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                  <text>Baule for Ho Chi Minh Trail Is On

•

SAIGON (UPI)-Lt. Gen. Hoang Xuan
Lam, commander of South Vietnamese
forces in Laos, said today his men had
counterattacked Hill 31 and were fighting
the Communists in hand to hand combat in
the battle for the Ho Chi Minh trail. U.S.
aircraft were using heat-seeking rockets
against Communist tanks there.
A column from the South Vietnamese 1st
Armored Brigade was reported moving
northward from Route 9 through difficult
and enemy infested terrain to give added
fire support to the beleaguered troops six
miles above the highway. U.S. military
sources close to Lam said the colwnn
commander refused to leave Wednesday

'

Now You Know
Mickey Mouse made his film
debut in 1928 in "Steamboat
Willie," the first animated
sound cartoon.

on grounds he lacked sufficient air support.
Hill 31 is seven miles inside Laos, 15
miles northwest of the U.S. fire support
base at the border village of Lang Vei and
six miles north of Route 9. It fell to the
Communists Thursday with the apparent
loss of a battalion of South Vietnamese
paratroopers (450 men). Another battalion
of ARVN rangers was virtually wiped out
last week at nearby landing zone Ranger.
The South Vietnamese have established
a series of landing zones and fire support
bases inside Laos on the network of jungle
roads and trails which make up the Ho Chi

Minh trail supply route from North
Vietnam through Laos to South Vietnam
and Cambodia. Forward columns
remained only 16 miles inside Laos under protection of U.S. artillery- three
weeks after the operation began.
Heavy fighting was reported at three
other forward South Vietnamese bases
today. At Hotel 2, a base 12 miles southwest of Lang Vei, the South Vietnamese
said they won, killing 57 Communists at a
loss of two dead and four wounded. They
also reported a victory nine miles south of
the border town of Lao Bao where they
said they killed 45 Communists at a loss of

five wounded.
But at landing zone South, in the same
general area as the Hill31 battle, the South
Vietnamese abandoned the base today
under heavy fire, leaving their mortars
and recoilless rifles as they boarded U.S.
helicopters to fly to safety. U.S. planes
later bombed the area in hopes of
destroying the weapons.
General Lam told UPI correspondent
Joseph Galloway at Khe Sanh that his
troops had killed "hundreds" of North
Vietnamese. The series of South Vietnamese losses appeared to be the worst
since start of the Laos campaign on Feb. B.

U.S. plane losses in the fighting increased steadily and the U.S. command
said 18 have been lost over Laos with 22
Americans killed, 16 wounded and 14
missing. It said 12 others were lost in South
Vietnam with the deaths of 15 Americans,
14 wounded and 4 missing. Front dispatches have estimated helicopters lost or
heavily damaged more than twice the
official figure of 30 destroyed.
Two F4 Phantom jets were shot down in
the Hill 31 operation. One crashed nearby
and the two-man crew was saved. The
other made it to the South China Sea where
the plane crashed. One of the two crewmen

was killed.
The command said that as of today the
Americans had flown more than 16,000
helicopter sorties in Laos.
U.S. pilots said North Vietnamese on Hill
31 were wearing captured South Vietnamese uniforms and that they had
tricked at least one U.S. helicopter into
flying in to help them. When he got close,
the pilot said, the Communists blasted his
helicopter with bursts of fire from Chinese
AK47 rifles.
Lam, in reporting the counterattack,
told Galloway the Communists still hold
parts of Hill 31.

The Daily Sentinel
Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Area

Wonders from Tin
•

•

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
An old tin can, an aluminum
pie pan, grapefruit peel, a scrap
of material in the hands of
imaginative Meigs women, and
presto! a potpourri of pretties.
Ideas on crafts and gift items
were exchanged and shaped by
the 16 homemakers who
gathered at the Meigs Bookmobile headquarters for a work
session Thursday.
Feature of the day was tin can
craft with Mrs. Louise Brewer
of Portland demonstrating how
to make attractive wall
plaques, medallions, and
centerpieces using a variety of
sizes of cans.
The way to make aluminum
flowers was demonstrated by
Mrs. Howard Nolan of
Syracuse. She used aluminum
pie pans trimming the elevated
edge and rolling it into bud
THIS BASKET of colorful stuffed and stocking dolls
shape, cutting petals from the
along with an instruction book on making them was the gift
flat part and then attaching a
item suggestion of Mrs. Carrie Grueser.
stem. Several of her grapefruit
roses, some painted, others
~ntiqued, were displayed by
I
7\.T
•
.~
I Mrs. Nolan.
Gift ideas were exchanged
I
I with Mrs. Jessie Cottrill of
Syracuse showing a wall shelf
maue
from a ham can; Mrs.
Epidem
Wayne Swisher, Pomeroy, a
COLUMB
FIVE omo CinES have now closed their candle holder from food cans
highly contagious outbreak of influenza, and and styrofoam covered with
many other commtmities are straining to keep classes in session crushed foil and painted; Mrs.
despite large absenteeism.
John Moon, a gold-colored
The latest to announce the cancellation of classes was decorated cigarette box ; and
Painesville Township, where as many as 38 per cent of the Mrs. Carrie Grueser, stuffed
enrollment of some schools was absent. About 4,000 students are and stocking dolls.
enrolled there.
Other gift ideas shown included a miniature chair with a
red velvet seat made from a tin
1Leadership Awards Announced
COLUMBUS - THE OIDO INFORMATION Committee can, an antiqued jewelry case
(OIC) presented seven Distinguished Leadership Awards at its made from a cigar box, three
lith annual meeting here today. The Ohio Broadcasters Public dimensional pictures from
Service Foundation and the Ohio Jaycees were both cited for plastic flowers, and padded
statewide voter registration programs. The American Legion and pictures.
To further the sharing and
American Legion Auxiliary received awards for sponsorship of
exchange idea of the group a
Buckeye Boys State and Buckeye Girls State.
Individual awards went to Warren T. Hackett, Colwnbus, "white elephant" table was
senior vice president of the Huntington National Bank, for his proposed for the next meeting,
book on economic education, "How We Prosper Under Freedom," the purpose being to trade items
rather than to buy them. Bottles
·Robert S. Morrison, Ashtabula busine~an, for his book on
which can be used for conpolitical and economic issues, "The Contax Plan," and Harry E.
tainers, pine cones, boxes,
Richter, Colwnbus, vice president of the Ohio National Bank, for
fabrics, feathers, pieces of
participating in civic activities.
styrofoam were among the
items mentioned.
Draftee's Hijack Fails
At the next meeting of the
VANCOUVER, B. C. - A TEEN-AGE Army draftee on his
group which h~s been named
way to basic training hijacked a Western Airlines jet Thursday
the Holiday Gift Club, Mrs.
and forced it to fly to Canada. Chapin J. Paterson, 19, of Shingle
Vilma Pikkoja will demonstrate
Springs, Calif., surrendered to Royal Canadian Mounted Police
how to make string pictures. A
after the Boeing 737 touched down at Vancouver International
spool of heavy thread, a small
Airport.
hammer, and a piece of dried
The hijacker, who first ordered the plane flown to Cuba, was
plywood or board are all that's
one of 69 Army inductees among the 92 passengers on the plane,
needed to participate. Finishing
)Continued on Page 10)
which was en route to Seattle, 120 miles south of here.

• r---------------------------,
: 111ews••• zn

•

•
f'

B rze
. s :
1

TEN CENTS

Israel Won't
Be Budging

TIN CAN CRAFT -Mrs. Louise Brewer showed how to make attractive wall plaques,
centerpieces, and medallions from tin cans at the Holiday Gift Club meeting Thursday.

By United Press International
Israel and Egypt gave
cautious approval today to
President Nixon's Middle East
statements in his State of the
World message, but Israeli
Premier Golda Meir said
Thursday night no American
pressure will make Israel
budge from its current Mideast
position .
In Cairo, the semiofficial
newspaper Al Ahram said
Nixon's statements showed the
"traditional American bias to
Israel," but it said they contain
"new indications worthy of

Burning Permits Needed Mar . 1
As of Monday, March 1,
permits are required for all
rural burning according to the
Revised Code of the State of
Ohio, Victor Bahr, Long Bottom, Division Fire Warden, said
today.
These permits are required
during March, April and May,
months considered the dry
months and a time when high
winds are expected during the
day and chances of fires
escaping from control causing
considerable damage are
dominant. The expense of
controlling such fires and the
man hours lost for the people
called to suppress them are
other important factors, Bahr
said.
Persons doing any burning
are responsible for containing
their fires and for making sure
the fires are out before leaving

them.
Permits may be obtained
from the following township
,
wardens :
BEDFORD - Fred L. Burson, George Carper, R. V.
Heilman, W. A. King, John
Meek:s, Ernest Wood.
CHESTER - Marie N.
Domigan,
George
C.
Genheimer, Mary V. Kautz,
Erma Johnston, G. L. or Wayne
Michael, Vercia N. Stout, Rexal
T. Summerfield.
COLUMBIA - Reed Jeffers,
Dorsey Jordan, Jean Hallie
Swett, G. E. Yerigan.
LEBANON - Ruda Durst,
Clinton E. Johnson, Harold G.
Roush, John R. Sellers.
LETART - Thereon Johnson,

::::::::;:;:;:::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::~i::::::::::::::y

The Pomeroy - Middleport
Lions Club was host at a
meeting earlier this week of
Zone Eight, Region 2, District
13-K, with .Junior Deputy
Governor of 13-K Russell
Williams presiding.
Topics discussed were ways to
earn money to benefit the sight
saving program, information
pertaining to old and new
members, and the upcoming
district, state and international
conventions.
Club President and Mrs.
Cassell will attend the district
convention in Columbus next
Tuesday. The international

OUTLOOK EXTENDED
Extended Ohio Weather
Outlook Sunday through
Tuesday:
Partly cloudy and cold
Sunday with a chance of snow
flurries northeast portion. A
chance of snow over the state
Monday or Tuesday. Below
normal temperatures
prevailing during the period
with daily highs averaging in
the 30s and the lows at night
ranging mainly from the
upper teens to the 20s.

Roy 0. Pearson, Eula Wolfe.
OLIVE - Paul F. Andrews,
Frank H. Bise, Gordon R.
Collins, Vallie D. Conn, James
Cowdery, C. Ed Humphrey,
Willard Pigott, Glenna J.
Sanders.
ORANGE - Harold Barnhart, Paul G. Buckley,
Dorothy Robinson, James R.
Stout.
RUTLAND - Rose Ellen
Carson, Leodell Davidson, W.
Musser, James
W.
D.
Nicholson, Wayne Turner.
SALEM- John F. Colwell,
JackW.Crisp,GeraldK.Grate,
Lauren Hoffman, Eugene
Holliday, Guy Swadley.
SAUSBURY TOWNSHIP Nathan Pearl Biggs, Charles E.

Lions Review Projects

Clark, Howard A. Dailey, Philip
Globokar, Guy V. Reuter.
SCIPIO - Wayne Chase,
tta mor. 1 R. Cotterill, Ldwin
Ob r Qlzer, Myrtle H. Stanley,
Mrs. Gath Townsend, Kenneth
Welsh.
SUTTON
Lawrence
Beegle, Harold Carnahan, 0. J.
Gaul, Clifford Morris, Vernon
Nease, Edson E. Roush, Rev.
Paul Sellers, Woodrow T.
Zwilling.

AutO Brok en

Jnt0 al Grill

A tape player and three tapes
were taken when an auto was
broken into Friday at 10:30
p.m., the Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept. reported.
The car, a 1966 Chevrolet,
parked at Five Points, is owned
by Norma L. Randolph,
Coolville. Entry to the locked
vehicle was made by breaking a
window wing. The incident is
under investigation.
The sheriff's department is
also investigating a single car
accident that occurred on SR 33,
about 1.8 miles north of
Pomeroy. A car owned by
Donald E. Kelly, Middleport,
was found heading south in a
creek bed along SR 33.

convention will be held in Las
Vegas.
The next zone meeting will be
a social event with wives attending. The date and place will
be announced.
The next regular meeting of
the Pomeroy - Middleport Lions
Club will be March 10 at the
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church following a noon luncheon. A film from the Shell
Library will be shown. Earl
Ingels will be guest speaker.
Seventeen persons from
LOCAL TEMPS
Pomeroy, Middleport, Athens,
Temperature in downtown
Chesterhill and Nelsonville Pomeroy Friday at 11 a.m. was
attended the zone meeting.
46 degrees under rainy skies.

~nii;:;~T;F;hJHooked /)rug Inmates Talk to Students
~

"

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Gov.
John J . Gilligan •. just ret~ne,d
from three days m the nahon s
capital, plans to fight as hard as
the next state for federal funds.
"We're going after f~d.eral
m~ney aggressively,". Gilligan
satd ~ur~~ay 0~ the flig~t bac~
to OhlO. Ythou Just cantot wat
and expect e money
come
to you. You have to go out and

Aid Given Twice

•

:~?

fight for it."
While in Washington, the
governor enlarged the size of
the state's office staff there
from two to four and also put the
bite on federal officials to locate
a federal testing facility in Ohio.
After meeting with Transportation Secretary John Volpe
on Tuesday, Gilligan was
delighted to find he was seated
at the same table with him at a
White House dinner that night.
"I got in a few more licks
about why Ohio should get the
National Highway Compliance
Test Center, •• Gilligan admitted. The governor said he
wants to improve Ohio's
ranking of 48 th among the 50
states in receiving federal
research funds.

Two calls answered Thursday
by the Pomeroy E-R squad
were at 3:30 p.m., went to the
home of Dana Covert, Union
Ave., where Mr. Covert was
suffering from severe pains in
his back and legs, was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
and admitted, and at 10:10 p.m.
QUARANTINE LIFTED
to the David Napper place,
WILMINGTON, Ohio (UPI)
Bailey Run Road. Napper was
taken to Veterans Memorial - The quarantine placed on
Hospital where he was treated part of Clinton County Nov. Bas
for a medical ailment and the result of an outbreak of hog
cholera has been lifted.
discharged.

Lows tonight to near 50
southeast. Windy and turning
colder Saturday, chance of
showers south and central and
snow flurries north. Highs to
near 50 southeast portion.

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1971

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL. XXVI NO. 222

Weather

By George Hargraves, Superintendent

MeigsLocalSchooiDistrict
There isn't an intelligent, thinking American
citizen who is not concerned about the growth of the
problem of drug abuse in our nation. our particular
concern in this matter is that it appears to be a
problem that is concentrated in the youthful portion of
our population. Consequently, schools have been given
the task of attempting to help solve the problem.
In our health classes in grades 7, 8 and 10 we give

Speaking of Schools-No. 177
extensive treatment of this matter. It has been the
topic of much discussion in our classes also. Our
guidance and administrative staff members seek a
variety of methods to make our students aware of the
dangers of the drug scene.
On last Monday our high school students had an
exceptional chance to really gain first hand information from two men who know all about it. Herb
Watts and Jessie Jackson are both inmates of the
Chillicothe Correctional Institute (CCI). Sgt. Ratliff, a
guard at CCI, accompanied them during their visit to
Meigs High.
These two men present themselves not as reformed or former drug addicts. They say that they are
drug addicts who are just not taking drugs now. This
brings home the fact that once a person becomes an

addict that condition continues for a lifetime, even if
the person does stop the use of drugs.
According to these men, once you are hooked it is
for life. H you can quit, you are only sure of staying
"quit" one day at a time. To me that is a very
frightening thought. I imagine it was to most of our
students also.
These men talked with all of our sophomores in the
large group health- guidance class that we have each
day. They also spent the rest of the day talking with
smaller groups of students in our classrooms. The
teachers and students with whom 1 have spoken felt
that this was an extremely valuable experience.
Meigs Local sends its thanks to Herb Watts, Jessie
Jackson, Sgt. Ratliff and the Chillicothe Correctional
Institute for providing this fine service to our high
school students.
TilE REGISTRATION process for next year's
grades9-1G-ll-12startedwhenwesenthomethelistsof
available courses. On the final page of the material
that went home was a form for the student and parent·
to complete. This completed form should be signed and
returned to school as soon as possible. They should all
be in by now, but they are not. If you haven't done this
yet, please do so. It will help us a lot to have all these
completed anj returned as quickly as possible.
WE ADVERTISED for bids for air conditioning of
the center core of the academic wing of the high school.
We received only one bid and it was considerably

attention" and that Egypt
would make a comprehensive
study of the message.
The reaction in Israel was
almost as reserved. Officials
called it the clearest statement
Nixon has yet made on the
Arab-Israeli conflict, and Israeli newspapers welcomed his call
for secure Israeli boundaries
but questioned such things as
his projected Big Four role in a
settlement.
Israel Galili, a cabinet
member without portfolio and a
close confidante of Mrs. Meir,
told the Tel Aviv newspaper
Maariv today that the Israeli
response to the latest Egyptian
peace initiative will be flexible
enough to permit negotiations
to continue.
His statements followed Mrs.
Meir's statement Thursday
night that no American presmr, will makl) Israel budge
rrom its current Middle East
position of retaining some lands
captured from the Arabs-a
statement being set forth in the
Israeli reply to Egypt.
' "They (the Americans) know
full well that the lack of
financial aid will not cause
Israel to make any concessions
in matters that concern its
security," she told a public
gathering in Tel Aviv.
She said Israel will not give
up East Jerusalem, the Golan
Heights, and the Red Sea
fortress of Sharm El Sheikh
"under any possible peace
agreement with its Arab
neighbors."
Her statement coincided with
Galili's that the Egyptian call
for withdrawal from all captured territory is not acceptable
- "under no circumstances will
there be an Israeli withdrawal
to the pre-June 1967 cease-fire
lines," he said.

Driver Charged
RACINE - Charles Aeiker,
22, Racine, was charged with
DWI following a traffic accident
at 11 p.m. Thursday on Rt. 124,
one mile west of Racine.
According to the Gallia-Meigs
Post State Highway Patrol,
Aeiker attempted to pass an
auto driven by James R.
Skender, 22, Zanesville, cut
back in and struck the front of
Skender's car, ran off the left
side of the roadway and struck a
utility pole. Moderate damage
resulted.

above the estimated cost. This matter will require
additional consideration.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
We are having trouble again with impure water at
ADMITTED - Edith Rice,
Salem Center. State health officials have confirmed
Pomeroy; Christy Matson,
that boiling the water will make it safe for drinking.
Rutland; Helen Bahr, MinerThis we are doing. It's inconvenient, but it is the only sville; Dana Covert, Pomeroy;
safe way. It's what we will do until we can locate and Kelly Ginther, Chester.
remedy the source of our problem.
DISCHARGED - Ernest
After considerable effort just a few weeks ago, the Werry, Gertrude Bass, Donna
water tested fine. Now we have the problem again. We Gilmore, Frances Dray and
are seeking all the advice and help that we can obtain Lucille Lambert.
in correcting the trouble.
NEWS &amp; NOTES - We get another shot at those
Athens Bulldogs down at Rio Grande tonight - Well
DIVORCE ASKED
over one-third of our professional staff members have
A suit for divorce has been
continuing teaching contracts or tenure - We are in filed in Meigs County Common
the midst of a very successful eighth grade basketball Pleas Court by Roy E. Crouser,
tournament at the junior high school - A week from Rutland, Rt. 1, against Juanita
today will bring us to the end of the fourth grading Crouser, Westerville, Ohio,
period. In other words, the year will be two-thirds charging gross neglect of duty.
completed - Well over half of our non-certificated
employees (bus drivers, cooks, custodians, mechanics,
secretaries) are on continuing contracts - If you
MARRIAGE LICENSES
receive a letter from school that says that your child
Harold Daniel Winters, 54,
may not pass this year, call the school as soon as Parkersburg, and Lila leadore
possible and set up a conference - UOn't forget those Bentz, 48, Pomeroy, Rt. 3;
immunization shots, if you have a child who will enter Michael David Bragg, 27, Pt.
school next year. Now is the time to have them done Pleasant, and Nancy Loraine
Good luck to Coach Wolfe's Marauders tonight.
Vanlnwagen, 23, Pomeroy.

