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                  <text>•
••

•
•

Strippers Shocked
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Those
who say there's nothing worse
than a reformed drinker might
have had second thoughts last
week if they had attended the
first House committee hearing
on tough strip mine legislation
- especially if they were a
coal mine operator.
The House Environment Committee was treated, if that is
the world,. to a fist-thumping,
ear - splitting plea for strong
regulations from, of all people,
the owner of a strip mine company in Pennsylvania.
''You must pass this bill,"
thundered Russell Haller of Kittanning, Pa., operator of the
West Freedom Mining Co. Part
of the audience, presumably
coal operators- or miners, stared in disbelief. Some waved
their hands in contempt.
Haller Appears
Haller appeared before the
committee on behalf of the
strip mine reform bill with two
of his former arch - enemies
from Pennsylvania.
One was Wilham E. Guckert,
director of conservation and
reclamation who personally
supervises backfilling and replanting of strip pits in western
Pennsylvania.

The other was Pennsylvania
state Rep. John F. Laudadio, a
spokesman for conservation and
a strong ally of the sporl&lt;;men 's
lobby in the Keystone State.
"Eight or nine years ago, I
said the new Pennsylvania law
-would put me out of business,"
Haller told the committee. "It
passed in January, 1964, and I
said 'There I go. down the
drain."'
But he explained that after
he was required to plan and
engineer his projects to meet
the requirements to reclaim the
land as he mined, he became a
better businessman and was
still able to make a profit.
Different Reaction
"I used to go down to a
fraternal organization or someplace and people would ask me,
'What do you do?'" he related.
"I'd tell them I was a strip
rome operator, and they'd say,
'What a hell of a thing to do.'
Now, the~ say, 'Aren't you the
guy that did that beautiful thing
up there on the hill?"' Haller
said, referring to a landscaping
JOb he had done on his coal pit.
Haller's reclamation reputation is such that he can lease
land from farmers to mine be-

cause they know he will leave
it in as good or better condition than he found it.
Guckert showed the committee color slides of hugh strip
pits, some gouged 100 feet into
the earth. Then he showed the
same areas after compulsory
reclamation, turned into lush
hay and buckwheat fields or
beautifully landscaped lakes.
"They cando it," gentlemen,"
he said repeatedly. "They tell
you they can't, but they can."
At one point there was laughter from the audience.
Don't Let Them Laugh
''Don't let them laugh at you,
gentlemen," retorted Guckert,
whose predecessor had been
fired in Pennsylvania because

Clean Up Begins

Rackets Figure

he was not treating all coal
mine operators alike. "They
can do tt if you make them."
Guckert said he makes them,
and "we get along just fine.
I'm not afraid to tell them
when they do a good job, and
they're doing a good job."
Debate on the Ohio strip
mine bill is likely to be long
and controversial, but it probably will produce no greater
irony than Haller standing sideby-side with Guckert and Laudadio, with who he once
fought bitterly.
And the committee may not
soon forget the color slides documenting the sharp transformation of wasted land through
proper conservation techniques.

Is Found Dead

A movement to "clean up
Pomeroy" will get underway in
the next few days.
Edison Hobstcttcr, Pomeroy
National Bank President, said
Pomeroy will begin cleaning up
Sunday night or Monday when
Pomeroy firemen wash down
the streets in the business
blocks.
Arrangements to clean the
business section were made at
Hobstetter's suggestion. In
return, merchants will present
the Pomeroy Fire Department
with $300 which will be used for
the purchase of new raincoats
and auxiliary equipment.
Pomeroy merchants are
being asked to contribute to the
overall payment and may send,

STEUBENVILLE, OHIO
(UPI) - Albert Di Stefano,
named in federal indictments
earlier this week as the
leader of a major gambling
operation in eastern Ohio,
was found dead in his car
Thursday, it was disclosed
today.
Columbiana
County
Coroner Dr. William Kolozsi
ruled death was caused by
carbon monoxide poisoning.
The sheriff's office said an
"involved and quite lengthy"
letter was tucked inside the
front windshield on the
driver's side.
•.

·:

0:: :::::·::=.···

ur give, their contributions to
Hobstetter. Checks should be
made payable to the Pomeroy
Jt'ire Department. Although the
cleanup movement began to roll
only on Thursday, already four
committments for helping
defray costs had been made
Thursday afternoon.
Businessmen already indicating their willingness to pay
on the donation to be given
firemen include Kermit Walton,
Paul Simon, Alfred Elberfeld
and Hobstetter.
Mayor Charles Legar announced today "Clean Up
Week" will start April 1 in
Pomeroy. Residents will be
asked to clean up their yards.
Waste collected may be set

along the curb for pick up by .a
village truck. The truck will
move through the community
on a schedule which will be
announced when it is worked
out by the mayor.
It is stressed that the pick up
is not to include garbage
collected each week through the
town but only trash and waste
collected about a home which is
not handled through routine of
regular garbage pick-up.
The Pomeroy street sweeper
will also soon be back into
operation, the mayor commented. A part needed for
repair of the sweeper has been
ordered. The machine will be
operating about town as soon as
possible.

The Daily Sentinel
Devoled To The
VOL. XXIII NO. 237

lnter~u

Of The Meigs-Mason Area
FRIDAY, MARCH 19, 1971

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

TEN CENTS

Juveniles Held

•

Meigs County Sheriff Robert
C Hartenbach's Dept. said
today five juveniles have been
apprehended who have admitted breaking and enterings
at
the
Meigs
County
fairgrounds.
Three of the youths admitted
to breaking and entering of
buildings at the fairgrounds and
also a private camper trailer
parked there.
The department also investigated vandalism at the
junior fatr building and the
breaking and entering of the
fair secretary's building.

•
•

THESE A..'I\1ERICANISM and Government test winners
were honored Thursday night at the birthday dinner of
Middleport's Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American Legion.
The group includes: front row, from thE' left, Edie Mees,
Debra Fitc
a J? ay; back row left to right, Mike
rublE', Ju
Webt&gt;
dOave Gerard. All are
Metgs High
ts \\ th the exception of Miss Fitch
and Miss H
wa the coWity winner. Not present
for the pict
e Franklm Rizer II, Metgs High School,
and Michael Bonng and Michael Benedum, Eastern High
School. Presenting certificates and medals to the winners of
the annual test given cooperatively by the Pomeroy, Rutland
and Middleport Posts, was Tony Fowler, Americanism
c"airman of the host post. Commander Paul Haptonstall
pr€'&lt;&gt;ided over the observance and entertainment was a
magic show by Ben Franklin of Point Pleasant.

•

Removed from the secretary's
building were several billy
clubs, a PA speaker, wire,
paint, trophies and keys to other
buildings on the grounds.
,

Thursday the department
took into custody two boys who
admitted vandalism of the
junior fair building and to the
breaking and entering.
Some of the stolen items have
been recovered. The boys also
admitted to painting initials on
the junior fair building and
breaking into the Pomeroy Gun
Club on several occasions to
steal pop, shotgun shells and

drinking glasses. They also
admitted to painting the bridge
that leads from old Route 33 to
Hemlock Grove and painting a
building owned by the Karr
Construction Co. located behind
the skating rink on SR 7 in
Chester
Township.
The
department will file charges
against the youths in Meigs
County Juvenile Court.
The sheriff's department
warned that anyone caught on
the school grounds, Pomeroy
Gun Club, fairgrounds or on the
Ben Tom Corp., property after
unreasonable hours will be
prosecuted .

Board Hires Teachers

Twenty-seven teachers were
hired for the 1971-72 school year
by the Southern l..Qcal School
Board Thursday night.
Cha{les Norris, clerk, said
additional iring will be effected later.
Teachers rehired were James
Adams, Conme Andrews,
Sandra Boothe, Vmas Lee,
Erma McClurg, Howard Nolan,
Gale Price, Carl Weese, Fannie
Lee, Connie• Romine, John
Bailey, Robert Oliver, Dorothy
Oliver, Elizabeth Hobbs,

•

Jennings Beegle, William
Jewell, Herbert Parker, Hilton
Wolfe, Jr., Eileen Buck, Chlorus
Grimm, Dwaine Wolfe, Mary
Hill, Edna Price, Robert
Beegle, Emma Louks, Ruth
Stearns, and Larry Wolfe.
New teachers hired were
Delores Wolfe, Roger Roush
and Sharon Fischer.
Norris, the clerk, offered his
verbal resignation, stating that
he did not want to neglect his
main responsibility, his church.
The board did not act on the
resignation.
In other business the board
approved bids for a school bus
chassis and body. The Meigs
Equipment Co. bid for a chassis
in the amount of $5,297.95 was
accepted and the Edwin H.
Davis Co. (of Danville) bid of
$3,375 for the body was ac-

cepted. Davis distributes the
Superior body.
Two other bids for chassis
were subm.tted. The Pomeroy
Motor Co. offered one for $5,300
and the R. H. Rawlings Sons
Co., one for $5,540.45.
The Rev. Paul Sellers,
member of the Racine Fire
Dept., reported on school fire
drills. The board granted Linda
Badgley, fourth grade teacher
at Racine, a leave of absence
for the balance of the school
year.
The board also agreed to
continue with Title II and Title
III programs and hired Mrs.
Paul Sellers as substitute cook.
Attending were Clarence
Lawrence, Charles Pyles,
Denny Hill, David Nease and
Gene Yost, board members;
Norris, clerk, and Ralph Sayre,
superintendent.

Weather
Cloudy, windy and colder with
a chance of snow flurries
tonight and Saturday. Lows
tonight from the mid 20s to the
lower 30s and highs Saturday in
thr; 305.

TWO INDUCTED
Two Meig County young men
inducted into the armed forces
at Fort Hayes, Columbus,
Thursday, were Gary L.
McKnight and Robert Black.

CANDIDATES FOR KING AND QUEEN - Six Southern High School seniors are candidates for the Kin and Queen of the Beaux Arts Ball to be staged at Southern ~igh School on
April3. Competing m the penny a vote contest are, front row, 1-r Shirley Congo, bb&amp;e Norris,
an' Mar ~Smith.
k rc Stt'veGrad
ldS()O anti v .. ··~~hlpy y,·.,id
1:\alt wiU
be provided by the 0. U. Quintet.

WASHINGTON (UPI) The cost of living rose 0.2 per
cent in February, the second
straight month the increase
was well below the inflationplagued average of the last
two years, the Labor
Department said today.
But the February report &lt;'f
the consumer price index
showed some of the largest
items in the average family's
budget - food, clothing and
medical care - continue to
increase substantially. Increases in these items were
partially offset by declines in
mortgage interest rates and
the price of used cars.

FundS ars

The · GPorge
Thompson
Kidney Fund has almost
doubled in the past three days.
As of Thursday night its toW
was $1,607.20, with donations
continuing to pour in. At noon
:Monday the fund was $822.
The fund was established
rectmtly by the Winding Trail
Garden Club to aid George
Thompson, 18, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Thompson of
Pomeroy. Young Thompson is
confined to the Cleveland Clinic
where both of his kidneys have
been removed. He is awaiting a
transplant which is now
scheduled for March 30. Donor
LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown will be his sister, Mrs. Wayne
Pomeroy at 11 a.m. Friday Roush of Belpre.
Latest contributors to the
was 40 degrees under partly
fund which is being headed by
cloudy skies.

Mrs Robert Lewis, are Mr. and
Mrs. William H. Jones, employes of the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co. in
Middleport; Constance Shields,
Pomeroy Church of Christ, Mr.
and Mrs. Jack Seidenabel, the
Doyle T. Shuler Co., Silver Run
Free Will Baptist Church, the
Carleton Church, Mr. and Mrs.
Brooks Sayre, Recruit Sunday
School Class of th ·
•
United Methodist C&amp;n.
Gamma Mu Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, Helen M.
Shuler, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur J.
Strauss, Mr. and Mrs. Harold E.
Thomas, Wilbur Bailey, Fred
Goeglein, Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Mills, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Hamm, Minersville WSCS,
(Continued on page 10)

Beautifying Plan Supported by School

•

By George Hargraves, Superintendent
Meigs Local School District
Students of the Meigs Local School District are
being encouraged by our Board President Frank W.
Porter to do something "to beautify that portion of the
county known as the Meigs Local School District.'' Mr.
Porter has contributed $50 for prizes for those three
students who are judged to have done the best job in

TWO LONG-TIME MEMBERS were honored Thursday evening at the annual birthday
observance of Feeney Bennett Post 128, American Legion, and its auxiliary group. They were
Mrs. Emma Wayland, left, 45 year auxiliary member, and Mrs. Wilma Davis, right, 50 years
and a charter member . Other living charter members are Mrs. Lillian Steiff, Mrs. Irene Cross
and Mrs. Mildred Fowler. In the center is Mrs. Ben Neutzling, Pomeroy, Eighth District
President, who closed the birthday observance with an original poem , "My Poppy Dream."

••

i---------------------------1
7\.T
•
B . ~+. I

I

:

1 ~ews

.•. zn

rze1 s :

By United Press International

Brass may be Tarnished

•

WASHINGTON - THE ARMY HAS recommended that Maj.
Gen. Samuel W. Koster and the general who assisted him in
commanding the America! Division involved in the alleged
massacre at My Lai be disciplined and possibly demoted.
Koster, 51, resigned as superintendent of the U. S. .:vtilitary
Academy at West Point last year after he was charged with
covering up the alleged massacre of more than 100 Vietnamese
civilians at My Lai by a unit of his di\ision March 16, 1968. The
charges were dropped in .January Brig. Gen . George H. Young
.Jr , 50, was his assistant in Vietnam.

PROGRAM ANNOUNCED
A
community
service
program will be presented when
Drew Webster Post 39,
Amencan Legion, meets at 7:30
p.m. Tuesday at the post home.
Mrs. Corrine Lund and Mrs.
Lillian Moore, representing the
Metgs Cancer Society, Will
speak and a film on cancer will
be shown. Red Cross workers
are to turn in their money at the
meeting.

C OF C TO MEET
The Middleport Chamber of
Soviets Theorize China Policy
Commerce will meet at 7:30 this
MOSCOW - A GROUP OF SOVIET speciallsts on Com- evemng at the Columbus and
munist China has issued a booklet saying Prking hopes to provoke Southern Ohio Electric Co.
lllt'eting room .
(Continued on page 10)

Speaking of Schools-No. 180
this area between now and the conclusion of this school
year .
I have been asked to implement this program and I
am happy to be a part of it.
Our pnncipals, asst. Supt. Larry Morrison and I
met on Wednesday to attempt to design the best
procedures to achieve the purpose that this project
seeks. The purpose is a completely honest and
worthwhile one - that of making our school district a
more attractive place in which to live.
Early next week every student in the Meigs Local
District will receive a brief statement of the ground
rules of this competition . They will also receive a form
that should be completed and returned to their school
by the date specified. On this form will be the
description and location of the specific project so that it
may be judged. We want to keep rules to an absolute
minimum . We hope to push participation to the
maximum.
,
The prizes offered should be a n incentive to participate. As participation takes place we hope that the
real incentive will become that of truly making our
district a better and more attractive place in which to
live.
The judging of the efforts of our students will be an
important task. I will be seeking the assistance of a
number of our community leaders who are not directly
connected with the school district . I trust that I will

find cooperation as I strive to establish a fine committee of judges.
I would like to add my brief statement of encouragement in respect to this competition and its
purpose. Competition is a wholesome and vital part of
the American way of life. 1his is good. Pride in the
appearance of one's home and surroundings has been a
part of that same AmericaP way of life, but it seems to
have slipped somewhat in recent years.
Maybe you 3,000 students in Meigs Local can accept
the challenge and do something, indeed many things,
to put a new shine on the visible surface of our community . If you do, I'm certain that that shine will
produce an inner glow of pride within all of you who do
something to achieve the goal.
The cry among the youth from coast to coast and
from border to border is ECOLOGY. Well, this is what
we are talking about. Perhaps you and I as individuals
can't clean up Lake Erie but we can collect bottles that
Jitter a street. Maybe we can't stop oil seepage off
Santa Barbara but we can plant flowers in an ugly,
bare place. Maybe we can't remedy the past ills of
strip mining, but we can plant trees to stop erosion.
Maybe we can't clean up the Ohio so that bass will
thrive in it, but we can do something about building or
improving a farm pond. Maybe we can't do a Jot of
things, but I know that there are a lot of things that we
- and especially, you students - can do to make Meigs
County a better and more attractive home.
How about H? Talk about ecology and the
.destruction of our environment is cheap. Action takes
thought and sweat. Across this nation thousands and
thousands of young people have pointed the way for
their communities by participating in real action
projects such as is proposed. Work as individuals, as
groups, as clubs - any way that you want to. Let's just
get on with the job and see how much shine we can
have on our community by the time hundreds of alumni
return to Meigs County for their annual banquets late

in May. Let's surprise them. Let's pleasantly surprise
those possible newcomers who will be consider~
where to live in this area. Let's surprise our townspeople. Let's surprise ourselves. You've ~ot the ball.
LAST MONDAY EVENING the Governor presented
his budget message. Interpretations, elaborations,
discussions, etc. will be going on for some months to
come. Politics will clearly play a vital role in the
ultimate outcome.
So, here we all are, trying to figure just what Ute
various parts of a broad proposal will do to our schools
and to each of us as individual taxpayers. I can only
say that it is too early to tell. We'll have to wait and see.
The matters of taxation, tax reform and adequate
support for the necessary agencies and institutions of
our society - these matters are quite complicated ..
They also bear a considerable emotional factor
because they all touch someone's pocketbook.
I trust that we can all maintain an open mind as
spedfic proposals evolve from the broad background
that is presently visible. It has been quite evident to me
that a change of considerable magnitude in the support
of schools was dictated by the economic facts of life of
our society. Again, I say that we will have to wait and
see what eventually evolves at Broad and High. As I
have quite frequently stated- as far as Meigs Local is
concerned, that is where the money is.
NEWS &amp; NOTES- A big thank you to the many,
many people who helped to make our third annual
Vocational Conference Week a s uccess.- If you have
a child who will enter school next fall, don't forget to
get those immunization shots now. Don't wait until the
last minute. - It's a fact that sniffing glue or other
similar suhstances can produ&lt;'e lasting damage to the
brain and liver.-Our best wishes certainly will accompany John Tannehill as he flies the Pacific to
participate in the World Table Tennis Tourmunent in
Japan.

�.---------------------------1 r-----------------------------------------1

1 he Datly S&lt;&gt;ntintl,l\lidlUcport-Pomcroy, 0., March 19, 1971

2

I I
1

I

,\n airbonw ~dsel
By Helen Bottel
there are too manv unn•
sean·hed. unknown· factor:;
LETTERS SPEAK LOUDER THAN ...
for this projt•ct to procE&gt;ed
Quality -In CraftsmanshiP
Steu·arl L. Udall. former Dear Helen:
How would you advise this woman? I am close to her offlutcrior secrecaru. uppos·
Quality In Materials
Quality You Can Trust.
III!J further developme11t spring, so I can't give my name.
of tl1e superso111c trailS·
Her husband works seven days a week, his second job being a
992-5314
port plaue
Pomeroy, 0.
W.M:oin
hobby. He has no time, energy or money to socialize with his wife,
though he spends on other pleasures. H some social thing links her
with him, she must trail12 paces behind while he is the life of the
party.
He did manage to spend considerable money on a big family
reunion that included an expensive picture with him in the center
SW'rounded with pretty young things while his wife was dangling
on the very edge of the group. The wife had her image blocked out
in the reproduction as she says "it would remind her of her status
in his life."
I feel she may be far out in resenting this "disrespect" from
her husband. After all, she is an older woman and age has not
enhanced her looks, while her husband continues to be charming,
V 8 Svp"'r Sport. '2 dr. H. T., power steering. auto. trans., bucket
·
seats witt, COI'Sole, shows good care.
youthful and popular. True, she has contributed much to his
success and has worked hard raising a good family, but isn't it
enough that he stays with her?
Even his folks are aware of his sacrifices. They may not have
invitations or room for her, but they don't close him off. They
Deluxe. 4 d.-.. 2 seat station wagon.
always have a bed waiting for him, and friends for him to meet if
he needs feminine company. You'd think the wife would get the
message that she has served her pW'pose and is passe.
Don't you think a definite break would be more dignified at
Calali11a Stationwagon, factory air, 1 local owner. A very
her age than what many women do: Turn to drink, drugs, or
satisfied customer, auto. trans .• P S., P. B.
"bought" affairs? She has no vices, so her only fault is her age
and plainness. Of course her attempts at communication are
called nagging. Your suggestions, please. -A FRIEND
Dear "Friend":
You are "close to this woman's offspring" because you ARE
e1nneville, VB. 2 dr. hardtop, demo., factory a1r., P.S., P.B.,
this woman, as another letter (signed "Second Class Citizen")
dl.to. trars, AM FM radio. A beautiful low mileage car
proves. It came in the same mailbag, carried the same commemorative stamp and postmark; was written on the same
stationery with the same typewriter. And through it ran the same
thread of deep self-pity, though this time, first person.
Look, my friend, injustice collectors always find what they
Catalira, 2 dr hardtop, a low mileage sharp one owner car. Like
nPw ilres, P S., auto. trans.
seek because their actions make people shun them. While you see
yoW'self as the poor, "old" wornout, cast-aside slavey who "has
no faults but age and plainness," others may see you as a jealous,
holier-than-thou type who makes life miserable for everyone
around
her.
La Sabre Stationwagon, worth much more.
Trying to &lt;h"um up advice column sympathy won't help your
cause, nor will it "shame" your husband. Perhaps you have a
case: I've no doubt you ARE neglected and avoided, but until you
get honest and admit you bring much of this on yourself, you'll
keep on drowning in crocodile tears.
My suggestion? See a good psychoterapist and don't hit him
with the con job you tried to pull on me. - H.
BUICK
PONTIAC
GMC TRUCKS
Dear Helen:
116 Years of Continuous Business
Two years ago we bought a car from a used-car lot. The
PHONE992-2143
POMEROY, OHIO
dealer guaranteed it for 90 days, but it didn't last that long. First
the transmission would't hold fluid and then the motor blew. We
refused to pay for the car when the dealer refused to fix it. So we
parked it. He never repossessed it.
Recently a finance company (who bought the dealers'
papers) has started dunning us. After two years, can they collect?
-NO MONEY
Dear No:
You should have "parked" the car on the dealer's doorstep
two years ago. Since a finance company now has his papers, you
may f ce a losing battle. Consult the Legal Aiq Society in your
City.- H.
This colwnn is dedicated to family living, so If you're having
kid trouble or just plain trouble, let Helen ,help YOU. She will also
welcome yoW' own amusing experiences. Address Helen Bottel in
care of this newspaper.

