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Elberfelds .In·.Pom

January Furniture Sale

Social '

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J•nuarj Furniture Sale

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WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT . Pomeroy
·· Lions Club, Wednesd~y noon,
United Methodist Church. ·
POMEROY Chapter 80,
Royal Arch Masons, stated
meeting, 7:30 p.m. Pomeroy
Masonic Temple.
AUXiLIARY, Middleport Fire
Department, home of Mrs.
Thomas Darst, 7:30 Wed.
nesday night. Member&amp;to take
a guest.
GROUP I, 7:30 Wednesday, .
home of Mrs. Bill Sprouse.
Mrs. John Redovian to have
the book study. Bake sale to be
held ill meeting .
WHITE ROSE Lodge, 1: 30 p.

End Tables - Cocktaii,Tables • Hex
Tables • Commode Tables • Dough_
. Box Tables • Book Shelves .
Mushrooms

m. Wednesday , Amer'ican

Legion Hall, Middleport.
THURSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS Gra nge ,
7:30p.m. Thursday at the hall.
EASTERN
Athleti c
Boosters, Thursday, 8 p.m. at
high school. Refreshments ,
everyone welcome.
ELEANOR CIRCLE of
Heath United Methodist
Church, 7:30 p.m. Thursday at
the home of Mrs. Kenneth
Cooke with Mrs. Earl
Davenport assisting.
POMEROY Chapter 80,
Royal Arch Masons, special
meeting, Thursday night, 7:30
p.m. rank and past master
degr~es to be conferred.
AFTERNOON CIRCLE,
Heath United Methodist
Church, Thursday, 2 p.m. at
the church. Mrs. Nan Moore,
leader ; Mrs.NormanWayland,
Mrs. Mary Rinehart, and Mrs.
Walter Hayes, hostesses.
BRADBURY · PTA , l :30
Thursday afternoon, at the
school.
OHIO VALLEY Grange 2ii12,
Letart Falls, 7:30p.m. Thurs·
day home of Mrs. Elizabeth
Roush. Deputy and Mrs. Virgil
Atkins will install officers.
Members are to take any kind
of pie and sandwiches.
MEIGS 4-H Pleasure Riders,
Thursday, 7:30 at St. Paul
Lutheran Church In Pomeroy.
"They're Off and Running," 45
minute film to be shown.
FRIDAY
TEEN DANCE, Friday,
Wahama High School, 9 to 12
Friday with Jays emceeing.
School sponsored.
RETURN
JONATHAN
Meigs Chapter, DAR, 2 p.m.
Friday at the home of Mrs.
David Miller, Middleport. Mrs.
James Brewington and Miss
Frieda Faehnle, co-hostesses.
Roll call, current events: Mrs.
Patrick Lochary to · have the
program.
SATURDAY
HIGH SCHOOL dance party,
Meigs Junior High , Mid·
dleport, 8 to II p.m. Saturday.
Jays emceeing.
HYMN SING, Saturday, 7:30
p.m. at old post office building,
Racine, Apostolic Gospel
Church. Public welcome.
BAKE SALE, Saturday,
starting at 9 a.m. Gaul's
Market, Chesler, sponsored by
Eastern Girls Athletic Assn.
basketball team . ·
SOUP SALE, beginning 4
p.m. Saturday, Southern High
School preceding Hannan
Trace game. Bean, vegetable
soup, sandwiches, pie and
coffee, sponsored by junior
class.
MEIGS COUNTY Retired
Teachers Assn., 12 noon
Saturday
at
Pomeroy
Elementary School for potluck
dinner. Mrs. Vilma Pikkoja,
delegate to Washington Con·
ference on Aging, speaking on
her experience. Take own'table
service.
SPEAKER NOTED
Gary Swope, Meigs County
game protector, will be
s, ~aker when the Chesler PTA
meets at 8 p.m . Monday at the
schooL Swope will show a film
during the meeting when
father's night will be observed.
A social hour will follow the
session All parents are cordially invited.

MEIGS THEAT~E
Tonight &amp; Thursday . ,
January 12· 13
NOT OPEN
. Friday &amp; Saturday
January 14-15

A MAN CALLED
SLEDGE
ITechnicolorJ
James Garner

Dennis Weaver

" GP"

HOW TO
COMMIT MARRIAGE ·
(Technlcolor)
Jan1eWyman

Bob Hope

Jackie Gleason

" GP"

SHOW STARTS7P.M.

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69.00 5 pc.
79.00 3 pc.
119.00 7 pc.
119.00 5 pc .
139.00 7 pc.
169.00 5 pc.
169.00 7 pc.
179.00 4 pc.
\.29.95 7 pc.
189.00 5 pc.
189.00 5 pc.

Bronze and Brass Dinette Sets
Drop Leaf Table, 2 chairs
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Bronze and Brass Dinette Sets
Chrome Dinette Sets
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Bron~e and Brass Dinette Sets
Chrome Dinette Sets
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Black Dinette Sets
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Harvest Table, bench, 2 chairs
Bronze and Brass Dinette Sets
Mediterranean Dinette Sets
Early American Dinette Sets

Sale 56.00
Sale 64.00
.Sale 96.00
Sale 96.00
Sale 112.00
Sale 136.00
Sale 136.00
Sale 144.00
Sale 104.00
Sale 152.00
Sale 152 .00

January
Furniture Sale!

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Appalachia
Wich Area,
PoorPe9ple

Recliners · Rock·O· Loungers · Platform
Rockers · Swivel Rockers , · Lounge Chairs ·
Occasional Chairs · Boudoir Chairs and wood
Rockers. Large selection of styles and fabrics .

Early American · Traditional·, Mediterranean
·· Modern. Maple · Walnut · Pecan · Oak.
REG. 29.00
SALE 24 .00
REG. 29.95
SALE 25.00
REG. 35.90
SALE 29.00
REG. 39.00
SALE 32.00
REG. 39.95
· - · · · · •
SALE 33.00
REG. 40 .00
SALE 33.00
REG. 49.00
SALE 40.00
REG. 52.00
SALE 42.00
REG. 59.00 '·
SALE 48.00
REG. 59.95
SALE 49.00 .
REG. 69.95
SALE 56.00
REG. 74.00
SALE 59.00
REG. 79.00
SALE 64.00
REG. 89.00
SALE 72.00
REG. 89.95
SALE 73.00
REG. 99.00
SALE 80.00
REG. 109.95
SALE 88.00
REG. 119.00
SALE 96.00
REG. 119.95
SALE 97.00
REG. 129.00
SALE 105.00
REG. 149.00
· · · · · SALE 1~0.00

42.50 Boudoir Chairs . . . . . .
69.00 Recliner, maple occasional Chair . .
69.00 Boudoir Chairs . . . . . . . . .
64.00 PlaKorm Rocker . .
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79.00 Boudoir Chair.Rediner . . . .
84.00 Swivel Rocker . . . . . . . . . .
89.00 Boudoir Chairs . . . . . . . . .
119.00 Occasional Chairs and Recliners
98.00 Pine Decorated Rockers . . . .
129.00 Rock·O·Loungersand Occaslonol Chairs

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Sale 35.00
Sale 49.00 .
Sale 54.o0-Sale 49.00
Sal" 59.00
Sale 64.00
Sale 89.00
Sale 99.00
Sale 78.00
Sole IOUO

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. . . . Sale 114.00
Rockers·
. . . . Sale 122.00
. . . . . Sole 130.00
Sale 138.00
Sale 154.00
Sale 162.00
Soli 119.00
Sale 146.00
Soltll6.00
Salt 200.00
Sale 201.00
Sole 179 Oti
Sale m:oo

Pine, Walnut, Cheny, Oak, Pecan, Birch • Bassett . HeywoOd
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Wakefield • Thomasville • Lane • Taylor • Jamestown • Webb
• Young • Hinkle • Riverside
249.00
259.00
319.00
339.00
349.00
359.00
399.00
419.00
429.00
449.00
489.00
498.00
529.00
549.00
559.00
595.00
598.00
649.00
749.00
798.00

BEDROOM SUITES
BEDROOM SUITES
BEDROOM SUITES
BEDROOM SUITES
BEDROOM SUITES
BEDROOM SUITES
BEDROOM SUITES
BEDROOM SUITES
BEDROOM SUITES
BEDROOM SUITES
BEDROOM SUITES
BEDROOM SUITES
BEDROOM SUITES
BEDROOM SUITES
BEDROOM SUITES
BEDROOM SUITES
BEDROOM SUITES
BEDROOM SUITES
BEDROOM SUITES
BEDROOM SUITES

SALE 199.00
SALE 208.00
SALE 256.00
SALE 272.00
SALE 280.00
SALE 288.00
SALE 320.00
SALE 336.00
SALE 344.00
SALE 360.00
SALE 392.00
SALE 399.00
SALE 424 .00
SALE .439.00
SALE 447.00
SALE 476.00
SALE 479.00
SALE 520.00
SALE 599.00
SALE 639.00

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290 ·00 42" Round Table with 2 leaves, 3 ·d
51 e
Chairs,
I arm Chair-Maple .. .. .... ,._ Sale 199 ,00
795 ·00 8 pc . Sohd Cherry · Dining Room Suite
Sale 636.00
279.00 Heywood Wakefield Corner Cabinet
Sale 224.00
109 8:0~ Heywood Wakefield 8 pc. Pine
Dmm,g,Room Suite . · .. . Sale 779 .00
129.00 48 Round Solid Maple Table
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Sate 88.00
64 9.00 8 pc. Bassett Dining Room SuiteSale 52o.oo ,.

198.00 Saginol Hidden Table-Cherry
Sale 149.00
295.00 Pecan China · - . - - . ·· Sale 246.00
750.00 8 pc . .Bassett Dining Room Suite
Sale 626.00
395.00 Birch Buffet &amp; Hutch . . . Sale 299.00
1379.007 pc. Lane Dining Room Suite-table 4
chairs, china, server
Sale 995.00
14~;00 .~e~wood Wakefield Extension Table,
36 x48 w1th 2 leaves
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Sale 99;00
49.00 Side Chairs · . . . . . • Sale 39,00
29.00 Heywood Wakefield Lazy Susan
Sale
' 24.00

Living Room Suites • Sofas . l.cM! Sea1s •
Rocking Love Seats
Large selection of colors and fabrics - Nylon . He rculon . Vinyl - all top
grade covers.
159 .00 ROCKING LOVE SEAT . . . . . . . .
SALE 128.00
198.00 LOVE SEAT . . . . .
SALE 159.00
209 .00 LOVE SEATS . . . . ·
SALE 168.00
239 .00 SOF.A · . . . . .
SALE 192.00
249.00 LOVE SEAT . . . .
SALE 200.00
259.00 SOFA OR LOVE SEAT
SALE 208.00
279.00 LOVE SEAT
. . - . . -SALE 224.00
298.00 SOFAS . . . .
SALE 238.00
319.00 SOFAS . . . .
. . .
SALE 256.00
339.00 SOFA . . . .
. . .
SALE 272.00
359.00 SOFA . . . . . . . .
SALE 288.00
369.00 SOFA . . . . - . . .
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SALE 296.00
389.00 SOFAS AND 2 PIECE SUITES
SALE 312 .00
398.00 2 PIECE SUITES
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SA~E 319.00
419.002PIECESUITES
.... .
SALE 336.00
449.00 2 PIECE SUITES
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SALE 360.00
459 .00 2 PIECE SUITES
SALE 368.00
469.00 2 PIECE SUITES
SALE 376.00
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529.00 2 PIECE SUITES
SALE 414 .00 569.00 2 PIECE SUITES
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SALE 456 .00

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ByCHARLENEHOEFIJCH
''~ "Here we are, living In the richest area in the world, with
1.fkore minerals tlla11 anywhere else, and yet we have the poorest ·
people In the land."
• This was Frecj Snuffer's description of Appalachia - a land
' llll!erelsolatiori imposed by the mountains and the exploitation of
~e coal barrons and lar,ge land owners have taken tllelr toll. ·
A soclolopst teaching at
Grande College while working
on his doctoratl!'at West Virginia Unlvtrsity, Snuffer was the
keynote speaker at a program' on AJ.p&amp;lachla Culture, Wed·
nesday night at St. Paul's Lutheran Olurch, Pomeroy, spilnBOred
by the Meigs County Extension Homemakerl' Council.
Also bighllg~ts ol the program attended by wer 100 persons
were an enlightening talk an&lt;! slide presentation on the food of
Appalachia and an entertaining time ol music on the ,dulclmer,
an lnltrument UQiq~ Ill ~~1ac~, ~Y ~ 4~fia WW~Id and ·
................
~ · a•nlpalt.
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.,Sn~fer, a native W,est mounliiin .peaple, beginning in
l(jrgllilan and a ltuilerit ol Dr. Scotland and Ireland,. and
Norman ~pklns 1 authority . discussed the' characii\r,lstks
on Appalachian culture, they brought to the C9lonles In
described ·Southern Ohio Pennsylvania around J7h
poverty as compara~le to the when they came· to America
poverty 1n the most inac· allen a trek through the
cesslble mountains of West Mediterranean country.
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~lrginla.
A lol!dueaa for Uijuor, a
• He listed exploitation by genuine' affection for
absentee industrialists who anlDJAis, Ioven of a good
~e ,in and purcha.~ the
fight', are among the
nilneral rights on tllousands of characteristics ol the
acres for pennies an acre, moun)aln culture today
mined the land,. and took the brought. from ~otland and
money out ..of Appalachia Ireland, Suuflet &amp;~~ld;
where it was needed for
In ' co11clusion, ·Snuffer
~ucatlon and weHare, as the reviewed , the sociological
pri'rl)e cause of existing changes ta~ing place today. l(e
poverty today.
said research shows that once
, . The speaker listed the dominated wives are rebelling,
~velts, tile Rockefeller&amp;, causing . c'hange In family
tlieMellonsamong the wealthy situations. Divorce ·is in·
Who have exploited the creasln-. child desertion is on
mountaineers, and then ~r the riae, and women are
(ppealed to the government, reflecting on their position.
\\Sing their political pOJfer, to
, Jllood of Appalachia
''nve the people of the
Miss Edelene Wood of
~ountalns ."
Parkersburg defined - Ap·
The poverty re111ains, palachla food or mountain food
Snuffer sajd, becauae· of as "im]1rovised food." She
ISolation. ''Th* people get in used slides to stiow the
the region and they never get riwnerous edi~lea which are
9111. They are for the mOll! part available In a natural state.
to!ally isolated from other
A teacl)er of wild plant
cultlres."
Identification for the adult
· The v-rr 'culture of the education section of the Wood
mountain 'people Is a de\erring .County School System, . Miss
factor In the'ir poverty, Wood Is known for her dlilner
il~clared th~ speaker. ·He parties using wild foods. She
traced the heritage of the . (~ntbl!'ed on page 12) .

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Large selection of colors and fabrics
169.00
199.00
249 .oo
298.00
315.00
319.00

Sofa Bed or Chair ••
Sleeper · . . - . .
Sleeper . . - . -Sleep or Lounge - •.
Hic;le-a-Bed
Sleeper

Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale

136.00
160.00
200.00
239.00
255.00
258.00

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339.00 Sleeper . • . . • . Sale 272 ,00
449.00 Sleep or Lounge •• _ Sale 360 ,00

Prompt Delivery ~ Cf)ntinuous Service

Barg~lns AU Over The Stor:e lfl. our January Sale •. Wearing Apparel
for Your Family and Furnishings For. Your 14ome

TEN CENTS•

Groppi Sentence
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Overturned by
rl Supreme Court
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JONES 9
SITE -The Jones Boys Discount, Store
wlll be built soon on this site on Pomeroy's West Main St. This
lot housed Dannie's Trailer Sales. One trailer remains. In the
b&amp;ckground is a Davis Ice and Produce building that wlll be

. torn down to make ro0111 for the r\ew store. The area above
and below Davis Ice Is being cleared by Carter and Evans
Construction Company. The site was purchased by Merill
Evans and Assoc. from Craw's Steak House, Inc.

Children Had Best Christmas
One of. the best Christmases
in recent·years was enjoyea in
December at the Meigs County
Chil~ren's Home. Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Musser, who are in
charge of the 'home, said
today :
1'We would like to thank all of
the wonderful people of Meigs
County and · also 59me from
0\llside for making the holiday
season a blessed and joyous

one."
Be,ides su~p\ying gifts,
many residents stopped at the
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hm'{'\!
jiiJil to say "hello" or to
sinll carQls fq[ ~e youngsters.
Gl~\!1~ . 10w~r~ lh&amp; Christmas

JI .Hear
.J)r. Hoyt

OfHSUS

John W. Inman Jr., Fort
Wayne, Ind., regional director
of. the Hwnane Society of the
United .States, will speak at a
public meeting In Meigs
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By United Preas btenlallonal
County possibly as early as
'; ENTERPRIIIE, ALA- A'J'OI\NADq slamme4 through two February.
nner parb ori the 9Utsklrts ol-tldlsolllheastem Alal!ama town .The meeting is being planned
Ntlylodaywlille the occupant&amp; wel"e lleeptnS, An undetennlned by a local steering committee
.
iiimber of persoru1 was killed.
' ( 7
whicb met Wednesday evi!ning
: PollcesaldtlJreeorfom bodles~been~vered.ll r~e in Pomeroy City Hall with Dr.
1q11ad office~ ...Ill .,en w..-e llhown dead. :rhe twister llriiJCked John Hoyt, New York City,
dDwn power llnEI8 and r~· had to rig emergency lights to president of HSUS. Dr. Hoyt Is
~C\' the deb~ for the d~ 'I'll! jnjured. _ .• ' . ,
the son of the Rev. and Mrs.
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Clermont 'Hoyt, formerly of
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REORGANIZ4'110N Qf ~Ohio Bureau of Middleport. He' atle!llied Rio
iqllployment Serjllcea (OBES), Will become effective Jan. ~. Grande College and later was
~101' Wll1jlm E.~ .-ld ~· 'nle plan createe · pastor of a large Fort Wayne
lllb\ ·dlstricta, aU ~bl~ to tile celltral office here . At church before accepting the
.-..I more ll!an 100 dlllerejlt local ofllce managers~! top ~ost with HSUS.
Dr.
Hoyt distributed
4lpct1y to headqllarten bere,
, ·'
literature
aild fielded questions
,; District 5 lpaliidea Franklin, Union, Delawere, "Ucklng,
Jbdii!WI, Fayette, ptctaway, Fairfield, ~· Hocking, Pike, .from e!ght persons who h~d
ymton, Athena, ~o. Jaclrlon, Melp Lawrence and Gallla 'been Invited tO meel·'wlth him.
The group plans to begln
CI;IUIItiel. •
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research here that could lead
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to the organization of a Meigs
' W~TON- EIGHI'Y lo.MEIUCAN new1111en wW be
COUlltyChapler of the Humane
.~-to accOI!IpUy Prtaldent Nixon to Mllnlarict China 'next
Society.
dllnth, and lhey wiD 'be able to tr81)811lit Instant live television,
Attending were Mrs. Don
~ copy and piWtographs. The White .lfouse salil t11e ·lleizing, Mrs. Jean Will, Miss
ailnne ~ . It cltar there would be "abllolutely no PI'W Caroline Smith, Mrs . Rita
-.hlp,"
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Lewis, Mrs. Carol Ohlln&amp;er,
., At the 1a111t time, 7Jeller announced~ Chlheae tlble tennis Miss Lucy Amsbary, Mtl.
.... wtn aolile to the United Slalll -tlnie In the aprina 1or ~~~~~~Fi8htr and \ Chester
.
(Cenliallld ..... 11) '
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:Nt;ws.•. in Briefs

Sofa Beds • Sleepers
Sleep or Lounges

Sale!

NO. XXIV NO. 192

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January Furniture Sale .
January

Devoted To The lnteresb Of The Meig1-Ma10n Area
POMEROY·MIDDLEPilRJ. OH!O
THURSDAY, JANUARY 13, 1972
PHONE 992·2156

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Dining Room Furniture
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169.00 Rock-O.Loungers . Recliners

Occasional Chairs . . . . .
189.00 Rock·O·Loungers . . . . . . .
198.00 Rock-0-Loungers . . . . . . · .
199.00 Chair and OHoman . . . . . .
m .oo Recliner . · · . . . . . . . . .
229.00 Rock·O' Lounger·Recliner . . .
249.00 Recliner · · · ·· · · . . .. . .
259.00 Rock·O-Lounger · . . . . . . . . .
299.00 Mr. &amp; Mrs. Chair &amp; ottoman . . . . .
239.00 Recliner · · · · · · . . . . . .

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139.00 Occasional Chairs-Swivel Rockers

Rock.Q.Loungers . . . .
149.00 Occasional Chalrs.Swivel
Rock·O-Loungers . . . .
159.00 Swivel Rockers·Recliners

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THE PEOPLE OF APPALACillA - Fred Snuffer, sociologist, attributed Appalachia
culture as it is today to the Scottish·Irish heritage of the people, their suboequent isolation, and
exploitation by the absentee landowners, in his address here Wednesday night. Snuffer is
pictured conferring with Mrs. Jennifer Sheets, assistant home extension agent from Meigs
County, who arranged the program for the Meigs County Extension Homemakers' Council.

TilE FOOD OF APPALACHIA - This plate of popcorn
ballS flavored with wild anise was provided by Miss Edelene
Wood of Parkersburg who showed samples and gave a slide
presentation tlh wild foods readily available to the Ap·
palachla dweller.
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THE MUSIC OF Ai&gt;PALACHIA..:. Highly entertained with their dulcimer music were Miss
•Gloria Winfield and Bob Conta .of Gallipolis. ,Conta described the dulcimer as an instrument
· mique to Appalachia.
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January Chair Sale!

January Fumiture Sale Dinette Sets

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cowiblus-

WASHINGTON (UP!) -The
Supreme Court overturned today a contempt sentence
meted out to Father James E.
Groppi by the Wisconsin
legislature .
The court held that the
militant Milwaukee priest was
not given a statement of 1he
charges or a chance to 0ree)i0n6
to them.
Chief Juatlce Warren E.
Burger
delivered
the
unanlnious .7.0 opinion.
The newly seated members
of the court-Justices Lewis F.
Powell Jr., and William H.
Rebnqulst-4id not participate
in the ruling. .
Under an 1848 state law, the
Wisconsin aSsembly cited the
civil rights leader by a 71·24
vole on Oct. I, 1969, two days
after he had led 1,1100 people
onto the chamber floor In a ·
protest against cust in weHare
payments. The resolution

specified he would be confined
in the county jail for six months
or · for the duration of the
legislative session; whichever
was briefer.
When Father Groppi appealed to federal courts, U.S.
District Judge James E. Doyle
l'llled in his favor but when the
state took the ·cue to the '7tJro- ,
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals,
the conviction was upheld.
In reversing the appeals
court, Burger said when a
legislative body acts two days
after the event, "in the absence
of the contemnor lllld without
notice, there is no assurance
that the members of the.
legislature are acting, as a
judge does In a contempt case,
on the basis of personal observation and Identification of
the contemnor engaging in the
conduct.
''Nor Is there any op·
portunity whaLjOever lor him
to speak in defense or
nlitigatlon, If he Is in fact the
offender."
The opinion said "the func· tlon of the contempt process by
a legislative body is perhaps
more related to deterrents of
those disposed to create disor·
ders than to restoring order."
"But the deterrence function

Episcopal Church 'wom~n. · M&amp;R Foodliner; Middleport
P9Jileroy.
.
Nazarene Church; Bernice
Judge and Mrs. F. H. 0'· Baker, Middleport Book Store ;
Brien, Syracuse Women's Farmers Bank' and Savings
Auxiliary of fire department; Co., Pomeroy; Pomeroy
Mr. anp Mrs. Earl Frecker; National Bank; Pomeroy
Pomeroy Chapter OES; Mr. Masonic Lodge ; Meigs.
· ·
and Mrs. Homer Cannan; Jackson Bookmobile; Brad·
Rutland American Legion and bury Elementary School;
Rutland Fire Department; ' Racine Grange; Hearthstone
Dutton Drug Co.
· Class, Middleport First Baptist
-·
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church; Soldiers and Sailors
Church Youth F•.l!owship; Relief Commission,· MarJ'orie .
' Bradford Chur,cfi..tqf Christ; Hoffner ; Mr. and Mrs. Emmett
Don, Mildred alld,"'-" Bet;lng; Blackburn, Pomeroy; Gibbs
James F. Arnold, Rodney
Mr. and Mrs. &lt;!'eiul Mora; Grocery, Pomeroy; Keno Downing, Dale M. Dutton, can equally be servedBusy Bee Cia~. Middleport Christian Church; Mr. and Bernard V. Fultz, Harold E. perhaps even better-by giving
,First Baptist Church; Veterans Mrs. Jay Hall ; Racine Grange; Hubbard, 'Rose S. Reynolds . notice and bringing the con·
Memorial Hospital stiff; John Racine First Baptist Church; and PaulS. Smart were elected lemnor before the body and
J,.isle and children of Salisbury Mr. and Mrs. Paul Simon and directors at the annual giving opportunity to be heard
Elementary School; Golden Rich Valley Dairy.
stockholders meeting of the before being declared in
Rule Class, Middleport First
·
Citizens National Bank contempt and sentenced," it
Baptist Church; Legion
Tuesday.
added.
Auxiliary Drew Webster Post
gi
Downing was
named
39,
Pomeroy ;
Nona
chairman of the board and
St~l
Winebrenner; Luther League,
Paul S, Smart, secretary.
St. Paul Lutheran Church,
Smart, president of the bank,
Pomeroy; Midway Mark•t,
reported that 1971 was the .best
Pomeroy.
Six new members were year in the history of the bank
American Legior, Junior welcomed Tuesday night when . from the. standpoint of growth
Auxiliary, Middleport; Cub Drew Webster Post 39, and earnmgs.
Scout Pack 215, Middleport; American Legion, met at the
The directors, after taking
hall.
their· oaths, appointed the
Joe Bishop, manager of
They are Leon McKnight, following officers: Smart, Midwest Steel, a growing
..WO:.:O:O;o;07.NNOY.hro'.:O..V,.NA'.V.'.N'.'o'.'o..'.....'o' •,o,•,I_,V.,•' •.-_;.yy;,...
~.o;.o;o_.'!o".«o'.~~b;.:o;o.o~.:o:o:o:6"£• .•.«o:x,o;.;.~.,of'~~v.o;.o.v.•.&lt;;.•;.o;.•-.,.:•;.(•.•M/',}:•.•~•:~
:~:
;:;: George Buchanan, Albert president; .Hubhard, executive Pomeroy industry, was the
I
.
' Hoffman, Leo Wallacc, Ken· vice president; Manning Kloes, guest speaker at the Wed·
neth Mankin and James cashier; Fultz, vice president; nesday noon luncheon of the
to
Proffitt. Eddje Whaley , Gene Grate, assistant vicc Pomeroy-Middleport Lions
COLUMBUS (UPI) - ''The: best day to quit ~~ membership
chairman,. president,
and
Lois Club.
·
~
smoklug Is todl!y ,'' Dr. John Cllshman, director·
reported the post went over McElhinny, assistant cashier.
Introdu~d ·b Do p
h
'th
t
tal
b
h'
M
M
Elh.
h
h
"
Y
n
earc
'• designate of lbe Oblo Department of HealtH says.
Ia
0
1
quo w1 a o mem ers P
rs. c mny • w
as Bishop discussed the Midwest•
"There 18 aimply ilo point In ·PUUlng It off." &lt;la8hmall . . of 324 for the year.
been with the. bank more than ·~Steel operation, noting the
~ was commenting on tlits week's National Educalloa
· ' ll was reported that $260 was 12 years, will be assurmng extent the company is conWeek on SmokiDg, which Is being observed with the ~~ .raised for the "Gifts for . the most of the dulles o.' Mrs. Rose tributing to the econolhy of
them~ "Get ready, set date, and quit!"
~ Yanks Who Gave" program Reynolds who retired at the Meigs County, Midwest em.
with $50 of the total coming e~d of 1971. Mrs. McElhmny ploys 55 hourly workers, 16
"lagreewllb that, but whr not mate the date today,",
.
from the Ladies Auxiliary of w1ll , also continue as head technicians, !llanagers . and
said Cllhman. H~ ~ld Z9 mlWon persons ln. lbe United
the Post and $5 from the junior bookkeeper.
.
. clerical workers.
Statea have quit anioitng.
I
auxiliary.
The
board
detenmned
to
Bishop said Midwest is still
"Uilfortunately the total co11t11111pllon of cigarettes Is
started
still golllg up," cisbmaa aald. "New smokers are % Commander Leonard Jewell . proceed as s?"n as possible to expanding .
11
announced
that
the
annual
remodel
the
recently
pur·
.
.
.
coming on lbe scene, especlllly amon1 our·people."
§; birthday observance will be on chased adjoining building of operatiOns m Pomeroy 10
1!160
''This Is ~ tragedy beca111e bejlltb atatlstica clearly ~.: March !8 with a dance to fonow the bank for drive-in facilities . In the old Parkersburg R1g and
show lbe link betweea smoking and aueb serlo111 $! a party. A valentine dance was The remodeling project will Re~l plant. The c.ompany,
aliments as cancer and heart dlaeaae," be said. ''Now ~ also announced ·tar Saturday, Include a major change in the which manufactu,res tra~k
. we are developing valid ~tatlotlca that demo1111tra!e a :~· Feb. 12, at the post home with exterior of the present bank equipment, distnbutes . liS
serious threat to uabom babies ·when their mothers are : music by organist, Armand building.
· product all over the Umted
smokers." .
,
~: Turley . A post trustees· session
States. The firm's problems in
'
'
.
~
growing, ahd som~ of the big
•;,o;:::;::%·~·m&gt;·
......
·.... .. ·- . . .... x .~ .........: .... .U:U(\~~.m..CK. HiiBU.O:eJ was announced for 7.: 30 tonight
projects IIJidwest has been
at the post home.
ChanceofUghtsnowpossible involved In, ·were discussed.
All Leg\onaires who have today, beginning as rain south
p u1 K1 .
Veterans Memorial Hoopltal Davis, Hilda Warth, Mabel
.ven two gallons or more
a
oes, president, had as
gl
M
jlrtin·, Kate Loudin, Stella
and east portiJns. Tern- h'
t M · K ba h
ADMITTED - Faurice
•s gues
ee ug .
Neece, Pomeroy; Zellah Rood,
Donald
Baxter, blood in t.he blood program are peratures fa-.,.lnto the 20s or The
luncheonarvm
was p~pared
Lawson, Racine; EdlU• McCoy, Catherine Wolfe, Clarice asked to con\Qct Commander low 3011 this afternoon, Lows ·ln and served by the ladles of the
Syr&amp;CIIIt'·,
Gibson, Harve~ . Erllwlne, Jewell . Refreshments. were the 201 in the ICIIIth. tridaJ,
Unltecl Metbodlat
DIBCIIAI\OI'lO - LYdia Clllrln YOIInt.
., •rvtd b~J~~~~--!!!~j

observance at the home were:
Catholic Women's Club of
Sacred Heart, Pomeroy ;
Eastern Future Homemakers
of America; Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, American Legion,
Middleport; Grace Episcopal
Church, Pomeroy; Harold and
Faye Sauer, Bechtel Church
and neighbors, New Haven;
Ruth Sellers, . Portland ;
Eleanor Circle of Middleport's
Heath Methodllt Church and
the WSCS of that church;
Chester Church; St. John
Lutheran Church; Royal
Crown Bottling Co .; Candystripers of Veterans
Memorial Hpspital; Gladys J .
Morgan, near Pomeroy ;
Rutland Church of Christ,
Melanie Beegle, Maxine
Gaskill, Xi Gamma Mu
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
'Sorority.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Chase,
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Anthony;
DeaconeSses of Syracuse First
United Presbyterian Church;
Mr. and Mrs. Pat Lochary,
Reedsville Women 's
Missionary Society; Grace

197!'• Best
For Bank

Le "on·AddS
6 Members

Midwest

Story Told to

Pomeroy Lions

t.'o"o'•';tioV.MVVM...,_:O:~

~
ij

No ReJJson

Put it Off

~

&gt;

'

Weather
"'"ft

· .

�Absentee Rules Explained

SCOtrrS INVESTED - An mvestlture sernce for
members of new Pomeroy Browrue Troop 66 was held
Wednesday at the Pomeroy Elementary School The group
mcludes front row from the left Mary Beth Hawley
Tammy Eichinger Becky Handley Kim Mulford second
row from left RocheJle McDantel Melame Dtllard Barbara
Grueser back row from the left Kellt Grifftth Meltnda
Thomas Krlstm Anderson Leaders of the new troop are
Carolyn Grueser and Donna Handley

Stiversville News Notes
Mr and Mrs Vtctor Durst
and sons were recent guests of
his parents Mr and Mrs R R
Durst and Tom
Mr and Mrs Randall
Talbott New Lexington
vtstted hts mother Mrs Ohve
Talbott
Mr and Mrs Ttm Wilkerson
and son Shawn Columbus and
S W Durst were recent dmner
guests of Mr and Mrs Rudy
Durst
Mrs Ohve Talbott was a
weekend guest of her daughter
and famtly Mr and Mrs
George Souders Xema
Maxme Durst Desste
Weddle and chtldren Robm
Allen Mrs Lewts and children
Nttro W Va Mr and Mrs
Davtd Bryant Dunbar W Va
were' recent guests or Mr and
Mrs Bill Bryant and children
Mr
and
Mrs
Bud
Gluesencamp and daughters
Bohvar 0 were recent guests
of thetr parents Mr and Mrs
Raymond Fttch and Mr and
Mrs L R Gluesencamp and
Ntkkie Dawn
Mr and Mrs Blatn Oatley
and sons called on hts mother
Mrs Ocran Oatley Spiller
Saturday
Mr and Mrs Gary Van
Meter and sons Reedsville
vtstted hts mother Mrs Ada
Van Meter Sunday
Mr and Mrs Harold Brewer
and Jane Long Bottom were
Salurday afternoon callers at
the home of hts parents Mr
and Mrs A C Brewer and
Davtd
Mrs Elva Oatley Syracuse
called on her parents Mr and
Mrs Carl Aulherson and Mrs
Nell Mtddleswart a Sunday
alternoon
Mr and Mrs Mtke Corbett
VISited relatives m Columbus
over the weekend
Recent vtsttors of E H
Carpenter and famtly were
Paul Evans Ntck Durst S W
Durst Rudy Durst Maxme
Durst Delbert Lawson Sandra
Corbett Howard Allen Blam
Oatley and Benny Mrs Btll
Bryant and Dave Patty
Gluesencamp Tom Durst
Mrs Paul Evans and Paul
Dean spent Sunday afternoon
wtth her mother Mrs Mae Van
Meter and Ruby
Delbert Lawson Mmersvtlle
VIsited h1s patepts Mr and
Mrs J W Lawson and son
T mrsday
Maxme Powell Long Bot
tc n called on Maxme Durst
Tuesday afternoon
Mrs Clarence Lawrence
Por lland v1st ted her mother
Mr and Mrs Leon Donahue

The Daily Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
CI+.ESTER L TANNEHILL
EXt&lt;i Ed

ROBERT HOEFLICH
Ctly Edtlor
Pub shed da y ell c ept
Sa urday by The Oh o Valley
Publ sh ng Company
111
Court St
Pomeroy Oh o
~~769 Bus f'1~SS Off ce Phone
992 2156 Ed tor al Phone 992
2157
Second class postage pa d at
Pomerov Ohio
Nat anal adverts ng
repreuntaf ve
Bott nel
Gallagher Inc 12 East 42nd
St New York City New York
Subscr pt on rates
De
I vered by Cf!lrr er where
available so cents per week
By Motor Rovte where carr er
serv ce not ava fable Orle
month ST 75 By ma I In Oh o
and W va One year Sl~ oo
$1)( months $7 2:S
Three
movths u 50 Subscr pi on
pr {e ncludes Sunday T mes
Sen I net

Tuesday
Mr and Mrs Mtke Evans
and family VISited hts mother
Mrs Arthur Evans Pomeroy
Mr Clmt Birch and Leota
VISited Mr and Mrs Thom~s
Btrch and fa_mtly Waterford
0 one day last week
Mr and Mrs Danny Hames
Columbus vts1ted her mother
Mrs Icy Oatley and Melvm
over the weekend

Chester
News Notes
By Clarice Allen
AUXILIARY MEETS
The \-"lll.es Auxiliary of the
Chester ")'Ire Dept met
Wednesd!ly evenmg at the ftre
house wtth Prestdent Betty
Newell prestdmg Mmutes of
the prevwus meeting were
read by Clance Allen and the
treasurer s report was gtven
by Opal Wtckham Reports of
committees were gtven and
b1lls were pa1d Members voted
to buy an electric can opener
for the kitchen
Roll call was answered by
Betty ~jewell Clance Allen
Opal Wickham Grace Gumpf
Erma Cleland Inzy Newell
Opal E1chmger and Opal
Hollan
Mr D D Clelland and Mrs
Carpenter Columbus visited
Sunday wtth Mr and Mrs
Denzil Cleland and Mr Vern
Cleland
B1lly Robert Allen has
returned to Bethelhem Pa
after spendmg two weeks wtth
hts parents Mr and Mrs
Clayton Allen Btlly ts a student
at Lehtgh Umvers1ty m
Bethelhem
Mr&amp; Dame! Toban and
chtldren have returned to thetr
home m Goldsboro N C after
spendmg several months here
Wtth Mrs Lawrence Smith
Mtss Lucille Smtih has
returned home after spendmg
several weeks wtth Mrs John
Reuter Akron
Mr and Mrs Charles
Etchmger a,nd daughter spent
~he weekend wtth Mrs Opal
E1chmger and family
Mrs Ztba M1dktff Hemlock
Grove spent a recent evemng
w1th Mrs John Wtckham
Mtss Donna Kaye Matlack
has returned to her home 1n
Lake Worth Fla
after

By BOB HOEFUCH
Yes Vlrglma you can be
absent more than 30 days from
elementary school of the Me1gs
Local School D111trtct and stiJI
pass to the next grade at the
end of the schpol year
And you know what 7 High
school students can be absent
m excess of 15 days during any
smgle semester and can still
receive credit for thetr work
for the semester
I tell you this Vlrguua
because there ts apparently
some confusiOn developmg on
the policy of the dtstrtct m
regard to absenteetsm Some
parents- and students have
tndtcated that they believe that
a grade school puptl mtssmg m
excess of 30 days of school m a
year wtll be retamed at the
same level at the end of the
year regardless of the puptl s
abthttes
These rumors Vtrgmta are
causmg frustratwn on the part
of some paren~ especially
those wtth youngsters who
seem parltcularly suscepltble
to every vtrus and Illness that
passes by - and durmg a
smgle school year there appear
to be many
The Metgs Local School
Dtstrtct does however have a
pohcy whtch ts designed to
discourage truancy Thts
poltcy reads
Wtlh the exception of home
mstructton extended tllness
pregnancy hospttahzat!On or
other determmed satisfactory
cause the absence of any
semor high school student m
excess of 15 days durmg any

smgle semester shall result m
the loss of any and all credit for
subJects durmg the semester
Wtth the same exceptions
ltsted m 5Sl 71 (above) the
absence of any student in
grades one through e1ght in
excess of 30 days durmg a
school year shall result In the
Joss of any and all credtt for the
school year
Wtth the same exceptions
( hsted above) the absence of
any student In excess of 10 days
durmg any smgle semester
shall be reported m writing by
the prtnclpal to the JUvenile
court
At ftrst glance the poficy
does sound strtct but let me
assure you VIrginia Its qnly
atmed at truancy and not
absenteeiSm that ts legttlmate
The secret of course hes tn the
Or
othe~
determmed
saltsfactory cause
A
sal!sfactory cause refers to
another section of the diStrict s
pohcy entitled excused absence we are told by George
Hargraves supermtendent of
the Metgs Dlstrtct Excused
absences Include personal
tllness Illness m the famtly
quarantine of the home death
of a relatiVe observance of
religiOus hohdays medtcal and
dental services (thts should be
a !muted pnvtlege and should
not be abused by excessive
use) approved school ac
ltvJltes and spectal ctr
cumstances m whtch requests
are made by parents and the
pnnctpal can JUStify the ab
sence as a famtly necesstly or

New Haven Social Events
WOMANSCLVB
The New Haven Woman s
Club met for a Chnstmas Walk
on December 28 begmmng at
the home of Mrs Charles
Smtth for the appeltzer course
wtlh Mrs Robert Gurlts and
Mrs
Dorsey Roush as
hostesses They remained at
Mrs Smtih s home where she
served a turkey dmner with all
the trtmmtngs Members then
proceeded to the home of Mrs
Harold Rose for dessert She
was assisted by Mrs Jack
Hesson
'Members enjoyed a gtft
exchange They accepted the
apphcalton for membership by
Mrs Emo Wood Mrs Wtlham
Russell tlistributed house
numbers to the members who
m turn wtll dtstrtbute these
numbers to restdents of New
Haven
spendmg two weeks With Mr
and Mrs Roy Chnsty and other
relaltve~

Mrs Lula Lodwtck has
returned to her home after
bemg a surgtcal patten! at
Umverstty
hosptlal
tn
Columbus
Mr and Mrs Clayton Allen
spent a recent evemng w1th
Mr
and Mrs
Charles
Goeglem Flatwoods
Mr and Mrs Bruce Myers
and famtly spent Chrtstmas
weekend m Mansfteld wtlh Mr
and Mrs Lloyd Koemg and Mr
and Mrs Donald Hawk and
famthes
Chnstmas dmner guests of
l,lr and Mrs Vtrgtl Roush
were Mr and Mrs Larry
Roush and Jean Ann Wmter
Haven Fla Mtss Donna Kaye
Matlack Lake Worth Fla
Mr and Mrs Ronald Pooler
and children Middleport Mr
and Mrs Don Roush and son
Mrs Nora Brown and Mrs
Jean Summerfield local
Mrs Nora Brown ac
compamed Mr and Mrs Larry
Roush when they returned to
thetr home m Wmter Haven
Fla and wtll spend the wmter
wtth them
Mr and Mrs Henry Hart
man and daughters vtstted
recently tn Pennsylvania wtth
h1s parents

New Haven Personals
Roy Jones has been returned
to h1s home here after being a
paltent at Holzer Medical
Center where he was treated
for leg fractures
Mr and Mrs Donald F
Roush and Sheryl returned
home Sunday evenmg after
spendmg the hohday season
wtth Mr and Mrs Fred
Pomeroy and famtly at Las
Vegas New Mextco They were
JOined there by Mr and Mrs
Sheldon Roush of Detroit
M!Ch
Mr ~nd Mrs J'ames N
Roush and family were
Chnstmas guests of Mr and
Mrs Albert Ftelds at Wmter
Park Mtchtgan Mrs Ftelds ts
the mother of Mrs Roush Mr
and Mrs Ftelds spent the New
Year hohday weekend here at
the Roush home
Mr and Mrs Clyde Foley of
Kmgwood were New Years
weekend guests of Mr and
Mrs Lloyd Roush
Wtlham Dye ts a medtcal
pal!ent at Veterans Memonal
Hospttal
Mr and Mrs Wtlhe Joe
Grmstead left Monday for a
vacatiOn m Flortda
Mr and Mrs Lloyd Roush
spent the Christmas hohday
wtlh their daughter and famtly
Rev and Mrs John E
Bamnger and Stephen m
Burtonsville Maryland
Mr and Mrs Harry Layne
were m Spencer Monday to
attend the funer~l servtces of
Mr Guy Sinnet uncle of Mrs
Layne and brother of Mrs
Harry L Dyer
College Basketball Resu Its
By Umted Press International

Marshall 102 DePa~w 76
Delaware 83 Gettysburg 82
V rg n a 97 Geo Washington 76
Lafayette 100 Columba 64
Wesl V rglnla 88 Bucknell73
Morgan St 60 Del St 42
M amr I0) ~ Western Mlch 64
Case Western 78 Allegheny 70
Cornell lOS Roqhester 98
South Car 116 Manhattan 78
Haw a 77 Connect cut71
Albron 77 Kalamazoo 59

Toledo 78 Butler 55
Un on 77 Kngs Po nt 65
Colgate 100 RPI 82
Oh o U 85 Kent St 74
Boston U 85 Vermonl62
Tufts 112 Amherst 84
Syracuse 106 Cams us 93

Wooster 76 Mt Unron 75

Senators Told Strip Mine
Bill Unworkable in Parts

Ralph Hatch ~ ho tesUfted
before the Senat" Urban and
Htghway Affatrs Committee
which IS presently c'nSJderlng
the legtslalton satd ore of the
unworkable provJSwns was a
requirement to completely
backftll the htghway created
by the strip mme operation
If we had to f1lltl m we d not

have anv bigger area to grade
for producltvlty Hatch satd
I want a good strong slrtp
mme btU Hatch said The
demond for electnctty ts so
great that many more people
w111 be gomg mto strip mtmng
Wtthout regulal!ons some
operators wtll go m and ruin 1t
for legtltmate operators he
satd
Hatch also satd we are not
denytng the fact that thefe 1s
actd dramage m some streams
near -lits str1p operatiOns m
Eastern Ohw However Hatch
said h1s company has mstalled
eqwpment to neutralize this
ac1d dramage by m1xmg 11 w1th
hme

•

•

Cl.lLUMBUS I UP!) - The
P1 eSJdent of Hanna Coal Co
"''d Wednesday he does not
oppose new stnp mme
regulatiOns but some of the
proviSions m a b1ll presently m
the Ohw General Assembly are
tmpracllcal
and
un
workable

Also testifymg before the
committee was John Edwards
of the Ohw Reclama lion
Assoctal!on
Edwards emphastzed the
step by-step procedure whlc"
must be flied by str1p mme
operators under the law should
reqmre more detail
The emphasis ts on
reclamation for short range
and sometimes detrimental
goal mstead of long range
conservation o( natural
renources Edwards sa1d l!le
committee began hearmg
tesltmony on the bill after It
recetved the .egllllaUO! from a
subcomllUttee

•

•
as one that would be
educalionally productive
So, you aee Vtrglnla the
e~cuaed abeences which are
satisfactory causes are quite
lenient and would not penallae
any students whose abeence
was even near being
legtUmate
I
Oh
and Incidentally
Vtrguua 1 the diStrict alSo has a
~rovtston for absences for
special purposes and th1s
provtdes that during each
school year a student IIIII.Y be
permitted one day of absence
for a special purpose The
request for such absence shall
he m wntten form and signed
by the student s pirent or
guardian, the request must be
made and approval gtven by
the prlnctpal pnor to the absence and as with all excused
absence all work may be made
up and no penalty of any kmd
assessed And - not only that
- the absence for a spectal
purpose for a penod longer
than one day may also be
allowed
That s about tl Vlrgmta and
I hope that thts not only clears
up the confusiOn that you ve
had bu! also maybe for
students and parents across
the diStnct who mtght not have
had the complete mfonnatwn
previously

Wallace
In Raee
TALLAHASSEE, Fla ('lJPI)
- Gov Geqe ec.-Iey Wallace
of Alabama aliiiGUIIced his
candidacy for prelidenl as ~
Democrat today, pi'OOllaing a
new begiJtnlng of hope' for
the Arpertcan people
Wallace dldlnot menlloo hiJ
1968 tiilrd parly rampalan for
president In remarkli prepared
for his unqualified offiCial
entry Into the race for the
Democratic presidential
nllJJiiJ1ati,Q~ star~ with the
Florida primary March 14
The people of Florida,' he
said
have a unique op
portunt ty They can start the
grass roots movement to take
back the national Democratic
party unto themselves
presumably by voltng for
Wallace In the Flortda
presidential preference
primary
Wallace pledged If e~cted­
and he tnslsted he was in the
race to wm - continued with
drawal from VIetnam a return
of Jaw and order reduced
taxes a complete halt to forced
busing of pupils reopening of
schools closed by orders of
federal courts or the Juslice
Department
and
no
recogmtion of Castro Cuha

St~ng

Bill Ready

COLUMBUS (UPI) - A Flnl, howevB the SeMte
Senate aubccmmlttee flnllhed ' ~ttee of which be Ill a
must ' furthtJ "
Its work on a camplehenllve , memller
strip mine control- bW Wed- scrutinize It Tbree puliUc
nesdaJ and predicted the hearings are ICheclultd on the
le1Ja¥onlllitcoes to the 11oqr bill during the lag!Jlatlv' ~~
~ the Senile for a vote will be reeess expected to commence
a !'.IUih workable bill •
next week and P in March. ' ' ~
The tir~ Republicans anCI one
'Technically, It's In good
Dem~rat on the sub 1 shape Regula ..ld after the ,...
comm1tlee agreeCI on tbe iiubcommtttee releas~ the I
measure
finally
after bW Other members of the ·~
reworldng It for near!~ ~ panel were Sens IWTY L
months and reported It be'Cit: to Armstrong R Logan •1111
the full Senate urban ilid ~ld M MotU D-farma
Highway Affairs Committee
The btll ~lamps strict ~
The House unanlniously ap- controls on strip -"mine -,
proved It la&amp;t October
operations
It
requlrn
Sen Ralph Regula, R reclamation as mining
Navarre chairman of the sub- proceeds $nd dperators will be c
comnuttee predicted the bill forced to_ file detail\'(! plaps "'
would be ready for a floor vote With the' state 'Department of ,..,
by AprU
Natural Resources
,~

