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•

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;-"•""''
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·:··· ·.·.·

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.
~.

�J

J

••
3- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0,, Dec. 30,1971

.

2- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Dec :10, 1971

~·-------t

Ashbrook. Goes to Grassroots
By United Press International
, . Although he IS w1dety regardi ed among hiS 1deolog1cat sup,llDflers as a leading pohllcal
,spokesman of the Amencan
nght, Rep John M Ashbrook
,IS rarely seen on the House
floor defendmg the conserva-~ve cause
He IS the rankmg Republican on the House Internal Secunty Committee and second-

ranked on the House Education
and Labor Committee, but he
seldom IS embrmled m legiSlative battles.
And only infrequently does he
Jmrihis conservallve colleagues
on the floor m denouncmg excessive federal spendmg or control of the economy, even though
these are the very issues on
wh1ch he w1ll campaign against
Pres1dentNuconnextyear m the

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

Hematocrit Checks
Presence of Anemia
II\ L:m renee Lamb. M.D.
Dear Dr Lamb- ! recently
"en! to g1ve a pmt of blood
at a local hosp1tal but was
told I "ould be unable to
g1ve because nw hematocnt
\l as too low It . \\as 39 and
then maHmum acceptable
f1gm e \\ as 41 Just what does
tilts mean " What 1s the hem·
atocnt • 1, 1t senous for 11
to be lo\\ er tha n normal'
Does tt stgml\ a n y t h 1n g
\\ l'o ng '

Dear Readfr- The hemc: toCIIt 1s one way of meas
ut mg ho" ma n) red blood
celb \Oll have or as a check
tm the p1 esence of anemia.
The blood IS composed of
1\u td 1pI as m a I w1th cells
suspended m tt Most of the
•·ells are the red blood cells
to It ans pot t o xygen The
hema tocnt IS the per cent of
the blood vol ume that IS
ma de up of the cells A tube
of blood IS centnfuged and
the red cells settle to the
bottom The volume m per
cent of the red blood cells IS
read off the tube Usually
abo ut 47 per cent of the
bl0od ;olume m men and a
ltttle less m \\omen IS from
the cells
~ val ue that IS too low
11 ould suggest the presence
of an ane mia and would war
ta nt further testmg Or you
could have accumulated ex
cess water. wh1ch seems un·
!1kely If you have some
bleedmg, such as from hem·
orrho1ds or an ulcer 11 could
cause th1s It does deserve
cl)eck ing to see tf the firSt
readmg was correct or not
and. 1! 11 ts, add1honal stud·
1es to fmd out what the prob·
l ~m really IS.

Dear Dr. Lamb--! have
had an anem1a problem for
yea rs I would hke to have
your opm10n of the treat
ment of anemia (not perm·
CIOUS)

I have been gettmg crude
l1ver shots for over 15 years
There IS a difference of
epmton whether I am get·
tmg any 1ron m thiS treat·
ment or whether I get uon
m the B-12 if taken I have
tned tro n p1lls off and on
and they make me consh·
pate d and 1ll I am older
than 70 and qmte act1ve I
have always felt I needed
crude hver shots, that I felt
better havmg them
Dear Reader- If you are
gettmg hver shots or B-12
shots for an anem1a, you are
bemg treated for permc1ous
anem1a (one mamfestahon
of B·l2 def1c1ency ) That
would be hkely m your age
group If you don't have per·
mcwus anemta , there 1s httle
1eason for you to be gettmg
crude hver shots or B·12
shots
Most doctors prefer thetr
pattents to take B-12 shots
as opposed to crude liver because there are some people
who become mtolerant to the
crude liver shots The B·12
m the l1ver IS what makes 11
work
There should be very hltle
reason for you to need 1ron
unless you have a poor diet
Women after the menopause
need no more 1ron than men
and that tsn't very much
unless they are bleed1ng
from some I o c a !lo n You
mtght revtew your d1et and
see 1! you. a~e .getting enough
foods that ~ontam iron
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN l

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~
~

~
~

· Generation Rap

~

'

By Helen and Sue Bottel
:•'• tGOT A PROBLEM? Or a subject lor discussion, two
:}:eneration style? Direct your questions to eltber Sue or Helen
'""uel -or both, in care of Ibis newspaper, II you want a com·
ltinat10o mother-daughter answer.)
OUR READERS ANSWER THE MAIL
Oear Helen and Sue :
In reply to the letter from "Wondering" who asked how guys
iell about datmg unwed mothers, I can only speak lor myself, but
i say - 11 makes no difference.
: I dated an unwed mother for over a year She never tried to
)!ide the facts , and I never blamed her. My case was a littie
llifferent m that I'm sterile The fact that she already had a child
inade her even more attractive tome, as I want desperately to be
father. However, there are thousands of men like me - and I'd
~ess that many would feel as I do. So the fact that a girl has a
~hild 1s not much of a deterrent to a good marriage (unless the
guy ,s~ prude, m whtch case she wouldn't want hun anyway) .
Our romance ' It ended - for other reasons. -D. D.
Dear Rap
Thts IS to "Wondermg " I don't know whether you kept your
baby or not or whether you had an abortion, rut I had to write and
tell you things will be better soon.
Last year I went through your same doubts. I gave my baby
up for adoption My folks wanted me to have an abortion and•
when I refused, they felt I'd rumed my life. They wanted to keep
everythtng secret!
When I gave my baby away, I thought my life had ended. I
was wrong . Soon after, I started datmg agam, and I learned to
recogmze the fellows who would understand and those who
couldn't There are plenty of both !
ThiS year I met and marned the most wonderful guy in the
world He knows all about my past and understands.
I have several friends who e1ther bad abortions or babies
they gave up. They all agree with me when I say that if a man IS
worth havmg, to date or marry, he will not let the past keep hlm
a10ay - SURE

a

'

Dear Rap
You showed a remarkable amount of conunon sense In your
answers to "Doubtful" who got fleeced by a phony ''witch." But
you also d1splayed a lack of knowledge of certain facts.
"Doubtful's" boy fnend was obviously not influenced by the
acllons of the ''Wicca," as She mistakenly termed some
charlatan who fleeced her .
You see, today's S&lt;K:alled Witches are a bunch of kooks who
are supposed to go around casting "evil spells " This is far from
the actual truth.
"W1cca " (meamng "Wise one ") can only be correctly apphed to someone who follows a nature-and-fertility religllln
which dates back,to Paleobthic tunes. It IS a realistic, valid
religion that places great emphasis on love and trust; It has
nothing ;o do with worshippmg the deVIl or any sort of similar
nonaenae.
True, Its followers do beheve they can work maJllc through
the use of natural (not "super" natural) forces, just as Otrlstianll
believe they can obtain miracles through prayer.
.... It would be mterestlng to see how different would be the'
reaction, If "Doubtful" had "gone to churcll" to get her guy back.
U witchcraft is ''supen!;Uon" then certainly sols religion.
In ~!Jon, It iaal(ainst the rules of this ''wicca" rellgton to
ICcepl money for acbleving desired effects, so no witch ever
vlctlrnllle8 anyone financially.
I hope thlJ note Ills helped mfonn you of what Witchcraft
reaDy is uoppollllf to popular miSCODceptlons.- WISE ONE
Dear Wile One: .. Not really, but thanb for v .r interesting letter. - RAP

New Hampshire and Flor1da primarieS.
Ashbrook, at 43 years of age
a six-term veteran of the House,
obviously relishes the political
arena outside Congress, ftring
theenthuSiasmofconservatives
at grassroots rallies and helpmg orgamze them for political
campaigns.
H1s name is a household word
among readers of such conservative journals as National ReVIew and Human Events, and
among members of Young
Americans lor Freedom and its
adult
counterpart,
the
American Conservative Umon,
which he helped found m 1964.
Alawyer and weekly newspaper publisher m his native
Johnstown, Ohio, Ashbrook was
graduated from Harvard Uruverslty and Ohio State UmverSIIy Law School. Elected to the
House in 1960, he was one of
the leaders of the movement to
giVe Sen. Barry M. Goldwater
of AriZona theGOPpres1dential
nomination in 1964.
Mter Goldwater was swamped m the Johnson electorallandshde that year, Ashbrook helped orgamze the ACU, a Wash·
mgton-based group which supports conservative candidates
for Congress. Ashbrook was its
cha1rman from 1966 until he
stepped down earlier thiS year .
Mter servmg as national
of
Young
eha1rman
Republicans m the early 1950s,
Ashbrook won election to the
Ohio General Assembly m 1956,

Pallbearers for
Service Listed

Social
Calendar

where he served until he went
to Congress in 1960.
In 1958 he was named one of
THURSBAY
the 15 outstandi/lg young ll)en in
JOB'S DAUGHTERS, Bethel
American politics and was cho62,
semi-annual Installation
sen one of "the most respected" conservative leaders m a Thursday, 7:30 p.m. Pomeroy
Masontc Temple. Public innational poll m 1970.
Although he enjoys the friend- . vited. Milisa Rizer to be inship of both Senate and House stalled as honored queen.
CONFESSIONS, Sacred
conservatives, Ashbrook expects little support from Heart Catholic Church, 7 to 8 p.
congressional colleagues in his m. Thursday; Friday, llam. to
primary challenge to Nixon's noon, 3:30 p. m. to 4:30 p. m.
foreign and domestic policies.
FRIDAY
But, according to those close
NEW YEAR'S Eve dance
to Ashbrook, he believes he can
and buffet lunch, Drew Websurrunon significant support lor
ster Post 39, American Legion
his rightwing insurgency from
Home, Pomeroy, 9 p.m., lor
the conservative grassroots
members and guests. Organ
groups he has long cbampioned.
muSic by Armand Turley.
ANNUAL Tri.County New
Timothy Bishop
Year's Eve teen ball, Friday,
8·30 p.m . to 12:30 a.m. at
Died Wednesday Wahama High School
auditorium with Jays em·
Timothy B1shop of 1131 ceeing and playing lop 100
Hamson Ave., Columbus, a records of 1971. Informal, open
former Pomeroy res1dent, died to public . Sponsored by
Wednesday morning at Doc- Wahama High School senior
tor's Hospital
class. Dress, informal, $1
He IS survived by hiS wile, person.
Laura, a son, George, and a
NEW YEAR'S Eve services
daughter, Mrs. L H. (Mary) at Rutland Church of Chri.!t
Casto, both of Columbus, three With social hour beginning at 9
grandchildren, and one great- p.m. followed by program and
grandchild. Funeral serv1ces cantilellght services. Public
w1ll be held Friday at 3:30p.m. invited.
at the Shaw and Davis Funeral
Home, West Second Ave. ,
MONDAY
Columbus.
THEODORUS COUNCIL 17,
WEBB SIGNED
Daughters of Amertca, 7:30
PHOENIX, Anz. (UPI)--Jelf Monday night at the IOOF ball.
Webb, a 6-loot, 4-mch guard Members to take Items to the
who played college ball at meeting lor a Silent auction.
Kansas State, • was signed Cbarter will be draped for Mrs.
Wednesday by the Phoenix Suns Ed1th Batey, a charter
of the National Basketball member
AssOCI&amp; liOn.
MEIGS CHAPTER: Order of
Webb was placed on wa1vers DeMolay , regular meetmg,
by the Milwaukee Bucks earher 7-30 p. m. Monday, M1ddleport
thiS year .
Masonic Temple.
RUTLAND GARDEN Club
PLAYERS FARMED OUT
w1ll present radio program,
PITISBURGH (UP!) --Goa- " B~rds" by Mrs Paul Wmn,
lie Jun Rutherford and rookie Mrs. Jonah Cotterill, 9 a. m
defenseman Joe Norts were Monday, WMPO.
farmed out by the Pittsburgh
Pengums Wednesday to thetr
TUESDAY
Hershey, Pa.,larm club.
MIDDLEPORT Masomc
Rutherford had a 3.37 goals- Lodge 363, F&amp;AM regular
against average m 10 games meeting, 7:30p ni. Tuesday at
while Noris had two goals and temple .
·
five assists tn 35 games.

Funeral serv1ces for Mrs
John Batey were held on Dec .
19 at the Rawhngs Coats
Funeral Home. The Rev.
Stanton Smith officiated at the
serv1ces and bur1al was m the
Rock Sprmgs Cemetery
Pallbearers were Sidney
Spencer , Leroy E1chmger,
Roger Letfhe1t, John Weeks,
Alva W1ll and Paul Frick.
Out-of-town relatives here
were Mr. and Mrs. John Weeks
and family, Reynoldsburg, Mr
and Mrs. Edward Mcintosh, GAME TIMES
NEW YORK (UP!)-The
Dayton; Mrs. Harry DaviS,
Mrs
Herbert Hamilton, Dallas-San Francisco game at
Canton ; Mr. and Mrs. Don Dallas will begm at 1.30 p.m.
Davis and Mr. and Mrs. John EST Sunday and the MiamiFr1el and family, LouiSville, Baltimore at Miarm game Will
Oh1o Mrs. Batey was the start at 4-30 p.m. EST, 11 was
oldest memher of the En- announced Wednesday by Pete
terprise United MethodiSt Rozelle, commiSSIOner of the
Natwnal Football League.
Church.

WIN AT BRIDGE

Karn Wins in '71 Rematch

Sunday School
Cliristmas
Pariy. Enjoyed
LETART FALLS - The
Letart Falls United Brethren
Sunday School held Its annual
ChriStmas party at the Shrine
Club House at Racine Tuesday
night
A program consisting of
songs, poems , scripture
readings and prayer was given
followed by a film, Christmas
Bells, by the pastor, Rev.
Robert Shook.
A gift exchange and refreshments of sandwiches, pie and
coffee were served to Rev.
Robert Shook, children Lucy,
Gerry and Cindy; Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Noms, Mr. and Mrs.
Marshall Adams and son,
Raymond, Mr. and Mrs. Erwin
Gloeckner, Danny Badgely,
Mr and Mrs. Herbert Roush
and Roger, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
Norris, Mrs. Edward Miller,
Jeff Miller, Iva Orr, General
Hall, Mrs. Freda Evans, Mrs.
Bernice Shook, Mrs. Larry
O'Brien, children Jimmy,
Linda and Carol; Dennis
Manuel and two children, and
Mrs. Eula Bracken.

~------------------ -- ---------------------,

l Voice along Broadway l
I

-

BY JACK O'BRIAN
LONELINESS OF CHRISTMAS
LONG GONE
NEW YORK (KFS) - We've spent
Christmases in many places _ Rome, Buffalo,
the Bahamas, elsewhere, all memorable; and
none more beautifully touching and homespun
than m big old, cynical, skeptical, cruel, noisy,
nasty, menacing Manhattan. We remember our
early New York ctmstmas, all alone in
Manhattan, just a few months out of exotic
Buffalo an'd sllenUy yearning to be back, if just
for that Christmas Eve ... We saw a friend off
for Buffalo the mght before Christmas, and as
we walked Jack Grood through Grand Central
Station to the Midmght Flyer, a chorus of about
50 redcaps was singing Cbrlsunas carols.
We saw Jack off and wandered back to the
mam rotunda of Grand Central and harkened to
the fine, big voices of the black men whose un1on
was solidly Negro because they couldn't get mto
ther railroad umons and 11 was the best dignified
employment they could wangle. They were
sohdly decent men, uplifted even more by their
beauttful hymns and carols as they lifted their
own spirits and those of the last small crowd
dashing to take the trains home for the biggest
hohday of all. All except this lonely lad, very
young, happy to be a Big Town newspaperman
at last, not yel here long enough to have the sort
of friends who would mvtte him to a midnight
celebration . So we aurally drank m the
stentorian beauty of the redcaps' carols.
It was the year before the war. '!11mgs
weren't bad We were grateful to have the job in
New York, our amb1tion smce a teenager. And
there we stood, alone, of a sudden conscious that
tears were on our cheeks, tears of appreciation
for thiS lovely melodic reminder of the Holy
N1ght, and of course of self-pity lor ourself. So
we took ourself away from that doleful delight,
walked to w. 5:/nd Sl to try and drown our
masochism m a little real jazz, and wound up
having a semi-happy time talking to Joe
Helbock at his jazz emporium and almost
!orgettmg our certainly qwckly tranSient
travail.
It never happened agam Sometimes we
WISh 11 had. It had been a bittersweet rmdnight,
Redcaps smgmg the counterpoint to our
loneliness and somehow it became a warm
distant memory as the years toddled by, at last
among friends.
.
The years and the loneliness and even the
memory of that Christmas Eve softened and
often was forgotten. Until one Christmas Eve
many years later when we asked a friend
named How ani Epstein where he was gomg for
Chnstmas Eve. Howard sa1d he badn't thought
of 1t He hked the holiday even though he was
Jew1sh, and 1t wasn't qwte h1s Btg Day
Yes, he would be delighted to come to our
apartment. Then we met another couple, Jack
Pearl of "Vas You Rfe Sharlie" fame, and his
Wmme, Jac~ Jew~l..,Wmnie not, and invited
them to stop by !o~ sbme Cbmtmas grog. And
Edith Brady, half.Jewish (her mother) and
Imh (her father, professor of romance
languages at the U. of V1enna where he met
Ed1th's mother, a fe1sty, fast-Witted matrtarch
who chain-smoked c1garets and cheated slightly
at gin rummy). Ed1th would come, and bring
her boy friend, now her husband, Charhe
Mosconi, who w1th brother Louis were a great
star-dancing act at the old Palace on Broadway
and Shea's m Buffalo when we were too young
even to become the theater usher we were tn our
teens

made tl 1mposs1ble for the
throw-m to develol'
This made an mteresting
The Dai~ Sentinel
article, but our expert read·
DEVOTED TO THE
ers have discovered an al·
INTER EST OF
.106
MEIGS MASON AREA
ternate
!me
of
p
I
a
y
that
WEST
EAST
CHESTER L TANNEHILL , ,
would have brought in the
Exec. Ed.
.AKQJ983 .106
slam 1f W1Uard had made it.
ROBE AT HOEFLICH ,
¥Votd
¥2
C1ty Editor
We were repeating the ac+K J4
+ 10 9 7 2
Published
dally except
tual play. Here IS the might.. KJZ
.987543
Saturday by The Oh10 Valley
have-been.
Publ1Sh1ng Company, Ill
SOUTH (D)
Court Sl, Pomeroy , Ohio ,
Just
Jet
the
jack
of
dia• Vo1d
45769 Bus.ness Off1ce Phone
monds hold that trick Sup·
¥AKQ108643
992 2156, Ed1torial Phone 992
pose West leads the four of
• 853
21l7
diamonds
which is as good
Second class postage pa1d at
.AQ
Pomeroy, Oh10
a
p
I
a
y
as
any
Dummy's
North-South vulnerable
Nat1onal adverf 1S 1ng
queen wins the tnck and a
representat1ve
Bott10elll
West North East South
third
spade
is
led
and
ruffed.
Gallagher
,
Inc
,
12
East 42nd 1
1¥
St,
New
York
C1ty,
New
York
Now South runs out all h1s
I •
Pass
Pass 3¥
Subscr•pt1on
rates
De
hearts commg down to the
3.
Pass
Pa"
· l1vered by earner where
ace of diamonds, a spade
availabl e 50 cents per week ,
4•
Pass
Pass 5¥
By Motor Route where carrter ,
m
dummy
while
and
a
club
;•
Dbte
Pass s•
One
serv1ce not available
p..,.
he
holds
a
diamond
and
the
Dble Pass
Pass
month Sl 75 Bv ma1l m Oh10
~ce-queen of clubs
Opening lead- • K
and W va , One vear $14 00 1
' S1x monlh s S1 25
Three
The diamond 1s led and
months $4 SO Subscrtptton
West must either chuck h1s
pr1ce mcludes Sunday T1mes
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby good spade or unguard hiS
Sent1ne1
Here IS a reptml of our king of cl~bs
hand of Sept 3 It was orig{NEWSPAPER EHTUPRISE ASSH)
mally played by W1Uard S.
Karn against Edward Hymes
Jr., back in 1931.
The btddmg has been:
PARTY ENJOYF.:D
The peculiar b1ddmg IS due
A blender was presented to
North East South Youth Fellowship of the Mrs. Bowen, advisor. Atto the fact they were jockey· West
m~ for position m a rubber
3•
Enterprise United Methodist tending were Anme and Phil
bndge game.
~:le
~~ss P~ Church held a ChrisUDas party Ohlinger, Rodney Pullins,
Eventually Eddy doubled ~!s
You South hold
recenUy at the home of Mrs. Becky, Brenda and Beverly
s1x hearts and opened the
kmg of spades Karn ruffed. •K Q'Jlo TG's ¥Q J 2 +H •3 Ed Bowen. Games were played Will, Ricky Johnson and a
led a t r u m p to dummy;
What do you do now'
and the group exchanged gifts. guest, Diane Jordan .
1uffed a second spade and
Your par!ner should J
led a low diamond. Eddy notA-Pass.
he playing you for any
proceeded to play the Jack tricks at all and you have a
of diamonds He visualized probable b.. rt trl&lt;k.
an eventual throw·m play
TODAY'S QUESTION
agamst h1m if he played a
You do pass and West relow diamond and by playing
doubles
What do you do now '1
the jack then and the kmg on
Answer Tomorrow
the next d1amond lead he
NORTH
• 7 54 2
¥J 975
+ AQ6

30

4.

WMPO Radio, 1390 In MiddleportPomeroy, will be playing the TOP 50
RECORDS FOR 1971 on NEW YEAR'S DAY
FROM 12:30 P.M. UNTIL 5:30 P.M. FOR
FIVE BIG HOURS you can escape the football
games and listen to your favorites of the past
year. As an ADDED BONUS, WMPO will give .
away $13.90 AND 13 RECORD ALBUMS TO
the person whocati correctly list the TOP TEN
RECORDS OF 1971 in order. Entries must be
in the station or postmarked before December
30, 1971 . In case of a tie, decision of the judges
_ will be final. So get your entries In now for the
Top Ten Contest an!;! ,be sure to listen to
WMPO Radio - 1390 --lbr the unveiling of the
1971 top 50 . . That's this Saturday, .New
Year 's Day.

...,......tate,

.

"It's a Jewish Christmas," Edith decided
alter hearing the re~l of the suddenly
lengthening guest Ust. §o it became a 1111all
warm joke: "The O'Brians Je11iah OtrlatmQ."
It came every Dec. U for years. 1bat flrat one
was a warm and happy riot. Bert Lahr (Jewish)
and his Mlldred (Catholic). Lou Holtz, Jewish.
B1lly Rose, Jewish, and wile Eleanor Holm, •
Catholic. Harry Sobol, JewUh. But we weren't
snooty about the ecumenllm: Bert Wbeeler,
Catholic, the Jack Haleys, and boy! Is Jack
Haley Sr. Catholic - p~eaches In chlfthes
'n'everything these days!
Dean Jagger and his Gloria, now divorced,
Dean at dawn retrieving his coat from a closet,
noticing our best Cavanagh hat (cost $100 In a
much more economical time), said, "This Is
just one more hat too small lor me" and tried It
on . Fit perfecUy. Wouldn't take It off. That was
some 23 years ago, and Dean ~Ull hun'!
returned that rich felt skimmer, and we've seen
11 on hun in dozens of movies. It became his
"lucky hat. " We claimed tl was protective
psychology to save spending $100 on a duplicate.
Oh, well.
The CbrlsUDas Eves toddled along, then
trotted, then sped by and our great old Jewish
Cbnstmas Eves have dwindled. Lou Holtz lives
in H'wood with his decades-younger wife. Billy
Rose is dead. Eleanor Holm Uves In Miami
Beach. Jack Pearl has been ill and Winnie ata)'ll
home to tend the great old clown. Howard
Epstem died, even lonelier than we were that
first Chnsunas Eve.
Howard got married for a flattering and
ull!mately tragic reason: he thought · we
O'Bnans were the happiest couple he knew and
dearly w1shed to emulate us. So one late winter
Howard vacaltoned tn Miami Beach, met a girl
rebounding from divorce, and In one whirlwind
weekmamedherandfoughtbitterlyeverafter.
They were cruelly unhappy, each marrying
lor a wrong reason, and though they had a chlld,
it wasn' t to work out. Howanl's wife divorced
him and still both were unhappy.
One night Joanne died by choice. Howard
was neither relieved nor less lonely, and be took
to booze, and neglected his health, and finally
was one of the ricllest undl!l'llllllrilbed llwyera
m New York. His almost total abandonment of
solid food caught up wtth him, and Howard
Epstein, who'd Inspired our Jewish Otrlatmas
Eve, d1ed, alone, almost of starvation. Somehow
we didn't schedule any Jewish Otrlatmas Eve
that year and haven't had one since.
Bert Lahr died. Harry Sobol alone comes
over to our house; he moved close to us because
he enjoys our children as if he were their
grandfather. The Jack Haleys seldom are in
New York. Dean Jagger, remarried happlly
smce Gloria divorced him, remains in his happy
H'wood home lor the holidays. Kept that hat,
too, even if it's out of style with the wide brim.
It'll come bl!ck, be.,.aaya_ - - .
• -.
Bert Wheeler was a marvelous, welcomf
guest, but one Cuistmas Eve he gave us a sad
turn. CharlieMosconi came over to uk uuome
directions lor Bert, the lll'e8t happy movievaudevillHlluslcal comedy alar clown who
earned and spent mllllons, rode in limousines
and knew only the most IUEUr10111 best.
"Bert wants to know which bua to take to
get him to st. Malachy'a Clurdl for Midnight
Mall," Olarlle asked. We told hlm. Bert left for
Mass, then for his lonely single room at the
Lamb's Club. It 1111 us and Howard Epstein and
loneliness at Chri.!tmu, Ill over qlln.

By UllltedPreulnternallon~l
• Most holiday basketball tour·namenta wind up tonight and
among the most eiclting should
be the Ohio State-UCLA matchup In the Bruin Classic.
Oblo State, the sixth-rated
team m the country, clobbered
Arizona 110-47 Wednesday night
and UCLA Uk~wise decunated
Texas 11~. UCLA IS ranked
as the best team in the nation.
M\Bmi of Oblo wlli go for the
rangerlne Bowl Tournament tiUe In Orlando, Fla., against
William II Mary. Miami finished off Rollins (Fla.) 78-&amp;'l and
Wllllam &amp; Mary best Stetson
94-67 in the semi.flnals.
Otterbein won theMusldngum
Tournament by knocking off the
hostMuskies 116-M, and Urbana
won lta own tourney for the
second year In a row, beating
Point Park (Pa.) 80-74.
In other games, VIrginia best
Xavier 8$-65 In the Palmetto
Classic; OUvet (Mich.) downed
Ohio Northern 89-ll'/ in the Marshall( Mich.) tourney; Ohio Wesleyan whipped Alfred (N.Y.)
7f&gt;-51 in the Lemoyne (N.Y.)
tournament; and Ohio Dominican got by Chesapeake (Va.)
97.ao in the Appalachisn Classic.
Wooster beat Bethany (W.
Va.) 89.ao and Brockport State
(N .Y.) whipped Oakland
(Mich.) 112-83 in the Wooster
Classic; Case Western downed
St. Francis (Ind.) 83-72;
Wilmington defeated Anderson
(Ind.) . .76; Earlham (Inc.)
whipped Hanover (Ind.) 7f&gt;.63,
and Defiance eleminated
Findlay 90-69
In Independent games
Youngstown State demolished
Western Illinois 91-51 and
Berea (Ky.) edged Marietta
101-100.
Ohio State's Allan Hornyak
scored27polnts in the top-heavy
win over Arizona. Mter. the
Buckeyes built up a 48-31 intermission lead, he sal out almost
all of the second balf. Luke
Witte added 13 points.
Sophomore Gary Dees scored
2il points in the second half for
Miami, thriling the fans m Orlando wtth a string of left-hand-

. -1

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

50TH

TAKE A SMART STEP

Meigs Co. Branch

SALE
The Athens County
S.vlngs &amp; Loon Co.
29' S.cond 51.
Pam•ray, Ohio

1

'

mber Federal Home Loan
Bank.

MISS AMERICA,SHOES
FOR THE LADIES
00
ONLY

•8

THE SHOE BOX
Where Sh~ Are Sensib~ Priced
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Member Federal Savings &amp;
Loan Insurance Corp. All
l

ccounts Insured up to

,000.00.

ed jump shots.
.
Ohio Dominican led by just
two pomts at the half m the

Pro Standings
NHL Standings
By United Press tnlernalionat
East
w. L. T. Pis.
New York
2l l 6 l6
Boston
24 6 4 l2
Montreal
21 6 7 49
Toronto
17 12 8 42
13 t7 6 32
Detroit
Buffalo
8 22 8 24
Vancouver
9 22 4 22
West
W. L. T. Pis.
Ch lea go
25 8 3 53
Minnesota
20 tl 4 44
California
11 19 7 29
Phlladetph•a
It 18 l 27
Plllsburgh
It 21 5 27
St. Louis
tO 21 6 26
Los Angeles
9 26 1 19
Wednesday's Results
Los Angeles 3 Vancouver 1
Montreal 3 California 2
St. Louis 6 Toronto 3
Boston 5 Chicago 1
Detroit 7 Buflalo 3
(Onlygames scheduled)
nursday's Games
Boston al Minnesota
(Onlygamescheduledl
AHL Standtngs
By United Presslnlernal1onat
East
w. L. T. Pis.
24 6 4 52
Boston
Nova Scotia
15 10 9 39
Springfield
13 t2 7 33
12 ts 4 28
Rochester
9 18 8 26
Providence
West
W. L. T Pis.
Baltimore
16 13 5 37
Hershey
15 9 6 36
Cleveland
tl 13 6 36
Cincinnati
12 15 8 32
Richmond
13 16 6 32
Tidewater
s 22 3 19
Wednesday's Results
Cleveland 4 Boston t
Richmond 4 Tidewater 2
Sprmgfleld9 Clnclnnall3
(Only games scheduled)
Thursday's G1mes
Nova Scotia at Hershey
(Only game scheduled)
NGA Standings
By Un1led Press Internallonal
Eastern Conference
Allanite DiviSion
W. L. Pet. GB
Boston
26 t2 684
New York
23 13 639 2
Philadelphia 15 23 395 t1
Buffalo
lt 23 324 13
Central Otvtston

won its own tourney. In the
consolation game, Huntington
(lnd ) beat Northwood (lnd )
116-104. Huntmgton's Steve
Platt set a new Urbana
Fieldhouse record with his 48
points. Northwood's Mike Oden
had 33 points.
Wooster goes agalliSt Brock-

In the consolal!on game ClarIOn (Pa.) defeated Westrnmster
( Pa ) 7f&gt;.70.
Youngstown State rolled to Its
seventh victory in an undefeated season. Roo Smith led the
scoring with 25 pomts.
Grand Valley State overwhehned Wnte State of Ohio

t

111-U lor its 18th consecutive
home court v1ctory ami
Aquinas k,nocked off Hope 86-74
to wind up the Grand Valley
(Mich. ) Invitational.
There was no championshlp
at state m the toranlenl.
Bill Fogt scored'!/ pomts for
Wnght, now U.

