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Farmers In Big Trouble
BOWLING GREEN , Ohio
(UP!) - I( government contlnues to fail to respond to the
needs of the farmers, one of the
"most serious domestic
problems ever to face our
nation "will come about, an
Ohio farm official told a U.S.
Senate subcommittee on rural
development Tuesday.
C. William Swank, executive
vice president of the Ohio Farm
Bureau Federa tion , testified
before the subcommittee
chaii &lt;:d by Sen. Hubert Humphrey, D-Minn .
"If we don't start taking a

look at rural America, its
problems and potentials, in a
serious and honest manner that
leads towards solutions, we will
have on our hands one of the
most
seri ous
domestic
problems e""r to face our
natio n,'' Swank said in
prepared testimony.
Swank said that "Whenever
farm incomes have declined, so
have the rural communities. "
He said legislation is urgently
needed to provide farmers with
bargaining power so a

prosperous agriculture can be
retained.
'' Farmers can no longer
afford to make a big investment
in the production of a commodity and then market it at a
price that is below the cost of
production," he said .
The agriculture spokesman
also said farmers should he
protected from secondary
boycotts "which could bankrupt
producers of highly perishable
commodities suct1 as fr uits and
vegeta bles."
Today'• FUNNY' will poy $1.00 lor

42 Named For Honors

MEIGS THEATRE

ea&lt;h origiiiCII " funny" ustd . Send gags
to : Todor's FUNNY, 1200 Wut Third

St., Cleveland, Ohio 44113.

By WIIJ..IAM B. MEAD
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Rules
designed to better inform
consumers about the power of
gasoline and the problems of
washing and cleaning clothes
have been issued by the
Federal Trade Commission
(FTC ).
The FTC ordered service
stations to begin posting gasoline ocmne ratings starting
March 15. Clothing manufacturers were told that, beginning
July 3, they must affix a
permanent label advising the
consumer how to wash or clean
the item .
William Dixon, assismnt director of the FTC's Bureau of

Consumer Protection, said
there is going to be some
confusion about the octane
ratings because the FTC
adopted a formula different
from that used by the few
gasoline firms that now post
octane, and by car manufactur·
ers in owners' manuals.
Dixon told a news conference
Thursday that the differmg
formula was adopted because it
was more precise. Octane
ratings under the FTC formula
run about two points 'below
those under the more familiar
system, he said.
The octane rating of a
gasoline is a guide to its anti·
knock characteristics. The

proper octane content combined
.with the proper engine produce
no knocks, and thereby the
most efficient use of gasoline.
Pitofsky said a typical .label
required under the clothing rule
might read, "machine wash in
sudsy water at medium temperature, rinse well, tumble ~Y
thoroughly, hang immediately.
Garment may he drip dried and
steam pressed."
"Consumers quite frequenUy
rUin garmenls because they
don't have adequate informa·
tion on how to care for them,"
Pitofsky said. "This problem Is
getting worse because of the
tremendous proliferation of
synthetic fibers and combina·

Uons."
The FTC said it would allow
disposable paper labels on
clothing that might he Impaired
l:Jy a permanent label, such as
a see-through blouse. The
agency said no labels would he
required on items such as
diapers, socks and undershirts;
that cost $3 or less and are
"completely washable under all
normal circumstances."

SocialCalendar

Tonight &amp; Thursday

Dec. 15-16
NOT OPEN

Friday &amp;

Forty-two students have been
named to the second six weeks
honor roll of Southern High
School. Students with grades of
B or better in all subjects are
named to the roll . Students'
names in capital letters made
"A'' in all subjects. Named to
the roll were:
SENIORS - Pat Arnold, Neil
Baker, Chris Beegle, Cathy
Boyd , Anthony Bradford,
Sharon Craven, Joe Derouvin ,
Bruce Hart, Candy Hoback,

Saturday

December 17-18

PLANET OF THE APES
( Technicolor )

Charl ton Heston

Maur ice Evans
" G"

BE'NEATH THE PLANET
OF THE APES
(Technicolor)
Ja mes Fra nciscus
Kim Hunte-r

" G"
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

Stanley Kiser, Loretta Middleswart, MAXINS VARIAN,
Alan Pugh, Randy Pyles,
James Smith, James Warner.
JUNIORS - Lorna Bell,
Denise Gross, Sandra Randolph, JUDI ROBERTS,
Patri cia
Sayre,
Larry
Wilcoxen .
SOPHOMORES - Mary
Congo, Della Cross, Charlene
Fleming, Cynthia Gooch,
Dennis Hawk, Jill Houdashelt,
Valerie Johnson, Vicky Johnston, Verne Ord, Robert Sayre,

..••---.-MMMlttlllttlllttiiMMII"i!~~tt:!!!~lt Phyllis Spears, Terry Spencer,
DAVID THEISS, Patricia
Woods.
FRESHMEN - Hope Bird,
Jeff Circle, Mary Hawk, PAUL
SIMPSON, Vickie Wolle,
STEPHANIE ORD.

fl.

()~

yIt Merrily with

8

7'APIH/CUHDIH

ADMIRAL
Ultra -Compact
Solid State

CASSETIE
RECORDER
THE IC9ooo
Model CTRS91
ADMIRAL Ultra.
Compact So lid
State
Reco rder
" M1n1" 1n IIZP but "mn!'' 1n perform~n c'e ! A perfect
gtf1 for thl! studen t or busy cxecu i iVt'. Fully fu tured
Wtll'l pud'lbunon cont r ol~ lo r play, rKord . last fo rward ,
r~tnd , and ~ top . Th~l! ' s even a button th.u "pops up "
tht' caneue door. See-th rous h nueue door h&lt;11S indtU tor ltnes 10 m.~rk the rape pMition. An ad'o'anced

ONLY

lntesra ted C11n.ut (I(J •n the ampl•f•er ~·d~ m the com pa&lt;t de~•8" and o~ssu•es long-l:ie deptndab•lrly. Re&lt;Ofd
le11el meter. Included are earphone, remote mrcrophone
· 11nd ~land , battery, deluxe carryinA Cilte,.shoulder stnrp,
'ep,u;ne microphone carrytng cue and blank C-60 uswtte. Bu1ll·in charaer switch make) b11teri~ lut lon1e•
when u~ wrth the opflDNI 1\C 1\dapter {TCC6AI

H-s;-, .-·, w.n. ··,

PROGRAM SET
The Christmas program of
the Syracuse Church of the
Nazarene will be presented at 7
p.m. Sunday under the direction
of Mrs. Alfred Rusche!. The
first portion of the program will
consist of the children's
recitations followed by a
pageant, "Gifts for the King ."
The public is invited .

Legislators Taking Vacation
COLUMBUS (UP!)- The Ohio
House and Senate plan to reconvene today, spend two days
cleaning up 1971 business and
then adjourn for the rest of the
year.
The adjournment will he a
short one, since most of the
year has been spent battling
over the budget and taxes _ a
fight which ended dramatically
last Friday with approval of a
17.686 billion budget and a new
income tax for Ohio.
House Speaker Charles F.
Kurless, R-Bowling Green, said
Tuesday congressional
redistricting will be the priority
item in January, after which a
nwnber of other subjects will he
dealt with at a more relaxed
pace through next June.
Kurless and Lieutenant Gov.
John W. Brown, presiding officer of the Senate, are expected to sign the massive budget
and tax bill when it is returned from the printer's and send
it to Gov . John J . Gilligan, ending the longest one-year session
in Ohio legislative history.
Might Reconvene
Following Thursday's planned
adjournment, Kurless said, the
legislature probably will reconvene the first week in January

PARTY PLANNED
Junior American Legion
Auxiliary members of District 8
will stage a party Thursday at
the Southeastern Ohio Mental
Health
Center,
Athens.
Residents with cakes , candy, or and adopt a congressional recookies to contribute may districting plan sometime after
con met Mrs. Albert Roush 992- the middle of the month.
The Speaker said another re3169.

cess would probably be taken
until March, and it would prol&gt;ably be June before all work is
completed for 1972. Legislators
will have primary election campaigns in April, as well as genera! election campaigning later
in the year.
Top priority items this week,
according to Kurfess, are Senate concurrence in a compre·
hensiveairpoUutioncontrolbill,
Senate consideration of a Housepassed Republican reapproprialion of capital improvement
funds, House consideration of a
compromiseelectionreformbill
and action on a pair of public
employe retirement bills.
The House has scheduled a
vote for today on legislation
designed to make permanent a
ban on gas and oil drilling under
Lake Erie, now prohibited
through next July 1.
The Senate is to vote on a
heavily-sponsored House-passed consumer protection bill
barring deceptive sales practices and empowering the attorney general to enforce the
law.
.
Also up for a Senate vote IS
a lo~g-aw.a~ted House • passed
bill requmng mstallat10n of
safety glass m hazardous areas

FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

of private dwellings.
The House is scheduled toreceive congressional redistricting plans today from
interested parties, mainly
the Republicans and Democrats who are subdividing Ohio's 24 congressional
districts into 23 because Ohio
lost ground in last year's fed·
era! census and must give up
one seat.
Kurfess said hearings probably would he held during the
recess, with a vote in January
on the redistricting bill.
"!see no reason redistricting wouldn't he ready by the
second week in January," Kurfess said.
Faced With Cbolce
The Republican - controlled
legislature is faced with either
passing a GOP -oriented plan
and risking a veto from Gilligan or working with the administration and Democrats on a
compromise.
The redistricting plan must be
completed early next year for
the filing deadline of Feb . 2 for
primary elections.
The House Ways and Means
Committee has scheduled a
hearing today on legislation designed to reduce real esmte tax

rates in answer to an upcoming order raising assessment
percentages on residential property.
Kurfess said the Ways and
Means Committee would con tinue to study this problem through
the recess, including proposed
constitutional changes in real
estate laxation.
A Senate Judiciary subcommittee will hold a hearing today on a prc;&gt;osal to reduce the
age of maturity from 21 to 18.
Kurfess said other matters to
be dealt with next year include
strip mine reform, no-fault insurance, public employe bargaining legislation, criminal
law revision, a proposed environmenlal protection agency, a
code of ethics, separate cabinetlevel agencies lor mental bygiene and corrections, an OIIUIIbus "fair credit" bill for con:;un1ers, and "cleaning up" the
provisions of the tax and budget bill which just passed.
He also said he expects a
move to bring to the House
floor a Senate-passed resolution
calling lor · a constitutional
amendment to end Ohio's prohibition against lotteries.
Both chambers were to re·
turn at 1:30 p.m. today.

THURSDAY
TWIN CITY Shrine Club
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at
Clubhouse, Racine, Walter
Grueser presiding.
SPECIAL MEETING, Shade
River Lodge 453, F&amp;AM, 7:30
p.m. Thursday, work in Master
Mason Degree. All Master
Masons invited by Worshipful
Master Denver E. Well.
FRIDAY
JITNEY SUPPER, 5·7: 30
p.m., Friday, Eastern High
School followed by dance from
10 to 11:30 p.m. with "Our
Creation" of Beverly providing
music. Events sponsored by
sophomore class.
SATIJRDAY
ANNUAL
CHRISTMAS
dance, Wahama High School, 8
to 11 p.m. Saturday with Jays
emceeing. Sponsored by student
council. Informal and open to
public.
ANNUAL Christmas
program, carleton Church, 7:30
p.m. Saturday. Visit from
Santa. Public welcome.
SUNDAY
ANNUAL Christmas
program, Morning Star Urdted
Methodist Church, 7:30 p.m.
Sunday. Public invited.
COUNTY ·WIDE prayer
meeting at Stiversville Community Church, 2 p.m. Sunday,
Okey Ahart, leader .

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY ARE OPEN_UNTIL 9 EVERY NIGHT THIS WEEKAlso the tcrj store in the middle block-and Santa will be at the toy store
7 to 8 each n· t this week.

..

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

ANOTHER BIG SHIPMENT OF EASY CHAIRS

Urged

magnificent

maYFair QUALITY

OPEN EVERY NIGHT UNTIL 9:00

the Aristocrat of Comfort Chairs
·• .....u.__.

•

•

•

stan1

I

qualily .. . America's Value Chair. Compare Berkline Mayfair chairs with
others cosling much, much more . Here's luxury in everything but
price ... qua li ty construct1on ... exquisite hand delai ling ... rich
fabri cs and deep grained vinyls. Mechanism guaranteed fo r
life of the chair.

Century-Old Blue
Britches That Won
Adjustable Back

The West,' Styled
Long and Lean With A
Flare For Fashion.
Rugged, All Cotton,
Pre·Shrlfllk Denim For
Lasting Comfort, Stitched
Throughout With Strongest
Thread . Fabric With A Crease
That Won't Quit.

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' ·, '\..· l '_. 'a
L!
;'\_
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PROGRAM SET
The Christmas program of
the Rutland Church of the
Nazarene will be held during
the Sunday school hour which
hegins at 9:30a.m. Sunday. The
Christmas play will be
presented at 7:30 Sunday
evening. The public is invited,
said the Rev. Uoyd D. Grimm,
Jr., pastor .
LJBERATIONJST TABBED
BERKELEY, Calif. (UP!). The Berkeley City Council, in a
surprise move , has appointed a
woman's liberationist active in
the Democratic party as its
ninth member.
Mrs. Susan Hone, mother of
two and a personnel manager,
was named to the post Tuesday
night after months of wrangling
to fill the empty seat in the
University of California com-

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Victory in East,
~~ Ingredient for War
:! ~!l
~
By Unitfd Press International
!1!~ Cease Fire with
The Soviet Union will support any move l:l:l:l:
' by Egypt to resolve the
East crisis, by l[l/
war or by peace, the Soviet ambassador to :;:;:;:: West are Claimed
t--::: Cairo said today.
,

Assembly
Keeps up

Mi~dle

~jf

~:;:;::

1::$l

It was the first time a Soviet official has !:!:!:!:

NEW DELHI (UP!) -

~~ publicly endorsed President Anwar Sadat's ili Prime Minister Indira Gandhi

n declaration

that a continuing deadlock in ::::::::
Wii Middle East peace efforts left Egypt iiO option i!it!
:~l but to fight.
!:I:
:;:;::::
Soviet Ambassador Vladimir Vino-:;:;:;:;
l:lr gradov's remarks to newsmen appeared~!:!:!:
on the front page today of the newspaper AI :f![[
~!:l:!: Goumhouriya. "We support Cairo's decision, :j:!:::l
!~lf whether It is for peace or the battle, because in j;!:jj;
;:~;:;: either case it will lead to liquidation of the ~;:~;;
ltJisraeli aggression," he said, according to the

announced
today
West
Pakistan forces had surrendered unconditionally in East
Pakismn and that a unilateral
cease-lire had been arranged
on the western front.
She said she was calling a
cease-fire on the western front
where Indians and Pakistanis
have batUed in the Kashmir
region because she wanted "to
stop further bloodshed and
::~~:: newspaper.
~~~:::
unnecessary losa of lfe."
Only hours before India had
announced a major lank victory on the Pakistan-Kashmir
~---------------------------, border.
She apparently did not
consult with Pakistan before
declaring a cease-lire on the
western front. Moments before
By United Press International
Pakistani President Agha
YARDVIUE, N.J.- RIOT-ARMED STATE pollee today
Mohammad Yahya Khan
moved onto the grounds of a penal institution here, possibly
announced that Pakistan would
preparing to take the facility back from rebellious prisoners who
fight on until total victory.
seized two hostages yesterday.
Mrs. Gandhi went before the
So far, state officials said, the hostag~ have been treated
lower house of parliament and
"wiUl respect."
told the cheering legislators
that West Pakistan forces had
SAIGON -COMMUNIST COMMANIJOO TODAY stormed a
unconditionally surrendered in
East Pakismn and that "Dacca
village on South Vietnam's central coast and ldlled or wounded 23
is
now a free capital of a free
of Its militia defenders before reinforcements arrived.
COW1try.''
The attack occurred just outside the Phu Cat air base that the
Her
cease-fire
anUnited States turned over to South Vietnam earlier this month.
nouncement came shortly
afterward .
. COLUMBUS -STATE NATURAL RESOURCES Director
WUllam B. Nye said today the capital improvements budget
Pomeroy Grant
passed by the Ohio General Assembly before it adjourned
' -~~~~y ... ~!!..I!!PJI_ ."DII!IY. meaningless apJrOpriations"
Of $4,613 Made
becauae the money is not there. The f9.8 mJlllon budget is "very
much akin to placing coal in tbelr constituents' Christmas
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov.
stockings," Nye said.
John J. Gilligan announced
Nye said the projects are to he financed with revenue bonds, Wednesday federal grants lor
but there are no revenues at aU to support the projects. The Ohio totaling more than
''paper projects" include $850,000 for Burr Dak State Park; $265,000, awarded under · the
$750,000 for Crane Creek State Park; $20,000 for Delaware State federal Omnibus Crime
Park; $1.95 million for East Harbor State Park; U.7 million for Control Act had been apGeneva State Park; $500,000 for Indian Lake State Park; $1.25 proved.
Ucking County's Boys Own
million for Paint Creek Reservoir Slate Park, and Sl million for
Shelter
( BOYS) project
West Branch state Park.
received the largest grant,
DENVER -PATROLMAN JOHN L. PINDER, 38, a !!;-year $99,765.
Other grants included ~.613
veteran on the Denver police force, arrested his daughter
Wednesday on marijuana charges. Pinder said he made an to Pomeroy for police communications equipment.
(Continued on page 12)

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News ... in Briefs

Cheshire. When it reaches lull
production, the new mine will
deliver 8-million tons of coal
annually. The Meigs Mine will
include several slopes, a coal
preparation plant, and a !!;mile conveyor to deliver the
coal to the Gavin Plant.
Total cost of the Meigs Mine
project is estimated at $115
million . It will employ 2,000
persons, both mining and non·
mining, when it reaches full
operation.
The name "Meigs" is a
prominent one in early Ohio
history.
Return Jonathan Meigs, Jr.,
was born in Connecticut In 171W
and received his law degree
from Yale College at the head
of ·his class. He went to
Marietta with his father in 1788
and became a prominent
lawyer.

In 1798, he was appointed a
territorial judge and the
following year was elected to
the territorial legislature .
Meigs was the first chief
justice of the Ohio Supreme
Court in 1803 and 1804 and
served as a U. S. Senator from
Ohio (1807-1810).
He was elected to two terms
as governor of Ohio, serving
from 1810 to 1814 when he was
an active supporter of the War
of 1812.
Near the end of his second
term of governor, Meigs
resigned to become postmaster
general of the United States,
holding that post until 1823 in
the
administrations
of
Presidents Madison and
Monroe. He died in Marietta in
1824.

R: l! t line

~~~~~~~~~~~~~---llllir'llllir'MMlttlllttll!'illlltlllltiiiiOIIRIIIIIIIIflllllllll!llll•••••••••,..,..lltlMMMIIOIIR.,..IIIIIOIII~

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
.

COLUMBUS- State Senator
Oakley C. Collins (R·lronton)
Tuesday said the income tax
bill passed by the legislature
!8st week "is one of the worst
pieces of legislation ever
foisted upon the people of
Ohio".
"Not only is the income mx
an unnecessary burden on the
working people and their
families, it will hurt Ohio's
business climate that has attracted industry and jobs,"
Collins said.
Colllns,
one
of
13
Republicans in the Senate who
voted against the bill, also
charged that the measure Is
"shot full of holes·and contains
many bad features." The
Ironton Senator said the hill's

prov1s1ons for homestead
exemption for elderly home
owners are "totally inadequate
because the exemptions will
not apply until December of
1972"'
He also criticized the
measure for the fact that the
largest single appropriation
goes to welfare, rather than to
education.
"If it hadn't been for the
welfare demands of Governor
Gilligan, there would have
been absolutely no need to even
discuss an income mx. The
income tax gives Gilligan the
foot-in-the-door he seeks to
expand his wasteful spending
practices," Collins said.
Collins said the so-called
property tu rQllback con•

tained in the bill Is "a gimmick" inserted by Gilllgan,
and "amounts to practically no
tax reform at all."
"Under the language of the
bill, the tiny rollback is not
ev~n guaranteed
to the
property owner. If a county has
debts, it can take the rollback
money right out of the home
owner's hands to pay those
debts," he pointed out.
"The property mx rollback,"
he said, "may turn out to be 'a
complete phantom' after the
Slate Board of Tax Appeals
rules on the reassessment of
property tax values."
"If the Board rules that
property must be assessed
·uniformly at 40 per cent of
value, there will he an average

Wrangles

Mrs. Gandhi, wearing a
yellow shawl over a white sari,
stood in the place of her father,
the late Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, in the Lok Sabha,
India's lower house of Parliament, and told of the great
victory in precise, patrician
English.
"We have hailed the new
nation at this historic

moment," she said.

u

...

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio General Assembly ,
struggling right down to the
final whistle, adjoucned
Wednesday night for the
balance of 1971 after the
longest and no doubt one of the
most temestuous years in its

history.

We

hail the people of Bangia
Desh." Bangia Desh, meaning
Bengal homeland, is the name
chosen by the rebels who rose
against the Yahya Khan
government.
In the Indian house of
parliament members pounded
their desks, stood and cheered.
A few threw papers into the air
and others shouted "Jai Ban·
gla" (Long Uve Bengal) and
"Long Live India." It was
greater than any ovation ever
given Mrs. Gandhi's father.
Forgot Her Lines
Mrs. Gandhi admitted later
she was so choked up with
emotion she skipped some of
the lines of her prepared
statement announcing the sur·
render at 4:31p.m. (6:01a.m.
EST). And her speech was
continually interrupted with
cheers as MPs waved their
arms and danced in the aisles.
Through circumsmnce and
iron will, over the disapproval
of the U.S. government and
against the tough generals of
Pakistan, Mrs. Gandhi had
pulled off India's most Impressive victory. She had split East
Pakistan off from West Pakis·
tan and created a new nation to
be called Baflgla Desh, friendly
and beholden to India, on
India's sensitive eastern
border.
Many details of the surrender
remained to he worked out.
There was no official announcement but fighting presumably
ceased throughout East Pakistan .

~-w.~'~w.-;*·$,;*:,:~t-~·

Tax Receipts Up
Meigs County sales tax
re&lt;elpts were up 10.29 per
cent and motor vehicle sales
tax receipts )!'ere up 95.08
per cent during the monlb of
November, Mrs. Gertrude
Donahey, stale treasurer,
reports.
General sales tax receipts
In Meigs County for the
month of November, 1970,
totaled $54,1116.56 compared
to receipts of $59,741.45 lor
November, this year, an
Increase of $5,574.89, Motor
vehicle sales tues for the
period last year totaled
$15,701.39 compared lo
receipts of $30,631.83 for the
month of November, Ibis
year.

Collins Hits Income Tax Bill

I __

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~~~~~::·=-~·:.':l:&gt;:·:-:.:-::::::::::::::::::::~*-=~:::::::::::-~:::::::::::::::::;:;:~::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::;.;.;.:·:·:·:~:·:·:-:·:-...~~~:::;~:

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~~:8~:~:;-:·:-:~~*:;:-::.o::::::::~=~:~:::::::-:::~:::::::=-::::::::::~==~=-=·=·=:~=~=~=:::=:=:t~:::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::;;:::~~==::

The new coal rrdning complex being developed in Meigs
County will be !mown as the
Meigs Mine, it was announced
today by Joe P. Gills, executive
vice president of Ohio Power
Co.
The mine will be built and
operated by Southern Ohio
Coal Co., a subsidiary of Ohio
Power. Mr. Gills said the name
was selected at the suggestion
of a number of Meigs County
residents and "we are pleased
to pay tribute in this way to the
area in which we are a cor·
porate citizen."
Details of the new rrdne
development were announced
last August. It will supply coal
principally to Ohio Power's
$488-milllon 2.6-milllon
kilowatt General James M.
Gavin Plant, now under construction on the Ohio River at

The Original,

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992·2156

THURSDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1971

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 17.2

It's Meigs Mine, Now

-.11111111·,.., Magni fic ent Mayfai r ... magnificent slyling . .. magnificent

STA·PREST"
FLARE JEANS

POMEROY

Devoted To 1JJe lnteresl3 Of The Meig3-Mason Area

from BERKLINE®

OJ~WnQ~®

PAIR

The first book !mown to have
been published in the Western
Hemisphere was a religious
manual printed in 1539 in ·
Mexico City by an Italian
named Juan Pablos.

VOL XXIV

Cooler today and tonight and
Friday.
Winds
slowly
dimishing north portion today.
Chance of s.now flurries north·
east portion tonight and
Friday. High today mostly in
the 50s. Low tonight in the 31ls.
High Friday in the 40s.

'

~

.-----------------------------------------1

D - 1~~/,.''.

00

Weather

Now You Know·
.

~ - The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pcmeroy, 0., Dec. 15, 1971

increase in property taxes· of
over 25 per cent. This would
more than wipe out the benefits
of any property tax reduction
provided in the income tax
bill," he said.
·
Collins said Governor
Gilligan "has to bear the
responsibility for leading Ohio
Into a wilderness of high
spending and high laxation."
Other states with an income
tax have found lJ·.• t most of the
revenue It produ•1!S goes Into
welfare programs, and that tax
rates are constanUy being
raised against the people's
wishes," he further stated.
"Unfortunateiy, Gilligan and
his staff already arr planning
to raise the rates of the new
Ohio tax," Collins concluded.

CHRISTMAS EVENT - C. T. Chapman and Robert Brown, scholars, and Eric Upscomb
and Brian Ash, ball players, I tor, will take part in the second grade class presentation, "I'm
Getting Nuttin for Christmas" at Syracuse Grade School Wednesday at I p.m. The musical
comedy is under the direction of Miss Beverly Price. The public is invited. Sanm will hand out
treats and room mothers will distribute gilts following the play.

Music, Arts Festival
Sunday at Meigs High
.
The Art, Vocal and Instrumental Music Departmenls of Meigs High School
will join to present a public
Christmas Music and Arts
Festival at 2 p. m. Sunday in
the school auditoriwn.
The symphonic band,
directed by David Bowen, will
open the program with
"Fan lasy On a Bell Carol",
"God Rest Ye Merry, GenUem~n," "Christmas Music for
Winds" and "Deck the Hall and
All That Jazz."
Directed by Lewis Shields,
the concert band will present
"Christmas Spirit" arranged
by Sammy Nestico, and "Saint
Nicholas Suite".
The chorale of Mrs. Christine
Guthrie will present the story
of the first Christmas in

tableau form with Dallas
Weber as the narrator.
The mbleaux will include
successive scenes as follows:
The Long Expected Jesus with
the music, "0 Come, 0 Come,
Immanual";
The
Annunciation, "Angels in the Sky
are Singing"; The Manger
Throne, !(Beautiful Savior"i
Adoration of the Shepherds,
"While Shepherds Watched
Their Flocks"; The Mother
Mary, "Gentle Mary Laid Her
Child"; Smr of the East, "As
Lately
We
Watched";
Bethlehem of Judea, "The ·
Birthday of A King"; We
Three Kings, "We Three Kings
of Orient Are"; and Light of
the World, with the vocal being
"0 Holy Night".
Part two of the vocal portion

will include contemporary
selections including "The Bell
Song," "Strangers in the
Streets," "Has Anybody Seen
Christmas", "A Child of Hope"
and "A Joyous Christmas".
Students of Mrs. Margaret
Ella Lewis in the Art Dept.
have prepared a special
display of holiday art to be
shown in the school foyer
Sunday.
John Mora is in charge of the
film to he shown in conjunction
:with t1J!! program. Charles
Chancey is in charge of
lighting, and Mrs. C. E.
Blakeslee Is in charge of the
usherettes for the program
which will be repeated at the
annual school assembly next
Wednesday afternoon.'

Rutland Homes Show Beauty
RUTLAND - Cash prizes in competition of both categories. Rutland are elaborately
lour categories will be
Homes winning a first place decora~, while others are
awarded in the annaul com- last year may not win first novel and beautiful by their
munity decorating contest place again this year in the very simplicity ,"
Mrs.
sponsored by the Rutland same category, but will he Snowden said. She invites the
Friendly Gardeners Club.
considered for second or third public to tour Rutland.
.Mrs. Robert Snowden, place . Last year's winners,
Mrs. Snowden will drive the
chairman, said no registration however, may be considered judges committee on a tour of
is required. Judging will be on for any of the prizes if they are the town, returning them to the
Tuesday evening, beginning at competing in a different home of Mrs. Bruce Davis for
6. All homes wishing to be category.
the announcement of the
judged must have their
~~ Nume rous
homes
in winners and a social hour.
decorations lighteJ by that
time. Mrs. Robert Crow,
Syracuse, will he in charge of
the judging . Only homes
located within the villagf
corporation limits will be
judged.
Categories are decorative,
religious, decorative doorway,
and religious doorway. Mixing
religious and decorative items
in a display will disqualify the
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Ohio Legislature but not
entry.
Prizes will be $10 for first, $5 Republican s Wednesday enough to override a veto by
for second, and $3 for third in submitted a congressional Democratic Gov. John J . Gilli·
the religious and non-religious redistricting bill that would gan .
The plan submitted by the
categories; with $5,$3 and $2 to eliminate the district of
Democratic
Rep.
Wayne
Hays
GOP would split up Hays' dis·
be awarded in the doorway
of Flushing, while Democrats trict among the districts of Reintroduced a bill that would publican Reps. John M. Ashassure
them
seven brook of Johnstown and Frank
congressmen while conceding T. Bow of Canton and Demoeight to the GOP.
crat Carles J. Carney of,
The bills were introduced in Youngstown.
the Ohio House of RepresentaTerritory ReallgDed
tives and were made necessary
Hays' home county of Belby the 1970 census which show- mont would he in the district
ed population in the Buckeye belonging to Rep. Clarence E.
.SUite did not rise as much as Miller of Lancaster.
in other st.ates so Ohio will)ose
The Republican plan also
one congressman, cutting the adds some areas of eastern
number from 24 to 23.
Jefferson County and Columbl·
It is believed the two plans ana County to Cat ney's diltrict
SHOPPING DAYS
can be made into some sort of which includes DemocraUc
TO CHRISTMAS
compromise that would be ac- Youngstown and adds some
ceptable to both parties. The suburban territory east of
READ OUR ADS
GOP has the majority in the
(Crmtinued on page 12)

Redistricting
Fuss Continues

The respite will he brief for
·the lawmakers, who spent
roughly 180 working days in
Columbus this year. They will
·return Jan. 5 to deal with
another thorny problem congressional redistricting.
The end came shortly before
11 p.m. after a flurry of activIty which saw several major
pieces of legislation shoot back
and forth from the' House to
the Senate lor final clearance.
Adjournment was delayed by
a snarl over a pension bill always a prime source of controversy in a last-minute rush
toward adjournment for the
year.
Legislative leaders scheduled
"skeleton" sessions for Dec. ·22
but no more working sessions
for the rank-and.file until 1972.
Budget Signed
Key to adjournment was the
signing by Lieutenant Gov.
John W. Brown and House
Speaker Charles F. Kurfess of
the $7.686 billion budget and
lax package which held the
spotlight in the Itigislature for
nine months before ils adoption
last Friday.
The giant spending measure,
to he financed in part by the
state's first personal income
tax, was sent to Gov. John J.
Gilligan, who is expected to
study it carefully before signing it.
Action in the House and Senate to bring about the brief holiday recess resembled a three·
ring circus at times.
It took two quick conference
committees to iron out the pension increase for teachers, pul&gt;licemployesandschoolemployes who retired after last July
1.
The Senate attempted to add
a sweetener for elected state of·
ficials by allowing them to average only their four highest annual salaries in figuring their
pensions instead of the five now
required for all employes.
Senate Backed Down
The House refused to go along
and eventually the Senate backed down and the bill was quickly adopted.
On one major bill, the House
voted 50-36 to back off from a
strengthening amendment and
send the governor a comprehen·
sive air pollution control bill
stiffening state powers in dealIng with contamination from
factories, municipalities and
motor vehicles.
The bill empowers the slate
attorney general to enforce orders of the state Air Pollution
Control Board in controlling pollution, multiplies fines lor violations and grants powers to close
down emission sources in emer·
gencies.
The Senate declined unani·
mously to go along with a House
amendment which would have
forbidden the Air Pollution Control Board to grant variances to
industries for economic and
technical reasons, and the
House backed off to get the new
(Continued on page 12)

Two Deer Killed,

Third Injured
Two deer were killed and a
third was injured on SR 7 near
Chester Wednesday night and
early today, the Meigs County
Sheriff's Dept. reported.
Today at 7:18 a.m. a truck
owned by Empire Food
Company struck two deer,
killing one and injuring the
other. Delalla of who killed a
deer Wednaday night were not
available.

�2-1'he Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Ore. 16, 1971

Rondon Keeps Title
CLEVELAND( UP! )-Vicente
Rondon of Venezuela knocked
out chaUenger Doyle Baird of
Akron, Ohio, in the elghth
round Wednesday night to
retain his World Boxing Associ·
ation light heavyweight title.
Using short left and right
chops to the head, Rondon
opened up multiple cuts on
-Baird's face . At 2:10 of the
eighth round in the scheduled
15-rounder a soUd left hook
flattened Baird and he di&lt;l not
revive for several minutes.
"He's a good tough middleweight but the best thing for
him to do is retire," Rondon
said of the Akron foundry
worker. Baird, 33, was two and
one-half inches shorter and five
pow\ds lighter than the cham·
pion.
"The light heavyweight class
is just too much for Baird,"
Rondon said through his
manager and interpreter Felix
Zabala. "He is a game fighter
but he cuts too easily."
Baird had come out fast,
trying for a quick knockout in
the first round. But while the
170-pound challenger threw a
lot of punches in the first three
minutes, he landed only one
solid blow, on the side of
Rondon's head.
Rondon slowed down Baird in
the sixth and seventh rounds
before belting him at will in the

eighth.
A right chop to the head
dropped Baird in a neutral
corner for ·an eight count at
1: 14 and he was sent across
the ropes for another eight
count at 1:49 in the eighth. '
With blood flowing from his
facial cuts, Baird staggered to
his feet and Rondon floored hi)n

for the last time with a solid
left hook.
"He kept hitting me with that
right chop," Baird said later.
"Every time I tried to counter
with the left ... bang, there he
was again with that hard right
to the head."
It was Rondon's 23rd straight
victory. He is now hoping to

Emile Griffith in New York. He
was unable to set up any big
paydays after that and refused

NEW YORK (UPI)- The
boxing world today mourned
the death of Dick Tiger, the
former world middlewei2ht and
light heavyweight champion.
Tiger, born in Nigeria as
Richard Ihetu, was 42. His
death from cancer of the liver
was announced Wednesday by
the Nigerian mission to the
United Nations. Nigerian representatives said Tiger died
Monday in Aba, Nigeria.
Tiger earned more than a
half million dollars in twice
winning the middleweight title
and then taking the lightheavy
crown. Helost his wealth in the
Biafran war and died virtuaUy
penniless. Tiger, who was a
Biafran army lieutenant during
that war,last fought on July 15,
1970, when he lost an unani·
mous 10-round decision to

to become a "trial horse" or

journeyman fighter .
Funeral arrangements were

Local Bowling
POMEROY LANES

Morning Glories Leagu4!

Pis

Newell Sunoco

70

Gibbs Grocery

61
58
51
50
46

Excelsior Oil Co.
Spencer's Market

Domlgan Sohio

G&amp;J Auto Parts
High

Team Series
Domigan Sohio 2268, G&amp;J Auto
Parts 2226 , Gibbs Grocery 2148 .

Team High Game -

G&amp;J

Auto Parts 852 , Oomigan Sohio
814, Newell Sunoco 779 .
Ind . High Series - Mary
Gilli lan 4.56, Lenora McKnight
451 , Margaret Follrod 442 ,

NEW YOI,U{ (UP!) --Cinclnna!l Bengals quarterback
Is January First
Virgil Carter continues as L1e
third most successful passer In
restaurant and trailer park the American FootbaU Conoperators in Melgs County ference, according to statistics
must purchase licenses for 1972 released today.
by Jan. I. Licenses may be
Carter has completed 132 of
secured at the office. of the 213 paas attenipts for 62 per
Meigs County Health Depart- cent. He haa thrown nine
ment, located at 114\2 E. Main touchdown passes and totaled
St., Pomeroy.
1,583 yards In passing.
Those needing to purchase
Leroy Kelly of the Cleveland
su~h licenses', however, are
Browns Is fourth In rushing .in
reminded that the health the AFC, having roUed up 81S
department wiD be closed from yards on 216 carries for a 3.8
noon on Thursday, Dec. 23, yard average. He has scored 10
through Sunday, and from noon touchdowns.
Thursday, Dec. 30 through
Kicker Horst Muhlmann of
Sunday, Jan. 2. Penalty for the Bengals iB fourth high scorrestaurants and trailer parkS er In the conference. He has
operating without a license is kicked 29 ema points and 20
$100 a day.
field goals for a total of 89

meet Bob Foster. A bout in San
Juan, Puerto Rico, has been
submitted to the WBA for
approvaL
•
"We have talked with Foster
for the past three weeks and
have sent the offer to the
WBA," said Zabala. "We will
fight anywhere and hope to
meet Foster on Feb. 18. "

Marie Domigan

~,~~'8~::1».~'&lt;.~:&amp;-::

ADAIR TO COACH
OAKLAND (UP!) - Jerry
Adair, a SS.year-old former
inflielder with four American
League cluba, was hired by the
Oakland Athletics Wednesday
to serve as their first base
coach for the 1972 season.