1964 CHEVROLET

?95

1965 OLDS. 85

~95

1969 PONTIAC

1970 PONTIAC

REDUCED

1970 PONTIAC

REDUCED

BY JACK O'BRIAN

LAS VEGAS LOSES A BIG SPENDER
NEW YORK - Actor MW'vyn Vye's okay
after open-heart surgery .... Popular show biz
hangout Danny's Hideaway's moving several
buildings away from its current E. 45th St. spot
.... Stylish Cafe Chauveron also must move in a
year, new skyscraper going up on its site .... One
of the chic French eateries is on a cash-&lt;&gt;r-carry
basis with suppliers .... Jack Entratter, who died
last week, is the shrewd gent who captured all
the big entertainers for his Sands Hotel simply
by paying more money than any other Las Vegas
impresario .... His first cash-captive was Nat
King Cole, later Sinatra and his klan .... Polly
Bergen's not too choked up about Samantha
Eggar, her agent husband Freddie Field's client.
The gal who wrote "Put the Blame on
Marne" for Rita Hayworth's "Gilda" flick, Doris
Fish~, divorced her Detroit financier husband
Charles Gershenson; Doris has some of her own
fine torch songs to intone if she's sad about it:
"You Always HW't the One You Love," "Into
Each Life Some Rain Must Fall," "Invitation to
the Blues," "You Can't See the Sun When You're
Crying," and like that .... La Hayworth is
comebacking in Joe Levine's "Road to Salina."
Bette Davis is about the best TV guest
anywhere, and she's better with Dick Cavett
than the rest ... . Leading Greek-American
journalist Val Arms toasted (Eeseegyia!)
beautiful Maria Papadatos at Tom Manessis'
Greek-mood Delegate spot; La Papadatos is the
only Greek entertainer with her own Greek TV
show in the U. S. . .. Roseland Ballroom owner
Lou Brecker's getting a lawyer - letter after. a
sex movie planning to title itself "Roseland,"
Lou feeling reasonably enough such a filth-flick
would constitute a titular invasion of his 65 years
of ballroom respectability under that valued
brand-name.
Impertinent impressionist David Frye gave

1962 BUICK

Many more

BLAETTNARS

:::: H""
.
:::
v,zer Medtcal 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. Charles R.
Aeiker, Racine, a daughter;
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald L. Neal,
Pt. Pleasant, a son; and Mr.
and Mrs. William 0. Rice, Pt.
Pleasant, a daughter.
Discharges
Guy Campben, Sr., David
Cole, Mrs. James Cundiff, Lori
Derenberger, Carolyn Dixon,
Mrs. Delmar Grady, David
Grueser, Bobby Hemby, Mrs.
James Hensley, Jr. and infant
daughter, Mrs. Robert Jenkins,
Mrs. Grace Lowe, Linda McCarley, Mrs. Robert Oliver,
William Smith, Mrs. Richard
Vankirk, Mrs. Vernon Weber,
Mrs. Kenneth Wilson, Mrs. Max
Snyder, and Wayne C. Metzler.

67 Olds 98 4 dr., ·air,------------ SJ795
66 Buick Wildcat 4 dr., ----------·s1395
66 Chevrolet lm pala 4 door _________:$1195
65 Olds 88 4 dr. H.T., ____________ ?95
65 Pontiac GP 2 dr. H.T., air, -------...$1195

Several1971 Olds In Stock
For Immediate Sale!

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
"You'll Like Our Quality Way
of Ooing Business"
992-5342 GMAC FINANCING
POMEROY
Open Evenings Untii6:00-Til5 P.M. Sat.

-------------------The new Datsun 1200s are really something.
Up to 30 MPG.
We took the ugly out of economy
Sure-stopping front disc brakes.
and put the performance in.
All·synchromesh 4-speed stick shift.
Each 1200 has the new high-cam
Steel unibody construction for solid
69 HP engine. Quick acceleration.
protection.
Plus, many other features and no~~~i!!!-~;"'l!!i~r...,-.._ cost extras. Like locking gas
c~
cap and whitewall tires.
The value is really
something.

DATSU

eration " by Mrs. Amos Leonard.
Mrs. Scott Folmer conducted
the contest which was won by
Mrs. Whaley and Mrs. Grueser .
Refreshments were served by
the hostess to those named and
Mrs. Arlie Abbott, Mrs. William
Witte who joined the club, and
Mrs. Gerald Arnold and her
grandson, Jason, of Buronnnais, Ill.

The Almanac
By United Press International
Today · Fnday, iarch 19,
the 78th day of 1971.
The moon is in its last
quarter.
The morning stars are Venus,
Mars and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury and Saturn.
Those born on this day are
under the sign of Pisces.
On this day in history:
In 1906 the new Hotel
Traymore in Atlantic City,
N.J., trying to prove it was
modern, advertised "twentyfive private baths, capacity

450."
In 1917 the Supreme Court
ruled that the Adamson Act,
signed by President Woodrow
Wilson in 1916 and providing for
an eight-hour work day on
railroads, was constitutional.

5

70 Maverick

$1795

THE

QUALITY
PRINT SHOP

992-3345

Middleport, 0

Auto trans .. 6 cyl.

1595

$1395
---------------------------65 Oldsmobile Delta
$795
2 Door, H.T. auto. trans.
66 Oldsmobile 98
Factory air condition,

65 FORO CUSTOM
2 Dr sedan. 6 cyl.,

tires.

4

TV
SERVICE
DEPARTMENT
If you need TV Service
in a hurry, call us in
the morning, we'll be
there in the afternoon.

CALL 992-2635
FOR INGELS
FAST SERVICE

____.
TV SERVICE

._MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Dodge City News
1969 Chevrolet
Biscayne 4 door., 6 cylinder.

1966 Chevrolet
Malibu 4 door, air cond.

1968 Dodge Coronet
4 Door, 6 cylinder.

1968 Dodge Dart
2 Door,

v.a,

dr., auto. trans.

4 speed.

1966 Dodge Charger
2 Door, V-8, t-flite.

1968 Dodge Charger
2 Door, V 8, t·flite.

1969 Ford Torino GT
2 Door, V-8, p-st.

1967 Ford Mustang
2 Door, V-8, 3 speed.

1970 Plymouth GTX
2 Door, V-8, t-fl ite.

1970 Volkswagen Transporter
3 Door, 4 speed, 3 seats.

1965 Jeep Wagoneer
4 Wh. drive, p-st., 6 cyl., '4 door.

1965 Rambler Classic
Mail us the car you're looking for.
If you dodn't find the kmd of car you want In thiS ad ,
jUSt 1111 1n th1s coupon and mail 1t to us. We may have
jUSt the used car you're lookmg for right on our lot
If we do we'll call and tell you And we'll hold the car
untl ' you can come down and see 11 No obt1ga11on.
The car I want is:
Year
Make
Model or Body Style
Equopped w•tl1
Proced at abo~&lt;t
( ) Chec~ here of no trade ·m
MY TRADE- IN IS
Year
Make
Model or Body Slyle
Equopped wolh
tn ( 1 faor ( I good , 1 excellent condot ,on
N dme

auto. trans , radio, w-w

f695

Street
C11y

State

lop

Pt,cne

SEE: Gale Ingraham- Ray Riggs
David Riggs

RIGGS BROS., INC.
USED
CARS Belpre, 0.
813 Farson St .
423-6331
Corner of Rt. 7 and Farson Street

I

INGELS
FURNITURE

4 Door, 6 cyl., automatic.

LINCOLN CONTINENTAL
4 Dr. sedan, all power, air cond., auto. trans.,
tilt st~ering wheel, 4 new tires. Like new. Was
S1795. Now
66

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

We Have Our
Own New

Missing Body Parts" by Mrs.
James Conkle, and "Atomic
Energy" by Mrs. Harold
Blackston.
Other readings were "Testing
for Brain Damage" by Mrs.
Goeglein; "Does Environmeht
Cause Mental Illness" by Mrs.
Skinne~; "Relief from Rye
Neck" by Mrs. Louis Grueser;
"Heart Treatment by Phone"
by Mrs. Clifford Leifheit: and a
monologue entitled "Op-

2195
$2195
$1695

SMITH AUTO SALES
KANAUGA, OHIO

NOW

2195

WE
SPECIALIZE
IN WEDDINGS

Th;• nu:est thing to d,
first thing on S&lt;Jturday
morning is nothing.

.

the Quo Varus captains, waiters etc. the order for
each course in the various voices with which he
If yrm hurry aml get
mea t-axes celebrities on TV: But he had to pay
everythinu don e yo u
plannerl to clo this SaLUT·
his bill anyway .... The Father Divine-Bdwy.
rlil1/ you!ll just have time
show "Holy Husband" musical will star Yaphet
to !}et two h()urs' sLeep
Kotto in his first tune-show attempt .... Rodney
Su11&lt;1ay night.
~
Dangerfield's dream of "retirement": Living in
Miami and playing the big cafes two-three
The automat1c watch goes
back to the dawn of histor~ •
months a year.
The 1970-recession year boomed home- and the first snoopy neighsewing to a $3 billion business .... Singer reports bor.
a fantastic rush for sewing machines .... Most
pictured woman in the world isn't Jackie nor
Pat, but Queen Liz .... Henry Hudson Hotel
·llfE DAILY SENTINEL
owner Irving Schatz likes Sen. Hubert HumDEV-OTED TO
INTEREST OF
phrey and sends him for a functional gag- his
MEIGS-MASON AREA
hostelry's monogrammed towels .... Sen. HH CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
may be the most regular top-line politician N.Y.
ROBE :~e~·J=:FLICH,
has seen since Jinuny Walker .... He was as
Publ ish'ei~y Edd~rr; ~n&lt;cept
popular at P. J. Clarke's on Frazier-Ali fight saturday by The Ohio Valley
night as Ethel Kennedy, Andy Williams, Jason Court
Publishing
Company, Ohio,
111
St .. Pomeroy,
Robards or even the bartenders.
45769. Business Office Phone
Irvin Wallace gets a nomination in this ~n/156, Editoria l Phone 992·
week's Age of Vulgarity sweepstakes: He's
Second class postage paid at
.
Pomeroy, Ohio.
dedicated his "The Nympho and Other Maniacs"
Nat i 0 n a 1 advertising
book about 30 historical sex-swingers to his representative Bottinelli_o
Gallagher, Inc., 12 East .c~..\!!
"liberated" children, Amy, 15, and Peter, 23 .... St.;'"New York City, New York.
.
Iock"m'CO1• Sanders dinin"gat Delivered
Subscription
Tha t was f mgerby carrierrates;
where
Mike Manuche's, and not on fried chicken .... At ava ilable so cents per week;
By Motor Route where carrier
Manuch e 's, J ohnny Mercer sru"d h.IS f avort•te service
!lOt available: One
singers are Ella Fitzgerald, Bing Crosby and month ' S1 .75. By maiJ ·In Ohio'
.. ~taire .... That "hould kill him with and W. Va., One year S1.C.OO .·
Fred ,.,
~
Six months S7.25. l'hree
Sinatra.
months S4.50. Subscription
Billy Rose's old townhouse in the E. 90s, sold ~~~ct~~~~~ludes Sundav Times ·
to the Algerian Embassy by Billy's estate for •
$1,500,000, is for sale again at the same figure ....
We lmew Algerian ambassador to the U. N.
Tewfik Bouatura, who was dealing for the Rose
mansion, but we kept our trap shut that the
money from the sale would go to Israel. After it
was consummated, we told Tewfik where his
Arab money was going. The young, charming
ambassador thought it over a moment, smiled
and shrugged "I don't care."

A contribution will be sent to
the
Clemons
Christian
Children's Cottage by the
Evangeline Missionary Society
of the Pomeroy Church of
Christ.
Meeting Tuesday night at the
home of Mrs. Stanley Bass,
Locust St., the group studied
about the children's work being
done in Ontario, Canada. Mrs.
You Can't Beat A Riggs Deal
Harold Smith led in the mission
~------SPECIAL--------~
study.
A lily will be placed in the
69 DODGE 1f2 TON
sanctuary for Easter by the
Pickup
truck,
6 cyl., stand. trans., heavy duty, step
group. In the absence of Mrs.
rear bumper.
Conrad Ohlinger, president,
Was '1795 Now '1595
Mrs. Smith had charge of the
meeting. Mrs. Elwood Bowers
gave devotions using Romans
70 OUSTER
5
12, with Mrs. Louis Osborne
340 V-B. 2 dr. H. T., 4 sp., competition oranoe
with white vinyl top, bucket seats. racing
Presenting the prayer. Memwheels.
bers answered roll call with a 11---'---------------------------------------tl
memory verse. Mrs. Edward
69 COUGAR
Venoy will be hostess for the
Convertible, 302 V-8, 3 speed trans., lime
5
green with white top, radio &amp; w-w tires.
11--=-------------_:_----------------------..
April meeting.
Refreshments were served by
69 CH EV. IMPALA
Mrs. Bass to Mrs. Charles
Custom , 2 Dr. H.T., dark green with light
green interior, P.S., P. B., low milea e.
Hoffman, Mrs. Clarence An- .__.:::.__p_o_N_T_I_A~C-=----'-.:.......;;:..:.:....:..::..;..c.....:...;.~=:..:.....-------------ll
68
drews, and Mrs. Denve;- Kapple
2 Dr. H.T., P.S., P.B., white with black vinyl
and others named above.
top. Real sharp.

Drive a Datsun,
then decide.

Th" Someth ng Spec1a1

Plans for serving the
bloodmobile in April were
discussed and contributions
were made to the George
Thompson Kidney Fund and the
Meigs County Society for
Crippled Children at Thursday's meeting of the Rock
Springs Better Health Club.
The April treat for residents
of the Meigs County Infirmary
will be provided by Mrs.
Wheeler Drake, Mrs. Louis
Grueser and Mrs. Hugh Bearhs.
Meeting at the home of Mrs.
Fred Goeglein, the pledge to the
flag and a prayer opened the
session presided over by Mrs.
WJlliam Grueser. Mrs. George
Skinner used the 12th verse of
the Second Psalm and a
reading "God and His Earth"
for devotions . Secret pal
communications was the roll

chi Idre n,sCottage ~~fi~~; d;~e~:~l~s::R::ro:~

In 1942 all men in the United
States between the ages of 45
and 64, about 13 million, were
ordered to register with the
Selective Service boards for non
military duty.

Bv I'HIL PASTOHET

Plans Made to Serve Bloodmobile

lrH~s;~~A'L'"lll ~:";~::o~ade ~);~~~~~~::£~{;~~

70 Cadillac Coupe DeVille, air-------· '6000
69 Cadillac Sedan DeVille, air.____ --_SSOOO

L

l

i Helen Help Us! ! Voice along Broadway

Timely Quotes

BARBS

The Dodge City Posse Wants You
WALLACE AMBERGER- EMERSON JONES
BOB BRATTON · HILTON WOLFE
OICK RAWLINGS

RAWLINGS DODGE CITY

992-2152

992-2151
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

•

�3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 19 1971

.r~s;;,.;;-n~;~·lBucks
.L~~~-·~':!~c::~-~:!_."._.~~~ --·--------J
. That guy Wolfe (Donald) has done it again. Below is a first
mstallment of two bringing up to date team and individual
achievements in Meigs High School Marauder basketball, now all
offour seasons old. Mr. Wolfe probably wore out at least one of the
school's commercial departrnen t adding machines in the process,
but "the record" is invaluable to the school now and in future
years.
There's only one problem: How will Principal James Diehl
and Athletic Director Charles Chancey find a replacement for
Wolfe who is scheduled to step into retirement soon? The second
half of. the production, "Individual Records," will appear Monday. Lines ending with a lower case "x" indicates a new record.

,. •

ALL-TIME MEIGS MARAUDER
BASKETBAlL RECORDS

•
•

•

(19~1969-1970-1971)

Team Records
Most points scored 1 game- 81 vs Point Pleasant in 1971 x.
Most points scored by opponents 1 game -104 by Jackson in
1968.
Most points scored 1 season -1221 in 1971 x.
Most points scored by opponents 1 season -1469 in 1968.
Most field goal attempts 1 game -70 vs Logan in 1968 and vs
Wellston in 1970.
Most field goals attempts by opponents 1 game- 95 by New
Lexington in 1968.
Most field goal attempts 1 season -1059 in 1970.
Most field goal attempts 1 season by opponents - 1284 in 1968.
Most field goals made 1 game - 27 vs Nelsonville-York in
1970; 27 vs Wellston in 1971 (Tie). '
Most field goals made 1 game by opponents - 40 by Waverly
in 1971 X.
Most field goals made 1 season- 411 in 1971 x.
Most field goals made 1 season by opponents- 564 in 1968.
Best field shooting average 1 game - 52 per cent vs Point
Pleasant in 1971 x.
Best field shooting average 1 game by opponent - 56 per cent
by Nelsonville-York in 1968.
Best field shooting average 1 season- 41 per cent in 1971 x.
Best field shooting average 1 season by opponents - 43 per
cent in 1968.
Most free throws attempted 1 game - 47 vs Logan in 1970.
Most free throws attempted 1 game by opponents - 58 by
Vinton in 1968.
Most free throws attempted 1 season- 637 in 1971 x.
Most free throws attempted 1 season by opponents- 528 in
1968.
Most free throws made 1 game - 35 vs Point Pleasant in 1971
X.

Most free throws made 1 game by opponents - 39 by Vinton in
1968.
Most free throws made 1 season - 399 in 1971 x .
Most free throws made 1 season by opponents - 341 in 1968.
Best free throw average 1 game - 83 per cent vs New
Lexington in 1968.
Best free throw average 1 game by opponents - 86 per cent
by Wellston in 1970.
Best free throw average 1 season - 62 per cent in 1971 x.
Best free throw average 1 season by opponents - 64 per cent
in 1968 and 1969.
Highest point average per game in 1 year - 61 in 1971 x.
Highest point average per game in 1 year by opponents - 77
in 1968.
on page 4)

•

ATHENS, Ga. (UPI)- Ohio
State's moment of glory may be
shorUived.
The Big Ten champions ended
second-ranked Marquette's 39game winning streak Thursday
night with a 60-59 upset in the
semi-finals of the NCAA
Mideast Regional - but next
come the Western Kentucky
Hilltoppers who may be the
hottest team in college basketball at the moment.
The Hilltoppers, who overcame an 18-point deficit last
week to knock off Jacksonille
University, were cooking on all
burners Thursday night as they
humiliated the proud Kentucky

Jolt Warriors

Wildcats 107-83 to win a Mideast
finals berth against Ohio State
Saturday afternoon.
"We don't play much better
than we did tonight," Western
Kentucky Coach John Oldham
said after his team routed the
Southeastern Conference champions. "If we did, we'd have to
join the NBA."
But the way Ohio State Coach
Fred Taylor sees it, his
Buckeyes are just happy to
have a chance to play in the
regional finals. They never
really expected to get that far.
"We were scared to death at
the start," Taylor said in explanation of why the lOth-rank-

Tonight's Games

Bench Is
Out With
Leg Injury
WINTER HAVEN, Fla.
(UPI) -Johnny Bench, the
Cincinnati Reds' star catcher,
will miss the next several
exhibition games while his
spiked right shin heals.
Bench, most valuable player
in the National League last
year, spiked himself Thursday
while stealing third base in the
seventh inning of a 7-5 win over
the Boston Red Sox.
A physician at Winter Haven
Hospital closed the gash with
ten stitches.
Bench is hitting .357 in the
nine games he has played in
since coming to terms with the
Reds over his contract.
Cincinnati collected 12 hits off
three Red Sox pitchers and was
helped by six Boston errors.
Outfielder Bernie Carbo drove
in two runs with a single and a
home run and rookie third
baseman Kurt Bevacqua had
three singles.
Lefthander Ross Grimsley
held the Sox hitless until the
fifth inning. Grimsley, a nonroster player has allowed only
three earned runs in 16 innings.
COLTS-BROWNS TRADE
CLEVELAND (UPI)-Linebacker Tom Butler, who spent
most of his time in the National
Football League on the Cleveland taxi squad, was traded to
the Baltimore Colts Thursday
for an undisclosed draft choice.

