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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.

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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.

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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.

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-- ~ --

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.

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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

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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.

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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)

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• 3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. 31, 1971

2- The DallY Sent1nel, 1\'hddleport-Pomeroy, O.,l.lec. 31,J971

EDITORIALS
•

B)' DON OAKLF.\'

'
'·
Two gcolog1sts wntmg 111 Sc1ence magatme
predict that the old earth. wh1ch has been
huffmg and puffing and shuddermg and sll'aku1g w1th earthquakes. volcanoes. uplifts and
subsidences for the past four liillwn years
01 so. is scheduled eventually to gel through
w1th all that and enter a penod of calm and
tJ·anq Julllty- ·m someth mg less than another
billion years..
One wonde1s 1f the nucroscopic, allegedly
In telli gent life cimgmg to liS surface ,(microSCOpiC when '1ewed from the moon I will ever
lea1 n the secret of livmg m peace w1th its
own kmd and m balance w1th other kinds, or
whether 1t Will destro) Itself and perhaps
e\ erytlung else long before earth enter!
geologic old age
The shorl·l1ved Chnstmas spml has van
1shed more qu 1ckly than usual this season
It has been echpsed by the reahzation that
the new year of 1972 fmds men engaged m
k1lhng each other. or preparing to k11l each
ot her. on as w1de a scale as ever m the past
-and pi ec1sely m those areas of the world
m which civJhzatJOn has existed the longestSoutheast ·\sw, the Indian subcontinent and
the eastern nm of the Mediterranean.
lt IS also comCJdenta Uy . m two of those
a1eas that toUJ of the world 's great religions
- Buddhism Islam Chnsllanity and Judaism
- had theu ongms It 1s one of those areas
to wh1ch Chnshans especially. and especially at this ume of year look for renewal of
!hell faith llwt there 1' a purpose in human

-Generation Rap.

'if~§ IJ@@~@~~

1972: A Silver-lihinl

Y~r?

1'972

371'

It is only wit~m the last generatwn that
man has found the power wherewith to de·
stroy himself and all his works. and has
somehow stayed his own hand
It isr,nly within the last decade that we
have b orne aware of the threat of our own
multi!J ing numbers, and only within the last
half-d~Me that concern about mdustrial
man's impact on the environment and upon
other living things has become widespread
There is more to hope for than there ts to
despair of as we liegm th1s new year

RAY CROMLEY

Santa Vis-its

Social
Calendar

Study Dangers in
Legal Drug Use

The True Stoturd
Of 72 Candidates

Busy Beavers

B} RAY CROMLEY

.'

WASHINGTON tNEA I
WASHINGTON !Nl!:A 1
We worry , and ughtly, about drug abuse. But conSider
Sen Ge01ge l\IcGu\et n s acl \ ocates say he ts s~ng
these facts on the legitimate mediCal use of drugs which
un the tssues and tuu~.'11 enou gh to be prestaent
..
patients obtam on prescripllon from the If doctors, or
.\ppra1sets sa\ Sen llenl\ M Jackson of Wash1pgton
while m the hosp1tal
IS a ttl act tH' to ._ onst•t \ dll\ e Democrats . Republicans and
• Roughly 5 per cent of med1cal hospital admiSSIOns
llldependents
.
are due to drug reactwns
Ma\ 01 .Jnhn Lmdsa\ 1s sa1d b\ both hts supporters ~nd
• Approximately 15 per cent of hospital pallents go
so me polttJL tans and ohset \eJ s to ha\e an edge m glAinor
through adverse drug reactiOns
()\('! pnlen tlal 1972 pi CS!denllal llVals ThiS IS the miun
• Though studies of the beneficial effects of drugs
I as1s fell the Judgmt'nl that he m1ght have a chanc'e tfo1
have become mcreasmgly effecllve, httle progress has
tile Democ1 at1c nomlllatwn
been made m precisely detecting and documentmg unObse1 vauons about tile otlm candidates could also be
demable s1de-effects.
tossed 111 he1 e But the pomt to •nake is that most of them
In a senes of sesswns, some 300 sc1enhsts and admm
a1 cn't reliable 1nd1cato1&gt; In some m sta nc~s they ref~ct
JStrators from umverSJtles , the government, the pharmag1oss lack of mlotmat10n
~·:
ceullcal industry and health-care systems conSidered
Take Jac kson as all example ·\n Ilhnqi~ poU ,takt\ii-by , tllE!f;e problems The1r concluswns reported by the Drug
the Cl11cago Sun-Tlml'S m late October s)ltwed· he ~·- a ;• tl~•rch Board ol the National Academy of Science'C! v lllln hold on the swte's GOP voters, only a mo(fesl
National Research Counc1l merit the most careful study
appeal to mdepcndents less support among Democrat;
This report states that " modern ammal toxicity stud1es
Ihan lll OS I Of hiS I I\ a ls
,
and careful chmcal tnals shll fail to recogmze some de.Jackso n's mallaget s " 111 argue that h1s problem IS not
layed effects , novel types of tox1c1ty, effects that may
bc1ng k no~&lt;n . that his back mg will broaden as he becomes
be unpredictable owmg to genetic vanables, interactiOns
betlt'l 1ccog mzed 13ut that IS not lthe same as con ten~ g
b~tween disease and drugs, and interactions between
that he• alieady has the k1nd of s upp01t &lt;~p{c ified ·'tne · • . dru'gs themselves The aplasllc anem1a due to chloram·
IIuth 1s tl1e e\ 1dence I S not yet there.
r.
.
pnenicol, the sudden death due to pressurized aerosol
1 hen agam :'llcGovei JI The ct ucta l matter is notiVbat
delivery of bronchod1lators, and the pulmonary hypertenhts dedicated ad; ocales lhmk of h1m . but ·how the vo~r s
sibn due to ammorex are examples of unexpected prob111 ge netal see h1 m
•
,.~~
le'h\s. Delayed recogmtion of occluSive and thromboemEve!) body know s that McGovern has sp~ n t a yeat in
boliC vascular disease associated w1th oral contraceptives
hmd cam pa1g nm g w1 1hn ut ga mmg much 1rl the naflofial
illustrates the problems posed by the use of drugs m
polls The quest1on 1s wh)' The only pro'per answl!t\"
healthy people , the earlier recogmtion of these vascular
that nobod) tea llv knows But 11 IS pla1n that he IS !lot
p~oblem s m other countnes points up our nat10na1 unpreperce1ved as lhe sttong presJdenll al f 1 g u ~e hiS warmest
paredness The 1rrevers1ble neurolog1c damage m conbacket s say he IS
r
nection w1th long-term chlopromazme therapy was clearThe st uff abo ut Lindsay's glamor !charisma IS the fav ly discerned only after years of use."
Otlte word for 1t these days J may be real enough. , ~t
Fears aroused by these facts has slowed the release
there seems to be l1ttl e ev1dence as to hojv voters f~
, he
of Ii!!eded drugs It hasn't led , the report says, to the
glamm thmg into the1 r total 1mage of Lindsay I ·, . s
creation of an adequate nationwide system for early
cha11 sma ovemdmg. 01 do voters thmk lie has dis ilildetection of adverse reactions
Jfvm g handicaps ? Ans,. eJS to thiS and pthef quesb s
E'len when adverse reactwns are diScovered thiS knowlare needed to gauge Lind say's teal chanci's
.
edge IS not always put to use The doctor is overwhelmed
The pmnt I w1sh to make IS that the 19(2 preSidential
will! informatiOn-reports of the Amencan Med1cal Ascam paign 1s bemg waged and talked aiC!ut agains ~ a
soi!'liltwn 's Council on Drugs, package mserls , "Dear
.
; ,
backdrop of considerable 1gnorance.
D~tor " letters. No doctor can possibly read all the llteraIt doesn' t have to be that way. There exs~t today Il~ly
trlre . And even if he could, the conferees agr~ed , the store
sophi sticated techniques of polling and poll analySIS. l y
of knowledge " 1s so vast and diSconnected that he Will
pernut politiCians , then· strategists , scholars and
not be able to recall all the details of adverse reactions
servers to learn far mm e tha n ever about what vo rs
or apply them when needed "
are th mk1n g
There has not been m the past an adequate means of
fhe Important aspect of pollmg 1n the 1970s is not 'the
tal&lt;ing advantage of diScovenes in adverse reactions m
head to-head compari sons amo ng candidates It 'IS the
ot~t countries The problems associated w1th pressurpamstakmg search for vo ter altitudes toward the whgle
IZI!d bronchodilator aerosols were recogmzed in Australia
range of a candidate 's attnbutes
~
and tegulatory action was taken It IS acknowledged that
In 1969, such broad-based checking turn~d up evidetlj,e
the delay m Widespread appreciation of this problem in
tha t New York C1ty vote rs regarded Mayor Lmdsay)as
EnJ(land cost hundreds of lives m that country alone
a rrogan t Tile mayor 's managers worked on him to aftlir
The report notes that some of the very laws designed to
tha t 1mpress1on
.;.
protect the patient sometimes work to his detnment. The
In early 1967. the-then Gov George Romney of Michtrend m accident law makes 1t rather likely drug manuIgan wa s seen by vole! s m Ne w Hampsh~re, key prim~ry
facturers will be held fmancially responsible when it can
sta le, as havmg leade1 sh1p quahlles fitting him for the
be shown a dru~ causes spec1fic adverse reactwns. " The
prcs1dency By late that year , those voters had rever~d
trend of law will
mcrease the mcenbve for manuthe'llselves and decided he did not have those tra1ts Ris
facturers of drugs to explain away reactions. rather than
fUJ 1blmg on the Issue of the Vietnam war, capped off by
make an effort to find possible causal relations." Then
h1s famous 'bra in wash" statement, had destroyed his
too, "Fear of malpractice suits is presently an mcentive
Image
:1. for doctors in hospitals to avmd reporting."
Th1s k1nd of 1nforma twn 1s v1lal to sound politfcal
Woat's needed is a national data bank m which adverse
Judgments Candidates can't hope to make the most ,of
reaclions from whatever source, national or international.
the 1r st1ong oomts and correct lhe1r weak ones if ti\dy
cal) be reported, tabulated, analyzed and made available
don' t know how the voters truly see them .
f.
't'o rooke this practical, without penalty to the reporting
The amazmg lhmg m 1971 1s how little of thiS sophistidoctor, hospital or drug company, 1t has been suggested
cated mformatJOn-gathenng IS gomg on Very · active
that some form of no-fault insurance or compensation be
candidates like Jackson and McGovern are dealing frotn
made available to those patients unintentionally harmed
Ignorance [I does n't make sense
by the use of standard drugs .

WATCH NIGHT service at
Salvatwn Army, Butternut
Ave ., Pomeroy, 7:30 p.m. to
m1dmght tomght. Speaker, the
Rev Frank Cheesebrew, light
,refreshments. Public invited.
MONDAY
RACIND CHAPTER, OES,
regular sess1on, 8 p.m. Monday. Members celebratiOn
December and January birthdays to be honored along with
committees who served at
ms tallatwns Officers asked to
wear or take formals for group
photograph. Refreshments by
worthy matron and worthy

THI6

16
5EY!.'DUR SLATZ ..
~E'5 WRITI~

/4..

BOOK ABOOr
J-CIRA.C.E HAM/to.!
HE WANT'S 'TO
TO PEOPLE
KNEW 1-!11/v •

(GOT A PROBLEM? Or a subject for dlseusdon, twogeneration style? Dlreet your questlous to either Sue or Helen
Do !tel - or both, In care of lhls newspaper, If you want a eomblnallon molher-&lt;laughter answer.)
11!0UGHTS FOR THE NEW YEAR
Dear Rap:
A while back I read "The Desiderata" but didn't copy it
down. It had some great thoughl•, and an interesting history, too.
If you could fmd a copy would you please pnnt 1!? - This lime I'll
keep your column. - LOOKING FOR THOUGHTS TO UVE BY
Dear Lookmg :
•
Here's "The Desiderata," courtesy of our older daughter,
Kathy, who collects such good thoughts. The history? It's in
dispute at the moment, but lradilion says 11 was first found inscribed on the wall of Old Saint Paul's Church, Baltimore, dated
1692. - HELEN
"Go placidly amid the noJSe and haste, and remember what
peace there may be m s1lence. A3 far as possible, without
surrender, be on good terms w1th all persons. Speak your truth
quietly and clearly ; and Iis(en to others, even the dull and
Ignorant; they too have the1r story.
"Avoid loud and aggressiVe persons, they are vexatious to
the spirit.lf you compare yourself Willi others, you may become
vain and b1tter ; for always there w1ll be greater and lesser
persons than yourself. EnJOY your achievements as well as your
plans.
"Keep mterested in yoW' own career, however humble; it IS a
real possessiOn 1n the changmg fortunes of tune. Exeri:ise
·caution In yo!ll' business affa1rs; for the world ts full of tnckery.
But let this not ~lind you lo what v1rtue there IS; many persons
strive for hJgh Ideals; and everywhere life is full of heroism.
"Be yourself. Especially, do not fe1gn affection. Neither be
cyrucal about love; for , m the face of aU andity and disenchantment, 1t IS perenmal as the grass.
I
"Take kindly the counsel ~f the yea rs, gfacefully surrendering the things of youth. Nurt!ll'e strength of spirit to shield you
m sudden misfortune. But do nut distress yourself with
imaginings. Many fears are born of fatigue and loneliness.
Beyond a wholesome discipline, be gentle with yourself.
"You are a child of the uruverse, no less than the trees and
the stars; you have a r1ghl to be here. And whether or not it IS
clear to you, no doubt the umverse 1s unfolding as it should.
"Therefore, be at peace witb God , whatever you conceive
Him to be, and whatever your labors and aspirations, 111 the noisy
confuswn or life, keep peace wtth your soul
"With all its sham, drudgery and broken dreams, it Is still a
beautiful world. Be careful. Stme to be happy - AUTHOR
UNKNOWN

.~**************'­
A though: t
For Today

TH.OUGHTS
The Lord !he God of
hosts, !he Lord IS hzs name·
"So you, by the help of your
God, return, hold fa.•! to
love and justzce, and watt
contmually for yoU1 God "
-Hosea 12·5 , 6

"

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'\

A v1sit from Santa
highhghted the Chnstmas
party of the Busy Beavers 4-H
Club held at the James
Province home near Middleport.
Santa distributed gifts to
those attending the party .
ChriStmas games and carols
were enjoyed and refreshments were served to Laura
Hoover, Vicky King, Becky
King, Jeffery Whittington ,
Donme Karr, Cathy Hess,
Sandy Might, Tammy Stewart,
Sharon Karr, ChrlSty Hess,

Melinda Barnett, Debbie
Mulford, Paula Cunnmgham,
Melinda Thomas, Carrie Karr,
Angela Dalley, lisa Snyder,
David Hoover, Debqif S!W9fr, .
Allen Todd Davidson, Sleven
Hoover, Tresia Whittington,
Lms Davidson, Roger Snyder,
L1sa Wh1thngton, Leslie
Whittington, Mrs. Dehna Karr,
Mrs. Mary Hoover, Mrs. Jean
Provmce , Mrs. Frances
Whittington, Mrs . Nancy
Snyder, Mrs. Diana Davidson,
James Province, and Allen
Dav1dson. J

It' s the ab1!1ty to take a

iC joke, not make one, which
il' proves you have a se nse
·; of humor
.,.
-, u E9siman

Fishers Host
Holiday Brunch

il
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-11
:
il
il
il
il
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lfs Quick! Easy

t:t'

DRIVE-IN
BANKING

t

f
t

Fridan Only
il The Drive-In Windowoll

:
i1

t

isOpen
9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
(Continuously)

f

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Bankong Hours 9 to Jil

~ FARMERS BANK t
Other

and 5 1o 7 as usual on.;

i&lt;

Fndays

tf and SAVINGS CO. tt
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POMEROY, OHIO
Member FDIC
Member Federal
Reserve System

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+++1
(And Kathy adds, at the end of her letter "Well, that's it. I
love tt.l may even live by It - who knows'" We too
And have a Great 1\'ew Year I - HE! .EN AND SUE

Prize Winners
Are Announced

then opened up a 23-pomt lead dominating the boards, moved
in the first half before Bill out to a 44-32 lead at the half
Walton, the Bruins' 6-foot-11 and was never in trouble. Bill
sophomore center, ran into foul Schaeffer had 19 points to lead
trouble. Ohio State closed the St. John's.
gap to 4:1-38 in the second half
In another battle between
before their 6-11 center, Luke rated teams, Hawaii, with Bob
Witte, also ran into foul Nash leading the way, roared
trouble. The Bruins then back from a !().point halftime
surged to a 22-iJolnl advantage deficit to beat Arizona State,
before Coach John Wooden ranked 20th, P!l-77, and take the
inserted his subs.
Rainbow Classic.
Walton, who played only 18
Nash fmished with 27 points,
minutes, managed 14 points 16 in the second half, and John
and had 12 rebounds and six Penebacker added 23 for the
blocked shots before the half. unbeaten Rainbows, now 9-0.
Witte led Ohio Stale, now 7-2, Paul Stovall led Arizona State
with 19 points.
With 17 points.
The victory was the eighth
Other Action
without a loss this season for
In otber action involving
the Bruins, who failed to rated teams, North Carolina
surpass the 100-point mark for ( 4) beat Bradley, 75-69, to win
the first tJme .
the Su~ar Bowl Tournament;
VIllanova Upsets S.C.
Louisville ( 13) ripped FordSouth Carolina, unbeaten
and ranked third in the nation, WJ:
didn't fare so well. Tom
lnglesby, who finished wtth 28 ,
'
points, sank two free throws
with six seconds left as 18thranked Vlllano~a upset the
Gamecocks, 77-76, to win the
Quaker City Tournament.
South Carolina had battled
Portsmouth erupted for 22
back from a nineiJOint deficit po1nts in the final period
to go ahead on Kevin Joyce's Thursday mght for a 71Hi6
basket with '1:1 seconds left, but come-from-behmd Victory over
lnglesby was fouled in the act Waverly 1n non-league aclion.
of shooting___!lnd converted the
Waverly had held a mne
two free throws. Tom Riker pomt intermission lead but
had 28 points for South were held to mne points m the
Carolina and Joyce added 16. fmal e1gh t minutes . Tom
Jun O'Bnen scored 20 points Gentry's 15 was high for Portsand soph Len Elmore, named mouth wh1le Mike Oyer led
the tournament's
Most Waverly with 14.
Valuable Player, had 18
PORTSMOUTH (78)
rebounds as 14th-ranked Gentry 8-0-16; Spriggs 4-2-10;
Maryland stWUied No. 8 St. Williamson 2-1-5 ; Daehler 4+
John's (N.Y.), 90-69, to win the 12; Hopkms 5-4-14; Lovenguth
Maryland Invitational. 7-1-15: While 2-0-4: Prater l.QMaryland, with Elmore 2; TOTALS 33-12-78.
WAVERLY (66)- Malloy 42-10; Oyer 5+14; Fa1rch1ld 3-06; Gulhon 2-3-7; Workman 3-410; Shoemaker 5-2-12; Salyers
2-1-5 ; Pie iter ().2-2; TOTALS 24-

Here comes the New

Card o! Thanks

Yeort We hope it will
be the happiest yet for
all our friends.

1 WOULD loke to thank the
doctors, nurses, a1des and all

others at Holzer Medical
Cen ter who I
my
recent illness
to my '"ends
tor lhetr
fl owers,
;, v ll~)J;t~g)t;;:~~
·
12 31 ·

- ---

Hours : 7 1.m. ro 5: 30p.m. DillY

773-5583 7o.m. tot p.m. Fndoy &amp; S.lurdoyMason, W. Va

•

Cook Plays on AJI Burners
NORm

(D)

31

• A1065

¥2
WEST

tAKQS
o!oA 1084

EAST

• J4
¥A97 63

• 73
¥KJ1084

tJI08 6

t32

o!o63

.KQ75

SOU11!

4KQ982
• 9 74
,f.J92
North-South vulnerable

Wesl

North

Eost South

It
4•

1¥

14

2¥

5¥

Pass

54

Pass

Pass
Pass

Pass

Opening lead- ¥ A

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
You must seek and lind
We wmd up the year with
God 111 the heart - Jean Paul
a hand sent us by our good
Richter. German novelist
friend Curtis Cook of BirIn the presence of God mingham .
and of Chrts! Jesus and of He commented the bidding
the elect angels./ charge you was horrible. We disagree.
to keep these rules without East and West were flagfavor, domg notlung from flying aglinst their vulner·
partialtty - 1 Ttmoth y 5.21 able
opponents who refused
(•
0
"
to settle for the sure 500
points a double would bring.
West opened the ace of
hearts and shifted to the jack
of di~monds
1
Th1s g6ve South a ch~nce
to work out an elimination
play.
He won m dummy ; led
Truthfulness is a cornerstone in character, and if tl two rounds of trumps and
be not fJrmly la1d in youth. when both opponent• fol ·
the•·e will ever be a weak lowed he could have spread
spot m the foundation - h1s hand . but he played the
Je;rerson Dav1s p estrlent or hand out If he had clauned
he wou ld have used up much
thr• r.onfrclor~ r.,-

QUICK QUIZ

er
Landm ark
Bureau, Pomeroy .

Q- Who was the It rs!
Saw an d motor Phone
more time explaining.
shoemaker m A m e r t c u to BAND
991 9981
The play was simple. He make separate shoes fu r the
12 Jt.Jtc
ruffed his last heart and r~ght and left foot?
cashed dummy's remaining A- W i I !Jam Young of
Rea I Estate FOf Sale
top diamonds. The suit didn't Philadelphia, m 1800 - 1
break but that made no dif·
Q- What are the Synop·
ference since ali he had to do tzc Gospels'
was to ruff dumm~'s last A-The ·Gospels of Mat·
d1amond ; lead the Jack of thew Mark and Luke
clubs and pass it to East.
Q-' Whtclt ts the tallest of
It didn't matter that East all dogs?
held both the king·and queen A-The Insh wolfhound
of clubs. He had to lead a It s t a n d s about 32 mches
club back or give declarer a high and weighs from 105 to
Broker
ruff and discard.
140 pounds
HO
Mechanic
Street
If West had shifted to a
Q-W hat was the ftrst
Pomeroy, Ohio
club at trick two, South federal offtcc held by Frank
I
would have had no way to go lin D Roosevelt?
LOTS
but down at his five spade
A-Tiie post of asststant IN MEIGS school district.
contract. However, there secretary of the Navy under
Reslncled area $2,000.00.
was no reason to assume Woodrow Wilson
•
NEW
.
both club honors in the East
4
BEDROOMS,
2
baths,
hot
hand. Put one or both over in
Q-Who was the ftrs! fa· water heat. Fireplace, dish West and five spades would
tality
m a powered aircraft washer Full basement.
make easily against any deDouble garage. 5 wooded
fltght?
fense.
ac
res Only $30,000.00
A-Lt. Thomas Selfndge
!NEWSPAPER IHTIR,IISI ASSN)
WhO died in a crash near
J BEDROOMS
.
Washington, D.C , on Sept. NI CE bath, floor furnace ,
17, 1906, on a flight piloted firep lace. Dining room,
basement Garage, Large lot.
by Orville Wright.
The bidding has been.
Some
fru1t, Only $8,000.00.
Q- What Confederate mtl·
West
North
East South
ttary officer held the tztle of
2 BEDROOMS
34
4o!o
44
Solo
Pass "Gen~ral of the Confederate NICE little cozy' place. Bath,
oak
floors.
Pass
Dble
Pass Pass Army for .only two months . beauf1lul
before
formally
surrender·
Basement.
Only
$6,500.00.
Redbl • Pass
Pass
? ing?
You, South, hold:
A-Robert E Lee
3 BEDROOMS
.·
·
NEAT, l'h baths. large living,
.KQI10765 ¥Ql2 tH .3
Q-_Whtch IS the largest dmlng, wall to wall carpeting,
What do you do now?
, room l1l the Whtte House?
gas fireplace. Modern kit·
A-Pass. Your partner is supA- The East Room, 79 chen, relntgerator, etectctc
P""•d lo know who! he is doing. feet long and 36 % feet wide
ran~e, garbage disposal .
TODAY'S QUESTION
Q~ Winclt ts t11~ larqe1t of
Dou te WeagHAVE
Your partner deals and bids all !he more than 6.000 spe·
l1 PROPERTIES
thre" spades. You, South, hold . czes of ferll&gt; '
HELEN l. TEAFORD,
•• ¥AQ965 tKJ43.KQ72 A- The tree-fern of NorASSOCIATE
What do you do now' •
folk Island, in the South Pa992-JJl~ 992-2378
·
·
c1fic, wh1ch atlains a height
t2-3t-6tc
of up tn 80 lee!.

Virgil B;

TEAFORD.
·sR.

Happy New Year
We don 't ploy cat and mouse games when •I
comes to telling our customers we think they're

swell. And,

lo

wish them the grondest New Year

Our resolution is to go on serving you as best
we c:an. Thanks ever so much for your patronage .

From All Of Us At · • •

Farm

t2-J1 ltc

ham, 96-82, to take the ECAC
Holiday Festival; Florida
State
( 17)
trounced
Washington State, Sii-61, to win
the Far West Classic; and
Southwestern Louisiana (11)
tripped Los Angeles State, 113102.
OHIOSTATE tSJI - M1norJ
0-16 . Jackson2Q,04 . W!He75
5 19; Hornyak 4 2-210, Gerhard
52-Jt2 ; Merchanf10·02; Wolle
o 0-0 o, S1ekmann 0 0-0 O;
Wager 0 0-0 0; Repel Ia o 0-0 O;
Kiracofe 0 0 0 0, Totals 22 9-11

...

CROW'S
STEAK
HOUSE

•

53.

UCLA 179) - Wilkes 5 3-3 lJ;
Farmer 6 0-0 12 , Walton 6 2-4
14; Curtis 6 1 J 13 ; Bibby J 4 4
10, Nater J 1-2 7. Hollyfield 2 2-

Home of

the Fabulous

2 6, ChaP,man 0 0 0 0, Carson 0

0-00; Hill0454, Franki111000
0, Tolals Jl 17-23 79
Halff1me UCLA 41, Ohio
State 24
Fouled out Jackson
Total Fouls Oh1o St ate 20,

UCLA 10
A- 12,820

JFJ: ll
Waverl y We
ston

Non-Loop Victims
11Hi6.
Reserve · Portsmouth 62,
Waverly 35.
Alexander placed f1ve men 111
double figures to rout the
Well,ston Golden Rockets 131-55
Thursday night.
It was Wellston's worst cage
loss m the school's long history.
Alexander is 7-I. WHS IS 2-4.
WELLSTON (55) - Seltles
19, Stewart 8, Warrmgton 3,
Souders 6, Martin 2, Smear 3,
Leach 6, Zimmerman 8.
ALEXANDER (131)
Brooks 6, Brown 17, White 27,
Dishong 13, R1zzley 8, Ervm15,
Reynolds 4, Dillenger 8, Tnbe
15, Mantle 4, Gilders 8, G1lky 6.
Score by Quarters:
Wellston
12 15 15 13-,15
Alexander
41 33 28 29- 131

THE TEXAS COWGIRLS, professional girls basketball team, will play the coaches of
Southern Local School District on Tuesday, Jan . 4, at 8 p.m. at the high school The game is

sponsored by the Southern Athletic Boosters A3socJalion. The Texas CowgJrls have performed
as a unit 22years. The average age of the g1rls JS 19. They have played over 3,700 engagements
from coast to coast, including Canada and Mmaco They were the first professiOnal g1rls team
to play in Mad1son Square Garden and Boston Gardens. The Texas Cowgirls, a comedy
basketball team, are the greatest laugh-getters m the game today.

SANDWICH

Toe May Decide Outcome
Of

MIAMI (UPI )-Such a small scormg record thiS season with
thing as a big toe could we1gh 75 pomts
heavily in the 1972 Orange
Nebraska has a few toes to
clasSIC Saturday night.
consider, too. For example,
r
Considered a "bowl game of Rich Sanger, a sophomore who
the decade" No . !-ranked also kicked a total of 75 points
Nebraska wdl go against No. 2 this season, mcluding an
Alabama and the wmner w1ll amazmg 60 extra points
rece1ve the MacArthur Bowl,
signifying the national collegaite football championship.
In both camps they 're considermg the health of a btg toe
It belongs to Johnny Musso,
A1abama's "Italian Stalhon, '
and the youth whom Coach
Paul Bear Bryant calls "the
greatest back I've ever
CLEVELAND (UPI ) - This
coached n m 27 years.
All -Amenca Musso, the year's crop of semor college
workhorse of the Alabama football players IS "the poorest
ALL GAMES
W1shbone-T attack who also in yea rs" w1lh the exception of
TEAM
p
OP passes,
L
catches and blocks to running backs, the personnel
Gallipolis
5 1 425
330
perfection, says his injured left d~reclor of the Cleveland
Athens
6 2 486
431 big toe is fine . Nevertheless, he Browns believes.
Waverly
5 2 523
402 has it carefully tended and
"There is a pretty good
group
of backs available, but a
PorlsmQuth
6 3 658
625 taped every day prepanng for
real shortage of outstanding
Ironton
3 4 460
500 the Nebraska encounter.
personnel
for the draft in
H~ mjured 1t early and went
Federal-Hocking
3 5 468
544
Paul Bixler said
Chesapeake
2 4 398
396 out m the LSU game which general,"
won by a narrow, 14- Thursday
Wellston
2 4 378
519 7.Alabama
Bixler said top ball carriets
But he came off crutches
Meigs
2 5 402
446 against previously undefeated include Ed Marinaro of CorLogan
2 5 398
491 Auburn two weeks later to nell , Johnny Musso of
422 carry the ball 33 !Jmes for 167 Alabama, Bob Moore of
Jackson
0 6 360
Thursday's Results :
yards and two touchdowns m Oregon, J1m Bertelson of
Texas and Calvin Harrell of
the 31-7 v1ctory
'
Alexander 131 Wellston 55
Bryant, with his eyes set on Arkansas State
Portsmouth 78 Waverly 66
"Moore is a stocky 5-ll, 200
the natiOnal champwnsh1p ,
January 7 Games:
pounds
and will go early m the
knows he will need all his
Gallipolis at Logan
stallions to upset the seven- draft ," Bixler sa1d. "People
Meigs at Ironton
point-favorite Nebraska Corn- don't know about Harrell, but
Athens at Waverly
huskers, coached by Bob we do He's a httle over six feet
and weighs 220."
Wellston at Jackson
Devaney .
Bixler sa1d good linemen are
And Musso himself said:
"Nebraska is much better than m limited supply With the best
Evansv•lle
Invitational
anybody we've played, the seemmg to be defenSive end
College Basketball Results
!Fmal
Round)
By Untted Press International
complete football team. Defen- Wall Patulski of Notre Dame
Evansvl 91 Murray St 83
Far West Classic
"Patulsk1 has had an outsively, they remind me of LSU
t Consolation I
(Final Round I
Seat11e
85
Pacific
83
standing
career and 1s bound to
... but they're much b1gger."
Fla. St 85 Wash . St. 61
B1g
Eight
(Consolation)
If Musso should need help in go right away," BIXler said.
F1nal Round)
Wash 100 M1ch1gan 80
Bixler indicated the Browns
the toe department, Bryant has
Missouri 67 Kan. St 58
Dartmouth 92 Oregon 82
t Consolatoon I
five b1g ones on the bench may be m the market for
Ore Sf 81 New Mex 69
Nebraska
84
Okla
68
Rainbow Classic
swung by talented sophomore defenSive backs
All-College
( Fina I Round)
"Tom Darden of Michigan is
Bill Davis, who broke the
(Final Round)
Haw a i1 87 Anz. Sf. 77
Eastern Ky 83 Okla City 78
Southeastern Conference klck- a very fine safety," he said.
(Consolation)
(Consolation,
"Another good one is Tom CasTemple 61 Calif 57
Santa
Clara
66
Army
61
Minn . 83 TCU 57
anova of LomsJana Slate.
lnd Sl 88 Texas Tech 84
Nrthwstrn 94 Haw Mannes 71
" Among the better corJacksnvl 95 No Tex. 51 82
Bru1n Classic
Potnsett1a Classic
Maryland
Invitational
nerback
are Clarence Ellis of
IFtnal Round]
!Fmal Round!
(Final
Round)
UCLA 79 Ohio St. 53
Clemson 77 Auburn 67
Notre Dame, Willie Buchanon
Maryland 90 Sf John 69
t Consolation I
&lt;Consolation)
of
San Diego State, Cra1g
Quaker City Tourney
Texas 86 Anzona 69
Holy Cross 104 Furman 88
I Final Round)
Clemons of Iowa and Clifford
Char lone lnvttationa I
Sugar Bowl ClassiC
Villanova 77 So Car 76
I Final Round)
( Ftnal Round)
Brooks of Tennessee A &amp; I,"
t Consolatoon I
Davidson 83 Vlrg. Tech 73
No
Car
75 Bradley 69
Bixler sa1d.
LaSalle 82 Mass 75
I Consolation)
(Consolation)
Tenn. 61 Boston Coli 60
Rutgers 9t Ga Tech 64
Sf Jos 85 Purdue 74
Steel Bowl Tournament
Palmetto Invitational
Oral Roberts Classic
1Final Round)
tFmal Round)
( Ftnal Round)
Duquesne 87 P1tt 67
Virginia 77 Citadel 72
0
Roberts
103 Loyola . Cal 86
t Consolation)
l Consolation)
(Con solation)
Navy 72 Wake Forest 62
Air Force 62 Xavier, 0 58
East Car 74 Conn 64
Hall of Fame
(Final Round)
Dkla Sf 66 Kansas 65
Brown 70 Marrs Harvy 69
Iowa St. 87 Colo 82
( Consola11on)
Ball St 84 Bucknell 83
Ark 51 90 Tenn 78
Assumption 85 Sprnglld 72
Midwestern 82 Eastern Ill 80
ECAC Hohday FesiJval
Iowa 89 Drake 83
I Ftnal Round)
Toledo 95 St. Jos.llnd.) 78
Loulsvl 96 Fordham 82
Marshall 88 Oh1o U 81
t Consolation)
S. Oak . St. 87 N. Oak Sf 80
Prov1dence 93 St. Peters 87
Wis. 101 Ky St. 81
Syracuse 92 Penn St 77
Colo St. 81 Utah St. 79
Queen City Tourney
Ch1cago 64 Knox 54
N1a~ara 95 Cornell 69
Can~sius 86 LIU 76
N.J. Kiwanis Classic
(Final Round)
210 E. 2nd
Pomeroy
Brtdgprt 68 C WPost 66
Phone 992-5428
(Consolation)
Monmth 94 Monlclr St 82

Oodeo By Phone
And Take Em Home
992-5432

.,

•

•
Celebrating the
wming of a11other Y ea!
calls for festiv e
1
thanks to all

'71 College

Players Are

&lt;'

•

Rated 'Poor'

SEO Cage Standings

0

w

MASON - Wmners of pmcs
a'!'Jrd~~ .,\!UFlt)i,..a . i),o~df)', l
promo ton program of MasonNew Haven busmessmen were
- -·announced today
'
I
WOULD l•ke to take thts op
The group mcludes Darrell
pe r Iundy at the close of the
Marr, a p1zza , gtven by llw
year 1971 to ~ay thanks io e~ll
church groups, the Amencan
New Ha ven P1zza Shop,
Mr. and Mrs. Mason Fisher
Legrons and !herr J utuor and
T1mothy Chnsman , $5 gJ\'en b)
Semor Auxdranes and oiher
of Mmersv11le entertamed
Roney's Market: Harry Staa ts,
organrlalions and all rn
Chnstmas mormng with their
$0, g1vcn by Dalr)' H~ ven,
drvrrlualc; who c:o ntrr buted
traditional oyster slew brunch.
trme funds and se nt cards to
Chm Forbes, $5, g1ven hy
help bnnq happmess rnto t he
Guests were Mr. and Mrs.
Oliver's Servic e SlalJon,
lr ves of ou r Veterans, our
Wilham Fisher and son, B1ll,
James Blank, $5 g1ven b)
M erg!!
Coun ty
folk s
Torch ; Roland Fisher,
hospr
la
ltled
ou
t
ol
the
county,
Ba tey's Hardware, Melvin
pa trent !! ill Athens Menta l
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Oms Tbe Almaoae
Thornton, $0, g1ven by Burton's
Heal
th Center and Arcadra
Harris, Mrs. Ernest Harris, By United Press International Sunoco Statwn ; Kerm11 Gress,
Rest Home rn Coofvrl le It is
Mr. and Mrs. Greg Roush and
dll much ap precrated
Today is Friday, Dec. 31, the 011 change and lubncalJon
Becky, Mr. and Mrs. Milton last day of 1971. This is New g1ven by Flesher's Stall on,
Mrs Osby (Mary) Marhn
12J1 11c
Roush, Randall and Sandra, Year's Eve.
Stan Rl e im~re , $10, 1'\ew Haven
"
and Barbara and Carla Fisher.
Market; Darrell Marr, set of
The moon Is full.
Not tee
Other visitors during the
The morning stars are lamps by New Haven Furholiday weekend ,were John Mercury and Jupiter.
niture ; John Ray Ohlinger, $10, GUN SHOOT, Broad Run Rod
Wiles, home from the Great
and Gun Club. New Haven.
The evening stars are Venus, from the Mason-Poml Pleasant
W Va , Sunday, Jan . 2, noon
Lakes Naval Hospital, and Mr. Mars and Saturn.
till
Glass Co.; Dorothy Angel, a
and Mrs. Gordon FISher of New
l2-Jt -1fc
On this day in history:
battery, Appliance Tire Co.,
Philadelphia; Mrs. Willis
In 18'19 Thomas Edison gave Donald Kmg, $25 bond, Mason
l.eadmgham and daughters,
KOSMETICS and wogs
tlle first public demonstration County Bank and Cectl Dun- KOSCOT
for sa le Brown's Phone 992
Rose Marie and Barbara, of of the incandescent lamp in can, mini b1ke, given by Hart's
5113
Gallipolis, and Mr. and Mrs.
12 Jt ftc
Menlo Park, N.J.
Used Cars. No purchase was
Tom Vaughan of Huntington,
In 1946 President Harry S necessary to participate.
W.Va. were caUers during the Truman proclaimed tbe ofFor Sale
week.
ficial end of World War II.
DON'T PUMP you r sluggish
septic tank . Glet Klean-EmAII Septic Tank CleanWIN AT BRIDGE
patron

¥Q5

®

UP! Sports Writer
UCLA's young Bruins had
their first big test Thursday
rught and passed it with flying
colors.
The No. 1 ranked Bruins
taking on thelf toughest o~
ponent of the season thus far
clobbered sixth-ranked Ohi~
State, '19-53, to wm their own
Bruin Classic.
UCLA surged to an 11-llead
in the first four minutes and

•

It is only within a single human lifetime
that this has beCome truly one world, m
terms of rapid transportation and commumcation.

BRUCE BIOS$AT

By JOE CARNJCE~I

By Helen and Sue Bottel

life abll that there will someday again be
glad t'ling~ of great joy which shall be to
all mlin-tidlngs of peace, lasting peace. on
'- .;
· t
eartll' a_nd ~dod wll 1 0 men
Agaiil the sad tidings drown out the glad
Yet itlJ far too eatly in the gamt\._for despair
Vie\V6d against the unimagmably great
lime sale of geology, mankind's SOJOUrn on
th1s plibet has been but ;m eyeblink. Even
viewed against tbe time scale of his own
species' existence, a timescale which lengthens Wifh each neW diSCOVery, modern Citydwellllj, technological man arrived onlr
yestefi\ay
Horrlll. sajiiens hbs been around for at least
20,000 ljl' 30,000 years Somethmg aspirmg to
that stage walked on two legs nearly two
million years ago in Africa .

lh BRUCE BIOSSAT

psu Dumped by Bruins

It's All Yours

J'

J

TRAINER NAMED
EDWARDSVILLE , Ill. f UP! )
- Wilfred Buddell, !ramer of
the Southern llhnots at Edwardsvllle soccer team, Thursday was named !ramer for the
U.S. Olympic soccer team.

'

VILLAGE PHARMACY
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

MOTOROLA@
ESCORT PERSONAL PORTABLE
BLACK &amp; ·WHITE - - T.V.

ARTERS
420

MA.IH STREET

POINT PLEASANT

MENS\A'E\R
\

."\

all
of our good
friends
*
a New Year
filled
with
health and
happiness.
KING BUILDERS SUPPLY
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

WINTER RETREADS

2-HOUR
CLEANING

(Upon Request)

.ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

9" picture (measured diagonally)

Motorola Escort Personal Portable
Black~

Wh1te TV. Instant P1cture/

Sound Solid State.... Chassls. Plays
on AC current- Plays on Banertes
(opttonal extra) Earphqne Included

Snap-On Sun Sh1eld C1garet1e
Lighter Connector Cord Included

Plastic cabJne tm Walnut gram hn tsh

3 ROOMS
NEW'
FURNIJURE

750xl4
or Smaller

. '349.95

m:oo'1lown-

·&amp;aJance On
Convenient
Terms.

(Add A $1.00 For Each Size Larger)

H
&amp;
R
FIRESTONE
N. 2nd AVE.
992-2238
'

..

-

�•
,.

J

'"

• 3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. 31, 1971

2- The DallY Sent1nel, 1\'hddleport-Pomeroy, O.,l.lec. 31,J971

EDITORIALS
•

B)' DON OAKLF.\'

'
'·
Two gcolog1sts wntmg 111 Sc1ence magatme
predict that the old earth. wh1ch has been
huffmg and puffing and shuddermg and sll'aku1g w1th earthquakes. volcanoes. uplifts and
subsidences for the past four liillwn years
01 so. is scheduled eventually to gel through
w1th all that and enter a penod of calm and
tJ·anq Julllty- ·m someth mg less than another
billion years..
One wonde1s 1f the nucroscopic, allegedly
In telli gent life cimgmg to liS surface ,(microSCOpiC when '1ewed from the moon I will ever
lea1 n the secret of livmg m peace w1th its
own kmd and m balance w1th other kinds, or
whether 1t Will destro) Itself and perhaps
e\ erytlung else long before earth enter!
geologic old age
The shorl·l1ved Chnstmas spml has van
1shed more qu 1ckly than usual this season
It has been echpsed by the reahzation that
the new year of 1972 fmds men engaged m
k1lhng each other. or preparing to k11l each
ot her. on as w1de a scale as ever m the past
-and pi ec1sely m those areas of the world
m which civJhzatJOn has existed the longestSoutheast ·\sw, the Indian subcontinent and
the eastern nm of the Mediterranean.
lt IS also comCJdenta Uy . m two of those
a1eas that toUJ of the world 's great religions
- Buddhism Islam Chnsllanity and Judaism
- had theu ongms It 1s one of those areas
to wh1ch Chnshans especially. and especially at this ume of year look for renewal of
!hell faith llwt there 1' a purpose in human

-Generation Rap.

'if~§ IJ@@~@~~

1972: A Silver-lihinl

Y~r?

1'972

371'

It is only wit~m the last generatwn that
man has found the power wherewith to de·
stroy himself and all his works. and has
somehow stayed his own hand
It isr,nly within the last decade that we
have b orne aware of the threat of our own
multi!J ing numbers, and only within the last
half-d~Me that concern about mdustrial
man's impact on the environment and upon
other living things has become widespread
There is more to hope for than there ts to
despair of as we liegm th1s new year

RAY CROMLEY

Santa Vis-its

Social
Calendar

Study Dangers in
Legal Drug Use

The True Stoturd
Of 72 Candidates

Busy Beavers

B} RAY CROMLEY

.'

