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:t»- uo! Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Dec. 8; 1971

Impounded Wate~ Supplies Two Schools
MERCERVILLE - A water
impoundment made by strip
mir ~ operators several years
ago has saved the day for
Hannan Trace High School and
Elementary School in Gallia
County.
The two schools received
their entire water supply from
an impoundment made by strip
mine operations several years
ago. Under the provisions of the
House Bill 928, now facing the
Ohio senate, the water iJh.
poundment would not exist
because it does not fit the
requirements of the House Bill.
But try to convince Dennis M.
Murdock, superintendent of the
Hannan Trace school district,
that the water impoundment
does not fit requirements and
you may have a long debate on
your hands. Murdock sees the
water impoundment as the
savior of two of his schools.
"lf it weren't for this water
from the impoundment, we
would either have to close the
schools or have water brought
In gallon bottles from the city,"
Murdock said.
Hannan Trace High School
and elementary school are
located away from any main
water line, leaving the water
impoundment as their only
source of water supply.
"We use about 10,000 gallons

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WATER IMPOUNDMENT PAYS OFF -Dennis M.
Murdock, superintendent of Gallia County's Hannan Trace
school district, explains that although the water line is below

!Ofeet, there Is enough water for the 700 students who attend
Hannan Trace High School and Elementary School. The new
House Bill 928 would outlaw any impoundment where 'the
water level is under 10 feet.

of water a day. Every drop
comes from this water impoundemerit," he said. "I don't
know what we would do if it
didn't exist."
. Murdock said large sums of
money had been spent on
drilling operations for water
weUs. "Before we discovered
the impoundment we drilled
four or five welts only to see
them go dry within a week," he
said.
The water impoundment
supplies enough water for the
700 students which attend the
two schools. "After the weUs
went dry we became desperate
for water," Murdock said.
"Then I thought about the water
impoundment in back of the
high school."
Murdock said many people
told him the idea of using water
from an impoundment would
not work. "They said the water
was polluted and full of acid,"
be said. "But this water is the
purest I have seen."
The impoundment is 14 feet at
the highest level and in places
only about four feet. Under the
provisions of House Bill 928, no
water impoundment may be
less than 10 feet at any point.
This would destroy the impoundment at Hannan Trace
High School.
Murdock said the water had
been analyzed by the Ohio State
Health Depariment for purity.
The results were surprising.
"Not only is this water pure, it

contains floride, " Murdock
said. "The bealth ®pariment
told us that obr students would
have less cavities because the
water contains this norlde."
"We live in an impoverished
area. Many children never have
the opportunity to get norlde
treaiments," be said. ''The
florida is their only protection.
It's like an-extra bonus for us."
The , water from . thj! - im·
poundment is piped across a
road from the high school to the
elemen!afy school. A miniature
proce8slng plant sits behind the
high school. "Water !Jows by
gravity into the chlorinating
plant and is then flltered Into a
clear well where it is picked up
by the pumps," Murdock said.
The water Impoundment ts on
land once owned by strip mine
operators but now owned by the
school system. "When we approached the mine operators
about using the water they were
very enthusiastic about the idea
and gave us permission to use
the water impoundment to its
fullest advantages," he said.
Two other r:chools In the
Hannan Trace School District
are having water problems .
also. Murdock said one school
closed its doors for several days
while the other is having water
brought in by trucks.
Murdock said the impoundment would still be used
when city water lines are ex-·
tended to his area . "Why not?
We have as much water as we

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need. It's cheaper and frankly, 1
think It's purer water," he aaid;
The only problem Murdock II
faced with Is competition for~
water. A rather large d~
enjoys \lrinking the water. ~
tracks can be seen around the
water lmpoWldment. Murdoc~
would make _no speculation as to
the condition of the deer's
after drinking the florid~
enriched water.

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Hunters Kill 101 Deer
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Hunters killed 101 deer in
Meigs County during the deer
season which closed at 5 p.m.
Wednesday,Gary Swope, Meigs
County game protector, said

teeq.

today.
. This year tbe season was a bit
longer, running from 7:30a.m.,
Nov. 29 to 5 p.m. yesterday.
Swope said, however, the
number of hunters in Meigs
County "appeared to be down"
from last year.
In addition to the 101 checked
ln at local stations, Swope indlcated tbere may have been
some more killed and checked
at out-Qf-county stations.
Checked In here were:
Pearl Edwards, Jr., Long
· Bottom; Robert Painted,
Pomeroy; Jimmy Bailey,
Wintersville; Sol Bigley, Reedsville; Charles Harris, Reedsville; Grant Smith, Reedsville;
James Chadwell, Reedsville;
Marvin Parker, Uniontown;
Edward Murphy, Tuppers
Plains; Walter J . Kubla,
Belpre; Ronnle Johnson, Portland; Dayton McElroy, Minersville; Thomas Ebersbach,
Orchard Lake, Mich.; Ralph

WOMEN llllEAK BARRIEB

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Th8
Customs Bureau has
the appointment of five womf!!
as customs agen~ . They wwe
the first women ever named to
the corps of qents which
detects narcollcs smuggling
and Investigates other customs
related fraud.
The five were Janel Ingram,
29, Denver, one of the first
women sky marshals named
last year; Susan Rowley, 25,
Miami; Geraldine Baker, 25,
New York; Sarah Durantan 23,
Boston; and Phyllis Barrett, 24,
New Orleans.

announce!!

DATES ANNOUNCED
ALBANY, N.Y. (UPI)- The
1172 New York State Professional Golfers Association
Championship, richest state pro
title in the natlon, will be held
sept. 18-22 on Long Island, it
was announced Tuesday.
The $30,000 event is scheduled
for the l!ethpage state golf
complexal Farmingdale.

A TWF;NTY-THREE POINT DEER, largest to be shot this Silason, was bagged Tuesday
afternoon by Sol Bigley , Reedsville, near Forked Run Lake area.

Now You Know

In The Drapery Department

NO. 167

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

I
By Ualted Press International
The Indian Air Force and
Navy bombarded ports of
Karachi and Chlttagong In West
and East Pakistan today,
inflicting heavy damage on
shipping. In Dacca, a direct hit
on an orphanage by Indian
planes buried hundreds of
children.
~cue workers lifting huge
chunks of concrete by hand said
they had recovered 30 bodies
and expressed fear the death
toll among the children and In
nearby shops and houses could

NOW ON SALE!·
Woven Cottons, Chenilles ,
Early American, Flora!s .
Plaids. Cotton Ribs. Excellent colors. Twin and
Full sizes.

ClUB

FOR'72 .........

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Make 49 payments, 50c
to $10.00 and we make
the

50TH

MACARTHUR BOWL
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
MacArthur Bowl , which is
awarded annually by a committee of the National Football
Foundation to the collegiate
football team it considers the
best in the country, will not be
presented until after the New
Year's Night Orange Bowl
showdown between No . 1
Nebraska and No.2 Alabama;

MEIGS THEATRE .
Tonight &amp; Thursday
Dec. 8-9 •
NOT OPEN

The Athen• County
Savings &amp; loan co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
mber Federal Home loan
Bank .
Nlember Federal Savings &amp;
Loan lnsvrance Corp. All
ccounts lnsur~d up to
•0110.00.

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Friday thru Tuesday
December 10·14
Walt Disney's
SCANDALOUS JOHN
(Technicolorl
Brian Keilh
Alfonso Arau
''G"
Walt Disney's
PETER THE WOLF
I Technicolor I
STOOGE : Malice in the
Palace
SHOW STARTS I P.M.

children when they choose - an
opportunity long taken for
granted by the better~ucated,
higher-income segments of
society.
Unfortunately, the program
has attracted the acute
suspicion of some militant
blacks, who see in it a racially

,.,..,..j

Inspired plot to control the black ...,...,._,._,.......,....,........,.._......................,.....,.,.,,... ..,..........,........, .. .
population, which is growing at
a considerably faster rate than
the white population. Until this
suspicion is overcome, the
federally financed family
planning clinics will do least
good where they are most
needed - in urban ghettos.

Holiday Sale
Mens and
Womens Styles

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

Washington
Report By

Clarence
Miller

AIRWAY
MOLDED
LUGGAGE
Save 20%

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You can buy a regular $22.95 Train
Concern over rising crime Juvenile justice also is a
Case for Ol)ly $18.36 or a $24.95 Mens
increased rapidly In the last difficult problem. To cite only
Companion for Sl9.96 during this
decade. At the national level, one example: A nation-wide
sale.
Comparable savings on all
Excellent color selection
other
luggage
Including Weekender,
Congress translated concern study in the mid-1960's of
Blue .
Green.
Charcoal,
26"
and
28"
Wardrobe Cosmetic
into meaningful action through juvenile court judges revealed
case, Garmenf Bags, Two and Three
Charcoal Green, Honey Gold.
the Omnibus Crime Control and that half of them had no unSulters.
White, Burnt Orange.
Safe Streets Act of 1968. That dergraduate degree, one-fifth
legislation created the Law had received no college .,.. .,... .,._..,.,.,.,.,,... ..,..........,........,..,....,..,..• .,.,,...........,....,.....,.._,._.._.._..,.,.. .
Enforcement Assistance Ad- education at all, and one-fifth
Special Purchase
ministration (LEAA) as the were not even members of the
Federal Government's major bar.
effort in the fight against crime. LEAA has funded a projected
Sale prices now in our first floor lingerie
The Safe Streets Act said law 4-year study to set up a national
department on these most popular styles of Dove
enforcement is a state and local committee to study juvenile
Skin Panties.
responsibility, but that states, justice. Areas to be studied
_._.
_...___....
.....
_,_
cities, and coWJties need federal include training, qualifications
Reg. 69c Acetate Tricot Elastic or Bard Leg
aid to help them mount a full and selection of juvenile court
Briefs. Sizes S-6-7.
attack on crime.
judges, prosecutors and defense
As a strong supporter of counsel, court referees, adSale 3 pair 11.65
LEAA, I have watched with mlnlstrators and juvenile
,.....
great Interest the programs to pro~ation and treatment perReg. 79c Acetate Tricot Elastic or Band Leg
which the LEAA has addressed sonnel; the role of police; arrest
Briefs. Sizes 8-9-1 0
its efforts. One area is juvenile and detention; laws relating to
delinquency.
juveniles; court procedures ·
Sale pair 12.05
........
.................
_,...,
.....-.
Total .LEAA funding of and community-based treat:
Reg . 100 percent Nylon Elastic Leg Briefs. Sizes
juvenile delinquency programs ment programs and facilities.
5-6-7.
grew from about $4 million in A first offense can stigmatize
fiscal year 1969 to about $32 a juvenile for life and
3 pair 12.25
million in fiscal year 1970 to inadequate treatment may
more than $71 mlllion in fiscal make him worse Instead of
year. 1971 - a total of ap- better. To achieve the most
Reg. 1.00 100 per cent nylon Elastic Leg Briefs.
Sizes 8-9-10.
proximately $107 million.
effective rehabilitation, LEAA
Ju ~enile delinquency is a programs emphasize probation
3 pair 12.75
Be sure to register In our Third Floor Furniture
huge and stubborn problem. and treaiment rather than
..,..,
.
'
Department for the Whirlpool Washer and Dryer
Records mdlcated that aimo~t institutionalization, in as many
to
be given away.
Reg.
1.00
Nylon
Stretch
Lace
Brief
or
Bikini
half the persons arrested m cases as possible.
..
Style.
connection with serious crimes With adequate fed eral
No purchase Is necessary and you· need not be
White- Black- Beige-.&amp;,qua- Pink
in 1969 were 18 or under. An FBI assistance, LEAA will continue
present
to win. ·
study showed that 72 pet. of 1o put particular emphasis on
those arrested in 191&gt;3 at age 20 the problem of juvenile
Sale 3 pailS '2.65
or under were rearrested within delinquency. LEAA assistance, ~'"'""'""'Mt&lt;lllltlltlli!llllltllil•••••
...
5 years. And youth crime is I am told, will not only be used
growing .rapidly. In the 1960's, to give greater protection to
~
Parking
and Mecl),anic
the population o( people 18. or society - by aiding law enunder grew only about 27 pet., forcement departments - but
but the nwnber of arrests in this also rehabilitative assi~tance to
age group increased almost 100 the juvenile offender.
pet.
.

DOVE SKIN PANTY SALE

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Our Free

lots on Second Street

Street

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

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PHONE 992·2156

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BEDSPREADS

nicekl, copp er cobalt and
tungsten, which already are or
soon will be in short supply.
Suppose, however, that the
average American family
decides that two kids are
enough? Should that attitude
prevail for the next three
decades, the U.S. population in
the year 2000 would be about 271
million - a hefty 32 pet. increase over the present, but still
50 million fewer people than·
we'd have with three children in
the average family.
After years of backing away
timidly from the whole issue of
population control, the federal
government at last has committed itself to make "family
plannlng services" - a
euphemism for contraceptive
devices - available to "all
persons desiring such services. "
The program was authorized
by Congress in a landmark bill
enacted in 1970. Expenditures
during the last fiscal year were
a modest $25 million for the
whole country, bu~ are due to
rise to $58 million this year and
to $91 million the following year.
The purpose of this program
is quite plainly and simply to
give poor people the opportunity
to halt their production of

action until the January
meeting . The board also approved a temporary budget for
the first six months of 1972.
ln other business the board
indicated its support of a fivec ounty federal-funded
cooperative project for which
an application is being
prepared . Attending were
Harold Lohse, Harold Roush,
Virgil Atkins, Gordon Collins
and George Perry , board
members, and Robert Bowen,
County Supt. of Schools.

Ronald Campbell, Colwnbus ;
Philip Radford, Pomeroy;
Starling Schneider, Columbus ;
J. F. Young, Racine; Daniel
Sayre, Columbus; Don Smith,
Pomeroy ; Wilbur Robinson ,
Coolville; Glen Robinson,
Coolville; Everet T. Ransom,
Racine; Howard Jeffers ,
Pomeroy ; Arthur Slusher ,
Pomeroy ; Charles Finley, Jr .•
Racine; Roger Beach, West
Jefferson; Charles Brewe~,
Long Bottom ; Fritz Sisson,
Syracuse; Ray McCarty, Jr.,
Marysville; Guy Sargent ,
Pomeroy ; Larry Jacobs,
Springfield; Frank Broderick,
Pomeroy ; Robert
Hall ,
Hilliard; Manning Roush ,
Pomeroy; Robin Nye, New
Albany ;
Ernest
Sisson,
Syracuse; Danny Brown,
Minersville, and Charles
Brannon, Raymond, Ohio.

Rain spreading east by early
tonight. Rain ending in most
sections by Friday morning .
Lows Thursday night in the 40s.
Friday little temperature
change with highs in the 50s to
around 60 extreme south.

THURSDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1971

MORGAN-JONES and BATtS

By LOUIS CASSELS
Unlted Press International
The future of America
depends in a very basic sense on
decisions that are being made,
privately and separately, by
millions of you ng married
couples.
Each couple must answer for
itself the question: What size
family do we want?
If all the decisions average
out to 3.1 children per family,
the U. S. Census Bureau says,
the nation's population will
climb irom 205 million at
present to around 322 million in
the year 2000 - which, kindly
remember, is just 29 years
away.
So rapid a growth rate could
have disastrous effects on efforts to curb pollution of the air
and water and to conserve
America's already seriously
strained energy and raw
material resources. The more
people, the more pollution . The
greater the rate of population
growth, the heavier the
pressure on reSources such as
gas, oil, manganese, chromium!

A delega ti on representing
parents living in the Eastern
School District whose children
are a !tending Meigs High
School met with the Meigs
County School Board Tuesday
night.
· The delegation , presenting
more detailed information ,
asked that the territory they
live in be transferred to the
Meigs Local District.
Following a discussion, the
board, wishing to study the
matter further, voted to defer

More Probably
Checked in at
Out-of-County
Hunt Stations

Weather

SALE I

Young Manieds Hold U.S. Future

Transfers Asked

Devoted To Tlw Interests OJ The Meigs-Mmon Area

VOL. XXIV

Washington Window

Wolfe, Racine ; Bobby Adams,
Racine; Ronald McDade,
Wester ville; John Stobart ,
Racine;
Samuel Piltro,
Columbus; Emmett Lightfoot,
Middleport; Ernest Shuler,
Racine; Cleon Pratt, Jr.,
Pomeroy; Victor Wolfe,
Racine ;
John
Jeffers,
Pomeroy; John Young, Rae.·ne;
Wayne Chappelear, Pqmeroy ;
George Smith, Pomeroy.
Roland Fisher, Minersville;
Milton Roush, Syracuse;

I

Your Christmas Shopping Center

Debra West, historian. Students are chosen for the national
music honor society on the basis of scholarship, character,
cooperation, leadership and service.

Willis Howell, Canton; John
Bailey, Pomeroy; Dale Willis,
Syracuse ; Benjamin White,
Pomeroy ;
Ray
Pullins,
Pom eroy; Charles Ransom,
Pomeroy; Leonard Lanham,
Pomeroy; Carroll Teaford,
Racine ; Donald Kim, Tuppers
Plains;
Ballard
Smith,
Columbus; Melvin Smith,
Pomeroy ; Harry Yarbrough,
Rutland ; Bill Stewart, Rutland;
Dale Smith, Pomeroy; Dwight
Cullums , Pomeroy; David

The hermit era b lives In shells
abandoned by other sea
creatures.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

OFFICERS AND ADVISORS of the Southern High School
Tri-M Club for the 1971-72 school year are, 1-r, Mrs. Lee Lee,
advisor; Renee Burke, president; Beth Theiss, secretary;
Doug Rees, treasurer; Candy Hoback, vice president; and

Johnson, Clinton.
Charles R. Harris, Portland;
William J . Moore, Mt. Orab,
Ohio; Robert Murphy, Reedsville; Jack Westfall, Reedsville; Ray Fulton, Reynoldsburg; Eldon Blake, Jr:, Reedsville; John Hetzer, Reedsville;
CUster Crase, Wakeman, Ohio;
Charles Kim, Tuppers Plains;
Wayne Sidle, Wayne, Ohio;
Samuel McKinney, Mi!ldleporl;
Dennis McKinney, Rutland;
Larry Oxley, Pataskala; Edmond Ward, Barboursville, W.
Va.; Charles W. Bailey,
Pomeroy; Earl Mossman,
Middleport; A. Dindo, New
Philadelphia; James Fife,
South Charleston, Ohio ; Lola
Proffitt, Racine; Lewis Harper,
Rutland; W. II. Cheadle,
Albany; David Cashdorph,
Columbus; Robert Markle,
Pedro; Curtis Dalton, Rutland ;
Jack Morris, Pomeroy ;
Richard Wagner, Colwnbus;
Keith Krautter, Minersville;
Russell Branham, Columbus.
Robert Sawyers, Mason, W.
Va.; Jerome Beach, Colwnbus;
Millard Roush, Syracuse;
George Miller, Middleport;

be as high as 500. Pakistan
protested to the International
Red Cross.
On the eastern war front,
Indian Defense Minister Jagjivan Ram said the Indian
military had sealed all land, air
and sea escape routes to
retreating Pakistani soldiers.
An estimated 37,000 Pakistani
troops were reported digging in
near Dacca for a last ditch
stand. India was broadcasting a
steady stream of surrender
demands.
On the Western front, 1,000

miles away across the Indian
subcontinent, heavy fighting
was reported still underway in
Kashmir but Ram said a
Pakistani offensive had been
blunted there. Pakistan reported successes there and said its
troops drove across the Mannawar Tawi River in the Chamb
district and destroyed two
Indian ammunition dumps.
The spokesman said the
Indians sank four gunboats
when they refused to surrender
and thai the navy captured two
Pakistani merchant ships and

was escorting them to Indian
ports.
several foreign ships including one American have been hit
by Indian attacks. The captain
of a Parutrnanian freighter hit
near Chiltagong said in Rangoon one crewman was killed
and two woundee. He said a
Danish ship also was hit.
Both sides reported sinking or
damaging submarines. Ram
told the cheering Indian parliamen! that a second Pakistani
submarine had been sunk and
that Pakistan has so far lost

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ur1e

three warships, nine gunboats
and two submarines.
Pakistani spokesmen in Karachi said the Pakistani navy
badly damaged a Soviet-made
submarine of the Indian Navy
47 milea south of Karachi on
Wednesday and that a destroyer and a frigate were following
up today in hopes of confirming
the kill. A spokesman said the
submarine was leaking oil
badly.
India reported more successes in the Comilla region of
(Continued on Page 12)

~--News.~:in-)J~ief~-~ ASCS Com~ittees Elected
By United Pres• International
PARIS- THE UNITED STATF.'l ASKED HANOI today to
devise means whereby U. S. prisoners can receive mail, then
(X'oposed that the Paris talks meet Dec. 23 Instead of next week .
The Communists immediately accused the United States of trying
to torpedo the talks. U. S. negotiator William J. Porter, in a
surprise move, told Hanoi and VietCong negotiators we wanted to
meet them In two weeks time ra !her than next Thursday so they
can get the necessary authority from their governments for tbe
negotiating issues.
Hanoi's Xuan Thuy and the Viet Cong's Dinh Ba Thi told
newsmen after the five-bour session they rejected the U. S.
(X'Oposal . They called it a "vile maneuver" and a "manifest
sabotage" of the three-year-old conference.

.
SAIGON -SOUTH VIETNAMF.'lE FORCF.'l, supported by

allied artillery and helicopter gunships, battled with North
VIetnamese and VietCong forces today In the Caqtbodlan rubber
(X'oducing cotmtry. Reports said the fight was one of the biggest in
South VIetnam's !7-day campaign to clear out Communlst sanetuarles in Cambodia.
In other war news, the U. s. command reported that four
Americans had died In com hat last week, bringing the u.s. death
toll for the war to 4~ 617.
'
BELFAST, NORTHERN mELAND- THE BLOODY sectarian fighting in Northern Ireland continues. British troops
battled today with gurunen and youth gangs in Londonderry.
Last night In Belfast, a part-time militiaman was shot to
death as he watched television at his home.
WASHINGTON-THE HOUSE WAS EXPECI'ED to approve
today a compromise tax package that would slash corporate and
Individual taxes by $15.7 billion over three 'years.
The measure was opposed by organized labor as "a raid on
the treasury" by big business.
NEW YORK- DR. RALPH J, BUNCHE, former U.N. undersecretary general for special political affairs and winner of
the Nobel Peace Prize In 1950, died at 12:40 a.m. EST today at
New York Hospital after a long illness. He was 67.
Bunche's widow said the Negro diplomat entered the hospital
two days ago for new tests and had "seemed to be doing very
well." He had been suffering from kidney malflUlctlon, diabetes,
beatl disease and various complications for months.
HONOLULU - THE COAST GUARD said today that the
DaniBh merchant vessel Heerlng Ki'lse was In trouble in 30-loot
seas about !:JI miles
of Midway Island and may have swik.
A spokesman here said ships reaching the area where the
dl.stressed craft was believed to be could find no trace of the 7,Oil().
ton container ship, which was believed to have 38 peraons aboard.

north

WASHINGTON -A PROGRAM TO ~ price support
loan8 to grain fanners 25 pet. and raile their lneome by $2 billion
annually passed the HoWJe early today allll was sent to the Senate
where It wa•apecled to receive li favorable reception.
Democratlclllpporters'ol the legislation, which Is opposed by
the ~atlon, said they 8Zpected the Senate to pass the bill
In the waning hours rl. the CUITeDt leSilon and send It to the White
Houae. President N!Ion then would have a politically difficult
choice. He could veto the bill on the basla It would disrupt ,his
budget, or he ceiUid Pl'\)lect hla election prospects in the farm bell
· by Jett!QI It beeome Jaw.
\

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Community Commit!ees of
the Meigs County Agriculture
Stabilization and Conservation
Service were announced
Wednesday following the official tally of ballots cast in the
recent election .
Personnel of the ASCS office
In Pomeroy were busy until4:30
p.m. Tuesday counting ballots.

The counting was open to the
public.
Results of the balloting ac-.
cording to H. E. Shields, county
executive director (in each
township in the order : chairman, vice-chairman, regular
member, first alternate and
second alternate) were:
Bedford-Salisbury - Virgil C.

Injuries Slight
Two persons were slightly Rt. 218, slx-tentha of a mile
.injured in three ~inor traffic south of Rl. 790. Officers said
accidents wveshgated Wed- Canaday's car collided with an
nesdaybytheGallia-Me1gs Post auto operated by Everett L.
McGuire, 65, Willowood.
State Highway Patrol.
The first occur.red at 11:45 a . Canaday was cited to Municipal
m. on Rt. 325, mne-tenths of a Court for failing to yield the
mile north of Rt. 554 where right of way.
Ttmothy L. Ferree, 22,
Williamsburg, lost control of his A final mishap occurred at
car when a tire blew out, ran off 11:20 p. m. on Rt. 34, one and
the roadway, and struck a tree. three-tenths miles east of Rt.
Ferree suffered minor Injuries 160 where a deer ran into the
but was not immediately · path of it car operated by
treated.
Donald D. Combs, 24, Pomeroy.
Ronald R. Canday, 39, Rt. I, The animal was not recovered.
Gallipolis, sustained minor There was minor damage to
injuries in a two car collision on Comba' car.

King, Robert Pickett, Pearl H.
Hayes, Hugh P. Custer, Vincent
P. Broderick.
Chester - Dale Kautz,
Donald C. Mora, W. S. Michael,
Albert Parker, Roy L. Holter.
Columbia-Scipio - Reed
Jeffers, Kenneth C. Welsh, R. A.
Whittington , James Gaston,
Hie! French.
Lebanon-Letart - Harold G.
Roush, Charles R. Harris,
Thomas D. Sayre, Virgil Roush,
Andrew Cross.
Olive-Orange
Cecil
Caldwell, Dana C. McCain,
Gordon H. Collins, Chester
Buckley. Carl Findling.
Rutland-Salem - Clifford
Might, John F. Colwell, Carl E.
Shenefiel&lt;), Leo Morris, Eugene
Coleman.
Sutton - Charles H. Theiss,
David Nease, James Carnahan,
Gene Yost, Charles W. Cornell,
Jr.
The county convention, to
elect one member for• a three
year term and two alternates to
the county committee for one
year terms each will he held at I
p.m. Friday, Dec 17, at the
Masonic Temple building in
Pomeroy: The public is invited
to the convention.

'Twas a Dark Day 'for Some
You never miss the water 'til the well runs dry.
Racine, Pomeroy and Rutland users qf Ohio Power Co. service
learned Wednesday afternoon they didn't miss electricity until there
wasn't any.
Some patrons were without service for as long as 5'1:! hours after a
main line broke between the Rutland and Pomeroy substations.
Fortunately, temperatures were high enough that those with furnaces
controlled by electricity were not affected by cold.
Fred Morrow, local manager of the power company, said a tree fell
across and broke the line. Crews were summoned immediately to
repair it. Rutland was without service about a half hour. Some sections
of Poineroy had service by about 4 p.m. while in the Lincoln Hill area
service was not restored until about 5:30.
Upriver, the last to get service restored was the Racine community at about7 p.m. The break occurred about 1:25 p.m.
With few exceptions (buildings served by the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.), Pomeroy and Racine stores, were all but
pitcli dark during the outage. In Pomeroy, clerks stayed on hand a_nd
some managed to do a little stocking of holiday merchandise on shelves
despite the darkness. At one store, those stopping by to conduct
business were handed flashlights to !~lake their way through.

CHIWCOTHE VETERANS PARTY -Over !OObagsoffrultand candy were prepared by
American Legion Auxiliary members Wednesday night for the birthday party being staged
today at the Chillicothe Veterans Hospital. Shown as !bey worked on the project are, left to
right, Mrs. Della Stahl and Mrs. Lucy McKinney, standing, and Mrs. Avanell Bass, seated, all
of the Middleport unit; and Mrs. Loretta Tiemeyer of the Pomeroy uni\, seated across from
Mrs. Bass.

File Accounts By
December 17
All candidates in the
November elections have
unlil 4 p. m. on Friday,
December 17, to file an expense account with the Meigs
County Board of Elections.
Winners and losers both must
file the required form.
Failure to do so prohibits the
Individual from running for
another political office. for a
period of five years.
The board office, located In
the Masonic Temple building
In Pomeroy, Is open from I to
4 p. m. Monday through
Friday.

Bread Sale
Made $326

Bags of Goodies
Ready for Party
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Bags of fruit, candy and
cookies were prepared, favors
were made, and holiday table
decor a lions were completed
last night for the birthday party
at the Chillicothe Veterans
Hospital today by volunteers
from Meigs County four
American Legion Auxiliary
units.
Mrs. Charles Kessinger of
Pomeroy, District 8 Auxiliary
president, supervised the work
as over 100 bags, each containing a candy bar, three

A recent sale of bread conducted by Drew Webster Post 39
of tbe American Legion
produced $326 according to Phil
Ohlinger, chairman of the Gifts
for Yanks program. Ohlinger,
reporting at the regular
meeting of the post Tuesday
night, extended his and the ...,..__ _ _ _ _ _ _.J
post's thanks to citizens of
Pomeroy for their SUPJlOrt of the SHOPPING DAYS
program and to members who TO CHRISTMAS
took part in it.
Ed Whaley, membership
READ OUR ADS
(Continued on page 12)

13

apples, an orange, tangerine,
banana and pear were filled and
boxed. A hundred packages of
homemade candy and cookies
contributed by auxiliary
members and others of the
community also were prepared.
Mrs. Kessinger said over 50
pounds of homemade candy and
about 30 dozen cookies were
donated.
Ten door prizes, each containing a variety of personal
items, were wrapped. Twentyfive
Christmas
table
arrangements were made by
the iunior members of the
Middleport auxiliary, and 125
colorful felt comb and pencil
cases were made by the senior
members of the Middleport
unit. The combs were donated
by Mrs. Avanell Bass and Mrs.
Lelah Weatherby; the Citizen's
National bank gave pens, and
scratch pads were contributed
by the Quality Print Shop.
Workers are Mrs. Loretta
Tiemeyer, Mary Tiemeyer, and
Cindy Campbell of Drew
Webster Pos139 WJ!t, Pomeroy;
Mrs. Florence Richards.
(Continued on Page 12)

t,,

�•
2- Tbe Dldb' IJe!l!l•l, Ml'teport.Ptweroy, 0., Dec. 8, 1971

The Family Jewels

rvoic;--,Jo-;g-u~~d;ay-l

THOUGHTS

And fear came upon every
so-ul; and many wonders an&lt;l
signs were done through the
a p os tl es . •tnd all who be· I
lieved were together and had
all tiiinfJs in common.-Acts
2:43, 44.
'
Coura~e

. .

is what you find
lacking m most people be. cause courage is constantly
limited by fear, and fear is
possessed by most people
and possibly by all pe.ople,
- David Sarnoff. electrical
e ngineer.

" So whatever you wish
that men would do to you, do

so to them for this is the law
and the prophet s' ' -Matthew 2:12.
We have committed the

Golden Rule to memory, let
us now commit it to life..Edwin Markham, poet

They feed on the sin of
my people; they are greedy
tor their iniquity. And it
shall be like people, like
priest; I will punish them
for their ways, and requite
them for their deeds.- Hosea 4:8, 9.
It is a funny thing about
life; if you refuse to accept
anything but the best you
very often get it- Somerset
Maugham. author.

•

EDirORIAL

Onus on Driver to
Make Roads Safer
A traffic expert from Ohio State University says that
the driver should be made more responsible for safety
on the roads.
That statement is not as obvious as it sounds . Blaming
the driver for the traffic safety problems is not currently
the vogue. "It is highly unpopular to emphasize the
driver's incompetence ," says Helmut Engleman, an associate professor of mechanical engineering who heads
the Ohio State Highway Accident Research Team .
The federal government's current auto safety P.rograms are "trying to soft-pedal the driver's respons1bil·
ity," in favor of developing various safety devices such
as the air bag, says Engelman, whose team is com.
pleting the final report on a two-year traffic safety study
for the U.S. Department of Transportation.
The investigation of 60 accidents, he says, will show
that the causes of most were poor judgment of risk,
driver incompetence, inattention to driving, drunkenness
and poor vehicle condition .
Engelman makes several comments and recommenda·
lions.
·
• New approaches to driver training should be studied.
"It is well to talk about emergency handling but there
is no opportunity to really do it," I"! says .
• Since it is " almost impossible" to get a drunken
driving conviction in an accident case , the present "implied consent" law on drunken driving should be rewritten. Engleman urges that specific consent for )!n
alcohol test be required of the driver when he applies
for a license.
• Road signs and warnings should be improved. A
paucity of clear signs and an overabundance of inadequate ones leads to driver confusion.
• Trucks larger than those now on the roads should
not be permitted. Engelman believes that no car- large
or small-now stands a chance if involved with a collision with a heavy truck .
• Seat belts , the best form of safety protection, should
be worn , but worn properly . If seat belts are allowed to
ride over the hip bone they can pinch the intestines
against the spine in a collision and cause severe injury.
A major finding of the study, according to Engelman,
is that serious "out-of-control" accidents do not usually
result in head-on collisions. Instead, cars are likely to
slide in such a way that impact will be made from the
side or the rear. This linding is one key to the engineer's
criticism of proposed federal air bag requirements for
1974 cars.
Air bags, he notes, are effective only in direct frontal
collision- a type of accident that occurs mainly at low
driving speeds.
"The air bag is a potential hazard. It will blow out the
windows as it blows up and then throw you out of the
car unless you are situated in exactly the right place ,"
Engelman contends .
·
Dozens of studies have been performed on air bags .
It is not likely that in the near future any decisions will
be reached. But Engelman's statement that "the driver
has to assume some responsibility for keeping himself
alive, " is one that should be drummed into the heads of
new drivers as well as veterans.
We've heard it a thousand times, but "defensive driving," will be the key to traffic safety until what we now
call the automobile is obsolete.

Business Image
Gets Black Eye
A r~ent Harris Survey of popular attitudes toward business has received a lot of attention .

For instance, the number of Americans giving busine ss
high maru for " bringing better quality products to people" has slip~ fr om a high of 75 per cent recorded m a
similar poll m 1966 to a low of 46 per cent today . There
has been a corresponding rise in negative feelings among
customers.
Back in 1966, by an overwhelming 73 per cent to 22 per
cent, the public praised business for " offering young people a chance to 8et ahead." Now , by 50 per cent to 40 per
cent, they criticize it for just the opposite reason.
By a score of 45 per· cent to 36 per cent, most people do
not feel that business "allows people to use their full creative abilities." Five years before, business received
credit for doing just that by 62 per cent to 25 per cent.
Where in 1966 the public felt, by a thumping 75 per cent
to 12 per cent, that business had been a real help in eliminating economic depressions, " by 1971 attitudes had so
changed that by 45 per cent to 36 per cent most Americans
think business is no longer even a factor in dealing with a
depression .
·
Clearly, says Harris, public opinion about business has
been strongl.y tempered by the hard times people feel thev
have been through in recent months. But compounding
the problem are rising fublic expectations regarding the
soclal responsibilities o b"siness.
And therein may lie an as-yet-untold tale.
It is no coincidence that this decline in public confidence
in bll5iness has coincided with the appearance and prolif·
eration of consumer advocates, environmental champion~
and others who have been slaying corporate dragons right ·
aad left.
Flve years of constant harping on what's wrong with ·
business, and little about what's right with it, have left . ·
their (!lark.
·

·

By Helen and Sue Bottel

:t
~

BAN THE BEAUTY CONTF.'!TS?
Dear Helen and Sue:
The Student Affairs Committee of our College has voted to
withdraw student support from future Homecoming Queen and
other festival queen contests. They are traditions in our town and
I am sure that most of the college.students still want these contests to continue.
However, the Women's liberation group (of about 40) persuaded the committee that campus queen contests are "meat
shows" and morally degrading to women.
Seems to me this should be up to the majority of students on
campus, not a smaU Student Affairs Committee. (Yes, members
are elected by "popular vote," but very few people bother to vote
- perhaps one-tenth of all registered students. Therefore they
don't •represent us.)
As for so-called beauty contests being "degrading," why is it
bad to award girls for popularity? Alter all, awards are made in
other fields - scholastic, athletic , scientific.
Do you, Helen and Sue, consider that queen or beauty contests
put down women?- COlLEGE STUDENT
Dear Student:
Let's put it this way: Many professions which draw women
(and men too) reqoire attractiveness, outgoing personalities, the
"cool" that comes from public appearances. Many beauty queens
(actually, they're popularity queens) have gone on to careers in
acting, advertising, modeling and maybe these can also be put
down as ''meat show" jobs but the pay is great, they require
brains as well as looks, and they offer self-esteem which is what
Women's Uberationists push hardest, right?
We think queen contests are pleasant traditions for high
schools and colleges. If they are to be eliminated, then it should be
by popular vote, not by edict of the Student Council. True, they
don't generate wild enthusiasm as they did in past years (nor do
national or worldwide "beauty" contests), but they're still a
welcome change from all that "life is real life is earnest" tenslon
that envelops campuses these days.
(Okay, Uberationists, strike us dead!) - HELEN AND SUE
NOTE FROM HELEN: Occurs to me that if only one-tenth of
all registered students bother to vote in campos elections, then
the others haven't much cause for complaint on how student af.
fairs are run. They've already defaulted.
NOTE FROM SUE: Why doesn't "lib" concentrate on IM·
PORTANT issues, and leave queen contests to those who enjoy
them?
Dear Rap :
This is for "A Friend of the Fair Sex" who implied that
women's dress and actions invite rape, etc.
I had to recheck the date on the paper! I couldn't believe that
letter: it sounded like "Friend" just stepped out of the 1950s.
This is 1971, Sweetie : smarten up! If every girl who wore
hotpants got raped, I'd startfeeling sorry for the rapists.
No one "invades" bars any more. That's left to John Wayne
and old westerns. People walk right up civilly (leaving their
harpoons at the side, of course), and girls aren't "asking for it"'
when they stop for a drink.
As for bringing crime under control (by dress regulations,
and malting bars off~imits to females), gals got raped when they
wore ten crinolines and two corsets. It just took a little longer,
that's all. On the other hand, Eve had no trouble, and ahe only
wore a fig leaf.
People belong only wbere they want to belong. If they want~
stay at home, that's cool, but I'm not tbe cookie-baking little
ho!Jlebody that "Friend" seems to want all women ~ be. Ac·
tually, I'm 15, so I can't go into bars yet, but I defend the right of
older girls to do as they please. - NOT ACHINA DOLL

DEVOTED TO.TH E
· M"EIGS-MASON AREA

CI4E5TER L. TAfiNEI:tiLL ,

.
Jane Gleklen. Nick and Jane are art dealers.
carl Reiner's ducking fUms and TV next
spring Ill direct a''Tough to Get Help" on Bdwy

Euc.ld.
. ROBERT HOEFI.ICH ,

BY JACK O'BRL\!11
WIFE TAKES A STAND
FOR MUSKIE
NEW yORK (KFS) - Sen. Ed Muskle's ... Every winebibber's dream: the French
wife, a yoga fan, refused Ill poae for a magulne champagne area now has one cask -largest In
standing on her head ... Morton Downey's otay the world - that holds the equivalent of 200,000
after the gallstone operaUon at Palm Beach's bottles ... Wotta 91rimmlng PQOl for Gleason and
Good Samaritan Hospital's gravel.plt ... Rose Delli Martin! ... Eastside detectives nabbed an
Kennedy's autoblog went Ill Doubleday for obllcene pbooe caller who boasted he knows 600
$1,525,000- without&amp; Une on paper ... Doorman IIWI!bers from memory ... How chic! Socialite
at a Sinatra midtoWn luu)gout tried Ill make It ~lbbler Phllllp Van Renaselaer used a 14-brat
lllugh for fellow we know who parked near the cricket to IIUIDillon a walter at Ma Pomme.
WUIIam Manchester (who wrote the Kendoor; ambled over menacingly with a muaclepal and promlaed Ill do ma:vDem -and suddenly nedy-lome that cauaed all the publlahlng conwas looking down the mouth of a pollee 38: It was nlpUons a few shrugsago) paid a $506.69 fine for
a tough detective simply driving bis own wife keeping a book ("Six Pla)'ll of Clifford Odeta")
home ... Labor mediator Ted Kheel always has he borrowed :19 years ago from the U. of Mass.·
admired his youthful facade: untU thlll week · Amherst Ubrary. Oh Debt, where Is thy sting ! ...
w)len he became a grandpop via Bob and Slirley DetecUves took a final browse through the upper
Kheel; now he can quit holdlbg In bis twnmy.
Eastside •partment house wherein the Wylie girl
Goodwill Indu.stries gets the finest con- was murdered. It's being torn down ... Illlch:
tributions of the 111UiUal: thlllweek, a &lt;llerokee John Carradlne at Gobbler's Notch restaurant
language newspaper dated 1877 •.. Mubamrnad said he'U play a plastic surgeon In the "Richard"
All and Joe Louis plan a personal appearance · flick who chqes the pldzz of a paUent to that of
lllur of S. Africa ... Joe Namath's flicb bllven't Pres. Nlxoo's.
Slelley Winters told Red Baroo · owner
scored but fannEr UCLA All-American quarterback Mille Frankovich thinks Bdwy. Joe's &lt;llarles Ober she'll spend Olrlstmas In Rome
ready finally Ill cash In with the (rOper celluloid with their daughter and ex.!Juaband VIttorio
red-dogging ... ColumlU pl'Cillises on a stack of GU11118n ... Inflation: Sixth Ave. shoe shop
old Sam ~iegel Rl¥1!1' Kwai Ollcars that bis (between 58th and 59thSta.) gets $1 lor a shine ...
"Nicholas &amp; Alexandra" will be nominated in Jack Haley Jr. and Jill St. John are having one
devil of a Iotta fun ... His Arlstotlean pappy
five categories.
Great Olympics berea Jesse Owens Is at thought Alexander Onassis, 23, and Baroness
Michael Reese Hospital with pneumonia. His 9th Thyssen, 38, had chilled It, but they're still close
attack ... After dladalnlng ever learning Ill drive as Siamese twins ... "The Godfather" 111m bn't
a car, Ruth Gordon finally did at tile age ol '15 for even ready lor ra-eviewing (about springtime)
her "Harold &amp; Maude" flick ... Doris Lilly and Marlo Puzo already Is working on the sequeL
Michael Tolan's already dickering for the lead.
ParlJ.bound Jean Seberg doesn't think much
of Jane Fonda's off-ecreen riot act. Sle's against
the Vlet war, too (aren't we all?) but likes lt
played less sensationally, "more discreet" ...
Rex
Harrison's 9011 Noel's now directing a
"Some Uke It Hot" fllm ... The Vanessa
Redl(rave-Franco
Nero
playing-house touring troupe of "Father of the Bride" with Don
relationship Is off (he's papa ~ her chlld)-IIe Arneche top-billed ... "Juicy Miss l.iJcy's" on E.
didn't stay at Vanessa's mansion this London 49th St. is a tiny shop you'd suspect might
trip and anyway Van's been dating actor squeeze you a neat glass of orangeade, but the
Timothy Dalllln, 23 ... The NBC deejay Ted juice Is just mod.fashions ... The Salvador Dati
Browns have an AP"U stork date ... Fames artist bust of JFK to be exhibited at the JFK Cultural
Andrew Wyeth ("Christina's World" etc.) has a Center in Washington later will be sold for
spring wedding date -his son Nicholas will wed $15,000, Sal hopes.
.,

City Ed!lor
Publ ished d .. lly

•
excepf
Salurday by )he Ohio Va)ley

Publlshlno Company , 111
court St ., Pomerov •. Ohio,
.t5769 . Business Office Phone
992·2156, Editorial PhOnt 992 .

The wind and the ocean
had a quarrel, but he who
paid the price was the sailor
in the boat.

Subs cript i on rates : De ·
' livered by carrier where
avalleble 50 Cents per week ;
By Motor Route where carrier
serv ice not avpllable : One
month S1.75 . By mail In Ohio
: and w. Va ., One year $14 .00 .
: Six months $7 .25 . Three
months S-4 .50 . Subscr iption
· price includes Sunday T1mes .J
; Sentinel .

·---=--

-Jamil M. Baroody, Saudi
A r a b i a's ambassador to
the U.N. , 9uoting an Arab
proverb' after Russian and
Red Chinese delegates ex·
changed verbal-insults.

