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~ ·-'lbeDIU)'Senllnei,Middeport·PmleroY,O.,Jan.3,1r12

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;j

:.; ;l·Rockets
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SAIGON (UPI) - Guen;illas
· ' ' ftr~ four rockets into the hllge
U.S. Alr Force base at Da Nang ·
today in the first attack there
: Iince Aug. 25 and heavily
·-: libelled three South Vlet•namese bases near the
' ' · ·: Cam!Jodian crossroads town of
• Krek, military sources
·· reported.
• It was the second shelling
·.attack against the three Krek
.;bases in two days. The com' manct&gt; also reported the
, .:Communists hit South Vietna-mese positions just -below the
· Demilitarized Zone Sunday
,. with 10 rounds of 82 millimeter
. mortar shells.
About one-fifth of the recent
five days of air strikes against

.

~

Nortl1 Vi~tnam were: flown
fiom Da Nang and the rocket
attack appeared to be in
retaliation. It came shortly
after the Communists ended
their three-day : New Year's
truce. One man was hurt and
three planes damaged,
In tl1e Krek area of Cambodia, about 85 miles northwest .
of saigon, the Comrilunists
appear¢ to be tsking advantage of a partial South"
Vietnamese withdrawal from
the rubber country.
. Military ~urces said tl1e
guerrillas moved in close
enough to one armored cavalry
base camp tl1ree miles northeast of Krek to fire shortrange
B40 rocket grenades at it. They

South
VietnaA
mese airbol'l\e division was
pulled out of the area last W&lt;!!k
and sent to the Central
Highland!!' where a major
9!mmunist offWisive is ex.. ·
peeled . .
At Da Nang, 370 miles north
of Saigon and 100 mile~
southeast of the Demilitarized
Zone, the Communists fired
Soviet-built 100 i&gt;ound 122 mm .
,rockets.
,

Common Cause Sets Targets
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.·
(Continued from Pilge -11
::wrgets and supply build-up areas" and made necessary by what
;:he claimed were enerriy activities that imperiled remaining U.S.
::forces in the South.
:: -Maintained tl1at despite, some skepticism about summit
::meetings, he was heading for sessions with the RuSllians and
::a.tnese because "unless we talk about differences eventually we
may ~d. up fl&amp;hling abuut them!'
.
. "
-Ji[hted that he had decided to resume the sale of Phantom jet
fighters to Israel. But he gave no details on bow many planes
·were involved and when the shipments would begin.
-Left somewhat unclear what -If any ..ground rules he
would set down on granting amnesty to young men who have fled
the country to avoid the draft. The President said he would be
"very liberal" on the question after Americans were no longer
fighting in Vietnam and all U.S. POW's had been freed . He added
it would have to be on the basis of individuals "paying the price,
of course, that an.vone should pay, for violating the law."

f•*************£ Jlaul RVallace

.~

i
il

-tr

THOUGHT ~
FOR TODAY
Fear not that thy life shall !
come to an end, but ..,..
A

Dies on Sunday

t Wallace,
DEXTER Paul
78, Dexter Route 1,
A.

rather fear that If shall il died Sunday morning at
~ never have a beginning . il O'Bleness Hospital in Athens.
il
Mr . Wallace was a retired
il
-Cardinal Newman • farmer of the Salem Center
11: area and was a member of Star
il
: Grange 778. He had farmed
• lfs Quick! ~ 'il over 30 years.
ir
i(
Surviving &lt;li re his wife,
il Lottie; a foster daughter,
il
: Gertrude
Newheart
of
il California; a sister, Mrs. May
il
F 'd
Onl
il Arbogast, Huntington, W. Va.;
'il
n_ a YS .Y
il a brother, Joe in Montana, and
i1 The Drfe· in Wmdow : ahalf-brother, Henry, of Utah.
:
IS Open
il Funeral services wili be held
il
·9 A.M._to 1 P.M.
. : at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the
:
( Conhnuously)
ir Martin Funeral Home . in
il Other B~nking Hours 9 to 3 il Rutland With the Rev. Williard
il and s to 1 · as usual on il Dutcher officiating. Burial will
il Fridays.
il be in the Standish Cemetery at
il
: Dexter. Friends m&amp;Y'C&amp;Iiatlhe
il funeral home any time
beginning Tuesday.
il
i1
COUNCIL TO MEET
POMEROY, OHIO
il Installation of officers will be
'II: , Member FDIC
: held when Chester Council No.
il
Member Federal
il 323 Daughters of America
Reserve System
c m~tat the halL Officers are t~

t

:

1t****

: DRIVE-IN
: BANKING

: fARMERS BANK
• and SAVINGS CO• t

t

!.

***************" weilr white.

PRlCES ARE RIGHT!

Gardner, in 8 UP! Washington Window interview, said his
230,01)().member group would
eschew partisan polltics and
instead concentrate Its efforts
·
on Congressional
and state
legislative reform, on campaign spending limitations
andmon lobbying controls.
He called state legislatures
"among the most scapdalous1y
operated instrumentalities in
this country.
·
"It's going to be a long time
before we have full time state
· wo uld be
legislatures, bo t 1t
cheaper at the price,
believe me ... Most of
them are ~iddled with
conflict of interest, riddled with corruption and
wholly inadequate instruments
of self government. "The conflict of interest in
the state legislatures is the
worst evil that they have,"
Gardner added. "Tbere are
men making Jaws who most of
the time are iii the employ of
the interests they are making
the Jaws about."
Gardner's a Republican who
was Secretary of Health,
Education and Welfare during
the Johnson administration. He
also said taxpayers would be
saving money if they supported
government-financed political
campaigns.
• "I think it would be the
biggest bargain the American
people ever got if !My just took
over the cost of campaigning
he
said.
thl!mselves,"
"Because whep tl1ey hand the
cost of campaigning over to
these big interests, what comes
back to tl1ose big interests in
political favor's is 10, 20, 30, 100
· times as much money out of
our taxpayers' pockets."

'

WASHINGTON (UPI)- In
another report on the collapse
of the Penn t;entral Railroad,
congressiona} investigators
have detailed the unsuccessful
efforts of one of the line's board
members to prevent the
bankruptcy.
The House Banking Committee stsff rep_ort said board
member RobertS. Odell of San
Francisco started, in the fall of
1969, to warn other board
members of the railroad's
troubles. The bankruptcy
occurred in June of 1970.
The investigators said
Odell's effor.ts · to deal with

BUDGET
SHOP!

· BAKER

"com~

pletely ignored" by Stuart T.
Saunders, chairman of the
railroad; and the line's chief
financial . officer, David C.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight &amp; Tuesday
- :.January 3·4

FOOL'S PARADE
(Hchnlcolorl
Ja"]es Stewart
George Kennedy

fiiNITUII
IIDDI.IPOIT, 0.

"G P"

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1oi~:,rvcotorcartoons':

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and Wilbur
the Dog
Note

SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

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Five to 10 ·pet': · increases
authorized for 2.5 million
veterans and survivors by two
· bills signed December 15 will
be reflected in February
checks the Veterans Ad·
ministration reported tod~y.
The ·increases are effective
Jan. I but wiU not show up in
checks unUI early February.
The increases will cost an
estimated $195 million the first
year.
-CommenUng on the two new
laws at ·a recent ·press conference, Administrator· of
Veterans Affairs Donald E.
Johnson declared:
"I cannot begin ' to tell you
how very pleaaed the President
and all of us are with this new
legislation. This is chiefly
because those who benefit are
mostly older low-income
veterans who are totally
disabled .and widows and
children who most need this·
financiat-support."
Public Law 92-198 provide.s
6.5 pet. ·cost of living increases
11&gt;2.2 million veterans, widows
and children who · draw VA
benefits based on the death or
disability of veterans for
nonservice .. connected caut:es.
First year cost of the increases
is estimated at $127.2 million.
By signing this legislation
tl1e VA Administrator pointed
out the President has
prevented hardships which
would have arisen January I
wben social security increases
become effective. Without the
legislation 1,150,000 pensioners

· R 0U8h es ObServe
Grover
·
.
Anniversary
· Nuinher 65 ·

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TV. ·~

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Rev. Neace of

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ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

President of Council ·,

. VOL XXIV

NO.

Mr. Collins, a hauling con.
tractor in high'l'aY construction, is married .to the
former Pandora Strickland.
T~ey re~i~e on Lincoln Heights
and are lhe parents of one son,
Ronald.
Council gave three required
readings to the appropriation
budget providing $621,906.28
for 1ocal government for the
fiscal year 1972 (see detsils
elsewhere).
Mayor Baronick named the
following committees:
, Safety and parking meter
committee, Lucien Poulin,
chairman, ·Jim Mee~ and Don
Collins; finance committee,
Ralph · Werry, chairman,
Poulin, arid William Snouffer ;
utility and sanitary committee,

•

Now You Know

. The dove actually is one of
.the most warlike creatures on
earth. Unlike most animals,
birds and fish which have ~uilt­
in inhibitions against ki!Ung or
even seriously hurting
members of their own species,
·the dove has no such
Inhibitions.

Pomeroy Council in 'its first
session of the new year Monday night approved its annual
: budget, elected Don Colllna its .
presid'ent, and appointed
former Mayor Charles .Legar
lo tl1e Board of Public Affairs.
Legar was named to the
.. board. to fill the varancy
created by tl1e resignation of .
· newly-elected Mayor William
B'aronick, who succeeded
Logan ,Jan. 1. .
Mr. Collins first became
president of council on Jan. I,
1970, a year ago, when he
succeeded Leslie Fultz, who
resigned. He began his service
on council on 1959 when ap'
pointed to fill the unexpired
term of· Don Mullen, who
resigned.

sell, ordinance commlttee,

Russell, chairman, Snouffer
and Poulin; street committee .•
Collins, chairman, Werry and
Mees.
In o.ther roullne actions,
· council gave three required
readi~gs to an ordinance lo
renew notes covering a loan of
$12,000 used to resurface
village streets. Total amount of
the original notes was $15,000
which is to be paid by 1976.
Council also renewed its
lease with the Pomeroy
Emergency Squad, Inc., for
two years.
Co\incil approved the appointment· of Calvin Lane as
· street commissioner for

•

at

e

Mees, . chairman, Collins
and Mrs. Elma · Rus-

Rain spreading eastward
across southern Ohio, changing
to snow this afternoon. Accumulations of I to 3 inches,
higher amounts in the north.
Colder tonight, lows in the low
20s. Wednesday highs in the
uoner 30s.

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1::85::..__ __ _ _ _ _PO.:._M_E_:RO_Y·_M1+DD_LE_P_OR_:T,_O_HI
_O_ _ _ _ _ _T.:_UE_SD_A...:.Y,~JA_N_UA_RY_4.:..,_
19_
72_-'---~-•

Meeting with council were
members of the Methodist
Church Youth Fellowship with
(Continued on page 8)

Weather

Devoted To Tlae Intereats OJ The Meigs-Mason Area
·

another year and re-appointed
Phil Globolw' lo the b&lt;iar~ of
cemetery trJlllleeS.
Baronick,, fulfilling his
campaign promise, appointea
three per11ons to a new
"cultural and restoration
committee." Its members
selected at-large, ·Will' oriake
recornmendallons to' council
·relative lo buildings that might
better be lorn down or rebuilt,
and to a general cleanup of tl1e
town. Appointed on the committee were Dorothea Fisher,
chairman, Nancy REred and
Doris Ewing.

PHONE

TEN CENTS

992-2156

•

Medical Copters
In Vietnam Carry
Machine Guns too
•

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• HOLIDAY HAPPINESS came to residenls of the Melgil County Infirmary from many
directions, Among the young persons.taking time to make the hollday brighter for the folks at
the infirmllry were these boys of Middleport Cub Scout Pack 24o.

N~ws... in

Briefs
'

BY UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
THERE WERE 1%5 pollcemen murdered last year - the
highest one-year toll ever and 25 more than in 1970. The FBI said
Monday 20 of the officers died in ambush-type attacks, 24 were
killed responding to robbery calls, 20 were slain making traffic
stops an~ 22 died attempting arrests for crimes othef than
burglary an(j.-GJi1jery.
The rest were slain in various circumstances ranging from
attacks by the mentally deranged to fights with prlsiJners in their
custody.
·

,Eleven at ·
Meigs High
Suspended

By ARTHUR HIGBEE
SAIGON (UPI)-The U.S.
command today disclosed that
American ambullince helicopters carry machlne . guns .along
with their Red Cross markings
and have done so for 10 years.
Military spokesmen made
the disclosure when asked for
details of the Monday ambush
of an American patrol 40 miles
northeast of Saigon.
·
One Gl wasl killed and 14,
wounded. It was the heaviest
U.S. casualty count in a single
action since last May I when
five men were killed and 10
wounded near the A Shau
Valley, although there have
since been heavier casualties
. in shellings . and air crashes.
Military sources said tl1e
Communists also blew up two
South Vietnamese armored
personnel carriers with [\lines
along Highway 7 about five
miles south of Snuol in the
Cambodian rubber plantation
counlry today.

Thirteen government
soldiers were wounded and the
tracked carriers were heavily
damaged, ·the source~ said.
Four helicopters-()ne OH6
observation craft and three
UH1 Huey Me~evac helicopters were shot i Jwn by the VIet
Cong as they arrived to help
the U.S. troops under attack.
At least two of the choppers
had to be airlifted out by other
helicopters because they were
put out of action.
Military spokesmen, In reply
to newsmen's questions; sail
M60 machine guns were
mounted on the medical
evacua lion helicopters
although in this case, the guns
were not fired.
"The military command
feels this does not violate the
Geneva Conv~nUon, In the
sense that they are armed for
the purpose of defending the
crews and the patients involved," the. spokesman said.
"This is the same as a medic

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carrying weapons in the field."
"Our helos get shot up all the
time and when they are
protecting patients they ljave a
right to shootback," said a
spokesman for the U.S. Anny
Medical Cqmmand. He said the
policy had been in effect for 10
years.
Nevertheless, the combat
unlls al-e taking the guns ·off
their choppers and painting
them .white under a new
program that seems to be
cutting
down
losses,
a · spokesman' said. Until
last fall, ambulanlOI' helicopters were painted olive drab
Uke other choppers and carried
dim Red Cross signs that were
difficult to see from the
ground. As a resuli, they were
frequently shot at.
The U.S. command also
announced belatedly that a
U.S. Air Force F4 PhantOm jet
was lost over the Laotian upper
- panhandle last Friday and both
crewmen were misaing,

I
CANDIDATE IN BABY DERBY4urtlas Fr.anldln
English,bornall:M p.m. New Year's Day at Holzer Medical
Center, is a leading candidate for the prizes offered by
' babY, born of Meigs
merchants in the bend area to the first
County parents in 1972. Holding Kurliss is his mother, Mrs.
Wllllam T. English, of 652 .Beach St., Middleport. His fa•.her,
one of Pomeroy High School's great football players of the
1950s, is employed in the maintenance department at the
PhWp·Sporn Plant in Mason County. Grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Harry Games, Middleport, and Mr. and Mrs.
Howard English, Pomeroy. Kurtiss checked in at 7 lbs. 13'h
ounces and 20-inches tall.- Picture by Jack Carr.

Eleven male students of
Meigs High School have been
given 10-day suspensions from
classes unless they get a
haircut.
District ad!jlinistralors said
today that the 11 students had
CIIASE, MicH. -ANDY HORUJKO, A LOCAL hermit who been ordered so~~ fime ago to
yearned to go for a long walk, has completed hiS&lt;12,01)().mile trek have haircuts in accordance
from Anchorage, Alaska, to T12rre del Fuego at the tip of South with the dress cnde of the
school as approved by the
America.
Meigs Local School District
MONROVIA, LIBERIA - AN INAUGURAL banquet for Board of Education.
Whep the students returned
President WlDlam R. Tolbert today climaxed the final day of the
first part of Mrs. Richard M. Nixon's diplomatic visit to three to classes Monday fr,om their
Christmas vacatipn, they had
'Mrs. Georgia Williamson, 80,
African nations:
not complied, it was reported. well-known Meigs County
COLUMBUS, OHIO - AFJ...CIO CHIEF Frank King has They were sent home but can resident, died Monday at' her
return to · school when they horne on the Pomhoy •
indicated ihe executive board of the labor organization would aid
comply with the rules of the Harrisonville road.
opponents of Sen. Edmund Muskie, D-Mail]e, in the . Ohio .
schooL
Mrs. Williamson, who was
presidential primary in May but did not say whether tbe group
One of the II had complied by ' assoc.iated with the Meigs
.\ A
budget
providing personal services $39,000, other personal services $150, debt
would endorae a candidate.
Tuesday morni~g and returned County Welfare Dept. a
. $621,906.28 in 1972 was ap- $20,aoo, total $o9,8oO, fire service $42,075. Total $42,225 .
"We don't llke to see It (the primary) foreclosed in Ohio and to classes. The lengtl1 of the number of years, and who was
General bon'd retirement
proved by Pomeroy Council department, personal services
yet that's just what is going to happen unless somebody does hair of tl1e offenders exceeded a devoted sports fan, died in
$1,~00,
supplies
and
materials
fund, person~! services ·$7 ,000,
Monday night in its first
something to help some of the other candidates," said King. that provided in the dress cnde, the family home where slie was
$1,500, other $4,240, total, payment of principal $4,462,50.
session
of
the
year,
ApKing said two weeks ago that Gov. John J. Gilligan's en- officials said.
born and wt.ere she had reared '
prdpriations, by departments, $10,040. Total for security of Tolal, $11,462.50.
dorsement of Milskie was "ill adv~ and ill timed.:·
her four children.
persons and property $69,890.
1fere:
street
bond
Special
The dailghter of the late
Street lighting, utility, retirement fund , payment of
Mayor's fund $1,200, clerk
WASHINGTON -CATTLE AND SHE.EP coming to marKet'
Ge·orge and Sarah Hysell
fund .$1,200, treasurer's fund $13,1m.50, street department, principal $4,000, payment of
on or alter Saturday, Jan. 8, must comply with a new regulation
Moore, she was a lifelong
personal services"--$17 ,000, interest $168.78. · Total,
~. soli("'tor's fimd $2,000,
which officials hope wiD keep hormone .residues. out of the
Republican and a member of
supplies
and materials $2,500, ' $4,168.78.
elections $500, council fund
the Trinity Church in Pomeroy.
nation's meat supply, Agriculture Department officials said
capital outlay $3,000, oilier
mo.
Besides
her
parents,
she
was
· today.
1
General Administration, $9,157.00. Total, $31,657.&gt;0.
preceded in death by her
The regulation requires producers wbo use the growth· personal services, $4,500, sup- Special street repair $15,000.
on
·
('Conjinued
on
page
8)
MRS.
WILLIAMSON
promoting hormone dleihylslilbestrol (DES) to withdraw It from
plies and materials $1,200, Total for street construction,
cattle and sheep feed seven days ,before slaughter. Also, as ,a
capital outlay $1,000, other mainter.ance and repair fund,
Ralph Gerald Spencer, 66,
$46,6ii7,50.
'backstop, animals coming to slaughter must be accompanied by
$6,400, lots! $13,100.
'
,/"'-.
educator and.youth and c~urch
State Highway fund, percert~icate$ stating the seven-day withdrawal rule has beep
General Governmental
leader; of 1608 Nye Ave.,
Services, pollee department, sonal services $500, other
complied with.
•Pomeroy, died Monday at the
$3,000. Total state highway
The McGovern for President
Holzer Medical Center where
· improvement fund, $3,500,.
Committee will hold a public
:, JS ANGELES - ACI'OR ROGER DAVIS wiU take over the he was taken after suffering a
'
Cem~tery
op~ration
and
caucus on Jan. 9 at Baker
role in the television series "Alias Smith and Jones". that had heart attack at his home.
Stanley Wells, 25, Rt.l, Long maintenance, personal ser- Center Ballroom, Athens, from
been ph.yed by Peter Duel, the ABC network announced Monday.
The son of the late Albert and
Bottom, was cited to Meigs vices $7 ,oOO, supplies and 1 to 5 p.m., to select the adDuel, 31, died Friday of a bullet through the head, apparently Myrtle Heaton Spencer,-he was
County
Court
Monday materials $1,400. Total, $6,900, visory list of district delegates
suicide. Davis, of Louisville;Ky., studied at Columbia University a school teacher 39 years 36 of
1
following a traffic mishap on
Water puniplng, personai and alternates for candidacy in
and UCLA, and appeared in the afternoon television serial "Dark which were in the Pomeroy
Frank W. Porter and Don second Monday of each month. ·Rl. 218, nine tenths of a mile services $25,600, supplies and tl1~ Ohio primary for election to
Shadows." He will step into tbe role of HaMibal Hayes for the SchOQis. He atlf,nded Rio Mullen were
reelecte&lt;\ Previously, th~ board met in East Rt. 7.
materials $1,000. Total, $26,600.. ~rve at the .1972 Democratic
Jasi.'four episodes of this season.
Grande College antl graduated president and vice president, · regul~r sessions on the secbnd · According to the GalliaWater distribution, personal National Convention, lOth
from tlhio University . He respectiv*y, Monday nigh( by Tuesday of each month,
Meigs State Highway Patrol, services $7,000, supplies and Congressional District
served auring his long career the Meigs [.ocal School District
Following the organization Wells' car sideswipe;&lt;! another materials $12,000, other $9,000, Democrat~ were notified
in leaching as principal of the Board of Education in its _an- session, · l!Je board met . in a operated by Garrett Reed, 7~, · · total, $28,000. Total for water today.
Pomeroy Elemenlary School nual organizational session. special session 'to accept, the coolville. Wells was charged system operation, $54,600.
The meeting will ·be conon Mulberry Ave. He retired
Preceding the election, Carol resignation of ~ohn Teaford as with driving left of center and
Administration, ·water , due ted pursuant to Robert's
Charles R. Karr was Carl Nelson courthouse from leaching in 1966.
Pierce, a new 'member, and welding instructor , in the hit-skip.
personal services ,1,000, debt Rules of Order and the Ohio
Mr .J Spencer was a scout- return in&amp; board members vocational department of the
reelected .president and Bob .•custndiails, Lowell Greer, dog
AGallia County accident was service $44,000. Total, $45,000. Vemocratic Constitution. and
Clark vice president for 1972 warderi, and Mrs . . Sharon master ln Pomer.oy 25 years Virgil King and Joe Sayre were high school. Charles Neuman, investigated .in Bidwell where - Water, ~ mprovetben t .~byAaws...ana_
"NaUonal .•·;
Tuesday . when the . Meigs Wright custodian!Jor offices- and in I~ presen~tl\e given their oaths of office by Syracuse;. \\'lis employed as autos dri ven by John A. $235,000,other,$15,000,totalfor Guidelines ." A state-wide ·
County -B~rd . of - eom-:- liicaied at the: county in · Silver . Seaver Medal for· his Lee W. McComas, clerk. All substitute .welding teacher Birchfield, 21, Rt. 1 Bidwell, waler fund, $280,000,
caucus will be held at the
missioners met -f~r its firmary . Attending' Tuesday work . He . w~s an active are beglnnlngTfour yel\1' terms. effective Jan. 3.
and Randall M. Spencer, 10,
Sewer maintenance, per- Imperial Houae N~rth,
orgaillzatlonal meeting.
sessio~s were Karr, Clark,. and . member · of the Enterprise
McComas \vas reappointed
The
board
approved Chilltcothe, collided. Spencer sonal aervices $11,600, supplies Columbus, on Jan . .18 at 7:30
The commissioners reap· Warden Ours, commissioners, United · Methodist Church clerk for · four years effecllve · payment o( annual dues for was cited to Gallipolis and materials $11,000. Tolal ' p.m. to select an advisory list ·
where he was · Sonday School Jan . I, 19?2:. Regul~r monthly membership in ll ,e Ohio Sch~l Municipal Court for failure \o · $22,600, ·
pointed Mrs. Mar~ · Cham: and Mrs. Cha'l!bers, clerk. ·
·
of delegates anrt alternates
ben clerk, ,Jim CorneD and
~
·
(Conlin~ed on page 8)
t,mgs we;·e se t r·or the.. Boar&lt;ls Assn.·
1eId t1·~ r1g
· ht o.( wa~, Adntl' nistratlon -- ..n., .. o;. .nntlAr llint!h ru\."!ee
y
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Mrs • .Williamson Dies
&lt;

$621,906 Appropriated.

To Run Pomeroy in '72

Bevan.
"The detailed description of
Odell's futile attempts to force
Penn Central's board ana
management to act in
·a · responsible fortright
manner to S9lve mounting problems is one of
the most vivid examples
imaginable of the complete
breakdown of the director system in a great American Corporation," said ,.Rep. Wri;:ht
Patman, D-Tex., chairman of
the Banking Committee. "It
clearly spotlights the need for
reform. "
The milage report called
entire affair "a story of mismanagement, poor judgement,
corruption and frivolous b~­
havlor."
The document also said the
director~ voted more tl1an $215
million in . dividends between
1963 and ,!'969, even· though the
railroad needed all the investment money itcmild dig up - a
foolhardy policy, according to
tl1e investigators.
· The report blamed the collapse on the railroad's "disastrous" diversification inw non-.

Public Seroice
T~mis Begin

TAKE OATH OF OFFICE - Newly-elected Pomeroy M•yor William Baronick, left, adririnisters the oath of office to the two newly-elected council members, Jim Nees, center, and
William E. Snouffer, pr\or to Monday night's council meeting.
·

Weston Dies

Mrs.

\

·Board of Affairs

.: :In Review

By RICK DU BROW
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Memolr on the New year's
weekend ·television football
lunacy:
All right, elerybody, we can
open the drapes now. Say hello
to your wife and brats. Introduce yourself if you liave lo.
What's the baby's name again?
Find out what everybody's
been doing arouqd the house
since Friday. Are we at war or
anything? And,,oh yes, Happy
New Year.
It was a great weekend for
·learning the national anthem.
And aU those parades and
floats, with the enormous funds
poured into them, were really
terrific, weren't they?
The aJUIOuncing of the games
was wonderful too. It was
deeply moving and inspiration
to hear some of the nellfork
sports shills tell us how proud a

Don Collins Elected

-r;;;;ar

Accepts Seat on

'j

Gridiron Gluttony Ends

A
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Charles

would have had their vA made under some cirpensions reduced and more cumstances to children · and
' titan' 16,000 on VA rolls would parents of · veterans. About
have lost tlielr pensions en- · 53,000 childreq will receive five
percent and ee,ooo parents 6.5
tlrely,
pel increall@ under the law,
The other new law, PL 9%-107, which wiD coat an eslbnated
provides a 10 pet. increase lor, $67.8 m!Wiin the first year.
VA officials stressed that no
186,000 widows of veterans who
appllcatlon
for the !Jlcreases
. died of service • connected
causes. Called Dependency will be necessary, They wiD be
and ll)demnlty Compensation Included automatically In
(DIC), such payments are also February checks.
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Former Mayur

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team should be even though It
· was Jos!Dg by. about 30 points
because II was putting up a
great scrap. And reminding liS,
with great foresight, that the
losing team !)'auld be back: next
MASON\-_ The year of 1971 Mrs. Edna jtoush,. New Haven;
year Who said It wouldn't?
If a team Is getting creamed&gt;.
was marked witl1 two big ob- Mr. and Mrs. Artie Roush,
. by 30 points, why the Idiotic
servances for Mr. and Mrs. Point Pleasanb; Mrs. Erma
Turnbull,
Mrs.
Lola
Jefferies
announcing cbarade telling 1J.!!
Grover Roush of Mason. Mr.
that the boys on both aides are
Roush, a retired coal miner, and Mrs , Joyce Carson,
hitting really hard? What are
recently celebrated his 87th Mason; Mrs. Kate Roush,
they supposed to be doing, ,
birthday at a family dinner Letart; Mrs. Chloe Fick,
after
all? Dancing with each
Pomeroy, and Mrs , Ruth
hosteq by Mrs. Roush.
other? And CBS still treats Its
The couple, well known in the Wallace of Wisconsin.
Jl'O games as though they were
bend area, also celebrated
some kind of holy ceremony.
tl1eir 65th wedding anniversary
And NBC though sllghUy
the past year, The Roushes are Veterans Memorial Hospital
looser, has enougti of :an
tl1e parents of two sons, Clyde
FRIDAY ADMISSIONS alllsnce with football so thalli
Roush of Camp Conley near Gaye Smalley, Chester;
also tends to be on the overly
Point Pleasant and Harold Homer Mills, Syracuse; Mary
polite side. I like Curl Gowdy,
Roush of Philo, Ohio, and five Smith, Middleport; Hobart
but I'd Jlke to hear him open up
grandchildren and 11 great- Smalley, Chester; Dana Mc·
Lo
B
tt
B
·
grandchildren complete the Cam, _ nJ!. o om;_ ermce
even more.
The most exciting New
family.
Grueser, Middleport; Carl
Year's football game was
Mr. and Mrs. Roush were . Jeffers, Syracuse.
underdog Stanford's 13-12 win
married in 1906 at the Union
FRIDAY DISCHARGES Church at Letart with the Rev. Jeff Morris, Mary Roush,
over Michigan in the Rose
PleuutValleyHospllal
Bowl. You never saw a looser,
Robinson officiating.
William Hobstetter, Florence
ADMISSIONS - JosepL more InfOrmal looking team
Mr. Roush for years has been Hennigar, Homer Smith,
Ellis, Cottageville; Mrs. than Stanford. It seemed to be
a devoted o"l!l'dener and is Kenneth Hoffman
, James
.
Claude
Thornton, Le0f1_i Mrs. the only team on the lube all
among the first each spring .lo Hollon, Albert Frank, William
NEW HAVEN- The Rev.
have lettuce and onions on his Zirkle, Eric Knotts.
Oscar Neace, formerly of New Oden Pearson, Mrs. Wllllam weekend that gave the lmpresdinner table. The Roush home ' SATURDAY ADMISSIONS Haven, W. Va., died at his Stewart, Patricia Condee, slon that It knew football was
too, for many years, has been -Elizabetl1 Hysell, Rutland; home in Weston, W.Va., about · Venlla Smith, Mrs. Arnold only a game. II bnproviaed
tl1e scene of a big apple butter 'I:hurman Martin, Minersville; noP,n Sunday, following a Lane, Jack Wheeler, Mrs. OWe- colorflllly llke a good Juz
llllines, Mrs. !Annie., Roe, all band. It wasn't Mlclllgan that
making project.
Mona Gibbs, !Atart, ·w. Va.; lengthy illneSll.
For a number of years Mr. Roy Sears, Middleport; Arthur
The Rev. Mr. Neace would Pt. Pleasant; KeMy Burns, Stanford beat so much as the
Roush.built jon boats but gave Goodwin, Pomeroy ; Linda have been 92years old on Jan. 6 Henderson; Ernest Hudnall, absurd Ylew that football is
tl1is hobby up some time ago. Hackett, Middleport.
this_year. He was preceded In Moundsville; Howard Kaiser, some kind of a holy war. They .
He still buys and sells hides.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES death by his parents, Scot~ and Mason; Mrs. lAona Dines, should call them the Stanford
Mrs. Roush pieces quilts and - Larry Sellers, Ralph Uphrasla Neaf.~ ~nd two Glenwood; 'Mrs. Ronald ragamufllnl.
'' "--engages In other kinds of hand Brewer, Homer Goegleln, . brothers. Surviving are his [.ogan, Gallipolis; Lewis
MarUn,
Robertsburg;
Harry
The
channel
swim: pro
work in her retirement.
Howard Searles, Terry Uttle, wife, Mary; five chlldr.en,
basketball's two top teama Attending the birthday Cloyd Brookover, Pamela seven grandchildren; a 'sister, Surface, Middleport.
DISCHARGES - Addison the Incredible 1M Angeles
dinner were' Mr. and
Fred Young,
Mrs .
Florence
Potts,
[.yons,
David Nibert, Kathy • l.akera, who have 'l!on 311n ,.
Roush of Letart, Mr. and Mrs.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Syracuse; an aunt, Martha
Harold Roush of Philo, Mr. and Everett Dalley, Pomeroy; Thomas of ,Springfield, Pa., Wtle, Maud Jones, Amy . row, and the deflilldlng cham·
Mrs. James Tracy and Brent, William Dye, New Haven; and · several nieces and Byers, James Napier, Mrs. pion Milwaukee [lucka -"~11ll
Frank Epple and daughter on ABC nut Sunday at 2 p.m.
also of Philo, Mr. and Mrs. Myrtle Wolfe, Racine; Mar-- nephews.
Clyde Roush, Point Pleasant~ - jorie Goett, Middleport; Roger
Funeral services will be held Mrs. Stanley Allshlre and son: · EST ... "Lylllon Johnllon TalkB
Mrs. and Mrs. Larry Eblin, Pomeroy; Betty Pooler, Wednesday afternoon tn· Mrs. Clara Meadowa, Monty Polltica," Mnother ptlme Ume
David Ellzi.beth Jones Lellter hour in which the fOi'mer
Luckeydoo, Larry and PhiUp of Middleport; Barbara Lyons, Weston.
Casto:
Mrs. Allen Waugh, president is irJtervlewed by
Charleston; Mr's. Ora Cochran Mason; Clarice Gibson, Long
James Clonch Brian RolllnB Walter Cronkite, airs on CBS
of St. Albans; Willie Grimm, Bottom; H.' D. Goeglein,
'
CLUB
TO
MEET
Jeffery Brown,
Stephen' Jan. 'll.
.. ·
·
Pomeroy; Catherine Wolfe,
'Mrs.
Rodney
Downing
will
CIRCULATION NOTED
Racine; Millard Swartz,
McGraw, Mrs. Harold Stewart,
review Freud's "Passions of Mrs. Charles Glitey and son,
Circu'Iation of tl1e Pomeroy Pomeroy.
and Mi~dleport Public
SUNDAy DISCHARGES _ the Mlrul," and the response -Mrs. Sam Lewis And son, Mrs.
LOCAL TO DINE
. Libraties and the Bookmobile Bessie McKnight, Vaughn will be a thought on psychiatry John Lewis, Marvin Col, Mrs.
Brlcklayet'll Local No. 32 will
service in November totaled Barnhart, Edith McCoy, Ina when the Middleport Uterary Lloyd Huffman.
dine foliowlng its · regular
12,279. Magazine donations for Ferrell, Carl Jeffers, tydia Clu5 meets at 2 p.m. We(lBffiTH - Dec. 31, a son to meeting Thurlday evenln!l 11
ll1~ montl1 were by Mrs. Roscoe Stewart, Beverly Powell, nesdsy at the home of Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Carter the American !Aglon Hill In
Emerson Jones.
~ise and Mrs. To111 Rue.
Harrison Robinson.
/
Smith, Point Pleasant.
Pomeroy.
RIDER KILLED
RAVENNA, Ohio (UP!) -A
snowmobile hit•a barbed wire
fence and flipped over near
here in Portage County, killing
Tirnotl1y Taylor, 20, Mantua,
Sunday.

PCR Board Gets
Committee's Fire
.
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management were

from our

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Mr. and Mrs. Grover Roush -

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:~ POW Question

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The head of the self-&amp;yled
"peoplEi's lobby" coupled lils
attsck "ith a disclosure that
Common Calise plans to spotlight such confllcts of interest
in state lawmaking bodies this
year as a first step in
legislative reform.

.

also flre&lt;tmore than 100 rpunds ,
of heavy 82 mm mortsr lite
and a few 122 mm rock$ into
the other .two baaes, one of
•which is occupied by Cambodians:

treason charges by the former was East Paklstsn.
military government of exBhutto has conferred frePresid•nt Aghan Mohammad quently witl1 Rahman in recent
Yahya Khan but was releaaed days, and informed political
recently to house arrest by sources in Rawalpindi said
Bhulto.
Bhutto tried to convince him
Rahmany party won an that East Pakistan must
absolute majority in the Pakis- remain a part of Pakistan, but
tan Parliament a year ago but witl1 greater autonomy.
Yahyil Khan never permitted
Pakistan radio, monitored in
him to tske office as premier. New Delhi, said a huge public
Instead, tl1ere.was an uprising meeting in Karachi voiced its
in East Pakistan, civil war and . acclaim for Bhutlo's decision to
then tl1e India-Pakistan war release the East Pakistani who
that created the Independent was captured by Pakistani
stste of Bangladesh in what troops when tl1e civil war began

, WASHlNGTON (UPI)-Most
·.state legislatures are riddled
:With corruption and confllcts of
;.interest, and are wholly inade~quate for what tl1ey are sup:posed to be doing, Chairman
;,~r l ,n W. Gardner of Common
· ~use S&amp;id today.

