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                  <text>Now You Know
Inaccessible Island, in the
South Atlantic, is uninhabited .

•

•

The Daily Sentt

Weather
Clearing and cold tonight.
Lows in the 20s. Mostly fair
east, increasing cloudiness west
and warmer Saturday. Highs in
the 40s north and upper 40s to
mid 50s south.

Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Area

VOL. XXVI

NO. 242

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

i---------------------------,
1\.T
•
B . ,-f.

I

:
I

1 ~ews

•.• zn

rze1 s :
I

I

By United Press International
SAIGON -THE VANGUARD of 2,770 South Vietnamese
reinforcements flew today into Khe Sanh, the forward base for
South Vietnam's Laos offensive. President Nguyen Van Thieu
said the operation "still continues."
Thieu did not elaborate but South Vietnamese headquarters
has not ruled out the possibility new forays might be made into
Laos from Khe Sanh against the Ho Chi Minh Trail, North Vietnam's military lifeline.

•

'
•

•

•
•

COLUMBUS - GOV. JOHN J. GILLIGAN'S $9 billion
biennial budget was divided into three sections and re-introduced
Thursday into the House of Representatives by Republicans.
Hearings will start next week.
Each section of the budget was sponsored by the chairman of
the committee which will be considering it - Reps. Lloyd George
Kerns of Raymond, Finance Committee; Norman A. Murdock of
Cincinnati, Education Committee, and E. W. Lampson of Jefferson, Ways and Means Committee.
CLEVELAND- GOV. JOHN J. GILLIGAN has asked for a
meeting offive states and Ohio to map plans for the restoration of
rail passenger service along Lake Erie.
Gilligan requested Ohio Public Utilities Commission
Chairman Henry W. Eckhart to convene a meeting of transportation or utilities department representatives from Pennsylvania, New York, Michigan, Indiana and Illinois.
COLUMBUS - GOV. JOHN J. GILLIGAN has proclaimed
this week a "Week of National Concern" and the week of May 1016 "Ohio's March for Humanity in Behalf of POW - MIA's,"
prisoners of war and servicemen missing in action.
The governor took the action Thursday in the presence of the
parents of a missing soldier and the wives of five other Ohioans
either missing or held prisoner in Indochina.
WASHINGTON- THE TRANSPORTATION Department,
conforming to the rejection by Congress of further government
participation in development of the supersonic transport plane,
has started preparing legislation that would shut down all SST
activity.
Undersecretary James M. Beggs, describing the SST project
as "dead as a doornail," said Thursday the bill would go to
Congress early next week. It was expected to seek $275 million to
close the project out.
WASHING"""N- THE LABOR Department in a monthly
report has added five cities to its list of major labor markets
suffering "substantial unemployment. •· The total of 50 cities in
the category is the largest number in nine years.
Placed in the classification of 6 per cent or more joblessness
Thursday were New Haven, Conn., Rockford, ill., Terre Haute,
Ind., Worcester, ass, and Binghamton, N.Y. One-third of the
nation's major
rk ts now have substantial unemployment.
CHICAGO
THREE days of discussions and some
vocal outbursts,
La e Michigan Enforcement Conference has
voted in favor of strict federal regulations to protect the lake's
shoreline from heated water discharged by power plants.
The vote was not unanimous, however. David P. Currie,
lllinois' representative and a frequent target of conservationists
during the conference, dissented against a section requiring
existing power plants to install expensive equipment to cool water
before flushing it into the lake.

•

NEW DELHI (UPI)-Civil
war broke out in East Pakistan
today, reports reaching India
said. East Pakistani soldiers
and police battled West Pakistani armed forces with heavy
casualties, the reports said.
The West Pakistani army
seized control of Dacca Radio
in East Pakistan and closed it
down. But East Pakistani
political leader Sheikh Mujibar
Rahman went on the air on a
clandestine radio broadcast to
urge his followers to continue
their battle.
"May Allah bless you and
help in your struggle for
freedom from the enemy," he
said in the broadcast heard in
Calcutta.
Rahman said the fighting
started when Pakistani armed
forces attacked the East
Pakistan rifle base at Peilkhana and the Rajabag police
station in Dacca about midnight. He said they killed a
number of unarmed people.
The Press Trust of India
( PTI) news agency said ''civil
war" had broken out. "Authori-

Driver Is

tative reports reaching Calcutta
said that troops and mobs have
clashed in several places in
East Pakistan" and there were
"heavy casualties" in the
fighting, the agency said.
Reports reaching the Indian
border said at least 10,000 West
Pakistan army troops landed at
Chittagong and Chalna in East
Pakistan during the past 24
hours. They were brought in by
five ships and were dispersed
to three areas-Dacca, Commilla and Jessore.
There already were an
estimated 60,000 West Pakistani
troops stationed in East Pakistan . The two sections of the
nation are separated by 1,000
miles of India, and growing
demands for autonomy for East
Pakistan were what touched off
the fighting.
Rahman, in his broadcast,
said ''People arc. f.,f •· " "
gallantly with the eneh•i for

thecauseoffr~edomofsen~ll

•

will depend on the interest and enthusiasm that you
and our students generate and share.
- The legislative picture is still quite cloudy.
Others profess to know what will happen in taxes and
school finance . As for me, I still haven' t been able to
clearly identify the outline of the final product.
Compromise and pressure in large amounts will be in
evidence prior to the time that the final agreement is
approved.
yes, nine - week s of
- There are jus t nine
school left on the calendar. Each one goes faster than
the one before - especially after you pass 30 or 40.
- Our graduates are going to face CJ very soft job

Monday

IT'S ALI, FOR GEORGE! Mrs. Carrie Neutzling, left, and Mrs. Mary Kautz, chairman,
whip up hotdog sauce as they prepare for a public cafeteria style dinner to begin at 4 p.m. today
at the Trinity Church in Pomeroy. All proceeds from the event which will continue through the
evening hours will go to the George Thompson Kidney Fund. Contributions for the dinner were
pouring into the church today, Mrs. Kautz reported. Thompson is in Cleveland Clinic where
both kidneys have been removed and is now awaiting a transplant scheduled for March 30. This
evening's public dinner is the biggest drive activity yet held for the fund which has already
gone over $3,000.

TtOmpSOn . K l•dney

,...,..,L
..l

1

m arket in May this year. Many college graduates are
finding it difficult to find placement also. This is
particularly true in certain teaching areas.
- This brings us down to the necessity for realistic
choices in preparation for a job. You must face the
facts that jobs are scarce. They probably will be for
some time to come - especially in some areas. You
have to know the facts, estimate the trends and decide
accordingly.
- This year's eighth graders and their parents
have to make some hard decisions about college. Does
the student have the ability and the drive to complete a
college course? Will there be the necessary funds
available? You have to face these now and make the
best decisions you can. If college is not in the student's
future, then don't have him or her take a college prep
course. This just doesn't make sense when we have a
wide opportunity in vocational education.
- Here are some items of interest on the school
calendar : April 2 - High School Concert Band Concert; April 3 - Ninth Grade Party; April 9 and 11 Easter Vacation ; April 16 - Senior Class Play; April
23 - Junior High School Band Concert; April 24 -

T

0W

Middleport Church of Christ,
Past Officers Club of Racine
OES Chapter; Willard Mowry,
Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd Wright,
Dandee Potato Chip Co. by R.
E. French, distributor; Grace
F Shaver and Gladys M.
Frederick, both of Columbus;
Dorothy
and
Lawrence
Douglas, Mr. and Mrs. James
A. Diehl, Jr., Twin City Shrine
Club, Class Four, Racine
Baptist Sunday School; C. R.
Golay of Golay and Co., Inc .,
and M. C. Auman, Jr., Chore
Boy Division of Golay Co., both
at Cambridge, Ind.; Mr . and
Mrs. Durward Cumings, Mr.
and Mrs . Gerald E. Ours ,
cannisters in Racine Village,
Racine Firemen's Auxiliary,
David Cumings, Mr. and Mrs.
Henry R. Euler.
•

Com Swallowed
By 5-year-Old

Five-year-old Traci Herman,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Herman, Sycamore St., Middleport, was rushed to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the
Middleport Emergency Unit at
8:58 p .m. Thursday when a
dime became lodged in her
throat.
The coin was removed at the
hospital and Traci was returned
to her home.
At 11:41 a.m. Thursday, the
Sophomore Party; April 30 - High School Symphonic squad was called to an apartBand Concert; May 7 - Junior-Senior Prom; May 7 ment at 717 Beech St., where
and 8 - Salisbury Entertainment Program; May 9 Donna Jean Phelps, 22, had
High School Choir Concert and Art Show ; May 15 apparently taken an overdose of
Band Banquet; May 23 - Baccalaureate; May 25 medication. She was taken to
Commencement; May 27 - Last full day of classes; Veterans Memorial Hospital
May 28 - Students return for report cards; May 29 were she was admitted.
At 12:03 p.m. Thursday, the
many alumni banquets.
- Last Tuesday the junior high school athletes and fire department was called to
cheerleaders were given a fine banquet by Mr. Moore extinguish a brush fire near the
and his staff. Mr. Morrison did an excellent job of Luther Oldaker Home on
speaking to these youngsters. There is certainly a lot of Shotgun Hollow Road.
enthusiasm evident in this group. We look forward to
great things from them.
- Registration for next year is coming early in
Veterans Memorial Hospital
May. Don't forget those immunization shots and the
ADMISSIONS
Donna
birth certificate.
Phelps, Middleport; Lillian
- The water at Salem Center School is being tested Singer, Mason ; DCJvid Miller.
every week. All reports have been satisfactory since I Mtddlepo rt ; Shclia Conkle,
last reported this prob;em to you. We will watch this Cheshire ; Dorothy Snyder,
situation closely, you may be certain of that.
Hockingport.
DISCHARGES ~ Joy Wfe
- I trust that you have found something of interest
and Barbara Fisher.
or value in this brief column.

• •

.

,

Futtd
Totals '3,577.37

Desh"- Bengah land, wh1ch
means East Pakistan. He called
on ''every section of the people
of Bengla Desh to resist the ~
enemy forces at any cost."
~
:::!::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:::::::
Within the past three days,
By United Press International
the
George Thompson Kidney
Warmer with a chance of
Fund
has grown an additional
showers Sunday and Monday
$600, making a grand total of
followed by partly cloudy and
$3,577.37 as of Thursday night,
a little cooler Tuesday. Highs
Mrs . Robert Lewis, drive
Sunday and Monday in upper
chairman, said today.
40s north to upper 50s south.
Monday evening, the drive for
Highs on Tuesday from the
Thompson
had
reached
low 40s north to the lower 50s
$2,931.12,
as
contributions
south. Lows at night mainly
continued to pour in . George,
from mid 30s to mid 40s.
the 18-year-old son of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Thompson of
Pomeroy, is presently confined
Dogs Reported
to the Cleveland Clinic where
both of his kidneys have been
Running Loose
removed. He IS now waiting a
Numerous complaints have
transplant which is currently
been received at village hall in
scheduled
for March 30. The
Middleport against dogs runbe his sister, Mrs.
donor
will
ning loose in the community,
Wayne Roush of Belpre.
Chief of Police J. J . Cremeans
Several anonymous consaid today.
tributions are included in the
Complaints are intensified at
this time of the year when the fund along with contributions
gardening season is ap- from Columbus residents as
proaching and flower gardens well as donations from two
are beginning to grow, the chief firms in Cambridge, Ind. Also
included in the new consaid.
He reminded residents that tributions is a box or coins
village regulations require that collected by teenagers of the
dogs be tied or confined at all Senior Sunday School Class of
times. Dogs running loose will the Alfred United Methodist
be turned over to the dog cat- Church.
Latest contributors include
cher and their owners will be
The
Kin Club, Sugar Run Flour
cited to face charges in the
Home
Laundry,
Mill,
mayor's court, Chief Cremeans
Homebuilders Class of the
said .

A Few Notes On This and That.

Speaking of Schools-No. 181

Will Meet

East Pakistan Is
Hit By Civil War

)

•

Officials

COLUMBUS (UPI) -State Corrections Commissioner
Bennett Cooper said Thursday the state should inspect all
jails and workhouses.
Cooper said there appears to be a lack of consistency in
the opera lions among the various state facilities.
"I think the institutions have been pretty generally
autonomous," said Cooper. He said a uniform policy should
be applied to all jails and workhouses.
Cooper testified before the Ohio Committee on Crime and
Delinquency which is made up of private citizens.

Fl'. BENNING, GA. - THE JURY in the murder courtmartial of Lt. William J. Calley Jr. dampened speculation it was
near a verdict by asking today for material for a detailed study of
the village of My Lai.
Moments after the six-officer jury began its tenth day of
deliberations word was sent out for five pencils. The jurors asked
not for lead pencils used for ballot marking but for five different
Clarence E. Lee, 24,
colored grease pencils for tracing events on a map.
Pomeroy, Rt. 1, was reported in
The jury then asked for a "clean overlay," or a transparent fair condition at Holzer Medical
plastic sheet without any chalk or pencil marks on it.
Center this morning with injuries suffered in a single car
accident
on Pomeroy's West
GRANTED DIVORCE
Main Street Thursday at 10:15
WASHINGTON (UPI) One divorce was granted and
Nixon administration farm p.m.
one case was dismissed in
Pomeroy Policeman Henry
officials,
under
heavy
Meigs County Common Pleas
pressure from dairy farmers Werry reported that Lee was
Court.
and Congress, Thursday traveling south on West Main
Karen Burnside was granted
reversed themselves and when the car struck a concrete
a divorce from Thomas R.
announced a 27-cent per wall at the entrance of Monkey
Burnside on charges of gross
neglect of duty and extreme hundred weight increase in Run, crossed the highway and
government price supports struck a telephone pole. Lee
cruelty.
sustained a possible broken jaw
Action filed by Mary J . for milk.
Agriculture
Secretary and severe lacerations to the
Wippel, etal, against Swisher &amp;
Lohse Drugs, was dismissed. Clifford M. Hardin announced face when his head went
that support for manufac- through the windshield.
He was taken to Veterans
turing grade milk in the 1971Memorial
Hospital by the
72 marketing year beginning
OPEN UNTIL NOON
April1 will be raised to $4.93 Pomeroy Emergency Squad.
The office of the Meigs per hundredweight. This is 27 He was later transported to
Agriculture Stablization and cents above the $4.66 rate in Holzer Medical Center by the
Conservation Service, Masonic effect for the current 1970-71 squad.
The accident is still under
Temple, Pomeroy, will be open season.
investigation, Werry reported.
Saturday until 12 noon.

By GEORGE HARGRAVES, Superintendent
Meigs Local School District
Tonight's column will be one that deals briefly with
a number of items rather than concentrating on one.
- Encourage your student's participation in the
drive to "SPRUCE UP" Meigs Local School District.
As Steve Allen's hit song a few years ago said - "This
could be the start of something big." Just "how big"

TEN CENTS

Action Sought To
Solve Middleport Du1np Issue

In Accident

•

PHONE 992-2156

l~n~nediate

Injured

•

FRIDAY, MARCH 26, 1971

Mr. and Mrs. Harold E.
Cowdery, Mr. and Mrs. Avery
Goeglein, Mr. and Mrs. Elwood
Bowers, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Gerard,
Chester
United
Methodist Church, Mr. and Mrs.
Colter Shuler, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Hartenbach and family;
Joe Thompson, Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Sisson, Syracuse Fireman's
Auxiliary, Racine American
Legion Auxiliary Unit 602, Mrs.
Margaret Ella Lewis, Bradford
Church of Christ, Faye Pratt,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Riffle,
Senior Sunday School Class of
Alfred
United Methodist
Church ; Dale Winebrenner,
Mrs. 0. L. Strauss, Heath
United Methodist Church at
Middleport, Mr. and Mrs. Hugh
Custer, Mr. and Mrs . Harold
Chase, Donald Mora family,
and the Chester United
Methodist Church.
Contributions are to be sent to
the postmaster at Pomeroy and
checks are to be made payable
to the George Thompson Kidney
Fund.

7-Year-Old
Hit By Car
MASON - A seven-year-old
Mason child escaped serious
injury Thursday morning when
according to police she darted
out in front of a car while
enroute to school.
She
is
Robyn
Lynn
Icenhower, daughter of Mrs.
Melba Icenhower and a first
grader at the Mason Elementary School. She was treated at
Pleosant Valley Hospital for
abrasions of the right leg and
left elbow and released.
Deputy Sheriff Jack Pyles
said the child was in a group of
children waiting for a school
bus near the Adams ville
Cemetery. The bus was approaching from the west,
Deputy Pyles said, when the
child darted in front of a vehicle
driven by Edith Lambert
Forrest. Middleport. He added
that the accident h:.:d occurred
before the bus had turned on it&lt;;
blinker lights and stopped.
No charges were filed against
l\lrs Forres t.

BY BOB HOEFLICH
Something must be done
about the Middleport dump.
No one was in disagreement
about that statement Thursday
night when Middleport Village
Council met with a representative of the Meigs County
Board of Health and representatives of residents
who have lodged strong complaints against the dump .
The special session was called
in order to air problems of the
operation of the dump which is
located off the Route 7 by-pass
in Salisbury Township.
Although no concrete plan
was outlined at last night's
session, suggestions which
might materialize in a solution
were made and council set
another special meeting for
next Monday night to attempt to
specifically line up a plan to be
followed.
Dale Dutton, president of lhe
board of health, told the group
that he was present as a board
of health representative but in
an unofficial capacity. He did
say, however, that satisfactory
solid waste controls must be put
into effect and that the State of
Ohio is dissatisfied with the
ll-as
Middleport operation
qumping operations in other
~"'ommuniti ..". Tit&gt;
c. n
rl
.tat there has been a conSld" ·able amount of protest
fr ,m people living near the
Middleport dump not 1nly as to
the problem of burning which
has occurred several times but
also a problem of rats.
"The feeling seems to be now
that it"s a good time to resolve
the dump problems," Dutton
said.
Continuing, Dutton stated
that he was not able to tell
council how to correct the
situation or how to handle any
matter . However, he suggested
that, perhaps, cotmcil might
make a contact with Earl
Griffin, Hockingport, who has
taken over rubbish and garbage
collection in the Pomeroy area
and see if some arrangement
could be made for Griffin to
provide a similar service in
Middleport.
The health board chairman
stated that hopefully Meigs
County will receive a subsidy
from the feder"l f!Overnment to
establish a solid ·aste disposal
landfill but ad'ied that the
earl~e t time such a subsidy
could e received would be in
July. Le pointed out also that in
government programs
sometimes expected grants
aren't made and such could be
the case with the landfill subsidy.
Dutton stated that the Middleport dump has remained
open over conr iderable protest
and that the f ~alth board did
not ""tsh to clo::;e the dump and
cr ~
a hardship on Mid(!
·t. Sucl' closing would
J
resir'
of the town
in which to
nd trash.
1avtd Ohlinger
uld have com.o~an the people of
u.udmg Creek and Bradbury areas if the dump had been
close to his home. He commented that he thought a year
ago the dump should be closed.
On the other hand, he said, he
hated to see the community
without a d.Jmp and did not wish
to see an out of town operator
replace the local haulers. He did
agree that some action must be
forthcoming.
John Zerkle, pn~sident of the
council, agreed also that
residents near the dump have
had legitimate complaints but,
he said. 1,200 Middleport
fantilics ha\·e also had to be
cun$idered since they must
haYC some place where their
refuse can be tnkcn . Ik pointed
nut that :\-1idd1Pport L"annot
lContinut-d on pap,~ h))

�2 -The Dail) Sentinel, Middlepor t-Pomer oy, 0., March 26, 1971

WIN AT BRIDGE

Before the Guests Arrive

DR.l.AWRENCE E. LAMB

.A

Dear Reader-There is a
good possibility that there
isn't anything wrong with

Dr. T. J. Bradshaw·
Optometrist
MOVING OFFICE
TO
181 N. SECOND
MIDDLEPORT
Ph. 992-3279
WE
SPECIALIZE
IN WEDDINGS

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

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

THE
QUALITY
PRINT SHOP
992-3345

Today's
Alm anac

Middlepo ..t, 0

c
TE
HOU

•

Home of

the Fabulous

·.

SANDWICH
Order By Pho ne
And Take Em Home

992-5432

'I KJ!l:l2

t K 10!14
~ A K :l

By United Press International
Today is Friday, March 26,
the 85th day of 1971.
The moon is in its new phase.
The ~ruing stars are Venus,
ars ood Jupiter.
1
The vemng stars are MerculJ and Satur n.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Aries.
On this day in history:
In 1892 American poet Walt
Whitman died in Camden, N.
J., at the age of 73.
In 1942 President Manuel
Quezon of the Philippines joined
American Gen. Douglas MacArthur in Australia after a
hazardous trip from beseiged
Corregidor.
In 1952 Dr. Jonas Salk
announced a new vaccine he
said was capable of immunizing
people against polio.
In 1965 President Lyndon
Johnson ordered the Ku Klux
Klan investigated after four
men were arrested in the
murder of civil righ ts worker
Viola Liuzzo in Alabama .
A thought for today : American poet Robert Frost said, "A
child misses the unsaid goodnight and falls asleep with
heartache.''

Put Your Boy In
A Higher Tax
Bracket!