Class AAA
(At Cincinnati)
Hamilton Taft (17·3) vs.
Springfield North (203)
Dayton Dunbar (21 -ll vs .
Ci ncinnati St. Savier (16-4)
Class AA
&lt;At Bowling Green)
Lexington (20-2) vs.
Lima Central Catholic (18-3)
(At Ashland)
Rossford (20-2) vs. Canton Leh·
man (20-2)
(At Athens)
Maysville (17-5) vs.
Steubenville Catholic (19-3)
Columbus Ready (20 2) vs.
Waverly (21 1)
(At Dayton)
Tipp City ( 175) vs.
Cincinnati Loveland (21 -2)
Oakwood (16-3) vs. London (14·

8)
Class A .
(At Columbus)
Ridgedale (19 -2) vs. East
Can ton (2 1-2)
Pleasant ( 18-4) vs . Hillsdale
(21 3)

Ohio H. S. Basketball
Tournament Scores
By United Press International
Class AAA
(At Columbus)
Cols. Walnut Ridge 73
Steubenville69 (ot)
(At Canton)
Euclid 61 Bay Village 60
A~ron Central -Hewer 63 Toledo
Wood. 56
Class AA
(At Copley)
Youngstown North 93 Twinsburg 75
Class A
(At Bowling Green)
Vanlue 82 Old Fort 70
(At Lima)
Convoy Crestview 58 Ayersville
38
(At Athens)
Zanesville
Rosecrans
55
Crooksville 54
Pike Western 58 Indiana Valley
South 53
(At Dayton)
Fort Recovery 57 Clinton
Massie 55
Sidney Lehman 66 Franklin
Monroe 57

CRO 'S Upshaw Regains Form
STEAK
..

.•

HOUSE

•

Home of

the Fabulous

..-......
...
.•
..•..• fomBoy
.•.
... SANDWICH
•

Order

By

Phone

And Toke Em Home

992-5432

.•
"

•..
•
•

•
..•

•

•

By United Press International allowed three hits during his
Cecil Upshaw, who was six-inning assignment.
sidelined for the entire 1970
The Braves scored all their
season after suffering a freak runs off Denny McLain in the
injury, apparently is as good as first inning on singles by Felix
new and ready to give the Millan, Ralph Garr, Hank
Atlanta Braves the relief Aaron, Dusty Baker and Clete
pitching they need to be a Boyer.
On other fronts: Homers by
pennant contender.
Upshaw, a former basketball Brant Alyea and Leo Cardenas
player, nearly tore the ring led the Minnesota Twins to a 9finger of his left hand off in an 2 victory over the New York
a ccident prior to the 1970 Yankees behind the four-hit
season and the Braves suffered pitching of Jim Perry and Sal
with him all season through Campisi. It was the lOth
lack of effective relief pitching. straight loss for the Yankees ...
Upshaw had an 8-7 record and Ron Brand's two-aut double in
a 2.46 earned run average in 52 the lOth inning drove in the
games in 1968 and a 6-4 slate winning run in the Montreal
and 2.91 ERA in 62 games in Expos' 6-5 triumph over the
1969.
Houston Astros.
Upshaw has pitched 10 2-3 Dick McAuliffe singled in two
shutout innings this spring, runs in the seventh inning and
including three in a 3-0 victory scored the winning run on Bill
over the Washington Senators Freehan's sacrifice fly in the
Thursday. He retired nine .ninth as the Detroit Tigers beat
straight batters after taking the New York Mets, 5-4. Mickey
over for Pat J arvis, who Lolich ptlched six shutout
innings for the Tigers .. .Byron
Browne drove in three runs
with as many singles and Larry
Hisle knocked in two runs to
give the Philadelphia Phillies a
6-5 win over the Kansas City
Royals.
Steve Blass allowed three
runs and six hits in seven
The BLOCK Army is well traininnings, pacing the Pittsburgh
~ d to do bottle for you! After
Pira tes to a 6-4 win over the St.
a private discussion with you,
Louis Cardinals. Julian Javier
we'll generally save more than
had a double and two singles
e nough on your tax to pay
Cardinals ...Johnny
for the
our low charge.
Bench, the Cincinnati Reds' allDon't fight it! See
s tar catcher, suffered a 10BLOCK! It's a good
stitch, self-inflicted spike wound
place
to
place

DON'T BATTLE WITH YOUR

INCOME TAX

o:•

on the nght shin and will be
sidelined about a week. Bench
suffered the injury stealing
third base during the Reds' 7-5
triumph over the Boston Red
Sox ...The Red Sox farmed out
pitchers Dick Mills, Jack
Curtis, Terry Williams, Mike
Garman, Lynn McGlothen and
Rogelio Moret, outfielder Ben
Oglivio and catcher Tom
Maggard.

Warriors
Top
Bulls
By Umted Press International
The San Francisco Warriors
the Chicago Bulls Thursday night but both teams went
home happy.
The Warriors clinched the
second-place playoff spot in the
National Basketball Association's Pacific Division with
their 91-85 victory over the
Bulls. Hours later, the Bulls
gained the runnerup slot in the
Midwest Division when the New
York Knicks beat the third
place Phoenix Suns 131-123 in
overtime.
In the only other NBA game,
Seattle upended Milwaukee
122-121.
Nate Thurmond and Jeff
Mullins scored 29 points each to
lead the Warriors past the
Bulls. The San Francisco
defense held Chicago to only 11
points in the second period.
Willis Reed scored six of his
16 points during the overtime
peri.od as the Knicks ousted
be::~t

your confidence.

BOTH

FEDERAL
AND

$

sophomore Luke Witte had the
Buckeyes ahead 58-57 with
barely a minute to go, two plays
involving Marquette Coach Al
McGuire's sophomore son,
Allie and the loss of All-America
Dean Meminger were the
deciding factors.
Marquette, still trailing at
that point, had the ball out of
bounds in front court with seven
seconds to play. Young McGuire passed in to sophomore
Mike Mills who returned the
ball to McGuire before Allie
coulcf get across the sideline.
One second later, McGuire
fouled Ohio State sophomore
Allan Hornyak, who sank a
clinching pair of free throws.
Meminger, held to 11 points

'

ABA Standrngs
By United Press tnternationa I
East
w. l. Pet. GB
49 26 .653
Virg inia
42 35 .545 8
Kentuc k y
39 37 .513 101/2
New York
33 45 .423 171/1
Pi t lsburg h
33 46 .418 18
F loridia ns
29 47 .382 201/2
Caroli na
West
W. l. Pet. GB
Utah
52 23 .693 ..
Indiana
53 24 .688 .
Memphis
38 38 .500 14'12
Denver
27 50 .351 26
Texas
26 50 .342 26112
Thursday's Results
Utah 124 Denver 123
Friday's Games
Ken tucky at Indiana
Virginia vs . Carolina
a t Greensboro, N .C.
Memphis a t Texas
U1ah at New York
(Only games scheduled)

during a sub-par performance
fouled out with more than fiv~
minutes left to play. Marquette
held a five-point lead at that
time.
" They were well parepared,"
said coach McGuire. "They did
their thing. We won 39 in a row
and we won some we shouldn't
have won. We had a nice run at
it this year and we hope to be
back. "
Seventh-ranked Western Kentucky handed 8th-ranked Kentucky its most lop-sided defeat
in the Wildcats' long and illustrious history of NCAA tournaNBA Standings
ment play. The worst previous By United
Press lnternationa I
such defeat suffered by the fourAt lantic Divi sion
W. l. Pet. GB
time NCAA champions was by
York
52 29 .642 ...
19 points to Dartmouth in 1943. XPhiNew
ladelphia 45 34 .570 6
Boston
Buffalo

Bruins Romp
By JOE CARNICEI.LI
UPI Sports Writer
UCLA's methodical NCAA
express churned on, but that
was the only thing predictable
about Thursday night's regional
semifinals.
Surprise was the name of the
game and there were shocks in
all four regionals.
There was Ohio State, the Big
Ten champion, upsetting second-ranked Marquette 60-59,
ending the Warriors' 39-game
winning streak, and Western
Kentucky routing Kentucky 10783, the worst tournament
beating evt":r for Adolph Rupp's
Wildcats in the Mideast...
There was Bobby Jones
holding Player of the Year .
Austin Carr well below his
season's average as Drake
ousted Notre Dame 79-72 in
overtime and Kansas having to
rally to stop Houston 78-77 in the
Midwest...
There was Long Beach State

coming back from a 13-point
deficit at halftime to beat inspired University of the Pacific
78-65 in the West...
And finally there was undefeated and underrated Pennsylvania stopping South Carolina
79-64 to set up a "Philadelphia
final" in the Eastern regionals
against Villanova, an 85-75
conqueror of Fordham.
UCLA Looked Ready
UCLA, looking for a fifth
consecutive NCAA basketball
title, looked ready as it
steamrollered Brigham Young
91-73. The Bruins, the nation's
No. 1 team, will meet Long
Beach State in Saturday·•s
Western finals, a rematch of
last year's regional windup. In
other regional finals, Kansas
will face Drake and Western
Kentucky tangles with Ohio
State.
The winners will advance to
Houston for the national
semifinals next Thursday and

the NCAA title game, Saturday,
March 27.
The Bruins, with a perfectly
balanced attack, got 15 points
from Henry Bibby, 14 from
Sidney Wicks and 13 each from
Curtis Rowe and Steve Patterson.
Jerry Tarkanian, the Long
Beach coach , is anxious for a
rematch. " Everybody wants to
play the No . 1 team and there's
no doubt about it, UCLA is No.
1," said Tarkanian after watching his club stumble early in
the game and then rebound with
a devastating pressing defense.
Fouls Hurt Marquette
Fred Taylor, the Ohio State
coach, felt his club was "intimidated" on the boards by
Marquette, but was happy with
the result. Marquette suffered a
crushing blow when Dean
Meminger, the Warriors' star
guard, fouled out with more
than five minutes left and
Marquette five points ahead.

Scared At First'-Taylor
ATHENS, Ga. (UPI) - Fred
Taylor was scared to death at
the start, but not too surprised
at the finish.
"Hey, these kids have done it
before - nothing surprises me,"
the happy Ohio State coach
said Thursday night after his

youthful squad had just upset
second-ranked Marquette 60-59
in the NCAA Mideast Regionals.
The end score does not begin
to tell the tenseness of the last
few minutes of play when it
was looking more and more

Evansville Eyes Fifth
College Division Title
EVANSVILLE, Ind. (UPI)Host Evansviile shoots for its
fifth NCAA college division
basketball crown tonight
against Old Dominion, which is
in the championship game for
the first time.
Evansville closed with a fury
Thursday night to oust Southwestern Louisiana, 93-74, and
Old Dominion's Monarchs upset
Kentucky Wesleyan, 97-83, in
semifinal games .
The Aces rolled into a 47-33
halftime lead over Southwestern Louisiana, which had
sidelined favored Assumption in
the quarterfinals. The Bulldogs
trimmed the Evansville lead to
four a t 69-65 with eight minutes
to play. Then the Aces outscored Southwestern 8-1 in the
next few minutes and 23-9 for
the remainder of the game.
John Wellemeyer topped
Evansville, now 21-8, with 23
points. Bob Clayton, who hit
eight of nine from the floor, got
21 and Rick Coffey added 20.
Dwight Lamar, the leading

college division scorer with a
36.6 average, was limited to 21
points.
Sophomores Randy Coulling
and Rick Nau led Old
Dominion's victory over Kentucky Wesleyan, bringing the
Monarchs' record to 21-8.
Coulling finished with 24
points, 18 in the final half. Nau
got 15 including 11 in the last
half.

College Basketball Results
By United Press International
NCAA Tournament
Eastern Regional
At Raleigh, N.C.
Villanova 85 Fordham 75
Penn 79 So Carolina 64
Mideast Regional
At Athens, Ga.
Ohio St. 60 Marquette 59
W Kentucky 107 Kentucky 83
Midwest Regional
At Wichita, Kan.
Drake 79 Notr e Dame 72, oi
Kansas 78 Houston 77
Far West Regional
At Salt lake City, Utah
Long Beach St 78 U of Pa cific
65
UCLA 91 Brigham Young 73

Phoenix from a playoff shot.
College Division
At Evansville, Ind.
Dick Barnettled New York with
Evansv i lle 93 SW Louisiana 74
30 points and Connie Hawkins Old
Dominion 93 Kentucky
was tops for Phoenix with 35. Wslyn 74

like the Buckeyes were io be
counted out instead of in.
" We were so dad-burn nervous you'd think we hadn't been
on the road 'this year," Taylor
said. " We were scared to death
at thP start.''
The Buckeyes~al:l • 'tung to
the tails of Marquette's Warriors throughout the first half,
trailed 31-27 at halftime and
didn 't catch up until just 1:09
was left in the game.
"The thing that really turned
it in our favor the second half
was our three-quarter court rat
game defense," the coach theorized. " The poise of our kids
was tremendous - they really
hung in there a couple of times
when it looked almost impossible."
Seven-foot sophomore Luke
Witte put the Bucks ahead for
the first time at 58-57 with a
layup and with six seconds left
Allan Hornyak was fouled. His
accuracy sealed it.
As it turned out, the game
went according to Taylor's
overall scheme .
"We had to beat their press
and we did, we had to stop
Dean Meminger and I'm sure
we did that," he said.
The only part he wasn't so
happy about was the Buckeye
board-tending.
" We weren't rebounding as
aggressively as we could and
then we made a little run at
them early in the second half
we made a couple of foolish
passes," he said. "But the kids
settled down and did a great
job."

42 38 .525 9'11
22 58 .275 29 112
Central Division
W. l. Pet. GB
X Balt imore 41 38 .519 ...
Atla n ta
35 45 .438 6'12
Cincinnati
33 47 .413 8'11
Cleveland
14 65 .177 28
Midwest Division
W. L. Pet. GB
X-Milwaukee 66 15 .815 ...
Ch icago
50 29 .633 15
Phoenix
46 33 .582 19
De troit
43 36 .544 22
Pacific Division
W. L. Pet. GB
X Los Angeles 47 33 .588
San Francisco 41 40 .506 6l! 2
San Diego
38 42 .475 9
Sea It Ie
37 42 . 468 9'12
Portland
25 53 .321 21
X-Ciinched div. title.
Thursday's Results
New York 131 Phoenix 123, ot
San Francisco 91 Chicago 85
Seattle 122 M ilwaukee 121
Friday's Games
Ba lt i more at Boston
Buff alo at Detroit
Cincinnati at Phi ladelphia
Chicago at Atlanta
M i lwaukee at San Diego
Seattle at Portland
(Onl y games scheduled )
NHl Standings
By United Press International
East
W. l. T. Pts
53 10 7 113
Bos ton
44 15 11 99
New York
36 21 13 85
Mon treal
34 30 6 74
Toron to
20 37 13 53
Buffal o
20 39 10 50
De troit
19 42 7 45
Vancouver
West
W. L. T. Pts
44 17 9 97
X-Chicago
St. L ouis
29 24 17 75
M innesota
26 30 15 67
Phi ladelphia
26 30 13 65
Pit tsburgh
20 32 18 58
Los Ange les
21 35 12 54
Californi a
18 47 5 41
X-Ciinched div. title
Thursday' s Results
Montreal 4 Toronto 1
Phi ladel phi a 2 New Y ork 1
Boston 7 Detr oit 3
Buffa lo 5 St. Louis 3
L os Angeles 3 Chicago 2
Friday's Game!&gt;
tsburg h at Vane ve
Chicago at Californ a
(Only games scheduled)

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McCLURE'S

STATE

ed Buckeyes fell 13 points behind midway the first half.
"They intimidated us on the
boards."
However, Ohio State captain
Jimmy Cleamons had no intention of letting the Buckeyes quit.
The only senior playing for OSU
Thursday night, Cleamons, who
wound up high scorer in the
game with 21 points, led a
comeback battle that cut
Marquette's lead to 31-27 at
halftime
and wiped it out
altogether with 1:09 left in the
game.
"The thing that turned it
around for us was our threequarter court press," said Taylor. "We call it our rat defense."
Although a layup by 7-foot

Pro Standings

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Ph . 992 -3795

Pomeroy , Ohio

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McCLURE'S DAIRY ISLE
4th &amp; Locust

992 -5248

Middleport, 0.

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Short &amp; Long Sleeve
Also Arrow Sport Shirts

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YOUR FASHION CENTER

Matching Washer________sl9995

H&amp;R Firestone
992 -2238

N. lnd Ave.

Middleport, 0.