2Y2. Millio~.. VA (Jtecks.'
.
·B~ger Nexf Feb~uary·

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Siri~~ ·DaNlmg
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Banglade_sh Leader is Free
By.UnlledPresslaternaUonal
Pakistan President Zulfikar
Ali Bhutto today announced the
uncondltionalrelease of Bengali
Nationalist leader Sheikh Muji, bur Rahman, official Radio
Pakistan reported.
UP! correspondent Robert
Kaylor . reported from New
Delhi the announcement presumably frees Rahman Ill assume
the presidency of the governmentor Bangladesh.
Rahman, leader of tl1e
Awami League party in East
Pakistan, had been tried on

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MENS AND BOYS

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COATS and
J.ACKETS.

Ralph Spencer

...

Of Jlomeroy
Dies Monday

'

In the busy mens al)d boys dep1rtment'on
the 1sf floor - Big January S111e of mens
Jackets and Coats.

• LllllE" BOYS SIZES 2T TO
I•

4fMD 3TO 6X
...

• MEN'S SIZES 36 TO·54
•
An excellent selection In waist length lacllel$ and
the longer car coal lengths. Choose from corduroys ·
wool plaids . dacron·cotlon bl~nds · quilled nylons ·
solid colors and plaids. All are warmly tined· well
made jacketS- arranged for your easy selection. ·

Karr; Clark Are.Reeiected

---------------··
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·

railroad properties,
onexpenses
its hnge ....- -. .
qperating
losses; high
invqlving mergers•.. exti!ssive
-labor cost:: and . laqe salary
increases.
-

Public Caucus

·Porter,. Mullen
Are Reelected

·• REGULAR BOYS SIZES 6 TO 2!1

~-·"" ....

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E•-aERFELDs· liN·
pft
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Is Announced

Driver Cited

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.. ·. ·.. ·.·.-....·.·..·.······ ":·..

Pianist Coming

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On Way Out

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CARTER AND EVANS INC., erected steellaat week for
a new restaurant In the VU!age of Clieshli'e. Harold Laughlin,

-Cultural Series
Opens January 13

Laughlin Vending Co., Auiens and Gallipolis, Is conetructing ··
the restaurant on the old C8ln property. The 26 by 52 (oot structure will offer fast.food and cafeteria sef'VIce.

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Grain Prices
COLUMBUS IUPII - Daily
cash grain prices paid to farmers Tuesday at grain elevators
In central, northwestern and

southwestern Ohio as reported
by the Ohio Department of Agriculture are: No. 2 Wheat ibul
mostly unchanged to 1 cent lower; 1.41-1.48, mostly 1.44-1.47.
No. 2 Ear Corn (bu) mostly 1
cent lower; 1.00 - 1.05, mostly
1.05. No. 2..Shelled Corn {bu)
mostly 1 cent lower; 1.05 - 1.08,
mostly 1.07-1.08. No. 2 Shelled
Corn {100 lb) mostly 2 cents
lower; 1.88-1.93, mostly 1.911.93.
No.2 Oats {bu) mostly unchanged ; .69-.75, mostly .70-.72. No. 1
Soybeans lbul mostly 3 cents
lower; 2.87-2.98, mostly 2.952.98.

HOSPITAL
NEWS
Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
vtsiting hours 2-4 and 7~ p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Dlocbarges
Sarah Jean Ph118on, Jofumy
A. Klein, Mrs. Charles Leo
LaDeaux and son, Cherie M.
Roberts, Timothy· L. DaviJ,
Jeffrey L. Sayre, Ralph
Garnes, Samuel M. Miller,
Diane, K. Turner, ~- Doi:othy

Mrs. BoW1l1811

11

Dies in west -

11

Property

fransfers

Mr. Eddy's Newest Books

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• R an ··
Generatton
1

contract Makes 'Either Wa'y

r--------------------;----------------------1
l
B Wt

I . 0-. ce

Maloney Released

NBA Stondings
By United Pross lntornotionol
, ~oslorn CDnftroneo
Alllnlie Division
W. l. Pet. GB
Boston
27 u 659
New York
25 14 .641 1
Philadelphia 16 24 .400 .10'h
B~flalo
11 26 .297 14
Ctntra I Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Baltimore
15 22 .405
Cleveland
15 24 .381 1
Atlanta
14 15 .359 2
I
Cincinnati
10 27 .. 270 5
Western
Conftrenee
••
Midwest Division
remaining in the game, Ohio
,
W. L. Pet. GB
State could not regain and re- Milwaukee 32 8 .800
Chicago
27 10 .730 3'12
tain the lead.
Phoenix
23 11 .575 9
The Bucks' 7-footer, Luke Detroit
15 24 .385 16'/2
Witte, was called for two techPacific Division
W. L. Pet. GB
lllcal foul8-ln the flrst.balf for
Los
Angeles
37 3 .925 ...
toislug a baU Into the .c;rowd Seattle
23 18 .561 141/2
after being . touched lor a per- • GoldenSiate 20 19 ,513 16'/2
U 26 .350 23 sonal, and in the second for Houston
Portland
9 32 .220 28'12
words he·had with an official.
Monday's Results
Coach Fred Taylor benched New Yor~ 101 Mllw 99
IOnly games scheduled)
him the flnal17 minutes of the
Tuesday's Games
g8me. \
Philadelphia at Detroit
"Two technicals are slightly Phoenix at Chicago
ridiculous," Taylor com- • Buffalo at Golden St
Seattle at Houston
mented.
New York at Milwaukee
Witte finished with 13 points Atlanta at Portland
(Only games scheduled)
and Allan Hornyak, looking like
the workhorse of last season,
•
halt a game-high 26. Ralph
ABA Standings '
Bohlk was high for Creighton
By United Pross International
with 20 points.
East
W. L. Pet. GB
Taylor 98id the ability of the
Kentucky
30 9 .769 .. .
Bucks to score ~7 points In the Virginia
25 15 625 51!&gt;
last half "reaDy gives us a Floridians
18 21 462 12
1
New York
16 23 .410 14
boost."
Pittsburgh
17 25 .405 14'12
Carolina
13 28 .317 18
West
W. L. Pet. GB
1
Ulan
29 10 .744 ...
Indiana
23 18 .561 7
Denver
, 16 21 .432 12
Memphis
16 23 .410 13
Dallas
16 26 .381 14'1&gt;
Monday's Results
Dallas 102 Indiana 101
(Only game scheduled)
Tuesdey's Gomes
Virginia at Floridians
Carolina at Pittsburgh
notches to round out the top KentuckY at Denver
Utah at Memphis
five after the Hoosiers emerged
{Only games scheduled I
aaklngplna of the Old Dominion • .
Claalc. I
Louisville, winner of · the
Holiday Festival at New York,
made a long leaR from the 13th
spot to s.l:xth as the Cardinals
totaJJed 82 points In the voting.
PeM made the biggest jump
of all, however, leapfrogging
from the No. 19 spot to be
seventh ranked with 79 points.
Long Beach State, Ohio State
and Maryland complete the top
Powerful South Point (~)
10.
was ranked third In the Class
AA play In the Associated
College Ratings
NEW YORK IUPil .-The Press' first weekly high echool
United Press International top poD today.
20 college basketball teams
Only·oOther area team !bled
with first place vot"' ._nd won- Ill 'the \'0111Mn M citt!les·t.&lt;as
loot records as of Jan. 1 In
defending Southeastern 'ohio
parentheses: (filth weeki
Team
Points League champion Waverly.
1. UCLA {301 18-0)
308 The Tigers were ranked eighth
2. Marquette (11 (8·01
268
3. North Car. IB-1)
242 In the state.
4. South Car. (7.1)
142
Unbeaten We118ville, home of
5 .Indiana (8·11
82 former Rio Grande College
6. Louisville 18-11
82
7. Penn (7·11
79 great Clarence "Bevo"
S. Long Beach St. 19-11
63 Francis, is ranked nwnber one
9. Olllo St. 17-21
58 in AA circles.
10. Msryland 18-1)
49
Boardman is ranked nwnber
11. Southern Cal. 17-21
46
12. Florida St. {1-2)
44 one in Class AAA play. Ucltlng
13. St. John's {8-21
29 Heights Is nwnher one In Class
14. Hawaii {9-0)
28
15. !tiel Villanova {9-11
25 A action. New Boston Is ninth,
(Tie) Kentucky {6·21
25 and Alexander In Athens
17. S.W. Louisiana 15-1)
20 County Is ranked lOth.
lB. Virginia {9·01
19
The UP! poll and the Ohio
19. MISSOY.rl (10-11
IS
20. Brigham Young 18-21 11 High
School
Athletic
Association PoD will be an·
nounced later this week.

By Califomia

Drop Pacers

~eighton -Is.

94-76.
Victim
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The series, produced
RIO
GRANDE
originally
for the British
"Civilisation," the renowned
series on the cultural )jfe of Broadcasting Corporation was
man, opell8 at Rio Grande written and narrated by noted
College Jan. 13 with the "The art historian Kenneth Clark.
Frozen World," a look at man The series premiered in ,this
following the faD of the Roman country in 1969 in the National
Empire. All performances in Gallery of Art In W&amp;shington,
the 134ilm series will be in D. C. More than 'lTS,OOO perso1111
Holzer Hall Recreation Room, have seen ·the fihn and 100
and wiD be open to the public showings at the Gallery.
without charge.
In preparing the series,
CHARLESTON,W.Va (UPI) gest need today in the nation's pnces would spawn "far reachEach of the !Uilms In the Clark, two producers and three
-Soft coal operators were coal fields
mg ' ~ffects" on coal's future .
M.Mhworth,Mn.~mm
series runs 50 minutes in cameramen spent two years
warned Monday that American
Unless accord is reached beSaine ~~marginal mrnes"
Fink,
Wrenna E. Laudermllt,
length, and each will be shown traveling through 11 countries,
mines would face nationahza· tween labor and management, rrught be forced to close, Jones
Mrs. Emma L. Williamson,
twice. The first showing Is set In addition to the 13-fl!m serf:!~,
tion if the industry fa1ls to government and industry, and asserted, because the price
Rebecca
Jean Wells, Mrs.
for 1:40 and the second is 8:30. /Clark produced a 366-page
meet the nation's energy needs. the public and industry, Jones commission's ruling would
Irene Cook_,_ Luci!Je DrumThe second in the serie-- ''The volume, Civillsation," witlL
Speaking.. to the Charleston said the factors would stay at place a ceihng on coal profits
mond, ·Mrs. Nola tggers,
Great Thaw," Is schedliled for nearly 300 illustrations.
Exchange Club, President Her- odds and result in a "great dis- and in turn limit the industry's
PRUITI HONORED
Sharon
Kay Ferren pnd son,
The
showlugs
at
Rio
Grande
Jan. 20, while the third,
bert E. Jones of Amherst Coal service" to the state and to the potential Investments.
COLUMBUS (IJPI) - Okla· "Romance and Reality," will College are part of a national
Mrs. Bernice (Doris Max- Jeffrey J. Icard, Mrs. Jennie J. ·
Co. in Kanawha County said the working miner.
homa running back Greg Pruitt be shown Jan. 'lT.
distribution
program
set
up
weD)
Darst, Pomeroy, learned McNeal, John A. ,Stone, VIola
'
"I have seen nationalized
element of harmony is the b1gwas named Monday to receive
One film will be shown each under matching grants from Sunday of the unexpected Helen Young and son, •Ella
mines in foreign countries,
an "award of distinction" from week through April. The series the National Endowment for death of her sister, Mrs. C. H. Payne, Mrs. Maxie Brit, Mrs.
said Jones, one of four indus·
Meigs
the Touchdown Club of Colum· ends with the April 201h per· the Humanities and from the (Bessie Maxwell) Bowman, in Avoneile Cobb, Cary B. Wilson,
lr1al leaders who helped neg~
· bus at its awards banquet Jan. formance
Darin Edw~rd, Wolfe, Lori R.
of . Heroic Xerox Corporation totaling Pasadena, Calif.
tiate the new United Mine Work·
211.
Engle.
$18l,OG6.
The
films
are
being
Mrs.
Bowman,
91,
was
a
Materialism a look at the sky
ers contract. "I hope 1t doesn't
Although justa junior, Pruitt scraper, the suspenSion bridge, distributed to colleges and graduate of Pomeroy High
Kimberly L. Hamm, Maggie
bappen' here."
was third in voting for the and the machine, things that universities with enrollments School in the class of 1897. It Lambert, Marian R. Escue,
'
Although the new pact bore
Heisman Trophy. He averaged express the deepest feelings under 2,000.
was believed she was the oldest Margaret E. Miller 'and
an expensive priCe tag, Jones
9.4yards per carry last season. and aspirations of our time.
The distribution program, • graduate of Pomeroy High daughter, Wayne A. Alvei'BOII,
said 11 woui!J, help pay for it·
according to J. Carter Brown, School.
John A. Cunningham, Melinda
self if wildcat strikes are re·
director of the National
Mrs. !lowman was preceded M/ Casto, Mn. Gladys D.
Denver E. Well, Florence duced and better relationships
Well to Buckeye Rural Elec.
Gallery, makes Is possible for In death by her husband, Grant, Mrs. Billy E. Hale, Mrs.
develop between labor and
Coop., R1ght of Way Easement, management.
audiences all over the country Carlas Hobart Bowman ; a Patty Sue Johnson and BOll,
Bedford.
to see the "Civilisation" films. daughter, Elnora;-'one son, Elsie Mae Pleasants, Alma
Jones assa1led the Federal
Guy V Sargent, Bertha Price Commission, saying that
. He said !bat each fihn will be Maxwell, last Oct. 6, and her Lorraine
Robbins
and- -'
Mr. Eddy's new books
Sargent to Buckeye Rural the ~en percent jwnp 1n coal
It is the Poem Singing into shown twice to make it daughter-In-law, Rose, on Dec. daughter, Mrs. Judy Kaye Bird
released in December:
Elec. Coop., Right of Way
your Eyes, Arnold Adolf.
available to both students and 24. In addition to her Sister, and son, Phillip 0. Rife, Mrs.
The Kibbutz : Life on an
Easement, Bedford.
The
First
Book
of
the
the community.
Mrs. Bowman Is survived by Jessie I. Walker and Floyd G.
Wilham Connolly, Erma
Israeli
Commune,
Paul
:, _Jqhn E.- Holley, Ruby M". Connolly to Douglas M. Bissell,
Netherlands An•elo Cohn.
. A,1tqW_of .00 c.Q)Ieges and 911e son, .Marvin, and several Thornaa.,.. . .., · u~· T ;uwu1
• ,I
[)eegan.
· 1, ,• . 1 ~ , ~ • , ,
• Honey to Buckeye Rural Elec. Carolyn A Bissen, Lot 4, Ar·
Thii rlrsl' ~it~f I'rullii;'.Je&amp;n ljll\V~\ies wijl, ,rec,eive...the grandchildren , and · gr~at­
When Parents Fail, Sanford Bothwell.
Coop, Right of Way Easement, baugh's Sub., Olive.
fllms, and an estimated grandchildren.
Katz.
Scipio.
A Late-Born Child, Anatolii 3,000,000 people will see the
Mary Dodd, Mary Pullen,
APPEAR IN ASHLAND
LINDA COWDERY
How to Surv1ve Education ; Aleksin.
Barbara Shuler, Doyle T. Robert K. Pullen to Billy B.
series this year, Brown said.
The Gospel-aires of the
MEETING DELAYED
Shuler, !lenrJetta Shuler to Orr, Martha Lou Orr, Parcel
REEDSVILLE - Mrs.
Before, Dumg and after
Mystery on the Delta, He noted that 20,000 people
A meeting of the Women's Rutland Church of the
Maude Holcomb, 0.94123 Acre, 100 Acre Lot 104, Olive.
Unda Cowdery, daughter of
Colleg~ Richard Gummere. Harriette Abels.
came to the series premier In Auxiliary of the Middleport Nazarene were in Ashland,
Columbia.
Onc$-oll Mouse, Hitopadesa .
Sunlight Valley, Anne N. the 300-seat auditorium at the Fire Deparbnent scheduled for Ky., Friday night, where they
Bobby Joe Wolfe, Tessie Mr. and Mrs. Walter Brown,
Edd1e Lou Howery, Pearl S. Wolfe I&amp; Wilbert McClain , Reedsville, has completed a
National Gallery.
The White Stag, Kate Seredy · Baldwin.
Wednesday night has been · were the featured group at
Howery to Maude Holcomb, Parcels, Letart-Sutton.
course of classes which
Hero Tales from Many
A Year in the Ught of Rosie
For more Information postponed' until Jan. 12 at the services held at the Grace
0.94123 Acre, CoiWQbla.
enable her to work In lbe
Lands, Alice Hazeltine.
Bernard, Barbara Brenner.
concerning the series, contact home of Mrs. Thomas Darst. Church of the Nlizarene in
Robert R. Sheen, Delores
Walter Wears , V1rgmia Sheen to Basharat A. Munir, coronary unit or lnlensive
The Real Mother Goose,
The Shades, Belly Brock.
Gerald A. Ramsay, director of
:"-Shland: Making up the group
Wears to Franklin Real Eslate, Ameena B. Munir. Parcels, care unit at Camden.CIIIj'k
Mother Goose.
The Wheel on the School, special services at Rio Grande
are
Dav1d Grate, Steve Grimm
FIRST FATALITY
'h Acre, Sa:lisbury.
Hospital in Parkersburg.
How to Avoid Automobile Meindert De Jong.
College, at 245-5353, ext. 79.
Sclpio.Columbla .
PORTSMOUTH, Ohio (UP!) and Naomi Bissell, singers,
Mrs. Cowdery graduated Accidents, Fred E. Taylor.
Wild in the World, John
- This city reC()I'ded its first and their accompanist, Connie
from
West
Virginia
Ride on the Wind, Alice Donovan.
PLANT STRUCK
1972 traffic death Monday night Cremeans.
f."'*"::::&lt;::~::.:~~:::::&gt;;:&lt;:::::::::::·:&lt;·::&gt;:::·:·:·:::::::::·:·:·:·:·:~::::·:·:::·:::·:·:*:·~&lt;:w,:::::::::::::x~::~: University, Parktrsburg Dalgliesh.
Ginger Pye, Eleanor Estes.
BRYAN • Ohio (UP!) •
[~~ Brancb, l May 9 wltb au ~ace : A Young Per- The Bunch on McKellahan Alnbout 150 members . of the when Pearly West, 53, was
IN HOSPITAL
assoc)ate degree 1u nursing. ~
de to Space, Arthur C. Street, Carol J. Farley.
ternaUonal Association of killed when hit by a car on U. s . •
52 on the east side. John
Mrs.
Walter Roush (June
~.~&gt;.~ She successfully passed tbe C
Harriet, the Spy, Louise Machinists and Aerospace
'J:'
state hoard for registered
Charted Desigps for Needle- Fitzhugh.
. •
Workers struck the Bart Fraley, 74, Portsmouth, the Pratt) of Middleport Is a
pati~nt at the University
- By Helen and Sue Bottel
nurses in June. Mrs. Made Rugs, Sibyl I. Mathews.
The Runaway's Diary, Manufacturing Co. here driver, was not charged.
.Hospital,
Columbus, Room 531,
:§ Cowdery Is a 1969 graduate
Tole Painting, B. Kay Marilyn Harris.
Monday. The
workers,
WIN
AT
BRIDGE
North.
Dear Helen and Sue:
of Eastern Hlgb School. Sbe Fraser.
Early Spring, Robert lf8zel. members of the union's Lodge
Why are guys like this? You meet once, maybe dance all _ and,.ber, husband, Stephen, DrGiants &amp; TwWitches and a
Don't Cry, Little Sister, 1549• walked off their jobs at
evenmg with him, he asks for your phone number - and doesn't
reside at 1038 Murdock Ave.,
agon or
o, Phyllis F . Jennette Letton.
. lhe manufacturer of air COli·
call.
Parkersburg. He IS enrolled Fenner. '
The 13th Member, MaUreen ditioning • related equipment
Okay, you're klnda put down, but it isn't fatal. Maybe he was
at Parkersburg Community
Time to Laugh, Phyllis R. Mclliwraith.
when their contract expired.
NORTH
or hold-up one.
.
4
Fenner.
Th
B
hb
bi
W'll'
--•JJO
toob usy,or Iost your nwnber. But the next week, at the dance he
Then he would lead his
College.
e , us a es, 1 lam
•
Nebula Award Stories.
stev
• AQ 2
last club . West would have
won't even say " Hi. " Now what would a simple "Hello" mean?
enson.
+ Q6
to play low and the trick
Maybe he's embarrassed because he didn't follow through on the
K 109 8 6 2
would be ducked to East's
caU,buthemakes italotwors!, byignoringyou.
~
1
WF.ST (D)
' EAST
·, jack. East's best play would
be a spade, but South would
Just because I changed by mind about thinking a fella is the
I
K5
• 7 6 43 2
7
refuse the finesse anG make
absolute greatest is no reason I should make him my enemy.
I
...
•9 3
.8654
0 97
his
nine t r i c k s ·with one
Why can 't boys be "Justfmnds" too ?- W.N.S.
1
1
: ~ ~~
: ~~
spade,
three hearts, two diaDear W.:
SOUTH
monds and four clubs.
H the fellow IS truly "embarrassed 'because he didn 't follow
.._
TUESDAy
• A Q98
(NEWSPAPER !NTERPIISI ~SS~)
thnugh on the call," he may av01d the girl at the next dance
BY JACK O'BRIAN
been missing a cultural joy forever; why not
MIDDLEPORT Masonic
• K JlO
+A853
be cause he doesn't want to nsk a snub . (The {ragile male ego
GOING FAR, EASI' AND
now?
·
Lodge 363, F&amp;AM regular
• 74
thing .) .
WEST, INN. Y.
Don't wander central Purk at night, but ' meellng, 7:30p.m. Tuesday at
East-West vulnerable
Why not play 1t casually fne'ndiy, say "Hi " Ill's! _ and if he
NEW YORK (KFS) - Chinatown Is an
watching the skaters on the rlnk 'in winter temple.
• West North East South
The h•ddmg has been: ·
STU.L doesn 't thaw, well , here's Sue with her somewhat less Oriental jungle of joy where you'll find inex- daylight is a delight; ditto the lee rink in Radio
CHESTER COUNCIL 323, 1+
2•
Pass 3 NT. West North East
South
3
charitable v1ewpomt · - HELEN
pe118ive restaurants amid the colorful sights, city - oops, Rockefeller Plaza, real talented Daughters of America, 7:30 Pass Pass
Pass
·
~ass
?
•
Dear W.:
sounds, smeUs and Far Esst ambiance, to · showoffs, and you might even see a Kennedy p.m. lnstallaUon of officers.
Opemng lead- + J
You, South, hold.
. . are madly in love with continue our suggestions on. seeing New York pra tfallin gat eIther rink.
Wear white .
.A2 .Q9876 tQ54 .Ql06
Th ere are. guys who think all girls
· 11Y 1f they've made a b1g play wth the "What's without it costing you an arm and a leg ... little
WEDNESDAY
them· (espeoa
Free shows? Burlington Industries has a
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby ' What do you do now?
1
your telephone n~~~'" routine the week before) . This type Italy is. right next to Chinatown, fiavored with
whole working ''miD" In Its 6th Ave. building. MIDDLEPORT Literary
,
A
ha!;-~~:~
i.:!::·~ ;,'j~~
f1gures a sunple H1 1s lead1ng the poor girl on after he's . the Sights, sounrls and pasta-Bmelb vou'll love
There are more: ask a! the Convention Bureau· Club, home of Mrs. Emerson t Souths JUmp to three no- t.ricks. While your tee of ~u· m~
,
' J
2
Wedn sd
rump was slightly unsound
" ~
changed his rrund. He wouldn't know how to be "just friends "- ... Greenwich Village has fallen on· sleazier
that's what It's there. for.
ones, p.m.
e ay. Mrs. opposite hls partner's weak "going to be a trick, it;;, very
because he's too pusy snarmg the next pigeon .
.
times, but even this bas given the great old area
Macy's and Gimbel's stores, both, a ~ight Zav~!z to ! eview two-club overcall, but South unlikely your queens will be
What I mean is, if he's an ego-tripper, forget him! You can
(much of its chann re.mainS) a mod.flavor your
oceathtllkifig viBlt In themiefves; Macy's is the Honeycomb
by Adela liao . no 1dea that his part- any use.
•
soon tel~ by watchmg how he operates on the dance floor (ari'a - 't oungsters especially will enjoy; we wouldn't
world's biggest store, parenthetically.
Rogers St. John.
ner' s hand was that weak
'rODAY'S QUESTION
comparmg w1th last week) _ SUE
suggest taking the kid:! down there at night;
Every type of food Is avallable In
MEIGS COUNTY Salon 710, In addition, South had greai
Again your partner opens
Dear Helen and Sue :
you, either, for that menacing matter.
Manhattan: there' are some 1.3,000 restaurants ~hters of America, 1 p,.m., ~~:~i~~~c~u~m~s ability to ~~d~ spades. This · ti"!'L'Y.!JU_
I am 19 and in college. i'm dating a gil'! whom 1 consider one
The Empire State Building remains an
In New York and you're never far !:-:xn a
of Mn. Mary Martin,
•Q865 • z • KQJS4 3 "'7Z
of the finest in the world . She's kmd, generous and tho•ghtful and
exciting spot to see N.Y. in all directioll8; ditto calorie or two: every internaUonal
from
STATED MEETING • dulf:m~·~rt~ u':;e ~ut~fgd~
What do you do now?
everyone likes her. Tllat is, everyone except my two spmster
the Rainbow Room and Raimbow GriD In Radio
A (Afrifcaalln) to (Zambian), with l!phabetlcal ~=:.Y~~ p~::, Jo~~: monds Then he entered his
-· - - - -- ·: 1
aunts who are extremely bigoted .. A!I they can see in her is thai
City; or Rockefeller Center·as the Rockefellers stops o
ethnic sorts; even thoup India llld Bacon, W.M. All Master hand with a' heart and led
The Daily'
she's lnsh and Catholic, and they take out their prejudice against
prefer to caU It ... You don't have to settle for
Pakistan battled tragically, there are' liVer&amp;! Masons invited
four of clubs. West played
O.EVQTED TO THE
her In very unfunny cracks about her nationality and religion _
expell!live dining, though : just v~ a cocktail friendly "lndlan·PakWIIJIIlm" eateries; check
THURSDAY
low and South iumWjd up
.JN TE R li~T 9F. .•
hoping they'll turn me agamst her through ridicUle.
.
at the see-aU-directions bar and olmge on the
the Yellow Pages ",' '111ere'sa Buddhist Temple
BRICKLAYERS LOCAL 32 ~~:~ ~~~t~y~sa~~~~-me h~~e!t
c:W~5/tA~A~:::,tL,
· I just can't shut them up. My parents don't live here, so they
same 65th floor ; big windows, g t views.
m&lt;lllnatown If you dcare to~d your sacred will have a dluner following He abandoned clubs and took
hoc. Ed.
0
8
Radio City Music Hall is mparatively. gawking further.
Thursday evening meeting at the spade finesse . .
R Ec~~ ~~~:,LitH,
can't help. What do you suggest ? - IN LOVE BUT SAD
Dear ILBS :
.
ine~nsive, a great bargain, eaper by far
TheN. Y. Parksllejl'thasWalkln.Toura; ; Pomeroy American Legion
West was in with the king
Published dally except ·
Yo_u do not make it clear whether you live w1th these aunts or
than the sex.flicks which abo din midtown at check the Convention Bureau again ... German Home,
and cleared the ·diamonds
Sal.urday
by 7he
Ohio Volley
PubliShing
Company,
111 '
whether you just v1sit them occasionally. If the taller I'd suggest
$5 a leer ; just ignore them w e you're here ...
Food? Try·Yorkvllle, the upper East Side (88th
SACRED HEAR't Guild, 7: IS but he was too late. South Court. St., Pomeroy, Ohio,
that you curtail your visits and let them figure th~gs out for
The Bdwy. theater is'lKreat,' and expensive, and 2nd Ave. for instance). Hllllliarian? Second p.m . Thursday at church. collected three tricks in .each m~:l5:,u~l~;~~~~~~~~~n~h~;2~ •
themselves. It's more difficult 1f y9u live with them, 1 grant
although the New York Conveption Bureau has Ave. in the lower 1101 and 7Qs, espectall)l arollild Hostesses, Martha Howell, major, suit P 1 u s two dia- 21 57.
•
1
beca US:.1 t's...mos
- ' - 1·unposs1'bletocurea blgot.Bu\ "changingthe'
di scount c~upons for so10e' shows ; if your 76thSt ... TheF u1tonFlahMarketmtellatohlgb Anna Blac kwood, Ro'berta monds and on e cu
1 b for h'IS ' Pomerov.
SecondclaupOstegepalda't
Ohio
,1
subject seems the only way ou1t - even if you have to be rude in
budget forbids, try off-Broadway where tickets
heaven, but if~at's your perfwne, sniff away, Dalley and Loretta Saelens.
g~~e.
. N a 110 n •! • d ve,r tIs in U'
domg it. - HELEN
~e cheaper, amb1ance more enthusiastic, the and eat lunch at Sweet's on the East River; _ POMEROY CHAPTER 80, "chcu~&amp;~~:.·.''· ~~1 ~e~ast : Ge:,r.W;/,·t~~~ 12 8J'~~~ntJ:.~ 1
Dear In Love : ·
•
.
' .. &gt;
'f:·eatricallife force more urgent ·, ·It's fun. ·
great old-fashioned simple decor and walters to Royal Arch Masoll8, special ".West s h 0 u 1 d have ~one' , 51 • New York City, New York .
t
tin Th sda
, SUQsc nlpiiOn rates : , De ·~
Maybe a weekly turn-&lt;&gt;n of TV's ALL IN TilE' F;AM[LY
&lt;' Musewns ; N. Y. has one of -tile world's
match, but go early for dinner; it's not (or late- mee g, ur Y night, 7:30 r1ght up with his ace of c ubs 1_I •ve,red!. by carr; or whoro· 1
greatest: the-Metropolitall"'MJllleUIII o1- Aft on- dining sophisticates -merely for great«af~ p.m. at the Pomeroy Masonic and beaten the contract."
~~·~~~~~ ~~uct~"~h:r'e' c:;.'l~;· :
-~~mi;.gh~tu·;do~_~th~e~trFil~·cJs If an one ca 'sten_to Arc~e-~u~
1
and not see how lruly ndiculous they are ; they're
5th Ave. We traverse Its halls occasionallY, - we
connoissetlrs.
.
Temple. Mark master and past
~st ~as wrong. South serv ice not available: ono 1
0
beyond hope, In the meantime, practice selective ?eafness.
must admit 1&gt;Ur children hauled us there after
Over the -years we've done It aU. Loyed It, ::~~ ~gr:~~;nl: ~: ~ W~s~t~~r~r:y~~s ~h:t~f~~ , r~~n~ $~~ 5•.g~, ~~~.~~~~-~~ ;
Prejudice disguised as hwnor can be stopped cold if nobody
years of our ignoring this sensationally im· . toc M you will. Welcome to thll big wide offi
.
ace. West's best defense · • months $7 25. Throe
laughe . ...- SUE
I
' "&lt;. .
portant musewn, and we knew again we bad JVOnderful town. Okay, Mrs. Burke?
tendcers are requested to at- · would be to play diamonds ;.?!i7~, 1~~:: ·s~~db::rif~~s~· •
i
',,'
I
I, .
• '
·
South COUld lake his ace now ' Se~l-~nel.
I

'Coal- Operators Warned

a ong r

ay

I

SQCI'a I

caIen da·r

•

•

;:;

Z

Pro St4ndings

Bucks Rally,

ms;~~=·&amp;:;s.,~~m:::·~ e n . ; , , , , •• : \ '

· MVPAWARDSDINNER
AEw YORK (UPI)- The
sixth annual professional football most valuable player
awards dinner, honormg MVP
stars m the National FoolbaU
League, has been set for Jan.
28 at the Holiday Plaza Inn in
Hempstead, N.Y: The dmner
will benefit the Long Island
Athletic Club's 5,000-youth athleUc program.
THREE OF 'mE TEXAS OOWGffiLS that wiD be perThe announcement was made
forming at Southern High School Wednesday night are Susie . by dmner chairman Joseph A.
Buck, Flossie Randall and Mary Pabeck, team dribblers.
Gundermann, Jr., and general
The girls, a professwnal group, will play the coaches' of , chairman Gene Ward, NFL
Southern Local School D1stnct. Game time Ill 8 p.m. Adcommissioner Pete Rozelle
mission Is $1 for students and $1 50 for adults. The Southern
w1il serve as honorary
Athletic Boosters are the sp&lt;Jnsoring group.
chall'man.

'

; 3-TheilailySentinel,Mlddlepori-Pcmeroy, O.,Jan. 4,1972

Beve~ages .
OOLUMBUS (UP!) - Stale
Liquor Director Richard E.
Guggenheim said today one rl.
his goals for 197218 to get rid rl.
those items that aren't selling
well.
"We have a serious inventory problem," he said. "I
estimate the state may have up
to n mlllion tied up in unproductive Inventory. It Isn't
dolnf. the state any good."
Guggenheim said a new inventory control and allocation
system for liquor stores wiU be
tested this month and should be
in full operation before July I
to prevent another buildup of
slow moving items.
Other 1972 projects of the deparbnent include:
-Operation by April I of a
new data processing -program
·for permits.
- Teclmical improvements
in the data processing division,
saving nearly $5,000 a month.
- Comple\i2n of an analysis
· of
the 11J management
organization of the department.
- Recommendatioll8 for lmproved pay benefits for store
personnel to confonn more
closely with private industry.

-.
\

'

Slow
Moving
,
.

•

.' ·

,

'

Kuu Woo Palka, plaulst, Is
sebeduled toperform 1u the
Portsmouth Hlgb School
audllorlum Wednesday,
beginning at 7:30 p.m.
Trl·County Community
Concert Association sull·
scrlbers are reminded !bat
all · Portsmouth concerts
begin one-ball hour earUer
this year.
'

.'

-.-

' -

.·.·.·.·.·..····

·-

..•

I

1

COLUMBUS(UPI)-Creighton threw a acare Into Ohio
State Mondai' night, but the
ninth-raleciBuckeyes managed
to make It look easy in the
end. _ 1
Despite a 40-37 halftime dell·
ell and a toaaup In the early
second half, the Bueka finally
came aUve, oulacoring the visiting Bluejays 16-4 during the
last four,and a half mlnutea to
triumph M-78.
The game marked Ohio
State's last non-conference
competition before opening the Big, Ten season against Purdue op
· Saturday at West Lafayette,
'Ind.
The Nebra!ka team surprised
12,024 vocal ·rooters at St.
John Arena by puJIIng to a
nlnei&gt;olnt lead, 34-25, in the
first half. Until64-63, with 10:04

:Bruins Retain Top
Spot In UPI Poll
NEW YORK (UPI)-UCLA,
In search of Its sixth straight
national title, polled aU but one
&lt;t the flrs(iJlace votes Monday
to conUnue as college basketball's foremost qUintet in the
weekly ratings by United Pre8s
International's Board of
Coaches.
The Bruin&amp; captured 30 firstplace votes as 31 f11 the :ISmember board participated in
the balloting. UCLA wound up
with 308 points, 40 more than
runner-up Marquette.
The Bruins knocked off
Texaa,!J.5.85, and ninth-ranked
Ohio State, 79-53, during the
week to win their own Bruins
tournament and raise their

aeaaon record io ~-

The Warriors, also 11-0, took
the remaining firs(iJlace vote
and flnl.shed with 288 points as
they also captured a tournament-the Milwaukee lnvita·
lional-with wins over Georgetown 'and Manhall.
North[ Carolina rode theSugar Bowl Classic tourney to
the No. 3 position with 242
points, while South Carolina,
upended by Villanova In the
Quaker City Holiday Festival In
Philadelphia; dropped to fourth
with 142 points.
Indiana moved up two

Pointers
Ranked 3rd
In'4 AP Poll

Chaps Rally,

ANAHEIM, Calif. (UP!) Jim Maloney, veteran rightDALLAS (UP!) - Donnie
bander traded to the California Freeman's 21 points, 13 In the
Angela last year after &amp;pend· last quarter, lifted Dallas to a
ing a decade with the Clncln- 102-101 victory over Indiana In
natl Reda, haa been given his the only American Basketball
unconditional release from the Association game Monday
Angela. .
night.
Maloney made ' only four
The Chaps, who trailed by as
· starts with the Angels for an many as 15 points, r~ed for a
G-3 record and ·a ~.10 earned nine-point lead with two and a
run average after being ham· half minutea left, then held off
pered by Injuries.
- an Indiana surge led by Rick
Cincinnati traded him for ___l,{OJJDt.
.
Greg Garrett after he missed
Lynn ChappeD and Joe
moat of 1970 with an Ach!Ues Hamilton added 18 points each
tendon Injury.
for Dallas while Rich Jones had
While with Clnclnnatl, he 16 for the Texas team.
hurled three no-hit games and
Indiana's Roger Brown
bad five one-hitters, which tied scored 'l1 points and Bob
a National League career Nelolicky had 23.
mark. He held the Reels club
Mount hit three-point play
record for moat strikeouts (265 and a three...,.,"! goal In the ,
.,v••
in 1983) and tied the club rec- final minutes and bad a chance
ord for most strikeouts In a to win the gllllle but his Jl!.foot
nine-inning game (18 agalll8t jumper at the buzzer bounced
.
.
Milwaukee).
off the rim.
·
•••••••••··~·-••••••

a

culain\

Sentinel

1

1

_j_J

CALL

POINTVIEW · 992-2505

Sen. 'Edmund Muskle ( DMillne) Is scheduling 1 primetime announcomontlonlght, to
formally oay he'• running for
ttlt office he's boon running
for since 1969.. 11'11 run at S: 20
p.m., 01. 8.

