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'

•

LEGAL NOTICE .

'

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

Ol~~~d- Lunchr~om

412.63
Total E)l(pencUtures OF THE BOARD
Lunchroom F'-'nd
$2,971.27
OF ED.UCATION
.Balance, D~c. 31 , 1971 S.621 .74
For Flsul Yelt: Ending
Tolal Ew.penditures Plus
Dectmbtr 31 , 197l
Bal .. Oec . 31.197l
68,593.01
E.urern Loul School District
Uniform School
•
Meigs c.ounty
· Supplies Fund
At. 1 Rttdnllle, Ohio
Balance, January 1,
39.94
Jan. u , 1972
1971
I certify the following report
Rece ipts ...:... Income
to be correct.
Sale of Work books
2,001.15
C. O. Newland Tofa l Receipts- .
· Clerk. Treasurerofthe Income
2,001 .15
Board of Educalion .
Recelph - Transfers
From General Fund
738.84
CASH RECONCILIATION . Total Recei pts ·r738.84
Total Fund Balances,
Transfers
Dec..3l. 1971
$ 5.. ,4,. 9 _87 Total Receipts (Income
Depos1tory Balan ces:
Clr'!d Transfers
2,739.99
Pomeroy Nit. Bank 54 ,9.u.al Tolal Beginning Billan ce
Tri ,County Bank
2,779.93
24 096 74 Plus Receipts
Total Depository
' ·
Expendifures
rJalances
. 79 ,0.41.5S Purchase of Workbooks 2, 11'9 ,93
O•Jfstand lng Warrants , Dec . 31 , Total Expenditures - Un iform
1971 (Deduct)
2 4 • 59 ~, 68
Sc hoo l Supplies Fund 2,779.93
Total -. Clerk -Treasurer's
Total Expenditures ~lvs
Batance, Dec . 31 ,
Sal., Dec.. 31. 1971
2.779.93
1971
,44'9.87
N. D. E . A. Title Ill Fund
64
SUMMARY OF CASH
(Include Appalnhia)
BALANCEs·, R£CEIPTS
ReceiPts
AND EXPENDITURES
Coord inator - Title Il l 1,219.09
Balance Jan . 1( 1971
Tolal
1,219.09
General Fund
67 ,440 .17
Receipts - Transfers
Bond Retlremenl
14, 093 .96 From General Fund
3,307.25
,507 .36 Total Transfers
Lu~ctlroom
3,307.25
4
Un1form School
Total Rece ipts (Receipts
Suppl ies
Plus Tran.sfers)
.4 ,526.34
39 _94 Totll
·E•SEA
l Beginn inn,. Balance
• • • T'll
1 e 1
5,021
.84
Tota l
91,1 03_27
Plus Receipts
4,526.34
Total Receipts
Expenditures
16.00
General Fund
466.267 .24 A l6-2
I,3 11 .31
Bond Rie lirement
28,596.11 . ::
570.34
lu~ch room
64,085.65 H"A
1,409.60
Un1form School
_.,
Supp lies
3,307.25
2 739 99 Total Expenditures
N.D.E.A. Tifleltl
'
·
Transfers
4 526 3 To Generllll Fund
1,219,09
E sEA T'tl
23 ·' 79 1.·3"&lt;1 TotaiTransfer·
E·s·E·A·
T!
le
s
1,219.09
·
·
·
.
11
e
II
1,278.13
T
t
I
E
Total
591 ,2u .80 o a xpendltures
Total Recelph &amp; Balilnces
' Includ ing Tra nsfers 4,526.34
Genera l Fund
533 ,707 _41 Total Expenditures Plus
Bond Retirement
42. 690 _07 Sa~, f~cAJ\\~71 F 4,526 .34
Luunctlroom
68,593.01 Ba lanc'e' J·an· ' e 11 und
niform School
•
vary .
Suppl ies
1971
23.791.34
2
779
99
• ·
No
Tola l
23.791.34
11
1
4
526
34
.E.A.
Tille I
Total Beginning Bal ance
• ·
E·s
.
.
E.A.
Tille
28,Q
1
}
18
E sEA T'tl
It
Plus Receipts
28,813.18
· · · ' 1e
1, 27 ·13
Expenditures
Tolal
682,388.07 A2
333.26
Expendilu""es
Al6.1
21.089.05
General Fund
504,888.87 B6
82.28
Bond Retirement
26,332.02 E2D
305.52
Lunchroom
62.911 .27 HSA
711 .65
Uniform School
Total Expenditures
22.521 .86
Supplies
2.779.93
Trilnsfers
N.D.E.A. Title til