�POMEROY

MIDDLEPORT

POMEROY
TRINITY
MT. MORIAH BAPTISTUnitedChurch of Chnst -Rev Corner Fourth and Main,
Perrin, pastor. Fred Blaettnar, Middleport. Rev. Henry L. Key,
h 1 9 5
Jr., pastor. Sunday School 9:30
t S d
sup · un ay c 00 • : 1 a. m.; a. m., Arnold Richards, supt.;
Worship, 10:25 a. m.; youth
choir rehearsal, Monday, 6: 30 Morning worship 10:30 a, m.
p. m., Mrs. Marvin Burt,
FIRST
UNITED
PRESdirector.
Senior
choir BYTERIAN, Middleport-Rev.
rehearsal, 7:30p.m. Thursday, , Russell Lester, pastor. Sunday
~- Paul Nease, director. School 9:30a.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-'
E•ening service 7:30p.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 Unio·nCHRIST- 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. YOUIJQ _peoples Evening worship 7:30. Wedmeeting, both 7:30 P- m. Sun- nesday prayer meeting, 7:30 p.
day-Wednesday,
combined m.
Bible study
and
prayer
CHURCH OF THE NAZAmeeting, 7:30 p. m.
.R.EI'il_-=._Mlci~or!.,___B~.Y,
THE SALVATION ARMY Audry Miller, pastor; Floyd
Envoy Ra~ S. Wining, officer in Carson, supt. Sunday school,
c;)1arge.
uncjay, 10 a. m., 9: 30 a.m .;
Morning
warHoliness meeting; 10:30 a. m. ship,
10:30
a.m.;
junior
Sunday School. Young People's
· t
6 30
NYPS 6 45
Legion,7p.m.;Thursday,lto3 ~Qcley. :
p.m.;
· ;
Sunday evangelistic
.
p m.
p.m., Lad1es Home League; 7 ~eeting, 7 : 30 p.m. Prayer
P. m. Prep ria !iS.!:_«.
t·
SACRI;:D HEART Rev ._ mee mg
ed nesd ay, 7·. 30 p .m.:.
Father Bernard Krajcovic,
MIDDLEPO_RT
PENpastor .
Phone
992-2825, TECOSTAL - Th1rd Ave., the
Saturday evening Mass, 7:30 Rev. B. . L. Barrett, pastor.
p .m. Sunday Mass, 8 and 10 Ralph Pnddy, Sunday school
a.m. Confessions, Saturday 7- supt. Classes for all ages,
Sund~y school, _10 a.m.; Sunday
7 . 3o p.m.
·
.
evenmg serv1ce, 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.; v1ce, 7:30p.m.
morning worship, 1~:30 a.m.;
MIDDLEPORT
FIRST
BYF, 6 p. m.; Bible Stud_y BAPTIST -Charles W. Simons.
Wedn~sday 7 P- m.; cho1r pastor. Danny Thompson, Sunday School Supt. Sunday
practlce'--Wed., 8:30 p, m.
FIRST SOUTH_ERN BAP- Church School, 9:15 a. m.;
Tl~~- 220 E,- Mam, Pomeroy, Morning worship, 10:15 a. m .
af!il1ated wdh 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 Mt;:Ciure, supt.; war- evening prayer service, 7:30.
sh1p serv1ce, 10:30 a.m.;
evening worsh ip, 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 LUTH ERAt.l 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.; oravPr
service, 10 :30 a. m. Con- service 7 p. m. Wednesday.
firmation class, Saturday, 9:45
a.m.
POMEROY-CHESTER
MASON COUNTY
UNITED
METHODIST CHRISTIAN
SCIENCE
Robert R. Card,
pastor. Services, 315 Main St., Pt .
P.omeroy - Worship, 10:30 a. Pleasant. Sunday services, 11
m.; Church School, 9:15 a,. m.; a.m. Wednesday Testimonial
Frank
Vaug an
superin- meeting, 7:30 p.m.
tendent. Ches.+
h1p 9 a
l'l"
Churd'
m;
GRAHAM UNITED METHRoger Epple,
ODIST CHURCH - Preaching
~EVENTH
DVENT
9 lO a m , first and second
TIST Po
Mulberry ~undays of each month; third
Hgts. Herbert
gan, pastor
and fourth Sundays each month,
Sabbath School, 5aturday, 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.

s

w

the SerTnonette
Tills is 'Lent'::::::

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I

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BY REV. ROBERT W. KUHN, PASTOR
First Baptist Church, Pomeroy
Once again we have begun what is known as the Lenten
season.
Lent very often coincides with spring training for baseball
players. The players gather in their various camps located in
warm climates. They start with running to loosen their muscles.
Even a star player needs to condition himself for the long road
ahead.
So it is with Lent. It is the spring-training period of our
Christian faith. It is a time for spiritual spring training, a time for
the lubrication of our souls. It is a time for setting the gap in our
spiritual spark plugs. It is a time for checking up on ourselves to
prepare us to share in the Resurrection power that cornes from
faith in Jesus as the Christ.
Jesus did not come to His mission unprepared. He needed the
time in the wilderness of temptation to be prepared for His
ministry to men. He needed the final week of preparation for the
victory of the Cross and subsequent Resurrection. So for us Lent
is a means of preparation to share in that victory of Jesus.
First of all in Lent, we reaffirm our loyalty to God's will. Our
Wholeness depends upon this. The wholeness of our being is in
God. For without God we are nothing.
Secondly, in Lent there needs to be a realization of our own
failures. There should be an acknowledgment of sin in our lives.
Lent is a call to repentence. It is a time when we turn away from
our past way of life and seek the power of God's Spirit to help us to
do better. David recognized this when he acknowledged his sin
unto God, and his iniquity he did not hide. For he said, "I will
confess my transgressions unto the Lord; and thou forgavest the
iniquity of my sin."
Our third task then is to seek the forgiveness of God. We read
in I John 2:}, 2: "My children,in writing thus to you my purpose is
that you should not commit sin. But should anyone commit sin, we
have one to plead our cause with the Father, Jesus Christ, and He
is just. He is himself the remedy for the defilement of our sins, not
our sins only but the sins of all the world." So we need to turn to
God. We need to confess our sinful motives and actions.
This then is what Lent should mean. It is the special effort to
be more devoted than ever before. A time to be more honest with
ourselves and with God. A time to be less centered in our selves.
This takes time and effort. So this period of time before Easter
provides that opportunity, but we must make the most of every
moment by beginning right now.

I

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·'..'

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ol

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Middl eport
Church
attendance, Feb . 21 - 530 .
Middleport population
2,784.
Middleport Ministeri al Assn.

~

Food Faddist
Graham crackers we re mvented in 1H29 by Sylvester
Graham, a temperance
lecturer-food faddist, who
promisf'd to sa ve souls
thro11gh th &lt;• stomac·h, ac-cord ing to Ency&lt;'iopa(•dia Brifr~n
nica .

GET

ARENTION

MASON
ASSEMBLY
OF
GOD -Second St., Mason, W.
Va. Chester Tennant, pastor.
Sunday school, 10 a . m.;
morning worship, 11 a. m.;
evangelistic service, 7:30 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, 9:30 a. m., Rev.
Guy Sayre, supt.; evening
service, 7:30. Tuesday Bible
stud~, 7:30 p. m . Thursday
evenmg prayer meeting, 7:30 p.
m. ~unday evening youth
serv1ces, 6 : 30 with Roger
Manley, youth lead~r.
MASON "FIRST BAPTIST Second and Pomeroy Sts., Stan
Craig, pastor. Sunday school,
9:45a.m.; worship service, 11
a.m.; training union, 6:3o·p.m.;
evening worship service, 7:30
p .m. Mid-week prayer service,
Wednesday. 7:30 p.m.
CHRISTIAN
SCIENCE
Services at 315 Main St., Pt.
Pleasant, Sunday School 9: 15
a.m. Sundays, 11 a.m .; Wednesday, 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&gt;,
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.

RACINE FIRS r CHURCH
OF THE NAZARENE
Sunday School, 9:30 a. m.;
Morning Worship, 10:30 a.m.;
Evening worship, 7:30 p. ,m.
Wednesday, ·. Sunday School
Superintenderrt, Pau line McClintock, 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. Wilma
Bahr, Supt. Youth Fellowship 6
p.m. each Sunday at Tuppers
Plains
United
Methodist
Church.
DANVILLE WESLEYAN -J.
A. Curry, pastor. Sunday
School, 9:30 a. m.; Youth and
junior youth service, 6:45p.m.;
Evening worship, 7:30 p. m .
Prayer and praise Wed., 7:30 p.

m.
HEMLOCK
GROVE
CHRISTIAN- David Stauffer,
pastor; Stanford Stockton, supt.
Morning worship, 9:30 a.m.;
church school, 10:30 a.m.;
young peo~les meeti!lg, 6:30
p.m.; evenmg 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, sup!.; evening
service, 7:30 p.m. Prayer
meeting, Thursday, 7:30 p.m.

CHESTER CHURCH OF
GOD- Rev. Donald A. Sheets,
pastor. Sunday School 9: 30 a .
MEIGS COUNTY
m.; Worship service, 11 a. m.;
Evening service, 7:30. Prayer
ALFRED
UNITED service and youth service ,
METHODIST Rev. Randy Thursday, 7:30 p. m.
_
Lavender, pastor. Sunday
FOREST RUN METHODIST
School, 9:45 a. m .• Lloyd
Dillinger, supt.; worship ser- 1- Rev. Forrest Donley, pastor ;
vice, 11 a.m. with the Rev. Mr. Mrs. Fread Nease, sup t.
Lavender in charge. Wed - Worship service 9 a.m.; Sunday
nesday prayer service, 7:45 p. School, 10 a. m.
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN
m.
Robert Eugene Musser ,
pastor. Sunday school, 9: 30
a.m.; morning worship, 10:30;
Robert Bobo. Sunday school
UNITED FAITH- Robert E. supt. Sunday evening service,
Smith, pastor. Worship service 7:30 p.m.; youth meetina .
and Sunday school, 9:30 a.m., Monday, 7 p.m. Midweek
Fred ?amsel, supt.; evening service, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.
worsh1p, 7:30 p.m.; youth
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF
meeting, 7 p.m. Prayer meeting THE NAZARENE- Rev. M. C.
Thursday, 7:30p.m.
Larimore. pastor. Bob Moore,
Sunday School Supt. Sunday
School, classes for a II ages, 9:30
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST a . m.; mor_ping worship, 10:45,
Hobart Newell, supt. Ser- NYPS Sunday, 6:30 p. m.;
vices weekly, 9:30a.m. Sunday. evangelistic service, Sunday,
Preaching first and third 7:30 p.m. Mid-week prayer.
Sundays of month by Charles meeting, Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Mssionary meeting, second
Russell, 9:30 a.l'l".
Wednesday, 7:30 P. m.
ROCK
SPRINGS
METHODIST - Rev. Richard
Pumphrey, pastor; Harold
HOBSON
CHRISTIAN 8 I ackston ,
superintendent.
UNION Darrel Doddrill, Morning worship, 9:30 a.m. ;
pastor. Sunday School, 9:30 a. church school, 10:15 a.m.;
m., Annie Mohler, supt.; evening worship, 7:30 p.m.;
Leonard Gilmore, first elder; MYF, 6 p.m. Prayer meeting
evening service, 7:30 p. m. and Bible Study, Wednesday,
Wednesday prayer meeting, 7:30 p.m . A ministrative
7:30 p. m.
.Council first Monday, 7:30p.m.
MT. ...MORIAH CHURCH OF - -EDEN UNITED BRETHREN
GOD - Racine Route 2. The IN CHRIST- Elden R. Blake,
Rev. Charles Hand, pastor. pastor. Sunday School. lOa. m.;
Sunday school, 9:45 a.m.; Winnie Holsinger , supt. Mormorning worship, 11 a .m . ning sermon, 11 a. m.; Evening
Evening services, Tuesday and service Christian Endeavor ,
Friday, 7:30.
7:30 p. m. ; Mrs.
Lyda
TUPPERS
PLAINS Chevalier, president. Song
CHARGE
UNITED service and sermon, 8:20. MidMETHODIST. Sunday worship Week prayer meeting WedSt. Paul's 9 a.m.; South nesday, 7:30 p. m. Mrs. Mazie
Bethel 9· 55 a .m.; Alfred 11 a.m. Holsinqer, class leader.
POMEROY LOWER LIGHT
{First and third Sundays) 7:45
p.m.; {Second and 4th Sun - CHURCH- Harrisonville Road,
days). Lottridge -7:45 p.m . ~ev. Roy Taylor, pastor; Henry
. {First and third Sundays), 11 Eblin, Sunday School Supt .
"'.m. Second and 4th Sundays. Sunday School, 9:30 a . m. ;
evening worship, 7:30 p. m.'
LONG
BOTTOM Prayer and prasie service,
METHODIST - Rev. Freeland Thursday, 7:30 p. m.
Norris, pastor. Sunday School,
RACINE - CE rARl
WES10 a.m.; church services, 11
LEYAN UNITED METHODIST
a.m.
Racine, W . Dale McClurg,
BEARWALLOW RIDGE pastor. Sunday School, 9: 30 a.
CHURCH OF CHRIST- John m.; Worship service, 10:30 a.
Rockhold, pastor . Bible study, m.; UMYF, 7 p. m. each Sun9:30 a.m.; morning worship, day ; Senior Choir practice,
10: 30; evening worship, 7: 30 Thursday, 7:30 p. m. ; Service
p.m . Wednesday Bible study, Guild , fourth Monday, 7:30 p.
m. ; Happy Hustlers Sunday
7: 30p.m.
School Class meeting, fourth
STIVERSVILLE
COM - Friday, 6 p. m.; WSCS second
MUNITY CHURCH Rev . Friday, 7:30 p. m .; Official
Edsel Hart, pastor. Sunday Board, second Monday, 7:30 p.
morning worshJp service, _10 m.
---·
a.m., Dell Talbot, supenn COMMUNITY
CHURCH,
tendent. Prayer meeting, each Dexter - Rev. Basil DeWeese,
Thursday, 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 - Harrisonville
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
Mdrning 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 worship, 7:30 p. m.
LETART
UNITED
vices, 7 p. m. ; Wednesday
evening prayer meeting and METHODIST CHURCH - First
and second Sundays, preach ing
Bible study, 7:30 p. 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 even ings at 8 p. m.,
prayer and Bible Study.
10:30 a .m.
FLATWOODS
UNITED
METHODIST, Rev . William
ST. JOHN lUTHERA~ 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 METHODIST Paul A. Rev. Ceci I Cox, pastor. Sunday
Se llers, pastor ; Ben Qui sen- school supt., Joe Sayre. Svnday
berry, Sunday School Supt. schoo l , 9:45 a.m .; Sunday
worship service, 9:30a .m. first
evening worship, 7:30. Wedand third Sunday. Evening nesday
prayer and Bible study,
ser vice, B p . m. fourth Sunday. 7:30p.m.
.
LANGSVILLE MIDWAY T UP P E R S
PLAINS
services 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
SUTTON
UNIT ED school, 9:30 a. m ., Morning
METHODIST
Pau l A. Sermon, 10:30 a. m . Evening
Sellers, pastor; Martha Lee, sermon , 7 p . m .
Sunday School Supt. Worship EAST
LETART
FAL LS
servi ce, 10:45 a. m .;second and UNITE 0
MET H 0 01 s T
fourth
Sundays;
evening CHURCH - W. Dale McClurg ,
worhsip, B p. m. third Sunday. pastor. Worship se rvices,
E NTERPR ISE
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, choir, 6: 15 p. m .
LETART FALLS UNITED
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST BRETHREN Rev. Robert
Norman McCain , supt. Shook, pastor; Herschel
Norris,
Services week ly at 9:30 a. m . supt. Sunday school, 9:30a.m. ;
Preaching first and third morning sermon, 10:30 a.m.;
Sundays of month by Charles
evening sermon, 7:30 alter'&lt;ussell, 9:30 a. m .
nating each Sunday. Prayer
BRADBURY CHURCH OF service, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m .
CH IR ST Roy Bill Carter, Prayer meetin g, 7: 30 p.m .
evangelist; Thurman Carsey, alternating Sundays.
Bible School sup!.; Bible School
BRADBURY CHURCH OF
9: 30 a. m .; morntng 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
mee ling Wednesday, 7:30p.m .

meeti':'g, 6:30 p. m.; Evening
worship, 7:30 p. m.
APPLE GROVE UNITE.D
METHODIST CHURCH - W.
Dale McClurg , pastor. Worship
service, first and third Sundays
of each month at B 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,
B p.m.
CARME:L UNITED METHODIST Paul A. Sellers,
pastor; Wayne Roush, supt.
Worship service, 10:45 a. m.,
first and third Sundays;
evening worship, 8 p.m. second
Sunday.
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE Rev. Herbert
Grate, pastor. Worship service,
l1 a.m. and 7:30p.m. Sunday.
Sunday School, 9:30 a. m.
Richard Barton, supt. Prayer
(!leeting, Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
HARRISONVILLE
PRESBYTERIAN Mrs. Norma
Lee, Sunday Schoop Superintendent. Sunday School 9: 30 a.
m. Sunday Service 8 p. m . Rev.
Max Donahue, M iddleport,
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, 9:45 a.
m. Christian Endeavor, th ird
Saturday of each month.
LAUREL CLIFF
FREE
METHODIST Rev. Eugene
Gill, pastor. Will iam Bai ley ,
supt. Sunday School, 9:30a.m.;
Morning worship, 10: 30 a. m.;
Evening worship, 7:30 p. m.
Wednesday, Christian Youth
Crusade, 6:30 p. m.; Prayer ·
meeting 7:30 p. m. Thursday,
choir practice, 7 p. m.
DEXTER
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST -Danny
Evans ,
pastor. Norman C. Will , supt.
Sunday School 9:30 a. m.;
Worship service, 10: 30 a. m.
Christian Endeavor Sunday
evening.
_
REORGANIZED
CHURCH
OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS- PortlandRacine Road. Ralph Johnson,
pastor. Sunday School, 9;30 a.
m. ; Morning worship, 10:30 a.
m. ; Sunday evening service, 7
p . m. Wednesday evening
prayer services, 7:30p.m.

If we could build a fence around the world, would we respect
our limitations and live happily with one another? Would we stop
wars? Probably not!
You can fence in physical objects but not the minds and hearts
of mankind.

•

Nor can we be forced to live in peace. Peoce comes through
practicing love, faith and tolerance-an understanding of God and
His Church. Then, remember World Day of Prayer. Determine not
to build a fence around yourself, or around anyone else. Instead,
enlarge your horizons through the common voice of prayer.
What bette place to start than in the Church?
Scriptures selected by the American Bible Society

Copyright 1971 Keister Advertising Service, Inc., Strasburg, Virginia

BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Great Bend, Charles Norris,
pastor. Worship service, 9:30 a.
m.; Sunday School , 10:30 a.m.
MORNING STAR UNITED
METHODIST- Rev. Wi lliam
Airson, pastor; Roy Van Meter,.
supt.; Sunday School, 9:30 !'I·
m. ; Morning worship, 10:15 a.
m.; Youth Fellowship and Bible
Study, Thursday, 8 p. m. Fred
Smith, layleader.
CARLETON CHURCH Kingsbury
Road.
Sunday
School, 9:30a.m .• Ralph Carl,
supt. Worship service, 10:30 a.
m. and 7:30 p. m. alternately.
Prayer meeting, Wednesday,
7:30 p . m. Rev. Jay Stiles ,
pastor.
OLD
DEXTER
CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH Rev. Willard Dutcher, pastor.
Mrs . Worley Francis, Sunday
School Supt. Sunday School,
9:45a.m. Church Services 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: 30 p. m.
HYSELL
RUN
FREE
METHODIST Cecil Wise,
Pastor. Sunday School, 9:30
a.m.; Morning worship, 10:30
a.m.; Young People's service,
6:45p.m. ; Evangelistic service,
7:30 p.m. Prayer meeting,
Thursday, 7:30p.m.
FREEDOM
GOSPEL
MISSION - Bald Knobs, Rev.
L. R. Gluesencamp, pastor.
Roger Wilfred , Sr., Sunday
School Supt. Sunday School,
9:30 a. m .; Sunday evening
worship 7:30. Prayer meeting,
Tuesday, 7:30 p. m. Ernest
Deeter, class leader. Yough
M eeting Wednesday, 7:30p.m.,
Ernest Deeter, leader.
MT. HERMON UNITED
BRETHERN CHURCH IN
CHRIST - Rev. Robert Shook,
pastor, Sunday School, 9:30 a .
m., Roy Pooler, supt. ; Alfred
Wolfe, asst. supt.; morning
wors hip, 11 a .m. ; evening
sermon , 7:30 p.m. , alternating
each Sunday . Class meeting, 11
a. m . alternating Sunday
mornings,
Alfred
Wolfe,
layleader; Chr istian Endeavor,
7:30 p . m. Sunday , Roger
Buckley, president. Prayer
meeting, Wednesday, 7: 30 p. m.
Board meeting first Monday
each month , 7:30p.m.
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED
PRESBYTERIAN
- Rev.
Russell Lester, pastor. Worship
service, 9 a.m. ; Sunday School,
10 a.m.

'RUT LAN 0
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST - Rev. Samuel Ja ckson,
pastor. Sunday School, lOa . m .;
Mrs. Gertrude Butler, supt.
Prayer Service, 1: 30 p. m .;
preaching service, 2 p. m.
THE
RUTLAND
METHODIST Rev. Richard C.
Pumphery,
pastor.
Church
Sch~o l 9: 30 a.m. ; Worship
serv1ce 10:30 a.m.

Sunday
John
14:1-6

Monday Tuesday Wednesday
John
John
Psalms
16:1-11
15:12- 17 20:24-31

Thursday
Psolms
22:1-5

•

Saturday
Romans
15:4-13

Fridoy
Acts
24:10-15

With the hope it will, in some measure; foster and 11elp sustain that which is
good in family and community life, this feature is sponsored by the business
firms. and organizations whose names appear below.

P-------------------~-------------------.•
WILLIS ANTHONY
PLUMBING AND HEATING
992 2550

240 Lincoln St.

GOEGLEIN READY MIX CO•

Phone 992-3284

•

Middleport

Middleport

HEINER'S BAKERY

M &amp; R FOODLINER

•
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Bakers of Good Bread
Huntington, W. Va.