LUNCHEON SET
NEW YORK (UPI)-The
AAU wiD sponsor a luncheon
featuring Olympic Gold Medal
winners during the American
footbail and basketbaU conference to be held March 23-26 at
the University of Notre Dame.

Pis

FOX TABBED
ST. LOUIS (UPI)-Charlie
Fox, manager of the San
Francisco Giants, winners of
the Western Division tlUe In the
National League, was named
Wednesday as Manager of the
Year by the Sporting News in a
poll of the 24 major league
managers.

Rosenbaum -Meadows

54

Morrow-Moo re

54

Winebrenner

IN MEN'S CLOTHING

193, ,

L.

Winebrenner 180, J . Bentley
17 4.

Ind . High Series , Men - J.
Bentley 595, W. Boyer 589, D.

ANOTHER BIG SHIPM

Meadows 552 ; Women

~

L.

Winebrenner 530, J . Bentley

Holter 452 .
High Team Series -

452, P .

MEN'S

Fultz.

Benfley 2060, Morrow-Moore
1927,
1822.

KNIT SLACKS
.,

Perm ~Press,

The

Dai~

GIFT WRAP

$1
4
12 ROLLS..... • ·
~1.29

5 ROLLS ............79

REG.

12 Glass
21A'! •••••.•.••.•••• ~ 129
!~'!............... 79~

~

Cuts6
17818

Reg.

MINIATURE

TREE LIGHTS

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

_.....,........,_ ..... ~Wntillcr-

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

~

.•

!: . ,\, [:SEARs]

' {\

...

.

c-~-.. 11. plfMII!IIIl , _ crdo

....,. .......... 11111. OIIMr
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eiNalr ,.__a.~ 1111 1tot nr doaloar- la.t.A·D.Ir

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(uoo.... u ~ttaJ. no-,",'
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t-tO,....r..Ordnc.n....

. . . . . ... . ....... lltul

220 E. Main

If ilcM .W., •

S.Jn HM A

....,_

••..,, """~
'"

""

lull Your NIHs

992-2178 Pomeroy

OPEN EVENINijS

-

$399

. Reg. 59c

EXTENSION CORD.......... .

TREE ORNAMENTS

TAPE

AMERICAN
GREETING

ONLY

CHRISTMAS
CARDS

9~

LADY CLAIROL
STE~M ,.,_
1ST

79$

1.95

1

VALUE

.

Reg.
$26.95

$1995

ONLY

at.RISTM~
BY

.frmllf
35~

Almost everything about the Marauders in the Athens.Meigs
game Tuesday at Rock Springs was gogd except the final score.
OUr boys took charge midway in the second quarter to build a 3].
20 halftime lead and fattened it to 16 at 36-20 three minutes into
the third quarter. We had momentwn.
But Athens turned it off, got its own thing going, and simply
wasn't stopped. Coach Charley McAfee of Athens put on a double
team press in the back court and tightened up the guarding in the
front court once the Marauders got the ball past the time line.
The result : steals in the back court; steals in the front court, and
the temperature of the.Meigs shooters dropping toward the frost
line when they managed to get hurried attempts away.
· I thought all the Marauders gave 100 pet. effort. Steve
Dunfee at forward (4-3-11) appeared more relaxed than
heretofore. Rich Bailey, a wiry and quick junior guard (Z.S.12)
only needs a little seasoning . Jeff Morris continues in his role as
one of the league's fine shooters and rebounders. Jeff easily may
become known as Chairman of the Boards, a monicker lovingly
affixed to &amp;.7 Mal Davis of St. John's University who Tuesday
night got 33 points and 21 rebounds against American University.
Andy Vaughan, Tony Vaughan, Jimmy Boggs and Mark
Werry can play in the SEOAL. They will prove it more each
week .
FRIDAY NIGIIT MEIGS goes to Gallipolis for another "big
one." Heck, they're all big this early in the season, because to
this point the league championship still belongs to anybody
w1lllng to pay the price to win it. Ironton did six teams a favor by
administering Gallipolis its first loss Tuesday nlght at Ironton.
Gallipolis, with one league loss, and Meigs with two, have to
·come Into the game Friday night at full throttle. It oughtta be
some bash.
(Continued ori Page 5)

4 and 5 points values for AAA
schools, depending on their
enrollment, to a straight 3
points.
Because of the different point
values used in the trial ratings
this past season, Balta's Pan·
thers, playing four schools with
5-point ratings and six with 4point ratings, finished second in
Region 1 to Parma Senior.
Harding finished with a 10-0
record, while Parma, playing
all 5-point schools but one, finished 9-1. Rerlm on a J.point
basis, Harding finished first.
"Everybody Is Equal"
"I want to emphasize that I'm
not just happy to see the modification because it made us No.
1," Balta said. "I just don't
thi nk you can judge the caliber
of a football team by the enrollAHL Standings
ment of a school. It will now
By United Press International
be based solely on the won-lost
East
w. L. T. Pet . re~ord of your opponent. Every21 4 J 45
Bostor1
body is equal when we start."
14
8 7 35
Nov a Scotia
The board took little time in
I Spr ingfield
10 9 7 27
9
16
4
22
Rochester
deciding whether playoffs
7 15
7 21
Provi den ce
should
be held next fall, voting
West
W. L. T. Pis. 5-1 for the playoffs after little
Hershey
14
8 4 32
or no debate, but it was a
Baltimore
14 13 4 32 different s\t!TY on selecting the
Cleveland
· 12 11 6 30 AAA teams.
Richmond
11 13 4 28
Cincinnati
10 13 7 27
In fact, a motion was made
Tidewater
6 19
J 15 and seconded to continue the
Wednesday's Results
3-4-5 values for AAA teams, but
Nova Scotia 5 Providence 2
after
some debate, with Lou
Richmond 8 Cleveland 3
Baltimore2 Tidewater 1
Venditti, president of the
1On lygamesscheduledl
Ohio High School Football
Thursday's Games
Coaches
Association, Assistant
1No gamesscheduled I

CANDY

-HI.

to sur'

CHRISTMAS CANES

CHOCOLATE SANTAS

Cnstom

TINSEL

Fast Track

GARLAND~.

CARS

Reg. '1.29

Rea. '1.19

18Ft

49~

69t

nr

DAN MEADOWS

"CREATOR OF Reasonahli' Dru!l Prirn
North Second A~.-992-5759- Middleport, Ohio

OPEN LATE
EVERY NIGHT
'TIL
atRISTMAS

OHSAA Commissioner Fred
Dafler, and Commissioner Dr.
Harold Meyer all favoring the
straight 3-point values, the
motion was voted down 4-2.
After the final ratings were
released early in November and
a flood of criticism started roll·
ing in, especially from the
Northeastern part of the state,

Myer said the 3-4·5 point sys·
tem "may be the breakdown in .
the ratings."
Try Another Way
"Whether the 3, 4 and 5 system is better remains to be
seen," Meyer said Wednesday,
"but my thought is, we've tried
one way, Jets try the other."
Vendittiand Dafler both point·

quarter, but went cold and lost
in the final seconds, 56-M.
Gallipolis defeated Athens, 64·
50 earlier.
The Blue Devils probably
will use a full-court press
before the evening is over.
Meigs, beating the Athens half.
court press easily in the first
half, had trouble getting the
ball up floor in the second half
against a stronger version.
In the reserve game, the
little Marauders will play the
Blue Imps, who are 0-3 in
league play . Meigs, coached by
Bill Wickline, is 1·2 in league
games and 3·2 overalL
Game limes Friday are the
reserves at 6:30 p. m. and the
varsities at 8 p. m.

ed out that scheduling problems
for the smaller AAA schools
would practically kill any
chances they would have or ever
ge tting into a state playoff un:
der 3-4·5.
Gerry Faust of Cin~innati ·
Moeller, whose team was No. 1
in Region 4 and would have
been one of the four AAA teams
involved had there been play.
offs this fall, said, "It's a year
too late, but I'm still happy
about it because it will improve
football in Ohio."

ELKS?"
Join the fraternity of
progressive farmers who
have sw itched to heating
oil , diesel fueL gasoline and

lubricants all at a price
that 's easy on their

pocketbook .

measures

80"x20".

4 ROLLS

OPEN EVENINGS
7I

•.

CHRISTMAS DECORATIONS

3-PC. SALAD SET

11" SIZE ...

WITH HIGH

DOME LID

VINTAGl 'ATTIIN

46·511)9'2

Detachable heat control
... cooking chart on
handle.
Completely
immersible for easy
cleaning.

TRIPLE TRACK OR BliND STOP
WINDOWS

VALLEY WMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.
992·2709

MIDDLEPORT

GENERAL ELECTRIC
Has 15 steam v•nts • • • 'witches

OTHER
IRONS

These participating merchants are
now giving free tickets:

* * *

GIFT CERTIFICATES
GIVEN AWAY EACH FRIDAY

3-10-17-24

•500 CASH .
Given Away Dec. 24

HELD IN THE
POMEROY

No purchase is necessary to
receive free tickets at par .

tlclpatlng stores.

PARKING LOT

up

MIRROMATIC IPRASSURE COOKERS

JUMBO HASSOCK

4 ql, 14.95

AVOCADO OR
SANDALWOOD
Pomeroy

Nelson's Drugs

Moore's Store
Pomeroy Cement Block
J&amp; R Sports Shop
Crow's Steak House
Swisher &amp; Lohse Drugs
Blue &amp; Grey Restaurant
Goessler 1S Jewelry
Stiffler's Dept. Store
Marguerite's Shoe Store
Pomeroy Landmark
Kroger Store
Etberfelds Dept. Store
The L&amp;Z Shop
Ebersbach Hardware
New York Clothing
House
Pomeroy Motor Co.
G&amp;J Auto Parts
Welker's Ashland
Station

Heavy duty foam

podded top with
leather type
coveri nQ.

. ICONTRIBUTORSI
Davis - Warner In -

plo stic
·

ELECTRIC TOASTERS........ 9.99 up

surance

Cleland Realty
Smith Nelson Auto Sales
The Dally Sentinel
.WMPO Radio
Athens ~Aessenger
Farmers Bank &amp;
Savings
Pomeroy National Bank
Athens Co. Savings &amp;
Loan, (Meigs Branch)

I

SUNBEAM
PORTABLE MIXERS ........ll.98 up

REG. $7.49

GENERAL ELECTRIC

TABLE RADIO
Hondsorne thin·line styling . -4"
front-fired dynamic spfaker.

95

Automatic volume control'.

Fully molded back.

......................................................................
SOLID STATE DESIGN

·

Free Parking in Pomeroy Dec. 20-24

6 ql, 16.95

ELECTRIC
COFFEEMAKERS............. 9.95 up

Flower Shop

The Fabric Shop
Sears Catalog Store
Hartley's Shoes
K&amp;C Jewelers
Pomeroy Ben Franklin
lola's Dress Shop

Chapman's Shoes

ALL DRAWINGS

9.98

9.98

from steam to dry at a push of the
button . •. fully automatic.