Two February Events Planned
Programs to honor the
Masons and the Eastern Star
members were planned for
February when Bethel 62
InternatiOnal Order of Jobs
Daughters met Monday mght
at the Masomc Temple
Installed during the meeting
were Barbara Fultz as
mustctan Ann Colwell and
Beverly Wilcox as choir
members Two past honored
queens Irene Barnes and

Utilities Under FPC

by the FPC and are subject to
FPC wholesale rate regulation
The FPC may also order them
LEGAL NOTICE
to interconnect and sell power
Total For Cemetery Operation
to other utilities
LEGAL NOTICE
and Maintenance
8 900 oo
Notice
Is
hereby
given
that
The court reversed a rulmg the annual meeting of the
WATER P~MPING
25 600 00
by the 5th U S CirCUit Court of stockholders of The Farmer$ Persona Serv ces
Supplies and Materials 1 000 00
Bank
and
Savings
Company
of
Appeals which refused to 211 West Second Street Total For Water
Pumping
26 600 00
brtng the Florida Power &amp; Pomerov Ohio wtll be held at
WATER DISTRIBUTION
the
office
ot
sa
d
ba.nk
n
Ltght Company under th.,. Pomeroy Ohio accord ng to Its Personal Services ,
7 000 00
FPC s regulatory umbrella by laws on the third Wed Supplies and Mater a Is 12 000 00
9.000 00
of January 1972 at 4 00 Other
Justice Wtlltam 0 Douglas nesday
P M for thi purpose of electing Total For Wattr
Dlstr but on
28 000 00
and Chtef Justice Warren E directors and the transaction of
Total For water System
such
other
business
as
mav
Burger dissented Justices properly come before said
Opera I an
54 600 00
ADMINISTRATION-WATER
Potter Stewart and Ute new meet no
1 000 00
PaulE Kloos Personal Serv ces
court members - Lewis F
44 000 00
Secretary Debt Serv ce
WATER IMP
Powell Jr and W1lllam H 1121 23 30 (1) 6 13 41
Other
235 000 00
Re~t did not participate
.-----;.:...:~.,:...;_... -l';~t~lp!W c'«l:l~rrc 1 tl! 0 &amp;I
Florida P&amp;L Ill connecteq
Total For. Administration~ u
ORDINANCE NO 421
wtth the Florida Power Corp
~w•t•r
45000 00
ANNUAL
Total For Water
i
and three other state utilities to
APPROPRIATION
(Reven-,Jtl Fund
280 000 00
O~DINANC&amp;
form a FloriCIIl pool whose
SEWER MAINTENAN~E
A RESOLUTION to make PersonaiServlces
1160000
members exchange power appropriations
for Current Suppll., and Malerlals 11 oOo oo
The Expenses and other EM Total For Sewer
among themselves
of the Village of
Me lntenance
22 600 oo
commission sought to exercise pendltures
Pomeroy State of Ohio during
ADMINISTRATIONIts jurtsdlction m 1965 on the the fiscal year endinG
SEWAGE
31 1972
Personal Services
150 oo
basis of an exchange between December
Stcllon 1 BE IT R'ESOLVED Debt Service
42 075 oo
the pool and subsidiaries of the by the Council for the VIllage of Total For Administration
Pomeroy State of Ohio That to
- Sewago
42 225 oo
Southern Co a holding provide
for the curre-nt eM
Section
13
That
ther•
bt
company of four major utilities penses and other exrtnditures appropriated
from
tht
of the said VIllage o Pomeroy GENERAL
FUND
mcludmg the Georgl8 Power during
the fiscal year ending RETIREMENT FUND
Co
December
31
1972
the Persona Srrvlces
7 DOD oo

Generation Rap
By Helen

Brenda Taylor and Mrs ••
Debbte Fmlaw and Tom Ed
wards guardian and associate '
guardl8n of the Bethel were
mtroduced
Members were reminded "
durmg the meeting prestded
over by Mllisa Rtzer honored
queen that orders for" ,
housewares hemg sold by the •
Bethel ~re to be turned in to
Mrs Fmlaw by Jan 21
ANNIVERSARY NOTED
The golden weddmg an·
mversary of Mr and Mrs
Delbert Becker of Middleport
wtll he observed on Jan 23 wtth
a dinner at thetr home for
relatives and fnends Mr and
Mrs Becker are the parents of
Mrs Bettie Gladwell of
Columbus and Mr Don Becker
of Mtddleport The couple have
stx grandchildren

Court Herds Electric
WASHINGTON (UP!) The
Supreme Court tssued a ru!lng
Wednesday that would place
almost every electric uttllty m
the country under the
jurtsdtction of the Federal
Power CommiSSIOn
Until now uttlity compames
operatmg wholly wtthtn a
state were regulated only by
state publiC ullhty com
mtsstons
The court ruled 4 to 2 wtth
three members not par
tictpatmg that the FPC had
regulatory power over utilities
which are members of power
pools With other states even
though the utility tlself has no
customers m the other states
Most stale ullhttes are
members of pools whtch m
terconnect generahng
factlities to allow one state to
borrow power from another
dunng emergencies or durmg
peak load pertods
An FPC spokesman sa1d the
ruhng would have qUite an
effect on utthty compantes It
means they must adhere to
accoun ling procedures set up

J"

~nd Sue Bottel

LETTER FROM A BLACK GmL
Dear Rap
This ts m answer to Cyme who Is getting turned off by
ractsm You answered him weU but I d like to a&lt;kl a few things
What the Cyme terms an assertion of racial superlonty IS
not what racial pride Is all about Black is beautiful does not
mean black Is MORE beautiful but black 111 AS beautiful as
white
Every oppressed people must go through Ibis stage and
realtze who they are This ts only a step towards self-respect Of
course some overdo It but don t a few do that in every race•
It IB good the Cyme understands the anger that minonty
groups have towards whttes But something el8e must also be
understood The Cyntc 111 not directly responsible for the temble
thtngs the Caucastan race has done But If he doet not try to
change the sltuatton in his lifetime he is suUty of bemg passiVe
After World War II people were tried and found l!llilty for
not speaking out against the Nazis The Cynic should not feel
gutlty but he should try to do something to change things as tbey
are now

Since ha Is whtte the best place to start Is in the whtte
community Many wh1tea are not even as educa.ted about the
Third World as he IS
The fight goes beyond color We all have to fight thiS thing
red black white, brown yellow Each person has to decide for
himself who the enemy ts and how to change him - ME!JNDA
KAY A BLACK GIRL
Dear Melinda
Thanks for your good letter Things WILL change You and
Sue will see even if my generation stays around only for the first
two acts - HELEN
Dear Helen and Sue
Why Is tt that when a SUY takes a girl out he thinks It s his
duty to go park and make out•
None of the guys around here even plan thetr dates Do they
think they would take a girl to a show, horseback riding, to a
carruval or game, to the beach to dinner, ~ling bowling or to
a dance 1 Even a good walk to a museum, or an Invitation to help
him wash hiS car would be appreciated
There are lots of things that don t cost much money, and
they're a lot more fun than sitting in a car for twd or three hours
glued to each other'
What can be done to get the point over to ~s? SICK AND
TIRED OF IT
Dear Salol
Polish up your No Parking button and let the guys know
the difference between a cheap date and a date that cheapens So
long as you ACCEPT sublllllrlne hunts you II gat nothmg
better - HELEN
1
Dear T1red
A friend of mine has the ultimate reply to lhose SUY8 who
figure every g1rl should park She say• II s my football my
field and my rules You'd be IIIII'Jirlaed bow many decide to
play the game her way - SUE

followtng sums be end they are
hereby set asl~e end ap
propriated as follows viz
Sl!'ctlon 2 That there be ap
proprlated from the GENERAl.

FUND
GENERAL
GOVERNMENTAL
SERVICES
(PROGRAM CODE 70)
MAYOR

Transaction
Class
Personal Services
Total For Mayor

CLERK
Personal Services
Total For Clerk
Cferk Trtasurer

TREASURER

Payment of Principal
4 462 SO
Total For General Bon,d
Retirement Fund
11 462
Section 14 That ..-there be
appropriated
from
the

).,
~

-'
•
•

•
'

~

fl
t&lt;n
P
P ·t

o

'

"

SPECIAL STREET liD RET
FUND
-4

ooo oo
168 78

4 168 78
TOTAL
ALL
1 200 00 APPROPRIATIONS
1 200 00
621 906 28
SECT
ON
17 And tho Village
1 200 00 Clerk Is hereby authorized to
"tWa warrants on the
1 200 00 draw
V llage Treasurer for payments

360 00

made
SECURITY OF
PERSON ANI!
Section 18 This ordinance "'
- PROPERTY
shall take effect at the earliest
( PRQGRJM CODE 10)
per od a lowed bv law
POLICE DEPARTMENT
Passed Jah J 1972
Personal Services
39 000 00
Qonald 1 Collins ,.:
Other
10 850 oo
Preildenl of Councl!
Total For Pollee
CERTIFICATe
Dtparfment
59 8SO 00 Section 5705 39 R c - No
FIRE DEPARTMENT
appropriation mU1sure shall -;
Personal ~ervices
1300 00 become effective until tl;\ere Is ..
Supplies end Material 4 500 00 filed with the appropriating •
Othor
4 240 oo authority by the county auditor •

Total For fire
1 certificate that tpe total ap
•
Department
10 0~0 00 proprtat ons from eech lund
:
Total For Security of 'talcen togtther With ell other •
Persons and Property
outstanding appropriations do •
IProgram Coot 10) 69 890 oo not exceed su~t~ official :
STREET LIGHTING
tStlmatt or aroet..ae~ Offlt;ill •
• UTILITY
ttstlmate
WHen ~ the
*P
•
Other
13 822 so proprlattons does not nceed •
Total tor Street
such official estlrnate the :
Lighting
13 822 50 county auditor shall ;lve auch TRANSPORTATION
cer11fleett forthwith upon •
FACILITIES
receiving
from
tt\W ep
""'
I PROGRAM CODE 60)
proprlatlng •uthortty e certified :
STREET DI!PT
copy of the approprtatlol'l •
Personel Services
17 000 00 measure
~C

Suppllea and MaterielS 2 500 00
Capital Outlay
J 000 00 The Slate of llhlO.,. Mtlgt •
Othor
? !51 50 couooy ss
~
-..:
T(ltal For Street
Paving
31 657 50
I Jant Walton Clork of tl\e
SPECIAL ITREET
Vlllade of Pomeroy In sal~
RliPAIR
&lt;
Counlv and In whose custody'
Ot~er
1500000 the Flies Journals and Records ~
Total For Street
ere required by tht Laws of the •
Rtpa{rlng
15 000.00 ~tate of Oh ro to Itt kept dO •
Totel. For Strtet Constructftlin
htreby oortlfy that tho =

•

=
•

Maintenance and
Repair Fund

foregoing Annual ApprC)prlatlon
Ordinance 11 tektn and copies
from the orlglnel Ordh11.,Ce

..,

t
•

(Progr•m Code 601 46 657 50
STAJI HIG'HWAY
now on fl!t with told Vlflogo •
FUNDIDtpt orOifttt)
that the foreootng Ord nance ~
Personal Strvlces
500 oo has b!en compared by me wllh •
Ot~er
3 000 oo the stld original and that the •
Total For Stott Highway
•ame Jsa true anct correct copy .~.
thereof
.,
Improvement Fund
IProgram COde 40) 3 500 DD
Wltneas
my
algnature
•
PUILIC HIALTH $1RV!g&amp;s this
day of January 1912
=
CIMITIRY OPIRATIO"
Jane Wollon
AND MAINTINANCI,
CltrkaflhtVIII.Vtof t!
Ptrsonll StrvlciS
7 500 oo
Mtlgl CO\Inty Ohio
SuppiiiS ond Mttorlols 1 ~oo oo l116131t
I

•

Kentucky
VIrginia
Floridians
New York
Pittsburgh
Carolina

East
W L Pet

34

9
27 17

19 24

791

GB

614 7 '

442 15
19 25 432 15 2
18 28 391 17 '
15 30 333 20
West
W L Pet GB
Utah
31 14 689
Indiana
25 19 568 5 ,
Memphis
19 25 432 11 2
Dallas
20 28 417 12 12
Denver
17 25 405 1212
Wednesd.ly s Results
Dallas 107 Denver 102
IOnly.gamescheduled)
Thursday s Games
Florldlansat New York
Denver at Plttoburgh
Utah vs VIrginia
At Norfolk Va
IOnlygamesscheduled)

AHL Standtngs
By United Presslnternattonal
~

East

WLTPts
259757
Boston
20 13 9 49
Nova Scot1a
15 14 8 38
Sprrngfleld
12 2{) 9 33
Providence
12 22 5 29
Rochester
Wtsf
WLTPts
Hershey
20 II 6 46
Baltimore
19 15 5 43
Richmond
17 16 6 40
Cleveland
17 16 6 40
Cincinnati
14 18 9 37
Trdewater
9 26 4 22
Wednesdays Results
Cleveland 3 Hershey 1
Nova Scotia 5 Rochester 2
Rlchmond7 Provldence2
IOnlygamesscheduled)
Thursday • Games
Cleveland at Tidewater
IOnlygamescheduled)

Bishop II 4 Texas Coli 88
Dowling 85 Baruch 73
Rice 87 Georgra Tech 74
W Chstr St 78 Kutztwn St 69
Air Force 84 Sou Colo St 76

Tar Heels Rip
Clemson 81-61

~

'

The Southern Valley Athletic Symmes Valley The Vtktogs tasted defeat once thts ~ear tl
Cage crown could be 01\ the line mfl1cted a ~tunnmg 71.jj9 upset appears there may be trouble
th111 weekend With two tm over the Ptrates JUS! before the on the rtse Two Eagles Rtck
portant games Friday mght Christmas vacation Eastern Wtlhams and Mtke Benedum
Coach BtU Phtlltps Eastern moves mto the game after have qutl the team since the
Eagles tnvade Ptrateland for a edgmg Hannan Trace 57-54 season began
game with Coach Jun Foster s and rompmg over South
North Galha wtth tis dectstve
North Gall1a Pirates
height advantage has been led
western 65-29
Eastern Is second m the
North Gall18 last weekend by Arthur Clark 6-5 semor
SVAC loop s~ndmgs wtth a 6-1 dumped the Kyger Creek center Gary Crosswht~ 6-4
record The Eagles only Bobcats 95-52 and tOpped a Juntor forward Larry Justus
blemtsh was a 72-55 setback stubborn Federal Hockmg 1M semor. forward and Pat
Stout 5 10 semor guard
suffered m December at the squad 61-53
hands of North Gallta
The llletgs CounUans are led Harv~y Brown 5 9 semor
Ttie Pirates are 5-l m the by DenniS Etchmger 6-3 semor speedster has been a b1g
SVAC and 6-2 overall Saturday center and Bob Caldwell 5-10 scormg threat of late
mght North Gallta has a semor guard
Coach Wayne Whtle s
rema1ch w1th ~nbeaten
Although Eastern has only Vtkmgs are 8ol&gt; overall wtth

By GENE CADDES
UP! Sports Writer
COLUMBUS (UP!)--Ohto
high school basketball notea
from around the state
If he had been playing on the
road Milton-Umon Coach Len
Volbert Could have claimed he
was homered, ' the term used
when the V18ltmg team doesn t
think the officials gave them a
fatr shake
The Bulldogs however were
playing at home when they
dropped a 61-48 dec111lon to St
Paris Graham a contest m
which they dldn t shoot a smgle
free throw That s right not
one
Only one personal was called
on Graham durmg the contest
an offensive one g1vmg the
ball to Milton Union out of
bounds
Graham meanwhile was
converting on 17 of 28 from the
line to more than make up for
the 24 22 advantage the
Bulldogs had from the fteld
Pleased With Officials
One rmght expect Volbert to
hit the roof of the gym the way
thmgs went but such was not
the case

I went over the game fihn
and I didn t see one foul on
Graham Volbert aatd later
exceptfor the one offenstve I
have no questions about the of
flclallng In face we were
pleased wtth the offiCials
The offiCials were Dave Kullman and Don Pterce both of
the Dayton area
The game also went a little
goofy scorewlse wtth MlltonUmon taking a 22 7 first
quarter lead and stlll leading
34-26 at halftune only to lie
outscored 35-14 in the final 16
minutes of play It was the
Bulldogs 28th loss m their last
29 games
Fatrport Harbor had 1ts losmg streak covermg three sea
sons stretched to 28 games
Frtday by a 69'«! loss to Car
dina! The victory snapped a
10 game losmg streak for
Cardinal
After Another Honor
Scott May Sandusky s All
Ohio end ts makmg a strong
move to also capture all~tate
honors •n basketball May 6-5
and 210 pounds scored 32
pomts Fnday mght m the Blue
Streaks 58,51 vtctory over

scored 37 pomts grabbed 20
rebounds and blocked six shots
as South Carolina manhandled
Manhattan and Jim Price s 25potnt effort, including four free
Ia's
throws in the final minute,
Willi ~lh Carollill' liil\lllljj ~lped !Aul.l\!llle .beat Dayton. ,..
tr'l '' "
~• b
mn H "'" &lt;" ,.. 1'" wv
0
gone"lriCiependent the battle RoY Ebron scored 35 Jllllnta and
T:pr~
•
for ACC honot:S this seuon W1ll Dwight Lamar the nations
expected to be foucht between leading acorer, a~ed 31 as
Marylaill and North CarollDa Southwestern lliiulslana
,
North Carolina is ln there downed Eastern New Mexico
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Btll 50 at halfttme and 86-81 after
Elsewhere 7-4 Tommy Sharman worned about a let- three periods
fight~ but It'll be surprising
Van Arsdale fmished with 31
VIrginia that will provide the Burleson scored 30 pijints as down He turned out to be right
opposition
North carolina ~tate blaste~
The amazmg Los Angeles pomts to lead all scorers while
VIrginia, ranked Nq 9 Duke, 85a and Greg Kohls hit Lakers, who had a 33-game wth Nate The Skate Archibald
nationally, boosted Its record 37 points In 87racuse s easy streak broken on national tele tallied 22 and had 13 asststs
to 12-G Wedneaday night with a 106-93 victory over Canwus vision at Milwaukee Sunday.
That was our plan, sa1d
97·78 rout of George Larry Finch's 24-polnt per will go Into the all~tar bresk Archibald a second year
guard from Texas El Paso
Wuhlngton North CarollDa formance carried Memphis with at least five !oases
the No Steam, lifted its record State to an llU5 ttlumph over
Coming off a 20-point vi.£)ory Cousy told me he wanted me
to 1~1 wllh an 11-jjl triumph Louisiana State and Mark at Detroit the Lakers were to drtve and make Wilt cOITlllllt
over
Clemson
North Wehrle and Danny McGuire beaten by the Cmcmnatt hintself Then I was to pass
Carolina 8 only loas waa at scored 22 asch aa Rice topped Royals 108 107 Wednesday off
Georsla Tech, 8'1·74
night
Chamberlam led the Lakers
~ton
Barry Parkhill, just over an
Bill Knight scored 28 pomts
Sharman had thought the let with 24 points and 19 rebounds
and
Kent
Scott
a&lt;kled
22
as
down
would come against the Jerry West contributed 21
attack rJ. the flu, scored 23
points despite being rested PlttsbmBh cruised past David Pistons Tuesday night m the pom\s while Hap Hatrston had
much of the game to lead the son 91·78, and Tom Corde and game after the Lakers Nation- a game-high 23 rebounds
VIrginia attack. Jim Hobgood Tom Ricciardi combined for 44 al Basketb'll Association
added 14 points and Frank points as Ohio University beat record strmg was stopped
Kent State, 85-74 Tom
Instead It Cjl1liO at C~m­
DeWitt 13 for the Cavaliers
North carolina, with Robert Kozelko s 'l/.point 14-rebound nat! against a team whtch had
McAdoo scoring 28 points, effort carried Toledo past only 11 victories
Bob Cousy Sharman s old
lroke open a cl01e game in the Butler 7W5
teammate with the Boston Cel
second half and went on to beat
lies watched hts Royals post
Clemlon ln an ACC&gt;same The
their second straight win after
Tar Heelll Jed by only two
dropping 14 in a row
points at the half before
DALLAS (UPI)-The Dallas
The Lakers now 4~ have
eruptlnC in the, aecond hall
Chaparrals overcame a 16- one more game left before the
North Carolina Coach Dean
potnt deficit in the second half AII.Star Game at lA&gt;s Angeles
Smith waa charged with a
Wednesday night and slipped Tuesday rught, playing at Phil
NEW YORK IUPI) - The
double technical and ejected past Denver, 107 102 in the
Cleveland
Indians chose Eric
from the lame at the half and only American Basketball adelphia Friday night
Ralch a pitcher !rom CompThe letdown may follow the ton Calif as lherr No I pick In
Tates Locke CleirlJon s coach, AssoctaUon game
the annual baseball free agent
Lakers to Permsylvanla
alsO drew a technical foul
Sbrunie Hall led the COIIl&amp;'
draft
Wednesday while the
Two years ago the New York Cincinnati
In other action lilvolving back with 19 points, 17 m the
Reds went with
rated teams, South carolina second half Dallas took lile Knicks set an NBA record of 18 Infielder Greg Sinatro of Dade
straight vtclortes They then Junior College In Florida In the
( 4) clobbered Manhattan, 116lead with just more than three lost three m a row
tlrsf round of the regular phase
78, Lo\daviDe (8) suri!ed past
of the draft
minutes remaining and did not
Last sea9011 the Milwaukee
Dayton, 71-44, , and South· trail again
In the AAA selections
Bucks won 20 consecutive Cleveland chose Anthony
western IA&gt;uiSIIina (18) ripped
games to lreak the Knicks Gram mores Is a ohortstop
Eastern New Me:dco 11$-79
from Miramar Fla for Its
record The Bucks then took Portland farm club and
Seve!Hooter l!&gt;llnny Traylor
three straight defeats
Cincinnati took Tomy Mut2 of
•
Tom Van Arsdale s 15-foot Santa Fe N M for Its In
AAA club
jump shot with three seconds dlanapolls
Calllornla drafted Trm
left put Cincinnati Into a 108-105 Burns a rltcher from Dayton
lead Wilt Chamberlain dunked for Its Sol Lake City AAA team
Detroit picked up out
an mbounds pass with no time and
fielder Daniel Gonzales of
showing for the final Laker Whittier Calif for Its Toledo
CAll POINTVIfW
992 150~
club
basket
AA selections Included
The Royals led aU the way
Cleveland
p eked up out
Anow show makH lh debut
Another very fin• actor after taking a 31).24 ftrst quar !Ieider Clyde Fink Jr of
ton lght and I don f know
this one very much alive an,d
ter lead They were tri front 62- Salisbury N C for Its Elmira
whelher to laugt&gt; or cry lt s •~Ill going strong- shows up
called Me and the Chimp
with Dfck Cavett He s
and stars Ted Bessell
James Whitmore one of the
playing straight man to a boot In my JUdgment 11 JO
monkoy Instead of Merlo pm Ch 6
Thomas The only way to tell
+++
If thlo predictable sure looer
MOVIES
Athena
4
hu anything going for It ot p m and Humoresque
all Is lo watch It 8 p m Ch
11 30 p m ~ both-Ch~l

The stage has been set for
Saturday's big Atlantic Coast
Conference encounter with a
surprising cast of charac·

Mansfield Seruor His season s
average is 'll 3 per game
BobHuggUIS of Indian Valley
South poured m 44 points
Saturday mght m tbe Rebels
80-50 Victory over previously
unbeaten Lakeland HuggUIS
the 6-4 senior son of IVS Coach
Charles Huggins has 16 field
goals and 12 of 15 free throws
He was a first learn Class A All
Ohto selection last season
Celina's 6.jj sen1ors Curt
Shellabarger 1lttd Joe Ester
field were too much for Sidney
Saturday night Shellabarger
scored a career htgh 28 pomts
and pulled down 19 rebounds
and Westerfield had 17 pomts
and 14 rebounds m the
Bulldogs 82-70 wm over the
Yellow Jackets The VIctory
was the lOth m a row for thtrd
ranked Celina
Portsmouth West s 6-6
sophomore KeUy Shy has led
the Senators to an 8-1 record
Withhts 24polntand 17 rebound
per game averages
Claymont was without the
services of both Dave Smitl!, 6-

Choice

Rent Floor Sander &amp; EdgerS
To Finish Your Floors

hl-

+

Ail old show which co~ I

survive in Us preoent formal
makes us want to cry IQ be
1ure Tonight we II see
Alios Smith and Jones
ftlhlrlng the late Peter
Du'l who diad durlpg the
holldayo an apparent
suicide The !lhow wosn t
really vreot but Duel struck
ua oa 1 capable young octor
Ht II be misled, I p m Ch
12

++t

FRIDAY Get up early
and don t m1,. lhe big doings
as the Today show ob
oerves Its 20th brrth!fay 1My
gosh can It have been
twenty years') On hand will
be most ot the old regularsDove Garroway· Jock
Lescoulle John Chtncellor
Hugh Downs among ot~ors
(bul ~ot J Fred Mugg1 I
behove) 7om Chs 2 &amp; 1

We Also Have Thane or VamiBh
'
Made By Gym Seal and Fabulon

Hoin1 U M ItS lt,ni7Uitlj Ml
77).5583 7 1 M lo9 ,_,. Frltlly 6 ..MUY lift, W V•

•

SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L P
Symmes Valley
8 0 627
Easlern
7 1 546
North Galli a 6 2 659
Hannan Trace 4 4 428
Southern
3 5 503
Kyger Creek 1 7 432
Soulhwestern 0 9 336
TEAM
W L p
Symmes Valley
Eastern
: ~ :
North Galla 5 1 516
Hannan Trace 2 4 325