MARK V STORE
Middleport, Ohio

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

OHIO VALLEY BAKING CO.
Bakers of Holsum Bread
Middleport, Ohio

Middleport, Ohio

BOGGS EQUIPMENT
Sales- Allis Chalmers- Service
Farm - Industrial - Lawn- Garden
Tuppers Plains
667-3435

•

RACINE FOOD MARKEf
The Store with A Heart
Racine

949-3342

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.
Ohio' s Oldest Dodge Dealer
Middleport, 0.

.
~--------------------~---------------------1~

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

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
Rexall Drugs
We Fill All Doctors Prescriptions
992-2955
Pomeroy

RAYBUCK MOTOR SALES Inc.

LINCOLN-MERCURY
AME'R I CAN MOTORS
Phone 593-6601
85 N. Court St.
Athens

NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE
Take Someone with You to Church
In Pomeroy Over 90 Years
Kermit Walton, Mgr.

GAUL'S MARKET
Chester, Ohio

ROYAL OAK PARK
Family Recreation
Swimming

MEIGS MOBILE HOME SALES
Comfortable LivingReasonably Priced
Tuppers Plains
667-3891

POMEROY ELECTRIC SERVICE
Electric Motor Repair
810 W. Main

992-5750

SADIE'S MARKET
Meats and Groceries
Syracuse
992-3986

~--------------------+---------------------~··

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

RUTLAND CHURCH OF
CHRIST- Sunday school, 9: 30
a.m., V. H . Braley, supt.;
Furniture and Appliances
Church and Office Supplies-Gifts
communion and devotions,
10 :30 a . m . Regular board
Chester, 0.
992-2641
Middleport Phone 985-3308
meeting 7:30, third Saturday
l&gt;,.ch month .
.
THE
RUTLAND
COMMUNITY CHURCH - Rev.
Attend the Church of Your Choice
Amos Tillis, pastor. Sunday
School, 9:30 a. m. ; Worship
service, 11 a. m. ; Wednesday
Bulova Watches-Sa les &amp; Service
prayer meeting , 7:30 p. m.
Pomerov
186
N. Second
Middleport
Ph. 992-3498
Sunday night worship, 7: 30.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE - Rev. Lloyd ~--------------------------~-------- ---------------~.-----1
D. Grimm, Jr., pastor. Sunday
School , 9: 30 a . m .; M orning
and
worsh ip, 10 :30 a. m .; Young
people's service, 6: 45 p. m .;
Evangelistic services, 7:30 p
m . Wednesday evening service
Serving The Big Bend Area
7:30p.m.

F. J. WALLACE, JEWELER

The Daily Sentinel
WANT ADS
.Always Get Results!

BEN FRANKLIN STORE

THE DAILY SENTINEL

Sunday Times-Sentinel

•

�3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 26,1971

:··=· •.

Warriors
Edge
Rams
In
Overtime
•
By FRED McMANE
UPI Sports Writer
Dick Phelps, coach of Fordham University, wants another
shot at second-ranked Marquette, and he hopes to get it in
the NCAA tournament at
Houston.
Phelps, whose spirited Rams
lost to Marquette 85-80 in
• overtime Thursday 'night, lndicated that his club would pass
up the local National Invitation
Tournament for a bid to the
NCAA tournament and possibly
another shot at the Warriors.

•

"I'd love to get you in
Houston," Phelps said to Al
McGuire, coach of Marquette,
following the warriors' exciting
victory before a capacity crowd
of 19,500 at Madison Square
Garden. "We've got everything
to gain and nothing to lose."
Praise For Losers
"Suppose they move you to
the Midwest regionals?"
quipped McGuire, referring to
last season when he passed up
a bid to the NCAA and went to
the NIT because his team was
. placed in the NCAA Midwest

regionals instead of the preferred Mideast regionals.
Fordham, which is ranked
No. 9, gave Marquette its
toughest game of the season.
Had it not been for the
Warriors' 6-foot-11 center, Jim
Chones, the verdict might have
gone the other way. Chones
scored 22 points in the game,
including seven during the
overtime session, collected 15
rebounds and blocked a half
dozen shots.
''Fordham is the best
coached team I've ever seen,"

... Gallipolis, Marietta In

said McGuire. "I am surprised
beyond words that they're that
well coached. A team as small
as Fordham is contmually at a
mismatch, like some of my old
teams, but they handled our
press better than any other
team during our winning
streak."
Marquette's winning streak
has now reached 34, including
22 in a row this season.
Other Close Games
Overtime seemed to be the
order of the day Thursday night
as three other major games

Bill Smith, a 6-11 center, and
Gred Kohls each scored 31
points to spark Syracuse to its
17th victory in 23 games. Gene
Armstead collected 30 points
for Rutgers, now 13-7.
Guard Steve Bracey scored 35
points, including 14 during the
two overtime sessions, as Tulsa
edged Memphis State. Ronnie
Robinson collected 30 points for
Memphis State and also
grabbed a school record 28
rebounds.
St. Louis, which blew a 15point lead in the final eight
minutes of regulation time, got
19 points and 18 rebounds from
Harry Rogers in turning back
Wichita State .

were decided in an extra
session. Syracuse, gunning for
an NIT bid, beat Rutgers,
another NIT hopeful, 88-81, in
double overtime; Tulsa nipped
Memphis State, 94-91, in double
overtime and St. Louis edged
Wichita State, 73-72, in overtime.
In other games, Houston
whipped Lamar Tech, 93-74;
Santa Clara defeated NevadaReno, 99-85; and Manhattan
edged Connecticut, 86-83, in the
first game of the doubleheader
at Madison Square Garden.

•

II

Tonight's Games

Tournament Finals

•
•

The Meigs Eighth Grade
cagers were defeated by
Gallipolis Thursday in the semifinals of the Meigs Jr. High
Invitational tournament, 26-24.
At the half-time break, Meigs
was leading 14-6, but Coach
Dean Mason's boys rallied in
the third quarter to go ahead 1918 at its end. No more than two
points separated the two teams
from the third quarter on.
For the winners, Jim Justice
had 9 points, Jim Niday 8, Tom
Valentine 6, Mikd Watson 2 and
Mike Sickles 1.
For Meigs, Greg Donahue led
all scorers with 11, Danny

•

Dodson had 6, Perk Ault 4, Steve
Walburn 2 and Tim Colburn 1.
Gallipolis played without its
regular center, John Groth, who
is ill with the flu.
Meigs will play Nelsonville at
2:23 p.m. Saturday in the
consolation game.
In the second game Marietta
downed Nelsonville 39 to 30 for
the other berth in the finals
Saturday at 4 p.m.
For Marietta Bob Gebczky
had 11 points, Ron Everick and
Jan Hall 9 each, Brad Burke 6,
Jim Brockmier and Dave Casto
2 each.
For Nelsonville Kirk Inman

Class A Action
Starts Saturday

Four Southern Valley Athletic
Conference cage teams will see
action Saturday night in the
opening round of the Class A
Sectional Tournament at Meigs
High School.
Kyger Creek (3-15) will meet
Southern (8-10) in the opening
contest at 7 p.m
During the regular season,
Southern defeated the Bobcats
twice, 53-49 at Racine and 73-59
': at Cheshire.
Bobcats
Coach Joh
offense
hold a sligh
lfe Jr.'s
,. while Coach
a tighter
Tornadoes Jl
defense.
During the season, KC scored
1,143 points while permitting
1,264. Southern, in winning its
: eight games, scored a total of
972. The Tornadoes permitted

•

•...

1,024 points.
The winner will meet topseeded Eastern ( 15-3) on Thursday, March 4.
North Gallia's rugged Pirates
will meet winless Southwestern
in the final game.
Second-seeded North Gallia
moves into tourney play with a
14-3 record. The Pirates scored
a total of 1,323 points while
holding their opponents to 973
points, tops in the SVAC.
The Pirates, however, played
one less game than Eastern.
Southwestern's offense
scored only 781 points while its
defense allowed 1,450 points.
The winner will meet the
winner of the KC-SouthernEastern contest for the tournament championship and right
to move to the Chillicothe
District Tournament.

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Amerka's favorite fertilizer
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Keeps it that way longer too,
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.:

Alfred
Social Note.~
Sunday School attendance on
Feb. 21 was 51, the offering
$19.92. Worship services were
held at 11 o'clock with the Rev.
Lavender bringing the message
from Habakuk 2:18-20. "There
is worship of images or symbols
in the world today. Religion
provides hope and justification.
God knows all about us - he
wants our todays and our
tomorrows."
The Women's Society held its
regular meeting on Tuesday
evening, Feb. 16 at the home of
Clara Follrod and Nina
Robinson, with an attendance of
13, Nellie Parker, president,
had charge of the meeting
which opened with prayer by
June Stearns . The hymn,
"Stand Up, Stand Up for
Jesus," was sung.
A total of 15 sick and shut-in
calls were reported. A card
from David and Linda Williams
was read thanking the society
for the fruit cake sent them for
Christmas..
A communication was read
from the District President,
Beulah Ballard, giving some of
the high points to be remembered this year. The meeting
place schedule was rearranged
due to sickness in two of the
homes. An order has been
received for rugs; and vanilla
and gelatin were sold at the
meeting.
Osie Mae Follrod led the
program on "Cuba" - A Study
in the Reality of Risk, with
Nellie
Parker,
Florence
Spencer and June Stearns
taking the parts of three Cuban
mothers, in a dialogue form.
"Love Divine," was sung,
prayer and scripture from 1st
Jolm 4:7-21, by Alma Swartz .
Background
information
about the church in Cuba was
given by Thelma Henderson. A
reading, "Washington, a Godly
Statesman" and a poem were
read by Nina Robinson. A
program is being prepared for
World Day of Prayer on March
5 with Thelma Henderson,
leader.
Lovely refreshments were
served in keeping with the St .
Valentine and Washington's
Birthday, by the hostesses. The
next meeting will be held at the
home of Genevieve Guthrie on
Tuesday evening, March 16 with
an Easter program to be furnished by the various members.
Several local families attended services and visited at
Ewing's Funeral Home from
Saturday evening to Monday at
2 p.m. with family and friends
of Floyd Eugene Well, who met
a tragic death at his home.

5,000 sq ft bag (20 lbs) _5.:45 4.35
10,000 sq ft bag (40 lbs) _9.85 7.95
15,000 sq ft bag (60 lbs)~ 10.9S

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MODERN SUPPLY
399W Mai n St.
992-2164
Pomeroy,Ohio
The Store With "ALL KINDS OF STUFF"
For Pet~ Stnbl P.!&gt; Large &amp; Small Animals Lawn s
f,nrd r-n~

LONNIE COATS, of Meigs was somewhat overshadowed
by big Jim Niday of Gallipolis Thursday in the semi-finals of
the Meigs Jr. High Invitational Eighth Grade basketball
tournament. Gallipolis rallied in the third quarter to win 2624. Meigs plays the consolation game Saturday starting at
2:23p.m.

GREG OONAHUE, Meigs' Eighth Grade team big gun,
gets off a jump shot Thursday closely guarded by Mike
Watson of Gallipolis. The Gallians rallied to pull the game
out, 26-24, and get in the finals Saturday at Middleport Jr.
High at 4 p .m .

Burial was in the Silver Ridge
cemetery.
Mr. and Mrs. Otto Swartz
called on Clara Follrod and
Nina Robinson last Tuesday
evenin!L__

,.iiii.___________llliiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiliiill----.

BAH R CLOTHIERs
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

BIG BIG

20o/o off

w

.
•
....
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led all scorers with 13 points,
Max Pitts and Kevin Canter had
6 each and Frank Standall 2.
BY QUARTERS
Nelsonville
12 17 27 30
Marietta
6 19 29 39
BY QUARTERS
4 14 18 24
Meigs
1 6 19 26
Gallipolis

BIG SAlE

CONTINUES

~ GREA1
sE.\.£.&amp;1'o s~"'"'GS
6\G

ON FAMOUS NAME BRANDS

WINTER WEAR
FOR MEN AND WOMEN

Mr. and Mrs. Clair Woode and
Conni Sue of Circleville, 0.,
spent Saturday evening with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
D. Woode. They later visited
Mr. and Mrs. William Carr and
daughters, before going on to
spend the night with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
White and returning home
Sunday.

CLASS AAA
(At Rio Grande)
7:00p.m.- Athens (15-3) vs.
Meigs (11-7).
8:15p.m.-Jackson (13-5) vs.
Lancaster (7-11).
CLASS AA
(At Alexander)
7:00p.m.- Vinton County (414) vs. Nelsonville-York (7-11).
8:15 p.m. - New Lexington
(2-16) vs. Belpre (5-13).
(At Beaver)
7:30p.m.- Alexander (14-4)
vs. Minford (11-7).
(At Symmes Valley)
7:00p.m. -Oak Hill (0-18) vs.
Ironton ( 7-11).
8: 15 p.m. - Gallipolis ( 4-14)
vs. Rock Hill ( 8-9).
SATURDAY'S GAMES
CLASS A
(At Nelsonville-York)
7:00p.m.- Crooksville (10-7)
vs. Glouster (2-15).
8:15 p.m. - Miller ( 0-8) vs.
Laurelville ( 15-5).
(At Meigs)
7:00p.m. -Kyger Creek (315) vs. Southern (8-10).
8:15p.m.- Southwestern (018) vs. North Gallia ( 14-3).
(At Ironton)
7:00p.m.- Hannan Trace (99) vs. Green (2-15).
8:15-p.m. - Ironton St. Joe (314) vs. Symmes Valley (11-7) .
CLASS AAA
(At Rio Grande)
7:00p.m. - Marietta (6-12)
vs. Logan (3-15).
8:15p.m. - Chillicothe (11-7)
vs. Portsmouth (13-5).
CLASS AA
(At Alexander)
7:30 p.m. - Wellston (4-14)
vs. Warren Local ( 12-6).
(At Beaver)
7:30p.m. - Northwest (1-15)
vs. Wheelersburg ( 14-4) .
(At Symmes Valley)
7:30p.m. - Coal Grove (8-10)
vs. Chesapeake (14-4).

·:.,

·.

·:.

ABA Standings
By United Press International
East
w. L. Pet. GB
Virginia
46 22 .676 ...
36 32 .529 10
Kentucky
New York
32 35 .478 131h
Carolina
29 38 .433 16lh
29 40 .420 17lf2
Pittsburgh
29 41 .414 18
Floridians
West
W. L. Pet. GB
Utah
46 20 .697 ...
Indiana
43 22 .622 2112
Memphis
36 32 .529 11
Denver
23 42 .354 22lf2
Texas
20 45 .308 285fe
Thursday's Results
Virginia 127 Carolina 114
Pittsburgh 129 Floridians 115
Utah 112 Indiana 109
(Only games scheduled)
Friday's Games
Denver at Texas
Memphis at New York
(Only games scheduled)
Ohio High School
Basketball Tournament
Scores
Class AAA
Canton South 71 Canton Timken
64
Perry 63 Alliance 61 (of)
At Cleveland
Cleve. East Tech 129 Cleve. C.
c. 39
Bedford 80 Cleveland Glenville
73
At Lorain
Lakewood 74 Amherst 47
Avon Lake 54 Lorain Admiral
King 53
Class AA
Manchester 59 Waynedale 48
Orrville 58 Loudonville 56 (2 ot)
West Branch 55 East Palestine
51
St . Thomas Aquinas 67 Minerva
62
At Berea
Buckeye 58 Olmsteed Falls 51
Brooklyn 69 Firelands 66
At Warren
Lakeview 63 Aurora 47
At Columbus
Cols. De Sales 66 Jonathan Alder
55
Columbus Ready 86 Heath 39
Marion Elgin 70 Mifflin 61
Bexley 93 Hamilton Township 73
At Westerville
Grandview 49 Circleville 47
Class A
At Mt. Vernon
Newark Catholic 49 East Knox

NHL Standings
By United Press International
East
W. L T. Pfs
43 10 7 93
Basion
37 14 10 84
New York
31 17 12 74
Montreal
31 25 5 67
Toronto
18 33 8 44
Detroit
16 35 11 32
Buffalo
18 36 6 42
Vancouver
, West
W. L. T. Pts
Chicago
39 15 6 84
St. Louis
26 18 16 68
Minnesota
21 27 14 56
Philadelphia
23 28 10 56
Pittsburgh
19 27 15 53
Los Angeles
17 31 11 45
California
17 41 3 37
Thursday's Results
Boston 8 Vancouver 3
Toronto 1 Minnesota 1
St. Louis 3 Detroit 1
Philadelphia 3 Buffalo 2
Montreal 5 Los Angeles 3
(only games scheduled)
Friday's Games
Chicago at California
(only game scheduled)

48

Pleasant 57 Cardington 51
At Lancaster
West Jefferson 77 Amanda
Clearcreek 75

Carmel

··:

. ".·

Pro Standings

AHL Stancungs
By United Press International
East

W. L. T. Pfs.

21 22 12 54
21
25 10 52
19 23
9 49
2029
747
West
W. L. T. Pts.
Baltimore
34 13
5 75
Cleveland
28 19
6 62
Hershey
20 25
9
49
Rochester
19 28
8 46
Thursday's Results
Baltimore 6 Hershey 2
(only game scheduled)
Friday's Games
Cleveland at Montreal
Providence at Quebec
Baltimore at Rochester
(only games scheduled)

Quebec
Montreal
Providence
Springfield

College Basketball ResultsBy United Press International
East
Manhattan 86 Conn 83
Marquette 85 Fordham 80 ot
Syracuse 88 Rutgers 81 2 ot
Providence 74 DePaul 64
South
Tulsa 94 Memphis St. 91 2 ot
Midwest
St. Louis 73 Wichita St. 72 ot
Southwest
Houston 93 Lamar Tech 74
Colo St. 68 New Mexico 67
New Mex St 87 W Texas St 60
Tex El Paso 66 Wyoming 65.

News~ Local Bowling

Aldon Springer and daughters
of Vinton, Va., spent a weekend
with Paul Moore.
Mrs. Douglas Circle and Mrs.
Jack Follrod spent Tuesday
with Mr. and Mrs. James
Cornell of Pomeroy.
Rev. Glenn Bate of near
Marietta called at the home of
Betty Van Meter and Margaret
Ann Johnson recently.
Mr. and Mrs. George Circle
and daughter of New Haven, W.
Va. called on Mary Circle a
recent Sunday.
Mrs. Eunie Brinker was a
dinner guest of Mr. and Mrs.
William Charleton of Racine on
FALCONS ON TOP
Tuesday evening.
NEW YORK (UPI)
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Earl
Fairmont State, which would up Johnson spent a recent evening
its season with a 25-0 record, with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wood
finished first in the final ratings and Waid Johnson of Apple
of the National Association of Grove.
Intercollegiate Athletics
Ralph Lee celebrated his
(NAIA) for the second time in birthday Sunday at the home of
four years.
Mr. and Mrs Robert Lee and
.
·
The F a 1cons po11e d 27 first farmly. Attending were Mr. and
place votes from a 32-member Mrs. Dwight Swepston and
coaching panel to beat out children Mrs James Ingram
·
'
Kentucky State for the top spot. and daughter, Jane, all of
The Falcons also won the honor Columbus, Mrs. Fern Stansbury
in 1968.
and John Ferry of Athens Mr
·
tat
.
. ·
·
E au Cla1re S e of Wisconsin Lee rece1ved several g1fts.
was third followed by Moorhead
Mr. and Mrs. Hayman
St. of Minnesota, Stephen F. Barni tz of Pomeroy and
Austin, Findlay, Ohio, Gardner- William Carleton of Racine
Webb of North Carolina, called at the home of Eunie
Belhaven of Mississippi, Brinker Sunday .
Central State of Ohio, and
Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Taylor
Georgetown of K~_!ltucky. _ _ of McKenzie Ridge, Mr. and
·. Mrs. Frank Hudson and Toni of
THE DAILY SENTINEL
Racine, Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Hudson, Mr. and Mrs. Shelby
DEVOTED TO
INTEREST OF
Pickens and family, all of
MEIGS-MASON AREA
Syracuse, visited at the home of
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
Exec. Ed.
Mr. and Mrs. Allan Taylor.
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
Several of this community
City Editor
Published dai ly e')(cept have been on the sick list.
Saturday by The Ohio Valley
Publishing Company, 111
Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio,
45769. Business Office Phone
~92 -2156 , Ed itorial Phone 992·
2157 .
Second class postage paid at
Pomeroy, Ohio .
National advertis ing
representative Bottinelli ..
Gall agher, Inc ., 12 East 42nd
St., New YorK City, New YorK.
S ub scription
rates:
Delivered by carrier where
available 50 cents per weeK ;
By Motor Route where carrier
service not available: One
month $1.75 . By mail in Ohio'
and W. Va., One year $14.00 .
Six months $7.25. three
months $4.50. Subscription
price includes Sunday Times -

CITY LEAGUE
Feb. 16, 1971
Won Lost
50
14
Lou's Ashland
H-R Firestone
36
28
Cement Block
32
32
Swisher Lohse
32
32
Quality Print
24
40
Buckeye Potato Chips 18
46
First high (3 games) Cement
Block, 2513; Second high, H-R.
Firestone, 2456; Third high,
Quality Print, 2444.
First High Team Game -Cement Block, 889; Second
High, H-R Firestone, 878; Third
High, Lou's Ashland, 850.
First High Ind. (3 games) Bodimer, 628; Second High,
Clatworthy, 573; Third High,
Bailey, 567.
First High Ind. Game Bodimer, 236; Second High, C.
Boyles, 230; Third High, Bailey
212.
POMEROY LANES
EARLY BIRD
February 24, 1971
Pfs

58
Mark
V
52
D. D. Pinnettes
Welker's Maple Lawn
Poultry
36
Evelx-n's Grocery
34
Rawlrngs Dodge
22
Coca-Cola Dropouts
14
.High team series - D. D.
Pmnettes, 2252; . Team High
Game - D. D. Pmnettes 796.
High Ind. Series- Betty Batey,
524; Second High Ind. Series Ma~y
Vo~s 522·
Frrst Htgh Ind. Game - Mary
voss 226; Second high Ind. game
- Betty Batey 221.