.,
At first I started writing
'.'the applicant" and all that
Jargon, but I soon gave that
up and just wrote "1." They
knew what I meant.
-Mrs. Persis S. Widerman,

For Rent or Sale
LONG BOTTOM - S room .
house and bath , furnace .
Phone 98S-3529.
12-S-30tc

For Sale

COMPLETE Kent Drum Trap
Set - Wl(). Inquire at City
Loan or phone 992-2289.
12-8-6tp
SHEER-ED
white
Pine
Christmas trees. $3.50 and up.
Swap Shop, 30S N. 2nd,
Middleport.
12·8-31c

--'------

500 H &amp; N Leghorn pullets. 20

weeks old, ready to lay.
Modern Poullry, 399 W. Main
St ., Pomeroy , Ohio. Phone
992-2164.
12-8-Jtc

MEN'S WORK ·unltorms, Boy's
and girl's school clothing.
Jeffers Clothing Store, Rock
. Spri ngs Rd., going toward
fairgrounds .

69-year-old Queens, N.Y. ,
widow, who successfully
argued a complicated Social Security law case
against the U.S. government in federal court.

The contention that the
( Vietnam 1 war is immora·l is
widely accepted as fact .. .
But while the war may be
many things, it is not im·
moral. It may even turn out
to be one of the most moral
conflicts in history because
?f our reasons for becominl'
mvolved, the terrible sacrifices and in the fact that
three presidents have repeatedly affirmed our com·
mitment in the face of enor·
mous opposition.
- L. James· Binder editor of

"Army" magazirle.

I think there's nothing
more t r a g i c. to education
than turning out students
wh~ understand all about
their culture but nothing
about making a living.
-Rob~rt

EAST
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SOUTH (D)
.AKQ
¥Q3

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North~South

West
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

North
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6¥

..

12-Htc

Four games are on tap this
weekend in the Southern Valley
Athletic Conference where
three teams, Symmes Valley,
Eastern and North Galli&amp; share
the top spot in the standings.
Friday night, Coach Jim
Foster's North Gallia Pirates
1 will host Coach Paul Dillon's
Hannan Trace Wildcats.
North Gallia owns victories
over Southern and Southwestern. Hannan Trace has lost
to Symmes Valley and Eastern.
The Pirates are anchored by
6-5 senior center, Arthur Clark,
who had a perfect 18 for 18 field
goals Tuesday night against the
Highlanders. That needless to
say, has to be some sort of
record in prep basketball.
Hannan Trace, eyeing a big
upset, has been led offensively
by Keith Swain, 5-10 senior
guard, and J:ohn Lusher, 6-0
sophomore forward . The
Wildcats have good height in IH
sophomore Don Wells and 6-5
junior Mike Caldwell.
Coach Wayne White's
Symmes Valley Vikings 4.0 in
all games and J..O in the SVAC
will host Coach Richard
Hamilton's Southw estern
Highlanders.
The Vikings have been paced
offensively by Danny Wllson, 511 senior, Phil Robinson, 5-9
junior guard and big Keith
Roach, 6-0 senior center. Roach
doesn't score much but is

rugged under the boards. Southwestern has had its problems
this season. The Highlanders
are ().4 ,
Saturday night, Eastern's
Eagles coached by Bill Phillips
will seek their fifth straight
victory over Coach Jim
Arledge 's Kyger Creek Bob·
cats.
Eastern has defeated South·

vulnerable

East South
It
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

3.

4N.T.
SN.T.
7N.T.

Four Meigs Junior High basketball team schedules, 8th
grade, 8th grade B, 7-88 combined, ahd 7A-7B combined were
announced today by Head Coach Marvin McKelvey who is
assisted by Chuck Downie, Chuck Bartels and Hick VanMatre.
DATE
Dec. 9
Dec. 13
Dec. 15
Dec. 16
Dec. 20
Dec, 21
Jan. 5
Jan. 10
Jan. 12
Jan: 13
Jan. 19
Jan. 20
Jan . 20
Jan. 25
Jan. 26
Jan. 27
Jan. 31
Feb. 1
Feb. 3
Feb. 7
Feb. 10

EQr_Sale.
Aluminum
,. l6" Jt 23~ ~".1109

Sheets
·usED OFFSET
HAVE
MANY us'Es

-2W

Opening lead-• I
B)' Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

''Curiouser and curiouser,''
Alice. "I keep get·

t~ought

ling better hands all the
time. Maybe there aren't
any bad hands for me in
Wonderland."
Alice decided to open one
diamond rather than two no·
trump. She was sure there
would be further bidding. No
one plays one bids in Wonderland. Alice lost no time
getting to seven no-trump,
after finding her partner
held all the missing aces
and kings.
Alice could only count 12
top tricks. but she was sure
that the 13th would develop.
She won the spade lead
and ran off four clubs to dis-

Daily Sentinel

4

Roufe 689, ·

phQ11e Wllesville, 669-3785.
9-3-tfc

A-Bid th,.. no-trump. Your

,.rtner can't be tryinr for a - - :.- - - - -- slam, ~ince three clubs was not S 1NG E R automatic sewing
a forctng bid.
machine. Like new, In

TODAY'S QUESTION

"Think stripes
will ever
come back?"
Economical reliable
oil heat Is here to
stay. For quality oil
and reliable service

speed automatic

chards , State

P.M. Team
5:00
8A
5:30
8A
· 4:30
7-l!B
5:30
8A
4:30
7A-7B
5:30
BA.
6:00
8A
4:30
7-88
4:30
7A-7B
6:00
8A
4:00
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one of the defensive end spots
and also give receiver Ed Marshall and linebacker Doug Ad·
ams, both first-year men, some
playing time.

arm.

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The queen was correct. A changer, separate controls.
diamond lead would break Balance $64.10. Use our
up the final squeeze, but we budget lerms. Call 992-708S.
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CINCINNATI (UP[)- Cincinnati Bengals veteran quarterback Virgil Carter rriay see little action Sunday against the
Pitlsburgh Steelers because of
a sore wrist on his throwing

card a diamond from dumalor s1.oo
my. Then she cashed the
last two top spades and
noted that East showed out
I
on the second one. Three
rounds of hearts carne next
and Alice was in a dummy
J
which now consisted of a
111 CourtS!.
low spade, heart and diaPomeroy, Ohio
mond, while she held ace· 1.-------'--'-.:..__king-eight of diamonds .
West had to hold on to a E:ARL Y Amer ican slereo-radio
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Opp.
Net-York
Athens
Racine
Gallipolis
KygerCr.
Fed-Hock.
Belpre
Wellston
KygerCr .
Pt. Pl.
Wahama
Jackson
Jackson
Fed-Hock .
Racine
Nel-Vork
Athens
Wellston
Gallipolis
Belpre
Pt. Pleasant

Carter Has Sore Wrist

PLATE~

diamond."

western, Hannan Trace,
Southern and Federal-Hocking.
Dennis Eichinger, 6-3 senior
center; Bob Caldwell, 5-11
senior guard, and Alan Duvall,
6-1 junior forward, have been
the mainstays in the Eastern
attack.
Kyger Creek is 1·2 on the
year. The Bobcats were
defeated by Southern Tuesday

Schedules Set Up

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Carter injured his right wrist
during last weekend's game
against Cleveland and has
thrown very little this week in
practice seS.!Iions.
Coach Paul Brown said
x-rays show no fracture, but
"the wrist is tender and we
don't know how much work
he 'll be able to do."
If the wrist doesn't come
around by this weekend, Brown
probably will use rookie Ken
Anderson more than he had anticipated.
Rookie safety Neil Craig will
definitely miss the remaining
two games of the season.
Craig Is hospitalized with a
bruised kidney and Brown said
"we're going to play it safe
with him."
"We don't want to take any
chances with his kidney problem/' he said.
The coach expects to start
rookie lineman Ken Johnson at

College Basketba I! Re1ull'i. .
By United Press !nlernitiihiAI
Marshall lot St. Peter's 71 ·
Wisconsin 92 DePauw 69
Fa !rfie!d 16 Connecticut 69
Air Force 87 Concordia !Mil 73
Vermont 78 Norwich 69
Sprngf!d 110 Worcester Tech 75
Mrs Hrvy 93 W. Va St. S4
Dar!mouth 86 Harvard 68
Wlch. St . 70 Colorado 55
S.C. St. 102 Voorhees 94
Shaw SO N.C. Centra! 4S(ot)
E. Tenn 68 Richmond 66
Lane Col! 86 Belhune-Cokmn 85
Wilkes 105 Elizabethlwn 86
Defiance 100 Albion I Mich.) 81
Navy 86 Johns Hopkins 57
Loyola (Md.)83 American 81
Cen. Mich. 89 Ball St. 83
Ind . Cenlral80 Oak. City 71
Virginia 78 Maryland 57
Bridgeport 100 Kgs. Pl. 75
Providence 76 Buffalo sa
Brown 72 Yale 68
Louisville 88 Dayton 60
Niagara II LaSalle 10
1!! . St. 99 Soeast Mo. 72
Ill inois 89 North Park 78
Mass. 93 Holy Cross 82 (ot)
Wake Forest IS W&amp;M 60
Kans. Sl. 87 Texas 60
Okla City 102 SMU 87
Kansas 88 Notre Dame72

-~~~~~---~·--------------------.

'

The first game of organized baseball took place at
Hoboken, N.J. , in 1846. The
New York Nine defeated the
New York Knickerbockers,
23 to 1.

BERRl'S WORlD

17 10 .630
14 12 .538
13 14 .481
11 15 .423

...
2'12

4
5'12

Central Division

,Baltimore
Cleveland

W. L. Pet. GB
11 15 .423 ...
9 18 .333 2°12

Cincinnati

8 17

.320 2112

Atlanta

8 17 .320 2'/'

Western Conference
Midwest Division
W. L. Pet. GB

Milwaukee
Chicago
Phoenix
Detroit

2.(

18

4 .857 ...
7 .720 4'17

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Games tonight include Otterbein at Rollins (Fla. ) Capital at
Wilmington, Muskingum at
Marietta , Carnegie-Mellon at
Oberlin, West Virginia State at
Central State, Malone at Thiel
(Pa .), Shaw (N.C. ) at Steubenville, and Walsh at Northwood
(Ind .).
Dayton. oiaving at Louisville,
was down _by one P!'int at
the half, 32-31 , but the Cardinals broke it open in the second half. Guard Jim Price of
Louisville led all scorers with
26 points. Dayton is now 1-2.
Defiance scored 67 points in
the second half to gain its
fourth victory without a loss.
Bill Kramer led the Yellow
Jackets with 20 points .
Thomas More trailed by five

at the half, but went ahead
shortly after the break and led
the rest of the way. Ken Burgei of Findlay, now 2-1, led all
scorers with 25 points.
Urbana extended its season
record to 6-0 with the win over
Rio Grande. John Plunkett scored 24 points for the winners.
Harry Hairston was high for
the Redmen with 19.
John Carroll finally took the
undisputed lead with 13:51 left
in the game and steadily pulled
away to hand Case its third defeat of the season against no
wins. Carroll is now 1-2.
Sophomore George Gervin
scored a spectacular 44 points
to pace Eastern Michigan as its
first win of the season. Cleveland State, now I-.'!, was led by
Matt Taylor with 33 poinls.

66 Atlanta at Phoenix

Excelsior Oil Co.
59 Los Angeles at Golden State
!Only games scheduled)
Spencer" s Ma rkef
58
Domigan Sohio
44
ABA Standings
Gibbs Grocery
43 By United Press lnternationa I
G. &amp;J. Auto Parts
42
East
High Team 3-Games - first,
W. L. Pet. GB
Domlgan Sohio 2188 ; second, Kentucky
18 7 .720
Newell Sunoco 2138; lhird, Virginia
16 11 .593 3
Gibbs Grocery 2131 .
Floridians
12 15 .444 I
High Team Game - first, Pills burgh
12 16 .429 7lf2
Domigan Sohio 776; second. New York
10 i5 .400 8
Spencer's Markel, 771 ; third, Carolina
9 17 .346 91f2
Gibbs Grocery 152.
West
High Ind. J Games - first .
W. L. Pet. GB
Myrile Sisson 416; second, Utah
20 8 .714
Margare! Folrod 411; third, Indiana
S 10 .600 3'1'
Sandy Korn 410.
Memphis
12 14 .462 7
High Ind. Game - lirsf, Dallas
11 16 .407 a•;,
Runell Moyer 192 ; second
Denver
10 16 .385 9
Fra.nkie Hunnel 169 ; third:
.
Wednesday's Results
Lucolle Vaughan 160.
Kentucky 121 Carolina Ill
Utah 116 Dallas 97
Memphis 109 Denver 91
OH 10 COLLEGE
!Only games schedule)
BASKETBALL SCORES
Thursday's Games
By United Press tnlernationa! New York
vs . Virginia
Defiance 100 Albion !Mich.) 81 At Richmond, Va.
Thomas More 1Ky .) 78 Findlay Kentucky at Indiana
74
Dallas at Piffsburgh
John Carroll 87 Case Western
(Only games scheduled)
Reserve 10
.
AHL Standings
Eastern Michigan 118 Cleveland
State 98
By United Press lnternationa I
East
Akron 84 Ashland 64
W. L. T. Pis
Urbana 112 Rio Grande 87
Boston
19 3 2 40
LO&lt;Jisvl!le 88 Dayton 60
Nova Scotia
13 8 6 J2
Akron 84 Ashland 64
Springfield
9 9 5 23
Urbana 112 Rio Grande 81
I 12 " 6 20
Providence
Lou isville 88 Dayton 60
8 16 3 19
Rochester
Wesl
W. L. T. Pis
Wednesday's Fight Results
14 6 4 32
By United Press International Hershey
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UP!) - Cleveland
11 9 5 27
II 13 4 26
Amando Vasquez, 171, Mexico, Baltimore
10 12 3 2J
stopped Cipriano Hernandez, Richmond
7 12 7 21
170, San Diego, Cali!. (5); Cincinnati
6 15 3 15
Marco Gerardo, 151, San Diego. Tidewater
Wednesday's Results
knocked out Bobby Carrillo. 144.
Tidewater a·Cleveland 4
Los Angeles 131.

NHL Standings

By United Press International

East

New York
Montreal

W. L. T Pis
17 . ' 5 39

16
18
10

Boston

Toronto
Detroit
Vancouver

3
5

2

8

8

s
4
s

15
8 16
6 16

8

Buftalo

West

CRICKETEER SUITS

6 38

38
28
21
20
17

AND

Sport Coats

W. L. T Pis

Minnesota

Chicago
Pittsburgh
St. Louis
California
Philadelphia

Los Angeies

18

6

5

22

3

39

17 7 3 31
I0 15 3 2J
9 14 4 22
9 16 4 22
8 12 5 21

Wednesday's Resulls

1 11

Montreal .4 Detroit 2

SAVINGS

Toronto 3 Minnesota I
New York 2 Chicago 2
California 1 Pittsburgh 1
Boston 5 Los Angeles 3
(Only games scheduled I

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Thursday's Games

New York at Philadelphia
Chicago at Buffalo
I Only games scheduled)

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B~ACK

&amp;

the Sports.
By Chet Tannehill

Desk

No. 7ll6

'No. 7205

3!8" DRill
ch Waverly, defending Southeastern Ohio Conference basketball
· .inlplons, comes' ~. Rock Springs Friday evening to test the
Meigs Marauders in tne """no league game for both. When' the
firing is completed around 9:30p.m. we'll know more about the
Marauders who have put together two victories In three starts,
one of the triumpha being over Jackson, 62-511, the other a sharp
display of expertise In defeating neighbor Wahama, 74-110.
"Wahama," said its supporters, "is not that bad."
The Marauders' loss was to a good South Point club, 81~.
Waverly is 1-1, having licked Wellston 98-52 and lost to Portsmouth West 86-69. How good Is Portsmouth West (to get a tine on
Coach Carroll Hawhee's crew)? can't tell yet. Portsmouth West,
still undefeated, has knocked over two good teams since opening
against Waverly.
Waverly area scribes were enthusiastic about the Tigers in
November
before they
the serious
shooting
began.ended
"As good, or better
said, when
Waverly
22-2, losing to
than
last year,"
Athens In conference play and in the regional finals to Maysville

TillS BASKETBALL EDITION .OF Coach Jim Osborne's in
GAIJS.Iand is a good one. I was able to catch them Tuesday
evening In their somewhllt-of.a-surprlse 77-119 destruction of an
aggressive Chesapeake club (coached by Lewis D'Antoni, father
of a couple ·Of fine MarshaU U players past and present of the
same name).
Osborn~. 1()-10 in his first year at Gallipolis, and 5-15 last
season, has to be Uking what he bas seen so far on the court.
Already 3-0, with a shocking upset 64-50 victory over Atbens last
week, he andhlsboyshave to be on Cloud 10, No. not being quite
high enough.
At least one boy on thlll Big Blue team Is somewhat unbellevable. I refer to Jimmy Noe, the spindly legged almost
skinny junior who simply doesn't look up Ill the rugged game of
basketball.
· -Tuesday night he got 15 points, Including five field goals hit
from 14 to 16 feet out off the quickest release I've seen since Matt
Dlliorj drew on Deadeye Dan.
nie six boys I saw play TUesday have learned excellent In·
dividual and collective defensive techniques. Rod Ferguson was
already a fine ball player; GU Price, the &amp;-3.,. sophomore, is
!ll'eatly lm(X'Oved over last year. Larry $lowden's shooting eye
halll't dimmed a bit and Rick Boo.ne ·and Kev !Jieeta, the quar.
terbacbwho divided tlme In the fifth posltlon, gave nothing away
to Cheiapeake.
&gt; • .
· OII!Ome's ~ ·f!lart is the, belt of any GARS team slncejhe , .
18116-58 aeuon when the famous John Mlllhooe was· a senior.
'lhat'sll y.-sl
Thla could be a fluke openlnj, some say. Certainly. But.no
coach In the country would hesitale to trade theirs for Osborne's.
lw for the.relit of the schedule: My gueu is thla will be a sweet ·
for Mr. Olbome.

19.99 W' COMPACT DRILL-19.99

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4-9·11(: '
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Nationally lOth-ranked Ashland College was dumped
mightily Wednesday night as
Akron marked up its 21st
straight home win.
Akron led 33-29 at the half
and won going away, 84-64. It
was the Zips' third season win
without a loss. Ashland, rated
lOth this week in the UPI poll
of small college teams, is now

weal Bowling

tachments, cordwlnder and .o

paint spray. Used but in like •
new condition . Pay 534.45 ;
cash or budget plan available. •
Phone 992-5641.
12-1·61c ••

By United Press International

All five Akron starters scored
in double figures , led by Len
Pacific Division
W. L. Pet. GB Paul with 20. Earl Hill was
Los Angeles
24 3 .889 ... high for Ashland with 19.
Seattle
18 11 .621 7
In other college basketball
Golden Slate 16 1J .552 9
Houston
6 22 .214 18112 games, Louisville outclassed
Portland
5 22 .185 19 Dayton 88-60; Defiance downed
Wednesday's Results
Albion (Mich.) 100-81; Thomas
Baltimore 115 Pori! and 97
More (Ky.) got by Findlay 78Boston 126 Cleveland 107
Phila115 Cincinnali 109
74; John Carroll whipped Case
Los Angeles 125 Houston 120
lf/-70; Eastern Michigan beat
I Only games scheduled)
MORNING GLORIES
Cleveland State 118-98, and UrThursday's Games
STANDINGS
TEAM
PTS. Chicago at Detroil
bana put down Rio Grande 112-

state finals two years ago in what today would be Class AAA, Phil
Miller and Rick Eblin. Also gone are two other starters, but
Waverly had easy victories frequently last year so several of the
bo)'ll listed below got extensive seasoning for the season now
underway.
Waverly's sure candidate for all~eague honors Is Mike Oyer,
now a junior, and team captain. He was a starter last year at &amp;-3
and was still growing. Hawhee will field four other starters from
this field, Don Fairchild, Butch Workman, Bill Malloy, Doug
Pfeifer, Don Gullion, Toby Helton, John Sloemaker, Larry
Swindler. Dusty Mickey, Dave Salyers, Laurens Steger, Bill
Malloy, Scott Young, Charles Jenkins and Don Jenkins.

12-5-61c

Akron Rips Ashland

14 11 .560 81!7
10 15 .400 121f7

You will see an experienced, big-enough, and talented Tiger
team here Friday. Hawhee lost two boys who led Waverly to the

L. Ewig l eben,
now?
prestdent of Ferris State
College in Big Rapids
Mich., s~ying colleges and
umversthes · s h o u l d be
DACHSHUND puppies, A.K.C. ,
training more auto mestandard 6 weeks, 25 chamchanics
and
fewer
English
·
pions In 5 generations. Will.
.
hold for Christmas. Phone
literature majors.
992-6469.

night. If the Bobcats pull an
upset, they must cut down their
'turnovers and fouls . Kyger
Creek has not defeated Eastern
in basketball since the 1967-68
season.
. North Gallia will travel to
Eastern of Pike County in the
only other Saturday game. The
Pirates should get their first
real big test of the season.

Boston
New York
P!oi!adelphia
Buffalo

W. L. Pel. GB

(86-62).

beautiful walnut cabinet ,
makes design slltches, zigzags, buttonholes, blind hems,
etc. Will sell for $8l. Cal!
Ravenswood 273-9893 alter 5
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Your partner contines to
four diamondS. What do you do

NBA Standings
By U"ited Press International
Eastern Conference
Atlantac Division

1

!lSI.

--

Pro Standings

'Cats Seek Upset Over

. INTERESTOP

!

.

3- The llillly sentlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. 9, 1971

The Daily Sentinel ,

SUNBE;:AM and DOMINION

·CH.··

HARDWARE

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,,
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"Everything In Ha~dware" ·
· on Main St. In Pomeroy

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The Family Jewels

rvoic;--,Jo-;g-u~~d;ay-l

THOUGHTS

And fear came upon every
so-ul; and many wonders an&lt;l
signs were done through the
a p os tl es . •tnd all who be· I
lieved were together and had
all tiiinfJs in common.-Acts
2:43, 44.
'
Coura~e

. .

is what you find
lacking m most people be. cause courage is constantly
limited by fear, and fear is
possessed by most people
and possibly by all pe.ople,
- David Sarnoff. electrical
e ngineer.

" So whatever you wish
that men would do to you, do

so to them for this is the law
and the prophet s' ' -Matthew 2:12.
We have committed the

Golden Rule to memory, let
us now commit it to life..Edwin Markham, poet

They feed on the sin of
my people; they are greedy
tor their iniquity. And it
shall be like people, like
priest; I will punish them
for their ways, and requite
them for their deeds.- Hosea 4:8, 9.
It is a funny thing about
life; if you refuse to accept
anything but the best you
very often get it- Somerset
Maugham. author.

•

EDirORIAL

Onus on Driver to
Make Roads Safer
A traffic expert from Ohio State University says that
the driver should be made more responsible for safety
on the roads.
That statement is not as obvious as it sounds . Blaming
the driver for the traffic safety problems is not currently
the vogue. "It is highly unpopular to emphasize the
driver's incompetence ," says Helmut Engleman, an associate professor of mechanical engineering who heads
the Ohio State Highway Accident Research Team .
The federal government's current auto safety P.rograms are "trying to soft-pedal the driver's respons1bil·
ity," in favor of developing various safety devices such
as the air bag, says Engelman, whose team is com.
pleting the final report on a two-year traffic safety study
for the U.S. Department of Transportation.
The investigation of 60 accidents, he says, will show
that the causes of most were poor judgment of risk,
driver incompetence, inattention to driving, drunkenness
and poor vehicle condition .
Engelman makes several comments and recommenda·
lions.
·
• New approaches to driver training should be studied.
"It is well to talk about emergency handling but there
is no opportunity to really do it," I"! says .
• Since it is " almost impossible" to get a drunken
driving conviction in an accident case , the present "implied consent" law on drunken driving should be rewritten. Engleman urges that specific consent for )!n
alcohol test be required of the driver when he applies
for a license.
• Road signs and warnings should be improved. A
paucity of clear signs and an overabundance of inadequate ones leads to driver confusion.
• Trucks larger than those now on the roads should
not be permitted. Engelman believes that no car- large
or small-now stands a chance if involved with a collision with a heavy truck .
• Seat belts , the best form of safety protection, should
be worn , but worn properly . If seat belts are allowed to
ride over the hip bone they can pinch the intestines
against the spine in a collision and cause severe injury.
A major finding of the study, according to Engelman,
is that serious "out-of-control" accidents do not usually
result in head-on collisions. Instead, cars are likely to
slide in such a way that impact will be made from the
side or the rear. This linding is one key to the engineer's
criticism of proposed federal air bag requirements for
1974 cars.
Air bags, he notes, are effective only in direct frontal
collision- a type of accident that occurs mainly at low
driving speeds.
"The air bag is a potential hazard. It will blow out the
windows as it blows up and then throw you out of the
car unless you are situated in exactly the right place ,"
Engelman contends .
·
Dozens of studies have been performed on air bags .
It is not likely that in the near future any decisions will
be reached. But Engelman's statement that "the driver
has to assume some responsibility for keeping himself
alive, " is one that should be drummed into the heads of
new drivers as well as veterans.
We've heard it a thousand times, but "defensive driving," will be the key to traffic safety until what we now
call the automobile is obsolete.

Business Image
Gets Black Eye
A r~ent Harris Survey of popular attitudes toward business has received a lot of attention .

For instance, the number of Americans giving busine ss
high maru for " bringing better quality products to people" has slip~ fr om a high of 75 per cent recorded m a
similar poll m 1966 to a low of 46 per cent today . There
has been a corresponding rise in negative feelings among
customers.
Back in 1966, by an overwhelming 73 per cent to 22 per
cent, the public praised business for " offering young people a chance to 8et ahead." Now , by 50 per cent to 40 per
cent, they criticize it for just the opposite reason.
By a score of 45 per· cent to 36 per cent, most people do
not feel that business "allows people to use their full creative abilities." Five years before, business received
credit for doing just that by 62 per cent to 25 per cent.
Where in 1966 the public felt, by a thumping 75 per cent
to 12 per cent, that business had been a real help in eliminating economic depressions, " by 1971 attitudes had so
changed that by 45 per cent to 36 per cent most Americans
think business is no longer even a factor in dealing with a
depression .
·
Clearly, says Harris, public opinion about business has
been strongl.y tempered by the hard times people feel thev
have been through in recent months. But compounding
the problem are rising fublic expectations regarding the
soclal responsibilities o b"siness.
And therein may lie an as-yet-untold tale.
It is no coincidence that this decline in public confidence
in bll5iness has coincided with the appearance and prolif·
eration of consumer advocates, environmental champion~
and others who have been slaying corporate dragons right ·
aad left.
Flve years of constant harping on what's wrong with ·
business, and little about what's right with it, have left . ·
their (!lark.
·

·

By Helen and Sue Bottel

:t
~

BAN THE BEAUTY CONTF.'!TS?
Dear Helen and Sue:
The Student Affairs Committee of our College has voted to
withdraw student support from future Homecoming Queen and
other festival queen contests. They are traditions in our town and
I am sure that most of the college.students still want these contests to continue.
However, the Women's liberation group (of about 40) persuaded the committee that campus queen contests are "meat
shows" and morally degrading to women.
Seems to me this should be up to the majority of students on
campus, not a smaU Student Affairs Committee. (Yes, members
are elected by "popular vote," but very few people bother to vote
- perhaps one-tenth of all registered students. Therefore they
don't •represent us.)
As for so-called beauty contests being "degrading," why is it
bad to award girls for popularity? Alter all, awards are made in
other fields - scholastic, athletic , scientific.
Do you, Helen and Sue, consider that queen or beauty contests
put down women?- COlLEGE STUDENT
Dear Student:
Let's put it this way: Many professions which draw women
(and men too) reqoire attractiveness, outgoing personalities, the
"cool" that comes from public appearances. Many beauty queens
(actually, they're popularity queens) have gone on to careers in
acting, advertising, modeling and maybe these can also be put
down as ''meat show" jobs but the pay is great, they require
brains as well as looks, and they offer self-esteem which is what
Women's Uberationists push hardest, right?
We think queen contests are pleasant traditions for high
schools and colleges. If they are to be eliminated, then it should be
by popular vote, not by edict of the Student Council. True, they
don't generate wild enthusiasm as they did in past years (nor do
national or worldwide "beauty" contests), but they're still a
welcome change from all that "life is real life is earnest" tenslon
that envelops campuses these days.
(Okay, Uberationists, strike us dead!) - HELEN AND SUE
NOTE FROM HELEN: Occurs to me that if only one-tenth of
all registered students bother to vote in campos elections, then
the others haven't much cause for complaint on how student af.
fairs are run. They've already defaulted.
NOTE FROM SUE: Why doesn't "lib" concentrate on IM·
PORTANT issues, and leave queen contests to those who enjoy
them?
Dear Rap :
This is for "A Friend of the Fair Sex" who implied that
women's dress and actions invite rape, etc.
I had to recheck the date on the paper! I couldn't believe that
letter: it sounded like "Friend" just stepped out of the 1950s.
This is 1971, Sweetie : smarten up! If every girl who wore
hotpants got raped, I'd startfeeling sorry for the rapists.
No one "invades" bars any more. That's left to John Wayne
and old westerns. People walk right up civilly (leaving their
harpoons at the side, of course), and girls aren't "asking for it"'
when they stop for a drink.
As for bringing crime under control (by dress regulations,
and malting bars off~imits to females), gals got raped when they
wore ten crinolines and two corsets. It just took a little longer,
that's all. On the other hand, Eve had no trouble, and ahe only
wore a fig leaf.
People belong only wbere they want to belong. If they want~
stay at home, that's cool, but I'm not tbe cookie-baking little
ho!Jlebody that "Friend" seems to want all women ~ be. Ac·
tually, I'm 15, so I can't go into bars yet, but I defend the right of
older girls to do as they please. - NOT ACHINA DOLL

DEVOTED TO.TH E
· M"EIGS-MASON AREA

CI4E5TER L. TAfiNEI:tiLL ,

.
Jane Gleklen. Nick and Jane are art dealers.
carl Reiner's ducking fUms and TV next
spring Ill direct a''Tough to Get Help" on Bdwy

Euc.ld.
. ROBERT HOEFI.ICH ,

BY JACK O'BRL\!11
WIFE TAKES A STAND
FOR MUSKIE
NEW yORK (KFS) - Sen. Ed Muskle's ... Every winebibber's dream: the French
wife, a yoga fan, refused Ill poae for a magulne champagne area now has one cask -largest In
standing on her head ... Morton Downey's otay the world - that holds the equivalent of 200,000
after the gallstone operaUon at Palm Beach's bottles ... Wotta 91rimmlng PQOl for Gleason and
Good Samaritan Hospital's gravel.plt ... Rose Delli Martin! ... Eastside detectives nabbed an
Kennedy's autoblog went Ill Doubleday for obllcene pbooe caller who boasted he knows 600
$1,525,000- without&amp; Une on paper ... Doorman IIWI!bers from memory ... How chic! Socialite
at a Sinatra midtoWn luu)gout tried Ill make It ~lbbler Phllllp Van Renaselaer used a 14-brat
lllugh for fellow we know who parked near the cricket to IIUIDillon a walter at Ma Pomme.
WUIIam Manchester (who wrote the Kendoor; ambled over menacingly with a muaclepal and promlaed Ill do ma:vDem -and suddenly nedy-lome that cauaed all the publlahlng conwas looking down the mouth of a pollee 38: It was nlpUons a few shrugsago) paid a $506.69 fine for
a tough detective simply driving bis own wife keeping a book ("Six Pla)'ll of Clifford Odeta")
home ... Labor mediator Ted Kheel always has he borrowed :19 years ago from the U. of Mass.·
admired his youthful facade: untU thlll week · Amherst Ubrary. Oh Debt, where Is thy sting ! ...
w)len he became a grandpop via Bob and Slirley DetecUves took a final browse through the upper
Kheel; now he can quit holdlbg In bis twnmy.
Eastside •partment house wherein the Wylie girl
Goodwill Indu.stries gets the finest con- was murdered. It's being torn down ... Illlch:
tributions of the 111UiUal: thlllweek, a &lt;llerokee John Carradlne at Gobbler's Notch restaurant
language newspaper dated 1877 •.. Mubamrnad said he'U play a plastic surgeon In the "Richard"
All and Joe Louis plan a personal appearance · flick who chqes the pldzz of a paUent to that of
lllur of S. Africa ... Joe Namath's flicb bllven't Pres. Nlxoo's.
Slelley Winters told Red Baroo · owner
scored but fannEr UCLA All-American quarterback Mille Frankovich thinks Bdwy. Joe's &lt;llarles Ober she'll spend Olrlstmas In Rome
ready finally Ill cash In with the (rOper celluloid with their daughter and ex.!Juaband VIttorio
red-dogging ... ColumlU pl'Cillises on a stack of GU11118n ... Inflation: Sixth Ave. shoe shop
old Sam ~iegel Rl¥1!1' Kwai Ollcars that bis (between 58th and 59thSta.) gets $1 lor a shine ...
"Nicholas &amp; Alexandra" will be nominated in Jack Haley Jr. and Jill St. John are having one
devil of a Iotta fun ... His Arlstotlean pappy
five categories.
Great Olympics berea Jesse Owens Is at thought Alexander Onassis, 23, and Baroness
Michael Reese Hospital with pneumonia. His 9th Thyssen, 38, had chilled It, but they're still close
attack ... After dladalnlng ever learning Ill drive as Siamese twins ... "The Godfather" 111m bn't
a car, Ruth Gordon finally did at tile age ol '15 for even ready lor ra-eviewing (about springtime)
her "Harold &amp; Maude" flick ... Doris Lilly and Marlo Puzo already Is working on the sequeL
Michael Tolan's already dickering for the lead.
ParlJ.bound Jean Seberg doesn't think much
of Jane Fonda's off-ecreen riot act. Sle's against
the Vlet war, too (aren't we all?) but likes lt
played less sensationally, "more discreet" ...
Rex
Harrison's 9011 Noel's now directing a
"Some Uke It Hot" fllm ... The Vanessa
Redl(rave-Franco
Nero
playing-house touring troupe of "Father of the Bride" with Don
relationship Is off (he's papa ~ her chlld)-IIe Arneche top-billed ... "Juicy Miss l.iJcy's" on E.
didn't stay at Vanessa's mansion this London 49th St. is a tiny shop you'd suspect might
trip and anyway Van's been dating actor squeeze you a neat glass of orangeade, but the
Timothy Dalllln, 23 ... The NBC deejay Ted juice Is just mod.fashions ... The Salvador Dati
Browns have an AP"U stork date ... Fames artist bust of JFK to be exhibited at the JFK Cultural
Andrew Wyeth ("Christina's World" etc.) has a Center in Washington later will be sold for
spring wedding date -his son Nicholas will wed $15,000, Sal hopes.
.,

City Ed!lor
Publ ished d .. lly

•
excepf
Salurday by )he Ohio Va)ley

Publlshlno Company , 111
court St ., Pomerov •. Ohio,
.t5769 . Business Office Phone
992·2156, Editorial PhOnt 992 .

The wind and the ocean
had a quarrel, but he who
paid the price was the sailor
in the boat.

Subs cript i on rates : De ·
' livered by carrier where
avalleble 50 Cents per week ;
By Motor Route where carrier
serv ice not avpllable : One
month S1.75 . By mail In Ohio
: and w. Va ., One year $14 .00 .
: Six months $7 .25 . Three
months S-4 .50 . Subscr iption
· price includes Sunday T1mes .J
; Sentinel .

·---=--

-Jamil M. Baroody, Saudi
A r a b i a's ambassador to
the U.N. , 9uoting an Arab
proverb' after Russian and
Red Chinese delegates ex·
changed verbal-insults.

.,
At first I started writing
'.'the applicant" and all that
Jargon, but I soon gave that
up and just wrote "1." They
knew what I meant.
-Mrs. Persis S. Widerman,

For Rent or Sale
LONG BOTTOM - S room .
house and bath , furnace .
Phone 98S-3529.
12-S-30tc

For Sale

COMPLETE Kent Drum Trap
Set - Wl(). Inquire at City
Loan or phone 992-2289.
12-8-6tp
SHEER-ED
white
Pine
Christmas trees. $3.50 and up.
Swap Shop, 30S N. 2nd,
Middleport.
12·8-31c

--'------

500 H &amp; N Leghorn pullets. 20

weeks old, ready to lay.
Modern Poullry, 399 W. Main
St ., Pomeroy , Ohio. Phone
992-2164.
12-8-Jtc

MEN'S WORK ·unltorms, Boy's
and girl's school clothing.
Jeffers Clothing Store, Rock
. Spri ngs Rd., going toward
fairgrounds .

69-year-old Queens, N.Y. ,
widow, who successfully
argued a complicated Social Security law case
against the U.S. government in federal court.

The contention that the
( Vietnam 1 war is immora·l is
widely accepted as fact .. .
But while the war may be
many things, it is not im·
moral. It may even turn out
to be one of the most moral
conflicts in history because
?f our reasons for becominl'
mvolved, the terrible sacrifices and in the fact that
three presidents have repeatedly affirmed our com·
mitment in the face of enor·
mous opposition.
- L. James· Binder editor of

"Army" magazirle.

I think there's nothing
more t r a g i c. to education
than turning out students
wh~ understand all about
their culture but nothing
about making a living.
-Rob~rt

EAST
.6
¥Jl09752
tQI05

.863
SOUTH (D)
.AKQ
¥Q3

t AK87
.QJ94
North~South

West
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

North
I¥
4•
S¥
6¥

..

12-Htc

Four games are on tap this
weekend in the Southern Valley
Athletic Conference where
three teams, Symmes Valley,
Eastern and North Galli&amp; share
the top spot in the standings.
Friday night, Coach Jim
Foster's North Gallia Pirates
1 will host Coach Paul Dillon's
Hannan Trace Wildcats.
North Gallia owns victories
over Southern and Southwestern. Hannan Trace has lost
to Symmes Valley and Eastern.
The Pirates are anchored by
6-5 senior center, Arthur Clark,
who had a perfect 18 for 18 field
goals Tuesday night against the
Highlanders. That needless to
say, has to be some sort of
record in prep basketball.
Hannan Trace, eyeing a big
upset, has been led offensively
by Keith Swain, 5-10 senior
guard, and J:ohn Lusher, 6-0
sophomore forward . The
Wildcats have good height in IH
sophomore Don Wells and 6-5
junior Mike Caldwell.
Coach Wayne White's
Symmes Valley Vikings 4.0 in
all games and J..O in the SVAC
will host Coach Richard
Hamilton's Southw estern
Highlanders.
The Vikings have been paced
offensively by Danny Wllson, 511 senior, Phil Robinson, 5-9
junior guard and big Keith
Roach, 6-0 senior center. Roach
doesn't score much but is

rugged under the boards. Southwestern has had its problems
this season. The Highlanders
are ().4 ,
Saturday night, Eastern's
Eagles coached by Bill Phillips
will seek their fifth straight
victory over Coach Jim
Arledge 's Kyger Creek Bob·
cats.
Eastern has defeated South·

vulnerable

East South
It
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

3.

4N.T.
SN.T.
7N.T.

Four Meigs Junior High basketball team schedules, 8th
grade, 8th grade B, 7-88 combined, ahd 7A-7B combined were
announced today by Head Coach Marvin McKelvey who is
assisted by Chuck Downie, Chuck Bartels and Hick VanMatre.
DATE
Dec. 9
Dec. 13
Dec. 15
Dec. 16
Dec. 20
Dec, 21
Jan. 5
Jan. 10
Jan. 12
Jan: 13
Jan. 19
Jan. 20
Jan . 20
Jan. 25
Jan. 26
Jan. 27
Jan. 31
Feb. 1
Feb. 3
Feb. 7
Feb. 10

EQr_Sale.
Aluminum
,. l6" Jt 23~ ~".1109

Sheets
·usED OFFSET
HAVE
MANY us'Es

-2W

Opening lead-• I
B)' Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

''Curiouser and curiouser,''
Alice. "I keep get·

t~ought

ling better hands all the
time. Maybe there aren't
any bad hands for me in
Wonderland."
Alice decided to open one
diamond rather than two no·
trump. She was sure there
would be further bidding. No
one plays one bids in Wonderland. Alice lost no time
getting to seven no-trump,
after finding her partner
held all the missing aces
and kings.
Alice could only count 12
top tricks. but she was sure
that the 13th would develop.
She won the spade lead
and ran off four clubs to dis-

Daily Sentinel

4

Roufe 689, ·

phQ11e Wllesville, 669-3785.
9-3-tfc

A-Bid th,.. no-trump. Your

,.rtner can't be tryinr for a - - :.- - - - -- slam, ~ince three clubs was not S 1NG E R automatic sewing
a forctng bid.
machine. Like new, In

TODAY'S QUESTION

"Think stripes
will ever
come back?"
Economical reliable
oil heat Is here to
stay. For quality oil
and reliable service

speed automatic

chards , State

P.M. Team
5:00
8A
5:30
8A
· 4:30
7-l!B
5:30
8A
4:30
7A-7B
5:30
BA.
6:00
8A
4:30
7-88
4:30
7A-7B
6:00
8A
4:00
7-8B
5:00
8A
5:30
8B
5:30
8A
4:30
7-8B
5;30
8A
5:30
8A ,
4:30
7-8B
5:30
8A
5:30
8A
5:30
8A

one of the defensive end spots
and also give receiver Ed Marshall and linebacker Doug Ad·
ams, both first-year men, some
playing time.

arm.

·I

The queen was correct. A changer, separate controls.
diamond lead would break Balance $64.10. Use our
up the final squeeze, but we budget lerms. Call 992-708S.
12-7·6tc
agree with Alice that the - - - - - - -remedy was rather drastic. NEW 1971 Zlg .zag sewing
(NEWSPAPER ENTliPRISE. ASSN .)
machine In original factory
carlon . l!g -zag to make
buHonholes, sew oo buHons.
monograms, and make fancy
des!gnswlth luslthe twist of a
·The bidding hl5 hetn:
single-dial. Left In !ay.awa V:
and never been used. WI!! sef!;
w.. t North East South for
only S47 cash, or credit
Dble
1¥
terms
available. Phone 992·
2¥
3,fo
Pass
3t
5641.
Pass
?
Pass 3¥
12-7-61c '
You, South, hold:
.AQ4¥KUAQ1085.KI09 APPLES
Fitzpatrick OrWhat do you do now?

Place
home
home
away
away
home
away
horne
home
away
away
away
home
home
home
home
away
away
away
home
away
home

CINCINNATI (UP[)- Cincinnati Bengals veteran quarterback Virgil Carter rriay see little action Sunday against the
Pitlsburgh Steelers because of
a sore wrist on his throwing

card a diamond from dumalor s1.oo
my. Then she cashed the
last two top spades and
noted that East showed out
I
on the second one. Three
rounds of hearts carne next
and Alice was in a dummy
J
which now consisted of a
111 CourtS!.
low spade, heart and diaPomeroy, Ohio
mond, while she held ace· 1.-------'--'-.:..__king-eight of diamonds .
West had to hold on to a E:ARL Y Amer ican slereo-radio
top spade and East to a top combination, AM-FM radio. 4
heart . Neither could hold speaker sound system. 4
three diamonds and Alice speed automatic changer .
] · ed th
d 1
Balance 578..40 . Use our
c aim.
e gran s am.
budget terms. Call 992-708S.
The red queen who sat
12.7.6tc
East pointed at her partner - - - - - - - - and yelled " Off with his MODERN walnut slereo-radio
head! He should have led a combination, 4 speaker sound
system,

Opp.
Net-York
Athens
Racine
Gallipolis
KygerCr.
Fed-Hock.
Belpre
Wellston
KygerCr .
Pt. Pl.
Wahama
Jackson
Jackson
Fed-Hock .
Racine
Nel-Vork
Athens
Wellston
Gallipolis
Belpre
Pt. Pleasant

Carter Has Sore Wrist

PLATE~

diamond."

western, Hannan Trace,
Southern and Federal-Hocking.
Dennis Eichinger, 6-3 senior
center; Bob Caldwell, 5-11
senior guard, and Alan Duvall,
6-1 junior forward, have been
the mainstays in the Eastern
attack.
Kyger Creek is 1·2 on the
year. The Bobcats were
defeated by Southern Tuesday

Schedules Set Up

The

WEST
.JI0972
¥8
tJ963

4o7S2

\

---~~...- .... . -

.5'/Jf/J"/:Y YOUR NFtOS

Alice Pulls 3-Way Squeeze
9

I

-- L

WIN AT BRIDGE

NOR Til
.8S4J
¥AK64
U2
"'AK!O

Uln t e t

St ., New York City, New. York .