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None vulnerable
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East

South

Pass
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Opening lead-• Q

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By Oswa ld &amp; James Jacoby
The wor k of science is t o
s ubstitute fact s for appearances. T he work of a very
exper t declarer is to substit ute sure-things fo r possib ilities. We don't know how a
bad player wo uld handle today's cont ract.
We do kn ow how the near
expert wo uld h andle it. He
will see eight top tricks and
a ninth in he arts if West
holds b oth the ace a nd q ueen .
If n ot, he can still lead a
heart towa r d d umm y a nd
g u e s s c or rectly, pr ovided
that East d oesn 't h old both

BRUCE BIOSSAT

rNEWS~APER ENTERPRISE ASSN J

m 1ssing honors.
Thcrf'forc, the near expert
wi ll p lay some dJamonds.
stopping in h1s hand, lead a
heart t oward dummy and
hope. If West clatters up
with_ the ace everything wJil
be f m c. If West goes mto a
long hu ddle and ducl:s everythi ng will also be fine.
However, if West plays low
without study, the chances
are the near expert will play
dummy's jack. The defense
will wind up with two hearts
a nd three spades.
The expert goes at the
han d in slightly different
style. At tricks two and
three he plays dumm.v's ace
an d king of cluhs.
East
dr ops t h e 10 on the second
club and now the expert continues w1th t he three of
cl ubs, plays his jack of
clubs and makes his ninth
trick wit h the nine spot.
What would the expert do
if t h at 10 of clubs didn't

NORTH

~·om son . Th e fi g ure· of 98.6

F . fo r body tempe rat ure is
stnctly an average one.
Body temp era! ure in a person va r ies thro ughout the
day a nd the difference may
be 2.0 or even 3.0 degr ees.
The lowest tem perature is
in the late a fternoon or early
eve n ing j ust as you have
noted in your son.
If t he re IS no other indication of illness in your "husky
boy." it seems to me the
best idea would be to throw
the thermometer away and
let him lead a normal life.
Dear Dr. Lamb- I h ave
just taken your do-it-yourself p h y s i c a I and failed
miserably. I am a 24-yearold female and have two
children. I am about 25
pounds o v e r w e i g h t and
smoke a 1 m o s t constantly.
Without an examination, can
you tell me if my chances
or developing arteriosclerosis
or heart disease will reverse
if I mend my ways'?
Dear Reader No, it's not
too late: in fact. much older
p e o p 1 e with known heart
disease. even previous heart
attacks, can often benefit by
making a marked change in
their living habits. You have
one thing in your favor and
that is being female. Women
are less apt to have heart
attacks until later in life.
The incidence in women,
however. is significantly increased in those who smoke
A lot of the things that cause
a woman to age prematurely
are r e late d to her living
habits. This includes lack of
physical exercise, developing
obesity and the excessive
use of tobacco.
This is one place where
the old proverb, an ounce of
prevention IS worth a pound
of cure. is really true.

•

Expert Finds Better Way

Temperature Rise
May Be Normal
By Lawn•nce Lamb, l\l.D.
Dear Dr. Lamb-l have a
buv 14 1 ~ years old . He is
vei·~ husk,: and appears
hea.lthv . !'\bout three years
ago he ran a temperattire a t
night. begmning at about
5·30 p.m. to 6 p.m. and we
put him in the hospital for
tests of all kinds. Thev came
up with streptococcyi throat
a11d gave him shots and a ntibiotics. Now he nms a temperature of 99 to 99.6 or 99.8.
Despite treatments, he continues to have the temperature. What I want to know
is. is it dangerous and what
could cause mv son to be
sick with this femperature?

drop·; lie would try to riiCJKt '
tlw ninth tnck m h(:arh, JUst
as the nt·ar CX[H:rt dHl

At present pr ices, how
order stea,~ i~ r~rely.

1

WASHINGTON (NEAl
Sen. Edmund Muskie is moving well again, even as
belated reports of his admitted late-winter slump are
still filtering in. He had two very good days m New
Jersey and New York.
After that tame performance in Pittsburgh in midFebruary, he tailed off some more. And then he got
smacked with that poll which showed him off seven
points as the leading Democratic presidential contender.
Muskie, however. is not given to sitting around. He
read two harsh accounts of his Pittsburgh venture and
said simply: "I deserve them ... It was not his first hard
self-appraisal of the year. He chided himself fur mistakes
on his January trip to California.
Distinct change for the better was quickly evident
when he rose to speak in Camden, N.J., at a victory
dinner honoring Sen. Harrison (Pete l Williams, who was
re-elected last fal l.
The speech had more and better specific content. He
zinged President Nixon for alleged fail u re of leadership,
declaring that the incumbent offers America "th e voicP
of the manager, not ... the leader.,. Muskie added :
"I do not accuse the administration of not caring. But
in my judgment what it cares about, and what this country needs, are two different things."
What put this speech so markedly higher on thv scale
than the Pittsburgh mis[ire was tone. This came partly
from the Improved content and the smoother tooling, but
mostly from Muskie' s delivery.
Recently a top Democrat said: " Muskie"s real. He'!; nut
a made-up man." The Camden utterance gave st rong support to that notion . A whole man was up there talkingnot a mere political figure spouting contrived phrases
with nicely arranged pauses and varied inflections.
Virtually all of the busy Democratic contenders are
telling their listeners these days that America needs,
more than anyt hing, a quality of leadership that will
draw people into common bond and d imin ish their
crippling fear and distrust. This is how Muskie said it:
"Americans want to be told they are one people. and
they want to hear it from the highest leadership in th e
land. They want to be told they don't have to fear living
with one another, and they want to hear it f rom t h e
highest leadershi!J m the land ."
Simple, inspirational stuff. Yet it had an emotional
charge in it that r aised it beyond sermonizing. And it
was pure Ed Muskie. the kind of thing that made his
campaign utterances of 1968 seem a gu st of fresh air .
A common view in this town is that rival Sen. George
McGovern's h ard-hitting antlwar barrages are "keeping
Muskie honest" and driving him to less-equivocal positions. Maybe so. But the strong evidence from his own
postmortems on h is efforts is that he measures Mu skie
against Muskie-not against McGovern or anybody else.
You can tell Muskie to be h1s best self. but you can't
tell him to be somebody else. That goes for charges
about his ca ution- and his now publicized temper. Taping
a David Frost show, for Wednesday , March 31, airing,
he says of that temper :
"Of course, I can get angry, sometimes with reason,
sometimes without reason. I can be petty, too. But I
hope I'm also capable of love and compassion . . ."
The Frost appearance, a full 90 min utes, u nfolds the
Muskie thought processes as applied to a broad range
of issu es. It is must listening for anyone trying to gauge
the 1972 outlook. Some of the senator's answers are
peculiarly fascinating. They beg in in tones of caution
and end up as fairly strong pronouncements. Are we
listening to fu zziness, or the slow gyrations of a rational
m ind which just won't be stampeded into the easy d eclamations strong liberals cherish '7 If voters decide it 1s
rationality and they like it, then Ed Muskie may be the
one who soon will be keeping the othe rs honest.

Th&lt;' bidding h:.s
We~t

North

P&lt;~ss

2 oTo
4 oTo
4 'I
5 "'

Show us a man with
will power, and we'll bet
he's a rich unde.
,, ,,, ·

bl'l'"
f:a~t

Sou t h

l 'l

:3 .

Pass
Pass

4+
Pass
Pass
Pass
5~
Pass
Pass
You, South, hold:
. lS VK 10 71; 5 + A K Q 9 4 ~A 2
What do you do now?
6

.,

A-Bid six cl ubs. Partner is

showing the spade ace, hut
.vou had gone as far as you
coul d when you hid five clu hs.

• •••••••••••••••

l

~ A Thought ~
ic
~
~ For Today ~
~

ic .

!

.;: He who has hope, ha s
~ everything.
•

~

-Old Proverb

~

~

*It's Quick!
* Easy
* :

~

DRIVE-IN
BANKING

.;:

we ~
~

.;:

~

~

~.

Fridays Only
.;:
~ The Drive-In Window~
.;:
is Open
-tr:
.;:
9 A.M. to 7 P. M.
i'
~
( Continuously)
~

!

Other Banking Hours 9 to :
3 and 5 to 7 as usual on .;:
.;: Fridays.
.;:
•

EDITORIALS

Muskie Again
Up-and-at- em

O!H:l :] •Jrt!UD

- --A_R_a_s
__ :
8
By P HIL PASTORET

•

.;:

.;:

~ FARMERS BANK ~~
and SAVINGS CO. -tr:~

It has always been a du bious proposition to com pare a
small country with one that is m ore than 20 times larger.
both in area a nd population, im m ensely more diverse a nd
with an entirely differe nt his tory.
This has not kept some Swedes from b oasting, with
justification, about how far their co untry has come in
social progress and reminding the United States how far
it has to go.
Yet while the two countries may not fairly be compared,
the United States may have something t o learn from t he
experience of Sweden- if not how to achieve perfection,
perhaps how to avoid some of the p itfalls along the way
to that desired state.
A century ago, Swed en was one of the most backward
nations in E urope, w ith life so miserable in a la nd of
harsh clim ate a nd rocky soil that fully one million out of
a population of five million em igra ted.
In this century, the industrial revolu tion, coupled with
enlightened political and management-labor leader ship,
has transform ed her into one of the most advanced
nations in the world.
For the past decade, the goal of these leaders has been
to create an egalit arian society, to res hape the social
pyramid which places the wealthy few on top of the many
poor, by narrowing and ultimately erasing traditional
wage a nd class differences. A so-called "solidarity principle" in wage negotiations gave p r eference to low-income
workers.
At the same time, Sweden has been busily building a
cradle-to-grave welfare state.
The result is that the real income of those m the upper
str,eta of the pyramid has been declining while that of the
.: lower strata has been rising. For instance, in the past two
years, there was a seven per cent net decrease in buymg
power among state employes but a seven per cent in
crease in buying power for industrial workers.
Moreover, to pay for a myriad of free welfare services.
Swedes have seen the average income tax soar to 40 per
cent. There is a lso a 17 per cent sa les tax on most cons umer items.
Thus both blue-collar and whit e-collar are restless. Add
to this situation the worst inflation in the country's history, and you 've got tro uble.
The trouble erupted in Februa r y in a series of strikes
that merged into one big strike involving teac hers, doctors, dentists, engineers, j udges, train dispatchers senior
civil servants a nd white-collar mumcipal worke~s. Not
only was the nor mal life of the c ountry paralyzed, b ut the
whole concept of the egalitarian-welfar e state was called
into questio n.
"The organized welfar e state has gone mad," said world
famo us eco nomist Gunnar Myrda l. " It' s become a class
struggle with academics and civil ser vants seeing the
lower classes creeping up on them a nd not liking it at
all."
Strikers denied tha t class-consciousness was involved.
The iss ue was merely the br ead -a nd-butter one of tr yi ng
to keep ahead of the tax and inflation spiral.
At one point the governm ent threatened to br eak t he
strike by locking out s ome 5,000 a rmy officers, w ho are
permitted to organize in Sweden . Since they formed the
largest bloc in on e of the striking un ions, having to pay
them strike benefit s would have bankrupted the union .
Eventua lly, the parliament was forced to vote a temporary ban on all strikes . There the situation remains at
present.
It may be that Sweden has come so far so fast tha t it
needs a long breathin g spell to assess just w here it st ands
at this j uncture in its histor y .
It could also be that it need s to rea ssess the very direction in which it has been head ing.

what m 0 s t fishermen .;:
catch at this time of year is -tr:
a cold .
.;:

People known to have
rejrigemtors stocked with
cold mash e d turnips
aren't bothered very often with drop-in guests.

iC
iC
i'

~

POMEROY, OHIO
Member FDIC
Member Federal
Reserve System

~

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:

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•
•
•

501 NYLON

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12xl5 .RUG _________ 79.00

•

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Open Fri. &amp; Sat. Nights

992-2635

Middle port

Your lnvimtion To

Thoughts
"And you will hear of wars
and rumors of wars; see that

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. .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - • this
you must
are take
not place.
alarmed;
fo7·
but the
end is not yet."-Matthew
24:6.

A Ma ssey-Ferguson trac tor c an mean more than

jus t a summer job. Any enterprising youngs ter ~an
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hau ling, s now-cleaning . .. and making it fast with
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The lesson which war s
and depressio n s h ave
ta ught is that if we want
peace, pr osperity and h appiness at h ome we must help
t o establis h th em abr oad. Hugo L. Black, Associate
J u stice, U.S. S u pre me
Cou rt.

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DEVOTE D TO
IN TEREST O F
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C H ESTER L. T ANN E HILL,

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SEE NOW AT .. .

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991 2036

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

Second class postage paid at
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Nat iona l advertising
rep r esentative
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st ., New York City , New Yo r k.
Subscription
ra t es:
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pr ice inc ludes Su nday Ti mes
,sentinel .
_ -_

I

'

Bliddleport, itlhio

Exec. E d .

City Editor
Published dai ly el&lt;cept
Saturday by Th e Ohio Va lley
Pub lish ing Company, 111
Court St ., Pomeroy , Ohio.
45769. Business Office Phone
992-2156, Editor ial Phone 992-

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THE DAILY SENTINEL

j

WED., MAR 24 - SUN., MAR. 28
NO OFFERING TAKEN

7:30 NIGHTLY

........................
..:Inspiring Messages:.
by Rev.

Chas. Simons

..

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

Specull Gospel

Music
Ee~ ch

Night!

PLA N TO ATTE N D!

.... ...•.......... ....
SUNDAY
7:30 PM
Singspiration

.

· ····· ~ ··············

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

•
•

•

•

•

49th State UCLA,
Meet Begins
COLUMBUS ( UPI) -The bigger schools swing into action today in the 49th state high
school basketball tournament,
the first to crown three state
champions.
Class A action opened Thursday night with a semi-final
doubleheader which saw Marion
Pleasant beat Zanesville Rosecrans 62-55 in the opener and
Fort Recovery hand Convoy
Crestview a 55-42 defeat.
Pleasant and Fort Recovery
will meet in the title game for
the smaller schools at noon Saturday.
The first AA contest finds
Canton Lehman, ninth ranked
in the final UPI ratings and
picked by many as the team to
beat, going against Tipp City.
Lehman, paced by 6-foot-7
John Mills and 6-foot-3 Jack
Yung, takes a 22-2 record into
the contest against a 19-5 mark
for Tipp City, led by 6-foot-3
guard Mark Peters.
In the second game, Warren
Champion, with a 21-3 record,
battles surprising Maysville,
with a 19-5 mark.
Winners of the two AA games
meet for the championship in a
3:00p.m. title game Saturday.

HOUSTON ( UPI) -One of
these years, UCLA is going to
lose an NCAA championship.
But it doesn't look like 1971 is
Today at 5:30, the state's No. going to be that year.
1 ranked Class AAA quintet,
The Bruins toyed with Kansas
Columbus Walnut Ridge, goes for a little while Thursday night
up against Akron Central-Row- in the semifinals of the NCAA
er, which knocked off the No. champiOnships, and despite the
2 rated team, Boardman, in the fact they played a game coach
regional finals.
John Wooden considered disapWalnut Ridge,led by 6-foot-10 pointing, they still bumped off
AAA player of the year, Ed the Jayhawks 68-60.
Stahl, and 6-foot-4 All-Ohio secThat puts UCLA back in the
ond teamer Greg Olson, has a finals once again-this time
23-0 record to throw against the against the upstart Villanova
Eagles, 17-6.
Wildcats.
The nightcap, scheduled for
Villanova outfought Western
9:30, should be a scorcher,
with Cleveland East Tech, 21-2,
goingagainstskyscrapping Dayton Dunbar, 23-1.
East Tech is led by third
team all-Ohioan, 6-foot-5 Freddie Beamon, and 6-foot-4 James
NEW YORK (UPI)-lt's a
Abrams.
tossup whether Paul Hoffman's
They will have to contend trip down nightmare alley that
with the likes of 6-foot-9 Bill cost St. Bonaventure a shot at
Howard, 6-foot-7 Cornelius Cash, the National Invitation basketalso a third team all-Ohio se- ball Tournament title will be
lection, and 6-foot-5 Lorenzo worse than the bad dream
Cash, Cornelius' brother. The Georgia Tech is expected to
Wolverines also have a pair of live through after meeting
slick guards in 6-foot-2 Bill Hig- North Carolina in Saturday's
gins and 6-foot-1 Rick Gates.
championship game.
The winners of the two AAA
semi-final games will meet at
7:30 Saturday for the big school
crown.

Kentucky 92-89 in the other
semifinal game at the cavernous Astrodome. It was a truly
exciting contest that slipped
over into two overtimes.
But Villanova, a team with
six losses and a surprise visitor
to this tournament in the first
place, will go into the finals
Saturday afternoon as the
overwhelming underdog.
Wooden, of course, does not
see things that way.
"What do I think of our
chances?" he asked himself.
"About the same as Villanova's."
The final game will bring

By United Press International
Two more opening day
pitchers were selected Thursday when manager Eddie
Kasko chose Ray Culp to start
for the Boston Red Sox and
manager Bob Lemon named
Dick Drago to start for the
Kansas City Royals.
Culp, a 17-game winner last
season who went seven innings
in the Red Sox' 6-2 victory over
the St. Louis Cardinals Thursday, will pitch Boston's season
opener against the New York
Yankees. Culp allowed six hits

and two runs in becoming the
first Red Sox pitcher to go
seven innings this spring.
Drago, who had a 9-15 record
in 1970, was named to face the
California Angeles in the
Royals' opener. The 25-year-old
right-hander has won a total of
20 games for the Royals in the
last two seasons and has been
their most impressive pitcher
this spring. Lemon made the
announcement after giving the
Royals their first day off since
spring training started on Feb.

baseball squad record this
season following last year's 3-14

. .- - - - - - - - - -.. performance.
Coach Ed Bartels Marauders
AT ASC&amp;l
will be solid at each position.
The only big problem might be a
lack in depth and a good outfield.
Meigs lost only two seniors
from last year's squad, Pat
Archer and Danny Abbott. Both
were starters.
The Marauders, who have
switched from the Southern
Per year on 1 year certificates
of
de pos it .
Division of the Southeastern
Minimum Deposit $10,000.
Ohio Athletic League to the
Interest payable sem i
Northern Division will begin
an nua lly (P,. c;ert cer
play Tuesday with the Logan
+ f.ca•es f.
xChieftams at home . Joining
h nged t
rate)
Me1gs m the four team Northern
90 Days ont
e Cl 1f
Div1s1on w1ll be Athens,
withdra111
b fore
Wellston and Logan.
matur1ty.
On the mound for Coach
Meigs Co. Branch
Bartels nine will be senior
lettermen Rick Van Matre, Jed
Will, and Tim Demosky. All are
righthanded
except
for
Demosky. All three started
Meigs County Branch of The some games last year.
Catching should present no
Athens County Savings &amp;
problem as senior lettermen
loan Co.
296 Second St.
Gene Powell and Roger Dixon
Pomeroy, Ohio
battle it out for the starting
backstop job. Powell started
there last year and Dixon
proved himself a fine hitter on
the Meigs Legion team last

5%%

1

•

•

•

@

d!1lllnm
McCLURE'S t5!liy
1ste]
Come as you are Eat in the car
• sandwiches
• short orders
• biggest beefburgers in town

•

Sounds good . ..
let's eat - at -

McCLURE'S DAIRY ISLE
4th &amp; Locu st

!

Hoffman missed two free
throws with no time left in the
first overtime Thursday night
and Tech went on to beat the
Bonnies, 76-71, in a second
extra session of their semifinal
match. A fast-breaking North
Carolina team entered the title
bracket by defeating Duke, 7367, in the other semifinal.
"It's simply nightmarish,"

said Hoffman after flubbing a
chance to win for St. Bonnie. "I
usually hit 70-80 per cent of my
foul shots. One thing for sure, I
can't continue to worry about
it.
The NIT, dubbed the tournament of losers because the
second bests and conference
also-rans received the invitations, is a cinderella step for

Culp, Drago Nallled Starters

SAVINGS
GROW FASTER

•

together the most potent front
line in college basketball Sidney Wicks, Steve Patterson
and Curtis Rowe-against a
team that will have to depend
on making the outside shot or
else.
Bruins Flubbed But Won
"We will play Villanova about
the same as we did against
Kansas," Wooden said following
his club's victory over Kansas.
"The things that got us here
will be the things we generally
go with."
But even Wooden can't ignore
the fact he coaches the next
thing to a basketball machine.

Middleport, 0.

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"I guess when they are
shooting well they can compare
with any of my other teams,"
he said.
UCLA's victory over Kansas
seemed to be an easy one, and
it was surprising to the recordbreaking 30,148 persons who
filed into the Astrodome to find
at game's end the Jayhawkers
were trailing by only eight
points.
"I can't remember when we
made so many turnovers (24),"
said Wooden. "Out 13 turnovers
in the first 20 minutes was very
bad, horrible as a matter of
fact."

Local Bowling
year.
David Boyd, a hard-hitting
senior lettermen, should retain
his job at first base while junior
lettermen Steve Dunfee, senior
letterman Ron Clonch, and Chip
Haggerty should fill the other
three infield spots. Dunfee was
a starter last year. Clonch
played most of the year at
shortstop after Haggerty was
injured early in the season.
Senior letterman Stan Wilson
will head the outfield corps.
Wilson was a starter last year.
Other outfield posts are sought
by Van Matre when he isn't
pitching, Powell when he isn't
catching, and junior letterman
Rick Ash.
Other members of the 22 man
squad are : juniors - Mike
Taylor, of; Tom Cooke, inf and
p; Jon Buck, in£.; Bob
Blackston, of, and Ed Young,
inf and p.
Sophomores
Chuck
Eastman, of; Terry George,
inf; Bill Vaughan, inf; Bill
Chaney, inf ; Louis McKinney,
inf.
Freshman- Floyd Burney, of.
Here's the 1971 schedule:
March 30, Logan, home; April
5, Pt. Pleasant, home; April 6,
Wellston, away; AprilS, Vinton,
home; April 13, Athens, away;
April 15, Pt. Pleasant, away;
April 16, Eastern, home; April
19, Federal-Hocking, home;
April20, Logan, away; April 27,
Wellston, home; April 28,
Wahama, away; April 30,
Eastern, away; May 5, FederalHocking, away; May 4, Athens,
home; May 8, St. Albans, home;
May 12, Vinton, away; May 13,
Wahama, home.
All home games played at
Middleport.

Thursday Afternoon
March 18, 1971
Standings:
Team
151
Simons Market
M&amp; R Foodlin~r
148
New York Clothing
l01
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
98
81
Moores
Racine Food Market
77
High Individual Game
Carolyn Bachner, 191.
Second High Ind. Game
Sandy Phalin, 180.
High Series Carolyn
Bachner, 518.
Second High Series
Pandora Collins. 497.
Team High Game - Simons
Market, 803
Team High Series
Simons
Market, 2280.