2-HOUR
"CLEANING
(UI)(in Request)

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

2"16 E. 2nd
- Pomeroy
Phone 992-5428
\

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Middleport, 0.

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middlrport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 26, 1971
SUPPER PLANNED
A family potluck supper will
be held at Trinity Church in
Pomeroy at 6 p.m. Sunday.
Following the supper, a
program will be presented in
the Sunday school room.
Featured on the program will
be a skit, "The Lord's
Messengers" with roles being
taken by Mrs. Marie Houck as
the Rev. Smith; Mrs. Pauline
Mayer, Mrs. Giltbridges; Mrs.
Alice G~obokar, Mrs. Maloney;
Mrs. LOIS Burt, as Lois Roberts
and Connie Lanning as Johnnie:
Mrs. Ben Neutzling will give a
monologue, "Visitation Pays."

S~ci;~--l President of Ohio Conference
Calendar To Speak in Pomeroy Mar. 13

t

!

The first U.S. So 1die r s'
Home was established in
Washington, DC., on March
3, 1851. Its purpose was to
make a home for invalid and
disabled soldiers.
These are the "dear old golden rule days" at the Clifton, W. Va., Elementary School
about 1914. Teacher is Goldie Withrow. The picture is the property of Mrs. Ray Pickens of
Clifton.

SALE
JEWELIIY
REDUCED
V..-Y2

. .,. . . .

~

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE

...

....1

----~~

!

£

~I

Red Cross Helped when Needed

FtOWERS
For All Occasions·

February 24, 1971
Dear Sir:

We wire flowers everywhere

992-2039
Pome~oy

~

Constructive Letters of Opinion, in good taste, are
welcomed. The editor reserves the right to shorten letters.
All letters must be signed, with a full address, although I
initials may be used upon request.
~

•••E~-'-~-?J/t. U«Ui"L:

99 Mill Street
Middleport, Ohio

.

~

I

.
.'

Flower Shop

Butt&amp;rnut Ave. Pomeroy
Mrs. Millard Van Meter

Several times I have helped with the Red Cross drives and
have always contributed to it, but I never realized how great a job
they do. When my brother died unexpectedly, I immediately
cantacted the Red Cross to locate my nephew, Chucky McCabe.
He was supposed to be in Vietnam but due to change of orders was
at Fort Harrison, Indiana. After 31h hours of calling and
searching, the Red Cross was able to reach him.
I wish to thank the Red Cross and Mrs. Braun for their work
and to remind all that we never miss the water until the well runs
dry.
Florence Richards, Middleport

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

!
Qua •• ry 111 '-raftsm .. nship
Quality In Materials
Quality You Can Trust.
992·5314
Pomeroy,O.
W.N''lin

ZE
0

GS

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

THE

QUALITY
PRINTMiddlepo,.t,
SHOP 0

992-3345

Holzer Medical Center,
First Ave.
and Cedar
St. General visiting hours
2-4 and 7-8 p.m. Maternity
visiting hours 2:30 to 4:30 p.m.
Parents only on Pediatrics
Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Roland L.
Dovenbarger, Gallipolis, a
da ughter , Mr. and Mrs.
Stephen R. Finlaw, Pomeroy, a
daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey
L. Blevins, Thurman, a
daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
D. Barsotti, Gallipolis, a
daughter; and Mr. and Mrs.
Charles G. McComas, Pt.
Pleasant, a son.
Discharges
Donald L. Armentraut, Mrs.
Kenneth R. Blakeman and
infant son, Mrs. Darwood H.
Bond, Mrs. Robert L. Bragg,
Mrs. Genieve B. Cobb, Mrs.
Dennis D. Craig, Mrs. Bertha A.
Evans, Mrs. Larry E. Evans
and infant daughter, David M.
Fetty, Joseph L. Fields.

MONDAY, MARCH 1 · 8 P.M.

ONE SHOW
ONLY

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL

"MUSIC FOR YOUNG AMERICA"
PAUL CALDWELL AND THE CALDWELLS
Combining Great Musical Talent
with a Patriotic Theme Tuned to
Modern Youngsters.
Adults: $1.00
Children: 50c

SPONSORED BY
AMERICAN LEGION
POST NO. 39
POMEROY

DON'T LOOK
FOR

Garland B. Gillingham, Mrs:
Ralph D. Jones, Mrs. Thomas
H. Kearns and infant son, Mrs.
Orville T. King, Mrs. Michael
R. Little and infant son, Mrs.
Musgrave,
Raymond F.
Burleigh F. Oiler, Mrs. Robert
C. Rawlings and infant son, Mr.
W. Earl Saunders, Joseph
Smith, Mrs. Victoria Stacy,
Mrs. Michael A. Tredway and
infant son, Mrs. Lowell W.
Vaughan and infant daughter,
Donald F. Henry, Sue Ellen
Hayes, and Mrs. Raymond
Musgrave.

I

Pomeroy....
}
Personal Notes l

Mr. and Mrs. Norman M.
Hysell of Bashan and Mr. and
Mrs. Dores Arnold, Rock
Springs, were Saturday visitors
of Mr. and Mrs. Norman E.
Hysell and children, Pomeroy
Route 2. On Tuesday the Norman E. Hysell family visited
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Bissell and
children, Lincoln Heights.
John Weeks of Reynoldsburg
came Wednesday for Miss
Genevieve Stobart. He took her
to the brace clinic in Columbus
and then returned her later in
the day.
Dollie Airson, 13 year old
daughter of the Rev. and Mrs.
William Airson, was treated at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Wednesday night for an arm
laceration. Her arm was cut in a
fall into a storm door.
Mrs. Rachel McBride, Mrs.
Susie Fischer, Miss Frankie
Mumaw, Mrs. Agnes White,
Mrs. Myla Hudson and Mrs.
Ada Slack of the Syracuse
United Presbyterian Church
attended the Lenten breakfast
and quiet hour at Trinity
Church, Pomeroy, Wednesday.

Eden News
By Martha Holsinger
Attendance at Eden Sunday
School Sunday was 74.
Douglas Holsinger spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Sol
Bigley and Eddie.
Visiting over the week end
with Mr. and Mrs. -Elden Blake
Jr. and family were Mrs.
Blake's sister, Jean, and Lee
McMurray and Tammy.
Mr. and Mrs. Bethel
Gillenwater, Belpre, spent
Monday evening with Mr. and
Mrs. Virgil Holsinger and
Aleshia Lynn.
Mrs. Sol Bigley and Eddie
visited Thursday evening with
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Fields and
Tony, Reedsville.
Mrs. Martha Holsinger and
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Holsinger
and Aleshia Lynn visited
Thursday evening with Mrs.
Emma Van Meter and family,
Belpre.
Mrs. Roxie Reed visited
Friday with Mrs. Kathleen
Smith.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Holsinger and family spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Alva
Holsinger Jr. and family,
Racine.

DR. KRUMM
The Rt. Rev. John Elbridge
S.T.D.,
Hines,
D.D.,
Presiding Bishop of the
Episcopal Church, USA, will
head
dignitaries
participating in the consecration
of Bishop-Elect John McGill
Krumm as the 6th Bishop of
the Diocese of Southern Ohio.
The Consecration is in Christ
Church, Cincinnati at 10:30
a.m., March 20. He will
succeed the Rt. Rev. Roger
W. Blanchard, who resigned
to become Vice President and
Program Director of the
Executive Council of the
Episcopal Church. Dr.
Krumm was graduated from
U.C.L.A. in 1935, from
Virginia Seminary in 1938,
gained his Ph.D from Yale in
Church History in 1948, with
an honorary S.T.D. from
Kenyon in 1962.

A NOTHER GOOD BUY
FRO M BAKER'S

TROUBLE

To get the full lion's share
of those legal deductions,
look no further! Just take
•yo•Jr tax return to H &amp; R
BLOCK. There's an office
near you. Trained preparers will tame your taxes.
H &amp; R BLOCK- A good
place to place your confidence.

i

HOSPITAL NEWS

~

BOTH
FEDERAL
AND

FRIDAY
AFTER GAME dance,
Wahama High auditorium, 9:30
to midnight Friday with
Jaycees emceeing; junior class
sponsorship.
REVIVAL starting Friday
through March 5, 7:30 each
ev.ening at West Columbia
United Methodist Church. Rev.
Connie Dickens speaking
Friday, Saturday, Sunday;
Rev. Charles Norris, pastor
Racine
Baptist
Church,
speaking March 1 through
March 5. Special music, public
welcome .
SHADE RIVER Lodge 453,
F&amp;AM, 7:30p.m. Friday at hall.
Work in EA Degree, all Master
Masons invited.
SATURDAY
MEIGS BAND Boosters
sponsoring high school dance
party, Saturday, 8 to 11 p.m., at
Meigs Junior High School,
Middleport; Jays will emcee.
SUNDAY
HYMN SING, Sunday, 2 p.m.
at Zion Church of Christ
sponsored by Meigs County
Youth Rally; free will offering,
public invited.
MONDAY
RIVERVIEW PTA Monday,
7:30 p.m . at school; demonstration audio-visual equipment
by teachers; musical number
by fourth and fifth graders;
Swedish dance by Riverview
Girl Scout Trc0op 67. Refreshments.
MEIGS LOCAL Chapter,
OAPSE, Monday, 7:30 p.m.,
Meigs Jr. High, Middleport.
Charles Grant, Gallipolis,
speaker; members and nonmembers invited.
MEIGS CHAPTER DeMolay
Monday 7:30 p.m. Masonic
Temple; council meets at 7 p.m.
RACINE CHAPTER 134 OES
Monday 8 p.m. Masonic Temple
in Racine; initiation practice;
all officers asked to attend.
SALEM CENTER PTA
Monday 7: 30 p.m.; potluck
dinner at 6 p.m.; Grate family
to furnish entertainment, and
special guests to attend. Open
house will be observed.
REVIVAL, Faith Tabernacle
on Bailey Run Road, 7:30 each
evening beginning Monday,
Clair R. Rubble, elder.
POMEROY Garden Club, 1
p.m., Monday, home of Mrs.
Fred Blaettnar with Mrs. E. W.
Coates, assisting hostess.
MIDDLEPORT Garden Club,
2 p.m. Monday, Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
Demonstration on velvet roses
by Mrs. James Titus.
Hostesses, Mrs. B. B. Zeigler,
Mrs. Titus and Mrs. Homer
Russell.
TuESDAY
MIDDLEPORT LODGE 363
F&amp;AM 7:30p.m. Tuesday.
POMEROY CHAPTER 100
OES Tuesday, Masonic Temple
7:45 p .m.; Deputy Grand
Matron Wilma Styer will be
present for a pre-inspection
visit. All members urged to
attend.

Elder Philip Follett of Mount
Vernon, Ohio, president of the
Ohio Conference of Seventh-day
Adventists, will deliver the
Sabbath sermon March 13 at the
Pomeroy Seventh-de:,,· Adventist Church, Mulberry
Heights at 3 p.m.
Follett directs the work of the
Adventist denomination in Ohio.
He is chairman of the executive
committee of the Ohio Conference and of the board of
directors of the church's Mount
Vernon Academy. He is also a
trustee of Lorna Linda Foods,
whose eastern division offices
are in Mount Vernon.
After graduating from La
Sierra College, Riverside,
Calif., Follett entered the
PHILIP FOLLETI'
ministry of the Seventh-day
Adventist Church, serving California. He is also a graduate
several pastorates in Southern of the Theological Seminary at

NEW HAVEN -The New
Haven
Woman's
Club
celebrated "Guest Month" with
a buffet supper in the club
rooms at the library. A patriotic
theme was used by the
hostesses, Mrs. Charles Dodd,
Mrs. Dan Edwards, Mrs.
Robert Gurtis, Mrs. Mark Ward
and Mrs. Karl Wiles.
Mrs. Jack Flesher, Fine Arts
chairman, presented a musical
program featuring Miss Becky
Paugh and Miss Louellen
Roush, students from Wahama
High School accompanied by
Mrs. William Russell.
Mrs. Charles H. Smith,
president, appointed Mrs. Paul
Scally, Mrs. 0. C. Campbell and
Mrs. K. H. Ford to the
nominating committee and
Mrs. Kenneth Thompson as
chairman c;f the annual dinner.
Other members and guests
present were Mrs. John Wolfe,
Mrs. Louis Karschnick, Mrs.
Chet Curry, Mrs. Maysel
Clevenger, Mrs. Donald F.
Roush, Mrs. David Dewhurst,
Mrs. Eugene Hester, Sr., Mrs.
George Ingels, Mrs. Tom
Hoffman, Mrs. Phil Batey, Mrs.
John Morgan, Mrs. Donald

t

A THOUGHT
~FOR TODAY
+:

t

~sermons.

iC

•~
•~

- Anonymous

i

PORTABLE TV

picture measured diagonal/y; 100 sq. ln.

~

makes the hours go by a lot nicer

iC

-tc

•

This personal
toteable has a
screen size big
enough for the
whole family
to
enjoy.
Private
Listening
Earphone
included.
Built.in carry
handle. Handle
Impact Plastic
cabinet
with
Walnut grain
finish.
147/a"
wide,
151fa "
high,
11%"
deep.

It's Quick! Easy ~

~

!1
:-tc
ti
+:
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Only
!
Drive-In Window -tc .
!+: 9 A.M.isOpen
!+: ~'
to 7 P.M.
DRIVE-IN
BANK IN G

-tc
-tc

(Continuously)

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ic'l

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Other Banki~g Hours 9 to
i( and 5 to 7 as usual on~
i( Fridays.
i(.

-tc

-

! _FARMERS BANJ( · :·j

tt and SAVINGS CO. t~.
POMEROY, OHIO
Member FDIC
Member Federal
ReserveSystem

~

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AMERICA'S LARGtST T~X SERVICE WITH OVER 5000 OFFICES

~

.._..-------------1
WERNER RADIO &amp; T.V.

i(

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MIDDLEPORT, 0.

UALITY PRODUCTS BY GLIDDEN- - - spred®-

A Beautiful

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All-Purpose·
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e
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Greatest Thing
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MIDDLEPORT, 0.

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• Profe5Sional results

FURNITURE

•

CADET II

• . • • •t

antea

304 E. Main Street
Ph. 992-3795
Pomeroy, Ohio

The Good Life
Begins With
a Keepsake

14'

teach us more of the love +:
of God than a thousand il:

quickly

IIJ 7 1

62.50
MAN ' S 12.5

smart, distinctive styling

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• 5-way written guarIll BI.. OC K

WED RING

Toteables •

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6

VOYAGE
1150 TO 225

MOTOROLA®
.

e

If

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jl!lilli!l

•

0

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'

Bumgardner, Mrs. Jerry Scott,
For your engagement, choose
Mrs. Harold Rose, Mrs. John Keepsake-the beautiful begin·
Thorne, Mrs. David Roush, ning of a lifetime together. Every
Mrs. Earl Ewing, Mrs. Dorsey Keepsake·is exquisitely crafted in
14K gold and guaranteed against
L. Roush and Mrs. Velma UHllffiOIIU lOSS.
Roush.
Mrs. Donald F. Roush,
Educational Chairman, announced the program for March
would be a surprise on Tuesday,
Mar. 23. Members should invite
guests. Hostesses will be Mrs.
Eugene Hester, Sr., Mrs.
Charles Howard and Mrs.
George Ingels. Members are
asked
to notify
the hostesses of .__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. .
the number
of guests.

........... ¥ ......¥ •.·.

$

STATE

•

Club's Guest Month Observed

i(

SERVICES SET
There will be no evening
worship services at the First
Southern Baptist Church in
Pomeroy Sunday as members
will be conducting baptismal
services at the French City
Baptist Church in Gallipolis.

Andrews University, Berrien
Springs, Michigan. For four
years before coming to his
present post, he was director of •
the Department of Lay Activities and Welfare services of
the Adventists' Southern
California Conference in
Glendale. He is married and has
two children, David and
Lorraine.

290

North Second Avenue

Middleport. Ohio

�s- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 26,1971
~------~

Workers for Sale Announced

• Girl Scout
Diary
•

•
a

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 S percent to 6 percent
depending on the amount
and
length
of
time
deposited.

Meigs Co. Branch

@
Of The Athens County

•

Savings &amp; Loan Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

RALLY PLANNED
A pool rally will be held
Sunday at the Mount Moriah
Baptist Church, Middleport
beginning at 2 p.m. Choirs from
several area churches will be
presenting special music during
the afternoon and a Columbus
minister will be the guest
speaker. The rally will be
followed with a fellowship hour
in the basement of the church.
The public is invited to attend.
TAKEN TO HOLZER
The Racine E-R squad went
at 10:50 a.m. Thursday to the
Delmar Grady residence, Long
Bottom Route 1, for Evelyn
Marie Grady, age 2, who was
taken to Pomeroy and transferred to an ambulance which
took her to the Holzer Medical
Center. She was believed to
have been suffering from
pneumonia.
MEETING CALLED
Mrs. Margaret Ella Lewis,
president of the Middleport
Alumni Association, has called
a meeting of the officers,
executive committee, and
chairman of committees for
Tuesday night at 7:30 at the
Meigs Junior High School

Wilma Lee Hunter to Wed
Mr. and Mrs. M. B. Hunter, Cheshire, are announcing the
forthcoming marriage of their daughter, Wilma Lee, to Mr.
Joseph Ray Gilkey, son of Mr. Clarence Gilkey of Middleport
and Mrs. Ruth Gilkey of Columbus. The bride~lect
graduated from Kyger Creek High School in 1967 and is
presently employed at Jack's Dairy Bar in Middleport. Her
fiance attended Middleport High School and is employed at
Williams Coal Co. Wedding plans are incomplete.

N. W. COMPTON. 0. D.

Several new toys will be
provided for the pediatrics
department
of
Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the
American Legion Auxiliary of
Feeney-Bennett Post 128.
Meeting Wednesday night at
the hall, the unit voted to spe d
$25 on the project now. Contributions to the heart fund and
the American Red Cross drive
of $5 each were made. Mrs. Etta
Will, Mrs. Helen Kennedy, Mrs.
Emma Wayland, Mrs. Erma
Hendricks, Mrs. Valsia Roush,
Mrs. Patricia Might, Mrs. Della
Stahl and Mrs. Geraldine
Kessinger volunteered to assist
with the house-to-house canvass
in Middleport for the Red Cross.
Plans were made for a
community service party to be
held at the Southeastern Mental
Health Center on March 17. On
March 18, the unit will join Post
39 for the a nual American
I..:egion birthday party. At that
time the 50th anniversary of the
unit will be observed with
recognition of charter members .
Delegates and alternates to
Buckeye Girls State were
selected during the meeting
with the names of the girls to be
released following their acceptance by the American
Legion Auxiliary. Sandwiches,
cookies, and candy will be
provided by the auxiliary
members for the district junior
community service party at the
Athens Mental Health Center on
March 11.
Mrs. Kessinger told of the
response to her appeal for hats
and pocketbooks and noted that
more are needed. These are
taken to the women at the
Health Center. Mrs. Osby
Martin, a guest, was present
and awarded 50 hour pins for
voluntary work at the Center to
Mrs. Geraldine Kessinger, Mrs.
Erma Hendricks, Mrs. Rosa
Searls, a nd Mrs. Helen Ken-

nedy. The late Hazel Morris
also qualified for a 50 hour pin .
The charter was draped in
memory of Mrs. Worley Howell.
It was reported that the unit
now has 138 members with 29
being juniors.
James Roach of Middleport
met with the group to discuss
drug abuse.
Reported ill were Mrs .
Beatrice Stewart, Kenny
Johnson, Harry Kauff, Leo
Childs, Frank Murray, L. E.
Triplett, Miss Bess Sanborn,
Homer R1ce and Charles
Withee.
A bake sale was to be held by
the juniors on the Saturday
before Easter was announced.
Proceeds will go toward district
conference expenses. A fish
dinner preceded the meeting.

FilA-\'.\ and CO:-/V.
Fl~ANCI:\G

AVAJLABLJ:;

MODELS AVAILABLE FOR INSPECTION
CALL 992-7129
DALE DUnON

TOM CROW

992-2534

992-2580

992-3433

BIG SAVINGS ON TOOLS!
---

( ~~~--~e
...·."\~'-~~.