'

TIMELY QUOTES

•

, SecOnd class postege peld et
, Pomeroy. Ohio .
Netlonal advertlslno
' representetlve
8()tflnelli ·
· Ga.ll.agher, Inc ., 1'2 Eest .U nd

•~

YOU'll
· Like
Our

Service.

Carter injured his right wrist
during last weekend's game
against Cleveland and has
thrown very little this week in
practice seS.!Iions.
Coach Paul Brown said
x-rays show no fracture, but
"the wrist is tender and we
don't know how much work
he 'll be able to do."
If the wrist doesn't come
around by this weekend, Brown
probably will use rookie Ken
Anderson more than he had anticipated.
Rookie safety Neil Craig will
definitely miss the remaining
two games of the season.
Craig Is hospitalized with a
bruised kidney and Brown said
"we're going to play it safe
with him."
"We don't want to take any
chances with his kidney problem/' he said.
The coach expects to start
rookie lineman Ken Johnson at

College Basketba I! Re1ull'i. .
By United Press !nlernitiihiAI
Marshall lot St. Peter's 71 ·
Wisconsin 92 DePauw 69
Fa !rfie!d 16 Connecticut 69
Air Force 87 Concordia !Mil 73
Vermont 78 Norwich 69
Sprngf!d 110 Worcester Tech 75
Mrs Hrvy 93 W. Va St. S4
Dar!mouth 86 Harvard 68
Wlch. St . 70 Colorado 55
S.C. St. 102 Voorhees 94
Shaw SO N.C. Centra! 4S(ot)
E. Tenn 68 Richmond 66
Lane Col! 86 Belhune-Cokmn 85
Wilkes 105 Elizabethlwn 86
Defiance 100 Albion I Mich.) 81
Navy 86 Johns Hopkins 57
Loyola (Md.)83 American 81
Cen. Mich. 89 Ball St. 83
Ind . Cenlral80 Oak. City 71
Virginia 78 Maryland 57
Bridgeport 100 Kgs. Pl. 75
Providence 76 Buffalo sa
Brown 72 Yale 68
Louisville 88 Dayton 60
Niagara II LaSalle 10
1!! . St. 99 Soeast Mo. 72
Ill inois 89 North Park 78
Mass. 93 Holy Cross 82 (ot)
Wake Forest IS W&amp;M 60
Kans. Sl. 87 Texas 60
Okla City 102 SMU 87
Kansas 88 Notre Dame72

-~~~~~---~·--------------------.

'

The first game of organized baseball took place at
Hoboken, N.J. , in 1846. The
New York Nine defeated the
New York Knickerbockers,
23 to 1.

BERRl'S WORlD

17 10 .630
14 12 .538
13 14 .481
11 15 .423

...
2'12

4
5'12

Central Division

,Baltimore
Cleveland

W. L. Pet. GB
11 15 .423 ...
9 18 .333 2°12

Cincinnati

8 17

.320 2112

Atlanta

8 17 .320 2'/'

Western Conference
Midwest Division
W. L. Pet. GB

Milwaukee
Chicago
Phoenix
Detroit

2.(

18

4 .857 ...
7 .720 4'17

•

-----===--

ELECTROLUX VACUUM:
Cleaner complete with at.;

.

-------JUST laken In 1971 mode! Dial.:
A-Malic

l!g -Zag

sewing•

machine . This machine;
makes buitonholes, fancy •

designs, etc. Pay balance due ·
of $28.48. Phone 992-7085.
:
12-7-6tc•

.
.

Park view Kennels, Phone 992: ~

5443.

•

"

8-15-tfc :

r···--~···~
1
Christmas Special!

1

I.!

2HU. n.

REG. $309.00
SAVE $60.0(

I
I
"I think we're got an ertra-attention-getting campaign
here lor you, sir. Women's lib will positively consider the
whole series ol oJs os Jegroding to women!"

.

.

~~i~1
•

020A V

l.~

•

------=z;z•
'

.

STIH~

Chain Saw IIlith Built·ln Shock Absorbers

~

... _ . ..· tOOM•~b
.

AI~New

The. World's
. First &amp; Only Mini.Si::e

I SALE '249
·B

IF YOU ARE ONE OF THE MANY,
WHO WILL BUY AatAIN SAW tHIS
atRISTMAS · · • You'll Want The

1~

- ~ · .atEST FREEZER ~~

~:

..

• ~•

1-1.

Newell Sunoco

If/.

Games tonight include Otterbein at Rollins (Fla. ) Capital at
Wilmington, Muskingum at
Marietta , Carnegie-Mellon at
Oberlin, West Virginia State at
Central State, Malone at Thiel
(Pa .), Shaw (N.C. ) at Steubenville, and Walsh at Northwood
(Ind .).
Dayton. oiaving at Louisville,
was down _by one P!'int at
the half, 32-31 , but the Cardinals broke it open in the second half. Guard Jim Price of
Louisville led all scorers with
26 points. Dayton is now 1-2.
Defiance scored 67 points in
the second half to gain its
fourth victory without a loss.
Bill Kramer led the Yellow
Jackets with 20 points .
Thomas More trailed by five

at the half, but went ahead
shortly after the break and led
the rest of the way. Ken Burgei of Findlay, now 2-1, led all
scorers with 25 points.
Urbana extended its season
record to 6-0 with the win over
Rio Grande. John Plunkett scored 24 points for the winners.
Harry Hairston was high for
the Redmen with 19.
John Carroll finally took the
undisputed lead with 13:51 left
in the game and steadily pulled
away to hand Case its third defeat of the season against no
wins. Carroll is now 1-2.
Sophomore George Gervin
scored a spectacular 44 points
to pace Eastern Michigan as its
first win of the season. Cleveland State, now I-.'!, was led by
Matt Taylor with 33 poinls.

66 Atlanta at Phoenix

Excelsior Oil Co.
59 Los Angeles at Golden State
!Only games scheduled)
Spencer" s Ma rkef
58
Domigan Sohio
44
ABA Standings
Gibbs Grocery
43 By United Press lnternationa I
G. &amp;J. Auto Parts
42
East
High Team 3-Games - first,
W. L. Pet. GB
Domlgan Sohio 2188 ; second, Kentucky
18 7 .720
Newell Sunoco 2138; lhird, Virginia
16 11 .593 3
Gibbs Grocery 2131 .
Floridians
12 15 .444 I
High Team Game - first, Pills burgh
12 16 .429 7lf2
Domigan Sohio 776; second. New York
10 i5 .400 8
Spencer's Markel, 771 ; third, Carolina
9 17 .346 91f2
Gibbs Grocery 152.
West
High Ind. J Games - first .
W. L. Pet. GB
Myrile Sisson 416; second, Utah
20 8 .714
Margare! Folrod 411; third, Indiana
S 10 .600 3'1'
Sandy Korn 410.
Memphis
12 14 .462 7
High Ind. Game - lirsf, Dallas
11 16 .407 a•;,
Runell Moyer 192 ; second
Denver
10 16 .385 9
Fra.nkie Hunnel 169 ; third:
.
Wednesday's Results
Lucolle Vaughan 160.
Kentucky 121 Carolina Ill
Utah 116 Dallas 97
Memphis 109 Denver 91
OH 10 COLLEGE
!Only games schedule)
BASKETBALL SCORES
Thursday's Games
By United Press tnlernationa! New York
vs . Virginia
Defiance 100 Albion !Mich.) 81 At Richmond, Va.
Thomas More 1Ky .) 78 Findlay Kentucky at Indiana
74
Dallas at Piffsburgh
John Carroll 87 Case Western
(Only games scheduled)
Reserve 10
.
AHL Standings
Eastern Michigan 118 Cleveland
State 98
By United Press lnternationa I
East
Akron 84 Ashland 64
W. L. T. Pis
Urbana 112 Rio Grande 87
Boston
19 3 2 40
LO&lt;Jisvl!le 88 Dayton 60
Nova Scotia
13 8 6 J2
Akron 84 Ashland 64
Springfield
9 9 5 23
Urbana 112 Rio Grande 81
I 12 " 6 20
Providence
Lou isville 88 Dayton 60
8 16 3 19
Rochester
Wesl
W. L. T. Pis
Wednesday's Fight Results
14 6 4 32
By United Press International Hershey
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UP!) - Cleveland
11 9 5 27
II 13 4 26
Amando Vasquez, 171, Mexico, Baltimore
10 12 3 2J
stopped Cipriano Hernandez, Richmond
7 12 7 21
170, San Diego, Cali!. (5); Cincinnati
6 15 3 15
Marco Gerardo, 151, San Diego. Tidewater
Wednesday's Results
knocked out Bobby Carrillo. 144.
Tidewater a·Cleveland 4
Los Angeles 131.

NHL Standings

By United Press International

East

New York
Montreal

W. L. T Pis
17 . ' 5 39

16
18
10

Boston

Toronto
Detroit
Vancouver

3
5

2

8

8

s
4
s

15
8 16
6 16

8

Buftalo

West

CRICKETEER SUITS

6 38

38
28
21
20
17

AND

Sport Coats

W. L. T Pis

Minnesota

Chicago
Pittsburgh
St. Louis
California
Philadelphia

Los Angeies

18

6

5

22

3

39

17 7 3 31
I0 15 3 2J
9 14 4 22
9 16 4 22
8 12 5 21

Wednesday's Resulls

1 11

Montreal .4 Detroit 2

SAVINGS

Toronto 3 Minnesota I
New York 2 Chicago 2
California 1 Pittsburgh 1
Boston 5 Los Angeles 3
(Only games scheduled I

20% OFF

Thursday's Games

New York at Philadelphia
Chicago at Buffalo
I Only games scheduled)

Point Pleasant, W.Va.

504 Main St.

Always Buy
the best • .••

B~ACK

&amp;

the Sports.
By Chet Tannehill

Desk

No. 7ll6

'No. 7205

3!8" DRill
ch Waverly, defending Southeastern Ohio Conference basketball
· .inlplons, comes' ~. Rock Springs Friday evening to test the
Meigs Marauders in tne """no league game for both. When' the
firing is completed around 9:30p.m. we'll know more about the
Marauders who have put together two victories In three starts,
one of the triumpha being over Jackson, 62-511, the other a sharp
display of expertise In defeating neighbor Wahama, 74-110.
"Wahama," said its supporters, "is not that bad."
The Marauders' loss was to a good South Point club, 81~.
Waverly is 1-1, having licked Wellston 98-52 and lost to Portsmouth West 86-69. How good Is Portsmouth West (to get a tine on
Coach Carroll Hawhee's crew)? can't tell yet. Portsmouth West,
still undefeated, has knocked over two good teams since opening
against Waverly.
Waverly area scribes were enthusiastic about the Tigers in
November
before they
the serious
shooting
began.ended
"As good, or better
said, when
Waverly
22-2, losing to
than
last year,"
Athens In conference play and in the regional finals to Maysville

TillS BASKETBALL EDITION .OF Coach Jim Osborne's in
GAIJS.Iand is a good one. I was able to catch them Tuesday
evening In their somewhllt-of.a-surprlse 77-119 destruction of an
aggressive Chesapeake club (coached by Lewis D'Antoni, father
of a couple ·Of fine MarshaU U players past and present of the
same name).
Osborn~. 1()-10 in his first year at Gallipolis, and 5-15 last
season, has to be Uking what he bas seen so far on the court.
Already 3-0, with a shocking upset 64-50 victory over Atbens last
week, he andhlsboyshave to be on Cloud 10, No. not being quite
high enough.
At least one boy on thlll Big Blue team Is somewhat unbellevable. I refer to Jimmy Noe, the spindly legged almost
skinny junior who simply doesn't look up Ill the rugged game of
basketball.
· -Tuesday night he got 15 points, Including five field goals hit
from 14 to 16 feet out off the quickest release I've seen since Matt
Dlliorj drew on Deadeye Dan.
nie six boys I saw play TUesday have learned excellent In·
dividual and collective defensive techniques. Rod Ferguson was
already a fine ball player; GU Price, the &amp;-3.,. sophomore, is
!ll'eatly lm(X'Oved over last year. Larry $lowden's shooting eye
halll't dimmed a bit and Rick Boo.ne ·and Kev !Jieeta, the quar.
terbacbwho divided tlme In the fifth posltlon, gave nothing away
to Cheiapeake.
&gt; • .
· OII!Ome's ~ ·f!lart is the, belt of any GARS team slncejhe , .
18116-58 aeuon when the famous John Mlllhooe was· a senior.
'lhat'sll y.-sl
Thla could be a fluke openlnj, some say. Certainly. But.no
coach In the country would hesitale to trade theirs for Osborne's.
lw for the.relit of the schedule: My gueu is thla will be a sweet ·
for Mr. Olbome.

19.99 W' COMPACT DRILL-19.99

No. 7412 Dustless

SANDER ASSORnMENT

19.99

No. 7516

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4-9·11(: '
POODLE puppies, Silver Toy '

Nationally lOth-ranked Ashland College was dumped
mightily Wednesday night as
Akron marked up its 21st
straight home win.
Akron led 33-29 at the half
and won going away, 84-64. It
was the Zips' third season win
without a loss. Ashland, rated
lOth this week in the UPI poll
of small college teams, is now

weal Bowling

tachments, cordwlnder and .o

paint spray. Used but in like •
new condition . Pay 534.45 ;
cash or budget plan available. •
Phone 992-5641.
12-1·61c ••

By United Press International

All five Akron starters scored
in double figures , led by Len
Pacific Division
W. L. Pet. GB Paul with 20. Earl Hill was
Los Angeles
24 3 .889 ... high for Ashland with 19.
Seattle
18 11 .621 7
In other college basketball
Golden Slate 16 1J .552 9
Houston
6 22 .214 18112 games, Louisville outclassed
Portland
5 22 .185 19 Dayton 88-60; Defiance downed
Wednesday's Results
Albion (Mich.) 100-81; Thomas
Baltimore 115 Pori! and 97
More (Ky.) got by Findlay 78Boston 126 Cleveland 107
Phila115 Cincinnali 109
74; John Carroll whipped Case
Los Angeles 125 Houston 120
lf/-70; Eastern Michigan beat
I Only games scheduled)
MORNING GLORIES
Cleveland State 118-98, and UrThursday's Games
STANDINGS
TEAM
PTS. Chicago at Detroil
bana put down Rio Grande 112-

state finals two years ago in what today would be Class AAA, Phil
Miller and Rick Eblin. Also gone are two other starters, but
Waverly had easy victories frequently last year so several of the
bo)'ll listed below got extensive seasoning for the season now
underway.
Waverly's sure candidate for all~eague honors Is Mike Oyer,
now a junior, and team captain. He was a starter last year at &amp;-3
and was still growing. Hawhee will field four other starters from
this field, Don Fairchild, Butch Workman, Bill Malloy, Doug
Pfeifer, Don Gullion, Toby Helton, John Sloemaker, Larry
Swindler. Dusty Mickey, Dave Salyers, Laurens Steger, Bill
Malloy, Scott Young, Charles Jenkins and Don Jenkins.

12-5-61c

Akron Rips Ashland

14 11 .560 81!7
10 15 .400 121f7

You will see an experienced, big-enough, and talented Tiger
team here Friday. Hawhee lost two boys who led Waverly to the

L. Ewig l eben,
now?
prestdent of Ferris State
College in Big Rapids
Mich., s~ying colleges and
umversthes · s h o u l d be
DACHSHUND puppies, A.K.C. ,
training more auto mestandard 6 weeks, 25 chamchanics
and
fewer
English
·
pions In 5 generations. Will.
.
hold for Christmas. Phone
literature majors.
992-6469.

night. If the Bobcats pull an
upset, they must cut down their
'turnovers and fouls . Kyger
Creek has not defeated Eastern
in basketball since the 1967-68
season.
. North Gallia will travel to
Eastern of Pike County in the
only other Saturday game. The
Pirates should get their first
real big test of the season.

Boston
New York
P!oi!adelphia
Buffalo

W. L. Pel. GB

(86-62).

beautiful walnut cabinet ,
makes design slltches, zigzags, buttonholes, blind hems,
etc. Will sell for $8l. Cal!
Ravenswood 273-9893 alter 5
p.m.
ll -28·tfc

Your partner contines to
four diamondS. What do you do

NBA Standings
By U"ited Press International
Eastern Conference
Atlantac Division

1

!lSI.

--

Pro Standings

'Cats Seek Upset Over

. INTERESTOP

!

.

3- The llillly sentlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. 9, 1971

The Daily Sentinel ,

SUNBE;:AM and DOMINION

·CH.··

HARDWARE

___ ____,

,,
. .

"Everything In Ha~dware" ·
· on Main St. In Pomeroy

..._

•

�'

'
1-TbeDillySenllnei,Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Dec. 9,1971

(:bUd Welfare Tops Pouvior Projects

4- The Dally Sentinel, MlddlelXIrt·Pomeroy, 0 .. dec.9, 1971

Mentor,.Moeller Lads
Top AAA Dream Squad
ppund Chip Harpring, and Brad
COLUMBUS (UP! l - Don 111-0 season.
Otten of Centerville, 6-3, 225.
Loaded With Backs
Martin, a hard running lailback
The guards are Tim Davis of ·
Bell, a second team choice
from Mentor and Steve Niehaus,
Warren
Western Reserve, 5-9,
a quick 265 . pound defensive last year, didn't match his jun·
tackle from Cincinnati Moeller, ior year rushing figures, but the 190, and Elyria's Les Miles, 6-1,
today were named back of the unbeaten Troy team was load- 210, and the center Steve Turnyear and lineman ofthe year to ed with running backs and er of Princeton at 6-3, 195.
Heading the defensive unit is
head the 1971 United Press In· Coach Jim Conard didn't use
a
player who could have been
ternational Class AAA all.Ohio Bell as much.
Voted as the No. I quarter- named to either team, 6-5, 2111football team.
Martin, who gained over 1,800 back, was Bedford's Mike Dau- pound end Scott May of· San·
yards for an 8.6 per carry aver- gherty, a 6-3, 1711-pounder, who dusky . He's joined by Ken And·
age and scored 27 touchdowns, had a tolal offense for the year ler of Lakewood St. Edward, 66, 230.
edged U1ree other outslanding of 2,590 yards.
Teaming with Niehaus at
hit
on
105
of
his
Daugherty
running backs for back of the
173 passing attempts for 1,592 tackle is Troy's Dave Starkey,
year honors.
The voting was so close and yards and 17 touchdowns. He 6-5 230, making the front four
the competition so keen that all also ran the hall 146 times for all at least 6-foot.S in height.
Niehaus, who was voted his
four were named to the first of- another 818 yards and 10 TDs.
Daugherty, who has been lim· team's most valuable player
fensive squad.
Joining Martin are Columbus ed at 4.7 for the 40 yard dash, both last year and this, runs
Eastmoor 's Archie Griffin , is tops in his class of 625 with the 40 in 4.8, extremely fast for
a man 6-5 and 265 pounds.
Troy's Gordon Bell, and rke a 4.0 scholastic mark.
Moeller Coach Gerry Faust
The offensive ends on the first
Maxwell of Elyria.
Niehaus' speed and agility,
says
Griffin, a 5-10, 190 pounder, offense are Moeller's Jim Kelly,
led Eastmoor to the Columbus a glue-fingered 5-10, 175-pound· more than his size and strength,
aty 1.eague championship with er who catches everything in make him difficult to block and
his 156 points and over 1,700 sight, and Doug Stubbs of War- is the reason most Moeller opre n Harding who is being com- ponents ran plays away from
yards rushing .
Maxwell's figures compared pared to former Harding, Ohio him this year. Despite this, Niefavorably with Martin's, as the Slate and pro great Paul War- haus still managed to be involv·
ed in 9!i tackles for the season.
f&gt;.ll, 170 pounder also scored 27 field . Stubbs is 6-2, 175.
touchdowns and picked up more
The offensive tackles are an- He was also used at various
than 1,800 yards in the Pioneer's other Moeller product, 6-5, 235- times as a linebacker and tight

Redmen Drop
112-87 Tilt

Cage Stats
On Page 9

.West Great In Clutch, Lakers Defeat Rockets
By United Press Intematlonal
"Jerry West was just great in
the clutch -as usual."
'ihat was Coach Bill Shar·
man's summation Wednesday
night after the Los Angeles
Lakers beat the Houston
Rockets 125-120 and moved to
within two victories of the
National Basketball Association's all-time mark of 20 in a

row.
The lakers' 18th straight
victory -two behind the 20 in a
row put together by the
Milwaukee Bucks last season ~"»..·~.::.::.~.!.":''~~
increased their season mark to
end.
24-3 and gave them a sevenGuards Usted
game first-place lead over idle
The middle guard on the first Seattle in the NBA's Pacific
defense is 5-lO, 2l(l.pound Ted Division. It was the Lakers'
Kreilick of Fremont Ross, and second closest margin of
the linebackers Lou Williott of victory during the streak.
Youngstown Ursuline, 6-2, 220, "This was by far the toughest
Ken Kuhn of Louisville, 6-2, game of our string," said
210, and Len Sernulka of War- Sharman. "The Rockets are 100
ren Harding.
. per cent improved since our
Roundmg out the defellSive last meeting and seem to be
squad are defensive hacks Den- adapting to Tex Winter's triple
ny Stroud of Canton Lin~oln, 5- post offense. And Jerry West
10, 170, Jeff Bixler of Fmdlay, was just great in the clutch 5-10, 160, and Mike Mavromatis as usual."
of Steubenville, the smallest Gail Goodrich had 42 points
player on either team at 5-9, for the Lakers while Wilt
140.
Chamberlain took only one shot
Tom Balta, who directed War- from the field -a shot he made
ren Harding to its first perfect with 5:26 to go in the third
season ever this year and the period. Elvin Hayes led the
slate Class AAA champtonshtp, Rockets with 31 points.
was a comfortable winner of The Lakers try for No. 19
the coach of the year voting. against ·Golden State tonight
Batla picked up 21 of the 71 and play their next game
votes cast by coaches and against Phoenix at home
sportswriters and broadcasters Friday night.
from around the state, wmnmg The Boston Celtics defeated
over Elyria's Bill Barton who the Cleveland Cavaliers 126-107,
fi nished with 13. Troy's Jim the Baltimore Bullets beat the
Conard finished third with 10. Portland Trail ·Blazers 115-97
Others with more than one
·
vote were Port Clinton's Marc
McClain, Tom Hollman of Greenville, Gerry Faust of Moeller,
Dave Hurst of Sycamore, Charles Shuff of Fremont Ross and
John Rovolo of Parma.

Urbana's Blue Knights, firing regained the lead with 3:30 left .~~--------------~
a sizzling 66 pet. from the floor, in the half on a crip shot by.Tom
finished strong in the second Vance. That made it 411-39.
half to defeat Rio Grande's Urbana was on top to stay.
Redmen 112-87 in a Mid.Ohio After , trailing 51).4.4 during
Conference basketball game in intermission, the Redmen made
Community Center at Urbana one last serious threat. After
Wednesday night. The victory falling behind 54-44 with 19:31
left Urbana in undisputed first left in the game, Bartram,
place in MOC play.
Hairston and Jordan combined
It was Urbana's sixth con- efforts to give the Redmen eight
se&lt;ijitive victory of the 1971-72 straight points. That reduced
caiilpaign. The charges of the Knights: lead to two- 54-52.
Coach John Stanley upped their Urbana began pulling away
MOC mark to 3-0.
after that. When Bernard
The victory snapped Rio's Williams, Rio's top rebounder
three-game winning streak and fouled out with 14:29left in the
left Coach Art Lanham's quintet game (Rio trailed 68-58 at that
with a 4-2 mark. In league play, point) it was all over for the
Rio is 2-1.
Redmen.
A!l five Urbana starters The Redmen will be idle until
finished in double figures in Dec. 20 when they take part in
scoring . Three of the five the West Florida University
Knights scored 20 or more Holiday Tournament.
points.
Next home game for Rio is
Jon Plunkett was tops with 24. Jan.l2, against Lander College.
Terry Anderson finished with Box score of Wednesday's
22, Bill Aikman 20, Mark Todd contest:
19 and Harold Howe 14.
RIO GRANDE (87)- Bentley
The lightning-fast Knights hit 6-1-13 ; HairstonS-3-19 ; Williams
4·1·9: Jordan 6·1·13 ; Bartram 5·
an amazing 66 pet. from the 3-13
: LamberfJ-0.6; Bollinger 2field , sinking 47 of 71 field goal 1.5; Rouse 1·0·2; Harf 2·0·4;
attempts. The home club was Carmichael 1·1-3. TOTALS even hotter at the foul circles, 38·11·87.
URBANA (112) -Aikman 9collecting 18 of 20 charity tosses 2-20; Plunkett 10-04; Anderson
for 90 pet.
10·2·22 ; Todd 7·5-19 ; Howell 6·214;
Miller 0·0·0; Vance 2-2·6:
Rio connected on 38 of 99 shots
Johnson 1·1·3; Bowman 0-0·0;
from the field for a 37.5 pet. At Cu lt 2·0·4. TOTALS 47-18-112.
the foul circles, Rio hit 11 of 15
Halftime Score- Urbana 50,
Rio
44 .
for 73 pet. Rio collected 47
ASSORTED CHOCOLATES
re' lr.unds.
Always a Christmas favor ire .. . creams. nuts,
Harry Hairston paced the
caramels, nou gats, roffeescotch,
fruits,
Redmen with 19 points. Capt.
cnmches and cheW}' cenrers, dipped in finest
Roger Bel !ley, Wray Jordan
dark and milk chocolate.
and Steve Bartram each tallied
13.
lb. $2.()(} 2 lb. $3.95 3 Jb. $5 .90 5 Jb. tU ?"
The first half was a nip-and8 oz. box $1.00
luck affair. Urbana held the
upper hand the first live
minutes of play. Roger Bentley 's twin-pointer put Rio
ahead for the first time, 12-10, at
the H:SO mark. The Redmen
retained the lead for six
minutes, fell behind 27-26 at the
8:30 mark, then regained the
le~d and zoomed to 37-30 lead at
Pius Sales Tax
the 6:21 mark. It was Rio's
biggest lead of the night.
With 6-0 senior guard Mark
Todd finally finding the range,
the Knights stormed back and

GIFrS
FOR

and the Philadelphia 76ers
topped the Cincinn,ti Royals
115-109 in other Wednesday
night games.
John Havlicek's 28 points led
six Celtics who scored in double
figures in an easy victory over
the Cavaliers. The Celtics led
63-46 at halftime and closed out
the victory With a 411-29 fourth
period. Dave Sorenson led the
Cavaliers with 19 points.
. Archie Clark scored 30 points ,
for the Bullets, who rallif11 in
the third period after trailing 53
-25 at halftime. Sidney Wicks
had 24 points and Dale
.Schlueter 20 for the Blazers.
Kevin Loughery scored 11 of
his 20 points in the last free
minutes to clinch the victory
for the 76ers, who dealt the
Royals their fifth straight loss.
The Royals rallied from an
eight-point halftime deficit to
trail by one point with 6:34 to
go but the 76ers drew away .

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COM~IN

WHILE
THEY LAST

first, and then Hocking ,
Wyandotte, Gallia, Erie, and
MiJmi. A special pin presented
to the Meigs Salon was accepted
by Mrs. Welsh, chapeau, and
Mrs. Veda Davis. To date 1,046
membership dues have been
paid towards the goal of 1,746.
Mrs. Martin announced ~he
departementalla marc he to be
held at the Sheraton Gibson
Mrs. Edna Smeltz, part- ·Hotel in Cincinnati, July 22 and
nership chairman, announced '23. Changes in the national
goal salons. Meigs County was constitution were outlined by
Mrs. Reva Cihla, and repor.ts of
the meeting in Houston in
September were given by
several who attended. Mrs.
.
: Violet Aichholz, second
member of the national finance
l • . ~~-""''?"~~-------~~'?"-~~~ conunittee, brought greetings,
THURSDA~ ~~ · • · ' '"' -··- ' , .and Mrs. Myrtle Walker,
WILLING Workers Class, Racine Ia secretaire-eassiere
QUARTERLY MEETING, Enterprise United Methodist gave !;,.!ructions on reports:
Pomeroy Lower Light Church, Church, 7:30 Thursday mght at
Reports were given by Mrs.
Thursday • Friday • Saturday, the ho.me of Mrs. Ed Bowen for Irene Mier on publicity • Evaline
Rev. Ralph Spires speaking, I Christmas party.
Berkley on partnership;
7:30 each evening.
FRIDAY
Marcella Huston, on history,
SACRED HEART Women's
MIDDLEPORT Women's and Catherine Baker on ritual
Club monthly meeting and Christian Temperance Union, and emblems.
Christmas party, 8 tonight, at 7:30p.m. Friday at the home of Color bearers for the
church. It will be preceded by Mrs. Betty Cline.
ritualistic opening were Mrs.
Mass at 7:15. Gift exchange.
Eunie Brinker and Mrs . Julia
POTLUCK DINNER by Rock
MARY SHRINE, White
Springs Grange, 6:30 p.m. Shrine of Jerusalem, 8 p. m.
Thursday at the hall. Meat will Friday at IOOF Hall, Pomeroy
be provided by grange.
for Christmas party, gift exELEANOR CIRCLE, of change.
Heath Methodlst Church, 7:30
p.m. Thursday, at home of Mrs.
SATURDAY
AFTER ·GAME dance
Bernard Fultz. $1 gift exchange.
CHRISTMAS DINNER of Saturday, 9·12 midnight,
High
School
Wildwood Garden Club, 6:30 Wahama
auditorium
following
Wahama
p.m. Thursday, Bowers
Restaurant, Pomeroy, meeting Alumni game. Jays emceeing,
75 cents admission , school
and gift exchange to follow.
CHRISTMAS PARTY, sponsored.
E~stern
Chapter OAPSE,
Friday, 7 p.m. at Tuppers
SUNDAY
Plains Elementary School.
Take covered dish and $1 gift CRUSADE FOR Christ
revival starting Sunday, 7:30 p.
for exchange.
m. at Page~ille Baptist Church,
I
Rev.
Charles
Lusher,
I
evangelist. Public invited.
· UNDERPRMLEGED !am·
'··
lilies register for food baskets at
FOLDING TRAVEL IRON \
Automatic Iron by
Salvation Army headquarters, I
\
Wedemeyer, with cord
to 5 p. m. Sunday at 115 Butset and vinyl case.
\
ternut Ave., Pomeroy.
AC / DC .. JlOV.
'
Pomeroy.

s

to the unit's goal. Mrs.
·Catherine Welsh of the Meigs
Salon presented a trophy to be·
given for the best all-around
publicity scrapbook promoting
the Eight and Forty program,
and Mrs. Martin gave a trophy
to be awarded to the Salon with
the best "tuberculosis program
in the state.

.

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WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT AMATEUR
Gardeners, home of Mrs.
Charles Taunton with Mrs. S. T.
J Smith, Mrs. Roger Morgan,
Mrs. Russell Mills and Mrs.
Jean Moore hostesses for
Christmas party, 8 p. m.
Wednesday. $2 gift exchange
with wrappings to be judged.

The Almanac
By United Press Intematlonal
Today is Thursday, Dec. 9,
the 343rd day of 1971.
The mqon is in its last
quarter.
There are no morning stars.
The evening stars are Saturn,
Venus, Mars, · Jupiter and
Mercury a~d Jupiter.
Those born on "this day are
under the sign of Sagittarius,
English poet John Milton was
bOrn Dec. 9, 1608.
On this day In history :
·In 1793 Noah Webster established the American Minerva, ·
the first daily newspaper in 1~~
New York City.
:· ·
In 1907 Christmas seals were
plAced on sale in the post office .
at Wilmington, Del., to raise
money to fight luberculosis.

Ph. 992-2511

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TUESDAY
OHJO ETA PHI Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, Tuesday,
7:30 p. m. home of Mrs.
Charlotte Taunton. Cultural
program "Music, Drama and
Dance," by Vikki Gloeckner.
Hostesses, Mrs. Taunton, Mrs.
Susan Baer and Mrs. Charlotte
Hanning.

11nd under the tree.

FOR

QiRiSTMAS CARDS
AND
CHRISTMAS
WRAP

MONDAY
RACINE AMERICAN Legion
Auxiliary annual Christmas
dinner party, Roush Drive-In
Restaurant, Letart, W. Va .,
Monday. M;embers meet at 5 p. ,
m. ·at Legion Hall prior to
leaving. $1 gift exchange.
TWIN CITY Shrinettes
C'iu'iBtmas dinner 6:30 p. m.
Monday at Martin Restaurant,
Middleport. $1 gift exchange.
RUTLAND GARDEN Club,
Christmas dinner, 6:30 Monday
at Craw's Steak House, followed
by meeting and gift exchange at
home of Mrs. C. 0. Chapman.
Members reminded to take
table arrangements for the
Athens Mental Health Center.

they're hoping to

GAI·ORE

$5.49

STORE HOURS:
..
Sizes 7.00x14
7.35x14;
"··,,

donations as well as membership dues are ahead of last
year's figures.
Three
trophies
were
presented~ to Mrs . Louise
Goodall, trophy and awards
chairman, to be awarded nex.t
year. Miss Ann Eshelman,
secretary of the American
Legion, gave a membership
trophy to be given to an Eight
and 40 partner collecting the
most dues for her Auxiliary,
based on percentage according

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CHRISTMAS
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loday. MONADEX Is a tiny
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TV RECORD SET

NEW YORK (UP!) - The
Thanksgiving Day game be·
tween Nebraska and Oklahoma .
attracted the largest television
audience ever for a regular·
sea~on college football contest.
The game, televised by ABC, ,
averaged 13.6 million homes
per minute, according to
Nielsen ratings. This surpassed
the 13.3 millio.r average
achieved by Notre DameSouthern California in 1970.

COMFORT ON

LOSE UGLY FAT

less .

the National American Legion
Child Welfare Foundation the
Cystic Fibrosis Foundatio~ ihe
all-partners' project the Ohio
Medicine Fund, 'and the
National Jewish Hospital for
bed.lll!llntenance parties gifts
band
lnstru~ents ' and
medicine for the ~hildren
confined there.
The scholarship program of
the Eight and Forty was
discussed by Mrs Wanda
Tanner who urged Umt each
partner give $1 and that names
of nurses interested in furthering their education in cystic
fibrosis and tuberculosis care
be submitted for consideration
of a ·scholarship. Mrs. Martin
contributed 125 during the
r 1 ~RD,l·
meetingandMrs.Tannernoted
a M\'s. Helen Lore!, youth that the total to date is $178.
nd . ,children chairman, Mrs. Ella Mae Beaverson,
asked. for donations to finance chairman, noted that all

DRESS YOUR MAN WITH GOOD LOOKS AND

---------

weigh

Projects for !972, several
Involving child welfare work,
were planned during the
wee~e~d pouvior of Eight and
~:~~~ld a~the N_~~House i~
,.. .. us an prest · over by
Mrs~ Mary Martin, Pomeroy,
departemental chapeau.
Among the projects adopted
;:s the. endowment of a ~at
De :Nallonal Je":"tsh Hospttal m
nve~. Thts mvolved $1,000
and Will be the 21st bed .to be
endowed by Ohio. A gift of $100
~w~rds the project was conib~ted by the Meigs County
Salo~, and Mrs. Martin donated
$25. The local salon also conlributed an afghan made by
Ruth&gt;H..Tpornto?, Pomero!•. to
~u.OO ma spectal fund ralSmg

Open Evenings

SPECIAL

ROCKETS TO BE SOLD
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (UPIJ
'-General Manager Bob Sabourin of the Jacksonville Rockets
said Wednesday the team's
board of directors has voted
unanimously to sell the Eastern
Hockey League club.
.The Rockets have a 6-20-1
record and are mlr.ed..lo t/le

Hysell, Meigs Salon. The ad·
dress of welcome was given by
Catherine Heacock, chapeau of
Franklin County Salon 333; with
Mrs. Mier giving the response.
Mrs. Martin introduced the
officers and distinguished
guests.
The meeting was preceded by
a breakfast. A Christmas motif
with red tapers and wreaths of
holly and berries decorated the
tables . Place mats were
provided by the Meigs County
Tuberculosis and Health
Association. Carol books given
as favors were provided by the
Columbus Dispatch. Mrs.
Martin presented gifts to each
of the distinguished guests.
Introduced were Mrs.
Raymond H. Sloan, Ashland,
American Legion Auxiliary
Department president; Miss
Eshelman,
Auxiliary
secretary; Jack W. Blevins,
Portsmoutll, 40 et 8 grand chef
de gare; George Glaub,
Columbus, grand correspondent
for the 40 et 8; Mrs. Arthur
Hrabak, Maynard, National
American Legion Auxiliary
committee women.
A dutch supper was held on
Saturday evening followed by
an open suite where filmed
highlights of the national
convention were shown.

•
o

..Middleport

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1-TbeDillySenllnei,Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Dec. 9,1971

(:bUd Welfare Tops Pouvior Projects

4- The Dally Sentinel, MlddlelXIrt·Pomeroy, 0 .. dec.9, 1971

Mentor,.Moeller Lads
Top AAA Dream Squad
ppund Chip Harpring, and Brad
COLUMBUS (UP! l - Don 111-0 season.
Otten of Centerville, 6-3, 225.
Loaded With Backs
Martin, a hard running lailback
The guards are Tim Davis of ·
Bell, a second team choice
from Mentor and Steve Niehaus,
Warren
Western Reserve, 5-9,
a quick 265 . pound defensive last year, didn't match his jun·
tackle from Cincinnati Moeller, ior year rushing figures, but the 190, and Elyria's Les Miles, 6-1,
today were named back of the unbeaten Troy team was load- 210, and the center Steve Turnyear and lineman ofthe year to ed with running backs and er of Princeton at 6-3, 195.
Heading the defensive unit is
head the 1971 United Press In· Coach Jim Conard didn't use
a
player who could have been
ternational Class AAA all.Ohio Bell as much.
Voted as the No. I quarter- named to either team, 6-5, 2111football team.
Martin, who gained over 1,800 back, was Bedford's Mike Dau- pound end Scott May of· San·
yards for an 8.6 per carry aver- gherty, a 6-3, 1711-pounder, who dusky . He's joined by Ken And·
age and scored 27 touchdowns, had a tolal offense for the year ler of Lakewood St. Edward, 66, 230.
edged U1ree other outslanding of 2,590 yards.
Teaming with Niehaus at
hit
on
105
of
his
Daugherty
running backs for back of the
173 passing attempts for 1,592 tackle is Troy's Dave Starkey,
year honors.
The voting was so close and yards and 17 touchdowns. He 6-5 230, making the front four
the competition so keen that all also ran the hall 146 times for all at least 6-foot.S in height.
Niehaus, who was voted his
four were named to the first of- another 818 yards and 10 TDs.
Daugherty, who has been lim· team's most valuable player
fensive squad.
Joining Martin are Columbus ed at 4.7 for the 40 yard dash, both last year and this, runs
Eastmoor 's Archie Griffin , is tops in his class of 625 with the 40 in 4.8, extremely fast for
a man 6-5 and 265 pounds.
Troy's Gordon Bell, and rke a 4.0 scholastic mark.
Moeller Coach Gerry Faust
The offensive ends on the first
Maxwell of Elyria.
Niehaus' speed and agility,
says
Griffin, a 5-10, 190 pounder, offense are Moeller's Jim Kelly,
led Eastmoor to the Columbus a glue-fingered 5-10, 175-pound· more than his size and strength,
aty 1.eague championship with er who catches everything in make him difficult to block and
his 156 points and over 1,700 sight, and Doug Stubbs of War- is the reason most Moeller opre n Harding who is being com- ponents ran plays away from
yards rushing .
Maxwell's figures compared pared to former Harding, Ohio him this year. Despite this, Niefavorably with Martin's, as the Slate and pro great Paul War- haus still managed to be involv·
ed in 9!i tackles for the season.
f&gt;.ll, 170 pounder also scored 27 field . Stubbs is 6-2, 175.
touchdowns and picked up more
The offensive tackles are an- He was also used at various
than 1,800 yards in the Pioneer's other Moeller product, 6-5, 235- times as a linebacker and tight

Redmen Drop
112-87 Tilt

Cage Stats
On Page 9

.West Great In Clutch, Lakers Defeat Rockets
By United Press Intematlonal
"Jerry West was just great in
the clutch -as usual."
'ihat was Coach Bill Shar·
man's summation Wednesday
night after the Los Angeles
Lakers beat the Houston
Rockets 125-120 and moved to
within two victories of the
National Basketball Association's all-time mark of 20 in a

row.
The lakers' 18th straight
victory -two behind the 20 in a
row put together by the
Milwaukee Bucks last season ~"»..·~.::.::.~.!.":''~~
increased their season mark to
end.
24-3 and gave them a sevenGuards Usted
game first-place lead over idle
The middle guard on the first Seattle in the NBA's Pacific
defense is 5-lO, 2l(l.pound Ted Division. It was the Lakers'
Kreilick of Fremont Ross, and second closest margin of
the linebackers Lou Williott of victory during the streak.
Youngstown Ursuline, 6-2, 220, "This was by far the toughest
Ken Kuhn of Louisville, 6-2, game of our string," said
210, and Len Sernulka of War- Sharman. "The Rockets are 100
ren Harding.
. per cent improved since our
Roundmg out the defellSive last meeting and seem to be
squad are defensive hacks Den- adapting to Tex Winter's triple
ny Stroud of Canton Lin~oln, 5- post offense. And Jerry West
10, 170, Jeff Bixler of Fmdlay, was just great in the clutch 5-10, 160, and Mike Mavromatis as usual."
of Steubenville, the smallest Gail Goodrich had 42 points
player on either team at 5-9, for the Lakers while Wilt
140.
Chamberlain took only one shot
Tom Balta, who directed War- from the field -a shot he made
ren Harding to its first perfect with 5:26 to go in the third
season ever this year and the period. Elvin Hayes led the
slate Class AAA champtonshtp, Rockets with 31 points.
was a comfortable winner of The Lakers try for No. 19
the coach of the year voting. against ·Golden State tonight
Batla picked up 21 of the 71 and play their next game
votes cast by coaches and against Phoenix at home
sportswriters and broadcasters Friday night.
from around the state, wmnmg The Boston Celtics defeated
over Elyria's Bill Barton who the Cleveland Cavaliers 126-107,
fi nished with 13. Troy's Jim the Baltimore Bullets beat the
Conard finished third with 10. Portland Trail ·Blazers 115-97
Others with more than one
·
vote were Port Clinton's Marc
McClain, Tom Hollman of Greenville, Gerry Faust of Moeller,
Dave Hurst of Sycamore, Charles Shuff of Fremont Ross and
John Rovolo of Parma.