NH l Standings
By United Press lnternationa I
East
x-Boston
New York
Montreal
Toronto
Buffalo
Detroit
Vancouver
x Chicago
St. Louis
Minnesota

~~itl;~ue~g~ia

5";·

45
39
36
21
21
21
West W.
47
30
28

}2 T7 ~~~
17
21
31
39
42
44
l.

17
25
30

11

13
7
13
10
7
T.
9
17
16

101
91
79
55
52
49
Pts
103
77
72

~~ ~~ ~~ ~~

Los Aqngeles
23 37 12 58
California
19 49 5 43
X-Ciinched div title
Thursday's Results
Detroit 4 Vancouver 3
Minnesota 2 Phila 2, tie
Los Angeles 5 Toronto 3
Friday's Games
Vancouver at Buffalo
St. louis at California
(Only games scheduled)

ATLANTA 500 ENTRY

ATLANTA (UPI)- Cale Yarborough made a last minute
decision Thursday to compete
in the Atlanta 500 stock car
race on April 4. The presence
of the three-time Atlanta 500
First ship to be sunk by a winner is considered a shot in
submarine was the U.S.
1\'avy 's Housatonic, sunk by the arm to the financiallya Confederate s ubmarine off troubled Atlanta International
Raceway, site of the 500.
Charleston , S.C .. in 1864

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Middleport, 0.,

Tech, which ran off a 13-1
record at the season's start and
then skidded . A fine recovery
earned the Engineers a tourney
bid.
Tech reached the title round
by beating LaSalle, Michigan
and the Bonnies. The Engineers' next game, however,
resurrects memories of an
earlier encounter with North
Carolina in which the Tar Heels
beat Tech by 29 points.
"There's no way on paper we
should beat North Carolina,"
says Tech coach Whack Hyder
"but pressure won the big
games for us in this tournament.''
Tech never actually scored a
basket in its second overtime
session with the Bonnies. There
was one goal-tending call
against St. Bonaventure and
seven straight Tech foul shots.
Jim Thorne led Tech with 27
points and Rich Yunkus added
19 as the Engineers built a
bridgehead to a title shot. Carl
Jackson paced the Bonnies with
18 before fouling out.
North Carolina made it three
wins in four starts this season
against Atlantic Cocast Conference rival Duke by breaking
open the game with 10 straight
points midway in the second
half for a 52-39 lead. The
closest Duke got after that was
five points.
George Karl scored a gamehigh 21 points for Carolina,
includmg 10 m thE:' last five
minutes. Richie O'Connor paced
Duke with 18 pomts.

17·
Rico Petrocelli's two-run single was th big blow of a fiverun eighth-inning rally which
gave the Red Sox their victory.
George Scott homered for the
Red Sox while Luis Melendez
connected for the Cardinals.
On other fronts; Tony Conigliaro's third single of the game
climaxed a three-run ninthinning rally which lifted the
California Angeles to a 7-6
triumph over the Oakland
Athletics. Alex Johnson, hustling all the way after his
recent fine by Manager Lefty
Phillips, scored the winning run
when second baseman John
Donaldson bobbled the relay
from the outfield on Conigliaro's hit.
Ed Spiezio's lOth-inning homer enabled the San Diego
Padres to defeat the San
Francisco Giants, 2-l...Eddie
Leon had four hits, including a
homer, and knocked in the tiebreakmg run in the seventh
inning as the Cleveland Indians
downed the Milwaukee Brewers, 13-8... Fifth-inning singles
by Bobby Mitchell, Thurman
Munson and Roy White provided the winning run fer the New
York Yankees in a 4-2 victory
over the New York Mets. Jerry
Koosman went seven innings
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (UPI)
for the Mets and was tagged
- Jack McNally was named
for 10 hits.
offensive coordinator of Marshall University's football team
Not Ready To
Thursday, filling the final
coaching vacancy created by
Retire-Frazier
the school's Nov. 14 team plane
tragedy.
NEW YORK (UPI)
McNally, 27, had served as
Heavyweight champion Joe offensive line coach the past two
Frazier says he will defy the years of his six-year assistant
advice of his friends and ad- coaching tenure at the
visors to fight again.
University of Buffalo.
"I don't see no retirement in
He graduated from Buffalo in
sight,"
the
27-year-old 1969 and was a three-year letPhiladelphian said Thursday terman as an offensive guard
night. "I'm ready to fight right
and linebacker there.
now, but I won't fight again this
New Marshall head coach
year. If Clay wants a rematch, Jack Lengyel, who now has six
I'm willing."
assistants, said of McNally:
Without exception Frazier's
"He is a young and enmanager, trainer, friends, thusiastic coach that will
advisors
and
business
complement our present
associates advised him to retire
coaching staff. He will be in
after he successfully defended charge of coordination of our
his title with a 15-round decision offense and has a big job ahead
over Muhammad Ali on March of him."
8.

McNally Named

MU Coordinator

ARE YOU

Fin als

Wicks wound up with 21
points while guard Henry Bibby
hit 18 for UCLA and Rowe
contributed 16. Kansas center
Dave Robisch led his club with
17 points.
Siemiontkowski!
The Villanova-Western Kentucky game was the type of
contest one would expect to see
in a championship tournament.
The game was knotted 74-74
at the end of regulation time
after the Hilltoppers' Jerry
Dunn missed a chance for
victory at the free throw line
with four seconds left.
Then the Hilltoppers missed

the last shot again in the first
overtime period and the score
was left tied at 85-85.
Howard Porter's key basket
in the final minute and two
more free throws finally
brought Villanova the vic~ vt _,
after Western Kentucky's ~ J,
center Jim McDaniels fouled
out.
Dunn led Western Kentucky
with 25 points while McDaniels
had 22. The game's scoring
honors, however, was Han
Siemiontkowski. He pumped in
31 points before fouling out in
the final seconds of regulation
play.

Knicks Capture
Playoff Opener
NEW YORK (UPI)-An offensive lapse and a defensive
breakdown by the Atlanta
Hawks proved the ingredients
for the New York Knicks' 1-0
playoff lead today in defense of
their National Basketball Association title.
The Knicks beat the Hawks,
112-101, Thursday just when it
appeared Atlanta had the game
in the bag. Bill Bridges missed
an easy layup that would have
given Atlanta a nine-point lead
early in the fourth quarter and
ultimately provided the momentum for a complete New York
turnabout.
Atlanta will try to recoup
here Saturday night in the
second game of the best-in-

Pro Standings

seven series. The scene
switches to Atlanta for the
third game on Sunday.
Two other playoff series
· continue tonight when Baltimore plays at Philadelphia and
Los Angeles entertains Chicago.
The 76ers won the opener of
their series against the Bullets
126-112 while Los Angeles holds
a 1-0 edge over Chicago after
nipping the Bulls 100-99 Wednesday night. The fourth playoff
series between San Francisco
and Milwaukee gets underway
Saturday night at Oakland.
Dick Barnett, held to only
three points in the first three
quarters, turned in his pet
brand of "money game" as he
hit for 11 straight points in the
final stanza that pushed New
York into a 97-95 lead. He kept
the Knicks' surge going with his
17th point of the period after
Bill Bradley sent the team into
the lead for good at 99-97 on a
jumper from the key.
Barnett, who started the
game with a cold, suddenly set
a feverish pace as he outplayed
Walt Hazzard and forced the
Atlanta guard to foul out.
Barnett finished the game
with 20 points, but it was
Bradley's long distance gunnery
that kept the score close
enough for Barnett's last
quarter firew&lt;Jrks to become
effective. Bradley tallied 25
points, Willis Reed had 22 and
Walt Frazier 19. Lou Hudson
scored 22 for Atlanta and Pete
Maravich contributed a team
high of 23 points.

ABA Standings
By United Press International
East
W. l. Pet. GB
x-Virgtnia
51 28 .646 ...
Kentucky
42 38 .525 9112
New York
39 40 .494 12
Flroidians
35 46 .432 17
Pittsburgh
34 47 .420 18
Carolina
31 48 .392 20
West
w. l. Pet. GB
Indiana
56 24 .700 -· Utah
56 24 .700 ...
Memphis
40 40 .500 16
Texas
28 51 .354 271/2
Denver
27 53 .338 29
X-Ciinched div. title
Thursday's Results
Flondians 128 Virgir1ia 105
Carolina 128 Pittsburgh 122
Utah 138 Texas 128
Indiana 129 Denver 110
Friday's Games
Kentucky at New York
Memphis vs. Carolina
at Greensboro, NC.
Utah vs. Virginia
at Hampton, Va.
Indiana at Texas
(Only games scheduled)
$% MILLION FOR WYATT
PITTSBURGH (UPI) - The
NBA Playoff Standings
Pittsburgh Condors of the
By United Press International American Basketball Associa(Best of 7- Semifinals)
tion Thursday signed 6-foot-8¥.!
Eastern Division
Series' A'
forward Levi Wyatt, their
w. L. second round draft pick from
1 0
New York
0 1 Alcorn A&amp;M, to a five-year
Atlanta
contract reported to be in
Series 'B'
w. l. excess of $500,000.
1 0
Philadelphia
0 1
Baltimore
Western Division
Series 'C'
Milwaukee
San Francisco
Series 'D'

w.

L.

0 0
0

w.

0

L.
1 0

Los Angeles
0 1
Chicago
Thursday's Results
New York 112 Atlanta 101
(Only game scheduled)
Friday's Games
Baltimore at Philadelphia
Chicago at Los Angeles
(Only games scheduled)

2-HOUR
CLEANING
(Upon Request)

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS
2)6 2nd
Pomeroy
E.

Phone 992-5428

Wedorif'NO'You

BEING

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of City loon...

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BJTH

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n

Devils, Bonnies Ousted

Meigs Has
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Ten lettermen will attempt to
improve the Meigs Marauder

Villanova

and special larger loans up
to $5000 are available at

GUARANTEE :=~:=:=:=:=:==ffi

We guarantee accurate preparation of every tax return.
_If we make ~ny errors thot cost you any penalty or
onterest, we woll pay that penalty or interest.

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

H&amp;R

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AMERICA'S LA.RGEST TAX SERVICE WITH OVER 5000 OFFICES

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125 E. Main

992-2171
Pomeroy, 0.

'·

�- .....

4- The Daily Sentinel. Middleoort-Pomeroy, 0., March 26, 1971
~_...,...___..,.....,.........,......_..._~------

I

Girl .Scout
Diary

By Charlene Hoeflich

The deadline for entries in the Youth Conservation Awards
Program for girl scout troops in the county has been extended to
April 15 due to the lack of adequate participation. The contest is
sponsored by the Meigs Soil and Conservation District.
Mrs. William Ohlinger, chairman of the Big Bend Neighborhood, asks that each troop make at least one entry in the
contest. The project is to deal with some phase of conservation
relating to soil, water and natural resources in the county or
water and air pollution, and can be of any nature.
Prizes of $5 will be awarded to the first place winner in each
troop. The county winner will receive $15, with the runner-up to
receive $10.
Further details are available from Mrs. Ohlinger.
MRS. A. R. KNIGHT will be one of four Meigs Countians to
receive service pins at the annual leaders luncheon of the Four
Rivers Girl Scout Council at the University Inn, Athens, on April
30. Mrs. Knight has been active in Meigs County Girl Scout work
for 35 years.
Reservations for the luncheon are to be made with Mrs.
Ohlinger by April 7. The $2luncheon charge is to be paid at the
time the reservation is made.
SALISBURY TROOP 208
Cadettes of Troop 208 will go to Camp Kiashuta Tuesday for
work on an emergency preparedness challenge. Plans include
field first aid, fire building, and cooking.
Requirements for the pottery and ceramic badge were
completed this week. Pottery items made by the girls will be fired
in the kiln at Meigs High School by Mrs. Charles Lewis.
TUPPERS PLAINS TROOP 267
An overnight at Camp Rotan in Athens County has been

planned for the sixth graders of Troop 267 who will be promoted
from junior scouts to cadettes in May. The overnight was set for
May 7 and 8.
Girl scout Sunday was observed recently with group attendance at the Tuppers Plains Methodist Church. A gift of money
was presented to the church for use of the annex where meetings
are held.
Participating in the Thinking Day event were Dorothea
Runyon, Debra and Arlene Connolly, Sandra Hensley, Jane
M1llhone, Diana and Teresa Benedum, Teresa Longenette,
Deanna Baker, and the leaders, Marge Benedum, Beverly Collins
and Debbie Millhone.
MIDDLEPORT TROOP 39
A village clean-up project was discussed during Monday
night's meeting of Middleport Junior Troop 39. The scouts were
requested by their leader. Mrs. Roscoe Wise, to present ideas for
projects of beautification and ways of cleaning up the community
at next week's meeting.
Nancy Buskirk and Amy Hamm, senior scouts and leaders-intraining were present to assist Mrs. Wise. Plans were discussed
for an outing with a junior troop at Tuppers Plains.

~ami
Ru ell Mills was completed
by the; .rls t
y. C'.andleholders, cups, and
figurmes were
four-week course.
('()lumbus and Southern Ohio Electric
Cooking cia
Co. will begin r April 7 with Miss Joanna Distler, home
economist, as the mstructor. A skating party has been set for
April 18 with Clarence Boyles to instruct the girls in their work
toward a skating badge.
A service project was discussed and the March 31 meeting
was set as a time to decide on a spring village cleanup project.

Spring and

ElMiRA
Fashion Firsts
OUR NEW

JEWELRY

See the New
Red, White. Blue
Jewelry
Nev er has our spring collection
been more varied in new pi eces
and colors. See the new fish,
butt erfly and other new piece s.
Just about everything in a quality
show1ng is ready for your
choo sing . Drop in and take a peek .

1.00 and up

r·--S~cial

1 Conference Planned
Junior conference plans were
. discussed during Wednesday
night's meeting of the American
Legion Auxiliary of FeeneyBennett Post 128, Middleport.
Mrs. Charles Kessinger,
president of the unit and also
District 8 junior activities
chairman, announced the
district junior conference for
April 24 at Wilkesville, and the
Department of Ohio conference
at Bexley on June 5. A skit on
Americanism will be presented
by the juniors of the Pomeroy
and Middleport units at both the
district and the Department of
Ohio conferences.
The annual girls state tea has
been set for June 4 at the
Middleport legion hall, with
Mrs. Agnes Merriett of
Columbus to be the guest
speaker. Mrs. Kessinger announced a bake sale to be held
by the juniors on April 3.
A contribution was made to
the Meigs County Society for
Crippled Children.
Reported ill were Mrs. Etta
Will, Mrs. Will Reynolds, Harry
Kauff, Mrs. Pauline Gallagher,
Mrs. Albert Roush, and Mrs.
Denver Rice. Mr. and Mrs. H.

M. Cross have now been
released from the hospital and
are at their home.
At a meeting of the junior
auxiliary on Tuesday night, it
was voted to buy Easter gifts
for the adopted handicapped
child and the senior citizen of
the unit. A practice was held for
the skit on Americanism.
A dinner preceded the
Wednesday night meeting.

~
~ Personal Notes

[

~

~

Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Vaughan, Bill, Don, Beth and
Zandra, and Mrs. Annice
Ohlinger, were in Charleston
Sunday to visit Mrs. Elizabeth
Parsons. Mr. Vaughan and
Zandra attended the Ringling
Bros. and Barnum and Bailey
Circus.
Keith Black is convalescing at
home where he undergoes daily
therapy for a leg condition. He
expects to return to school in
about two weeks on a half-day
basis.

the Serrnonette
YE MUST BE BORN AGAIN!-John 3:7
By CHARLES W. SIMONS, JR.
First Baptist Church of Middleport
One night Jesus had a caller by the name of Nicodemus who
was a leader of the Jews and who belonged to the party of the
Pharisees. Nicodemus, in the course of his conversation with
Christ, said to Him, "We know, Rabbi, that you are a teacher sent
by God for no one could do the mighty works you are doing unless
God were with him."
Jesus answered, "I tell you the truth: no one can see the
Kingdom of God unless he is born again."
"How can a grown man be born again?" Nicodemus asked.
"He certainly cannot enter his mother's womb and be born a
second time!"
"I tell you the truth," replied Jesus, "that no one can enter
the Kingdom of God unless he is born of water and of the Spirit.
Flesh gives birth to flesh and Spirit gives birth to spirit. Do not be
surprised because I tell you, 'You must be born again.' "
As you read this article you may be asking yourself this
question, "How can I be born of water and of the Spirit?"
When Jesus talks about being born of water, He is speaking
about man's natural birth in the world, for he mentions that flesh
gives birth to flesh. It is interesting to note that when the fetus is
in the womb that it is immersed in a watery like substance called
the amniotic fluid, and that at birth this amniotic fluid is
discharged, thus it can be said that when man comes into the
world that he is born of water.
But for man to enter into the Kingdom of God he must be born
again; he must be born of the Spirit. If a person is to be born of the
Spirit, he must do four things. First, he must repent of his sins.
This implies that he acknowledges himself to be a sinner before
God, that he asks God to forgive him of his sins, and that he with
the strength of Christ begins to turn from his sinful ways.
Secondly, he must believe in the person of Jesus Christ. He
must believe that Jesus Christ is the Son of God, that Jesus Christ
lived in perfect life, that Jesus Christ died upon the cross to save
him from his sins, that Jesus Christ arose from the dead, and that
Jesus Christ is coming to earth again.
Thirdly, he must invite Jesus Christ into his heart and life. In
Revelation 3:20 we find Jesus saying these words, "Behold, I
stand at the door, and knock: if any man hear my voice, and open
the door, I will come in to him and will sup with him and he with
Me." Here Christ is plainly saying that He will only enter into a
person's heart upon that person's invitation, and here Christ gives
His word that He will enter into a person's heart and fellowship
with him when that individual opens the door of his heart and
invites Him in.
Fourthly, he must be willing to keep Christ's commandments.
This implies a willingness to follow Christ and to serve Him. In
John 14: 15 we find these words of Christ, ''If you love me, keep my
commandments." The individual who invites Jesus Christ into his
heart by faith must seek to demonstrate his faith in Christ by
striving with the help of Christ to live a holy life and a life that is
pleasing to God.
My friend, have you been born again by the Spirit of God? If
not, then right now wherever you are bow your head, confess your
sins to God, believe in Christ and what He has done for you at
Calvary, invite Christ into your heart and life by faith, and ask
God to help you to walk in obedience to Christ's teachings. My
friend, when you do this you will become a child of God, you will
begin to have a different perspective of life, and you will have a
place reserved for you in the New Heavens and Earth which God
one day will create for His children.
We who are Christians, let us thank God for making the way
possible for us to be born again so that we might find meaning and
purpose in life and have the hope of a glorious future life beyond
the grave. Fellow Christians, let us challenge ourselves to
proclaim to those outside of the Faith, that they need to be born
again.

CaIend ar

-·1~ Spring Presbyterial
Announced
~&lt;.und. round-~

I

FRIDAY
DANCE at Racine Junior High
School, 8:30 to 11:30 p. m.
Friday sponsored by Southern
High School sophomores. Music
by the Blue Rose Cathedral, Pt.
Pleasant.
CHESTER
Elementary
School annual musical on
American theme, Friday, 8
p.m. at school. Public invited.
CAFETERIA style dinner
beginning 4 p.m. Friday,
Trinity Church, Pomeroy. All
proceeds to George Thompson
Kidney Fund.
TRINITY benefit dinner for
the George Thompson Kidney
Fund. Serving to begin at 4 p.m.
in the Trinity Church dining
room.
DANCE Friday Wahama
High School auditorium, 8 to 11
p.m., sponsored by high school
cheerleaders. Jays will emcee.
EVANGELISTIC services
Friday, 7:30 p.m. at First
Baptist Church, Middleport.
Rev. Charles Simons will be
bringing the message. Youth
Night.
SATURDAY
EVANGELISTIC services
Saturday, 7:30 p.m. at First
Baptist Church, Middleport.
Rev. Charles Simons will be
bringing the message. Men,
Pack-A-Pew Night.
PLATE CHICKEN dinner
Saturday, 11:30 a.m. continuing
through early evening supper
hour at meetmg headquarters
of Ladies Auxiliary, Syracuse
Volunteer Fire Department.
Dinners in dining room or can
be taken out.
DANCE Saturday at Eastern
High School 8 to 11:30 p.m.
Sponsored by sophomore class.
Music by Tubey's Basement
Band. Public is invited to attend.
GARAGE SALE, Saturday, 10
a.m. to 5:30p.m. at home, Mr.
and Mrs. Don Headley, Tuppers
Plains, sponsored by Tuppers
Plains Community Club. Lunch
available in Tuppers Plains
Methodist Church annex.
MEIGS HIGH School Band
Boosters sponsoring high school
dance, Saturday, 8 p.m. to 11
p.m. at Meigs Junior High
School, Middleport, Jays emceeing.
REGISTRATION Racme peewee, little and pony league
members signup 9 a.m. to 1
p.m. Saturday at Simpson
building, Racine. Bake sale in
conjunction with signup.
Players take uniforms to
building.
INSPECTION Shade River
Lodge 453; F&amp;AM, Saturday,
7:30p.m., Chester. Work in FC
degree; refreshments. All
Master Masons invited.
MEIGS COUNTY Youth
Rally KCC Day at Ohio Valley
Christian Assembly, 1 to 4 p.m.
Saturday, on former Route 33 at
Bedford. Group singing, special
music, plays, fellowship hour.
Public invited.
SUNDAY
REVIVAL, Church of God,
Chester, Sunday 7:30 p.m.
Evangelist Emma Jean Perry
of Cincinnati. Special singing.
Everyone welcome.
SATURDAY SIGN UP day for
pony, little league and peewee
league in Racine from 9 a.m. to
1 p.m. Boys urged to bring old
uniforms and insurance money.
A bake sale will be held in the
Simpson building at the same
time.
REVIVAL, Syracuse Church
of Nazarene, 7:30 p.m. nightly
through Sunday, April 4. Rev.
James B. McClung, Sugar
Grove, speaking; special
singing. Public invited.

SERVICEMAN'S ADDRESS
Pvt. Marty Morarity, son of
Mrs .
Pauline
Morarity,
Syracuse, is serving with the U.
S. Army in Germany. Morarity
is a graduate of Southern High
School. His address is Pvt.
Marty Morarity, 298-42-1974,
HHC 2nd Pit. 30th Inf., New
York, N. Y. APO 0903:;.

uality In Crattsmanshtp
Quality In Materials
Quality You Can Trust.