�. _. . _. ._. . -- ----l

4 _The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 19,1971

Slides Shown
By the Roushes

~

197 Earn Honors Listing

Party Given at

Social ~\
Health Center
Calendar

One hundred and ninety seven Cadle, Wanda Cardillo, Steven KISER, Debbie Knight, Mary
students earning B or better of Cottenll, .Jeff Darst, DONNA Krawsczyn, David Lemley,
Meigs High School have been FRANCIS, BETH FULTZ, Mike May, Diana McAngus,
named to the fourth six weeks David Gerard, Karen Hale, Mark Morris, TINA NIERI,
A St. Patrick's Day party was
Slides of their trip to Russia
honor roll. Senior Cosmetology Sheila Hawk, Randy Haynes, Gary O'Dell, Mark Oiler, Joe
staged Wednesday at the
were shown by Mr. and Mrs.
students did not receive their Julia Hutchison, EDITH MEES, Rosenbaum, DEBBIE SHUCK,
Southeastern Ohio Mental
Edison Roush at a recent
FRIDAY
grades due to the absence of Sherry Michael, Heidi Milhoan, Patty Searles, Gail Sizemore,
Health Center as an American
meeting of the Chester P.T.A.
SOUP SUPPER, 4:30 p.m. Legion Auxiliary community
Mrs. Mary Powell who was Robert Moodispaugh, Roger Albert Smith, JILL SMITH,
Mrs. Richard Barton was Friday at the Syracuse Asbury
Rick
called to Florida by the death of Pearch, Desiree Pike, Christine RANDY ' SNIDER,
chairman of the family night Methodist Church. Soup, pie, service project_ Mrs. Myrtle
Robinson, JAMES SCHOLL, Stobart and Sherman White.
her
father_
Named
to
the
honor
Walker
of
Racine,
district
program. A report was given by sandwiches_ Containers to be
Everett Schuler, WILLIAM
roll were (all A in caps):
the ways and means committee provided for take-out orders_ chairman, was in charge of
STEPHEN STANLEY, BILL
SENIORS
Don
Anderson,
arrangements for the party
that vanilla
and
other
VAUGHAN.
BASKETBALL
games,
Randy
Becker,
Dennis
Boggs,
attended
by
60
women.
flavorings have been ordered.
FRESHMEN
Leroy
Syracuse
Grade
School,
Friday,
Bradbury,
Mary
Brickles,
Mary
Games
were
played
with
It was noted that the new slide
Adams,
Steve
Anderson,
John
7
p.m.,
fifth
grade
boys
versus
Eddie
Brown,
Alice
Capehart,
prizes of candy, gum, mints,
for the kindergarten children
Ash, David Barnhart, Regina
sixth
grade
boys;
8
p.mfathers
TWILA
CLATWORTHY,
scarves,
hats,
shoes,
cosmetics,
has arrived and is in use, but
DEBBIE CROW, Mary Ferrell, Bing, Richie Blumenauer, Rick
that
expected
financial versus sons. Proceeds for jewelry, cigarettes, stationery,
Lyla
Garnes,
DAVID Bolin, Donna Boyd, Bruce
basketball
banquet.
and cologne being awarded to
assistance towards the purCaldwell, Diana Carsey, Vicky
REV. EDWIN McLeod, the winners.
HAGGERTY,
George
Hawley,
55 pc. service for 8
chase
price
has
not
James Couch, Melvin
Clelland,
Belpre,
will
show
film
slides
of
Hayes,
BERNADETTE
Don
Mrs. Dolly Kleinschmidt of
materialized. The need for new
the Holy Land, 7:30 p.m. Logan, formerly of Meigs
HENNESSY, STEVE HOFF- Cremeans, Joyce Davis, Rita
sidewalks around the building
MAN, Kaye Howell, Patty Davis, Robert Eason, Connie
Friday, Bald Knob Freedom County, was at the piano for
was discussed along with the
Gospel Mission, Sti versville- group singing of hymns.
Jeffers, Glenna Keys , Mary Lou Garnes, David Grant, Ingrid
need for limestone on the berm
Bashan Road. Public invited_ Refreshments of sandwiches,
King, MARIANNE KLOES, Hawley, Randy Hill, Mary
of the road.
Nancy
Mayer,
LINDA Janey, Dana Johnson, EZRA
SATURDAY
potato chips, bananas, KoolThe Meigs County Council of
MIDKIFF, KATHY MOORE,
SQUARE DANCE, Saturday, Aid, cupcakes, and shamrock
Parents and Teachers by-laws
SHERRY NELSON, GLORIA
9 p.m.- 1 a.m. Royal Oak Park cook1es were served.
were read and approved, and it
OILER, Ellen Rice , Joyce
archery building. Music by
Assisting
with
the
party
were
was voted to give a $10 donation
Riley, FRANKLIN RIZER,
Mike Garrell and band, caller Mrs_ Walker, Mrs_ Mary Roush,
to the George Thompson Kidney
KAYTE MULLEN, Cathy
Jim Carnahan. Sponsored by Mrs. Julia Norris, Racine
Fund.
Searles, John Sebo, Donald
Southern Local Band Boosters. Auxiliary 602; Mrs_ Charles
Mrs. Roger Keller, Mrs.
Shultz, GLENNA SPRAGUE,
RACINE POST 602, American Kessinger, Mrs. Erma HenDelmar Baum, and Mrs.
Peggy Staats, Nancy St. Clair,
Legion
birthday
party, dricks, Mrs. Etta Will, and Mrs.
Richard Gaul were named to
Becky Swindell, Sandy Taylor,
Saturday, 6 · 30 p.m_ Auxiliary Patty Might, Middleport 128;
the nominating committee. The
James
Thomas,
Marsha ..,.____.....,__..__-...n.,
members take covered dish for Mrs. Ernest Bowles, and Mrs.
second, third, sixth and seventh
PORTLANDMrand
Mrs.
Harold
Sellers,
Portland,
Thornton,
Becky
Triplett,
Joyce
Seed Potatoes: Pontiacs, Maine Cobblers,
potluck dinner.
Allen Hampton, Middleport 263;
grades tied for the attendance
are announcing the engagement and forthcoming marriage
HIGH SCHOOL dance party, Mrs. Helen Billings, Athens 21;
Waggoner,
Wilbur
Ward,
Certified Kennebec
award.
of their daughter, Judy Lee, to Lance Corporal Edward E.
DONNA WEBER, Jed Will,
Meigs Junior High School, Mrs. Kleinschmidt, Mrs. Heide
Appointed to the April
Boyd, son of Mr. and Mrs_ Edward Boyd, Jackson. Miss
Middleport, Saturday, 8 to 11 Sloan, and Mrs. Fred Walters,
• Onion Sets
Peat Moss
Donna Wilson, Stan Wilson_
hospitality committee were
Sellers graduated from Southern High School in 1967 and
p.m. with Jays emceeing. Logan 78; and Mrs. George
JUNIORS - Joyce Arney,
Grass
Seed
M, &gt;. Earl Dean, Mrs. J. M.
from the Jackson Manpower School in August, 1970_ She is
School sponsored.
Hackett,
Mrs.
Osby
Martin,
John
Anderson,
Susan
Andrews,
Hydrated
lime
•
Garden
&amp; Lawn Tools
Gaul, Mrs. Roger Gaul, Mrs.
Richard Ash, Irene Barnes,
RUMMAGE SALE Friday Mrs. Grace Pratt, Mrs_ J . M.
presently employed at the Ohio State Employment Service in
Gordon Anderson, Mrs. Alvin
Plant Food
Lawn &amp; Garden Hose
Wayne Barnett, Doris Barnand Saturday, Fry building, Thornton, and Mrs_ Harry
Columbus.
Tripp, and Mrs. Raymond
Middleport, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., by Davis, Pomeroy 39_
hart, William Barnhart, OPAL
&amp; Sprayers
Her
fiance
is
serving
aboard
the
U.S.S.
Terrebonne
Ginther.
BERRY, Robert Black, Resa
• Grass Seeders
Middleport Junior Troop 5.
Parish in the Mediterranean Sea. Wedding plans are inBoothe, Pam Burson, KAREN
• Fertilizer
• Fencing in Complete
DANCE Saturday Southern
complete.
CADLE, DEBBIE CARDER,
Selection
High School 9:30 to 11:30 p_m,
NBA PLAYOFFS ON TV
William Clark, Mike Cullums,
ALSO: Warrier Alfalfa, Glacier Alfalfa ,
sponsored by the French Club.
NEW YORK (UPI)-The Music by Willie.
Janelle Cummings, ANDREA
Alsike Clover, Medium Red Clover, Timothy,
American Broadcasting CompaDEWHURST, Jo Ellen Diehl,
SUNDAY
Ky --31-Fescue 1 cert. Rye Grass.
ny said Thursday it will begin
Nancy Dixon, ROGER DIX N,
MISSIONARY
Convention,
Also just arrived, Northup Flower &amp;
its television coverage of the Hocking District, Sunday 2:30
Harvey Erlewine, James Estep,
Vegetable Seeds &amp; Plant Starter Kit Punch 'N
The need for uniforms was
National Basketball Association p_m. at the Naomi Baptist
(Continued from page 3)
Crystal Faulkner, DEBBIE
Grow.
playoffs on Sunday, March 28. Church. Mrs. Campbell Harper, stressed at a meeting of comGARNES, Dennis Gilmore,
Most personal fouls 1 game- 35 vs Vinton in 1968.
Viewers in the East will see the president; the Rev. Samuel mittee members of Middleport
GRATE,
NANCY
Most personal fouls 1 game by opponent - 32 by Logan in VICKI
Cub Scout Pack 245 Wednesday
Philadelphia-Baltimore game Jackson, pastor.
GREENLEE, Connie Grueser,
1970.
and western TV watchers will
MELANIE HACKETT, Ronald
MEIGS COUNTY Prayer night at the Columbus and
Most personal fouls 1 season- 370 in 1968.
399 West Main Street
992-2164
Pomeroy, 0.
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
see the Los Angeles-Chicago
Harrison, Vickie Harrison, Jane
THE STORE WITH "ALL KINDS OF STUFF" FOR
service, Sunday, 2 p.m. at the
Most personal fouls 1 season by opponents- 419 in 1971 x_
Residents with uniforms to
contest.
PETS- STABLES- LARGE AND SMALL ANIMALS.
Chester
Church
of
the
Most rebounds 1 game- 56 vs Jackson and Wellston in 1971 x. Hazelton, Roger Hendrix,
donate or for sale at a
LAWNS- GARDENS
Frank
Hoffman,
John
Hunnell,
Most rebounds 1 game by opponent- 62 by Jackson in 1969.
Okey Ahart, leader_ reasonable price are asked to
DEBORAH JOHNSON, Cindy
• - - - - - - - - - -. . Nazarene; MONDAY
Most rebounds 1 season -799 in 1971 x.
contact Mrs. Jean Cart, den
Jordan, DIANA KING,· ARMEIGS BAND Boosters, 8
Most rebounds 1 season by opponents- 837 in 1969.
leader
coach,
992-2929.
THUR
KLOES,
David
p_m. high school cafeteria.
Most games played 1 season- 20 in 1969.
Scout dues were discussed
Krawsczyn, Steven Lane,
Most quarters played 1 season- 83 in 1971 x.
and it was explained that fees
TUESDAY
Connie Lanning, Douglas Little,
Least total points 1 game- 20 vs Athens in 1968_
PUBLIC MEETING, Racine for re-registration and books,
PAMELA MANLEY, Richard
Least total points 1 game by opponent
33 by Nelsonville- Martin, DEBRA MAY, Daniel
Junior High, 8 p.m. Tuesday, pins and patches are paid from
representative
of
Com- due collections. Arrangements York in 1970.
McCloud, GARY MICHAEL,
monwealth System Corp. to be were made to send birthday
Least total points 1 season- 958 m 1968.
Randy Michael, Mary Midkiff,
present to discuss sewerage cards to residents of the Meigs
Least total points 1 season by opponents -1073 in 1970.
Darla
Neutzling,
Marla
system for Racine. All residents County informary and the
Least field goal attempts 1 game - 38 vs Marietta in 1968 and Neutzhng, Ruby Nicinsky, ANN
Children's Home. Mrs. Marion Wahama in 1970.
mv1ted
OHLINGER, Edward Parker,
ME iS
t~ Committee on Francis will have charge of this.
Least field goal attempts 1 gam£' by opponent - 34 by Karen Price, CONNIE RAD!\l t
and Drug Abuse,
The SOAR ( Save Our Gallipolis in 1971 x.
FORD,
Rosemary
Rice,
Tuesd.n, 7:30 p,m_ at St. Paul American Resources) project,
Least field goal attempts 1 season- 983 in 1971.
Margaret Riggs, MILISA
Lutheran Church, 231 E. officially beginning Saturday,
Least field goal attempts 1 season by opponents -1099 in 1971 RIZER, Brenda Russell,
Second, Pomeroy. Public in- was discussed. Each den will
Rebecca Scaggs, John Sebo,
carry out projects and the pack x. Least field goals made 1 game - 6 vs Athens in 1968.
vited_
Stella
Smith,
STEVEN
SOUTHERN Local Band will sponsor a joint project. At
Least field goals made 1 game by opponent - 12 by Nelson- STANLEY, Janet Stivers,
Boosters, 7:30 p.m- Tuesday, the meeting were Norman
Steven Story, MICHAEL
in 1970.
It's the onw lawn tractor high school, Racine. Parents of Yeauger, president, Marshall ville-York
STRUBLE, Michael Taylor,
Least field goals made 1 season -343 in 1968.
guarantee for 2 years! band members urged to attend. McMillion, Milford Hysell, Mrs.
Least field goals made 1 season by opponents - 406 in 1970_ Tim Taylor, Ruth Terrell, Fred
The all ·season Lawn Ranger
RACINE American Legion Cart, and Mrs. Francis.
Lowest field goal shooting average 1 game - 1J per cent vs Thompson, Robert Titus,
has seven rugged horses Post Auxiliary, 7:30 p.m.
Martin Vaughan, Joe Welker,
hitched to a tough 3-speed
Athens
in 1968.
all .gear drive. A positive Tuesday at post home.
nesday in Point Pleasant.
Lowest field goal shooting average 1 game by opponent - 17 Danny White, Rebecca Will,
cont~ol
implement clutch.
Clarence Williams, BRENDA
Earlier th1s week, Mrs. Turner per cent by Nels.-Y in 1970_
(Metal &amp; Wood)
Gentle turf saver tires. Ride
and
Mrs.
Verner
See
visited
a horse now. Wheel Horse, of
Lowest field goal shooting average 1 season - 33 per cent in WOODS, Cathy Yates.
SOPHOMORES Diane
relatives in Point Pleasant.
course!
May We Help You ...
Aleshire, Shirley Alkire,
Mr. and Mrs. Karl Owen have 1968.
Lowest field goal shooting average 1 season by opponents Barbara
Archer,
Linda
returned from a 10 day visit in
"li/heef
35
per
cent in 1970.
Atkinson,
Lynne
Baker,
~
~ Dayton with Mrs. John
Least free throw attempts 1 game- 9 vs. Wellston in 1968.
Elizabeth Blaettnar, Terry
Goodrich.
Least free throw attempts 1 game by opponent - 10 by
180 Mulberry
992-2115
Pomeroy
Guests of Mr. and Mrs.
in 1969.
~~~
r
~ Clifford Hayes and Gregg, Gallipolis
Least free throw attempts 1 season - 473 in 1968.
Middleport, and other area
OUR PROWlS( Our 2 -}'ear «uarantee on any part
Least free throw attempts 1 season by opponents - 450 in
relatives over the weekend
in any ne .... Wheel Hor ~t trJctor or atlach•na
Mr. and Mrs_ Rollin Wolfe of
A three mile hike was taken
tool . If we make •t and 1l ha~ a manuhctunng
1970.
were Mr. and Mrs. Russell
defect. we II replace 11 through our author ·
Columbus spent the past
by
the Middleport webelos
11ed dealer for 2 yur s alter you bOURht 1t.
Least free throws made 1 game -4 vs Jackson in 1968_
All you 'll pay are serv1ce ulls or transport
weekend here with their son-in- Bainum and Mrs. Grace
Monday night_ The boys met at
•nc un1t tc dnd from dealer On dri~e belts,,
Least
free
throws
made
1
game
by
opponent
4
by
Marietta
Eichensehr, Columbus. They
commerc•all;·used tractors, the same cuaran·
law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs_
the American Legion hall and
tee for 90 days. Battery, eng•ne are auaran·
came especially for the funeral in 1968.
teed separately by tfle• r maken. of course
Don Erwin and Amy, and other
then went to the Mill St Park to
Least free throws made 1 season - 272 in 1968.
services of Emerson Hayes at
relatives.
Wheel Horse Sales &amp; Serv.
begin the hike over the hill and
Least
free
throws
made
1
season
by
opponents
261
in
1970.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Turner the Ewing Funeral Home .
through the cemetery_ The boys
Lowest free throw average 1 game - 25 per cent vs Gallipolis
Tuesday guests of Miss
attended funeral services for
played flashlight tag, and built
.__ _ _ _ _ _
c.he•s•te•r•,.o•.• Okey Blankenship held Wed- Lenore Betzing and Mrs . in 1970.
human pyramids along the way.
Clifford Hayes were Miss
Lowest free throw average 1 game by opponent- 30 per cent
In the group were Milford
Betzing's sister, Mrs. Freda by Marietta in 1968.
Hysell,
leader,
Richard
Miller, and Mrs. Viola Moon _
Lowest free throw average 1 season - 52 per cent in 1969 and Hovatter, Dale Spencer, and
1970_
Gene Hood of Boy Scout Troop
TRACTORS IN
Lowest free throw average 1 season by opponents - 58 per 245 and webelos, Donald Geary,
SERVICE SET
STOCK
SOLD AT
Pomeroy's
Community cent in 1970.
Jeff Laudermilt, Jeff Gilkey,
DEALER'S COST.
Lowest point average per game 1 season- 50 in 1968.
Lenten service will be held at
Michael Hindy, Ricky Hovatter,
Lowest point average per game 1 season by opponents -56 in Jo McCloud, Ney Parker,
7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the
United Methodist Church with 1970.
Kenny Roush, Dean Spencer,
the Rev. W_ H _ Perrin and
Least personal fouls 1 game - 9 vs Gallipolis in 1969.
John Stewart and David Wilcox.
Envoy Ray Wining in cnarge.
Least personal fouls 1 game by opponent - 10 by Athens and
Wellston in 1968.
ner, Pomeroy, and Mrs. Jean
Least personal fouls 1 season - 328 in 1970.
Stout, Syracuse. The greatLeast personal fouls 1 season by opponents - 350 in 1968.
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs_
Least rebounds 1 game- 22 vs Jackson in 1971 x.
Gordon Wolfe, Racine, Route 2,
Least rebounds 1 game by opponent - 20 by Nelsonville-York Herman Hoffner, Lincoln
SAME DAY
in 1970; 20 by Gallipolis in 1971 (tie).
Heights; Mr. and Mrs. Oscar
SERVICE
Least rebounds 1 season - 470 in 1968.
Robertson, Syracuse; and Mr.
In At 9-0ut At 5
and Mrs . Robert Stout, Route 1,
Least rebounds 1 season by opponents - 684 in 1968.
McArthur
Most players fouled out 1 season - 21 in 1968.
Use-our Free Parking Lot
Most players fouled out 1 season by opponents - 23 in 1970.
Least players fouled out 1 season - 10 in 1970.
Least players fouled out 1 season by opponents - 7 in 1968.
For All Occasions·
216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy

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ONEIDA STAINLESS • FLATWARE

$19.95

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE

Judy Lee Sellars to Wed

e

e
e

I

•

e
e
e

•

Need of Uniforms

Told at Meeting

Sports Desk

MODERN SUPPLY

WE'LL HELP YOU

FENCE 'EM IN I I

•

WE'Ll SUPPLY THE

Red Brand Fencing
and Farm Gates

~~j !Middl;rt -l
WBIILBOBSI ~ Personal Notes ~
.. hPOWIB

I

SUGAR RUN MILLS

Webelos on Hike

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Baum lumber Co.

SPRING SPECIAL!

MODERNIZING KITCHEN?

Th e
Convince

are here!

SHIRT
FINISHING

DON'T FUSS!

FLOWERS

Robinson's Cleaners

·1
Don·t put up w1th a n outd ated kitchen .
Fmd out how l1ttle it costs to modernIZe

Com e

1n

and se lect from any plan

3 ROOMS ·.
NEW
FURNITURE

$349.95
$35.00 Down-

Jnd ctv c k our fme select1on of new
f1xtu res .

Ohio Valley Plumbing &amp; Heating
992-2036

Edward Baer, owner

Pomeroy

Balan~e On
Convenient
Ten:ns.

MASON
FURNITURE
Mason, W. Va.

SON IS BORN
Mr . and Mrs. David Stout of
Lincoln Heights, Pomeroy, are
announcing the birth of a son,
Christopher Ryan, on March 8
at the Holzer Medical Center.
· The seven pound, three ounce
infant is Mr. and Mrs. Stout's
first child. Grandparents are
:\1r. and Mrs . Lawrence Hoff-

We wire flowers everywhere

992-2039

The DAVID BROWN 990

Pomeroy Flower Shop

ONE OF THE COMPLETE LINE OF RUGGED,
DEPEM!!~!llE DAVID BROWN DIESEL TRACTORS

Butternut Ave. Pomeroy
Mrs. Millard Van Meter

N. W. COMPTON. 0. D.
OPTOMETRIST

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

We

(Clll th&lt;:&gt;,, th" " (C?nvincc rs" lwcau&lt;c of thP. thou;onds
of mo rf" thon ~oti&lt;ficd owners f r om coast to co11sl. And
th&lt;&gt;re 's o moor I for ever y rP.qu irernent - 7 70. 8AO, 990

Cllld

1200 Thr · (c&gt;rw ncers"- tcsl '" iv&lt;::: ope todoy.

Howard's David Brown Tractor Sales
742-5862
RL 1 New Lima Roild

Rutland. 0.

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5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 19,1971

Owl Hollow School Program

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Compliments of
~1. L. PAHKER, Tca('her

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May Alden
lll'rnil'l' KcC'baul{h
Vt·hun Nt·wlnaltl
Binit•t• N&lt;·wlaml

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Girl Scout

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tA
THOUGHT$

~FOR TODAY!

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Great results ca nnot be
achieved at once. We
must be sa tisfied to ad·
vance in life as we walk step by step.
-Samuel Smiles

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It's Quick! Easy

DRIVE-.IN

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BANKING~
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Fridays Only
~ The Drive- l n Window
~
is Open
~
9 A.M. to7 P.M.
iC
(Continuously)
~Other Banking Hours 9 to
iC 3 and 5 to 7 as usual on

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POMEROY, OHIO
Member FDIC
Member Federa l
Reserve System

By MRS. AGNES HILL
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Owl Hollow
school house was located about 300 yards off
the road and above and back of the present C.
0. Newland home. The lettering spelling out
the name of the school was made of large ferns
and placed on the building by the pupils,
especially for the picture-taking occasion.
The Owl Hollow woods back of the rail
fence was owned by Daniel Keller and his
daughter, Mary Baker. This picture is a copy
of a faded, torn print taken by a photographer
named Deweese, of Coolville, about 1888. At
times there were as many as 70 to 80 pupils
attending this school. (Information and pic-

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year assist m securing sponsors
for the girls and in the selection
of ones to attend.
Senior girl scouts are needed
to help carry out the program
along with volunteer adult
workers.
A cleanup day at Sandy Bend
has been set for May 8 beginning at 10 a.m. Those who can
help are asked to take a bucket,
rags, and their own lunch .
LEADERS LUNCHEON
Delegates to the annual
leaders' luncheon to be held
April 7 at the University Inn,
Athens, were elected during the
meeting. They are Mrs. Mary
Hunter, Mrs. Thelma Airson,
and Mrs. Daisy Patterson.
Several leaders will receive
service pins at the luncheon .
The registration fee is $2 which
includes the luncheon and this
amounts is to be turned into
Mrs. Ohlinger by March 30.
Registration for the meeting is
at 9 a.m.
DAY CAMP
June 14-18 is the date set for
the Big Bend Neighborhood day
camp. Mrs. Mary Bahr,