WASHINGTON tNEA I
WASHINGTON !Nl!:A 1
We worry , and ughtly, about drug abuse. But conSider
Sen Ge01ge l\IcGu\et n s acl \ ocates say he ts s~ng
these facts on the legitimate mediCal use of drugs which
un the tssues and tuu~.'11 enou gh to be prestaent
..
patients obtam on prescripllon from the If doctors, or
.\ppra1sets sa\ Sen llenl\ M Jackson of Wash1pgton
while m the hosp1tal
IS a ttl act tH' to ._ onst•t \ dll\ e Democrats . Republicans and
• Roughly 5 per cent of med1cal hospital admiSSIOns
llldependents
.
are due to drug reactwns
Ma\ 01 .Jnhn Lmdsa\ 1s sa1d b\ both hts supporters ~nd
• Approximately 15 per cent of hospital pallents go
so me polttJL tans and ohset \eJ s to ha\e an edge m glAinor
through adverse drug reactiOns
()\('! pnlen tlal 1972 pi CS!denllal llVals ThiS IS the miun
• Though studies of the beneficial effects of drugs
I as1s fell the Judgmt'nl that he m1ght have a chanc'e tfo1
have become mcreasmgly effecllve, httle progress has
tile Democ1 at1c nomlllatwn
been made m precisely detecting and documentmg unObse1 vauons about tile otlm candidates could also be
demable s1de-effects.
tossed 111 he1 e But the pomt to •nake is that most of them
In a senes of sesswns, some 300 sc1enhsts and admm
a1 cn't reliable 1nd1cato1&gt; In some m sta nc~s they ref~ct
JStrators from umverSJtles , the government, the pharmag1oss lack of mlotmat10n
~·:
ceullcal industry and health-care systems conSidered
Take Jac kson as all example ·\n Ilhnqi~ poU ,takt\ii-by , tllE!f;e problems The1r concluswns reported by the Drug
the Cl11cago Sun-Tlml'S m late October s)ltwed· he ~·- a ;• tl~•rch Board ol the National Academy of Science'C! v lllln hold on the swte's GOP voters, only a mo(fesl
National Research Counc1l merit the most careful study
appeal to mdepcndents less support among Democrat;
This report states that " modern ammal toxicity stud1es
Ihan lll OS I Of hiS I I\ a ls
,
and careful chmcal tnals shll fail to recogmze some de.Jackso n's mallaget s " 111 argue that h1s problem IS not
layed effects , novel types of tox1c1ty, effects that may
bc1ng k no~&lt;n . that his back mg will broaden as he becomes
be unpredictable owmg to genetic vanables, interactiOns
betlt'l 1ccog mzed 13ut that IS not lthe same as con ten~ g
b~tween disease and drugs, and interactions between
that he• alieady has the k1nd of s upp01t &lt;~p{c ified ·'tne · • . dru'gs themselves The aplasllc anem1a due to chloram·
IIuth 1s tl1e e\ 1dence I S not yet there.
r.
.
pnenicol, the sudden death due to pressurized aerosol
1 hen agam :'llcGovei JI The ct ucta l matter is notiVbat
delivery of bronchod1lators, and the pulmonary hypertenhts dedicated ad; ocales lhmk of h1m . but ·how the vo~r s
sibn due to ammorex are examples of unexpected prob111 ge netal see h1 m
•
,.~~
le'h\s. Delayed recogmtion of occluSive and thromboemEve!) body know s that McGovern has sp~ n t a yeat in
boliC vascular disease associated w1th oral contraceptives
hmd cam pa1g nm g w1 1hn ut ga mmg much 1rl the naflofial
illustrates the problems posed by the use of drugs m
polls The quest1on 1s wh)' The only pro'per answl!t\"
healthy people , the earlier recogmtion of these vascular
that nobod) tea llv knows But 11 IS pla1n that he IS !lot
p~oblem s m other countnes points up our nat10na1 unpreperce1ved as lhe sttong presJdenll al f 1 g u ~e hiS warmest
paredness The 1rrevers1ble neurolog1c damage m conbacket s say he IS
r
nection w1th long-term chlopromazme therapy was clearThe st uff abo ut Lindsay's glamor !charisma IS the fav ly discerned only after years of use."
Otlte word for 1t these days J may be real enough. , ~t
Fears aroused by these facts has slowed the release
there seems to be l1ttl e ev1dence as to hojv voters f~
, he
of Ii!!eded drugs It hasn't led , the report says, to the
glamm thmg into the1 r total 1mage of Lindsay I ·, . s
creation of an adequate nationwide system for early
cha11 sma ovemdmg. 01 do voters thmk lie has dis ilildetection of adverse reactions
Jfvm g handicaps ? Ans,. eJS to thiS and pthef quesb s
E'len when adverse reactwns are diScovered thiS knowlare needed to gauge Lind say's teal chanci's
.
edge IS not always put to use The doctor is overwhelmed
The pmnt I w1sh to make IS that the 19(2 preSidential
will! informatiOn-reports of the Amencan Med1cal Ascam paign 1s bemg waged and talked aiC!ut agains ~ a
soi!'liltwn 's Council on Drugs, package mserls , "Dear
.
; ,
backdrop of considerable 1gnorance.
D~tor " letters. No doctor can possibly read all the llteraIt doesn' t have to be that way. There exs~t today Il~ly
trlre . And even if he could, the conferees agr~ed , the store
sophi sticated techniques of polling and poll analySIS. l y
of knowledge " 1s so vast and diSconnected that he Will
pernut politiCians , then· strategists , scholars and
not be able to recall all the details of adverse reactions
servers to learn far mm e tha n ever about what vo rs
or apply them when needed "
are th mk1n g
There has not been m the past an adequate means of
fhe Important aspect of pollmg 1n the 1970s is not 'the
tal&lt;ing advantage of diScovenes in adverse reactions m
head to-head compari sons amo ng candidates It 'IS the
ot~t countries The problems associated w1th pressurpamstakmg search for vo ter altitudes toward the whgle
IZI!d bronchodilator aerosols were recogmzed in Australia
range of a candidate 's attnbutes
~
and tegulatory action was taken It IS acknowledged that
In 1969, such broad-based checking turn~d up evidetlj,e
the delay m Widespread appreciation of this problem in
tha t New York C1ty vote rs regarded Mayor Lmdsay)as
EnJ(land cost hundreds of lives m that country alone
a rrogan t Tile mayor 's managers worked on him to aftlir
The report notes that some of the very laws designed to
tha t 1mpress1on
.;.
protect the patient sometimes work to his detnment. The
In early 1967. the-then Gov George Romney of Michtrend m accident law makes 1t rather likely drug manuIgan wa s seen by vole! s m Ne w Hampsh~re, key prim~ry
facturers will be held fmancially responsible when it can
sta le, as havmg leade1 sh1p quahlles fitting him for the
be shown a dru~ causes spec1fic adverse reactwns. " The
prcs1dency By late that year , those voters had rever~d
trend of law will
mcrease the mcenbve for manuthe'llselves and decided he did not have those tra1ts Ris
facturers of drugs to explain away reactions. rather than
fUJ 1blmg on the Issue of the Vietnam war, capped off by
make an effort to find possible causal relations." Then
h1s famous 'bra in wash" statement, had destroyed his
too, "Fear of malpractice suits is presently an mcentive
Image
:1. for doctors in hospitals to avmd reporting."
Th1s k1nd of 1nforma twn 1s v1lal to sound politfcal
Woat's needed is a national data bank m which adverse
Judgments Candidates can't hope to make the most ,of
reaclions from whatever source, national or international.
the 1r st1ong oomts and correct lhe1r weak ones if ti\dy
cal) be reported, tabulated, analyzed and made available
don' t know how the voters truly see them .
f.
't'o rooke this practical, without penalty to the reporting
The amazmg lhmg m 1971 1s how little of thiS sophistidoctor, hospital or drug company, 1t has been suggested
cated mformatJOn-gathenng IS gomg on Very · active
that some form of no-fault insurance or compensation be
candidates like Jackson and McGovern are dealing frotn
made available to those patients unintentionally harmed
Ignorance [I does n't make sense
by the use of standard drugs .

WATCH NIGHT service at
Salvatwn Army, Butternut
Ave ., Pomeroy, 7:30 p.m. to
m1dmght tomght. Speaker, the
Rev Frank Cheesebrew, light
,refreshments. Public invited.
MONDAY
RACIND CHAPTER, OES,
regular sess1on, 8 p.m. Monday. Members celebratiOn
December and January birthdays to be honored along with
committees who served at
ms tallatwns Officers asked to
wear or take formals for group
photograph. Refreshments by
worthy matron and worthy

THI6

16
5EY!.'DUR SLATZ ..
~E'5 WRITI~

/4..

BOOK ABOOr
J-CIRA.C.E HAM/to.!
HE WANT'S 'TO
TO PEOPLE
KNEW 1-!11/v •

(GOT A PROBLEM? Or a subject for dlseusdon, twogeneration style? Dlreet your questlous to either Sue or Helen
Do !tel - or both, In care of lhls newspaper, If you want a eomblnallon molher-&lt;laughter answer.)
11!0UGHTS FOR THE NEW YEAR
Dear Rap:
A while back I read "The Desiderata" but didn't copy it
down. It had some great thoughl•, and an interesting history, too.
If you could fmd a copy would you please pnnt 1!? - This lime I'll
keep your column. - LOOKING FOR THOUGHTS TO UVE BY
Dear Lookmg :
•
Here's "The Desiderata," courtesy of our older daughter,
Kathy, who collects such good thoughts. The history? It's in
dispute at the moment, but lradilion says 11 was first found inscribed on the wall of Old Saint Paul's Church, Baltimore, dated
1692. - HELEN
"Go placidly amid the noJSe and haste, and remember what
peace there may be m s1lence. A3 far as possible, without
surrender, be on good terms w1th all persons. Speak your truth
quietly and clearly ; and Iis(en to others, even the dull and
Ignorant; they too have the1r story.
"Avoid loud and aggressiVe persons, they are vexatious to
the spirit.lf you compare yourself Willi others, you may become
vain and b1tter ; for always there w1ll be greater and lesser
persons than yourself. EnJOY your achievements as well as your
plans.
"Keep mterested in yoW' own career, however humble; it IS a
real possessiOn 1n the changmg fortunes of tune. Exeri:ise
·caution In yo!ll' business affa1rs; for the world ts full of tnckery.
But let this not ~lind you lo what v1rtue there IS; many persons
strive for hJgh Ideals; and everywhere life is full of heroism.
"Be yourself. Especially, do not fe1gn affection. Neither be
cyrucal about love; for , m the face of aU andity and disenchantment, 1t IS perenmal as the grass.
I
"Take kindly the counsel ~f the yea rs, gfacefully surrendering the things of youth. Nurt!ll'e strength of spirit to shield you
m sudden misfortune. But do nut distress yourself with
imaginings. Many fears are born of fatigue and loneliness.
Beyond a wholesome discipline, be gentle with yourself.
"You are a child of the uruverse, no less than the trees and
the stars; you have a r1ghl to be here. And whether or not it IS
clear to you, no doubt the umverse 1s unfolding as it should.
"Therefore, be at peace witb God , whatever you conceive
Him to be, and whatever your labors and aspirations, 111 the noisy
confuswn or life, keep peace wtth your soul
"With all its sham, drudgery and broken dreams, it Is still a
beautiful world. Be careful. Stme to be happy - AUTHOR
UNKNOWN

.~**************'­
A though: t
For Today

TH.OUGHTS
The Lord !he God of
hosts, !he Lord IS hzs name·
"So you, by the help of your
God, return, hold fa.•! to
love and justzce, and watt
contmually for yoU1 God "
-Hosea 12·5 , 6

"

...

'\

A v1sit from Santa
highhghted the Chnstmas
party of the Busy Beavers 4-H
Club held at the James
Province home near Middleport.
Santa distributed gifts to
those attending the party .
ChriStmas games and carols
were enjoyed and refreshments were served to Laura
Hoover, Vicky King, Becky
King, Jeffery Whittington ,
Donme Karr, Cathy Hess,
Sandy Might, Tammy Stewart,
Sharon Karr, ChrlSty Hess,

Melinda Barnett, Debbie
Mulford, Paula Cunnmgham,
Melinda Thomas, Carrie Karr,
Angela Dalley, lisa Snyder,
David Hoover, Debqif S!W9fr, .
Allen Todd Davidson, Sleven
Hoover, Tresia Whittington,
Lms Davidson, Roger Snyder,
L1sa Wh1thngton, Leslie
Whittington, Mrs. Dehna Karr,
Mrs. Mary Hoover, Mrs. Jean
Provmce , Mrs. Frances
Whittington, Mrs . Nancy
Snyder, Mrs. Diana Davidson,
James Province, and Allen
Dav1dson. J

It' s the ab1!1ty to take a

iC joke, not make one, which
il' proves you have a se nse
·; of humor
.,.
-, u E9siman

Fishers Host
Holiday Brunch

il
il

~

iC
-11
:
il
il
il
il
il

*** :
•

lfs Quick! Easy

t:t'

DRIVE-IN
BANKING

t

f
t

Fridan Only
il The Drive-In Windowoll

:
i1

t

isOpen
9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
(Continuously)

f

~

t

Bankong Hours 9 to Jil

~ FARMERS BANK t
Other

and 5 1o 7 as usual on.;

i&lt;

Fndays

tf and SAVINGS CO. tt
~

il
.;:
•

POMEROY, OHIO
Member FDIC
Member Federal
Reserve System

-jr

.;:

it:

-II

**************~

+++1
(And Kathy adds, at the end of her letter "Well, that's it. I
love tt.l may even live by It - who knows'" We too
And have a Great 1\'ew Year I - HE! .EN AND SUE

Prize Winners
Are Announced

then opened up a 23-pomt lead dominating the boards, moved
in the first half before Bill out to a 44-32 lead at the half
Walton, the Bruins' 6-foot-11 and was never in trouble. Bill
sophomore center, ran into foul Schaeffer had 19 points to lead
trouble. Ohio State closed the St. John's.
gap to 4:1-38 in the second half
In another battle between
before their 6-11 center, Luke rated teams, Hawaii, with Bob
Witte, also ran into foul Nash leading the way, roared
trouble. The Bruins then back from a !().point halftime
surged to a 22-iJolnl advantage deficit to beat Arizona State,
before Coach John Wooden ranked 20th, P!l-77, and take the
inserted his subs.
Rainbow Classic.
Walton, who played only 18
Nash fmished with 27 points,
minutes, managed 14 points 16 in the second half, and John
and had 12 rebounds and six Penebacker added 23 for the
blocked shots before the half. unbeaten Rainbows, now 9-0.
Witte led Ohio Stale, now 7-2, Paul Stovall led Arizona State
with 19 points.
With 17 points.
The victory was the eighth
Other Action
without a loss this season for
In otber action involving
the Bruins, who failed to rated teams, North Carolina
surpass the 100-point mark for ( 4) beat Bradley, 75-69, to win
the first tJme .
the Su~ar Bowl Tournament;
VIllanova Upsets S.C.
Louisville ( 13) ripped FordSouth Carolina, unbeaten
and ranked third in the nation, WJ:
didn't fare so well. Tom
lnglesby, who finished wtth 28 ,
'
points, sank two free throws
with six seconds left as 18thranked Vlllano~a upset the
Gamecocks, 77-76, to win the
Quaker City Tournament.
South Carolina had battled
Portsmouth erupted for 22
back from a nineiJOint deficit po1nts in the final period
to go ahead on Kevin Joyce's Thursday mght for a 71Hi6
basket with '1:1 seconds left, but come-from-behmd Victory over
lnglesby was fouled in the act Waverly 1n non-league aclion.
of shooting___!lnd converted the
Waverly had held a mne
two free throws. Tom Riker pomt intermission lead but
had 28 points for South were held to mne points m the
Carolina and Joyce added 16. fmal e1gh t minutes . Tom
Jun O'Bnen scored 20 points Gentry's 15 was high for Portsand soph Len Elmore, named mouth wh1le Mike Oyer led
the tournament's
Most Waverly with 14.
Valuable Player, had 18
PORTSMOUTH (78)
rebounds as 14th-ranked Gentry 8-0-16; Spriggs 4-2-10;
Maryland stWUied No. 8 St. Williamson 2-1-5 ; Daehler 4+
John's (N.Y.), 90-69, to win the 12; Hopkms 5-4-14; Lovenguth
Maryland Invitational. 7-1-15: While 2-0-4: Prater l.QMaryland, with Elmore 2; TOTALS 33-12-78.
WAVERLY (66)- Malloy 42-10; Oyer 5+14; Fa1rch1ld 3-06; Gulhon 2-3-7; Workman 3-410; Shoemaker 5-2-12; Salyers
2-1-5 ; Pie iter ().2-2; TOTALS 24-

Here comes the New

Card o! Thanks

Yeort We hope it will
be the happiest yet for
all our friends.

1 WOULD loke to thank the
doctors, nurses, a1des and all

others at Holzer Medical
Cen ter who I
my
recent illness
to my '"ends
tor lhetr
fl owers,
;, v ll~)J;t~g)t;;:~~
·
12 31 ·

- ---

Hours : 7 1.m. ro 5: 30p.m. DillY

773-5583 7o.m. tot p.m. Fndoy &amp; S.lurdoyMason, W. Va

•

Cook Plays on AJI Burners
NORm

(D)

31

• A1065

¥2
WEST

tAKQS
o!oA 1084

EAST

• J4
¥A97 63

• 73
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tJI08 6

t32

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SOU11!

4KQ982
• 9 74
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North-South vulnerable

Wesl

North

Eost South

It
4•

1¥

14

2¥

5¥

Pass

54

Pass

Pass
Pass

Pass

Opening lead- ¥ A

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
You must seek and lind
We wmd up the year with
God 111 the heart - Jean Paul
a hand sent us by our good
Richter. German novelist
friend Curtis Cook of BirIn the presence of God mingham .
and of Chrts! Jesus and of He commented the bidding
the elect angels./ charge you was horrible. We disagree.
to keep these rules without East and West were flagfavor, domg notlung from flying aglinst their vulner·
partialtty - 1 Ttmoth y 5.21 able
opponents who refused
(•
0
"
to settle for the sure 500
points a double would bring.
West opened the ace of
hearts and shifted to the jack
of di~monds
1
Th1s g6ve South a ch~nce
to work out an elimination
play.
He won m dummy ; led
Truthfulness is a cornerstone in character, and if tl two rounds of trumps and
be not fJrmly la1d in youth. when both opponent• fol ·
the•·e will ever be a weak lowed he could have spread
spot m the foundation - h1s hand . but he played the
Je;rerson Dav1s p estrlent or hand out If he had clauned
he wou ld have used up much
thr• r.onfrclor~ r.,-

QUICK QUIZ

er
Landm ark
Bureau, Pomeroy .

Q- Who was the It rs!
Saw an d motor Phone
more time explaining.
shoemaker m A m e r t c u to BAND
991 9981
The play was simple. He make separate shoes fu r the
12 Jt.Jtc
ruffed his last heart and r~ght and left foot?
cashed dummy's remaining A- W i I !Jam Young of
Rea I Estate FOf Sale
top diamonds. The suit didn't Philadelphia, m 1800 - 1
break but that made no dif·
Q- What are the Synop·
ference since ali he had to do tzc Gospels'
was to ruff dumm~'s last A-The ·Gospels of Mat·
d1amond ; lead the Jack of thew Mark and Luke
clubs and pass it to East.
Q-' Whtclt ts the tallest of
It didn't matter that East all dogs?
held both the king·and queen A-The Insh wolfhound
of clubs. He had to lead a It s t a n d s about 32 mches
club back or give declarer a high and weighs from 105 to
Broker
ruff and discard.
140 pounds
HO
Mechanic
Street
If West had shifted to a
Q-W hat was the ftrst
Pomeroy, Ohio
club at trick two, South federal offtcc held by Frank
I
would have had no way to go lin D Roosevelt?
LOTS
but down at his five spade
A-Tiie post of asststant IN MEIGS school district.
contract. However, there secretary of the Navy under
Reslncled area $2,000.00.
was no reason to assume Woodrow Wilson
•
NEW
.
both club honors in the East
4
BEDROOMS,
2
baths,
hot
hand. Put one or both over in
Q-Who was the ftrs! fa· water heat. Fireplace, dish West and five spades would
tality
m a powered aircraft washer Full basement.
make easily against any deDouble garage. 5 wooded
fltght?
fense.
ac
res Only $30,000.00
A-Lt. Thomas Selfndge
!NEWSPAPER IHTIR,IISI ASSN)
WhO died in a crash near
J BEDROOMS
.
Washington, D.C , on Sept. NI CE bath, floor furnace ,
17, 1906, on a flight piloted firep lace. Dining room,
basement Garage, Large lot.
by Orville Wright.
The bidding has been.
Some
fru1t, Only $8,000.00.
Q- What Confederate mtl·
West
North
East South
ttary officer held the tztle of
2 BEDROOMS
34
4o!o
44
Solo
Pass "Gen~ral of the Confederate NICE little cozy' place. Bath,
oak
floors.
Pass
Dble
Pass Pass Army for .only two months . beauf1lul
before
formally
surrender·
Basement.
Only
$6,500.00.
Redbl • Pass
Pass
? ing?
You, South, hold:
A-Robert E Lee
3 BEDROOMS
.·
·
NEAT, l'h baths. large living,
.KQI10765 ¥Ql2 tH .3
Q-_Whtch IS the largest dmlng, wall to wall carpeting,
What do you do now?
, room l1l the Whtte House?
gas fireplace. Modern kit·
A-Pass. Your partner is supA- The East Room, 79 chen, relntgerator, etectctc
P""•d lo know who! he is doing. feet long and 36 % feet wide
ran~e, garbage disposal .
TODAY'S QUESTION
Q~ Winclt ts t11~ larqe1t of
Dou te WeagHAVE
Your partner deals and bids all !he more than 6.000 spe·
l1 PROPERTIES
thre" spades. You, South, hold . czes of ferll&gt; '
HELEN l. TEAFORD,
•• ¥AQ965 tKJ43.KQ72 A- The tree-fern of NorASSOCIATE
What do you do now' •
folk Island, in the South Pa992-JJl~ 992-2378
·
·
c1fic, wh1ch atlains a height
t2-3t-6tc
of up tn 80 lee!.

Virgil B;

TEAFORD.
·sR.

Happy New Year
We don 't ploy cat and mouse games when •I
comes to telling our customers we think they're

swell. And,

lo

wish them the grondest New Year

Our resolution is to go on serving you as best
we c:an. Thanks ever so much for your patronage .

From All Of Us At · • •

Farm

t2-J1 ltc

ham, 96-82, to take the ECAC
Holiday Festival; Florida
State
( 17)
trounced
Washington State, Sii-61, to win
the Far West Classic; and
Southwestern Louisiana (11)
tripped Los Angeles State, 113102.
OHIOSTATE tSJI - M1norJ
0-16 . Jackson2Q,04 . W!He75
5 19; Hornyak 4 2-210, Gerhard
52-Jt2 ; Merchanf10·02; Wolle
o 0-0 o, S1ekmann 0 0-0 O;
Wager 0 0-0 0; Repel Ia o 0-0 O;
Kiracofe 0 0 0 0, Totals 22 9-11

...

CROW'S
STEAK
HOUSE

•

53.

UCLA 179) - Wilkes 5 3-3 lJ;
Farmer 6 0-0 12 , Walton 6 2-4
14; Curtis 6 1 J 13 ; Bibby J 4 4
10, Nater J 1-2 7. Hollyfield 2 2-

Home of

the Fabulous

2 6, ChaP,man 0 0 0 0, Carson 0

0-00; Hill0454, Franki111000
0, Tolals Jl 17-23 79
Halff1me UCLA 41, Ohio
State 24
Fouled out Jackson
Total Fouls Oh1o St ate 20,

UCLA 10
A- 12,820

JFJ: ll
Waverl y We
ston

Non-Loop Victims
11Hi6.
Reserve · Portsmouth 62,
Waverly 35.
Alexander placed f1ve men 111
double figures to rout the
Well,ston Golden Rockets 131-55
Thursday night.
It was Wellston's worst cage
loss m the school's long history.
Alexander is 7-I. WHS IS 2-4.
WELLSTON (55) - Seltles
19, Stewart 8, Warrmgton 3,
Souders 6, Martin 2, Smear 3,
Leach 6, Zimmerman 8.
ALEXANDER (131)
Brooks 6, Brown 17, White 27,
Dishong 13, R1zzley 8, Ervm15,
Reynolds 4, Dillenger 8, Tnbe
15, Mantle 4, Gilders 8, G1lky 6.
Score by Quarters:
Wellston
12 15 15 13-,15
Alexander
41 33 28 29- 131

THE TEXAS COWGIRLS, professional girls basketball team, will play the coaches of
Southern Local School District on Tuesday, Jan . 4, at 8 p.m. at the high school The game is

sponsored by the Southern Athletic Boosters A3socJalion. The Texas CowgJrls have performed
as a unit 22years. The average age of the g1rls JS 19. They have played over 3,700 engagements
from coast to coast, including Canada and Mmaco They were the first professiOnal g1rls team
to play in Mad1son Square Garden and Boston Gardens. The Texas Cowgirls, a comedy
basketball team, are the greatest laugh-getters m the game today.

SANDWICH

Toe May Decide Outcome
Of

MIAMI (UPI )-Such a small scormg record thiS season with
thing as a big toe could we1gh 75 pomts
heavily in the 1972 Orange
Nebraska has a few toes to
clasSIC Saturday night.
consider, too. For example,
r
Considered a "bowl game of Rich Sanger, a sophomore who
the decade" No . !-ranked also kicked a total of 75 points
Nebraska wdl go against No. 2 this season, mcluding an
Alabama and the wmner w1ll amazmg 60 extra points
rece1ve the MacArthur Bowl,
signifying the national collegaite football championship.
In both camps they 're considermg the health of a btg toe
It belongs to Johnny Musso,
A1abama's "Italian Stalhon, '
and the youth whom Coach
Paul Bear Bryant calls "the
greatest back I've ever
CLEVELAND (UPI ) - This
coached n m 27 years.
All -Amenca Musso, the year's crop of semor college
workhorse of the Alabama football players IS "the poorest
ALL GAMES
W1shbone-T attack who also in yea rs" w1lh the exception of
TEAM
p
OP passes,
L
catches and blocks to running backs, the personnel
Gallipolis
5 1 425
330
perfection, says his injured left d~reclor of the Cleveland
Athens
6 2 486
431 big toe is fine . Nevertheless, he Browns believes.
Waverly
5 2 523
402 has it carefully tended and
"There is a pretty good
group
of backs available, but a
PorlsmQuth
6 3 658
625 taped every day prepanng for
real shortage of outstanding
Ironton
3 4 460
500 the Nebraska encounter.
personnel
for the draft in
H~ mjured 1t early and went
Federal-Hocking
3 5 468
544
Paul Bixler said
Chesapeake
2 4 398
396 out m the LSU game which general,"
won by a narrow, 14- Thursday
Wellston
2 4 378
519 7.Alabama
Bixler said top ball carriets
But he came off crutches
Meigs
2 5 402
446 against previously undefeated include Ed Marinaro of CorLogan
2 5 398
491 Auburn two weeks later to nell , Johnny Musso of
422 carry the ball 33 !Jmes for 167 Alabama, Bob Moore of
Jackson
0 6 360
Thursday's Results :
yards and two touchdowns m Oregon, J1m Bertelson of
Texas and Calvin Harrell of
the 31-7 v1ctory
'
Alexander 131 Wellston 55
Bryant, with his eyes set on Arkansas State
Portsmouth 78 Waverly 66
"Moore is a stocky 5-ll, 200
the natiOnal champwnsh1p ,
January 7 Games:
pounds
and will go early m the
knows he will need all his
Gallipolis at Logan
stallions to upset the seven- draft ," Bixler sa1d. "People
Meigs at Ironton
point-favorite Nebraska Corn- don't know about Harrell, but
Athens at Waverly
huskers, coached by Bob we do He's a httle over six feet
and weighs 220."
Wellston at Jackson
Devaney .
Bixler sa1d good linemen are
And Musso himself said:
"Nebraska is much better than m limited supply With the best
Evansv•lle
Invitational
anybody we've played, the seemmg to be defenSive end
College Basketball Results
!Fmal
Round)
By Untted Press International
complete football team. Defen- Wall Patulski of Notre Dame
Evansvl 91 Murray St 83
Far West Classic
"Patulsk1 has had an outsively, they remind me of LSU
t Consolation I
(Final Round I
Seat11e
85
Pacific
83
standing
career and 1s bound to
... but they're much b1gger."
Fla. St 85 Wash . St. 61
B1g
Eight
(Consolation)
If Musso should need help in go right away," BIXler said.
F1nal Round)
Wash 100 M1ch1gan 80
Bixler indicated the Browns
the toe department, Bryant has
Missouri 67 Kan. St 58
Dartmouth 92 Oregon 82
t Consolatoon I
five b1g ones on the bench may be m the market for
Ore Sf 81 New Mex 69
Nebraska
84
Okla
68
Rainbow Classic
swung by talented sophomore defenSive backs
All-College
( Fina I Round)
"Tom Darden of Michigan is
Bill Davis, who broke the
(Final Round)
Haw a i1 87 Anz. Sf. 77
Eastern Ky 83 Okla City 78
Southeastern Conference klck- a very fine safety," he said.
(Consolation)
(Consolation,
"Another good one is Tom CasTemple 61 Calif 57
Santa
Clara
66
Army
61
Minn . 83 TCU 57
anova of LomsJana Slate.
lnd Sl 88 Texas Tech 84
Nrthwstrn 94 Haw Mannes 71
" Among the better corJacksnvl 95 No Tex. 51 82
Bru1n Classic
Potnsett1a Classic
Maryland
Invitational
nerback
are Clarence Ellis of
IFtnal Round]
!Fmal Round!
(Final
Round)
UCLA 79 Ohio St. 53
Clemson 77 Auburn 67
Notre Dame, Willie Buchanon
Maryland 90 Sf John 69
t Consolation I
&lt;Consolation)
of
San Diego State, Cra1g
Quaker City Tourney
Texas 86 Anzona 69
Holy Cross 104 Furman 88
I Final Round)
Clemons of Iowa and Clifford
Char lone lnvttationa I
Sugar Bowl ClassiC
Villanova 77 So Car 76
I Final Round)
( Ftnal Round)
Brooks of Tennessee A &amp; I,"
t Consolatoon I
Davidson 83 Vlrg. Tech 73
No
Car
75 Bradley 69
Bixler sa1d.
LaSalle 82 Mass 75
I Consolation)
(Consolation)
Tenn. 61 Boston Coli 60
Rutgers 9t Ga Tech 64
Sf Jos 85 Purdue 74
Steel Bowl Tournament
Palmetto Invitational
Oral Roberts Classic
1Final Round)
tFmal Round)
( Ftnal Round)
Duquesne 87 P1tt 67
Virginia 77 Citadel 72
0
Roberts
103 Loyola . Cal 86
t Consolation)
l Consolation)
(Con solation)
Navy 72 Wake Forest 62
Air Force 62 Xavier, 0 58
East Car 74 Conn 64
Hall of Fame
(Final Round)
Dkla Sf 66 Kansas 65
Brown 70 Marrs Harvy 69
Iowa St. 87 Colo 82
( Consola11on)
Ball St 84 Bucknell 83
Ark 51 90 Tenn 78
Assumption 85 Sprnglld 72
Midwestern 82 Eastern Ill 80
ECAC Hohday FesiJval
Iowa 89 Drake 83
I Ftnal Round)
Toledo 95 St. Jos.llnd.) 78
Loulsvl 96 Fordham 82
Marshall 88 Oh1o U 81
t Consolation)
S. Oak . St. 87 N. Oak Sf 80
Prov1dence 93 St. Peters 87
Wis. 101 Ky St. 81
Syracuse 92 Penn St 77
Colo St. 81 Utah St. 79
Queen City Tourney
Ch1cago 64 Knox 54
N1a~ara 95 Cornell 69
Can~sius 86 LIU 76
N.J. Kiwanis Classic
(Final Round)
210 E. 2nd
Pomeroy
Brtdgprt 68 C WPost 66
Phone 992-5428
(Consolation)
Monmth 94 Monlclr St 82

Oodeo By Phone
And Take Em Home
992-5432

.,

•

•
Celebrating the
wming of a11other Y ea!
calls for festiv e
1
thanks to all

'71 College

Players Are

&lt;'

•

Rated 'Poor'

SEO Cage Standings

0

w

MASON - Wmners of pmcs
a'!'Jrd~~ .,\!UFlt)i,..a . i),o~df)', l
promo ton program of MasonNew Haven busmessmen were
- -·announced today
'
I
WOULD l•ke to take thts op
The group mcludes Darrell
pe r Iundy at the close of the
Marr, a p1zza , gtven by llw
year 1971 to ~ay thanks io e~ll
church groups, the Amencan
New Ha ven P1zza Shop,
Mr. and Mrs. Mason Fisher
Legrons and !herr J utuor and
T1mothy Chnsman , $5 gJ\'en b)
Semor Auxdranes and oiher
of Mmersv11le entertamed
Roney's Market: Harry Staa ts,
organrlalions and all rn
Chnstmas mormng with their
$0, g1vcn by Dalr)' H~ ven,
drvrrlualc; who c:o ntrr buted
traditional oyster slew brunch.
trme funds and se nt cards to
Chm Forbes, $5, g1ven hy
help bnnq happmess rnto t he
Guests were Mr. and Mrs.
Oliver's Servic e SlalJon,
lr ves of ou r Veterans, our
Wilham Fisher and son, B1ll,
James Blank, $5 g1ven b)
M erg!!
Coun ty
folk s
Torch ; Roland Fisher,
hospr
la
ltled
ou
t
ol
the
county,
Ba tey's Hardware, Melvin
pa trent !! ill Athens Menta l
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Oms Tbe Almaoae
Thornton, $0, g1ven by Burton's
Heal
th Center and Arcadra
Harris, Mrs. Ernest Harris, By United Press International Sunoco Statwn ; Kerm11 Gress,
Rest Home rn Coofvrl le It is
Mr. and Mrs. Greg Roush and
dll much ap precrated
Today is Friday, Dec. 31, the 011 change and lubncalJon
Becky, Mr. and Mrs. Milton last day of 1971. This is New g1ven by Flesher's Stall on,
Mrs Osby (Mary) Marhn
12J1 11c
Roush, Randall and Sandra, Year's Eve.
Stan Rl e im~re , $10, 1'\ew Haven
"
and Barbara and Carla Fisher.
Market; Darrell Marr, set of
The moon Is full.
Not tee
Other visitors during the
The morning stars are lamps by New Haven Furholiday weekend ,were John Mercury and Jupiter.
niture ; John Ray Ohlinger, $10, GUN SHOOT, Broad Run Rod
Wiles, home from the Great
and Gun Club. New Haven.
The evening stars are Venus, from the Mason-Poml Pleasant
W Va , Sunday, Jan . 2, noon
Lakes Naval Hospital, and Mr. Mars and Saturn.
till
Glass Co.; Dorothy Angel, a
and Mrs. Gordon FISher of New
l2-Jt -1fc
On this day in history:
battery, Appliance Tire Co.,
Philadelphia; Mrs. Willis
In 18'19 Thomas Edison gave Donald Kmg, $25 bond, Mason
l.eadmgham and daughters,
KOSMETICS and wogs
tlle first public demonstration County Bank and Cectl Dun- KOSCOT
for sa le Brown's Phone 992
Rose Marie and Barbara, of of the incandescent lamp in can, mini b1ke, given by Hart's
5113
Gallipolis, and Mr. and Mrs.
12 Jt ftc
Menlo Park, N.J.
Used Cars. No purchase was
Tom Vaughan of Huntington,
In 1946 President Harry S necessary to participate.
W.Va. were caUers during the Truman proclaimed tbe ofFor Sale
week.
ficial end of World War II.
DON'T PUMP you r sluggish
septic tank . Glet Klean-EmAII Septic Tank CleanWIN AT BRIDGE
patron

¥Q5

®

UP! Sports Writer
UCLA's young Bruins had
their first big test Thursday
rught and passed it with flying
colors.
The No. 1 ranked Bruins
taking on thelf toughest o~
ponent of the season thus far
clobbered sixth-ranked Ohi~
State, '19-53, to wm their own
Bruin Classic.
UCLA surged to an 11-llead
in the first four minutes and

•

It is only within a single human lifetime
that this has beCome truly one world, m
terms of rapid transportation and commumcation.

BRUCE BIOS$AT

By JOE CARNJCE~I

By Helen and Sue Bottel

life abll that there will someday again be
glad t'ling~ of great joy which shall be to
all mlin-tidlngs of peace, lasting peace. on
'- .;
· t
eartll' a_nd ~dod wll 1 0 men
Agaiil the sad tidings drown out the glad
Yet itlJ far too eatly in the gamt\._for despair
Vie\V6d against the unimagmably great
lime sale of geology, mankind's SOJOUrn on
th1s plibet has been but ;m eyeblink. Even
viewed against tbe time scale of his own
species' existence, a timescale which lengthens Wifh each neW diSCOVery, modern Citydwellllj, technological man arrived onlr
yestefi\ay
Horrlll. sajiiens hbs been around for at least
20,000 ljl' 30,000 years Somethmg aspirmg to
that stage walked on two legs nearly two
million years ago in Africa .

lh BRUCE BIOSSAT

psu Dumped by Bruins

It's All Yours

J'

J

TRAINER NAMED
EDWARDSVILLE , Ill. f UP! )
- Wilfred Buddell, !ramer of
the Southern llhnots at Edwardsvllle soccer team, Thursday was named !ramer for the
U.S. Olympic soccer team.

'

VILLAGE PHARMACY
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

MOTOROLA@
ESCORT PERSONAL PORTABLE
BLACK &amp; ·WHITE - - T.V.

ARTERS
420

MA.IH STREET

POINT PLEASANT

MENS\A'E\R
\

."\

all
of our good
friends
*
a New Year
filled
with
health and
happiness.
KING BUILDERS SUPPLY
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

WINTER RETREADS

2-HOUR
CLEANING

(Upon Request)

.ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

9" picture (measured diagonally)

Motorola Escort Personal Portable
Black~

Wh1te TV. Instant P1cture/

Sound Solid State.... Chassls. Plays
on AC current- Plays on Banertes
(opttonal extra) Earphqne Included

Snap-On Sun Sh1eld C1garet1e
Lighter Connector Cord Included

Plastic cabJne tm Walnut gram hn tsh

3 ROOMS
NEW'
FURNIJURE

750xl4
or Smaller

. '349.95

m:oo'1lown-

·&amp;aJance On
Convenient
Terms.

(Add A $1.00 For Each Size Larger)

H
&amp;
R
FIRESTONE
N. 2nd AVE.
992-2238
'

..

-

�j

f
4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Dec. 31,1971
····.·
. .
Whales ha ve an average
life span of 30 to 50 years .
·"

,.

'

Miami Tangerine Champ
A Special
Thanks to Al l
Of Our Customer s
and
Fr iends Th is
Past Year ,
Welcom e To
All New Ones
In 1972

Bob's Gulf
Formerly

8e!l'con Service Station

Mary's Steve Steward shared
scoring honors with 15 points
apiece.
Rollins (Fla.) tapped in the
ball at the buzzer to give it the
consola lion win, 82-31 , over Stetson (Fla.).
In other holiday tournament
play, UCLA crushed Ohio State
79-53 in the Bruin Classic; Air
Force beat Xavier 62-58 in the
consola lion round of the Pahnett&lt;&gt; Classic; West Virginia Tech
edged Ohio Dominican 73-69 in
the consolation game of the Appalachian Classic.
Defiance wins Hoosier
Ohio Northern beat Adrian
(Mich.) 106-78 in consolation at
the Marshall Optimist Classic;
Cenlre (Ky.) won its own tournament's consolation game
over Marietta 83-75.
DefiancebeatEarlham (Ind.)
86-75 in the champiol)Ship game

By United Press International
It was a ~reathtaking night
at Orlando, Fla ., when both the
championship and consolation
games of the Tangerine Bowl
Basketball Tournament were
decided in tl)e final second.'
Larry Garloch, Miami of
Ohio's 6·2 senior guard, sank
lwo foul sho'-5 with one second
on the clock to give the Redskins the championship over
William &amp; Marry 69-67.
Garloch only scored 11 total
poin'-5 in the game. Teammate
Phil · Lumpkin and William &amp;

'

'

.. •

We're circling the
New Yeor with
the best round-up
of wishes for
you . Mony !honks.

•

Defiance got its eighth win in
an undefeated season in finishing the victor in the HoosierBuckeye tourney. Mark Shine
· led with 16 points, but Earlham's Jerry Banks was high for
the game with 19.
Wooster had led its tom;ney

Squires Make It

voted the most valuable player
in the two;lay classic. Wooster's Mike Grenart, who led the
host team wlh 22 points, was
voted best defensive player.
Air Force led Xavier ~Y only
two points
with .one minute left
.
In the Palmetto Classic at .
Charleston, S. C., but the
Musketeers from Ohio missed
a shot that would have tied the
g81lle and llie airmen put the
game away. High for the game
was Xavier's Bob Fullarton
NBA Standings
with 17 points.
By United Press International
Steve Davis scOred 17 points
Eastern Conference
In Ohio Northern's easy win
Atlantic Division
W. L. Pet. GB over Adrian for third place in
Boston
26 12 .684 ...
the Marshall (Micli.) tourNew York
23 14 .622 2112
lllllnent.
Paul McLaughlin led
Philadelphia 15 23 .395 11
Buffalo
II 24 .314 13'12 Ohio Dominican with 21 points
Central Division
in its loss in the Appalachian
W. L. Pet. GB Classic played at Montgomery,
Baltimore
15 22 .405
Cleveland
15 23 .395
If&gt; W.Va.
Atlanta
13 25 .343 2'1&gt;
Toledo gained its seventh win
Cincinnati
10 26 .278 4'h
in eight starts and it marked
Western Conference
the 100th career victory for
Midwest Division
W. l. Pet. GB coach Bob Nichols, in his sevenMilwaukee
32 · 7 .821 ...
th year at UT. Center TomKo27 10 ,730 4
Chicago
Phoeni x
22 16 .579 9'h zelko scored 24 points .

Three Wins In R Ow

Mr . &amp; Mrs .. Millard Van Meter &amp; Associates

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP
Pomeroy

TH;E~

Ohio College

Basketball Scores

By United Press International

J'l toast to the brand New
Year! May it hold many good
things for you. Thank you for yonr loyalty.

To ledo 95 St. Joseph 's I Ind.) 78
Cinc innati 80 Kent State 67
Marshal l 88 Ohio U. 81
Marshall Optimist Classic

a smile is contagious. Best wishes!

Pro Standings

Ohio Northern 106 Adrian
College 78 I Cons .l

Los Angeles
36
3 .923 .. .
22 18 .550 14'12
Seattle
Golden St.
20 19 .513 16
Houstoo
14 25 .359 22
Portland
14 25 .359 22
Portland
8 32 .200 2B 1h
Thursdav's ResuHs
Baltimore 110 New York 102
Golden St. 128 Oetroit 122
Chicago i17 Portland 92
Houston 129 Atlanta 115
Phoenix 123 Buffalo 102
Los Angeles 122 Seattle 106
(CAlly games scheduled)
Fridav's Games
Phila at Boston, Day
!Only game scheduled)

Centre College Invitational
Centre I Ky.) 83 Marietta 75
I Cons.)

Palmetto Invitational
Air For ce 62 Xa v ier 58 (Cons.)

Wooster Classic
Oakland !Mich.) 93 Bethany
I W. Va .l 86 (Cons .)
West Virginia Tech 73
Ohio Dominican 69

Wooster Classic

Brock port ( N.Y.) 73
Wooster
!Champ.

Memphis vs. Denver at Dallas

Canton Lehman 60 Akron
North 43
North Canton Hoover 63 Oak·
wood 44
Canton South 63 Canton
Glenwood 43

Marlington 78 Perry 73
AI Iiane 69 New Philadelphia 56
Coshocton 72 Zanesville 58
West Holmes 55 Hiland 49
Eastlake North 50 Mentor 37
Maple Heights 63 Mayfield 50

Independence 78 Strongsville
56
Elyria 68 Fremont 52
Cols . Linden-McKinley 80
Cleve. JF K 72

Warrensville 62 Solon 37

Utah at Dallas
{Only games scheduled I
NHL Standings

Bv Uni1ed Press International

MILKSHAKE ONLY

Detroit
Buffalo

25
24
21
17
13
8
West

5
6
6
12
17
22

6
5
7
8

56
53
49
42
6 32
8 24

ALL STORES WILL

CLOSE 6 P.M.
NEW YEAR'S EVE

Bysantine 30
Berkshire Bl Crestwood 64
Bedford 78 Berea 54
Olmsted Falls 66 Brooklyn 48
Cleve . St. Ignatius 60 Padua 57
Alenander 131 Wellstoo 55

J
5
7
5
5
I

-

Vickie Sutton is Betrothed

Alnlricl's Origi111l JNM Sinca 1850

STA-PRfST

SUNDAY
JAN. 2, 1972
1PMT07PM

6
8
6
3

• Aair

e Slim Fit
Mr. Levi's
PANTS
'

MIDDLEPORT

·1church
Severaltrouns ipeoplt,of the
read Christmas poems.

1 1:

•·.

.

,

· IT

and Super Shm Legs ·•

36

32
32
19

BAHR CLOTHIERS

E_~erybody

Lik63 It

~

laig

• They were, "Let's Think About
~ Ouistmas" by Mrs. Terry
., Lewis; "A Shepherd", by
Stephen Fowler; "Home to
Nazareth," by Mrs. Jerry
Morgan, and "The Gift of
•

· Harris Family

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

{011y game scheduled )

.