.

+++

I'm positively addicted to
the old movie serials which
Ch. 9 rerun* each week. I
know the hero It 'olng to
ftalpe In these cllf hangers
IIIICII saw 1 lot of them In !lie
Forties), but there's high
comedy, 11 not high adventure.
A new nrlal, "G-Miln vo. the
Blec:kl Orogon.'' Is lust atar·
t ng, ·.• p.m. Tueidays and

Thursdays.

+++

+++

Qlck Cavett has GM's
swftlheart, Ralph Nader, and
Sandy Dennis as gu11ts
tonight, 11:30 p.m ., Ch. 6.

+++

MOVIES: "War of
Wll~ats.'' John Wayne
he ever make 1 movie
that title?), 4 p.m.,

tho
{did
with
and

"PaHerns," Van Heflin, 11: 30
p.m., both Ch. 10.

'

..

1

•
OHIO COLLEGE
BASKETBALL SCORES
United Pren lnternatl011al
:ltllo Stare 94 Creighton 76
Xavier 83 Marian {lnd.l 70
Cincinnati 81 Drake 78
Akron 57 Wltlenberg 53 {oil
Defiance 97 Ohio Northern 92
Dayton 73 Houston 69
Earlham lind.) 85 Ashland 75

.

By GARY KALE ·
UP! Spo..U Writer
. NEW YORK (UPI) - The
Milwaukee Buck.!, beaten by'
Walt Frazier's !Uoot jumper
with three seconds remaining
Monday night, get a &lt;:hance for
revenge in tonight's second
half of a back.to-back set with
the New York Knlcks.
Frul.er's baaket capped a
string of 13 straight points by
the New York guard and
provided the Knick&amp; with a 101·
99 comeback victory. The last
two mlnutea of the game
turned Into a personal seorlng

-

duel between FraZier and '
l:ateem ·Abdul.Jabbar, who
tallied Milwaukee's last eight
points.
"There's tomorrow night,"
said AbduJ..!abbar, sittlnl! de·
jectedly In the Milwaukee
dressing room after he scored
a game-bigh 38 points to 31 for
Frazier.
· Abdul.Jabbar thought he was
fouled on the last play of the
game when his sweeping hook
shot missed the basket at the
buzzer.
Wlllda Up In Mid-Court
"I weigh 237 pounds, but I

wound up-at mi&lt;kourt on the
play," he complained. " I
wasn't pulled there by
magnets."
Frazier was the key to New
York's continued hex over
Milwaukee which now has
reached 11 victories in the last
13 games between the clubs
Entering the game . with a
marksmanship of 21 points or
better in his previous !&amp;'lames,
Frazier was Umlted to six
points in the first half on Oscar ,
Robertson's close guarding.'
The bearded Knick backcourt wonder broke a 99-all tie

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK ( UPI )-Bill
Russell has seen a couple of
basketball games in his time.
He lln't easUy Impressed.
Especially by what he sees on a
basketball floor.
What he saw Monday night at
Madison Square Garden im·
preased him though. Trernen®usly.
.
Bobby Fischer, the international chess grand master who
,llleets Russia's Darla Spassky
Tor the world champiOnship
soon, hasn't- seen as many
basketball games as Bill
Russell.
"':! But he's an even tougher nut
to crack.
He doesn't get impressed
about anything.
It was different Monday
night, He showed up for his
first basketball game In more
than five years and he was
impressed, too.
Otbera Impressed
So were such otherwise- cold
cucumbers as WWis Reed,
Earl "The Pearl" Monroe,
Oscar Robertson and Kareem

Abdul.Jabbar. They ~it paid
highest praise one professional
can pay another and aU talied
about the same man-Walt
Frazier of the New York
Knick&amp;.
Walt Frazier played the kind
of game Monday night kids like
to dream about. Grown men,
too.
What's more he picked the
perfect time. With the game
nationally televised and a
capacity 19,588 on hand,
Frazier ran off 13 straight
points In . the final 2:38,
collaborated with Phil Jackson
in a vital heartstopplug "steal"
20 seconds from the end and
wound up receiving one of the
most twnultuous ovatlo118 ever
accorded any athlete at
Madlaon Square Garden for
leadlug the Knick&amp; to a 101·99
win over the Milwaukee Bucks
in a moviellke finish.
"'Great!' that's the only way
to describe it," said Bill
Russell, on hand to do the color
commentary for national TV.
"The' last time I ever saw
anythlnl! like It was In 1958
when Bob Pettit srored 51

points in the final game of the
playoffs against us (Boston).
They (St. Lbuis) beat us and he
-got 19 of their laat 21 points."
Bobby Fischer blinked his
eyes when he s.tw the Knicks
gain possession 20 seconds
from the end with the score tied
9lHIII. Earl Monroe passed off
. to Bill Bradley on his left.
Bradley gave the ball to
Frazier, who nearly lost it, but
quickly regained control and
began his move with eight
seconda left.
Frazier killed five more
seconds and then with only
three remaining, he hit with a
jumper and the whole place
went plumb mad.
"You're used to complete
quiet when you play," Dave
DeBuaschere said to Bobby
Fischer in the Knick&amp;' dressing
room afterward. "What did
you think?"
"Very exciting," Fischer
said, giving the question
proper thought before answerlng.
"What did you think of
Frazier?" someone else asked
the blond chess whiz.

-~

Milwaukee center netted 23 in
the opening hlllf.
This was th'll Knick&amp;' first '
confrontation against a Jabbar-led te~m without WIUIB
Reed. They seemed . to be
playing thi~ one for the
''cap'n .''

There was no other action m
the National Basketball
Association Monday 11ight. ·
In addition to tonight's Net(
York at "'ilwaukee game,
Philadelphia is at Detroit,
Phoenix at Chicago, Seattle at
Houston, Atlanta at Portland,
Buffalo at Golden State.

Fischer .. were a stru~le . I was pulling
said, much more quickly this to the left or right all night."
Why, because of the prestime.
"Fantastic," put in DeBuss· sure1
"It could've been," laughed
chere. "He was just incredible
Frazier. "I know the game was
at the end."
Willis Reed, sitting on the just another game In lhe
Knick&amp;' bench with tendonitis, standings but I was a little
called Frazier's performance tight. Really, I was embar"unbelievable" and Monroe rassed the way I was playlnl!. I
remarked "It's getting so you llnew It was a national
televised game and my parents
sort of expect it from him."
Oecar Robertson, who vainly were watching In Atlanta,
tried to keep Frazier from Georgia. I wanted to play well
getting off his game-winning but I realized I wasn't. I bad
shot, said, "You can't take it only s.l:x points at the half."
Walt Frazier got a little
away from him, he played a
better
as the game went on.
great game" and Jabbar
Enough&lt; so !bat he got a rlie
agreed "he hit some tough
out
of Bill Russell. Tbatseldom
shots there at the end." Toogh
happe118. Enoulih so that he
wasn't really the word.
also got one out of Bobby
Bucks Out Front
The Bucks were out front the Fischer.
whole game, once by as much _And that simply never
as 13 points, and the Knick&amp; happened before.
never led until Frazier's final
shot.
Advertisement
"I thought It would hit the
rim," said the Knicks' bearded
backcourt dynamo who wound
up with 31 points for the night.
"I had some doubts about that
last one because aU my shots
~~Extraordinary,''

January

Falcons Have Only 7 Players
ByUllitedPreu International
Bowling Green State hoals
N,!a/!a;~~~ ~rught'and Coa~h Pat
Haley may find It difficult to
keep five players on the floor
at the same time.
Haley lost sophomore guards
Jim Kindle and Jack Wissman
indefinitely New Year's Eve
When they suffered burns..during an apartment grease lire.
They were expected to be
released from the hospital by
today, but their injuries may
keep them out the rest of the
season . Wissman suffered sei:·
ond degree burns on his right
hand and Kindle was burned on
his right leg and right band.
The Injuries left just seven
able bodied players for tonight's game. Lee Henson, the
•

starting forward, was injured In
the Mot~r City Classi&lt;:, last
week at Detroit, and forward
Bob Hotaling has been sidelined with a stomach ailment.
In Ohio college games played
Monday night, Ohio State downed Creigllton 84-76; xavier
bounced Marian 83-70; Cincln·
nat! edged Drake 81·78; Akron
got by Wittenberg ~7~; Deli·
once kept winning on a 97-92
decision over Ohio Northern;
Dayton sUpped by Houston 7369; and Earlham (Ind.) whip·
ped Ashland IIS-75.
Other games tonight Include
Missouri at Ohio U.; BaldwinWallace at St. Bonaventure;
Cleveland State at Detroit:
Capital at Denison and the
start of the Marletla Invitation·
, al.

Warriors Remain
Unbeaten At Home
By Ullited Press International and Temple, led by Mike

Marquette
Coach
AI
McGuire can breatbe a little
eaaler. Jim Chones Is back in
form.
&lt;llones, Marquette's 6-foot11 centerandoneofthebest big
men In •the nation, had been
having his problema the last
two games and the secondranked Warriors had to struggle to win. But Chones found
the range again Monday night,
acorlng 31 points as Marquette
drubbed Wisconsin, 'IUO, to
remain unbeaten in nine
games.
Marquette managed only a
'l1·25 halftime lead but then
Ch011esandsophomore-Marcua
Washington turned it on .

Jones' 21 points, ~~ Pepperdine, 83-79. St. Louis cruised
pallt host South Alabama, 78-61,
and 12th-ranked Florida State
behind Ron King's 24 points,
ripped Denver, 8&amp;-70, In the
'opening round of the SeniOr
Bowl tournament. &lt;1
Bill Ligon and Rod Freeman
~amed for 46 points as Vanderbilt stopped Louisiana
State, ~73, and lloyd Batts,
who finished with 'l1 points, hit
a 20.foot jump shllt with . 24
seconds left to pace Cincinnati
to an 81-78 victory over Drake.
Ron lfarrla hit 23 points as
Wichita State beat Bradley, 71·
67, and 7.{1 Kevin Kunnert
scored 26 in Iowa's n-ea'
triumph over Kansas. Scott

~~o:,r::::tstbeS:.!~ :~~ ~~~dea~e~~or:2

Mter leading 41·'l1 at the
ball, Dayton had to battle it
out with Houston in the final
minutes. Donald Smith, with 23
points, and John Von Leahman,
with 20, were ill8trwnentalln
the Flyers' fourth win In nine
games.
Larry Quarles hit on a basket
and five free throws in overtime to give Akron its seventh
win in eight starts. Wittenberg
forced the game into the extra
period w1th a foul shot in the
final23 seconds. The Tigers are
2-0.
Bob Fullerton scored the first
five points for xav1er as the
Musketeers picked up their
sixth win in 10 games. Fullerton _finished wi~ 18 pomts.
.mo.::
·v 1 uat 'Ill!¥. Marl8n f~U to 11-3.
NEW YORK (UPI) - Oblo
State, beaten by powerful
UCLA IHI week, wu rsted
nlntb lhil1feelt In the Ullited
Pres• International Uat of
lop-ranked
college
basll:elball teams In lhe
country.
Tbe Buckeyes, 8-2 wltb a
win Monday night over ,
Creighton, received 58 votes
In the latest balloting, UCLA
remained tbe leader, wltb
308 votea. .
.·.·.;:-·-·,·.··:···:-:-:·-··..·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.· ,• .........
Allan Hornyak scored 28
points as Ohio State gained its
eighth win against two defeats
af"'r rallying In the second
half. The Bluejays had led 40.
37 at the half.
Defiance, one of the few undefeated teams left, went ahead
21-19 and Jed the rest of the
way to gain its ninth win of the
season. Ken Bush was high for
the winners with 19 points but
Northern's Rick Scaletta
sc~ed 21 points
lloyd Balls ecored 'l1 points
for Cincinnati, including a 20foot jumper wltb 24 seconds
left to play, to give the Bearcats their seventh victory
against three defeats.

Thli Week's SpedoJ

1~:~~~ I

Forest.
In ot~er action, Donald
Smith and John von Leahman
combined for 43 points as
Dayton upset Houston; 73-69,

To Expire ···
The AAA reminda you to
check your drivers license If
you have a birthday this
month. Many Ucenses expire
this year and you only have
30 days before your birthday
to renew It and keep driving
legally .
_
• A winter breakdO)fllls no
fun, no matter how you look
at it. But you can make the
best of things by joining AAA
before trouble strikes. Then,
if and when you do need help,
you can count on swift, ef.
ficient AAA Emergency
Road Service.
Contact us today at 9922590 for membership In·
formation ; there's no
obligation.

•

••
t

COOPER'S AISWER TO WINTER TRACTION t

'

---

1967 OlDS
fOUR DOOR

White with blue Interior, V-8
motor, autp. trans . and
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INSURANCE • so·NDs

ttETmE-~
:Sin :"~~!nov~~~~~

Birthday May Cause
Drivers License

USED CARS
· -

Gary Watson led Wisconsin poir,ts,beat Dartmouth,l02-85.
" You'll Like Our . Quailty
with
15
points.
John
Gianelli
1111d
Jim
Me·
_
Way
of Doing Business."
SOUTAR LEADER
In other action Involving Cargo scored 25 points each as
992-S~:Ac FINAN~~:eroy
NEW YORK (UPI) ~ Dave
rated telllll8, Ohio State (9) Pacific clubbed Nevada-Las
Open Evenings 'Til 1 , 00 •
Soutar of Gilroy, Calif., was th4l
rall.l_ed for a 114-78 victory over Veps, 111-G, and California
Til • 1&gt; M. Sot.
;
first round leader of the U. S Crelghton,
Southwestern clobbered BlyW, 127-&amp;7.
Open Bowling Tournamen Louisiana (17) downed Me.
Monday with a 1,817 total.
Neese State, 119-$, and VIrginia
d ke
Don Johnson of Akron, Ohio, ( S) t
I
sappe
Wa Forest, 74- '
was _eighth with 1,723 going 64.
'I
Into eight more qualifying
Allan Hornyak SCored ,.
IN
~es today, ahd ,Ron Webber points as Ohio State . beat
PHONE 992-2342
Ml DOLE PORT, 0.
La
of Cincinnati was ninth at 1,722. CreI ghton. and ,..._.dh
... "lfi t mar,
Another eight-game set wiD the nation's leading scorer, hit
.
be rolled Wednesday before the 25 a S SouthWeitern Loulalana
)
field Is cut to 64 from the 192 downed McNeese.,Barry Park·
•
wtto started.
hlU's 20 points and 17 by Jim
Hobgood helped Virginia resHERIFF TO
CINCINNATI (UP!)- Dan
Tehan, ' Hamilton County
sheriff for 24years, announced
11e wm not seek r~..~1ectton this
Yo:!!•.

afler stealing the ball at
midcourt and hitting on his
shot from the top of the key .
Robertson sliPped while trying
to guard Frazier on the shot.
"I was really surprised when
I got the open shot," Frazier
said . ·,.I started badly, hilling
only one of seven shots In the
ltrst half . But when I began
ronnectmg I gamed con·
fidence."
Knicks Credit Lucas
The Knicks credited Jerry
Lucas with holding AbduiJabbar to 15 points in the
second half after the

Knicks, Bucks lmpressiv~ Monday

Downmg
. .Ch'lds
Agency 1nc
I

Come to think of II, there's
Just about the,same amount of
outpense 1!1Aho movie serials
es thai't ls1n the Muskle announcement.

.

College Basketball Rosults
By United Press International
Ohio St. 94 Creighton 76
Xavier (Q) 83 Msrlan 70
Vir. 74 Wake Forest 64
Georgia 112 Rollins 77
Auburn 69 Miss. 65
Tulsa 96 Trinity {Tex.) 70
Citadel 68 Wrri. &amp; Mary 59
Eastern Mich. 87 Grambling 80
Vanderbilt 80 LSU 73
UTEP 75 New Mex. St. 59
Rider 92 CCNY 70
Pitt 99 Geo. Wash . 81
Dayton 73 Houston 69
Iowa 81 Kansas 68
Ball St. 92 Butler 85
Dallas Bapt 82 Ab Chris 72
Arkansas St 88 Okla St 76
Marquette 72 Wisconsin 60
-clncl 18 Drake 78
Earlham 85 Ashland 75
Akron 57 Wttnbg 53, ot
Sienna 88 Moravian 75
Senior Bowl Tournament
Florida St. 88 Denver 70
St. Louis 78 South Ala. 61

Frazie~'~ Goal Beats Buck~ ~--

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CARTER AND EVANS INC., erected steellaat week for
a new restaurant In the VU!age of Clieshli'e. Harold Laughlin,

-Cultural Series
Opens January 13

Laughlin Vending Co., Auiens and Gallipolis, Is conetructing ··
the restaurant on the old C8ln property. The 26 by 52 (oot structure will offer fast.food and cafeteria sef'VIce.

.

.

Grain Prices
COLUMBUS IUPII - Daily
cash grain prices paid to farmers Tuesday at grain elevators
In central, northwestern and

southwestern Ohio as reported
by the Ohio Department of Agriculture are: No. 2 Wheat ibul
mostly unchanged to 1 cent lower; 1.41-1.48, mostly 1.44-1.47.
No. 2 Ear Corn (bu) mostly 1
cent lower; 1.00 - 1.05, mostly
1.05. No. 2..Shelled Corn {bu)
mostly 1 cent lower; 1.05 - 1.08,
mostly 1.07-1.08. No. 2 Shelled
Corn {100 lb) mostly 2 cents
lower; 1.88-1.93, mostly 1.911.93.
No.2 Oats {bu) mostly unchanged ; .69-.75, mostly .70-.72. No. 1
Soybeans lbul mostly 3 cents
lower; 2.87-2.98, mostly 2.952.98.

HOSPITAL
NEWS
Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
vtsiting hours 2-4 and 7~ p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Dlocbarges
Sarah Jean Ph118on, Jofumy
A. Klein, Mrs. Charles Leo
LaDeaux and son, Cherie M.
Roberts, Timothy· L. DaviJ,
Jeffrey L. Sayre, Ralph
Garnes, Samuel M. Miller,
Diane, K. Turner, ~- Doi:othy

Mrs. BoW1l1811

11

Dies in west -

11

Property

fransfers

Mr. Eddy's Newest Books

\

• R an ··
Generatton
1

contract Makes 'Either Wa'y

r--------------------;----------------------1
l
B Wt

I . 0-. ce

Maloney Released

NBA Stondings
By United Pross lntornotionol
, ~oslorn CDnftroneo
Alllnlie Division
W. l. Pet. GB
Boston
27 u 659
New York
25 14 .641 1
Philadelphia 16 24 .400 .10'h
B~flalo
11 26 .297 14
Ctntra I Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Baltimore
15 22 .405
Cleveland
15 24 .381 1
Atlanta
14 15 .359 2
I
Cincinnati
10 27 .. 270 5
Western
Conftrenee
••
Midwest Division
remaining in the game, Ohio
,
W. L. Pet. GB
State could not regain and re- Milwaukee 32 8 .800
Chicago
27 10 .730 3'12
tain the lead.
Phoenix
23 11 .575 9
The Bucks' 7-footer, Luke Detroit
15 24 .385 16'/2
Witte, was called for two techPacific Division
W. L. Pet. GB
lllcal foul8-ln the flrst.balf for
Los
Angeles
37 3 .925 ...
toislug a baU Into the .c;rowd Seattle
23 18 .561 141/2
after being . touched lor a per- • GoldenSiate 20 19 ,513 16'/2
U 26 .350 23 sonal, and in the second for Houston
Portland
9 32 .220 28'12
words he·had with an official.
Monday's Results
Coach Fred Taylor benched New Yor~ 101 Mllw 99
IOnly games scheduled)
him the flnal17 minutes of the
Tuesday's Games
g8me. \
Philadelphia at Detroit
"Two technicals are slightly Phoenix at Chicago
ridiculous," Taylor com- • Buffalo at Golden St
Seattle at Houston
mented.
New York at Milwaukee
Witte finished with 13 points Atlanta at Portland
(Only games scheduled)
and Allan Hornyak, looking like
the workhorse of last season,
•
halt a game-high 26. Ralph
ABA Standings '
Bohlk was high for Creighton
By United Pross International
with 20 points.
East
W. L. Pet. GB
Taylor 98id the ability of the
Kentucky
30 9 .769 .. .
Bucks to score ~7 points In the Virginia
25 15 625 51!&gt;
last half "reaDy gives us a Floridians
18 21 462 12
1
New York
16 23 .410 14
boost."
Pittsburgh
17 25 .405 14'12
Carolina
13 28 .317 18
West
W. L. Pet. GB
1
Ulan
29 10 .744 ...
Indiana
23 18 .561 7
Denver
, 16 21 .432 12
Memphis
16 23 .410 13
Dallas
16 26 .381 14'1&gt;
Monday's Results
Dallas 102 Indiana 101
(Only game scheduled)
Tuesdey's Gomes
Virginia at Floridians
Carolina at Pittsburgh
notches to round out the top KentuckY at Denver
Utah at Memphis
five after the Hoosiers emerged
{Only games scheduled I
aaklngplna of the Old Dominion • .
Claalc. I
Louisville, winner of · the
Holiday Festival at New York,
made a long leaR from the 13th
spot to s.l:xth as the Cardinals
totaJJed 82 points In the voting.
PeM made the biggest jump
of all, however, leapfrogging
from the No. 19 spot to be
seventh ranked with 79 points.
Long Beach State, Ohio State
and Maryland complete the top
Powerful South Point (~)
10.
was ranked third In the Class
AA play In the Associated
College Ratings
NEW YORK IUPil .-The Press' first weekly high echool
United Press International top poD today.
20 college basketball teams
Only·oOther area team !bled
with first place vot"' ._nd won- Ill 'the \'0111Mn M citt!les·t.&lt;as
loot records as of Jan. 1 In
defending Southeastern 'ohio
parentheses: (filth weeki
Team
Points League champion Waverly.
1. UCLA {301 18-0)
308 The Tigers were ranked eighth
2. Marquette (11 (8·01
268
3. North Car. IB-1)
242 In the state.
4. South Car. (7.1)
142
Unbeaten We118ville, home of
5 .Indiana (8·11
82 former Rio Grande College
6. Louisville 18-11
82
7. Penn (7·11
79 great Clarence "Bevo"
S. Long Beach St. 19-11
63 Francis, is ranked nwnber one
9. Olllo St. 17-21
58 in AA circles.
10. Msryland 18-1)
49
Boardman is ranked nwnber
11. Southern Cal. 17-21
46
12. Florida St. {1-2)
44 one in Class AAA play. Ucltlng
13. St. John's {8-21
29 Heights Is nwnher one In Class
14. Hawaii {9-0)
28
15. !tiel Villanova {9-11
25 A action. New Boston Is ninth,
(Tie) Kentucky {6·21
25 and Alexander In Athens
17. S.W. Louisiana 15-1)
20 County Is ranked lOth.
lB. Virginia {9·01
19
The UP! poll and the Ohio
19. MISSOY.rl (10-11
IS
20. Brigham Young 18-21 11 High
School
Athletic
Association PoD will be an·
nounced later this week.

By Califomia

Drop Pacers

~eighton -Is.

94-76.
Victim
.
.

The series, produced
RIO
GRANDE
originally
for the British
"Civilisation," the renowned
series on the cultural )jfe of Broadcasting Corporation was
man, opell8 at Rio Grande written and narrated by noted
College Jan. 13 with the "The art historian Kenneth Clark.
Frozen World," a look at man The series premiered in ,this
following the faD of the Roman country in 1969 in the National
Empire. All performances in Gallery of Art In W&amp;shington,
the 134ilm series will be in D. C. More than 'lTS,OOO perso1111
Holzer Hall Recreation Room, have seen ·the fihn and 100
and wiD be open to the public showings at the Gallery.
without charge.
In preparing the series,
CHARLESTON,W.Va (UPI) gest need today in the nation's pnces would spawn "far reachEach of the !Uilms In the Clark, two producers and three
-Soft coal operators were coal fields
mg ' ~ffects" on coal's future .
M.Mhworth,Mn.~mm
series runs 50 minutes in cameramen spent two years
warned Monday that American
Unless accord is reached beSaine ~~marginal mrnes"
Fink,
Wrenna E. Laudermllt,
length, and each will be shown traveling through 11 countries,
mines would face nationahza· tween labor and management, rrught be forced to close, Jones
Mrs. Emma L. Williamson,
twice. The first showing Is set In addition to the 13-fl!m serf:!~,
tion if the industry fa1ls to government and industry, and asserted, because the price
Rebecca
Jean Wells, Mrs.
for 1:40 and the second is 8:30. /Clark produced a 366-page
meet the nation's energy needs. the public and industry, Jones commission's ruling would
Irene Cook_,_ Luci!Je DrumThe second in the serie-- ''The volume, Civillsation," witlL
Speaking.. to the Charleston said the factors would stay at place a ceihng on coal profits
mond, ·Mrs. Nola tggers,
Great Thaw," Is schedliled for nearly 300 illustrations.
Exchange Club, President Her- odds and result in a "great dis- and in turn limit the industry's
PRUITI HONORED
Sharon
Kay Ferren pnd son,
The
showlugs
at
Rio
Grande
Jan. 20, while the third,
bert E. Jones of Amherst Coal service" to the state and to the potential Investments.
COLUMBUS (IJPI) - Okla· "Romance and Reality," will College are part of a national
Mrs. Bernice (Doris Max- Jeffrey J. Icard, Mrs. Jennie J. ·
Co. in Kanawha County said the working miner.
homa running back Greg Pruitt be shown Jan. 'lT.
distribution
program
set
up
weD)
Darst, Pomeroy, learned McNeal, John A. ,Stone, VIola
'
"I have seen nationalized
element of harmony is the b1gwas named Monday to receive
One film will be shown each under matching grants from Sunday of the unexpected Helen Young and son, •Ella
mines in foreign countries,
an "award of distinction" from week through April. The series the National Endowment for death of her sister, Mrs. C. H. Payne, Mrs. Maxie Brit, Mrs.
said Jones, one of four indus·
Meigs
the Touchdown Club of Colum· ends with the April 201h per· the Humanities and from the (Bessie Maxwell) Bowman, in Avoneile Cobb, Cary B. Wilson,
lr1al leaders who helped neg~
· bus at its awards banquet Jan. formance
Darin Edw~rd, Wolfe, Lori R.
of . Heroic Xerox Corporation totaling Pasadena, Calif.
tiate the new United Mine Work·
211.
Engle.
$18l,OG6.
The
films
are
being
Mrs.
Bowman,
91,
was
a
Materialism a look at the sky
ers contract. "I hope 1t doesn't
Although justa junior, Pruitt scraper, the suspenSion bridge, distributed to colleges and graduate of Pomeroy High
Kimberly L. Hamm, Maggie
bappen' here."
was third in voting for the and the machine, things that universities with enrollments School in the class of 1897. It Lambert, Marian R. Escue,
'
Although the new pact bore
Heisman Trophy. He averaged express the deepest feelings under 2,000.
was believed she was the oldest Margaret E. Miller 'and
an expensive priCe tag, Jones
9.4yards per carry last season. and aspirations of our time.
The distribution program, • graduate of Pomeroy High daughter, Wayne A. Alvei'BOII,
said 11 woui!J, help pay for it·
according to J. Carter Brown, School.
John A. Cunningham, Melinda
self if wildcat strikes are re·
director of the National
Mrs. !lowman was preceded M/ Casto, Mn. Gladys D.
Denver E. Well, Florence duced and better relationships
Well to Buckeye Rural Elec.
Gallery, makes Is possible for In death by her husband, Grant, Mrs. Billy E. Hale, Mrs.
develop between labor and
Coop., R1ght of Way Easement, management.
audiences all over the country Carlas Hobart Bowman ; a Patty Sue Johnson and BOll,
Bedford.
to see the "Civilisation" films. daughter, Elnora;-'one son, Elsie Mae Pleasants, Alma
Jones assa1led the Federal
Guy V Sargent, Bertha Price Commission, saying that
. He said !bat each fihn will be Maxwell, last Oct. 6, and her Lorraine
Robbins
and- -'
Mr. Eddy's new books
Sargent to Buckeye Rural the ~en percent jwnp 1n coal
It is the Poem Singing into shown twice to make it daughter-In-law, Rose, on Dec. daughter, Mrs. Judy Kaye Bird
released in December:
Elec. Coop., Right of Way
your Eyes, Arnold Adolf.
available to both students and 24. In addition to her Sister, and son, Phillip 0. Rife, Mrs.
The Kibbutz : Life on an
Easement, Bedford.
The
First
Book
of
the
the community.
Mrs. Bowman Is survived by Jessie I. Walker and Floyd G.
Wilham Connolly, Erma
Israeli
Commune,
Paul
:, _Jqhn E.- Holley, Ruby M". Connolly to Douglas M. Bissell,
Netherlands An•elo Cohn.
. A,1tqW_of .00 c.Q)Ieges and 911e son, .Marvin, and several Thornaa.,.. . .., · u~· T ;uwu1
• ,I
[)eegan.
· 1, ,• . 1 ~ , ~ • , ,
• Honey to Buckeye Rural Elec. Carolyn A Bissen, Lot 4, Ar·
Thii rlrsl' ~it~f I'rullii;'.Je&amp;n ljll\V~\ies wijl, ,rec,eive...the grandchildren , and · gr~at­
When Parents Fail, Sanford Bothwell.
Coop, Right of Way Easement, baugh's Sub., Olive.
fllms, and an estimated grandchildren.
Katz.
Scipio.
A Late-Born Child, Anatolii 3,000,000 people will see the
Mary Dodd, Mary Pullen,
APPEAR IN ASHLAND
LINDA COWDERY
How to Surv1ve Education ; Aleksin.
Barbara Shuler, Doyle T. Robert K. Pullen to Billy B.
series this year, Brown said.
The Gospel-aires of the
MEETING DELAYED
Shuler, !lenrJetta Shuler to Orr, Martha Lou Orr, Parcel
REEDSVILLE - Mrs.
Before, Dumg and after
Mystery on the Delta, He noted that 20,000 people
A meeting of the Women's Rutland Church of the
Maude Holcomb, 0.94123 Acre, 100 Acre Lot 104, Olive.
Unda Cowdery, daughter of
Colleg~ Richard Gummere. Harriette Abels.
came to the series premier In Auxiliary of the Middleport Nazarene were in Ashland,
Columbia.
Onc$-oll Mouse, Hitopadesa .
Sunlight Valley, Anne N. the 300-seat auditorium at the Fire Deparbnent scheduled for Ky., Friday night, where they
Bobby Joe Wolfe, Tessie Mr. and Mrs. Walter Brown,
Edd1e Lou Howery, Pearl S. Wolfe I&amp; Wilbert McClain , Reedsville, has completed a
National Gallery.
The White Stag, Kate Seredy · Baldwin.
Wednesday night has been · were the featured group at
Howery to Maude Holcomb, Parcels, Letart-Sutton.
course of classes which
Hero Tales from Many
A Year in the Ught of Rosie
For more Information postponed' until Jan. 12 at the services held at the Grace
0.94123 Acre, CoiWQbla.
enable her to work In lbe
Lands, Alice Hazeltine.
Bernard, Barbara Brenner.
concerning the series, contact home of Mrs. Thomas Darst. Church of the Nlizarene in
Robert R. Sheen, Delores
Walter Wears , V1rgmia Sheen to Basharat A. Munir, coronary unit or lnlensive
The Real Mother Goose,
The Shades, Belly Brock.
Gerald A. Ramsay, director of
:"-Shland: Making up the group
Wears to Franklin Real Eslate, Ameena B. Munir. Parcels, care unit at Camden.CIIIj'k
Mother Goose.
The Wheel on the School, special services at Rio Grande
are
Dav1d Grate, Steve Grimm
FIRST FATALITY
'h Acre, Sa:lisbury.
Hospital in Parkersburg.
How to Avoid Automobile Meindert De Jong.
College, at 245-5353, ext. 79.
Sclpio.Columbla .
PORTSMOUTH, Ohio (UP!) and Naomi Bissell, singers,
Mrs. Cowdery graduated Accidents, Fred E. Taylor.
Wild in the World, John
- This city reC()I'ded its first and their accompanist, Connie
from
West
Virginia
Ride on the Wind, Alice Donovan.
PLANT STRUCK
1972 traffic death Monday night Cremeans.
f."'*"::::&lt;::~::.:~~:::::&gt;;:&lt;:::::::::::·:&lt;·::&gt;:::·:·:·:::::::::·:·:·:·:·:~::::·:·:::·:::·:·:*:·~&lt;:w,:::::::::::::x~::~: University, Parktrsburg Dalgliesh.
Ginger Pye, Eleanor Estes.
BRYAN • Ohio (UP!) •
[~~ Brancb, l May 9 wltb au ~ace : A Young Per- The Bunch on McKellahan Alnbout 150 members . of the when Pearly West, 53, was
IN HOSPITAL
assoc)ate degree 1u nursing. ~
de to Space, Arthur C. Street, Carol J. Farley.
ternaUonal Association of killed when hit by a car on U. s . •
52 on the east side. John
Mrs.
Walter Roush (June
~.~&gt;.~ She successfully passed tbe C
Harriet, the Spy, Louise Machinists and Aerospace
'J:'
state hoard for registered
Charted Desigps for Needle- Fitzhugh.
. •
Workers struck the Bart Fraley, 74, Portsmouth, the Pratt) of Middleport Is a
pati~nt at the University
- By Helen and Sue Bottel
nurses in June. Mrs. Made Rugs, Sibyl I. Mathews.
The Runaway's Diary, Manufacturing Co. here driver, was not charged.
.Hospital,
Columbus, Room 531,
:§ Cowdery Is a 1969 graduate
Tole Painting, B. Kay Marilyn Harris.
Monday. The
workers,
WIN
AT
BRIDGE
North.
Dear Helen and Sue:
of Eastern Hlgb School. Sbe Fraser.
Early Spring, Robert lf8zel. members of the union's Lodge
Why are guys like this? You meet once, maybe dance all _ and,.ber, husband, Stephen, DrGiants &amp; TwWitches and a
Don't Cry, Little Sister, 1549• walked off their jobs at
evenmg with him, he asks for your phone number - and doesn't
reside at 1038 Murdock Ave.,
agon or
o, Phyllis F . Jennette Letton.
. lhe manufacturer of air COli·
call.
Parkersburg. He IS enrolled Fenner. '
The 13th Member, MaUreen ditioning • related equipment
Okay, you're klnda put down, but it isn't fatal. Maybe he was
at Parkersburg Community
Time to Laugh, Phyllis R. Mclliwraith.
when their contract expired.
NORTH
or hold-up one.
.
4
Fenner.
Th
B
hb
bi
W'll'
--•JJO
toob usy,or Iost your nwnber. But the next week, at the dance he
Then he would lead his
College.
e , us a es, 1 lam
•
Nebula Award Stories.
stev
• AQ 2
last club . West would have
won't even say " Hi. " Now what would a simple "Hello" mean?
enson.
+ Q6
to play low and the trick
Maybe he's embarrassed because he didn't follow through on the
K 109 8 6 2
would be ducked to East's
caU,buthemakes italotwors!, byignoringyou.
~
1
WF.ST (D)
' EAST
·, jack. East's best play would
be a spade, but South would
Just because I changed by mind about thinking a fella is the
I
K5
• 7 6 43 2
7
refuse the finesse anG make
absolute greatest is no reason I should make him my enemy.
I
...
•9 3
.8654
0 97
his
nine t r i c k s ·with one
Why can 't boys be "Justfmnds" too ?- W.N.S.
1
1
: ~ ~~
: ~~
spade,
three hearts, two diaDear W.:
SOUTH
monds and four clubs.
H the fellow IS truly "embarrassed 'because he didn 't follow
.._
TUESDAy
• A Q98
(NEWSPAPER !NTERPIISI ~SS~)
thnugh on the call," he may av01d the girl at the next dance
BY JACK O'BRIAN
been missing a cultural joy forever; why not
MIDDLEPORT Masonic
• K JlO
+A853
be cause he doesn't want to nsk a snub . (The {ragile male ego
GOING FAR, EASI' AND
now?
·
Lodge 363, F&amp;AM regular
• 74
thing .) .
WEST, INN. Y.
Don't wander central Purk at night, but ' meellng, 7:30p.m. Tuesday at
East-West vulnerable
Why not play 1t casually fne'ndiy, say "Hi " Ill's! _ and if he
NEW YORK (KFS) - Chinatown Is an
watching the skaters on the rlnk 'in winter temple.
• West North East South
The h•ddmg has been: ·
STU.L doesn 't thaw, well , here's Sue with her somewhat less Oriental jungle of joy where you'll find inex- daylight is a delight; ditto the lee rink in Radio
CHESTER COUNCIL 323, 1+
2•
Pass 3 NT. West North East
South
3
charitable v1ewpomt · - HELEN
pe118ive restaurants amid the colorful sights, city - oops, Rockefeller Plaza, real talented Daughters of America, 7:30 Pass Pass
Pass
·
~ass
?
•
Dear W.:
sounds, smeUs and Far Esst ambiance, to · showoffs, and you might even see a Kennedy p.m. lnstallaUon of officers.
Opemng lead- + J
You, South, hold.
. . are madly in love with continue our suggestions on. seeing New York pra tfallin gat eIther rink.
Wear white .
.A2 .Q9876 tQ54 .Ql06
Th ere are. guys who think all girls
· 11Y 1f they've made a b1g play wth the "What's without it costing you an arm and a leg ... little
WEDNESDAY
them· (espeoa
Free shows? Burlington Industries has a
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby ' What do you do now?
1
your telephone n~~~'" routine the week before) . This type Italy is. right next to Chinatown, fiavored with
whole working ''miD" In Its 6th Ave. building. MIDDLEPORT Literary
,
A
ha!;-~~:~
i.:!::·~ ;,'j~~
f1gures a sunple H1 1s lead1ng the poor girl on after he's . the Sights, sounrls and pasta-Bmelb vou'll love
There are more: ask a! the Convention Bureau· Club, home of Mrs. Emerson t Souths JUmp to three no- t.ricks. While your tee of ~u· m~
,
' J
2
Wedn sd
rump was slightly unsound
" ~
changed his rrund. He wouldn't know how to be "just friends "- ... Greenwich Village has fallen on· sleazier
that's what It's there. for.
ones, p.m.
e ay. Mrs. opposite hls partner's weak "going to be a trick, it;;, very
because he's too pusy snarmg the next pigeon .
.
times, but even this bas given the great old area
Macy's and Gimbel's stores, both, a ~ight Zav~!z to ! eview two-club overcall, but South unlikely your queens will be
What I mean is, if he's an ego-tripper, forget him! You can
(much of its chann re.mainS) a mod.flavor your
oceathtllkifig viBlt In themiefves; Macy's is the Honeycomb
by Adela liao . no 1dea that his part- any use.
•
soon tel~ by watchmg how he operates on the dance floor (ari'a - 't oungsters especially will enjoy; we wouldn't
world's biggest store, parenthetically.
Rogers St. John.
ner' s hand was that weak
'rODAY'S QUESTION
comparmg w1th last week) _ SUE
suggest taking the kid:! down there at night;
Every type of food Is avallable In
MEIGS COUNTY Salon 710, In addition, South had greai
Again your partner opens
Dear Helen and Sue :
you, either, for that menacing matter.
Manhattan: there' are some 1.3,000 restaurants ~hters of America, 1 p,.m., ~~:~i~~~c~u~m~s ability to ~~d~ spades. This · ti"!'L'Y.!JU_
I am 19 and in college. i'm dating a gil'! whom 1 consider one
The Empire State Building remains an
In New York and you're never far !:-:xn a
of Mn. Mary Martin,
•Q865 • z • KQJS4 3 "'7Z
of the finest in the world . She's kmd, generous and tho•ghtful and
exciting spot to see N.Y. in all directioll8; ditto calorie or two: every internaUonal
from
STATED MEETING • dulf:m~·~rt~ u':;e ~ut~fgd~
What do you do now?
everyone likes her. Tllat is, everyone except my two spmster
the Rainbow Room and Raimbow GriD In Radio
A (Afrifcaalln) to (Zambian), with l!phabetlcal ~=:.Y~~ p~::, Jo~~: monds Then he entered his
-· - - - -- ·: 1
aunts who are extremely bigoted .. A!I they can see in her is thai
City; or Rockefeller Center·as the Rockefellers stops o
ethnic sorts; even thoup India llld Bacon, W.M. All Master hand with a' heart and led
The Daily'
she's lnsh and Catholic, and they take out their prejudice against
prefer to caU It ... You don't have to settle for
Pakistan battled tragically, there are' liVer&amp;! Masons invited
four of clubs. West played
O.EVQTED TO THE
her In very unfunny cracks about her nationality and religion _
expell!live dining, though : just v~ a cocktail friendly "lndlan·PakWIIJIIlm" eateries; check
THURSDAY
low and South iumWjd up
.JN TE R li~T 9F. .•
hoping they'll turn me agamst her through ridicUle.
.
at the see-aU-directions bar and olmge on the
the Yellow Pages ",' '111ere'sa Buddhist Temple
BRICKLAYERS LOCAL 32 ~~:~ ~~~t~y~sa~~~~-me h~~e!t
c:W~5/tA~A~:::,tL,
· I just can't shut them up. My parents don't live here, so they
same 65th floor ; big windows, g t views.
m&lt;lllnatown If you dcare to~d your sacred will have a dluner following He abandoned clubs and took
hoc. Ed.
0
8
Radio City Music Hall is mparatively. gawking further.
Thursday evening meeting at the spade finesse . .
R Ec~~ ~~~:,LitH,
can't help. What do you suggest ? - IN LOVE BUT SAD
Dear ILBS :
.
ine~nsive, a great bargain, eaper by far
TheN. Y. Parksllejl'thasWalkln.Toura; ; Pomeroy American Legion
West was in with the king
Published dally except ·
Yo_u do not make it clear whether you live w1th these aunts or
than the sex.flicks which abo din midtown at check the Convention Bureau again ... German Home,
and cleared the ·diamonds
Sal.urday
by 7he
Ohio Volley
PubliShing
Company,
111 '
whether you just v1sit them occasionally. If the taller I'd suggest
$5 a leer ; just ignore them w e you're here ...
Food? Try·Yorkvllle, the upper East Side (88th
SACRED HEAR't Guild, 7: IS but he was too late. South Court. St., Pomeroy, Ohio,
that you curtail your visits and let them figure th~gs out for
The Bdwy. theater is'lKreat,' and expensive, and 2nd Ave. for instance). Hllllliarian? Second p.m . Thursday at church. collected three tricks in .each m~:l5:,u~l~;~~~~~~~~~n~h~;2~ •
themselves. It's more difficult 1f y9u live with them, 1 grant
although the New York Conveption Bureau has Ave. in the lower 1101 and 7Qs, espectall)l arollild Hostesses, Martha Howell, major, suit P 1 u s two dia- 21 57.
•
1
beca US:.1 t's...mos
- ' - 1·unposs1'bletocurea blgot.Bu\ "changingthe'
di scount c~upons for so10e' shows ; if your 76thSt ... TheF u1tonFlahMarketmtellatohlgb Anna Blac kwood, Ro'berta monds and on e cu
1 b for h'IS ' Pomerov.
SecondclaupOstegepalda't
Ohio
,1
subject seems the only way ou1t - even if you have to be rude in
budget forbids, try off-Broadway where tickets
heaven, but if~at's your perfwne, sniff away, Dalley and Loretta Saelens.
g~~e.
. N a 110 n •! • d ve,r tIs in U'
domg it. - HELEN
~e cheaper, amb1ance more enthusiastic, the and eat lunch at Sweet's on the East River; _ POMEROY CHAPTER 80, "chcu~&amp;~~:.·.''· ~~1 ~e~ast : Ge:,r.W;/,·t~~~ 12 8J'~~~ntJ:.~ 1
Dear In Love : ·
•
.
' .. &gt;
'f:·eatricallife force more urgent ·, ·It's fun. ·
great old-fashioned simple decor and walters to Royal Arch Masoll8, special ".West s h 0 u 1 d have ~one' , 51 • New York City, New York .
t
tin Th sda
, SUQsc nlpiiOn rates : , De ·~
Maybe a weekly turn-&lt;&gt;n of TV's ALL IN TilE' F;AM[LY
&lt;' Musewns ; N. Y. has one of -tile world's
match, but go early for dinner; it's not (or late- mee g, ur Y night, 7:30 r1ght up with his ace of c ubs 1_I •ve,red!. by carr; or whoro· 1
greatest: the-Metropolitall"'MJllleUIII o1- Aft on- dining sophisticates -merely for great«af~ p.m. at the Pomeroy Masonic and beaten the contract."
~~·~~~~~ ~~uct~"~h:r'e' c:;.'l~;· :
-~~mi;.gh~tu·;do~_~th~e~trFil~·cJs If an one ca 'sten_to Arc~e-~u~
1
and not see how lruly ndiculous they are ; they're
5th Ave. We traverse Its halls occasionallY, - we
connoissetlrs.
.
Temple. Mark master and past
~st ~as wrong. South serv ice not available: ono 1
0
beyond hope, In the meantime, practice selective ?eafness.
must admit 1&gt;Ur children hauled us there after
Over the -years we've done It aU. Loyed It, ::~~ ~gr:~~;nl: ~: ~ W~s~t~~r~r:y~~s ~h:t~f~~ , r~~n~ $~~ 5•.g~, ~~~.~~~~-~~ ;
Prejudice disguised as hwnor can be stopped cold if nobody
years of our ignoring this sensationally im· . toc M you will. Welcome to thll big wide offi
.
ace. West's best defense · • months $7 25. Throe
laughe . ...- SUE
I
' "&lt;. .
portant musewn, and we knew again we bad JVOnderful town. Okay, Mrs. Burke?
tendcers are requested to at- · would be to play diamonds ;.?!i7~, 1~~:: ·s~~db::rif~~s~· •
i
',,'
I
I, .
• '
·
South COUld lake his ace now ' Se~l-~nel.
I

