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10 - The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pcmeroy, 0., Dec.-. 19'11 .

.

.Now You .Know ·

-

.

River Dumping Banned

Lindsay .Declares Gmdidacy
MIAMI (UP! )- Mayor John who has seen and fell first hand saying it had "stifled dissent
V. ·Lindsay declaret\ his candi- the anguish of imposed scar- and driven progressives from
dacy for the Democratic city - who has been forced to its ranks."
presidential nomination today choose between teachers in our
Unds,ay said the other
with a sweeping attack on the schools and doctors In our Democratic candidates had
Nixon admlnistration and a hospitals, between cleaning Washington backgrounds, as
vow to "speak for the America our rivers and caring for the had every President' with a
that
Washington
has sick- because the funds we political background in the
ignored."
need are drained away Into past 40 years . "In 1972,
The tali, handsome New mindless wars and into the someone must speak for the
York mayor said in a prepared pockets of the few," he said.' · America that Washington has
statement at a Miami news
Lindsay, 50, was elected ignored," he said.
conference tllat he was seeking Congress and mayor of New
The mayor attacked the
the presidency because he felt York as a Republican. In 1968, Nixon administration for its
•I was time for a chief he delivered a seconding policies on Vietnam, the econ()o
executive who had firsthand speech for loe nomination of my, law and order, the
knowledge of the problems of Spiro T. Agnew as vice Supreme Court and ·the diviAmerica.
. president. Four months ago he sions within the country .
"We know it is not a new
"It is time for a President quit the Republican Party,

Brandt

KEY BISCAYNE , Fla.
(UP! l - President Nixon and
West German Chancellor Willy
Brandt meet today in a sununit
session to coordinate their
policies aimed at bolstering the
Western alliance and reducing
tensions with the East.
Nixon arranged a small
ceremonial welcome with a
cordon of troops and flags
flying at his babny bayside
villa. Brandt arrives by
helicopter at I :15 p.m. from
Longboat Key, a plus, Florida
vacation spot where he spent
the night.
Afterwards Nixon and
Brandt, winner of the 1971
Nobel Peace Prize, will retreat
to a paneled study at 516 Bay
Lane, one of the President's
resort homes for private talks .
It was one of a series of
meetings the President has
been holding with major allies
to seek their views and to
assure them no deals will be
made to compromise Free
World unity when he makes his
jo urneys to Peking and
Moscow next year.
Will Reassure Germany
The President also will try to
reassure Germany that ll)e
United States will make no
troop reductions in Europe
without compensatory cuts by
Warsaw Pact nations.
"II is particularly timely for
the President to sit down with
our major alties to talk about,
and hannonize, the policies of
the allies to the greatest extent
possible so tllat there can be
essential unity that will allow
each"lo proceed with independent policies ''Within a common framework ,'' said
presidential spokesman
Ronald L. Ziegler.
"Nixon and Brandt were
scheduled to hold 51'.. hours of
intensive talks today and
Wednesday at the beachside
compound set off by towering

~daire

Skinny
• •

w elcomedE~-~g

green hibiscus bushes and
pabn trees.
Nixon also will host an informal ''Working" dinner at his
beachside villa for the chancellor and his official party.
Reporters Warned
Reporters were warned In
advance not to expect any

''dramatic announcements'' or
specific agreements to emerge
from tbe freewheeling discus-

sions.
On his arrival in Florida
Monday, Brandt said he looked
forward to a meeting which
would "bring the friendship of
our countries closer."
Monday evening, Nixon hosted a small dinner for FBI
Director J. Edgar Hoover, who

Defector •••
(Continued from Page I)
agent.
The State Department said
Chebotaryev, about 35,
defected to the United
on
Oct.
3,
States
while he was attached to
a Soviet trade mission in
Brussels under the listing "an

engineer."
American officials said he
was known, however, to be a
military intelligence agent,
and that he provided information- the nature of
which IIley declined to discUBS.
The .State Department said
Chebotaryev left the Washington apartment Dec. 23, telling
his roommate he.was~ golng for
a walk. He did not return.
The next day, the State
Department was informed by
Yuly J . Voronlsov, actlng head
of the Soviet Embassy In
Washington, that Chebotaryev
wanted to return to his wile and
children in Russia.
He was questioned Sunday
by immigration and security
officials at John F. Kennedy
International Airport in New
York, and was allowed to
leave. U.S. officials said that
just before his departure, he
chatted jovially with Soviet
dipioll'!l'ts.
State Department officials
said there was no indication
that Chebotaryev's decision to
return resulted from any
pressure from the Soviet
government.
Officially, U.S. spokesmen
declined to speculate on the
major's reasons for changing
his mind.
But there were suggestions
in other quarters that he was
trylng to establish contact with
Oieg Lyalin, 35, a Russian who
defected to England early in
October and gave information
that led to the ouster of 105
Soviet nationals identified as
espionage agents.

is vacationing here, and Secretary of St~ William P .
Rogers.
.
He was expected to remain in
Florida until New Year's Day,
when he flies back to Washington to say goodbye to his wife
Pat, who will be leaving on a
trip to Africa .

Corner

Local Bowling
TRI .COUNTY LEAGUE
Dec . 21, 1971
Standings
Team
Davis Warner Ins.

Larry's Ashland
Rawlings Dodge
Pomeroy Cement Block
H. &amp; R. Fires tone

Pts.
78
74
72
61
51

Now Mary was engaged to a
man very just
24
Joseph by name, but in Mary Holsum Bakery
High
Individual
Game
B.
did trust.
Bodimer 145.
The angel told her the way of
Second High Ind. Game - E.
Voss 214.
Christ's birth,
She was made the most blessed 631.High Series - B. Bodlmer
woman on earth.
Second High Series - H.
VanVranken 583 .
Team High Gam e
A short lime later both women Rawlings
10•3.
and men
Team
High
Se ries
A Thought.
Were called to a city called Rawlings 3059.
~
For Today ~ Bethlehem.
So both Mary and Joseph had
BEGINNERS LEAGUE
to
go,
Dec. 23, 1971
Do not worry about what
Slandings
For
Caesar,
the
king,
had
iC may never happen .
iC
Team
Pts.
decreed it so.
-.c
B
'
'
F
.
-.c
Misfits
62
- en)amm rankhn -.c
-.c
Bombers
52
46
AU the inns in the town were Lucky Stars
Four Aces
36
-.c
-.c lull that day.
Four Deuces
34
So Joseph made Mary a bed in Red Devils
34
High Individual Game - E.
the
hay.
-.c r
-.c And God delivered to Mary a VanMeter 188 ; D. Durst 167 .
Second High Ind. Game - R.
Son
ROilch 180; S. Davis 165.
And the lime of salvation on High Series - R. ROilch 515 ; S.
Davis 440 .
eartll had begun.
Second High Series - B.
Ollie T. Roush Slater 438; D. Hawley 431.
Team High Game - Four
Letart, W. Va.
Deuces 719.
Team Hig h Series - Misfits
Fridan Only .
2041.
-.c The Drive-In Window
~
is Open
-.c 9 A.M. fo 7 P.M. ..
Nd-DRAFT, M.\YBE
~
I ~ol!finuously J
WASHINGTON (UP!) Tonight, Dec.lB
Other Banking Hours 9 to 3~
There is a strong posslbllity
and S 1o 7 as usu,al on ...
that no young .Americans will
Fridays.
·
FIVE EASY PIECES
be called up in the draft during
(Technlcolbrl
the firsL three months of 1972,
Jack Nicholson
according
to
Defense
Karen Black
Secretary Melvln R. Laird. At
"R"
a news conference Monday
POMEROY, OHIO
~ Colorcartoons:
Red
Tractor
Laird said there definitely will
Member FDIC
Member Federal
Brothers jn Outer Space
be no conscription in January
Reserve System
Stooge
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
··and "quite possibly '' none in
i'
----~~.;;.;r,..,J the foUowing two months.
~*.*********'*'*~

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£:
lfs Quick! Easy i
,..
.... ~ DRIVE-IN !
~~ BANKING

£I

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MEIGS THEATRE

j.FARMERS BANK f

BAKER
FURNITURE
I'
.___""""__....
MIDOt.EPOU, O.

a,on seroes
88th Birthday,
Asks for Peace

The Poet's

The angel said "Mary, the
Lord is with thee."
Mary wondered what this
salutation might be.
He then said, "Mary, a child
you shall bear,
And down through the ages a
crown He shall wear."

and SAVINGS mJ

..

widening and deepening
t.'lem," he said. "For the truth
about Washington is that it is a
capital closed to the ordlnary
citizen but open to bankrupt
corporate giants, foreign dictators and to those wealthy
enough to buy privileged
protection with campaign
cash.
lindsay confirmed speculation that he would skip the
nation's first primary in New
Hampshire, where Sen. Edmund S. MUBkie is considered
to have a big lead.
He said he was beglnnlng his
race with the March 14 Florida
"because Florida
primary
.
with its economic and cultural
diversity, is a testing ground
for the beJiefs and principles I
will run on."

.

ourodibvisions-it is

CLEVELAND (UP!) Multimillionaire industrialist
CyrUB Eaton has celebrated his
88th birthday by calling for an
end to tbe Vietnam war and
praising initiatives for more
normal relations W;ith the
Carr Out Until
Soviet Union and Chins.
Eaton arrived at his terminal
Late January
tower office at 8 a.m. Monday
to begln his business day as usCLEVELAND (UP!)
Injured rookie Austin Carr of ual. He is chairman of the
the Cleveland cavaliers is board of the C &amp; 0 Railroad. He
expected to be back in action had already been at work for
after the all-61ar break ln late an hour in his office at his home
after awakening at 6 a.m.
January.
Later In the day there was a
carr was examined by orth()o
luncheon
in his honor put on by
pedic surgeon Dr. James Nicholas in New York Monday. his friends and associates.
on
the
Commenting
Nicholas found no evidence of a
refracture to carr's right foot, prospects for the economy in
lroken in training camp Sept. 1972, Eaton said :
''There will be no permanent
18, and he prescribed a threeweek program of exercise and improvement until President
Nixon or his successor ends the
therapy, tlle club said.
Nicholas attributed the pain war in Vietnam.
"Dr. Henry Kissinger seems
In Carr's foot to unnatural
pressure from the right leg to be slowly recognizing that
because the leg became weak and is persuadlng Nixon to get
while the bone in tlle foot was along with China and the Soviet
Union."
mending.
He said the former Notre
Dame star should be playing
again without pain following Police, E·R Unit
tlle exercise and therapy
program. He also prescribed a Busy on Weekend
special basketball shoe to aid
The Pomeroy E-R unit was
in the recovery.
carr has been on tbe bench called to the Ernest Stewart
since shortly after a Dec. 3 residence in Weishtown at
game against Buffalo in which 12:29 p.m. Monday for Mrs.
the palo occurred In his foot. Etta Custer, who was ill. She
was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where she
was admitted for treatment.
Pomeroy police reported an
accident at the lntersection of
Second and Lynn Sts. at 1:25
p.m. Saturday. A car driven by
Sheila Otha, 20; Gallipolis,
JOYFUL NEWS
pulled from Lynn into the right
A long lime ago in Galilee
rear of a car driven by .Robert
(A little town beside the sea) Murray, South Point, iraveiing
To a virgin, named Mary, an east on Second St. Medium
angel came
damage resulted. Sheila Otha
From God, unto her and called was cited to court on a charge
her by name.
of failing to yield right of way.

•**************'\

~ .

prosperity when two million
Americans are thrown out of
work in three years," he said.
"It is not a generation of peace
when our bomb! rain death on
the men, women and children
of three Asian nations, and at
this moment again escalate the
endless, wretched war in
Vietnam into the north."
lindsay criticized President
Nixon for vetolng the day care
center program, for failing to
control the sale of handguns
and for ngmtnating to the
Supreme Court men whom the
mayor called "insensitive to
liberty."
"And we know, too, that
when an administration listens
only to those with entrenched
wealth and power, it is not

•

Dog Tags on Sale
Until January 10

WASHINGTON (UP!) . Federal Court Judge Aubrey
E. Robinson . Jr. has nded
· against the administration's
lateat water cleanup program
which allowed the government
to issue permits for dumping
refuae Into rivers.
He held federal agencies
"acted in excess of their
statutory authority and also ln
violation of the National Environmental Policy Act'! of
1969 In allowing permits to
pollute.
He upheld the contention of
two Ohio conservationists that
regulation~ authorizing the
permits should call for the
filing of environmental impact
statements as required by the
1969 act.

Limit of 1.5%
More Turkeys
Put on Grower8'

Meigs Countians have wtlil
Jan. 10 to purchase dog tags at
WASHINGTON (UP!)- The
the office of County Auditor Agriculture Department today
Gordon Caldwell before a advised turkey growers to hold
penalty will be invoked.
any 1972 production lncreased
Licenses are $2 each for male to 1.5 per cent or less.
or female dogs and $10 for
The advice was contained in
kennels. The penalty for not a 1972 ''marketing guide" for
purchasing by Jan. 10 is $1 for producers issued by departdogs and $5 on the kennel ment specialists. Officials said
licenses. Dogs must have tags the recommended level of
within 30 days after they are production is calculated to
three months old.
result - as nearly as can be
~w~:
.,aw· ~~ foreseen - In "stable and
reasonable" prices for both
consumers and farmers .
Howard E. Sayre
The guide said producers can
achieve the proposed goal by
holding
output in the first hall
Died December 24
of 1972 10 per cent below this
Howard E. Sayre , 67,
' year's level and then perFawnskin, Calif., formerly of
milling a 4per cent increase In
Meigs County, died Dec. 24, at the sec-ond hail. This
the San Bernardlno Hospital.
marketlng pattern would avoid
Mr. Sayre had been employed a price-depressing buildup of
as an aircraft mechanic.
storage stocks at the beginning
Surviving are his wife, Clara
of the heavy marketing season
B. Sayre; two brothers, Russell next fall, experts said .
of Los Angeles, and. E. W.
Sayre, Columbus, and five
sisters, Mrs . Minnie Dudley,
Columbus ; Mrs. EJecta Porter,
MI. Gilead ; Mrs. Florence
Ubrey, Cardington;· Mrs .
Eleanor Dasher, Marysville,
and Mrs. Bertha Maurer, MI.
Cummins Diesel Central
·Vernon. Funeral services were Ohio, Inc., Columbus, has filed
Monday in San Bernardino.
an action against Randolph
Fraley, Sr., and Randolph
Fraley, Jr., in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court seeking
CLOTHING OFFERED
the unpaid balance of a
Free clothing day will be judgement awarded by another
held from 10 a.m. to noon court.
·
Thursday at the Salvation
The plaintiff states that he
Army HQ on Butternut Ave. in has been awarded a judgement
Pomeroy. Anyone in need of from the defendants in the
clothing· may attend.
Franklin County Municipal
Court In Columbus, and that
$1,597.30 r,emalns unpaid .
Plaintiff asks that a local hank
MARRIAGE LICENSES
be checked to determine if the
Michael Richard Martin 21 defendants have deposits
Jackson, and Sandra ~en~ there.
Newlun, 20, . Long Bottom;
Narthan Lynn Brady, 20,
Athens, and Mary Marie Peck,
20, Albany Route 3; Don Wayne
Pleasant VaUey Hospital
SWJsher, 22, Pomeroy, and
ADMISSIONS
Elaine Jodelle Davis 21
Hartley,
Point: Mrs.
Pleasant ;
Middleport.
'
'
Harold Potts, Gallipolis Ferry;
Brian Rollins, Leon; Mrs. Roy
Bostic, Sr., Point Pleasant ;
INVITATIONS ACCEPTED
Annie Beres, Point Pleasant;
MILWAUKEE (UP!) -Offi- Mrs. Charles Sayre, Mason;
cials of the Milwaukee Basket- Mrs. Frank Epple, Middleport ;
bail Classic announced Mo~nday Mrs. Bryan Duddlng, Point
that Yale and Rice have Pleasant ; James Clonch,
accepted invitations to play In Southside.
next season 's lOth annual
DISCHARGES: Mrs. Paul
tournament.
Smith, Jeanne Bush, John
Marquette and Wisconsin will Baumgardner, Roger Harper,
be the host teams in tlle Rodney
Byus,
Randy
tournament scheduled for Dec. Bonecutter, Mrs . Daniel
29-30.
Miller, Britton Aldridge and
Mrs. Mildred Hargraves.
Births : Dec. 27, a son to Mr.
and Mrs . Stanley Aleshire,
DINWIDDIE ON WAIVERS
MILWAUKEE (UP!) -1 Pomeroy. Dec. 28, a daughter
Veteran forward Bill Din to Mr. and Mrs. Frank Epple,
widdie was placed on Middleport.
the National Basketball
Association's waiver list
Monday by the Milwaukee
MALTA IN PACT
Bucks.
LONDON
(UP! )
Dinwiddie, a five-year veteran in the NBA, had scored a Diplomatic sources said today
total of 37 points in 1.'1 games Malta has concluded a new
commercial accord with the
with the Bucks.
Soviet Union and that 11 appeared to be part of a 'deter·
HOSPITAL RENAMED
mined Soviet drive to establish
naval facilities there for its
KUALA LUMPUR (UP!) Malaysia's largest mental growing Mediterranean ,fleet.
hospital at Tanjong Rambutan,
1110 miles north of here, has
LOCAL TEMP
been renamed "Garden of
The
temperature
ln downHappiness Hospital." The old
name was "Central Mental town Pomeroy at II a.m.
Tueaday was 48 degrees, under
Hospital."
swtny skies.

Action Filed

In Judgement

Corps ordered indUBtrlea

The two filed the class action
suit on behalf of conservationists as "consistent UBel'll of the
Grand River In northeastern
Ohio."
''The regnlations before the
court today clearly fty in the
face of NEPA's mandate that
all agencies of .the federal government shall make such reports and include qetalled
statements," Judge Robinson
said In his order last week.
The administration program
initiated this year was
fashioned from an 1899law that
bars discharges Into navigable
waterways without a permit
froin the Army Corps of
Engineers.
A year ago President Nixon
announced the law would be
used to crack down on
polluters, and nnder 1t the

to

submit permit applications
listing what p&lt;&gt;Uutants each
factory discharged. ThQse
falllng to submit appllcatloni
technically would be barred
from further dtschargea.
The suit named as defendants the Corps, which tssuea
the permits ; the Environmental
Protection
Agency, which helps administer the program, and
Army 'Secretary Stanley R.

Resor.

~

An EPA spokesman said the
had received
abouf"20,000 applications and
issued about 00 permits.
He also said he did not know
what the court ruling would do
to the program, but lt would be
up to the jUBilee Department If
an appeal is made.

Law Professor Contends
Militia I jahle at Kent
"Military 'armaments on city
IOWA CITY, Iowa (UPI):....
An article appearing In the streets, armed soldiers giving
Iowa Law Review contends the and obeylng orders as though
Ohio National Guardsmen who on a battlefield of war, statutes
shot and killed four students at that encourage reckle118 force
Kent State University in MB¥, by extending not merely in1970, are not exempt from demnity but Immunity for
"criminal and civil liability lor unreasonable military acts If
unreasonable acts."
done ln good faith or under
The article written by Univ- orders -these are the bastard
ersity of Colorado Law Prof. offspring of the lllploltative
David Engdahl said the decades since the Civil War;
guardsmen are "bound by the and they cannot be reconciled
same standards of due process with due process of law,"
of law" as any civilian Engdahl said.
autllorltes.
The professor also maintained use of the military against
civliisns In civil disturbances
(Continued from Page I)
violated the ancient Angl()o
American principle of due Parks, $5oo,ooo. Amount disproprocess. A person cannot be portionate to total park needs.
- Rocky Fork State Park,
summarily deprived of these
$182,000.
Amount disproportionrights In peace tbne by troops
outside immediate civilian ate.
-PundersonState Park,$H,control, he said.
Tradition dating hack to the ooo. Amount too small to fund
Assize of Anns, he added, dic- any contemplated project.
tated that wherever regular
-Geneva State Park, $1,700,·
soldiers or militia are used In 000. Amount disproportionate.
civil disorders, they have been
- Hueston Woods State Park,
under the jurisdiction of $26,000. Amount too small.
civilian and civil law, and so
Bureau of · Employment
should be subjeCt to the same Services, $241,000 for Fostoria
penalties as civilian police office, $37,415 for Salem office
officers,
and$189,000for Defiance office .
"Riots and civil distrubances Salem office already completed
must be suppressed," he said, and no n.,. offices were ever
"but in accordance with due contemplated for Fostoria or
process of law."
Defiance.

$14 Mi11ion

MAKE ELBERFELDS IN
POMEROY
YOUR SHOPPING CENTER
BE THRIFTY! SAVE ALL OF
YOUR SALESLIPS FROM. , .

ElBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Art:=================~

HOWARD TO START
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) Ohio Stale back Harry Howard
has been named one of the
starters for tlle East team In
the Shrine All-Star game
Friday in Candlestick Park.
RAINY PRACfiCE
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) The East . and West squa,ds
worked out in cold and drizzling
weather Sunday In preparation
for next Friday's Shrine fool·
ball game at C~ndlestick Park.

INVEST CHRISTMAS CASH
IN A GOOD nMEPIECE

Before
you
buy
·any

watch
consider
.
this......

· ·-- ~

_\~pon

210

built of prec:IIIon·
englneeNd parll, with
jewtled-levar movement
to Insure dependable
performance and
accuracy.

pace. CllooH Caravella•
by Bulove, In many atytee

from only

tto.•

.r

Request) ·

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

E. 2nd
Pomeroy
Phone 992.5418

Jewelry Store
CalrtSt

Devoted To

VOL XXI'I NO. 181

11Je lntel'e3~ Of The Meigs-Masof' Area

POMEROY·M IDDLEPORT. OHIO

Ponl.,
.

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1971

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

~OUDl
..

$1,237,853 Appropriated

By Commissioners; Some
Officillls Take Pay Cut

• •

Attacks Hit
By ARTHUR HIGBEE
SAIGON (UP]) - American
jets bombed North Vietnam
again today in the fourth
consecutive day of the most
sustained raids on the north
ever ordered by President
Nixon. The North Vietnamese
fired missiles and antiaircraft
artillery and sent up Sovietbuilt MIG jets against the U.S.
planes.
Military sources said the
Communist ,opposition to the
raids was light. Radio Hanoi
said seven American fighterbombers had heen shot down
since the prolonged raids began
Sunday.

A record budget of $1,237,853.32 for 1972 was approved by the
Meigs County board of Commissioners Tuesday.
The record high had been in 1970 when the commission
operated with a budget of $1,147,496.63. The 1971 appropriations
totaled $1,094,194.35.
The 1972 budget is an all time high despite a statutory
reduction In salaries of Meigs County's elected officials following
the 1970 census. Officials each will be receiving from $600 to $800
less In 1972. Salaries are paid on tlle basis of population in accordance with state law.
Major lncreases In the 1972 budget compared to the 1971
budget are in (by deparimenl totals):
Auditor - From $27,203 to
$31,383.
from $376,544 to $408,338.
Inspections- From $979 to
Motor Vehicle Gas Fund $5,000.
From a total of $693,572 to
County Planning (new)
$745,176.
$4,479.
General lund appropriations
Elections - From $22,480 to in 1972 include :
::~~:::::::::!::::».::::::::::::8:::::~z::::::*:~:~~m::::
$30,370.
General executive, board of
Protection to property and county comm issioners
persons - From $36,860 to salaries officials, $12,600;'
$41,880.
salaries of employes, $3,6110;
'•'·
TB Hospital claims and care supplies, $1,500; equipment, :-··
I new) - $19,000.
$2,0110; commissioners share of
Soldiers' Relief - From engineering office, $100; rent
THE CHR.JSTMAS CITY is a IItle that Nuernberg West
$11,775 to $14,350.
for health department, $900;
Germany, might justly claim. The ancient city Is ;,blaze
Public
Assistance,
Incontracts, repair, $5,000;
with lights during the holiday season and Is the settl•g
WASHINGTON (UP!) -The
surance, Pensions, Taxes, Etc. travel and expenses of com- American Medical Association,
of the centuries-old Christklndl· smarkl-lhe Christ
Child's Market. Although heavl1 v damaged In World
- From $25,550 to $33,678.
miSsioners, $400; advertising insisting it wants "to cooperate
War II, much of Nuernberg's medieval architecture
Total GF (including minor and printing, $1110; other ex- with President Nixon's curb on
survived or has been reconstructed .
increases or reductions), (Continued on page 101
inflation," has complained to
the Cost of Living Council about
a 2.5 per cent ceiling on
increases In physicians' fees.
In the hierarchy of Phase II
economics, the Cost of Living
Council sits one step higher
(
than the Price Conunission,
By Uolted Press luternational
which imposed the ceiling Dec.
15.
EGYPfiAN PRESIDENT ANWAR SADAT HAS DECIDED
Donald Rumsfeld , director of
to go to war with lsraeltgregaln Egyptian lands, the semiofficial
the
Cost of Living Council,
Cairo newspaper Ai Abram said today. ''The decision to fight has
WASHING'ION(UP!) -Rep. could see little difference in
already been taken, " it quoted Sadat as sayingc"lt remains the John M. Ashbrook, R.Qhio many administration programs suggested that tlle AMA take
same. This means we must mobilize all our resources for the announced today as a challen- from those of the Democrats its case directly to the Price
battle of liberation of the occupied lands."
ger to President Nixon in
He said Nixon had accused Commission, according to his
However, the Egyptian president opened the way for a Republican primaries, saying the Democrats of weakening spokesman. Rumsfeld heard
political settlement, saying "We shall continue our political he would be appealing "to the U.S. defense forces but "had the complaint Tuesday from a
action in all fields and leave the door open for ali contests. But we majority sentiment" in the allowed the situation to get contingent headed by Dr. Max
H. Parrott, chairman of the
• shall continue to insist that not one inch of our occupied GOP.
worse.
AMA board of trustees.
Ashbrook, a conservative
territories will be surrendered. "
Ashbrook said Nixon 's deciIn a statement after the
serving his sixth term in the sion to visit Red China was the
meeting
at the White House,
KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. - PRESIDENT Nixon winds up his House, accused Nixon of final factor that caused him to
the AMA said, "Whle stressing
sununit session with Willy Brandt today, having reassured the allowing the nation's military become a challenger to the
medicine's desire to cooperate
West German chancellor that the United States will make no strength to deteriorate and with President.
Nixon was saying, Ashbrook with President Nixon's curb on
secret deal with the Soviet Union on East-West troop cuts in failure to take "a more forceful
position " toward the Soviet said, that "we've been wrong inflation, Dr. Parrott took
Europe .
and we've changed, " without exception to price control
They scheduled 21'.. hours more of talks at Nixon's resort Union and Red China.
He said he would oppose any change in attitude by propoSals that would deny
villa on Biscayne Bay before Brandt depsrted shortly after noon
ireaiment equal to that given
Nixon in the March 1 New Peking.
for Sarasota, Fla. where he is vacationing with his family.
other
providers of professional
Hampshire primary, the first in
He
said
Nixon
needs
"
to
take
Presidenoial Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler told newsmen
tlle nation, and thai his ': Phase a more forceful position vis a services."
that Nixon privately pledged to Brandt there would be no end
The 2.5 per cent annual limit
I" plan then also will include vis the Soviet Union and Red
runs around NATO allies on troop reductions when he journeys to running in the Florida primary
on fee increases was the same
China," and that in Peking he
Moscow In late May.
March 14.
hoped that the President would imposed on all other services
After that, Ashbrook said, be able to "deal from strength" and industries at the start of
CINCINNATI - THE CINCINNATI Zoo reports that the will be his "Phase II" in discussions with Red China's Phase II Nov. 14. But the
commission gave special atten. recent up and down temperatures here have resulted in one of its determining whether his cam- leaders.
reindeer contracting pneumonia! "That's not supposed to paign, "starting basically from
"But he can 'I deal from tion to health services because
happen," said zoo veterinarian Dr. Jerry Theobald. The reindeer zero," has gained enough strengtll if the defense posture the annual rate of inflation in
is being treated with antibiotics, he said.
support to become an allo{)ut continues to decline," Ashbrook that sector of the economy was
estimated at 13 per cent.
national effort.
said.
The commission ruled that
WASHINGTON - IN AN EFFORT to help poultrymen
Ashbrook was Interviewed on
"I think it's difficult to mount
stamp out outbreaks of the highly virulent Newcastle poultry the CBS Morning News pro- a campaign for President but 1 doctors and others in their
disease, the Agriculture Department has proclaimed a federal gram in advance of a news do not take a defeatist stance category would be required to
maintain for inspection a list of
quarantine on eight small infested areas in California, New conference later in the morn- in the beginning," Ashbrook
said. "! am running to appeal prices that were being 1!1\arged
Mexico and Texas. The affliction can kill all of tlle birds in un- ing :
Ashbrook said Nixon had to the majority of sentiment in for medical services during the
protected flocks .
!ltklay economic freeze. The 2.5
Officials belatedly announced tlle qusrantine, which was broken pledges made in winning the Republican party and per cent guidelines require
effective Dec. 23, on Tuesday. They said the federal restrictions the presidential nomination in throughout much of the coun- increases to be justified by
on movement of poultry and equipment from infested areas 1968 and that conservatives try."
higher operating co~ts.
would back up state quarantines which had been in effect earlier.
On other economic fronts
Tuesday, the Price Commission
WASHINGTON - GOVERNMENT PURCHASES of surplus
approved a 6.9 per cent price
corn in a new program aimed at boosting market prices conincrease for most products of
tinued at relatively low levels this week, an Agriculture
the Wheeling-Pittsburgh Steel
Department report showed Tuesday .
Co. and the Commerce DepartOfficials said the department, after reviewing weekly bids,
ment reported a composite
Tuesday purchased I. 75 million bushels of corn out of 19.5 million
index of leading economic
bushels offered from would-be sellers. Thls .brougbt total purindicators edged up in Novemchases after three weeks to about 4.9 million bushels, lncludlng
ATHENS, Ohio (UP!) - A Delegation, " said Elmer F. ber.
The index of eight indicators
I. 77 million last week and 1.425 million the previous week.
former member of the Jones, Athens, in a letter to all
went
up 0.2 per cent from
Republican State Central and state and cowtty committee ·
October, the lith gain in the
WASHINGTON - REP. EDWARD I. KOCH, D-N.Y., said Executive Committee today officers.
"This is being done not in past 13 months. The index has
urged the drafting of
Tuesday he supports the conditional amnesty pian for draft
Lieutenant Governor John llpposition' to any other person risen 13 per cent since
· resisters drawn up by Sen . Robert Taft Jr., R.Qhio, and will
Brown as Ohio's favorite son to wishing to fill that spot, but November, 1970. ,.
introduce companion legislation ln the House . The Taft proposal
The strongest gains were a
the Republican National more as a 'compromise canwould allow young men falling to register! or the draft or show up
Convention as a stand-in for didate' who should be ac- 3.6 per cent boost in new
for Induction to return to the United States within a year after the
ceptable to all," said Jones. · factory orders for durable
President Nixon .
legislation became lawllnd escape prosecution. In return they
"John has more than earned goods and a 3 per cent rise in
"John was advised of my
would have to spend three years of alternative federal service in
programs such as VISTA, the Veterans Administration or Public intentions and has indicated the distinction and honor," said contracts and orders for new
that he stands ready .to serve Jones. "He has been your plants and equipment. The
Health Service hospitals. Draft resisters In prison could receive
the Republican Party - as a friend and my friend when leadlng negative factor was a
up to two years' credit toward alternative service.
9.7 per cent decline in new
Koch said civilian service "Is a reasonable and necessary favorite son or head of the Ohio working Republicans were housing starts.
·.·.··.......... ·.........·•·.·•.··.·.·.·.·. ·.·.·.·:·. . hard to locate.
.responSe which takes Into consideration the legitimate feelings of
"Will you not only think
those who served in Vietnam, many of whom opposed the war,
ANOTHER COMBO
about the matter, but write to
and the families oft hose who lost their lives there." •
Friday's Sentinel wiU also
State Chairman John Andrews
Veterans Memorial Hospital
contain an edltlon of the
suggesting this be done," he
ADMI'ITED - Ollie WenSunday Tlmeo-Senllnel In
LIMA, OHIO- AN INQUIRY by the state attorney general's.
wrote. The letter was dated deli, Ripley , W. Va. ; Carroll
order to pennlt Ohio VaUey
office into the death of a patient at Lima State Hospital for the·
Dec. 18. but released todaJ.;.
Grimm, Racine ; Terry Little,
Publishing Co., employees to
Criminally Insane was to continu~ today despite an assertion by
U. S. Sen, Rofiert Taft Jr., Athens; Iris carr, Coolville ;
observe the New Year's
the superintendent that the death was due to natural causes.
has announced he lntencb to Melanie Morgan, Syracuse.
holiday. Hospital attendants said they found Robert Schneider, 30, of
run as a fa1•orite son - stand-in
DISCHARGED - Roma
!ConUriued on page 10)
for President Nixon.
Beal, Mary Hasbargen.

Hanoi Radio again denounced
what it termed "the piratical
air attacks by the American
imperialist aggressors." It said
U.S. planes bombed hospitals,
schools and state farms. The
U.S. command declined to
comment but military sources
said what Hanoi claimed was
almost impo~sible.
The chief objective of the
raids appeared to be to
suppress just such antiaircraft
reacti.on as the North Vietnamese came up with today. An
increasing number of MIG jets
had scrambled to chaUenge the
U.S. planes.
Qn South Vietnamese battle-

position
fronts, a U.S. Army OH6 provincial capital of Thanh
observation helicopter was shot Hoa, 85 miles south of Hanoi
down along the Csmbodian and displayed what they said
border Tuesday. Its two U.S. was the wreckage of a downed
crewmen were wounded . Milita- U.S. aircraft along with identifiry sources said the 'copter was cation car&lt;ls of two pilots kill~
flying in support of South in the crash.
Vietnamese 23rd Infantry DiviThe broadcast identified the
sion troops.
pilots as Capt. Paul Rosen,
The broadcast from Hanoi service number 316464799FR,
said another U.S. jet was shot date of birth Nov. 24, 1945; 2nd
down over Quang Bing Pro- Lt. (first name unintelligible)
vince in North Vietnam Tues- Castille, born Dec. 13, 1946,
day and said it was the seventh service number 275468109FV.
plane downed since Sunday.
Offici.ally, the U.S. command
The U.S. command had no has maintained silence on the
comment on the broadcast.
raids, citing the need for
But the Communists held a security because the raids were
news conference Monday in the "an ongoing operation."

IDoctors · 64 Pints Blood Taken

I Object

News ... in Briefs Ashbrook Will

Enter Primary

·As Favorite Son

Allin contemporary
- l o match today'a

.

Chance of rain north anti east ··
tonight. Low tonight in the lQ,.'
Cloudy and warmer with rain
likely Thursday. High Thursday in the upper 4!6 to mid 50s.

Brown Advanced

Alow-priced watch can
be a good lnvaalment · ·'
or_a complete wua ot
money. Chooee awatoh

2-HOUR
. CLEANING

The california gray whale,
during its feeding season in the
Bering Straits , eats so
voraciously that it gains an
average of 10 pounds an hour .

.,

gov~rnment

•

WeathAr

~

Sixty-four pints of blood were
cuntributed to Meigs County's
American Red Cross Blood
program Tuesday when a
Bloodmobile visited the
Pomeroy Elementary School.
Forty-six of the 78 persons
offering · themselves were
replacing blood used by
relatives or friends and 18 were
first time donors. Louella M.
Taylor of Cheshire became a
gallon donor.
Making up the nursing staff
were Barbara Sci tes, RN, and
Mary Armes, LPN. Doctors
Thomas McGowan, J . J . Davis
and Raymond Boice made up
the medical staff. The canteen
was served by the Racine
American Legion Auxiliary

WATCH NIGHT SET
The Meigs Area Holiness
Association will conduct a
Watch Night service with
several member churches
taking part from 8:30 p.m.
Friday to mldnlght at the
Rutland Church of the
Nazarene.
An attendance banner will
be awarded at 9:30 and aiiO
the Rev. Melvin Maxwell,
president of Circleville Bible
College, will speak. There
wlil be spe&lt;lai ~ocal music.
The public is invited.

Two are Fined
By Mr. Fisher

with Jeannette Lawrence
chairman. Boy Scout Troop
249, Tom Cassell, scoutmaster,
loaded and unloaded the unit.
Clerical workers were Jean
Nease, Mary Nease, Marybelle
Warner, Joyce Hoback, Grace
Drake, Jean Sayre, Juanita
Sayre, Lulabelie Hampton,
Dorothy Smith, Jeannette
Lawrence, Elva Dailey,
Martha Beegle, Clara Mcintyre, Beulah Strauss, Harriett
Neigler, Becky Anderson,
Vernon Nease, Candy Hoback
and June Ashley.
Donations were by the
Quality Print Shop, Meigs
Local School District, Daily
Sentinel, Athens Messenger,
Radio WMPO, Veterans

Harlan

Wehrung ,

David

Koblentz. Robert Couch. Albert
Parker, Roger Gaul , Herbert

Dixon,

Donna

Wil son,

Tom

Crow, Lloyd Blackwood, Fred
Thompson, Harley E. Johnson,
Howard P. Logan , Alfred
Wolfe, Wanda L. Eblin, Gary
Smith, Robert Musser, Joseph
Gloeckner, . Richard Sargent,
Homer Smith, Jerry Harper,

Harry L. Bailey, Wallace
Hatfield, Charles Salser,
Richard Eblin, George Nash,
Margaret Bailey, Harry Clark,
Gladys Wolfe. Judy Wolle,
(Continued on page 10)

$50,000 Asked
A $50,000 damage suit has
been filed in the Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by
William M. Hanshaw, Point
Pleasant, against Mark A.
Haley, Middleport, and
University Volkswagen,
Athens.
Hanshaw charges in his
petition that Haley, as an agent
of the Athens firm, was driving
a vehicle owned by that
company on Dec. 28, 1969, when
he struck the defendant at the
Hanshaw Truck Stop at
Henderson, W. Va . Hanshaw
further says that he suffered
permanent injUries, for which
he seeks the $50,000 to Include

Fined by Middleport Mayor
C. 0 . Fisher Tuesday night
were William E. VanMeter, 35,
Clifton, W. Va., $100 and costs
and three days. i~ jail on conviction of driving while inMeigs County restaurant
toxicated, and Robert Rupe, 74,
Middleport, $10 and costs, operators must purchase
licenses by noon Thursday If
reckless operation.
Forfeiting bonds were Louise tlley pian to operate after Dec.
Mitchell, 43, Gallipolis, $25 31 .
Licenses are available at the
posted on a speeding charge,
and James Harris, 30, Mid- Meigs County Health Dept.
dleport, $30, or a petty larceny office on East Main St.,
Pomeroy. The office will close
charge.
at noon Thursday and will
LOCAL TEMPS
remain closed until Monday,
The . temperature in down- January 3. Those continuing to
town Pomeroy at II a.m. operate after midnight on Dec.
Wednesday was 34 degrees 31 without a license are subject
under cloudy skies.
to a fine of $100 a day.

Deadline Near
For Licenses

Best Film Picked
NEW YORK (UPI) - "A
Clockwork Orange" won 31
votes Tuesday to beat "The
Last Picture Show," in balloting by the New York Fibn
Critics for the best fibn of 1971.
"The Last Picture Show"
received 24 votes, "The French
Connection" il, and "Sunday,
Bloody Sunday," 8.
Stanley Kubrick was named
as best director for "A
Clockwork Orange," while the
best actor award went to Gene
Hackman in "The French
Connection." Jane Fonda was
named best actress for her role
in "Klu~e ."
Other awards i.ncluded :
- Best supporting actor, Ben
Johnson , "The Last Picture
Show. "
- Best suppo1'Ling actress,

Memorial Hospital and the
Ewing Funeral Home .
The donor list, by communities, follows:
POMEROY - Mrs. Ruth E.
Lutheran , Walter Couch .
Gerald Rought, James E.
Hawley, Kenneth Scltes,

Ellen Burstyn, "The Last
Picture Show."
In addition to Kubrick, who
got 38 votes, directors on the
final ballot included Peter
Bogdanovich, "The Last Pic·
ture Show," with 21 votea, and
William Friedkln, "The French
Connection," with '11.
Also on the final ballot for
best actor were Peter Finch in
"Sunday Bloody Sunday," Malcolm McDoweU in "A Clockwork Orange," Paul Scofield in
"King Lear" aDd Jean-LouiS
Trintignanl in "The Conformist.~~

Gena Rowlands in "Minnie
and Moskowitz" and Shirley
MacLaine in "Desperate Characters" were In the final
balloting for best actress.

medical expenses and loss of

income.
Beverly Murphy, Winter
Park, Fla., has filed action for
support of one child against
Ricky L. Murphy, Reedsville,
under the States' Reci~rocal
Support Agreement.
Granted a divorce by Judge
John C. Bacon was Connie Sue
Hanning from Darrell Hannlng
on grouncb of gross neglect of
duty and extreme cruelty. The
plalnUff wu given custody of
two minor chUdren.

Texaco Bid

Is Accepted
The bid by Texaco to furnish
gasoline and diesel fuel for the
next three months was accepted Tuesday by the Meigs
County commissioners.
Texaco's bid was .1225c per
gallon for regular grade
gasoline and .1515c for high
U.st. The bid on the diesel fuel
was .1148 per gallon.
Bills were approved for
payment and the 1972 appropriations resolution was
adopted . Attending were
commissioners Robert Clark
and Charles R. Karr, Sr., and
Clerk Martha Chambers.

Five Fined by
Mayrir Legar
Fined by Pomeroy Mayor
Charles Legar Tuesday night
were Sheila Atha, 00, Crown
City, $5 and costs, on conviction ,of failing to yield right
of way ; Doug Burns, Pomeroy,
$5 and costs, reckless
operation; Gary Milch, 00,
Pomeroy, reckless operation,
and Effie Pickens, Pomeroy, $5
and costs, assured clear
distance .
Forfeiting bonds were
Csrvln Mll)'le, Pomeroy, $25,
posted on a charge of disturbing the peace; Deborah Rice,
18, Byesville, running a red
light, $15, and Ttm Burnside,
Po111eroy, ~. assault and
battery .