••

:• Gathers On
•

••

:• Christmas Day
•

:
•
:
:
:
:

19

FROM

•
"

•"

THE OFFICERS, DIRECTORS
AND EMPLOYEES OF CITIZENS
NATIONAL THANK YOU FOR
PERMITTING US TO SERVE YOU
DURING THE PAST YEAR. MAY
WE CONTINUE TO SERVE YOU
DURING 1972_
Officers and Employees
Rodney , Downing, Chairman of
Board
·
Paul S. Smart, President
Harold E. Hubbard, Executive .V.
President
·
Rose S. Reynolds, Vice President
Bernard V. Fultz, Vice President
Manning Kloes, Cashier
Gene Grate, Asst. Vice President
Lois McElhinny, Head Bookk~per
Dorothy Anthony, Secretary
Mary Hindy, Bookkeeper
Nancy Davis, Bookkeeper
Sarah Fowler, Bookkeeper
Norma Wilcox, Bookkeeper
Edward Durst, Teller
Leland Brown, Custodian

~

:
~

•
••
:
•
:
~

HERE'S HOPING
. ·-· '
'72 IS A BIG
'HIT,' FOR YOU

'

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
' .

1

:
:
:
•
••

•

••
••

.•

o•rect~rs:

••

Rodney Do ntrg .
Paul S. Sm rt
'
Harold E. · bbard
Rose S. Reri)olds
Bernard V. !tultz
James F, Ar~olc:j
Dale M. Duttbn

.•

,••
••
•
·'
•J

A family g•therlng was held
Christmas Day 1 at the attractive1y decorated home of
Mrs. Opal Harris on State
Route 681.
A traditional dinner of ham,
turkey and all the trimmings
was served to Mr. and Mrs.
Harlan Webb and daughter,
Mr. and 'Mrs. David Hamilton
of Mansfield; Mr. and Mrs.
Sonny Harris and family, Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Harris and
family, and Mr. and Mrs.
Herman Grossnickle and
family, local, and Leonard
Paugh and Miss Julia
Nedoby1ek, of Pittsburgh, Pa.
Others visiting during the
day were Mr. and Mrs. Leroy
Barr and Charles Barr, Porterfleld; Miss Reg~ Scullin
and a friend of Pa~kersburg,
W. Va. and 'Mr. and Mrs. John
Hamilton and son, Mansfield.

••

••
•••
•

n\ ~''

presented its annual Chrislmas
play under direction of Sandra
Fowler entitled, "Who Gave
the Christmas Party ?" It
featured Barbara McDermitt
and David Edwards as the
lovable school janitors, Keith
Gi~s as the jazzy trumpet
,I
player who found out that ,.:1
playing Joseph was not really
square after all ; Jackie Gail
Roush as the tender-hearted
DONALD FITCH
English teacher and the
Mr. and Mrs. Donald
members of her English class,
who were Cheryl Flowers, Fitch, Pomeroy Route 3, are
Dianne Gibbs, Lynn Kearns, announcing the birth of lheir
Christi Kearns, Johnny first child, a seven pound 11
Ohlinger, Tommy Anderson ounce son, Donald Scott, on ·
and Dianna Kearii'S• ·falso Chrlslillai .Oay..at .St. Joseph
featurl'!l as Mary in the final Hospital to Parkersburg, W.
Va.
scene of the play ).
Maternal grandparents
Special music in the play was
are
Mr. and Mrs. Fred
provided by Keith Gibbs and
Jackie Gail Roush who played, Karshner, Columbus, and
"Silent Night" as a trumpet Mr. and Mrs. Carl Fitch,
duet; Christi Kearns and Lynn Long Boltom, are the
Kearns who played, "We Wish paternal grandparents.
You A Merry Christmas" on Great-grandmothers are
Lena
Reeves,
the flute and clarinet Mrs.
respectively, and by Barbara Columbus, and Mrs. Alice
McDermitt and Cheryl Fitch of Long Bottom.
Flowers who sang, " What
Child is This ?" at the manger
while the rest of the group
SECOND SON COMES
hummed.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Eblin,
The
benediction was
Sr.,
Crystsl Lake, Ill., are
pronounced by Sandra Fowler.
announcing the birth of their
second son, Brian Arthur,
INFANT ILL
seven pounds, 10 ounces, born
Lori Renee Engle, one month on Dec. 14 at the Memorial
old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hospital in McHenry County,
Junior Engle, South Third m. Grandparents are Mr. and
Ave., Middleport, is a patient Mrs. Henry Eblin, Sr., of
at the Holzer Medical Center, Crystal Lake, and Mr. and
Gallipolis, receiving treatment Mrs. Charles A. Schuler of
for bronchitis.
Middleport. The paternal
great-grandparents are Mr.
A cat, because of its per- and Mrs. Steve Eblin, Union
feel sense of balance, usual· Ave., Pomeroy. The Eblins'
ly lands on its feet when it elder son, is Harley, Jr., '!l
falls .
months old . .

ALL
STORES WILL
...

CLOSE 6 P.M.
NEW YEAR'S EVE
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 31
AND

AZALEA DROPPED
WILMINGTON,N.C.(UPI)Due to lack of public support,
the Azalea Open golf tournament has not been scheduled
on the 1972 Professional Golf
Association tour.
Prighten The Day
For A
Shut-In
With A

Foliage Garden
From 53.00
Dudley's Florist

SATURDAY, JAN. 1, 1972

OPEN

SUNDAY
JAN. ,2 , 1972
1PMT07PM

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

ere . . . . omes

THESE ..FEEDERS"

r

ARE FOR THE BIRDS

AT MODERN SUPPLY

HAIL
to the

NEW
YEAR

. You tan Also Buy:

• Suet Seed Cakes

A bright and happy New Year, full of good health and good fortune ... that 's our
heartfelt wish for all our customers and friends.
--!

• Wild Bird Seed
• Sunflower Seed
• Cracked Com

.

A New Year approaches
filled with new promise.

your loyal support, thanks _!
From All Of Us At

General
Tire
Sales
N. S.Cond Ave.
· Middleport

We appreciate your patronage and we thank you lo.r ·all your good will in the past .
We're looking forward to serving you throughout the coming year. Best wishes to
everyone!

Effective Jan. 2, 1972
OFFICE HOURS:

DD-3 SUET SEED FEEDER

'

WILL CLOSE
NEW YEAR'S DAY

Redwood Feeders

•

MIDDLEPORT

''Early .Bird''

To Choose From ...

•
•

BAKER

FURNITURE

Many Sizes and Styles

•
•

i.

~ 11\\1(!

MR. AND MRS. LLOYD WRIGHT, Pomeroy, announce
the engagement of their daughter, Re~ecca Sue, to Mr. John
Card, son of the Rev. and Mrs. Robert Card, Pomeroy. Miss
Wright is a senior at Meigs High School. Her fiance, a 1970
graduate of Meigs High School, attended Mountain State
College in Parkers~urg, W.Va. for a year before enlisting in
the U.S. Air Force. Weddiilgplansare incomplete.

••

•

f\ I i .I I

Christmas," by Charles
Hoffman. A recitation was
given by Paula Lou Cunningham and a prayer was
offered by Mrs. John King .
The traditional Christmas
Scripture from St. Luke
Chapter D was read against
the background of a tree and
brightly wrapped packages by
Miss Dianne Gibbs playing the
role of baby -sitter for the
evening to Vicky Gibbs, L&lt;&gt;u
Roush and Ellen McDermitt.
Special music was provided
by Mrs. Arline McDermitt,
Mrs. Connie Gibbs and Mrs.
Lyta Hoffman who sang ,
"Silent Night," and by Mrs.
Connie Gibbs and Cathy "'cDermitt, who sang, "Star of the
East.''
•
The nursery class, under
direction of Mrs. Connie Gibbs,
presented a poem by Mrs.
Gi~s, a recitation by Jeff
Ohlinger and a Christmas drill
in which the entire class
participated. Special feature of
the program was a single
retelling of the Christmas story
during which Mrs . Gibbs
paused occasionally to let one
of tbe children hold up an
object and supply the word she
missed. Children who participated in the nursery class
program were Rex Gib~s ,
Cynthia Kearns, Terry Lewis
and Jeff Ohlinger.
The
Primary
Class
presented its program under
direction of Mrs. Renata
Roush. After remarks by Mrs.
Roush, the children chose to
illustrate the Christmas story
with the traditional manger
tableau of shepherds, wise
men, Mat,Y. Joseph and the
Babe lying in a manger.
Scripture for this segment
was read by Mrs. Mona Gibbs
at the conclusion of which the
children sang, "Away In A
Manger." Primary children
participating were Roberta
Ohlinger, Tammy Ohlinger,
Ellen McDermitt, L&lt;&gt;u Roush,
Hope Roush, Vicky Gibbs,
Paula L&lt;&gt;u Cunningham and
David Cunningham.
The Bible Banner Class

•
=~----------------~
•

&lt;

CITIZENS NATIONAL
BANK·
.
'

:

.'

George Ingels

FURNiTURE

Kings."

·'Hair4·,Regular•n•'
~
·r ·l )u:rh

'

INGELS

•
NEW HAVEN, W. Va. - On
• the night of December 23,
young people of tbe Fairview
Sunday School presented their
annual Christmas program.
The program opened with a
prelude entitled,
"The
Coventry Carol" played by
Cathy McDermitt. A call to
worship, "This is the Night"
was read by Sandra Fowler
and the congregation sang, "It
Came Upon the Midnight
Clear." Other congregational
songs during the course of the
evening were, "Joy to the
World" and " We Three

SLACKS
~•

Rebecca Wright Is Engaged

Program Given by Youths

JEANS A'ff'

53
45
29
27
27

TASTES sp
GOOD

We're strumming
out a 1horus of New
Yea~ wishes to
all of our "auld
acquointo111es."
Many thanks for
your generous
and loyol patronage.
c

Cleveland
15 13
Cincinnati
12 15
Rlchmood
13 16
Tidewater
8 22
Thursdoy's Results
Hershey 5 Novo Scotia 2
{CAlly game scheduled)

MR. AND MRS. BERNARD WALLACE of 1687 Lincoln
Heights, Pomeroy, are announcing the engagement of their
daughter, Vickie Lee Sutton, to Mr. James Monroe Fink, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Fink of Rutland. Miss Sutton is
enrolled in cosmetology at Meigs High School where she is a
senior. Her fiance attends the Tri.COunty Vocational In.stltule at Nelsonville. Wedding plans are incomplete.

•

CITIZEL
NS NATIONA.,\1.

Sy:e

OPEN·

MIDDLEP.ORT.'iO!_,

FOURTH &amp; LOCUST

Friday's Games

J

SATURDAY, JAN. 1, 1972

'

McCLURES DAIRY IS~E .,. 1~·

Ohio Cotfege
Basketboll Score•
By United Press tnternationat
Tangerine Bowl Tournament
Miami (Ohio) 69 William &amp;
Mary 67
PalmeHo Classic
Bruin Classic
UCLA 79 Ohio St. 53
Hoosier-Buckeye Tournament
Oefiance 86 Earlham { Ind.) 75
!Champ.)
Bluffton 68 Taylor I Ind.) 67
I Coost .)
Hanover (Ind . ) 76 Findlay 70
iCons. I
Appalachian Classic
W. Va. Tech 73 Ohio Dominican
69 (Champ)
Marshal! !Mich.)
Optimist Classic
Ohio Northern 106 Adrian
IMii:h .l 78 ICons.)

California at Oetrolt
Buffalo at Pittsburgh
!CAlly games scheduled)

r.tiar Aul4

WILL CLOSE
NEW YEAR'S DAY

••

6 26

'

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 31
AND

••

W. L. T. Pt•
Ch icago
25 8
Minnesota
20 II
Dallfornla
II 19
Philadelphia
II IB
Pittsburgh
II 21
Sf . Louis
10 21
Los Angeles
9 26
Thursday's Results
Minnesota 2 Boston 2
{CAlly game scheduled)

Geneva 64 Madison 60
North Ridgeville · 76 Elyria
Catholi c 66
Manchester 66 Buckeye 51
Avon . Lake 63 Cleveland John
Marshall 60
West Geauga 63 Cleve . Cardinal 51
Fairview 62 Napoleon 61
Defiance N Elida 72
Patri ck Henry 104 Leipsic 64
Midpark 52 Willoughby South
38
Sandusky 70 Admiral King 58
Cleve . Holy Name 59 Cleve .

24~

and Sunday -

W. L T. Pts Boston at Cincinnati

Toronto

''

Saturday - New Years Day

Fridiiy's G1mes

East

Boston
Montreal

'

SPECIAL

Chrislrnas guests of Mr. and
HAPPY
Mrs. George Hackett, Sr. were
NEW YEAR
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Shafer and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Hackett and daughter of
•Columbus, Mr. and Mrs. Joe
· Tribble and daughter, Kim, St.
Albims, W. Va. and Dr. and
Mrs. · R. R. Pickens, Midlleport.
Agent
for
Knapp
Here for the holiday weekend
rith Mr. and Mrs. William T. Shoes.
Middleport, 0 .
lrueser and Mrs. Stella
lrueser were Mr. and Mrs.
:obert Jay and Mr. and Mrs.
1011 Grueser. They were joined
" Christmas diilner by Mr.
ICI Mrs. Mike Gerlach.
Christmas guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Brannan were
Clarence Brannan and Mrs.
Grace Weber, West Union, W.
Va ., and Mrs. Clyda Allensworth.
Mr. and . Mrs. Michael
Gerlach were in Marietta
Sunday for the Smith family
reunion and in McConnelsville
Sunday evening for the
Gerlach family get-together.
From there they went to
Columbus for a visit with Mr.
and Mrs.' Robert Jay and Mr.
and Mrs. Don Grueser. On
Chrisirnas eh they were in
Chillicothe to ·visit Mr. and
Mrs. Wendell Gerlach.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Wolfe and
daughter, Wendy, Gallipolis,
Mr. and Mrs. Ada Bradbury,
and Mrs. Evelyn Lewis were
Christmas dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles A. Bradbury.
Mrs. Blanche Gilkey was the
Chris 1mas guest of Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Hess and chlldren,
Middleport, Route 1.

CLIFF'S
Shoe Repair

' J

24 ·.363 17112

14

Pacific Division
W. L. Pet. GB

New York

.~eigh­

to begin a bright New Year. Try it and oee ; • •

.w.

Franklin Heights 88 Tr iad 55
Upper Arlington 62 Washington
CH 58
Coshocton 72 Zanesville 58
Portsm outh 78 Waverly 66
Alexander 131 Well ston 55
Spr ingfield North 91
Springfield Shawnee 53
Lora i n Senior 64 Marion
Harding 53
Toledo Scott 54 Cantoo Lincoln
52

and

Personal Notes

bors w i th a wide smile . That's the richeot woy

. The Virginia Squires will be rebounds for the Colonels while
sorry to see the Carolina Larry Jones led the Floridians
Cougars go.
with 19 points.
Virgini11_ scored its third
Zelmo Beaty's 34 points and
victory over the Cougars in as 24 rebounds and Willie Wise's
many nights Thursday night as 29-point effort helped Utah beat
rookie Julius Erving hit for 33 Denver. Ralph Simpson had 22
points and pulled doWri 22 points for Denver, which lost to
rebounds to highlight a 124-120 the Stars for the 2Qth time in its
lriumph. Charlie Scott added last 21. games.
31 points for the Squires, inDon Freeman and Steve
ABA Standings
cluding a pair of free throws . Jones combined for 19 of By United Press tnternationat
East
with six seconds left that in- Dallas' last 29 points to lift the
w. l. Pet. GB
' Centre Invitational
sured the victory.
Chaps over Memphis in the Kentucky
28
9 .757 ...
Centre I Ky .) 83 Marietta 75
Rookie Jim McDaniels had doubleheader opener. Johnny Virginia
25 15 .625
(Cons . I
17 21 .447 11 112
37 points to lead the Cougars Neumann led the Pros with 23 Floridians
Wooster Classic
New
York
16
21
.432
12
Brockport
{ N. Y. ) 73 Wooster 71
and George Lelunann.added 27. points.
17 25 .405 1311•
Pittsburgh
(Champ .)
In
other
American
Carolina
13 27 .325 161f• Oakland I Mich.) 93 Bethany
West
Basketball Association action,
IW . Va .) 86 iCons.)
Thursday Night
W. L. Pet. GB
the Kentucky Colonels downed
Utah
28
9 .757 ...
Ohio High School
the Floridians, 11!.jl9, while the
Basketball Results
Indiana
22 17 .564 7
AHL Standings
Utah Stars beat the Denver By United Press International Memphi s
16 22 .421 12112
By
United
Press International
Cambridge
81
Tri
Valley
63
Denver
14
21
.400
13
Rockets, 103-98, and the Dallas
East
Dallas
15 24 .385 14
Mt. Vernon 60 Cahanna 39
Chaparrals edged the Memphis Westerv ille 65 Westland 57
w. L. T. Pts
Thursday's Results
Boston
24 6 4 52
Pros, 102-99, in a doubleheader Reynoldsburg 90 Wh itehall 87 Virginia 124 Carolina 120
Nova
Scotia
15 II 9 39
Kentucky
111
Floridians
89
12
otl
at Denver.
Springf ield
13 12 7 33
Bloom Carroll 68 Berne-Union Dallas 102 Memphis 99
Dan Issei scored 42 points, 21
Rochester
12 18 4 28
Utah 103 Oenver 98
45
Providence
9 18 I 26
in each half, as the Colonels Canal Win ches'ter '1"1 ~ Millers- ''· tOnlygam~schediJte)
West
port
64
Friday's
Games
cruised to their eight victory in
W. L. T. Pts
. Linden 80 Cleve . JFK 72
New York at Indiana
the last nine games . Artis Cols
Hershey
16 9 6 38
Kentu cky vs . Carolina
Cols . North 69 Salem 57
Gilmore added 23 points and 19 Delphos St. John 89 Col s
16 13 5 37
At Greensboro Baltimore
Watterson 63

f~ends

•

Middleport

.•,

Put on a· happy face . Greet

J

Mr. and Mrs. Earl R. pound, three ounce daughler ,
DeWees, Middleport Route I, Tracy Louise, on Dec. 14 at the
are anno"!'cing the birth of Holzer Medical Center.
Maternal grandparents are
their first child, an eight
Mrs. Pauleen Tillis and John
Tillis, Pomeroy Route 2, and
paternal grandparents are
Mrs .. Mildred ·DeWees and
Clarence DeWees , both of
Middleport.
A
greatgrandfather is Will Haley ,
Rutland Route 1.

HELL.O

71~7 with 47 seconds left, but
Brockport come back with (our
free tllrows to knot the score at
71-all and John Collins hit his
only basket of the night just
before the buzzer ended the
game.
Brockport's Ron Gilliam was
high with 28 points and his brother Dan, added 19. Ron was

Detroit

•

Ph. 992-2039

of the Hoosier-Buckeye Tournament played at Findlay. In consolation games, Bluffton edged
Taylor (Ind.) ~7 and Hanover
(Ind.) beat Findlay 71&gt;-70.
In the Wooster Classic, Brockport (N.Y.) edged Wooster 7371 for the championship, and
Oakland (Mich.) whipped Bethany (W.Va.) 93-36 in the conS&lt;&gt;Iation game.
In single games Thursday
night, Toledo beat st. Joseph's
(Ind.) 95-78; Cincinnati beat
Kent State 80-67, and Marshall
overcame Ohio U. 88-31.

Deweeses Welcome First Daughter

MODERN SUPPLY

9:00 to 3;00 Daily
Tbuis. &amp; Sal 9:00 to Noon

WAYNE&amp; MASTERS FEEDS
399 W. Main St.
992-2164
Pomeroy, 0.
THE STORE WITH "ALL KINDS OF
STUFF"- FOR PETS, STABLES, LARGE &amp;
SMALL ANIMALS, LAWNS AND GAR[: ENS.

MEIGS OOUNlY BRANCH
THI AfHIHS COUNTY
MVINGS I LOAH CO.
" ' W'.... a.•• -.,, OIJo 81ft

Friday 9:00 to 6:00
.'

.,,

L

�j

f
4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Dec. 31,1971
····.·
. .
Whales ha ve an average
life span of 30 to 50 years .
·"

,.

'

Miami Tangerine Champ
A Special
Thanks to Al l
Of Our Customer s
and
Fr iends Th is
Past Year ,
Welcom e To
All New Ones
In 1972

Bob's Gulf
Formerly

8e!l'con Service Station

Mary's Steve Steward shared
scoring honors with 15 points
apiece.
Rollins (Fla.) tapped in the
ball at the buzzer to give it the
consola lion win, 82-31 , over Stetson (Fla.).
In other holiday tournament
play, UCLA crushed Ohio State
79-53 in the Bruin Classic; Air
Force beat Xavier 62-58 in the
consola lion round of the Pahnett&lt;&gt; Classic; West Virginia Tech
edged Ohio Dominican 73-69 in
the consolation game of the Appalachian Classic.
Defiance wins Hoosier
Ohio Northern beat Adrian
(Mich.) 106-78 in consolation at
the Marshall Optimist Classic;
Cenlre (Ky.) won its own tournament's consolation game
over Marietta 83-75.
DefiancebeatEarlham (Ind.)
86-75 in the champiol)Ship game

By United Press International
It was a ~reathtaking night
at Orlando, Fla ., when both the
championship and consolation
games of the Tangerine Bowl
Basketball Tournament were
decided in tl)e final second.'
Larry Garloch, Miami of
Ohio's 6·2 senior guard, sank
lwo foul sho'-5 with one second
on the clock to give the Redskins the championship over
William &amp; Marry 69-67.
Garloch only scored 11 total
poin'-5 in the game. Teammate
Phil · Lumpkin and William &amp;

'

'

.. •

We're circling the
New Yeor with
the best round-up
of wishes for
you . Mony !honks.

•

Defiance got its eighth win in
an undefeated season in finishing the victor in the HoosierBuckeye tourney. Mark Shine
· led with 16 points, but Earlham's Jerry Banks was high for
the game with 19.
Wooster had led its tom;ney

Squires Make It

voted the most valuable player
in the two;lay classic. Wooster's Mike Grenart, who led the
host team wlh 22 points, was
voted best defensive player.
Air Force led Xavier ~Y only
two points
with .one minute left
.
In the Palmetto Classic at .
Charleston, S. C., but the
Musketeers from Ohio missed
a shot that would have tied the
g81lle and llie airmen put the
game away. High for the game
was Xavier's Bob Fullarton
NBA Standings
with 17 points.
By United Press International
Steve Davis scOred 17 points
Eastern Conference
In Ohio Northern's easy win
Atlantic Division
W. L. Pet. GB over Adrian for third place in
Boston
26 12 .684 ...
the Marshall (Micli.) tourNew York
23 14 .622 2112
lllllnent.
Paul McLaughlin led
Philadelphia 15 23 .395 11
Buffalo
II 24 .314 13'12 Ohio Dominican with 21 points
Central Division
in its loss in the Appalachian
W. L. Pet. GB Classic played at Montgomery,
Baltimore
15 22 .405
Cleveland
15 23 .395
If&gt; W.Va.
Atlanta
13 25 .343 2'1&gt;
Toledo gained its seventh win
Cincinnati
10 26 .278 4'h
in eight starts and it marked
Western Conference
the 100th career victory for
Midwest Division
W. l. Pet. GB coach Bob Nichols, in his sevenMilwaukee
32 · 7 .821 ...
th year at UT. Center TomKo27 10 ,730 4
Chicago
Phoeni x
22 16 .579 9'h zelko scored 24 points .

Three Wins In R Ow

Mr . &amp; Mrs .. Millard Van Meter &amp; Associates

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP
Pomeroy

TH;E~

Ohio College

Basketball Scores

By United Press International

J'l toast to the brand New
Year! May it hold many good
things for you. Thank you for yonr loyalty.

To ledo 95 St. Joseph 's I Ind.) 78
Cinc innati 80 Kent State 67
Marshal l 88 Ohio U. 81
Marshall Optimist Classic

a smile is contagious. Best wishes!

Pro Standings

Ohio Northern 106 Adrian
College 78 I Cons .l

Los Angeles
36
3 .923 .. .
22 18 .550 14'12
Seattle
Golden St.
20 19 .513 16
Houstoo
14 25 .359 22
Portland
14 25 .359 22
Portland
8 32 .200 2B 1h
Thursdav's ResuHs
Baltimore 110 New York 102
Golden St. 128 Oetroit 122
Chicago i17 Portland 92
Houston 129 Atlanta 115
Phoenix 123 Buffalo 102
Los Angeles 122 Seattle 106
(CAlly games scheduled)
Fridav's Games
Phila at Boston, Day
!Only game scheduled)

Centre College Invitational
Centre I Ky.) 83 Marietta 75
I Cons.)

Palmetto Invitational
Air For ce 62 Xa v ier 58 (Cons.)

Wooster Classic
Oakland !Mich.) 93 Bethany
I W. Va .l 86 (Cons .)
West Virginia Tech 73
Ohio Dominican 69

Wooster Classic

Brock port ( N.Y.) 73
Wooster
!Champ.

Memphis vs. Denver at Dallas

Canton Lehman 60 Akron
North 43
North Canton Hoover 63 Oak·
wood 44
Canton South 63 Canton
Glenwood 43

Marlington 78 Perry 73
AI Iiane 69 New Philadelphia 56
Coshocton 72 Zanesville 58
West Holmes 55 Hiland 49
Eastlake North 50 Mentor 37
Maple Heights 63 Mayfield 50

Independence 78 Strongsville
56
Elyria 68 Fremont 52
Cols . Linden-McKinley 80
Cleve. JF K 72

Warrensville 62 Solon 37

Utah at Dallas
{Only games scheduled I
NHL Standings

Bv Uni1ed Press International

MILKSHAKE ONLY

Detroit
Buffalo

25
24
21
17
13
8
West

5
6
6
12
17
22

6
5
7
8

56
53
49
42
6 32
8 24

ALL STORES WILL

CLOSE 6 P.M.
NEW YEAR'S EVE

Bysantine 30
Berkshire Bl Crestwood 64
Bedford 78 Berea 54
Olmsted Falls 66 Brooklyn 48
Cleve . St. Ignatius 60 Padua 57
Alenander 131 Wellstoo 55

J
5
7
5
5
I

-

Vickie Sutton is Betrothed

Alnlricl's Origi111l JNM Sinca 1850

STA-PRfST

SUNDAY
JAN. 2, 1972
1PMT07PM

6
8
6
3

• Aair

e Slim Fit
Mr. Levi's
PANTS
'

MIDDLEPORT

·1church
Severaltrouns ipeoplt,of the
read Christmas poems.

1 1:

•·.

.

,

· IT

and Super Shm Legs ·•

36

32
32
19

BAHR CLOTHIERS

E_~erybody

Lik63 It

~

laig

• They were, "Let's Think About
~ Ouistmas" by Mrs. Terry
., Lewis; "A Shepherd", by
Stephen Fowler; "Home to
Nazareth," by Mrs. Jerry
Morgan, and "The Gift of
•

· Harris Family

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

{011y game scheduled )

.

••

:• Gathers On
•

••

:• Christmas Day
•

:
•
:
:
:
:

19

FROM

•
"

•"

THE OFFICERS, DIRECTORS
AND EMPLOYEES OF CITIZENS
NATIONAL THANK YOU FOR
PERMITTING US TO SERVE YOU
DURING THE PAST YEAR. MAY
WE CONTINUE TO SERVE YOU
DURING 1972_
Officers and Employees
Rodney , Downing, Chairman of
Board
·
Paul S. Smart, President
Harold E. Hubbard, Executive .V.
President
·
Rose S. Reynolds, Vice President
Bernard V. Fultz, Vice President
Manning Kloes, Cashier
Gene Grate, Asst. Vice President
Lois McElhinny, Head Bookk~per
Dorothy Anthony, Secretary
Mary Hindy, Bookkeeper
Nancy Davis, Bookkeeper
Sarah Fowler, Bookkeeper
Norma Wilcox, Bookkeeper
Edward Durst, Teller
Leland Brown, Custodian

~

:
~

•
••
:
•
:
~

HERE'S HOPING
. ·-· '
'72 IS A BIG
'HIT,' FOR YOU

'

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
' .

1

:
:
:
•
••

•

••
••

.•

o•rect~rs:

••

Rodney Do ntrg .
Paul S. Sm rt
'
Harold E. · bbard
Rose S. Reri)olds
Bernard V. !tultz
James F, Ar~olc:j
Dale M. Duttbn

.•

,••
••
•
·'
•J

A family g•therlng was held
Christmas Day 1 at the attractive1y decorated home of
Mrs. Opal Harris on State
Route 681.
A traditional dinner of ham,
turkey and all the trimmings
was served to Mr. and Mrs.
Harlan Webb and daughter,
Mr. and 'Mrs. David Hamilton
of Mansfield; Mr. and Mrs.
Sonny Harris and family, Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Harris and
family, and Mr. and Mrs.
Herman Grossnickle and
family, local, and Leonard
Paugh and Miss Julia
Nedoby1ek, of Pittsburgh, Pa.
Others visiting during the
day were Mr. and Mrs. Leroy
Barr and Charles Barr, Porterfleld; Miss Reg~ Scullin
and a friend of Pa~kersburg,
W. Va. and 'Mr. and Mrs. John
Hamilton and son, Mansfield.

••

••
•••
•

n\ ~''

presented its annual Chrislmas
play under direction of Sandra
Fowler entitled, "Who Gave
the Christmas Party ?" It
featured Barbara McDermitt
and David Edwards as the
lovable school janitors, Keith
Gi~s as the jazzy trumpet
,I
player who found out that ,.:1
playing Joseph was not really
square after all ; Jackie Gail
Roush as the tender-hearted
DONALD FITCH
English teacher and the
Mr. and Mrs. Donald
members of her English class,
who were Cheryl Flowers, Fitch, Pomeroy Route 3, are
Dianne Gibbs, Lynn Kearns, announcing the birth of lheir
Christi Kearns, Johnny first child, a seven pound 11
Ohlinger, Tommy Anderson ounce son, Donald Scott, on ·
and Dianna Kearii'S• ·falso Chrlslillai .Oay..at .St. Joseph
featurl'!l as Mary in the final Hospital to Parkersburg, W.
Va.
scene of the play ).
Maternal grandparents
Special music in the play was
are
Mr. and Mrs. Fred
provided by Keith Gibbs and
Jackie Gail Roush who played, Karshner, Columbus, and
"Silent Night" as a trumpet Mr. and Mrs. Carl Fitch,
duet; Christi Kearns and Lynn Long Boltom, are the
Kearns who played, "We Wish paternal grandparents.
You A Merry Christmas" on Great-grandmothers are
Lena
Reeves,
the flute and clarinet Mrs.
respectively, and by Barbara Columbus, and Mrs. Alice
McDermitt and Cheryl Fitch of Long Bottom.
Flowers who sang, " What
Child is This ?" at the manger
while the rest of the group
SECOND SON COMES
hummed.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Eblin,
The
benediction was
Sr.,
Crystsl Lake, Ill., are
pronounced by Sandra Fowler.
announcing the birth of their
second son, Brian Arthur,
INFANT ILL
seven pounds, 10 ounces, born
Lori Renee Engle, one month on Dec. 14 at the Memorial
old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hospital in McHenry County,
Junior Engle, South Third m. Grandparents are Mr. and
Ave., Middleport, is a patient Mrs. Henry Eblin, Sr., of
at the Holzer Medical Center, Crystal Lake, and Mr. and
Gallipolis, receiving treatment Mrs. Charles A. Schuler of
for bronchitis.
Middleport. The paternal
great-grandparents are Mr.
A cat, because of its per- and Mrs. Steve Eblin, Union
feel sense of balance, usual· Ave., Pomeroy. The Eblins'
ly lands on its feet when it elder son, is Harley, Jr., '!l
falls .
months old . .

ALL
STORES WILL
...

CLOSE 6 P.M.
NEW YEAR'S EVE
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 31
AND

AZALEA DROPPED
WILMINGTON,N.C.(UPI)Due to lack of public support,
the Azalea Open golf tournament has not been scheduled
on the 1972 Professional Golf
Association tour.
Prighten The Day
For A
Shut-In
With A

Foliage Garden
From 53.00
Dudley's Florist

SATURDAY, JAN. 1, 1972

OPEN

SUNDAY
JAN. ,2 , 1972
1PMT07PM

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

ere . . . . omes

THESE ..FEEDERS"

r

ARE FOR THE BIRDS

AT MODERN SUPPLY

HAIL
to the

NEW
YEAR

. You tan Also Buy:

• Suet Seed Cakes

A bright and happy New Year, full of good health and good fortune ... that 's our
heartfelt wish for all our customers and friends.
--!

• Wild Bird Seed
• Sunflower Seed
• Cracked Com

.

A New Year approaches
filled with new promise.

your loyal support, thanks _!
From All Of Us At

General
Tire
Sales
N. S.Cond Ave.
· Middleport

We appreciate your patronage and we thank you lo.r ·all your good will in the past .
We're looking forward to serving you throughout the coming year. Best wishes to
everyone!

Effective Jan. 2, 1972
OFFICE HOURS:

DD-3 SUET SEED FEEDER

'

WILL CLOSE
NEW YEAR'S DAY

Redwood Feeders

•

MIDDLEPORT

''Early .Bird''

To Choose From ...

•
•

BAKER

FURNITURE

Many Sizes and Styles

•
•

i.

~ 11\\1(!

MR. AND MRS. LLOYD WRIGHT, Pomeroy, announce
the engagement of their daughter, Re~ecca Sue, to Mr. John
Card, son of the Rev. and Mrs. Robert Card, Pomeroy. Miss
Wright is a senior at Meigs High School. Her fiance, a 1970
graduate of Meigs High School, attended Mountain State
College in Parkers~urg, W.Va. for a year before enlisting in
the U.S. Air Force. Weddiilgplansare incomplete.

••

•

f\ I i .I I

Christmas," by Charles
Hoffman. A recitation was
given by Paula Lou Cunningham and a prayer was
offered by Mrs. John King .
The traditional Christmas
Scripture from St. Luke
Chapter D was read against
the background of a tree and
brightly wrapped packages by
Miss Dianne Gibbs playing the
role of baby -sitter for the
evening to Vicky Gibbs, L&lt;&gt;u
Roush and Ellen McDermitt.
Special music was provided
by Mrs. Arline McDermitt,
Mrs. Connie Gibbs and Mrs.
Lyta Hoffman who sang ,
"Silent Night," and by Mrs.
Connie Gibbs and Cathy "'cDermitt, who sang, "Star of the
East.''
•
The nursery class, under
direction of Mrs. Connie Gibbs,
presented a poem by Mrs.
Gi~s, a recitation by Jeff
Ohlinger and a Christmas drill
in which the entire class
participated. Special feature of
the program was a single
retelling of the Christmas story
during which Mrs . Gibbs
paused occasionally to let one
of tbe children hold up an
object and supply the word she
missed. Children who participated in the nursery class
program were Rex Gib~s ,
Cynthia Kearns, Terry Lewis
and Jeff Ohlinger.
The
Primary
Class
presented its program under
direction of Mrs. Renata
Roush. After remarks by Mrs.
Roush, the children chose to
illustrate the Christmas story
with the traditional manger
tableau of shepherds, wise
men, Mat,Y. Joseph and the
Babe lying in a manger.
Scripture for this segment
was read by Mrs. Mona Gibbs
at the conclusion of which the
children sang, "Away In A
Manger." Primary children
participating were Roberta
Ohlinger, Tammy Ohlinger,
Ellen McDermitt, L&lt;&gt;u Roush,
Hope Roush, Vicky Gibbs,
Paula L&lt;&gt;u Cunningham and
David Cunningham.
The Bible Banner Class

•
=~----------------~
•

&lt;

CITIZENS NATIONAL
BANK·
.
'

:

.'

George Ingels

FURNiTURE

Kings."

·'Hair4·,Regular•n•'
~
·r ·l )u:rh

'

INGELS

•
NEW HAVEN, W. Va. - On
• the night of December 23,
young people of tbe Fairview
Sunday School presented their
annual Christmas program.
The program opened with a
prelude entitled,
"The
Coventry Carol" played by
Cathy McDermitt. A call to
worship, "This is the Night"
was read by Sandra Fowler
and the congregation sang, "It
Came Upon the Midnight
Clear." Other congregational
songs during the course of the
evening were, "Joy to the
World" and " We Three

SLACKS
~•

Rebecca Wright Is Engaged

Program Given by Youths

JEANS A'ff'

53
45
29
27
27

TASTES sp
GOOD

We're strumming
out a 1horus of New
Yea~ wishes to
all of our "auld
acquointo111es."
Many thanks for
your generous
and loyol patronage.
c

Cleveland
15 13
Cincinnati
12 15
Rlchmood
13 16
Tidewater
8 22
Thursdoy's Results
Hershey 5 Novo Scotia 2
{CAlly game scheduled)

MR. AND MRS. BERNARD WALLACE of 1687 Lincoln
Heights, Pomeroy, are announcing the engagement of their
daughter, Vickie Lee Sutton, to Mr. James Monroe Fink, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Fink of Rutland. Miss Sutton is
enrolled in cosmetology at Meigs High School where she is a
senior. Her fiance attends the Tri.COunty Vocational In.stltule at Nelsonville. Wedding plans are incomplete.

•

CITIZEL
NS NATIONA.,\1.

Sy:e

OPEN·

MIDDLEP.ORT.'iO!_,

FOURTH &amp; LOCUST

Friday's Games

J

SATURDAY, JAN. 1, 1972

'

McCLURES DAIRY IS~E .,. 1~·

Ohio Cotfege
Basketboll Score•
By United Press tnternationat
Tangerine Bowl Tournament
Miami (Ohio) 69 William &amp;
Mary 67
PalmeHo Classic
Bruin Classic
UCLA 79 Ohio St. 53
Hoosier-Buckeye Tournament
Oefiance 86 Earlham { Ind.) 75
!Champ.)
Bluffton 68 Taylor I Ind.) 67
I Coost .)
Hanover (Ind . ) 76 Findlay 70
iCons. I
Appalachian Classic
W. Va. Tech 73 Ohio Dominican
69 (Champ)
Marshal! !Mich.)
Optimist Classic
Ohio Northern 106 Adrian
IMii:h .l 78 ICons.)

California at Oetrolt
Buffalo at Pittsburgh
!CAlly games scheduled)

r.tiar Aul4

WILL CLOSE
NEW YEAR'S DAY

••

6 26

'

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 31
AND

••

W. L. T. Pt•
Ch icago
25 8
Minnesota
20 II
Dallfornla
II 19
Philadelphia
II IB
Pittsburgh
II 21
Sf . Louis
10 21
Los Angeles
9 26
Thursday's Results
Minnesota 2 Boston 2
{CAlly game scheduled)

Geneva 64 Madison 60
North Ridgeville · 76 Elyria
Catholi c 66
Manchester 66 Buckeye 51
Avon . Lake 63 Cleveland John
Marshall 60
West Geauga 63 Cleve . Cardinal 51
Fairview 62 Napoleon 61
Defiance N Elida 72
Patri ck Henry 104 Leipsic 64
Midpark 52 Willoughby South
38
Sandusky 70 Admiral King 58
Cleve . Holy Name 59 Cleve .

24~

and Sunday -

W. L T. Pts Boston at Cincinnati

Toronto

''

Saturday - New Years Day

Fridiiy's G1mes

East

Boston
Montreal

'

SPECIAL

Chrislrnas guests of Mr. and
HAPPY
Mrs. George Hackett, Sr. were
NEW YEAR
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Shafer and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Hackett and daughter of
•Columbus, Mr. and Mrs. Joe
· Tribble and daughter, Kim, St.
Albims, W. Va. and Dr. and
Mrs. · R. R. Pickens, Midlleport.
Agent
for
Knapp
Here for the holiday weekend
rith Mr. and Mrs. William T. Shoes.
Middleport, 0 .
lrueser and Mrs. Stella
lrueser were Mr. and Mrs.
:obert Jay and Mr. and Mrs.
1011 Grueser. They were joined
" Christmas diilner by Mr.
ICI Mrs. Mike Gerlach.
Christmas guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Brannan were
Clarence Brannan and Mrs.
Grace Weber, West Union, W.
Va ., and Mrs. Clyda Allensworth.
Mr. and . Mrs. Michael
Gerlach were in Marietta
Sunday for the Smith family
reunion and in McConnelsville
Sunday evening for the
Gerlach family get-together.
From there they went to
Columbus for a visit with Mr.
and Mrs.' Robert Jay and Mr.
and Mrs. Don Grueser. On
Chrisirnas eh they were in
Chillicothe to ·visit Mr. and
Mrs. Wendell Gerlach.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Wolfe and
daughter, Wendy, Gallipolis,
Mr. and Mrs. Ada Bradbury,
and Mrs. Evelyn Lewis were
Christmas dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles A. Bradbury.
Mrs. Blanche Gilkey was the
Chris 1mas guest of Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Hess and chlldren,
Middleport, Route 1.

CLIFF'S
Shoe Repair

' J

24 ·.363 17112

14

Pacific Division
W. L. Pet. GB

New York

.~eigh­

to begin a bright New Year. Try it and oee ; • •

.w.

Franklin Heights 88 Tr iad 55
Upper Arlington 62 Washington
CH 58
Coshocton 72 Zanesville 58
Portsm outh 78 Waverly 66
Alexander 131 Well ston 55
Spr ingfield North 91
Springfield Shawnee 53
Lora i n Senior 64 Marion
Harding 53
Toledo Scott 54 Cantoo Lincoln
52

and

Personal Notes

bors w i th a wide smile . That's the richeot woy

. The Virginia Squires will be rebounds for the Colonels while
sorry to see the Carolina Larry Jones led the Floridians
Cougars go.
with 19 points.
Virgini11_ scored its third
Zelmo Beaty's 34 points and
victory over the Cougars in as 24 rebounds and Willie Wise's
many nights Thursday night as 29-point effort helped Utah beat
rookie Julius Erving hit for 33 Denver. Ralph Simpson had 22
points and pulled doWri 22 points for Denver, which lost to
rebounds to highlight a 124-120 the Stars for the 2Qth time in its
lriumph. Charlie Scott added last 21. games.
31 points for the Squires, inDon Freeman and Steve
ABA Standings
cluding a pair of free throws . Jones combined for 19 of By United Press tnternationat
East
with six seconds left that in- Dallas' last 29 points to lift the
w. l. Pet. GB
' Centre Invitational
sured the victory.
Chaps over Memphis in the Kentucky
28
9 .757 ...
Centre I Ky .) 83 Marietta 75
Rookie Jim McDaniels had doubleheader opener. Johnny Virginia
25 15 .625
(Cons . I
17 21 .447 11 112
37 points to lead the Cougars Neumann led the Pros with 23 Floridians
Wooster Classic
New
York
16
21
.432
12
Brockport
{ N. Y. ) 73 Wooster 71
and George Lelunann.added 27. points.
17 25 .405 1311•
Pittsburgh
(Champ .)
In
other
American
Carolina
13 27 .325 161f• Oakland I Mich.) 93 Bethany
West
Basketball Association action,
IW . Va .) 86 iCons.)
Thursday Night
W. L. Pet. GB
the Kentucky Colonels downed
Utah
28
9 .757 ...
Ohio High School
the Floridians, 11!.jl9, while the
Basketball Results
Indiana
22 17 .564 7
AHL Standings
Utah Stars beat the Denver By United Press International Memphi s
16 22 .421 12112
By
United
Press International
Cambridge
81
Tri
Valley
63
Denver
14
21
.400
13
Rockets, 103-98, and the Dallas
East
Dallas
15 24 .385 14
Mt. Vernon 60 Cahanna 39
Chaparrals edged the Memphis Westerv ille 65 Westland 57
w. L. T. Pts
Thursday's Results
Boston
24 6 4 52
Pros, 102-99, in a doubleheader Reynoldsburg 90 Wh itehall 87 Virginia 124 Carolina 120
Nova
Scotia
15 II 9 39
Kentucky
111
Floridians
89
12
otl
at Denver.
Springf ield
13 12 7 33
Bloom Carroll 68 Berne-Union Dallas 102 Memphis 99
Dan Issei scored 42 points, 21
Rochester
12 18 4 28
Utah 103 Oenver 98
45
Providence
9 18 I 26
in each half, as the Colonels Canal Win ches'ter '1"1 ~ Millers- ''· tOnlygam~schediJte)
West
port
64
Friday's
Games
cruised to their eight victory in
W. L. T. Pts
. Linden 80 Cleve . JFK 72
New York at Indiana
the last nine games . Artis Cols
Hershey
16 9 6 38
Kentu cky vs . Carolina
Cols . North 69 Salem 57
Gilmore added 23 points and 19 Delphos St. John 89 Col s
16 13 5 37
At Greensboro Baltimore
Watterson 63

f~ends

•

Middleport

.•,

Put on a· happy face . Greet

J

Mr. and Mrs. Earl R. pound, three ounce daughler ,
DeWees, Middleport Route I, Tracy Louise, on Dec. 14 at the
are anno"!'cing the birth of Holzer Medical Center.
Maternal grandparents are
their first child, an eight
Mrs. Pauleen Tillis and John
Tillis, Pomeroy Route 2, and
paternal grandparents are
Mrs .. Mildred ·DeWees and
Clarence DeWees , both of
Middleport.
A
greatgrandfather is Will Haley ,
Rutland Route 1.