'Coal- Operators Warned

a ong r

ay

I

SQCI'a I

caIen da·r

•

•

;:;

Z

Pro St4ndings

Bucks Rally,

ms;~~=·&amp;:;s.,~~m:::·~ e n . ; , , , , •• : \ '

· MVPAWARDSDINNER
AEw YORK (UPI)- The
sixth annual professional football most valuable player
awards dinner, honormg MVP
stars m the National FoolbaU
League, has been set for Jan.
28 at the Holiday Plaza Inn in
Hempstead, N.Y: The dmner
will benefit the Long Island
Athletic Club's 5,000-youth athleUc program.
THREE OF 'mE TEXAS OOWGffiLS that wiD be perThe announcement was made
forming at Southern High School Wednesday night are Susie . by dmner chairman Joseph A.
Buck, Flossie Randall and Mary Pabeck, team dribblers.
Gundermann, Jr., and general
The girls, a professwnal group, will play the coaches' of , chairman Gene Ward, NFL
Southern Local School D1stnct. Game time Ill 8 p.m. Adcommissioner Pete Rozelle
mission Is $1 for students and $1 50 for adults. The Southern
w1il serve as honorary
Athletic Boosters are the sp&lt;Jnsoring group.
chall'man.

'

; 3-TheilailySentinel,Mlddlepori-Pcmeroy, O.,Jan. 4,1972

Beve~ages .
OOLUMBUS (UP!) - Stale
Liquor Director Richard E.
Guggenheim said today one rl.
his goals for 197218 to get rid rl.
those items that aren't selling
well.
"We have a serious inventory problem," he said. "I
estimate the state may have up
to n mlllion tied up in unproductive Inventory. It Isn't
dolnf. the state any good."
Guggenheim said a new inventory control and allocation
system for liquor stores wiU be
tested this month and should be
in full operation before July I
to prevent another buildup of
slow moving items.
Other 1972 projects of the deparbnent include:
-Operation by April I of a
new data processing -program
·for permits.
- Teclmical improvements
in the data processing division,
saving nearly $5,000 a month.
- Comple\i2n of an analysis
· of
the 11J management
organization of the department.
- Recommendatioll8 for lmproved pay benefits for store
personnel to confonn more
closely with private industry.

-.
\

'

Slow
Moving
,
.

•

.' ·

,

'

Kuu Woo Palka, plaulst, Is
sebeduled toperform 1u the
Portsmouth Hlgb School
audllorlum Wednesday,
beginning at 7:30 p.m.
Trl·County Community
Concert Association sull·
scrlbers are reminded !bat
all · Portsmouth concerts
begin one-ball hour earUer
this year.
'

.'

-.-

' -

.·.·.·.·.·..····

·-

..•

I

1

COLUMBUS(UPI)-Creighton threw a acare Into Ohio
State Mondai' night, but the
ninth-raleciBuckeyes managed
to make It look easy in the
end. _ 1
Despite a 40-37 halftime dell·
ell and a toaaup In the early
second half, the Bueka finally
came aUve, oulacoring the visiting Bluejays 16-4 during the
last four,and a half mlnutea to
triumph M-78.
The game marked Ohio
State's last non-conference
competition before opening the Big, Ten season against Purdue op
· Saturday at West Lafayette,
'Ind.
The Nebra!ka team surprised
12,024 vocal ·rooters at St.
John Arena by puJIIng to a
nlnei&gt;olnt lead, 34-25, in the
first half. Until64-63, with 10:04

:Bruins Retain Top
Spot In UPI Poll
NEW YORK (UPI)-UCLA,
In search of Its sixth straight
national title, polled aU but one
&lt;t the flrs(iJlace votes Monday
to conUnue as college basketball's foremost qUintet in the
weekly ratings by United Pre8s
International's Board of
Coaches.
The Bruin&amp; captured 30 firstplace votes as 31 f11 the :ISmember board participated in
the balloting. UCLA wound up
with 308 points, 40 more than
runner-up Marquette.
The Bruins knocked off
Texaa,!J.5.85, and ninth-ranked
Ohio State, 79-53, during the
week to win their own Bruins
tournament and raise their

aeaaon record io ~-

The Warriors, also 11-0, took
the remaining firs(iJlace vote
and flnl.shed with 288 points as
they also captured a tournament-the Milwaukee lnvita·
lional-with wins over Georgetown 'and Manhall.
North[ Carolina rode theSugar Bowl Classic tourney to
the No. 3 position with 242
points, while South Carolina,
upended by Villanova In the
Quaker City Holiday Festival In
Philadelphia; dropped to fourth
with 142 points.
Indiana moved up two

Pointers
Ranked 3rd
In'4 AP Poll

Chaps Rally,

ANAHEIM, Calif. (UP!) Jim Maloney, veteran rightDALLAS (UP!) - Donnie
bander traded to the California Freeman's 21 points, 13 In the
Angela last year after &amp;pend· last quarter, lifted Dallas to a
ing a decade with the Clncln- 102-101 victory over Indiana In
natl Reda, haa been given his the only American Basketball
unconditional release from the Association game Monday
Angela. .
night.
Maloney made ' only four
The Chaps, who trailed by as
· starts with the Angels for an many as 15 points, r~ed for a
G-3 record and ·a ~.10 earned nine-point lead with two and a
run average after being ham· half minutea left, then held off
pered by Injuries.
- an Indiana surge led by Rick
Cincinnati traded him for ___l,{OJJDt.
.
Greg Garrett after he missed
Lynn ChappeD and Joe
moat of 1970 with an Ach!Ues Hamilton added 18 points each
tendon Injury.
for Dallas while Rich Jones had
While with Clnclnnatl, he 16 for the Texas team.
hurled three no-hit games and
Indiana's Roger Brown
bad five one-hitters, which tied scored 'l1 points and Bob
a National League career Nelolicky had 23.
mark. He held the Reels club
Mount hit three-point play
record for moat strikeouts (265 and a three...,.,"! goal In the ,
.,v••
in 1983) and tied the club rec- final minutes and bad a chance
ord for most strikeouts In a to win the gllllle but his Jl!.foot
nine-inning game (18 agalll8t jumper at the buzzer bounced
.
.
Milwaukee).
off the rim.
·
•••••••••··~·-••••••

a

culain\

Sentinel

1

1

_j_J

CALL

POINTVIEW · 992-2505

Sen. 'Edmund Muskle ( DMillne) Is scheduling 1 primetime announcomontlonlght, to
formally oay he'• running for
ttlt office he's boon running
for since 1969.. 11'11 run at S: 20
p.m., 01. 8.

.

+++

I'm positively addicted to
the old movie serials which
Ch. 9 rerun* each week. I
know the hero It 'olng to
ftalpe In these cllf hangers
IIIICII saw 1 lot of them In !lie
Forties), but there's high
comedy, 11 not high adventure.
A new nrlal, "G-Miln vo. the
Blec:kl Orogon.'' Is lust atar·
t ng, ·.• p.m. Tueidays and

Thursdays.

+++

+++

Qlck Cavett has GM's
swftlheart, Ralph Nader, and
Sandy Dennis as gu11ts
tonight, 11:30 p.m ., Ch. 6.

+++

MOVIES: "War of
Wll~ats.'' John Wayne
he ever make 1 movie
that title?), 4 p.m.,

tho
{did
with
and

"PaHerns," Van Heflin, 11: 30
p.m., both Ch. 10.

'

..

1

•
OHIO COLLEGE
BASKETBALL SCORES
United Pren lnternatl011al
:ltllo Stare 94 Creighton 76
Xavier 83 Marian {lnd.l 70
Cincinnati 81 Drake 78
Akron 57 Wltlenberg 53 {oil
Defiance 97 Ohio Northern 92
Dayton 73 Houston 69
Earlham lind.) 85 Ashland 75

.

By GARY KALE ·
UP! Spo..U Writer
. NEW YORK (UPI) - The
Milwaukee Buck.!, beaten by'
Walt Frazier's !Uoot jumper
with three seconds remaining
Monday night, get a &lt;:hance for
revenge in tonight's second
half of a back.to-back set with
the New York Knlcks.
Frul.er's baaket capped a
string of 13 straight points by
the New York guard and
provided the Knick&amp; with a 101·
99 comeback victory. The last
two mlnutea of the game
turned Into a personal seorlng

-

duel between FraZier and '
l:ateem ·Abdul.Jabbar, who
tallied Milwaukee's last eight
points.
"There's tomorrow night,"
said AbduJ..!abbar, sittlnl! de·
jectedly In the Milwaukee
dressing room after he scored
a game-bigh 38 points to 31 for
Frazier.
· Abdul.Jabbar thought he was
fouled on the last play of the
game when his sweeping hook
shot missed the basket at the
buzzer.
Wlllda Up In Mid-Court
"I weigh 237 pounds, but I

wound up-at mi&lt;kourt on the
play," he complained. " I
wasn't pulled there by
magnets."
Frazier was the key to New
York's continued hex over
Milwaukee which now has
reached 11 victories in the last
13 games between the clubs
Entering the game . with a
marksmanship of 21 points or
better in his previous !&amp;'lames,
Frazier was Umlted to six
points in the first half on Oscar ,
Robertson's close guarding.'
The bearded Knick backcourt wonder broke a 99-all tie

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK ( UPI )-Bill
Russell has seen a couple of
basketball games in his time.
He lln't easUy Impressed.
Especially by what he sees on a
basketball floor.
What he saw Monday night at
Madison Square Garden im·
preased him though. Trernen®usly.
.
Bobby Fischer, the international chess grand master who
,llleets Russia's Darla Spassky
Tor the world champiOnship
soon, hasn't- seen as many
basketball games as Bill
Russell.
"':! But he's an even tougher nut
to crack.
He doesn't get impressed
about anything.
It was different Monday
night, He showed up for his
first basketball game In more
than five years and he was
impressed, too.
Otbera Impressed
So were such otherwise- cold
cucumbers as WWis Reed,
Earl "The Pearl" Monroe,
Oscar Robertson and Kareem

Abdul.Jabbar. They ~it paid
highest praise one professional
can pay another and aU talied
about the same man-Walt
Frazier of the New York
Knick&amp;.
Walt Frazier played the kind
of game Monday night kids like
to dream about. Grown men,
too.
What's more he picked the
perfect time. With the game
nationally televised and a
capacity 19,588 on hand,
Frazier ran off 13 straight
points In . the final 2:38,
collaborated with Phil Jackson
in a vital heartstopplug "steal"
20 seconds from the end and
wound up receiving one of the
most twnultuous ovatlo118 ever
accorded any athlete at
Madlaon Square Garden for
leadlug the Knick&amp; to a 101·99
win over the Milwaukee Bucks
in a moviellke finish.
"'Great!' that's the only way
to describe it," said Bill
Russell, on hand to do the color
commentary for national TV.
"The' last time I ever saw
anythlnl! like It was In 1958
when Bob Pettit srored 51

points in the final game of the
playoffs against us (Boston).
They (St. Lbuis) beat us and he
-got 19 of their laat 21 points."
Bobby Fischer blinked his
eyes when he s.tw the Knicks
gain possession 20 seconds
from the end with the score tied
9lHIII. Earl Monroe passed off
. to Bill Bradley on his left.
Bradley gave the ball to
Frazier, who nearly lost it, but
quickly regained control and
began his move with eight
seconda left.
Frazier killed five more
seconds and then with only
three remaining, he hit with a
jumper and the whole place
went plumb mad.
"You're used to complete
quiet when you play," Dave
DeBuaschere said to Bobby
Fischer in the Knick&amp;' dressing
room afterward. "What did
you think?"
"Very exciting," Fischer
said, giving the question
proper thought before answerlng.
"What did you think of
Frazier?" someone else asked
the blond chess whiz.

-~

Milwaukee center netted 23 in
the opening hlllf.
This was th'll Knick&amp;' first '
confrontation against a Jabbar-led te~m without WIUIB
Reed. They seemed . to be
playing thi~ one for the
''cap'n .''

There was no other action m
the National Basketball
Association Monday 11ight. ·
In addition to tonight's Net(
York at "'ilwaukee game,
Philadelphia is at Detroit,
Phoenix at Chicago, Seattle at
Houston, Atlanta at Portland,
Buffalo at Golden State.

Fischer .. were a stru~le . I was pulling
said, much more quickly this to the left or right all night."
Why, because of the prestime.
"Fantastic," put in DeBuss· sure1
"It could've been," laughed
chere. "He was just incredible
Frazier. "I know the game was
at the end."
Willis Reed, sitting on the just another game In lhe
Knick&amp;' bench with tendonitis, standings but I was a little
called Frazier's performance tight. Really, I was embar"unbelievable" and Monroe rassed the way I was playlnl!. I
remarked "It's getting so you llnew It was a national
televised game and my parents
sort of expect it from him."
Oecar Robertson, who vainly were watching In Atlanta,
tried to keep Frazier from Georgia. I wanted to play well
getting off his game-winning but I realized I wasn't. I bad
shot, said, "You can't take it only s.l:x points at the half."
Walt Frazier got a little
away from him, he played a
better
as the game went on.
great game" and Jabbar
Enough&lt; so !bat he got a rlie
agreed "he hit some tough
out
of Bill Russell. Tbatseldom
shots there at the end." Toogh
happe118. Enoulih so that he
wasn't really the word.
also got one out of Bobby
Bucks Out Front
The Bucks were out front the Fischer.
whole game, once by as much _And that simply never
as 13 points, and the Knick&amp; happened before.
never led until Frazier's final
shot.
Advertisement
"I thought It would hit the
rim," said the Knicks' bearded
backcourt dynamo who wound
up with 31 points for the night.
"I had some doubts about that
last one because aU my shots
~~Extraordinary,''

January

Falcons Have Only 7 Players
ByUllitedPreu International
Bowling Green State hoals
N,!a/!a;~~~ ~rught'and Coa~h Pat
Haley may find It difficult to
keep five players on the floor
at the same time.
Haley lost sophomore guards
Jim Kindle and Jack Wissman
indefinitely New Year's Eve
When they suffered burns..during an apartment grease lire.
They were expected to be
released from the hospital by
today, but their injuries may
keep them out the rest of the
season . Wissman suffered sei:·
ond degree burns on his right
hand and Kindle was burned on
his right leg and right band.
The Injuries left just seven
able bodied players for tonight's game. Lee Henson, the
•

starting forward, was injured In
the Mot~r City Classi&lt;:, last
week at Detroit, and forward
Bob Hotaling has been sidelined with a stomach ailment.
In Ohio college games played
Monday night, Ohio State downed Creigllton 84-76; xavier
bounced Marian 83-70; Cincln·
nat! edged Drake 81·78; Akron
got by Wittenberg ~7~; Deli·
once kept winning on a 97-92
decision over Ohio Northern;
Dayton sUpped by Houston 7369; and Earlham (Ind.) whip·
ped Ashland IIS-75.
Other games tonight Include
Missouri at Ohio U.; BaldwinWallace at St. Bonaventure;
Cleveland State at Detroit:
Capital at Denison and the
start of the Marletla Invitation·
, al.

Warriors Remain
Unbeaten At Home
By Ullited Press International and Temple, led by Mike

Marquette
Coach
AI
McGuire can breatbe a little
eaaler. Jim Chones Is back in
form.
&lt;llones, Marquette's 6-foot11 centerandoneofthebest big
men In •the nation, had been
having his problema the last
two games and the secondranked Warriors had to struggle to win. But Chones found
the range again Monday night,
acorlng 31 points as Marquette
drubbed Wisconsin, 'IUO, to
remain unbeaten in nine
games.
Marquette managed only a
'l1·25 halftime lead but then
Ch011esandsophomore-Marcua
Washington turned it on .

Jones' 21 points, ~~ Pepperdine, 83-79. St. Louis cruised
pallt host South Alabama, 78-61,
and 12th-ranked Florida State
behind Ron King's 24 points,
ripped Denver, 8&amp;-70, In the
'opening round of the SeniOr
Bowl tournament. &lt;1
Bill Ligon and Rod Freeman
~amed for 46 points as Vanderbilt stopped Louisiana
State, ~73, and lloyd Batts,
who finished with 'l1 points, hit
a 20.foot jump shllt with . 24
seconds left to pace Cincinnati
to an 81-78 victory over Drake.
Ron lfarrla hit 23 points as
Wichita State beat Bradley, 71·
67, and 7.{1 Kevin Kunnert
scored 26 in Iowa's n-ea'
triumph over Kansas. Scott

~~o:,r::::tstbeS:.!~ :~~ ~~~dea~e~~or:2

Mter leading 41·'l1 at the
ball, Dayton had to battle it
out with Houston in the final
minutes. Donald Smith, with 23
points, and John Von Leahman,
with 20, were ill8trwnentalln
the Flyers' fourth win In nine
games.
Larry Quarles hit on a basket
and five free throws in overtime to give Akron its seventh
win in eight starts. Wittenberg
forced the game into the extra
period w1th a foul shot in the
final23 seconds. The Tigers are
2-0.
Bob Fullerton scored the first
five points for xav1er as the
Musketeers picked up their
sixth win in 10 games. Fullerton _finished wi~ 18 pomts.
.mo.::
·v 1 uat 'Ill!¥. Marl8n f~U to 11-3.
NEW YORK (UPI) - Oblo
State, beaten by powerful
UCLA IHI week, wu rsted
nlntb lhil1feelt In the Ullited
Pres• International Uat of
lop-ranked
college
basll:elball teams In lhe
country.
Tbe Buckeyes, 8-2 wltb a
win Monday night over ,
Creighton, received 58 votes
In the latest balloting, UCLA
remained tbe leader, wltb
308 votea. .
.·.·.;:-·-·,·.··:···:-:-:·-··..·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.· ,• .........
Allan Hornyak scored 28
points as Ohio State gained its
eighth win against two defeats
af"'r rallying In the second
half. The Bluejays had led 40.
37 at the half.
Defiance, one of the few undefeated teams left, went ahead
21-19 and Jed the rest of the
way to gain its ninth win of the
season. Ken Bush was high for
the winners with 19 points but
Northern's Rick Scaletta
sc~ed 21 points
lloyd Balls ecored 'l1 points
for Cincinnati, including a 20foot jumper wltb 24 seconds
left to play, to give the Bearcats their seventh victory
against three defeats.

Thli Week's SpedoJ

1~:~~~ I

Forest.
In ot~er action, Donald
Smith and John von Leahman
combined for 43 points as
Dayton upset Houston; 73-69,

To Expire ···
The AAA reminda you to
check your drivers license If
you have a birthday this
month. Many Ucenses expire
this year and you only have
30 days before your birthday
to renew It and keep driving
legally .
_
• A winter breakdO)fllls no
fun, no matter how you look
at it. But you can make the
best of things by joining AAA
before trouble strikes. Then,
if and when you do need help,
you can count on swift, ef.
ficient AAA Emergency
Road Service.
Contact us today at 9922590 for membership In·
formation ; there's no
obligation.

•

••
t

COOPER'S AISWER TO WINTER TRACTION t

'

---

1967 OlDS
fOUR DOOR

White with blue Interior, V-8
motor, autp. trans . and
power steering.

t
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INSURANCE • so·NDs

ttETmE-~
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USED CARS
· -

Gary Watson led Wisconsin poir,ts,beat Dartmouth,l02-85.
" You'll Like Our . Quailty
with
15
points.
John
Gianelli
1111d
Jim
Me·
_
Way
of Doing Business."
SOUTAR LEADER
In other action Involving Cargo scored 25 points each as
992-S~:Ac FINAN~~:eroy
NEW YORK (UPI) ~ Dave
rated telllll8, Ohio State (9) Pacific clubbed Nevada-Las
Open Evenings 'Til 1 , 00 •
Soutar of Gilroy, Calif., was th4l
rall.l_ed for a 114-78 victory over Veps, 111-G, and California
Til • 1&gt; M. Sot.
;
first round leader of the U. S Crelghton,
Southwestern clobbered BlyW, 127-&amp;7.
Open Bowling Tournamen Louisiana (17) downed Me.
Monday with a 1,817 total.
Neese State, 119-$, and VIrginia
d ke
Don Johnson of Akron, Ohio, ( S) t
I
sappe
Wa Forest, 74- '
was _eighth with 1,723 going 64.
'I
Into eight more qualifying
Allan Hornyak SCored ,.
IN
~es today, ahd ,Ron Webber points as Ohio State . beat
PHONE 992-2342
Ml DOLE PORT, 0.
La
of Cincinnati was ninth at 1,722. CreI ghton. and ,..._.dh
... "lfi t mar,
Another eight-game set wiD the nation's leading scorer, hit
.
be rolled Wednesday before the 25 a S SouthWeitern Loulalana
)
field Is cut to 64 from the 192 downed McNeese.,Barry Park·
•
wtto started.
hlU's 20 points and 17 by Jim
Hobgood helped Virginia resHERIFF TO
CINCINNATI (UP!)- Dan
Tehan, ' Hamilton County
sheriff for 24years, announced
11e wm not seek r~..~1ectton this
Yo:!!•.

afler stealing the ball at
midcourt and hitting on his
shot from the top of the key .
Robertson sliPped while trying
to guard Frazier on the shot.
"I was really surprised when
I got the open shot," Frazier
said . ·,.I started badly, hilling
only one of seven shots In the
ltrst half . But when I began
ronnectmg I gamed con·
fidence."
Knicks Credit Lucas
The Knicks credited Jerry
Lucas with holding AbduiJabbar to 15 points in the
second half after the

Knicks, Bucks lmpressiv~ Monday

Downmg
. .Ch'lds
Agency 1nc
I

Come to think of II, there's
Just about the,same amount of
outpense 1!1Aho movie serials
es thai't ls1n the Muskle announcement.

.

College Basketball Rosults
By United Press International
Ohio St. 94 Creighton 76
Xavier (Q) 83 Msrlan 70
Vir. 74 Wake Forest 64
Georgia 112 Rollins 77
Auburn 69 Miss. 65
Tulsa 96 Trinity {Tex.) 70
Citadel 68 Wrri. &amp; Mary 59
Eastern Mich. 87 Grambling 80
Vanderbilt 80 LSU 73
UTEP 75 New Mex. St. 59
Rider 92 CCNY 70
Pitt 99 Geo. Wash . 81
Dayton 73 Houston 69
Iowa 81 Kansas 68
Ball St. 92 Butler 85
Dallas Bapt 82 Ab Chris 72
Arkansas St 88 Okla St 76
Marquette 72 Wisconsin 60
-clncl 18 Drake 78
Earlham 85 Ashland 75
Akron 57 Wttnbg 53, ot
Sienna 88 Moravian 75
Senior Bowl Tournament
Florida St. 88 Denver 70
St. Louis 78 South Ala. 61

Frazie~'~ Goal Beats Buck~ ~--

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at the home . of Mr. and Mrs.
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.

K . .·

and SAVINGS ro.

'

'

DRIVE-IN
BANKING

, ,

I

..

' ). fl.

.' •' '

.

'T'

.
"Taking a Look at Our,
selves" was· the theme of the
program presented by Mrs.
Manning Kloes. Readings on
the topic were given by Mrs.
Mary Hughes , Mrs. Leora
Sigman, Mrs. Ethel Hughes,
Mrs. Paul Sffil!rt, Mrs. Fred
Hoffman, and Mrs. Bill Davill.
A general discussion followed
the repdings.
Mrs. Willis Anthony of the
Dorcas Circle had deyotions
basing her conunents on the
New Year. The love gift ser·
.vice was conducted by Mrs.
•

.

.

'

Diamonds

•

Avane I Holliday off.ered a life·
'time phiiqsophy to help people
enjoy "their work .. ·
.
The · lecturer concluded lhe
program by a reading, "Slow ·
Down in your 50s."
VISIT MARTINS
Visiting at the home of Mr.
and Mrs . Osby Martin
following the death of his
.mother, Mrs. Edgar Roush,
were ·Mr. and Mrs . . Robert

. Wine, Cleveland ; Mrs .
Charles Simons with Mts. Chaimer J. Eakins, Alliance; .
Harold Hubbard, Mrs. Charles Tom Hagen, Alliance; Mrs.
Searles, Mrs. Kioes, Mrs . Fred Robert Jones, GaiUpoliB, and
Lewis, Mrs. Davis, Mrs . Harry Reapp, Gaiilpolis.
Be\llah White, Mrs. Hoffman,
Mrs. Tony Fowler,,&gt;frs. Ariand
'·
King, Mrs. Jacob Turner and
Mrs. Willis Anthony participating. Prayer concluded
the meeting.
A dessert course was served
by Electa Circle members,
Mrs. King , Mrs . Werner, Mrs . .It 'takes the worry '--Fowler, Mrs. Gerald Anthony, out of weari1g denturoa.
and Mrs. Davill.

Beautiful diamond
engagement and wedding
ring sets. For your
comfort and protection
Jhey interlock, so they
don't twist apart.

ChewI

:A-iscilla®

By

~ESSLER

JEWELRY STORE
POMEROY

Advert isement

A DISCOUNT
O[PARTMf.NT STOitl
'-

.PT. PLEASANT- GALLIPOLIS- MASON

STARTS

PRICED FOR QUI.CK CLEARANCE! ..

WED.

WOMENS FLANNELETTE
TAUORED PAJAMAS
OR WALTZ GOWNS
.

Printed designs. Our regular priced
$2.27. sleepwear. Stock up for the
cold nights.
·

$

MORNING
AT

44

1

9:30 A.-.

SIZES 34 TO 40
SHOP YOUR
NEAREST STORE!

PRICES SLASHED FOR SAVINGS!

MENS HOUSE SI1PPERS
BLACK - BROVM
OR MAHOGQNY

HEAvY GAUGE VINYL!

PlASTI( TOTE

JANUARY
IS ATIME
TO SAVE!

$ 99

Gusset Double
handle. Floral print

4"

VALUES TO $3.27
MENS

· ALL HOLIDAY STYLES REDUCED!

INSULATED WomenaiiiPow•
THERMAL
IWEA

EXPANDO
RACK
A 67* VALUE!

SOCKS

·PLASTIC TABLECLOTHS
WJTH FOAM BACK I
$}22

Values to $5.95 . Orion$
acryctic; long sleeve styles
in pretty pastel colors. Size
34 to 40.

Regular 77c. Cushioned
lining, insulated all over
to retain body heat, keep
cold out All cotton.

52SIZE
X70
SOLIDSPRINTS-

PRICED ,TO CLEAR I

RLSWI

•

25 OR MORE IN PACKAGE I

PANTS ,

EVERYDAY

EVERY PAIR REDUceD
Bonded acrylic and other fabrics Jr slripes,

GREDING .
-

~-- --

·

prints, plaids. Sizes up to 14: Former values to

f

t-

SAVE

WITH THIS COUPON
•
Wjthout Coupon 3 Bar£

4

YOU

22 Ol

.i

i · .;
* * ..;;
i lfS*Quick!
Easy t·

69

SEE

IVORY

SHERBET
.,.