·~t~,

C/H

'7100

•7020

1/4" VAR. SPEED DRILL
Trigger locks ol selecled speed from
Rugged ManGrip
handle. I /7 H.P.

0 lo 2250 RPM.

1499

'7250

1/2" REVERSING DRILL

3/8 INCH DRILL
Handles bigger, Iaugher jabs. Well
balanced. Drills 3/4" in hardwood,
3/8" in sleel.
1000 RPM.

Reversing switch permits easy removal

of jammed bils. Top mounled auxiliary
handle. 1/3 H.P.
500 RPM.

95

34

~~ e

'~)111~-~

C/H

IC/H

.,...~ e

1'-~
. . ,w---' . . . ·; \
-..
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cj

1 7510

:: •

'r ·~--,

-.....-.
I .

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,,. I!

e

-- ,&gt;-

C/H

'7545

UTILITY JIG SAW

3-SPEED JIG SAW

7-1/4" CIRCULAR SAW

P~rfect for fine finisoing of wood, metal

Cuts wood, metal, plastic, c.omposilion

and plashc. 25 sq. in. sanding area.
r_;ne· hond control.

Includes blade, hex wrench and holder.
/7 H.P.

Multr·speed to suit moler&gt;ol. Ouick·
change lilling shoe. Blade, wrench ond

Be&lt;el ond rip od1"slmen's . 1 1/4"
blade rncluded. Cutlinq deplh, Wf
2 3/8" I H P

FINISHING SANDER

1499

501 NYLON

'~~A1'" WH69~0R

CARPET

6.99

~7

~~

.5 '

U-1509

69~

2 ._-'' ..:

C/H

t

.

,_

,

STAPLE GUN WITH
FREE STAPLE TACKER

.

J

REG.

13.95

C/N

1097

Heo,y·duly

Slapler

sloples
FREEl
All-purpose Slople locker, PLUS 1,000
sloples'

,.~

I~

e ·r·

MIDDLEPORT
cafeteria in Middleport. Plans
992-2635
will be reunion.
made for the annual . ._ _ PH.
_ _ _ _ _ _ __,
alumni

I
I

FUEL CYLINDER

.

WITH
COUPON

REG. 1.59

ADDITIONAL OR

I

l!::::~g~iOUT •COU~ON ~

SINGLE LEVER FAUCET
SPRAY AND STRAINE

(Hw•)J;{e):(lf..
JIG SAW
BLADE
ASSORTMENT

··

129

111111

(,;

REG. 2.29

·~

y"h·
/•'

.

J9BB

lndudP.~ o rotc.hel wrenclt, ·~'JC.~

Rubber bumper ol moulh of chrome
plated ca se c.ushions blrJde return, re
duces end bro::r;~'J'J':
Reg 6 .50

444

ets,

screwdrivers, pliers,

od

jiJstoble wr10tnc hes., punc.hes 'lnd
rhi'ie l~

All podP.d in u rnetol
hip -rool lool bo1 and all fully
warrt:mtl!d

CtN

'J J)

10" ADJUSTABLE
WRENCH

lop'!r~d fltJndlr: •pu:r~ bt:!tter 9r1rJ 10
turn )!iJhhrun nw·.~ holtc;. I IJ8 r;w

openin9 Peq

PROPANE TORCH
(jhls tt'I~II'Jntly

wdh OI'J pr~ h~rJtin9 t)r
nrtmmq Burn'i. rJ! I?Sf}'" . tJp trJ IS
hours Reg 1 4'}

4

97

26" HAND SAW
~•Hit - in

BIT BRACE

r,r,r~rirJI

qurJI•ty w•th

·.trur.tion _ rlhorp. •• , ~ t lf:,:l~1

•,t,_.,.J

rr..r1

~lrHdwrJrJrl

') r,r,jr,f
r_lr 1•,r;

torHodlf•

hrJnri lt::, ~f'!t~ TWJ

J44

rrJ!rh•·f

qtJIJr

''~ '

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Ohio Valley Plumbing &amp; Heating
Pomeroy

HIGH SPEED DRILL SET
J] ~WJh ·,p• · ~o::d .'•· •· t ..f. lh H'
1/liJ .. tr_.. :j4'•n1J~h •lr'l''''
R ?fJ

LIMIT 4 PER
CUSTOMER AT
THIS SALE PRICE
f•un urJ •,I••d N•d,
' '' ' ' " ' :n t• , flll!

.l•~ r

180 Mulberry Ave .

992 -2115

Pomeroy

WE SALUTE
Future Farmers of America Week

fy (f· YI:f'ol''• ! -H
I ltJ f'J""'"'Jd h•·rJff,

257
REG. 89¢

7~

(.rJntr;ifl')
~il'JS

(t)~~ j:I~IJ

SUGAR RUN MILLS

4

f!IJ',

Ht,tt\.o

If)" •.wt· f'l'

kwj 4 4'1

~
2' 4' PERFORATED HARDBOARD
Field Seeds Ready Now

J87

{HWIJ

~
SPECIAL

A sink designed to make your kitchen lovelier, your_ work
easier! Many modern features to give you max1mum
convenience for m1nimum cost Soft sati n stainle ss steel
surface will never crack, chip, peel or stain. Sound
deadening undercoating . Self -rim simp lifies installation
Twin basins and aerator faucL t. Size is 33" x 22" (fits a 32"
x 21" cutout)

~ I?

FULLER

\

~

l.!::::======:-=-=;::_-....:.-.. : :. . -·--:::======:=;

PARKER

.

I 99~

STAINLESS
STEEL SINK
WITH

I
I

6-l/4"

CRESCENT

16' TAPE RULE

~ROP~NE.TOR~

u .175o

2.49
2.69

f-est, smooth cui!. For gcncrt'JI
C/H rurpose rtpping, UO!:.S cultiny.

".::::;-~ ~

S.IC. WAYNE

THO trigger poliitions p~rmil •n10tont
swilth &gt;n'J from 100 lo 140-woll heals.
P99 8.?5

6- 1 2"

LUFKIN

'A-.C,N

SOLDERING GUN

. -·

shoots

wherever you'd drive a nail

FURNITURE

I

1650

u

'

t \ \ "

ARROW

JNGELS

··~

~ .~~~"~~,?

Slirs up lo a go lion con. Se lf-cleaning
r ils oil size drills.

65 pc. TOOL SET

With foam rubber pad
and completely in sta ll ed. Gold, green,
blue and red.

CIRCULAR SAW
BLADES

I I I

., -:-&amp;......I

Atloch grinding, buHing wheel&lt;, wire
brushes lo 1/4" &amp; I /2" dril ls.

'"'