�2- The DaUy Sentinel, Midcleport.Pon~t•rHy, 0., Dlx'. 29, 1971
r------ - ---~----------------1

lHelen Help Us !
I

:

I

By Helen Bottel

1

• KEEP SECRETS TO YOURSELF
Dear Helen ·
I am getting m31Tled m a few weeks and was told that my
husband~ IS supposed to read my diary on our weddmg
night. Is this true • - DIANE
Dear Diane
NO !!' - H
Dear Helen ·
Holidays are the tune for vts1t10g or bemg visited How about
remindii.g people about guest manners• And host manners too •
I have this friend who comes to stay for a week or more and
by the time she's gone, I'm pooped' I'm "domg for " her the
entire time, and do well to get one dish-drying offer out of her
~e·s constantly asking me to brmg her somethmg, or go shoppmg for her But when 1t comes lo suggesting trips (some qmte
expensive ) she's nght m there The more t1red I get, the more
she wants to go And she never thinks to p1ck up the check. W1th
her, tt's "dutch" or my treat She doesn't even br10g a '1hank
you gift," or send one
Yet, m spite of this, she's good company - JUst not a good
VISitor Many people are like her. Maybe a list of "dos' ' and
"don'ts" would help them - TIRED HOSTESS
Dear T1red .
A reader from San Antomo sent th1s "guest " list (To which
I've added a few of my own pet remmders )Dear Helen
You asked for "something dtfferent" for your colwnns As a
recent hostess, I JOtted down Ideas (for myself and others ) on
how to be a popular VISitor. Here they are·
1 Remember that your hostess has gone to great pains ftxmg
up the house Compliment her - and then try to keep 1t looking
that way Don't strew your things all over - confme them to your
room, and don't even let that room look as though a hur~Icane
had struck. Agood host or hostess ISn't snoopy, but sometnnes he
or she looks m on a guest's room. It shouldn't be with total
dismay.
2 About breakfasts if the hostess must riSe early to see her
husband off to work, she mtght prefer that you come out later
when she IS!l't so rushed. But if she prefers flxmg one breakfast
for all, then don't wander out around 9 am and expect her to
reactivate her kitchen
3 If you stay over a week, be sure to g1ve your hosts a few
hours of "alone tune " each day Don't always be Wlderfoot Go
shoppmg by yourself, take a walk, read a book Constant entertammg wears a hostess down .
4 Offer to help Better yet, be there when help IS needed and
p1tch m. But don'tscrub or clean TOO hard You might g1ve the
hostess the unpress10n she doesn 't do 1t well enough.
5 Don't ask your hosts to baby-s1t for you (especially 1f
they're grandparents or rela\1 ves of the children) Too many
young mameds make "Grandma's house" their convement free
headquarters whUe they spend the whole vacatiOn tune v1sJtmg
friends
6 Keep the k1ds Wlder control. And remember, JWTipmg on
them exceSSively for every little thmg 1s almost as bad as lettmg
them rWl wild
7 Don't brmg your pets
8. You're not m a motel, so hang up your towels, use them
agam , make your beds, p1ck up your clothes; keep your toothbrush and cosmet1cs htdden or at least contamed And double
check before you leave Sending forgotten 1tems by parcel post IS
expens1ve ,
9 Loosen up your purse strmgs. Take your host and hostess
,, OIH~dinnet&gt;atlellllt once1Don'Horget~:a:l!oyouogift..lf')'Ou
' dr10k, brmga bottle. Even if you don't ~and they do -likeWise.
10. And leave before you wear out your welcome RECENT HOSTESS

u....

Hope
Plan Will Work
MADRID (UP!) - "When you've made your pttch
and the talkmg is over ," sa1d Bob Hope with a shrug,
"all you can do IS watt "
Even at that, the 68-year-old comedmn sa1d
Monday he was "not optuntstlc" hts plan for a
"chlldren{&lt;Xhildren" campatgn to rmse money for
release of U S serVIcemen from North Vietnam would
work
"My proposals have been submitted m wntmg
VIa the American Embassy 10 Bangkok," he told a
news conference at the U. S. Torre jon Air Base outside
Madrid "They have not been rejected, nor answered
I'm still wa1tmg "
Hope w01md up a stopover m Spam Tuesday w1th a
performance at Torre Jon, then was to fly to do the fmal
show m hiS annual Chnstmas tour for servtcemen at
Guantanamo Navy Base, 1n Cuba
Thursday, he met With Nguyen Van Tranh, first
secretary of the North Vietnamese Embassy m
Vtenttane, Laos, to dtscuss his plan.
"I thought by raismg funds through the work of
Amencan chUdren for schools and hospttals for the
VIetnamese there (North Vietnam) could be a
poss1b1lity of gaining the release of the POWs," he
said
"My endeavors are at a standstill at present," he
srud
"The odds agamst a VlS8 are very long "

Gututn
•..1 • U

SYRACUSE - The 69th
anniversary and annual
Chnsimas dinner of Gwdmg
Star Counctl124, Daughters of
Amenca Lodge was held Dlx'.
9 The hall was decorated m the
Chnstmas mot1f which meluded a decorated tree under
whtch the exchange gifts were
placed
The highlight of the planned
potluck 6 P m dmner was a
large cake decorated With red
pomsetttas and mscr1bed
" Happy 69th Anmversar y
Gmdmg Star Council 124 "
Tables were covered wtth
Chnstmas tablecloths and
centered w1th remdeers,
sleighs and a mJmature Mr
and Mrs. Santa Claus
Followmg dmner a regular
meeting was held with vtce
councilor Wtlma Davidson m
the chair Election of officers
for the first SIX months of 1972
was held and retained IVete
Sadie Thuener, recordmg
secretary; Margaret Cottrill,
treasurer, Esther Harden ,

2 1-20. Prayer was g1ven by
Rachel McBnde and roll call
was answered w1th a SCripture
verse containmg the word

"Peace ."
"The Chr1stmas G1ft" was
read by Mrs. McBride , "It Is
Not Far," Ruth Zav1tz; Ada
Slack read
"Chnstmas
Carols" , "Let Us Pray On Tius
Holy Day, " Frankie Mumaw ;
"Praymg Hands" Agnes
Whtte, "Another Chrtstmas
Story," Myla Hudson ; "Prayer
of St . Francis," Florence
Potts; 11 Joy To The World / '
Susie Ftscher; Rev. Zav1tz
read "Ready For Christmas" ;
Daisy Roush rec1ted the 23rd
Psalm from memory.
These readings were m-

terspersed w1th smgmg of
"Silent Night," and "0 Come
All Ye Faithful."
The January roll call word
wtll be "wmter" and hostess
Will be Ada Slack. In closmg
the group prayed the Lord's
Prayer Attendmg besides
those named above was
Rtchard Duckworth

ELSA KIMES ILL
Elsa Kimes of Middleport IS
a patient at the Arcadia
Nursmg Home m Coolville She
w1ll be observmg a birthday
anmversary on Jan 2

20c of Malpractice Dollar
Reaches Victim or Family
By LEROY POPE
NEW YORK (UP!) - The high cost and
scarCity of medical malpracl!ce insurance is
becommg as serious for the public as for the
medical profeSSIOn .
This was brought out forcibly m testunony
by state Insurance commissioners and other
Witnesses m tbe mid-December hearmgs m
Washmgton held by the Department of Health,
Education and Welfare
Among the more startUng disclosure~ was that
only ZO cents out of each dollar paid for
malpractlce Insurance ever reacbes a victim of
malpractice or his famlly. That compares with a
claim payout of 42 cents on lbe premium dollar
for automoblle liablllty policies, a record the
Insurance companies admit they are oot proud
of.
Another was that malpractice lllSurance
costs some hospitals as much as $2 a day per
patient!
Greater Concern Voiced
Greater concern was vmced by some of the
commissioners over what they said was tbe cost
inflation of medical care and actual
deterioration of medical care resulting from the
p-act ice of "defensive medicine" by doctors and
hol!j)ltalls seeking to sidestep malpractice suits.
Pemsylvanla's, inSID'ance eomnussloner,
Herbert Denenberg, said many physicians
lmhestlatingly order extra tests costing as much
• $UMland pli patients in hoapttal beds at $100a
dly Cor tests or procedures where hospitalization
II not rully neceuary juat to protect themselves
from a possible charge of neglect
'

"IF I'M WRONG, I may be sued for a million
dollars, so I don't hesitate to make the patient
pay for an extra hundred dollars worth of tests,"
he quoted one surgeon as saymg.
Denenberg and other Witnesses told HEW
offiCJals that defensive medicine also may involve avotding surgery and other procedures,
regardless of the medical mdicatJons, because of
the risk of Ia wsuits. "It even 10cludes refusal to
treat some patients altogether if they seem to be
likely candidates for fling malpractice clsims,"
Denenberg testified.
Chance F.xtremely Small
Testunony showed that even though some
dramallcally large judgments have been
awarded to victims of medical and hospital
malpractice, m the aggregate tbe victim's
chance of recovery m tbe courts is small.
Denenberg concluded that the malpractice
problem "Is helpln~ to assure low quality care at
the highest possible price."
Among the measures proposed at the
bearings to relieve the problem were :
- Regulallon of lawyers' contingent fees in
malpractice suits to protect the pubhc from
excessive judgments,
- Stricter regulatiOn of hospitals to prevent
acCidents,
-More stnngent hcens10g laws for doctors
and stricter disciplinary measures for the
p-ofess10n.
-Taking steps to develop at least a parttal
no-fault system of medwal and hospital
malpracllce swts

Mason Area

A Big One. that Got Away
NORTH (D)
• KJ85

.A3
+A86
.AK 102
WEST
EAST
.64 2

.3

.7
.QJ1095
+KJ9532 +Q107
.J94
oloQ853
SOUTH
'
.AQ1097
.K8642
+4

.16

Both vulnerable

w.. t
Poss

Pass
Pass
Pass

1•+

North

3

4.
5.
Pass

1•

East South
Pass
Pass 3 •
Pass 4NT.
Pass 6.
Pass

Opemng lead-· 2

d1d not s t u d y the hand
enough to notice 11. We also
failed to n o t e !bat South
could make a graad slam by
means of dummy reversal
He leads a diamond to the
ace at tnck two Ruffs a diamond in his hand. leads a
---------Send $1 lor JACOBY MODERN book
to 'Wm ot Bridgo," (c/o tb., newspapor), P.O. lox 49. Radoa City
Staloan, New York, N y 10019

Lakers
Make It

News, Notes

By United Press IDternalloaal
The Los Angeles Lakers are
one game away from ending
1971 with a two-month unbeaten string.
The Lakers stretched their
reCord winning streak to 29
games Tuesday night by
coasting to a I~ victory
over tbe Buffalo Braves. Loa
Angeles has not lost since the
end of October and could end
the year on a two-rnonlb unbeaten tear Thursday night
against Seattle.
Buffalo, wilh rookie Eimoere
&amp;nitb leading the way, moved
out to a 38-27 lead early in the
second period before the
Lakers exploded. Los Angele~
outscored the Braves 25-6
durmg the last 9~ minutes of
the half, holding Buffalo to just
10 points In the period, lo break
open the game.
WUt Olamberlaln had 23
points and 13 rebounds and
Jerry West hit 211 points to lead
lbe Lakers. &amp;nitb's 32 points
and :Ill rebounds paced the
Buffalo. attack.
The &lt;llicago Bulls scored a
116-105 victory !bat extended
their winning streak to six
games and handed the defendIng NBA chamPion MUwaukee
Bucks their third loss In four
games. The victory enabled the
Bulls to move to within four
games of the Bucks In lbe
Midwest Division.
A record home crowd of
19,497 in Chicago saw Bob Love
outscore Kareem AbdulJabber, 41~, and lead the
Bulls to their victory over the
Bucks.
Love scored 19 of his points in
the third period during which
the Bulls took a five-point lead.
Abdui..Jabbar made 14 field
goals for the Bucks but connected on only ~even-of-17
free throws.
The Boston Celt1cs defeated
the Philiidelphla 76ers, 1211-116,
the New York Kmcks beat the
Detroit Pistons 11S-IOO, the
Cleveland Caviillers shaded
the PorUand Trail Blazers 112111 and the Baltimore Bullets
topped the Cincmnati Royal
119-3'1 in other Tuesday mghf

Wash CH Oosing

Bumgarner to

Speak Friday

In Clifton

Chester

News Notes

Social
Calendar

BY KErrH WISECUP
points and qwckly built up a 10SOUTH POINT - The Meigs 2 lead. That advantage
Marauders dropped their however was reduced to six, 15fourth straight and fifth of 9, at the end of the first eight
seven Tuesday night against mmutes.
undefeated South Pomthere 75The Pomter margm slowly
, 51, in a non~eague match
widened, their fast breaks and
" The Pomters, coached by superior reboundmg proving
" Michael Hughes, are now 8-{1 dec1s1ve . With 1:58 left in the
overall whtle the Marauders first half, they led 30-15 At the
are 2.,5 and remained at 1-3 m half it was 33-21.
Southeastern Oh10 Athlel!c
Outscormg the Marauders
League action.
12-2m the first four mmutes of
Metgs, coached by Carl the third quarter, South Pomt
Wolfe, played without their top took a commandmg 45-23 lead.
scorer and Tebounder, 6-3 Jeff It swelled to 51-27 With 2:20
Morris, for the first tune thts remaining m the third quarter .
year Moms's absence proved
But Meigs played brilliant
to be costly as the Marauders catch-up ball m those !mal two
obVIously were handicapped nunutes of the thtrd stanza
without him. Morris IS out for They outscored the wmners 13the season with a broken 3, trailing 54-40 after three
collarbone
pertods.
The Marauders were never
Limtted to one field goal the
mthe lead as the quick and tall first SIX mmutes of the fourth
Pomters scored the first SIX perwd, Me1gs lost tis

29In Row

NCR's Plant at

games. '•'

o

O il h

"

South Whips North
By JIM McGREGOR
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (UP!)
-Ken Kavanaugh Jr. did not
recetve tbe honor his father did
m the Blue-Gray football game,
but he came close Tuesday
night as the South downed the
North, 9-0
The 6-2, 195-pound tlght end
from Lowslana State caught
five paues for 93 yards,
helping set up both Gray scores
in the 34th annual charity
game. He was named the
South's most valuable offensive
player .
He followed in the footsteps
of his father who also played
end at LSU and played for the
South m the 1939 Blue-Gray
game. However, lbe elder
Kavanaugh caught two touchdown passe• that year and was
named the game's most valuable player
Kavanaugh Jr m1ssed the
1971 most valuable player
award by only one vote with
the honor going to Guy Roberts,
a 225-pound defensive end from
Maryland who was also was
named the South's best defensive player.
Roberts' strong lme play was
a major factor m limitmg
North quarterbacks Neil Graff
of WJSConsm and Gary Fox of
Wyommg to only 13 yards m
the air . Roberts had SIX solo
tackles and two assists
Alan Thompson of W1sconsm
picked up 56 of the North's 61
rushmg yards and was named
most valuable offensive player
for the Blues. Mike Perfetl! of
Minnesota picked off a pass by
TCU's Steve Judy and was m
on mne tackles to take
defensive honors for the North.
It was a defensive show all
the way wtth the North faUing
time and agam to move the ball
and the South havmg only one
longsustalneddrive. That came
late m the fiT!t quarter when
Judy drove the Grays 74 yards,
passmg to Kavanaugh and
handing off lo Stahle Vincent of
Rice and Art Cantrell of LSU.
Vmcent got the only six-pointer
of the night on the opening play
of the second quarter, runnmg

I• '

John Havlicek scored a
game high 36 points and led a
third per1od surge which
enabled the Celllcs to overcome a 16-pomt deftclt at
PhiladelphJa. The victory was
the ninth m a row for the
Celtics while the loss was the
76ers' eighth m nine games.
Billy Cunnmgham had 24
pomts for the 76ers.
Walt Frazier scored 30 pomts
and Bill Bradley had 19 for the
Knicks, who carried a sevenpomt lead over Detroit Into the
fourth period and won going
away.
Walt Wesley's free throw
after the final buzzer provided
the victory margin for the
Cavaliers, who outrebounded
the TraU Blazers ~. and the
Bulleta got 28 points from
Archie Clark and held the
Royals to 10 field goals in the
first half in their easy triumph
at Baltimore.

Oara Garland
Buried Sunday

Funeral serviCes for MISS
Clara Garland, Minersville,
were held at 2 p.m. Sunday 11
the Ewmg Funeral Home wtth
the Rev. Forrest Donley offiCiating
•
Pallbearers were Henry
Thomas, Wyllis DaVIS, Jr ,
George Harns, Kenneth
Harris, Robert Harbrecht, Sr.,
and Denver Rice. Honorary
pallbearers were Wyllis DaVIS,
Sr , Lewis Hams, Richard
Thomas, Hosmer Roush, Fred
Daniels, Arthur Evans, and
Ross Stewart, Sr.
Those from out-of-town atGROGANS HAVE SON
tending were Gayle Jones of
CUFTON - Mr. and Mrs.
South Bend, Ind.; Mr. and Mrs. Larry Grogan are aMounc10g
Harold Rubadue of Mt. Ver- the birth of their first child, a
non; Marianne Evans, Walnut son, on Dec. 27 at Holzer
Creek, Calif.; Mrs Betty Medical Center. The mother Is
McMahon of Woodsfield; Mrs. the former E1alne Cartwright.
Clara Haskms and Mrs . The Infant weighed 7 pounds
Charlotte Cremeans, and 15 ounces, and has been
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. C. A. named Otrlstopher Charles.
Evans of Bidwell; Mr. and Grandparents are Mr and
Mrs. Robert Harbrecht, Sr., Mrs. Charles Cartwright,
Worthington. Burial was in Clifton, and Mrs. J\Wjorle
MinersvlDe Hill Cemetery.
Grogan, Middleport. Greatgrandmothers are Mrs .
Laurene Lewis, Mrs. Mary
Wells and Mrs. Evelyn
Nicholson. Great - great grandmothers are Mrs. Jessie
Cartwright
and Mrs, Olga
By UDited Press IDternalloul
Today Is Wednesday, Dec. Lewis, both of Clifton
29, the 363rd day of 1971 with
two to follow.
The moon is betwen Its first
The Daily
quarter and full stage.
Q,EVOTED TO THE
The morning stars are
-~ INTERE5TOF
MEIGS·MASON AREA
Mercury and Jupiter.
Cit.ESTER L. TANNEHILL,
The evening stars are Venus,
.. Exec. Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
Mars and Saturn.
City Editor
1
On this day in history:
Published dally n:cept •
Saturday by The Ohio Velley
In 1848 gas lights were InPubllsh.ng Company, 111
stalled in the White House for
Court St, Pomeroy, OhiQ , 1
45769 Buslnt!Ss Office Phone
the first time.
992 2156, Ed•IOnal Phone 992
In 1851 the first Young Men's
2157
Second class postage paid at
Christian Aasoclatlon opened
Pomeroy, Oh•o
•
its doors In Boston.
Na ional edvertlslng
represe,.ntattve
Bottlnelll
In 1940 Nazi Germany eonGallagher, tn c , 12 East 42nd
dueled one of its mDllt violent
~~ , New York Cl1y, New York
Sut;ascr•ptlon rates. De .
bombings of London.
1

It over from the seven He led
the South rushers with 78 yards
on 21 carries.
The South got Its final three
pomts late 1n the final quarter
after a 45-yard pass from Judy
to Kavanaugh set up a IS-yard
field goal by Tennessee's
George Hunt.
The second and th1rd quar-

By JOE CARNICELU
UPI Sports Writer
Southern California's dreams
of deposmg UCLA as the West
Coast's maJor basketball power
may be just that-dreams
The Trojans, ranked ftfth m
the natton, were rocked back to
reahty Tuesday mght as 19thranked Pennsylvania crwsed to
an 88-67 vtctory m the opemng
round of the Kodak Classic at
Rochester, NY
Penn, w1th Corky Calhoun
and Bob Morse leading the
way, surged to a 31-13 lead
early in the game. The Trojans
managed to cut the deficit to
41-37 but Morse and Ph1l
Hankinson combmed to keep
the Quakers ahead 10 the
second half
Southern Cal suffered a
maJor blow when backcourt
star Paul Westphal fouled out
m the second half. Hankinson
had 21 pomts and Morse 20 to
lead Penn while Joe Mackey's
17 were htgh for USC. The
Quakers will face St Bonaventure, whtch clubbed Rochester,
84-60, m the tourney !male
tomght
In the only other meetmg
between ranked teams, Steve
Downing scored 22 pomts and
pulled down 23 rebounds as No
7 lndtana held off No 9
Brigham Young, 61-50 Joby
Wrtght added 18 points for l.he
Hoosiers, who held BYU's h1~h-

"custom meat cutting"

Plea5antRidge Road
POMEROY,OHIO

,------ - - ,
/ If I have to go \
._&lt; take me to The, .
,. I_ Shop

--. ----·

Quiclc Serv1ce
Government Inspected
Cut To Your Specifications
,__

Dick Vaughan
992-3374

CALL POINTVIEW : 992 - 2505

carrier where

serv•ce not available One
poet Oscar Fingal said , month S1 75 By mall In Ohio
"There Is only one thing in the • and W Va , One ynr SU 00
world wor11e than being talked ' Six months S7 25 Three
mo!,lths $~ so Subscr•ptlon
•about, and that Is not being pnce
Inc lud es Sunday Times .
Sentmel
..
tallied about."

-

-- ----'-

1

1

,
1
1

J.

WEDNESDAY, DEC. 29
It looksas If Channel 6 has
hood It with the ABC network
fare early Tuesdar evenings
Tonight, they shlf to • mid·
week, P,~lme- tlme movl~,
offering Blackwater Gold,
with Kelr Dullea as thl~
week's flick. It starts at 7·30.
(Meanwhile, II you want to see
"Bewitched" "Courtship of
Eddie's Faiher/' and "Smllh
Family," they're still around
on Ch. 12.)
Who was the first political
figure 1 remember admiring•
Why, Ail Landon, who ran
against FOR In 1936, when 1
was a kid from 8 solidly
Republican family. 1 recall
proudly wearing sunflower
badges (London was from
Kansas, the Sunf19wer Stale)
that p,roclalmed "Landon·
Knox.'
Now, I'm. no longer a kid

I

The Marauders wtll be on the
road the third straight tune
next Friday, Jan. 7, agamst the
Ironton Tigers m SEOAL play.
On the folloWing Saturday they
complete their non-league
schedule for the entire season
against the Wahama White
Falcons at home.

Montgomery

OJ

Redman

7-12
2 11
9 17
7 10

Evans
Hurst

Patrick

2'
46

PF TP
20

S

IS

2

0

0

2

J

10

5

2

2

I

2
0

0

0

51

I
3
3

16

7

3
0
3
I

2

20

23

14

2

Blue Knights Cop
Tournament Win
URBANA, Ohio ( UPI) Pomt Park ( Pa ) and Urbana
College grabbed opemng round
victones Tuesday mght in the
Urbana College Hohday
Tournament to advance to the
championship game
Point Park, behind the 18
points of Joe Spellman, edged
Northwood (lnd ) 77-70 In the
opener whUe Mark Todd hit for
39 to pace the Blue Knights to a
107-97 VICtory over Huntington
(lnd)

or a Republican, bul t still
admire All Landon He's been
a very sensible Amen can
statesman, looking at the
world wllh • skeptical eye
that's never cynical, and very
gentlemanly about his awful
trouncing '" 19:14 At 8~, he'll
be Interviewed 0n "The Great
Amerlcen Dream Machine"
c
at 9 p.m., h. 11. A wise old
gentleman, Indeed, and most
of all, a gentleman.
Julia Child makes a
chocolate log ot7. 30 p.m., Ch.
9, and then runs right over to
Ch 11 and whips up soma
pastry ~~rts at 8 p.m;, The
nicest French Chef we
know - and, obviously, the
busiest
MOVIES: "Mighty Ursus," ~ p.m., and a WWII
chll ler·dlller with Clark Gable
and Lana Turner, 11 •30 p.m.,
both Ch. 10.

HADDIX RESIGNS
BOSTON (UP!) - Harvey
Haddix has resigned as pttchmg coach of the Boston Red
Sox and will be replaced by ExSox hurler Lee Stange, general
Manager Dick O'Connel sa1d
today.
O'Connel said Haddtx
stepped down "for personal
and family reasons." The 46year-old southpaw came to the
Red Sox last season after
previously coaching With the
New York Mets and Clncinnal!
Reds.

8

8

23
15

NOW

112 PRia
Dudley's Florist
Serving: Middleport,
Pomeroy, Gallipolis. 0
&amp; Mason Co .. W. V1.

Golden St at C~nclnnah
Parllanl at Milwaukee
Cleveland vs Philadelphia
at Hershey. Pa
!Only games scheduled)

College Basketball Results

Ba Ill more

14 22

389

14

378

Atlanta

13 24

286

31Jz

GB

26 10
20 16

722 4
55&lt; 10

Detro1t

14

378 16'h

23

Dtvtston
W L Pel GB

Pactflc

Los Angeles
Seattle
Golden St

35 3 921
22 17 564 13'12
18 19 486 16'12

Houston

13

351 21 1/2

2.4

Portland
8 30 211 27
Tuesday's Results

New York 119 Detro11 100
Boston 120 Phoiadelph1a 116
Chicago 116 Milwaukee 105
Cleveland 112 Portland 111
Los Angeles lOS Buffalo 87
!Only games scheduled)
Wednesday's Games

Phoemx at Houston

ABA Standmgs
By Umted Press International

East

HunneycuH

01

2

0

I
0

00

00

2

I

0

Carolina

51
75

Utah
lnd1ana
Memphis

30-64 lS-30 61 14
BY QUARTERS
9 12 19 11
15 18 21 21 -

SOUTH POINT - The Meigs
Marauder reserves faced a
vasUy unproved South Pomt
reserve squad Tuesday mght
here, losmg 43-35. The little
Marauders had beaten the
same South Pomt team 32-20 at
home ear her m the season The
loss dropped Metgs to 4-3 for
the year They are Z-2 m league
play
Coach BtU WJCklme 's lads
were on top 22-19 at the half and
trailed by only one, 34-33, going
mto the !mal stx mmutes of
play But Meigs turned ice cold
1n the fourth stanza, managing
only two pomts as South Pomt
rolled up mne.
Bdl Chaney led all scorers
wtth 14 points and played an
exceUent game on the hoards.
Bill Myers had SIX and Terry
George and Ron Couch added

351 1'1'

25

Ch1caQo
Phaemx

02

Me1gs

1h

Mtdwest DIYISIOI1
W. L Pet
Milwauk ee
31
7 816

I

South Point

GB

Western Conference

12

TOTALS

23

10

Clnctnnaf1

00

23

W L Pel

Cleveland

00

6
5
0

7S

five each for the little
Marauders Shockey paced the
Winners wtth 12.
Meigs made 14 of 46 from the
field for 30pet and 7 of 17 from
the foullme. South Point hit on
19 of 46 from the field for 41 pet
and 5 of 15 from the chanty
stripe
Meigs, Fred Burney ()..()..(),
Myers 3-0-6, Chaney 6-2-14,
Floyd Burney 1-1-3, George Z-15, Pr1ce ()..()..(),Couch 2-1-0, Ash
1-G-2 Totals 14-7~ .
South Pomt, Lawson 4-1-9,
Wyant 0-1-1, Smith 2-0-4,
Shockey 6-0-12, Tennant 3-1-7,
Hurd 3-2-6, Blake Hl-2. Totals
19-5-43
BY QUARTERS
Meigs
11 11 11 2--J5
S Pomt
10 9 15 ~
Officials, Butcher and
Dawson

Bulldogs Lose

It 35 In Row
By ORVAL JACKSON
ORLANDO, Fla (lJPI )Quarterback Chuck Ealey and
h1s Toledo teammates have left
thetr mark on the Tangerme
Bowl and tis one that may
never be equalled
Toledo won Its third stratght
Tangerme Bowl v1ctory Tuesday mght over Richmond , 26-3,
and m dmng so extended the
natiOn 's longest current
Winning streak to 35
Ealey, a second team AllAmerican selection, was voted
the game's top back, the th1rd
year running he had taken
home that award
The outstanding lineman
award was taken home by
Toledo's All-Amenca defensive
tackle Mel Long Long led the
Toledo defenstve unit that

Sharp
R1chards
Tenna nt

W. L. Pel

Kentucky

26 9
23 15
16 20
15 21

V1rgtnla
Floridia ns
New York

Pittsburgh

17

2~

1-4

20

GB

743

605 41f2
44.4 101!2
417 l1 lJ:2

'15 12

By Un1ted Press International
Old Oommton Classtc

lndtana 61 Bngham Young 50
Old Domm10n 115 Rtce 86
Quaker Ctty Tourney

I Semofmal Round I

So Car 86 Boston Coli 64
Vtllanova 76 Tenn 67

13 25 343 141J2
West
(Consolatoon)
W. L Pet GB Mass HIO Manhattan 72
26 9 7~3
108 Faorf~eid 96
22 16 S79 5'h LaSalle
ECAC
Holiday Fesl1val
16 20 444 10'12

Denver

412 1111'2

Dallas

14 23 378 13
Tuesday's Results
Vir9lma 129 Carolina 126
Ind1a na Ill MemphiS 10~
Deover 114 Plll5burgh 105
{Only games scheduled)
Wednesday's Games
P1tlsburgh at New York
Vorg1ma vs Carolina
at Rale~gh. N C
lndtana at Flondtans
Memphis at Kentucky
Dallas at Utah

( Semtfma I Round}
Fordham 87 Prov1dence 72( ot )
LouiSvi 126 Sf Pelers SO

(Consolaloon)
Syracuse 74 Duke 72
Penn St 80 Utah 69
Gator Bowl
I Forst Round I

lllmots 74 No Car St 72

Flonda 87 Columbia 47

St Bnvnture 84 Rochestr 60

NHL Standongs
By Umted Press lnternahona I

East
W. L

24
23
20
17

New York

Boston
Montreal
Toronto

s

Vancouver

West

8
9

7 47

21
21

25 7
20 11
11

IS

11 17
11 21
9 21
8 26

51 LOUIS

Las Angeles

50

~

6

W L

Ch1cago
Mmnesota
California
Philadelphia
P1tlsburgh

6 54

6

II
12 tl7

Detro11
Buffalo

T Pis

Penn 88 Southern Cal 67

Roadrunner Invitational

(Forst Round)

Montana St 89 Portland 76
Far West Classtc
6 30
(Forst Round)
8 24
' l2 Wash Sl 81 M1ch1gan 67
Utah St Tournament
T Pis
3 53
!Consolaloon)
4 44
idaho
St
88 Arkansas 73
7 29
s 27
5 27

Tuesday'5 Results

s

~2

6

2~

I 17

Toronto ~ Pltlsburgh 2
!Only game schedu led)
Wednesday's Games

!untied Richmond to only 138
total offensiVe yards and scored
the Rockets' f1rst touchdown
when he forced a fumble by
Richmond quarterback Ken
N1chols and then fell on the ball
m the end zone
The spJTtted but outmanned
Sp1ders from Richmond took
the game to Toledo from the
start and controlled the ball for
the ftrst 8 10 mmutes wtth
Ke1th Clark finally kicking a 27yard held goal
But then Toledo's strength
began to tell and the Rockets
gradually pulled away before
16,750 fans
Tailback Joe Schwartz, Toledo's leading scorer all year,
agam was the workhorse,
scormg touchdowns on runs of
one and three yards, while
Ealey added a touchdown of his
own w1th a one-yard plunge.
George Ke1m kicked all four
extra pomts for Toledo but
missed on a 22-yard fteld goal
attempt early in the second
half
Toledo Coach Jack Murphy
satd Long 's recovery was the
btg play for the Rockets.
"That play gave us the lift
we needed to get movmgt''
Murphy satd. "It picked everybody up, and 1! there was a
turmng pmnt that was It."
Rtchmond Coach Frank Jones
cred1ted the Toledo defensive
front line for the pressure 11 put
on Nichols.
"When you play the 13thranked team m the country,
there are only 12 teams that
are supposed to beat them,"
Jones sa1d.

1

Kodak Classtc

I Forst Round)

INK CONTRACTS
CHICAGO (UP!) - Second
baseman Don Kessmger and
catcher Randy Hundley have
Signed thetr 1972 contracts, the
Chicago Cubs annoWlced Tuesday
Kessmger, who finished last
year wtth a .258 batting
average, and Hundley, who
miSSed all but nine games
because of a knee injury,
became the second and third
Cubs to stgn for the new
season

-SPECIAL.
67 Dodge Monaco
Station wagon

Cal1for n1a at Montreal
St loUIS at Toronfo

Philadelph~a at New York
Boston at Ch1cago
Detroit at Buffalo

Vancouver

at Los Angeles

!Only games scheduled)

Second Contest
Athens, on top 39-31 With 2 58
remamlng in the third period,
couldn't hold on Tuesday mght
as Parkersburg's visiting Big
Red came from behmd to
defeat the Bulldogs, 57-54.
It was Athens' second loss m
seven games. The Big Red
upped their season mark to 3-1.

College Scores
Bog Eoght Tournament
I Forst Round)

Kansas St. 62 Okla. 6C
Iowa St 91 Kansas 88
Motor Coly Tournament
(Fonal Round)
Stanford 80 Valparaiso 66
I Consolaloon)
Detro1t U 86 Bwlng Grn 78
Milwaukee Classic

(Fonat Round)
Marquetle 74 Marshall 72
(Consolation)
Wis. 82 Geolown (DC) 62
All-College Tournament

Athens will host Lancaster
tomght m a non-conference
game.
The game was close all the
way AHS trailed seven pomts
m the first half, but kept batUmg back
Scott Stevens, 6-10 junior
center, paced the Winners wHh
19 pomts. Dave Smith's 27 led
the losers.
Athens hit 23 of 57 from the
field, and 8 of 21 from the foul
Circles. Parkersburg hit 24 of
59 from the field, and nine of 16
from the foul circles. Each
team collected 37 rebounds
Box score :
PARKERSIIU-RG {57) Eddy, J. J.J , Crew. 7 1 15.
Stephens, 91 19, Bell, 3 511 ;
Thornton, 3 1-7; Criner, 102 .
TOTALS 24·9-47.
ATHENS (S4) - 0 Smith,
12 3 27, Mace, 1·0 2. Chonko, J.
1 3, Greene, 5-~· 14 , Inbod y, 2 1·
5, Handley, 20-4. TOTALS2l·B·
54.
By Quarters:
10 27 ~~ 57
Parkersburg
Athens
13 21 S2 5~
Reserves- Parkersburg 35.
Athens 27

AHL Standings
By Umted Press International
East
W. L T. Pis
Boston
2~
5 4 52
15 10 9 39
Nova Scotia
Springfield
12 12 7 31
Rochester
12 18 ~ 28
Prov1dence
9 18 ' 26
West
W. L. T. Pis
Ball1more
16 13 5 37
Hershey
15 9 6 36
,Cleveland
1~ 13
6 34
Cincinnati
12 14 8 32
Richmond
12 16 6 30
Tidewater
8 21 3 19
Tuesday's Results
Cine! 6 Tidewater 3
Novo Scotia 2 Providence 2
(Only games scheduled)
Wednesday's Gomes
Boston at Cleveland
Tidewater at Richmond
Clncl at Springfield
(Only games scheduled)
Napoleon 66 Paulding 6~
Rossford 8~ Delta 76
Fayetle 67 Hopewell Loudon 53
Ayre'Svllle 76 Continental 75
lot)

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mileage. Good tires Very clean

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For The
Best In Used Cars

KEITH GOBLE FORD
USED CAR LOT
992-3422

461 5. Third

Middleport, o.

WINTER·RETREADS

Las Vegas Classoc
(First Round)

Santa Clara 109 Jaxnvl 88
Eastern Ky 95 Texas Tech 92 Weber Sf. 95 Southern Ill 87
Bluebonnet Classic

!Final Round)
Houston 106 Mlch St 73
(Consolation)
Texas A&amp;M 73 LSU 68

Kentucky 83 Notre Dome 67
N Hamp 6C Oluo Wslyan 57
Brown lOA Am Inti SO
Morris Hrvy 92 Boston U
78

2 POUND

FRUIT CAKE
99~

Cheer The Sick
With A

POINSETTIA

Central DIVISIOn

0
0
I
3
0

36

Morns
Johnson

Offtc1als, Wembrecht and Wh1te

scormg KresunJT CoslC to 21
pomts .
Elsewhere, No 2 Marquette
edged Marshall, 74-72, m the
Milwaukee Classtc, South Carolma (3) npped Boston College,
86-64, m the Quaker City
Tournament, Long Beach State
( 10) routed Cal-Fullerton, 10383, m the InternatiOnal City
Class1c, LoUJsvllle ( 13) crushed
St Peter's, 126-60, m the
Hobday Festival ; Kentucky
(15) wh1pped Notre Dame, 8367, and Santa Clara upset No
16 Jackson.ville, IO!tllll, m the
Ali .College TClllrnament.
In other acllllil, Illmo1s, wtth
Ntck Weatherspoon hlttmg 22
pomts, downed North Carol10a
State, 71,-72, after Flonda
clobbered Colwnbia, 87-47, m
the Gator Bowl tournament;
Kansas State edged Oklahoma,
62-60, and Gene Mack's 34-pomt
performance led Iowa State to
a 91-68 victory over Kansas in
the B1g Etght tournament; and
Houston, with Dwtght Jones,
Steve Newsome and Dwight
White combmmg for 56 pomts,
whipped Michigan State, 106-73,
to wm the Astro Bluebonnet
tournament.
Franldm Irv10g's 25 pomts
helped Wyommg beat Utah
State, 92-65, to capture the Big
Blue Classic and Temple edged
Minnesota, 6(1.57, and California
shaded Texas Christian, 76-74,
m Rainhow ClaSSic actlon.

WL. L. Pel GB
Boston
26 12 .68~
New York
23 12 · 639 2
Philadelphia ll 22 405 10"'
Buffalo
11 23 324 13

Balt1more 119 Ctnct 87

5

59

Aflantt1c DIVISIOn

I2
0I
I2
0I

Buy It with the $1.00 A Tankful

You Save At

750xl4
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&gt;

SlaW. MAIN
'

•

12

Toledo Makes

Eastern Conference

field , mosUy forced long shots,
for 31 pet. and 7 of 14 from the
foul hne for 50 pet They had 20
personal fouls called on them
South Point hit on 30 of 64
from lhe field, mostly close to
basket, for 40 pet. and 15 of 30
from the foul line for 50 pet
They were charged With 14
personqls

MEIGS SOUTH POINT STATISTICS
MEIGS
FG-FGA FT-FTA RB
Dunfee
8 16
~ 5
5
T Vaughan
6 I~
J5
6
Werry
04
00
1
16
00
2
Bo~gs
Ba 1ley
SIS 0 2 J
A Vaughan
1·4 00
0
B Vaughan
18
02
1
Ash
OJ
00
0
Sayre
01
00
2
TOTALS
22-71 7·14 20
SOUTH POINT

l]

'

,

puntmg duel
lietween Hunt, who only dtd
place ldckmg at Tennessee, and
Perfetti Hunt kicked five for a
43-yard average, while Per!Jttl
had a 41.1 average on seven
boots.
Acrowd of 24,0011 watched the
game m Montgomery's Cramton Bowl. The game was also
shown over some 125 telev1s10n
statwns throughout the country

the Marauders
For the Pomters, Ken Hurst
led all scorers with 23 most of
them commg off clever moves
around the basket and short
Jumpers along the key. He also
had 14 rebounds.
Lance Redman, Pmnt's shck
movmg
center,
with
tremendous sprmg in his legs,
had 16 pomts and owned the
boards with 23 grabs Marty
Patnck added 15 for South
Po1nt.
The big difference in the
game was the battle under the
boards. South Pomt had an
amumg 61 rebounds to a
meager 20 by the Marauders
Meigs hit on 22 of 71 from the

( F1rsl Round)

1

1

ters featured a

By Penn, 88-67

The Shop

Sentirlet

SO cen ts per week,
A thought for the day: Irish 1 available
By Motor Route where carrier

momentum as qwckly as they
~dd gotten 11 South Point
&lt;utscored tn. Marauders 21-2
m the first SIX minutes of the
!mal eight minutes, leading 7542
In garbage time for Point,
Me1gs scored the fmal nme
pomts of the game.
Leading scorer and top
player for the Marauders was
semor captam Steve Dunfee
with 20 pomts and five
rebounds Dunfee, a ~ semor
forward , plsyed a beaullful
floor game, stealmg the ball
frequently
when
the
Marauders were pressmg
Tony Vaughan, the Metgs
"big man" without Morris,
added 15 for Meigs and s1x
rebounds The 6-2 senior forward, however, was clearly
outmanned under the basket by
the Pomters. Rich Ba1ley, 5-9
junior guard, had 10 pomts for

NBA Standongs
By Un•fed Press lnferpafJonal

...
I 1

AllfUJIUJC

l•vered~ by

Pro Standings

1'; ,1•ans R k d
Oc e Reserves Tumbled 43•35
0J

Toda.r'•

1

.