OFFICE 992-7129
TOM CROW
992 2580

I

l

Spring Clean-Up

panel discussion on the theme
with Mrs. Robert Preston, First
Baptist, Rendville, speaking on
"Christian Witnessing In the
Home" using scripture from
Deut. 11:18-19; Mrs. Arnold
Richards, Mount Moriah,
Middleport, "Christian Witnessing through the Church,"
Matt. 18, 19th verse; and
"Christian Witnessing in the
Community," Mrs. Hariett
Warner, First Baptist, Rutland,
Acts I, 8th verse.
Extending greetings during
the meeting were Mrs. Dorothy
Lewis, Bidwell, president of the
Women's Auxiliary of the
Providence District; Mrs.
Bernice Borden, Bidwell, state
superintendent of the children's
band; the Rev. and Mrs. E. L.
Strother, First Baptist Church,
Rendville; the Rev. Henry Key,
Mount Moriah, Middleport;
Carlos Thompson, Chillicothe.
Closing remarks were given by
the Rev. Mr. Jackson with the
Rev. Mr. Key giving the
benediction.

f

A spring clean-up of the
Middleport American Legion
Park on Mill St. has been set for
Saturday by the Middleport Cub
Scout Pack 245 and the Middleport Boy Scout Troop 245.
The project will be carried out
in conjunction with the national,
program SOAR (Save Our
American Resources). Cubs,
webeloes and scouts are asked
to report to the park at 11 a.m. ,.
for the work session. Plans are
to clean the entire hillside
during the day.

Fl1&gt;WERS
For All occasions·
We wire flowers everywhere

992-2039
Pomeroy Flower Shop
Butternut Ave. Pomeroy

Mrs. Mi liard Von Meter

Two Observe
Birthdays
With Parties
The birthdays of Jamie
Scally, nine, and Mark Hood, 10,
were observed Tuesday evening
after school with a party at the
home of Mrs. Marion Francis.
The party was held in conjunction with a meeting of Den
3, Cub Scout Pack 245.
A cake inscribed ' Happy
Birthday Jarrue and Mark"
with candles was served with
ice cream and punch. The occasion also marked the
promotion of Mark from the den
to webeloes . A gift from the den
was presented to each of the
boys.
Blowouts, suckers, and
pouches of bubble gum were
given as favors. Attending were
Max Geary, Keith black, James
Gheen, David Shuler, Mrs.
George Hackett, Sr., Mrs. Flora
Bailey, Miss Brenessa Hood,
and Marion Francis. Ray
Stewart and Greg Knapp were
unable to attend.
The meeting opened with the
pledge to the flag.

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MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

•

LET'S GET TOGETHER
See our vast display of
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awaiting you

I

9Q7 2534

"Christian Witnessing" was
the theme of the Hocking
Subdistrict Missionary Convention held Sunday at the
Naomi
Baptist
Church,
Pomeroy.
Mrs. Campbell Harper of the
Mount Moriah Baptist Church,
president, and Mrs. ·Jesse
Roberts of the First Baptist
Church,
Rendville,
vice
president, presided at the
meeting which opened at 2:30
p.m. with a song service led by
Mrs. Harper. Kenneth Roberts
was at the piano.
A praise and testimonial
service was led by Mrs. Sherman Butler, First Baptist
Church, Rutland, and the hymn,
"Calling Today" preceded the
invitation by the Rev. Samuel
Jackson, pastor of the host
church. There was avoca~ solo,
"Jesus Savior, Pilot Me" by
Tony Preston of the Rendville
church following a brief
business meeting.
Mrs. Allen Hampton of the
Naomi Church moderated a

Cub Scouts Plan

•

8ee nwrry total look inspirutions mul new ideas

GREEN HILL HOMES. INC.
DALE DUTTON

Missionary Convention
Theme is Witnessing

. .

cermng the !.attn Amencan .
countnes. Mrs. Owens read
Psal.rn - 1' gave an Easter
rnedJtatwn from Ideals, and a
poem, "Two Pieces of Wood" by
Phyllis C. Michael. To close the
meeting she read a poem,
"Irish Blessing."
Yellow flowers were used on
the tables for refreshmen~
served by Mrs. Richard Kerr,
Mrs. Mildred Bailey, Mrs. Jesse 6
Shumaker, and Mrs. Helen
Lewis.

FURNITURE FOR TODA Y'S HOMEMAKERS

LITTLE OR NO DOWN PAYMENT!
CALL US•..

LARRY SPEN&lt;.;ER
991 J.133

A
ubtn card was
stgned for M1ss Margaret
Sauer,~ patient. at the Veterans
Mernonal Hospttal.
The group sang "Christ
Arose" to open the meeting with
Mrs .•J. E. Harley presenting a
prayer for missionaries in
Sudan and Indianapolis, Ind.
Mrs. Tom Rue gave the book
study entitled "Where America
Struggles to be Born" con-

LAST service Sunday of

. .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -... evangelistic
crusade
at First
Baptist Church,
Middleport,
10: 15a.m. Members and friends
of the church as well as those
who do not attend any church
are invited to attend.
MONDAY
MEIGS County NFO meeting,
8 p.m. Monday at Chester
Grange Hall.

new FHA
financing
program
makes
•
renting
ridiculous

The Spring Presbyterial to be
held in Portsmouth on April 2:1
was announced by Mrs. Karl
Owens president at the
Thursd~y night mee'ting of the
Women's Association of the
Middleport First
United
Presbyterian Church.
Mrs. Owens urged members
to plan to attend the meeting. It
was voted to contribute $15 to
the George Thompson Kidney

W.

N'~in

992-5314
Pomeroy, 0.

;Jt••••

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT. 0.

�5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 26,1971

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POMEROY

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MIDDI EPOPT

POMEROY
TRINITY
MT. MORIAH BAPTISTUnitedChurch of Christ -Rev
Corner Fourth and Main,
Perrin, pastor. Fred Blaeffnar, Middleport. Rev. Henry L. Key,
supf.SundaySchool,9:15a.m.; Jr., pastor. Sunday School9 :30
• Worship, 10:25 a. m .; youth a. m., Arnold Richards, supt.;
choir rehearsal, Monday, 6:30 Morning worship 10 : 30 a. m.
p. m ., Mrs. Marvin Burt,
FIRST UNITED
PRESdirector.
Senior
choir BYTERIAN, Middleport-Rev.
rehearsal, 7:30p.m. Thursday, Russell Lester, pastor. Sunday
Mr.s. Paul Nease, director.· School 9:30 a m., Lewis Sauer,
Thursday, all day Busy Bee supt.; worship service 10:30
quilting party in church social a.m.
room·
M I D D L E P0 RT
H E AT H
PUMEROY CHURCH OF UNITED METHODIST-Rev.
THE 'NAZARENE Corner Max E. Donahue, minister;
Union and Mulberry. Rev. Eric Chambers, Sunday School
Clyde V. Henderson, pastor. superintendent. Church School
Sunday School 9:30 a. m.; 9:30 a. m .; morning worship,
Raymond
Walburn,
supt. 10:30 a.m.; youth meeting, 7 p.
Morning worship 10:30 a. m.; m.; Choir rehearsal, Wed -'
Evening service 7:30 p. m. Mid
nesday 7 7:30 p. m.; Mrs. E.
week service, Wednesd~y . 7:30 Robert Hamm, director.
p. m.
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSESGRACE EPISCOPAL- Rev. Larry Carnahan presiding
Stanley Platfenburg, minister. , minister. Sunday, Bible lecture,
Morning prayer and sermon, 9:30 a. m.; Watchtower study,
10:30 a. m. Holy communion 10:30 a. m.; Tuesday, Bible
and sermon, frsf Sundays, study, 7:30 p. m.; Thursday,
10:30 a . m. Church school, ministry school 7:30 p. m .,
kindergarten through eighth service meeting 8:30 p. m.
grade, 10:30 a.m.
MIDDLEPORT
CHURCH
POMEROY CHURCH OF of Christ in Christian UnionCHRIST- Mr. Hoyt Allen, Jr., Lawrence Manley, pastor; Mrs.
pastor . Bible School, 9:30a.m.; Russell Young, Sunday School
worship, 10:30; adult worship Supt. Sunday School 9:30a.m.;
service and younq peoples Evening worship 7:30. Wedmeeting, both ' 7:30-p. in. Sun- nesday prayer meeting, 7·30 p.
day -Wednesday,
combined m.
Bible
study
and
prayer
CHURCH OF THE NAZAmeeting, 7:30p.m.
RENE Middleport, Rev.
THE SALVATION ARMY- Auary 1v 1111 _,r, pastor; Floyd
Envoy RayS. Wining, officer in Carson, supt. Sunday school,
i:.harge. Sunday, 10 a. m., 9:30
a.m.;
Morning
warHoliness meeting; 10:30 a. m. ship,
10:30
a.m.;
junior
Sun~ay School. Young People's ~ociety. 6:30 p.m.; NYPS 6;45
Leg1on, 7 p._ m.; Thursday, 1 to 3 p.m.
Sunday
evangelistic
p. m., Lad1es Home League, 7 meeting, 7:30 p.m. Prayer
p. m. PreQ rlasses .
meeting Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
SACR~D HtAK I Rev.Father Bernard Krajcovic,
MIDDLEPORT
PENpastor.
Phone
992-2825, TECOSTAL- Third Ave., the
Saturday evening Mass, 7:30 Rev. William Kniffel, pastor;
p.m. Sunday Mass, 8 and 10 Ralph Priddy, Sunday School
a.m. Confessions, Saturday 7- sup!.; Classes for all ages,
7:30 p.m.
Sunday School, 10 a.m.; Sunday
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST evening service, ?:30 p. m.
Wednesday evenmg Young
-'3obert Kuhn, pastor. George People's meeting and Bible
Skmner, Sunday School supt. Study, 7 : 30. Saturday evening
Sund~y Scho?l, 9:30 a. m.; service, 7:30.
mornmg wor,n•~· 1~:30 a. m.;
FIRST BAPTiST CHURCH of
BYF, 6 p. m., B1ble Study
.
s· th d
Wednesday 7 p. m.; choir Middleport, corner of IX an
practic~ We_d., 8:30 p. m.
P_almer Streets, Rev. Charles
FIRST SOUTHERN BAP- Somons,
pastor.
Danny
.
Thompson, Sunday School
T I~T. - 220 E_. Mam,
Pomeroy, Superintendent. Sunday
af~ll1ated w1th S.B.C. Rev. church school for everyone
Cl1fford Coleman: pastor. 9 : 15 a.m.; Morning worship
Sunday school, 9. 30 _a.m., lO: 15 a.m.; Evening services,
He_rshel M~Ciure, supt., worp m .. Wednesday prayer
.
shrp serv1ce, 10:30 a.m.; 7 · 30 · ~
evening worship, 7:30 p.m. ser:v•~':· 7.30 p.m. ExtraJ'o¥~~
Wednesday prayer meeting and - acflvJfJes on Su~day, 5 p . ., .
Bible study, 7 30 p.m.
af II y~uth_ up to sd1xth gr~~e, ~_.g3~
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN
or JUnior an
sen 1o
1
Rev. Arthur C. Lund, pastor. students.
.
Sunday School, 9: 15 a. m.,
CHURCH OF CH~IST, MI~ ­
Charles Evans, Supt.; worship dleport, 5th and Mam. Raullm
service, 10:30 a. m. Con- Moyer, pastor. Thomas Kelly,
firmation etas Saturday, 9:45 Sunday School supt. Bi?le
a. m.
School, 9:30 a. m.; mornmg
POMEROY CHESTER
worship, 10:30 a. m.; evening
UNITED
METHODIST worship, 7:30 p. m.; ornvPr
Robert R . Card, pastor. service 7 p.m. Wednesday . .
Pomeroy - Worsh p, 10:30 a.
m , Church Sc+ I 9 15 a. m.;
MASON COUNTY
f- 11 ~k
Vav
sup~&gt;~ In
dent Cl'&gt;
~
CHRISTIAN
SCIENCE
c~~rc"
m'
Services, 3"5 Main St., Pt.
RO&lt;.r fppiE'
SEVENTH
ADVENT- Peasant. Sunday services, 11
TIST Po
Mulberry a.m. Wednesday Testimonial
Hgts. Herbert M gan, pas•or. meeting, 7 30 p m.
Sabbath School 5aturday, 2 p.
m.; worship, 3:15 p. m. Dorcas GRAHAM UN I TED METH Society, lOa. m each Thursday. ODIST CHURCH - Preaching
9:30 a. m., first and second
THE HILAND CHAPEL, Sundays of each month; third
George Casto, pastor . Sunday and fourth Sundays each month,
School, 9:30; eveni ng worship, worship service at 7:30 p. m.
7: 30.. Thursday evening prayer Wednesday evenings at 7:30,
serv 1ce, 7:30p.m.
Prayer and Bible Study.

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

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!Helen Help Us!
I

l

I

By Helen Bottel

1

HOW DOES A WOMAN- PAYYHE BILLS?
Dear Helen :
I frequently take my sister and her husband out for dinner, as
they have been very kind to me since I became a widow.
But often it ends up the other way around, with the man
paying for all of us. This is because the waitress brings him the
bill, and if I ask for it, he is embarrassed, and I feel like a fool.
I've tried giving him the money before we enter the
restaurant, but he refuses. What can I do? - SINGLE BUT SELFSUPPORTING
Dear Single :
Make the reservations in your name, and arrange with the
manager to pay at the desk, or by credit card. You can also tell
the waitress beforehand that you want to sign for the dinners.
A man shouldn't feel embarrassed when a woman offers to
pay - but he does, and so she must go to a little extra work,
smoothing the way. - H.
Dear Helen:
Our daughter will be married soon. We have planned a nice
wedding, but now she springs this on us: After she and the
bridegroom leave, she wants her friends to stay on at the
reception hall for a dance a nd beer bust. That means keeping the
band for four more hours, providing drinks for a thirsty crowd,
not to speak of the cleanup and possible breakage.
We aren't wealthy. Is this fair? -- TOO MUCH
Dear T. M. :
No! When the bride and bridegroom make a dash through the
rice, the reception should end. - H.
Dear Helen:
My daughter works full time with a take-home pay check of
$120 a week. She read in a 10-year-old magazine (where it came
from I don't know) that $40 a month was right for at-home room
and board. She considers this "high."
Ten dollars a week wouldn't even pay for her food these days.
She also expects all her laundry done, comes and goes as she
pleases, does no work in the house, and uses the telephone constantly. She is 22, and very picky, causing fights with the younger
children.
What would you suggest that wouldn't be "holding her up"?MOTHER
Dear Mother :
I'd suggest $20 a week minimwn, and if she balks, I'd ask
"What's holding YOU up? Find an apartment." - H.
Dear Helen :
Referring to your piece on overkill in burglar alarms, we
agree with the lady who said you can overdo protection of a
private restdence. There are certainly companies who take advantage of fear to make a fast buck.
However, most reputable organizations will give you no more
protection than you need. For example, a good security system
with a hot line to the police and fire department is available for as
little as $300.
Installa Lion of an al(:lrm system is no job for an amateur.
There is no need to spend thousands of dollars. but most people
will sleep twtrer if the~ have wise· prulel'lion froltl intruders. H.
H.

MASON
ASSEMBLY
OF
GOD -Second Sf., Mason, W.
Va. Chester Tennant, pastor.
Sunday school, 10 a. m .;
morning worship, 11 a. m.;
evangelistic service, 7:30 p . m.
Bible study and prayer service,
Wednesday, 7:30 p. m. Phone
773 5133.
HARTFORD CHURCH OF
Christ in Christian Union Rev.O'Dell Manley, pastor.
Sunday School, 9:30a.m., Rev.
Guy Sayre, supt.; evening
service, 7:30. Tuesday Bible
study, 7:30 p. m. Thursday
evening prayer meeting, 7:30 p.
m. Sunday evening youth
services, 6:30 with Roger
Manley, youth leader.
MASON FIRST BAPTISTSecond and Pomeroy Sts., Stan
Craig, pastor. Sunday school,
9:45 a.m.; worship service, 11
a.m.; training union, 6:30-p.m.;
evening worship service, 7:30
p.m. Mid-week prayer service,
Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
CHRISTIAN
SCIENCE
Services at 315 Main St., Pt.
Pleasant. Sunday School 9: 15
a.m. Sundays, 11 a.m.; Wednesday, testimonial meeting 8
p.m. All welcome.
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH
- Letarl Route 1, !he Rev. Sian
Craig, pastor. Sunday school.
9:30 a.m.; prayer and Bible
study, 7:30p.m. Cottage prayer
service, Tuesday, 10 a.m.;
worship service, Friday, 7:30
p .m.
MASON
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST- John Steele, pastor.
Worship, 10 a.m.; Bible study,
11:15 a.m.; evening worship,
7:30 p.m . Mid-week service,
Wednesday, 7:30p.m.

MEIGS COUNTY
ALFRED
UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH. Rev.
Randy
Lavender,
pastor.
Sunday School at 9:45, Lloyd
Dillinger,
Superintendent.
Worship services at 11 a.m. with
the Rev. Lavender with Holy
Communion to be observed.
Wednesday evening prayer
services at 7:45p.m.

. UNITEDFAITH- obert_E.
Smith, pastor. Worsti p serv1ce
and Sunday school, 9:30 a.J!l·•
Fred Samsel, supt.; evemng
worship, 7:30 p.m.; yol!th
meeting, 7 p.m. Prayer meetong
Thursday, 7:30 p.m.
BRADFORD CHURCH OF
CHRIST Charles Russell,
Pastor.
Bud
Bartrum,
Superintendent, Sunday School,
9:30 a.m. Wors hip Service,
10:30 a.m. Sunday evening
services. 7 p.m. Bible study
Wednesday, 7 p.m. Bradford
Group Tuesday, 7 p.m.
HOBSON
CHRISTIAN
UNION Darrel Doddrill,
pastor. Sunday School, 9:30 a.
m., Annie Mohler, supt.;
Leonard Gilmore, first elder;
evening service, 7:30 p. m .
Wednesday prayer meeting,
7:30 p. m.
.
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF
GOD - Racine Route 2. The
Rev. Charles Hand, pastor.
Sunday school, 9:45 a.m.;
morning worship, 11 a.m.
Evening services, Tuesday and
Friday, 7 30.
TUPPERS
PLAINS
CHARGE
UNITED
METHODIST. Sunday worship
St. Paul's 9 a.m.; South
Bethel9:55 a .m . ; Alfred 11 a,m.
(Firs! and third Sundays) 7:45
p.m.; (Second and 4th Sundays). Lottridge -7:45 p.m.
(First and third Sundays). 11
&lt;'~.m. Second and 4th Sundays.
LONG
BOTIOM
METHODIST - Rev. Freeland
Norri s, pastor. Sunday School,
10 a.m.; church services, 11

a.m.