To Retire From
Pro Eootball

Bears Seeking New Coach
CHICAGO (UP!) - Chicago
Bears owner George Halas
!aunclleda ''wide open" search
for a new coach today, but It
was unUkely some stranger
would come in to take over the
job.
Halas fired hls protege, Jim
Dolley, Wednesday after four
unsuccessful years In the job,
during which the Bears had
three consecutive losing
seasons for the first time m
history. He said ''the door is
wide open" for a new man to
step in."
But four times previously,
since he founded the Bears in
1920, Halas has chosen a
replacement lor himself as
coach, and each time he looked
only into the ranks of Bears
players or coaches.
These facts indicated that
' while any applicant, from
coUege or pro ranks, could
send his recommendatlons to
Hallas, the 76-year-old club
owner was most Ukely to dlp
into his present staff.
Front runners for the

Oh1o College
Bukelboli Scores
By Untied Press!nlernal1onat
Youngstown St 92 Western
Illinois 51
Berea ( Ky I 101 Manetta 100
Palmetto Classtc

vs. Virginia
• - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . Carolina
Thurtday'sGames
al Hampton. Va.
Kentucky at Floridians
Memphis vs. Dallas
at Denver
Utah at Denver
IOnlygamesschedutedl

position thus had to be Bill
Austin, a former head coacll of
Natlonal Football League
teams at Pittsburgh and
Washington, and Abe Gilron,
the Bears' defelllive coach.
lfa)as, though, said he would
consider "other coaches with
professional experience, or
college coaclles." The new
coach was to be named before

MarkV
Finishes

In Third
PROCTORVILLE - Sam
Mitchell, a semor at Gallipohs,
sank a 20 footer from the
corner to give the Mark V
tndependents a 99-98 wln over
loco No. 1 of Huntington for
third place m the Fairland
Independent Tournament here
Wednesday mght.
The consolation game was
rup and tuck all the way. Mark
V tra1led by two after one
quarter, 25-23, but rallied to
take a 52-50 lead at the half
loco. No !led 76-75 after three
quarters.
Dave F1fe, a semor at Meigs,
led Mark V w1th 24 pomts m h1s
first start Other scorers for
the locals were Ron Ferguson
17, M1 tcheU 16, Gary Fenderbosch 15, and Bob Ford 2,
all of Galbpobs ; and from
Middleport, Doxie Walters
added 15 and Ch1p Haggerty 14
John McMaster led !nco No 11
With 24.
Other statistics showed
Walters with 16 rebounds and
e1ghl aMists, Fenderbosch 17
rebounds, Ferguson
15
rebounds, Haggerty, eight
assists, and Mitchell with mne
rebounds and 10 pomts in the
!mal quarter.
In the cbampionship game,
Gold's Furmture of Huntington
mpped Hall's Funeral Home of
Chesapeake, 92-88. Hall's, who
defeated Mark V, 92-74, in
semi-final action, led at the
balf, 43-38.
Bill Fabas of Gold's was
selected the tournament's most
valuable player Mark V's alltournament selection was Ron
Ferguson.
Mark Vwas without their lop
three scorers, Mike Fenderbosch, Pete Anderson and
Beep Mathews, all of
Gallipolis, against !nco No. 1.
Mark V wtll play in the
Ceredo-Kenova Tournament
this Saturday at 3 p. m. Its
opponent is not known. In this
tndependent tournament ,
college players are not allowed
to participate.
BY QUARTERS
Mark V
23 211 23 24 - 99
lncoNo. l
25 25 26 22 - 98

CALL POINTVIEW : 992 - 2505

pretty ! JOd·looklng show,
"Adventure To the Top of
Everest," al tO p.m.

THURSDAY, DEC. 30
A couple more of those
September gee.qhtzzes bite
the dust this evening, as the
Channel 9 has quit caltln9,
Grim Neilsen Rating Reaper Its program "Folk Gu•lar '
cuts down the shows that Now It's " Folk Guitar Plus."
didn't make 11. "Bearcats" Plus what? Folk banjo,
rolls off tn a cloud of dust at 8 ' maybe? We're lnlrlgued . If
p.m., Ch. tO, and we think you are, It's on at 7:30p.m.
we've seen the lost of the
MOVIES: Channel to,
"Chicago Teddy Bears," ' perhaps figuring 1971 was
which Is pro·empted for a CBS enough of a horror as II was,
Special
moves Its horror doubleUn;.,lssed
and
un· teature to Thursday again this
mourned. Sorry about that week· "Mission Wars" and
"Neanderthal Man,'' startlno
Channel s won't even be at 11 :30 p.m Also: "Safari,"
telling
them
goodbye, Victor Mature and Janet
however, since It'll be Leigh, 4 p.m ., same channel.
telecasting the Peach Bowl, •
which a couple of years ago
FRIDAY : The Dooley
featured WVU's Mountaineers Brothers go at It today In the
and Gow . Leater Maddox Gator Bowl, and It should be a
riding a bicycle backwards. dandy game, maybe one of the
Toolght It's a duller affair, best this season. Brother
· with Mississippi (9·2) and Vince's Georgia Bulldogs
Georgia Tech (6·51 tangling In were 10·1and have that rarest
Atlanta, with the fans yawning of rarities, a running quar.
over the tact that Malldox lsn1 terback, In Andy Johnson.
bicycling these days and the Brother Bill's North Caroline
Tech quarterback Is a block Tar Heels 19·21 have a .hot
man, which might tell you ~rospeclln Lew Jolley . 2 p.m..
something about what's Chs. 2and 7. And at 4 p.m .. the
happening In Georgia. a p.m East·West Shrine game puts
. Ed Marinaro and John Reaves
There's no CBS movie In the same backfield for the
tonight, with a correspon· East, with Oregon's Bobby
doni's rep6r1 on foreign af. Moore and QB Jimmy Jontt
lairs at 91 .m .. Ch. 10, and a leading !he West. Ch. 12.

port Slate (N.Y) tonight to deOtterbem and Muskingum
Cide the Wooster Classic cham- have now met three straight
pion. Bethany (W.Va.) will take years m the championship
on Oakland (M1ch.) m the con- game of the Musklngum
solation match.
Tournament. It IS the third
Xavier w1ll go against Air straight wm for the Cardinals.
Force m the consolal!on game Don Manly scored 24 points for
of the Palmetto Classic at Cbar- Otterbein, which rallied from a
leston, S.C. tom~ht
:I.S-12 deficit in the ftrsl half

Dick Schafrath

Vlrgon1a 85 Xavoer (()11ol 65
Cleveland
1l 23 395
Marshall (Mich.) Tournament
Baltimore
14 22 389
Olovet (Mich I 89 Ohio North
Atlanta
13 24 351 l'h
ern 87
Cincinnati
10 26 278 4
Musk~ngum Tournament
Western Conference
Clan on ( Pa.l 75 Westminster
Mtdwesl Divts&lt;on
1Pa.l 70 I cons I
W. L. Pet. GB Otterbem 86 Musklngum 64
Milwaukee 32 7 821
(Champ.)
Chicago
26 10 722 4'h
Bruin Classic
Phoenix
21 16 568 10
&lt;J11o srate"9t Amona 47
Detroit
14 23 .378 17
Wo01ler Classic
PICifiC DiviSIOn
Wooster 89 Bethany (W Va ) 60
W. L. Pel. GB Brockport Sl (NY.) 112
LosAngetes 35 3 911
Oakland (Mich) 83
Seattle
22 17 564 13'1&gt;
Urbana Tournament
Golden State 19 19 lOO 16 Urbana 80 Point Park (Pa 1 74
Houston
13 25 343 22
1Champ. l
Portland
8 Jt 20l 27'1&gt; Huntington ( lnd 1 116
Wednesday's Results
Nor!~ wood ( lnd I 1041Cons I
Golden State 107 Cincinnati 102
Case Western Tournament
Milwaukee t23 Portland 84
Case Western 101 St . FranciS
Cleveland 103 Philadelphia 102
( lnd 1 59
Plloenlx 124 Houston 106
Malone 102 Oberlon 90(0ntygamesscheduledl
HooSier· Buckeye Tourllilment
Thursday's Games
Taylor (Ind.) 83 Manchester
Golden Stale af Detroit
&lt;lnd 1 72
Baltimore at New York, day
Wilmington 90 Anderson (Ind.)
Portland at Chicago
76
Buflalo at Phoenix
Earlham ( tnd ) 7l Hanover
los Angeles at Seattle
( tnd 1 63 ,
Atlanta at Houston
Defiance 90 Fondlay 69
!Only games scheduled)
Lemoyne, N.Y. Tourllilmenl
Ohio Wesleyan 75 Alfren
I N.Y I 51
ABA Standutgs
Appalachtan Classtc
By Umted Press lnlernallonal
&lt;J1io
Dominican 97
East
Chesapeake (Va I 80
W. L Pel. GB
Tangerine
Bowl Tourn.
27 9 750
Kentucky
(Qhlol 78 Roll1ns (Fia I
VIrginia
24 1l 615 4'1&gt; Miami
73
Floridians 17 20 459 lOt;,
Grand Valley, Mich. lnv11.
16 21 432 1 Ph Grand
New York
Valley St. Ill Wright St
Pittsburgh 17 25 405 13
86
Carolina
13 26 333 15'1,
Luthenn Tournament
West
Luther
68 Wittenberg 63
W. L Pel. GB
Fort
EustiS lnvit.
Utah
27 9 750 ..
95 Denison 87
Indiana
22 17 .564 6'1&gt; Susquehanna
(Cons.)
Memphis
16 21 432 t Ph
Vorglnia Sl 98 John Carroll 67
Denver
t4 20 412 t2
ICons.)
Dallas
14 24 363 14
Wednesdlly's Results
New York lOl Pittsburgh 102
VIrginia t26 Carollnall7
Kentucky 125 Memphis lll
Floridians 123 Indiana 112
Utah 106 Dallas 102
W

L. Pet. GB

Appalachian Classic at Montgomery, W.Va., but ran up an impressive second balf advantage
to take an easy win. Jim Underwood scored 26 points for the
Ohioans.
New Record
Urbana's John Plunkett contributed 27 points as the team

~LA Clash In Finals

the NFL draft Feb. 1-2.
Halas satd he would pay
Dooley for the year remaining
on the five-year contract he
signed when he became head
coach, but added tbat Dooley
was free to seek any other job
he wished. Should Dolley take a
job in pro football, Halas rnight
not have to pay his full salary
lor next year.
Halas said Dooley was let go

ColtegeBaskelba!IResulls
By Umted Press lnternattonal
Far West Classtc
(Sem1ftnal Round)
Fla St 73 Ore. St 72
Wash St 109 New Mex. 51
(Consolal1onl
Wash 100 Dartmouth 75
M1ch1gan 93 Oregon 85
Btg Etghl Tourney
I Semthna t Round)
Kansas St 92 Iowa St 75
Mossoun 86 Colo. l7
Consalatton

O&lt;la 97 Kansas 69
Nebraska 64 O&lt;la Sf 56
At!-College Tourney
I Semtflnal Round)
O&lt;ta City 89 Army 82
Eastern Ky 89 Santa Clara 85
(Consolation)
Jacksnvl 81 Texas Tech 66
No Tex St 68 Ind. St l9
Hall of Fame Tourney
(Sem1ftna IRound)
Brown 83 Assumption 79

M Havery 92 Sprlnglleld 77
(Consolation)
Batt St 98 Boston U 90
Bucknell 77 Am tnt! 67
PomseHiaCiass1c
Auburn 103 Furman 78
Clemson 67 Holy Cross 49
Sugar Bowl Class1c
No Car 93 St Jos , Pa 77
Bradley 72 Purdue 64
Old Oomtneon Classtc
1Final Round)
lnd•ana 88 Old Dominion 86
( Consolalton)
BYU 93 ~ice 73
Charlotte tnvtlallona I
Dav1dson 91 Ga Tech 66
Va Tech 77 Rutgers 73
Las Vegas Classic

IFtnal Round)
Baylor 82 Weber Sl 72
(Consolation)
UN Las V09as 91 Sou Ill 90
St. Louts lnvtlaltonal
I F1nal Round)
St Lou1s 87 Loyola, Ill 62
IConsolalton)
SMU S1 Yale 80
Roadrunner lnvttahonal
(Ftnat Round)
N Mex St 95 Mont St 8l
(Consolalton)
Pepperdme 73 Portland 71
Oral Roberts Classic
Loyola . Cal 87 East Car 68
0 Roberts 106 Conn 88
Kodak Classic
I Final Round)
Penn 70 St Bonvntre 69
(Consolation)
Southern Cal 88 Rochslr U l5
Garden St. Classic
Lafayette 88 Amer 7 76
Geo. Wash. 78 Rider 69
N.J. Kiwanis Classtc
ISemifmal Round)
Bndgeport 75 Mntctr St 74
C W Post 75 Mnmouth 70
Steel Bowl Tourney
P11lsburgh 88 Navy 78
Duquesne 56 Wake Foresll5
PatmeHo tnvtlallonal
Vlrglnla8l Xav 1er (0165
C1tadet 61 A1r Force 60

because "the record speaks for
itseH."
On the record Dolley's teams
won 2il and lost 36 games and
he was in charge In 1969 when
the team had its worst record
ever, one win and 13 defeats.

Bulldogs Romp
Mike Green scored 23 points,
hauled down 14 rebounds, and
Smith
teammate
Dave
collected 22 pomts and ll
rebounds to lead the Athens
Bulldogs past Lancaster, 62-49,
Wednesday mght.
Athens held a 27-22 advanlsge at ·intermission, and
had little trouble the rest of the
way m postmg its sixth victory

of the season m eight starts
LANCASTER (49)- Arledge
16, Uhl!, Dillard 17, Powers 7,
Wright 4, Edwards 4.
ATHENS (62) - Srn1th 22,
Mace 1, Wood 2, Chonko 2,
Ackerman 4, Green 23, Inbody
2, Handley 6.
By Quarters:
Lancaster
5 17 13 14-49
Athens
11 16 17 IS--62

Brockington Named .
NFL Rookie-Of-Year
NEW. YORK (UPI) -John
Brockington, who took his
"cloud of dust" to the pros and
used 11 in record proportion, is
United Press International's
1971 National Foothall Conference Rookie of the Year.
Brockington, schooled in the
"three yards and a cloud of
dust" rwlning offense of Woody
Hayes at Oh1o Stale, was one of
the lew bright lights for the
Green Bay Packers this season
as he became the most
productive rookie runner In
National Football League history.
Brockington's 1,105 yards are
the most ever recorded by a
f1rst-year player and he is only
the fourth rookie ever to
surpass the 1,000-yard mark,
joimng Beattie Feathers, Cookie Gilchrist and Paul Robinson.
His performance, best in the
NFL, earned him a spot on the
Ali-NFC Team and landslide election Thursday
as Rookie of the Year.
Brockington received 32 of the
39 votes cast by 39 sports
SPONSOR NAMED
SUITON, Mass. (UPI)-The
$52,000Ladles Professional Golf
championship, scheduled lor
June 8-11 at Pleasant Valley
Country Club, will be sponsored
by Eve Cigarettes, the club
announced Wednesday.
Kathy Whitworth ts the
defendmg champion.

Ra1nbow Classtc

( Semtftnal Round)
Hawaii 87 Calif 79
t Consolation)
Monn 86 Hawaii Marines 71
TX TCU 93 Northwestern 78
Gator Bowl Tourney
(Final Round)
Illinois 76 Florida 75
IConsoltlionl
N Car Sf 76 Columbia 48
Maryland lnvilatoonal
St Johns 94 Harvard 88
Maryland t03 Western Ky 67
Long Beach tnvttattonat
( Ftna t Round)
L Bch St 109 uc Rvrslde 85
&lt;ConsoloHonl
Cal. SJ,. Fllrtn 82 Cal Poly SLO
79
Bruin Classic
/
Oltto St 90 Arizona 47
(
UCLA lll TexaS65
Mitton 83 Sl Xavier 67
N.Dak. St 80 North Iowa 72
S.Dak. St 96 Mankato 85
Oltlo Wesleyan 7l Alfred 51
Ky. St. 68 Drury 66
S. F. Austin 104 St Thom 76

The last two seasons the Bears
finished 6-8, and this year, With
a 6-3 record to be contenders
for the Central Division liUe
after nme games, they lost the
last five to fall into third place .

EXTEND STREAK
CLEVELAND (UP!) - The
Cleveland Barons extended
their home win streak to 17
gamea Wednesday night with a
4-1 deciSion over the Boston
Braves.
Th B
te ped t 10
·
e arons s P
ou
front tn the first period on the
ltrst of two goals by DenniS
Giannini.
Fred O'Donnell tied 11 up 1-1
at 9:55 of the second period, but
Giannini's second goal, at 12:08
of the same period, put the
Barons ahead to stay.
Cleveland added two in the
third period on shots by Billy
Heindl and Terry Caffery.
Barons goaltender Gilles
Gilbert had 55 saves to 32 for
Boston's Dan Bouchard.

writers, three from each NFC
city. Vic Washington of San
Francisco receiVed four votes
and linebacker Isiah Robertson
of the Los Angeles RalliS the
other three.
Brockington, a 6-foot-1, 216pounder from Brooklyn, N.Y.,
is only the third Packer ever to
rush lor 1,000 yards - joming
Jim Taylor and Tony Canadeo
--and the second Green Bay
rookie to win the honor. Boyd
Dowler was honored In 1959.
The former Ohio State star
carried 216 times last season
and averaged 51 yards per
carry. He surpassed the 100yard mark four times to lead
the conference in that category.

ROOKIES OF THE YEAR
NORWALK, Conn. (UP!)Hubert Green, a :ZS.year old
from Alabama, and Sally UtUe,
a 19-year old from South
Mrica, were named Wednesday
the 1971 professional golf tour
Rookies of the Year by Golf
Digest magazme.

Wednesday N1ght
Ohio Htgh School
Basketball Results

Br United Press International

Canton Lehman 70 Columbus
West 47
Dover 65 Sandr, Valley 60
Canton McK•n ey 68 Cleve St
Joseph 66
Walsh Jewett l7 Mogadore 43
Zanesv11ie 61 Cambridge 55
Brush 80 Lakewood 59
Valley Forge 71 Normandy 67
(oil
Parma 6~ Shaker Heights 62
North Olmsted 60 Falrvoew 49
Mldvlew 78 Avon 69
Cleve Collinwood 72 Orange 59
Cclumbla 71 Cle\0 Byzantine
45
Toledo Macomber 63 Cleve
John Hay 52
Lima Sen1or 67 Lima Shawnee
54
Lima Ba lh 70 Lima Central
Catholic 69
Fort Frye 66 Morgan l7
Freeport Lakeland l4 Woods
fieid 48
Dover 65 Sandy Valley 60
Barberton 87 Tlmken 68
Athens 62 Lancaster 49
Westlake 68 Bay 53
Chardon 70 Newbury 56
Painesville Harvey 86
Cleveland Lutheran East 57
Painesville Riverside 98 Perry
42
Rocky Rover l8 Medi ~ l6
Forelands 71 Ed1son 46
Black Rover 92 Keystone 69

From all of us at Kerm's Korner

HAPPY
NEW
YEAR
This Is the one week of the
year that we advise you not
to gel •all tanked up'
HAPPY NEW YEAR

d/igh-spirited

for making 1971 one of the most
prosperous.

CLEVELAND (UPI)
Cleveland Browns offensive
tackle Dick Schafrath, a 13year pro football veteran,
announced Wednesday he is
retirmg.
Scbafrath, 34, who spent his
entire career with the Browns,
told Browns owner Art Modell
of his retirement Ill a telephone
call.
Modell sa1d the call "confirmed what we had expected."
I can't say enough about
Dick and hiS contributions to
the Browns and to pro football," Modell sa1d. "He leaves
with our best wishes."
Scafrath, who has played in
s1x pro bowl games, moved in
as regular offensive tackle m
1960 when Lou Groza confined
his activities to kicking. He
remained a regular until this
season when, after the first few
games, changes were made in
the offensive line.
Schafrath, a nat1ve of
Canton, Oh1o, was drafted
second by Cleveland m 1900
after playing at Ohio State.

wishes come your

ALUMINUM

way for
•

Without you it couldn't have been

0

the New Year.

Grateful thanks for your

done.

always friendly and kind support.

Again, Thanks!

"KERM"
NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE

BLIND STOP OR OVER LAP
WIN DO~

VALLEY WMBER &amp; SUPPLY 00.
MIDDLEPORT

ISears l "
JMHuized Cltalol Men:hant
LOU &amp; THELMA OSBORNE
POMEROY, OHIO

.'

�J

J

••
3- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0,, Dec. 30,1971

.

2- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Dec :10, 1971

~·-------t

Ashbrook. Goes to Grassroots
By United Press International
, . Although he IS w1dety regardi ed among hiS 1deolog1cat sup,llDflers as a leading pohllcal
,spokesman of the Amencan
nght, Rep John M Ashbrook
,IS rarely seen on the House
floor defendmg the conserva-~ve cause
He IS the rankmg Republican on the House Internal Secunty Committee and second-

ranked on the House Education
and Labor Committee, but he
seldom IS embrmled m legiSlative battles.
And only infrequently does he
Jmrihis conservallve colleagues
on the floor m denouncmg excessive federal spendmg or control of the economy, even though
these are the very issues on
wh1ch he w1ll campaign against
Pres1dentNuconnextyear m the

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

Hematocrit Checks
Presence of Anemia
II\ L:m renee Lamb. M.D.
Dear Dr Lamb- ! recently
"en! to g1ve a pmt of blood
at a local hosp1tal but was
told I "ould be unable to
g1ve because nw hematocnt
\l as too low It . \\as 39 and
then maHmum acceptable
f1gm e \\ as 41 Just what does
tilts mean " What 1s the hem·
atocnt • 1, 1t senous for 11
to be lo\\ er tha n normal'
Does tt stgml\ a n y t h 1n g
\\ l'o ng '

Dear Readfr- The hemc: toCIIt 1s one way of meas
ut mg ho" ma n) red blood
celb \Oll have or as a check
tm the p1 esence of anemia.
The blood IS composed of
1\u td 1pI as m a I w1th cells
suspended m tt Most of the
•·ells are the red blood cells
to It ans pot t o xygen The
hema tocnt IS the per cent of
the blood vol ume that IS
ma de up of the cells A tube
of blood IS centnfuged and
the red cells settle to the
bottom The volume m per
cent of the red blood cells IS
read off the tube Usually
abo ut 47 per cent of the
bl0od ;olume m men and a
ltttle less m \\omen IS from
the cells
~ val ue that IS too low
11 ould suggest the presence
of an ane mia and would war
ta nt further testmg Or you
could have accumulated ex
cess water. wh1ch seems un·
!1kely If you have some
bleedmg, such as from hem·
orrho1ds or an ulcer 11 could
cause th1s It does deserve
cl)eck ing to see tf the firSt
readmg was correct or not
and. 1! 11 ts, add1honal stud·
1es to fmd out what the prob·
l ~m really IS.

Dear Dr. Lamb--! have
had an anem1a problem for
yea rs I would hke to have
your opm10n of the treat
ment of anemia (not perm·
CIOUS)

I have been gettmg crude
l1ver shots for over 15 years
There IS a difference of
epmton whether I am get·
tmg any 1ron m thiS treat·
ment or whether I get uon
m the B-12 if taken I have
tned tro n p1lls off and on
and they make me consh·
pate d and 1ll I am older
than 70 and qmte act1ve I
have always felt I needed
crude hver shots, that I felt
better havmg them
Dear Reader- If you are
gettmg hver shots or B-12
shots for an anem1a, you are
bemg treated for permc1ous
anem1a (one mamfestahon
of B·l2 def1c1ency ) That
would be hkely m your age
group If you don't have per·
mcwus anemta , there 1s httle
1eason for you to be gettmg
crude hver shots or B·12
shots
Most doctors prefer thetr
pattents to take B-12 shots
as opposed to crude liver because there are some people
who become mtolerant to the
crude liver shots The B·12
m the l1ver IS what makes 11
work
There should be very hltle
reason for you to need 1ron
unless you have a poor diet
Women after the menopause
need no more 1ron than men
and that tsn't very much
unless they are bleed1ng
from some I o c a !lo n You
mtght revtew your d1et and
see 1! you. a~e .getting enough
foods that ~ontam iron
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN l

a..
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~
~

~
~

· Generation Rap

~

'

By Helen and Sue Bottel
:•'• tGOT A PROBLEM? Or a subject lor discussion, two
:}:eneration style? Direct your questions to eltber Sue or Helen
'""uel -or both, in care of Ibis newspaper, II you want a com·
ltinat10o mother-daughter answer.)
OUR READERS ANSWER THE MAIL
Oear Helen and Sue :
In reply to the letter from "Wondering" who asked how guys
iell about datmg unwed mothers, I can only speak lor myself, but
i say - 11 makes no difference.
: I dated an unwed mother for over a year She never tried to
)!ide the facts , and I never blamed her. My case was a littie
llifferent m that I'm sterile The fact that she already had a child
inade her even more attractive tome, as I want desperately to be
father. However, there are thousands of men like me - and I'd
~ess that many would feel as I do. So the fact that a girl has a
~hild 1s not much of a deterrent to a good marriage (unless the
guy ,s~ prude, m whtch case she wouldn't want hun anyway) .
Our romance ' It ended - for other reasons. -D. D.
Dear Rap
Thts IS to "Wondermg " I don't know whether you kept your
baby or not or whether you had an abortion, rut I had to write and
tell you things will be better soon.
Last year I went through your same doubts. I gave my baby
up for adoption My folks wanted me to have an abortion and•
when I refused, they felt I'd rumed my life. They wanted to keep
everythtng secret!
When I gave my baby away, I thought my life had ended. I
was wrong . Soon after, I started datmg agam, and I learned to
recogmze the fellows who would understand and those who
couldn't There are plenty of both !
ThiS year I met and marned the most wonderful guy in the
world He knows all about my past and understands.
I have several friends who e1ther bad abortions or babies
they gave up. They all agree with me when I say that if a man IS
worth havmg, to date or marry, he will not let the past keep hlm
a10ay - SURE

a

'

Dear Rap
You showed a remarkable amount of conunon sense In your
answers to "Doubtful" who got fleeced by a phony ''witch." But
you also d1splayed a lack of knowledge of certain facts.
"Doubtful's" boy fnend was obviously not influenced by the
acllons of the ''Wicca," as She mistakenly termed some
charlatan who fleeced her .
You see, today's S&lt;K:alled Witches are a bunch of kooks who
are supposed to go around casting "evil spells " This is far from
the actual truth.
"W1cca " (meamng "Wise one ") can only be correctly apphed to someone who follows a nature-and-fertility religllln
which dates back,to Paleobthic tunes. It IS a realistic, valid
religion that places great emphasis on love and trust; It has
nothing ;o do with worshippmg the deVIl or any sort of similar
nonaenae.
True, Its followers do beheve they can work maJllc through
the use of natural (not "super" natural) forces, just as Otrlstianll
believe they can obtain miracles through prayer.
.... It would be mterestlng to see how different would be the'
reaction, If "Doubtful" had "gone to churcll" to get her guy back.
U witchcraft is ''supen!;Uon" then certainly sols religion.
In ~!Jon, It iaal(ainst the rules of this ''wicca" rellgton to
ICcepl money for acbleving desired effects, so no witch ever
vlctlrnllle8 anyone financially.
I hope thlJ note Ills helped mfonn you of what Witchcraft
reaDy is uoppollllf to popular miSCODceptlons.- WISE ONE
Dear Wile One: .. Not really, but thanb for v .r interesting letter. - RAP

New Hampshire and Flor1da primarieS.
Ashbrook, at 43 years of age
a six-term veteran of the House,
obviously relishes the political
arena outside Congress, ftring
theenthuSiasmofconservatives
at grassroots rallies and helpmg orgamze them for political
campaigns.
H1s name is a household word
among readers of such conservative journals as National ReVIew and Human Events, and
among members of Young
Americans lor Freedom and its
adult
counterpart,
the
American Conservative Umon,
which he helped found m 1964.
Alawyer and weekly newspaper publisher m his native
Johnstown, Ohio, Ashbrook was
graduated from Harvard Uruverslty and Ohio State UmverSIIy Law School. Elected to the
House in 1960, he was one of
the leaders of the movement to
giVe Sen. Barry M. Goldwater
of AriZona theGOPpres1dential
nomination in 1964.
Mter Goldwater was swamped m the Johnson electorallandshde that year, Ashbrook helped orgamze the ACU, a Wash·
mgton-based group which supports conservative candidates
for Congress. Ashbrook was its
cha1rman from 1966 until he
stepped down earlier thiS year .
Mter servmg as national
of
Young
eha1rman
Republicans m the early 1950s,
Ashbrook won election to the
Ohio General Assembly m 1956,

Pallbearers for
Service Listed

Social
Calendar

where he served until he went
to Congress in 1960.
In 1958 he was named one of
THURSBAY
the 15 outstandi/lg young ll)en in
JOB'S DAUGHTERS, Bethel
American politics and was cho62,
semi-annual Installation
sen one of "the most respected" conservative leaders m a Thursday, 7:30 p.m. Pomeroy
Masontc Temple. Public innational poll m 1970.
Although he enjoys the friend- . vited. Milisa Rizer to be inship of both Senate and House stalled as honored queen.
CONFESSIONS, Sacred
conservatives, Ashbrook expects little support from Heart Catholic Church, 7 to 8 p.
congressional colleagues in his m. Thursday; Friday, llam. to
primary challenge to Nixon's noon, 3:30 p. m. to 4:30 p. m.
foreign and domestic policies.
FRIDAY
But, according to those close
NEW YEAR'S Eve dance
to Ashbrook, he believes he can
and buffet lunch, Drew Websurrunon significant support lor
ster Post 39, American Legion
his rightwing insurgency from
Home, Pomeroy, 9 p.m., lor
the conservative grassroots
members and guests. Organ
groups he has long cbampioned.
muSic by Armand Turley.
ANNUAL Tri.County New
Timothy Bishop
Year's Eve teen ball, Friday,
8·30 p.m . to 12:30 a.m. at
Died Wednesday Wahama High School
auditorium with Jays em·
Timothy B1shop of 1131 ceeing and playing lop 100
Hamson Ave., Columbus, a records of 1971. Informal, open
former Pomeroy res1dent, died to public . Sponsored by
Wednesday morning at Doc- Wahama High School senior
tor's Hospital
class. Dress, informal, $1
He IS survived by hiS wile, person.
Laura, a son, George, and a
NEW YEAR'S Eve services
daughter, Mrs. L H. (Mary) at Rutland Church of Chri.!t
Casto, both of Columbus, three With social hour beginning at 9
grandchildren, and one great- p.m. followed by program and
grandchild. Funeral serv1ces cantilellght services. Public
w1ll be held Friday at 3:30p.m. invited.
at the Shaw and Davis Funeral
Home, West Second Ave. ,
MONDAY
Columbus.
THEODORUS COUNCIL 17,
WEBB SIGNED
Daughters of Amertca, 7:30
PHOENIX, Anz. (UPI)--Jelf Monday night at the IOOF ball.
Webb, a 6-loot, 4-mch guard Members to take Items to the
who played college ball at meeting lor a Silent auction.
Kansas State, • was signed Cbarter will be draped for Mrs.
Wednesday by the Phoenix Suns Ed1th Batey, a charter
of the National Basketball member
AssOCI&amp; liOn.
MEIGS CHAPTER: Order of
Webb was placed on wa1vers DeMolay , regular meetmg,
by the Milwaukee Bucks earher 7-30 p. m. Monday, M1ddleport
thiS year .
Masonic Temple.
RUTLAND GARDEN Club
PLAYERS FARMED OUT
w1ll present radio program,
PITISBURGH (UP!) --Goa- " B~rds" by Mrs Paul Wmn,
lie Jun Rutherford and rookie Mrs. Jonah Cotterill, 9 a. m
defenseman Joe Norts were Monday, WMPO.
farmed out by the Pittsburgh
Pengums Wednesday to thetr
TUESDAY
Hershey, Pa.,larm club.
MIDDLEPORT Masomc
Rutherford had a 3.37 goals- Lodge 363, F&amp;AM regular
against average m 10 games meeting, 7:30p ni. Tuesday at
while Noris had two goals and temple .
·
five assists tn 35 games.

Funeral serv1ces for Mrs
John Batey were held on Dec .
19 at the Rawhngs Coats
Funeral Home. The Rev.
Stanton Smith officiated at the
serv1ces and bur1al was m the
Rock Sprmgs Cemetery
Pallbearers were Sidney
Spencer , Leroy E1chmger,
Roger Letfhe1t, John Weeks,
Alva W1ll and Paul Frick.
Out-of-town relatives here
were Mr. and Mrs. John Weeks
and family, Reynoldsburg, Mr
and Mrs. Edward Mcintosh, GAME TIMES
NEW YORK (UP!)-The
Dayton; Mrs. Harry DaviS,
Mrs
Herbert Hamilton, Dallas-San Francisco game at
Canton ; Mr. and Mrs. Don Dallas will begm at 1.30 p.m.
Davis and Mr. and Mrs. John EST Sunday and the MiamiFr1el and family, LouiSville, Baltimore at Miarm game Will
Oh1o Mrs. Batey was the start at 4-30 p.m. EST, 11 was
oldest memher of the En- announced Wednesday by Pete
terprise United MethodiSt Rozelle, commiSSIOner of the
Natwnal Football League.
Church.