Urbana's Blue Knights, firing regained the lead with 3:30 left .~~--------------~
a sizzling 66 pet. from the floor, in the half on a crip shot by.Tom
finished strong in the second Vance. That made it 411-39.
half to defeat Rio Grande's Urbana was on top to stay.
Redmen 112-87 in a Mid.Ohio After , trailing 51).4.4 during
Conference basketball game in intermission, the Redmen made
Community Center at Urbana one last serious threat. After
Wednesday night. The victory falling behind 54-44 with 19:31
left Urbana in undisputed first left in the game, Bartram,
place in MOC play.
Hairston and Jordan combined
It was Urbana's sixth con- efforts to give the Redmen eight
se&lt;ijitive victory of the 1971-72 straight points. That reduced
caiilpaign. The charges of the Knights: lead to two- 54-52.
Coach John Stanley upped their Urbana began pulling away
MOC mark to 3-0.
after that. When Bernard
The victory snapped Rio's Williams, Rio's top rebounder
three-game winning streak and fouled out with 14:29left in the
left Coach Art Lanham's quintet game (Rio trailed 68-58 at that
with a 4-2 mark. In league play, point) it was all over for the
Rio is 2-1.
Redmen.
A!l five Urbana starters The Redmen will be idle until
finished in double figures in Dec. 20 when they take part in
scoring . Three of the five the West Florida University
Knights scored 20 or more Holiday Tournament.
points.
Next home game for Rio is
Jon Plunkett was tops with 24. Jan.l2, against Lander College.
Terry Anderson finished with Box score of Wednesday's
22, Bill Aikman 20, Mark Todd contest:
19 and Harold Howe 14.
RIO GRANDE (87)- Bentley
The lightning-fast Knights hit 6-1-13 ; HairstonS-3-19 ; Williams
4·1·9: Jordan 6·1·13 ; Bartram 5·
an amazing 66 pet. from the 3-13
: LamberfJ-0.6; Bollinger 2field , sinking 47 of 71 field goal 1.5; Rouse 1·0·2; Harf 2·0·4;
attempts. The home club was Carmichael 1·1-3. TOTALS even hotter at the foul circles, 38·11·87.
URBANA (112) -Aikman 9collecting 18 of 20 charity tosses 2-20; Plunkett 10-04; Anderson
for 90 pet.
10·2·22 ; Todd 7·5-19 ; Howell 6·214;
Miller 0·0·0; Vance 2-2·6:
Rio connected on 38 of 99 shots
Johnson 1·1·3; Bowman 0-0·0;
from the field for a 37.5 pet. At Cu lt 2·0·4. TOTALS 47-18-112.
the foul circles, Rio hit 11 of 15
Halftime Score- Urbana 50,
Rio
44 .
for 73 pet. Rio collected 47
ASSORTED CHOCOLATES
re' lr.unds.
Always a Christmas favor ire .. . creams. nuts,
Harry Hairston paced the
caramels, nou gats, roffeescotch,
fruits,
Redmen with 19 points. Capt.
cnmches and cheW}' cenrers, dipped in finest
Roger Bel !ley, Wray Jordan
dark and milk chocolate.
and Steve Bartram each tallied
13.
lb. $2.()(} 2 lb. $3.95 3 Jb. $5 .90 5 Jb. tU ?"
The first half was a nip-and8 oz. box $1.00
luck affair. Urbana held the
upper hand the first live
minutes of play. Roger Bentley 's twin-pointer put Rio
ahead for the first time, 12-10, at
the H:SO mark. The Redmen
retained the lead for six
minutes, fell behind 27-26 at the
8:30 mark, then regained the
le~d and zoomed to 37-30 lead at
Pius Sales Tax
the 6:21 mark. It was Rio's
biggest lead of the night.
With 6-0 senior guard Mark
Todd finally finding the range,
the Knights stormed back and

GIFrS
FOR

and the Philadelphia 76ers
topped the Cincinn,ti Royals
115-109 in other Wednesday
night games.
John Havlicek's 28 points led
six Celtics who scored in double
figures in an easy victory over
the Cavaliers. The Celtics led
63-46 at halftime and closed out
the victory With a 411-29 fourth
period. Dave Sorenson led the
Cavaliers with 19 points.
. Archie Clark scored 30 points ,
for the Bullets, who rallif11 in
the third period after trailing 53
-25 at halftime. Sidney Wicks
had 24 points and Dale
.Schlueter 20 for the Blazers.
Kevin Loughery scored 11 of
his 20 points in the last free
minutes to clinch the victory
for the 76ers, who dealt the
Royals their fifth straight loss.
The Royals rallied from an
eight-point halftime deficit to
trail by one point with 6:34 to
go but the 76ers drew away .

l \-1 lb. box $3.00

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Mail Orders Filled.
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THE SHOE BOX

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•••••

That's Moore 'sf

•.

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SAYRE HARDWARE
882-2)25

New Haven

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(LIMITED SUPPLY)

,

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2 ONLY PROCTOR PORTABLE HAIR DRYER ............... 17.95 12.88

WEAR-EVER

7·PC. COOKWARE SET
88

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oven and 10" open skillet.

2 ONP IONA 4 SPEED STAND MIXER.:................. 19.95 '13.88

$15

1-f(,.

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s\1

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I

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KITCHEN TOOLS
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kitchen tools. plus .
wall ha 0ging rack.
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'·

1 ONLY FIRE EXTINGUISHER ............................... 11.95 '7.88

2 ONLY PROCTOR-SILEX 2 SLICE TOASTER ................. 12.95 •7.88

$599

7 ONLY IONA ELECTRIC CAN OPENER ..................... 11.95 •7.88

FOR THE
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•

(LIMITED
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REG. SALE

REG. $28.88

3 On~ Continental BatteiJ Train ............................ 6.95
REMINGTON'S
Special
For The
Outdoofs.
Man!

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CHAIN SAW

,,

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. 4 On~ Ideal Auto Racing Set ............................. 27.95
I
· i4 On~ Red/Wht/Biue ABA Basketball,..................... 4.98

·169

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UP

I

:9 On~ Wagon Trail Play Set ................................ 4.49

•

·5 011~ Friction Turbine

SPEAKERS • • .·5.99 to 16.99

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29

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Open Nights 1il Christmas
-------- -

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5 Onij Space Fighter Robot................................ 4.95

•3.44

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• ,.
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.
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·, 4 On~ Cam ivai~ Guitat ...................................... 6.95 •3.99

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5 On~ Rumble Tumble Race Game .......·................. 2.49
5 On~ Westem Battery Operated Locomotive ................. 6.95

OPEN DAILY 8 AM TO 10 PM
SUNDAY 10:30 AM TO 12:30 PM ·
AND 5:00 PM TO 9 PM

•3."

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SOME WITH AM RADIO
SOME WITH AM/FM RADIO

A GREAT SELECTION!

~rrier .............................

•3.88
•3.33
77c
'16.88
•
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119

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Portable Tape Players

39.95 to 79.95

J•

On~ Kiddie Folding Stool ................................ 1.19

J

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PERFECT TO GIVE!

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ll

Comes fully assembled and features semi-aufo·
malic oiling, quiet law-tone· mufflit1, ·qjld cus,h• :
ioned hand grips.
·
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- _ _.......,_ _~-

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7 ONLY IONA 4 SPEED HAND MIXER ..................... 11.95 •7.88
~ ONLY ELECTRIC MAKEUP MIRROR ....................... 8.95 •4.88

9.0 amp. motor develops 1V.. h.p. Has
overload clutch, sawdust ejection chule.
"Visiport" to see blade, 6-ft. 3-wi,..
CD rd.

,

•

Gift Sale
REG. SALE
Cleanup I
1 ONLY PANASONIC AM/FM PORTABLE RADI0 ............39.95 29.88

COM~IN

WHILE
THEY LAST

first, and then Hocking ,
Wyandotte, Gallia, Erie, and
MiJmi. A special pin presented
to the Meigs Salon was accepted
by Mrs. Welsh, chapeau, and
Mrs. Veda Davis. To date 1,046
membership dues have been
paid towards the goal of 1,746.
Mrs. Martin announced ~he
departementalla marc he to be
held at the Sheraton Gibson
Mrs. Edna Smeltz, part- ·Hotel in Cincinnati, July 22 and
nership chairman, announced '23. Changes in the national
goal salons. Meigs County was constitution were outlined by
Mrs. Reva Cihla, and repor.ts of
the meeting in Houston in
September were given by
several who attended. Mrs.
.
: Violet Aichholz, second
member of the national finance
l • . ~~-""''?"~~-------~~'?"-~~~ conunittee, brought greetings,
THURSDA~ ~~ · • · ' '"' -··- ' , .and Mrs. Myrtle Walker,
WILLING Workers Class, Racine Ia secretaire-eassiere
QUARTERLY MEETING, Enterprise United Methodist gave !;,.!ructions on reports:
Pomeroy Lower Light Church, Church, 7:30 Thursday mght at
Reports were given by Mrs.
Thursday • Friday • Saturday, the ho.me of Mrs. Ed Bowen for Irene Mier on publicity • Evaline
Rev. Ralph Spires speaking, I Christmas party.
Berkley on partnership;
7:30 each evening.
FRIDAY
Marcella Huston, on history,
SACRED HEART Women's
MIDDLEPORT Women's and Catherine Baker on ritual
Club monthly meeting and Christian Temperance Union, and emblems.
Christmas party, 8 tonight, at 7:30p.m. Friday at the home of Color bearers for the
church. It will be preceded by Mrs. Betty Cline.
ritualistic opening were Mrs.
Mass at 7:15. Gift exchange.
Eunie Brinker and Mrs . Julia
POTLUCK DINNER by Rock
MARY SHRINE, White
Springs Grange, 6:30 p.m. Shrine of Jerusalem, 8 p. m.
Thursday at the hall. Meat will Friday at IOOF Hall, Pomeroy
be provided by grange.
for Christmas party, gift exELEANOR CIRCLE, of change.
Heath Methodlst Church, 7:30
p.m. Thursday, at home of Mrs.
SATURDAY
AFTER ·GAME dance
Bernard Fultz. $1 gift exchange.
CHRISTMAS DINNER of Saturday, 9·12 midnight,
High
School
Wildwood Garden Club, 6:30 Wahama
auditorium
following
Wahama
p.m. Thursday, Bowers
Restaurant, Pomeroy, meeting Alumni game. Jays emceeing,
75 cents admission , school
and gift exchange to follow.
CHRISTMAS PARTY, sponsored.
E~stern
Chapter OAPSE,
Friday, 7 p.m. at Tuppers
SUNDAY
Plains Elementary School.
Take covered dish and $1 gift CRUSADE FOR Christ
revival starting Sunday, 7:30 p.
for exchange.
m. at Page~ille Baptist Church,
I
Rev.
Charles
Lusher,
I
evangelist. Public invited.
· UNDERPRMLEGED !am·
'··
lilies register for food baskets at
FOLDING TRAVEL IRON \
Automatic Iron by
Salvation Army headquarters, I
\
Wedemeyer, with cord
to 5 p. m. Sunday at 115 Butset and vinyl case.
\
ternut Ave., Pomeroy.
AC / DC .. JlOV.
'
Pomeroy.

s

to the unit's goal. Mrs.
·Catherine Welsh of the Meigs
Salon presented a trophy to be·
given for the best all-around
publicity scrapbook promoting
the Eight and Forty program,
and Mrs. Martin gave a trophy
to be awarded to the Salon with
the best "tuberculosis program
in the state.

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THE GIFT
fashions

GIFTS

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'9.44

. ~ On~ Battery Operated Dachshund ........................ 7.95

•4.44

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STARTI~G FRIDAY N!GHT,
I

w\ WILL BE OPEN 'TIL 9
~

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:·' UNTJL CARISTMAS.

.

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT AMATEUR
Gardeners, home of Mrs.
Charles Taunton with Mrs. S. T.
J Smith, Mrs. Roger Morgan,
Mrs. Russell Mills and Mrs.
Jean Moore hostesses for
Christmas party, 8 p. m.
Wednesday. $2 gift exchange
with wrappings to be judged.

The Almanac
By United Press Intematlonal
Today is Thursday, Dec. 9,
the 343rd day of 1971.
The mqon is in its last
quarter.
There are no morning stars.
The evening stars are Saturn,
Venus, Mars, · Jupiter and
Mercury a~d Jupiter.
Those born on "this day are
under the sign of Sagittarius,
English poet John Milton was
bOrn Dec. 9, 1608.
On this day In history :
·In 1793 Noah Webster established the American Minerva, ·
the first daily newspaper in 1~~
New York City.
:· ·
In 1907 Christmas seals were
plAced on sale in the post office .
at Wilmington, Del., to raise
money to fight luberculosis.

Ph. 992-2511

takes to m.ake

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them the
happiest!

THE KIDDIE SHOPPE
T IN MIDDLEPORT

ON THE

BUXTON LADIES'

HALLMARK

•

JEWEL CASE

-------------BROXODENT
ELECTRIC
TOOTH
BRUSH

PEERLESS B
POCKET RA

.\,

Solid state
8-tr ans is tor AM
Rad io with telescopic
antenna . Padded
leatherette cabi net.
Buill in AC 6 AA.
Penlite batteries.

STAINLESS STEEL

3 PC. BOWL SET

•2.99

HI INTENSITY
LAMP WITH
HI· LO SWITCH
Adjustable arm, 360 °
swivel, positions light

wherever needed.
Ass01ted COIOIS.

800"
·-- r
'

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$5.95 value

$4.95

ROCKET
TRANSPARENT II

TAPE

CLAIROL

HAIRSETTER

17~

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KIWI
/ / SONY CUBE ··~
SHOE SHINE COMPACT / F~·AM CLOCK RADIO

Space-saving _kit is just the 5 iz~ ol
your hand, rncludes 2 lar~e-~rze

\

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I Big sound and performance in small
/ space. All so lid state,

KIWI Boot Pol ish, 2 polrshrng/

, simulated walnul grain

cloths, 2 brushes, 2 appl icatms.
,All in Texas Tan case .

;

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cabinet, push·button
band selection.

i

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WESTCLOX VELOURETTE
TRAVEL ALARM

Feminine styled
travel alatm clotk 1
covered in red, blue
or green velvet.
Gold coiOt tlim.

$29.95
Plus

BUXTON

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Surcharge

I

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BILLFOLDS
REG. 15.00

I
I

$9.95
•••-'f\..$l2 .95 value

~IFT SUGGESTIONS

t&lt;

1 ' •

' •

~ \0'

~~
3
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BOX FREE WITH COUPON/
/
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I
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~?."'~,,_, ....

.

-,

~\~----i-- ~ ..ENCHAN.TED
\'%\
I IOLIDAY

oe~~!~:~!d~.~~!:.~.s }o"'J;~/
15¢ valu,e

-,

I

~ ouT THis co
c'-' ;;b;~!f.~tr . I •ElECTRIC TOOTHBRUSH
1"'\J:.i::;- ocP",I
ll' • '" .. "1

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SUNBEAM
l·PERCOLATORS •STEAM IRON lADY SCHICK
aHAIR CUTIING OUTFIT
I
SHAVER

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SHALIMAR
CHANEL 5

JEWELERS

WHITE SHOULDERS
ESTEE lAUDE

SPRAY BOTTLE

GIFT·A-RAMA
SRI£

.

A-ISS--------•'

ni. NO.- - - - -·--

CHASE
HARDWARE
LC!CuSI St.

We've got what It

CHRISTMAS

DUOSIT If

The Best Service
for
PLUMBING and
HEATING
Shop or Field

..

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$6.49 "lue

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,3 On~ .AMF 12 Inch Tricycle..................... !.: ....... 14.95
'{

TUESDAY
OHJO ETA PHI Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, Tuesday,
7:30 p. m. home of Mrs.
Charlotte Taunton. Cultural
program "Music, Drama and
Dance," by Vikki Gloeckner.
Hostesses, Mrs. Taunton, Mrs.
Susan Baer and Mrs. Charlotte
Hanning.

11nd under the tree.

FOR

QiRiSTMAS CARDS
AND
CHRISTMAS
WRAP

MONDAY
RACINE AMERICAN Legion
Auxiliary annual Christmas
dinner party, Roush Drive-In
Restaurant, Letart, W. Va .,
Monday. M;embers meet at 5 p. ,
m. ·at Legion Hall prior to
leaving. $1 gift exchange.
TWIN CITY Shrinettes
C'iu'iBtmas dinner 6:30 p. m.
Monday at Martin Restaurant,
Middleport. $1 gift exchange.
RUTLAND GARDEN Club,
Christmas dinner, 6:30 Monday
at Craw's Steak House, followed
by meeting and gift exchange at
home of Mrs. C. 0. Chapman.
Members reminded to take
table arrangements for the
Athens Mental Health Center.

they're hoping to

GAI·ORE

$5.49

STORE HOURS:
..
Sizes 7.00x14
7.35x14;
"··,,

donations as well as membership dues are ahead of last
year's figures.
Three
trophies
were
presented~ to Mrs . Louise
Goodall, trophy and awards
chairman, to be awarded nex.t
year. Miss Ann Eshelman,
secretary of the American
Legion, gave a membership
trophy to be given to an Eight
and 40 partner collecting the
most dues for her Auxiliary,
based on percentage according

......,fll"'tlrlfltltlltltll••-,..•-'"'"tltll,_._,..._,......,""""tltlltllll,_.,,...,.

1il Christmas

THE GIFT BOX

.. an exquisite gift package fill&lt;d
with a variety of chocolat&lt;s and but·
rer bons ... creams, mlts, crisp and
chewy centers.

CHRISTMAS
MORNING.

You can start losing weight
loday. MONADEX Is a tiny
table! and easy to lake .
MONADEX will help curb your
desire lo excess food. Eat less -

TV RECORD SET

NEW YORK (UP!) - The
Thanksgiving Day game be·
tween Nebraska and Oklahoma .
attracted the largest television
audience ever for a regular·
sea~on college football contest.
The game, televised by ABC, ,
averaged 13.6 million homes
per minute, according to
Nielsen ratings. This surpassed
the 13.3 millio.r average
achieved by Notre DameSouthern California in 1970.

COMFORT ON

LOSE UGLY FAT

less .

the National American Legion
Child Welfare Foundation the
Cystic Fibrosis Foundatio~ ihe
all-partners' project the Ohio
Medicine Fund, 'and the
National Jewish Hospital for
bed.lll!llntenance parties gifts
band
lnstru~ents ' and
medicine for the ~hildren
confined there.
The scholarship program of
the Eight and Forty was
discussed by Mrs Wanda
Tanner who urged Umt each
partner give $1 and that names
of nurses interested in furthering their education in cystic
fibrosis and tuberculosis care
be submitted for consideration
of a ·scholarship. Mrs. Martin
contributed 125 during the
r 1 ~RD,l·
meetingandMrs.Tannernoted
a M\'s. Helen Lore!, youth that the total to date is $178.
nd . ,children chairman, Mrs. Ella Mae Beaverson,
asked. for donations to finance chairman, noted that all

DRESS YOUR MAN WITH GOOD LOOKS AND

---------

weigh

Projects for !972, several
Involving child welfare work,
were planned during the
wee~e~d pouvior of Eight and
~:~~~ld a~the N_~~House i~
,.. .. us an prest · over by
Mrs~ Mary Martin, Pomeroy,
departemental chapeau.
Among the projects adopted
;:s the. endowment of a ~at
De :Nallonal Je":"tsh Hospttal m
nve~. Thts mvolved $1,000
and Will be the 21st bed .to be
endowed by Ohio. A gift of $100
~w~rds the project was conib~ted by the Meigs County
Salo~, and Mrs. Martin donated
$25. The local salon also conlributed an afghan made by
Ruth&gt;H..Tpornto?, Pomero!•. to
~u.OO ma spectal fund ralSmg

Open Evenings

SPECIAL

ROCKETS TO BE SOLD
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (UPIJ
'-General Manager Bob Sabourin of the Jacksonville Rockets
said Wednesday the team's
board of directors has voted
unanimously to sell the Eastern
Hockey League club.
.The Rockets have a 6-20-1
record and are mlr.ed..lo t/le

Hysell, Meigs Salon. The ad·
dress of welcome was given by
Catherine Heacock, chapeau of
Franklin County Salon 333; with
Mrs. Mier giving the response.
Mrs. Martin introduced the
officers and distinguished
guests.
The meeting was preceded by
a breakfast. A Christmas motif
with red tapers and wreaths of
holly and berries decorated the
tables . Place mats were
provided by the Meigs County
Tuberculosis and Health
Association. Carol books given
as favors were provided by the
Columbus Dispatch. Mrs.
Martin presented gifts to each
of the distinguished guests.
Introduced were Mrs.
Raymond H. Sloan, Ashland,
American Legion Auxiliary
Department president; Miss
Eshelman,
Auxiliary
secretary; Jack W. Blevins,
Portsmoutll, 40 et 8 grand chef
de gare; George Glaub,
Columbus, grand correspondent
for the 40 et 8; Mrs. Arthur
Hrabak, Maynard, National
American Legion Auxiliary
committee women.
A dutch supper was held on
Saturday evening followed by
an open suite where filmed
highlights of the national
convention were shown.

•
o

..Middleport

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Lodge 0 zcers are Installed
Dorothy and Albert Woodard
were installed as worthy
matron and worthy patron of
Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order of
the Eastern Star, in installation
ceremonies Tuesday night at
.tlui Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Other officers installed were
Sylvia Midkiff, associate
matron ; Dale Smith, associate
patron; Marie Curd, secretary;
Myrtle Sisson, treasurer ; Joan
Rayburn , co ndu ct re ss ;
Jacqueline Zirkle, associate
conductress; Mabel Goeglein,
chaplain; Virginia Salser,
marshal ; Clara Thomas,
organist; Florence Well, Ruth,
Sue Zirkle, Esther; June
Eichinger, Martha; Wanda
Rizer, EJecta; Betty Hayes,
warder, and William Hayes,
sentinel. Mary Bowen who Is
hospitalized, will be installed as
Adah at a later time.
Bernice Hoffman, past deputy
grandmatron, was the installing
officer. Assisting her were
Clara and James Soulsby, installing marshals; Maud

"•

..Jf"~~
-~

Grueser, condu ctress; Tom

Edwards, chaplain ; Lucille
Swackhamer, organist ; Freda
Grueser, warder, Theo Smith,
sentinel; and Virginia Salser,
inviting marshall.
Distinguished
gues ts
prese nted were Marlene
Logston, Belpre, deputy grand
matron; Winifred Hooper, New
Marshfield, grand representative to British Columbia; Bill
Hayes, Thea Smith, Tom Ed·
wards, Dale Smith, and Albert
Woodard, Knights of the York
Cross of Honor ; Jesse Brinker,
commander of the Ohio Valley
Commandery 124, Knight
Templar, and high priest of
Bosworth Council.
Also presented were five past
patrons and 10 past matrons of
Pomeroy Chapter, 50 year
members, District 26 officers
including
Janet
Bolin,
president, and Martha Must,

Nancy J Fields to Wed
HARTFORD- Mr. and Mrs.
James Clyde Fields of Hartford
are announcing the engagement
of their daughter, Nancy J. to
Holing L. Greene, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph Green of
Hartford . Miss Fields• is a
secre ,ary at the . Hartford

SALES ON TWO DAYS
A bazaar and bake sale
sponsored by the Ladies
Auxiliary of the Middleport
Pentecostal Church will be held
Friday and Saturday in the Fry
building, Middleport, from 10
a. m. to 4 p.m.

Elementary SchooL Mr. Greene
is employed at the FederalMogul Plant in Gallipolis . Both
are graduates of Wahama High
SchooL Wedding plans are
incomplete .

IN STEUBENVILLE
Mrs. Louise Klaas , Mrs .
Lucille Powell and Mrs. Audrey
Blessing spent Thanksgiving at
Steubenville visiting Mr. and
Mrs. William Coleman and
family , Mr. and Mrs. Jay
Blessing and family, and at
Wintersville with Mr. and Mrs.
T. W. Call .

I.. . .. . .........

vice president, those with
former grand appoi ntments,
past matrons and patrons of
other chapters, and worthy
rna trans of other chapters.
Approximately 75 attended the
installation.
Holiday projects planned
included treats for the
Children's Home to be handled
by Mrs. Sisson and Mrs. Curd,
Meigs County Infirmary
remembrances by Mr. and Mrs.

Dale Smith, gifts for shut-ins by
Mrs. Mabel Goeglein and Mrs.
Rayburn. ·
Installation dates were annOW1ced by the worthy matronselect. Also announced was the
Dec. 11 installation of DeMolay
at Middleport, and the Dec. 30
installation of Job's Daughters,
Pomeroy.
Following her installation,
Mrs. Woodard presented inspirational desk calendars with

POLLY'S POINTERS
.Here's a Way to Use
Old Furs as New Trim
By POLLY CRAMER
DEAR POLLY- I have help for Alice who wants to use
parts of an outdated fur coat as trimming on a new suit.
To cut fur. lay skin with fur side down, trace pattern on
the skin side and use a razor blade to cut-never scissors.
If you do not have a single·edge blade, cover one side
with adhesiye tape or you may end up with cut fingers.
Care must taken to have the ·nap or lay of the fur
running down. To sew fur pieces together, put t hem side
by side and sew very near the edge by hand (with small
whipping stitches) but not like a seam in cloth. As you
sew along, hold the two pieces together with the thumb
and forefinger and run a big needle or even a nail file
down slantwise to push all the fur down out of sight before making stitches. When it is turned or opened flat the
fur will be on the outside where it should be. Tape, as
dark in color as the fur, should be sewn by hand all .
around the collar. Lay tape on fur side and push fur hairs
back same as a seam. When tape is turned to the underside it is used to stitch to the cloth. I find it is better to
pad a collar with cotton batting for a professional finish .
Also, the collar can be lined with the suit fabric or lining
rather than with fur which may make it too bulky. Fur
is a bit tricky to work with but once you know how it is
not too difficult- MABEL
DEAR GIRLS-Waxed thread ls preferable for sewing
furs . Do not worry if fur pieces have to be pieced to
make a collar or other such part fo r if all the hairs go
in the same direction tbe patching should not show when
the job Is finished. Remember edges of fur must have
tape sewn on them so as to provide something to sew
to.-POLLY
&gt;'Miilri1lii1M:~wM:lliMW!'"' Po II y' s Prob Iem !iWfflMmm.t'ilWI!W!IWBJ¥
:·. DEAR POLLY-How can I keep posters, burlap f•
and other materials sticking to paneling ? Nails can- {.
. not be put m the walls and plastic gummed tape ~
} and l)lasking tape will not hold them properly. Will !!!
plastic gummed tape leave a mark when removed 11
0 from a paneled wali?-R. M.
'"

a
! b ll b I*'Ji

ie¥1? bl

tf.,•~&gt;W&lt;t:~:«''~:-·~·&gt;W'H:-•-·•-M·W\:t&gt;,:.r~·wf.,&gt;r&lt;W00~-:·-'~'f!&lt;'-~'
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.
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~,®~w.&gt;.&lt;,ll;Qiw&gt;.\.,:,.:.""'""if,~,,K,.&gt;-!"-:;x.:·;r;w.~«~,;~;;;,;;.i'$"~""''"'-~"fi;ii&lt;.-'t.&amp;~;\~~~~'

u:

DEAR POLLY- My Pet Peeve is with stores that have
a sufficient number of check-out Janes but never have
enough of them open to accommodate the lines a nd
so waste their customer's valuable time. This m!lthod
seems common with many stores today that one spends
as much tim e wa1hng to be checked out as in actual
shopping.-MRS. J. 0 . H.

popular pOems by Jjelen Steiner
Rice to each new officer and
.gifts to installing officers.
Receiving gifts f~om the
chapter were Mabel and Denzil
Goeglein.
·congratulatory remarks were
made by the deputy grand
ma tron on the installation
service. THe death of the father
of Craig McCartney, worthy
grand patron of , the Grand
Chapter of Ohio was announced

HOSPITAL
NEWS

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-3 p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. James P.
Bumgarner, Mason, a son; Mr.
and Mrs. Stan Craig, Mason, a
son ; and Mr. and Mrs . Donald
Ray Upton, Mason, a son.
Discharges
Josephine Burris, Mary Cox,
Clifford Eads, Philip Globoker,
Mary Gollihue, · Juanita
Guinther, Edith Martin, Edna
·McVay, Mrs. Margaret Miller,
Mrs. Paul Pierce and son, Mrs.
Mary Queen, Mrs. Richard W.
Rawlings and son, William
Russell, Michael Shong, Mrs.
Ullian Spriggs, Brad Steinbeck,
John Strait, Mrs. Lewis K.
Taylor and son, Dorothy White,
John Withrow and Mrs. Joyce
Woods.
NUT SALE DUE
The annual holiday nut sale of
Middleport Cub Scout Pack 245
will be held this weekend. The
cub scouts will be selling nuts
Friday evening, Saturday and
Sunday with all proceeds to go
toward financing the program
of scouting within the pack.
·Books, pins and various supplies are purchased with the
money.

by·Mrs. Logston.
Guests were registered by
Ella Smith and Mabel Moore at
a table covered in gold with a
green Chi'istmar- spray . Pin-&lt;&gt;ns
were green star replicas cen·
l.ered with gold stars.
The chapter room was
decorated in the Christmas
motif in the green and gold color
scheme.
Mrs. Goeglein and Mrs.
Rayburn presided at the punch
bowl and coffee service for the
social hour. The table was
covered in dark green linen and
lace centered with a gold candle
surrounded by a wreath. Tinsel
and tapers decorated the other
tables, and a gold wreath was
used at the fireplace .
The trustees are Guy Guinther' Mrs. Goeglein, and Ed·
wards, and the Eastern Star
committee which handled the
refreshments were Thelma Dill;
chairman , Maria Foster,
Pauline Mayer, Pauline Hysell,
Leona Smith, Ethel Smith,
Marie Cus te r , and Allee
Struble.

Make 49 pay.ments, so· ·
to $10.00 and we mak
· the

50TH

Free X-Mas Gift Wrapping of
your Gill at All Our Stores

ELECTRIC ALAAM CLOCKS

NO. 20326

WESTCLOX PRINCETON

·
·
'
!

·

LIGHTED
·DIAL

The Athens County
Savings &amp; L..n Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Member Federal Home Loan
Bank.

. Member Federal Savings &amp;
Loan Insurance Corp. All
, accounts Insured up 1
520,000.00.

liiiilt. . . . . . . ...

Feature• the very latest In •tyling
with a touch oC the new and the old.
Lighted dlat BB8urea cle!lr 24-hour
reado.blllty. Incorporate• the exclusive

NORELCO

'-'--«l»&lt;----------~---~

MIRROR
REG. 31.99

Razor

by Gillette ·

REG. 15.00

'21.99

Heavy-Duty 3-cych!i WASHER
dBSign..::l for family-sized

3-cycle DRYER features heated
or air-only cycle for drying
plastics or foam rubber

wash loads

[SEARS

j

220 E. Main

Aulhoriad

992-2178 Pomeroy

Open Friday &amp; Saturday Until 9

CaiiiDC lllfdlonl

I

SON BORN DEC. 6
Mr. and Mrs. Randall Gene
Hawley of Middleport are announcing the birth of a son
Randall Gene Jr born at th~
Holzer Medic'al Cente M •
day, Dec. 6, at 4, 22 / ;., ;;::,
Infant, first for Mr. and Mrs.
Hawley weighed eight po ds
and se~en ounces. Mate~nal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
William Sheridan, Pomeroy ;
paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Norman Hawley
Middleport, and Mrs. Phoe~
Lee, Middleport, is a greatgrandmother.

TOYTOWN NOW OPEN - Special Opening, Thurs. Afternoons. Open Fri. &amp; Sat. Nights Til9

"The

St~re

Of Thousands Of Gifts"

WIDE, WIDE SELECTIONS NOW ON ,DISPLAY
CHRISTMAS DECORATIOH$AU kind• in o wide oel..:tion, 4;~~~,~
lighto for indoors ond outdooro. '
A'rtilicial trees, ready for your

CHRISTMAS
WRAPPING
Gift boxes, Ioney pa•
pers, tags, seals • •
you name it, we have
it of thrifty low
prices.

SHOP EARLY

~,JI; ((;!f(;,f(I/(I.J
{?r;, /1'1

f:w; (/r i/tif&gt;ii;Ji
.

'

Box auortmonts and
individual cards.

tOO's Of Ideas For Home and Family
Use Our Convenient Lay-A-Way Plan.
A Small Deposit Will Hold Your Selection
As You Make Payments At Your C011vience

Shipment of Live ·Parakeets Just Arrived.
SPECIALS
R... 11.10 Jumbo Coloring Boolcs·- - - -66c
R... t4.66 Monopoly O.mt
l4.33

R... t2.77 ~Nbu llrblt Doll
SU7
' .... IU7 Fllller Prl.,. Frisky Frog
12.97
R... IUOiox of 50 "-sorlld Christmas cards-$1 ,25
R... m.~·~ Foot Scotch Pine Tree
"·"

Mlny Mont Specials Throughout The Store

MAKE POMEROY YOUR SHOPPING CENTER
•.·.· ·. . . . -:-.-:. . . : / . . :-:.
: .·.·. ·-·-·.·.···" .·.·-: -.· ·.-..·.

.BEN,.FRANKUN.PHoNE
992-3498

.

OPEN FRIDAY

.
&amp;

200-202 EAST MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OHIO
GOLD
STAR
SATURDAY NIGHTS TIL 9 STORE

" A GOLD STAR STORE"

CONDITION CRITICAL
Mrs. Robert G. Clarke, New
Haven, W. Va., remains in
critical condition at the Holzer
Medical Center, Gallipolis
Room 222.
·
'

to Give you a Cleaner, M.t:Jre

(Upon Request)

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS
210 E. 2nd
Pomeroy

"

LB. ONLY 99~

• Shoves Close with le56 Pulling,
leu Tugging, Less Skin Irritation .

,'

GIFT IDEA!

HAl KARATE

X-15 OUTFITS
REG. 122.95

REG. ·19.95

Men 's Cologne.

:···

Aller Shave, ·

,''

REG.
27 .50

REG. $4.25

..

,,' •
••

. EXTENSION CORDS

Norelco

Super
Mistletoe

12 FT. REG. 79'...........................

a.AIROL AIR

DRYER

BR~SH

'17.71

6 ROLL REG. 1.98 ..... 88'
J ROLL Reg 98'........ 53'
FOIL WRAP.:..... ~~~~~ac· .. 53'

,,• j l

•

63'

1.99

13

Gift

WOMEN

Buy!

ANfi
MEN

STICK-ON 'BOWS
Reg. 98'
Bag of 25

75e

HAl KARATI
After Shave Lotion

•1.66
_BOXED, HAND STRAP

1.00

•

Large Selection Of Toys
At Discount Prices! ·

No. 1841

GElS

BY PARKER

.., .. ~~ •3.77
1.8 5'

~~~~~:.
Rog. 3.44
one Voes oUt, th1 rest

~

Christmas Tree

b &amp; Brush

9 oz. Luden's
REG.
. '1.85

98'
.

DELUXE
NO. K-300

·We Initial Free of Charge!

Reg.

NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOVSE
POMER.OY
OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS

Phone 992-5421

'

29.99

2"299 .

'

HERSHEY MILK CHOCOLATE KISSESlo oz.ONLY'
·LUDEN'S CHOCO.LATE COVERED CHERRIES ONLY.
'

REESE'S PEANUT BUTIER CUPS .....·,,·;;;~~O~NLY
- ~0

11 01.

.

SET

•2.87

ELEC. lWINKL£

LITE
BELL SET
WITH GARLAND

. 3 LIGHT
.CAtfDELIER

·REG. szjg · ...

£LL HARD MIX
~ INDOOR~UTDOOR

-

REG.
. '

'5.09

.)~'

;:•
'

.'•'
.•

.C-7112

REG. 69'

.,~
•
'
·l
'

•'

\

SPECIAL
' REG:

..,,

~

$499 t-=~;;;;;:;;;;~E~BY~PA--R...JKER ..~~:.

REG. 118.95

The search for perfect gifts ends here. Set-togo luggage is the sure Christmas hit for family
members . .. and all special people. We've got
many coordinated pieces, in famous Samsonite.

~

:,
:i
•
'·
'(
•

\

SAMSONITE

Comb 'n Dry Hot Hair

is:.

'

C.7~

l

..(

•&lt;
~

l

Regular 1.75
4 OZ· SIZE

UL APPROVED
15{1TE INDOOR SET

Reg.54t Reg.88

69c

.

'•

. ONLY

RIBBON

•
••
,•

.

RADIO
66

.,'•.•

•'

4 oz.·

Schick Hot lather

~'•

'•
''

LOTION
REG. $3.00

'

,•

SOLID STATE PORTABLE

Make
no mistake .. ,

SETS

AFTER SHAVE

WRAP PAPER

••

~~-

BLACK BELT

. CHRISTMAS

I

...
:RATE

STYLING

81
JAodel
AREG.

' I

,..MACHINE

HAL ••

· 9 FT. REG. 69'.................... ~;.,,.~ 5~6~ ·

REG.
29.95

..

2-HOUR
CLEANING

•

Rum and Brandy
Flavored

6 FT. REG. 59' .......................... 48~

PUPIL PARTY SET
Plans have been completed
for an . all-!!chool Christmas
celebratiOn Wednesday, Dec. 22
at the Pomeroy Ele'."entary
School under sponsorship of the
Pomeroy PTA. A carol sing will
be held and films will be shown
in . the auditorium with ~e
Children returmng to their
classrooms .for refreshments.
Each teacher has been provided
$5 by the PTA to apply to expenses of the party.

DAUGHTER BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Paul King,
Pomeroy, are annOW1cing the
birth of a daughter, Kristin
Maria, Nov. 25, at the Holzer
Medical Center, Gallipolis. The
infant weighed eight pounds.
Mr. and Mrs. King have a son,
Kevin. Maternal grandmother.
is Mrs. Letta Spencer and the
paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Edward King.

FRUIT CAKE

• Battery Powered Orb ito I Shaving
Action . Shoving Edge Rotote5
Making 4000 Orbits Per Minute

Portable Hair Dryer
New oaMtNIDN Model 1826

$2.1._77

·--~~--~-~---···--···············

Members of the Pomeroy using the Christmas story.
Women 's Christian Tern- ·Cards were read from Mrs.
perance Union met Tuesday at Melvin Alkire, wife of a former
the_home of Miss Nelle Bing, pastor of the Pomeroy United
Umon Ave., for a covered dish Methodist Church, and Mrs.
holiday luncheon. Mrs. Allen Glenroy Ewing who resides in
Hampton presided with group Columbus. A card was signed
singing of "Joy to the World," a for Miss Lucretia Genheirner
prayer by Mrs. William Smith, who is spending the winter in
and remarks by Mrs. Otto Des Florida. Mrs. lies, Mrs. Reibel
and Mrs. Louise Reibel opening and Mrs. Lena Huber were
the meeting. Mrs. Iles gave a guests at the luncheon. The next
reading, "To Know God In the meeting will be held on Jan. 5.
Morning .''
Mrs. T. T. Shelton presented
the program and devotions,

CutsS

ELLEN

• A Completely New System of
Shoving

KODAK INSTAMATIC

$12.99

WCTU Has Luncheon

Cuts6
tts'1~95 $17888

B.ARBARA

' A Unique R:ozor Design

SALON

I

t--------------llll"'lttl-

Comfortable Shave.

RAZOR

.;(~5

The :r

The Unique Gift

TRUE-TO-LIGHT Ill
MAKE·UP

·

BILLFOLDS

Trlpleheader

GENERAL TIRE SALES
Middleport, 0 .

·

AMITY~

Plus Recappable Casing

Phone 992-7161

Clairol

MEN'S AND
lADIES'

$9.95

MOUNTED FREE

~~......~

$ 99

eo
Christmas
Gift

3~89 Orbitor 4000

REG. 5.95 ......... 4.59

4
.............__-'

Urnes during any one alarm period.
Masur switch on back of C&amp;80 pennanently cancels a Ia r m. Shaturproof
crystal, sweep alarm Indicator, and
aecondo hand.
~ln. high, ~\0 ln. wide, 3\lo ln. deep.

REGULAR RETREADS
ANY SIZE

REG. 4.95 .........

Q~LY

time- fi rm touch on top leta you

YOU'VE COME TO THE RIGHT AD •• •

ONLY

REG. 3.95.......... 2.99

REG • $9•98

magic tou c h and drowse features .
Ala.rm buzzes at preselected waking

drowse 10 ·mlnute1l, then wakes you
again. Drowoe may be repeated three

IF YOU'RE LOOKING
FOR A BffiER PRICE:

ZIP PO
LIGHTERS

T

CANDY
Reg.

3f

NOW
UMITl

19t

•

•\
~
\

l

,:'

·,

'

�'
.

I

I~

'

Lodge 0 zcers are Installed
Dorothy and Albert Woodard
were installed as worthy
matron and worthy patron of
Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order of
the Eastern Star, in installation
ceremonies Tuesday night at
.tlui Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Other officers installed were
Sylvia Midkiff, associate
matron ; Dale Smith, associate
patron; Marie Curd, secretary;
Myrtle Sisson, treasurer ; Joan
Rayburn , co ndu ct re ss ;
Jacqueline Zirkle, associate
conductress; Mabel Goeglein,
chaplain; Virginia Salser,
marshal ; Clara Thomas,
organist; Florence Well, Ruth,
Sue Zirkle, Esther; June
Eichinger, Martha; Wanda
Rizer, EJecta; Betty Hayes,
warder, and William Hayes,
sentinel. Mary Bowen who Is
hospitalized, will be installed as
Adah at a later time.
Bernice Hoffman, past deputy
grandmatron, was the installing
officer. Assisting her were
Clara and James Soulsby, installing marshals; Maud

"•

..Jf"~~
-~

Grueser, condu ctress; Tom

Edwards, chaplain ; Lucille
Swackhamer, organist ; Freda
Grueser, warder, Theo Smith,
sentinel; and Virginia Salser,
inviting marshall.
Distinguished
gues ts
prese nted were Marlene
Logston, Belpre, deputy grand
matron; Winifred Hooper, New
Marshfield, grand representative to British Columbia; Bill
Hayes, Thea Smith, Tom Ed·
wards, Dale Smith, and Albert
Woodard, Knights of the York
Cross of Honor ; Jesse Brinker,
commander of the Ohio Valley
Commandery 124, Knight
Templar, and high priest of
Bosworth Council.
Also presented were five past
patrons and 10 past matrons of
Pomeroy Chapter, 50 year
members, District 26 officers
including
Janet
Bolin,
president, and Martha Must,

Nancy J Fields to Wed
HARTFORD- Mr. and Mrs.
James Clyde Fields of Hartford
are announcing the engagement
of their daughter, Nancy J. to
Holing L. Greene, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph Green of
Hartford . Miss Fields• is a
secre ,ary at the . Hartford

SALES ON TWO DAYS
A bazaar and bake sale
sponsored by the Ladies
Auxiliary of the Middleport
Pentecostal Church will be held
Friday and Saturday in the Fry
building, Middleport, from 10
a. m. to 4 p.m.

Elementary SchooL Mr. Greene
is employed at the FederalMogul Plant in Gallipolis . Both
are graduates of Wahama High
SchooL Wedding plans are
incomplete .

IN STEUBENVILLE
Mrs. Louise Klaas , Mrs .
Lucille Powell and Mrs. Audrey
Blessing spent Thanksgiving at
Steubenville visiting Mr. and
Mrs. William Coleman and
family , Mr. and Mrs. Jay
Blessing and family, and at
Wintersville with Mr. and Mrs.
T. W. Call .

I.. . .. . .........

vice president, those with
former grand appoi ntments,
past matrons and patrons of
other chapters, and worthy
rna trans of other chapters.
Approximately 75 attended the
installation.
Holiday projects planned
included treats for the
Children's Home to be handled
by Mrs. Sisson and Mrs. Curd,
Meigs County Infirmary
remembrances by Mr. and Mrs.

Dale Smith, gifts for shut-ins by
Mrs. Mabel Goeglein and Mrs.
Rayburn. ·
Installation dates were annOW1ced by the worthy matronselect. Also announced was the
Dec. 11 installation of DeMolay
at Middleport, and the Dec. 30
installation of Job's Daughters,
Pomeroy.
Following her installation,
Mrs. Woodard presented inspirational desk calendars with

POLLY'S POINTERS
.Here's a Way to Use
Old Furs as New Trim
By POLLY CRAMER
DEAR POLLY- I have help for Alice who wants to use
parts of an outdated fur coat as trimming on a new suit.
To cut fur. lay skin with fur side down, trace pattern on
the skin side and use a razor blade to cut-never scissors.
If you do not have a single·edge blade, cover one side
with adhesiye tape or you may end up with cut fingers.
Care must taken to have the ·nap or lay of the fur
running down. To sew fur pieces together, put t hem side
by side and sew very near the edge by hand (with small
whipping stitches) but not like a seam in cloth. As you
sew along, hold the two pieces together with the thumb
and forefinger and run a big needle or even a nail file
down slantwise to push all the fur down out of sight before making stitches. When it is turned or opened flat the
fur will be on the outside where it should be. Tape, as
dark in color as the fur, should be sewn by hand all .
around the collar. Lay tape on fur side and push fur hairs
back same as a seam. When tape is turned to the underside it is used to stitch to the cloth. I find it is better to
pad a collar with cotton batting for a professional finish .
Also, the collar can be lined with the suit fabric or lining
rather than with fur which may make it too bulky. Fur
is a bit tricky to work with but once you know how it is
not too difficult- MABEL
DEAR GIRLS-Waxed thread ls preferable for sewing
furs . Do not worry if fur pieces have to be pieced to
make a collar or other such part fo r if all the hairs go
in the same direction tbe patching should not show when
the job Is finished. Remember edges of fur must have
tape sewn on them so as to provide something to sew
to.-POLLY
&gt;'Miilri1lii1M:~wM:lliMW!'"' Po II y' s Prob Iem !iWfflMmm.t'ilWI!W!IWBJ¥
:·. DEAR POLLY-How can I keep posters, burlap f•
and other materials sticking to paneling ? Nails can- {.
. not be put m the walls and plastic gummed tape ~
} and l)lasking tape will not hold them properly. Will !!!
plastic gummed tape leave a mark when removed 11
0 from a paneled wali?-R. M.
'"

a
! b ll b I*'Ji

ie¥1? bl

tf.,•~&gt;W&lt;t:~:«''~:-·~·&gt;W'H:-•-·•-M·W\:t&gt;,:.r~·wf.,&gt;r&lt;W00~-:·-'~'f!&lt;'-~'
-~ ·
.
- q
~,®~w.&gt;.&lt;,ll;Qiw&gt;.\.,:,.:.""'""if,~,,K,.&gt;-!"-:;x.:·;r;w.~«~,;~;;;,;;.i'$"~""''"'-~"fi;ii&lt;.-'t.&amp;~;\~~~~'

u:

DEAR POLLY- My Pet Peeve is with stores that have
a sufficient number of check-out Janes but never have
enough of them open to accommodate the lines a nd
so waste their customer's valuable time. This m!lthod
seems common with many stores today that one spends
as much tim e wa1hng to be checked out as in actual
shopping.-MRS. J. 0 . H.

popular pOems by Jjelen Steiner
Rice to each new officer and
.gifts to installing officers.
Receiving gifts f~om the
chapter were Mabel and Denzil
Goeglein.
·congratulatory remarks were
made by the deputy grand
ma tron on the installation
service. THe death of the father
of Craig McCartney, worthy
grand patron of , the Grand
Chapter of Ohio was announced

HOSPITAL
NEWS

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-3 p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. James P.
Bumgarner, Mason, a son; Mr.
and Mrs. Stan Craig, Mason, a
son ; and Mr. and Mrs . Donald
Ray Upton, Mason, a son.
Discharges
Josephine Burris, Mary Cox,
Clifford Eads, Philip Globoker,
Mary Gollihue, · Juanita
Guinther, Edith Martin, Edna
·McVay, Mrs. Margaret Miller,
Mrs. Paul Pierce and son, Mrs.
Mary Queen, Mrs. Richard W.
Rawlings and son, William
Russell, Michael Shong, Mrs.
Ullian Spriggs, Brad Steinbeck,
John Strait, Mrs. Lewis K.
Taylor and son, Dorothy White,
John Withrow and Mrs. Joyce
Woods.
NUT SALE DUE
The annual holiday nut sale of
Middleport Cub Scout Pack 245
will be held this weekend. The
cub scouts will be selling nuts
Friday evening, Saturday and
Sunday with all proceeds to go
toward financing the program
of scouting within the pack.
·Books, pins and various supplies are purchased with the
money.

by·Mrs. Logston.
Guests were registered by
Ella Smith and Mabel Moore at
a table covered in gold with a
green Chi'istmar- spray . Pin-&lt;&gt;ns
were green star replicas cen·
l.ered with gold stars.
The chapter room was
decorated in the Christmas
motif in the green and gold color
scheme.
Mrs. Goeglein and Mrs.
Rayburn presided at the punch
bowl and coffee service for the
social hour. The table was
covered in dark green linen and
lace centered with a gold candle
surrounded by a wreath. Tinsel
and tapers decorated the other
tables, and a gold wreath was
used at the fireplace .
The trustees are Guy Guinther' Mrs. Goeglein, and Ed·
wards, and the Eastern Star
committee which handled the
refreshments were Thelma Dill;
chairman , Maria Foster,
Pauline Mayer, Pauline Hysell,
Leona Smith, Ethel Smith,
Marie Cus te r , and Allee
Struble.

Make 49 pay.ments, so· ·
to $10.00 and we mak
· the

50TH

Free X-Mas Gift Wrapping of
your Gill at All Our Stores

ELECTRIC ALAAM CLOCKS

NO. 20326

WESTCLOX PRINCETON

·
·
'
!

·

LIGHTED
·DIAL

The Athens County
Savings &amp; L..n Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Member Federal Home Loan
Bank.

. Member Federal Savings &amp;
Loan Insurance Corp. All
, accounts Insured up 1
520,000.00.

liiiilt. . . . . . . ...

Feature• the very latest In •tyling
with a touch oC the new and the old.
Lighted dlat BB8urea cle!lr 24-hour
reado.blllty. Incorporate• the exclusive

NORELCO

'-'--«l»&lt;----------~---~

MIRROR
REG. 31.99

Razor

by Gillette ·

REG. 15.00

'21.99

Heavy-Duty 3-cych!i WASHER
dBSign..::l for family-sized

3-cycle DRYER features heated
or air-only cycle for drying
plastics or foam rubber

wash loads

[SEARS

j

220 E. Main

Aulhoriad

992-2178 Pomeroy

Open Friday &amp; Saturday Until 9

CaiiiDC lllfdlonl

I

SON BORN DEC. 6
Mr. and Mrs. Randall Gene
Hawley of Middleport are announcing the birth of a son
Randall Gene Jr born at th~
Holzer Medic'al Cente M •
day, Dec. 6, at 4, 22 / ;., ;;::,
Infant, first for Mr. and Mrs.
Hawley weighed eight po ds
and se~en ounces. Mate~nal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
William Sheridan, Pomeroy ;
paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Norman Hawley
Middleport, and Mrs. Phoe~
Lee, Middleport, is a greatgrandmother.

TOYTOWN NOW OPEN - Special Opening, Thurs. Afternoons. Open Fri. &amp; Sat. Nights Til9

"The

St~re

Of Thousands Of Gifts"

WIDE, WIDE SELECTIONS NOW ON ,DISPLAY
CHRISTMAS DECORATIOH$AU kind• in o wide oel..:tion, 4;~~~,~
lighto for indoors ond outdooro. '
A'rtilicial trees, ready for your

CHRISTMAS
WRAPPING
Gift boxes, Ioney pa•
pers, tags, seals • •
you name it, we have
it of thrifty low
prices.

SHOP EARLY

~,JI; ((;!f(;,f(I/(I.J
{?r;, /1'1

f:w; (/r i/tif&gt;ii;Ji
.

'

Box auortmonts and
individual cards.

tOO's Of Ideas For Home and Family
Use Our Convenient Lay-A-Way Plan.
A Small Deposit Will Hold Your Selection
As You Make Payments At Your C011vience

Shipment of Live ·Parakeets Just Arrived.
SPECIALS
R... 11.10 Jumbo Coloring Boolcs·- - - -66c
R... t4.66 Monopoly O.mt
l4.33

R... t2.77 ~Nbu llrblt Doll
SU7
' .... IU7 Fllller Prl.,. Frisky Frog
12.97
R... IUOiox of 50 "-sorlld Christmas cards-$1 ,25
R... m.~·~ Foot Scotch Pine Tree
"·"

Mlny Mont Specials Throughout The Store

MAKE POMEROY YOUR SHOPPING CENTER
•.·.· ·. . . . -:-.-:. . . : / . . :-:.
: .·.·. ·-·-·.·.···" .·.·-: -.· ·.-..·.

.BEN,.FRANKUN.PHoNE
992-3498

.

OPEN FRIDAY

.
&amp;

200-202 EAST MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OHIO
GOLD
STAR
SATURDAY NIGHTS TIL 9 STORE

" A GOLD STAR STORE"

CONDITION CRITICAL
Mrs. Robert G. Clarke, New
Haven, W. Va., remains in
critical condition at the Holzer
Medical Center, Gallipolis
Room 222.
·
'

to Give you a Cleaner, M.t:Jre

(Upon Request)

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS
210 E. 2nd
Pomeroy

"

LB. ONLY 99~

• Shoves Close with le56 Pulling,
leu Tugging, Less Skin Irritation .

,'

GIFT IDEA!

HAl KARATE

X-15 OUTFITS
REG. 122.95

REG. ·19.95

Men 's Cologne.

:···

Aller Shave, ·

,''

REG.
27 .50

REG. $4.25

..

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. EXTENSION CORDS

Norelco

Super
Mistletoe

12 FT. REG. 79'...........................

a.AIROL AIR

DRYER

BR~SH

'17.71

6 ROLL REG. 1.98 ..... 88'
J ROLL Reg 98'........ 53'
FOIL WRAP.:..... ~~~~~ac· .. 53'

,,• j l

•

63'

1.99

13

Gift

WOMEN

Buy!

ANfi
MEN

STICK-ON 'BOWS
Reg. 98'
Bag of 25

75e

HAl KARATI
After Shave Lotion

•1.66
_BOXED, HAND STRAP

1.00

•

Large Selection Of Toys
At Discount Prices! ·

No. 1841

GElS

BY PARKER

.., .. ~~ •3.77
1.8 5'