RACINE FIRSI CHURCH
OF THE
NAZARENE
Sunday School, 9:30 a. m.,
Morning Worship, 10 : 30 a. m.;
Evening worship, 7: 30 p. m.
Wednesday, Sunday School
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, 7:30p.m .
SOUTH BETHEL UNITED
METHODIST _ Rev. Randy
Lavender, pastor. Sun d ay
school, 9 a.m., Mrs. Wilma
Bahr, Supt. Youth Fellowship 6
p.m. each Sunday at Tupper!&gt;
Plains
United
Methodist
Church.
DANVILLE WESLEYAN -J.
A. Curry, pastor. Sunday
School, 9:30 a. m.; Youth and
junior youth service, 6:45p.m.;
Evening worship, 7:30 p. m.
Prayer and praise Wed .• 7:30 p.
m.
GR 0 V E
H EM L 0 C K
CHRISTIAN- David Stauffer,
pastor; Stanford Stockton, supt.
Morning worship, 9: 30 a .m ·;
church school. 10:30 a.m.;
young peoples meeting, 6:30
p.m.; evening worship, 7: 30.
Bible study, Wednesday, 7: 30
p.m ·
SILVER RUN FREE BAPTIST- Rev. Howard Kimble,
pastor. Sunday school. 10 a.m.;
Henry Davis. sup!.; evening
service, 7:30 p.m. Prayer
meeting, Thursday, 7:30 p.m.
CHESTER CHURCH OF
GOD- Rev. Donald A. Sheets,
pastor . Sunday School 9:30 a.
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 meetino.
Monday, 7 p.m . Midweek
service, Wednesday, 7:30p.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.; morning worship, 10: 45 •
NYPS Sunday, 6:30 p. m.;
evangelistic service, Sunday,
7:30 p.m. Mid-week prayer
t.
Wd
730 m
m~•ng,
en~ d ay,.
P· ·
Mssionary meeting, second
Wednesday, 7:30P.m.
R 0 C K
S P R I N G S
METHODIST - Rev. Richard
Pumphrey, pastor ; Harold
Blackston,
superintendent.
Morning worship, 9:30 a.m.;
chur ch 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, 10 a. m.;
Winnie Holsinger, supt. Mar
ning sermon, 11 a.m.; Evening
service Christian Endeavor.
7:30 p. m.;
Mrs.
Lyda
Chevalier, president. Song
service and sermon, 8:20. Mid
Week prayer meeting Wed
nesday, 7:30 p. m. Mrs. Mazie
Holsinqer, class leader.
POMEROY LOWER LIGHT
CHURCH- Harrisonville Road,
1-(ev. Roy Taylor, pastor; Henry
Eblin, Sunday School Supt.
Sunday School, 9:30 a. m.;_
evening worship, 7:30 p. m .
Prayer and prasie servicP.,
Thursday, 7:30 p. m
RACINE-LETART
WESLEYAN UNITED METHODIST
Racine, W. Dale McClurg,
pastor. Sunday School. 9:30 a.
m.: Worship service, 10:30 a.
m .; UMYF, 7 p. m. each Sunday; Senior Choir practice,
Thursday, 7:30 p. m. ; Service
Guild, fourth Monday, 7:30 p.
m.; Happy Hustlers 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; even ing worship, 7:30
p.m. Wednesday Bible study,
7:.30 p.m.
STIVERSVILLE
COMMUNITY CHURCH Rev.
Edsel Hart, pastor. Sunday
morning worship serv ice, _10 m.
a. rr., Dell Ta I bot, superin COMMUNITY
CHURCH,
tendent. Prayer meeting, each Dexter- Rev. Basil DeWeese,
Thursday, 7:30 p.m . Sunday pastor. Sunday morning wor evening serv ice, 7: 30.
ship, 10 a. m.; Worship services, 7: 30 p. m. Tuesday and
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST Sunday evenings.
Pam eroy- Ha rr i so nv iII e
Road. John Webst er, pastor;
Paul M c Elroy, Sunday School
ST.
PAUL'S
UNITED
Supt.SundaySchool,9 : 30a m.;
M orn ing Worship and com- METHODIST CHURCH munion, 10:30 a. m.; Sunday Tuppers Plains. Rev. Randy
eveni ng youth Christian En- Lav e nder, pastor. Sunday
deavor, 6 p. m.; Worship ser - School , 9: 30 a. 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, 7:30p.m.
METHODIST CHURCH - First
and second Sundays, preaching
af 8 p. m .; Third and fourth
ST. JOHN 'LUTHERAN
Pine Grove, Rev. Gerald Sundays, Sunday School, 10 a.
Herbener, pastor. Sunday m .; worship service at 11 a.m.;
school,9a. m .; Church serv ice, Tuesday evenings af 8 p. m.,
prayer and Bible Study.
10 a.m.
FLATWOODS
UNITED
SYRACUSE
UNITED
METHODIST Paul A. M E THODIST, Rev . William
Airson, pastor, Robert Eason,
Sellers, pastor; Ben Quisen
berry, Sunday School Supt. sup!. Sunday School at 10 a . m.,
worship service, 9: 30 a. m. first Worship serv ice at 11 a. m.
and third Su nday . Evening Prayer meeting Thursday, 8 p.
service, 8 p.m. fourth Sunday. m.
MT. UNION BA.PTIST LANGSVILLE MIDWAY services each Sunday at 10 a.m . Rev . Cecil Cox, pastor. Sunday
a nd 7:30 p. m. Tuesday evening school sup!., Joe Sayre. Sunday
schoo l , 9:45 a .m .; Sunday
worship, 7: 30.
SUTTON
UNITED evening worship, 7: 30. Wed
METHODIST Paul A . nesday prayer and Bible study,
Sellers, pastor; Martha Lee, 7: 30p.m.
Sunday School Supt. Wor ship
TUPPERS
PLAINS
service, 10: 45 a . m . ;second and
fourth
Sund ays;
evening CHRISTIAN CHURCH - Mr.
wor'lsip, 8 p. m . third Sunday. John Wyatt, pastor; J. S. Davis,
ENTERPRISE
UNITED Sunday School supt. ; Sunday
METHODIST -Rev. William school, 9:30 a m., Morning
Airson, pastor . Ralph Spencer, Sermon, 10: 30 a. m. Evening
sermon, 7 p. m .
Supt.; Car l Jen nings, asst. sup!
Worship services, 9: 30 a. m .;
Sunday Schoo l, 10 : 30 a m., EAST
LETART
FALLS
Youth Fellowship, 6:30 p. m.; UNITED
METHODIST
Wednesday, choir, 6: 15 !;). m
CHURCH - W. Dale M cClurg,
pastor . Wo rship services,
second
and fourth Sundays of
BRADBURY CHURCH OF
month at 9 a.m.; Sunday
CHRIST, Roy Bill Carter. each
evangel is! , Thurman Carsey, Schoo l , fir st and third Sundays
Bible School sup f.; Bible School
9:30 a.m . , morning worship,
10 30 a .m.; youth meeting, 6
p m., eveni ng service, 7 p.m .,
Chr i s tian
Workers
Cla ss,
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m .; prayer
n;eeting Wednesday, 7· 30 p.m .
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Hobart Newell , supt. Serv ices
weekly, 9:30 a .m
Sunday .
Preaching fir st and third
Sundays of month by Char les
Russell. 9:30 a.m.

meeting, 6:30 p. m.; Evening
worship, 7·30 p.m.
APPLE GROVE UNITE:D
METHODIST CHURCH - W
Dare 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
t·A~ME:L UNITED METHS
ODIST Pau 1 A.
e 11 ers,
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,
s d
11 a.m. and 7:30p.m. un ay.
Sunday School, 9:30 a. m.
Richard Barton, supt. Prayer
meeting, Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
HARRISONVILLE
PRESBYTERIAN Mrs. Norma
Lee, Sunday Schoop Superin
tendent. Sunday School 9:30 a.
m. Sunday Service 8 p.m. Rev.
Max Donahue, Middleport.
pastor.
BETHANY
UNITED
METHODIST -Paul A. Sellers.
pastor; Blythe Theiss, Sunday
School supt. Worship service,
9:30 a. m. second and fourth
Sundays; Evening worship, 8 p.
m. first Sunday.
L0 TT RI DG E
UN IT ED
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,
sup!. Sunday School. 9:30a.m.;
Morning worship, 10:30 a. m.;
Evening worship, 7:30 p . m.
Wednesday, Christian Youth
Crusade, 6:30 p. m.; Prayer
meeting 7:30 p. m. Thursday,
choir practice, 7 p. m.
DEXTER
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST -Danny
Evans,
pastor. Norman C. Will, supt.
Sunday School 9: 30 a. m.;
Worship service, 10:30 a. m .
Christian Endeavor Sunday
evening.
REORGANIZED
CHURCH
OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS- PortlandRacine Road. Ralph Johnson,
pastor. Sunday School. 9:30 a.
m.; Morning worship, 10:30 a.
m.; Sunday evening service, 7
p . m . Wednesday evening
prayer services, 7:30 p. m.
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST _
Great Bend, Charles Norris,
t
W
h.
·
9
pasor. ors lpservoce, : 30a.
m.; Sunday School, 10:30 a.m.

of

Let's talk a moment, parent to parent •.••

It's ()Uite an adjustment, i5n't it? Your
daughter, Jill, is on doud nine because Jack
asked her for a date. Jack9 s driving his dad's
car. That is, you hope he drives it. Maybe he
just aims it and takes off.

cars
and
dates

Yes, it's quite an adjustment. And all the
hooks say there's nothing you can do about
it. Kids date. So, watch television, read a
hook, listen for the muffled "Good night ·'
and the click of the doorlatch, then stop worrying and go to sleep. Until her next date••••
The churches of our community have no
simple solution for this problem. They have
a complex solution: Through moral and religious training, develop in every boy and
girl a mature sense of responsibility, a respect for life and ChriHian character.
The young people we'll have the greatest
confidence in tomorrow arc going to church
today.

:-::.

··tf.·.

Sundav
!':-alms
:l!): 1-7

:\1nnday

•

Psalm~

'" :1-7

Tuc~da v

•

!'"alms

Wedne'iday

•

119 :1 13-117

l'~alms

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11f&gt;:l-10

Thursday
.Jeremiah •
17:5 -7

Friday

Hosea

Saturday
Jeremiah
29:1-7

•

2:1-1-18

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MORNING STAR UNITED'"~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~-~~~-~-~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
METHODIST _ Rev. William
Airson, pastor; Roy Van Meter,
supt.; Sunday School, 9:30 a.
m.; Morning worship, 10:15 a.
With the hope it will, in some measure, foster and help sustain that which is
m.; Youth Fellowship and Bible
Study, Thursday, 8 p. m. Fred
good in family and community fife, this feature is sponsored by the business
Smith, layleader.
firms and organizations whose names appear below.
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
CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH Rev. Wi liard Dutcher, pastor.
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.; Evangel is tic 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, c lass leader. Yough
Meeting Wednesday, 7:30p.m .,
Ernest Deeter, leader .

WILLIS ANTHONY
PLUMBING AND HEATING

992-2550
240 Lincoln St.

GOEGLEIN READY MIX CO.
Phone 992-3284

Middleport

Middleport

HEINER'S BAKERY

M &amp; R FOODLINER

Bakers of Good Bread
Huntington, W.Va.

MARK V STORE
Middleport, Ohio

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

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

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

Middleport, Oh io

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

RACINE FOOD MARKET
The Store with

A Heart
949-3342

Racine

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.
Ohio's Oldest D~dge Dealer
Middleport, 0.

GAUL'S MARKET

MT. HERMON UNITED
Chester, Ohio
BRETHERN CHURCH IN
CHRIST - Rev. Robert Shook,
pastor , Sunday School, 9:30 a.
m ., Roy Pooler, sup!.; Alfred
Wolfe, ass!. supt.; morning
worship , 11 a.m.; evening
sermon, 7: 30 p .m ., alternating
each Sunday. Class meeting, 11
Family Recreation
Pomeroy-Member F. D. I. C. &amp;
a. m . alternating Sunday
Swimming
Federal
Reserve
System
mornings,
Alfred
Wolfe,
layleader; Christian Endeavor, ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~.

riJ~kl~y. mpre~~~ednat P~~~:~

meeting, Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Board meeting first Monday
each month, 7: 30p.m.

THE FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS CO.

ROYAL OAK PARK

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

MEIGS MOBILE HOME SALES

Rexall Drugs
We Fill All Doctors Prescriptions

Comfortable Living~
Reasonably Priced

Pomeroy
Tuppers Plains
667-3891
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED 992-2955
PRESBYTERIAN
- Rev. 11-- - - - -- ~~-;::::~::--:-~-r--~-~-~~~-~-~~-~---1
Russell Lester, pastor. Worship
service, 9a. m .; Sunday School.
10 a.m.
LINCOLN- MERCURY
AMERICAN MOTORS
RUTLAND
Electric Motor Repair
Phone 593-6601
_
810 W. Main
992-5750
RUTLAND FIRST BAP85 N. Court St.
Athens
TIST - Rev. Sam uel Jackson,
pastor. Sunday School, 10 a.m .;
Mrs. Gertrude Butler, supt.
Prayer Service, 1: 30 p. m.;
oreaching service, 2 p. m .
Take Someone with You to Church
Meats and Groceries
THE
RUTLAND
METHIn Pomeroy Over 90 Years
ODIST Rev. Richard C.
Syracuse
992-3986
Kermit Walton, Mgr.
Pumphery,
pastor .
Church
Schoo l 9:30 a.m; Wor sh ipf-~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~+~-- -~~-~~~-~~~-~~--11
10 3
service
: o a .m .
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
CHRIST - Sundayschool,9;30
a.m, v.. H. Braley, supt .;
Church and Office Supplies- Gifts
Furniture and Appliances
commun1on and devotions,
992-2641
Middleport
Phone 985-3308
Chester, 0.
10: 3~ a . m . Regular board
meehng 7:30, third Saturday
~&gt;nrh m0nth.
r---~~~~~~~~-~~~~~-~+~~-

RAYBUCK MO'JiOR SALES InC.

POMEROY ELECTRIC SERVICE

NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE

SADIE'S MARKET

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

f. J. WALLACE, JEWELER

ot each
monthat
9 a.m ..ofsecond
THE
RUTLAND
Attend the Church of Your Cho'tce
and
fourth
Sundays
each MUNITY
CHURCH - COMRev.
month a! 10 a. m .; Bible study, Amos Tillis, pastor. Sunday
Wednesday.
Scho_ol. 9:30 a. m . ; Worship
Bulova Watches~ Sales &amp; Service
serv•ce, 11 a. m.; Wednesday
186 N. Second
Middleport
Pomeroy
prayer meeting, 7: 30 p. m.
Ph. 992-3498
LETART FALLS UNITED Sunday night worship, 7:30.
BRETHREN Rev. Robert
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
Shook, pastor; Herschel Norris, THE NAZARENE -Rev. Lloyd
~L'NTINEL
sup!. Sunday school, 9:30 a .m. ; C. Gr1mm, Jr., pastor. Sunday
-JL
morning sermon, 10:30 a.m.; School_. 9:30 a. rn.; Morning
and
evening sermon, 7:30 alter- worsh1p, 10:30 a. m . ; Young
nating each Sunday. Prayer people's scrv i~:e, 6· 45 p. m .;
service, Wednesday, 7:30 p .m. Evangelistic services, 7:30 p
S
Prayer meel1ng, 7:30 p.m . m . Wednesday eveni ng serv ice •~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~e~r~v~i~n~g~T~h~e.9~ig~B~e~n~d~~;r~e~a~~~~
alternating Sundays.
7:30 p. m .

The Da1'lry Sent1'nel
WANT ADS
AI Ways Get Resu ltsl.

BEN FRANKLIN SJiORE

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Truth or Consequences
Dinah's Place
Concentration
Sale of the Century
Hollywood Squares
Jeopardy
Who. What, Where
News
Memory Game
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The Doc•ors
Another World
Bright Promise
Mr. Cartoon
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8 •10 The Answer
8 JO TV Chapel
9 00 Singing Jubilee
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11:00 Kartuon Karnival
11:30
12:00 Mormon Choir
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1: 00 Meet the Press
1:30 Baseball
7•00
2:30
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3:30
4:00
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5:30
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9•30
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6:00
6: 30 Bible Answers
6:45
7:00 News
7:30 Sleepy Jeffers
8:00
8:30 Romper Room
9: 00 Capt. Kangaroo
9:30
10:00 Jackie Oblinger
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11 : 00 Family Affair
11: 30 Love of Life
12: 00 Galloping Gourmet
12:30 Search for Tomorrow
1: 00 Divorce Court
1:30 As the World Turns
2: 00 Love Is
2:30 .Guiding Light
3:00 Secret Storm
3:30 Edge of Night
4:00 Movie
4:30
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6:00 Evening News
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7:00 What's My Line
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8: 30 The Lucy Show
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10:30
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12:00

«

CHANNEL 3
6:00
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6:45
7:00
7:30
8:00
8:30
9 : 00
9:30
10:00
10:30
11: 00
11:30
12:00
12:30
1:00
1: 30
2: 00
2:30
3 : oo
3:30
4: 00
4:30
5:00
5:30
6:00
6:30
7:00
7:30
8:00
8:30
9:00
9:30
10:00
10:30
11:00
11:~0

Corn Cob Report
Today

Movie Game
Tru t h or Consequences
Dinah ' s Place
Concentration
Sale of Century
Hollywood Squares
Jeopardy
Who, What, Where
Mid-Day News
Memory Game
Days of Our Lives
The Doctors
Another World
Bright Prom i se
Mr. Cartoon
Petticoat Junction
Wagon Train
News
NBC News
King Family
Inside Scotland Yard
Movie

News
Tonight Show

CHANNEL13 CHANNEL 3
Farm Report
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Word of Life
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Rocky &amp; His Friends
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Mike Douglas

That Girl
News
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Make A Deal
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Wild Wild West
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News
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Special
Movie

News
Mcvie

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CHANNEL 8
6:00
6: 30
7:00
7: 30
8:00
8: 30
9:00
9:30
10:00
10:30
11 : 00
11 : 30
12 : 00
12 : 30
1: 00
1. 30
2:00
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3:00
3:30
4:00
4:30
5:00
5 : 30
6:00
6:30
7: 00
7:30
8:00
8:30
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10:00
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11 : 00
11:30
12:00

The Bible Answers
News
Sleepy Jeffers
Romper Room
Captain Kangaroo
Jackie Oblinger
Beverly Hillbillies
Family Affair
Love of Life
Galloping Gourmet
Search for Tomorrow
Divorce Court
As the World Turns
Love is Splendored
Guiding Light
Secret Storm
Edge of Night
Movie

Evening News
Walter Cronkite
What's My Line
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Green Acres
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All in the Family
CBS News Hour
News
Merv Griffin

6: 00
6:30
6: 45 Corn Cob Report
7:00 Today
7:30
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10:00 Dinah's Place
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12:00 Jeopardy
12:30 Who, What, Where
1:00 News
1: 30 Memory Game
2: 00 Days of Our Lives
2: 30 Doctors
3: 00 Another World
3: 30 Bright Promise
4:00 Mr. Cartoon
4:30 Petticoat Junction
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5:30
6:00 News
6:30 NBC News
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7:30 Men from Shiloh
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9:00 Kraft Music Hall
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12:00

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6:30
7: 15
7:30
8: 00
8:30
9:00
9:30
10:00
10: 30
11: 00
11:30
12:00
12:30
1:00
1: 30
2:00
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3:00
3:30
4:00
4:30
5:00
5:30
6:00
6:30
7:00
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8:00
8:30
9:00
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11:00
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12:00
1:30

Farm Report
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Christophers
Underdog
Rocky &amp; His Friends
Jack La La nne
Mike Douglas

That Girl
News
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Make A Deal
Newlywed Game
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Movi e

Marcus Welby
News
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News

12:00

-------------~-------------1

6:00
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8: 30
9:00
9: 30
10:00
10:30
11:00
11:30
12:00
12:30
1: 00
1:30
2:00
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3:30
4:00
4:30
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6: 30
7:00
7:30
8:00
8:30
9:00
9: 30
10:00
10:30
11:00
11:30
12:00
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11:30
12: 00
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2:00
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3:00
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4: 00
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5:30
6:00
6:30
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8:30
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10:00
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11 : 30
12: 00

Corn Cob Report
Today

Movie Game
Truth or Consequences
Dinah 's Place
Concentration
Sale of Century
Hollywood Squares
Jeopardy
Who, What, Where
News
Memory Game
Days of Our Lives
Doctors
Another Wor ld
Brigh t Prom ises
Mr. Cartoon
Petticoa t Junction
Wagon Train
News
NBC News
Birds Eye V iew
Flip Wilson
Ironside
Adam 12
Dean Martin Show
News
Ton ight Show

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CHANNEL· 8
6:00
6: 30
7:00
7: 30
8:00
8:30
9:00
9:30
10:00
10:30
11:00
11: 30
12:00
12:30
1:00
1: 30
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6:00
6:30
7:00
7:30
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9:30
10:00
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Bible Answers
News
Sleepy Jeffers
Romper Room
Capt. Kangaroo
Jackie Oblinger
Beverly H ill bil lies
Family Affair
Love of Life
Ga ll oping Gourmet
Search for Tomorrow
Divorce Court
As the World Turns
Love is Splendored
Guiding Ligh t
Secre t Storm
Edge of N ight
Movie

News
Cronkite
What' s My Line
Family Affair
Jim Nabors
Movie

News
Merv Griffin

News

•

6:00
6: 30
7:15 Farm Report
7:30 Univ. of Mich .
8:00 Glory Road
8: 30 Underdog
9: 00 Rocky &amp; His Friends
9: 30 Jack LaLanne
10: 00 Mike Douglas
10: 30
11:00
11: 30 That Girl
12:00 News
12: 30
1:00 A ll My Children
1:30 Make A Deal
2:00 Newlywed Game
2:30 Dating Game
3:00 Gen. Hospital
3:30 Munsters
4:00 Addams Family
4:30 Flintstones
5:00 Wild Wild West
5:30
6: 00 Big Valley
6:30
7:00 News
7:30 Eddie's Father
_8;00 Room 222
8:30 Smith Family
9 : 00 Johnny Cash
9:30
10: 00 Young Lawyers
10:30
11 : 00 News
11 : 30 Movie
12:00
1:30 News

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Univ. of Mich.
The Story
Underdog
Rocky &amp; His Friends
Jack La La nne
Mike Douglas

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Flintstones
Wild Wild West
Big Val ley
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A l ias Sm ith &amp; Jones
Bewitched
Room for Granddaddy
Dan August
Newsmaker '71
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CHANNEL 13

6: 00
6:30 Bible Answers
6:45
7: 00 News
7:30 Sleepy Jeffers
8: 00
8:30 Romper Room
9:00 Capt. Kangaroo
9:30
10:00 J. Oblinger
10: 30 Beverly Hillbillies
11:00 Family Affair
11:30 Love of Life
12: 00 Galloping Gourmet
12:30 Search for Tomorrow
1:00 Divorce Cour t
1: 30 As the World Turns
2: 00 Love Is Splendored
2:30 Guiding Light
3:00 Secret Storm
3:30 Edge of Ni ght
4:00 Mov ie
4:30
5:00
5:30
6:00 News
6:30 Cronkite
7:00 What's My Line
7: 30 Interns
8:00
8:30 Andy Griffith
9:00 Movie
9:30
10:00
10:30
11:00 News
11:30 Movie
12:00

7: 15 Farm Report
7:30 Univ . of Michigan
8:00 The Christophers
8:30 Underdog
9:00 Rocky &amp; His Friends
9:30 Jack La L a nne
10:00 Mike Douglas
10:30
11:00
11:30 That Girl
12:00 News
12:30
1:00 All My Chi ldren
1:30 Let ' s Make A Deal
2:00 Newlywed Game
2:30 Dating Game
3:00 General Hospital
3: 30 Munsters
4:00 Addams Fam ily
4:30 Fl i ntstones
5: 00 Wild Wild West
5:30
6:00 Big Valley
6:30
7:00 News
7:30 The Brady Bunch
8:00 Nanny &amp; the Professor
8:30 Partridge Family
9:00 That Girl
9: 30 The Odd Couple
10:00 Love American Style
10:30
11 : 00 News
11:30 Movi e
12:00
1:30 News

•

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'7:00 Today
7:30
8:00
8:30
~ · 00 Movie Game
9: 30 Truth or Consequences
10: 00 Dinah' s Place
10: 30 Concentration
11 00 Sale of Century
11: 30 Hollywood Squares
12: 00 Jeopardy
12: 30 Who, What, Where
1·00 News
1:30 Memory Game
2 00 Days of Our Lives
2:30 Doctors
3:00 Another World
3: 30 Bright Prom i ses
4: 00 Mr. Cartoon
4: 30 Petticoat Junction
5:00 Wagon Train
5: 30
6: 00 News
6:30 NBC Evening News
7: 00 Porter Wagoner
7:30 The Record Makers
8: 30 Name of the Game
9:00
9: 30
10: 00 Strange Report
10: 30
11:00 News
11:30 Tonight
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CHANNEL 8 I CHANNEL 13 lI CHANNEL 3
6:00
6:30 Bible Answers
6:45
7:00 News
7 : 30 Sleepy Jeffers
8: 00
8 : 30 Romper Room
9 : 00 Capt. Kangaroo
9:30
10:00 Jackie Oblinger
10:30 Hillbillies
11:00 Family Affair
11: 30 Love of Life
12:00 Search for Tomorrow
1:00 Di vorce Court
1:30 As the World Turns
2:00 Love Is
2:30 Guiding Light
3:00 Secret Storm
3:30 Edge of Night
4:00 Movie
4:30
5:00
5:30
6:00 Capital News
6:30 Cronkite
7:00 What's My Line
7:30 Men at Law
8:00
8:30 Death Valley Days
9:00 Medical Center
9:30
10:00 Hawaii Five-0
11:00 News
11:30 Merv Griffin
12:00