4.526.3&lt;1 To General Fund
2,639 .78
E.S.E.A . Title I
25.1 61 .64 Total Transfers
2,639.78
1,278.13 Total Expend itures Including
E.S.E.A. Title II
Total
627,938.20
Transfers ,
25,161 64
Balance
Ba"
t o
31 • 1971
General
Fund Dec. 31, 1971
28,818 . 5~., Tot,al
ec.
Expend itu res Plus3,651. 54
Bond Ret irement
16,358.05
1.. Dec . 31 ' 1971
Lunchroom
5,621 .74 BaE.S.E.A.
28,813 .18
Title tt Fund
ESE
. . .A. T itle I
3.651 .5&lt;1
Receipts
Total CASH BALANCE,
54,449.87 Federa 1 SubSldy
· Fund 1,056.76
Total
1,056.76
RECEIPTS AND
Receipts - Transfers.
EXPENDITURES
From General Fund
221 .37
BY FUND
Total Transfers
221.37
General Fund :
Total Receipts !Receipts
Balance, Jan . I, 1971 67,440.17 Plus Transfers)
1.278.13
Receipts - Revenue
Tot al Beginning Ba lance
General Pro perty Ta" Plus Receipts
1.278.13
Real Estate (Gross)
Expenditures
• 115,5.tl4.]8 B5A
1.278.13
Tangible Personal Property
Total !fxpend ltures
1,278.13
Tax (G ross)
5,19.4.71 Total E:-tpend itures Including
Foundation Fund
Tran,fers
1.278.13
(Grossi
319,290.54 Total Expenditures Plus
Federal Subsidy Bat., Dec . 31 , 1971
1,278.13
P. L.874
4,588.00
ASSETS' AND
State of Oh io LIABILITIES
Vocational Ed ucation 102.87
DECEMBER 31, t971
State of Oh io Assets :
H~nd l capped Stude nts 100.00 Depository
Balances {Act ive
State of Oh io and Inactive) , Dedu ct
School Bus Purchases 4,849.00 Outstanding warrantsState of Ohio .
54,449 .81
Olher
L650.00 Accounts Receivable (For
Tuition - Parents and ·
Supplies, Textbooks ,
Patrons
105.00 .e Qu 1pment, etc .)
Total
Revenue
16,995.64
Receipls
,
•.
Inventory
Supplies
and
451 42 ., 50 Mllterials
2.500.00
Receipts - No"revenue
Lands (Cost) (Bu ilding
Adjustments and
Sites , Equipment.
Refunds
7,'4 13.95
etc .)
19,000.00
sate of Non -Real
eullru(lgs &lt;coso &lt;ALL
Property
900.00
' 1S lid I
Olher - Nonrevenue
2,52
1.12 Sc .!?0
u ngs
710,000 .00
Total Nonrevenue
Equl ment &lt;CosO CALL School
Receipts
10,895.07 Building Equipm ent)
Receipts - Transfers
216,000.00
From (Fundi
Tote! Assets
1,018,9-45.51
liabil ities :
Title IIllFund
Fund 1,219.09
1s p aya ble
N.O.E.A
E.S .E.A..Tille
2,639.78 A
ccovnIndebtedness
3,697 .80
Bond
152,000.00
Bon d ReI ·
88.80 Tote I Lia bilities
155.697.80
Total Tran sfer s
3,947.67 E:-tcess or Deficiency
Total Receipts (Revenue,
Of Assets
863,2-47 .71
• Nonrevenue and
Total
1.018,945.51
Transfers )
466,267 .24
SCHOOL DEBTTota l - Beginn ing Balan ce
BONDS
Plus Receipts
533,707 .41 Purpose for Wh ich Bond
Expenditures
Debt Was created
Total Expend itures Bldgs. &amp; Equ ipment
Adm inistra tion
23,939.95 Outstand ing Ja n.
- lnslruc1ion
291,962 .93 1, 1971
111 ,000.00
- Librar ies
1.032.71 Redeemed Dur ing Year
- Transportat ion of
1971
19,000.00
Pupils
62.506.66 Bal ance Outstand ing
- Playgrounds and
Dec. 31 , 1971
152,000.00
Community Centers
97.85 Rate of Int .
p -.
- Auxil iary Agencies
Oa_te ot Fi nal Mal.
12-1-79
59,166.49 (1 ) 18, It
- Operation of
School Pla nt
•9.521.50
- School Plant
NOTICE OF
Ma intenance
10.656.30
APPOINTMENT
-Capital Outlay
1,737 .02