WIN AT BRIDGE

Karn Wins in '71 Rematch

Sunday School
Cliristmas
Pariy. Enjoyed
LETART FALLS - The
Letart Falls United Brethren
Sunday School held Its annual
ChriStmas party at the Shrine
Club House at Racine Tuesday
night
A program consisting of
songs, poems , scripture
readings and prayer was given
followed by a film, Christmas
Bells, by the pastor, Rev.
Robert Shook.
A gift exchange and refreshments of sandwiches, pie and
coffee were served to Rev.
Robert Shook, children Lucy,
Gerry and Cindy; Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Noms, Mr. and Mrs.
Marshall Adams and son,
Raymond, Mr. and Mrs. Erwin
Gloeckner, Danny Badgely,
Mr and Mrs. Herbert Roush
and Roger, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
Norris, Mrs. Edward Miller,
Jeff Miller, Iva Orr, General
Hall, Mrs. Freda Evans, Mrs.
Bernice Shook, Mrs. Larry
O'Brien, children Jimmy,
Linda and Carol; Dennis
Manuel and two children, and
Mrs. Eula Bracken.

~------------------ -- ---------------------,

l Voice along Broadway l
I

-

BY JACK O'BRIAN
LONELINESS OF CHRISTMAS
LONG GONE
NEW YORK (KFS) - We've spent
Christmases in many places _ Rome, Buffalo,
the Bahamas, elsewhere, all memorable; and
none more beautifully touching and homespun
than m big old, cynical, skeptical, cruel, noisy,
nasty, menacing Manhattan. We remember our
early New York ctmstmas, all alone in
Manhattan, just a few months out of exotic
Buffalo an'd sllenUy yearning to be back, if just
for that Christmas Eve ... We saw a friend off
for Buffalo the mght before Christmas, and as
we walked Jack Grood through Grand Central
Station to the Midmght Flyer, a chorus of about
50 redcaps was singing Cbrlsunas carols.
We saw Jack off and wandered back to the
mam rotunda of Grand Central and harkened to
the fine, big voices of the black men whose un1on
was solidly Negro because they couldn't get mto
ther railroad umons and 11 was the best dignified
employment they could wangle. They were
sohdly decent men, uplifted even more by their
beauttful hymns and carols as they lifted their
own spirits and those of the last small crowd
dashing to take the trains home for the biggest
hohday of all. All except this lonely lad, very
young, happy to be a Big Town newspaperman
at last, not yel here long enough to have the sort
of friends who would mvtte him to a midnight
celebration . So we aurally drank m the
stentorian beauty of the redcaps' carols.
It was the year before the war. '!11mgs
weren't bad We were grateful to have the job in
New York, our amb1tion smce a teenager. And
there we stood, alone, of a sudden conscious that
tears were on our cheeks, tears of appreciation
for thiS lovely melodic reminder of the Holy
N1ght, and of course of self-pity lor ourself. So
we took ourself away from that doleful delight,
walked to w. 5:/nd Sl to try and drown our
masochism m a little real jazz, and wound up
having a semi-happy time talking to Joe
Helbock at his jazz emporium and almost
!orgettmg our certainly qwckly tranSient
travail.
It never happened agam Sometimes we
WISh 11 had. It had been a bittersweet rmdnight,
Redcaps smgmg the counterpoint to our
loneliness and somehow it became a warm
distant memory as the years toddled by, at last
among friends.
.
The years and the loneliness and even the
memory of that Christmas Eve softened and
often was forgotten. Until one Christmas Eve
many years later when we asked a friend
named How ani Epstein where he was gomg for
Chnstmas Eve. Howard sa1d he badn't thought
of 1t He hked the holiday even though he was
Jew1sh, and 1t wasn't qwte h1s Btg Day
Yes, he would be delighted to come to our
apartment. Then we met another couple, Jack
Pearl of "Vas You Rfe Sharlie" fame, and his
Wmme, Jac~ Jew~l..,Wmnie not, and invited
them to stop by !o~ sbme Cbmtmas grog. And
Edith Brady, half.Jewish (her mother) and
Imh (her father, professor of romance
languages at the U. of V1enna where he met
Ed1th's mother, a fe1sty, fast-Witted matrtarch
who chain-smoked c1garets and cheated slightly
at gin rummy). Ed1th would come, and bring
her boy friend, now her husband, Charhe
Mosconi, who w1th brother Louis were a great
star-dancing act at the old Palace on Broadway
and Shea's m Buffalo when we were too young
even to become the theater usher we were tn our
teens

made tl 1mposs1ble for the
throw-m to develol'
This made an mteresting
The Dai~ Sentinel
article, but our expert read·
DEVOTED TO THE
ers have discovered an al·
INTER EST OF
.106
MEIGS MASON AREA
ternate
!me
of
p
I
a
y
that
WEST
EAST
CHESTER L TANNEHILL , ,
would have brought in the
Exec. Ed.
.AKQJ983 .106
slam 1f W1Uard had made it.
ROBE AT HOEFLICH ,
¥Votd
¥2
C1ty Editor
We were repeating the ac+K J4
+ 10 9 7 2
Published
dally except
tual play. Here IS the might.. KJZ
.987543
Saturday by The Oh10 Valley
have-been.
Publ1Sh1ng Company, Ill
SOUTH (D)
Court Sl, Pomeroy , Ohio ,
Just
Jet
the
jack
of
dia• Vo1d
45769 Bus.ness Off1ce Phone
monds hold that trick Sup·
¥AKQ108643
992 2156, Ed1torial Phone 992
pose West leads the four of
• 853
21l7
diamonds
which is as good
Second class postage pa1d at
.AQ
Pomeroy, Oh10
a
p
I
a
y
as
any
Dummy's
North-South vulnerable
Nat1onal adverf 1S 1ng
queen wins the tnck and a
representat1ve
Bott10elll
West North East South
third
spade
is
led
and
ruffed.
Gallagher
,
Inc
,
12
East 42nd 1
1¥
St,
New
York
C1ty,
New
York
Now South runs out all h1s
I •
Pass
Pass 3¥
Subscr•pt1on
rates
De
hearts commg down to the
3.
Pass
Pa"
· l1vered by earner where
ace of diamonds, a spade
availabl e 50 cents per week ,
4•
Pass
Pass 5¥
By Motor Route where carrter ,
m
dummy
while
and
a
club
;•
Dbte
Pass s•
One
serv1ce not available
p..,.
he
holds
a
diamond
and
the
Dble Pass
Pass
month Sl 75 Bv ma1l m Oh10
~ce-queen of clubs
Opening lead- • K
and W va , One vear $14 00 1
' S1x monlh s S1 25
Three
The diamond 1s led and
months $4 SO Subscrtptton
West must either chuck h1s
pr1ce mcludes Sunday T1mes
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby good spade or unguard hiS
Sent1ne1
Here IS a reptml of our king of cl~bs
hand of Sept 3 It was orig{NEWSPAPER EHTUPRISE ASSH)
mally played by W1Uard S.
Karn against Edward Hymes
Jr., back in 1931.
The btddmg has been:
PARTY ENJOYF.:D
The peculiar b1ddmg IS due
A blender was presented to
North East South Youth Fellowship of the Mrs. Bowen, advisor. Atto the fact they were jockey· West
m~ for position m a rubber
3•
Enterprise United Methodist tending were Anme and Phil
bndge game.
~:le
~~ss P~ Church held a ChrisUDas party Ohlinger, Rodney Pullins,
Eventually Eddy doubled ~!s
You South hold
recenUy at the home of Mrs. Becky, Brenda and Beverly
s1x hearts and opened the
kmg of spades Karn ruffed. •K Q'Jlo TG's ¥Q J 2 +H •3 Ed Bowen. Games were played Will, Ricky Johnson and a
led a t r u m p to dummy;
What do you do now'
and the group exchanged gifts. guest, Diane Jordan .
1uffed a second spade and
Your par!ner should J
led a low diamond. Eddy notA-Pass.
he playing you for any
proceeded to play the Jack tricks at all and you have a
of diamonds He visualized probable b.. rt trl&lt;k.
an eventual throw·m play
TODAY'S QUESTION
agamst h1m if he played a
You do pass and West relow diamond and by playing
doubles
What do you do now '1
the jack then and the kmg on
Answer Tomorrow
the next d1amond lead he
NORTH
• 7 54 2
¥J 975
+ AQ6

30

4.

WMPO Radio, 1390 In MiddleportPomeroy, will be playing the TOP 50
RECORDS FOR 1971 on NEW YEAR'S DAY
FROM 12:30 P.M. UNTIL 5:30 P.M. FOR
FIVE BIG HOURS you can escape the football
games and listen to your favorites of the past
year. As an ADDED BONUS, WMPO will give .
away $13.90 AND 13 RECORD ALBUMS TO
the person whocati correctly list the TOP TEN
RECORDS OF 1971 in order. Entries must be
in the station or postmarked before December
30, 1971 . In case of a tie, decision of the judges
_ will be final. So get your entries In now for the
Top Ten Contest an!;! ,be sure to listen to
WMPO Radio - 1390 --lbr the unveiling of the
1971 top 50 . . That's this Saturday, .New
Year 's Day.

...,......tate,

.

"It's a Jewish Christmas," Edith decided
alter hearing the re~l of the suddenly
lengthening guest Ust. §o it became a 1111all
warm joke: "The O'Brians Je11iah OtrlatmQ."
It came every Dec. U for years. 1bat flrat one
was a warm and happy riot. Bert Lahr (Jewish)
and his Mlldred (Catholic). Lou Holtz, Jewish.
B1lly Rose, Jewish, and wile Eleanor Holm, •
Catholic. Harry Sobol, JewUh. But we weren't
snooty about the ecumenllm: Bert Wbeeler,
Catholic, the Jack Haleys, and boy! Is Jack
Haley Sr. Catholic - p~eaches In chlfthes
'n'everything these days!
Dean Jagger and his Gloria, now divorced,
Dean at dawn retrieving his coat from a closet,
noticing our best Cavanagh hat (cost $100 In a
much more economical time), said, "This Is
just one more hat too small lor me" and tried It
on . Fit perfecUy. Wouldn't take It off. That was
some 23 years ago, and Dean ~Ull hun'!
returned that rich felt skimmer, and we've seen
11 on hun in dozens of movies. It became his
"lucky hat. " We claimed tl was protective
psychology to save spending $100 on a duplicate.
Oh, well.
The CbrlsUDas Eves toddled along, then
trotted, then sped by and our great old Jewish
Cbnstmas Eves have dwindled. Lou Holtz lives
in H'wood with his decades-younger wife. Billy
Rose is dead. Eleanor Holm Uves In Miami
Beach. Jack Pearl has been ill and Winnie ata)'ll
home to tend the great old clown. Howard
Epstem died, even lonelier than we were that
first Chnsunas Eve.
Howard got married for a flattering and
ull!mately tragic reason: he thought · we
O'Bnans were the happiest couple he knew and
dearly w1shed to emulate us. So one late winter
Howard vacaltoned tn Miami Beach, met a girl
rebounding from divorce, and In one whirlwind
weekmamedherandfoughtbitterlyeverafter.
They were cruelly unhappy, each marrying
lor a wrong reason, and though they had a chlld,
it wasn' t to work out. Howanl's wife divorced
him and still both were unhappy.
One night Joanne died by choice. Howard
was neither relieved nor less lonely, and be took
to booze, and neglected his health, and finally
was one of the ricllest undl!l'llllllrilbed llwyera
m New York. His almost total abandonment of
solid food caught up wtth him, and Howard
Epstein, who'd Inspired our Jewish Otrlatmas
Eve, d1ed, alone, almost of starvation. Somehow
we didn't schedule any Jewish Otrlatmas Eve
that year and haven't had one since.
Bert Lahr died. Harry Sobol alone comes
over to our house; he moved close to us because
he enjoys our children as if he were their
grandfather. The Jack Haleys seldom are in
New York. Dean Jagger, remarried happlly
smce Gloria divorced him, remains in his happy
H'wood home lor the holidays. Kept that hat,
too, even if it's out of style with the wide brim.
It'll come bl!ck, be.,.aaya_ - - .
• -.
Bert Wheeler was a marvelous, welcomf
guest, but one Cuistmas Eve he gave us a sad
turn. CharlieMosconi came over to uk uuome
directions lor Bert, the lll'e8t happy movievaudevillHlluslcal comedy alar clown who
earned and spent mllllons, rode in limousines
and knew only the most IUEUr10111 best.
"Bert wants to know which bua to take to
get him to st. Malachy'a Clurdl for Midnight
Mall," Olarlle asked. We told hlm. Bert left for
Mass, then for his lonely single room at the
Lamb's Club. It 1111 us and Howard Epstein and
loneliness at Chri.!tmu, Ill over qlln.

By UllltedPreulnternallon~l
• Most holiday basketball tour·namenta wind up tonight and
among the most eiclting should
be the Ohio State-UCLA matchup In the Bruin Classic.
Oblo State, the sixth-rated
team m the country, clobbered
Arizona 110-47 Wednesday night
and UCLA Uk~wise decunated
Texas 11~. UCLA IS ranked
as the best team in the nation.
M\Bmi of Oblo wlli go for the
rangerlne Bowl Tournament tiUe In Orlando, Fla., against
William II Mary. Miami finished off Rollins (Fla.) 78-&amp;'l and
Wllllam &amp; Mary best Stetson
94-67 in the semi.flnals.
Otterbein won theMusldngum
Tournament by knocking off the
hostMuskies 116-M, and Urbana
won lta own tourney for the
second year In a row, beating
Point Park (Pa.) 80-74.
In other games, VIrginia best
Xavier 8$-65 In the Palmetto
Classic; OUvet (Mich.) downed
Ohio Northern 89-ll'/ in the Marshall( Mich.) tourney; Ohio Wesleyan whipped Alfred (N.Y.)
7f&gt;-51 in the Lemoyne (N.Y.)
tournament; and Ohio Dominican got by Chesapeake (Va.)
97.ao in the Appalachisn Classic.
Wooster beat Bethany (W.
Va.) 89.ao and Brockport State
(N .Y.) whipped Oakland
(Mich.) 112-83 in the Wooster
Classic; Case Western downed
St. Francis (Ind.) 83-72;
Wilmington defeated Anderson
(Ind.) . .76; Earlham (Inc.)
whipped Hanover (Ind.) 7f&gt;.63,
and Defiance eleminated
Findlay 90-69
In Independent games
Youngstown State demolished
Western Illinois 91-51 and
Berea (Ky.) edged Marietta
101-100.
Ohio State's Allan Hornyak
scored27polnts in the top-heavy
win over Arizona. Mter. the
Buckeyes built up a 48-31 intermission lead, he sal out almost
all of the second balf. Luke
Witte added 13 points.
Sophomore Gary Dees scored
2il points in the second half for
Miami, thriling the fans m Orlando wtth a string of left-hand-

. -1

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

50TH

TAKE A SMART STEP

Meigs Co. Branch

SALE
The Athens County
S.vlngs &amp; Loon Co.
29' S.cond 51.
Pam•ray, Ohio

1

'

mber Federal Home Loan
Bank.

MISS AMERICA,SHOES
FOR THE LADIES
00
ONLY

•8

THE SHOE BOX
Where Sh~ Are Sensib~ Priced
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Member Federal Savings &amp;
Loan Insurance Corp. All
l

ccounts Insured up to

,000.00.

ed jump shots.
.
Ohio Dominican led by just
two pomts at the half m the

Pro Standings
NHL Standings
By United Press tnlernalionat
East
w. L. T. Pis.
New York
2l l 6 l6
Boston
24 6 4 l2
Montreal
21 6 7 49
Toronto
17 12 8 42
13 t7 6 32
Detroit
Buffalo
8 22 8 24
Vancouver
9 22 4 22
West
W. L. T. Pis.
Ch lea go
25 8 3 53
Minnesota
20 tl 4 44
California
11 19 7 29
Phlladetph•a
It 18 l 27
Plllsburgh
It 21 5 27
St. Louis
tO 21 6 26
Los Angeles
9 26 1 19
Wednesday's Results
Los Angeles 3 Vancouver 1
Montreal 3 California 2
St. Louis 6 Toronto 3
Boston 5 Chicago 1
Detroit 7 Buflalo 3
(Onlygames scheduled)
nursday's Games
Boston al Minnesota
(Onlygamescheduledl
AHL Standtngs
By United Presslnlernal1onat
East
w. L. T. Pis.
24 6 4 52
Boston
Nova Scotia
15 10 9 39
Springfield
13 t2 7 33
12 ts 4 28
Rochester
9 18 8 26
Providence
West
W. L. T Pis.
Baltimore
16 13 5 37
Hershey
15 9 6 36
Cleveland
tl 13 6 36
Cincinnati
12 15 8 32
Richmond
13 16 6 32
Tidewater
s 22 3 19
Wednesday's Results
Cleveland 4 Boston t
Richmond 4 Tidewater 2
Sprmgfleld9 Clnclnnall3
(Only games scheduled)
Thursday's G1mes
Nova Scotia at Hershey
(Only game scheduled)
NGA Standings
By Un1led Press Internallonal
Eastern Conference
Allanite DiviSion
W. L. Pet. GB
Boston
26 t2 684
New York
23 13 639 2
Philadelphia 15 23 395 t1
Buffalo
lt 23 324 13
Central Otvtston

won its own tourney. In the
consolation game, Huntington
(lnd ) beat Northwood (lnd )
116-104. Huntmgton's Steve
Platt set a new Urbana
Fieldhouse record with his 48
points. Northwood's Mike Oden
had 33 points.
Wooster goes agalliSt Brock-

In the consolal!on game ClarIOn (Pa.) defeated Westrnmster
( Pa ) 7f&gt;.70.
Youngstown State rolled to Its
seventh victory in an undefeated season. Roo Smith led the
scoring with 25 pomts.
Grand Valley State overwhehned Wnte State of Ohio

t

111-U lor its 18th consecutive
home court v1ctory ami
Aquinas k,nocked off Hope 86-74
to wind up the Grand Valley
(Mich. ) Invitational.
There was no championshlp
at state m the toranlenl.
Bill Fogt scored'!/ pomts for
Wnght, now U.

To Retire From
Pro Eootball

Bears Seeking New Coach
CHICAGO (UP!) - Chicago
Bears owner George Halas
!aunclleda ''wide open" search
for a new coach today, but It
was unUkely some stranger
would come in to take over the
job.
Halas fired hls protege, Jim
Dolley, Wednesday after four
unsuccessful years In the job,
during which the Bears had
three consecutive losing
seasons for the first time m
history. He said ''the door is
wide open" for a new man to
step in."
But four times previously,
since he founded the Bears in
1920, Halas has chosen a
replacement lor himself as
coach, and each time he looked
only into the ranks of Bears
players or coaches.
These facts indicated that
' while any applicant, from
coUege or pro ranks, could
send his recommendatlons to
Hallas, the 76-year-old club
owner was most Ukely to dlp
into his present staff.
Front runners for the

Oh1o College
Bukelboli Scores
By Untied Press!nlernal1onat
Youngstown St 92 Western
Illinois 51
Berea ( Ky I 101 Manetta 100
Palmetto Classtc

vs. Virginia
• - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . Carolina
Thurtday'sGames
al Hampton. Va.
Kentucky at Floridians
Memphis vs. Dallas
at Denver
Utah at Denver
IOnlygamesschedutedl

position thus had to be Bill
Austin, a former head coacll of
Natlonal Football League
teams at Pittsburgh and
Washington, and Abe Gilron,
the Bears' defelllive coach.
lfa)as, though, said he would
consider "other coaches with
professional experience, or
college coaclles." The new
coach was to be named before

MarkV
Finishes

In Third
PROCTORVILLE - Sam
Mitchell, a semor at Gallipohs,
sank a 20 footer from the
corner to give the Mark V
tndependents a 99-98 wln over
loco No. 1 of Huntington for
third place m the Fairland
Independent Tournament here
Wednesday mght.
The consolation game was
rup and tuck all the way. Mark
V tra1led by two after one
quarter, 25-23, but rallied to
take a 52-50 lead at the half
loco. No !led 76-75 after three
quarters.
Dave F1fe, a semor at Meigs,
led Mark V w1th 24 pomts m h1s
first start Other scorers for
the locals were Ron Ferguson
17, M1 tcheU 16, Gary Fenderbosch 15, and Bob Ford 2,
all of Galbpobs ; and from
Middleport, Doxie Walters
added 15 and Ch1p Haggerty 14
John McMaster led !nco No 11
With 24.
Other statistics showed
Walters with 16 rebounds and
e1ghl aMists, Fenderbosch 17
rebounds, Ferguson
15
rebounds, Haggerty, eight
assists, and Mitchell with mne
rebounds and 10 pomts in the
!mal quarter.
In the cbampionship game,
Gold's Furmture of Huntington
mpped Hall's Funeral Home of
Chesapeake, 92-88. Hall's, who
defeated Mark V, 92-74, in
semi-final action, led at the
balf, 43-38.
Bill Fabas of Gold's was
selected the tournament's most
valuable player Mark V's alltournament selection was Ron
Ferguson.
Mark Vwas without their lop
three scorers, Mike Fenderbosch, Pete Anderson and
Beep Mathews, all of
Gallipolis, against !nco No. 1.
Mark V wtll play in the
Ceredo-Kenova Tournament
this Saturday at 3 p. m. Its
opponent is not known. In this
tndependent tournament ,
college players are not allowed
to participate.
BY QUARTERS
Mark V
23 211 23 24 - 99
lncoNo. l
25 25 26 22 - 98

CALL POINTVIEW : 992 - 2505

pretty ! JOd·looklng show,
"Adventure To the Top of
Everest," al tO p.m.

THURSDAY, DEC. 30
A couple more of those
September gee.qhtzzes bite
the dust this evening, as the
Channel 9 has quit caltln9,
Grim Neilsen Rating Reaper Its program "Folk Gu•lar '
cuts down the shows that Now It's " Folk Guitar Plus."
didn't make 11. "Bearcats" Plus what? Folk banjo,
rolls off tn a cloud of dust at 8 ' maybe? We're lnlrlgued . If
p.m., Ch. tO, and we think you are, It's on at 7:30p.m.
we've seen the lost of the
MOVIES: Channel to,
"Chicago Teddy Bears," ' perhaps figuring 1971 was
which Is pro·empted for a CBS enough of a horror as II was,
Special
moves Its horror doubleUn;.,lssed
and
un· teature to Thursday again this
mourned. Sorry about that week· "Mission Wars" and
"Neanderthal Man,'' startlno
Channel s won't even be at 11 :30 p.m Also: "Safari,"
telling
them
goodbye, Victor Mature and Janet
however, since It'll be Leigh, 4 p.m ., same channel.
telecasting the Peach Bowl, •
which a couple of years ago
FRIDAY : The Dooley
featured WVU's Mountaineers Brothers go at It today In the
and Gow . Leater Maddox Gator Bowl, and It should be a
riding a bicycle backwards. dandy game, maybe one of the
Toolght It's a duller affair, best this season. Brother
· with Mississippi (9·2) and Vince's Georgia Bulldogs
Georgia Tech (6·51 tangling In were 10·1and have that rarest
Atlanta, with the fans yawning of rarities, a running quar.
over the tact that Malldox lsn1 terback, In Andy Johnson.
bicycling these days and the Brother Bill's North Caroline
Tech quarterback Is a block Tar Heels 19·21 have a .hot
man, which might tell you ~rospeclln Lew Jolley . 2 p.m..
something about what's Chs. 2and 7. And at 4 p.m .. the
happening In Georgia. a p.m East·West Shrine game puts
. Ed Marinaro and John Reaves
There's no CBS movie In the same backfield for the
tonight, with a correspon· East, with Oregon's Bobby
doni's rep6r1 on foreign af. Moore and QB Jimmy Jontt
lairs at 91 .m .. Ch. 10, and a leading !he West. Ch. 12.

port Slate (N.Y) tonight to deOtterbem and Muskingum
Cide the Wooster Classic cham- have now met three straight
pion. Bethany (W.Va.) will take years m the championship
on Oakland (M1ch.) m the con- game of the Musklngum
solation match.
Tournament. It IS the third
Xavier w1ll go against Air straight wm for the Cardinals.
Force m the consolal!on game Don Manly scored 24 points for
of the Palmetto Classic at Cbar- Otterbein, which rallied from a
leston, S.C. tom~ht
:I.S-12 deficit in the ftrsl half

Dick Schafrath

Vlrgon1a 85 Xavoer (()11ol 65
Cleveland
1l 23 395
Marshall (Mich.) Tournament
Baltimore
14 22 389
Olovet (Mich I 89 Ohio North
Atlanta
13 24 351 l'h
ern 87
Cincinnati
10 26 278 4
Musk~ngum Tournament
Western Conference
Clan on ( Pa.l 75 Westminster
Mtdwesl Divts&lt;on
1Pa.l 70 I cons I
W. L. Pet. GB Otterbem 86 Musklngum 64
Milwaukee 32 7 821
(Champ.)
Chicago
26 10 722 4'h
Bruin Classic
Phoenix
21 16 568 10
&lt;J11o srate"9t Amona 47
Detroit
14 23 .378 17
Wo01ler Classic
PICifiC DiviSIOn
Wooster 89 Bethany (W Va ) 60
W. L. Pel. GB Brockport Sl (NY.) 112
LosAngetes 35 3 911
Oakland (Mich) 83
Seattle
22 17 564 13'1&gt;
Urbana Tournament
Golden State 19 19 lOO 16 Urbana 80 Point Park (Pa 1 74
Houston
13 25 343 22
1Champ. l
Portland
8 Jt 20l 27'1&gt; Huntington ( lnd 1 116
Wednesday's Results
Nor!~ wood ( lnd I 1041Cons I
Golden State 107 Cincinnati 102
Case Western Tournament
Milwaukee t23 Portland 84
Case Western 101 St . FranciS
Cleveland 103 Philadelphia 102
( lnd 1 59
Plloenlx 124 Houston 106
Malone 102 Oberlon 90(0ntygamesscheduledl
HooSier· Buckeye Tourllilment
Thursday's Games
Taylor (Ind.) 83 Manchester
Golden Stale af Detroit
&lt;lnd 1 72
Baltimore at New York, day
Wilmington 90 Anderson (Ind.)
Portland at Chicago
76
Buflalo at Phoenix
Earlham ( tnd ) 7l Hanover
los Angeles at Seattle
( tnd 1 63 ,
Atlanta at Houston
Defiance 90 Fondlay 69
!Only games scheduled)
Lemoyne, N.Y. Tourllilmenl
Ohio Wesleyan 75 Alfren
I N.Y I 51
ABA Standutgs
Appalachtan Classtc
By Umted Press lnlernallonal
&lt;J1io
Dominican 97
East
Chesapeake (Va I 80
W. L Pel. GB
Tangerine
Bowl Tourn.
27 9 750
Kentucky
(Qhlol 78 Roll1ns (Fia I
VIrginia
24 1l 615 4'1&gt; Miami
73
Floridians 17 20 459 lOt;,
Grand Valley, Mich. lnv11.
16 21 432 1 Ph Grand
New York
Valley St. Ill Wright St
Pittsburgh 17 25 405 13
86
Carolina
13 26 333 15'1,
Luthenn Tournament
West
Luther
68 Wittenberg 63
W. L Pel. GB
Fort
EustiS lnvit.
Utah
27 9 750 ..
95 Denison 87
Indiana
22 17 .564 6'1&gt; Susquehanna
(Cons.)
Memphis
16 21 432 t Ph
Vorglnia Sl 98 John Carroll 67
Denver
t4 20 412 t2
ICons.)
Dallas
14 24 363 14
Wednesdlly's Results
New York lOl Pittsburgh 102
VIrginia t26 Carollnall7
Kentucky 125 Memphis lll
Floridians 123 Indiana 112
Utah 106 Dallas 102
W

L. Pet. GB

Appalachian Classic at Montgomery, W.Va., but ran up an impressive second balf advantage
to take an easy win. Jim Underwood scored 26 points for the
Ohioans.
New Record
Urbana's John Plunkett contributed 27 points as the team

~LA Clash In Finals

the NFL draft Feb. 1-2.
Halas satd he would pay
Dooley for the year remaining
on the five-year contract he
signed when he became head
coach, but added tbat Dooley
was free to seek any other job
he wished. Should Dolley take a
job in pro football, Halas rnight
not have to pay his full salary
lor next year.
Halas said Dooley was let go

ColtegeBaskelba!IResulls
By Umted Press lnternattonal
Far West Classtc
(Sem1ftnal Round)
Fla St 73 Ore. St 72
Wash St 109 New Mex. 51
(Consolal1onl
Wash 100 Dartmouth 75
M1ch1gan 93 Oregon 85
Btg Etghl Tourney
I Semthna t Round)
Kansas St 92 Iowa St 75
Mossoun 86 Colo. l7
Consalatton

O&lt;la 97 Kansas 69
Nebraska 64 O&lt;la Sf 56
At!-College Tourney
I Semtflnal Round)
O&lt;ta City 89 Army 82
Eastern Ky 89 Santa Clara 85
(Consolation)
Jacksnvl 81 Texas Tech 66
No Tex St 68 Ind. St l9
Hall of Fame Tourney
(Sem1ftna IRound)
Brown 83 Assumption 79

M Havery 92 Sprlnglleld 77
(Consolation)
Batt St 98 Boston U 90
Bucknell 77 Am tnt! 67
PomseHiaCiass1c
Auburn 103 Furman 78
Clemson 67 Holy Cross 49
Sugar Bowl Class1c
No Car 93 St Jos , Pa 77
Bradley 72 Purdue 64
Old Oomtneon Classtc
1Final Round)
lnd•ana 88 Old Dominion 86
( Consolalton)
BYU 93 ~ice 73
Charlotte tnvtlallona I
Dav1dson 91 Ga Tech 66
Va Tech 77 Rutgers 73
Las Vegas Classic

IFtnal Round)
Baylor 82 Weber Sl 72
(Consolation)
UN Las V09as 91 Sou Ill 90
St. Louts lnvtlaltonal
I F1nal Round)
St Lou1s 87 Loyola, Ill 62
IConsolalton)
SMU S1 Yale 80
Roadrunner lnvttahonal
(Ftnat Round)
N Mex St 95 Mont St 8l
(Consolalton)
Pepperdme 73 Portland 71
Oral Roberts Classic
Loyola . Cal 87 East Car 68
0 Roberts 106 Conn 88
Kodak Classic
I Final Round)
Penn 70 St Bonvntre 69
(Consolation)
Southern Cal 88 Rochslr U l5
Garden St. Classic
Lafayette 88 Amer 7 76
Geo. Wash. 78 Rider 69
N.J. Kiwanis Classtc
ISemifmal Round)
Bndgeport 75 Mntctr St 74
C W Post 75 Mnmouth 70
Steel Bowl Tourney
P11lsburgh 88 Navy 78
Duquesne 56 Wake Foresll5
PatmeHo tnvtlallonal
Vlrglnla8l Xav 1er (0165
C1tadet 61 A1r Force 60

because "the record speaks for
itseH."
On the record Dolley's teams
won 2il and lost 36 games and
he was in charge In 1969 when
the team had its worst record
ever, one win and 13 defeats.

Bulldogs Romp
Mike Green scored 23 points,
hauled down 14 rebounds, and
Smith
teammate
Dave
collected 22 pomts and ll
rebounds to lead the Athens
Bulldogs past Lancaster, 62-49,
Wednesday mght.
Athens held a 27-22 advanlsge at ·intermission, and
had little trouble the rest of the
way m postmg its sixth victory

of the season m eight starts
LANCASTER (49)- Arledge
16, Uhl!, Dillard 17, Powers 7,
Wright 4, Edwards 4.
ATHENS (62) - Srn1th 22,
Mace 1, Wood 2, Chonko 2,
Ackerman 4, Green 23, Inbody
2, Handley 6.
By Quarters:
Lancaster
5 17 13 14-49
Athens
11 16 17 IS--62

Brockington Named .
NFL Rookie-Of-Year
NEW. YORK (UPI) -John
Brockington, who took his
"cloud of dust" to the pros and
used 11 in record proportion, is
United Press International's
1971 National Foothall Conference Rookie of the Year.
Brockington, schooled in the
"three yards and a cloud of
dust" rwlning offense of Woody
Hayes at Oh1o Stale, was one of
the lew bright lights for the
Green Bay Packers this season
as he became the most
productive rookie runner In
National Football League history.
Brockington's 1,105 yards are
the most ever recorded by a
f1rst-year player and he is only
the fourth rookie ever to
surpass the 1,000-yard mark,
joimng Beattie Feathers, Cookie Gilchrist and Paul Robinson.
His performance, best in the
NFL, earned him a spot on the
Ali-NFC Team and landslide election Thursday
as Rookie of the Year.
Brockington received 32 of the
39 votes cast by 39 sports
SPONSOR NAMED
SUITON, Mass. (UPI)-The
$52,000Ladles Professional Golf
championship, scheduled lor
June 8-11 at Pleasant Valley
Country Club, will be sponsored
by Eve Cigarettes, the club
announced Wednesday.
Kathy Whitworth ts the
defendmg champion.