HELL.O

71~7 with 47 seconds left, but
Brockport come back with (our
free tllrows to knot the score at
71-all and John Collins hit his
only basket of the night just
before the buzzer ended the
game.
Brockport's Ron Gilliam was
high with 28 points and his brother Dan, added 19. Ron was

Detroit

•

Ph. 992-2039

of the Hoosier-Buckeye Tournament played at Findlay. In consolation games, Bluffton edged
Taylor (Ind.) ~7 and Hanover
(Ind.) beat Findlay 71&gt;-70.
In the Wooster Classic, Brockport (N.Y.) edged Wooster 7371 for the championship, and
Oakland (Mich.) whipped Bethany (W.Va.) 93-36 in the conS&lt;&gt;Iation game.
In single games Thursday
night, Toledo beat st. Joseph's
(Ind.) 95-78; Cincinnati beat
Kent State 80-67, and Marshall
overcame Ohio U. 88-31.

Deweeses Welcome First Daughter

MODERN SUPPLY

9:00 to 3;00 Daily
Tbuis. &amp; Sal 9:00 to Noon

WAYNE&amp; MASTERS FEEDS
399 W. Main St.
992-2164
Pomeroy, 0.
THE STORE WITH "ALL KINDS OF
STUFF"- FOR PETS, STABLES, LARGE &amp;
SMALL ANIMALS, LAWNS AND GAR[: ENS.

MEIGS OOUNlY BRANCH
THI AfHIHS COUNTY
MVINGS I LOAH CO.
" ' W'.... a.•• -.,, OIJo 81ft

Friday 9:00 to 6:00
.'

.,,

L

�I

•

•

r

.• 1 - The DaUy Sentinel, Mtddleport-Porneroy, 0., Dec. 31,1971

: Get- Together Enjoyed Sunday
•

The traditional ChriStmas
get-together of tile Jewell Story
family was held Sunday at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. John
. Mengel, New Albany, 0
A poUuck dinner was served
at noon . Gifts were exchanged
during the afternoo n. Attending were Mr . and Mrs
Jewell Story, Pomeroy, 1\ D ,

••

•

•

'

It

all

balances!

Just the right
amount of health
and happiness for all
our loyal, friendly patrons.

Goessler's Jewelry Store
Pomeroy

Court St

..,...,_.._.

0

It

_.,_..,

l

Pomeroy....

Mr and Mrs Orvtlle Rhodes,
Racme; Sgt Gary Rhodes, KI
Sawyer. Mtch ; Mr and Mrs.
Francts Story and son, Mark,
Athens , Mr and Mrs Eugene
Story and son, Cla1r, Marysvt lle, and Mr an d Mrs.
Mengel, Ketth, Debra and
Linda

.,

J

Mr . and Mrs. Rtcha rd
DeMoss and chlidren of
Covington, Ky. , were overmght
guests !If Mrs. Earl Thoma a nd
chtldren thts week. They carne
for the funeral servtces of
James Sayre , Wednesday
mormng at the Ewmg Funeral
Horne Mrs. DeMoss is the
former Esther Hawley.
Mr and Mrs Bob Grueser
spent several days last week
wtth his parenls, Mr and Mrs.
Karl Grueser. They also visited
Mr . and Mrs. Henry Ftscher at
Wtlhamstown, W Va. before
returmng to th etr horn e
Crooksville
Mr. and Mrs Karl Grueser
and Mrs Welby Whaley spent
Chmtrnas
weekend
in
Colurnbus visiting Mr and
Mrs. Pat Qumn and chtldren,
Cmdy and Pat, and Mr. and
Mrs Jack McDowell
Mr and Mrs Aaron Kelton
,.ere Chnstrnas holiday guesls
of her stster anrl brother-inlaw, Mr and Mrs. George
Shtveler, Jr and Jayne, Cmcmnatt Dmner guests of the
Keltons at thetr Mmersvtlle
home Tuesday evening were
Mr and Mrs. Charles Cohen
and Mr and Mrs . Frank
Stsson, Angte , Mar¢y and
Amy On Wednesday the
Keltons enterlamed Mr and
Mrs Herschel Rose and Mtke
and Mr and Mrs Delmar
Canaday . The Canadays and
Mr. and Mrs. E. F Robmson
were guesls at the Keltons on
Sunday
Mrs. Roy Wmebrenner and
Mrs El12abeth Merrett had
several guesls over the holiday
weekend mcludmg Mrs. Mary
Weaver and Peggy of St.
Lomsvtlle, Ohw ; Mr and Mrs
Garry French and son, Garry,
Jr, Dayton , Mr. and Mrs
Wilham Gordon Winebrenner,
Mary Ann , Paula Sue, and
Becky, and Mr. and Mrs
Tommy Weaver, New Haven;
Sunday
afternoon
vtsitors were Mrs. Joe
Rolhns , Mrs. Fred Bnnk,
er, Letart, W. Va ., Mrs
Lmda Clark and famtly, New

Haven, W Va

i

• '· . ' '

Wltot's all the
noise about? We want
to wish our friends and
neighburs

tbe

greotest joy and

fun-filled New Yeor ever, and express our gratitude

SUGAR RUN MILLS
180 Mulberry Ave. 992-2115 Pomeroy

4 30 P m , Ch 6

Dr and Mrs. M. K. Fugate
and son, Frank, · of Athens
jomed Mr and Mrs. Frank
Fugate for Chnslmas dmner
Other guests were Mr. and
Mrs 0 P. Klem Dr. and Mrs
Fugate provtded the dmner
Mr and Mrs. Ray E Gtbbs
spent Christmas m Columbus
with their granddaughter, B. J .
Swan and children, Tim, Jack
and Tanya Jayne.
Hobday guests of Mrs W A
Morgan were Mr. and Mrs R
L Gotthardt and son, Bruce,
Colurnbus, Mr and Mrs. Roger
Morgan and daughter, Kathy,
and Mr and Mrs . Ketth
Morgan Ketth ts teaching at
the Ohw
Inslttute
of

going to be a long afternoon 11 p.m , Ch ~~
Adventur es
And evening
of Don Juan, 11 30 p.m , Ch
If you hate parades 1t's 10
Tnple feature " War

going to be a long mo;n 1ng path ," "Mr. Blandmgs Builds
' His Dr.~am , House, "

And if you hate both, you
probably need a second set
cable TV connection
+ + +
The parades first· There's
the Rose Bowl -Orange Bowl
spe&lt;:1al at 10 a m Chs 2 &amp; 7

Carr,

Grant, Mr &amp; Mrs Sm1fh,
Myrna Loy, slarts at II 30
P m • Ch 4
+ + +
SUNDAY, JAN. 2
Okay. now that you' ve had a
good heavy dose of college

and the Tournam~nt of RoseS football , let's look m on the
P evlew at the same t 1me on pros today, as the Super Bowl
C 1.

a. Then the Tournament of

After that , the bowl games· take on the San Franctsco
The Sugar Bowl , wtfh two of 49ers at 4 p.m., Ch 8.

After fhJS, the Super Bowl

time, kicks thtngs off at noon, and not much else -

un tll

Ch . 12, as Oklahoma (10 1) about June.
+ + +
meets Auburn (9 1)
The Cotton Bowl comes Fred Taylor, OSU coach,
next, with Penn State, the will h1ghilghf the Buckeyes
class of lhe East taking on the appearances wtfh UCLA In
Texas

Buy AGood Used Car
At Riggs Bros.
69 Ford LTD ..................s1895

Longho~ns (8 -2) at Californta on hts weekly show,

Dallas. 1 45 p m , Ch . 8. (At noon, Ch 4
the same time, Chs 2 &amp; 7 are
+ + +

carrying a Rose Bowl game
And there's a reltgtous news
preview )
spectal wh1 ch focuses on the
The Rose Bowl. with mator events m the world of

Michigan - that team so dear re l1g1on and churches at 10
to the hearts of every Buckeye a.m • Ch 10.
- lak&lt;ng lis perfect record up
+ + +
agamst Stanford wh1ch IS If you saw "The S1x W1ves of
mucn better than ;ts 8 3 mark Henry VIII " on CBS lasl
indicates. "' 45 p.m , Chs 2 &amp; summer, you saw a great
7
series of TV pr~rams
And finally the b1g one
Now, the senes IS being
The Orange Bowl. and a crack repea ted on public television.
at the national title for the 1n a slightly longer versmn
year, as unbeaten Nebraska and without some of the cuts
and unbeaten Alabama slug It wh1 ch CBS had to make for
out tor lhe top of the heap. a commercials In 12 parts. tf 's
p m., Chs. 2 &amp; 7.
appearance on "Masterpiece
++ +
Theatre" should be welcome
If, as 'noted, you can't stand mid-winter fare
indee.d
lhe parades and football (frank ly, we missed parts of tf
games, we'd note thatCh. 61s durtng the summer) 9 p m ,
showing movies all afternoon Ch. 11.
after the Sugar Bowl (listings f SUN D A~ ++M0 V 1E S
below).
and
Marshall
,.
basketball highlights are on "Confidentially Conme, Van
Ch. 2 at 4: 15p.m. (should be Johnson, 8 a.m .,Ch. _10 .. . " I
good wlfh MU doing so well'tn Am a Fuglflve. wtfh Paul
the Milwaukee Cl&amp;sslc) .
Mun1, not Dav1d Janssen,
But even lawrence Welk 11 · 30 p.m • Ch 10 (Some
has bowl fever,asthernaestro other films w111 be shown.
devotes his show lo the big depending on the conclusion of
Stanford-Michigan shootout at the fool ball games, on Chs. 2 &amp;
Pasadena. 3:30 p.m., Ch 7, 7 I
+ + +
7
MONDAY, JAN. 3
and p. m.,+C~ ~·
SATURDAY MOVIES·
Jonathan W1nters, one of
"Highly Dangerous," Dan~ TV's funniest men, s~ows up
Cltrl&lt;, 3 p.m ., Ch . 6 ... "The on Virginia Graham s show
- . . ..
.... .... . •_-- ~- lnd.R~v at 2 o.m .• Ch. 6.

OFFICE SUPPLIES
Including
ledgers.
ledger sheets, post
binders.
columnar
pads. inventory pads.
expanding files. li le
folders, etc.

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE

happy and
prosperous

New Year.

SYLVIA'S UPHOLSTERING
Mrs. Woodrow T. Zwilling, Prop:
SYRACUSE, OHIO

Milisa Rizer, Honored Queen
Dec. 30
Each of the mslalhng of-

fleers were gtven carnations
wtth mtmature ga vels lied wttil
red
and green nbbon and
ll I I
nettmg, an d Mrs. Rizer
rece tved a red rose corsage
and Mr Rtzer a red rose
boutonmere from Mthsa. A
corsage was also presented to
Mrs. Fmlaw . Davtd Krawsczyn
gave a red rose corsage to the
new honored queen
The red and green colors
were earned out m the lable
decoratwns for a soctal Hour
whtch followed. Centermg the
table was a cross replica mscnbed wt th Mtss Rtzer's
theme for her retgn, "Loyalty
to God lS the Hope of the
World " Replicas of a cornucopta, a dove and a gavel
were featured on the cake.
Punch, nuts and mmts were
served wtth the cake by Mrs .
Rose Ann Sebo and Mrs Lela
Curbs.
The guardtan counctl ts

'f t

,,

c§j~~
with towering hopes for
peak happiness and
health. And, top them off with thanks from us.

OHIO VAu.EY PWMBING &amp; HEATING
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Edward Baer &amp; Associates
POMEROY, OHIO

J!appy New Year to All

70 CADILLAC
'Loaded with all Cadillac extras

70 OLDSMOBILE 98,

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

4 Dr . sedan. loaded with e xtras.

2 Dr . H. T .• air condition , like new.

6 Cyl. . standard.

68 Buick .........................$1695Skylark. 4 dr .

67 Buick ........................s1295

USED CARS
69 Ford XL Convertible, air ............... ~ 11695
69 Olds 98 H. T. Sedan, air............. '2995

Skylark . 2 dr. H. T.

69 Olds 88 Holiday Coupe, air .. •.... •.. • '2295

69 Chevrolet ...................sf395

68 Olds 98 4 Dr. H.T., air................. '1995
68 PIJ. Barracuda 2 Dr. H.T. ... .. •.. .. .. • '1295
'
67 Chevelle Malibu 2 Dr. H.T. ...... .... 11195

2 Dr.

68 Chevrolet. ................. s1295
Super Sport. auto .• 2 dr ., vinyl top.

67 Mercury.................... s1095

67 Pontiac Catalina 4 Dr. Sedan, Air .... 11195
66 Olds 88 4 Door ........... :.......... : '895
.
.
66 Mercury Sta. Wagon, V-8 auto.......... '795

Monterey 4 dr .. air conditioning .

66 Ford............................. s395
Pickup Truck, 'h ton. 6 cyl.

61 Ford ............................ s595
Pick-up Truck, real nice 112 ton, long wide bed .
SEE: RAY RIGGS, AL ZEIGLER

RIGGS BROS., INC.
USED CARS
Ph. 985-41'00

.....

·- -

66 Buick LaSabre 4 Door, air ............. 11095
1
65 Oldsmo~ile 98 4-Door
795
65 Mercury Station Wagon, air ........... . '695
66 Comet 2 Dr. H.T., V-8 std............. '695
65 Olds 98 4 Or. H.T., air-.~ .............. '595

·······"

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
"You'll Like Our Quality Way •
of Doing Busiriess"
992-5342
GMC FINANCING
POMEROY
'
.
Ooen Eveninas Until 6; 0()-- Til 5 P.M, Sat.

M. W. COMPTON.
0. D.
' OPTOMETW .

OFFICE HOUR.S9 : ~0 TO 12,2 T0 .5 (CLOSE
•AT NOON ON THURS".l - EAST COURT ST .•
POMEROY.

70 BUICK ELECTRA 225 ·
' 4 Dr. , H. T., yellow with black vinyltop. loaded "
with extras .

66 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS
4 Dr .. H.T. , extra sharp.

69 FORD GALAXIE 500
4 Dr ., H.T., V-8, P. S .• P.B .• factory air/ vinyl
lop .
1

70 CHEVROLET Pickup T'lick

GSeeGiivRbLEtPi~k~ P Tr~~k
8

Long wicfe bed , V-8, 3 speed .

66 CHEVROLET Pickup
Long narrow bed .
•

"

a Sermonette

Bring in the year

70 MAVERICK

.,

SELECT

Friends
a very
•

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.....

m
Su nd a y eva ngel tsllc
FIRST SOUTHERN BAP- pmee
t mg. 1 30 p m Praye r
- 182 Mulberry Ave, meet ing WednP.srl rw 7 30 p m
POMEROY ,..lfiNl rY - Rev. Ti$T
.•
Pomeroy.
with S B C ,
W 1-f. Perrin, pastor Roy the Rev affiliated
Fred
Hill,
pastor
Mayer, Supt. Church school ,
School. 9 30 am ; ~AS® COUNTY '
9 l5a.m.; worshlp, 10 24a m , Sunday
mornmg
worship,
30 a. m i
THE HILAND CHAPEL,
, youth choir rehearsal Monday, jUnior SOCiety, 6. 30 10
a
m
NYPS,
:;eorge
Casto, pastor Sunday
6 30 p. m.; Mrs. Marvin Burt,
6 45 p m Sunday evangelistic School, 9· 30 ; eventng worship,
d~rector ;
sen1or
cholr
7 30 p m Prayer 7 30 Thursday eveni.ng prayer
rehearsal, 7. 30 p m , Thursda y, meetmg,
Wednesday,
7 30 o m
meetmg
servtce. 7 30 p.m
Mrs Paul Nease. director. All
MASON FIRST BAPTIST day quilling party for llusy Bee
MIDDLEPORT
Class, Thursda y, at church
and Pomeroy Sis , Stan
MT. MORIAH BAPTIST- Second
.social room .
Cratg,
pastor
Sunday Sl'hool,
.:orner Fourth and Ma1n,
PO~EROY ·cHURCH vr Middleport. Rev Henry L Key. 9 45 a.m' worship ser-.!~e. 11
THE NAZARENE - Corner Jr , pastor . Sunday School 9. 30 am , training union, 6 3$p.m.,
Union and Mulberry Rev a m., Arnold Richards, supt. ; evening worsh1p service, 7 30
p.m Mid-week prayer service,
Clyde V. Henderson, pastor M~rnlng worsh1p 10 30 a m.
Wednesday, 7:30p.m
Sunday School 9 30 a m ,
CHRISTIAN
SCIENCE
JEHOVAH'S
WITNESSES
Raymond Walburn , supt
Morning worship 10· 30 a m , La rry Carnahan presiding ServiCeS at 315 Matn St , Pt
Etenmg serv1ce 7 30 p m M1d m1n1ster Sunday, B1ble lecture, Pleasant, Sunday School 9 15
week servlce, Wednesday, 7 JO 9. . 30 a m , Watchtower study, a.m . Sundays, 11 a.m ; Wed·
10 30 a m. , Tuesday, Bible nesday, tesftmon1al meef&lt;ng 8
p m
p.m. All welcome
st~dy
. 7 30 p m , Thursday,
GRACE EPISCOPAL - Rev
FAIRVIEW lllllLE CHURCH
StanleY Plattenburg , m1mster mm1st ry school 7 30 p m ,
- Letart Route 1. the Rev Stan
Morning prayer and sermon , serv~ce meet1ng 8 30 p. m
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH Cra1g, pastor Sunday schooL
10 30 a m Holy commun1on
of
Chnst tn Ch(istian Union- 9 30 am prayer and Btble
and sermon, f1rst Sundays,
10 30 a. m Church school. Lawrence Manley, pastor ; Mrs. study, 7 30 p m Cottage prayer
kindergarten through eighth Russell Young, Sunday School service . Tuesday , 10 a .m .
Sup I Sunday School 9 30 a m , worship service, Fnday, 7 30
grade, 10· 30 a m.
POMEROY CHURCH OF Evenmg worship 7 30 Wed 0 m
MASON
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST - Mr . Hoyt Allen, Jr , 1esday or aver meetmg, 7 30 p.
CHRISTLoren
T.
Stephens,
pastor Bible School , 9 30 a m ,
minister. Worship, 10 a.m.,
worship, 10. 30; adult worsh1p
MIDDLEPORT PEN
serv1ce and . YOUIJJ:I peoples TECOSTAL, Third Ave, the Bible study, 11:15a m. ; evenmg
meeftng, both 7 30 p m Sun- Rev Wilham Kmttel, pastor . worship, 7:30 p.m. Mid-week
day Wednesday , com b1 ned Ronald Dugan, Sunday school servtce. Wednesday, 7 30 p.m B1 ble study and prayer supt Classes for all aQes, MASON ASSEMBLY ()f
mee ting, 7 30 p m
eventng se rv1 ce, 7 JO p m GOD - Second Sf , Mason , W
THE SALVATION ARMY - Young
peoples meeting , Va Chester Tennant, pastor
Envoy Ray S Wlmng , oft1cer 10 Wednesday, 8 p m , B1ble Sunday school , 10 a. m '
cJlarge -~~ Q~~x~!.Q -~ • study, Fnday, 8 p m
mornmg worshtp, 11. a m.,
Holmess meetmg ; 10 JO a m
evangeltst1c serv1ce, 7. 30 P m
Sunday School Young People's
FREE Wl L L BAPT l ST B1bie study and prayer service,
Legion, 7 p m , Thursday, 1 to 3 CHURCH - Cor9er Ash and 7W
7e3d5nle3s3day , 7 30 p. m Phone
p m , Lad1es Home League, 7 Plum , Mtddleoort·
Noel
. .
o. m. Prep ~lilsses.
_
Herrman, pastor; Guy Priddy,
HARTFORD CHURCH OF
SACRI;D HEART - Rev Sunday School Supt Saturday CHRIST m Chnsttan Un1on Father Bernard KraiCO VIc,_ evenmg serv1ce, 7 p m Sunday Rev O' Dell Manley, pastor
pa stor
Phone
992-2825, School . 10 a. m , Sunday Sundayschool , 9 30a m , Roger
Saturday eventng Mass, 7 30 evenmg worsh ip, 7 p m
Manley, supt , evenmg service,
Wednesday even ng
7 30
p m Sunday Mass, 8 and 10
FIRST BAPTfSf CHURCH of prayer meef&lt;ng , 7 30 p 1m
a m ConfessiOnS, Saturday 7
Middleport, corner of Sl xlh and Sunday evening youth service
7J1 pm
Palmer Streets, Rev Charles 6 45 with Macy Lou Carter.
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST S1m ons ,
pastor
Danny
-·Robert Kuhn , pastor. George Thompson , Sunday School leader No Tuesday se rvice
CHRISTIAN
SCIENCE
Sktnner, Sunday School supt Superintendent Sunday
Serv1ces,
315
Ma1n
St , Pt
Sunday School. 9 30 a m ; church school for everyone
mornmg worsh1p, 10 30 a m , 9 15 a.m .• Morning worship Pleasant Sunday services, 11
BYF , 6 p m , B&lt;ble Study 10 15 a.m ; Evenmg serv1ces, am. Wednesday Tesflmon1al
Wednesday 7 p m , cho1r 7 30 p m , Wednesday prayer meetma. 7 JO o.m .
,11ractice. Wed , 8 .39_11...!!b
service. 7 30 p m E)(tra youth MEIGS COUNTY
ST. PJ.lUL LUTHERAN - acllv1tles on Sunday, 5 p.m , for
MEIGS
Rev . Art~ur C. L~nd, pastor all youth up to s1xlh grade ; 6· 30
Sunday School , 9 15 a m , for jumor and semor h1gh
COOPERATIVE
Charles Evans, Supt , worship students
service, 10 30 a m Con
PARISH
for maf •on class, Tuesday, 4 15
CHURCH OF CHRIST,
THE UNITED
lo 5 30 p m , J untor Con. Middleport, 5th and Ma1n .
METHODIST
CHURCH
f1 rmat 1on class, Thursday, 6 30 Raulln Moyer, pastor M1chaet
Robert R. Card, Director
to 7 45J1 m
Gerlach, Sunday School supf
POMEROY CLUSTER
- SEVE"NTH DAY ADVENT-- Bible School. 9· 30 am , mor
Rev Robert R. Card
TIST - Pomeroy, Mulberry nlng wor ship, 10 30 a m ,
Rev . Stanten Sm1th
Hgts Herbert Morgan, pastor evening worship, 7 30 p m ,
CHESTER - Worship 9 15 a
Sabbath School , Saturday , 2 p prayer se rv1ce 7 p m Wed
m , Church School 10 a m
m , worsh1p, 3 15 p m. Dorcas nesday
ENTERPRISE - Worship, 9
Soc!elfAIOa. m. each.Thursda:L_
a
m , Church School , 10 a m
'GRA M UNITED METH .
A thought for today. Brittsh
FLATWOODS
- Worshtp, II
OOIST CHURCH - Preachtng
a
m
,
Church
School
10 a m
Sydney
Srntth
satd,
writer
9 30 a m , first and second
POMEROYW
orshtp,
Sundayj of each month , th&lt;rd "When you rise m the rnormng, a m .. Chur ch School 9 15 a.10m30.
and Iou- th Sundays tech month form a resolution to make tile UMYF 6 30 p m.
worsh i ~ servlc:e at 7: 30 p m
SPRINGS - Worsh1p
Wednesday evenings at 7 3C day a happy one for a fellow lOaROCK
.
m
.
Church
School9a. m ,
Prayer and Bible Studv
creature "
UMYF 6 30 p m
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
Rev Robert Bumgarner
HEATH - Worshtp 10 30 a
m , Church School 9 30 a m
UMYF 7 p m
RUTLAND - Worshlp 9 IS a
m , Church School 10 a m ,
UMYF 7 p m
SALEM CENTER - Worshop
By R. Eugene Gill, Pastor
9 a m , Church School lOa m ,
Laurel aHf Free Melhodtst Church
UMYF Thursday, 7 p m
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
ASPIRITIJAL EXAMINATION
Rev Forrest R. Donley
In Cor. 13:5 tile Apostle Paul admonishes the Cortnthians to
ASIIURY - Worshlp 11 a m .
examme themselves as to whether they be m the Faith. Let me
Ch urch School 9 50 a m :
set before you a few questions based on the word of God to help WSCS, 1st Tuesday
FOR EST RUN- Worshtp 9 a
you examine yourself.
'Tl •• Church School 10 a. m .
WSCS. 3rd Wednesday, 7 30 p
· - Am I striving to please God in all thmgs' Ps. 66 :16.
m
-Am I cultivating a constant awareness of tile Presence of
MINERSVILLE - Worsh1p
God' Gen. 16 :13
10 a m . Church School 9 a m
- Do I really love the scriptures more than any other book' WSCS, 3rd Monday, 7 30 p m
..SYRACUE - Worship, 8 a
Ps 1:2.
m.; Church School. 9 a. m ,
- Do I live In the Spll'it of Prayer1 Eph . 6 .16.
Prayer and Bible Study ,
Wednesday, 7 30 p. m
- Do I really deny myself for Olrist's sake1 Mk . 6:34.
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
- Do I relish religious conversalton 1 Mal. 3:16.
Rev. W. Dale McClurg
- Do I have upon my heart tile burden of lost souls1 Jer. 9:1.
Rev. Frank Cheesebrew
Rev Martha Ann Mattner
- Do I remember the Sabbath day and keep it Holy1 Exo.
tSt.• t1ANY
(Dorcas)
20 :8.
Worship, 9 30 a. m.; Church
- Am I living each day In a state of preparation to meet God 1 School 10 30 a m
CARMEL - Worship, 11 a.
Amos 4:12.
m., 1st and 3rd Sundays ,
-Am I Sptrit led1 Rom. 8:13-14.
Church Schoo.[, .!l!...!!, _m~
APPLE GROVE - Worship.
''Think on these thmgs! "
7 30 p m., church school , 9 30
a m , m1d week serv1 ce,
Wednesday , 8 p m

POMERCY

Customers and

4 Dr . H. T .• vinyl lop, turquoise .

' . _ _ _ . _ ... - - I'!

GOOD .

, CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
RENE - Middlepor t, Rev.,
AUdry Mtller, pastor . • .uyu
Carson, supt Sunday r schooL
9· 30 a m ,
/W&gt;rnmg worship, 10 30 am , ! unior
!QCtety, 6 30 pm , NYP o&lt;l\, 4~

We Want To Wish All

VI contenders are p1cked

Roses Parade 1fself at 11 :30 The. Balflmore Colts and
a .m.. Ch a. and the Cotton Mtamt Dolphtns go after the
Bowl Parade on Chs 2 &amp; 7. AFC crown at 1 p.m , Chs 2 &amp;
+ + +
7, while the Dallas Cowboys
the great also ran teams of all

Off

IN TRAINING
US. Air Force Sgt. Gary M.
Rhodes, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Orville Rhodes, Racine Route
I, took part m a three week
tratning exercise at Tyndall
Air Force Base, Florida. Sgt.
Rhodes is an aircraft maintenance specialist with tile 87th
Fighter Interceptor Squadron
at tile K. I. Sawyer Air Force
~se in Michigan, Sgi. Rhodes
returned from Florida in time
to spend tile Christmas holiday
season at his hom.e •

HOFFMAN CONFINED
Kenny Hoffman , son of Mr.
and Mrs. Perry Hoffman,
Middleport, ts confined to
Room 122 at Veterans
Memorial Hospttal. Hoffman
was adrnttted to the hospital
Thursday morning for treatment of injuries suffered tn an _
automobtle accident near
Athens He reportedly collided
with another vehtcle after he
swerved to avoid htttmg an
antmal in the roed. Hoffman
was enroute to his employment
at Bremen.

'

gra nd
mast er , Twelfth
Masomc Dtstrtct; Mr. and Mrs
Harry Chesher, worthy matron
and worthy patron of
E~angehne 1 , ~~apter , 0, ~ S
Mtddlepor!, and Mrs Uorothf
Woodard, worthy ma tron of
Pomeroy Chapter
Mrs .
Chesher and Mrs Woodard
regtstered the guesls.
Mrs .
Debbte
F tnlaw ,
guardt a n of th e BeJhel ,
Technology and hts wife at- presented a pas t honor ed
tends Ohto Umverstty.
quee n's nng to Brenda Taylor
Mr and Mrs . Bert Gnmrn, wh o tn turn presented a gtft to
Lelart Falls, spent Chnslmas her and Paul Darnell,
weekend wtth Mr. and Mrs assoctate guardian pro tern.
Russell Gnmrn and chtldren Mtss Rtzer presented a Btble to
Paula and Davts, St Clatrs- Mtss Taylor from lhe Bethel
vtlle. Thts week the Russell and also a personal gtlt.
Gnrnrn famtly and Mr and
Frankhn RIZer II, student at
Mrs Robert Grunm, Steve, the Atr Force Academy m
Chmty and Amy of Columbus Colorado, gave a dozen red
vtsited here wtth thetr parenls. roses to h1 s sts ter 1 and
presen ling the new honored
queen wtth a gavel was her
father. She also recetved a gtft
from the Betheltn observance.
of her birthday anmversary,

WzthA Bang

"Walk the

If you hate football , it's Dark Street," Ch~.ck Connors.

too

Mihsa Rtzer, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Franklin Rizer , .,.
mstalled as honored q~t· , of
Bethel 62, International Order
of Job's Daughters, in
ceremonies Thursday mght at
the Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Other elected officers mstalled by Brenda Taylor,
retiring honored queen of the
Bethel, were Leanne Sebo,
semor prmcess ; Path Well,
juntor prmcess; Diana Carsey,
gmde ; and Cathy Rayburn,
marshal
Asstsbng Miss Taylor wtth
the mstallatton were Irene
Barnes, gutde; Twila Clatworthy , marshal; Becky
Anderson, chaplam ; Mtckey
Wolfe, semor custodian; Annette
Warner,
]Umor
custodtan; Jennifer Butcher,
recorder;
Kathy
King,
mustctan, and Sherry King,
flagbearer . Solotst was Linda
Mayer whose selection was
"You'll Never Walk ' Alone."
All of the gtrls makmg up tile
mstalhng team are past
honored queens of the Bethel.
Appomted offtcers mslalled
were Eltzabeth Blaettnar,
chaplatn; Jill Houdashelt,
recorder ; Debbte Taylor,
treasurer; Patty Warner, ftrst
messenger ; Mehssa Thomas,
second messenger; Brenda
Stanley, third messenger;
Brenda
Hayes,
fourth
messenger ; Sandy Curtis, fifth
messenger; Mary Blaettnw,
libranan; Trudy Roach, senior
custodtan; Debra Hartenbach,
JUntor custodtan ; Tammy
Sayre, tnner guard; and Jackie
Carsey, outer guard .
Chotr members mstalled
we re Angte Stsson, Carla
Cnsp, Ktm Sebo, Paula
Etc htnger , Becky Thomas ,
Vtckt Kelly, Vanessa Folmer
and Ka thy Hams.
Among the dtstm gmshed
guests mtroduced were Paul
Darnell , ass octate grand
guardtan of the .(ir.afl\1. ~~) , ,
of Ohto; Btll Bauman of
Belpre , assoctate guardtan of
Bethel 65 and grand semor
custodtan ' Ben Phtlson, deputy

Start The New Year

CALL POINTVIEW: 992· 2505
SATURDAY JAN. 1

i isa Rizer Is
ew ueen

Personal Notes

co mp osed of Mrs. Finla w,
guardtan ; Tom Edwards,
assoctate guardian ; Joan
Rayburn, g~~ardtan secretary;
Mrs. Carolyn Thomas, , guardtan treasurer; and Mrs. Rose
Ann 5ebo, directress of mu, tc,.
The associate guardian council
lS made up ot Mrs. Florence
Well, promoter of sociability;
Mrs. Rizer, promoter of
paraphernalia ; Mrs . Peggy
Taylor, .
promoter
of
hosptlality; and Mrs. Betty
Fultz, directress of finance.

4

'

Tru~ck
1
I

64 CHEVROLET Pickup Truck
70 HORNET
6 Cyl., standard, 4 dr . sedan.

67 CAMARO
""

•

.••.
••

..

--

•

r

EAST LETART - Worship,
10 a.m., f1rst and th1rd Sundays ,
9 a m , second and fourth
Sundays, ohurch school, 9 a m ,
first and third Sundays , 10 a m..
second and fourth Sundays
Mid week serv ice, Wednesday,
8p m

GREAr BEND- Worsh1p 11
a m , 2nd and 4th Sundays .
Church School, 10 a m.
LETART FALLS- Worship

. .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - · 10 MORNING
a. m , Church
School
9a m
STAR
- Worship
9. 30 a m ; Church School tO· 30
a m ; MidWeek Service .
Wednesday, 8 p. m
MORSE CHAPEL - Worship
11 a. m , lsi and 3rd Sundays ,
Church School. 10 a m.
PORTLAND - Worship 7. 30
p. m , Church School 9· 30 a. m
SUTTON - Worship, 11 a. m
CALL POINTVIEW : 992 -2 505
2nd and 4th Sundays, Church
School 10 a m
WESLEYAN (Raconel Worship, 11 a m.; Church
School, 10 a m.
FRIDAY, DEC. 31
UMYF for all churches of the
Somehow, I can't gef very
Remember last week ,
Southern Cluster, 7 30 p. m
when we adv1sed you to turn exc ited about the Astrp
off your TV set, on cable or Bluebonnel Bowl tonight at each Sunday at the Youth
Center (Oak Grove Road.)
no1, and spend Christmas Eve 7 30 p m., Ch. 8. Colorado (9-2)
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
with your family , really beat Ohio State. bul that's
Rev. ~acob Lehman
about
all
I
know
about
them,
talking and hav ing fun , and
_
Rev.
Standley llrandum
and
I
kn
ow
even
less
about
thinking about the real
JOPPA
- Worship 10 a m ,
Hous
ton
(also
9·21.
meaning of Christmas?
Church School 9 a m ; Prayer
Daky, this week, reverse
Meeting, Wednesday. 8 p. m.
If you want lo ring oul the
that. Instead of getting
Old
Year
traditionally,
there's
LONG BOTTOM - Church
bombed at a party, on lhe
special
wl
th
Guy
Lombardo
services,
9 a.m. ; Sunday School
a
highway (God forbid!) or In
your own ll~lng room, why not (who else?) starting at 11:30 9: 45 a. m. Bible study every
Thursday, 7 30 p.m.
see 1972 op~n up on a note that p.m·, Ch. 8.
NORTH BETHEL- Worship
And
If
you
want
to
ring
In
can be festive and merry , If
11li.
rn .• Church School lOa. m.
the
New
Year
unlradltlonally,
sober
talcoholl-cally
ALFRED - Sunday schodl,
speaking). Turn on the TV and Oral Roberts has a New
Year's special , starting al 1 9 45 am . each Sundayt
let 'er rlpl
preaching at 11 a.m. each
am .
Sunday.
Prayer meeting, 7· 45
If you need a reminder,
p.m Wednesday, WSCS, 8 p.m
check In wtfh " The High Cost
MOVIES : Lots of them
of Accidents" on C)l. 10 at 7·30 today : "Savage Wilderness," on third Tuesday each monlh
REEDSVILLE - Sunday
p m Agoodnlghttoseeagood 4p, m , Ch. 10 ... "The ~lsha
show
.
Boy," Jerry Lewis, 9:30 p.m., school. 9 30, preaching, 7:30
· •
,
I Ch. 10 ... " Sunday In New
p m. Sunday , prayer meeting,
One of the nicer musicals York" 1 a.m ., Ch . 10 ... And 7: 30 p m Tuesday , WSCS, 7:30,
ever made Is the Roj:lgers and there's a quintuple featur~ Jlrsf ,Thurs!iay each mOl''"
.
Hammersteln production of lined up on Ch. 2, starting ~~
SILVER RIDGE - Worsh1p,
"Cinderella," which will be 11:30 p.m, and running until
10 a. m. ; Church School, 9 a m.
rerun on Ch 10 at 8 p.m. Not 1972 IS bout six hours old .
TU PPE&lt;RS 1 , P~AtNS '. _.._ ._ ..,_........ nl.aaunt
Worshlo 9 a m

•

KENO CHURCH. OF CHRIST
- Hobart Newell, supt Serv1ces•
Neekly, 9 30 ~. m on Su nday
Prea chtng ftr st an d th1rd
Sundays of month by Clifford

HEM L 0 C K
G R0 VE
CHRISTIAN _ Da vid Stauffer,
pas tor, Stanford Stockton, sup!
Mormng worsh1p, 9 30 a m ,
chur ch sc hool, 10 . 30 a m ,
Smith, 9 JO a rn
young peoples meetmg , 6 30
HOBSON
CHRISTIAN pm , eventng worship, 7 30.
UNION _ Darrel Ooddril l. Bible study , Wednesda y, 7 30
om
pastor Sun'day School. 9 30 a
m , Annie Mohler, su pt ..
Leonard Gtlmore, f~rst elder .
MT. UNION BAPTIST ~venlng serv1ce. 7 30 p m Rev
Cecil Cox, pastor Sunday
Wednesday prayer meeltng , school SuPf , Joe Sayre Sunda y
,7:"30 ~ - m.
sc hoo l, 9 4S a m.; Sund ay
M'CMORIAH CHUR!;H OF evenmg worship, 7· 30 Wed.
GOO - Racine Route 2 The nes day prayer and Bible study,
Rev Charles Ha'nd. pastor . 7 30 p m
Sunday school , 9 45 a .m '
TUPPERS
PLAINS
morning worsh ip, 11 P m
Evening services, Tuesday and CHRISTIAN CHURCH -Mr
Fnday, 7 30
__
John Wyatt, pastor: J S. Dav1s
BEARWALLOW RIDGE Sunday School supt , Sunday
hool, 9 30 a m., Morn1ng
CHURCH OF CHRIST - Dav1d sc
Sermon
Jewell , pastor Btble study , 9 30 se rmon,, 710p 30m a m Evenmg
am , morning worshtp, 10 30,
evening worship, 6 30 p m
LETART FALLS UNITED
Wednesday • B1ble study , 7 30 BRETHREN ~ Rev Robert
Shook, pastor ; Herschel N.orns;
P m.
UNITED MINISTRY .OF supl Sunday school, 9 30 a.m ,
MEIGS COUNTY. The Un~ted mormng sermon , 10· 30 a .m ,
Presbyt~rtan Church, Dw1ghf evemng sermon , 7 30 alter
l. Zavtfz, Paslnr Dtrecfor, nating each Sunday . Prayer
George W Hutton , Ass'f serv1ce, Wednesday, 7 30 p.m
Pastor 01rector .
FIRST Prayer meeting, 7:30 p m.
UNITED
PRESBYTERIAN, alternating Sundays.
Harrisonville. Sunday Church
School. 9 30 a.m ., Mrs Homer
CHESHIRE CHURCH OF
Lee, Supt, Mornmg Worship GOD. OF PROPHECY, G p
10· 30 a.m. FIRST UNITED Sm&lt;fh, pastor. Sunday School,
PRESBYTERIAN, Mtddleport. lOa m.. Arthur Henson, Supt ,
Sunday Church School. 9 30 Morn1ng Worsh1p 11 a m ,
a.m. , Lew1s ~auer, Supt, Youn9 Peoplesserv1ce, 7 p. m,
Mornma Worsh1o 10 30 a.m. Evenmg serv1ce, 7 30 p. m ,
FIRST
UNITED
PRES- Wednesday M1d Week Prayer
IIYTERIAN, Syracuse. Morn Serv1ce, 7 30 p m
mg Worship, 9 30 , a.m , meetmg, 6 30 p m. , EVenTnQ
Sunday-Church School 10 am , worsh1p, 7 30 o m.
Mrs Sam~el Hall. Supt
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE
STIVERSVILLE
COM -- NAZARENE - Rev Herbert
MUNITY, Rev. Edsel Hart, Grate, pastor Worsh1p serviCe,
pastor Sunday School service 11 am and 7·30p m Sunday
10 a m Prayer Meeting each Sunday School, 9 30 a m
Thursday 7 30 P m Sunday R1chard Barton, supt Prayer
evenmg service, 7.30 p m
_
- rpeetmg, Wednesd~y , 7:30o m.
BRADFORD CHURCH OF
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST CHRIST - Cl1fford Sm&lt;fh,
- Pomeroy Harnsonvllle mm1ster Sunday School 9 30 a
Road Kenneth Eberts, pastor m , mornmg chvrch 10 30 a
Paul
Mc Elroy,
Sunday m , Sunday evenmg serv1ce,
School Supt Sunday School 9 30 7 30 p m Wednesday serv1ce, 8
a m, mornmg worship and P m
commun ion, 10 30 a m '
LAUREL CLIFF FREE
Sunday evenmg youth C~n sttan METHODIST - Rev Eugene
endeavor, 6' 30. Worship ser GJII , pastor William Badey,
VI Ces , Sunday , 7 30 P m supt Sunday School,9 30a m ,
Wednesday evening prayer Morn&lt;ng worshtp, 10 30 a. m ,
~eet l ng and Btble study, 7 30 P Evenmg worship, 7 30 p. m
Wednesday, Chnst1an Youth
ST JOHN LUTHERAN _ Crusade, 6· 30 p m.. Prayer
Pme Grove, the Rev. Arthur meet1ng 7 30 p. m Thursday ,
Combs, pastor Sunday school , chOir pracftce, 7 P m
DEXTER CHURCH OF
9 30 am , church servoces,
10 30 am
CHRIST -Danny Evans,
pastor Norman C Wtll , supt
BRADBURY CHURCH OF Sunday School 9.30 a m ,
CHRIST, Roy Bill Carler . Worship serv1 ce, 10 30 a m.
evangeltst Thurman Carsey , ChriStian Endeavor Sunday
Btble School supf , B&lt;ble School evenina
9 30 am. , mormng worship,
KtORGANlZED CHURCH
10 30 a.m , youth meet~ng, 6
OF
JESUS CHRIST OF LAT·
p m, evemng serv1ce, 7 p m ,
TER
SAINTS - Portland
Chns t1an Workers Class, RacineDAY
Road
Jollnson,
.. uesday, 7 30 p m , prayer pastor HerbertRalph
Wh1te,
Sunday
&gt;efmg Wednesday, 7 30 p m.
School D~rector. Sunday School ,
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST - 9 30 a m , Morn1ng worship,
10 30 a m , Sunday evenmg
Rev. Freeland Norns, pastor. service,
7 p m Wednesday
Sunday schooL 10 a m. , church evenmg prayer
services, 7 30 p
serv1ce , 7 p m Wednesday m
B1ble study, 7 p.m
IIETHLEHEM BAPTIST BIBLE BAPTIST TEMPLE,
Great
Bend, Charles Norns,
Minersville, J A McWaters,
pasto
r
Worship servlce, 9 30 a
pastor Sunday School , 10 am ;
mornmg worship. 11 a m , m , Sunday School, 10 30 a m
Tra1n 1ng Umon , 6 30 p m ;
CARL~TON CHURCH evening worship, 7 30 p m. King sbury Road
Sunday
Prayer meeting, Wednesday, School, 9 30 a m, Ralph Carl ,
7 30 p m.
supt Worship serv1ce, 10 30 a
RACINE FlRSf CHURCH m. and 7.30 p. m. alternately
OF THE NAZARENE - Prayer mee tmg, Wednesday,
Sunday School. 9 30 a m , 7 30 p m Rev Jay Sflles,
Mornmg Worsh1p, 10.30 a m , pastor
Even1ng worsh1p, 7 30 p. m
OLD
DEXTER
CON
Wedn esday , Sunday School GREGATlONAL
CHURCH
Supennfendent, Pa ulme Mc- Rev W1llard Dutcher, pastor.
Cl tntock, pastor Re\J · Morn s Mrs Worley Franc1s, Sunday
M Wolfe
Supt Sunday School,
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST- 9School
45
a
m
Serv1ces f1rst
Cha rles Norn s, pastor Sunday and third Church
Sundays
followmg
School , 9 30 a m. , Mornmg Sunday School, Second
worship, 10 45 a m , Sunday fourth Saturday evenmgs, aand
p
evenmg worsh ip, 7 30 p m , m. serv1ces
Wedn esday even1ng B1bl e
Study, 7 30 o m
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN
- Mr. Robert Wyatt, pastor ;
DANVILLE WESLEYAN , Sunday School supt ., Ronald
Re v
Lawren ce Sullivan , Osborne Bible School, 9 30 a
past or Sunday Sc hool 9 30 m., preach1ng 10. 45 a. m..
am , you th and 1un1 or youth Evening services, 7.30 p m
serv 1ee, 6 45 p m , evenmg
worsh1p, 7 30 p m ; prayer and
pra1se. Wednesday, 7 30 p m
HYSHL
RUN
FREE
SILVER HUN FI&lt;~E BAP- METHODIST - Cecil Wise,
TIST - Rev Howard K1mble, Pastor Sunday School , 9:30
pas.tor Sunday school, 10 a m , a m ; Morning worship, 10.30
Henry Dav1s, sup t , evenmg am. , Young People's serv1ce,
ser v1ce, 7· 30 p m Prayer 6' 45 p.m .. Evangelistic serv1ce,
mee tmg, Thursday, 7 30 p m 7· 30 p.m Prayer meetmg ,
Thursday, 7 30 p.m
CHESTER CHURCH OF
GOD - Rev James Satterfield,
pastor Sunday school, 9 30
am , worship serv1ce, 11 a m ,
evening service , 7; prayer
serv1ce and youth se rv1 ce.
Thursday. 7 p m