~~~~~:.
Rog. 3.44
one Voes oUt, th1 rest

~

Christmas Tree

b &amp; Brush

9 oz. Luden's
REG.
. '1.85

98'
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DELUXE
NO. K-300

·We Initial Free of Charge!

Reg.

NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOVSE
POMER.OY
OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS

Phone 992-5421

'

29.99

2"299 .

'

HERSHEY MILK CHOCOLATE KISSESlo oz.ONLY'
·LUDEN'S CHOCO.LATE COVERED CHERRIES ONLY.
'

REESE'S PEANUT BUTIER CUPS .....·,,·;;;~~O~NLY
- ~0

11 01.

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SET

•2.87

ELEC. lWINKL£

LITE
BELL SET
WITH GARLAND

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.CAtfDELIER

·REG. szjg · ...

£LL HARD MIX
~ INDOOR~UTDOOR

-

REG.
. '

'5.09

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'

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.C-7112

REG. 69'

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SPECIAL
' REG:

..,,

~

$499 t-=~;;;;;:;;;;~E~BY~PA--R...JKER ..~~:.

REG. 118.95

The search for perfect gifts ends here. Set-togo luggage is the sure Christmas hit for family
members . .. and all special people. We've got
many coordinated pieces, in famous Samsonite.

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Comb 'n Dry Hot Hair

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Regular 1.75
4 OZ· SIZE

UL APPROVED
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Reg.54t Reg.88

69c

.

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RIBBON

•
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RADIO
66

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4 oz.·

Schick Hot lather

~'•

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LOTION
REG. $3.00

'

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SOLID STATE PORTABLE

Make
no mistake .. ,

SETS

AFTER SHAVE

WRAP PAPER

••

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BLACK BELT

. CHRISTMAS

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STYLING

81
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AREG.

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HAL ••

· 9 FT. REG. 69'.................... ~;.,,.~ 5~6~ ·

REG.
29.95

..

2-HOUR
CLEANING

•

Rum and Brandy
Flavored

6 FT. REG. 59' .......................... 48~

PUPIL PARTY SET
Plans have been completed
for an . all-!!chool Christmas
celebratiOn Wednesday, Dec. 22
at the Pomeroy Ele'."entary
School under sponsorship of the
Pomeroy PTA. A carol sing will
be held and films will be shown
in . the auditorium with ~e
Children returmng to their
classrooms .for refreshments.
Each teacher has been provided
$5 by the PTA to apply to expenses of the party.

DAUGHTER BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Paul King,
Pomeroy, are annOW1cing the
birth of a daughter, Kristin
Maria, Nov. 25, at the Holzer
Medical Center, Gallipolis. The
infant weighed eight pounds.
Mr. and Mrs. King have a son,
Kevin. Maternal grandmother.
is Mrs. Letta Spencer and the
paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Edward King.

FRUIT CAKE

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Making 4000 Orbits Per Minute

Portable Hair Dryer
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Members of the Pomeroy using the Christmas story.
Women 's Christian Tern- ·Cards were read from Mrs.
perance Union met Tuesday at Melvin Alkire, wife of a former
the_home of Miss Nelle Bing, pastor of the Pomeroy United
Umon Ave., for a covered dish Methodist Church, and Mrs.
holiday luncheon. Mrs. Allen Glenroy Ewing who resides in
Hampton presided with group Columbus. A card was signed
singing of "Joy to the World," a for Miss Lucretia Genheirner
prayer by Mrs. William Smith, who is spending the winter in
and remarks by Mrs. Otto Des Florida. Mrs. lies, Mrs. Reibel
and Mrs. Louise Reibel opening and Mrs. Lena Huber were
the meeting. Mrs. Iles gave a guests at the luncheon. The next
reading, "To Know God In the meeting will be held on Jan. 5.
Morning .''
Mrs. T. T. Shelton presented
the program and devotions,

CutsS

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Phone 992-7161

Clairol

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$ 99

eo
Christmas
Gift

3~89 Orbitor 4000

REG. 5.95 ......... 4.59

4
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Urnes during any one alarm period.
Masur switch on back of C&amp;80 pennanently cancels a Ia r m. Shaturproof
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aecondo hand.
~ln. high, ~\0 ln. wide, 3\lo ln. deep.

REGULAR RETREADS
ANY SIZE

REG. 4.95 .........

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time- fi rm touch on top leta you

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REG. 3.95.......... 2.99

REG • $9•98

magic tou c h and drowse features .
Ala.rm buzzes at preselected waking

drowse 10 ·mlnute1l, then wakes you
again. Drowoe may be repeated three

IF YOU'RE LOOKING
FOR A BffiER PRICE:

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LIGHTERS

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Reg.

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�H o n.o r s

Winners

The ljeCOnd six weeks honor
roll of Meigs High School was
announced today. Making the
grade of "B" or above In all
their subjects to be listed on the
roll were :

While, Linda Williams, Brenda
Will, Pamela Wilson, Basheba
Wlffe.
.
TENTH GRADE . - Peggy
Arney, John Ash, David Barnbarf, Edna Jane Borreff,
Brenda Barfon, Kimball Beck,
Donna Blevins, Richard
Blumenauer, Donna Boyd, Rick
Bolin, Bruce Caldwell, Thomas
Clelland, Ronald Couch, Diana
Carsey, Melvin . Cremeans,
Linda Cunningham, Joyce
Davis, Dinah Erlewlne, Rodney
Frecker, Kafhy Fridley, Connie
Garnes, David Grant, Ingrid
Hawley, Jeffrey Hawley; James
Hill, Jacqueline Huffon, Mary
Janey, Dana Johnson, Geneva
King, Ezra Kiser, Mary
Krawsczyn, Paul Lambert,
Diane McAngus, Michael May,
Mark Morris, Tina Nlerl, Gary
O'Dell. Roxanna Pafterson,

NINTH GRADE
Sharon
Bing, Anna ColwelL Charles
Conger. Richard Couch, Rober!
Council. Carla Crisp, Sandy
Curfis, Bonnie Dillon, Cindy
Demoskey, April Fraser, Larry
Fridley,
Barbara Fultz ,
Maureen

Hennessy ,

Sonia

Justis, Debra Kennedy, Sonia
Kiser, Nancy Lawrence, Mike

Nesselroad, Phil Ohlinger, Judy
Ann Owen, Kenny Rife. Vicki
Russell, Richard Salser, Sam
Terzeppelous, Gregory
Walburn, Steven Walburn, Joy

Club Projects Fixed
HUSKEY, 'l1IE GRMID CHAMPIO!{ BARROW of the International Uve Stock Show,
ll'ought $41 per pound or a total of $8,815, to Its breeders, Jack Rodlbaugh &amp; Sons of Rensselaer,
Indiana. The record price was paid by Bob Evaris (in hat), President of Bob Evans Farms.
With Jack and his family is the National Pork Queen.

Sold! for $4llb.
CHICAGO - Records and
lraditions fell at the recent
International Livestock Show
when Bob Evans , President of
Bob Evans Farms Inc .,
Columbus, Ohio, purchased the
Grand Champion Barrow Hog
for $41 a pound.
For the first time in the 12
year history of the show the
total purchase price of the 215pound Barrow topped that of the
grand champion steer.
The price paid by the midwest's leading producer of pork
sausage beat the previous
livestock show record by $13.50
per pound.
After the auction, "Husky"
was donated to the Lincoln Park
Zoo, Chicago, for display in the
zoo's farm section.
In what turned out to be a
family affair Evans also purchased the Grand Champion
Jllll\or Fair Barrow and the
Grand Champion Reserve
Barrow. All three champions
were raised by members of the
' me fliillily: ·
·
f in paying the record price,
Evans said shows and auctions
like these help to encourage
breeders of livestock to improve
their stock. "Meat processors, "
Bob Evans said, "are constantly looking for the leaner
meat type stock."
Evans, himself a livestock
breeder, raises prize.winning
Charolais cattle, as well as
quarter horses and other
livestock on his farm at Rio
Grande, Ohio.
Also active in conservation,
this past fall Evans purchased
five wild Spanish Mustangs,
four mares and a stallion to
start a herd at his ranch, the
only such herd east of the
Mississippi. There are only 250
Spanish Mustangs left on the
Western Plains. Evans hopes tO
build the herd to preserve these
animals for future generations.
As president of Bob Evans
t'arms,lnc., Evans has built his
sausage products into the most

popular brand of sausage in the
Midwes t, serving Ohio, Pennsylvania, Indiana, Michigan,
Illinois, Kentucky, and West
Virginia from the company's.
three farm plants in Bidwell
and Xenia, Ohio, and Hillsdale,
Michigan .
The company also owns and
(1lerates a chain of Bob Evans
Farms Restaurants in Ohio.

IJ J' J
110i-tua11

Unsold
Toys to Be
Given Away

'J

Featuring good country
cooking, these are fast
becoming, one of Ohio's more
popular family restaurants.
Currently, the company has
restaurants in Rio Grande,
Chillciothe and Columbus, and
one opening this month in
Cincinnati. There are two under
construction in Toledo.

R0 tl:uck R eld

The traditional holiday
potluck of the Loyal Bereans
Class of the Middleport Church
of Christ was held Tuesday
night in the church dining room.
Poinse ttias, greenery , and
candles decorated the tables
with L. R. Wiley giving the
blessing. A program of
Christmas
music
and
meditations was presented to
Mr . allG Mrs. George ~einhart,
chairmen.
·,.&lt;, 1; · : ~ Mar tha McNeal played
"Silver Bells" on the piano,
Mrs. Grace Hawley read a
Chrisimas story from Ideals
written by Alice Seeward, Mrs.
Meinhart gave the legend of the
Christmas rose, and a

Jr High HODOr
o

Pupils Listed
Students who have maintained a "B" average or better
at the Meigs Junior High School
for the second six weeks
grading period have been announced by Principal Russell
Moore .
SEVENTH - Mary Boggs,
Vickie
Branham,
Dale
Browning , Kellee Burdette,
Marilee Cassell, Ronald Coats,
Cathy Coleman ,' Mark Davis,
Robin Dewhurst, Mary Durst,
Paula Eichinger; Teresa Ellis,
Vanessa Folmer, Becky Fultz,
Sandy Garnes, Gregory Glaze,
Jennifer Grate, Jayne Hutchison , Karen Hysell, Vickie
Johnston, Cheryl Kennedy,
Laraine McElhaney, Rhonda
McGrath, Duane McLaughlin,
Denise Marshall, Cathy
Meadows, Vickie Might, John
Partlow, Faith Perrin, Bobby
Powers , Suzy Samuels,
Timothy Scites, qebbie Shelton,
Melanie Simmons, Rebecca
Thomas, Diana Thornton, June
Wamsley , Duane Weber ,
Beverly Wilcox, Beverly Will.
EIGHTH - Sharon Barrett,
Tom Batey, Bruce Blackston,
Gary Boggess, Christie Burson,
Sandra Carleton, Karen
Coleman, Ginger Cullums,
Patty Eblin, Elaine Fish,
Cherie Fry, Marc Fultz, Darla
Gill , Cindy Glaze , Crystal
Glaze, James Hawley, Tami
Hoffman , Debbie Janey, Mona
King, Max Laudermilt, Tami
Lee, Mike Magnotta, Charles
Marshall, Tammy Mowery,
Carmel Murphy, Kimberly
OhUnger, Judy Radford, Cindy
Reedy, Steve Rife, Rebecca
Roush, Kathy Rupe, Mary
RuscheII, Dale Ed Sisson, Mary
Smith, Tamra Stanley, George
Stewart, Michael Swick, Usa
Thomas, Donna Thornton,
Gregory VanMeter, Jack Well,
Terry Whaley , Earl Wood,
Janice Young.

Toys not sold during the
recent bazaar of the Ohio Eta
Phi ·Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will go to children of
needy families , Miss Lynn
Daniels, service chairman,
announced Tuesday night.
Meeting in the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
social
room,
members
discussed the couple's party to
be held Friday night at Oscar's
and the Tuesday night members' party to be held at
Charlotte Taunton's home with
a gift exchange.
It was announced that Mrs.
Nancy Beaver won an afghan .
Miss Elaine Davis presented a
box of candy, traditional announcement of a bride-elect, to
her sorority sisters. Miss Davis
and Don Swisher will be
married on Jan. 2. Mrs. Vikki
Gloeckner presided at the
q~eeting, Cultural program on
"Absolute Music" was given by
Mrs. Judy Werry and Mrs.
Tennna Well.
Ml.sli Joanna Distler, . home
economist for the Columbus and
I
Southern Ohlo Electric Co.,
cave
an
arrangement
,A thought for today : British
d~monstration and served poet John M_iiton said, "Peace
punch and cookies at the con- has her victories no less
clllllon of her program.
renowned than war."

Holiday projects, including a
conlribution to the Jaycees for
Christmas toys and gifts for the
residents of the Eimw~od
Nursing Home, were planned by
the Sew-Rite-Sewing Club
Wednesday night.
The meeting was held at the
club house with Mrs. Ray Baity
and Mrs. Ronald Browning as
the hostesses. A visit to the
Nursing home with the gifts and
·

Mrs. Mills is
Party Hostess
Recitations learned as
youngsters were recited by
members of the Jolly Bunch
Sewing Club at a holiday party
staged Tuesday night at the
home of Mrs. Nora Mills.
The club, organized 30 years
ago, recognized Mrs. Mattie
Bush, 86, the oldest member.
Mention was also made of Mrs.
Blanche Haskins who resides at
the Hamden Rest Home.
An exchange of Christmas
gifts followed a ham dinner.
Attending were Mrs. Gertrude
Miller, Mrs. Alma Miller, Mrs.
Ethel Hughes, Miss Mae Weber,
Mrs. Marjorie Milhoan, Mrs.
Lillian Smith, Mrs. Bush, Mrs.
Beatrice Robson, Mrs. Evelyn
Grueser, Mrs. Edith Jividen,
Mrs. Betty (Cline, Mrs. Grace
Johnson, Mrs. Freda Mitch,
Mrs. Helen Reynolds, Mrs. Mae
Bailey, Mrs. Jane Gllkey and
Mrs. Mills, all members, and
guests, Mrs. Vernon Weber,
Mrs. Lela Courtney of Byesville
here visiting Mrs. Hughes.

hwnorous poem, ~'Not a Man's
Job,'' and Dick Wiley sang to
his own accompaniment on the
guitar a medley of holiday
songs including "Chrisimas,"
"I'm Dreaming of a White
Christmas," "Walking in a
Winter Wonderland," "0 Holy
Night," and was joined by the
group for "Silent Night."
Officers for 1972 elected were
Mrs. Hawley, president; Mrs.
George' Meinhart,
vice
president; Mrs. M. L. Kelly,
first vice president; George
Meinhart,
second
vice
presidenl ;
Mrs.
Lena
McKinley, secretary ; Mrs .
Martha Childs, treasurer ; and
l'OwmDg
1
Mrs . Ruth Karr , assistant
secretary.
It was reported that $77 was
cleared on the soup sale last
month and Mrs. Hawley ex- • PT. PLEASANT - Mason
tended appreciation to those County democrats will dine,
who helped. Greeters in hear the state's attorney
February will be Mr. and Mrs. general, and meet probable
Meinhart, Mr. and Mrs. Robert democratic candidates in the
McElhinny, Mr. and Mrs . 1972 primary election Friday at
Wiley, Mrs. Cathryn Ervin, and the Moose hall.
Mrs. Carrie Roush. It was noted Tickets were available from
that Mrs. Lewis Triplett is ill. Democratic men and women,
Decorations for the affair officers of the Democratic
were handled by Mr. and Mrs. Women's Organization and
M. L. Kelly, Mrs. Meinhart, and members of the Young
Mrs. McElhinny. Ida Casci and Democrats Club of Mason
Miss McNeal were guests for County. The general public is
the dinner which was attended invited .
Donald Noll, dinner and
by 22 members of the class.
dance chairman, said the
dinner will be served at 6:30
p.m. and the dance will be from
9 till midnight. Jan Haddox and
his Music Department will play
for dancing.
The speaker is Chauncey H.
Browning Jr., West Virginia's
Attorney General.

B

,

Will

Speak Fn'day

today's FUNNY

Frlday, Safurday
&amp; Sunday
Colton Knlf. 75c lb.; New
Shipmen! Polyester Knit, no
higher than S3.88 yd. Sheel$,
crib size fo king size,
polyesfer, no -ironing.
9:30fo9
Mondayfhru Friday
9:30 fo5 Safurday
1 to5 Sun\fay

COTION GIN
Rt. 7

Addison, 0 .

\.\\~\\Tv HIGHLIGHTS
with Paul CraMree
CALL POINTVIEW : 992 -25 05
There 's a brand-new "Appolnfmenf with Desfiny"
sequence starling fonlghf on series . This one retraceS the
" Episode Acflon," the grand plofs fo kill Hitler, 8 p.m., Ch.

old reruns of movie seria ls 8.

from the glory days of fhe
+++
Saturday affernoon popcorn- MOVIES : " Inside
and-gunpowder circuli. It's Straighf," 4 p.m., and
" Zorro's Black Wh ip,'' 8 p.m .. "Befween Two Worlds," Will&gt;
Ch . 9. I really love fhls corn . John Garfield and Faje
Emersoo. 11 :30p.m., bofh 01:
+++
Bob Hgoe shows uo wifh 10.
Robert voulef, Lee Marvin
+++
..
and the Associated Press AllFRIDAY: "Sesame Streef"
America foofball learn on his leeches more ,!han · just
epeclal af 9 p.m., Chs. 2 &amp; 7. numbers and lefters. Today's
And Perry Como has' a version on Ch. 11 Is abouf
special with Mifzl Gaynor and ecology, I I: 30 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Arf Carney, 8 p.m .. Ch . 8.
lA dlfferent-.plsode 1! on Ch. 9
And !here's anofher in the at 8 a.m., noon, and 4 p.m.)

a basket of fruit will he made by
several members of the club on
the Sunday preceding Christmas.
The annual Chrisimas dinner
was set for Dec. 14 at 7 p.m.
with a dinner at The Martin to
be followed by a gift exchange
and party at the home of Mrs.
Flo Strickland. A homemade
auction was held as a fund
raising project.
Officers elected for the new
year were Mrs. George Hoff.
man, president; Mrs. Robert
Potter, vice president; Mrs.
Elza Gilmore, secretary and
news reporter, and Mrs. Don
Collins, treasurer. Mrs. Charles
Hoffman received both her
birthday and anniversary gifts.
Mrs. Gilmore received an
anniversary gift.
Others attending were Mrs.
Don Mullen, Mrs. Willard
Boyer, Mrs. Don McKnight and
Mrs. Bill McDaniel.

at

•
Meigs

Debra Pierce, Joe Rosenbaum,
Sandra
Rusche!,
Debra
Schaefer. Jeanie Schneider,
Debbie Schuck, Albert Smith,
Jill Smith, Mary Jane Smifh,
Randall Snider, Ricky Sfobart,
David Swisher, Brenda · Von
Meter, David Wolfe, Cindy Van
Meter. ·
•
ELEVENTH GRADE Shirley Alkire, Diane Aleshle,
Barbara Archer, George Arnoff, Roger Atkins, Linda
Afklnson, Lynne Baker, Belly
Barrell, Janet Biggs, Elizabeth
Blaeffnar, James Boggs, Sarah
Boyles, Francis Broderick, Jon
Bunce, Terry Cadle, Susanne
Card, Wanda Cordlllo, Richard
Carfer, Rita Cascl, Vickie
Clark, Jodi Cllckenger, Sfephen
Coff&lt;lrlll , Jeff bars!, Merr l
Ebersbach, Jenny Ferguson,
Lefe Floyd, Donna Francis,
Beth Fulfz. ··'Debbie Geliagher,
Rick Gaul, · David Gerard,
Patricia Glaze, Karen Hale,
David Hanson, Kennefh Harris,
Sheila Hawk, Greg Hayes,
Rendy Heynes, Connie Herdman, Melissa Hooper, John
Kaufl, Bill Kennedy, Eugene
McKinney, Ragena McGuire,
Krlsty Malson, Edlfh Mees,
Richard Mendenhall., Terry
Mefheny, Sherry Michael, Heidi
Milhoan, Debra Miller, John
Miller. Phillip Moon,. Kimberly
Mowery, Desiree Pike, David
Reeves, Chrlsflne Robinson ,
Brldgeff Ross, James Schmoll,
Chrlsfy Stanley, Richard
Vaughan, Steve Warner, Dallas
Weber, Bonnie Welsh, Paffl
Well, Sharon Wilson, Minday
Young .
TWELFTH GRADE - Joyce
Amey, Susan Andrews, Richard
Ash, Thomas Ball, Irene
Barnes. Doris Barnhart, Wayne

Announced ,

Barneff, Opal Berry, RObert
Blacksfon, Resa Boofh, Joo
Buck, Pamela Burson, Karen
Cadle, Debra Carder, Tom
Cooke, Michael Cullums,
Jehelle Cummings, Samson
Oars!, Dalene DeLegal, Andreas Dewhurst, Jo Ellen Diehl,
Paul Dill, Nancy Dixon, Roger
Dixon, Harvey Erlewlne.
James Esfep, Debbie Garnes,
Dennis Gilmore, Vicki Grate,
Nancy Greenlee, Terry Grogan,
Connie Grueser, Melanie
Hackeff, Harold Hanson, Jill
Harris, Vicki Harrison, Ted
Hayes, Roger Hendrix, John
Hunnell , Deboron Johnson.
Fred Jones, Cindy Jordan, Tom
Kern, Diana King, Sherry King,
Kent Kloes, pavld Krawsczyn,
Connie l\nning, Charles Legar,

Ted Lehew, Jeff Lewis, Douglas
Llffle, Pamela
Debra
May, G'ary Mlchae, Mary
Midkiff, Thiry Milliron. Darla
Neufzllng , Marla Neutzllng, ·
Ruby Nlclnsky, Carl Offuft, Ann
Ohlinger. Dabble . ~hllnger,
Edward Parker, ~a ~en Price.
Janet Reeves, Rosemary Rice,
Mill sa ·Rizer, Susan Rusche I,
Leanne Sebo, . Becky Scaggs,
Brenda Woods Staafs, Steven
Craig Stanley, Janet Slivers,
Michael Struble, Patricia
Thoma , Fred ThOmpson,
George Thompson, Robart
Titus. Paul Walker, Margie
Wamsley, Joe Welker, Danny
White, Rebecca Will, Clarence
(Tiny) Williams, Rebecca
Wright, Cathy Yates, Eddie
Young, Sharyl Johnson.

Mant•y·

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between

Russians

tated city after the Nazis destroyed it during World War II.
ThePolishpeoplesayyoucan
get the best view of Wa'rsaw
from atop the Palace of Cuiture "because then you can't
see the Russian Palace of Cuiture."

ca and the decline of the United Stat~s influence.
r ussia is having the same
problems today trying to maintain its influence among the
European Communist bloc
countires. Most of these countires are anxious, even willing,
to take a Marxist or Socialist
line, but communism as it is
practiced in Soviet Russia, the
hard line, Stalin - type, Lenintype of monolithic communism
may be on the rocks.

c

Silverplote ...-vice Includes troy,
coffee pol, tugar, &lt;rHmer,

Men's &amp; Women's
Wedding Bands
35.00

Watches by lltolova
35.00 up

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McCLURES DAIRY ISLE

Footwear Gifts For the Family

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:Robot 1M!~ ihat his radar could lead
toTIIICIII all ihi:toJs that MWr goi fbcsd In
Because Christmas \s a~ 9efl1011 and
~ and his frl0nds took to the air for

PHILCO

HI-BRITE 25" COLOR TV

CBl 80 UWA Knollwood

Christmas Specla I
•20000 oH

MISS AMERICA
and

NATURALIZER
SHOES

"A Complete Home Entertainment Genter"

Ladies' Fashion

WITH
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BOOTS

ftnYi\t'
1116

~

Leathers and paten!
leathers in

Crabtree Heads
Point &lt;lwnber
- PT. PLEASANT - Paul
Crabtree, president of Paul
Crabtree &amp; Aasociates, Inc.,
opera\Or of PoinTVlew Cabl_e
' Telev#l!lll.. . was elected
president Qf~
- ~.oint PleasantMason Co · · Chamber of
Conun~ · -: :the board of
directors Tuesday night.
Crabtree suceeeds Charles
Lanham, president of the
Cltizena National Bank ot PQint
Pleall8ilt.
· , ..
Other officers elected were
Mike Shaw, Mason County
Prosecuting Attorney, vice.
president; Cecil 1!llnton,
operitor of vmase lrisurance,
secretary, 111d RDbert Wingett,
'Point Pleasant Register,. was
re-elected treasurer.
Oulgoin( .Prlllident J..anbam
-diac:ulled a report from Gov.
Arc~ !A- Moore, Jr, on Route 2
upll'idlnB and efforta to reopen
,.;.'·the ·:p)uaanl Point Resort
·:.:·• Moore&gt;•lald in his letter that
attenlpta 1o secure an operator
for the Resort ~~r.v~ proved

*************.......

• c •

-the

4-PIECE COFFEE SERVICE ·

Germans

Lenin, and it has its own liberal
brand of Marxism and a rela·
lively open society. In East
Germany, the peoi&gt;_le have accepted Communist rule, but
don't like it and need a wall
and closed borders to keep the
people inside.
All these so-called Communist
counlries have a different approach and interpretation of
Communism. Some are liberal
and moving closer to the West.
Some are carbon copys of the
Soviet Union and echo the Soviet line like Charlie McCarthy
does for Edgar Bergen, but most
are restive. They crave more
contacts ·and trade and cor!Sumer goods from the U. S. and
the West - just like Yugosiovia
and Rumania - and this irritates and terrifies. Moscow.
Some Communist European

The1bysThatThlkoo: a Christmas

COURT ST., POMEROY

and

counties tolerate varying de- consumer goods, not steel mllla.
The universal criticism In aU
greees of freedom of religion
and freedom of the press and East European counties, includfreedom to criticize the regime. ing Yugoslovla, is that they are
Some, like Russia, don't. They ruled by technocrata, bureauare all different. Moscow is lry- crats and political party hacks,
ing to call the tune wlth little and that refonna are not fast
success and without using force . enough or democratic .enough.
What seems to be rn1aaJni
But the threat of military force
most
of all is something we
This anti-Soviet humor typiis always there, as It was in
fies how Communist Europe reHungary and Czechoslovar.ia, take for granted - freedom to
gards Russia. But it is only half
which tried to dismantle the Ira vel, freedom to criticize, freedom to better yourself, freedom
the story.
.
Communist apparatus.
In Poland, as in most ComThe further East you go in to produce what you want to
munist European countries, the
Europe, the closer to Russia, produce, freedom to lry for the
general feeling is that they hate In Poland, for example, about
and the lower the standard of best deal for yourself.
By IRVING LEIBOWITZ
the Germans, fear the Russians, three per cent of the people are
living, the less · freedom you
Editor, Lorain Journal.
and like Americans.
Communists and even some of
have.
A THOUGHT
In Warsaw, the tallest and Thismislrustof the ·Germans, the Communists are privately
People everywhere line up to
ugliest building in this beautiful and dread of the Russians, is anti-Soviet. (Poland is 90 per
buy meat, bread, vegetables,
FOR TODAY
city is the Palace of Culture all the more interesting because cent Catholic and the churches
fruit and hard-to-get consumer
and Science, a gift of the Rus- it comes at a time when a lot are full .) Yugosiovia today has
goods. The exception is YugoIf you are easily beafen,
sians to the Polish pef1Jie who of people in the free world are little interest in Russian -style
slovia, w~ch broke with Russia, ."'£ i~~k;lll be offen atwerereconstructingtheirdevas- talking disparagingly of Ameri- communism, never menhons
declared Itself non - aligned m
-Anonymous
.
foreign affairs and started its
.
e e
own marl:et economy like the
e ·c t s t o n o n
ompromtse
o m m g w e s t , instead of like Russia
where there is to~i state con- ~
leo! of the economy. prices, :
COLUMBUS(UPI)-AHouse- if a floor vote is inuninent.
with pennies." He declined to House Republicans and Demo- transportation, housing.
+: It's Quick! Easy
Senate conference conunittee Cuyahoga County Democrats take an immediate position on crats who have devised a comThe only Eastern European
was to meet today to decide in both the Senate and House the bill, however.
promise income tax bill of thetr counlry ~here .the people seem -1&lt;
whether to move to the floor a said they would be in Cleveland
Nobody Happy
own which includes abolition of content m a r1g1d Commun1st i(
budget-tax compromise calling later today for a meeting with The bill includes the personal municipal income taxes and a state ls Russia itself. Make no -1&lt;
for about $7M milllon in new Democratic County Chairman income tax; a 4 _per ce'ilt tax 20 per cent property tax roll- mistake aboutit. The vast rna- -1&lt;
revenues, including a One-half Joseph Bartunek.
on corporate net mcome up to back.
]Orlty of RUSSian people seem
Fridays Only
to 3'h per cent personal income The Cleveland area DemO.. $25,1100 and 8 per cent on inWork Required
satisfied with their own brand
The Drive-In Window
tax.
crats are said to be pressing come over that amount; a
Unanimously passed in the of communism. They think
is Open
.
.
.
.
.
.
th
t
·
·
th
·
Se
Wed
d
b'll
th'
tting
bette
II
th
·
9
A
M
The meetmg was to begm at for reviSIOn of the legislative ree-cen mcrease m e c&gt;ganate
nes ay was a 1
mgs are ge
ra e
. . t o 7 P . M.
10 a.m.
reapportionment plan, which rette tax; the severance tax on permitting county welfal'!' di- time, and it was their revolu- -1&lt;
(Continuously)
The four Republican and two will be taken up again under coal and other minerals; tax in- rectors to require employable tion in the first place 54 years Oth 8 k' H
tha ta ted 'I Th S . .,. er an tng ours 9 1o 3
Democratic conferees were .,.. court order Dec. 20.
creases on insurance compa- welfare recipients to earn their ago
ts r
I . . e ov1et i~••d 5 to 7 as usual on
peeled to act on signal from One Cleveland senator said if nies, banks and dealers in checks by participating in work- people know that their Commu- +: Frodays.
· their respective legislative lead- the plan is not revised the in- stocks and bonds; homestead relief programs.
nist "friends" in Poland, Yugo- : .
•
ers, who were faced with a de- come tax bill will l~e votes ••emption for the elderly, and
The measure, sponsored by slovia and East Gennany ha~e
cision on whether to seek a from the Cuyahoga County del- a 10 per cent across-the-board Sen. Tennyson Guyer, R-Find- ~t bette~- and they are wa1t· · --- .
--·
floor vote this week or delay egation ln the House.
reduction in real estate taxes. lay, is similar to a bill already mg patiently for things to get
until next week.
Adopted Budget Cuts
"While nobody will be hap- passed by the House.
better for themselves.
-1&lt;
POMEROY, OHIO
If the decision was for a de- The conference committee py," said Sen. Howard C. Cook,
Guyer said the proposal . All Easte~n European coun- +:
Merr.ber FDIC
lay, it was believed the con- Wednesday night formally R-Toledo, chairman of the con- would save the state $50 to tires are havmg trouble because
Member Federal
ferees would hold off on sign- adopted a series of amend- ference committee, "! think $100 million a year. He noted the governments are stressing
Reserve System . ·
ing the report, assembled Wed- ments, including $103 million in this will be about as fair a persons would not be required building industry over consumer
nesday night.
budget cuts from the so-called compromise as we could work to work if they were physically goods - and the people want ·
House · and Senate leaders Taf1-Fiannery bill'·which failed out. "
or mentally disabled, too old,
also had to decide which cham- in the Senate by two votes last House Minority Leader A. G. attending school, participating
ber should vote first on the re- month.
Lancione, D-Bellaire, said the in a vocational rehabilitation
P""t once it is signed by the
The m'ajor cuts were $66 mil- bill should be called the Cook- program, or needed at home to
" •k-old panel, the fourth to lion in public welfare appropria- McNamara bill after Cook and care for children or an intackle the thorny fiscal prob- tions, $17.5 million from educa- Rep. Keith McNamara, R-Co- capacitated spouse.
!em since Oct. 1.
tion and $16 million from men- lumbus, who offered the budget
Also receiving unanimous apWorking on Delay
tal health programs.
reductions which both Demo- proval in the Senate was a
Forces were at work to de- Also changed was the top cratic conferees opposed.
companion bill offered by Guylay the vote until next week, personal income bracket, drop- ·But Cook labeled the bill a er requiring recipients of genThat's What Sonny Specializes
· d'1v1'dua1s w1'th modifl·cation of Taft - Flannery era I re I'1ef an d a1'd to dependand pred'ICu·ons van'ed on the ·mg the tax on m
ln. Basket Dinners. Soft
bill's ·chances if it is sent to income over $40,000 a year after Sen. William W. Taft, R- ent children to obtain identifiDrinks, Coffee, Snacks, Frozen
the floor today.
from 4 to 3'h per cent.
Cleveland, and Rep. James J. cation cards with their photoQe_sserts For Holiday Parties.
One highly placed senate Re- .' N~,other. fH million worth of lf.\1\Dn~ry\... OrC.le.veland,.- ,_wno graphS to help make sure wei· •:;,0'
publican gave odds of only 5G- taxes were shaved from pro- drafted the first of two person- fare checks are cashed by the
50 that it wouiQJ!IISS, but an- posed levies on insurance com- al income tax bills which met proper recipients.
STOP YOUR SLEIGH .II.T
other Senate Repulili.can ·gave it panies and minerals extracted defeat in the Senate.
a good chance in the Senate. from the earth.
Rep. James Thorpe, R-Aili- ·
The world's first automoHe said the outlooK was some- Frank W. King, president of ance, Il)ade a futile pitch to
bile
club was formed in Paris
what more pessimistic in the •he Ohio AFL-CJO termed the conferees in opposition to
4th &amp; Locust
Middleport
in 1895, accordin~ to EncySanta Will
·
'
.
House,whichhasadjournedun- these cuts a "sham" and said the report. He is a member of clopaedia Britanmca.
til' next week subject to recall the committee was "dealing a coalition of conservative

D
lt! m~g
m
m

Goessler's

l9 9~P

m

¢J~:~~Iy

If It Comes From

53 Pieces

g JU

Caught

EDITORS NOTE: Irving Leibowih, editor of · ihe Lorain
Journal,recentJy'reiumedfrom
a four-week Mission to Moscow
study trip behind the Iron Curtain where be visited cities and
towns uuder the sphere of the
Spvlet Union. He wrote several
articles for his newspaper, two
of which were condensed and
provided to this newspaper by
United Press International. The
first article deals with Lelbowltz' Impressions of the entire
trip.