I~

Airman David H. Mora and
Ml88 Rhea Mora, student at
Ohio State University, sP.rit
the .. Christmas holiday with
their parenll!, \It'. and Mrs.
Donald Mora, and ..family,
Cheater Road. Airman Mora
returned Sunday to Lowery Air
Force Base, Colo. He was
accompanied to Port Columbus
by his mother and his fiancee,
Miss Debby Fitch, a nursing
student at the Good Samaritan
Hospital in Zanesville.
· Christmas weekend visitors
of Mr. and Mrs. Osby Martin
were ·Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Martin
and
daughter,
Stepbpie, A!Uance, and Mr.
·
and 'Mrs. Letcher Wine of
Cleveland.
DINNER GIVEN
Mr. and Mrs. Harold EbersMr. and Mrs. Ben Neutzling,
bach entertained with a post- Pomeroy, entertained with a
Chtistmas dinner party. Their family dinner party on the
guests were Mr. and Mrs. Sunday following Christmas.
James Ebersbach of Colum- Their guests were Mr. and
bus, Miss Darla Ellersbach and Mrs. Marvin Burt, Jeff,
Tom Siley, Marietta, and Mrs. Melanie, David ·and Randy,
Shirley Mills and David.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Riggs,
Rog'er Gilmore and Tim Maralyn and Caralyn, Chester
Glaze, both students at Ohio
State University, accompanied Road; Larry Tracy, New York ·
A ,.,h . h• .;
a ciBssmate, Jack Major, to his City, and Miss Sybil Ebers·
bach,
Pomeroy.
' 011g •
.;
home in North Carolina for a
.
'
holiday visit. From there the
coNTRmUToRS NOTED
For Today
. three went on . to Florida,
Sheral merchants con·
Common sense Is
. returning here on Christmas tributed food to the canteen
seeing things as they are.
Eve.
served by the American Legion .; and doing things as they .;
HOOle for Christmas with AuxlilaryofRacinePost602,at ~ · ought to be done.
~
Mr.andMrs. Elza Gilmore, Jr. the Dec. 28 bloodmobile visit 'it
· -C. E. Stowe
were their four sons, 'Mike, Contributing were Cross and
Rick, Rog~r and Joe, a second Soil, Racine; Racine Food
.;
year siJJdent at the Tri.County
Kroger, Weed ,
Technical
Institute
at Market,
Wholesale, M. and R.
Nelsonville. They were joined -Foodlin_er and Hoisurn Bakery,
for dinner by Miss Connie Mrs. John Boyd, president,
·
it
Grueser and Miss Linda reports,
.;
Wehrung.
John Lohae, Roger Gilmore an engineering major at Ohio
and Tim Glaze spent the New State University returned tO
Year's weekend in Cincinnati thelr respective scMols
Friday~ ~ly .
visiting Mr. and Mrs. Max Sunday after spending the
The Drive-In Window
Folmer and daughter.
holidays here with their
is Open
C: t:JoeGllrnore and Miss Unda parents, Mr. and Mrs. Marvin -..
AM
p
111
r') . _
g were the ,,ew
Years' Burt, Melanl e an d David .
« · .9 · · to·7 .M.
/ ( eeiend guests of Mr. and
Larry Tracy of New York
(Continuously)
.;
Mrs,. Barry Boyer of Me- City spent the Christmas
Other l&gt;anking Hours 9 lo J.;
· and 5 lo 7 as usual on.; ,
Connelsviile:
hoUday here visiting his
Fridays.
.
_ . it
Mrs. Russ Watson has mother, Mrs. Ray Riggs, and ·
._, _
relul'ned to her home here 'other relatives.
_r,
_,_PN
_
after spending Christmas with
Christmas guesta of Mr. and
Dr. and Mrs. J, B. Marshall Mrs. V. D. Edwards and son
~.
and family in Louisville_, Ky. David, were Mr. and Mrs. Earl
POMEROY. OHIO
.Member
FDIC
She Was accompanied home by Shrieves of The Plains, Mr. an d
be Fed
.Mem
r
era 1
ltJ:
John Marshall and his 'fiancee, Mrs . Larry Heines and ~
' Reserve Systefll
Miss Marilyn Bryan; who · daughter, Kristen, and Mrs. .
.
.;
returned to their home 9~'New ./Louise Heines, Pomeroy.
**************~
Year's Day.
·
Mrs. A. · R. Knight and
. grandson, Steven, were holiday
visitors in Glendale, W. Va.
11
with relatives and friencis . ·
Mrs. J. Edward Foster
returned Saturday following a
five week visit ill Kenton with
the Re1. and Mrs. Carver
willianis and children. Thurs- •
day Mrs. T. M. CottriU and
children of carroll came to
Kenton for Mrs. Foster and she
vWted • there until Saturday.
Jerry Orlh, husband of the
former MIII'Y Jane Cottrill wiU .
return Wednelday to his ship at
Alameda, Calif.
Mrs. Thoi-ne Cottrill of Logan
•
. was the holiday guest of Mr.
and Mrs. Joe Thorne. ·
Mr. and Mrl. Ben Neutzling.
T
were the New ' Year's .Eve
~ guests of Mr.
Mrs-'-'
•
· Plill Meinhart an~ idlss Erma
'
· Slnllh.
Jeff Burt, an ecology major
to receive hll degree this
MIOOLP'ORT1 0.
JIIK'klg fl'om Bowling Green
·'
Oniveratty, ·and R.10dy Burt,

t

IIIII III

•

1h

a•

)

cans

Mourning
of
Columbus carne over the
weekend for his wife and
children who had spent the
holiday in Point Pleasant with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Walters, and in Middleport
with Mrs. Golda -Mourning.
David Price of Bloomington,
Ind. also spimt the holiday here
with hill grandmother, Mrs.
Mourning.
Christmas breakfast guests
of Mrs. Beulah White were Mr.
d M
Ch 1 Whit
an
rs.
ar es
e,
Jeffrey D'arst, and. Mr: and
Mrs. Howard Well.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Powers
and children, and Mrs. Grace
Pratt accompanied Mrs. Alma
Cartwright to her home in
Akron over
. h the
h weekend.
bee · Mrs.
'tin
Cartwng t as
? vlSt g
. with the Powers fanuly for the
past
two weeks.•• f u. ' and ;
Hollda
.
-y -gues... o ''" ,;
Mrs. John Lyons were Mr. and
·Mrs. Tom Lyons of PonUac,
-Mich ., Carleton Scherlitz,
Marion, Mich., and Mrs.
Bernard .Schramm of ZanesVille ..Friday, Mrs. John Lyons
and grandso11, Eddie Miller,
Mrs. Virginia Buchanan, and
Mrs. Helen Shuler returned
Mrs. Schramm to her home.

.

SCOT tAD

10 '

Given Family

so~~mes

'**************l.

gal.

MILK

POP

6 p~k

r : j/

'

Orange Drink

Holiday Dinner
Mrs. Olan Genheimer en.
tertained her family with a
holiday dinner recently at her
Forest Run home . Guesta were
Mr. and ~rs. William Knight,
S~ven, Richa~di JO~and BW,
Pomt Pleasant, W. Va.; Mr.
and Mrs. William Sheridan,
Jr., Maria, Anita, and
Christina, Rio Grande; Mi-.
and Mrs. Peter Vanica, Lon·
don, EngiBnd.
Mr. and Mrs. Vanica will
return to England after
spending several days in Bay
Village with his parents, and in
Virginia with friends. Guest
over the New Year's weekend
oL Mrs, Genheimer was her
gran cis on, Richard Knight .

Favorite Bread·

BONELESS STEW MEAL ..... !~:99e

La19e

.

·Loretta Faye Kiser to Wed

Pomeroy.... .

h,

l'l

lJ

· · ''
The an~ual fellowship tea to
which women of all Rio Grande
BaptiSt Association · churches
will be invited was planned flir
Feb. 7 at the MiddlePo/~ F.irst
· Baptist Church when the'S. H.
Hollaay guests of the Rev. Sanborn . Missionary Society
and Mrs. Charles Simons, Wes met Monday night at the
and 1 Carol, have been their church.
mothers, Mrs. Eva Carpel and
Chairman of the three circles
.l,. , - ' .
Mrs . Richelieu Simons of ol the Sanborn Society will
Philadelphia, Pa. Spending a serve as hostesses for the tea.
~week with-the Simons' family
Mrs. John Werner presided at
before Christmas was' Mrs. the meeting which opened with
Simons' brother, J,oe Carpel, an organ prelude by Mrs .
RACINE - l)fr. and Mrs. Okey Kiser of Racine are
Gera14 Anthony.
·
Philadelphia.
announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Ian·
their daughter, Loretta Faye, to Mr. Donald Keith McLead
narelli, Dave and Andy, of
n, 8on of Mr. and Mrs. Donald McLead of Route I, Shade. Wooster visited over the
The bride-elect is a 1970 graduate ol Southern Local High
holiday with Mr. and Mrs.
School and a 1971 graduate of Jackson Manpower Tr~ining
David Ohlinger.
Center. Mr. McLead is a 1966 graduate of Shade High School
Pvt. James E. Baer returned.
and is preaently employed by the 7-Up Bottling Co., Athens.
to Fort Lee, Va. Sunday night
Wedding plans are incomplete.
after spending the holidays
here with.his wife, Susan, and

.--

Everyday Low Price! .

USDA CHOICE BEEF

DIOPPED
SIRLOIN STEAK

.

P.prsonal Notes. '

.

GROUND

program was pres~~ted by the
lecturer, Nellie Vale.
The roll C!lil was "What can
we do for the Grange inf-972?"
Pam Holcomb read, "Seven
Rules for a Vital New Year";
Fannie PetUt re!'d "Garden of
We" and Wanetta Radekin
gave suggestions on "How to
get the most out of life."·

Program by bringing used eye .
glasses to the next meeUng.
· Erma Nelson was reported
on 'the sick lis!. The next
meeting Wl' ll 'be at the'home of
Mr. and .Mrs. G. A. Radekin on
the fourth Saturday evening of
January.
-IJ '
A potluck. supper preceded
the meeting and a literary

Middleport

49~~

~8 RAND

County" was discussed and
suggestions wer.e made to
bring about changes.
Mrs. Wanetta Radekin, home
econprnics c ha Irman, ~nnOunced the State Centenrual
CUp Cake contest )VOuid be held
at the next meeting. Members
wereaskedtoparticipateinthe
Nation,ai Grange Activity

.

,.

D s
. Annual re ~tOWS tp 1 ea 'ate et ~~~~~~; M~n~ndM~~~ek~:;

•

..

•

Plan~

..

$3.94 .

HOLDS 12 PAl R! .
: A real
occasion
cards at a
their value.

4 LADIES
SHOE .
BAG

buy.
greeting
fraction of
-

'

GIRLS AND MISSES.·
BULIS_Y ORLON

'

.

•

$0CKS

AND

.

'

Eqtii_PPED WITH
GROMMETS
FOR HANGING

KNEE HIGH

$ 88
OUT THEY GO- VALUES TO $3.98!

BOYS PANTS
. SIZES TO 18
Entire stock of boys :
straight leg pants
reductd. Deniins, twills
etc. Permanent press.

WHITE &amp; CIX.ORS
SIZES 6-8~
AND 9-11

$ 57

~

SAV-INGS YOU'WILL Ll

PR.
L

COME--- SAVE BIG 'I

......iiiiiioiiiii......_ _ _ _ _ _...

DEEP MARKDOWNS ON ALL

BOYS

WINTER
JACKETS
Not a big group-but
every one priced at big
savings.

•

PRICES SLASH~D _!CLEARANCE
VALUES
LONG SLEEVE
. TO $3.98.

WOMENS PANT

· . TOPs·
Setect from Nylons or
Polyester fabrics . Multistripes, solids, etc. Sizes S.M,·
I

l. . ;..

YOUR FAYOITE "TWO SIZE"
WOMENS SEAMLESS

PANTY

H0$1

"

" Ampion" nylon--exira soft,
super stretch and recovery for
your 'legs. Petite medium or
medium tall sizes. Regular 99 c.

FURNITURE

PAIR

,.

·'

�'.
'.

"'

'

'

'

;

.

-·

.

-

;
'

..

'

' L:S A
&lt;l)aUy~ntinei,Middleport-Pomeroy,O., Jan. 4, 1972 • · • ·
..
.
il' "LUE'-G. JTITJ\~ AL_L "'HR.OlJGH J972! GIVE
. .
..
. . . . DEDICATED TO MORE Ul.
,. .IHU - - - · ...
'

'

'

.•

-

•

LzUrel Grange

Activities
in
19{2
•

•

RUTLAND - Laure!' Grange
began 1972on New Year's night
at the home . of Mr. and Mrs.
R.obert Holliday with Evereti
HolcOOJb, I'!faster, presideing.
During !he b]ISiness meeting,
an officers·• conf.erence
discusSed plans ftir the coming
year: A membership com·
rnittee of Pam Holcomb,
Avanei · Holliday and Albert
Bolen .was appointed.
"Price Control in Meigs

ON THESE, 1=00~- V.

. MARK V MONEY-SAVERS!

. YOU _,CAN SAVE 30~ A LB.
SUPERIORS

USDA CHOICE

. MEATS

,__ _ _ _ _ _......,.

POLIStl SAUSAGE .

U. S. GOVT. INSPECTED
Ground Beef The Way You Like
It - Fresh, Lean and Low Pricedl

3 lb. 'l
5 •1·
lb. 39$

SUPERIORS .
BUDGET BACON ................. .
SUPERIORS PORK

FRIDAY ONLY

BEEF-

SAVE

IN ANY AMOUNT

40~

Ground Chuck .....~·

lb.

. ,~

SUPEiiORS
SLICED BOLOGNA ..... •· ......... ···••

.

69C

CUBE STEAK

SUPERIORS BEEF - SUPERIOR QUALITY

.

NECK BONE$ •••••.•••••.• ••••• ·····•

LB.

SUPERIORS
lb.
ALL MEAT WIENERS...................

-- ·

-·lb;79$
:g:E s'!~~~GE ................. ~ .. ~~: 59$

SUPERIORS ASSORTED
.
LUNCH MEATS ••, •••• .:..................

. lb.

l

.Personal Notes
.

,.

\

Royal _Puddings

Scot Lad Specials!-1WHOLE KERNEl -.;Low
CORN-GREEN BEANSPEAS-SHELLOUT BEANS

Aunt Nellie's

,- ,... ., .......... ··: ••.•..,.-. ........._. ..........-.-~ ...- ..--~o&gt;-.1.

~.

· Chocolate &amp;Vanilla
Laig( 6 oz. Box
boxes

cans

for

for

....

'

1~0

54.oz.

MARK V MONE·Y-SAVERS!

SCOT lAD

59~-

•

)ar

large

POTATO CHIPS
SEALTEST GRADE A

THURSDAY ONLY SALE!

RC COLA

CANNED

SHASTA

COKE

CANNED

8 ::~ 69

4

14oz.
pkg.

on~

cans
for

BISCUITS

DESSERT TREAT!

V ALUABLE COUPO N

SCOT LAD.

Several Flawrs!

Frozen Food

SPECIAL!

HOW

LIQUID
104 OFF

gal~

BANQUET MINCE OR PUMPKIN

PIES

.

3 for

,.

Redeemable
only at~"Expires

MARK VSTORE ·

3-21-71 .

74'

WITH
THESE
COUPONS!

_r:ARMERS •.

10~~ $1J!
.NESCAFE .

«

r:-::=~1.19

•

MARK V ·
STORE

/T'S TRUE"- - -

.

Choice

MARK VVALUABLE
,. ·
~.

Red Ripe

COUPON

SA"\J~ ~NJDU BUY A

. lb.

1lfe:m
1 SP£~

BANANAS .
·Golden
- Ripe

~

VALUES

1
'

pkg.

1

.

1b. ~-

..

FOUND

'"d

I

BAKER

MIDDLEPORT, 0

•
\

PICE

1.19

We AcceprFederal Food Stttmps
-~ e.HDNL992-3480
.

"We Reserve The Right To Limit Ouantiti .... "

ARE

. 11fTH THIS COUPQII

SUPER MARKfl •·9Pen pa)ly 9 to,10 • Sun.
.

K . .·

and SAVINGS ro.

'

'

DRIVE-IN
BANKING

, ,

I

..

' ). fl.

.' •' '

.

'T'

.
"Taking a Look at Our,
selves" was· the theme of the
program presented by Mrs.
Manning Kloes. Readings on
the topic were given by Mrs.
Mary Hughes , Mrs. Leora
Sigman, Mrs. Ethel Hughes,
Mrs. Paul Sffil!rt, Mrs. Fred
Hoffman, and Mrs. Bill Davill.
A general discussion followed
the repdings.
Mrs. Willis Anthony of the
Dorcas Circle had deyotions
basing her conunents on the
New Year. The love gift ser·
.vice was conducted by Mrs.
•

.

.

'

Diamonds

•

Avane I Holliday off.ered a life·
'time phiiqsophy to help people
enjoy "their work .. ·
.
The · lecturer concluded lhe
program by a reading, "Slow ·
Down in your 50s."
VISIT MARTINS
Visiting at the home of Mr.
and Mrs . Osby Martin
following the death of his
.mother, Mrs. Edgar Roush,
were ·Mr. and Mrs . . Robert

. Wine, Cleveland ; Mrs .
Charles Simons with Mts. Chaimer J. Eakins, Alliance; .
Harold Hubbard, Mrs. Charles Tom Hagen, Alliance; Mrs.
Searles, Mrs. Kioes, Mrs . Fred Robert Jones, GaiUpoliB, and
Lewis, Mrs. Davis, Mrs . Harry Reapp, Gaiilpolis.
Be\llah White, Mrs. Hoffman,
Mrs. Tony Fowler,,&gt;frs. Ariand
'·
King, Mrs. Jacob Turner and
Mrs. Willis Anthony participating. Prayer concluded
the meeting.
A dessert course was served
by Electa Circle members,
Mrs. King , Mrs . Werner, Mrs . .It 'takes the worry '--Fowler, Mrs. Gerald Anthony, out of weari1g denturoa.
and Mrs. Davill.

Beautiful diamond
engagement and wedding
ring sets. For your
comfort and protection
Jhey interlock, so they
don't twist apart.

ChewI

:A-iscilla®

By

~ESSLER

JEWELRY STORE
POMEROY

Advert isement

A DISCOUNT
O[PARTMf.NT STOitl
'-

.PT. PLEASANT- GALLIPOLIS- MASON

STARTS

PRICED FOR QUI.CK CLEARANCE! ..

WED.

WOMENS FLANNELETTE
TAUORED PAJAMAS
OR WALTZ GOWNS
.

Printed designs. Our regular priced
$2.27. sleepwear. Stock up for the
cold nights.
·

$

MORNING
AT

44

1

9:30 A.-.

SIZES 34 TO 40
SHOP YOUR
NEAREST STORE!

PRICES SLASHED FOR SAVINGS!

MENS HOUSE SI1PPERS
BLACK - BROVM
OR MAHOGQNY

HEAvY GAUGE VINYL!

PlASTI( TOTE

JANUARY
IS ATIME
TO SAVE!

$ 99

Gusset Double
handle. Floral print

4"

VALUES TO $3.27
MENS

· ALL HOLIDAY STYLES REDUCED!

INSULATED WomenaiiiPow•
THERMAL
IWEA

EXPANDO
RACK
A 67* VALUE!

SOCKS

·PLASTIC TABLECLOTHS
WJTH FOAM BACK I
$}22

Values to $5.95 . Orion$
acryctic; long sleeve styles
in pretty pastel colors. Size
34 to 40.

Regular 77c. Cushioned
lining, insulated all over
to retain body heat, keep
cold out All cotton.

52SIZE
X70
SOLIDSPRINTS-

PRICED ,TO CLEAR I

RLSWI

•

25 OR MORE IN PACKAGE I

PANTS ,

EVERYDAY

EVERY PAIR REDUceD
Bonded acrylic and other fabrics Jr slripes,

GREDING .
-

~-- --

·

prints, plaids. Sizes up to 14: Former values to

f

t-

SAVE

WITH THIS COUPON
•
Wjthout Coupon 3 Bar£

4

YOU

22 Ol

.i

i · .;
* * ..;;
i lfS*Quick!
Easy t·

69

SEE

IVORY

SHERBET
.,.

I~

Airman David H. Mora and
Ml88 Rhea Mora, student at
Ohio State University, sP.rit
the .. Christmas holiday with
their parenll!, \It'. and Mrs.
Donald Mora, and ..family,
Cheater Road. Airman Mora
returned Sunday to Lowery Air
Force Base, Colo. He was
accompanied to Port Columbus
by his mother and his fiancee,
Miss Debby Fitch, a nursing
student at the Good Samaritan
Hospital in Zanesville.
· Christmas weekend visitors
of Mr. and Mrs. Osby Martin
were ·Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Martin
and
daughter,
Stepbpie, A!Uance, and Mr.
·
and 'Mrs. Letcher Wine of
Cleveland.
DINNER GIVEN
Mr. and Mrs. Harold EbersMr. and Mrs. Ben Neutzling,
bach entertained with a post- Pomeroy, entertained with a
Chtistmas dinner party. Their family dinner party on the
guests were Mr. and Mrs. Sunday following Christmas.
James Ebersbach of Colum- Their guests were Mr. and
bus, Miss Darla Ellersbach and Mrs. Marvin Burt, Jeff,
Tom Siley, Marietta, and Mrs. Melanie, David ·and Randy,
Shirley Mills and David.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Riggs,
Rog'er Gilmore and Tim Maralyn and Caralyn, Chester
Glaze, both students at Ohio
State University, accompanied Road; Larry Tracy, New York ·
A ,.,h . h• .;
a ciBssmate, Jack Major, to his City, and Miss Sybil Ebers·
bach,
Pomeroy.
' 011g •
.;
home in North Carolina for a
.
'
holiday visit. From there the
coNTRmUToRS NOTED
For Today
. three went on . to Florida,
Sheral merchants con·
Common sense Is
. returning here on Christmas tributed food to the canteen
seeing things as they are.
Eve.
served by the American Legion .; and doing things as they .;
HOOle for Christmas with AuxlilaryofRacinePost602,at ~ · ought to be done.
~
Mr.andMrs. Elza Gilmore, Jr. the Dec. 28 bloodmobile visit 'it
· -C. E. Stowe
were their four sons, 'Mike, Contributing were Cross and
Rick, Rog~r and Joe, a second Soil, Racine; Racine Food
.;
year siJJdent at the Tri.County
Kroger, Weed ,
Technical
Institute
at Market,
Wholesale, M. and R.
Nelsonville. They were joined -Foodlin_er and Hoisurn Bakery,
for dinner by Miss Connie Mrs. John Boyd, president,
·
it
Grueser and Miss Linda reports,
.;
Wehrung.
John Lohae, Roger Gilmore an engineering major at Ohio
and Tim Glaze spent the New State University returned tO
Year's weekend in Cincinnati thelr respective scMols
Friday~ ~ly .
visiting Mr. and Mrs. Max Sunday after spending the
The Drive-In Window
Folmer and daughter.
holidays here with their
is Open
C: t:JoeGllrnore and Miss Unda parents, Mr. and Mrs. Marvin -..
AM
p
111
r') . _
g were the ,,ew
Years' Burt, Melanl e an d David .
« · .9 · · to·7 .M.
/ ( eeiend guests of Mr. and
Larry Tracy of New York
(Continuously)
.;
Mrs,. Barry Boyer of Me- City spent the Christmas
Other l&gt;anking Hours 9 lo J.;
· and 5 lo 7 as usual on.; ,
Connelsviile:
hoUday here visiting his
Fridays.
.
_ . it
Mrs. Russ Watson has mother, Mrs. Ray Riggs, and ·
._, _
relul'ned to her home here 'other relatives.
_r,
_,_PN
_
after spending Christmas with
Christmas guesta of Mr. and
Dr. and Mrs. J, B. Marshall Mrs. V. D. Edwards and son
~.
and family in Louisville_, Ky. David, were Mr. and Mrs. Earl
POMEROY. OHIO
.Member
FDIC
She Was accompanied home by Shrieves of The Plains, Mr. an d
be Fed
.Mem
r
era 1
ltJ:
John Marshall and his 'fiancee, Mrs . Larry Heines and ~
' Reserve Systefll
Miss Marilyn Bryan; who · daughter, Kristen, and Mrs. .
.
.;
returned to their home 9~'New ./Louise Heines, Pomeroy.
**************~
Year's Day.
·
Mrs. A. · R. Knight and
. grandson, Steven, were holiday
visitors in Glendale, W. Va.
11
with relatives and friencis . ·
Mrs. J. Edward Foster
returned Saturday following a
five week visit ill Kenton with
the Re1. and Mrs. Carver
willianis and children. Thurs- •
day Mrs. T. M. CottriU and
children of carroll came to
Kenton for Mrs. Foster and she
vWted • there until Saturday.
Jerry Orlh, husband of the
former MIII'Y Jane Cottrill wiU .
return Wednelday to his ship at
Alameda, Calif.
Mrs. Thoi-ne Cottrill of Logan
•
. was the holiday guest of Mr.
and Mrs. Joe Thorne. ·
Mr. and Mrl. Ben Neutzling.
T
were the New ' Year's .Eve
~ guests of Mr.
Mrs-'-'
•
· Plill Meinhart an~ idlss Erma
'
· Slnllh.
Jeff Burt, an ecology major
to receive hll degree this
MIOOLP'ORT1 0.
JIIK'klg fl'om Bowling Green
·'
Oniveratty, ·and R.10dy Burt,

t

IIIII III

•

1h

a•

)

cans

Mourning
of
Columbus carne over the
weekend for his wife and
children who had spent the
holiday in Point Pleasant with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Walters, and in Middleport
with Mrs. Golda -Mourning.
David Price of Bloomington,
Ind. also spimt the holiday here
with hill grandmother, Mrs.
Mourning.
Christmas breakfast guests
of Mrs. Beulah White were Mr.
d M
Ch 1 Whit
an
rs.
ar es
e,
Jeffrey D'arst, and. Mr: and
Mrs. Howard Well.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Powers
and children, and Mrs. Grace
Pratt accompanied Mrs. Alma
Cartwright to her home in
Akron over
. h the
h weekend.
bee · Mrs.
'tin
Cartwng t as
? vlSt g
. with the Powers fanuly for the
past
two weeks.•• f u. ' and ;
Hollda
.
-y -gues... o ''" ,;
Mrs. John Lyons were Mr. and
·Mrs. Tom Lyons of PonUac,
-Mich ., Carleton Scherlitz,
Marion, Mich., and Mrs.
Bernard .Schramm of ZanesVille ..Friday, Mrs. John Lyons
and grandso11, Eddie Miller,
Mrs. Virginia Buchanan, and
Mrs. Helen Shuler returned
Mrs. Schramm to her home.

.

SCOT tAD

10 '

Given Family

so~~mes

'**************l.

gal.

MILK

POP

6 p~k

r : j/

'

Orange Drink

Holiday Dinner
Mrs. Olan Genheimer en.
tertained her family with a
holiday dinner recently at her
Forest Run home . Guesta were
Mr. and ~rs. William Knight,
S~ven, Richa~di JO~and BW,
Pomt Pleasant, W. Va.; Mr.
and Mrs. William Sheridan,
Jr., Maria, Anita, and
Christina, Rio Grande; Mi-.
and Mrs. Peter Vanica, Lon·
don, EngiBnd.
Mr. and Mrs. Vanica will
return to England after
spending several days in Bay
Village with his parents, and in
Virginia with friends. Guest
over the New Year's weekend
oL Mrs, Genheimer was her
gran cis on, Richard Knight .

Favorite Bread·

BONELESS STEW MEAL ..... !~:99e

La19e

.

·Loretta Faye Kiser to Wed

Pomeroy.... .

h,

l'l

lJ

· · ''
The an~ual fellowship tea to
which women of all Rio Grande
BaptiSt Association · churches
will be invited was planned flir
Feb. 7 at the MiddlePo/~ F.irst
· Baptist Church when the'S. H.
Hollaay guests of the Rev. Sanborn . Missionary Society
and Mrs. Charles Simons, Wes met Monday night at the
and 1 Carol, have been their church.
mothers, Mrs. Eva Carpel and
Chairman of the three circles
.l,. , - ' .
Mrs . Richelieu Simons of ol the Sanborn Society will
Philadelphia, Pa. Spending a serve as hostesses for the tea.
~week with-the Simons' family
Mrs. John Werner presided at
before Christmas was' Mrs. the meeting which opened with
Simons' brother, J,oe Carpel, an organ prelude by Mrs .
RACINE - l)fr. and Mrs. Okey Kiser of Racine are
Gera14 Anthony.
·
Philadelphia.
announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Ian·
their daughter, Loretta Faye, to Mr. Donald Keith McLead
narelli, Dave and Andy, of
n, 8on of Mr. and Mrs. Donald McLead of Route I, Shade. Wooster visited over the
The bride-elect is a 1970 graduate ol Southern Local High
holiday with Mr. and Mrs.
School and a 1971 graduate of Jackson Manpower Tr~ining
David Ohlinger.
Center. Mr. McLead is a 1966 graduate of Shade High School
Pvt. James E. Baer returned.
and is preaently employed by the 7-Up Bottling Co., Athens.
to Fort Lee, Va. Sunday night
Wedding plans are incomplete.
after spending the holidays
here with.his wife, Susan, and

.--

Everyday Low Price! .

USDA CHOICE BEEF

DIOPPED
SIRLOIN STEAK

.

P.prsonal Notes. '

.

GROUND

program was pres~~ted by the
lecturer, Nellie Vale.
The roll C!lil was "What can
we do for the Grange inf-972?"
Pam Holcomb read, "Seven
Rules for a Vital New Year";
Fannie PetUt re!'d "Garden of
We" and Wanetta Radekin
gave suggestions on "How to
get the most out of life."·

Program by bringing used eye .
glasses to the next meeUng.
· Erma Nelson was reported
on 'the sick lis!. The next
meeting Wl' ll 'be at the'home of
Mr. and .Mrs. G. A. Radekin on
the fourth Saturday evening of
January.
-IJ '
A potluck. supper preceded
the meeting and a literary

Middleport

49~~

~8 RAND

County" was discussed and
suggestions wer.e made to
bring about changes.
Mrs. Wanetta Radekin, home
econprnics c ha Irman, ~nnOunced the State Centenrual
CUp Cake contest )VOuid be held
at the next meeting. Members
wereaskedtoparticipateinthe
Nation,ai Grange Activity

.

,.

D s
. Annual re ~tOWS tp 1 ea 'ate et ~~~~~~; M~n~ndM~~~ek~:;

•

..

•

Plan~

..

$3.94 .

HOLDS 12 PAl R! .
: A real
occasion
cards at a
their value.

4 LADIES
SHOE .
BAG

buy.
greeting
fraction of
-

'

GIRLS AND MISSES.·
BULIS_Y ORLON

'

.

•

$0CKS

AND

.

'

Eqtii_PPED WITH
GROMMETS
FOR HANGING

KNEE HIGH

$ 88
OUT THEY GO- VALUES TO $3.98!

BOYS PANTS
. SIZES TO 18
Entire stock of boys :
straight leg pants
reductd. Deniins, twills
etc. Permanent press.

WHITE &amp; CIX.ORS
SIZES 6-8~
AND 9-11

$ 57

~

SAV-INGS YOU'WILL Ll

PR.
L

COME--- SAVE BIG 'I

......iiiiiioiiiii......_ _ _ _ _ _...

DEEP MARKDOWNS ON ALL

BOYS

WINTER
JACKETS
Not a big group-but
every one priced at big
savings.

•

PRICES SLASH~D _!CLEARANCE
VALUES
LONG SLEEVE
. TO $3.98.

WOMENS PANT

· . TOPs·
Setect from Nylons or
Polyester fabrics . Multistripes, solids, etc. Sizes S.M,·
I

l. . ;..

YOUR FAYOITE "TWO SIZE"
WOMENS SEAMLESS

PANTY

H0$1

"

" Ampion" nylon--exira soft,
super stretch and recovery for
your 'legs. Petite medium or
medium tall sizes. Regular 99 c.

FURNITURE

PAIR

,.

·'

�.. '

.

6- The DaUy Sentinel, MldcDeport-PornProx, 0 ., Jan. 4,1972

·

~ ,,r ~~ntinel' Classifieds
"
••

"
Carpente~
•••'
...

,I

Heeds ville

·'

. I

'•.
' •!
"" ',.

News, Event

New~,

N9tes

.

'

../

.

'

• ,'" " '·"~··

2 516115
'
Of
QUAliTY

Pomeroy
·Motor Co•

.. ,

.
'

'

I .. For Sale

LONG El\ll!FF TO GO TO TH'
EIARN, DAIIJ(;E TONIGHT?
. '-.

.
Aluminum

';.;_

36" X23"
X.009
'

ALL WEATHER ROOFING

Shee~

CONSTRUCTION
PWMBING CO.

~

Pomeroy Motor Co.