Case No. 20600
Total Expenditures Estate
of
Thomas
R. savage
Transfers
4,267 .46
.
Grand Total Expenditures - Deceased
is hereby given that
General Fund
504,888.87 InaNotice
Mae
of Route 2
Balance, Dec . 31,1971 28.818.54 Alba~'f, OhSavage
io, has been dulY
Total Expenditures Plus
1nted E:-tecutrix of the
Bal., Oec. 31 , 1971 533,707 .41 appo
Estate
of Thomas R. Savage,
Bond Retirement F\.lnd
, late of the village of
Balance, Ja n. 1, 1971 14,093.96 deceased
Albany
,
Meigs
County. Oh io.
Receipts - Revenue
Creditors
are
required to file
General Property Tax the
ir.
claims
with
said fiduc iary
Real Estate (Gross) 27,365.78 wlth1n four ·months.
Tang ible Persona l Property
Dated this 7th day of Ja nuary
Tax I Gross)
1.230.33 1972.
Total Revenue
F. H. O'Brien
Receipts
28,596.11
Judge
Total Receipts (Revenue.
(11 12, 19, 26, 31
Nonrevenue and
Transfers)
28.596.11
Total Beg inning Balance
NOTICE OF
Plus Receipts
A2 ,690 .07
APPOINTMENT
Expenditures
Bonds Matur ing
19,000,00 Estate
of Cas~~~ ~~~ol
Interest on Bonds
6,412.50 WILLIAM.SO N Deceased.
Other - Bond
Retirement Fund
919.52
Notice IS hereby given lha t
Total Expenditures - Bond
Sarah Gibb s of R:O.. 2,
Retirement Fund
26,332.02 Pomeroy , Meigs County, Ohio,
Balance, Dec . 31, 1971 16,358.05 ha.s . been .du ly appointed Ad ·
Tota l E
d'l
PI
.mmJstratr x of lhe Estate ol
xpen I ures us
Georgia William son, deceased
Bat. ,Lunchroom
Dec . 31, 19ZIFund42,690.07 late of R·D : 2• Pomeroy, Meigs'
B'alan ce, Ja nuary 1.
County, Oh iO.
4,507.36 Creditors are required to fi le
1971
Rfceipts - lnc:ome
.th.eir. cla ims with said fiduc iary
W1 thm four mon lhs.
Sal e of lunches
28,774.26 Dated th is 7lh day of Jan vary
Federal Subsidy 1972.
Lunc hes
32,288 .58
F. H. O'Brien
Federal Subsidy Probate Judge
Milk
2,880.72
Other - RevenUe
1.42.09 {1.) 12, 19 . 26 , 31 of sa id County
Total Receipts- Income
. 6&lt;1,085.65
Total Receipts
&lt;Income
64,085.65
Total Beginn irig Balan ce
Plus Receipts
68,593.01
E xpendl1ures
·
Personal Service - Manager
- Salaries and Wages 590.10
..,.. Cooks - Salaries and
Wages
12,995.77
PT. PLEASANT
Other - Personal Service Salerles and Wages 1.010.20 !,IVESTOCK SALES CO.
Supplies and Food
47 .091.?A
Pl. Pleasanl, W. Va.
Eaulpment
557.61
Repairs to Equipment ·3.11.68
Saturday, Jan.15, 1912
HOGS .- 175 to 22i1 21.60 to
. .
.
24.60, . Heavies 18 to 20.40,
Ughts 18.to 19, Fat Sows 20.30
to 21, Boars 20.30 to 21, Pigs 9 to
tonight &amp; fhursday
.January 19-20
15.25, Stock Shoats 17 to 19.
NOT OPEN
CATTLE - Sieejs 25.50 to 32,
Heifers 24.50 to 29.75, Fat Cows
Jon.,;,r.y 21-22 ·
20.50 to 23.10, Canners 17 to
HOW TO FRAME
18.110, Bulls 22.85 to 25.60, Stock
A FIGG .
ITechnlcolor)
Cows and Calves 175 to 285
·stock Steers 30 to 34, Stock ·
Don Knotts
Heifers. 27 to 30, Stock Steer
.Joe Flynn
Calves 32 to 36, Stock Heifer
RAIOON ROMMEL
CalVes 32 to 33.
ITechnicolor) Rich~rd
VEAL CALVES - Tops 52
Burian
Seconds 51.75, Mediwn 41.ti t~
John Collcos ,
"GP"
42.75, Common &amp; Heavies 34 .to
SHOW5TART57 P.M.
39, Culls 34 to 34.75.
FUfANCIAL