Ra1nbow Classtc

( Semtftnal Round)
Hawaii 87 Calif 79
t Consolation)
Monn 86 Hawaii Marines 71
TX TCU 93 Northwestern 78
Gator Bowl Tourney
(Final Round)
Illinois 76 Florida 75
IConsoltlionl
N Car Sf 76 Columbia 48
Maryland lnvilatoonal
St Johns 94 Harvard 88
Maryland t03 Western Ky 67
Long Beach tnvttattonat
( Ftna t Round)
L Bch St 109 uc Rvrslde 85
&lt;ConsoloHonl
Cal. SJ,. Fllrtn 82 Cal Poly SLO
79
Bruin Classic
/
Oltto St 90 Arizona 47
(
UCLA lll TexaS65
Mitton 83 Sl Xavier 67
N.Dak. St 80 North Iowa 72
S.Dak. St 96 Mankato 85
Oltlo Wesleyan 7l Alfred 51
Ky. St. 68 Drury 66
S. F. Austin 104 St Thom 76

The last two seasons the Bears
finished 6-8, and this year, With
a 6-3 record to be contenders
for the Central Division liUe
after nme games, they lost the
last five to fall into third place .

EXTEND STREAK
CLEVELAND (UP!) - The
Cleveland Barons extended
their home win streak to 17
gamea Wednesday night with a
4-1 deciSion over the Boston
Braves.
Th B
te ped t 10
·
e arons s P
ou
front tn the first period on the
ltrst of two goals by DenniS
Giannini.
Fred O'Donnell tied 11 up 1-1
at 9:55 of the second period, but
Giannini's second goal, at 12:08
of the same period, put the
Barons ahead to stay.
Cleveland added two in the
third period on shots by Billy
Heindl and Terry Caffery.
Barons goaltender Gilles
Gilbert had 55 saves to 32 for
Boston's Dan Bouchard.

writers, three from each NFC
city. Vic Washington of San
Francisco receiVed four votes
and linebacker Isiah Robertson
of the Los Angeles RalliS the
other three.
Brockington, a 6-foot-1, 216pounder from Brooklyn, N.Y.,
is only the third Packer ever to
rush lor 1,000 yards - joming
Jim Taylor and Tony Canadeo
--and the second Green Bay
rookie to win the honor. Boyd
Dowler was honored In 1959.
The former Ohio State star
carried 216 times last season
and averaged 51 yards per
carry. He surpassed the 100yard mark four times to lead
the conference in that category.

ROOKIES OF THE YEAR
NORWALK, Conn. (UP!)Hubert Green, a :ZS.year old
from Alabama, and Sally UtUe,
a 19-year old from South
Mrica, were named Wednesday
the 1971 professional golf tour
Rookies of the Year by Golf
Digest magazme.

Wednesday N1ght
Ohio Htgh School
Basketball Results

Br United Press International

Canton Lehman 70 Columbus
West 47
Dover 65 Sandr, Valley 60
Canton McK•n ey 68 Cleve St
Joseph 66
Walsh Jewett l7 Mogadore 43
Zanesv11ie 61 Cambridge 55
Brush 80 Lakewood 59
Valley Forge 71 Normandy 67
(oil
Parma 6~ Shaker Heights 62
North Olmsted 60 Falrvoew 49
Mldvlew 78 Avon 69
Cleve Collinwood 72 Orange 59
Cclumbla 71 Cle\0 Byzantine
45
Toledo Macomber 63 Cleve
John Hay 52
Lima Sen1or 67 Lima Shawnee
54
Lima Ba lh 70 Lima Central
Catholic 69
Fort Frye 66 Morgan l7
Freeport Lakeland l4 Woods
fieid 48
Dover 65 Sandy Valley 60
Barberton 87 Tlmken 68
Athens 62 Lancaster 49
Westlake 68 Bay 53
Chardon 70 Newbury 56
Painesville Harvey 86
Cleveland Lutheran East 57
Painesville Riverside 98 Perry
42
Rocky Rover l8 Medi ~ l6
Forelands 71 Ed1son 46
Black Rover 92 Keystone 69

From all of us at Kerm's Korner

HAPPY
NEW
YEAR
This Is the one week of the
year that we advise you not
to gel •all tanked up'
HAPPY NEW YEAR

d/igh-spirited

for making 1971 one of the most
prosperous.

CLEVELAND (UPI)
Cleveland Browns offensive
tackle Dick Schafrath, a 13year pro football veteran,
announced Wednesday he is
retirmg.
Scbafrath, 34, who spent his
entire career with the Browns,
told Browns owner Art Modell
of his retirement Ill a telephone
call.
Modell sa1d the call "confirmed what we had expected."
I can't say enough about
Dick and hiS contributions to
the Browns and to pro football," Modell sa1d. "He leaves
with our best wishes."
Scafrath, who has played in
s1x pro bowl games, moved in
as regular offensive tackle m
1960 when Lou Groza confined
his activities to kicking. He
remained a regular until this
season when, after the first few
games, changes were made in
the offensive line.
Schafrath, a nat1ve of
Canton, Oh1o, was drafted
second by Cleveland m 1900
after playing at Ohio State.

wishes come your

ALUMINUM

way for
•

Without you it couldn't have been

0

the New Year.

Grateful thanks for your

done.

always friendly and kind support.

Again, Thanks!

"KERM"
NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE

BLIND STOP OR OVER LAP
WIN DO~

VALLEY WMBER &amp; SUPPLY 00.
MIDDLEPORT

ISears l "
JMHuized Cltalol Men:hant
LOU &amp; THELMA OSBORNE
POMEROY, OHIO

.'

�, I'

: I

I
0- The Dally Se~lnel, Mlddlelll!rt·Pomeroy, O.,llec. 30,1971
4 - The Daily Sentinel, MiddlePQrl-Pometoy, 0 ., l.Jt'&lt;'. :10, 1971

'

Coach Landry ·almost Smiled
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UP!l- Tom
Landry caught himself just in
time .
For a minute there he almost
forgot and smiled.
It was a minor accident, and

Today's

Sport Parade
it took place in Bloomington,
Minn., Sunday, barely an
instant before the gun went off
signifying the whole business
was over and Dalias was a 2012 winner over Minnesollj.
If you studied the expression
of the tall, top-coated Cowboys'
coach at all as the TV camera
panned in to catch it, then you
saw an almost imperceptible
momentary change- the sha·
dow of a smile maybe you'd
call it.
But then Tom Landry imme·
diately went back to bei1 Tom
Landry again . The rozen
features, the icy penetrating
look, aU of it.
Landry isn't anywhere near
as hard an individual as he
looks, but he's never going to
lead the league in emotion.
That's simply his way.
If you talk with Tom Landry
about this characteristic of his,
you discover he isn't that
sensitive about it.
"Merely because I don't show
too much emotion doesn't mean
I don't experience it," he says.
"! just don't think there is
much place for emotion on the
sidelines during the ball game."
Not Much Animation
You watch most professional
football coaches on the sidelines
during a game and they aU look
pretty much the same . Like
condemned men. Not much
animation.
George Allen, the Washington
coach, has this habit of wetting
the second and third fingertips

Local Bowling
POMEROY LANES
Women's Thursday League
Dec . 23, 1971

Won Lost

New York Clothing

92
Dave' s T ire Land
84
Pomer oy Bowl ing Lanes
76
Simon 's Marke1
61
F oll&gt;st"Ruiilll~l&lt; .
41

Smtih's Body Shop ·

36
44

52
67
87

30

98

High Team Series - New
York Clothing 1737, Forest Run

Block 1696, Pomeroy Lanes
1627 .
High Team Game - New
York Clothing 616, New York
Clothing 607 , Foresl Run Block
l S4 .

High Ind . Game - Drema
Smith 199, Crestlyn Hill 184;
Sandy Phalin 177 .
Ind . High Series -

Maxine

Dugan 496, Eileen Searls 494,

Drema Sm ith 483 .

of his right hand by going to his
mouth after each play . . It
almost looks as if he's getting
ready to throw a forward pass .
John Unitas has the same habit
but he does a little more
throwing.
Getting back to Tom Landry,
his ball club has won eight
games in a row now and no
club in the NFL has put
together that big a winning
streak this year.
For the Cowboys there are
only two more rivers to cross,
the San Francisco forty Niners
this Sunday, then the Balli·
more-Miami winner in the
Super Bowl Jan . 16 and if they
can get past both it would
mean the first world champion·
ship in their history.
They have come this close
before - even closer - and
missed, so Tom Landry is
showing little excitement right
now. He is, in fact, acting a lot
like Bill Sharman, whose Los
Angeles Lakers. have won a
record 29 straight and are

Reedsville
News, Notes
Mrs. Carl Walton and Susie
have returned home after
spending two weeks at Celina,
assisting in the care of Mrs.
Walton's daughter, Mrs. Gary
(Sandra) Landon who are
announcing the birth of a s.on,
Michael Shawn, Nov. 30. The
baby weighed 9 lbs . The
Landons have another son,
Wesley, age 3 years. While
there Mrs. Walton celebrated
her birthday on Nov. 28. She
was guest of honor at a birth·
day dinner. Other guests in·
eluded Mr. and Mrs. John
Calaway and family of Marion.
Mrs . Walton and Susie
returned home w.ith the
Calaways for a week's visit.
Mrs. Walton's son, Mr. and
Mrs. James Cowdery and
family came lor them and
returned them to their home.
Karen Humphrey and Jean
Whitehead, students at Ohio
State University, are spending
the holidsys at their homes
here .
Mike Boring, student at Ohio
University at Athens, is
spending his holiday vacation
at his home.
Mrs. Bess Larkins, Mrs.
Gladys Williams and Mrs.
Ruth Anne Balderson visited
with Mrs. Bess Webster of
Tuppers Plains.
Visiting at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Gene Wilson are Mr.
and Mrs. Junior Congrove and
Mrs. David Hudson and son,
Michael, of Zanesville.
-Mrs. L. Balderson

leaving everybody else behind ,
in the National Basketball
Association's Pacific Division.
"We haven't won anything
yet," Sharman keeps saying.
"There's along way to go."
He means ·It.
So does Landry.
Players Reflect Coach
Frequently, players on a
particular club reflect their
coach's thinking and to a large
degree that's the way it is with
the Cowboys .
Roger Staubach, their quarterback, sounds like Landry
sometimes.
'With us now, each ball game
amounts to the Super Bowl," he
says. ,;What happened before
this Isn't important and the
only game we're concerned
about is this Sunday's. You
start thinking psst that and you

know what happell$, you never
get there."
To make it all the way, the
Cowboys w9uld have to stretch
their string--to 10 games and
when somebody pointed out
that no team in the NFL was
able to come close to that
many this year, Bobby Hayes,
the Cowboys' wide receiver,
said :
"! know that, and we all
know that, but it doesn't make
any difference. We're not
thinking about winning streaks.
All we're thinking about is our
next game, one at a tinle."
See that. Bobby Hayes Is only
20, and he sounds like his coach
already. No emotion, no enlla·
ratlon,noloudexclamation.
No guarantee this Sunday
either, but I think the Cowboys
are going to make it No. 9.

Apple Grove
News, Events

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr . and Mrs. Early Roush,
Mr . and Mrs. Don Beegle, Zane
and Tracy,. and Pam Buck
were Christmas dinner guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Buck.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Pearson,
Mrs. Sally Savage and Robin,
Mr. and Mrs. dim Roush, Mr.
and Mrs. Francis Webb, .Miss
Brenda Hawkins of Salem, 0 .,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Matthew
of Columbus, Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Theiss, Mr. and Mrs.
Clifford Hill, Max Hill and two
children were all dinner guests ·
of Mr. and Mrs. Junior Salser
and Mike at Dorcas Christmas.
Spending Christmas day and
over the weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Dallas Hill and family
and Mrs. Dolly Wolfe were
Mrs. Dale Hill and sons, Danny
and Dale Wallace, of Moore
· Haven, Fla.; Mr. and Mrs.
Marvin Hill, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
home for a week's visit and
CaSper, Billy and Brian Dye, Middleport.
all of Columbus, Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Fox and returned home Friday with the
held Saturday ,at Ewing Mike Hill and daughter, Dolly, David were Christmas Day. Gloeckners
who
spent
Funeral Home.
Christmas
weekend
with
Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Roush guests of the latter's sister, Mr.
Recent visitors of Mr. and and Joey, all local, Mr. and and Mrs. Orville Harpold and and Mrs. Badgely.
Mrs. John Dean, John and Mrs. Carl Wolfe Jr . and family at Belpre.
M;r. and Mrs. Homer Warner
Richard, were Mrs. Walter daughter, Wendy, of Addeville.
Christmas weekend guests of were Christmas Day guests of
Terrell and Billy Kendall of Mrs. Doris Rogers of Columbus Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Donohue Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt Ferguson at
Pataskala, Mrs. Edward called on the Hills /:day were Mr. and Mrs. Roher! New Haven, W. Va. In the
Weekly of Burton, S. C., Mr. afternoon.
Harden of • Marion, Mr. and afternoon they all visited Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Paynter of
Sunday dinner gues of Mr. Mrs.LoweiiBurton , Columbus, and Mrs. Woodrow Brown of
Carpenter, M~'&lt; and Mrs. and Mrs. Robert Smith were Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ft. Pierce, Fla., at the home of
Junior Smalley, Susan, Judy, Joe Derouin and friend , Cecilia Winebrenner and family of the former's mother, at Nitro,
Dale and Hobie of Wierton, W. Kapor of Millville, Pa., Mr. and Cheshire. On Christmas Day W. Va.
Va., Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Mrs. Jimmy Freeman of the group were all dinner
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Bass
Arnold of Chester, Mr. and
· p a., Mr. and Mrs. guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles and children of Marengo, Ohio,
Ervm,
Mrs. Kenneth Markins of Marlin Cunningham of Pitts- Winebrenner at Cheshire.
were over Christmas weekend
Racine and Mr . and Mrs. burgh, Mr. and Mrs. Bernard
Mrs. Virgil (Mary) Roush is guests of Mr. and Mrs. Arnold
Gerald Gilkey and family of Lavelle, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry a surgical patient at Veterans Hupp. Other guests Christmas
Athens.
Day were Max Manuel Sr., Mr.
Johnson and children, Mrs. Memorial Hospital.
'
The Youth of the Carleton Emma Johnson and Rodney
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Shields and Mrs. Don Manuel and
Church went caroling Monday Neigler of Racine.
were over Christmas weekend children of Racine, Mr. and
evening. They visited several
Mr. and Mrs. Brady Craig guests of Mrs. Marlene Fisher Mrs . Rufus Randolph of
families who are shut-in. an d son, Ke1'th , of Athens, Ala ., and children at Racine.
Dayton, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Following the caroling they were Christmas weekend
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Hayman
returned to the church where guests of the latter's parents, and family of Columbus were
the adults entertained them Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Norris. Christmas weekend guests of
with a potluck supper in the Other guests of the Norrises Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Hayman '
social rooms of the church.
were Mr. and Mrs. Hershcel and Keith.
Norris and Clarence, Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Me·
Mrs . Larry O'Brien, Jimmy, Dade and Gene Early were
Harrisonville
Linda and Carol; Mr. and Mrs. over Christmas weekend
Hoyt Ferguson of New Haven. guests of Mrs .. Edna Roush,
Society News
Mr. and Mrs. Butch Wilson Mrs. Gladys Shields and other
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Gibson and children and Mrs. Erma . relatives. On Monday the
have purchased the Landon Wilson spent Christmas McDades took Mr.s . Shields to
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Mansfield and VlStted Mr. and
Smith farm.
1\!r. and Mrs. F. 0. Whaley Charles Burri and boys at Mrs . Howard Roush. Mr .
and granddaughter, Ann, of Bolivar Dam. Mrs. Mary Burri Roush was scheduled to un·
Columbus visited Ava Gilkey of Canton was a Christmas Day dergo surger~ Tuesday. Mrs.
guest of the Burris.
S~1elds remamed for a VISit
Sunday.
Mrs.
Margie
Hunt
broke
her
w1th
the Roushes.
Mr. and Mrs. C. J.Schenck of
arm.
Mr
. and Mu. Erwin
Alabama~ left Friday to visit
Christmas dinner guests of Gloeckner
and
David
her brother, Don Updegraff Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Roush Gloeckner , Mrs . Joyce
in Atlanta, Ga.
Mr. and Mrs. James Payne were Mr. and Mrs. Walter Badgely, Mr . and Mrs. Richard
of Newark and Mamie Newlun McDade and Gene Early of Fisher attended the wedding of
visited relatives here over the Troy, Mrs. Edna Roush of Edward Moran to Betty
Racine, Mrs. Iva Orr, Mr. and Barmsh, Dec. 18, at the Umted
holidays.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey, Mrs. Ronnie Russell of Mid· Method1st Church at Vemce
Park, New Jersey. Mr. Moran
Mrs. Wilda Wiseman and Mrs. dleport.
Mrs. Ferne Hayman was an is stationed with the-Marines at
Lola Clark and Mr. and Mrs. C.
J. Schenck attended a over Christmas weekend guest PhlladelphlB. The Gl'?fkners
Christmas program at Chester. of Mrs. Leah Weatherby at also visited Mrs. Gloeckner's
sister, Mrs. Mildred LeGoullon
The Larry Clark children were
at Sister AnnaPQlis, Maryland
in the play.
Friday evening supper two weeks with her son, Nursing Home, and their
guests of the Roy Wlsemans Richard and family, helping daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
were Rev. and Mrs. David them move to West Virginia Badgely and children, Fair·
lu, Va. Danny Badgely ac·
Wiseman and chikldren and from Dayton.
companied
the Gloeckners
Mr. and Mrs. Ll!rry Clark,
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Sayre, Mr.
Taura and Penny.
and Mrs. Tim Sayre and
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gibson children, Mr. and Mrs. Dorsey
of Columbus spent Christmas Jordan and children spent
with the Robert Alkires and Christmas with their father,
Ray.
Dana Turner.
Christmas callers of Ava
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Seiple
Gilkey were Mr. and Mrs. of Dayton spent Christmas
Robert Gibson, Mr. and Mrs. with her sister, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Alltire and" Ray, Mr. Gene Young.
and Mrs. Walter Jordan, Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Doug Bishop
and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey and and children visited her
Karen and Tad.
parents, Saturday at Hamden.
Miss Judy Carsey called on
Mr. and Mrs. James Cheadle
Mrs. Lola· Clark Wednesday of Columbus spent the weekend
afternoon.
with Mr. and Mrs. Kenny
Mrs. Earl Foil Sr. closed her Payne and Mrs. Kathryn
store Friday and went to Weaver.
Columbus to spend Christmas
Mr. and Mrs. Don Wells and
with her children. She returned daughter of Columbus visited
home Sunday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Blge Lambert
Mrs. Delmar Rhodes spent over the weekend.

Kingsbury News, Notes
The Carleton Sunday School
had an attendance of 80 on
Dec,. 26. Ralph Carl,
superintendent, presented
Mary Lou King with a pin for 17
years perfect attendance.
Mrs. Sadie Carl a!lll Mrs.
Eva King visited with Mrs.
Carl's mother, Mrs. Hannah
Harrison who is ill recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Martin Swart
and Roma Sue of Columbus
spent a day recently with Mr.
and Mrs. Wayne Beal and
visited with Mrs. Roma Beat
who is a patient at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Sam Damron and Mr.
and Mrs. Gary Gibson of
Albany visited with Mr .
Damron who is a patient at
Holzer Hospital and is im·
proving slowly.
Miss Mary Lou King who is
attending college at Mt.
Vernon is spending her
Christmas vacation with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
King and family .
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Carl aud
family spent the weekeni! with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Barnett and family at
Grove City.
Mrs. Helen Dais visited
recently with Mr. and Mrs.
Clair Burson at Shade.
Richard Dean who is attending Asbury , College in
Wilmore, Ky., is spending his
Christmas vacation with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. John
Dean and John.
The Carleton Church had its
Christmas program Saturdsy
evening with a gift exchange
following the program:
Elijah Michael, who had
been a lifelong resident of this
community died at Camden
Clark Hospital following a
short illness. Services were

COME TO···

Mrs. Moore Host
At B&amp;PW ·Party

They'll Do It Every Ti~e

1/'1.

'

(Buz) Hupp and children, Mr.
and Mrs. Jim Hupp and
children. Rocky Hupp went
home with the Basses Sunday
for a week's visit.
Christmas Eve guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Homer Warner were
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Warner,
Randy Michael and Usa, Mrs.
Inez Roy and Rex and Nancy,
of Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Hupp
and son, Edward, called on Mr.
and Mrs. George Hupp at
Portland Sunday.

For That .End of Year Inventory
Office Fum~ure
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Personal Notes

,a,ct

HAPPY. NEW YEAR

FOR
OUTSTANDING BUYS I

Pomeroy....

Mr. and Mrs. Larry O'Brien
and Jimmy, Linda and Carol
spent Christmas night Wtth his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Rex
O'Brien at Stewart.
Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Norris of
Athens visited Mr. and Mrs.
Marshall Adams recently.

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Jllghllghls of her recent trip
totbeHolyLandwereshownin
slides and commentary by
Mnl. Allee Robeson at the
recent hoUday party of the
Middleport Business and Professional Women's Glub a\
the home of Mr's. Harrr S.
Moore.
·Mrs. Robeson was presented
a gift by tbe club. Mrs. Homer
Forrest was In charge of
arrangements for the program
which included a carol sing lind
a gift exchange. ·
The Moore home was extensively decorated for the
holidays and Mrs , Moore
opened the meeting with a
Christmas verse, "Also It is
Not Far." Mrs. Gra~ Pratt
presided during which time a
communication from
Congressman Clarence Miller
regarding House Bill 208
pertaining to equal rights for
women was read . Mrs.

,,.,

Holiday weekend guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Johnson,
Racine, were Mr.and Mrs. Roy
Johnson, Lora and David,
Carroll; Mr. and Mi's. Dale
Johnson, Kevin and Lisa,
North Ohnsted; Mr. and .Mrs.
Clyde Johnson and Connie,
Hamden; Mr. J. P. Sauder,
Charmaine and Kelly, Point
Pleasant, W.Va.; and Mr. and
Mrs. Glenn Cartwright, Uonel
and Eric, of Glendale, W. Va.
Christmas guests of Mr. and
Mrs. VIc Hannahs were Mr.
and Mrs . Dick Werry of
Mannington, W. Va.; Chuck
Hannahs, a student at
Mountain State College,
Parkenburg, and Miss Rise
Lockhart, Parkersburg . Chuck
maintained a B average for the
past quarter at Mountain State.
He Is affiliated with Kappa
Sigma Tau Fraternity.
Mr. and Mrs. Norman E.
Hysell, Bruce, Terry and
Nori,na Jean, of Pomeroy, R.
D.,ind Mr. and Mrs. Guy Rose
and Kenny of Portland, were
Christmas dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Norman M. Hysell,
Bashan.
Mrs. Norman E. Hysell and
children visited recently with
Mrs. Iva Singer of Chester.
Christmas dinner guests of
Mr. and Mnl. Willard Hines
were Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Woode, Chester; Mr. and Mrs.
Ray Hines, David and Doug,
Belpre; Mrs. Edith Hines and
Mrs. Georgia Swauger,
Pomeroy. They were joined for
the afternoon and evening by
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Hines,
Amy and Andrea, GalliPQiis;
. Mrs. Harletta Donovan,
Lancaster, and Mn. Marte
Chapman, Pomeroy. The
birthday anniversary of Mrs.
Willard Hines was also
celebrated.
Mr. and Mra. Patrick
Lochary and Miss Helen
Lochary returned from Glen
Ridge, N: J. Tuesday following
a Christmas visit there with
Mr. and Mrs. James Lochary
and children.
Mrs. Charles Warner,
Ebenezer s~. is in Marietta
visiting her son and daughterin-law, Mr. and Mrs: John
Sewell. She Is remaining for
the New Year's weekend when
her geanddaughter and her
hu!band, Mr. and Mrs. Bradley
Schlll~r, wlll arrive from
Pennsylvania for a visit.
Mrs. Betty Howell was the
Christmas weekend guest of
her son-in-law and daughter,
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Lee of
Elyria. Mrs. Lee, who has been
Ui for several montha, is im·
proving.
Mrs. Manning Webster of
Pomeroy and Mrs. Margaret
Coughenour of Cheshire spent
a day recently In Huntington,
W.Va., visiting their brother,
George Van Zandt. They also
visited Judge and Mrs. Frank
Eaton. Mn. Eaton Is the for·
mer Georgia Bing Russell of
Cheshire.
Mrs. WUIIam Smith and her
sister, Mrs. Azealea Ddister,
have returned from Dayton
where they were called by the
death of Mrs. Odlster's
daughter-in-Uiw;'Mrs. Mildred
Ddister.
Tuesday luncheon guesb$ of
Ml:s. Wllllam Smitli were Mrs.
Allen Hampton, Pomeroy,
Mrs. Con Young, .Middleport,
Mrs. Kathleen Baxter of
Cincinnati, Mri. Dpuglas
Jackson of RendvUie, aM Mrs.
Azealea Odister of Dayton,
here for an extended stay with
Mrs. Smith.

.. ,

Elizabeth Yerian, district
director, gave her evaluation
rePQrt of tbe club, and a thank
you note was read from Miss
Olga Pierotti for remem·
brances during the recent
death of her mother.
AI&amp;o read at the meeting was
a Jetter from Miss Debbie
Woods, who attends the Holzer
School of Nursing, under the
BPW scholarship. Miss Woods ·
wished members a Merry
Christmas, told of her
progress, and announced
capping ceremony for Jan. 21
at Grace United Methodist
Church.
Arrangements were made to
send $1 to each of the residents
of the Meigs County Infirmary.
An invalid chair donated to the
club's hospital loan center by
Mrs . Annlce Ohlinger was
acknowledged . Mrs. Mary
Kunselman reported that tbe
ceramic tree had been won by
Dale Warner.
Mrs. Joe Bailey and Mrs.
Dorinda Nardi were guests.
Refreshments of fancy sand·
wiches and cookies, punch and
coffee were served by the
hostess committee headed by
Mrs. Moore and Mrs. Pearl
Reynolds.
Attending besides those
named were Mrs. Betty Cline,
Mrs. Betty Conkle, Mrs. Mary
Kunzelman, Mrs. Wilma
Sargent, Mrs. Beulah Strauss,
Mn . Rose Reynolds, Mrs.
Nellie Vale, Mrs. Norma
Wilson.

Middleport

Personal Notes

'Lights of Christmas ' is Theme of Service
A portrayal ·of the manger
A candlelighting service Ught of the World is Jesus, the Spencer , Supt .. gave the
highlighted
the annual small candles of those at- welcome, and !her~ was group scene was presented as the
· Christmas Eve program at the tendin g the service were singing of "Hark the Herald choir sang . "What Child Is
..
Angels Sing" and "Joy to the This." Taking roles were Patty
Enterprise Uniied Methodist lighted .
The program opened with a World." Mrs. Philip Ohlinger Edwards as Mary, Briah WUI
Church.
as Joseph, Angela Curtis,
~~i.ighls of Christmas" was Christmas prelude by Miss gave the scripture.
Children 's recitations in- Cindy Curtis and Sandy
the theme of the candl•lighting Emma Lou Da vis. Ralph
cluqed "Two Celebrate" by Johnson as the angels, and
service with Rodney Pullins
Brian Will, "A Wish for All" by David Warth and Terry Smith
and Becky Will as the re'aders
Cindy Curtis, "Two Words" by as the shepherds.
and Ricky Johnson and
Santa arrived and gifts were
David Warth, "Manger Bed"
Beverly Will the candle
distributed
. Miss Elizabeth
by Sandy Johnson, "Listen,
lighters. During the service
People " by Brian Spencer, Davis had the closing prayer.
. eight large candles at the front
In charge of the program were
of the church were lighted, and
The annual Christmas buffet "Wouldn 'tll Be Wonderful" by Mrs . Ed Bowen, Mrs. Don
then as the choir sang "The of the Harry Pickens family Terry Smith and "Practice
Hunnel and Miss Joyce DaviS.
was held Christmas night at Love" by Angela Curtis.
the home of Mr. and Mrs .
Ernest Whitehead, Reedsville.
A!tending were the hosts'
children, Jean, home from
Ohio State University, Jane
and Juli, Mr. and Mrs. Warren
Pickens, Mr. and !\Irs. Denver
Weber, David and Mark,
LETART FALLS - Ohio Reedsville; Mr. and Mrs.
Valley Grange No. 2612 here Harold Sauer, Mary Ruth and
held its annual Christmas Joy, Middleport; Mr. and Mrs.
party at the elementary school William Meredith, Charles and
Thursday evening, Dec. 16, Roger.
with Worthy Past Master
Charles recenUy graduated
Early Roush in the chair. In· from Ohio State University
stallation of officers will' be cum laude with a dual degree,
held when the grange meets both bachelor and masters, in
MR. AND MRS. W. ROBERT COUCH of Pomeroy are
Jan.
13 at the home of Mrs. electric engineering. He will
announcing the engagement of their daughter, Janice
Elizabeth Roush.
leave this week for Rochester,
Loraine, to Mr. John R. Pauley, son of Mr. and Mrs. James C.
gilt
exchange
was
held
and
A
N. Y., where he has accepted
Pauley of Mason, W.Va. Miss Couch is a 1970 graduate of
the
lecturer's
program
conemployment
with the Eastman
Meigs High School and is presently employed in the office of
I
sisted of a Bible verse per· Company beginning Monday.
Dr. H. D. Brown, Pomeroy. Mr. Pauley, a 1970 graduate of
taining to Christmas by the
Wahama High School, is attending the United Electronics
group, a poem by Eula Wolfe,
Institute in Charleston, W. Va. Wedding plans are inParty Time
the song, "Away In a Manger,"
complete.
by the group; a poem by Mabel
IN ALL
Roush,, "'Twas the Night
COLORS &amp;
Before Christmas," and a
Ring Out The Old
Merry Christmas game, a
Welcome the New
STYLES
poem composed by all about
1
Christ.
Refreshments of baked
beans, sandwiches, salad and
Serving: Gallipolis,
Numerous friends and Andrew, and Mr . and Mrs. coffee were served. Refresh·
ments
of
sandwiches
and
pie
of
Middleport,
Pomeroy, 0 .,
relatives visited at the Long Paul J . Andrew, Columbus ;
any
lpnd
and
coffee
will
he
&amp;
Mason
CO.,
W.Va .
ON THE T IN MIDDLEPORT
Bottom home of Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Roger Buckley,
served
at
the
next
meeting.
Francis Andrew over the Pomeroy, R. D.; the Rev. Fr.
Christmas holiday weekend. John Wippel, Washington, D.
Home lor the holidays with C.; the Rev. Fr. Frank Patala ,
her parents is Miss Mary Ellen Chauncey; Mr. and Mrs .
Andrew of Grand Prairie, Gordon Collins and Mrs. Mattie
Texas. She is also visiting her Kinney, Tuppers Plains, Mr.
sister, Mrs. Larry Collins and and Mrs. George Collins and
family . On Christmas Eve Mr. Mike, and Mr. and Mrs. M.
and Mrs. Andrew received Nesselroad.
ROOR DISPLAY MODELS ALL REDUCED !
Andrew
was
Francis
telephone greetings from their
SOME WitH SMALL SCRATCHES.
daughter, Cathy , Gulfport, returned from St. Joseph's
Miss., and their son , Frank , Hospital only recently. He had
NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED.
Saigon. Frank recently been confined there since Dec.
returned from a two week 11 when he broke his )meecap.
JUST IN IN TIME FOR SALE A LARGE SELECTION OF COLOR' TV.
vacation in Australia.
Other Christmas weekend
SPURRIER REENLISTS
visi).ors at the Andrew' home
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
were Rosema~y and Mike Spurrier, Sr., near Pomeroy,

Mrs. Whitehead
Host at Buffet

Gift Exchange,

Girls 7 to 14

Program are

,.