VALUABLE MERCHANDISE

~~~ ?'!

GOOD SELECTION

~

MOORE'S

,

.124 W. MAIN

'

join the

Assorted oes1gns
... total at 4-j sq. ft.
Each
roll

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Vaughan , seemed to have
jelled, playing well overall in
their 56·54 loss to Athens last
Tuesday .
Meigs dropped into last place
in the league in scoring, but
remained in third place in
defense. Gallipolis is second in
both categories behind
Waverly, which leads in both.
Both the Blue Devils and
Marauders frittered away
leads in the final stages in
Tuesday
night
action .
Gallipolis led by three over
Ironton, 54·51 , with two
minutes left after a sensational
comeback, only to lose on
costly turnovers.
Meigs, on the other hand, had
a fat 16-point lead in the third

STEAM &amp; DRY IRON
POMEROY MERCHANTS
GOLD STAR CHRISTMAS

Johnny Ughtning .·

three quarters of play but the
Blue Devils finished on a full
tank of gas.
The other Gallia Academy
starters are Rick Boone as
Snowden's running mate at
guard, Rod Ferguson and
Jimmy Noe at forwards, and
Gil Price, center.
The Marauders are still led
by Jeff Morris, 6-3 senior
center. Morris had 17 points
and 17 rebounds against
Athens, almost exactly his
season average of 16,5 points
and 17.8 rebounds.
The other Meigs starters, 5-9
junior guard Rich Bailey, 5-9
junior guard Jimmy Boggs, 6-0
senior forward Steve Dunfee,
and 6-2 senior forward Tony

Action Praised

'1.29
SATIN TREE ORNAMENTS
REG. s1.79
99~

Hair Setter

ON ANY
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.
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.
AT VILLAGE PHARMACY
Expires 12·25-71

BOX OF 12 REG. 11.39 ....................

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plays a strong defensive game .
Coach Jim Osborne's team
has surprised area cage fans.
Picked to finish fourth in the
prediction poll, the Blue Devils
have defeated ·Athens and
Wellston in league play and
Federal-Hocking and
Chesapeake outside it.
A spokesman close to the
Wellston Athletic Dept. said
the Blue Devils were the "best
conditioned team he had seen
in a long while."
In the Wellston-Gallipolis
game the Blue Devils were on
top by only six after three
quarters, but went on to outscore the Rockets 30-9 in the
final eight minutes. Wellston
apparently had tired in the first

BOX OF 12 REG. 11.98 ................;

atRISTMAS

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DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS . MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
Exec . Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
City Editor
Pub li s~ed
da i ly ex c ept
Saturday by The Oh io Valley
Publ ishing Company, 111 .
Court St .. Pomeroy , .Oh io,
45769 . Bu si ness Office Phone
992 -2156, Editor ial Phone 992 2157 .
Second c la ss postage paid at
Pomeroy , Ohio .
Nat i onal advert i sing
repre sen tative
Bottinelli Ga llagh er . Inc .• 12 East 42nd
St., New York City, New York .
Subscription rates : De livered by carrier where
a~o~ai l able 50 cents per week ;
By Motor Route where carrier
serv ice not available : Onemonth S1.75 . Bv mail in Oh io
and w. Va ., One year 514 .00 .
Six months 57 . 25 . Three
; m~nt~s $4 .50 . Subscri pt i on
· pr1 ce mcludes Sun day T imes Sentinel.

By Chet Tannehill

ICICLES
Reg.

By KEITH WISECUP
By KEITH WISECUP
leading scorer. The 5-11 senior
The
hard-luck
Meigs
The Eastern Eagles and the guard is super .quick with a fine Marauders will take their 2-3
North Gallia Pirates meet outside shot.
record to. Gallipolis Friday
head.on at Eastern Friday
Other Eagles who will either night to battle the 4·1 Blue
night in a battle of league· start or play considerably are Devils in a Southeastern Ohio
leAders in the Southern VaUey Alan Duvall, 6...1 junior; Randy Athletic League contest.
Coaference play.
Young, 6·2 junior; Randy
The Marauders, coached by
In other area cage games, Boring, 5-10 junior; Rick Carl Wolfe, almost have to win
Southern takes on Hannan Williams, 6-2 senior; Dave in order to stay in the running
Trace Friday night and South. Milhone, 6·1 senior; Mike for the championship. They are
western Saturday night, both Benedurn,5-10senior, and Rick 1·2 in league play. Gallipolis is
away, also in SVAC action.
Sanders, 5-11 junior.
2-1 in league action, their first
Coach Bill Phillips' Eagles
The other Pirate starters are 'loss coming Tuesday at Ironton
are undefeated in five games ' guards Harvey Brown and Pat also 2-1, by the score of 60-54.
overall and four games in Stout.
The Blue Devil guard, 5-9
league play. North Gallia, 3·1
COME OFF WIN
Larry Snowden, will be the
overall and 3-0 in league play,
Coach Asa Bradbury 's biggest
problem
the
will be Eastern's toughest Southern Local Tornadoes will Marauders wiD have to solve.
opponent QY far to date.
he ~oming off their first win Snowden owns a tremendous
The Pirates have awesome when they meet Hannan Trace outside shot, drives well, and
heighth and good quickness to Friday night. The Tornadoes
go with their great shooting. defeated Kyger Creek 66-41last
Their front court consists of 6-4 week. They are 1·3 overall and
Gary Crosswhite, 6-4 Larry 1·2 in league play .
Justus, and 6-0 Arthur Clark,
The Wildcats also will be
all good scorers and reboun- coming off their first win, a 70.
ders.
30 plastering of winless South·
The Eagles are actually on western Tuesday night. South·
top of the SVAC with their 4-0 western will be Southern's
COLUMBUS (UP!)- Coach
slate, but North Gallia and opponent Saturday night.
Tom Balta of Class AAA state
Symmes Valley are also un·
Cousins Jim Hubbard and champion WarrenHardingWed·
defeated with 3-0 records . The Jerry Hubbard have been the nesday praised the a~tion taken
Eagles don't play Symmes top Tornadoes thus far. Jerry, by the Board of Control of the
Valley until Jan . 22. They play 5-10 junior forward, pumped in Ohio High School Athletic Assothe Pirates again on Jan. 14. 29 against Kyger Creek a week ciation in approving football
The Eagles' top player to ago. Jim, 5-11 senior guard, has playoffs for next ran and mod·
date has been Dennis been a consistent high-scorer ifying the method of selecting
Eichinger, a great rebounder all year.
AAA participants.
who scores consistently. The 6Balta, whose team finished
The other Southern probable
3 senior center is a three-time starters are guard Brett Hart, second in the OHSAA's Region
ali.SV AC and is well on the way forward Bruce Hart, and 1 computer ratings, despite betoward a fourth honor.
ing voted the top team in the
center Roger Wilford.
Bob Caldwell, younger
state
by the UP! Board of Coa·
The Eastern reserves hold a
brother of ex·Eagle great 4-1 season slate while the ches, said, "I'm for the playoffs
eager, Howie, is the Eagles' Southern reserves are l.J.
and I'm glad the modifica lion
went through."
The modification consisted of
changing the previously used 3,

the Sports

TREE ORNAMENTS

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SUPER WAVE RETIRED
NEW YORK (UPI)-Super
Wave, the aged pacing champion of 1971 in the United States
Trotting Aasocistion poD, haa
been retired and will enter into
stud at Lana LobeD Farms In
Hanover, Pa.

REG. 12.19

·-lot
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Rosenbaum -Meado ws

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The finals of the 1972
NCAA basketball tournament
will be held March 23·25 at
the Los Angeles Sport s
Arena.

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PLAY SETS
SKIRTS

Wednesday Late Mixed
December 8, 1971

Casseii.Carsey

Solids and Checks

'·

164.

O.Ven-Holter

Flare and Sem i-Fiare.

not announced for Tiger, the
son of an African chicken
farmer who learned to fight
from British troops in Africa
before going to England to
launch his pro career.
He finished with a record of
61 victories, 17losses and drew
three times. He won the
middleweight ti tie from Gene
Fullmer in 1962 before losing it
to Joey Giardello the foUowing
year in a controversial decision.
He regained it by beating
Griffith in 1965 but lost it to the
same fighter a year later. He
wonthelightheavyweightcrown
from Jose Torres but lost it to
the current champion, Bob
Foster, in the only knockout of
his career.
Tiger is survived by his wife
and five children.

Eagles in Early ShoWdown with Pirates Friday
Both Undefeated
In League Action Marauders in Must Contest

Ind . High Game - Mary
Gilli lan 199, Lila Mitch 177,

......,..~~·-•••lllt'"lltOI"MIHIIII,_,.....,,

.

Carter Is StiJJ 3rd In .Stats

License Deadlin~

Dick Tiger Had Cancer Of Liver

~~

1-!he DIIU, Sentinel, Mldcle.......Pvt~•oy, o., Dec. 16, 1971

·.·.·· ·.·.·.·.·.·.•,·,····-·.·..··.·.·.·........ :·

SAtta•

POMEROY

�2-1'he Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Ore. 16, 1971

Rondon Keeps Title
CLEVELAND( UP! )-Vicente
Rondon of Venezuela knocked
out chaUenger Doyle Baird of
Akron, Ohio, in the elghth
round Wednesday night to
retain his World Boxing Associ·
ation light heavyweight title.
Using short left and right
chops to the head, Rondon
opened up multiple cuts on
-Baird's face . At 2:10 of the
eighth round in the scheduled
15-rounder a soUd left hook
flattened Baird and he di&lt;l not
revive for several minutes.
"He's a good tough middleweight but the best thing for
him to do is retire," Rondon
said of the Akron foundry
worker. Baird, 33, was two and
one-half inches shorter and five
pow\ds lighter than the cham·
pion.
"The light heavyweight class
is just too much for Baird,"
Rondon said through his
manager and interpreter Felix
Zabala. "He is a game fighter
but he cuts too easily."
Baird had come out fast,
trying for a quick knockout in
the first round. But while the
170-pound challenger threw a
lot of punches in the first three
minutes, he landed only one
solid blow, on the side of
Rondon's head.
Rondon slowed down Baird in
the sixth and seventh rounds
before belting him at will in the

eighth.
A right chop to the head
dropped Baird in a neutral
corner for ·an eight count at
1: 14 and he was sent across
the ropes for another eight
count at 1:49 in the eighth. '
With blood flowing from his
facial cuts, Baird staggered to
his feet and Rondon floored hi)n

for the last time with a solid
left hook.
"He kept hitting me with that
right chop," Baird said later.
"Every time I tried to counter
with the left ... bang, there he
was again with that hard right
to the head."
It was Rondon's 23rd straight
victory. He is now hoping to

Emile Griffith in New York. He
was unable to set up any big
paydays after that and refused

NEW YORK (UPI)- The
boxing world today mourned
the death of Dick Tiger, the
former world middlewei2ht and
light heavyweight champion.
Tiger, born in Nigeria as
Richard Ihetu, was 42. His
death from cancer of the liver
was announced Wednesday by
the Nigerian mission to the
United Nations. Nigerian representatives said Tiger died
Monday in Aba, Nigeria.
Tiger earned more than a
half million dollars in twice
winning the middleweight title
and then taking the lightheavy
crown. Helost his wealth in the
Biafran war and died virtuaUy
penniless. Tiger, who was a
Biafran army lieutenant during
that war,last fought on July 15,
1970, when he lost an unani·
mous 10-round decision to

to become a "trial horse" or

journeyman fighter .
Funeral arrangements were

Local Bowling
POMEROY LANES

Morning Glories Leagu4!

Pis

Newell Sunoco

70

Gibbs Grocery

61
58
51
50
46

Excelsior Oil Co.
Spencer's Market

Domlgan Sohio

G&amp;J Auto Parts
High

Team Series
Domigan Sohio 2268, G&amp;J Auto
Parts 2226 , Gibbs Grocery 2148 .

Team High Game -

G&amp;J

Auto Parts 852 , Oomigan Sohio
814, Newell Sunoco 779 .
Ind . High Series - Mary
Gilli lan 4.56, Lenora McKnight
451 , Margaret Follrod 442 ,

NEW YOI,U{ (UP!) --Cinclnna!l Bengals quarterback
Is January First
Virgil Carter continues as L1e
third most successful passer In
restaurant and trailer park the American FootbaU Conoperators in Melgs County ference, according to statistics
must purchase licenses for 1972 released today.
by Jan. I. Licenses may be
Carter has completed 132 of
secured at the office. of the 213 paas attenipts for 62 per
Meigs County Health Depart- cent. He haa thrown nine
ment, located at 114\2 E. Main touchdown passes and totaled
St., Pomeroy.
1,583 yards In passing.
Those needing to purchase
Leroy Kelly of the Cleveland
su~h licenses', however, are
Browns Is fourth In rushing .in
reminded that the health the AFC, having roUed up 81S
department wiD be closed from yards on 216 carries for a 3.8
noon on Thursday, Dec. 23, yard average. He has scored 10
through Sunday, and from noon touchdowns.
Thursday, Dec. 30 through
Kicker Horst Muhlmann of
Sunday, Jan. 2. Penalty for the Bengals iB fourth high scorrestaurants and trailer parkS er In the conference. He has
operating without a license is kicked 29 ema points and 20
$100 a day.
field goals for a total of 89

meet Bob Foster. A bout in San
Juan, Puerto Rico, has been
submitted to the WBA for
approvaL
•
"We have talked with Foster
for the past three weeks and
have sent the offer to the
WBA," said Zabala. "We will
fight anywhere and hope to
meet Foster on Feb. 18. "

Marie Domigan

~,~~'8~::1».~'&lt;.~:&amp;-::

ADAIR TO COACH
OAKLAND (UP!) - Jerry
Adair, a SS.year-old former
inflielder with four American
League cluba, was hired by the
Oakland Athletics Wednesday
to serve as their first base
coach for the 1972 season.

LUNCHEON SET
NEW YORK (UPI)-The
AAU wiD sponsor a luncheon
featuring Olympic Gold Medal
winners during the American
footbail and basketbaU conference to be held March 23-26 at
the University of Notre Dame.

Pis

FOX TABBED
ST. LOUIS (UPI)-Charlie
Fox, manager of the San
Francisco Giants, winners of
the Western Division tlUe In the
National League, was named
Wednesday as Manager of the
Year by the Sporting News in a
poll of the 24 major league
managers.

Rosenbaum -Meadows

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IN MEN'S CLOTHING

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at.RISTM~
BY

.frmllf
35~

Almost everything about the Marauders in the Athens.Meigs
game Tuesday at Rock Springs was gogd except the final score.
OUr boys took charge midway in the second quarter to build a 3].
20 halftime lead and fattened it to 16 at 36-20 three minutes into
the third quarter. We had momentwn.
But Athens turned it off, got its own thing going, and simply
wasn't stopped. Coach Charley McAfee of Athens put on a double
team press in the back court and tightened up the guarding in the
front court once the Marauders got the ball past the time line.
The result : steals in the back court; steals in the front court, and
the temperature of the.Meigs shooters dropping toward the frost
line when they managed to get hurried attempts away.
· I thought all the Marauders gave 100 pet. effort. Steve
Dunfee at forward (4-3-11) appeared more relaxed than
heretofore. Rich Bailey, a wiry and quick junior guard (Z.S.12)
only needs a little seasoning . Jeff Morris continues in his role as
one of the league's fine shooters and rebounders. Jeff easily may
become known as Chairman of the Boards, a monicker lovingly
affixed to &amp;.7 Mal Davis of St. John's University who Tuesday
night got 33 points and 21 rebounds against American University.
Andy Vaughan, Tony Vaughan, Jimmy Boggs and Mark
Werry can play in the SEOAL. They will prove it more each
week .
FRIDAY NIGIIT MEIGS goes to Gallipolis for another "big
one." Heck, they're all big this early in the season, because to
this point the league championship still belongs to anybody
w1lllng to pay the price to win it. Ironton did six teams a favor by
administering Gallipolis its first loss Tuesday nlght at Ironton.
Gallipolis, with one league loss, and Meigs with two, have to
·come Into the game Friday night at full throttle. It oughtta be
some bash.
(Continued ori Page 5)

4 and 5 points values for AAA
schools, depending on their
enrollment, to a straight 3
points.
Because of the different point
values used in the trial ratings
this past season, Balta's Pan·
thers, playing four schools with
5-point ratings and six with 4point ratings, finished second in
Region 1 to Parma Senior.
Harding finished with a 10-0
record, while Parma, playing
all 5-point schools but one, finished 9-1. Rerlm on a J.point
basis, Harding finished first.
"Everybody Is Equal"
"I want to emphasize that I'm
not just happy to see the modification because it made us No.
1," Balta said. "I just don't
thi nk you can judge the caliber
of a football team by the enrollAHL Standings
ment of a school. It will now
By United Press International
be based solely on the won-lost
East
w. L. T. Pet . re~ord of your opponent. Every21 4 J 45
Bostor1
body is equal when we start."
14
8 7 35
Nov a Scotia
The board took little time in
I Spr ingfield
10 9 7 27
9
16
4
22
Rochester
deciding whether playoffs
7 15
7 21
Provi den ce
should
be held next fall, voting
West
W. L. T. Pis. 5-1 for the playoffs after little
Hershey
14
8 4 32
or no debate, but it was a
Baltimore
14 13 4 32 different s\t!TY on selecting the
Cleveland
· 12 11 6 30 AAA teams.
Richmond
11 13 4 28
Cincinnati
10 13 7 27
In fact, a motion was made
Tidewater
6 19
J 15 and seconded to continue the
Wednesday's Results
3-4-5 values for AAA teams, but
Nova Scotia 5 Providence 2
after
some debate, with Lou
Richmond 8 Cleveland 3
Baltimore2 Tidewater 1
Venditti, president of the
1On lygamesscheduledl
Ohio High School Football
Thursday's Games
Coaches
Association, Assistant
1No gamesscheduled I

CANDY

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to sur'

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CHOCOLATE SANTAS

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Reg. '1.29

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DAN MEADOWS

"CREATOR OF Reasonahli' Dru!l Prirn
North Second A~.-992-5759- Middleport, Ohio

OPEN LATE
EVERY NIGHT
'TIL
atRISTMAS

OHSAA Commissioner Fred
Dafler, and Commissioner Dr.
Harold Meyer all favoring the
straight 3-point values, the
motion was voted down 4-2.
After the final ratings were
released early in November and
a flood of criticism started roll·
ing in, especially from the
Northeastern part of the state,

Myer said the 3-4·5 point sys·
tem "may be the breakdown in .
the ratings."
Try Another Way
"Whether the 3, 4 and 5 system is better remains to be
seen," Meyer said Wednesday,
"but my thought is, we've tried
one way, Jets try the other."
Vendittiand Dafler both point·

quarter, but went cold and lost
in the final seconds, 56-M.
Gallipolis defeated Athens, 64·
50 earlier.
The Blue Devils probably
will use a full-court press
before the evening is over.
Meigs, beating the Athens half.
court press easily in the first
half, had trouble getting the
ball up floor in the second half
against a stronger version.
In the reserve game, the
little Marauders will play the
Blue Imps, who are 0-3 in
league play . Meigs, coached by
Bill Wickline, is 1·2 in league
games and 3·2 overalL
Game limes Friday are the
reserves at 6:30 p. m. and the
varsities at 8 p. m.

ed out that scheduling problems
for the smaller AAA schools
would practically kill any
chances they would have or ever
ge tting into a state playoff un:
der 3-4·5.
Gerry Faust of Cin~innati ·
Moeller, whose team was No. 1
in Region 4 and would have
been one of the four AAA teams
involved had there been play.
offs this fall, said, "It's a year
too late, but I'm still happy
about it because it will improve
football in Ohio."

ELKS?"
Join the fraternity of
progressive farmers who
have sw itched to heating
oil , diesel fueL gasoline and

lubricants all at a price
that 's easy on their

pocketbook .

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992·2709

MIDDLEPORT

GENERAL ELECTRIC
Has 15 steam v•nts • • • 'witches

OTHER
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These participating merchants are
now giving free tickets:

* * *

GIFT CERTIFICATES
GIVEN AWAY EACH FRIDAY

3-10-17-24

•500 CASH .
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HELD IN THE
POMEROY

No purchase is necessary to
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tlclpatlng stores.

PARKING LOT

up

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Pomeroy

Nelson's Drugs

Moore's Store
Pomeroy Cement Block
J&amp; R Sports Shop
Crow's Steak House
Swisher &amp; Lohse Drugs
Blue &amp; Grey Restaurant
Goessler 1S Jewelry
Stiffler's Dept. Store
Marguerite's Shoe Store
Pomeroy Landmark
Kroger Store
Etberfelds Dept. Store
The L&amp;Z Shop
Ebersbach Hardware
New York Clothing
House
Pomeroy Motor Co.
G&amp;J Auto Parts
Welker's Ashland
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Athens ~Aessenger
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Vaughan , seemed to have
jelled, playing well overall in
their 56·54 loss to Athens last
Tuesday .
Meigs dropped into last place
in the league in scoring, but
remained in third place in
defense. Gallipolis is second in
both categories behind
Waverly, which leads in both.
Both the Blue Devils and
Marauders frittered away
leads in the final stages in
Tuesday
night
action .
Gallipolis led by three over
Ironton, 54·51 , with two
minutes left after a sensational
comeback, only to lose on
costly turnovers.
Meigs, on the other hand, had
a fat 16-point lead in the third

STEAM &amp; DRY IRON
POMEROY MERCHANTS
GOLD STAR CHRISTMAS

Johnny Ughtning .·

three quarters of play but the
Blue Devils finished on a full
tank of gas.
The other Gallia Academy
starters are Rick Boone as
Snowden's running mate at
guard, Rod Ferguson and
Jimmy Noe at forwards, and
Gil Price, center.
The Marauders are still led
by Jeff Morris, 6-3 senior
center. Morris had 17 points
and 17 rebounds against
Athens, almost exactly his
season average of 16,5 points
and 17.8 rebounds.
The other Meigs starters, 5-9
junior guard Rich Bailey, 5-9
junior guard Jimmy Boggs, 6-0
senior forward Steve Dunfee,
and 6-2 senior forward Tony

Action Praised

'1.29
SATIN TREE ORNAMENTS
REG. s1.79
99~

Hair Setter

ON ANY
. . TIMEX
.
. WATCH
.
AT VILLAGE PHARMACY
Expires 12·25-71

BOX OF 12 REG. 11.39 ....................

Desk

plays a strong defensive game .
Coach Jim Osborne's team
has surprised area cage fans.
Picked to finish fourth in the
prediction poll, the Blue Devils
have defeated ·Athens and
Wellston in league play and
Federal-Hocking and
Chesapeake outside it.
A spokesman close to the
Wellston Athletic Dept. said
the Blue Devils were the "best
conditioned team he had seen
in a long while."
In the Wellston-Gallipolis
game the Blue Devils were on
top by only six after three
quarters, but went on to outscore the Rockets 30-9 in the
final eight minutes. Wellston
apparently had tired in the first

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DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS . MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
Exec . Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
City Editor
Pub li s~ed
da i ly ex c ept
Saturday by The Oh io Valley
Publ ishing Company, 111 .
Court St .. Pomeroy , .Oh io,
45769 . Bu si ness Office Phone
992 -2156, Editor ial Phone 992 2157 .
Second c la ss postage paid at
Pomeroy , Ohio .
Nat i onal advert i sing
repre sen tative
Bottinelli Ga llagh er . Inc .• 12 East 42nd
St., New York City, New York .
Subscription rates : De livered by carrier where
a~o~ai l able 50 cents per week ;
By Motor Route where carrier
serv ice not available : Onemonth S1.75 . Bv mail in Oh io
and w. Va ., One year 514 .00 .
Six months 57 . 25 . Three
; m~nt~s $4 .50 . Subscri pt i on
· pr1 ce mcludes Sun day T imes Sentinel.

By Chet Tannehill

ICICLES
Reg.

By KEITH WISECUP
By KEITH WISECUP
leading scorer. The 5-11 senior
The
hard-luck
Meigs
The Eastern Eagles and the guard is super .quick with a fine Marauders will take their 2-3
North Gallia Pirates meet outside shot.
record to. Gallipolis Friday
head.on at Eastern Friday
Other Eagles who will either night to battle the 4·1 Blue
night in a battle of league· start or play considerably are Devils in a Southeastern Ohio
leAders in the Southern VaUey Alan Duvall, 6...1 junior; Randy Athletic League contest.
Coaference play.
Young, 6·2 junior; Randy
The Marauders, coached by
In other area cage games, Boring, 5-10 junior; Rick Carl Wolfe, almost have to win
Southern takes on Hannan Williams, 6-2 senior; Dave in order to stay in the running
Trace Friday night and South. Milhone, 6·1 senior; Mike for the championship. They are
western Saturday night, both Benedurn,5-10senior, and Rick 1·2 in league play. Gallipolis is
away, also in SVAC action.
Sanders, 5-11 junior.
2-1 in league action, their first
Coach Bill Phillips' Eagles
The other Pirate starters are 'loss coming Tuesday at Ironton
are undefeated in five games ' guards Harvey Brown and Pat also 2-1, by the score of 60-54.
overall and four games in Stout.
The Blue Devil guard, 5-9
league play. North Gallia, 3·1
COME OFF WIN
Larry Snowden, will be the
overall and 3-0 in league play,
Coach Asa Bradbury 's biggest
problem
the
will be Eastern's toughest Southern Local Tornadoes will Marauders wiD have to solve.
opponent QY far to date.
he ~oming off their first win Snowden owns a tremendous
The Pirates have awesome when they meet Hannan Trace outside shot, drives well, and
heighth and good quickness to Friday night. The Tornadoes
go with their great shooting. defeated Kyger Creek 66-41last
Their front court consists of 6-4 week. They are 1·3 overall and
Gary Crosswhite, 6-4 Larry 1·2 in league play .
Justus, and 6-0 Arthur Clark,
The Wildcats also will be
all good scorers and reboun- coming off their first win, a 70.
ders.
30 plastering of winless South·
The Eagles are actually on western Tuesday night. South·
top of the SVAC with their 4-0 western will be Southern's
COLUMBUS (UP!)- Coach
slate, but North Gallia and opponent Saturday night.
Tom Balta of Class AAA state
Symmes Valley are also un·
Cousins Jim Hubbard and champion WarrenHardingWed·
defeated with 3-0 records . The Jerry Hubbard have been the nesday praised the a~tion taken
Eagles don't play Symmes top Tornadoes thus far. Jerry, by the Board of Control of the
Valley until Jan . 22. They play 5-10 junior forward, pumped in Ohio High School Athletic Assothe Pirates again on Jan. 14. 29 against Kyger Creek a week ciation in approving football
The Eagles' top player to ago. Jim, 5-11 senior guard, has playoffs for next ran and mod·
date has been Dennis been a consistent high-scorer ifying the method of selecting
Eichinger, a great rebounder all year.
AAA participants.
who scores consistently. The 6Balta, whose team finished
The other Southern probable
3 senior center is a three-time starters are guard Brett Hart, second in the OHSAA's Region
ali.SV AC and is well on the way forward Bruce Hart, and 1 computer ratings, despite betoward a fourth honor.
ing voted the top team in the
center Roger Wilford.
Bob Caldwell, younger
state
by the UP! Board of Coa·
The Eastern reserves hold a
brother of ex·Eagle great 4-1 season slate while the ches, said, "I'm for the playoffs
eager, Howie, is the Eagles' Southern reserves are l.J.
and I'm glad the modifica lion
went through."
The modification consisted of
changing the previously used 3,

the Sports

TREE ORNAMENTS

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SUPER WAVE RETIRED
NEW YORK (UPI)-Super
Wave, the aged pacing champion of 1971 in the United States
Trotting Aasocistion poD, haa
been retired and will enter into
stud at Lana LobeD Farms In
Hanover, Pa.

REG. 12.19

·-lot
"""' ............
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. . . .......... .. .....
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Rosenbaum -Meado ws

NCAA Finals
The finals of the 1972
NCAA basketball tournament
will be held March 23·25 at
the Los Angeles Sport s
Arena.

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Wednesday Late Mixed
December 8, 1971

Casseii.Carsey

Solids and Checks

'·

164.

O.Ven-Holter

Flare and Sem i-Fiare.

not announced for Tiger, the
son of an African chicken
farmer who learned to fight
from British troops in Africa
before going to England to
launch his pro career.
He finished with a record of
61 victories, 17losses and drew
three times. He won the
middleweight ti tie from Gene
Fullmer in 1962 before losing it
to Joey Giardello the foUowing
year in a controversial decision.
He regained it by beating
Griffith in 1965 but lost it to the
same fighter a year later. He
wonthelightheavyweightcrown
from Jose Torres but lost it to
the current champion, Bob
Foster, in the only knockout of
his career.
Tiger is survived by his wife
and five children.

Eagles in Early ShoWdown with Pirates Friday
Both Undefeated
In League Action Marauders in Must Contest

Ind . High Game - Mary
Gilli lan 199, Lila Mitch 177,

......,..~~·-•••lllt'"lltOI"MIHIIII,_,.....,,

.

Carter Is StiJJ 3rd In .Stats

License Deadlin~

Dick Tiger Had Cancer Of Liver

~~

1-!he DIIU, Sentinel, Mldcle.......Pvt~•oy, o., Dec. 16, 1971

·.·.·· ·.·.·.·.·.·.•,·,····-·.·..··.·.·.·........ :·

SAtta•

POMEROY

�, - The O.Uy ~1~1 • Mkklepon.J\Ime(oy, 0 ., Dec:. 18, 1971

WIN AT BRIDGE

t - The Daily Sentinel, MldcDeport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec:. 11, 1971

NHL Stondings
By United Press International

East

olts Secon
Unlted Press lnternationnl
The national polls don't show
Ohio University, but they
lbould.
\
For the second time in less
than a week, the unheralded
Bobcats have knocked off a
ranked and previously un·
beaten Big Ten team.
OU's victim Wednesday
night was 12th-ranked Indiana
and the score was 79-70. Last
Saturday the Cats massacred
OhiO State, then ranked fourth
in the nation.
"We threw every defense we
had, but the offense turned out
to be the best weapon," OU
ooach Jim Snyder said. "We
shot well early in the game.
Our defense was aggressive
By

and we denied them inside pen·
etration."
Ohio U. led from the start
and wasahead38-32 at the half.
When the visiting Hoosiers
came to within four points ear·
ly in the second half, they also
committed two costly tur·
liovers which the Cats cashed
in on.
Indiana's big gun, Joby
Wright, scored 35 points but
fouled out with two minutes to
go . The Hoosiers' Steve Down·
ing .added another 21 points,
but injured his knee late in the
game.
"Downing is pretty good with
one leg, but we didn't stop
him," Snyder admitted.
High for Ohio U. were Tom

Riccardi, with 18, and Tom
Corde, with 17. Riccardi, said
Snyder, "was much better than
we thought and plays strong
inside. "
Ohio U. is 3-J with the win.
Indiana is 4-1.
In two other college basket·
ball games played in Ohio,
Ashland
topped
Ohio
Dominican 9t&gt;-79 and Wooster
flattened Geneva (Pa.) 1~.
Ashland freshman Bill Rig·
gins scored 24 points to propel
the 14th-ranked Eagles to their
win. Dave Maurer and Jim Un·
derwood each scored 27 points
for Dominican. Ashland is now
3-1, Dominican 1-4.
Wooster's win avenged its
sole loss of last season, which

1.\ontreal
Boston
Toronto

was to Geneva . It was
Wooster's home opener after
playing its first four games on
the road. John Creasap was
high with 18 points.
Tonight, Miami is at Purdue,
Cal Poly is at Toledo, Akron at
Bellermine,
Kenyon al
Youngstown State, Ohio
Northern at Mercyhurst (Pa.),
and Urbana is at the Spring
Arbor (Mich.) tourney.
In othergames involving
ranked teams, Brigham Young
(No. 4) beat Oldahorna State
84-74, Arizona State, ranked
14th, topped Northern Arizona
96-71 and No. 16 Long Beach
State downed Loyola (Cal .) 7367.
Bernie Flyer had 21 points
and Kresimir Cosic 20 as BYU
downed stubborn Oklahoma

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Pomeroy, 0 .

OPEN EVENINGS

'TIL CHRISTMAS

RACINE - Southern Jr.
High's Seventh grade bas·
kethall team upended Meigs
Jr. High's Seven B team here
in a scoring spree of hot
shooters, 64-41. In another
game the Meigs B Eighth
grade team lost to Southern's
Eighth grade team 55-40.
Scoring in the Seventh grade
match, for Meigs, was led by
Buffington with 10 followed by
Scites, Walters and Coats each
with 7. For Southern, Bass led
with 12 and Boso had 10.
· In the Eighth grade game for
Meigs Qualls had 9, and Call,
Cole and Meadows each had 6.
For Southern Roberts and
Schultz led with II each and
Dunning had 9.
Southern 's Seventh and
Eighth grade teams were
scheduled to play here on Dec.
18 at 10 a. m. against Union
Furnace.
Meigs SA team will be at
Federal Hocking Dec. 21 at
5:30p. m.
.· BY QUARTERS
Meigs 7B
8 23 30 41
Southern 7
16 36 42 64

in the game as St. Bonaventure
beat DePaul ~.
Jim McColloum and Bob
Sabol had 20 points each to lead
st. Joseph's ( Pa .) over
Nevada-Reno 12S-66 and Jeff
Pete scored :aJ points to boost
unbeaten San Diego State to its
seventh victory, 864i9 over
Nortli Dakota State.
Weber State whipped Evans-

California

6

42

2 40
8 34

5 25
4 20
6 18

L. T. Pts.
3 45
3 41

21 7
19 8
10 16

Minnesota

By United Press International

East

Utah
Indiana

w.

L. Pel. GB

11

8 .72 4 ...
13 .6()6 3
16 .500 6'h
19 .406 9'i'l
18 .400 9112
20 .355 II

21
20
16
13
12

West

W. L. Pel. GB
21
18

9 .710
12 .. 600 Jlf1

Memphis
13 11" .433 so;,
Denver
12 11 .414 9
Dallas
II 20 .355 II
Wednesday's Results
New York 109 Memphis 100
Floridians 119 Virginia 105

Kentucky 131 Carolina 93
Indiana 124 Dallas 110
(Only games scheduled )

Thursday's Games
Pittsburgh at Floridians

\\~

w.

Chicago

Pro Standings

New York
Carolina

From K &amp; C Jewelers

Bullalo

again Wednesday night they
can win without an outstanding
performance from him when
they defeated the Seattle
SuperSonics, 112-100, and took
a 21'. game lead over idle New
York in the AUantic Division.
Don Chaney and Jo Jo White
scored 22 points each and Dave
Cowens added 21 plus H
rebounds for the Celtics.
Havlicek wound up with 20
points but made only one
basket
in the first period.
NBA Slandin~&gt;
By United Press International Spencer Haywood led Seattle
Eastern Conference
with 20 points and Don Smith
and Dick Snyder had 15 each.
Atlantic Division
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
W. L. Pet. GB
Boston
20 11 .625 .. . scored 35 points and John
New York
16 13 .551 2'11 Block had 24 to lead the
Ph iladelphia 14 16 .467 5
Buflalo
12 17 .4U 6 ,1, Milwaukee Bucks to a 122-108
triumph over the Buffalo
Central Division
W. L. Pel. GB Braves. It was the Bucks'
II 18 .379 .. · seventh consecutive victory
Baltimore
and gave them a 61'. game lead
Cleveland
II 20 .355 I
Cincinnati
10 19 .345 1 over Chicago in the Midwest
Atlanta
8 21 .216 3
Division. Bob Kaufmann was
Western Conference
high for the Braves with 29
Midwest Division
W. L. Pel. GB points.
28 4 .815 .. ·
Milwaukee
Dick Van Arsdale scored 31
Chicago
20 9 .690 61/2 1J2ints as the Phoenix Suns
Phoenix
11 13 .567 10
defeated the Cincinnati Royals,
Detroit
11 18 .379 15'11 127·108, and Elvin Hayes and
Pacific Division
W. L. Pel. GB Stu Lantz had 28 each as the
Houston Rockets downed the
Los Angeles 28 3 .903
Atlanta Hawks, 117-115, in
Sealtle
20 13 .606 9 overtime in the other Wednes·
Golden State 16 15 .516 12 ·
day night games.
Houston
10 23 .303 19
Portland
6 24 .200 21'1'1
The Suns clinched their
Wednesday 1 s Resul1s
victory
when Otw Moore and
Boston 112 Seattle 100
Connie Hawkins led them on a
Phoenix 127 Cincinnati 108
Houston 111 Atlanta liS lol l
!3-POint tear that gave them a
Milwaukee 122 Bullalo 108 - -· 98-78lead althe end of the third
I Only games scheduled)
period.
Thursday's Games
Ph iladelphia
al
Golden
Houston's victory was its
Slale
fourth in five games while the
Cincinnati a1 De1roit
loss was Atlanta 's fourth in a
I Only games scheduled!
row.
ABA Standings

Floridian s

BULOVA
and
ACCUTRON

Van couver

By Unlted Press International
The Boston Celtics are
demonstrating that strength in
numbers is still a vital factor in
playing winning basketball in
the National Basketball
Association .
The Celtics have a super star
in John Havlicek but showed

4 16 24 40 Virqinia
12 36 50 55 Pittsburgh

HAPPINESS IS

Detroit

s 45

I Only game scheduled!

TORRE HONORED
DAYTON, Ohio (UPI)-Joe
Torre , the hard41itting third
baseman of the St. Louis
Cardinals and the Most Valuable Player in the National
League, is the winner of the
1971 "Hutch Award" and will
collect it at the annual Dappo.r
Dan sports dinner in Pili·
sburgh on Feb. 6.
The "Hutch Award" is given
annually to the major league
player who beat exemplifies
the competitive spirit of the
late Fred Hutchinson .

24
23
23
13

Generation Rap
By Helen and Sue Bottel
(~I a problem? Or a subject for discussion, two-generation
style· Dlret!l your questions lo either Sue or Helen Bollel - or
both, If yoo want a combination mother-daughler answer.)
CHRISTMAs DILEMMA
·
Dear Rap :
We had one of those super big. weddings last June. 1 sent
personal thank-you notes to about 300 people. We truly appreclated~ll those lovely gifts, but here's my questlon :
I rea? m some etiquette book that the bride and groom shoold
send Chnstmas cards the first year of marriage to everyone who
gave the.m wedding presents. It seemed very thoughtful and nice,
and I tr1ed - but I struck out with morning sickness. Writing
makes me nauseollll - even more than Ullual.
Is It really necessary to remt;IJ~ber (with holiday cards) so
many people who are more our parents' friends than ours? We're
awfully grateful and we don't want to slight them but - HOW
CAN I?
'
Dear HCI:
I know a couple who followed this etiquette edict about
'?hrls~s wishes wwedding gi{ters, and not only ended up with
wr1ters cramp, but the following year discovered they were on
about 300 card lists. When you start something, it often
boomerangs.
So don't start it ! - HELEN
Dear How :
Christmas cards are foryour o~ special friends, and try to
hold the list down! It grows fast enough wllhout searching in
etiquette books for extra ways of increasing it. - SUE
NOTE FROM BOTH OF US: We think Christmas cards are
vastly overdone. Why send greetings to someone you see abnost
every day and wwhom you can wish a "Merry Christmas" in
person? Why "remember" near--strangers, jllllt because you
somehow you got on their lists'
A card, we believe , should mean, "I'm thinking of you and I
care. " So It needs a personal note (very short if you wish) or at
least your written signature, not justa printed name with nothing
added to show it's from a friend .
Anyone for agreement' - HELEN AND SUE
Dear Sue and Helen :
Here's a suggestion for the person whose friends have
everything. Give them Christmas present.. of volunteer work.
Find out what the friend's favorite charity is, and then offer w
work free for that charity for X number of hours - as a gift to
him or her. Get up some sort of certificate that shows your
promise in writing.
If you can'tspare the time, you can always donate w"Care"
or UNICEF or other worthy calllles in your friend's name.
It's got to be such a hassle, trying wfind the right gift. Of
course this wouldn't work for everyone, but it would help solve a
lot of Christmas shopping blues-because you 'd know you were
doing something that really helps. - W.S.B.
Dear GeneratiOn Rap :
This is an answer to "Joey," whose sister is blackmsiting
him with pictures of him he doesn't want his parents or friends to

s 25

Celtics Up Lead

Ken lucky

Meigs 8B
Southern 8

ville, the No. I small college
team, 97·79 behind Richard
Cooper's 26 points an~ 21
rebounds and John Gianelli's
22 points and 18 rebounds
boosted Pacific over Portland
84-M.
·
In other action, Yale beat
Brown 73-70, Harvard downed
Holy Cross 96-87, and Virginia
ripped William and Mary 82.62.

L. T. Pis.

20 4
18 4
19 6
13 9
10 15
8 18
6 19
West

New York

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . , . - - - - -...- - - . State. Elsewhere, Greg Kohls'
24 points helped unbeaten
Syracuse stop Penn State 73-70
and 6-foot-9 soph Glenn "&gt;rice
hit five consecutive shots early

'7

w.

Plllsburgh
10 17 4
Sl . Louis
9 17 S
Philadelphia
9 15 5
LosAngeles
6 23 1
Wed111sdoly's Results
New York 6 Philadelphia 2
Toronto 3 Pittsburgh 2
Chicago 2 Buffalo I
Minnesota 4 St. Louis 1
Montreal 3 Los Angeles I
1Onlygamesscheduledl
Thursdty'sG&lt;Imos
New York all\oston
Buffalo at Philadelphia
1Only games scheduled)

..
-t.,

. .'

- -

•

•

1t'

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My sister had three pictures of me : 1. With a girl kissing me;
2. In the bath tub (I and 2areseparate pictures, by the way); and
3, of me smoking .
Well, I borrowed a friend's camera and waited patiently until
I got the same kind of pictures of her. Then I showed them to her
and said I'd make a trade.
We both tore up the pictures and burned the negatives.
There's always a way, ifyoo think about it long and hard enough.'
-EVAN

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(Continued from Page 3)
TO THIS POINT, HAVING seen all the predicted "con·
tenders" play except Ironton, I'd have to say the strongest team
looks to be Waverly.McAfee will make a run for it, but I can't get
a picture of Athens beating Waverly at Waverly which the
Bulldogs will have to do unless somebody scratches up the Tigers
along the way .
They tell me Ironton, when hot, will beat anybody around.
Maybe Ironton can hurt Mr. Hawhee !
And you can't count out the Blue Devils, or even Meigs.
Larry Snowden had probably his coldest night shooting since he
became a regular Blue Devil starter al the beginning of the 1970.
71 season. He won't have many such productions.
Logan, Wellston and Jackson, on performance so far,
!X'obably will fight for the sixth, seventh and eighth places. But
apparently Wellston can't be taken lightly. The Rockets' 69-62
dumping of Logan Tuesday night had to beat least on the order of
a slight surprise.

OPEN UNTIL 8:00P.M. each evening
except Saturday &amp; Sunday.
See Emerson Jones, Pearl Ash, Hilton Wolfe,
Wallace Amberger. Dick Rawlings.

RAWLINGS
DEPENDABLE CITY

992-2151 OR 992·2152 MIOOU:PORT

Gilt dl11. tOK cold filled

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ABA's
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Russell Lane Day, 19,
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1; Thomas Edward Weaver, 24,
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-G alatians 5:22 , 23 .

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NEW YORK (UPI )-Martini
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that it will sponsor a Formula
One auto racing team in 1972.
Derek Bell of England and
Nanni Galli of Italy will be
team drivers, while David
Yorke of England has been
chosen team manager.

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Locust 51.

'. Midd lepor I

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TV
.

wiih Paul Crabtree

CALL POINTVIEW : 992·2505

I hope you caught Jim
Backus, vlslllng Ohio to appear on Bob Braun ' s 50-50

Club Ieday al noon, Ch . 4.

+++

FRIDAY: Cable TV doesn't
transform early morning
television , because there Isn't
that much on anywhere that's

Our senior citizens can find really so greal, but II does
a lol ol programs on public TV offer qulle a bll of diversity .
aimed lo ~elp them. One Is Some of lhe shows worth
" Yo,ur Social Security ," catching (In addition to lhe
beneficial to viewers of all '"al big ones hosted by David
ages above aboul 16. Catch II Frost and Ohioans Paul Dixon
on Ch . 9, 6: IS p.m .
and Phil Donahue) : Columbus
++ t '
Today, 6:30a.m., Ch. 4; Urban
Wllh Ch . 12 showing another League Presents, 6:30 a.m.,
Engel ber I Humperdl n ck Ch. 10; Daybreak, 7:30 a.m.,
special at 9 p.m., fans of Ch. 6; Fennimore's Fables,
James Franclscus and 7:45a.m. and 8:30a.m .. Ch . 6;
" Longstreet" can catch a Lucl's Toyshop (a favorite of a
moving episode In this series young lady we know, named
on Ch. 6. Lelf Erickson Is guest Carole "Shinybrlle" Crab·
slar .
lree), 9 a.m., Ch . 10; Chuck
+++
While Reports, 9:55a.m., Ch .
MOVIES : " Sign ·of lhe 10; Communique. 10:30 a.m.,
Pagan," Jeff Chandler ·and Ch . 6; Book Shelf, 10:55 a.m.,
Jack Palance, 4 p.m. ; "Merry Ch . 6; plus Ohio news, weather
Widow," Lana Turner, 11:30 and sports.
p.m.• both Ch . 10.

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•38995

Elijah Michael
Died Wedn day

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That r-tease.

inches: scored 34 poin ts, 'first-place lead over the Yirgi· comment : "Maybe if they sit
grabbed 25 rebounds and nia Squires, who bowed to the on the hench while it wiU gel
blocked nine shots Wednesday Floridians, 119·105. New York them in motion ... I'm tired of
nigh t lu lead the Kentucky beal. Memphis, 109-100, and going out and whipping Ken·
Colonels to a 137-93 rout of the Indiana trounced Dallas, 124· tucky and Indiana and Uta!)
Carolina Cougars. Gilmore. who 110, in other Wednesday night and then coming- in here
concentrated on defense 10 the games .
(Tampa, Fla.) and playing in a
Ira Harge scored 19 point.. coma ."
Colonels' early games, has
suddenly started to pump in for the Floridians, who took an
Bill Melchionni scored 25
84-81
lead
after
three
periods.
more points and could turn the
points and John Roche 22 to
ABA's Eastern Division race The Squires' performance so lead the Nets to their victory
disgusted Coach AI Bianchi that over Memphis while Roger
into a runaway.
The victory enabled the he benched his regulars for the Brown's 25 points paced India·
Colonels to take a three-game last 18 minutes with the na to it.. triumph over Dalias.

(Only 2 feet wide)

2-HOUR
CLEANING

Famous
Brands

ByUoltedPresslnlernallooal
Would you believe that Artis
Gibnore could soon become a
better-known name in pro
basketball than Kareem Abdul·
Jabbar ?
Maybe it already is.
Abdul-Jabbar is the former
Lew Alcindor, of course, and he
is dominating the National
Basketball Association in the
same fashion as did Wil t
Chamberlain in his prime.
Gibnore is only a rookie in
the American Basketball Association but he is displaying the
same talents as Abdul.Jabbar
and it could be that he soon will
be a box-office rival to the
former UCLA star.
Gilmore, who stands 7 feet, 2

S o u t h still h~ot or
work ahead of hi , but nade
the right play of
spade
nine . East took lhe trick and
North East South
West
made things easy for South
2N.T.
by leading back a diamond.
Pass
3 N.T . Pass Pass
This let ·South in dumm y to
Pass
lead a spade and wind up
Opening lead- + K
with one h e a r t, two diamonds, two spades, f u u r
Bl' Oswald &amp; James Jacoby clubs and the rubber.
It was possible to beat this
Jack Nicklaus uses an iron
when others use a driver. contract after the lead of the
Most experts use 20-point two low diamond at trick two .
no-trump openings although Don 't write us and ask how
unless - you e n c I o s e a PLAN WORKING
they claim to stick to 21.
Nicklaus can get enough stamped, addres!led enve - SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)distance with his iron , but lope.
The number of car pools taking
• fnstell It where the w11h Issometimes an expert has
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
kitchen, bath, nurMry . .. lnywhtN.
advantage of toll free lanes
trouble getting enough tricks
you can &amp;tt ac~~quat. wlrin&amp; plum~
during morning commuter
in11nd v.ntlnC.
,,
with 20 points .
hours on the San FranciscoI Wnhtr tnd ~ryer o~ do 1 flm·
When South looked over
il)'·tlzt load 1t tht ume time or lnOakland Bay Bridge has nearly
dummy he wished he hadn 't
dapendtntf)'.
The bidding ha~ been:
doubled ..
shaded his opening . Then he
• 2·Sp..d Washer. Reauler plut
decided to make the best of West North
Before the Jlklay experiment
East
South
Delicate 11ttin111 for tht flextbfllty 1
r1mily w11htr mutt hive.
il. He started by playing a
Dble began last week, only about 800
I Permanent PrtSI Cart In both
low diamond from dummy . Pass I •
Pass
2¥
cars carrying three or more
Wnher and Dryer.
2 N.T.
Pass
East signalled w i t h the Pass
3+ persons crossed the bridge in
?
Pass
eight and West was faced Pass 3 N.T.
the three hour rush period. A
You, South, hold:
total of 1,985 car pools were
.AQ4¥K6 +AQ10Mo ... KI09
counted Tuesday.
Wh at do you do now?
About 23,000 automobiles nor·
A-Pass. You should be in lhc
mally cross the bridge during
righl 'pol.
the 6 a.m. to 9 a.m. period.
CS
TODA Y'S QUESTION
Two experimental toll free
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
Elij'ah F . Michael, 83 ,
Instead of bid~ing two no- lanes for car pools were started
trump, your partner has ju mped
Pomeroy Route 4, died Wed· to three spades over your two in an effort to reduce conges· IMMil'IIIIIIOIMtolllltollliltollliltolllil11111!11!1t'lll!lflllliltO..,Iit"llt"'llt"'lttlltti11'1111'111101M111!111tollllioll•••••••
lion.
nesday at the Camden-Clark h earls. What do you do now?
Hospital in Parkersburg .
A lifelong Meigs County
farmer, Mr . Michael was
preceded in death by his wife,
Florence Hysell Michael in
1949; a son, Lawrence, in 1947;
five brothers, and two sisters.
He was the last member of his
family .
Surviving are a daughter,
Mrs. John B. Miller of Belpre;
a grandson, Richard Miller of
Ashland, Ky. ; two granddaughters, Marlene Miller and
Doris Miller, and a grea!granddaughter, Jennifer
Miller, of Belpre.
Funeral services will be at II
a.m. Saturday at the Ewing
Funeral Home with the Rev.
Enunett Osborne officiating.
Burial will be in Wells
Cemetery at Downington .
Friends may call at the funeral
home anytime.

Today we are afraid of
single words like goodness
and mercy and kindness. We
don 't believe in the good old
words because we don't beMrs. Jane Durfee Died Wednesday
lieve in the good old values
any more. And this is why
PT. PLEASANT - Mrs. John Howard of Sunnyvale, the world is so sick.- Lin
Jane Price Durfee, Point Calif., and David C. of Hun· Yutang, Chinese philosoPleasant, died Wednesday tington; a sister, Mrs. June D. pher.
morning at St. Mary's Hospital Merkent, West Hartford,
Conn., and two cousins, Jason
In Huntington.
She was the daughter of the Weisenberger and Mrs.
late C. 0. and Sara Irish Charlotte Sayre, Erie, Pa.
Funeral services will be held
Durfee. Mrs. Price was a
member of Christ Episcopal at 11 a. m. Saturday at Christ
Church at Point Pleasant, Episcopal Church with the
General Charles Lewis Rev. Clifford Schane of.
Chapter of the Daughters of the ficiating. Burial will be in
American Revolution, and was Kirkland Memorial Garden.
state historian of the Friends may call at the CrowDaughters of .the Mayflower Hussell Funeral Home in Point
Pleasant after 4 p. m. Friday.
Society.
Pomeroy
Surviving are her husband, The Foglesong Funeral Home · 210 E. 2nd
Phone
992·5428
is
in
charge.
Howard A Price; two sons,

buhtweave bind .

w i t h a po·oblem . Was hos
1·a rtner iefl with a singleton
jack or a doubleton Ill" Wcsl
guessed wrong and continued
a silall diamond .
Soo\lh gratefully look in the
trick with his jack. Then he
cashed his four lop cl ub&gt;
w h i I e East discarded the
1hree of spades and deuce of
hearts and West got rid of
the spade deuce.

yoU! haRd, includos 2 l011e-me
KIWI Boot Polish, 2 polishini

cloths,1b1Ushes,2appli catoiS.
All In Texas Tan case.

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�, - The O.Uy ~1~1 • Mkklepon.J\Ime(oy, 0 ., Dec:. 18, 1971

WIN AT BRIDGE

t - The Daily Sentinel, MldcDeport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec:. 11, 1971

NHL Stondings
By United Press International

East

olts Secon
Unlted Press lnternationnl
The national polls don't show
Ohio University, but they
lbould.
\
For the second time in less
than a week, the unheralded
Bobcats have knocked off a
ranked and previously un·
beaten Big Ten team.
OU's victim Wednesday
night was 12th-ranked Indiana
and the score was 79-70. Last
Saturday the Cats massacred
OhiO State, then ranked fourth
in the nation.
"We threw every defense we
had, but the offense turned out
to be the best weapon," OU
ooach Jim Snyder said. "We
shot well early in the game.
Our defense was aggressive
By

and we denied them inside pen·
etration."
Ohio U. led from the start
and wasahead38-32 at the half.
When the visiting Hoosiers
came to within four points ear·
ly in the second half, they also
committed two costly tur·
liovers which the Cats cashed
in on.
Indiana's big gun, Joby
Wright, scored 35 points but
fouled out with two minutes to
go . The Hoosiers' Steve Down·
ing .added another 21 points,
but injured his knee late in the
game.
"Downing is pretty good with
one leg, but we didn't stop
him," Snyder admitted.
High for Ohio U. were Tom

Riccardi, with 18, and Tom
Corde, with 17. Riccardi, said
Snyder, "was much better than
we thought and plays strong
inside. "
Ohio U. is 3-J with the win.
Indiana is 4-1.
In two other college basket·
ball games played in Ohio,
Ashland
topped
Ohio
Dominican 9t&gt;-79 and Wooster
flattened Geneva (Pa.) 1~.
Ashland freshman Bill Rig·
gins scored 24 points to propel
the 14th-ranked Eagles to their
win. Dave Maurer and Jim Un·
derwood each scored 27 points
for Dominican. Ashland is now
3-1, Dominican 1-4.
Wooster's win avenged its
sole loss of last season, which

1.\ontreal
Boston
Toronto

was to Geneva . It was
Wooster's home opener after
playing its first four games on
the road. John Creasap was
high with 18 points.
Tonight, Miami is at Purdue,
Cal Poly is at Toledo, Akron at
Bellermine,
Kenyon al
Youngstown State, Ohio
Northern at Mercyhurst (Pa.),
and Urbana is at the Spring
Arbor (Mich.) tourney.
In othergames involving
ranked teams, Brigham Young
(No. 4) beat Oldahorna State
84-74, Arizona State, ranked
14th, topped Northern Arizona
96-71 and No. 16 Long Beach
State downed Loyola (Cal .) 7367.
Bernie Flyer had 21 points
and Kresimir Cosic 20 as BYU
downed stubborn Oklahoma

Make it a present.with a future

Southem
Wins Pair
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992·2284

Pomeroy, 0 .

OPEN EVENINGS

'TIL CHRISTMAS

RACINE - Southern Jr.
High's Seventh grade bas·
kethall team upended Meigs
Jr. High's Seven B team here
in a scoring spree of hot
shooters, 64-41. In another
game the Meigs B Eighth
grade team lost to Southern's
Eighth grade team 55-40.
Scoring in the Seventh grade
match, for Meigs, was led by
Buffington with 10 followed by
Scites, Walters and Coats each
with 7. For Southern, Bass led
with 12 and Boso had 10.
· In the Eighth grade game for
Meigs Qualls had 9, and Call,
Cole and Meadows each had 6.
For Southern Roberts and
Schultz led with II each and
Dunning had 9.
Southern 's Seventh and
Eighth grade teams were
scheduled to play here on Dec.
18 at 10 a. m. against Union
Furnace.
Meigs SA team will be at
Federal Hocking Dec. 21 at
5:30p. m.
.· BY QUARTERS
Meigs 7B
8 23 30 41
Southern 7
16 36 42 64

in the game as St. Bonaventure
beat DePaul ~.
Jim McColloum and Bob
Sabol had 20 points each to lead
st. Joseph's ( Pa .) over
Nevada-Reno 12S-66 and Jeff
Pete scored :aJ points to boost
unbeaten San Diego State to its
seventh victory, 864i9 over
Nortli Dakota State.
Weber State whipped Evans-

California

6

42

2 40
8 34

5 25
4 20
6 18

L. T. Pts.
3 45
3 41

21 7
19 8
10 16

Minnesota

By United Press International

East

Utah
Indiana

w.

L. Pel. GB

11

8 .72 4 ...
13 .6()6 3
16 .500 6'h
19 .406 9'i'l
18 .400 9112
20 .355 II

21
20
16
13
12

West

W. L. Pel. GB
21
18

9 .710
12 .. 600 Jlf1

Memphis
13 11" .433 so;,
Denver
12 11 .414 9
Dallas
II 20 .355 II
Wednesday's Results
New York 109 Memphis 100
Floridians 119 Virginia 105

Kentucky 131 Carolina 93
Indiana 124 Dallas 110
(Only games scheduled )

Thursday's Games
Pittsburgh at Floridians

\\~

w.

Chicago

Pro Standings

New York
Carolina

From K &amp; C Jewelers

Bullalo

again Wednesday night they
can win without an outstanding
performance from him when
they defeated the Seattle
SuperSonics, 112-100, and took
a 21'. game lead over idle New
York in the AUantic Division.
Don Chaney and Jo Jo White
scored 22 points each and Dave
Cowens added 21 plus H
rebounds for the Celtics.
Havlicek wound up with 20
points but made only one
basket
in the first period.
NBA Slandin~&gt;
By United Press International Spencer Haywood led Seattle
Eastern Conference
with 20 points and Don Smith
and Dick Snyder had 15 each.
Atlantic Division
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
W. L. Pet. GB
Boston
20 11 .625 .. . scored 35 points and John
New York
16 13 .551 2'11 Block had 24 to lead the
Ph iladelphia 14 16 .467 5
Buflalo
12 17 .4U 6 ,1, Milwaukee Bucks to a 122-108
triumph over the Buffalo
Central Division
W. L. Pel. GB Braves. It was the Bucks'
II 18 .379 .. · seventh consecutive victory
Baltimore
and gave them a 61'. game lead
Cleveland
II 20 .355 I
Cincinnati
10 19 .345 1 over Chicago in the Midwest
Atlanta
8 21 .216 3
Division. Bob Kaufmann was
Western Conference
high for the Braves with 29
Midwest Division
W. L. Pel. GB points.
28 4 .815 .. ·
Milwaukee
Dick Van Arsdale scored 31
Chicago
20 9 .690 61/2 1J2ints as the Phoenix Suns
Phoenix
11 13 .567 10
defeated the Cincinnati Royals,
Detroit
11 18 .379 15'11 127·108, and Elvin Hayes and
Pacific Division
W. L. Pel. GB Stu Lantz had 28 each as the
Houston Rockets downed the
Los Angeles 28 3 .903
Atlanta Hawks, 117-115, in
Sealtle
20 13 .606 9 overtime in the other Wednes·
Golden State 16 15 .516 12 ·