..

r

'.,

lb :-The Dally_Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 19, 1972 •

'

0

SALE at ELBER·.FELDS .IN POMEROY

1

Market Report

MEIGS THEATI\t

WASHINGTON (UPI)President Nixon prodded a·
Democratic Congress In an
election year State of the Union
message today to act on a
· stalled backlog . of his
legislative measures aimed at
achieving "a new prospeity
withoul war."
Frankly acknowledging th8t
1972 is a political year, and
even noting that he was
speaking to nwnerous Democratic Pr~idential hopefuls,
Nixon urged the newly con• vened members of the House
and Senate to make it "a year
of action" in which Alilerican
scientific know-how can be
directed to solving everyday
prolileins afflicting the people,

Thursday 9:30 A.M. to 5 P.~. - F~ . and SaJurday r----::::=:=-:·:-:-:::~~~._.:..
· --.......,_.;,____..........,.----.....:.--~
$1.29
9:30 A.M. to"9 AI Night
COSTUME1 JEWELRY
Eirrings . Pin'5 '~1 , Necklac'es Our entir"e stock is reduced lor this sale.

WOMENS DRESSES

32'1:!.

100~

REG. 3.00 JEWELRY
. . .
. .
SALE 1.49
. REG. 2.1111 JEWELRY ·
· . - - . . . . SALE '1'/c
REG. 1.00 JEWEL:RY . . . . .
. . . . SALE 49c

360 _Dresses from our regular stock. 12.95 to 29.50 Dresses . ·
Juntor si zes 5 to 13. Misses sizes 8 to 20 . Half sizes 12v2 to
All well ·known qualities.

·
.
.
.
. . ·
-

-

--

. SALE
SALE
SALE
. · SALE
SALE
· · SALE
SALE
. SALE

;r

WOMEN$ SCARFS

7.75
8.75
9.75
10.75
11.75
12.75
16.75
18.75

25 .00 WDMENS COATS
16.50 WOMENS COATS
19.50 WOMENS COATS
29 .50 WOMENS COATS
WOMENS COATS
I 35.00
39.50 WQMENS COATS
59.50 WOMENS COATS
49.50 WOMENS COATS
69.50 WOMENS COATS
79.50 WOMENS COATS,
89.50 WOMENS COATS
99 .00 WOMENS COATS

- · · ·
· · · • · · .
.· · · · . .
·
- .. .
.. .
.. .

·
· ·
·
·

... . .
-

·
·
·
·

Hats · Scarfs
Gloves • Mittens

Sale ~ Price

36"

regulars ~ nd longs.

sale 3.oo
Sale 4.oo
Sale 5.00
Sale 6.00
Sale 7.oo

Robes and Dusters . . .

7 ,95

RObes and Dusters

·

Weekend Special
'

3 yards 1.29

·

Sale6.74

P-------------------~---~·
Little Boys 5. 95 Lined Western Jackets
Sizes 2to 6x ·

Sale 4.74

Blouses ~ Jumpers_
· Slacks • Dn:sses
..
.
. .

14.95
12.95
11 .95
10..95
9.95
8.95

.

12.95 - - Sale 7.50
16.50 - - Sale 10.50
_,...,_ ............_..

SWEATERS
SWEATERS
SWEATERS
SWEATERS
SWEATERS
SWEATERS

1.09
$4.49

3 Pc. Bathmat Sets

,Girls_Wear Sizes 3 to 6x and 7 to 14

Girls

Jumpers
·

. . . . Sale
. • . . Sale
- · · • Sale
· · · • Sale
· · · · Sale

Sale! .Boys Sweaters

2.50
3.50
4.50
6.50
7.50

A good selection of slipovers and coat styles. Juvenile sizes 2
. to 6. Boys sizes 8 to 20.