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PULLOVERS
SWEATERS
JEANS

Grange"Features

janice Loraine Couch Betrothed

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Home for Christmas

Mr. and Mrs. Dale K. Roush,
Steven and Kathy, Apple
Creek, were the Sunday guests
of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Ben Turner . Steven is home on
vacation from New Bedford,
Mass., where he at tends
college.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Venoy
and children of Harrisonville
entertained Wednesday with a
dinner honoring Miss Mabel
Hysell on her birthday anniversary.
Guests for a pre-holiday
dinner party at the OWen Fink
home were Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Dean Fink, Steven and
Timothy, of New Haven, Mr.
New officers were elected at
and Mrs. Bill Fink and Billy,
Johnnie,
and
Chuckle, a recent meeting of the Adult
Cheshire, and Mr. and Mrs. Class of the Bradford Church of
John Buckley and Jeff, Christ.
Elected were Mrs. Frances
Chesapeake.
Mrs . Geneva Yates has Hysell, president; Mrs. Jackie
returned from Cambridge Reed, vice president; Mrs.
Norma Russell, secretary;
where she spent the Christmas
Nora
Cambron ,
holiday with her son and Mrs.
treasurer;
Mrs.
Helen
Miller,
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
David Robert Yates, Sr. and card chairman, and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. David Robert Mildred Sisson, news reporter .
Yates, Jr. and Roger Alan. On It was voted to send a donation
Christmas Day the Yates to a Bible college and to make a
payment on the psrsonage
families went to Me·
stove.
Connelsville for a dinner with
Devotions by Mrs. Tressie
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Lawrence. Hendricks
were entitled
Other guests there were Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Bedford, "Salvation for All Men ."
Scripture was taken from
Wilmington, Del., and Mr. and
Mrs. John Danner, Lori Alice, Romans 1:8-16 and Acts·10, 34.
Reports were given by the
Johnston, S. C.
officers.
Miss Carolyn Searls of
Attending the meeting were
Columbus was the holiday
weekend guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Homer Forrest,
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Sisson, Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Searls.
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Farmer andMrs.HarryHendricks,Mr.
andMr.andMrs. PhllDevenny and Mrs. Herbert M1ller, Mr.
of Dayton were the Chrlstmas....-:md Mrs. James Reed and Joy, .
night guests of Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Cambron, Mrs. Frances
Arthur Skinner and Mrs. David . Hysell, Mrs. Eleanor Hoover,
Fanner.
Mrs. Laura Hoover and Mrs.

Officers Named

By Adult Class

From 3.00

Dudley's Aorist

received a telephone call from
their son, M.Sgt. Clarence
Spurrier, Jr., on Christmas
Day from Anchorage, Alaska.
Spurrier has reenlisted in the
U. S. Air Force for two and a
half more years . He and his
wife, Doris, and son, Dennie,
have lived in Alaska for the
past two years and will be
there for one more year. Sgt.
Spurrier marked his 20th year
in the air force today, Dec. 30.

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ON DEAN'S LIST
Jim Warner, son of Mr. and
Mrs . William Warner, South
Second Ave., Middleport, has
been named to the dean's list
for the fall quarter at the Ohio
Institute of Technology in
Columbus. Jim is currently
spending the holiday season
with his parents and brother.

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Edward Templeton of Bailey Verna::H:y:se:ll:.
Run spent Christmas Day in
Jackson visiting his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Lawton Tem·
pleton. Other visitors were Mr. ·
and Mrs. Ben Batey and Mr .
and Mrs. Vic (Lelia) Mar·
chinoa, of .Dayton.
Dinner guests of Mr. and
Mrs. James M. Reed on .
Christmas. Eve were Laurence
Reed, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Durst
and Tim, James D. Reed, and
Phyllis Davidson, Columbus.
James D. Reed spent the
weekend with his parents.
Mr. Eber Henderson of
Pomeroy and Mrs. Lillian
Stleff of Middleport were
Christmas dinner illesta of Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Sauer, Mary
Ruth and

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I
0- The Dally Se~lnel, Mlddlelll!rt·Pomeroy, O.,llec. 30,1971
4 - The Daily Sentinel, MiddlePQrl-Pometoy, 0 ., l.Jt'&lt;'. :10, 1971

'

Coach Landry ·almost Smiled
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UP!l- Tom
Landry caught himself just in
time .
For a minute there he almost
forgot and smiled.
It was a minor accident, and

Today's

Sport Parade
it took place in Bloomington,
Minn., Sunday, barely an
instant before the gun went off
signifying the whole business
was over and Dalias was a 2012 winner over Minnesollj.
If you studied the expression
of the tall, top-coated Cowboys'
coach at all as the TV camera
panned in to catch it, then you
saw an almost imperceptible
momentary change- the sha·
dow of a smile maybe you'd
call it.
But then Tom Landry imme·
diately went back to bei1 Tom
Landry again . The rozen
features, the icy penetrating
look, aU of it.
Landry isn't anywhere near
as hard an individual as he
looks, but he's never going to
lead the league in emotion.
That's simply his way.
If you talk with Tom Landry
about this characteristic of his,
you discover he isn't that
sensitive about it.
"Merely because I don't show
too much emotion doesn't mean
I don't experience it," he says.
"! just don't think there is
much place for emotion on the
sidelines during the ball game."
Not Much Animation
You watch most professional
football coaches on the sidelines
during a game and they aU look
pretty much the same . Like
condemned men. Not much
animation.
George Allen, the Washington
coach, has this habit of wetting
the second and third fingertips

Local Bowling
POMEROY LANES
Women's Thursday League
Dec . 23, 1971

Won Lost

New York Clothing

92
Dave' s T ire Land
84
Pomer oy Bowl ing Lanes
76
Simon 's Marke1
61
F oll&gt;st"Ruiilll~l&lt; .
41

Smtih's Body Shop ·

36
44

52
67
87

30

98

High Team Series - New
York Clothing 1737, Forest Run

Block 1696, Pomeroy Lanes
1627 .
High Team Game - New
York Clothing 616, New York
Clothing 607 , Foresl Run Block
l S4 .

High Ind . Game - Drema
Smith 199, Crestlyn Hill 184;
Sandy Phalin 177 .
Ind . High Series -

Maxine

Dugan 496, Eileen Searls 494,

Drema Sm ith 483 .

of his right hand by going to his
mouth after each play . . It
almost looks as if he's getting
ready to throw a forward pass .
John Unitas has the same habit
but he does a little more
throwing.
Getting back to Tom Landry,
his ball club has won eight
games in a row now and no
club in the NFL has put
together that big a winning
streak this year.
For the Cowboys there are
only two more rivers to cross,
the San Francisco forty Niners
this Sunday, then the Balli·
more-Miami winner in the
Super Bowl Jan . 16 and if they
can get past both it would
mean the first world champion·
ship in their history.
They have come this close
before - even closer - and
missed, so Tom Landry is
showing little excitement right
now. He is, in fact, acting a lot
like Bill Sharman, whose Los
Angeles Lakers. have won a
record 29 straight and are

Reedsville
News, Notes
Mrs. Carl Walton and Susie
have returned home after
spending two weeks at Celina,
assisting in the care of Mrs.
Walton's daughter, Mrs. Gary
(Sandra) Landon who are
announcing the birth of a s.on,
Michael Shawn, Nov. 30. The
baby weighed 9 lbs . The
Landons have another son,
Wesley, age 3 years. While
there Mrs. Walton celebrated
her birthday on Nov. 28. She
was guest of honor at a birth·
day dinner. Other guests in·
eluded Mr. and Mrs. John
Calaway and family of Marion.
Mrs . Walton and Susie
returned home w.ith the
Calaways for a week's visit.
Mrs. Walton's son, Mr. and
Mrs. James Cowdery and
family came lor them and
returned them to their home.
Karen Humphrey and Jean
Whitehead, students at Ohio
State University, are spending
the holidsys at their homes
here .
Mike Boring, student at Ohio
University at Athens, is
spending his holiday vacation
at his home.
Mrs. Bess Larkins, Mrs.
Gladys Williams and Mrs.
Ruth Anne Balderson visited
with Mrs. Bess Webster of
Tuppers Plains.
Visiting at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Gene Wilson are Mr.
and Mrs. Junior Congrove and
Mrs. David Hudson and son,
Michael, of Zanesville.
-Mrs. L. Balderson

leaving everybody else behind ,
in the National Basketball
Association's Pacific Division.
"We haven't won anything
yet," Sharman keeps saying.
"There's along way to go."
He means ·It.
So does Landry.
Players Reflect Coach
Frequently, players on a
particular club reflect their
coach's thinking and to a large
degree that's the way it is with
the Cowboys .
Roger Staubach, their quarterback, sounds like Landry
sometimes.
'With us now, each ball game
amounts to the Super Bowl," he
says. ,;What happened before
this Isn't important and the
only game we're concerned
about is this Sunday's. You
start thinking psst that and you

know what happell$, you never
get there."
To make it all the way, the
Cowboys w9uld have to stretch
their string--to 10 games and
when somebody pointed out
that no team in the NFL was
able to come close to that
many this year, Bobby Hayes,
the Cowboys' wide receiver,
said :
"! know that, and we all
know that, but it doesn't make
any difference. We're not
thinking about winning streaks.
All we're thinking about is our
next game, one at a tinle."
See that. Bobby Hayes Is only
20, and he sounds like his coach
already. No emotion, no enlla·
ratlon,noloudexclamation.
No guarantee this Sunday
either, but I think the Cowboys
are going to make it No. 9.

Apple Grove
News, Events

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr . and Mrs. Early Roush,
Mr . and Mrs. Don Beegle, Zane
and Tracy,. and Pam Buck
were Christmas dinner guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Buck.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Pearson,
Mrs. Sally Savage and Robin,
Mr. and Mrs. dim Roush, Mr.
and Mrs. Francis Webb, .Miss
Brenda Hawkins of Salem, 0 .,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Matthew
of Columbus, Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Theiss, Mr. and Mrs.
Clifford Hill, Max Hill and two
children were all dinner guests ·
of Mr. and Mrs. Junior Salser
and Mike at Dorcas Christmas.
Spending Christmas day and
over the weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Dallas Hill and family
and Mrs. Dolly Wolfe were
Mrs. Dale Hill and sons, Danny
and Dale Wallace, of Moore
· Haven, Fla.; Mr. and Mrs.
Marvin Hill, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
home for a week's visit and
CaSper, Billy and Brian Dye, Middleport.
all of Columbus, Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Fox and returned home Friday with the
held Saturday ,at Ewing Mike Hill and daughter, Dolly, David were Christmas Day. Gloeckners
who
spent
Funeral Home.
Christmas
weekend
with
Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Roush guests of the latter's sister, Mr.
Recent visitors of Mr. and and Joey, all local, Mr. and and Mrs. Orville Harpold and and Mrs. Badgely.
Mrs. John Dean, John and Mrs. Carl Wolfe Jr . and family at Belpre.
M;r. and Mrs. Homer Warner
Richard, were Mrs. Walter daughter, Wendy, of Addeville.
Christmas weekend guests of were Christmas Day guests of
Terrell and Billy Kendall of Mrs. Doris Rogers of Columbus Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Donohue Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt Ferguson at
Pataskala, Mrs. Edward called on the Hills /:day were Mr. and Mrs. Roher! New Haven, W. Va. In the
Weekly of Burton, S. C., Mr. afternoon.
Harden of • Marion, Mr. and afternoon they all visited Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Paynter of
Sunday dinner gues of Mr. Mrs.LoweiiBurton , Columbus, and Mrs. Woodrow Brown of
Carpenter, M~'&lt; and Mrs. and Mrs. Robert Smith were Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ft. Pierce, Fla., at the home of
Junior Smalley, Susan, Judy, Joe Derouin and friend , Cecilia Winebrenner and family of the former's mother, at Nitro,
Dale and Hobie of Wierton, W. Kapor of Millville, Pa., Mr. and Cheshire. On Christmas Day W. Va.
Va., Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Mrs. Jimmy Freeman of the group were all dinner
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Bass
Arnold of Chester, Mr. and
· p a., Mr. and Mrs. guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles and children of Marengo, Ohio,
Ervm,
Mrs. Kenneth Markins of Marlin Cunningham of Pitts- Winebrenner at Cheshire.
were over Christmas weekend
Racine and Mr . and Mrs. burgh, Mr. and Mrs. Bernard
Mrs. Virgil (Mary) Roush is guests of Mr. and Mrs. Arnold
Gerald Gilkey and family of Lavelle, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry a surgical patient at Veterans Hupp. Other guests Christmas
Athens.
Day were Max Manuel Sr., Mr.
Johnson and children, Mrs. Memorial Hospital.
'
The Youth of the Carleton Emma Johnson and Rodney
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Shields and Mrs. Don Manuel and
Church went caroling Monday Neigler of Racine.
were over Christmas weekend children of Racine, Mr. and
evening. They visited several
Mr. and Mrs. Brady Craig guests of Mrs. Marlene Fisher Mrs . Rufus Randolph of
families who are shut-in. an d son, Ke1'th , of Athens, Ala ., and children at Racine.
Dayton, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Following the caroling they were Christmas weekend
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Hayman
returned to the church where guests of the latter's parents, and family of Columbus were
the adults entertained them Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Norris. Christmas weekend guests of
with a potluck supper in the Other guests of the Norrises Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Hayman '
social rooms of the church.
were Mr. and Mrs. Hershcel and Keith.
Norris and Clarence, Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Me·
Mrs . Larry O'Brien, Jimmy, Dade and Gene Early were
Harrisonville
Linda and Carol; Mr. and Mrs. over Christmas weekend
Hoyt Ferguson of New Haven. guests of Mrs .. Edna Roush,
Society News
Mr. and Mrs. Butch Wilson Mrs. Gladys Shields and other
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Gibson and children and Mrs. Erma . relatives. On Monday the
have purchased the Landon Wilson spent Christmas McDades took Mr.s . Shields to
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Mansfield and VlStted Mr. and
Smith farm.
1\!r. and Mrs. F. 0. Whaley Charles Burri and boys at Mrs . Howard Roush. Mr .
and granddaughter, Ann, of Bolivar Dam. Mrs. Mary Burri Roush was scheduled to un·
Columbus visited Ava Gilkey of Canton was a Christmas Day dergo surger~ Tuesday. Mrs.
guest of the Burris.
S~1elds remamed for a VISit
Sunday.
Mrs.
Margie
Hunt
broke
her
w1th
the Roushes.
Mr. and Mrs. C. J.Schenck of
arm.
Mr
. and Mu. Erwin
Alabama~ left Friday to visit
Christmas dinner guests of Gloeckner
and
David
her brother, Don Updegraff Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Roush Gloeckner , Mrs . Joyce
in Atlanta, Ga.
Mr. and Mrs. James Payne were Mr. and Mrs. Walter Badgely, Mr . and Mrs. Richard
of Newark and Mamie Newlun McDade and Gene Early of Fisher attended the wedding of
visited relatives here over the Troy, Mrs. Edna Roush of Edward Moran to Betty
Racine, Mrs. Iva Orr, Mr. and Barmsh, Dec. 18, at the Umted
holidays.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey, Mrs. Ronnie Russell of Mid· Method1st Church at Vemce
Park, New Jersey. Mr. Moran
Mrs. Wilda Wiseman and Mrs. dleport.
Mrs. Ferne Hayman was an is stationed with the-Marines at
Lola Clark and Mr. and Mrs. C.
J. Schenck attended a over Christmas weekend guest PhlladelphlB. The Gl'?fkners
Christmas program at Chester. of Mrs. Leah Weatherby at also visited Mrs. Gloeckner's
sister, Mrs. Mildred LeGoullon
The Larry Clark children were
at Sister AnnaPQlis, Maryland
in the play.
Friday evening supper two weeks with her son, Nursing Home, and their
guests of the Roy Wlsemans Richard and family, helping daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
were Rev. and Mrs. David them move to West Virginia Badgely and children, Fair·
lu, Va. Danny Badgely ac·
Wiseman and chikldren and from Dayton.
companied
the Gloeckners
Mr. and Mrs. Ll!rry Clark,
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Sayre, Mr.
Taura and Penny.
and Mrs. Tim Sayre and
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gibson children, Mr. and Mrs. Dorsey
of Columbus spent Christmas Jordan and children spent
with the Robert Alkires and Christmas with their father,
Ray.
Dana Turner.
Christmas callers of Ava
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Seiple
Gilkey were Mr. and Mrs. of Dayton spent Christmas
Robert Gibson, Mr. and Mrs. with her sister, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Alltire and" Ray, Mr. Gene Young.
and Mrs. Walter Jordan, Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Doug Bishop
and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey and and children visited her
Karen and Tad.
parents, Saturday at Hamden.
Miss Judy Carsey called on
Mr. and Mrs. James Cheadle
Mrs. Lola· Clark Wednesday of Columbus spent the weekend
afternoon.
with Mr. and Mrs. Kenny
Mrs. Earl Foil Sr. closed her Payne and Mrs. Kathryn
store Friday and went to Weaver.
Columbus to spend Christmas
Mr. and Mrs. Don Wells and
with her children. She returned daughter of Columbus visited
home Sunday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Blge Lambert
Mrs. Delmar Rhodes spent over the weekend.

Kingsbury News, Notes
The Carleton Sunday School
had an attendance of 80 on
Dec,. 26. Ralph Carl,
superintendent, presented
Mary Lou King with a pin for 17
years perfect attendance.
Mrs. Sadie Carl a!lll Mrs.
Eva King visited with Mrs.
Carl's mother, Mrs. Hannah
Harrison who is ill recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Martin Swart
and Roma Sue of Columbus
spent a day recently with Mr.
and Mrs. Wayne Beal and
visited with Mrs. Roma Beat
who is a patient at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Sam Damron and Mr.
and Mrs. Gary Gibson of
Albany visited with Mr .
Damron who is a patient at
Holzer Hospital and is im·
proving slowly.
Miss Mary Lou King who is
attending college at Mt.
Vernon is spending her
Christmas vacation with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
King and family .
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Carl aud
family spent the weekeni! with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Barnett and family at
Grove City.
Mrs. Helen Dais visited
recently with Mr. and Mrs.
Clair Burson at Shade.
Richard Dean who is attending Asbury , College in
Wilmore, Ky., is spending his
Christmas vacation with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. John
Dean and John.
The Carleton Church had its
Christmas program Saturdsy
evening with a gift exchange
following the program:
Elijah Michael, who had
been a lifelong resident of this
community died at Camden
Clark Hospital following a
short illness. Services were

COME TO···

Mrs. Moore Host
At B&amp;PW ·Party

They'll Do It Every Ti~e

1/'1.

'

(Buz) Hupp and children, Mr.
and Mrs. Jim Hupp and
children. Rocky Hupp went
home with the Basses Sunday
for a week's visit.
Christmas Eve guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Homer Warner were
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Warner,
Randy Michael and Usa, Mrs.
Inez Roy and Rex and Nancy,
of Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Hupp
and son, Edward, called on Mr.
and Mrs. George Hupp at
Portland Sunday.

For That .End of Year Inventory
Office Fum~ure
and Equipment

0~ Nl

tlu\stmas tards
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TO OUR PATRONS

D

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Record Storage Boxes
• Typewriter Ribbons
• Adding Machine Tapes

Nil YIAR

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GRlHINGS

File Guides, Tall Types

File Tables, File Folders (all
types hanging &amp; filing), File
Index &amp; Cards, Ledger Books

Sheets, Work Sheet Pads,
Pencil Sharpeners, Staplers,
, Staples, Tape &amp; Tape
Dispensers, Stencils - ·all
type. All type of typing
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If WE DON'T HAVE U WE CAN GET IT

Personal Notes

,a,ct

HAPPY. NEW YEAR

FOR
OUTSTANDING BUYS I

Pomeroy....

Mr. and Mrs. Larry O'Brien
and Jimmy, Linda and Carol
spent Christmas night Wtth his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Rex
O'Brien at Stewart.
Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Norris of
Athens visited Mr. and Mrs.
Marshall Adams recently.

~rapp\n% p~per

New Year's Special

$AVE $100·

It's almost
time to bring
in the New
year ... let's
celebrate
together.' To our patrons- many thanks.

00

ON THE

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Ebersbach Hardware

Jllghllghls of her recent trip
totbeHolyLandwereshownin
slides and commentary by
Mnl. Allee Robeson at the
recent hoUday party of the
Middleport Business and Professional Women's Glub a\
the home of Mr's. Harrr S.
Moore.
·Mrs. Robeson was presented
a gift by tbe club. Mrs. Homer
Forrest was In charge of
arrangements for the program
which included a carol sing lind
a gift exchange. ·
The Moore home was extensively decorated for the
holidays and Mrs , Moore
opened the meeting with a
Christmas verse, "Also It is
Not Far." Mrs. Gra~ Pratt
presided during which time a
communication from
Congressman Clarence Miller
regarding House Bill 208
pertaining to equal rights for
women was read . Mrs.

,,.,

Holiday weekend guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Johnson,
Racine, were Mr.and Mrs. Roy
Johnson, Lora and David,
Carroll; Mr. and Mi's. Dale
Johnson, Kevin and Lisa,
North Ohnsted; Mr. and .Mrs.
Clyde Johnson and Connie,
Hamden; Mr. J. P. Sauder,
Charmaine and Kelly, Point
Pleasant, W.Va.; and Mr. and
Mrs. Glenn Cartwright, Uonel
and Eric, of Glendale, W. Va.
Christmas guests of Mr. and
Mrs. VIc Hannahs were Mr.
and Mrs . Dick Werry of
Mannington, W. Va.; Chuck
Hannahs, a student at
Mountain State College,
Parkenburg, and Miss Rise
Lockhart, Parkersburg . Chuck
maintained a B average for the
past quarter at Mountain State.
He Is affiliated with Kappa
Sigma Tau Fraternity.
Mr. and Mrs. Norman E.
Hysell, Bruce, Terry and
Nori,na Jean, of Pomeroy, R.
D.,ind Mr. and Mrs. Guy Rose
and Kenny of Portland, were
Christmas dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Norman M. Hysell,
Bashan.
Mrs. Norman E. Hysell and
children visited recently with
Mrs. Iva Singer of Chester.
Christmas dinner guests of
Mr. and Mnl. Willard Hines
were Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Woode, Chester; Mr. and Mrs.
Ray Hines, David and Doug,
Belpre; Mrs. Edith Hines and
Mrs. Georgia Swauger,
Pomeroy. They were joined for
the afternoon and evening by
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Hines,
Amy and Andrea, GalliPQiis;
. Mrs. Harletta Donovan,
Lancaster, and Mn. Marte
Chapman, Pomeroy. The
birthday anniversary of Mrs.
Willard Hines was also
celebrated.
Mr. and Mra. Patrick
Lochary and Miss Helen
Lochary returned from Glen
Ridge, N: J. Tuesday following
a Christmas visit there with
Mr. and Mrs. James Lochary
and children.
Mrs. Charles Warner,
Ebenezer s~. is in Marietta
visiting her son and daughterin-law, Mr. and Mrs: John
Sewell. She Is remaining for
the New Year's weekend when
her geanddaughter and her
hu!band, Mr. and Mrs. Bradley
Schlll~r, wlll arrive from
Pennsylvania for a visit.
Mrs. Betty Howell was the
Christmas weekend guest of
her son-in-law and daughter,
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Lee of
Elyria. Mrs. Lee, who has been
Ui for several montha, is im·
proving.
Mrs. Manning Webster of
Pomeroy and Mrs. Margaret
Coughenour of Cheshire spent
a day recently In Huntington,
W.Va., visiting their brother,
George Van Zandt. They also
visited Judge and Mrs. Frank
Eaton. Mn. Eaton Is the for·
mer Georgia Bing Russell of
Cheshire.
Mrs. WUIIam Smith and her
sister, Mrs. Azealea Ddister,
have returned from Dayton
where they were called by the
death of Mrs. Odlster's
daughter-in-Uiw;'Mrs. Mildred
Ddister.
Tuesday luncheon guesb$ of
Ml:s. Wllllam Smitli were Mrs.
Allen Hampton, Pomeroy,
Mrs. Con Young, .Middleport,
Mrs. Kathleen Baxter of
Cincinnati, Mri. Dpuglas
Jackson of RendvUie, aM Mrs.
Azealea Odister of Dayton,
here for an extended stay with
Mrs. Smith.

.. ,

Elizabeth Yerian, district
director, gave her evaluation
rePQrt of tbe club, and a thank
you note was read from Miss
Olga Pierotti for remem·
brances during the recent
death of her mother.
AI&amp;o read at the meeting was
a Jetter from Miss Debbie
Woods, who attends the Holzer
School of Nursing, under the
BPW scholarship. Miss Woods ·
wished members a Merry
Christmas, told of her
progress, and announced
capping ceremony for Jan. 21
at Grace United Methodist
Church.
Arrangements were made to
send $1 to each of the residents
of the Meigs County Infirmary.
An invalid chair donated to the
club's hospital loan center by
Mrs . Annlce Ohlinger was
acknowledged . Mrs. Mary
Kunselman reported that tbe
ceramic tree had been won by
Dale Warner.
Mrs. Joe Bailey and Mrs.
Dorinda Nardi were guests.
Refreshments of fancy sand·
wiches and cookies, punch and
coffee were served by the
hostess committee headed by
Mrs. Moore and Mrs. Pearl
Reynolds.
Attending besides those
named were Mrs. Betty Cline,
Mrs. Betty Conkle, Mrs. Mary
Kunzelman, Mrs. Wilma
Sargent, Mrs. Beulah Strauss,
Mn . Rose Reynolds, Mrs.
Nellie Vale, Mrs. Norma
Wilson.

Middleport

Personal Notes

'Lights of Christmas ' is Theme of Service
A portrayal ·of the manger
A candlelighting service Ught of the World is Jesus, the Spencer , Supt .. gave the
highlighted
the annual small candles of those at- welcome, and !her~ was group scene was presented as the
· Christmas Eve program at the tendin g the service were singing of "Hark the Herald choir sang . "What Child Is
..
Angels Sing" and "Joy to the This." Taking roles were Patty
Enterprise Uniied Methodist lighted .
The program opened with a World." Mrs. Philip Ohlinger Edwards as Mary, Briah WUI
Church.
as Joseph, Angela Curtis,
~~i.ighls of Christmas" was Christmas prelude by Miss gave the scripture.
Children 's recitations in- Cindy Curtis and Sandy
the theme of the candl•lighting Emma Lou Da vis. Ralph
cluqed "Two Celebrate" by Johnson as the angels, and
service with Rodney Pullins
Brian Will, "A Wish for All" by David Warth and Terry Smith
and Becky Will as the re'aders
Cindy Curtis, "Two Words" by as the shepherds.
and Ricky Johnson and
Santa arrived and gifts were
David Warth, "Manger Bed"
Beverly Will the candle
distributed
. Miss Elizabeth
by Sandy Johnson, "Listen,
lighters. During the service
People " by Brian Spencer, Davis had the closing prayer.
. eight large candles at the front
In charge of the program were
of the church were lighted, and
The annual Christmas buffet "Wouldn 'tll Be Wonderful" by Mrs . Ed Bowen, Mrs. Don
then as the choir sang "The of the Harry Pickens family Terry Smith and "Practice
Hunnel and Miss Joyce DaviS.
was held Christmas night at Love" by Angela Curtis.
the home of Mr. and Mrs .
Ernest Whitehead, Reedsville.
A!tending were the hosts'
children, Jean, home from
Ohio State University, Jane
and Juli, Mr. and Mrs. Warren
Pickens, Mr. and !\Irs. Denver
Weber, David and Mark,
LETART FALLS - Ohio Reedsville; Mr. and Mrs.
Valley Grange No. 2612 here Harold Sauer, Mary Ruth and
held its annual Christmas Joy, Middleport; Mr. and Mrs.
party at the elementary school William Meredith, Charles and
Thursday evening, Dec. 16, Roger.
with Worthy Past Master
Charles recenUy graduated
Early Roush in the chair. In· from Ohio State University
stallation of officers will' be cum laude with a dual degree,
held when the grange meets both bachelor and masters, in
MR. AND MRS. W. ROBERT COUCH of Pomeroy are
Jan.
13 at the home of Mrs. electric engineering. He will
announcing the engagement of their daughter, Janice
Elizabeth Roush.
leave this week for Rochester,
Loraine, to Mr. John R. Pauley, son of Mr. and Mrs. James C.
gilt
exchange
was
held
and
A
N. Y., where he has accepted
Pauley of Mason, W.Va. Miss Couch is a 1970 graduate of
the
lecturer's
program
conemployment
with the Eastman
Meigs High School and is presently employed in the office of
I
sisted of a Bible verse per· Company beginning Monday.
Dr. H. D. Brown, Pomeroy. Mr. Pauley, a 1970 graduate of
taining to Christmas by the
Wahama High School, is attending the United Electronics
group, a poem by Eula Wolfe,
Institute in Charleston, W. Va. Wedding plans are inParty Time
the song, "Away In a Manger,"
complete.
by the group; a poem by Mabel
IN ALL
Roush,, "'Twas the Night
COLORS &amp;
Before Christmas," and a
Ring Out The Old
Merry Christmas game, a
Welcome the New
STYLES
poem composed by all about
1
Christ.
Refreshments of baked
beans, sandwiches, salad and
Serving: Gallipolis,
Numerous friends and Andrew, and Mr . and Mrs. coffee were served. Refresh·
ments
of
sandwiches
and
pie
of
Middleport,
Pomeroy, 0 .,
relatives visited at the Long Paul J . Andrew, Columbus ;
any
lpnd
and
coffee
will
he
&amp;
Mason
CO.,
W.Va .
ON THE T IN MIDDLEPORT
Bottom home of Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Roger Buckley,
served
at
the
next
meeting.
Francis Andrew over the Pomeroy, R. D.; the Rev. Fr.
Christmas holiday weekend. John Wippel, Washington, D.
Home lor the holidays with C.; the Rev. Fr. Frank Patala ,
her parents is Miss Mary Ellen Chauncey; Mr. and Mrs .
Andrew of Grand Prairie, Gordon Collins and Mrs. Mattie
Texas. She is also visiting her Kinney, Tuppers Plains, Mr.
sister, Mrs. Larry Collins and and Mrs. George Collins and
family . On Christmas Eve Mr. Mike, and Mr. and Mrs. M.
and Mrs. Andrew received Nesselroad.
ROOR DISPLAY MODELS ALL REDUCED !
Andrew
was
Francis
telephone greetings from their
SOME WitH SMALL SCRATCHES.
daughter, Cathy , Gulfport, returned from St. Joseph's
Miss., and their son , Frank , Hospital only recently. He had
NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED.
Saigon. Frank recently been confined there since Dec.
returned from a two week 11 when he broke his )meecap.
JUST IN IN TIME FOR SALE A LARGE SELECTION OF COLOR' TV.
vacation in Australia.
Other Christmas weekend
SPURRIER REENLISTS
visi).ors at the Andrew' home
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
were Rosema~y and Mike Spurrier, Sr., near Pomeroy,

Mrs. Whitehead
Host at Buffet

Gift Exchange,

Girls 7 to 14

Program are

,.

BLOUSES
PULLOVERS
SWEATERS
JEANS

Grange"Features

janice Loraine Couch Betrothed

Corduroy
Brushed
Denim
Washable
Blends

CORSAGES

Home for Christmas

Mr. and Mrs. Dale K. Roush,
Steven and Kathy, Apple
Creek, were the Sunday guests
of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Ben Turner . Steven is home on
vacation from New Bedford,
Mass., where he at tends
college.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Venoy
and children of Harrisonville
entertained Wednesday with a
dinner honoring Miss Mabel
Hysell on her birthday anniversary.
Guests for a pre-holiday
dinner party at the OWen Fink
home were Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Dean Fink, Steven and
Timothy, of New Haven, Mr.
New officers were elected at
and Mrs. Bill Fink and Billy,
Johnnie,
and
Chuckle, a recent meeting of the Adult
Cheshire, and Mr. and Mrs. Class of the Bradford Church of
John Buckley and Jeff, Christ.
Elected were Mrs. Frances
Chesapeake.
Mrs . Geneva Yates has Hysell, president; Mrs. Jackie
returned from Cambridge Reed, vice president; Mrs.
Norma Russell, secretary;
where she spent the Christmas
Nora
Cambron ,
holiday with her son and Mrs.
treasurer;
Mrs.
Helen
Miller,
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
David Robert Yates, Sr. and card chairman, and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. David Robert Mildred Sisson, news reporter .
Yates, Jr. and Roger Alan. On It was voted to send a donation
Christmas Day the Yates to a Bible college and to make a
payment on the psrsonage
families went to Me·
stove.
Connelsville for a dinner with
Devotions by Mrs. Tressie
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Lawrence. Hendricks
were entitled
Other guests there were Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Bedford, "Salvation for All Men ."
Scripture was taken from
Wilmington, Del., and Mr. and
Mrs. John Danner, Lori Alice, Romans 1:8-16 and Acts·10, 34.
Reports were given by the
Johnston, S. C.
officers.
Miss Carolyn Searls of
Attending the meeting were
Columbus was the holiday
weekend guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Homer Forrest,
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Sisson, Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Searls.
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Farmer andMrs.HarryHendricks,Mr.
andMr.andMrs. PhllDevenny and Mrs. Herbert M1ller, Mr.
of Dayton were the Chrlstmas....-:md Mrs. James Reed and Joy, .
night guests of Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Cambron, Mrs. Frances
Arthur Skinner and Mrs. David . Hysell, Mrs. Eleanor Hoover,
Fanner.
Mrs. Laura Hoover and Mrs.