3495

~~~d~rPi.ncluded

PAINT MIXER

SQUARE YARD

IN ALL ANALYSIS

Edward Baer, owner

TO

WINTER SALE!

CARPET

FERTILIZER

992 -2036

SHOW YOU HOW

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

u~~

BUY I

GREEN HILL HOMES CAN

LARRY SPENCER

OPTOMETRIST

Toys Will be Provided
Children at Hospital

WE'LL SAVE YOU 1l10NEY

•

The schedule is announced for Thursday and Friday, March 3,
workers to serve at a rummage 4 and 5, in the Stark building
sale to be held on Wednesday, across from the Pomeroy Post
Office. The sale will be from f
a.m. to 3:30 p.m. each day,
sponsored by the Syracuse
PTA.
FACTS
Workers for Tuesday who will
pick up and prepare for the sale
are Daisy Patterson, Minnie
Harris, Etta Mae Norton, Faye
Hamilton and Beverly Chapman. The morning shift March 3
includes Dorothy Amberger,
Carolyn Roush, Jeanette Duffy;
afternoon shift, Helen Hubbard,
Lou Ferrell and Marcia Arnold.
Workers March 4 are Faye
Hamilton, Jonetta Davis,
The peacock, or peafowl, Dorothy Fischer, morning;
is a bird of the pheasant Beverly Chapman, Shirley
family which is considered Houston, Minnie Harris, afsacred in India. The World ternoon.
A I man a c say5 that the
Workers on the final day,
green peafowl is considered
by many people to be the March 5, are Etta Mae Norton,
most beautiful bird. During Dorothy Forbes, Maribelle
courtship the male displays Warner, morning; Janice
ils colorful feathers in a Lawson, Mildred Pierce and
magnificent fanlike array.
Charlotte Nease, afternoon.
More volunteers are needed.

WORLD ALMANAC

By Charlene Hoeflich

POMEROY JUNIORS 247
Pomeroy Juniors Troop 247 and guests went to the Skate-aWay Rink Thursday night for a skating party. Each member of
the troop invited three friends. Transportation was provided by
Mrs. Keith Whitlatch, leader, Mrs. Ivan Woods, Mrs. Carl Roach,
Mrs. Sally Smith, and Mrs. John Sebo.
Scouts going were Bonnie Woods, Debbie Hartenbach, Trudy
Roach, Karen Smith, Cheryl Smith, Becky Thomas, Mary
Blaettnar, Anita Ruschel, Debbie Osborne, Patty Warner, Diane
Colter, and Kim Sebo.
POMEROY TROOP 61
Kim Taylor was elected new scribe at a recent meeting of
Troop 61 at the Pomeroy Elementary School.
The girls discussed the cookie sale now in progress and had a
program on manners. Badge work was reviewed by Mrs. April
Smith and Mrs. Linda Guinther, leaders, for Tammy Guinther,
Cindy McKinney, Cathy Blaettnar, Anna McKinney, Judy Hall,
Paige Smith, Jane Sisson, Sharri Osborne, Sherri Mitch, Kim
Taylor, Becky Houdashelt, and Debbie Harbrecht.
A hike was planned for Saturday and cookies provided by
Judy Hall were served. Games were conducted by Judy and Anna
McKinney.
SALISBURY CADE'ITES 208
A four-weeks ceramic course was completed by the Salisbury
cadettes Tuesday night. Mrs. Tom Martin of Rutland was instructor for the group.
Each of the girls made a Zodiac sign necklace along with
several other pieces. Sandy Curtis made miniature horses and a
vase; Pam Nottingham, a hillbilly figurine and a creamer; Dollie
Airson, a creamer and two "brat" dolls; Shellie Clark, a bud vase
and the "brat" dolls, and Kim Ohlinger, a fallen knight figurine,
•
and a tidbit tray.
IIIW'
SALISBURY BROWNIES 220
Cooking lessons were started Thursday by the Salisbury
Brownies at the Colwnbus and Southern Ohio Electric Co. with
Miss Joanna Distler as the instructor. The course will be continued over a four week period and concluded with a tea for
parents.
MIDDLEPORT JUNIORS TROOP 5
Plans for the observance of Girl Scout Week, May 7-13, were
made and arrangements were completed for ceramic classes
with Mrs. Russell Mills at Wednesday night's meeting of Troop 5.
•
The ceramic classes will begin on March 6 and ccontinue for
four weeks. On Girl Scout Sunday the girls will attend church in a
group at the Middleport First Baptist. On Monday the girls will
work on individual projects toward their homemakers badge and
on Tuesday, a citizenship day, a visit to the Meigs County Court
House has been planned.
Wednesday of that week which is designated health and
safety day, the scouts will clean up the Meigs Junior High and
Middleport Ele nentary school grounds. In observance of international frie tdship day, the girls will visit the bookmobile
•
headquarters where Mrs. Vilma Pikkoja, a native of Estonia, will
teach them a song and dance .
A visit to the Pomeroy National Bank to view the art show there
has been planned for March 12, and the week of activity will be
concluded with a hike and wiener roast on Saturday.
Mrs. Richard Vaughan, leader, announced that cooking classes
for the group
gin on March 31 at 3:30p.m. and continue
through April 2 A
age sale was planned for early April
ceeds to go for camperships.
with a portion of

Residents are asked to take Daisy Patterson or call 992-57!)0
rummage to the home of Mrs. for pick-up.

q

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POMEROY CEMENT BLOCK CO.
The Department Store Of Building Since 1915

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 26, 1971

Bargains, Bargains, and More Bargains In Sentinel Classifieds
r---------------------------1

!Helen Help Us!
I

I

I

By Helen Bottel

COMPARISON SHOPPING
URGE NOT EXCLUSIVELY FOR MEN
Dear Helen:
I have a wonderful husband.
We have no sex hang-ups. We
love each other in a way that is
complete and beautiful. I'm
happy!
So why is it, Helen, that I find
myself thinking "How would it
be with another man?" I have
no one in mind. I love only Sam.
Mate swappers disgust me.
I'm sometimes frightened by
my thoughts. Am I not-normal?
- I AM CURIOUS, STUPID
Dear Stupid:
Though many don't admit it,
women aren't much different
from men in their submerged
(well not always) urge for
comparison shopping. But
totally married gals only
wonder occasionally ...And their
mates seldom know when that
"guilty imagination" rates
them special pampering at
home.
Don't worry, "Stupid." You
might label yourself - "I Am
Normal, Curious." -H.
Dear Helen:
After reading the letter from
"Shocked by Elderly Belles",
about older women who would
date him but not marry him, I
had to write.
I am 68, going with a 71-yearYOUNG man who figures he's
too old to get married but - an
affair with me? That's different!
I fear the spry old party wants
to use me.
So if you could please provide
the name and address of
"Shocked," I might change his
mind about elderly belles and
rings. BELLE FROM

Voice
along

I

1
I

WANT AD'
INFORMATION
DEADLINES

5 P.M. Day Before Publication
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
Will be accepted until9 a.m. for
Day of Publication
REGULATIONS

Notice
ATTENTION ladies! Would you
like to try a wig on in the
privacy of your own home?
You can. Just call us. We also
have the Mink Oil Kosmetics.
Koscot, of course. Distributors, Brown's~ Phone
Middleport 992-5113.
. 12-31-tfc

For Sale
GUN
CABINET,
early
American
style,
7-gun
capacity, large glass door
with locks, also, shell drawer
with lock, 2 boot doors. Phone
992-2936.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _2_·25-3tc
HAY, S. E. Trussell. Phone 9493839 .
2-25-3tc

The Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads
DUBUQUE
deemed objectional. The
publisher will not be responsible
Dear Belle:
for more than one incorrect
AUCTION - WHEN? Each
Sorry, the belle tolls not for insertion.
Friday night, 7 p.m. Where? BOY'S ALL weather coal, size
RATES
him! I don't give out names and
For Want Ad Service
Hayman's Auction House, 12. Two formals, like new,
addresses unless I know the 5 ~ents per Word one insert1on
Laurel Cliff on new Rt. 7 . size 9-10. lronrite automatic
Minimum Charge 1Sc·
people involved. Too risky.- H.
Pomeroy-Middleport
By· ironer with chair. Phone 992·
12 cents per word three
pass.
•· 3933
consecutive insertions.
2-21-6tp
2 7-tfc
18 cents per word six conDear Helen:
secutive insertions.
Something really wonderful
25 Per cent Discount on paid· RUBBER STAMPS made to 21 INCH Zenith color television,
console model. Hi-fi sound.
order. 24 hour service. Dwain
happened to me last night and ads and ads paid within 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS
Touch tuning, new picture
or Wilma Casto, Portland,
I'd like to share it. An old boy
&amp; OBITUARY
tube, one year warranty.
Ohio.
$1.50 for 50 word• minimum
friend called and wanted to talk Each
2-12-90tc
Phone Mason 773-5933.
additional word 2c.
2-21-6tc
to me.
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per WILL GIVE piano and orgar1
You see, two years ago, he Advertisement.
lessons in my home. Phone
WHY WAIT
refused to marry me for the
OFFICE HOURS
992-3666.
8:30a.m.
to
5:00p.m.
Daily,
8·16-tfc
simple reason he didn't love me,
BUY YOUR
6:30a.m. to 12:00 Noon
though I was to have his baby. Saturday.
FERTILIZER
I hated him for a long time
Lost
Now
and get the early
because I hated myself. Then I
In Memory
LADY'S gold wedding ring with
Discount
sets, vicinity of G and J Auto
found out I wasn't so bad. Stupid IN MEMORY of our father,
Parts
and
Kroger's,
Bag, Bulk and Liquid Fermaybe, but not bad. What I'm
James Hazelton, Sr., who
Pomeroy, last Tuesday. tilizer, all available now.
passed away six years ago,
trying to say is that as soon as I
Reward.
Contact
Ruby Take delivery now from our
Feb.
26:
lost this hate for myself,
Brewer, Long Bottom, phone area warehouse at Pomeroy.
Do not ask us if we miss him,
Chester 985-3554.
stopped feeling sorry for "me," For there's still a vacant place.
2·21·6tp
POMEROY
I found literally hundreds of Often we think we hear his
J. W. Carsey, Mgr.
footsteps
people who have problems that
Phone 992-2181
Female Help Wanted
And we
his smiling face.
made mine look silly. I love Days of see
sadness still are with
FEMALE. Women interested in FRIGIDAIRE, full size electric
again! I love human beings
us.
working in cable t~levision. range. Good condition.
because that's what we all are. Tears of silence often flow,
Contact Dr. Harold D. Brown, Reasonable. Phone 992-2773.
his memory keeps him near
And that phone call last night But
Phone 992-2878.
2-24-3tp
US,
2-25-6tc - - - - - - - - - - brought it all into focus. I'm Since he left us six years ago.
FOR QUICK sale, two 12-foot
Sadly missed by children and
able to forgive!
produce cases, 12 foot dry and
grandchildren.
Help Wanted
I'm so glad I'm alive that I
12 foot refrigerated, $200.
2-26-ltp
RELIABLE babysitter, in my Phone 992-3975.
sometimes want to walk down
home, 5 days a week from 8
2-24-4tc
the street and say to the first Notice
a.m. to 5 p.m. Phone 742-5042. - - - - - - - - - - person I meet, "Hey, you're
2-25-3tc DON'T PUMP your sluggish
septic tank. Get Klean-Em·
great! Aren't YOU glad to be WILL PICK up merchandise
All Septic tank cleaner.
and take to auction on a WAITRESS. Can work any
alive too?"
shift. Apply in person. Joe
Landmark Farm Bureau,
percentage basis. Call Jim
But I suppose people would
Rizer, manager, Martin
Pomeroy.
Adams, auctioneer. Rutland.
2·26 ltc
Restaurant.
think I was crazy or something.
Phone 742-4461.
2-25-Jtc
9-23 tfc
- FOR PEACE AND LOVE
FIREWOOD. Gerald King,
Dear For:
Shade. Phone 696-1287.
Wanted
To
Buy
2-26-6tp
No, I don't believe people
OLD
furniture,
dishes,
bras~
BAND, Friday and Saturday
would think you are crazy or
beds,
etc.
Write
M.
D.
Miller,
nights, 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Hi-7
NEW 4-GALLON
garden
Rt.. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call
something. You'd be surprised
Club.
sprayer. Clean bee hives.
992-6271.
2-25-3tp
how one person's "aliveness"
Platform scales. Phone New
9·1-tfc
Haven 882·2852.
makes others around her glad T. L. OSBORNE motion picture
2-26-3tp
Black Magic is to be shown OLD UPRIGHT pia11os, any
they're alive.
Saturday,
Feb.
27,
at
the
Your letter did that for me.
condition, as long as have not ONE LARGE Ayrshire heifer
Pentecostal AGsembly, 7:30
due to freshen soon. Also,
been wet.". Paying $10 each.
Keep on sharing your wealth,
p.m. on Rt. 124, four miles
700x18 truck tires. Phone 949·
First floor only. Mondays will
Honey!- H.
from Racine.
be pick-up day. Write, giving
3073.
2·25-2tc
2-26-5tc
good directions. Witten Piano
Company, Box 188, Sardis,
DANCE, Red's Club, Mason, W.
Ohio 43946.
POOL table, balls, rocks, cues.
Va., Friday and Saturday.
by his many friends and we
8-20-tfc
Phone 992-2360.
Featuring
The
Saints,
staroffer to his stately widow,
2·26-tfc
ting at 9 p.m.
Molly, and his only brother,
2-25-ltp
For
Rent
BEATEN down carpet paths go
Jerry, our deepest sympathy
UNFURNISH.ED 3-room
when Blue Lustre arrives.
and prayers.
apartment. Phone 992-2288.
Rent electric shampooer, $1.
Arthur Godfrey calmly offBaker Furniture, Middleport.
1-31-tfc
2·24-6tcp
handed on radio that the Fern9 to 1
Lib got that way because
Saturday, Feb. 27
8x35 TRAILER with tip out. One 3 BEDROOM house, newly
women just got tired of dancing
Music by
bedroom. Darwin vicinity.
decorated, new bathroom,
backwards - as if that nifty
Adults only. Call 992-6452.
modern kitchen with new
The Mavericks
2·26-tfc
joke had not been created by TV
cabinets, new gas furnace,
Fish
Fry
&amp; Refreshments
large garden space. Priced
writer-comedian Pat Mcstarting at 6 p.m.
for quick sale. Also, one
5 ROOM and bath furnished
Cormack, right on the air
apartment size refrigerator.
apartment, Chester. Inquire
several times ... The latin
Albert Hill, Racine, Ohio.
at Newell's Sunoco Station.
Phone 949-2261.
maestro Tito Puentes are
Phone Chester 985-3350.
2-23-6tc
rehearsing lullabies (August).
2·7-tfc
Members &amp; Guests
Actor Peter Marshall's son,
COAL furnace, $25. Phone 949·
Invited
FURNISHED and unfurnished
3656.
Pete Jr., will get on TV in a
apartments. Close to school.
2-23-6tp
different business than pop:
Phone 992·5~34.
The L. A. Dodgers just signed HOME sewing. Phone 992-5327.
10-18·tfc 1950 FORD tractor, good con.
2-23-30tc
.,...-----------dition. Phone 992-5058.
Jr.... More good nightclub
3
ROOM
apartment,
all
electric,
2-23-6tc
news: The immensely gifted GUN SHOOT every Saturday
wall
oven,
table
top
range,
night,
6
p.m.
near
Racine
Caterina Valente stars at the
slainless steel double sink, COAL, limestone. Excelsio:
Planing Mill. Assorted meats.
food disposal. Nice clean
Americana's Royal Box Mar. 2
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
Sponsored by Syracuse Fire
apartment. See to appreciate.
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
through 20 ... No gal we've ever
Department.
Located
in
Pomeroy.
Phone
4-9-tfc
2-24-3tc
known in show biz works as
Ga IIi polis 446-9539.
2-2-tfc
hard and efficiently as
USED HEATING
INCOME TAX service, daily
Caterina: Not only does she star
EQUIPMENT
except Sunday. Evenings by HOUSE, 4 rooms, bath,
Coal furnaces, $35. Blowers,
appointment only. Phone 992·
in cabarets, on TV, has a TV
basement
and
attic
storage.
$25. Oil Burners, $50. Gas
2272. Mrs. Wanda Eblin,
series in Europe, but has her
Nice yard and driveway.
Floor Furnaces, $25. Coal
located on Rt. 7 bypass, one
Available
March
1.
Phone
992·
own disc jockey show in Japan
Stoker, $50. Arnold Brothers,
mile south of fairgrounds.
2780
or
992-3432.
E. Main St., Pomeroy.
(taped in Japanese in a W.
2·7·30tc
2-18-tfc
2-18-tfc
German studio), writes a
DOZER WORK. Septic tanks,
syndicated fashion column, a
NEW 1970 Zig-Zag Sewing
leach beds. Phone 949-4761. For Sale or Rent
Machine n original factory
10-18-tfc 5 ROOM HOUSE for rent in
cookbook (in German featuring
carton. Zig-Zag to make
Chinese dishes) plus a few
Syracuse. Two lots for sale.
buttonholes, sew on buttons,
Call Jacob Turner, Mid·
peripherally profitable Real Estate For Sale
monograms, and make fancy
dleport,
Ohio.
Phone
992-3681.
designs wi lh just the twist of a
distractions for her spare, if
1-26-6tp
single dial. Left in lay-away
any, time.
and never been used. Will sell
Ex marked the spot in Quo NICE HOME, 2 bedrooms, TRAVEL TRAILERS and
for only $47 cash, or credit
campers. Rentals by day,
Vadis: ex-Mayor Bob Wagner dinette and kitchen, bath, 112
terms available. Phone 992week, month. Complete line of
basem~nt,
furnace,
all
5641.
with June Lord, ex-N .J. Gov.
supplies. Reese hitches, truck
2-23-71
utilities available and in
Bob Meyner &amp; missus, ex-Met
or travel trailer mirrors,
house. Also one small 3 room
brake controls, awning ac- ELECTROLUX Vacuum
star Guiseppi De Stafano, on the
house, store building with
cessories, jacks, pie Irons.
Cleaner complete with at.
eve of a Rome trip to cut an storage tanks in for gas
One used 1970 truck camper.
station, four acres or better of
tachments, cordwinder and
album of opera favorites ... Quo
A terrific discount on any new
land with large frontage on
paint spray. Used but in like
travel trailer or camper
Vadis owner Gino Robusti's State Route 7, between
new condition. Pay $34.45
ordered in February for
Chester and Tuppers Plains,
cash or budget plan available.
wife is recuperating in Ft.
delivery at your convenience.
Ohio,
$9,000
down,
balance
in
Phone 992-5641.
Lauderdale, so their wedding monthly payments.
Ask about our Mini-Motor
2-23-71
anniversary the other night 6 ROOM frame house, excellent
Home coming in March. Gaul
Trailer Sales, Inc., Chester,
loomed lonely -until Gino was condition, 3 bedrooms, bath,
KILL TERMITES and yard
Ohio. Phone 985-3832.
serenaded by the usual opera gas furnace, carpeting, white
insects with Arab "You-Do2·1B·9tc
picket fence around house, 3~.
lt." King Builders Supply
stars dining on the premises:
acres of ground, garden, very
Company, Middleport.
Richard Tucker, Mario Sereni, good
buy
at
$8,000.
2·21-60tc
Pets For Sale
Grace Brumby, Renata Tebaldi Welshtown, Minersville, Ohio.
GeorgeS. Hobstetter, Jr.
and Carlos Bergonzi.
REGISTERED
MAtt:
Broker
chihuahua, $125. Phone Real Estate For Sale
Remember the kid who
Phone 985-4186
Chester 985-3887 between 6 HOUSE, 1640 Lincoln Hts.,
or
played Chuck Conners' son on
and ·a p.m.
Hilton
wolfe
Sr.
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
TV's "Rifleman," Johnny
2-25-3tp
Phone 949-3211
10-25-tfc
Crawford'? Well time tears
2-26-3tc
MINIATURE Schnauzers , o1d CONVENIENT but secluded
along, and Johnny has his Army
Poodle puppies. Permanent
building lots on T79 al Rock
service behind him and will co- muscle hasn't kept a lot of
injections and groomed.
Springs. Within walking
star with Kris Nelson in "The businesses from fleeing New
Barkaroo Kennels. Turn right
distance of Meigs High
at Torch, Ohio, 5th house
Resurrection of Bronco Billy," York for the cleaner and safer
School, a 5 minute drive from
right. Phone Coolville 667Pomeroy. Call or see BUI
described as Oscarstuff and a suburbs and exurbs, but it did
3654.
Witte weekends, or after 5
"Western though youthful manage to coax the burgeoning
2-11-30tc
p.m. weekdays. Phone 992·
eyes" ... Marlene Dietrich did No-Cal soft drink firm from
6887.
AKC
REGISTERED
miniature
leaving:
No-Cal's
multimillion2-3-tfc
an 80-minute press conference
Schnauzer, 10112 months old.
at the Miami Beach Playboy dollar plant will rise across the
Well house broken. Loves
Plaza and answered all queries bay from LaGuardia Airport at children. Phone 992-5709.
2-23-6tp
except two - about Greta College Point .. . The jet noise
Garbo and a new film she'll should help it carbonate ... Kirk
Kerkorian, boss of MGM's For Sale
make with Orson Welles.
British star Tommy Steele troubles, said at the Tower Suite WALNUT STEREO radio
combination. Four speed
(now at Caesars Palace) is he's about to build skyscraper
intermixed
changer.
4
buying a soccer team in Blighty hotels in Acapulco .. . The
speaker sound system, dual
$35.00 Down... Now you can paint nudes at handsomest of the whole
volume control. Balance
Acapulco
luxury
community
Balance On
home - just daubing in colors
$66.15. Use our budget terms.
Call 992·3352.
ConveRient
by number (Craft Master) ... In will be D. K. Ludwig's Princess
2-25-6tc
the
science-cybernetics-war- Hotel ... Don't mention "Paint
Terl)ls.
horror age, the big Toy Fair Your Wagon" to Lee Marvin BEAUTIFUL Colonial maple
slereo, AM &amp; FM radio, four
here has huge displays of paper unless you'd like a belt in the
speakers, 4 speed automatic
dolls ... And the largest single schnozz ... Son of an otherwise
changer, separate controls.
pruduct in the toy industry beleaguered TV star has even
Balance $79.35. Use our time
more misery: the son's on pot
payment plan. Call 992-3352.
remains dolls.
Mason, W. Va.
2·25.6tc
The mayor's persuasive and pop knows it. Tragic.

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

L

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

DANCE

Br'
IAN
DR. DAVID REUBEN'S
SEX TOME WAS
A CURTAIN RAISER
NEW YORK - Ethel Merman's mother, 87, is in
Roosevelt Hospital after a heart
attack ... Cong. Bella Abzug, the
Totie Fields of politics, has a
new worry: Redistricting based
on reduced population might
erase her district; and one other
... Perry Como's next record
(his "It's Impossible" is a rare
good-melody smash in the age
of rock) will be Rod McKuen's
and Francis Lai's "Love Story"
... The Liz Montgomery witch
series, "Bewitched," got its 8th
season ABC-TV renewal ...
Author David Reuben seems
deeper in show biz these days
than medicine: The sex-book
man will be aboard the TV
special "Everything You
Always Wanted to Know About
Jack Benny but Were Afraid to
Ask."
Beryl Slocum Powell, who
wed Adam Clayton Powell III
last year, was dropped from the
'71 Social Register ... Genevieve
Bujold and husband-director
Paul Almond said ta-ta ... Lewis
Strauss, Ike's AEC head, is very
ill .. . Paulette Goddard at
Pyrenees sat her huge German
shepherd at her feet, and he
gobbled a few filet mignons:
"Cheaper than private guards,"
Paulette shrugged ... Louis
Armstrong will try to blow some
life back into the Waldorf's
Empire Room for two weeks
starting March 2 ...
Another old friend died Charlie Berns, co-founder (with
the late Jack Kriendler) of the
elegant "21" and later boss of
"21" Brands, an important
liquor-wine importer, one of the
brightest, blithest spirits in this
little mid-Manhattan community ... We went to the
Metropolitan Opera more often
with Charlie and Molly Berns
thim anyone except our wife,
spent many a merry midnight
with this crusty old charmer,
who built a business from
Prohibition days to its present
eminence as the finest
restaurant in America - it's
always been more a club than a
commercial premises - with
high standards for everything
he enjoyed, from personal
friendships to
commercial
relationships ... He was a
gentleman, who, when he
needed to be in the rough
Prohibition Era, could play
tough with the "boys" who tried
w muscle in; he will "le missed

Ea2les Club,
Pomeroy

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

HOBSTETTER

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

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

Business Services
GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.

MASON CAR WASH
"AUTOMATIC"
Car ~ompletely Mitted &amp;
Thoroughly Rinsed.
Open Sat. &amp; Sun. ONLY
Sat. 9 to 5-Sun. 11 to 5

PRICE '1.25
Do It Yourself Open
24 Hrs. Daily. 25c

1

A nENTION VOERANS

Gl LOANS available to buy or build your new
home. Contact us for more information.

Radiator Service

GREEN HILL HOMES
OFF ICE PHONE 992-7129
NO ANSWER CALL

TOM CROW
Night 992-2580

DALE DUTTON 992-3106
Night 992-2534

LARRY SPENCER
Night 992-3433

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

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

Real Estate For Sale

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
$5.55
-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

41/4 ACRES on blacktop road.
One acre fenced pasture, new
septic tank and water lines.
Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
well.
Two nice
Good
buildings, one with cellar.
606 E. Mcrin, Pomeroy, 0.
Land can be bought with or
without 8' x 48' trailer, in good
condition, 2 bedroom, fur- SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
nished. $3,900. Call Donald
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
Pooler, Coolville. Phone 985·
662-3035.
3897.
2-12-tfc
2-25-3tp
AIR CONDiliONING, Re·
frigeration service. Jack's
Refrigeration, New Haven.
Phone 882"2079.
·
4·6-tfc
608 East Main Street
----------Pomeroy
HOE and end-loader
RUTLAND ROUTE 1- FARM BACK
work. Septic tanks installed.
about 170 acres, all fenced,
George (Bill) Pullins. Phone
about 50 acres for cultivation,
992-2478.
2 deep wells, 2 ponds, 3 barns,
11-29-tfc
shed, silo, milk house, a good
8 room house with bath, ---------------ARE YOU AFRAID OF BIG
PART MINERALS. Going at
CONTRACTOR PRICES?
$20,_o..oo.
You needn't be with the
quality workmanship and
POMEROY- good 2 bedrooms
reasonable prices we now
home, full basement NEW
offer on remodeling, plumFORCED
AIR
BATH.
bing and wiring in your home.
FURNACE,
AND
HOT
Catl Valley Lumber and
WATER &lt;TANK, FULLY
Supply Company. Phone 992·
FURNISHED. $.4,600
2709 day or 742-3262 after 5
p.m.
POMEROY - 1 story frame, 2
2-23-30tc
bedrooms, bath, 5 rooms, nice
porch. $4,250.
INTERIOR and exterior carpentry, metal roofing and
MIDDLEPORT - South 4th
shingle roofing; 20 years
Street- 2 story, 4 bedrooms,
experience. Clinton Pierce,
2 baths, lots of remodeling,
Phone 992-2015.
nice location. $7,950.
2-23-12tp
TO BUY OR SELL
CONTACT HENRY CLELAND
HARRISON'S TV AND ANREALTOR
TE;NNA SERVICE:. Phone
Office 992-2259
992-2522.
Residence 992-2568
6-10-tfc
2-21-6tc

Cleland Realty

Virgil B.
TEAFORD

Pomeroy..,

Ph. 992,-2143

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

LEGAL NOTICE

TO: Bl DOERS
SUBJECT: Purchase of
School Buses
FOR: The Board of EducatioA
of the Southern Loca I Schoor"
District, Racine, Ohio

+++++

Sealed proposals will be
received by the Board of
Education of the Southern Local
School District of Racine, Ohio
at the Clerk's office at 8:00p.m.
o'clock on March 18, 1971 and at
that time opened by the clerk of
said board as provided by law
for one {1) Sixty-Six (66)
passenger school bus, ac·
cording to specifications of said
board of education. Separate
and independent bids will b.
received with respect to the
chassis and body type, and will
state that the buses when
assembled and prior to
delivery, comply with all school
district specifications, all safety
regulations and current C'hio
Minimum Standards tor School
'\us Construction of the
:::&gt;epartment of Education
adopted by and with the consent
of the Director of Highway
Safety pursuant to Section
4511.76 of the Revised Code ar.d
all other pertinent provisions o!.a
law.
~
Specifications
and
in·
structions to bidders are on file
in the office of the Clerk·
Treasurer, Racine, Ohio.
The Board of Education
reserves the right to reject any
and all bids.
By Order of the Board of
Education.
Charles S. Norris,
Clerk-Treasurer,
Southern Local
Board of Education
(2) 12,

19, 26

(3) 5, 4t~

LEGAL NOTICE

Bids will be received in the
office of the village clerk of
Rutland for the repair and re
surfacing of all streets within
the village. Specifications are
ava liable by contacting Vernon
Weber, Clerk, Rutland, Ohio.
(2) 26; (3) 5, 8, 3tc

SWAP SHOP

SR.
Broker

INTERIOR carpenter worR, by
the hour or contract. Phone
992-3511.
1-31·30tp

Beat lnf!ation!

COUNTRY HOME - 6 rooms,
bath, garage, small garden.
Asking $7,000.00.

READY-MIX CONCRETE de·
livered right to your project.
Fast and easy.
Free
estimates. Phone 992-3284.
Goeglein Ready-Mix Co.,
Middleport, Ohio.
6-30-tfc

BUY - SELL

110 Mechanic St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

POMEROY- 3 bedrooms, with
closets, bath, large living,
modern kitchen. All paneled.
Gas furnace. Only $12,000.00. SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED.
"Ditching. Electric sewer
SAVE YOUR RENT MONEY,
cleaning." Reasonable rates.
BUY A HOME.
Phone
John
Russell,
Gallipolis 446-4782.
4-7-tfc
MIDDLEPORT- 4 bedrooms,
closets, bath. Large living.
Near
stores.
Garage SAW FILING, all kinds of
$10,000.00.
sharpening. Lawn mower
repair. Briggs and Stratton
POMEROY 3 bedrooms,
Engine Service. Low cost pick
bath, gas furnace. Modern
up and delivery. Colmer's
kitchen. Large living. 2 lots.
Saw Shop, Mechanic St.,
$21,000.00.
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2604.
HELEN TEAFORD,
2-25-3tc
ASSOCIATE
992-3325 992-2378
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
2-26-6tc
Complete Service
Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio
Critt Bradford
Business Opportunities
5· 1-tfc

~

See Us At The ...

WE

OR

·-

TRADE
NEW AND
USED FURNITURE

j.

ALSO
APPLIANCES AND
HOUSEWARES

SWAP SHOP
Open:
Til9 Mon., Tues.
Wed. &amp; Fri.
9 Ti16 Thurs. &amp; Sat.
992-7261
305 N. 2nd Ave. Middleport
9

·~

RIGHT PERSON to manage or
buy dry cleaning route or
truck. Will sell plant and
building. ABC Cleaners,
Mason, W. Va.
2·26.tfc

Home

Insurance
AUTOMOBILE insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Call 992·
2966.
6-15-tfc

JEMO
ASSOCIATES
.

3 ROOMS

FURNITURE
'349.95

"The sense of pride one has in
owning their own home cannot be
measured in dollars and cents.
We will be eternally grateful to
Jemo Associates for this opportunity."

MASON
FURNITURE

•

EXPERIENCED

.
MR. &amp; MRS. PAUL HARRIS
192 Beech St.
Middleport

NEW

'

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.
TOM CROW
OR
DALE DUTTON
Phone 304-485-6725 Day
Phone 992-3106 Day
992-2580 Night
992-2534 Night

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

1M:I

�7- The Daily Sentinel

•

1971

Find The Car

Get Ready for

You Want
Right Here!

Spring
Trip-ping

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

r---------------------·r----------------------,
I Value-Rated Buys . . •
:
I

1969 CHEVROLET
$3495
Caprice 4 door. Factory air cond., auto. trans., P.S., P. B.,
vinyl roof. like new tires. Local owner with only 14,000 mi.
1969 CHEVROLET
$2495
Townsman Station Wagon. Low mileage local owned with
auto. trans., power steering, new tires, radio. Pleasing
lilac finish. See this before you buy.
1966 FORD
.
$995
Falcon 2_d~., 6 cyl. ~td. trans., all good tires, smart looking
copper fmtsh, radto. Real economy in this car.