Marauders Lose at South Point, 75-51
.,

Mrs . Maxine Arnold of
Kansas City, Mo. arrived on
Monday to spend two or three
weeks VISiting her sister and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur
Stewartm Mason, and with her
mother, Mrs. Mary Awntller in
Hartford, and with other
relatives and friends.
Holiday visitors of Mrs,
Mlu'Y Aumlller, Mr. and Mrs.
club to the ace; ruffs dum- Wilbur Stewart were Mr. and
my's last diamond ,' leads a Mr J k F 1
d famil
club to tbe kmg, ruffs a cl~b
s. ac ow 1!1' an
Y'
and leads his last trump to ~ · ~d Mrs. Gary Stewart and
dummy.
Miss1e, all of Pt. Pleasant; Mr.
Dummy is left with two and Mrs. Jack Stewart and
trumps, a club and tbe ace- Brice of Walton, W. Va.; Tim,
three of hearts. Those two Butch and Usa Stewart, Mrs.
trumps are played and South Geraldine Greer New Haven •
discards down to t~e king Mrs. Helen Knapp, Ne~
and two hearts East IS hop~- Haven· Mr. and Mrs. Henry
lt&gt;ssly squeezed. He can t
•
throw his last club and smce Gibbs, Columbus.
he also can't unguard the Mr. and Mrs. Grady Gregg
hearts he has to watch South and family of Athens, Alabama
make all tbe tricks
visited mends and relatives in
Our !banks to the many the bend area. Mr. Gregg was a
1eaders who sent us com- former employee of Interstate
ments on Ibis most Interest- Utilities 1n Mason.
lng hand.
Mr. and Mrs. Glen CartINEWSPAPEl ENTERPRISE ASSN I
wright and family of Glendale,
W. Va. visited recently with
Mrs. Jessie Cartwright. Mrs
The boddong has been
Cartwright and Mrs. Evelyn
West
North EMt South Nicholson will accompany the
3•
Cartwrights to Glendale for a
4•
4•
s•
? visit.
You, South, hold
Christmas dinner ~ests of
•KQJ10765 •QJ2 +54 •3 Mr. and Mrs. Charles CartWhat do you do now•
wright in Clifton were Mrs.
A-P.... When you preempt Laurene Lewis, Mr. and Mrs.
you should never rebid merely Larry Grogan and Ernie
because part""r bas raised your Hesson 1 Pt. Pleasant.
SUit
,
Mrs. Wilma Blake spent the
TODAY S QUESTION
holidays with Mr. and Mrs.
Your partner doubles I '; e Tom Hesson in Columbus.
c)uts What do you do now
Christmas dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs Jack Fox were
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Fox, Mrs.
Lena Fox, all of Clifton.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs .
Richard Gilkey and Mark on
ChriStmas were Mr. and Mrs
Uoyd Wllliams, Mr. and 1\frs
Denver Blake and daughters,
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Williams and
daughter, Judy; Betty Lyons of
Clifton; Mr. and Mrs Pearl
Pomeroy;
Mr.
production demands , " Gilkey,
Raymond
Foglesong,
Pt
Sweeney said
Sweeney sa1d the firm would Pleasant.
Mr and Mrs BID VanMeter
hold negohattons With the five
and
son, Harry Joe, left on
unwns representing workers to
Sunday for a Florida vacation.
discuss the future
Mr and Mrs. Kenny Bass of
"Because of the effects of
Marengo,
Ohio VISited recently
this deciSIOn on the employes
With his mother, Mrs. Kat1e
we shall commence disBass at Clifton.
cussions Immediately with
Dinner guests of Mr. and
the represent.tives of the five
Mrs Earl Darst, Pt. Pleasant
unions involvedl" he said.
on Christmas Day were Mrs.
Helen Barker, Mrs. Jessie
Cartwnght, Mr and Mrs Ray
Fox

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Today's hand appeared in
our column back m July
South had looked at dummy
and c o m m e n t e d, "We
haven't btd enough." Then
he proceeded to win the
trump lead and play tbe ace
and kmg of hearts. West
ruffed and led a second
trump, whereupon Garrulous
Gene proceeded to go down
one at h1s slam contract
Numerous readers pointed
out tbe contract could be
made. East must discard on
that second trump and can't
afford to throw a heart or
He must throw a diamond Now South plays ace
of dl3monds , ruffs a low dia•
mond, ruffs a low heart and
'"ar~11 1 e a d s dummy's last dta.,, J mond If East throws a club
South can set up dummy's
financial secretary Elected last club , 1f he throws a
were
Councilor
Wtlma heart, South can set up h1s
DaVIdson, Associate Councilor last heart
Myla Hudson VIce Councilor
This play IS known as a
'
trump squeeze Gene dtd not
Etleen Clark, Associate VIce find II at the table and we
Paulme Morarity, Associate
Jun10r Past Councilor Ada
Slack, Conductor Kathryn
Johnson, Warden Edith Hood,
Instde Sentmel Mabel Pickens
and Outstde Sentmel Mildred
Pterce
Others attendmg were
Council deputy Jean Hall, Alice
Capehart,
Ed1th
Hood ,
Florence Potts, Esther Harden, Agnes Wh1te, Jantce
DAYTON (UP!) - The
Lawson , Thelma Grueser, Natwnal Cash Reg1ster Co has
Kathryn Johnson, Margaret announced the closmg of 1ts
E1chmger, Robert Flanagan, facJbttes at Washmgton Court
and Jtichard Duckwurtli
House effecttve Jan. 31
After the busmess meeting, a because they are unswtable for
very delightful program was modern pnnting produchon
conducted by Kathryn Johnson
Robert M. Sweeney, vtce
mcluding smgmg of carols
president
and
general
manager of the NCR
Systemed1a DiVISion, said the
shutdown would affect about
160 workers now employed at
the plant. Five-hundred
workers are employed at the
plant durmg full produchon,
but they have been la1d off or
are on strtke
"We have made this deciSion
wtth great reluctance and only
after a thorough reappraisal of
CLIFTON - A Watch Ser- the plant's suitability m the
vice wtll be held on New Year's light of present and future
WEDNESDAY
Eve at the Cl1fton United
DANCE WEDNESDAY, 7:30
Methodtst Church startmg at
1p m., Kyger Creek High
9 30 p m The Rev Robert
MEETING
CANCELLED
School, to 11:30 Jays will
Bumgarner of Mtddleport will
The
January
meeting
of
the
emcee. Sponsored by Kyger
be the speaker Judy Williams
Middleport
,
G
arden
Club
has
Creek Alumni Assn.
and Junmy Kapp will present a
been
cancelled
INSTAU.ATIONpractlce for
prelude of mus1c.
officers and installing of ofMembers of variOus church
ficers,
Bethel 62, International
chmrs will parl!ctpate and
Order of Job's Daughters,
other special mUSic will be
Clayton Schartlger and at- Pomeroy Masonic Temple,
presented.
The planning committee for tended the program at lbe 6:30p.m. Wednesday.
THURSDAY
the service IS composed of Mrs Nazarene Church.
Mrs.
Letha
Wood
spent
JOB'S DAUGJITERS, Bethel
Ray Fox, chairman; Mrs .
with
her
daughter,
Chrtstmas
62,
semi-annual Installation
Lester Foreman, Mrs. Harold
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Roy
Christy.
Thursday, 7:30p.m. Pomeroy
Bumgarner and Miss Esther
Other
dinner
guests
were
her
Masoruc Temple. Public inMcKnight Refreshments will
aunts, Freda Miller and Lenore vited. Mlllsa Rizer to be inbe served.
Other mimsters to par- Betzing and her ruece from stalled as honored queen.
ticipate m the Mason parish- Florida.
CONFESSIONS,
Sacred
Richard Barton and family Heart Catholic Church, 7 to 8 p.
Wide community servtce are
Rev. Mrs Bernice Winkler, spent Christmas with her m. Thursday; Friday, 11 am. to
Rev. Mrs. Achsah Miller, Rev mother, Mrs. Jane Smith of noon, 3:30 p. m. to 4.30 p m.
Parker Hinzman, Rev William Silver Ridge.
FRIDAY
Freda Miller and Lenore
DeMoss and Rev Gerald
NEW YEAR'S Eve dance
Betzing had supper with
Sayre
Richard Barton and family and buffet lunch, Drew WebChristmas Eve and they ster Post 39, American Legion
opened presents and had a Home, Pomeroy, 9 p.m., for
members and guests, Organ
qwet Christmaa.
Mrs. Georgie Thoma spent music by Armand Turley
ANNUAL Tri-County New
the Christmas holidays with
Year's
Eve teen ball, Friday,
her daughter and son-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Leo King of 8.30 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. at
Wahama
High
School
Attendance at Nazarene Columbus.
Sunday School Dec. 19 was 78.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Cruthers of auditorium with Jays emCollection was $21.32.
Canton spent the weekend ceeing and playing top 100
Leo King and wife of Christmas holidays with her records of 1971. Informal, open
Columbus, Earl Thoma and mother, Mrs. Doris Maris. to public. Sponsored by
family of Pomeroy, Guy Sunday dinner gue~t was her Wshama High School senior
class. Dress, informal, $1
Thoma and family of Flatwood molher, Mrs. Beu Larkins.
Road spent Sunday with their
Debbie Wood of Gallipolis person.
NEW YEAR'S Eve services
mother, Mrs. Georgie Thoma. spent the past week with her
Mrs. Edna Wood and parents, Mr.,and Mrs. Robert at Rutland Church of Christ
daughter, Sandra; attended the Wood, Ssndy and Bobby Lynn. with social hour beginning at 9
concert at GallipoliS which Donna Kay MaUack of Florida p.m. followed by program and
Debbte Wood had part.
spent some time with the candlelight services. Puqllc
Invited.
Rick Koblentz of Columbus Woods girls.
called on his grandparents, Mr.
Edna Wood entertained with
and Mrs. George Genheimer Christmas dinner her brother
Sunday evenmg.
and famlly of Pt. Pleasant.
Attendance at the Nazarene
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Christy, TRYOUT SITE MOVED
Sunday School Dec. 26 was 66. Letha Wood, Freda Miller,
DENVER ( UPI) -The first
Collecllon was $10.89.
Lenore
Betzlng
spent l'fordlc Olympic Tryouts will be
Mr and Mrs. George Christmas afternoon with the moved from Lake Placid, N.Y.,
Genhetmer had Christmas Harold Hawk family at where there has been little
dinner with their daughter, Hockingport. Leslie Hawk and snow this year lo Lyndovllle Vt.
Mrs. David Koblentz. Other wtfe had dinner with tb~m.
The lli-lulometer race for
callers were the Earl Dean
Mr. and Mrs . Charley men and the five-kilometer
famlly .
Woodie spent Christma• with race for women will be run
Mrs. Barbra Mace and their daughter, Mrs. Willard Dec. 31 The jumping part of
family of West Virgmla spent Heines and famlly. Steve Frost the Nordic event, which is
Tuesday and Wedn ooay with of Belpre was a recent caller of slaled for Jan 2 , will remain at
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. the Woodles.
Lake Plartd.

'l Dz'nnerclub
Counct
Star
6
Celebrates 69th A nntver.

Potluck Dinner Served Buffet To Star Class
SYRACUSE - The annex of
the First Umted Presbyterian
Church here was beautifully
decorated for the potluck
Chnstmas d10ner of the Star
Class at noon on Dec 21
The buffet dmner table was
covered with a Christmas cloth
centered with a pomsett1a
arrangement, on e1ther side
bemg candles and bud vases
With a pomsettla
Kentucky fried ch1cken was
donated by Crow 's Steak
House
Followmg dmner , a gift
exchange was held and a short
busmess sessiOn conducted by
th e president,
Frankie
Mumaw Agnes White read the
Christmas story from St Luke

3-The DaUy Sentinel, Mlddlepclrt-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. 29, 1971

WIN AT BRIDGE

' '

991-9981

POMEROY,O.

H &amp; R FIRESTONE
992·2238

N. 2no liVE.

.

�2- The DaUy Sentinel, Midcleport.Pon~t•rHy, 0., Dlx'. 29, 1971
r------ - ---~----------------1

lHelen Help Us !
I

:

I

By Helen Bottel

1

• KEEP SECRETS TO YOURSELF
Dear Helen ·
I am getting m31Tled m a few weeks and was told that my
husband~ IS supposed to read my diary on our weddmg
night. Is this true • - DIANE
Dear Diane
NO !!' - H
Dear Helen ·
Holidays are the tune for vts1t10g or bemg visited How about
remindii.g people about guest manners• And host manners too •
I have this friend who comes to stay for a week or more and
by the time she's gone, I'm pooped' I'm "domg for " her the
entire time, and do well to get one dish-drying offer out of her
~e·s constantly asking me to brmg her somethmg, or go shoppmg for her But when 1t comes lo suggesting trips (some qmte
expensive ) she's nght m there The more t1red I get, the more
she wants to go And she never thinks to p1ck up the check. W1th
her, tt's "dutch" or my treat She doesn't even br10g a '1hank
you gift," or send one
Yet, m spite of this, she's good company - JUst not a good
VISitor Many people are like her. Maybe a list of "dos' ' and
"don'ts" would help them - TIRED HOSTESS
Dear T1red .
A reader from San Antomo sent th1s "guest " list (To which
I've added a few of my own pet remmders )Dear Helen
You asked for "something dtfferent" for your colwnns As a
recent hostess, I JOtted down Ideas (for myself and others ) on
how to be a popular VISitor. Here they are·
1 Remember that your hostess has gone to great pains ftxmg
up the house Compliment her - and then try to keep 1t looking
that way Don't strew your things all over - confme them to your
room, and don't even let that room look as though a hur~Icane
had struck. Agood host or hostess ISn't snoopy, but sometnnes he
or she looks m on a guest's room. It shouldn't be with total
dismay.
2 About breakfasts if the hostess must riSe early to see her
husband off to work, she mtght prefer that you come out later
when she IS!l't so rushed. But if she prefers flxmg one breakfast
for all, then don't wander out around 9 am and expect her to
reactivate her kitchen
3 If you stay over a week, be sure to g1ve your hosts a few
hours of "alone tune " each day Don't always be Wlderfoot Go
shoppmg by yourself, take a walk, read a book Constant entertammg wears a hostess down .
4 Offer to help Better yet, be there when help IS needed and
p1tch m. But don'tscrub or clean TOO hard You might g1ve the
hostess the unpress10n she doesn 't do 1t well enough.
5 Don't ask your hosts to baby-s1t for you (especially 1f
they're grandparents or rela\1 ves of the children) Too many
young mameds make "Grandma's house" their convement free
headquarters whUe they spend the whole vacatiOn tune v1sJtmg
friends
6 Keep the k1ds Wlder control. And remember, JWTipmg on
them exceSSively for every little thmg 1s almost as bad as lettmg
them rWl wild
7 Don't brmg your pets
8. You're not m a motel, so hang up your towels, use them
agam , make your beds, p1ck up your clothes; keep your toothbrush and cosmet1cs htdden or at least contamed And double
check before you leave Sending forgotten 1tems by parcel post IS
expens1ve ,
9 Loosen up your purse strmgs. Take your host and hostess
,, OIH~dinnet&gt;atlellllt once1Don'Horget~:a:l!oyouogift..lf')'Ou
' dr10k, brmga bottle. Even if you don't ~and they do -likeWise.
10. And leave before you wear out your welcome RECENT HOSTESS

u....

Hope
Plan Will Work
MADRID (UP!) - "When you've made your pttch
and the talkmg is over ," sa1d Bob Hope with a shrug,
"all you can do IS watt "
Even at that, the 68-year-old comedmn sa1d
Monday he was "not optuntstlc" hts plan for a
"chlldren{&lt;Xhildren" campatgn to rmse money for
release of U S serVIcemen from North Vietnam would
work
"My proposals have been submitted m wntmg
VIa the American Embassy 10 Bangkok," he told a
news conference at the U. S. Torre jon Air Base outside
Madrid "They have not been rejected, nor answered
I'm still wa1tmg "
Hope w01md up a stopover m Spam Tuesday w1th a
performance at Torre Jon, then was to fly to do the fmal
show m hiS annual Chnstmas tour for servtcemen at
Guantanamo Navy Base, 1n Cuba
Thursday, he met With Nguyen Van Tranh, first
secretary of the North Vietnamese Embassy m
Vtenttane, Laos, to dtscuss his plan.
"I thought by raismg funds through the work of
Amencan chUdren for schools and hospttals for the
VIetnamese there (North Vietnam) could be a
poss1b1lity of gaining the release of the POWs," he
said
"My endeavors are at a standstill at present," he
srud
"The odds agamst a VlS8 are very long "

Gututn
•..1 • U

SYRACUSE - The 69th
anniversary and annual
Chnsimas dinner of Gwdmg
Star Counctl124, Daughters of
Amenca Lodge was held Dlx'.
9 The hall was decorated m the
Chnstmas mot1f which meluded a decorated tree under
whtch the exchange gifts were
placed
The highlight of the planned
potluck 6 P m dmner was a
large cake decorated With red
pomsetttas and mscr1bed
" Happy 69th Anmversar y
Gmdmg Star Council 124 "
Tables were covered wtth
Chnstmas tablecloths and
centered w1th remdeers,
sleighs and a mJmature Mr
and Mrs. Santa Claus
Followmg dmner a regular
meeting was held with vtce
councilor Wtlma Davidson m
the chair Election of officers
for the first SIX months of 1972
was held and retained IVete
Sadie Thuener, recordmg
secretary; Margaret Cottrill,
treasurer, Esther Harden ,

2 1-20. Prayer was g1ven by
Rachel McBnde and roll call
was answered w1th a SCripture
verse containmg the word

"Peace ."
"The Chr1stmas G1ft" was
read by Mrs. McBride , "It Is
Not Far," Ruth Zav1tz; Ada
Slack read
"Chnstmas
Carols" , "Let Us Pray On Tius
Holy Day, " Frankie Mumaw ;
"Praymg Hands" Agnes
Whtte, "Another Chrtstmas
Story," Myla Hudson ; "Prayer
of St . Francis," Florence
Potts; 11 Joy To The World / '
Susie Ftscher; Rev. Zav1tz
read "Ready For Christmas" ;
Daisy Roush rec1ted the 23rd
Psalm from memory.
These readings were m-

terspersed w1th smgmg of
"Silent Night," and "0 Come
All Ye Faithful."
The January roll call word
wtll be "wmter" and hostess
Will be Ada Slack. In closmg
the group prayed the Lord's
Prayer Attendmg besides
those named above was
Rtchard Duckworth

ELSA KIMES ILL
Elsa Kimes of Middleport IS
a patient at the Arcadia
Nursmg Home m Coolville She
w1ll be observmg a birthday
anmversary on Jan 2

20c of Malpractice Dollar
Reaches Victim or Family
By LEROY POPE
NEW YORK (UP!) - The high cost and
scarCity of medical malpracl!ce insurance is
becommg as serious for the public as for the
medical profeSSIOn .
This was brought out forcibly m testunony
by state Insurance commissioners and other
Witnesses m tbe mid-December hearmgs m
Washmgton held by the Department of Health,
Education and Welfare
Among the more startUng disclosure~ was that
only ZO cents out of each dollar paid for
malpractlce Insurance ever reacbes a victim of
malpractice or his famlly. That compares with a
claim payout of 42 cents on lbe premium dollar
for automoblle liablllty policies, a record the
Insurance companies admit they are oot proud
of.
Another was that malpractice lllSurance
costs some hospitals as much as $2 a day per
patient!
Greater Concern Voiced
Greater concern was vmced by some of the
commissioners over what they said was tbe cost
inflation of medical care and actual
deterioration of medical care resulting from the
p-act ice of "defensive medicine" by doctors and
hol!j)ltalls seeking to sidestep malpractice suits.
Pemsylvanla's, inSID'ance eomnussloner,
Herbert Denenberg, said many physicians
lmhestlatingly order extra tests costing as much
• $UMland pli patients in hoapttal beds at $100a
dly Cor tests or procedures where hospitalization
II not rully neceuary juat to protect themselves
from a possible charge of neglect
'

"IF I'M WRONG, I may be sued for a million
dollars, so I don't hesitate to make the patient
pay for an extra hundred dollars worth of tests,"
he quoted one surgeon as saymg.
Denenberg and other Witnesses told HEW
offiCJals that defensive medicine also may involve avotding surgery and other procedures,
regardless of the medical mdicatJons, because of
the risk of Ia wsuits. "It even 10cludes refusal to
treat some patients altogether if they seem to be
likely candidates for fling malpractice clsims,"
Denenberg testified.
Chance F.xtremely Small
Testunony showed that even though some
dramallcally large judgments have been
awarded to victims of medical and hospital
malpractice, m the aggregate tbe victim's
chance of recovery m tbe courts is small.
Denenberg concluded that the malpractice
problem "Is helpln~ to assure low quality care at
the highest possible price."
Among the measures proposed at the
bearings to relieve the problem were :
- Regulallon of lawyers' contingent fees in
malpractice suits to protect the pubhc from
excessive judgments,
- Stricter regulatiOn of hospitals to prevent
acCidents,
-More stnngent hcens10g laws for doctors
and stricter disciplinary measures for the
p-ofess10n.
-Taking steps to develop at least a parttal
no-fault system of medwal and hospital
malpracllce swts

Mason Area

A Big One. that Got Away
NORTH (D)
• KJ85

.A3
+A86
.AK 102
WEST
EAST
.64 2

.3

.7
.QJ1095
+KJ9532 +Q107
.J94
oloQ853
SOUTH
'
.AQ1097
.K8642
+4

.16

Both vulnerable

w.. t
Poss

Pass
Pass
Pass

1•+

North

3

4.
5.
Pass

1•

East South
Pass
Pass 3 •
Pass 4NT.
Pass 6.
Pass

Opemng lead-· 2

d1d not s t u d y the hand
enough to notice 11. We also
failed to n o t e !bat South
could make a graad slam by
means of dummy reversal
He leads a diamond to the
ace at tnck two Ruffs a diamond in his hand. leads a
---------Send $1 lor JACOBY MODERN book
to 'Wm ot Bridgo," (c/o tb., newspapor), P.O. lox 49. Radoa City
Staloan, New York, N y 10019

Lakers
Make It

News, Notes

By United Press IDternalloaal
The Los Angeles Lakers are
one game away from ending
1971 with a two-month unbeaten string.
The Lakers stretched their
reCord winning streak to 29
games Tuesday night by
coasting to a I~ victory
over tbe Buffalo Braves. Loa
Angeles has not lost since the
end of October and could end
the year on a two-rnonlb unbeaten tear Thursday night
against Seattle.
Buffalo, wilh rookie Eimoere
&amp;nitb leading the way, moved
out to a 38-27 lead early in the
second period before the
Lakers exploded. Los Angele~
outscored the Braves 25-6
durmg the last 9~ minutes of
the half, holding Buffalo to just
10 points In the period, lo break
open the game.
WUt Olamberlaln had 23
points and 13 rebounds and
Jerry West hit 211 points to lead
lbe Lakers. &amp;nitb's 32 points
and :Ill rebounds paced the
Buffalo. attack.
The &lt;llicago Bulls scored a
116-105 victory !bat extended
their winning streak to six
games and handed the defendIng NBA chamPion MUwaukee
Bucks their third loss In four
games. The victory enabled the
Bulls to move to within four
games of the Bucks In lbe
Midwest Division.
A record home crowd of
19,497 in Chicago saw Bob Love
outscore Kareem AbdulJabber, 41~, and lead the
Bulls to their victory over the
Bucks.
Love scored 19 of his points in
the third period during which
the Bulls took a five-point lead.
Abdui..Jabbar made 14 field
goals for the Bucks but connected on only ~even-of-17
free throws.
The Boston Celt1cs defeated
the Philiidelphla 76ers, 1211-116,
the New York Kmcks beat the
Detroit Pistons 11S-IOO, the
Cleveland Caviillers shaded
the PorUand Trail Blazers 112111 and the Baltimore Bullets
topped the Cincmnati Royal
119-3'1 in other Tuesday mghf

Wash CH Oosing

Bumgarner to

Speak Friday

In Clifton

Chester

News Notes

Social
Calendar

BY KErrH WISECUP
points and qwckly built up a 10SOUTH POINT - The Meigs 2 lead. That advantage
Marauders dropped their however was reduced to six, 15fourth straight and fifth of 9, at the end of the first eight
seven Tuesday night against mmutes.
undefeated South Pomthere 75The Pomter margm slowly
, 51, in a non~eague match
widened, their fast breaks and
" The Pomters, coached by superior reboundmg proving
" Michael Hughes, are now 8-{1 dec1s1ve . With 1:58 left in the
overall whtle the Marauders first half, they led 30-15 At the
are 2.,5 and remained at 1-3 m half it was 33-21.
Southeastern Oh10 Athlel!c
Outscormg the Marauders
League action.
12-2m the first four mmutes of
Metgs, coached by Carl the third quarter, South Pomt
Wolfe, played without their top took a commandmg 45-23 lead.
scorer and Tebounder, 6-3 Jeff It swelled to 51-27 With 2:20
Morris, for the first tune thts remaining m the third quarter .
year Moms's absence proved
But Meigs played brilliant
to be costly as the Marauders catch-up ball m those !mal two
obVIously were handicapped nunutes of the thtrd stanza
without him. Morris IS out for They outscored the wmners 13the season with a broken 3, trailing 54-40 after three
collarbone
pertods.
The Marauders were never
Limtted to one field goal the
mthe lead as the quick and tall first SIX mmutes of the fourth
Pomters scored the first SIX perwd, Me1gs lost tis

29In Row

NCR's Plant at

games. '•'

o

O il h

"

South Whips North
By JIM McGREGOR
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (UP!)
-Ken Kavanaugh Jr. did not
recetve tbe honor his father did
m the Blue-Gray football game,
but he came close Tuesday
night as the South downed the
North, 9-0
The 6-2, 195-pound tlght end
from Lowslana State caught
five paues for 93 yards,
helping set up both Gray scores
in the 34th annual charity
game. He was named the
South's most valuable offensive
player .
He followed in the footsteps
of his father who also played
end at LSU and played for the
South m the 1939 Blue-Gray
game. However, lbe elder
Kavanaugh caught two touchdown passe• that year and was
named the game's most valuable player
Kavanaugh Jr m1ssed the
1971 most valuable player
award by only one vote with
the honor going to Guy Roberts,
a 225-pound defensive end from
Maryland who was also was
named the South's best defensive player.
Roberts' strong lme play was
a major factor m limitmg
North quarterbacks Neil Graff
of WJSConsm and Gary Fox of
Wyommg to only 13 yards m
the air . Roberts had SIX solo
tackles and two assists
Alan Thompson of W1sconsm
picked up 56 of the North's 61
rushmg yards and was named
most valuable offensive player
for the Blues. Mike Perfetl! of
Minnesota picked off a pass by
TCU's Steve Judy and was m
on mne tackles to take
defensive honors for the North.
It was a defensive show all
the way wtth the North faUing
time and agam to move the ball
and the South havmg only one
longsustalneddrive. That came
late m the fiT!t quarter when
Judy drove the Grays 74 yards,
passmg to Kavanaugh and
handing off lo Stahle Vincent of
Rice and Art Cantrell of LSU.
Vmcent got the only six-pointer
of the night on the opening play
of the second quarter, runnmg

I• '

John Havlicek scored a
game high 36 points and led a
third per1od surge which
enabled the Celllcs to overcome a 16-pomt deftclt at
PhiladelphJa. The victory was
the ninth m a row for the
Celtics while the loss was the
76ers' eighth m nine games.
Billy Cunnmgham had 24
pomts for the 76ers.
Walt Frazier scored 30 pomts
and Bill Bradley had 19 for the
Knicks, who carried a sevenpomt lead over Detroit Into the
fourth period and won going
away.
Walt Wesley's free throw
after the final buzzer provided
the victory margin for the
Cavaliers, who outrebounded
the TraU Blazers ~. and the
Bulleta got 28 points from
Archie Clark and held the
Royals to 10 field goals in the
first half in their easy triumph
at Baltimore.

Oara Garland
Buried Sunday

Funeral serviCes for MISS
Clara Garland, Minersville,
were held at 2 p.m. Sunday 11
the Ewmg Funeral Home wtth
the Rev. Forrest Donley offiCiating
•
Pallbearers were Henry
Thomas, Wyllis DaVIS, Jr ,
George Harns, Kenneth
Harris, Robert Harbrecht, Sr.,
and Denver Rice. Honorary
pallbearers were Wyllis DaVIS,
Sr , Lewis Hams, Richard
Thomas, Hosmer Roush, Fred
Daniels, Arthur Evans, and
Ross Stewart, Sr.
Those from out-of-town atGROGANS HAVE SON
tending were Gayle Jones of
CUFTON - Mr. and Mrs.
South Bend, Ind.; Mr. and Mrs. Larry Grogan are aMounc10g
Harold Rubadue of Mt. Ver- the birth of their first child, a
non; Marianne Evans, Walnut son, on Dec. 27 at Holzer
Creek, Calif.; Mrs Betty Medical Center. The mother Is
McMahon of Woodsfield; Mrs. the former E1alne Cartwright.
Clara Haskms and Mrs . The Infant weighed 7 pounds
Charlotte Cremeans, and 15 ounces, and has been
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. C. A. named Otrlstopher Charles.
Evans of Bidwell; Mr. and Grandparents are Mr and
Mrs. Robert Harbrecht, Sr., Mrs. Charles Cartwright,
Worthington. Burial was in Clifton, and Mrs. J\Wjorle
MinersvlDe Hill Cemetery.
Grogan, Middleport. Greatgrandmothers are Mrs .
Laurene Lewis, Mrs. Mary
Wells and Mrs. Evelyn
Nicholson. Great - great grandmothers are Mrs. Jessie
Cartwright
and Mrs, Olga
By UDited Press IDternalloul
Today Is Wednesday, Dec. Lewis, both of Clifton
29, the 363rd day of 1971 with
two to follow.
The moon is betwen Its first
The Daily
quarter and full stage.
Q,EVOTED TO THE
The morning stars are
-~ INTERE5TOF
MEIGS·MASON AREA
Mercury and Jupiter.
Cit.ESTER L. TANNEHILL,
The evening stars are Venus,
.. Exec. Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
Mars and Saturn.
City Editor
1
On this day in history:
Published dally n:cept •
Saturday by The Ohio Velley
In 1848 gas lights were InPubllsh.ng Company, 111
stalled in the White House for
Court St, Pomeroy, OhiQ , 1
45769 Buslnt!Ss Office Phone
the first time.
992 2156, Ed•IOnal Phone 992
In 1851 the first Young Men's
2157
Second class postage paid at
Christian Aasoclatlon opened
Pomeroy, Oh•o
•
its doors In Boston.
Na ional edvertlslng
represe,.ntattve
Bottlnelll
In 1940 Nazi Germany eonGallagher, tn c , 12 East 42nd
dueled one of its mDllt violent
~~ , New York Cl1y, New York
Sut;ascr•ptlon rates. De .
bombings of London.
1

It over from the seven He led
the South rushers with 78 yards
on 21 carries.
The South got Its final three
pomts late 1n the final quarter
after a 45-yard pass from Judy
to Kavanaugh set up a IS-yard
field goal by Tennessee's
George Hunt.
The second and th1rd quar-

By JOE CARNICELU
UPI Sports Writer
Southern California's dreams
of deposmg UCLA as the West
Coast's maJor basketball power
may be just that-dreams
The Trojans, ranked ftfth m
the natton, were rocked back to
reahty Tuesday mght as 19thranked Pennsylvania crwsed to
an 88-67 vtctory m the opemng
round of the Kodak Classic at
Rochester, NY
Penn, w1th Corky Calhoun
and Bob Morse leading the
way, surged to a 31-13 lead
early in the game. The Trojans
managed to cut the deficit to
41-37 but Morse and Ph1l
Hankinson combmed to keep
the Quakers ahead 10 the
second half
Southern Cal suffered a
maJor blow when backcourt
star Paul Westphal fouled out
m the second half. Hankinson
had 21 pomts and Morse 20 to
lead Penn while Joe Mackey's
17 were htgh for USC. The
Quakers will face St Bonaventure, whtch clubbed Rochester,
84-60, m the tourney !male
tomght
In the only other meetmg
between ranked teams, Steve
Downing scored 22 pomts and
pulled down 23 rebounds as No
7 lndtana held off No 9
Brigham Young, 61-50 Joby
Wrtght added 18 points for l.he
Hoosiers, who held BYU's h1~h-

"custom meat cutting"

Plea5antRidge Road
POMEROY,OHIO

,------ - - ,
/ If I have to go \
._&lt; take me to The, .
,. I_ Shop

--. ----·

Quiclc Serv1ce
Government Inspected
Cut To Your Specifications
,__

Dick Vaughan
992-3374

CALL POINTVIEW : 992 - 2505

carrier where

serv•ce not available One
poet Oscar Fingal said , month S1 75 By mall In Ohio
"There Is only one thing in the • and W Va , One ynr SU 00
world wor11e than being talked ' Six months S7 25 Three
mo!,lths $~ so Subscr•ptlon
•about, and that Is not being pnce
Inc lud es Sunday Times .
Sentmel
..
tallied about."

-

-- ----'-

1

1

,
1
1

J.

WEDNESDAY, DEC. 29
It looksas If Channel 6 has
hood It with the ABC network
fare early Tuesdar evenings
Tonight, they shlf to • mid·
week, P,~lme- tlme movl~,
offering Blackwater Gold,
with Kelr Dullea as thl~
week's flick. It starts at 7·30.
(Meanwhile, II you want to see
"Bewitched" "Courtship of
Eddie's Faiher/' and "Smllh
Family," they're still around
on Ch. 12.)
Who was the first political
figure 1 remember admiring•
Why, Ail Landon, who ran
against FOR In 1936, when 1
was a kid from 8 solidly
Republican family. 1 recall
proudly wearing sunflower
badges (London was from
Kansas, the Sunf19wer Stale)
that p,roclalmed "Landon·
Knox.'
Now, I'm. no longer a kid

I

The Marauders wtll be on the
road the third straight tune
next Friday, Jan. 7, agamst the
Ironton Tigers m SEOAL play.
On the folloWing Saturday they
complete their non-league
schedule for the entire season
against the Wahama White
Falcons at home.

Montgomery

OJ

Redman

7-12
2 11
9 17
7 10

Evans
Hurst

Patrick

2'
46

PF TP
20

S

IS

2

0

0

2

J

10

5

2

2

I

2
0

0

0

51

I
3
3

16

7

3
0
3
I

2

20

23

14

2

Blue Knights Cop
Tournament Win
URBANA, Ohio ( UPI) Pomt Park ( Pa ) and Urbana
College grabbed opemng round
victones Tuesday mght in the
Urbana College Hohday
Tournament to advance to the
championship game
Point Park, behind the 18
points of Joe Spellman, edged
Northwood (lnd ) 77-70 In the
opener whUe Mark Todd hit for
39 to pace the Blue Knights to a
107-97 VICtory over Huntington
(lnd)

or a Republican, bul t still
admire All Landon He's been
a very sensible Amen can
statesman, looking at the
world wllh • skeptical eye
that's never cynical, and very
gentlemanly about his awful
trouncing '" 19:14 At 8~, he'll
be Interviewed 0n "The Great
Amerlcen Dream Machine"
c
at 9 p.m., h. 11. A wise old
gentleman, Indeed, and most
of all, a gentleman.
Julia Child makes a
chocolate log ot7. 30 p.m., Ch.
9, and then runs right over to
Ch 11 and whips up soma
pastry ~~rts at 8 p.m;, The
nicest French Chef we
know - and, obviously, the
busiest
MOVIES: "Mighty Ursus," ~ p.m., and a WWII
chll ler·dlller with Clark Gable
and Lana Turner, 11 •30 p.m.,
both Ch. 10.

HADDIX RESIGNS
BOSTON (UP!) - Harvey
Haddix has resigned as pttchmg coach of the Boston Red
Sox and will be replaced by ExSox hurler Lee Stange, general
Manager Dick O'Connel sa1d
today.
O'Connel said Haddtx
stepped down "for personal
and family reasons." The 46year-old southpaw came to the
Red Sox last season after
previously coaching With the
New York Mets and Clncinnal!
Reds.

8

8

23
15

NOW

112 PRia
Dudley's Florist
Serving: Middleport,
Pomeroy, Gallipolis. 0
&amp; Mason Co .. W. V1.

Golden St at C~nclnnah
Parllanl at Milwaukee
Cleveland vs Philadelphia
at Hershey. Pa
!Only games scheduled)

College Basketball Results

Ba Ill more

14 22

389

14

378

Atlanta

13 24

286

31Jz

GB

26 10
20 16

722 4
55&lt; 10

Detro1t

14

378 16'h

23

Dtvtston
W L Pel GB

Pactflc

Los Angeles
Seattle
Golden St

35 3 921
22 17 564 13'12
18 19 486 16'12

Houston

13

351 21 1/2

2.4

Portland
8 30 211 27
Tuesday's Results

New York 119 Detro11 100
Boston 120 Phoiadelph1a 116
Chicago 116 Milwaukee 105
Cleveland 112 Portland 111
Los Angeles lOS Buffalo 87
!Only games scheduled)
Wednesday's Games

Phoemx at Houston

ABA Standmgs
By Umted Press International

East

HunneycuH

01

2

0

I
0

00

00

2

I

0

Carolina

51
75

Utah
lnd1ana
Memphis

30-64 lS-30 61 14
BY QUARTERS
9 12 19 11
15 18 21 21 -

SOUTH POINT - The Meigs
Marauder reserves faced a
vasUy unproved South Pomt
reserve squad Tuesday mght
here, losmg 43-35. The little
Marauders had beaten the
same South Pomt team 32-20 at
home ear her m the season The
loss dropped Metgs to 4-3 for
the year They are Z-2 m league
play
Coach BtU WJCklme 's lads
were on top 22-19 at the half and
trailed by only one, 34-33, going
mto the !mal stx mmutes of
play But Meigs turned ice cold
1n the fourth stanza, managing
only two pomts as South Pomt
rolled up mne.
Bdl Chaney led all scorers
wtth 14 points and played an
exceUent game on the hoards.
Bill Myers had SIX and Terry
George and Ron Couch added

351 1'1'

25

Ch1caQo
Phaemx

02

Me1gs

1h

Mtdwest DIYISIOI1
W. L Pet
Milwauk ee
31
7 816

I

South Point

GB

Western Conference

12

TOTALS

23

10

Clnctnnaf1

00

23

W L Pel

Cleveland

00

6
5
0

7S

five each for the little
Marauders Shockey paced the
Winners wtth 12.
Meigs made 14 of 46 from the
field for 30pet and 7 of 17 from
the foullme. South Point hit on
19 of 46 from the field for 41 pet
and 5 of 15 from the chanty
stripe
Meigs, Fred Burney ()..()..(),
Myers 3-0-6, Chaney 6-2-14,
Floyd Burney 1-1-3, George Z-15, Pr1ce ()..()..(),Couch 2-1-0, Ash
1-G-2 Totals 14-7~ .
South Pomt, Lawson 4-1-9,
Wyant 0-1-1, Smith 2-0-4,
Shockey 6-0-12, Tennant 3-1-7,
Hurd 3-2-6, Blake Hl-2. Totals
19-5-43
BY QUARTERS
Meigs
11 11 11 2--J5
S Pomt
10 9 15 ~
Officials, Butcher and
Dawson

Bulldogs Lose

It 35 In Row
By ORVAL JACKSON
ORLANDO, Fla (lJPI )Quarterback Chuck Ealey and
h1s Toledo teammates have left
thetr mark on the Tangerme
Bowl and tis one that may
never be equalled
Toledo won Its third stratght
Tangerme Bowl v1ctory Tuesday mght over Richmond , 26-3,
and m dmng so extended the
natiOn 's longest current
Winning streak to 35
Ealey, a second team AllAmerican selection, was voted
the game's top back, the th1rd
year running he had taken
home that award
The outstanding lineman
award was taken home by
Toledo's All-Amenca defensive
tackle Mel Long Long led the
Toledo defenstve unit that

Sharp
R1chards
Tenna nt

W. L. Pel

Kentucky

26 9
23 15
16 20
15 21

V1rgtnla
Floridia ns
New York

Pittsburgh

17

2~

1-4

20

GB

743

605 41f2
44.4 101!2
417 l1 lJ:2

'15 12

By Un1ted Press International
Old Oommton Classtc

lndtana 61 Bngham Young 50
Old Domm10n 115 Rtce 86
Quaker Ctty Tourney

I Semofmal Round I

So Car 86 Boston Coli 64
Vtllanova 76 Tenn 67

13 25 343 141J2
West
(Consolatoon)
W. L Pet GB Mass HIO Manhattan 72
26 9 7~3
108 Faorf~eid 96
22 16 S79 5'h LaSalle
ECAC
Holiday Fesl1val
16 20 444 10'12

Denver

412 1111'2

Dallas

14 23 378 13
Tuesday's Results
Vir9lma 129 Carolina 126
Ind1a na Ill MemphiS 10~
Deover 114 Plll5burgh 105
{Only games scheduled)
Wednesday's Games
P1tlsburgh at New York
Vorg1ma vs Carolina
at Rale~gh. N C
lndtana at Flondtans
Memphis at Kentucky
Dallas at Utah

( Semtfma I Round}
Fordham 87 Prov1dence 72( ot )
LouiSvi 126 Sf Pelers SO

(Consolaloon)
Syracuse 74 Duke 72
Penn St 80 Utah 69
Gator Bowl
I Forst Round I

lllmots 74 No Car St 72

Flonda 87 Columbia 47

St Bnvnture 84 Rochestr 60

NHL Standongs
By Umted Press lnternahona I

East
W. L

24
23
20
17

New York

Boston
Montreal
Toronto

s

Vancouver

West

8
9

7 47

21
21

25 7
20 11
11

IS

11 17
11 21
9 21
8 26

51 LOUIS

Las Angeles

50

~

6

W L

Ch1cago
Mmnesota
California
Philadelphia
P1tlsburgh

6 54

6

II
12 tl7

Detro11
Buffalo

T Pis

Penn 88 Southern Cal 67

Roadrunner Invitational

(Forst Round)

Montana St 89 Portland 76
Far West Classtc
6 30
(Forst Round)
8 24
' l2 Wash Sl 81 M1ch1gan 67
Utah St Tournament
T Pis
3 53
!Consolaloon)
4 44
idaho
St
88 Arkansas 73
7 29
s 27
5 27

Tuesday'5 Results

s

~2

6

2~

I 17

Toronto ~ Pltlsburgh 2
!Only game schedu led)
Wednesday's Games

!untied Richmond to only 138
total offensiVe yards and scored
the Rockets' f1rst touchdown
when he forced a fumble by
Richmond quarterback Ken
N1chols and then fell on the ball
m the end zone
The spJTtted but outmanned
Sp1ders from Richmond took
the game to Toledo from the
start and controlled the ball for
the ftrst 8 10 mmutes wtth
Ke1th Clark finally kicking a 27yard held goal
But then Toledo's strength
began to tell and the Rockets
gradually pulled away before
16,750 fans
Tailback Joe Schwartz, Toledo's leading scorer all year,
agam was the workhorse,
scormg touchdowns on runs of
one and three yards, while
Ealey added a touchdown of his
own w1th a one-yard plunge.
George Ke1m kicked all four
extra pomts for Toledo but
missed on a 22-yard fteld goal
attempt early in the second
half
Toledo Coach Jack Murphy
satd Long 's recovery was the
btg play for the Rockets.
"That play gave us the lift
we needed to get movmgt''
Murphy satd. "It picked everybody up, and 1! there was a
turmng pmnt that was It."
Rtchmond Coach Frank Jones
cred1ted the Toledo defensive
front line for the pressure 11 put
on Nichols.
"When you play the 13thranked team m the country,
there are only 12 teams that
are supposed to beat them,"
Jones sa1d.

1

Kodak Classtc

I Forst Round)

INK CONTRACTS
CHICAGO (UP!) - Second
baseman Don Kessmger and
catcher Randy Hundley have
Signed thetr 1972 contracts, the
Chicago Cubs annoWlced Tuesday
Kessmger, who finished last
year wtth a .258 batting
average, and Hundley, who
miSSed all but nine games
because of a knee injury,
became the second and third
Cubs to stgn for the new
season

-SPECIAL.
67 Dodge Monaco
Station wagon

Cal1for n1a at Montreal
St loUIS at Toronfo

Philadelph~a at New York
Boston at Ch1cago
Detroit at Buffalo

Vancouver

at Los Angeles

!Only games scheduled)

Second Contest
Athens, on top 39-31 With 2 58
remamlng in the third period,
couldn't hold on Tuesday mght
as Parkersburg's visiting Big
Red came from behmd to
defeat the Bulldogs, 57-54.
It was Athens' second loss m
seven games. The Big Red
upped their season mark to 3-1.