Officers Named

By Adult Class

From 3.00

Dudley's Aorist

received a telephone call from
their son, M.Sgt. Clarence
Spurrier, Jr., on Christmas
Day from Anchorage, Alaska.
Spurrier has reenlisted in the
U. S. Air Force for two and a
half more years . He and his
wife, Doris, and son, Dennie,
have lived in Alaska for the
past two years and will be
there for one more year. Sgt.
Spurrier marked his 20th year
in the air force today, Dec. 30.

HANDCRAFTED

®

Giant-Screen 23" Console
The Hilliard. The Inness and The Ribera are all fully equipped with the lollowing.
New Zenith Customized Tuning
·
Chroma color Picture Tube with n.ew Glare-Ban Picture Face. Zenith Titan 80 Handcrafted Chas si s

for greater dependability. Automatic Tint Guard Control. Super Video Range B2 -Channel Tun ing

System. Chromatic Brain Color Demodulator. AFC- Automatlc Fine-tuning Control.

ON DEAN'S LIST
Jim Warner, son of Mr. and
Mrs . William Warner, South
Second Ave., Middleport, has
been named to the dean's list
for the fall quarter at the Ohio
Institute of Technology in
Columbus. Jim is currently
spending the holiday season
with his parents and brother.

2-HOUR
CLEANING
(Upon Request)

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS
E. lnd
Pomeroy

210

:"::-":"_..;,~:::P:h:•:ne:·':';2·;54;28;:~

THE HILLIARD
C4516W
Smart Contemporary styled lowboy
com-pact console.

Beautifully crafted Early American styled
lowboy compact console. Decorative wrap·
around gallery and hose rail.

Mar all your tomorrows ring out with

Shop or Field
Ph. 992-2511

p$ace-that's oui New Year's
wish. We extend:heartfelt appreciation.

CHASE
HARDWARE

~!~NlF~~~r~~.N•
l
POMEROY OHIO

. .

992 •3498

I .

'

THE INNESS
C4517M

,

The Best Service
for
PLUMBING and
HEATING

Middleport

The Kiddie Shoppe

RIDENOUR YEAR·END SALE

Edward Templeton of Bailey Verna::H:y:se:ll:.
Run spent Christmas Day in
Jackson visiting his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Lawton Tem·
pleton. Other visitors were Mr. ·
and Mrs. Ben Batey and Mr .
and Mrs. Vic (Lelia) Mar·
chinoa, of .Dayton.
Dinner guests of Mr. and
Mrs. James M. Reed on .
Christmas. Eve were Laurence
Reed, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Durst
and Tim, James D. Reed, and
Phyllis Davidson, Columbus.
James D. Reed spent the
weekend with his parents.
Mr. Eber Henderson of
Pomeroy and Mrs. Lillian
Stleff of Middleport were
Christmas dinner illesta of Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Sauer, Mary
Ruth and

Locust St.

/

,

'
ContemPOrary
style cabinet
Chromacolor Plcli•re Tube
New Zenllh Customized Tuning
Tllan 100 Handcrafted C~ssls
Chromatic Brain Color Oemodular
Super Gold Video Guard Tuning System
Aulqmallc Tint Guard Control

C4518W

Mediterranean styled compact console with
casters . Flaring full base.
·- -

-·

RIDENOUR
., .

ST. RT. 7

THE MARIN
C4519W

Y.V

rGAS
SERVICE
'

-~~--~---..::..-~..;...- 11~
' --~-- ---------~-

�r

•

'
6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Poo•eroy, 0., O.C. 30,19il

Sentinel Classifieds Get Actio~/ Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
.

WANT AD
INFORI\\ATION
DEADLINES
5 P.M. Day Before Publlcali01
MQilday Deadline 9 a .m.
. .£~1!~!1411oo &amp; Corrections

Of
QUALITY

Will be accepted until9 a.m . fOr

Day of Publloatlon
REGULATIONS
' The P~o,~blisher reserves thE.
rlghl 'lo edil or rejecl any ads·
deemed objeclional. Th~
pub Iis her will not be responsible

1971 CHEVELLE MALIBU CPE .

Insertion .
RAT~S

For Want Ad Service

1970 CAMARO CPE.

5 cents per Word one insertion·

$3095

Less than 11 ,000 miles &amp; appearance ot 72 model. Rally
Sport equipped, Classic copper with sandalwood interior,
tintffi glass, factory air conditioned, sports mirrors,
console, air spoiler , turbo hydromatic, power steering &amp;
brak-es , 350 cu . in. V ·B engine . Really Sharp.

MinimUm Charge 75c
12 cents · per word three
consecutive insertions.
' 18 cents per word six con.
secuti ve insertions.

'2S Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp;OBITUARY
,

25c Charge per
Advertisem~nt .
.

home, gas heat, Sycamore

machine.

St., Mlddleporl . Phone 992·
7004 or 992-3585 , Danny
Thompson .
12-23-lfc

beautiful walnut cablnel,
makes design stitches, zig -

Like

new ,

Mobile Homes For Sale

TRAILER tbTS. Bob's Mobfie&gt;
Court, Rt. 124, Syracuse,
Jllio. 992-2951.
~
4-2-tfc

From the largest T;,,;:i;
Bulldozer Radiator to the
1Srnallesf Heater Core.
Nalho n Biggs
Rodiotur Specfollst

Notice
New Lima Road for lh hog
and other pri zes .

BAND, Friday and Saturday,
Jack's Club, cover charge.
For reservations come to club
In person.

Pets welcome.

12-27-tfc

M'LLER

and
aluminum
awning ,
aluminum skirting, com .

pletely

setup,

NOTICE
IN THE COMMON P~EAS
COORT OF MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO
~EGAL

the New Year right and come
to Hayman 's Auction~ Friday
night. Aucti on starts at 7 p.m .
Hayman Auc1ion House,

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Pomeq Home &amp; Aulli
· Open 8Tii'S
Monday thru Satur$y
•
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 .

JOHNSON MASONRY

HOME &amp; AUTO

Co~plete

992-2094
606 1:. Miiin Pomero1 .

Remodeling

1220 Washington Blvd.
Belpre, Ohio
air condlllooed, 8' x20' porch

Pomeroy

EXPERT
'Wheel Alignment .
.'5.5S

PdMEROY

OFFICE SUPPLIES

beaulllul

And

loc;ation. Owner leaving state.

FURNITURE ·

12-30-2tc

Tuppers Plains
Society News

Ph. 992-2174

MOBILE HOMES

Phone 949-4892 or 992·5272.
12-2S-41p 4 ROOM HOUSE. furnished al
12-30-Hc
124
Laurel
Sl.,
Pomeroy.
Call
THE Whispering Pines Nile SHOOTING malch, Saturday ,
992-5836 or inq ui re at 126
Jan. 1, at the Racine Planing
Club will close al 7 p. m.
FOR THE BEST deal In a new
Laurel St.
Mill al 6 p.m. Factory choke
Fr iday night, New Year's
or used mobile home, try
12-30·61c
guns only. Assorted meat .
Eve . Dance Saturday night,
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
!hanks to the Rev. Marshall
Sponsored by the Syracuse
Jan. l, 10 p. m . until 2 a. m .
Kanauga, Ohio.
•
D.A. V. home in Pomeroy for
Larimore. Rev . Forrest R.
Fire Dept .
Music by The Kasua l s, 4 pc .
12-lt-901c
group
meetings
and
par
ties,
Donley for their consoling
12-29-31c
band and two female singers
phone 991-5247.
words, lhe Ewing Chapel. Mr.
from Beverly, Ohio.
12-19-121c Auto Sales
and Mrs . Bob Moore and
12-30 21c GUN SHOOT, Forked Run
organist, Rose Ann Je nkins.
Sportsman Club, Sunday,
Our thanks to the Syracuse KOSCOT Kosmelics and wigs
Jan . 2, 12 noon .
2 BEDROOM mobile home In MERCURY Monlerey in good
Women 's Auxiliary and all
12-29·3tc
Racine area . Phone . 992-6329. condition, power steering,
for sale. Brown's, phone 992 .
other tributes . The Morri s
12-14-tfc power brakes. See Weber
5113.
across from the State Garage.
Harden Family.
SAVE up toone hall. Bring your
12-30-31p
SICk TV to Chuck 's TV Shopi FURNISHED sleeping room
GUN SHOOT, Sunday , Jan .' 2, I
over Wine Store. Rent by '64 PONTIAC Calallna con151 Butternut Ave .• Pomeroy .
p.m ., Racine Gun Club .
Phone 992-5080.
monlh. Phone 992-5293.
vertible. Come look this over
12-29-31c
11 -26-lfc
11 -2 1-lfc
at 105 Union Ave., Phone 9923293 belween 5 p. m. and 8 p.
LOOKING for bargains? Start
LEGAL NOTICE
m.

WE WI SH to thank our many
friends tor their comforting
prayers , flowers and the
loving expressiins of sympathy in the loss of our
husband and father. A spec ial

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

12' · 14' · 24' · WiDE

home across from Bradbury 60xl2, 2 bedroom, all-electric,

School. Call 992-5308 or see
Charles Lewis, 2nd house
south from Bradbury School .

Stop In and See Our
~loor Display.

Kitdlens, Baths
Room Additions
And Patils

•

••

-

HA8DCRAFT
GIFT ITEMS
Christmas
decorations, wearing
apparel, jewelry,
· ceramics.

SII;R~,

FOUR NEW HO.MES , _
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom $16,900.00 home can be purchased with a
moothly paymenl as low as $65.00 lor a family wllh a base
salilrr. of $5,000.00 and three children. 7'1, Pet. annual
~:enl.age rate.

Wanted To Rent

MA~'

••

)f)(/~ IKJf KI&lt;'1W/IS

WAIT,
\:::::::::--/ VEAI-I, YOU
I'UT YOU~ SKI
...VOU
NEED T~EIII AS
POLES ON
WOULDN'T
SPLINTS J
LIKE. T~IS.. .
WANT TO
I.OSE

Dolls, all dressed In style,
knilled and crocheted. I Has
to be seen to be appreciated I
Many ilems you hovt bt111
looking lor, for that ptrftcl
gill.

MY M()IIMit MOM NU

HIDDEN
TREASURES
GIFT SHOP
1\\ARTHA ROSE, OWner,
l
Located on County Road 34
n..r Royal O.k Park. Watch
lor Signs.
Op&amp;n every cNY except
Monday
I P.M. 1117 P.M.

AH'D
A FOOL
TOAPPL'/

. FO'TioU5

992-7601

JOe&gt;-JT'LL

e.E

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

MOBBED-

240 Lincoln St.
Middleport, Olllo
Dbo Anthony Plumbing
We

have

1

c~;~mplete

Homo.Malnltnance Strvlco
the year • round. No matler
what your need. Complole
roof or spouting rtpalr .

Interior

or

ext1rior Clr·

ponlry. Ceiling tile and
Ponoling
ond
Siding.
Complete Plumbing &amp;
H.. ling.
Doy Number 992-2550
We hove 24 hr. ome1'9oncy

NURSE and secrelary desires
house with some acreage in 1964 VOLKSWAGEN. good
Meigs Counly area . Call
running condit ion , S-400 .
Alhens 593-6495.
Phone 742-4423.
12-28-4tc
12-28-3tc

Laurel Clllf.

LUKl:V •·

•

.

NEW. 12 x 60, 2 bedroom mobile

Notice

\

PLACE I

zags, buttonholes, blind hems.

1 BEDROOM and 2 bedroom
mobile homes. Adults ooly .
Phone 992-5592.
12-19-tfc

12-28-3tc

. .. .

~JRE A MNJ W~E
I-ICAR.T 15 IIJ 11-\E

NOT
NO MORE
I DON'T,

.

Business Services·,.

in

etc. Will sell lor $8S. Call
Ravenswood· 273-9893 afler 5
p.m.
11 -28-lfc

NICE TRAILER, 1 bedroom,
ideal lor couple, 10 miles
norlh of Pomeroy. Phone 9926452.
12-15-tfc

1'Pio!EROY, OHIO

STILL SHOOT. Sunday , Jan. 2,
1 p.m. al Rutland Gun Club on

t,;ard of Thanks

SOxl2 TWO BEDROOM mobile SINGER . aulomallc sewing

738,4.

OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.

BLIND ADS
Additional

'

For Sale

2 BEDROOM mobile home,
furnished , ulllities paid,
available now. Phone 992-

Pomeroy Motor Co.

$1.50 for SO word minimum ~·
Each additional word 2c.

S~turdav

Ul95

Sanda lwood with brown vinyl top, factory air conditioned,
V-8 engine with turbo hydromalic, power steering, E.
clock, P. 8 ., radio. Rally wheel s with w.w t ires . Fri. &amp; rear
guards. Reta il $41 55. Co. official car &amp; specially priced .

for more than one incorrect

OFFICE HOURS
8:30 a.m. lo 5j00 p.m. Dally
8: 30 a.m. to 12 : 00 Noor

Pomeroy
•tor Co•

2 SIGIIS

.

For Rent

'