director, is soliciting help for
day camp and asks that persons
inter esting in helping out whether or not they are now
involved in scouting - contact
her.
The deadline for registration
is set for May 1 and the fee
established by the Four Rivers
Council is $5. Day camp
booklets were distributed by
ll;lrs. Ohlinger and troops not
represented at the Neighborhood meeting may contact
her for the booklets.
The April 21 meeting was set
for 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Camp
Kiashuta a nd those attending
are to take a nosebag lunch .
Drinks will be provided.
OTHER BUSINESS
It was reported during the
meeting that nine senior girl
scou ts are taking the leader-intraming course. Amy Hamm
a nd Nancy Buskirk are
assisting Mrs. Mary Wise with a
troop in Middleport; Becky
Wnghl works with Mrs . Jackie
Zirkle and her brownie troop in
Pomeroy; Ann Ohlinger helps
with the Brownie Salisbury
Troop: Milisa Rizer. works with
Tro0p 254 of Syracuse. Troops
df',;iring a Sf'nior scout to serve
as un asstslanl are asked to
advise Mrs. Philip Ohlinger,
troop lcarlrr .
Mr.; Ohlinger announ&lt;.'l'd the
IP;I(JPrs' spring conf&lt;-renc·c wtll
lw• h• It' April l!l and 20 at the

Bt·~~it· Osburn
:!\1,. lwl II id•·""" r
Ju;luw llnk•·r
Alil'e Foreman
Harry Keller
.Samuel s ·-~~011
Serena Si;son
Mnri•· Tippy
('lllfortl \\"nl•.,ll
\'ern Wakely
Erwin Ridenour
Glenn Branch

Otho Branch

I n·in Foreman
,;S,ciJool jSoarb
Elmer Newland, Pre8.
E. H. Keebaugh, Treas.
Wm. l&lt;'ollrnd

J. M.

J. F. Bran('h, Clerk
W. F. Koblentz
Albert Cole

Bry~on

M. L. PARKER, TEACHER, (center, in group
below, left) had the "souvenir" program above made,
apparently for the 1908-09 pupils who finished the term.
Attendance fluctuated. Up to 80 or more jammed into
the schoolhouse at times. The demands of rural living
at other times kept children in the fields. Parker listed

ture, Wellington Halsey, Tuppers Plains, age
90) .

The teacher, center, back, was John B.
Halsey, father of Fon and Wellington Halsey.
The pupils, beginning at top of the picture
on the right side, and going across from right
to left: Rose Caldwell, Lu McLane, Albert
Keller, Homer Parker, Elmer Newland,
Herdy Parker, Marion Keller, Elzie Watson,
Ed Parker, Eva Watson, Annie Keller, Leslie
Keller, Emory Keller, Leslie Reed.
Middle row: Ella Caldwell, Rose Reed,

30 pupils on his complimentary program (above) but
only 14 stood for the picture (below, left) which
probably was taken long before "graduation."
Placement of the children in the picture is not possible
at this time.

Rena Parker, Lenora Keller, (first name
unrecalled) Reed, Mamie Parker, Millie
Parker.
Bottom row, Ethel Watson, Josie Caldwell, Lizzie Reed, Vietta Reed, Zelda
Newland, Millie Newland, Fon Halsey (age 6),
Wellington Halsey Cage 8) , Billy Caldwell
(father of Meigs County Auditor, Gordon
Caldwell), Charles Keller, Milford Parker,
Homer McLane, Win Worthen, Clyde Caldwell, George Caldwell, Milo Caldwell, Elza
Caldwell .

rural Orange Twp home, Owl Hollow pupils, now less numerous
f..

By Charlene Hoeflich

A camp fo
dvantaged
girls will agam th1s year be
sponsored by the Four Rivers
Girl Scout Council and Meigs
County's Big Bend Neighborhood is eligible to send 10
girls.
Mrs. Jane Snyder, district
advisor, met Wednesday with
Mrs. William Ohlinger, Neighborhood chairman, and local
scout leaders to discuss plans
for the camp to be held at Sandy
Bend, Aug. 15-21.
Cost for each girl is $10.90.
Necessary equipment, clothing,
and supplies are requested from
the scout troops of the county.
Troops are asked to fix one kit
containing toothpaste and
brush, bar of soap, washcloth,
towel, a used sheet, a plastic
raincoat. A collection of used
camp clothing, sizes 9 to 12, will
be carried out by the troops, and
boots and bathing suits are
needed for each of the girls.
Last year's Appalachia
Heritage Camp program was
attended by 19 Meigs County
disadvantaged girls, with each
one
sponsored
by
an
organization or individuals of
the county. Mrs. Kenneth
Scites, home health nurse of the
Meigs-Gallia Community Action Program, will again this

!'"rune('~ K.·tl.,r
llt·mit·t· 1\'o·wland

Dwight Keebaugh
Ebb Sisson
Cedi Sis~on
V ida O~bnrn
.\lplwu• Wnt•nn
Evert Newland
Frank Griffin

n 'rithmetic in
those old days
OWL HOLLOW ITSELF, in 1908, perfect for a Sunday
picnic with that "girl just like the girl that dear old Dad .... "
Mr. Parker, Letha Ridenour, Glenn Branch, May Alden,
Charles Kincade, Otho Branch, Mabel Ridenour, Florence
Alden, and Vern Wakely.

F lorenee Alden

L..thn H id•·a11nar
l'urol llnkt•r
lval Myers

rea din ' writin '

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Nu. :l

1908 Owl Hollow pupils, then fewer in number
Neil House Mo tor Hotel,
Columbus. Workshop topics will
be ecology, programs, today 's
youth, meeting the individual
girl 's
needs,
dramatics,
working with volunteers, songs
and games, and folk dancing.
Registration is $1 for each day
and must be made with Mrs.
Ohlinger pnor to April 12.
Thinking Day ideas for 1972
were discussed. The Juliette
Low Fund money will be sent to
the Parkersburg office on
March 31 and Mrs. Ohlinger
urged that those who have not
contributed, do so before that
time.
Leaders and assistant leaders
at the meeting wer~ Mrs.
Dorothy Napper, Wolfe Pen
Troop 75; Mrs. Nancy Morris,
Mrs. Sharon Welker, and Mrs.
Sharon Swindell, Salisbury
Brownies 220; Mrs. Thelma
Airson, Salisbury Cadette 208;
Mrs. Marge Benedum, Tuppers
Plains, Junior Troop 267; Mrs.
Mary Hunter, Chester 204; Mrs.
Jackie Zirkle, Pomeroy 66;
Mrs . Margaret Sheridan,
Pomeroy 17; Mrs. Beverly
Collins, Tuppers Plains, Juniors
267; Mrs . Doris Fisher, Racine
137 ; Mrs. Daisy Patterson,
Syr acuse 254; Mrs. Kathryn
Johnson, Pomeroy 271; Mrs.

Miss Graham Wins Recognition
Miss Linda Graham, a senior one of 400 top ranking juniors
at Ohio State University, was and seniors honored at the 14th
Annual President's Scholarship
Recognition dinner.
Miss Graham is the daughter
Mary Wise, Middleport 39; Mrs.
Ruth Ann Williams, Reedsville. of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Graham, 908 Scott St., New
COOKIE SALE
A grand total of 6,432 boxes of Carlisle, and the granddaughter
girl scout cookies was sold in of Mrs. Mary Amos Riley of
Meigs County and will be Columbus, former Meigs
delivered in about two weeks. County residents.
The dinner, a major event of
Mrs. Phillip Fisher reports
that the 536 cases of cookies will the academic year at Ohio
be delivered to her home on State, was held at the Ohio
March 30, and are to be picked Union on the campus. Students
up there by the leaders the fo r recognition of their
following day. The troop to sell scholastic ability were selected
the most cookies was Mid- by the Colleges of the Univerdleport Junior Troop 39 with 81 sity.
cases.
RACINE TROOP 137
A tour of the Best Photo
Service in Coolville has been
planned by Racine Troop 137.
Work on the magic carpet
badge was completed at last
week's meeting. To qualify for
the badge the girls had a book
display, reported on books they
like to read, did a dramatiza tion, read stories and
poetry.
The next group project will be
jewelry craft. Work will also be
started on the collectors badge.

JOHN B. HAlSEY HOME, Owl Hollow, was built by Jon B. Halsey during the SpanishAmerican War. The fancy lattice trim on the porches was handmade by the carpenters. It was
constructed by Gard Caldwell and William Smart; plastered by the Kimes Bros. of Chester. In
the yard are Dana Halsey and Frances Halsey (Mrs. Wilk Jaccaud).
Miss Graham is a 1967
Tecumseh
High
School
graduate where she was covaledictorian of her graduating
class .
She
received
a
scholarship to Kent State
University and attended there
two years prior to enrolling at
Ohio State.
Miss Graham 1s a psychology
major and will receive her
bachelor of science degree in
June.

MOTOROLA~-

Motorola Component
Stereo Music Systems!
Oh Yes-And You Will Too!

watt instantaneous peak power output solid state
receiver (15 watt EIA music power output rating). It
plays the same B·track stereo tape cartridges used in
automobile tape players. Four speakers
two 61 '2" and
2" paired in sea led stereo enclosures. Stereo record
changer jacks · Pushbutton Power Switch . Pushbutton
FM-AFC switch . Rotary Function made switch for AM.
FM Stereo. Phono or auxiliary tape.
30

Bass Control. Treble Control, Loudness Control, Balance
Control. AM FM tuning meter, F M Stereo indicator Light,
Bl ack light slide rule dial with log scale, Vernier tuning,
Stereo Headphone Jack , 3 stage IF with tuned RF for F M
sens itiv ity .

____

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

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6 _The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 19, 1971
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.
POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT
HARTFORD CHURCH OF
POMEROY
TRINITY
Ml. MORIAH BAPTIST- Christ in Christian Union UnitedChurch of Christ -Rev Corner Fourth and Main,
Rev.O'Dell Manley, pastor.
Perrin, pastor. Fred Blaettnar, Middleport. Rev. Henry L. Key,
Sunday School, 9:30 a. m., Rev.
supt. Sunday School, 9:15a.m.; Jr., pastor. Sunday School 9:30 Guy Sayre, supt.; evening
Worship, 10:25 a. m.; youth a. m., Arnold Richards, supt.;
service, 7:30. Tuesday Bible
choir rehearsal. Monday, 6 30 Morning worship 10:30 a. m.
study, 7: 30 p. m . Thursday
p. m., Mrs. Marvin Burt,
FIRST
UNITED
PRES- evening prayer meeting, 7:30 p.
director.
Senior
choir BYTERIAN, Middleport-Rev. m. Sunday evening youth
rehearsal. 7:30p.m. Thursday, Russell Lester, pastor. Sunday services, 6:30 with Roger
Mrs. Paul Nease, director. School 9:30a.m., Lewis Sauer, Manley, youth leader.
Thursday, all day Busy Bee supt.; worship service 10:30
MASON FIRST BAPTIST quilting party in church social a.m.
Second and Pomeroy Sts., Stan
~om,_
Ml DOLE PORT
HEATH Craig, pastor. Sunday school,
POMEROY CHURCH OF UNITED METHODIST-Rev. 9:45a.m.; worship service, 11
THE ' NAZARENE Corner Max E. Donahue, minister; a.m.; training union, 6: 30"p.m.;
Union and Mulberry. Rev. Eric Chambers, Sunday School evening worship service, 7:30
Clyde V. Henderson, pastor. superintendent. Church School p.m. Mid-week prayer service,
Sunday School 9:30 a . m.; 9.30 a. m.; morning worship, Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Raymond
Walburn,
supt. 10:30a. m.; youth meeting, 7 p.
CHRISTIAN
SCIENCE
Morning worship 10:30 a. m.; m.; Choir rehearsal, Wed- Services at 315 Main St., Pt.
Evening service 7:30p.m. Mid- nesday 7-7 · 30 p. m.; Mrs. E.
Pleasant, Sunday School 9:15
week service, Wednesday, 7:30 Robert Hamm, director.
a.m. Sundays, 11 a.m.; WedP· m .
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES- nesday, testimonial meeting 8
GRACE EPISCOPAL- Rev. Larry Carnahan presiding p.m. All welcome.
Stanley Platten burg, minister. , minister. Sunday, Bible lecture,
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH
Morning prayer and sermon, 9:30 a. m .; watchtower study,
10:30 a. m. Holy
1 e - Lelart Route 1, the Rev. Stan
. tcommunion 10 : 30 a. m.; T uesd ay, B'bl
5undays, study, 7:30 p . m.; Thursday, Craig, pastor. Sunday school.
and sermon, f 1rs
10:30 a. m. Church school, ministry school 7:30 p. m., 9:30 a.m.; prayer and Bible
study, 7:30p.m. Cottage prayer
kindergarten through eighth service meeting 8:30 p. m.
grade, 10:30 a.m.
MIDDLEPORT
CHURCH service. Tuesday, 10 a.m.;
POMEROY CHURCH OF of Christ in Christian Union- worship service, Friday, 7:30
CHRIST- Mr. Hoyt Allen, Jr., Lawrence Manley, pastor; Mrs. p.m.
pastor. BibleSchool,9:30a.m.; Russell Young, Sunday School
MASON
CHURCH
OF
worship, 10:30; adult worship Supt. Sunday School 9:30a.m.; CHRIST- John Steele, pastor.
service and younq peoples Evening worship 7:30. Wed· Worship, 10 a.m.; Bible study,
meeting, both. 7:30 -p.
Sun- nesday prayer meeting, 7: 30 p. · 11:15 a.m.; evening worship,
day-Wednesday,
combined m.
7:30 p.m. Mid-week service,
Bible study
and
prayer
CHURCH OF THE NALA- Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
meeting, 7:30p.m.
.RENT Middleport, Rev.
THE SALVATION ARMY Audry tvlllleo, ~asror; r-loyd MEIGS COUNTY
Envoy RayS. Wining, officer in Carson, supt. Sunday school,
charge. Sunday, 10 a. m., 9:30
a.m.;
Morning
warALFRED UNITED METHHoliness meeting ; 10:30 a. m. ship,
10:30
a.m.;
junior
Sunday School. Young People's ~gciety, 6:30 p.m.; NYPS 6:45 ODIST CHURCH, Rev. Randy
Lavender, pastor SunLegion, 7 p._ m., Thursday, 1 to 3 p.m.
Sunday
evangelistic
School, 9· 45.
Lloyd
p. 11., Lad1es Home League; 7 meeting, 7:30 p.m. Prayer day
Superintende~t.
p. m. Prep cla5SP"
meeting Wednesday 7:30 p.m . Dillinger ,
SACRED HEART Kev._
'
Norship Services 11 a.m. wtth
Father Bernard Krajcovic,
MID 0 L E PORT
P E Ill- Rev. Lavender. Prayer Serpastor.
Phone
992-2825, TECOSTAL- Third Ave., the vices Wednesday evening 7:45
Saturday evening Mass, 7:30 Rev. William Knittel, pastor; p.m.
p.m . Sunday Mass, 8 and 10 Ralph Priddy, Sunday School
a.m. Confessions, Saturday 7 supt. ; Classes for all ages,
7:30p.m.
Sunday School, lOa. m.; Sunday
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST evening service, ?: 30 p. m. . UNITED FAITH- Robert E.
Wednesday evenmg Young Smith, pastor . Worship service
-~obert Kuhn, pastor. George People's meeting and Bible and Sunday school, 9:30 a·'!'·•
Sktnner, Sunday School supt. Study, 7 : 3o. Saturday evening Fred Samsel, supt.; evenmg
Sund~y School! 9:30 a. m.; service, 7:30.
worship, 7:30 p.m.; yo'!th
mornmg worship, 1~:30 a.m.;
MID-DLE- PORT
FIRST • meeting, 7 p.m. Prayer meetmg
BYF, 6 P· m .; Bible Study BAPTIST -Charles W. Simons.
Thursday, 7:30p.m.
Wedn~sday 7 p . m.; cho1r pastor. Danny Thompson, Sun practice, Wed., 8:30 p. m.
day School Supt. Sunday
BRADFORD CHURCH OF
FIRST SOUTH_ERN BAP- Church School, 9:15 a. m.;
CHRIST Charles Russell,
TI~T.- 220 E_. Mam, Pomeroy, Morning worship, 10:15 a. m.
Pas tor.
Bud
Bar I rum,
affiltated w1th S.B.C. Rev. Sunday Bible study hour 7:30 p.
Superintendent, Sunday School ,
Cltfford Coleman, pastor. m . Sunday, 4:30 p . m., game
9:30 a.m. Worship Service ,
Sunday school, 9: 30 a.m ., 'time for youth. Weanesday
10:30 a.m. Sunday evening
He_rs hel Mc;:Ciure, supt.; wor- evening prayer service, 7:30.
shtp servtce, 10:30 a.m. ;
services, 7 p.m. Bible study
evening worship, 7:30 p.m.
CHURCH OF CHRIST, MidWednesday, 7 p.m. Bradford
Group Tuesday, 7 p.m .
Wednesday prayer meeting and - dleport, 5th and Main. Raul lin
Bible study, 7:30p.m.
_ Moyer, pastor. Thomas Kelly,
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN Sunday School supt. Bible
HOBSON
CHRISTIAN
Rev. Arthur C. Lund, pastor. School, 9:30 a. m.; morning
UNION Darrel Doddrill,
Sunday School, 9:15 a. m., worship, 10:30 a. m.; evening pastor. Sunday School, 9:30 a.
Charles Evans, s~ pt.; worship worship, 7:30 p, m . ; oravPr m., Annie Mohler, supt.;
service, 10: 30 a. m. Con- service 7 p. m. Wednesday.
Leonard Gilmore, first elder;
firmation class, Saturday, 9:45
evening service, 7:30 p. m .
a.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting,
POMEROY-CHESTER
MASON COUNTY
I_:30 p. m.
UNITED
METHODIST - CHRISTIAN
SCIENCE
MT. MOI&lt;IAH I..HURCH 0 ..
Robert R. Card, pastor. Services, 315 Main St., Pt.
· Pomeroy - Worship, 10:30 a. Pleasant. Sunday services, 11 GOD - Racine Route 2. The
Rev. Charles Hand, pastor.
m.; Church School, 9:15a . m.; a.m. Wednesday Testimonial
Sunday school. 9: 45 a.m. ;
F rank
Vaughan
superin- meeting, 7;30 o .m
morning worship, 11 a.m.
tendent Chester
p 9 a.
GRAHAM UNITED METH- Evening services, Tuesday and
m., Churc-h Sc-'l
ODIST CHURCH - Preaching Friday, 7:30.
RQg~r Ep e, su
..m., first- and second
TUPPERS
PLAINS
SEVEN H DAY
NT 9 JO
UNITED
T I ST Po mer
berry Sunday'&gt; of each month; third CHARGE
and
•ourth
Sundays
each
month,
METHODIST. Sunday worship
Hgts. Herbert M
pastor.
St. Paul's 9 a.m.; South
Sabbath S~hool, Saturday, 2 p. worship serv1ce at 7:30 p. m. Wednesday
evenings
at
7
30,
Bethel 9:55a.m.; Alfred 11 a.m.
m.; worshtp, 3:15p.m. Dorcas
Prayer
and
Bible
Study.
(First and third Sundays) 7:45
Society, lOa. m. each Thursday.
p.m. ; (Second and 4th Sundays) . Lottridge -7:45 p.m.
(First and third Sundays), 11
r1.m. Second and 4th Soonrl&lt;'~vs.

m.

the Serrnonette

The Corruption and Cure of Sin
In Isaiah chapter one we find a vivid picture of the corruptive
nature of sin. There, in verses four through six, we read:
"Ah, sinful nationa, a people laden with iniquity, a seed of
evildoers. children that are corrupters: they have forsaken the
Lord, they have provoked the Holy One of Israel unto anger, they
are gone away backward. Why should ye be stricken any more?
ye will revolt more and more: the whole head is sick and the
whole heart faint. From the sole of the foot even unto the head
there is no soundness in it; but wounds, and bruises, and
putrifying sores: they have not been closed, neither bound up,
neither mollified with ointment."
PERHAPS THE MOST heart-rending thought presented in
this description is that although sin has so polluted and corrupted
the nature of man as to evict all soundness from him, yet it seems
to go unrecognized and untreated. It is even so today.
Sin is called everything but what it is. Those deep in sin are
recognized as everything but what they are; people polluted and
corrupted by the stench of putrifying sin. Sin, for the most part,
continues to go unrecognized and untreated.
As was the case with the pharisees of Jesus' day, people today
do not seem to recognize their malady, nor do they want to seek
the cure. When Jesus said, "They that are whole have no need of
the physician, but they that are sick." He seemed to be saying
that the first step to healing was the recognition of the illness. It
still is.
_
The Bible says, "All have sinned and come short of the glory
of God." The epidemic of sin has contaminated all. Therefore, all
have need of the physician.
If you can recognize your need today and turn to the
physician, there is real hope that the corrupting advance of the
disease of sin can be stopped in you and that you can be made
whole by Him.
I invite you to take your disease of sin to Jesus today.
Rev. Audry Miller, Middleport,
Church of the Nazarene.

Bishop Krumm Being Honored
services and receptions in honor
of Bishop Krumm will take
place in Cincinnati, Dayton,
Columbus, and Athens, Ohio.
The Rev. Nancy Walker will Mrs . Frances P. Ba1lie,
be speaker at revival services President of the Episcopal
which get underway this Churchwomen, i s General
evening at the Pomeroy Church Chairman and Coordinator of
all such arrangements, except
of the Nazarene.
The services will be held those tn Cincinnati sponsored by
through Sunday with the Rev. MARCC.
In Athens, Tuesday, March
Walker speaking at 7:30 each
evening. The Hysell Run Free 23, at 7:30 p .m. at the Ohio
Me thodis t Youth Choir w1ll sing University Inn there will be a
at this evening's service while desse rt-reception in which
the Glorylanders of Wilmington parish, civic, educational, a nd
w1ll smg at the Saturday and ecumenical leaders of the entire
Sunday evening services . At 2 regwn will participate . The
p.111 . Sunday there will be a Rev. Wilham Black, Athens,
sr)n gfcs t . The Rev . Clyde and The Rev . Stanley W.
Hendcn;on, pastor, inv ites the Platlcnburg, Pomeroy, are in
charge.
puhlw to attend th&lt;• ~,.~
Beginning Sunday, March 21,

Speaker Announced

LONG
BOTTOM
METHODIST- Rev. Freeland
Norris, pastor. Sunday School,
10 a.m.; church services, 11
a.m .

RACINE FIRS I CHURCH
OF THE NAZARENE
Sunday School, 9:30 a. m.;
Morning Worship, 10:30 a. m.;
Evening worshil?, 7:30 p. m.
Wednesday, Sunday School
Superintendent, Pauline Me·
Clintock, pastor. Rev. Morris
M. Wolfe.
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST CharlesNorris, 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.
P: Jyer and praise Wed., 7:30 p.

m.
HEMLOCK
GROVE
CHRISTIAN - David Stauffer,
pastor; Stanford Stockton, supt.
Morning worship, 9:30 a.m .;
church school, 10:30 a.m.;
young peoples meeting, 6: 30
p.m.; evening worship, 7:30.
Bible study, Wednesday, 7:30
p.m.
SILVER RUN FREE BAPTIST- Rev. Howard Kimble,
pastor. Sunday schooL 10 a.l'!l.;
Henry Davis, supt.; even mg
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.
m.; Worship service, 11 a. m.;
Evening service, 7:30. Prayer
service and youth service,
Thursday, 7:30 p. m.
FOREST RUN METHODIST
-Rev. Forrest Donely, pastor.
Charles
Hamilton,
supt.;
Worship service, 9 a. m.;
Sunday School, 10 a. m.
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN
Robert Eugene Musser,
pastor. Sunday school, 9:30
a.m.; morning worship, 10:30;
Robert Bobo, Sunday school
supt. Sunday evening service,
7:30 p.m.; youth meetina.