day night games.
Houston
10 23 .303 19
Portland
6 24 .200 21'1'1
The Suns clinched their
Wednesday 1 s Resul1s
victory
when Otw Moore and
Boston 112 Seattle 100
Connie Hawkins led them on a
Phoenix 127 Cincinnati 108
Houston 111 Atlanta liS lol l
!3-POint tear that gave them a
Milwaukee 122 Bullalo 108 - -· 98-78lead althe end of the third
I Only games scheduled)
period.
Thursday's Games
Ph iladelphia
al
Golden
Houston's victory was its
Slale
fourth in five games while the
Cincinnati a1 De1roit
loss was Atlanta 's fourth in a
I Only games scheduled!
row.
ABA Standings

Floridian s

BULOVA
and
ACCUTRON

Van couver

By Unlted Press International
The Boston Celtics are
demonstrating that strength in
numbers is still a vital factor in
playing winning basketball in
the National Basketball
Association .
The Celtics have a super star
in John Havlicek but showed

4 16 24 40 Virqinia
12 36 50 55 Pittsburgh

HAPPINESS IS

Detroit

s 45

I Only game scheduled!

TORRE HONORED
DAYTON, Ohio (UPI)-Joe
Torre , the hard41itting third
baseman of the St. Louis
Cardinals and the Most Valuable Player in the National
League, is the winner of the
1971 "Hutch Award" and will
collect it at the annual Dappo.r
Dan sports dinner in Pili·
sburgh on Feb. 6.
The "Hutch Award" is given
annually to the major league
player who beat exemplifies
the competitive spirit of the
late Fred Hutchinson .

24
23
23
13

Generation Rap
By Helen and Sue Bottel
(~I a problem? Or a subject for discussion, two-generation
style· Dlret!l your questions lo either Sue or Helen Bollel - or
both, If yoo want a combination mother-daughler answer.)
CHRISTMAs DILEMMA
·
Dear Rap :
We had one of those super big. weddings last June. 1 sent
personal thank-you notes to about 300 people. We truly appreclated~ll those lovely gifts, but here's my questlon :
I rea? m some etiquette book that the bride and groom shoold
send Chnstmas cards the first year of marriage to everyone who
gave the.m wedding presents. It seemed very thoughtful and nice,
and I tr1ed - but I struck out with morning sickness. Writing
makes me nauseollll - even more than Ullual.
Is It really necessary to remt;IJ~ber (with holiday cards) so
many people who are more our parents' friends than ours? We're
awfully grateful and we don't want to slight them but - HOW
CAN I?
'
Dear HCI:
I know a couple who followed this etiquette edict about
'?hrls~s wishes wwedding gi{ters, and not only ended up with
wr1ters cramp, but the following year discovered they were on
about 300 card lists. When you start something, it often
boomerangs.
So don't start it ! - HELEN
Dear How :
Christmas cards are foryour o~ special friends, and try to
hold the list down! It grows fast enough wllhout searching in
etiquette books for extra ways of increasing it. - SUE
NOTE FROM BOTH OF US: We think Christmas cards are
vastly overdone. Why send greetings to someone you see abnost
every day and wwhom you can wish a "Merry Christmas" in
person? Why "remember" near--strangers, jllllt because you
somehow you got on their lists'
A card, we believe , should mean, "I'm thinking of you and I
care. " So It needs a personal note (very short if you wish) or at
least your written signature, not justa printed name with nothing
added to show it's from a friend .
Anyone for agreement' - HELEN AND SUE
Dear Sue and Helen :
Here's a suggestion for the person whose friends have
everything. Give them Christmas present.. of volunteer work.
Find out what the friend's favorite charity is, and then offer w
work free for that charity for X number of hours - as a gift to
him or her. Get up some sort of certificate that shows your
promise in writing.
If you can'tspare the time, you can always donate w"Care"
or UNICEF or other worthy calllles in your friend's name.
It's got to be such a hassle, trying wfind the right gift. Of
course this wouldn't work for everyone, but it would help solve a
lot of Christmas shopping blues-because you 'd know you were
doing something that really helps. - W.S.B.
Dear GeneratiOn Rap :
This is an answer to "Joey," whose sister is blackmsiting
him with pictures of him he doesn't want his parents or friends to

s 25

Celtics Up Lead

Ken lucky

Meigs 8B
Southern 8

ville, the No. I small college
team, 97·79 behind Richard
Cooper's 26 points an~ 21
rebounds and John Gianelli's
22 points and 18 rebounds
boosted Pacific over Portland
84-M.
·
In other action, Yale beat
Brown 73-70, Harvard downed
Holy Cross 96-87, and Virginia
ripped William and Mary 82.62.

L. T. Pis.

20 4
18 4
19 6
13 9
10 15
8 18
6 19
West

New York

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . , . - - - - -...- - - . State. Elsewhere, Greg Kohls'
24 points helped unbeaten
Syracuse stop Penn State 73-70
and 6-foot-9 soph Glenn "&gt;rice
hit five consecutive shots early

'7

w.

Plllsburgh
10 17 4
Sl . Louis
9 17 S
Philadelphia
9 15 5
LosAngeles
6 23 1
Wed111sdoly's Results
New York 6 Philadelphia 2
Toronto 3 Pittsburgh 2
Chicago 2 Buffalo I
Minnesota 4 St. Louis 1
Montreal 3 Los Angeles I
1Onlygamesscheduledl
Thursdty'sG&lt;Imos
New York all\oston
Buffalo at Philadelphia
1Only games scheduled)

..
-t.,

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My sister had three pictures of me : 1. With a girl kissing me;
2. In the bath tub (I and 2areseparate pictures, by the way); and
3, of me smoking .
Well, I borrowed a friend's camera and waited patiently until
I got the same kind of pictures of her. Then I showed them to her
and said I'd make a trade.
We both tore up the pictures and burned the negatives.
There's always a way, ifyoo think about it long and hard enough.'
-EVAN

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City" .

(Continued from Page 3)
TO THIS POINT, HAVING seen all the predicted "con·
tenders" play except Ironton, I'd have to say the strongest team
looks to be Waverly.McAfee will make a run for it, but I can't get
a picture of Athens beating Waverly at Waverly which the
Bulldogs will have to do unless somebody scratches up the Tigers
along the way .
They tell me Ironton, when hot, will beat anybody around.
Maybe Ironton can hurt Mr. Hawhee !
And you can't count out the Blue Devils, or even Meigs.
Larry Snowden had probably his coldest night shooting since he
became a regular Blue Devil starter al the beginning of the 1970.
71 season. He won't have many such productions.
Logan, Wellston and Jackson, on performance so far,
!X'obably will fight for the sixth, seventh and eighth places. But
apparently Wellston can't be taken lightly. The Rockets' 69-62
dumping of Logan Tuesday night had to beat least on the order of
a slight surprise.

OPEN UNTIL 8:00P.M. each evening
except Saturday &amp; Sunday.
See Emerson Jones, Pearl Ash, Hilton Wolfe,
Wallace Amberger. Dick Rawlings.

RAWLINGS
DEPENDABLE CITY

992-2151 OR 992·2152 MIOOU:PORT

Gilt dl11. tOK cold filled

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ABA's
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-G alatians 5:22 , 23 .

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NEW YORK (UPI )-Martini
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Derek Bell of England and
Nanni Galli of Italy will be
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TV
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wiih Paul Crabtree

CALL POINTVIEW : 992·2505

I hope you caught Jim
Backus, vlslllng Ohio to appear on Bob Braun ' s 50-50

Club Ieday al noon, Ch . 4.

+++

FRIDAY: Cable TV doesn't
transform early morning
television , because there Isn't
that much on anywhere that's

Our senior citizens can find really so greal, but II does
a lol ol programs on public TV offer qulle a bll of diversity .
aimed lo ~elp them. One Is Some of lhe shows worth
" Yo,ur Social Security ," catching (In addition to lhe
beneficial to viewers of all '"al big ones hosted by David
ages above aboul 16. Catch II Frost and Ohioans Paul Dixon
on Ch . 9, 6: IS p.m .
and Phil Donahue) : Columbus
++ t '
Today, 6:30a.m., Ch. 4; Urban
Wllh Ch . 12 showing another League Presents, 6:30 a.m.,
Engel ber I Humperdl n ck Ch. 10; Daybreak, 7:30 a.m.,
special at 9 p.m., fans of Ch. 6; Fennimore's Fables,
James Franclscus and 7:45a.m. and 8:30a.m .. Ch . 6;
" Longstreet" can catch a Lucl's Toyshop (a favorite of a
moving episode In this series young lady we know, named
on Ch. 6. Lelf Erickson Is guest Carole "Shinybrlle" Crab·
slar .
lree), 9 a.m., Ch . 10; Chuck
+++
While Reports, 9:55a.m., Ch .
MOVIES : " Sign ·of lhe 10; Communique. 10:30 a.m.,
Pagan," Jeff Chandler ·and Ch . 6; Book Shelf, 10:55 a.m.,
Jack Palance, 4 p.m. ; "Merry Ch . 6; plus Ohio news, weather
Widow," Lana Turner, 11:30 and sports.
p.m.• both Ch . 10.

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•38995

Elijah Michael
Died Wedn day

ROBINSON'S
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That r-tease.

inches: scored 34 poin ts, 'first-place lead over the Yirgi· comment : "Maybe if they sit
grabbed 25 rebounds and nia Squires, who bowed to the on the hench while it wiU gel
blocked nine shots Wednesday Floridians, 119·105. New York them in motion ... I'm tired of
nigh t lu lead the Kentucky beal. Memphis, 109-100, and going out and whipping Ken·
Colonels to a 137-93 rout of the Indiana trounced Dallas, 124· tucky and Indiana and Uta!)
Carolina Cougars. Gilmore. who 110, in other Wednesday night and then coming- in here
concentrated on defense 10 the games .
(Tampa, Fla.) and playing in a
Ira Harge scored 19 point.. coma ."
Colonels' early games, has
suddenly started to pump in for the Floridians, who took an
Bill Melchionni scored 25
84-81
lead
after
three
periods.
more points and could turn the
points and John Roche 22 to
ABA's Eastern Division race The Squires' performance so lead the Nets to their victory
disgusted Coach AI Bianchi that over Memphis while Roger
into a runaway.
The victory enabled the he benched his regulars for the Brown's 25 points paced India·
Colonels to take a three-game last 18 minutes with the na to it.. triumph over Dalias.

(Only 2 feet wide)

2-HOUR
CLEANING

Famous
Brands

ByUoltedPresslnlernallooal
Would you believe that Artis
Gibnore could soon become a
better-known name in pro
basketball than Kareem Abdul·
Jabbar ?
Maybe it already is.
Abdul-Jabbar is the former
Lew Alcindor, of course, and he
is dominating the National
Basketball Association in the
same fashion as did Wil t
Chamberlain in his prime.
Gibnore is only a rookie in
the American Basketball Association but he is displaying the
same talents as Abdul.Jabbar
and it could be that he soon will
be a box-office rival to the
former UCLA star.
Gilmore, who stands 7 feet, 2

S o u t h still h~ot or
work ahead of hi , but nade
the right play of
spade
nine . East took lhe trick and
North East South
West
made things easy for South
2N.T.
by leading back a diamond.
Pass
3 N.T . Pass Pass
This let ·South in dumm y to
Pass
lead a spade and wind up
Opening lead- + K
with one h e a r t, two diamonds, two spades, f u u r
Bl' Oswald &amp; James Jacoby clubs and the rubber.
It was possible to beat this
Jack Nicklaus uses an iron
when others use a driver. contract after the lead of the
Most experts use 20-point two low diamond at trick two .
no-trump openings although Don 't write us and ask how
unless - you e n c I o s e a PLAN WORKING
they claim to stick to 21.
Nicklaus can get enough stamped, addres!led enve - SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)distance with his iron , but lope.
The number of car pools taking
• fnstell It where the w11h Issometimes an expert has
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
kitchen, bath, nurMry . .. lnywhtN.
advantage of toll free lanes
trouble getting enough tricks
you can &amp;tt ac~~quat. wlrin&amp; plum~
during morning commuter
in11nd v.ntlnC.
,,
with 20 points .
hours on the San FranciscoI Wnhtr tnd ~ryer o~ do 1 flm·
When South looked over
il)'·tlzt load 1t tht ume time or lnOakland Bay Bridge has nearly
dummy he wished he hadn 't
dapendtntf)'.
The bidding ha~ been:
doubled ..
shaded his opening . Then he
• 2·Sp..d Washer. Reauler plut
decided to make the best of West North
Before the Jlklay experiment
East
South
Delicate 11ttin111 for tht flextbfllty 1
r1mily w11htr mutt hive.
il. He started by playing a
Dble began last week, only about 800
I Permanent PrtSI Cart In both
low diamond from dummy . Pass I •
Pass
2¥
cars carrying three or more
Wnher and Dryer.
2 N.T.
Pass
East signalled w i t h the Pass
3+ persons crossed the bridge in
?
Pass
eight and West was faced Pass 3 N.T.
the three hour rush period. A
You, South, hold:
total of 1,985 car pools were
.AQ4¥K6 +AQ10Mo ... KI09
counted Tuesday.
Wh at do you do now?
About 23,000 automobiles nor·
A-Pass. You should be in lhc
mally cross the bridge during
righl 'pol.
the 6 a.m. to 9 a.m. period.
CS
TODA Y'S QUESTION
Two experimental toll free
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
Elij'ah F . Michael, 83 ,
Instead of bid~ing two no- lanes for car pools were started
trump, your partner has ju mped
Pomeroy Route 4, died Wed· to three spades over your two in an effort to reduce conges· IMMil'IIIIIIOIMtolllltollliltollliltolllil11111!11!1t'lll!lflllliltO..,Iit"llt"'llt"'lttlltti11'1111'111101M111!111tollllioll•••••••
lion.
nesday at the Camden-Clark h earls. What do you do now?
Hospital in Parkersburg .
A lifelong Meigs County
farmer, Mr . Michael was
preceded in death by his wife,
Florence Hysell Michael in
1949; a son, Lawrence, in 1947;
five brothers, and two sisters.
He was the last member of his
family .
Surviving are a daughter,
Mrs. John B. Miller of Belpre;
a grandson, Richard Miller of
Ashland, Ky. ; two granddaughters, Marlene Miller and
Doris Miller, and a grea!granddaughter, Jennifer
Miller, of Belpre.
Funeral services will be at II
a.m. Saturday at the Ewing
Funeral Home with the Rev.
Enunett Osborne officiating.
Burial will be in Wells
Cemetery at Downington .
Friends may call at the funeral
home anytime.

Today we are afraid of
single words like goodness
and mercy and kindness. We
don 't believe in the good old
words because we don't beMrs. Jane Durfee Died Wednesday
lieve in the good old values
any more. And this is why
PT. PLEASANT - Mrs. John Howard of Sunnyvale, the world is so sick.- Lin
Jane Price Durfee, Point Calif., and David C. of Hun· Yutang, Chinese philosoPleasant, died Wednesday tington; a sister, Mrs. June D. pher.
morning at St. Mary's Hospital Merkent, West Hartford,
Conn., and two cousins, Jason
In Huntington.
She was the daughter of the Weisenberger and Mrs.
late C. 0. and Sara Irish Charlotte Sayre, Erie, Pa.
Funeral services will be held
Durfee. Mrs. Price was a
member of Christ Episcopal at 11 a. m. Saturday at Christ
Church at Point Pleasant, Episcopal Church with the
General Charles Lewis Rev. Clifford Schane of.
Chapter of the Daughters of the ficiating. Burial will be in
American Revolution, and was Kirkland Memorial Garden.
state historian of the Friends may call at the CrowDaughters of .the Mayflower Hussell Funeral Home in Point
Pleasant after 4 p. m. Friday.
Society.
Pomeroy
Surviving are her husband, The Foglesong Funeral Home · 210 E. 2nd
Phone
992·5428
is
in
charge.
Howard A Price; two sons,

buhtweave bind .

w i t h a po·oblem . Was hos
1·a rtner iefl with a singleton
jack or a doubleton Ill" Wcsl
guessed wrong and continued
a silall diamond .
Soo\lh gratefully look in the
trick with his jack. Then he
cashed his four lop cl ub&gt;
w h i I e East discarded the
1hree of spades and deuce of
hearts and West got rid of
the spade deuce.

yoU! haRd, includos 2 l011e-me
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_7 -- Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Dec. 16,1971

&amp;- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. 16, 1971 •

Club Party Held
C h ristmas
ta b le
arrangements made for the
Southeaste rn Ohio Mental
Health Center ·at Athens were
displayed at the holiday party
~ the Rutland Garden Club
Monday night at the home of
Mrs. C. 0. Chapman and Mrs.
Ann Webster, Rutland.
The table pieces made for the
Health Center will be delivered
by Mrs. Jack Robson, chairman of the project.
Members dined at Crow's
Steak House before gomg to the
Chapman home which was
attractively decorated for the
holiday season . Mrs. Harry
Willi amson was co-hostess .
Guests besides Mrs. Webster
were Mrs. Jean Vandenbark
and her daughter, Ann.
During the meeting con·
dueled by Mrs. Har vey
Erlewine, the club voted to
contribute to the Waukeena
Fund. A re port of the county
Christmas flower show showed
blue ribbons going to Mrs.
Robert Canaday, an ar tistic
arra ngeme nt, Mrs. Cha rles
Lewis, a collage, Mrs. Roy
Snowden, a houseplant, and a
red , Mrs. Ruby Diehl, an
African violet. Mrs. Lewis and
Mrs. Kate Jarrell were cochairmen for the club's table
display, "Germany Around the
World" which won a yellow
ribbon .
Mrs.
Snowden
displayed a poster on holiday
plant care and served on the
judging commi ttee, and Mrs.
James Nicholson assisted in
the preparation of displa ys. On

the refreshment committee for
the show were Mrs. Paul Wino,
Mrs. Erlewine and Miss Diehl.
Acomplimentary note on the
Rutland Club's recent flower
show from Mrs. Roy Christy,
Ma rietta, an OAGC judge, was
read. A report ~~::as given by
Mrs. Lewis on her recent visit
to the Ladies Night observance
of the Maso nic Lodge at
Amesville. She presented a
desc riptive lecture on the
achievement and duties of her
garden club. ACcompanying
her to Amesville were Mrs.
Jar rells and Mrs. Alber t
·Woodard of Pomeroy .
It was reported that a flower
had been sent to Mrs. Dick
Foley du ring her recent
hospitalization. A round-robin
card was sent to Mrs. Everett
Colwell, ill at her home. The
garden club's schedule at the
Gallipolis State Institute was
read by the president. Mrs.
Jonah Cotterill and Mrs. Paul
Wino will prepare the radio
program. Mrs. Canaday noted
that the program books had
been sent to the distric t
chairman for competition.
by
Mrs.
Devo tions
Williamson were from St. Luke
2, !O and ll ,anda poem, "What
Is Christmas'", along with
prayer. Members gave the
creed and collect and
res ponded to roll call by
naming a flower or a tree of the
Holy Land . The traveling prize
provided by Mrs. Lewis, was
awarded to Mrs . Dayton
Parsons. Mrs. Russell Little

will furnish the prize for the
next meeting.
Diehl ,
program
Miss
chairman , pres ented Mrs.
Wino, who gave a r esume from
"A Driftwood Tree for the
Birds" from the works of
Mabel D. Hodgins. She had
prepared an unusual driftwood
tree, decorated with grain,
suet, pine cones filled with
peanut butter, and seeds for
wintertime bird feeding.
Gardening tips for January
were given by Mrs . Erlewine.
They included seed orders,
caring for Christmas plan Is,
forcing hyacinths, tulips,
crocus and other plant.!l, and
the care of houseplant.!l during

~-. · Social Calendar

Three new members were event honoring 50 year Mr~. Ruby Matheney gave
welcomed at the annual members. Mrs. Wolfe also · grace. Presiding at the
UH~O VALLEY Grange 2612 Christnias dinner party of the asked the district offiCers to meeting was Mrs, Hue! Butler
meeting at Letart Falls School, Past Councilors AsSociation of send in a name for an escort at "f Goldeli Gleem CoWlcll with
7:30 tonight. Member~ to take District 13 held Sunday at the the rally.
. Mrs. Edith Betzlng, a past
50 cent gift exchang~ 1tem and Redwood Inn, Belpre.
Mrs. Althea Strong sent · state councilor, Chester
salad and sandwtches for
Welcomed into membership thanks to the group for ex- Council giving devotiDIL!I, She
refreshments.
.
were Mrs. Edna VickerS, Mrs. pres:!ions of sympathy at the gave the Chrilltmas story frcm
CHRISTMAS PLAY, Htland Essa Varner and Mrs. Erma death of her husband, Harley. Matthew and led in the. Lord's
Chapel, Route 124,7:30 tomght. Barnes all of Belle Prairie It was noted that Mrs. Pribble Prayer in unlaon and the
Public invited.
Councll, Belpre. Mrs . Fae Wilsonlsillathome, thai Mrs. pledge to the flag.
FRIDAY
Hoselton was appointed by the Faye Parlin ts. vacationing in
Chrlstnias readings Included
PAST MATRONS
of district deputy, Jean WoHe, as Florida, and that Mrs. Jean "Trail to Christmas" by Mrs.
Evangeline Chapter, Order of deputy of the Belpre council. Poling bas been returned home Martha Hudnall; "The Utile
the Eastern Star, Christnias
During the meeting tile from St. Joseph Hospital.
Things at Christmas" by Mrs.
'PBl'IY Friday night at the home District 13 rally to be held in'
The Christmas motif was Hoselton; "Christmas In the
of Mrs. James Clatworthy, 6 April at Syracuse was an- carried out In the table Vlllilge" by Mrs. Annabelle
p.m. potluck, $2 gilt exchange. nounced. Deputies were asked decorations. Red and white Kehl; "Chrilltmas Candlea" by
JITNEY SUPPER, 5-7 :30 to submit ideas for a special boots were given as favors. Iva Slltcy, and a recitation by
p.m., Friday, Eastern High
Mrs. Una McVay.
School followed by dance from
Gifts were exchanged. At10 to 11 :30 p.m. with ''Our
tending besides thOile named
Creation" of Beverly providing
were Mrs. Tillie Clark, Mrs.
music. Events sponsored by
Sara Jane Riddle, Mrs. Erma
sophomore class.
Jenkins, district conductor,
6
SATURDAY
RUTLAND - The RuUand evening, at ·
Mrs. Clara Smith, Mrs. OWe
ANNUAL
CHRISTMAS Friendly Gardeners will hold, will
Following
dinner,
the group M V
return to the Bolin home
c ay, aU of G
. olden G1eem;
dance, Wahama High School, 8 their annual Christmas dinner for a business meet;•• and Mrs . Edna Reibel, stale
to II p.m. Saturday with Jays at The Martin Wednesday,
-'6
legislative committee, Mrs .
· S
ed b tud t Dec. 22 at 6:30 p. m. Members exchange of gifts among secret B tt R ib 1 M
emc~mg . ponsor
Ys en
pals. Members are reminded to
e Y e e'
rs. Ne ttl e
council. Informal and open to will meet at the home of Mrs.
Hayes, Tbeodorus CouncU, and
public.
Joe Bolin, hostess of the bring a fruit plate decorated Miss Fay Reibel, a guest. Mrs.
for the holidays to be g1'ven to
ANNUAL
Christmas
local shut-ins of Rutland. Mrs. McVay Is the district vice
program, Carleton Church, 7:30
Howard Birchfield is chainnan councilor and Mrs. Stacy Is the
p.m. Saturday. Visit from
state warden.
of this cheer project.
Santa. Public welcome.
Auxiliary of Feeney-Bennett
MODERN WOODMEN , Post 128,4 to 7 p.m. Sunday at
Mrs_. Bolin will have . . .- - - - - - -. . .
Middleport, 6335, Christmas the hall. Gift exchange of $1.50. devotwns and Mrs. Larry
party beginning with potluck
ALFRED United Methodist • Ed":ards the January garsupper, 6 p.m. Saturday DAY Church will hold its annual denmg tips_. Mrs . Robert
Hall, Pomeroy. Meat, coffee, Christmas program on Sunday Snowden wtll moderate a
program on the proper use of
.
.
rolls furnished , take covered eve., Dec. 19. Linda Williams,
,_ to
Mondaythru
rna donnas. Each member ,.
Fl
Spe
d
Vl
lti
dish. Children's gift exchange.
orence
ncer, an
c
b.
d
· f
th ·
Friday 9:30to9
Members and friends invited. Carr are the program com- nng . a rna onna . or
e
Saturday 9:30 to 5
SUNDAY
mlttee. Everyone welcome.
educational display With Mrs.
Sunday, Ito 5
Bolln as chainnan. Moderator
ANNUAL Christmas
for group judging of gift
RUTLAND Church of the wrappings will be Mrs. EdProg ram, 7:30 p.m. sun day•
Pomeroy Church of Christ. Nazarene Christmas program wards who also ls chairman of
sunday durmg
· Sunda
h 1
Rt. 7
Putilic invited.
Y
sc
oo dinner reservati••·
.
h
ta
tin
t
9
30
~~
Addison,
EAGLE RIDGE Community
our s r g a : a.m.
Chr'
Christnias program, 7:30 p.m.
1stmas pIay at 7:30 p.m.
Sunday , Pomeroy Church of Publ'IC we1come.
'-'·~·'•'· '·' " '"' '·'"' ,.,{ t:&lt;.&lt;r.&lt;.-:&lt;~~ ,.-:'r: r.~~:
Christ. Public invited.
ANNUAL Christma s
MONDAY
program, Morning Star United
HARRISONVILLE EleMethodist Church, 7:30 p.m. mentary School Christmas
Sunday. Public invited .
program, Monday, 7:30 p.m.
COUNTY -WIDE pray er
Door prizes to be given.
meeting at Stiversville ComTHEODORUS Council 17,
munity Church, 2 p.m. Sunday,
Daughters of America, IOOF
Okey Ahart, leader.
hall, 6 p.m. Monday. Turkey
AT
dinner
with members to take a
C::HRISTMAS party of the
::
Junior American Legion covered dish. $1 gift exchange.
PHONE 992-7474
·

I.,~·.,.
r ~·....,....,---------------~-'

THURSDAY
LAUREL CLIFF Better
Health Club , Christmas
meeting, Meigs County Infirmary, 6:30 Thursday, dinner
and gift exchange. Reservation
with Mrs. Mildred Jacobs or
Mrs. Ernest Powell.
EPISCOPAL CHURCH
Women, home of Mrs. Harry S.
Moore, Middleport, with Mrs. J .
0. Roedel, co-hostess , 7:30
Thursday.
BAS HAN FIRE House,
Christmas supper for com~wuty, 6:30p.m. Take cove_red
dish, d~sert ~d table service.
Santa Will amve at 8 p.m. Take
gift for your children .
HARRISONVlLLE Chapter
the winter months. "Peace" , a OES inslltllation, 8 p.m. ThursMadonna
and
child day at Masonic Hall, poUuck
arrangement, was displayed refreshments.
by Mrs . Snowden at the
MIDDLEPORT Cub Scout
meeting.
Pack 245, Wednesday, 7 p:m.
Members exchanged gifts. American Legion hall MidRefreshment.!l were served by dleport.
'
the hostesses and Mrs. WebMIDDLEPORT Child Conster, Mrs. Vandenbark, and
Miss Ann Vandenbark.
servation League, Thursday,
7:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Susan Blaker, Syracuse, Rustic
Hills Addition. An exchange of
RESPEITS PAID
h
hr
bulbs to
SYRACUSE - Mr. and Mrs. omemade C istmas
'
Herbert Parker accompanied be held.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Parker
ROCK SPRINGS Better
of near Long Bottom, and Health Club, Christmas party.
Wilbur Parker of Chester Star PoUuck dinner at 11:30 a.m. at
Route, to the Hastings Funeral the Rock Springs United
Home in Morgantown, W. Va., Methodist Church. Members to
Sunday, to pay their respects to tak e a 25 cen t gra b ba g.
Miss Maude Creel, 89. The late
Miss Creel had been a
WOMEN'S ASSN., 7:30 p.m.
housekeeper for the late Pearl Thursday at the Middleport
First United Presbytert' an
Parker for 10 years.
Church. Book study by Mrs.
Kar I Ow en, devotions by Mrs,
Marcus Ch am bers, and
MEETING ATIENDED
Maxine Griffith, cashier of hostesses, Mrs. Tom Rue, Mrs.
the Pomeroy National Bank, Harry S. Moore, and Mrs.
attended a meeting of the Bank Russell Lyons.
Operations Committee of the
TWIN CITY Shrine Club
Ohio Bankers Assn. held at the
Ramada Inn South, Columbus, Thursday, 7:30 p.m . at
Clubhouse, Racine, Walter
on Tuesday.
Grueser presiding.
PROGRAM SET
The Chrisbnas program of
the Eagle Ridge Community
Church will be held at 7:30
Sunday evening . The public is
invited.

'TIS THE SEASON ...

New Members Welcomed

1

At Nelson's Prescription Drug Store

SPECIAL MEETING, Shade
River Lodge 453, F&amp;AM, 7:30
p.m. Thursday, work in Master
Mason Degree . . All Master
Masons invited by Worshipful
Master Denver E. Well .

Shop-Compar·e-e-Open Evenings 'Til 10
BARBARA

BY LUDEN'S

Christmas Dinne-r Planned

REGULAR 4.95

KODAK INSTAMATIC
X-15 OUTFITS

VIP LOOK VINYL

~

r

'···· • t

·~

t. -t. t..c..t....• ~ \..."-...·...·...-.....~-!.. t:..:.~

•

CONDITIONIN(; MIST IIAIKSETTH

2~~~9

The Ideal
Christmas
Gift

17 88

Schick Hot lather

DELUXE
NO. K-300
Reg .

29 .99

The
Orbitor
Razor
by Gillette

2299

1100!1. '1890

..

C-7'12
REG. 69'
PKG. OF 5
REPlACEMENT

METAL

thermoatatlca'lly controlled heating posts have
rollers ready for use In minutes
all rollers heat simultaneously
rollers hold heat longer, prevent tangling
5to 15 minutes In your hair and Instant beauty .
rubber tipped steel clips have positive-locks to
hold curleraln place
extra cltpslncludod
3 sizes of rollers for ve rsatility
case of white emboased

DRYERS

lADIES'

44~

UMBRELLAS

Drum
+ Durable Press
Cycle

One goes out, the rest stay .lit.

•

Reg.
271

retpOntJOilrty

r emO'Io'~

(II tn~

rtt.pOntrbility cl me S!l. .d

unl"• !he ooe V"' "''nanty
O~~t~en

ck1l1 r fPilh "

REG.
29.95

A.New Wringer

HAl KARATI
~egular 1.75
4 OZ· SIZE

Next To Rail's Ben Franklin In Middleport
link, crank gea r, drive gur, ct:~nnect·
ing rod. pin1on and clu t e~ arm m
warranled for ten years lr om date of
installat ion•by Speed Queen. A 0•·
vision of McGraw-Edison Company
If any of the abo" listed p.1rts farl
w1thin the 10-year warranty per iod as
a result of a manufacturine: defecl.
they will ~e replaced. Labor charges
incune d in the removal and repla c~ ·
men! ol such p.arls are the responsi·

The Remainder of Miss America Ladies Loafers as advertised
·--·

in Sunday Times-Sentinel, Dec. 12 are still on Sale
DW3090

I

Your Speed Queen Authorized

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
992-2094

Pomeroy

992-3770

Jr;here Shoes Are Sensibly Priced ·

Stick-On Bows
Reg. 98'
Bag of 25

ONLY •8.00

bility of the owner unless !he one
warrant; responsibility of the

MIDDLEPORT 0.

ASST.
COLORS

HAl KARATE
Gift Collection

76t

• . Y·· ~uol, 108ft.

...

KODAK FILM
REG.

'1.85

77t

'

59~

98~

'1.98

OFF

$298
ONLY

CASHEWS

OftLY

66~

SHOE SHINE
REG.
KITS 1.50 ONLY

s

1

EPCO-SHOESHINE

KIT

Reg .

$2.98

ANGEL
HAIR
Beautiful

Timex Watch

Metal
Band

$199
•

59t

Full Color Holiday

DOOR DECORATION
Weather resistant, 6 It, 4"
fall , 3 11. wide . ReQ . 1.49

Only 88'

:4&amp; C

6 FT. REG. 59'..........

9 FT. REG. 6~' .......... I

·.

12 FT. REG.

79~.........

.

..
.
.:
.

•,

EXTENSION CORDS

.. 56~
. 63~

~ .,

CUBES :;

IJ Roll, l82 ft .

LARGE
SELECTION
OF TOYS AT
DISCOUNT
PRICES

i·
,...·'

....'~··

GARLAND

FlAVOR HOUSE
DRY ROASTED

Men's Cologne,
Aller Sliave, ·

RIBBON

.

~
·.,

TINSEL

MAGNETIC PHOTO

GIFT IDEA!

co nsistin&amp; of the case, rocKer arm ,

CX-126-12

'

ALBUM

' liJ.IEAI WARIINTY
ON TIWISMISSION PillS
Speed Queen washe r lransmtss•ons

606 E. Main St.

;:

'3

99~

"Ready to Serve Your Needs for the Ho'lidays"

Queen dealer

'"0.:

1~

After Shave Lotion

FROM {i) SPEED QUEEN

'••
'•

•,
•'

All PAPER MATE
PENS AND SETS

1nd ••DliCemtlnl ol ltlt lull lit lht

\JW.,.,

19.99

'i)·r'~'· ...;J

~

98~

lkGrJW-Edison c~,., 11 m. tub ltil• " 1 rta.J it ol 1
mnuhctuung d~fe-c 1 . 01 wrll bill rli)l.ced. lllbor cnwgu

.'•'••
,:
..·-.
'•

as~

AND

WllfMII.cl for
Speed Que..,, A Oi'liiKln of

.,

·.

29~

a.... ro lflu'I IUI 111111 wt~ •r tub II

ll'll:unlld rn ltle

9

••'•

:..

REG. 11.40

$}19

x 800" - made by th e
makers of Scotch Tape.

Lint Screen

tne -.ner b¥'

26.95

1

UMBRELLAS

'

$1 8

::·:·:
.::.•

a.....,...----...,
r
.......- - - - '•;.!

MEN'S

I /2 II

SPEED QUEEN
Tilt SptiCI
1M 111. of

REGULAR 19.95

Rocket Tape

REG. 15.00

+ In-A-Door

from

~::., 3.44

BILLFOLDS

+ Stainless Steel

Regular

MACHINE 1366

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

'BULBS

UL APPROVED
15-LITE INDOOR SET

MODE L

for the 70's

.J

.··:,.

ONLY

WASHERS

••

KiNDNESS
CUSTOM CARE"K -"'·"

The Unique Gift

DA
6011

3 LB. ONLY 99e

ONLY

o.

~if.l!t ~
$~~~
JOHNIE·s ::t~JY g
..
t-e.,,'\.•,•,v," ' ·'-'

Rum and Brandy
Flavored

New 21 -curl Hairsetter
'
helps you catch
the ''WOWI-Iook'' now

$1666

QJIION GIN

~~
~

FRUIT CAKE

DOMINION

REG. 122.95

CRUSHED VRV

FOR THE
LADY ON YOUR UST

$299

5 lb.
box

ELLEN

ONLY
I

'

�..
_7 -- Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Dec. 16,1971

&amp;- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. 16, 1971 •

Club Party Held
C h ristmas
ta b le
arrangements made for the
Southeaste rn Ohio Mental
Health Center ·at Athens were
displayed at the holiday party
~ the Rutland Garden Club
Monday night at the home of
Mrs. C. 0. Chapman and Mrs.
Ann Webster, Rutland.
The table pieces made for the
Health Center will be delivered
by Mrs. Jack Robson, chairman of the project.
Members dined at Crow's
Steak House before gomg to the
Chapman home which was
attractively decorated for the
holiday season . Mrs. Harry
Willi amson was co-hostess .
Guests besides Mrs. Webster
were Mrs. Jean Vandenbark
and her daughter, Ann.
During the meeting con·
dueled by Mrs. Har vey
Erlewine, the club voted to
contribute to the Waukeena
Fund. A re port of the county
Christmas flower show showed
blue ribbons going to Mrs.
Robert Canaday, an ar tistic
arra ngeme nt, Mrs. Cha rles
Lewis, a collage, Mrs. Roy
Snowden, a houseplant, and a
red , Mrs. Ruby Diehl, an
African violet. Mrs. Lewis and
Mrs. Kate Jarrell were cochairmen for the club's table
display, "Germany Around the
World" which won a yellow
ribbon .
Mrs.
Snowden
displayed a poster on holiday
plant care and served on the
judging commi ttee, and Mrs.
James Nicholson assisted in
the preparation of displa ys. On

the refreshment committee for
the show were Mrs. Paul Wino,
Mrs. Erlewine and Miss Diehl.
Acomplimentary note on the
Rutland Club's recent flower
show from Mrs. Roy Christy,
Ma rietta, an OAGC judge, was
read. A report ~~::as given by
Mrs. Lewis on her recent visit
to the Ladies Night observance
of the Maso nic Lodge at
Amesville. She presented a
desc riptive lecture on the
achievement and duties of her
garden club. ACcompanying
her to Amesville were Mrs.
Jar rells and Mrs. Alber t
·Woodard of Pomeroy .
It was reported that a flower
had been sent to Mrs. Dick
Foley du ring her recent
hospitalization. A round-robin
card was sent to Mrs. Everett
Colwell, ill at her home. The
garden club's schedule at the
Gallipolis State Institute was
read by the president. Mrs.
Jonah Cotterill and Mrs. Paul
Wino will prepare the radio
program. Mrs. Canaday noted
that the program books had
been sent to the distric t
chairman for competition.
by
Mrs.
Devo tions
Williamson were from St. Luke
2, !O and ll ,anda poem, "What
Is Christmas'", along with
prayer. Members gave the
creed and collect and
res ponded to roll call by
naming a flower or a tree of the
Holy Land . The traveling prize
provided by Mrs. Lewis, was
awarded to Mrs . Dayton
Parsons. Mrs. Russell Little

will furnish the prize for the
next meeting.
Diehl ,
program
Miss
chairman , pres ented Mrs.
Wino, who gave a r esume from
"A Driftwood Tree for the
Birds" from the works of
Mabel D. Hodgins. She had
prepared an unusual driftwood
tree, decorated with grain,
suet, pine cones filled with
peanut butter, and seeds for
wintertime bird feeding.
Gardening tips for January
were given by Mrs . Erlewine.
They included seed orders,
caring for Christmas plan Is,
forcing hyacinths, tulips,
crocus and other plant.!l, and
the care of houseplant.!l during

~-. · Social Calendar

Three new members were event honoring 50 year Mr~. Ruby Matheney gave
welcomed at the annual members. Mrs. Wolfe also · grace. Presiding at the
UH~O VALLEY Grange 2612 Christnias dinner party of the asked the district offiCers to meeting was Mrs, Hue! Butler
meeting at Letart Falls School, Past Councilors AsSociation of send in a name for an escort at "f Goldeli Gleem CoWlcll with
7:30 tonight. Member~ to take District 13 held Sunday at the the rally.
. Mrs. Edith Betzlng, a past
50 cent gift exchang~ 1tem and Redwood Inn, Belpre.
Mrs. Althea Strong sent · state councilor, Chester
salad and sandwtches for
Welcomed into membership thanks to the group for ex- Council giving devotiDIL!I, She
refreshments.
.
were Mrs. Edna VickerS, Mrs. pres:!ions of sympathy at the gave the Chrilltmas story frcm
CHRISTMAS PLAY, Htland Essa Varner and Mrs. Erma death of her husband, Harley. Matthew and led in the. Lord's
Chapel, Route 124,7:30 tomght. Barnes all of Belle Prairie It was noted that Mrs. Pribble Prayer in unlaon and the
Public invited.
Councll, Belpre. Mrs . Fae Wilsonlsillathome, thai Mrs. pledge to the flag.
FRIDAY
Hoselton was appointed by the Faye Parlin ts. vacationing in
Chrlstnias readings Included
PAST MATRONS
of district deputy, Jean WoHe, as Florida, and that Mrs. Jean "Trail to Christmas" by Mrs.
Evangeline Chapter, Order of deputy of the Belpre council. Poling bas been returned home Martha Hudnall; "The Utile
the Eastern Star, Christnias
During the meeting tile from St. Joseph Hospital.
Things at Christmas" by Mrs.
'PBl'IY Friday night at the home District 13 rally to be held in'
The Christmas motif was Hoselton; "Christmas In the
of Mrs. James Clatworthy, 6 April at Syracuse was an- carried out In the table Vlllilge" by Mrs. Annabelle
p.m. potluck, $2 gilt exchange. nounced. Deputies were asked decorations. Red and white Kehl; "Chrilltmas Candlea" by
JITNEY SUPPER, 5-7 :30 to submit ideas for a special boots were given as favors. Iva Slltcy, and a recitation by
p.m., Friday, Eastern High
Mrs. Una McVay.
School followed by dance from
Gifts were exchanged. At10 to 11 :30 p.m. with ''Our
tending besides thOile named
Creation" of Beverly providing
were Mrs. Tillie Clark, Mrs.
music. Events sponsored by
Sara Jane Riddle, Mrs. Erma
sophomore class.
Jenkins, district conductor,
6
SATURDAY
RUTLAND - The RuUand evening, at ·
Mrs. Clara Smith, Mrs. OWe
ANNUAL
CHRISTMAS Friendly Gardeners will hold, will
Following
dinner,
the group M V
return to the Bolin home
c ay, aU of G
. olden G1eem;
dance, Wahama High School, 8 their annual Christmas dinner for a business meet;•• and Mrs . Edna Reibel, stale
to II p.m. Saturday with Jays at The Martin Wednesday,
-'6
legislative committee, Mrs .
· S
ed b tud t Dec. 22 at 6:30 p. m. Members exchange of gifts among secret B tt R ib 1 M
emc~mg . ponsor
Ys en
pals. Members are reminded to
e Y e e'
rs. Ne ttl e
council. Informal and open to will meet at the home of Mrs.
Hayes, Tbeodorus CouncU, and
public.
Joe Bolin, hostess of the bring a fruit plate decorated Miss Fay Reibel, a guest. Mrs.
for the holidays to be g1'ven to
ANNUAL
Christmas
local shut-ins of Rutland. Mrs. McVay Is the district vice
program, Carleton Church, 7:30
Howard Birchfield is chainnan councilor and Mrs. Stacy Is the
p.m. Saturday. Visit from
state warden.
of this cheer project.
Santa. Public welcome.
Auxiliary of Feeney-Bennett
MODERN WOODMEN , Post 128,4 to 7 p.m. Sunday at
Mrs_. Bolin will have . . .- - - - - - -. . .
Middleport, 6335, Christmas the hall. Gift exchange of $1.50. devotwns and Mrs. Larry
party beginning with potluck
ALFRED United Methodist • Ed":ards the January garsupper, 6 p.m. Saturday DAY Church will hold its annual denmg tips_. Mrs . Robert
Hall, Pomeroy. Meat, coffee, Christmas program on Sunday Snowden wtll moderate a
program on the proper use of
.
.
rolls furnished , take covered eve., Dec. 19. Linda Williams,
,_ to
Mondaythru
rna donnas. Each member ,.
Fl
Spe
d
Vl
lti
dish. Children's gift exchange.
orence
ncer, an
c
b.
d
· f
th ·
Friday 9:30to9
Members and friends invited. Carr are the program com- nng . a rna onna . or
e
Saturday 9:30 to 5
SUNDAY
mlttee. Everyone welcome.
educational display With Mrs.
Sunday, Ito 5
Bolln as chainnan. Moderator
ANNUAL Christmas
for group judging of gift
RUTLAND Church of the wrappings will be Mrs. EdProg ram, 7:30 p.m. sun day•
Pomeroy Church of Christ. Nazarene Christmas program wards who also ls chairman of
sunday durmg
· Sunda
h 1
Rt. 7
Putilic invited.
Y
sc
oo dinner reservati••·
.
h
ta
tin
t
9
30
~~
Addison,
EAGLE RIDGE Community
our s r g a : a.m.
Chr'
Christnias program, 7:30 p.m.
1stmas pIay at 7:30 p.m.
Sunday , Pomeroy Church of Publ'IC we1come.
'-'·~·'•'· '·' " '"' '·'"' ,.,{ t:&lt;.&lt;r.&lt;.-:&lt;~~ ,.-:'r: r.~~:
Christ. Public invited.
ANNUAL Christma s
MONDAY
program, Morning Star United
HARRISONVILLE EleMethodist Church, 7:30 p.m. mentary School Christmas
Sunday. Public invited .
program, Monday, 7:30 p.m.
COUNTY -WIDE pray er
Door prizes to be given.
meeting at Stiversville ComTHEODORUS Council 17,
munity Church, 2 p.m. Sunday,
Daughters of America, IOOF
Okey Ahart, leader.
hall, 6 p.m. Monday. Turkey
AT
dinner
with members to take a
C::HRISTMAS party of the
::
Junior American Legion covered dish. $1 gift exchange.
PHONE 992-7474
·

I.,~·.,.
r ~·....,....,---------------~-'

THURSDAY
LAUREL CLIFF Better
Health Club , Christmas
meeting, Meigs County Infirmary, 6:30 Thursday, dinner
and gift exchange. Reservation
with Mrs. Mildred Jacobs or
Mrs. Ernest Powell.
EPISCOPAL CHURCH
Women, home of Mrs. Harry S.
Moore, Middleport, with Mrs. J .
0. Roedel, co-hostess , 7:30
Thursday.
BAS HAN FIRE House,
Christmas supper for com~wuty, 6:30p.m. Take cove_red
dish, d~sert ~d table service.
Santa Will amve at 8 p.m. Take
gift for your children .
HARRISONVlLLE Chapter
the winter months. "Peace" , a OES inslltllation, 8 p.m. ThursMadonna
and
child day at Masonic Hall, poUuck
arrangement, was displayed refreshments.
by Mrs . Snowden at the
MIDDLEPORT Cub Scout
meeting.
Pack 245, Wednesday, 7 p:m.
Members exchanged gifts. American Legion hall MidRefreshment.!l were served by dleport.
'
the hostesses and Mrs. WebMIDDLEPORT Child Conster, Mrs. Vandenbark, and
Miss Ann Vandenbark.
servation League, Thursday,
7:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Susan Blaker, Syracuse, Rustic
Hills Addition. An exchange of
RESPEITS PAID
h
hr
bulbs to
SYRACUSE - Mr. and Mrs. omemade C istmas
'
Herbert Parker accompanied be held.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Parker
ROCK SPRINGS Better
of near Long Bottom, and Health Club, Christmas party.
Wilbur Parker of Chester Star PoUuck dinner at 11:30 a.m. at
Route, to the Hastings Funeral the Rock Springs United
Home in Morgantown, W. Va., Methodist Church. Members to
Sunday, to pay their respects to tak e a 25 cen t gra b ba g.
Miss Maude Creel, 89. The late
Miss Creel had been a
WOMEN'S ASSN., 7:30 p.m.
housekeeper for the late Pearl Thursday at the Middleport
First United Presbytert' an
Parker for 10 years.
Church. Book study by Mrs.
Kar I Ow en, devotions by Mrs,
Marcus Ch am bers, and
MEETING ATIENDED
Maxine Griffith, cashier of hostesses, Mrs. Tom Rue, Mrs.
the Pomeroy National Bank, Harry S. Moore, and Mrs.
attended a meeting of the Bank Russell Lyons.
Operations Committee of the
TWIN CITY Shrine Club
Ohio Bankers Assn. held at the
Ramada Inn South, Columbus, Thursday, 7:30 p.m . at
Clubhouse, Racine, Walter
on Tuesday.
Grueser presiding.
PROGRAM SET
The Chrisbnas program of
the Eagle Ridge Community
Church will be held at 7:30
Sunday evening . The public is
invited.

'TIS THE SEASON ...

New Members Welcomed

1

At Nelson's Prescription Drug Store

SPECIAL MEETING, Shade
River Lodge 453, F&amp;AM, 7:30
p.m. Thursday, work in Master
Mason Degree . . All Master
Masons invited by Worshipful
Master Denver E. Well .

Shop-Compar·e-e-Open Evenings 'Til 10
BARBARA

BY LUDEN'S

Christmas Dinne-r Planned

REGULAR 4.95

KODAK INSTAMATIC
X-15 OUTFITS

VIP LOOK VINYL

~

r

'···· • t

·~

t. -t. t..c..t....• ~ \..."-...·...·...-.....~-!.. t:..:.~

•

CONDITIONIN(; MIST IIAIKSETTH

2~~~9

The Ideal
Christmas
Gift

17 88

Schick Hot lather

DELUXE
NO. K-300
Reg .

29 .99

The
Orbitor
Razor
by Gillette

2299

1100!1. '1890

..

C-7'12
REG. 69'
PKG. OF 5
REPlACEMENT

METAL

thermoatatlca'lly controlled heating posts have
rollers ready for use In minutes
all rollers heat simultaneously
rollers hold heat longer, prevent tangling
5to 15 minutes In your hair and Instant beauty .
rubber tipped steel clips have positive-locks to
hold curleraln place
extra cltpslncludod
3 sizes of rollers for ve rsatility
case of white emboased

DRYERS

lADIES'

44~

UMBRELLAS

Drum
+ Durable Press
Cycle

One goes out, the rest stay .lit.

•

Reg.
271

retpOntJOilrty

r emO'Io'~

(II tn~

rtt.pOntrbility cl me S!l. .d

unl"• !he ooe V"' "''nanty
O~~t~en

ck1l1 r fPilh "

REG.
29.95

A.New Wringer

HAl KARATI
~egular 1.75
4 OZ· SIZE

Next To Rail's Ben Franklin In Middleport
link, crank gea r, drive gur, ct:~nnect·
ing rod. pin1on and clu t e~ arm m
warranled for ten years lr om date of
installat ion•by Speed Queen. A 0•·
vision of McGraw-Edison Company
If any of the abo" listed p.1rts farl
w1thin the 10-year warranty per iod as
a result of a manufacturine: defecl.
they will ~e replaced. Labor charges
incune d in the removal and repla c~ ·
men! ol such p.arls are the responsi·

The Remainder of Miss America Ladies Loafers as advertised
·--·

in Sunday Times-Sentinel, Dec. 12 are still on Sale
DW3090

I

Your Speed Queen Authorized

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
992-2094

Pomeroy

992-3770

Jr;here Shoes Are Sensibly Priced ·

Stick-On Bows
Reg. 98'
Bag of 25

ONLY •8.00

bility of the owner unless !he one
warrant; responsibility of the

MIDDLEPORT 0.

ASST.
COLORS

HAl KARATE
Gift Collection

76t

• . Y·· ~uol, 108ft.

...

KODAK FILM
REG.

'1.85

77t

'

59~

98~

'1.98

OFF

$298
ONLY

CASHEWS

OftLY

66~

SHOE SHINE
REG.
KITS 1.50 ONLY

s

1

EPCO-SHOESHINE

KIT

Reg .

$2.98

ANGEL
HAIR
Beautiful

Timex Watch

Metal
Band

$199
•

59t

Full Color Holiday

DOOR DECORATION
Weather resistant, 6 It, 4"
fall , 3 11. wide . ReQ . 1.49

Only 88'

:4&amp; C

6 FT. REG. 59'..........

9 FT. REG. 6~' .......... I

·.

12 FT. REG.

79~.........

.

..
.
.:
.

•,

EXTENSION CORDS

.. 56~
. 63~

~ .,

CUBES :;

IJ Roll, l82 ft .

LARGE
SELECTION
OF TOYS AT
DISCOUNT
PRICES

i·
,...·'

....'~··

GARLAND

FlAVOR HOUSE
DRY ROASTED

Men's Cologne,
Aller Sliave, ·

RIBBON

.

~
·.,

TINSEL

MAGNETIC PHOTO

GIFT IDEA!

co nsistin&amp; of the case, rocKer arm ,

CX-126-12

'

ALBUM

' liJ.IEAI WARIINTY
ON TIWISMISSION PillS
Speed Queen washe r lransmtss•ons

606 E. Main St.

;:

'3

99~

"Ready to Serve Your Needs for the Ho'lidays"

Queen dealer

'"0.:

1~

After Shave Lotion

FROM {i) SPEED QUEEN

'••
'•

•,
•'

All PAPER MATE
PENS AND SETS

1nd ••DliCemtlnl ol ltlt lull lit lht

\JW.,.,

19.99

'i)·r'~'· ...;J

~

98~

lkGrJW-Edison c~,., 11 m. tub ltil• " 1 rta.J it ol 1
mnuhctuung d~fe-c 1 . 01 wrll bill rli)l.ced. lllbor cnwgu

.'•'••
,:
..·-.
'•

as~

AND

WllfMII.cl for
Speed Que..,, A Oi'liiKln of

.,

·.

29~

a.... ro lflu'I IUI 111111 wt~ •r tub II

ll'll:unlld rn ltle

9

••'•

:..

REG. 11.40

$}19

x 800" - made by th e
makers of Scotch Tape.

Lint Screen

tne -.ner b¥'

26.95

1

UMBRELLAS

'

$1 8

::·:·:
.::.•

a.....,...----...,
r
.......- - - - '•;.!

MEN'S

I /2 II

SPEED QUEEN
Tilt SptiCI
1M 111. of

REGULAR 19.95

Rocket Tape

REG. 15.00

+ In-A-Door

from

~::., 3.44

BILLFOLDS

+ Stainless Steel

Regular

MACHINE 1366

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

'BULBS

UL APPROVED
15-LITE INDOOR SET

MODE L

for the 70's

.J

.··:,.

ONLY

WASHERS

••

KiNDNESS
CUSTOM CARE"K -"'·"

The Unique Gift

DA
6011

3 LB. ONLY 99e

ONLY

o.

~if.l!t ~
$~~~
JOHNIE·s ::t~JY g
..
t-e.,,'\.•,•,v," ' ·'-'

Rum and Brandy
Flavored

New 21 -curl Hairsetter
'
helps you catch
the ''WOWI-Iook'' now

$1666

QJIION GIN

~~
~

FRUIT CAKE

DOMINION

REG. 122.95

CRUSHED VRV

FOR THE
LADY ON YOUR UST

$299

5 lb.
box

ELLEN

ONLY
I

'

�.. '

.

.. .

•·

~

--..

~

. .. ..

~

1- ·~ O.Oy Sedlnel, Mlddleport-Pmneroy, 0., Dec. 16, 1971

Infirmary Residents Given Program

Children 's Toys Project Accepted
Toys the year-round for
children at Veterans Memorial
Hospital has been taken on as a
spe&lt;:lal project of the Women's
Society of Christian Service of
the Pomeroy United Methodist
Church.
Meeting Tuesday night at the
church, the ladies heard a
letter read from the auxiliary

of the hospital asking toys for
hospitalized children . The
WSCS selected May as its
month for furnishing toys.
A holiday potluck dinner by
the WSCS with members of the
Lydia Circle as guests
preceded the meeting. The
church parlor was extensively
decorated
including
a

for her installation. She named
several of her committees.
Members sang Happy Bir·
thday to those having birthday
anniversaries and get-well
cards will be sent to those who
are ill. Following her farewell
conunents, Mrs. George had
her pages, Mrs. Ruth Erlewine
and Mrs. Pearl Canaday,
deliver gifts to the officers, as
she expressed her appreciation
in verse form .
The birthday box was opened
and netted the chapter $41.75.
Before the closing, Lois and
Paul Pauley, associate matron
and
associate
patron,
presented Mr. and Mrs. George
with a gift. Refreshments were
served by Mrs. Frances Alkire,
Connie Quivey, and Florence
and Thelma Meeks.

SON BORN DEC. 6
CLIFTON - Mr. and Mrs.
Danny Ray Kearns, Clifton,
are announcing the birth of an
CELEBRATION SET
eight pound, one ounce son,
Mr. and Mrs. Challie Greer
Scott Allen, on Dec. 6 at the of Syracuse will celebrate their
Holzer Medical Center. 45th wedding anniversary on
Maternal grandparents are Christmas Day. Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Vergil L. Lewis, Greer have two daughters,
West Colwnbia, and paternal Mrs. James S. Johnson of
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Marietta and Mrs . Clyde
Joseph
Kearns,
West Oonch of Bremen and a son,
Co I u m bus. Great- Lowell Greer, of Pomeroy.
grandmothers are Mrs. Bessie They also have 11 grandFerguson and Mrs. Lola Lewis, children a nd six greatboth of West
---~~~::;:i.,

IDEAL GIFTS FOR ALL
*SLIPPERS
*SHOES
*HANDBAGS
*MEN'S and BOYS' SOCKS
*HOSIERY
INE KITS
c. . . .. . .. . .

.... :

::: ,·• ....... ··:··: ·:

•'

..... '• '•'.

,•

:·

..

'·, •'

.,

'

Shut-ins Will
Be Remembered ··

Party for OES Club Held
The annual Chrislmas party
of the Past Officers Club of the
Racine Chapter, Order of the
Eastern Star, was held at the
home of Mrs. Bert Grinun,
Letart Falls, Friday evening.
Mrs .
Le tha
Morris,
president, conducted the
business meeting with Mrs.
Cora
Webb.
treasurer,
reporting that a check for the
"Gifts for the Yanks Who
Gave" had been sent to the
Racine American Legion Post
602 for the program.
Mrs. Laura Circle presented
the devotions and the program
was given by Mrs. Bernice
Carpenter. Both pertained to
the Christmas season.
Officers elected for 1972 were
Mrs. Morris, president ; Mrs.

RACINE - Members of the
Women's Society of Christian
Service of the Racine
Weslaya n United Methodist
Church met Monday night at
the home of the Rev. and Mrs.
Dale McClurg for a turkey
dinner .
The parsonage was extensively decorated for the
holiday season. The dinner was
served from a table covered
with white lace and centered
with a circle of advent candles.
Grace was given by Mrs.
Lavinia Simpson.
Mrs. Alice Wolfe presented
the program of Christmas with
several members taking part.
Carols were sung and gifts
exchanged around a lighted
tree. 'J'he January meeting
will be held in the church annex. Others attending were

... ....· ,• •' :::,:::::: ...

·:· ;. ,:

:: :;: :

... ... :·.

·• ·. ·• •••·•
,.

• • • FROM GOESSLER'S

~~ :

:: :

•.::

THAT GIVE INmNT

\ Jhe
t Important
P gift

::
·'
' ~,
:'

is

Accutron~
:)

Mrs. Frances Roberts, Mrs.
Libby Wolfe, Mrs. Dorothy
McKenzie, Mrs. Mattie Circle,
Mrs. Alice Wolfe, Mrs. Clara
Mae Sargent, Mrs. Margaret
West and Mrs. Etta Mae Hill.

Racine
Social Events
By Mrs. Francis Morris
Devotions by Mrs. Frances
Wilcoxen opened the meeting
of the Esther Circle at the
home of Mrs. Henry Roush,
Tuesday evening, Dec . 14.
Scriptu re was from Luke .
Readings were given and the
group sang "Silent Night." A
Christmas program followed,
presented by Mrs. Dorothy
Badgley. Readings included
Christmas Bells, Chris tmas
ThEveryhts Day ,
Chris tmas
oug , What Is Christmas,
Christmas. The last verse of
Silent Night and prayer closed
the program. After a business
session, a feUowship hour was
enjoyed and refreshments
were served by Mrs. Roush and
daughter, Mildred, in keeping
with the season and beautiful
decorations.
Recent weekend guests of
Rev. and Mrs . Frank
Cheese brew were her brotherin-law and sister, Mr . and Mrs.
Kenneth West of Columbus.
Mr. Harold Adams left for
Hawaii after a furlou gh and

being married to Miss Garcia
McGraw , who will join him
later. She is finishing her
schooling in the the Gallipolis
Business School.
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Bobb of
· Colwnbus spent Friday afternoon with their aunt, Mrs.
' ' Hazel Carnahan.
Mrs . Rufus Randolph of
Baltimore was a weekend
guest of relatives and friends .
Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Wingett
and Mrs. Ann Coe spent a
. · weekend in Akron with Mr. and
'·· Mrs. John Davis. Mrs . Coe
., ·• remained for the Christmas
holidays.
Frances . Foster and Hazel
Carnahan visited Mrs. Lottie
''' Wilcoxen Sunday at the
, Elmwood Nursing Home.

by Bulova

;.·

.Laura Circle, vice-president ;
Mrs. Webb, secretary; and
Mrs.
Gretta
Simpson ,
treasurer. The annual dinner
was discussed and plans were
made to go to the University
Inn on Feb. 6. The traveling
prize was given by Mrs .
Grimm and won by Mrs. W. 0.
Barnitz.
The Grimm home was attractively decorated for
Christmas and gifts for exchange were placed beneath a
Christmas tree. Refreshments
were served during a social
hour by Mrs. Grinun and Mrs.
Gretta Simpson. Attending
besides those named were Mrs.
Isabel Simpson, W. 0. Barnitz,
Wilson Carpenter, and Bert
Grimm.

Wesleyan ·Meeting Held

__.:_-1

OPEN NIGHTS 'TIL 9 UNTIL CHRISTMAS

Residents of the Meigs favors were given to each
County ' Infirmary were en- resident. Members of the
tertained recently with a society also provided gifts for
program and party by mem- each resident there, Punch and
bers of the Missionary Society cookies were served.
From
of the Pomeroy First Baptist
the
infirmary .
Church.
members went to the Baptist
The program included parsonage where the love gift
"Silent Night," a ~uet by Mrs. was dedicated by Mrs. EUen
Robert Kuhn and Mts. Betty Couch. Miniature Christmas
Will, group singing of the stockings made by Mrs. Albert
traditional carols, and a story, Smith and Mrs. Orval Wiles
"The Christmas Party" by were distributed to the
Mrs. Kuhn. Christmas carol ·members. Money will be put
books, religious books, and into the stockings each month
for a special project.

c

50-Year Pin Awarded
HARRISONVILLE - Mrs.
Ivy Johnson was presented a
00-year membership pin by her
granddaughter, Sharon Barr,
at a meeting of Harrisonville
Chapter, Order of the Eastern
Star, Tuesday night.
Mrs. Johnson was escorted to
the East and presented a gift
by Avanell and Fred George,
worthy matron .and worthy
patron.
In keeping with the Christmas season, miniature. holiday
cards made by Mrs. George
were used as pin-ons. Lois
Pauley, worthy matron elect,
announced that she would like
to have potluck refreshments

PROGRAM PLANNED
Young people ol the
Pomeroy Nazarene Ctiurch
will present their Christmas
Christmas tree and the tables Christmas carols being sung
program Sunday. The Rev.
Christmas
carried out the Christmas and several
motif.
readmgs being presented. A :ilr. Clyde V. Henderson,
pastor, will have a combined
Mrs. Faye Wildermulh skit by Miss Campbell, Mrs.
service
of Sunday school and
presided at the meeting Polly Eichinger, and Mrs.
worship, followed by the
opening with a prayer and a Clara Thomas entitled "Tbe
program, Christmas treats
welcome to the Lydia Circle Christian Lile" appropriate for
to
being
distributed
members. Officers' reports · the Christmas season was
everyone attending. The
were given and filed for audit. given. Prayer by Miss CampThank you note was read from bell and singing of "Joy to the . public Is invited.
concluded
the
the Wehrung family for cookies World "
sent to Harry Wehrung. Gifts program.
Mrs. Virginia Edwards read
were sent to some members
an
article entiUed "Christmas
currently out of town and to
Comes at Oilferent Times of
several who are ill.
Miss Grace CampbeU had the Year". The Lord's Prayer
charge of the program with in unison closed the meeting .

You haven't a minute to
lose. Or gain . Not when you
shop for Accutron, the
watch that gives you tuning
fork time, guaranteed
accurate to within a
minute a month.•
We have a superb selection
of Accutron watches,
styled to suit that special
man on your gift list.
Accutron by Bulova.
From $110.

A Christmas project of
remembering shut-ins was
planned during Tuesday
night's meeting of the Love Joy
Circle, B. H. Sanborn
Missionary Society, Middleport First Baptist Church,
held at the home of Mrs. Allen
Hughes, High St.
Mrs. Dale Walburn presided
at the meeting opening it with a
reading "One Solitary Life".
Mrs. Hughes' devotions included scripture from St. Luke
and a reading entitled "The
Lazy Man 's 23rd Psalm ." The
regular offering was $12.25,
and the love gift offering was
$!2.
Arrangements were made
for the January Sanborn
Society program. Mrs. Paul
Smart gave two readings "A
Christmas Yearning " and "A
Christmas Story". Refreshments were served to those
nam ed and Mrs. Lillian
McGhee, Mrs. Elizabeth
Gardner, Mrs. Dana Hamm,
Mrs. Isabelle Winebrenner
and Mrs. Leora Sigman.
'

Agift of money will be sent to
Miss Nancy DeMott, a
scholarship student. Mrs .
Oliver Michael gave a
Christmas prayer to close the
meeting. Refreshments of
punch and cookies were served
by Debbie Call, Karla, Janelle
and Robin Kuhn to those
named and Mrs. Joe Cook,
Mrs. William Watson, Mrs. L.
P. Sterrett, Mrs. T. T. Shelton,
Mrs. George Skinner, Mrs.
William Barnhart, Mrs. Ivan
Walker, Mrs. Lester Price and
Mrs. Harry Bailey.

AL£
ON

Gauls' daughter, Patricia Gaul
Clay, from Eastern Michigan
University on Sunday.
Speaker for tbe occasion was
William F. Buckley, Jr., a
graduate of Yale University
and former professor there,

-Up Reveals
PHNOM PENH (UPI) -A
anticorruption
aimed at its own allvo~:~!~ army, shows that
se
officers have been
~~~~~: the pay of 15,000
1'1
soldiers," sources
to Deputy Prime Minister
Malak said this week.
•'11le sources said the drive,
started Dec. 6 in the
' 111&lt;1111 "'' • census of all battalion