.•

MARY ALICE SAMUELS
By Mrs. Evel)'ll Brlckles
BILL NELSON 992-3657
HILTQN WOLFE '949-3211
816 W. Ma in Street,
Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Newell Pomeroy, Ohio,
TOM CROW, 992·2580
DALE DUTTON, 99'1-2534
1 WILL NOT be responsible lor For Sale
s2 CHEVROLET
pickup,
service.
Pla intiff,
and family of Chester, Mr. and
any
debls
contracted
b{
F----------,.---1
perfecl
condllion,
$900
.
992-5103
742-3947
· VS ·
anyone other than mysel .
Serious inquiries only . Phone NE IG LE R Building Supply .
Mrs. John Newell and family of NATHANIEL
S.EPTIC TANKS CLEANED
SAMUELS .
742-4761
Colwnbus and Mr. and Mrs. Address Unknown
~~~~d Gerald Russell
9926083.
Free esllmate on building Reasonable rales. Ph. 446-4782.
Wo ore fully Insured
12-29-IOip
Defendant . )
Gallipolis . John Russell .
your
new home. Will draw
Richard Slllith and family of
12-28-31p
No. 14982
(Miner &amp; Operator.
prl/lts 1o sull the lay of your
36" X 23 X .009
NOTICE
Columbus spent Christmas
5-12-lfc
'69
DODGE
Swinger
2
doer
land
.
Call
Guy
Nelgler
,
Nathaniel Samuels , whose
hardlop
with Mr. and Mrs. Jessie place
VB
slandard,
red
with
Ohio.
For
repair
and
Racine,
of residence is unknown
YOUR WEIGHT ...
black vinyl fop. Sl, 100. '69
aluminum siding , soffet and UPHOLSTER.ING . SERVICE ,
Newell. Elmer Newell of the U. and cannot with reasoMble ABOUT
overweight
ladies,
teens
and
complele selection of fabrics
Volkswagen,
good
coodlflon,
guller. Call Donald Smllh,
igence be ascertained , will
S. Navy stationed in dil
men interested in a Weight
and vinyl lo choose from .
tC'Ike notice that on the 13th day
11 ,100. '68 Ford pickup cuslom
Racine, Ohio.
·
All Commercial &amp;
Watchers I Rl Class in
Philadelphia visited the of December , 1971 , the un .
Pick-up and delivery. Sialer
cab, 6-cyl. , 3 speed, 25,000
10-7-tlc
dersigned , Mary Alice Samuels ,
USED OFFSET PLATES
·Pomeroy write : Weight
Upholslerlng, Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
miles, $1,400. Phone 992-6048.
Newells on Friday.
fi led her Complaint against him
Wa tc hers (R), 1863 Seclion
HAVE
992·3617.
phone
12-27-61p
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
Home Units
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Higgins in the Court of Common Pleas of
Rd
..
Cincinnali,
Ohio
45237.
12-27-30tp
MANY
USES
service,
all
makes.
992·2284.
Meigs Countv , Ohio. demand ing
and daughter, Amanda Ruth, divorce.
10-3-lfc
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
custody of minor child
1970 W-30 OLDSMOBILE 442,
Authorized Singer Sales and SEPTIC lanks cleaned. Miller
of Vienna , W. Va., spent of the partiEis , and other relief .
automatic/ factorr stereo
24-Hour Service
You, the said Nathan ie l
Service.
We Sharpen Scissors.
Sanllalloo, Slewarl, Ohio. Ph.
I
ape.
Lots
of
extras.
Ike
new.
Christmas Day here with her Samuels, are reQuired to i!ln 3-29-ll'e-c---166~2 :j035.
8 ior $i.oo
Call 992-24-41 afler 5 p.m.
sister, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth swer said Compla int w ithin
2· 12-tfc
YOUNG
MEN
11-28-tfc
twenty eight days after January
Griffith . .
19, 1972.
Real--Estate For Sale
_R_E_,~,_y__-M-,x- -c-o -N _c R_ETE
:·.'·'
. ,.. ,
:;;~~·and Mro. Frank Dorst
Real Estate For Sale
•1' ' ,:
. Mary Al ice Samuels
:HOUSE: \~4l Unc~ln Heights. delivered righl to your
PH."'i2·7260 ., ;
'ana family of Long Bottom
Plaintiff
Call Danny Thompson, 992.. pro(ect. Fasl and easy. Free
RACINE - 10 room house ,.
spent Christmas with her
2196.
esllmales. Phone 992-3284 .
bath, basement, garage, two
Webster and Fultz
·
7-18-1'- Goegleln Ready-Mix Co.,
lots.
No
reasonable
offer
mother, Mrs. Ethel Stout.
P.0 . Bo:oc 723, Pomeroy , Ohio
Middleport, Ohio.
]II Court 51.
refused . Phone 949 ~4313 .
Attorneys for Plaint iff
Mrs. Neisel Weatherman
S
6·30-tfc .
Pomeroy,
Ohio
12-22-12tp
spent Christmas weekend with 112) 15, 22. 29 (I l 5, 12, 19, 6t
HARRISON' S TV and Antenna
Mr. and Mrs. Wallis McDonald
COAL, limestone . Excel sior NICE 2-slory home with full
Service. Phone 992-2522.
NOTICE
OF
and family of Colwnbus and
basemen! , 2 lois, new forced
Sa il Works, E. Main St.,
APPOINTMENT
6·1O.lfc
air furnace . Near Pomeroy
while there she also called on
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
Case No. 20590
Elemenlary School . Phone.
Estate of Morris Harden ,
4-9-tlc
other friends.
BACKHOE ),NO DOZER work.
Deceased .
AUTOMOBILE Insurance
992-7384 lo see.
Septic lanks Installed. George
601
East
.Main
Mr . and Mrs. Wayne
Notice is hereby given that
be'l!' cancelled? Losl your
IJ.7
-Ifc
POODLE puppies. Silver Toy,
I Bill) Pullins, Phone 992-2418.
POMEROY
Dorothy Harden of Syracuse,
operalor's license? Coil 992·
Brickles spent Christmas with Ohio,
Park
view
Kennels,
Phone
992·
4·25-lfc
has been duly appointed
TEMPTING BUY
2966.
5443.
3 BEDROOM ranch lype home. ANOTHER
her niece, Mr. and Mrs . Administratrix of the Estate of
1
POMEROY
I
story
6-IS.Hc
Arbaugh Addllion, Tuppers
8-15-tfc
Morris Harden, deceased, late
O' DELL WHEEL alignment
Willard Ebersbach and family of
frame
,
2
bedrooms,
wllh
Meigs County, Ohio .
Plains. All new wllh folal
located at Crossroads. Rt. 124. C. BRADFORD. Auttlmeer
closets, bath, utility-room In
of Chester.
· Creditors are reQuired to file
electric and central a-ir
Complete
front end service,
basement, hardwood floors,
thelr claims with said fiduc iary
Comolete S..-il«
conditioning, bath and 3/•,
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Hoffman, within
tune
up
and
brake service .
END
OF
YEAR
gas
furnace
and
hot
wafer
four month:l .
Phone 949-3821
fully carpeled, lull basemen!,
Wheels balanced elec Mr. and Mrs. Charles Betzing
lank,
Dated this 13th day of
large
lol,
EXCELLENT
Racine. Ohio
gara~e in basemen!. See by
lronlcally .
All
work ·
Crill Bradford
spent Christmas with their December 1971 . F . H . O'Brien
CONDITION,
JUST
$7 ,·
Clearance Sale!
appo~nlmenf, phone 992-2196
guaranteed.
Reasonable
5-1-lfc
900.00.
or 992-3585. Danny Thompson.
children, Mr. and Mrs. Dana
Judge
rales. Phone 992-3213.
Buy
Any
Fuel
Oil
Financing available.
7-27-lfc
Hoffman and family of (12) 16, 13, 30, Jtc
THIS- POMEROY - 6
12-30-tfc SEE
While learning aboul the pay
room
frame, 2 bedrooms, i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,___________""
SIEGLER
HEATER
Rutland.
raise, have him explain how
bath, basement, porches, gas
Mrs. Mariam Hendershot
NOTICE OF
you may enlist and stay
SIX ROOM house, 133 Butlernu•
FORCED-AIR heal, GOING
GET
FREE
.
APPOINTMENT
home for lhe holidays.
and son, Charles, of Lancaster
Ave. Conlacl Ed Hedrick, 2137
.AT $5,000.00. ·
Case No. 20,591
200 Galloos Fuel Oil When
Wadsworth Drive, Columbus,
and Mr. and Mrs. Wilford Estate of Harold K . ward
Ohio, phone 237-433-4.
You
Boy
Any
Siegler
Healer
Deceased
.
TUPPERS PLAINS A
Tippie and family of Athens R.
Call him at614-593-3D22
11 -21 -llc
Not ice is here given that
BRAND NEW SPLIT LEVEL
Thru Dec. 31.
D. were visiting their parents, Nellie Pierce of Rutland , R .D ., - call collect · for
CBRICKI 6 acres, 3 large
County, Ohio, has been
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Nichols Meigs
bedrooms,
closets galore, Jlh
~OMIROV
·
complete details.
duly appointed Adm inlstratri:oc

for Sale
Aluminum
Sheets·

l:t ·30

WINNIE WINKLE

J:M A WIOO\\IERLWINNIE', AND

\'MEN lrW WI~E: Dlcf?t. I

'THOJGHi I'D NEVEK

Fi'\LL IN I..C:WE: AeAI N.
WE HAD 1lUCH AN

HOW VA FI)(IW

FER INSUitANCE?

'THE fll\~ FEW DAYS
HAVE MADf ME:
1111NK .wM3E: IVE
6EEN WRON~ ....
!MYf!£ .l COliLD
1DVE ANO'THER ...

ll1fAJ. MARRIAGE !

11

Service &amp;Repair

------~

20J

Also Furnace Repajr

The
. ..
YOUR LOCAL ARMY Daily Sentinel
.

Cleland
Realty

REPRESENTATIVE
WANTS TO

- ~

C&amp;M
REFRIGERATION
SERVICE

TilE BORN

TALK TO YOU

ABOUT THE NEW

BUS

ARMY PAY RAISE

Thursday.

Lois Ebersbach of Chester
called on her aunt, Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Brickles Friday.
Denver Weber of Reedsville
also called on the Brickles'.
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Babcock, Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Lyon,s
and son, Lamar, Mrs. Eulah
Swan of Tuppers Plains, Mr .
and Mrs. Eugene Riggs and
family of Eastern and Dorothy
Dodder, local, all spent Sunday
wt th Mr. and . Mrs. Marion
Riggs and family of Logan.
Mr. and Mrs. James Watson
and family of Kentucky spent
Christmas weekend at their
home here .
John P. Kelly of Chester was
a SWiday evening guest of Mr.
and Mrs. Wayne Brickles.
Mrs. Lilly Lee Shultz and
children and Mrs. Lea Jean
Hawkins of Cohunbus, Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Parker and family
of Coal Grove and Mr. and Mrs.
Wesley Arbaugh, local, and
Mr. and Mrs. John Hasen and
family of Michigan all spent
Chrilltmas with their parents,
Mr. and Mrs. John · Arbaugh.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Justis of
Success spent Christmas with
hill parenls, Mr. and Mrs.
Oscar Babcock. They also
visited her parenls, Mr. and
Mrs. Berl Boggs and family in
lhe afternoon.
Mr. and Mro .. Veri TulUe
were Chrilltmas dinner guests
~ Mr. and Mrs. Homer Cole
and family. They slso called on
other relatives ui the af.

temooit. .
Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Myers
and Wilily of ColwnbuB spent

OaislmG wlth her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Rollnd Torrence.
Helin Cue ~ BelbanY' Rldl!e

'

of the Estate of Harold K . Ward ,
d.eceased, late of Langsville ,
Meigs County , Ohio.
,
Creditors are required to file
the ir claims with said f iduciary
within four months .
Dated this 20th day of
December 1971.
F . H . O'Brien
Judge
(ll )

13, 30 II) 6. Jt

Today's Army wants to
join you at a much
higher salary .

PICKUP lruck , 1967

Dodge Coronel. David Yosl,
Case No. 2B,586
Estate of OOETTA PIEROTTI
Deceased .
Nolice is hereby given that

PIEROTTI of 118 E 2nd

O~GA

Portland, Ohio . Phone 8432242.
12-29.Jip

(ll )

2l. 19 11) 5
~EGA~

NOTICE

Notice is hereby g iven that
the annual meeting of. the
stockholders of The Farmers
Bank and Savings Company of
211
West
Second
Street.
PomeroY. Ohio. w ill. be held at
the office of said bank in
Pomeroy, Ohio, according to Its
by -laws, on the third Wed nesday of January , 1972, at 4:00
P.M . tor the purpose of electing
dlrec;tors and the transact ion of
such other business as may
properly come before said
meefing .
Paul E . Kloes
Secretary

(11)

l3,

30 (1) •. 13,"

spent a recent day with Mr.
and Mrs. Jessie Newell.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Taylor
and family of Torch ond Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Tucker and
family, local, spent Christmas
with their parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Blain Taylor.
Sunburn is caused by lhc
ultraviolet rays of lh• sun.

storage building Phone 985-3529.

$6,500.

12-19-301c
GAS HEATER, 55,000 BTU,
natural or bollled gas. good
condition

with

SENTINEL
CARRIERS
Mason &amp; Hartford
PHONE 992-2156
FOR DOAILSI

Employment Wanted

TEAFORD·
SR.

Broker
110 Mechanic Streel
Pomeroy, Ohio

metalbestos

body. Phone 985-4118.
12-29-Jic
STEREO.

Early American

stereo. radio combination

AM- F M radio, 4-speaker
sound syslem. Balance $79.81.
Use our budge! terms. Call
992-7085.
12-29-6tc
WALNUT, modern slyle,
stereo-radio, AM-FM radio. 4-

WANTED!

Virgil B.

chimney, SSO . Phooe 949-3211 . CHESHIRE Large block
12-29-31c
business building on Rt. 7.
engines ; also 1964 Chevrolet

Help Wanted

Judge

house, bath , business or

TWO 283 CU. IN. Chevrolel

Wanted To Buy

Street, Pomeroy , Ohio , has been OLD FURNITURE , Round Qak
tables, Brass beds, dishes,
duly appointed EKecutrix: of the
Estate of Odella Pierott i,
cl ocks, and .or complete
deceased , late of Pomeroy,
households. Wrlle M. D.
Meigs County , Ohio .
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy , Ohio.
Creditors are required to f ile
Call
992-6271.
their claims with said f iduc iary
12-17-tlc
within tour month s.
Dated this 16th day of
December 1911 .
F . H . O'Brien

LONG BOTTOM - Five room

For Sale or Trade
FOR

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

J.cll W. Clr~tr, Mtr.
ftlltlll tft-1111

Suitable for restaurant, store,
garage or service station .

RURAL - One acre with old
house. $1500,00 CASH
BUSINESS BUILDING- Easl
Main. 9 rooms, 1 bath, 3
reslrooms. $18,500.00 IF
SOLD THIS YEAR.
RURAL - 6 rooms, balh, gas
furnace . Also Business
Building, 30x4-4.
3 HOUSES - 2 renled . Olher
one has 3 bedrooms, balh, gas
forced air furnace with free
gas lo all. NOW ONLY
$16,000.00.

speaker sound system, .f.
speed automatic changer.

PI:~~~1.YBOUUYR~~~.

Balance $68.59. Use our
budge! lerms. Call 992.7085.
12·29·61c

HELEN L. TEAFORD,
ASSOCIATE
992-3325 - 992-2378
12-23-61c

PAINT damage, 1970 Zig Zag
sewing machines,
orig i nal cartons .
tachments needed
controls are built

still In
No at as our
ln. Sews

baths, large glassed living

rJJ&amp;MJJ3M;u..J.=:!!:!-t.c

dining room , built-In kitchen
wllh dining space, ullilly
room, 2 car garage, hot water

0..0.:''

UliiCrambl• theoe fwr J!lmbleo,
drirl&lt;,
one letter to eac:h ~quare, to .too.. t

heal, carpeled throughout,
except baths and kitchen. A
WONDERFUL HOME .
$48,000.00.
START THE NEW YEAR OFF
WITH A HOME OF YOUR
OWN, SEE US TODAY.
HENRY CLELAND
REALTOR
Offlco 99'1-2259
Residence 992·2568
12-27-61c

form four ordinary wordo.

1968 Firebird

$1'895

I

TIDIO

The Station
That Listens

sharp.

1967Dr.Chevrolet

III

· _Fin Agitator .

Ptrma-Preu ·
Moylo1
Htloof H11t

Dry en

Surround clothes .
wlt!l gentlt, tven'•
heat. No hot spots ,·

no

ot.~erdrvlng , 1

'-Fine Mesh

Filter.

Lint.'

Wt s,.cl•llzt In

1778.

MAYTAG
· Rtd Corptt

12-30-6tc

llrYict

:RUTLAND
FURNitURE
742-4211
Arnold Grate

.

WHAT YOU'D' CALLAelJY
'lo/'ICS NOT EXPERIENCEt;'

eNO\JeH 10 HAVE
5At1 HABI1S.

1968 Mustang
Conv ., V-8, automatic. p.-st .• clean &amp; ready .

American '44o' station wagon, six cyl.,
automatic, economy Is h'ere.

Autom111cs
2 lPetd operation .
Cholet of water
temps ,
Auto ,
water
level
control. · llnl
F liter or Power

tire, young fryers . Phone 843·

~-

To You

' ' if~tao:oclly .,.
Moytlg
.

12-30-4tc 352 FORD motor, 10x28 tractor

)~

I

'400' 2 dr. hdtp ., V-8, 4-spd ., p.-st., p.-br .,

1968
Rambler
WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL
1966 Plymo.uth

home. Also housework 2 days
a week . Phone 992-5972 .

Y""f'.
dono&lt; do

•l.!.!:,\;:W • : -

Caprice 4
HT, V-8, automatic, p.,st., p .- br~,
air cond. Very nice.

wllh I or. 2 needles, makes ·
bullonholes, sews oo bulloos.
monograms, and blind hem ·
slllch. Full cash price, S38.SO.
Budget plan available. Phone
992-5641.
12-29-6tc

FURNISHED and unfurnished APPLES - Fitzpatrick Or·
apartments . Close lo school
chards. State Route 689 ,
Phone 992-5434.
pl.one Wilesville, 6.' 9-3785.
10-18-tfc
9-3-lfc

(C 1171 Kine Foatuno SJDdlc&amp;lo, Inc.)

roorn with stone flreplace 1

INTERIOR painting. Call Don TROPICAL · FISH,
fancy
VanMeter 985-3951.
guppies, angels and breeders,
12-19-12fp
Bellas and supplies. Phone
992-5..3.
WILL DO babyslfling In my
12·30-ttc

For Rent

YllleiUJ'I CQploflaote: THE TWO MOST ENGAGING
POWERS OF AN AUTHOR ARE TO .MAKE NEW THINGS
I'.AKILIAR AND FAliiLIAR THINGS NEW.-THACURAY

Rutland, 0.

(.bl•rn loMrrowJ

•

Jumblooo AXIOM TONIC llDLI MALADY
Yetlt:rdty'•

Fury Ill 4 dr. V-8, T·fllte, p.-steering, sharpspecial this week.

An•"'~'~

TltU miflhl bfO n f.,Pttiuf( imer• - A
"COMIAT·ANT11

1969 Rambler
American 2 Dr .• six cyl., std. shift, less than

25,000 miles.

DOWN

1. Jol&lt;eaters

I.-breve

See Emerson Jones, Pearl Ash, Hilton Wolfe,
Wallace Amberger, Dick (lawlings.

RAWLINGS
DEPENDABLE CITY
992-2151 OR 992·2152 MIDDLEPORT

DAII.Y CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how

to

work tt:

LONGFELLOW
AXYDLB.o\AXK
~~ Jetter llmpq atllldl for another. Ill thlJ umplo A II
ured for the three L'a, X for tho two O'a, etc. Slnrle letters,
aPQ111'0phe1, the JI1IJIIh u.d formaUo11 of the warda are Ill
hlntl. Each day the eode letter• are dllleri!Dt.

;,

II

,..,...

HOW

.~.

NICE.

·l~

.•

A Crnotosram Qaotallon
RV

RJ

SJ

ROGJ...YJREPN

VJ,SUP.SVN

GANVLM

SJ RV

RJ

VLSI.JPSVN

OF,TRQ.-TAPVIlll LN

VA

ffll

VA

I

•

•

\

•

\

. :~.\.

•

'

�r

•

'
6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Poo•eroy, 0., O.C. 30,19il

Sentinel Classifieds Get Actio~/ Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
.

WANT AD
INFORI\\ATION
DEADLINES
5 P.M. Day Before Publlcali01
MQilday Deadline 9 a .m.
. .£~1!~!1411oo &amp; Corrections

Of
QUALITY

Will be accepted until9 a.m . fOr

Day of Publloatlon
REGULATIONS
' The P~o,~blisher reserves thE.
rlghl 'lo edil or rejecl any ads·
deemed objeclional. Th~
pub Iis her will not be responsible

1971 CHEVELLE MALIBU CPE .

Insertion .
RAT~S

For Want Ad Service

1970 CAMARO CPE.

5 cents per Word one insertion·

$3095

Less than 11 ,000 miles &amp; appearance ot 72 model. Rally
Sport equipped, Classic copper with sandalwood interior,
tintffi glass, factory air conditioned, sports mirrors,
console, air spoiler , turbo hydromatic, power steering &amp;
brak-es , 350 cu . in. V ·B engine . Really Sharp.

MinimUm Charge 75c
12 cents · per word three
consecutive insertions.
' 18 cents per word six con.
secuti ve insertions.

'2S Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp;OBITUARY
,

25c Charge per
Advertisem~nt .
.

home, gas heat, Sycamore

machine.

St., Mlddleporl . Phone 992·
7004 or 992-3585 , Danny
Thompson .
12-23-lfc

beautiful walnut cablnel,
makes design stitches, zig -

Like

new ,

Mobile Homes For Sale

TRAILER tbTS. Bob's Mobfie&gt;
Court, Rt. 124, Syracuse,
Jllio. 992-2951.
~
4-2-tfc

From the largest T;,,;:i;
Bulldozer Radiator to the
1Srnallesf Heater Core.
Nalho n Biggs
Rodiotur Specfollst

Notice
New Lima Road for lh hog
and other pri zes .

BAND, Friday and Saturday,
Jack's Club, cover charge.
For reservations come to club
In person.

Pets welcome.

12-27-tfc

M'LLER

and
aluminum
awning ,
aluminum skirting, com .

pletely

setup,

NOTICE
IN THE COMMON P~EAS
COORT OF MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO
~EGAL

the New Year right and come
to Hayman 's Auction~ Friday
night. Aucti on starts at 7 p.m .
Hayman Auc1ion House,

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Pomeq Home &amp; Aulli
· Open 8Tii'S
Monday thru Satur$y
•
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 .

JOHNSON MASONRY

HOME &amp; AUTO

Co~plete

992-2094
606 1:. Miiin Pomero1 .

Remodeling

1220 Washington Blvd.
Belpre, Ohio
air condlllooed, 8' x20' porch

Pomeroy

EXPERT
'Wheel Alignment .
.'5.5S

PdMEROY

OFFICE SUPPLIES

beaulllul

And

loc;ation. Owner leaving state.

FURNITURE ·

12-30-2tc

Tuppers Plains
Society News

Ph. 992-2174

MOBILE HOMES

Phone 949-4892 or 992·5272.
12-2S-41p 4 ROOM HOUSE. furnished al
12-30-Hc
124
Laurel
Sl.,
Pomeroy.
Call
THE Whispering Pines Nile SHOOTING malch, Saturday ,
992-5836 or inq ui re at 126
Jan. 1, at the Racine Planing
Club will close al 7 p. m.
FOR THE BEST deal In a new
Laurel St.
Mill al 6 p.m. Factory choke
Fr iday night, New Year's
or used mobile home, try
12-30·61c
guns only. Assorted meat .
Eve . Dance Saturday night,
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
!hanks to the Rev. Marshall
Sponsored by the Syracuse
Jan. l, 10 p. m . until 2 a. m .
Kanauga, Ohio.
•
D.A. V. home in Pomeroy for
Larimore. Rev . Forrest R.
Fire Dept .
Music by The Kasua l s, 4 pc .
12-lt-901c
group
meetings
and
par
ties,
Donley for their consoling
12-29-31c
band and two female singers
phone 991-5247.
words, lhe Ewing Chapel. Mr.
from Beverly, Ohio.
12-19-121c Auto Sales
and Mrs . Bob Moore and
12-30 21c GUN SHOOT, Forked Run
organist, Rose Ann Je nkins.
Sportsman Club, Sunday,
Our thanks to the Syracuse KOSCOT Kosmelics and wigs
Jan . 2, 12 noon .
2 BEDROOM mobile home In MERCURY Monlerey in good
Women 's Auxiliary and all
12-29·3tc
Racine area . Phone . 992-6329. condition, power steering,
for sale. Brown's, phone 992 .
other tributes . The Morri s
12-14-tfc power brakes. See Weber
5113.
across from the State Garage.
Harden Family.
SAVE up toone hall. Bring your
12-30-31p
SICk TV to Chuck 's TV Shopi FURNISHED sleeping room
GUN SHOOT, Sunday , Jan .' 2, I
over Wine Store. Rent by '64 PONTIAC Calallna con151 Butternut Ave .• Pomeroy .
p.m ., Racine Gun Club .
Phone 992-5080.
monlh. Phone 992-5293.
vertible. Come look this over
12-29-31c
11 -26-lfc
11 -2 1-lfc
at 105 Union Ave., Phone 9923293 belween 5 p. m. and 8 p.
LOOKING for bargains? Start
LEGAL NOTICE
m.

WE WI SH to thank our many
friends tor their comforting
prayers , flowers and the
loving expressiins of sympathy in the loss of our
husband and father. A spec ial

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

12' · 14' · 24' · WiDE

home across from Bradbury 60xl2, 2 bedroom, all-electric,

School. Call 992-5308 or see
Charles Lewis, 2nd house
south from Bradbury School .

Stop In and See Our
~loor Display.

Kitdlens, Baths
Room Additions
And Patils

•

••

-

HA8DCRAFT
GIFT ITEMS
Christmas
decorations, wearing
apparel, jewelry,
· ceramics.

SII;R~,

FOUR NEW HO.MES , _
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom $16,900.00 home can be purchased with a
moothly paymenl as low as $65.00 lor a family wllh a base
salilrr. of $5,000.00 and three children. 7'1, Pet. annual
~:enl.age rate.

Wanted To Rent

MA~'

••

)f)(/~ IKJf KI&lt;'1W/IS

WAIT,
\:::::::::--/ VEAI-I, YOU
I'UT YOU~ SKI
...VOU
NEED T~EIII AS
POLES ON
WOULDN'T
SPLINTS J
LIKE. T~IS.. .
WANT TO
I.OSE

Dolls, all dressed In style,
knilled and crocheted. I Has
to be seen to be appreciated I
Many ilems you hovt bt111
looking lor, for that ptrftcl
gill.

MY M()IIMit MOM NU

HIDDEN
TREASURES
GIFT SHOP
1\\ARTHA ROSE, OWner,
l
Located on County Road 34
n..r Royal O.k Park. Watch
lor Signs.
Op&amp;n every cNY except
Monday
I P.M. 1117 P.M.

AH'D
A FOOL
TOAPPL'/

. FO'TioU5

992-7601

JOe&gt;-JT'LL

e.E

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

MOBBED-

240 Lincoln St.
Middleport, Olllo
Dbo Anthony Plumbing
We

have

1

c~;~mplete

Homo.Malnltnance Strvlco
the year • round. No matler
what your need. Complole
roof or spouting rtpalr .

Interior

or

ext1rior Clr·

ponlry. Ceiling tile and
Ponoling
ond
Siding.
Complete Plumbing &amp;
H.. ling.
Doy Number 992-2550
We hove 24 hr. ome1'9oncy

NURSE and secrelary desires
house with some acreage in 1964 VOLKSWAGEN. good
Meigs Counly area . Call
running condit ion , S-400 .
Alhens 593-6495.
Phone 742-4423.
12-28-4tc
12-28-3tc

Laurel Clllf.

LUKl:V •·

•

.

NEW. 12 x 60, 2 bedroom mobile

Notice

\

PLACE I

zags, buttonholes, blind hems.

1 BEDROOM and 2 bedroom
mobile homes. Adults ooly .
Phone 992-5592.
12-19-tfc

12-28-3tc

. .. .

~JRE A MNJ W~E
I-ICAR.T 15 IIJ 11-\E

NOT
NO MORE
I DON'T,

.

Business Services·,.

in

etc. Will sell lor $8S. Call
Ravenswood· 273-9893 afler 5
p.m.
11 -28-lfc

NICE TRAILER, 1 bedroom,
ideal lor couple, 10 miles
norlh of Pomeroy. Phone 9926452.
12-15-tfc

1'Pio!EROY, OHIO

STILL SHOOT. Sunday , Jan. 2,
1 p.m. al Rutland Gun Club on

t,;ard of Thanks

SOxl2 TWO BEDROOM mobile SINGER . aulomallc sewing

738,4.

OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.

BLIND ADS
Additional

'

For Sale

2 BEDROOM mobile home,
furnished , ulllities paid,
available now. Phone 992-

Pomeroy Motor Co.

$1.50 for SO word minimum ~·
Each additional word 2c.

S~turdav

Ul95

Sanda lwood with brown vinyl top, factory air conditioned,
V-8 engine with turbo hydromalic, power steering, E.
clock, P. 8 ., radio. Rally wheel s with w.w t ires . Fri. &amp; rear
guards. Reta il $41 55. Co. official car &amp; specially priced .

for more than one incorrect

OFFICE HOURS
8:30 a.m. lo 5j00 p.m. Dally
8: 30 a.m. to 12 : 00 Noor

Pomeroy
•tor Co•

2 SIGIIS

.

For Rent

'

.•

MARY ALICE SAMUELS
By Mrs. Evel)'ll Brlckles
BILL NELSON 992-3657
HILTQN WOLFE '949-3211
816 W. Ma in Street,
Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Newell Pomeroy, Ohio,
TOM CROW, 992·2580
DALE DUTTON, 99'1-2534
1 WILL NOT be responsible lor For Sale
s2 CHEVROLET
pickup,
service.
Pla intiff,
and family of Chester, Mr. and
any
debls
contracted
b{
F----------,.---1
perfecl
condllion,
$900
.
992-5103
742-3947
· VS ·
anyone other than mysel .
Serious inquiries only . Phone NE IG LE R Building Supply .
Mrs. John Newell and family of NATHANIEL
S.EPTIC TANKS CLEANED
SAMUELS .
742-4761
Colwnbus and Mr. and Mrs. Address Unknown
~~~~d Gerald Russell
9926083.
Free esllmate on building Reasonable rales. Ph. 446-4782.
Wo ore fully Insured
12-29-IOip
Defendant . )
Gallipolis . John Russell .
your
new home. Will draw
Richard Slllith and family of
12-28-31p
No. 14982
(Miner &amp; Operator.
prl/lts 1o sull the lay of your
36" X 23 X .009
NOTICE
Columbus spent Christmas
5-12-lfc
'69
DODGE
Swinger
2
doer
land
.
Call
Guy
Nelgler
,
Nathaniel Samuels , whose
hardlop
with Mr. and Mrs. Jessie place
VB
slandard,
red
with
Ohio.
For
repair
and
Racine,
of residence is unknown
YOUR WEIGHT ...
black vinyl fop. Sl, 100. '69
aluminum siding , soffet and UPHOLSTER.ING . SERVICE ,
Newell. Elmer Newell of the U. and cannot with reasoMble ABOUT
overweight
ladies,
teens
and
complele selection of fabrics
Volkswagen,
good
coodlflon,
guller. Call Donald Smllh,
igence be ascertained , will
S. Navy stationed in dil
men interested in a Weight
and vinyl lo choose from .
tC'Ike notice that on the 13th day
11 ,100. '68 Ford pickup cuslom
Racine, Ohio.
·
All Commercial &amp;
Watchers I Rl Class in
Philadelphia visited the of December , 1971 , the un .
Pick-up and delivery. Sialer
cab, 6-cyl. , 3 speed, 25,000
10-7-tlc
dersigned , Mary Alice Samuels ,
USED OFFSET PLATES
·Pomeroy write : Weight
Upholslerlng, Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
miles, $1,400. Phone 992-6048.
Newells on Friday.
fi led her Complaint against him
Wa tc hers (R), 1863 Seclion
HAVE
992·3617.
phone
12-27-61p
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
Home Units
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Higgins in the Court of Common Pleas of
Rd
..
Cincinnali,
Ohio
45237.
12-27-30tp
MANY
USES
service,
all
makes.
992·2284.
Meigs Countv , Ohio. demand ing
and daughter, Amanda Ruth, divorce.
10-3-lfc
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
custody of minor child
1970 W-30 OLDSMOBILE 442,
Authorized Singer Sales and SEPTIC lanks cleaned. Miller
of Vienna , W. Va., spent of the partiEis , and other relief .
automatic/ factorr stereo
24-Hour Service
You, the said Nathan ie l
Service.
We Sharpen Scissors.
Sanllalloo, Slewarl, Ohio. Ph.
I
ape.
Lots
of
extras.
Ike
new.
Christmas Day here with her Samuels, are reQuired to i!ln 3-29-ll'e-c---166~2 :j035.
8 ior $i.oo
Call 992-24-41 afler 5 p.m.
sister, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth swer said Compla int w ithin
2· 12-tfc
YOUNG
MEN
11-28-tfc
twenty eight days after January
Griffith . .
19, 1972.
Real--Estate For Sale
_R_E_,~,_y__-M-,x- -c-o -N _c R_ETE
:·.'·'
. ,.. ,
:;;~~·and Mro. Frank Dorst
Real Estate For Sale
•1' ' ,:
. Mary Al ice Samuels
:HOUSE: \~4l Unc~ln Heights. delivered righl to your
PH."'i2·7260 ., ;
'ana family of Long Bottom
Plaintiff
Call Danny Thompson, 992.. pro(ect. Fasl and easy. Free
RACINE - 10 room house ,.
spent Christmas with her
2196.
esllmales. Phone 992-3284 .
bath, basement, garage, two
Webster and Fultz
·
7-18-1'- Goegleln Ready-Mix Co.,
lots.
No
reasonable
offer
mother, Mrs. Ethel Stout.
P.0 . Bo:oc 723, Pomeroy , Ohio
Middleport, Ohio.
]II Court 51.
refused . Phone 949 ~4313 .
Attorneys for Plaint iff
Mrs. Neisel Weatherman
S
6·30-tfc .
Pomeroy,
Ohio
12-22-12tp
spent Christmas weekend with 112) 15, 22. 29 (I l 5, 12, 19, 6t
HARRISON' S TV and Antenna
Mr. and Mrs. Wallis McDonald
COAL, limestone . Excel sior NICE 2-slory home with full
Service. Phone 992-2522.
NOTICE
OF
and family of Colwnbus and
basemen! , 2 lois, new forced
Sa il Works, E. Main St.,
APPOINTMENT
6·1O.lfc
air furnace . Near Pomeroy
while there she also called on
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
Case No. 20590
Elemenlary School . Phone.
Estate of Morris Harden ,
4-9-tlc
other friends.
BACKHOE ),NO DOZER work.
Deceased .
AUTOMOBILE Insurance
992-7384 lo see.
Septic lanks Installed. George
601
East
.Main
Mr . and Mrs. Wayne
Notice is hereby given that
be'l!' cancelled? Losl your
IJ.7
-Ifc
POODLE puppies. Silver Toy,
I Bill) Pullins, Phone 992-2418.
POMEROY
Dorothy Harden of Syracuse,
operalor's license? Coil 992·
Brickles spent Christmas with Ohio,
Park
view
Kennels,
Phone
992·
4·25-lfc
has been duly appointed
TEMPTING BUY
2966.
5443.
3 BEDROOM ranch lype home. ANOTHER
her niece, Mr. and Mrs . Administratrix of the Estate of
1
POMEROY
I
story
6-IS.Hc
Arbaugh Addllion, Tuppers
8-15-tfc
Morris Harden, deceased, late
O' DELL WHEEL alignment
Willard Ebersbach and family of
frame
,
2
bedrooms,
wllh
Meigs County, Ohio .
Plains. All new wllh folal
located at Crossroads. Rt. 124. C. BRADFORD. Auttlmeer
closets, bath, utility-room In
of Chester.
· Creditors are reQuired to file
electric and central a-ir
Complete
front end service,
basement, hardwood floors,
thelr claims with said fiduc iary
Comolete S..-il«
conditioning, bath and 3/•,
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Hoffman, within
tune
up
and
brake service .
END
OF
YEAR
gas
furnace
and
hot
wafer
four month:l .
Phone 949-3821
fully carpeled, lull basemen!,
Wheels balanced elec Mr. and Mrs. Charles Betzing
lank,
Dated this 13th day of
large
lol,
EXCELLENT
Racine. Ohio
gara~e in basemen!. See by
lronlcally .
All
work ·
Crill Bradford
spent Christmas with their December 1971 . F . H . O'Brien
CONDITION,
JUST
$7 ,·
Clearance Sale!
appo~nlmenf, phone 992-2196
guaranteed.
Reasonable
5-1-lfc
900.00.
or 992-3585. Danny Thompson.
children, Mr. and Mrs. Dana
Judge
rales. Phone 992-3213.
Buy
Any
Fuel
Oil
Financing available.
7-27-lfc
Hoffman and family of (12) 16, 13, 30, Jtc
THIS- POMEROY - 6
12-30-tfc SEE
While learning aboul the pay
room
frame, 2 bedrooms, i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,___________""
SIEGLER
HEATER
Rutland.
raise, have him explain how
bath, basement, porches, gas
Mrs. Mariam Hendershot
NOTICE OF
you may enlist and stay
SIX ROOM house, 133 Butlernu•
FORCED-AIR heal, GOING
GET
FREE
.
APPOINTMENT
home for lhe holidays.
and son, Charles, of Lancaster
Ave. Conlacl Ed Hedrick, 2137
.AT $5,000.00. ·
Case No. 20,591
200 Galloos Fuel Oil When
Wadsworth Drive, Columbus,
and Mr. and Mrs. Wilford Estate of Harold K . ward
Ohio, phone 237-433-4.
You
Boy
Any
Siegler
Healer
Deceased
.
TUPPERS PLAINS A
Tippie and family of Athens R.
Call him at614-593-3D22
11 -21 -llc
Not ice is here given that
BRAND NEW SPLIT LEVEL
Thru Dec. 31.
D. were visiting their parents, Nellie Pierce of Rutland , R .D ., - call collect · for
CBRICKI 6 acres, 3 large
County, Ohio, has been
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Nichols Meigs
bedrooms,
closets galore, Jlh
~OMIROV
·
complete details.
duly appointed Adm inlstratri:oc

for Sale
Aluminum
Sheets·

l:t ·30

WINNIE WINKLE

J:M A WIOO\\IERLWINNIE', AND

\'MEN lrW WI~E: Dlcf?t. I

'THOJGHi I'D NEVEK

Fi'\LL IN I..C:WE: AeAI N.
WE HAD 1lUCH AN

HOW VA FI)(IW

FER INSUitANCE?

'THE fll\~ FEW DAYS
HAVE MADf ME:
1111NK .wM3E: IVE
6EEN WRON~ ....
!MYf!£ .l COliLD
1DVE ANO'THER ...

ll1fAJ. MARRIAGE !

11

Service &amp;Repair

------~

20J

Also Furnace Repajr

The
. ..
YOUR LOCAL ARMY Daily Sentinel
.

Cleland
Realty

REPRESENTATIVE
WANTS TO

- ~

C&amp;M
REFRIGERATION
SERVICE

TilE BORN

TALK TO YOU

ABOUT THE NEW

BUS

ARMY PAY RAISE

Thursday.

Lois Ebersbach of Chester
called on her aunt, Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Brickles Friday.
Denver Weber of Reedsville
also called on the Brickles'.
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Babcock, Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Lyon,s
and son, Lamar, Mrs. Eulah
Swan of Tuppers Plains, Mr .
and Mrs. Eugene Riggs and
family of Eastern and Dorothy
Dodder, local, all spent Sunday
wt th Mr. and . Mrs. Marion
Riggs and family of Logan.
Mr. and Mrs. James Watson
and family of Kentucky spent
Christmas weekend at their
home here .
John P. Kelly of Chester was
a SWiday evening guest of Mr.
and Mrs. Wayne Brickles.
Mrs. Lilly Lee Shultz and
children and Mrs. Lea Jean
Hawkins of Cohunbus, Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Parker and family
of Coal Grove and Mr. and Mrs.
Wesley Arbaugh, local, and
Mr. and Mrs. John Hasen and
family of Michigan all spent
Chrilltmas with their parents,
Mr. and Mrs. John · Arbaugh.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Justis of
Success spent Christmas with
hill parenls, Mr. and Mrs.
Oscar Babcock. They also
visited her parenls, Mr. and
Mrs. Berl Boggs and family in
lhe afternoon.
Mr. and Mro .. Veri TulUe
were Chrilltmas dinner guests
~ Mr. and Mrs. Homer Cole
and family. They slso called on
other relatives ui the af.

temooit. .
Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Myers
and Wilily of ColwnbuB spent

OaislmG wlth her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Rollnd Torrence.
Helin Cue ~ BelbanY' Rldl!e

'

of the Estate of Harold K . Ward ,
d.eceased, late of Langsville ,
Meigs County , Ohio.
,
Creditors are required to file
the ir claims with said f iduciary
within four months .
Dated this 20th day of
December 1971.
F . H . O'Brien
Judge
(ll )

13, 30 II) 6. Jt

Today's Army wants to
join you at a much
higher salary .

PICKUP lruck , 1967

Dodge Coronel. David Yosl,
Case No. 2B,586
Estate of OOETTA PIEROTTI
Deceased .
Nolice is hereby given that

PIEROTTI of 118 E 2nd

O~GA

Portland, Ohio . Phone 8432242.
12-29.Jip

(ll )

2l. 19 11) 5
~EGA~

NOTICE

Notice is hereby g iven that
the annual meeting of. the
stockholders of The Farmers
Bank and Savings Company of
211
West
Second
Street.
PomeroY. Ohio. w ill. be held at
the office of said bank in
Pomeroy, Ohio, according to Its
by -laws, on the third Wed nesday of January , 1972, at 4:00
P.M . tor the purpose of electing
dlrec;tors and the transact ion of
such other business as may
properly come before said
meefing .
Paul E . Kloes
Secretary

(11)

l3,

30 (1) •. 13,"

spent a recent day with Mr.
and Mrs. Jessie Newell.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Taylor
and family of Torch ond Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Tucker and
family, local, spent Christmas
with their parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Blain Taylor.
Sunburn is caused by lhc
ultraviolet rays of lh• sun.

storage building Phone 985-3529.

$6,500.

12-19-301c
GAS HEATER, 55,000 BTU,
natural or bollled gas. good
condition

with

SENTINEL
CARRIERS
Mason &amp; Hartford
PHONE 992-2156
FOR DOAILSI

Employment Wanted

TEAFORD·
SR.

Broker
110 Mechanic Streel
Pomeroy, Ohio

metalbestos

body. Phone 985-4118.
12-29-Jic
STEREO.

Early American

stereo. radio combination

AM- F M radio, 4-speaker
sound syslem. Balance $79.81.
Use our budge! terms. Call
992-7085.
12-29-6tc
WALNUT, modern slyle,
stereo-radio, AM-FM radio. 4-

WANTED!

Virgil B.

chimney, SSO . Phooe 949-3211 . CHESHIRE Large block
12-29-31c
business building on Rt. 7.
engines ; also 1964 Chevrolet

Help Wanted

Judge

house, bath , business or

TWO 283 CU. IN. Chevrolel

Wanted To Buy

Street, Pomeroy , Ohio , has been OLD FURNITURE , Round Qak
tables, Brass beds, dishes,
duly appointed EKecutrix: of the
Estate of Odella Pierott i,
cl ocks, and .or complete
deceased , late of Pomeroy,
households. Wrlle M. D.
Meigs County , Ohio .
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy , Ohio.
Creditors are required to f ile
Call
992-6271.
their claims with said f iduc iary
12-17-tlc
within tour month s.
Dated this 16th day of
December 1911 .
F . H . O'Brien

LONG BOTTOM - Five room

For Sale or Trade
FOR

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

J.cll W. Clr~tr, Mtr.
ftlltlll tft-1111

Suitable for restaurant, store,
garage or service station .

RURAL - One acre with old
house. $1500,00 CASH
BUSINESS BUILDING- Easl
Main. 9 rooms, 1 bath, 3
reslrooms. $18,500.00 IF
SOLD THIS YEAR.
RURAL - 6 rooms, balh, gas
furnace . Also Business
Building, 30x4-4.
3 HOUSES - 2 renled . Olher
one has 3 bedrooms, balh, gas
forced air furnace with free
gas lo all. NOW ONLY
$16,000.00.

speaker sound system, .f.
speed automatic changer.

PI:~~~1.YBOUUYR~~~.

Balance $68.59. Use our
budge! lerms. Call 992.7085.
12·29·61c

HELEN L. TEAFORD,
ASSOCIATE
992-3325 - 992-2378
12-23-61c

PAINT damage, 1970 Zig Zag
sewing machines,
orig i nal cartons .
tachments needed
controls are built

still In
No at as our
ln. Sews

baths, large glassed living

rJJ&amp;MJJ3M;u..J.=:!!:!-t.c

dining room , built-In kitchen
wllh dining space, ullilly
room, 2 car garage, hot water

0..0.:''

UliiCrambl• theoe fwr J!lmbleo,
drirl&lt;,
one letter to eac:h ~quare, to .too.. t

heal, carpeled throughout,
except baths and kitchen. A
WONDERFUL HOME .
$48,000.00.
START THE NEW YEAR OFF
WITH A HOME OF YOUR
OWN, SEE US TODAY.
HENRY CLELAND
REALTOR
Offlco 99'1-2259
Residence 992·2568
12-27-61c

form four ordinary wordo.

1968 Firebird

$1'895

I

TIDIO

The Station
That Listens

sharp.

1967Dr.Chevrolet

III

· _Fin Agitator .

Ptrma-Preu ·
Moylo1
Htloof H11t

Dry en

Surround clothes .
wlt!l gentlt, tven'•
heat. No hot spots ,·

no

ot.~erdrvlng , 1

'-Fine Mesh

Filter.

Lint.'

Wt s,.cl•llzt In

1778.

MAYTAG
· Rtd Corptt

12-30-6tc

llrYict

:RUTLAND
FURNitURE
742-4211
Arnold Grate

.

WHAT YOU'D' CALLAelJY
'lo/'ICS NOT EXPERIENCEt;'

eNO\JeH 10 HAVE
5At1 HABI1S.

1968 Mustang
Conv ., V-8, automatic. p.-st .• clean &amp; ready .

American '44o' station wagon, six cyl.,
automatic, economy Is h'ere.

Autom111cs
2 lPetd operation .
Cholet of water
temps ,
Auto ,
water
level
control. · llnl
F liter or Power

tire, young fryers . Phone 843·

~-

To You

' ' if~tao:oclly .,.
Moytlg
.

12-30-4tc 352 FORD motor, 10x28 tractor

)~

I

'400' 2 dr. hdtp ., V-8, 4-spd ., p.-st., p.-br .,

1968
Rambler
WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL
1966 Plymo.uth

home. Also housework 2 days
a week . Phone 992-5972 .

Y""f'.
dono&lt; do

•l.!.!:,\;:W • : -

Caprice 4
HT, V-8, automatic, p.,st., p .- br~,
air cond. Very nice.

wllh I or. 2 needles, makes ·
bullonholes, sews oo bulloos.
monograms, and blind hem ·
slllch. Full cash price, S38.SO.
Budget plan available. Phone
992-5641.
12-29-6tc

FURNISHED and unfurnished APPLES - Fitzpatrick Or·
apartments . Close lo school
chards. State Route 689 ,
Phone 992-5434.
pl.one Wilesville, 6.' 9-3785.
10-18-tfc
9-3-lfc

(C 1171 Kine Foatuno SJDdlc&amp;lo, Inc.)

roorn with stone flreplace 1

INTERIOR painting. Call Don TROPICAL · FISH,
fancy
VanMeter 985-3951.
guppies, angels and breeders,
12-19-12fp
Bellas and supplies. Phone
992-5..3.
WILL DO babyslfling In my
12·30-ttc

For Rent

YllleiUJ'I CQploflaote: THE TWO MOST ENGAGING
POWERS OF AN AUTHOR ARE TO .MAKE NEW THINGS
I'.AKILIAR AND FAliiLIAR THINGS NEW.-THACURAY

Rutland, 0.

(.bl•rn loMrrowJ

•

Jumblooo AXIOM TONIC llDLI MALADY
Yetlt:rdty'•

Fury Ill 4 dr. V-8, T·fllte, p.-steering, sharpspecial this week.

An•"'~'~

TltU miflhl bfO n f.,Pttiuf( imer• - A
"COMIAT·ANT11

1969 Rambler
American 2 Dr .• six cyl., std. shift, less than

25,000 miles.

DOWN

1. Jol&lt;eaters

I.-breve

See Emerson Jones, Pearl Ash, Hilton Wolfe,
Wallace Amberger, Dick (lawlings.

RAWLINGS
DEPENDABLE CITY
992-2151 OR 992·2152 MIDDLEPORT

DAII.Y CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how

to

work tt:

LONGFELLOW
AXYDLB.o\AXK
~~ Jetter llmpq atllldl for another. Ill thlJ umplo A II
ured for the three L'a, X for tho two O'a, etc. Slnrle letters,
aPQ111'0phe1, the JI1IJIIh u.d formaUo11 of the warda are Ill
hlntl. Each day the eode letter• are dllleri!Dt.

;,

II

,..,...

HOW

.~.

NICE.

·l~

.•

A Crnotosram Qaotallon
RV

RJ

SJ

ROGJ...YJREPN

VJ,SUP.SVN

GANVLM

SJ RV

RJ

VLSI.JPSVN

OF,TRQ.-TAPVIlll LN

VA

ffll

VA

I

•

•

\

•

\

. :~.\.

•

'

�...

~

.....

_,

.... '

'

.

l.

r

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., De\'. 30, 1971

•·••.·.·.