Monday, 7 p.m. Midweek
service, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE- Rev. M. C.
Larimore, pastor. Bob Moore,
Sunday School Supt. Sunday
School, classes for all ages, 9: 30
a.m. ; morping worship, 10:45,
NYPS Sunday, 6: 30 p. m.;
evangel istic service, Sunday,
7:30 p.m. Mid-week prayer
meeting, Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Mssionary meeting, second
Wednesday, 7:30 o. m.
- ROCK
SPRINGS
METHODIST - Rev. Richard
Pumphrey, pastor; Harold
Blackston,
superintendent.
Morning worship, 9:30 a.m.;
church school, 10:15 a.m.;
evening worship, 7:30 p.m. ;
MYF, 6 p.m. Prayer meeting
and Bible Study, Wednesday,
7:30 p.m. A ministrative
Council first Monday, 7:30p.m.
- EDEN UNITED BRETHREN
IN CHRIST- Elden R. Blake,
pastor . Sunday School, lOa. m. ;
Winnie Holsinger, supt. Morning sermon, 11 a.m.; Evening
service Christian Endeavor,
7:30 p.
m.;
Mrs . Lyda
Chevalier, president. Song
service and sermon, 8:20. MidWeek prayer meeting Wednesday, 7:30 p. m. Mrs. Mazie
Holsinqer, class leader.
POMEROY LOWER Lll&gt;tlT
CHURCH- Harrisonville Road,
Rev. Roy Taylor, pastor; Henry
Eblin, Sunday School Supt.
Sunday School, 9:30 a. m.;.
~vening worship, 7:30 p . rr..
Prayer and prasie service,
Thursday, 7:30 p. m .
RACINE-LETAroc 1
WESLEYAN UNITED METHODIST
Racine, W. Dale McClurg,
pastor. Sunday School, 9:30 a.
m. ; Worship service, 10:30 a.
m.; UMYF, 7 p. m . each Sunday; Senior Choir practice,
Thursday, 7:30 p. m.; Service
Guild, fourth Monday, 7:30 p.
m.; Happy Hustlers Sunday
School Class meeting, fourth
Friday, 6 p. m.; WSCS second
Friday, 7:30 p. m.; Official
Board, second Monday. 7:30 p.

BEARWALLOW RIDGE
CHURCH OF CHRIST - John
Rockhold, pastor. Bible study,
9:30 a.m. ; morning worship,
10:30; evening worship, 7:30
p.m. Wednesday Bible study,
7:30p.m.
STIVERSVILLE
COMMUNITY CHURCH Rev.
Edsel Hart, pastor . Sunday
morning worship service, 10 m
a.m., Dell Talbot, superinCOMMUNIT'r
I..HURCH,
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
Road . John Webster, pastor;
Paul McElroy, Sunday School
ST.
PAUL'S
UNITED
Supt. Sunday School, 9:30a.m.;
Morning Worship and com- METHODIST CHURCH munion, 10: 30 a. m. ; Sunday Tuppers Plains. Rev . Randy
evening youth Christian En- La vender, pastor . Sunday
deavor, 6 p. m. ; Worship ser- School, 9: 30a.m.; youth
vices, 7 p. m.; Wednesday fellowship, 6 p. m. ; Sunday
evening prayer meeting and evening worship, 7:30 p. m.
LETART
UNITED
Bible study, 7:30 p. m.
METHODIST CHURCH -First
and second Sundays, preaching
at 8 p. m. ; Third and fourth
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN
Pine Grove, Rev . Gerald Sundays, Sunday School, 10 a.
; worship service at 11 a.m. ;
Herbener, pastor. Sunday m.
school, 9 a.m.; Church service, Tuesday evenings at 8 p. m.,
prayer and Bible Study.
10 a.m.
FLATWOODS
UNITED
SYRACUSE
UNITED
METHODIST Paul A. METHODIST, Rev. William
Airson, pastor, Robert Eason,
Sellers, pastor; Ben Quisen berry, Sunday School Supt. supt. Sunday School at 10 a. m.,
worship service, 9:30 a. m . first Worship service at 11 a . m .
and third Sunday. E vening Prayer meeting Thursday, 8 p.
service, 8 p.m. fourth Sunday. m.
MT. UNION BAPTIST LANGSVILLE MIDWAY services each Sunday at 10 a.m. Rev . Ceci I Cox, pastor . Sunday
and 7:30p.m. Tuesday evening school supt., Joe Sayre. Sunday
school, 9:45 a.m.; Sunday
worship, 7:30.
SUTTON
UNITED evening worship, 7: 30. WedMETHODIST Paul A. nesday prayer and Bible study,
Sellers, pastor; Martha Lee, 7:30p.m .
Sunday School Supt. Worship
TUPPERS
PLAINS
service, 10:45 a. m.;second and
lou rth
Sundays;
evening CHR ISTIAN CHURCH - Mr.
worhsip, 8 p. m. third Sunday. John Wyatt, pastor ; J . S. Davis ,
ENTERPRISE
UNITED Sunday School supt. ; Sunday
METHODIST - Rev. W i lliam school, 9: 30 a. m ., Morning
Airson, pastor. Ralph Spencer, Sermon, 10:30 a. m. Evening
Supt.; Carl Jennings, asst. supt. sermon, 7 p. m.
Worship services, 9:30 a. m.;
Sunday School, 10:30 a. m.; EAST
LETART
FALLS
Youth Fellowship, 6:30 p. m .; UNITED
METHODIST
Wednesday, choir, 6:15 p. m. CH UR CH - W. Dale McClurg,
pastor. Worship services,
BRADBURY CHURCH OF second and fourth Sundays of
CHR IST, Roy Bill Carter. each month at 9 a. m.; Sunday
eva ngelist ; Thurman Carsey, School, first and third Sundays
Bible School supt.; Bible School of each monthat 9 a. m .; secon d
9:30 a.m.; morning worship, and fourth Sundays of each
10:30 a.m.; youth meeting, 6 month at 10 a. m. ; Bible study,
p.m., evening service, 7 p.m., Wednesday .
Christian
Workers
Class,
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m .; prayer
LETART FALLS UNITED
meeting Wednesday, 7:30p.m. BRETHREN Rev . Robert
Shook , pastor; Herschel Norris,
supt. Sunday school , 9:30a.m.;
KENO CHURCH OF CHR I ST, morning sermon , 10: 30 a.m. ;
Hobart Newell , supt. Services ev ening sermon, 7:30 alterweekly, 9. 30 a.m. Sunday. nating each Sunday. Prayer
Preaching first and third servi ce, Wednesday, 7.30 p .m.
Sundays of month by Charles Prayer meeting, 7:30 p .m .
Russel l , 9:30a.m.
a lternating Sundays.

meeting, 6:30 p. m.; Evening
worship, 7:30 p. m.
APPLE GROVE UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH - W.
Da1e McClurg, pastor. Worship
service, first and third Sundays
of each month at 8 p. m.;
Sunday School every Sunday at
9:30 a. m.; WSCS, second
Tuesday of each month at 7:30
p.m.; Bible Study, Wednesday,
8 p.m.
CARMEL UNITED METHODIST Paul A. Sellers,
pastor; Wayne Roush, supt.
Worship service, 10:45 a. m.,
first and third Sundays;
evening worship, 8 p.m. second
Sunday.
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE Rev. Herbert
Grate, pastor. Worship service,
11 a.m. and 7:30p.m. Sunday.
Sunday School, 9:30 a. m.
Richard Barton, supt. Prayer
meeting, Wednesday, 7:30 p. m.
HARRISONVILLE
PRESBYTERIAN Mrs. Norma
Lee, Sunday Schoop Superintendent. Sunday School 9:30 a.
m. Sunday Service 8 p.m. Rev.
Max Donahue, Middleport,
pastor.
BETHANY
UNITED
METHODIST -Paul A. Sellers,
pas~r; 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, third
Saturday of each month.
LAUREL CLIFF
FREE
METHODIST- Rev. Eugene
Gill, pastor. William Bailey,
supt. Sunday School, 9:30a.m.;
Morning worship, 10:30 a. m.;
Evening worship, 7:30 p. m.
Wednesday, Christian Youth
Crusade, 6:30 p. m . ; Prayer
meeting 7:30 p. m. Thursday,
choir practice, 7 p. m .
DEXTER
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST -Danny
Evans,
pastor. Norman C. Will, supt.
Sunday School 9:30 a. m.;
Worship service, 10:30 a. m.
Christian Endeavor Sunday
evening .
__
REORGANI1ED
CHURCH
OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS- PortlandRacine Road. Ralph Johnson,
pastor. Sunday School, 9:30 a.
m. ; Morning worship, 10:30 a.
m.; Sunday evening service, 7
p . m. Wednesday evening
prayer services, 7:30 p. m.
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Great Bend, Charles Norris,
pastor. Worship service, 9:30 a.
m.; Sunday School, 10:30 a.m.
MORNING STAR UNITED
METHODIST - Rev. William
Airson, pastor; Roy Van Meter,
supt.; Sunday School, 9:30 a.
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, 9:30 a. 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
CON GREGATIONAL CHURCH Willard
Dutcher,
pastor.
Rev.
Mrs. Worley Francis, Sunday
School Supt. Sunday School,
9:45 a. 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
Meeting 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
worship, 11 a.m. ; evening
sermon, 7:30 p.m., alternating
each Sunday. Class meeting, 11
a. m . alternating Sunday
mornings,
Alfred
Wolfe,
layleader ; Christian Endeavor,
7:30 p. m. Sunday, Roger
Buckley, president. Prayer
meeting, Wednesday, 7:30p . m .
Board meeting first Monday
each monlh , 7:30p.m.
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED
PRESBYTERIAN
- Rev.
Russell Lester , pastor . Worship
service, 9 a . m. ; Sunday School,
10 a . m.

··R UTLAND
_

RUTLAND F IRST BAPTIST- Rev . Samuel Jackson,
pastor. Sunday School, 10 a. m.;
Mrs. Gertrude Butler, supt.
Prayer Service, 1: 30 p. m. ;
oreachinq s&lt;&gt;~vir&lt;&gt; ? n m
THE
RUTLAND
ME T~
ODIST Rev. Richard C.
Pumphery,
pastor.
Church
School 9: 30 a .m .; Worship
service 10: 30 a.m.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
CHRIST - Sunday school, 9: 30
a.m. , V. H. Braley, supt.;
communion and devotions ,
10 :30 a.m. Regular board
meeting 7:30, third Saturday
&lt;&gt;rlrh m&lt;:lnth.
.
THE
RUTLAND
COMMUNITY CHURCH - Rev.
Amos Ti l lis, pastor. Sunday
School, 9:30 a. m.; . Worship
service, 11 a. m .; Wednesday
prayer meeting, 7:30 p. m.
Sunday night worship, 7:30.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE - Rev. Lloyd
D Grimm, Jr., pastor. Sunday
::&gt;chool, 9:30 a. m .; Morning
worship, 10:30 a. m .; Young
people's service, 6: 45 p . m .;
Evangelistic services, 7:30 p
m . Wednesday evening service ·
7:30p.m.
'

There are days when Jim feels "all geared up." Like many men today,
he has the sense of being just a cog in a wheel-no real identity. This is
wrong!
It takes a great many Jims, all kinds, to keep the wheels turning. But
each is important, and each is an individual. God intended men to have not

•

only a sense of identity, but a basic self-esteem.
Maybe you've been underestimating yourself! Maybe you've been feeling that you are just one of the crowd! If so, during this Lenten season you'd
better take a new look at both the world and yourself.
For a new penpective, maybe you'd better start going to church.

Scriptures selected by the AmericAn Bible Society

Sunday
Zechariah
9 :9-17

Monday
Romans

8:14-25

Thursday
Tuesday
Wednesday
II Thessalonians
I Corinthians
I John
2:13-17
13:1-13
3:1 -3

Friday Saturday
Titus
I Peter
1:1-3
3:14-18

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

K &amp; C JEWELERS

RALL'S BEN FRANKLIN STORE

Keepsake Diamond Rings
Pomeroy, 0.

312 E. Main St.

t

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

~---------------------+------------~------~-

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

Middleport

GOEGLEIN READY MIX CO.
Phone 992-3284

HEINER'S BAKERY

Middleport

M &amp; R FOODLINER

Bakers of Good Bread
Huntington, W. Va.

Middleport, Ohio

BOGGS EQUIPMENT

MARK V STORE

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

Middleport, Ohio

OOM IGAN SOH 10 STATION
Athens Road
Pomeroy
A Family That Worships Together
Stays Together

RACINE FOOD MARKET
The Store with A Heart
Racine

949-3342

OHIO VALLEY BAKING CO.

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.

Bakers of Holsum Bread
Middleport, Ohio

Ohio's Oldest Dodge Dealer
Middleport, 0.

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

THE FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS CO.
Pomeroy-Member 1-. D. I. C. &amp;
Federal Reserve System

•

GAUL'S MARKET
Chester, Ohio

ROYAL OAK PARK
Family Recreation
Swimming

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

MEIGS MOBILE HOME SALES

Rex a I I Drugs
We Fill All Doctors Prescriptions
992-2955
Pomeroy

Comfortable LivingReasonably Priced
Tuppers Plains
667-3891

RAYBUCK MOTOR SALES Inc.
Lincoln - Mercury
American Motors
85 N. Court St.
593-6601

Building Supplies and Millwork
General Contracting
Ph . 992-3978

Dedicated to the Interest
of the
Meigs · Mason Area .

SENTINEL
WANT ADS PAY!

POMEROY ELECTRIC SERVICE
Electric Motor Repair

Athens

RACINE PLANING MILL

THE DAILY SENTINEL

I

810 W. Main

992-5750

I

BOWER'S DRIVE-l N
RESTAURANT
Pomeroy, 0.

E. Main St.

TUPPERS PLAINS HARDWARE

General Hardware
Paint- Plumbing &amp; Electrical Supplies
Tuppers Plains
667 -3963
'

THE DAILY SENTINEL
and

Sunday Times-Sentinel
Servinq I he Big Bend Area

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6· 00
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10: 00 Oral Roberts
10: 30 Faci ng life
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CHANNEL 8 CHANNEL 13
6 : 00
6 : 30 The Bi ble Answe r s
7: 00 New s
7: 30 Sleepy Jeffers
8: 00
8: 30 Romper Room
9 : 00 Captain Kangar oo
9 : 30
10 : 00 Jackie Obl inger
10 : 30 Bev erl y Hi ll billies
11: 00 Family Affair
11 : 30 Lov e of Life
12 : 00 Galloping Gourmet
12 : 30 Search f or T omorr ow
1: 00 Di vorce Cour t
1: 30 As the Worl d Turns
2: 00 Lov e is Splendored
2: 30 Guiding Light
3: 00 Secret Storm
3: 30 Edge of Nigh t
4: 00 Mov ie
4: 30
5: 00
5 : 30
6 : 00 Evening News
6 : 30 Wal ter Cr onkite
7:00 What' s My Line
7: 30 Beverly Hillbi ll ies
8: 00 Green Acres
8: 30 Hee-Haw
9 : 00
9: 30 All in the Famil y
10: 00 CBS News Hour
10 : 30 Close-Up
11:00 News
11 : 30 Merv Griffi n
12:00

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Sunday
CHANNEL 8

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CHANNEL 8
6: 00
6: 30 TV Classroom
6:45
7: 00 Cartoons
7:30 Green Hornet
8: 00 Bugs Bunny
8: 30 Roadrunner
9: 00 Sabr ina
9:30 Groovy Cooli es
10: 00 Josie
10: 30 Globe trotters
11 : 00 Archi e' s Fun House
11 : 30
12:00 Scooby-Do
12:30 The Monkees
1:00 Dastardly &amp; Mutt ley
1: 30 Jetsons
2:00 Vi ew poin t
2:30 To Whom I May Concern
3:00 TJ~A.
3: 30
4:00 Golf
4: 30
5:00 Wrestling
5 : 30
6:00 New s
6: 30 CBS New s
6: 30 Roger M udd
7 :00 To Rom e wit h Love
7:30 Mission Impossible
8: 00
8: 30 My Three Sons
9: 00 Arnie
9: 30 M a ry Tyl er Moore
10:00 M a nni x
10: 30
11:00 New s
11:30 Movie

CHANNEL 13
6:00
6:30
6:45
7:00
7:15
8:00 Kentucky Afield
8: 30 Neighbors
9 :00 L ance lot Link
9:30
10:00 Jerry L ewis
10:30 The Double Deckers
11: 00 Hot Wheels
11 :30 Sky Ha wks
12·00 Motor Mouse
12: 30 Hardy Boys
1: 00 American Bandstand
1: 30
2: 00 Vi sual Girl
2: 30 Bowli ng
3:00 Bonnie Lou &amp; Buster
3:30 Pro Bow ler's T our
4: 00
4: 30
5:00 Wide World of Sports
5: 30
6:00
6:30 F ishing Show
7: 00 Wilburn Bros.
7:30 La wrence Wel k
8:00
8:30
9: 00
9: 30 Movie
10:00
10: 30
11:00 Chi ll er
11: 30
12: 30

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 19, 1971

Bargains, Bargains, and More Bargains In Sentinel Classifieds
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Sealed proposal will be
received by Mr L. W. MeCom as, clerk of the Meigs Local
School
District Board of
Education, Middleport , Ohio at
the office of the clerk in the
Middleport Junior High School,
South Third Avenue, Mid
dleport. Ohio 45760, until 12:00
o'clock noon E.S.T. April 19,
1971, and opened and read aloud
immediately thereafter. Bids
are being taken for the installation of air conditioning in
various areas of the New Meigs
High School located on C. H. 25
near U. S. Route 33. All bids
sha II be in accordance with the
drawings and specifications
prepared by Sullivan , Isaacs
and Sullivan, Architects and
Associated Engineers. on file
during regular office hours in
the office of the Clerk, South
Third Avenue. Middleport,
Ohio; at the office of the Architect, 1800 Reading Road,
Reading, Cincinnati, Ohio
45215; at the Dodge Report Plan
Rooms, 2528 Kemper Lane.
Cincinnati, Ohio and 1333 W. 5th
Avenue. Columbus, Ohio; at the
Allied Construction Industries,
1010 Yale Street, Cincinnati,
OhtO.
Principal contractors may
obtain one (1) set of bid
documents for the purpose of
biddong on the principal con
tract from Sullivan, Isaacs and
Sullivan, 1800 Reading Road,
Cincinnati, Ohio 45215, upon a
deposit of Ten Dollars ($10.00)
which deposit will be refunded
to each bidder submitting a
bona fide bid, upon return of the
bid documents in good condition
within a period of ten (10) days
of the receipt of bids the entire
deposit shall be forfeited.
Bids shall be submIt ted on the
form furnished with each set of
bi&lt;i
documents or on a
ly, ewritten copy of that form .
Each bid shall be accompanied
by a bid bond, certified check or
cashiers check in the amount of
at least 10 per cent of the gross
bid with the understanding that
it shall guarantee that the
bidder shall not withdraw his
bid for a period of thirty (30)
days after the scheduled closing
time for receipt of bids; that if
bid is accepted, bidder will
enter into formal contract with
the Owner and that the required
Performance Bond will be
given. The bond or check of all
unsuccessful bidders will be
returned when contract and
bond have been executed.
Check made payable to the
Meigs Local School District,
Board of Education.
The bidder to whom contract
IS awarded shall execute and
deliver to the Owner within ten
(10) days after the award and
before signing the contract. a
corporate surety bond in a penal
sum equa I to at least 100 per
cent of the contract sum, and
the cost of such bond shall be
paid for oy the bidder .
The Meigs Lccal School
District, Board of Education,
reserves the right to reject any
or all bids, to waive informatilities and to withhold
final awarding of the contract
for thirty (30) days after
opening of bids.

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

.-169 CH EV . TOWNSMAN
$2495
Station Wagon. Low mileage local owned wiih auto.
trans .. power steering, new tires. radio. Pleasing blue
finish. See this before you buy.

1967 FORD MUSTANG
$1495
6 Cyl., auto. trans., console. maroon finish, all good w w
tires, radio. Real Nice.
1967 FORD L TO 4 DOOR
$1795
Factory air conditioning, auto. trans., P.S., P.B., like new
tires, nice maroon finish with black vinyl roof. Now only
$1795.

Pomeroy Motor Co.

NEED MONEY? Sell Knapp
shoes. part time or full til')1e.
No investment. Send for free
selling kit. High commissions
p lus bonus. Write to E. M.
Bistow,
Knapp
Shoes,
Brockton,
Massachusetts
02401.
3- 17-3tc

For Sale or 'Rent
DISCO UN T still on:
Continental , Skamper, Go Tag AAlong, and Champion campe r s, trailers and motor
homes. Some here - more
coming; Don't walk, start
r unning to Gaul Trailer Sales,
Inc .• Chester, Ohio. Phone
985-3832. P. S. -Reserve your
1 ental unit for the coming
season N OW.
3-7-13tc

I

UNFU R NI SHE D 3 . room
apartm ent. Phone 992-2288.
1-31-tfc

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

WANT AD
T WO OR three bedroom home,
INFORMATION
Cottage Road, Syracuse.
DEADLINES
Ad ults only. Phone 992-5133.
5 P M. Oay Before Publication
VFW GUN shoot. Sunday,
3-2-tfc
Noonday Deadline 9 a.m.
Cance.llation &amp; Corrections
March 21, noon. Broad Run
Will be accepted until9 a.m. f
Rod and Gun Club, New TRAILER SPACE on old Rt. 33,
1h-mile north of new Meigs
Day of Publication
Haven, W. Va., sponsored by
REGULATIONS
Stewart Johnson Post 9926,
High School . Phone 992-2941.
The Publisher reserves the
Mason, W. Va.
3 5 tfc
right to edit or reject any ads
318 3tp
deemed
objectional.
The
FURNISHED and unfurnished
publisher will not be responsible
for more than one incorrect GUN shoot, 1 p.m., Sunday,
apartments. Close to school.
insertion.
March 21. Still and trap
Phone 992-5434.
RATES
targets. Rutland Gun Club.
10-18-tfc
For Want Ad Service
Also, Friday night pisto l
5 cents Rer Word one insertion
shoot.
HOUSE, 4 rooms, bath, garage,
- ·· MinTmum Charge 75c
3-18-3tc
Spring Ave., Pomeroy. Also,
12 cents per word three
3-room, bath, semi-furnished
consecutive insertions.
18 cents per word six con- ATTENTION ladies! Would you
apartment and 2-room, bath,
secutive insertions.
'.
furnished
apartment,
like to try a wig on in t he
25 Per cent Discount on paid
Mulberry Ave. References
privacy of your own home?
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
required. Phone 992-6698.
You can. Just call us. We also
CARD OF THANKS
1
3-10 tfc
have the Mink Oil Kosmetics,
&amp; OBITUARY
$1.50 for 50 word' minimum.
Kosco!,
of
course.
Each additional word 2c.
Distributors, Brown's. Phone 2 BEDROOM house. Lincoln
BLIND ADS
Hts .• Pomeroy . Phone 992·
Middleport 992-5113.
Addition a I 25c Charge per
5127 after 4 p.m.
12-31-tfc
Advertisement.
3-2-tfc
OFFICE HOURS
8.30 a.m. to 5·00 p m. Daily, GUN SHOOT. Every Saturday
night, 6 p.m., near Racine 5 ROOM house, furnished,
8:30 a.m. to 12:00 Noon
phone 992-2433. Mrs. A. R.
Saturday.
Planing Mill, sponsored by
Knight, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Syracuse Fire Department.
Assorted meats.
3-16-6k
3-17-3tc
WISH to thank all my dear
2 BEDROOM trailer. Adults
friends,
neighbors
and
only. Phone 992-5592.
BAND- Friday and Saturday
relatives for their kindness
·
3-17-tfc
nights- 9 p.m. to 2 a.m. Hl-7
shown me during my stay at
Club.
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
3-17-3tc 3 ROOM apartment, all electric,
Special thanks to Mr. and
wall oven, table top range,
Mrs. Charles Neulzling and
stainless steel double sink,
the Pierces who were first to
food disposal. Nice clean
give me aid and comfort at
apartment. See to appreciate.
RIGHT
PERSON
to
manage
or
the car wreck; the Middleport
Located in Pomeroy. Phone
buy dry cleaning route or
emergency squad for its quick
Gallipolis 446·9539.
truck.
Will
sell
plant
and
and efficient service; Dr.
3-17-tfc
building. ABC Cleaners,
Pickens. all the nurses, aides