'

Ic;i-II"R II=I= .. CAN I GIT Ol.JT

By Mrs. Lyle Balderson
1970CHEVELLEMALIBU HTCPE,
, . $2995 ·'
.
'
FOURNEWHOMES ·
Pfc. Ronald Orr of Fort
•',
Recent
guests
of
their
Low
mileage
by
local
owner
with
lois
of
\l;arranty
left
OPEN
FOR INSPECTION .
..... parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Monmouth, New Jersey, and
lactory air conditioned, V-8 engine, turbo-hydromatlc, p:
ONE
HOME
IN RACINE
.-.&amp;
Mrs. Ronald Orr of Colwnbus
steering,
gold
body,
sandalwood
vinyl
lop,
radio,
vinyl
•, '
,
..
"
TWQ.HOM'
E
&amp;fNSV·RACUSE
Culwell and other . relatives visited during the holidays with
inlerlor,'good w-w tires. This car Is load~ with extras.
USED OFFSET PLATES) ..
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT .
here were Mr. and Mrs . John his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
1969 CHEVROLET KINGS WOOD ST. WG.
'$2295
HAVE
!' ';,
&amp;
NO MONEY DOWN ·
'·
Culwell, Colwnbus, Mrs. Ed Orr and Randy .
Local 1 owner car &amp; less than 23,000 miles. factory air
MANY 'US£S
•'
ioo PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
conditioned, luggage rack, 2U V-8 engine, automatic,
Hensley, Mrs. Mary Collier
·'
240 Lin~oln St. ,
.A 3bedroom $16,900.00 home can .be porch~sed with a
Visiting Mr. and Mrs. Bill
· '-. and Mr. and Mrs, Rosecoe
power
sleerlng
.&amp; brakes, beautiful white finish &amp; green
Middleport, Ohio
monthly peymenlaslow as $65.00 for .a family with a base
'
20~
Congrove and Pamela during
vinyl lnte&lt;lor , new tires, radio &amp; all the deluxe acD.tle
Anthl!nY Plumbing
Taekelt of Flatwoods, Ky., and
salary
of
$5,000.00
ond
111ree
children.
7'1•
Pet.
annual
cessories.
the holidays were Hope Harper
we
have
a compltte. ·Homo
\.
percentage
rate.
Mr , aJ,d Mrs. T. H. Blanton and and family of HaJTisonville;
1968 OODGE CORONET
S1m
,,
B. for $1.00
Ma·lnltoiance
Strvlcl · tht
Greg, Ja ckson.
4 Dr. H:T. Cpe. Loi:all owner car &amp; shows the best of care,
Mrs. Wilma Wright of
year
around.
No
i!&gt;elttr what
· V-8, automatic; p. steering, radio, good tires, dark blue
Mrs. Florence Slanear t spenl Hockingport and Mrs. Fairy
your need. COmplete roof or
finish with vinyl interior. Priced to move.
some time recently with her
spouting ropelr. Interior or
Belle Fos~r and family of
son-in-law and daughter, Mr. Belpre.
exterior urpentry. ClUing
Hie and Paneling end Siding.
and Mrs . Scott Leeds, Rita,
Christmas dinner guests of
Compltle
· Plumbing I
Laura, Diane, Charles and
Mr. and Mrs. WaJTen Pickens
Heating.
·
. OPEH EYES. 1:00 P.M.
•
Scot\, al Rockledge, Fla .
CALL
were Mr. and Mrs, R. E.
Number
m-2550
O.y
'
111
Court
St.
f'PMEROY, OHIO"
·
BILL NELSON,t92-3657
Christmas Day gucsls at th~ Williams, Mr. and Mrs. Lyle
HILTON WOLFE, J49-3211
we heve 24 hr. emergency
Pomeroy,
Ohio
TOM
CROW,
992-2510
DALE DUTTON, 992-2534
home of Mr. and Mrs. Rolland Balderson and Kay, local, and
servlt:e.
'
·
992-5803
.
742-3947
Crabtree were their sons and Bill Dietl and Bob Day of
.742-4761
daugbters-in·lliw, Mr. and Mrs. Belpre.
WANT ADS
Card' of Thanks
Wanted To Blly
we areluliy insured
INFORMATION
Kenqeth Crabtree and Mr. and
Guests at the home of Mr.
. DEADLINES
I
WISH
to
thank
all
those
who
Of.D FURNITURE, Round Oak
Mrs. Donald Crablree and and Mrs. Ernest Whitehead
5
P.M.
Day
Before
'
sent
flowers,
cards
and
gills
tables, Brass beds, dishes,
Publication
Cindy and Mrs. Crabtree's and daughters Christmas night
to me during my stay In Grant . clocks, and -or '\complete
All
mercia!
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
mother, Murl Galaway .
included Mr. and Mrs. Harold
HoSpital. I greatly appreciate households . Write M. D.
POMEROY .
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
your kind thoughts and Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. John Dunham, . Sauer and daughlers of Mid- Will be accepted until9 a.m. for
Home Unils
prayers. May God bless you Call 992-6271.
-GUARANTEEDHOME &amp; AUTO
Connie, Yvonne, John Carl and dleport, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Day of Publication
all. Oleva Sweeney, Grove12-17-ttc
REGULATIONS
Phone 992-2094
Richard, New BQSton, Ill., Meredith and sons of Beverly,
port, Ohio.
992-2094
'
The Publisher reserves the
24-Hour Seroice
J-4. ltc
~pent several days here with Mr. and Mrs. Denver Weber
right to edit or reject any ads
For
Sale
606
E.
Main
Pomeroy
·Pomeroy Home &amp;
their parents, Mr. and Mrs. and sons and Mr. and Mrs.
deemed objectional. The
2
YEAR
OLD,
5
h.p.
Ward's
publisher will · not be
Carl Dqnham and Mr. and Mrs. Warren Pickens.
Open 8 Tits
Riding Mower - $100, also 9
responsible for more than one I WOULD like lo . express my
Monday
thru Saturday
Reed Jeffers and other
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Thomas · Incorrect Insertion.
sincere thanks to the doctprs ff. overhead garage door 606
E.
Main,
Pomeroy, o.
and
relatives. They were among and family of Cheshire spent
.. and nurses at Hol,zer Medical $50. Phone Reedsville 667·
RATES
3041
.
Center,
Dr.
Bulrlmas,
Racine
For Want Ad Service
the guests at a family Christmas Eve with her
Amerkan Legion, lrlends and _ __ __ _ _ _ _
• · ~-Oic
S cents per Word one Insertion
gathering at the home of Mr. paren ts , Mr. and Mrs. D. c.
neighbors for their !lowers,
Minimum Charge 7Sc
Stop In and See Our
and Mrs. Reed.. Jeffers on Riebel.
tood and cards during lhe 1969 SYLVAN' moblle home 12 cents per word three
death of my husband, Ernest $1,500 and lake over
Floor Display.
Christmas night. Other.s
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Weber consecutive Insertions.
D. Johnson. May God bless payments of $59.07. Phone
18
cents
per
word
six
conpresent were Mr. and Mrs. and family of Keno w~re recent secutive Insertions.
you all. ·Mrs. Emma Johnson
992-2098.
Gene Jeffers, Margie, Lester, dinner guesls of Mr. and Mrs.
and
children
.
I·4-4lp
NEIGLER -Building Supply .
25 ·Per Cent Discount on paid
From the largest T ...:;:;;
1-4-llp - - - - ---ads and ads paid within 10
Free estimate on building
Marco and Roberl, Mike Denver Weber and sons, David
Bulldozer Radiator to the
days.
-COAL,
limestone
.
Excelsior
yoUI
new home. Will drew
Lawson, Mr. and Mrs. Lavern and 1\fark. The dinner was
Salt Works, E. Main St., Smallest Heater Core.
CARD OF THANKS
prints
to suit 111e lay of your
Nathan Biggs
Jordan, Ruth Ann, Jane, observance of Mark's birthPomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
&amp; OBITUARY
land. Call Guy Nelgler,
\ ~adlator Specialist
Jackie, Danny, Betty and day.
H-lfc
suo for 50 word minimum . Lost ·
Racine, Ohio. For repair and
Each
additional
word
2c.
aluminum
siding, soflet and
IN
LEBANON
Township,
part
_
P
_
O
O_
D
_
L_E--1--S
-11-T
JeJTie Sue, Larry Birchfield,
Holiday guests at the home of
BLIND ADS
gutter , Call DOnald Smith,
Collie
an~ Shepherd, while
pupp
es,
ver
oy,
Danny Llewellyn, Gayle Mr. and Mrs. Walter Bro\Vn
Additional 25c Charge per
Racine, Ohio.
breast and black on back.. Parkvlew Kennels, Phone 992Complete
Advertisement.
5443
Chesser, Mrs. Faye Jordan and and David were Mr. and Mrs.
10-7-ttc
Answers to Rusty. Contact
·
,
Ph. 992-2174
Pomeroy
OFFICE HOURS
8-b-11c
-~---Mrs. Ida Denniscm and Richard Steve Cowdery of ParkersHubert Price 843-2641.
- - - -- - -- Remodeling
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m . Dally;
BACKHOE AND l!lOZER work.
,T"ffers, Niki and Krlsti.
burg, Mr. and Mrs. WiUiam
I-A
-3Ic
LONG BOTTOM - Five room
8:30 a.m . to 12:00 Noon ._ ___:______
Septic tanks Installed. G..,,ge
house, bath, business, or WIL
Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Thomas and son, Matthew, of
(Bill) Pullins. Phone 992-2418.
babysllllng In my
Kitchens,
Baths
Notice
storage
building
u.soo.
home.
Also
housework
2
days
4-2.5-ttc
Shaner of Athens spent an Enon and Miss Naomi Pickens
Phone
985-3529.
a
week.
Phone
992-5972.
evening with Mr. and Mrs. of Athens.
·
In Memory
INCOME TAX service, dally
12·'9-301c
Room Additions
HARRISON'S TV and Antenna
·
12-30-41c
except
Sunday,
evenings
by
--Walter Jordan.
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Martin
Service. Phone 992-2522.
appointment. Mrs . Wanda TROPICAL FISH, laney HAVE WELDER, will travel.
LOVING memory ot -our
And
Patios
6-10-llc
Mr. and . Mrs. Allred Rice, and son, Michael, of Alexan- INdear
Eblln, Laurel Cliff Road, 1 guppies, angels and breeders,
husband, father and
Local certified welder with
Steve, Rtck and fnend, dria va., visited with her
mile west ol Meigs County Bellas and supplies. Phone
grand! ather who departed his
mobile gas welder wants
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Fairground on Rt. 7 bypass. 992-5443.
lite on Jan. 4, 1964.
Cohunbus, and Mr. and Mrs. parents, Mr. and Mrs. Grant
welding
jobs.
Any
evening
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
Phone 992-2272.
days are long, the nights
after 6:30 and all day
12-30-lfc
662-3035.
. Dame Jordan , Bryan and • Boring and Mike during the The
1-3-JOic
sad ;
Saturday. Phone 992-5271.
2-12-llc
Ke1th, VISited thetr parents, holidays.
And, with each passing day, We - - - - - -- - APPLES - Fitzpatrick Or· _ __ _ _ ___._3· ·61p Real Estate For Sale
miss you, "Dear Dad."
Mr. and Mrs. Wilham Culwell
Anrl
Marie
Buckley,
SEWING In my home. Will chards, State Route 689,
READY-MIX CONCRETE de·
RACINE ...., 10 room
Sadly
mlll5ed
by
wife
Mirl,
make drapes, cushions . phone Wilkesville, 669-3787 . Fot Rent or Lease
livered right to your proJect.
on Christmas Day.
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
bath.
basement,
garage,
two
children a~ grandchildren.
Phone 992-6879.
9·3-flc
Fast and easy.
Free
lots . No reasonable offer
, :.
Mr. and Mrs. John Me- Che·s ter Buckley celebrated
TRAILER
HOME,
2-bedroom,
1-4- lip
1·3· 121p
992-3284.
estimates
.
Phone
refused.
Phone
949-4313.
~
furnished, located In' Meigs
• · C?~mlck,, Charleston, W: Va ., her first birthday, Dec. 29. Her - - - - - STEREO, Early American
Goegleln Ready-Mix Co.,
12-22-12tp
Co.; -Salem Township. Call or
KOSCOT KOSMET.ICS and wigs stereo, radio combination
Mlddi'I'Of.t, -Ohio. .
• · VlSited w1th Mr. and lllrs. Gay cak'e.. -was de'corated with Card of Thanks
write G. C. Oflttaao Elaine
AM-FM
radio,
4-speaker
'··:. ·
6-30-tfc
for
sale.
Brown's.
Phone
992·
~ohnson and family.
a musical doll which played
Rd., ColumbUs, Ohio 235·1227,' HOUSE, 1642 Lincoln Heights.
sound
syslem
.
Balance
$79.81
.
5113
.
1
1·3-3.fp
Call Danny Thompson, 992· SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
· Mr . and M~s. Larry Stanley "Happy Birthday." This was WE WISH to lhank our neighUse our budget terms. Call
12-31 -ttc
bors, friends and relatives for
--2196.
a~d Anna, Erie~ Pennsylvan~a, given to her by Mrs. Henry
rates. Ph. 4A6lheir kindness and sympathy ABOUT YOUR W.li!\iiHT ... 992.7085.
7-18-lfc REASONABLE
·
12-29-6tc
4782,
Gallipolis.
John Russell,
Auto
Sales
spent a vacation here With Graham. In addition to Ann's
during the illness and death ol
overweight ladies, teens and
Owner
&amp; Operator.
·
our
beloved
mother,
Edilh
their parenta, Mr. and. Mrs. parents helping her celebrate
men interested In a Weight WALNUT, modern style. '118 FORD pickup, 25.000 miles, 3 BEDROOM ranch type home,
5-12-ttc
Bale¥.
Special
thanks
to
those
Arbaugh Addition, Tuppers
stereo-radio, AM-FM radio, 4wide bed, custom cab Eugene Stanley, Albany, and were h~r grandparents Mr.
Watchers 1R) Class in
sending flowers and food, the
Plains. All new with total AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
$1.400;
'65
Mustang,
V-8,
4
speaker
sound
syslem,
4·
Pomeroy
write
:
Weight
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Smilh and and Mrs. Charles NeUU:an of
slaff of Holzer Medical
electric
and central air
speed automatic changer .
speed - $225 ; '64 Ford conWatchers ( R), 1863 Section
cancelled?
Lost
your
Center , Dr. Harder, Dr.
conditioning,
ball1and '4 tully
Nancy. local.
Syracuse, Brenda Boring and
Balance
$68.59
.
Use
our
vertible,
excellent
condition
Rd
..
Cincinnati,
Ohio
45237.
operator's
license?
Call
992·
Butrimas,
Rawlings-Coats,
carpeted, full bfsemenf, , 2~.
- $400. Phone 992-6048.
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
Mr. and Mrs. W....I..swelt, . Carolyn Griffin. Ann enjoyed
10·3-ttc
.
Rev .
Stanton
Smith,
12·29-6tc
1-4-51c garage In basement. See by
Middlep?rt, spe~t ChriStmas her gills and cards. She also
6·15-ttc
pallbearers, those caring for - - -- - appillntment, phOile 992-2196
up toone half. Bring your
the grave and all who helped SAVE
Day With theu .son and received a family heirloom
or 992-3585. Danny Thompson . UPHOLSTERING SERVICE,
PAINT
damage,
197~ Zig Zag '69 VOLKSWAGEN, : ·l Jor
sick
TV
to
Chuck's
TV
shop,
"
in any way . Daughter Rachel,
Financing available.
daughter-m-law, M.r. and Mrs. antique glaas set from Mrs.
sewing
machines,
still
In
sedan, deluxe~ 4 speed, t ·' dlo
151
Butternut
Ave.,
Pomeroy.
complete selection of fabrics
Son Eldon.
• 12-30-lfc
$1.100;
'69
Dodge
Swinger,
original cartons . No af Phone 992-5080.
Walter Swett, while their son- Alice Adams of PorUand. This
and vinyl to choose from .
1-4-ltp
2 door hardtop ; V-8, standard,
lachmenls needed as our
11 -21 -ttc
Pick-up and delivery.' Slater
in-law and daughter, Mr. and had been handed down from - - - - - yellow with black vinyl top; SIX ROOM house, 133 Butternut
controls are buill ln. Sews
Upholstering, Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, 2137
M~s. Arthur Reedy and Mrs. Jewett, who is 95 years of The Almanac
36,000 miles, still under
INSTRUCTION In organ and with I or 2 needles, makes
phone
992·3617.
Wadsworth Drive, Columbus,
bullonholes, sews on bullons,
warranty - $1 ,075. Phone 992plano. Gerald Holfner, phone
children , Pomeroy, were age and resides al Portland. By United Press International
12-27-JOfp
Ohio, phOne 237-4334.
6048 ..
monograms,
and
blind
hem
992-3825.'
guests on ChriStmas Eve a~ the
Mrs. Bess Larkins visited
Today Is Tuesday, January 4,
11-21 -lfc O' DELL WHEEL allghment
stitch. Full cash price, $38.50.
l-4-5fc
1-4-61c
Swett home. Recent vis1tors wilh Mrs. Doris Marks of the fourth day of 1972 with 362
Budge! plan available. Phone
located at Crossroads, Rl. 124.
~2 - 5641.
1968 PONTIAC Flreblrd, 350 Cu .
were Mr. and Mrs. C. E. chester during the holidays. to follow.
Complete
front end service,
For Rent
12-29-6lc
ln., 4-speed, black-red Intune up and brake service.
The moon Is between its full
Spencer and A. R. Caster, Other . guests at the Marks
terior. Phone 949-2921.
Wheels balanced elec.
Charleston, W. Va.
home were Mr. and Mrs. phase and last quarter.
4 ROOM HOUSE, furnished al BAND Saw and motor. Phone
.
Ironically
.
All
work
- - -- - -- --=·
·3-61p
124 Laurel St ., Pomeroy. Call 992-9981.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Greenlees James
Carruthers
and
The morning stars are
guaranteed.
Reasonable
992-5836 or inquire at 1~
12-31 -3tc '65 GMC 112-ton pickup, '62
rates. Phone m -3213.
and Rilla Rhoades, local, and daughter, Penny, of Louisville, Mercury and Jupiter.
7-27-lfc
Laurel St.
Dodge 'l'·lon pickup. Phone
The eveiling stars are Venllil,
Mrs. Rose Hooper, Darlene Mr. and Mrs. Bert Scrimsher,
12-30-61c --=========-~
,.
949-2972.
Mars
and
Saturn.
and Janet, Athens, were TeJTy Ca,rruthers of Louisville
1-3-31c
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
END OF YEAR
NICE trailer, 1 bedroom, Ideal
On this day in history :
Complete Service
Christmas ?ay guests of Mr. and ·Donna Radabaugh of
Broker
lor
couple.
10
miles
north
of
MERCURY
Monterey
In
gOOd
F'hone 949·3821
and Mrs. CIUton Fraley, Rusty Canton.
In 1885 Dr. William Grant of
110 Mechanic Street
Clearance
Sale!
Pomeroy , $65 a month . Phone
condition, power steering,
Racine, Ohio
Pomeroy, Ohio
and ·Roger.
.
Brenda Boring, student at Davenport, Iowa, perfonned
992-7479.
power brakes. See Weber
Crill Bradford
Buy
Any
Fuel
Oil
across from the,State Garage .
1-4-lfc
Mrs. Carl Ross and fa~tly, Bliss Business College, lhe first appendectomy. The
5-l-Ite
LOI)
~----_:._
12·30-3tp
Ctrcleville, Mrs . Mella FJSher Colwnbus, spent her hoUday lpatlent ma.de · a complete 2 BEDROOM mobile home,
IN MEIGS school district . · SEWING MACHINES. Repelr
· and Mr. and Mrs. Rex Cheadle, vacation with her parents, Mr. recovery.
turnlshed , utilities paid,
'64 PONTIAC Catalina con- Restricted area. $2,000.00.
service, ell makes. m -2284.
In 1937 about 10,000 Italian
available now. Phone 9'12·
Don, Kathy and Rex1e, at- and Mrs. Richard Borin~ and
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
vertible. Come look this over
NEW
7384.
tended a family gathermg at family
Authorized
Singer Sales and
at 105 Union Ave., Phone 992- 4 BEDROOMS,
troops landed in Spain to help
200
Gallons
Fuel
Oil
When
2 baths, hot
1-4-3tc
3293
between
5 p. m. and 8 p.
Service.
We
Sharpen Scissors.
the
nationalist
forces
in
that
You
Buy
Any
Siegler
Heater
th~ home of Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. · and Mrs. Lindley
water heal. Fireplace, dishm.
3-29-lfc
Full basement .
1ltam Cheadle on Chnstmas Osborne are spending the country's civil war.
TRAILER, Brown's Trailer Thru. Dec. ll.
12-30-61c washer.
Double
garage.
5
wooded
In 1967 speedboat racing
Park , Minersville, Ohio,
D.y.
winter with their daughter, Mr.
POMUOY ·
"
Real Estate F·or Sale
phone
992-3324.
52 CHEVROLET pickup, acres. Only $30,000.00.
Jacec, __
w.
CerNy,
Mer.
Mrs. Harold Oxley spent a . and Mrs. Richard Boring and driver Donald Campbell died
ffl·llll
'
1-4-6lc
pertecl cond III on, $900.
3 BEDROOMS
!Pew da ys m Canonsburg, family . Mrs. Boring is helping when his je~ powered boat
NICE 2-sfory home with lull
Serious Inquiries only. Phore NICE bath,
lloor furnace,
992-6083.
basement, 2 lots, new forced
enn., With her son-m-law and to care for her father who is ill. exploded.
FURNISHED and unfurnished
llreplace. Dining room,
352 FORD motor, 10x28 tractor
air
furnace. Near Pomeroy.
12·29-lOip
Close
to
school.
apartments.
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Visiting during the holidays
basement. Garage, Large lot .
lire, young tryers. Phone 843Elementary
School . Phone
Phone
992-5434.
Some fruit . Only•$8,000.00.
S ch ~mdl , Tina Mane and at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
A thought for the day : Irish
2778.
992-7284 to see.
10-18-ttc
1970
W-30
OLDSMOBILE
442,
kl
poet James Stephens said7
Robm .
!
12-30-61c
11-7-lfc
autom.atlc, factorr stereo
2 BEDROOMS
Mr . and Mrs. Dorsey Jordan , ~en B~ bey ;:ere ~· an~ "Women are wiser than men 50xl2 TWO BEDROOM mobile
tape.
Lots
of
extras.
Ike
new.
NICE little cozy place. Bath,
0
home, gas heat Sycamore
Rodney, Virginia , Rick and
rs ·
ered 1 an because they know less and
eall 992-2441 after s p.m.
beautiful
oak
floors .
Mobile
Homes
For
Sa~
St..
Middleport.
Phone
m
.
daughter, Patricia, of Phoenix, . understand more."
Ral h
11
-2&amp;-ttc
Basement.
Only
$6,
500.00.
.
P ' were Christmas Day Ariz ., and Mr. and Mrs. John
7004. or 993-3585 . Danny
Thompson.
guests of Mrs. J ordan 's father, Ludwick of~ West Jefferson.
3 BliDROOMS
12-23-lfc
Real Estate For Sale
NEAT, Jl/2 baths, large living, .,
Dana Turner
of nea r !atricia Meredith also visited Zanesville and Mr. and Robert
Har risonville. Others wh o
dining, wall to wall carpeting,
with her cousin , Ann Marie Sams and sons of Jane Lew, W. NICE TRAILER, I bedroom,
gas fl&lt;eplace . Modern kltjoin ed them for a fa mily Buckley .
Ideal for couple, 10 miles .
Va.
-che~, refrigerator, · electriC
north of Pomeroy. Phone 992- ·
Tom and Jimmie Buckley of
gathering were Mr. and Mrs.
range, garbage disposal.
Mrs. Helen Archir spent 6452.
Double garage.
Joe Sayre, Mr. and Mrs. Roger Westerville had lunch with Mr. Christmas with Mr. and Mrs.
12-11-llc
WE HAVE
•
1
Riggs and family and Mr. and and Mrs. Chester Buckley, Don Coleman and family of
2~
•
37
PROPERTIES
BEDROOM and 2 bedroom
I
Mrs . Tim Sayre and children, Christmas Day.
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
Colwnbus.
mobile homes. Adults only .
608 East Main
AS~OCIATE
all or Rutland Route.
Christmas dinner guests at
•
Phone 992-5592 .
Dinner guests of Anderson B.
POMEROY
992-3325
992-2371
Paul and W. C. Peck spent the home of Mr. andMrs: Gene Kibble during the hoUdays
12-19-lfc
12-31 -6fc
Christmas Eve at the home of Wilson were Mr. and Mrs. were Mr . ' and Mrs. Glen TRAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile
CLELAND REALTY
ON
608'
East
Main
·-~-~;:;.:1~""1;.-.J
their nephew, Mr . and Mrs. JWJ[or Congroveanddaughter, Milhoan of Parkersburg, Mr. · Court. Rt. 12•. Syracuse, Ohio
1220 Washington Blvd.
roMEROY
~~----~----------~'~· -MIDDLEPORT
- 2 or 3-.1··
· Belpre, Ohio
Thad Dye. Other guesls were Dee, and Mr. and' Mrs. D«vld and Mrs. David Smith and
992-2951.
bedrooms ,
bath,
full
: · ilit C'ipJclty
4-2'1fc
l'ilrs. Madge Blackwood and Hudson and son, Michael of family of Long Bottom and
- -----,-basement, 2 nice level lots, ·
Meytl'
Lisa [lye of Carrabelle, Fla.
60xl1, 2 BEDROOM, allNancy ·Bawn til Chester.
NEW 12 x 60, 2 bedroom· mobile . electric, air conditioned,
carpeted, paneled. A STEAL ·
Automat ca
• Mr . aiid Mrs. Dale Stansbury
home across !rom Bradbury
AT JUST $8,900.00, · ~~g~~d ~tr:.~~:r
''
8'x20' porch and aluminum
were hos ts to a family McCormick,
School. Call 992-5308 or see
Charleston, W.
awning, aluminum skltllng, BUSINESS- CARRY-OUT - ·
temps.
Auto.
Charles lewis, 2nd house
gathering on Christmas Day. Va., al~o called at the Crabtree Notice .
completely setup, beautiful .
Witter
level
DOING
A
GOOD
.
BUSINESS
.
~outh from Brad!;iur{ School.
locallon. Owne.,leavlng stale. ·
Those attending were Mr. and · home .
~ontrol, · · L'liif
SALE, 341 Park St., Middleport,
- EXCELLENT LOCATION
Pets welcome.
P~one 949-4892 or 992-5272.
·
llttr o,. Power
antiques
and
miscellaneous
Mrs. Clair Dale Stansbury,
- ONLY INTERESTED
12-27-ttc ·
Mr . and Mrs. Walter Jordan
,F'fn Agitator
12-30-llc
Items,
Wednesday,
Thursday,
PARTIES
NEED
CALL
'
- - - - ' ' - T - - - -Jolla Ann, Clara Mae and were guests of her parents, Mr.
,..lrm·I ·Pri11 ~
Friday and Saturday. •9 a.m. NEW 2-BED.ROOM, double
Moyte 1
FOR
THE
BEST
deal
in
a
new
Bobby, Groveport; Larry and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey, Karen
to 6 p.m.
RUTLAND- BUSINESS F()R.
wide, mobile home on lot In
Halo al Hoot
or
used
mobile
home,
try
Sla:nsbury, Reynoldsburg; Mr. and Tad in Albany on Christ.
1-4-llc
.SALE - has living ·quarters
Dryers
Syracuse . Completely fur Kanauya Mobile Home Sales,
.Surround ctcith"
over, MOO!'RN, 3 bedrooms,
nished. Phone 992-244-1 after 5 Ka~auga, Ohio.
and Mrs . Harold Oxley and Mr. mas Day. They also visited her
'With gentle, •v•n
p.m.
.
ball1, NOT VERY OLO. AN
and Mrs. ·Jerry Slansbury and grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. For Sale'
12-17-90tc
hnt. No hat apota,l
1-3-lfc
EXCELLENT BUSINESS
family, local.
~fne Ovtrdrylng, 1
1967
HONDA
SO,
Sears
electric
FOR
A
COUPLE
WITH
A
Lincoln Russell, Wolf Pen and
MOBILE
HOMES
.
Large
FIller Mt1h 1Llnt
organ.. Phone Athens 593-7391l. D.A.V. home .In . Pomeroy for selec!lon8 - 10 - 12wldes, I lo4
GREAT FUTURE. CALL
'Mrs . 'Hannah Gr_Qory, his grandmother, Mrs. Faye
FOR
INFORMA-TION.
1+3tc
group meetings and parties, bedrooms. bank repos and
Weli.HW.za In
Radcliff, visited with her raece Jordan and · other . local
phone 992-5247:
MAyfi'ta
.used,
some
practical!~
new
.
and ' husband, Mr. and Mrs. relatives. They were recent · HOME LITE C-51 chain saw,
'
lite!
12-19-12k ~ave up to '"· R. A. of Don T6. BUY OR SELL IN A
HURRY CALL US TODAY.
:, Arthur Crabtree, and Mrs, guests or her "grandmother,
good condition, $120. Phone 2 ~EDROOM
b'l h . ~ ·Miller', 705 Far,son Street,
HENRY E. CLELAND
247-2547 or 247-2543. "
mo ' e ome "' Belpre, Ohio by Kaiser
: Gregory's son-in-law and Mrs. · Ava Gilkey arid other
REALTOR
Racine etrea. Pho·1e 992-6329. Alumjnum, phone. '423-9531.
4
•. daughter; Mr. and Mrs. John relatives in Harrisonville.
Residence
992 ·2~8
• --- ..~- ---~ - 31 c '
·
1
12-14-l.lc
·· ..
· •
l~ - 1~c
142-4211
Arnold Gr•t•
·
·I'Hic
Rutland,
•
••
).
I; .
·,

, '

•

,.

Get Action! SeTitinelClassifiedS Get ReSu~ts! - ·

,.

.

.,'

.

.

'

·I

•
bNE THING t AI&gt;MtRI!
~lOuT I'ROFES$0~

Mtt! ... HE l&gt;O&amp;SN'T TRY
. tO ~IVE ANVONS ..,

The
Daily Sentinel

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

$5.55

WEReN'T
l1RAG ~NG,
OFFICER.

•• ABOUT T~E ACADeMIC:
l.EVEL OF HIS COURSE
•

VE5 ... LM'
TO liO

'THE 6MIE 11ME.

?

Service. &amp; Repair
Com

&amp;

NO'W TI:IAT 'fOU'VE
SiGI\IED THE . ~,.....
CONTRACTYOU'REA
TV STAR!!

Auto

Also Furnace Repair

OFFICE SUPPUES

PH. 992·7260

FURNITURE

C&amp;M
REFRIGERATION
SERVICE

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

WE J.l6T IW'PENEP
. 10 ACCEL.ERA'I£ AT

we

HAD TROUBLE WI1J.+'IHE:

EVezyrHING-!
YOU NAME:
IT 11'5

JOHNSON MASONRY

HA~PE,NED!

TEN PERCENT OF OUR STAFF

PlUI'Afli~~ .. THE HEAD OF
OU~ PRODUGnON DE·

Ol!T' WITH COLD5 OORE

iHROAT5, 'THE FW ...

P,ARTMENT ALMO&amp;T
WALKED OFF Tlif
u06 IN A HUFF ...

r!MSORRY

IASI&lt;ED!~-

992-1608

house.·

- - -- - - -

.

·'
Yri~E IAKI~I. uP A
COI.LI&lt;LTIOil FaOI..D
~!Silllli I ~ IS !IIi11!(1~ OtJ ~I[~~

.,..,-----~

fll0ii11E A:EL Of'

FOR IU-sALE ... IT'S

- THe RfSONAitCE
OF IT~ $1RIHGS, I

IT$

THIS OIIE, 11011EST
10M!

- - -- - -

- -- -- -

IF TliAT MI!Aita WHAT
PIAHO HAVE I Rl~

MUST AIISIJME THIS

IH$!RUM81T VIAS
OfiCE ~XTREMEL'(

Virgil B.
TEAFORD

- - -- - -

9ATINY 111000

VALUABLE!

~lgMffil!J];:::t,.:::ti
ACROSS
I. &amp;hisgal
play
4. Field
8. usarber
of Seville"
heroine
ll. Word for
Cassius
tt. Of man's
habits and
customs
13. Army post
It. However
(var.)
15. Florida
tinge
11. "The
Foggy
Foggy

.sa.

SIEGLER HEATER
GET FREE

DICK TRACY __ _

w;

r

1

-"

18. Abbrevla·
lion after ·

.12'.• 14' •

WiDE

M_ILLER

· MOBil! HOMES

CleLind

Realty ·

like a person.

0.

Venl~e"

10. Leveled
with
16. Evil
emperor
20. Bare
:1%. Countries
of Asia
U.Greet
goddeuof
agricul· ·
lure
tioner's
25. Killers ·
command Z'l.Puta
6. Alleviate
value on

30. Time for
loading
33. Della or
song ·
35. English
convey-

. ance

36. Ascend
40. Sailor's

KROJE

time

I

rJ

1'ERJIID [

WHA'T TO WeAR WH f;N
MILKIN6 A C0 W.
1
Now aJTanre the eircled letters

.
_ J
ouneoted
the above
cartoon.
=·==\.~~~=;;:~;t~~:;;~~to~~~olrm
theb7iurprise
answer,
as

~ ___:_Pril~·

1

.

,

II

tz. One-

,....+-+-+--l

III I

IBREHEYI

assent

Ll

Ytflr.rd•r'•

..:::
.. ~i:..::L::..:AIISWIII=~·::.._..._jl [
lumbi&lt;" NAIVE

I I X1 I J

CLIFT IITIA Y MUSTER

Annu:·r1 Thil fril'udly ff'fi Pr tnitn i•

you" - SINCERELY

""''If

essence

Sf, Elfin
35. Threefold
(comb.
form)
31. Give the
once.over
38. Resident
of

·

..

I SAUPE

9. "Moor of

19. Anything
harmful
Zl. "Whatis new?" ·'
zs. Steps
!8. 111do"
setting
zs.Recessed
window
Z9.0fthe
back
31.Madame
• Bovary
U.Rose

YOUR 'DI··

RUTlAND JURNITURE·~~

,. Second,
hand tire

names

•

WMP0/1390

c.,,.,

Unocramble these fO.r Jumbles,
one letter to each oqull'e, lo
form lour ordinary words.

1.0nce
more

some

We talk to
you

39. Latvian
capitsl
fl. Less lnex·
pensive
fl. Pallid
«.. Daisylike
flowers
45. Dole
46. Verily
DOWN
1.Yutang
Z. Join
S. Not in we
C. Eccleslutlcal
vestment
5. Execu-

-:.c

.'

i{OU SM

iJE'lL NEVER
BE MARR•Eo..

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it:
AX· YDLBAAXR
II, LONGFEI,LOW
One ietter simply standJr for another. In this sample A Is
wed for the three L'a, X for the two D's, etc. Single letter•.
apostrophes, the lenllb and formation of the words are ell
hints. Each day tHe code !etten are diJI'erent.
A CrJploll'a• QllolaUon

lUG

MV 'Toq

I DON'T LIKE'(()(), '{()U'RE
CRA861' ALL THE iiME AND

TOO 60691'!

ACSOEPGS. - M C T C.

Yesterday's pryptoquole: TIME IS THAT WlllCII MAN iS
ALWAYS TRYING TO KILt, BUt WHICH ENDS IN KILL·
lNG HIM·.-HERBERT SPENCER

ME SOME REA50N,S ...

r-----------, ,-...-------.....:...""'

MI , M
YTYFIMAE
JMHIB ,(, lUG
. MVTOCI . s·ADOEPa's ' ONOMEJiiB .SGJCCS N
TC

WE'LL , i.JH&lt;( NOT ' 6iVE

l2!!!!:U.JL..::::...;;!;;=::.Oi.b

(~ 'lii2·Kjtl.c Flmlurt a ~)'n: l irlh•, lue'.t
'

.

THOSE ARE ltEASONS ?

�.. '

.

6- The DaUy Sentinel, MldcDeport-PornProx, 0 ., Jan. 4,1972

·

~ ,,r ~~ntinel' Classifieds
"
••

"
Carpente~
•••'
...

,I

Heeds ville

·'

. I

'•.
' •!
"" ',.

News, Event

New~,

N9tes

.

'

../

.

'

• ,'" " '·"~··

2 516115
'
Of
QUAliTY

Pomeroy
·Motor Co•

.. ,

.
'

'

I .. For Sale

LONG El\ll!FF TO GO TO TH'
EIARN, DAIIJ(;E TONIGHT?
. '-.

.
Aluminum

';.;_

36" X23"
X.009
'

ALL WEATHER ROOFING

Shee~

CONSTRUCTION
PWMBING CO.

~

Pomeroy Motor Co.