·---~--------------------·
Sizes 2 to 6x "and 7 to 14
2.95 . - . . . . Sale 2.00
Gi~s ·
,

3.95 • . . . . . Sale 2.50
4.95 - . . . . . 5ale 3.00
~ 95 . - . . . . Sale 3.50

Sk1rls

9.95 SWEATERS
8.95 SWEATERS
7.95 SWEATERS
6.95 SWEATERS
5.95 SWEATERS
4.95 SWEATERS

•
· · · ·· ·• ·· •.
· • · •

- -. -

.
·.
·

·
·
.
·.
·

·
·
.
·.
·

SALE 5.00
SALE 4.50
SALE 4.00
SALE
SALE 3.50
3.1111 .
SALE 2.50

100 .P er cllnt VIscose Rayon Rug, Lid 1..over,
Conto~r Mat. Good colors. Machine washable,
machtne dryablec

3 e3 9
t-----------------------1
Special
Sale Price

CURTAIN RODS

----------'-'--------------+----:------------------~
Sizes '7 to 14

Girls Skirt and
VeSt Sets

5. 95
10.95
12.95
13.95

L....

. . .
. . .
. . .
.•.

. . .
. . .
. . .
.••

Sale
5ale
5ale
5ale

WOOL TOBOGGANS

3.5o
6.50
7.50
8.50

.

~------------------------··~----~,--~~------~
Girls·Vests • 1.95 to 12.95
BIG TOY SALE
Sizes 7 to 14. While they last .
Girls•

7.95 - · . · . • Sale 4.50
8.95 · · · · . . Sale 5.5o

-----------J2.0£-~.;.~.;.;..~J!.£·~-·

Girts Pants Suits

5.95
8.95
10.95
16.50

Sizes 7 to 14

Pants suits .
sale 3.5o
Pants Suits
Sale 5.50
Pants Suits
. Sale 6.50
Panls Suits .
Sale 10.50

7.95 Slacks ..... . Sale 4.50
6.95 Slacks ..... . Sale 5.50
!o.95 Slacks ... .. - Sale 6.50

Also teen sizes.

B glasses in a set .

Aluminum
with
colorful
heat
resistant finish .

wheal decoration .

2.00 a set

1.95 Rockingham

0

LINGERIE SALE

Mugs and

REG. 15.00 LINGERIE
· · · · · • - - SALE 8.25
REG. 13.00 LINGERIE
· . SALE 7.25
REG. 11.00 LINGERIE
· · SALE 6.25
REG. 10.00 LINGERIE
- · SALE 5.25
,REG. 9.00 LINGERIE
· · SALE 4.75
REG. 8.00 LINGERIE .
· · SALE 4,25
REG. 7.00 LINGERIE
· · SALE3.50

AshTrays

Famous Maker
.
- ·-"

STOCKINGS

Vinyl
Handbags

Shee r

or

mesh

con ·

strudion. Si2:es 81;, to 1Pn
L. Quantities limited.

'k09. 1.75 pr. and l.Ji pr.

Sale 1h Price
•

\

Sal&amp; 7r pair

Decolatiwe
Mirrors

Gold or Brown

98~.·each
2.95

Square, round and
rectangular shapes.

Changes. drloks to slush
instantly. Red, yellow and

avocado.

.

While They Lasi

Weekend Special

'44* yd.

yard

'

Living Room - Bedroom .- Dining Room
and Kitchen Furniture.
.
Well known makes - .all at sale prices. :
Pro":lpt delivery - sensible credit.
. Furmture and Carpet department, 3rd
' flOor.
·-

Warehouse Sale!
·

.

.JUtlllllllo

GQod selectlin of reconditioned
.

.