Mike Oyer, W.
19
19.0
1f7J-72 HIGH S(HOOL
BASKETBAl--L
To~yVau~han,M . 16
16.0
( lncludts gam It
~~~~~~~~~-- w.
1
.
through Dec. 4)
Rod
Ferguson,
G.
12
1 12.0
. OVERALL STANDINGS
TEAM
WL POP
OFFENSIVELY
Eaatern
4 o 284 178 l~e~der
~~1 ~~~) A8~00
Alexander
3 o 261 194
85 (1) 85.0
Gallipolis
2 o 1SO 104 North Galli a
Norfh Gall Ia
1 o ss ST Waver~
165 (2) 82.5
Meigs
2 1 1'16 189
j~
~u
Afhens
2 1 172 16-4 ~~lllltto~s
284 (41 71 .0
Waverly
1 1 165 114 Easfern
Wltllston
1 1 143 157 lronfon
134 (2) 67 .0
lronfon
1 1 134 120 l:it~~on
~:~
Vinton County
1 1 127 132
127 (2) 63.5
Kyger Creek
1 1 114 124 Vinton Co.
Miller
1 2 179 194 ~ller
179 (31 59.7
Logan
1 2 175 191
uthern
179 (3) 59.7
FeGtl'ai-Hocklng 1 2 168 212 Logon
175 (3) 58.3
172 (3) 57.3
Sf~r-Wash .
1 2 155 195 Afhens
Nelson-York
1 3 209 207 K~er Creek
114 (21 57.0
Wahama
0 1 so 74 F .-Hocking
168 (3) 56.0
'Jackson
0 2 132 139 Nels-York
209
52.3
155 (4)
(3) 51.7
Glousfer
0 3 135 203 Sfarr-Wash.
SO (1) so.o
Soujhern
0 3 179 213 Wahama
Pt. Pleasanf
0 0 0 0 Glouster
125 (31 45.0
SEOAL STANDINGS
TEAM DEFENS.!l':~L
Avg.
(VARSITY)
178 (4) 4-4.5
•TEAM
W L POP Eastern
207 (4) 51.8
Waverly
109852 Nels-York
lrooton
107255 Gallipolis
104 (2) 52.0
Gallipolis
106-4SO
Meigs
106258
57 (I) 57.0
Jtckson ·
015862 Norfh Gall Ia
Logan
015572 ~~;!~"creek
g~
~-~
Wellston
015298
189 (31 63:o
Athens
01S064 Meigs
Logan
·
191 (3) 63.7
TRI-VALLEY
!VARSITY)
~~~~e~nder
J:~
::-~
TEAM
W L POP
195 (31 65:0
Belpre
1 0 SO 49 Starr-Wash.
132 (21 66.0
Nels-York
0 1 49 so Vlnfon Co.
Fed-Hocking
0 0 0 0 y~~~::,e,:~ (3) :~:~
Vlnlon Co.
0 0 0 0 Fed,- Hockl~g
212
70.7
Warren Local
00 0 0
Southern
213 ' (3) 71.0
SVAC STANDINGS
(VARSITY)
Wahama
74 (1) 74.0
TEAM
WL POP Wellston
157
(2) 78.5
Easfern
3 0 218 126 THIS WEEK'S SCHEDULE
FRIDAY
Symmes Valley
2 0 149 90
North Gallla
1 0 85 57
SEOAL
Ironton af Afhens
Kyger Creek
1 1 114 124 Jackson
at
Logan
Soufhern
0 2 123 156
Hannan- Trace
0 2 89 121 Waverly all,\elgs
Southwestern
0 2 71 175 Gallipolis of Wells to~
SEOAL STANDINGS
Nelsonvllle~Yl~~:'!~Y
!RESERVE)
Federal -Hock ing
TEAM
W 1-- POP
Waverly
1 o 6-4 31 Vinton Countl af Belpre
Athens
1 0 58 43 Hannan- Tracev~c North Galli a
lronfon
1 0 54 30
Jackson
1 o 33 29 Soufhwesfern at Symmes
Gallipolis
o I 43 58 Valley
Wellstoo
o 1 31 6-4 Gi
t 21hers d
Logan
o 1 30 54 Ml~~1e;t "starr~~~s~l~gfon
Melgs
0 1 29 33
Hunflngton Ea·sf at Polnl
TRI-VAI--1--EY
(RESERVE)
~~a:"n!b
Catholic ai
TEAM
WL POP wa~r!~ L~;~
Nels-York
I 0 47 39
SATURDAY
Belpre
0 1 39 47
Fed.- Hocklng
00 0 0 K
c kS~A~ast
Vlnfon Co.
0 0 0 0 yger ree Others ern
Warren l--ocal
00 0 0
Federal -Hocking af Miller
SVAC STANDINGS
(RESERVE)
Alexander of Vlnfo~ Cou~fy
Laurelvllle
TEAM
W L POP Norfh
Gall IaalafGlousfer
Eastern (Pike)
Easfern
3 0 122 86
Reemlln
of
Sfarr-Washlngton
Symmes Valley
2 o 97 71
North Gallla
1 o 45 29 Columbus Bishop Harlley af
Kyger Creek
I 1 81 67 Waverly
Southern
0 2 60 93 Frontier Local af warren Local
Hannan-Trace
0 2 52 93 Belpre at Parkersburg Cafhollc
TUESDAY
Solithwestern
0 2 61 79
TEAM STATISTICS
Waverly at ~!~~~n
Field Goii-Perconlatt
Gallipolis
at lronfon
TEAM
FGM-FGA Pet.
Athens
at
Meigs
Gallipolis
26-45 .578
Ironton
30-43 .476 Wellslon at L~an
Meigs
22-49 .449
Waverly
43-99 .43-4 Soufhwesterns .f~annan Trace
Others
Athena
21-49 .429
Wellston
25-67 .373 Nelsonv ille-York at Kyger
Jackson
20-56 .357 Creek
Logan
19-67 .284 Ripley at Point Pfeasant
F.-.. Throw Percental'
TEAM
FTM-FT Pet.
Waverly
12-19 .632
Gallipolis
12-19 .632
Ironton
12-19 .632
Meigs
18·29 .621
Jackson
IS-31 .581
enlisted very
Logan
17-33 .515
All\ens
8-18 .444
lristoyst
Wellston
2· 6 .333
REBOUNDS
TEAM
No. G Avg.
Waverly
68 1 68.0
Meigs
47 1 .47.0
Gallipolis
41 I 41.0
Athens
40 1 40.0
lronfon
40 1 40 .0
Jackson
35 1 35.0
Logan
28 1 28.0
Wellsfoo
20 1 20.0
PERSONAL FOULS
TEAM
No. G Avg.
Waverly
7 1 7.0
Alhens
14 1 14.0
Gallipolis
14 1 14.0
Wellston
15 1 15.0
Logan
17 1 17.0 ·
Ironton
21 1 21.0
Meigs
23 1 23.0
Jackson
23 1 23.0
INDIVIDUAL LEADERS
Field Goal Percentage
IR&gt;
Name, THm FGM-FGA Pet.
Roger Spellman. Well 3-3 1.000
Dive Salyers, Wav. 3-3 1.000
Rod Ferguaon, Gall. H .800
Gil Price. Gall.
3-4 .750
Mlkt Sayre, Maigs
3-4 .750
Mod~l
Ray McKinnis, Well. 6-8 .7SO
FrH Tllraw Perconte1•
Neme, THm FTM-FT Pet.
Greg Smlfh, L.
5-5 1.000
Bud Chrlsflan, Iron. 5-3 1.000
Tony Vaughan, M.
7-8 .875
Larry Snowden. G.
6-7 .857
Sieve Ktller, Jack.
5-6 .833
REBOUNDS
,
Name, THm
No. G Avg.
)!!!_Morrlf, lfl~-- _ 20 1 20~0

!o&gt;

Especially .

Stainless
Steel Ware

SEO Cage Statistics

Poles

many

colors.

fOil. IAEM
~MO

Also
Boots
For The
Fami~

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A complete home entertainment Center In one
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operete independently of Color TV. With op·

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phono can be enjoyed in a second .room at th e
same time Color TV Is being enjoved in another.

FOREMAN &amp;· ABBOn ·
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�H o n.o r s

Winners

The ljeCOnd six weeks honor
roll of Meigs High School was
announced today. Making the
grade of "B" or above In all
their subjects to be listed on the
roll were :

While, Linda Williams, Brenda
Will, Pamela Wilson, Basheba
Wlffe.
.
TENTH GRADE . - Peggy
Arney, John Ash, David Barnbarf, Edna Jane Borreff,
Brenda Barfon, Kimball Beck,
Donna Blevins, Richard
Blumenauer, Donna Boyd, Rick
Bolin, Bruce Caldwell, Thomas
Clelland, Ronald Couch, Diana
Carsey, Melvin . Cremeans,
Linda Cunningham, Joyce
Davis, Dinah Erlewlne, Rodney
Frecker, Kafhy Fridley, Connie
Garnes, David Grant, Ingrid
Hawley, Jeffrey Hawley; James
Hill, Jacqueline Huffon, Mary
Janey, Dana Johnson, Geneva
King, Ezra Kiser, Mary
Krawsczyn, Paul Lambert,
Diane McAngus, Michael May,
Mark Morris, Tina Nlerl, Gary
O'Dell. Roxanna Pafterson,

NINTH GRADE
Sharon
Bing, Anna ColwelL Charles
Conger. Richard Couch, Rober!
Council. Carla Crisp, Sandy
Curfis, Bonnie Dillon, Cindy
Demoskey, April Fraser, Larry
Fridley,
Barbara Fultz ,
Maureen

Hennessy ,

Sonia

Justis, Debra Kennedy, Sonia
Kiser, Nancy Lawrence, Mike

Nesselroad, Phil Ohlinger, Judy
Ann Owen, Kenny Rife. Vicki
Russell, Richard Salser, Sam
Terzeppelous, Gregory
Walburn, Steven Walburn, Joy

Club Projects Fixed
HUSKEY, 'l1IE GRMID CHAMPIO!{ BARROW of the International Uve Stock Show,
ll'ought $41 per pound or a total of $8,815, to Its breeders, Jack Rodlbaugh &amp; Sons of Rensselaer,
Indiana. The record price was paid by Bob Evaris (in hat), President of Bob Evans Farms.
With Jack and his family is the National Pork Queen.

Sold! for $4llb.
CHICAGO - Records and
lraditions fell at the recent
International Livestock Show
when Bob Evans , President of
Bob Evans Farms Inc .,
Columbus, Ohio, purchased the
Grand Champion Barrow Hog
for $41 a pound.
For the first time in the 12
year history of the show the
total purchase price of the 215pound Barrow topped that of the
grand champion steer.
The price paid by the midwest's leading producer of pork
sausage beat the previous
livestock show record by $13.50
per pound.
After the auction, "Husky"
was donated to the Lincoln Park
Zoo, Chicago, for display in the
zoo's farm section.
In what turned out to be a
family affair Evans also purchased the Grand Champion
Jllll\or Fair Barrow and the
Grand Champion Reserve
Barrow. All three champions
were raised by members of the
' me fliillily: ·
·
f in paying the record price,
Evans said shows and auctions
like these help to encourage
breeders of livestock to improve
their stock. "Meat processors, "
Bob Evans said, "are constantly looking for the leaner
meat type stock."
Evans, himself a livestock
breeder, raises prize.winning
Charolais cattle, as well as
quarter horses and other
livestock on his farm at Rio
Grande, Ohio.
Also active in conservation,
this past fall Evans purchased
five wild Spanish Mustangs,
four mares and a stallion to
start a herd at his ranch, the
only such herd east of the
Mississippi. There are only 250
Spanish Mustangs left on the
Western Plains. Evans hopes tO
build the herd to preserve these
animals for future generations.
As president of Bob Evans
t'arms,lnc., Evans has built his
sausage products into the most

popular brand of sausage in the
Midwes t, serving Ohio, Pennsylvania, Indiana, Michigan,
Illinois, Kentucky, and West
Virginia from the company's.
three farm plants in Bidwell
and Xenia, Ohio, and Hillsdale,
Michigan .
The company also owns and
(1lerates a chain of Bob Evans
Farms Restaurants in Ohio.

IJ J' J
110i-tua11

Unsold
Toys to Be
Given Away

'J

Featuring good country
cooking, these are fast
becoming, one of Ohio's more
popular family restaurants.
Currently, the company has
restaurants in Rio Grande,
Chillciothe and Columbus, and
one opening this month in
Cincinnati. There are two under
construction in Toledo.

R0 tl:uck R eld

The traditional holiday
potluck of the Loyal Bereans
Class of the Middleport Church
of Christ was held Tuesday
night in the church dining room.
Poinse ttias, greenery , and
candles decorated the tables
with L. R. Wiley giving the
blessing. A program of
Christmas
music
and
meditations was presented to
Mr . allG Mrs. George ~einhart,
chairmen.
·,.&lt;, 1; · : ~ Mar tha McNeal played
"Silver Bells" on the piano,
Mrs. Grace Hawley read a
Chrisimas story from Ideals
written by Alice Seeward, Mrs.
Meinhart gave the legend of the
Christmas rose, and a

Jr High HODOr
o

Pupils Listed
Students who have maintained a "B" average or better
at the Meigs Junior High School
for the second six weeks
grading period have been announced by Principal Russell
Moore .
SEVENTH - Mary Boggs,
Vickie
Branham,
Dale
Browning , Kellee Burdette,
Marilee Cassell, Ronald Coats,
Cathy Coleman ,' Mark Davis,
Robin Dewhurst, Mary Durst,
Paula Eichinger; Teresa Ellis,
Vanessa Folmer, Becky Fultz,
Sandy Garnes, Gregory Glaze,
Jennifer Grate, Jayne Hutchison , Karen Hysell, Vickie
Johnston, Cheryl Kennedy,
Laraine McElhaney, Rhonda
McGrath, Duane McLaughlin,
Denise Marshall, Cathy
Meadows, Vickie Might, John
Partlow, Faith Perrin, Bobby
Powers , Suzy Samuels,
Timothy Scites, qebbie Shelton,
Melanie Simmons, Rebecca
Thomas, Diana Thornton, June
Wamsley , Duane Weber ,
Beverly Wilcox, Beverly Will.
EIGHTH - Sharon Barrett,
Tom Batey, Bruce Blackston,
Gary Boggess, Christie Burson,
Sandra Carleton, Karen
Coleman, Ginger Cullums,
Patty Eblin, Elaine Fish,
Cherie Fry, Marc Fultz, Darla
Gill , Cindy Glaze , Crystal
Glaze, James Hawley, Tami
Hoffman , Debbie Janey, Mona
King, Max Laudermilt, Tami
Lee, Mike Magnotta, Charles
Marshall, Tammy Mowery,
Carmel Murphy, Kimberly
OhUnger, Judy Radford, Cindy
Reedy, Steve Rife, Rebecca
Roush, Kathy Rupe, Mary
RuscheII, Dale Ed Sisson, Mary
Smith, Tamra Stanley, George
Stewart, Michael Swick, Usa
Thomas, Donna Thornton,
Gregory VanMeter, Jack Well,
Terry Whaley , Earl Wood,
Janice Young.

Toys not sold during the
recent bazaar of the Ohio Eta
Phi ·Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will go to children of
needy families , Miss Lynn
Daniels, service chairman,
announced Tuesday night.
Meeting in the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
social
room,
members
discussed the couple's party to
be held Friday night at Oscar's
and the Tuesday night members' party to be held at
Charlotte Taunton's home with
a gift exchange.
It was announced that Mrs.
Nancy Beaver won an afghan .
Miss Elaine Davis presented a
box of candy, traditional announcement of a bride-elect, to
her sorority sisters. Miss Davis
and Don Swisher will be
married on Jan. 2. Mrs. Vikki
Gloeckner presided at the
q~eeting, Cultural program on
"Absolute Music" was given by
Mrs. Judy Werry and Mrs.
Tennna Well.
Ml.sli Joanna Distler, . home
economist for the Columbus and
I
Southern Ohlo Electric Co.,
cave
an
arrangement
,A thought for today : British
d~monstration and served poet John M_iiton said, "Peace
punch and cookies at the con- has her victories no less
clllllon of her program.
renowned than war."

Holiday projects, including a
conlribution to the Jaycees for
Christmas toys and gifts for the
residents of the Eimw~od
Nursing Home, were planned by
the Sew-Rite-Sewing Club
Wednesday night.
The meeting was held at the
club house with Mrs. Ray Baity
and Mrs. Ronald Browning as
the hostesses. A visit to the
Nursing home with the gifts and
·

Mrs. Mills is
Party Hostess
Recitations learned as
youngsters were recited by
members of the Jolly Bunch
Sewing Club at a holiday party
staged Tuesday night at the
home of Mrs. Nora Mills.
The club, organized 30 years
ago, recognized Mrs. Mattie
Bush, 86, the oldest member.
Mention was also made of Mrs.
Blanche Haskins who resides at
the Hamden Rest Home.
An exchange of Christmas
gifts followed a ham dinner.
Attending were Mrs. Gertrude
Miller, Mrs. Alma Miller, Mrs.
Ethel Hughes, Miss Mae Weber,
Mrs. Marjorie Milhoan, Mrs.
Lillian Smith, Mrs. Bush, Mrs.
Beatrice Robson, Mrs. Evelyn
Grueser, Mrs. Edith Jividen,
Mrs. Betty (Cline, Mrs. Grace
Johnson, Mrs. Freda Mitch,
Mrs. Helen Reynolds, Mrs. Mae
Bailey, Mrs. Jane Gllkey and
Mrs. Mills, all members, and
guests, Mrs. Vernon Weber,
Mrs. Lela Courtney of Byesville
here visiting Mrs. Hughes.

hwnorous poem, ~'Not a Man's
Job,'' and Dick Wiley sang to
his own accompaniment on the
guitar a medley of holiday
songs including "Chrisimas,"
"I'm Dreaming of a White
Christmas," "Walking in a
Winter Wonderland," "0 Holy
Night," and was joined by the
group for "Silent Night."
Officers for 1972 elected were
Mrs. Hawley, president; Mrs.
George' Meinhart,
vice
president; Mrs. M. L. Kelly,
first vice president; George
Meinhart,
second
vice
presidenl ;
Mrs.
Lena
McKinley, secretary ; Mrs .
Martha Childs, treasurer ; and
l'OwmDg
1
Mrs . Ruth Karr , assistant
secretary.
It was reported that $77 was
cleared on the soup sale last
month and Mrs. Hawley ex- • PT. PLEASANT - Mason
tended appreciation to those County democrats will dine,
who helped. Greeters in hear the state's attorney
February will be Mr. and Mrs. general, and meet probable
Meinhart, Mr. and Mrs. Robert democratic candidates in the
McElhinny, Mr. and Mrs . 1972 primary election Friday at
Wiley, Mrs. Cathryn Ervin, and the Moose hall.
Mrs. Carrie Roush. It was noted Tickets were available from
that Mrs. Lewis Triplett is ill. Democratic men and women,
Decorations for the affair officers of the Democratic
were handled by Mr. and Mrs. Women's Organization and
M. L. Kelly, Mrs. Meinhart, and members of the Young
Mrs. McElhinny. Ida Casci and Democrats Club of Mason
Miss McNeal were guests for County. The general public is
the dinner which was attended invited .
Donald Noll, dinner and
by 22 members of the class.
dance chairman, said the
dinner will be served at 6:30
p.m. and the dance will be from
9 till midnight. Jan Haddox and
his Music Department will play
for dancing.
The speaker is Chauncey H.
Browning Jr., West Virginia's
Attorney General.

B

,

Will

Speak Fn'day

today's FUNNY

Frlday, Safurday
&amp; Sunday
Colton Knlf. 75c lb.; New
Shipmen! Polyester Knit, no
higher than S3.88 yd. Sheel$,
crib size fo king size,
polyesfer, no -ironing.
9:30fo9
Mondayfhru Friday
9:30 fo5 Safurday
1 to5 Sun\fay

COTION GIN
Rt. 7

Addison, 0 .

\.\\~\\Tv HIGHLIGHTS
with Paul CraMree
CALL POINTVIEW : 992 -25 05
There 's a brand-new "Appolnfmenf with Desfiny"
sequence starling fonlghf on series . This one retraceS the
" Episode Acflon," the grand plofs fo kill Hitler, 8 p.m., Ch.

old reruns of movie seria ls 8.

from the glory days of fhe
+++
Saturday affernoon popcorn- MOVIES : " Inside
and-gunpowder circuli. It's Straighf," 4 p.m., and
" Zorro's Black Wh ip,'' 8 p.m .. "Befween Two Worlds," Will&gt;
Ch . 9. I really love fhls corn . John Garfield and Faje
Emersoo. 11 :30p.m., bofh 01:
+++
Bob Hgoe shows uo wifh 10.
Robert voulef, Lee Marvin
+++
..
and the Associated Press AllFRIDAY: "Sesame Streef"
America foofball learn on his leeches more ,!han · just
epeclal af 9 p.m., Chs. 2 &amp; 7. numbers and lefters. Today's
And Perry Como has' a version on Ch. 11 Is abouf
special with Mifzl Gaynor and ecology, I I: 30 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Arf Carney, 8 p.m .. Ch . 8.
lA dlfferent-.plsode 1! on Ch. 9
And !here's anofher in the at 8 a.m., noon, and 4 p.m.)

a basket of fruit will he made by
several members of the club on
the Sunday preceding Christmas.
The annual Chrisimas dinner
was set for Dec. 14 at 7 p.m.
with a dinner at The Martin to
be followed by a gift exchange
and party at the home of Mrs.
Flo Strickland. A homemade
auction was held as a fund
raising project.
Officers elected for the new
year were Mrs. George Hoff.
man, president; Mrs. Robert
Potter, vice president; Mrs.
Elza Gilmore, secretary and
news reporter, and Mrs. Don
Collins, treasurer. Mrs. Charles
Hoffman received both her
birthday and anniversary gifts.
Mrs. Gilmore received an
anniversary gift.
Others attending were Mrs.
Don Mullen, Mrs. Willard
Boyer, Mrs. Don McKnight and
Mrs. Bill McDaniel.

at

•
Meigs

Debra Pierce, Joe Rosenbaum,
Sandra
Rusche!,
Debra
Schaefer. Jeanie Schneider,
Debbie Schuck, Albert Smith,
Jill Smith, Mary Jane Smifh,
Randall Snider, Ricky Sfobart,
David Swisher, Brenda · Von
Meter, David Wolfe, Cindy Van
Meter. ·
•
ELEVENTH GRADE Shirley Alkire, Diane Aleshle,
Barbara Archer, George Arnoff, Roger Atkins, Linda
Afklnson, Lynne Baker, Belly
Barrell, Janet Biggs, Elizabeth
Blaeffnar, James Boggs, Sarah
Boyles, Francis Broderick, Jon
Bunce, Terry Cadle, Susanne
Card, Wanda Cordlllo, Richard
Carfer, Rita Cascl, Vickie
Clark, Jodi Cllckenger, Sfephen
Coff&lt;lrlll , Jeff bars!, Merr l
Ebersbach, Jenny Ferguson,
Lefe Floyd, Donna Francis,
Beth Fulfz. ··'Debbie Geliagher,
Rick Gaul, · David Gerard,
Patricia Glaze, Karen Hale,
David Hanson, Kennefh Harris,
Sheila Hawk, Greg Hayes,
Rendy Heynes, Connie Herdman, Melissa Hooper, John
Kaufl, Bill Kennedy, Eugene
McKinney, Ragena McGuire,
Krlsty Malson, Edlfh Mees,
Richard Mendenhall., Terry
Mefheny, Sherry Michael, Heidi
Milhoan, Debra Miller, John
Miller. Phillip Moon,. Kimberly
Mowery, Desiree Pike, David
Reeves, Chrlsflne Robinson ,
Brldgeff Ross, James Schmoll,
Chrlsfy Stanley, Richard
Vaughan, Steve Warner, Dallas
Weber, Bonnie Welsh, Paffl
Well, Sharon Wilson, Minday
Young .
TWELFTH GRADE - Joyce
Amey, Susan Andrews, Richard
Ash, Thomas Ball, Irene
Barnes. Doris Barnhart, Wayne

Announced ,

Barneff, Opal Berry, RObert
Blacksfon, Resa Boofh, Joo
Buck, Pamela Burson, Karen
Cadle, Debra Carder, Tom
Cooke, Michael Cullums,
Jehelle Cummings, Samson
Oars!, Dalene DeLegal, Andreas Dewhurst, Jo Ellen Diehl,
Paul Dill, Nancy Dixon, Roger
Dixon, Harvey Erlewlne.
James Esfep, Debbie Garnes,
Dennis Gilmore, Vicki Grate,
Nancy Greenlee, Terry Grogan,
Connie Grueser, Melanie
Hackeff, Harold Hanson, Jill
Harris, Vicki Harrison, Ted
Hayes, Roger Hendrix, John
Hunnell , Deboron Johnson.
Fred Jones, Cindy Jordan, Tom
Kern, Diana King, Sherry King,
Kent Kloes, pavld Krawsczyn,
Connie l\nning, Charles Legar,

Ted Lehew, Jeff Lewis, Douglas
Llffle, Pamela
Debra
May, G'ary Mlchae, Mary
Midkiff, Thiry Milliron. Darla
Neufzllng , Marla Neutzllng, ·
Ruby Nlclnsky, Carl Offuft, Ann
Ohlinger. Dabble . ~hllnger,
Edward Parker, ~a ~en Price.
Janet Reeves, Rosemary Rice,
Mill sa ·Rizer, Susan Rusche I,
Leanne Sebo, . Becky Scaggs,
Brenda Woods Staafs, Steven
Craig Stanley, Janet Slivers,
Michael Struble, Patricia
Thoma , Fred ThOmpson,
George Thompson, Robart
Titus. Paul Walker, Margie
Wamsley, Joe Welker, Danny
White, Rebecca Will, Clarence
(Tiny) Williams, Rebecca
Wright, Cathy Yates, Eddie
Young, Sharyl Johnson.

Mant•y·

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between

Russians

tated city after the Nazis destroyed it during World War II.
ThePolishpeoplesayyoucan
get the best view of Wa'rsaw
from atop the Palace of Cuiture "because then you can't
see the Russian Palace of Cuiture."

ca and the decline of the United Stat~s influence.
r ussia is having the same
problems today trying to maintain its influence among the
European Communist bloc
countires. Most of these countires are anxious, even willing,
to take a Marxist or Socialist
line, but communism as it is
practiced in Soviet Russia, the
hard line, Stalin - type, Lenintype of monolithic communism
may be on the rocks.

c

Silverplote ...-vice Includes troy,
coffee pol, tugar, &lt;rHmer,

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Watches by lltolova
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Because Christmas \s a~ 9efl1011 and
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Crabtree Heads
Point &lt;lwnber
- PT. PLEASANT - Paul
Crabtree, president of Paul
Crabtree &amp; Aasociates, Inc.,
opera\Or of PoinTVlew Cabl_e
' Telev#l!lll.. . was elected
president Qf~
- ~.oint PleasantMason Co · · Chamber of
Conun~ · -: :the board of
directors Tuesday night.
Crabtree suceeeds Charles
Lanham, president of the
Cltizena National Bank ot PQint
Pleall8ilt.
· , ..
Other officers elected were
Mike Shaw, Mason County
Prosecuting Attorney, vice.
president; Cecil 1!llnton,
operitor of vmase lrisurance,
secretary, 111d RDbert Wingett,
'Point Pleasant Register,. was
re-elected treasurer.
Oulgoin( .Prlllident J..anbam
-diac:ulled a report from Gov.
Arc~ !A- Moore, Jr, on Route 2
upll'idlnB and efforta to reopen
,.;.'·the ·:p)uaanl Point Resort
·:.:·• Moore&gt;•lald in his letter that
attenlpta 1o secure an operator
for the Resort ~~r.v~ proved

*************.......

• c •

-the

4-PIECE COFFEE SERVICE ·

Germans

Lenin, and it has its own liberal
brand of Marxism and a rela·
lively open society. In East
Germany, the peoi&gt;_le have accepted Communist rule, but
don't like it and need a wall
and closed borders to keep the
people inside.
All these so-called Communist
counlries have a different approach and interpretation of
Communism. Some are liberal
and moving closer to the West.
Some are carbon copys of the
Soviet Union and echo the Soviet line like Charlie McCarthy
does for Edgar Bergen, but most
are restive. They crave more
contacts ·and trade and cor!Sumer goods from the U. S. and
the West - just like Yugosiovia
and Rumania - and this irritates and terrifies. Moscow.
Some Communist European

The1bysThatThlkoo: a Christmas

COURT ST., POMEROY

and

counties tolerate varying de- consumer goods, not steel mllla.
The universal criticism In aU
greees of freedom of religion
and freedom of the press and East European counties, includfreedom to criticize the regime. ing Yugoslovla, is that they are
Some, like Russia, don't. They ruled by technocrata, bureauare all different. Moscow is lry- crats and political party hacks,
ing to call the tune wlth little and that refonna are not fast
success and without using force . enough or democratic .enough.
What seems to be rn1aaJni
But the threat of military force
most
of all is something we
This anti-Soviet humor typiis always there, as It was in
fies how Communist Europe reHungary and Czechoslovar.ia, take for granted - freedom to
gards Russia. But it is only half
which tried to dismantle the Ira vel, freedom to criticize, freedom to better yourself, freedom
the story.
.
Communist apparatus.
In Poland, as in most ComThe further East you go in to produce what you want to
munist European countries, the
Europe, the closer to Russia, produce, freedom to lry for the
general feeling is that they hate In Poland, for example, about
and the lower the standard of best deal for yourself.
By IRVING LEIBOWITZ
the Germans, fear the Russians, three per cent of the people are
living, the less · freedom you
Editor, Lorain Journal.
and like Americans.
Communists and even some of
have.
A THOUGHT
In Warsaw, the tallest and Thismislrustof the ·Germans, the Communists are privately
People everywhere line up to
ugliest building in this beautiful and dread of the Russians, is anti-Soviet. (Poland is 90 per
buy meat, bread, vegetables,
FOR TODAY
city is the Palace of Culture all the more interesting because cent Catholic and the churches
fruit and hard-to-get consumer
and Science, a gift of the Rus- it comes at a time when a lot are full .) Yugosiovia today has
goods. The exception is YugoIf you are easily beafen,
sians to the Polish pef1Jie who of people in the free world are little interest in Russian -style
slovia, w~ch broke with Russia, ."'£ i~~k;lll be offen atwerereconstructingtheirdevas- talking disparagingly of Ameri- communism, never menhons
declared Itself non - aligned m
-Anonymous
.
foreign affairs and started its
.
e e
own marl:et economy like the
e ·c t s t o n o n
ompromtse
o m m g w e s t , instead of like Russia
where there is to~i state con- ~
leo! of the economy. prices, :
COLUMBUS(UPI)-AHouse- if a floor vote is inuninent.
with pennies." He declined to House Republicans and Demo- transportation, housing.
+: It's Quick! Easy
Senate conference conunittee Cuyahoga County Democrats take an immediate position on crats who have devised a comThe only Eastern European
was to meet today to decide in both the Senate and House the bill, however.
promise income tax bill of thetr counlry ~here .the people seem -1&lt;
whether to move to the floor a said they would be in Cleveland
Nobody Happy
own which includes abolition of content m a r1g1d Commun1st i(
budget-tax compromise calling later today for a meeting with The bill includes the personal municipal income taxes and a state ls Russia itself. Make no -1&lt;
for about $7M milllon in new Democratic County Chairman income tax; a 4 _per ce'ilt tax 20 per cent property tax roll- mistake aboutit. The vast rna- -1&lt;
revenues, including a One-half Joseph Bartunek.
on corporate net mcome up to back.
]Orlty of RUSSian people seem
Fridays Only
to 3'h per cent personal income The Cleveland area DemO.. $25,1100 and 8 per cent on inWork Required
satisfied with their own brand
The Drive-In Window
tax.
crats are said to be pressing come over that amount; a
Unanimously passed in the of communism. They think
is Open
.
.
.
.
.
.
th
t
·
·
th
·
Se
Wed
d
b'll
th'
tting
bette
II
th
·
9
A
M
The meetmg was to begm at for reviSIOn of the legislative ree-cen mcrease m e c&gt;ganate
nes ay was a 1
mgs are ge
ra e
. . t o 7 P . M.
10 a.m.
reapportionment plan, which rette tax; the severance tax on permitting county welfal'!' di- time, and it was their revolu- -1&lt;
(Continuously)
The four Republican and two will be taken up again under coal and other minerals; tax in- rectors to require employable tion in the first place 54 years Oth 8 k' H
tha ta ted 'I Th S . .,. er an tng ours 9 1o 3
Democratic conferees were .,.. court order Dec. 20.
creases on insurance compa- welfare recipients to earn their ago
ts r
I . . e ov1et i~••d 5 to 7 as usual on
peeled to act on signal from One Cleveland senator said if nies, banks and dealers in checks by participating in work- people know that their Commu- +: Frodays.
· their respective legislative lead- the plan is not revised the in- stocks and bonds; homestead relief programs.
nist "friends" in Poland, Yugo- : .
•
ers, who were faced with a de- come tax bill will l~e votes ••emption for the elderly, and
The measure, sponsored by slovia and East Gennany ha~e
cision on whether to seek a from the Cuyahoga County del- a 10 per cent across-the-board Sen. Tennyson Guyer, R-Find- ~t bette~- and they are wa1t· · --- .
--·
floor vote this week or delay egation ln the House.
reduction in real estate taxes. lay, is similar to a bill already mg patiently for things to get
until next week.
Adopted Budget Cuts
"While nobody will be hap- passed by the House.
better for themselves.
-1&lt;
POMEROY, OHIO
If the decision was for a de- The conference committee py," said Sen. Howard C. Cook,
Guyer said the proposal . All Easte~n European coun- +:
Merr.ber FDIC
lay, it was believed the con- Wednesday night formally R-Toledo, chairman of the con- would save the state $50 to tires are havmg trouble because
Member Federal
ferees would hold off on sign- adopted a series of amend- ference committee, "! think $100 million a year. He noted the governments are stressing
Reserve System . ·
ing the report, assembled Wed- ments, including $103 million in this will be about as fair a persons would not be required building industry over consumer
nesday night.
budget cuts from the so-called compromise as we could work to work if they were physically goods - and the people want ·
House · and Senate leaders Taf1-Fiannery bill'·which failed out. "
or mentally disabled, too old,
also had to decide which cham- in the Senate by two votes last House Minority Leader A. G. attending school, participating
ber should vote first on the re- month.
Lancione, D-Bellaire, said the in a vocational rehabilitation
P""t once it is signed by the
The m'ajor cuts were $66 mil- bill should be called the Cook- program, or needed at home to
" •k-old panel, the fourth to lion in public welfare appropria- McNamara bill after Cook and care for children or an intackle the thorny fiscal prob- tions, $17.5 million from educa- Rep. Keith McNamara, R-Co- capacitated spouse.
!em since Oct. 1.
tion and $16 million from men- lumbus, who offered the budget
Also receiving unanimous apWorking on Delay
tal health programs.
reductions which both Demo- proval in the Senate was a
Forces were at work to de- Also changed was the top cratic conferees opposed.
companion bill offered by Guylay the vote until next week, personal income bracket, drop- ·But Cook labeled the bill a er requiring recipients of genThat's What Sonny Specializes
· d'1v1'dua1s w1'th modifl·cation of Taft - Flannery era I re I'1ef an d a1'd to dependand pred'ICu·ons van'ed on the ·mg the tax on m
ln. Basket Dinners. Soft
bill's ·chances if it is sent to income over $40,000 a year after Sen. William W. Taft, R- ent children to obtain identifiDrinks, Coffee, Snacks, Frozen
the floor today.
from 4 to 3'h per cent.
Cleveland, and Rep. James J. cation cards with their photoQe_sserts For Holiday Parties.
One highly placed senate Re- .' N~,other. fH million worth of lf.\1\Dn~ry\... OrC.le.veland,.- ,_wno graphS to help make sure wei· •:;,0'
publican gave odds of only 5G- taxes were shaved from pro- drafted the first of two person- fare checks are cashed by the
50 that it wouiQJ!IISS, but an- posed levies on insurance com- al income tax bills which met proper recipients.
STOP YOUR SLEIGH .II.T
other Senate Repulili.can ·gave it panies and minerals extracted defeat in the Senate.
a good chance in the Senate. from the earth.
Rep. James Thorpe, R-Aili- ·
The world's first automoHe said the outlooK was some- Frank W. King, president of ance, Il)ade a futile pitch to
bile
club was formed in Paris
what more pessimistic in the •he Ohio AFL-CJO termed the conferees in opposition to
4th &amp; Locust
Middleport
in 1895, accordin~ to EncySanta Will
·
'
.
House,whichhasadjournedun- these cuts a "sham" and said the report. He is a member of clopaedia Britanmca.
til' next week subject to recall the committee was "dealing a coalition of conservative

D
lt! m~g
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Goessler's

l9 9~P

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If It Comes From

53 Pieces

g JU

Caught

EDITORS NOTE: Irving Leibowih, editor of · ihe Lorain
Journal,recentJy'reiumedfrom
a four-week Mission to Moscow
study trip behind the Iron Curtain where be visited cities and
towns uuder the sphere of the
Spvlet Union. He wrote several
articles for his newspaper, two
of which were condensed and
provided to this newspaper by
United Press International. The
first article deals with Lelbowltz' Impressions of the entire
trip.

Mike Oyer, W.
19
19.0
1f7J-72 HIGH S(HOOL
BASKETBAl--L
To~yVau~han,M . 16
16.0
( lncludts gam It
~~~~~~~~~-- w.
1
.
through Dec. 4)
Rod
Ferguson,
G.
12
1 12.0
. OVERALL STANDINGS
TEAM
WL POP
OFFENSIVELY
Eaatern
4 o 284 178 l~e~der
~~1 ~~~) A8~00
Alexander
3 o 261 194
85 (1) 85.0
Gallipolis
2 o 1SO 104 North Galli a
Norfh Gall Ia
1 o ss ST Waver~
165 (2) 82.5
Meigs
2 1 1'16 189
j~
~u
Afhens
2 1 172 16-4 ~~lllltto~s
284 (41 71 .0
Waverly
1 1 165 114 Easfern
Wltllston
1 1 143 157 lronfon
134 (2) 67 .0
lronfon
1 1 134 120 l:it~~on
~:~
Vinton County
1 1 127 132
127 (2) 63.5
Kyger Creek
1 1 114 124 Vinton Co.
Miller
1 2 179 194 ~ller
179 (31 59.7
Logan
1 2 175 191
uthern
179 (3) 59.7
FeGtl'ai-Hocklng 1 2 168 212 Logon
175 (3) 58.3
172 (3) 57.3
Sf~r-Wash .
1 2 155 195 Afhens
Nelson-York
1 3 209 207 K~er Creek
114 (21 57.0
Wahama
0 1 so 74 F .-Hocking
168 (3) 56.0
'Jackson
0 2 132 139 Nels-York
209
52.3
155 (4)
(3) 51.7
Glousfer
0 3 135 203 Sfarr-Wash.
SO (1) so.o
Soujhern
0 3 179 213 Wahama
Pt. Pleasanf
0 0 0 0 Glouster
125 (31 45.0
SEOAL STANDINGS
TEAM DEFENS.!l':~L
Avg.
(VARSITY)
178 (4) 4-4.5
•TEAM
W L POP Eastern
207 (4) 51.8
Waverly
109852 Nels-York
lrooton
107255 Gallipolis
104 (2) 52.0
Gallipolis
106-4SO
Meigs
106258
57 (I) 57.0
Jtckson ·
015862 Norfh Gall Ia
Logan
015572 ~~;!~"creek
g~
~-~
Wellston
015298
189 (31 63:o
Athens
01S064 Meigs
Logan
·
191 (3) 63.7
TRI-VALLEY
!VARSITY)
~~~~e~nder
J:~
::-~
TEAM
W L POP
195 (31 65:0
Belpre
1 0 SO 49 Starr-Wash.
132 (21 66.0
Nels-York
0 1 49 so Vlnfon Co.
Fed-Hocking
0 0 0 0 y~~~::,e,:~ (3) :~:~
Vlnlon Co.
0 0 0 0 Fed,- Hockl~g
212
70.7
Warren Local
00 0 0
Southern
213 ' (3) 71.0
SVAC STANDINGS
(VARSITY)
Wahama
74 (1) 74.0
TEAM
WL POP Wellston
157
(2) 78.5
Easfern
3 0 218 126 THIS WEEK'S SCHEDULE
FRIDAY
Symmes Valley
2 0 149 90
North Gallla
1 0 85 57
SEOAL
Ironton af Afhens
Kyger Creek
1 1 114 124 Jackson
at
Logan
Soufhern
0 2 123 156
Hannan- Trace
0 2 89 121 Waverly all,\elgs
Southwestern
0 2 71 175 Gallipolis of Wells to~
SEOAL STANDINGS
Nelsonvllle~Yl~~:'!~Y
!RESERVE)
Federal -Hock ing
TEAM
W 1-- POP
Waverly
1 o 6-4 31 Vinton Countl af Belpre
Athens
1 0 58 43 Hannan- Tracev~c North Galli a
lronfon
1 0 54 30
Jackson
1 o 33 29 Soufhwesfern at Symmes
Gallipolis
o I 43 58 Valley
Wellstoo
o 1 31 6-4 Gi
t 21hers d
Logan
o 1 30 54 Ml~~1e;t "starr~~~s~l~gfon
Melgs
0 1 29 33
Hunflngton Ea·sf at Polnl
TRI-VAI--1--EY
(RESERVE)
~~a:"n!b
Catholic ai
TEAM
WL POP wa~r!~ L~;~
Nels-York
I 0 47 39
SATURDAY
Belpre
0 1 39 47
Fed.- Hocklng
00 0 0 K
c kS~A~ast
Vlnfon Co.
0 0 0 0 yger ree Others ern
Warren l--ocal
00 0 0
Federal -Hocking af Miller
SVAC STANDINGS
(RESERVE)
Alexander of Vlnfo~ Cou~fy
Laurelvllle
TEAM
W L POP Norfh
Gall IaalafGlousfer
Eastern (Pike)
Easfern
3 0 122 86
Reemlln
of
Sfarr-Washlngton
Symmes Valley
2 o 97 71
North Gallla
1 o 45 29 Columbus Bishop Harlley af
Kyger Creek
I 1 81 67 Waverly
Southern
0 2 60 93 Frontier Local af warren Local
Hannan-Trace
0 2 52 93 Belpre at Parkersburg Cafhollc
TUESDAY
Solithwestern
0 2 61 79
TEAM STATISTICS
Waverly at ~!~~~n
Field Goii-Perconlatt
Gallipolis
at lronfon
TEAM
FGM-FGA Pet.
Athens
at
Meigs
Gallipolis
26-45 .578
Ironton
30-43 .476 Wellslon at L~an
Meigs
22-49 .449
Waverly
43-99 .43-4 Soufhwesterns .f~annan Trace
Others
Athena
21-49 .429
Wellston
25-67 .373 Nelsonv ille-York at Kyger
Jackson
20-56 .357 Creek
Logan
19-67 .284 Ripley at Point Pfeasant
F.-.. Throw Percental'
TEAM
FTM-FT Pet.
Waverly
12-19 .632
Gallipolis
12-19 .632
Ironton
12-19 .632
Meigs
18·29 .621
Jackson
IS-31 .581
enlisted very
Logan
17-33 .515
All\ens
8-18 .444
lristoyst
Wellston
2· 6 .333
REBOUNDS
TEAM
No. G Avg.
Waverly
68 1 68.0
Meigs
47 1 .47.0
Gallipolis
41 I 41.0
Athens
40 1 40.0
lronfon
40 1 40 .0
Jackson
35 1 35.0
Logan
28 1 28.0
Wellsfoo
20 1 20.0
PERSONAL FOULS
TEAM
No. G Avg.
Waverly
7 1 7.0
Alhens
14 1 14.0
Gallipolis
14 1 14.0
Wellston
15 1 15.0
Logan
17 1 17.0 ·
Ironton
21 1 21.0
Meigs
23 1 23.0
Jackson
23 1 23.0
INDIVIDUAL LEADERS
Field Goal Percentage
IR&gt;
Name, THm FGM-FGA Pet.
Roger Spellman. Well 3-3 1.000
Dive Salyers, Wav. 3-3 1.000
Rod Ferguaon, Gall. H .800
Gil Price. Gall.
3-4 .750
Mlkt Sayre, Maigs
3-4 .750
Mod~l
Ray McKinnis, Well. 6-8 .7SO
FrH Tllraw Perconte1•
Neme, THm FTM-FT Pet.
Greg Smlfh, L.
5-5 1.000
Bud Chrlsflan, Iron. 5-3 1.000
Tony Vaughan, M.
7-8 .875
Larry Snowden. G.
6-7 .857
Sieve Ktller, Jack.
5-6 .833
REBOUNDS
,
Name, THm
No. G Avg.
)!!!_Morrlf, lfl~-- _ 20 1 20~0

!o&gt;

Especially .

Stainless
Steel Ware

SEO Cage Statistics

Poles

many

colors.

fOil. IAEM
~MO

Also
Boots
For The
Fami~

Equipped For 8 Track Tape Deck
~TV wHh SOlid State Stereo Phono and FM/AM Radio
A complete home entertainment Center In one
ha nd some cabinet. Stereo phono and rad io
operete independently of Color TV. With op·

tional second room extension spea kers Stereo
phono can be enjoyed in a second .room at th e
same time Color TV Is being enjoved in another.

FOREMAN &amp;· ABBOn ·
MIDDLEPORT 0.

'iOUMG IAEM

tO'i. ~"0

·

Q\\tYelt~
~

.,

OPEN FRI.
&amp; SAT. N IGHl'S '

CHAPMAN'S
I

SHOES ·

.

Pi&gt;tnef1!r's Quality Slaoe Slore

. ..

�.....