0 junior averagtng 26 4 points

OP
483
384
440

428
per game and 6 o John
502
597
Barkley m the tenth ranked
779
Mustangs 59-57 loss to New
OP
Phlladeljj!la Saturday night
Cleveland Benedictines re
~~~
cord«tting state high school
311
htgh jump champton Joe
347
Reccord baSil t lost any of the ~~~t::c~eek ~ ~ ~~
sprmg In his Moot 7 frame In Southwestern o 7 242 580
the Bengals 80o77 wm over Totols
12 22 2751 2752
John Adams Frtday ntght
SVAC RESERVES
TEAM
W L P OP
Reccord blocked two shots Eastern
7 o 319 226
early m the contest and later Norlh Gall Ia 5 1 24'1 193
was called for goal tending Symmes Valley
three tunes He ftntshed the Kyger Creek ~ ~ :~ :~
rught wtth 21 points and 18 Hannan Trace 2 4 194 25,2
rebounds
Southern
2 4 227 272
Soulhwestern 0 7 124 293
I
lkn
New Madison sLy e Fa or Totals
22 21 1741 1741
continues as the leadmg scorer
Friday s Gam11 Eastern at
m the Darke County area with North Gallla Kyger Creek at
a 32 pomts per game average Hannan Troce Southern al
Hannan
W Va
and
on352pomts m 11 games Falk qesapeake at Symmes
nor has been over40polnts four Valley
times with a htgh of 48
Saturday s Games Symmes
Larry Shade 6-foot 7 junior Valley at North Gallla Han
nan Trace at Southern and
once:beaten Newton (Ill) had ~ Southwestern al lronlon St
.3Q pomts and 24 rebounds m his Joe
team s 88-80 wm over Anna (92) Saturday mght He s aver
agmg 24 rebounds per contest

"1 feel

!:

jumpy today!"
Relax

let Rizer s worry

about your fuel oil needs
We molch your rate of oil
used against a temperature
chart to know when to refill
your fuel all tank You
always have an adequate
oil supply

Crosby Play

Lowly Royals
Z"
T
t " alf,ers
I"! " "
lJ.J "e

Is Top

8

Arledge s Bobcats wtll attempt htlttng Southern 111 :1-4, in
to snap a stx game losing league play and ~ overall
streak agatnst Coach Paul
The Tornadoes liave been led
Dlllop s Wildcats
by Jerry and Jtm Hubbard and
Hannan. Trace ts 4-4 m all 6-1 semor Bruce Hart Also
games and 2'4 tn the SV AC
slated Saturday evening are
The Bobcats are led m the the Southwestern Ironton St
scormg department by Roy Joe game at Ironton and the
Thompson 6-2 semor center Hannan Trace-Southern game
and George Curry 5-11 juntor at Racme
forward
Mtke Caldwell 6-5 Junior
center Ketlh Swatn 5 10
semor guard and John Lusher
6-2 sophomore forward lead the
Wtldcat attack
KC s btggest problenns have
been too many turnovers and
the lack of consistent lteld goal

victories over Fairland and
Rock Htll m non league games
The Vtkmgs wtll play
Chesapeake Fr1day mght
Symmes Valley has been led
offensively by Danny Wtlson 511 semor forward Wtlson has
canned 86 pomts '"h1s last two
ball '!lames
Other scormg thfeats are
Phtl Robinson 5-9 guard Jene
Myers 5-11 Junior and Ketth
Roach 6-0 semor Roach ts the
rna JOr rebounder
In other Fr1day games
Kyger Creek travels to Hannan
Trace and Southern Is at
Rannan W Va Coach Jim

Prep Team Fouls Once In Tilt

Raich

•

from any of the foregoing ap
ons upon receiving
360 oo proprlat
proper
certificates
and"
SOLICITOR LEGAL
vouchers therefor Dpproved by
ADVISOR
the board or officers authorized
Personel Services
2 000 00 by
law to 4pprove the same or
Totftl For !;ollcltor
an
ordinance or resolution of
Legal Advisor
2 000 00 council
to make the e~
ELECTIONS
pendltures proVIded that no
Other
500 00 Yf'llrrantsshall be drawn or paid J
Total For Elect ons
500 00 for salaries or wages except to
COUNCIL
employed by authority
Personal Strvlces
720 00 persons
of
and
In
accordance with law or
Total For Council
720 00 ordinance
Provided further ,..
GENERAL
that
the
approprlatiOF\S
for
ADMINISTRATION
contingencies can only t)e ex "
Personal Strvlces
4 500 00 pended
upon appeal of wo
Supplies and Materials 1 200 00
Council for Items of
thirds
of
Capital Outlay
I 000 00
~;:onstltutlng
a legal ...
Other
6 400 00 expense
obligation aga nst the village
Toto!
c
13 100 00 and for purposes other 11t11n
Total For General
those covered by the other
Admlnlotrotlon
19 080 oo specific
appropr atlons herein ~
Personal Services
Total For Trnsurer

Tflursday sG•mes

Baltimore at Seattle
IOnlygamescheduled)
ABA Stondlngs
By Un1ted PresslnlornotJonal

NHL Stonditlgs
By United Press lntornoltonat
E11t
W L T Ph
New York
27 6 7 61
Boston
27 7 6 60
Montreal
23 10 7 53
19 13 10 41
Tor!&gt;nto
Detroit
11 18 7 41
Buffalo
8 24 10 26
10 24 5 25
Vancouver
Wost
WLTPts
Chicago
21 8 5 61
Minnesota
22 13 6 50
California
)3 22 9 35
St Louis
13 22 7 33
Philadelphia
12 21 7 31
Pittsburgh
11 23 8 30
Los ~eleo
II JO 2 24
eclneoday s Results
Boston Pittsburgh 2
Toronto Los Angeles I
Cal! for a 2Minnesota 0
IOnly games scheduled)
Tliursd.ly s Gamos
Pittsburgh at Montreal
New York at Buffalo
Los Angeles at Bdston
(Onlygamesscheduled)

Pirates Face Eagles,' Vikings

By United Press tlllematlonal

so ,.,

Peymentof Principal
Payment of Interest
Tote For Spec al
Auessm ent Bond
Retirement Fund

lilA Stondlngs
ly Unllfd '"'' tnl~m~tronal
Eastern Conference
AIIHtlc DIYiston
W L Pet GB
Boston
30 16 652
NewYbrk
25 18 581 3y2
Phllldtlpllta 19 26 412 10 ,
Buffalo
13 30 302 15,12
Cllllr~l DtYtlfon
W L,; Pet GB
Baltimore • 19 23 t52
A-tlanta
16 28 364 ~
Cleveland
15 28 349 4&lt;,
Cincinnati
12 31 279 7',
Western Canlortnce
Midwest Dlvtslon
W L Pet Gil
Milwaukee, 36 10 783
Chicago
31 13 705 4
Phoenix
26 19 578 91 2
Detroit
17 28 378 1812
Poclfrc DIYtslon
W L Pet Gil
LosAnge[es 40 5 889
Seattle
27 19 587 13 ,
Golden Sf
25 19 568 14 ,
Houston
15 2'1 341 24',
Portland
11 35 239 29'h
Wednosd.ly s RISults
Boston I13 Chicago 112
Cincinnati 107 Los Ang 107
Buffalo 111 Phlladelphla1~
Atlanta 104 Milwaukee 102
IOnlygamesscheduled)

Stws ·~oday
PEBBLE BEACH Calif
(UPI)-Last year Jack Ntck
laus won four tournaments and
a quarter million dollars while
playmg In only 18 events
HIS 1972 plans call for about
the same kind of schedule and
naturally he d like to win
another quarter rmllton plus at
least one of the big four of the
PGA championship Masters
and Brtttsh and U S Opens
Today after a layoff of ftve
weeks he starts off m pursutt of
all that money m the Btng
Crosby Naltonal p•o-am one of
those canuv•I events on the
wmter schedule However tis
wmners purse of $28 000 111
nothmg to laugh at
Nicklaus Los Angeles Open
champ George Archer 1971
PGA Player of the Year Lee
Trevino Billy Casper and
defendmg champ Tom Shaw
are the name players m a
170-man Crosby pro field
Among the mtsslng thts year
ts Arnold Palmer who played
club Cincinnati got Bertram
Froncks a pitcher from
Hackettstown N J for Its
Three Rivers club Minnesota
chose John Pangle a pitcher
tram Akron for Its Charlotte
AA club Houston drafted
David Meltes a pitcher from
Columbus Ohio lor Its
Columbus Ga team
THe rest of Cleveland s p cks
in the regular phase were

Michael Smith pitcher San
Jose Calli ChariH Petrillo
second base Southfield M1ch
John Keough Jr pitcher
Rockland Mas! and Michael
Johnson pitcher Spring! eld
Mo
In the sec!&gt;ndary phose the~
got William Taylor lnflelde(
James
Encinitas Calif
Hannah first base Newark
Ohio Alan Lobb pitcher
Ben Heise
Bangur Pa
shortstop Vacaville Calif
Donald CoUins pitcher Lyons
Go and Edward Burzo
outfield Levittown N Y
The rest of Cln~lnnatl s p cks
In the regular phase were
Farrell Vincent Jr pitcher
Memph•s
Tenn
Keith
Ove~"-ck pitcher Pickerell
Neb
Lewfl Reasonover
ohortstop Nashville Tenn
Gary Erskine outfield pitcher
Anderson lnd and Perry
Renfroe pitcher Jacksonville

Ala

In the ~ condary phase
Cincinnati drafted Ronald
Herr ng Pilcher Greenville
Ala Thomes Hume pitcher
St P~ersburg Fla and Larry
D' B111n prtcher Omaha Neb
In the f llh round of the
regular phase A selections
Detrort picked up John Davies
a prtcher from Toledo for rts
Clinton club In the I tth round
of the tecondary phase• Texas

got Robin Ogle flrot booeman
())&lt;ford Oh10 for Its Geneva

1.-~------~-----------• club

poorly m the Los Angeles Open
and has gone home to rest upuntil the Hawaiian Open next
month
I m going to concentrate
Palmer satd on playmg less
and hopefully better I just
couldn t putt at Los Angeles

BLIND STOP OR OVER LAP

WINDOWS

, VAllEY WMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.
MIDDLEPORT

992 2709

YOUR
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BUY

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ELECTRIC
WATER HEATER
ONLY

'89.95

Jacket dlometor 2012 height from floor Including
nipples 32 nipple size 'II "-tween nipples a
height of eltctrlc outlet 2• 10 Immersion type 4500
watt lower and u - twin eltmenls Capacity 52
gal welt Insulated white enameled outer jacket l
YEAR OUTRIGHT WARRANTY

•

'

GAS MODELS
30 Galloo

40 Galloo '

6950

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.

'·

EBERSBACH
HARDWARE
Phone 9~ 2811

':
1

now

Mam

Pomeroy

�Absentee Rules Explained

SCOtrrS INVESTED - An mvestlture sernce for
members of new Pomeroy Browrue Troop 66 was held
Wednesday at the Pomeroy Elementary School The group
mcludes front row from the left Mary Beth Hawley
Tammy Eichinger Becky Handley Kim Mulford second
row from left RocheJle McDantel Melame Dtllard Barbara
Grueser back row from the left Kellt Grifftth Meltnda
Thomas Krlstm Anderson Leaders of the new troop are
Carolyn Grueser and Donna Handley

Stiversville News Notes
Mr and Mrs Vtctor Durst
and sons were recent guests of
his parents Mr and Mrs R R
Durst and Tom
Mr and Mrs Randall
Talbott New Lexington
vtstted hts mother Mrs Ohve
Talbott
Mr and Mrs Ttm Wilkerson
and son Shawn Columbus and
S W Durst were recent dmner
guests of Mr and Mrs Rudy
Durst
Mrs Ohve Talbott was a
weekend guest of her daughter
and famtly Mr and Mrs
George Souders Xema
Maxme Durst Desste
Weddle and chtldren Robm
Allen Mrs Lewts and children
Nttro W Va Mr and Mrs
Davtd Bryant Dunbar W Va
were' recent guests or Mr and
Mrs Bill Bryant and children
Mr
and
Mrs
Bud
Gluesencamp and daughters
Bohvar 0 were recent guests
of thetr parents Mr and Mrs
Raymond Fttch and Mr and
Mrs L R Gluesencamp and
Ntkkie Dawn
Mr and Mrs Blatn Oatley
and sons called on hts mother
Mrs Ocran Oatley Spiller
Saturday
Mr and Mrs Gary Van
Meter and sons Reedsville
vtstted hts mother Mrs Ada
Van Meter Sunday
Mr and Mrs Harold Brewer
and Jane Long Bottom were
Salurday afternoon callers at
the home of hts parents Mr
and Mrs A C Brewer and
Davtd
Mrs Elva Oatley Syracuse
called on her parents Mr and
Mrs Carl Aulherson and Mrs
Nell Mtddleswart a Sunday
alternoon
Mr and Mrs Mtke Corbett
VISited relatives m Columbus
over the weekend
Recent vtsttors of E H
Carpenter and famtly were
Paul Evans Ntck Durst S W
Durst Rudy Durst Maxme
Durst Delbert Lawson Sandra
Corbett Howard Allen Blam
Oatley and Benny Mrs Btll
Bryant and Dave Patty
Gluesencamp Tom Durst
Mrs Paul Evans and Paul
Dean spent Sunday afternoon
wtth her mother Mrs Mae Van
Meter and Ruby
Delbert Lawson Mmersvtlle
VIsited h1s patepts Mr and
Mrs J W Lawson and son
T mrsday
Maxme Powell Long Bot
tc n called on Maxme Durst
Tuesday afternoon
Mrs Clarence Lawrence
Por lland v1st ted her mother
Mr and Mrs Leon Donahue

The Daily Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
CI+.ESTER L TANNEHILL
EXt&lt;i Ed

ROBERT HOEFLICH
Ctly Edtlor
Pub shed da y ell c ept
Sa urday by The Oh o Valley
Publ sh ng Company
111
Court St
Pomeroy Oh o
~~769 Bus f'1~SS Off ce Phone
992 2156 Ed tor al Phone 992
2157
Second class postage pa d at
Pomerov Ohio
Nat anal adverts ng
repreuntaf ve
Bott nel
Gallagher Inc 12 East 42nd
St New York City New York
Subscr pt on rates
De
I vered by Cf!lrr er where
available so cents per week
By Motor Rovte where carr er
serv ce not ava fable Orle
month ST 75 By ma I In Oh o
and W va One year Sl~ oo
$1)( months $7 2:S
Three
movths u 50 Subscr pi on
pr {e ncludes Sunday T mes
Sen I net

Tuesday
Mr and Mrs Mtke Evans
and family VISited hts mother
Mrs Arthur Evans Pomeroy
Mr Clmt Birch and Leota
VISited Mr and Mrs Thom~s
Btrch and fa_mtly Waterford
0 one day last week
Mr and Mrs Danny Hames
Columbus vts1ted her mother
Mrs Icy Oatley and Melvm
over the weekend

Chester
News Notes
By Clarice Allen
AUXILIARY MEETS
The \-"lll.es Auxiliary of the
Chester ")'Ire Dept met
Wednesd!ly evenmg at the ftre
house wtth Prestdent Betty
Newell prestdmg Mmutes of
the prevwus meeting were
read by Clance Allen and the
treasurer s report was gtven
by Opal Wtckham Reports of
committees were gtven and
b1lls were pa1d Members voted
to buy an electric can opener
for the kitchen
Roll call was answered by
Betty ~jewell Clance Allen
Opal Wickham Grace Gumpf
Erma Cleland Inzy Newell
Opal E1chmger and Opal
Hollan
Mr D D Clelland and Mrs
Carpenter Columbus visited
Sunday wtth Mr and Mrs
Denzil Cleland and Mr Vern
Cleland
B1lly Robert Allen has
returned to Bethelhem Pa
after spendmg two weeks wtth
hts parents Mr and Mrs
Clayton Allen Btlly ts a student
at Lehtgh Umvers1ty m
Bethelhem
Mr&amp; Dame! Toban and
chtldren have returned to thetr
home m Goldsboro N C after
spendmg several months here
Wtth Mrs Lawrence Smith
Mtss Lucille Smtih has
returned home after spendmg
several weeks wtth Mrs John
Reuter Akron
Mr and Mrs Charles
Etchmger a,nd daughter spent
~he weekend wtth Mrs Opal
E1chmger and family
Mrs Ztba M1dktff Hemlock
Grove spent a recent evemng
w1th Mrs John Wtckham
Mtss Donna Kaye Matlack
has returned to her home 1n
Lake Worth Fla
after

By BOB HOEFUCH
Yes Vlrglma you can be
absent more than 30 days from
elementary school of the Me1gs
Local School D111trtct and stiJI
pass to the next grade at the
end of the schpol year
And you know what 7 High
school students can be absent
m excess of 15 days during any
smgle semester and can still
receive credit for thetr work
for the semester
I tell you this Vlrguua
because there ts apparently
some confusiOn developmg on
the policy of the dtstrtct m
regard to absenteetsm Some
parents- and students have
tndtcated that they believe that
a grade school puptl mtssmg m
excess of 30 days of school m a
year wtll be retamed at the
same level at the end of the
year regardless of the puptl s
abthttes
These rumors Vtrgmta are
causmg frustratwn on the part
of some paren~ especially
those wtth youngsters who
seem parltcularly suscepltble
to every vtrus and Illness that
passes by - and durmg a
smgle school year there appear
to be many
The Metgs Local School
Dtstrtct does however have a
pohcy whtch ts designed to
discourage truancy Thts
poltcy reads
Wtlh the exception of home
mstructton extended tllness
pregnancy hospttahzat!On or
other determmed satisfactory
cause the absence of any
semor high school student m
excess of 15 days durmg any

smgle semester shall result m
the loss of any and all credit for
subJects durmg the semester
Wtth the same exceptions
ltsted m 5Sl 71 (above) the
absence of any student in
grades one through e1ght in
excess of 30 days durmg a
school year shall result In the
Joss of any and all credtt for the
school year
Wtth the same exceptions
( hsted above) the absence of
any student In excess of 10 days
durmg any smgle semester
shall be reported m writing by
the prtnclpal to the JUvenile
court
At ftrst glance the poficy
does sound strtct but let me
assure you VIrginia Its qnly
atmed at truancy and not
absenteeiSm that ts legttlmate
The secret of course hes tn the
Or
othe~
determmed
saltsfactory cause
A
sal!sfactory cause refers to
another section of the diStrict s
pohcy entitled excused absence we are told by George
Hargraves supermtendent of
the Metgs Dlstrtct Excused
absences Include personal
tllness Illness m the famtly
quarantine of the home death
of a relatiVe observance of
religiOus hohdays medtcal and
dental services (thts should be
a !muted pnvtlege and should
not be abused by excessive
use) approved school ac
ltvJltes and spectal ctr
cumstances m whtch requests
are made by parents and the
pnnctpal can JUStify the ab
sence as a famtly necesstly or

New Haven Social Events
WOMANSCLVB
The New Haven Woman s
Club met for a Chnstmas Walk
on December 28 begmmng at
the home of Mrs Charles
Smtth for the appeltzer course
wtlh Mrs Robert Gurlts and
Mrs
Dorsey Roush as
hostesses They remained at
Mrs Smtih s home where she
served a turkey dmner with all
the trtmmtngs Members then
proceeded to the home of Mrs
Harold Rose for dessert She
was assisted by Mrs Jack
Hesson
'Members enjoyed a gtft
exchange They accepted the
apphcalton for membership by
Mrs Emo Wood Mrs Wtlham
Russell tlistributed house
numbers to the members who
m turn wtll dtstrtbute these
numbers to restdents of New
Haven
spendmg two weeks With Mr
and Mrs Roy Chnsty and other
relaltve~

Mrs Lula Lodwtck has
returned to her home after
bemg a surgtcal patten! at
Umverstty
hosptlal
tn
Columbus
Mr and Mrs Clayton Allen
spent a recent evemng w1th
Mr
and Mrs
Charles
Goeglem Flatwoods
Mr and Mrs Bruce Myers
and famtly spent Chrtstmas
weekend m Mansfteld wtlh Mr
and Mrs Lloyd Koemg and Mr
and Mrs Donald Hawk and
famthes
Chnstmas dmner guests of
l,lr and Mrs Vtrgtl Roush
were Mr and Mrs Larry
Roush and Jean Ann Wmter
Haven Fla Mtss Donna Kaye
Matlack Lake Worth Fla
Mr and Mrs Ronald Pooler
and children Middleport Mr
and Mrs Don Roush and son
Mrs Nora Brown and Mrs
Jean Summerfield local
Mrs Nora Brown ac
compamed Mr and Mrs Larry
Roush when they returned to
thetr home m Wmter Haven
Fla and wtll spend the wmter
wtth them
Mr and Mrs Henry Hart
man and daughters vtstted
recently tn Pennsylvania wtth
h1s parents

New Haven Personals
Roy Jones has been returned
to h1s home here after being a
paltent at Holzer Medical
Center where he was treated
for leg fractures
Mr and Mrs Donald F
Roush and Sheryl returned
home Sunday evenmg after
spendmg the hohday season
wtth Mr and Mrs Fred
Pomeroy and famtly at Las
Vegas New Mextco They were
JOined there by Mr and Mrs
Sheldon Roush of Detroit
M!Ch
Mr ~nd Mrs J'ames N
Roush and family were
Chnstmas guests of Mr and
Mrs Albert Ftelds at Wmter
Park Mtchtgan Mrs Ftelds ts
the mother of Mrs Roush Mr
and Mrs Ftelds spent the New
Year hohday weekend here at
the Roush home
Mr and Mrs Clyde Foley of
Kmgwood were New Years
weekend guests of Mr and
Mrs Lloyd Roush
Wtlham Dye ts a medtcal
pal!ent at Veterans Memonal
Hospttal
Mr and Mrs Wtlhe Joe
Grmstead left Monday for a
vacatiOn m Flortda
Mr and Mrs Lloyd Roush
spent the Christmas hohday
wtlh their daughter and famtly
Rev and Mrs John E
Bamnger and Stephen m
Burtonsville Maryland
Mr and Mrs Harry Layne
were m Spencer Monday to
attend the funer~l servtces of
Mr Guy Sinnet uncle of Mrs
Layne and brother of Mrs
Harry L Dyer
College Basketball Resu Its
By Umted Press International

Marshall 102 DePa~w 76
Delaware 83 Gettysburg 82
V rg n a 97 Geo Washington 76
Lafayette 100 Columba 64
Wesl V rglnla 88 Bucknell73
Morgan St 60 Del St 42
M amr I0) ~ Western Mlch 64
Case Western 78 Allegheny 70
Cornell lOS Roqhester 98
South Car 116 Manhattan 78
Haw a 77 Connect cut71
Albron 77 Kalamazoo 59

Toledo 78 Butler 55
Un on 77 Kngs Po nt 65
Colgate 100 RPI 82
Oh o U 85 Kent St 74
Boston U 85 Vermonl62
Tufts 112 Amherst 84
Syracuse 106 Cams us 93

Wooster 76 Mt Unron 75

Senators Told Strip Mine
Bill Unworkable in Parts

Ralph Hatch ~ ho tesUfted
before the Senat" Urban and
Htghway Affatrs Committee
which IS presently c'nSJderlng
the legtslalton satd ore of the
unworkable provJSwns was a
requirement to completely
backftll the htghway created
by the strip mme operation
If we had to f1lltl m we d not

have anv bigger area to grade
for producltvlty Hatch satd
I want a good strong slrtp
mme btU Hatch said The
demond for electnctty ts so
great that many more people
w111 be gomg mto strip mtmng
Wtthout regulal!ons some
operators wtll go m and ruin 1t
for legtltmate operators he
satd
Hatch also satd we are not
denytng the fact that thefe 1s
actd dramage m some streams
near -lits str1p operatiOns m
Eastern Ohw However Hatch
said h1s company has mstalled
eqwpment to neutralize this
ac1d dramage by m1xmg 11 w1th
hme

•

•

Cl.lLUMBUS I UP!) - The
P1 eSJdent of Hanna Coal Co
"''d Wednesday he does not
oppose new stnp mme
regulatiOns but some of the
proviSions m a b1ll presently m
the Ohw General Assembly are
tmpracllcal
and
un
workable

Also testifymg before the
committee was John Edwards
of the Ohw Reclama lion
Assoctal!on
Edwards emphastzed the
step by-step procedure whlc"
must be flied by str1p mme
operators under the law should
reqmre more detail
The emphasis ts on
reclamation for short range
and sometimes detrimental
goal mstead of long range
conservation o( natural
renources Edwards sa1d l!le
committee began hearmg
tesltmony on the bill after It
recetved the .egllllaUO! from a
subcomllUttee

•

•
as one that would be
educalionally productive
So, you aee Vtrglnla the
e~cuaed abeences which are
satisfactory causes are quite
lenient and would not penallae
any students whose abeence
was even near being
legtUmate
I
Oh
and Incidentally
Vtrguua 1 the diStrict alSo has a
~rovtston for absences for
special purposes and th1s
provtdes that during each
school year a student IIIII.Y be
permitted one day of absence
for a special purpose The
request for such absence shall
he m wntten form and signed
by the student s pirent or
guardian, the request must be
made and approval gtven by
the prlnctpal pnor to the absence and as with all excused
absence all work may be made
up and no penalty of any kmd
assessed And - not only that
- the absence for a spectal
purpose for a penod longer
than one day may also be
allowed
That s about tl Vlrgmta and
I hope that thts not only clears
up the confusiOn that you ve
had bu! also maybe for
students and parents across
the diStnct who mtght not have
had the complete mfonnatwn
previously

Wallace
In Raee
TALLAHASSEE, Fla ('lJPI)
- Gov Geqe ec.-Iey Wallace
of Alabama aliiiGUIIced his
candidacy for prelidenl as ~
Democrat today, pi'OOllaing a
new begiJtnlng of hope' for
the Arpertcan people
Wallace dldlnot menlloo hiJ
1968 tiilrd parly rampalan for
president In remarkli prepared
for his unqualified offiCial
entry Into the race for the
Democratic presidential
nllJJiiJ1ati,Q~ star~ with the
Florida primary March 14
The people of Florida,' he
said
have a unique op
portunt ty They can start the
grass roots movement to take
back the national Democratic
party unto themselves
presumably by voltng for
Wallace In the Flortda
presidential preference
primary
Wallace pledged If e~cted­
and he tnslsted he was in the
race to wm - continued with
drawal from VIetnam a return
of Jaw and order reduced
taxes a complete halt to forced
busing of pupils reopening of
schools closed by orders of
federal courts or the Juslice
Department
and
no
recogmtion of Castro Cuha

St~ng

Bill Ready

COLUMBUS (UPI) - A Flnl, howevB the SeMte
Senate aubccmmlttee flnllhed ' ~ttee of which be Ill a
must ' furthtJ "
Its work on a camplehenllve , memller
strip mine control- bW Wed- scrutinize It Tbree puliUc
nesdaJ and predicted the hearings are ICheclultd on the
le1Ja¥onlllitcoes to the 11oqr bill during the lag!Jlatlv' ~~
~ the Senile for a vote will be reeess expected to commence
a !'.IUih workable bill •
next week and P in March. ' ' ~
The tir~ Republicans anCI one
'Technically, It's In good
Dem~rat on the sub 1 shape Regula ..ld after the ,...
comm1tlee agreeCI on tbe iiubcommtttee releas~ the I
measure
finally
after bW Other members of the ·~
reworldng It for near!~ ~ panel were Sens IWTY L
months and reported It be'Cit: to Armstrong R Logan •1111
the full Senate urban ilid ~ld M MotU D-farma
Highway Affairs Committee
The btll ~lamps strict ~
The House unanlniously ap- controls on strip -"mine -,
proved It la&amp;t October
operations
It
requlrn
Sen Ralph Regula, R reclamation as mining
Navarre chairman of the sub- proceeds $nd dperators will be c
comnuttee predicted the bill forced to_ file detail\'(! plaps "'
would be ready for a floor vote With the' state 'Department of ,..,
by AprU
Natural Resources
,~

Two February Events Planned
Programs to honor the
Masons and the Eastern Star
members were planned for
February when Bethel 62
InternatiOnal Order of Jobs
Daughters met Monday mght
at the Masomc Temple
Installed during the meeting
were Barbara Fultz as
mustctan Ann Colwell and
Beverly Wilcox as choir
members Two past honored
queens Irene Barnes and

Utilities Under FPC

by the FPC and are subject to
FPC wholesale rate regulation
The FPC may also order them
LEGAL NOTICE
to interconnect and sell power
Total For Cemetery Operation
to other utilities
LEGAL NOTICE
and Maintenance
8 900 oo
Notice
Is
hereby
given
that
The court reversed a rulmg the annual meeting of the
WATER P~MPING
25 600 00
by the 5th U S CirCUit Court of stockholders of The Farmer$ Persona Serv ces
Supplies and Materials 1 000 00
Bank
and
Savings
Company
of
Appeals which refused to 211 West Second Street Total For Water
Pumping
26 600 00
brtng the Florida Power &amp; Pomerov Ohio wtll be held at
WATER DISTRIBUTION
the
office
ot
sa
d
ba.nk
n
Ltght Company under th.,. Pomeroy Ohio accord ng to Its Personal Services ,
7 000 00
FPC s regulatory umbrella by laws on the third Wed Supplies and Mater a Is 12 000 00
9.000 00
of January 1972 at 4 00 Other
Justice Wtlltam 0 Douglas nesday
P M for thi purpose of electing Total For Wattr
Dlstr but on
28 000 00
and Chtef Justice Warren E directors and the transaction of
Total For water System
such
other
business
as
mav
Burger dissented Justices properly come before said
Opera I an
54 600 00
ADMINISTRATION-WATER
Potter Stewart and Ute new meet no
1 000 00
PaulE Kloos Personal Serv ces
court members - Lewis F
44 000 00
Secretary Debt Serv ce
WATER IMP
Powell Jr and W1lllam H 1121 23 30 (1) 6 13 41
Other
235 000 00
Re~t did not participate
.-----;.:...:~.,:...;_... -l';~t~lp!W c'«l:l~rrc 1 tl! 0 &amp;I
Florida P&amp;L Ill connecteq
Total For. Administration~ u
ORDINANCE NO 421
wtth the Florida Power Corp
~w•t•r
45000 00
ANNUAL
Total For Water
i
and three other state utilities to
APPROPRIATION
(Reven-,Jtl Fund
280 000 00
O~DINANC&amp;
form a FloriCIIl pool whose
SEWER MAINTENAN~E
A RESOLUTION to make PersonaiServlces
1160000
members exchange power appropriations
for Current Suppll., and Malerlals 11 oOo oo
The Expenses and other EM Total For Sewer
among themselves
of the Village of
Me lntenance
22 600 oo
commission sought to exercise pendltures
Pomeroy State of Ohio during
ADMINISTRATIONIts jurtsdlction m 1965 on the the fiscal year endinG
SEWAGE
31 1972
Personal Services
150 oo
basis of an exchange between December
Stcllon 1 BE IT R'ESOLVED Debt Service
42 075 oo
the pool and subsidiaries of the by the Council for the VIllage of Total For Administration
Pomeroy State of Ohio That to
- Sewago
42 225 oo
Southern Co a holding provide
for the curre-nt eM
Section
13
That
ther•
bt
company of four major utilities penses and other exrtnditures appropriated
from
tht
of the said VIllage o Pomeroy GENERAL
FUND
mcludmg the Georgl8 Power during
the fiscal year ending RETIREMENT FUND
Co
December
31
1972
the Persona Srrvlces
7 DOD oo

Generation Rap
By Helen

Brenda Taylor and Mrs ••
Debbte Fmlaw and Tom Ed
wards guardian and associate '
guardl8n of the Bethel were
mtroduced
Members were reminded "
durmg the meeting prestded
over by Mllisa Rtzer honored
queen that orders for" ,
housewares hemg sold by the •
Bethel ~re to be turned in to
Mrs Fmlaw by Jan 21
ANNIVERSARY NOTED
The golden weddmg an·
mversary of Mr and Mrs
Delbert Becker of Middleport
wtll he observed on Jan 23 wtth
a dinner at thetr home for
relatives and fnends Mr and
Mrs Becker are the parents of
Mrs Bettie Gladwell of
Columbus and Mr Don Becker
of Mtddleport The couple have
stx grandchildren

Court Herds Electric
WASHINGTON (UP!) The
Supreme Court tssued a ru!lng
Wednesday that would place
almost every electric uttllty m
the country under the
jurtsdtction of the Federal
Power CommiSSIOn
Until now uttlity compames
operatmg wholly wtthtn a
state were regulated only by
state publiC ullhty com
mtsstons
The court ruled 4 to 2 wtth
three members not par
tictpatmg that the FPC had
regulatory power over utilities
which are members of power
pools With other states even
though the utility tlself has no
customers m the other states
Most stale ullhttes are
members of pools whtch m
terconnect generahng
factlities to allow one state to
borrow power from another
dunng emergencies or durmg
peak load pertods
An FPC spokesman sa1d the
ruhng would have qUite an
effect on utthty compantes It
means they must adhere to
accoun ling procedures set up

J"

~nd Sue Bottel

LETTER FROM A BLACK GmL
Dear Rap
This ts m answer to Cyme who Is getting turned off by
ractsm You answered him weU but I d like to a&lt;kl a few things
What the Cyme terms an assertion of racial superlonty IS
not what racial pride Is all about Black is beautiful does not
mean black Is MORE beautiful but black 111 AS beautiful as
white
Every oppressed people must go through Ibis stage and
realtze who they are This ts only a step towards self-respect Of
course some overdo It but don t a few do that in every race•
It IB good the Cyme understands the anger that minonty
groups have towards whttes But something el8e must also be
understood The Cyntc 111 not directly responsible for the temble
thtngs the Caucastan race has done But If he doet not try to
change the sltuatton in his lifetime he is suUty of bemg passiVe
After World War II people were tried and found l!llilty for
not speaking out against the Nazis The Cynic should not feel
gutlty but he should try to do something to change things as tbey
are now

Since ha Is whtte the best place to start Is in the whtte
community Many wh1tea are not even as educa.ted about the
Third World as he IS
The fight goes beyond color We all have to fight thiS thing
red black white, brown yellow Each person has to decide for
himself who the enemy ts and how to change him - ME!JNDA
KAY A BLACK GIRL
Dear Melinda
Thanks for your good letter Things WILL change You and
Sue will see even if my generation stays around only for the first
two acts - HELEN
Dear Helen and Sue
Why Is tt that when a SUY takes a girl out he thinks It s his
duty to go park and make out•
None of the guys around here even plan thetr dates Do they
think they would take a girl to a show, horseback riding, to a
carruval or game, to the beach to dinner, ~ling bowling or to
a dance 1 Even a good walk to a museum, or an Invitation to help
him wash hiS car would be appreciated
There are lots of things that don t cost much money, and
they're a lot more fun than sitting in a car for twd or three hours
glued to each other'
What can be done to get the point over to ~s? SICK AND
TIRED OF IT
Dear Salol
Polish up your No Parking button and let the guys know
the difference between a cheap date and a date that cheapens So
long as you ACCEPT sublllllrlne hunts you II gat nothmg
better - HELEN
1
Dear T1red
A friend of mine has the ultimate reply to lhose SUY8 who
figure every g1rl should park She say• II s my football my
field and my rules You'd be IIIII'Jirlaed bow many decide to
play the game her way - SUE

followtng sums be end they are
hereby set asl~e end ap
propriated as follows viz
Sl!'ctlon 2 That there be ap
proprlated from the GENERAl.

FUND
GENERAL
GOVERNMENTAL
SERVICES
(PROGRAM CODE 70)
MAYOR

Transaction
Class
Personal Services
Total For Mayor

CLERK
Personal Services
Total For Clerk
Cferk Trtasurer

TREASURER

Payment of Principal
4 462 SO
Total For General Bon,d
Retirement Fund
11 462
Section 14 That ..-there be
appropriated
from
the

).,
~

-'
•
•

•
'

~

fl
t&lt;n
P
P ·t

o

'

"

SPECIAL STREET liD RET
FUND
-4

ooo oo
168 78

4 168 78
TOTAL
ALL
1 200 00 APPROPRIATIONS
1 200 00
621 906 28
SECT
ON
17 And tho Village
1 200 00 Clerk Is hereby authorized to
"tWa warrants on the
1 200 00 draw
V llage Treasurer for payments

360 00

made
SECURITY OF
PERSON ANI!
Section 18 This ordinance "'
- PROPERTY
shall take effect at the earliest
( PRQGRJM CODE 10)
per od a lowed bv law
POLICE DEPARTMENT
Passed Jah J 1972
Personal Services
39 000 00
Qonald 1 Collins ,.:
Other
10 850 oo
Preildenl of Councl!
Total For Pollee
CERTIFICATe
Dtparfment
59 8SO 00 Section 5705 39 R c - No
FIRE DEPARTMENT
appropriation mU1sure shall -;
Personal ~ervices
1300 00 become effective until tl;\ere Is ..
Supplies end Material 4 500 00 filed with the appropriating •
Othor
4 240 oo authority by the county auditor •

Total For fire
1 certificate that tpe total ap
•
Department
10 0~0 00 proprtat ons from eech lund
:
Total For Security of 'talcen togtther With ell other •
Persons and Property
outstanding appropriations do •
IProgram Coot 10) 69 890 oo not exceed su~t~ official :
STREET LIGHTING
tStlmatt or aroet..ae~ Offlt;ill •
• UTILITY
ttstlmate
WHen ~ the
*P
•
Other
13 822 so proprlattons does not nceed •
Total tor Street
such official estlrnate the :
Lighting
13 822 50 county auditor shall ;lve auch TRANSPORTATION
cer11fleett forthwith upon •
FACILITIES
receiving
from
tt\W ep
""'
I PROGRAM CODE 60)
proprlatlng •uthortty e certified :
STREET DI!PT
copy of the approprtatlol'l •
Personel Services
17 000 00 measure
~C

Suppllea and MaterielS 2 500 00
Capital Outlay
J 000 00 The Slate of llhlO.,. Mtlgt •
Othor
? !51 50 couooy ss
~
-..:
T(ltal For Street
Paving
31 657 50
I Jant Walton Clork of tl\e
SPECIAL ITREET
Vlllade of Pomeroy In sal~
RliPAIR
&lt;
Counlv and In whose custody'
Ot~er
1500000 the Flies Journals and Records ~
Total For Street
ere required by tht Laws of the •
Rtpa{rlng
15 000.00 ~tate of Oh ro to Itt kept dO •
Totel. For Strtet Constructftlin
htreby oortlfy that tho =

•

=
•

Maintenance and
Repair Fund

foregoing Annual ApprC)prlatlon
Ordinance 11 tektn and copies
from the orlglnel Ordh11.,Ce

..,

t
•

(Progr•m Code 601 46 657 50
STAJI HIG'HWAY
now on fl!t with told Vlflogo •
FUNDIDtpt orOifttt)
that the foreootng Ord nance ~
Personal Strvlces
500 oo has b!en compared by me wllh •
Ot~er
3 000 oo the stld original and that the •
Total For Stott Highway
•ame Jsa true anct correct copy .~.
thereof
.,
Improvement Fund
IProgram COde 40) 3 500 DD
Wltneas
my
algnature
•
PUILIC HIALTH $1RV!g&amp;s this
day of January 1912
=
CIMITIRY OPIRATIO"
Jane Wollon
AND MAINTINANCI,
CltrkaflhtVIII.Vtof t!
Ptrsonll StrvlciS
7 500 oo
Mtlgl CO\Inty Ohio
SuppiiiS ond Mttorlols 1 ~oo oo l116131t
I

•

Kentucky
VIrginia
Floridians
New York
Pittsburgh
Carolina

East
W L Pet

34

9
27 17

19 24

791

GB

614 7 '

442 15
19 25 432 15 2
18 28 391 17 '
15 30 333 20
West
W L Pet GB
Utah
31 14 689
Indiana
25 19 568 5 ,
Memphis
19 25 432 11 2
Dallas
20 28 417 12 12
Denver
17 25 405 1212
Wednesd.ly s Results
Dallas 107 Denver 102
IOnly.gamescheduled)
Thursday s Games
Florldlansat New York
Denver at Plttoburgh
Utah vs VIrginia
At Norfolk Va
IOnlygamesscheduled)

AHL Standtngs
By United Presslnternattonal
~

East

WLTPts
259757
Boston
20 13 9 49
Nova Scot1a
15 14 8 38
Sprrngfleld
12 2{) 9 33
Providence
12 22 5 29
Rochester
Wtsf
WLTPts
Hershey
20 II 6 46
Baltimore
19 15 5 43
Richmond
17 16 6 40
Cleveland
17 16 6 40
Cincinnati
14 18 9 37
Trdewater
9 26 4 22
Wednesdays Results
Cleveland 3 Hershey 1
Nova Scotia 5 Rochester 2
Rlchmond7 Provldence2
IOnlygamesscheduled)
Thursday • Games
Cleveland at Tidewater
IOnlygamescheduled)

Bishop II 4 Texas Coli 88
Dowling 85 Baruch 73
Rice 87 Georgra Tech 74
W Chstr St 78 Kutztwn St 69
Air Force 84 Sou Colo St 76

Tar Heels Rip
Clemson 81-61

~

'

The Southern Valley Athletic Symmes Valley The Vtktogs tasted defeat once thts ~ear tl
Cage crown could be 01\ the line mfl1cted a ~tunnmg 71.jj9 upset appears there may be trouble
th111 weekend With two tm over the Ptrates JUS! before the on the rtse Two Eagles Rtck
portant games Friday mght Christmas vacation Eastern Wtlhams and Mtke Benedum
Coach BtU Phtlltps Eastern moves mto the game after have qutl the team since the
Eagles tnvade Ptrateland for a edgmg Hannan Trace 57-54 season began
game with Coach Jun Foster s and rompmg over South
North Galha wtth tis dectstve
North Gall1a Pirates
height advantage has been led
western 65-29
Eastern Is second m the
North Gall18 last weekend by Arthur Clark 6-5 semor
SVAC loop s~ndmgs wtth a 6-1 dumped the Kyger Creek center Gary Crosswht~ 6-4
record The Eagles only Bobcats 95-52 and tOpped a Juntor forward Larry Justus
blemtsh was a 72-55 setback stubborn Federal Hockmg 1M semor. forward and Pat
Stout 5 10 semor guard
suffered m December at the squad 61-53
hands of North Gallta
The llletgs CounUans are led Harv~y Brown 5 9 semor
Ttie Pirates are 5-l m the by DenniS Etchmger 6-3 semor speedster has been a b1g
SVAC and 6-2 overall Saturday center and Bob Caldwell 5-10 scormg threat of late
mght North Gallta has a semor guard
Coach Wayne Whtle s
rema1ch w1th ~nbeaten
Although Eastern has only Vtkmgs are 8ol&gt; overall wtth

By GENE CADDES
UP! Sports Writer
COLUMBUS (UP!)--Ohto
high school basketball notea
from around the state
If he had been playing on the
road Milton-Umon Coach Len
Volbert Could have claimed he
was homered, ' the term used
when the V18ltmg team doesn t
think the officials gave them a
fatr shake
The Bulldogs however were
playing at home when they
dropped a 61-48 dec111lon to St
Paris Graham a contest m
which they dldn t shoot a smgle
free throw That s right not
one
Only one personal was called
on Graham durmg the contest
an offensive one g1vmg the
ball to Milton Union out of
bounds
Graham meanwhile was
converting on 17 of 28 from the
line to more than make up for
the 24 22 advantage the
Bulldogs had from the fteld
Pleased With Officials
One rmght expect Volbert to
hit the roof of the gym the way
thmgs went but such was not
the case

I went over the game fihn
and I didn t see one foul on
Graham Volbert aatd later
exceptfor the one offenstve I
have no questions about the of
flclallng In face we were
pleased wtth the offiCials
The offiCials were Dave Kullman and Don Pterce both of
the Dayton area
The game also went a little
goofy scorewlse wtth MlltonUmon taking a 22 7 first
quarter lead and stlll leading
34-26 at halftune only to lie
outscored 35-14 in the final 16
minutes of play It was the
Bulldogs 28th loss m their last
29 games
Fatrport Harbor had 1ts losmg streak covermg three sea
sons stretched to 28 games
Frtday by a 69'«! loss to Car
dina! The victory snapped a
10 game losmg streak for
Cardinal
After Another Honor
Scott May Sandusky s All
Ohio end ts makmg a strong
move to also capture all~tate
honors •n basketball May 6-5
and 210 pounds scored 32
pomts Fnday mght m the Blue
Streaks 58,51 vtctory over

scored 37 pomts grabbed 20
rebounds and blocked six shots
as South Carolina manhandled
Manhattan and Jim Price s 25potnt effort, including four free
Ia's
throws in the final minute,
Willi ~lh Carollill' liil\lllljj ~lped !Aul.l\!llle .beat Dayton. ,..
tr'l '' "
~• b
mn H "'" &lt;" ,.. 1'" wv
0
gone"lriCiependent the battle RoY Ebron scored 35 Jllllnta and
T:pr~
•
for ACC honot:S this seuon W1ll Dwight Lamar the nations
expected to be foucht between leading acorer, a~ed 31 as
Marylaill and North CarollDa Southwestern lliiulslana
,
North Carolina is ln there downed Eastern New Mexico
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Btll 50 at halfttme and 86-81 after
Elsewhere 7-4 Tommy Sharman worned about a let- three periods
fight~ but It'll be surprising
Van Arsdale fmished with 31
VIrginia that will provide the Burleson scored 30 pijints as down He turned out to be right
opposition
North carolina ~tate blaste~
The amazmg Los Angeles pomts to lead all scorers while
VIrginia, ranked Nq 9 Duke, 85a and Greg Kohls hit Lakers, who had a 33-game wth Nate The Skate Archibald
nationally, boosted Its record 37 points In 87racuse s easy streak broken on national tele tallied 22 and had 13 asststs
to 12-G Wedneaday night with a 106-93 victory over Canwus vision at Milwaukee Sunday.
That was our plan, sa1d
97·78 rout of George Larry Finch's 24-polnt per will go Into the all~tar bresk Archibald a second year
guard from Texas El Paso
Wuhlngton North CarollDa formance carried Memphis with at least five !oases
the No Steam, lifted its record State to an llU5 ttlumph over
Coming off a 20-point vi.£)ory Cousy told me he wanted me
to 1~1 wllh an 11-jjl triumph Louisiana State and Mark at Detroit the Lakers were to drtve and make Wilt cOITlllllt
over
Clemson
North Wehrle and Danny McGuire beaten by the Cmcmnatt hintself Then I was to pass
Carolina 8 only loas waa at scored 22 asch aa Rice topped Royals 108 107 Wednesday off
Georsla Tech, 8'1·74
night
Chamberlam led the Lakers
~ton
Barry Parkhill, just over an
Bill Knight scored 28 pomts
Sharman had thought the let with 24 points and 19 rebounds
and
Kent
Scott
a&lt;kled
22
as
down
would come against the Jerry West contributed 21
attack rJ. the flu, scored 23
points despite being rested PlttsbmBh cruised past David Pistons Tuesday night m the pom\s while Hap Hatrston had
much of the game to lead the son 91·78, and Tom Corde and game after the Lakers Nation- a game-high 23 rebounds
VIrginia attack. Jim Hobgood Tom Ricciardi combined for 44 al Basketb'll Association
added 14 points and Frank points as Ohio University beat record strmg was stopped
Kent State, 85-74 Tom
Instead It Cjl1liO at C~m­
DeWitt 13 for the Cavaliers
North carolina, with Robert Kozelko s 'l/.point 14-rebound nat! against a team whtch had
McAdoo scoring 28 points, effort carried Toledo past only 11 victories
Bob Cousy Sharman s old
lroke open a cl01e game in the Butler 7W5
teammate with the Boston Cel
second half and went on to beat
lies watched hts Royals post
Clemlon ln an ACC&gt;same The
their second straight win after
Tar Heelll Jed by only two
dropping 14 in a row
points at the half before
DALLAS (UPI)-The Dallas
The Lakers now 4~ have
eruptlnC in the, aecond hall
Chaparrals overcame a 16- one more game left before the
North Carolina Coach Dean
potnt deficit in the second half AII.Star Game at lA&gt;s Angeles
Smith waa charged with a
Wednesday night and slipped Tuesday rught, playing at Phil
NEW YORK IUPI) - The
double technical and ejected past Denver, 107 102 in the
Cleveland
Indians chose Eric
from the lame at the half and only American Basketball adelphia Friday night
Ralch a pitcher !rom CompThe letdown may follow the ton Calif as lherr No I pick In
Tates Locke CleirlJon s coach, AssoctaUon game
the annual baseball free agent
Lakers to Permsylvanla
alsO drew a technical foul
Sbrunie Hall led the COIIl&amp;'
draft
Wednesday while the
Two years ago the New York Cincinnati
In other action lilvolving back with 19 points, 17 m the
Reds went with
rated teams, South carolina second half Dallas took lile Knicks set an NBA record of 18 Infielder Greg Sinatro of Dade
straight vtclortes They then Junior College In Florida In the
( 4) clobbered Manhattan, 116lead with just more than three lost three m a row
tlrsf round of the regular phase
78, Lo\daviDe (8) suri!ed past
of the draft
minutes remaining and did not
Last sea9011 the Milwaukee
Dayton, 71-44, , and South· trail again
In the AAA selections
Bucks won 20 consecutive Cleveland chose Anthony
western IA&gt;uiSIIina (18) ripped
games to lreak the Knicks Gram mores Is a ohortstop
Eastern New Me:dco 11$-79
from Miramar Fla for Its
record The Bucks then took Portland farm club and
Seve!Hooter l!&gt;llnny Traylor
three straight defeats
Cincinnati took Tomy Mut2 of
•
Tom Van Arsdale s 15-foot Santa Fe N M for Its In
AAA club
jump shot with three seconds dlanapolls
Calllornla drafted Trm
left put Cincinnati Into a 108-105 Burns a rltcher from Dayton
lead Wilt Chamberlain dunked for Its Sol Lake City AAA team
Detroit picked up out
an mbounds pass with no time and
fielder Daniel Gonzales of
showing for the final Laker Whittier Calif for Its Toledo
CAll POINTVIfW
992 150~
club
basket
AA selections Included
The Royals led aU the way
Cleveland
p eked up out
Anow show makH lh debut
Another very fin• actor after taking a 31).24 ftrst quar !Ieider Clyde Fink Jr of
ton lght and I don f know
this one very much alive an,d
ter lead They were tri front 62- Salisbury N C for Its Elmira
whelher to laugt&gt; or cry lt s •~Ill going strong- shows up
called Me and the Chimp
with Dfck Cavett He s
and stars Ted Bessell
James Whitmore one of the
playing straight man to a boot In my JUdgment 11 JO
monkoy Instead of Merlo pm Ch 6
Thomas The only way to tell
+++
If thlo predictable sure looer
MOVIES
Athena
4
hu anything going for It ot p m and Humoresque
all Is lo watch It 8 p m Ch
11 30 p m ~ both-Ch~l

The stage has been set for
Saturday's big Atlantic Coast
Conference encounter with a
surprising cast of charac·

Mansfield Seruor His season s
average is 'll 3 per game
BobHuggUIS of Indian Valley
South poured m 44 points
Saturday mght m tbe Rebels
80-50 Victory over previously
unbeaten Lakeland HuggUIS
the 6-4 senior son of IVS Coach
Charles Huggins has 16 field
goals and 12 of 15 free throws
He was a first learn Class A All
Ohto selection last season
Celina's 6.jj sen1ors Curt
Shellabarger 1lttd Joe Ester
field were too much for Sidney
Saturday night Shellabarger
scored a career htgh 28 pomts
and pulled down 19 rebounds
and Westerfield had 17 pomts
and 14 rebounds m the
Bulldogs 82-70 wm over the
Yellow Jackets The VIctory
was the lOth m a row for thtrd
ranked Celina
Portsmouth West s 6-6
sophomore KeUy Shy has led
the Senators to an 8-1 record
Withhts 24polntand 17 rebound
per game averages
Claymont was without the
services of both Dave Smitl!, 6-

Choice

Rent Floor Sander &amp; EdgerS
To Finish Your Floors

hl-

+

Ail old show which co~ I

survive in Us preoent formal
makes us want to cry IQ be
1ure Tonight we II see
Alios Smith and Jones
ftlhlrlng the late Peter
Du'l who diad durlpg the
holldayo an apparent
suicide The !lhow wosn t
really vreot but Duel struck
ua oa 1 capable young octor
Ht II be misled, I p m Ch
12

++t

FRIDAY Get up early
and don t m1,. lhe big doings
as the Today show ob
oerves Its 20th brrth!fay 1My
gosh can It have been
twenty years') On hand will
be most ot the old regularsDove Garroway· Jock
Lescoulle John Chtncellor
Hugh Downs among ot~ors
(bul ~ot J Fred Mugg1 I
behove) 7om Chs 2 &amp; 1

We Also Have Thane or VamiBh
'
Made By Gym Seal and Fabulon

Hoin1 U M ItS lt,ni7Uitlj Ml
77).5583 7 1 M lo9 ,_,. Frltlly 6 ..MUY lift, W V•

•

SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L P
Symmes Valley
8 0 627
Easlern
7 1 546
North Galli a 6 2 659
Hannan Trace 4 4 428
Southern
3 5 503
Kyger Creek 1 7 432
Soulhwestern 0 9 336
TEAM
W L p
Symmes Valley
Eastern
: ~ :
North Galla 5 1 516
Hannan Trace 2 4 325

0 junior averagtng 26 4 points

OP
483
384
440

428
per game and 6 o John
502
597
Barkley m the tenth ranked
779
Mustangs 59-57 loss to New
OP
Phlladeljj!la Saturday night
Cleveland Benedictines re
~~~
cord«tting state high school
311
htgh jump champton Joe
347
Reccord baSil t lost any of the ~~~t::c~eek ~ ~ ~~
sprmg In his Moot 7 frame In Southwestern o 7 242 580
the Bengals 80o77 wm over Totols
12 22 2751 2752
John Adams Frtday ntght
SVAC RESERVES
TEAM
W L P OP
Reccord blocked two shots Eastern
7 o 319 226
early m the contest and later Norlh Gall Ia 5 1 24'1 193
was called for goal tending Symmes Valley
three tunes He ftntshed the Kyger Creek ~ ~ :~ :~
rught wtth 21 points and 18 Hannan Trace 2 4 194 25,2
rebounds
Southern
2 4 227 272
Soulhwestern 0 7 124 293
I
lkn
New Madison sLy e Fa or Totals
22 21 1741 1741
continues as the leadmg scorer
Friday s Gam11 Eastern at
m the Darke County area with North Gallla Kyger Creek at
a 32 pomts per game average Hannan Troce Southern al
Hannan
W Va
and
on352pomts m 11 games Falk qesapeake at Symmes
nor has been over40polnts four Valley
times with a htgh of 48
Saturday s Games Symmes
Larry Shade 6-foot 7 junior Valley at North Gallla Han
nan Trace at Southern and
once:beaten Newton (Ill) had ~ Southwestern al lronlon St
.3Q pomts and 24 rebounds m his Joe
team s 88-80 wm over Anna (92) Saturday mght He s aver
agmg 24 rebounds per contest

"1 feel

!:

jumpy today!"
Relax

let Rizer s worry

about your fuel oil needs
We molch your rate of oil
used against a temperature
chart to know when to refill
your fuel all tank You
always have an adequate
oil supply

Crosby Play

Lowly Royals
Z"
T
t " alf,ers
I"! " "
lJ.J "e

Is Top

8

Arledge s Bobcats wtll attempt htlttng Southern 111 :1-4, in
to snap a stx game losing league play and ~ overall
streak agatnst Coach Paul
The Tornadoes liave been led
Dlllop s Wildcats
by Jerry and Jtm Hubbard and
Hannan. Trace ts 4-4 m all 6-1 semor Bruce Hart Also
games and 2'4 tn the SV AC
slated Saturday evening are
The Bobcats are led m the the Southwestern Ironton St
scormg department by Roy Joe game at Ironton and the
Thompson 6-2 semor center Hannan Trace-Southern game
and George Curry 5-11 juntor at Racme
forward
Mtke Caldwell 6-5 Junior
center Ketlh Swatn 5 10
semor guard and John Lusher
6-2 sophomore forward lead the
Wtldcat attack
KC s btggest problenns have
been too many turnovers and
the lack of consistent lteld goal

victories over Fairland and
Rock Htll m non league games
The Vtkmgs wtll play
Chesapeake Fr1day mght
Symmes Valley has been led
offensively by Danny Wtlson 511 semor forward Wtlson has
canned 86 pomts '"h1s last two
ball '!lames
Other scormg thfeats are
Phtl Robinson 5-9 guard Jene
Myers 5-11 Junior and Ketth
Roach 6-0 semor Roach ts the
rna JOr rebounder
In other Fr1day games
Kyger Creek travels to Hannan
Trace and Southern Is at
Rannan W Va Coach Jim

Prep Team Fouls Once In Tilt

Raich

•

from any of the foregoing ap
ons upon receiving
360 oo proprlat
proper
certificates
and"
SOLICITOR LEGAL
vouchers therefor Dpproved by
ADVISOR
the board or officers authorized
Personel Services
2 000 00 by
law to 4pprove the same or
Totftl For !;ollcltor
an
ordinance or resolution of
Legal Advisor
2 000 00 council
to make the e~
ELECTIONS
pendltures proVIded that no
Other
500 00 Yf'llrrantsshall be drawn or paid J
Total For Elect ons
500 00 for salaries or wages except to
COUNCIL
employed by authority
Personal Strvlces
720 00 persons
of
and
In
accordance with law or
Total For Council
720 00 ordinance
Provided further ,..
GENERAL
that
the
approprlatiOF\S
for
ADMINISTRATION
contingencies can only t)e ex "
Personal Strvlces
4 500 00 pended
upon appeal of wo
Supplies and Materials 1 200 00
Council for Items of
thirds
of
Capital Outlay
I 000 00
~;:onstltutlng
a legal ...
Other
6 400 00 expense
obligation aga nst the village
Toto!
c
13 100 00 and for purposes other 11t11n
Total For General
those covered by the other
Admlnlotrotlon
19 080 oo specific
appropr atlons herein ~
Personal Services
Total For Trnsurer

Tflursday sG•mes

Baltimore at Seattle
IOnlygamescheduled)
ABA Stondlngs
By Un1ted PresslnlornotJonal

NHL Stonditlgs
By United Press lntornoltonat
E11t
W L T Ph
New York
27 6 7 61
Boston
27 7 6 60
Montreal
23 10 7 53
19 13 10 41
Tor!&gt;nto
Detroit
11 18 7 41
Buffalo
8 24 10 26
10 24 5 25
Vancouver
Wost
WLTPts
Chicago
21 8 5 61
Minnesota
22 13 6 50
California
)3 22 9 35
St Louis
13 22 7 33
Philadelphia
12 21 7 31
Pittsburgh
11 23 8 30
Los ~eleo
II JO 2 24
eclneoday s Results
Boston Pittsburgh 2
Toronto Los Angeles I
Cal! for a 2Minnesota 0
IOnly games scheduled)
Tliursd.ly s Gamos
Pittsburgh at Montreal
New York at Buffalo
Los Angeles at Bdston
(Onlygamesscheduled)

Pirates Face Eagles,' Vikings

By United Press tlllematlonal

so ,.,

Peymentof Principal
Payment of Interest
Tote For Spec al
Auessm ent Bond
Retirement Fund

lilA Stondlngs
ly Unllfd '"'' tnl~m~tronal
Eastern Conference
AIIHtlc DIYiston
W L Pet GB
Boston
30 16 652
NewYbrk
25 18 581 3y2
Phllldtlpllta 19 26 412 10 ,
Buffalo
13 30 302 15,12
Cllllr~l DtYtlfon
W L,; Pet GB
Baltimore • 19 23 t52
A-tlanta
16 28 364 ~
Cleveland
15 28 349 4&lt;,
Cincinnati
12 31 279 7',
Western Canlortnce
Midwest Dlvtslon
W L Pet Gil
Milwaukee, 36 10 783
Chicago
31 13 705 4
Phoenix
26 19 578 91 2
Detroit
17 28 378 1812
Poclfrc DIYtslon
W L Pet Gil
LosAnge[es 40 5 889
Seattle
27 19 587 13 ,
Golden Sf
25 19 568 14 ,
Houston
15 2'1 341 24',
Portland
11 35 239 29'h
Wednosd.ly s RISults
Boston I13 Chicago 112
Cincinnati 107 Los Ang 107
Buffalo 111 Phlladelphla1~
Atlanta 104 Milwaukee 102
IOnlygamesscheduled)

Stws ·~oday
PEBBLE BEACH Calif
(UPI)-Last year Jack Ntck
laus won four tournaments and
a quarter million dollars while
playmg In only 18 events
HIS 1972 plans call for about
the same kind of schedule and
naturally he d like to win
another quarter rmllton plus at
least one of the big four of the
PGA championship Masters
and Brtttsh and U S Opens
Today after a layoff of ftve
weeks he starts off m pursutt of
all that money m the Btng
Crosby Naltonal p•o-am one of
those canuv•I events on the
wmter schedule However tis
wmners purse of $28 000 111
nothmg to laugh at
Nicklaus Los Angeles Open
champ George Archer 1971
PGA Player of the Year Lee
Trevino Billy Casper and
defendmg champ Tom Shaw
are the name players m a
170-man Crosby pro field
Among the mtsslng thts year
ts Arnold Palmer who played
club Cincinnati got Bertram
Froncks a pitcher from
Hackettstown N J for Its
Three Rivers club Minnesota
chose John Pangle a pitcher
tram Akron for Its Charlotte
AA club Houston drafted
David Meltes a pitcher from
Columbus Ohio lor Its
Columbus Ga team
THe rest of Cleveland s p cks
in the regular phase were

Michael Smith pitcher San
Jose Calli ChariH Petrillo
second base Southfield M1ch
John Keough Jr pitcher
Rockland Mas! and Michael
Johnson pitcher Spring! eld
Mo
In the sec!&gt;ndary phose the~
got William Taylor lnflelde(
James
Encinitas Calif
Hannah first base Newark
Ohio Alan Lobb pitcher
Ben Heise
Bangur Pa
shortstop Vacaville Calif
Donald CoUins pitcher Lyons
Go and Edward Burzo
outfield Levittown N Y
The rest of Cln~lnnatl s p cks
In the regular phase were
Farrell Vincent Jr pitcher
Memph•s
Tenn
Keith
Ove~"-ck pitcher Pickerell
Neb
Lewfl Reasonover
ohortstop Nashville Tenn
Gary Erskine outfield pitcher
Anderson lnd and Perry
Renfroe pitcher Jacksonville

Ala

In the ~ condary phase
Cincinnati drafted Ronald
Herr ng Pilcher Greenville
Ala Thomes Hume pitcher
St P~ersburg Fla and Larry
D' B111n prtcher Omaha Neb
In the f llh round of the
regular phase A selections
Detrort picked up John Davies
a prtcher from Toledo for rts
Clinton club In the I tth round
of the tecondary phase• Texas

got Robin Ogle flrot booeman
())&lt;ford Oh10 for Its Geneva

1.-~------~-----------• club

poorly m the Los Angeles Open
and has gone home to rest upuntil the Hawaiian Open next
month
I m going to concentrate
Palmer satd on playmg less
and hopefully better I just
couldn t putt at Los Angeles

BLIND STOP OR OVER LAP

WINDOWS

, VAllEY WMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.
MIDDLEPORT

992 2709

YOUR
BEST
BUY

MOR-FLO
52 GAL GLASS LINED

ELECTRIC
WATER HEATER
ONLY

'89.95

Jacket dlometor 2012 height from floor Including
nipples 32 nipple size 'II "-tween nipples a
height of eltctrlc outlet 2• 10 Immersion type 4500
watt lower and u - twin eltmenls Capacity 52
gal welt Insulated white enameled outer jacket l
YEAR OUTRIGHT WARRANTY

•

'

GAS MODELS
30 Galloo

40 Galloo '

6950

72'1J

.

'·

EBERSBACH
HARDWARE
Phone 9~ 2811

':
1

now

Mam

Pomeroy

�'

5- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. l3, lim

t - The Dally Senttnel,Middlepori-I'CIIIet'OY, o., Jan. 13, 1972

.

'

•

Louis
BYUillledl'rHaiDierualloaal
Dayton got another crack at
sbth-ranked Louisville
Wedrieaday night but ran out of
gas In the second half.
The Flyers, who lost to tlie
Cardlnals·eartier in the season
· in a game at LOuisville, were
beaten again on their home
court 'liM.
.
But at least it wasn't the 88. 60 mop job Louisville did on
Dayton before.
' . The teams were tied 27-27 at
the half and although Louisville
jumped out to a 15-point lead
with 3:2lleft to play, the Fly·
ers rallied to trail by just five
with 1:08 remaining.
At that point Louisville's cool
· Jim Price put the game away
with f0ur perfect free throws.
, Price had a total of 25 points
for the game, but . Dayton's
sophomore guard Donald Smith
was high for the game with 28.
The win made Louisville 10-1.
. Dayton fell to 5-6,
Other Slandouts
Amorig ·a bevy .of other resul ts for the night, these stand
out.
'· Capital, the nation's 12th
rated small college team, pick-

•

2-HOUR
CLEANING
(Upon
Request)
.
.

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS
Znd

210 E.

Pomeroy

Phonti 992-5421

.

..

'

RUTH
Ont Size

e Repeats ·Win OVer Dayton

second half," said OU coach
Jim Snyder.
In the other MAC tilt,.defending champ Miami was never in
danger in evening its overall
record at 5-5 and winning its
first league game in three tries.
Western is 2-8 overall and 2-2
in the league.
Toledo, loser only once in 11
games this sP&lt;~son, got 27
points from MAC player of the
week Tom Kozelko. The Rockets led by as much as 27 points
late in the game over coldshooting Butl~r.
.
Youngstown Stale, 21Jth ranked small college team in the
nation, chalked up win No. 10
overGannon , BillyWellsscored
20 points for the Penguins, who
have los! only once this season.
Findlay climbed all over
Bluffton in that· Hoosier-Buckeye Coriference game. ··Fred
Nevar scored Woosll!r's final
eight points as the Scots improved their record to 9-3 over-

all .and ~in the Ohio Conference. MI. Union fell to 5-6. and
1-J.
·
In other OC games, a Ires~
man, James Evans, gave Wittenberg fo,ur pressure-packed
. free throws in the overtime period to guarantee the win over
Otterbein. Wittenberg is ~in
the conference and f.ii overall,
Otterbein is 6-4 and ().!. .
And senior guard Jackie
Brown poured in 32 points for
Ohio Wesleyan in !hat win over
Den~ton. Wesleyan is 3-3 overaU and 1-lln the league, Denison, 11!4 by Dudley Brown's 25
points, is 0-3 .in the OC and
3-7 overall.
Doug Hart scored 31 points
for Rio Grande, which is now

s.s.

points for the vicloriou~ Crusaders who handed Central its
fifth loss in nine starts.
Cleveland State, playlng at
hQme, upset Allron, the eighth
ranked small college team in
the country, 64-58. With ~ seconds left in the game Cleveland's Chuc~ H111 and jim Lawson each connected on two foul
shots to put the game away.
Akron Is 9-2 now aild Cleveland
Is ~7.
In other games: Miami .beat
Western Michigan ~; 'Ohio
U. downed Kent State 85-74;
WQOSter edged Mt. Union 76-75;
Rio Grande outpointed Lander
(S.C.)I04-92; Youngstownwhip.
ped Gannon (Pa.) 70-M; Findlay swamped Bluff!Qn ~'.

vi ~~"

81

s.
gl'
D;

VILlAGE
PHARMACY
for Your

"OW.

STOO: YOUR MEDICINE CHEST

:'\'HE CRI!ATOII Of
lfASONAJlf DRUG PRICIS'

ed up its l!th win without a
loss by defeating Central State
99-83.ForwardsBobArnoldand
Joe Jacobus each scored 27

with their slxtll triumph
against five setbacks.
The victory snapped Rio's
three-game losing streak.
Lander dropped to 5-7 on the
year.
Rio Grande will return to
Mld.&lt;Jhio Conference action at
Walsh Friday night. Saturday,
Rio will play at Malone in
another MOC outing.
Next home game- a big one
- is January 19, against the
powerful Urbana Blue Knights.
Coach Flats l{orne's
Senators slunoed Rio
Wednesday night by blUing
eight of their lint 1% shots
from afar to take a Is.&amp; lead
In the first five minutes of
play.
After a time out, Rio adjusted its defense, and with
1().10 left In the half, Harry
Hairston 's bucket on a
beautiful pass from guard AI
Martin put the Redmen on top
lor the first time, 21-211.
.The lead exchanged hands
seven Urnes during the next
five minutes. Rio's big S-5
'freshman center,
· ' Jackson~ · put" the
shead to stay with
jumper at the 5:14 mark.
Rio, down 32-29 at the 6:37
mark, reeled off 15 straight
points behind Capt. Roger
Bentley, ·AI Martin, Ron
Lambert, Doug Hart, Rouse
and Steve Bartram to take a 4429 lead with 2:2lleft in the half.
Rio led 411-37 during the halftime intermission.
The Redmen Increased
\llelr lead to 14 polots, 72-58,
with 9:54 Ieiiia the game.
The Senators stormed back
1&lt;,&gt; outscore Rio 10.0 dllriDg
the next 1:iiG of play, and all
of a suddeo II was 7%-iB.
Ironton's Steve Bartram

SEOUT
Entire Stock

i*
~
··N···-·

: ==~.:.'=·~~~"X

.

·.

~..
..~ . . _ · c.;,
... ........

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

-,..
-·--·
I

.,

..-

:•
·'

en~~ h

• .

_ . . . . .'!:

••

.,, -

lt•"•"•""""···
..
REG. 'lUI SPECIAL
'17.n

,_

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

'.'

_.. ..... i
'

' flhtpnaiOf

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

.

'

•' •

tM:
rr ·. ;·:..

~

. 2•. . . '
. _.,.......... ....

•

- ·~·

'

NOT
ALL
SIZES
IN ALL

OFF

MUST MAKE ROOM FOR NEW STOCK

LANDER !9Zl.- Blevins, 31·7; Cole, 4·1.9; Graham, 13-2·
28; May, 13·4·30; Popp, 3·0·6;
Smith, 4·4·12.- TOTALS 40·12·

92.

RIO GRANDE (1041 Bartram, 4.o.a ; Bentley, 9·2·20;
Bollinger, 1·0·2 ; Hairston, 7.Q.
14 ; Hart, 13·5-31 ; Jordan, 1·2·4;
lambert, 2.1.5; Marlin, 4-J. ll;
Rouse, 3·0·6; Thompson, 1·1·3.
- TOTALS 45·14·104.
Halftime Score - . Rio 48
lart:fer 37.

R I N C.S

Spr ing is for1pcoplc y.~10 ap~
young, nli ve an d i n l o~·c . ·
Thl'y' rc ou t kind or people.
and we're for tu nate to see a
l{oop many of them ever y day.

The'y ('Ome in to see our
Aa·tCa rved dinmond cngagl•nwnt
rings. Man y pi(·k otw o ut. and

•
••

others just look , and t:o me back
and look sOme more. We Jove it.

•

store every tln y of !he ytlnr .