ELBERF~LDS INJ~OMIROY
,I

I

'

.

from

'

By United Preaslntematlonal
·
MARIE'ITA, GA.- THE LpCIQIE~EORGIA Co. says
It will use Its "employment.Jn-l'ever8e" program In an attempt to
lind jobs for 672 employees W)1o wui be cut off by the dosing of C5
Gl)axy suiHlssembly plants In four states. The job ellmlnations
are the result of·a declining work load on lite giant cargo airPlane
program, the company said.
.. '
·
The biggest loss will be at Chattanooga, TeM., where a
subassembly plant will be shut down soon and the building sold to
the Koeliring Co. of Milwaukee.
'
Other plants to be phased out are at Martinsburg, W. Va.,
with 132 employees; Logan, Ohio, with 120 and Uniontown, Pa.,
with 133. The MArtinsburg plant wi1J close in March and the
others in May.

He also served notice he
would ask for greater defense
spending this yell' .
In a personal appearance
before a joint session of
Congress which was natiqnally
televised, Nixon declared : "In
reaching the moon, we saw
what miracles Alilerican technology is capable of achieving.
Now the ·time has come to
move more deliberately

By United Press International
Alabama Gov . . George C.
Wallace plans to take his
campaign for the Democratic
presidential nomination to the
North and predicts he will
"shock" both the Democrats
and Republicans when he runs
in
the
Pe~nsylvania
primary.
Wallace said he was giving
"high consideration" to enter·
lng primaries in four other
states.
"Of course, I don't have the
money to run the kind of
campaign that the other
candidates have, but I feel that
I will get an excellent vote in
Pennsylvania -enough to
shock the Nalio~~Bl Democratic
party and the Republican
party," Wallace said.
Wallace was Interviewed by
CBS News.
Sen. Henry M. Jackson, D;
Wash ., one of Wallace's opponents in the Florida
primary, said Wednesd;ly at
Oklahoma City that a vote for
Wallace would be a vote
wasted, because WaUace could
never win the Democratic

.

.c.

.· ..
· ,~

I

I

nomination for president.
"Why thrown away your
vote?" Jackson said. "Every. one knows he's not going to get
the nomination."
In other political. developments :
-Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey,
0-Minn., new to Detroit in an
apparent attempt to head off
early endorsement by the

member American Federation
of State, Coll!ltY and Municioa,
Employes. Muskie . then
dedicated his eight-story
campaign headquarters in
Washington and announced
creation of a youth coalition.

United Auto Workers of Sen.
Edmund Muskie , D-Maine,
Humphrey's chiel rival for the
nomination.
- Muskie , who has been
orchestrating a bandwagon
effect by spacing out the endorsements of prominent
. Democrats, accepted the endorsement ol Jerry Wurf,
president of the 500,000

R·eel~cted .

TEN CENT~

Woman Rescued
An off-duty state highway
Hunter quickly lowered all
patrolman today was credited the car windows, and had his
with saving the life of a Rt. 1, wife rush. to the fiearest
Crown City woman , wiici ap- telepliilne · tp SWllll\pn · help.
parently was attempting • While waiting for an amsuicide.
bulance, Patrolman · Roger
Mrs . Kathleen Grace Hyden arrived on the scene.
Spurlock, 41, is listed in Both Hyden and Hunter then
satisfactory condition at the placed Mrs. Spurlock on the
Holzer Medical Center where hood of the vehicle where she
she was admitted at 2:45 a. m. could get more iresh air. Mrs.
from
carbon Spurlock had regained con·
suffering
monoxide poisoning.
sciousness by the time the
Ptl. D. M. Hunter, Gallla- Waugh -Halley-Wood amMeigs Post, a resident of bulance arrived as a result of
Burkhart Lane, Gallipolis, and first aid administered by. the
his wife were driving north on two patrolmen.
Rt. 7 at 1:50 a. m. when Pti.
Hospilalauthorities reported
Hunter.noticed a car parked at Mrs. Spurlock was sWI In
the roadside reslarea north of satisfactory condition at 10 a.
. Crown City.
m. today.
Ptl. Hunter was assigned to
. Stopping to investigate,
Hunl:er discovered a hose had · the Gallla·M~igs Post last
been led into the car's window September from the Athens
from the exhaust system. He Post State Highway Patrol.
opened the door and found Mrs.
Spurlock slwnped over in the
front seat.
·

THESE FIFTH GRADERS are leading the cheers for the Racine Elementary School fifth
grade basketball team this seaaon. The team will play siJ:: games with teams from nearby
schools. Costuming for the cheerleading corps, in t:edand white, was created by mothers of the
group which includes lrom the left, Penny Smith, Carol Morris, aH:aptain; Becky Crow,
Peggy Nelgler, captain; Tam Bowers, Janis Carnahan, Teresa Ervin, Linda Norris, Beverly
McLain and Marie Pickens.