College Scores
Bog Eoght Tournament
I Forst Round)

Kansas St. 62 Okla. 6C
Iowa St 91 Kansas 88
Motor Coly Tournament
(Fonal Round)
Stanford 80 Valparaiso 66
I Consolaloon)
Detro1t U 86 Bwlng Grn 78
Milwaukee Classic

(Fonat Round)
Marquetle 74 Marshall 72
(Consolation)
Wis. 82 Geolown (DC) 62
All-College Tournament

Athens will host Lancaster
tomght m a non-conference
game.
The game was close all the
way AHS trailed seven pomts
m the first half, but kept batUmg back
Scott Stevens, 6-10 junior
center, paced the Winners wHh
19 pomts. Dave Smith's 27 led
the losers.
Athens hit 23 of 57 from the
field, and 8 of 21 from the foul
Circles. Parkersburg hit 24 of
59 from the field, and nine of 16
from the foul circles. Each
team collected 37 rebounds
Box score :
PARKERSIIU-RG {57) Eddy, J. J.J , Crew. 7 1 15.
Stephens, 91 19, Bell, 3 511 ;
Thornton, 3 1-7; Criner, 102 .
TOTALS 24·9-47.
ATHENS (S4) - 0 Smith,
12 3 27, Mace, 1·0 2. Chonko, J.
1 3, Greene, 5-~· 14 , Inbod y, 2 1·
5, Handley, 20-4. TOTALS2l·B·
54.
By Quarters:
10 27 ~~ 57
Parkersburg
Athens
13 21 S2 5~
Reserves- Parkersburg 35.
Athens 27

AHL Standings
By Umted Press International
East
W. L T. Pis
Boston
2~
5 4 52
15 10 9 39
Nova Scotia
Springfield
12 12 7 31
Rochester
12 18 ~ 28
Prov1dence
9 18 ' 26
West
W. L. T. Pis
Ball1more
16 13 5 37
Hershey
15 9 6 36
,Cleveland
1~ 13
6 34
Cincinnati
12 14 8 32
Richmond
12 16 6 30
Tidewater
8 21 3 19
Tuesday's Results
Cine! 6 Tidewater 3
Novo Scotia 2 Providence 2
(Only games scheduled)
Wednesday's Gomes
Boston at Cleveland
Tidewater at Richmond
Clncl at Springfield
(Only games scheduled)
Napoleon 66 Paulding 6~
Rossford 8~ Delta 76
Fayetle 67 Hopewell Loudon 53
Ayre'Svllle 76 Continental 75
lot)

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mileage. Good tires Very clean

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For The
Best In Used Cars

KEITH GOBLE FORD
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Middleport, o.

WINTER·RETREADS

Las Vegas Classoc
(First Round)

Santa Clara 109 Jaxnvl 88
Eastern Ky 95 Texas Tech 92 Weber Sf. 95 Southern Ill 87
Bluebonnet Classic

!Final Round)
Houston 106 Mlch St 73
(Consolation)
Texas A&amp;M 73 LSU 68

Kentucky 83 Notre Dome 67
N Hamp 6C Oluo Wslyan 57
Brown lOA Am Inti SO
Morris Hrvy 92 Boston U
78

2 POUND

FRUIT CAKE
99~

Cheer The Sick
With A

POINSETTIA

Central DIVISIOn

0
0
I
3
0

36

Morns
Johnson

Offtc1als, Wembrecht and Wh1te

scormg KresunJT CoslC to 21
pomts .
Elsewhere, No 2 Marquette
edged Marshall, 74-72, m the
Milwaukee Classtc, South Carolma (3) npped Boston College,
86-64, m the Quaker City
Tournament, Long Beach State
( 10) routed Cal-Fullerton, 10383, m the InternatiOnal City
Class1c, LoUJsvllle ( 13) crushed
St Peter's, 126-60, m the
Hobday Festival ; Kentucky
(15) wh1pped Notre Dame, 8367, and Santa Clara upset No
16 Jackson.ville, IO!tllll, m the
Ali .College TClllrnament.
In other acllllil, Illmo1s, wtth
Ntck Weatherspoon hlttmg 22
pomts, downed North Carol10a
State, 71,-72, after Flonda
clobbered Colwnbia, 87-47, m
the Gator Bowl tournament;
Kansas State edged Oklahoma,
62-60, and Gene Mack's 34-pomt
performance led Iowa State to
a 91-68 victory over Kansas in
the B1g Etght tournament; and
Houston, with Dwtght Jones,
Steve Newsome and Dwight
White combmmg for 56 pomts,
whipped Michigan State, 106-73,
to wm the Astro Bluebonnet
tournament.
Franldm Irv10g's 25 pomts
helped Wyommg beat Utah
State, 92-65, to capture the Big
Blue Classic and Temple edged
Minnesota, 6(1.57, and California
shaded Texas Christian, 76-74,
m Rainhow ClaSSic actlon.

WL. L. Pel GB
Boston
26 12 .68~
New York
23 12 · 639 2
Philadelphia ll 22 405 10"'
Buffalo
11 23 324 13

Balt1more 119 Ctnct 87

5

59

Aflantt1c DIVISIOn

I2
0I
I2
0I

Buy It with the $1.00 A Tankful

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CERTIFIED GAS STATION
&gt;

SlaW. MAIN
'

•

12

Toledo Makes

Eastern Conference

field , mosUy forced long shots,
for 31 pet. and 7 of 14 from the
foul hne for 50 pet They had 20
personal fouls called on them
South Point hit on 30 of 64
from lhe field, mostly close to
basket, for 40 pet. and 15 of 30
from the foul line for 50 pet
They were charged With 14
personqls

MEIGS SOUTH POINT STATISTICS
MEIGS
FG-FGA FT-FTA RB
Dunfee
8 16
~ 5
5
T Vaughan
6 I~
J5
6
Werry
04
00
1
16
00
2
Bo~gs
Ba 1ley
SIS 0 2 J
A Vaughan
1·4 00
0
B Vaughan
18
02
1
Ash
OJ
00
0
Sayre
01
00
2
TOTALS
22-71 7·14 20
SOUTH POINT

l]

'

,

puntmg duel
lietween Hunt, who only dtd
place ldckmg at Tennessee, and
Perfetti Hunt kicked five for a
43-yard average, while Per!Jttl
had a 41.1 average on seven
boots.
Acrowd of 24,0011 watched the
game m Montgomery's Cramton Bowl. The game was also
shown over some 125 telev1s10n
statwns throughout the country

the Marauders
For the Pomters, Ken Hurst
led all scorers with 23 most of
them commg off clever moves
around the basket and short
Jumpers along the key. He also
had 14 rebounds.
Lance Redman, Pmnt's shck
movmg
center,
with
tremendous sprmg in his legs,
had 16 pomts and owned the
boards with 23 grabs Marty
Patnck added 15 for South
Po1nt.
The big difference in the
game was the battle under the
boards. South Pomt had an
amumg 61 rebounds to a
meager 20 by the Marauders
Meigs hit on 22 of 71 from the

( F1rsl Round)

1

1

ters featured a

By Penn, 88-67

The Shop

Sentirlet

SO cen ts per week,
A thought for the day: Irish 1 available
By Motor Route where carrier

momentum as qwckly as they
~dd gotten 11 South Point
&lt;utscored tn. Marauders 21-2
m the first SIX minutes of the
!mal eight minutes, leading 7542
In garbage time for Point,
Me1gs scored the fmal nme
pomts of the game.
Leading scorer and top
player for the Marauders was
semor captam Steve Dunfee
with 20 pomts and five
rebounds Dunfee, a ~ semor
forward , plsyed a beaullful
floor game, stealmg the ball
frequently
when
the
Marauders were pressmg
Tony Vaughan, the Metgs
"big man" without Morris,
added 15 for Meigs and s1x
rebounds The 6-2 senior forward, however, was clearly
outmanned under the basket by
the Pomters. Rich Ba1ley, 5-9
junior guard, had 10 pomts for

NBA Standongs
By Un•fed Press lnferpafJonal

...
I 1

AllfUJIUJC

l•vered~ by

Pro Standings

1'; ,1•ans R k d
Oc e Reserves Tumbled 43•35
0J

Toda.r'•

1

.

Marauders Lose at South Point, 75-51
.,

Mrs . Maxine Arnold of
Kansas City, Mo. arrived on
Monday to spend two or three
weeks VISiting her sister and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur
Stewartm Mason, and with her
mother, Mrs. Mary Awntller in
Hartford, and with other
relatives and friends.
Holiday visitors of Mrs,
Mlu'Y Aumlller, Mr. and Mrs.
club to the ace; ruffs dum- Wilbur Stewart were Mr. and
my's last diamond ,' leads a Mr J k F 1
d famil
club to tbe kmg, ruffs a cl~b
s. ac ow 1!1' an
Y'
and leads his last trump to ~ · ~d Mrs. Gary Stewart and
dummy.
Miss1e, all of Pt. Pleasant; Mr.
Dummy is left with two and Mrs. Jack Stewart and
trumps, a club and tbe ace- Brice of Walton, W. Va.; Tim,
three of hearts. Those two Butch and Usa Stewart, Mrs.
trumps are played and South Geraldine Greer New Haven •
discards down to t~e king Mrs. Helen Knapp, Ne~
and two hearts East IS hop~- Haven· Mr. and Mrs. Henry
lt&gt;ssly squeezed. He can t
•
throw his last club and smce Gibbs, Columbus.
he also can't unguard the Mr. and Mrs. Grady Gregg
hearts he has to watch South and family of Athens, Alabama
make all tbe tricks
visited mends and relatives in
Our !banks to the many the bend area. Mr. Gregg was a
1eaders who sent us com- former employee of Interstate
ments on Ibis most Interest- Utilities 1n Mason.
lng hand.
Mr. and Mrs. Glen CartINEWSPAPEl ENTERPRISE ASSN I
wright and family of Glendale,
W. Va. visited recently with
Mrs. Jessie Cartwright. Mrs
The boddong has been
Cartwright and Mrs. Evelyn
West
North EMt South Nicholson will accompany the
3•
Cartwrights to Glendale for a
4•
4•
s•
? visit.
You, South, hold
Christmas dinner ~ests of
•KQJ10765 •QJ2 +54 •3 Mr. and Mrs. Charles CartWhat do you do now•
wright in Clifton were Mrs.
A-P.... When you preempt Laurene Lewis, Mr. and Mrs.
you should never rebid merely Larry Grogan and Ernie
because part""r bas raised your Hesson 1 Pt. Pleasant.
SUit
,
Mrs. Wilma Blake spent the
TODAY S QUESTION
holidays with Mr. and Mrs.
Your partner doubles I '; e Tom Hesson in Columbus.
c)uts What do you do now
Christmas dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs Jack Fox were
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Fox, Mrs.
Lena Fox, all of Clifton.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs .
Richard Gilkey and Mark on
ChriStmas were Mr. and Mrs
Uoyd Wllliams, Mr. and 1\frs
Denver Blake and daughters,
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Williams and
daughter, Judy; Betty Lyons of
Clifton; Mr. and Mrs Pearl
Pomeroy;
Mr.
production demands , " Gilkey,
Raymond
Foglesong,
Pt
Sweeney said
Sweeney sa1d the firm would Pleasant.
Mr and Mrs BID VanMeter
hold negohattons With the five
and
son, Harry Joe, left on
unwns representing workers to
Sunday for a Florida vacation.
discuss the future
Mr and Mrs. Kenny Bass of
"Because of the effects of
Marengo,
Ohio VISited recently
this deciSIOn on the employes
With his mother, Mrs. Kat1e
we shall commence disBass at Clifton.
cussions Immediately with
Dinner guests of Mr. and
the represent.tives of the five
Mrs Earl Darst, Pt. Pleasant
unions involvedl" he said.
on Christmas Day were Mrs.
Helen Barker, Mrs. Jessie
Cartwnght, Mr and Mrs Ray
Fox

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Today's hand appeared in
our column back m July
South had looked at dummy
and c o m m e n t e d, "We
haven't btd enough." Then
he proceeded to win the
trump lead and play tbe ace
and kmg of hearts. West
ruffed and led a second
trump, whereupon Garrulous
Gene proceeded to go down
one at h1s slam contract
Numerous readers pointed
out tbe contract could be
made. East must discard on
that second trump and can't
afford to throw a heart or
He must throw a diamond Now South plays ace
of dl3monds , ruffs a low dia•
mond, ruffs a low heart and
'"ar~11 1 e a d s dummy's last dta.,, J mond If East throws a club
South can set up dummy's
financial secretary Elected last club , 1f he throws a
were
Councilor
Wtlma heart, South can set up h1s
DaVIdson, Associate Councilor last heart
Myla Hudson VIce Councilor
This play IS known as a
'
trump squeeze Gene dtd not
Etleen Clark, Associate VIce find II at the table and we
Paulme Morarity, Associate
Jun10r Past Councilor Ada
Slack, Conductor Kathryn
Johnson, Warden Edith Hood,
Instde Sentmel Mabel Pickens
and Outstde Sentmel Mildred
Pterce
Others attendmg were
Council deputy Jean Hall, Alice
Capehart,
Ed1th
Hood ,
Florence Potts, Esther Harden, Agnes Wh1te, Jantce
DAYTON (UP!) - The
Lawson , Thelma Grueser, Natwnal Cash Reg1ster Co has
Kathryn Johnson, Margaret announced the closmg of 1ts
E1chmger, Robert Flanagan, facJbttes at Washmgton Court
and Jtichard Duckwurtli
House effecttve Jan. 31
After the busmess meeting, a because they are unswtable for
very delightful program was modern pnnting produchon
conducted by Kathryn Johnson
Robert M. Sweeney, vtce
mcluding smgmg of carols
president
and
general
manager of the NCR
Systemed1a DiVISion, said the
shutdown would affect about
160 workers now employed at
the plant. Five-hundred
workers are employed at the
plant durmg full produchon,
but they have been la1d off or
are on strtke
"We have made this deciSion
wtth great reluctance and only
after a thorough reappraisal of
CLIFTON - A Watch Ser- the plant's suitability m the
vice wtll be held on New Year's light of present and future
WEDNESDAY
Eve at the Cl1fton United
DANCE WEDNESDAY, 7:30
Methodtst Church startmg at
1p m., Kyger Creek High
9 30 p m The Rev Robert
MEETING
CANCELLED
School, to 11:30 Jays will
Bumgarner of Mtddleport will
The
January
meeting
of
the
emcee. Sponsored by Kyger
be the speaker Judy Williams
Middleport
,
G
arden
Club
has
Creek Alumni Assn.
and Junmy Kapp will present a
been
cancelled
INSTAU.ATIONpractlce for
prelude of mus1c.
officers and installing of ofMembers of variOus church
ficers,
Bethel 62, International
chmrs will parl!ctpate and
Order of Job's Daughters,
other special mUSic will be
Clayton Schartlger and at- Pomeroy Masonic Temple,
presented.
The planning committee for tended the program at lbe 6:30p.m. Wednesday.
THURSDAY
the service IS composed of Mrs Nazarene Church.
Mrs.
Letha
Wood
spent
JOB'S DAUGJITERS, Bethel
Ray Fox, chairman; Mrs .
with
her
daughter,
Chrtstmas
62,
semi-annual Installation
Lester Foreman, Mrs. Harold
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Roy
Christy.
Thursday, 7:30p.m. Pomeroy
Bumgarner and Miss Esther
Other
dinner
guests
were
her
Masoruc Temple. Public inMcKnight Refreshments will
aunts, Freda Miller and Lenore vited. Mlllsa Rizer to be inbe served.
Other mimsters to par- Betzing and her ruece from stalled as honored queen.
ticipate m the Mason parish- Florida.
CONFESSIONS,
Sacred
Richard Barton and family Heart Catholic Church, 7 to 8 p.
Wide community servtce are
Rev. Mrs Bernice Winkler, spent Christmas with her m. Thursday; Friday, 11 am. to
Rev. Mrs. Achsah Miller, Rev mother, Mrs. Jane Smith of noon, 3:30 p. m. to 4.30 p m.
Parker Hinzman, Rev William Silver Ridge.
FRIDAY
Freda Miller and Lenore
DeMoss and Rev Gerald
NEW YEAR'S Eve dance
Betzing had supper with
Sayre
Richard Barton and family and buffet lunch, Drew WebChristmas Eve and they ster Post 39, American Legion
opened presents and had a Home, Pomeroy, 9 p.m., for
members and guests, Organ
qwet Christmaa.
Mrs. Georgie Thoma spent music by Armand Turley
ANNUAL Tri-County New
the Christmas holidays with
Year's
Eve teen ball, Friday,
her daughter and son-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Leo King of 8.30 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. at
Wahama
High
School
Attendance at Nazarene Columbus.
Sunday School Dec. 19 was 78.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Cruthers of auditorium with Jays emCollection was $21.32.
Canton spent the weekend ceeing and playing top 100
Leo King and wife of Christmas holidays with her records of 1971. Informal, open
Columbus, Earl Thoma and mother, Mrs. Doris Maris. to public. Sponsored by
family of Pomeroy, Guy Sunday dinner gue~t was her Wshama High School senior
class. Dress, informal, $1
Thoma and family of Flatwood molher, Mrs. Beu Larkins.
Road spent Sunday with their
Debbie Wood of Gallipolis person.
NEW YEAR'S Eve services
mother, Mrs. Georgie Thoma. spent the past week with her
Mrs. Edna Wood and parents, Mr.,and Mrs. Robert at Rutland Church of Christ
daughter, Sandra; attended the Wood, Ssndy and Bobby Lynn. with social hour beginning at 9
concert at GallipoliS which Donna Kay MaUack of Florida p.m. followed by program and
Debbte Wood had part.
spent some time with the candlelight services. Puqllc
Invited.
Rick Koblentz of Columbus Woods girls.
called on his grandparents, Mr.
Edna Wood entertained with
and Mrs. George Genheimer Christmas dinner her brother
Sunday evenmg.
and famlly of Pt. Pleasant.
Attendance at the Nazarene
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Christy, TRYOUT SITE MOVED
Sunday School Dec. 26 was 66. Letha Wood, Freda Miller,
DENVER ( UPI) -The first
Collecllon was $10.89.
Lenore
Betzlng
spent l'fordlc Olympic Tryouts will be
Mr and Mrs. George Christmas afternoon with the moved from Lake Placid, N.Y.,
Genhetmer had Christmas Harold Hawk family at where there has been little
dinner with their daughter, Hockingport. Leslie Hawk and snow this year lo Lyndovllle Vt.
Mrs. David Koblentz. Other wtfe had dinner with tb~m.
The lli-lulometer race for
callers were the Earl Dean
Mr. and Mrs . Charley men and the five-kilometer
famlly .
Woodie spent Christma• with race for women will be run
Mrs. Barbra Mace and their daughter, Mrs. Willard Dec. 31 The jumping part of
family of West Virgmla spent Heines and famlly. Steve Frost the Nordic event, which is
Tuesday and Wedn ooay with of Belpre was a recent caller of slaled for Jan 2 , will remain at
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. the Woodles.
Lake Plartd.

'l Dz'nnerclub
Counct
Star
6
Celebrates 69th A nntver.

Potluck Dinner Served Buffet To Star Class
SYRACUSE - The annex of
the First Umted Presbyterian
Church here was beautifully
decorated for the potluck
Chnstmas d10ner of the Star
Class at noon on Dec 21
The buffet dmner table was
covered with a Christmas cloth
centered with a pomsett1a
arrangement, on e1ther side
bemg candles and bud vases
With a pomsettla
Kentucky fried ch1cken was
donated by Crow 's Steak
House
Followmg dmner , a gift
exchange was held and a short
busmess sessiOn conducted by
th e president,
Frankie
Mumaw Agnes White read the
Christmas story from St Luke

3-The DaUy Sentinel, Mlddlepclrt-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. 29, 1971

WIN AT BRIDGE

' '

991-9981

POMEROY,O.

H &amp; R FIRESTONE
992·2238

N. 2no liVE.

.

�..

. '

'

'

' 4-The DaUySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Dec. 29, 1971

Tacy Upset over McGuire Lip
MILWAUKEE, Wis. ( UPilMarshall University basketball
coach Carl Tacy wore two hats
Tuesday night~oach and psy·
chologist- butneitheronecould
bring his team a victory even
though he came close.
HisThunderingHerdsuffered
a 74-72 loss to Al McGuire's
Warriors as Marquette, second
ranked in the nation, captured
the title in the Milwaukee Classic.
After the game Tacy was
pleased with his team's per-

CLEARANCE I

udies' Famous Brand

formance but highly displeased opponent. This time though, ll1ble belt - holier than thou.
with his treatment in Milwau- · Tacy kept his team huddled He's just like Elmer Gantry."
"I'd love to get Mar~ball in
kee.
·lightly together with their
a home~nd-home series," Mc··we didn't get a courtesy h&lt;~nds occupied elsewhere.
Guire
said. "I'd have 'no ill
'd
"That
didn't
bother
me,"
Mccall or anything," he sa1 .
"Someone should have called Guire said after the game. feelings."
''l'mnotparticularlyinterest·
have called us. I'm not partie· "But some of his (Tacy's) yeliularly anxious to come back to ing did. He kept after the offi- edin playing Marquette again,"
cials."
Tacy said. "There isn't much
· Milwaukee again."
Tacy started his psyching
Tacy wouldn't talk about the hospitality here."
" ! wonder what he'd be saytechniques dW'ing the pre-game officials but he admitted that
ing
if he'd won," McGuire said
introductions.
McGuire called him something
as he walked out of the dressNormally, as each Marquette unpleasant after the game.
"Youknowwhat
Tacy's
like,"
ing room.
player is introduced, he runs
over and shakes hands with his McGuire said. ''He's from the

SPORTSWEAR
OFF
obbie Brooks
Russ Tcigs
Aileen

POMEROY

\

.

1

like these 1n years

McGuire: 'We're Lucky to Win'
MILWAUKEE, Wis. (UPI)"We were fortunate tonight, to
win ' " was
the way Al McGuire
I
descri~ his Marquette Warriors 74-72 win over Marshall
Tue~y night in the champion-

Ohio Coll09e
Basketball Scores

Scores
Cleveland St. Joseph 73
Ashtabula Edgewood 69
Pymatuning Valley 54
Wintersville 58 Brooke (W.

Va .l 54
Steubenville C. C. 84 Wheeling
(W Va.) 63

Dillonvale 54 Stanton Local 49

Marietta 65 Tridelph ia (W.
Va .l 63 lot)
Stravsbvrg 49 Garaway 47
Gahanna 72 Delaware 66
Westerville 67 Mt. Vernon 58

Westland 80 Whitehall 59
Worthington 85 Reynoldsburg
50
London 75 Grove City 62
Bexley 97 Marysville 52 (3)
Lakewood 79 Johnstown 65
Licking Heights 85 Licking
Valley 57

Cols. Centra l 68 Greenfield
Mclain 46
Canal Winchester 64 Groveport

62

North Union 62 Triad 50
Ci rcleville 86 Teays Valley 73

Pleasant 78 Plain City 46
Parkersburgh (W. Va .) 57
Athens 54
Ashtabula 65 Conneaut 61 lot)

Geneva 80 Jefferson 76

Cleve land St. Ignatius 79

Cleve land Cathedral Latin 76
Bellevue 66 Vermilion 61
Youngstown Boardman 96

Cleveland East Tech 80

Allen Park 67 Baptist Christian
65 (championship
West Holmes 61 River View 54

lot)
Ridgewood 71 Conotton Valley
66

Piqua 63 West Milton 51
Tecumseh 64 Troy 51
Beavercreek
64
Dayton

Belmont 51
O.kwood 75 Dayton Kiser 57
Twin Valle' South 63 Eaton 59
!.~......~

...... .

National-Trails 69 O.kmont 54
Greenville 66 Vandalia Butler

60
Yellow Springs 75 Westmont 59

Anna 76 Franklin Monroe 57

Fort Loramie 74 Gettysburg 27

Bradford 62 Russia 61
Mendon Union 93 Parkway 75
Riverside 87 Jackson Center 50

Norwalk 56 Mansfield St.
Peters 52

Mt. Gilead 42 Cardington 38
Mansfield Malabar 51 Mansfield Madison 42

McMechen IW. Va .) Bishop
Donahue 75

Union Local63
Hicksville 55 Hilltop 54
Archbold 89 Bryan 59
Tinora 66 Liberty Center 55
Defiance 85 Fairview 67

Wolfpen
News, Notes
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith
visited Sunday afternoon with
Harley Smith, a patient at
Holzer Medical Center. They
also visited Mrs. Harley Smith
and Mr. and Mrs. Earl Dean.
Mrs. William Boyce of
Columbus, Mr. and Mrs .
William Russell of Minersville
and Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Russell were Sunday visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Russell.
Dreama Eblin, '(laughter of
Mr. and..Mrs. Henry Eblin, was
in Veterans Memorial Hospital
for observation and has
returned home and is feeling
better.
Mrs. Ethel Hatfield retW'ned
home after spending some time
with her son and family, Mr.
and Mrs . Bill Hatfield, North
Carolina.
Mrs. Helen Johnson returned
home Sunday after spending a
week with Mr. and Mrs. Lee
Roush and family of Logan and
helping care for their new son,
Joseph Allen.
Mr. and Mrs. [)(Jyle Knapp,
Kail, Kevin and Charles, enjoyed a pre-Christmas dinner
with Mrs. Lena Knapp of

!Ashland Tournament)

West Virginia State 114

Geneseo State IN .Y.l 103

(cons .)
Eastern Michigan 95 Ashland

89

was a vastly different ball club.
The Warriors jumped off to a
5-0 lead but Marshall began
breaking the Warriors fabled
press and went ahead . It wasn't
until a long jW'Rp Shot with two

College Ratings

By United Press International

Pittsburgh F ifth Avenue 82

( at)

ship game of the Milwaukee
Classic.
Marshall had edged Wisconsin in the opening game
Monday night, but against
Marquette the Thlljldering Herd

!Championship!
IMotor Cjty Classic)

Detro it 86 Bowling Green 78
(cons .)

IMuskingum Holiday Tourn.l
Otterbein 104 Westm i nster

I Pa .l 96

Muskingum 70 Clarion 59

IHoosier.Buckeyel
Findlay 93 Taylor (Ind.)

75
Defiance 75 Manch es t er ( Ind. )
72
Hanover 82 Bluffton 74

(Lemoyne IN. Y.l

Tournament)
New Hampshire 60 Ohio
Wesleyan 57
(Urban Holiday Tournament)

Point Park (Pa.) 77 Northwood
I Ind .) 70
Urbana 107 Huntington I Ind.)
97

Alfred
Social ,'Votes

NEW YORK IUPII - The
United Press lnternatlona 1 top
20 small college basketball
teams wi th first place votes
and won-lost records as of Dec.
261n p•rentheses (fourth week).
Team
Points
1. Kentucky St. 1171 (J.O)
289
2. La . Tech 151 (6-01
261
3. Eau Cla ire 16 1 18·01
239
4 . Tennessee st. 12·01
207
5. Assumption 11 ) 14·1I 116
6. Itiel F. Austin 15-1)
115
ITie) Evansvl Ill (4·21 114
8. Howard Payne 17-11
100
9. Cheyney St. (6-1I
57
10. Akron 16:11
,
49
11 . Delta (MISs.) St. 17-01
31
12. Ashland (5- 11
30
13. Falrmnt IWVa .) St. 5-1) 29
14. Fla. Southern (1 I (7-0) 22
15. Eastern IlL Ill 15-11
21
16. Ph1la Textile (4-2)
15
17 .Grambling (5-ll
13
18. Itiel Ky. Wesleyn 13·21
12
!Tie) Sam Houston St. 13-g
20. Ten .. Tech (41)
11

and Mrs. Ernest Taylor were
all their children, Mr. and Mrs.
John H. Taylor and family of
Sunday School attendance on Virginia ; Mr. and Mrs. Char·
Dec. 26 was 31, the offering $15. les Taylor and family of
Worship services were held Guysville, 0., and Mr. and
at 11, with the Rev. Lehman Mrs . Lloyd Dillinger and
bringing the message from family of Shade, 0.
Luke 2:21-31 "Behold My Eyes
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Have Seen Salvation this day," Henderson, Mr. and Mrs.
- Simeon. Attendance at this David Williams and Aaron, and
service was 23.
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Follrod,
. The WSCS Christmas party, Stevie and Kathy attended a
held in the church basement on family get-together at the
Tuesday eveiWig,. Dec. 21, was home of their mother, Edith
attended by 36 members , Harper at Tuppers Plains for
relatives and friends. A potluck Christmas, on Sunday, Dec. 19.
lunch was served, gifts were
Mrs. Sarah Woode of
exchanged, and names drawn Coolville visited Mr. and Mrs.
for another year.
Vere Swartz Christmas Day.
Ni na
Robinson
spent
Several local people attended
Christmas with her son, Robert the Christmas program at the
Robinson and family at Belpre, Orange Christian Church
0., and in the afternoon they all Wednesday evening, Dec. 22.
visited Mr. and Mrs. Gerald . The Follrod-Robinson and
Swartz and family at Marietta , the William Carr homes were
0.
scenes for a get-together for
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Woode families and friends on
and Conni Sue of Circleville, 0. Christmas Eve.
spent their Christmas vacation
Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Swartz
here with their parents, Mr. had Christmas· dinner with
and Mrs. Charles D. Woode, their son, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
and the William Carr family, Swartz and family at WilliamsandMr. and Mrs. Robert White town, W. Va. In the afternoon
of Keno and other relatives.
they visited their other son,
Clara
Follrod
spent Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Swartz
Christmas Day with her son, and family at Marietta.
Bill and family at Athens.
-Mrs. Charles D. Woode
Glen Robinson is ill at this
writing . .
Christmas day guests of Mr.
THEY GIVE TOO
Giving contributions for
Langsville and Mr. and Mrs. Christmas to the Meigs
Ralph Knapp, Michael and Community Class, not reported
Timmy, of CoiW'Rbus.
earlier, were Mary Harris and
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith Marlene Putnam .
visited Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
Haning, Rhonda and Ronald,
Sunday evening.
Mrs. Clair Giles, Jr. returned
home after several days in
Holzer Medical Center and is
recuperating.
Mr. and Mrs. Everett Ray
Johnson of CoiW'Rbus have a
new son born Sunday, Dec. 19.

seconds left in the first half by
Allie Me Guire that Marquette
regained the lead.
But Marshall quickly came
back from a 34-33 halftime
deficit.
The Herd, behind the play of
Randy Noll and Russell Lee,
pulled ahead in the second half
and it wasn't until M.cGuire hit
two free thro~s with 4:48 left
that the Warrwrs look the lead
at 62-W.
Marshallcametowithinli&amp;-63
but two free throws by Bob
. ·
LackeygaveMarquette,ranked
second inthe nation, an insW'mountable lead
..
·
It was our pressure free
throw shooting that gave us the
win "CoachMcGuiresaid The
•.
·
Warnors sank 28 of 39 from the
line for 72 percent. Marshall
had 10 of 17 for 59 per cent.
" ! was mighty impressed
with Marquette's team," Mar·
shall Coach Carl Tacy said.
"They played hard and are
.
.
very qwck. But ·our boys did
might well too. They played a
very good game."
Lackey was named the
toW'nament's Most Valuable
Player and led the Warriors in
scoring with 23 points. Jim
Chones added 17. High scorer
for Marsball was Noll and Lee
added 15.
The loss was the first in nine
games for Marshall and the win
gave the Warriors an unblimished record in eight games.
In the consolation game,
Wisconsin downed . eorgetown
82.02.

Ladies' Dresses - Sale Priced!
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Pomeroy

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are broken. so, shop now and save!

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12 OZ. PKG..............

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Sizes are broken, but values are exceptional!

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Phone 992·l428

I

MASON

49eLB.

CAGLES
PRIDE

~tt-0

HAM

Hurry-·-in for · o·utstanding
bargains in girls' dresses .
Shop ear ly tor best selection!

3 LB. or MORE

9~.

FU,RNIIURE
'349.95

I

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MEATS

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***************•

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LB.

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44

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$35.00 llllwn'8ela n~;e On
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The Drive-In Window
isOpen
i&lt;
, 9A.M.to7P.M.
~
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Other Banking Hours 9 to 3 il
and 5 to 7 as usual _on
Fridays.
~

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People are congregating to
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PORK

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Member FDIC
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LB.
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STYLE
PORK

BOSTON ROLL

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NEW YEAR

(Upon Request)

Have a new dress for the holiday
ahead. Come pick out a bargain! Sizes are broken, but price is
right. Values to 16.99.

Many be tter fashion
styles are now on sale at
a tiny price. We have .
priced
them
for
clearance now! Values
to 23.00.

! FARMERS BANK i
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-Anonymous

......

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$

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styles and colors in bargain rack .
Values to 10.99.

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•
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.00

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FOR TODAY

FUL

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llB. BOX

CABBAGE

4 oz.

~

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LB.

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46 oz.

KOBEY
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POTATOES
. 211 CAN

BUSH'S
BLACKEYE

PEAS .
16 OZ. CANS

2
ro~25

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40 oz.

39

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180 CT.

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15 oz.
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'

'

' 4-The DaUySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Dec. 29, 1971

Tacy Upset over McGuire Lip
MILWAUKEE, Wis. ( UPilMarshall University basketball
coach Carl Tacy wore two hats
Tuesday night~oach and psy·
chologist- butneitheronecould
bring his team a victory even
though he came close.
HisThunderingHerdsuffered
a 74-72 loss to Al McGuire's
Warriors as Marquette, second
ranked in the nation, captured
the title in the Milwaukee Classic.
After the game Tacy was
pleased with his team's per-

CLEARANCE I

udies' Famous Brand

formance but highly displeased opponent. This time though, ll1ble belt - holier than thou.
with his treatment in Milwau- · Tacy kept his team huddled He's just like Elmer Gantry."
"I'd love to get Mar~ball in
kee.
·lightly together with their
a home~nd-home series," Mc··we didn't get a courtesy h&lt;~nds occupied elsewhere.
Guire
said. "I'd have 'no ill
'd
"That
didn't
bother
me,"
Mccall or anything," he sa1 .
"Someone should have called Guire said after the game. feelings."
''l'mnotparticularlyinterest·
have called us. I'm not partie· "But some of his (Tacy's) yeliularly anxious to come back to ing did. He kept after the offi- edin playing Marquette again,"
cials."
Tacy said. "There isn't much
· Milwaukee again."
Tacy started his psyching
Tacy wouldn't talk about the hospitality here."
" ! wonder what he'd be saytechniques dW'ing the pre-game officials but he admitted that
ing
if he'd won," McGuire said
introductions.
McGuire called him something
as he walked out of the dressNormally, as each Marquette unpleasant after the game.
"Youknowwhat
Tacy's
like,"
ing room.
player is introduced, he runs
over and shakes hands with his McGuire said. ''He's from the

SPORTSWEAR
OFF
obbie Brooks
Russ Tcigs
Aileen

POMEROY

\

.

1

like these 1n years

McGuire: 'We're Lucky to Win'
MILWAUKEE, Wis. (UPI)"We were fortunate tonight, to
win ' " was
the way Al McGuire
I
descri~ his Marquette Warriors 74-72 win over Marshall
Tue~y night in the champion-

Ohio Coll09e
Basketball Scores

Scores
Cleveland St. Joseph 73
Ashtabula Edgewood 69
Pymatuning Valley 54
Wintersville 58 Brooke (W.

Va .l 54
Steubenville C. C. 84 Wheeling
(W Va.) 63

Dillonvale 54 Stanton Local 49

Marietta 65 Tridelph ia (W.
Va .l 63 lot)
Stravsbvrg 49 Garaway 47
Gahanna 72 Delaware 66
Westerville 67 Mt. Vernon 58

Westland 80 Whitehall 59
Worthington 85 Reynoldsburg
50
London 75 Grove City 62
Bexley 97 Marysville 52 (3)
Lakewood 79 Johnstown 65
Licking Heights 85 Licking
Valley 57

Cols. Centra l 68 Greenfield
Mclain 46
Canal Winchester 64 Groveport

62

North Union 62 Triad 50
Ci rcleville 86 Teays Valley 73

Pleasant 78 Plain City 46
Parkersburgh (W. Va .) 57
Athens 54
Ashtabula 65 Conneaut 61 lot)

Geneva 80 Jefferson 76

Cleve land St. Ignatius 79

Cleve land Cathedral Latin 76
Bellevue 66 Vermilion 61
Youngstown Boardman 96

Cleveland East Tech 80

Allen Park 67 Baptist Christian
65 (championship
West Holmes 61 River View 54

lot)
Ridgewood 71 Conotton Valley
66

Piqua 63 West Milton 51
Tecumseh 64 Troy 51
Beavercreek
64
Dayton

Belmont 51
O.kwood 75 Dayton Kiser 57
Twin Valle' South 63 Eaton 59
!.~......~

...... .

National-Trails 69 O.kmont 54
Greenville 66 Vandalia Butler

60
Yellow Springs 75 Westmont 59

Anna 76 Franklin Monroe 57

Fort Loramie 74 Gettysburg 27

Bradford 62 Russia 61
Mendon Union 93 Parkway 75
Riverside 87 Jackson Center 50

Norwalk 56 Mansfield St.
Peters 52

Mt. Gilead 42 Cardington 38
Mansfield Malabar 51 Mansfield Madison 42

McMechen IW. Va .) Bishop
Donahue 75

Union Local63
Hicksville 55 Hilltop 54
Archbold 89 Bryan 59
Tinora 66 Liberty Center 55
Defiance 85 Fairview 67

Wolfpen
News, Notes
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith
visited Sunday afternoon with
Harley Smith, a patient at
Holzer Medical Center. They
also visited Mrs. Harley Smith
and Mr. and Mrs. Earl Dean.
Mrs. William Boyce of
Columbus, Mr. and Mrs .
William Russell of Minersville
and Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Russell were Sunday visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Russell.
Dreama Eblin, '(laughter of
Mr. and..Mrs. Henry Eblin, was
in Veterans Memorial Hospital
for observation and has
returned home and is feeling
better.
Mrs. Ethel Hatfield retW'ned
home after spending some time
with her son and family, Mr.
and Mrs . Bill Hatfield, North
Carolina.
Mrs. Helen Johnson returned
home Sunday after spending a
week with Mr. and Mrs. Lee
Roush and family of Logan and
helping care for their new son,
Joseph Allen.
Mr. and Mrs. [)(Jyle Knapp,
Kail, Kevin and Charles, enjoyed a pre-Christmas dinner
with Mrs. Lena Knapp of

!Ashland Tournament)

West Virginia State 114

Geneseo State IN .Y.l 103

(cons .)
Eastern Michigan 95 Ashland

89

was a vastly different ball club.
The Warriors jumped off to a
5-0 lead but Marshall began
breaking the Warriors fabled
press and went ahead . It wasn't
until a long jW'Rp Shot with two

College Ratings

By United Press International

Pittsburgh F ifth Avenue 82

( at)

ship game of the Milwaukee
Classic.
Marshall had edged Wisconsin in the opening game
Monday night, but against
Marquette the Thlljldering Herd

!Championship!
IMotor Cjty Classic)

Detro it 86 Bowling Green 78
(cons .)

IMuskingum Holiday Tourn.l
Otterbein 104 Westm i nster

I Pa .l 96

Muskingum 70 Clarion 59

IHoosier.Buckeyel
Findlay 93 Taylor (Ind.)

75
Defiance 75 Manch es t er ( Ind. )
72
Hanover 82 Bluffton 74

(Lemoyne IN. Y.l

Tournament)
New Hampshire 60 Ohio
Wesleyan 57
(Urban Holiday Tournament)

Point Park (Pa.) 77 Northwood
I Ind .) 70
Urbana 107 Huntington I Ind.)
97

Alfred
Social ,'Votes

NEW YORK IUPII - The
United Press lnternatlona 1 top
20 small college basketball
teams wi th first place votes
and won-lost records as of Dec.
261n p•rentheses (fourth week).
Team
Points
1. Kentucky St. 1171 (J.O)
289
2. La . Tech 151 (6-01
261
3. Eau Cla ire 16 1 18·01
239
4 . Tennessee st. 12·01
207
5. Assumption 11 ) 14·1I 116
6. Itiel F. Austin 15-1)
115
ITie) Evansvl Ill (4·21 114
8. Howard Payne 17-11
100
9. Cheyney St. (6-1I
57
10. Akron 16:11
,
49
11 . Delta (MISs.) St. 17-01
31
12. Ashland (5- 11
30
13. Falrmnt IWVa .) St. 5-1) 29
14. Fla. Southern (1 I (7-0) 22
15. Eastern IlL Ill 15-11
21
16. Ph1la Textile (4-2)
15
17 .Grambling (5-ll
13
18. Itiel Ky. Wesleyn 13·21
12
!Tie) Sam Houston St. 13-g
20. Ten .. Tech (41)
11

and Mrs. Ernest Taylor were
all their children, Mr. and Mrs.
John H. Taylor and family of
Sunday School attendance on Virginia ; Mr. and Mrs. Char·
Dec. 26 was 31, the offering $15. les Taylor and family of
Worship services were held Guysville, 0., and Mr. and
at 11, with the Rev. Lehman Mrs . Lloyd Dillinger and
bringing the message from family of Shade, 0.
Luke 2:21-31 "Behold My Eyes
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Have Seen Salvation this day," Henderson, Mr. and Mrs.
- Simeon. Attendance at this David Williams and Aaron, and
service was 23.
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Follrod,
. The WSCS Christmas party, Stevie and Kathy attended a
held in the church basement on family get-together at the
Tuesday eveiWig,. Dec. 21, was home of their mother, Edith
attended by 36 members , Harper at Tuppers Plains for
relatives and friends. A potluck Christmas, on Sunday, Dec. 19.
lunch was served, gifts were
Mrs. Sarah Woode of
exchanged, and names drawn Coolville visited Mr. and Mrs.
for another year.
Vere Swartz Christmas Day.
Ni na
Robinson
spent
Several local people attended
Christmas with her son, Robert the Christmas program at the
Robinson and family at Belpre, Orange Christian Church
0., and in the afternoon they all Wednesday evening, Dec. 22.
visited Mr. and Mrs. Gerald . The Follrod-Robinson and
Swartz and family at Marietta , the William Carr homes were
0.
scenes for a get-together for
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Woode families and friends on
and Conni Sue of Circleville, 0. Christmas Eve.
spent their Christmas vacation
Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Swartz
here with their parents, Mr. had Christmas· dinner with
and Mrs. Charles D. Woode, their son, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
and the William Carr family, Swartz and family at WilliamsandMr. and Mrs. Robert White town, W. Va. In the afternoon
of Keno and other relatives.
they visited their other son,
Clara
Follrod
spent Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Swartz
Christmas Day with her son, and family at Marietta.
Bill and family at Athens.
-Mrs. Charles D. Woode
Glen Robinson is ill at this
writing . .
Christmas day guests of Mr.
THEY GIVE TOO
Giving contributions for
Langsville and Mr. and Mrs. Christmas to the Meigs
Ralph Knapp, Michael and Community Class, not reported
Timmy, of CoiW'Rbus.
earlier, were Mary Harris and
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith Marlene Putnam .
visited Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
Haning, Rhonda and Ronald,
Sunday evening.
Mrs. Clair Giles, Jr. returned
home after several days in
Holzer Medical Center and is
recuperating.
Mr. and Mrs. Everett Ray
Johnson of CoiW'Rbus have a
new son born Sunday, Dec. 19.

seconds left in the first half by
Allie Me Guire that Marquette
regained the lead.
But Marshall quickly came
back from a 34-33 halftime
deficit.
The Herd, behind the play of
Randy Noll and Russell Lee,
pulled ahead in the second half
and it wasn't until M.cGuire hit
two free thro~s with 4:48 left
that the Warrwrs look the lead
at 62-W.
Marshallcametowithinli&amp;-63
but two free throws by Bob
. ·
LackeygaveMarquette,ranked
second inthe nation, an insW'mountable lead
..
·
It was our pressure free
throw shooting that gave us the
win "CoachMcGuiresaid The
•.
·
Warnors sank 28 of 39 from the
line for 72 percent. Marshall
had 10 of 17 for 59 per cent.
" ! was mighty impressed
with Marquette's team," Mar·
shall Coach Carl Tacy said.
"They played hard and are
.
.
very qwck. But ·our boys did
might well too. They played a
very good game."
Lackey was named the
toW'nament's Most Valuable
Player and led the Warriors in
scoring with 23 points. Jim
Chones added 17. High scorer
for Marsball was Noll and Lee
added 15.
The loss was the first in nine
games for Marshall and the win
gave the Warriors an unblimished record in eight games.
In the consolation game,
Wisconsin downed . eorgetown
82.02.