The y make it Spring in our

..•••

GOESSLER
JEWELRY STORE
POME~OY

Mrs. De Moss, and.Chuck ·
NEW HAVEN - Mrs. William (Mary) De Moss, New Haven,
gave an excellent performance with her dummy, "Chuck" at the
New Haven Rotary dinner meetlng on Thursday at Hartford
United Meihodist Church. This talented lady has been perfanning for 19 years as a ventriloquist.
It started.when she was 11 years old and was given a Jerry
Mahoney toy dummy. The chUdr~n in the sixth grade at her
school in Clarksburg, were each to participate ill opening
ei&lt;ercises at the school. When she was at a loss as to what to do,
ber mother suggested that she perform with her dummy. At
least, that would be different!
It turned out that the performance was well received and she
~ WI!J ca~ ~P.erlonn 11\lh.~eJ:-~time and tinle ~~Pin: Her .
' father, encrluraging her go farther, gave her a prOfessional
dummy which she named Chuck .
With Chuck she received a correspondence course every
month for a year.
'
She i8 a graduate of Roosevelt High SChool in Clarksburg and
of West Virginia Wesleyan College In 1964.
lll:rs. DeMoss assists her husband, the Rev, William De Moss,
with New.Haven 'United Methodist Church activities, mainly with
the musical program of the church and the Story Hour at New
Haven Library.
In addition to his church activities, the Rev, De Moss ls
chairman of the Mason County Committee on Aging; chairman
of the advisor board of the Foster Grandparents Program at
Lakin State Hospital; secretary of the Mason County Mipisterial
Association; a Southwest Community Action Boafd member,
and a member of the New Haven Rotary Club.
The De Mosses are parents of three children, Mark, 9; Mike
5, and Michele, 3. ·

-.-.
i•

.-..

---.

FINAL

e Savin s are Great'#

--• LADIES': ·MISS AMERICA
-- CHILDREN'S: ROBIN HOOD
~

•••
•

••

MEN'S VNECK

••

MEN'S ORLON

WILSON K. 28

BOYS' 2 PC. SET

SWEATERS GOLF BALLS STRETCH
100% lAMBS WOOL

Reg.

Reg.
'9.95

'

Shirt and ·Pants ~•
•

SIZE 3 TO 7

"ONE SIZE FITS ALL"

$1.30 each

Reg.
'1.00

EACH

$13l $300.
TO

&amp; BOYS'

FAMOUS DAN
PERMA PRESS SHEETS

Sca~rf

50% POLYESTER 50% COITON
SOLID COLORS AND FASHION STRIPES
72x104

:Jt~~nED

$4

99

(IF

HUSH PUPPIES

••

[

--.
----.':
----..•
.-.
--.-..
-.-.
•

- ·'

.I

' "'

THE SHOE' BOX

~

1

'1500

·.TO

~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~

I

·MEN'S AND BOYS'

OUTERWEAR

......

.......
--.....
....
---

•

Men's Reg. 16:98 to 75.00
Now'11.32 to 50.00
Boys~

99

Jackets and Car Coats in
both long
lengths. ·

GIRLS 'JACKm MISSES &amp;JUNIOR ONE LARGE GIIOllP
AND COATS
~SSORTEQ
SPORTSWEAR
'6.95 TO '22.95
ON SALE

AILEEN - RUSS TOGS WHISRERS • WRANGLERS
DEVON·· RED EYE JR.

9A.M."
•
•

I

SAVIN.GS
ON ALL.3 FL9Q~S

.

I

I ·

.

Reg. 14.98 to 24.50
Now 9.99 to 16.34

' REGUMR '6.99

SALE

FABRICS
VALUES TO l.OO'YD.
1

e.
YARD

·X Clearance Sale! .

Continues

••••

~TO ~

OFF

HATS - P.J.'s - GOWNS
. - COATS
JACKETS - SNOW SUITS
DRESSES - BLOUSES SPORTSWEAR
THE
PLAY
AND
INFANT
CRIB
SETS.

ON THE T IN MIDDLEPORT

Choice of The

TH.E

Store~

MICROWAVE

rr/,

"""'•"./

·•

All Men's &amp; Boys'

SWEATERS

and

short

'~OFF

KERM'SI KORNER.
.

New York··clothlng House
POMEROY, OHIO

-

All

VEN

Dinettes

So easy to operate, even kids can use it!

1. JUST PUT...,. ,FOOD
IN
..
.

'"'

NOW

'

Hoffman, Mrs. Roy Jones and
Mrs. Phil Batey as hostesses.
The meeting was opened by the
president, Mrs. Harold
Bumgarner.
·Devotions were led by Mrs.
William DeMoss. She· read a
scripture lesson, a reading
"Babe in Arms" and talked on
the year !972 and what you can
make It to be.
A business meeting was held
at which time the club
discussed ways to help the
rescue squad with their fundraising drive. They also voted
to send a donation of $15 to
"Care," a national Garden
Club project.
NEW HAVEN - Miss Lisa
Thomas, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs .' Robert
Thomas
celebrated her .birthday
December 29, with a party held
in her honor, in the _Plll:ish
House of St. Paul Lutheran
Church, New Haven . Miss
Thomas was se~~Q years old.
Guests attending the party
were Lisa Pickens, Anna
Lewis, Diana. Roush, Misti
Gandee, Mathew . Roush,
Rodney Weaver, · Roselyn
Roush, Kay Roush, LouElien
Roush, Mrs. Emory Roush 1
Mts. Clarence Thomas and
Mrs. Robert Thomas.

'

PUSH THE SiART
BUTTON

Choice Of The

Store:

ALL
LAMPS
NOW

You don't have to cook for the kids. Let them do it themselves . .. with the
Radarange microwave oven. It's electronic cooking ... the quickest,
easiest cooking known to rnan ... and kids.
• Cooks a hot dog in 20 seconds .
• Cooks a hamburger in 60 seconds .
• Bakes a potato in 4 minutes.

And the Radarange cooks cool. Only the food gels 1\ot, the oven and
kitchpn stay r.ool. You cook on paper, glass or china. Cook and serve on
paper plates, if you like. Nothing could be easier than that.

Choice Of The

,
•

'

®

GIFT TO YOU

. ___ ,_____ FREE CRYSTAL
STEMWARE

Store~

ALL
CHAIRS .

Now, get an elegant set of Bremen Crystal
Scandinavian -styled stemware absolutely fre e with
the purchase .at an Amana Radarange micfowave
oven. Tbe 24-plece set includes eight, 4-ounce
sherbel-juice glasses; eight, 9-ounce a nd eight,
10-ounce all -occasion glasses. Each piece is
handcut and carries your personal monogram.
This Is definitely a limited otter . . . so hurry/

THE AMANA RADARANGE MICROWAVE OVEN:
KIDS USE IT, MOM LOVES IT! SEE IT TODAY

-

Including Berkline.
and

.

La-Z._

You Always Do Better At

PLUMj!ING and
HEATING
Shop or Field

MAS.ON FURNITUR.E

Ph. 992-2511

Locust 51.'

OFF

• Cooks a S-Ib. roast in 35 minutes.

The Be$1 Service
for
.

CHASE
HARDWARE

'

SET THE TIMER

BIRTHDAY NOTED

ORlON PANT SElS

PERFE~. '3.98)

A\ Children's.JanUJJfy

New Haven Social Events
The Nehacllma Garden Club
me.t Monday evening at the
Alex-Quillen Memorial
Building with Mrs. Thomas

ALL FAMOUS BRANDS

·Coats &amp; Jackets

'·

$500

...,.

BONDED

'PILLOW CASE (IF PERFECT '2.69)

lADIES'

ONLY

REGUlAR 7.95 TO 24.95
· REDUCED TO
1

TWIN FinED (IF PERFECT •3.19)

ONLY

FRIDAY

JACKETS
AND COATS

1

••
••

~

REDUC£0 FOR CWRMCE •
REG. 11.98 TO lS.OO
CLEARANCE

Reg. '199 TO '6.99
TO

•

Gl RLS' 'SLACKS

SETS

$2

••

PAIR OF

LATEST FASHION

99

•'

'199

MEN AND BOYS

Hat, Gloves,

.

Reg.

DISCONTINUED STYLES OF

~
·
~

••

good repair.
- An ampfe .supply of fresh
alrbe provided-for all gas fired
heating appliances.
- Car mufflers are .·checked ·
frequently for leaks, and kept
clean and in good ·repair. ·
- An automobile, or any fuel
bu~nlng engine, is never
allowed to run in a closed
building.
- An automobile engine is
shut off when occupants
remain in the automobile for
extended periods 61 time.
Carbon monoxl~e is an environmental· hazard that
. should concern everyone, as it
makes no distinction as to age
or social status among its
unsuspecting victims. It Is a·.
potential hazard that can occur
in any automobile, home,
school, church, restaurant or
any structure where fuel
burning equipment i8 usad.
Answers to questions on how
to make .a home safe from
carbon monoxide, may be
directed to local ·health
departments or the offices of
local fuel suppliers.

Mason
Furniture's

to

•

SAI.ES

JANUARY CLEARANCE SALEI

Nebraska. has never had a Its deer ·~nd antelope huqtlng
gun fatality in the history. of 'sea~ons .

·CONTINUES THIS
WEEK!
'

'

ALL
~

News Notes

ment, advises that most.carbon
monoxide poisonings are .the
resJll of:
- Using .an unvenU:d space
heater in a small unventilated
room,
'- Starting and ruMing an
automobile in a closed garage,
- Using a gas oven for
overnight heating, or,
- Operating iaulty gas fired
healing appliances.
The Accident Prevention
Unit of-the Ohio Department of
Health says preventive action
must consider the two main
causes of carbon monoxide
production , ·the Improper
burning of fuels and insufficient ventilation , The
methods·of prevention should
include:
.
. ..,. Adequare ventilation to
the outside air · should be
provided for anything that
burns.
- All fuel burning equipment
be properly installed in accordance
with
local
regulations.
· - All equipment, flues and
chimneys are kept clean and in

••

•

,.........

to as "The silent Killer;"

are especWiy hazardous. In
carbon , monoxide
is small closed areas carbon
produced by ·the incomplete. monoxide can accumulate very
burning , of solid, liquid or rapidly in . su!fic,ient congaseous fuels and includes tentration to cause illness and
wood, coal, charcoal, oil, · death.
naiutal or bottled gas and
When carbon monoxide and
gasoline. The · most frequent · oxygen are present in the air
.sources of carbon moitolide we breathe, the red blood cells
production are the automobile have a grearer affinity for the
engm
' e; gas fired heating ap. deadly gas than for oxygen.
piiances, clothes dryers, water The hemoglobin of the blood
heaters, gas kitchen ranges becomes saturated with carbon
wo a
and refrigerators.
monoxide and the body is
'
•
. Upvented iljiaee heaters used deprived or life giving oxygen .
.in homes and sometimes in
Selim J. BlazeWicz, M. D.,
"'-'£ Y
travel trailers and campers , Health Commissioner of the
Meigs County Health DepartMASC&gt;~ ..:... Angle and. Teresa
Proffitt, daughiers of Mr. and
' ~:;~~~a~~: Proffitt, observed
' ·.~
in December,
' Arigie, 10, Invited several of
· fler friends to her home for ice
By Alma M81'8hall
cream and cake. They were
·'
Beth Wilson, 'Melanie Sisson,
Karen Brown, :ranya Cundiff;.
Jill Taylor, Usa Stewart, Edie
Shepard, Julie Gibbs, Crystal .·
.Richardson. Also present were
' Mrs. James Proffitt and
Teres3 .
, 011 Teresa's 13th birthday
she held a pizza party, inviting
Jan Wilson, Evelyn Russell,
Robin Stewart and her sister,
Teresa. It also was at her
home.
On Christmas eve the birth~ay of Kathy Foglesong was
observed at the home of Mr .
and Mrs. Proffitt. Among the
guests were Kathy, a freshinan
at Marshall, and her sister,
Cinda, a sophomore at Marshall.

POMEROY, OHIO

SALE STARTS

.

D I AM OND

•
•

These two outstanding groups appearing in the New]lleigs Inn Lounge from 9:00
until . • .
·

Rei '19.95 TO s59.95

'

~(arvede ,

••"

MEIGS INN

Lander hit 49 pet. from the
field by sinking 40 of 81 attempts. The Senators made 12
of 22 free throws. Jeff May, 6-1
junior, pumped in 30 points for
the losers. Tom Graham, 6-3
sophomore added 28.

I

WOMEN'S DRESS &amp; CASUALS
REG
. t)
11.95 TO .13.95 S
S

PRINTEMPS SET

•
•

AT THE

game,

UP

~lYLES

:•

••

············~···········

'

Mason County

•••

••

$388 TO $11 88
45%

•

••

ONLY

TO

••
•••

•

REG. 15.95 TO '17~95

'

WI

••

broke the spell on a fine steal at
mld-&lt;!ourt and scored an easy
layup, After that, Rio led
anywhere from eight to 12
points the remainder of the

.
more than 10,000 people are
made ill and require medical
attention.
Because carb~n monoxide ·Is such an elusive .
gas J,hat has no characrerisllc
odor or t..te and Clll!lot be
seen or !eW,'1lt is often ,referred
;
B!...6L

:• Some peon,
Je
1'1
iculda·y.. of
: enjoy' Spring
.
"
:·~• more than others. T D ughters
•,
•..
;.,.,_,ed
Ob
Are'
•

•••

The smallest moss is the
pygmy moss ; the longest is
the brook moss, which forms
streamers up to three feet
long in flowing water.

LINED AND UNLINED

-Miss Wonderful

'

Each year in this country ·
carbon monoxide poisoning, is
responslb1e for 800 deaths in
vel]icles such as automobiles,
travel trailers and · c~pers,.
and another· 600 are killed in
barnes. It is estimated !hat

••

C. P.O.

of
.

•

:;
:
:
:
•
:
·· :
:
~

,~t~\ 'I - . -IZ-111.-I..AI~LMY._A.II_.I._WI-CAM--JI!I":'LI":'~.~.·--..,....
1
\.~'4' f~t:! c!."~~.:O:•.... *- ":i :::2

JlliArriYM

LOSE UGLY FAT

·

Fils Women5 ft . to 511.7 ln., 1!10to 150 lbs.
i · RotullrS1 .49-Speclllll.2t Pair
Thlsls one of our regular Items·not secondS or
~ lrregullrs. All Firs! Glulllty.

- I, .. .

.

l !14;000 ))ie Annually From .Monoxide Poison

There were several other

hi~hscorersdurlng the evening.

Coach Art Lanham's Rio
Grande College Redrnen got
the "red carpet treatment"
upon their return home to Lyne
Center lor the first time in
more than a month Wednesday
night and the result was a
convincing 104-92 triumph over
visiting Lander College of
South Carolina.
Rio's cheerleaders, prior
to the opening llpoll, rolled
out a red carpel to greet
Coach Lanham's quintet,
and the Redmen responded

T:

PMTY m

Ohio Domin'lcan, which beat
Walsh. Herb Bowen hit 39 for
Walsh,
RiiSsell Drake scored 32 to ·
lead Case In il! win over Allegheny.
And Wajnesburg (Pa.) toi.t to
Malone despliea 31-point effort
by Ted Maczuzak.
. The only game tonight is ,
Wheeling (W.Va.) at Steubenville.

Rio Trips Lander

T'

;

773-5592

HERMAN GRATE

MASON, w. VA.

I

�'

5- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. l3, lim

t - The Dally Senttnel,Middlepori-I'CIIIet'OY, o., Jan. 13, 1972

.

'

•

Louis
BYUillledl'rHaiDierualloaal
Dayton got another crack at
sbth-ranked Louisville
Wedrieaday night but ran out of
gas In the second half.
The Flyers, who lost to tlie
Cardlnals·eartier in the season
· in a game at LOuisville, were
beaten again on their home
court 'liM.
.
But at least it wasn't the 88. 60 mop job Louisville did on
Dayton before.
' . The teams were tied 27-27 at
the half and although Louisville
jumped out to a 15-point lead
with 3:2lleft to play, the Fly·
ers rallied to trail by just five
with 1:08 remaining.
At that point Louisville's cool
· Jim Price put the game away
with f0ur perfect free throws.
, Price had a total of 25 points
for the game, but . Dayton's
sophomore guard Donald Smith
was high for the game with 28.
The win made Louisville 10-1.
. Dayton fell to 5-6,
Other Slandouts
Amorig ·a bevy .of other resul ts for the night, these stand
out.
'· Capital, the nation's 12th
rated small college team, pick-

•

2-HOUR
CLEANING
(Upon
Request)
.
.

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS
Znd

210 E.

Pomeroy

Phonti 992-5421

.

..

'

RUTH
Ont Size

e Repeats ·Win OVer Dayton

second half," said OU coach
Jim Snyder.
In the other MAC tilt,.defending champ Miami was never in
danger in evening its overall
record at 5-5 and winning its
first league game in three tries.
Western is 2-8 overall and 2-2
in the league.
Toledo, loser only once in 11
games this sP&lt;~son, got 27
points from MAC player of the
week Tom Kozelko. The Rockets led by as much as 27 points
late in the game over coldshooting Butl~r.
.
Youngstown Stale, 21Jth ranked small college team in the
nation, chalked up win No. 10
overGannon , BillyWellsscored
20 points for the Penguins, who
have los! only once this season.
Findlay climbed all over
Bluffton in that· Hoosier-Buckeye Coriference game. ··Fred
Nevar scored Woosll!r's final
eight points as the Scots improved their record to 9-3 over-

all .and ~in the Ohio Conference. MI. Union fell to 5-6. and
1-J.
·
In other OC games, a Ires~
man, James Evans, gave Wittenberg fo,ur pressure-packed
. free throws in the overtime period to guarantee the win over
Otterbein. Wittenberg is ~in
the conference and f.ii overall,
Otterbein is 6-4 and ().!. .
And senior guard Jackie
Brown poured in 32 points for
Ohio Wesleyan in !hat win over
Den~ton. Wesleyan is 3-3 overaU and 1-lln the league, Denison, 11!4 by Dudley Brown's 25
points, is 0-3 .in the OC and
3-7 overall.
Doug Hart scored 31 points
for Rio Grande, which is now

s.s.

points for the vicloriou~ Crusaders who handed Central its
fifth loss in nine starts.
Cleveland State, playlng at
hQme, upset Allron, the eighth
ranked small college team in
the country, 64-58. With ~ seconds left in the game Cleveland's Chuc~ H111 and jim Lawson each connected on two foul
shots to put the game away.
Akron Is 9-2 now aild Cleveland
Is ~7.
In other games: Miami .beat
Western Michigan ~; 'Ohio
U. downed Kent State 85-74;
WQOSter edged Mt. Union 76-75;
Rio Grande outpointed Lander
(S.C.)I04-92; Youngstownwhip.
ped Gannon (Pa.) 70-M; Findlay swamped Bluff!Qn ~'.

vi ~~"

81

s.
gl'
D;

VILlAGE
PHARMACY
for Your

"OW.

STOO: YOUR MEDICINE CHEST

:'\'HE CRI!ATOII Of
lfASONAJlf DRUG PRICIS'

ed up its l!th win without a
loss by defeating Central State
99-83.ForwardsBobArnoldand
Joe Jacobus each scored 27

with their slxtll triumph
against five setbacks.
The victory snapped Rio's
three-game losing streak.
Lander dropped to 5-7 on the
year.
Rio Grande will return to
Mld.&lt;Jhio Conference action at
Walsh Friday night. Saturday,
Rio will play at Malone in
another MOC outing.
Next home game- a big one
- is January 19, against the
powerful Urbana Blue Knights.
Coach Flats l{orne's
Senators slunoed Rio
Wednesday night by blUing
eight of their lint 1% shots
from afar to take a Is.&amp; lead
In the first five minutes of
play.
After a time out, Rio adjusted its defense, and with
1().10 left In the half, Harry
Hairston 's bucket on a
beautiful pass from guard AI
Martin put the Redmen on top
lor the first time, 21-211.
.The lead exchanged hands
seven Urnes during the next
five minutes. Rio's big S-5
'freshman center,
· ' Jackson~ · put" the
shead to stay with
jumper at the 5:14 mark.
Rio, down 32-29 at the 6:37
mark, reeled off 15 straight
points behind Capt. Roger
Bentley, ·AI Martin, Ron
Lambert, Doug Hart, Rouse
and Steve Bartram to take a 4429 lead with 2:2lleft in the half.
Rio led 411-37 during the halftime intermission.
The Redmen Increased
\llelr lead to 14 polots, 72-58,
with 9:54 Ieiiia the game.
The Senators stormed back
1&lt;,&gt; outscore Rio 10.0 dllriDg
the next 1:iiG of play, and all
of a suddeo II was 7%-iB.
Ironton's Steve Bartram

SEOUT
Entire Stock

i*
~
··N···-·

: ==~.:.'=·~~~"X

.

·.

~..
..~ . . _ · c.;,
... ........

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

-,..
-·--·
I

.,

..-

:•
·'

en~~ h

• .

_ . . . . .'!:

••

.,, -

lt•"•"•""""···
..
REG. 'lUI SPECIAL
'17.n

,_

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

'.'

_.. ..... i
'

' flhtpnaiOf

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

.

'

•' •

tM:
rr ·. ;·:..

~

. 2•. . . '
. _.,.......... ....

•

- ·~·

'

NOT
ALL
SIZES
IN ALL

OFF

MUST MAKE ROOM FOR NEW STOCK

LANDER !9Zl.- Blevins, 31·7; Cole, 4·1.9; Graham, 13-2·
28; May, 13·4·30; Popp, 3·0·6;
Smith, 4·4·12.- TOTALS 40·12·

92.

RIO GRANDE (1041 Bartram, 4.o.a ; Bentley, 9·2·20;
Bollinger, 1·0·2 ; Hairston, 7.Q.
14 ; Hart, 13·5-31 ; Jordan, 1·2·4;
lambert, 2.1.5; Marlin, 4-J. ll;
Rouse, 3·0·6; Thompson, 1·1·3.
- TOTALS 45·14·104.
Halftime Score - . Rio 48
lart:fer 37.

R I N C.S

Spr ing is for1pcoplc y.~10 ap~
young, nli ve an d i n l o~·c . ·
Thl'y' rc ou t kind or people.
and we're for tu nate to see a
l{oop many of them ever y day.

The'y ('Ome in to see our
Aa·tCa rved dinmond cngagl•nwnt
rings. Man y pi(·k otw o ut. and

•
••

others just look , and t:o me back
and look sOme more. We Jove it.

•

store every tln y of !he ytlnr .

The y make it Spring in our

..•••

GOESSLER
JEWELRY STORE
POME~OY

Mrs. De Moss, and.Chuck ·
NEW HAVEN - Mrs. William (Mary) De Moss, New Haven,
gave an excellent performance with her dummy, "Chuck" at the
New Haven Rotary dinner meetlng on Thursday at Hartford
United Meihodist Church. This talented lady has been perfanning for 19 years as a ventriloquist.
It started.when she was 11 years old and was given a Jerry
Mahoney toy dummy. The chUdr~n in the sixth grade at her
school in Clarksburg, were each to participate ill opening
ei&lt;ercises at the school. When she was at a loss as to what to do,
ber mother suggested that she perform with her dummy. At
least, that would be different!
It turned out that the performance was well received and she
~ WI!J ca~ ~P.erlonn 11\lh.~eJ:-~time and tinle ~~Pin: Her .
' father, encrluraging her go farther, gave her a prOfessional
dummy which she named Chuck .
With Chuck she received a correspondence course every
month for a year.
'
She i8 a graduate of Roosevelt High SChool in Clarksburg and
of West Virginia Wesleyan College In 1964.
lll:rs. DeMoss assists her husband, the Rev, William De Moss,
with New.Haven 'United Methodist Church activities, mainly with
the musical program of the church and the Story Hour at New
Haven Library.
In addition to his church activities, the Rev, De Moss ls
chairman of the Mason County Committee on Aging; chairman
of the advisor board of the Foster Grandparents Program at
Lakin State Hospital; secretary of the Mason County Mipisterial
Association; a Southwest Community Action Boafd member,
and a member of the New Haven Rotary Club.
The De Mosses are parents of three children, Mark, 9; Mike
5, and Michele, 3. ·

-.-.
i•

.-..

---.

FINAL

e Savin s are Great'#

--• LADIES': ·MISS AMERICA
-- CHILDREN'S: ROBIN HOOD
~

•••
•

••

MEN'S VNECK

••

MEN'S ORLON

WILSON K. 28

BOYS' 2 PC. SET

SWEATERS GOLF BALLS STRETCH
100% lAMBS WOOL

Reg.

Reg.
'9.95

'

Shirt and ·Pants ~•
•

SIZE 3 TO 7

"ONE SIZE FITS ALL"

$1.30 each

Reg.
'1.00

EACH

$13l $300.
TO

&amp; BOYS'

FAMOUS DAN
PERMA PRESS SHEETS

Sca~rf

50% POLYESTER 50% COITON
SOLID COLORS AND FASHION STRIPES
72x104

:Jt~~nED

$4

99

(IF

HUSH PUPPIES

••

[

--.
----.':
----..•
.-.
--.-..
-.-.
•

- ·'

.I

' "'

THE SHOE' BOX

~

1

'1500

·.TO

~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~

I

·MEN'S AND BOYS'

OUTERWEAR

......

.......
--.....
....
---

•

Men's Reg. 16:98 to 75.00
Now'11.32 to 50.00
Boys~

99

Jackets and Car Coats in
both long
lengths. ·

GIRLS 'JACKm MISSES &amp;JUNIOR ONE LARGE GIIOllP
AND COATS
~SSORTEQ
SPORTSWEAR
'6.95 TO '22.95
ON SALE

AILEEN - RUSS TOGS WHISRERS • WRANGLERS
DEVON·· RED EYE JR.

9A.M."
•
•

I

SAVIN.GS
ON ALL.3 FL9Q~S

.

I

I ·

.

Reg. 14.98 to 24.50
Now 9.99 to 16.34

' REGUMR '6.99

SALE

FABRICS
VALUES TO l.OO'YD.
1

e.
YARD

·X Clearance Sale! .

Continues

••••

~TO ~

OFF

HATS - P.J.'s - GOWNS
. - COATS
JACKETS - SNOW SUITS
DRESSES - BLOUSES SPORTSWEAR
THE
PLAY
AND
INFANT
CRIB
SETS.

ON THE T IN MIDDLEPORT

Choice of The

TH.E

Store~

MICROWAVE

rr/,

"""'•"./

·•

All Men's &amp; Boys'

SWEATERS

and

short

'~OFF

KERM'SI KORNER.
.

New York··clothlng House
POMEROY, OHIO

-

All

VEN

Dinettes

So easy to operate, even kids can use it!

1. JUST PUT...,. ,FOOD
IN
..
.

'"'

NOW

'

Hoffman, Mrs. Roy Jones and
Mrs. Phil Batey as hostesses.
The meeting was opened by the
president, Mrs. Harold
Bumgarner.
·Devotions were led by Mrs.
William DeMoss. She· read a
scripture lesson, a reading
"Babe in Arms" and talked on
the year !972 and what you can
make It to be.
A business meeting was held
at which time the club
discussed ways to help the
rescue squad with their fundraising drive. They also voted
to send a donation of $15 to
"Care," a national Garden
Club project.
NEW HAVEN - Miss Lisa
Thomas, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs .' Robert
Thomas
celebrated her .birthday
December 29, with a party held
in her honor, in the _Plll:ish
House of St. Paul Lutheran
Church, New Haven . Miss
Thomas was se~~Q years old.
Guests attending the party
were Lisa Pickens, Anna
Lewis, Diana. Roush, Misti
Gandee, Mathew . Roush,
Rodney Weaver, · Roselyn
Roush, Kay Roush, LouElien
Roush, Mrs. Emory Roush 1
Mts. Clarence Thomas and
Mrs. Robert Thomas.

'

PUSH THE SiART
BUTTON

Choice Of The

Store:

ALL
LAMPS
NOW

You don't have to cook for the kids. Let them do it themselves . .. with the
Radarange microwave oven. It's electronic cooking ... the quickest,
easiest cooking known to rnan ... and kids.
• Cooks a hot dog in 20 seconds .
• Cooks a hamburger in 60 seconds .
• Bakes a potato in 4 minutes.

And the Radarange cooks cool. Only the food gels 1\ot, the oven and
kitchpn stay r.ool. You cook on paper, glass or china. Cook and serve on
paper plates, if you like. Nothing could be easier than that.

Choice Of The

,
•

'

®

GIFT TO YOU

. ___ ,_____ FREE CRYSTAL
STEMWARE

Store~

ALL
CHAIRS .

Now, get an elegant set of Bremen Crystal
Scandinavian -styled stemware absolutely fre e with
the purchase .at an Amana Radarange micfowave
oven. Tbe 24-plece set includes eight, 4-ounce
sherbel-juice glasses; eight, 9-ounce a nd eight,
10-ounce all -occasion glasses. Each piece is
handcut and carries your personal monogram.
This Is definitely a limited otter . . . so hurry/

THE AMANA RADARANGE MICROWAVE OVEN:
KIDS USE IT, MOM LOVES IT! SEE IT TODAY

-

Including Berkline.
and

.

La-Z._

You Always Do Better At

PLUMj!ING and
HEATING
Shop or Field

MAS.ON FURNITUR.E

Ph. 992-2511

Locust 51.'

OFF

• Cooks a S-Ib. roast in 35 minutes.

The Be$1 Service
for
.

CHASE
HARDWARE

'

SET THE TIMER

BIRTHDAY NOTED

ORlON PANT SElS

PERFE~. '3.98)

A\ Children's.JanUJJfy

New Haven Social Events
The Nehacllma Garden Club
me.t Monday evening at the
Alex-Quillen Memorial
Building with Mrs. Thomas

ALL FAMOUS BRANDS

·Coats &amp; Jackets

'·

$500

...,.

BONDED

'PILLOW CASE (IF PERFECT '2.69)

lADIES'

ONLY

REGUlAR 7.95 TO 24.95
· REDUCED TO
1

TWIN FinED (IF PERFECT •3.19)

ONLY

FRIDAY

JACKETS
AND COATS

1

••
••

~

REDUC£0 FOR CWRMCE •
REG. 11.98 TO lS.OO
CLEARANCE

Reg. '199 TO '6.99
TO

•

Gl RLS' 'SLACKS

SETS

$2

••

PAIR OF

LATEST FASHION

99

•'

'199

MEN AND BOYS

Hat, Gloves,

.

Reg.

DISCONTINUED STYLES OF

~
·
~

••

good repair.
- An ampfe .supply of fresh
alrbe provided-for all gas fired
heating appliances.
- Car mufflers are .·checked ·
frequently for leaks, and kept
clean and in good ·repair. ·
- An automobile, or any fuel
bu~nlng engine, is never
allowed to run in a closed
building.
- An automobile engine is
shut off when occupants
remain in the automobile for
extended periods 61 time.
Carbon monoxl~e is an environmental· hazard that
. should concern everyone, as it
makes no distinction as to age
or social status among its
unsuspecting victims. It Is a·.
potential hazard that can occur
in any automobile, home,
school, church, restaurant or
any structure where fuel
burning equipment i8 usad.
Answers to questions on how
to make .a home safe from
carbon monoxide, may be
directed to local ·health
departments or the offices of
local fuel suppliers.

Mason
Furniture's

to

•

SAI.ES

JANUARY CLEARANCE SALEI

Nebraska. has never had a Its deer ·~nd antelope huqtlng
gun fatality in the history. of 'sea~ons .

·CONTINUES THIS
WEEK!
'

'

ALL
~

News Notes

ment, advises that most.carbon
monoxide poisonings are .the
resJll of:
- Using .an unvenU:d space
heater in a small unventilated
room,
'- Starting and ruMing an
automobile in a closed garage,
- Using a gas oven for
overnight heating, or,
- Operating iaulty gas fired
healing appliances.
The Accident Prevention
Unit of-the Ohio Department of
Health says preventive action
must consider the two main
causes of carbon monoxide
production , ·the Improper
burning of fuels and insufficient ventilation , The
methods·of prevention should
include:
.
. ..,. Adequare ventilation to
the outside air · should be
provided for anything that
burns.
- All fuel burning equipment
be properly installed in accordance
with
local
regulations.
· - All equipment, flues and
chimneys are kept clean and in

••

•

,.........

to as "The silent Killer;"

are especWiy hazardous. In
carbon , monoxide
is small closed areas carbon
produced by ·the incomplete. monoxide can accumulate very
burning , of solid, liquid or rapidly in . su!fic,ient congaseous fuels and includes tentration to cause illness and
wood, coal, charcoal, oil, · death.
naiutal or bottled gas and
When carbon monoxide and
gasoline. The · most frequent · oxygen are present in the air
.sources of carbon moitolide we breathe, the red blood cells
production are the automobile have a grearer affinity for the
engm
' e; gas fired heating ap. deadly gas than for oxygen.
piiances, clothes dryers, water The hemoglobin of the blood
heaters, gas kitchen ranges becomes saturated with carbon
wo a
and refrigerators.
monoxide and the body is
'
•
. Upvented iljiaee heaters used deprived or life giving oxygen .
.in homes and sometimes in
Selim J. BlazeWicz, M. D.,
"'-'£ Y
travel trailers and campers , Health Commissioner of the
Meigs County Health DepartMASC&gt;~ ..:... Angle and. Teresa
Proffitt, daughiers of Mr. and
' ~:;~~~a~~: Proffitt, observed
' ·.~
in December,
' Arigie, 10, Invited several of
· fler friends to her home for ice
By Alma M81'8hall
cream and cake. They were
·'
Beth Wilson, 'Melanie Sisson,
Karen Brown, :ranya Cundiff;.
Jill Taylor, Usa Stewart, Edie
Shepard, Julie Gibbs, Crystal .·
.Richardson. Also present were
' Mrs. James Proffitt and
Teres3 .
, 011 Teresa's 13th birthday
she held a pizza party, inviting
Jan Wilson, Evelyn Russell,
Robin Stewart and her sister,
Teresa. It also was at her
home.
On Christmas eve the birth~ay of Kathy Foglesong was
observed at the home of Mr .
and Mrs. Proffitt. Among the
guests were Kathy, a freshinan
at Marshall, and her sister,
Cinda, a sophomore at Marshall.

POMEROY, OHIO

SALE STARTS

.

D I AM OND

•
•

These two outstanding groups appearing in the New]lleigs Inn Lounge from 9:00
until . • .
·

Rei '19.95 TO s59.95

'

~(arvede ,

••"

MEIGS INN

Lander hit 49 pet. from the
field by sinking 40 of 81 attempts. The Senators made 12
of 22 free throws. Jeff May, 6-1
junior, pumped in 30 points for
the losers. Tom Graham, 6-3
sophomore added 28.

I

WOMEN'S DRESS &amp; CASUALS
REG
. t)
11.95 TO .13.95 S
S

PRINTEMPS SET

•
•

AT THE

game,

UP

~lYLES

:•

••

············~···········

'

Mason County

•••

••

$388 TO $11 88
45%

•

••

ONLY

TO

••
•••

•

REG. 15.95 TO '17~95

'

WI

••

broke the spell on a fine steal at
mld-&lt;!ourt and scored an easy
layup, After that, Rio led
anywhere from eight to 12
points the remainder of the

.
more than 10,000 people are
made ill and require medical
attention.
Because carb~n monoxide ·Is such an elusive .
gas J,hat has no characrerisllc
odor or t..te and Clll!lot be
seen or !eW,'1lt is often ,referred
;
B!...6L

:• Some peon,
Je
1'1
iculda·y.. of
: enjoy' Spring
.
"
:·~• more than others. T D ughters
•,
•..
;.,.,_,ed
Ob
Are'
•

•••

The smallest moss is the
pygmy moss ; the longest is
the brook moss, which forms
streamers up to three feet
long in flowing water.

LINED AND UNLINED

-Miss Wonderful

'

Each year in this country ·
carbon monoxide poisoning, is
responslb1e for 800 deaths in
vel]icles such as automobiles,
travel trailers and · c~pers,.
and another· 600 are killed in
barnes. It is estimated !hat

••

C. P.O.

of
.

•

:;
:
:
:
•
:
·· :
:
~

,~t~\ 'I - . -IZ-111.-I..AI~LMY._A.II_.I._WI-CAM--JI!I":'LI":'~.~.·--..,....
1
\.~'4' f~t:! c!."~~.:O:•.... *- ":i :::2

JlliArriYM

LOSE UGLY FAT

·

Fils Women5 ft . to 511.7 ln., 1!10to 150 lbs.
i · RotullrS1 .49-Speclllll.2t Pair
Thlsls one of our regular Items·not secondS or
~ lrregullrs. All Firs! Glulllty.

- I, .. .

.

l !14;000 ))ie Annually From .Monoxide Poison

There were several other

hi~hscorersdurlng the evening.

Coach Art Lanham's Rio
Grande College Redrnen got
the "red carpet treatment"
upon their return home to Lyne
Center lor the first time in
more than a month Wednesday
night and the result was a
convincing 104-92 triumph over
visiting Lander College of
South Carolina.
Rio's cheerleaders, prior
to the opening llpoll, rolled
out a red carpel to greet
Coach Lanham's quintet,
and the Redmen responded

T:

PMTY m

Ohio Domin'lcan, which beat
Walsh. Herb Bowen hit 39 for
Walsh,
RiiSsell Drake scored 32 to ·
lead Case In il! win over Allegheny.
And Wajnesburg (Pa.) toi.t to
Malone despliea 31-point effort
by Ted Maczuzak.
. The only game tonight is ,
Wheeling (W.Va.) at Steubenville.

Rio Trips Lander

T'

;

773-5592

HERMAN GRATE

MASON, w. VA.

I

�.
I

... '

....

•

ill

. ..

L

'
I

J

b- ,,. Dilly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jaq. 1~,19'12

Elect;ion.Year Vanes

in lim!.
Talmadge · hedged this
statement with two conditions:
Nixon will be hard to heat
unless by ·eiectlon day (I) his
"Phase II" econo111ic controls
have. blown up in his face; or
(2) the United States is stili
bogged down in Vietnam.
Talmadge figures Nixon is too
smart a politician to let eiUter
of those things happen.
Wallace Is Warming Up
In Alabama, Gov. George

Letters

Q{

• •
IDIOD
weleo!Did." Tiley llbould be less
1haDIIO wordiiGIII (or be llllbjeettoredaelfoo by the editor)
IIIII lball be _dped wllb _lbe lllpee'• address. Names may
jle-Wi'lhbeld apoa pablfeaUom, however, Gil request. Letters
be fD 'ood taste, 8d~ii!S lssues, not personalities. ·
Lellen 01 apiDIGD .n

_.eald

''

why Not with Less Hair?
Dear Editor:
Let me begin by saying, I supPort the Meigs School Board in
their decision to maintain the present dress code, of which there
has been a lot of controversy. I feel Ute code is very lenient.
The mothers who argued, (at the recent Meigs Local School
Board meeting), that their child could get an education wiUt long
hair, and education seemed to be tbeir main concern, Uten why
couldn't they get an education with less hair? - and learn to
abide by a few laws.
If )bey are taught to rebel over such a trivial matter, then
how will they react to the draft call? Or will they be in Ute group
who will burn his draft card? .
Wake Up Parents!
Also a Parent (Name withhe.ld on request ).

Racine Social Events
ByMRS.FRANCISMORRIS Mrs. Nick Yost and Mr. and
Mrs. Dorothy Badgley was Mrs. Norman Norris.
hostess for Ute meeting of Ute
Spending Christmas with Mr .
Esther Missionary Circle at the and Mrs. Jack Sharpnack were
First Baptist Church Monday Mr. and Mrs. P. H. Baker; Mr .
evening, J1111. 10. "I would Be and Mrs. Gary Spires; Mr. and
Uke Jesus" was sung by the Mrs. Jack Sharpnack, Jr., and
group In opening Ute meeting family and Miss Marabeiie
,lrith devoUOO&amp;.by: J.I.rs Mal-ie\1 Sha!l&gt;riid, alltl!frQ/1i»mbus.
Rousll. Aller ' Scripture' and '• T:Sg't.US'nd 'Mrs. Steven
Prayer, readings were "The Jacobs and family of LockNew C~apter" and "New bourne Air Base, Columbus,
Years Vow". A program by spent Saturday with her
Helen Simpson included grandpar.ents, Mr. and Mrs.
readings by members "What Henry Roush.
the Gospel Says", "Missions",
Bud Simpson of Pomeroy
"My Gift", "The Steward's called on his moUter, Mrs.
Prayer", "There is No Path Gretta Simpson, Monday.
Ahead", "Where To Look",
Mr. and Mrs. James Roush
: "Man With a Message", and family and Miss Elisa
i "Spiritual Work Shop" and a McMillan spent New Years'
1 diJcusslon
on questions and week end wiUt Mr. and Mrs.
i allswers. After the business Fred Sayre and family at
session The Love Gift program Leesville.
: was given by Marie Roush
Miss Susie Biggs, a student
: using Ute hymn "Who At My at the Jackson Manpower
: Door Is Standing?" Scripture, training school, spent the week
: Matt. 28, topic "What Is The end with her moUter, Blanche
Church Supposed To Do". Biggs.
, Closed with the Dedication
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Roberts
· Prayer for the offering. A of Patriot spent Sunday with
· fellowship hour was held In Ute his mother, Mrs . Frances
basement when Mrs. Badgley Roberts.
served lovely refreshments to
Mrs. Audrey Brownell of
nine members and one guest. Kanauga visited New Years'
Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Skow (Ute week end wiUt Mr. and Mrs.
former Doreen Norris) an- Fern Norris.
· nounced the birUt of a son, 7
Miss Mara belle Sharpnack of
lbs. 6 oz., Eric William Skow, Columbus spent New . Years
, born Dec. 12, 1971 in St. Joseph week end with her parents, Mr.
·Hospital, St. Paul, Minn. and Mrs. Jack Sharpnack.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cleland
Mr. and Mrs. Fern Norris.
were Sunday guests of Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Hall Mrs. Steve Cleland, Vince and
(Shirley Norris) and two Ryan at Columbus.
children of St. Paul, Minn.,
spent the Christmas holidays
with Mr. and Mrs. Fern Norris
A •·printer's devil" is an
apprentice who is learning
and in Colwnbus with Mr. and to be a printer.

7-Tbe

i

Alf.~ed

·

High Ind. Series _ Maxine

sick of racist politics, and he
seems to be succeeding.
.
h
I n Iac'I hlS
prospects ave
improved so dramatically the
Democrats are having a hard
time finding spmebody to run
,
h' "'
·
·"~
1
1galnst· tm.' • • .. 1
r

Dugan 488; Crestlyn Hill 465;
Drema Smith 463.
High Team game - Dave's
Tire Land 63ll; Simon's Mkt.
632 ; New York Clothing 608 .
High Ind. game - Terry
Shain 187; Becky Dunfee 180 ;
•

15 Ol

·

.

'

. REXALL

QUIET-NITE

.
,
.
_
99

Reg.JIZ.'Jl'
6

•

•

~--------4

· Rexall fast .

Reg. 1.89

100 .

$1:39

'

Rexall - Reg. 891

BREATH FRESH-••
Rexall

69•

S'JlO·
Tl.

99~

GRAND PRIZE

TABLETS I.Giycerin
$}29

Reg. 89c
12's

''

31

1972 .

\

Command Hair Groomer

AMBASSADOR BROUGHAM

. REG. 1.79

I

)

10 Pack Chew;ng Gum Juicy FruH
~~mint

,

Alurex·
~~g.:: __ ~ ___79•
2 Tablets.'
Rexall - Reg. 99'

Mouth Wash~-5 7'
REXALL

Reg. 1495

•

mantllaclurer.

•12.95 up

.

GO•••GO•••RIUR'S

DEVILBISS
COOL MIST

SUCRETS
LOZENGES
24's
Reg. -83'·-----·
16

53'

.

,.

HUMIDIFIER

oz.Ige
ISO ALCOHOL. .• ~!
·____sge

l'w11"'"'"

~EDDDN

DoMr..,..!Jo-

lim i ~R.

17 jewel. stainless
steel, luminous dial.

Carry to table without cOfd.

NIIUOI'I . ........

1.&gt;.,..1

r .O1. ,..,.,.,,,..

..,,,, ust l'rict: sue ••

Mhtfo..
' '~ O.~lwrl AO~

,.bltti

~

Dry

,.,.~ .....· 1~01011

VIM Slit..._

...,,.....,IT-

Walla IIIII"'

""'' v........

w,.._,..,. ,_

kllirl:k

OILORASEPTIC
_UQUID

.........c.......,. ..

~ ......

Pftow.,....

.....

···~h•• .....
~·-·
.......
..,.,

SPRAYER
REG. '1.50
6 Ol

O.Ut .. tdp .......

''"""" ""'''

f111at ~ D&lt;l~lw,.

••

~OC kl ~t11C111Um

I'"""' r..mulo

"&lt;ttto•21 .... _
1'1(111"' 2t .....
Q·T•,.. c.tlon IQbt

"~~~'"'

CifM6tM\ ilpr11

~..:k1 r~ muli

Vo(l1 lin••

C..c.,. .,,,.. Vollm&lt;M

Empot"'C""'"""""

··-... """'"""' "'"

~ot•Oo"

.,,.u W•-"•'

ho~opo' llhllt.OIM ....... o

mlr

~ ~~~~­

~

v..:•• H)'QI.o'

,.,.g

ioo&lt;IJ ,_..

(nl,mol - J·IO•UII

lllln. lill f'rkt: S11• ttc•

Mlrs. lisl ''let: $45 uc•

"''"""" c..t.,. 111,..
liTIHJ .......
ron~•

"""

a.- .. , ..... ..,., ....,

Reg.

REG. 11.49

19.95

lOO's

1

$1
07
BUFFER IN ---~11!~~- , . ·

Reg. '1•

HEATING
AND CENTRAL
AIR CONDITIONING

_·15¥4

oi

gge

TABLETS

gge

SUCRETS

1

Ret. 1.67

TP9~~~TE

· · ·~

r

'1 ~

..lifAI

~-~

~

REG.

59•

89'

DIAPER LINERS

59•

REG.
98'

sheerl" stn,S"value ·' P~Ck~~·,sb""'".

_....

........._._....

-~·- ·--~-· "~·

"Regular or Mint"' .
, ultra brite

88$
BAND-AID -BRAND

REG. 9f
30's

66•

REG. '1.39
60's

aa•

"

REG.
85' OIILY

49~

··Mfr's List'
·'
'
Price 6Jc

43~'

gge

'FlAVORED
OR
PlAIN

.

Mflllr FIAi'CifiD

P.I:H~~~~~
. TABLETS
...... . ,,,,_

I

REG. '1.69

'

. 200's

I

1.3· .·•1.19

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

f!IIIDDl£PORf, 0.

., .;;_;y

'
I

..

.. .. .

..
~

'

I

.,

~

. REG.
.

1.49

1

~"'"
baby

99• ·

"

REG. 12.39
81h Ol

CHERAOOI. D
SYRUP

NATURE'S REMmY

REG. 11.99 .

.....

caotiCII D' •

180's

6 oz.

1.19
READY-'JO.USE
(BY CASE)

•3.39

WITH IRON ONLY ~3.39

12'12 oz.

CIRCUS SHAPE VITAMINS
.._.....

REG. '4.95

REG. 1.29

CEPACOL .
REG. '1.59

20 Ol

40's

'2.66 ss~

.

MENTHOlATUM

REG. 13.99

lOO's

•2.69

DEEP HEATING LOTION
REG. '1.49
401.
MENTHOLATUM
Dee~t Heating

WITH IRoN
1

'1.33

Contac

ENFAMIL
32 oz.

'

24 oz.

77~

26 oz.

7~

U 0J!I 1!~1'o.to l ~!l ii~, ~ ID I ~ JIIIIUI.

Prescriptions Is Our Main Business

,,..:::.·.·

COUGH MIXTURE

REGUlAR
OR
MINT

'

PETROLEUM JELLY
REG. '1.09

'

FOREMAN &amp;ABBOTT

-.....
-.. ...

MAGNESIA '

·REG. '1.95 REG. '1.03
powder

15 Ol .

r

REG. '1.89
72's

INTENSIVE CARE
LOTION

• COME EARLY AND JOIN THE FUN ·

ef'REE ESTIMATES
eFREE DELIVERY
eEASY TERMS
eSALES AND SERVICE

lOO's

You SAVE when ~ou BUY the LARGER SIZES

Tape

BATTERIES
6 Pak 6]4

Bayer
Timed-Release Aspirin

'1.19

_
Rexall

Stock up and Savel
"D" Cell

36}

MAG~ESIA

ss~

lf2''x10 yds
1"x5 yds.

300's

FORMULA 44

REG. '1.05

PHIWPS'
MILK OF

REG. 11.08
!70's ... :) .........

55's

oz.

REG. 4:r

Q·TI.PS

Sore

Throat Lozenges

'

REG. 12.61

TUMS

'1.66

REG. '1.35

$ 17

(Antacid)
,Reg. 11.97

''

EMPIRIN OOMPOUND

MYlANTA UQUID

.;;~

I

CJIIOII. . pi K lMIU&gt;d

lo~ ..,

ss~

TlltMI.lUWil'll

369 · Intensive Care

'

l=REE MOUNTING

C..•KOI D to&lt;11n IJ••P

N01kormt
{
,.., 100"•·- lltt I lfO'&gt;
lot""'!
,...-~· ,. lloatt

, ..~ .......

10 yur Emer&amp;HICY Balle!}.

o.-&lt;- lpti!OW

••ro•1 •"""",.''""'Pt"~

MlllORI RESERVE FlAS~UG~TS

79c Vaseline

[_ __j

.GAS - OIL - ELECTRIC

Plus Fed. Excise
Tu S1.3S up

~~

lOy 0.... Hyf .."'(

..