UITS
PORT COATS

JUST IN TIME
FOR

CHRISTMAs

~~~~~~~~~::
units,withhada
II'
30 battalions,

SUITS AND SPORT COATS
FROM
OUR REGUlAR STOCK
REDUCED .

paper strength of 500 men
each, had to be written off as
"existing on paper only."
'l1le sources said some of the
phantom wtits had up to 100
men, but as such, were combat
ineffecUve.
Tbe officers concerned
were ordering equipment for
nonexlatent soldiers and
selling II, as well as
pockeUng lbe rougbly
per
montb pay lor eacb
"pbantom aoldler" liJied.
Other battalion commanden
are living lbelr troops only a
portlon of lbelr pay and

15%
Come in and select that new
outfit and save money .

•IS

Many fine gift accessories to
complete th e outfit.

FREE GIFT WRAP

OPEN
EVERY
NIGHT
11l
CHRISTMAS

ARTERS

TO MEET MONDAY
The Men's Fellowship of the
Meigs County Churches of
Christ will meet at 7:30 p. m.
Monday at the Pomeroy
Church of Christ.

420 MAIN STREET
POINT PLEASANT

Atte.nded Graduation in Michiga~

kn.m
. •

tom Army

ANTA
AYS

MENS\II.'E\R
~

," \

LOSE UGLY FAT

weigh

Artificial trees , ready for your

you name it, we have

~0,, &amp;n4·S),rr/.i

no

.

SCOTCH PINE
SPRUCE PINE
(Ohio Grown)

your life ... start today .
MONADEX coSis $3.00 lor a 20
day supply. Lose ugly tal or
your mone y will be refun ded
with no questions asked .
MONADEX Is sold with this
guarantee by: Swisher &amp; Lohw
Drugs, 112 E. M.lin , Pomeroy &amp;
Dutton Drug Store, Middleport.
Mail Orders Filled.

SHULER'S
MARKO

w. Main

Pomeroy, O.

••

individual cords .

The National Geogra phic.
Society, founded in 1888
"for the increase and diffusion of geographic knowl·
edge," is the world's largest
non profit scientific and educational institution, The
World Almanac notes. The
society produces the illustrated mont h 1y National
Geogra phic, books, maps,
globes. atlases and televi·
sion programs.
supposed to be 180,000, but the
highest figure possible for the
real P"my is 100,000 and the
comn . nd fears they may find
the figures are as low as
120,000," the sources said.

justice."

B~ACK

&amp;

200-202 EAST MAIN ST.

GOLD
STAR
STORE

1-....Ma~n~y~M;o~r~e~Sp~e~c~ia~ls~T~h~ro:u~g~ho:u~I~T~he~s:ta~r~e--.!======================:!J

Model

...

Assoi bnent

3/8" DRIU. - - -19.99

C8180 UWA Knoll wood

:'
:

•,

,.

··:

· ·:

I ) St•lnltn 1teet. Sll.,er markers. Blue dial. $US .
I) Gilt end tll1cll t1r1e1 dia l. Gilt edaed str1p . SUS.
C) SltlniiU ltltl. Depth·IUttd to G66 lett . $115 .
D) l•K lOUd IOid. Ctltndtr. Torloin·tont dit !. UID.

'·
:· ,
~ ,'
,_,

El Two tlm1 111n1 witch, Sltln itu Jtttl. $175.
f ) Gllt dilL 101&lt; JOid fllltd bllkltwuvt band. Ill$ .
II All SltiJ'IIItl Jtttl . 81tck tnd whitt ttrttl dilL $tiS,

Goessler' s Jewelry Store
Court St.
LW• will adjust to this tole ra nce . 11 noch:ury.

'fui~!&lt;®~~''''~·•M·I: t-: :c•~:; , .~.,
:&lt;:&lt;:

,,,,.,,

,.

Pomeroy
Gu~'ra

,

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il lor one rea r.

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&lt;·•'&lt;;":&gt;%
• .::m. ''"
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II' s a l~eling ... ii' s a fragrance ...
i!'s_lhe perfect gik ,

Helena. Rubinsteinr1
Heaven Sent

AmbM~

Costume
Jewelry
1.00

,VI ~· 1-.art in a holiday l'r\OO(j
wjltllflll hea-ly f~&lt;CIIICt
thol Clil191 ,.. ~ S.111 by
Ht...0 R..b!nlhlill In d81ighifyl

SPRAY
COLOGNE

_.., lo pul.,.,. her ••••·

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Mist, Perfume and Bath

Oil, Eau de Parium. ·
ss.oo.
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and

Jewelry
Boxes

3

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Powder

Sel, 56.00.

All The Famous Brands
Kiku
Tussy
Aphrodisia
Dana's Tabu
Chanel No . s
Ambush
Helena Rubinstein
20 Carats
Max Factor
Faberge
Hyponotique
Woodhue
Primit~ve, Prom ise
Tigress
Xanadu
Skinny Dip Cologne
Tinker Bell for the young Miss.

Ambush ... Dana's fabulous fragrance •••
bright, fresh and young in a sleek, sophisticated
spray bottle. A gift she'll want to get, a gift

$400

you'll want to give .

HIM

Beauty

Gifts

English
Leather
Toi lelri es,
Faberge,
Brut,
Aphrodisia,
Woodhue .

For HER

-~.:

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7

·.:~

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Dana , Canoe Toiletries,
Old
Spice,
Mennen,
Aqua
Velva,
Max
Factor, Tro 'l ie, Black
Bell and tl d l(•r~te.

Christmas
Cards

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box
and up

19.99

SANDER ASSORtMENT
No. 7516

19.99

KIT

All New Models

JUSTIN LEAlHER GOODS
Mens Billfolds
Ladies Billfolds

ALL UL APPROVED

Smoking

3.95 up
3.95 up

Gifts
Pipes by Kay Woodie, Yellow Bowl ,
and Dr. Grabow. Tobacco Pouches,
Lighters ,
Pipe
Racks
and
Humidifiers .

See Our Justin Purses
For Her. A Fine Gift
Trifold and Two Fold
Billfolds, $10.00

'eels •Shotguns• Rifles • Equipment
.___.•
REMINGTON • WINCHESTER - HARRISON &amp; RICHARDSON ·
ITHACA . M~SBURG · BROWNING - GUN OIL · CLEANING PADS ·
GAME BAGS - SHELL VESTS- GUN. CASES · HUNTING CLOTH~
(INCLUDING INSULATED) - RIFLE SLUG STRAPS· LANTERNS · ·
cANADIAN HEATERS - KNIVES • COMPASSES · FLASHLIGHTS AMMUNITION - AXES • FISHING POLES AND FISHING EQUIP·

PERFECI' GIFT

BIBLES

1.59up

TIMEX WATatES
Shockproof
Water Proof
6.95 up
Electric
Timex Watches
25.00 up
Clocks by Weslclox
Windup and Electric

For that extra gift a box of
Stationery for Him or Her. Also
Paper Mate Pens.
·· ..

Large Assortment

MENT.

:::

_,

. _....--·.

7%" SAW
•29.95

No. 7412 Dustless

"A Complete Home Entertainment Center"

The Almanac
By United Press International
Today is Thursday, Dec. 15,
the 350th day of 1971.
The moon Is between its last
quarter and new phase.
The morning stars
Mercury and Jupiter.
Tbe evening stars are Venus,
Mars and Saturn.
Those born on this day m
under the sign of Sagittarius.
Composer-actor Noel C&lt;ivranl
was born Dec. 16, 1899.
On this day in history :
In 1773 the Boston Tea Party
took place. American rebeis
dressed as Indians boarded a
British vessel in Boston Harbor
and threw 342 chests of tea
overboard in a protest against
taxation.
In 1835 property loss was
placed at $20 million dollars
after a fire broke out in New
York City. The blaze got out of
control and firemen h~d to be
CAlled all the way from
Philadelphia.

__-.

Christmas Special
'20000 oH ·

HI-BRITE 25" COLOR TV

Take her
completely by
surprise -with

FOR HER!

No. 7305

No. 7116

JIG

PHILCO (RJ

"

American Greetings
Loose Cards
For The Family

BE N'FRANKUN•
OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 9:00
"A GOLD STAR STORE "

,,

All New

1.00

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POMEROY, OHIO

1;1~iHI

Numerous Styles!

MAKE POMEROY YOUR SHOPPING CENTER

PHONE
992 · 3498

I,

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As You Make Payments At Your Convience

SPECIALS
Reg.Sl.OOJumboColaringBooks
66c
Reg. 14 ·66 Monopoly Game
$4.33
Reg.l2.77 Mahbu Barbie Doll
11.97
0150
RReg.
suo Box
Assorted Christmas Cards-Sl9lS
e&lt;J. 113.99 6112 Foot Scotch Pine Tree
1 99
Reg. 98c Hal Wheels, la~e
se lection
l7c ea'ch
.,
Reg. $3·66 Spirograph
12.97

OPEN EVENINGS

rJJilJr. •,

,

Use Our Convenient Lay-A.way Plan .
A Small Deposit Will Hold Your Selection

Shipment of Live Parakeets Just Arrived.

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Alwys Buy
the bat ...

100's Of Ideas For Home and Family

Ill

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assortments and

SHOP EARLY

known nationally as a syndicated columnist and a
television personality. He is the
brother of New York's conservative U.S. Senator John
Buckley.
Mrs . Clay received her
bachelor of science degree in
elementary education during
the graduation held at the
Bowen Field House .
Following the ceremony, Mr.
and Mrs. Victor Gaul, brother
and sister-in-law of Mrs. Clay,
were hosts at a party in their
home at Garden City honoring
the graduate. Attending
besides those named above
were Mrs. Clay's husband,
Larry, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Clay and children, Shiels and
Monaca; Mr. and Mrs. David
Teeter and children, Herbie
and Roy Clay, and Pat Boring
of Dearborn Heights.

A thought for today : American writer H~nry Louis Mencken said, "Injustice is relatively
easy to bear; what stings is

c;rtJ /lrr
&amp;dlj Cit 7iJit,wJl

it at thrifty low
prices.

. .

Co nta ins

make you nervous.
No
strenuous exercise. Change

WIDE, WIDE SELECTIONS NOW ON DISPLAy
CHRISTMAS
WRAPPING
Gilt box.., laney pa·
pers, tags, seals .•

less.

CHRISTMAS
TREES

dangerous drugs and will not

"The Store Of Thousands Of Gifts"
lights lor indoor s ond outdoors.

I ' •,· • "

c

today
llny · - - - - - - - - - ·
tablet. MONADEX
and easy isto a take.
MONA DEX will help curb your
desire to e•cess lood. Ealless .

OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 9:00 PM

AII kinds in a wide selection,

pocketing the resl, sources
said.
The campaign comes at a
time when the Cambodian
army, hard pressed by the allout North Vietnamese offensives around Phnom Penh
on Northern Highway 6, can illafford to spend time on
bookkeeping
But it was those offensives
that exposed the extent of
corruption to a point where it
no longer could ge ignored.
At the outset of the offensive
around the Cambodian capital,
the high command called up
units from outlying provinces
-only to find they were calling
up "a paper army."
When the tattered remains of
a brigade routed from Highway 6 fowtd its way hack to
Phnom Penh through rice
paddies and forests in ones and
twos, it turned out they had not
been paid for three months.
The brigade, commended by
Lt. COl. lth Suong, had held
firmly In place until the retreat
was ordered. Once in Phnom
Penh, the heroes of Highway 6,
wandered up to passers-by and
asked for the price of a meal.
"The army on paper is

S WI ~HER ·LOHSE

You can slart losing weight

r------------------......
CHRISTMAS DECORATIOHS-

..

The TJa0y$entlnel, Midtneport-PouiEtoy, 0., Dec. 16,1971

SOFT TOYS
GAMES

.;::

View Masters ,
:·: :

er.aum
-

er...

$1.95

G~EATt=OR ~
CHRISti\•AS l

Sott Toys """ the
,•lttle ones. U1'91

• EJecbic Inn GMNG
• OU.Itllms

small
e•m•s, etc.

as~rlmenl

Extra Reels • 1.50

toys~

-GIFT CANDY • ••
Russell Stover &amp; Whitman's.

FOR MEN!
.
. . Equipped For 8 Track Tape Deck
Color TV wbh Solid State \Stereo Phono and FM 1AM Radio
A comp let e hom e entertainment center in one

handsome ca binet. Stereo phono and radio
operate Independen tly of Color TV . With op-

FOR~MAN

t iona! second r o~m ex tension speakers Stereo
phono .can be enJ.9Yed in a second room at the
same time ColorA\' is being enjoyed in another .

&amp; ABBOTT

MIDDLEPORT,

0.

DOMIN
Starting Friday
(Tomorrow) DEC. 17

OPEN
EVENINGS

.

EIERSIACH
HARDWARE

Jewelry
Cases

Low drug prices on all our drugs
and prescriptions. 7 Days a week .
Four Friendly Pharmacists and
Clerks to serve you.

Open daily 8 a .m . to .JO p.m.
Sunday 10 :30 a.m. to 12 :30 p.m.
and 5:00 p.m. and to 9 p.m.

.,

6.75 up

"Everything In Hllrdware"
On Main St. In Pomeroy

'

I

'

••

·.

I,

�.. '

.

.. .

•·

~

--..

~

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~

1- ·~ O.Oy Sedlnel, Mlddleport-Pmneroy, 0., Dec. 16, 1971

Infirmary Residents Given Program

Children 's Toys Project Accepted
Toys the year-round for
children at Veterans Memorial
Hospital has been taken on as a
spe&lt;:lal project of the Women's
Society of Christian Service of
the Pomeroy United Methodist
Church.
Meeting Tuesday night at the
church, the ladies heard a
letter read from the auxiliary

of the hospital asking toys for
hospitalized children . The
WSCS selected May as its
month for furnishing toys.
A holiday potluck dinner by
the WSCS with members of the
Lydia Circle as guests
preceded the meeting. The
church parlor was extensively
decorated
including
a

for her installation. She named
several of her committees.
Members sang Happy Bir·
thday to those having birthday
anniversaries and get-well
cards will be sent to those who
are ill. Following her farewell
conunents, Mrs. George had
her pages, Mrs. Ruth Erlewine
and Mrs. Pearl Canaday,
deliver gifts to the officers, as
she expressed her appreciation
in verse form .
The birthday box was opened
and netted the chapter $41.75.
Before the closing, Lois and
Paul Pauley, associate matron
and
associate
patron,
presented Mr. and Mrs. George
with a gift. Refreshments were
served by Mrs. Frances Alkire,
Connie Quivey, and Florence
and Thelma Meeks.

SON BORN DEC. 6
CLIFTON - Mr. and Mrs.
Danny Ray Kearns, Clifton,
are announcing the birth of an
CELEBRATION SET
eight pound, one ounce son,
Mr. and Mrs. Challie Greer
Scott Allen, on Dec. 6 at the of Syracuse will celebrate their
Holzer Medical Center. 45th wedding anniversary on
Maternal grandparents are Christmas Day. Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Vergil L. Lewis, Greer have two daughters,
West Colwnbia, and paternal Mrs. James S. Johnson of
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Marietta and Mrs . Clyde
Joseph
Kearns,
West Oonch of Bremen and a son,
Co I u m bus. Great- Lowell Greer, of Pomeroy.
grandmothers are Mrs. Bessie They also have 11 grandFerguson and Mrs. Lola Lewis, children a nd six greatboth of West
---~~~::;:i.,

IDEAL GIFTS FOR ALL
*SLIPPERS
*SHOES
*HANDBAGS
*MEN'S and BOYS' SOCKS
*HOSIERY
INE KITS
c. . . .. . .. . .

.... :

::: ,·• ....... ··:··: ·:

•'

..... '• '•'.

,•

:·

..

'·, •'

.,

'

Shut-ins Will
Be Remembered ··

Party for OES Club Held
The annual Chrislmas party
of the Past Officers Club of the
Racine Chapter, Order of the
Eastern Star, was held at the
home of Mrs. Bert Grinun,
Letart Falls, Friday evening.
Mrs .
Le tha
Morris,
president, conducted the
business meeting with Mrs.
Cora
Webb.
treasurer,
reporting that a check for the
"Gifts for the Yanks Who
Gave" had been sent to the
Racine American Legion Post
602 for the program.
Mrs. Laura Circle presented
the devotions and the program
was given by Mrs. Bernice
Carpenter. Both pertained to
the Christmas season.
Officers elected for 1972 were
Mrs. Morris, president ; Mrs.

RACINE - Members of the
Women's Society of Christian
Service of the Racine
Weslaya n United Methodist
Church met Monday night at
the home of the Rev. and Mrs.
Dale McClurg for a turkey
dinner .
The parsonage was extensively decorated for the
holiday season. The dinner was
served from a table covered
with white lace and centered
with a circle of advent candles.
Grace was given by Mrs.
Lavinia Simpson.
Mrs. Alice Wolfe presented
the program of Christmas with
several members taking part.
Carols were sung and gifts
exchanged around a lighted
tree. 'J'he January meeting
will be held in the church annex. Others attending were

... ....· ,• •' :::,:::::: ...

·:· ;. ,:

:: :;: :

... ... :·.

·• ·. ·• •••·•
,.

• • • FROM GOESSLER'S

~~ :

:: :

•.::

THAT GIVE INmNT

\ Jhe
t Important
P gift

::
·'
' ~,
:'

is

Accutron~
:)

Mrs. Frances Roberts, Mrs.
Libby Wolfe, Mrs. Dorothy
McKenzie, Mrs. Mattie Circle,
Mrs. Alice Wolfe, Mrs. Clara
Mae Sargent, Mrs. Margaret
West and Mrs. Etta Mae Hill.

Racine
Social Events
By Mrs. Francis Morris
Devotions by Mrs. Frances
Wilcoxen opened the meeting
of the Esther Circle at the
home of Mrs. Henry Roush,
Tuesday evening, Dec . 14.
Scriptu re was from Luke .
Readings were given and the
group sang "Silent Night." A
Christmas program followed,
presented by Mrs. Dorothy
Badgley. Readings included
Christmas Bells, Chris tmas
ThEveryhts Day ,
Chris tmas
oug , What Is Christmas,
Christmas. The last verse of
Silent Night and prayer closed
the program. After a business
session, a feUowship hour was
enjoyed and refreshments
were served by Mrs. Roush and
daughter, Mildred, in keeping
with the season and beautiful
decorations.
Recent weekend guests of
Rev. and Mrs . Frank
Cheese brew were her brotherin-law and sister, Mr . and Mrs.
Kenneth West of Columbus.
Mr. Harold Adams left for
Hawaii after a furlou gh and

being married to Miss Garcia
McGraw , who will join him
later. She is finishing her
schooling in the the Gallipolis
Business School.
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Bobb of
· Colwnbus spent Friday afternoon with their aunt, Mrs.
' ' Hazel Carnahan.
Mrs . Rufus Randolph of
Baltimore was a weekend
guest of relatives and friends .
Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Wingett
and Mrs. Ann Coe spent a
. · weekend in Akron with Mr. and
'·· Mrs. John Davis. Mrs . Coe
., ·• remained for the Christmas
holidays.
Frances . Foster and Hazel
Carnahan visited Mrs. Lottie
''' Wilcoxen Sunday at the
, Elmwood Nursing Home.

by Bulova

;.·

.Laura Circle, vice-president ;
Mrs. Webb, secretary; and
Mrs.
Gretta
Simpson ,
treasurer. The annual dinner
was discussed and plans were
made to go to the University
Inn on Feb. 6. The traveling
prize was given by Mrs .
Grimm and won by Mrs. W. 0.
Barnitz.
The Grimm home was attractively decorated for
Christmas and gifts for exchange were placed beneath a
Christmas tree. Refreshments
were served during a social
hour by Mrs. Grinun and Mrs.
Gretta Simpson. Attending
besides those named were Mrs.
Isabel Simpson, W. 0. Barnitz,
Wilson Carpenter, and Bert
Grimm.

Wesleyan ·Meeting Held

__.:_-1

OPEN NIGHTS 'TIL 9 UNTIL CHRISTMAS

Residents of the Meigs favors were given to each
County ' Infirmary were en- resident. Members of the
tertained recently with a society also provided gifts for
program and party by mem- each resident there, Punch and
bers of the Missionary Society cookies were served.
From
of the Pomeroy First Baptist
the
infirmary .
Church.
members went to the Baptist
The program included parsonage where the love gift
"Silent Night," a ~uet by Mrs. was dedicated by Mrs. EUen
Robert Kuhn and Mts. Betty Couch. Miniature Christmas
Will, group singing of the stockings made by Mrs. Albert
traditional carols, and a story, Smith and Mrs. Orval Wiles
"The Christmas Party" by were distributed to the
Mrs. Kuhn. Christmas carol ·members. Money will be put
books, religious books, and into the stockings each month
for a special project.

c

50-Year Pin Awarded
HARRISONVILLE - Mrs.
Ivy Johnson was presented a
00-year membership pin by her
granddaughter, Sharon Barr,
at a meeting of Harrisonville
Chapter, Order of the Eastern
Star, Tuesday night.
Mrs. Johnson was escorted to
the East and presented a gift
by Avanell and Fred George,
worthy matron .and worthy
patron.
In keeping with the Christmas season, miniature. holiday
cards made by Mrs. George
were used as pin-ons. Lois
Pauley, worthy matron elect,
announced that she would like
to have potluck refreshments

PROGRAM PLANNED
Young people ol the
Pomeroy Nazarene Ctiurch
will present their Christmas
Christmas tree and the tables Christmas carols being sung
program Sunday. The Rev.
Christmas
carried out the Christmas and several
motif.
readmgs being presented. A :ilr. Clyde V. Henderson,
pastor, will have a combined
Mrs. Faye Wildermulh skit by Miss Campbell, Mrs.
service
of Sunday school and
presided at the meeting Polly Eichinger, and Mrs.
worship, followed by the
opening with a prayer and a Clara Thomas entitled "Tbe
program, Christmas treats
welcome to the Lydia Circle Christian Lile" appropriate for
to
being
distributed
members. Officers' reports · the Christmas season was
everyone attending. The
were given and filed for audit. given. Prayer by Miss CampThank you note was read from bell and singing of "Joy to the . public Is invited.
concluded
the
the Wehrung family for cookies World "
sent to Harry Wehrung. Gifts program.
Mrs. Virginia Edwards read
were sent to some members
an
article entiUed "Christmas
currently out of town and to
Comes at Oilferent Times of
several who are ill.
Miss Grace CampbeU had the Year". The Lord's Prayer
charge of the program with in unison closed the meeting .

You haven't a minute to
lose. Or gain . Not when you
shop for Accutron, the
watch that gives you tuning
fork time, guaranteed
accurate to within a
minute a month.•
We have a superb selection
of Accutron watches,
styled to suit that special
man on your gift list.
Accutron by Bulova.
From $110.

A Christmas project of
remembering shut-ins was
planned during Tuesday
night's meeting of the Love Joy
Circle, B. H. Sanborn
Missionary Society, Middleport First Baptist Church,
held at the home of Mrs. Allen
Hughes, High St.
Mrs. Dale Walburn presided
at the meeting opening it with a
reading "One Solitary Life".
Mrs. Hughes' devotions included scripture from St. Luke
and a reading entitled "The
Lazy Man 's 23rd Psalm ." The
regular offering was $12.25,
and the love gift offering was
$!2.
Arrangements were made
for the January Sanborn
Society program. Mrs. Paul
Smart gave two readings "A
Christmas Yearning " and "A
Christmas Story". Refreshments were served to those
nam ed and Mrs. Lillian
McGhee, Mrs. Elizabeth
Gardner, Mrs. Dana Hamm,
Mrs. Isabelle Winebrenner
and Mrs. Leora Sigman.
'

Agift of money will be sent to
Miss Nancy DeMott, a
scholarship student. Mrs .
Oliver Michael gave a
Christmas prayer to close the
meeting. Refreshments of
punch and cookies were served
by Debbie Call, Karla, Janelle
and Robin Kuhn to those
named and Mrs. Joe Cook,
Mrs. William Watson, Mrs. L.
P. Sterrett, Mrs. T. T. Shelton,
Mrs. George Skinner, Mrs.
William Barnhart, Mrs. Ivan
Walker, Mrs. Lester Price and
Mrs. Harry Bailey.

AL£
ON

Gauls' daughter, Patricia Gaul
Clay, from Eastern Michigan
University on Sunday.
Speaker for tbe occasion was
William F. Buckley, Jr., a
graduate of Yale University
and former professor there,

-Up Reveals
PHNOM PENH (UPI) -A
anticorruption
aimed at its own allvo~:~!~ army, shows that
se
officers have been
~~~~~: the pay of 15,000
1'1
soldiers," sources
to Deputy Prime Minister
Malak said this week.
•'11le sources said the drive,
started Dec. 6 in the
' 111&lt;1111 "'' • census of all battalion