Ladies' Dresses - Sale Priced!
ALL THE FAMOUS BRANbS

VAL TO 10.99

NOW

...

il

...
~

~
..,
..,

~
t:

~

..,

it
il

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS
210 E. 2nd
Pomeroy

-

~·
.
.
This is lhl:l'Sale where you save big dollars now! All thi s season's best
styles and colors at drastic reductions. Come, look! Come, save! Sizes
are broken. so, shop now and save!

VALUES TO 12.99

00

:i(

«

88

CLEARANCE!

Gi~s'

OUT THEY GO!

0~

Dresses .

GIRLS'
COATS

VALUES TO 2.99

$1.88
$2.88

Complete Une

,%

VALUES TO 3.99

EA

· ~ FURNITURE
I' Mason, w. V.o .
,,
"

MASON, W. VA.

12 OZ. PKG..............

. ,. ·1

39'

· VAL. TO 19.99

FOCKES
LUNCHEON

WINTER

JACKOS

.

VALUES TO 17.99 AND 19.99

'

12

TOMATO
10 oz.
SOUP CAN
FRESH PRODUCE

Cit~~ r:f,.
,..,

IGA

ALTINE
CRACKERS
VAN CAMPS

4
SAU.SAGE
VIENNA

LEAN SLICED

BOILED

GROUNP

BEEF

Men'' Better
JACKO$

BOYS' WINTER JACKETS
Boys' Jackets are on sale now and va lues are
greater than ever. See this selection now and
save at
·

All VARIETIES
I LB. PKG.

FRESH LEAN

VAL. TO 22.99

CAMPBELL$
PKGS.

LB.

Choose a warm jacket now at sensational, low clearance prices.
Sizes are broken, but values are exceptional!

WINTER

MATERIALS CO.

WIENER.$

'

.,.19

Men's Jacket Sale ! !

Phone 992·l428

I

MASON

49eLB.

CAGLES
PRIDE

~tt-0

HAM

Hurry-·-in for · o·utstanding
bargains in girls' dresses .
Shop ear ly tor best selection!

3 LB. or MORE

9~.

FU,RNIIURE
'349.95

I

•

~t9

MEATS

:f

...
***************•

OGG &amp; ZUSPA

ONLY

LB.

VALUES TO 33.00

44

NOW$

!

il

00

VALUES TO 29.99

VAL. TO 8.99

.I

LB. 69e

1
PKG.

VALUES TO 19.99

NEW·

TP-rms. ·

SAUSAGE

OR

JACKOS

$35.00 llllwn'8ela n~;e On
Convenient

BACON

GO/
COAT CLEARANCE!

Fridays Only
The Drive-In Window
isOpen
i&lt;
, 9A.M.to7P.M.
~
I Continuously J
il
Other Banking Hours 9 to 3 il
and 5 to 7 as usual _on
Fridays.
~

3 ROOMS

SPARERIBS

PORK ROAST

EY'

DRIVE-IN
BANKING

People are congregating to
usher in a New Year. We
join in with thanks.

PORK

WALDORF
SLICED

BONELESS

lfs Quick! Easy

POMEROY, OHIO
Member FDIC
Member Federal
Reserve System

LB.
COUNTRY
STYLE
PORK

BOSTON ROLL

Every Coat on Sale!

NEW YEAR

(Upon Request)

Have a new dress for the holiday
ahead. Come pick out a bargain! Sizes are broken, but price is
right. Values to 16.99.

Many be tter fashion
styles are now on sale at
a tiny price. We have .
priced
them
for
clearance now! Values
to 23.00.

! FARMERS BANK i
! and SAVINGS 00. !
:
i&lt;
i&lt;
i&lt;

NOW

VALUES TO 23.00

-Anonymous

......

PORK STEAK

.00

$

Save on ladies' dresses in Stif·
ti er's Clearance Sale! Many
styles and colors in bargain rack .
Values to 10.99.

Hitting the ceiling is no
way to get up in the world .

•
...•

LEAN ·

VALUES TO 16.99

.00

A THOUGH1·
FOR TODAY

FUL

2-HOUR
CLEANING

Bargains All Over The Store! SAVE NOW!

SOLID HEAD

llB. BOX

CABBAGE

4 oz.

~

CANS

LB.

HI C FRUIT DRINKS
46 oz.

KOBEY
SHOESTRING

POTATOES
. 211 CAN

BUSH'S
BLACKEYE

PEAS .
16 OZ. CANS

2
ro~25

IGA
PORK

IGA

&amp;
BEANS
40 oz.

39

4

NAPKINS
STOKELY'S

180 CT.

KRAUT

4

15 oz.
CAN

· '--------~..;...-J

~

--·

�.'

- - Pomeroy
------,
....

&amp;'- ~ oauy ~ttnel,Middleport ·Ptmmty, o., Dec.29, 1971

Mrs. Carpenter
Host for Party
The Christmas party of Ute
Bend 0 ' Ute River Garden Club
was ~eld recently at the home
ol Mrs . Wilson Carpen ter
which was decorated lor the
holiday season.
"I 'll Be Home for Christmas" was the program theme
with Mrs. Bert Grimm reading
the Christmas story from Luke
2. She also gave a reading,
"Trouble at Ute Inn " and
concluded wi Ut a Christmas
prayer.
Members responded to roll
call by naming a gift for a
gardener . Mrs. Robert Kuhn
read a letter from C. E.
Blake s lee ann oun ci ng
meetings for 'Feb. 17 and

March 9.
Readings were given on
Christmas legends. An Indian
Christmas carol was read by
Mrs. Kuhn . The traveling prize
brought by Mrs. Ida Diehl was
won by Mrs . Ralph Webb.
Ribbons were awarded to Utose
with the best gift wrappings.
Gifts were exchanged.
Mrs. Kuhn, therapy chair·
man, announced a program to
be held at the Gallipolis State
Institute sometime in June .
She also noted a county
workshop being planned for
January.
Refreshments were served.
The January meeting will be
held at the home of Mrs. Kuhn .

... .

Personal Notes.
Mrs. Mildred Frank was the
Christmas Day guest of Mr .
and Mrs. Richard Gaul, Mark
and David, Chester. Other
guests were Mrs. Gaul 's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Ours.
Weekend guest of Mrs. Alice
Dodson. Chester. was Mrs.
Mildred Frank. The two visited
Mr. and Mrs. Harlis Frank and
Mrs. Edith Osborne, Long
. Bottom, Route I.
&lt; Albert Frank is a patient at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
for observation and treatment.
Mr . and Mrs. Bradford Maag
have returned home after a
weekend visit in Columbus
. with their son-in-law and
daughter , Mr . and Mrs .
Richard Lowe and children.
Mrs. Jess Arnold, Canal
Winchester, and Mrs. Roger F.

r

At Dinner Party

Mr . and Mrs. Thereon
Johnson entertained at their
Racine home Christmas night
of Mr . and Mrs . Charles with a family dinner party.
Kessinger.
Guests were Dr. Kathryn
Christmas guests of Mr. and Philson, Blacksburg, Va. ; Miss
Mrs. Albert Roush, Becky and Edith Hayman, Racine ; Mr .
Kenny, were Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. Scott Wheeler and
Dale Roush, Sherry and David, daughter, Sciotoville, and Mr.
St. Albans, Mr. and Mrs. Larry and Mrs. Don Johnson , Bruce
flowers, Mrs. Roger Roush and Brian, Portland. They
and Doug , Columbus, Mr . and were joined later in the evening
Mrs. Charles Kessinger and by Mr. and Mrs. Ben Philson
Mrs . Kathern Smith, Kevin and and Mr . and Mrs . Rush
Christi , Pomeroy . The family Philson , Eric and Sarah, of
received a call from anoUter Racine.
daughter, Mrs. Don Matheny
Dr .
Tuesday evening
and her family of JacksonviUe, Philson , Mr. and Mrs. Thereon
N. C. Other holiday visitors of Johnson, and the Scott Wheeler
Ute Roush family were Mrs. family were dinner guests of
Mildred Meade and daughter , Mr . and Mrs. Johnson at their
Veronica, Columbus.
Portland home.
Mrs. Charles Spencer and
five children of Lima are here
visiting her mother, Mrs .
Ernest Carr, Harrisonville,
and her sister, Mrs. Harry E.
Clark, and family, Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Dave Grind·
staff and son, Bryan, Racine,
Miss Linda Grindstaff and
MASON - Mrs. Alice Faye
Jerry Van lnwagen of Bradbury , were in Beckley, W. Va. Gardner entertained the
for a holiday weekend visit Mason Homemakers Club with
a Christmas party at her home
with relatives.
here.
Mrs. Matilda Noble read
Mr . and Mrs. Bob Walters
and sons, Ryan and Rhett, Scripture from Luke , 2nd
Veto, spent Christmas with her Chapter. "One Solitaire Life"
moUter, Mrs. Dixie Smith and was read by Mrs. George
Carson.
Roy, Portland.
Mrs . Gardner gave a
Terry and Keith Ebersbach
of Newark are spending the Christmas reading and closed
week here with their grand· Ute program with prayer.
Mrs. George Hudson ,
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Ebersba ch,
Portland . recovering from an illness,
Christmas weekend visitors at Utanked the club members for
the Ebersbach home were Mr . a flower which she received.
Mrs. Gardner gave a prize to
and Mrs . Ted Roberts of
the
game winner, Mrs. Cecil
Ostrander and Mr . and Mrs.
Larry Ebersbach and David, Smith . Club members exchanged gifts. The home was
Syracuse.
Dinner guests of Mr . and beautifully decorated for the
Mrs . Marvin McKelvey, holidays. Refreshments were
Syracuse, on Christmas Eve served to Mrs. John Roach,
were Mr . and Mrs. Don Mrs. Cecil Smith, Mrs. Uoyd
Johnson , Bruce and Brian, Mr. Williams, Mrs. Laurene Lewis,
and Mrs. William McKelvey Mrs. George Carson, , Mrs.
and Bruce, Portland, and Mr .. Alburtice Young, Mrs. Matilda
and Mrs. George Schneider, Noble, Mrs. Evelyn Stewart,
Mrs. Daisy Roush and Mrs. T. Mrs. Landon Smith, Mrs. John
G. Hilldore, Syracuse . Marshall, Mrs. George Hudson
Christmas morning Mr. and and Mrs. Ray Fox .
Mrs. Marvin McKelvey left for
Boston, Mass. for a visit wiUt
CONFINE[) AT HOME
Mr. and Mrs. Bill McKelvey,
Mark and Nathan . They wiU
Ernest Vanlnwager\has been
return later this week.
confined to his Bradbury home
Mr. and Mrs. Ken Konicek, for the past week with an inner
Nancy and Cheryl, of Parma ear infection. He returned to
were Monday overnight guests Delaware today for further
of Mr. and Mrs. Thereon examination and treatment.
Johnson. Tuesday morning His son, keith Vanlnwagen, is
Utey visited Mr. and Mrs. Don under Ute care of an Athens eye
Johnson before returning to specialist who removed a piece
Parma.
of steel which was imbedded in
his eye.

lmcer.·C' Named ~~~~i~~~~e~~~~~:k
1972 O'}}/II
.J

Officers were elected at Ute
monUtly class meeting and
holiday dinner party of the
Adult Class of the Pomeroy
Nazarene Church at the home
oF Mr. and Mrs. Eslie
Mossman.
Elected for 1972 were Mrs.
Glen McClung , president; Mrs.

Clyda Bing, Mrs. Mamie
Snider, Raymond Walburn,
Mrs. Leach and son ,
Jamie Stephenson, the Rev.
Mr. Henderson, Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Colmer, Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Koenig, Mr. and Mrs.
Glen McClung and son, Danny,
Mr . and Mrs. Fred Pullins, and
Mossman , vice president ; Mr . and Mrs . Mossman .
William Steph e nson ,
secretary; and Mrs. Jerry
Colmer, treasurer . Mrs .
Mamie Snider, Mrs . Clyda
Bing, Mrs. Pauletta Leach.
Mrs. Mary Pullins and Mrs.
Ruth Koenig were named to Ute
refreshment committee, with
Mrs. Clyde Henderson, Mrs.
Raymond Walburn, Mrs. Don r
Bricl&lt;les, being named to the
Christmas dinner guests of
entertainment committee.
Mr . and Mrs. Ernest VanlnGien McClung spoke to the wagen, Bradbury, were Miss
group on ways of building the Unda Grindstaff, Racine; Miss
Sunday school. McClung gave Susie Jeffers, Dexter, Mrs.
the
prayer,
William Lyda Beech, Bradbury, and
Stephenson read scripture, and Jerry and Keith Van Inwagen.
the group sang Christmas Afternoon visitors were Mr.
songs. Gifts were exchanged and Mrs . Clifford Jacobs,
before the closing prayer by Pomeroy.
the Rev. Clyde Henderson .
Mr . and Mrs. Robert Turner,
Attending were Mrs. Gladys Michael, Debbie, Gary, and
Gibson, Mrs. Betty Brown, Sandy,
Bucyrus,
were
Mrs. Lelah Hendrick, Mrs. Christmas weekend guests of
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Turner. Sandy and Gary
remained for the week and will
return home Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Sigman
and children, Toledo, visited
over the holidays with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Jacks , Langsville , and his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. F1avy
Sigman, Middleport.
Mr. · and Mrs. Ernest A.
Jones and son , Kenneth,
Columbus , were guests
Monday and Tuesday of Mr.
and Mrs. Harry S. Moore. Mr.
and Mrs . Moore were in
Columbus to visit her aunts,
Miss Grace Sauvage and Mrs.
Harry E. Hoagland.
Mrs. W. K. Wilson returned
today to Ressalear, N. Y.
following a three week visit
here with Mr. and Mrs. Glenn
Lambert and other relatives.
Joining the Lamberts and Mrs.
Wilson for Christmas dinner
was Miss Frieda Faehnle.
Mr. and Mrs. Owen Fink and
son, Danny, spent the
Christmas
weekend
in
Chesapeake visiting Mr, and
Mrs. John Buckley and son,
Jeff. Jeff accompanied them to
Middleport for a week's visit.
Other guests this week at the
Fink home are Mrs. Alice Fink
and her granddaughter, Teresa
Ervin, Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Knight
and Mrs. M. C. Wilson returned
home Tuesday from Upper
Arlington where they spent the
holiday weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Ron Halley, Paige and
Brad.

Middleport

Personal Notes

Enjoy the holidays. Couple Married
A KitchenAid dishwasher will
wash your dishes, soak pots

and pans automatically, and
dry everyth ing with sanitized,
Jan.circulated air. Ch oice of
built-i ns, front or top -loading
portables, co nvcrtibhn or dish washer -sinks. KitchenAid dishwashe rs are made by the
world's oldest and larg

·

Holiday Dinner
Party is Held

DINNER GIVEN
MASON - William Elias had
members of the family as his
dinner guests here on
Christmas Day, Enjoying the
occasion were Mr. and Mrs.
Johnny Heath (Donna Will) of
Columbus; Mrs. Laura Will,
Mrs. Virginia Faudree and
. John Elias, Jr., and children,
Lynn, Kimberly, Tanuny and
John Ellas III, all of Mason.
Many friends and relatives
called at Ute Elias home during
the day.

On November 17

HARTFORD, W. Va.- Mrs.
Vera Roberts is announcing the
manufa cturer of connme•rciaill marriage of her son, Cpl.
dishwashers .
Gordon Lee Johnson, to the
former Dianne Lynn Harrison,
GETA
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Warren Harrison of Delaware,
KITCHENAID
Ohio,
on November 17. Cpl.
DISPOSER, TOO.
Johnson is the grandson of
Grlndl llnef, fllttr,
q,ultter. Lutl lor~ger .
Mrs. Helen Johnson of 134
Anli·J•mming. ConMulberry Ave ., Pomeroy,
linuou• Of batch f1ad
mode II.
The couple is residing In
Jacksonville, N. C., where Cpl.
Johnson is serving In the
Marines. They will return to
Columbus, Ohio upon his
discharge next January 14.

SALES &amp;SERVICE
Phone 985-3308
&amp; 985-3307 '

St. Rt. 7 .

Chester

NEED CLOmiNG?
Any resident in need of
clothing can attend the free
cloUting day of the Salvation
Army, Butternut Ave., from 10
a .m. to 12 noon Thursday.

_,

. Pop&lt;:orn PofJJ}Cr

HomerJ'fOkers

lly POLLY CRAMER

Bridesmaids are

Luncheon Guests

OPEII DAILY
10 TO 9

\ ',

--•rnli"'~:
';· DEAR POLLY- I used my good stainless steel ~
_:1 sauce pan to pop corn and some of the popcorn
:~ burned qn the bottom of the pan. 1 have tned fu\
•1 cleanser, nylon net, scrubbers and soaking but ·;
~ nothing removes the marks . If anyone has had a · ;
Jl similar problem I do hope _ th.ey~
ill help. me. .
'll MRS. 0 .
-.
;~""=~"'~"~•w•
•:'i&gt;.«.~~-""''iii'i&lt;"M.
·~·~••m;•&lt;"'~-·
- ··
''" , .
\
"~,""'~.-~'&gt;.'«;
~.
..~,'@
&lt;•"'&gt;; ,..,.:"'

:"' ·

Polly's Pr·oblem

;1

DEAR POLLY- My Pet Peeve is with dairies . I wish
they would sell buttermilk in pint-sized cartons as they
do "half and half. " Most recipes call for only one or two
cups and those of us who._ do not care to drink it are left
with a lot in the quart container, which takes up neede1
space in the refrigerator.-CARQL
OEAR GIRLS-Betty, my right-ham! helper, says this
Is also one of her -Pet Peeves.-POLLV
DEAR POLLY- Like Mrs. R. Y. , we, too, have a flagstone slab hearth and I have found that washing the entire
hearth with soapy water removes any water stains. She
might try this and if it does not work on hers she could
buy a special rock cleaner at a place that sells stones.MRS. K. D.
OEAR GIRLS-Afler these stains are removed any
good floor wax applied to tbe beartb will be a protection
and make cleaning easier thereafter .-POLLY
DEAR POLLY- Having just moved into a mobile home
I have discovered it is very important to have the right
item in the right place at the right time .
In my wardrobe closet with folding doors two wooden
triangles support the overhead s h e If. Along the
sloping wood front of one, 1
put six cup hooks to hold
chains , belts, etc . On the
other, I placed hooks I had
opened slightly so my purse
handles would loop over
them . On the floor , I have
a shoe stand for nine pairs
of shoes . While standing in
one spot I can select ·the
•••
right dress , purse, belt and
shoes. I also put costume jewelry in plastic bags, which
are pinned (with plastic clothespms I to the cross bars of
dress hangers.- ANATASIA
DEAR POLLY- When hemming skirts and dresses it is
better to use several short lengths of thread rather than
one long one. If the hem comes loose there is only a small
section to be rehemmed instead of the entire length.LORRI

A holiday( dinner party was·
held at the 1Ajnerlcan Legion
hall in Mlddlepart fol\ the
junior All¥l~can Legion
Auxiliary mem~ of FeeneyBennett Post 128 last week.
Following lhe turkey dinner
Ute girls sang \!lO!JI!S, danced
and played games. A gift exchange was held . and poin·
settias were presented to Mrs.
Charles Kessinger, Eighth
District president, ,and Mrs.
Patty Might, junioo advisor.
Mrs . Albert Roush, junior
activities chairman . for the
Eighth District, was also
present fill' II!• dinner party.
Juniors attending were
Becky Roush, Debra McGuffin,
Sandra Might, Cheryl Bar·
nhart, Pamela and Melinda
Morris, Judy Gilkey, Terri,
Shellle and Sherrie Fox,
Melinda Thomas, Angela
Dailey, Paula cUnnlngtuun,
and Christina Smith.

OPEII DAILY
. 10 TO 9

'

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH FRIDAY, DEC. 31st.

lAST!

'Heck's Reg. 2 FOR 35'

FANTASTIC BUYS IN EVERY DEPARTMENT
16 oz.
PRESTON£
WINDSHIELD WASHER

I

('

7

... - ____... ' . .../ """.1. .

HARDWARE ..DEPT.

,., '

l

w:

2

RAND

SHOES

G.E.

S}6

PAIR

2 SLICE TOASTER

WYCK

Heck's Reg.
112.96

PORTABLE
10 SPEED

I

14.96

1

JEWELRY DEPT.

IRONING BOARD

54~

'1.59

&amp;r

Dudley's Florist

Heck's Reg.
$8.99

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

Serving: Middleport,
Pomeroy, Gallipolis, 0.
&amp; Mason Co., W. Va.

SPRAY COLOGNE

$2.00 EACH

OPENING MON., JAN. 3, 7:30P.M.
ST. PAUL'S LUTHERAN CHURCH
231 E. Second St., Pomeroy, Ohio

NO REGISTRATION

Give Your Diamond A New Setting
Put a little zing into your diamond. l.et o.ur
diamond experts reset your gem in a swinging ,
new style ... everything from pins to pendants.

NO OBLIGATION

CLASSES ALSO MEET WEEKLY
. IN GAUJPOIJSMethodist
Groce Unllod
St. Louis Church
Church
91 Stolt St.

Tuesdays 7:lOo.m.
$3.00 Regtstronon

Somt

·

i i i l i -..... 11«: ••

OPEN SUNDAY REGULAR HOURS
'
'

SundaJ 10:30 LIT!. to 12:30 p.m. ~d ,
5:00 p.m. and ., 9 p.m.
'

Wodneldoysf :lOa.m.
suo Week DuH

_

. . ....................... lhlt --.·

....,.._

ClOSED SAT., NEW YEAR'S DAY

2nd &amp; Cedar

.WEIGHTttWATCHERS.
••J .. ,... n• ••••, ,.......

.

TABU • AMBUSH • 20 CARATS,. EMIR

ftiNO SETTINIJ

.

'6 •99

Heck's Reg.

.

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

SHEETS 81x1cM .................. :~:~~. '3·

liMITED TIME ONLY

•

7MtCI,'N 'Itri*"'WfC. . MIIIuf -.1m

'l

•

RED
LINE

SPIN TOP WASTE BIN
$119

'1·98
HOUSEWARE DEPT.

Heck's Reg.
'3.99.

CLOTHING DEPT.

FULL SHEnS......................... :~:~~. '3 ·29

4 fabulous fragrances
in elegr:mt spray
flacons . . . only

·POMEROY

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

CLOTHING DEPT.

COME TO A

JEWELRY DEPT.

No. 4522 FESCO

FOLDING DOOR

Heck's Reg.

$1 .00

Heck's Reg.

AIRLUME

• Sprays
1 Vases

HOUSEWARES DEPT.

$fi.99

Reg.
11.44

29

'3

LADIES SWEATERS

TWIN SHEETS ......................... :~•. •2 .66

Heck's Reg.

SHEETS 72x104................... ~~:~~. •2·.66

. $8.94

.88

66

SPORTING GOODS

STEAM IRON

PORTABLE

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

• Baskets ·

NO. 228

PROCTOR

Heck's Reg.

TYPING PAPER

Sympathy FloweiS

14·

SPORTING GOODS

Heck's

..:

Heck's Reg. 117.77

3 QT. COVERED

.'

'

,; ,.&lt;! lANTERN ~

,,,.., .

•5·''
SAUCE
PAN-

Heck's Reg. 7'!

COLEMAN

Heck's Reg. '8.88

200 cl

37.5 SQ. Fl

OF OUR NEW ClASS IN

. BOOTS...

,,

MIXER

JEWELRY DEPT.

$3.48
HARDWARE DEPT

I,

$10 00

Heck's Reg. 14.88

INSULATED

$1.00

CHROME

VAN

JTIO

WRINGER
MOP
PAIL

.18

SPORTING

SPORTING GOODS

'4·''

HARDWARE DEPT.

'

Heck's Reg. 99'

$29··

..

SPORTING GOODS

HUNTING
SO:CKS·.,.

Heck's Reg.

No. 513

$1.39

HARDWARE

COLEMAN
HEATER·.

...

HARDWARE DEPT.

Heck's Reg.

.66

'

COOLANT ••.:l".i,,
._..._. " . ·'"""'"'
- - ·-·.. ~
"

BATTERIES

14.88 Regular

'i

.oo
1

6 VOLT LANTERN

1

.•

Heck's Reg. 16'"

EVEREADY

ELECTRIC HEATER

On~

2 66'...-....--:•~~'-,
_·-·.""c:~
. . . :. _ . .-'-"l .

$

1.49

1

NO. 645
SUPERELECTRIC

White

.

Heck's$
Reg.

HARDWARE DEPT.

COMMODE SEAT

KITS

GAL

•1·38

HARDWARE DEPT.

Heck's Reg.
13.99

ANTI-FREUE

Heck's Reg. 11.68

34~

BERNZ-0
MATIC

SENTINEL

ROCKET
MOTOR OIL

Heck's Reg. 44'

AS141

DOW

2 GALLON

ANTI-FREUE

Sonny Bess was Caller at Party

FREE OPEN MEETING

$

BARS

County Home

'8

WHILE QUANTITIES

JERGENS SOAP

Gifts Delivered To

Gifts were taken to the Meigs
County Children 's Home
following a caroliJJII party by
the Laurel C1lll Free Methodist
Olurch youth last week. The
group upon ooncluslon of
caroling, went to the home of
Miss Elaine Davis of MidMr. and Mrs. Lawrence Eblin
dleport entertained Tuesday
where
refreshmenta were
with a bridesmaids' luncheon
served and gifts ezchanged.
at Oscar's in Gallipolis.
Attending were Nancy GW,
The table centerpiece
Darla
GW, Julie, Joyce and
carried out Ute color scheme of
Jayne Hutchison, Sherr! and
Ute wedding and favors were
(HEWSPAPEII HITERPIISI ASSN .)
Ricky Clark, Mrs . Ernest
minature brides. Gifts were
Haggy,
Mrs: Jack Stanley,
You
will
receive
a
dollar
If
Polly
uses
your
favorite
presented by Miss Davis,
homemaking Idea, Pet Peeve, Polly's Problem or solution
Olarles A. Diehl, Greg Eblin,
bride-elect of Don Swisher, to to
a problem. Write Polly In care of Ibis newspaper.
Dennis Glhnare, Tom Soulaby.
her attendants.
Penny and Patty Eblin, Brian,
Guests were Mrs. Randall
Marvin and Belinda Friend,
Fisher, Gallipolis ; Miss
Charles
DIU, Barbara and
Candace Bahr, Middleport ;
Keith Klein, Don Hayes, Diana
Miss Anna Laura Kovich,
Lewis, and the Rev. and Mrs.
Huntington, W. Va.; Miss
Calling for the Shade River Squares, Marietta; Grand Eugene Gill, Kathy and
Betsy Cunningham, Mid· Belles and Beaus Square• Squares, Gallipolis, and the
Delores.
dleport; Miss Susan Edge, Dance club's Christmas dance Square Naders of Belpre.
Ironton; Miss Jane Renner, Utis month was Sonny Bess
The Belles and Beaus next
Parkersburg ; Miss Andrea from Huntington.
8rrH ON FRIDAY
'
dance will be January 29. All
Riggs, Pomeroy; Mrs. .Don
Mrs.
J.
K.
Smith
of
Mid·
Several couples from the visitors are welcome.
Hazzard, Durham, N. C., and area's
cl~ • attended
~.!.~ o~.e. ~ 87th
Mrs. Ed Baer, Middleport.
611tliilay -versary 'IIrlday,
representing [J!ie Starduaters,
Visiting here wiUt her Tuesday
Washington,
Va.; Pioneer
was a great-nephew, John
DAUGHTER BORN
Wilson.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Epple,
SUPPER GIVEN
4ll North Fourth St., Mid·
Mr. llJld Mrs. Harold Chase, dleport, are announcing the
IN EXERCISE
Middleport, hosted a holiday birUt of an 8lb., 9 oz. daughter
LETART, W. Va. - U. S. Air buffet supper Christmas night. at 4:26 a.m. on Tuesday, Dec.
Force Sgt. Steven . W. Guests were Mr . and Mrs. 28, at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Newberry, son of Mr. and Mrs. Willis A!Jthony, Mr. and Mrs. She has been named Amy La
FOR ·
Elmer W. Newberry of Rt. 2, Gerald Anthony, Joe and Dawn. Grandparents are Mr.
took part in a recent U. S. Barbara and Kent Kloes, and Mrs . M. A. Epple,
MEN AND BOYS
Strike Command joint forces Middleport; Mr. and Mrs. Jay Pomeroy Route 3; Mrs .
training exercise at Elgin Jenkins and children, David, Pauline Greathouse of Mid·
99 TO
99
AFB, F1a. Sgt. Newberry Is an Belli and Steven, Portsmouth; dleport, and Mr. and Mrs. Cecil
accounting and finance Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Huddleston, Point Pleasant.
specialist with the 33rd Tac- Leiving, Mike, Judy, Sue and Mr. and Mrs. Epple have two
tical Fighter Wing at Elgin. He Jane, West Columbia, W. Va .; other children, Lynn and John ,
is a 1967 graduate of Point Mrs .
Chester
Roush,
Pleasant High School and Washington, D. C. ; Miss Holly
attended Gallipolis Business Layne, New Haven, W. Va. ;
College. His wife, Karen, is the Mr. and Mrs. Harold Abbott,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Farley, Hockingport,
Clovis Bailey of Rt. I, Thur- and Mr. and Mrs. J . E.
Jenl&lt;ins, Lucedale, Miss.
• man ·

r-----------.
M0·91~

Is Given.for

.Poses Problem

and "Silent Night."
The children's program was
directed by Mrs. Lawrence
Eblin with Patty Eblin at lhe
piano. Singing, "I Heard the
Bells on Christmas Day," were
Susie Jett, Angela Barton,
Angie Baker, Laura Smith, and
Delores GilL Arecitation, "To
Him· Who Gave His All," by
Laura Smith served as the
offertory with Terry Clark,
John SmiUt, Ricky Baker, and
Mark Friend the ushers.
Recitations
were
"A
Christmas Prayer" by Betty
Reed ; "Christmas Bells" by
Laura Smith, Ricky Baker,
John SmiUt, Mar~ Friend, and
Terry Clark; "Message of the
Candle" by Kathy Gill, Joyce
Baker, Lori Russell, Diane
Smith, Rita Bailey, Brenda
Jett, and Crystal Hall. Waid
Hayman read "I Like
Christmas"
to
organ
background music by Mrs.
Hayman; "Thank You, Dear
God" by Jana Wiseman and
anoUter recitation by Diane
Smith.
Mrs. Harry E. Clark sang "0
Holy Night" and Penny and
Patty Eblin sang "Christmas."

RIDENOUR~S

'lV &amp;'
APPLIANCE

'

Christmas Eve

]ohnsons Host

,

Holiday.Party

MLLY'S POINTERS

Play Givef! .on
"Just One Small Choir," a
Christmas play, was presented
on Christmas Eve at the Laurel
Cliff Free MeUtodist Cl]urch.
Mrs. Uoyd Wright narrated
Ute play which featured three
scenes. Diane Lewis gave a
recitation, "For God So Loved
the World, " and among Ute
choral selections were "Hark,
the Herald Angels Sing,"
"Once in Royal David City,"

•

Heck's
Reg.

�.'

- - Pomeroy
------,
....

&amp;'- ~ oauy ~ttnel,Middleport ·Ptmmty, o., Dec.29, 1971

Mrs. Carpenter
Host for Party
The Christmas party of Ute
Bend 0 ' Ute River Garden Club
was ~eld recently at the home
ol Mrs . Wilson Carpen ter
which was decorated lor the
holiday season.
"I 'll Be Home for Christmas" was the program theme
with Mrs. Bert Grimm reading
the Christmas story from Luke
2. She also gave a reading,
"Trouble at Ute Inn " and
concluded wi Ut a Christmas
prayer.
Members responded to roll
call by naming a gift for a
gardener . Mrs. Robert Kuhn
read a letter from C. E.
Blake s lee ann oun ci ng
meetings for 'Feb. 17 and

March 9.
Readings were given on
Christmas legends. An Indian
Christmas carol was read by
Mrs. Kuhn . The traveling prize
brought by Mrs. Ida Diehl was
won by Mrs . Ralph Webb.
Ribbons were awarded to Utose
with the best gift wrappings.
Gifts were exchanged.
Mrs. Kuhn, therapy chair·
man, announced a program to
be held at the Gallipolis State
Institute sometime in June .
She also noted a county
workshop being planned for
January.
Refreshments were served.
The January meeting will be
held at the home of Mrs. Kuhn .

... .

Personal Notes.
Mrs. Mildred Frank was the
Christmas Day guest of Mr .
and Mrs. Richard Gaul, Mark
and David, Chester. Other
guests were Mrs. Gaul 's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Ours.
Weekend guest of Mrs. Alice
Dodson. Chester. was Mrs.
Mildred Frank. The two visited
Mr. and Mrs. Harlis Frank and
Mrs. Edith Osborne, Long
. Bottom, Route I.
&lt; Albert Frank is a patient at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
for observation and treatment.
Mr . and Mrs. Bradford Maag
have returned home after a
weekend visit in Columbus
. with their son-in-law and
daughter , Mr . and Mrs .
Richard Lowe and children.
Mrs. Jess Arnold, Canal
Winchester, and Mrs. Roger F.

r

At Dinner Party

Mr . and Mrs. Thereon
Johnson entertained at their
Racine home Christmas night
of Mr . and Mrs . Charles with a family dinner party.
Kessinger.
Guests were Dr. Kathryn
Christmas guests of Mr. and Philson, Blacksburg, Va. ; Miss
Mrs. Albert Roush, Becky and Edith Hayman, Racine ; Mr .
Kenny, were Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. Scott Wheeler and
Dale Roush, Sherry and David, daughter, Sciotoville, and Mr.
St. Albans, Mr. and Mrs. Larry and Mrs. Don Johnson , Bruce
flowers, Mrs. Roger Roush and Brian, Portland. They
and Doug , Columbus, Mr . and were joined later in the evening
Mrs. Charles Kessinger and by Mr. and Mrs. Ben Philson
Mrs . Kathern Smith, Kevin and and Mr . and Mrs . Rush
Christi , Pomeroy . The family Philson , Eric and Sarah, of
received a call from anoUter Racine.
daughter, Mrs. Don Matheny
Dr .
Tuesday evening
and her family of JacksonviUe, Philson , Mr. and Mrs. Thereon
N. C. Other holiday visitors of Johnson, and the Scott Wheeler
Ute Roush family were Mrs. family were dinner guests of
Mildred Meade and daughter , Mr . and Mrs. Johnson at their
Veronica, Columbus.
Portland home.
Mrs. Charles Spencer and
five children of Lima are here
visiting her mother, Mrs .
Ernest Carr, Harrisonville,
and her sister, Mrs. Harry E.
Clark, and family, Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Dave Grind·
staff and son, Bryan, Racine,
Miss Linda Grindstaff and
MASON - Mrs. Alice Faye
Jerry Van lnwagen of Bradbury , were in Beckley, W. Va. Gardner entertained the
for a holiday weekend visit Mason Homemakers Club with
a Christmas party at her home
with relatives.
here.
Mrs. Matilda Noble read
Mr . and Mrs. Bob Walters
and sons, Ryan and Rhett, Scripture from Luke , 2nd
Veto, spent Christmas with her Chapter. "One Solitaire Life"
moUter, Mrs. Dixie Smith and was read by Mrs. George
Carson.
Roy, Portland.
Mrs . Gardner gave a
Terry and Keith Ebersbach
of Newark are spending the Christmas reading and closed
week here with their grand· Ute program with prayer.
Mrs. George Hudson ,
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Ebersba ch,
Portland . recovering from an illness,
Christmas weekend visitors at Utanked the club members for
the Ebersbach home were Mr . a flower which she received.
Mrs. Gardner gave a prize to
and Mrs . Ted Roberts of
the
game winner, Mrs. Cecil
Ostrander and Mr . and Mrs.
Larry Ebersbach and David, Smith . Club members exchanged gifts. The home was
Syracuse.
Dinner guests of Mr . and beautifully decorated for the
Mrs . Marvin McKelvey, holidays. Refreshments were
Syracuse, on Christmas Eve served to Mrs. John Roach,
were Mr . and Mrs. Don Mrs. Cecil Smith, Mrs. Uoyd
Johnson , Bruce and Brian, Mr. Williams, Mrs. Laurene Lewis,
and Mrs. William McKelvey Mrs. George Carson, , Mrs.
and Bruce, Portland, and Mr .. Alburtice Young, Mrs. Matilda
and Mrs. George Schneider, Noble, Mrs. Evelyn Stewart,
Mrs. Daisy Roush and Mrs. T. Mrs. Landon Smith, Mrs. John
G. Hilldore, Syracuse . Marshall, Mrs. George Hudson
Christmas morning Mr. and and Mrs. Ray Fox .
Mrs. Marvin McKelvey left for
Boston, Mass. for a visit wiUt
CONFINE[) AT HOME
Mr. and Mrs. Bill McKelvey,
Mark and Nathan . They wiU
Ernest Vanlnwager\has been
return later this week.
confined to his Bradbury home
Mr. and Mrs. Ken Konicek, for the past week with an inner
Nancy and Cheryl, of Parma ear infection. He returned to
were Monday overnight guests Delaware today for further
of Mr. and Mrs. Thereon examination and treatment.
Johnson. Tuesday morning His son, keith Vanlnwagen, is
Utey visited Mr. and Mrs. Don under Ute care of an Athens eye
Johnson before returning to specialist who removed a piece
Parma.
of steel which was imbedded in
his eye.

lmcer.·C' Named ~~~~i~~~~e~~~~~:k
1972 O'}}/II
.J

Officers were elected at Ute
monUtly class meeting and
holiday dinner party of the
Adult Class of the Pomeroy
Nazarene Church at the home
oF Mr. and Mrs. Eslie
Mossman.
Elected for 1972 were Mrs.
Glen McClung , president; Mrs.

Clyda Bing, Mrs. Mamie
Snider, Raymond Walburn,
Mrs. Leach and son ,
Jamie Stephenson, the Rev.
Mr. Henderson, Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Colmer, Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Koenig, Mr. and Mrs.
Glen McClung and son, Danny,
Mr . and Mrs. Fred Pullins, and
Mossman , vice president ; Mr . and Mrs . Mossman .
William Steph e nson ,
secretary; and Mrs. Jerry
Colmer, treasurer . Mrs .
Mamie Snider, Mrs . Clyda
Bing, Mrs. Pauletta Leach.
Mrs. Mary Pullins and Mrs.
Ruth Koenig were named to Ute
refreshment committee, with
Mrs. Clyde Henderson, Mrs.
Raymond Walburn, Mrs. Don r
Bricl&lt;les, being named to the
Christmas dinner guests of
entertainment committee.
Mr . and Mrs. Ernest VanlnGien McClung spoke to the wagen, Bradbury, were Miss
group on ways of building the Unda Grindstaff, Racine; Miss
Sunday school. McClung gave Susie Jeffers, Dexter, Mrs.
the
prayer,
William Lyda Beech, Bradbury, and
Stephenson read scripture, and Jerry and Keith Van Inwagen.
the group sang Christmas Afternoon visitors were Mr.
songs. Gifts were exchanged and Mrs . Clifford Jacobs,
before the closing prayer by Pomeroy.
the Rev. Clyde Henderson .
Mr . and Mrs. Robert Turner,
Attending were Mrs. Gladys Michael, Debbie, Gary, and
Gibson, Mrs. Betty Brown, Sandy,
Bucyrus,
were
Mrs. Lelah Hendrick, Mrs. Christmas weekend guests of
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Turner. Sandy and Gary
remained for the week and will
return home Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Sigman
and children, Toledo, visited
over the holidays with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Jacks , Langsville , and his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. F1avy
Sigman, Middleport.
Mr. · and Mrs. Ernest A.
Jones and son , Kenneth,
Columbus , were guests
Monday and Tuesday of Mr.
and Mrs. Harry S. Moore. Mr.
and Mrs . Moore were in
Columbus to visit her aunts,
Miss Grace Sauvage and Mrs.
Harry E. Hoagland.
Mrs. W. K. Wilson returned
today to Ressalear, N. Y.
following a three week visit
here with Mr. and Mrs. Glenn
Lambert and other relatives.
Joining the Lamberts and Mrs.
Wilson for Christmas dinner
was Miss Frieda Faehnle.
Mr. and Mrs. Owen Fink and
son, Danny, spent the
Christmas
weekend
in
Chesapeake visiting Mr, and
Mrs. John Buckley and son,
Jeff. Jeff accompanied them to
Middleport for a week's visit.
Other guests this week at the
Fink home are Mrs. Alice Fink
and her granddaughter, Teresa
Ervin, Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Knight
and Mrs. M. C. Wilson returned
home Tuesday from Upper
Arlington where they spent the
holiday weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Ron Halley, Paige and
Brad.