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

Uflr tl&lt;&gt;lt 100111 Pull
VloOWI"""
V -11\1 In! ....... C...

CINJ .....,.... ~ ...

h &gt;t&lt; A1il'hft
layeo c-,.~ o A1pmn

IEMIII"OM™ ST~~ WMM' ..
CDRO C()RDl(SS SERVING
DISHES Kee~ food hot for hOtJU.

"

'

REGULAR TREAD .- MtlD &amp; SNOW

IM~I""""""

Qua.ntar.

~

LOTION

GO•••GO••• GOODYEAR

BLACK - RED - WHITEWALL

.........

..""'""$on
....,

._IK' llt~M · Itt&lt;l

...~ lftOI&gt;I""' ONp " U M i l -

'"'''

Vlh&gt;l Pock

SEI!D DAV DA1( CALENDAR
WATCHESBuilt !Of pret1Sioft

Mhs. ll1t l'rlct:,$45 mil

77'
REG. '1.19
77•
' 6 Oi lAVENDER

·-·-·--·- -----------·---··-·

~~ ... 51"~

600- 91b PRIZES

MOISTURELLE
I,,

--···"' .......

A.-ln~ll

200- Btlr PRiztS

lllrt. Ull Price: .._tach

I· '

ltiiCI

...,..,~

-~-·· ~, ~-001'
-~-··11~0.

....

6 oz.

~c·­

..

'''~ lotoon

a,. ,. .,..,.._
~~~~~· .... Kl ~

100- Jth PRIZES

S"N-C!ST REElS,
RODSWITHPOWER GUIDE
lo catch the ~~~ onu'

REG. '1.19
6 Ol GREEN·

s1m off.--~------$225

,1....

At&lt;o l-01-

100- &amp;th PRIZES

~.

Swedish-Formula ·

lltn. Lkt me....... tid

Ca~Kowlti

0..0«

USE INSTEAD Of'SOAl'

/

Heat Pad

!IIICRDFT OECU11VE 1ENNIS
R/.CKIJS fcOll 8!NCROF1.
Mlerica's ol(!est racket

• •

$3.25 Max Factor

llln. Lilt l'riU:

_,,,,.0

Comm1nG '"'" ti-

I'

__________
,.. ___ _
Special Sale

Cltwll COo TR!PMASTER
SHQTGUMS A~~el! trap
sho01int system from
CROSMAH !RMS.

~1111\1 ~·

I

'

"7'

only$~ (

IYIOII NWOII Sianalure
Goll Sets fl"' NOR!HW!SI(RN
G(lF CO.. I iurts, 3 woois.

Ct -gl

.

100-Sth PRIZES

.l,llt&lt;nl T,.,..

••

·
"
"
A

Sp~a~

SUNIIIID RUNABOUT 80.\TS
U'Jhrninum iun~bouh lrom
SliRCRAfT, tht IIIII! Wof~
ol Recreation.

·~~~- ·

At Our Cosmetic Bar
Tabu · Ambush · Emir · 20. Carat
Colo!j'ne. ,
· ··
··-'"

Reg. $1.49

12-3r• PRIZES

lllaOO(Iofll , jl

GO FREE
ENTRY
'
BLANKS
AT
NELSON'S

4!r Wrigl•·----·---·43'

2- 2nd PRiztS

A...ciOC)oftl.....,l
llb00tl&gt;fl4 "'ltM•IIt

99~

5 Ol

'

ltfr&amp;..l.kl Pfla, ,_ nell

REG. '1.98

·-·

Reg. 75'
4oz.

Luxury features mcluding air conditionirg.
radio , automat1c transmiSSion, power steer ·
~ng. power brakes and tinted glass and from
STARCRAF T- beaut1ful accommodations to
travel Amer ica. STARFLITE unfolds into an
1deal cottage.

FEMININE
HYGIENE
DEODORANT
SPRAY

o=M.1"el uQUI'd -------'1•
.

PUtS STARFLITE 6CAMPER

10 Ol

4!r Feenamint________ 31'

Foot' Powder

HAND LOTION .

ALL
SIZES
14"

'1.5~

7 Ol

65' Vicks ·
Reg . 55c - Pl.
Vaporub. •••.4~
29*
'1s Pertussin
8 Hour Cough Formula •••'1 49
'15!1 Alka Seltzer Plus. ___ ,'119

· Childrens 36's 29'
Buffered 100,s . 79'

992-2101

•

REG.

Infants'
Rexall

Rexall

Passenger Tlre,s

·: 16 Ol

HYDROGEN,PEROXIDE

12

Brand New

· •REG. '2.35

1

5 Gr. lOQ's, 43~

--'

.

Mfr's List
$199 • Mfr's ,List
Price $3.29
Price $1.09
F~r fast relief of associated aches;and pains •.
fever and headaches.

ASPIRIN

1

J

· 25's

,

Bottles of 110
mg.
· Mfr's Ust
Price $2.16

REXALl

REXAL~

Qlld Tablets

1

$}09

Sale.

'

CAPSULES

ST_RENGTH. ·

.

'

··-vrriMi'N~tr;"•r•Aduii( or

Home1letmanent ,
1

·'

'

Nlgiltlime,Col4 ...
. lk l..

POMEROY, O.

(

'

AS OFTEN
AS YOU
WISH

HAIR SPRAY .

'

Rexall TIMED-ACTION .· Mfr's List Price $1.39
Nasal
·
'
10's
Decongestant

REXAU..
-

ENTER ·

V0-5

Price $1.75
·.
09 _

.

RIZER OIL' 00.

700 E. M&lt;lin

300 TABL~TS .

_

, ASPIRIN Fast-act;~r~f~nrehefl

50's

-· - -

,. 2 FOR 99~

FRIDAY, JAN. _

Maxine D'-'9an 17.91 1 t \

1

Annual Large Size
SWEEPSTAKES

REG. 11.98

weal Bowling

conservative whites who are

V0-5

SHAMPOO

Sunday School attendance on
Jan. 9 was 47, the olferipg
$18.95. Worship l'ervices were
Wallace is warming up for heldutllo'cllic~with the Rev.
another run at the presidential · Jacob Lehman bringing the
roses. His rapport with some message from Mark 4:· 26-3J,
white Southerners is so strong . "Spiritual and Physi~al
Wallace is bound to attract a GrowUt," to an attendance of ·
good many votes in Southern 33.
'
states, particuariy Utose along
Mr. and Mrs. ,Clair Woode
the Gulf Coast, wfiere race still and CoMie of Circleville, 0., '
is a much more heated political spent Ute weekend at Ute
issue than it now is in Ute ·states' William Carr residence and
of · the Southern Atlantic vis! ted Mrs . Carr in !'the
Seaboard.
Veterans .Memorial Hospital
But the . present feeling and other relatives in the
among well-informed Southern county.
Democrats is that it's Nixon,
Mary Carr and Genevieve
not Wallace, who's likely to Guthrie recently called on Iris
carry their states in Novem- Carr at the Veterans Memorial
ber.
Hospital, Room · 119. She is
The degree to which improving and now able to
Republican .stock has risen in have visitors.
Ute Sout.h as a result of new
Sunday guests of Clara
restrictions on textile imports, Follrod and Nina Robinson .
Nixon's widely popular wage- were Mr. and Mrs. Bill Follrod '
price 'freeze and .the continued and Sue Ann of Athens. ··
winding down of the Vietnam
The Women's Society will ,
War is reflected in the radical hold its next regular meeting
cbange that has taken place in on Tuesday evening, Jan. 18, at
the re-election prospects of Ute home of June Stearns with
Sen. Strom Thurmond, R-S.C. Nina Robinson, program
A few months ago, the word leader.
among Republicans as well as
Thelma Henderson spent
Democrats was that "oi' Strom Sunday afternoon at the home 1
can be had" in 19'12. Thurmond of her mother, Edith Harper at
himself was clearly worried, Tuppers Plains, and her sister
and began running scared Nola Pearson of Columbus, 0.
months in advance of the time
Several local people have
an incumbent normally would been suffering from colds and
flu.
launch his campaign.
· Campaign Strategy
Thelma Henderson attended
His campaign strategy calls Ute Council on Ministries, held
for living down 'his once at the Long Bottom MeUtodist
carefully cultivated reputation Church, Monday evening, Jan.
as a die-hard defender of 10.
segregation. This reputation
has ceased to Q§ a political
asset in a state where 25 per
cent of the registered voters
are black. Thurmond's attempt
to detach himself from his past
Women's Thursday
racial views is attracting some
Atternoon League
hoots of derision from
Jan. 6, 1912
Beginning
lnd Half
Dem ocrats, and it is doubtful
Standing
wheUter many Negro voters Team
W. L.
will swallow th e " new " Pomeroy Lanes
'
8 0
Dave's Tire Land
8 0 '
Thurmond image.
New York Clothing
4 4
But Thurmond never really Simon's Mkt.
4 4
expected them to. His goal is Smith's Body Shop
• o 8
Forest Run Block .
0 8
simply to defuse an issue that
High Team 3 games might cost him votes among Simon's Mkt. 1770; New York
middle-class, moderately Clothing 1740; Dave's - Tire
Land 1717.

I

-

•

Jan. 13,']972

REXA

Social Notes

Nixon· Strong .i n. Dixie
BY LOUIS CASSELS
.Ualle.tl Preu blmllllooal
Democratic hq,ea for 1972
election victories in the South
have dropped sharply in the
past few months.
Sen. Hertnan Talmadge, D- ·
Ga., said out loud what many
Southern Democratic leaders
have been saying privately
whe,, he told an audience in
Waynesboro, Gal., recently
lhat it will be "extremely
dlfficulr' to stop President
tlixon frb carrying Ute South

••

__j

REG. '1.49

901.

10 Ol

.69~

79e

REG. 13.99

lOO's

•2.6'9

Reg. s1.9$

Rub

'1.3 3 .
'

-

~

CS'\~ IN FOR YouR FREE ENTRY BLAH

�.
I

... '

....

•

ill

. ..

L

'
I

J

b- ,,. Dilly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jaq. 1~,19'12

Elect;ion.Year Vanes

in lim!.
Talmadge · hedged this
statement with two conditions:
Nixon will be hard to heat
unless by ·eiectlon day (I) his
"Phase II" econo111ic controls
have. blown up in his face; or
(2) the United States is stili
bogged down in Vietnam.
Talmadge figures Nixon is too
smart a politician to let eiUter
of those things happen.
Wallace Is Warming Up
In Alabama, Gov. George

Letters

Q{

• •
IDIOD
weleo!Did." Tiley llbould be less
1haDIIO wordiiGIII (or be llllbjeettoredaelfoo by the editor)
IIIII lball be _dped wllb _lbe lllpee'• address. Names may
jle-Wi'lhbeld apoa pablfeaUom, however, Gil request. Letters
be fD 'ood taste, 8d~ii!S lssues, not personalities. ·
Lellen 01 apiDIGD .n

_.eald

''

why Not with Less Hair?
Dear Editor:
Let me begin by saying, I supPort the Meigs School Board in
their decision to maintain the present dress code, of which there
has been a lot of controversy. I feel Ute code is very lenient.
The mothers who argued, (at the recent Meigs Local School
Board meeting), that their child could get an education wiUt long
hair, and education seemed to be tbeir main concern, Uten why
couldn't they get an education with less hair? - and learn to
abide by a few laws.
If )bey are taught to rebel over such a trivial matter, then
how will they react to the draft call? Or will they be in Ute group
who will burn his draft card? .
Wake Up Parents!
Also a Parent (Name withhe.ld on request ).

Racine Social Events
ByMRS.FRANCISMORRIS Mrs. Nick Yost and Mr. and
Mrs. Dorothy Badgley was Mrs. Norman Norris.
hostess for Ute meeting of Ute
Spending Christmas with Mr .
Esther Missionary Circle at the and Mrs. Jack Sharpnack were
First Baptist Church Monday Mr. and Mrs. P. H. Baker; Mr .
evening, J1111. 10. "I would Be and Mrs. Gary Spires; Mr. and
Uke Jesus" was sung by the Mrs. Jack Sharpnack, Jr., and
group In opening Ute meeting family and Miss Marabeiie
,lrith devoUOO&amp;.by: J.I.rs Mal-ie\1 Sha!l&gt;riid, alltl!frQ/1i»mbus.
Rousll. Aller ' Scripture' and '• T:Sg't.US'nd 'Mrs. Steven
Prayer, readings were "The Jacobs and family of LockNew C~apter" and "New bourne Air Base, Columbus,
Years Vow". A program by spent Saturday with her
Helen Simpson included grandpar.ents, Mr. and Mrs.
readings by members "What Henry Roush.
the Gospel Says", "Missions",
Bud Simpson of Pomeroy
"My Gift", "The Steward's called on his moUter, Mrs.
Prayer", "There is No Path Gretta Simpson, Monday.
Ahead", "Where To Look",
Mr. and Mrs. James Roush
: "Man With a Message", and family and Miss Elisa
i "Spiritual Work Shop" and a McMillan spent New Years'
1 diJcusslon
on questions and week end wiUt Mr. and Mrs.
i allswers. After the business Fred Sayre and family at
session The Love Gift program Leesville.
: was given by Marie Roush
Miss Susie Biggs, a student
: using Ute hymn "Who At My at the Jackson Manpower
: Door Is Standing?" Scripture, training school, spent the week
: Matt. 28, topic "What Is The end with her moUter, Blanche
Church Supposed To Do". Biggs.
, Closed with the Dedication
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Roberts
· Prayer for the offering. A of Patriot spent Sunday with
· fellowship hour was held In Ute his mother, Mrs . Frances
basement when Mrs. Badgley Roberts.
served lovely refreshments to
Mrs. Audrey Brownell of
nine members and one guest. Kanauga visited New Years'
Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Skow (Ute week end wiUt Mr. and Mrs.
former Doreen Norris) an- Fern Norris.
· nounced the birUt of a son, 7
Miss Mara belle Sharpnack of
lbs. 6 oz., Eric William Skow, Columbus spent New . Years
, born Dec. 12, 1971 in St. Joseph week end with her parents, Mr.
·Hospital, St. Paul, Minn. and Mrs. Jack Sharpnack.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cleland
Mr. and Mrs. Fern Norris.
were Sunday guests of Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Hall Mrs. Steve Cleland, Vince and
(Shirley Norris) and two Ryan at Columbus.
children of St. Paul, Minn.,
spent the Christmas holidays
with Mr. and Mrs. Fern Norris
A •·printer's devil" is an
apprentice who is learning
and in Colwnbus with Mr. and to be a printer.

7-Tbe

i

Alf.~ed

·

High Ind. Series _ Maxine

sick of racist politics, and he
seems to be succeeding.
.
h
I n Iac'I hlS
prospects ave
improved so dramatically the
Democrats are having a hard
time finding spmebody to run
,
h' "'
·
·"~
1
1galnst· tm.' • • .. 1
r

Dugan 488; Crestlyn Hill 465;
Drema Smith 463.
High Team game - Dave's
Tire Land 63ll; Simon's Mkt.
632 ; New York Clothing 608 .
High Ind. game - Terry
Shain 187; Becky Dunfee 180 ;
•

15 Ol

·

.

'

. REXALL

QUIET-NITE

.
,
.
_
99

Reg.JIZ.'Jl'
6

•

•

~--------4

· Rexall fast .

Reg. 1.89

100 .

$1:39

'

Rexall - Reg. 891

BREATH FRESH-••
Rexall

69•

S'JlO·
Tl.

99~

GRAND PRIZE

TABLETS I.Giycerin
$}29

Reg. 89c
12's

''

31

1972 .

\

Command Hair Groomer

AMBASSADOR BROUGHAM

. REG. 1.79

I

)

10 Pack Chew;ng Gum Juicy FruH
~~mint

,

Alurex·
~~g.:: __ ~ ___79•
2 Tablets.'
Rexall - Reg. 99'

Mouth Wash~-5 7'
REXALL

Reg. 1495

•

mantllaclurer.

•12.95 up

.

GO•••GO•••RIUR'S

DEVILBISS
COOL MIST

SUCRETS
LOZENGES
24's
Reg. -83'·-----·
16

53'

.

,.

HUMIDIFIER

oz.Ige
ISO ALCOHOL. .• ~!
·____sge

l'w11"'"'"

~EDDDN

DoMr..,..!Jo-

lim i ~R.

17 jewel. stainless
steel, luminous dial.

Carry to table without cOfd.

NIIUOI'I . ........

1.&gt;.,..1

r .O1. ,..,.,.,,,..

..,,,, ust l'rict: sue ••

Mhtfo..
' '~ O.~lwrl AO~

,.bltti

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Dry

,.,.~ .....· 1~01011

VIM Slit..._

...,,.....,IT-

Walla IIIII"'

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w,.._,..,. ,_

kllirl:k

OILORASEPTIC
_UQUID

.........c.......,. ..

~ ......

Pftow.,....

.....

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~·-·
.......
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SPRAYER
REG. '1.50
6 Ol

O.Ut .. tdp .......

''"""" ""'''

f111at ~ D&lt;l~lw,.

••

~OC kl ~t11C111Um

I'"""' r..mulo

"&lt;ttto•21 .... _
1'1(111"' 2t .....
Q·T•,.. c.tlon IQbt

"~~~'"'

CifM6tM\ ilpr11

~..:k1 r~ muli

Vo(l1 lin••

C..c.,. .,,,.. Vollm&lt;M

Empot"'C""'"""""

··-... """'"""' "'"

~ot•Oo"

.,,.u W•-"•'

ho~opo' llhllt.OIM ....... o

mlr

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v..:•• H)'QI.o'

,.,.g

ioo&lt;IJ ,_..

(nl,mol - J·IO•UII

lllln. lill f'rkt: S11• ttc•

Mlrs. lisl ''let: $45 uc•

"''"""" c..t.,. 111,..
liTIHJ .......
ron~•

"""

a.- .. , ..... ..,., ....,

Reg.

REG. 11.49

19.95

lOO's

1

$1
07
BUFFER IN ---~11!~~- , . ·

Reg. '1•

HEATING
AND CENTRAL
AIR CONDITIONING

_·15¥4

oi

gge

TABLETS

gge

SUCRETS

1

Ret. 1.67

TP9~~~TE

· · ·~

r

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..lifAI

~-~

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REG.

59•

89'

DIAPER LINERS

59•

REG.
98'

sheerl" stn,S"value ·' P~Ck~~·,sb""'".

_....

........._._....

-~·- ·--~-· "~·

"Regular or Mint"' .
, ultra brite

88$
BAND-AID -BRAND

REG. 9f
30's

66•

REG. '1.39
60's

aa•

"

REG.
85' OIILY

49~

··Mfr's List'
·'
'
Price 6Jc

43~'

gge

'FlAVORED
OR
PlAIN

.

Mflllr FIAi'CifiD

P.I:H~~~~~
. TABLETS
...... . ,,,,_

I

REG. '1.69

'

. 200's

I

1.3· .·•1.19

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

f!IIIDDl£PORf, 0.

., .;;_;y

'
I

..

.. .. .

..
~

'

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. REG.
.

1.49

1

~"'"
baby

99• ·

"

REG. 12.39
81h Ol

CHERAOOI. D
SYRUP

NATURE'S REMmY

REG. 11.99 .

.....

caotiCII D' •

180's

6 oz.

1.19
READY-'JO.USE
(BY CASE)

•3.39

WITH IRON ONLY ~3.39

12'12 oz.

CIRCUS SHAPE VITAMINS
.._.....

REG. '4.95

REG. 1.29

CEPACOL .
REG. '1.59

20 Ol

40's

'2.66 ss~

.

MENTHOlATUM

REG. 13.99

lOO's

•2.69

DEEP HEATING LOTION
REG. '1.49
401.
MENTHOLATUM
Dee~t Heating

WITH IRoN
1

'1.33

Contac

ENFAMIL
32 oz.

'

24 oz.

77~

26 oz.

7~

U 0J!I 1!~1'o.to l ~!l ii~, ~ ID I ~ JIIIIUI.

Prescriptions Is Our Main Business

,,..:::.·.·

COUGH MIXTURE

REGUlAR
OR
MINT

'

PETROLEUM JELLY
REG. '1.09

'

FOREMAN &amp;ABBOTT

-.....
-.. ...

MAGNESIA '

·REG. '1.95 REG. '1.03
powder

15 Ol .

r

REG. '1.89
72's

INTENSIVE CARE
LOTION

• COME EARLY AND JOIN THE FUN ·

ef'REE ESTIMATES
eFREE DELIVERY
eEASY TERMS
eSALES AND SERVICE

lOO's

You SAVE when ~ou BUY the LARGER SIZES

Tape

BATTERIES
6 Pak 6]4

Bayer
Timed-Release Aspirin

'1.19

_
Rexall

Stock up and Savel
"D" Cell

36}

MAG~ESIA

ss~

lf2''x10 yds
1"x5 yds.

300's

FORMULA 44

REG. '1.05

PHIWPS'
MILK OF

REG. 11.08
!70's ... :) .........

55's

oz.

REG. 4:r

Q·TI.PS

Sore

Throat Lozenges

'

REG. 12.61

TUMS

'1.66

REG. '1.35

$ 17

(Antacid)
,Reg. 11.97

''

EMPIRIN OOMPOUND

MYlANTA UQUID

.;;~

I

CJIIOII. . pi K lMIU&gt;d

lo~ ..,

ss~

TlltMI.lUWil'll

369 · Intensive Care

'

l=REE MOUNTING

C..•KOI D to&lt;11n IJ••P

N01kormt
{
,.., 100"•·- lltt I lfO'&gt;
lot""'!
,...-~· ,. lloatt

, ..~ .......

10 yur Emer&amp;HICY Balle!}.

o.-&lt;- lpti!OW

••ro•1 •"""",.''""'Pt"~

MlllORI RESERVE FlAS~UG~TS

79c Vaseline

[_ __j

.GAS - OIL - ELECTRIC

Plus Fed. Excise
Tu S1.3S up

~~

lOy 0.... Hyf .."'(

..

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

Uflr tl&lt;&gt;lt 100111 Pull
VloOWI"""
V -11\1 In! ....... C...

CINJ .....,.... ~ ...

h &gt;t&lt; A1il'hft
layeo c-,.~ o A1pmn

IEMIII"OM™ ST~~ WMM' ..
CDRO C()RDl(SS SERVING
DISHES Kee~ food hot for hOtJU.

"

'

REGULAR TREAD .- MtlD &amp; SNOW

IM~I""""""

Qua.ntar.

~

LOTION

GO•••GO••• GOODYEAR

BLACK - RED - WHITEWALL

.........

..""'""$on
....,

._IK' llt~M · Itt&lt;l

...~ lftOI&gt;I""' ONp " U M i l -

'"'''

Vlh&gt;l Pock

SEI!D DAV DA1( CALENDAR
WATCHESBuilt !Of pret1Sioft

Mhs. ll1t l'rlct:,$45 mil

77'
REG. '1.19
77•
' 6 Oi lAVENDER

·-·-·--·- -----------·---··-·

~~ ... 51"~

600- 91b PRIZES

MOISTURELLE
I,,

--···"' .......

A.-ln~ll

200- Btlr PRiztS

lllrt. Ull Price: .._tach

I· '

ltiiCI

...,..,~

-~-·· ~, ~-001'
-~-··11~0.

....

6 oz.

~c·­

..

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a,. ,. .,..,.._
~~~~~· .... Kl ~

100- Jth PRIZES

S"N-C!ST REElS,
RODSWITHPOWER GUIDE
lo catch the ~~~ onu'

REG. '1.19
6 Ol GREEN·

s1m off.--~------$225

,1....

At&lt;o l-01-

100- &amp;th PRIZES

~.

Swedish-Formula ·

lltn. Lkt me....... tid

Ca~Kowlti

0..0«

USE INSTEAD Of'SOAl'

/

Heat Pad

!IIICRDFT OECU11VE 1ENNIS
R/.CKIJS fcOll 8!NCROF1.
Mlerica's ol(!est racket

• •

$3.25 Max Factor

llln. Lilt l'riU:

_,,,,.0

Comm1nG '"'" ti-

I'

__________
,.. ___ _
Special Sale

Cltwll COo TR!PMASTER
SHQTGUMS A~~el! trap
sho01int system from
CROSMAH !RMS.

~1111\1 ~·

I

'

"7'

only$~ (

IYIOII NWOII Sianalure
Goll Sets fl"' NOR!HW!SI(RN
G(lF CO.. I iurts, 3 woois.

Ct -gl

.

100-Sth PRIZES

.l,llt&lt;nl T,.,..

••

·
"
"
A

Sp~a~

SUNIIIID RUNABOUT 80.\TS
U'Jhrninum iun~bouh lrom
SliRCRAfT, tht IIIII! Wof~
ol Recreation.

·~~~- ·

At Our Cosmetic Bar
Tabu · Ambush · Emir · 20. Carat
Colo!j'ne. ,
· ··
··-'"

Reg. $1.49

12-3r• PRIZES

lllaOO(Iofll , jl

GO FREE
ENTRY
'
BLANKS
AT
NELSON'S

4!r Wrigl•·----·---·43'

2- 2nd PRiztS

A...ciOC)oftl.....,l
llb00tl&gt;fl4 "'ltM•IIt

99~

5 Ol

'

ltfr&amp;..l.kl Pfla, ,_ nell

REG. '1.98

·-·

Reg. 75'
4oz.

Luxury features mcluding air conditionirg.
radio , automat1c transmiSSion, power steer ·
~ng. power brakes and tinted glass and from
STARCRAF T- beaut1ful accommodations to
travel Amer ica. STARFLITE unfolds into an
1deal cottage.

FEMININE
HYGIENE
DEODORANT
SPRAY

o=M.1"el uQUI'd -------'1•
.

PUtS STARFLITE 6CAMPER

10 Ol

4!r Feenamint________ 31'

Foot' Powder

HAND LOTION .

ALL
SIZES
14"

'1.5~

7 Ol

65' Vicks ·
Reg . 55c - Pl.
Vaporub. •••.4~
29*
'1s Pertussin
8 Hour Cough Formula •••'1 49
'15!1 Alka Seltzer Plus. ___ ,'119

· Childrens 36's 29'
Buffered 100,s . 79'

992-2101

•

REG.

Infants'
Rexall

Rexall

Passenger Tlre,s

·: 16 Ol

HYDROGEN,PEROXIDE

12

Brand New

· •REG. '2.35

1

5 Gr. lOQ's, 43~

--'

.

Mfr's List
$199 • Mfr's ,List
Price $3.29
Price $1.09
F~r fast relief of associated aches;and pains •.
fever and headaches.

ASPIRIN

1

J

· 25's

,

Bottles of 110
mg.
· Mfr's Ust
Price $2.16

REXALl

REXAL~

Qlld Tablets

1

$}09

Sale.

'

CAPSULES

ST_RENGTH. ·

.

'

··-vrriMi'N~tr;"•r•Aduii( or

Home1letmanent ,
1

·'

'

Nlgiltlime,Col4 ...
. lk l..

POMEROY, O.

(

'

AS OFTEN
AS YOU
WISH

HAIR SPRAY .

'

Rexall TIMED-ACTION .· Mfr's List Price $1.39
Nasal
·
'
10's
Decongestant

REXAU..
-

ENTER ·

V0-5

Price $1.75
·.
09 _

.

RIZER OIL' 00.

700 E. M&lt;lin

300 TABL~TS .

_

, ASPIRIN Fast-act;~r~f~nrehefl

50's

-· - -

,. 2 FOR 99~

FRIDAY, JAN. _

Maxine D'-'9an 17.91 1 t \

1

Annual Large Size
SWEEPSTAKES

REG. 11.98

weal Bowling

conservative whites who are

V0-5

SHAMPOO

Sunday School attendance on
Jan. 9 was 47, the olferipg
$18.95. Worship l'ervices were
Wallace is warming up for heldutllo'cllic~with the Rev.
another run at the presidential · Jacob Lehman bringing the
roses. His rapport with some message from Mark 4:· 26-3J,
white Southerners is so strong . "Spiritual and Physi~al
Wallace is bound to attract a GrowUt," to an attendance of ·
good many votes in Southern 33.
'
states, particuariy Utose along
Mr. and Mrs. ,Clair Woode
the Gulf Coast, wfiere race still and CoMie of Circleville, 0., '
is a much more heated political spent Ute weekend at Ute
issue than it now is in Ute ·states' William Carr residence and
of · the Southern Atlantic vis! ted Mrs . Carr in !'the
Seaboard.
Veterans .Memorial Hospital
But the . present feeling and other relatives in the
among well-informed Southern county.
Democrats is that it's Nixon,
Mary Carr and Genevieve
not Wallace, who's likely to Guthrie recently called on Iris
carry their states in Novem- Carr at the Veterans Memorial
ber.
Hospital, Room · 119. She is
The degree to which improving and now able to
Republican .stock has risen in have visitors.
Ute Sout.h as a result of new
Sunday guests of Clara
restrictions on textile imports, Follrod and Nina Robinson .
Nixon's widely popular wage- were Mr. and Mrs. Bill Follrod '
price 'freeze and .the continued and Sue Ann of Athens. ··
winding down of the Vietnam
The Women's Society will ,
War is reflected in the radical hold its next regular meeting
cbange that has taken place in on Tuesday evening, Jan. 18, at
the re-election prospects of Ute home of June Stearns with
Sen. Strom Thurmond, R-S.C. Nina Robinson, program
A few months ago, the word leader.
among Republicans as well as
Thelma Henderson spent
Democrats was that "oi' Strom Sunday afternoon at the home 1
can be had" in 19'12. Thurmond of her mother, Edith Harper at
himself was clearly worried, Tuppers Plains, and her sister
and began running scared Nola Pearson of Columbus, 0.
months in advance of the time
Several local people have
an incumbent normally would been suffering from colds and
flu.
launch his campaign.
· Campaign Strategy
Thelma Henderson attended
His campaign strategy calls Ute Council on Ministries, held
for living down 'his once at the Long Bottom MeUtodist
carefully cultivated reputation Church, Monday evening, Jan.
as a die-hard defender of 10.
segregation. This reputation
has ceased to Q§ a political
asset in a state where 25 per
cent of the registered voters
are black. Thurmond's attempt
to detach himself from his past
Women's Thursday
racial views is attracting some
Atternoon League
hoots of derision from
Jan. 6, 1912
Beginning
lnd Half
Dem ocrats, and it is doubtful
Standing
wheUter many Negro voters Team
W. L.
will swallow th e " new " Pomeroy Lanes
'
8 0
Dave's Tire Land
8 0 '
Thurmond image.
New York Clothing
4 4
But Thurmond never really Simon's Mkt.
4 4
expected them to. His goal is Smith's Body Shop
• o 8
Forest Run Block .
0 8
simply to defuse an issue that
High Team 3 games might cost him votes among Simon's Mkt. 1770; New York
middle-class, moderately Clothing 1740; Dave's - Tire
Land 1717.

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Jan. 13,']972

REXA

Social Notes

Nixon· Strong .i n. Dixie
BY LOUIS CASSELS
.Ualle.tl Preu blmllllooal
Democratic hq,ea for 1972
election victories in the South
have dropped sharply in the
past few months.
Sen. Hertnan Talmadge, D- ·
Ga., said out loud what many
Southern Democratic leaders
have been saying privately
whe,, he told an audience in
Waynesboro, Gal., recently
lhat it will be "extremely
dlfficulr' to stop President
tlixon frb carrying Ute South

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REG. '1.49

901.

10 Ol

.69~

79e

REG. 13.99

lOO's

•2.6'9

Reg. s1.9$

Rub

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: •- die Deily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o.. Jan: ·13,1972
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R enort By
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· Foreign policy and the new
economic program were
dominant issues in the first
llell41011 of the 92nd Congress
Which adjourned Dec . 17.
The s...,..Ut!Q '"end-the-war"
am-.hdment offered by Senator
Mansfield passed the Senate
three times during the session
only to be defeated in the House
and subsequently watered
down in conference commlttees. Its inclusion in the
foreign · aid authorizati on
deadlocked a joint conference
Committee three weeks and
delayed adjournment until it
· .)Vas finally dropped . The
Administration was able ·to
continually with s tand
moun~ Congressional opposition 'to its Indochina policy
and now appears to have a.free
hand in completing the withdr9wal program according to
the President's own timetable.
The foreign aid program
encountered its roughest road
in 25 years and was almost
~ealt a death blow in the
!:enate. Nevertheless, it
bounced back In the waning
days of the session although in
substantially modified and
reduced form . For the first
time, conservatives distraught
over the $218 billion we have
given away in the last twentyfive years and liberals opposed
to military assistance to
Southeast Asia have combined
In a coati lion capable of
restructuring the en tire
program even further in the
months ahead.
On Aug. 15, the President
made his dramatic announcement that he was invoking his Presidential
authority given him by
Congress to control wages and
prices. At the same time he
requested a major tax
reduction
program
to
' timulate· the economy . The
Congress gave the President
hear!y everything he asked for
including repeal of auto excise
tax, reinstitution of investment
tax creQit, and $16 billion tax
ctit. Late In the session the
· Congress passed a second

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record time the amenllment
was ratified by three fourtlls of
the states and became the 26th
amendment. The youth vote
will have an important and
significant impact on the
American electoral process.
Draft - The draft was extended for two years, instead of
the usual four and further
revisions in the induction
process were made to remove
certain inequities. The bill also
contained a $2.4 billion increase in military pay and
allowances designed to achielie
the Administration target of an
all-volunteer army by June 30,
1973.
. campaign Spending Reform
- Late in the session both
Houses agreed on a reform bill
to limit media spending in
federal election campaigns and
stre ngt hen re porting and
disclosure re qui rements of
can~idates . Candidates for
federal office would be allowed
to spend $50,000 or 10 cents per
voting constituent, whichever
is greater.
Employment - $2.5 billion
was authorized for a major
.public service jobs program
for the unemployed at the state
and local level. The legislation
would create 150,000 jobs in
such areas as erlucation ,
he a I t h , co ns e r v a t i on ,
recreation, and public safety .
Additional assistance is
directed to local areas where
unemployment rate exceeds 6
pet.
.
Cons titutional Changes The Senate mu~t act on the socalled "equal rights amend·
ment" which cleared the House
for the second consecutive
Congress. After eight years
and a successful discharge
petition, the "prayer amendment" reached the House floor
only to fail to r·eceive the
necessary two-thirds vote for
·approval.
From Jan. 21 through Dec.
17, the House spent 168 days in
session. The 1,903 hours and 27
minutes that Congress was in·
session consumed 34 ,685
pr inted pages in the
'il:~~~d. J?;IC~i~: "Co~~r~ssi_ona l ljecord. 18,146

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mea su res wer e inlroduced,

wa geipl'l'~

1,271 measures 'Wer·e !-eported
cmfrol authorllty until April 20, [rom committees and 198
19'13, and autho~izes , new ad· public bills were enac ted mto
mlniatrative machinery to law. There were 320 recorded
operate Phase II of the NEP. votes taken in the House in
Other major legislation of 1971, an increase of more than
the session Included:
80 pet. over the first session of
Supersonic Transport - The the 9lst Congress. ·
Congress voted to terminate
the SST program to develop a
commercial airliner capable of. PLAGER OUT
Cln-ying 300 passengers 1,800
ST. LOUIS (UPI )-Bob Plamlles'per hour and end federal ger, defenseman of · the. St.
ftnanclng of the controversial Louis Blues, will be out of
aircraft. The vote indicated action for about 10 days with a
both a desire .to reorder broken rib.
national priorities and a
Plager, who has already
concern for the environment. missed nearly half the season
Eighteen Year Old Vote with a painful calcium deposit
On March 23, the 1Congress in his leg, was injured in
cleared a Constitutional Tuesday's 7-3 victory over the
~ndrnent enfranchising 11 Montreal Canadiens when he
million 18-20 year olds. In collided with Harry Richard.

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Holzer Medical ~nter, First
Ave . .and Cellar St. {ieneral
visiting hours 2-4 and 7ttP- m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p. m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Robert E.
Stevens; Galllpolis Ferry. a
son; Mr. and Mrs. William H.
Porter, Jackson, a daughter;
· Mr. and Mrs. Rodney L. Smith,
'Coalton, a daughter; Mr. and
Mrs. · Clarence E. Woodall,
-Gallipolis, a daughter, and Mr.
and Mrs. William G. Johnson,
Gl\llipolis, a son.
. Discharges
Mrs. Juanita C. Lodwick,
Mrs. Antha A. Mills, i:&gt;arryll L.
~ariz, Gilbert C. Hart, Mrs.
Ullie M. Randolph, Wiliiam F:
Payton, Janet M. Northup,
Cecil C. Elmore, .Mrs. Robert
Donnally and daug hter,
Willard H. Nibert, Jack H~rris,
, Marvin .B~tes Jr., Berthll M.
Craig, Mrs. Brady J. Angel and
son, Marcia J. Dill, Bonnie
Williams, Patricia Ann
Eisnaugle, Russell L. Tyo,

NOTICE

Mel p. Simon, M.D., . Urologist, announces the removal of his office from
Holzer Clinic to Pleasant Valley
Hospital in Point Pleasant, West
Virginia . Patients with appointments
can keep the same with Dr. Simon at
Pleasant Valley Hospita I. If unable to
make the appointment, please call 4463919 or 675-4340. Dr. Simon can also see
patients at the Medical Plaza at 203
Jackson Pike, Ga IIi polis, Ohio during
Saturdays. Dr. Simon also wishes to
state that he is stili an active member
of the Holzer Medical Center·-Hospital.

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RUTLAND HIGH SCHOOL class of 1908submitted
by the
Rev . Dr. R. D. Brown, retired , minister of the Pilgrim
Holiness Church which Is no--: the Wesleyan Church. Rev .
Brown recalls the following in Uris group, Mack Hawkins,
Earl Stone, Leonard !'rice, Bill BarkstaU. Clara Price,
Genevive Bryant, Adline Parker, Cora Rupe, Marie Spires,

Florence Barton, Kenneth Washington, Dennis Spires,
Denver Bryant, John Swickard, Charles Williams, qme
McFa~lapd, Fr\'(la: Graham, Mrs. ,Bailey, Charles Bormg,
Maggre Motley, Grace Boring, ·Ethel Kincaid, Denver
Brown, Cl~y Gardner, Gladys Williams, and the teacher,
Storie Thompson.
·

Clarence L. Belton, Carroll' S.
Napper, Susan L: Johnson and
Katrina D. Tuck4r,
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JANUARY

rn,

BIRTH ANNOUNCED
Mr.. and Mrs. Ronald E.
Mll)l!r, Columbus , are an·
. nouncing the ,birth of a six
pound, nine ounce son, Ronald
Alva, on Jan·. 4 at a ColumHus
hospital. Maternal ·grandparents are Mrs. Mary June
Wilcoxson and Charles Park,
Columbus, and paternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Russell E. Miller, Middleport.
. Great-grandparents
Mrs.
Gertrude lt{iller of Middleport
and Walter Cook 0! Syracuse.
Mr. and Mrs. Miller also have
three daughters, C11rma, 3;
Traci, 2, and Eugenna, 1.

OFF

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News, Event

Transfers

Grange banquet in April and
specia l committees were
appointed. The theme for the
Lecturer hour was "Precious
Memories" and each member
present was asked to give a
special memory. Duane Will,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Norman
Will, wHo toured Europe this
past summer with the Ohio
Youth Choir, showed slides and
gave a very interesting resume
of the events in which he
participated and the sights of
interest that he saw. Delicious
refreshments of sandwiches,
pie, an.d C&lt;lff~ were served by
met11hers of Hemlock Grove

.

Eutern 'Girls Athletic Assn. • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
..
basketball team.
SOUP SALE, . iJe8lnnlng 4
of ~~~d._~-:!=· Riders p.m. Saturday, Sou.them High
Thursday, 7, 30 at St. PaL School preceding Hannan
• Ch h 1 Pomer
Trace game. Bean, vegetable
Luthe ran
oy.
d 1h
1
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urc n
"They'reOff and Running," 4li soup,_ san w c 11 ' P e an .
coffee, sponaored by junior
. te film to be sh
'
,
mml\,
.
own.
cla8s. ,
'
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SHADE RIVER Lodge ~. .
MEIGS COUNTY RetireQ
F. and A.M, Thursday, 7:30 at Teachers Assn., 12 noon
the Chester Hall. Denver Well, Saturday
at
Pomeroy
worshipful master.
.Elementary School for potluck
XI GAMMA MU Thursday dinner. Mrs. Vlhna P!kkoja',
7:45 p. m. hOIJ!e of Mrs. delegate to Wuhlngton eonMildred Karr, Middleport.
ference 011 Aging, speaking on
FRmAY
her experience. Take own table
RIGHT IS RESERVED TO
TEEN DANCE, Friday, aervlce.
Wahama High School, 9 to 12
TEEN DANCE, Saturday at
LIMIT QUANTITIES
Friday with Jays emceeing. Racine Junior High following
VISITS BAERS
butetbllll pme. Mumc by
Mrs . Clyda Bing and School sponsored.
Spring Street, AlbeN.
daughter, Joyce, Bradbury,
visited Sunday afternoon with
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Baer,
REViV
DAUGHTER BORN.
Forest Run.
start~n~ Sunday, Hirtford, w,.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald E.
Williams, Delta, formerly of Va., Church of Chrlat hi
~EG.
Dexter In Melp County, ll'e &lt;lu-lstlan Union, Rev. Autunm
, .
,
Sc:olt,
Wheelersburg,
speaking.
announcing the birth II( •IeVen
pound, 13 ounce daughter, Public Invited, 7:30 eacli
Angela Faye, on De&lt;:. 24 at evening.
DR. RUSSELl. Jonea, Ur·
.
.
Mercy Hospital In Columbus.
ban~. speaker "for revival
Grandparents are Mrs. Helen
Williams of Columbus and Mr. services starting Sunday, First
and Mrs. Harry Wilson of Baptist Ch4rcb, Racine,
Cln~ln~li. Mrs. W\lllama n111ning ~h .Sunda~ •.Jan,
apent a few days with' her 23. Serylcel, 7:30 eacii
daughter and family, Mr. and evening; Duane Wolfe, song
Mrs. George Perry fl. Grand leader .
Rapids, Ohio, and abo with her
MONDAY
son, Ronald and family at GAME PROTECfOR Gary
Delta . She went · ta-- Delta Swope will show film on wild
especially to see · her new life when Chester PTA meell,
granddaughter. Mrs. Wllaon, Monday, 8 p. m. at school to
Cincinnati, also spent lut·week observe Dad's Night. All
at Delta assisting in the care of parents cordially Invited,
the new baby.
social hour after' meeting.
.eHypnotique
. Roush.
Atkins Deputy
Will matall
officers.
and Mrs.
VIrgil
Members are to take any idnd

THURSDAY, FRIDAY,·SATURDAY AND SUNDAY SALE!

Discount
Prices,
Of Coursal
.

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26-35s to
Get Draft
Card· Notes
W'A'kiifNGTON '( tJl&gt;t) '::.:
Men between 2S "and 35 who
may have for gotten they still
are liable for the draft may be
surprised to receive new draft
cards in the mail soon saying
they are now classified !H.
It does not mean they are
about to be calied up. The !H
classification is simply a new
holding category for dormant

&amp;Ol

60TABL£TS
$1.17
ONLY ..

REG; 79' .
ONLY

The change was one of a
series - most of them affecti ng conscientious objectors
- issued today by the Selective
Service System.
In another change, young
men approaching their 18th
birthdays will now have 60
days instead of five in which to
register for the draft. Officials
said they had no need for
speedy registration and the
rush could be inconvenient for
a youth who was vacationing or
extremely busy studying fOr
exams during that period. The
new regulations expand the
registration period to 30 days
on either side of the 18th birth- .
day.
ONHONORROU
Mrs. Marshall (Deborah )
Roush of Letart Falis made the
honor roll for the fa li semester
at Rio Gra nde Coliege. Mrs.
Roush is a junior.

Reg: $1.49 · ,.
Only

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BEST BUY

NEET HAIR RIMOYER

~

MAX FACJOk

j

All the Features
Chromix" control lets you get color
mr x you prefer at the turn of a knob
Lighted channel selectors make tuning

records.

Spray Mist' Cologne··

j

a snap---even in darkened viewing rooms

Two 5-inch oval speakers offer rich
sound that realty Iitts a room
Set-and-forget volume control
Cabinet about 39'hx29'!irxl8 inches deep
Tube cup extends 6V. in. from back

Fifty-one patienbs at the
Southeastern Ohio Mental
Health Center, Athens, were
.guests at a party staged
Tuesday night by the ·
Homebuilders Claas of the
Mldditport Church of Cbrlat.
The class began holding
partieslnDe&lt;:. 1968forpatlenta
at the hospital and Tuelday
night marked their 37th one.
L. R. Wiley and Denver Rice
playt!Q a medley of songs and
hynins on their gullars. There
was group singing and games
with prlzei of . candy, guni,

57 X 43101~ontemr.ora1J, walnut veneer
57 X 43111~olonia , 1111ple veneer
57 X 431~1-Spanish, pecan veneer

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Catalog Merchant

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Lou &amp; Th elma
OSBORNe

220 E. Main

handkercblefll, shaving suppiles, soap, powder, holle and
headscarves . beinC lllvan u
prizel. The Rev. Raullln Moyer
pve prayer and refr:ealunenta
of cakes, buanu, candy, gum
and punch were aervecl. ·
Carl Wright, an employe at
the Health Center, allilted
with the party. Others attending were Mrs. L. R. Wiley,
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Kincaid,
Mrs. Denver Rice, Mrs.
Norman. Yeauger, Mrs. Carl ·
Roach, Mrs. Don Erwin; Mn.
Osby Martin, Mrs. William

992-21 ~ 8

PJlm.eroy

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REG. $1.89

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ONLY

LISTERINE THROAT LOZENGES
18 SIZE

,BAG OF 30

ONLY

comnilttees were -appointed Mrs. Ray Batty, Mrs. Charles
Ronald
when the Sew-Rile sewing Club Hoffman, · Mra.
Mra. Don
met Wednesday night at the Bl'j)wnlng,
club house. Mrs. Don Collins McKnight, · Mn. James
and Mrs. Flo Strickland were Netibling, Mrs. Ein. White;
Rowers, Mrs. Robert . Potter,
hocJesses.
•
' Mrs. George Hoffman ap- Mrs. Willard BOyer; cards pointed the following com- · Mrs. Don Mullen and Mrs.
mitteea : Wa)ls and Means, Strickland; gifts- Mrs. Larry
Wellrunc and Mrs. Edward
Wella; entertainment - Mrs.
Bill McDaniel and Mra. James
Neutzllng.
Mn. Elza Gilmore and Mrs.
Collins gave the aecretary and
treasurer's reports. It wai
noted that the next meeting
will be on Jan. liB with Mrs.
McKnight and Mrs. Glbn1n to
be hostesses.

BA ER

FURNITURE

4 PLY-POLYESTER

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

4 PLY POLVESTER
650X13 WHITE \VALL·. - - - - - - - ·
'17 75
.
700X13 WHITE WALL.- -----------· , 17,
75
700X13 BLAC!&lt; WALL·-----------.. , 16, ·
50
, 17 ·
E78X14 WHITE WALLS ......;_____
95

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NOW'S TH,ETIME·TO ..

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Mr. Frltndlr

G78X14 WHITE WALL
G78X15 WHITE WALL
F78.X15 WHITE WALL

REMODEL THE
"WE HAVE A

H78X14 WHITE WALL·-------~---- ... •26 •50
H78X14 BLACK WALL• ------.....-...... _ ,,3,50
L78X 15 _
WHITEWALL ....................~-- '28.75

COMPLETE
UNEOF
BUILDING
SUPPLIES."

ATIICROOM

...... ......
BUILD A NEW
FARM BUILDING

ROOM

Visit or call us toda)' for CQmplete informolian cind o
free estimale showing ,.
haw·economicol it is to remodel
·· or.add o new roam lo your presenl home!

VISIT OUR LUMBER DEPARTMENT _TOD~

Po'meroy Cement Block Co.

Most of the pueblo tribes
the American southwest
not fish since they relish ,as sacred and
not ea t lhcm.

The Departmeni Stel':.e of Building Since 1915

REG. 39e
ONLY

NYQUIL
NIGHniME COLD MEDICINE

~· REG. $1.69
ONLY

&amp;OZ.
REG. 11.59

ONLY

O·TIPS
.
.

McKESSON RUBBING
' PINT

COIION SWABS
125 SIZE
REG. 87'

ADO A 'NEW
DEGREEAWARDED .

OILY

49~

REG. 65'.

ONLY

WIWim Mlchlel Hayman,
formerly of Racine, pdualel
on Dec. 17, frOm tile Ohio Institute of Technology recelvlnc
his aaoclate degree In electronic ~ teC:IuKJjogy.

He Is employed bY North

Electric · at Gallon 11 •
j)t'ogram engineer.' Haym8n
was an honor student at the
inaUiute during hli training.
·He rl!lida In Gallon with hli
wife and 1 son.

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Plllnnltisls
_, Sn You!