FREEDOM
GOSPEL
MISSION - Bald Knobs, Rev
L R. Gluesen camp, pastor
Roger Wilfred, Sr , Sunday
School Supt Sunday School ,
9 30 ) a m , Sunday evening
wor sh1p 7 30 Prayer meetmg,
Tuesday, 7 30 p m Ernest
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN Deeter, class leader . Yough
- Homer Stephens, pastor Meetmg Wednesday, 7 30 p m ,
Sunday School, 9 30 a m ; Ernest Deeter , leader
mornmg worsh1p, 10 30 am.;
Robert Bobo. Sunday school MT. HERMON UNITED
supl .. Sunday e ~ en1ng ser vtce, BRETHERN CHURCH IN
7 30 Youlh meeting , Monday, 7 CHRIST- Rev Robert Shook,
p m M1d week .serv1ce, Wed pastor, Sunday SC"hooL 9 30 a
nesday, 7 30 p m. _ _
m., Roy Pooler, supt ; Alfred
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF Wolle, asst supt.: mornmg
THE NAZARENE - Rev M C. worsh1p , 11 aJ" ; evening
Larimore, pastor Bob Moore. sermon, 7 30 p m., al ternating
Sunday School Supt. Sunday each Sunday Class meetmg, 11
School, classes for all ages, 9:30 a m alternating Sunday
a m i morJJing worship, 10:45, morn1ng s, Alfred Wolfe ,
NYPS Sunday, 6 30 p m.; layleader , Chmttan Endeavor,
evangel1shc service, Sunday, 7 30 p. m Sunday, Roger
7 30 p m. Mid week prayer, Buckley , preSident Prayer
meeting, Wednesday, 7·30 p.m meeflng, Wednesday, 7 30p m.
Mss1onary meeting , second Board meeting firs t /11\onda y
Wednesday, 7 30 p. m.
eacH month, 7 30 p m

UNITED FAITH NON DENOMINATION Rev
DenniS Weaver' pastor Sunday 'RuT LAN n
school. 9 30 a m , Bob Barber,
supt.. worship service, 10 30 . RUTLAND FIRST IIAP.
a.m , youth meeting, 6 45 p.m , TIST - Rev. Samuel Jackson,
church, 7.30 p m Bible study, pastor Sunday School , lO a. m ,
Wednesday, 7 30 p.m.
M!S. Gertrude Butler, supt .
Prayer Service, · 1· 30 p m..
lDlN UNITED BRETHREN ""''chinA service ? o m
IN CHRIST - Elden R. Blake, '
pastor Sunday Sc~ool , lOa. m.;
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
Winnie Holsinger, supt Mor- CHRIST- Sunday school. 9·30
nmg sermon, 11 a. m.; Evening a.m., V H. Braley, supt.;
service Christian Endeavor, communion and devotions, .
7 30 p. m. ; Mrs. ' Lyda 1q: 30 am. Regular board
Oevaller , president . Song meeting 7 30, third Saturday
service and sermon, 8:20 Mid- .ao;u:h .m"lnth.
Week prayer meeting Wed· M~~TTY ~~~~b~~~ COM.
nesday, 7 30 p. m, Mrs . Mazie Rl h
-Rev.
HolslnQer, class leader.
_
c ard Dubbeld, pastor.
,
. . School, 9 30 a. m.; Worship •
fOM E~u Y LOWEN LIGHr service, 11 a m. ; Wednesday
CHURCH- H•rrlsonvllle Road, prayer meeting, 7 30 . p m.
l&lt;ev. Roy Taylor, pastor; Henr{ Sunday night wor~hlp, 7·30.
Eblin, Sunday School Sup. RUTLAND CHURCH OF
Sunday School, 9. 30 a. m. ;, THE NAZARENE - Rev. Lloyd
evening worship, 7. 30 p. m. D. Grimm, Jr .. pastor. Sundey
Prayer and prasie service , School. 9 30 a. m , Morning
Thursday, 7.30 p. m.
worship, 10· 30 a 'm , Young
people's !&gt;er vu.:e, 6: 45 p m ,·
COMMUNITY
CHURCH Evangellsftc ser vtces , 7, 30 p
rship service~ m We.dnc,day ovcnn'lg Strvice
Church ~rht\1\l pex_ter ~ Wo_
-~ ..
7 l0nm
..-\

·.
Monday
Romans
6, I · J I

Su nday
fccles•as tes
12, 1-14

W ednesdar
Tuesday
Ephesmns - Ephes•ans
4, 22 32
3, 1-10

Thursday
Colo ss1ons
3, ) . JJ

Froday
Hebre..,
8, 6-13

Saturday
I Peter
J, 13-25

\\

(

op~n~hl

~~

' I"'

1971

ll!lv,. • hl t n~ ~"' "'I +'

lnr Slli, bur&amp; YIISJ nll

We all kn ow the feeling
of frustratiOn that comes
fro m not finding enough
ho urs in a day. lime to kill
ts a luxury for most of us.
Ne.w Year's reminds us
that time is one commodity
that cannot be bqjlgbl. Try '
as we will, we cannot crowd
more than twenty.four houn
1nto a day. Whether it's too
mu ch t1me on our hands or
too l1ttle, we need con·
stontly lo be aware of how
we spe,nd our t1me.
Alter a ll, in a hundred
years, we'll oil be gone.
This thought makes current
problems look pretty small
Proper balance of work,
play ond worship makes
happ1er lives.
Let God
s p ~ak to your heart and
b11ng new perspective into
your life. Attend church
thos Sunda y.

l' "
'

\'

I

With the hope It will, in some measure. foster and help su stain that which ts
good in family and community life. this feature is sponsored by the business
ftrms and organizations whose names appear below

ANTHONY
PLUMBING AND HEATING
992·2550
240 Lincoln St .
Middleport

HEINER'S BAKERY

GOE"GLEIN
READY MIX CO.
.
.,

Phone 9g2.J284

•

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Middleport

M &amp;R FOODLINER

Bakers of Good Bread
Huntington , W. Va .

Middleport, Ohio

BOGGS EQUIPMENT

MARK VSTORE

Sales · Allis Chalmers - Service
Farm · lndustnal · Lawn . Garden
Tuppers Plains
667-3435

Mtddleporl. Ohio

DOMIGAN SOHIO STATION

RACINE FOOD MARKET

Athens Road
Pomeroy
A Fam ily That Worships Together
Stays Together

The Store with A' Heart
Ra c 1ne
949-3342

OHIO VAu.EY BAKING CO.

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.
Ohio's Oldest Dodge Dealer
Middleport. 0 .

Bakers of Holsum Brea.P
Middleport, Ohio

LYONS MARKET

G~.Ul'S

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

MARKET

Chesler, Ohio

THEIARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS CO.

ROYAL OAK PARK
Family Recreation
Swimming

Pomeroy- Member F. D. I. C. &amp;
Federal Reserve System

,

Me tg s County Branch

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
Rexall Drugs
We Fill All Doctors Pres c ription s
992 -2955
Pomeroy

GAU~'S

TRAILER SALES
and GAUL'S SHAKE HAVEN

THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.
296 W Sec ond Ph. 992-3863 Pomeroy

POMEROY ELECTRIC SERVICE

Sf. Rt . 7
Lhester, Oh1o
Choose the Church of
r Chotce

Elec tric Motor Repair
810 W. Main
99 2. 5750

SADIE'S MARKET

NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE
Take Someone with You to Churc h
In Pomeroy Over 90 Years
Kermit Walton , Nlgr .

Meats and Groceries
Syrac use
992-3986

.

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MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
Lh urch and Office Supplies-Gifts
992-2641
Middleport

F. J. WALLACE, JEWELER

I

Bulova Watches- Sales &amp; Service
186 N. Second
Middleport

.· VILlAGE CUT RAlE
,

and

VILlAGE FLOWER SHOP
,
Racine, Ohio

Ph. 949-3272

Furniture pnd Appliances
Phone 985-3308
Chester,

o.

Attend the Church ol Your Choice

BEN FRANKLIN stoRE
Pomeroy

.ALL

ROOFING

AND CONSTRUCJION CO.
992-2550

240 Lincoln St.

I

�I

•

•

r

.• 1 - The DaUy Sentinel, Mtddleport-Porneroy, 0., Dec. 31,1971

: Get- Together Enjoyed Sunday
•

The traditional ChriStmas
get-together of tile Jewell Story
family was held Sunday at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. John
. Mengel, New Albany, 0
A poUuck dinner was served
at noon . Gifts were exchanged
during the afternoo n. Attending were Mr . and Mrs
Jewell Story, Pomeroy, 1\ D ,

••

•

•

'

It

all

balances!

Just the right
amount of health
and happiness for all
our loyal, friendly patrons.

Goessler's Jewelry Store
Pomeroy

Court St

..,...,_.._.

0

It

_.,_..,

l

Pomeroy....

Mr and Mrs Orvtlle Rhodes,
Racme; Sgt Gary Rhodes, KI
Sawyer. Mtch ; Mr and Mrs.
Francts Story and son, Mark,
Athens , Mr and Mrs Eugene
Story and son, Cla1r, Marysvt lle, and Mr an d Mrs.
Mengel, Ketth, Debra and
Linda

.,

J

Mr . and Mrs. Rtcha rd
DeMoss and chlidren of
Covington, Ky. , were overmght
guests !If Mrs. Earl Thoma a nd
chtldren thts week. They carne
for the funeral servtces of
James Sayre , Wednesday
mormng at the Ewmg Funeral
Horne Mrs. DeMoss is the
former Esther Hawley.
Mr and Mrs Bob Grueser
spent several days last week
wtth his parenls, Mr and Mrs.
Karl Grueser. They also visited
Mr . and Mrs. Henry Ftscher at
Wtlhamstown, W Va. before
returmng to th etr horn e
Crooksville
Mr. and Mrs Karl Grueser
and Mrs Welby Whaley spent
Chmtrnas
weekend
in
Colurnbus visiting Mr and
Mrs. Pat Qumn and chtldren,
Cmdy and Pat, and Mr. and
Mrs Jack McDowell
Mr and Mrs Aaron Kelton
,.ere Chnstrnas holiday guesls
of her stster anrl brother-inlaw, Mr and Mrs. George
Shtveler, Jr and Jayne, Cmcmnatt Dmner guests of the
Keltons at thetr Mmersvtlle
home Tuesday evening were
Mr and Mrs. Charles Cohen
and Mr and Mrs . Frank
Stsson, Angte , Mar¢y and
Amy On Wednesday the
Keltons enterlamed Mr and
Mrs Herschel Rose and Mtke
and Mr and Mrs Delmar
Canaday . The Canadays and
Mr. and Mrs. E. F Robmson
were guesls at the Keltons on
Sunday
Mrs. Roy Wmebrenner and
Mrs El12abeth Merrett had
several guesls over the holiday
weekend mcludmg Mrs. Mary
Weaver and Peggy of St.
Lomsvtlle, Ohw ; Mr and Mrs
Garry French and son, Garry,
Jr, Dayton , Mr. and Mrs
Wilham Gordon Winebrenner,
Mary Ann , Paula Sue, and
Becky, and Mr. and Mrs
Tommy Weaver, New Haven;
Sunday
afternoon
vtsitors were Mrs. Joe
Rolhns , Mrs. Fred Bnnk,
er, Letart, W. Va ., Mrs
Lmda Clark and famtly, New

Haven, W Va

i

• '· . ' '

Wltot's all the
noise about? We want
to wish our friends and
neighburs

tbe

greotest joy and

fun-filled New Yeor ever, and express our gratitude

SUGAR RUN MILLS
180 Mulberry Ave. 992-2115 Pomeroy

4 30 P m , Ch 6

Dr and Mrs. M. K. Fugate
and son, Frank, · of Athens
jomed Mr and Mrs. Frank
Fugate for Chnslmas dmner
Other guests were Mr. and
Mrs 0 P. Klem Dr. and Mrs
Fugate provtded the dmner
Mr and Mrs. Ray E Gtbbs
spent Christmas m Columbus
with their granddaughter, B. J .
Swan and children, Tim, Jack
and Tanya Jayne.
Hobday guests of Mrs W A
Morgan were Mr. and Mrs R
L Gotthardt and son, Bruce,
Colurnbus, Mr and Mrs. Roger
Morgan and daughter, Kathy,
and Mr and Mrs . Ketth
Morgan Ketth ts teaching at
the Ohw
Inslttute
of

going to be a long afternoon 11 p.m , Ch ~~
Adventur es
And evening
of Don Juan, 11 30 p.m , Ch
If you hate parades 1t's 10
Tnple feature " War

going to be a long mo;n 1ng path ," "Mr. Blandmgs Builds
' His Dr.~am , House, "

And if you hate both, you
probably need a second set
cable TV connection
+ + +
The parades first· There's
the Rose Bowl -Orange Bowl
spe&lt;:1al at 10 a m Chs 2 &amp; 7

Carr,

Grant, Mr &amp; Mrs Sm1fh,
Myrna Loy, slarts at II 30
P m • Ch 4
+ + +
SUNDAY, JAN. 2
Okay. now that you' ve had a
good heavy dose of college

and the Tournam~nt of RoseS football , let's look m on the
P evlew at the same t 1me on pros today, as the Super Bowl
C 1.

a. Then the Tournament of

After that , the bowl games· take on the San Franctsco
The Sugar Bowl , wtfh two of 49ers at 4 p.m., Ch 8.

After fhJS, the Super Bowl

time, kicks thtngs off at noon, and not much else -

un tll

Ch . 12, as Oklahoma (10 1) about June.
+ + +
meets Auburn (9 1)
The Cotton Bowl comes Fred Taylor, OSU coach,
next, with Penn State, the will h1ghilghf the Buckeyes
class of lhe East taking on the appearances wtfh UCLA In
Texas

Buy AGood Used Car
At Riggs Bros.
69 Ford LTD ..................s1895

Longho~ns (8 -2) at Californta on hts weekly show,

Dallas. 1 45 p m , Ch . 8. (At noon, Ch 4
the same time, Chs 2 &amp; 7 are
+ + +

carrying a Rose Bowl game
And there's a reltgtous news
preview )
spectal wh1 ch focuses on the
The Rose Bowl. with mator events m the world of

Michigan - that team so dear re l1g1on and churches at 10
to the hearts of every Buckeye a.m • Ch 10.
- lak&lt;ng lis perfect record up
+ + +
agamst Stanford wh1ch IS If you saw "The S1x W1ves of
mucn better than ;ts 8 3 mark Henry VIII " on CBS lasl
indicates. "' 45 p.m , Chs 2 &amp; summer, you saw a great
7
series of TV pr~rams
And finally the b1g one
Now, the senes IS being
The Orange Bowl. and a crack repea ted on public television.
at the national title for the 1n a slightly longer versmn
year, as unbeaten Nebraska and without some of the cuts
and unbeaten Alabama slug It wh1 ch CBS had to make for
out tor lhe top of the heap. a commercials In 12 parts. tf 's
p m., Chs. 2 &amp; 7.
appearance on "Masterpiece
++ +
Theatre" should be welcome
If, as 'noted, you can't stand mid-winter fare
indee.d
lhe parades and football (frank ly, we missed parts of tf
games, we'd note thatCh. 61s durtng the summer) 9 p m ,
showing movies all afternoon Ch. 11.
after the Sugar Bowl (listings f SUN D A~ ++M0 V 1E S
below).
and
Marshall
,.
basketball highlights are on "Confidentially Conme, Van
Ch. 2 at 4: 15p.m. (should be Johnson, 8 a.m .,Ch. _10 .. . " I
good wlfh MU doing so well'tn Am a Fuglflve. wtfh Paul
the Milwaukee Cl&amp;sslc) .
Mun1, not Dav1d Janssen,
But even lawrence Welk 11 · 30 p.m • Ch 10 (Some
has bowl fever,asthernaestro other films w111 be shown.
devotes his show lo the big depending on the conclusion of
Stanford-Michigan shootout at the fool ball games, on Chs. 2 &amp;
Pasadena. 3:30 p.m., Ch 7, 7 I
+ + +
7
MONDAY, JAN. 3
and p. m.,+C~ ~·
SATURDAY MOVIES·
Jonathan W1nters, one of
"Highly Dangerous," Dan~ TV's funniest men, s~ows up
Cltrl&lt;, 3 p.m ., Ch . 6 ... "The on Virginia Graham s show
- . . ..
.... .... . •_-- ~- lnd.R~v at 2 o.m .• Ch. 6.

OFFICE SUPPLIES
Including
ledgers.
ledger sheets, post
binders.
columnar
pads. inventory pads.
expanding files. li le
folders, etc.

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE

happy and
prosperous

New Year.

SYLVIA'S UPHOLSTERING
Mrs. Woodrow T. Zwilling, Prop:
SYRACUSE, OHIO

Milisa Rizer, Honored Queen
Dec. 30
Each of the mslalhng of-

fleers were gtven carnations
wtth mtmature ga vels lied wttil
red
and green nbbon and
ll I I
nettmg, an d Mrs. Rizer
rece tved a red rose corsage
and Mr Rtzer a red rose
boutonmere from Mthsa. A
corsage was also presented to
Mrs. Fmlaw . Davtd Krawsczyn
gave a red rose corsage to the
new honored queen
The red and green colors
were earned out m the lable
decoratwns for a soctal Hour
whtch followed. Centermg the
table was a cross replica mscnbed wt th Mtss Rtzer's
theme for her retgn, "Loyalty
to God lS the Hope of the
World " Replicas of a cornucopta, a dove and a gavel
were featured on the cake.
Punch, nuts and mmts were
served wtth the cake by Mrs .
Rose Ann Sebo and Mrs Lela
Curbs.
The guardtan counctl ts

'f t

,,

c§j~~
with towering hopes for
peak happiness and
health. And, top them off with thanks from us.

OHIO VAu.EY PWMBING &amp; HEATING
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Edward Baer &amp; Associates
POMEROY, OHIO

J!appy New Year to All

70 CADILLAC
'Loaded with all Cadillac extras

70 OLDSMOBILE 98,

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

4 Dr . sedan. loaded with e xtras.

2 Dr . H. T .• air condition , like new.

6 Cyl. . standard.

68 Buick .........................$1695Skylark. 4 dr .

67 Buick ........................s1295

USED CARS
69 Ford XL Convertible, air ............... ~ 11695
69 Olds 98 H. T. Sedan, air............. '2995

Skylark . 2 dr. H. T.

69 Olds 88 Holiday Coupe, air .. •.... •.. • '2295

69 Chevrolet ...................sf395

68 Olds 98 4 Dr. H.T., air................. '1995
68 PIJ. Barracuda 2 Dr. H.T. ... .. •.. .. .. • '1295
'
67 Chevelle Malibu 2 Dr. H.T. ...... .... 11195

2 Dr.

68 Chevrolet. ................. s1295
Super Sport. auto .• 2 dr ., vinyl top.

67 Mercury.................... s1095

67 Pontiac Catalina 4 Dr. Sedan, Air .... 11195
66 Olds 88 4 Door ........... :.......... : '895
.
.
66 Mercury Sta. Wagon, V-8 auto.......... '795

Monterey 4 dr .. air conditioning .

66 Ford............................. s395
Pickup Truck, 'h ton. 6 cyl.

61 Ford ............................ s595
Pick-up Truck, real nice 112 ton, long wide bed .
SEE: RAY RIGGS, AL ZEIGLER

RIGGS BROS., INC.
USED CARS
Ph. 985-41'00

.....

·- -

66 Buick LaSabre 4 Door, air ............. 11095
1
65 Oldsmo~ile 98 4-Door
795
65 Mercury Station Wagon, air ........... . '695
66 Comet 2 Dr. H.T., V-8 std............. '695
65 Olds 98 4 Or. H.T., air-.~ .............. '595

·······"

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
"You'll Like Our Quality Way •
of Doing Busiriess"
992-5342
GMC FINANCING
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'
.
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M. W. COMPTON.
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•AT NOON ON THURS".l - EAST COURT ST .•
POMEROY.

70 BUICK ELECTRA 225 ·
' 4 Dr. , H. T., yellow with black vinyltop. loaded "
with extras .

66 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS
4 Dr .. H.T. , extra sharp.

69 FORD GALAXIE 500
4 Dr ., H.T., V-8, P. S .• P.B .• factory air/ vinyl
lop .
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70 CHEVROLET Pickup T'lick

GSeeGiivRbLEtPi~k~ P Tr~~k
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Long wicfe bed , V-8, 3 speed .

66 CHEVROLET Pickup
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•

"

a Sermonette

Bring in the year

70 MAVERICK

.,

SELECT

Friends
a very
•

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.....

m
Su nd a y eva ngel tsllc
FIRST SOUTHERN BAP- pmee
t mg. 1 30 p m Praye r
- 182 Mulberry Ave, meet ing WednP.srl rw 7 30 p m
POMEROY ,..lfiNl rY - Rev. Ti$T
.•
Pomeroy.
with S B C ,
W 1-f. Perrin, pastor Roy the Rev affiliated
Fred
Hill,
pastor
Mayer, Supt. Church school ,
School. 9 30 am ; ~AS® COUNTY '
9 l5a.m.; worshlp, 10 24a m , Sunday
mornmg
worship,
30 a. m i
THE HILAND CHAPEL,
, youth choir rehearsal Monday, jUnior SOCiety, 6. 30 10
a
m
NYPS,
:;eorge
Casto, pastor Sunday
6 30 p. m.; Mrs. Marvin Burt,
6 45 p m Sunday evangelistic School, 9· 30 ; eventng worship,
d~rector ;
sen1or
cholr
7 30 p m Prayer 7 30 Thursday eveni.ng prayer
rehearsal, 7. 30 p m , Thursda y, meetmg,
Wednesday,
7 30 o m
meetmg
servtce. 7 30 p.m
Mrs Paul Nease. director. All
MASON FIRST BAPTIST day quilling party for llusy Bee
MIDDLEPORT
Class, Thursda y, at church
and Pomeroy Sis , Stan
MT. MORIAH BAPTIST- Second
.social room .
Cratg,
pastor
Sunday Sl'hool,
.:orner Fourth and Ma1n,
PO~EROY ·cHURCH vr Middleport. Rev Henry L Key. 9 45 a.m' worship ser-.!~e. 11
THE NAZARENE - Corner Jr , pastor . Sunday School 9. 30 am , training union, 6 3$p.m.,
Union and Mulberry Rev a m., Arnold Richards, supt. ; evening worsh1p service, 7 30
p.m Mid-week prayer service,
Clyde V. Henderson, pastor M~rnlng worsh1p 10 30 a m.
Wednesday, 7:30p.m
Sunday School 9 30 a m ,
CHRISTIAN
SCIENCE
JEHOVAH'S
WITNESSES
Raymond Walburn , supt
Morning worship 10· 30 a m , La rry Carnahan presiding ServiCeS at 315 Matn St , Pt
Etenmg serv1ce 7 30 p m M1d m1n1ster Sunday, B1ble lecture, Pleasant, Sunday School 9 15
week servlce, Wednesday, 7 JO 9. . 30 a m , Watchtower study, a.m . Sundays, 11 a.m ; Wed·
10 30 a m. , Tuesday, Bible nesday, tesftmon1al meef&lt;ng 8
p m
p.m. All welcome
st~dy
. 7 30 p m , Thursday,
GRACE EPISCOPAL - Rev
FAIRVIEW lllllLE CHURCH
StanleY Plattenburg , m1mster mm1st ry school 7 30 p m ,
- Letart Route 1. the Rev Stan
Morning prayer and sermon , serv~ce meet1ng 8 30 p. m
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH Cra1g, pastor Sunday schooL
10 30 a m Holy commun1on
of
Chnst tn Ch(istian Union- 9 30 am prayer and Btble
and sermon, f1rst Sundays,
10 30 a. m Church school. Lawrence Manley, pastor ; Mrs. study, 7 30 p m Cottage prayer
kindergarten through eighth Russell Young, Sunday School service . Tuesday , 10 a .m .
Sup I Sunday School 9 30 a m , worship service, Fnday, 7 30
grade, 10· 30 a m.
POMEROY CHURCH OF Evenmg worship 7 30 Wed 0 m
MASON
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST - Mr . Hoyt Allen, Jr , 1esday or aver meetmg, 7 30 p.
CHRISTLoren
T.
Stephens,
pastor Bible School , 9 30 a m ,
minister. Worship, 10 a.m.,
worship, 10. 30; adult worsh1p
MIDDLEPORT PEN
serv1ce and . YOUIJJ:I peoples TECOSTAL, Third Ave, the Bible study, 11:15a m. ; evenmg
meeftng, both 7 30 p m Sun- Rev Wilham Kmttel, pastor . worship, 7:30 p.m. Mid-week
day Wednesday , com b1 ned Ronald Dugan, Sunday school servtce. Wednesday, 7 30 p.m B1 ble study and prayer supt Classes for all aQes, MASON ASSEMBLY ()f
mee ting, 7 30 p m
eventng se rv1 ce, 7 JO p m GOD - Second Sf , Mason , W
THE SALVATION ARMY - Young
peoples meeting , Va Chester Tennant, pastor
Envoy Ray S Wlmng , oft1cer 10 Wednesday, 8 p m , B1ble Sunday school , 10 a. m '
cJlarge -~~ Q~~x~!.Q -~ • study, Fnday, 8 p m
mornmg worshtp, 11. a m.,
Holmess meetmg ; 10 JO a m
evangeltst1c serv1ce, 7. 30 P m
Sunday School Young People's
FREE Wl L L BAPT l ST B1bie study and prayer service,
Legion, 7 p m , Thursday, 1 to 3 CHURCH - Cor9er Ash and 7W
7e3d5nle3s3day , 7 30 p. m Phone
p m , Lad1es Home League, 7 Plum , Mtddleoort·
Noel
. .
o. m. Prep ~lilsses.
_
Herrman, pastor; Guy Priddy,
HARTFORD CHURCH OF
SACRI;D HEART - Rev Sunday School Supt Saturday CHRIST m Chnsttan Un1on Father Bernard KraiCO VIc,_ evenmg serv1ce, 7 p m Sunday Rev O' Dell Manley, pastor
pa stor
Phone
992-2825, School . 10 a. m , Sunday Sundayschool , 9 30a m , Roger
Saturday eventng Mass, 7 30 evenmg worsh ip, 7 p m
Manley, supt , evenmg service,
Wednesday even ng
7 30
p m Sunday Mass, 8 and 10
FIRST BAPTfSf CHURCH of prayer meef&lt;ng , 7 30 p 1m
a m ConfessiOnS, Saturday 7
Middleport, corner of Sl xlh and Sunday evening youth service
7J1 pm
Palmer Streets, Rev Charles 6 45 with Macy Lou Carter.
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST S1m ons ,
pastor
Danny
-·Robert Kuhn , pastor. George Thompson , Sunday School leader No Tuesday se rvice
CHRISTIAN
SCIENCE
Sktnner, Sunday School supt Superintendent Sunday
Serv1ces,
315
Ma1n
St , Pt
Sunday School. 9 30 a m ; church school for everyone
mornmg worsh1p, 10 30 a m , 9 15 a.m .• Morning worship Pleasant Sunday services, 11
BYF , 6 p m , B&lt;ble Study 10 15 a.m ; Evenmg serv1ces, am. Wednesday Tesflmon1al
Wednesday 7 p m , cho1r 7 30 p m , Wednesday prayer meetma. 7 JO o.m .
,11ractice. Wed , 8 .39_11...!!b
service. 7 30 p m E)(tra youth MEIGS COUNTY
ST. PJ.lUL LUTHERAN - acllv1tles on Sunday, 5 p.m , for
MEIGS
Rev . Art~ur C. L~nd, pastor all youth up to s1xlh grade ; 6· 30
Sunday School , 9 15 a m , for jumor and semor h1gh
COOPERATIVE
Charles Evans, Supt , worship students
service, 10 30 a m Con
PARISH
for maf •on class, Tuesday, 4 15
CHURCH OF CHRIST,
THE UNITED
lo 5 30 p m , J untor Con. Middleport, 5th and Ma1n .
METHODIST
CHURCH
f1 rmat 1on class, Thursday, 6 30 Raulln Moyer, pastor M1chaet
Robert R. Card, Director
to 7 45J1 m
Gerlach, Sunday School supf
POMEROY CLUSTER
- SEVE"NTH DAY ADVENT-- Bible School. 9· 30 am , mor
Rev Robert R. Card
TIST - Pomeroy, Mulberry nlng wor ship, 10 30 a m ,
Rev . Stanten Sm1th
Hgts Herbert Morgan, pastor evening worship, 7 30 p m ,
CHESTER - Worship 9 15 a
Sabbath School , Saturday , 2 p prayer se rv1ce 7 p m Wed
m , Church School 10 a m
m , worsh1p, 3 15 p m. Dorcas nesday
ENTERPRISE - Worship, 9
Soc!elfAIOa. m. each.Thursda:L_
a
m , Church School , 10 a m
'GRA M UNITED METH .
A thought for today. Brittsh
FLATWOODS
- Worshtp, II
OOIST CHURCH - Preachtng
a
m
,
Church
School
10 a m
Sydney
Srntth
satd,
writer
9 30 a m , first and second
POMEROYW
orshtp,
Sundayj of each month , th&lt;rd "When you rise m the rnormng, a m .. Chur ch School 9 15 a.10m30.
and Iou- th Sundays tech month form a resolution to make tile UMYF 6 30 p m.
worsh i ~ servlc:e at 7: 30 p m
SPRINGS - Worsh1p
Wednesday evenings at 7 3C day a happy one for a fellow lOaROCK
.
m
.
Church
School9a. m ,
Prayer and Bible Studv
creature "
UMYF 6 30 p m
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
Rev Robert Bumgarner
HEATH - Worshtp 10 30 a
m , Church School 9 30 a m
UMYF 7 p m
RUTLAND - Worshlp 9 IS a
m , Church School 10 a m ,
UMYF 7 p m
SALEM CENTER - Worshop
By R. Eugene Gill, Pastor
9 a m , Church School lOa m ,
Laurel aHf Free Melhodtst Church
UMYF Thursday, 7 p m
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
ASPIRITIJAL EXAMINATION
Rev Forrest R. Donley
In Cor. 13:5 tile Apostle Paul admonishes the Cortnthians to
ASIIURY - Worshlp 11 a m .
examme themselves as to whether they be m the Faith. Let me
Ch urch School 9 50 a m :
set before you a few questions based on the word of God to help WSCS, 1st Tuesday
FOR EST RUN- Worshtp 9 a
you examine yourself.
'Tl •• Church School 10 a. m .
WSCS. 3rd Wednesday, 7 30 p
· - Am I striving to please God in all thmgs' Ps. 66 :16.
m
-Am I cultivating a constant awareness of tile Presence of
MINERSVILLE - Worsh1p
God' Gen. 16 :13
10 a m . Church School 9 a m
- Do I really love the scriptures more than any other book' WSCS, 3rd Monday, 7 30 p m
..SYRACUE - Worship, 8 a
Ps 1:2.
m.; Church School. 9 a. m ,
- Do I live In the Spll'it of Prayer1 Eph . 6 .16.
Prayer and Bible Study ,
Wednesday, 7 30 p. m
- Do I really deny myself for Olrist's sake1 Mk . 6:34.
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
- Do I relish religious conversalton 1 Mal. 3:16.
Rev. W. Dale McClurg
- Do I have upon my heart tile burden of lost souls1 Jer. 9:1.
Rev. Frank Cheesebrew
Rev Martha Ann Mattner
- Do I remember the Sabbath day and keep it Holy1 Exo.
tSt.• t1ANY
(Dorcas)
20 :8.
Worship, 9 30 a. m.; Church
- Am I living each day In a state of preparation to meet God 1 School 10 30 a m
CARMEL - Worship, 11 a.
Amos 4:12.
m., 1st and 3rd Sundays ,
-Am I Sptrit led1 Rom. 8:13-14.
Church Schoo.[, .!l!...!!, _m~
APPLE GROVE - Worship.
''Think on these thmgs! "
7 30 p m., church school , 9 30
a m , m1d week serv1 ce,
Wednesday , 8 p m

POMERCY

Customers and

4 Dr . H. T .• vinyl lop, turquoise .

' . _ _ _ . _ ... - - I'!

GOOD .

, CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
RENE - Middlepor t, Rev.,
AUdry Mtller, pastor . • .uyu
Carson, supt Sunday r schooL
9· 30 a m ,
/W&gt;rnmg worship, 10 30 am , ! unior
!QCtety, 6 30 pm , NYP o&lt;l\, 4~

We Want To Wish All

VI contenders are p1cked

Roses Parade 1fself at 11 :30 The. Balflmore Colts and
a .m.. Ch a. and the Cotton Mtamt Dolphtns go after the
Bowl Parade on Chs 2 &amp; 7. AFC crown at 1 p.m , Chs 2 &amp;
+ + +
7, while the Dallas Cowboys
the great also ran teams of all

Off

IN TRAINING
US. Air Force Sgt. Gary M.
Rhodes, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Orville Rhodes, Racine Route
I, took part m a three week
tratning exercise at Tyndall
Air Force Base, Florida. Sgt.
Rhodes is an aircraft maintenance specialist with tile 87th
Fighter Interceptor Squadron
at tile K. I. Sawyer Air Force
~se in Michigan, Sgi. Rhodes
returned from Florida in time
to spend tile Christmas holiday
season at his hom.e •

HOFFMAN CONFINED
Kenny Hoffman , son of Mr.
and Mrs. Perry Hoffman,
Middleport, ts confined to
Room 122 at Veterans
Memorial Hospttal. Hoffman
was adrnttted to the hospital
Thursday morning for treatment of injuries suffered tn an _
automobtle accident near
Athens He reportedly collided
with another vehtcle after he
swerved to avoid htttmg an
antmal in the roed. Hoffman
was enroute to his employment
at Bremen.

'

gra nd
mast er , Twelfth
Masomc Dtstrtct; Mr. and Mrs
Harry Chesher, worthy matron
and worthy patron of
E~angehne 1 , ~~apter , 0, ~ S
Mtddlepor!, and Mrs Uorothf
Woodard, worthy ma tron of
Pomeroy Chapter
Mrs .
Chesher and Mrs Woodard
regtstered the guesls.
Mrs .
Debbte
F tnlaw ,
guardt a n of th e BeJhel ,
Technology and hts wife at- presented a pas t honor ed
tends Ohto Umverstty.
quee n's nng to Brenda Taylor
Mr and Mrs . Bert Gnmrn, wh o tn turn presented a gtft to
Lelart Falls, spent Chnslmas her and Paul Darnell,
weekend wtth Mr. and Mrs assoctate guardian pro tern.
Russell Gnmrn and chtldren Mtss Rtzer presented a Btble to
Paula and Davts, St Clatrs- Mtss Taylor from lhe Bethel
vtlle. Thts week the Russell and also a personal gtlt.
Gnrnrn famtly and Mr and
Frankhn RIZer II, student at
Mrs Robert Grunm, Steve, the Atr Force Academy m
Chmty and Amy of Columbus Colorado, gave a dozen red
vtsited here wtth thetr parenls. roses to h1 s sts ter 1 and
presen ling the new honored
queen wtth a gavel was her
father. She also recetved a gtft
from the Betheltn observance.
of her birthday anmversary,

WzthA Bang

"Walk the

If you hate football , it's Dark Street," Ch~.ck Connors.

too

Mihsa Rtzer, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Franklin Rizer , .,.
mstalled as honored q~t· , of
Bethel 62, International Order
of Job's Daughters, in
ceremonies Thursday mght at
the Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Other elected officers mstalled by Brenda Taylor,
retiring honored queen of the
Bethel, were Leanne Sebo,
semor prmcess ; Path Well,
juntor prmcess; Diana Carsey,
gmde ; and Cathy Rayburn,
marshal
Asstsbng Miss Taylor wtth
the mstallatton were Irene
Barnes, gutde; Twila Clatworthy , marshal; Becky
Anderson, chaplam ; Mtckey
Wolfe, semor custodian; Annette
Warner,
]Umor
custodtan; Jennifer Butcher,
recorder;
Kathy
King,
mustctan, and Sherry King,
flagbearer . Solotst was Linda
Mayer whose selection was
"You'll Never Walk ' Alone."
All of the gtrls makmg up tile
mstalhng team are past
honored queens of the Bethel.
Appomted offtcers mslalled
were Eltzabeth Blaettnar,
chaplatn; Jill Houdashelt,
recorder ; Debbte Taylor,
treasurer; Patty Warner, ftrst
messenger ; Mehssa Thomas,
second messenger; Brenda
Stanley, third messenger;
Brenda
Hayes,
fourth
messenger ; Sandy Curtis, fifth
messenger; Mary Blaettnw,
libranan; Trudy Roach, senior
custodtan; Debra Hartenbach,
JUntor custodtan ; Tammy
Sayre, tnner guard; and Jackie
Carsey, outer guard .
Chotr members mstalled
we re Angte Stsson, Carla
Cnsp, Ktm Sebo, Paula
Etc htnger , Becky Thomas ,
Vtckt Kelly, Vanessa Folmer
and Ka thy Hams.
Among the dtstm gmshed
guests mtroduced were Paul
Darnell , ass octate grand
guardtan of the .(ir.afl\1. ~~) , ,
of Ohto; Btll Bauman of
Belpre , assoctate guardtan of
Bethel 65 and grand semor
custodtan ' Ben Phtlson, deputy

Start The New Year

CALL POINTVIEW: 992· 2505
SATURDAY JAN. 1

i isa Rizer Is
ew ueen

Personal Notes

co mp osed of Mrs. Finla w,
guardtan ; Tom Edwards,
assoctate guardian ; Joan
Rayburn, g~~ardtan secretary;
Mrs. Carolyn Thomas, , guardtan treasurer; and Mrs. Rose
Ann 5ebo, directress of mu, tc,.
The associate guardian council
lS made up ot Mrs. Florence
Well, promoter of sociability;
Mrs. Rizer, promoter of
paraphernalia ; Mrs . Peggy
Taylor, .
promoter
of
hosptlality; and Mrs. Betty
Fultz, directress of finance.

4

'

Tru~ck
1
I

64 CHEVROLET Pickup Truck
70 HORNET
6 Cyl., standard, 4 dr . sedan.

67 CAMARO
""

•

.••.
••

..