CHANNEL 13
6:00
6:30
7: 15
7:30
8:00
8:30
9· 00
9: 30
10·.00
10: 30
11 .30
12:00
12: 30
1: 00
1: 30
2:00
2:30
3:00
3:30
4:00
4:30
5:00
5: 30
6:00
6: 30
7:00
7:30
8: 00
8:30
9:00
9:30
10:00
10:30
11 : 00
11:30
12:00
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6:00
6:30
6:45
7: 00 John's AI manac
7:30
8:00 Tom Foolery
8:30 Heckle and Jeckle
9:00 Woody Woodpecker
9:30 The Bugaloos
10:00 Dr. Doolittle
10:30 Pink Panther
11: 00 Pufns tuf
11:30 Here Comes the Grump
12:00 Hot Dog
12:30 4-H Photo Club
1:00 Ro ller Derby
1:30
2:00
2:30
3:00
3:00
4:00 Laredo
4:30
5:00 Bill Anderson
5:30 Sports Chal lenge
6 : 00 News
6: 30 NBC News
7:00 Nashville Music
7: 30 Andy Wil l iams
8:00
8:30 Movie
9:00
9:30
10:00
10:30
11:00 News
11:15 Late Movie
12:00
12:15

•

6:00
6: 30 TV Classroom
6: 45
7:00 Cartoons
7:30 Green Hornet
8:00 Bugs Bunny
8:30 Roadrunner
9:00 Sabrina
9:30 Groov y Coolies
10:00 Josie
10:30 Globetrotters
11:00 Arch ie's Fun House
11:30
12:00 Scooby -Do
12:30 The Monkees
1:00 Dastardly &amp; Mutt ley
1: 30 Jetsons
2:00 Quester Grand Prix
2:30
3:00
3:30
4:00 Golf
4: 30
5:00
5:30
6:00
6: 30
6:30
7:00
7:30
8:00
8: 30
9· 00
9 30
10:00
10: 30
11 : 00
11·30

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Wrestling
News
CBS News
Roger Mudd
To Rome with Love
Mission Impossible
My Three Sons
Arn ie
Mary Tyler Moore
Mannix
News
Movie

•

---------

CHANNEL 13
6:00
6:30
6:45
7:00
7:15
8:00 Kentucky Afield
8:30 Nei ghbors
9:00 L a nce l ot Link
9:30
10:00 Jerry Lewi s
10:30 The Double Deckers
11: 00 Hot Wheels
11:30 Sk y Hawks
12: 00 AAotor Mouse
12:30 Hardy Boys
1·00 Amer i can Bandstand
1:30
2:00 Visua l Girl
2: 30 Bowling
3:00 Bonnie Lou &amp; Buster
3 : 30 Pro Bowl er ' s Tou r
4:00
4: 30
5:00 W ide Wor ld of Sporis
5: 30
6: 00
6:30 Fish ing Show
7: 00 Wilburn Bros.
7:30 Lawrence We lk
8:00
8:30 Pear l Bailey
9:00
9·30 Movie
10:00
10:30
11:00
11·30 Chiller
12:30

•

�7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 26,1971

•
•

OAGC Regional Meet Speaker is Mrs. Ruble

YOUTH NIGHT
Youth Night will be observed
at 7:30 tonight during the
evangelistic service of the
Middleport First Baptist
Church.
The Rev. Charles Simons,
pastor, will speak on a subject
geared especially for youth but
will also be beneficial to adults.
The youth choir of the Racine
Baptist Church will provide
special musical numbers. No
offering will be taken .

"The Beauty of Weathered
Wood" will be the topic of Mrs.
Floyd J. Ruble of Columbus,
speaker at the April 24 meeting
of Region 11, Ohio Association
of Garden Clubs, to be held at
the Rutland gymnasium.
An accredited judge for over
15 years, Mrs. Ruble has served
as judge for county and state
fair and garden club shows all
over Central Ohio. She
regularly attends judges
schools to keep up on modern
trends. For a number of years
she taught garden club classes.
The Rutland Friendly Gardeners will host the meeting
with registration to be held
from 9:15 to 10 a.m. A luncheon
will be served at the Rutland
Elementary School cafeteria
and prepaid reservations are to
be sent to Mrs. Joe Bolin
Rutland, by April 19. The lun:

-----

•

cheon cost is $1.50.
A feature of the meeting will
be a sales table with all garden
club members in the region
being asked to con tribute
containers, plants, seeds, bulbs,
dried materials, weathered
wood or any item related to
gardening for the sale.

Proceeds will go to a fund for book and to the Wahkeena
publication of a wild flower Fund.

SPRING SPECIAL!
TRACTORS IN
STOCK SOLD AT
DEALER'S COST.

The
Convince---are here!

HOSPITAL NEWS

It's the onw lawn tractor
guarantee for 2 years!
The all-season Lawn Ranger
has seven rugged horses
hitched to a tough 3-speed
all-gear drive. A positive
control implement clutch.
Gentle turf saver tires. Ride
a horse now. Wheel Horse, of

looi~hee/~

•

WBBBLBOBSB
POWBB
Theew&gt;eMihaU&gt;O

OUR PROYISE. Our 2·ye.ar guarantee on any part

1n any new Wheel Horse tractor or attaching
toot If we make it and 1t has a manutactunng
defect. we'll replace it throueh our authorzed dealer for 2 years after you bought it.
All you'll pay are serv1ce calls or transport·
1ng unit to and from dealer. On drive bells,
commercially-used tractors; the same guarantee for 90 days _ Batlery, engme are guarantteCI separately by ttleir makers. of course

•

Wheel Horse Sales &amp; Serv .

Baum Lumber Co.

SUPPORTING APPALACHIA - The SubCommittee on Flood Control and Internal
Development of the House Public Works Committee has reported legislation extending lhe
authority of the Appalachian Regional Commission to the full Public Works Committee for
further consideration. The bill-co-sponsored by lOth District Congressman Clarence E. Miller,
would extend the authorization of ARC highway programs for another five years and the nonhighway programs for an additional four years. Miller testified in support of ARC programs
before both the House and Senate Committees. Congressman Miller is shown with Ohio
University's Vice President for Development, Martin Hecht (seated, right); and Daniel Lloyd
(standing, left), program director of the Ohio Valley Health Services Foundation; and jack
Farrington, executive director of the health foundation. All three testified in support of ARC's
extension.

DINNER SATURDAY
SYRACUSE A plate
chicken dinner will be held
Saturday at the Municipal Park
meeting headquarters by the
Ladies Auxiliary of the
Syracuse Fire Department.
The menu is baked chicken
noodles, mashed potatoes:
green beans, cole slaw rolls
coffee and tea. Servir{g will
start at 11:30 a.m. and continue
through an early evening
supper hour.

BROWN 990
ONE OF THE COMPLETE LINE OF RUGGED,
DEPEN~~BLE DAVID BROWN DIESEL TRACTORS
We call them the "Convince rs" because of the thou;ands
of more than satisfied owners from coast to coost. And
there's a model for every requirement-770, 880, 990
and 1200. The ''Convincers"-test drive one today.

Howard's David Brown Tractor Sales
742-5862

Rt. 1 New Lima Road

Rutland, 0 •

Chester, 0.

MARINE Warrant Officer Joseph B. Hatfield, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Joe Hatfield of Rt.l, Pomeroy, is now serving with
the Force Logistic Command in Vietnam.

30 Are Enrolled In
Steer Feeding Program

·•

Loads of load space -5 easy-entry doors, 6 feet of
flat floor. Power plus economy-96 HP overhead cam
engine, up to 25 miles per gallon. Solid comfortbucket seats, easy-clean vinyl interior, safety front
disc brakes.

DATSUN
Drive a Datsun ••. then decide at:

SMITH AUTO SALES
Kanauga, Ohio

I

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
PROMOTED - Michael
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Gary D. Evans, Johnson, stationed in the
Navy, has been promoted
Racine, a daughter.
Seaman Apprentice to
from
Discharges
Dean K. Akers, Mrs. Marvin Fireman, according to word
J. Boggs, April E. Brickles, received by his parents, Mr.
Mrs. Billy J. Burdette, John S. and Mrs. Earl Johnson.
Calandros, Gene Childers, Mrs. Johnson enlisted for four
Ola E. Craig, Mrs. Robert G. years, and is stationed
Davis, Mrs. Ronald Ellis, Mrs. aboard the USS Perry
Bobby G. Halley, Mrs. Beverly (DD0844) which recently
Johnson, Thomas J. Justice, received a Citation for
Thomas L Kelley Sr., Mrs . meritorious achievement
Frederick M. Lamm, Mrs. while participating in conSammy M. Martin and infant tingency operations in the
son, William Napier, Mrs . Eastern Mediterranean from
Robert L. Oliver, Patricia Sept. 9 to October 197 . His
Patterson, Elias P. Prater, address is Michael Johnson,
Mrs. Ina Pratt, Mrs. Verlie G. FN B477715, 1st Division USS
Rivers, Angela M. Schultz, Mrs. Perry (DD-844), FPO New
Anna E. Sims, Mrs. Anna K. York, New York, 09501.
Ward, Tina M. Sallaz, and
Melissa G. Nance.

I---------------------~

1 Value-Rated

Buys ...

I
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The Meigs County Better
Livestock Beef Club met at the
meeting room of the Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric
Company on Wednesday.
Thirty members are enrolled
in the steer feeding program
with five enrolled in beef
breeding. To encourage more
beef breeding projects, it was
recommended that starting in
1972 members would need to
carry a beef breeding project at
least one year out of two.
In developing the leadership
program for 1971 Carol Pierce
was selected as county-wide
leader with a division of the
county into three parts so advisors and older club members
could assist newer club
members in doing a better job
of beef production and feeding.
In the western area will be Mr.
Pierce and Ray Midkiff with
two appointed experienced club
members ; in the Bas hanRacine-Letart area Mr. Andrew
Cross with one older member;
in the Route 7-33 area there will
be three cooperating advisors,
Francis Benedum, I. 0. McCoy,
and Bill Carr, with three older
members assisting.
The next meeting of the club

for organi~a tiona! purposes will
be set within the next three
weeks.
Attending were Becky and
Brian Windon, Grant and
Randy Johnson , Ricky and
Kimmy Pierce, Angie Sisson,
Martin and Frank Broderick,
Lee Hysell, Paul Midkiff, Paul
and Edwin Cross, Vicki Carr,
Mike Benedum, and Byron
McCoy. Adults attending included Mr. and Mrs. Ray
Midkiff, Mr. and Mrs. Andrew
Cross, Carol Pierce, Francis
Benedum, Virgil Windon, I. 0.
McCoy, Mrs. William Carr.
Mrs. Gay Johnson, and Mrs.
John J. Rose Jr.
PLEASANT VALLEY
ADMISSIONS - Monroe
Sheets, Gallipolis; Orlan Burns,
Point Pleasant, and Mrs.
Burdell Hayes, Robertsburg.
DISCHARGES - Larry Hess,
Sherrie Smith, James Murray,
Mrs. Petty Sayre, Mrs. Charles
Sayre and son; Mrs. Dwight
Taylor, Joseph Neal, Mrs .
Ronald Givens, Mrs. George
Westfall and daughter, Angela
McDonald, Mrs. Owen Coffee
and daughter.

@

VOLKSWAGEN

@

70 Cadillac Coupe DeVille, air:... ______ $fi000
Cadillac Sedan DeVille, air-------- ~000
Olds 98 Hoi. Sedan, air--------. s1995
Chev. Caprice 4 Dr., :tir --------· s1795
Olds F-85 4 Door ___________ :sll95

Ford LTD 4 Door HardtOP-------~s1595
Chev. Impala 2 Dr. H.T.--------· s1595
Olds 98 4 Dr., air ___________ s1795
Buick Wildcat 4 Dr. _______ ___s1395

65 Pontiac GP 2 Dr. H.T., air _______ sll95

Several 1971 Olds In Stock
For Immediate Sale!

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
"You'll Lik e Our Quality Way
of Doing Business"

992 SJll

GMAC FINANCING

Opf·n Eveni11gs Unitl6·00

POMEROY

Til5 P. M . Sa t.

L--------------~------

70 PONTIAC

s2895

Cata lina 2 dr. Hard Top. A low mileage, sharp, one
owner car. Like new tires .

s2195

OCAI.tR

Reg~;~;il$ 1695

66 PONTIAC

$}595
sg95
$1295

Cata lina 2 dr. HT. Owned by loca l mec hani c. Shows
very best of care.

BLAETTNARS
BUICK

2

Now $1395

Dr. H.T., yellow with black

340 V-8, 2 dr. H.T., 4-sp., compet ition orange with white
vinyl top, bucket seats, racing wheel s.

70 MAVERICK ,________ ...: ____ $1795
Auto. trans., 6 cyl.

69 COUGAR
Convertible, 302 V 8, 3 speed trans ., lime green with white
top, radio &amp; w-w tires.

68 PONTIAC---------------$1695

Many more

Phone (614) 446-9800 •vr"o••f&lt;o

You Can't Beat A Riggs Deal

70 DUSTER---------------$2195

4dr. Catalina Sedan. Like new finish, PS, PB &amp; AT.

~Ga llipolis, Ohio

Pomeroy

992-2115

Pickup truck, 6 cyl. , stand. trans., heavy duty, step rear
bumper.

65 PONTIAC

.~~ W~~..~~~~~~~:·,IN~~

180 Mulberry

69 DODGE .!2.2~:.~.:.~7.:_s____ Now $1595

Sprint 6 2 dr. Hard Top . Beautiful white car with
buc ket sea t s and operating consu l

Volkswagens and used cars!

SUGAR RUN MILLS

Cyl., auto. trans.,
vin I top.

SPRING
IS - - - A

67 PONTIAC

excellent inventory of 1971

May We HeJp You .

6

Firebird VB 2 dr . Hard Top. 400 c u. in . eng ine. Auto.
tran s. Power steering. Power disc brakes. We so ld
this one owner car new and can highly recommend .

salesmen show you our

COMPLETE STOCKS
PRICES TO PLEASE

68 MUSTANG

68 PONTIAC

Let our experienced

FIELD

~-------SPECIAL--------~

68 CHRYSLER

IN STOCK

TRY OURS

Ray R. Sprouse, 49, Melrose
Park, Ill., former resident of
Pomeroy, died Sunday at Hines
Veterans Admimstratlon
Hospital, Hines City, Ill.,
following a long illness.
Mr. Sprouse resided in
Pomeroy
and
attended
Pomeroy Elementary and
Pomeroy High Schools.
He was a veteran of W. W. II
receiving his basic training at
Camp Gordon, Ga. He served
six years in Germany with the
Tenth Armored Division of the
U.S. Army.
Survivors include his wife,
Mariam, one son, Ray R., Jr.,
his mother, Mrs. Lillian Snow
Sprouse, three sisters, Mrs.
Florence Laudermilk, Fairpoint, 0 ., Mrs. Virginia
Dawson, Zanesville, and Mrs.
William Holt, Pomeroy, also
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services and burial
were held Wednesday at
Melrose Park, Ill.

VB Newport custom 2 dr. Hard Top. Factory air
conditioned. Extra nice inside and out.
Fully equipped.

66 Ford T-Bird, air-- ----------- s1295
66 Buick LeSabre 4 Dr., air _________s1295
66
67
67
66

used by the Rev. Billie Scott
Mick, Weston District Superintendent of the United
Methodist Church, as he spoke
to the student body at Wahama
High School Monday.
Rev. Mick noted that there
are many opportunities for
cooperation in the church, home
and school.
Rev. Mick discusses "Techniques of Evangelism" each
morning at 10 a.m. at the
Mason United Methodist
Church. Attendance at evening
services being held in five area
churches has increased.
The Rev. Clifford Schells is
the guest speaker at the Clifton
Church, the Rev. Paul Morrison
at the Union Church, Dr. W. H.
Morrison at the New Haven
Church and the Rev. Thompson
at the Graham Methodist
Church.
Services in all churches will
continue the rest of the week.
The public is cordially invited to
attend.

New Used Car From Blaettnars

.

69
67
67
66

Sprouse
Cooperation Is
,
Services
Speaker s Topic
Conducted
"Cooperation" was the topic

PONTIAC
GMC TRUCKS
116 Years of Contin uous Business
PHONE 992-2143
POMEROY, OHIO

2 Dr. H.T., P.S., P.B., white with black vinyl top . Real
sharp.

68 MERCURY MONT-EG0-------$1695
Dr . Sedan, V-8, auto. trans., P.S., dark green with white
top, radio, w-w tires, a ll vinyl interior. Real clean, one
local owner.
d

66 MUSTANG-------------- $1095
8

Cy l ,

3

speed,

2

dr . H.T., Emberg low with tan interior .

66 OLDSMOBILE 98 --------- $1395
Factory air condition.

4

dr .. auto. trans.

65 FORD CUSTOM----- ------ ~95
2

Dr sedan

6

cyl., nuto. trans .. radio, w w tires.

--------------------------SEE: Gale Ingraham - Ray Riggs
David Riggs

RIGGS BROS., INC.
USED CARS
81J F-ar son St.
423-6331
Belpre, 0.
Corner of Rt. 7 and Farson Street

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 26, 1971

Bargains., Bargains, and More Bargains In Sentinel Classifieds •
2 SIGNS
Pomeroy
I. Business Services
OF

Card of Thanks

1 WISH to thank everyone who
was Kind and thoughtful
during my stay at the Jewish
Hospital in Cincinnati. Also ,
thanks to all who sent cards .
Loretta Tiemeyer.
3 26 ltc

WE WANT to thank everyone
for their cards, letters, and
especially prayers for our
daughter, Lori, while she was
in Holzer Hospital. Special
thanks to our relatives, neigh ·
bors. friends, the children,
teachers and cooks at the
Salisbury Elementary SchooL
Brownie Troop 220, and all the
Nat ional Life customers who
called and offered their help.
Your kindness will never be
forgotten.
Mr . and Mrs. Bill Pullins
3 26ltp

------------------WE WISH to thank all our

neighbors and friends for the
flowers, food and kindness
shown us at the death of Mrs.
Minnie Holman. Also, thanks
to the staff of Veterans
Memorial
Hospital.
the
pallbearers, and Rev . Charles
Simons. Your thoughtfu Iness
is greatly appreciated.
The Holman family and
grandchildren .
3-25-ltp

- WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P.M. Day Before Publication
Monday Deadline9a .m.
cance.llatio n &amp; Corrections
Will be accepted until9 a .m. f
Day of Publication
REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads
deemed
objectional.
The
publisher will not be responsible
for more than one incorrect
insertion .
RATES
For Want Ad Service
_.?cents ~r Word one irsertion
... tvdn 1mum Cliarge 75c
12 cents per word three.
consecutive insertions.
18 cents per word six con secutive insertions.
'.
25 Per cen t Discount on paid
ads and ads paid with in 10 days
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$1 50 for 50 word• minimum.
Each additional word 2c.
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per
Advertisement.
OFFICE HOURS
8:30 '03·.m. to 5:00pm. Daily,
8:30 a . m. to 12:00 Noon
Saturday.

IN LOVING memory of Glenna
Hoeflich, who passed away
March 26, 1961.
The evening stars shine on the
grave

Of the one we loved but could
not save.
God took her home, it was His
will
But in our hearts, we love her
still.
Sadly missed by husband,
Edward Hoeflich; daughter
and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Reino Lind.
326-ltp
-----------IN MEMORY of 0. E " Mack"
McKinley who passed away
four years ago, March 26
In some enchanted "afterawhile"
I hope to find you and your
smile.
The precious days and years we
shared
On this earth, served to prepare
Us for the star-encrusted hope
Of life beyond our human scope
Sadly missed by wife, Lena;
sons, Brooks and Earl;
daughter, Ruth.
3-26-ltc
- - - - - -- - - --

LEGAL NOTICE
IN THE MATTER

sET ... L MEN T
Ac
COUNTS
PROBATE COU
MEIGS COUNTY
Accounts and v
c
following name
a ~s
have been filed ir
rebate
Court, Meigs Coun y, Oh10, for
approval and settlement:
CASE NO. 13,497-A Eighth
Account of The Huntington
National Bank of Columbus,
Trustee under the Last Will and
Testament of Albert D . Ebersbach, Deceased.
.
CASE NO. 19,209 Sixth
Current Account of Dan Shane,
Guardian of the Estates of
Daniel Franklin Shane and
Herman Lee Shane, Minors.
CASE NO. 16,068 Seco nd
Account of Lester J. Taylor,
Guardian of the Person and
Estate of Pearlie C. Stansb ury,
an Incompetent Person.
CASE NO . 20079 First Annual
Account of Ben H. Ewing and
The Huntington National Bank
of Co lumbus , Co -Executors of
the Estate of William Henry
Ewing, Deceased.
CASE NO. 20,313 Final Ac count of John Victor Wippel,
Executor of the Estate of Henry
E. Wippel, Deceased .
CASE NO. 20,369 First and
Final Account of Wendell C.
Gerlach, Executor of the Es t ate
of Bertie N. Watts, Deceased .
Unless exceptions are filed
thereto, said accounts will be
for hearing before said Court on
the 26th day of Apri l , 1971, at
which t me said accounts will be
considered and continued from
day to day until finally disposed
of.
Any person interested may
file written exceptions to said
accounts or to matters per taining to the execution of the
trust, not l ess than five days
prior to the date set for hearing.
JOHN C. BACON
Acting Probate Judge
Meigs County, Ohio
(3) 26, ltc

RUBBER STAMPS made to
order. 24 hour service. Dwain
or Wilma Casto, Portland,
Ohio.
2-11-90tc

Employment Wanted
WOMAN wants housework to do
in Pomeroy area. Phone
Chester 985-3900.
3-24-3tc

LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Sealed proposal will be
received by Mr. L. W . Me
Comas, 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
shall 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
452 15; 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,
Ohio.
Principal contractors may
obtain one (1) set of bid
documents tor the purpose of
bidding on the principal contract from Sullivan, Isaacs and
Sullivan, 1800 Reading Road,
Cincinnati, Ohio 45215, upon a
deposit of Ten Dollars ($10.00)
wh ch~eposlt will be refunded
o ea
bidder submitting a
ora fl e b d. upon return of the
,·d documents in good condition
"" hrn a per od of ten (10) days
of the l'ece pt of bids the enhre
deposit shall be forfeited .
B1ds shall be submitted on the
form furnished with each set of
bid documents or on
a
typewritten 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 sha ll 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 al l
unsuccessful bidders will be
returned when contract and
bond have been executed.
Check made payable to th e
Meigs Local School District,
Board of Education .
The bidder to whom contract
is awarded sha ll execute and
deliver to the Owner within ten
(10) days after the award and
before sig ning the contract, a
corporate surety bond in a penal
sum equal to at least 100 per
cent of the contract sum, and
the cos t of such bond shal l be
paid for by the bidder.
The Meigs Local School
District, Board of Education,
reserves th e right to reject any
or all bids, to waive in formatilities and to withhold
final awarding of the contract
for thirty (30) days after
opening of bids.
The Meigs Local School
District Board
of Educatio n
Mr. L . W . Mc Comas, Clerk
(3) 19, 26, (4) 2, 9, 4tc

CARNIVAL

Motor Co.