"U DAILY 1:00 A.M. 10 10 P.rt. • SUIDIIY 10:31 Ul. 10.12-JI P.l. &amp; 5 111 PJi. .
I •

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MEN1HC).LYP1US

Cough Drops

REG. 7'1

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s 15

ONLY

Committees of Club Appointed

GUARDIAN PREMIUM TIRES

All Prices Plus Fed . Excuse Tax, From S1 .76 to $3.27
AL'L TIRES INSTALLED F~EE .

1.5 oz.

. 5.8 ·oz.

Gnieser.

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS UNTIL 9

'BELTED TIRES

•Primtif eGolden

37th Party Given

BLEMISHED AND DISCONTINUED -

.

VASELINIINTINSIVE
CARE LOTION

BUFFERIN

FAST HOME .PERMANENT

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Hood MoVing
[nJo Chkago

teacher, Denver Brown, Olieva Bryant, and Grace Warner.
So_me of the students, Rev. Brown could not identify. During
thiS period Rutland High School had just four classro9ms.
Mr. Mutchler, who will be 94 Friday, resides at the Pilgrim
Manor Nursing Home, Plymouth, Ind.

Property

SPORT COATS

·30'%ro -50%

Catalog Values Jn

Carpenter

-AND

Mrs:.

Great Midwinter

spent a week here with his
uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. ·
Meigs
James Gaston .
Mr~ and Mrs. William
Lawson and family visited with
his brother in Ia w and sister,
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Grim and
Mr . and Mrs. David family, Poca, W. Va .
Woodrum and children,
Columbia Grange members
Columbus, visited with his
who attended the Janua ry
Mabel V. Cleland to Dallas B.
grandmother, Muri Galaway,
g
of
Meigs
Coun
ty
meetin
Cleland,
Geraldine Cleland,
on Saturday. Recent guests of .
Pomona
Gra
nge
were
Earl
Parcels, Sutton .
Mrs. Galaway were her niece
· Stark e.;;:. C)lri Gr:~t eesj nMa~y, W
~i ghl;tv, .Po~aL1,,,HQ) 1
. and hus~t\.¥r .•~¢illl!rs . Berth4.!(Jrjppc~ at1!J ~ an't
~eu
l,ah
..
c
. Hill, 62 'Acres,
Richard ;P§rsons 8h(f';fti'ck,
Mrs. Ml! ndal Jordan.
Bedford
.
Dayton.
Services were held at
Janus R. Krier; Diedre J.
Floyd King , formerly of this
.Temple Church for Orville Krier aka Diedre J. Sager aka
communily, who now lives in
Whi ttington, Lancaster, for- Diedre J. Ruoff to Noah E.
Me Arthur , is confined to
Holzer Hospital for treatment. mer resident of the com- Rig ney, May E. Rig ney, %
Helen Peck, wlio is in the U. munity. Mr. Whittington, 77, Acre, Salem.
passed away at the home of a
Clark lhle, Mildred !hie to
S. Air Force and stationed at
daughter
in
Lancaster.
SurColumbia
Gas Trans. Corp.,
Offu tt Ai r ~· o r ce Base in
vivors
included
a
wife,
Emma;
Right of Way, Sutton .
Nebraska , spent a few days
two daughter, Mrs. Ed
Constance Bush, dec'd. to
leave here wiUr h~r parents,
I
Thelma
)
Marshall,
Lancaster
Roy
H. Bush, Robert W. Bush,
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Peck and
and
Mrs.
Raymond
(Letha)
Roy F. Bush, Charles W. Bush,
family .
~
Cottr ill , Harr isonville; two Emest L. Bush , Lawrence E.
Mr. and Mrs. Manf.ord
Smith, La ncaster, called at the sons. Leonard Whitting ton, Bush, Susa.n Eliza beth Pigott,
home of their son and daug hter Baltimore and Ronald Whit- George M. Bush, Clara May
tington , local ; one brother, Mcintyre, Jacob M. Bush, Aff.
in law, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
James Whittington of Rutland for Trans., Le banon.
Smith and Nancy, al ter al
and two sisters, Rosie Martin,
Robert W. Bush, Roy F.
tending the Orv ille Whittington
S~racuse ; and Bessie Harris, Bush, Gloria Bush, Charles W.
funeral.
Columbus ; 17 grandchudren Bu sh, Marie Bush, Ernest L.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Jordan
attended the wt!Qding of Dawn and 15 great-grandchildren. Bush, Flossie Bush. Lawrence
Bur ia l was in Temple E. Bush, Violet Bush, Susan
French and · Dave Moore
Cemeter y. Those relatives Elizabeth Pigott, Willard
Athens, which was held at th~
from a distance who attended Pigott, George M. Bush, Clora
Richland Avenue United
were: Mr. and Mrs. Ed Mar- Mae Mcintyre , Herbert
Methodist Church , Athens.
shall and Patty, Mrs . Norma Mcintyre, Jacob M. Bush,
Mrs. Jordsn was an at tendant
Marshall and son and Mrs. Joy Suzanne Bush to Roy H. Bush,
Mr. and Mrs. James Gaston
McKittrick and children Parcel, Lebanon ."
were recent guests of her
La ncas ter ; Mr . and Mrs:
Howard Noble, James
mother, Mrs.' Elizabeth Crowe,
Leona rd Whittington and Eric; Ferguson, Joan · Ferguson to
Urichsville, and her brother in
law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. John Mathias and Raymond D. Priddy, Ruth Ann
Gary Gibson, Gnadenhutte n. da ugh ters, Baltimore ; Mr. and ,Priddy, seven and twenty-two
Mr. and Mr s. Glen Mrs. Jeff Whittington, Mrs. one-hundredths acre, I;tutland.
Bessie Harris and Ba sil Kirk
Citizeps National Bank to
Gassaway. Powell , spent
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;
Mr.
and
Mrs.Ear)
Allen E. Jenkinson, Luella
several days here with their
. son-in-law and daughter , Mr. Reedy, Redhouse, W. Va. and Jenkinson, Lot 13 Probsts
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and Mrs . William Miller, Mrs. Hazel Davis, Buffalo, W. Mtddleport.
Va.
Connie, Debbie and Lori.
Dwight W. Corbin, Delores
Will Ent ertain Grange
Mr . and Mrs. Ha r old
June Corbin to Ohio Power Co.,
Meigs County Pomona
Gillogly, Vicky and Bruce,
Deed of Correction, 2.50 Acres,
Grange
No. 64 held their Lebanon.
were in Columbus during the
meeti ng
at
weekend and visitC(l his sister, re gular
Harold Carnahan , Isabel
Grange
Hall
on
Rocksprings
Mrs. Bernice McKnight and
Carnahan to James W. CarFrid ay evening. Plans were
family.
nahan, Na ncy Carn ahan ,
J)av id Hess , Springfi eld , made to have the annual All- Parcels, Sutton.
Lawrence R. Gluesencamp,
Sr. , Clara Louise Gluesencamp
to William A. McKelvey , Hazel
s~~~~M:ncc~K~~elvey, 16.25 Acres.

SUITS

n-r- tep enson

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RUTLAND
CLASS OF 1909 (Room 3), includes Paul
Be81l, Florence Barton, Marie Spires, Neva Brown, Cledith
Braley, Edward Grant. Paul Near . Dallas Brown ing, Bub
Renshaw, Bessie Ma theney, Jodi e Matheney, Com Rupe,
Roy Price, William Barks tall, Walter Spires . Guy. Mutchler,

' ........ ,. ~~-RUTLAND - Mra. Ben purpose and objective of the from , Mrs. Mabel Brown, Ellen ~. Mn. Nlllllllnl
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THURSDAY
l'IUDAY
security officer for the ception after World War I, · cernlng the ·poulblllty of guesta. A dnurt ~ ROCK SPRINGS Grallgt, , WORSHIPFUL Muier John American Leg!Qn AIIKillary, descrlb!ni It u an Intelligent aecurlng new memben. Mn. 181'Ved by tbi IIIIIIM.
7:30p.m. Tburaday at the hill. C. Bacon .anJI!IIIIICG IPIC!al . nes.tment of Qhlo, prllled and progressive JlfOtlram for . .- - - -·- - - - - - - - - - - -. .
EASTERN . Athletic meeiiDc, Puneror Lcrdp 1.., tile American Legion JlfOtlram veteraN. She commented on
Booeters, Thurlday; a p.m. at Flo:AM, 7::10 p. m. Frldlly· at Tuesday night when the • the changes of lime and the
high achool. Refreahmenta, temple Ill' I!IIPectiO!I by Right Auxilltry of Lewis Manley urgent need for maijltalnlng a
everyone welcome.'
Worahipfuf ·. Ilrother Ben POtit 38l met at · the hr.ne of progressive Legion program,
ELEANOR CIRCLE of · Philson. Refreshment• Mrs. Naomi Bentley here.
particularly 111 this time when
Heath United , Melhodlit fotlotriJI8 meeting. All Master
Mrs. Neutzling reviewed the the Army, Navy and ,{serve
Church, 7:30,p.m. Tbursd&amp;y at Maaolll invited.
S ·; L S h
. forces seem to be
the home of Mrs. Kennetb
RETURN. JONATHAN
deteriorating.
Cooke \vlth Mrs. · Earl Melp Chapter DAR 2 p.m
M
N bllng &amp;lao com'
.. Davenport assia~.
. F)iday at the :bcme 'of
Mqrriage is Noted
me.:-:~d :~ 'the need for
POMEROY Chapier 80, . DavldMlller,~l Mn. , . The ~hlldren of Mrs. Mmlle maintaining an l!wareness of
Royal ~h. M880111, apec1a1 , Jamett Brewingto!' and Mlu M. Snider iire announcing the trends In AmeriCIIIId keeping
meeting, Thurlday night, 7:ll .Ftieda. Faehnle, co-bosteuea. ~ge of their mother to intouchwithourcongressmen.
p.m. ~ank and put master Roll Clil, curren.t evenII: Mrs. Mr. William R. StepQenson, Sr. The apealter was introduced by
· degrees to be conferred.
· Patrick Lochary to have the of Mlddlejiiirt.
Mrs.. Virginia Det.egal who
AFTERNOON ·· CIRCLE, program.
The VCIW!I were exchanged by presided at. the meeting.
Heath United Methodist
\Ill! couple In .Pearlaburg, Va. Mrs . Campbell Harpe~.
,Chui-cl!, Thursday, 2p.mi at
SATURDAY
·
·onJari. 8. The Rev. Herbert D. Americanism chalrmall, anOpe~ Mondiy incl Friday
the church. Mrs. Nan Moore,
HIGH SCHOOL dance party • Holton o! .the . Pearisburg nounced tentative plans for an
evemng till 1:00 p.m.
leader; Mrs.Norm~nWayland, Melfi&amp; Junior '· atgh, Mid·. Baptist ' Church officiated . ,AmeriCinlsm program on Feb.
Mrs. Mary Rinehart, and Mn. dieport, 8 to 11 p.m. Saturday. .Enroute home they visited with 13 In the afternoon.
Waiter Hayes; hostesses.
Jays emceelilg.
. Mr. Stephenson's son, WWiam
Mrs. Bentley served as color
7
30
ijRADBURY PTA, 1:30
lfYl!!N SING,~turday, ' " R. Stephenson, Jr. and family bearer and Mrs. Nellie WinThursday a(ternoon, at the ~:C·~=~~
b = j In Philadelphia, Pa . They ston, chaplain, . for the
BChool.
Cburch. Public welcome.
returned home Tuesday. Mr. ritualistic opening. The
OHIO VALLEY Grange 2812,
BAKE SAL!i;, . Saturday, Slephe!llon Ia an engineer with treasurer's report· was given
50.4 MAIM ITIIIT
Letart Falll, 7:30p.m. 'lburs- starting at 1 a.m. Gaul's' !he Penn Central Rallroac!·
by Mrs. WWiamSmlth. A letter
1
day Home of. Mrs. Ellzailetlr Market, Chester, aponaored by

MEET TONIGHT
Carol Pierce; advisor of the
Meigs County Better livestock
Beef Club, advises all mem·
bers that their first meeting is
tonight at the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric
Company meeting room, !Ifill
St., Middleport, at 7:30 p.

CON-SOLE
COLOR ·TV

American .Legion Program Prais~d
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Clarence ·:

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'nit Deily a.r.inel,Mio!t~ie!b-t-P&lt;meroy, 0., Jan. 1!;1m

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: •- die Deily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o.. Jan: ·13,1972
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Washlngton
R enort By
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· Foreign policy and the new
economic program were
dominant issues in the first
llell41011 of the 92nd Congress
Which adjourned Dec . 17.
The s...,..Ut!Q '"end-the-war"
am-.hdment offered by Senator
Mansfield passed the Senate
three times during the session
only to be defeated in the House
and subsequently watered
down in conference commlttees. Its inclusion in the
foreign · aid authorizati on
deadlocked a joint conference
Committee three weeks and
delayed adjournment until it
· .)Vas finally dropped . The
Administration was able ·to
continually with s tand
moun~ Congressional opposition 'to its Indochina policy
and now appears to have a.free
hand in completing the withdr9wal program according to
the President's own timetable.
The foreign aid program
encountered its roughest road
in 25 years and was almost
~ealt a death blow in the
!:enate. Nevertheless, it
bounced back In the waning
days of the session although in
substantially modified and
reduced form . For the first
time, conservatives distraught
over the $218 billion we have
given away in the last twentyfive years and liberals opposed
to military assistance to
Southeast Asia have combined
In a coati lion capable of
restructuring the en tire
program even further in the
months ahead.
On Aug. 15, the President
made his dramatic announcement that he was invoking his Presidential
authority given him by
Congress to control wages and
prices. At the same time he
requested a major tax
reduction
program
to
' timulate· the economy . The
Congress gave the President
hear!y everything he asked for
including repeal of auto excise
tax, reinstitution of investment
tax creQit, and $16 billion tax
ctit. Late In the session the
· Congress passed a second

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record time the amenllment
was ratified by three fourtlls of
the states and became the 26th
amendment. The youth vote
will have an important and
significant impact on the
American electoral process.
Draft - The draft was extended for two years, instead of
the usual four and further
revisions in the induction
process were made to remove
certain inequities. The bill also
contained a $2.4 billion increase in military pay and
allowances designed to achielie
the Administration target of an
all-volunteer army by June 30,
1973.
. campaign Spending Reform
- Late in the session both
Houses agreed on a reform bill
to limit media spending in
federal election campaigns and
stre ngt hen re porting and
disclosure re qui rements of
can~idates . Candidates for
federal office would be allowed
to spend $50,000 or 10 cents per
voting constituent, whichever
is greater.
Employment - $2.5 billion
was authorized for a major
.public service jobs program
for the unemployed at the state
and local level. The legislation
would create 150,000 jobs in
such areas as erlucation ,
he a I t h , co ns e r v a t i on ,
recreation, and public safety .
Additional assistance is
directed to local areas where
unemployment rate exceeds 6
pet.
.
Cons titutional Changes The Senate mu~t act on the socalled "equal rights amend·
ment" which cleared the House
for the second consecutive
Congress. After eight years
and a successful discharge
petition, the "prayer amendment" reached the House floor
only to fail to r·eceive the
necessary two-thirds vote for
·approval.
From Jan. 21 through Dec.
17, the House spent 168 days in
session. The 1,903 hours and 27
minutes that Congress was in·
session consumed 34 ,685
pr inted pages in the
'il:~~~d. J?;IC~i~: "Co~~r~ssi_ona l ljecord. 18,146

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mea su res wer e inlroduced,

wa geipl'l'~

1,271 measures 'Wer·e !-eported
cmfrol authorllty until April 20, [rom committees and 198
19'13, and autho~izes , new ad· public bills were enac ted mto
mlniatrative machinery to law. There were 320 recorded
operate Phase II of the NEP. votes taken in the House in
Other major legislation of 1971, an increase of more than
the session Included:
80 pet. over the first session of
Supersonic Transport - The the 9lst Congress. ·
Congress voted to terminate
the SST program to develop a
commercial airliner capable of. PLAGER OUT
Cln-ying 300 passengers 1,800
ST. LOUIS (UPI )-Bob Plamlles'per hour and end federal ger, defenseman of · the. St.
ftnanclng of the controversial Louis Blues, will be out of
aircraft. The vote indicated action for about 10 days with a
both a desire .to reorder broken rib.
national priorities and a
Plager, who has already
concern for the environment. missed nearly half the season
Eighteen Year Old Vote with a painful calcium deposit
On March 23, the 1Congress in his leg, was injured in
cleared a Constitutional Tuesday's 7-3 victory over the
~ndrnent enfranchising 11 Montreal Canadiens when he
million 18-20 year olds. In collided with Harry Richard.

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Holzer Medical ~nter, First
Ave . .and Cellar St. {ieneral
visiting hours 2-4 and 7ttP- m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p. m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Robert E.
Stevens; Galllpolis Ferry. a
son; Mr. and Mrs. William H.
Porter, Jackson, a daughter;
· Mr. and Mrs. Rodney L. Smith,
'Coalton, a daughter; Mr. and
Mrs. · Clarence E. Woodall,
-Gallipolis, a daughter, and Mr.
and Mrs. William G. Johnson,
Gl\llipolis, a son.
. Discharges
Mrs. Juanita C. Lodwick,
Mrs. Antha A. Mills, i:&gt;arryll L.
~ariz, Gilbert C. Hart, Mrs.
Ullie M. Randolph, Wiliiam F:
Payton, Janet M. Northup,
Cecil C. Elmore, .Mrs. Robert
Donnally and daug hter,
Willard H. Nibert, Jack H~rris,
, Marvin .B~tes Jr., Berthll M.
Craig, Mrs. Brady J. Angel and
son, Marcia J. Dill, Bonnie
Williams, Patricia Ann
Eisnaugle, Russell L. Tyo,

NOTICE

Mel p. Simon, M.D., . Urologist, announces the removal of his office from
Holzer Clinic to Pleasant Valley
Hospital in Point Pleasant, West
Virginia . Patients with appointments
can keep the same with Dr. Simon at
Pleasant Valley Hospita I. If unable to
make the appointment, please call 4463919 or 675-4340. Dr. Simon can also see
patients at the Medical Plaza at 203
Jackson Pike, Ga IIi polis, Ohio during
Saturdays. Dr. Simon also wishes to
state that he is stili an active member
of the Holzer Medical Center·-Hospital.

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RUTLAND HIGH SCHOOL class of 1908submitted
by the
Rev . Dr. R. D. Brown, retired , minister of the Pilgrim
Holiness Church which Is no--: the Wesleyan Church. Rev .
Brown recalls the following in Uris group, Mack Hawkins,
Earl Stone, Leonard !'rice, Bill BarkstaU. Clara Price,
Genevive Bryant, Adline Parker, Cora Rupe, Marie Spires,

Florence Barton, Kenneth Washington, Dennis Spires,
Denver Bryant, John Swickard, Charles Williams, qme
McFa~lapd, Fr\'(la: Graham, Mrs. ,Bailey, Charles Bormg,
Maggre Motley, Grace Boring, ·Ethel Kincaid, Denver
Brown, Cl~y Gardner, Gladys Williams, and the teacher,
Storie Thompson.
·

Clarence L. Belton, Carroll' S.
Napper, Susan L: Johnson and
Katrina D. Tuck4r,
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JANUARY

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BIRTH ANNOUNCED
Mr.. and Mrs. Ronald E.
Mll)l!r, Columbus , are an·
. nouncing the ,birth of a six
pound, nine ounce son, Ronald
Alva, on Jan·. 4 at a ColumHus
hospital. Maternal ·grandparents are Mrs. Mary June
Wilcoxson and Charles Park,
Columbus, and paternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Russell E. Miller, Middleport.
. Great-grandparents
Mrs.
Gertrude lt{iller of Middleport
and Walter Cook 0! Syracuse.
Mr. and Mrs. Miller also have
three daughters, C11rma, 3;
Traci, 2, and Eugenna, 1.

OFF

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News, Event

Transfers

Grange banquet in April and
specia l committees were
appointed. The theme for the
Lecturer hour was "Precious
Memories" and each member
present was asked to give a
special memory. Duane Will,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Norman
Will, wHo toured Europe this
past summer with the Ohio
Youth Choir, showed slides and
gave a very interesting resume
of the events in which he
participated and the sights of
interest that he saw. Delicious
refreshments of sandwiches,
pie, an.d C&lt;lff~ were served by
met11hers of Hemlock Grove

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Eutern 'Girls Athletic Assn. • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
..
basketball team.
SOUP SALE, . iJe8lnnlng 4
of ~~~d._~-:!=· Riders p.m. Saturday, Sou.them High
Thursday, 7, 30 at St. PaL School preceding Hannan
• Ch h 1 Pomer
Trace game. Bean, vegetable
Luthe ran
oy.
d 1h
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urc n
"They'reOff and Running," 4li soup,_ san w c 11 ' P e an .
coffee, sponaored by junior
. te film to be sh
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mml\,
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own.
cla8s. ,
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SHADE RIVER Lodge ~. .
MEIGS COUNTY RetireQ
F. and A.M, Thursday, 7:30 at Teachers Assn., 12 noon
the Chester Hall. Denver Well, Saturday
at
Pomeroy
worshipful master.
.Elementary School for potluck
XI GAMMA MU Thursday dinner. Mrs. Vlhna P!kkoja',
7:45 p. m. hOIJ!e of Mrs. delegate to Wuhlngton eonMildred Karr, Middleport.
ference 011 Aging, speaking on
FRmAY
her experience. Take own table
RIGHT IS RESERVED TO
TEEN DANCE, Friday, aervlce.
Wahama High School, 9 to 12
TEEN DANCE, Saturday at
LIMIT QUANTITIES
Friday with Jays emceeing. Racine Junior High following
VISITS BAERS
butetbllll pme. Mumc by
Mrs . Clyda Bing and School sponsored.
Spring Street, AlbeN.
daughter, Joyce, Bradbury,
visited Sunday afternoon with
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Baer,
REViV
DAUGHTER BORN.
Forest Run.
start~n~ Sunday, Hirtford, w,.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald E.
Williams, Delta, formerly of Va., Church of Chrlat hi
~EG.
Dexter In Melp County, ll'e &lt;lu-lstlan Union, Rev. Autunm
, .
,
Sc:olt,
Wheelersburg,
speaking.
announcing the birth II( •IeVen
pound, 13 ounce daughter, Public Invited, 7:30 eacli
Angela Faye, on De&lt;:. 24 at evening.
DR. RUSSELl. Jonea, Ur·
.
.
Mercy Hospital In Columbus.
ban~. speaker "for revival
Grandparents are Mrs. Helen
Williams of Columbus and Mr. services starting Sunday, First
and Mrs. Harry Wilson of Baptist Ch4rcb, Racine,
Cln~ln~li. Mrs. W\lllama n111ning ~h .Sunda~ •.Jan,
apent a few days with' her 23. Serylcel, 7:30 eacii
daughter and family, Mr. and evening; Duane Wolfe, song
Mrs. George Perry fl. Grand leader .
Rapids, Ohio, and abo with her
MONDAY
son, Ronald and family at GAME PROTECfOR Gary
Delta . She went · ta-- Delta Swope will show film on wild
especially to see · her new life when Chester PTA meell,
granddaughter. Mrs. Wllaon, Monday, 8 p. m. at school to
Cincinnati, also spent lut·week observe Dad's Night. All
at Delta assisting in the care of parents cordially Invited,
the new baby.
social hour after' meeting.
.eHypnotique
. Roush.
Atkins Deputy
Will matall
officers.
and Mrs.
VIrgil
Members are to take any idnd

THURSDAY, FRIDAY,·SATURDAY AND SUNDAY SALE!

Discount
Prices,
Of Coursal
.

.•

!~A~EETINQ,

26-35s to
Get Draft
Card· Notes
W'A'kiifNGTON '( tJl&gt;t) '::.:
Men between 2S "and 35 who
may have for gotten they still
are liable for the draft may be
surprised to receive new draft
cards in the mail soon saying
they are now classified !H.
It does not mean they are
about to be calied up. The !H
classification is simply a new
holding category for dormant

&amp;Ol

60TABL£TS
$1.17
ONLY ..

REG; 79' .
ONLY

The change was one of a
series - most of them affecti ng conscientious objectors
- issued today by the Selective
Service System.
In another change, young
men approaching their 18th
birthdays will now have 60
days instead of five in which to
register for the draft. Officials
said they had no need for
speedy registration and the
rush could be inconvenient for
a youth who was vacationing or
extremely busy studying fOr
exams during that period. The
new regulations expand the
registration period to 30 days
on either side of the 18th birth- .
day.
ONHONORROU
Mrs. Marshall (Deborah )
Roush of Letart Falis made the
honor roll for the fa li semester
at Rio Gra nde Coliege. Mrs.
Roush is a junior.

Reg: $1.49 · ,.
Only

I.

BEST BUY

NEET HAIR RIMOYER

~

MAX FACJOk

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All the Features
Chromix" control lets you get color
mr x you prefer at the turn of a knob
Lighted channel selectors make tuning

records.

Spray Mist' Cologne··

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a snap---even in darkened viewing rooms

Two 5-inch oval speakers offer rich
sound that realty Iitts a room
Set-and-forget volume control
Cabinet about 39'hx29'!irxl8 inches deep
Tube cup extends 6V. in. from back

Fifty-one patienbs at the
Southeastern Ohio Mental
Health Center, Athens, were
.guests at a party staged
Tuesday night by the ·
Homebuilders Claas of the
Mldditport Church of Cbrlat.
The class began holding
partieslnDe&lt;:. 1968forpatlenta
at the hospital and Tuelday
night marked their 37th one.
L. R. Wiley and Denver Rice
playt!Q a medley of songs and
hynins on their gullars. There
was group singing and games
with prlzei of . candy, guni,

57 X 43101~ontemr.ora1J, walnut veneer
57 X 43111~olonia , 1111ple veneer
57 X 431~1-Spanish, pecan veneer

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Authorized
Catalog Merchant

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Lou &amp; Th elma
OSBORNe

220 E. Main

handkercblefll, shaving suppiles, soap, powder, holle and
headscarves . beinC lllvan u
prizel. The Rev. Raullln Moyer
pve prayer and refr:ealunenta
of cakes, buanu, candy, gum
and punch were aervecl. ·
Carl Wright, an employe at
the Health Center, allilted
with the party. Others attending were Mrs. L. R. Wiley,
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Kincaid,
Mrs. Denver Rice, Mrs.
Norman. Yeauger, Mrs. Carl ·
Roach, Mrs. Don Erwin; Mn.
Osby Martin, Mrs. William

992-21 ~ 8

PJlm.eroy

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REG. $1.89

.

ONLY

LISTERINE THROAT LOZENGES
18 SIZE

,BAG OF 30

ONLY

comnilttees were -appointed Mrs. Ray Batty, Mrs. Charles
Ronald
when the Sew-Rile sewing Club Hoffman, · Mra.
Mra. Don
met Wednesday night at the Bl'j)wnlng,
club house. Mrs. Don Collins McKnight, · Mn. James
and Mrs. Flo Strickland were Netibling, Mrs. Ein. White;
Rowers, Mrs. Robert . Potter,
hocJesses.
•
' Mrs. George Hoffman ap- Mrs. Willard BOyer; cards pointed the following com- · Mrs. Don Mullen and Mrs.
mitteea : Wa)ls and Means, Strickland; gifts- Mrs. Larry
Wellrunc and Mrs. Edward
Wella; entertainment - Mrs.
Bill McDaniel and Mra. James
Neutzllng.
Mn. Elza Gilmore and Mrs.
Collins gave the aecretary and
treasurer's reports. It wai
noted that the next meeting
will be on Jan. liB with Mrs.
McKnight and Mrs. Glbn1n to
be hostesses.

BA ER

FURNITURE

4 PLY-POLYESTER

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

4 PLY POLVESTER
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700X13 BLAC!&lt; WALL·-----------.. , 16, ·
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, 17 ·
E78X14 WHITE WALLS ......;_____
95

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NOW'S TH,ETIME·TO ..

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Mr. Frltndlr

G78X14 WHITE WALL
G78X15 WHITE WALL
F78.X15 WHITE WALL

REMODEL THE
"WE HAVE A

H78X14 WHITE WALL·-------~---- ... •26 •50
H78X14 BLACK WALL• ------.....-...... _ ,,3,50
L78X 15 _
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free estimale showing ,.
haw·economicol it is to remodel
·· or.add o new roam lo your presenl home!

VISIT OUR LUMBER DEPARTMENT _TOD~

Po'meroy Cement Block Co.

Most of the pueblo tribes
the American southwest
not fish since they relish ,as sacred and
not ea t lhcm.

The Departmeni Stel':.e of Building Since 1915

REG. 39e
ONLY

NYQUIL
NIGHniME COLD MEDICINE

~· REG. $1.69
ONLY

&amp;OZ.
REG. 11.59

ONLY

O·TIPS
.
.

McKESSON RUBBING
' PINT

COIION SWABS
125 SIZE
REG. 87'

ADO A 'NEW
DEGREEAWARDED .

OILY

49~

REG. 65'.

ONLY

WIWim Mlchlel Hayman,
formerly of Racine, pdualel
on Dec. 17, frOm tile Ohio Institute of Technology recelvlnc
his aaoclate degree In electronic ~ teC:IuKJjogy.

He Is employed bY North

Electric · at Gallon 11 •
j)t'ogram engineer.' Haym8n
was an honor student at the
inaUiute during hli training.
·He rl!lida In Gallon with hli
wife and 1 son.

..

.'

,,

.
'

•

•

.

'

IRVICI

•

J

4 ••, ....
Plllnnltisls
_, Sn You!

"U DAILY 1:00 A.M. 10 10 P.rt. • SUIDIIY 10:31 Ul. 10.12-JI P.l. &amp; 5 111 PJi. .
I •

I

.c

•.•

.I

' '•

HMJ.'S
MEN1HC).LYP1US

Cough Drops

REG. 7'1

.

s 15

ONLY

Committees of Club Appointed

GUARDIAN PREMIUM TIRES

All Prices Plus Fed . Excuse Tax, From S1 .76 to $3.27
AL'L TIRES INSTALLED F~EE .

1.5 oz.

. 5.8 ·oz.

Gnieser.

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS UNTIL 9

'BELTED TIRES

•Primtif eGolden

37th Party Given

BLEMISHED AND DISCONTINUED -

.

VASELINIINTINSIVE
CARE LOTION

BUFFERIN

FAST HOME .PERMANENT

,

'

::.:::·

Hood MoVing
[nJo Chkago

teacher, Denver Brown, Olieva Bryant, and Grace Warner.
So_me of the students, Rev. Brown could not identify. During
thiS period Rutland High School had just four classro9ms.
Mr. Mutchler, who will be 94 Friday, resides at the Pilgrim
Manor Nursing Home, Plymouth, Ind.

Property

SPORT COATS

·30'%ro -50%

Catalog Values Jn

Carpenter

-AND

Mrs:.

Great Midwinter

spent a week here with his
uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. ·
Meigs
James Gaston .
Mr~ and Mrs. William
Lawson and family visited with
his brother in Ia w and sister,
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Grim and
Mr . and Mrs. David family, Poca, W. Va .
Woodrum and children,
Columbia Grange members
Columbus, visited with his
who attended the Janua ry
Mabel V. Cleland to Dallas B.
grandmother, Muri Galaway,
g
of
Meigs
Coun
ty
meetin
Cleland,
Geraldine Cleland,
on Saturday. Recent guests of .
Pomona
Gra
nge
were
Earl
Parcels, Sutton .
Mrs. Galaway were her niece
· Stark e.;;:. C)lri Gr:~t eesj nMa~y, W
~i ghl;tv, .Po~aL1,,,HQ) 1
. and hus~t\.¥r .•~¢illl!rs . Berth4.!(Jrjppc~ at1!J ~ an't
~eu
l,ah
..
c
. Hill, 62 'Acres,
Richard ;P§rsons 8h(f';fti'ck,
Mrs. Ml! ndal Jordan.
Bedford
.
Dayton.
Services were held at
Janus R. Krier; Diedre J.
Floyd King , formerly of this
.Temple Church for Orville Krier aka Diedre J. Sager aka
communily, who now lives in
Whi ttington, Lancaster, for- Diedre J. Ruoff to Noah E.
Me Arthur , is confined to
Holzer Hospital for treatment. mer resident of the com- Rig ney, May E. Rig ney, %
Helen Peck, wlio is in the U. munity. Mr. Whittington, 77, Acre, Salem.
passed away at the home of a
Clark lhle, Mildred !hie to
S. Air Force and stationed at
daughter
in
Lancaster.
SurColumbia
Gas Trans. Corp.,
Offu tt Ai r ~· o r ce Base in
vivors
included
a
wife,
Emma;
Right of Way, Sutton .
Nebraska , spent a few days
two daughter, Mrs. Ed
Constance Bush, dec'd. to
leave here wiUr h~r parents,
I
Thelma
)
Marshall,
Lancaster
Roy
H. Bush, Robert W. Bush,
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Peck and
and
Mrs.
Raymond
(Letha)
Roy F. Bush, Charles W. Bush,
family .
~
Cottr ill , Harr isonville; two Emest L. Bush , Lawrence E.
Mr. and Mrs. Manf.ord
Smith, La ncaster, called at the sons. Leonard Whitting ton, Bush, Susa.n Eliza beth Pigott,
home of their son and daug hter Baltimore and Ronald Whit- George M. Bush, Clara May
tington , local ; one brother, Mcintyre, Jacob M. Bush, Aff.
in law, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
James Whittington of Rutland for Trans., Le banon.
Smith and Nancy, al ter al
and two sisters, Rosie Martin,
Robert W. Bush, Roy F.
tending the Orv ille Whittington
S~racuse ; and Bessie Harris, Bush, Gloria Bush, Charles W.
funeral.
Columbus ; 17 grandchudren Bu sh, Marie Bush, Ernest L.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Jordan
attended the wt!Qding of Dawn and 15 great-grandchildren. Bush, Flossie Bush. Lawrence
Bur ia l was in Temple E. Bush, Violet Bush, Susan
French and · Dave Moore
Cemeter y. Those relatives Elizabeth Pigott, Willard
Athens, which was held at th~
from a distance who attended Pigott, George M. Bush, Clora
Richland Avenue United
were: Mr. and Mrs. Ed Mar- Mae Mcintyre , Herbert
Methodist Church , Athens.
shall and Patty, Mrs . Norma Mcintyre, Jacob M. Bush,
Mrs. Jordsn was an at tendant
Marshall and son and Mrs. Joy Suzanne Bush to Roy H. Bush,
Mr. and Mrs. James Gaston
McKittrick and children Parcel, Lebanon ."
were recent guests of her
La ncas ter ; Mr . and Mrs:
Howard Noble, James
mother, Mrs.' Elizabeth Crowe,
Leona rd Whittington and Eric; Ferguson, Joan · Ferguson to
Urichsville, and her brother in
law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. John Mathias and Raymond D. Priddy, Ruth Ann
Gary Gibson, Gnadenhutte n. da ugh ters, Baltimore ; Mr. and ,Priddy, seven and twenty-two
Mr. and Mr s. Glen Mrs. Jeff Whittington, Mrs. one-hundredths acre, I;tutland.
Bessie Harris and Ba sil Kirk
Citizeps National Bank to
Gassaway. Powell , spent
'
Columbus
;
Mr.
and
Mrs.Ear)
Allen E. Jenkinson, Luella
several days here with their
. son-in-law and daughter , Mr. Reedy, Redhouse, W. Va. and Jenkinson, Lot 13 Probsts
.
'
and Mrs . William Miller, Mrs. Hazel Davis, Buffalo, W. Mtddleport.
Va.
Connie, Debbie and Lori.
Dwight W. Corbin, Delores
Will Ent ertain Grange
Mr . and Mrs. Ha r old
June Corbin to Ohio Power Co.,
Meigs County Pomona
Gillogly, Vicky and Bruce,
Deed of Correction, 2.50 Acres,
Grange
No. 64 held their Lebanon.
were in Columbus during the
meeti ng
at
weekend and visitC(l his sister, re gular
Harold Carnahan , Isabel
Grange
Hall
on
Rocksprings
Mrs. Bernice McKnight and
Carnahan to James W. CarFrid ay evening. Plans were
family.
nahan, Na ncy Carn ahan ,
J)av id Hess , Springfi eld , made to have the annual All- Parcels, Sutton.
Lawrence R. Gluesencamp,
Sr. , Clara Louise Gluesencamp
to William A. McKelvey , Hazel
s~~~~M:ncc~K~~elvey, 16.25 Acres.

SUITS

n-r- tep enson

J!

'
RUTLAND
CLASS OF 1909 (Room 3), includes Paul
Be81l, Florence Barton, Marie Spires, Neva Brown, Cledith
Braley, Edward Grant. Paul Near . Dallas Brown ing, Bub
Renshaw, Bessie Ma theney, Jodi e Matheney, Com Rupe,
Roy Price, William Barks tall, Walter Spires . Guy. Mutchler,

' ........ ,. ~~-RUTLAND - Mra. Ben purpose and objective of the from , Mrs. Mabel Brown, Ellen ~. Mn. Nlllllllnl
'
·
·
•·
• NeullllilcofP&lt;ImerOl'; llltional American Legion at Its tn:-- GalUpolls, was · read .con- 111¥1 Mn. -'nl- OtlliW wwe
THURSDAY
l'IUDAY
security officer for the ception after World War I, · cernlng the ·poulblllty of guesta. A dnurt ~ ROCK SPRINGS Grallgt, , WORSHIPFUL Muier John American Leg!Qn AIIKillary, descrlb!ni It u an Intelligent aecurlng new memben. Mn. 181'Ved by tbi IIIIIIM.
7:30p.m. Tburaday at the hill. C. Bacon .anJI!IIIIICG IPIC!al . nes.tment of Qhlo, prllled and progressive JlfOtlram for . .- - - -·- - - - - - - - - - - -. .
EASTERN . Athletic meeiiDc, Puneror Lcrdp 1.., tile American Legion JlfOtlram veteraN. She commented on
Booeters, Thurlday; a p.m. at Flo:AM, 7::10 p. m. Frldlly· at Tuesday night when the • the changes of lime and the
high achool. Refreahmenta, temple Ill' I!IIPectiO!I by Right Auxilltry of Lewis Manley urgent need for maijltalnlng a
everyone welcome.'
Worahipfuf ·. Ilrother Ben POtit 38l met at · the hr.ne of progressive Legion program,
ELEANOR CIRCLE of · Philson. Refreshment• Mrs. Naomi Bentley here.
particularly 111 this time when
Heath United , Melhodlit fotlotriJI8 meeting. All Master
Mrs. Neutzling reviewed the the Army, Navy and ,{serve
Church, 7:30,p.m. Tbursd&amp;y at Maaolll invited.
S ·; L S h
. forces seem to be
the home of Mrs. Kennetb
RETURN. JONATHAN
deteriorating.
Cooke \vlth Mrs. · Earl Melp Chapter DAR 2 p.m
M
N bllng &amp;lao com'
.. Davenport assia~.
. F)iday at the :bcme 'of
Mqrriage is Noted
me.:-:~d :~ 'the need for
POMEROY Chapier 80, . DavldMlller,~l Mn. , . The ~hlldren of Mrs. Mmlle maintaining an l!wareness of
Royal ~h. M880111, apec1a1 , Jamett Brewingto!' and Mlu M. Snider iire announcing the trends In AmeriCIIIId keeping
meeting, Thurlday night, 7:ll .Ftieda. Faehnle, co-bosteuea. ~ge of their mother to intouchwithourcongressmen.
p.m. ~ank and put master Roll Clil, curren.t evenII: Mrs. Mr. William R. StepQenson, Sr. The apealter was introduced by
· degrees to be conferred.
· Patrick Lochary to have the of Mlddlejiiirt.
Mrs.. Virginia Det.egal who
AFTERNOON ·· CIRCLE, program.
The VCIW!I were exchanged by presided at. the meeting.
Heath United Methodist
\Ill! couple In .Pearlaburg, Va. Mrs . Campbell Harpe~.
,Chui-cl!, Thursday, 2p.mi at
SATURDAY
·
·onJari. 8. The Rev. Herbert D. Americanism chalrmall, anOpe~ Mondiy incl Friday
the church. Mrs. Nan Moore,
HIGH SCHOOL dance party • Holton o! .the . Pearisburg nounced tentative plans for an
evemng till 1:00 p.m.
leader; Mrs.Norm~nWayland, Melfi&amp; Junior '· atgh, Mid·. Baptist ' Church officiated . ,AmeriCinlsm program on Feb.
Mrs. Mary Rinehart, and Mn. dieport, 8 to 11 p.m. Saturday. .Enroute home they visited with 13 In the afternoon.
Waiter Hayes; hostesses.
Jays emceelilg.
. Mr. Stephenson's son, WWiam
Mrs. Bentley served as color
7
30
ijRADBURY PTA, 1:30
lfYl!!N SING,~turday, ' " R. Stephenson, Jr. and family bearer and Mrs. Nellie WinThursday a(ternoon, at the ~:C·~=~~
b = j In Philadelphia, Pa . They ston, chaplain, . for the
BChool.
Cburch. Public welcome.
returned home Tuesday. Mr. ritualistic opening. The
OHIO VALLEY Grange 2812,
BAKE SAL!i;, . Saturday, Slephe!llon Ia an engineer with treasurer's report· was given
50.4 MAIM ITIIIT
Letart Falll, 7:30p.m. 'lburs- starting at 1 a.m. Gaul's' !he Penn Central Rallroac!·
by Mrs. WWiamSmlth. A letter
1
day Home of. Mrs. Ellzailetlr Market, Chester, aponaored by

MEET TONIGHT
Carol Pierce; advisor of the
Meigs County Better livestock
Beef Club, advises all mem·
bers that their first meeting is
tonight at the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric
Company meeting room, !Ifill
St., Middleport, at 7:30 p.

CON-SOLE
COLOR ·TV

American .Legion Program Prais~d
;
..

· MMet.Monday

I

Clarence ·:

~

,..

'nit Deily a.r.inel,Mio!t~ie!b-t-P&lt;meroy, 0., Jan. 1!;1m

r;

�••
' '

•
· ~filii~ .........

···-·.--y u Jan 1:1. ltn

.'