--

•

r

EAST LETART - Worship,
10 a.m., f1rst and th1rd Sundays ,
9 a m , second and fourth
Sundays, ohurch school, 9 a m ,
first and third Sundays , 10 a m..
second and fourth Sundays
Mid week serv ice, Wednesday,
8p m

GREAr BEND- Worsh1p 11
a m , 2nd and 4th Sundays .
Church School, 10 a m.
LETART FALLS- Worship

. .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - · 10 MORNING
a. m , Church
School
9a m
STAR
- Worship
9. 30 a m ; Church School tO· 30
a m ; MidWeek Service .
Wednesday, 8 p. m
MORSE CHAPEL - Worship
11 a. m , lsi and 3rd Sundays ,
Church School. 10 a m.
PORTLAND - Worship 7. 30
p. m , Church School 9· 30 a. m
SUTTON - Worship, 11 a. m
CALL POINTVIEW : 992 -2 505
2nd and 4th Sundays, Church
School 10 a m
WESLEYAN (Raconel Worship, 11 a m.; Church
School, 10 a m.
FRIDAY, DEC. 31
UMYF for all churches of the
Somehow, I can't gef very
Remember last week ,
Southern Cluster, 7 30 p. m
when we adv1sed you to turn exc ited about the Astrp
off your TV set, on cable or Bluebonnel Bowl tonight at each Sunday at the Youth
Center (Oak Grove Road.)
no1, and spend Christmas Eve 7 30 p m., Ch. 8. Colorado (9-2)
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
with your family , really beat Ohio State. bul that's
Rev. ~acob Lehman
about
all
I
know
about
them,
talking and hav ing fun , and
_
Rev.
Standley llrandum
and
I
kn
ow
even
less
about
thinking about the real
JOPPA
- Worship 10 a m ,
Hous
ton
(also
9·21.
meaning of Christmas?
Church School 9 a m ; Prayer
Daky, this week, reverse
Meeting, Wednesday. 8 p. m.
If you want lo ring oul the
that. Instead of getting
Old
Year
traditionally,
there's
LONG BOTTOM - Church
bombed at a party, on lhe
special
wl
th
Guy
Lombardo
services,
9 a.m. ; Sunday School
a
highway (God forbid!) or In
your own ll~lng room, why not (who else?) starting at 11:30 9: 45 a. m. Bible study every
Thursday, 7 30 p.m.
see 1972 op~n up on a note that p.m·, Ch. 8.
NORTH BETHEL- Worship
And
If
you
want
to
ring
In
can be festive and merry , If
11li.
rn .• Church School lOa. m.
the
New
Year
unlradltlonally,
sober
talcoholl-cally
ALFRED - Sunday schodl,
speaking). Turn on the TV and Oral Roberts has a New
Year's special , starting al 1 9 45 am . each Sundayt
let 'er rlpl
preaching at 11 a.m. each
am .
Sunday.
Prayer meeting, 7· 45
If you need a reminder,
p.m Wednesday, WSCS, 8 p.m
check In wtfh " The High Cost
MOVIES : Lots of them
of Accidents" on C)l. 10 at 7·30 today : "Savage Wilderness," on third Tuesday each monlh
REEDSVILLE - Sunday
p m Agoodnlghttoseeagood 4p, m , Ch. 10 ... "The ~lsha
show
.
Boy," Jerry Lewis, 9:30 p.m., school. 9 30, preaching, 7:30
· •
,
I Ch. 10 ... " Sunday In New
p m. Sunday , prayer meeting,
One of the nicer musicals York" 1 a.m ., Ch . 10 ... And 7: 30 p m Tuesday , WSCS, 7:30,
ever made Is the Roj:lgers and there's a quintuple featur~ Jlrsf ,Thurs!iay each mOl''"
.
Hammersteln production of lined up on Ch. 2, starting ~~
SILVER RIDGE - Worsh1p,
"Cinderella," which will be 11:30 p.m, and running until
10 a. m. ; Church School, 9 a m.
rerun on Ch 10 at 8 p.m. Not 1972 IS bout six hours old .
TU PPE&lt;RS 1 , P~AtNS '. _.._ ._ ..,_........ nl.aaunt
Worshlo 9 a m

•

KENO CHURCH. OF CHRIST
- Hobart Newell, supt Serv1ces•
Neekly, 9 30 ~. m on Su nday
Prea chtng ftr st an d th1rd
Sundays of month by Clifford

HEM L 0 C K
G R0 VE
CHRISTIAN _ Da vid Stauffer,
pas tor, Stanford Stockton, sup!
Mormng worsh1p, 9 30 a m ,
chur ch sc hool, 10 . 30 a m ,
Smith, 9 JO a rn
young peoples meetmg , 6 30
HOBSON
CHRISTIAN pm , eventng worship, 7 30.
UNION _ Darrel Ooddril l. Bible study , Wednesda y, 7 30
om
pastor Sun'day School. 9 30 a
m , Annie Mohler, su pt ..
Leonard Gtlmore, f~rst elder .
MT. UNION BAPTIST ~venlng serv1ce. 7 30 p m Rev
Cecil Cox, pastor Sunday
Wednesday prayer meeltng , school SuPf , Joe Sayre Sunda y
,7:"30 ~ - m.
sc hoo l, 9 4S a m.; Sund ay
M'CMORIAH CHUR!;H OF evenmg worship, 7· 30 Wed.
GOO - Racine Route 2 The nes day prayer and Bible study,
Rev Charles Ha'nd. pastor . 7 30 p m
Sunday school , 9 45 a .m '
TUPPERS
PLAINS
morning worsh ip, 11 P m
Evening services, Tuesday and CHRISTIAN CHURCH -Mr
Fnday, 7 30
__
John Wyatt, pastor: J S. Dav1s
BEARWALLOW RIDGE Sunday School supt , Sunday
hool, 9 30 a m., Morn1ng
CHURCH OF CHRIST - Dav1d sc
Sermon
Jewell , pastor Btble study , 9 30 se rmon,, 710p 30m a m Evenmg
am , morning worshtp, 10 30,
evening worship, 6 30 p m
LETART FALLS UNITED
Wednesday • B1ble study , 7 30 BRETHREN ~ Rev Robert
Shook, pastor ; Herschel N.orns;
P m.
UNITED MINISTRY .OF supl Sunday school, 9 30 a.m ,
MEIGS COUNTY. The Un~ted mormng sermon , 10· 30 a .m ,
Presbyt~rtan Church, Dw1ghf evemng sermon , 7 30 alter
l. Zavtfz, Paslnr Dtrecfor, nating each Sunday . Prayer
George W Hutton , Ass'f serv1ce, Wednesday, 7 30 p.m
Pastor 01rector .
FIRST Prayer meeting, 7:30 p m.
UNITED
PRESBYTERIAN, alternating Sundays.
Harrisonville. Sunday Church
School. 9 30 a.m ., Mrs Homer
CHESHIRE CHURCH OF
Lee, Supt, Mornmg Worship GOD. OF PROPHECY, G p
10· 30 a.m. FIRST UNITED Sm&lt;fh, pastor. Sunday School,
PRESBYTERIAN, Mtddleport. lOa m.. Arthur Henson, Supt ,
Sunday Church School. 9 30 Morn1ng Worsh1p 11 a m ,
a.m. , Lew1s ~auer, Supt, Youn9 Peoplesserv1ce, 7 p. m,
Mornma Worsh1o 10 30 a.m. Evenmg serv1ce, 7 30 p. m ,
FIRST
UNITED
PRES- Wednesday M1d Week Prayer
IIYTERIAN, Syracuse. Morn Serv1ce, 7 30 p m
mg Worship, 9 30 , a.m , meetmg, 6 30 p m. , EVenTnQ
Sunday-Church School 10 am , worsh1p, 7 30 o m.
Mrs Sam~el Hall. Supt
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE
STIVERSVILLE
COM -- NAZARENE - Rev Herbert
MUNITY, Rev. Edsel Hart, Grate, pastor Worsh1p serviCe,
pastor Sunday School service 11 am and 7·30p m Sunday
10 a m Prayer Meeting each Sunday School, 9 30 a m
Thursday 7 30 P m Sunday R1chard Barton, supt Prayer
evenmg service, 7.30 p m
_
- rpeetmg, Wednesd~y , 7:30o m.
BRADFORD CHURCH OF
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST CHRIST - Cl1fford Sm&lt;fh,
- Pomeroy Harnsonvllle mm1ster Sunday School 9 30 a
Road Kenneth Eberts, pastor m , mornmg chvrch 10 30 a
Paul
Mc Elroy,
Sunday m , Sunday evenmg serv1ce,
School Supt Sunday School 9 30 7 30 p m Wednesday serv1ce, 8
a m, mornmg worship and P m
commun ion, 10 30 a m '
LAUREL CLIFF FREE
Sunday evenmg youth C~n sttan METHODIST - Rev Eugene
endeavor, 6' 30. Worship ser GJII , pastor William Badey,
VI Ces , Sunday , 7 30 P m supt Sunday School,9 30a m ,
Wednesday evening prayer Morn&lt;ng worshtp, 10 30 a. m ,
~eet l ng and Btble study, 7 30 P Evenmg worship, 7 30 p. m
Wednesday, Chnst1an Youth
ST JOHN LUTHERAN _ Crusade, 6· 30 p m.. Prayer
Pme Grove, the Rev. Arthur meet1ng 7 30 p. m Thursday ,
Combs, pastor Sunday school , chOir pracftce, 7 P m
DEXTER CHURCH OF
9 30 am , church servoces,
10 30 am
CHRIST -Danny Evans,
pastor Norman C Wtll , supt
BRADBURY CHURCH OF Sunday School 9.30 a m ,
CHRIST, Roy Bill Carler . Worship serv1 ce, 10 30 a m.
evangeltst Thurman Carsey , ChriStian Endeavor Sunday
Btble School supf , B&lt;ble School evenina
9 30 am. , mormng worship,
KtORGANlZED CHURCH
10 30 a.m , youth meet~ng, 6
OF
JESUS CHRIST OF LAT·
p m, evemng serv1ce, 7 p m ,
TER
SAINTS - Portland
Chns t1an Workers Class, RacineDAY
Road
Jollnson,
.. uesday, 7 30 p m , prayer pastor HerbertRalph
Wh1te,
Sunday
&gt;efmg Wednesday, 7 30 p m.
School D~rector. Sunday School ,
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST - 9 30 a m , Morn1ng worship,
10 30 a m , Sunday evenmg
Rev. Freeland Norns, pastor. service,
7 p m Wednesday
Sunday schooL 10 a m. , church evenmg prayer
services, 7 30 p
serv1ce , 7 p m Wednesday m
B1ble study, 7 p.m
IIETHLEHEM BAPTIST BIBLE BAPTIST TEMPLE,
Great
Bend, Charles Norns,
Minersville, J A McWaters,
pasto
r
Worship servlce, 9 30 a
pastor Sunday School , 10 am ;
mornmg worship. 11 a m , m , Sunday School, 10 30 a m
Tra1n 1ng Umon , 6 30 p m ;
CARL~TON CHURCH evening worship, 7 30 p m. King sbury Road
Sunday
Prayer meeting, Wednesday, School, 9 30 a m, Ralph Carl ,
7 30 p m.
supt Worship serv1ce, 10 30 a
RACINE FlRSf CHURCH m. and 7.30 p. m. alternately
OF THE NAZARENE - Prayer mee tmg, Wednesday,
Sunday School. 9 30 a m , 7 30 p m Rev Jay Sflles,
Mornmg Worsh1p, 10.30 a m , pastor
Even1ng worsh1p, 7 30 p. m
OLD
DEXTER
CON
Wedn esday , Sunday School GREGATlONAL
CHURCH
Supennfendent, Pa ulme Mc- Rev W1llard Dutcher, pastor.
Cl tntock, pastor Re\J · Morn s Mrs Worley Franc1s, Sunday
M Wolfe
Supt Sunday School,
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST- 9School
45
a
m
Serv1ces f1rst
Cha rles Norn s, pastor Sunday and third Church
Sundays
followmg
School , 9 30 a m. , Mornmg Sunday School, Second
worship, 10 45 a m , Sunday fourth Saturday evenmgs, aand
p
evenmg worsh ip, 7 30 p m , m. serv1ces
Wedn esday even1ng B1bl e
Study, 7 30 o m
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN
- Mr. Robert Wyatt, pastor ;
DANVILLE WESLEYAN , Sunday School supt ., Ronald
Re v
Lawren ce Sullivan , Osborne Bible School, 9 30 a
past or Sunday Sc hool 9 30 m., preach1ng 10. 45 a. m..
am , you th and 1un1 or youth Evening services, 7.30 p m
serv 1ee, 6 45 p m , evenmg
worsh1p, 7 30 p m ; prayer and
pra1se. Wednesday, 7 30 p m
HYSHL
RUN
FREE
SILVER HUN FI&lt;~E BAP- METHODIST - Cecil Wise,
TIST - Rev Howard K1mble, Pastor Sunday School , 9:30
pas.tor Sunday school, 10 a m , a m ; Morning worship, 10.30
Henry Dav1s, sup t , evenmg am. , Young People's serv1ce,
ser v1ce, 7· 30 p m Prayer 6' 45 p.m .. Evangelistic serv1ce,
mee tmg, Thursday, 7 30 p m 7· 30 p.m Prayer meetmg ,
Thursday, 7 30 p.m
CHESTER CHURCH OF
GOD - Rev James Satterfield,
pastor Sunday school, 9 30
am , worship serv1ce, 11 a m ,
evening service , 7; prayer
serv1ce and youth se rv1 ce.
Thursday. 7 p m

FREEDOM
GOSPEL
MISSION - Bald Knobs, Rev
L R. Gluesen camp, pastor
Roger Wilfred, Sr , Sunday
School Supt Sunday School ,
9 30 ) a m , Sunday evening
wor sh1p 7 30 Prayer meetmg,
Tuesday, 7 30 p m Ernest
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN Deeter, class leader . Yough
- Homer Stephens, pastor Meetmg Wednesday, 7 30 p m ,
Sunday School, 9 30 a m ; Ernest Deeter , leader
mornmg worsh1p, 10 30 am.;
Robert Bobo. Sunday school MT. HERMON UNITED
supl .. Sunday e ~ en1ng ser vtce, BRETHERN CHURCH IN
7 30 Youlh meeting , Monday, 7 CHRIST- Rev Robert Shook,
p m M1d week .serv1ce, Wed pastor, Sunday SC"hooL 9 30 a
nesday, 7 30 p m. _ _
m., Roy Pooler, supt ; Alfred
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF Wolle, asst supt.: mornmg
THE NAZARENE - Rev M C. worsh1p , 11 aJ" ; evening
Larimore, pastor Bob Moore. sermon, 7 30 p m., al ternating
Sunday School Supt. Sunday each Sunday Class meetmg, 11
School, classes for all ages, 9:30 a m alternating Sunday
a m i morJJing worship, 10:45, morn1ng s, Alfred Wolfe ,
NYPS Sunday, 6 30 p m.; layleader , Chmttan Endeavor,
evangel1shc service, Sunday, 7 30 p. m Sunday, Roger
7 30 p m. Mid week prayer, Buckley , preSident Prayer
meeting, Wednesday, 7·30 p.m meeflng, Wednesday, 7 30p m.
Mss1onary meeting , second Board meeting firs t /11\onda y
Wednesday, 7 30 p. m.
eacH month, 7 30 p m

UNITED FAITH NON DENOMINATION Rev
DenniS Weaver' pastor Sunday 'RuT LAN n
school. 9 30 a m , Bob Barber,
supt.. worship service, 10 30 . RUTLAND FIRST IIAP.
a.m , youth meeting, 6 45 p.m , TIST - Rev. Samuel Jackson,
church, 7.30 p m Bible study, pastor Sunday School , lO a. m ,
Wednesday, 7 30 p.m.
M!S. Gertrude Butler, supt .
Prayer Service, · 1· 30 p m..
lDlN UNITED BRETHREN ""''chinA service ? o m
IN CHRIST - Elden R. Blake, '
pastor Sunday Sc~ool , lOa. m.;
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
Winnie Holsinger, supt Mor- CHRIST- Sunday school. 9·30
nmg sermon, 11 a. m.; Evening a.m., V H. Braley, supt.;
service Christian Endeavor, communion and devotions, .
7 30 p. m. ; Mrs. ' Lyda 1q: 30 am. Regular board
Oevaller , president . Song meeting 7 30, third Saturday
service and sermon, 8:20 Mid- .ao;u:h .m"lnth.
Week prayer meeting Wed· M~~TTY ~~~~b~~~ COM.
nesday, 7 30 p. m, Mrs . Mazie Rl h
-Rev.
HolslnQer, class leader.
_
c ard Dubbeld, pastor.
,
. . School, 9 30 a. m.; Worship •
fOM E~u Y LOWEN LIGHr service, 11 a m. ; Wednesday
CHURCH- H•rrlsonvllle Road, prayer meeting, 7 30 . p m.
l&lt;ev. Roy Taylor, pastor; Henr{ Sunday night wor~hlp, 7·30.
Eblin, Sunday School Sup. RUTLAND CHURCH OF
Sunday School, 9. 30 a. m. ;, THE NAZARENE - Rev. Lloyd
evening worship, 7. 30 p. m. D. Grimm, Jr .. pastor. Sundey
Prayer and prasie service , School. 9 30 a. m , Morning
Thursday, 7.30 p. m.
worship, 10· 30 a 'm , Young
people's !&gt;er vu.:e, 6: 45 p m ,·
COMMUNITY
CHURCH Evangellsftc ser vtces , 7, 30 p
rship service~ m We.dnc,day ovcnn'lg Strvice
Church ~rht\1\l pex_ter ~ Wo_
-~ ..
7 l0nm
..-\

·.
Monday
Romans
6, I · J I

Su nday
fccles•as tes
12, 1-14

W ednesdar
Tuesday
Ephesmns - Ephes•ans
4, 22 32
3, 1-10

Thursday
Colo ss1ons
3, ) . JJ

Froday
Hebre..,
8, 6-13

Saturday
I Peter
J, 13-25

\\

(

op~n~hl

~~

' I"'

1971

ll!lv,. • hl t n~ ~"' "'I +'

lnr Slli, bur&amp; YIISJ nll

We all kn ow the feeling
of frustratiOn that comes
fro m not finding enough
ho urs in a day. lime to kill
ts a luxury for most of us.
Ne.w Year's reminds us
that time is one commodity
that cannot be bqjlgbl. Try '
as we will, we cannot crowd
more than twenty.four houn
1nto a day. Whether it's too
mu ch t1me on our hands or
too l1ttle, we need con·
stontly lo be aware of how
we spe,nd our t1me.
Alter a ll, in a hundred
years, we'll oil be gone.
This thought makes current
problems look pretty small
Proper balance of work,
play ond worship makes
happ1er lives.
Let God
s p ~ak to your heart and
b11ng new perspective into
your life. Attend church
thos Sunda y.

l' "
'

\'

I

With the hope It will, in some measure. foster and help su stain that which ts
good in family and community life. this feature is sponsored by the business
ftrms and organizations whose names appear below

ANTHONY
PLUMBING AND HEATING
992·2550
240 Lincoln St .
Middleport

HEINER'S BAKERY

GOE"GLEIN
READY MIX CO.
.
.,

Phone 9g2.J284

•

j "'

Middleport

M &amp;R FOODLINER

Bakers of Good Bread
Huntington , W. Va .

Middleport, Ohio

BOGGS EQUIPMENT

MARK VSTORE

Sales · Allis Chalmers - Service
Farm · lndustnal · Lawn . Garden
Tuppers Plains
667-3435

Mtddleporl. Ohio

DOMIGAN SOHIO STATION

RACINE FOOD MARKET

Athens Road
Pomeroy
A Fam ily That Worships Together
Stays Together

The Store with A' Heart
Ra c 1ne
949-3342

OHIO VAu.EY BAKING CO.

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.
Ohio's Oldest Dodge Dealer
Middleport. 0 .

Bakers of Holsum Brea.P
Middleport, Ohio

LYONS MARKET

G~.Ul'S

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

MARKET

Chesler, Ohio

THEIARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS CO.

ROYAL OAK PARK
Family Recreation
Swimming

Pomeroy- Member F. D. I. C. &amp;
Federal Reserve System

,

Me tg s County Branch

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
Rexall Drugs
We Fill All Doctors Pres c ription s
992 -2955
Pomeroy

GAU~'S

TRAILER SALES
and GAUL'S SHAKE HAVEN

THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.
296 W Sec ond Ph. 992-3863 Pomeroy

POMEROY ELECTRIC SERVICE

Sf. Rt . 7
Lhester, Oh1o
Choose the Church of
r Chotce

Elec tric Motor Repair
810 W. Main
99 2. 5750

SADIE'S MARKET

NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE
Take Someone with You to Churc h
In Pomeroy Over 90 Years
Kermit Walton , Nlgr .

Meats and Groceries
Syrac use
992-3986

.

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
Lh urch and Office Supplies-Gifts
992-2641
Middleport

F. J. WALLACE, JEWELER

I

Bulova Watches- Sales &amp; Service
186 N. Second
Middleport

.· VILlAGE CUT RAlE
,

and

VILlAGE FLOWER SHOP
,
Racine, Ohio

Ph. 949-3272

Furniture pnd Appliances
Phone 985-3308
Chester,

o.

Attend the Church ol Your Choice

BEN FRANKLIN stoRE
Pomeroy

.ALL

ROOFING

AND CONSTRUCJION CO.
992-2550

240 Lincoln St.

I

�.

I

. \.,

t - The 01~ Sentinel, Mlddleport~Pomeroy, 0., Dec. 31, 1971
.

I

:o
0

OF THE

t

.,

-

·vua

,\

Listed m this page and facing page are gifts

ly

~

by local merchants that go to the first baby born of
'

· Meip County parents. Parents of children born after Midnight,
Dec. 31, 1971 are asked to send their name,
.
address and, ckttor's report to The Dai~ Sentinel not ~er than Jan. 7, 1972.
'

I

RULES:

•

Winning baby must be born to parents, who are
Iega 1...-esidents of Meigs County.
All such babies are eligible.

'

I

•

,•

.••
..,.~
•....,.
.,

....•
.,
~~

MIDDLEPORT
POMEROY

)'

:;:

,,.
•
.,

AN EDUCATOR SET

OUR GIFT TO
THE FAMILY OF
1972's First .:\ '~

SUPER MARKET

~:.

.

••

!:

TO THE FIRST
ARRIVAL
OF
1972 BY

.-"

....
"'~

·.;~

Gin FOR THE .
:: FIRST FAMILY
•'

.i

::

;:

-:

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

TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN·
: PRESENT THIS COUPON FOR. A
$5 .00 PURCHASE OF
I

: -FREE

.. I
'·~

~

..••••

I

I

:

I
BABY NEEDS:

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

The New Year's
First New Baby
Will Be Gifted
With A

.&lt;
-~

....

••
'·

,.;..

....
~...

.."'

,.~

.
~

'

..--------

Prizes must be claimed by Jan. 31, 1972.

:..

$10.00

•

10 GALLONS OF
GASOLINE

WELKER'S

~

!...
..

OUR GIFT TO .
THE
1972 BABY
WILL BE
$3.93

rMOORE'S

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

POMEROY, 0.

CUT
FLOWER
ARRANGEMENT

DUDLEY'S
59 N. Second

992-5560

Middleport

OFF ON ANY
l'HING
ORDERED FROM THE
SEARS CATALOG

Authorized ~ M-nt
&amp; THELMA
1 LOU --··--- ··

OSBORNE

---- -

'

OUR GIFT "
.WILL BE
A

'~

' '.

,..

· Meal To The Mother
OF 72's FIRST BABY

CHOW'S STEAK HOUSE
~

GIFT CERTIFICATE

·

OUR GIFT TO

I

.

~~fiRST

I

' ARRIVAL OF
1972
A
BABY BUNTING

•
' '·

WI~ RECEIVE

A PAIR OF

We're Looking Ahead

Flnt
a,.by With
Our Gift
A

u.

$10.00
r

SAVINGS ACCOUNT
·Pomeroy
· National Bank
POMEROY. OHIO.. .

Chateau Beauty Salon

Gerber
Baby
Food
RACINE,

MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

OUR G'IFT TO
MEIGS COUNTY'S .
197·2 ARRIVAL ,.
A

3-. ..:.~E

FEEDER
SET

ONE
FREE MEAL

POMEROY,

THE MOTHER
OF
1972 FIRST
. BABY

WILL RECEIVE

\- \ ·_, .

WILL RECEIVE

A

$3.00 GIFT
CERTIFICATE

~(..._,_

BABY BlANKET
d-J-. ,_ ~- ~
AND
-;:;.; .
A PAIR OF BOOTIES
From ...

PACKAGE
OF DIAPERS

STIFFLERS
STORES
.
INC.

·WESTERN AUTO

FOR THE
FIRST
FATHER OF
1972

..,. ,, :{,

A

POMEROY, OHIO

.

Racine Dept. Store

POMEROY, 0.

FOR FABRIC
FROM

THE FABRIC SHOP
POMEROY, 0 . .

RACINE, OHIO

..

J

First Baby of 1972

TO THE 1972
NEW YEAR
BABY
Our Gift
FIRST BABY
SHOES .

3,Boxes of
New Born

mother

PAMPERS

ol

the first baby

!

From ...
Complements From ••.

. A,LOVELY BLOUSE . .

. Racine
Food
Mkt.
'.

SOMEniiNG
. NICE FROM.

RACIN

The L &amp; Z Dress Shop
· 111 E. MAIN

2 Cases
of

MRS. MILLARD VAN METER
POMEROY, OH 10

ONE FREE WASH
·AND
SET
, Compliments From:

A

'•

i

Pomeroy Flower Shop

WILL RECEIVE

'

Ourgift ·
is to the

For 1972's

co.

FOR THE 1972
NEW YEAR
(, \ ~- ~ SURPRISE

We Will
Present
The First
~~Miss'' or "Mr."

MILK .

BABY PLANTER

· Meigs County's
First Baby
of 1972

Pomeroy, 0.

MUSICAL
CRADLE TOY

.......

Our Gift To The ·
_Mother of The
1972 New Year Baby

P001eroy, 0.

Of 1972 With A • • •
CASE OF
KROGER

TO THE FIRST
BABY OF
1972

WAID CROSS SONS

992-2181

O.

FIRST
LITTLE
A

Our Gift To The
. .. ~~~ Baby Of
1972

540 E. Main

;"

OUR GIFT

Blue &amp; Grey
Restaurant

POLL PARROT BABY SHOES
FROM

HARTLEY'S SHOES

,;.

FOR MEIGS

'"MR. or ''MISS"

Prescriptions Are Our Main Bu'siness
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

OHIO

RACINE

STORE

ON THE T
MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

uonn1 eono'l' n

RACINE HOME
NATIONAL BANK DUTTON DRUG

Middleport, Ohio

'POMEROY,

THE KIDDIE SHOPPE

. Mark V Sup_
er Mkt.

A GIFT OF THE

~~ ~YEM

POMEROY, 0.

BOX OF
ASSORTED
BABY ITEMS
FOR THE
FIRST
1972
BABY

1972's first
baby
will receive
our gift of a

..

J4annaty .
' ,",. Jj

·A$3.25
GIFT OF
BABY
CLOTHING

SAVINGS ACCOUNT

QIE.:;fMSI
BMY Of lHE ~

.

FREE

·

To Help The First
Baby Grow
Big and
Strong ·
Our Gift
ACASE
.
.OF ·
GERBER
FOODS FOR BABY

Our Gift To The
1972
~ew Year's
Baby
$5.00 .

'

.

'5.00
-..._,..;;;,.~

Pomeroy, Ohio

•

Washable
BEAR

Citizens National Bank ·
FOR THE FIRST
BABY

Court St.

271 N. 2nd Ave.

BABY OF '72

A SJO.OO

" THE CREATOR 'OF
REASONABLE DRUG PRICES"

Cuddle

FROM THE

A BEAUTIFUL GIFT

JEWELRY STORE

Pomeroy, Ohio

SAVINGS
--- ACCOUNT

•

GOESSLER'S

ASHLAND SERVICE
279W. Main

Jillagt

·FOR THE FIRST

FOR THE FUTURE
OF 7ls FIRST
BABY

FOR MEIGS COUNTY'S
FIRST
P.RRIVAL OF
1972
OUR GIFT
$5.00 GIFT CERTIFICATE

IS PRESENTED

(•

.,.

Applications must be filed in this office by Jan. 7,
1972. In case of a tie, award will be distributed at
discretion of contest committee.
•

•

....

.;

Exact time of birth must be specified in written
statement by attending physician.

LISTED ON THIS PAGE AND FACING PAGE ARE GIFTS
OFFERED BY LOCAL MERCHANTS THAT GO TO THE
FIRST BABY BORN OF MEIGS COUNTY PARENTS.
PARENTS OF CHILDREN BORN AFTER MIDNIGHT,
DE&lt;;. 31, 1971, ARE ASKED TO SEND THEIR NAME,
ADDP.E''C:, "Nu DOCTOR'S REPORT, TO THE DAILY
SE,HINEL NuT . !HER THAN JAN. 7, 1972.

KIPS SHOE STORE

·A
TRAINING
CHAIR
TO THE

FIRST BABY
OF THE
1972 NEW YEAR
FROM... .

OUR SPECIAL
GIFrS

$10.00
SAVINGS ACCOUNT
and

.. ONE OOirfBANK
Compliments From • ••

H&amp;R .fiRESTONE
MIDDLE PORT, 0.

MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

0.

· · For 1972 New Year
BABY

·POMEROY
-I.

"'

•

'

[.

'

'

. "

'

'

�.

I

. \.,

t - The 01~ Sentinel, Mlddleport~Pomeroy, 0., Dec. 31, 1971
.

I

:o
0

OF THE

t

.,

-

·vua

,\

Listed m this page and facing page are gifts

ly

~

by local merchants that go to the first baby born of
'

· Meip County parents. Parents of children born after Midnight,
Dec. 31, 1971 are asked to send their name,
.
address and, ckttor's report to The Dai~ Sentinel not ~er than Jan. 7, 1972.
'

I

RULES:

•

Winning baby must be born to parents, who are
Iega 1...-esidents of Meigs County.
All such babies are eligible.

'

I

•

,•

.••
..,.~
•....,.
.,

....•
.,
~~

MIDDLEPORT
POMEROY

)'

:;:

,,.
•
.,

AN EDUCATOR SET

OUR GIFT TO
THE FAMILY OF
1972's First .:\ '~

SUPER MARKET

~:.

.

••

!:

TO THE FIRST
ARRIVAL
OF
1972 BY

.-"

....
"'~

·.;~

Gin FOR THE .
:: FIRST FAMILY
•'

.i

::

;:

-:

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

TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN·
: PRESENT THIS COUPON FOR. A
$5 .00 PURCHASE OF
I

: -FREE

.. I
'·~

~

..••••

I

I

:

I
BABY NEEDS:

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

The New Year's
First New Baby
Will Be Gifted
With A

.&lt;
-~

....

••
'·

,.;..

....
~...

.."'

,.~

.
~

'

..--------

Prizes must be claimed by Jan. 31, 1972.

:..

$10.00

•

10 GALLONS OF
GASOLINE

WELKER'S

~

!...
..

OUR GIFT TO .
THE
1972 BABY
WILL BE
$3.93

rMOORE'S

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

POMEROY, 0.

CUT
FLOWER
ARRANGEMENT

DUDLEY'S
59 N. Second

992-5560

Middleport

OFF ON ANY
l'HING
ORDERED FROM THE
SEARS CATALOG

Authorized ~ M-nt
&amp; THELMA
1 LOU --··--- ··

OSBORNE

---- -

'

OUR GIFT "
.WILL BE
A

'~

' '.

,..

· Meal To The Mother
OF 72's FIRST BABY

CHOW'S STEAK HOUSE
~

GIFT CERTIFICATE

·

OUR GIFT TO

I

.

~~fiRST

I

' ARRIVAL OF
1972
A
BABY BUNTING

•
' '·

WI~ RECEIVE

A PAIR OF

We're Looking Ahead

Flnt
a,.by With
Our Gift
A

u.

$10.00
r

SAVINGS ACCOUNT
·Pomeroy
· National Bank
POMEROY. OHIO.. .

Chateau Beauty Salon

Gerber
Baby
Food
RACINE,

MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

OUR G'IFT TO
MEIGS COUNTY'S .
197·2 ARRIVAL ,.
A

3-. ..:.~E

FEEDER
SET

ONE
FREE MEAL

POMEROY,

THE MOTHER
OF
1972 FIRST
. BABY

WILL RECEIVE

\- \ ·_, .

WILL RECEIVE

A

$3.00 GIFT
CERTIFICATE

~(..._,_

BABY BlANKET
d-J-. ,_ ~- ~
AND
-;:;.; .
A PAIR OF BOOTIES
From ...

PACKAGE
OF DIAPERS

STIFFLERS
STORES
.
INC.

·WESTERN AUTO

FOR THE
FIRST
FATHER OF
1972

..,. ,, :{,

A

POMEROY, OHIO

.

Racine Dept. Store

POMEROY, 0.

FOR FABRIC
FROM

THE FABRIC SHOP
POMEROY, 0 . .

RACINE, OHIO

..

J

First Baby of 1972

TO THE 1972
NEW YEAR
BABY
Our Gift
FIRST BABY
SHOES .

3,Boxes of
New Born

mother

PAMPERS

ol

the first baby

!

From ...
Complements From ••.

. A,LOVELY BLOUSE . .

. Racine
Food
Mkt.
'.

SOMEniiNG
. NICE FROM.

RACIN

The L &amp; Z Dress Shop
· 111 E. MAIN

2 Cases
of

MRS. MILLARD VAN METER
POMEROY, OH 10

ONE FREE WASH
·AND
SET
, Compliments From:

A

'•

i

Pomeroy Flower Shop

WILL RECEIVE

'

Ourgift ·
is to the

For 1972's

co.

FOR THE 1972
NEW YEAR
(, \ ~- ~ SURPRISE

We Will
Present
The First
~~Miss'' or "Mr."

MILK .

BABY PLANTER

· Meigs County's
First Baby
of 1972

Pomeroy, 0.

MUSICAL
CRADLE TOY

.......

Our Gift To The ·
_Mother of The
1972 New Year Baby

P001eroy, 0.

Of 1972 With A • • •
CASE OF
KROGER

TO THE FIRST
BABY OF
1972

WAID CROSS SONS

992-2181

O.

FIRST
LITTLE
A

Our Gift To The
. .. ~~~ Baby Of
1972

540 E. Main

;"

OUR GIFT

Blue &amp; Grey
Restaurant

POLL PARROT BABY SHOES
FROM

HARTLEY'S SHOES

,;.

FOR MEIGS

'"MR. or ''MISS"

Prescriptions Are Our Main Bu'siness
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

OHIO

RACINE

STORE

ON THE T
MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

uonn1 eono'l' n

RACINE HOME
NATIONAL BANK DUTTON DRUG

Middleport, Ohio

'POMEROY,

THE KIDDIE SHOPPE

. Mark V Sup_
er Mkt.

A GIFT OF THE

~~ ~YEM

POMEROY, 0.

BOX OF
ASSORTED
BABY ITEMS
FOR THE
FIRST
1972
BABY

1972's first
baby
will receive
our gift of a

..

J4annaty .
' ,",. Jj

·A$3.25
GIFT OF
BABY
CLOTHING

SAVINGS ACCOUNT

QIE.:;fMSI
BMY Of lHE ~

.

FREE

·

To Help The First
Baby Grow
Big and
Strong ·
Our Gift
ACASE
.
.OF ·
GERBER
FOODS FOR BABY

Our Gift To The
1972
~ew Year's
Baby
$5.00 .

'

.

'5.00
-..._,..;;;,.~

Pomeroy, Ohio

•

Washable
BEAR

Citizens National Bank ·
FOR THE FIRST
BABY

Court St.

271 N. 2nd Ave.

BABY OF '72

A SJO.OO

" THE CREATOR 'OF
REASONABLE DRUG PRICES"

Cuddle

FROM THE

A BEAUTIFUL GIFT

JEWELRY STORE

Pomeroy, Ohio

SAVINGS
--- ACCOUNT

•

GOESSLER'S

ASHLAND SERVICE
279W. Main

Jillagt

·FOR THE FIRST

FOR THE FUTURE
OF 7ls FIRST
BABY

FOR MEIGS COUNTY'S
FIRST
P.RRIVAL OF
1972
OUR GIFT
$5.00 GIFT CERTIFICATE

IS PRESENTED

(•

.,.

Applications must be filed in this office by Jan. 7,
1972. In case of a tie, award will be distributed at
discretion of contest committee.
•

•

....

.;

Exact time of birth must be specified in written
statement by attending physician.

LISTED ON THIS PAGE AND FACING PAGE ARE GIFTS
OFFERED BY LOCAL MERCHANTS THAT GO TO THE
FIRST BABY BORN OF MEIGS COUNTY PARENTS.
PARENTS OF CHILDREN BORN AFTER MIDNIGHT,
DE&lt;;. 31, 1971, ARE ASKED TO SEND THEIR NAME,
ADDP.E''C:, "Nu DOCTOR'S REPORT, TO THE DAILY
SE,HINEL NuT . !HER THAN JAN. 7, 1972.

KIPS SHOE STORE

·A
TRAINING
CHAIR
TO THE

FIRST BABY
OF THE
1972 NEW YEAR
FROM... .

OUR SPECIAL
GIFrS

$10.00
SAVINGS ACCOUNT
and

.. ONE OOirfBANK
Compliments From • ••

H&amp;R .fiRESTONE
MIDDLE PORT, 0.

MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

0.

· · For 1972 New Year
BABY

·POMEROY
-I.

"'

•

'

[.

'

'

. "

'

'

�'

J

I

J

to:...TIIo lloUv Senlinel,Mlddleport-Pomeroy,O .. Dec. 31,1971

Sentinel
Classifieds
Get
Action!
Sentinel
Classifieds
Get'
Results!
.
-------------------------------------------oj' '
•
Business Services
' For Sale
AUTOMOBILE insurance
2 SIGNS
TWO 283 CU IN Chevrolet
been cancelled? Lost ' your
engines; al so 1964 Chevrolet
operator 's license? Call 992bod y. Phone 985 4118.
Of
2966.
12 29-3tc
Motor
Co.
'6-15-tfc
QUALITY
C. BRADFORD. Auctian..,r

WANT AD
INFORI,\A TION
DEADLINES
5 P.M. Day Before Publication
Monday Deadline 9 a m.
,_
(illeJI~tiQn_S. CorrectiQnS
Will be accepted until9 a.m. for
Day of Publioatlon
·
REGULATIONS
.

Pomeroy

END OF YEAR

The Publisher reserves the

right 'to edit or reject any ads
'deemed objectional. Th,.

1970 CAMARO COUPE
350 v.s engine. automatt c,

-- for more than one incorrect
insertion.

RATES

1970 DODGE POLARA

For Wapt Ad Serv ice

5cents per Word one insertion
Minimum Charge 75c
12 cents _ per

word

CARD OF THANKS
&amp;OBITUARY

BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per ·

Advert1semcn1.

$2995

200 Gallons Fuel Oil When
You Buy Any Siegler Heater
Thru Dec. 31.

992-5443.

trre. young fryers Phone 843-

BAND, Friday and Saturday ,

New L1ma Road for
and other pnzes.

11,

hog

12-30 2tc
THE Wh1spermg Pines Nile
Club wil l close at 7 p . m
Friday night, New Year's
Eve . Dance Saturday mght,
Jan 1, 10 p m unhl 2 a m
Music by The Kasua ls. 4 pc
band and two fem a le singers
from Beverly. Ohio.

12 - 29~ 3tc

-

.

overwetgh l lad ies. teens and
men interested tn a Wetght

,wa tc hers

I R1 Cla ss

' Pomeroy

w r rte

Wet~ht 1

REPRESENTATIVE

Sunday ,

WANTS TO

sick TV to Chuck's TV Shop,

LOOKI NG for bargains? Start

ABOUT THE NEW

the New Year right and come
to Hayman's Auction, Friday
night. Auction starts at 7 p.m .
Hayman Auction Hou se ,

Signed ·
Cogar

Gera ld

ARMY PAY RAISE

12-28-4tc

any debts contr ac ted b{
anyone other than mysel .

Russell

LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
B1ds w ill be r ecel.ved at the
":' =off ice of the Vi ll age Clerk , on
Seco nd Stree t, Village of
Pomeroy, Oh io, until 12 o'clock
noon, Januar y 17, 1972, for the
following proposal.
For a new two way rad 10
sys te m .
Spectfi catl on s are on file in
the office of the Mayor in the
Vllage of Pomeroy , Ohio
Each bid must contain the full
name of every person or
com pany Interested In the
sa me, and be accompanied by a
bOnd or certified check in the
sum of 1100.00 to the satisfaction
of the Village Council as a
guaranty that if the bid is accrpted , a con tra ct will be en .
· ·fered into and Its performance
properly secured .
These checks or bonds will be
returned at once to all except
the successful bidder . His check
or bond will be held until the
contract or bid Is properly
executed by him .
The right is reserved to reject
any and all b ids.
Jane Walton , Clerk
VIllage of Pomeroy , Ohio
1121 H, 31 , 2tc

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC SALE
TO WHOM IT MAY CON CERN :
Notice rs hereby given that on
January 11th, 1972, at 9. 30 A . M
a rublic sale will be held at
Po .1 eroy Motor Company ,
Po n eroy , Ohio to sell for cash
the follow•ng co lla teral , to wit
1965 Chevrolet, Spt Cpe , Ser .
No
16 .. 375 N 144 ll6
sa1d
colla t eral bemo he ld to secur e
an obtigatron ar ising under a
retail tnstalment secvrr ty
agreement executed by Ray
McGuire and he ld by General
Motors Acceptance Cor porat ion
as secured Po!lrty . Said public
sale is to be con ducted ac .
cord ing to th e laws of the Sta l e
• ~ of Dhro General Motors Ac ·
ceptan ce Corporation reserves
the rig ht to bid at th is sa l e.
The collateral 1S presently
slored and may be seen at
Po meroy Mo tor Company,
Pomeroy , Ohio
General Motors
Acceptance Corporation
De c 31

While learning about the pay
raise, have him exp lain how
you may enlist and stay
home for the holid ays

Call him at 614-593-3022
ca II collect
for
complete details .
Toda y's Army wants to
join you at a much
higher salary .

WANTED!

·I'"'2fr
The
Daily Sentinel
,Ill Court St,

Pomeroy, Olllo

For Rent

Mason &amp;Hartford

apartments. Close to school

Phone 992-5434.

For Sale or Trade
FOR PICKUP tru ck, 1967
Dodge Coronet Oav1d Yost.
Portland , Ohto. Phone 843-

2242 .

INVITATION TO BID
Sea led proposals will be
received at the Village Clerk 's
Off i ce , Middleport V i l l age
Cl erk's Off ice, Race St r eet,
Middleport, Ohio, until ,. :00
p .m Jan 1,., 1972 and opened as
soon as pra cticable th ereafter,
for performing and executing
the Cont ract for Middl eport
Fire Department, Race Str eet
at North Fourth Stree t, Mid
dleport, Ohio. , .
In accordance with the plans
and specifications, and a l l
Contract document s contained
here in, prepared by Aubl e
Ml tc heff . Bvrge ss
and
Associates , • '~2 West State
Street , Athe ns, Ohro 45701. 1188
Pippin Road, C1nci nn at1. Ohio

•sm.

For

l lnd tca teProl ectl
Addit ional in format ion may
be secured from the Office of
Auble·Mitcheii . Burge ss &amp;
Associates , ,. lf2 w. State Ath ens ,
Ohio -5701.
Ea ch bid must be ac compcmled by a bid bond of 10
pet . of the proposed contract at
the time of bid opening and the
successful bidder Will be
required to post a 100 pet .
performance bond based on his
bid total . This amount must be
stated In dollars and cents
The own ers reserve the right
to reject any or att b ids, or to
accept the bid which embraces
such combinalton of alternate
proposal s as may promote the
best Interests of the Village of
M iddleport .
Gene Grate , Cler k
Village of Middleport
(12) , • •

31

(I)

7. 14, 4t

•.

BILL NELSON 992-3657
TOM CROW, 992-2580

HARRISON'S TV and Antenna

Selvice &amp; Repair

Serv1ce. Phone 992 ·2522.

6-10-tfc

All Commercial &amp;

NEIGLER Building Su ppl y
Free estrmate on building
your new hom e. Will draw
prthts to suit the lay of your

la nd

Home Units

Ca ll Guy Neigler ,

Racine. Ohio. For repair and
alummum siding , sotfe t and

gutter. Cal l Donald Sm1th.
Raci ne, Ohio.

&gt;

24-Hour Service

·

10-7-tfc
-:-=-------~

SEW IN G MACHINES Repair

Also Furnace Repair
PH. 992-7260

ser vice, a ll makes. 992-2284.
The Fabnc Shop. Pomeroy.
Author i zed Singer Sa les and
Service We Sha rpen Scissors.

C&amp;M
REFRIGERATION
SERVICE

3-29-tfc

Real Estate For Sale

St , Middleport Phone 9927004 or 992-3585 , Danny
Thompson .

12' 14' - 24' • WiDE

12-23-lfc

MILLER

NICE TRAILER. 1 bedroom ,

MOBILE HOMES

idea l for couple, 10 miles
north of Pomero y. Phone 992 -

6452.

Phone 992-5592.

12-19-tfc

TEAFORD
SR.
6roker
110 Mechanic Street
Pomeroy, Oh1o

1220 Washington Blvd.
Be Ipre, Ohio

12-15 lfc

Virgil B.

CHESHIRE -

Auto Sales
MERCURY Monter ey 1n good
cond i fton . power st eering ,
power brakes . See Weber
acro ss from the State Garage .

Large block

business building on Rt. 7
Suitable for restaurant , stor e,
garage or service sf alton .

RURAL - One acre with old
house $1500.00 CASH
Court . Rl. 124, Syracuse »
BUSINESS
- East
.Jhio. 992-2951
12 30 3tp Ma1n . 9 BUILDING
rooms, 1 bath , 3
4-2- tfc .
reslrooms . $18,500 00 IF
'64 PONTIAC Catal ina conSOLO THIS YEAR.
2 BEDROOM mobile home, vertible. Coroe look thts over RURAL
- 6 rooms, bath, gas
I RAILE-R lOTS, Bob's Mobile

furnished, u ti I ities pa i d,
available now . Phone 992-

7384.

12-28-3tc

a,t 105 Union Ave , Phone 992-

3293 belween 5 p m and 8 p
m

12306tc

NEW, 12 x 60, 2 bedroom mob1le 1964 VOLKSWAGEN , good
runn 1ng

4 ROOM HOUSE. furniShed at
124 Laurel St, Pomeroy Ca ll
992 ·5836 or
Laurel St.

1nqu1re at

c ondttt on,

Phone 742 4423
52

$400

12 29 3tp

CHEVROLET

piCkup.

perfect cond1tto n, $900 .
Serrous 1nquines on l y. Phone

992-6083

12-29·10tp

126

'69 DODGE Sw inger 2 doer

12-30-6tc

hardtop V8 standard, red with

D.A.V. home m Pomeroy for
group meetings and parties,

phone 992-5247

12tc

black vinyl top, $1, 100. '69

Volkswagen, good condit ron,
$1,100 . '68 Ford pickup custom

cab, 6-cyl .. 3 speed, 25,00'
mi les, 51,400 . Phone 992·6t'
127

2 BEDROOM mobile home in
Racine area . Phone 992 ·6329 .

1970 W-30 OLDSMOBILE

442

automatic, factorl s tere~
tape . Lots of extras. ike new.

12-14-tfc

Call 992-2441 after 5 p.m.
11 -28-tfc

Wanted To Rent

'

NURSE and secretary destres
house with some acreage in

furnace.

Also

Bu stness

Building, 30x44.
3 HOUSES - 2 rented Other

one ha s 3 bedrooms . bath, gas
forced air furnace wi th fr ee

Pomeroy

POMEROY
•

HOME &amp; AUTO

606

E.

992-2094
Main Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPLIES
And

FURNITURE
Stop In a ncl See Our
Floor Display.

gas to all. NOW ONLY
$16,000.00.
O' DELL WHEEL alig ent
INVEST YOUR 1971
located at Crossroads, Rt 124.
PROFITS. BUY NOW.
Complete
front end service,
.HELEN L. TEAFO RD.
tune
up
and
brake serv ice .
ASSOCIATE
Wheels
balanced
elec 992-3325-992-2378
tronically
All
work
12-23-6tc
guaranteed.
Reasonable
rates. Phone 992-3213
7-27-tfc

&amp;OB East Main

POMEROY
AN OTHER TEMPTING BUY
- POMEROY - 1 story
frame , 2 bedrooms , with
closets. bath, utility -room in
basement, har dwood fl oors ,
gas furnace and hot wa t er

tank, la rge lot, EXCELLENT
CONDITION,
JUST $7,.
900.00.

room frame, 2 bedrooms,
bath, basement, porches, gas

FORCED-AIR heat, GOING
AT SS,ooo.oo.

COAL, lr mestone. EKcels 1or

Sa lt Work s. E. Main St , 3 BEDROOM ranch type home. TUPPERS PLAINS
A
Arbaugh Addition. Tuppers
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3891
BRANQ. NEW SPLIT LEVEL
Plains Al l new with total
(BRICK) 6 acres, 3 large
49-ttc

5443.