,

~~~~1 . 1~~~=7-n,~~~~rl~----~----~==~~
EEKMIDMEEK
OUR BOSSIE JEST

10- Tile Dilly Sentinel, Mlcldlepori·PcrW!I'oy, 0:,Dec. 9, 1971

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! SentinelClassified~ Get R~sultsl'
.

.

Notice

WANT AD
INFORMATION
. ·.
DEADLINES
.
' 5 P.M. Dey Before Publication
~ev Deediin,9a .m.

.
RAlES
For Want Ad Service

Wednesday.

5 cents per Word one Insertion·
Minimum Charge 75c
' 12 cents per word three
consecutive insertions.
18 cents per word si x con .
secutlve Insertions.

CARD OF THANKS
&amp;OBITUARY

Sl.SO for SO word minimum .
Each additional word 2c .

BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per
,

,

OFFICE HOURS
1
SolO a.m . to 5;00 ;&gt;.m. Daily,
8oJO a .m. lo 12 o00 Noon
·Saturday.

In Memory
IN LOVING memory of David
Wayne Grindstaff. Jr . who

passed away Dec . 8fh, 1970.
At rest in the arms of Jesus.

Sadly missed by mother,
father and grandparents.

Rd .-, Cincinnati , Ohio 45237 .

IQ.3.11c
'
SALE
at

:-----:--~--

WE
GRATEFULLY
acknowledge the thoughtful
prayers and flowers of friends

and neighbors during the
death of our baby, Kenneth
Ray . Special thanks to the U.
S. Air Force, N\artln Funeral
Home and Rev . Darrell
Porter for their services.
Your kindness will never be
Keftneth Ray Graham .

12-8·11P

HOUSEKEEPER ,
middle·
aged, light work and share
home and car . Write Box 729
C·O

Help Wanted

The Daily Sentinel ,

Pomeroy .

12·8·31p

Tex.

ca t with collar In Carmel area
near Racine. Phone 949 -3701.

12·8-3tc

-------

Notice
SHOWALTER 'S Wet Pet Shop,
Chester. Ohio. Follow signs

from

Newell's

Garage,

common Angels 39c each, 3
for S1. Open evenings and
weekends.

12-9-Jtp

I Will NOT be responsible for
any debts contracted by
21, Racine , Ohio.

WANTED!

anyone other than myself and

my molher. C. Grop·
penbacher, 128 locust St.,
Middleport .
.12'9-31p
KOSCOT Kosmetlcs and wigs:
Yes we have Koscot Products
and wigs in stock for your
immediate needs. Yes we do
deliver . Would you like to
select your own customers
and have your own route and

make good money? Call
Brown's in Middleport 992·
5113, distributors of Koscot
Kosmetics .

11 ·16·1fc

WILL CARE for small children
in my home. Phone 992·6187.

12·8-6tc

YARD Sale, Thursday thru
Sunday ,
David
Haggy
Res iden ce, left of Happy
Hollow.

12·8-Jtc
GUN Shoot, Dec. 121h, 12 noon,
Mile Hill Road . 20 lb. steak,
hams, bacon, turkeys, pork .
Sponsored by Racine Fire

Dept .

12·8-41c

atRISTMAS TREES
Locally
grown,
sheered and sprayed,
Scotch Pine.

Brownell Avenue
Parallel to Middleport Hill
Middleport. Ohio

automatic, power steering,
white side wall tires, wheel
covers , radio and heater,
14,000 actual miles, tor-red

automatic, factory stereo
tape . Lots of extras. Like new.

PHONE 992~2\56
"'FOR DETAILS!

Male Help Wanted

typewriters part·time . We
train. Local inter'v'iew. For
application detai ls, write :

Regional Manager, Box 25,
Glenshaw, Pa.
12·5·51p

- - -- Employment Wanted

=----- --

HOUSECLEANING in Mid·
dleport and Pomeroy area .

12.J.I 2tc

Wanted To Buy

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Ph. 992-2174

ior Signs.

Open every day eocept
MoQday
1 P.M. fill P.M.

Baths
Room Additions
And Patios

Radiator Specialist

ROOFING' &amp; CARPENTER
WORK
SPOUTING, ·
ROOF PAINTING··

992-7608

Pomeroy

ORIGINAL CABINET
COMPANY

POMEROY

NEW &amp; OLD WORK·
All Weather R.oofing &amp;
Construction Co. and An·

HOME &amp; AUTO
606 I!. Main

thony jlumbing &amp; Heating.
Complete
Plumbing ,
Heating and A,jr Conditioning.
240 Lincoln St., ,Middlepoo' f

COMPLETE

992-2094

Pomero1

BUILDING

OFFIC£ SUPPLIES

SERVICES

And

Phone 992-2550
Insured - Experienced
Work Guaranteed
See us for · Free
Estimate on Furnace
lnstalalion.

From drafting to completion
of home or business:

FURNITURE ·
Stop In and See Ou1
Floor Display.

Mobile Homes for Sale·

12-8·61c

.I PH. 992-7796

Complete line of aluminum,
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
viny l and steel sidi ng .
Authorized Singer Sales and
Complete line of bu ilding.
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
additions, and remodeling .
J.29.ffc
All work guaranteed. Com mercial and res idential BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
roofing . No job too small.

Phone

446 ·3839 for

free

estimates.

11 -18·J0tc
AWNINGS. storm doors and

12'' ·. 14' · 24' · WiDE

MILLER
MOBILE.HOMES
1220 Washington Blvd.
Belpre, Ohio

Real Estate For Sale

Oelanil
Realty

frame, 8 rooms, 3 bedrooms,

1'/, baths, porches, NEW 2 car

garage, storm doors and

windows, carports.
marquees, aluminum siding
and railing. Call A. Jacob.
sales representative. For free
estimates, phone Charles .

Lisle,

Syracuse,

V.

Johnson and Son , Inc.

v.

5·27.flc
AUTOMOBILE

Septic tanks ins/ailed. George
( Billl Pullins, Phone 992·2478.
4-25-ffc

UPHOLSTERING

2 BEDROOM mobile home in
Middleport . Adul ts only .
Phone 992·5247.
11 ·28·121p
FURNISHED sleeping room
Rent by

month . Phone 992·5293.
11-26·1fc

. SR.

Broker
110 Mechanic Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

2966.

· OponiTII~
Monday lhru Saturday
604 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 .
Slater Upholstering, Rl. 3, . HARRISON'S TV and
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3617.
Service. Phone 992·2522.
12-5·6fC
6-IO·ffc

12·9-3fc IF YOU REALLY WANT TO
·
.SELL OR BUY CALL 992SOR R~ L po~y mare $30, 7 year
3225 992·2378
·· REDUCE sate ·•nd tasl ·with
old and 1deal for smallest · HE' LEN L ' TEAFO
child. Will hold 1111 Christmas.
. ASSOCIATE RO,
Gobroe tablets end E-Vepw.. tar Pilla N.IUV~ . Oruos.
Phone 949-4605,
non u~NTINELRUILDING 1

SGt

IT
WA6 THE WOR6'1'

SI~·PACK!

1110. 1\iE CAR15 AT
1\o!E COR'NEif OF TliE
MEAT
IN

!'EN, Wl6 IT THE CARS
ON THAT 1W&gt; CURVE

~Tiff,

OUT l-lERI!. ON THE
HIGHWAY?

COI.LI610N I'VE
EVI!.R' SEEN. 1EN

IN 'THE H06PITAL.

®

D-DON'T CAST TH'
10 ·'fEAR TOOTH/ICHI':
SPf:LL, ltJOTH DEMON!!
US KIDS BELIE.VES
IN'/0'- r--~--"

1970 Camaro Cpe. ................... ~3095
Less than 11,000 miles &amp; appearance of 72 model. Rally
Sport equipped, Classic copper with sandalwood interior,
tinted glass, factory air condllloned, sports mirrors,
console, air spoiler. turbo hydromatlc, ;&gt;OWer steering &amp;
brakes, 350 cu. ln. V-8 engine. Really Sharp.

- IS IF YOU BRING
M£ TOOTH THIS

SIZE !!

,........,....-.--'

IT M-MA'I
TAKE.
ALI'L
TIME.,
1DOTH

DEMON-

1970 Chevrolet BelAir 4-Door.......12595
Less than 10,000 miles by loc•l owner. Sharp as new In all
ways, white over gold finish, 350 v.a engine, power
steering, radio, white-walls. wh. covers .

1970 Dodge Polara ...................12395
4 Dr., V·8 engine, automatic trans., P.S., factory air, good
tires, radio &amp;other extras, white fin ish, clean Interior ,

OH l DOI'IT

1970 Chevelle Malibu HT Cpe. .....12995

DON'T '&gt;'OU 5eE, JANtE, /I' I

CAN ':tleciDfNT,O.U.Y'RIJN INlO
MR. MAR'nN~ WHILE ~E'5

low mileage by local owner wllh lots ofwarranfy left:
factory air conditioned, V.8 engine, turbo-hydromatic, p.
steering, gold body, sa ndalwood vinyl top, radio, vinyl
Interior, good w.w fires . This car is loaded wllh extras.

VACATIONINe IN THE

IMH.w.A~ .... -~

1969 Chevrolet KinDWOOdSt Wg. 12295.
Local 1 owner car &amp; less !han 2J.OOO miles, factory ·air
condi tioned, luggage rack, 227 V·8 engine. automatic.
power steering &amp; brakes, beautiful white finish &amp; green
vinyl interior, new tires. radio &amp; all the deluxe ac.

cessories .

located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.

USED CAR
SALE

Complete front end service,
tune up and brake service.
Wheels
balanced
elec tronically .
All
work
guaranteed.
Reasonable

rates. Phone 992·3213.

.

7-27·11C

Real Estate For Sale

dishwasher, din i ng room,

ceramic file bath, hot water
heat, basement and fenced

yard. Phone 742-3171 .
12-6-6fc

HAVE
A

HAPPY
DAY

WMPOtl~
~.,.o
- .

ftll VliiiD 1\181...,__

THIS! !

Select Your New Chevrolet
from our JargeJinventory of cars and
trurks in stock!
•HIGHER PRICES ON OUR NEXT SHIPMENT!
'Z

-

Your Chevy Dealer
Open Eves. Til8

992·2126

•
•J'

Pomerov

''

l

~

CONTINUES AT

I

oa ~~o"'

'

CONCRE '.

NICE- :f. Bedroom house, fully
carpeted, built·in kitchen with

HEAR

Pomeroy Motor Co.

6·15-ffc

-.

NOW

THE BORN LOSER

--=------.-,O'DELL-WHEEL alig~·ment

i642 lincoln Heights.,
All utilities. Rt.' 7 o'HOlJSE;
Call
Danny
Thompson, m .'
By .pass . $2,500.00.
2196.
.
I
7.1a.11• ,
RACINE- Large 3 bedrooms,
bath , gas furnace . Nice SIX ROOM house, 133 Butternuo
Kitchen .
Porches
and
Ave, Contact Ed Hedr ick, 2137
Garage.
W•dsworth Drive, Columbus,
Ohio, phone 2J7-4334.
5 ACRES - Overlooking the
,.
11 ·21 -lfc
Ohio River. 1200' Frontage.
NICE 2-s lory home wilh full
SYRACUSE - 5 rooms, balh,
basement, 2 lots. new forced
gas heal . On 124 - Asking
air furnace. Near Pomeroy
$6,000.00.
Elementary School. Phone:
992·1384 to see.
'
SYRACUSE - 3 rooms, full
11·7-lfc
basement. level lot. $2500.00.

door . Phone 992·2936.

I l&gt;tG
THIS HANI&gt;'I

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

insurance

2 ACRES-::_

walnut. 2 gun cabinets, one
cherry, one walnut, 7 gun STOCK FARM - 114 acres. 2
capacity, drawer for shells, 2 barns, S room house, bath,
doors for boots, glass front
furnace . Minerals. $18,000.00.

service .

Reupholstering.
repairing ,
rebuilding.
Comp lete
selection of beautiful fabrics ,
plus nau~ahvde, bottaflex and
korosea1 in vinyl to choose
from . Pick -up and delivery .

windows, EXCELLENT SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph .
LOCATION WITH LEVEL
662·4(135.
LOT, close to shopping,
2·12·1'
$12,900.

Virgil B.
TEAFORD

TONIGHT

Our Lot is Full
of Reasons Why
You Should Buy Now••

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

-oc-- - - --

RAWLINGS
• •

NOTICE

/'8.Do

~

._~~~c.,\ IS YOUR COLOR TV SET A~C't.
OVER TWO YEARS OLD?
"~&lt;

992·2151 OR 992-2152 MIDDLEPORT

. HURRY

to
152 Butternut

ACROSS
I.-Paulo
4. One of
the ages
~~ ~ ll.lnfant
8. Prescribe
12. Carangoid
...,.,,...
fish
13. Monster
If. Part of
a circle
· 15. Comic,
Louls 17. Contem·
porary
Caesar
18. Prefix in

~

CHUCK'S TV
Ph, ftl -5010

Pomeroy, Ohio

Used Car Sale Continues at Dependable City ..
hurry ~hile the selection is good ... compare
prtces w1th any other dealer and stop in for our
.deal , ..

ntu"tl

&gt;m;:o

1970 Hornet SST 2 Dr Sedan
$ ;:tDVI111-In
1968 Rebel SST 2 DHT
$
-em
1965 Ambassador 4 Dr Sedan
$
zm"'
1967 Ford Country Squire
$
"'l:o-1
1967 Mercury Comet 2 Dr Sed
$ -lrO
1966 Mercury Comet Caliente
$
1964 Ford Custom 2 Dr Sed
s nZr
1964 For~ Fair lane 4 Dr
$
1966 Buick Saeclal2 DIH
$ &gt;:z:E
1965 Buick Skylark 2 DHT
$ zm-1
1965 Pontiac Tempest 2 Dr
$
1964 Chevrolet ·Malibu 4 Dr
$
~c:&gt;
1963 Chevrolet h11pala 4 Dr
$
1971 Dodge Coronet C11stom
$
1970 Dodge , ChalLenger 2 DHT r-&lt;m
1970 Dodge Charger 2 DHT
$ c. ;:a
1970 Dodge Coronet 4 Dr
$ m: -1
$ &gt;~iii
1968 Dodge Coronet R· T
1968 Dodge Coronet Deluxe
$ rmm
.
1967 Dodge Coronet 4 Dr
$ -&lt;
:z:.
196.6 Dodge Coronet4 Dr (3) ·
$
' c:l»·
1966 Dodge Charger 2 DHT
$ ;:tD&lt;VI
$
1966 Dodge Polar a Covert.
m-1
1966 Plymouth Fury 114 Dr
'
$
1967 Volkswagen Transporter
$ )&gt;:Z:"tl
1967 Fiat '600D' 2 Dr
$
•VI
$
1966 Triumph Roadster
mO
$
1966 Dodge 0200 3/4 ton
c:;:o
1966 Dodge DlOO 1f2ton
$
VI-I

Seotlllb

. Cratcbit

.Zt. Scottish

WHAT COLOR?

Pick your own wall·lo-well carpeting for a new 3 bedroom
ranch. House completed and ready for occupancy . UN·
BELIEVABLE DOWN PAYMENT AND MONTHLy
PAYMENT. Cell 992-7034 or 1·268·1810 collect for ap.
po1ntment to see.

. JEMO ASSOCIATES, INC.
Cor. Park &amp; Sycamore
Middlepprf
Ph. 991-7034

••• C••c•nr . '
Mort t
·

E-to

Autotnattu

Cholco of .,11 .,
tom PI .
Au to

·r6~ 1H~. ~ !"tV,~

.'

·.

river
Z1. Attention·
getter
23. Curtain
fabric
JS, Church or
Bible, for
example
27. Allah's
faith
28. Small
·" ·' ''"
bunch
31. 11- in
the bag"
32. Vitality
34. "The
~"'·'- - ~'''-'-""'-...:r~
Windy
City," for
short
35.Man's
nickname
36. Historic
period
S7. Chinese
dynasty

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: WHAT A BLESSING u WOULl&gt;
BE IF WE COULD OPEN AND SHUT OUR EARS AS EASILY
AS WE OPEN AND SHUT OUR EYES.-G. C. LICHTENBERG

'"nl•·,r•l•".
MIYflt

.with Gtntlt, tvtn
;hut, No hOIIPOfl,l

-!1 tv.rdrylng,
l',ll't:r,~~lh •Li,nl .

.......

.RUTLA"D FURNITURE

V42-4211'

Arnoi!I .Grete

Rutla~. o.

II I I

t) I
SEA1TL
;::r-1--f"""-1

I I

~ A

V'. :

11-\15 MIGH115e Nt1r WIL,
!JUi t'ANG&gt;ERO\I&amp;.
Now

•-w- the clrelod'·~ten

to ror-;;; ii;iiii'PI'iM ..,.,;;., •

=~·;;:;~·~iii~~~~Ll~IIUIItlled b7 the . . ....._

r

Pril•nu•u•swa~~n

(I I I I I I]

(.4Mwenta•arNw)

J••bieeo fMPIL IUIAL IXHOIT PIGION

.....I

LONGFELLOW

AXYDLBA&amp;XI.
~h~!er olmp)y otands lor another. In this sample A II
\ISed'':for .'the three' L'a, X for the two O'a, etc. Sinal• letten,
apos~es. the lenlth and formation of the word' are all
hints. Each day the code letten are di~erent.
\.
..._.

Drrtro
,lurround clolhoo

•uc•rpil

live of
(0 1971ltlnr Future• Syndicate, Inc.)
IODown
(3 wds.)
42.1siand
6, Actor
· republic
cU&amp;~~®~ .,tlw&amp;!J .-1 ,_.
Hugh
U.Move7.lmpov·
ments
Unscramble these fwr Jumbloo,
erished
44. M.artha
8.Honshu's Ye.tenl•r'• Auwer one letter to each IIQU&amp;ro, to
form four ordinary worda.
volcano
45. yes
9.Motherof 27. Where
Romais
Isaac
DOWN
29. Take
10. Nose-to·
, partln
1. Knightly
the-grind·
·
30.
Liquid
title
stone saga
measures
%. Repre·
(2 wds.)
31. Suggest
sentative
16. Give oft
33. Philip·
3. Harry
2%.
Torme
TALEV
pine
Golden
ISland
bestseller Z4.1mmedi·
39. Minuscule
(3 wds.)
ately
I
41. Sioux City
t. Nl&amp;erlan Z6, Back of
ill,
....
gal
the neck
tribesman

II

Htlttl Hut

W• ....,lilllrt to
. lofA\'TAO

5. Descril"

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE.-Here's how to work It:

,Fin 40/ttipr . .

em

38. Circulate
40. Put in

~ ·

' fl1er o,. Power

m:z:

See Emerson Jones, Pearl Ash. Hilton Wolfe,
WMiace Amberaer, .Dick Rawlinas. ,

'

l IPitd 0Ptrttlon .

-cm.,

.

Dlllltl

11. Youngest

'o

MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM AT
DEPENDABLE CITY
MID·
DLEPORT ...
OPEN UNTILS:OO P.M. eilch evening
.
except .Saturday &amp; Sunday .

5

'

o-o
"-to

oao
-zo
r-t&lt;

I

o2";.q

Th~n if should have • compleio factory tune up we will

tune your color by Vectorscope as the loclory did whrn If
was new. We will also clean the tuner m1ke all •djustments to bring your color back to life •• it wos when
new.
PLUS PARTS IF ANY USED
Also black and whife rtpatrs. Save money, bring them in

DEPENDABLE CITY

____

12-l· IIC

SET FER

lollY, liMO,
CAN '&gt;OU ~liND
MEA FIN FOR
GAS'i

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'"'5.55

been cancelled? Lost your
operator' s license? Call 992·

USED Volkswagen tor parts. MIDDLEPORT delivered right to yo ur
brick , 5 rooms , 2 bedrooms,
Phone 985·4118.
project. Fast and easy. Free
bath , liled and paneled ,
12-7-61c
est1mates
. Phone 992 -3284 .
carpeled, level lot, $6,950.
Goeglein
Ready -Mix Co.,
OLD Furniture, dishes, clocrll;,
Middleport, Ohio.
and.or complete households. RACINE - 2 story frame, 9
6·30·Ht ·
Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
rooms , 4 bedrooms, bath , full
.....:...:..:
basement, 3 level lots. gas
Pomeroy, Ohio. Cali 992-6271.
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
8·2S.tlc
forced. air heat, Ref. and
Range . AN EXCELLENT Reasonable rates. Ph. 446-4782,
Gallipolis. John Russell,
BUY. $12,900.
Owner &amp; Operator.
5·12-ffc
POMEROY - A LOT FOR A
LITTLE - I slory frame, 2
bedrooms, NEW BATH, NEIGLER Building Su pply .
HEATING SYSTEM, HOT
Free estimate on building
4·2-/lc
WATER TANK, large lot . ' your new home. Will draw
JUST $4,900.
;&gt;r}nfs to suit the lay of your
land. Call Guy Nelgler .
Racine, Ohio. For repair and
GIVE YOUR FAMILY THE
aluminum
siding, soffet and
GREATEST CHRISTMAS OF
gutter. Call Donald Smith,
ALL WITH A HOME OF
Racine. Ohio.
THEIR OWN.
10·7-ttc
HENRY E. CLELAND
FURNISHED and unfurnished
Office 991·2259
=c: .-.;B:::R-:::- A:::D-;:F-;:0-;:R-;:Dc-,-;Ac-u-:-ct::-ion
...::_eer .
apartments. Close to school.
Residence 992-2568
Phone 992.5434.
Complete Service
12-9·61c
10-18·/lc
Phone 949·3821
Racine, Ohio
UNFUR NISHED house , 4
Criff Bradford
rooms and bath, utility room,
5·1·Hc
garage. 1665 Point Lane ,
Lincoln Heights. Phone 992 ·

l RC"D IT

IIJ A FOIQVtJ€
c=!&lt;J6!

service, all makes. 992-2284.

1'12 slory READY -MIX

over Wine Store.

MARTHA ROSE, Owner
Located on County Road 34
near Royal Oak Park, Watch

K~chens,

Nathan Biggs

steering . Good shape . 949·
383J.
12·9-61c

GUN Shoot, Forked Run
Sportsman Club, Sunday , COUNTRY home, 6 rooms and
bath, yard, garage and
Dec. 12, 12 noon.
garden . One mile · north of
12·B·31c
Chesler, Ohio. Phone 985-JS38.
12-8·3fc
SHOOTING Match, Saturday,
Dec. 11, at the Racine Planing
Mill at 6 p.m. Factory choke
guns only. Assorted meat.
Sponsored by the Syracuse For Sale
Fire Dept.
12-8·3tc CHRISTMAS trees, selecl your
own , cut later, SJ each .
Harley Haning, Pomeroy, Rl.
SPENCERS' Market, Mid·
3. Phone 992-6380.
dleport, will · not be able to _ ____.:_ _ _ _..,:
12:..:.·9·3fp SALEM CENTER
4
make deliveries until further
bedrQOms,
l'h
baths,
cook
notice.
NEWLY made gateieg table,
units. Double stainless sink.
12·8·21c
20" center, 19" leaves ,
10 ACRES.
SAVE' up to one halt. Bring your
sick· TV to Chuck's TV Shop;
151 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy,
Phon4! 992-5080.
11 ·21 -tfc

Bulldozer Radiator to
Smallest Heater Core .

fj.9.3fp

INTERIOR painting . Call Don
608 East Main
VanMeter 985·3951.
POMEROY
11 -26·12tp MIDDLEPORT - 2 slory

3874.

GIFT SHOP

Remodeling

From the largest

1963 CORVETTE , call 992.3981

Mason &amp; Hartford

Phone 992-2876.

HILTQN WOLFE ·.949-3711
DALE DUTTON, 992-2534

Complete

Cali 992·2441 after 5 p.m.
11 -28-ffc
after 6 p.m.

HIDDEN
TREASURES

JOHNSON'MASONRY

high impact paint. Phone 992·
5785.
12.J.61p

SENTINEL
CARRIERS
IN POMEROY

~c------

BRADFORD'S

BILL NELSON 992-3657
TOM CROW, 991-2580

Auto Sales

Phone 992-3293.

12-9·3tp EMPLOYED MAN . Repair
I WILL NOT be responsible for
any debts contracted by

12-Hip

mobile home with expando
living room, 2 years old, no
re asonable offer refused .

. anyone other than myself.

Signed: R. B. Salser, Box

Haven.

prices
are still frazlin
bargain level.

looking for, for that perfect
gilt.

12-B·IIC 65 X 12 SCHULTZ 2 bedroom ALLSIDE Builders &amp; General SEWING MACHINES. Repair
Contra ctors., Gallipolis, Ohio.

Lost
LOST - Smail gold and white

POOL Table. Call 882·2382, New

opening in Pomeroy area . No
experience necessary. Age
not
important.
Good '62 CHEVROLET Impala. '52
charac ter a must. We train .
Chevrolet pickup. Phone 992·
6083.
.
Air mall A. D. Dickerson,
12·7 61c
Pres . , Southwestern

Petroleum Corp., Fl. Worth,

Dolls, all dressed in style,
kniHed and crocheted. 1Has
to be seen to be appreciated)

12·8·6fc

engine. air conditioning,
power brakes and power

TEXAS Oil COMPANY has

Wanted

Phone 949-4365.

12·5-61c 1968 PLYMOUTH Fury Ill . 38J

forgotten. The family of

Christmas
decorations, wearing
apparel, jewelry,
ceramiCs.

Many items you have been

Middleport Rl. 7 Bypass, 7:30
p.m., Dec. 10, 1971. You'll find "'19=7o::-cw""."'
30c---=
Oc-l-=:
D-,.
SM
=
o""B"
IL"E~ 442,

wrapping ·paper-, -perfume.
coats, boots, clocks, radios ,
blankets, spreads, pillows,
candy, decorations, tools,
toys, dolls, jewelry , watches ,
toasters. irons, ru~s , chairs
and many other 1tems too
numerous to mention. Come
early to obtain seat.

HANDCRAFT
'GIFT ITEMS

Impala, 4 dr . sedan, 327 cu. in. '
motor,
power steering, ·
automatic, Champagne .

'67 CHEVROLET Super Sport,
J27 , 4 speed, excellent con.
.BOUT YOUR WEIGHT .. .
dil lon . Phone 949·2621.
overweigh t ladi es, teens and
12-9·6tc
men interested in a Weight
Watchers (R) Class in
Pomeroy write : Weight· 1971 PLY MOUTH Duster. 6
Watchers ( R), 1863 Section cyl inder , 225 cu . in.,

Hayman's Auction , Laurel
Cliff
on
Pomeroy -

Card of Thanks

mattress and box springs S25
each in sets only, rocking
chairs as low as $19.95. Free
camera with every dinette set
purchased. Open from 9 a.m.
to 8 p.m . unti I Christmas.
Free delivery.

We're here to HELP YOU.
So come in and try us.
Owner, Raymond Grady

OVER AN'BABV-5ET
FER ME TONIGHT,

CALFED THIS

Business Services

FOUR N.EW HOMES • - _
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom $16.900.00 home can be purchased with a
monthly payment as low as $65.00 for a family with a base
I
of $5,000.00 and ' three children. 7•;, Pet. annual
rate.

20 FT. SELF .MADE camper.
/ra iler . Also, 1969 Chevrolet

Phone 992·2836

IF '1E COULD COME

MELISSV,
BUT I . GOT
MV OWN TO

.

'

12-9·31c

Syracuse, Ohio
Come In and see our new line
'ot Mud &amp; Snow Recap Tires .
We also do grease jobs, oil
changes &amp; fix flat tires on all
autos &amp; 1rucks. etc.

IH·IIp CHRISTMAS

G

and

GRADY'S
ASHLAND

25 Per Cent Discount on paict
'ads and ads paid within 10 days.

Advertisement.

Friday

Saturday nights. Phone 985'
3929, 985·3585 or 985.9996.
12·5·12tc

I WI.IZ WONDERIN'

LOWEEZY--

. For Sale

&lt;I(ATE·A·WAY holiday parties. CH INESE Ring Neck Pheasant.
Christmas party , Fr i day ,
Call 895·3972, John Thomas,
Dec. \7, New Year'S: Eve
leon, W. Va .
party , Friday, Dec. 31 from
12-S-6tc
1!4JIQ11_~J:otr.c~.i!QnJ - .
7:30 p.m. to 12:30 a.m.
Will be accepted until9 a.m. for
Schedule your holiday parti es HOLIDAY specials at the
·•
Day of Publi&lt;alion
now.
Available on Monday,
Parsons Furniture Store, St .
. REGULATIONS
Tuesday
and
Th urs da.y
Rt. 7, in Kanauga . 3 pc. living
' The . Publisher reserves · thJ
nights. Also Saturday and
room suites. $119.95, recliner ,
'rlghf'fo edit or reject any ads• Sunday
afternoons . Open
1
$59 .95, bedroom suites $98.95,
deemed ·object ion a I.
Thei
,publisher will not be responsi-ble
for more than one incorrectj
'insedion. ·

. I'D lOVE TO,

A Cryptosnm Qaotatlon

:

C RXBCKVJ GBNW XU CFlll RJGXKXFJ
;, ·=··· XZN

PC SJ

KCF

WJP ' PQJ

OXP Q Z NP

NFSFZQF

•

KQXVGBJF

PZ

UKB J C RXFW .-.t1 ZNBKJ

I'M .
LIFTING!!
I'M
LIFTIN6Y.

�.....

,

~~~~1 . 1~~~=7-n,~~~~rl~----~----~==~~
EEKMIDMEEK
OUR BOSSIE JEST

10- Tile Dilly Sentinel, Mlcldlepori·PcrW!I'oy, 0:,Dec. 9, 1971

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! SentinelClassified~ Get R~sultsl'
.

.

Notice

WANT AD
INFORMATION
. ·.
DEADLINES
.
' 5 P.M. Dey Before Publication
~ev Deediin,9a .m.

.
RAlES
For Want Ad Service

Wednesday.

5 cents per Word one Insertion·
Minimum Charge 75c
' 12 cents per word three
consecutive insertions.
18 cents per word si x con .
secutlve Insertions.

CARD OF THANKS
&amp;OBITUARY

Sl.SO for SO word minimum .
Each additional word 2c .

BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per
,

,

OFFICE HOURS
1
SolO a.m . to 5;00 ;&gt;.m. Daily,
8oJO a .m. lo 12 o00 Noon
·Saturday.

In Memory
IN LOVING memory of David
Wayne Grindstaff. Jr . who

passed away Dec . 8fh, 1970.
At rest in the arms of Jesus.

Sadly missed by mother,
father and grandparents.

Rd .-, Cincinnati , Ohio 45237 .

IQ.3.11c
'
SALE
at

:-----:--~--

WE
GRATEFULLY
acknowledge the thoughtful
prayers and flowers of friends

and neighbors during the
death of our baby, Kenneth
Ray . Special thanks to the U.
S. Air Force, N\artln Funeral
Home and Rev . Darrell
Porter for their services.
Your kindness will never be
Keftneth Ray Graham .

12-8·11P

HOUSEKEEPER ,
middle·
aged, light work and share
home and car . Write Box 729
C·O

Help Wanted

The Daily Sentinel ,

Pomeroy .

12·8·31p

Tex.

ca t with collar In Carmel area
near Racine. Phone 949 -3701.

12·8-3tc

-------

Notice
SHOWALTER 'S Wet Pet Shop,
Chester. Ohio. Follow signs

from

Newell's

Garage,

common Angels 39c each, 3
for S1. Open evenings and
weekends.

12-9-Jtp

I Will NOT be responsible for
any debts contracted by
21, Racine , Ohio.

WANTED!

anyone other than myself and

my molher. C. Grop·
penbacher, 128 locust St.,
Middleport .
.12'9-31p
KOSCOT Kosmetlcs and wigs:
Yes we have Koscot Products
and wigs in stock for your
immediate needs. Yes we do
deliver . Would you like to
select your own customers
and have your own route and

make good money? Call
Brown's in Middleport 992·
5113, distributors of Koscot
Kosmetics .

11 ·16·1fc

WILL CARE for small children
in my home. Phone 992·6187.

12·8-6tc

YARD Sale, Thursday thru
Sunday ,
David
Haggy
Res iden ce, left of Happy
Hollow.

12·8-Jtc
GUN Shoot, Dec. 121h, 12 noon,
Mile Hill Road . 20 lb. steak,
hams, bacon, turkeys, pork .
Sponsored by Racine Fire

Dept .

12·8-41c

atRISTMAS TREES
Locally
grown,
sheered and sprayed,
Scotch Pine.

Brownell Avenue
Parallel to Middleport Hill
Middleport. Ohio

automatic, power steering,
white side wall tires, wheel
covers , radio and heater,
14,000 actual miles, tor-red

automatic, factory stereo
tape . Lots of extras. Like new.

PHONE 992~2\56
"'FOR DETAILS!

Male Help Wanted

typewriters part·time . We
train. Local inter'v'iew. For
application detai ls, write :

Regional Manager, Box 25,
Glenshaw, Pa.
12·5·51p

- - -- Employment Wanted

=----- --

HOUSECLEANING in Mid·
dleport and Pomeroy area .

12.J.I 2tc

Wanted To Buy

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Ph. 992-2174

ior Signs.

Open every day eocept
MoQday
1 P.M. fill P.M.

Baths
Room Additions
And Patios

Radiator Specialist

ROOFING' &amp; CARPENTER
WORK
SPOUTING, ·
ROOF PAINTING··

992-7608

Pomeroy

ORIGINAL CABINET
COMPANY

POMEROY

NEW &amp; OLD WORK·
All Weather R.oofing &amp;
Construction Co. and An·

HOME &amp; AUTO
606 I!. Main

thony jlumbing &amp; Heating.
Complete
Plumbing ,
Heating and A,jr Conditioning.
240 Lincoln St., ,Middlepoo' f

COMPLETE

992-2094

Pomero1

BUILDING

OFFIC£ SUPPLIES

SERVICES

And

Phone 992-2550
Insured - Experienced
Work Guaranteed
See us for · Free
Estimate on Furnace
lnstalalion.

From drafting to completion
of home or business:

FURNITURE ·
Stop In and See Ou1
Floor Display.

Mobile Homes for Sale·

12-8·61c

.I PH. 992-7796

Complete line of aluminum,
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
viny l and steel sidi ng .
Authorized Singer Sales and
Complete line of bu ilding.
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
additions, and remodeling .
J.29.ffc
All work guaranteed. Com mercial and res idential BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
roofing . No job too small.

Phone

446 ·3839 for

free

estimates.

11 -18·J0tc
AWNINGS. storm doors and

12'' ·. 14' · 24' · WiDE

MILLER
MOBILE.HOMES
1220 Washington Blvd.
Belpre, Ohio

Real Estate For Sale

Oelanil
Realty

frame, 8 rooms, 3 bedrooms,

1'/, baths, porches, NEW 2 car

garage, storm doors and

windows, carports.
marquees, aluminum siding
and railing. Call A. Jacob.
sales representative. For free
estimates, phone Charles .

Lisle,

Syracuse,

V.

Johnson and Son , Inc.

v.

5·27.flc
AUTOMOBILE

Septic tanks ins/ailed. George
( Billl Pullins, Phone 992·2478.
4-25-ffc

UPHOLSTERING

2 BEDROOM mobile home in
Middleport . Adul ts only .
Phone 992·5247.
11 ·28·121p
FURNISHED sleeping room
Rent by

month . Phone 992·5293.
11-26·1fc

. SR.

Broker
110 Mechanic Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

2966.

· OponiTII~
Monday lhru Saturday
604 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 .
Slater Upholstering, Rl. 3, . HARRISON'S TV and
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3617.
Service. Phone 992·2522.
12-5·6fC
6-IO·ffc

12·9-3fc IF YOU REALLY WANT TO
·
.SELL OR BUY CALL 992SOR R~ L po~y mare $30, 7 year
3225 992·2378
·· REDUCE sate ·•nd tasl ·with
old and 1deal for smallest · HE' LEN L ' TEAFO
child. Will hold 1111 Christmas.
. ASSOCIATE RO,
Gobroe tablets end E-Vepw.. tar Pilla N.IUV~ . Oruos.
Phone 949-4605,
non u~NTINELRUILDING 1

SGt

IT
WA6 THE WOR6'1'

SI~·PACK!

1110. 1\iE CAR15 AT
1\o!E COR'NEif OF TliE
MEAT
IN

!'EN, Wl6 IT THE CARS
ON THAT 1W&gt; CURVE

~Tiff,

OUT l-lERI!. ON THE
HIGHWAY?

COI.LI610N I'VE
EVI!.R' SEEN. 1EN

IN 'THE H06PITAL.

®

D-DON'T CAST TH'
10 ·'fEAR TOOTH/ICHI':
SPf:LL, ltJOTH DEMON!!
US KIDS BELIE.VES
IN'/0'- r--~--"

1970 Camaro Cpe. ................... ~3095
Less than 11,000 miles &amp; appearance of 72 model. Rally
Sport equipped, Classic copper with sandalwood interior,
tinted glass, factory air condllloned, sports mirrors,
console, air spoiler. turbo hydromatlc, ;&gt;OWer steering &amp;
brakes, 350 cu. ln. V-8 engine. Really Sharp.

- IS IF YOU BRING
M£ TOOTH THIS

SIZE !!

,........,....-.--'

IT M-MA'I
TAKE.
ALI'L
TIME.,
1DOTH

DEMON-

1970 Chevrolet BelAir 4-Door.......12595
Less than 10,000 miles by loc•l owner. Sharp as new In all
ways, white over gold finish, 350 v.a engine, power
steering, radio, white-walls. wh. covers .

1970 Dodge Polara ...................12395
4 Dr., V·8 engine, automatic trans., P.S., factory air, good
tires, radio &amp;other extras, white fin ish, clean Interior ,

OH l DOI'IT

1970 Chevelle Malibu HT Cpe. .....12995

DON'T '&gt;'OU 5eE, JANtE, /I' I

CAN ':tleciDfNT,O.U.Y'RIJN INlO
MR. MAR'nN~ WHILE ~E'5

low mileage by local owner wllh lots ofwarranfy left:
factory air conditioned, V.8 engine, turbo-hydromatic, p.
steering, gold body, sa ndalwood vinyl top, radio, vinyl
Interior, good w.w fires . This car is loaded wllh extras.

VACATIONINe IN THE

IMH.w.A~ .... -~

1969 Chevrolet KinDWOOdSt Wg. 12295.
Local 1 owner car &amp; less !han 2J.OOO miles, factory ·air
condi tioned, luggage rack, 227 V·8 engine. automatic.
power steering &amp; brakes, beautiful white finish &amp; green
vinyl interior, new tires. radio &amp; all the deluxe ac.

cessories .

located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.

USED CAR
SALE

Complete front end service,
tune up and brake service.
Wheels
balanced
elec tronically .
All
work
guaranteed.
Reasonable

rates. Phone 992·3213.

.

7-27·11C

Real Estate For Sale

dishwasher, din i ng room,

ceramic file bath, hot water
heat, basement and fenced

yard. Phone 742-3171 .
12-6-6fc

HAVE
A

HAPPY
DAY

WMPOtl~
~.,.o
- .

ftll VliiiD 1\181...,__

THIS! !

Select Your New Chevrolet
from our JargeJinventory of cars and
trurks in stock!
•HIGHER PRICES ON OUR NEXT SHIPMENT!
'Z

-

Your Chevy Dealer
Open Eves. Til8

992·2126

•
•J'

Pomerov

''

l

~

CONTINUES AT

I

oa ~~o"'

'

CONCRE '.

NICE- :f. Bedroom house, fully
carpeted, built·in kitchen with

HEAR

Pomeroy Motor Co.

6·15-ffc

-.

NOW

THE BORN LOSER

--=------.-,O'DELL-WHEEL alig~·ment

i642 lincoln Heights.,
All utilities. Rt.' 7 o'HOlJSE;
Call
Danny
Thompson, m .'
By .pass . $2,500.00.
2196.
.
I
7.1a.11• ,
RACINE- Large 3 bedrooms,
bath , gas furnace . Nice SIX ROOM house, 133 Butternuo
Kitchen .
Porches
and
Ave, Contact Ed Hedr ick, 2137
Garage.
W•dsworth Drive, Columbus,
Ohio, phone 2J7-4334.
5 ACRES - Overlooking the
,.
11 ·21 -lfc
Ohio River. 1200' Frontage.
NICE 2-s lory home wilh full
SYRACUSE - 5 rooms, balh,
basement, 2 lots. new forced
gas heal . On 124 - Asking
air furnace. Near Pomeroy
$6,000.00.
Elementary School. Phone:
992·1384 to see.
'
SYRACUSE - 3 rooms, full
11·7-lfc
basement. level lot. $2500.00.

door . Phone 992·2936.

I l&gt;tG
THIS HANI&gt;'I

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

insurance

2 ACRES-::_

walnut. 2 gun cabinets, one
cherry, one walnut, 7 gun STOCK FARM - 114 acres. 2
capacity, drawer for shells, 2 barns, S room house, bath,
doors for boots, glass front
furnace . Minerals. $18,000.00.

service .

Reupholstering.
repairing ,
rebuilding.
Comp lete
selection of beautiful fabrics ,
plus nau~ahvde, bottaflex and
korosea1 in vinyl to choose
from . Pick -up and delivery .

windows, EXCELLENT SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph .
LOCATION WITH LEVEL
662·4(135.
LOT, close to shopping,
2·12·1'
$12,900.

Virgil B.
TEAFORD

TONIGHT

Our Lot is Full
of Reasons Why
You Should Buy Now••

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

-oc-- - - --

RAWLINGS
• •

NOTICE

/'8.Do

~

._~~~c.,\ IS YOUR COLOR TV SET A~C't.
OVER TWO YEARS OLD?
"~&lt;

992·2151 OR 992-2152 MIDDLEPORT

. HURRY

to
152 Butternut

ACROSS
I.-Paulo
4. One of
the ages
~~ ~ ll.lnfant
8. Prescribe
12. Carangoid
...,.,,...
fish
13. Monster
If. Part of
a circle
· 15. Comic,
Louls 17. Contem·
porary
Caesar
18. Prefix in

~

CHUCK'S TV
Ph, ftl -5010

Pomeroy, Ohio

Used Car Sale Continues at Dependable City ..
hurry ~hile the selection is good ... compare
prtces w1th any other dealer and stop in for our
.deal , ..

ntu"tl

&gt;m;:o

1970 Hornet SST 2 Dr Sedan
$ ;:tDVI111-In
1968 Rebel SST 2 DHT
$
-em
1965 Ambassador 4 Dr Sedan
$
zm"'
1967 Ford Country Squire
$
"'l:o-1
1967 Mercury Comet 2 Dr Sed
$ -lrO
1966 Mercury Comet Caliente
$
1964 Ford Custom 2 Dr Sed
s nZr
1964 For~ Fair lane 4 Dr
$
1966 Buick Saeclal2 DIH
$ &gt;:z:E
1965 Buick Skylark 2 DHT
$ zm-1
1965 Pontiac Tempest 2 Dr
$
1964 Chevrolet ·Malibu 4 Dr
$
~c:&gt;
1963 Chevrolet h11pala 4 Dr
$
1971 Dodge Coronet C11stom
$
1970 Dodge , ChalLenger 2 DHT r-&lt;m
1970 Dodge Charger 2 DHT
$ c. ;:a
1970 Dodge Coronet 4 Dr
$ m: -1
$ &gt;~iii
1968 Dodge Coronet R· T
1968 Dodge Coronet Deluxe
$ rmm
.
1967 Dodge Coronet 4 Dr
$ -&lt;
:z:.
196.6 Dodge Coronet4 Dr (3) ·
$
' c:l»·
1966 Dodge Charger 2 DHT
$ ;:tD&lt;VI
$
1966 Dodge Polar a Covert.
m-1
1966 Plymouth Fury 114 Dr
'
$
1967 Volkswagen Transporter
$ )&gt;:Z:"tl
1967 Fiat '600D' 2 Dr
$
•VI
$
1966 Triumph Roadster
mO
$
1966 Dodge 0200 3/4 ton
c:;:o
1966 Dodge DlOO 1f2ton
$
VI-I

Seotlllb

. Cratcbit

.Zt. Scottish

WHAT COLOR?

Pick your own wall·lo-well carpeting for a new 3 bedroom
ranch. House completed and ready for occupancy . UN·
BELIEVABLE DOWN PAYMENT AND MONTHLy
PAYMENT. Cell 992-7034 or 1·268·1810 collect for ap.
po1ntment to see.