•

Pomeroy Motor Co.
OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
POMEROY OHIO
I

Auro sates
l963 PONTIAC Catalina, 389
cubic inch, tri-power; 4-speed
with Hurst shifter; tach,
gauges.
4:56
Posi-Doug
headers, Goodyear slicks,
engine just rebuilt. Nice
throughout. Phone 742-4852.
2-21-6tp

•
•

1962 FORD Fairlane, good
running condition, $200.
Phone Chester 985-3887.
2-25-3tp

1969 Torino 2 dr. ·

$2295
1968 Montego 4 dr.

S1695
1969 Fury Ill 4 dr.

S2495
1967 VW deluxe 2 dr.

•

$1295
1967 Mustang 2 dr.

$1295
1966 Biscayne 4 dr.

$1

1969 Fu

•

1963 Cusknn 880

wa~

~95

1965 Tempest 2 dr.

SS95
1963 Corvair 4 door

s495

•

1964 Newport 2 door

$495
1970 Coronet 4 door

S2295
1968 Coronet R/T

$1795

1968 Dart GT

•

$1695
1968 Coronet 4 dr.

S1695

1966 Coronet 4 dr.

S1395

1963 Coronet 4 dr.
~95
SEE
THE
GOOD
GUYS ON THESE
SPECIALS
E.
Jones, R. Bratton, w.
Amb e rg e r,
D.
Rawling s.
992-2151
992-2152

RAWLINGS
DODGE CITY
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Harrisonville
Society News

•

Mrs. Clara Carl and Mr. and
Mrs . Raymond Chapman of
Maryland were here to attend
the funeral of Mr. Cash of
Athens.
Mr . and Mrs. F . 0 . Whaley of
Columbus spent the weekend
with Edith Whaley and Ava
Gilkey.
The Lend-a-Hand held a bake
sale Saturday at Davis-Warner
Ins . place in Pomeroy and
cleared $42.65.
The large frame house
belonging to Harold Graham
and occupied by Bessie Graham
was gutted by fire recently . It
was formerly the Walter
French
residence.
The
Grahams have purcha&lt;-ed a

1969 BUICK LeSabre, 2-dr.
hardtop, power steering,
power brakes, air, 18,000
miles. E!xcellent condition.
Phone 992-2288.
11-10-tfc
1965 CHEVROLET one ton
truck, excellent condition.
Phone 992-3380.
2-23-Stc
1967 OLDSMOBILE, 442, 4speed. Call after 5 p. m.
Phone 992-2572.
2-26-2tc
61 PLYMOUTH , 4 door hardtop.
Henry Hartman, Chester.
Call 985-3839.
2-26-3tc

Was $1795
68 CAMARo
R_ally Sports, dark green finish with black
W
vmyl top, 327 V-8 eng., 3 sp., air condition.
NO

$1695

197(1" MERCURY CYCLONE SPOILER
(Week's Special
429 V-B, competition blue, 2 dr. hdtp., bucket
seats, P.S., P. B., 8,000 actual miles, sticker
price $4300. Now

By Bertha Parker
Sabbath School attendance
Feb. 14 at the Free Methodist
Onn-ch was 112, offering was
$23.50. February 21 attendance
was 127, offering was $26.60 and
attendance at preaching services was 145.
Rev. Eugene Gill attended the
Zone Four ministers meeting
atZanesville.
Mr. and Mrs. Wyatt Schaefer,
Mt. Vernon, son David, student
at Ohio University, visited
recently with Mr. and Mrs.
Norman Schaefer.
Mrs. James Gilmore is a
patient at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Phil Wise,
McConnellsville,
attended
services at the local church
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Diehl
were in Columbus Friday. Mr.
Diehl went for his medical
checkup.
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford

I

I

70 Cadillac Coupe DeVille, air ________ ~000
66 Cadillac Coupe DeVille, air________ s2195J

$2995

66 MERCURY S-55

2 Dr. H.T., yellow finish with black top, black
bucket seats, P.S., P.B., auto. floor shift, local
owned car.
69 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE
Convertible, 4 speed trans.,
Sharp.

radio.

S}Q95,

$1795

67 COUGAR 289 V-8

XR-7, limegreen, black vinyl top, P.S., P. B.,
air cond., auto. trans., tilt wheel, AM-FM
radio, all leather interior.
66 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL
4 Dr. Sedan, all power, air cond., auto. trans.,
tilt steering wheel, 4 new tires. Like new.
69 THUNDERBIRC
2 Dr. H. T., Landau

$}795

s0 LD

s3495
$1795

ond.

67 DODGE CHARGER

P.S., P.B., air cond., auto. trans., real clean.

s0 LD

68 FO.&lt;D
Custom 500, 4 d1
3, P.S., air
condition.
69 CHEV. TOWNSMAN
Stationwagon, light blue finish, 327 V-8, P.S.,
stand. trans., radio, real clean
65 OLDS
4 Dr. H.T., P.S., P.B., auto. trans., air conr'"ion.

·$1395
$}595
$}895
sg95

RIGGS BROS., INC.
_.~~

USED CARS

By Mrs. Evelyn Brickles
Attendance for Sunday School
at the United Methodist Church
was 48 and offering was $19.69
and worship service attendance
was 35 and offering $30.45.
The United Methodist Church
held a jitney supper at the
church
annex
Saturday
evening. The supper was well
attended and they cleared
$143.55.
Oscar Babcock returned

Icenhower attended the funeral
of his brother recently at
Steubenville.
Several persons from this
community attended the
funeral of Mr. William Carmon
which was held at Ewing
Funeral Home, Pomeroy.
trailer.
The Laurel Cliff Health Club
Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Epple
spent an evening with Ava will meet March 4 at the home
of Bertha Parker.
Gilkey.
Mrs. Mamie Newlun, Ray
Alkire and Clarence Eastman
all have had a virus infection.
Mrs. Jay Clark had the
misfortune to sprain her ankle.
Mr . and Mrs. Robert Alkire
and son Ray spent the weekend
in Columbus with Mr. and Mrs.
R. R. Gibson.
CLIFTON - Bernie Smith
Don Updegraff of Burlingham, Ala., the husband and Don Pullin, pharmacists at
of the former Eleanor Gilkey, Fruth's Drug Store in Pt.
underwent major surgery on Pleasant, described drugs being
used, gave their slang names,
Feb. 19.
noted
symptoms of abuse and
Mrs. Weltha Clark visited the
the results of long use in talks to
Robert Clarks recently.
Mrs. Kitty Whaley spent an the Mason Homemakers Club
afternoon with Frances Alkire . Tuesday at the home of Mrs.
Bessie Graham called on Lloyd Williams here .
Smith, who said they would
Margaret Douglas.
Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Gilkey and speak to other organizations
son Joey of Columbus spent the about drugs, may be reached at
weekend with Ava Gilkey and Fruth's . Slides will be available
soon showing effects of drug
other relatives.
Mrs. Felix Alkire had a abuse. Smith said the only way
Stanley party recently.
to combat drug abuse is with
Mr . and Mrs. Ralph Moore of knowledge of its disastrous
Brooklyn, N. Y., visited Mr. and results .
Mrs. Felix Alkire Tuesday
He noted that the FDA has
banned two kinds of sleeping
evening.
Mr . and Mrs. M. A. Epple, pills advertised on TV and said
Mrs. Earl Foit, Mr. and Mrs. K. the banning of cigarette comC. Welsh, Mrs . John Stout and mercials was the best thing for
Mrs. Donahue attended church public health done in a long
at Rutland Sunday evening .
time .
Mr . Harold Graham spent the
Some of the most common
weekend with his mother , drugs being used, he said, are
marijuana, barbiturates, LSD
Bessie Graham.
&lt;?f
Mr. and Mrs. Otis McGrath and .. ampheta~ines .
and son spent Sunday with the manJuana, he sa1d arrests m
1960 were doubled for the use of
Earl McGraths.
.
.
.
Miss Penny Williams of the drug .
Persons fail to realize tha.t 1f
Rutland was a guest of the
Robert Alkires Sunday evening. they are caught smokmg

home Monday from Camden
Clark Hospital, Parkersburg,
where he was a medical patient
for several weeks.
Rev. and Mrs. Cecil Nichols of
Swanton, Ohio spent a few days
here with his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence Nichols.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Barnett are vacationing in
Alabama and some of the other
Southern states.
Mr.andMrs. Wayne Brickles,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Betzing
went to Ewing Funeral Home,
Pomeroy, Sunday to see Floyd
Well who was killed Friday,
when he was thrown from his
tractor.
James Watson of the U. S.
Army and is stationed at
Oklahoma is spending several
days here with relatives and
also with his mother Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Brooks of North
Carolina.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Brickles
visited Mr. and Mrs. Lesley
Hawk of Chester Sunday.
Others visiting in the Hawk

Develop~nent

I 65 Cadillac Coupe DeVille.---------·$1495
67 Olds 98 4 dr., •air, 'Nas $1995 _. • ___ $1795

I

; 66 Buick Wildcat 4 dr., was s1595------ $1395
: . ~6 Chevrolet Impala 4 door ---------·$1195
1 65 Olds 88 4 dr. H.T., was f995 _______$795

I 65 Pontiac GP 2 dr. H.T., air, was s1295 __$1195 1
1

.60 Ford 1h ton Pickup------------ s250
Several 1971 Olds In Stock
For Immediate Sale!

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
"You'll Like Our Quality Way
of Doing Business"
992-5342
GMAC FINANCING
POMEROY
Open Evenings Until6: OQ- Til 5 P.M. Sat .

69 GTO PONTIAC
2 Dr. ha~dtop, only 22,136 easy miles. Like new inside and out .
A~tomattc t_rans., power steering, power brakes, bucket seats
wtth operatmg console.

68 CHRYSLER NEWPORT

$2395

Custom 2 dr. hardtop, factory air conditioning, low mileage.
Extra sharp. Fu lly equipped.

65 BUICK WILDCAT
Conv. Cpe., like new f i nish, good top, good tires, A.T., P.S., P.B.

~95

65 BUICK LeSABRE

2 Dr. hardtop, one careful local owner, like new finish, good
tires, A. T., P.S., P. B.

69 CHEVROLET ¥2 TON
~WB- Fleetside. One careful local owner, like new finish, good

ttres.

70 BONNEVILLE

Save as much as

S1}()()

Factory air conditioned. Low mileage, fully equipped.

65 CATALINA PONTIAC

~95

2 Dr. hardtop, like new finish . Shows best of care. New tires,
A.T., P.S. &amp; P.B.
.

70 PONTIAC CATALINA

S2895

2 Dr. H.T. , a low mileage one owner car, like new tires. Extra
nice.

---------------------68 BUICK RIVERIA
New Haven Social Events
n.r..LH.~ATION

813 Farson St.
423-6331
Belpre, o.
Corner of Rt. 7 and Farson Street

Tuppers Plains
Society News

67 Olds 88 H.T. Sedan, air--------- $1795
66 Olds 98 Lux. Sedan, air _________$1795
66 Ford LTD 4 Door Hardtop. ________s1595

Real

69 DODGE 112 TON
Pickup truck, 6 cyl., stand . trans., heavy
duty, step rear bumper.

Laurel Oiff
News Notes

Y~U CAN GH AGOOD DfA
ON- US(O CARS H(H~I

You Can't Beat A Riggs Deal
- SPECIAL -

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

s3495

2 Dr. H. T., factory air , AM·FM radio, vinyl top, extra sharp, low

Anyone interested should mileage car. Traded in by one of our repeat careful owners.
contact Doc Ohlinger at an
early date.
Members of the board are
now selling tickets at the
ska ting rink. Marion Dingey Station Wagon, factory air - a one owner trade-in from a very
was elected to fill a vacancy on satisfied owner . Shows best of care.
the board.
They decided to set Saturday
afternoons for recreation at the
building. They ordered two
volley balls and net for this, also
there will be basketball, and
other games. Robert Gurtis and
BUICK
PONTIAC
GMC TRUCKS
William Russell are to be in
Over 117 years of Continuous Service to Bend
charge.
PHONE 992-2143
POMEROY, OHIO
The building is put to use
every night. There is open
·skating
on Tuesday and
was
Mrs.
Ettie
Wills
and
home
Sunday with Freda Miller and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Saturday evenings; Archery
Lenore Betzing and went to the
Berry, and their son Mr. and shoots on Monday and Friday
Attendance at the Nazarene funeral home to see Gene Well.
Mrs. Donald Berry, all of evenings and Sunday afternoons. They are open for Sunday School Feb. 21 was 72,
Belpre.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wood
and daughters spent Sunday
A birthday dinner was served private skating parties on collection was $18.63.
Mr. and Mrs. Leo King of evening with Harold Hawk and
Sunday at the home of Mrs. Wednesday and Thursday
Myrtle Boggess in honor of Mrs. evenings. Also the room up- Columbus spent Sunday with family of Albany.
Mrs. Jane Smith spent a few
Boggess's birthday.
Her stairs may be rented for private her mother, Georgia Thomo.
Her son, Earl and wife and days with her son and daughterchildren Mr. and Mrs. Garland parties any evening.
Attending were William children were also callers.
in-law, Mr . and Mrs. Alphie
Brannon of Bridgeport, W.Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Thoma and Smith of Reedsville.
and William Boggess of Hun- Russell, Robert Gurtis, Charles
Mrs. Adkin called on Mrs.
tington, W. Va. were preser.t; Zerkle, Graceline Sprouse and children of Flat Wood Rd . were
Monday evening callers of Opal Freda Miller Friday afternoon.
also Mrs. Neisel Weatherman of Donald Ohlinger.
Hollen.
Evening callers were Mrs. lone
Tuppers Plains and the honored
LUTHERAN WOMEN
Mrs. Moon took dinner Brickles and children and Mrs.
guest Mrs. Boggess.
The Esther and Rebec a
Reba Hysell and son of Gold
Circles of The Lutheran ChUI1Ch
Women held a joint meeting on of glass or color can be used. Ridge .
Mr. and Mrs. George
Sunday evening at the church Anyone having any glass should
with the Esther Circle as contact Mrs. Thompson or Mrs. Genheimer spent one day this
week with Mr. and Mrs.
hostess. The meeting was Kenneth Vickers.
opened .~ith t~e sin?ing .of the
The meeting closed with the Lawrence Rose of Reedsville.
Several from here attended
hym~. Day _1s Dymg m the ·Missionary Benediction and the
West . Devotions were led by singing of the hymn "0 Zion the funeral of Gene Wells
Monday.
Mrs .. B. R. Vance; Ge~rge Haste."
Mrs. Evelyn Stewart of Mason Washmgton's Prayer was g1ven
presented devotionals taken by Mrs. Carroll Adams, Jr.
Mrs.
J.
V.
McGrew,
from the 6th chapter of Dan~el,
verses 1 through 10. The theme president, presided at the
meeting. Mrs. David Roush
was "Power of Habit."
The treasurer's report was read a letter from Our Savior
given by Mrs. Lloyd Williams Lutheran Church at Rocky
and the secretary's report by Boy Indian Reservation, telling
Mrs. Cecil Smith. The lesson of their work. Slides were shown
leader, Mrs. Smith, thanked the of the church and its work at the
reservation also of the history of
guest speakers.
The constitution of the Mason the people living there. Mrs. B .
County Homemakers Cour;tcil R. Vance was narrator of the
slides.
was read by Mrs. Laulne
Mrs. McGrew announced that
Lewis. Mrs. J. Marshall appointed Mrs . Lewis to repre ent the Spring District Assembly
the club as a director-mem er would be held on April 24 at
at
the
Mason
County Grace Lutheran Church, St.
Loads of load space - S easy-entry doors, 6 feet of
flat floor. Power plus economy-96 HP overhead cam
Homemakers Council. Albans. The group voted to M~ld
engine, up to 25 miles per gallon. Solid comfortFollowing the program and a progressive dinner on April
bucket seats, easy-clean vinyl interior, safety front
business meeting, an auction 21. '
Mrs. William Russell .and
disc brakes.
was held with Mrs . Ray F'ox,
Mrs. Carroll Adams, Jr. were
serving as auctioneer.
Afterwards, the hostess, Mrs. appointed to survey and receive
Williams, served refreshments estimates for a P.A. System for
to Mr. Smith, Mr. Pullin, Mrs. the church.
Mrs. Kenneth Thompson
Iris Morris, Mrs. Cecil Smith,
announced
that The Little
Mrs. Laurene Lewis, Mrs.
Drive a Datsun ..• then decide at:
Evelyn Stewart, Mrs. Matilda Luther League was taking as a
project
the
collecting
of
glass,
Noble, Mrs . Landon Smith, Mrs.
Dorothy Cartwright, Mrs . using the motto Don't Overload
George Hudson and Cheryl. Your Garbage Cans, Save Your
Mrs. Elizabeth Jeffers, Mrs . Glass for Us.' ' This is collected
Kanauga, Ohio
Lawrence Roush , Mrs . Ray Fox each Saturday and taken to the
factory once a month. Any type
and Mrs . J. Marshall.

The New Haven Recreation
Foundation met for their
February
meeting
with
President, Donald " Doc"
Ohlinger presiding.
A discussion was held on the
filter system of the pool. The
organization is now seeking
estimates on the cost of a new
filter system. They also
discussed the hiring of life
guards and management of the
pool for the summer. They are
considering the hiring of an
adult manager who is a
qualified Sr. Life Guard .

69 PONTIAC CATALINA

Many more

BLAETTNARS

Chester East

of Drug Ahus

Related by 2 Phartnacists
marijuana by police and
arrested, they will have a
criminal record the rest of their
lives, Smtth said.
In regards to barbiturates,
one out of every four persons
will have barbiturates in drugs
they use casually. These drugs
are highly abused; druggists
attempt to control it.
Don Pullin passed around a
display of samples of the drugs,
solium nembutal, sodium
seconal, sodium amytal, turnal,
carbrital
and
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bephetamine 20, biphetamine T
20 and desbutal.
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tasteless and can be eaten off a
sugar cube or cookies. A single
ounce is enough to send 300,000
people "on a trip." The after
effects of this drug lasts from 8
to 10 hours. It is regarded as a
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Friday
Cli..\NNEL 8
6:00
6: 30 Bible Answers
6:45
7:00 News
7:30 Sleepy Jeffers
8:00
8:30 Romper Room
9:00 Capt. Kangaroo
9: 30
10: 00 J . Oblinger
10:30 Bever ly Hi llbillies
11:00 Family Affair
11:30 Love of Life
12:00 Galloping Gourmet
12:30 Search for Tomorrow
1: 00 Divorce Court
1:30 As the World Turns
2:00 Love Is Splendored
2:30 Guiding Light
3:00 Secret Storm
3:30 Edge of Night
4:00
4:30
5:00
5:30
6:00 News
6:30 Cronkite
7:00 What' s My Line
7:30 Interns
8:00
8: 30 Andy Griffith
9:00 Movie
9:30
10:00
10:30
11:00 News
11:30 Movie
12:00

•

CHANNEL 13
7: 15 Farm Report
7: 30 Univ. of Michigan
8: 00 The Christophers
8:30 Underdog
9: oo Rocky &amp; His Friends
9: 30 Jack La Lanne
10: 00 Mike Douglas
10:30
11 : 00
11 : 30. That Girl
12: 00 News
12: 30
1:00 A ll My Chi ldren
1:30 Let' s Make A Deal
2:00 Newlywed Game
1 2:30 Da t ing Game
3:00 General Hospital
3:30 Munsters
4:00 Addams Family
5 :00 Wild Wild West
5 : 30
6:..QO B[,g_Valley
6:30
""f:OONews
7:30 The Brady Bunch
8: 00 Nanny and Professor
8:30 Partridge Family
9:00 That Gi rl
9: 30 The Odd Couple
10:00 Love American Style
10:30
11 : 00 News
11:30 Movie
12:00
1: 30 News

•

1

Saturday

lI CHANNEL 3

cHANNEL 8

I
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6:00

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6:45
7:00 John' s Almanac
7:30
8: 00 Tom Foolery
8: 30 Heckle and Jeckle
9:00 Woody Woodpecker
9:30 The Bugaloos
10:00 Dr. Doolittle
10: 30 Pink Panther
11:00 Pufnstuf
11 : 30 Here Comes the Grump
12: 00 Hot Dog
12:30 Kartoon Karn iva r
1:00 College Basketball
1: 30
2:00
2:30
3:00
3:00 Movi~
4:00
4:30
5: PO Bill Anderson
5: 30 Sports Challenge
6:00 News
6: 30 NBC News
7:00 Nashville Music
7:30 Andy Williams
8:00
8:30 Movie
9:00
9: 30
10: 00
10: 30
11 : 00 News
11 : 15 Late Movie
12: 00
12: 15

•

•

6: 00
6:30 TV Classroom
6 : 45
7: 00 Cartoons
7:30 Green Hornet
8: 00 Bugs Bunny
8: 30 Roadrunner
9:00 Sabrina
9: 30 Groovy Cool ies
10:00 Josie
10:30 Globetrotters
11 : 00 Archie' s Fun House
11:30
12:00 Scooby-Do
12: 30 The Monkees
1: 00 Dastardly &amp; Mutt ley
1:30 Jet sons
2:00 ACC Basketbal l
3:00
3: 30
4:00 Golf
4:30
4:30
5:00 Wrestling
5:30
6:00 News
6:30 CBS News
6: 30 Roger Mudd
7:00 To Rome with Love
7: 30 Mission Impossi ble
8: 00
e: 30 My Three Sons
9:00 " Arnie"
9: 30 Mary Tyler Moore
:00 Mannix
11:00 News
11:30 Movie

•

CHANNEL 13
6 : 00
6: 30
6:45 Living Word
7:00 Neighbors
7: 15 Women' s View
7: 30 Wonderama
8: 30
9: oo Lance lot Link
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 Ameri can Bandstand
1: 30
2:00 Bonnie Lou &amp; Buster
2:30 Bowli ng
3:00 Bonnie Lou &amp; Buster
3 : 30 Pro Bowler's Tour
4:00
4:30 Golf
5: 00 Wide World of Sports...
5 : 30
6 : 00
6 : 30 F ishing Show
7:00 Wil burn Bros.
7:30 Lawrence Welk
8: 00
8: 30 Pearl Bailey
9:00
9: 30 Movie
10: 00
10: 30
11:00
11:30
12:00 Chiller

•

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1HE MOST
STUPID SHOW I EVER

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THE' CRATe FeeLS
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BR:JTHERHOOD
MEETIN'
TOI\IIGHI, MR5.

•

~,IGH!-AH NEVAH KIN GO

NOWHAR,ON ACCOUNT
O'THESE ROTTEN
BRATS 0' MINE.':'

ROTTENBRATZ?n-~--

THE' TUSA ~A5
A TENDENCY TO
DOMINATE, AND
I NOTICED
SOME SLURRING
OF'THE LOW
NOTES ON THE
ACCORDION •••

WELL, KID... PUF/f..
~Y, 5uPFOBE BQ'v\E:()NE PIP MISTAKE
MIS&amp; WINKLE FOR MR5.
DOUGLA:7! 11-iAT STILL
DOESN'T EXPLAIN HER
DISAPPEARANCE.

@

MR&amp;. DOU6l.A&amp; DfAI.b IN PRECIOU(; STONE&amp;.
IF KIDNAPPER$ GOT' 'THEIR HAND$ ON

645P.•• WHEE'ZE ...

HOW DO YA LIKE

HER 1l'HEY MIGHT fORCE

OUR MU51C?

HER TO PART WITH OOME
OF ll-10:7E ROCK&amp; !

•
ALLEY OOP

GASOI.JNE ALLEY
n:m~ferred mLJ call6
over here! Brake6
aren't holdinq!

THE BORN LOSER
lE'E -1:-!E'E ... lEL.L- ME, '1-JI-IIC.H

1-\1! I'M MmEtJG FROM 11-!E
SE(.RHAAIAL.

lEE-H~E-l·U;~... BRUTUS

FO:JL!

HO HARM WILL COME
l'O THE GIRL' CHILD Ar1D

HER LOYAL COMPAtiiOI'IS~

•

BUT IF YOU WIS H

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TO RETURN TO

CAP'TAIN AHAB
HIS ALLIES,..
I SHALL MAKE
THE ARRANGEMENTS"
A~

DAILY CROSSWORD
ACROSS
1. Stuff

DICK TRACY

"I'M AFRAlD TWE
CWAMEL(:ON ~AS
WON TJ.US ROUNo;·
HE MUSES.

_.--- - - - r-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
THEY WILL 8ELIEYE SHE
SENT FOR THIS OFFICER
TO COME SECRETLY'
BECAUSE SHE FCXJNI7
50ME IRREGULARITY,
~E DOLBLE- DEAUNG.

5. Gorilla's
relative,
informally
10. First-rate;
11. Disk
jockey's
medium
12. Social
engagement
l3.Corrida
star
H. Splllane's
private eye
(2wds.)
16. Screwball
17. George C.
Scott film
21. Float in
the wind
25. Vodka,
orange j uice
and ice
27. Adolescent,
for short
28. Hash house
29. Sandy's

6. Injury
7. Same
(Latin!
8.Bog
9. Inferior
13. Roared
15. Enough.
old style
17. Attentiongetting

22 ..._
Maria"
23. Chemin
de

hy HENAI AnNCH () ,•rHI ft(HI I t t

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

18. Tennis
point
19. "Three"
in
Milan
20. Firstdown
yardage
21. Joker

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(A.awen to-rr.w.

Jumbleo: NERVY

Yeoterd•y'o

41. Don't go yet
42. Put a
stop to
43. Table
d'DOWN
1. Ungentlemanly chap
2.Meander
3. Opposed to
4. Submissive
5. Slav

I

TWICE

18

One letter simply stands
used tor the three L's, X
apostrophes, the length
hints. Each day the code let~rs are d

A
ZYXGW

FD
HFS

FJ
FQ

ZOO
QXD

Crypt~

DE

I'VE SEEN THE AIRPORT, BOT I'VE

NEVER FLOWN ON A PLANE... I

SJ.

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TOOK A TRIP ON A 8U S ONCE...
15 LIFE LIKE A TRIP ON A BU5?

ram Quotation

DX

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FQSWPJXOO
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: WHAT YOUR HEART THINKS IS
GREAT, IS GREAT. THE SOUL'S EMPHASIS IS ALWAYS
RIGHT. -R. W. EMERSON
(iC) 1971 Kin&amp;' Features Syndicate, Ine.)

HARBOR

PIIIATI

Anawer: Haw to get what'a left-INHERIT

DAILY

•

THIS WIU. HEL!'
'iOU 10 !3E FAIR.
Now arraJlle the dn:led tetter.
to form the aurpriae anawer, u
aunated b7 the aboYe cartoon.

I Mit * SUIIPIIISUNSWIUere

wife

I

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rRANDO
J I D

sound

A.

I ITJ

TICEXE

30. Underworld
"torpedo"
(2 wds.)
37. Worshiped
I 38. On the briny
40. Jason's

Exhibit

�10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 26, 1971

Bible Institute
Begins Sunday
A week-long Bible Institute,
open to persons of all
denominations, will begin
Sunday at the Middleport
Church of Christ.
Individuals are welcome to
enroll in one or more of the
following classes:
Sunday, 2 p.m., Christian
Doctrine, John Webster,
teacher; 3 p.m., Personal
.Evangelism, taught by Dave
Stauffer.
Monday, 6:30 p .m., Contemporary
Problems
of
Religion, taught by Tom Kelly.
Thursday, 7 p.m., Acts,
taught by Louis King; 8 p.m.,
The Four Gospels, Charles
Russell, teacher.
Friday, 7 p.m., Leadership
Training and Speech, Ron
Moyer, teacher; 8 p.m.,
Christian Chalk Art, by Hoyt
Allen.
Saturday, 2 p.m., Personality
of Christ, taught by Keith Wise;
3 p.m., New Converts, taught by
Eddie Buffington.
Residents may register in the
office of Rev. Ron Moyer at the
church, Fifth and Main Sts.,
Middleport. Registration will be
taken in each class until March
21. The registration donation is
$4 for any 13-week class.
The christian who wants a
deeper understanding of the
Bible should register to take
these special classes, Mr .
Moyer said. Age, lack of a
diploma, or color or creed are
not factors in enrolling for the
course, he said. All classes will
be held at the Middleport
Church of Christ.
Teachers will not be paid. The
enrollment donation will be

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight &amp; Saturday
February 26-27
ZIG ZAG
(Technicolor)
George Kennedy
Anne Jackson
THE BLOOD OF
DRACULA'S CASTLE
( Technicolorl
John Carradine
Paula Rayll}ond
Sun., Mon. &amp; Tues.
Feb. 28 - Mar. 1-2
Elvis ~resley

AY

THAT'S

Colorcartoor.
Dr. Ha! Ha l
Gems from Gemini
Champ Chump
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

used for the purchase of supplies. Class periods are one hour
in length. Those registering are
assured that there will be no
embarrassing questions asked
during any class but all will
have the opportunity to take
part in class discussions.
A special film training class is
to be held for shut-ins. Those
interested may also register for
any of the classes at the
Columbia Gas Co. office in
Middleport. Their donation is to
be given at the first class
meeting.

Clara Genheimer
Died on Thursthly

SHINING THROUGH ,,, ,

Mrs. Clara Edna Genheimer,
83, died Thursday at her home
in South Vienna, Ohio.
She is survived by her
husband, Harry, a former
Meigs County resident and a
teacher, three daughters, Mrs.
Robert (Lois) Sweet, Columbus; Mrs. Paul (Maxine)
Ridenour, London, and Mrs.
:Wilbur (Jean) Farley, Lima; a
sister, Eva Schreiber, Ball Run
Road; a brother, Victor
Genheimer, near Pomeroy, and
several grandchildren .
Funeral services will be held
at2:30p.m.SundayattheSouth
Vienna United Methodist
Church. Burial will be in the Asbury Cemetery at South Vienna.

Overnight Wire
By United Press International
ATLANTA -A RADIO STATION Thursday proclaimed Vice
President Spiro T. Agnew the "world's worst golf shot." Agnew
replied, "many shanks." The vice president, who shanked a ball
to the right into the gallery at the recent Bob Hope Desert Classic,
was advised of the proclamation by station WSB in Atlanta.
"Many shanks for your interest in my recent golfing activities," Agnew wired back. "Your offer of the special award for
'World's Worst Golf Shot' is most generous." The prize accompanying the title, a trip to next week's Doral-Eastern Golf
Tournament,at Miami, was passed on by Agnew to Mrs. G. L.
Decker of Salem, Ore., one of the spectators hit by his errant shot
at the Desert Classic.
PRESQUE ISLE, MAINE -JUDGE Julian W. Turner fmed
his mother, Mrs. Marjorie Turner, $15 Thursday in the room in
which he was born.
Mrs. Turner pleaded guilty to driving without an inspection
sticker and was fined in the courtroom, on the third floor of a
former hospital. Part of the room was the hospital delivery room.
Turner said he is probably the only judge to have been born in his
own courtroom.
The arresting officer said he felt bad about bringing Mrs.
Turner into court, but the judge said everyone is subject to the
same laws. "I'm sure my family feels the same way," he said.
SAN FRANCISCO - FROM NOW ON, local "community
chest" funds will be giving less to the Boy Scouts and more to
groups which help drug addicts and black orphans, an official of
the National United Community Fund Council said today. The
new policy in United Fuild administration is being tested this year
in the $17 million United Bay Area Crusade. A $1.5 million kitty for
"new directions" projects was creamed off the top.
This action touched off bitter protests from the agencies
which historically received all the money. Many of them are
getting less this year than they expected. Some were cut off
altogether. "We are no longer going to be just a federated fundraising organization," said Laurence Rolling, chairman of the
national council's allocation committee. "That was fine 10 years
ago but doesn't mean anything today. We are out there to take
care of people where the need is."
WASHINGTON- THE NAVY'S NEW LOOK, according to
the man responsible for it, has gotten out of hand. Too many
sailors are walking around with long hair, shaggy beards and
grimy work clothes. Adm. Elmo R. Zumwalt, the Chief of Naval
Operations who brought beer to the barracks and relaxed hair and
clothes rules to make the Navy attractive to youth, has had to
backtrack.
He has lSSUed new orders telling sailors their hair always
must look neat and must not touch the color. In addition mutton
chop sideburns are out, beards must be neatly trimmed and those
who wear work clothes to and from duty shouldn't lounge around
looking like their civilian contemporaries outfitted in duds from a
Navy surplus store.
SHERIFF DIES
COLUMBUS
(UPI)
Franklin County Sheriff Stacy
Hall died in a Miami, Fla.,
hospital Thursday ten days
after suffering a stroke and his
son, Stacy, Jr. was sworn in as
an interim successor.

Meigs High FFA in Columbus for Day
House District 27 Rep. Ralph
Welker, third from left, Sen.
• 1
r ?P:f ~ • "1 Oakley Collins, left, of
~~~J~II~~- a 99 l".j&lt;c Southeastern Ohio, joined
1\
;; !jotf
r,-, J~~ . ~~~~ Daniel Midkiff, second from
,. A/7
t.!_
'.~-;.,~ ~·~~
I
~...--..::.--~:..::s;~~~e. left, treasurer of Meigs Chapter
_
- J' -:-: ~14..:_-~ .......~"' ~
~- t11~7 FFA Meigs High School, and
Everett Holcomb, right, Vo-Ag
FFA members are youthful Americans with some of the
instructor, in the opening event
same aspirations and interests as adults. They want to see
of a Leadership - Citizenship
America be strong and vibrant in the future. This is indicated
Day held recently in Columbus.
The day began with a breakby their willingness to work, and their healthy attitude about
fast where legislators, FFA
getting involved. FFA'ers are serious about preparing
members, and teachers became
themselves for a career in agriculture as part of vo-ag
acquainted.
Special
apstudies in high school. And they know it helps to be
preciation awards were made to
adequately prepared for a career. They also recognize a need
Theodore M. Gray, Piqua
to make America better and the need to start now. The FFA
has always conducted community service projects, and now
the FFA is putting extra emphasis on this type of activity.
Extend your best wishes to them some way during National
FFA WEEK, February 20-27.