8-15-tfc

LONG BOTTOM - Five room
house,

bath , b usiness

storage building Phone 985-3529.

or

56,500.

12-19-30tc

GAS HEATER, 55,000 BTU,
natura l or boftled gas, good
condition with metalbestos
chimney, $50 Phone 949·3211.

12-29-3tc
SINGER automatic sewing
machine . Like new, in
beautiful walnut ca bi ne t,

makes design stitches, zigzags, buttonholes, blind hems,

etc Will sell for $85. Call

Ravenswood 273·9893 after 5

pm .

11 -28-tfc
STE R E&lt;l. wfy American
stereo , radio combination
AM · FM radio, 4-speaker
sound system . Balance $79 .81.
Use our budget terms Ca ll

992-7085.

W~LNUT ,

modern

style .

stereo.radio, AM- FM radio, 4.
speaker sound system . 4·
speed au tomatic chang er .

Balance $68 .59 . Use our
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
12-29-61c

sewi ng machines, still in
ortgmal carto ns. No at .
tachments needed as our
controls are buil t in. Sews
w1 th I or 2 needles, makes
buttonholes , sews on buttons .
monograms, a nd blind hem

stitch. Full ca'sh price, 138.50 . 1.
Budget plan available . Phone

99?-5641

•

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto .
' Open 8Til'5
Monday thr u Saturdoy
606 E. Main, Pomeroy , 0.

JOHNSON' MASONRY
Comp lete

Remodeling

992-7608

-

ALL WEATHER ROOFING
&amp;CONSTRUCTION
&amp; PLUMBING CO.
240 ~lncoln St.
Middleport, Ohio
Oba Anthony Plumbing
We have a complete
HomeMainlonance Servlco
the year around . No maher

what your need. Complete
roof or spouting repair .
Interior or exterior clr -

pontry . Ceiling tile and
Paneling and
Siding .
Complete Plumbing &amp;
Heating.
Day Number 992-2550
We have 24 hr. emergency
service.
992-580J
742-3'47
742-4761
We are fully Insured

UPHOLSTERING SERVICE.
complete selection of fabrics
and vi nyl to choose fr om .
Pick-up and delivery. Slater BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
Upholstering, Rt 3, Pomeroy,
Septic tanks Installed. George
phone 992-3617.
( Billl Pullins, Phone 992-U78.
12-27-JOtp
4-25-lft

WMPO Radio , 1390 in Middleport Pomeroy, will be playing the TOP SO
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 Iisten to your favorites of the past
year , As an ADDED BONUS, WMPOwill give
away Sl3.9J) .AND 13 . ~ .E~!)RQ, AL·I!UMS •TO
the person .&gt;Wlo can correctly list th.e TOP TEN
RECORDS OF 1971 in order, Entries must be
in the station or postmarked before December
30, 1971 , In case of a t ie, decision of the judges
will be final. So get your entries in now for the
Top Ten Contest and be sure to listen to r
WMPO Radio - 1390 - for the unveiling of the
1971 top SO . .• That's this Saturday, New
Year 's Day.

-

,"NOTICE"

MEIGS COUNTY AUDITOR

12-29 6fc

BY JACK O'BRIAN .
GLAD YOU ASKED,
MRS. STEINER
NEW YORK (KFS)
"Dear Mr. O'Brian /' writes
reader Dorothea Steiner of .
Yonkers, "I heard you say on
1V that you are not a celebrity,
that you only write about
celebrities and talk about them
on the air, But we'd like to
kl1 ow perhaps just once who
YOW' personal friends are. For
instance, to whom do you write
Ou-istmas cards, or phone
once in a while. Please?"
Okay, Mrs, S. We Just got a ....J
call from the Bellamys, Alice
and Ralph, our daughter
Kate's godparents, They're off:
to Fiji and Australia by ship'
and wouldn 't be here for OlD'
usual Christmas Eve telephone
klatch . ., Morton Downey, OlD' ·
daughter Bridget's godfather,
to whom we speak virtually
every day, whether he's in
Palm Beach, Manhattan or
wherever. Perry Como, friend
since '43, and his wife Roselle,
Ill fine folk aa fit into OlD' fine
book ... Perry's aide, Harry '
Sobol,
brilliant
conversationalist and "Wlcle" to
OW' sprigs.
Tin Pan Alley's Cork
O'K..,fe and Chicago's Pat
O'Malley ... All four owners of

\\
SUNDAY
00-13. " The Nun's Story"
7:30-8, TBA
9: ll0-13, " Grand Slam"
11 :30-8, " 13 Frightened Girls"
11 :30-13, "Sherlock Holmes In
Washington"
MONDAY
9. ll0-3, "Showboar'
11 : 30-8, " Gideon of Scotland
Yards"
11 :30-13, " Untamed Youth"

80

ex
erguson ,
General Motors

=

~ - QQ

, re

sales exec, .
whohasmoreenthusiasmafter
passi·ng 80 than most lads
racing to get to 35 ... Walter ·
Winchell, the fellow who
started the three-dot art form
.. . Danny Lavezzo, owner of P, •

"'d

~

,....
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~

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~

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111

111

'

J;Vl::

TUESDAY
"G idget

11 : Jo-8, " Over Exposed"

WEDNESDAY
7.1l0-3, " Wild, Wild Winter"
1L3tr-3, "Left Hand of God"
11. 3tr-8, " The Camp on Blood
Isl and"

THURSDAY
9 ll0-8, TBA
11·3fr-13, "Guns of Darkness"
11 : 3tr-8, "Four Ta bles of Love"

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Old Buffalo
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love : Ed Sullivan, a splendid
composer who opt ed for
Buffaloandbecame adeputy

still friends ... Darwin Martin
of San Francisco who once
owned a Buffalo Hotel
(Stuyvesant) and tlJo retired, .

-s

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

Jtm Kerr, president of AVCO

nightclub owner and now
catering firm owner; Jack
Scott, transpQrtation exec, Ann
McDhenney Mathews - all
friends since we were kids and

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FRIDAY
8· 30-3, "The Last Flight"
9:00-8, TBA
11 : 30-8, " Reach for Glory"
11 :30-1 3, " Up Periscope"
SATURDAY
8:30-13, " The Astronaut"
9.00-3, "Vanquished"
11 · 30-8, "Operation Solo"
11 .30-13, " Maneater of Hydra "
and "Wa r of the Monster"

Gets

Married''

,_L't)
G.J,"Q.:;, =o::~:.:GI:::~'&lt;w#L05

41

Ql

11:~

11 3fr-13, " Violent Road"

~

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\)( )\

8: 30- 13,

4

/!=
0

"21," a posh saloon we 've
aAittendedF for some 30 yeartir~ ed
...

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~~rh;~~i~:~e~~g:y~:;~a:: ~ 0 ~: ~ 2~: ~: ~~ ~ ~ ~~ ~ ~ ~ z~ ~~: ~ ~ ~ ~· ~2 ~ :~ :~g ~ 2~

~ bubbling, interested

•

from show biz to the best - -- - -- -- - --

:~

wines.

• I

''
I

1.50

~6 . 50

,55

.65

2.50
2,50

23.00

26,50

,55
,55

,65 1.00 32.00
.65 1.00 35.50

1.50

32.80

,55

.65 1.00 40,80

2.00
2,00

23.00
22-00

.55
.55

,65
.65

1.00 31.50
1.00 30.50

2.50

22.00

,55

.65

1.00 31.00

1.50

23.00

.55

.65 1.00 31.00

2,00

23.00

,55

,65

2.50

lAO

26.50
26.50

,55
9.00 .55

.65 1.00 35.50
.65 1.00 43.40

1.50

26.50

.55

,65 1.00 34.50

1.30
.20
.20

26.50

,55
.55

.65 1.00 84.30
.65 1.00 36,90
.65 1.00 40.90

26.50
26.50

,

3.70
7,70 . ,55

1.00 34,50

1.00 31.50

2,50

26.50

.55

.65 1.00 35.50

2.00
.70
.70
2.00

22.00
22,00

.55
8.00 ,55
10.30 .55
.55

.65 1.00 30.50
.65 1.00 37.20
.65 1.00 39.50
.65 1.00 35.00

22.00

26.50

Real estate taxes which have not be en paid at the close of each colle~tion
carry a penalty of ten per cent. Taxes may be paid at the office of the count
treas urer or by maiL Please bring YO!l r last tax receipt and if you pay by m ~
be "!Ire to locate y~ur pmperty by taxing district. Always examine your ~1
.recmpt i,o see that It covers all your property, Office Hours 9:00A.M, to 4·0~
P.M. da1ly except Saturday when office closeR at Noon. Tax books will open
Dr cember 15, 1971 to February 3, 1972,
HOWARD E. FRANK, Meigs County Treasurer

'

Br_'Way

remains

I~

AND CORPORATIONS

along ·

~~:::~~rker~ac~ack M~~~~~:

~~

BEDFORD
Meigs Local S.D. _______ 4.30
room wi th stone f ireplace,
CHESTER
dining room, bui lt. in kitchen
Eastern Local S,D, __ __ _ 4.30
with dining space , utilitv
or 992-3585. Danny Thompson . r oom , 2 car garage, hot water
Meigs Local S.D. _______ 4.30
Fi na ncing avai labl e.
heaL carpeted throughout 1
12-30-lfc except baths and kitchen . A COLUMBIA
Alexander Local S.D. __ _ 4.30
WONDERFUL HOME .
$48,000.00.
SIX ROOM house, 133 Butternu•
LEBANON
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, 2137
Eastern Local S.D. __ __ __ 4,30
Wadsworth Dri ve, Columbus, START THE NEW YEAR OFF
WITH
A
HOME
OF
YOUR
Sout hern Local S,D, _____ 4,30
Of1io. phone 237-4334.
OWN,
SEE
US
TODAY.
11 -21 -lfc
LETART
HENRY CLELAND
Southern Local S.D, _____ 4,30
HOU-SE. 1642 Lincoln Heights.
REALTOR
Office 992 ~ 2259
Call Danny Thompson, 992..
OLIVE
2196 .
Residence 992-2568
F,astern Local S.D. _____ 4.30
12-27-6tc
ORANGE
Eastern Local S.D. ------ 4.30
RUTLAND
Meigs Local S.D. - ---- - - 4,30
Rutland Village - - --- - -- 4.30
SALEM
Meigs Local S.D. -- - ---- 4,30
SALISBURY
Meigs Local S.D, - -- - - -- 4,30
Middleport Village ______ 4.30
P omeroy Village ________ 4.30
SCIPIO
goes on sale Jan . 3 &amp; you have until
Meigs Local S.D. - ------ 4,30
Feb. 1 to get without penalty . Ap- ,
SUTTON
plicants must bring their title in to
Southern Local S.D. ____ 4,30
obtain the tax, No tax will be sold for
Racine Village ---- ~-- - ~ 4.30
Syracuse Village -- ---- - 4.30
less than $36.00, Figured by cost price
Sutton-Meigs Local _____ 4.30

depreciated down time by tax rate
when trailer is located. Decal must be
placed in . front window . They are
bought at the County Auditor's O(fice,

PAINT damage, 1970 Zig Zag

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992 -2~94

bedrooms, closets galore, 3112

beths, large glassed livi ng

House Trailer Tax

12-29-6tc

Open every doy except
Mondoy
1 P.M. til7 P.M.

t;~

SCHOOL DISTRICTS

Parkv1ew Kennel s, Phone 992-

.':i.55

for Signs.

In purs ua~ce of l!lw, I, Howard E. Frank, Treasurer of Meigs County, Ohio,
do hereby give notice that the number of Mills levied on each dollar of property shown on the 9e~eral ,Tax Duplicate of Real Estate, Public Utility and
P er sonal Property w1thm said County for the year 1971 is as follows:

lots . N o reasonable offe r
refused. Phone 949 ·43 13

el ectric and ce ntral a i r
conditioni ng, bath and lf4,
fully carpeted , full basement ,
garage in basement See by
appomtment, phone 992-2196

HIDDEN
TREASURES
GifT. SHoP

RATES OF TAXATION FOR 1971

TOWNSHIPS

POODLE puppies, Si lver Toy,

Dolls, all dressed in style,
kniHed and crocheted. ( Hos
10 be seen to be appreciated)
Many items you have been
looking lor, lor that perfect
gift,
.

Cleland
Realty'

Meig s County area . Ca ll Real Estate For Sale
Athens 593-6495.
RACI NE - 10 room house,
12-28-31c bath , basement, garage, two SEE THIS - POMEROY - 6
12-22-12tp

wearing
apparel, , jewelry,
ceramics.

MARTHA ROSE, oWner
Located on County R.. d J4'
near Royal Oak Park. Walch

And Patios

Ph. 992-2174

l• decorations,
Christmas

EXPERT
·Wheel Alignment

Room Additions

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

'GifT ITEMS

Hll TQN WOLFE
DALE DUTTON, 992·25~4

Kitchens, Baths

From the la rgest
Bulldozer Radiator lo
Smallest Heater Core.
Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specialist

HQDCRAFT

1
94J-32_11

11-7-tfc

Sycam ore

For Sale

LEGAL NOTICE

estimates. Phone 992-3284.
Goeg lein Ready-Mi x Co ..
Middleport, Oh io.
6-30-tfc,

10-18-tfc

12 - 19~

PHONE 992-2156
FOR DETAILS!

del i vered r 1ght to your
pro1ect Fast and easy Free

basement , 2 lots, new forc ed
a1r furnace Near Pomeroy
Elem entary School
Phon e:
992·7384 to se e.

FURNISHED and unfurnished

12-27-tf c

SENTINEL
CARRIERS

CO NCRETE

12-17-90tc NICE 2 slory home Wilh lull

Charles Lewis, 2nd house
south from Bradbury School .
Pets welco me

.t:or Sale

·usEDOFFSET PLATES
HAVE ,
MANY USES

or used mobile home, try
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
Kanauga, Oh io

School. Call 992-5308 or see

Help Wanted

2- 12-ttc

FOR THE BEST deal'" a new

home a cross from Bradbury

Pla ns and spec tfications may
be picked up at the Arc hitec t 's
office or ·at the Middleport
Vi lla ge Clerk 's Off ice · 4112 West
State St reet, Athens, Ohro
..45701 ; Race Street, Middleport ,
Ohio .
A deposit Is required as called
for In the " Instruct ion to Brd Like every orbit m space, ders ." Bids shalt be sealed and
in a sealed enveloped
that of the moon is an ellipse. enclosed
dellv~red to the Clerk ' s Office,
237 Race St. , Middleport, Ohio
, •
-~~-----'-i·.·r .S760.
Th e envti lope shall be en
1 dorsed as follows in the upp er
fl
left ha nd cor ner :
Proposa I for
36" X 23" 1....009
(I ndi cate Class of Work' )

Alu.mirium
Shiets-

12-30-tfc

BEDROOM and 2 bedroom

12-29-3tp

~~-~

WI LL DO bab ysitting rn my
home. Also housework 2 days
a week Phone 992 -5972
12 30 4t c

mobil e homes. Adults only

12-28-3tp
GUN SHOOT, Sunday, Jan . 2. 1
p m., Racine Gun Club.
12-29-3tc

air condi ti oned, 8' x20' por ch
a nd
al uminum
awning ,
a lum rnum sktr lmg , co m pletely setup,
beau tt ful
loca tJon . Ow ner leavi ng state .
Phone 949 ·4892 or 992 .5272

Employment Wanted

home, gas heat ,

TALK TO YOU

11 -21 -lfc

I WILL NOT be responsible for

Mobile Homes For Sale

SOx 12 TWO BEDROOM mobile

151 Butternut Ave ., Pomeroy

Phone 992-5080.

12-17-tfc

60 xl2 , I. bedroom , a H·electric ,

12-29-3tc

SAVE up to one half . Bring your

Laurel Cliff.

Call 992-6271 .

10-3-lfc INTER lOR painting . Call Don
VanMeter 985 3951.
12-19 121p

YOUR LOCAL ARMY

662-4035.

12-30 6tc

Miller, Rt . .4, Pom eroy , Ohio.

Rd ., Cincinnati, Ohio 45237

YOUNG MEN

5-12-tfc
.
.
SE PTtC tanks cleaned. Miller

-,.-~~~~~~

in

Watchers (RI. 1863 Seclion

GUN SHOOT , Forked Run
Sportsman Club,
Jan 2, 12 noon .

Wanted To Buy

S - Filzpat ri ck Or
OLD FURNITURE , Round Oak APPLE
chards
. Sta te Ro ute 689 ,
tables. Brass beds, dishes.
pha.ne
Wilesville,
669·3785
clocks , and -or complete
9-3-tl c
. 12-28-4tp
househol ds. Write M D.

ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT ..

SHOOTI NG match. Saturday.

Fire Dept

2778 .

Ja ck's Club, cover charge.
For reservations come to club
m person .

12-30-21c
Jan . L at the Racme Planmg
Mill at 6 p m Factory choke
guns only . Assorted meat
Sponsored by the Syracuse

12-30-tlc

352 FORD motor, 10x28 lractor

Notice

STILL SHOOT, Sunday . Jan. 2.
I p.m at Rutland Gun Club on

fancy

guppies, angels and breeders ,•
Bel tas and supplies. Phone

OFFICE HOURS
30 a .m to 5 00 p m. Daily.
8 30 a m to 12 00 Noor

Not1ce

FISH ,

TROPI~L

8

Saturdav .

Reasonable rates . Ph 446-4782 ,
Gall i polis . John Russell ,
Ot-mer &amp; Operator.

READY -MIX

OPEH EVES. 1:00 P.M.
i'j)MEROY, OHIO

,

S-1-tfc

Sanitation. Stewart, Oh1o. Ph .

POMIODY
Jack W. Clrtty, Mtr
, ...... Ht-2111

Pomeroy llotor Co.

Sl 50 for 50 word minimum
' Each add1tional word 2c,

Crill Bradford

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED

GET FREE

Low m tleage by loca l owner with lots of warranty left.
factory air cond1honed, v.s engrne, turbo-hydromatic, p
steer tng , gold body , sanda l wood vinyl top, radto, vtn yl
interior, good w-w t ires Th rs carts loaded with extra s

secuhve msert ions.
25 Per Cent Discount on pa i'-t
ads and ads paid within 10 day~

·

$2395

1970C HEVELLE MALIBU HT CPE .

1

Racine. Ohio

SIEGLER HEATER

tires. radio &amp; other extras, whtte finish . clean mterior

threE;.

con iecut1ve insertions
· l8 cents per word s1x con

·.

Dr., V-8 engine, automatic trans., P S , factor y air . good

&lt;1

Phone 949-3821

Buy Any Fuel Oil
'

FO!JR NEW HOMES _,__
OPEN FOR INSPECTL!lN
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME tN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONI;Y DOWN
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom 116.900.00 home can be purchased with a
monthly payment as low as 565.00 lor a family with a base
salltry, of $5,000.00 and three children. 7'1•· Pet. annua l
~~~a rate,

Comp let e Service

Clearance Sale!

power steering console,
beautiful dark green, finished with green v inyl roof Less
than 22, 000 mtles by local owner, radto, new w-w t~r es . A
sharp model priced to please

publisher will not be responstbte

.

$279S

Business Services

.

'

Voice

r~ . . ..n -

and girls .

A lawyer we've known
since he was a kid who grew up
to be one of the most brilliant in
the world, the controversial
and never dull Roy M, Cohn .. . ,..
Albert Blinder,.ex.,.ss't federal ~
attorney to whom marvelous 1.1
disasters occur regularly : such
as the time he was an ass'!
district attorney and a girl he
arrested in an abortion mill
raid and held as a hostile but
effective witness named the
son she never wanted, "Albert
Bllnder
something"
Columnist Leonard Lyons (we
don't ail hale each other ) ...
Great old comedian Jack (Vas
you dere Sharlie?) Pearl ,..
Dick Piperno ... Louise Jorio,
owner of Louise's E. ~ St.
restaurant, and her son Bob
and husband Dick, who fought
' Madison Square Garden main
events more than 50 years ago l------=----- -- -- at 135 poWJds, and now at 79,
weighs 175 and it's all muscle
from his upstate farming .
(That's why Gloria Swanson
eats at' Louise's regularly they serve their own homegrown vegetables.)

·'
.,

...•
'

. ''

I
I

I
I
I

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t

,LJSTEN
2oth CENTU
FORMATION HOU

Mon•.thru Fri.
9:30AM
.

1360

'

....

ON THE
.DIAL

.'
~

' ..,

.
I'

�'

J

I

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to:...TIIo lloUv Senlinel,Mlddleport-Pomeroy,O .. Dec. 31,1971

Sentinel
Classifieds
Get
Action!
Sentinel
Classifieds
Get'
Results!
.
-------------------------------------------oj' '
•
Business Services
' For Sale
AUTOMOBILE insurance
2 SIGNS
TWO 283 CU IN Chevrolet
been cancelled? Lost ' your
engines; al so 1964 Chevrolet
operator 's license? Call 992bod y. Phone 985 4118.
Of
2966.
12 29-3tc
Motor
Co.
'6-15-tfc
QUALITY
C. BRADFORD. Auctian..,r

WANT AD
INFORI,\A TION
DEADLINES
5 P.M. Day Before Publication
Monday Deadline 9 a m.
,_
(illeJI~tiQn_S. CorrectiQnS
Will be accepted until9 a.m. for
Day of Publioatlon
·
REGULATIONS
.

Pomeroy

END OF YEAR

The Publisher reserves the

right 'to edit or reject any ads
'deemed objectional. Th,.

1970 CAMARO COUPE
350 v.s engine. automatt c,

-- for more than one incorrect
insertion.

RATES

1970 DODGE POLARA

For Wapt Ad Serv ice

5cents per Word one insertion
Minimum Charge 75c
12 cents _ per

word

CARD OF THANKS
&amp;OBITUARY

BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per ·

Advert1semcn1.

$2995

200 Gallons Fuel Oil When
You Buy Any Siegler Heater
Thru Dec. 31.

992-5443.

trre. young fryers Phone 843-

BAND, Friday and Saturday ,

New L1ma Road for
and other pnzes.

11,

hog

12-30 2tc
THE Wh1spermg Pines Nile
Club wil l close at 7 p . m
Friday night, New Year's
Eve . Dance Saturday mght,
Jan 1, 10 p m unhl 2 a m
Music by The Kasua ls. 4 pc
band and two fem a le singers
from Beverly. Ohio.

12 - 29~ 3tc

-

.

overwetgh l lad ies. teens and
men interested tn a Wetght

,wa tc hers

I R1 Cla ss

' Pomeroy

w r rte

Wet~ht 1

REPRESENTATIVE

Sunday ,

WANTS TO

sick TV to Chuck's TV Shop,

LOOKI NG for bargains? Start

ABOUT THE NEW

the New Year right and come
to Hayman's Auction, Friday
night. Auction starts at 7 p.m .
Hayman Auction Hou se ,

Signed ·
Cogar

Gera ld

ARMY PAY RAISE

12-28-4tc

any debts contr ac ted b{
anyone other than mysel .

Russell

LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
B1ds w ill be r ecel.ved at the
":' =off ice of the Vi ll age Clerk , on
Seco nd Stree t, Village of
Pomeroy, Oh io, until 12 o'clock
noon, Januar y 17, 1972, for the
following proposal.
For a new two way rad 10
sys te m .
Spectfi catl on s are on file in
the office of the Mayor in the
Vllage of Pomeroy , Ohio
Each bid must contain the full
name of every person or
com pany Interested In the
sa me, and be accompanied by a
bOnd or certified check in the
sum of 1100.00 to the satisfaction
of the Village Council as a
guaranty that if the bid is accrpted , a con tra ct will be en .
· ·fered into and Its performance
properly secured .
These checks or bonds will be
returned at once to all except
the successful bidder . His check
or bond will be held until the
contract or bid Is properly
executed by him .
The right is reserved to reject
any and all b ids.
Jane Walton , Clerk
VIllage of Pomeroy , Ohio
1121 H, 31 , 2tc

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC SALE
TO WHOM IT MAY CON CERN :
Notice rs hereby given that on
January 11th, 1972, at 9. 30 A . M
a rublic sale will be held at
Po .1 eroy Motor Company ,
Po n eroy , Ohio to sell for cash
the follow•ng co lla teral , to wit
1965 Chevrolet, Spt Cpe , Ser .
No
16 .. 375 N 144 ll6
sa1d
colla t eral bemo he ld to secur e
an obtigatron ar ising under a
retail tnstalment secvrr ty
agreement executed by Ray
McGuire and he ld by General
Motors Acceptance Cor porat ion
as secured Po!lrty . Said public
sale is to be con ducted ac .
cord ing to th e laws of the Sta l e
• ~ of Dhro General Motors Ac ·
ceptan ce Corporation reserves
the rig ht to bid at th is sa l e.
The collateral 1S presently
slored and may be seen at
Po meroy Mo tor Company,
Pomeroy , Ohio
General Motors
Acceptance Corporation
De c 31

While learning about the pay
raise, have him exp lain how
you may enlist and stay
home for the holid ays

Call him at 614-593-3022
ca II collect
for
complete details .
Toda y's Army wants to
join you at a much
higher salary .

WANTED!

·I'"'2fr
The
Daily Sentinel
,Ill Court St,

Pomeroy, Olllo

For Rent

Mason &amp;Hartford

apartments. Close to school

Phone 992-5434.

For Sale or Trade
FOR PICKUP tru ck, 1967
Dodge Coronet Oav1d Yost.
Portland , Ohto. Phone 843-

2242 .

INVITATION TO BID
Sea led proposals will be
received at the Village Clerk 's
Off i ce , Middleport V i l l age
Cl erk's Off ice, Race St r eet,
Middleport, Ohio, until ,. :00
p .m Jan 1,., 1972 and opened as
soon as pra cticable th ereafter,
for performing and executing
the Cont ract for Middl eport
Fire Department, Race Str eet
at North Fourth Stree t, Mid
dleport, Ohio. , .
In accordance with the plans
and specifications, and a l l
Contract document s contained
here in, prepared by Aubl e
Ml tc heff . Bvrge ss
and
Associates , • '~2 West State
Street , Athe ns, Ohro 45701. 1188
Pippin Road, C1nci nn at1. Ohio

•sm.

For

l lnd tca teProl ectl
Addit ional in format ion may
be secured from the Office of
Auble·Mitcheii . Burge ss &amp;
Associates , ,. lf2 w. State Ath ens ,
Ohio -5701.
Ea ch bid must be ac compcmled by a bid bond of 10
pet . of the proposed contract at
the time of bid opening and the
successful bidder Will be
required to post a 100 pet .
performance bond based on his
bid total . This amount must be
stated In dollars and cents
The own ers reserve the right
to reject any or att b ids, or to
accept the bid which embraces
such combinalton of alternate
proposal s as may promote the
best Interests of the Village of
M iddleport .
Gene Grate , Cler k
Village of Middleport
(12) , • •

31

(I)

7. 14, 4t

•.

BILL NELSON 992-3657
TOM CROW, 992-2580

HARRISON'S TV and Antenna

Selvice &amp; Repair

Serv1ce. Phone 992 ·2522.

6-10-tfc

All Commercial &amp;

NEIGLER Building Su ppl y
Free estrmate on building
your new hom e. Will draw
prthts to suit the lay of your

la nd

Home Units

Ca ll Guy Neigler ,

Racine. Ohio. For repair and
alummum siding , sotfe t and

gutter. Cal l Donald Sm1th.
Raci ne, Ohio.

&gt;

24-Hour Service

·

10-7-tfc
-:-=-------~

SEW IN G MACHINES Repair

Also Furnace Repair
PH. 992-7260

ser vice, a ll makes. 992-2284.
The Fabnc Shop. Pomeroy.
Author i zed Singer Sa les and
Service We Sha rpen Scissors.

C&amp;M
REFRIGERATION
SERVICE

3-29-tfc

Real Estate For Sale

St , Middleport Phone 9927004 or 992-3585 , Danny
Thompson .

12' 14' - 24' • WiDE

12-23-lfc

MILLER

NICE TRAILER. 1 bedroom ,

MOBILE HOMES

idea l for couple, 10 miles
north of Pomero y. Phone 992 -

6452.

Phone 992-5592.

12-19-tfc

TEAFORD
SR.
6roker
110 Mechanic Street
Pomeroy, Oh1o

1220 Washington Blvd.
Be Ipre, Ohio

12-15 lfc

Virgil B.

CHESHIRE -

Auto Sales
MERCURY Monter ey 1n good
cond i fton . power st eering ,
power brakes . See Weber
acro ss from the State Garage .

Large block

business building on Rt. 7
Suitable for restaurant , stor e,
garage or service sf alton .

RURAL - One acre with old
house $1500.00 CASH
Court . Rl. 124, Syracuse »
BUSINESS
- East
.Jhio. 992-2951
12 30 3tp Ma1n . 9 BUILDING
rooms, 1 bath , 3
4-2- tfc .
reslrooms . $18,500 00 IF
'64 PONTIAC Catal ina conSOLO THIS YEAR.
2 BEDROOM mobile home, vertible. Coroe look thts over RURAL
- 6 rooms, bath, gas
I RAILE-R lOTS, Bob's Mobile

furnished, u ti I ities pa i d,
available now . Phone 992-

7384.

12-28-3tc

a,t 105 Union Ave , Phone 992-

3293 belween 5 p m and 8 p
m

12306tc

NEW, 12 x 60, 2 bedroom mob1le 1964 VOLKSWAGEN , good
runn 1ng

4 ROOM HOUSE. furniShed at
124 Laurel St, Pomeroy Ca ll
992 ·5836 or
Laurel St.

1nqu1re at

c ondttt on,

Phone 742 4423
52

$400

12 29 3tp

CHEVROLET

piCkup.

perfect cond1tto n, $900 .
Serrous 1nquines on l y. Phone

992-6083

12-29·10tp

126

'69 DODGE Sw inger 2 doer

12-30-6tc

hardtop V8 standard, red with

D.A.V. home m Pomeroy for
group meetings and parties,

phone 992-5247

12tc

black vinyl top, $1, 100. '69

Volkswagen, good condit ron,
$1,100 . '68 Ford pickup custom

cab, 6-cyl .. 3 speed, 25,00'
mi les, 51,400 . Phone 992·6t'
127

2 BEDROOM mobile home in
Racine area . Phone 992 ·6329 .

1970 W-30 OLDSMOBILE

442

automatic, factorl s tere~
tape . Lots of extras. ike new.

12-14-tfc

Call 992-2441 after 5 p.m.
11 -28-tfc

Wanted To Rent

'

NURSE and secretary destres
house with some acreage in

furnace.

Also

Bu stness

Building, 30x44.
3 HOUSES - 2 rented Other

one ha s 3 bedrooms . bath, gas
forced air furnace wi th fr ee

Pomeroy

POMEROY
•

HOME &amp; AUTO

606

E.

992-2094
Main Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPLIES
And

FURNITURE
Stop In a ncl See Our
Floor Display.

gas to all. NOW ONLY
$16,000.00.
O' DELL WHEEL alig ent
INVEST YOUR 1971
located at Crossroads, Rt 124.
PROFITS. BUY NOW.
Complete
front end service,
.HELEN L. TEAFO RD.
tune
up
and
brake serv ice .
ASSOCIATE
Wheels
balanced
elec 992-3325-992-2378
tronically
All
work
12-23-6tc
guaranteed.
Reasonable
rates. Phone 992-3213
7-27-tfc

&amp;OB East Main

POMEROY
AN OTHER TEMPTING BUY
- POMEROY - 1 story
frame , 2 bedrooms , with
closets. bath, utility -room in
basement, har dwood fl oors ,
gas furnace and hot wa t er

tank, la rge lot, EXCELLENT
CONDITION,
JUST $7,.
900.00.

room frame, 2 bedrooms,
bath, basement, porches, gas

FORCED-AIR heat, GOING
AT SS,ooo.oo.

COAL, lr mestone. EKcels 1or

Sa lt Work s. E. Main St , 3 BEDROOM ranch type home. TUPPERS PLAINS
A
Arbaugh Addition. Tuppers
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3891
BRANQ. NEW SPLIT LEVEL
Plains Al l new with total
(BRICK) 6 acres, 3 large
49-ttc

5443.

8-15-tfc

LONG BOTTOM - Five room
house,

bath , b usiness

storage building Phone 985-3529.

or

56,500.

12-19-30tc

GAS HEATER, 55,000 BTU,
natura l or boftled gas, good
condition with metalbestos
chimney, $50 Phone 949·3211.

12-29-3tc
SINGER automatic sewing
machine . Like new, in
beautiful walnut ca bi ne t,

makes design stitches, zigzags, buttonholes, blind hems,

etc Will sell for $85. Call

Ravenswood 273·9893 after 5

pm .

11 -28-tfc
STE R E&lt;l. wfy American
stereo , radio combination
AM · FM radio, 4-speaker
sound system . Balance $79 .81.
Use our budget terms Ca ll

992-7085.

W~LNUT ,

modern

style .

stereo.radio, AM- FM radio, 4.
speaker sound system . 4·
speed au tomatic chang er .

Balance $68 .59 . Use our
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
12-29-61c

sewi ng machines, still in
ortgmal carto ns. No at .
tachments needed as our
controls are buil t in. Sews
w1 th I or 2 needles, makes
buttonholes , sews on buttons .
monograms, a nd blind hem

stitch. Full ca'sh price, 138.50 . 1.
Budget plan available . Phone

99?-5641

•

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto .
' Open 8Til'5
Monday thr u Saturdoy
606 E. Main, Pomeroy , 0.

JOHNSON' MASONRY
Comp lete

Remodeling

992-7608

-

ALL WEATHER ROOFING
&amp;CONSTRUCTION
&amp; PLUMBING CO.
240 ~lncoln St.
Middleport, Ohio
Oba Anthony Plumbing
We have a complete
HomeMainlonance Servlco
the year around . No maher

what your need. Complete
roof or spouting repair .
Interior or exterior clr -

pontry . Ceiling tile and
Paneling and
Siding .
Complete Plumbing &amp;
Heating.
Day Number 992-2550
We have 24 hr. emergency
service.
992-580J
742-3'47
742-4761
We are fully Insured

UPHOLSTERING SERVICE.
complete selection of fabrics
and vi nyl to choose fr om .
Pick-up and delivery. Slater BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
Upholstering, Rt 3, Pomeroy,
Septic tanks Installed. George
phone 992-3617.
( Billl Pullins, Phone 992-U78.
12-27-JOtp
4-25-lft

WMPO Radio , 1390 in Middleport Pomeroy, will be playing the TOP SO
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 Iisten to your favorites of the past
year , As an ADDED BONUS, WMPOwill give
away Sl3.9J) .AND 13 . ~ .E~!)RQ, AL·I!UMS •TO
the person .&gt;Wlo can correctly list th.e TOP TEN
RECORDS OF 1971 in order, Entries must be
in the station or postmarked before December
30, 1971 , In case of a t ie, decision of the judges
will be final. So get your entries in now for the
Top Ten Contest and be sure to listen to r
WMPO Radio - 1390 - for the unveiling of the
1971 top SO . .• That's this Saturday, New
Year 's Day.

-

,"NOTICE"

MEIGS COUNTY AUDITOR

12-29 6fc

BY JACK O'BRIAN .
GLAD YOU ASKED,
MRS. STEINER
NEW YORK (KFS)
"Dear Mr. O'Brian /' writes
reader Dorothea Steiner of .
Yonkers, "I heard you say on
1V that you are not a celebrity,
that you only write about
celebrities and talk about them
on the air, But we'd like to
kl1 ow perhaps just once who
YOW' personal friends are. For
instance, to whom do you write
Ou-istmas cards, or phone
once in a while. Please?"
Okay, Mrs, S. We Just got a ....J
call from the Bellamys, Alice
and Ralph, our daughter
Kate's godparents, They're off:
to Fiji and Australia by ship'
and wouldn 't be here for OlD'
usual Christmas Eve telephone
klatch . ., Morton Downey, OlD' ·
daughter Bridget's godfather,
to whom we speak virtually
every day, whether he's in
Palm Beach, Manhattan or
wherever. Perry Como, friend
since '43, and his wife Roselle,
Ill fine folk aa fit into OlD' fine
book ... Perry's aide, Harry '
Sobol,
brilliant
conversationalist and "Wlcle" to
OW' sprigs.
Tin Pan Alley's Cork
O'K..,fe and Chicago's Pat
O'Malley ... All four owners of

\\
SUNDAY
00-13. " The Nun's Story"
7:30-8, TBA
9: ll0-13, " Grand Slam"
11 :30-8, " 13 Frightened Girls"
11 :30-13, "Sherlock Holmes In
Washington"
MONDAY
9. ll0-3, "Showboar'
11 : 30-8, " Gideon of Scotland
Yards"
11 :30-13, " Untamed Youth"

80

ex
erguson ,
General Motors

=

~ - QQ

, re

sales exec, .
whohasmoreenthusiasmafter
passi·ng 80 than most lads
racing to get to 35 ... Walter ·
Winchell, the fellow who
started the three-dot art form
.. . Danny Lavezzo, owner of P, •

"'d

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TUESDAY
"G idget

11 : Jo-8, " Over Exposed"

WEDNESDAY
7.1l0-3, " Wild, Wild Winter"
1L3tr-3, "Left Hand of God"
11. 3tr-8, " The Camp on Blood
Isl and"

THURSDAY
9 ll0-8, TBA
11·3fr-13, "Guns of Darkness"
11 : 3tr-8, "Four Ta bles of Love"

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Old Buffalo
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love : Ed Sullivan, a splendid
composer who opt ed for
Buffaloandbecame adeputy

still friends ... Darwin Martin
of San Francisco who once
owned a Buffalo Hotel
(Stuyvesant) and tlJo retired, .

-s

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

Jtm Kerr, president of AVCO

nightclub owner and now
catering firm owner; Jack
Scott, transpQrtation exec, Ann
McDhenney Mathews - all
friends since we were kids and

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FRIDAY
8· 30-3, "The Last Flight"
9:00-8, TBA
11 : 30-8, " Reach for Glory"
11 :30-1 3, " Up Periscope"
SATURDAY
8:30-13, " The Astronaut"
9.00-3, "Vanquished"
11 · 30-8, "Operation Solo"
11 .30-13, " Maneater of Hydra "
and "Wa r of the Monster"

Gets

Married''

,_L't)
G.J,"Q.:;, =o::~:.:GI:::~'&lt;w#L05

41

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11 3fr-13, " Violent Road"

~

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8: 30- 13,

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aAittendedF for some 30 yeartir~ ed
...

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•

from show biz to the best - -- - -- -- - --

:~

wines.

• I

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I

1.50

~6 . 50

,55

.65

2.50
2,50

23.00

26,50

,55
,55

,65 1.00 32.00
.65 1.00 35.50

1.50

32.80

,55

.65 1.00 40,80

2.00
2,00

23.00
22-00

.55
.55

,65
.65

1.00 31.50
1.00 30.50

2.50

22.00

,55

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1.00 31.00

1.50

23.00

.55

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2,00

23.00

,55

,65

2.50

lAO

26.50
26.50

,55
9.00 .55

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.65 1.00 43.40

1.50

26.50

.55

,65 1.00 34.50

1.30
.20
.20

26.50

,55
.55

.65 1.00 84.30
.65 1.00 36,90
.65 1.00 40.90

26.50
26.50

,

3.70
7,70 . ,55

1.00 34,50

1.00 31.50

2,50

26.50

.55

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2.00
.70
.70
2.00

22.00
22,00

.55
8.00 ,55
10.30 .55
.55

.65 1.00 30.50
.65 1.00 37.20
.65 1.00 39.50
.65 1.00 35.00

22.00

26.50

Real estate taxes which have not be en paid at the close of each colle~tion
carry a penalty of ten per cent. Taxes may be paid at the office of the count
treas urer or by maiL Please bring YO!l r last tax receipt and if you pay by m ~
be "!Ire to locate y~ur pmperty by taxing district. Always examine your ~1
.recmpt i,o see that It covers all your property, Office Hours 9:00A.M, to 4·0~
P.M. da1ly except Saturday when office closeR at Noon. Tax books will open
Dr cember 15, 1971 to February 3, 1972,
HOWARD E. FRANK, Meigs County Treasurer

'

Br_'Way

remains

I~

AND CORPORATIONS

along ·

~~:::~~rker~ac~ack M~~~~~:

~~

BEDFORD
Meigs Local S.D. _______ 4.30
room wi th stone f ireplace,
CHESTER
dining room, bui lt. in kitchen
Eastern Local S,D, __ __ _ 4.30
with dining space , utilitv
or 992-3585. Danny Thompson . r oom , 2 car garage, hot water
Meigs Local S.D. _______ 4.30
Fi na ncing avai labl e.
heaL carpeted throughout 1
12-30-lfc except baths and kitchen . A COLUMBIA
Alexander Local S.D. __ _ 4.30
WONDERFUL HOME .
$48,000.00.
SIX ROOM house, 133 Butternu•
LEBANON
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, 2137
Eastern Local S.D. __ __ __ 4,30
Wadsworth Dri ve, Columbus, START THE NEW YEAR OFF
WITH
A
HOME
OF
YOUR
Sout hern Local S,D, _____ 4,30
Of1io. phone 237-4334.
OWN,
SEE
US
TODAY.
11 -21 -lfc
LETART
HENRY CLELAND
Southern Local S.D, _____ 4,30
HOU-SE. 1642 Lincoln Heights.
REALTOR
Office 992 ~ 2259
Call Danny Thompson, 992..
OLIVE
2196 .
Residence 992-2568
F,astern Local S.D. _____ 4.30
12-27-6tc
ORANGE
Eastern Local S.D. ------ 4.30
RUTLAND
Meigs Local S.D. - ---- - - 4,30
Rutland Village - - --- - -- 4.30
SALEM
Meigs Local S.D. -- - ---- 4,30
SALISBURY
Meigs Local S.D, - -- - - -- 4,30
Middleport Village ______ 4.30
P omeroy Village ________ 4.30
SCIPIO
goes on sale Jan . 3 &amp; you have until
Meigs Local S.D. - ------ 4,30
Feb. 1 to get without penalty . Ap- ,
SUTTON
plicants must bring their title in to
Southern Local S.D. ____ 4,30
obtain the tax, No tax will be sold for
Racine Village ---- ~-- - ~ 4.30
Syracuse Village -- ---- - 4.30
less than $36.00, Figured by cost price
Sutton-Meigs Local _____ 4.30

depreciated down time by tax rate
when trailer is located. Decal must be
placed in . front window . They are
bought at the County Auditor's O(fice,

PAINT damage, 1970 Zig Zag

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992 -2~94

bedrooms, closets galore, 3112

beths, large glassed livi ng

House Trailer Tax

12-29-6tc

Open every doy except
Mondoy
1 P.M. til7 P.M.

t;~

SCHOOL DISTRICTS

Parkv1ew Kennel s, Phone 992-

.':i.55

for Signs.

In purs ua~ce of l!lw, I, Howard E. Frank, Treasurer of Meigs County, Ohio,
do hereby give notice that the number of Mills levied on each dollar of property shown on the 9e~eral ,Tax Duplicate of Real Estate, Public Utility and
P er sonal Property w1thm said County for the year 1971 is as follows:

lots . N o reasonable offe r
refused. Phone 949 ·43 13

el ectric and ce ntral a i r
conditioni ng, bath and lf4,
fully carpeted , full basement ,
garage in basement See by
appomtment, phone 992-2196

HIDDEN
TREASURES
GifT. SHoP

RATES OF TAXATION FOR 1971

TOWNSHIPS

POODLE puppies, Si lver Toy,

Dolls, all dressed in style,
kniHed and crocheted. ( Hos
10 be seen to be appreciated)
Many items you have been
looking lor, lor that perfect
gift,
.

Cleland
Realty'

Meig s County area . Ca ll Real Estate For Sale
Athens 593-6495.
RACI NE - 10 room house,
12-28-31c bath , basement, garage, two SEE THIS - POMEROY - 6
12-22-12tp

wearing
apparel, , jewelry,
ceramics.

MARTHA ROSE, oWner
Located on County R.. d J4'
near Royal Oak Park. Walch

And Patios

Ph. 992-2174

l• decorations,
Christmas

EXPERT
·Wheel Alignment

Room Additions

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

'GifT ITEMS

Hll TQN WOLFE
DALE DUTTON, 992·25~4

Kitchens, Baths

From the la rgest
Bulldozer Radiator lo
Smallest Heater Core.
Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specialist

HQDCRAFT

1
94J-32_11

11-7-tfc

Sycam ore

For Sale

LEGAL NOTICE

estimates. Phone 992-3284.
Goeg lein Ready-Mi x Co ..
Middleport, Oh io.
6-30-tfc,

10-18-tfc

12 - 19~

PHONE 992-2156
FOR DETAILS!

del i vered r 1ght to your
pro1ect Fast and easy Free

basement , 2 lots, new forc ed
a1r furnace Near Pomeroy
Elem entary School
Phon e:
992·7384 to se e.

FURNISHED and unfurnished

12-27-tf c

SENTINEL
CARRIERS

CO NCRETE

12-17-90tc NICE 2 slory home Wilh lull

Charles Lewis, 2nd house
south from Bradbury School .
Pets welco me

.t:or Sale

·usEDOFFSET PLATES
HAVE ,
MANY USES

or used mobile home, try
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
Kanauga, Oh io

School. Call 992-5308 or see

Help Wanted

2- 12-ttc

FOR THE BEST deal'" a new

home a cross from Bradbury

Pla ns and spec tfications may
be picked up at the Arc hitec t 's
office or ·at the Middleport
Vi lla ge Clerk 's Off ice · 4112 West
State St reet, Athens, Ohro
..45701 ; Race Street, Middleport ,
Ohio .
A deposit Is required as called
for In the " Instruct ion to Brd Like every orbit m space, ders ." Bids shalt be sealed and
in a sealed enveloped
that of the moon is an ellipse. enclosed
dellv~red to the Clerk ' s Office,
237 Race St. , Middleport, Ohio
, •
-~~-----'-i·.·r .S760.
Th e envti lope shall be en
1 dorsed as follows in the upp er
fl
left ha nd cor ner :
Proposa I for
36" X 23" 1....009
(I ndi cate Class of Work' )

Alu.mirium
Shiets-

12-30-tfc

BEDROOM and 2 bedroom

12-29-3tp

~~-~

WI LL DO bab ysitting rn my
home. Also housework 2 days
a week Phone 992 -5972
12 30 4t c

mobil e homes. Adults only

12-28-3tp
GUN SHOOT, Sunday, Jan . 2. 1
p m., Racine Gun Club.
12-29-3tc

air condi ti oned, 8' x20' por ch
a nd
al uminum
awning ,
a lum rnum sktr lmg , co m pletely setup,
beau tt ful
loca tJon . Ow ner leavi ng state .
Phone 949 ·4892 or 992 .5272

Employment Wanted

home, gas heat ,

TALK TO YOU

11 -21 -lfc

I WILL NOT be responsible for

Mobile Homes For Sale

SOx 12 TWO BEDROOM mobile

151 Butternut Ave ., Pomeroy

Phone 992-5080.

12-17-tfc

60 xl2 , I. bedroom , a H·electric ,

12-29-3tc

SAVE up to one half . Bring your

Laurel Cliff.

Call 992-6271 .

10-3-lfc INTER lOR painting . Call Don
VanMeter 985 3951.
12-19 121p

YOUR LOCAL ARMY

662-4035.

12-30 6tc

Miller, Rt . .4, Pom eroy , Ohio.

Rd ., Cincinnati, Ohio 45237

YOUNG MEN

5-12-tfc
.
.
SE PTtC tanks cleaned. Miller

-,.-~~~~~~

in

Watchers (RI. 1863 Seclion

GUN SHOOT , Forked Run
Sportsman Club,
Jan 2, 12 noon .

Wanted To Buy

S - Filzpat ri ck Or
OLD FURNITURE , Round Oak APPLE
chards
. Sta te Ro ute 689 ,
tables. Brass beds, dishes.
pha.ne
Wilesville,
669·3785
clocks , and -or complete
9-3-tl c
. 12-28-4tp
househol ds. Write M D.

ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT ..

SHOOTI NG match. Saturday.

Fire Dept

2778 .

Ja ck's Club, cover charge.
For reservations come to club
m person .

12-30-21c
Jan . L at the Racme Planmg
Mill at 6 p m Factory choke
guns only . Assorted meat
Sponsored by the Syracuse

12-30-tlc

352 FORD motor, 10x28 lractor

Notice

STILL SHOOT, Sunday . Jan. 2.
I p.m at Rutland Gun Club on

fancy

guppies, angels and breeders ,•
Bel tas and supplies. Phone

OFFICE HOURS
30 a .m to 5 00 p m. Daily.
8 30 a m to 12 00 Noor

Not1ce

FISH ,

TROPI~L

8

Saturdav .

Reasonable rates . Ph 446-4782 ,
Gall i polis . John Russell ,
Ot-mer &amp; Operator.

READY -MIX

OPEH EVES. 1:00 P.M.
i'j)MEROY, OHIO

,

S-1-tfc

Sanitation. Stewart, Oh1o. Ph .

POMIODY
Jack W. Clrtty, Mtr
, ...... Ht-2111

Pomeroy llotor Co.

Sl 50 for 50 word minimum
' Each add1tional word 2c,

Crill Bradford

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED

GET FREE

Low m tleage by loca l owner with lots of warranty left.
factory air cond1honed, v.s engrne, turbo-hydromatic, p
steer tng , gold body , sanda l wood vinyl top, radto, vtn yl
interior, good w-w t ires Th rs carts loaded with extra s

secuhve msert ions.
25 Per Cent Discount on pa i'-t
ads and ads paid within 10 day~

·

$2395

1970C HEVELLE MALIBU HT CPE .

1

Racine. Ohio

SIEGLER HEATER

tires. radio &amp; other extras, whtte finish . clean mterior

threE;.

con iecut1ve insertions
· l8 cents per word s1x con

·.

Dr., V-8 engine, automatic trans., P S , factor y air . good

&lt;1

Phone 949-3821

Buy Any Fuel Oil
'

FO!JR NEW HOMES _,__
OPEN FOR INSPECTL!lN
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME tN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONI;Y DOWN
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom 116.900.00 home can be purchased with a
monthly payment as low as 565.00 lor a family with a base
salltry, of $5,000.00 and three children. 7'1•· Pet. annua l
~~~a rate,

Comp let e Service

Clearance Sale!

power steering console,
beautiful dark green, finished with green v inyl roof Less
than 22, 000 mtles by local owner, radto, new w-w t~r es . A
sharp model priced to please

publisher will not be responstbte

.