'

Ic;i-II"R II=I= .. CAN I GIT Ol.JT

By Mrs. Lyle Balderson
1970CHEVELLEMALIBU HTCPE,
, . $2995 ·'
.
'
FOURNEWHOMES ·
Pfc. Ronald Orr of Fort
•',
Recent
guests
of
their
Low
mileage
by
local
owner
with
lois
of
\l;arranty
left
OPEN
FOR INSPECTION .
..... parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Monmouth, New Jersey, and
lactory air conditioned, V-8 engine, turbo-hydromatlc, p:
ONE
HOME
IN RACINE
.-.&amp;
Mrs. Ronald Orr of Colwnbus
steering,
gold
body,
sandalwood
vinyl
lop,
radio,
vinyl
•, '
,
..
"
TWQ.HOM'
E
&amp;fNSV·RACUSE
Culwell and other . relatives visited during the holidays with
inlerlor,'good w-w tires. This car Is load~ with extras.
USED OFFSET PLATES) ..
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT .
here were Mr. and Mrs . John his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
1969 CHEVROLET KINGS WOOD ST. WG.
'$2295
HAVE
!' ';,
&amp;
NO MONEY DOWN ·
'·
Culwell, Colwnbus, Mrs. Ed Orr and Randy .
Local 1 owner car &amp; less than 23,000 miles. factory air
MANY 'US£S
•'
ioo PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
conditioned, luggage rack, 2U V-8 engine, automatic,
Hensley, Mrs. Mary Collier
·'
240 Lin~oln St. ,
.A 3bedroom $16,900.00 home can .be porch~sed with a
Visiting Mr. and Mrs. Bill
· '-. and Mr. and Mrs, Rosecoe
power
sleerlng
.&amp; brakes, beautiful white finish &amp; green
Middleport, Ohio
monthly peymenlaslow as $65.00 for .a family with a base
'
20~
Congrove and Pamela during
vinyl lnte&lt;lor , new tires, radio &amp; all the deluxe acD.tle
Anthl!nY Plumbing
Taekelt of Flatwoods, Ky., and
salary
of
$5,000.00
ond
111ree
children.
7'1•
Pet.
annual
cessories.
the holidays were Hope Harper
we
have
a compltte. ·Homo
\.
percentage
rate.
Mr , aJ,d Mrs. T. H. Blanton and and family of HaJTisonville;
1968 OODGE CORONET
S1m
,,
B. for $1.00
Ma·lnltoiance
Strvlcl · tht
Greg, Ja ckson.
4 Dr. H:T. Cpe. Loi:all owner car &amp; shows the best of care,
Mrs. Wilma Wright of
year
around.
No
i!&gt;elttr what
· V-8, automatic; p. steering, radio, good tires, dark blue
Mrs. Florence Slanear t spenl Hockingport and Mrs. Fairy
your need. COmplete roof or
finish with vinyl interior. Priced to move.
some time recently with her
spouting ropelr. Interior or
Belle Fos~r and family of
son-in-law and daughter, Mr. Belpre.
exterior urpentry. ClUing
Hie and Paneling end Siding.
and Mrs . Scott Leeds, Rita,
Christmas dinner guests of
Compltle
· Plumbing I
Laura, Diane, Charles and
Mr. and Mrs. WaJTen Pickens
Heating.
·
. OPEH EYES. 1:00 P.M.
•
Scot\, al Rockledge, Fla .
CALL
were Mr. and Mrs, R. E.
Number
m-2550
O.y
'
111
Court
St.
f'PMEROY, OHIO"
·
BILL NELSON,t92-3657
Christmas Day gucsls at th~ Williams, Mr. and Mrs. Lyle
HILTON WOLFE, J49-3211
we heve 24 hr. emergency
Pomeroy,
Ohio
TOM
CROW,
992-2510
DALE DUTTON, 992-2534
home of Mr. and Mrs. Rolland Balderson and Kay, local, and
servlt:e.
'
·
992-5803
.
742-3947
Crabtree were their sons and Bill Dietl and Bob Day of
.742-4761
daugbters-in·lliw, Mr. and Mrs. Belpre.
WANT ADS
Card' of Thanks
Wanted To Blly
we areluliy insured
INFORMATION
Kenqeth Crabtree and Mr. and
Guests at the home of Mr.
. DEADLINES
I
WISH
to
thank
all
those
who
Of.D FURNITURE, Round Oak
Mrs. Donald Crablree and and Mrs. Ernest Whitehead
5
P.M.
Day
Before
'
sent
flowers,
cards
and
gills
tables, Brass beds, dishes,
Publication
Cindy and Mrs. Crabtree's and daughters Christmas night
to me during my stay In Grant . clocks, and -or '\complete
All
mercia!
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
mother, Murl Galaway .
included Mr. and Mrs. Harold
HoSpital. I greatly appreciate households . Write M. D.
POMEROY .
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
your kind thoughts and Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. John Dunham, . Sauer and daughlers of Mid- Will be accepted until9 a.m. for
Home Unils
prayers. May God bless you Call 992-6271.
-GUARANTEEDHOME &amp; AUTO
Connie, Yvonne, John Carl and dleport, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Day of Publication
all. Oleva Sweeney, Grove12-17-ttc
REGULATIONS
Phone 992-2094
Richard, New BQSton, Ill., Meredith and sons of Beverly,
port, Ohio.
992-2094
'
The Publisher reserves the
24-Hour Seroice
J-4. ltc
~pent several days here with Mr. and Mrs. Denver Weber
right to edit or reject any ads
For
Sale
606
E.
Main
Pomeroy
·Pomeroy Home &amp;
their parents, Mr. and Mrs. and sons and Mr. and Mrs.
deemed objectional. The
2
YEAR
OLD,
5
h.p.
Ward's
publisher will · not be
Carl Dqnham and Mr. and Mrs. Warren Pickens.
Open 8 Tits
Riding Mower - $100, also 9
responsible for more than one I WOULD like lo . express my
Monday
thru Saturday
Reed Jeffers and other
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Thomas · Incorrect Insertion.
sincere thanks to the doctprs ff. overhead garage door 606
E.
Main,
Pomeroy, o.
and
relatives. They were among and family of Cheshire spent
.. and nurses at Hol,zer Medical $50. Phone Reedsville 667·
RATES
3041
.
Center,
Dr.
Bulrlmas,
Racine
For Want Ad Service
the guests at a family Christmas Eve with her
Amerkan Legion, lrlends and _ __ __ _ _ _ _
• · ~-Oic
S cents per Word one Insertion
gathering at the home of Mr. paren ts , Mr. and Mrs. D. c.
neighbors for their !lowers,
Minimum Charge 7Sc
Stop In and See Our
and Mrs. Reed.. Jeffers on Riebel.
tood and cards during lhe 1969 SYLVAN' moblle home 12 cents per word three
death of my husband, Ernest $1,500 and lake over
Floor Display.
Christmas night. Other.s
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Weber consecutive Insertions.
D. Johnson. May God bless payments of $59.07. Phone
18
cents
per
word
six
conpresent were Mr. and Mrs. and family of Keno w~re recent secutive Insertions.
you all. ·Mrs. Emma Johnson
992-2098.
Gene Jeffers, Margie, Lester, dinner guesls of Mr. and Mrs.
and
children
.
I·4-4lp
NEIGLER -Building Supply .
25 ·Per Cent Discount on paid
From the largest T ...:;:;;
1-4-llp - - - - ---ads and ads paid within 10
Free estimate on building
Marco and Roberl, Mike Denver Weber and sons, David
Bulldozer Radiator to the
days.
-COAL,
limestone
.
Excelsior
yoUI
new home. Will drew
Lawson, Mr. and Mrs. Lavern and 1\fark. The dinner was
Salt Works, E. Main St., Smallest Heater Core.
CARD OF THANKS
prints
to suit 111e lay of your
Nathan Biggs
Jordan, Ruth Ann, Jane, observance of Mark's birthPomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
&amp; OBITUARY
land. Call Guy Nelgler,
\ ~adlator Specialist
Jackie, Danny, Betty and day.
H-lfc
suo for 50 word minimum . Lost ·
Racine, Ohio. For repair and
Each
additional
word
2c.
aluminum
siding, soflet and
IN
LEBANON
Township,
part
_
P
_
O
O_
D
_
L_E--1--S
-11-T
JeJTie Sue, Larry Birchfield,
Holiday guests at the home of
BLIND ADS
gutter , Call DOnald Smith,
Collie
an~ Shepherd, while
pupp
es,
ver
oy,
Danny Llewellyn, Gayle Mr. and Mrs. Walter Bro\Vn
Additional 25c Charge per
Racine, Ohio.
breast and black on back.. Parkvlew Kennels, Phone 992Complete
Advertisement.
5443
Chesser, Mrs. Faye Jordan and and David were Mr. and Mrs.
10-7-ttc
Answers to Rusty. Contact
·
,
Ph. 992-2174
Pomeroy
OFFICE HOURS
8-b-11c
-~---Mrs. Ida Denniscm and Richard Steve Cowdery of ParkersHubert Price 843-2641.
- - - -- - -- Remodeling
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m . Dally;
BACKHOE AND l!lOZER work.
,T"ffers, Niki and Krlsti.
burg, Mr. and Mrs. WiUiam
I-A
-3Ic
LONG BOTTOM - Five room
8:30 a.m . to 12:00 Noon ._ ___:______
Septic tanks Installed. G..,,ge
house, bath, business, or WIL
Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Thomas and son, Matthew, of
(Bill) Pullins. Phone 992-2418.
babysllllng In my
Kitchens,
Baths
Notice
storage
building
u.soo.
home.
Also
housework
2
days
4-2.5-ttc
Shaner of Athens spent an Enon and Miss Naomi Pickens
Phone
985-3529.
a
week.
Phone
992-5972.
evening with Mr. and Mrs. of Athens.
·
In Memory
INCOME TAX service, dally
12·'9-301c
Room Additions
HARRISON'S TV and Antenna
·
12-30-41c
except
Sunday,
evenings
by
--Walter Jordan.
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Martin
Service. Phone 992-2522.
appointment. Mrs . Wanda TROPICAL FISH, laney HAVE WELDER, will travel.
LOVING memory ot -our
And
Patios
6-10-llc
Mr. and . Mrs. Allred Rice, and son, Michael, of Alexan- INdear
Eblln, Laurel Cliff Road, 1 guppies, angels and breeders,
husband, father and
Local certified welder with
Steve, Rtck and fnend, dria va., visited with her
mile west ol Meigs County Bellas and supplies. Phone
grand! ather who departed his
mobile gas welder wants
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Fairground on Rt. 7 bypass. 992-5443.
lite on Jan. 4, 1964.
Cohunbus, and Mr. and Mrs. parents, Mr. and Mrs. Grant
welding
jobs.
Any
evening
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
Phone 992-2272.
days are long, the nights
after 6:30 and all day
12-30-lfc
662-3035.
. Dame Jordan , Bryan and • Boring and Mike during the The
1-3-JOic
sad ;
Saturday. Phone 992-5271.
2-12-llc
Ke1th, VISited thetr parents, holidays.
And, with each passing day, We - - - - - -- - APPLES - Fitzpatrick Or· _ __ _ _ ___._3· ·61p Real Estate For Sale
miss you, "Dear Dad."
Mr. and Mrs. Wilham Culwell
Anrl
Marie
Buckley,
SEWING In my home. Will chards, State Route 689,
READY-MIX CONCRETE de·
RACINE ...., 10 room
Sadly
mlll5ed
by
wife
Mirl,
make drapes, cushions . phone Wilkesville, 669-3787 . Fot Rent or Lease
livered right to your proJect.
on Christmas Day.
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
bath.
basement,
garage,
two
children a~ grandchildren.
Phone 992-6879.
9·3-flc
Fast and easy.
Free
lots . No reasonable offer
, :.
Mr. and Mrs. John Me- Che·s ter Buckley celebrated
TRAILER
HOME,
2-bedroom,
1-4- lip
1·3· 121p
992-3284.
estimates
.
Phone
refused.
Phone
949-4313.
~
furnished, located In' Meigs
• · C?~mlck,, Charleston, W: Va ., her first birthday, Dec. 29. Her - - - - - STEREO, Early American
Goegleln Ready-Mix Co.,
12-22-12tp
Co.; -Salem Township. Call or
KOSCOT KOSMET.ICS and wigs stereo, radio combination
Mlddi'I'Of.t, -Ohio. .
• · VlSited w1th Mr. and lllrs. Gay cak'e.. -was de'corated with Card of Thanks
write G. C. Oflttaao Elaine
AM-FM
radio,
4-speaker
'··:. ·
6-30-tfc
for
sale.
Brown's.
Phone
992·
~ohnson and family.
a musical doll which played
Rd., ColumbUs, Ohio 235·1227,' HOUSE, 1642 Lincoln Heights.
sound
syslem
.
Balance
$79.81
.
5113
.
1
1·3-3.fp
Call Danny Thompson, 992· SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
· Mr . and M~s. Larry Stanley "Happy Birthday." This was WE WISH to lhank our neighUse our budget terms. Call
12-31 -ttc
bors, friends and relatives for
--2196.
a~d Anna, Erie~ Pennsylvan~a, given to her by Mrs. Henry
rates. Ph. 4A6lheir kindness and sympathy ABOUT YOUR W.li!\iiHT ... 992.7085.
7-18-lfc REASONABLE
·
12-29-6tc
4782,
Gallipolis.
John Russell,
Auto
Sales
spent a vacation here With Graham. In addition to Ann's
during the illness and death ol
overweight ladies, teens and
Owner
&amp; Operator.
·
our
beloved
mother,
Edilh
their parenta, Mr. and. Mrs. parents helping her celebrate
men interested In a Weight WALNUT, modern style. '118 FORD pickup, 25.000 miles, 3 BEDROOM ranch type home,
5-12-ttc
Bale¥.
Special
thanks
to
those
Arbaugh Addition, Tuppers
stereo-radio, AM-FM radio, 4wide bed, custom cab Eugene Stanley, Albany, and were h~r grandparents Mr.
Watchers 1R) Class in
sending flowers and food, the
Plains. All new with total AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
$1.400;
'65
Mustang,
V-8,
4
speaker
sound
syslem,
4·
Pomeroy
write
:
Weight
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Smilh and and Mrs. Charles NeUU:an of
slaff of Holzer Medical
electric
and central air
speed automatic changer .
speed - $225 ; '64 Ford conWatchers ( R), 1863 Section
cancelled?
Lost
your
Center , Dr. Harder, Dr.
conditioning,
ball1and '4 tully
Nancy. local.
Syracuse, Brenda Boring and
Balance
$68.59
.
Use
our
vertible,
excellent
condition
Rd
..
Cincinnati,
Ohio
45237.
operator's
license?
Call
992·
Butrimas,
Rawlings-Coats,
carpeted, full bfsemenf, , 2~.
- $400. Phone 992-6048.
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
Mr. and Mrs. W....I..swelt, . Carolyn Griffin. Ann enjoyed
10·3-ttc
.
Rev .
Stanton
Smith,
12·29-6tc
1-4-51c garage In basement. See by
Middlep?rt, spe~t ChriStmas her gills and cards. She also
6·15-ttc
pallbearers, those caring for - - -- - appillntment, phOile 992-2196
up toone half. Bring your
the grave and all who helped SAVE
Day With theu .son and received a family heirloom
or 992-3585. Danny Thompson . UPHOLSTERING SERVICE,
PAINT
damage,
197~ Zig Zag '69 VOLKSWAGEN, : ·l Jor
sick
TV
to
Chuck's
TV
shop,
"
in any way . Daughter Rachel,
Financing available.
daughter-m-law, M.r. and Mrs. antique glaas set from Mrs.
sewing
machines,
still
In
sedan, deluxe~ 4 speed, t ·' dlo
151
Butternut
Ave.,
Pomeroy.
complete selection of fabrics
Son Eldon.
• 12-30-lfc
$1.100;
'69
Dodge
Swinger,
original cartons . No af Phone 992-5080.
Walter Swett, while their son- Alice Adams of PorUand. This
and vinyl to choose from .
1-4-ltp
2 door hardtop ; V-8, standard,
lachmenls needed as our
11 -21 -ttc
Pick-up and delivery.' Slater
in-law and daughter, Mr. and had been handed down from - - - - - yellow with black vinyl top; SIX ROOM house, 133 Butternut
controls are buill ln. Sews
Upholstering, Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, 2137
M~s. Arthur Reedy and Mrs. Jewett, who is 95 years of The Almanac
36,000 miles, still under
INSTRUCTION In organ and with I or 2 needles, makes
phone
992·3617.
Wadsworth Drive, Columbus,
bullonholes, sews on bullons,
warranty - $1 ,075. Phone 992plano. Gerald Holfner, phone
children , Pomeroy, were age and resides al Portland. By United Press International
12-27-JOfp
Ohio, phOne 237-4334.
6048 ..
monograms,
and
blind
hem
992-3825.'
guests on ChriStmas Eve a~ the
Mrs. Bess Larkins visited
Today Is Tuesday, January 4,
11-21 -lfc O' DELL WHEEL allghment
stitch. Full cash price, $38.50.
l-4-5fc
1-4-61c
Swett home. Recent vis1tors wilh Mrs. Doris Marks of the fourth day of 1972 with 362
Budge! plan available. Phone
located at Crossroads, Rl. 124.
~2 - 5641.
1968 PONTIAC Flreblrd, 350 Cu .
were Mr. and Mrs. C. E. chester during the holidays. to follow.
Complete
front end service,
For Rent
12-29-6lc
ln., 4-speed, black-red Intune up and brake service.
The moon Is between its full
Spencer and A. R. Caster, Other . guests at the Marks
terior. Phone 949-2921.
Wheels balanced elec.
Charleston, W. Va.
home were Mr. and Mrs. phase and last quarter.
4 ROOM HOUSE, furnished al BAND Saw and motor. Phone
.
Ironically
.
All
work
- - -- - -- --=·
·3-61p
124 Laurel St ., Pomeroy. Call 992-9981.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Greenlees James
Carruthers
and
The morning stars are
guaranteed.
Reasonable
992-5836 or inquire at 1~
12-31 -3tc '65 GMC 112-ton pickup, '62
rates. Phone m -3213.
and Rilla Rhoades, local, and daughter, Penny, of Louisville, Mercury and Jupiter.
7-27-lfc
Laurel St.
Dodge 'l'·lon pickup. Phone
The eveiling stars are Venllil,
Mrs. Rose Hooper, Darlene Mr. and Mrs. Bert Scrimsher,
12-30-61c --=========-~
,.
949-2972.
Mars
and
Saturn.
and Janet, Athens, were TeJTy Ca,rruthers of Louisville
1-3-31c
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
END OF YEAR
NICE trailer, 1 bedroom, Ideal
On this day in history :
Complete Service
Christmas ?ay guests of Mr. and ·Donna Radabaugh of
Broker
lor
couple.
10
miles
north
of
MERCURY
Monterey
In
gOOd
F'hone 949·3821
and Mrs. CIUton Fraley, Rusty Canton.
In 1885 Dr. William Grant of
110 Mechanic Street
Clearance
Sale!
Pomeroy , $65 a month . Phone
condition, power steering,
Racine, Ohio
Pomeroy, Ohio
and ·Roger.
.
Brenda Boring, student at Davenport, Iowa, perfonned
992-7479.
power brakes. See Weber
Crill Bradford
Buy
Any
Fuel
Oil
across from the,State Garage .
1-4-lfc
Mrs. Carl Ross and fa~tly, Bliss Business College, lhe first appendectomy. The
5-l-Ite
LOI)
~----_:._
12·30-3tp
Ctrcleville, Mrs . Mella FJSher Colwnbus, spent her hoUday lpatlent ma.de · a complete 2 BEDROOM mobile home,
IN MEIGS school district . · SEWING MACHINES. Repelr
· and Mr. and Mrs. Rex Cheadle, vacation with her parents, Mr. recovery.
turnlshed , utilities paid,
'64 PONTIAC Catalina con- Restricted area. $2,000.00.
service, ell makes. m -2284.
In 1937 about 10,000 Italian
available now. Phone 9'12·
Don, Kathy and Rex1e, at- and Mrs. Richard Borin~ and
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
vertible. Come look this over
NEW
7384.
tended a family gathermg at family
Authorized
Singer Sales and
at 105 Union Ave., Phone 992- 4 BEDROOMS,
troops landed in Spain to help
200
Gallons
Fuel
Oil
When
2 baths, hot
1-4-3tc
3293
between
5 p. m. and 8 p.
Service.
We
Sharpen Scissors.
the
nationalist
forces
in
that
You
Buy
Any
Siegler
Heater
th~ home of Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. · and Mrs. Lindley
water heal. Fireplace, dishm.
3-29-lfc
Full basement .
1ltam Cheadle on Chnstmas Osborne are spending the country's civil war.
TRAILER, Brown's Trailer Thru. Dec. ll.
12-30-61c washer.
Double
garage.
5
wooded
In 1967 speedboat racing
Park , Minersville, Ohio,
D.y.
winter with their daughter, Mr.
POMUOY ·
"
Real Estate F·or Sale
phone
992-3324.
52 CHEVROLET pickup, acres. Only $30,000.00.
Jacec, __
w.
CerNy,
Mer.
Mrs. Harold Oxley spent a . and Mrs. Richard Boring and driver Donald Campbell died
ffl·llll
'
1-4-6lc
pertecl cond III on, $900.
3 BEDROOMS
!Pew da ys m Canonsburg, family . Mrs. Boring is helping when his je~ powered boat
NICE 2-sfory home with lull
Serious Inquiries only. Phore NICE bath,
lloor furnace,
992-6083.
basement, 2 lots, new forced
enn., With her son-m-law and to care for her father who is ill. exploded.
FURNISHED and unfurnished
llreplace. Dining room,
352 FORD motor, 10x28 tractor
air
furnace. Near Pomeroy.
12·29-lOip
Close
to
school.
apartments.
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Visiting during the holidays
basement. Garage, Large lot .
lire, young tryers. Phone 843Elementary
School . Phone
Phone
992-5434.
Some fruit . Only•$8,000.00.
S ch ~mdl , Tina Mane and at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
A thought for the day : Irish
2778.
992-7284 to see.
10-18-ttc
1970
W-30
OLDSMOBILE
442,
kl
poet James Stephens said7
Robm .
!
12-30-61c
11-7-lfc
autom.atlc, factorr stereo
2 BEDROOMS
Mr . and Mrs. Dorsey Jordan , ~en B~ bey ;:ere ~· an~ "Women are wiser than men 50xl2 TWO BEDROOM mobile
tape.
Lots
of
extras.
Ike
new.
NICE little cozy place. Bath,
0
home, gas heat Sycamore
Rodney, Virginia , Rick and
rs ·
ered 1 an because they know less and
eall 992-2441 after s p.m.
beautiful
oak
floors .
Mobile
Homes
For
Sa~
St..
Middleport.
Phone
m
.
daughter, Patricia, of Phoenix, . understand more."
Ral h
11
-2&amp;-ttc
Basement.
Only
$6,
500.00.
.
P ' were Christmas Day Ariz ., and Mr. and Mrs. John
7004. or 993-3585 . Danny
Thompson.
guests of Mrs. J ordan 's father, Ludwick of~ West Jefferson.
3 BliDROOMS
12-23-lfc
Real Estate For Sale
NEAT, Jl/2 baths, large living, .,
Dana Turner
of nea r !atricia Meredith also visited Zanesville and Mr. and Robert
Har risonville. Others wh o
dining, wall to wall carpeting,
with her cousin , Ann Marie Sams and sons of Jane Lew, W. NICE TRAILER, I bedroom,
gas fl&lt;eplace . Modern kltjoin ed them for a fa mily Buckley .
Ideal for couple, 10 miles .
Va.
-che~, refrigerator, · electriC
north of Pomeroy. Phone 992- ·
Tom and Jimmie Buckley of
gathering were Mr. and Mrs.
range, garbage disposal.
Mrs. Helen Archir spent 6452.
Double garage.
Joe Sayre, Mr. and Mrs. Roger Westerville had lunch with Mr. Christmas with Mr. and Mrs.
12-11-llc
WE HAVE
•
1
Riggs and family and Mr. and and Mrs. Chester Buckley, Don Coleman and family of
2~
•
37
PROPERTIES
BEDROOM and 2 bedroom
I
Mrs . Tim Sayre and children, Christmas Day.
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
Colwnbus.
mobile homes. Adults only .
608 East Main
AS~OCIATE
all or Rutland Route.
Christmas dinner guests at
•
Phone 992-5592 .
Dinner guests of Anderson B.
POMEROY
992-3325
992-2371
Paul and W. C. Peck spent the home of Mr. andMrs: Gene Kibble during the hoUdays
12-19-lfc
12-31 -6fc
Christmas Eve at the home of Wilson were Mr. and Mrs. were Mr . ' and Mrs. Glen TRAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile
CLELAND REALTY
ON
608'
East
Main
·-~-~;:;.:1~""1;.-.J
their nephew, Mr . and Mrs. JWJ[or Congroveanddaughter, Milhoan of Parkersburg, Mr. · Court. Rt. 12•. Syracuse, Ohio
1220 Washington Blvd.
roMEROY
~~----~----------~'~· -MIDDLEPORT
- 2 or 3-.1··
· Belpre, Ohio
Thad Dye. Other guesls were Dee, and Mr. and' Mrs. D«vld and Mrs. David Smith and
992-2951.
bedrooms ,
bath,
full
: · ilit C'ipJclty
4-2'1fc
l'ilrs. Madge Blackwood and Hudson and son, Michael of family of Long Bottom and
- -----,-basement, 2 nice level lots, ·
Meytl'
Lisa [lye of Carrabelle, Fla.
60xl1, 2 BEDROOM, allNancy ·Bawn til Chester.
NEW 12 x 60, 2 bedroom· mobile . electric, air conditioned,
carpeted, paneled. A STEAL ·
Automat ca
• Mr . aiid Mrs. Dale Stansbury
home across !rom Bradbury
AT JUST $8,900.00, · ~~g~~d ~tr:.~~:r
''
8'x20' porch and aluminum
were hos ts to a family McCormick,
School. Call 992-5308 or see
Charleston, W.
awning, aluminum skltllng, BUSINESS- CARRY-OUT - ·
temps.
Auto.
Charles lewis, 2nd house
gathering on Christmas Day. Va., al~o called at the Crabtree Notice .
completely setup, beautiful .
Witter
level
DOING
A
GOOD
.
BUSINESS
.
~outh from Brad!;iur{ School.
locallon. Owne.,leavlng stale. ·
Those attending were Mr. and · home .
~ontrol, · · L'liif
SALE, 341 Park St., Middleport,
- EXCELLENT LOCATION
Pets welcome.
P~one 949-4892 or 992-5272.
·
llttr o,. Power
antiques
and
miscellaneous
Mrs. Clair Dale Stansbury,
- ONLY INTERESTED
12-27-ttc ·
Mr . and Mrs. Walter Jordan
,F'fn Agitator
12-30-llc
Items,
Wednesday,
Thursday,
PARTIES
NEED
CALL
'
- - - - ' ' - T - - - -Jolla Ann, Clara Mae and were guests of her parents, Mr.
,..lrm·I ·Pri11 ~
Friday and Saturday. •9 a.m. NEW 2-BED.ROOM, double
Moyte 1
FOR
THE
BEST
deal
in
a
new
Bobby, Groveport; Larry and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey, Karen
to 6 p.m.
RUTLAND- BUSINESS F()R.
wide, mobile home on lot In
Halo al Hoot
or
used
mobile
home,
try
Sla:nsbury, Reynoldsburg; Mr. and Tad in Albany on Christ.
1-4-llc
.SALE - has living ·quarters
Dryers
Syracuse . Completely fur Kanauya Mobile Home Sales,
.Surround ctcith"
over, MOO!'RN, 3 bedrooms,
nished. Phone 992-244-1 after 5 Ka~auga, Ohio.
and Mrs . Harold Oxley and Mr. mas Day. They also visited her
'With gentle, •v•n
p.m.
.
ball1, NOT VERY OLO. AN
and Mrs. ·Jerry Slansbury and grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. For Sale'
12-17-90tc
hnt. No hat apota,l
1-3-lfc
EXCELLENT BUSINESS
family, local.
~fne Ovtrdrylng, 1
1967
HONDA
SO,
Sears
electric
FOR
A
COUPLE
WITH
A
Lincoln Russell, Wolf Pen and
MOBILE
HOMES
.
Large
FIller Mt1h 1Llnt
organ.. Phone Athens 593-7391l. D.A.V. home .In . Pomeroy for selec!lon8 - 10 - 12wldes, I lo4
GREAT FUTURE. CALL
'Mrs . 'Hannah Gr_Qory, his grandmother, Mrs. Faye
FOR
INFORMA-TION.
1+3tc
group meetings and parties, bedrooms. bank repos and
Weli.HW.za In
Radcliff, visited with her raece Jordan and · other . local
phone 992-5247:
MAyfi'ta
.used,
some
practical!~
new
.
and ' husband, Mr. and Mrs. relatives. They were recent · HOME LITE C-51 chain saw,
'
lite!
12-19-12k ~ave up to '"· R. A. of Don T6. BUY OR SELL IN A
HURRY CALL US TODAY.
:, Arthur Crabtree, and Mrs, guests or her "grandmother,
good condition, $120. Phone 2 ~EDROOM
b'l h . ~ ·Miller', 705 Far,son Street,
HENRY E. CLELAND
247-2547 or 247-2543. "
mo ' e ome "' Belpre, Ohio by Kaiser
: Gregory's son-in-law and Mrs. · Ava Gilkey arid other
REALTOR
Racine etrea. Pho·1e 992-6329. Alumjnum, phone. '423-9531.
4
•. daughter; Mr. and Mrs. John relatives in Harrisonville.
Residence
992 ·2~8
• --- ..~- ---~ - 31 c '
·
1
12-14-l.lc
·· ..
· •
l~ - 1~c
142-4211
Arnold Gr•t•
·
·I'Hic
Rutland,
•
••
).
I; .
·,

, '

•

,.

Get Action! SeTitinelClassifiedS Get ReSu~ts! - ·

,.

.

.,'

.

.

'

·I

•
bNE THING t AI&gt;MtRI!
~lOuT I'ROFES$0~

Mtt! ... HE l&gt;O&amp;SN'T TRY
. tO ~IVE ANVONS ..,

The
Daily Sentinel

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

$5.55

WEReN'T
l1RAG ~NG,
OFFICER.

•• ABOUT T~E ACADeMIC:
l.EVEL OF HIS COURSE
•

VE5 ... LM'
TO liO

'THE 6MIE 11ME.

?

Service. &amp; Repair
Com

&amp;

NO'W TI:IAT 'fOU'VE
SiGI\IED THE . ~,.....
CONTRACTYOU'REA
TV STAR!!

Auto

Also Furnace Repair

OFFICE SUPPUES

PH. 992·7260

FURNITURE

C&amp;M
REFRIGERATION
SERVICE

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

WE J.l6T IW'PENEP
. 10 ACCEL.ERA'I£ AT

we

HAD TROUBLE WI1J.+'IHE:

EVezyrHING-!
YOU NAME:
IT 11'5

JOHNSON MASONRY

HA~PE,NED!

TEN PERCENT OF OUR STAFF

PlUI'Afli~~ .. THE HEAD OF
OU~ PRODUGnON DE·

Ol!T' WITH COLD5 OORE

iHROAT5, 'THE FW ...

P,ARTMENT ALMO&amp;T
WALKED OFF Tlif
u06 IN A HUFF ...

r!MSORRY

IASI&lt;ED!~-

992-1608

house.·

- - -- - - -

.

·'
Yri~E IAKI~I. uP A
COI.LI&lt;LTIOil FaOI..D
~!Silllli I ~ IS !IIi11!(1~ OtJ ~I[~~

.,..,-----~

fll0ii11E A:EL Of'

FOR IU-sALE ... IT'S

- THe RfSONAitCE
OF IT~ $1RIHGS, I

IT$

THIS OIIE, 11011EST
10M!

- - -- - -

- -- -- -

IF TliAT MI!Aita WHAT
PIAHO HAVE I Rl~

MUST AIISIJME THIS

IH$!RUM81T VIAS
OfiCE ~XTREMEL'(

Virgil B.
TEAFORD

- - -- - -

9ATINY 111000

VALUABLE!

~lgMffil!J];:::t,.:::ti
ACROSS
I. &amp;hisgal
play
4. Field
8. usarber
of Seville"
heroine
ll. Word for
Cassius
tt. Of man's
habits and
customs
13. Army post
It. However
(var.)
15. Florida
tinge
11. "The
Foggy
Foggy

.sa.

SIEGLER HEATER
GET FREE

DICK TRACY __ _

w;

r

1

-"

18. Abbrevla·
lion after ·

.12'.• 14' •

WiDE

M_ILLER

· MOBil! HOMES

CleLind

Realty ·

like a person.

0.

Venl~e"

10. Leveled
with
16. Evil
emperor
20. Bare
:1%. Countries
of Asia
U.Greet
goddeuof
agricul· ·
lure
tioner's
25. Killers ·
command Z'l.Puta
6. Alleviate
value on

30. Time for
loading
33. Della or
song ·
35. English
convey-

. ance

36. Ascend
40. Sailor's

KROJE

time

I

rJ

1'ERJIID [

WHA'T TO WeAR WH f;N
MILKIN6 A C0 W.
1
Now aJTanre the eircled letters

.
_ J
ouneoted
the above
cartoon.
=·==\.~~~=;;:~;t~~:;;~~to~~~olrm
theb7iurprise
answer,
as

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Annu:·r1 Thil fril'udly ff'fi Pr tnitn i•

you" - SINCERELY

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essence

Sf, Elfin
35. Threefold
(comb.
form)
31. Give the
once.over
38. Resident
of

·

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9. "Moor of

19. Anything
harmful
Zl. "Whatis new?" ·'
zs. Steps
!8. 111do"
setting
zs.Recessed
window
Z9.0fthe
back
31.Madame
• Bovary
U.Rose

YOUR 'DI··

RUTlAND JURNITURE·~~

,. Second,
hand tire

names

•

WMP0/1390

c.,,.,

Unocramble these fO.r Jumbles,
one letter to each oqull'e, lo
form lour ordinary words.

1.0nce
more

some

We talk to
you

39. Latvian
capitsl
fl. Less lnex·
pensive
fl. Pallid
«.. Daisylike
flowers
45. Dole
46. Verily
DOWN
1.Yutang
Z. Join
S. Not in we
C. Eccleslutlcal
vestment
5. Execu-

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.'

i{OU SM

iJE'lL NEVER
BE MARR•Eo..

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it:
AX· YDLBAAXR
II, LONGFEI,LOW
One ietter simply standJr for another. In this sample A Is
wed for the three L'a, X for the two D's, etc. Single letter•.
apostrophes, the lenllb and formation of the words are ell
hints. Each day tHe code !etten are diJI'erent.
A CrJploll'a• QllolaUon

lUG

MV 'Toq

I DON'T LIKE'(()(), '{()U'RE
CRA861' ALL THE iiME AND

TOO 60691'!

ACSOEPGS. - M C T C.

Yesterday's pryptoquole: TIME IS THAT WlllCII MAN iS
ALWAYS TRYING TO KILt, BUt WHICH ENDS IN KILL·
lNG HIM·.-HERBERT SPENCER

ME SOME REA50N,S ...

r-----------, ,-...-------.....:...""'

MI , M
YTYFIMAE
JMHIB ,(, lUG
. MVTOCI . s·ADOEPa's ' ONOMEJiiB .SGJCCS N
TC

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l2!!!!:U.JL..::::...;;!;;=::.Oi.b

(~ 'lii2·Kjtl.c Flmlurt a ~)'n: l irlh•, lue'.t
'

.

THOSE ARE ltEASONS ?

�''

,
•

'

·'

8 -The-~ily ~nth&gt;el , Middlepori-POIII&lt;'I'oy, 0., Jan. 4, 1972

/

Indiana, former Sen. Eugene ~sts.
grant them equal time
McCarthy of Minnesota, and
Two Republican · congress- to respond to Nixon 's..
Mayors - Sam Y,orty of Los men will oppose Nix- · hour-long television interview
Aflgeles and John Lindsay of on
In
New
Hamp- onthenetworkSundaynight.
New York . The 1968 nominee , shire. They are Rep. John
Sen.' Hubert H. Humphrey, Ashbrook of Ohio, who . has
An aide to McCloskey said
plans to ma.ke his announce- criticized Nixon for failing to,. the congressman would carry
men I next Monday. "-• keep his promises to conserva- his ca~ !o the I&gt;ederal
Rresident Nixon came d step lives, and Rep. Paul McCios- Cornmumcah~ns Comrmsswn
closer to declaring his candida- key of California, wpo has 1f McCloskey 1s turned down by
cy for the Republi9an nomina' attacked Nixon fw failing to . CBS. .
.
lion Monday when nominating end America~ parlicipation in Musk1e and McCarthy flied
petitions were filed on his the Indochina War. ·
petitions at Sprmgf1eld, Ill.,
behalf for New Hampshire's . McCloskey and the Democra- Monday to place their nam~s
March 7 primary, the first of tic National Committee on the March 21 Illm01s;
the presidential primary con- Monday asked CBS to presidential primary ballot.

By United Press International
·Sen. EdmundS. Muskie, who
, has traveled to 33 states since
September to build support for
a bid for the Democratic
nomination for president, goes
on national television toniRht to
make his candidacy official.
The Maine -senator, who was
the Democrats' candidate for
vice president in 1968, will air
his elght-minute'annouocement
at 8:20p.m. EST over CBS. He
already is considered toe frontrunner in the race.
Muskie will become the
seventh announced Democratic
candida te , joiningSens. George
McGovern of South D~ko ta,
Henry M. Jackson of Washington, and Vance Hartke of

Collins
(Cor:tinued from page I I
their leader, George Wright.
Wright, spokesman,' asked ·
for ·council's ,support In
obtaining the former
Pomeroy Junior High School
building as a recreation
center. Council advised
Wright that consent for the
use of the building would
have to be obtained from the
Meigs Local School Board.
Wright agreed· to see board
members. He said a petition, if
necessary, would be obl&lt;tined .
Council agreed to , help the
group and concurrect that the
idea "was a good one."
The mayor's report for the
month of December showing
receipts of $1,375 was accepted.
Jane Walton, clerk, read the
fire department's report
submitted by fire chief, Henry
Werry, for 1971.
It showed :
Out of town calls: brush fires
8, cars 6, houses imd buildings
8, cwo false ·alarms, $18,550 in
damage~ 431 man hours and '
three lr1ps to Albany train
wreck.
In town : brush fires 8, cars
and trucks, ·9, house and
buildings 10, total damage
$91,950, and one false alarm.
Council adjourned to go into
executive · session to discuss
salaries and probationary
periods of newly hired
policemen.
At~nding were Baronick,
Poulin, Werry, Snouffer,
Russell, Mees, and Collins,
council members; Jane
Walton, clerk ; Phyllis Hennessy, . treasurer, and Jed ·
Webster, chief of police.