QUALITY

FEEDER pigs, weight about
100 pounds. Call after 3:30
1 p.m. Phone 992-6279.
3-24-3tc

HANNAH'S h usband Hector
hates hard work so he cleans
the rugs with Blue Lustre.
Ren t electric shampooer, $1.
Baker Furniture, M iddleport.
3-24-6tc

1969 CHEVROLET
$2495
Townsman Station Wagon, low mileage local owned with
auto. trans., power steering, new tires, radio. Pleasing
blue finish. See this before you buy.
1968CHEVYII
$1595
Nova 2 dr., white finish, blue interior, 6 cyl. eng.,
automatic trans., new tires, radio &amp; heater .

SEARS 12 fo ot gamefish
fiberglass fishing boat. 1966
six horsepower water-cooled
motor , boat tra iler . First $200
buys it all. Robe rt Hill,
Raci ne. Phone 949-3811.
3-25- 3tp

1967 PLYMOUTH
$1395
Belvedere2 dr. hardtop, V-8 motor, power steering, st d. 3speed trans ., blk. top, cream body, radio.

-------

GUERNSEY
cow,
fresh
January 16. Excellent m ilker.
Ben Bickers, Bashan Road.
Phone 949-4605.
3-25-3tc

Pomeroy Motor Co.
OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
-flQMEROY, OHIO

-----------------21 INCH Motorola television.
Phone 992-3293.

3-25-6tp

Notice

HOME sewing. Phone 992-5327.
2-23-30tc

In Memory

For Sale

by Dick Turner

Notice

Pets For Sale

------------------l2X52
FOOT
Hillcrest

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

$5.55
-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

.•omeroy Home &amp; Auto
606 E. Ma1n, Pomeroy, 0 .

Auto Sales
1966
CHRYSLER .
Power
steering , power brakes,
factory air conditioning. Good
tires. $1,100. Phone New
Haven 882-2889.
J-24-3tc

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

Wanted To Buy

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

Real Estate For Sale

Male Help Wanted

Help Wanted

WANTED

SENTINEL
CARRIER

FOR
HARTFORD,
WEST VIRGINIA

For Rent

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

CLOSE OUT!

Virgil B.
1.,EAFORP
SR.

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

40 Minutes of Your Time Can Well Be the Most Profitable
Time You Ever Spent.

Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!

2
bedroom tra iler. Can be seen
COINS. Bought, sold, traded. REG IST ER ED Toy Fox Terrier
behind the Robert Hill home
puppies. Phone 742-5625 or
Complete line of supplies,
in Racine across from S R 338. 1956 BUICK, new snow tires,
contact Mrs. Vernon Weber,
new battery, new exhaust
albums, price guides. Open
3-25-3tc
system, needs body work,
Rutland.
daily 5 p.m. to 9 p. m. and all
3-23-6tc KILL TERMITES and yard
cheap. Phone 992-7354 or 992 day Saturday. Treasure Chest
insects with Arab "You-Do3838.
Coins, U .S. Rt. 33 South
3-24-4tp
l t." King Bui lders Supply
(Pomeroy Road), A thens ,
Company, Middleport.
Ohio. 10 per cent off on any
2-21-60tc 1962 CHEVY 2 ton, 2 speed axle,
OLD UPRIGHT pianos, any
supplies with this ad .
4 speed transm i ssion, V-8, 16
condition, as long as have not
3-26-6tc
foot flat, new rubber. $650.
been wet. Paying $10 each. DON 'T PUMP your sluggish
septic tank. Get Klean-EmFirst floor only . Mondays will
Phone 992-6048.
3-25-3tp
A II Septic Tank Cleaner.
be pick-up day. Write, giving
MADAM MARY PALMLandmark Farm Bureau ,
good directions. Witten Piano
ISTRY .
Reader
and
Company, Box 188, Sard is,
Pomeroy .
K-5 INTERNATIONAL, 1V2 ton,
advisor. Tells past, present
3-26-ltc
4 speed, 2 speed axle, 8x12
Ohio 43946.
and future. I will tell you just
8-20-tfc
flat. $150. Phone 992-6048.
what you want to know about
3-25-3tp
8 HEAD of white faced heifers,
friends and enemies. I give
around 500 pounds. E. L.
never failing advice on all OLD furniture, dishes , brass
Riebel, 3 miles east of
beds, etc. Wr ite M . D. Miller,
matters
of
life.
707lf2
Chester.
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Cal l
Washington Blvd., Belpre,
3-26-2tp CONVENIENT but secluded
992-6271 .
Ohio. Look for sign. For
9-1-tfc
appointment call 423-9153.
building lots on T79 at Rock
3-24-10tc
COAL, limestone . Excelsio:
Springs. Within walking
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
distance of Meigs High
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3S9l.
School, a 5 minute drive from·
4-9-tfc
Pomeroy. Call or see BUI
REVIVAL meeting at the NE ED MONEY? Sell Knapp
Witte weekends, or afte 5
shoes, part time or f ull time. :,.
___- - - - - - - - - - Church of God at Chester
p.m. weekdays . Phone 992starting March 28 at 7:30 p.m .
No investment. Send for free 1v 1uut:~N WALNUT STEREO
6887.
with Evangelist Emma Jean
se ll ing kit. High commissions
radio com bination, solid
2-3-tfc
Perry
from
Cincinnati.
plus bonus. Write to E . M .
state stereo, 4 speed changer ,
Specia l singing and prayer for
Bi stow,
Knapp
Shoes,
4 speaker sound system. Pay
the sick each e veni ng. Come
Broc kto n,
Massachusetts
balance $68.70. Use our 200 ACRE farm near Mt. Un ion
and bring a friend.
02401.
budget terms. Call 992-3352.
Church, Carpenter. Available
3-25-6tc
3-24-3tc
3-25-6tc
soon. George Caldwell, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Ohio.
------------------3-18-12tp
SPECIAL
for
you
MAPLE STEREO-Radio
Evangelistic services at First
Baptist
Church, 6th
&amp; MAT UR E woman for comcombination. Equipped with HOUSE, 1640 Lincoln Hts.,
Palmer, Middleport, from
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
panion for elderly lady. Live
AM-FM radio, 4 speakers,
10-25-tfc
Wednesday, Mar. 24 thru
in . Refere nces req uired.
four
speed
automatic
Sunday, March 28 at 7: 30 p.m.
Phone Chester 985-330 1.
changer, separate controls .
Balance $82.50. Use our 44 ACRE farm, Salem Town3-17-tfc
Plan to attend, you'll be glad
budget terms. Call 992-3352.
you did . Rev. Charles Simons,
ship. Phone 742-4459.
speaker. Special music.
3-23-6tp
BARMAID . Apply in person. Hi3 25 6tc
3-22-6tc
Ho Bar, Middlepor t .
- - - - - - - - -- - 3-26-6tc 18 FOOT fiberglas boat. 90 H. P. 24 ACRE farm at Long Bottom ,
Evinrude motor, tandem
REVIVAL, Mt. Hermon U. B.
house with 3 bedrooms, dining
trai ler. Excellent mechan ica l
Church March 26 to Apr il 4.
room, kitchen, living room,
condition.
Cost
over
$5,000
Rev.
Carey
Knittlf&gt;,
1'12 baths, enclosed back
new. $1 ,000 and it's yours.
evangelist, Cincinnati. Rev.
porch , wall to wall carpeting,
Phone 949-3913.
Freeland
Norri s,
song
aluminum siding, awning,
3-23-6tp
evangelist. Stories for the
storm windows and s.torm
------------------children. Everyone welcome .
doors, city water. Se ling due
NEW 1970 Zig Zag Sewing
7· 30 p.m. each evening.
ro ill health. Phone 614-985Machine in original factory
3-23-10tc
3938.
carton. Zig-Zag to make
3-26-12tp
buttonholes, sew on buttons,
GUN SHOOT, Sunday, March
monograms, and make fancy
28, 1 p.m. Mile Hill Road.
KEY REAL ESTATE
designs with just the twist of a
Ham, bacon, half hog.
4
HARRISONVILLE
single dial. Left in lay-away
Sponsored by Racine Fire
bedrooms, bath, garage on
and never been used. Will sell
Department.
one acre lot. $10,800.00.
for only $47 cash, or credit
3-24-3tc
terms available. Phone 992- HARRISONVILLE
------------------3
5641.
GUN SHOOT, Forked Run
bedrooms - 2 baths, a story
3-23-6tc
Sportsman Club, Sunday,
and half on 2.8 acre. $8,750.00.
March 28, noon.
ELECTROLUX
Vacuum
3-24-3tc
SNOWVILLE - 105 acre farm,
Cleaner com plete with at3 bedroom house, fully cart achments, cordwinder and
GUN SHOOT, Syracuse Fire 2 BEDROOM house, Lincoln
peted , bath, forced air furpaint spray. Used but in like
Department, every Saturday
nace , built-in kitchen with
His., Pomeroy. Phone 992new condition. Pay $34.45
night. 6 p.m. near Racine
dishwasher and free gas .
5127 after 4 p.m.
cash or budget plan available .
Planing Mill. Assorted meats.
$20,750.00.
3-2-tfc
Phone 992 -5641.
3-24-3tc
KEY REAL ESTATE
3-23 -6tc
Ray Douglas,· Broker
4 ROOM, bath, unfurn ished
420 W. Union St.
REV I VAL now in progress until
house. 1650 Lincoln Heights.
Phone 592-3414
March 28 at the Pomeroy
Phone 992-387 4.
Athens, Ohio
Lower Light Church on Route
3-23-tfc
3-26-3tc
143, 'h mile from S R 7 Bypass.
Rev.
Raymond
Rice, FURN ISHED apartment, five
Byesville, Ohio, Evangelist.
rooms, ba t h, Chester, phone
Rev. Roy Taylor, Pastor,
985-3350.
Everyone welcome.
3-26-tfc
3-23-4tc
Every One
ATTEN TION ladies! Would you 3 ROOM, bath, furnished or
semi -furnished
apartment.
like to try a wig on in the
Marked Down
Also,
2
room,
bath,
furnished
privacy of your own home?
apartment. Mulberry Ave.,
You can. Just ca ll us. We also
Get the Big Discount!
Pomeroy.
References
have the .Mink Oil Kosmetics,
Broker
required.
Phone
992-6698
.
Koscot,
of
course.
110 Mechanic St.
22 cu. ft. si de by side
3-23-tfc
Distributors, Brown's. Phone
Pomeroy, Ohio
Frostless Combination, 19
Middleport 992 -51 13.
cu. ft. side by side, 18 cu. ft.
12-31 -tfc UNFURNISH E D 3 - room
Up. Freezer, 2-11 cu. ft.
RACINE
RURAL
4
apartment in Coats Bldg .,
Chest Freezers and Elec.
bedrooms, bath , nice kitchen
Mi
dd
l
eport.
Inquir
e
at
WILL PICK up merchandise
Dryer. Must make room.
with oven and cook units. Full
apartment 16 or phone 992 and take to auction on a
Priced for fast sale!
basement. F urnace. Carport.
3641.
percen tage basis. Call Jim
$8,300.00.
3-l8-12tc
Adams, auctioneer, Rutland.
POMEROY
Phone 742-4461.
MIDDLEPORT - 4 bedrooms,
J . W. Carsey, Mgr.
9-23-tfc UNFURNISHED 3 - room
bath, gas heat . Large I iving,
Phone 992-2 181
apartment. Phone 992-2288.
side porch and garage.
1-31-tfc
AUCTION W HEN ? Each
Asking $10,500.00.
Friday night, 7 p.m. Wh ere?
Hayman's Auction House, T W O OR three bedroom home,
2 HOUS ES- 2 bedrooms. bath,
Cottage Roa d , Syracuse .
Laurel Cliff on new Rt. 7
gas heat. Rented . Second: 3
Adults only . Phone 992-5133. 1964 CHEVELLE convertible,
Pomeroy
Middleport By bedrooms, gas furnace, full
Phone
9923-2-tfc
good
condition.
pass.
basement. 3 car garages. 6
3917.
2-7-tfc - ----------------acres only $18,000.00.
3-21-6tp
TRA ILE R SPACE on old Rt. 33,
'h-mile north of new M eigs
WI LL GIVE piano and organ
HARRISONVILLE - 4 rooms,
High School. Phone 992-2941. 1969 OATS UN, 4 door standard
lessons in my home. Phone
half bath, cistern water.
3-5-tfc
shift. Phone 992-6995.
992 3666.
Outbuildings. Large level lot.
3-21 -6tc
8-16-tfc
$7,500.00.
FURN ISH ED and unfurnished
HELEN L TEAFORD,
apartments. Close to sc hool. 1969 BUICK LeSabre, 2- dr .
ASSOCIATE
Phone 992-5434.
hardtop, power steering,
LAND AND HOUS ES
10-18-tfc
LONG log chain, hook on both
power brakes, air, 18, 000
WANTED
ends, bet ween fairgrounds
mi les. Exce llent condition.
Ca II 992-3325
and Rut land. Phone 742-3835.
Phone 992-2288.
3-26-6tc
3-24-3tc
11-10-tfc
3 WROUGHl iron posts for
BLACK a nd white Eng lish
carport . Bookcase head Seller and a brown and white
b oa rd.
26 inch
Airway
Brittainy Spaniel , lost at the
luggage, new. Ca ll Chester
Isaak Walton Farm. Reward
985-3900.
3-24-3tc
Art Ski nner, phone 992-2500.
3-24-3tp
OFFICE HO UR S 9:30 TO 12, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE'
IT'S HER E - Mini -motor home
AT NOON ON T HURS .) - EAST COURT ST.,
of the year . Seeing is
believing a t Gau l Trailer
POM EROY.
IRONING to do i n my home.
Sales, Inc., Chester, Oh io,
County Road 36. Renta ls,
Phone Cheshire 367-7700.
supp li es, travel trai l ers,
3-23-tfc
campers. Champion, Conlinental, Tag -A - Long and
Skamper .
3-24-7t c

ALL FLOOR SAMPLES
OF OUR APPLIANCES

- - - - - - - - ---=-- ---ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!

icWINSOR
«BUDDY

-i'ALSO

-4rCHAMPION
icVAN DYKE

DOUBLE~WIDES

SEE TOM CROW, GUY SHULER OR BOB CROW

PARKERSBURG MOBILE HOMES. INC.

'"]

MEMORIAL BRIDGE TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSBURG, W.VA.

EXPERIENCED
Radiator Service

Roofing &amp; Carpenter
Work
Spouting, Roof
Painting

•

NEW &amp; OLD WORK
Al l Weather Roofing &amp;
Construction Co.
DEXTER , 0. 45726
PHONE 742-3945

From the Largest Truck or
Bulldozer Rad iator to the
$mallest Heater Core.

Insured- Experienced
Work Guaranteed
PAINTING ,
roof i ng
and
spouting service. Richard
Wilt, phone 992-2889.
3-11-30tc

BLAETTNARS
Pomeroy,

Ph. 992-2143

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED.
" D itching. Electric se wer
cleaning. " Reasonable rates.
Phone
John
Russel l,
Gal li polis 446-4782.
4-7-tfc

TELEVISIOa4
REPAIR
All Makes &amp; Models
Also
Stereos &amp; Tapes
675-3482 or 773-5196

READY-MIX
CONCRETE
delivered right to your
project. Fast and easy. Free
estimates. Ph one 992-3284.
Goeglein Ready-Mix Co. ,
Middleport, Ohio.
6-30-tfc

•
•

MASON COUNTY
T.V. SERVICE

J. Durbin- C. Inscore
Service Personnel
O'BRIEN ELECTRIC Service.
Commercial , residential and
industrial wiring. Phone 247SEWING MACHIN ES. Repa ir
2113.
service, all makes. 992-2284
3-12-tfc
The Fi!bric Shop, Pomeroy .
------------------Authorized Singer Sales and
O' DELL WHEEL a l ignment
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
3-29-tfc
Complete front end service,
tune up and brake service.
Wheels
ba l anced
elec- ALARMS! Burglar, fire and
hold-up. Southeastern
tronically.
All
work
Secur ity Systems. Call Ray
guaranteed .
Reasonable
Adams 247-2055 Mike
rates. 992-3213.
0 ' Brien 247-2113.
3-17-30tc
3-17-tfc
BACK HOE and end-loader
work. Septic tanks instal led.
George (Bil l) Pullins. Phone
992-2478.
11-29-tfc

•

See Us At The ...

SWAP SHOP

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

Beat Inflation!

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

WE

BUY - SELL

RALPH'S
CARPET
Upholstery Cleaning Service.
Free
estimates.
Phone
Gallipolis 446-0294.
3-12-tfc

OR

TRADE

SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662-3035.
2-12-tfc

NEW AND
USED FURNITURE
ALSO
APPLIANCES AND
HOUSEWARES

C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio
Cri tt Bradford
5-1-tfc

SWAP SHOP

Insurance
AUTOMOBILE insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Call 9922966.
6-15-tfc

Open:
9 Til9 Mon., Tues.
Wed. &amp; Fri.
9 Ti l 6 Thurs. &amp; Sat.
992-7261
305 N . 2nd Ave.
Middleport

•

GOODNEWS
(For A Change)

Auto Sales

Lost

For Sale

If You Haven't
Bought A

NEW HOME

.I

BECAUSE:
DOWN PAYMENT TOO HIGH
MONTHLY PAYMENTS TOO HIGH

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DON' T OWN YOUR OWN LOT

N. W. COMPTON, 0. D.
OPTOMETRIST

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

•

Wanted

_3 ROOMS

WANTED! ·

Used Furniture
and Appliances

/.]'~,.~~/

y/W~
• '3 - :ZL

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~--·:~------------------l

"But, Pop, I k•1ow th,. facts of life! Haven't l been
helrinv. .,,..,. ,.,; · ~- :

·

..

_dishes eyer since I can

rem~rr~~~r:'''

Will Buy Yours Whole House Or
Separate Pieces
Ph . 742 -4211

Rutland Furniture
Rutland, Ohio

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

A LUMINUM car top boats, 1012-13 foot. Loren zo D. Davis,
Ki ngsbury Road.
3-24-30tc
HOT DOG machine and 60 cup
coffee urn . L ike new. Phone
742 4461.
3-24-3tc
FUR N ITURE,
appliances,
c lothes, household i t ems.
Depot St., Rutland. Sale s igns
up. SAL E NOW GO IN G ON.
3-24 3tc

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

NEW
FURNITURE

$349.95

$35. 00 DownBalance On
Conve'nient
Terl)ls.

MASON
FURN ITUR·E
Mason, W. Va.

THIS

SATURDAY
AND

AND

LOOK
. SUNDAY
~~ 10 to 4

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BARNEY

EEK AND MEEK
(ARE: TO TUPJV
YOUR FIVJ&lt;:'l' ID
Tl-IOU 6HTS. OF LOVE.,
'rW~ FEU.A '?

•

ALL RIGI-lT, CL.A~S. r THINK
TI-!AT'S ENOUGH DISCUSSION
--LET'S CI-IANGE TH!:.
SUBJECT 1 Cl.ASSJ

,. 197\ b, ._(A., I"C'

--------·-- - - - - . -

WELL,THEN Ho'IJ ABovr

A TUWE-VP A~D AJJ
Of L CHANGE, fOP ?

FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS

T M ltrt U ~ '"' 011

I'D LIKE "To PLlT THIS

AD

THE" PAPER---" IF '"(Ot.J LOS!

$1.000.000. COME To 1345T~E"ET AND IDENTtl=i TriE""
~UI21&lt;E"r-!C..Y ~

•

'' 'N ~AT COLOR 15
THE MONF..Y? "

11\1

ELM

-y-

U'L ABNER
WHEN DAISY MAE
HEARS 'iO' BASHED
MAH HAID 11-J ---

SHE.'S ATIG£~ TO At\l"YONE
WHAT CAUSES rviE TH'
·OUCH!!- SLIGHTEST
I N-CORN-YEEN-"YUNCE!!'

- Tl ED ME UP, AN'
STASHED ME IN A-GASP!FERTY- LIZE.R SACK--AH'D HATE. TO BE IN

:r. WONDE:R

IF
!&lt;5"M6RANl7T
S:VE:R HAC? IHI?
PR06L..S:M WITH
HIS FAMIL'{ "?-

YORE. SHOES, FEEND!!