UITS
PORT COATS

JUST IN TIME
FOR

CHRISTMAs

~~~~~~~~~::
units,withhada
II'
30 battalions,

SUITS AND SPORT COATS
FROM
OUR REGUlAR STOCK
REDUCED .

paper strength of 500 men
each, had to be written off as
"existing on paper only."
'l1le sources said some of the
phantom wtits had up to 100
men, but as such, were combat
ineffecUve.
Tbe officers concerned
were ordering equipment for
nonexlatent soldiers and
selling II, as well as
pockeUng lbe rougbly
per
montb pay lor eacb
"pbantom aoldler" liJied.
Other battalion commanden
are living lbelr troops only a
portlon of lbelr pay and

15%
Come in and select that new
outfit and save money .

•IS

Many fine gift accessories to
complete th e outfit.

FREE GIFT WRAP

OPEN
EVERY
NIGHT
11l
CHRISTMAS

ARTERS

TO MEET MONDAY
The Men's Fellowship of the
Meigs County Churches of
Christ will meet at 7:30 p. m.
Monday at the Pomeroy
Church of Christ.

420 MAIN STREET
POINT PLEASANT

Atte.nded Graduation in Michiga~

kn.m
. •

tom Army

ANTA
AYS

MENS\II.'E\R
~

," \

LOSE UGLY FAT

weigh

Artificial trees , ready for your

you name it, we have

~0,, &amp;n4·S),rr/.i

no

.

SCOTCH PINE
SPRUCE PINE
(Ohio Grown)

your life ... start today .
MONADEX coSis $3.00 lor a 20
day supply. Lose ugly tal or
your mone y will be refun ded
with no questions asked .
MONADEX Is sold with this
guarantee by: Swisher &amp; Lohw
Drugs, 112 E. M.lin , Pomeroy &amp;
Dutton Drug Store, Middleport.
Mail Orders Filled.

SHULER'S
MARKO

w. Main

Pomeroy, O.

••

individual cords .

The National Geogra phic.
Society, founded in 1888
"for the increase and diffusion of geographic knowl·
edge," is the world's largest
non profit scientific and educational institution, The
World Almanac notes. The
society produces the illustrated mont h 1y National
Geogra phic, books, maps,
globes. atlases and televi·
sion programs.
supposed to be 180,000, but the
highest figure possible for the
real P"my is 100,000 and the
comn . nd fears they may find
the figures are as low as
120,000," the sources said.

justice."

B~ACK

&amp;

200-202 EAST MAIN ST.

GOLD
STAR
STORE

1-....Ma~n~y~M;o~r~e~Sp~e~c~ia~ls~T~h~ro:u~g~ho:u~I~T~he~s:ta~r~e--.!======================:!J

Model

...

Assoi bnent

3/8" DRIU. - - -19.99

C8180 UWA Knoll wood

:'
:

•,

,.

··:

· ·:

I ) St•lnltn 1teet. Sll.,er markers. Blue dial. $US .
I) Gilt end tll1cll t1r1e1 dia l. Gilt edaed str1p . SUS.
C) SltlniiU ltltl. Depth·IUttd to G66 lett . $115 .
D) l•K lOUd IOid. Ctltndtr. Torloin·tont dit !. UID.

'·
:· ,
~ ,'
,_,

El Two tlm1 111n1 witch, Sltln itu Jtttl. $175.
f ) Gllt dilL 101&lt; JOid fllltd bllkltwuvt band. Ill$ .
II All SltiJ'IIItl Jtttl . 81tck tnd whitt ttrttl dilL $tiS,

Goessler' s Jewelry Store
Court St.
LW• will adjust to this tole ra nce . 11 noch:ury.

'fui~!&lt;®~~''''~·•M·I: t-: :c•~:; , .~.,
:&lt;:&lt;:

,,,,.,,

,.

Pomeroy
Gu~'ra

,

:·.

·• ·

il lor one rea r.

· ::

:d·l·•'

&lt;·•'&lt;;":&gt;%
• .::m. ''"
•·:,,;. : : ••' '""'' •'·• : , , • , . .• ' ""'' &lt;.'' ''.::,,:I:''''''' ::::""':i:':: ' '"' : : ::': m':'i' :,.,••,:,;.:'""'·'.i'::·:::·:,:;:,!:::::::&lt;:::::'i·: : , , ,,;:: ',,,.·' ::::{' •' ' ·'"' ' ·'·' ' "··•·"''·N.':

II' s a l~eling ... ii' s a fragrance ...
i!'s_lhe perfect gik ,

Helena. Rubinsteinr1
Heaven Sent

AmbM~

Costume
Jewelry
1.00

,VI ~· 1-.art in a holiday l'r\OO(j
wjltllflll hea-ly f~&lt;CIIICt
thol Clil191 ,.. ~ S.111 by
Ht...0 R..b!nlhlill In d81ighifyl

SPRAY
COLOGNE

_.., lo pul.,.,. her ••••·

Mini .Set Trio : Spray

Mist, Perfume and Bath

Oil, Eau de Parium. ·
ss.oo.
Eau de Parfum Misl

and

Jewelry
Boxes

3

95up

Du st i ng

Powder

Sel, 56.00.

All The Famous Brands
Kiku
Tussy
Aphrodisia
Dana's Tabu
Chanel No . s
Ambush
Helena Rubinstein
20 Carats
Max Factor
Faberge
Hyponotique
Woodhue
Primit~ve, Prom ise
Tigress
Xanadu
Skinny Dip Cologne
Tinker Bell for the young Miss.

Ambush ... Dana's fabulous fragrance •••
bright, fresh and young in a sleek, sophisticated
spray bottle. A gift she'll want to get, a gift

$400

you'll want to give .

HIM

Beauty

Gifts

English
Leather
Toi lelri es,
Faberge,
Brut,
Aphrodisia,
Woodhue .

For HER

-~.:

. ...

7

·.:~

~

Dana , Canoe Toiletries,
Old
Spice,
Mennen,
Aqua
Velva,
Max
Factor, Tro 'l ie, Black
Bell and tl d l(•r~te.

Christmas
Cards

·. :::

::::

.... :-: ·..:::::.:: :: :::.: :: :•,::

" •': ;.

•"

. ... ;: ::

:

.;

:

·.·

.;

:: .; :: ::::: :·

: .:

.

box
and up

19.99

SANDER ASSORtMENT
No. 7516

19.99

KIT

All New Models

JUSTIN LEAlHER GOODS
Mens Billfolds
Ladies Billfolds

ALL UL APPROVED

Smoking

3.95 up
3.95 up

Gifts
Pipes by Kay Woodie, Yellow Bowl ,
and Dr. Grabow. Tobacco Pouches,
Lighters ,
Pipe
Racks
and
Humidifiers .

See Our Justin Purses
For Her. A Fine Gift
Trifold and Two Fold
Billfolds, $10.00

'eels •Shotguns• Rifles • Equipment
.___.•
REMINGTON • WINCHESTER - HARRISON &amp; RICHARDSON ·
ITHACA . M~SBURG · BROWNING - GUN OIL · CLEANING PADS ·
GAME BAGS - SHELL VESTS- GUN. CASES · HUNTING CLOTH~
(INCLUDING INSULATED) - RIFLE SLUG STRAPS· LANTERNS · ·
cANADIAN HEATERS - KNIVES • COMPASSES · FLASHLIGHTS AMMUNITION - AXES • FISHING POLES AND FISHING EQUIP·

PERFECI' GIFT

BIBLES

1.59up

TIMEX WATatES
Shockproof
Water Proof
6.95 up
Electric
Timex Watches
25.00 up
Clocks by Weslclox
Windup and Electric

For that extra gift a box of
Stationery for Him or Her. Also
Paper Mate Pens.
·· ..

Large Assortment

MENT.

:::

_,

. _....--·.

7%" SAW
•29.95

No. 7412 Dustless

"A Complete Home Entertainment Center"

The Almanac
By United Press International
Today is Thursday, Dec. 15,
the 350th day of 1971.
The moon Is between its last
quarter and new phase.
The morning stars
Mercury and Jupiter.
Tbe evening stars are Venus,
Mars and Saturn.
Those born on this day m
under the sign of Sagittarius.
Composer-actor Noel C&lt;ivranl
was born Dec. 16, 1899.
On this day in history :
In 1773 the Boston Tea Party
took place. American rebeis
dressed as Indians boarded a
British vessel in Boston Harbor
and threw 342 chests of tea
overboard in a protest against
taxation.
In 1835 property loss was
placed at $20 million dollars
after a fire broke out in New
York City. The blaze got out of
control and firemen h~d to be
CAlled all the way from
Philadelphia.

__-.

Christmas Special
'20000 oH ·

HI-BRITE 25" COLOR TV

Take her
completely by
surprise -with

FOR HER!

No. 7305

No. 7116

JIG

PHILCO (RJ

"

American Greetings
Loose Cards
For The Family

BE N'FRANKUN•
OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 9:00
"A GOLD STAR STORE "

,,

All New

1.00

...... ·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·: .·.·.·.·.···.·:·:·:·:-:·.·=·&gt;:·:·.·:·.·.·:·.······ •• •

POMEROY, OHIO

1;1~iHI

Numerous Styles!

MAKE POMEROY YOUR SHOPPING CENTER

PHONE
992 · 3498

I,

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

As You Make Payments At Your Convience

SPECIALS
Reg.Sl.OOJumboColaringBooks
66c
Reg. 14 ·66 Monopoly Game
$4.33
Reg.l2.77 Mahbu Barbie Doll
11.97
0150
RReg.
suo Box
Assorted Christmas Cards-Sl9lS
e&lt;J. 113.99 6112 Foot Scotch Pine Tree
1 99
Reg. 98c Hal Wheels, la~e
se lection
l7c ea'ch
.,
Reg. $3·66 Spirograph
12.97

OPEN EVENINGS

rJJilJr. •,

,

Use Our Convenient Lay-A.way Plan .
A Small Deposit Will Hold Your Selection

Shipment of Live Parakeets Just Arrived.

·--

Alwys Buy
the bat ...

100's Of Ideas For Home and Family

Ill

I

and up

........... • .:Ad~v.t:::!;::==-......- -

assortments and

SHOP EARLY

known nationally as a syndicated columnist and a
television personality. He is the
brother of New York's conservative U.S. Senator John
Buckley.
Mrs . Clay received her
bachelor of science degree in
elementary education during
the graduation held at the
Bowen Field House .
Following the ceremony, Mr.
and Mrs. Victor Gaul, brother
and sister-in-law of Mrs. Clay,
were hosts at a party in their
home at Garden City honoring
the graduate. Attending
besides those named above
were Mrs. Clay's husband,
Larry, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Clay and children, Shiels and
Monaca; Mr. and Mrs. David
Teeter and children, Herbie
and Roy Clay, and Pat Boring
of Dearborn Heights.

A thought for today : American writer H~nry Louis Mencken said, "Injustice is relatively
easy to bear; what stings is

c;rtJ /lrr
&amp;dlj Cit 7iJit,wJl

it at thrifty low
prices.

. .

Co nta ins

make you nervous.
No
strenuous exercise. Change

WIDE, WIDE SELECTIONS NOW ON DISPLAy
CHRISTMAS
WRAPPING
Gilt box.., laney pa·
pers, tags, seals .•

less.

CHRISTMAS
TREES

dangerous drugs and will not

"The Store Of Thousands Of Gifts"
lights lor indoor s ond outdoors.

I ' •,· • "

c

today
llny · - - - - - - - - - ·
tablet. MONADEX
and easy isto a take.
MONA DEX will help curb your
desire to e•cess lood. Ealless .

OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 9:00 PM

AII kinds in a wide selection,

pocketing the resl, sources
said.
The campaign comes at a
time when the Cambodian
army, hard pressed by the allout North Vietnamese offensives around Phnom Penh
on Northern Highway 6, can illafford to spend time on
bookkeeping
But it was those offensives
that exposed the extent of
corruption to a point where it
no longer could ge ignored.
At the outset of the offensive
around the Cambodian capital,
the high command called up
units from outlying provinces
-only to find they were calling
up "a paper army."
When the tattered remains of
a brigade routed from Highway 6 fowtd its way hack to
Phnom Penh through rice
paddies and forests in ones and
twos, it turned out they had not
been paid for three months.
The brigade, commended by
Lt. COl. lth Suong, had held
firmly In place until the retreat
was ordered. Once in Phnom
Penh, the heroes of Highway 6,
wandered up to passers-by and
asked for the price of a meal.
"The army on paper is

S WI ~HER ·LOHSE

You can slart losing weight

r------------------......
CHRISTMAS DECORATIOHS-

..

The TJa0y$entlnel, Midtneport-PouiEtoy, 0., Dec. 16,1971

SOFT TOYS
GAMES

.;::

View Masters ,
:·: :

er.aum
-

er...

$1.95

G~EATt=OR ~
CHRISti\•AS l

Sott Toys """ the
,•lttle ones. U1'91

• EJecbic Inn GMNG
• OU.Itllms

small
e•m•s, etc.

as~rlmenl

Extra Reels • 1.50

toys~

-GIFT CANDY • ••
Russell Stover &amp; Whitman's.

FOR MEN!
.
. . Equipped For 8 Track Tape Deck
Color TV wbh Solid State \Stereo Phono and FM 1AM Radio
A comp let e hom e entertainment center in one

handsome ca binet. Stereo phono and radio
operate Independen tly of Color TV . With op-

FOR~MAN

t iona! second r o~m ex tension speakers Stereo
phono .can be enJ.9Yed in a second room at the
same time ColorA\' is being enjoyed in another .

&amp; ABBOTT

MIDDLEPORT,

0.

DOMIN
Starting Friday
(Tomorrow) DEC. 17

OPEN
EVENINGS

.

EIERSIACH
HARDWARE

Jewelry
Cases

Low drug prices on all our drugs
and prescriptions. 7 Days a week .
Four Friendly Pharmacists and
Clerks to serve you.

Open daily 8 a .m . to .JO p.m.
Sunday 10 :30 a.m. to 12 :30 p.m.
and 5:00 p.m. and to 9 p.m.

.,

6.75 up

"Everything In Hllrdware"
On Main St. In Pomeroy

'

I

'

••

·.

I,

�..

10-TIIe Dilly Sentinel, Mklllfpart-Pumey,O., Det. ll,ll'll

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! SentinelClassifieds Get Results!
N 1.

.

For Rent

WANT 'AD
0 ICe
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
REDUCE safe ·and fast with
S P.M. Day Before Publication
Gobese tablets and E-VapJt!Q['Iday Deadline 9 a .m .

~ JangH4tlon _&amp;Corr~JQ11!

tor

more than one incorrect·

·Insertion .

11 -17-30tp

overwei ght ladies, teens and
men interested in a Weight
Watchers ( R&gt; Cla ss i n
Pomeroy
write : Weight ·

Watchers (R), 1863 Section

RATES
For Want Ad Service

Rd ,, Cincinnati, Ohio 45237 .
lQ-J.tf c

5 cent s per Word one insertion·
M inimUm Charge 75c

12 cchts

per word

threE

consecutive insert ions
18 cents per word six conse&lt;:ufive insertions.
25 Per Cent DiscoU nt on pa id
ads and ads paid within .10 day s.

$1.50 for 50 word minimum
Each additional word 2c.

BLIND ADS
Aqditional 25c Charge per
Adv ertlsem~ nt .

Club. New Haven. Sponsored

by Post 9926, Mason. W. Va .

·

12- 16-3tc

Ham . Turkey and Pork .
by
Racine
Sponsored
American Legion.

a.m .

to

S.,turdav

12 : oo

Noon

In Memory
In "memory of Viota Louks
who passed away December

16, 1961.
1_, ·-

Life is a flower.
How sad when faded and

gone .
Looking back with memories
Along the road we trod,
We bless the years we had

you
And leave the rest to God.
A live rose in a living hand
means more than tears shed
1nd flowers Ia id on the
grave.

FamilY
IN LOVIN'G memory of Henry
Sprouse who was killed in a
mine accident December 16,
1969:
in our hearts is a
picture, o a loved one la id to
rest, for he was one of the

3929, 965-3585 or 985-9996.
12-5-12tc
SHOOTING match, Saturday ,
Dec. 18, at the Racine Planing
Mill at 6 p.m . Factory choke
guns only . Assorted meat.
Sponsored by the Syracuse

Fire Dept.

Phone 992-5434.

Sadly

missed

daughter , sisters,
families and friends.

TRAiL_E_R tbTs. Bob's Mobiieo
Court. Rt. 124, Syracuse,

Jhio. 992-2951 .

For Sale

SIN GER automa tic sewing
mach i ne . Like new, in
beautiful walnut cabinet.
makes design stitches, zigzags, buttonholes. blind hems,

GUN SHOOT , Forked Run
Sportsman Club, Sunday ,
Dec . 19, 12 noon .
12-15-3tc

11 -28-lt c
PURE BRED English setter
pups, hunting strain. 10 weeks

REFJ&lt;IGERATOR, new shower
and accessories, gas heating
stove. Can be seen at 2nd
house on r ight across from

Hap py Hollow.

DEEP well pump , hot water
heater . Phone 985 -3891.

12-12-6tp

WESTINGHOUSE refrigerator,
Coppertone, very good condition , $50. Phone 742 -5434 or

698-3719.

12-14-3fc

HAY , m ixed and pure clover.

Phone 949-4910
12-14-6tc

CHRISTMAS Tree Sale, Trailer
size-50c;3 tt. - 4ft.S1 ; 511.
- a ft. $2.50 ; slands $2 .
ln .

12- 12-6tp

I WISH to thank my neighbors,
friends and all who senf
flowers. food and money .
Also, those who assisted In
any way during the illness

and death of my husband,
Joseph Meek. I especially
want to thank Rawlings-Coats
Funeral Home, Pallbearers,
Or. J . J. Davis, and Rev.
Charles Si mons for hi s
prayers and consoling words .
Your kindness will never be

QUEEN

Phone 742-3290.
HAMMOND

WANTS TO
TALK TO YOU

Notice
KOSCOT Kosmet ics and wigs.
Yes we have Ko!cot Products
and wigs In stock for your

lri'tmediate 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 9925113, distri butors of Koscot
Kosmetics.

11 -16-tk

SAVE up to one half. Bring your
sick TV to Chuck's TV Shop.

ABOUT THE NEW

COA L, li m e::atone . Ex ce l sior
Sa lt Work s, E. Main St.,
Pomeroy . Phone 992 ·3891 .

ARMY PAY RAISE
While learning about the pay
. ra ise, have him explain how
you may enlist and stay
hom e for the holidays.

Call him at614-593-3022
- ca II collect - for
complete details .
Today ' s Army wants to
join you at a much
higher salary.

4-9-tfc

POODLE puppies. Si lver Toy,

11-21 -tfc

Employment Wanted
dleport and Pomero y area .

Phone 992-2876.
12-3-1 2tc

Help Wanted

NEED A ROOM or two painted
the

holidays?

Richard Dubbeld 742-5625.
12-13-5tc

1121 16, 23, 30, 3tc

Meigs

Property
Transfers
Mathilda M. Rowley , .30 acre.
Salisbury .
Geraldine Grueser. admx ..
Everette Shoemaker. dec., to

Alfred

Birchfield ,

Pomeroy . ·

M . Mcintyre. lh acre, Chester .
Charles R. Harris, Waynita
Harris to Ohio Power Co.,
easement, Lebanon .
James A . Tay lor , Alma

Taylor to Arthur Taylor, Irene
Taylor, parcels, Rutland.

fulltime

F'armers Sank &amp; Savings Co.

Pomeroy.

trace of water
upon the moon within historical time.

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

A 3

BILL NELSON 992-3657
TOM CROW, 992-2580

606

992-2094
Main Pomeroy

E.

OFFICE SUPPLIES
And

FURNITURE
Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

:q~

Pomeroy, Ohio

12-1 3-6tp

LARGE farm fresh eggs. Phone
643-2778.
12-15-6tc

a.m. -5 p.m. weekdays .

12-12-5tc

every week . Carl Chevalier,

Rt. 1, Long Bottom, Ohio.
12-15-12tp

For Rent
2 BEDROOM mobile home in
Racine area . Phone 992-6329.

12-14-tfc

Syracuse . Completely fur nished . Phone 992-2441 after 5

p.m.

12- 14-6tc

stereo-radio, AM-FM rad io, 4speaker sound system , 4speed automatic changer ,
separate controls . Balance

Complete

SR.

Broker
110 Mechanic Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

'60 MERCURY, 64,000 miles.

REAL ESTATE TEAFORD
12-15-3tp MIDDLEPORT - 10 room
double hou se. $3500.00.
Slalion FREE GAS HEAT- 6 rooms ,

Wagon, good condition, motor
overhauled . Phone 992-6417 .

1963 CHEVROLET Nova with
transmission, 2 chrome

. 12-12-6tp
automatic , factory stereo
tape. Lots of extras. Like new.
Call 992-2441 after 5 p.m.

11 -28-tfc

ideal

for

aparT -

couples .

Contact McClure's Dairy Isle,
992-5248 or 992.-3436. .
.12-15-12tc

. OUTOFTHE
IGNORANCE THAT

WE-IS
ALL WE

HIM .' . ' - -

KNO W S IS
HOW TO BE

bath, cellar. Small barn .
Mineral s .29 acre. S13,500.00 .

bedroom
home,
gas
automatic heat. Plains water .

IF I. ONLY
KNEW WHAT

HE.lOOII'ED
.LIKE!

t

j

•

,-\t ;:./ :

DRUTHER
BE LIKE..
MAH

•

J

PAPP'f!!

'I

Baths
Room Additions
And Pams

would make
qr-eat Chri.;tmas

Vega, Camaro, Wagons and Impala 4 Door.
See us now for a MONEY-SAVING DEAL.

project , Stubb~!

1967 Chevrolet Impala S.S. Cpe.;- bucket
seats , V-8 engine, 4 speed trans ., maroon
finish &amp; blk. vinyl interior.

BACKHOE AND DOZER wor k.
4-25-tfc

F rt. fender &amp; door
damaged, priced low for
savings to you.

'

..,-----. •

Pomeroy Motor Co.
Your Chevy Dealer

Se r vice. Phone 992 -2522 .

6-10-tfc
AUTOMOBILE

MAYBE WE CAN PUT
A LITTLE LIFE IN

Open Eves . Til B

992-2126

insurance

Pvmeroy

been cancelled? Lost your
operator' s license? Ca ll 992 ..6-15-Hc

O' DELL WHEEL align.i-nent
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
Complete front end service,
tune up and brake service.
balanced
elec Wheels
tronically .
All
work
guaranteed .
Reasonable

•••

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Reasonable rates . Ph. 446-4782 ,

Gall ipol is. John Russell ,
Owner &amp; Operator.
5-12-tfc

SE PTIC tanks cleaned. Mil ler
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph .
7-27-tfc
662-:j035.
.
.
2·12-tfc
Ni:IGLER Building Supply .
Free estimate on building
CONCRETE
YO!Jr new home. Will draw READY·MIX
right
to your
delivered
prints to suit 1he lay of your
project.
Fast
and
easy.
Free
land . Call Guy Nelgler ,
estimates . Phone 992-3284 .
Racine, Ohio. For repair and
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co.,
aluminum siding , soffet and
Middleport, Ohio.
gutter. Call Dona ld Smith,
6-30-tfc .
Raci ne, Ohio.
10-7-tfc _C___B_R_A_D_F_O_R_D
:-,Au c-:tlo"
-n~
eer

Yeslerday'a Cryploqaole: TWO THINGS ARE BAD FOR

SE WIN G MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 992-2284.

3-29-tfc

t3. What

rates. Phone 992-3213.

----

Comolete Service

For Rent or Sale
LONG BOTTOM -

Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio
Crltt Bradford

5 room

house and bath , furna ce.

Phone 985-3529.

5-1-tfc
12-5-30lc - - - - - - - -

5. Missouri
city
6. Meat pie
7. Whereto
find Mont·
gomery
(abbr.)
8. Texas
f •terd.y'1 A.IUWCII'
(3 wds.)
9.1mplore
27. Wood for
walling
10. Clerical
slicks
residence
29. Sparoid
17. Remote
fisb
Z3•.Go31. Assail
route
(2 wds.)
U. Candlenut 33. Consumed
tree fiber
34. Ward off
39. English
%5. Glanriver
Carlo41. Word
Z6. Spread
with
like
weed
wildfire .

The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Au1horized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.

stewards
do
M. Map
within a
map
ts. Emissary

DOES

HAVE

L.OOK,

8.0,?

A

HAPPY
DAY

DOWN
1. Lifting
device
z. Zeal

s. Texas

WMP0/1390

Stadium
athletes

ON YOUR DIAL ·

(2 wds.)

I. Summer,
In Sedan

TERRY

MUD AND SNOW TIRES

FOR
SALE .
HOMES,
BUSINESSES, FARMS AND
COMMERCIAL LAND.
992-3325 - 992-2378
HELEN L. TEAFORD
. ASSOCIATE
NEAR EWING MORTUARY
12-l6-6tc

-

essence

MY MAN COtJLP NOT ~ISK
HIS SECURITY IN A PO.ICE
STAlE 5UCH AS THIS, HE
COUlPOHlY WARN ME
OF PANGER TO MY
ENTERP1115f5 IN

lliiS

ALl WE KNOW IS THAT THERe AAf RI/MOI\'5 OF
A.COUP D'ErAT WHICH WllLCHAHGETitfMLAHCf
OF RJWER. THE
..
PllAGON LAPY

CANNOT

........-r.-r.--1!1&gt;1

(var.)
%5. Coffee or
leather
27. Substan·
tiol
28. Bac-

THE !IEABT- RUNNING UP STAIRS AND RUNNING

DOWN PEOPLE.-BERNAJID BARUCH

,,'·

Unscrambletheoe four Jumble1,
one letter to· each square, to

form four ordinary words.

•,.
;

'
"

N,.fi'(J(;

(]
0
tYUW/1'
~
J I III
MYSAtt:

WHEN IHEY!i':E RO'MN
THE'/ COULt7 l3e
OAN&amp;E!WUS.
Now arranr• the circled letters
to form the surprise anawer, ~ .

by the above cartoon.
t___...::Prillt
=·IM:::...:SMISI==·=
ANSWIII
= Iln.::..____jl ffil Ill)

~~~~=;=:::::=::::==_:•~urreoted

chante's

ery
!9. European
' river
se. Recently

(A111wert toaaorraw) ·

Junobl"' VENOM

lntro-

Ye•h:rd•r'•

duc:ed
• •• "My -

\ An1wrr:

Sal"

LEGAL NUMBER PANTIY

U11e if if yolf r.tnnt to /{tJ
urr~1mrt ed - AN APRON

:12.-legs

THI5 15 IT,

35. Eye
16. Stage of
hbitory
37. Hebrew
letter

PMTNER .. WE'RE
NEXT!