. JEMO ASSOCIATES, INC.
Cor. Park &amp; Sycamore
Middlepprf
Ph. 991-7034

••• C••c•nr . '
Mort t
·

E-to

Autotnattu

Cholco of .,11 .,
tom PI .
Au to

·r6~ 1H~. ~ !"tV,~

.'

·.

river
Z1. Attention·
getter
23. Curtain
fabric
JS, Church or
Bible, for
example
27. Allah's
faith
28. Small
·" ·' ''"
bunch
31. 11- in
the bag"
32. Vitality
34. "The
~"'·'- - ~'''-'-""'-...:r~
Windy
City," for
short
35.Man's
nickname
36. Historic
period
S7. Chinese
dynasty

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: WHAT A BLESSING u WOULl&gt;
BE IF WE COULD OPEN AND SHUT OUR EARS AS EASILY
AS WE OPEN AND SHUT OUR EYES.-G. C. LICHTENBERG

'"nl•·,r•l•".
MIYflt

.with Gtntlt, tvtn
;hut, No hOIIPOfl,l

-!1 tv.rdrylng,
l',ll't:r,~~lh •Li,nl .

.......

.RUTLA"D FURNITURE

V42-4211'

Arnoi!I .Grete

Rutla~. o.

II I I

t) I
SEA1TL
;::r-1--f"""-1

I I

~ A

V'. :

11-\15 MIGH115e Nt1r WIL,
!JUi t'ANG&gt;ERO\I&amp;.
Now

•-w- the clrelod'·~ten

to ror-;;; ii;iiii'PI'iM ..,.,;;., •

=~·;;:;~·~iii~~~~Ll~IIUIItlled b7 the . . ....._

r

Pril•nu•u•swa~~n

(I I I I I I]

(.4Mwenta•arNw)

J••bieeo fMPIL IUIAL IXHOIT PIGION

.....I

LONGFELLOW

AXYDLBA&amp;XI.
~h~!er olmp)y otands lor another. In this sample A II
\ISed'':for .'the three' L'a, X for the two O'a, etc. Sinal• letten,
apos~es. the lenlth and formation of the word' are all
hints. Each day the code letten are di~erent.
\.
..._.

Drrtro
,lurround clolhoo

•uc•rpil

live of
(0 1971ltlnr Future• Syndicate, Inc.)
IODown
(3 wds.)
42.1siand
6, Actor
· republic
cU&amp;~~®~ .,tlw&amp;!J .-1 ,_.
Hugh
U.Move7.lmpov·
ments
Unscramble these fwr Jumbloo,
erished
44. M.artha
8.Honshu's Ye.tenl•r'• Auwer one letter to each IIQU&amp;ro, to
form four ordinary worda.
volcano
45. yes
9.Motherof 27. Where
Romais
Isaac
DOWN
29. Take
10. Nose-to·
, partln
1. Knightly
the-grind·
·
30.
Liquid
title
stone saga
measures
%. Repre·
(2 wds.)
31. Suggest
sentative
16. Give oft
33. Philip·
3. Harry
2%.
Torme
TALEV
pine
Golden
ISland
bestseller Z4.1mmedi·
39. Minuscule
(3 wds.)
ately
I
41. Sioux City
t. Nl&amp;erlan Z6, Back of
ill,
....
gal
the neck
tribesman

II

Htlttl Hut

W• ....,lilllrt to
. lofA\'TAO

5. Descril"

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE.-Here's how to work It:

,Fin 40/ttipr . .

em

38. Circulate
40. Put in

~ ·

' fl1er o,. Power

m:z:

See Emerson Jones, Pearl Ash. Hilton Wolfe,
WMiace Amberaer, .Dick Rawlinas. ,

'

l IPitd 0Ptrttlon .

-cm.,

.

Dlllltl

11. Youngest

'o

MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM AT
DEPENDABLE CITY
MID·
DLEPORT ...
OPEN UNTILS:OO P.M. eilch evening
.
except .Saturday &amp; Sunday .

5

'

o-o
"-to

oao
-zo
r-t&lt;

I

o2";.q

Th~n if should have • compleio factory tune up we will

tune your color by Vectorscope as the loclory did whrn If
was new. We will also clean the tuner m1ke all •djustments to bring your color back to life •• it wos when
new.
PLUS PARTS IF ANY USED
Also black and whife rtpatrs. Save money, bring them in

DEPENDABLE CITY

____

12-l· IIC

SET FER

lollY, liMO,
CAN '&gt;OU ~liND
MEA FIN FOR
GAS'i

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'"'5.55

been cancelled? Lost your
operator' s license? Call 992·

USED Volkswagen tor parts. MIDDLEPORT delivered right to yo ur
brick , 5 rooms , 2 bedrooms,
Phone 985·4118.
project. Fast and easy. Free
bath , liled and paneled ,
12-7-61c
est1mates
. Phone 992 -3284 .
carpeled, level lot, $6,950.
Goeglein
Ready -Mix Co.,
OLD Furniture, dishes, clocrll;,
Middleport, Ohio.
and.or complete households. RACINE - 2 story frame, 9
6·30·Ht ·
Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
rooms , 4 bedrooms, bath , full
.....:...:..:
basement, 3 level lots. gas
Pomeroy, Ohio. Cali 992-6271.
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
8·2S.tlc
forced. air heat, Ref. and
Range . AN EXCELLENT Reasonable rates. Ph. 446-4782,
Gallipolis. John Russell,
BUY. $12,900.
Owner &amp; Operator.
5·12-ffc
POMEROY - A LOT FOR A
LITTLE - I slory frame, 2
bedrooms, NEW BATH, NEIGLER Building Su pply .
HEATING SYSTEM, HOT
Free estimate on building
4·2-/lc
WATER TANK, large lot . ' your new home. Will draw
JUST $4,900.
;&gt;r}nfs to suit the lay of your
land. Call Guy Nelgler .
Racine, Ohio. For repair and
GIVE YOUR FAMILY THE
aluminum
siding, soffet and
GREATEST CHRISTMAS OF
gutter. Call Donald Smith,
ALL WITH A HOME OF
Racine. Ohio.
THEIR OWN.
10·7-ttc
HENRY E. CLELAND
FURNISHED and unfurnished
Office 991·2259
=c: .-.;B:::R-:::- A:::D-;:F-;:0-;:R-;:Dc-,-;Ac-u-:-ct::-ion
...::_eer .
apartments. Close to school.
Residence 992-2568
Phone 992.5434.
Complete Service
12-9·61c
10-18·/lc
Phone 949·3821
Racine, Ohio
UNFUR NISHED house , 4
Criff Bradford
rooms and bath, utility room,
5·1·Hc
garage. 1665 Point Lane ,
Lincoln Heights. Phone 992 ·

l RC"D IT

IIJ A FOIQVtJ€
c=!&lt;J6!

service, all makes. 992-2284.

1'12 slory READY -MIX

over Wine Store.

MARTHA ROSE, Owner
Located on County Road 34
near Royal Oak Park, Watch

K~chens,

Nathan Biggs

steering . Good shape . 949·
383J.
12·9-61c

GUN Shoot, Forked Run
Sportsman Club, Sunday , COUNTRY home, 6 rooms and
bath, yard, garage and
Dec. 12, 12 noon.
garden . One mile · north of
12·B·31c
Chesler, Ohio. Phone 985-JS38.
12-8·3fc
SHOOTING Match, Saturday,
Dec. 11, at the Racine Planing
Mill at 6 p.m. Factory choke
guns only. Assorted meat.
Sponsored by the Syracuse For Sale
Fire Dept.
12-8·3tc CHRISTMAS trees, selecl your
own , cut later, SJ each .
Harley Haning, Pomeroy, Rl.
SPENCERS' Market, Mid·
3. Phone 992-6380.
dleport, will · not be able to _ ____.:_ _ _ _..,:
12:..:.·9·3fp SALEM CENTER
4
make deliveries until further
bedrQOms,
l'h
baths,
cook
notice.
NEWLY made gateieg table,
units. Double stainless sink.
12·8·21c
20" center, 19" leaves ,
10 ACRES.
SAVE' up to one halt. Bring your
sick· TV to Chuck's TV Shop;
151 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy,
Phon4! 992-5080.
11 ·21 -tfc

Bulldozer Radiator to
Smallest Heater Core .

fj.9.3fp

INTERIOR painting . Call Don
608 East Main
VanMeter 985·3951.
POMEROY
11 -26·12tp MIDDLEPORT - 2 slory

3874.

GIFT SHOP

Remodeling

From the largest

1963 CORVETTE , call 992.3981

Mason &amp; Hartford

Phone 992-2876.

HILTQN WOLFE ·.949-3711
DALE DUTTON, 992-2534

Complete

Cali 992·2441 after 5 p.m.
11 -28-ffc
after 6 p.m.

HIDDEN
TREASURES

JOHNSON'MASONRY

high impact paint. Phone 992·
5785.
12.J.61p

SENTINEL
CARRIERS
IN POMEROY

~c------

BRADFORD'S

BILL NELSON 992-3657
TOM CROW, 991-2580

Auto Sales

Phone 992-3293.

12-9·3tp EMPLOYED MAN . Repair
I WILL NOT be responsible for
any debts contracted by

12-Hip

mobile home with expando
living room, 2 years old, no
re asonable offer refused .

. anyone other than myself.

Signed: R. B. Salser, Box

Haven.

prices
are still frazlin
bargain level.

looking for, for that perfect
gilt.

12-B·IIC 65 X 12 SCHULTZ 2 bedroom ALLSIDE Builders &amp; General SEWING MACHINES. Repair
Contra ctors., Gallipolis, Ohio.

Lost
LOST - Smail gold and white

POOL Table. Call 882·2382, New

opening in Pomeroy area . No
experience necessary. Age
not
important.
Good '62 CHEVROLET Impala. '52
charac ter a must. We train .
Chevrolet pickup. Phone 992·
6083.
.
Air mall A. D. Dickerson,
12·7 61c
Pres . , Southwestern

Petroleum Corp., Fl. Worth,

Dolls, all dressed in style,
kniHed and crocheted. 1Has
to be seen to be appreciated)

12·8·6fc

engine. air conditioning,
power brakes and power

TEXAS Oil COMPANY has

Wanted

Phone 949-4365.

12·5-61c 1968 PLYMOUTH Fury Ill . 38J

forgotten. The family of

Christmas
decorations, wearing
apparel, jewelry,
ceramiCs.

Many items you have been

Middleport Rl. 7 Bypass, 7:30
p.m., Dec. 10, 1971. You'll find "'19=7o::-cw""."'
30c---=
Oc-l-=:
D-,.
SM
=
o""B"
IL"E~ 442,

wrapping ·paper-, -perfume.
coats, boots, clocks, radios ,
blankets, spreads, pillows,
candy, decorations, tools,
toys, dolls, jewelry , watches ,
toasters. irons, ru~s , chairs
and many other 1tems too
numerous to mention. Come
early to obtain seat.

HANDCRAFT
'GIFT ITEMS

Impala, 4 dr . sedan, 327 cu. in. '
motor,
power steering, ·
automatic, Champagne .

'67 CHEVROLET Super Sport,
J27 , 4 speed, excellent con.
.BOUT YOUR WEIGHT .. .
dil lon . Phone 949·2621.
overweigh t ladi es, teens and
12-9·6tc
men interested in a Weight
Watchers (R) Class in
Pomeroy write : Weight· 1971 PLY MOUTH Duster. 6
Watchers ( R), 1863 Section cyl inder , 225 cu . in.,

Hayman's Auction , Laurel
Cliff
on
Pomeroy -

Card of Thanks

mattress and box springs S25
each in sets only, rocking
chairs as low as $19.95. Free
camera with every dinette set
purchased. Open from 9 a.m.
to 8 p.m . unti I Christmas.
Free delivery.

We're here to HELP YOU.
So come in and try us.
Owner, Raymond Grady

OVER AN'BABV-5ET
FER ME TONIGHT,

CALFED THIS

Business Services

FOUR N.EW HOMES • - _
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom $16.900.00 home can be purchased with a
monthly payment as low as $65.00 for a family with a base
I
of $5,000.00 and ' three children. 7•;, Pet. annual
rate.

20 FT. SELF .MADE camper.
/ra iler . Also, 1969 Chevrolet

Phone 992·2836

IF '1E COULD COME

MELISSV,
BUT I . GOT
MV OWN TO

.

'

12-9·31c

Syracuse, Ohio
Come In and see our new line
'ot Mud &amp; Snow Recap Tires .
We also do grease jobs, oil
changes &amp; fix flat tires on all
autos &amp; 1rucks. etc.

IH·IIp CHRISTMAS

G

and

GRADY'S
ASHLAND

25 Per Cent Discount on paict
'ads and ads paid within 10 days.

Advertisement.

Friday

Saturday nights. Phone 985'
3929, 985·3585 or 985.9996.
12·5·12tc

I WI.IZ WONDERIN'

LOWEEZY--

. For Sale

&lt;I(ATE·A·WAY holiday parties. CH INESE Ring Neck Pheasant.
Christmas party , Fr i day ,
Call 895·3972, John Thomas,
Dec. \7, New Year'S: Eve
leon, W. Va .
party , Friday, Dec. 31 from
12-S-6tc
1!4JIQ11_~J:otr.c~.i!QnJ - .
7:30 p.m. to 12:30 a.m.
Will be accepted until9 a.m. for
Schedule your holiday parti es HOLIDAY specials at the
·•
Day of Publi&lt;alion
now.
Available on Monday,
Parsons Furniture Store, St .
. REGULATIONS
Tuesday
and
Th urs da.y
Rt. 7, in Kanauga . 3 pc. living
' The . Publisher reserves · thJ
nights. Also Saturday and
room suites. $119.95, recliner ,
'rlghf'fo edit or reject any ads• Sunday
afternoons . Open
1
$59 .95, bedroom suites $98.95,
deemed ·object ion a I.
Thei
,publisher will not be responsi-ble
for more than one incorrectj
'insedion. ·

. I'D lOVE TO,

A Cryptosnm Qaotatlon

:

C RXBCKVJ GBNW XU CFlll RJGXKXFJ
;, ·=··· XZN

PC SJ

KCF

WJP ' PQJ

OXP Q Z NP

NFSFZQF

•

KQXVGBJF

PZ

UKB J C RXFW .-.t1 ZNBKJ

I'M .
LIFTING!!
I'M
LIFTIN6Y.

�'.i

•.'.
12- Tile Dally Se~l, JIMJr..(ld'hlllplll'toW'I'I--!IIO'J1t, 0., Dee. 1,1171

Right to

!

·

(.

•

1

ROLL

Road Plan

Gift Shopping on all 3 floors and at the
•

Launched
A plsn of action to search for
ways to improve classroom
teaching of reading at all
learning levels was launched by
the advisory council of the
Right To Read Committee in
Meigs County Tuesday afternoon at the County
Superintendent of Schools
Office. Mrs . Greta Suttle,
thairman, presided.
Appointed chairman in each
school was the principal or head
teacher, who will be responsible
for organizing the teachers and
implementing the schools' plan
of action in carrying out the
goal of the program.
The council was composed of
John Lisle, principal of
Salisbury School and coordina tor of Federal Reading
Programs in Meigs Local;
Ralph Wigal, coordinator of
Federal Reading Programs and
coach in Southern District;
Vilma Pikkoja , director of
Bookmobile Services in Meigs
County; Mrs. Marilyn Jannum,
parent and president of
Riverview PTA in Eastern
District, and Nellie Vale,
recorder , and elemen tary
school supervisor.

GRANGE NOT MEETING
LETART FALLS - Ohio
Valley Grange 2612 here will not
meet tonight due to revival
services being conducted at the
Letart United Brethren Church.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight. Dec. 9
NOT OPEN

SCANDALOUS JOHN
!Technicolor)
Brian Keith

i

" G"

PETER THE WOLF
tTechnicolorl
STOOGE: Malice in the
Pa~~~W STARTS 7 P.M.

WOMEN'S AND
GIRLS'

KNIT
HEADWEAR
On the first floor
toboggans. berets, headwt.arl
wifh mafching scarf sets,
mittens and gloves In a fine

selection of styles and colors.

the Middle Block

The House was to reconvene
at 10 a.m., but lengthy party
caucuses were expected to de·
lay a roll c•ll at least until aft.
er noon.
The chamber adopted a $7.8
billion budget with a graduated personal income tax with
four votes to spare last July 14,
but anti-Income tax forces are
believed to have gained some
ground since then.
The outcome was expected tb
hinge on the postures of the

he hoped the measure would
pass.
The conference report, drafted over a week's time, received
the exact number of votes need·
ed for Senate clearance.
Sen. Clsra E. Weisenborn, R·
Dayton,
whose name was last
House Speaker Charles F.
Kurfess, R·Bowling Green, who on the list of senators voting,
summoned Hoose members cast the 17th and deciding vote.
But the pivotal votes came
back to Columbus following the
Senate vote, would offer no pre- from Sens. Howard C. Cook, R·
diction on the impending roll Toledo, and Stanley J . Aronoff,
calL He said "in many ways" R-Cinclnnati, members of the

Cleveland
Democratic
delegation and a small black
caucus, and on the effectiveness
of a group of Republican conservatives bent on knocking the
proposal down.

fourth conference committee
w.lich put the report together.
Cook and Aronoff had voted
against a similar budget and in·
come tax proposal which fail·
ed in the Senate by two votes
Nov. 22.
Two Dems Oppose
Two Democratic senators,
Douglas Applegate of Steuben·
ville and Ronald M. Mottl of
Parma, voted against the report,
which requires $790 million

worth of net new revenues and
contains about $250 million
worth of tax relief features .
But the other 11 Democrats
were joined in support by Mrs.
Weisenborn, Sens. Cook and Ar·'
onoff, and Republican Sens.
David S. Holcomb of Dayton,
William W. Taft of Cleveland,
and Paul R. Malia of Westlake.
The two-year budget figure in
the report compares with the
budget of $6.2 billion for the last

biennium and. Gilligan's
proposal of $9.1 billion.
If includes a 3S per cent in·
crease in state aid to elementary and secondary education, a
25 per cent hike for higher ed·
ucation, a 52 per cent boost in
public weHare expenditures, a
33 per cent i~rease for local
governments and sizeable increases in other areas.
The taxes include a corporate
net income tax coupled with a
tax on net worth; a new sev-

erance tax 9n minerals ; a threecent increase in the tax on a
pack of cigarettes; and tax
hikes on insurance companies,
banks, and dealers in stocks
and bonds.
Pay Raise Included
It also contains a 10 per cent
across-the • board reduction in
property taxes and homestead
exemptions of up to ~.000 for
property owners over 65 years
of age, depending on their in(Continued on page 4)

-·

girls. We'll help you

Bus~y"1~-....,..,.-..,._:L..,.~~~!!=:..J

Come To Elberfelds
Ready To Wear Department
And Select Your Holiday
Dresses From Our Beautiful
Collection.

nns ATI'RACTIVE CHRISTMAS TREE arrangement
has been created at the Meigs Junior High School in Middleport by Mrs. Marilyn Meier to honor students named to
the honor roll for the second six weeks grading period. The
tree features photographs of all of the students named to the
roll. Mrs. Meier is employed as secretary at the junior high
school.
~!~~~-r~~!:~~ms:~

Men's ,Robes
Make

The holiday season is the partying
season and we are prepared with
hundreds of beautiful dresses for
you to se.Ject from. We have
collected the season's most beautiful
· dresses and costumes for you to
wear with charm and grace famous label knits and wools in all
the new colors and styles. All easy
care fabrics - styles for Junior
Petites · Regular Juniors . Misses .
Half Sizes and Extra Sizes.

Children
(Continued from page 1)
East Pakistan today and said
capture of two more villages
had opened the way to Dacca.
Calcutta dispatches said East
Pakistani refugees were
streaming back into the East.

k Quillen

Died

ALL WEATHER

COATS

ALUMINUM

,,
TRIPLE TRACK OR BLIND STOP
WINDOWS

VALLEY WMBER &amp;SUPPLY·00.
MIDDLEPORT

FIRM TO CLOSE

SPORT
SHIRTS
Regular boys sizes 8 to 20

and

juvenile sizes 3 to 7.

All permanen1 press - solid

colors, bright stripes and
pia Ids in the new collar styles
that boys like so well.

The Valley Lumber and
Supply Co. )l'ill be closed all day
Friday for the funeral services
of D. W. Rothg~b, stockh9lder.
The services will.be held at 2 p.
m. Friday at Ute Main St.,
Baptist Churc!h In Point
Pleasant. •

In the Mens and Boys Department ••• theist floor .

ANOTHER BIG SHIPMENT OF WRANGLER BWE
DENIM JEANS FOR MEN AND FOR BOYS
M~ns Regular Cut Wranglers . . . . . . . SiZO$ 28 to 44
Mens Super Lean Wrantlers . . . . . . . Sizes 28 to :u

Boys Super Lean Wranglers · · . Regular, slim 1nd huskits

Boys Flare Leg Wranglers · . . . Rtgulors ond Slims
Mens Flare Leg Wranglers · . . . . . . sizes 28 toll
And on 1he 2nd floor- Wrangler jeans for women and lor
girls in the popular styles . new looks . new colors .

Stop in - select yours now.

CHRISTMAS TREE
DEOORATIONS
In the Toy Store . middle block .
Tree ornaments In various sizes

and shapes. Many wonderful
imported ornaments . Icicles .

tinsel · tree lights . extra light
bulbs · artificial trees . tree tops
· candles. Many, many other
iferns to make your tree and
home the merriest ever.

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

: News ... in Briefs \ 3 Hurt
In Crash
I

,

I

I

By United Preaa International
UNITED NATIONS- INDIA IS CONTINUING to disregard
the General Assembly's appeal for a cease.flre in the Indo·
Pakistani War. Pakistan officially accepted the U.N. truce call.
Observers say the war issue may now be switched back to the
Security Council, because the Council's edicts are enforceable
whereas the Assebmly's are only advisory.

Mrs. I. 0. (Audrey) McCoy,
54, Reedsville, Rt. I, was
hospitalized following a near
headon tw&lt;Kar collision Thurs·
day at 10 p.m. on SR 7 near
Chester.
The Meigs County Sheriff's
SAIGON -TWO UNITED STATES HEUCOPTERS were Dept. said Mrs. McCoy suffered
shot down in the Mekong Delta by the VIet Cong Thursday. The a laceration to her lip and
enemy gumers then trained their fire on a group of other copters complained of chest pains. She
seeking to save the downed flyers .
was taken to Veterans
.Two Americans were killed and se.ven wounded. In Cam· Memorial Hospital by the
bodia, a large Chinook cargo chopper was downed by enemy fire . Pomeroy E·R squad.
Mrs. McCoy was traveling
BELFAST, NORTHER IRELAND -TilE BRmsH Army north when a car driven by
said a part-time soldier and a man riding with him were killed In Joseph Dale Lawrence, 33,
ambush by gunmen today on a rural road near the frontier with Pomeroy·, Rt. 2, pulled off SR
248 into the path of Mrs. Me·
the Irish Republic.
Coy's
car, the vehicles meeting
On Thursday night, gunfights and demonstrations In Lon·
almost headon.
(Continued on page 12)
Lawrence and a passenger,
James Morrise, Pomeroy, had
lacerations of their heads.
Lawrence was arrested for
driving while Intoxicated and
failure to yield l-ight of way.

Decorating Contest in

Pomeroy is Announced

MAKE GREAT

•

GIFTING

MEN'S

SPORT
COATS

1990

OFFICERS OF MEIGS CHAPI'ER, Order of DeMolay, will be installed Saturday night at
7:30 at Ute Middleport Masonic Hall by John Purdum, Master Councilor of the Great Seal
Olapter of Ollllltothe.'Thotte to be Installed are John H. Kauff (center), Master Councilor;
Gene A. Davis (left) Senior Councilor and Duane D. Will, Junior Councilor. Assisting witli the
installation will be Randy Williams of Marietta, Eric Anderson of Chillicothe, Dave Martin of
Marietta, John Sebo of Meigs and Don Dick, Chillicothe. The Installation is open to the public.

MATCH THE SHIRT WITH ANEW WEMBLEY TIE
FOR BOYS - FINE SELECTION.

Special Sale

Sale
Price

PHONE 992-2156

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1971

TEN CENTS

wee

Boys

90

Smart plaids and neat
stripes In an excellent
selection of colors.
Sizes 36 to 46. Regulars
and longs.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL XXIV NO. 16R

Permanent Press
Packed in
handy travel case.

SPECIAL PURCHASE!

Eugene, Norwalk, and Robert
William, Mason; two aunts,
Mrs. Clyde Bayles and Mrs.
Jack Hite, both of Middleport;
an uncle, Ben Batey, Mid·
dleport, and several nieces and
nephews.
Funeral services will be held
Saturday at 1 p.m. at Ewing
Chapel with the Rev. Eugene
Gill officiating. Burial will be In
Rock Springs Cemetery.
Friends may call at Ute funeral
lwme after 9 a.m. Friday.

Rain today and mild. Highs
from the 50s to the low 60s.
Rain likely tonight and continuing mild. Lows tonight in
the 40s. Partial clearing and
little cooler Saturday. Highs in
the upper 40s and iiOs.

Devoted To Tlae lnlere.IB Of The Meigs-Mmon Area

·Small, medium , large
and extra large sizes in
solid colors, plaids and
stripes. Dacron and
cotton blend fabrics or
serviceable corduroy.

Sale! Men's 29.95

Ch

The first warship sunk by a
submarine was the Union steam
sloo)Hlf-war Housatonic, which
was torpedoed In Charleston
Habor in 11164 by the Con·
federate submarine Hunley ,
which then sank.

Gifts!

Ambrose Curtis
Died WJF?·~tllte!Wra:rl
t:

Jesse Mavn.Jird
ll!-d "'eunesda

.

Wonderful

Come in and let us help you with
your selection.

Ambrose B. Curtis, 73, formerly of Meigs County and of
Carroll, Route 1, near Lancaster, died Wednesday at Cape
Coral, Fla.
The son of the late Asbury and
Plooma Curtis, he was born in
Meigs County on Jan. 19, 1898.
He was a registered engineer,
surveyor and appraiser with the
Ohio Department of Highways
36 years. Later he was_a review
appraiser for the West Virginia
State Road Dept. six years. Mr.
Curtis belonged to Masonic
bodies at Charleston, W. Va.,
and Chester.
Surviving are his wife,
Lillian; a son, William, of
Carroll, Route I; a daughter,
Mrs . Theodore Anderson,
Carroll Route I; four grandchildren; a steJHiaughter, Mrs.
Landon Rowe of Columbus;
SELECT APREffi ROBE FOR HER
three step,grandsons; two
brothers, Leo Samuel Curlis,
THIS CHRISTMAS FROM ELBERFELDS
Pomeroy Route I, and ·Jewell
Beautiful full length quilted robes in solids
Curtis of Pomeroy; several
and prints - washable acetates - softly
aunts; and several nieces and
quilted with hi -loft polyester fiberfill .
nephews.
zipper and button front .styles . full skirts.
Funeral services will be held
J1
"'·at 1 p.m. Saturday at the chapel
Regular and Extra Sizes
JF}'_J_
of the Frank E. Smith Funeral
ure
YHome in Lancaster. Masonic , .........._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _................11111111'11Mtooiitoii101ii~~
NEW HAVEN - Jesse graveside rites will be held at 3
Maynard, 52, New Haven, died p. m. Saturday at Beech Grove
Wednesday at West Virginia Cemetery in Pomeroy. Friends
University Hospital.
may call at the Smith Funeral
Mr. Maynard, an electrician, Home after 7 p. m. today.
was a member of IBEW 317,
Huntington ; of the Pleasant
Valley Community Church, and
UC
of Smith-Capehart Post 140,
JF}'
American Legion. The son of
w1
the late W. H. and Roxie Black·
Chuck G Qu'll
57 of 157
burn Maynard, he was born
· 1 en, . •
March 8 1919 at Laura K
South Second St., Middleport,
survi~ing are his' :ire, died Wednesday at Veterans
Sizes 36 to 50 in regulars , shorts and
Roberta Preece Maynard; two Hospttal, _Lexrngton, Ky.
longs. Solid color black. dark olive
sons, Russell and Paul, of Point
Mr. Quillen was an employe
and British tan . Scotchgard finish Pleasant; a daughter, Mrs. Ann of Zerkle Trucking Company
Zirkle of Middleport. two several years. A veteran of
zip out removable lining . Smartly
.
'
. World War II, he was preceded
styled · well tailored · expertly
grandchildren; two brothers, . d th b hi f th Chari
Virgil and Jasper, of Pilgrim, rn . ea
y s a er,
es
waterproofed .
te
M
La
.
Quillen.
.
.
Ky., an d stx SlS rs, rs. sste
He ts
. surv1v
. ed by J~
.,_ wife,
.
Fletch er and Mrs. Ernestme M
L .
Q 'll
t
Hall, Inez, Ky.; Mrs. Ollie
ary outse Ut en; ~o
Preece, Mrs. Ruby Howell, daughters, Janet Morrts,
Mrs. Oretha Cline all of Chester, and Charlene .Estep,
. .
'
.
Mason; four step-chtldren,
Pigrtm, Ky., and Mrs. Justme r'Milto R h U S N . Ell
Hannah, Columbus.
1..,;:;: n ous • · · avy, en
Funeral services will be at R~ush, J . C. Sparks, and Sally
1,30 p.m. Saturday at the Sparks, all of ~berton, Ohio; 111Ntoo~t~"-111it•••••.,;llfl'lllfi'I!11111111'11"MII'III
Foglesong Funeral Home in hi~ mother, Besste Mae Quillen, I'
Mason with the Rev. Herman Middleport; . four grandJordan officiating. Burial will chtldren; four stSte~s, Evelyn L.
be in Graham Cemetery. Spencer, Pom~roy, Mrs. Frank
Friends may call at the funeral Ktng, Har_rtsonvtlle, Mrs.
home any time after 1 p.m. Harold Persmger, Piketon, and

Weather

Now You Know
- -

Sizes for women and

with your selection.

·
terburg, Ohio; three brothers,
~:;:;~~~~==~Fr=id:a:y~;:::i~~;j,
Mrs . •Edward Russell, Cen·
George A.,
Middleport;

992-2709

COLUMBUS (UP!)-The Ohio
House today headed (or a show·
down vote on a $7.686 billion
bp.dget ·and orre-half to 3\1 per
cent graduated personal income
tax, hopeful of ending the nine·
month fiscal Impasse.
Despite 17-15 Senate approval
Thursday and an endorsement
from Gov. John J. Gilligan, the
vote on the proposal was ex·
peeled to be, in the words of
one Republican House member,
"tighter than wallpaper."

Elberfelds Toy Store in

Sale

Friday thru Tuesday
December 10-14
Walt Disney 's

Alfonso Arau
wait Disney's

BRING THE CHILDREN TO SEE

FRIDAY AFTERNOON 2 to 3
SATURDAY AFTERNOON
2 to 3

Bread

CLOSED 4 DAYS
Offices of the Meigs County
Courthouse, in accordance with
the Revised Ohio Code, Section
325.19, will be closed all day
Friday, Dec . 24, and Saturday,
Dec. 25, and again all day on
Friday and Saturday, Dec. 31
and Jan. 1, Judge John C. Bacon
of Com_mon Pleas Court said
today.

I

in the middle block.

SANTA CLAUS

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
Pauline
Deren berger, Pomeroy; Rex
Argabrite, Reedsville; Timothy
Thomas, Middleport.
DISCHARGES - Charlotte
Snider, Larry Atherton, Hanna
Harrison, Willa Gibbs, Robin
(Continued from page 1)
chairma n, said 312 paid Rood , Philip Hood Myrna
memberships have been Beaver.
secured, 31 short of last year's
LocAL TEMPS
quota .
The temperature m downtown
Robert Roush, fifth district
Pomeroy at 11 a.m. Thursday
commander, invited all Legion was 50 degrees under cloudy
members to attend a meeting at skies.
Feeney Bennet Post, Mid· ·:t::~:Si:!S~~===~:::::~s::::::::~::~:~~~:m~$:=!:
Jleport, Monday at 7:30p.m. to
hear District Commander Divorce Granted
Marlin Bush. Other officers of
One suit for divorce has been
the district also will attend.
granted and another was filed in
Bush notified the post that the
Meigs County Common Pleas
Eighth District won the Court.
membership prize of $400.
Lillian L. Maynard was
Roger Mowery was introduced
granted a divorce from Oscar
and accepted as a new member.
Maynard. Ruth Ann Griffin,
Reedsville, filed suit against
Larry E. Griffin, Indianapolis,
Ind ., on grounds of gross
neglect and extreme cruelty.
(Continued from page I )
ln the case of the apMiddleport unit263; Mrs. Eunie propfialion by the state of
Brinker and Mrs . Myrtle easements for highway purWalker, Racine unit 602; Mrs. poses over the property of
Golda Mourning, Mrs. Helen Dennis L. Facemyer, eta!, the
:{ennedy, Mrs. Rosie Searles, court ruled that the property
Mrs. Avanell Bass, Mrs. Erma owners are entitled to interest
Hendricks , Trudy Ohlinger, at the rate of six per cent in the
Linda Darst, Mrs. Patricia amount of $1, 749.65.
Might, Mr. and Mrs. Albert
The cases of The Farmers
Roush, Mrs. Della Stahl, Mrs . Bank and Savings Company vs
Lucy McKinney , Pam and Herbert L. Clarke and Cheryl
Melinda Morris, Jeff and Mike Staats vs Danny Staats, were
Wayland, and Mr. and Mrs. dismissed.
Charles Kessinger.

Goodies

Tight Vote .Certain .in House on Taxes, Bu I - et

Elherfelds In Pomeroy are open Friday and Saturday night!! until 9. A good time for Qnistmas

.• ~.~
..

Stop In the Music ~part,;ent, 2nd f~or. See our:fino display ·
of LP Albums in Chrlitmas music oneS V'Our regular favorites
Record albums. make gifts lhit keep on giving.
·
~,..

........................
,

ALSO A BIG SELECTION OF
8 TRACK STEREO TAPES

ELBERFELDS I.N ·. POME

Plans for Pomeroy's annual
home lighting contest were
announced today by Mrs.
Margaret Ella Lewis, chair·
man .
Again residents are . being
asked to register for the contests by completing the form
included with this article.
Registration tickets are to be
filed with Mrs. Lewis or Tom
Cassell who is heading the
contest on behaH of sponsors,
the_ Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce, by the evening of

Monday, Dec. 20. Judging will
begin at 7 p.m. on Tuesday,
Dec. 21.
The Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Co., the Ohio
Power Co. and Columbia Gas of
Ohio are donating merchandise
prizes to be awarded the top
three winners in each of the
three categories which include
secular, religious and door or
entrance way. Second prize in
each 'category is $10 In cash and
third prize in each is $5.

DECORATING CONTEST
Please enter my name among the entries
In the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce home
decorating contest.
NAME; ______________________
STREET------------~-------­

CATEGORY-------------------Categories Include: religious, · non·
rell&amp;ioos, doorway. Mail to Mrs. Charles
Lewis, Route 1, Middleport, or mail or deliver
to Tom Cassell, Middleport. ·

By United Press IDternatlonal had been driven off without
An Indian army spokesman inflicting any damage."
said today Indian troops were A truce was to go Into effect
using helicopters to cross the today at the Karachi and Dacca
Meghna River-last major bar- Airports to permit the evacuarier to the East Pakistani tion of hundreds of foreign
capital of Dacca-i!nd that a refugees but there was no
trujjor attack could come any immediate word on success of
time.
the truce.
Indian Prime Minister Indira
'F1ood of Claims'
Gandhi told a crowd of 100,000 Pakistani spokesmen in Racollege students in New Delhi walpindi insisted that "all
that India would fight on until major towns in East Pakistan
East Pakistan is liberated for are in our control," but a flood
the Bangia Desh, the rebel of Indian victory claims from
government of East Pakistan East Pakistan cast doubt on the
which India already has recog- statement.
nized.
The Indian military spokesPakistan has accepted a U.N. man said major Indian ground
General Assembly call for a forces had massed 35 to 40
cease.fire and a pullback of miles northeast of Dacca and
troops, but Mrs. Gandhi said that a three-pronged drive
only that India had the request could start at any time. He said
under consideration. Then she there were no major water
said "nothing can deter us from obstacles on the route to the
driving the occupation (Pakista- East Pakistani capital.
ni ) forces out of the region." The spokesman said the river
India warned all foreign crossing was near Bhairab
shipping to stay clear of the Bazar, east of Dacca, and the
area of conflict following a troops "are concentrating for
series of Indian Air Force and further advance toward Dacnaval raids against the West ca."
Pakistani port of Karachi and a T h
•
series of ports in East
Pak1stan.
Intercept Ships
The Indian spokesman said
the Indian Navy had found it
necessary to intercept and
board all ships to prevent the Ralph Wigal was named Title
escape of Pakistani military I coordinator effective Jan. 1,
personnel.
Robert Spurlock, Oak Hill, was
A military spokesman in_ New hired as the new Vo-Ag inDethl satd Indtan naval untts on structor replacing Harold
Wednesday night "pierced the Rowles who has resigned ef·
offshore defenses" of Pakistsn fective Dec. 22 and Hilton Wolfe
and bombarded Karachi harbor Jr. was appointed head baseball
and the big harbor oil complex coach by the Southern Local
at.Kemari. He said "this daring School Board Thursday night.
raid does emphasize that we The board authorized Renee
control the approaches to Burke, Meigs County's Junior
Karachi."
Miss, to attend the Ohio Junior
UP! correspondent Lemmy Miss pageant at East liverpool,
Pinna reported from Karachi January 17-21.
that the thunder of heavy guns A replacement for Charles
and the sound of warplanes and Norris, clerk of the board who
explosions rocked Karachi resigned effective Jan. 3, will be
throughout the night but that a named at the January meeting.
spokesman said "the enemy . The board also agreed to par·
ticipate in the five-county
Cooperative Development
Program.
SUPPER SET
The Junior Clsss of Eastern Attending were Charles
High School wiU hold a jitney Pyles, David Nease, Denny Hill
supper beginning at 5 p.m. and Gene Yost, board memSaturday al the high school. bers; Ralph Sayre, superin·
Steak, spaghetti, salads, tendent; Jim Adams, principal;
desserts and beverages will be John Eichinger, student council
president, and Mr. Norris.
available.

ree ffi
New J0 bs

RENEE BUCKLEY, four-year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roger Buckley, Pomeroy, Rt.
3, made her donation Thursday to the annual Salvation Army Christmas drive. Accepting it is
Envoy Ray Wining. Donations are used to provide b!15kets for underprivileged families.

Committees Asked to Work
For Approval of Tax Levy
Malcobn B. Orebaugh, during
the December three-county
Community Mental Health and
Mental Retardation Board
meeting held in the Gallipolis
Cllamber of Commerce office
recently, appointed committees
to work for a tax levy which will
appear on the ballots in
Jackson, Gallia and Meigs
counties next May.
The committees, by counties,
are :
Jackson - Warren Walters,
chairman and Annette Levine,
&lt;XKhairman; Gallia - Dr.
Bernard Niehm, chairman and
Dr. G. Wilson Bowers, CO·
chairman; Meigs - Tom Kelly,
chairman and Maxine Wingett,

co-chairman.
As of now, a figure has not
been established for the levy
according to Mr. Orebaugh,
general committee chairman.
In other matters, the board
heard a report from the
Executive Oirector, Maxine S.
Plummer and Dr. Ed Dietlker,
Ohio University, Psychology
Departmtlllt, on Ute clinical
services that would be starling
In January in Jackson, Meigs
and Gallia Counties.
Mrs. Plwnmer also reported
a training grant has been
submitted to the Department of
Mental Hygiene for funding.
This grant would be used to
contract with a college or

Long View Attempted of Schools Today
By GEORGE HARGRA ~. Supt. ·
Meigs Local School Diltrlct
In the rush and push of today's world of pressure
and tension the problems of the day sometimes get
out of focus. It's easy to lose one's perspective.
Every now and then we just have to take that
"long view" to regain that needed perspective and fit
our problems, our society, and ourselves Into the
11
}ong view 11 flow of time.
Many people do this each year as one year closes
out and a new one starts. That helps. Another oc·

Speaking of Schools-No. 217
curence that can cause us to stop and think a bit about
the "long view" is the arrival of a milestone an·
niversary of a significant historical event. That
happened this week as we reached the thirtieth
December seventh since the attack at Pearl Harbor.
To some of you, !know, Pearl Harbor is a pair of
words from a history book or a late, late movie. To
those of you who admit to more than 40, I'm certain,
Pearl Harbor means something else. I'm positive
that. yoti remember where you were and what you
were doing on December 7, 1941. I do.
So, what's the point? What about the "long
view"? What does this have to do with schools? Just
this: I would like for us to take a long view look at
schools, in 1941 and In 1971.
The 1971 automobile is considerably changed
from the 1941 ' model - changed In appearance,

university to provide training in
the community for agencies and
staff in the mental health field.
The Community Mental
Health and Mental Retardation
Board wili!X'ovide speakers for
local clinics and organizations.
To request a speaker, Individuals should call Gallipolis
446-4950 or write Community
Mental Health and Mental
Retardation Board, 16 State
Street, P.O. Box 292, Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631.

West Agrees on
Better Guard
Against Reds
BRUSSELS (UPI)-The United States and its European
allies agreed today to keep up
and strengthen their guard
against the threat of Communist attack. They also agreed to
start preparatory talks · "as
soon as possible" for the
mammoth 35-nation conference
on European security proposed
by the Soviets early in 1972.
The agreement to do so was
reached by foreign ininisters of
the 15 North Atlantic Treaty
Organization (NAT0) member
countries at the end of their
annual pre-Christmas stock·
taking meeting hete.
NATO officials said they
agreed the preliminary talks
should be held in the Finnish
capital of \Helsinki between
ambassadors of the United
States, Canada and all Eu·
ropean countries that Intend to
take part in the security
conference.

operation, cost and even purpose to some extent. Not idealistic people ahd our Institutions, including
·all the
., changes have been good. Indeed, in some ways schools, showed it.
In the thirty years since most of our navy sank
many feel that the old '41 had a lotofgoodpoints.
The automobile is not the only thing that has and 2500 died on that long ago Decen1ber Sunday, our
changed in those 30 years. As a matter of fact, we nation has assumed a new role in the world. Our
would be hard pressed to find anything that hasn't society has experienced vast and deep changes in its
changed. Those 30 years have brought great change fabric . As a reflection of that society, schools have
In schools. Most of this change has taken place In the li~ewise been subject to great upheaval.
And now we find schools ·racing problems,
past dozen years.
Those 30 years - and particularly the last dozen questions and challenges that were unthought of in
- have brought rapid and extensive change in our 1941. Consequently, we find schools that have
society, how that society views its schools, and what changed greatly and the changes have not all been
that society expects from Its schools. As with the ones that have been unquestioningly or universally
automobile, all of these changes have not been ac- a~cepted.
· In viewing the situation with as much objectivity
eepted as 100 per cent unmixed blessings by oociety
as one can command, it's only natural that the
or by professional educators.
' Those of you over 40, take a minute to thinlt back schools of 1971 differ from those of 1941 in apio your school of 1941. Push aside the rosy haze of pearance, operation, cost and purpose - just as we
·nostalgia and try to remember how it really was and · find in comparing the 1941 and 1971 cars.
The purpose of this rambling discourse is simply
not just the way you remember because it was part of
your youth. It had its good poinls and its bad points. to ask that you view today's schools and their
Dropouts weren't such a worry.1bey found jobs problems as not the end; or the beginning. They
or went to service or even into the CCC. Far less than represent just one spot in the continuing "long view"
half the students graduated from high school. A lot of which I wrote earlier. When you face the facts oi
•·
quit after grade il. High school offered college prep, the "long view•· and see change as Inevitable as the
DINNER ON MONDAY
general and commercial courses. Vocational sunrise of tomorrow,) feel you can more nearly face
The aMual Christmas dinner
education wasn't even a glow ovet· the horizon.
today's seemingly overwhelming school problem as
and party of the Pcmero)'
·
Religion, morality, the Jaw, parents, the school, what it is.
Garden Club will be held at 8:30
teachers, patriotism, and authority In general were
Whatev.er it is, It Is only part of a continuing p.m. Monday at the Ep~l
..,_.much more widely and deeply respected by young succession of problems that schools aoo society must Parish · House In Pomeroy.
and old alike. I guess we were still a naive, isolated, face and for which answers must be found.
There '1ril1 be a gift exchlnp.

'

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