Mason.
W.
Va.
and Candystripers; to the
UNFURNISHED 3-room
3·10-tfc
ministers for their many
apartment in Coats Bldg.,
vis1ts and prayers, and to all
Middleport.
I nquire
at
who helped in any way. May
apartment 16 or phone 992·
God bless you all
3641.
The Meigs Local School
3- 18-12tc
Mrs. Minnie M. Foil SMALL farm and house.
District Board
3-19-ltc
buildings, Meigs County area.
of Education
60X12 TRAILER, Cheshire. No
Contact Oris Frederick, 3221
Mr L W M&lt;:Cor&lt;~a'i Clerk
children. Phone 367-7512.
Georgetown
Rd..
In( l 19
2 9 4\c
3-16-6tp
dianapolis, Ind. 46224. Phone
317-291-9130
S25 REWARD for female dog,
3-9-12tc
o e y ar old, 14 Inches fall.
AL
Black with silver overcast,
8
be r
s1 ver egs and face, has very OLD UPRIGHT pianos, any
V1l ag
M 0
Me q&lt;; C:our ty
condition, as long as have not
long hair that hangs in her
Hall, urhl 4 00 P
been wet. Paying $10 each
eyes. and floppy ears. Very
the repa1f ar&gt;d r s rtacmg of
friendly. Answers to name of
First floor only. Mondays will
slrE'cls as specified m the
Buttons, or Buddy. She wears
be pick-up day. Write, giving
specifications as filed at the
a leather collar with rabies
good directions. Witten Piano
Village Hall. Copies of the
tag. Contact anyone at Newt
Company, Box 188, Sardis,
specifications are available at
Humphrey farm adjacent to
Ohio 43946.
•he Mayor Office
8-20-tfc
Rock Springs fairgrounds or
Gene Grate,
Clerk -Treasurer
call 992-6787 after 6 p.m.
Every One
(3) 19, 26 (4) 2, 31
3-18 3tp OLD furniture, dishes. brass
Marked Down
beds, etc. Write M. D. Miller.
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call
Get the Big Discount!
992-6271.
9-1-tfc
1962 CHEVROLET 2 ton V8, 4
22 cu. ft. side by side
speed transmission, 2 speed
Frostless Combination, 19
axle, new rubber, 16 ft. flat.
cu. ft. side by side, 18 cu. ft.
$650.
Up. Freezer, 2-11 cu. ft.
1959 Dodge 2 ton cab and
Chest Freezers and E lee.
- chassis, VB, 5 speed transDryer. Must make room.
Attendance at the Nazarene
mission, 2 speed axle, good
Priced for fast sa le!
Sund~y School March 14 was 72. Al~~~~~~~r~~~~nal K -5, 4 speed
Offermg was $11.75.
transmission, 2 speed axle,
POMEROY
.
Rose Ginther called on Lula
8x12 flat bed, runs good. $150.
J. W. Carsey, Mgr.
Lodwick Saturday afternoon. Wil! trade for farm tractor or
Phone 992-2181
.
ll
d f
.
f
p1ck up lruck. Phone 992-6048.
Will Buy YoursR oger B 1sse an
ann1y o
3-18-3tc
Whole House Or
Bashan spent Sunday with his
MIXED HAY, clover, alfalfa
Separate Pieces
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
and timothy. Lester Keaton,
Ph. 742-4211
phone Chesler 985-3809.
Bissell.
HOME sewing. Phone 992-5327.
3-14-6tc
Noami Bissell entertained
2-23-30tc
two of her nieces Saturday
REGISTERED quarter -horses.
WILL PICK up merchandise
night.
Rutland, Ohio
Pleasure, contest, racing,
and take to auction on a
Mrs. Ada Van Meter spent
yearlings. bred mares, $200 to
percentage basis. Call Jim
$300. Phone 992-5883.
Sunday afternoon with Mrs.
Adams, auctioneer, Rutland.
3-14-6tc
Phone 742-4461.
Lodwick.
9·23-tfc MATURE woman for comMr.
and
Mrs.
George
panion for elderl y lady. Live USED OFFICE equipment:
Genheimer
attended
the AUCTION WHEN? Eath
Desks, bookcases, drafting
in . References required.
Friday night, 7 p.m. Where?
Emerson Hayes funeral and
tab le, typewriters, adding
Phone Chester 985-3301.
Hayman's Auction House,
machines and calculators.
3-17-tfc
vistted patients at Veterans
Laurel Cliff on new Rt. 7
Phone 247-2911 or 247-2677.
Memorial Hospital on Sunday
Pomeroy
Middleport By- LADIES! Did you give up a
3-1 8-3tp
pass.
afternoon.
career
to
become
a
2-7-tfc
homemaker? Now you can 14-FOOT runabout with 40 hp.
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Price
motor, $450. Phone 247-2911 or
have a career and remain a
heard from their son, Paul, who WILL GIVE piano and organ
247-2677.
glamorous wife and mo!her.
lessons in my home. Phone
is a Marine stationed in Cuba.
3-18-3tp
For appointment call 1-446·
992 3666.
4146 or 949-3703.
They were proud that he has
8-16-lfc
3-17-3tc WALNUT
STEREO radio
made corporal.
combination. Four speed
Mr. and Mrs. Charles King RUBBER STAMPS made to
intermixed
changer.
4
order. 24 hour service. Dwain WE'RE NOT firing - we're
and family of Moundsville spent
speaker sound system, dual
hiring. all the men. women, or
or Wilma Casto, Portland,
a weekend with Bill Windon and
college students we can train
volume contro l . Balance
Ohio.
$66.15. Use our budge: terms.
to work fu ll or part time
family and other relatives.
2-12-90tc
Call 992-3352 .
collecting past due accounts
Cecil King and family of East
3-1 8-6tc
by phone or soliciting past due
Liverpool spent a weekend with GUN SHOOT, Sunday, March
accout1ts. If you are in21. at Racine Gun Club.
BEAUTIFUL
Colonial
Maple
terested in applying yourself
his mother, Mrs. Edith King.
Hams. bacon, steaks, pork
Stereo, AM&amp;FM radio, fc.ur
to a rewarding future- apply
Several persons attended the
chops.
speakers, 4 speed automatic
in person on l y. Credit Bureau
3-15·6tc
61st wedding anniversary obchanger, separate controls.
of Point Pleasant, 312 Main
Ba lance $79 .35 . Use our time
Sl., Point Pleasant, W. Va.
servance of Mr. and Mrs. John GUN shoot.
Forked Run
payment plan. Call 992-3352 .
3-17-6tc
Hoffman. Their granddaughter,
Sportsman Club, Sunday,
3-18-6tc
March 21, 12 Noon.
Mrs. Margie Goett, served ice
RESPONSIBLE person to work
3·17·3tc
established route . Good
SINGER Cabinet Model Sewing
cream and cake.
- - - - - - - - - --commission. ABC Cleaners,
Machine, equipped with dial
Mrs. Doris Marks attended
Mason
contro l for zig-zag, buttonhole
the illness of their son, Don, who
church and spent Sunday
3-5-tfc
and fancy design work as well
is in a Logan, W. Va. hospital.
as beautiful straight sewing.
evening with Mrs. Freda Miller.
They entertained their son,
Will sacrifice for $51 60 cash
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Price
or terms available. Phone 992Robert, and family of West
were called to West Virginia by
5641.
Virginia over the weekend.
3-16 6tc
Mr. Earl Thoma and family of
Pomeroy and Guy Thoma and
COAL. limestone. Excelsio•
Salt Works. E. Main St.,
family of Flatwoods Rd. called
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
ITEM: Jack Kane.
on thetr mother, Mrs. Georgia
4-9-ffc
You somehow get the
Thoma Sunday.
feeling he has thought
Mrs. Mildred Zeigler called
RECONDITIONED TV sets,
!about
what
he's
For information or service
on Mrs. Weber Thoma Monday.
call Sparkie's TV Service,
sharing with you. Your
In the afternoon they called on
phone Mason 773-5933.
feeling IS right.
Mrs. Georg1a Thoma.
3 12 12tc

Notice

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

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

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

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

Card of Thanks

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

Business Opportunities

Wanted To Buy

Lost

For Sale

CLOSE OUT!

ALL FLOOR SAMPLES
OF OUR APPLIANCES

Chester East

For Sale or Trade

Wanted

News Notes

WANTED! ·

Used Furniture .
and Appliances

Notice

Rutland Furniture

Help Wanted

WANTED

SENTINEL
CARRIER

FOR
HARTFORD,
WEST VIRGINIA

WMP0/1390

In 19:37 an explosion at the
Consolidated Public School in
"('V. London, Tex ., k1lled 426
pr:rsons, 111ost of them children.

See Us At The ...

SWAP SHOP

CAR HOP and waitress wanted.
Apply in person, Crew's Steak
House.
3-11-6tc

Business Services

I

Beat lnfla.ti.on !

EXPERIENCED

WE

Radiator Service

BUY -

_ ,_.,.,,....-=
~.·.
~·-~·-~-,.
111' 1'1'1 I~Jt.'"·• I , ,
! II11••'1'11111"!
~~

SELL

TRADE
NEW AND
USED FURNITURE

I ''

I

~

ATT ENTION PROSPECT IVE
MOB I LE HOME BUYERS !
40 M inutes of Your Time Can Well Be t he Most Prof i tab le
Tim e You Ever Spent.

••

Drive 36 Mi les and Save A Bund le!
icWI NSO R
«B U D DY

* CH AMPION
iC VA N DYKE

-i' AL SO
DOU B L E ~W IDE S

SEE TOM CROW, GUY SHU LE R OR BOB CROW

PARKERSBURG MOBILE HOMES, INC.

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

MEMORI AL BRIDGE TRAFF IC C IRCLE
PARK E RSB U RG, W. VA.

BLAETTNARS

Roofing &amp; Carpenter
Work
Spouting, Roof
Painting

TELEVISIOi4
REPAIR

Pomeroy

R e~l

_-';

;'

................

ALSO

,PPL1~NCES ~NO
HOUSEWARES

ln.. u,iJ' ~.:

· r

OR

For Rent

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

•

Male Help Wanted

Estate For Sale

A ll Makes&amp; M odels
Also
Stereos &amp; Tapes
675-2241 or 773-5196

Cleland Realty

•

NEW &amp; OL D WORK
608 East Main
POMEROY
All Weather Roofin g &amp;
RACINE RT. 2 A CROSS
Const ruction Co.
FROM KAISER P LANT Open:
D EXTER, 0. 4 5726
Located on the river, out of
9 Til9 Mon., Tues.
P H ON E 742-3945
floods, 1 story, .2 bedrooms,
Wed. &amp; Fri.
J. Durbin- t:. Inscore
bath, nice kitchen, part
1nsured-E xperienced
9 Til6 Th urs. &amp; Sat.
Service Per sonne l
Work Guar anteed
basement, drilled well, 1.37
992-7261
ACRES G ROUN D . $7,500.
305 N . 2nd Ave.
Middleport
MINERSV I LLE
GOO D
V I EW OF THE RIVER AIR
CONDITIONING.
EXCELLENT
CON D ITION
Refrigera rion service. Jack's
1112 story frame, 3
Refrigeration, New Haven.
bedrooms, bath, basement,
Phone 882-2079.
DON'T PUMP your sluggish
panelling,
aluminum
siding,
4-6-tfc
seplic tank. Get Klean-Em.
large
yard.
$10,000.
All septic tank cleaner.
POMEROY
B
E
A
U
TI
FU
L
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
Landmark Farm Bureau,
BRICK, ALMOST NEW- 1
service, all makes. 992·2284
Pomeroy.
s lory, 3 large bedrooms,
The Fabric Shop. Pomeroy.
double closets, built-in kit·
Authorized Singer Sales and
chen, dining bar and area,
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
HOME OF W. M. Sinclair, Rt . 7.
carpeting, bath. basement
3-29-tfc
-GUARANTEEDLovely three bedroom home,
with recreation room, utility
Phone 992-2094
bath and half, two garages,
room, 1 acre. ALL F OR SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
full basement, storm windows
$27,500.
Sanitation,
Stewart,
Ohio.
Ph.
and doors. 1112 acres, call 992662-3035.
TO BU Y OR SE L L
2441 daytime, Chester 985-3840
CONTACT US
2-12-tfc
606 E. Ma1n, Pomeroy, 0 .
after 5:30p.m.
HE NRY CLELAN D
3-17-tfc
REALTOR
c. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Office 992-2259
Complete Service
CAR TAPE player and tape.
BACK HOE and end-loader
Residence 992-2568
Phone 949-3821
$50. Phone 742-3656.
work. Septic tanks installed.
3-18-6tc
Racine, Ohio
317-3tp
George (Bill) Pullins. Phone
Critt Bradford
----------992-2478.
5-1-tfc
SAVE BIG! Clean rugs and
11-29-tfc
------------------upholstery with Blue Lustre.
PA I NTING.
roofing
and
Rent electric shampooer. $1.
spouting service. Richard HARRISON'S TV AND ANBaker Furniture, Middleport.
TENNA SERVIC E . Phone
Wilt, phone 992-2889.
George Hobstetter, Broker
3-17-3tc
992-2522.
3-1 1-30tc
Hilton Wolfe, Salesman
------------------6-10-tfc
Phone 949-3211
ELECTROLUX
CLEANER 79 ACRES, 5 room house, 40,000 ALARMS! Burglar, fire and
large deluxe model. Complete
hold-up. Southeastern NEIGLER Construction. For
foot of timber. Plenty of good
wi lh all cleaning tools and
building or remodeling your
Security Systems. Call Ray
water.
Good
spring
on
place.
paper bags. Used but cleans
home, Call Guy Neigler.
Adams 247-2055 Mike
Located
2
miles
out
of
town
on
like new. Will sell for $28 cash
Racine, Ohio.
0' Brien 247-2113.
good road. $16,000.
or terms avai !able. Phone 9927-31-tfc
3-17-tfc
3-19-3tc
5641.
3-16-6tc
CARPET
SEPTIC TANKS CL E A N E D. RALPH'S
Upholstery Cleaning Service.
"Ditching. Electric sewer
2
Free
estimates.
Phone
BEDROOM
house
in
cleaning." Reasonable rates.
Gallipolis 446-0294.
Pomeroy.
Recently
Phone
John
Russell.
3-12-tfc
remodeled,
large
lawn.
Gallipolis 446-4782.
Inquire of owner. Phone 992
4·7-tfc
2619.
3-1 6-6tp
READY-MIX
CONCRETE
delivered right to your
Broker
project. Fast and easy. Free
110 Mechanic St.
estimates. Phone 992-3284.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Goeglein Ready-Mix Co.,
POMEROY - 3 bedrOOIT'S, l12
Livestock for Sale
Middleport, Ohio.
baths, nice kitchen, TV room.
ONE 2 year Hereford bull. Also,
6-30-tfc
Full basement, steam heat,
young Black Angus bull.
Double garage. $20,000.00
Phone Chester 985-3930. Carl
O'BRIEN ELECTRIC Service.
BETTER BUY TODAY
Ritchie, Reedsville.
Commercial, residential and
3-17-3tp 15 ACRES - 4 bedrooms with
1st In Selection
industrial wiring . Phone 247closets, bath, nice modern
2113.
1st In Vol um e
kitchen, stainless steel sink.
Livestock for Sale
3-1 2-1 2tp
Gas forced air furnace. Full
1st In Servic e
REGISTERED polled Hereford
basement with recreation
bulls. We have 10 registered
room. Double garage. All O'DELL WHEEL alignment
service age bulls for sale at
12 Year Terms Available
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
minerals. $22,000.00
farm. 18 to 24 months of age.
We will never knowingly be
Complete
front
end
service,
FEEL FREE, OWN
Contact Byron Miller; phone
undersold !
tune up and brake service.
614-992·6639 or 614-985-3341. RUTLAND- 2 nice bedrooms,
Wheels
balanced
elecbalh, utility. Large living and
Royal Oak Farm, Rt. 3,
tronically.
All
work
kilchen. Large lot. $9,500.00
Pomeroy , Ohio 45769.
guaranteed.
Reasonable
3-17-3tc
rates.
ACREAGE NEEDED
Pomeroy
3-17-30tc
ANYWHE R E
50 ACRES - Modern 6 room
992·7195
home, bath, gas furnace. Full
Open 7 Days A Week
1969 TOYOTA Wagon. Good gas
basement. Double garage. All
mileage. Reason for selling minerals. Large stocked fatm
need bigger car. See Leonard
pond. Bargain.
Scarbrough at Darwin.
TO BUY, SELL or
3-17-3tp
TRADE CALL US
992-3325
1969 BUICK LeSabre, 2-dr.
HELEN L. TE A FORD
hardtop, power steering,
ASSOCIATE 992-2378
power brakes, air, 18,000
3-19-6tc
miles. Excellent condition.
Phone 992-2288.
CONVENIENT but secluded
11-10-tfc
building lots on T79 at Rock
1963 Dt::LUXt:: t-ord Station
Springs. Within wa l king
Wagon. 5 new tires, new 36
dislance of Meigs High
month battery. For details
School. a 5 minute drive from·
call 992 2804 or 992-5246.
Pomeroy. Call or see Bill
Witte weekends, or after 5
3-18-3tc
p.m. weekdays. Phone 992·
6887.
2-3-tfc
7 ROOM house, bath, good
A L SO:
condition, on one acre land. SPACIOUS 3-bedroom brick
Tuppers
Plains,
phone
ranch house, large I iving,
Coo lville 667 3347.
dining and family rooms.
3 18 6tp
Basement, 2 car garage. All
electric central air. Very
200 ACRE farm near Mt. Union
992-7357
comfortable. Upper twenties.
Church, Carpenter . Available
New Haven. Weekends only.
248 CONDO R
POMEROY, 0 .
soon. George Caldwell, Rt. 4,
Phone New Haven 882-2712.
Pomeroy, Ohio.
3-19-2tc
3·18-12tp

SWAP SHOP

MASON COUNTY
T.V. SERVICE

For Sale

EXPERT

.Wheel Alignment

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

. $5.55

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

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

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

HOBSTETTER

~

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

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

Virgil B.

TEAFORD
SR.

•

DANNIE'S

For Sale

)

Mobile.Homes
Pomeroy

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

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

•

DANNIE'S

Auto Sales

.-------------------

•

Spring Tune-Up

TIME

I•

MOWERS • SMALL ENGINES

Lawn B oy • Briggs &amp; Stratton - Koh ler
Tecumseh -Sales and Service

Rea l Estate For Sale

I

WARREN MOWER SHOP

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

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

AUTOMOTIVE REPAIR

Insurance

AUTOMOBILE insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator's I icense? Call 992 4 ROOM house, bath, 2 lots,
2966.
good location. Phone 992-2806.
6-15-tfc
3-14-6tc

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

A House Is Not A Home • • .

Hom e

GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.
JEMO ASSOCIATES
MR. &amp; MRS. CARL MOODISPAUGH
101 Park St.
Middleport
" I have worked as a union car.
pe.1ter for most of my working
years. I am greatly impressed
wilh lhe quality matenals that
J.A. puts into their homes."

Why Pay Rent On A
House ...
When You Can Own Your
Own Home?
MODELS AVAILABLE FOR INSPECTION

Si t es Avai lable

KILL TERM ITES and yard
~·
insects with Arab "You-Do·
Don't Delay! Contact AI Moody Tod ay!
~ I
It " King Builders Supply
Park &amp; Sycamore Streets, M iddleport
.JAv.&amp;.
Company, Middleport.
Phone 992 . 7o34
________________2_·2--1601c l l. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..

FOR I N FORMATION :

CALL 992-7129
LARRY SPE N CER
992 ·3433

DALE D UTTON
9'12-2534

TOM CROW
992-2580

I

•

�f

i

;

I

l

J

I

I

EEK AND MEEK
NOW FER TH' NATIONAL NEWS!!
"SQUAWK'' HAWKINS, TH'

•

WEL~OWE-Q-ROCK-AN'-ROLLER

AN' ANNIE BANANNY, TH'ITALIAN'
MOVIN~PITCHER ACTRESS, ELOPED
OFF TO
LAS VEGAS
LAST
SATIDDY

GLORY BE!~
I THOUGHT SHE
HAD HER CAP
SET FER THAT
MAHARAJY
·FELLER

I

NIGHT

\) .

II= l CAN BUY WHAr

Ne At..'JJAYS WAf4\eD

l HoPe o~ Hoose:
l'E&gt; 61t:S E.NOOOH 1Q

HOLD THEM!

•
•

~

® ~VS PAS$ AND MNN~ SEEMS t/NA8Lc
70 CO.ME t/P WITH AN IDEA

FL/61/T FROM 175

70 SAVE lOPCR!S/8.

IM LCOKING FOR AN IDEA
THAT WILLGIVf: WOMEN
AN ALTERNATIVE
TO THE MINI, MIDI

A,\JD !v\.A.XI LOOK !
IT CA.'•J7 13f: A
SLACK 5ET AND
IT CAN.,.. BEA

PANTS SUIT.'

GASOUNE ALLEY

I wa~ hopinq a kind fellow
who~e dad own6 a qa raqe

•

would talk hiG old man into

lendinq a quLJ
c;ome Gpace!

'-'V.'i:~
::::t:....\.._~

......'L

3·19

'

THE BORN LOSER
IW~T'/OJTO

MDI/£; MISS c:e.wAISI-I
OVER HtRE ~'a TO
MISS

MI~FIE'LD

MD

Fu.E 'fHORt.W'PLE
TO lHAT FAR WALL!

Jrlru

I

3 · 19

C 1t11"' l-IlA. I..: TM. ·~ US ,., 0#

DAILY CROSSWORD

t

ACROSS
1 . "Auntie

l

t,

DICK TRACY

LIZ'Z.,SINCE WE'RE BOTI-I
ASSIGNED TO STAKEOUT TI-llS POUCI-I FELLOW,
I SUGGEST WE START
AT HIS HOME.

BOTI-I-VOU TAKE
THE DAY Sf-41FT
AND I'LL TAKE
TI-lE NIGHT.

•
-~

..

•

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THE CLOSED MIND, IF CLOSED
LONG ENOUGH, CAN BE OPENED BY NOTHING SHORT
OF DYNAMITE.-GERALD JOHNSON
&lt;© 1971 King Features Syndicate, Inc.)

l!iJ

16. Com-

3. Party
game
(2wds.l
-4. Greek
letter
5. Misdemeanor's
relative
6. Hoodlum's
pen
name
7. Scotty's
headgear
8. See
3Down
(3wds.)
11. Warehouse
accommodation
12. Landed
properties

5.Jazz
pianist,
- - Waller
9. Border on
Wl-lV COULDN'T
10. Slip by
WE WORK BOTH SHIFTS
13. City in
TOGETI-lER?
Arizona
14. Boundaries
15. Miss
MacGraw
16. Blu~ grass
17. "- - as a
Stranger"
~...:!IIIII,J 18. Numismatist's
possessions
20. Refrain
syllable
21. Wise guy
23."- Forsyte
Woman"
24. Keep score
25. Beleaguer
26. Formerly
27. Ancient
Egyptian
city
28. Hooray!
29. Modern
Egyptian
city
30. Peruvian
city
31. Vandal
32. Kindergartner
35. Educe
37. Cooking
direction
:tS. Tranquil
39. Likewise
40. Espied
-n. Convene

miseration
19. Heraldie
bearing
21. Some
are
tall,
some
are
short
22. Put
in
irons
23.Row
of
seats
2&amp;. Word
with
bone
or
dig

·'

IE

27. Become
tight
29. Backbone
33. French
river
3-4. Jogging
gait
36. Letter
1
37. Well-known
uncle
.-------,

r

tiS'fO.I.\

J I

J)AJfJIOI&lt;;

I

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Now arrange the circled letten
to form the surprise answer, as
suggested by the above cartoon.

V' ~
h,_ _,d

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~

_

Print tbe SURPRISE ANSWBI here

HE' WAe. JUDGED SANE-

ANP ;&gt;~NT TO PRI70/V-A~OUT
IHR!OB YEAR? AGO!

OHo f\JO! ... iHSN

?LOAT MAY 6E
6UNNIN 6 FOI&lt;:.
YOU AND MY

FIANCE:., TOO!

Yr-otrrday'o

I

HONOR

SUBMIT

nftPr mltrrin/(P - "SHORT"
r-------------~--~

CAN C{OU IMAGINE? HIS
WAS 6RfAKING, AND
HE D!VN'T EVEN KNOW IT!!
HEA~

~0

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it:
A X Y D I. B -- ' A X R
LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stand,; for another. In this sample A is
used for the thrE'e L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters.
apostrophes. the length and formation of the words art' :~ II
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

vi

h•

Crypto~:"ram

A

WDJL
YDEQ

TOUCHY

An•w ..r: Whnt thl' tnll mnr1 bl'rtWI('

1. "!Remember "

KYI

[ill]
(An.w.,re tomorrow)

JunobJ...: BOOTY

DOWN

CAPTAIN EASY
I "TRAPPED "THE- We iRDO" OURIN€1
A ROAOHOU?E HOI.DUP.,PEiR?ONAL-1.-Y.
l THOOOHT ?l.OAT WA? ME..NTAL--WE-ARIN6 A MA?K J,..II&lt;JE -rHI~ t

2. Actor,
Walter

LDRP

VDVILDRP

KYZJ

CRDMJ

PZJQEMTP

LS

LS

D.J

MJ -

ZJURMXY

WSE

ZJSAUY

JSAJUXLZE

Quotation

LYZ

AJQZEXLDJQ. -

MX

c s s

[31( GoLLtl, IF I EVER HIT A DEe'

DRIVE llJ CE~TER FIELD, AND I ROUND
FI~H 5ASE, ANI' I muND SECOND BME.
AND I ROUND THIRD BASE AND I 60

TEARING IN TO HOME LIKE A ~A!UO.~'
FREIGHT, HE'D BEITER NOT 6E IN M'&lt; WA~'!
......