Middleport

Personal Notes

Enjoy the holidays. Couple Married
A KitchenAid dishwasher will
wash your dishes, soak pots

and pans automatically, and
dry everyth ing with sanitized,
Jan.circulated air. Ch oice of
built-i ns, front or top -loading
portables, co nvcrtibhn or dish washer -sinks. KitchenAid dishwashe rs are made by the
world's oldest and larg

·

Holiday Dinner
Party is Held

DINNER GIVEN
MASON - William Elias had
members of the family as his
dinner guests here on
Christmas Day, Enjoying the
occasion were Mr. and Mrs.
Johnny Heath (Donna Will) of
Columbus; Mrs. Laura Will,
Mrs. Virginia Faudree and
. John Elias, Jr., and children,
Lynn, Kimberly, Tanuny and
John Ellas III, all of Mason.
Many friends and relatives
called at Ute Elias home during
the day.

On November 17

HARTFORD, W. Va.- Mrs.
Vera Roberts is announcing the
manufa cturer of connme•rciaill marriage of her son, Cpl.
dishwashers .
Gordon Lee Johnson, to the
former Dianne Lynn Harrison,
GETA
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Warren Harrison of Delaware,
KITCHENAID
Ohio,
on November 17. Cpl.
DISPOSER, TOO.
Johnson is the grandson of
Grlndl llnef, fllttr,
q,ultter. Lutl lor~ger .
Mrs. Helen Johnson of 134
Anli·J•mming. ConMulberry Ave ., Pomeroy,
linuou• Of batch f1ad
mode II.
The couple is residing In
Jacksonville, N. C., where Cpl.
Johnson is serving In the
Marines. They will return to
Columbus, Ohio upon his
discharge next January 14.

SALES &amp;SERVICE
Phone 985-3308
&amp; 985-3307 '

St. Rt. 7 .

Chester

NEED CLOmiNG?
Any resident in need of
clothing can attend the free
cloUting day of the Salvation
Army, Butternut Ave., from 10
a .m. to 12 noon Thursday.

_,

. Pop&lt;:orn PofJJ}Cr

HomerJ'fOkers

lly POLLY CRAMER

Bridesmaids are

Luncheon Guests

OPEII DAILY
10 TO 9

\ ',

--•rnli"'~:
';· DEAR POLLY- I used my good stainless steel ~
_:1 sauce pan to pop corn and some of the popcorn
:~ burned qn the bottom of the pan. 1 have tned fu\
•1 cleanser, nylon net, scrubbers and soaking but ·;
~ nothing removes the marks . If anyone has had a · ;
Jl similar problem I do hope _ th.ey~
ill help. me. .
'll MRS. 0 .
-.
;~""=~"'~"~•w•
•:'i&gt;.«.~~-""''iii'i&lt;"M.
·~·~••m;•&lt;"'~-·
- ··
''" , .
\
"~,""'~.-~'&gt;.'«;
~.
..~,'@
&lt;•"'&gt;; ,..,.:"'

:"' ·

Polly's Pr·oblem

;1

DEAR POLLY- My Pet Peeve is with dairies . I wish
they would sell buttermilk in pint-sized cartons as they
do "half and half. " Most recipes call for only one or two
cups and those of us who._ do not care to drink it are left
with a lot in the quart container, which takes up neede1
space in the refrigerator.-CARQL
OEAR GIRLS-Betty, my right-ham! helper, says this
Is also one of her -Pet Peeves.-POLLV
DEAR POLLY- Like Mrs. R. Y. , we, too, have a flagstone slab hearth and I have found that washing the entire
hearth with soapy water removes any water stains. She
might try this and if it does not work on hers she could
buy a special rock cleaner at a place that sells stones.MRS. K. D.
OEAR GIRLS-Afler these stains are removed any
good floor wax applied to tbe beartb will be a protection
and make cleaning easier thereafter .-POLLY
DEAR POLLY- Having just moved into a mobile home
I have discovered it is very important to have the right
item in the right place at the right time .
In my wardrobe closet with folding doors two wooden
triangles support the overhead s h e If. Along the
sloping wood front of one, 1
put six cup hooks to hold
chains , belts, etc . On the
other, I placed hooks I had
opened slightly so my purse
handles would loop over
them . On the floor , I have
a shoe stand for nine pairs
of shoes . While standing in
one spot I can select ·the
•••
right dress , purse, belt and
shoes. I also put costume jewelry in plastic bags, which
are pinned (with plastic clothespms I to the cross bars of
dress hangers.- ANATASIA
DEAR POLLY- When hemming skirts and dresses it is
better to use several short lengths of thread rather than
one long one. If the hem comes loose there is only a small
section to be rehemmed instead of the entire length.LORRI

A holiday( dinner party was·
held at the 1Ajnerlcan Legion
hall in Mlddlepart fol\ the
junior All¥l~can Legion
Auxiliary mem~ of FeeneyBennett Post 128 last week.
Following lhe turkey dinner
Ute girls sang \!lO!JI!S, danced
and played games. A gift exchange was held . and poin·
settias were presented to Mrs.
Charles Kessinger, Eighth
District president, ,and Mrs.
Patty Might, junioo advisor.
Mrs . Albert Roush, junior
activities chairman . for the
Eighth District, was also
present fill' II!• dinner party.
Juniors attending were
Becky Roush, Debra McGuffin,
Sandra Might, Cheryl Bar·
nhart, Pamela and Melinda
Morris, Judy Gilkey, Terri,
Shellle and Sherrie Fox,
Melinda Thomas, Angela
Dailey, Paula cUnnlngtuun,
and Christina Smith.

OPEII DAILY
. 10 TO 9

'

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH FRIDAY, DEC. 31st.

lAST!

'Heck's Reg. 2 FOR 35'

FANTASTIC BUYS IN EVERY DEPARTMENT
16 oz.
PRESTON£
WINDSHIELD WASHER

I

('

7

... - ____... ' . .../ """.1. .

HARDWARE ..DEPT.

,., '

l

w:

2

RAND

SHOES

G.E.

S}6

PAIR

2 SLICE TOASTER

WYCK

Heck's Reg.
112.96

PORTABLE
10 SPEED

I

14.96

1

JEWELRY DEPT.

IRONING BOARD

54~

'1.59

&amp;r

Dudley's Florist

Heck's Reg.
$8.99

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

Serving: Middleport,
Pomeroy, Gallipolis, 0.
&amp; Mason Co., W. Va.

SPRAY COLOGNE

$2.00 EACH

OPENING MON., JAN. 3, 7:30P.M.
ST. PAUL'S LUTHERAN CHURCH
231 E. Second St., Pomeroy, Ohio

NO REGISTRATION

Give Your Diamond A New Setting
Put a little zing into your diamond. l.et o.ur
diamond experts reset your gem in a swinging ,
new style ... everything from pins to pendants.

NO OBLIGATION

CLASSES ALSO MEET WEEKLY
. IN GAUJPOIJSMethodist
Groce Unllod
St. Louis Church
Church
91 Stolt St.

Tuesdays 7:lOo.m.
$3.00 Regtstronon

Somt

·

i i i l i -..... 11«: ••

OPEN SUNDAY REGULAR HOURS
'
'

SundaJ 10:30 LIT!. to 12:30 p.m. ~d ,
5:00 p.m. and ., 9 p.m.
'

Wodneldoysf :lOa.m.
suo Week DuH

_

. . ....................... lhlt --.·

....,.._

ClOSED SAT., NEW YEAR'S DAY

2nd &amp; Cedar

.WEIGHTttWATCHERS.
••J .. ,... n• ••••, ,.......

.

TABU • AMBUSH • 20 CARATS,. EMIR

ftiNO SETTINIJ

.

'6 •99

Heck's Reg.

.

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

SHEETS 81x1cM .................. :~:~~. '3·

liMITED TIME ONLY

•

7MtCI,'N 'Itri*"'WfC. . MIIIuf -.1m

'l

•

RED
LINE

SPIN TOP WASTE BIN
$119

'1·98
HOUSEWARE DEPT.

Heck's Reg.
'3.99.

CLOTHING DEPT.

FULL SHEnS......................... :~:~~. '3 ·29

4 fabulous fragrances
in elegr:mt spray
flacons . . . only

·POMEROY

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

CLOTHING DEPT.

COME TO A

JEWELRY DEPT.

No. 4522 FESCO

FOLDING DOOR

Heck's Reg.

$1 .00

Heck's Reg.

AIRLUME

• Sprays
1 Vases

HOUSEWARES DEPT.

$fi.99

Reg.
11.44

29

'3

LADIES SWEATERS

TWIN SHEETS ......................... :~•. •2 .66

Heck's Reg.

SHEETS 72x104................... ~~:~~. •2·.66

. $8.94

.88

66

SPORTING GOODS

STEAM IRON

PORTABLE

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

• Baskets ·

NO. 228

PROCTOR

Heck's Reg.

TYPING PAPER

Sympathy FloweiS

14·

SPORTING GOODS

Heck's

..:

Heck's Reg. 117.77

3 QT. COVERED

.'

'

,; ,.&lt;! lANTERN ~

,,,.., .

•5·''
SAUCE
PAN-

Heck's Reg. 7'!

COLEMAN

Heck's Reg. '8.88

200 cl

37.5 SQ. Fl

OF OUR NEW ClASS IN

. BOOTS...

,,

MIXER

JEWELRY DEPT.

$3.48
HARDWARE DEPT

I,

$10 00

Heck's Reg. 14.88

INSULATED

$1.00

CHROME

VAN

JTIO

WRINGER
MOP
PAIL

.18

SPORTING

SPORTING GOODS

'4·''

HARDWARE DEPT.

'

Heck's Reg. 99'

$29··

..

SPORTING GOODS

HUNTING
SO:CKS·.,.

Heck's Reg.

No. 513

$1.39

HARDWARE

COLEMAN
HEATER·.

...

HARDWARE DEPT.

Heck's Reg.

.66

'

COOLANT ••.:l".i,,
._..._. " . ·'"""'"'
- - ·-·.. ~
"

BATTERIES

14.88 Regular

'i

.oo
1

6 VOLT LANTERN

1

.•

Heck's Reg. 16'"

EVEREADY

ELECTRIC HEATER

On~

2 66'...-....--:•~~'-,
_·-·.""c:~
. . . :. _ . .-'-"l .

$

1.49

1

NO. 645
SUPERELECTRIC

White

.

Heck's$
Reg.

HARDWARE DEPT.

COMMODE SEAT

KITS

GAL

•1·38

HARDWARE DEPT.

Heck's Reg.
13.99

ANTI-FREUE

Heck's Reg. 11.68

34~

BERNZ-0
MATIC

SENTINEL

ROCKET
MOTOR OIL

Heck's Reg. 44'

AS141

DOW

2 GALLON

ANTI-FREUE

Sonny Bess was Caller at Party

FREE OPEN MEETING

$

BARS

County Home

'8

WHILE QUANTITIES

JERGENS SOAP

Gifts Delivered To

Gifts were taken to the Meigs
County Children 's Home
following a caroliJJII party by
the Laurel C1lll Free Methodist
Olurch youth last week. The
group upon ooncluslon of
caroling, went to the home of
Miss Elaine Davis of MidMr. and Mrs. Lawrence Eblin
dleport entertained Tuesday
where
refreshmenta were
with a bridesmaids' luncheon
served and gifts ezchanged.
at Oscar's in Gallipolis.
Attending were Nancy GW,
The table centerpiece
Darla
GW, Julie, Joyce and
carried out Ute color scheme of
Jayne Hutchison, Sherr! and
Ute wedding and favors were
(HEWSPAPEII HITERPIISI ASSN .)
Ricky Clark, Mrs . Ernest
minature brides. Gifts were
Haggy,
Mrs: Jack Stanley,
You
will
receive
a
dollar
If
Polly
uses
your
favorite
presented by Miss Davis,
homemaking Idea, Pet Peeve, Polly's Problem or solution
Olarles A. Diehl, Greg Eblin,
bride-elect of Don Swisher, to to
a problem. Write Polly In care of Ibis newspaper.
Dennis Glhnare, Tom Soulaby.
her attendants.
Penny and Patty Eblin, Brian,
Guests were Mrs. Randall
Marvin and Belinda Friend,
Fisher, Gallipolis ; Miss
Charles
DIU, Barbara and
Candace Bahr, Middleport ;
Keith Klein, Don Hayes, Diana
Miss Anna Laura Kovich,
Lewis, and the Rev. and Mrs.
Huntington, W. Va.; Miss
Calling for the Shade River Squares, Marietta; Grand Eugene Gill, Kathy and
Betsy Cunningham, Mid· Belles and Beaus Square• Squares, Gallipolis, and the
Delores.
dleport; Miss Susan Edge, Dance club's Christmas dance Square Naders of Belpre.
Ironton; Miss Jane Renner, Utis month was Sonny Bess
The Belles and Beaus next
Parkersburg ; Miss Andrea from Huntington.
8rrH ON FRIDAY
'
dance will be January 29. All
Riggs, Pomeroy; Mrs. .Don
Mrs.
J.
K.
Smith
of
Mid·
Several couples from the visitors are welcome.
Hazzard, Durham, N. C., and area's
cl~ • attended
~.!.~ o~.e. ~ 87th
Mrs. Ed Baer, Middleport.
611tliilay -versary 'IIrlday,
representing [J!ie Starduaters,
Visiting here wiUt her Tuesday
Washington,
Va.; Pioneer
was a great-nephew, John
DAUGHTER BORN
Wilson.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Epple,
SUPPER GIVEN
4ll North Fourth St., Mid·
Mr. llJld Mrs. Harold Chase, dleport, are announcing the
IN EXERCISE
Middleport, hosted a holiday birUt of an 8lb., 9 oz. daughter
LETART, W. Va. - U. S. Air buffet supper Christmas night. at 4:26 a.m. on Tuesday, Dec.
Force Sgt. Steven . W. Guests were Mr . and Mrs. 28, at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Newberry, son of Mr. and Mrs. Willis A!Jthony, Mr. and Mrs. She has been named Amy La
FOR ·
Elmer W. Newberry of Rt. 2, Gerald Anthony, Joe and Dawn. Grandparents are Mr.
took part in a recent U. S. Barbara and Kent Kloes, and Mrs . M. A. Epple,
MEN AND BOYS
Strike Command joint forces Middleport; Mr. and Mrs. Jay Pomeroy Route 3; Mrs .
training exercise at Elgin Jenkins and children, David, Pauline Greathouse of Mid·
99 TO
99
AFB, F1a. Sgt. Newberry Is an Belli and Steven, Portsmouth; dleport, and Mr. and Mrs. Cecil
accounting and finance Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Huddleston, Point Pleasant.
specialist with the 33rd Tac- Leiving, Mike, Judy, Sue and Mr. and Mrs. Epple have two
tical Fighter Wing at Elgin. He Jane, West Columbia, W. Va .; other children, Lynn and John ,
is a 1967 graduate of Point Mrs .
Chester
Roush,
Pleasant High School and Washington, D. C. ; Miss Holly
attended Gallipolis Business Layne, New Haven, W. Va. ;
College. His wife, Karen, is the Mr. and Mrs. Harold Abbott,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Farley, Hockingport,
Clovis Bailey of Rt. I, Thur- and Mr. and Mrs. J . E.
Jenl&lt;ins, Lucedale, Miss.
• man ·

r-----------.
M0·91~

Is Given.for

.Poses Problem

and "Silent Night."
The children's program was
directed by Mrs. Lawrence
Eblin with Patty Eblin at lhe
piano. Singing, "I Heard the
Bells on Christmas Day," were
Susie Jett, Angela Barton,
Angie Baker, Laura Smith, and
Delores GilL Arecitation, "To
Him· Who Gave His All," by
Laura Smith served as the
offertory with Terry Clark,
John SmiUt, Ricky Baker, and
Mark Friend the ushers.
Recitations
were
"A
Christmas Prayer" by Betty
Reed ; "Christmas Bells" by
Laura Smith, Ricky Baker,
John SmiUt, Mar~ Friend, and
Terry Clark; "Message of the
Candle" by Kathy Gill, Joyce
Baker, Lori Russell, Diane
Smith, Rita Bailey, Brenda
Jett, and Crystal Hall. Waid
Hayman read "I Like
Christmas"
to
organ
background music by Mrs.
Hayman; "Thank You, Dear
God" by Jana Wiseman and
anoUter recitation by Diane
Smith.
Mrs. Harry E. Clark sang "0
Holy Night" and Penny and
Patty Eblin sang "Christmas."

RIDENOUR~S

'lV &amp;'
APPLIANCE

'

Christmas Eve

]ohnsons Host

,

Holiday.Party

MLLY'S POINTERS

Play Givef! .on
"Just One Small Choir," a
Christmas play, was presented
on Christmas Eve at the Laurel
Cliff Free MeUtodist Cl]urch.
Mrs. Uoyd Wright narrated
Ute play which featured three
scenes. Diane Lewis gave a
recitation, "For God So Loved
the World, " and among Ute
choral selections were "Hark,
the Herald Angels Sing,"
"Once in Royal David City,"

•

Heck's
Reg.

�8 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Dec. 2!1, 1971

~

.,

Sentinel Classifieds Get Actiont Sentinel Cla_ssifieds Get R~sults!
Racine
2 516f11S
Po111eroy
Business
Services
Of
·SoCial Events
•

REGULATIONS

By Mrs. Francis Morris

The Publisher reserves the.
right ·to edlt or re iect ariy ads 1
'deemed
objectional .
Th~
publisher will not bt responsKlle
for more than one incorrect:
insertion .

EEKANDMEEK

OPEN UP
INTH'NAME

.,

THANKY,.
SHERIFF

IT'S 'TfRRtBlc,
. JOHIJ!

OF TH' DADBURN
LAW!! .

I BEDROOM trailer apartm.!nt ,

MQOday Deadline 9 a .m.

Will be accepted until9a .m . for
Day of P.ubli,ation

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

For Rent

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P.M. Day Before Publication

.. .£a~!letlon .&amp; Corrections .

..

.

QUALITY

Motor Co.

1970CHEVELLEMALIBU HTCPE.

$2995

Low mileage by local owner with lOts of warranty left,
factory air condit!anedl V-8 engine, turbo-hydromatic, p.

lde~l

for

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

D.A. V. home In Pomeroy for
group meetings and parties,
phone 992-5247.
12-19-12tc .

Mr . and Mrs. Thomas
steering , gold body, sandalwood vinyl lop. radio. vinyl
Bartley and Mrs . Valiera
inter ior. good w·w tires. This car is loaded with extras.
2 BEDROOM mobile home in
Thierman of Dayton , Mrs.
1969 CHEVROLET KINGSWOOD ST. WG.
$2295
Racine area. Phone 992-6329.
Jean Goodwin of Wilmington .
12·14-tfc
RATES
Local 1 owner car. &amp; less than 23.000 miles. factory air
Mrs. Jean Woodruff of CinFor Want Ad Service
conditioned, luggage rack , 227 v.a eng·ine, automatic:,
5 cents per Word one inserfian·
cinnati , Mrs. Joan Rein51!hell
FURNISHED sleeping room
power steering &amp; brakes, beautiful white finish &amp; green
MinimUm Charge 75c
over Wine Store. Ren1 by
vinyl interior, new tires, radio &amp; all the deluxe ac·
of Upper Sandusky, Mrs.
12 cents per word three
month. Phone 992·52'13.
cessories.
Kathryn Black of Kenton , Mr . consecutive insertions.
11-26-lfc
1968 DODGE CORONET
$1495
18 cents per word six con
and Mrs. Kenneth Blythe of
4 Or . H. T. Cpe. Loca l 1 owner ca r &amp; shows the best of care,
insertions.
Spencerville, Mr. and Mrs. secutive
25 Per Cent Discount on pa id
V-8, au1amatic, p. steering, radio, good tires, dark blue
Wanted To Rent
John McKinnon of Springfield, ads and ads paid within 10 ddys .
finish wi1h vinyl interior. Priced to move.
NURSE and secretary delilres
CARD OF THANKS
Mr . and Mrs. Loren Nixon of
house with some acreage in
&amp;
OBITUARY
New Straitsville were guests
$1.50 for so r word minim um.
Meigs · County area. Cat I
recently of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Each additional word 2c.
.
Athens 593-6495.
BLIND ADS
12-28-31c
Webb and attended the annual
OPE II EVES. I:GO I' .M.
Additional
2Sc
Charge
per
installation of O.E.S. officers .
f'!)MEROY, OHIO
Advertisemf!:nt .
,
For Sale
Mr. and Mrs. Crill Bradford,
OFFICE HOURS
8:30 a.m to StOO p-.m. Daily,
Jr . of Worthington spent
30 a .m . to 12 : 00 Noon
Chrislmas Day and overnight 8:
Sa turdav ·
Notice
with Mr . and Mrs . Crill
Card of Thanks
36'' X2J" X.009
Bradford and other Christmas
I WANT to thank everyone for
For
Sale
or
Trade
guests were Mr. and Mrs .
the kindness and concern
FOR PICKUP truck. 1967
me while I was in
shown
Herman Carson and family of
Dodge Coronet . David Yost ,
Veterans
Memorial HospitaL
Coolville and Mr. and Mrs.
Portland, Ohio . Phone 843 Many thanks to those who
2242.
Howard Frank and family of
sent cards and flowers . A
12-29-Jtp
USED OFFSET PLATES .
Racine R.D. Spending Sunday
special thanks to the doctors,
viii
tors
and
those
who
HAVE .
nurses,
with .the Bradfords and Mrs .
remembered me in prayer .
MANY
USES
Esther Piper were Mr. and
May God bless you alt.
Mrs . Orland Mitchell of
Elsie Pooler .
12-29-llp
Mr . and Mrs. Lawrence
Parkersburg .
8 for $1.00
Mr . and Mrs. Francis Morris Chapman were Christmas HEARTFELT thanks to the
doctors and nvrses of
accompanied their son-in-law guests of Mrs . C. 0. Chapman
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
and daughter , Mr . and Mrs . and family in Rutland .
the Rev . Forrest Donley, the
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Canode
Bob Swift to Columbus ThursEwing
Funeral
Home .
pallbearers and those who
day and visited them and Mr. of Lucasville and Mr. and Mrs.
served at the cemetery at the
and Mrs. Merle Schroeder and Frances Canode of Columbus
death
of Miss Clara Garland .
J11 Court St.
family and were overnight spent Christmas at the home of
Special thanks to those who
Pomeroy,
Ohio
sent Miss Garland gifts before
guests of their grandson, Mr . their mother, Mrs. Clarence
her death and to those sending
and Mrs . Bill Lake and Canode.
.'
flowers and cards at the time
COAL , limestone . Excelsior
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Coen
children and accompanied
of her departure. Mr . and
Salt Works. E. Main St .•
them Christmas morning to the and family and Mrs. Grace
Mrs. lewis Harris, Wyllis
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3891.
Davis and daughter. Marilyn.
4-9- tfc
Athens area and were dinner Hensler hosted a dinner on
12-29-lfp
guests of Mrs . Ethel Lewis and Christmas. Guests included the
POODLE puppies, Silver Toy ,
Mr . and Mrs . John Glab. Other John Paul Hensler family of WE WISH to thank our many
While learn ing about the pay
Park view Kennels . Phone 992 friends for their comforting
raise. have him explain how
5443 .
dinner guests were Mr. and Athens Route and the Clayton
prayers, flowers and the
you may enlist and stay
8-15-tfc
Mrs. Pete Gould of Marietta . Hensler family of Marietta .
loving expressiins of sym.
home far the holiday s.
Dr. Kathryn Philson of Young Mark Hensler remained
pathy in the loss of our
husband and father . A specia I
Blacksburg, Va. and Mr . and for a few days with the Coens.
END OF YEAR
thanks to the Rev. Marshall
Call him at 614-593-3022
Mr. Luther Harvey, who
Mrs. Scott Wheeler and Mary
Larimore . Rev . Forrest R.
- call collect - tor
Clearance Sale!
Elizabeth of Sciotoville were underwent surgery in Holzer
Donley for their consoling
details.
complete
words. the Ewing Chapel, Mr.
Chrislmas guests and also Hospital a week ago expects to
Buy Any Fuel Oil
and
Mrs.
Bob
Moore
and
be
released
soon.
spendtqg the week with Mr.
organist, Rose Ann Jenkins.
Today's Army wants to
Mr . and Mrs. Robert
and Mrs. Thereon Johnson.
Our thanks to the Syracuse
join you at a much
Women 's Auxiliary and all
Other Christmas Day guests Holliday were pleasantly
higher salary.
other tributes. The Morris
were Mr. and Mrs. Don surprised on Thursday when
Harden Family.
200 Gallons Fuel Oil When
Johnson, Brian and Bruce of their former neighbors, Mr.
- 12-29·21c
You Buy Any Siegler Heater
Portland and Miss Edith and Mrs. Hesson, in Wooster
KOSCOT Kosmetics and wigs: Thru Dec . 31.
called on them.
Hayman, Racine .
In Memory
Yes we have Koscot Products
Christmas
guests
of
Mr.
and
and
wigs in stock for your
POMIROY
Christmas greetings were
IN LOVING memory of our
JIICk W. Cerser, Mtr.
immediate needs . Yes we do
received from the parents in Mrs. G. A. Radekin and Tina
dear mother, Amy Clark. who
........ tt1 ~2111
deliver. Would you like to
passed away 7 years ago
Canada of the boys who were were Mr. and Mrs. Arlin
select your own customers
today, Dec . 29, 1964. given shelter overnight in the Radekin and daughter, the The memory of our dear
and have your ow_p route and LONG BOTTOM - Five room
- make goo4 rn"'On~y? Call
Baptist Church . They said the Robert Holliday family and
bath, business or
mother, ·
Elrown's in Middleport 992- house,
However
long
apart
,
Mrs.
Dorothy
Johnson
of
storage
building - $6,500.
boys were in Tennessee, still on
5113, distributors of Kosco! Phone 985-3529.
Is
like
a
soothing
memory
Pomeroy.
U1eir way to New Orleans.
Kosmetics .
That lingers in our hearts.
12-19-JOic
11 -16-ffc'
Mr. and Mrs . Paul Wallace
Mrs. Addie Petrel and Mr.
Sadly missed by children.
12-29-lfc
GAS HEATER. 55,000 BTU,
and Mrs. Ben Petrel spent have moved lo the Angel of
natural or bottled gas. good
Christmas with Mr. and Mrs . Mercy Nursing Home in
Wanted To Buy
condition with metalbestas
Jack Feuerbacher at Jackson . Albany.
Male Help Wanted
WILL BUY raw furs and beef chimney, $50 . Phone 949-321 1.
12-29-31c
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Frank
Shiltz
hides Saturday and Sunday
Mr. Kenneth Swart of Stow,
TEXAS 01 L Company has
every
week.
Carl
Chevalier,
Ohio spent Christmas holidays were in DeCoto, West Virginia
openi ng Pomeroy area . No
TWO 283 CU. IN . Chevrolet
Rt. 1, Long Bottom, Ohio.
experience necessary. Age
with his mother, Mrs. James last week attending funeral
12-15-12fp engines ; also 196.4 Chevrolet
not
important.
Good
body . Phone 985-4118.
Swart and his sister, Mrs. services for Mrs . Shiltz's
charader a must. We train .
12-29·31c
brother-in-law.
Alfred Crow and family .
Air Mail to A. D. Dickerson, OLD FURNtT"URE, Round Oak
tables, Brass beds, dishes,
Mrs . Erma Nelson and
Pres . • Southwestern
Mrs. Maude Thornburg of
clocks,
and·or complete STEREO, Early American
Petroleum
Corp.,
Ft.
Worth,
Joey ,
spent
Huntington, W. Va. spent grandson,
households
. Write M. D. stereo. radio combination
Texas.
Saturday
with
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Christmas with her son, Mr.
Miller, Rt . 4. Pomeroy, Ohio. AM-FM radio, 4-speaker
12-29-lfc
sound system . Balance S79.81.
George Ragan. Mrs. Nelson is
Call 992-6271.
Alfred Crow and family .
Use our budget terms . Call
12·17-tfc
Mrs. Grella Strnpson and improved after about six weeks
992-7085.
Notice
12-29-6tc
Mrs . Lillian Hayman had suffering with a blood clot in
Help
Wanted
BAND, Friday and Saturday.
Christmas dinner with Mr . and her leg.
. WALNUT, modern style .
Jack's Club, cover charge.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Larry
Spencer
Mrs . Gerald Simpson and
stereo-radio, AM-FM radio. 4·
For reservations come to dub ,--w-.-~-A_N_T_E_D-:-!---,
have moved into the Lowther speaker sound system , 4·
family .
in person.
speed automatic changer .
12-28-41p
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Hayman Bobo residence.
Balance $68 .59 . Use our
Holiday guests of Mr. and
and son, Tate, of Columbus
budget
terms. Call 992-7085.
SHOOTING match, Saturday,
12-29·6fc
were six o'clock dinner guests Mrs. Marvin Wilson were Mr.
Jan . 1, at the Racine Planing
and
Mrs.
K.
C.
Smith
and
of his mother, Mrs . Ullian
Mill at 6 p.m. Factory choke
PAINT damage, 1970 Zig Zag
guns
only . Assorted meat .
family
of
Columbus
and
Mr.
Hayman, Christmas.
sewing machines, stlll in
Sponsored by the Syracuse
original cartons . No at.
For six o'clock dinner and Mrs. Randall Smith of
Fire Dept.
tachments needed as our
Christmas with Mrs. Grella Hazard, Ky.
12-29-31c
controls are built in. Sews
Mason &amp; Hartford
Simpson were Mr. and Mrs.
with 1 or 2 needles. makes
GUN SHOOT, Forked Run
buttonholes, sews on buttons,
Bruce Stmpson and son, Shane, Gallipolis.
Sportsman Club, Sunday, PHONE 992-2156
monograms, and blind hem
of Dayton, Mrs. Bud Simpson
The following were ChristJan . 2. 12 noon .
stitch. Full cash price. S38.50.
12·29-31c
and mother of Pomeroy and mas guests of Mr. and Mrs.
. FOR DOAILSI
Budget plan available. Phone
992-5641.
Todd Simpson of Gallipolis.
Jerry Powell, Mr. and Mrs. GUN SHOOT, Sunday, Jan . 2, 1
12 - 29-~11:
Mr . and Mrs. Leon Jordon Austin Wolfe and Jerry,
p.m., Racine Gun Club.
12·29-Jtc Employment Wanted
and family of Thornville spent Syracuse; Roger Hill, Mrs.
EARLY American stereo-radio
INTERIOR painting. Call Don combination, 4.speaker sound
Christmas with her parents, lTiah WoHe, Letart; Mr. and
VanMeter 985-3951.
system, AM-FM radio, 4·
Mr . and Mrs . Clarence Mrs. Oval Diddle, Antiquity,
12-19-12tp speed automatic changer,
Bradford.
and son, Bob, of Vietnam; Mr.
balance S78.32. Use our
Mrs. Isabel Simpson spent and Mrs. Earl Custer,
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
For
Rent
12-2Hic
Christmas weekend with Mr. Syracuse; Mr. and Mrs.
FURNISHED
and
unfurnished
and Mrs. Joe Beckwith and Bernard Diddle, Mr. George
apartments. Close to school. MODERN walnut stereo-radio
Shelly in Parkersburg.
Diddle, Columbus; Mr. a.1d
Phone 992-5434.
combination, .4.speaker sound
10-18-tfc
system, 4·Speed automatic
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Cross Mrs. Tom Diddle and son,
changer, separate controls.
and Ray of Columbus were Mansfield; Mr . and Mrs. Boone
50x12 TWO BEDROOM mobile
Balance $64 .79. Use our
Christmas dinner guests of Mr . Adams, Tom Diddle, Sharon
home, gas heat, Sycamore
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
St., Middleport . Phone 992·
and Mrs. Earl Cross and Diddle, Pam Cleek, Mrs.
12-21 -0fc
7004
or 992·3585, Danny
family and spent overnight Libbie Fisher and two sons.
Thompson.
1971 ZIG·ZAG sewi ng machine
wi th Mrs. Howard Neigler.
Mr . and Mrs. Roger Hill are
12-23-lfc left in layaway . Beautiful
Christmas dinner guests of announcing the birth of a son,
pastel color. full size model.
NICE TRAILER.
bedroom. All buill in to buttonhole;
Mr . and Mrs. George Neigler Julian Scott, on Christmas
Jdeat for couple, 10 miles overcast and fancy stitch .
were Mrs. Howard Neigler, Day. Grandparents are Mr.
north of Pomeroy . Phone 992· Pay ·l ust $.48.75 cash or terms
local. Mr. and Mrs. Phil MU!er and Mrs, Jerry Powell and
6452.
ava• able. Trade -ins ac SAVE up to one half. Bring your
12-15-tfc cepted. Phone 992-5641.
of Columbus and Mr . and Mrs. Mrs. Julian Hill.
sick TV to Chuck's TV Shop;
12-21 -6tc
151 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy .
Rob Palmer of Parkersburg . Mrs. Margaret Houdashelt
1
BEDROOM
and
2
bedroom
-Phone 992-5080.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Webb was a Christmas guest of Mr.
mobile homes. Adults only . VACUUM cleaner brand new
11 -21-tfc
Phone 992-5592 .
1971 model. Complete with all
spent Thursday till Sunday and Mrs . Houdashelt and
12-19-tfc cleaning tool s. Small paint
over Christmas holiday with family at Gallipolis.
LOOK lNG for bargains? Start
damage in shipping . Will take
lhe New Year right and come
their son, Dr. and Mrs. James
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Cleland,
$27 cash. or budget plan
to Hayman 's AL'ction, Friday
available. Phone 992-5641.
Webb at Columbus.
Vince and Ryan, of Columbus
night. Auction starts at 7 p.m.
12·21 ·6fc
Mr . and Mrs. Henry Roush, spent Christmas weekend with
Hayman Auction House.
Laurel Clilf.
Mildred and Dale, visited over Mr . and Mrs. F:rank .Cleland
12-28-4tc TRAILER lOTS Bob's "lv\obli;;-_ 24 25FT. TRAILER, ~ompletely
Christmas weekend' in Akron and Mrs. Anna Wines and
t Rl 124
' s
redecorated lntenor. Must
C
· o~r '
·
• yracuse, sell, $975. Call 992-5171 .
with Mr. and Mrs. John Fisher family .
Jhw. 992-2951 .
•
12-l4-31c
NOT be responsible for
and family and Mr. and Mrs.
Mr . and Mrs. Frank Cleland I WILL
4-2-tfc - - - -- - - - any debts c.o ntracted b{
spent Chrisirnas Day with her
Paul Zvara.
anyone other than mysel .
APPLES - Fitzpatrick OrSigned : Gerald Russett ~ BEDROOM mobile home, chards, State Route 689 ,
Mr. and Mrs. David Roush parents, Mr. and Mrs. William
furnished , utilities paid, phQI'Ie Wllesvllle, 669-3785.
Cogar.
and daughter, Lorelei of Wood at Jacksonville.
available now. Phone 9929-3-tfc
12-28-31p
Columbus spent 1\fonday with
Rev·. and -Mrs . Frank
7384.
12-28-3tc SINGER au"tomalic sewing
hisfa!her, Mr. Dale Roush and Cheesebrew spent Christmas
machine. Like new , in
ABOUT
YOUR
WEIGHT
...
his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. with his mother, Mrs.
NEW, 12 x 60, 2 bedroom mobile , beautiful walnut cabinet,
overweight
ladies.
teens
and
Madaline Macomber at Pt.
Henry Roush.
home across from Bradbury
makes design stitches, zigmen interested in a Weight
Christmas guests of Mr. and Pleasant.
School.
Call 992-S308 or see
zags, buttonholes, blind hems,
,Watchers (RJ . Class in
Mrs. Roy Riffle were their
Rev . Ray Wining of Pomeroy
"Pomeroy write: Wei~ht , Charles Lewis, 2nd house elc. Will sell for $85. Call
Ravenswood 273-9893 after 5
Walchers IR), 1863 Secl1on soulh from Bradbury School.
children, Mr. Melvin Riffle of was a dinner guesi recently of
p.m:
,
Pe1 s welcome .
Rd o, Cincinnati, Ohio 45237.
Columbus and Mr. and Mrs. Rev . and Mrs . Frank
12-27-Uc
11 -28-lfc
10-3-lfc
SUI McKenzie and family of Cheesebrew.
---':;;~~~-- ,'

Pomeroy Motor Co.

For Sale

YOUNG MEN

YOUR LOCAL ARMY

Point Rock

--'1'

ALL WEATHER ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTION
&amp; PLUMBING CO.

HomeMaintenance Service
the year around. No matter,'

TALK TO YOU

BAND

9 p.m. to 2 a.m.
New Year's Eve

Hl-7 CLUB

24-Hour Service
'.

Also Furnace Repair
PH. 992·7260

742-3947
742-4761
We are fully Insured

HOME &amp; AUTO

Complete

992-2094

Remodeling
KHehens, Baths
Room Additions
And Patios

And

FURNITURE ·
Stop· In and See Our
Floor Display.

lfll It NU.. .... , T . ~

BADGE GUYS
PSST ~ABOUT T~tS
BLIND MTE ~OU GOT

Dolls, all dressed In style,
kniHed and crocheted. I Hts
to be seen to H appreciated)
Many items you have been
looking for, for tMt perfect
gift.

ME, SHJIRK~·
'

we

W~ EN
MET OUT ON
T~E COLO, WIND~ !ll&lt;l

... AND I TWIG1H&gt;
HIS ARM UNTIL
HE AGREED,
SGT f51.01TER.

SLOPE, .r COu•D
UNI&gt;I!II.STANl&gt; •

GIFT SHOP

JOHNSON' MASONRY

r::. Main Pomeroy
OFFICE SUPPLIES

Christmas
decorations, wearing
apparel. lewelrv,
,,
ceramics.

TO CONVINCE DETECTIVE
HAZARD TO TAKE ME
TO DINNER!

TREASURES

PdMEROY

606

HQDCRAFT
.GIFT iTEMS

HlflDEN

C&amp;M
REFRIGERATION
SERVICE

service.

MARTHA ROSE, oWntr
I
Located on County Rood 34
near Royol Oak Park. Wotch
for Signs.
Open every day except
Monday
1 P.M. Iil7 P.M.

992-7608

...

SMITH ·NELSON
MOTOR~ INC.

Ph. 991-2174

-

WHAT

BI.IT YOU CAN'T
U5E FORGE TO GET

..

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiator
Smallest Healer Core .
Nolhan Biggs
Radiator Speciollst

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
A J bedroom 116,900.00 home can be purchased with a
":~'~~~~~ o.avn,ent as lpw as S6S.OO for a family with a base
•·
.00 and three children. 7'/• Pet. annual
per·cerilalje rate.

ARMY PAY RAISE

SENTINEL
CARRIER$

Home Units

991-5803

ABOUT THE NEW

SIEGUR HEATER
GEl FREE

All Commercial &amp;

what your need. Complete
roof or spouting repair .
Interior or exterior car pentry . Ceiling tile and
Paneling and Siding .
Complete Plumbing &amp;
Heating.
Day Number 992-2550
We have 24 hr. emergency

·Sheets

The
Dailv Sentinei

SeMce &amp; Repair

240 Lincoln St.
Middleport, Ohio
Dba Anthony Plumbing
We have a complete

Aluminum

.

.

'

REPRESENTATIVE
WANTS TO

:,:

(:ouples .

CONFESSION?

I l.ISED JUDO.,,

~~:t::\ ~~CE~W~O~IM~N~S~~~N~:R.)

;.2-.21

'

DEPENDING UPON
MOTIVATIONAl. FACTORS

ARe \'OU ei.JRE YOU CAN'T
&amp;TAY FOR A F&amp;t MORE
WEEKS i" I'D•...I'D LIKi:
10 GET TO t&lt;NIJW '&gt;OU

Pom1roy

UNDER~YING CU~

Flt.IANCIAL F~UCTUATIONS,

I'D ~ 'AMA~GAMA'TED
s;HOE~ACEOS'IS A GOOD

BETTER!

BUY!

EXPERT

!

Wheel Alignment

.'

~5~
-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094
Bl LL NELSON 992-3657
TOM CROW, 991-2580

HILTON WOLFE 94t-3lll
DALE DUTTON, 991-2534
AUTOMOBILE

Mobile Homes For Sale

2966.

MOBIL£ HOMES
1220 Washington Blvd .
~!pre , Ohio
FOR THE BEST deal in a new
or used mobile home, try

Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
12-17-901c

Auto Sales

NICE 2-siory home with full

TANKS CLEANED
Reasonable rates. Ph. 446-4782,
Gallipolis . John Russell.
Owner &amp; Oporator.
5-12-tfc

-----

ORPHAN ANNIE
IT IS llllTH A HEAVY HEART lltAT I

COME TO 'IOU, MI&amp;TER 'WARBUCK&amp;!
FOR tT Ill MY SAD MY TO INFORM

11• ~HOttEST~

TO
·~f'il5illf"tN'I£&amp;TMEHT
Sl TOM I&amp; WA6!ED!

-- ---~

TV and Antenna
Service. Phone 992-2522.
6-1D-Ifc
Elementary School. Phone, - - - - - ----,.__
992-7384 to see.
BACKHOE AND DOZER work :
11 -7-lfc · SeP,fic tanks Installed. George
(Bill) Pullins, Phone 992-2478..
+25-tfc

pickup,

perfect condition,
$900 .
Se rious inquiries only . Phone

992 -6083.

·-SEPTIC

HA~~ISON'S

basement. 2 lots, new for ced
air furnace . Near Pomeroy

1964 VOLKSWAGEN . good
running condition , $400 .
Phone 742-4423.
12-29-31p
CHEVROLET

· Open BTU'S
Monday 1hru Saturdoy
61M E. Main, Pomoroy, 0.

UPHOLSTERING SERVICE ,
complete selection of fabrics
and v1nyl' tQ choose .from .
Pick -up and delivery. Slater
Upholstering, Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
WRECKING and hauling .
phone 992-3617.
Phone 992-6083.
12-27-JOtp
12-17-10fp
...., SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
Real Estate For Sale
66
HOUSE; i642 Lincoln Heights.
2-:1°35 ·
2. 12-tfc
Call Danny Thompson, 992-- - - - - - - - - 2196·
READY -MIX
CONCRETE
7-18·"'
del lvered right to your.
t..:.h.L I~ I: - 10 rt&gt;on. huu~e.
project. Fast and easy. Free
bath, basement. garage. two
estimates. Phone 992-3284.
lots . No reasonable offer
Goegleln Ready-Mix Co.,
refused . Phone 949-4313.
Middleport, Ohio.
12-22- 121p
6-30-lfc,

MILLER

52

•6-15-tfc

C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949-3821
Recine, Ohio
Crtlt Bradford
5-1-tfc

12' - 14' · M' '. WiDE

Kanauga, Ohio.

your
992-

been cancelled?
operator's license?