"

WANT ADS
For .Rent
For Sale
INFORMATION
DEADLINE$
GUN SHOOT, Friday, jln, 1~. 6
4 ROOM houst. both, storo!!" LONG BOTTOM - Five room
Day
Before
· p.m. Rltl,. American L19ion ' 5 • P.M.
room, furnace on hard road m
house, bath, business. or
Publlcttlon
f'&lt;&gt;rlland . Couple or small
Of! Milt Hill Road. Assortld
storage
building - 16.500.
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
mM!s.
family, 540 a month. Phone , Phone 985·3529.
992-7382.
. . '
Cancellation ·&amp; Correcllpns
12·19-301c
Will be accwpted until 9 a.m. for
l-11' 31p
Dloy of Publication
~.-~.,...
--~
TROPICAL FISH, fancy
IIIEGULATIONS
NICE
trailer,
1
bedroom, Ideal
guppies. angels and breeders,
·WIN AT
The Publisher l"tsarves the
for couple, 10 mileS north of
Belles and supplies. Phone
~
right to edit or re/ect any ads
f'&lt;&gt;meroy , $65 a month . Phone
992-5~43.
deemed object onal. The · 992·7479.
12-30-lfc
publisher will not be
1-4-tfc
responsible tor more than one
' '
lncorret:l Insertion.
GOOD hay. Phone 992·3658.
1
BEDROOM
trailer
apartRATES
l-11 -61c
ments, Ideal for couples .
FOI" Want Ad Service
Contact McClure's Dairy Isle,
s.cents per Word one Insertion
992-524 or 992.3436.
Minimum Charge 7Sc
1·9·12!C Auto Sales
12 cents ·per wori:t three
N01t111 (D)
IS
Lowest prices ever listed . on · the
consecutive insertions.
1968 MERCURY Monterey, .4
.AQ43
18 cents per WOI"d six con- BEDROOM . and 2. bedroom
dr .• v.s, power brak.es, power
following 1971 models in stock now;·
mobile homes. Adults only. . steering/
secutive lnltrllons .
• 74
radip - $975. Phone
·
Phone
992-5592.
·
.
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
tA6
985-3927,. Chest.,.., Ofllo.
12-19-Hc
ads
and
ads
paid
within
10
.Q)0852
'
.. 1-12-4tp
days.
·
\UST
EAST
TRAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile 1961 FIAT,' 4 doo
CARD OF THANKS
. r, extra good
.J965
• Void
Court, Rt. 124, Syracuse, Ohio
&amp; OBITUARY
shape,
48;000
miles . Carl
Challenger 2 Dr. H.T.• '31a' V-8, torqueflite, p..KJ952
•10863
992-2951 .
'
suo
lor
50 WOfd ()'llnlmum.
Findling, Alfred.
st., radio, w-s-w. new car J never titled, full
tQJIOS
+87432
~-2-trc
Each additional word 2c.
) ·12-3tp
•Void
•J976
BLIND ADS
warranty from date of sale.
Additional 2Sc Cha ~ge per FURNISHEO and unfurnished
SOUTH
Sticker Price '$361i.6S.
apartments. Close to school. 1970 W-30 OLOSMOBfLE 4&gt;12,
Advertisement.
• Kl08 72
Phone
992-5434.
aufomatlc, factory stereo
OFFICIE HOURS
.AQ
tape. Lots otextras. Like new ..
10·18-Hc
8:
30
a.m.
ro
5:00
p.m.
Dally,
t K9
Call
992·2«1 after 5 p.m.
a.m.
to
12
:00
Noon
8:30
.AK43
Saturday.
11,-28-trc
Coronet Custom 4 Dr .• '318' V-8,-torqueflite, p.Both vulnerable
1911
CHEVY
Vega,
with
st .• factory air, tinted glass, radio, drivers ed.
\\'est North Eut South
Notice
studded snow tires mounted,
14
Pass 1•
unit. full warranty.
·
plus· two , extra·· regular tires,
Pa,. 2.
Pw 4N.T. KO!iCOT KOSMETICS and wigs FO.. Sale
Sl,700.00; 'Also Teac stereo
Sticker Price 54117.80.
Paso 5.
Poss 5 N.T. · tor sale. Brown's. Phone 992· 30 IN. GAS range, good concassette
player-recorder
for
5113.
Paso 6.
Pw 6.
use with home stereo system
dition, Chrome trim clock and
12-31-trc
Poss Pus
Pw
·$50; Phone ·742·3887 or 742back· light' Phone 992-3059.
from 9:30 a.m. to 2:30
4«7
Opening lead-t Q
·l·ll-31c
ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT ...
p."m. and after 5 p.m.
overweight ladles. teens and
4 Dr.. Station Wagon, '360' V-8, automatic, p.l-12-6tp
By Olwald &amp; James Jacoby . men lnteretled In a Weight STEREO-Radio Console, 4 ---~-..st.,
p.-br., radio. w-s-w. air cond., new car.
speed lntermlxe&lt;l · changer,
Watchers ( R) Class in
'
r
Sticker Price $4497.20.
dual volume control, 4 '70 CHEVELLE SS, 396, ex.
Old man Z was back at
Pomeroy write : Weight
cell~nt condition, many ex,
sp~ker
sound
system,
lpvely
·
Watchers
·
(
R1,
l!f63
Section
the club after a long ab·
tras, ' call
614-992-2251
Walnut finish . Balance. 169.5~.
Rd.. Cincinnati. Ohio ~5237 .
sence. He got right into a
evenings.
·.
'
Use our budge( ter,.,s.··:C.ii·
·- 10·3-Hc
rubber l)tidge game w i t h
l-7-61p
992-7085.
.
' '
b o t h sides vulnerable and SAVE up to one hair. Bring your
·
1·i2-6tc. ·,65 CHEVY Station Wagon, I
Polar a Custom 4 Dr. H. T.~ '360' V-8,
promptly blasted to slam .
sick TV to Chuck's TV shop,
.phone
992-6256
after
5
p.m.
t~rqueflite, p.-st .• p.-br., lactory air, tinted
Not that six spades wasn't
lSI Butternut Ave., Pomeroy. STEREO. Early Amefican
l-9-6tp
style, AM-FM t1rnbinallon; .1 ' •:
a sound contract. More
Phone 992·5080.
glass. radio, demonstrator. ful.l warranty,.
'
speaker sound 'system, 4· ,.
sclentlflc bidding might have
11·21 -trc
Sticker Price $4893.20.
··.
speed automatic changer : 1967 VOLKSWAGEN Beetle,
brought him to seven, but it
good
shape,
S995.
Phone
742Balance $79 .67 . Use our
was weU he stopped at six. WANT WORK at hoine ad·
4211 or 742-4931.
budget
terms.' Call 992-7085.
S i n c e East held aU four
dress!".)' and sturtlng en l,- 13-3tc
1-lHtc
clubs,. the
. re was no way to
velopes Rush •If-stamped
envelope to F. Uribe, Box 36,
brlngllome · more than 12
Albany, Ohio, ~710.
TWIN
NEEDLE
Sewing
.Coronet .Custom 4 DSW, '383' V-8, T-flite, p.tricks. The slightest care1-6-tfc Machine 1971 Model in walnut Mobile Homes For
st., p.-br .• w-s-w, fattory air. tinted glass, less
stand. All features built-In to
lessness In pia~ would have
60X12.
2-bedroom,
all-electric,
than
5,000 miles, balance of warranty.
left him one trtck short.
STILL Target Shoot, Sunday, make fancy designs and do
air
conditioned,
8x20fl.
Porch
.Original Sticker $4728.35.
. .
"Shades of R. F. Foster,"
Jan . 16, I p. m., Rutland Gun stret.ch sewing . Also but.
and . aluminum awning,
tonholes, blind hems, etc.
muttered Z. " Old hands alClub on New Lima Rd.
a luminum skirting, com .
cash price or terms
ways repeat for me."
1-13-3tc $43.35
pletely setup. Be·autlful
See Emerson Jones, Pearl Ash, Hilton Wolfe,
available. Phone 992-5641.
IQ:catlon. Owner leaving sfate·.
After •that Z went
up
with
v
F
w
G
h
1-12-6tc
Wallace Amberger. Dick Rawlings.
· · · uns oot, noon, SunPhone 949-4892 or 992-5272.
d ummy s ace of diamonds
day. Jan. 16, Broad Run Gun
1·10-trc
and led a trump. E a s t
Club, New Haven, sponsored NORWEGIAN Elkhound pups.
Phone 992 ·2~2 .
showed out and said, "Just
by Post 9926, Mason, W. Va.
1-12-6tc
as I thought."
. -~------~·-13_-3tc
He took his king Of trumps SEWING in my home. Will
and led the seven. West covmake drapes, cushions .
ered w I t h the nine. Z rePhone 992·6879.
turned to his hand with the
l-3-121p
king of diamonds and Jed
the eight of trumps. It did INCOME TAX service, dally
992·2151 or 992-2152 MIDDLEPORT
36" X 23" X.Od9
except Sunday, evenings by
12'
•
14'
•
24'
•
WiDE
not matter what West did.
Mrs. Wanda
Z wu able to pick up · the appointment.
Eblin, Laurel Cliff Road, 1
trumps- without I o s I n g a
mile west of Meigs County
trick.
Fairground on Rl. 7 bypass.
Business Services
Then he started on ·clubs. Phorie-W2·l272.
'
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED CONTRA'CTOR, Dry Wall
1-3-JOic
He played bla king and ace
mfiJ"ashlngton ' Biv~.
REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446· · Finisher and• painting .
and 1 a.v e a club trick to
Belpre, Ohio
4782. Gallipolis. John Russell,
Richard I. Dubbeld, phone
USED OfFSET PLATES
East. After that he was able SHOOTING Match, Salurday,
Owner &amp; Operator.
.
742-5825.
HAVE
to d "la.c a r d the queen of Jan. 15, at the Racine Planing
5-12-trc
I-I0-51c
FOR THE BEST deal in a new
MANY USES
h e a r t s on dummy's fifth
Mill at 6 p.m. Factory choke
or used mObile home, try AUTOMOBILE insurance been =7
sE=P=T::IC~ta-n-:-k-s-c le-a-ne-d,..."""'M
"'IIIer
club.
guns only. Assorted meat .
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
cancelled?
Lost
your
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
We wonder If many re811- Sponsored by the Syracuse
Kanauga, Ohio.
operafor's license? Call 992 - 662·3035.
12-17-90tc
ers would have taken Z's · Fire Dept.
2966.
2-12-ffc
1·12-3tc
precautions. He would lose a
8 for Sl.OO
;i;fOBI
L
E
HOMES
.
Large
6-ll-tfc
trump trick if East held au GUN SH~OT, Forked Run
HARRISON'S TV and Antenna
seleclion8-10-t2wldes, llo4 ::8A--:CK_
H_
O_
E_A_N
_D
_
O_
O_
Z_
E_R_w_~k .·
Service. Phone 992-2522.
four but In that case there
Sportsman Club, Sunday ,
bedrooms, bank repos and
s
~
6-10-ltc
epllc tanks installed. George
was very little chance that . Jan. 16, 12 noqn.
,.:
ed ' some pracII co II Y new.
us
!Bill)
Pullins.
Phone
992-2478.
East would also hold aU four
l-12-3fc
Save u~ to If• . R. A. or Don
·clubs.
Miller, 705 Farson Street, -:-:=:::-:-:---::-:--:::-=---4·_
25-trc
PUPPIES lo give away to gQOd
tHlWSPAPII INTilPltSI ASSN.)
Belpre, . Ohio by Kaiser O' DELL WHEEL allghment
home. Phone 949·3621.
Aluminum, phone 423·9531 ·
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
1·12-3tc
1.4. 121 c
Complete front end service,
111 Court St.
tune up and brake service.
Wheels
balanced
elec .Pomeroy, Ohio
Real Estate For Sale .
The bidding hu been:
WEEKEND revival starling
" onically.
All
work
West
North
Eut
S h
Jan. 13 at 7:30 p.m. at Boring
uaranteed.
Reasonable
,
out
Chapel Church, Vales Mills
ales. Phone 992-3213.
3•
Paso
4•
Rd., Vinton Count~ . The COAL, limestone. Excelsior
5•
Pus
Pus
?
Joyfulalrn . alnglng nightly,
Salt Works, E. Ma in St.,
7-27-trc
WEATHER
You, South, hold:
Bissell Brothers .slnglng Jan.
f'&lt;&gt;meroy . Phone 992-3891.
C. BRADFORD, Auct ioneer
•Q13Z •Au tAIOZ •An
15th, Sunday afternoon ser4-9-trc
vices at 2 p.m. featurlntrthe . ::-::-:-::---.....:.._ __
Complefe Service
CONSTRUCTION
Phone 949-3821
Whot do you do now?
Bil!ell family, Joyfulalres POODLE puPJlles, Silver Toy,
' Main
Racine, Ohio
608 East
A-Doable """ toke the sure
and othero. Everyone Is
Perk view Kennels, Phone 992CQ.
Crill Bradford
1111111 profit
welcome. Evangellal Rev . 5443.
POMERO.Y
5-1-trc
8-15-ttc RACINE RURAL-.' 35 wOoded
TODAY'S QUESTION
John Elswick.
l-11-31c
240 Lincoln 51.
acres, frontage 6n both sides SE WING MACHINES. Repair
You do double. Your partner· - - - - - - - - Middleport, Ohio
1h YR. OLD good McCullough
1
of
the
road,
pond,
about
5
runs In five IIPOdes and East
all makes. 992-2284.
Dbl Anltlony Plumbing
250 chain saw - $75; 2 yr. old
acres level. Going at less than ' service,
The
Fabric
Shop, Pomeroy. W~ have t complete Home
bida six heuts. What do you do
more pony - $15 ; phone 742·
SlOO.OO
per
acre.
Authorized Singer Sales and
now?
Lost
5253.
DEXTER- 8 rooms, bath, 2 Service.
Maintenance Service the
We Sharpen Scissors.
1-11 -31c
porches, 1 enclosed, 2
year around: No matter wha1
GREY AND WHITE kitten,
3-29.trc
with flea collar in vicinity of BAND SAW with or without . garages. Large storage
your need. Complete roof or
building, great ror a family . READY-MIX CONCRETE de- spouting
McClure's Dloiry Isle. Phone
repair. Interior or
motor. May be seen at Cer- $8,900.
992-28U.
. '
livered
right
to
your
project.
exterior
carpentry.
Ceiling
Service Station, POMEROY- See this 1'12 story
tified
l-13-3tc
Fast
dnd
easy
.
Free
tile
•nd
Paneling
and
Siding.
f'&lt;&gt;meroy
.
Phone
992-9981.
frame, 6 rooms , 2 bedrooms,
Etrly Bird LNgue
estimates . Phone 992-3284 . Complete Plumbing &amp;
l-11
-31p
part
basement,
2
nice
lots.
In
..... 5, 1972
Goeglc 1'1 .R eady -Mi K Co.,
excellent
neighborhood.
Healing.
Sltndlngs
Help
Wanted
Mlddl&lt;port, Ohio.
·' ' '
$6,900.
.
TNm
Day Number 992·2550 ·
Pis.
6·30.ttc
While
Glove
PROPERTY
Is
moving.
To
buy
D. G. Plnnetteo
16 WYNAN'S
We
.have
24 hr. emergency
INVENTORY SALE
Maintenance Service, State's
or sell, contact us today.
Rawlings Dodge
8
sen
ice.
Largest Clt~nlng Contractor,
Hanry 0. Cleland, Rnllor
King Builders
8
Real Estate For Sale
992-5803
742-3947
Clearance
now accepting applications
·OHice 992-2259
Evelyn's Grocery
6
992-3898
742-4761
for work at New Haven, W.
Residence 992-2568
Larry' a Ashland
6
Buy An·v Fuel Oil
We are fully Insured
Va.,
5
p.m.
to
8:30
p.m.,
1·11 ·31c
Nlelgs Mob lit Homes
~
Monday thru Friday. An
Teem High Game
HEATER
equal oppori1Jnlly employer .
NICE 2-story home with full
Evelyn's Grocery 835· D. G.
Phone .c85-7531 collect.
Plnnelln 750; t,arry's Ashland
basement) 2 lots, new forced
'
1-9-6tc
air furnace. Near Pomeroy.
728. '
POMEROY
Ttam High Serlos - -:---~-.,....--Elementary School. Phon .
200 Gallons Fuel 011 When
992-7284
to s.ee.
Evelyn'• Grocery 2176; 0. G.
You Buy Any Siegler Hiator ·
HOME &amp; AUTO
Wanted To Buy
~ ·tnnettes 217~ ; King Bulldors
Thru
Jan.
15.
~--=----::=-~-11...:·
7
-trc
2106.
FURNITURE, Round O.k
992-2094
Broker
Ind. High "Game - Martha OLD
HOUSE . PhOne 992-7394.
I'OMUOY ..
tables,
Brass
beds.
dishes,
110
Mechanic
Street
606 E. Main Po.meroy
Nnh 190; Charlotte Willford
1-13-6tc
""',w.
clock&amp;, and -or complete
_ ~omeroy, Ohio
_ otl·llll .
Ill; Martha Nash 175.
households. Write Nl. D.
Ind. High Series - Martha
HOUSE. 1642 Lincoln Heights.
Miller, Rl. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
OLDtM HUME
SUPPLIES
Nash 528 ; Julia Boyles 475 ;
Call Danny Thompson, 992.
Call 992-6271. .
' VACUUM CLEANER. Electro
3 bedrooms. bath,' large living
2196.
Jean Warner -169.
and
12-17-Hc
Hygiene New Demonstrator
7-18-ttc
and dining. Garage. Nice lot.
has all cleaning attachments ::-::-:-=~::--:----~-Only $10,000.00.
plus
the
new
Electro
Suds
tor
USED
GUITAR:
any
condition
.
3
BEDROOM
ranch
type
home,
4 BEDROOMS
"Do not marvel at this; for Will re.flnish and restring If shampooing carpet. Only Arbaugh Add ition, Tuppers Nice living,
dining and break- Stop In and See ' Our
the hour 'f l coming when all necessary. Call &gt;992-3214.
$27.50 cash price 'or terms
Plains. All new with total
fast nook. Gas forced air
Floor Display.
who· are in the tombs will
available. Phone 992·56~1 .
l·l2-31c
electric and central air
furnace. · Double Garage .
· hear his v o ice and come
1-12-6tc conditioning, bath and 'I• tully
$14,500.00. .
fOrth, tho&amp;e who hove done WANTED to buy. Herdetly's
carpeted, full basement,
RENOVATEP
garage ln basement See by, 7 rodms~ bath, gas 1 furnace,
'good, to the resurrection of
Historical and Geographical AU~TION, Saturday, January
paneling. 3 bedrooms II x 17.
15th, 11 a. m. I have sold my . appointment, phone 992-2196
Entyclopedla Illustrated,
U/e, and tho It who hove
or992-3585.
Danny
Thompson
.
Garage.
'I• acre. Only
farm
located
llf7
miles
east
of
outline
map
and
containing
dolie etlil, to the re&amp;urrection
Financing available.
$11,000.00.
.
SOlem Canter on Stale Route
of jtulgment."-John 5:28, history of Meigs County, 124.
12-30-Hc
67
ACRES
Will
sell
the
following
· published 1883 by H. H.
29.
3 bedroom house. bath, furnace, ·
per;ona! property: N9 Ford
Hardesty and Co .• Publishers.
I""
drilled well.· Barn, garage. From the largest
lractor, gQOd condition, 10 fl . SIX ROOM house, 133 Butternut
Write Oneita M. Hullon, 301
Ava.
Contact
Ed
Hedrick,
2137
Small stream. Some .flmber. Bulldozer Radiator to
farm
trailer,
roto
tiller,
Kenilworth Dr .. Akron, Ohio
Deming deep well pump, 2 Wadsworth Drive, Columbus, · Only $9,500.00 THIS MONTH. Smallest' Heater Core.
44313.
The ·si.tion
, 114 ACRES
lawn mowers, , 20 ln. gas Ohio, phone 237- 433~.
1·13-6tc
Ntltltn Blgg1
range, push type rotary ---:-.,------'---..:."...:·2:.:1 ·trc . Callie farm . 2 'barns, good
Rtdlllor
Speclollsl
fences. ' s room house. beth,
garden tool, ~ screw jacks.
For Rent
pipe VIH, pipe fillings, ~ FOR · SALE by owner. We'll · !breed air furnace . Only
118,000.00.
electric
motors, .chain bin- mlsa our home, but It's too
2 BEO.RClONi mObile home, 12 x ders, t•ock
large
tor
elderly
'i:f,le.
If's a
. WE HAVE 32
chlin,,
fires
,
60, tdulll , only. Phorie 992. Implement ••ls, rotlt block
modern
brick,
3
rooms,
2
PROPERTIES
FOR SALE
. To
5443.
.
!'11. 992·2174
.
baths, toll basement, central
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
and line, oil cans, e cotle&lt;ltion
:.
'·
1·11-.trc . or hand· tools and many Items
heating and 1lr conditioning, •
ASSOCIATE
u·PHOLSTERING SERVICE~
992-3325 H2-2378
no) illltd. Roy Slant, owner. .carpeted, heated swlmmlnQ
NEW 2-BEOROOM, ~ouble
Terms: Cash. Not ruponsible
pool, largo marble patio,
l-9·61c ·complete selocllon of fabrics
and vinyl I~ choose from .
wide, mobile home on tot In
large landscaped tot. ~rice In ·
·.
· .·
for occldtnts. J,.unch, 11rved.
Pick· up end delivery. Slater
Syre~ult . Completely iurfillies. Term a. 719 McCulloch POMEROY 5 room house and
Bradford Auction Co., Ai• C.
Upholstering, Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
nlshld. Phone 992·24&gt;1\ after s
Rd., .Pt. Pleasant, W. Va. Ph.
bath, full basement. Phone
Bradford, Manager ; C. C.
,P.m.
4
phone 992-3617.
"304-675-U .
992-3919 or 992·2729.
Bradford, Auctioneer.
12-27-301p
1·9-6tc
1-13-ltc
1·11·31p

BRIDGE

HE GOT

NEVER
BEFORE

-

.A

GAIN .-

1971 DODGE

~~,.---~-~-

I ( ( f '( (

r

·-f

I ( f ( ( f ( (

. ._

f f f f /

z

1-13

JIM'S SI)(-FtVG, TOM'S.S1 K· FOU~,
AN~ TON¥'S

HOT!.

StX•StX

..

1·/3

1969 Chevy II Nova 2 dr............!1695

$()(

V-B engine, automatic trans .• p. steering, factory air
conditioned, good w-w tires, radio, dark green finish with
spotless Interior.
:

WEL':J 5un.ER 1
WHAT DO')QU

'THINK?

TRUCK BUYS

1966 CHEVROLET............S1G95
2. Ton 84" · cab to axle · 292 cu. ln. engine. Good 82Sx70
l&gt;res~ 2speed r. axle, solid cab &amp; was used on paved roads.

1955 CHEVROLEL ............$495
~~~n H. Duty 84" C.A.• 825 tires, 2 speed, rear axle, V-8·

1964
CHEVROLET;
.........
.
..
'

..

_._ .

'll .Ton with 8 fl.

~
..-_· ' . .
utllit\1 bOdy. Runs ouf good.

·H lo..t

I

.,
.
..

-~ ~

· • .f

"H

;

~f

I SIIID, A !'Ef.lf.l¥

:; ;

~omeroy MotQr·.

Fa&lt; 'I?Jii!.
1'.o&lt;.XMf'S I

Your Chevy Dealer
· Open Eves. Til&amp;

Pomeroy

Lirtu ORPHAN ANNIE

.

·I!)()
W~Re

RIGHT
AS
UsuAL,
ASP I

c ]'{'{

FOUR NEW HOMES
OPEN 'FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN Ml DOLE PORT
'
NO MONEY DOWN
.
100 PCT. FINANCING.AVAtLABLE
A 3 bedroom 116,900.00 home can be purchased with a
monthly payment a slow as $65.00 tor a family wllh ·a base
salary or $5,000.00 and three children. 711• Pet. annual
percentage rate.

~lYMID~;"'-' ~c_l,., _,J,..,..

; ~ OE:R:\L

8;.\hl ;{

1. lrnpu-

lOV('l' 'S

d&lt;'nt&lt;'

chniCt•
4.1. Bm·Q'

lkdar&lt;&gt;d
1. '" Kubla

l·ouisiam•
r----.--V~E:-S-,~J-IS-T-•11.

VE~ICL.E

TRACKS
ONl.V OME SET OF
FOOTP!:IINTS TO THE
I-lOUSE.

lacls
9. Slor&lt;'
fodd er

UNUSUAl.
'BOUT 'E.R.

CALL
BILL NELSON,992-3657
HILTON WOLFE,f49.3211
TOM CROW, 992-2580
DALE DUTTON, 992·1534

Atlanlit

·

LIKE ANV
O"(~ER NIC:E, 15. Galli&lt;·
ORDINARY
fri&lt;•nd
LITTLE WOMAN. 16. Swiss
-NAWTl-liN'

{ootwc~\1'

17. llndn·ss&lt;•d
hid &lt;&gt;
18. Wa s ~~
t&gt;tm&lt;lid~l ll'

19. llan l-!in J:'
luo.o;&lt;·ly, a:\

sin~.:

the

r ... , ~Nt:.r·" ••••''

to the Nile 10. More
•profound
2. Form('.l'
'!111'xi&lt;'an
16. Act'l'l·
pr('side&gt;nt
C'l'atcd
20. Chinuwr
3. Swcel
young
dirl
t hin g •
22. Scruritr
' ful'
·
4. Haggarcl
paymt•nt
novrl

sized

26. Finally
27. 111110('(' 1l l

28. Ballroom

EXPERT
Wh!!el Alignment

. The
Orchid Room

-GUARANTEE o:-,
Phone 992-2094

Pruneroy Home &amp;Auto

OFFICE

Open BTll5
.Mondoy thru Sttur$,y
'!!'E. Main~ Pomeroy, o.

FURNITURE

0

Make reservations for your
private parties, banquets, .
special occasions.
'
Ideal for meeting place with or without kitchen
prlvlleget.
Individual Catering
Will seat up to 150 people.

$5.55

c.,..,,M.,.

I

-

I I

29. Miss ~I;I \ '
30. Pnlll'&lt;' d ·

32. F l'l'IH.: h

painter

'THI5 IS t&gt;JE:I'THEft VERY

38. Wra lh

39. Gcrw r:1·
lion

~

~•tt•r o~ Powel
~In
.. ~llftl-Prii.a·~

"'"•tor

39...~imilar

·

MIYIIt

1

With leftflt, IYtrt
ht1t. No ~ot 1111111 I

no . · ovtrdrylno: 1.1
Ll,nt
......

!'"'. Mnh
..-,illar.

(42·4111

.

.

·. o u1ll

. •wc.r"'
.:
•.,.,,.. I
c:- :_RQD ~RNITURE~ ..'· ; ~ 1
,

I

· L.-'-..1---'---1"-..1--

( 'ltYI'TO\!{ IO'l'E - Here's how to wo1·k ~ t:

ZNA

), V ,Z P II

X N Q K H 0 P '1' L Q S

o IJ C H I' 0 K 1' l'
'

N II

C Z CTV NR

\'cstC!rday's &lt;:rn&gt;toquolc: JIESOLV E 'J'O PERFORM WHAT
YOU ...OUG!ll'; l'k:RrOJIM Wl'I'IIOU T } "A IL WHAT YOU
JIII:~OL\'.E.-DENJAMI!i l 'RAN]a.J.N

Rlltl•f!C!.!9.:ijl_

'

I? HE IN?

ODt: Al'l'VO. -- Tl'Qllll UHQEN

.j

I ,

HELLO,CH\ICK?

I AAVE 'Ttl SI'EAK
ltJ M~ ATTORNE~ .

t; l' \' .1 C 11 E 1. 11 Y 0 N

. · ---- ·-L

Arnolll Arata ·

(;ell fHiiJ lljl~r

,.

hiJ amtlr i1

Ji'"'h•d"'-A... ENStONER

A Cryplogram Quotalion

. •·Ji~&amp;·l~ .

rn-rn

PritUe Sllll RGUNSWIIIIiln

~QIWt"fl

AXYili,JIAI\XR
18 I, ON !l •• ·~ I. I. O,l\' .
. On&lt;• letter simply &lt;lands for another. In· ihb •~mple A is
u«•&lt;l for the thre" L',, X Cor the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apo."'ti·pphl's, the 1 ngth and formation of the word::; are all
bin is. };arh clay lhc rode lcllers arc diiTercn!.
. ,

"•loofHtll

SMITH NELSON .
MOTORS. INC.

~~iii.if.~·~~- ;;•uc:::':::eo:::ted~.by the above cartoon.

Yelllenlay'~

llWiiSlll't'

I~AII. Y

el~lt41etten

Jumbl•" RODEO PIANO liCE'S ERMINE

:IS. Pu~on
attire
Soreness
28. Nervouo

a1·ca

'I

•~n•e

Now
the
to rnii,; IUrprlae uwwer, ..

(Au•er• 1omorro'WI

S7.1nquirin~·

·~o~ ..~~r.- L•Lvl:.'

·
ctothfl,

I

Jilm

36. Sianwsc

IPttl!t optrltlon .

Dryer~

I"

HC' slcm

35. Some

•

Choice ·•I wtlto·
Auto .
,t tm p1 .
1

~ s~rround

'l

34. Vm·nbh
_ ing1·rdit•nt

1

,,,Mtyt
e~,••' lir ..
Autom•tlcs

!
t::::::Ll:::=i·I I I I
.'IHOI'IN

IC

GOOD NOR VE!(y BAD~0, Rt:PEAI II/

III

- [ ]

creation
33. 1'fw ~U illM

I 992-5786

r

II

I• ugh
31.ilushi&lt;•ll
Hamlnt•tt

Phone

992-3975

'-'•....&amp;.~.;.:;-...__:.._.....,

j'

POliRC [

danct·:-

"1'l:ll' Com·

pleat - "
23. l!nus&lt;i:ll ·
prrsonur
thin g
24. "El - ,""

• ~".!.:.~.~.:.!.:'"''...

25. Under-

a Ol' Sl

' SR.

I

1. .I\ rca f1·om

thr

I D(JNUP

'carty
8. Discus·

lknaring
words

Unacramblethcae four Juriiblea,
one Jettu to each square, to
form' four ordinary words.

luuk ,
IIOWN

riV&lt;' l'
~c:ll....-.J...-!---1----l2. t:niv. in

NO

. Virgil B.
TEAFORD

'

42. Doctrint•s
H.1'ook a

Kha n"

13. Nu( thl·n•

Sale{

, I

40. Music

ACROS~

·'~'' "'"~ ')

LDeal Bowling

OffYOUiDW.

,_..,

Ton 8' Stepsloe, V-8 engine. H. · Duty 15" tires. std.
trans .. H. Duly sprgs., radio, low mileage, 1 owner unit.

ROOFING

WIP0/1390

· I 'M lORN '

~NTWO
ALTE~NA1WES;
OIL~.

3~

==-:-- --

You

MENTION!

1968 CHEVROLET............s1695

&amp;PWMBING

Th.t Lilten.

I Fl'RIOOT T'

.---~

LiSSONS!

Business Services

~~::::::::::::=:

/EASY

NO R6RJNPS!

LI'L DETAIL.

GUARANTEES YA'ILL I

LEARN 'T' 51&lt;1 IN

1969 Chev. Impala' Cpe. ............$2095

Th~

------

HMMM I
THERE'S ONE

0\JI't liXCI..USIVE
MET !-lOP

307 V-Bengine, 3 SP"ed floor shirt, spotless clean blk. vlnyl'·l
Interior, dark blue finish, w-w tires, like new. radio.
1 owner car.

------

SIEGLER
GET FREE

-'·-~

Lo'N mileage by.local owner with lots or warranty tell,
factory air conditioned. V-8 engine, turbo-hydromallc, p.
steering, gold body, sandalwood vinyl top, radio, vinyl
Interior, good w-w Illes. This car Is loaded with extras. ·

,.,~(!Bilf Hatt1~

ALL
&amp;

A. 6ALE6 Lic:ENSE • .__..,

1970 Chevelle Mali.bu HT epe. ..... $2995 .

·MlLLER

Cleland
llealty

HE JI..IST GETS MORE
CUSTOMERS' WHEN PEOPLE
TI11NK THE GOODS ARE

tires, radio &amp; other extras, white finish, clean Interior. , .I

$3795

Daily Sentinel

HE~ CLEAN, BE~. ljE ~T
THEM HONESTLY AND HE~ 601'

4 Or., V-8 engine, automatic tra~s .. P.S., factory air. gOod

..

Aluminum
Sheets

USED

1970 Dodge Polara .................... $2395

RAWLI~GS
DE~ENDABLE CITY

For Sale

. '

. "'2795

$3195

1971 DODGE

PURPLE HEART

350 V-8 engine, automatic.
power
steering
console,
beautiful dark green, finished
with green vinyl roof. Less than
22,000 miles by local owner,
radio, new w~w _tires . A sharp
model priced to please.

Sale

''

I (

1970 Camaro Coupe

1971 DODGE' $3595

1

f

1 I (

-

brown vinyl, lop, factory air ·
conditioned, V-8 engine with
turbo hydromatic, power
· steering, E. clock,' P,B.• radio,
Rally wheels . with w-w tires.
Fri.&amp; rear guards. Retail $4155.
Co.· official ' car &amp; specially
priced. ·

-1971 MATADOR ~3595

'

r

WH' I t.,; IT 'THI&gt;.T
.
'SPECIAL 13UtLETI'-!5,..

-­

I

1971 Chevelh!
•3595 .
Malibu Cpe., sandalwooa with

c::------

'i

·t"l

'

1971 DODGE

'

.

I ( (/ fl I l (( ' '

il sten f1r

NEVER

- --.,.----

r.tr.r~~~----~------- AN' A.

TWO GOLD
STARS··

.

i

I I

'

.

l

1 ' ' I

'

Notice

.

.-

\

Sentinii Ciassifieds .Get Action'! Sentinel ·Cl-assifieds .Get Res
OlcJManZ .
Zings'em

'

(0 1972 Kina: Features Svnilic~te., lne.)
''

/

�••
' '

•
· ~filii~ .........

···-·.--y u Jan 1:1. ltn

.'

"

WANT ADS
For .Rent
For Sale
INFORMATION
DEADLINE$
GUN SHOOT, Friday, jln, 1~. 6
4 ROOM houst. both, storo!!" LONG BOTTOM - Five room
Day
Before
· p.m. Rltl,. American L19ion ' 5 • P.M.
room, furnace on hard road m
house, bath, business. or
Publlcttlon
f'&lt;&gt;rlland . Couple or small
Of! Milt Hill Road. Assortld
storage
building - 16.500.
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
mM!s.
family, 540 a month. Phone , Phone 985·3529.
992-7382.
. . '
Cancellation ·&amp; Correcllpns
12·19-301c
Will be accwpted until 9 a.m. for
l-11' 31p
Dloy of Publication
~.-~.,...
--~
TROPICAL FISH, fancy
IIIEGULATIONS
NICE
trailer,
1
bedroom, Ideal
guppies. angels and breeders,
·WIN AT
The Publisher l"tsarves the
for couple, 10 mileS north of
Belles and supplies. Phone
~
right to edit or re/ect any ads
f'&lt;&gt;meroy , $65 a month . Phone
992-5~43.
deemed object onal. The · 992·7479.
12-30-lfc
publisher will not be
1-4-tfc
responsible tor more than one
' '
lncorret:l Insertion.
GOOD hay. Phone 992·3658.
1
BEDROOM
trailer
apartRATES
l-11 -61c
ments, Ideal for couples .
FOI" Want Ad Service
Contact McClure's Dairy Isle,
s.cents per Word one Insertion
992-524 or 992.3436.
Minimum Charge 7Sc
1·9·12!C Auto Sales
12 cents ·per wori:t three
N01t111 (D)
IS
Lowest prices ever listed . on · the
consecutive insertions.
1968 MERCURY Monterey, .4
.AQ43
18 cents per WOI"d six con- BEDROOM . and 2. bedroom
dr .• v.s, power brak.es, power
following 1971 models in stock now;·
mobile homes. Adults only. . steering/
secutive lnltrllons .
• 74
radip - $975. Phone
·
Phone
992-5592.
·
.
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
tA6
985-3927,. Chest.,.., Ofllo.
12-19-Hc
ads
and
ads
paid
within
10
.Q)0852
'
.. 1-12-4tp
days.
·
\UST
EAST
TRAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile 1961 FIAT,' 4 doo
CARD OF THANKS
. r, extra good
.J965
• Void
Court, Rt. 124, Syracuse, Ohio
&amp; OBITUARY
shape,
48;000
miles . Carl
Challenger 2 Dr. H.T.• '31a' V-8, torqueflite, p..KJ952
•10863
992-2951 .
'
suo
lor
50 WOfd ()'llnlmum.
Findling, Alfred.
st., radio, w-s-w. new car J never titled, full
tQJIOS
+87432
~-2-trc
Each additional word 2c.
) ·12-3tp
•Void
•J976
BLIND ADS
warranty from date of sale.
Additional 2Sc Cha ~ge per FURNISHEO and unfurnished
SOUTH
Sticker Price '$361i.6S.
apartments. Close to school. 1970 W-30 OLOSMOBfLE 4&gt;12,
Advertisement.
• Kl08 72
Phone
992-5434.
aufomatlc, factory stereo
OFFICIE HOURS
.AQ
tape. Lots otextras. Like new ..
10·18-Hc
8:
30
a.m.
ro
5:00
p.m.
Dally,
t K9
Call
992·2«1 after 5 p.m.
a.m.
to
12
:00
Noon
8:30
.AK43
Saturday.
11,-28-trc
Coronet Custom 4 Dr .• '318' V-8,-torqueflite, p.Both vulnerable
1911
CHEVY
Vega,
with
st .• factory air, tinted glass, radio, drivers ed.
\\'est North Eut South
Notice
studded snow tires mounted,
14
Pass 1•
unit. full warranty.
·
plus· two , extra·· regular tires,
Pa,. 2.
Pw 4N.T. KO!iCOT KOSMETICS and wigs FO.. Sale
Sl,700.00; 'Also Teac stereo
Sticker Price 54117.80.
Paso 5.
Poss 5 N.T. · tor sale. Brown's. Phone 992· 30 IN. GAS range, good concassette
player-recorder
for
5113.
Paso 6.
Pw 6.
use with home stereo system
dition, Chrome trim clock and
12-31-trc
Poss Pus
Pw
·$50; Phone ·742·3887 or 742back· light' Phone 992-3059.
from 9:30 a.m. to 2:30
4«7
Opening lead-t Q
·l·ll-31c
ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT ...
p."m. and after 5 p.m.
overweight ladles. teens and
4 Dr.. Station Wagon, '360' V-8, automatic, p.l-12-6tp
By Olwald &amp; James Jacoby . men lnteretled In a Weight STEREO-Radio Console, 4 ---~-..st.,
p.-br., radio. w-s-w. air cond., new car.
speed lntermlxe&lt;l · changer,
Watchers ( R) Class in
'
r
Sticker Price $4497.20.
dual volume control, 4 '70 CHEVELLE SS, 396, ex.
Old man Z was back at
Pomeroy write : Weight
cell~nt condition, many ex,
sp~ker
sound
system,
lpvely
·
Watchers
·
(
R1,
l!f63
Section
the club after a long ab·
tras, ' call
614-992-2251
Walnut finish . Balance. 169.5~.
Rd.. Cincinnati. Ohio ~5237 .
sence. He got right into a
evenings.
·.
'
Use our budge( ter,.,s.··:C.ii·
·- 10·3-Hc
rubber l)tidge game w i t h
l-7-61p
992-7085.
.
' '
b o t h sides vulnerable and SAVE up to one hair. Bring your
·
1·i2-6tc. ·,65 CHEVY Station Wagon, I
Polar a Custom 4 Dr. H. T.~ '360' V-8,
promptly blasted to slam .
sick TV to Chuck's TV shop,
.phone
992-6256
after
5
p.m.
t~rqueflite, p.-st .• p.-br., lactory air, tinted
Not that six spades wasn't
lSI Butternut Ave., Pomeroy. STEREO. Early Amefican
l-9-6tp
style, AM-FM t1rnbinallon; .1 ' •:
a sound contract. More
Phone 992·5080.
glass. radio, demonstrator. ful.l warranty,.
'
speaker sound 'system, 4· ,.
sclentlflc bidding might have
11·21 -trc
Sticker Price $4893.20.
··.
speed automatic changer : 1967 VOLKSWAGEN Beetle,
brought him to seven, but it
good
shape,
S995.
Phone
742Balance $79 .67 . Use our
was weU he stopped at six. WANT WORK at hoine ad·
4211 or 742-4931.
budget
terms.' Call 992-7085.
S i n c e East held aU four
dress!".)' and sturtlng en l,- 13-3tc
1-lHtc
clubs,. the
. re was no way to
velopes Rush •If-stamped
envelope to F. Uribe, Box 36,
brlngllome · more than 12
Albany, Ohio, ~710.
TWIN
NEEDLE
Sewing
.Coronet .Custom 4 DSW, '383' V-8, T-flite, p.tricks. The slightest care1-6-tfc Machine 1971 Model in walnut Mobile Homes For
st., p.-br .• w-s-w, fattory air. tinted glass, less
stand. All features built-In to
lessness In pia~ would have
60X12.
2-bedroom,
all-electric,
than
5,000 miles, balance of warranty.
left him one trtck short.
STILL Target Shoot, Sunday, make fancy designs and do
air
conditioned,
8x20fl.
Porch
.Original Sticker $4728.35.
. .
"Shades of R. F. Foster,"
Jan . 16, I p. m., Rutland Gun stret.ch sewing . Also but.
and . aluminum awning,
tonholes, blind hems, etc.
muttered Z. " Old hands alClub on New Lima Rd.
a luminum skirting, com .
cash price or terms
ways repeat for me."
1-13-3tc $43.35
pletely setup. Be·autlful
See Emerson Jones, Pearl Ash, Hilton Wolfe,
available. Phone 992-5641.
IQ:catlon. Owner leaving sfate·.
After •that Z went
up
with
v
F
w
G
h
1-12-6tc
Wallace Amberger. Dick Rawlings.
· · · uns oot, noon, SunPhone 949-4892 or 992-5272.
d ummy s ace of diamonds
day. Jan. 16, Broad Run Gun
1·10-trc
and led a trump. E a s t
Club, New Haven, sponsored NORWEGIAN Elkhound pups.
Phone 992 ·2~2 .
showed out and said, "Just
by Post 9926, Mason, W. Va.
1-12-6tc
as I thought."
. -~------~·-13_-3tc
He took his king Of trumps SEWING in my home. Will
and led the seven. West covmake drapes, cushions .
ered w I t h the nine. Z rePhone 992·6879.
turned to his hand with the
l-3-121p
king of diamonds and Jed
the eight of trumps. It did INCOME TAX service, dally
992·2151 or 992-2152 MIDDLEPORT
36" X 23" X.Od9
except Sunday, evenings by
12'
•
14'
•
24'
•
WiDE
not matter what West did.
Mrs. Wanda
Z wu able to pick up · the appointment.
Eblin, Laurel Cliff Road, 1
trumps- without I o s I n g a
mile west of Meigs County
trick.
Fairground on Rl. 7 bypass.
Business Services
Then he started on ·clubs. Phorie-W2·l272.
'
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED CONTRA'CTOR, Dry Wall
1-3-JOic
He played bla king and ace
mfiJ"ashlngton ' Biv~.
REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446· · Finisher and• painting .
and 1 a.v e a club trick to
Belpre, Ohio
4782. Gallipolis. John Russell,
Richard I. Dubbeld, phone
USED OfFSET PLATES
East. After that he was able SHOOTING Match, Salurday,
Owner &amp; Operator.
.
742-5825.
HAVE
to d "la.c a r d the queen of Jan. 15, at the Racine Planing
5-12-trc
I-I0-51c
FOR THE BEST deal in a new
MANY USES
h e a r t s on dummy's fifth
Mill at 6 p.m. Factory choke
or used mObile home, try AUTOMOBILE insurance been =7
sE=P=T::IC~ta-n-:-k-s-c le-a-ne-d,..."""'M
"'IIIer
club.
guns only. Assorted meat .
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
cancelled?
Lost
your
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
We wonder If many re811- Sponsored by the Syracuse
Kanauga, Ohio.
operafor's license? Call 992 - 662·3035.
12-17-90tc
ers would have taken Z's · Fire Dept.
2966.
2-12-ffc
1·12-3tc
precautions. He would lose a
8 for Sl.OO
;i;fOBI
L
E
HOMES
.
Large
6-ll-tfc
trump trick if East held au GUN SH~OT, Forked Run
HARRISON'S TV and Antenna
seleclion8-10-t2wldes, llo4 ::8A--:CK_
H_
O_
E_A_N
_D
_
O_
O_
Z_
E_R_w_~k .·
Service. Phone 992-2522.
four but In that case there
Sportsman Club, Sunday ,
bedrooms, bank repos and
s
~
6-10-ltc
epllc tanks installed. George
was very little chance that . Jan. 16, 12 noqn.
,.:
ed ' some pracII co II Y new.
us
!Bill)
Pullins.
Phone
992-2478.
East would also hold aU four
l-12-3fc
Save u~ to If• . R. A. or Don
·clubs.
Miller, 705 Farson Street, -:-:=:::-:-:---::-:--:::-=---4·_
25-trc
PUPPIES lo give away to gQOd
tHlWSPAPII INTilPltSI ASSN.)
Belpre, . Ohio by Kaiser O' DELL WHEEL allghment
home. Phone 949·3621.
Aluminum, phone 423·9531 ·
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
1·12-3tc
1.4. 121 c
Complete front end service,
111 Court St.
tune up and brake service.
Wheels
balanced
elec .Pomeroy, Ohio
Real Estate For Sale .
The bidding hu been:
WEEKEND revival starling
" onically.
All
work
West
North
Eut
S h
Jan. 13 at 7:30 p.m. at Boring
uaranteed.
Reasonable
,
out
Chapel Church, Vales Mills
ales. Phone 992-3213.
3•
Paso
4•
Rd., Vinton Count~ . The COAL, limestone. Excelsior
5•
Pus
Pus
?
Joyfulalrn . alnglng nightly,
Salt Works, E. Ma in St.,
7-27-trc
WEATHER
You, South, hold:
Bissell Brothers .slnglng Jan.
f'&lt;&gt;meroy . Phone 992-3891.
C. BRADFORD, Auct ioneer
•Q13Z •Au tAIOZ •An
15th, Sunday afternoon ser4-9-trc
vices at 2 p.m. featurlntrthe . ::-::-:-::---.....:.._ __
Complefe Service
CONSTRUCTION
Phone 949-3821
Whot do you do now?
Bil!ell family, Joyfulalres POODLE puPJlles, Silver Toy,
' Main
Racine, Ohio
608 East
A-Doable """ toke the sure
and othero. Everyone Is
Perk view Kennels, Phone 992CQ.
Crill Bradford
1111111 profit
welcome. Evangellal Rev . 5443.
POMERO.Y
5-1-trc
8-15-ttc RACINE RURAL-.' 35 wOoded
TODAY'S QUESTION
John Elswick.
l-11-31c
240 Lincoln 51.
acres, frontage 6n both sides SE WING MACHINES. Repair
You do double. Your partner· - - - - - - - - Middleport, Ohio
1h YR. OLD good McCullough
1
of
the
road,
pond,
about
5
runs In five IIPOdes and East
all makes. 992-2284.
Dbl Anltlony Plumbing
250 chain saw - $75; 2 yr. old
acres level. Going at less than ' service,
The
Fabric
Shop, Pomeroy. W~ have t complete Home
bida six heuts. What do you do
more pony - $15 ; phone 742·
SlOO.OO
per
acre.
Authorized Singer Sales and
now?
Lost
5253.
DEXTER- 8 rooms, bath, 2 Service.
Maintenance Service the
We Sharpen Scissors.
1-11 -31c
porches, 1 enclosed, 2
year around: No matter wha1
GREY AND WHITE kitten,
3-29.trc
with flea collar in vicinity of BAND SAW with or without . garages. Large storage
your need. Complete roof or
building, great ror a family . READY-MIX CONCRETE de- spouting
McClure's Dloiry Isle. Phone
repair. Interior or
motor. May be seen at Cer- $8,900.
992-28U.
. '
livered
right
to
your
project.
exterior
carpentry.
Ceiling
Service Station, POMEROY- See this 1'12 story
tified
l-13-3tc
Fast
dnd
easy
.
Free
tile
•nd
Paneling
and
Siding.
f'&lt;&gt;meroy
.
Phone
992-9981.
frame, 6 rooms , 2 bedrooms,
Etrly Bird LNgue
estimates . Phone 992-3284 . Complete Plumbing &amp;
l-11
-31p
part
basement,
2
nice
lots.
In
..... 5, 1972
Goeglc 1'1 .R eady -Mi K Co.,
excellent
neighborhood.
Healing.
Sltndlngs
Help
Wanted
Mlddl&lt;port, Ohio.
·' ' '
$6,900.
.
TNm
Day Number 992·2550 ·
Pis.
6·30.ttc
While
Glove
PROPERTY
Is
moving.
To
buy
D. G. Plnnetteo
16 WYNAN'S
We
.have
24 hr. emergency
INVENTORY SALE
Maintenance Service, State's
or sell, contact us today.
Rawlings Dodge
8
sen
ice.
Largest Clt~nlng Contractor,
Hanry 0. Cleland, Rnllor
King Builders
8
Real Estate For Sale
992-5803
742-3947
Clearance
now accepting applications
·OHice 992-2259
Evelyn's Grocery
6
992-3898
742-4761
for work at New Haven, W.
Residence 992-2568
Larry' a Ashland
6
Buy An·v Fuel Oil
We are fully Insured
Va.,
5
p.m.
to
8:30
p.m.,
1·11 ·31c
Nlelgs Mob lit Homes
~
Monday thru Friday. An
Teem High Game
HEATER
equal oppori1Jnlly employer .
NICE 2-story home with full
Evelyn's Grocery 835· D. G.
Phone .c85-7531 collect.
Plnnelln 750; t,arry's Ashland
basement) 2 lots, new forced
'
1-9-6tc
air furnace. Near Pomeroy.
728. '
POMEROY
Ttam High Serlos - -:---~-.,....--Elementary School. Phon .
200 Gallons Fuel 011 When
992-7284
to s.ee.
Evelyn'• Grocery 2176; 0. G.
You Buy Any Siegler Hiator ·
HOME &amp; AUTO
Wanted To Buy
~ ·tnnettes 217~ ; King Bulldors
Thru
Jan.
15.
~--=----::=-~-11...:·
7
-trc
2106.
FURNITURE, Round O.k
992-2094
Broker
Ind. High "Game - Martha OLD
HOUSE . PhOne 992-7394.
I'OMUOY ..
tables,
Brass
beds.
dishes,
110
Mechanic
Street
606 E. Main Po.meroy
Nnh 190; Charlotte Willford
1-13-6tc
""',w.
clock&amp;, and -or complete
_ ~omeroy, Ohio
_ otl·llll .
Ill; Martha Nash 175.
households. Write Nl. D.
Ind. High Series - Martha
HOUSE. 1642 Lincoln Heights.
Miller, Rl. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
OLDtM HUME
SUPPLIES
Nash 528 ; Julia Boyles 475 ;
Call Danny Thompson, 992.
Call 992-6271. .
' VACUUM CLEANER. Electro
3 bedrooms. bath,' large living
2196.
Jean Warner -169.
and
12-17-Hc
Hygiene New Demonstrator
7-18-ttc
and dining. Garage. Nice lot.
has all cleaning attachments ::-::-:-=~::--:----~-Only $10,000.00.
plus
the
new
Electro
Suds
tor
USED
GUITAR:
any
condition
.
3
BEDROOM
ranch
type
home,
4 BEDROOMS
"Do not marvel at this; for Will re.flnish and restring If shampooing carpet. Only Arbaugh Add ition, Tuppers Nice living,
dining and break- Stop In and See ' Our
the hour 'f l coming when all necessary. Call &gt;992-3214.
$27.50 cash price 'or terms
Plains. All new with total
fast nook. Gas forced air
Floor Display.
who· are in the tombs will
available. Phone 992·56~1 .
l·l2-31c
electric and central air
furnace. · Double Garage .
· hear his v o ice and come
1-12-6tc conditioning, bath and 'I• tully
$14,500.00. .
fOrth, tho&amp;e who hove done WANTED to buy. Herdetly's
carpeted, full basement,
RENOVATEP
garage ln basement See by, 7 rodms~ bath, gas 1 furnace,
'good, to the resurrection of
Historical and Geographical AU~TION, Saturday, January
paneling. 3 bedrooms II x 17.
15th, 11 a. m. I have sold my . appointment, phone 992-2196
Entyclopedla Illustrated,
U/e, and tho It who hove
or992-3585.
Danny
Thompson
.
Garage.
'I• acre. Only
farm
located
llf7
miles
east
of
outline
map
and
containing
dolie etlil, to the re&amp;urrection
Financing available.
$11,000.00.
.
SOlem Canter on Stale Route
of jtulgment."-John 5:28, history of Meigs County, 124.
12-30-Hc
67
ACRES
Will
sell
the
following
· published 1883 by H. H.
29.
3 bedroom house. bath, furnace, ·
per;ona! property: N9 Ford
Hardesty and Co .• Publishers.
I""
drilled well.· Barn, garage. From the largest
lractor, gQOd condition, 10 fl . SIX ROOM house, 133 Butternut
Write Oneita M. Hullon, 301
Ava.
Contact
Ed
Hedrick,
2137
Small stream. Some .flmber. Bulldozer Radiator to
farm
trailer,
roto
tiller,
Kenilworth Dr .. Akron, Ohio
Deming deep well pump, 2 Wadsworth Drive, Columbus, · Only $9,500.00 THIS MONTH. Smallest' Heater Core.
44313.
The ·si.tion
, 114 ACRES
lawn mowers, , 20 ln. gas Ohio, phone 237- 433~.
1·13-6tc
Ntltltn Blgg1
range, push type rotary ---:-.,------'---..:."...:·2:.:1 ·trc . Callie farm . 2 'barns, good
Rtdlllor
Speclollsl
fences. ' s room house. beth,
garden tool, ~ screw jacks.
For Rent
pipe VIH, pipe fillings, ~ FOR · SALE by owner. We'll · !breed air furnace . Only
118,000.00.
electric
motors, .chain bin- mlsa our home, but It's too
2 BEO.RClONi mObile home, 12 x ders, t•ock
large
tor
elderly
'i:f,le.
If's a
. WE HAVE 32
chlin,,
fires
,
60, tdulll , only. Phorie 992. Implement ••ls, rotlt block
modern
brick,
3
rooms,
2
PROPERTIES
FOR SALE
. To
5443.
.
!'11. 992·2174
.
baths, toll basement, central
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
and line, oil cans, e cotle&lt;ltion
:.
'·
1·11-.trc . or hand· tools and many Items
heating and 1lr conditioning, •
ASSOCIATE
u·PHOLSTERING SERVICE~
992-3325 H2-2378
no) illltd. Roy Slant, owner. .carpeted, heated swlmmlnQ
NEW 2-BEOROOM, ~ouble
Terms: Cash. Not ruponsible
pool, largo marble patio,
l-9·61c ·complete selocllon of fabrics
and vinyl I~ choose from .
wide, mobile home on tot In
large landscaped tot. ~rice In ·
·.
· .·
for occldtnts. J,.unch, 11rved.
Pick· up end delivery. Slater
Syre~ult . Completely iurfillies. Term a. 719 McCulloch POMEROY 5 room house and
Bradford Auction Co., Ai• C.
Upholstering, Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
nlshld. Phone 992·24&gt;1\ after s
Rd., .Pt. Pleasant, W. Va. Ph.
bath, full basement. Phone
Bradford, Manager ; C. C.
,P.m.
4
phone 992-3617.
"304-675-U .
992-3919 or 992·2729.
Bradford, Auctioneer.
12-27-301p
1·9-6tc
1-13-ltc
1·11·31p

BRIDGE

HE GOT

NEVER
BEFORE

-

.A

GAIN .-

1971 DODGE

~~,.---~-~-

I ( ( f '( (

r

·-f

I ( f ( ( f ( (

. ._

f f f f /

z

1-13

JIM'S SI)(-FtVG, TOM'S.S1 K· FOU~,
AN~ TON¥'S

HOT!.

StX•StX

..

1·/3

1969 Chevy II Nova 2 dr............!1695

$()(

V-B engine, automatic trans .• p. steering, factory air
conditioned, good w-w tires, radio, dark green finish with
spotless Interior.
:

WEL':J 5un.ER 1
WHAT DO')QU

'THINK?

TRUCK BUYS

1966 CHEVROLET............S1G95
2. Ton 84" · cab to axle · 292 cu. ln. engine. Good 82Sx70
l&gt;res~ 2speed r. axle, solid cab &amp; was used on paved roads.

1955 CHEVROLEL ............$495
~~~n H. Duty 84" C.A.• 825 tires, 2 speed, rear axle, V-8·

1964
CHEVROLET;
.........
.
..
'

..