$279S

Business Services

.

'

Voice

r~ . . ..n -

and girls .

A lawyer we've known
since he was a kid who grew up
to be one of the most brilliant in
the world, the controversial
and never dull Roy M, Cohn .. . ,..
Albert Blinder,.ex.,.ss't federal ~
attorney to whom marvelous 1.1
disasters occur regularly : such
as the time he was an ass'!
district attorney and a girl he
arrested in an abortion mill
raid and held as a hostile but
effective witness named the
son she never wanted, "Albert
Bllnder
something"
Columnist Leonard Lyons (we
don't ail hale each other ) ...
Great old comedian Jack (Vas
you dere Sharlie?) Pearl ,..
Dick Piperno ... Louise Jorio,
owner of Louise's E. ~ St.
restaurant, and her son Bob
and husband Dick, who fought
' Madison Square Garden main
events more than 50 years ago l------=----- -- -- at 135 poWJds, and now at 79,
weighs 175 and it's all muscle
from his upstate farming .
(That's why Gloria Swanson
eats at' Louise's regularly they serve their own homegrown vegetables.)

·'
.,

...•
'

. ''

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,LJSTEN
2oth CENTU
FORMATION HOU

Mon•.thru Fri.
9:30AM
.

1360

'

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ON THE
.DIAL

.'
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. ••
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I GOT' A S AL E
ON REVARSABLE
DOORMATS,
LOW EEZ'I

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•

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IVHAT K HOCK
•
· DO 'IOU 11-liM&lt; 'rt'XJ~ , ,
[;(/(AJ6?

•
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•
••

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CAN tlEAT
HOME C.O OKIN'

..
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...

f!I IWI ., NU., I« , Ul

·~

HE SAV ~ NOTHIN '

•
•

•
• •

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TERRIBlE BAD!!

•
•••

•

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/JOJJ '1

"'EMEM&amp;R!

•

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- ~Y.

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Lt. IU. '""· Oil'.

1],1/
1117., NL\ lAC~ T:M. ltt. ll.$. Pot. Off.

CLA1TER
'OOK
AT HOP€
EYEING

THE

BETTER WATC~
OUT, CLOD, 'n IS

il-'E

IT MU5'r HAV£ BEEN
R~SACKED LAS'r

LEAP YE4Rl

WEEKEW.

CLOCK~

YEAH ... TOP
0" DEVJI.'S
DE;_SCENT

WE WERE AWAY
'THEN . 8U'r WITH
f ~IT AN
ICV SPOT
AT T~E TOP

SEVEN aiiLDREN ...

...IN THE

... STEPPSP
ON AN ICE

SUMAII T
J.ODGE

BUf)IJU STILL

cuae;

HAVE TO WEAl?
YOU!? POLICE
UNIFORM ...

OF DliVtL'S
DESCENT

IT
IS TH IS T&gt;-1'
TV COMPAN Y
WHUT 'S GOT
AUOB F'O '
A SMALL
BOY?

IS-

®

F¥\Yif.J '

SPLENDID
LJil
CHAP-

HAPP'YNEW

AND,OH WE:

FI'IIE

'10U

THOUSAN'
A
WEEK?

DO HOPE: 'IOU
DO!! r-~

SMAlL

BOYS

HE'lL TAKE
TH E u O B!!

'

'lEAR TO

US AL.L.-

'/I.AR.'!

H · HA IN'T
IT GOf.JNA

. .!&lt;SI'tci~LLY 'f•Ul ASSENIIJI,'I ~11111
Wllo 001L1' liiiS CNl Of'VOUil:&lt;;.! r-_-

BEA

HAPP Y
NOO Y'AR
FO' ME
TOO?

,,,~

..

·-

-~ · ...

·.-'

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BUGS BUNNY

BUGS
ANY

AND ~15 I~ ~E ~T
NIGHT OF ~E: YEA::&lt;: ;
WINNIE... LET$ MAKE
'THE MOST OF 301H .

'
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TOO!!

).!Appy NEW

HAS
APPLIED RIGHT?

or

YI'.AR TO ':!QQ

HA PP'I NEW

PLI\CE YA'P

WHEN 5UC7PENLY THE~£':
WAS THIS TEWW16L.E
KNOCi&lt;INS IN TH!i '
MOTOR!

Slii'NICE/

L..II&lt;E T' SIT?

I

Yl\ '-01' AN
OIL LEAl&lt;!

HAVE 'IOU LOCATE'P
~6 TROUBLE?

I WA5 DWIVING Al-ONG

WE' D UKE A TI\E!LE
C:LOS&amp; TO SOMI&lt;

PART1CIItAil

I"' "--

j

'

•••
••'

,_

ALLEY OOP

1llUII F\JGHT
AIJTEIIN ' " l'l.L

liE IIIGHTI.t&lt;XI

THE BORN LOSER

'IOU

81)f, IF 1 "'Vf;
~
r$- 1\1ES6 ~S. I'Ll
FellL.ED 10 ~VE Ct..€
10 $WI ~~H!;ARL .

~D liE~

·se
~L'

NO, ANNIE! THE YOU~'~£;

WE &lt;lOTTA

DO IS WARN

H0!1EST"!''M
WHAT 'S
HAPPe NIH'
~tt'

...

MAN ~U5T COPE WITH

THIS SITUATION
HIM5E,F 1 IF HE'S GOT
THE STUFF; HE'Ll MAI&lt;E
. Q!!.T AL' RIGHT!

YA WENT AN '
TOL' MR. WAR BUCKS

~D

MIS$ fWI.JISH
\IIILL WAilT OJ&amp;,W,AIID
I'LL ~y WI~D LIP
IAKJ~O, 01£ MYSf!k...

l CAIJ'T
ST,t.ND~!

WITGKRAF'T MONKEY S~INES ~AVE BEEN A
GREAT RACKET-WE'VE
MADE DOUG~- BUT

WEVE BEEN lOOKING
FOR '

ni1s

WJu~~N ~gN

CLOO! BUT Flli!f'&gt;T ... SUFFER A
mTLE!!
-

THAT I WASA

~!~f

r.--:-------~

fVE GOT TO f.lAVE THAT
IMAP. NOT A PWOTOGRAP~-j ,
BUT THE

REAL TiliNG.

R ET!

r--------""'01
LIKE RENEGADE INDIANS
0~ vanE
~ , I MAY ~AVE TO
DO A liTTLE SCALPING.

ACROSS
1. Summer
place
5. Plowed
land
10. Russian
mountain
range
11 _FJ'do's
·comp·anion
12. Mountain
lake
13. lndte
U. That final
drink
16. Scottish
island
17. Garland;
wreath
(poet.)
ZO. Success

' DOWN
1. Roman

city
statesman 17.Jeanne
Bates or
d'King
18. New
(comb.
S.-'snest
form)
t~~ 19. Egyptian Yoote.doy'•A..w•
5. Redolence
killer
28. Manifest
6. - l clef 20. Farming
29.German
7. Ancient
imple·
Egyptian
city
ment.
30. Amiable
city
21. Lodging
8. Say "no"
place
31. Eve's
grandson
22.
Be
to
quiet!
32. Opposed
9.Museum
24. See Z6
to
offering
Across
33. Detail
13. Book of
25. Amy
34. Alaskan
precity
LoweU
scribed
forms
was one
35. Joker

..

TttarolJGH l~t'fBJ,
IAL._- .,J HOOJ ' CC&gt;&lt;SIOERINGTHAT
~ IAAPAM fiEAL CAN THE'O!ILY OUTER PERIL 15
0115fRVE, THE ~TATE MEN LI~E YOURSELF WHO
lliKfS PRECAUTON5 . l'IOULD 5TEAL THE ART
1115 ~P05515LE
CJF THE ANCIENTS ...
TO APPROACH

~UT

IN LIGHT CJF TilE LOW
/1{)1/AL CHARACTER OF
~ WlfO EXCAVATE
THE ANCIENT PLACE ,

NfN AH~ IIOMEN, EACH
WITH A REP • X'
DAUI!ED ON THEIR
SACKS.

LERED

~

TV PEOPlE TOOK HER
TO THE BROADCAST
STATION AND PAID
~ER $50 BESIDES,

I [TI

r~l ' "

ll.·:JI

1 j I I (J

IRADAIF I

1 ,..___

arranre 1M circled lettera

I . !~:::'~~:~=~~

II

I KJ

AFF'ECT€.D
!Y THE: FAL.L..

No,.

rrr xxxxxxJ

1 AN

DEAFEN

ANP TillS IN A COU NT~i
MRf ONE !MY HIRE
110Nf5T PfA5ANT5 FOR

AFEW C~N5 A ""'Y!

INVENT

enolll(h to lwrt&gt; bnd hnbit•-A uNO·VICE"

HAm NEW
'iEAA To 1
E\'ER'(ONE.

39. ••Beau

"
'CAPTAIN EASY
J)IICI!Y Hi- A
WI!II!P !fnCfACI.e
wAll )lf'A~r•ewr
WIJ.JPOW,. ..

40. Kind of
· clock

ll·/1

A Cryptogram Quotation
HDXO
TZTL,

AKOL,

UKV

HDXO, LHTUL,

LTU?
EO

TS

FK!

AK .-T VLHDF ·

RKPLKF

an old

.

woman

30. Drool
32. Lasso
34. Scholarly
reading
35. Help nefariously
39. Guido's
note
41. Spanish

t.:;;;:;-:;i;;:=~~~~

queen

l

VALIA

~

..,~ .. .... r.... ...... .,..- .

.._... ~, '"• R ~. "' ''

I
ZIMEA

II
1/ANF/Ej

I K

t
I I I
RULBET

I (]

II
I I

TAAT IJA.oi&gt;I'T

.

VERI{ NICE,
WA~ IT?

I t I I X)

' -____P!il
_ .;,;..;.;c.
llle S .;.;,.,·=UISWII
__
..._ _

(Aa••en
l' ~l14'rd•J'•

Jumhl'" GRAVE

II

AXYDLBAAXR
L 'O NGFELLOW

.

'•

li

A Cryptogram Quotatlou

n
fl

NG

Nl

IGDGK

•

DSMDFI
II C

PEZNAB

UNNAP

G JDG

D

LDIINAB

MK UDXK

SDIGNAJl . ZKIHSEGNHAI. - LZHEIG
.,

.

'

Ytsltrdoy's Cryptoquote: TIMEGOES,.YOU SAY ? J'fl NO!
, ALAS, TIME STAYS. WE GO.-At iSTIN J)()RSON
~

Mohd•~·)

ILDIIt ENDURE AFRAID

An'"'"'"r' No1 nlf,.cl•~llt.l' th• fnU-AN EVIIOIUN

Pt \\l 1-..

One letter simply stands for another. Jn this sa mple A Is
used for the three L's,· X for the two O's, etc, Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters arc dllfcrcnt•

.&lt;•

Now arranre the circled letten
to form the ourpriH anawer, u

'\J
====~;i;:i.Aii~~~..;•u;;r:r:=e•:.:ted~b:::ylthe above cartoon,

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work It:

Yeaterday's Cryptoquote: !TIS AS IMPOSSIBLE TO,TRANS·
LATE POETRY AS JT IS TO TRANSLATE MUSIC,-

,.,... , 'l' A' 1DJ;"

-

,_,

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
li LONGFELLOW
One letter simply standa for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
·apoatrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

29. "There

26. Extend,
as a subscription
30. Eydie's
man
31. Growl
S3.Man's
nickname
utile lad
lrish or
Arabian
Florafa\lna
Flutelike
Instrument
Treelined
street

An•wu1 f'hal you'd f'nll n gay who'• not e%J•eriencetl

PI \ " I o;

"'

ACROSS · 42, Cry like
6. U.S.S.R.
1. Collection
a cal
lake
of anec43. Watched
7. Appraise
dotes
over
8.Hehas
4. From a
44. Sicilian
lots to
long way
landmark
sell
45. Altar
olf
9. Absent
8. Roll
cons leliawith per.
Uon
; - - - - - - - . . . . , 11. Brazilian
ffiission
state
(2 wds.)
DOWN
'12. Tie one's
10.
Going
on
I. - standshoes
a
diet
still (2 '
13. Coup
. (2wds.)
wds.)
16.
Bovine
Z.
Bee's
goal
d'14. Eastern
lament
3.
Of
a
name
20. Give the
region
15. Glasgow
bum's
4. Beast Qf
hat
rush
Gibraltar
17. Hispanic
22. Avon's
5. Abun·
huzza
earl
daneei
18. Man's
24.
Earnings
plenty
nickname
(4 wds.)
25. Co rrected
19. Indifferent
!1. Circus
employee
~. Strikingly
odd

n.Noah's
Latin paet 1:.-+-t~f-+-+j~~~n:iir"'l~~::··:::~;;~~~~~:-- f~~;;;;;;.;;o;w;;-;;i~-;;y~;E;,~~~!l~- 26.
eldest son

(4uwen lomorrow)

Jumbln&lt;I.DIOT CASTE

OOADl-1~ .

---

011.

• :.:::~=.:-

JlARGE

coo.o

SJ.IcTWJ:$ ! ,IUKlS[ III!QI
rD IEI'!'R .lJ5T &amp;ifftD I~
UIJC€1&lt;: l14&lt; I'J~ - Fm;ZE

0' BEATIN ' PROf. C~EEPY! ALL WE
CAH DO, SANDY•" IS WISH HIM LUCK 1

IJIIICramble theae four Jumblea.
one letter to eath square, to
form four ordlnarr wordo.

a.

frequent ly broken
Z6.Bobby's
cousin
2'1. Jeremiad
28. Mistress
of24
Down
30. Words
· lor
Jan. 1
35. Chianti's
birthplace
36. Division
word
17. Frult
of
the oak
31. Stem's
partner

, j l . . U;l ...

-mAT

\\lloli,SIR! 00W
'PJ j(IO)I~

'DADDY" SAYS THAT H0!1EST TOM'S
GOTTA &gt;IGGER OUT HIS OWN WAY

JlYMOO~;u..J:::Y:!-:;·

15. Russian

~.They're

TERRY

'PJR&gt;a~

)'00'" GET ANOTHER CHAHCE, YOU

• ttn"' .........

r~;M:ES~;"~~~~
TI-lE BIG ONE

SIQ' f'IJ!I\SHI!JG,

EAC~ '(EAR Ml{ lli5URANCE
COMPAN\' SENDS ME A CALENVAR

�..'

j

•'

''

..
.

. ••
. .•

I GOT' A S AL E
ON REVARSABLE
DOORMATS,
LOW EEZ'I

'

·~

..
,

•

•
•

I
••
!

IVHAT K HOCK
•
· DO 'IOU 11-liM&lt; 'rt'XJ~ , ,
[;(/(AJ6?

•
•• •
•
••

•

••

CAN tlEAT
HOME C.O OKIN'

..
•.. :-

...

f!I IWI ., NU., I« , Ul

·~

HE SAV ~ NOTHIN '

•
•

•
• •

•

TERRIBlE BAD!!

•
•••

•

• ••

/JOJJ '1

"'EMEM&amp;R!

•

•

.'

oli, YEA~,

- ~Y.

• •

'

•

Lt. IU. '""· Oil'.

1],1/
1117., NL\ lAC~ T:M. ltt. ll.$. Pot. Off.

CLA1TER
'OOK
AT HOP€
EYEING

THE

BETTER WATC~
OUT, CLOD, 'n IS

il-'E

IT MU5'r HAV£ BEEN
R~SACKED LAS'r

LEAP YE4Rl

WEEKEW.

CLOCK~

YEAH ... TOP
0" DEVJI.'S
DE;_SCENT

WE WERE AWAY
'THEN . 8U'r WITH
f ~IT AN
ICV SPOT
AT T~E TOP

SEVEN aiiLDREN ...

...IN THE

... STEPPSP
ON AN ICE

SUMAII T
J.ODGE

BUf)IJU STILL

cuae;

HAVE TO WEAl?
YOU!? POLICE
UNIFORM ...

OF DliVtL'S
DESCENT

IT
IS TH IS T&gt;-1'
TV COMPAN Y
WHUT 'S GOT
AUOB F'O '
A SMALL
BOY?

IS-

®

F¥\Yif.J '

SPLENDID
LJil
CHAP-

HAPP'YNEW

AND,OH WE:

FI'IIE

'10U

THOUSAN'
A
WEEK?

DO HOPE: 'IOU
DO!! r-~

SMAlL

BOYS

HE'lL TAKE
TH E u O B!!

'

'lEAR TO

US AL.L.-

'/I.AR.'!

H · HA IN'T
IT GOf.JNA

. .!&lt;SI'tci~LLY 'f•Ul ASSENIIJI,'I ~11111
Wllo 001L1' liiiS CNl Of'VOUil:&lt;;.! r-_-

BEA

HAPP Y
NOO Y'AR
FO' ME
TOO?

,,,~

..

·-

-~ · ...

·.-'

,~.-.,.,

BUGS BUNNY

BUGS
ANY

AND ~15 I~ ~E ~T
NIGHT OF ~E: YEA::&lt;: ;
WINNIE... LET$ MAKE
'THE MOST OF 301H .

'
i

TOO!!

).!Appy NEW

HAS
APPLIED RIGHT?

or

YI'.AR TO ':!QQ

HA PP'I NEW

PLI\CE YA'P

WHEN 5UC7PENLY THE~£':
WAS THIS TEWW16L.E
KNOCi&lt;INS IN TH!i '
MOTOR!

Slii'NICE/

L..II&lt;E T' SIT?

I

Yl\ '-01' AN
OIL LEAl&lt;!

HAVE 'IOU LOCATE'P
~6 TROUBLE?

I WA5 DWIVING Al-ONG

WE' D UKE A TI\E!LE
C:LOS&amp; TO SOMI&lt;

PART1CIItAil

I"' "--

j

'

•••
••'

,_

ALLEY OOP

1llUII F\JGHT
AIJTEIIN ' " l'l.L

liE IIIGHTI.t&lt;XI

THE BORN LOSER

'IOU

81)f, IF 1 "'Vf;
~
r$- 1\1ES6 ~S. I'Ll
FellL.ED 10 ~VE Ct..€
10 $WI ~~H!;ARL .

~D liE~

·se
~L'

NO, ANNIE! THE YOU~'~£;

WE &lt;lOTTA

DO IS WARN

H0!1EST"!''M
WHAT 'S
HAPPe NIH'
~tt'

...

MAN ~U5T COPE WITH

THIS SITUATION
HIM5E,F 1 IF HE'S GOT
THE STUFF; HE'Ll MAI&lt;E
. Q!!.T AL' RIGHT!

YA WENT AN '
TOL' MR. WAR BUCKS

~D

MIS$ fWI.JISH
\IIILL WAilT OJ&amp;,W,AIID
I'LL ~y WI~D LIP
IAKJ~O, 01£ MYSf!k...

l CAIJ'T
ST,t.ND~!

WITGKRAF'T MONKEY S~INES ~AVE BEEN A
GREAT RACKET-WE'VE
MADE DOUG~- BUT

WEVE BEEN lOOKING
FOR '

ni1s

WJu~~N ~gN

CLOO! BUT Flli!f'&gt;T ... SUFFER A
mTLE!!
-

THAT I WASA

~!~f

r.--:-------~

fVE GOT TO f.lAVE THAT
IMAP. NOT A PWOTOGRAP~-j ,
BUT THE

REAL TiliNG.

R ET!

r--------""'01
LIKE RENEGADE INDIANS
0~ vanE
~ , I MAY ~AVE TO
DO A liTTLE SCALPING.

ACROSS
1. Summer
place
5. Plowed
land
10. Russian
mountain
range
11 _FJ'do's
·comp·anion
12. Mountain
lake
13. lndte
U. That final
drink
16. Scottish
island
17. Garland;
wreath
(poet.)
ZO. Success

' DOWN
1. Roman

city
statesman 17.Jeanne
Bates or
d'King
18. New
(comb.
S.-'snest
form)
t~~ 19. Egyptian Yoote.doy'•A..w•
5. Redolence
killer
28. Manifest
6. - l clef 20. Farming
29.German
7. Ancient
imple·
Egyptian
city
ment.
30. Amiable
city
21. Lodging
8. Say "no"
place
31. Eve's
grandson
22.
Be
to
quiet!
32. Opposed
9.Museum
24. See Z6
to
offering
Across
33. Detail
13. Book of
25. Amy
34. Alaskan
precity
LoweU
scribed
forms
was one
35. Joker

..

TttarolJGH l~t'fBJ,
IAL._- .,J HOOJ ' CC&gt;&lt;SIOERINGTHAT
~ IAAPAM fiEAL CAN THE'O!ILY OUTER PERIL 15
0115fRVE, THE ~TATE MEN LI~E YOURSELF WHO
lliKfS PRECAUTON5 . l'IOULD 5TEAL THE ART
1115 ~P05515LE
CJF THE ANCIENTS ...
TO APPROACH

~UT

IN LIGHT CJF TilE LOW
/1{)1/AL CHARACTER OF
~ WlfO EXCAVATE
THE ANCIENT PLACE ,

NfN AH~ IIOMEN, EACH
WITH A REP • X'
DAUI!ED ON THEIR
SACKS.

LERED

~

TV PEOPlE TOOK HER
TO THE BROADCAST
STATION AND PAID
~ER $50 BESIDES,

I [TI

r~l ' "

ll.·:JI

1 j I I (J

IRADAIF I

1 ,..___

arranre 1M circled lettera

I . !~:::'~~:~=~~

II

I KJ

AFF'ECT€.D
!Y THE: FAL.L..

No,.

rrr xxxxxxJ

1 AN

DEAFEN

ANP TillS IN A COU NT~i
MRf ONE !MY HIRE
110Nf5T PfA5ANT5 FOR

AFEW C~N5 A ""'Y!

INVENT

enolll(h to lwrt&gt; bnd hnbit•-A uNO·VICE"

HAm NEW
'iEAA To 1
E\'ER'(ONE.

39. ••Beau

"
'CAPTAIN EASY
J)IICI!Y Hi- A
WI!II!P !fnCfACI.e
wAll )lf'A~r•ewr
WIJ.JPOW,. ..

40. Kind of
· clock

ll·/1

A Cryptogram Quotation
HDXO
TZTL,

AKOL,

UKV

HDXO, LHTUL,

LTU?
EO

TS

FK!

AK .-T VLHDF ·

RKPLKF

an old

.

woman

30. Drool
32. Lasso
34. Scholarly
reading
35. Help nefariously
39. Guido's
note
41. Spanish

t.:;;;:;-:;i;;:=~~~~

queen

l

VALIA

~

..,~ .. .... r.... ...... .,..- .

.._... ~, '"• R ~. "' ''

I
ZIMEA

II
1/ANF/Ej

I K

t
I I I
RULBET

I (]

II
I I

TAAT IJA.oi&gt;I'T

.

VERI{ NICE,
WA~ IT?

I t I I X)

' -____P!il
_ .;,;..;.;c.
llle S .;.;,.,·=UISWII
__
..._ _

(Aa••en
l' ~l14'rd•J'•

Jumhl'" GRAVE

II

AXYDLBAAXR
L 'O NGFELLOW

.

'•

li

A Cryptogram Quotatlou

n
fl

NG

Nl

IGDGK

•

DSMDFI
II C

PEZNAB

UNNAP

G JDG

D

LDIINAB

MK UDXK

SDIGNAJl . ZKIHSEGNHAI. - LZHEIG
.,

.

'

Ytsltrdoy's Cryptoquote: TIMEGOES,.YOU SAY ? J'fl NO!
, ALAS, TIME STAYS. WE GO.-At iSTIN J)()RSON
~

Mohd•~·)

ILDIIt ENDURE AFRAID

An'"'"'"r' No1 nlf,.cl•~llt.l' th• fnU-AN EVIIOIUN

Pt \\l 1-..

One letter simply stands for another. Jn this sa mple A Is
used for the three L's,· X for the two O's, etc, Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters arc dllfcrcnt•

.&lt;•

Now arranre the circled letten
to form the ourpriH anawer, u

'\J
====~;i;:i.Aii~~~..;•u;;r:r:=e•:.:ted~b:::ylthe above cartoon,

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work It:

Yeaterday's Cryptoquote: !TIS AS IMPOSSIBLE TO,TRANS·
LATE POETRY AS JT IS TO TRANSLATE MUSIC,-

,.,... , 'l' A' 1DJ;"

-

,_,

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
li LONGFELLOW
One letter simply standa for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
·apoatrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

29. "There

26. Extend,
as a subscription
30. Eydie's
man
31. Growl
S3.Man's
nickname
utile lad
lrish or
Arabian
Florafa\lna
Flutelike
Instrument
Treelined
street

An•wu1 f'hal you'd f'nll n gay who'• not e%J•eriencetl

PI \ " I o;

"'

ACROSS · 42, Cry like
6. U.S.S.R.
1. Collection
a cal
lake
of anec43. Watched
7. Appraise
dotes
over
8.Hehas
4. From a
44. Sicilian
lots to
long way
landmark
sell
45. Altar
olf
9. Absent
8. Roll
cons leliawith per.
Uon
; - - - - - - - . . . . , 11. Brazilian
ffiission
state
(2 wds.)
DOWN
'12. Tie one's
10.
Going
on
I. - standshoes
a
diet
still (2 '
13. Coup
. (2wds.)
wds.)
16.
Bovine
Z.
Bee's
goal
d'14. Eastern
lament
3.
Of
a
name
20. Give the
region
15. Glasgow
bum's
4. Beast Qf
hat
rush
Gibraltar
17. Hispanic
22. Avon's
5. Abun·
huzza
earl
daneei
18. Man's
24.
Earnings
plenty
nickname
(4 wds.)
25. Co rrected
19. Indifferent
!1. Circus
employee
~. Strikingly
odd

n.Noah's
Latin paet 1:.-+-t~f-+-+j~~~n:iir"'l~~::··:::~;;~~~~~:-- f~~;;;;;;.;;o;w;;-;;i~-;;y~;E;,~~~!l~- 26.
eldest son

(4uwen lomorrow)

Jumbln&lt;I.DIOT CASTE

OOADl-1~ .

---

011.

• :.:::~=.:-

JlARGE

coo.o

SJ.IcTWJ:$ ! ,IUKlS[ III!QI
rD IEI'!'R .lJ5T &amp;ifftD I~
UIJC€1&lt;: l14&lt; I'J~ - Fm;ZE

0' BEATIN ' PROf. C~EEPY! ALL WE
CAH DO, SANDY•" IS WISH HIM LUCK 1

IJIIICramble theae four Jumblea.
one letter to eath square, to
form four ordlnarr wordo.

a.

frequent ly broken
Z6.Bobby's
cousin
2'1. Jeremiad
28. Mistress
of24
Down
30. Words
· lor
Jan. 1
35. Chianti's
birthplace
36. Division
word
17. Frult
of
the oak
31. Stem's
partner

, j l . . U;l ...

-mAT

\\lloli,SIR! 00W
'PJ j(IO)I~

'DADDY" SAYS THAT H0!1EST TOM'S
GOTTA &gt;IGGER OUT HIS OWN WAY

JlYMOO~;u..J:::Y:!-:;·

15. Russian

~.They're

TERRY

'PJR&gt;a~

)'00'" GET ANOTHER CHAHCE, YOU

• ttn"' .........

r~;M:ES~;"~~~~
TI-lE BIG ONE

SIQ' f'IJ!I\SHI!JG,

EAC~ '(EAR Ml{ lli5URANCE
COMPAN\' SENDS ME A CALENVAR

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14 -The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. 31, 1971

Holter

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\continued from page 1)
baseball . He is a member of the
Letterman's Club and has ·
served as a class officer for two
years . He belonged to the .art
club for one year, the Latin
Club for four years and the
Future Teachers Assn. for a
year.
Young Holter took part in the
minstrel show two years and
was a member of both the
marching and . concert bands
three years each. He played
junior high school football {or
two years.
. A.:tive outside of' the school,
Holter. has been in 4-H club
work 10 years. He has been a
member of the Meigs County
Junior Leaders Club for five
years and was the 1969 Meigs
County Achievement Winner.
He serves on the Meigs County
Junior Fair Board and the
Meigs eounty 4-H Advisory
Committee and has three
years' service on each.
Holter has done counseling
for the Meigs-Gallia 4-H camp
for two years and is a member
of the Jackson area Junior
Leadership 4-H Roundup and
has served on the planning
committee of that group for
two years .
The Ohio State Agriculture 4H winner in 1970, Holter was a
delegate to the Ohio Club
Congress, Columbus, in 1970,
and to the National Club
Congress in Chicago that year.
He was a county delegate to the
Citizenship Short Course in
Washington, D. C. this year .
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Kenneth
Hoffman, Middleport; Homer
Smith, Middleport; Lavada
Flinn, Portland.
DISCHARGED - Carolyn
Woods, Gail Lane, Mark Clark,
Margaret Jones.
IN HOSPITAL
Homer Hawkins, Rutland
Road, Pomeroy, is a patient at
Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. , Gallipolis.
His room number is 226.

MEIGS TliEATRE
Tonight &amp; Saturday
Dec . 31 -Jan . 1. 1972
Getting Straight
( Technicolor)
Elliott Gould,
Candice Bergen

" R"
Colorcartoons: Rounder
Search for Misery, Stooge
Sun., Mon ., &amp; Tues.
January 2-3-4
FOOL'S PARADE
(Technicolor)
James Stewart
George Kennedy
" Gp ~~
Disney Colorcartoons :
Goofy and Wilbur
Joey, thll Dog
Pluto's Blue Note
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.

Katie's Korner
HAPPY NEW YEAR! May 1972 be great for you ·- you and you. •
Have a safe and happy holiday!
The Southern Athletic Boosters Association is starting the
new year off with a bang . ·
On Tuesday night the Texas Cowgirls, a comedy basketball
team and great laugh-getters, will go against the CQaches of
Southern High School at the high school in Racine at 8 p.m.
· The game should prove to be very entertaining since the girls
are professionals and.have played over 3,7.00 engagements from
coast to coast, including Canada and Mexico. They also were the
first professional girls team to play Madison Square Garden and
Boston Gardens.
Many of the girls came to the COWGIRLS on recommendation of their coaches, and some are di~covered through
scouts .•A!l are picked for the tour on their ability as players, their
stability of temperament and moral background.
Coaches drill the team by the hour on how to play the ,good
male teams which they will encounter on the road. Many have
never play~~ men's rules, but their 70 pet. winning average over
all male competition is,proof that they learn their lessons well.
Don't forget Tuesday at Southern High School in Racine at 8
p.m. It should prove hilarious. Admission will be charged.

(Continued from page 1)
but several jurors said separately that most of their discussion
was on technicalities, and basic agreement was reached quickly
that the verdict would have to be guilty on some of the counts.
Dowdy, 59, was found guilty on eight counts of bribery, conspiracy and perjury, in connection with a $2'i,OOO payment to
influence a Justice Department fraud investigation of a
Washington, D. C. home improvement firm.

Lula Russell Dies Fn•day
Mrs. Lui a Russell, 82,
Middleport, died early today at
her residence.
Mrs. Russell was born March
9, 1889, the daughter of the late
James and Ida Woods Hall. She
was also preceded in death by
her husband, Harry; a
daughter, one brother, one
jster, and her son-in-law, W.
B. Harris, the latter, two
months ago.
Mrs . Russell was well
known as a cook for the Mary
Jane Coffee Shop for many
years and the Martin
Restaurant.
She is survived by a _
daughter, Mrs. Hilda Harris,
Mason; lwo sons, Clifford L.
•

Russell, Anderson, Ind., and
Chester A. Russell, Indianapolis, Ind.; a sister, Mrs.
Harry (Nora) Young, Mason;
two brothers, Lawrence Hall,
Middleport, and Herman Hall,
in Pennsylvania; six grandchildren, and nine greatgrandchildren .
Mrs. Russell was a member
of the Clifton Methodist
Church.
Funeral services will be held
Sunday at 2 p.m. at the
Rawlings Coats Funeral Home
with the Rev. Mrs. Bernice
Winkler officiating. Burial will
be in Riverview Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home after 10 a .m _ Saturday.

29DEER HIT
Deer were involved in 29
accidents this year, the Meigs
County
Sheriff's
Dept.
reported. Twenty of the deer
was a veteran of World War I, a died . Nine were injured.
member of the Carleton
Church, a life member of the
D.A.V., and a member of the
Meigs County Farm Bureau.
Mr. King is survived by his
wife, Neva Heilmann King;
two sons, Virgil, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, and Leo, of
Colwnbus; a brother, Edward,
Rock Springs; seven grandchildren, and several nieces
and nephews.
Funeral services will be
Sunday at 2 p.m. at the
Carleton Church with the Rev.
"·Stiles officiating. Burial will
be in Carleton Cemetery.
Friends may call at the Ewing
Funeral Home anytime.

William A. King, 76, Kingsbury Road, Pomeroy RD, died
Thursday at Holzer Medical
Center.
Mr. King was the son ofthe
late William D. and 'Mary
Schriber King. He was also
preceded in death by three
sisters and three brothers. He

RUTLAND

Serving .Meigs County
Since 1872

CHEERS
wishes wrapped up
our

Member Federal Reserve Systen,1

greeting .

i~

Along

with sincere apprecia·
tion for your pasl
patronage, "Thanks."

Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corpora lion
All Accounts Insured Up To $20,000.00

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The Management and Employees of

Elberfelds In PomeroY
Wish You and Your Family a
Prosperous and Peaceful New Year

lb

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POINT PllASANT, W. VA.

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I

NIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Continuous Service On
J'rl•ll#ll.la 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.

Look For M&amp;R's Big

STARTING

BOWERS
DRIVE-IN
Pomeroy, 0.

•
OPEN
12 to 6 ·

There eire lots of good

-: .

Lexington, Apita S. Jones,
Marietta, ·Daniel B. O'Dell,
Shade, Rt, 1, Branch S.
Scearcy, Huntington, Emmett
R. Edwards, Grove City, Roger
C. Hensley, Proctorville and
Jimmie D. Goodnite, Albany,
Rt. 1, $27.50 ·each, speeding;
Jack Stewart, $25," disturbing
the peace; Dora A. Carsey,
Pomeroy, Rt. 4, $25, failure to

.CITY ICE &amp; FUEL . CO.

.,

NATIONAL BANKPOMEROY

••
•

thuf Koenig, Jr ., Pomeroy,
RD, 30 days confinement,
bench warrant for nonsupport; David Bissell,
Chester, five year probation,
license suspended for two
years, vehiclar homicide.
Forfeiting bonds were Ralph
E. Hensley, Coal Grove,
Douglas S. Tomkies, Huntington, Judson J . Hollister, •

William King Dies Thursday

POMEROY

•...

costs, speeding; William R.
Boring, Middleport, Rt. 1, $10
and cosis, failure to register
motor vehicle; Judith K.
Black, Chesapeake, $17 and
costs, speeding; Mary V.
Kautz, Pomeroy, Rt. 3; $1&lt;1 and
costs, speeding; Ivan E ..
Smart, Nelsonville, $10 and
costs, left of center; Hermis H.
Skeen, Ripley, $15 and c'osts,
speeding; Virginia G. Whaley,
Shade, Rt. 1, $50 and costs,
speeding; James S. Eakins,
Racine, Rt. 2, $150 and costs,
three days confinement,
license suspended for six
months, driving while intoxicated; Violet L. Saylor,
Athens, $15 and costs,
speeding; Mary E. Eblin,
Pomeroy, $10 and costs, 1mproper backing; Michael D.
Adkins, Cle..:eland, $10 and
costs, fictitious plates; John N.
Hill, Racine, Rt. 2, $18 and
PORTLAND - ~Kenneth costs, speeding; Ronald
McLeod, 75, Portland, died VanMeter, Minersville, Rt. 1,
Friday morning at St. Joseph $150 and costs, three days
Hospital in Parkersburg confinement, license
following an extended illness. suspended for six months,
He was born at Redmond, W. restricted driving privileges,
Va ., April 6, 1896, the son of the driving while intoxicated;
late Kenneth and Annie Wines Frank Knotts, Nelsonville,
McLeod. Besides his parents, cos Is only, six months
he was preceded in death by probation, destruction of
four brothers and four sisters. property; James Barker,
Before his retirement, Mr. Coolville, $10 and costs, failure
McLeod was employed as an to transfer registration; Aroperator-engineer with the U.
S. Government Locks and
Dams Service. He was a
member of Anchor Lodge, 283,
F&amp;AM at Duncan Falls and
was a member of the Methodist
Olurch.
Surviving are his wife,
Pearl; two sons, the .Rev.
Edwin McLeod of Lowell, and
Cecil S., of Little Hocking; six
grandchildren, eight greatgrandchildren, and a sister,
Mrs. Maggie Sheline of Henderson, W. Va.
Funeral services will be at 2
p.m. Monday at the Spencer
Funeral Home in Belpre with
the Rev. Freeland Norris of
Racine officiating. Burial will
be in Rockland Cemetery at
Belpre. Belpre Lodge 609,
F&amp;AM will conduct memorial
services at 7 p.m. Sunday at
the funeral home where friends
may call after fp.m. Saturday.

Kenneth McLeod
Dies on Friday

News ... in Briefs

Our directors . officers and staff wish all our friends and
neighbors a happy, prosperous New Year.

·.

One defendant was bound
over lo the grand jury, 18 were
fined, and 17 others forfeited
bonds in Meigs County Court
Thursday.
Bound over to the grand jury
under $257.50 bond by Judge
Frank W. Porter was George
Hackney, Middleport, charged
with driving while intoxicated.
Fined were Warren Carr,
Nelsonville, Rt. 2, $13, and
costs , speeding; Isabel V.
Simpson, Racine, $12 and
costs, speeding; Edith M.
Watkins, Pomeroy, $15 and
costs, speeding; Harold G.
Patrick, Gallipolis, $17 and
costs, speeding; Richard
Bradley, Athens, Rt. 4, $12 and

By Katie Crow

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
At 5:42' p.m . Thursday,
Middleport E-R members
answered a call to the home of
Homer E. Smith, '1:1 SOuth
Third Ave. Smith who was ill
was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he
was admitted. At 10:05 a.m.
Thursday, the squad went to
the Cuba Little home in
Cheshire for Mrs. Little who
was ill. She was taken to Holzer
Medical Center.

.'

18 Defendants Fined; 17 Don't Show

: drive on rlght'half of roadway;
Phyllis C. Christian, Houston,
Texas, $27 .5j), pasailtg at In·
tersectlon; Wayne W. Little,
Columbus, $32.50, speeding;
Gary VanMeter; R~ville,
Rt. 1,'' $257.50, driving while
intoxicated; Clair E. Mitchell,
Pomeroy, Rt. 4, $27.50, passing
without
assured · clear
Dwayne· H.
distance;
Schramm, Ringgold; Ga.;
$32.50, speeding; Morris
Wright, Albany, Rt. ~. $25,
· parking on roadway, ,

SHOI!PING

CENTER

.MIDDLEPORt

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