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto .

Oeland

12·29-10lp

Realty

dining room, buill-in kllchen
with dining space, utility

TEAFORD

room , 2 car garage, hot water
heat, carpeted throughout,

SR.

except baths and ktlchen. A
WONDERFUL HOME.
548,000.00.

Br(iker

11 oMechanic Street
Pomerov , Ohio

CHESHIRE - Large block
business building on Rt . 7.
Suitable for restaurant, store.
garage or service station .

.

START THE NEW YEAR OFF
WITH A HOME OF YOUR
OWN, SEE US TODAY.
HENRY CLELAND
REALTOR
Office 992-2259
Residence 991-2568
12-27-61c

_

.

TillS PUBLICITY IS NOT
CiOOD. I!VERV NUT IN
TOWN WILL WANT TO
5niDV C.ERTI E'S ll EAD

Frome"
U.Eartby
~------· pigment
''";;~~~rNI~ASI&lt;S Llt"Z., IS. TeleYI
ANVON E
phone
ITfii&lt;ES
M/lP SERIOUSLY?'
greeting,
British

style

(3 wds.)
15. Crude
sugar
16. Sioux
17.-rule
(2 wds.)
11. Before
r•,~ lt."Hebrew
letter
!0. Nixon
or
Agnew
(abbr.)
!1. Ceremony
U.Pronoun
15. Flrstclus
1'1. C~eec

..

The Station

. furnace.

Also

Business

Building, 30X44.
3 HOUSE'S - 2 rented. Other

one has 3 bedrooms, bath, gas

forced air furnace with free
gas lo alt. NOW ONLY
$16,000.00.
INVEST YOUR 1911
PROFITS. BUY NOW.
HELEN L TEAFORD,
ASSOCiATE
992-3325- 992-2378
12-'23-61c
SIX ROOM house. 133 Butternur
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, ~137
Wadsworth Drive, Columbus,
Ohio, -phone 237-4334.
'o1 ·2l ·lfr

ll·,q

Yesterday's CfrPtoquole: THE ADVANTAGE OF A ·.
CREDIT CARD IS THAT . YOU DON'T KNOW YOU ARE ·,
BROKE, AT LEAST NOT BEFORE THE END OF THE
MONTH.-AUTHOR UNKNOWN

Yuten:lay'• An1wer

queen

U.Cruh
agaimt
:16. Splendid
za. For what
reason?
(2 wds.)
29.Hewho
scoffs
31. Patronage; protection

(C 1971 KiDI' Features Syndieate, Ine.)

33. With
acuteness
34. Small salamander
35. Alternate
38.1970
Oscar
winner
38. Sure to be
a vicl:ory
(2wds.}
U. Gained
45. Cheat;
bam-

~~MJ]3M®/kai 4/l-u"'...J ,_
h\1 tH Nlli/HINOlD ,otHI OOU I ([

Unscraiiillle-theoe four Jumbles,
one letter .to each oq~are, to
form four .ordinary words.

boozle

tLE1'EBE

TH~ Mt6HT

II

!!IE A
Ft6HTING INSECT

..:.l.:.:&gt;f:;.;IJ;.1::.::AM:r:....t:r;o""'&lt;:r"""'"i--,

Now arranre the circled lettors
to form th• surprl•• an"""· ..
above cartoon,

r

,,. ____ I A"( I I XI :0-[ll]"

(Amwen lomorro"·)

.Junobt.., TITU APRON CHARGE ·MOTHER
YHir.rday"•

~~~n~••:•:n~Th~u~~ha~o~a~II~M~C~Ii~r·e~~~~~M~AG~N~ET~~
~I'D

'OlE'r' MV5T 6E VE11';' BRAVE

UKE TO OliN AN
EN6Ll511 SHEEP
006...

~Pwlng

CAPI'AJ!II EASY

t

rJ ~ I;:;;~·~su::;;rr~e~st;ed::,;b~y~the
I
I:=::::t:,:::-::=~~d~:-;,~·
I

e.g.
H. Immediately
S'l. Freudlon
term
•· Underailed
4t. Greet
letter
tLLiquor

ON YOUR DIAL

b (]

WINT

Une,

WMP0/1390

-LEGAL-

(4wds.)
Ct. It Ills the
mortise
47. Negev
beut
U.Budget
item
49. Corundum
DOWN
1. Slight
%. Ancient
country
in Italy
3. Cab
driver's
remark
(2 wds.)
4. Ballad
5. Nose

ered from
(2wds.)
7. I (Ger.)
8. Cut the
hair from
9. Succinct
IZ. Gather
crops
14. Western
state
zz. Spanish

IO.Brewery
product
U. Benedic-

To You

r

1929

~

6. Recov-

lelder's
yells

That Listens

RURAL - One acre with old
house. $1500.00 CASH
BUSINESS BUILDING - East -:::::::::._,:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
Main. 9 rooms, 1 bath , 3
restrooms . $18,500.00 IF
SOLD THIS YEAR.
RUilAL - 6 rooms, bath, gas

song
since

I. Essence

'62 CHEVY Impala, runs good SEE THIS- POMEROY - 6 O' DELL WHEEL otlg'riment
room frame, 2 bedrooms,
located at Crossroads. Rf. 124.
$100, '52 Chevy pickup, mint
bllth,
basement, porches, gas
Complete front end service,
condition .
Phone
992.
FORCED-AIR heat, GOING
tune up and brake service.
6083 .
AT
55,000.00.
Wheels balanced elec.
12-17-10tp
All
work "
Ironically .
TUPPERS PLAINS A guaranteed.
Reasonable
RP.a I Estate For Sal A
BRAND NEW SPLIT LEVEL
rates. Phone 992-3213.
IBRICKt 6 acres, 3 large
7·27-ffc
bedrooms, closets galore, 3112
baths. large glassed living
room with stone fireplace,

ts. Popular

an infant

NEIGLER Building Supply.
Free estimate on building
yo~r new home. Will draw
prints to suit the lay of your
land. Call Guy Netgter,
Racine, Ohio. For repair aod

'69 DODGE Swinger 2 door
hardtop VB standard, red with
black vinyl top, $1 ,100. '69
608 East Moin
aluminum siding, soffet and
Volkswagen, good condition,
POMEROY
gutter. Colt Donald Smith,
$1,100. '68 Ford pickup custom
Racine, Ohio.
·
cab. 6-cyt. , 3 speed, 25,000 ANOTHER TEMPTING BUY
1D-7-tfc
miles, $1,400 . Phone 992-6048.
- POMEROY - 1 story
12-27·61p
frame , 2 bedrooms, with
closets, bath, utility-room In SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 992·2284.
basement, hardwood floors.
1970 W-30 OL DSMDB lLE 442,
The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
gas furnace and hot water
automatic , factory ·Stereo
Authorized
Singer Sates and
lank, large lot, EXCELLENT
tape . Lots of extras. Like new.
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
CONDITION, JUST $7,Call 992-2441 after 5 p.m.
3-2'1-ltc
900.00.
11 -28-tfc

Virgil B•.

ACROSS
1. Whlmpera,u

erade

TH~III!~ ~!\!iTHIN6

~ATHI!,R

MEIGS COUNTY
REAL ESTATE OWNERS

WllffP %'P
IIHOW 'J!1U",

~11&lt;1! 10

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work ll:

Ali! THERE IT

AXYDLBAAJ:B

I~. N0Wl

l:_:~~~~~=::;~

lo L 0 N G F B L L 0 W

One letier simply stands for anothl!l'. In this umple A ~o';::=::::::::::::~;;;::;::;;;;::~ r
UHCI fot the three L's, X for the two D's, ete. Single leltef!1
I ADMIRE THE Wfll{ THE'r'

The tax books are now open for the
December or first half collection of the
1971 Real Estate Taxes. Also for
delinquent tax. Closing date will be
February J1 1972.

apootropbes, the Jenalh ond formation of the wordr ore
blnts. Eac!l day the code )etters are dllferent.

au

STAND 6\.IARD OVER THE 5/IEEP

ACTUALL'r', THE'r' RE JUST
AFRAID TO tiE AlONE !

A Cryplolftm Quolallon

NMH NQF SFWN HKVRVBKV OFQ,HCW

.How8J11 E. frank

FZ

lUC "RDNMFC

RCH

NF
RKG

SRI.H

NMBXVW

ZRSBXBRC

NMBI(.VW

KHQ.-NMRTlHCRE

KH

ZRSRXBR

.

,, .
"
i

,,

'·- -----

.

-

1::-,·k;,"•,::.. ~ ·.~~:;.""::' .

t .!. . ........

.....

.:::.o~ti'~:a.

�8 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Dec. 2!1, 1971

~

.,

Sentinel Classifieds Get Actiont Sentinel Cla_ssifieds Get R~sults!
Racine
2 516f11S
Po111eroy
Business
Services
Of
·SoCial Events
•

REGULATIONS

By Mrs. Francis Morris

The Publisher reserves the.
right ·to edlt or re iect ariy ads 1
'deemed
objectional .
Th~
publisher will not bt responsKlle
for more than one incorrect:
insertion .

EEKANDMEEK

OPEN UP
INTH'NAME

.,

THANKY,.
SHERIFF

IT'S 'TfRRtBlc,
. JOHIJ!

OF TH' DADBURN
LAW!! .

I BEDROOM trailer apartm.!nt ,

MQOday Deadline 9 a .m.

Will be accepted until9a .m . for
Day of P.ubli,ation

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

For Rent

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P.M. Day Before Publication

.. .£a~!letlon .&amp; Corrections .

..

.

QUALITY

Motor Co.

1970CHEVELLEMALIBU HTCPE.

$2995

Low mileage by local owner with lOts of warranty left,
factory air condit!anedl V-8 engine, turbo-hydromatic, p.

lde~l

for

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

D.A. V. home In Pomeroy for
group meetings and parties,
phone 992-5247.
12-19-12tc .

Mr . and Mrs. Thomas
steering , gold body, sandalwood vinyl lop. radio. vinyl
Bartley and Mrs . Valiera
inter ior. good w·w tires. This car is loaded with extras.
2 BEDROOM mobile home in
Thierman of Dayton , Mrs.
1969 CHEVROLET KINGSWOOD ST. WG.
$2295
Racine area. Phone 992-6329.
Jean Goodwin of Wilmington .
12·14-tfc
RATES
Local 1 owner car. &amp; less than 23.000 miles. factory air
Mrs. Jean Woodruff of CinFor Want Ad Service
conditioned, luggage rack , 227 v.a eng·ine, automatic:,
5 cents per Word one inserfian·
cinnati , Mrs. Joan Rein51!hell
FURNISHED sleeping room
power steering &amp; brakes, beautiful white finish &amp; green
MinimUm Charge 75c
over Wine Store. Ren1 by
vinyl interior, new tires, radio &amp; all the deluxe ac·
of Upper Sandusky, Mrs.
12 cents per word three
month. Phone 992·52'13.
cessories.
Kathryn Black of Kenton , Mr . consecutive insertions.
11-26-lfc
1968 DODGE CORONET
$1495
18 cents per word six con
and Mrs. Kenneth Blythe of
4 Or . H. T. Cpe. Loca l 1 owner ca r &amp; shows the best of care,
insertions.
Spencerville, Mr. and Mrs. secutive
25 Per Cent Discount on pa id
V-8, au1amatic, p. steering, radio, good tires, dark blue
Wanted To Rent
John McKinnon of Springfield, ads and ads paid within 10 ddys .
finish wi1h vinyl interior. Priced to move.
NURSE and secretary delilres
CARD OF THANKS
Mr . and Mrs. Loren Nixon of
house with some acreage in
&amp;
OBITUARY
New Straitsville were guests
$1.50 for so r word minim um.
Meigs · County area. Cat I
recently of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Each additional word 2c.
.
Athens 593-6495.
BLIND ADS
12-28-31c
Webb and attended the annual
OPE II EVES. I:GO I' .M.
Additional
2Sc
Charge
per
installation of O.E.S. officers .
f'!)MEROY, OHIO
Advertisemf!:nt .
,
For Sale
Mr. and Mrs. Crill Bradford,
OFFICE HOURS
8:30 a.m to StOO p-.m. Daily,
Jr . of Worthington spent
30 a .m . to 12 : 00 Noon
Chrislmas Day and overnight 8:
Sa turdav ·
Notice
with Mr . and Mrs . Crill
Card of Thanks
36'' X2J" X.009
Bradford and other Christmas
I WANT to thank everyone for
For
Sale
or
Trade
guests were Mr. and Mrs .
the kindness and concern
FOR PICKUP truck. 1967
me while I was in
shown
Herman Carson and family of
Dodge Coronet . David Yost ,
Veterans
Memorial HospitaL
Coolville and Mr. and Mrs.
Portland, Ohio . Phone 843 Many thanks to those who
2242.
Howard Frank and family of
sent cards and flowers . A
12-29-Jtp
USED OFFSET PLATES .
Racine R.D. Spending Sunday
special thanks to the doctors,
viii
tors
and
those
who
HAVE .
nurses,
with .the Bradfords and Mrs .
remembered me in prayer .
MANY
USES
Esther Piper were Mr. and
May God bless you alt.
Mrs . Orland Mitchell of
Elsie Pooler .
12-29-llp
Mr . and Mrs. Lawrence
Parkersburg .
8 for $1.00
Mr . and Mrs. Francis Morris Chapman were Christmas HEARTFELT thanks to the
doctors and nvrses of
accompanied their son-in-law guests of Mrs . C. 0. Chapman
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
and daughter , Mr . and Mrs . and family in Rutland .
the Rev . Forrest Donley, the
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Canode
Bob Swift to Columbus ThursEwing
Funeral
Home .
pallbearers and those who
day and visited them and Mr. of Lucasville and Mr. and Mrs.
served at the cemetery at the
and Mrs. Merle Schroeder and Frances Canode of Columbus
death
of Miss Clara Garland .
J11 Court St.
family and were overnight spent Christmas at the home of
Special thanks to those who
Pomeroy,
Ohio
sent Miss Garland gifts before
guests of their grandson, Mr . their mother, Mrs. Clarence
her death and to those sending
and Mrs . Bill Lake and Canode.
.'
flowers and cards at the time
COAL , limestone . Excelsior
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Coen
children and accompanied
of her departure. Mr . and
Salt Works. E. Main St .•
them Christmas morning to the and family and Mrs. Grace
Mrs. lewis Harris, Wyllis
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3891.
Davis and daughter. Marilyn.
4-9- tfc
Athens area and were dinner Hensler hosted a dinner on
12-29-lfp
guests of Mrs . Ethel Lewis and Christmas. Guests included the
POODLE puppies, Silver Toy ,
Mr . and Mrs . John Glab. Other John Paul Hensler family of WE WISH to thank our many
While learn ing about the pay
Park view Kennels . Phone 992 friends for their comforting
raise. have him explain how
5443 .
dinner guests were Mr. and Athens Route and the Clayton
prayers, flowers and the
you may enlist and stay
8-15-tfc
Mrs. Pete Gould of Marietta . Hensler family of Marietta .
loving expressiins of sym.
home far the holiday s.
Dr. Kathryn Philson of Young Mark Hensler remained
pathy in the loss of our
husband and father . A specia I
Blacksburg, Va. and Mr . and for a few days with the Coens.
END OF YEAR
thanks to the Rev. Marshall
Call him at 614-593-3022
Mr. Luther Harvey, who
Mrs. Scott Wheeler and Mary
Larimore . Rev . Forrest R.
- call collect - tor
Clearance Sale!
Elizabeth of Sciotoville were underwent surgery in Holzer
Donley for their consoling
details.
complete
words. the Ewing Chapel, Mr.
Chrislmas guests and also Hospital a week ago expects to
Buy Any Fuel Oil
and
Mrs.
Bob
Moore
and
be
released
soon.
spendtqg the week with Mr.
organist, Rose Ann Jenkins.
Today's Army wants to
Mr . and Mrs. Robert
and Mrs. Thereon Johnson.
Our thanks to the Syracuse
join you at a much
Women 's Auxiliary and all
Other Christmas Day guests Holliday were pleasantly
higher salary.
other tributes. The Morris
were Mr. and Mrs. Don surprised on Thursday when
Harden Family.
200 Gallons Fuel Oil When
Johnson, Brian and Bruce of their former neighbors, Mr.
- 12-29·21c
You Buy Any Siegler Heater
Portland and Miss Edith and Mrs. Hesson, in Wooster
KOSCOT Kosmetics and wigs: Thru Dec . 31.
called on them.
Hayman, Racine .
In Memory
Yes we have Koscot Products
Christmas
guests
of
Mr.
and
and
wigs in stock for your
POMIROY
Christmas greetings were
IN LOVING memory of our
JIICk W. Cerser, Mtr.
immediate needs . Yes we do
received from the parents in Mrs. G. A. Radekin and Tina
dear mother, Amy Clark. who
........ tt1 ~2111
deliver. Would you like to
passed away 7 years ago
Canada of the boys who were were Mr. and Mrs. Arlin
select your own customers
today, Dec . 29, 1964. given shelter overnight in the Radekin and daughter, the The memory of our dear
and have your ow_p route and LONG BOTTOM - Five room
- make goo4 rn"'On~y? Call
Baptist Church . They said the Robert Holliday family and
bath, business or
mother, ·
Elrown's in Middleport 992- house,
However
long
apart
,
Mrs.
Dorothy
Johnson
of
storage
building - $6,500.
boys were in Tennessee, still on
5113, distributors of Kosco! Phone 985-3529.
Is
like
a
soothing
memory
Pomeroy.
U1eir way to New Orleans.
Kosmetics .
That lingers in our hearts.
12-19-JOic
11 -16-ffc'
Mr. and Mrs . Paul Wallace
Mrs. Addie Petrel and Mr.
Sadly missed by children.
12-29-lfc
GAS HEATER. 55,000 BTU,
and Mrs. Ben Petrel spent have moved lo the Angel of
natural or bottled gas. good
Christmas with Mr. and Mrs . Mercy Nursing Home in
Wanted To Buy
condition with metalbestas
Jack Feuerbacher at Jackson . Albany.
Male Help Wanted
WILL BUY raw furs and beef chimney, $50 . Phone 949-321 1.
12-29-31c
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Frank
Shiltz
hides Saturday and Sunday
Mr. Kenneth Swart of Stow,
TEXAS 01 L Company has
every
week.
Carl
Chevalier,
Ohio spent Christmas holidays were in DeCoto, West Virginia
openi ng Pomeroy area . No
TWO 283 CU. IN . Chevrolet
Rt. 1, Long Bottom, Ohio.
experience necessary. Age
with his mother, Mrs. James last week attending funeral
12-15-12fp engines ; also 196.4 Chevrolet
not
important.
Good
body . Phone 985-4118.
Swart and his sister, Mrs. services for Mrs . Shiltz's
charader a must. We train .
12-29·31c
brother-in-law.
Alfred Crow and family .
Air Mail to A. D. Dickerson, OLD FURNtT"URE, Round Oak
tables, Brass beds, dishes,
Mrs . Erma Nelson and
Pres . • Southwestern
Mrs. Maude Thornburg of
clocks,
and·or complete STEREO, Early American
Petroleum
Corp.,
Ft.
Worth,
Joey ,
spent
Huntington, W. Va. spent grandson,
households
. Write M. D. stereo. radio combination
Texas.
Saturday
with
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Christmas with her son, Mr.
Miller, Rt . 4. Pomeroy, Ohio. AM-FM radio, 4-speaker
12-29-lfc
sound system . Balance S79.81.
George Ragan. Mrs. Nelson is
Call 992-6271.
Alfred Crow and family .
Use our budget terms . Call
12·17-tfc
Mrs. Grella Strnpson and improved after about six weeks
992-7085.
Notice
12-29-6tc
Mrs . Lillian Hayman had suffering with a blood clot in
Help
Wanted
BAND, Friday and Saturday.
Christmas dinner with Mr . and her leg.
. WALNUT, modern style .
Jack's Club, cover charge.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Larry
Spencer
Mrs . Gerald Simpson and
stereo-radio, AM-FM radio. 4·
For reservations come to dub ,--w-.-~-A_N_T_E_D-:-!---,
have moved into the Lowther speaker sound system , 4·
family .
in person.
speed automatic changer .
12-28-41p
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Hayman Bobo residence.
Balance $68 .59 . Use our
Holiday guests of Mr. and
and son, Tate, of Columbus
budget
terms. Call 992-7085.
SHOOTING match, Saturday,
12-29·6fc
were six o'clock dinner guests Mrs. Marvin Wilson were Mr.
Jan . 1, at the Racine Planing
and
Mrs.
K.
C.
Smith
and
of his mother, Mrs . Ullian
Mill at 6 p.m. Factory choke
PAINT damage, 1970 Zig Zag
guns
only . Assorted meat .
family
of
Columbus
and
Mr.
Hayman, Christmas.
sewing machines, stlll in
Sponsored by the Syracuse
original cartons . No at.
For six o'clock dinner and Mrs. Randall Smith of
Fire Dept.
tachments needed as our
Christmas with Mrs. Grella Hazard, Ky.
12-29-31c
controls are built in. Sews
Mason &amp; Hartford
Simpson were Mr. and Mrs.
with 1 or 2 needles. makes
GUN SHOOT, Forked Run
buttonholes, sews on buttons,
Bruce Stmpson and son, Shane, Gallipolis.
Sportsman Club, Sunday, PHONE 992-2156
monograms, and blind hem
of Dayton, Mrs. Bud Simpson
The following were ChristJan . 2. 12 noon .
stitch. Full cash price. S38.50.
12·29-31c
and mother of Pomeroy and mas guests of Mr. and Mrs.
. FOR DOAILSI
Budget plan available. Phone
992-5641.
Todd Simpson of Gallipolis.
Jerry Powell, Mr. and Mrs. GUN SHOOT, Sunday, Jan . 2, 1
12 - 29-~11:
Mr . and Mrs. Leon Jordon Austin Wolfe and Jerry,
p.m., Racine Gun Club.
12·29-Jtc Employment Wanted
and family of Thornville spent Syracuse; Roger Hill, Mrs.
EARLY American stereo-radio
INTERIOR painting. Call Don combination, 4.speaker sound
Christmas with her parents, lTiah WoHe, Letart; Mr. and
VanMeter 985-3951.
system, AM-FM radio, 4·
Mr . and Mrs . Clarence Mrs. Oval Diddle, Antiquity,
12-19-12tp speed automatic changer,
Bradford.
and son, Bob, of Vietnam; Mr.
balance S78.32. Use our
Mrs. Isabel Simpson spent and Mrs. Earl Custer,
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
For
Rent
12-2Hic
Christmas weekend with Mr. Syracuse; Mr. and Mrs.
FURNISHED
and
unfurnished
and Mrs. Joe Beckwith and Bernard Diddle, Mr. George
apartments. Close to school. MODERN walnut stereo-radio
Shelly in Parkersburg.
Diddle, Columbus; Mr. a.1d
Phone 992-5434.
combination, .4.speaker sound
10-18-tfc
system, 4·Speed automatic
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Cross Mrs. Tom Diddle and son,
changer, separate controls.
and Ray of Columbus were Mansfield; Mr . and Mrs. Boone
50x12 TWO BEDROOM mobile
Balance $64 .79. Use our
Christmas dinner guests of Mr . Adams, Tom Diddle, Sharon
home, gas heat, Sycamore
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
St., Middleport . Phone 992·
and Mrs. Earl Cross and Diddle, Pam Cleek, Mrs.
12-21 -0fc
7004
or 992·3585, Danny
family and spent overnight Libbie Fisher and two sons.
Thompson.
1971 ZIG·ZAG sewi ng machine
wi th Mrs. Howard Neigler.
Mr . and Mrs. Roger Hill are
12-23-lfc left in layaway . Beautiful
Christmas dinner guests of announcing the birth of a son,
pastel color. full size model.
NICE TRAILER.
bedroom. All buill in to buttonhole;
Mr . and Mrs. George Neigler Julian Scott, on Christmas
Jdeat for couple, 10 miles overcast and fancy stitch .
were Mrs. Howard Neigler, Day. Grandparents are Mr.
north of Pomeroy . Phone 992· Pay ·l ust $.48.75 cash or terms
local. Mr. and Mrs. Phil MU!er and Mrs, Jerry Powell and
6452.
ava• able. Trade -ins ac SAVE up to one half. Bring your
12-15-tfc cepted. Phone 992-5641.
of Columbus and Mr . and Mrs. Mrs. Julian Hill.
sick TV to Chuck's TV Shop;
12-21 -6tc
151 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy .
Rob Palmer of Parkersburg . Mrs. Margaret Houdashelt
1
BEDROOM
and
2
bedroom
-Phone 992-5080.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Webb was a Christmas guest of Mr.
mobile homes. Adults only . VACUUM cleaner brand new
11 -21-tfc
Phone 992-5592 .
1971 model. Complete with all
spent Thursday till Sunday and Mrs . Houdashelt and
12-19-tfc cleaning tool s. Small paint
over Christmas holiday with family at Gallipolis.
LOOK lNG for bargains? Start
damage in shipping . Will take
lhe New Year right and come
their son, Dr. and Mrs. James
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Cleland,
$27 cash. or budget plan
to Hayman 's AL'ction, Friday
available. Phone 992-5641.
Webb at Columbus.
Vince and Ryan, of Columbus
night. Auction starts at 7 p.m.
12·21 ·6fc
Mr . and Mrs. Henry Roush, spent Christmas weekend with
Hayman Auction House.
Laurel Clilf.
Mildred and Dale, visited over Mr . and Mrs. F:rank .Cleland
12-28-4tc TRAILER lOTS Bob's "lv\obli;;-_ 24 25FT. TRAILER, ~ompletely
Christmas weekend' in Akron and Mrs. Anna Wines and
t Rl 124
' s
redecorated lntenor. Must
C
· o~r '
·
• yracuse, sell, $975. Call 992-5171 .
with Mr. and Mrs. John Fisher family .
Jhw. 992-2951 .
•
12-l4-31c
NOT be responsible for
and family and Mr. and Mrs.
Mr . and Mrs. Frank Cleland I WILL
4-2-tfc - - - -- - - - any debts c.o ntracted b{
spent Chrisirnas Day with her
Paul Zvara.
anyone other than mysel .
APPLES - Fitzpatrick OrSigned : Gerald Russett ~ BEDROOM mobile home, chards, State Route 689 ,
Mr. and Mrs. David Roush parents, Mr. and Mrs. William
furnished , utilities paid, phQI'Ie Wllesvllle, 669-3785.
Cogar.
and daughter, Lorelei of Wood at Jacksonville.
available now. Phone 9929-3-tfc
12-28-31p
Columbus spent 1\fonday with
Rev·. and -Mrs . Frank
7384.
12-28-3tc SINGER au"tomalic sewing
hisfa!her, Mr. Dale Roush and Cheesebrew spent Christmas
machine. Like new , in
ABOUT
YOUR
WEIGHT
...
his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. with his mother, Mrs.
NEW, 12 x 60, 2 bedroom mobile , beautiful walnut cabinet,
overweight
ladies.
teens
and
Madaline Macomber at Pt.
Henry Roush.
home across from Bradbury
makes design stitches, zigmen interested in a Weight
Christmas guests of Mr. and Pleasant.
School.
Call 992-S308 or see
zags, buttonholes, blind hems,
,Watchers (RJ . Class in
Mrs. Roy Riffle were their
Rev . Ray Wining of Pomeroy
"Pomeroy write: Wei~ht , Charles Lewis, 2nd house elc. Will sell for $85. Call
Ravenswood 273-9893 after 5
Walchers IR), 1863 Secl1on soulh from Bradbury School.
children, Mr. Melvin Riffle of was a dinner guesi recently of
p.m:
,
Pe1 s welcome .
Rd o, Cincinnati, Ohio 45237.
Columbus and Mr. and Mrs. Rev . and Mrs . Frank
12-27-Uc
11 -28-lfc
10-3-lfc
SUI McKenzie and family of Cheesebrew.
---':;;~~~-- ,'

Pomeroy Motor Co.

For Sale

YOUNG MEN

YOUR LOCAL ARMY

Point Rock

--'1'

ALL WEATHER ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTION
&amp; PLUMBING CO.

HomeMaintenance Service
the year around. No matter,'

TALK TO YOU

BAND

9 p.m. to 2 a.m.
New Year's Eve

Hl-7 CLUB

24-Hour Service
'.

Also Furnace Repair
PH. 992·7260

742-3947
742-4761
We are fully Insured

HOME &amp; AUTO

Complete

992-2094

Remodeling
KHehens, Baths
Room Additions
And Patios

And

FURNITURE ·
Stop· In and See Our
Floor Display.

lfll It NU.. .... , T . ~

BADGE GUYS
PSST ~ABOUT T~tS
BLIND MTE ~OU GOT

Dolls, all dressed In style,
kniHed and crocheted. I Hts
to be seen to H appreciated)
Many items you have been
looking for, for tMt perfect
gift.

ME, SHJIRK~·
'

we

W~ EN
MET OUT ON
T~E COLO, WIND~ !ll&lt;l

... AND I TWIG1H&gt;
HIS ARM UNTIL
HE AGREED,
SGT f51.01TER.

SLOPE, .r COu•D
UNI&gt;I!II.STANl&gt; •

GIFT SHOP

JOHNSON' MASONRY

r::. Main Pomeroy
OFFICE SUPPLIES

Christmas
decorations, wearing
apparel. lewelrv,
,,
ceramics.

TO CONVINCE DETECTIVE
HAZARD TO TAKE ME
TO DINNER!

TREASURES

PdMEROY

606

HQDCRAFT
.GIFT iTEMS

HlflDEN

C&amp;M
REFRIGERATION
SERVICE

service.

MARTHA ROSE, oWntr
I
Located on County Rood 34
near Royol Oak Park. Wotch
for Signs.
Open every day except
Monday
1 P.M. Iil7 P.M.

992-7608

...

SMITH ·NELSON
MOTOR~ INC.

Ph. 991-2174

-

WHAT

BI.IT YOU CAN'T
U5E FORGE TO GET

..

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiator
Smallest Healer Core .
Nolhan Biggs
Radiator Speciollst

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
A J bedroom 116,900.00 home can be purchased with a
":~'~~~~~ o.avn,ent as lpw as S6S.OO for a family with a base
•·
.00 and three children. 7'/• Pet. annual
per·cerilalje rate.

ARMY PAY RAISE

SENTINEL
CARRIER$

Home Units

991-5803

ABOUT THE NEW

SIEGUR HEATER
GEl FREE

All Commercial &amp;

what your need. Complete
roof or spouting repair .
Interior or exterior car pentry . Ceiling tile and
Paneling and Siding .
Complete Plumbing &amp;
Heating.
Day Number 992-2550
We have 24 hr. emergency

·Sheets

The
Dailv Sentinei

SeMce &amp; Repair

240 Lincoln St.
Middleport, Ohio
Dba Anthony Plumbing
We have a complete

Aluminum

.

.

'

REPRESENTATIVE
WANTS TO

:,:

(:ouples .

CONFESSION?

I l.ISED JUDO.,,

~~:t::\ ~~CE~W~O~IM~N~S~~~N~:R.)

;.2-.21

'

DEPENDING UPON
MOTIVATIONAl. FACTORS

ARe \'OU ei.JRE YOU CAN'T
&amp;TAY FOR A F&amp;t MORE
WEEKS i" I'D•...I'D LIKi:
10 GET TO t&lt;NIJW '&gt;OU

Pom1roy

UNDER~YING CU~

Flt.IANCIAL F~UCTUATIONS,

I'D ~ 'AMA~GAMA'TED
s;HOE~ACEOS'IS A GOOD

BETTER!

BUY!

EXPERT

!

Wheel Alignment

.'

~5~
-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094
Bl LL NELSON 992-3657
TOM CROW, 991-2580

HILTON WOLFE 94t-3lll
DALE DUTTON, 991-2534
AUTOMOBILE

Mobile Homes For Sale

2966.

MOBIL£ HOMES
1220 Washington Blvd .
~!pre , Ohio
FOR THE BEST deal in a new
or used mobile home, try

Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
12-17-901c

Auto Sales

NICE 2-siory home with full

TANKS CLEANED
Reasonable rates. Ph. 446-4782,
Gallipolis . John Russell.
Owner &amp; Oporator.
5-12-tfc

-----

ORPHAN ANNIE
IT IS llllTH A HEAVY HEART lltAT I

COME TO 'IOU, MI&amp;TER 'WARBUCK&amp;!
FOR tT Ill MY SAD MY TO INFORM

11• ~HOttEST~

TO
·~f'il5illf"tN'I£&amp;TMEHT
Sl TOM I&amp; WA6!ED!

-- ---~

TV and Antenna
Service. Phone 992-2522.
6-1D-Ifc
Elementary School. Phone, - - - - - ----,.__
992-7384 to see.
BACKHOE AND DOZER work :
11 -7-lfc · SeP,fic tanks Installed. George
(Bill) Pullins, Phone 992-2478..
+25-tfc

pickup,

perfect condition,
$900 .
Se rious inquiries only . Phone

992 -6083.

·-SEPTIC

HA~~ISON'S

basement. 2 lots, new for ced
air furnace . Near Pomeroy

1964 VOLKSWAGEN . good
running condition , $400 .
Phone 742-4423.
12-29-31p
CHEVROLET

· Open BTU'S
Monday 1hru Saturdoy
61M E. Main, Pomoroy, 0.

UPHOLSTERING SERVICE ,
complete selection of fabrics
and v1nyl' tQ choose .from .
Pick -up and delivery. Slater
Upholstering, Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
WRECKING and hauling .
phone 992-3617.
Phone 992-6083.
12-27-JOtp
12-17-10fp
...., SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
Real Estate For Sale
66
HOUSE; i642 Lincoln Heights.
2-:1°35 ·
2. 12-tfc
Call Danny Thompson, 992-- - - - - - - - - 2196·
READY -MIX
CONCRETE
7-18·"'
del lvered right to your.
t..:.h.L I~ I: - 10 rt&gt;on. huu~e.
project. Fast and easy. Free
bath, basement. garage. two
estimates. Phone 992-3284.
lots . No reasonable offer
Goegleln Ready-Mix Co.,
refused . Phone 949-4313.
Middleport, Ohio.
12-22- 121p
6-30-lfc,

MILLER

52

•6-15-tfc

C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949-3821
Recine, Ohio
Crtlt Bradford
5-1-tfc

12' - 14' · M' '. WiDE

Kanauga, Ohio.

your
992-

been cancelled?
operator's license?

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto .

Oeland

12·29-10lp

Realty

dining room, buill-in kllchen
with dining space, utility

TEAFORD

room , 2 car garage, hot water
heat, carpeted throughout,

SR.

except baths and ktlchen. A
WONDERFUL HOME.
548,000.00.

Br(iker

11 oMechanic Street
Pomerov , Ohio

CHESHIRE - Large block
business building on Rt . 7.
Suitable for restaurant, store.
garage or service station .

.

START THE NEW YEAR OFF
WITH A HOME OF YOUR
OWN, SEE US TODAY.
HENRY CLELAND
REALTOR
Office 992-2259
Residence 991-2568
12-27-61c

_

.

TillS PUBLICITY IS NOT
CiOOD. I!VERV NUT IN
TOWN WILL WANT TO
5niDV C.ERTI E'S ll EAD

Frome"
U.Eartby
~------· pigment
''";;~~~rNI~ASI&lt;S Llt"Z., IS. TeleYI
ANVON E
phone
ITfii&lt;ES
M/lP SERIOUSLY?'
greeting,
British

style

(3 wds.)
15. Crude
sugar
16. Sioux
17.-rule
(2 wds.)
11. Before
r•,~ lt."Hebrew
letter
!0. Nixon
or
Agnew
(abbr.)
!1. Ceremony
U.Pronoun
15. Flrstclus
1'1. C~eec

..

The Station

. furnace.

Also

Business

Building, 30X44.
3 HOUSE'S - 2 rented. Other

one has 3 bedrooms, bath, gas

forced air furnace with free
gas lo alt. NOW ONLY
$16,000.00.
INVEST YOUR 1911
PROFITS. BUY NOW.
HELEN L TEAFORD,
ASSOCiATE
992-3325- 992-2378
12-'23-61c
SIX ROOM house. 133 Butternur
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, ~137
Wadsworth Drive, Columbus,
Ohio, -phone 237-4334.
'o1 ·2l ·lfr

ll·,q

Yesterday's CfrPtoquole: THE ADVANTAGE OF A ·.
CREDIT CARD IS THAT . YOU DON'T KNOW YOU ARE ·,
BROKE, AT LEAST NOT BEFORE THE END OF THE
MONTH.-AUTHOR UNKNOWN

Yuten:lay'• An1wer

queen

U.Cruh
agaimt
:16. Splendid
za. For what
reason?
(2 wds.)
29.Hewho
scoffs
31. Patronage; protection

(C 1971 KiDI' Features Syndieate, Ine.)

33. With
acuteness
34. Small salamander
35. Alternate
38.1970
Oscar
winner
38. Sure to be
a vicl:ory
(2wds.}
U. Gained
45. Cheat;
bam-

~~MJ]3M®/kai 4/l-u"'...J ,_
h\1 tH Nlli/HINOlD ,otHI OOU I ([

Unscraiiillle-theoe four Jumbles,
one letter .to each oq~are, to
form four .ordinary words.

boozle

tLE1'EBE

TH~ Mt6HT

II

!!IE A
Ft6HTING INSECT

..:.l.:.:&gt;f:;.;IJ;.1::.::AM:r:....t:r;o""'&lt;:r"""'"i--,

Now arranre the circled lettors
to form th• surprl•• an"""· ..
above cartoon,

r

,,. ____ I A"( I I XI :0-[ll]"

(Amwen lomorro"·)

.Junobt.., TITU APRON CHARGE ·MOTHER
YHir.rday"•

~~~n~••:•:n~Th~u~~ha~o~a~II~M~C~Ii~r·e~~~~~M~AG~N~ET~~
~I'D

'OlE'r' MV5T 6E VE11';' BRAVE

UKE TO OliN AN
EN6Ll511 SHEEP
006...

~Pwlng

CAPI'AJ!II EASY

t

rJ ~ I;:;;~·~su::;;rr~e~st;ed::,;b~y~the
I
I:=::::t:,:::-::=~~d~:-;,~·
I

e.g.
H. Immediately
S'l. Freudlon
term
•· Underailed
4t. Greet
letter
tLLiquor

ON YOUR DIAL

b (]

WINT

Une,

WMP0/1390

-LEGAL-

(4wds.)
Ct. It Ills the
mortise
47. Negev
beut
U.Budget
item
49. Corundum
DOWN
1. Slight
%. Ancient
country
in Italy
3. Cab
driver's
remark
(2 wds.)
4. Ballad
5. Nose

ered from
(2wds.)
7. I (Ger.)
8. Cut the
hair from
9. Succinct
IZ. Gather
crops
14. Western
state
zz. Spanish

IO.Brewery
product
U. Benedic-

To You

r

1929

~

6. Recov-

lelder's
yells

That Listens

RURAL - One acre with old
house. $1500.00 CASH
BUSINESS BUILDING - East -:::::::::._,:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
Main. 9 rooms, 1 bath , 3
restrooms . $18,500.00 IF
SOLD THIS YEAR.
RUilAL - 6 rooms, bath, gas

song
since

I. Essence

'62 CHEVY Impala, runs good SEE THIS- POMEROY - 6 O' DELL WHEEL otlg'riment
room frame, 2 bedrooms,
located at Crossroads. Rf. 124.
$100, '52 Chevy pickup, mint
bllth,
basement, porches, gas
Complete front end service,
condition .
Phone
992.
FORCED-AIR heat, GOING
tune up and brake service.
6083 .
AT
55,000.00.
Wheels balanced elec.
12-17-10tp
All
work "
Ironically .
TUPPERS PLAINS A guaranteed.
Reasonable
RP.a I Estate For Sal A
BRAND NEW SPLIT LEVEL
rates. Phone 992-3213.
IBRICKt 6 acres, 3 large
7·27-ffc
bedrooms, closets galore, 3112
baths. large glassed living
room with stone fireplace,

ts. Popular

an infant

NEIGLER Building Supply.
Free estimate on building
yo~r new home. Will draw
prints to suit the lay of your
land. Call Guy Netgter,
Racine, Ohio. For repair aod

'69 DODGE Swinger 2 door
hardtop VB standard, red with
black vinyl top, $1 ,100. '69
608 East Moin
aluminum siding, soffet and
Volkswagen, good condition,
POMEROY
gutter. Colt Donald Smith,
$1,100. '68 Ford pickup custom
Racine, Ohio.
·
cab. 6-cyt. , 3 speed, 25,000 ANOTHER TEMPTING BUY
1D-7-tfc
miles, $1,400 . Phone 992-6048.
- POMEROY - 1 story
12-27·61p
frame , 2 bedrooms, with
closets, bath, utility-room In SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 992·2284.
basement, hardwood floors.
1970 W-30 OL DSMDB lLE 442,
The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
gas furnace and hot water
automatic , factory ·Stereo
Authorized
Singer Sates and
lank, large lot, EXCELLENT
tape . Lots of extras. Like new.
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
CONDITION, JUST $7,Call 992-2441 after 5 p.m.
3-2'1-ltc
900.00.
11 -28-tfc

Virgil B•.

ACROSS
1. Whlmpera,u

erade

TH~III!~ ~!\!iTHIN6

~ATHI!,R

MEIGS COUNTY
REAL ESTATE OWNERS

WllffP %'P
IIHOW 'J!1U",

~11&lt;1! 10

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work ll:

Ali! THERE IT

AXYDLBAAJ:B

I~. N0Wl

l:_:~~~~~=::;~

lo L 0 N G F B L L 0 W

One letier simply stands for anothl!l'. In this umple A ~o';::=::::::::::::~;;;::;::;;;;::~ r
UHCI fot the three L's, X for the two D's, ete. Single leltef!1
I ADMIRE THE Wfll{ THE'r'

The tax books are now open for the
December or first half collection of the
1971 Real Estate Taxes. Also for
delinquent tax. Closing date will be
February J1 1972.

apootropbes, the Jenalh ond formation of the wordr ore
blnts. Eac!l day the code )etters are dllferent.

au

STAND 6\.IARD OVER THE 5/IEEP

ACTUALL'r', THE'r' RE JUST
AFRAID TO tiE AlONE !

A Cryplolftm Quolallon

NMH NQF SFWN HKVRVBKV OFQ,HCW

.How8J11 E. frank

FZ

lUC "RDNMFC

RCH

NF
RKG

SRI.H

NMBXVW

ZRSBXBRC

NMBI(.VW

KHQ.-NMRTlHCRE

KH

ZRSRXBR

.