38. RainbOw

-

sewing

DAILY CRYPTOQUoTE-Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXIt
II LONGFELLOW
One letter simply atancb for another. In thl.a ~ple A La
used for the three L'a, X for the two O's, etc, Sln&amp;le lettan,
apostrophes, the lenllh and formation of the word• are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

blind hem s, etc . $43.35 cash
available.

12-14-6tc

j;VING AN
WITH NO
Cf' HUMOR I

WITHOUT EVE:N
I&lt;NOWING
ITI

machine, 1971 model, In new •
walnut stand . All features
built -i n to make fancy _.
design s. Also buttonholes ,·
terms

tZ- 16

lo~t~.

ALLI KNOW I
MVE PA&amp;&amp;ED
A r::l:l:ZCN '11"-''E$

12·14-6tc

or

lor Nf.t.,

IMIC,HT

4882.

Phone 992-5641.

(I lfll

IGGOP.ANl;
AWRIGHT.

OUF\ROU NDS

each or S15 pair. Phone 949-

NEEDLE

"THE CIVIL

-.

HAPPY -

We Have Several New 1971 Chevrolet
Passenger Cars In Stock

K~chens,

HARRISON'S TV and Antenna

basemen t, 2 lots, new forced
air furnace . Near Pomeroy
E Iemen lary Schoo l . Phone
192-7384 to see.

TEAFORD·

Auto Sales

I WIU.. LIFTHIM

BESSIE. WE HAIN'T
GOT MUCH
'CEPT LOVE-

LITTLE PIGS, 9 weeks old, $8

TWIN

•

Remodeling

FOR

12-15-llc

BEDROOM troiler
ment.

JOHNSON'MASONRY

NI CE 2-s tor y home with full

MILLER
1220 Washington Blvd.
Belpre, Ohio

THASS TRUE, AUNT

$68.72. Use our budget term s.
Phone 992-7065.
12-14-6tc

price

NICE TRAILER, 1 bedroom.

style .

THAT NEW SECRETAR'&gt;'
CN:-l'T 'M'E 1 TAKE 5ttORT\-W!D
.,. OR EYEN KEAP/

f&gt;ISNE.Y

WORI.!&gt; I

$HI 1&amp; Tl-t£ MA'i'OR's
""'IECE .

SitE
EVER PASS

HOW DID

NOW
HEAR
THIS! !

Pomeroy

ll -18-30tt

bination. AM-FM radio, 4buildings. Asking 55500.00 .
speaker sound system, 4- '7 1 VEGA with snow tires, nice,
NEW LISTING.
speed automatic c han~er .
$1,950. Call 742·3887 between WE HAVE 40 PROPERTIES
Balance $79.32 . Use our
9:30 a.m . and 2:30 p.m.

modern

_I h. 992-2174

11-21 -tfc

12-12-6tc TUPPERS PLAINS-Modern 2

WALNUT,

NI!W

SERVICE
£XAM1 BEN?

~-···--·············

AL L SIDE Bui lders &amp; General
Contractor s, Gallipolis, Ohio.
HOUSE, 1642 Lin coln Heights.
Comp lete line of aluminum,
Call Dann y Thompson, 99';viny l and stee l si ding .
2196.
Complete
line of building,
7-18-tf,.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __:_..:.::..:._
additions. and remodel ing .
AU work guaranteed. Com SIX ROOM house, 133 Butternu•
m ercia l and reside ntial
Ave . Contact Ed Hedr ick, 2137
roofing . No job too small :
Wadsworth Dri ve, Columbus,
Phone 446 -3 839 for free
Oh io, phone 237-4334.
estima tes.

Virgil B.

MOBILE HOMES

I'M HE.RE TO

RESCUE 'lOUR .
CHI LD FROM
THIS DEN OF

Local 1 owner car &amp; less than 23,000 miles, factory air
conditioned. luggage rack , 227 V-8 engine, autor:nat ic,
power steering &amp; brakes. beautiful whlte finish &amp; green
vlnyr interior. new tir es, radio &amp; all the delu xe accessories.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Real Estate For Sale

12' • 14' - 24' - WiDE

1970 W-30 OLDSMOBILE 442,

Wanted To Buy

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiator to
Smallest Heater Core.
Nat-han Biggs
Radiator Specialist

2966.

Fitzpatrick Or-

budget terms. Phone 992-7065.
12-14-6tc

Nu;~TS ...

T~E

1969 Chevrolet Kingswood Sl Wg. 5~5.

Septic tank s Installed. George

11 -7-ltc

PLYMOUTH

ROMANTIC

WOULD VOU
QO, Ci.tJt&gt;, M!Mf I
115ACII OR A]RT
l.AI/l&gt;ER.I&gt;ALE ~

i970 Chevelle Malibu HT Cpe. ... ..'2995

I Bill) Pullins, Phone 992-2478.

1965

BEAC~ES , ~USANOS
OF GALS IN 91KIN r$1

lli~ER&amp;

4 Dr., V-8 engine, automatic trans ., P.S., factory air, good
tires, radio &amp; other extras, white finish, clean interior.

992-7608
Ph , 992-5080

152 Butternut

carpeted, built -in kitchen with
dishwasher , di ning room ,
ceramic tile bath. Hot water
heat , basement , and fenced

2795

5

350 V-B engine, automatic. power steering console.
beautiful dark green, finished with green vinyl roof . Less
than 22.000 miles by local owner, radio, new w-w fires . A
sharp model priced to please.

HOME &amp; AUTO ,

CHUCK'S TV

·----------

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

3595

5

1970 camaro Coupe

POMEROY

PLUS PARTS IF ANY USED
Save money, bring them in

Phone 992-5612.

OF SPENDING
~OLIDAVS IN
R.OR.tDA

'IOU l)EVI L..! SUN NV

Low mileage by local owner with lots ofwarranty lefl.
fa ctory air conditiorled, V·8 engine, turbo-hydromatlc, p.
steering, gold body, sandalwood vinyl top, radio, vinyl
interior, good w.w tires . This car is lo~d~ with extras.

Also black and white repairs .

Jac:llW . car .. y, Mvr.
Phon• tt2-2111

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets·

SKIING l I DON'T KNOW,
StMO, I WAS T~ l NK&lt;NG

Less than 11 ,000 miles &amp; appearance of 72 model. Rally
Sport equipped, Classic copper with sandalwood interior,
tinted glass, factory air conditioned, sports mirrors,
console, air spoiler, turbo hydromatic. power steering &amp;
brakes, 350 cu . ln . V-8 enqine. Reallv Sharp.

HIL TQN WOLFE '94,·3211
DALE DUTTON, 992-2534

Then it should have a complete factory tune up we will
tune your color by Vectorscope as the factory did when it
was new. We will also clean the tuner make all adjustments to bring your color back to life as it was whef'!
new.

yard. Phone 742-3171.

_loo!!J_THE BADGE GUYS

1970 Dodge Polara ............... :.-}2395

OVER TWO YEARS OLD?

to

..

DAVII
..

1970 camaro Cpe. ................... ~3095

monthly payment as low as S65.00 for a family with a base
salllry of $5,000.00 and three children. 71!.. Pet. annual
·
rate.

~~ ~&gt;-'NOTICE
/'e.o.
"'~~c.' IS YOUR COLOR TV SET .o~C"~
'&gt;

I

VISITIN'

Sandalwood with brown vinyl top, tadory a lr conditl~~ed,
V-8 engine with turbo hydromatic, power steering, E.
clock, P. B., radio, Rally wheels with w-w tires. Frt. &amp; rear

Pomeroy, 0 .

.

The
Daily Sentinel

Call Harold Curtis for an
appointment . (614) 548-6411 , 9

~ · M~in ,

FOUR NEW HOMES,
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
bedroom $16,900.00 home can be purchased with a

4 ACRES. $10,500.00.
12·1 4-6tc
RUTLAND
- 3 bedroom
wheels, good tires in front .
pan eled ho me . Bath , gas
Will sell for $100. Can be seen
heating . Jlh lofs . NEW
Male He Ip Wanted
at Guy Priddy residence on
LISTING. $6,000.00.
Beech Grove Rd . at Rutland
A DYNAMIC CAREER OPLETART - 5 rooms, ba sement.
or phone 742-3031.
PORTUNITY . This Is a well Large lot for garden. Asking
12-15-3tp
capitalized Oh io company
J11 Court St.
$5,000.00.
Pomeroy, Ohio
where earnings and ad ·
2 apart·
1962 DODGE Polaro 500, low MIDDLEPORT
vancements are unlimited .
fnents - 11 rooms, 2 baths.
mileage, excellent condition,
Our business is depression
Adjunct to shopping.
BEAUTIFUL
Early
Ameri
can
phone 992-5427.
and inflation -proof . It has an
P.
S. J ACRES - 6 room house.
style, stereo -rad io com 12-15-6tc
inexhaustible market. YOu
Dug well, ce llar , 3 aut-

Ideal for couple, 10 miles
north of Pomeroy. Phone 992-

there any seas or
the moon? .
There has never

Heating and Ajr Con ditioning.
240 Lincoln St., ,tAiddlepo,·t

I SALE '249 t
II ~•
rl Mobile Homes For Sale
J

weekend
waitres s.
Whispering Pines Nite Club.
Apply in person only .

6452.

Q-Are
oceans on
A- No.
been any

I

and

Emma Reibel Oodin, James
W. Ogdln to Berlha Reibel,
Herbert Reibel, parcel s, NEW 2 bedroom , double wide,
mobile home on lot in
Salisbury. Pomeroy.

to Robert C. Hysell, Connie 1.
Hysell, easement, Pomeroy.
Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co.
to Mary C. Francis, lots,

I

. _34" X23" X.009

PHONE 992-2156
FOR DETAILS!
MAID

NEW &amp; OLD WORK
All Weather Roofing &amp;
Construction Co. and Anlhony flumbing &amp; Heating . ·
Complete
Plumbing,

9-3-tfc

BUY raw furs and beef
lots , WILL
hides Saturday and Sunday

Wilson Brunty, Angle Brunty
fo Herbert A. Mcintyre. Clara

REG. $309.00
SAVE $60.00

Mason &amp; Hartford

BAR

ROOFING &amp; CARPENTER
WORK
SPOUTING,
ROOF PAINTING ·

Real Estate for Sale
NICE 3-BEDROOM house, fully

chards , State Route 689 ,
phone Wilesvi He, 669 -3785.

ca ll on referred leads only .

John F . Harrison, Laura L.
Harrison to Wilbur H. Rowley .

I

606

HAVE, MAT£ ~

guards. Retail $4155. Co. official car &amp; specially priced.

I Real Estate For Sale
II

cu. FT.
I CHEST FREEZER
23

SENTINEL
CARRIERS

LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Cue No. 20590
Estate of Morris Hatden ,
Deceased .
Notice is hereby gi'¥'en that
Dorothy Harden of Syracuse,
Ohio, has been duly appo inted
Administratrix of the Estate of
Morris Harden, deceased , late
Of Meigs County , Ohio .
Creditors are required to file
their claims witt'! said f idu ciary
wlfhln four months .
Dated this 13th day of
December 1971.
F . H. O'Br ien
Judoe

Christmas Special!

AP PLES -

WANTED!

Phone

8-15-tfc

1971 Chevelle Malibu Cpe.

1 P.M. till P.M.

r---------..I

1
I

PH. 992-7796

Located on County Road 34
near Royal Oak Park. Watch
for Signs.
Open every day except
Monday

Kennels, Phone 992 -

5441 .

POMEROY

HOUSECLEANING in Mid-

151 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.

2 key -

12-12-61 c

Park~W' Iew

or Chihuahua on S. Third St..
Middleport . Phone 992-2947.
12-16-3tc

organ,

Pomeroy Home &amp; AutO .

VJHATLL 'rt::lu

IF THAR'S
ENNYTHING
I HATE AN'
DESPISE IT'S

Why You Should Buy Now

I

· Open6Tii"S
Monday thru Saturday

12-15-2tp

boards, full octave base
peda ls, excellent cond ition,
would make a nice Christmas
gift l or home or sma ll church.
Phone 992 -6602 .

Found
LIGHT brown male Manchester

washing

machine, good condit ion also
twin..tubs on track - $20. Near
Danv ille Wesleyan Church .

REPRESENTATIVE

forgotten.
Mrs. Lola Meek .
12- 16-ltp

SPEED

Fr om drafting to completion
of home or business.

MARTHA ROSE, Owner

12-16-31c

many

Card of Thanks

Phone 992-5080.

12-16-3tp

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

SERVICES

HIDDEN
TREASURES
GIFT SHOP

p .m .

old. Phone 742-5870.

BUILDING

gift.

Ravenswood 273-9893 after 5

Reynolds
Flower
Sh op .
Mason, W. Va .. up near Dr i ve-

YOUR LOCAL ARMY

Dolls, all dressed in style,
knitted and crocheted . (Has
to be seen to be appreciated)
Many items you have been
looking for, for that perfect

EXPERT

.

BRLLS
O'FIRE!!

Our Lot is Full
of Reasons ®

'Wheel Alignment
15.55

COMPLETE

Christmas
decorations, wearing
jewelry,
appareL
ceram1cs.

etc . Will sell for $85. Call

by

12:16-llp

for

10-18-tfc

' 12-15-3tc

Deef

best.

apartments . Close to school.

12·16-2tc
Christmas part y, Fnday,
Dec. 17, New Year's Eve
party , Fr iday , Dec. 31 from
l : JO p.m . to 12 :30 a ._m.
Sc hedule your hol iday part1es
now . Available on Monday,
and
Thursda.y
Tu esday
nights. Also Sa turday and
Sunday afternoons . Open
Wednesday . Friday and
Sa turda y nights. Phone 985-

HANDCRAFT
GIFT ITEMS

F URNISHED and unfurnished

ORIGINAL CABINET
COMPANY

•

--...., F.:EK AND MEEK

·

Business Services

FUR NISHED sleeping room
over Wine Store. Rent by
month. Phone 992-5293.
11 -26-tfc

.

OFFICE HOURS
6:30a .m. to 5;00 p.m. Daily , SKATE -A-WAY holiday pa_rties .
8: 30

8x35
TRAILER,
country
location. Phone 992-3954.
12-14-Jtc

4-2-tfc
V.F W. Gunshoot . noon, Sun day . Dec. 19, Broad Run Gun ·- · ---~~----

GUN SHOOT, Friday , Dec. 17, 7
p. m. Mile Hil l Road. Steak ,

CARD OF THANKS
&amp;OBITUARY

·

Water PHis. Nelson Drugs.

Will be accepte.;i until9a .m. fOr
Day of Publioatlon
REGULATIONS
•·
• The Publisher reserves the ABOUT YOUR WEI GHT ...
·right 'to edit or reject any ads·
~m ed
obiectional.
Th!i
publisher wilt not be responsible

.

I

$24~uslax
'

A Cryptogram Qaolatlou

GENERAL TIRE SALES
992-7161

NVAU
FRKWUF

MlDDLIPORT, 0.

-N.

I

••

XU

KWU

KWRP

NRFVSRZYV

KWU

FURYE
FURYE

WRPY
KGPNCO .

II

II

•

'

�..

10-TIIe Dilly Sentinel, Mklllfpart-Pumey,O., Det. ll,ll'll

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! SentinelClassifieds Get Results!
N 1.

.

For Rent

WANT 'AD
0 ICe
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
REDUCE safe ·and fast with
S P.M. Day Before Publication
Gobese tablets and E-VapJt!Q['Iday Deadline 9 a .m .

~ JangH4tlon _&amp;Corr~JQ11!

tor

more than one incorrect·

·Insertion .

11 -17-30tp

overwei ght ladies, teens and
men interested in a Weight
Watchers ( R&gt; Cla ss i n
Pomeroy
write : Weight ·

Watchers (R), 1863 Section

RATES
For Want Ad Service

Rd ,, Cincinnati, Ohio 45237 .
lQ-J.tf c

5 cent s per Word one insertion·
M inimUm Charge 75c

12 cchts

per word

threE

consecutive insert ions
18 cents per word six conse&lt;:ufive insertions.
25 Per Cent DiscoU nt on pa id
ads and ads paid within .10 day s.

$1.50 for 50 word minimum
Each additional word 2c.

BLIND ADS
Aqditional 25c Charge per
Adv ertlsem~ nt .

Club. New Haven. Sponsored

by Post 9926, Mason. W. Va .

·

12- 16-3tc

Ham . Turkey and Pork .
by
Racine
Sponsored
American Legion.

a.m .

to

S.,turdav

12 : oo

Noon

In Memory
In "memory of Viota Louks
who passed away December

16, 1961.
1_, ·-

Life is a flower.
How sad when faded and

gone .
Looking back with memories
Along the road we trod,
We bless the years we had

you
And leave the rest to God.
A live rose in a living hand
means more than tears shed
1nd flowers Ia id on the
grave.

FamilY
IN LOVIN'G memory of Henry
Sprouse who was killed in a
mine accident December 16,
1969:
in our hearts is a
picture, o a loved one la id to
rest, for he was one of the

3929, 965-3585 or 985-9996.
12-5-12tc
SHOOTING match, Saturday ,
Dec. 18, at the Racine Planing
Mill at 6 p.m . Factory choke
guns only . Assorted meat.
Sponsored by the Syracuse

Fire Dept.

Phone 992-5434.

Sadly

missed

daughter , sisters,
families and friends.

TRAiL_E_R tbTs. Bob's Mobiieo
Court. Rt. 124, Syracuse,

Jhio. 992-2951 .

For Sale

SIN GER automa tic sewing
mach i ne . Like new, in
beautiful walnut cabinet.
makes design stitches, zigzags, buttonholes. blind hems,

GUN SHOOT , Forked Run
Sportsman Club, Sunday ,
Dec . 19, 12 noon .
12-15-3tc

11 -28-lt c
PURE BRED English setter
pups, hunting strain. 10 weeks

REFJ&lt;IGERATOR, new shower
and accessories, gas heating
stove. Can be seen at 2nd
house on r ight across from

Hap py Hollow.

DEEP well pump , hot water
heater . Phone 985 -3891.

12-12-6tp

WESTINGHOUSE refrigerator,
Coppertone, very good condition , $50. Phone 742 -5434 or

698-3719.

12-14-3fc

HAY , m ixed and pure clover.

Phone 949-4910
12-14-6tc

CHRISTMAS Tree Sale, Trailer
size-50c;3 tt. - 4ft.S1 ; 511.
- a ft. $2.50 ; slands $2 .
ln .

12- 12-6tp

I WISH to thank my neighbors,
friends and all who senf
flowers. food and money .
Also, those who assisted In
any way during the illness

and death of my husband,
Joseph Meek. I especially
want to thank Rawlings-Coats
Funeral Home, Pallbearers,
Or. J . J. Davis, and Rev.
Charles Si mons for hi s
prayers and consoling words .
Your kindness will never be

QUEEN

Phone 742-3290.
HAMMOND

WANTS TO
TALK TO YOU

Notice
KOSCOT Kosmet ics and wigs.
Yes we have Ko!cot Products
and wigs In stock for your

lri'tmediate 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 9925113, distri butors of Koscot
Kosmetics.

11 -16-tk

SAVE up to one half. Bring your
sick TV to Chuck's TV Shop.

ABOUT THE NEW

COA L, li m e::atone . Ex ce l sior
Sa lt Work s, E. Main St.,
Pomeroy . Phone 992 ·3891 .

ARMY PAY RAISE
While learning about the pay
. ra ise, have him explain how
you may enlist and stay
hom e for the holidays.

Call him at614-593-3022
- ca II collect - for
complete details .
Today ' s Army wants to
join you at a much
higher salary.

4-9-tfc

POODLE puppies. Si lver Toy,

11-21 -tfc

Employment Wanted
dleport and Pomero y area .

Phone 992-2876.
12-3-1 2tc

Help Wanted

NEED A ROOM or two painted
the

holidays?

Richard Dubbeld 742-5625.
12-13-5tc

1121 16, 23, 30, 3tc

Meigs

Property
Transfers
Mathilda M. Rowley , .30 acre.
Salisbury .
Geraldine Grueser. admx ..
Everette Shoemaker. dec., to

Alfred

Birchfield ,

Pomeroy . ·

M . Mcintyre. lh acre, Chester .
Charles R. Harris, Waynita
Harris to Ohio Power Co.,
easement, Lebanon .
James A . Tay lor , Alma

Taylor to Arthur Taylor, Irene
Taylor, parcels, Rutland.

fulltime

F'armers Sank &amp; Savings Co.

Pomeroy.

trace of water
upon the moon within historical time.

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

A 3

BILL NELSON 992-3657
TOM CROW, 992-2580

606

992-2094
Main Pomeroy

E.

OFFICE SUPPLIES
And

FURNITURE
Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

:q~

Pomeroy, Ohio

12-1 3-6tp

LARGE farm fresh eggs. Phone
643-2778.
12-15-6tc

a.m. -5 p.m. weekdays .

12-12-5tc

every week . Carl Chevalier,

Rt. 1, Long Bottom, Ohio.
12-15-12tp

For Rent
2 BEDROOM mobile home in
Racine area . Phone 992-6329.

12-14-tfc

Syracuse . Completely fur nished . Phone 992-2441 after 5

p.m.

12- 14-6tc

stereo-radio, AM-FM rad io, 4speaker sound system , 4speed automatic changer ,
separate controls . Balance

Complete

SR.

Broker
110 Mechanic Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

'60 MERCURY, 64,000 miles.

REAL ESTATE TEAFORD
12-15-3tp MIDDLEPORT - 10 room
double hou se. $3500.00.
Slalion FREE GAS HEAT- 6 rooms ,

Wagon, good condition, motor
overhauled . Phone 992-6417 .

1963 CHEVROLET Nova with
transmission, 2 chrome

. 12-12-6tp
automatic , factory stereo
tape. Lots of extras. Like new.
Call 992-2441 after 5 p.m.

11 -28-tfc

ideal

for

aparT -

couples .

Contact McClure's Dairy Isle,
992-5248 or 992.-3436. .
.12-15-12tc

. OUTOFTHE
IGNORANCE THAT

WE-IS
ALL WE

HIM .' . ' - -

KNO W S IS
HOW TO BE

bath, cellar. Small barn .
Mineral s .29 acre. S13,500.00 .

bedroom
home,
gas
automatic heat. Plains water .

IF I. ONLY
KNEW WHAT

HE.lOOII'ED
.LIKE!

t

j

•

,-\t ;:./ :

DRUTHER
BE LIKE..
MAH

•

J

PAPP'f!!

'I

Baths
Room Additions
And Pams

would make
qr-eat Chri.;tmas

Vega, Camaro, Wagons and Impala 4 Door.
See us now for a MONEY-SAVING DEAL.

project , Stubb~!

1967 Chevrolet Impala S.S. Cpe.;- bucket
seats , V-8 engine, 4 speed trans ., maroon
finish &amp; blk. vinyl interior.

BACKHOE AND DOZER wor k.
4-25-tfc

F rt. fender &amp; door
damaged, priced low for
savings to you.

'

..,-----. •

Pomeroy Motor Co.
Your Chevy Dealer

Se r vice. Phone 992 -2522 .

6-10-tfc
AUTOMOBILE

MAYBE WE CAN PUT
A LITTLE LIFE IN

Open Eves . Til B

992-2126

insurance

Pvmeroy

been cancelled? Lost your
operator' s license? Ca ll 992 ..6-15-Hc

O' DELL WHEEL align.i-nent
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
Complete front end service,
tune up and brake service.
balanced
elec Wheels
tronically .
All
work
guaranteed .
Reasonable

•••

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Reasonable rates . Ph. 446-4782 ,

Gall ipol is. John Russell ,
Owner &amp; Operator.
5-12-tfc

SE PTIC tanks cleaned. Mil ler
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph .
7-27-tfc
662-:j035.
.
.
2·12-tfc
Ni:IGLER Building Supply .
Free estimate on building
CONCRETE
YO!Jr new home. Will draw READY·MIX
right
to your
delivered
prints to suit 1he lay of your
project.
Fast
and
easy.
Free
land . Call Guy Nelgler ,
estimates . Phone 992-3284 .
Racine, Ohio. For repair and
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co.,
aluminum siding , soffet and
Middleport, Ohio.
gutter. Call Dona ld Smith,
6-30-tfc .
Raci ne, Ohio.
10-7-tfc _C___B_R_A_D_F_O_R_D
:-,Au c-:tlo"
-n~
eer

Yeslerday'a Cryploqaole: TWO THINGS ARE BAD FOR

SE WIN G MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 992-2284.

3-29-tfc

t3. What

rates. Phone 992-3213.

----

Comolete Service

For Rent or Sale
LONG BOTTOM -

Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio
Crltt Bradford

5 room

house and bath , furna ce.

Phone 985-3529.

5-1-tfc
12-5-30lc - - - - - - - -

5. Missouri
city
6. Meat pie
7. Whereto
find Mont·
gomery
(abbr.)
8. Texas
f •terd.y'1 A.IUWCII'
(3 wds.)
9.1mplore
27. Wood for
walling
10. Clerical
slicks
residence
29. Sparoid
17. Remote
fisb
Z3•.Go31. Assail
route
(2 wds.)
U. Candlenut 33. Consumed
tree fiber
34. Ward off
39. English
%5. Glanriver
Carlo41. Word
Z6. Spread
with
like
weed
wildfire .

The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Au1horized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.

stewards
do
M. Map
within a
map
ts. Emissary

DOES

HAVE

L.OOK,

8.0,?

A

HAPPY
DAY

DOWN
1. Lifting
device
z. Zeal

s. Texas

WMP0/1390

Stadium
athletes

ON YOUR DIAL ·

(2 wds.)

I. Summer,
In Sedan

TERRY

MUD AND SNOW TIRES

FOR
SALE .
HOMES,
BUSINESSES, FARMS AND
COMMERCIAL LAND.
992-3325 - 992-2378
HELEN L. TEAFORD
. ASSOCIATE
NEAR EWING MORTUARY
12-l6-6tc

-

essence

MY MAN COtJLP NOT ~ISK
HIS SECURITY IN A PO.ICE
STAlE 5UCH AS THIS, HE
COUlPOHlY WARN ME
OF PANGER TO MY
ENTERP1115f5 IN

lliiS

ALl WE KNOW IS THAT THERe AAf RI/MOI\'5 OF
A.COUP D'ErAT WHICH WllLCHAHGETitfMLAHCf
OF RJWER. THE
..
PllAGON LAPY

CANNOT

........-r.-r.--1!1&gt;1

(var.)
%5. Coffee or
leather
27. Substan·
tiol
28. Bac-

THE !IEABT- RUNNING UP STAIRS AND RUNNING

DOWN PEOPLE.-BERNAJID BARUCH

,,'·

Unscrambletheoe four Jumble1,
one letter to· each square, to

form four ordinary words.

•,.
;

'
"

N,.fi'(J(;

(]
0
tYUW/1'
~
J I III
MYSAtt:

WHEN IHEY!i':E RO'MN
THE'/ COULt7 l3e
OAN&amp;E!WUS.
Now arranr• the circled letters
to form the surprise anawer, ~ .