President pro te1.1 of the Senate,
and Charles F. Kurfess of
Bowling Green, Speaker of the
House of Representatives.
Sen. Oliver Ocasek of Akron
spoke to the group in the
rotunda of the capitol on "How
Ideas Can Become Laws."
James E. Dougan, Assistant
Director
of
Vocational
Education for Agriculture of the
State Department of Education,
expressed appreciation to the
Ohio FFA Organization, a part
of Vocational Education, for the
interest in citizenship
leadership training, and to

Members of the Meigs FFA
Chapter in Meigs High School
are aware of the need to get
"Involved
in
America's
Future." They join FFA
MASON, W.Va.- The town of Mason joins
members everywhere to
the ranks of those celebrating historical bircelebrate National FFA WEEK,
thdays during February today by marking its
Feb. 20-27.
115th anniversary.
Throughout the week chapter
The first white settler was John Brown who
members planned activities to
built a log cabin on land owned then by A. D.
illustrate their involvement in
Wilcoxen. He spent a number of years in this
preparing to meet future
cabin before constructing a brick home, now the
challenges of agribusiness in
residence of Mrs. George Johnson.
America.
The town was named after Mason County
"We want our community and
which was named for George Mason.
the nation to know that, as FFA
Mrs. Charlotte Jenks, Mason town recorder,
members, we are concerned
announced an official observance of the 115th
with the challenging problems
birthday will be held June 19. Organizations will
we will face in our lifetime,"
be invited to participate in beautification
says Daniel Midkiff, chairman
projects prior to the observance. Those taking
of this year's FFA WEEK
part will be recognized.
committee. "In the FFA we
A parade is being planned on the June 19
learn to work together to acobservance.
complish worthwhile objectives," he said.
Meigs FFA members feel that
CANCELLED AGAIN
BONDS A WARDED
their involvement in the future
WILLARD, Ohio (UPI)
COLUMBUS (UPI) - First of agnculture ts vital to the
Classes for the fourth straight Boston Corp. has been awarded nation and its obJecti\ie to feed
day were cancelled at Willard $75 milhon in Ohio im- an ever growing population. "If
High School here today as a provement bonds by the Ohio this nation is to continue to
search continued for a bomb Sinking Fund Commission,
reported to be set to explode state Auditor Joseph T.
PERMITS PROPOSED
announced.
"sometime between Feb. 23 and Ferguson
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A
Feb. 26."
Ferguson, also the commission
bill to limit dumping of any
chairman, said First Boston's
materials into Lake Erie
bid of 4.293 per cent for the total
without a permit from the
CLERK CHARGED
issue was the lowest of three
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Mrs.
Environmental
Protection
bids submitted.
Agency was introduced in the
Thelma Leavell, 41, a personnel
House Thursday by Rep. Jack
clerk at the Procter &amp; Gamble
F. Kemp, R-N.Y.
Co. here, has been charged with
Ducks can swim as soon
embezzling nearly $40,000, some as they are h a t c h e d, but
of which she spent to help out they cannot fly for six weeks
her friends and relatives.
or more after hatching.
CONVICTION RETURNED
HAMILTON, Ohio (UPI) James Ward, 22, Cincinnati,

satisfy demands for lowo(!ost,
high-quality
agriculture
products, we must continue to
train responsible men and
women to fill the thousands of
jobs both on and off the farm,
says Everett Holcomb, Meigs
FF A Chapter Advisor and
vocational agriculture instructor.
This year's theme "Involved
in America's Future" pertrays
FFA activities designed to
involve members in constructive action. FFA members
throughout the nation are involved in agriculture, involved
in community action, involved
in leadership development, and
involved
in
working
cooperatively to achieve goals.
Each year FFA Week is
observed during the week of
George Washington's Birthday.
Although Washington is usually
recognized as a Revolutionary
War General and our first
President, it is not generally
known that his first love was the
farm.
Membership in the FFA is

made up of high school student.in vocational agriculture. The'J'
organization's activities are
designed to help develop
leadership and good citizenship
and to stimulate student interest in higher achievement.
While for many years the FF A
has devoted its main efforts
toward establishing young men
in farming, it also is working to
train and develop men fo.
thousands of jobs which support
the nation's farmers and
provide consumer services.
The Meigs FFA chapter has
44 members. Officers are:
;.resident, Gerald Donohue;
vice president, James Cotterill;
treasurer, Greg Lane; reporter,
Daniel Midkiff; sentinel, Rancly
Butcher, and secretary, Mike
Marcum. The student advisor i~
Frank Broderick.
Nationally, the FFA has
approximately 450,000 members with 9,000 chapters ill 49
states (Alaska has no FFA
program), and the Virgin
Islands. Membership in Ohio
totals 17,077.

Doctor Indicted

Can Craft

_ ,t~f'f;

A

-·

i

Meigs FFA Gets In volved

Mason Celebrating Birthimy

First President a Farmer

George Washington Involved

I{EEp TAbs ON
youR spE~~~h~9·
You know for sure when
you pay by check.
And you can open
a Checking Account
here in minutes.
Just ask.

Continuous Service On
Fridays 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.

·POMEROY
NATIONAL BANK
POMEROY

RUTLAND

Serving Meigs County
Since 1872
Member Federal Reserve System

•

Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
All Accounts Insured Up To $20,000.00

·····················································
STARTING MONDAY, MAR. 1

AND CONTINUING ALL WEEK
Annual Art Show in Our Lobby
Paintings by members of the
Gallery. Plan to vi sit thi s week!

D' Artiste

Everyone knows that George
Washington gave seven years of
his life without pay to command
the Revolutionary Army and
eight more to serve as the new
country's first president. What

more than 100 Ohio lawmakera.
for their time and interest il'
helping the group attend
committee hearings and to
attend House of Representatives and Senate sessions.
Gene Tapalman, president of
the Ohio FF A Association, and
lOfellow state officers arranged
the day's activities. These FFA
members are part of 14,000 high
school age youth who ar, .
preparing for occupations in
agriculture and who are
celebrating National FFA Week
from February 21-27.

isn't so well known is that he
would have been much happier
"under his own vine and fig
tree." By his own admission
George Washington's first in~
terest was farming .
It was because of his interest
in farming and his accomplishments as a successful
farmer that FFA WEEK is
celebrated during the week of
George Washington's birthday.
In addition, George Washington
has been labeled the patron
saint of the organization and
has come to symbolize the FFA
Treasurer.
Actually it was a small
inheritance that launched
Washington's career as a
farmer; he was 11 when his
father died. According to
custom, Lawrence - as the
oldest son - got most of the
estate including Mt. Vernon.
Washington's small inheritance
was only a 280-acre Cherry Tree
Farm plus a share of land at
Deep Run.
Washington started acc.umulating land with money he
earned as a surveyor. At 16,
George had bought 550 acres;
he added another 456 acres two
years later and another 552
before he reached 21.
Lawrence died at the early
age of 34, leaving Mt. Vernon to
his young daughter who died
and Lawrence's will then made
George the owner of Mt. Vernon's 2,500 acres!

.
.
.
~ashrngton resigned h1s
lllllltary commtssJOn when. he
was 26 and . soon marned
Martha C stts, a wealthy
Virginia widow. At that time he
owned about 5,000 acres of land
which had not fared well under
his brother's care during the
campaigns.
Washington began to take
farming seriously! He had a
keen business mind, an eye for
detail, and a searching curiosity
about anything new. He kept a
daily diary from 1760 till his
death in 1799, much of it dealing
with his farming activities. The
only major interruption in his
diary came during the
American Revolution.
Washington divided his huge
estate into five farms: Dogue
Run Farm, River Farm, Muddy
Hole Farm, Union Farm and
the Mansion House Farm,
where the big house still stands
today.
The management system was
quite modern. Each farm's
overseer made weely reports
which Washington used for his
notes, diaries, and account
books. He made exacting notes
on planting, harvest, and sale a trait that is recognized in the
FF A opening ceremony when
the treasurer says, "I keep
records of receipts and
disbursements,
just
as
Washington kept his farm accounts - carefully and accurately."
As early as 1766, Washington
realized the error in continued
tobacco cultivation. He practically abandoned tobacco, the
major colonial crop.
Nothing was wasted at Mt.
Vernon; Washington used
everything that was usable and
bought nothing he could
produce - he tanned cattle
hides and sold fish from his
waters.

The Columbus Dispatch
reported a Pomeroy doctor was
indicted Wednesday by a
federal grand jury on 10 counts
of false Medicare claims.
The grand jury charged that
Dr. Selim J. Blazewicz billed
the government for house calls
to patients and for treatment he
did not give during 1969. The U.
S. Attorney's office in Columbus
said it is continuing its investigation into the possibility
of similar violations by other
manslaughter here late Thurs- doctors in Ohio.
day by a Butler County Common Pleas Court jury and
sentenced to a one-to-20 year
term in the Ohio Penitentiarv
EIGHT TAPPED
Eight Wahama High School
students were tapped by the
National Honor Society in
DIES IN FLORIDA
MASON - Word has been ceremonies conducted during a
received of the death of a for- special assembly Friday
mer Mason County youth killed morning at Wahama High
in Sarasota, Fla. Edward 0. School. Seniors tapped were
(Buddy) Baldwin, son of Mr. Brent Clark, Becky Gilmore
and Mrs. Edward 0. Baldwin, and Chetti Hayes; juniors were
formerly of Mason, died in- Sharon Rickard, Beverly
stantly of injuries suffered in a Knapp, James Haymaker,
Linda Roush and David
traffic accident in Sarasota.
Morgan.

~:d~~~ w:;t~o~~rs;~t~r~~

•

(Continued frompage 1)
nails will be provided. It has
been suggested that some
background be put on the wood
prior to the meeting.
Mrs. Mabel Pickens and Mrs.
Jessie Cottrill will serve as
hostesses for the meeting which
will be held on March 25 at the .
bookmobile headquarters, 9:30
a.m. to 2 p.m. with a sack lunch
at noon.
·
The philosophy of the club is
- "come with a new idea and a
friend."
Participating in the activities
Thursday besides those named
were Mrs. William Morris, Mrs.
Orin Smith, Mrs. Bernice ~
Jeffers, Middleport; Mrs . ._,
Gertrude Johnson of West
Virginia; Mrs. Wayne Zurcher,
Mrs. Gertrude Mitchell, Miss
Lydia Ebersbach, Mrs. Mary
Baldwin, Pomeroy, and Mrs.
Edna Neigler, Racine.
SERVICE SET
A missionary service will be
held at 7:30p.m. Sunday at the
Pomeroy Lower Light Church
with Ronald Robbins, home on
furlough from Egypt, the guest
speaker.

't

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
OPEN TONIGHT UNTIL 9 P.M.
SHOP SATURDAY 9:30 TO 9 P.M.

Shop and Save During Our
Storewide

End~f-the-Month

Sale!

Bring your children t o our Big To y Sale on the
Second Floor. Trem e ndous selection of wheel goods,
furniture, g ames, puzzles, mod e ls, t r ucks, dolls,
scientific toys, etc.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

•

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