..--------"'t
. JR.E
MEIGS THEA
Tonight, Jan. 4
FOOL'S PARADE

&lt;Technicolor)

James Stewa·rt
George Kennedy

" GP"

Disney Colorurtoons:
Goofy and Wilbur
Joey, the Dog
Pluto's Blue Note

SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
Wednesday &amp; Thursday
January S-6

NOT OPEN

McCarthy refused to sign a
loyalty oath required by lliin9is
state law.
Jackson continued his campaign in Florida, which holds
its primary. March 14. He
passed up the New Hampshire
primary to concentrate on the
Florida race.
·

PT. PLEASANT - Mason
County's sheriff's race has
already proved to be a popular
one with five persons tossing
their hats into the ring on the
first day of filings. Also on the
first day there was one filing
for County Commissioner and
one for committeeman of
Hannan District.
Five ' persons ,
two
Republicans and
three
Democrats, all from Point
Pleasant, got early starts in
·seeking
the
sheriff's
nomination . James C. Hall of
1909 Main Street and James B.
Craddock of 1407 Elm Street
are the first two Republican
contenders. Hall actually was
the first person to file entering
his candidacy at 8:31 a.m. in
the office of Howard Schultz,
Circuit Clerk.
George E. Johnson of 194
Park Drive was the first to file
in the race on the Democratic
ticket.
Others
seeking
nomination on this ticket are
Kenneth Dean Pridemore of
the Camp Conley area and C.
E. "Charlie" Adkins of 3306
Franklin Avenue.
John A. "Andy" Wilson filed
for County Conunjssioner on
the Democratic ticket and John
H. Brumfield of Glenwood will
seek the post of committeeman
on the Republican ticket in
Hannan District.
Filings for county races may
be eQter.ed in the Circuit
Clerk's.. office until noon on
February 5.
Craddock was born and
raised in Charleston and is 51
years old. He graduated from .
Charleston High School and
attended · Morris Harvey
College. Amember of the U. S.
Army, heis a World War II
ve~ran and served in the
European
Theatre
of
Operations. He Is a member of
the Veterans of Foreign Wars
and the American Legion.
Mr. Craddock is well known
in Point Pleasant, having
served as a city councilman
from the First Ward. He is a
member of the Main Street
Baptist Church and is a
member of Local 781 (1ronwor)Ws).
Mr . Craddock is married, to
the former Betty Smith · of

Charleston and they are the
parents of three sons.
Presently he is owner and
operator of Craddock's Texaco
Service Station on Jackson
Avenue.
Johnson is a former Mason
County Sheriff having served a
four year ~rm preceding that
of Sheriff Troy Huffman.
Johnson is -widely known
throughout this county where
he has served the public all his
adult life. He was born and
raised in Mason County and
was educated in local schools.
Johnson, a veteran of World_
War II, served in the European
Theatre of Operations and is a
member of the American
Legic.1 .
While serving as a local
sheriff he participated in many
sheriff ' s org aniza ti ons
throughout the state. He is a
former member of the West
Virginia Sheriffs Association
where he served as an officer.
He was a member as well as a
vice presiden l. He is also a
former member of the National
Sheriff's Association.
The sheriff's candidate was
the first · secretary and
treasurer of the Mason County
Little Men's League. He has
been active in the Point
Pleasant Volunteer Fire
Department where he was a
psst officer and director during
his 18 year membership .
Johnson served as assistant
chief for several years.
During the time his son,
Danny, was in Point Pleasant
High School , Johnson was
active in the Big Black Backers

and held an officer's post.
In 1943 he married the former Ruth Hall of Huntington
and Danny is their only child,
and is married and lives in
Glenville.
'·
This "· is Kenneth D.
Pridemore's first venture .into
politics on the office seeking
level. Pridemore is 34 years old
and is an employe of the City
Ice and Fuel Company.
He was bOrn in Ohio, but
raised in Lincoln County,
where he graduated from
Hamlin High School in 1956. He
.moved to Mason County in 1957
and lived here since that time.
Pridemore perhaps made
most of his friends during the
time he was associated with his
uncle, Troy Huffman, who for a
number of years operated the
Texaco Service Center at Third
Street where Pridemore was
employed.
He is married to the former
Maury Mayes of Henderson
and they are the parents of
three children , Kennah who is
12, Todd Dean who is 9 and
Keith Allen who is six years
old.
Adkins, who is another
sheriff's candidate on the
Democratic ticket, is 41 years
old and is en employe of the
Kaiser Aluminum Company
plant at Ravenswood where he
has worked for 14 years.
He is an active member of
the Mason-Jackson Labor
Council and has served as a
Steelworkers Union official.
This is his first venture into
county politics. He is a
member of the local Moose
Club.
Adkins was born in Kanawha
County, but has lived in Mason
County for 14 years. He is
(Con tinned from page I )
married and is the father of
superintendent for a number of three children, Charles Jr .,
years. He was chairman of the who is 17, Doug 16, and Gail
administrative board, a
member of the Men's
Brotherhood, and was chairman of the Pastor's Parish
Relations Commit~e. During (Continued from page I)
World War II he was husband, Lafe Williamson, in
associated with Spencer 's 1937; a sister, and a brother.
Market three years in MidSurviving are a son, Earl,
dleport:
•
Born at West Shade, Mr. Detroit, Mich. ; three dsughMrs . • W.
A.
Spencer is survived by his wife, lers,
(Sarah) Gibbs , Pomero)';
Harriett Mcintosh Spencer; a
Mrs . F. W. (Jeanne)
son, Marvin, and daughter-inHundley, Gahanna, and Mrs.
law, Judy, Pomeroy Route 4;
two grandchildren, Brian and Dale (Joyce) Richards,

Spencer

Georgia

Melinda
Spencer;
two
brothers, Sidney and Roger
Spencer of Pomeroy; an aunt,
Mrs. Etta Will, Belpre; an
uncle , Homer Goeglein,
Pomeroy; several nieces and
nephews ; a brother-in-law_and
his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Mcintosh of Dayton.
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p.m . Friday at the Enterprise United Methodist
Church with the Rev. Stanton
Smith officiating . .Burial will
be in Rock Springs Cemetery.
Friends may call at the Nye
Avenue residence anytime
until the time of servi~u,.

-·.SHIRt

~

FIN-ISHING
'

SAME DAY
SERVICE
In At9- 0ul At S

Open a checking account with
us. It's safer than cash to pay those
monthly bills. And, it's convenient
as a dated reminder of what bills
.you've already paid.
· · Get the Facts

·tltbens ,atiorull
....C,~J~ICINNATI

MIDDLEPORT
OHIO

Mh• .JLE PORT, OH 10 •
, Member Federal Dep•U lnaurr. •ce Corporallllll

Use Our Free Parkingl..ot .

Robinson's Deaners
216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy

Lancaster i a sister-in-raw,

Mrs . Phil Williamson; eight
grandchildren , and seven
great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p.m. Thursday at the
Ewing Funeral Home with the
Rev . W. H. Perrin officiating.
Burial will be in ·Beech Grove
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home any time.

Barrel,
Man ,Made the.Trip
.
.

UTI'LEHORSE; Eo«land (UPI) -Sieve Smlth, ZZ, r
discovered ihaC po11nds Is too big for a mu to be fired
fronflfcllllni'O. Smith answered·a news..JM!I' ad cllllug
for someooe "wllllng wtravel" and found the Job WIS a
bumall eaDDOoball.
' ·
He took the Job, dooned the speelal elotbet aDd
climbed Into the barrel for the lint time aad somebody
lit ·the clw'ge. Sll!ith's body wedged lallde the ~!ami,
the eano011 blew fa baU and he ended up In a lake !$feet
away sLUI stuck laslde ball the barrel.
.
'!He's too lat," said Joe Weston-Webb, owoer of a .
loeal carnival. ''Neyer_'mlnd, I qui~" said Smith.

!I•

•

of the 1870s

Dies on Mon~y

COOLVILLE .,;- S. W; Wilbur
Dodd, 83, Coolville Route 1,
died Monday evening at St.
.t.oseph Hospital in · Parker'"
burg.
,
Mr. Dodd was born Feb. 10,
1888 In Athens Couilty, the son
of tJ.e late l)amuel P. and
Esther Townsend Dodd.
Hartke Sllid Monday he would
Besides his parents, he was
enter May 2 primary· In his
preceded in death.by his wife,
"
home state of Indiana as well
Lenni~, in 1941; three brothers,
as ihe &amp;ne in New Hampshire.
and a sister.
.
He predicted he would win
Mr. Dodd, a retired school
both.
'teacher, operated his own
printing business in Coolville
several years. He was. a
WASHINGTON (UPI)- The as much ils $11 million from the Sunday School teacher at the
government's sky marshal $37 million program in the Ireland CongregallOIIIII Church
program - once blUed as a business year' startlllg ~uly 1. a number of ·years and was a
major deterrent to airliner
Since the program started in former member of the
hijacking - may be cut back September, 1970, the govern- Coolville Grange. Mr. Dodd
by almost one-third, it was ment has trained about 1,500 belonged to Covlville Lodge
l"llrned today.
sky marshals.- But the mar- 527 IOOFLodge and Rebekah
who is 13 years old.
Govermnent sources said the shals, who are armed, have yet- Fidelity Lodge
Andy Wilson is- another Office of Management and - to thwart an lnflight hiJlicklng.
Surviving are a daughter, .
candidate who is well-known in Budget is considerin~ cutting
On ~one occasion when a Mrs. Donald J .. (Leona)
Mason County where. ne:. .has··· .~ ... ......... ··· .. · ·· ·· .................
~Y marS!Jal ":as aboard a . Powell, Santiago, Calif.; two
served in public office for a ~w;m::::;;;;@.......w.&amp;;; .. :: hijacked airhner - an step·grandsons Donald J.
MARIETrA, Ohio (UPI) American Airlines 717 Jumb_o Powell, . Jr., 'Belltngham,
number of years. Wilson
currently
is
seeking
- A $400,000 damage suit jet forced to fly to Cuba - 1t Wash., and'(1eorge H. Powell,
nomiootion on the Democratic
was filed . today In was decided not to risk an Fairfield, Calif.
Funeral services will be held
ticket for County ComWashington County Common attempt to capture the
missioner. He is a former
Pleas Court charging con· hiJack.er.
at 2p.m. Thursday at the White
But if the sky marshals are .to Fwieral Home bere with the
member of the three·member
tractors of the Harmor
court where he served for one
House Nursing Home with · be :'deplaned," they won't lose Rev, Robert Fetty officiating.
Burial will be in the Ireland
six-year term. He served one
negligence causing the Jan. their jobs, the source said.
six year term as Couniy Clerk.
9, lt70 flr,e which kllleci 31 Most of them wiD be used to
Cemetery. Friends may call at
bolster the ' airport boarding
the funeral home after noon on
Wilson is also well-known as a
perso01.
..
security
system,
which
bas
Wednesday.
former Civil Defense Director .n. The suit, the first to be
and beld this positlofi' at the
filed In connection wltb the liecome the main block to
time of the Silver Bridge
blaze, was on bebaU of Mary hiJackers, or will work for the
disaster,
CargUI Smithy, who wao Customs Bureau, which is in
charge· of recruiting sky
sOD
kllled In the fire.
Eight defendants were marshals.
named In the suit, all
charged with various counts
of oegUgence In the lack of
Mrs. Jessie Sisson, 87,
,lostalllag sprlnlder systems,
Middleport Route 1, died
fireproof carpeting and ·
,
Monday evening at Veterans
failure to Install other
Homer W. Clark, 71,
Memorial Hospital.
safety precautions.
Charleston, W. Va., a former
Mr$. Sisson was born Jan. 20;
Named In the suit were the
resident of Middleport, died
1884
in Btadbury, the daughter
Health Service, Inc.; Vernon
unexpectedly late Monday
of the late Joseph ,H. and
V. Vadlkln and Son, Inc., a
David
Nease
was
elected
night at Charleston General
Martha Hysell Gilmore.
supply paint and wallpaper
president
and
Denny
Hill,
vice
Hospital.
,
Besides her parenta, she was
firm; Welser and Cawley,
president,
for
1972
Monday
Surviving are two daughters,
preceded in . d"llth ·by· her
Inc., who Installed the
night
when
the
Southern
Local
Mrs. Clyde E. (Helen) Belcher,
husband,
George B.; in 1964,
carpel; Chesler Camden,
_
School
District
Board
of
Charleston, and Mrs. Jack
and three brothers.
architect; Dan River CarEducation
met
lor
Its
(Carolyn) Bachner, MidA member of the Bradbury
pets: Lyle PhUJips, a patient
organization
session.
Nease
dleport, and a grandson·,
Church of Clwlsl, Mrs. Sisson
at the home; W. H. Hetlby,
succeeded
Charles
Pyles,
a
Steven Clark Baclmer, Midowned and operated a grocery
general contractors; and the
member.
dleport. He was preceded in
store with her husband in
city of Marietta, for failure
Preceding
the
session,
Nease
death by &gt;his wife, Mabel
Bradbury several years.
fAI enforce safety sliwdards.
and Grover Salser, Jr., were
Raines Clark, and his parents,
She, Ja- survived by lour
.........·.·.·.·.·,·.·.·.··:·:·····:·::-:·:·:···:-: · ;. :-·;.,.·.·.·.•. given the oath of office. Nease
Charles and-Harriett Clark.
daughters,'"' Mrs.
Brad
was reelected to a four year (Pauline) Hudson, Middleport;
The body is at the Stevens ·
and Grass Funeral Home at Firemen Go Out ·~ ~nn and Salser is a new board Mrs. Allen (Mary) Roush,
member, elected last fall to a Middle'port;. Mrs. Vesta
Malden, W. Va. Burial will be
four y"llr term.
in Riverview Cemetery at Twice on Monday
Lambert, Gallon, Wid Mrs.
Middleport.
Funeral
The
board
appointed
Mrs.
Everett (Mabel) Michael,
The Middleport Fire Dept.
arrangements will be · an- answered two calls Monday Nancy Carnahan to a two year Middleport; two sons,- John ·
nounced.
evening. The first was at 5:45 tenn as clerk of the board and Sisson of Dayton, and Joseph
p.m. to the Qallas Blevins board -meetings were set for Sisson, of Pomeroy; 16
residence , 362 Lincoln St., 7:30p.m. on the second Thurs- grandchildren, 45 great·
where a rug on a furnace day of each month. A service grandchildren, 12 great • great
register caught fire, causing fund of $210 to handle possible • grandchildren and several
DEER 'KILLED
ilavel and related expenses of nieces, nephews and cousins.
A large buck deer was killed considerable smoke damage.
Funeral services will be held
The second call was at 7:23 board members or . their
Monday night on SR 124, onerepresentatives
was
at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the
half mile eas\ of Rutland, when p.m. to the Wanda Smith established.
Bradbury Church of Christ
it ran into the path of a car residence at 109 Park St.,
Other
board
members
are
driven by Earl Edward where the fire was ex- Charles Pyles and Clarence wltll Mr. Roy W. Carter officiating. Burial will be in
Cleland, 25, Racine, the Meigs tinguished before the firemen Lawrence.
Riverview Cemetery. Friends
County Sheriff's Dept. arrived.
may call at the Rawlings-Coats
reported. There was medium ?.::::::::?.:-.::::::::=::8::~w:;:;:;t.?.;:;:;:!:;m:w.?.!.
Funeral Home any time until
damage to the car.
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
12:30 p.m. Wednesday wben
AUTOS COLLIDE
Ohio Extended Outlook Middleport police in- the body will be taken to the
Thursday through Saturday:
Cold
Thursday, vestigated a minor ·accident church.
moderating temperatureJJ on Monday at 2:40 p.m. on the .
Friday with a cbance of snow Dutton Parking Lot, Alveta K.
or ralo, then tnrnlng colder Smith, Pomeroy, Rt. 4, backed
agaln Saturday. Highs Ia the into a parked truck belonging Veterans Memorial Hoapltal
ADMITTED - Richard
30s Thursday, rlslog to the to the McKesson and Robbins
Be
arbs, Sr., Pomeroy; Howard
_ 40s Friday and dropping to Co. of HWitington. There was
the 30s Satnrday. LoWlllo the approximately $5 damage to. L, Searls, Rutland; Marvin .
Marlene . Hoffman
of
teens and low 20s Thursday each vehicle. No citation was Crenieana, Coolville; Garnet
Gallipolis, 0. and Mrs. Patty
Potts, Syracuse; NWlcy Neutz.
morolog and lo the 20s issued.
Hoffman and sons, Stephen and
ling,
Syracuse; Jason Bush,
Friday and • Saturday
Jimmie, of Athens spent
Middleport; Mary Slivers,
mornings.
Christmas with Mr. and Mrs.
Middleport; Stella Rood
.
'
~!:::!::::::~:::::::::!::&amp;~:::::::::::::::*!:!:!:·
Leslie Hoffman.
COUNCIL TO MEET
Reedsville; Larry Spencer,
Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Denny of
Middleport Mayor John Racine; Jean Johnson, Racine.
LOC'AL TEMPS
Wilkesville were the dinner
Temperature in downtown Zerkle announced today tluit a
DISCHARGED- Ruby Cole,
guests of their daughter and Pomeroy . Tuesday at 11:30 special meeting of councU will Margaret .Stevens, John
famllji, Mr. and · Mrs. Bruce a.m. was 44 degrees under beheld Wedne.lday at 7:30p.m. Stevens, Lydia Elbersbach,
to elect a president of council. ' William Wheeler. . ·
clouay skies.
Morris and son, Larry.
.
· Mr · and M~. Alpha Barr and
son, Micheal, of Glenville State
College spent Christmas day
with Mr. and Mrs. Duane Barr
and son, Shawn of Oak Hill, 0 . .

Sky Cops Cut Back

BY BOB HOEFUCH
· In 187-!-75, it was predicted
with "reasonable anticipation"
lhllt Pomeroy would rank "at
no distant day" among the
great nuinulacturing cities of
the West,
This prediction was made in
a well preserved copy of
Sheppard's Pomeroy and
~iddlepor t
Direclol'y,
published in Cincinnati for the
years of 1814 and 1875.
TI.e conununity .at the time
was bursting with salt and coal
activities. The future looked
bright. However, the predic• lion falled to materialize,
alth0\18h at the time, Pomeroy
~anked fifth in trade and
commerce of the cities on the
Onto River above CmcinnaJi,
including Pittsburgh, and wss

20th in population·of the cil.ies
in Ohio according to the 1870
ceruius. By the 1118\l census its
population would soar above
8,000, but. then begin a decline
that continues today.
.Officillls of the city of Pomeroy at the l!me were George
Lee, mayor; 1.. H., Ue, 'clerk;
J. P. · Bradbury, soiicitor;
Conrad Mattern, marshal;
·. George Minich, street commissioner, and Aaron Stivers,
civUengineer
Tberewerea
council members, selected· to
represent the City's four
·wards. They were James Fish
Wid Edmund Williamson, first
ward; George Joachim and
Robert Richardson, second
ward; W. A. Aicher lind W, H.
Lasley, third ward, and Martin
Hays and Geo~ Cole, fourth

ward.
· Salisbury Township officers
, were Royal Chase, P. B.
DiCkerson an~ L. D .. Moore,
Sheppard's ~:i:i-ectory of Becoming One
.
with Ira Graham clerk and
John McClure the treasurer.
Justices of the peace were P.
B. Dickerson, George Lee and
J. J. White, whose long arms
enforcing the law were 0 ,
Jones, A. F. Sims 'and John
Peters, constables.
foreman of· hose; Sam D. recorder ; Ransom Griffin, undergone considerable name
\ Polneroy fire department Wallace; assisiant foreman of auditor; Thornton Mallory, changing since the almost tOOofficers were w: L. Downie, hose, and R: R. Lyman, C. H. tre·a surer ; J. C. McElroy, year old book was prin~ .
sheriff ; Dr. A. A. Stanley, Some of the streets listed in the
president; C. H. Lyman, Lyman, William Sharp
coroner; C. B. Holt, county publication are Bee, Parr,
· secretary;' ,J. W. Hart, George Rheinhart, pipemen
treasurer; George Munch ,
Meigs County officers listed surveyor; C. B. Laughead, Phelps, Salt, North, Henry,
chief; Peter Harnm, foreman in the directory were T. A. William Hays and B. F. Knight, Heckard, Short. Willow,
of engine; Henry Munch , Plantz, judge of common pleas 'commissioners, and Royal Dabney, Bridge, Davis and
assistant foreman of engine; court; A. B. Oonnally, clerk ; Chase, W. M. Swallow and Berry, none of which are in
Jacob Stafford, engineer; Ira Graham; prosecuting William · Foster, infirmary existence.
Churches of Pomeroy h1cludWilliam G. Crow, second attorney; P. B. Stanbery, directors.
(Contloued on Page 8) ·
Pomeroy's
streets
have
·
engineer; Thomas Crow, Jr., probate judge; John McClure,

i.'

..~m~:;:~:~:~, ~!~:~:=!:~!Z~:!:;!:~turing Citi~~~ ~~~~,J
¥J

•

Ms. /

'I

Devoted To The lnterutl Of The Meigs-Mwon Areo
POMEROY-MIDDLEP()RJ.. :Of{IQ
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 5, 197.2
PHONE 992-2156

. NO. XXIV NO. 186

Homer Clark

Die8.on Monday

Nease, Hill

Died Monday

Headrng Board
Oj Educaflon
•

Langsville

.News, Notes

Ron Corby
of Marietta,
0.
spent
Saturday
with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Gorby.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Barr and
David and Michelle were
Christmas day dinner gues1,9 of
her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Thoma and Patricia.
• Mr. and Mts. Ralph Knapp
and· boys of Columbus spent a
few days wllh his mother, .Mrs.
Lena Knapp.
• Mr. Harvey Barr of
Columbils, 0. 11nd Denctl Barr
of Walbridge, 0. called on
Alpha Bilrr and family last
• - - - - . . - - - - - - - - - - - • w e e k. ·
' ~

~

..

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
•

SALE! WOMEN'S SKIRTS
.

.

Our entire stock of womens blouses are included in this sale
' - including cottons, whi-p creams and knits. Many styles to
choose from.

READY TO WEAR DEPT. ·- SECOND FlOOR

SALE! WOMEN'S'
- BLOUSES~
·'

Take advantage of the great savings on womens skirts- our
entire stock is included in this sale-'-wool flannels, tweeds,
knitS' and corduroys. ·Many styles- to choose from.
.

'
Junior sizes · misses sizes and extra sizes.

READY TO WEAR DEPT. - SECOND MOR

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

·'

TEN CENTS

TheCampmeetingSingenwllllppear at the Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church at 7:30p.m. Saturday. Allllougb the
average age of the singing groop is 26, combined the mem·
bers have over 35 years experience as professional singers,
, ,having appeared on both. radii&gt; and television. Individually,
at one time or another, they have performed in most of the 50
states. The Campmeeting Singers also own the Anchor
Record and Publishing &lt;;o. Their 15 albums have been
recorded ina nlbnber of cities, including the record capital of
the world, Nashville, Tenn. The public is invited to attend
Saturday night's presentation.

Atkins is ·Reelected

Jessie
• Sis

Pleasani Valley Hoapll!ll
ADMISSIONS: Samuel
Miller, Atliens ; Mrs. Thomas
Darst, Michael HudSon, Mrs.
Lennie' Roe, Point Pleasant;
Cl
ara Bonecutter' Gallipolis
Ferry; Mrs. Clarence Emrick,
Point Pleasant ; James Napier,
Mr. and-Mrs. John Merrill of
Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs. Everett Columbus,O.and Mr. and Mrs.
McDaniel Gallipolis
Richard Ritter and daughter,
DISCHARGES . M~s Eulah Julia, of Fayetteville, N. c.
Legg, Charlj!S Tucker: Relda · ~elit the Christmas weekend
Mayes, Mrs. Cecil Phillips, Withtheir mother, Mrs. Emma
Mrs . Oden Pearson, Mrs. Ledlie.
WilliBIJl Palaska, Mrs. Roy .. Alpha Barr, who has been a
Smith and son. Marvin c
med•cal patient at Holzer, is
ox, improvin g a t this time.
Mrs. John Lewis' and son, Glen
Spurlock, Mrs. Ronald Logan,
Mr. and Mrs. Blair CadMrs. Arnold Lane and Mrs wallader and boys of Seaman,
Arnold Woodyard and son. · Ohio spent a few days iaJit week '
WIth her parents.

. .••-.llll••••••ill•••••••llil•

•

Wilbur Dodd

Five in· Sheriff's Race

Your Signature •••
Better Than Cash

I

..

.

President· Boning. Up for Sato Summit

'

Virgil Atkins, of Harrisonville, was reelected president
and Harofd Roush of Portland
was reelected. vice president
for 1972 by the Meigs County
School Board Tuesday night at
its organizational meeting.
The oath of o!fice was administered to board members
Gordon Collins and Harold
Roush who were reelected to
. four year terms last fall.
The board also set the first
Tuesday of each month as t"!S'
meeting night. When Ohio is on
Eastern Standard Time, the
board will meet at 7:30
and when on DST at 8 p.m.
In a regular meeting which
followed the reorganization,
ll)e bQard votedJo_continue lis
membership in the Ohio School
Board Association and to
purchase liability insurWJce.
A delegatio!l of parents and
their attorney, L. Allen Golda·
right leg, foot and arm and multiple lacerations and berry, met with the board in
abrasions. Frank J. Sylvester, 60, Columbus, driver of the regard \0 the transfer of cerSuburban Tractor and Curtis E. Blake, 40, Portland, Mich., tain territory from Eastern
~-driver of the car involved escaped serious injury. The patrol
Local School District to Meigs
. · said Call was unable to slop his pickup for Blake's car, which Local School District.
had slowed to turn into a driveway and swerved into the path . The.board voted not to transfer the territory since the
of the semi.

ji:m.

FIRST IUGHWAY DEATII - The Gallla-Meigs area
recorded its first tl'afflc fatality at 1:48 p.m. Tuesday when
29-year old Homer Leroy PhlUlps of Rl. 1, Crown City, died in
a three vehfcle colllslon on SR Rl. 7, one and eight tenths
miles north of Q'own City, Philllps was a passenger in a pickup driven by Richard J. Call, 33, Rt. ·2, Crown City, Call was
admitted to the Holzer Medical Center with fractures of the
'

Eastern Local School Board on
Jan . 3 adopted a resolution to
release permanently the
children of families living in
the Eastern District who have
been attending Meigs Local on
a non-tuition basis. It was the
opinion of the board that since
Eastern had taken such action,
it was not necessary to transfer
the territory.
The board authorized County
Supt. Robert Bowen to call a
meeting of all boards of
education in the county to
discuss the impact of school

county board of education.
Attending were Atkins,
Roush, Collins, Harold Lohse,
and George Perry, board
members, and Bowen.

legislation recently passed by
the legislature.
The board also adopted the
state
minimum
salary
~hedule as it relates to the

Cable

ts Ready

Pomeroy's cable television
system is now completed and
house i'nstallatlons should
begin within the next week,
officials of PoinTVIew Cable
TV announced today.
Prior to completion of the
&gt;:•,~•,:•,:•&gt;:•,:&lt;«&lt;•&gt;;•:&lt;o&gt;:Q:•;•W&lt;~
) . :0: • ·'·' '
, .., •, . .
main trunk and feeder lines
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
lhl:.ough the community, only a
Ohio extended outlook
few Pomeroy homes in the
Friday through Sunday:
south section of town were
A chance of rain or sn0w coonected to the cable system.
Friday, becoming mostly
Interviewers · will begin
fair Saturday and Sunday.
canvassing the town within the
Hlgbs Ia the mid 30s to mid
next few days to ask each
40s· Friday and lo the 50s
householder .where and when
Saturday ilnd Sunday. Lows
he wants his cable TV inlo the 20s.
stallatlon placed for the twomonth free trial Period which
was established by PoinTView
LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in do\VIltown Wid , the village government.
Virtually every home in
Pomeroy Wednesday at 11 a.m.
was 32 degrees under cloudy Pomeroy can be reached by the
cable lines now In place, and
skies.
home installations should
begin as soon as the interview
team begins its work.

At the same time, PoinTVlew
officials announced that most
of the homes in Middleport
have been connected to the
cable, and only "clean-up"
work remains to be done there.

This week, cable company

.O:o;:o:u.o:o-...Xo»Y.~».

officials and technicians are
working with representatives
of the Jerrold Corp., turnkey
contractor on the ' Pomeroy
""PI"OJect, measuring the
mileage of the new system and
testing it in various ways to
insure ,that it is functioning
properly and delivering proper
levels of electronic signals on
· all 11 channels of ~levision
carried by PoinTView.
More tljan 70 pet. of all
homes In the PolnTView
service area have taken the
two months' free trial, and
virtually all of th,ese families
have r~mained on the cable in
the Bend area, officials said.

News••• in-Briefs School Appropriation Approved ·Flashers Installed

BY UNITED PRF.'!S INTERNATIONAL ·
1 PHILADELPHIA - ARRI!'SI' WARRANTS were issued
Tuesday for an invest(Denl banker, a retired general and the
fanner third highest executive of the Penn Central Railroad on
charges they diverted$21 mllllon of the alllng company's funds to .
build their own fortunes.
l'lltMVUJ..E, MD. -A PRIEST WHO placed a recruiting
advertisement for his Catholic order in Playboy magazine says
the magazine offered him "the most mileage for the dollar."
LIMA .,. A TEEN-AGE GERMAN GIRL, her collarbone
lnken and her body·covered·with scratches and mosquito bites,
walked through the Peruvian jungles to safely lrilm a Christmas
Eve plane crash in which all92aboard had been believed dead. A
newrnajor land-air search has been set in motlbn.
'

SAIGON -THE U.S. OOMMAND TODAY reported new 852
raids near the fanner U. S. Marine base at Khe Sanh and near the
Laotian border. . .
. ·
..
Later, an Ainerican FI06 jet fighter-bomber attacked a
radar site inside North Vietnam in the first of what was termed
)rotectlve reaction strikes this year.
· OOLUMBUS - A TAXPAYER Information Service,
designed to ~elp in the implementation of the state's new per·
mal income .and corporate taxes, will be Institute&lt;\ within the
()Uo Department of Taxation, it was armounced today.
'
•, I Tax Commissioner Robert J. Kosydar said the unit will be
headed by Paul Sauer, who has been with the fiscal affairs
section, and Laurence Miller, an attorney in the legal section.
A REGIONAL DIRECTOR OF Ohio's 200,000 strong United
Auto Workers union members said today the UAW has not yet
(Conlloned on Page 8)

A $691,661.50 appropriations
resolution for 1972 was adopted
when the Eastern Local School
Ibistrict Board of Education
met Monday night.
Expenses Included in the
resolution are : administration,

· Melvin Van Meter, 447 Fifth
St., Kanauga, is the plainUff In
a $780,000 damage suit filed
Tuesday In Gallla County
Common Pleas Court against
the Holzer Medical Center and
Holzer Ho.~pital Foundation,
First Ave. and Cedar St.,
GalUpolls.
•·
·
, ·n .was the' third maJor suit
fUel! against the Holzer
Medical Center in the past
year.
' 1
, A~orcilng IQ the petition,
v1111 Meter was admitted to the
hospital Jan . 5, 1970 .for
treatment of a condition
. diagnosed as acute ap·
~ndlcllls. On Jan . ·12th, Van\
~

l'

-

tract and open 'order services,
$28,330.50; fixed charges,
$79,045; capital ouUay, $2,000;
lunchroom, $74,265; bond
retirement, $25,500.
Before meeting, the oath-of
office was given by Clerk

Eastern -Meigs .Local

School Tangle Untied
Fourteen school pupils whose
parents _live inside the boundaries of the Eastern Local
School District, but who attend
classes in the Meigs Local
District, have been released
permanently by the Eastern
Board of Education.
Several months ago, it had
been· found that the students ·
were attending classes outside
Eastern. The matterw,as taken
under study by bOth . the
Eastern and the Meigs Local
School District Boards of
·Education and the Meigs

Muskie
.$780,000 .Asked in Suit . _
\

$26,361; instruction, $325,510;
auxiliary agencies, $35,150;
operation of school plant,
$20,000; supplies, $46,600;
materials for maintenance,
$5 , 4 0 0 ;
e quipmen t
replaceme'&gt;$23,500; con-

.· :-:-:-·.--:·:··.-.:-:-.:·:·.·:·: ·=· ......:.:-:·:·····:·
Coimty Board of Education.
Several weeks later, the
MEETING CALLED
Eastern Board released the
A meeting to discuss the
students for ihe remainder of suspension of 11 Meigs High
the current school year since School male students
they were already atteQding because their hair does not
classes at schools in the Meigs allegedly conform to the
Local District.
scbool's.tllress code wDl be
Monday night, however, the held al7:30 p.m. Thursday at
Eastern Board released the the home of Mn. Wanda
present
students,
pre- Beck, 391 South Sec,ond,.
schoolers, Wid children that · Middleport. AU Interested
may be born into the families parents and students are
to attend Meigs District.
invited to attend.
Specific families were
(Continued on Page B)

Creston Newland to Clyde
Kuhn and Howard Caldwell,
Jr., new board members, and
Roger Epple, reelected to
another four year term on the
board last November.
During the organizational
session, I. 0. McCoy was
elected presldei\'t, and Epple
was named vice president. The
board selected the second
Tuesday of each month start'ing in February for regular
meetings beginning at 8 p.m.
The January meeting will be on
Jan . 10.
~ board adopted the new
state
minimum
salary
scbedule for teachers an~ the
20 cents per hour increase for
non-certified employes as
presented· by the Ohio
Department of Ellucation
effective Jan. I, this year.
However, no salary increase ·
shall exceed the percentage or
the amount approved by the
Federal Wage Price Commission.
The board agreed to enroll in
the Ohio School Board Members liability plan and to join
the Ohio . School . Board
Association .. The lifth . board
member Is Oris Smith.

WASffiNGTON (UP!) . -Sen. Edmund s. Muskie figures around the country, appearances in 33 states
has become a candidate for the· Democratic already and a firm reputation as a front-rurmer for
presidential nomination "not merely to change . the nomination..He became the eighth·Democratic or
Presidents, but to change the country."
Republican contender to annOUJlce officially, with his
1968 rurming mat~, Sen. Hl!bert H. Humphrey, DInvoking the name .of Lincoln and promising the Minn., ex~ted to become the ninth candidate on
He cpntends that as a result . nation "a new beginning," Muskie declared his Monday.
of the hospi\81 negligence, he . candidacy from the l')lgged coast of his native Maine
Muskie.'s speech was recorded in the living room of
srequffulerr.edg ate bal ck medinj~ryl Tuesday night hi a 10-minute taped television address his two-story yellow sununer cottage at Kennebunk
1n ex ns ve
1ca
tha
.
·
Be h
care and tr.eatnient and \wo th
" I made official what. everyone had expected for
ac .
surgical operations .for
ree years.
.
..
. . .
I! iPcluded'a call tor cjl ''new beginning," a promise
treatment of. his injuries He · The front-rumung Democrallc contender sa1d: his lp . work for freedom frOQl "{H!verty, deprivation,
s¢eks $15!100 for medlcai ·ex· decisjon "has bot lleen an easy one. It Will deeply discrimination and dlsease'tand pledge to "enlarge
peosea; .15,000 for loss of change my life." As if to prove him right, his cam- our country's influence ~II() prestige around the
· wages .and $750,000 for injuries ~ign managers 'booked him for a week of 1:Uo-15 world. "•
\
suffered, permanent disability hour..S-day_campaign appearances in Flirlda, New
. T~night, he said,,the bombs were still falling on
Wid impairment of"his earnin · Hampshire and Wisconsin.
.
Indochina, 40 persol)S were being · murdered and a
capacity, He asks for a j~ · Muskie enlered the race with a smooth-running thousand robbed on the streets, 5 million peopl_e were
trial. •
organization, endorsements frm!' major political , · going to bed without a, job to wake up for, arid "w~ are

a

and .the State Highway Patrol
01~·
ce In Gallipolis. The study
co lrmed.. the request by the
tw law agencies that (faffic
sig Is should be installed to
cut down on the hazardous
conditions and the many accidents that have occurred at
this intersection.
Amber flasher lights will be
installed facing the north-south
Stale Route 7 traffic and red
flashers will be facing the east·
west County RoadS traffic . The
intersection has been the scene
of an unusual number of traffic
accidents since completion of
the bypass In 1968 .

.

Reorganization,
Election is Held
Lee Rose, Crown City, was
elected 'president of the GalllaMeigs Community Action
executive council Tuesday
night in the Gallia CAP Office
in its regular monthly meeting . .

•

Staff members gave progress
reports on projects in operation
and brought the council up to
date on pending programs. ·
In the reorganization of the '
council and election of officers
for the coming year, six new
executive council members
were
officially
added ,
replacing six members whose
terms had expired. Added from
a divided and doobtful people, lacking a sense of Meigs County for three year
pui-pose .... worried about Ule lives we lead and the terms were Lula Hampton,
Alice Adams and Eileen
lives we will leave our children ."
Garnes replacing Carl Qualla,
Argyle Deeter and Lucy,.
"This is not IY.hat America should be," he said, and Taylor. .
although
. he
, could not blame
. tbe administration for all
Added from Gallia County
the nations woes, he sa1d the Pr~ent lacked truth- were Gene Wetherholt,
fulln~ss and ~eadershlp and had fatfed ~ ~e good Raymood Fisher and Norman
on his pro~ .to e!Jd the war, halt inflation and • L. Mitchell replacing John
restore .domesllc peace.
.
. Morgan Glenn Smith and
"An administration that has so failed us in the past Russell Notter.
cannot take u~ to the future," he said, promising that · Council officers for 1972 are
if elected he would try to •:make America what it was Mr . Rose, Gallia County,
to Abraham Lincoln, 'the last best hope of mankind.!" president; Mrs. Eileen Garnes,
The reference to tlie fat)ler of Republicanism did Meigs County, vice president,
not impress GOP National Chairman Robert Dole. He and Mrs. Lula Hampton, Meigs
~~id Muskie's state111ent was "a sorry ~pectacle of County, secretary-treasurer.
yet another public figure bad-mouthing · the United 1 'There were 18 present lor the
States of Ame~ica . "
.1 •
meeting. .
Jl
,

Pledges ·C,.ange of Direction

Meter was under U:eatment
again, and while under
medic,ation, fell from an
examlnaing table to the floor.

~

The intersection .of State
Route 7 and County Road 5 at ·
Bradbury in Meigs County now
has fisher lights acc,ording to
Division 10 Traffic Engineer
Lowell Russell.
The lights, originally slated
to be Installed last month were
delayed due to an overload on
the traffic depariment light
crew, are now scheduled to be
completed and ready for
service sometime after noon
today.
Division Deputy Director
Max R. Farley ordered the
study of traffic conditions after
receiving requests from the
Meigs County Sheriff's Dept.,

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