by the above cartoon.
t___...::Prillt
=·IM:::...:SMISI==·=
ANSWIII
= Iln.::..____jl ffil Ill)

~~~~=;=:::::=::::==_:•~urreoted

chante's

ery
!9. European
' river
se. Recently

(A111wert toaaorraw) ·

Junobl"' VENOM

lntro-

Ye•h:rd•r'•

duc:ed
• •• "My -

\ An1wrr:

Sal"

LEGAL NUMBER PANTIY

U11e if if yolf r.tnnt to /{tJ
urr~1mrt ed - AN APRON

:12.-legs

THI5 15 IT,

35. Eye
16. Stage of
hbitory
37. Hebrew
letter

PMTNER .. WE'RE
NEXT!

38. RainbOw

-

sewing

DAILY CRYPTOQUoTE-Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXIt
II LONGFELLOW
One letter simply atancb for another. In thl.a ~ple A La
used for the three L'a, X for the two O's, etc, Sln&amp;le lettan,
apostrophes, the lenllh and formation of the word• are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

blind hem s, etc . $43.35 cash
available.

12-14-6tc

j;VING AN
WITH NO
Cf' HUMOR I

WITHOUT EVE:N
I&lt;NOWING
ITI

machine, 1971 model, In new •
walnut stand . All features
built -i n to make fancy _.
design s. Also buttonholes ,·
terms

tZ- 16

lo~t~.

ALLI KNOW I
MVE PA&amp;&amp;ED
A r::l:l:ZCN '11"-''E$

12·14-6tc

or

lor Nf.t.,

IMIC,HT

4882.

Phone 992-5641.

(I lfll

IGGOP.ANl;
AWRIGHT.

OUF\ROU NDS

each or S15 pair. Phone 949-

NEEDLE

"THE CIVIL

-.

HAPPY -

We Have Several New 1971 Chevrolet
Passenger Cars In Stock

K~chens,

HARRISON'S TV and Antenna

basemen t, 2 lots, new forced
air furnace . Near Pomeroy
E Iemen lary Schoo l . Phone
192-7384 to see.

TEAFORD·

Auto Sales

I WIU.. LIFTHIM

BESSIE. WE HAIN'T
GOT MUCH
'CEPT LOVE-

LITTLE PIGS, 9 weeks old, $8

TWIN

•

Remodeling

FOR

12-15-llc

BEDROOM troiler
ment.

JOHNSON'MASONRY

NI CE 2-s tor y home with full

MILLER
1220 Washington Blvd.
Belpre, Ohio

THASS TRUE, AUNT

$68.72. Use our budget term s.
Phone 992-7065.
12-14-6tc

price

NICE TRAILER, 1 bedroom.

style .

THAT NEW SECRETAR'&gt;'
CN:-l'T 'M'E 1 TAKE 5ttORT\-W!D
.,. OR EYEN KEAP/

f&gt;ISNE.Y

WORI.!&gt; I

$HI 1&amp; Tl-t£ MA'i'OR's
""'IECE .

SitE
EVER PASS

HOW DID

NOW
HEAR
THIS! !

Pomeroy

ll -18-30tt

bination. AM-FM radio, 4buildings. Asking 55500.00 .
speaker sound system, 4- '7 1 VEGA with snow tires, nice,
NEW LISTING.
speed automatic c han~er .
$1,950. Call 742·3887 between WE HAVE 40 PROPERTIES
Balance $79.32 . Use our
9:30 a.m . and 2:30 p.m.

modern

_I h. 992-2174

11-21 -tfc

12-12-6tc TUPPERS PLAINS-Modern 2

WALNUT,

NI!W

SERVICE
£XAM1 BEN?

~-···--·············

AL L SIDE Bui lders &amp; General
Contractor s, Gallipolis, Ohio.
HOUSE, 1642 Lin coln Heights.
Comp lete line of aluminum,
Call Dann y Thompson, 99';viny l and stee l si ding .
2196.
Complete
line of building,
7-18-tf,.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __:_..:.::..:._
additions. and remodel ing .
AU work guaranteed. Com SIX ROOM house, 133 Butternu•
m ercia l and reside ntial
Ave . Contact Ed Hedr ick, 2137
roofing . No job too small :
Wadsworth Dri ve, Columbus,
Phone 446 -3 839 for free
Oh io, phone 237-4334.
estima tes.

Virgil B.

MOBILE HOMES

I'M HE.RE TO

RESCUE 'lOUR .
CHI LD FROM
THIS DEN OF

Local 1 owner car &amp; less than 23,000 miles, factory air
conditioned. luggage rack , 227 V-8 engine, autor:nat ic,
power steering &amp; brakes. beautiful whlte finish &amp; green
vlnyr interior. new tir es, radio &amp; all the delu xe accessories.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Real Estate For Sale

12' • 14' - 24' - WiDE

1970 W-30 OLDSMOBILE 442,

Wanted To Buy

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiator to
Smallest Heater Core.
Nat-han Biggs
Radiator Specialist

2966.

Fitzpatrick Or-

budget terms. Phone 992-7065.
12-14-6tc

Nu;~TS ...

T~E

1969 Chevrolet Kingswood Sl Wg. 5~5.

Septic tank s Installed. George

11 -7-ltc

PLYMOUTH

ROMANTIC

WOULD VOU
QO, Ci.tJt&gt;, M!Mf I
115ACII OR A]RT
l.AI/l&gt;ER.I&gt;ALE ~

i970 Chevelle Malibu HT Cpe. ... ..'2995

I Bill) Pullins, Phone 992-2478.

1965

BEAC~ES , ~USANOS
OF GALS IN 91KIN r$1

lli~ER&amp;

4 Dr., V-8 engine, automatic trans ., P.S., factory air, good
tires, radio &amp; other extras, white finish, clean interior.

992-7608
Ph , 992-5080

152 Butternut

carpeted, built -in kitchen with
dishwasher , di ning room ,
ceramic tile bath. Hot water
heat , basement , and fenced

2795

5

350 V-B engine, automatic. power steering console.
beautiful dark green, finished with green vinyl roof . Less
than 22.000 miles by local owner, radio, new w-w fires . A
sharp model priced to please.

HOME &amp; AUTO ,

CHUCK'S TV

·----------

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

3595

5

1970 camaro Coupe

POMEROY

PLUS PARTS IF ANY USED
Save money, bring them in

Phone 992-5612.

OF SPENDING
~OLIDAVS IN
R.OR.tDA

'IOU l)EVI L..! SUN NV

Low mileage by local owner with lots ofwarranty lefl.
fa ctory air conditiorled, V·8 engine, turbo-hydromatlc, p.
steering, gold body, sandalwood vinyl top, radio, vinyl
interior, good w.w tires . This car is lo~d~ with extras.

Also black and white repairs .

Jac:llW . car .. y, Mvr.
Phon• tt2-2111

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets·

SKIING l I DON'T KNOW,
StMO, I WAS T~ l NK&lt;NG

Less than 11 ,000 miles &amp; appearance of 72 model. Rally
Sport equipped, Classic copper with sandalwood interior,
tinted glass, factory air conditioned, sports mirrors,
console, air spoiler, turbo hydromatic. power steering &amp;
brakes, 350 cu . ln . V-8 enqine. Reallv Sharp.

HIL TQN WOLFE '94,·3211
DALE DUTTON, 992-2534

Then it should have a complete factory tune up we will
tune your color by Vectorscope as the factory did when it
was new. We will also clean the tuner make all adjustments to bring your color back to life as it was whef'!
new.

yard. Phone 742-3171.

_loo!!J_THE BADGE GUYS

1970 Dodge Polara ............... :.-}2395

OVER TWO YEARS OLD?

to

..

DAVII
..

1970 camaro Cpe. ................... ~3095

monthly payment as low as S65.00 for a family with a base
salllry of $5,000.00 and three children. 71!.. Pet. annual
·
rate.

~~ ~&gt;-'NOTICE
/'e.o.
"'~~c.' IS YOUR COLOR TV SET .o~C"~
'&gt;

I

VISITIN'

Sandalwood with brown vinyl top, tadory a lr conditl~~ed,
V-8 engine with turbo hydromatic, power steering, E.
clock, P. B., radio, Rally wheels with w-w tires. Frt. &amp; rear

Pomeroy, 0 .

.

The
Daily Sentinel

Call Harold Curtis for an
appointment . (614) 548-6411 , 9

~ · M~in ,

FOUR NEW HOMES,
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
bedroom $16,900.00 home can be purchased with a

4 ACRES. $10,500.00.
12·1 4-6tc
RUTLAND
- 3 bedroom
wheels, good tires in front .
pan eled ho me . Bath , gas
Will sell for $100. Can be seen
heating . Jlh lofs . NEW
Male He Ip Wanted
at Guy Priddy residence on
LISTING. $6,000.00.
Beech Grove Rd . at Rutland
A DYNAMIC CAREER OPLETART - 5 rooms, ba sement.
or phone 742-3031.
PORTUNITY . This Is a well Large lot for garden. Asking
12-15-3tp
capitalized Oh io company
J11 Court St.
$5,000.00.
Pomeroy, Ohio
where earnings and ad ·
2 apart·
1962 DODGE Polaro 500, low MIDDLEPORT
vancements are unlimited .
fnents - 11 rooms, 2 baths.
mileage, excellent condition,
Our business is depression
Adjunct to shopping.
BEAUTIFUL
Early
Ameri
can
phone 992-5427.
and inflation -proof . It has an
P.
S. J ACRES - 6 room house.
style, stereo -rad io com 12-15-6tc
inexhaustible market. YOu
Dug well, ce llar , 3 aut-

Ideal for couple, 10 miles
north of Pomeroy. Phone 992-

there any seas or
the moon? .
There has never

Heating and Ajr Con ditioning.
240 Lincoln St., ,tAiddlepo,·t

I SALE '249 t
II ~•
rl Mobile Homes For Sale
J

weekend
waitres s.
Whispering Pines Nite Club.
Apply in person only .

6452.

Q-Are
oceans on
A- No.
been any

I

and

Emma Reibel Oodin, James
W. Ogdln to Berlha Reibel,
Herbert Reibel, parcel s, NEW 2 bedroom , double wide,
mobile home on lot in
Salisbury. Pomeroy.

to Robert C. Hysell, Connie 1.
Hysell, easement, Pomeroy.
Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co.
to Mary C. Francis, lots,

I

. _34" X23" X.009

PHONE 992-2156
FOR DETAILS!
MAID

NEW &amp; OLD WORK
All Weather Roofing &amp;
Construction Co. and Anlhony flumbing &amp; Heating . ·
Complete
Plumbing,

9-3-tfc

BUY raw furs and beef
lots , WILL
hides Saturday and Sunday

Wilson Brunty, Angle Brunty
fo Herbert A. Mcintyre. Clara

REG. $309.00
SAVE $60.00

Mason &amp; Hartford

BAR

ROOFING &amp; CARPENTER
WORK
SPOUTING,
ROOF PAINTING ·

Real Estate for Sale
NICE 3-BEDROOM house, fully

chards , State Route 689 ,
phone Wilesvi He, 669 -3785.

ca ll on referred leads only .

John F . Harrison, Laura L.
Harrison to Wilbur H. Rowley .

I

606

HAVE, MAT£ ~

guards. Retail $4155. Co. official car &amp; specially priced.

I Real Estate For Sale
II

cu. FT.
I CHEST FREEZER
23

SENTINEL
CARRIERS

LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Cue No. 20590
Estate of Morris Hatden ,
Deceased .
Notice is hereby gi'¥'en that
Dorothy Harden of Syracuse,
Ohio, has been duly appo inted
Administratrix of the Estate of
Morris Harden, deceased , late
Of Meigs County , Ohio .
Creditors are required to file
their claims witt'! said f idu ciary
wlfhln four months .
Dated this 13th day of
December 1971.
F . H. O'Br ien
Judoe

Christmas Special!

AP PLES -

WANTED!

Phone

8-15-tfc

1971 Chevelle Malibu Cpe.

1 P.M. till P.M.

r---------..I

1
I

PH. 992-7796

Located on County Road 34
near Royal Oak Park. Watch
for Signs.
Open every day except
Monday

Kennels, Phone 992 -

5441 .

POMEROY

HOUSECLEANING in Mid-

151 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.

2 key -

12-12-61 c

Park~W' Iew

or Chihuahua on S. Third St..
Middleport . Phone 992-2947.
12-16-3tc

organ,

Pomeroy Home &amp; AutO .

VJHATLL 'rt::lu

IF THAR'S
ENNYTHING
I HATE AN'
DESPISE IT'S

Why You Should Buy Now

I

· Open6Tii"S
Monday thru Saturday

12-15-2tp

boards, full octave base
peda ls, excellent cond ition,
would make a nice Christmas
gift l or home or sma ll church.
Phone 992 -6602 .

Found
LIGHT brown male Manchester

washing

machine, good condit ion also
twin..tubs on track - $20. Near
Danv ille Wesleyan Church .

REPRESENTATIVE

forgotten.
Mrs. Lola Meek .
12- 16-ltp

SPEED

Fr om drafting to completion
of home or business.

MARTHA ROSE, Owner

12-16-31c

many

Card of Thanks

Phone 992-5080.

12-16-3tp

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

SERVICES

HIDDEN
TREASURES
GIFT SHOP

p .m .

old. Phone 742-5870.

BUILDING

gift.

Ravenswood 273-9893 after 5

Reynolds
Flower
Sh op .
Mason, W. Va .. up near Dr i ve-

YOUR LOCAL ARMY

Dolls, all dressed in style,
knitted and crocheted . (Has
to be seen to be appreciated)
Many items you have been
looking for, for that perfect

EXPERT

.

BRLLS
O'FIRE!!

Our Lot is Full
of Reasons ®

'Wheel Alignment
15.55

COMPLETE

Christmas
decorations, wearing
jewelry,
appareL
ceram1cs.

etc . Will sell for $85. Call

by

12:16-llp

for

10-18-tfc

' 12-15-3tc

Deef

best.

apartments . Close to school.

12·16-2tc
Christmas part y, Fnday,
Dec. 17, New Year's Eve
party , Fr iday , Dec. 31 from
l : JO p.m . to 12 :30 a ._m.
Sc hedule your hol iday part1es
now . Available on Monday,
and
Thursda.y
Tu esday
nights. Also Sa turday and
Sunday afternoons . Open
Wednesday . Friday and
Sa turda y nights. Phone 985-

HANDCRAFT
GIFT ITEMS

F URNISHED and unfurnished

ORIGINAL CABINET
COMPANY

•

--...., F.:EK AND MEEK

·

Business Services

FUR NISHED sleeping room
over Wine Store. Rent by
month. Phone 992-5293.
11 -26-tfc

.

OFFICE HOURS
6:30a .m. to 5;00 p.m. Daily , SKATE -A-WAY holiday pa_rties .
8: 30

8x35
TRAILER,
country
location. Phone 992-3954.
12-14-Jtc

4-2-tfc
V.F W. Gunshoot . noon, Sun day . Dec. 19, Broad Run Gun ·- · ---~~----

GUN SHOOT, Friday , Dec. 17, 7
p. m. Mile Hil l Road. Steak ,

CARD OF THANKS
&amp;OBITUARY

·

Water PHis. Nelson Drugs.

Will be accepte.;i until9a .m. fOr
Day of Publioatlon
REGULATIONS
•·
• The Publisher reserves the ABOUT YOUR WEI GHT ...
·right 'to edit or reject any ads·
~m ed
obiectional.
Th!i
publisher wilt not be responsible

.

I

$24~uslax
'

A Cryptogram Qaolatlou

GENERAL TIRE SALES
992-7161

NVAU
FRKWUF

MlDDLIPORT, 0.

-N.

I

••

XU

KWU

KWRP

NRFVSRZYV

KWU

FURYE
FURYE

WRPY
KGPNCO .

II

II

•

'

�..
12- The DallY Sentinel, Mldlleport.Pcneroy, 0., ~- 16, 1971

Short Funding
MORGANTOWN, W. Va .
(UP!) - Dr. Robert H. Britt,
associate professor of economics at West Vtrginia University, in an article published in
the University of Kentucky
Journal, asserted inadequate
federal funding has limited
construction of the Appalachian Development Highway System.
Britt said the estimated cost
of $3.9 billion is three times
larger than the original figure

Redistricting

(Continued from page I )
Cleveland to the District of
Democratic Rep . Charles A.
Vanik which could weaken both
of them.
, Democrats submitted a plan
designed to preserve seats for
incumbents John F. Seiberling
of Akron, Hays, Carney, Yanik,
Louis Stokes and James V.
Sl&lt;lnton of Cleveland and Thomas L. Ashley of Toledo.
The Democratic plan conceded Republican seats to incumbents Donald D. Clancy of Cincinnati, Charles W. Whalen of
Dayton, William H. Harsha of
Portsmouth, Clarence J. Brown
Jr. of Urbana, Jackson Betts
of Findlay, Delbert L. Latta of
Bowling Green, Chalmers Wylie of Columbus, Charles A.
Mosher of Oberlin and J. William Stanton of Painesville.
Combines Districts
The plan also combines the
districts of Betts and Latta as
well as those of Rep. John
Ashbrook of Johnstown and
Miller, leaving one district m
wh1ch no incumbent lives.
However, that district contains much of Ashbrook's territory and he woul\1 be expected
to run in it rather than fight
Miller if the plan were to go
through.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight, Dec. 16
NOT OPEN
Friday &amp; Saturday
December 11·18
PLANET OF THE APES
ITechnicolor I
Ch ar lton Hes ton

Maurice Evans
'' G"

BtNEATH THE PLANET
OF THE APES
\Technicolor)
Ja mes Franciscus
K1m Hunter

"G"

SHOW STARTS I P.M.

to finance the Appalachian Development Hi~hway System.
According to the Appalachian Regional Commission all of the states now
have the capacity to finance
more development highways
than federal funds will allow.
The system calls for the construction of 2,554 miles of highway in 10 states. West Virginia
would construct 410 miles. Only
307 miles had been completed
by October, 1970, including 12.5
in the Mountain State.
Of all funds obligated by the
ARC, said Britt, 62.2 per cent
were for highways. The figure
is less than the original estimate because a larger proportion has been invested in
health, education and other human resources projects.

Castro Vows
Capture All
Pirate Ships

to

MIAMI (UP! ) -l'remier
Fidel Castro's government
admi tied in a Cuban radio
broadcast today that it captured a Miami-based cargo
shtp in the Bahamas and
warned that its gunboats will
"go any distance from our
coast" to seize "pirate ships."
"The entire responsibility for
th1s situation belongs to the
government of the United
Sl&lt;ltes as principal author and
insptration of such acts of
banditry," said the broadcast
monitored in Miami.
The broadcast said the 1,400ton freighter Johnny Express,
owned by Cuban exiles and
flying the Panamian flag, was
captured about 120 miles from
the eastern coast of Cuba
Wednesday. The Johnny Express had radioed that it was
bein g attacked by Cuban
gunboats and many of its
crewmen
wounded
by
machine-gun fire .

Pleasant Valley Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Betty
Gillispie, Leon; and George
Burdette, Point Pleasant.
DISCHARGES - William
Dye, Mrs. Ralph Edwards,
Mrs. Fred Willet, Richard
Byron, Mrs. Charles Stutler
and daughter.

STARTING FRIDAY, DEC. 17

OPEN EVENINGS
UNTIL CHRISTMAS
FROM
MASON

FOR

HER

Beautification
Fund Drive off
To Good Stan
The Holzer Medical Center
Landscape and Exterior
Beautification Fund Raising
Drive is off to a good start
according to Chairman J. Tim
Evans.
"In the first two weeks of our
campaign, we have received
nearly $60,000 toward the total
goal of $165,000. I feel this is an
indication that we will pass our
total goal," he said.
The announcement was
made at a meeting of county
fund raising chairmen held in
Jackson this week. Also at the
meeting was Landscape Architect J. L. Tanner who
designed the Holzer Medical
Center project. He explained to
the chairmen that the landscaping is both functional in
design as well as pleasing to
the eye.
"We have used plant
groupmgs to develop a
similarity to the natural landscape surrounding the Medical
Center site," he said. He also
said that this .ma(!Sing of the
plants serves to provide a wind
break , to define roadway
boundaries, and to reduce the
visual impact of the large
parking areas.
Volunteers interested in
working on the fund raising
drive are invited to contact J.
Tim Evans, General Chairman, or any of the following
county chairmen: Jackson Jim Stiffl'er; Lawrence Judge Warren Earhart or Neal
Taylor; Mason - Walter
Windsor ; Meigs - Ted Reed.

Alffleu.a
..J- Wi
1
lppe
Died TY.T_ ..J ..J _
W

eanesu.ay

.
Mrs. Almeda Wtppel, 91,
Pomeroy , died Wednes~ay
evenmg at Holzer Medtcal
Center. Mrs. Wippel was
preceded m death by her
husband, Andrew; one son,
Dale ; three sisters, and four
brothers.
She is surv1ved by a
daughter, Helen Atkins,
Pomeroy; a sister, Martha
McElroy, Minersville; a
grandson , Edgar Atkins,
Galli.polis ;
two
granddaughters , Mrs . Frankie
Wippel Rusche!, Columbus,
and Mrs . Shirley Wippel
Poling, Columbus; six greatgrandchildren, one greatgreat-granddaughter, and
several nieces and nephews.
FWleral services will be held
Saturday at 2 p.m. at Ewing
Chapel with the Rev. Robert
Kuhn officiating. Burial will be
in Beech Grove Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home anytinne.

MRS. BATEY DIES
Mrs . Edith Batey died
Thursday morning at Holzer
Medical Center. Mrs. Batey
made her home with a
daughter, Mrs. Carl (Rachel)
Jennings, Rock Springs Road,
near Pomeroy. The body is at
the Rawlings-&lt;:oats Funeral
Home where services are being
arranged.

Say Merry Onistma.s With A

MAYTAG DISHWASHER

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Sherrie
Starcher, Pomeroy; Arthur
Carnahan, Long Bottom;
Carrie Baumgardner, New
Haven;
Janice Evans,
Pomeroy;
Harold Will,
Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED - Janice
Gibbs, Dorothy Whaley.

hard·working features
like these . .
TRIPLE LEVEL

WASH ACTION Full
w1d th sUrniB

steeL upper and
lower wa~h arms
~Ius

mam

n\ifJ~ Ie

~ P • ay

noute force
o~ werl ol water
1e 1~ aga.nst every
d1~h surlice. Gets

Make 49 payments. SOc
to $10.00 and we make
the

~CYCl HQRfV[R~ b1 g or small loads
OISMWASHI NGJOB. ~Dar~ hng clean
Attullr lor mry
c~ma

Was~

Order's
Officers

·installed
Installation of officers
the
annual
highlighted
Christmas meeting of the
Gallia-Meigs Fraternal Order
of Police Wednesday night at
the VFW Hall in Gallipolis.
Officers for the 1972 fiscal
year are E. J. Sheets, GalliaMeigs Post State Highway
Patrolman stationed in Meigs
County , president; Ray
Manley, Meigs County Deputy
Sheriff, vice-president; Ray
Sanders, GSI Security Police,
secretary; Jerry Taylor ,
Gallipolis Police Depariment,
guard, and Paul North,
Gallipolis Police Depariment,
chaplain.
Three new members, Gary
Swope, Meigs County Game
Protector; Ron Anderson,
Pomeroy Police Department,
and Russell Cremeans, a
former member of Lodge 55 of
Athens, were inducted.
Thirty-two members and
their guests enjoyed a turkey
dinner prepared by Mrs .
Laura Hackworth. Guests
included David Cline and
Russell Hall , members of
Athens Lodge 55, and Gallipolis
City Manager D. Kenneth
Morgan.
Door prizes, a 12 guage
Remington shotgun and
camera, were won by John
Burlile . and Rutland Mayor
Eugene Thompson, also a
guest.

.Swann is Free
Steven Swann, '·released from
the Mason County jail
Wednesday afternoon, goes a
free man today and is "forever
discharged of this charge."
Swann, having been acquitted
by a five woman-seven man
petit jury on an indictment
charging murder in connection
with the death of Sandra
Williams early on the morning
of July 4, was released on a
court order signed by Judge
James Lee Thompson. He
entered a plea of "not guilty by
reason of insanity" to the
indictment.
Jurors, after deliberations of
some two and a half hours,
returned the verdict "not guilty
due
to
insanity
and
recommendation for further

observation and treatment" at
the end of the two-day trial held
November 4 and 5.
Immediately, Judge
Thompson, the presiding jurist,
directed Sheriff Troy Huffman
to re-commit Swann to custody
and to re-incarcerate hinn in the
county jail until the Court" can
make
a
determination
concerning the element of
sanity".

Following this, fn recent
weeks, Swann has undergone
examinations by psychiatrists
in both Charleston and
Huntington who concluded "he
is not harmful to himself and
others".
Apparently it was through
this conclusion that Judge
Thompson signed the order
granting Swann's release. A.
Temperature in downtown
Pomeroy Thursday at 11 a.m. copy of the order was presented
was ii4 degrees under sunny ' to Sheriff Huffman who in turn·
executed the order.
skies.

News ... in Briefs
(Continued from page I)
unexpected stop at his home and discovered his daughter,
Connie, 18, and two men In the kitchen. When one ofthe men tried
to hide something, Pinder bec.ame suspicious, investigated and
discovered marijuana.
"!know I could have forgotten the whole matter because I
was the only one there, but what good would that have done,"
Pinder said. "There are tinnes when you just do what you feel you
have to do."
WASHINGTON -FEDERALAPPEAili Judge Otto &amp;erner,
a former Illinois governor and chairman of former President
Johnson's riot commission, was indicted Wednesday on charges
of bribery, mail fraud, tax evasion, perjury and conspiracy. The
charges against Kerner stemmed from race track transactions
in Illinois where he was governor between 1961and 1968.
Kerner, named to the 7th U.S. Qrcult Court of Appeals April
22, 1968, by Johnson, is only the fourth federal judge In history to
be indicted by a federal grand jury. The three others were accused of offenses connected with their judicial offices. Along with
three former stale officials appointed by him during his
governorship and a Chicago businesswoman, Kerner was named
In a 19-count, 64i&gt;Bge Indictment returned by a federal grand
jury In Chicago.

ELBERFELD$ OPEN UNTIL 9 P.M.
Open every night from now to December 24. An excellent time for your gilt buying all over the store. New selections
in mens shirts · me_n.,!i _!lress slacks- mens work clothing . more Angel Treads. New selection of Sheets - Hosiery Cameras and accessories.

Visit the 2nd floor- See the many new gift items · New Bedspreads. Curtains. new selection of Luggage - Yard
Goods · Car Coats - Dresses- Sale of womens Skirts- more Blouses for women . Aprons.

And on the Jrd floor another big selection of Easy Chairs - Bassell Bedroom furniture- Special Rug Sale . Big group
of Hassocks - Table Lamps . Lamp Shades. It'll pay you to shop every department- 1/isilevery floor.

and

teachers and other employes
effective on July I, 1972.
According
to figures
presented at the Columbus
meeting, Morrison said, the
following salary increase
provisions are set up for Jan . I :
Ateacher with less than a BS
degree now starts at $4,500 but
under the new schedule would
receive $5,1.07. With 11 years
experience, the same teacher
would receive $6,032, which is
jess than the $6,300 now
received.
A teacher with a ba'chelor's
degree now starting at $5,200
will receive $5,800 under the
new formula and would receive
$8,222.40 with II years experience compared to the
$7 .~ top salary now paid. A
teacher with five years

VOL. XXIV

WYNOT, Neb. (UPI) Have faith, you losing prep
basketball coaches. Your lot
could be worse.
Tiny Wynot High School,
with a male eiii'Ollment of 59,
has lost games of 103-21, 89ZI and 98-29 this year. The
latest contest (?) against
Niobrara, Neb., ended with
Wynot losing a squeaker,

TO CHRISTMAS

SANTA COMING
Santa, through the courtesy
of the Ladies Auxiliary of the
Racine Fire Department, will
arrive in Racine at 2 p. m.
Sunday to give treats to the
children of the community.
Santa will be at the community
tree near the fire station.

Rlnn u• hid for

lho '"'!'m!. o
ll l~r

wulling.
nrlfttr for pre

warming.

.................................
Mason Furniture
HERMAN GRATE

773-5592

'.

MASON, W. VA. ·

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

Member Federal Savings &amp;
Loan Insurance Corp. All
ccounls , ins.ured

S20,000.00.

up

to

NAME OMIITED
Cathy Davis was omitted
from the "B" honor roll of
Eastern High School for the
second sit: weeks grading
period.

.

FAVORITE HOlJDAY FOODS of these Melga girl scout
leaders were samples and the recipes shared at the Big Bend
Neighborhood meeting Wednesday. Pictured at the table

.

centered with a net Christmas tree made by a junior scout
are Mrs. Walter Morris, Mrs. William Ohlinger, Mrs. Roscoe
Wise, Mrs. Bruce Zirkle, Mrs. Jack Welker, and Mrs. James
Sisson, left to right . See page 5, "Fun With Foods."

Weather
Clearing south, cloudy and a
chance of snow flurries qorth ·
tonight. Colder tonight with low
in the upper teens or lower 20s.
Fair south partly cloudy north
and colder Saturday with highs
mostly in the 20s except in the
lower 30s extreme south.

Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Area

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 173

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1971

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

Best Homes in Route 7 East Area

On the second floor - bib aprons . tea aprons . smocks .
cobblers . aprons · organdy . prints . solid colors.

SANTA CLAUS
Bring the children to the Toy Store in the middle
black for a visit with Santa Claus.

Thursday, Friday or Saturday 7 to 8 P.M.

Make Excellent Gifts

liFT

FOR

BOYS

She'll Just Love
ACap And
Scarf
This Christmas

ROBES

Route 7 East shows
newcomers to Meigs County
more good homes than any
other area here according to
Pat Meeker, consultant for
Surveys Unlimited, Cable,
Ohio, employed by the Meigs
County Regional Planning
Commission,
Meeker pre.nll!d results of
a visual survey of housing in
the county to the commission
Thursday night at the ex-

tension office.
Meeker said Meigs County
has 7,200 housing units listed of
which approximately 4,300
were inventoried through the
visual survey. Found to have
the greatest percentage of good
homes (76pct.) was the Route 7
East area, known as the
Chester Road, or Route 7
toward Parkersburg from
Pomeroy.
Meeker said his finn in a

study of "Want ads" of houses
for rent or sale in the county
found that the percentage of
homes available is only about
one-half of one percent.
"Availability should run
three percent to allow present
residents opportunities to
secure more adequate housing
and
to
accommodate
newcomers arriving in the
county," he said.

Mens and boys depart·
ment, 1st floor - for boys
robes in corduroy · dacron

The firm in another study of along the road would affect
advertising on general home vacancies in that sector .
At the next meeting on Jan .
contracting work and found
only one firm advertising 20, Meeker will further discuss
regularly in the county. "This housing with members of the
would indicate that those commission preparatory to
engaged in building apparently completing a detailed text with
have all of the business they recommendations and conclusions. In the meantime, his
want," Meeker said.
He
noted areas of firm will begin a study of
parks,
and
deterioration where strip schools,
mining has taken pLace. The recreational facilities . Acarea of the county having the companying Meeker to the
greatest percentage of vacant meeting was his assistant,
houses is on Route 338, the road William Parker.
·w Long Bottom, Meeker said.
The commission, with E. F.
Robinson
, Pomeroy , chairHowever, it was noted that the
number of summer cotta~es man , presiding, discussed

and cotton blends.
Juven ile

2 to 6.
Regular boys size 8 to 18 Solid color . two color
combinations and cor·

Be sure to see
this fine group of
scarfs
and
matching caps.
Fine
quality
knits - some with
matching gloves
on the lsi
floor .

duroy .
Complete

size

with

Cease Fire in

vinyl

carrying case.

,

Come in for a
Demonstration

MEN'S INSULATED COVERALLS

r

I

•

'

. •.

'I . . .

•
''

West Accepted

.. ; ';. ......,.
...
'.

RCA AccuColor®TV

3.

Siz.es 36 to 46 in dark ol ive and green - red nylon quilt lin1ng.

'I

ad1ustable snap legs · action back . Completely washable.

TAIDNG PART In the anual a.n.tmu Jli'GIIIIm at Syracuse Elementary School are
members of the aecond class. Left to right are, Tina Pierce, Amber Warner, Diana Nease and
Sheryl Ables. The musical comedy "I'm Getting Nuttin' For Otristmas" is under the direction
of Miss Beverly Price. The play will be presented Wednesday at 1 p.m. The public Is invited to
attend.

r---------------------------,
7\.T
•
B . ..f.

I

;
The COVINGTOfil

You'll want to see all the other RCA Home En·
tertainment products. Stereos - B&amp;W Televisions
- Tape Players - Portable Phonos. Radios. Let us
help you with your selection.

,ews... zn

rze,s :

Bunk Beds

Nothing tops

1.5.1.® Socks

"TV"

in value, comfort, or looks
Favorite style, terrific value. 75% "Orion" acrylic and
25% stretch nylon in a handsome medium rib. Wears
and wears ... washes perfectly. Choose from 34 colors.
includrng jet brown, jet navy, jet olive, black, odord,
white. One size fits all from 10·13.

S DO

Maple and Walnut
finishes - converts easily
lo twin beds. Saves space
and are comfortable for
. sleeping.
Furniture Department
Jrd floor

I

I

GQ -72S, IOO&lt;K, Sol id Slllte ch111 11
25• dl•ron11 picture

Brilliant, lifelike color. Consistent,
dependable, performance. Accurate
automatic tuning. 100% Solid State chassis.
All the features that assure luxury color
viewing enjoyment. Come see it.
Music Department On The 2nd Floor.

1

I
By United Preas International

BELFAST, NORTHERN IRELAND - BRITISH Army
patrols were attacked In BeHast and Londonderry today, and a
civilian was wounded by mlper fire In the city of Newry.
But a spokesman at British Army Headquarters In tbe tense
province said it was relatively quiet, for Northern Ireland, where
fighting has claimed 164 lives this year. Thursday, Northern
Ireland Premier Brian Faulkner said a campaign against
terrorists of the Irish Republican Army, considered responsible
for much of the violence, was proving successful.

SAIGON -SOU'111 VIETNAMESE AND Cambodian troops,
with allied air and artillery support, pressed their advance today
Into the Otup robber plantation area of Cambodia.
The drive Is aimed at wreSting control from Communist
forces of key highways In the area.

1

po l s and pa ns

118-1.

instruction, and his assistant
Dr. Paul Spade.
Essex, according to the UPI,
urged school administrators to
use all their "energy and
resources" to fight any attempt to repeal the income tax
included ln the new state
budget.
At the meeting attended by
about 1,000 school officials,
Essex explained the effects of
the income tax bill and increased appropriations to
schools. He said school appropriations for the biennium
would be $390 million more
than the previous two year
. period.
Essex described the tax bill
as "another historic landmark
in ' the development of
education in our state. It's a
great day, greatest in lhis
generation without question.
"Regardless of your
politics," Essex said, "pay
tribute to a courageous
governor who set a high goal
and made it possible to attain
this goal" The school chief also
praised the "tremendous"
contribution made by House
Speaker Charles Kurfess, R·
Bowling
Green,
and
"legislators who placed their
careers on lhe blocks."

NEW SHIPMENT LADIES' APRONS

50TH

OniJ

training - ISO hours - now
sU!rting at $.5,400 wiD receive
$6,020.40 as of Jan. 1 while the
pay for II years experience
will be $6,763.80 compared to
the present $7,875.
A teacher with a Master's
Degree now starts at $5,700 but
will receive $6,351 under the
new schedule, going up to
$9,413.40 with 11 years experience compared to the
present $6,700 for that amount
of experience.
Non-certified employes will
receive a 20 cent an hour increase under the provisions of
the formula. Presenting information on the formula at the
Thursday meeting held at the
Lausche Building on the
fairgrounds were Dr. Martin
Essex, state superintendent of
~w:·ffl:·~·:~:tt».~::

Urdu, the language of
Pakistan, is taken from the
word for Army because Akbar,
an ancient Mogul emperor of
India, discovered that his
multilingual army had found a
common way of communicating.

Assembly
(Con tinned from page I)
law on the books in time for
thefederaldeadlinenextmonth.
The Senate unanimously
agreed to a House-passed bill,
stalled for months in the Senate Rules Committee, requiring
safety glass m storm doors
patio doors and bathtub enclo: '
sures in private dwellings after next July 1.
Fiercely Lobbied
The measure had been fiercely lobbied against by homebuilderandhardware dealer associations on grounds it would affect
sales of glass to replace broken
door and window panes.
But the chief sponsor, Rep.
George E. Mastics, R-Fairview
Park, noted that the children
of three House members had
been cut by shattered glass during the long delay on the bill,
and the House confirmed the
Senate action and sent the measure to the governor.
The Senate passed on an
emergency basis a House - approved bill reappropriating $238
million in funds for capital improvements at state facilities.
The House agreed, 62-24, to a
Senate · passed election reform
bill but knocked out an emer&amp;ency clause, meaning the provision will have to be implemented administratively by
Secretary of State Ted W.
Brown in preparation for the
1972 primary election.
The Republican . written bill
was a new version of one vetoed earlier by the governor because of a controversial clause
authorizing boards of elections
to ask a series of questions
about residency of college students and other transients before registering them to vote.
That clause was eliminated
from the new bill.
Bills To Governor
Both chambers agreed to conference committee reports and
sent the governor legislation
providing kidney dialysis
benefits on an out-patient basis
and granting retirement
benefit increases
to teachers •
•
public employes and school
employes who retired before
.July I, 1968.
- Both chambers agreed to a
conference report extending for
one year the life of a citizens'
commission studying the operation of the legislature.
-Sen. Robin T. Turner, R·
Marion, and Rep. Richard G.
Reichel, R ·Massillon, entered
formal protests against the passage of the budget and tax biU.

Meigs County teachers and
non-certified school employes
will get salary Increases effective Jan. I, 1972, contingent
however, upon the president's
signature on a bill which would
permit the increases under
wage and price control
regulations.
In Columbus Thursday to
hear an explanation of the new
school foundation subsidy
program were Robert Bowen,
Meigs County Superintendent
of Schools; Larry Morrison,
assistant superintendent of the
Meigs Local School District;
John Riebel, Superlhtendent of
the Eastern Local School
District, and Ralph Sayre,
Silperintendent of the Southern
Local School District.
Morrison told The . Daily
Sentinel today the increases
given in the new formula exceed 5.5 pet. increases approved under wage and price
control guideline regulations.
However, a bill has been
passed by both houses of
Congress and is ready for
President Nixon's signature,
which would permit teachers
. and non-certified employes to
receive the planned increases.
The new formula also provides
for additional pay increases for

Now You l\.now

l~r

day use

Teacher Raises Up to Nixon

..

COLUMBUS -omo PAID OUT $49.7 million for all welfare
programs In November, state Auditor Joseph T. Ferguson said
today. The November payment was $2.3 million below October
paymenls, he said. The total for the first five months of the new
fiscal year, which began July I, amounted to $241' million.
The Aid to Dependent Otlldren (ADC) program was given
$16.6 million, an increase of $39,961 over October. ADC recipients
Increased to 376,774 In November from October's 372,373 .
WASHINGTON -A FOOD AND DRUG Administration
(EDA) official acknowledged today that a law requiring
declaration of artificial food colors is illfrequently enforced for
. (Continued on page 12)

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED Orville
Landers, Pomeroy; Doris
Yonker, Letart, W. Va.
DISCHARGED - Julie
Richards, Nannie Radcliff,
Elmer Burns, Ullian Clark.

By United Press International
Agha Mohammad Yahya
Khan said today his troops
would observe an Indian
ceasefire on the Western front,
ending at least temporarily a
two-week-old war on the subcontinent.
Khan made the announcement in Bengali over
the official Radio Pakistan.
"! hav e commanded my
armed forces to cease fire,
from 7:30 p.m. West Pakistan
time (9 a.m. EST)," he announced.
Earlier, Indian Prime
Minister Indira Gandhi warned
Pakistan military leaders they
would be responsible for the
consequences if they spurned
her offer for a cease-fire.
All-India radio, the official
voice of the New Delhi
government, reported no new
clashes on the eastern front,

BY GEORGE HARGRAVES, SUPT.
Meigs Local Sebool District
In an effort to provide parents additional information about
the high school and its program, the first issue of the Meigs High
School Newsletter Is on Its way. Edited by Principal James
Diehl, it hopefully will serve to answer many of your questions.
One of the items included in the Newsletter discusses the
courses of study for the 1972-73 school year. Registration for all
high school students for next school year will be taking place in
the weeks ahead. Parents should be giving serious consideration

Speaking of Schools-No. 218
to this. The students should certainly be doing this also. Im·
portant future career decisions are involved in this registration
procedure.
THE READING program at Pomeroy Elementary has
abandoned the A·B.C grading system in grades 4-5-6. Instead of
grades we will report progress in reading as measured by
standardized test scores.
At the beginning ofthe school year the students in grades 4, s
and 6 were all tested in reading. These test results were used to
group the students according to their reading level. At the end of
three months they were tested again. These test results show
'

Dr. ... llln. R. D. Ill twa

100 Years Service Marked
LANGSVILLE - A Meigs
County couple - as of
December 11 - had completed
a century in the Lord's work, SO
years each. The couple is Dr.
and Mrs. H. D. Brown of
Langsville. Mrs. Brown is the
former Mabel Miller.
A native of North Carolina
and a daughter of a minister,
Mrs. Brown was converted at
an early age. She has worked
as an evangelistic singer,
children's and youth worker,
and a church musician. She
was a student of God's Bible
School in Cincinnati where she
also taught school.
Dr. Brown grew up in
Rutland and attended school
there. He went off to war in Co.
C, 37th Division, in 1917.
Following his discharge, he
became a police officer at
Marion. It was at Marion that
he was converted and received
his call to the ministry.
He united with the International Apostolic Holiness
Church. This became the
Pilgrim Holiness Church which
today is The Wesleyan Church.

District Newsletter in Mails

.
I

where
the
Pakistanis
surrendered Thursday, but
earlier reported heavy fighting
in the West.
"Now that India has
suggested a cease-fire on the
western front, Pakistan has
agreed to a cease-fire and to
make
all
relevant
arrangements regarding this
in accordance with the general
resolution in the United
Nations," Khan said.
More than a half dozen
ceasefire resolutions have been
introduced in the U. S. Security
Council since fighting erupted
on two fronts Dec. 3. The Soviet
Union has vetoed three U.S.·
sponsored cease-fire
proposals.
Yahya Khan, in a speech, to
West Pakistanis Thursday,
promised to continue the fight
"till the enemy is driven out
from our territory."

subdivision regulations being
prepared for final presentation
to the Meigs County commissioners for review and
approval. The regulations as
drawn will now be turned over
to the department of Meigs
County Engineer Ted Beegle
for further study. If the plan Is
followed, there will be
regulations set up on all subdivisions in the county so that
lots will be the property size
and drainage, sewage, and
other problems are handled.
If the commissioners adopt
legislation on the proposed
regulations, the planning
commission will be the ad·
ministrative body.

progress in reading in comparison to where the student was three
months ago. This puts him in competition with himself and not
with other members of his class.
These test results are also used to regroup the students according to their new achievement levels. A report to the parents
will expLain the students' growth or lack of growth in reading
during the three month period.
The faculty at Pomeroy Elementary School, headed by
Robert Morris, principal, is considering development of a
mathematics program along this same line for next year. We will
keep you posted on the progress of the present reading program
and the proposed math program.
NEWS &amp; NOO'F.S
We are still plugging away on the Mine Mechanics col\fse for
the second semester; there are still some unsolved problems""The last day of school before Christmas vacation will be next
Wednesday, Dec. 22- That will be a full day -There will be no
early dismissal - Classes resume on Monday, January 3
following the Christmas vacation . - We play Gallipolis there
tonight and travel to South Point Tuesday, Dec. 28 - If you are
over 65 and would like to have a Gold Card for free admission to
Meigs athletic events, just call us at 992-2153, and we will put one
in the mail.

Given a church to pastor, he
later graduated from The
Indiana Christian University at
Indianapolis , Ind ., receiving
bachelor of arts and doctor of
divinity degrees.
Dr. Brown was then placed in
the General Home Missionary
Depariment of the church as a
home missionary which was
followed by 26 years of working
in 41 states and Canada. As a
direct result of Dr . Brown's
work, 2B men were saved and
called into the ministry. The

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended Outlook Sunday through Tuesday:
Cold Sunday morning,
moderating Sunday and
Monday and not much
change Tuesday. Achance of
showers or snow flurries,
mainly northeast late
Sunday and Monday. Highs
mostly In the upper 30s and
40s. Overnight lows In the
upper teens to middle 20s
Sunday morning and the
:upper 20s to middle 30s
Monday and Tuesday
mornings.
PROGRAM ASSURED
The Leading 9reek Conservancy District at Rutland
will have a work training
program for youths 16 through
21 starting shortly after Jan . I.
Youth in the age bracket from•
low income families who are
interested are requested to fill
the office in Rutland and
complete applications.
MR. WEBER DIES

August P. Weber, Chester,
died this morning at Veterans
Memorial Hospital. Funeral
arrangements will be an·
nounced by Ewing Funeral
Home.
LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown
Pomeroy Friday at 11 a.m. was
42 degrees, under cloudy skies.

majority are still working in
the field .
Dr. Brown has served as
district superintendent of five
districts in the Pilgrim
Holiness Church besides
pastoring in Ohio, Tennessee,
Kentucky, West Virginia and
Canada.
Presently, Dr. Brown is an
ordained elder and Mrs. Brown
an ordained deaconess in the
Wesleyan Church and both are
actively engaged in general
evangelism.

35% Tax

Expected

In Ohio
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio Board of Tax Appeals
today was expected to announce a uniform assessment
of 35 per cent for all real
property in the state.
The board met Thursday to
adopt the assessment on a
mandate from the Ohio
Supreme Court that all
property must be assessed
equally.
The board reportedly at first
favored a 40 per cent
assessment.
However, the Ohio County
Auditors Association In
testimony at a board hearing
last week, favored a 30 per cent
assessment.
. The assessment is expected·
to offset a property tax
rollba.ck of 10 per cent which
was approved in the budget-tu
package passed last week by
the Ohio General Assembly.
I( this is the case, the
legislature is expected to t~etk
more tax relief for Ohl011na
when it reconvenes In January.

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            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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