I

ltJINtw'l'""• ,_.._

...._ .....""""'-

BUGS BUNNY

WINNIE WINKLE
BEQl.U:;E MORE "11-!AJ'J ONE YOU'RE RIGHT !
THAT BUILDING
DESIGN OR INDUSTRIAL
SECRET WAS STOLEN BY ACRO~B THE WAY
PEOPLE WITH HIGHLOOKS RIGHT
IXJWN ON US/
PONER TELESCOPES
OR BINOCULARS!

I CAN UNDERSTAND WHY
YOU KEEP THE DOOR
LOCKED WHILE '&gt;OU
WORK . l3UT WHY
ARE 11-iE SHADES
DRAWN SO

I HUR'RIEI/ RIGHT OVER!
WHAT15 'YER BEEF; ELMER?

'
ALLEY OOP

.

GASOUNE AIJ..EY

•

THE BORN LOSER
00-'( 11.\IC S+l€ ~\ES
fl£ 1115 Tf.I.IE-OF-DW IS

UTI'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

WPE~

THEY 06VIOUSlY MIST~KE ME
FOR SOME PERSON CALLED--·

"EROC."---- A

r CONE I~

CRf~TURE

THEY 'STtlHD IN FE~R
AND AWE OF--·

Yesterda,y's Cryptoquote: WHEN A MAN IS WRONG ANP
WQN'T ADMIT IT, HE ALWAYS GETS ANGRY.-THOMAS
HALIBURTON
(Ci 1871 Klnrr Fe&amp;ture.ll Syndicate, Inc.)

DAILY CROSSWORD

•

ACROSS
DICK TRACY
-IN .JUST 3 SECONDS

HOW

COULD POUCH
HAVE C:.OT OUT OF

1.---.....0--:UR

.,

,.

,

•

SIGI4T?

DOWN
1. - - de
combat
2. Gather
3. Scent
(4wds.j
4. Metric land
measure
5. Lament
6.Scope
7. Mel of
baseball
lore
8. Chewed
the rag
(3wds.)
9. Spanish
"misters"
10. Hennit
16. Gilded
cage
dweller

1. Sound of
laughter
- Pointe
niE BALLOONS WITH ~EIR CARGO 5. Park, Mich.
OF DIAMONDS SAIL ON.
ll.Khayyam
was one
12. Instead
13. Talk
frenetically
H. Chant
15. Opposite
of NNW
16. Seek alms
17. The
Jones boy
18. Endeavor
20. Numerical
prefix
21. In our
midst
22.Sharpen
MA;~~---K------ :a:l...ll~--""----------~ 23. Nicene or
Apostles'
25. The ones
I've got
26. Laugh
heartily
21. Simpleton
28. Friend
(Fr.)
29. Fainthearted one
~~~~~ 31. Angelo
II
orDiego
32. Arlsta
33. Lamprey
35. Withstand
37. Actress,

CAPTAIN EASY
WE'LL 60 AFTER HIAI
1'-l THE CFUJI7ER ~ HE
CAN'T HAVE MUCH
OF A LEAC' ~

19. Whirl
22. "Hold
it.
Dobbin!"
23. Water,
beer,
etc.
24. Iron
curtain
coun-

~WJMrnlbrn®:::.#=::c
Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words.
Y~sterday'a

try

Aaa"'er

29. Proofreading

25. Word
with
mark
up, down
30. Miss
or cross
Paget
27. Well-known 34. Gaunt
section
36. Colorado
of N .Y.C.
Indian
(with
37. Ocean
··The")
bottom
9

10

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PROAV

0

turnn
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IJ
Yrtt~rday"o

AXYDLBAAXR

A Crypto&amp;"ram Quotatton

TJ
-

HBEFDITN
RFD

ODSDN

ZPD B

HDBWRG

FDIDO

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MAUVE

I II I I J

CHROME

Anew.-r: What !he nighlingalt&gt;

L 0 N G F E L L 0 \\'
One letter s imply stands for another. In this sample A Is
used tor the three L's, X tor the two O's , etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length fl.nd formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

J

)THEM[

(Anowl!'ro tomorrow)

Jumblt!'"' BLESS

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how

B

Now arrance the circled letters
to form the surprise answer, as
suggested by the above cartoon.

l"=am:ml HE [I I I

Daniels
38. Unruly
protester
39.Pound
or stone
40. Pin, razor
or match
.fl. Campus
VIP

TSDN

0
0

ls

•

[]

RFBR

BOP

B

NTXIBOP

LWZRD
FD

HTG

ZY

KDRY
RFZOK

.TTNDSDN .

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!lfl"f(

her high E'" wilh - EASE

JIGGLE

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T--~--,---,-,---.--.-.,_---------------;-----------r"T"""''""---__,--~--

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Rule Changes

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tend the next meeting of the
Sheep and Market Lamb Club to
be held Monday, April12 at 7:30
p.m. at the County Extension
Office.
Those in attendance at the
meeting Tuesday evening included Ruth, Kenny and
Rachael Coen, Joe Nelson, Julie
Johnson, Randy Johnson
Denise Dean, Debbie and BlaU:
Windon, Ollie Sayre and Brent
and Brenda Staley. Adults
present were Mr. Edward Coen
Mrs. Gay Johnson, Mr. Virgll
Windon, Mr. Fred Stanley, Miss
Jenny Dean, Mr. and Mrs.
Clayton Coffey, and C. E.
Blakeslee.

Fi~y:~ti~~!::~~:E:i:~

r------~!'11---------------~~
Rawlings, on the corner of
Second &amp; Mill in Middleport, are wheeling and
dealing ... here are this
week's additions ...

1969 CHEVROLET BELAIR ----------$2095
4 Door sedan, V-8, automatic, p. steering,
sharp.

1967 CHEVROLET BELAIR----------$1595
4 Door Sedan, V-8, automatic, p. steering,
nice.

1965 DODGE CORONET----------..:.. sg95
T Flite p. steering.
power equipment, ready.

1966 PONTI CTEMPEST ---------·$1195
GTO 2 door, 4 speed, sharp as a tack.

1969 VOLKSWAGEN DELUXE -------.$1895
2 Door, 4 speed, 30,000 miles.
SeeR. H. Rawlings Sons Co. before you deal, we can save
you money . .. 992-2151, 992-2152 ask for one of the "Good
Guys" ... Bob, Wallace, Emerson, Hilton, Dick - all
here to serve your new or used car and truck needs.

RAWLINGS DODGE CITY
992-2152

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

We'll

We'll save you steps
as only a full-service bank can.
Because every bankmg service you need
is right here.
Sav~ngs, checking,loans ... you name it.
We've got it.

POMEROY
NATIONAL BANK
RUTLAND

Since 1872

___

MC'mber Federal R(•servc System

.._

•

Memb(•r Fr·(h·rd, Dt:pusit Insurance Corporation
All Accounts Insured Up To $20,000~~0

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TillS WEEKEND should provide a world of fun for fishermen
of the area.

RECEIVE CERTIFICATES- Seventeen members of
Brownie Troop 220 of Salisbury received certificates Thursday afternoon following completion of a five weeks cooking
course under the direction of Joanna Distler, home
economist of the Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Co.
Mothers of troop members were honored at a tea held at the
Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Co., Thursday afternoon. Receiving certificates were, 1-r, front row, Kathie

Quivey, Patti Parker, Linda Williams, Carla Whaley, Regina
Dorst, Judy Well; second row, Angela Sinclair, Jena Welker,
Linda Partlow, Laura Ohlinger, Lori Pullens, Jill Well,
Peggy Pugh, Rebecca Dorst, Camille Swindell, Carol Morris
and Leslie Cole, back Joanna Distler. Mrs. Nancy Morris is
troop leader, Mrs. Sharon Swindell and Mrs. Sharon Welker,
assistant troop leaders and Ann Ohlinger, program aide.

Smith Cha. r!Ye.
s A.re Dronned
e
.I:'.I:'

~- PLEASA~T - Charges
agamst ~upermtendent I.
Brooks. Smtth were dropped and
a heanng sche~uled to re_sume
Saturday was dtspensed wtth by
the Mason County Board of
Education during its regular
meeting Thursday night.
Board President Ted Stevens
asked that the matter be
dropped in line with Tuesday's
state Supreme Court decision
ordering reinstatement of
Smith.
It was just before the meeting
was adjourned a few minutes
past 10 o'clock when Stevens
said "I have something to bring
before you in light of the
Supreme Court ruling" and
followed it by asking the board
to "dismiss the charges".
At this point the president
brought forth a prepared
statement to this effect and
asked specifically that the four
members who brought the
charges sign it and that it be
placed in the minute book.
Bill Withers, Ray FieldF,
Charles Eshenaur and Ted
Stevens signed the statement
which said:
"We the undersigned four
members of the Mason County
Board of Education have voted
to reinstate Mr. I. Brooks Smith
and we are at this time
dismissing the charges against
him in order that the board will
not be jeopardized in any way in
future actions."
Withers entered the motion
for the action and Eshenaur
gave the second which was
approved. At this point Stevens
announced that previously he
had declined to comment and
now was ready to do this. He
read a prepared statement
which said:
Gentlemen:
"As you Board members
know, I have served as your
President for about two and
one-half months now, and I
, would like, at this time, to make
a few remarks to you.
"These charges having been
dropped by various reasons,
including the opinion and
thoughts of the Supreme Court
in their written opinion, and Mr.
Smith now being reinstated, and
the chaos hopefully brought to a

ITEM: Morning. A
zestful time for some
people. Double dismal
for others. Jim Mees
somehow gets us all
together every day.

c_oncluslOn, I waul~ like, at thts
bme, as your President, to urge
~ach ~nd every one. of y~u,
mcl~dmg ~yself, to JOin with
me m I?akmg a pl~dge to do
everythmg we possibly can to
work together with each other
and the Superintendent for the
betterment of each and every
school child and for the benefit
of each and every teacher and
administrator in our school
system.
"I am convinced that while
we have all made mistakes in
our differences of opinion, we
have acted out of our honest
convictions.
"However, at this time, I
want to again ask for a renewed
effort on all of our parts and on
the part of the Superintendent to
work together as a unit for one
goal- the benefit of the Mason
County School system.
"I want, at this time, to state
that I have no grudges, no ill
feelings, and I will do
everything in my power to work
witheachmemberoftheBoard,
each administrator, each
teacher, and each student in the
school system, as I have in the
past which the . people have
elected me to serve, and I am
certain that each of you will join
me in this pledge."
Smith was suspended Feb. 20
when four board members
brought 22 charges against him.
He was reinstated Wednesday
night in a special board
meeting.
Last night's meeting found
harmony among the board and
its superintendent, for the first
time in weeks as it went about
official duties passing all with
unanimous voting.
A portion of the meeting was
spent with the board making a
study of the 1971-72 school
budget as it considered
budgetary transactions. Since
no official action was taken, the
board set a budget meeting
tonight at 7:30p.m.
In making presentations Mr.
Smith commended those who
had prepared the new budget
and commented "In my absence they did a real good job ...
I concur with what they did."
Smith asked the board to
consider the possibility of a
building addition to the new
Vocational Center and cited the
need for an electronics shop "if
funds are available and to seek
federal funds".
The superintendent noted that
there is a possibility that the
budget will run better than $6
million dollars with federal aid.
I' This would be a considerable
increase since this year's was
around $5 million, he added.
Board member Eshenaur
asked about an assistant

l

School, but Smith asked the
board to delay action for a few
days while applications are
being received.
Smith asked the board to
consider more funds for school
bands but said there was no
mone; for this right now. He

(Continued from Page 1)
support a landfill as a lone
community. The use of packer
trucks are necessary if a landfill is to be operated suecessfully, he concluded.
At this point, Dutton spoke on
the inadequacy of the state law
dealing with the establishment
of a landfill. The law reads that
the county commissioners
"may" establish a landfill but
does not require them to do so,
Dutton said.
Like Ohlinger, Zerkle also
pointed out that the local
haulers must be taken into
consideration.
Mayor C. 0. Fisher said that
Mason County officials had
twice tried to mterest Middleport in l!Sing a landfill which
was planned in Mason County.
Mason was, in fact, hoping that
haulers from Meigs County
would use the facility. Mayor
Fisher said he would investigate today to determine if
the facility would still be
available to Middleport.
Councilman Dick Vaughan
stated that he disliked the idea
of any outsider coming into the
community to perform the
garbage collection service.
Councilman Clifford Stumbo
urged council to contact Griffin
at Hockingport for temporary
relief to alleviate the situation
now. He suggested a meeting
with Griffin at which the local
haulers would be invited to
attend to see what plan might be
worked out so that local haulers
would not become unemployed.
Stumbo said his position had
always been that the Middleport
dump should be closed.
Harold
Chase,
village
maintenance supervisor, said
that he and his employes had
worked hard in an attempt to
make the Middleport dump
work satisfactorily. He pointed
out that he was at the dump
Sunday night when firemen
were called to a fire there. He
said he was prepared to unlock
the gates of the dump for the
firemen but they had told him
not to because there was
nothing they could do about the
fire.
Councilman Lawrence
Stewart said, in his opinion,
woman, Mrs. Roger Morgan,
only recently named to the
council to fill a vacancy, did not
comment.

Tonight, Sat. &amp; Sun. Mar. 26-27-28
DOUBLE FEATURE PROGRAM

HThe Cockeyed Cowboys
of Calico County"
Sl•rr·ng

Dan 'Hass'/ Nanette

BlockerI Fa bray
of " 80N4~lA"

IGl
• - • --· ·- ·- - - -·- - · PLUS

- - · ~---

THE TRDPI... HUMAN1...
ANIMAL? ... or MISSING LINM?

SKULLDUGGERY

asked the board to look at this
request in August when the
budget is considered once more.
Ray Fields cited the need at
Wahama when he said the bend
area school "doesn't have the
business support that Point
Pleasant has".

Forest Acres Lake on the New Lima Road near Rutland the same location as Fort Meigs -has been stocked with 300
rainbow trout in preparation for a fishing derby on Saturday and
Sunday, from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m., both days.
•
No state license is required for fishing at the lake and prizes
will be awarded to the fishermen who catch the longest trout
during the two day derby.
EDDIE BURNS, son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Burns of Pomeroy,
will be seen on a forthcoming Mike Douglas television show if the
en tire presentation is used. The particular show was filmed on the
"New Orleans" which was the rescue ship for the astronauts in
the most recent moon shot.
Eddie serves on the ship and will be seen in a cooking bit with a
comedian Louie Nye.
•·
Incidentally, Eddie's father is confined to the Montgomery,
W.Va., hospital with severe head injuries received in a fall at
Alloy, W. Va.,.Wednesday. Mrs. Burns is making daily visits to
the hospital.
ROBERT DAVIS, Rose Hill resident, will be observing his
76th birthday Monday. He was only recently discharged from
Veterans Memorial Hospital. Cards may be sent to P. 0. Box 49,
Pomeroy.

MRS. ORIS GINTHER of near Chester has had her grandson,
Philip, son of Mr. and Mrs. James Ginther of Middletown as her
guest for the past few days. He accompanied her to Columbus
where she was honored as a five year 4-H club advisor.
Philip, a freshman at Ohio State University, is on spring
break and is now enroute to Texas to visit his brother, George,
stationed at the Sheppard Air Force Base. Philip is driving
Dutton again stated that some George's car and will leave the vehicle here returning to his
positive action should be home via plane.
forthcoming from Middleport. He remarked that the
BETTY CROCKER coupons are still being received at The
health board has been Daily Sentinel office on Court St. The coupons will be used to help
sympathetic and has tried secure a kidney machine for the Holzer Medical Center. There
every way to postpone any
have been a number of contributors of coupons already.
action hoping that something
satisfactory would be worked
out. He did say, however, that
something has to be done soon
since the State of Ohio is aware
of the problems with the MidWayne Andrew Zurcher, Sr., home; two daughters, Mrs.
dleport dump and is not at all
48, 850 East Main St., Pomeroy, Russell (Arlene) Peters of •
happy about the situation.
dted unexpectedly Thursday Pattersonville, Ohio, and Mrs.
Councilman Zerkle asked morning at the Holzer Medical Clarence (Sharon) Mattox of
Clair Might and Marvin Miller, Center.
Pomeroy; his mother, Mrs.
representing the Leading Creek
Mr. Zurcher was employed by Myrtle Zurcher, Mechanicsand Bradbury residents who the Katser Aluminum Chemical town, Ohio; two sisters, Mrs.
have complamed ab
the Corporation at Ravenswood and Foster (Kathryn) Ulman of
dump, if council could have 60
had formerly served with the Alliance and Mrs. Wayne
days to work out the problem. Pomeroy Police Department. (Carrie) Owings, Weirton, W.
The two men said they did not
Surviving are his wife, Va., and two brothers, William
believe the people would go
Wilovene Wagner Zurcher, two of Toronto, Ohio and Robert of •
along with that amount of time
sons, Wayne, Jr., West Mechanicstown. Also surviving
since a year and a half of Columbia, W. Va.; John, at are seven grandchildren and
operating the dump had already
several nieces and nephews.
passed and nothing had been
He was preceded in death by
done about the complaints.
his father, John Zurcher, and a
Stumbo pointed out that
daughter, Karen.
CELEBRATION SUNDAY
council is legally responsible for
Funeral services will be held
A
singspiration
celebration
providing a place for residents
will be held at 7:30 Sunday night at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Sweeney
of Middleport to dump garbage
F~eral Home in Carrollton,
and trash. It's the council's at the Middleport First Baptist
Church with special music to be Ohio, with burial to be in the
duty, he said, whether such a
presented by the Gospelaires. West View Cemetery there. •
dump be at Coolville or Mason,
Friends may call at the Ewing
W. Va. Again he urged that The evening message will be in
Funeral Home in Pomeroy until
form
of
personal
testhe
council act to provide im9 tonight and at the Sweeney
timonies
from
the
conmediate relief and then work
gregation. The public is invited. Funeral Home at Carrollton
out a more permanent plan.
from 2 to 4 and from 7 to 9 p.m.
Both Zerkle and Ohlinger at
Saturday.
this point told the two
representatives from the
TO MEET SUNDAY
citizens' group that they do not
There will be a meeting of all
believe it will take council 60
managers in the Slow Pitch M
days to work out a solution.
and
M Softball League Sunday
It was agreed then to hold the
special meeting Monday night at 4 p.m. at the Farmers Bank.
at which time council members
will attempt to work out a plan
LOST AND FOUND
of action.
LOST: child's pet gray striped
Attending in addition to those
LOCAL TEMPS
cat wearing a red collar. If
seen phone Mrs.
Bob
The temperature in downtown
mentioned previously were
Houdashelt, High St., MidClerk-Treasurer Gene Grate Pomeroy at 11 a.m. Friday was
dleport. Phone 992-7088.
and Police Chief J. J. 38 degrees under clearing skies.
J-26-Jtc
Cremeans.

Immediate ...

done about would
the dump.
niiiiiiiiii~i=pir;in;c;i;p;al;a;t;W;a;h;a;m;a;H;i,
gh something
have Council
to be

-

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

1

'f!lis evening's cafeteria dinner at Trinity Church for George
Thompson, 18-year-old Pomeroy youth who is awaiting a kidney
transplant at Cleveland Clinic, should be a big boost to the fund _...
drive underway on behalf of the Pomeroy young man.
The Meigs Jaycees are working out details for a dance also
for the Thompson fund. The dance has been set for April30.

WMP0/1390

Serving illeigs County

I

By Bob Hoeflich

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save you
some.

POMEROY

Beat••••

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POINT PLEASANT Much confusion apparently
has occurred from a New
Haven resident and a
member of the Mason County
Board of Education who lives
in Hartford having the same
name.
Raymond Fields, owner of

992 2151

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FUNDS RECEIVED
The state paid Meigs County's
school districts a total of
$140,060.89 under the school
calls and contacts from
foundation program for March
persons believing he is the
State Auditor Joseph T: board member. Raymond
FLrguson reports. Amounts Fields of New Haven wants it
received by each of the county's to be known "that he is not
districts include: Eastern
now and never has been a
$22,650.28;
Meigs Local: member of the Mason County
$94,584.02; and Southern Local
Board of Education." The
$22,826.59. In addition the Meig~ board member is Ray Fields
County Board of Education of Hartford who is a conreceived an allotment of struction worker.
$4,238.17.
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;::

2 Door h

1 1

l Of the Bend

Reco~nrnended

2 Door h

!

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

The first meeting of the Meigs
County Sheep and Market Lamb
Club was held at the County
Extension Office Tuesday. Mrs.
Clayton Coffey, advisor, was in
charge.
The group recommended rule
changes for 1971 so that club
members could sell single ewes
or wethers and also could carry
projects in pairs of lambs and
pens of three.
No member can sell more
than two single lambs in 1971
and the singles must be in
different classes.
Lambs must be secured and
on feed on the farms or at the
homes of club members not
later than June 1. Entry cards
must also be in the County
Extension Office by that date.
Anyone in the county interested in participating in the
market lamb program in Meigs
County in 1971 is invited to at-

I

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight &amp; Saturday
March 26 -27
THE CHEYENNE
SOCIAL CLUB
Where the West was
Really Made!
&lt;Technicolor}
James Stewart
Henry Fonda Shirley Jones
TICKLE ME
( Technicolor)
Elvis Presley
Julie Adams
Sun., Mon., Tues.
March 28-29-30
Lee Marvin
In
MONTE WALSH
(Techn1color)
Lee Marvin
Jednne Moreau
Colorcartoon:
Skyscraper (Phantom)
Wm Lucky
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

•

Wayne Zurcher, 48, Succumbs

•

•

Friday and Saturday
Elberfelds In Pomeroy
Are Open Until 9 In The Evening
Sale of Womens and Girls Coats • Womens and Girls Dresses .
Womens Blouses - Womens Pants Suits · Womens Uniforms
Kayser Hosiery Sale - Sale of Cannon Wash Cloths - Sale of Mens

•

and Boys Sport Coats • Sale of Radio and TV Sets · Sale of Mens
and Boys Shirts · Kodak lnstamatic Sale · Sale of Mens Slacks

Shop Until 9 Both Friday
and Saturday Nights

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

•

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