_._ .

'll .Ton with 8 fl.

~
..-_· ' . .
utllit\1 bOdy. Runs ouf good.

·H lo..t

I

.,
.
..

-~ ~

· • .f

"H

;

~f

I SIIID, A !'Ef.lf.l¥

:; ;

~omeroy MotQr·.

Fa&lt; 'I?Jii!.
1'.o&lt;.XMf'S I

Your Chevy Dealer
· Open Eves. Til&amp;

Pomeroy

Lirtu ORPHAN ANNIE

.

·I!)()
W~Re

RIGHT
AS
UsuAL,
ASP I

c ]'{'{

FOUR NEW HOMES
OPEN 'FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN Ml DOLE PORT
'
NO MONEY DOWN
.
100 PCT. FINANCING.AVAtLABLE
A 3 bedroom 116,900.00 home can be purchased with a
monthly payment a slow as $65.00 tor a family wllh ·a base
salary or $5,000.00 and three children. 711• Pet. annual
percentage rate.

~lYMID~;"'-' ~c_l,., _,J,..,..

; ~ OE:R:\L

8;.\hl ;{

1. lrnpu-

lOV('l' 'S

d&lt;'nt&lt;'

chniCt•
4.1. Bm·Q'

lkdar&lt;&gt;d
1. '" Kubla

l·ouisiam•
r----.--V~E:-S-,~J-IS-T-•11.

VE~ICL.E

TRACKS
ONl.V OME SET OF
FOOTP!:IINTS TO THE
I-lOUSE.

lacls
9. Slor&lt;'
fodd er

UNUSUAl.
'BOUT 'E.R.

CALL
BILL NELSON,992-3657
HILTON WOLFE,f49.3211
TOM CROW, 992-2580
DALE DUTTON, 992·1534

Atlanlit

·

LIKE ANV
O"(~ER NIC:E, 15. Galli&lt;·
ORDINARY
fri&lt;•nd
LITTLE WOMAN. 16. Swiss
-NAWTl-liN'

{ootwc~\1'

17. llndn·ss&lt;•d
hid &lt;&gt;
18. Wa s ~~
t&gt;tm&lt;lid~l ll'

19. llan l-!in J:'
luo.o;&lt;·ly, a:\

sin~.:

the

r ... , ~Nt:.r·" ••••''

to the Nile 10. More
•profound
2. Form('.l'
'!111'xi&lt;'an
16. Act'l'l·
pr('side&gt;nt
C'l'atcd
20. Chinuwr
3. Swcel
young
dirl
t hin g •
22. Scruritr
' ful'
·
4. Haggarcl
paymt•nt
novrl

sized

26. Finally
27. 111110('(' 1l l

28. Ballroom

EXPERT
Wh!!el Alignment

. The
Orchid Room

-GUARANTEE o:-,
Phone 992-2094

Pruneroy Home &amp;Auto

OFFICE

Open BTll5
.Mondoy thru Sttur$,y
'!!'E. Main~ Pomeroy, o.

FURNITURE

0

Make reservations for your
private parties, banquets, .
special occasions.
'
Ideal for meeting place with or without kitchen
prlvlleget.
Individual Catering
Will seat up to 150 people.

$5.55

c.,..,,M.,.

I

-

I I

29. Miss ~I;I \ '
30. Pnlll'&lt;' d ·

32. F l'l'IH.: h

painter

'THI5 IS t&gt;JE:I'THEft VERY

38. Wra lh

39. Gcrw r:1·
lion

~

~•tt•r o~ Powel
~In
.. ~llftl-Prii.a·~

"'"•tor

39...~imilar

·

MIYIIt

1

With leftflt, IYtrt
ht1t. No ~ot 1111111 I

no . · ovtrdrylno: 1.1
Ll,nt
......

!'"'. Mnh
..-,illar.

(42·4111

.

.

·. o u1ll

. •wc.r"'
.:
•.,.,,.. I
c:- :_RQD ~RNITURE~ ..'· ; ~ 1
,

I

· L.-'-..1---'---1"-..1--

( 'ltYI'TO\!{ IO'l'E - Here's how to wo1·k ~ t:

ZNA

), V ,Z P II

X N Q K H 0 P '1' L Q S

o IJ C H I' 0 K 1' l'
'

N II

C Z CTV NR

\'cstC!rday's &lt;:rn&gt;toquolc: JIESOLV E 'J'O PERFORM WHAT
YOU ...OUG!ll'; l'k:RrOJIM Wl'I'IIOU T } "A IL WHAT YOU
JIII:~OL\'.E.-DENJAMI!i l 'RAN]a.J.N

Rlltl•f!C!.!9.:ijl_

'

I? HE IN?

ODt: Al'l'VO. -- Tl'Qllll UHQEN

.j

I ,

HELLO,CH\ICK?

I AAVE 'Ttl SI'EAK
ltJ M~ ATTORNE~ .

t; l' \' .1 C 11 E 1. 11 Y 0 N

. · ---- ·-L

Arnolll Arata ·

(;ell fHiiJ lljl~r

,.

hiJ amtlr i1

Ji'"'h•d"'-A... ENStONER

A Cryplogram Quotalion

. •·Ji~&amp;·l~ .

rn-rn

PritUe Sllll RGUNSWIIIIiln

~QIWt"fl

AXYili,JIAI\XR
18 I, ON !l •• ·~ I. I. O,l\' .
. On&lt;• letter simply &lt;lands for another. In· ihb •~mple A is
u«•&lt;l for the thre" L',, X Cor the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apo."'ti·pphl's, the 1 ngth and formation of the word::; are all
bin is. };arh clay lhc rode lcllers arc diiTercn!.
. ,

"•loofHtll

SMITH NELSON .
MOTORS. INC.

~~iii.if.~·~~- ;;•uc:::':::eo:::ted~.by the above cartoon.

Yelllenlay'~

llWiiSlll't'

I~AII. Y

el~lt41etten

Jumbl•" RODEO PIANO liCE'S ERMINE

:IS. Pu~on
attire
Soreness
28. Nervouo

a1·ca

'I

•~n•e

Now
the
to rnii,; IUrprlae uwwer, ..

(Au•er• 1omorro'WI

S7.1nquirin~·

·~o~ ..~~r.- L•Lvl:.'

·
ctothfl,

I

Jilm

36. Sianwsc

IPttl!t optrltlon .

Dryer~

I"

HC' slcm

35. Some

•

Choice ·•I wtlto·
Auto .
,t tm p1 .
1

~ s~rround

'l

34. Vm·nbh
_ ing1·rdit•nt

1

,,,Mtyt
e~,••' lir ..
Autom•tlcs

!
t::::::Ll:::=i·I I I I
.'IHOI'IN

IC

GOOD NOR VE!(y BAD~0, Rt:PEAI II/

III

- [ ]

creation
33. 1'fw ~U illM

I 992-5786

r

II

I• ugh
31.ilushi&lt;•ll
Hamlnt•tt

Phone

992-3975

'-'•....&amp;.~.;.:;-...__:.._.....,

j'

POliRC [

danct·:-

"1'l:ll' Com·

pleat - "
23. l!nus&lt;i:ll ·
prrsonur
thin g
24. "El - ,""

• ~".!.:.~.~.:.!.:'"''...

25. Under-

a Ol' Sl

' SR.

I

1. .I\ rca f1·om

thr

I D(JNUP

'carty
8. Discus·

lknaring
words

Unacramblethcae four Juriiblea,
one Jettu to each square, to
form' four ordinary words.

luuk ,
IIOWN

riV&lt;' l'
~c:ll....-.J...-!---1----l2. t:niv. in

NO

. Virgil B.
TEAFORD

'

42. Doctrint•s
H.1'ook a

Kha n"

13. Nu( thl·n•

Sale{

, I

40. Music

ACROS~

·'~'' "'"~ ')

LDeal Bowling

OffYOUiDW.

,_..,

Ton 8' Stepsloe, V-8 engine. H. · Duty 15" tires. std.
trans .. H. Duly sprgs., radio, low mileage, 1 owner unit.

ROOFING

WIP0/1390

· I 'M lORN '

~NTWO
ALTE~NA1WES;
OIL~.

3~

==-:-- --

You

MENTION!

1968 CHEVROLET............s1695

&amp;PWMBING

Th.t Lilten.

I Fl'RIOOT T'

.---~

LiSSONS!

Business Services

~~::::::::::::=:

/EASY

NO R6RJNPS!

LI'L DETAIL.

GUARANTEES YA'ILL I

LEARN 'T' 51&lt;1 IN

1969 Chev. Impala' Cpe. ............$2095

Th~

------

HMMM I
THERE'S ONE

0\JI't liXCI..USIVE
MET !-lOP

307 V-Bengine, 3 SP"ed floor shirt, spotless clean blk. vlnyl'·l
Interior, dark blue finish, w-w tires, like new. radio.
1 owner car.

------

SIEGLER
GET FREE

-'·-~

Lo'N mileage by.local owner with lots or warranty tell,
factory air conditioned. V-8 engine, turbo-hydromallc, p.
steering, gold body, sandalwood vinyl top, radio, vinyl
Interior, good w-w Illes. This car Is loaded with extras. ·

,.,~(!Bilf Hatt1~

ALL
&amp;

A. 6ALE6 Lic:ENSE • .__..,

1970 Chevelle Mali.bu HT epe. ..... $2995 .

·MlLLER

Cleland
llealty

HE JI..IST GETS MORE
CUSTOMERS' WHEN PEOPLE
TI11NK THE GOODS ARE

tires, radio &amp; other extras, white finish, clean Interior. , .I

$3795

Daily Sentinel

HE~ CLEAN, BE~. ljE ~T
THEM HONESTLY AND HE~ 601'

4 Or., V-8 engine, automatic tra~s .. P.S., factory air. gOod

..

Aluminum
Sheets

USED

1970 Dodge Polara .................... $2395

RAWLI~GS
DE~ENDABLE CITY

For Sale

. '

. "'2795

$3195

1971 DODGE

PURPLE HEART

350 V-8 engine, automatic.
power
steering
console,
beautiful dark green, finished
with green vinyl roof. Less than
22,000 miles by local owner,
radio, new w~w _tires . A sharp
model priced to please.

Sale

''

I (

1970 Camaro Coupe

1971 DODGE' $3595

1

f

1 I (

-

brown vinyl, lop, factory air ·
conditioned, V-8 engine with
turbo hydromatic, power
· steering, E. clock,' P,B.• radio,
Rally wheels . with w-w tires.
Fri.&amp; rear guards. Retail $4155.
Co.· official ' car &amp; specially
priced. ·

-1971 MATADOR ~3595

'

r

WH' I t.,; IT 'THI&gt;.T
.
'SPECIAL 13UtLETI'-!5,..

-­

I

1971 Chevelh!
•3595 .
Malibu Cpe., sandalwooa with

c::------

'i

·t"l

'

1971 DODGE

'

.

I ( (/ fl I l (( ' '

il sten f1r

NEVER

- --.,.----

r.tr.r~~~----~------- AN' A.

TWO GOLD
STARS··

.

i

I I

'

.

l

1 ' ' I

'

Notice

.

.-

\

Sentinii Ciassifieds .Get Action'! Sentinel ·Cl-assifieds .Get Res
OlcJManZ .
Zings'em

'

(0 1972 Kina: Features Svnilic~te., lne.)
''

/

�I.

\

.

l

'

I •

,I

I

12-- '~'~"'DillY Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 13, 1972

Now ·You K:now

Friday and Saturday ·Sclle At Elbe~lcls ln .P.o~eroy ·
...~Lawmen
Take
Hijacker
t--------...-·-----.
. .
...

.

;· DALLAS (UP!). - FBI
'agents and .police stor!Jled a
:hijacked jelliner sitting Qn the
main runway and captured a
:rormer !Dental patieni who had
ilemanded $2 !Dillion ransom,
,'parachutes and eight box
lunches for himself and the
cre,w.
..
• The drama ended Wed-

-•
.Officers'
'

. MEIGS THEAll\£

"GP"

HOW TO
' COMMIT MARRIAGE
(Technicolorl
Jane Wyman

Bob Hope

Jackie Gleason

" GP' '

SHOW. STARTS 7 P.M.

TWO FINED
Two defendants fined $5 and
- costs iri fH~ court of Pomeroy
Mayor William . Baronick
Wednesday night were . Clyde
Taylor, 28, Pomeroy, assured
clear distance, and Tony
Taylor, 33, Pomeroy, failure to
yield right of way.

H . L . . . UILD

O .... O .. TUNfTY

Do something

u c~n do
something about
'1

Do you feel .1 uu \\"lllJlJ
lik~· t11 mak\.' u h i ~ ,;_i.'r
~· n ntrihutinn to 1nu r
l"urnrnunit~ . . . to lond

-·~
· .0··'D'i~ - " .,I

4\i
' ' :l:i

.

.

J!;O"'crnrnent . to ~o ur
sdwol . a nd yo u J on "t
reuH) k n u"' h ow IP ~o~.u

•

"ahout 1t :

T h e re is somdh ing :&gt;ou
, Jo . F onn your own
1home tovm booster dub .
1 Sh opping h om e tow n
, busi n t.&gt;ssmcn entitles you
to m t' mhe:rship.

I

It '" t h e he'lt club you can
The on ly q unl ifi cut ion
m em bersHip is to
•"'PP&lt;"' th e people whq
•!;urport yo u . Thut"seasy .

..
COMMUNICATK CONPID.~C·. SHOP' AT HOM.

The Farmers Bank
a~d Savings Co.
J

POMEROY, OHIO
Member · Federal

Reserve

System ·
,
On Fridays Our Drive- In
Window is Op•n 9 a.m. I~ 1
p.m .. I Continuously l. ·
S20,000 Maximum Insurance
· For Each Dep91itor

.

'

---------------~---•
'

TIE$

Appalachia

(Continued from page 1)
brought a tray of popcorn balls
flavored with sweet anice, a
wild plant, rather than vanilla.
These were served during a
concluding social hour.
Through her slide presentation, which featured Food
Author Euell Gibbons, Miss
Wood showed the actual
collection of wild' foods and
their ·preparation into a
gourmet dinner.
The preparation of May
apples, persimmons, wild
grapes, ground cherries, dandelion crowns, artichocks, and
sassafras was discussed by
the speaker, who described a
May apple chiffon pie as "one
of the best things I've ever
eaten ." She said ground
cherries can be used for
everything from pies to
pickles, and listed the roots of
several plan is which have been
used for medicinal purposes.
Music of Appalachia
Miss Winfield and Conta,
playing and singing ballads,
folk lunes and hymns on
dulcimers were well received.
Robert O'Dell of Gallipolis,
who made the instrurnenl.s
used by the two, was introduced.
Conta said the dulcimer, first
mention in Daniel of the Old
Testament, is unique to Appalachia. He described it as
being of two basic styles, the
hammered and stringed, and
contended that all it takes to
play a dulcimer is a "good ear
lor music." Miss Winfield, 8
native of North Carolina now
li vi ng in Gallipolis and
teaching English at Point
Pleasant, sang severa l numbers including the benediction.
"Shady Gfove," "Drunken
Sailor," "Bachelor's Hallt"
"Goin' Up Cripple Creek"
and "In the Sweet Bye and
Bye" were among , the
numbers they presented.
Mrs. Jennifer Sheets,
assistant home extension
ag·ent, coordinator for the
program introduced William
Grueser of the Rock Springs
area who a lso makes
dulcimers. He had one on
display.
Mrs .
Hazel
Stanley
welcomed the group and introduced' · Mrs.
Sheets
preceding the program, Coffee
and cookies following the
!Deettng were served by the
Harrisonville members of the
Extension ..Council .
A surprise of the meeting
was a·telegram from Mrs. John
Gilligan congratulating the
county on arranging an Appalachia Culture program, It ·was read by Mrs. Sheets.

SALE! 'WOMEN'S UN IFORMS

Bullalo plaid I.!} red and block. Plaid patterns In green or bt~e
· neck size 15 to 17. Button front style . 2 button down flop
pockets . lined neck band.

122.50 Uniforms
S19.SO U.niforms

SI7.SO Uniforms
$16.50 Uniforms

S14.9S Uniform s

Sll. 95 Uniforms

512.95 Unilorm1
$ 10. 95 Uniforms
$ 8.95 Unifor ms

S 7.95 Uniform s

' For this Sale

CX.e size fits sizes to fo 13. 65 per cent. Lambs wool · 35 01"'
cent stretch nylon. White with color tops of green, gold, ·
maroon, red or purple.
Save Friday and saturdaY .

88~

1.09

Mens

..

ail vinyl plastic. Washable .
Flameproof. 36" wide . 7ft .
long. White . Lt. Tan

Sale Prices

WOMEN'S LINGERIE DEPARTMENT

'

Sale'7.00
BOYS' 2.95 FlANNEL PAJAMAS

Sale 2.19

Bestform Bras a'nd Girdles
Womens Shortie Gowns

Playtex Bras a.nd Girdles

Sizes 8 to 18. Permanent press flannel. Coat style fOP:.

Hoover and Norca·

Fine selection of styles .and sizes. Save during the January

Boys 3.95 Flannel Patamas. Sires 8 to 18.

For most vacuum clean ers .
Finest in Quality .

SALE! CHILDREN'S WEAR

Sale 2.50

Sale

Sale 3.99
Sale 2.99

69~

Made with double ponel· seat. 100 percent cotton', Gentle
elastic leg opening provide athletic supporl. Sizes 30 to SO.

3 pair 3.39

$1.89 Mt. Maid
Hiland Miss

Mens Hanes Comfortable T Shirts In small, medium, large
and extra large sizes.
3for 3.39

THROW
RUGS
24X45

On the 2nd floor.

Special Purchase

All purpose rug for use ln

and Sale!

Bedrooms, etc. 'WashableBeautiful bright striped
rug.

Kitchens,

Another Shipmenll

Bathrooms ,

MEN'S A.ND YOUNG MEN'S BELTS

Sale

Mens Leather Work Belts in block
1 --~~~~~~~~ or brown. Sires 30 to 50 . . . . . . . . . .. • 1.75

MEN'S 29.95

~

SPORT,
COATS

· Mens ll/4 inch width Garrison

Fashion Fabric

Leather Belts. Sizes 30 to 50 . . • . . . . . 2.50
New ·selection of, yo'Ung mens wide width Sport Belts and
Reversible belts. Sires 281o 38
·

SEERS.UCKER

6S percent Polyester . 35

pric; l.

CORNING TRIO sns

49

bake and serve dishes. While with blue Cornflower design .

9.99 a set

19.90

MA~S

.

West Bend 32.95 7 pc. Cast Aluminum

COOKWARE
sns
10 Inch Teflon cOaled skillet

Size18x30
Marbelized . Red · Blue
(0nly401oselll

Set Includes :
1 quart s~ ucepan

SALE 5l.OQ EACH
BOYS' 15.95

SPORT
COATS
Sizes 6 to 20 in wool - c or duroy. Year round weight
sport coats. Very well
m ade, excel l en t assort .
. m ent arranged for your
easy. selection .

cover

eluminum : 'Piitfey green'··
mandarin red . cheddar
vellow .

Sale Price 25.00 a Set ·

Tremendous

All cotton - snow whife

at:• width . . •. $1.09

90".width . . . . 51.19
Star Quilting Thread
100 yd. spool
19c
250 yd. spool . . . 35c
Special!

Just received shipment

RUG SAMPLES

Washable Mattress Toppers
Made of polyurethane. Twin and Full size In 'J&lt;' 1" l'h'' and

24x48

2"

Shags and Tweeds
(only 24 to sell)

thickness. Priced from '

'

Also a shipment

of

packaged Urethane Foam Remn1nts.

Save During The

Sale ! Boys

Sale! Men s

Winter Jackets
Save now on these jae:ke ts
dur:ing the January Sa le.
Cordur oy · wool plaids

ny lon quilted Jackets. Sizes
36 to 54.

Janua~

Winter Jackets

Furniture

Sizes 8 to 20. A good

·Sale

selection of styles that .boys
and mot hers like. You can
r ea ll y save now.

Visit the 3rd floor. · Ex·
ceptlonally go,od buys In
furnifure for every room in.

Special Sale Group M ens and Young Men s

your home. Bedroom suites
· Living Room Suites .
Chairs · Dinette Sets . ·
Dining Room Suites .
Tables.
Toke time to look around .
See all the fine furniture
and reolly save:

A~OTHER

SLACKS
Flare slacks in solid colors - st rip es. Most all permanent
press . Sizes 29 to JS . Regu lar l y 5.95 to 9.95 .

BIG

For this Sale

Y2 Price
SAL.Er MEN'S INSULATED COVERALLS
~lion twill t.overall s with red nylon quill lining .

St zes 36 to 50 1n forest green or olivewood. Action
back · adjustable leg snaps. Big Ben by th e
·
ma kers of Wrangler.

Sale Price 14.88
Flannel Pajamas

Sizes A. B,'C and D. 100 percent cotton flannel. Coat style top.
Sa nfor ize d shrunk. Fi ne selection of patterns and co lors .

Regularly 3.95.

•

2 Pal'r 7.00

,

RCA COLOR
TELEVISION

MEN'S AND BOYS'

Stop In the music deport.
menton the 2nd floor. W.e' II
gladly show you t~ese .
special seta and show you
how yoU can save now.

Select the size and style you

RCA ·)

'

Mens Wranglers In super lean .

cut - regular cuf or flare leg _ :

1------...,..------,.----._,--~1 style.
Sale Prices .
Boys Wrangler Jeans In flare
leg style . super lean taper leg .

Men's and Boys' Sweat~rs

S~ve now On mens and boys sweaters . A good selec,tlo~ of
9 95
slrpovers and cardigans . Here's how you save

Sweaters Sale 6.00, 5.95 Sweaters Sale 4.00, 12.95 5.;~a l~rs
Sale 9.00.
Stop In and 'save on swea t ers now.

Choose

slimi'r""' regulai-s

~

I

. STEREOS

RCA

huskies.
I

CONSOLE

Special values now. In

or
I

;·, -~

'

Stereos

with .

AM-FM and FM
Ster.eo plus 8 track
stereo tape player
built · ln.
Music
Department

•

·

..

· · ~----

need now In Wrang ler Jeans
for men and boys .

2nd

Briefs. Tongue Twister

Metg1 (.ow School District
During the late, spring of last school year, the
·Bradbury pupils and teachers had ~ool ~t Canters
.~Cave Instead of ~t the Bradbury Building. Tl\ey had
the .help of parents and 4-H officials in developing
what Is called ''resident outdoor education."
• Resident outdoor education takes the pupil from
lhe classroom to the outdoor Ieeming center of
·nature. F.or tbose three days and nights Bradbury
was dee(llf immersed in that kind of program.
· Now we have a foUow-up to the program of last

Twice Thursday

has ,resulted in a plan to provide ed~cators in the
·designated counties with the necessary information
and resources to initiate and conduct a resident
Jiogram that will most appropriately.meet tile needs
of the students.
·
"We want to encourage resident outdQGr
education programs in the schools of. Ohio and· the
effective use of the local resources available to the
. schools lor teacHing in, for and about the total en·

.

.I

•

E-R Unit Out

school that bas any In teres~ wtu....,.:.&gt;er w cvutlucun~
Jl resident outdoor education program this year or in
the near future should have a repusentative at the
workshop."
111REE SESSlONS
•
The program on January 22 will he under the
direct supervlsloti of Gene Knight, Environmental
SUpervisor of the State Department of Education.
The 9:30 a.m. session Wll1 start the day and seek
vironment.
t
answers !0 these qu&lt;!ftions: Why resident outdoor
"On January 22, 1972, the Ohio Department of education? What does 11 do for the curriculum and for
Education. in cooperation with the 4-H Agricultural the cliild? How do you Initiate such a program? In·
Extension faculty will conduct a trainln~ workshop at formation wiD be given on a planlling check list plus
~pe{J/cing of Schools-No. 222
Bradbury Elmentary School, S. R 143, Middleport, pre-camp actlvl~es for studerits, teachers and
'
.
.
ttprlng. J. E. Brown, Director. of the Division of· (Meigs Local S.:hools ), The workshop is desllined to parents.
famiHarize teachers and · ~j.dmlnistrators with the
Three work sessions will be conducted at 10:311,
. Elementary and Secondary EdUCation ~ the State
operation
of
a
resident
outdoor
education
program·
1:00 and 2:311. ~ion I will deal with awareness,
' Qepartmeilt of Education·, is setting up a Resident
and
Its
relationship
to
the
overall
school
curriculum.
creativity, art, music, drama and evening programs.
,OUtdoor Education Workshop to be conduct;ed at
"Highlights of the workshop will include:
Session n wiD follow a sack lunch and touch social
BradburY School &amp;rturday, Jan. 22. He has Invited all
studles, economics of natural history and language
!- Participation in specific outdoor study
lchool I!JIIerlnle!)dents and .principals , in Athens,
opportunitie$.
·development skills. The final session will focus on
·Gllila, Jacklon, Lawrence, · Meigs and Vinton
- Familiarization with resident fac!Uties and
environmental math, mapping, . compasses; and
Counties. !fere, in part, ls hls letter describing the
HEADS DEALERS ~ Keith Goble of Goble Ford,
services
..
recreation.
Participants
are
advised
to
dress
for
Mlddloport,
left, was named president of the Trl.COunty
program:
. ,
- Introduction to local resources avallable .to .participation in outdoor actMties. After a question ( Automobile Dealers Association which met for a steak dinner
"Resident outdoor education aitil 'other . en·
schools
in planning and conducting a re,ldent
and answer period the workshop· will adjo~r.n
vlrollllental education activities have been inat the new Meigs Inn in Pomeroy Thursday afternoon. With ,
program.
$metlme after 4 p.m. ·
'
creQ(ng rapidly in Ohlo in response to the concern
Goble is Don Watts who was named vice presid&lt;nt of the
for envlrarunerital quality that ls permeating the
4-Developing loca.l plans for resident outdoor
It sounds like a full day and it should be a fruitful
association compqsed of dealers from Meigs, Gallia and
edubation.
'
·
entire COIIItry. Cooperative eifort among the State "1
day for' ai· . Our staff !Dembers at Bradbury look
Mason County. Carroll Norris of Norris Dodge Agency,
would
like
to
invile
yuu
and
•
or
your
forward
to
playing
host
and
sharing
experiences
with
·
"!
~t of Education, tJte local school dL!trlcts
Gallipolis, not present, was named secretary-treasurer.
representative
to
participate
m
U1e
worksh~~
·
Every
those
who
attend
from
the
si&amp;-&lt;:ounty
area
.
and the Cooperative
E.
~
tenaion
Service,
4-H
Division,
Walts ls operator~ Volkswagen in Gallipblis. ·
.'
.
By GE(IRGE HARGRAVES, ·SUPT.

Special values now in RCA ·
Color TV Sots. Consolu
and-portlbiH.

Wrangler
Jeans

N~ws•.. in

..

·Bradbury Schoo-l Has Outdoor Workshop

'

SHIPMENT

Arrwld Heads
Corporation

,_-.-----~-=Y Children .Have

Kind of'Naines

'

2.79 to9,49

Sale 2.49

'

Officers Named

'

5a¥ings now in our
Second Floor Home Sewing l)ept.
Just a few of. the many outstanding values:
Reg. 2.89 yd. · 54" Bonded Wool . . . . . . Sale 2.09 yd. 1
Reg. 2.39 yd. 45" Hi·LO Wale Corduroy .
Salt 1.49 yd.
Reg. 1.99 yd. 45" Velvet Touch Corduroy
Sale 1.59 yd. ·
Reg. 3.95 yd.-54" Drapery Fabric
S(otchgard Finish . . . . . • .. .
Site 3.\9 yd.
Reg. 3.89 yd.·S4" Upholstery Fabric • . . Salt 2.49,yd. ,

Quilting Sheeting

11.90

.

.-

...

.A.IIptecn· hii\I'I~Giuge-cest

-'over .
5 qua r t Dutch oven with

Priscilla

Special Sah~ Price

w ith

cover
' ..
2 quart sau cepan with

supplies and rna terials, $200,
An appropriations budget vices, $500; supplies and other, $100, total, $1,600.
Water filtration , personal other, $100, trustee service,
providing $59,066.26 in 1972 was materials, ~ . total, $1,000.
Street lightiQg , · $2,500 ; services, $350; supplies and $300, Farmers Bank bond,
approved by SyracuSe Council
iq,terest plus purchase ,
Thursday
night.
Ap· contingencies for purposes not materials, $350, total, $700.
Water pumping, personal $2,907.50; Farmers Home
propriations by departments otherwise provided, $1,000 ;
street' paving, $3,000; street services, $500; supplies and Administration $1,266.26; FHA
were:
Mayor 's fund, persona! repairing, personal serviCes, material~. $500; fuel and lights , reserve, $500, and revenue
services, $400; supplies and $1,000; supplies and materials, $800; other $100, total $,1900. bonds, $5,612.50.
In other business council
Water department portion ,
materials $200; 'other, $100; $1.000, total, .$2,000.
State transportati on new building, non-tra ns· vo ted not to accept the
total $700.
Clerk fund, personal ser- facilities, street paving, $500; ferrable, building construction, res ignation of Councilman
.
vices, supplies and materials, water supply and distribution, $2,000;. adminiStration, water Robert Wingett.
Herb
White,
representing
perlional services, $500; sup- and bonds, personal services,
$200, total, $500.
(Continued on Page 10) .
Treasurer's fund, personal plies and materials, $1,oo0; clerk of water board, $1,000;
services, $175; supplies-- and
materials, $50, total, $225.
Solicitor, $50; elections, $140;
council 's personal services ,
$360; supplieS and materials,
$100, other, $100, total, $560.
KAR1t REcoGNIZED - Gary ·Swope, left, Meigs County Game Prote,ctor, ThllJ'sday
Maintenance, building and
esented Horace Karr, Pomer!lY Route 3, a plaque and certific~~ct~ recognizing Karr as Meigs
grounds, pers9nal services,
Rafferty, defining the term
County's ''Wildlife Conservatioliist of the Year." Karr mailages 921 acres of land on which he
$500; supplies and materials, . President Richard· M. Nixon hospital stay" after completion
11
extended
care," said:
$500; total, $1,000.
raise8 beef cattle and on which he has constructed farm parks used for fishing and wildlife
may attend the dedication of ol the new complex on Route
We mean to render services
Utilities, $500; police, per· the new $20 million Medical 35.
Pw:poses; has established food plots and left them stand for wildlife, has left den trees standing
in
all areas past the acute
sonal services, $480; supplies Center Complex on Route 35
According to Rafferty, the
and wOoded areas for wildlife mating purposes, and bas managed mowing so as not wdestroy
and materials, $400; other, near Gallipolis probably on current facility will be an general hospital stay, in·
· or disturb wildlife. Karr, owner of the Karr Construction Co. and Royal Oak Park, is a member
$100, total, $980.
extended care unit and no eluding but not necessarily
of the board of directors ofthe Pomeroy National Bank, and is active ln civic affairs.
April 1.
limited to: ( 1) the three or four
Fire department, new
The President has received "white elephant."
graduations of care defined by
b.Ulding, combined fire and an official invitation from E. E.
the Medicare Laws ; (2)
city capital improvement, Davis of Jacksoh, a member of
Convalescent care; (3) Nur·
contract , services, con- the Holzer Hospital Foundation
sing Home Care ; ~( 4)
struction, $23,000; supplies and board of trustees and president
Retirement Home Apartment
materials, $1,000; other, $2,000, or' the Ohio Valley Health
for
those who care partially (or
total, $26,000.
Services Foundation. The
totally care) for themselves
Hospital operation and While House to this date has
but may want to be ln a
maintenance, $325; parks and not committed the President to
medical accessibly enplaygro~nds, personal ser- attending.
vironment."
This development, and ·
·
The board reappointed
others, were reviewed last
Rafferty as executive vice
week by the board of trustees
president of Holzer Medical
in its annual dinner meeting at
Center another year.~
Oscar's
Restaurant
in
New officers for 19 , cted
Gallipolis Nineteen of the
were
Harland arlin,
board's 24 members attended.
Gallipolis,
re:Olected
chainnan
John Rafferty , executiye
ol the board; Max Morrow of
'
vice president of Holzer
Wellston, 1st vice chainnan;
Medical Center, said in bls
E.
Neal Taylor of Arabia, 2nd
annual report that · present
vlce chairmarr; Emerson E.
LANGSVILLE - Southern properties of the Holzer
Evans of Galllpolls, treasurer,
Ohio Coal Company announced Hospital Foundation· on First
and Miss Alma McCormick of
today that it had awarded a and Fourth'Aves. in Gallipolls,
Gallipolis, secretary.
cohtrac\ fJll' tbe first slope and Jli'OVIding 195 beds, will render
The ···boar&lt;! reappointed
~-shl!ft wbtk at its Ml!il!s •Jitme· " Till!dical services in aD areu
Harland Martin, Emerson
John Rafferty
No. to. a southeastern Ohlo beyond the "acute .general
Evans, Stanley Evans, Max
firm, the Willlamson Shaft and
Morrow, J. Sherman· Porter,
Slope Company of Athens,
'•
Gary
Short, John Stiffler, and
. '
Ohio. ,
,.
E. Neal Taylor as its executive
LE"D WRESTLING .sQUAD CM!aptain of the Meigs High School wrestling team are Ted
A spokesman for the ~oal
committee.
Lehew, left, and John Thomas, right, both seniors. Fenton Taylor, center, is an assistant
company said thet work would
Dr. Charles E. Holzer, .Jr.
footbaD coach and the bea4 wrestling coach. Lehew wrestles in the 167lb. division, Thom~s in
begin imm~diately, ~nd is
was rHlected chief of staff of
the !57 lb. d!vlslon. Lehew and Thomas lead their team Saturday beginning at 7:30 p.m. against
schedule4 for completion by
RACINE - Officers of the Fritz Sisson, . vice president;
(Continued on Pa~e · 4l
a strongl!Quth Point High School teiltn. The public is invited.
lnld·March of )973.
Racine Fire Dept. and E·R Walter Cleland, secretary· 'J1h • work will consist of squad were announced today treasurer, and trustees are
eli~avation
of a two- by Pete Slrr)pson·.
Walter Cleland, Ernest Sisson
compartment slope and the
Ernest Sisson is president, and Pete Simpson.
installation of approximately
Named to the grievance
),100 feel of !Dine track for
committee were Fritz Sisson,
Glenn R\zer and Pete Simpson.
mfne cars. The lower comOfficers were reelected
' ,;
.
partment
wlll
be
used
for
David
Cleland
was
named
BY tlNrrED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
Thursday night when the
hauling.supplies into the mine
fire chief, Glenn Rizer his directors of the Meigs In·
sAIGON -PRESIDENT NIXON'S 70,000'troop withdrawal
by ' rail, and the upper for
assistant; Pete· Simpson, vestment Corp. met at the
Order by May I means th~ virtual end of large scale American
lieutenant; Walter Cleland , Meigs Inn.
VINTON, Ohio (UP! )- Mr. removal of coal, via conveyor,
army infantry, tank and artillery involvment in :Vietnam, u, S. and
·
from
'tl\e
mine
proper.
Ex·
The Middleport E-R unit chief of the first aid, sql(ad;
Mrs. Ernest Russell's
They are James Arnold,
milltary sources said today. They said the air force will stay at
eleven children have names c avatio~ for two single· answered two calls late Thurs· Ernest Sisson, assistant; Fritz president; Kermit Walton; vice
tresent strength.
like Noel Leon and Novel compartment shafts for air day morning. At 10:34 the Sisson, captain, and Bob
U. S. Army Secretary Robert Froehlke told Vietnamese Levon. Their middle names are intake and exhaust ventilation, squad went , to the Robert Beegle, lieutenant. The E,R president, and Bernard Fultz,
secretary-treasurer. William
officials the United States "can ca.,.Y ·on a war 1n a foreign tand formed ~y spelling their firsl each 20 feet ln dlameter, is also Winebrenner home on Front - squad made 97 calls in 1971.
D. (Bill ) Childs was named
for just so long ... and obviously that time is qlose to elapsing," names backward.
part of the contract.
St., where Mr. Winebrenner
general manager of the Meigs
Froehlke, completing a six-day visit to !he war zone, also said he
The deep-mine coal complex was ill. He was taken to
''Mother did it but I don't
Inn by the corporation which
GUM IS ILL
belleves.the Communists wUI try some "spectacular" milltary ~ know why," says Lura .Arul, is Qwned by Southern Ohlo Coal Pleasant Valley Hospital in
also
operates the LaSalle Hotel
Dale Gum, Pearl St., Midmaneuver shortly.
now Mrs. Lura Arul Gee. "She Company, a subsidiary of Ohio Point Pleasant.
in Middleport. Other directors
At 11:21 the squad went south dleport, is a medical patient at
would take names from the Power Company. When it
are
Richard Owen, Dr , R. R.
ABIDJAN, IVORY COAST - TRIBAL differences, mounting Bible and other books and· reaches full production in of Middleport on Route 7 where th~ University Hospital in
financial problems and social crisis were majOI' factors in tile compare them·until they came several years, it will produce a child, Robert Cummins, was Columbus. His room number is Pickens, Rodney Downing and
Kenneth Cooke.
bloodless coup Thursday that overthrew Ghana Premier Kofi out that way." The children's an estimated 8-million tons of ill in a car driven by bls mother N-1167.
Busta, diplomatic sourcJs sald today.
·
names are Noel Leon, Novel coal annually. The bulk of it who was enroute to the Holzer
• •
The commandlll's of Ghalll! 's 18,()()(knan army waited until Levon, · Norwood Doowroon, will be delivered to Ohio Medical Center with the
Busta was 1n London undergoing treatment for an eye ailment Nero! Loren, Leron Norel, Power's General James M. youngster. Afraid to travel
and installed a five-man military c\luncil led by Lt. Col. I. K. Noble Elbon, Uedo Odell, Lura Gavin Power Plant, now under farther, she asked the squad to
Achaempong to overthrow the premier. Busia sald in London he Arul, Loneva Avenol, Lebanna construction on the Ohlo River take her son the rest of the
way.
near Cheshire.
Annabell and Leah Hae).
(Continued on Page 10)

Is Awarded

Housewares Dept. -lsi floor

Candee Tred

ANTI-FATIGUE

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992·2156

Shaft Bid

Consists of one each 1 quarf, l'h quart and 13!.. quart cook,

Cleanup! $1.89

Special Sale Price

.FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 1972

.;

First Mine

Special 19.50

percent cotton, 45" wide.
s tripe s
in
As sorted
beautiful colors. Ma chine
washabl e. Very attractive

Si zes 36 to 46 in
regu la r and long s.
Tweeds
Her r i ngbone
pa t ferns . solid co l ors.
An
exce ll e nt
se lec tion of styles,
sizes, colors.

'

'.

ti

Regular $1 .00 package.

Dresses - Slack outfits · Jumpers ·- Blouses - Knit Rompers Tops with leotards · Romper Sets. Sizes from 6 months to 24
months and Toddlers sizes 2 and 4. ·Famous mak e.

J

· President Invited

Sale 2.00

Throw Away Bags

Sale.

M~n's

'

Green. ·

on the lsi Floor

7.50 and 6.00 Childrens Wear
3.49 and 5.49 Childrens Wear

Button Front Double Elbow·

Sizes 36 to 52 In teal heather, navy blue or dark oxford . 100
percenl Virgin wool. Comfortable to weor. Save Friday ond
Saturday.

Window Shades

Womens Long Robes
Womens Winter Pajama-s
Wo.men s F lanneleHe Gowns

9.95

COAT SWEATERS

Spedal! 51.69 Kordovin

Translucent heavy weight

Sp~cial

POM.EROY.~IDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL XxiV NO. 193

ATHELTIC SOCKS

RegularSi.39skein

Sale 58
Sale 17
Sale 16
Sale ss
Sale 54

'

Young Mens $1.00 Color Trim

colors.

Sale $IS
Sale 513
Sale 111
Sale SIO
Sale !9
Sale !B

Cold tonight and Saturd;iy,
chance of snow near Lake Erie.
Low tonight 10 above zero.
· High Saturday 10 to 15 north,
15-20 south.
'

Sale 2 for 10.00

Red Heart
"WINTUCK" OR LON
Excellent selection ol

and co lors.

Weather

Devoted To The lnt.ereab Of The Meiga-Ma10n Area

..

WOIIK StiiRTS

KNITT~~t Hw·;~STED

On the 2nd floor . A fine selection of st yles and sizes. White

525.00 Uniforms

on white •.

Mens

S31e-2.00

· Officers for 1972 were named
·by the Meigs County Farm
Bureau Tuesday night. They
are Henry Frank, Pomeroy
RD, president ; Rex Shenefield,
SAIGON - VIET CONG GUERRILLAS attacked a Sour.h
.Langsville, vice president ; Vietnamese base just outside Saigon today and the U. S. comMrs . Ziba Midkiff, Hemlock mand reported the first Communist attack on the big American
Grove, secretary, and Jack W. airfield at Da Nang in nearly two years. Heavy fighting also
Carsey, Pomeroy, treasurer. erupted along South Vietnam's Central Coast.
Frank reported that all
As the fighting grew in intensity throughout Vietnam, the
counties of the Bureau in Ohio military situation in neighboring Laos deteriorated and Comhave approved the property munist Pathet Lao forces claimed the capture of the American
protection plan which will go Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)-&lt;lperated base at Long Cheng.
Into effect in Meigs County on Governmen\sourees denied it but acknowledged the outpost was
~-!arch l. Frank .appointed a
nearly surrounded by North Vietnamese.
r.~ ward committee in con~
junction wlth the new property
protection plan including
SIGNUP DELAYED
LOCAL TEMPS
Sheriff Robert C. Hartenbach,
Orion W. Roush, chairman of
Temperature in downtown
Thomas D. Sayre, Rex the Meigs County Agriculture Pomeroy Thursday at 11 a. m.
Shenefield and himself.
Stabilization and Conservation was 60 degrees under sunny
The board also approved new Committee, reports that sign skies.
decals to be placed on all Farm up dates for the feed grain and
·Bureau members' lractors wheat program have been
which will increase insurance · changed to start Feb. 3, 1972
coverage by another $100. The and will extend through March
The vote by 21 members of
decals will be available March 10 this year.
the 1 Meigs
County
l. Mrs. David Koblentz and
Republi can Executive
Jloy Miller, delegates, reported
Committee Tuesday night to
TWO SUITS FILED
on the annual stale Farm
endorse
party candidates
One suit for divorce and
Bureau meeting. Membership
subject to the May Primary
.plans were made for a drive to another for partition of real
was
10 to 9 with two abestate have been filed in Meigs
slart soon.
staining, it was learned
County Coirunon Pleas C~t.
There were 20
today.
Linda Sue Betz, LangsviDei.Ji!\·
members absent.
1, filed the partition suit
The committee agreed to
against James Robert Betz, a
invite
Republican can·
Tonight &amp; Thursday
minor, Pomeroy. The property
dldates for county offices 1o
January 12-13
is located in Salem Township.
NOT OPOI
appear
before It prior to the
Wanda S. Blaine, Middleport,
secret ballot on eo·
filed suit for divor~e against
Friday &amp; Sat~rday
dorsements.
January 14-IS
Michael E. Blaine, Middleport,
A MAN CALLED
charging gross neglect of duty
SLEDGE
and extreme cruelty.
(Technicolor)
James Garner
Dennis Weaver

January Bargains! Ready To Wear Department

'

(ConUnued Jrom page I)
matches with an American team similar to those held in Peking
last ~pril. Tbose matches were the prelude to a breakthrough in
relations .between the two countries. Ziegler said Premier Chou
En-lai personally requested that the new table tennis matches
take place "when blossoms are in full bloom."

e

A &amp;ebl'a 's stripes are black

OPEN UNTIL 9 AT NIGHT BOTH FRIQAY AND SATURDAY .

passengers to get off the plane
S.lel Famous brand
· 2nd Floor
when Flight 38 landed-tit Love
Mens Washable
CHILDRENS COATS AND JACKETS
v, PRICE
Field at 2:50p. m. But~e. held
SPECIAL SALE OF W.OMENS :OATS
the crew - four hostesses and
·
SALE OF WDMENS SWEATERS
tl,ree men - until 8:51 p.m·.
SAVE ON W.OMENS SKIRTS ON SALE
Values to 4. 00. All are
when they escaped after
SALE PRICES W.OMENS BLOUSE S
washable .· Good selection
SALE OF · WOMENS SLACKS
of patterns and colors.
noticing Hurst '"h~d been
GIRLS WINTER WEAR PAJAMAS . .
V. PRICE
distracted by something in the
GIRLS ROBES. LONG GOWNS . . .
'h PRICE
rear of the plane. ·
INFANTS ANO TODDLERS KNIT SCAR,FS,
Federal and city police
HATS AND MITTENS
1-......,-~---·-~-1
'I&gt; PRICE
stormed the plane and captured the hijacker at 9:26 p, m. ' 1---~-~--,...~---·-~~,....,. . Sale! Coats and Clarks'

News... in · Br~efs

•

Of Bureau
Elected
.

'

nesday night about seven hours
after the bright orange and red
plane was seized by the selfadmiiled narcotics user.
"Today is the last day that I,
Billy Gene Hurst, is going to
exist," the hijacker told his
captured crew. 11'fomorrow a
new individual will be born."
Hurst, 22, hijacked the plane
Wednesday between Houston
and Dallas. He permitted the 94

.

•

;_.L;__ _ _ _,L_::....,...:....;.__,;.;__-J:}___:.-__ _

. ·'

_.__~

_ _. _ _ _ _ _ _

~

.'

, .._;_~..J..._ j,

__

OFF TO PAGEANT Renee Burke,
Meigs
County's Junior Miss, ready
to depart for East Liverpool.
Miss Burke, Southern High
School senior, wnt ·represent
Meigs County in the 1972
Ohio Junior Miss Pageant to
be held Jan. Zl·22 at East
Gate High School. Mlss
Burke wlll leave for East
Liverpool Saturday to take
part
In
weeklong
preUmlnary events ol the
1late pageant.

Auto Slides
Off Road
Ice on th~ roadway was
blamed for a one-ear accident
Thursday at 10:30 p.m. on ·SR
. 124 at the railroad crossing in
Langsville, the Meigs County
Sheriff's Dept. reported.
Thomas A. Crisp, 17 Langs·
ville, Rt. I, traveling west, hit a
slick place, his car going off the
road and over a slight embankment. Crisp suffered a
laceration in his hand but was
not . immediately treated.
There was heavy damage to
the car. No citation was issued.

Directors Try
New Restaurant
At Meigs Inn
J;&gt;irectors of the' Meigs In·
vestment Corporation, a group
of Pomeroy • Middleport
, busineSS!Jlen who purchased
and renovated the Hotel
Martin, a Pomeroy landmark,
- now the Meigs Inn - were
guests at a steak dinner
Wednesday .night as new kitchen faclllties were used the.
first time.
A · dinner was given
simultaneously at the Inn
honoring the birthdays of
Sheila Childs, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. William Childs, and
Meigs High School Athletic
Director and Head Football
Coach Charles Chancey .
Childs, manager of the Inn,
said th e dinners were
''febearsals" for the first
public dinner served using the
new kitchen fa cilities on
Thursday when the Tri.COunty
Automobile Dealers Assn. met
and dined at the Inn. The
dining room will open on a full· .
time basis next week, Childs
said .
Remodeling
artd
redecoration of the old
Pomeroy hotel has . been
proceeding more than a year .

SUIT FILED
A judgment seeking $938.68
has been liled in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by
Central Oillh!ld Supply
Company, Wooster, ag,lnat
David Searles, dha, Searlte
Drilling Company, Nelsonville,

.....

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