Aussies Look For Nymph
'

PERTH, Australia (UPI)- whatever it may be is under
The Nullarbor Nymph may be a way at the little town of Eucla,
tall, blonde girl dressed only in 600 miles east of Perth.
a fur miniskirt. who ' gambols
Some rabbit trappers, who
spotted what they called "the
with kangaroos.
Then again, it may be an kangaroo girl" earlier this
Englishman with long hair who week, swear she is tall, has
decided to become a hermit. Or long blonde hair, wears what
maybe it all is just a publicity appears to .be a fur miniskirt
and nothing else, and runs with
stunt.
In any case, the saga of the the kangaroos. They said when
Nullarbor Nymph has capturfll they tried to approach her on
the imagination of the Austra- the Nullarbor Desert near
lian public, so much so that a Eucla, a village with a
land and air search for population of eight persons,
four dogs and a parrot that
swears, she disappeared into
the brush.
Passengers See Girl
Passengers on a bus on the
Eyre highway that passes near
Eucla also said they saw her
Mrs. Ellen Fredricks Hart, about four miles from the
76, Ravenna , formerly of village. When the bus stopped
Pomeroy, died Wednesday at the girl disappeared. They left
some food and went on their
her residence there.
The daughter of the late way .
Steve Patupis, who owns
Anna Leifheit and Jacob
Ebersbach, Mrs. Hart also was Eucla 's Amber Motor Hotel and
preceded in death by three a foul-mouthed parrot, said the
creature is an Englishman with
brothers and a sister.
Surviving
are
four long hair who decided to
daughters , Mrs . Fredricka become a hermit. He said the
Mize, Akron; Mrs. Ann Davis, man disappeared about eight
Tallmadge; Mrs . Charlotte
:hie, Kent, and Mrs. Lois
Green, of Placentia, Calif. ;
three sons, Leroy, of Orwell ;
Milton, of Streetsboro, and
John, of Kent; a brother,
Richard Ebersbach ; 16
grandchildren , five great·
grandchildren and several
nieces and nephews.
COLUMBUS (UPi i-A radio
The body is being brought to newsman plans to throw a twothe Ewing Funeral Home hour, on-the-air drunk Friday
where friends may call from 7 morning in an effort to prevent
to 9 p.m. today. Funeral ser- drunk driving that night - New
vices will be at Ewings at 3 Years Eve .
p.m. Friday. Burial will be in
Stan Savran, news director at
Beech Grove Cemetery.
WRFD in suburban Wor '
thington, said he will consume
a double shot · of 100 proof
whickey every 15 minutes for
NOTICE
MASON COUNTY BANK
two hours.
LOBBY &amp; DRIVE-IN
)YJLL CLOSE 2:00 P.M.
friday.
Louis Hepp Dies

Ellen F. Hart

Dies Wednesday

months ago and he later found
his suitcase and clothes on the
desert.
Perth publicity man Goeff
Pearce, who first heard the
rabbit hunters' story, insists the
whole thing isn't a publicity
. stunt.
,
"What would be the point of
it? There's nothing to publicize
at Eucla," he said.
Today,aseriesofexpeditions
were under way for the
Nullarbor Nymph, with some
men· searching on foot while
light airplanes circled the area.
The search centered near a
cave where local hunters said
they found utensils and
evidence of habitation .
Area Is Desert
The area · is a desert, with
scorched, wasted lands, lots of
kangaroos and rabbits.
Helen Gurney, wife of a
ranch owner in the area,
shrugged off the whole affair.
"I think it's just a big publicity
stunt," she said.
"My husband is a good
tracker and it seems funny that
the hotel, which is making all
the fuss , has not asked him to
track this girl down."

Newsman Will Go

On Radio Drunk

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight - Dec. 30
' NOT OPEN

Fridoy &amp; Saturday
Dec. 31 , Jan. 1, 1972

Gening Straight
tTechnlcotorl
Elllon Gould,
Candice Bergen

" R"

Colorcartoons: Rounder
Search for Misery, Stooge
Show Starts at 7 p.m.

Louis W. Hepp, 82, of 1535
Oakwood Ave. , Columbus ,
formerly of Meigs County, died
Dec. 23 at MI. Carmel Hospital
in Columbus. He is survived by
his wife, Alice; a brother,
Franklln, of Pomeroy; a niece,
Mrs . Vera Buchanan of
Pomeroy, and two nephews,
Carl and Donald Hepp, of
Wellsville.
Funeral services were held
Mondsy in Columbus. Burial
was in Forest Lawn Cei!Jetery.

:::::!..::.:.:.:.:::.::::::.

H·L~

•UILO

OP'P'O .. TUHITY

You get more tor
your money when
you shop at home

During the 7:15a.m. to 9:15
a. m. drunk, Savran will discuss alcohol and its effects on
the human body with Dr. Phil
Wood, a Marion physician who
will supervise the test, and a
state highway patrolman.
All three participaints will be
available for call • in questions
from listeners during the two
hours.
Station manager Richard Via
said Savran's remarks will be
"tightly controlled."
"Savran will speak into tape
and we can monitor it before it
goes over the air," Via said.
" If he says something wrong
we will be able to block it out."
Via said the two • hour time
span was selected "because
that's about the period of time
you would spend at a party."
"We want the physician who
will examine Savran to say that
this man is in no shape to drive
an automobile," Via said. "The
theme of the program is if
you're going to have one for the
road, have someone drive for
you ."
Pleasant Valley Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Mrs. Sam
Lewis, Racine; David Nibert,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Roger
Deal, Glenwood; Mrs. Clyde
Keefer, Leon; Glen Spurlock,
Robertsburg ; Todd Martin ,
Hartford; Mrs. Paul Thornton,
Leon; Lester Casto, Point
Pleasant;
Mrs .
Ernest
Pearson, Gallipolis Ferry, and
Mrs. Charles Gilkey, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGES - Sandra
Smith, Arthur Dunlap, Mrs.
Fred Samet, Melvin Bush, Mrs.
Art Hartley, Mrs. Charles
Sayre, Mrs. Raymond Fultz
and Earl Breedon.
BIRTH - Dec. 30, a son to
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Lewis,
Racine.

Mon~)

spe1ll ut lwm c
builds sch ools . cm rl uy~
tea ch ers unJ buys book::. .

Homt:town m onev i m provf'~
st reets. Jeve lo r s r nrks and
pla y"'ruunJ s.
Mor t ..: ommun i t ~ scrvin: !o .
improved fire and rol ir t·
prot e~· ti o n uml better
gove- rnmen t ure ncedt•d
It tnkes mon e ~ .
Your c ummunit ~ '·neeJo; \ uU
nnd yu u need you r
l· onl ntun J t ~ ·. Monr.l !&gt; flt.'11t
ut lw mc is n ever fur aw :n
It m iK ht be a s \:lose us .
the s lide in t he pllm gmund:ll

SERVICE SET
There will be a Watch Night
service beginning at 7:30p.m.
Friday at the Salvation Army
at 115 Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy, ending at midnight.
The Rev. Frank Cheesebrew
will speak. Ught refreshments
will be served. The public is
invited.

·.. .·..· . ' ..........·•·.··.· ··: . •'•,·,•.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Unlted Press International
Ohio: Ex!endO!II outlook for
Saturday through Monday:
Mild Saturday and Sunday
wltb a chance of rain or snow
Saturday night, ending
Sunday. Clearing and a little
cooler Monday. Highs In the
40s Saturday and Sunday and
in the upper 30s and lower
tos Monday. Overnight lows
from the upper 20s to mid 30s
Saturday and Sunday
mornings, dropping to the
mid and upper 20s Monday
morning.

Attacks
(Continued from page I)
Russian-made MIG warplanes.
They had been sent to Olina
several years ago for safekeeping wben the United states was
carrying out continuous attacks against airfields and
othet targets all over North
VIetnam.
Toward the end of October,
for the first time, MIGs rose
against U.S. B52 bombers,
which previously had operated
unchallenged in wide-ranging
attacks over Southeast Asia.
Meanwhile, taking advantage of-the early onset of
the dry season, North Vietnam
for two months has been
sending relatively large
numbers of men and substantial material southward
along the Ho Chi Minh Trail to
a staging area in southern
Laos. From there it can deploy
forces to attack Royal Lao
troops, move into Cambodia or
try to regain the sanctuary
areas Hanoi's forces once held
in Cambodia along the South
Vietnamese border not far
from Saigon.
Pointing out that U. S. air
support now constitutes vir. tually the only American
combat action in the area,
administration officials say
that failure to reply to Hanoi's
intensified efforts would make
it unwise and unsafe to proceed
with further American with·
drawals after January.
For that reason, the new
"limited" U. S. attacks described by the Pentagon as
being of limited duration are
likely to be repeated unless the
administration sees evidence
that Hanoi ls willlng to pull in
its horns and settle lor a de
facto , if not a negotiated,
ceasefire.
ONF. GRANTED
One divorce was granted and
an.other was filed in Meigs
County Common Plea• Court
since Wednesday . Lefa A.
Powell was granted a divorce
from Charles F. Powell and
Marion F . Marcum, Middleport, filed for divorce
against William J. Marcum,
Rutland, charging gross
neglect of duty and extreme
cruelty.

Eden News
Social Notes

Dies Thursda.y
Mrs. Mary Frances Roush,
73, Minersville Route I., died
early Thursday morning at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
fo'Jowing a -lingering illness.
Preceding her in death was
her first husband, Edward
Martin, in 1936. She is survived
by her second husband, Edgar
Roush, a patient at the
Tuberculosis Hospital · in
Nelsonville; five sons, Albert,
Vincent, Herbert and Osby
Martin, all of Pomeroy, and
Eddie Marliin, of Middleport;
seven daughters, Mrs. Thomas
Mitchell and Mrs. Floyd
George, both of Columbus;
Mrs. Foyster Williams, Artemus, Ky. ; Mrs. Edna Monk,
Rutland ;
Mrs.
Lowell
Thompson, South Point; Mrs.
Richard Rummel , Omaha,
Neb., and Mrs. Jack Matthews,
Gallipolis; two sisters, Mrs.
Joe McNabb, Syracuse, and
Mrs. Sue Hagar, New York
City, N.Y. ; 38 grandchildren,
16 great-grandchildren and
several nieces, nephews and
cousins.
Funeral services will be held
at 10 a.m. Saturday at the
Ewing. Funeral
Home .
Graveside services will be at
noon at Greenlawn Cemetery
in Nelsonville. Friends may
calla\ the funeral home after 6
this evening.

By Martha Holsinger
Attendance at Eden Sunday
School Dec. 26 was 95. ·
Those spending Christmas
wrekend with Rev . Eldon
Blake were Mr. and Mrs. Orval
Blake of Greenfield, Mr. and
Mrs. ~rvan Blake and family,
Raymond Eubanks and
children, Mrs. Vivian Eubanks
anddanghte• and Mr. and Mrs.
Danny Kellis and family of
Springfield.
Those spending Christmas
Day with Mrs . Martha
Holsinger were Mr. and Mrs.
Sol Bigley and Eddie, "Mr. and
Mrs. Virgil Holsinger and
Aleshia, local, Mr. and Mrs.,
Clifford ··Holsinger, Missouri,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Webb and
Laura Jean, and Cora Webb of
Guysville, Mr. and Mrs. Alva
Holsinger Jr., Paul and Brad,
Racine, and Mrs. Emina Van
Meter, Roberta, David and
Robert Dewey, Belpre.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Smith
of Missouri spent a week
visiting Mrs. Uza Smith and
family .
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Kerwin
spent Christmas day with Mr.
and Mrs. William Hoselton.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bigley
and sons visited Mr. and Mrs.
Sol Bigley and Eddie Saturday
evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Sol Bigley
visited Thursday evening with
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Frank
and sons of Syracuse.
The U.S. Naval Academy
Mr . and Mrs. Russell was moved from Annapolis,
Holsinger and family of Md ., to Newport, R.l .1 dur~
Chester visited Mrs. Martha ing the Civil War.
Holsinger Saturday evening.
Mr . and Mrs. Reuben Bigley
and Paul visited Mr. and Mrs.
Sol Bigley and Eddie, Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Goff, Mr.
and Mrs. Howard Nelson and
Mr . and Mrs. Francis
Chevalier and family spent a
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Ivan Chevalier.

against author Francis
Russell, the New York Times,
' American Heritage Magazine
and McGraw Hlll publlshlng
company to stop impending use
of the letters.
A "temporary" restraining
order was issued at that time
pending. resolution of. the
dispute.
Judge Frederick T. Wllllams
today signed a journal entry
banning publication of the
Ie tters for 45 years. Harding in
turn dropped his suit.
, The order stipulated the
letters be sealed off In the
Ubrary of Congress unUI July
29, 2014 when they are to be"
opened to the public.
Microfilm copies of the
letters are to be deposited at
the Ohio Historical Society for
Scott L. Walton, 16, ' the same period of time. The
Pomeroy, was cited to Juvenile decision was agreed to by all
Court on charges of recklus parties.
operation and left . of center
OUTBREAK POSSIBLE
following a one car accident
Tuesday at 9:40 a. m. on
COLUMBUS (UP!) - State
Pomeroy's West Main Street. health officials say a flu outThe Pomeroy police reported break is possible in Ohio this
that Walton was traveling west winter . There have been
on Main Street at a high rate of scattered reports of influenza
speed. The right front wheels around the slate, mostly In
evidently went into a small Cleveland, including one fluditch on the right between the related death.
asphalt and curb. The car
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
came out of the ditch, slid 115
feet across the sidewalk and hit
The Middleport E·R unit
the porch of the W. 0. Barnltz answered a call at 9: 4a p.m.
home, back to the right across Wednesday for Michael Harris,
the sidewalk stopping in the 169 North Second Ave., who
was experiencing difficulty
middle of the highway.
There were no Injuries . breathing. He was taken to
There was heavy damage to Veterans Memorial Hospital
the car.
where he was admitted.

r

li
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100,000 SIGN UP
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - More
than 100,000 Ohioans applied
for workmen's compensation
benefits the week ending Dec.
18, the state Bureau of Employment Services, reported
Wednesday. The 100,531 figure
was below the 105,916 average
for December, 1970.

·......._ ---.--.~~..-.--...---io
~--·--~~~----·--~

~~._..-..,..., ~.__--......_..,_.,.....,

..-. . . . . . . .

....,..,~~

SALE OF WOMEN'S AND GIRLS' COATS
SALE OF MEN'S AND BOYS' OOATS AND JACKETS

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- _______________
.... .............

~-~.._....._.. .........

~

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Regina Swift,
Pomeroy; Rose Ball, Long
Bott'rim; Michael Harris,
Middleport; Vaughn Barnhart,
Chester.
DISCHARGED - Carole
Roush, Danny Bissell, Mary
Ann Johnson, Louise Meyers.

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

MORE

lA

THAN IV~

D

PICTURE THAN ANY
OTHER 18" COLOR TV
WITH ADMIRArS NEW

Everything's ·

tops! Thanks for your

many courtesies.

chapman's
ALLOFUSAT -

SHOE$,

~OME,RO Y

Clear and cold tonight with
lows in the 20s and upper teens.
Increasing cloudiness and not
·~ ·cold Saturday with highs in
the 40s.

Devoted To 1le lntere~ll Of The Meig3-Mason Area

POMEROY.MIDDLH'ORT, OHIO

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1971

~

$

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WU..UAM 0. BARONICK, third from left, was given his
oath of office as mayor of Pomeroy at noon Thursday by
Meigs County Court Judge Frank W. Porter, left. H811ding
tl:e gavel of the office to the mayor-elect is Mayor Charles
Legar who ls concluding 14 years of continuous service as
mayor of Pomeroy. Mrs. Baronick, who attended the

By United Press International
WASHINGTON - ~CIAL POTATO growers will
vote In a mail referendUIII)Feb. 1-10, on a proJIO'I"d checkoff to
finance a research and J)l1)Dlotion program for their crop, the
Agriculture Department innounced Thursday.
The referendum was ICheduled when tbe department announced its approval ofthe program, clearing the way for a final
decWon by producers. The checkoff, which can be set up to I
cent per hWidredwelght, would be levied on fanners producing
live acres or liMn of pOtatOes In the 411 mainland states.
BALTIMORE -THE JURY 'IHAT convicted Rep. John
Dowdy, D-Tex.,ofaccepting a $25,000bribe thought the evidence
weighed against him overwhelmingly from the very start of the
trial, Its members said Thursday after the verdict.
The jury of nine women and three men deliberated 15 hours,
(Continued on page 14 I

to discontinue the project on
that ground and also because
the work could jeopardize the
entire Second Street area in
that a landslide might occur
from the state employes using
an air hammer and creating
vibrations.
The letter points out:
"You were told by this
writer that there was a
possibility of breaking the
water seal in the rock trace,
letting the water come forth,
and create a landslide. This
event occurred: The slate has a
responsibility In this sllde."
Canaday charged there
was $100,000 damage to the
Pomeroy Post Office and the
security of everybody who
lives on Second St. was
jeopardized.

,-BY GEQRGE HARGRAVES, SUPT.
. Mel~• Local Sebool District
The final d~y of 1971 brings to a conclusion an
even dozen years of board of education membership
and service by, Mr. Hiram Slawter. Mr. Slawter has
been a me"lher of the Meigs Local Board of
Education since tbe district was formed Jan. I, 1966.
Prior to that he had served on the Northwestern Local
Board six years.
_ During these 12 years Mr. Slawter has given

... ,.
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95

TEN CENTS

••
••

ceremonies with a number of friends and re!Btives, is with
the group. In a brief talk, Mayor Baronick thanked residents
for the support given him and pledged himself to "faithfully
and lmpartlaUy fulfill the duties of this trust." He urged all
citizens to "join hands in an endeavor to better Pomeroy."

Official Families Dine
Twenty-three village of- Waiters, Mr. and Mrs. James
ficials of Middleport and their

::u::,~
a~;::: ·J~~ne;.,;~~
the host al the Martin

Brewington, Mr. and Mrs. .
Lawrence Stewart, Mrs. Roger
Morgan, Gene Grate, Police

MAYOR C. 0. FISHER, who altogether has 'served 16
years as mayor of Middleport since 1940, administered the
oath of office to new and reelected officials who start terms of
office Jan. I. From the left are Fred Hoffman and William
Walters, Republicans, new council members; Mayor Fisher,
John Zerkle, a councilman in Middleport 29 of the past 31
::·:f.:::::::~::::::::::~:::::::::::f.:::::~::::::::::::::m&gt;.:::::i·

~

Graham Set :~-.~-:_ ·.:
For a Kick
~
·. , n th~ P.ants
~

Restaurant Thursday night. ~~~e: a~~~;:/ ~:;e~:~~~
Attending in addition to new Sigman, and Mr. and Mrs.
officials an.d those still in office Fred Hoffman. There was a
were those who did not run for moment of silent prayer for
~
reelection. Present for the Councilman Clifford Stumbo
CLEVELAND ( UPI 1
dinner and .for ceremonies who was unable .10 attend due Evangelist Billy Graham has
later at vlllage hall to give the to illness.
· invited the religion editor of the
oath of office to new reelected
Cleveland Press to kick him in
officials were Mr. and Mrs. w·
.•
the seat of the pants
Zerkle, Mr. and Mrs. C.
0'
"whenever you feel like it _ 1
.oo.e·
need it sometimes."
Fisher, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Gress, Mr. and Mrs. David
Graham, who plans to bring
Ohltnger, Mr. and Mrs .
a crusade here next summer,
Richard Vaughan , William
made the unsual invitation in a
The location to weigh steers Ietter to George PIagenz, who
the evange Iist recentfor the 1972 Meigs County 4-H criticized
ly in his column.
Club and FFA Junior Fair
"Youreallyknowhowtohurt
Steer Program has been
changed because of the freeze a fellow, " Graham said. "The
branding process to be used. reason it hurts is because you
at least in part right. r
Now it will be necessary to are
will have to be more careful
have a squeeze shoot available.
The steers will be weighed at from now on."
Graham had said on a nationPomeroy's former mayor 10 a.m. Saturday, New Year's wide television crusade that
Day, Jan. 1, at the Karr Royal
recalled that the engineer, in
Oak
Farm scales, one-fourth "We had rats in our day too.
answering the above warning,
The only difference was we killsaid the rock was being mile south of Five Points.
ed
our own rats. We didn't ask
Participants in the program
reclaimed for use by the state
the government to do it for us."
highway department in its must turn in their entry cards,
Plagenz, in a Dec. 11 column,
completely filled out, on or
many culverts and drains
accused
Graham of casting "an
before January !st.
throughout the area.
If there are questions con- ungracious slur on the poor in
cerning the program, contacts every city who have had to live
He concluded:
with the scourage of rats. "
"Mr. Farley, you now have may be made with any
"My true views are that this
4,000 tons of rock lying on the member of the Steer and Lamb country is in desperate need of
post office and Second Street. Sale Committee which includes social justice and that includes
Pierce,
Francis
It is time to come and get it. If Carol
racial,pover'tyandenvironmenyou don 't clean this rock from Benedum, C. E. Blakeslee, Ray tal," Graham said in his reply.
the top of the post office and Midkiff, Uoyd Blackwood, Bill "However, I can certainly see
our street, I intend to file Carr, I. 0. McCoy, Jim tiow some of my remarks could
ch8rges against you, and ask Meredith, Frank Sisson, Randy have been misinterpreted. I reafor your removal on the Johnson, Mike Benedum, lly did not mean them the way
grounds that this operation you Daniel Midkiff, Edwin Cross, they apparently came out."
performed was strictly Grant Johnson, Mr. and Mrs.
LOCAL TEMPS
political skuldnggery, and is Clayton Coffey, Mr. and Mrs.
Andrew
Cross;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Temperature
in downtown
certainly against all state
Virgil
Windon,
and
Mr.
and
Pomeroy Friday at 10 a.m. was
regulations."
Mrs. Gay Johnson.
38 degrees under cloudy skies.

0.

e1

h PIace

Is Ch
' anged

Speaking of. Schools--No.. 220

THE DAYTON • MOI)EL 8T950
Bla~k finis~ on

hi -impact polystyrene
cabmet. (Deluxe decorator' stand optional).
'

FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT,
0.
.
'

•

many hours and ·much energy In tbe service of the
young people of these' two school districts. His unselfishne88 and courage have contributed greatly to
the progress of education In Meigs Local.
It has been IllY· pleasure to work with him 51&gt;
years.
The board recognized Mr. Slawter's service in a
resolution of commendation at its December
meeting. Why don' t you join them? Next time that
you see Hlram•Slawter, say "Thanks" for a dozen
·years of dedicated and productive community serviC"e.
.
' . CLASSE:S"RESUME next Monday, January 3. In
just three weeks we wUI reach the midpoint of the
school year. The semester or the third six weeks
period comes too close on Friday, January·21.

'

During the course of a school year, it is quite
normal for us to have some changes in a teaching
staff of nearly 140. Two of our teachers went on leaves
of absence on December 22. We have their positions
adequately covered for the period of their absence.
We do have one unfilled position at the time of
this report. We need a welding instructor at the high
school. To quall1y ·a (ierson must have a high school
diploma and seven years of work experience In the
welding trade. If you are interested or know Some
per.On who !flight be, call me at 992-2153. We need this
'
replaceme~t teacher just as soon as possible.
PLEASE .FORGIVE my repetition, but I would
like once aga!n to call your attention to two adult
programs.
The Adult Basic Education learning laboratories
are open each Tuesday and Thursday from 6:30 to
9:30 in Rutland and Middleport". The Adult Physical
Fitness program Qperates each Monday and Tuesday
evening from 7 to 9 at the junior high gym in Mid·
dleport. You are invited to take advantage of these
opportunities.
IN THIS FINAL COLUMN of 1971 I would like to
ex)iress my personal gratitude to Dick Owen and Chet
Tannehill~
. the opportunity [j) have this column
included i ach Friday edition of the Sentinel. I trust
that I ha e not too often misused the privilege that •
they have given to our district.
·

I particularly thank Chet for his editing
assistance when my writing doesn't always adapt
itself perfectly .to press construction.
My gratitude also goes to those who may occasionally or regularly read this weekly effort. I've
written 220 of them and 1 know that they haven't aU
been literary gems. I don't claim that any of them
have been.
Rather, they have been an honest effort to let you
know what Is going on in the district. Since the first
"Speaking of Schools" appeared on July 28, 1967,
that's what I've been trying to do. It's my hope that
the 220 columns have helped some in doing that.
Your comments on "Speaking of Schools" are
always \.elcome. Drop 'rqe a note at school - signed
or unsigned - and let me know what you think. Your
help wUI be appreciated.
·
NEWS &amp; NarES - College Board tests are set
for Saturday, Japuary 8, and again on Saturday,
March 4, saturday, Aprii 15, and Saturday, May 6 The ACT college test is scheduled lor Saturday, April
22 - Guidance counselors have more information
about these tests and dates - You can obtain a free
admission Gold Card, if you are ove~ 65, by calling
99~·2153 - V(e look forward to 1972 as a year of
significant accomplishment for Meigs Local and
Meigs C unty.
May jl'e all share in a good aryd prosperous 1972 !

years, who will be tbe new mayor, and Gene Grate, clerktreasurer reelect. Both Zerkle and Grate are also
Republicans. The oaths of office were administered following
a dinner for village officials and their spouses at the Martin
Restaurant Thursday night hosted by mayor-elect Zerkle.

Bahy R ace 0 P.en8
The first baby of Meigs
County parents born in 1972
will have a head.!ltart through
the annual Daily Sentinel's 1972
Baby Derby staged in
cooperation with local merchants .
Winner of this year's Derby
will be announced on Tuesday,
Jan . 11.
Thirty-two merchants are
cooperating again this year in
the derby to provt"de the ft"rst
baby of the new year wt"th g;"fts
presented by the businessmen.
Complete rules are listed in
today's edition as are all the
gifts.
The most important rule,
naturally, is that the baby's
mother and father are legal
residents of Meigs County,
though the father may be in the
armed forces and the family
stationed at a distant point.
Whatever the location, as long
as parents are legal residents
of Meigs County, the exact
time of birth must be specified

in a written statement by an
attending physician . The
statement must be received in
The Daily Sentinel Office, Ill
Court St., Pomeroy, not later
than Jan . 10.
Participating merchants and
their gifts include:
A&amp;P Super Market, $5 worth
of baby needs; Welker's
Ashland Service, 10 gallons
gasoline; Goessler's Jewelry
Store, an · ed.ucator set·,
Village Pharmacy, $5 gift
certificate ·, Citizens National
Bank, $10 savings account for
baby ·,
Moore's,
cuddle
washable stuffed bear·, Crow's
Steak House, free meal to the
mother; Hartley's Shoes, Poll
Parrot baby shoes; Dudley's,
cut ,flower arrangement; The
Kiddie Shoppe, $5 gift certificate; Swisher &amp; Lohse, box
of assorted baby items ;
Kroger's, case of Kroger milk ;
Sears Authorized Catalog
Merchant, $5 off on any order;
Mark V Super Market, one

case of Gerber baby food;
Pomeroy National Bank, $10
savings account for baby; L&amp;Z
Dress Shop, a blouse; Racine
Home National Bank, $10
savings account for baby;
Dutton Drug Store, $3.25 baby
clothes; Pomeroy Flower
Shop, a baby planter; Western
Auto, Musical cradle toy; Blue
and Grey Restaurant, free
meal for father; Landmark, a
baby bunting; Waid Cross
So
G b bab
ns, two cases er er
Y
food; K&amp;c Jewelers, three
piece feeding set; Cheateau
1 f
h d
Beauty Sa on, ree was an
set; Stifflers, a package of
diapers; Racine Department
Store, baby blanket and baby
boolies; Fabric Shop, $3 gift
certificate for fatir 1c for
mother; Racine Food Market,
three boxes of pampers; Kips
Shoes, first baby shoes; H&amp;R
Firestone, a training chair;
Athens County Savings and
Loan, Meigs County Branch,
$10 savings account or coin
bank for baby .

Holter, Morris Signed.
I

By Kentucky Wildcats

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PHONE 992-2156

Hiram Slawter Has Served Schools Well

Picture Tube·
you a year that's

at

VOL. XXI'#- . NO. 183

Delnuu A. Canaday, a former Pomeroy mayor, today
threatened legal action in a
letter directed to Max Farley,
division engineer of the State
Highway Department in
Marietta, if rocks which fell
recently near the Pomeroy
Post Office are not cleaned up
by the highway department.
In the copy of Canaday's
Jetter to Mr. Farley released
Thursday, Canaday charges
that the division engineer
ordered tbe State Highway
Dept. equipment into Pomeroy
during the first week of Oc·
' Iober, 1971 to build a parking
lot on pPivate property 'on East
Second St. which action, according to the state code, is
Illegal.
Canaday 's letter further
stated he warned the engineer

8~/#NT£~

•

skyrocketing to bring

Weather ·

In Aftermath of Rock Fall

•

The Farmers Bank
and Savings Co.

•

The Saraband was a stately
dance In slow triple time of
Oriental origin, resembliing .the
Minuet, and was popular in
European court circles in the
17th 3lld 18th centuries.

Legal Action Threatened

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Black Matrix
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COMMUNICATa CON .. ID.NCa, SHOP' AT HOM.

-

Now You Know

News ... in Briefs

Hundreds of yards in selection.
Polyesters - Bonded Wools - Prints · Velvet Touch Corduroy - Hi· Lo
-~rd~~~ :. ~~~s.~'::~t Press Blends- All at sale prices.

1

-

Home's Porch

Fashion Fabric Sale on the Second Floor

!.._.. . . . . . . .

l

Car Strikes

WE WILL BE CLOSED NEW YEAR'S EVE AND NEW YEA~'S DAY
~~-- ~--

.I
I

COLUMBUS . (UPI) - A
seven-year legal dispute over
publishing rights to the
" Harding · Loveletters,"
written by the 29th President of
the United States was settled
today when a Franklin County
Common Pleas Court judge
ordered they not be published
imtil the year 2014.
The order was filed in a suit
filed by a nephew of the late
President Warren G. Harding
who sought $1 million in
damages.
Dr. George T. Harding III
file&lt;( suit on July 29, 1964

SHOP FRIDAY 9:30 AM TO 5 PM

DIES IN CRASH
CINCINNATI (UPI )
Martin Malone, 23, Silverton,
was fatally injured Wednesday
when his car crossed a median
strip on Interstate 71 here and
hit an On-coming car head-&lt;&gt;n .
Malone died later of multiple
injuries at Bethesda Hospital.

,.

r'

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

•

Spend ~ uu r mon~) wh ere
cun ste 1t rou nt

Member F~deral Reserve
System
On Fridays Our Drive-In
Window 15 Open 9 a.m. to 7
p.m.,. ( Continuauslyl.
S20,000 Muimum Insurance
For Each Dl!positor

Harding Letters
Secret Till2014

Mary Roush, 73

OUTAGE WAS BRIEF
Ohio Power Co. customers in
Minersville through the Racine
area were without service for
50 minutes Thursday morning,
from 9:25 a. m. to 10:15 a. m.
Power Co. officials said wind
caused the outage in upper
Syracuse where improvements
are being made by the company.

.I 'OU

POMEROY, OHIO

r

ALAN HOLTER

Rotary Meets
President C. E. Blakeslee
reviewed organizational
matters in brief remarks
Thursday evening at Heath
United Methodist Church
following a dinner served to
members of the Middleport Pomeroy Rotary Club. David
Kuhn, the guest. of his father,
Robert Kuhn , was introduced.
Dire.ctors met following the
regular meeting to discu;s a
membership drive. Next week
the club will return to its
regular Friday evening
schedule. An effort will be
made. lo have 100 r-et. attendance.

Two Meigs County high
school seniors have been
selected for full four year
athletic scholarships at the
University of Kentucky,
Lexington.
They are R. Alan Holter,
son of Mr . and Mrs. Roy
Holter, Pomeroy Route 3 and a
senior at Eastern High School,
and Jeffrey H. Morris, sori of
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Morris,
Pomeroy Route 2, and a senior
at Meigs High School.
Confined to Veterans
Memorial Hospital with Injuries recei"ed in an auto
accident recently, Morris
signed his intent to accept the
scholarship - reportedly
valued at some $15,000 - this
week at the hospital.
Morris, who is 17, was named
to the All Southeastern Ohio
League football team thls fall
and in 1970 was named to the
third team of the All SEOAL In
basketball. He is c&lt;&gt;-&lt;:aptain of
the 1971 Meigs Hlgh School
basketball team and is a
member of the Meigs
Fellowship of Christian
Athletes.
Holter, a letterman in
football for four years at
Eastern High, was selected to
the all league Southern Valley
Athletic Confere.1ce team for
his junior and senior years. and
this fall was named Ohio top
Ci"ss Alineman of the year by

JEFFREY .MORRIS
the Associated Press and was
· given honorable mention ln the
slate by the United Press International selection. He
played both defensive and
offensive right (ackle for three
years at Eastern.
An houor student at Eastern
Hlgh School, Holter worked as
a staff memper on the school
paper for two years and has
been a member of . the vocal
chorus four years.
He lettered ln varsity football for four years and track'
for three years. He played one
season of both basketball and
(Continued on page 14)

L·~

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