,, .
"
i

,,

'·- -----

.

-

1::-,·k;,"•,::.. ~ ·.~~:;.""::' .

t .!. . ........

.....

.:::.o~ti'~:a.

�' .

•

10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Dec. 29, 1971

Demonstrators Slosh Blood
WASiflNGTON (UP!) -Re- moved m and arrested 87 of
sponding to a fourth day of them on charges of disorderly
large-~Jcale Amertcan bombmg conduct and obstrucltng a
htslol'tcal
attacks agamst North Vtet- nattonal
nam, demonstrators sloshed monument.
Earher Tuesday, IS VV AW
blood in front of the White
House Tuesday m the largest members ended thell' ocropa·
outbreak of antiwar actiVIty m tion of the Statue of Liberty in
the Untied States smce spring. New York, complymg wtth a
As about 150 demonstrators court ordk They started the
marched smgle file past the sil&lt;n Sunday to demonstrate
White House, ftve young men UteU" opposition to the war.
The mcreased aU" ratds also
stepped out of !me and threw
small plastic bags of blood to prompted verbal blasts at the
the stdewalk along Pennsylva· Ntxon admimstration
The front-runner for the
rua Avenue, stompmg on thein
until the bags broke and the Democ rallc prestdenttal
nommatlon, Sen Edmund S.
blood spurted
One of the demonstrators, Muskte, JOtned another
tdenhfted as Tom Urgo, 22, of Democrallc prestdenttal
New Jersey, was arrested for hopeful m calhng for an end of
the ratds Sen George S.
ltttermg
McGovern,
IJ.S D., satd the
The demonstrators, Jed by
.....,- members of Vtetnam Veterans hombmg was a new escalation
Agamst the War (VVAW) had
marched from the Capttol to
the White House before the
blood mctdent
They then walked to Lincoln
Memortal and sat on the stone
floor around the huge statue of
Abraham Lmcoln Pollee

Lawson Found
In Contempt

Of Injunction

Ernest Johnson

Gallta County Common
Pleas Court Judge Ronald R
Calhoun Tuesday found Glenn
E Lawson, Rt. I, Mtddleport,
guilty of contempt of court m
the tn]uncllon case !tied last
week by Herman R. Reese,
Clatr Athey and Arnold
Merntt, trustees of Cheshtre
Twp , and Everett Caldwell,
Rt I, Mtddleport
La11son was found guilty of
destroymg a brtdge to the
Caldwell property He was
01 dered to construct a new
bndge by Jan 1 or go to jail
Stmtlar charges agamst
Rose and Alonzo Lawson were
dtsmtssed Judge Calhoun
tssued an mjunclton last
Wednesday enJotnmg the
Lawsons from mamtainmg a
fence on the nght of way of
Zuspan Hollow Rd , tn Cheshtre
Twp , and from blocking the
entrance to Caldwell's
property
Accordmg to the petition, the
defendants had placed a
barbed wtre fence upon the
gravelled porllon of the nght of
way of Zuspan Hollow Rd ,
obstruchng trafftc and
blockmg the drtveway to the
Everett Caldwell property
Caldwell asked the court for
an InJunction m order to obtam
mgress and egress to hts home
He also asked for $5,000 m
damages for the mconvemence
and $20,000 m puntltve
damages resultmg from
defendant's dtsregard of
plaintiff's rtghts to free access
upon the public rtght.

Dies Tuesday
RACINE - Ernest Dale
Johnson, 75, Racme Route 1,
dted Tuesday at Holzer
Medtcal Center
A veteran of World War I,
Mr Johnson was a member of
the Moms Ch{lpel Methodist
Church and Racme Amencan
Legton Post 602
The son of the late Lows and
Ida Pondorf Johnson, he was
also preceded m death by two
sons , Ernest Charles, and
Frank Delano , and two
brothers, Albert and Ray
Survtvmg are hts wtfe ,
Emma D Johnson ; two
daughters, Mrs Freda Cunntngham, Glennmoor , and
Mrs Bermce Lavalley , Dorcas, two sons, Dale E Johnson, Carson , Cahf , and Jerry

M Joh nson, Racme . two
ststers, Mrs Earl Custer ,
Syracuse, and Mrs . Orner
Oatley , Racme , a brother ,
Clifford, of Sewtckley, Pa , 17
grandchtldren ; two great·
grandchtldren , and several
meces; nephews and cousms
Funeral servtces wtll be held
at 1 p m Fnday at the Ewmg
Funeral Home wtth the Rev
Freeland Noms offtctalmg
Mthtary ntes Will be conducted
by the Racme Amencan
Legton Post Burtal wtll be m
the Letart Cemetery Friends
may call at the funeral home
any ttme

(Continued from page I)
Robert Barton , John Tucker

Donna

David son, Harold Dewhurst,

Norman Will . Roger Blacr.,
Perry Kennedy
MINERSVILLE - Clara
Mcintyre. George W Cundiff.
J1mmy

E va ns ,

Mcintyre

MIDDLEPORT -

Phyllis

Charles

Searles, Kenneth Cooke, M11ton

Hood , Raullm Moyer

Make 49 payments, soc
to $10.00 and we make
the

HARRISONVILLE - Robert

Alk1re,
France s
Kenneth Payne

50TH

Alk1re.

RACINE - L1ll 1an Tucker,

Sandra Jones, Larry O'Bnen,

Earl Adams, Dorothy Badgley,
Ralph
Badgley, Mart•n

W1lcoxen , Edna Knopp, Elson
Spencer, James Roush , Vlrg1t
Walker. Aaron Wolfe, Emma

The Athens County
Sav1ngs &amp; Loan Co.

296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Oh10
Member F edera l Home Loan

Bank

Adams
REEDSVILLE - Grant
Sm1th
LONG BOTTOM - Ada
B•ssell, Robert K Lutz, Henry
Bahr, Richard Barton
CHESHIRE
Louella
Taylor
HEMLOCK GROVE
Sharon Welker
DEXTER - Leafy Chasteen
THE PLAINS - Ray Alkire
SYRACUSE Bern1ce
Levac_y

fv'\ember Federal Sav mgs &amp;
Loan Insurance Corp All
accounts msured up to

S20,000 00

MASON. W Va - Lawrence
Connolly
LETART, W Va - Clarence
Gill

Youth Cited For Traffic Infraction

(Continued from page I)
"
penses, $1 ,5po, total, $27,700
County Audtlor - General
offtce, salary, offtctal, $6,720;
salartes, employes, $13,920 ;
supplies, $5,000 ~deputy sealer,
$900; adverttsmg and prmting,
$350; other expenses, $200;
assessmg personal property,
$1,643.16, oUter expenses, $150;
1 appraismg real property :
professtonal servtces, $2,500;
total, $31,383.16
County Treasurer - Salary
officml, $6,600; salanes em.
ployes, $8,100, supplies, $1,800,
adverltsmg and prmtmg, $500;
other expenses, $500 ; Iota!,
$17,500
Prosecutmg Attorney Salary offtctal , $5,460; salartes
employes, $3,000; extra help,
$2,000;
supphes,
$100;
allowan ces, $2,400 , total,
$12,960

Charles E. Samsel, 16, Pt.
Pleasant, was ctted to
Galhpolis Juvemle Court for
makmg an tmproper turn
followmg a colhslon at 2:55
p m. Tuesday at Ute Junclton of
Rt 35 and Rt 1 near the Stiver
Memortal Brtdge.
Accordtng to the GalliaMetgs Post State Htghway
Patrol, Samsel turned left mto

Peace Group c~nty Plann•ng Com
$578 53 supplies, 13.500. total .
$4,478 53
Detennined Salary, off•c•al. $3,563 82 ,
m1ss1on -

Common

WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
antt-warmovement "willstaym
the streets as long as necessary''
to bnng the Vtetnam war to an
end, the Natwnal Peace Coalttion says
Jerry Gordon of Cleveland, director of the coalttwn, satd end·
the-war acltvtties would start on
the ftrst day of the New Year
wtlh a demonstratiOn m front of
the Whtle House
"We will stay m the streets
as long as necessary to put an
end to th1s VICtous war," Gordon satd at a Tuesday news conference here "We reJect the
suggestton that we stay home
and depend on the 1972 elections to end the kilhng m In·
dochma "
The demonstratton scheduled
for Saturday, he satd, will be
geared to protest the new U S
bombmg attacks on North
Vtetnam He asked that more
than the legal linut of 100 persons turn out for the demonstralton on the stdewalk m front of
the Whtte House
Gordon, wh~td the coali lion
wasplannmgfor amassiveanlt·
wardemonstratton mNew York
Apnl 22, dtsputed President
Ntxon's clatm of slowmg the
war
"Genoctdal terror assaults,"
he satd, "make a shambles of
Prestden!Ntxon's clatm that he
IS wmding down the lndochlna
war ."

Buckeye

Hil ls .

Pl eas Court -

salar1es employes. $6,400 ,
supplies. S200 , attorney fees ,

$500 , lurors fees, S1 .000, wit

ness ees, $500

$200

transcnpts,

lravel. $50 , expenses,

for e1 gn tudge , $300 , 1ury
co mm iSS ion sa lane s, $190 ,

total. $12.903 82
Juvenile
Department

Probat 1o n
Salanes,

employes $4,680 supplies per
d1em support, $250, travel.
$1 , 100 other expenses, $100 ,

... W11h

WIN THE

~~

~

BAKER

BUDGET
SHOP!
fURNITURE
MIODUPOIT, 0,

I

HER FORM Is great, ac·
cording to field hockey ex·
perts who have seen opera
star Anna Molfo in action
The A mer I c a n diva re·
cently was named presi·
dent of the women's Com·
mlttee of Italy's Fie I d
Hockey Federation.

m"ml~~*

COMPUTER TALKS
MENLO PARK, Callf.
(UPI) - Scientists at the
Stanfor~ Research Institute
(SRI) announced Tuesday
they have started to build a
computer thai can converse
with its programmers,
answering quesllons verbally.
Dr. Bertram Raphael,
manager of SRI's artificial
intelligence program, said
the computer wm be able to
speak lis answers as long as
Its questioners
limit
themselves to a l,OIJO.word
vacubulary prograiOmed
into the device, and as long
as they speak clearly In
"pure American male
English."

Lose Ground in
WASHINGTON (UP! )
Vtolent cnmes m the Umted
States mcreased by 10 pet.
durmg the ftrst nme months of
1971, FBI Dtrector J. Edgar
Hoover satd today, but three
Ohw ctltes reported a decrease
m the number of killings
compared wtUt 1970.
Cleveland reported 194
murders or manslaughter
cases January Utrough September thts year, compared
wtth 209 for the correspondmg
penod of 1970.
Toledo had 19 killings thts
year, compared With 23 last
year,
and
Youngstown
reported 13 thts year, compared wtth 18 last year.
Attorney General John N
Mttchell satd the number of
crtmes actually decreased m
the nme month perwd m 52 of
the 156 maJor ctttes wtth
populaltons of over 100,000. For
the same penod in 1970, 23
ctltes recorded a reduction m
senous offenses
Crime m the suburban areas,
mcreased 11 pet overall, the
FBI Umform Crtme Reports
satd Rural crtme mcreaSed 6
pel
IN CHEESE STATE
MADISON, Wts. (UP!)
Pollttcal mavertck John V.
Lmdsay, beanng the banner of
the "Amertca that Washington
has tgnored ," arrtved in
Wtsconsm today to try to wm
Ute votes of one of the nation's
most unpredictable electorates.

MEIGS
THEATRE
Ton1ght Thursday
&amp;

December 29·30
NOT OPEN

Probate Court Salary
off1C1at , $3,563 82 , salanes

INCREASE OK
WASHINGTON (l}PI) - The
Price Commlssion approved a
6.9 per cent price Increase
Tuesday for most products of
Ute Wheeling-Pittsburgh Steel
Co. The increase on steel miU
products, the same percentage
sought by the finn, will Increase the company's gross
revenues 6 per cent, the
colllllllssion satd.

News ... in Briefs

·==~

IN HOSPITAL
Dwtght Logan, Pomeroy, IS a
pallent at the Holzer Medical
Cen!A!r, room 214, Second Ave ,
Galhpohs.

WASHINGTON - THE SEClJIUTIFS and Exchange
Commission has accused the nation's Jrokerage houses of
mismanagement durmg a stock market volume boom - and
later of helping to precipitate a stock market price bust.

;:-:;;«·:-~»::~w.::.:.~.===·

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

$1,500 , 1urors fees, $100 , other

expenses. sao, total. $13,043 82
Clerk of Courts - Salary
offiCial

$6,840

Coroner -

SHOP lHURSDAY AND FRIDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 5:00 P.M.

satanes em

ployes, $7,950 , suppl1es, SJ,OOO ,
total, 117,790
Salary offlc1al ,

$1,890 other expenses, $1,000 ,

" R"

Colorcartoons. Rounder
Search lor MISery, Stooge
Show St•rlut 7 p.m,

WASHINGTON (UP!) President NIXon's decision to
resume heavy air attacks
against North Vietnamese
mllitary targets come as no
,mrprtse to those famlllar with
lntelllgence reports flowing
Into
Washington
from
Southeast Asia in recent
months.
Top Presidential advisers
concluded sorne days ago that
Hanoi was embarked on · a
course jeopardizing the success of Nixon's effort to
remove virtually all American
ground forces from Vietnam by
mld-1972. They contended
some U. S. counteraction was
clearly required.
The White House received in
late October what it considered
conclusive evidence that Hanoi
was preparmg a supreme

Raids Halted
SAIGON (UPI)- Amencan jet fighter-llombers raided North Vtetnam today for a
fifth consecutive day, then ended the most prolouged bombing campatgn north of the
Demilitarized Zone (pMZ) ever ordered by President NIXon.
The U.S. command announced that what 11 called the "limited duratton" bombmg
campaign had been completed and disclosed fpr the ftral t1me that most of tbe ratds were
confmed to the North Vietnamese panhandle below the 20th Parallel, whtch ts 70 mdes
south of Hanot The command satd one plane, an Air Force F4 Phantom Jet, was shot
down on the first day of the operation Sunday and its two crewmen were JntSSmg.
Hanoi Radio had reported only a few hours earlier that three more Amencan planes
had been shot down today, bringing to 14 the number of U.S. jets downed smce Sunday
The boradcaat also S81d "a number of pilots" had been captured.
The U.S. command had no comment on the Hwtoi claims but frequently withholds
news of downed atrcraft until the search and rescue operations for downed crewmen are
completed. The !mal day's raids saw more Comm1Ulist Antiaircraft and mtssile fire and
more Sovtet-bullt MIG fighters rising to challenge the U.S. planes but no damage was
reported to them.
In the gro1Uld war, Ute South Vietnamese military command called off a ftve-week·
old operation agamst Viet Coug sanctuaries m eastern Cambodta. Military sources satd
the 35,000 troops who took part were needed to try to thwart an expected oHenstve by
Communist guerrillas infiltratmg further north from Cambodia into South Vtetnam's
Central Highlands.
U.S. pilots said Ute anltall'craft fire they encountered was light and that no MIG had
yet attacked None of Ute planes flying out of Da Nang atr base has been htt, the atrmen

effort to make the Umted
States pay a far heavter price
than heretofore for tts con·
tinued atr support of South
Vtetnamese, Laottan and
Cambodian forces .
Intelligence sources reported
Uta! the North Vtetnamese
were installing a considerable
number of new Sovlewupplied
anti81Tcraft missile batteries
near the Demilitarized Zone as
well as in Laos, aU of them in a
position to operate agamst
American aircraft flymg
reconnatssance and attack
missions along the Ho Chi Mmh
Trail .
Intelligence sources also reported In late October that the
North Vtetnamese appeared to
have brought back to thetr own
airfields, VIrtually all of thetr
(Continued on page 6)

Modern theatrical
greasepamt was invented m
Gennany about 1670 by opera
smger Ludwtg Liechnener.

Mostly cloudy, wmdy and
colder, chance of showers
changing to snow tomght Lows
tn the mtd 30s Vartable
cloudmess and colder Frtday
Highs Friday tn the 40s

Devoted To The Interest.

VOL. XXIV NO. 182

POM EROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Is Friday Night

IS 500.

contract serv1ces
$4,500 ,
travel S270 other ex pen ses

$30 370

Buddmgs and Grounds Construct1on . $2,500 , mam
tenan ce
and
operat1on ,
salaries employes , S7 920 ,
supplies, $700
co ntract s,
repa1r $7 000 contracts fueL

l1ght and telephone, $7000,
total , 122,120

Protect1on to property and
persons - Shenlf salary of.
flcial , $6 ,720 , salar1e s em
ployes, $19,000 , tall matron.

$3,260, equ1pment. 18,300 ,

Fashion Fabrics

matron supplies. $4,000 off1ce
suppl1es, $400 , other expenses,

$200 , total. $41.880

-

Reg1strat 1on, v 1tat stat1st1cs,
5100 , other health cla1m s, $200 ,
cr.ppled ch1ldren a 1d, $2, 406 ,

total , $2,706

Chanties and Correct1on County home, sa lary otf1C1al,
$3,480 , salanes empl oyes.

I

Home Saving Department
Second Aoor

$9,600 . supplies, $8,500 con

tract serv1ces, fuel and light,

$3,000. other expenses. $200 ,
total , S24,780
Child Wellare Board Sa lanes , employes, $2, 160 ,
other child care se rv1 ces,
$2,400, other expenses, $700 ,

total. $5,260

SERVICE REOOGNIZED - Wayne Chase, left, ended 35 years·of seTVJce to the Meigs
County Agriculture, Stablllzation and Conservation Servtce Wednesday. He IS presented a
wristwatch from co-workers by Orion Roush, newly elected chairman of the Meigs County ASC
Committee. Mr. Chase began as a community committeeman and reporter m 1936. In 1940, he
was elected to the co1Ulty committee and has served as chatrman of the committee smce 1953
Monday evening, he was honored with a dinner at Crow's Steak House by assoctates and
friends and was presented a $-year servtce plaque, by John Hendrtx, distrtct director of thts
area.

News... in Briefs

Children's home - Salary,
off1C1aL $4,992 salanes em

ployes. S7,200. supplies, 16,000.

equ1pment, $200 , contracts,

fuel and lighl. $2,200. con

By United Pre" International

ssoo,

LONDON - BRITAIN SET PLANS IN motion today for a
quick military pillout from Malta, the strategiC Mecttterranean
• Island that has been a key Brllish base for 171 years.

other expenses, $200 , total .
$21 ,292
Sold•er's Rel1et - Salary,
satanes em -

ployes , S6,000 . equ•pment,

grave markers, $550 ; relief
allowances, $3,600 , expenses,
memonal. $.:100 , travel bunals,

WASHINGTON - SUPREME COURT Associate Jushce
John Marshall Harlan, 72, died at George Washington Umverslty
Hospital, just 14 weeks after lll health forced his retirement.
Cause of death was not given, but it was known that he had
been suffering from spinal cancer.

$300 . other expenses. 11.400,
total. $14.350

Publ1c Assistance - Grants,
$.:1 ,678 workhou se , contracf

serv1ce, $1 ,000, total, $5,678

Insurance, Pens1ons, Taxes

- County bu1ldmgs. $4,000 , on
workmen 's
com pensat1on ,
county and d1sabl~ work men 's rel1ef, $4,000, official

Contmgenc1es Unan
t1c1pated emergenc1es, $15,000

Total general fund ap
propnat1ons. 1408,33S 27
DOG KENNEL FUNO

ployes, $1,800, supplies, $800 ,
equipment mileage, $1.250 ,

cla1ms and witness fees ,
S1,500 ,
workmen ' s com pensation and d1sabled work ·

men's relief. $250, total , ~ . 045
MV GAS FUND
Engmeer - Salary off1c1al.
S12.276 , supplies, $300 ,
equipment, bridge Inspection,

$5,000. expenses, $15,000 ,
roads, labor,
$17 5,000 ,
matenals, $100.000, equip
m~nt.
S30.000, contracts,

Reg
Reg
Reg
Reg
Reg
Rev.

4.98 yd . 60" Bonded Wool . .
. ....
4.99 yd. 54" Terry Warp Kn1t .. .. ...
2 39 yd 45" Prmled Corduroy ... .. .
5 49 yd. 60" Bonded Wool . .
.
2 89 yd. 54" Bonded Wool . . . . .
4.98 45" Woven Jacquard Polyester .

Sale 3 79 yd.
Sale 1.99 yd.
Sale 1.49 yd.
Sale 4 19 yd.
Sale 2.09 yd.
Sale 2.79 yd.

Reg. 99c yd. 45 11 Permanent' Press Prmts.- • .. Sale 7'c yd.

Reg 1.99 yd. 4l" Acetate Kn1ls . • . . . . .. Salel9c yd.
Reg 1 69 yd 45" Rochelle Perm Press Print
~
Sale 1.39 yd.
Reg l 49 yd. 60" Sweater Knit . . . . . . . Sale 3.29 yd.
Reg 4.98 yd. 60" Polyester Fabric . .
• Sale 2.99 yd.
Reg 1.99 yd. 45" Velvet Touch Corduroy .... . Sale 1.59 yd.
Reg.139 yd. 45" Ouckhng Print . . . '· . Sale 79c yd.
Reg. 5.49 yd. 54" Woven Polyester . . . . . Sale 3.09 yd.
Reg. 4.99 yd 45" Parade Printed Polyester . . • .
Sale 2 79 yd.

Reg . 4.98 yd. 72" Com posit' Kn1l · . · .• Sale 2 99 yd.
Reg . 1.19 yd 45" Tremoye Perm. Press Prlnh . . .
Sale 69c yd.
Reg. 2.19 yd. 45" Challis Border Prmt . . . • Sale 19c yd.
Rev. 1.79 yd. 54" Knil'n Tuck . . . . . . . · Sale 79c yd.
Reg. 5.49 yd. 72" Mother Knits · . · .. · · · Sale 3.29 yd.
Reg. 2.39 yd. 45" HI Lo Wale Corduroy . . . . Salt U9 yd.
Rev. 1.89 yd. 45" Brushed Denim · · · · •.. Sale 99c yd.
Reg . 3.95 yd. 54" Scotchgard Upholstery Mal.
Sale 3.19 yd.
Reg. 3.89 yd. 54" Upholstery Mlterial · · · . . Salt 2.49 yd.
Reg. 4.99 yd. S4" Upholstery Mllerlal .. ..• Salt 3.99 yd.
Reg. 3.99 yd. 54" Upholstery Mlterlal . · ... Sale 3.19 yd.
Rev. 3.49 54" Upholstery Mllerial · · · . . Sale 2.79 yd.
Reg. 4 49 yd. 54" Upholstery Mllerial ... .. Sale 3.59 yd.

serv1ces, $280,000 ,
land,
.emergency funds , $10,000i
cornpensat1on and damages,

$25 ,000 , public employes
ret.remenl, $18.000. work
men's compensat1on and
disabled workmen 's rel1ef.

prov1ded by special lev1es
mcludmg $33,548 OS for the care
of

tuberculosts and the
agamst that d1sease,

progr~m

and 1&lt;4.746 tq operate the
Me1g5 County R&lt;lardatlon
Board

o

r

u

r

0

*:. :=:::::::

7

-

cham, and a department store,
together with a large super·
market. The tdentlties of the
other tenants were not
revealed, but tl was stated that
announcements would shortly
be made of these. The tmtial
cham, a major shoe store stages of construction will

Year-end Report

Good by Sheriff

The fiTS! major tenant will be
the G. C. Murphy Company,
who wtll occupy a 50,000 square
Aller 362 days of 1971, trafftc
foot store in the center. G C.
acctdents
mvesttgated by
Murphy ts one of Ute nabon's
largest and most widely known Metgs County Shertff Robert C
vartety chams and already has Hartenbach's Dept. were 60
locabons in both Galllpolts and more than the number Jogged
Point Pleasant. The new store tn 1970. There were two
WOOSTER, Ohto (UP!) - will dwarf all extstmg factliltes fatalihes, a record tn ·
State Sen. James K. Leedy, R· in the area and is expected to frequently dupltcated
Wooster, announced today he
Satd the shenff:
had restgned from the Ohio
"Wtth JUSt three days
Senate because the annual
remaming m 1971, I would
sessions of the General
remmd the dnvers of our
county to be alert and dnve
Assembly took up too much
time.
carefully so that the remainder
of the year wtll be remembered
"After 12 stratght months of ,.
0
commuting to Columbus I must ~ '
"
as one of the best durmg my
dectde if I am being fair to my
ltme as chtef Jaw enforcement
legal clients who have conCOLUMBUS (UP!) - U S offtcer of the county
"Over the years, we have
fldence m me and my famtly," DtstrtctCourtJudge Carl Rubm
satd Leedy, 47, who will Wednesday ordered str1kmg averaged as htgh as 10
practice law full time. "I've coal miners m five southern
been able to spend very little Ohio counties to go back to
time wtth my fanuly
work.
"If you are gomg to be a fullMembers of Local 1604 of the
time legislator, you have to be United Mine Workers Umon,
there full time," said Leedy. employed by Central Ohto Coal
"And I can't gtve up a law Co. of Canton, walked off thetr
practice which took 17 or 18 JObs Dee. 5, one month afrer
BenJamm F. Turner, 415
years to butld.
a new contract was Signed end- Page St., Mtddleport, former
"The Ohio ConstitutiOn was mg a four-month nattonwide
Metgs County representative to
not written for annual strtke.
Ohto's General Assembly and a
sesstons," said Leedy. "It's not .__'l'heuntonclaimeddifferences
retired railroad inspector, has
good for the state."
\vli!Cthe company over job
been presented a 55-year
'i..eedy represents Ute 19th classifications establishing pay
emblem m recogmtion of 55
Senate District which includes rates are a national problem
years continuous membership
the counties of Wayne, Medina, and could not bti settled by loc- m the Umted Transportation
Holmes, Ashland, Coshocton a1 arbitration. Rubm, however, Umon and a predecessor unit
and the western half of ruled the new contract provtdes thereof
Tuscarawas.
for compulsory and bmding ar·
In an accompanymg Jetter
Leedy's successor will be bltration and does apply to Ute stgned by Charles Luna,
selected
by
Senate dispute.
prestdent, and John H
RepubUcans from nominees He ruled the mtners cannot Shepherd, prestdent, it ts
submitted by the 19th District claim their problem ts national stated:
County GOP chairmen. One In scope because no other union
"We know that you must
possible successor could be locals are on strike.
have a deep feeltng of
former State Representative Mines closed by the wtldcat saltsfactton m knowmg that
Ralph Flsber of Wooster who strike are in Muskmgum, your
steadfast
loyalty
served in Ute House for many Noble, Guernsey, Morgan and throughout the years has
years.
Perry counttes.
,.,.~"'""'&lt;-"•""''
",,.,,
,.,,.....
__.,."....
;i!'l$""'""
~
.......,.;.,.............;o:•:•.•:•:•:•
...•....•.
•.·,·.-.·:o
--....-.;., •• :o= .....:.:.:c:o::: ::~q: ~
~··
............ .
·:··· ·.·.·

Lawmakipg

total . 117,135
Health and Welfare -

bonds, 12.000 . public employes
retirement. $18,000 . total.
$28,000

~_,

Jbb,

Womens Coat Sale
Girls Coat Sale
Save Now in Our Second Floor Apparel , Dept.

· Mens and Boys
Coat and Jacket Sale
Save Now in Our 1st Floor

Mens·Bors

Dept.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

RAVENNA, OHIO - CHARGES HAVE been offtctally
dropped against 20 of the 25 persons Indicted m the Kent State
disturbances in May of 1970 which resulted m the killing of four
students by National Guard troops.
Only five of the 25 persons indicted faced court actton, three
were convicted and two acquitted on directed verdicts. The
annoUncement was made by County Clerk of Courts Mrs. Lucy S.
DeLeone. The tbree persons convicted are still aw&amp;ting sen-

tencing.
WASHINGTON- COMPTROLLER GENERAL Elmer B.
Staats ruled Wednesday Interior Secretary Rogers C. B. Morton
illegally appointed to a coal safely advisory board a majority of
lndividuala who had an economic Interest m mining.
swita, in a letter to Rep. Ken Hechler, O.W. Va., indicated
Ute appointments to the Anthracite Coal Advisory Committee did
not cOliform with the 1969 federal coal mine bealth and safety act.
The committee was designed to belp the lntertor Department
carry out the law.

900 Packages to

POWs Refused
WASHINGTON (UPIJ Pentagon spokesmen say they
do not know why North Vtetnam refused to accept !100 gtfl
packages
destmed
for
Amertcan prisoners of war.
The Defense Department
revealed Wednesday that the
packages had been rejected
d~plte the fact North VIetnam
some time ago said they would
be accepted. But spkesman
Jerry W. Frtedhetm satd the
packages were refused before
Ute new U. S. bombing attacks
agamst the north began last
weekend
"This ts the ftrst time .. any
substantial
number of
packages for con!trmed
pnsoners have been returned,"
Frtedbeim satd. "On a few
previous occasions Hanoi
refused so01e packages
clatming- usually incorrectly
- that Utey were overweight."

Offices Closing
On January First

Offices of the county courtCOWMBUS - THE ST•.'~E Fire Marshal's office ruled
house,
the mayor's office and
today the fire on the ore carrier Roger Blough which· claimed 1
four llveJ was started accidentally durin_g work at Its dock In the wa!A!r department office in
Lorain on June~. 1971. "Investigators concurred that the cause Middleport will be closed all
day Friday due to the holiday
of Ute fire wu fuel oil sprayed on an electric ligbt bulb," said
weekend. Closmg 1S in ac·
state Fire Marshal Robert E. Lynch.
cordance wtth Ohio law
"EihaUStlve laboratory tests corroborated the cause and the
Meigs Audttor Gordon
)l(llnt of origin", he said. ''It was during the final stages of con- Caldwell satd the public has
struction of the Ropr Blough that the fire OCClln:ed In the engine unlU Jan. 20, rather than Jan.
\.room, rwultlng In eztenaiye damage and loss of four lives."
10, lo purchase do~ and kennel
licenses at his offtce.
ROTARYTONIGHT
.
DEPUTYNAMED
The Middleport-Pomeroy
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Rotary Club will meet at 6 luseph C. Houston, Columbus
LOCAL TEMPS
tonight for their regular city finance director, was
The temperature m downmeetb1g, lnatead of on Friday, named Wednesday as deputy
town
Pomeroy at 11 a m.
at Middleport's
Heath dU"ector for management and
Methodlat Church.
budget in the Ohio Department Thursday was 56 degrees under
cloudy sktes
of Natural Resources
\

TEN CENTS

draw customers from a wtde
area of Southern Ohto and the
netghbormg counties of West
Vtrgmta .
OUter tenants in the mttlal
stages of development wtll
mclude a maJOr drugstore

Gives Up

expenses, $100 , totaL $12,940
Agnculture - Grants, fa1r
board, $2,800 , state extension
fund , $11,335 , soli can
servatlon , $900 , ap1ary 1n
spe ct1on
$200 ,
ca ttl e,
pr eve nt1on d 1sea se, $1.000 ,

off1c1al, $2,100

;

Announcement was made
today of a maJor shoppmg
center development for the
Galhpohs , Ohw - Pomt
Pleasant, W. Va. area.
The shoppmg center, to be
known as Silver Bndge Plaza,
will be loca IA!d upon a 20 acre
tract of land at Kanauga, at the
off ramp of the Stiver Brtdge
connecting West Vtrgtma and
Ohto and at the mtersection of
U. S. Route 35 and Ohio Route

Sen. Leedy

$3,860 supplies $2,500 , other

tracts, sen11ce phys1c1an.

-;

PHONE 992·2156

Silver Bridge Plaza To
Locate On Kanauga Site

The annual New Year's
Ball of the Po10eroy
Fire10en's Association wm
be held beginning at 9 p. m.
Friday at the former
Pomeroy Junior High School
auditorium with "The
Mavericks" providing music
for dancing.
Firemen have been
preparing the vacant Junior
high building for the dance
wblch will conclude at 2 a.m.
Saturday. Members of the
decorating CODIDlittee will
meet at the building at 7
to
complete
tonight
decorations.

Elections Board of
E lechon s, 9a lane s off1c1als,
$5 ,000 , sa lar1es employes ,

su pplies.

THURSDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1971

For New Yea(s Eve

$6,960 . supplies, 1600. other
fees and extra help. S300 , total ,
114,047 94
$14,500

Of The Meigs·MtUOn Area

We Will Close Friday at 5 P.M.

COunty and Mun1c1pal Courts
- County court salary offiCial,
$6 ,187 94 ; salaries employes.

The U.S. COll1llll!lld has had little to say about the ratds other than that they have
been dU"ected agamst military targets and supply bases along the Ho Chi Mmh Trail,
over whtch the Communists ship ammurutwn, troops and war matertal into South
Vtetnam, Laos and Cambodia.
Bestdes the report of the end of the operatwn m eastern Cambodia, commuruques
from Phnom Penb reported more than 24 hours of "!terce ftghtmg " at the naval base of
Peam Chhkork, 42 miles northwest of the capital
"Highway 15 ts cut because of the fightmg ," satd Il. Col. Am. Rong, the offtctal
Cambodian military spokesman. Field offtcers at Neak Luong near the area of the
fightmg said reinforcements trymg to reach a strmg of four besieged villages nearby
were pmned down 21'.! mtles outstde Prey Veng.

Weather

. ··:··· ....;.·. ·:-..·.·:·..·.·.·.
Firemen's Ball

total, $2,890

told UP! correspondent Stewart Kellerman Hanoi RadiO said three .aircraft were
downed today over Nghe An ProVInce man area 125 miles south of Hanot and that they
brought to 14 Ute number of US jets downed smce the bombing campaign began Sunday.
Hanot Radto satd tis forces had "captured a number of pilots" but did not say exactly
how many m shootmg down the three planes
The North Vtelnamese government also ordered the natwn's 17 mdhon people "on
Constant alert" because of the American atr ratds, the longest m duratton smce former
Prestdent Lyndon B Johnson halted bombmg north of the Demilttartzed Zone IDMZ )
Nov. I, 1968.
North Vtetnam satd 47 ctviltans were ktlled by U.S atr attacks Sunday aod Monday
alone

Now You Know

·.·

m1ss1oners approprtated funds

Candrce Bergen

Air Attacks
-P redictable

'

employes , $7,800. supplies,

$3,600 , other expense. $1,000,
Bridges and Culverts - labor.
$20.000 , malenals . $25,000 ,
contracts, pro1ects, S30,000 ,
total. $745.176
In addition . the com.

Fnday &amp; Saturday
Dec. 31, Jan. 1, 1972
Gelling Straight
!Technlcolorl
Elliott Gould, "

DANCE TONIGHT
A dance w1U be held from
8 30 to II :30 p m. tonight at the
Pomeroy American Legwn
Home wtth mustc by Foxx.
Admission IS 75 cents.

a guardrail. There was minor
damage to t~e car and
guardrail.
A deer was killed in an acCident at 4:20 p.m. on Rt. 7,
three tenths of a mlle north elf
Rt. 681. The ammal ran into the
path of a car operated by
Dallas Lee Beasley, 28, Buf·
falo. There was minor damage
to Beasley's auto.

(Continued from page 1)
Kent, dead m his bed late Cllrlstmas Eve. Schenider, who had
allegedly been beaten by attendants last year, testified before a
speCial grand jury investigating conditions at the hospital earlier
thts year. Three attendants were mdlcted on cltarges of assault
for the alleged beating.

Recorder - Salary, off 1C 1al ,
$6,480 salanes employes ,

Law Enforcers

Ute path of an auto operated by
Wllliam ll. Phelps, 56, Pt.
Pleasant. William M. Phillips,
73, a passenger in the Phelps
auto, suffered minor Injuries.
There was moderate damage
to both cars.
A dog was blamed for an
accident at 1:43 p.m. Tuesday
on Meigs County Rd. 19 onetenUt of a mlle weat of Rt. 33.
The patrol reported Tiiomas E.
Serey, 17, Weal Chester, Ohto,
swerved h1s car to miss the dog
whtch ran mto the roadway,
lost control, and hts car struck

total S6 130

Aud1tor clerk h1re and
supplies, $.:145 , salanes. em -

PRlCES ARE RIGHT!

1 r l!

Bureau o f tn spect1on Exam1nahons, county off1ces,
15

Crime Battles

Blood
RUTLAND

that could lead only to "bloody
the
repriSals" agai,nst
remainmg U S forces tn
Vtetnam. Thirtyo()ne HObse of
Representatives members sent
Nixon a statement saying the
bombing would only serve to
contmue death imd destruction
m SouUteast Alta.
The Penta!JII'!;atd again' the
raids were bemg carried out m
response to North VIetnamese
VIO)abons of understanding~~
which Jed to Ute suspenston of
full-6Cale bombmg of Ute north
Nov. I, 1968 It satd the 811'
attacks would be of limited
duration .
"We have responded m a
limited way for a limited time
With the geography limited and
the targets limited," satd
Defense Department spokesman Jerry W. Friedheim.

1972 Budget
•

Judge Orders
Miners Back
Coal p:ls

fatahttes; m 1970 there were
none, and only two thts year
caused by motor vehicles "
The shertff credtled the
fewer fatahties to the younger
generatiOn's "great respect
and courtesy shown to Ute law
enforcement offtcers of the
county and to the laws of
Oh10 "

Agam thts year, as tn the
past, the sheriff's department
suggests that anyone who feels
he would requtre transportatiOn home on New Year's
Eve call the depa•tment whtch
wtll see that the person wtll be
taken home safely, and m
domg so, "perhaps make the
year of 1971 sbll a better year."

Recognition Accorded
Ben Turner's Service

-·--m

conltlbuted so much to the
growth of our orgamzatton and
the well bemg of our fellow
members.
"The htgher rates of pay and
be Iter workmg condtltons
enJoyed by our members would
not have been posstble wtthout
the constant support of
members hke you "
Turner has been a member
of Kanawha Star Lodge,
Brotherhood of Ratlroad
Trainmen for 55 years and ts
still a member. He was em·
played as a conductor by the
New York Central Railroad
and was a conductor and later
an inspector. He served In the
95th, 9jUt and 97th General
Assemblies.
.•. ·.-:

• :§"

w·· m

embrace m excess of 100,000
square feet of retatl store
spaces, and further expansion
up to a total m excess of 200,000
square feet ts anticipated
within the near future. Upon
completion, the center will
provide parktng for over 1500
automobiles
The Galltpolts-Potnl
Pleasant w:a has been the
subject of much mterest in
recent tWljlths because of the
new electric power plant bemg
built at Cheshire nearby, and
the associated coal mine
employment recently announced to supply coal for the
power plant. Employment for
these major employers has
been estimated as being m
excess of 5,000 wtthln a very
short time. These developments have spurred other
growUt m the area, and the new
shoppmg center development
IS believed to be destgned to
meet the needs of such growth.
Announcement of the
shopping center development
was made by Mr. J . J. Blazer,
Prestdent of Silver Brtdge
Regtonal Shopping Plaza, Inc.,
who will be the owner of the
new development. Mr Blazer
IS also widely known m the
areas as head of Blazer Con.
struction Company, a major
construction firm with tts of.
!tees m Wheelersburg, Ohio,
and Is also active in development of a new houstng
development at AddiSOn, Ohio,
three mtles from the shopping
center st!A!, known as Tara.
Archttects for the new
development is the firm of
Donald L. Moses and
Associates, of Charleston, W.
Va. LeaSing agent and consultant will be Eugene F.
Imbrogno, Real Estare Con·
sultan!, of Montgomery, W Va.
SCOUTS INVITED
RACINE - Scoutmaster
Roger Theiss of Boy Scout
Troop 241 invi~ all boys
between the ages of 11 and 16 of
Ractne, Letart and Port·
land areas wHo are in!A!rested
In becoming Boy Scouts to
attend a meeting Monday night
at 7 30 at the Racine American
Legton Hall.

•

sa~ ~::::::::=:::::=~:::::::::::::::::::=:::::::::::::::::--:::::::::..-.::~8W

Nixon Silent oli. Bombing Escalation
KEY BISCAYNE, Fla.
(UPI) - The Florida White
House eoncedea that President
Nixon ordered the lntenaified
bombing of North VIetnam, but
the President himself maintains strict silence on the
subject.
. When Pres• Secretary
Ralald L. lJegler was asked
whether the President per·
sonllly ordered the bombing,
he replied "I'm not gQing to
speak to the obvlou."
Nlson k~t In touch 1\'llh
developments at his Btscayne
Bay villa here and prepared to
head hack :o Washb ~ton later
today or Friday to ring in the

new year wtth his family.
Nlson and his close ones were
conscious that 1972 -'an elec·
- tion year - will be busy.
The President was in a sunny
mood as he wound up t~ days
of summit talks with West
German Chancellor Willy
Brandt Wednellday. On Ute
lawn outslde Nixon's white
atucco residence, Brandt
auded Ute same contentment
with their Intensive conversatlons
Relations are Excellent
"!can say without qualifieslion that the state of German.
American relattons are excel·
lent at this time," Ntxon satd

His remarks followed a
communique that stressed
Nixon's promise not to make
any private deals with the
Soviet Union on troop cuts tn
Europe when he travels to
MOSC&lt;JW in May.
"The President reaffirmed
that n() decisions affectmg the
Atlantic alliance will be taken
wtthout full consultation with
the allies," the joint statement
satd. Nixon also pledged
American commitments m Europe wtll rPtllam status quo and
there will be no reduction of
troops stationed in Europe.
Ntxon also brought up the
Southeast Astan stluation m

discussinuns with Brandt, according to West German
sources. But it was not mentioned in the comm1Ulique.
One element of surprise was
Ntxon 's announcement that
Davtd M. Kennedy would
become a Cabinet-level ambassador to NATO in an apparent move to bolster the U.s.
trade position in Europe.
Rides Aroaad lllaJUI
After the Farewella, Nixon
lroke awayfromhls compound
for a ride around the tropt.cal
island With his close friend,
Charles G. "Bebe" Rebozo.
Thev also went for a cruise on
B~~cayne Bay.

"Nixon plaimed to remain in
Washington over the holiday
weekend when he WUI say
farewell to his wife Pat, who
departs on wt African swing on
New Year's Day.
Sunday evening at 9:30p.m.
the President wlii be inter·
vlewedliveforone how' on CBS
Television. He Ill likely w be
askeJ his election plans,
summitry and bombing
policies In Southeast Alia.
He is expected to fly to San
Clemente, Call!. Monday to
prepare for art important
meeting with Japanese Prime
Minister Eisaku Sato Jan. &amp;-7.
~.

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