~~~~Vh'__~~b.

THAT' 5 Tf.lE LONGEST
THREAT I'VE EVER HEARD!

L

F:

GSYJ

VDJUX

)

�10-The Daily Sentinel, !vtiddleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 19, 1971

Tenth Base
Abandoned
SAIGOK ( UPI) U.S. helicopters todav airlifted to safety
South Vi~tnamese troops who
abandoned their westernmost
combat base m Laos. Some
evacuated South Vietnamese
troops said " we would rather
surrender than fight any
more."
Field commanders said 1,000
South Vietnamese infantrymen
were airlifted from Artillery
Base "Brown" and taken to
Artillery Base "Delta 1,'' nine
miles inside Laos.
It was the lOth fixed base

evacuated by South Vietnamese
forces or overrun by North
Vietnamese troops since the
start of the Allied drive into
Laos Feb. 8 in an effort to cut
the Ho Chi Minh trail, the
primary Communist supply line
into South Vietnam and Cambodia.
Some 3,000 South Vietnamese
marines and rangers were
flown to the border as
replacements for withdrawn
government troops, many of
them battered units.
4 U.S. Copters Hit
American helicopter crewmen, who have run into intense
antiaircraft fire throughout the
Laotian campaign, accomplished the latest withdrawal
from "Brown" with only light
ground fire reported.

Two Vehicles
ln. CollisiQn

I

WEST COLUMBIA - Two
vehicles collided Thursday at
3:30 p.m. here near Kapp's
Grocery, resulting in property
damages estimated at $90 but
no injuries.
Sheriff Troy Huffman said the
drivers were Harold Edwin
Burt, 32, of Pomeroy, and
Melvin Sherman Henry, 28, 1206
Hogg St., Point Pleasant. Burt
was driving a Heiner's Bakery ·
Truck of Middleport and Henry
a vehicle owned by Gloria
Henry of Point Pleasant.
Sheriff Huffman said Burt
was backing his truck from
Kapp's store but Henry pulled
up and stopped to let a
passenger out.

QR [t[' : S 25 0

W E ODI'\.G RING 2 9 7 '!"t

KPep~ake styles
c lil~sicallv sirnpiP to tn-

Exc iting

irom

tncately carved. Each w1th a
flawiPss n nt{'r diamond

Week of Lenten Services Lenten Series is Planned
Charge will be the Rev.
Morrison . He will deliver
sermons at Union Church
sunday and Monday evenings,
at Peniel Tuesday and Wednesday, al Oak Grove Thursday
and Friday and at Vernon
Saturday and Sunday evenings.
The Rev. Gerald Sayre is
pasltor.
All services of the Letart

News... in BriefS
REV. PAUL MORRISON
MASON - Five United
Methodist ministers will be in
the Mason area beginning
Sunday to hold a week of Lenten
Evangelistic services in the
Mason Parish March 21 through
March 28.
Services will be nightly at
7:30 p.m. at the New Haven,
Mason, Clifton, Union and
Letart Charges.
Evangelists to take part in the
"Spiritual Uplift" are Dr. W. H.

REV. BILLIE MICK
Morrison of Huntington, the
Rev. Billie Scott Mick of
Weston; the Rev. Clifford Schell
of Kenova; the Rev. Paul
Morrison of Silverton and the
Rev. Charles Thompson of
Point Pleasant.
Dr. Morrison will deliver the
special messages each evening
at the New Haven United
Methodist Church. The Rev.
William DeMoss is host pastor.
Special music will be presented.

40,000 in Societies .
Easter Seal Societies at
national, state and local levels
are governed by volunteer
boards with a total membership
of 40,000 men and women who
represent many business and
professional fields.
In addition, over a half
million volunteers assist the
professional staff in fund
ratsmg, transportation of
patients, camp counseling and
other tasks contributing to the
rehabilitation of the handicapped.
Last week approximately
5,600 envelopes containing

REV. CLIFFORD SCHELL

DR. W. H. MORRISON

The Rev. Mick will serve as
evangelist at the Mason United
Methodist Church where the
Rev. Parker Hinzman is the
local pastor. The Rev. Mick is
co-ordinator of the services and
will meet with representatives
of all churches at Mason's
Grace United Methodist Church
each morning at 10 a.m.
The Rev. Schell will deliver
the special sermons at the
Clifton United Methodist

Church Sunday, Wednesday,
and Saturday. He will be at the
Spillman Church Monday and
Thursday evenings and at
Hartford United Methodist on
Tuesday and Friday evenings.

Easter Seals were ma1led to the
home of Meigs County residents
by the local Easter Seal Society.
The Middleport-Pomeroy
Rotary Club annually sponsors
the seal sale in the county and
the drive this year is being
headed by Mrs. Charles Simons,
wife of the Rev. Charles Simons
who is Rotary Club president.
Those who have misplaced
their return envelopes or who
were missed in the mailing are
invited to complete the form
below and mail it with their
contribution.

Address._______________

Double

Feature

Program

(Continued from page 1)
a war between the United States and the Soviet Union so that
China can control the world. The China watchers also said Peking
made a bid to protect its nuclear installations from U. S.
preventive strikes by promising not to intervene in Indochina.
Nine Soviet sinologists coauthored a well-documented boo.
on Chinese foreign policy published recently under sponsorship of
the Far Eastern Institute of the Soviet Academy of Sciences.
"One of the can!~aal tasks of Chinese foreign policy ... is to drive a
wedge between the Soviet Union and the United States to inspire
and support a permanent state of conflict, to provoke crises and
direct clashes between the two countries," the booklet said.

Calley Jury in Third Day

Ff. BENNING, GA. - THE SHIRTSLEEVED jury
deliberating the fate of Lt. William L. Calley Jr. went into its thday of painstaking and time-consuming analysis today. The
defense was getting restless. Calley's attorney, George W.
Latimer, said he thought the jurors were acting too much like
investigators, with some unreasonable requests for pictures and
rereading of evidence, and were taking too much time.
The judge, Col. Reid W. Kennedy, said they were to be highly
commended for taking their time and being careful. The sixofficer jury was unaware of this exchange between counsel and
the Common Pleas Court within judge. They plowed ahead into the 52nd court day, and scheduled
~
15 days after official notice is more testimony rereading.
received.
Borden filed his appeal with Warren Praises Nation~ Youths
WASHINGTON - FORMER CHIEF JUSTICE Earl Warren
the Review Board last May
following his removal. His case turned 80 today, with praise for the nation's young people and a
was not opened however until warning that conflict of interest poses one of the greatest evils to
his acquittal last January of a the government of the republic. White-haired, grandfatherly and
morals charge filed fo lowing looking healthy, Warren reminisced about his epochal years on
an investigation by the Ohio the court and said the college seminars he has been conducting
State Highway Patrol.
since his retirement have renewed his faith in the young.
"In the main," he said in an interview in his Supreme CourJ..
DIES AT WORK
office, "our young people are far more knowledgeable aboaP
Lawrence R. Smith, Clifton,
what's going on in the world than they were in my day as a youth.
died of an apparent heart attack
They are more concerned, motivated to play a part.
this morning at the Central
Operating Coal Co., where he Soviet Diplomats Booted
was
employed.
Funeral
arrangements will be an- · MEXICO CITY -MEXICO'S EXPUlSION of five Soviet
nounced by Fogelsong Funeral diplomats Thursday night was "the most serious act short of a
break in relations" between Mexico City and Moscow, a ComHome.
munist source said today. He said the move took the Soviets
Veterans Memorial Hospital completely by surprise.
ADMITTED - Clyde Brown,
The expulsion order was issued 72hours after the governmet.
Pomeroy; Mollie Guinther,
said it had smashed a subversive plot by Mexican guerrillas
Syracuse.
DISCHARGED Nancy trained in Moscow and North Korea. It also followed Mexico's
Hubbard, Irene Cross, Vickie recall of its ambassador from Moscow for an indeterminate
period.
Branham, Joan Kirkham.

There will be special singing
and youth services each
evening at 7 prior to the
evangelistic service. The Rev.
Mrs. Bernice Winkler is pastor.
Evangelist for the Union

.Removal Upheld

Name_____________________________

Tonight, Sat. &amp; Sun. Mar. 19-20-21

Charge will be held at ·~
Graham United Methodist
Church with the Rev. Thompson
serving as evangelist. Special
music is being planned. The
Rev . Mrs. Achsah Miller is
pastor .
A welcome is being extended ~
to persons of the area to attenc '
the_se_ special Lenten evangehstlc servtces.
• ~.:

Town______~~~~~~==~~~~~
Send Tu: EASTER SEALS
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

The State Personnel Board of
Review Wednesday affirmed
the order of removal of last May
by the Department of Mental
Hygiene and Correction which
relieved Rev. Nyle D. Borden,
53, Gallipolis, from his duties as
chaplain at the Gallipolis State
Institute.
The decision, announced
today, was signed by Earl w.
Allison, chairman; Frank E.
Avren and John P. Cook. Copies
of the order were sent to Rev .
Borden and Dr. Bernard
Neihm, Superintendent,
Gallipolis State Institute.
The board said two of the
tht·ee allegations in the order
had been proven by the
preponderance of the evidence.
Their decision may be appealed under the provisions of
Chapters 143 and 119, Ohio
Revised Code , by written notice
of appeal setting forth the order
appealed from and grounds of
appeal filed with the board and

·: ·=·:. . ·::·= :.·

HUNTERS TO MEET
The Meigs County Coonhunters Association and
the Meigs County Foxhunters
Association will meet at 7:30
p.m. tonight a t the clubhouse on
Snowball Hill. Plans for a bench
show and field trial will be
made.

PWS

rr-rt~, ~OR

r.Th!:!!~-,
from dedicated lawyer to

Funds

1

more dedicated dropout.

Summ&amp;r

Winter

Fall

li1 ~AIN~
IF©~ AILIL $[gA$©1N$
We 1re gE:Yed to meet your bilnk1ng
1e..c , ev"ry day, every month, all year
aro md P/1ke us your bank for /\II
Se rv1ces. &lt;.m d 'or /\II Seasons.

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

POMEROY
NATIONAL BANK
POMEROY

RUTLAND

.Serving .1l1eigs County
.Since 1872
Mr::mbor Fede r tli Rr sc•rvc Sy s iP.m

•

MernbPr Ft·d r,ra l Dq)o&lt;,JI Insurance Corporation
A I Accounts Ins ured Up To $20,000 .00

(Continued from page 1)
Meigs High School Friendship
Club, Mr. and Mrs. Oris Roush,
Mrs. Clarence Heaton, the
Lloyd Moore Family, Cannister
at Title Office in the courthouse,
JOF Class of Pomeroy United
Methodist Church, Letart Falls
Grade School, Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald
Anthony,
Eddie
Hoeflich, Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Morris, Mr. and Mrs. Reino
Lind, Mr. and Mrs. Edison
Hobstetter, Pomeroy National
Bank , Pomeroy Elementary
School cannister, Swisher and
Lohse Drugs, Mr. and Mrs.
Lester Russell, Meigs Local
Athletic Boosters, Group II of
Middleport First United
Presbyterian Church, Helping
Hands Missionary Circle of
Bradford Church of Christ, Mr.
and Mrs . Arthur Hoyt, Mr . and
Mrs. Clyde White, Bearwalh1w
Church of Christ, Theodorus
Council 17 Daughters of
America, Mrs. Charles Wise of
Waverly, Lloyd E . Gasser of
Creston, the Ladies Auxilinry of
the Mason Volunteer Fire
Department and one anonymous contribution from the
Gallipolis area .

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight &amp; Saturday
March 19-20

WalterHamm
Dies Thursday
Walter T. Hamm, 79, died
Thursday evening at his home
at 325 Wetzgall St. in Pomeroy.
Mr. Hamm, a veteran of
World War I, before his
retirement operated
the
Rainbow Inn in Pomeroy.
Surviving are his wife, Lena;
five sons, Howard, of Kenton;
Robert, of Chillicothe; Charles,
Mexico City, Mexico; Larry, of
Hamilton, and Mike, at home;
four daughters, Mrs. Carol
Krujeiras, Brooklyn, N. Y.;
Mrs. Betty Johnson and Miss
Nancy Hamm, both
of
Columbus, and Miss Helen
Hamm, serving in the U.S.
Navy; a sister, Mrs. Albert
Smith, Huntington, W.Va.; nine
grandchildren, and several
nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
at 1 p. m. Sunday at the Ewing
Funeral Home with the Rev. W.
H. Perrin officiating. Burial will
be in Beech Grove Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home anytime.

Art Needlework Department

shop Our New

On The Second Floor

Elberfelds
Now Has
A Complete
Selection of
Bernat
Art Needlework

Buildings 1 %
Completed at Forest
Forestry buildings at the
Shade River Forest state park,
a construction project valued at
$83 ,703, are one per cent
completed, the Department of
Natural Resources said today.
A total of 96 capital improvement projects throughout
Ohio, valued at over $64 million
were under construction or
design as of Mar. 1.

Variety Show at

HOUSE OF
DARK SHADOWS
&lt;Technicolor)
Jonathin Frid
Grayson Hall

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

•
•
•
•
•
•

Afgan Kits
Pram Covers
Crewel Samples
Crewel Pillows
Em broidery Pillow Cases
Crewel Pictures

• Stitchery Door Stops
• Rug Patterns
• Pre-Cut Rug Wool
• Instructional Idea Books

Wahama is Ready
GP

MOON ZERO TWO
(Technicolor)
Jam es Olson
Catherina Von Schell
GP
Sun ., Mon . &amp; Tues .
March 2 1-22-23
SUPPOSE THEY GAVE
A WAR AND
NOBODY CAME
( Techni colorl
Brian Ke ith
Ernest Borgnine
GP
Colorcartoons:
Oil Thru the Day
Split Level
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ __.

Everything is in readiness at
Wahama High School for the big
Variety Show presentation to
take place tonight at 7:30 p.m.
in the school's gymnasiWll.
The event is being sponsored
by the Student Council with
William (Sam) McWhorter
advisor and Brent Clark, Curtis
Roush and Cozy Cooke, officers,
in charge.
BANQUET SET
Plans have been completed
for the annual Meigs County
Grange banquet Friday, April
16, at the Salisbury Elementary
Srhool.Servingwillstartat7 :15
p.m. Tickets may be secured
from arpa grange masters.

---.-

-·
SHOP TONIGHT

UNTIL 9:00 P.M.
OPEN SATURDAY

9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M .

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

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