Income Tax Repeal Launched

Elderly Woman
Dead by Fire
In Her Kitchen
MR. CHILD.ERS

Orllders
Promoted
•
I '

- Democratic . convention
-Mayor &amp;un Yorth, of Loa
· planners, hewing to a policy of Angeles, c;ampalgning for the
'neutrality in the party's pres- New Hampehire primary, said
idential nomination race, al- the federal government should
lowed 10 candidates to pick provide a guaranteed annual
hotel headquarters space at ln~ome for all of America's 20
Mlaml Beach.
million retired citizens.

'

An 86-yearoOid Long Bottom
woman died Tuesday night as a
result of severe burns, suffocation and shock when her
clothing caught fire in the
kitchen of her home.
Dead is Mrs . Ethel c.
Chevalier. Her body was found
about noon Wednesday by her
daughter, Mrs. John Hensley,
who lives next door. Dr. R. R.
Pickens, cQUnty C&lt;lroner, said
•'death apparently occurred
between 6 and 7 p.m. Tuesday.
Sheriff Robert c. Har-

SECOND TO FILE
embargo on moving military cargo during the dock strike was
RALPH W,\RDEN O!JRS,
not intended ''to Imperil the national inteMts;" have withdrawn
Republican, became the
..
the ban after an appeal from the Defense Department.
second candidate to file for
Administra(9r
William
E.
Ed Flynn, president of ll)e, Pacific Maritime Association,
nomination to run for a
· Garnes of the Ohio Bureau of
said Wednesday that the sole purpose of the ban had been to deny
major
'county position In the
Employment Services, has
striking longshoremen an income, since their union has no strike
May primary election• In
announced the appoinlments of
benefits.
Meigs County, WedDesday.
Robert Bennett ·as Acting
Ours, Incumbent, !Ued for
District Manager; Frank
MORGANTOWN, W. VA •...:.FATE DEALT the West VITginia Childers as Assistant District
nomination to run for a
second 'term as a Meigs
Unlverlllty basketball team .another tragic. blow Wec!nesdaY in a Manager
and · Di'strlct tenbach said Mrs. Chev'llier Countv
Commissioner. A
highway accident that t()9k the life of a suspended player and Unemployment Compensation was believed to have been
&lt;
resident ·of
Lebanon
seriously hurt his replacement. Larry "Deacon" Harris, dropped Supervisor of District Five,
dinner
when
her
l'ewnsblp,
Ours
II
aeelllng
preparing
from the squad earlier in the month for low grades, was klUed QBES . .
clothing caught fire as she · nomination for the term
Instantly in the on~ar mishap just south of Fainnont on In·
In the recent organization of attempted to use the oven. She
beg1nnlng Jan. !, 1972.
·
th ki
lerstate 79.
OBES, District Five was set up wflas foulnldfIymg
on e tchen
Robert Clark, tbe other
His replacement on the learn, Sam Oglesby, remained a to include Franklin (Colwnoor, a o her clothing burned
In cumbeat commlls1oner,
(Continued on page 8)
bus ), Union, Delaware., fr om .her bod Y·
has filed for the term
Licking, Madison, Fayette ,
The only fire damage to the
beg111lllng Jan. 3, 1972.
Pickaway, Fairfield, Ross, horne was to th e floo r where
Hocking, Pike, Vinton, Athens, she was found lying and a
Scioto, Jackson, Meigs, section of 'the ta~le cloth on the
VeleraDA Memorial Hospital
Officers and directors were Dr. Fred R. Carsey, Ma59n, W. Lawrence and Gallia Counties. kitchen U.ble.
ADMITTED .
Irene
Under'
the
new
structure,
all
. The body w~s taken to the Gilmore, Pomeroy ; Carol Hall,
reelected Wednesday af. Va.
ternoon at the annual
Officers reelected were Local Office Managers in Spencer Funeral Home in · Gallipolis; Nora Curtis,
shareholders meeting of The Theodore . T. Reed, Jr ., District Five will report to Belpre.
Pomeroy; Chrissie Powell,
Farmers Bank and Savings president; Thereon Johnson, Bennet's office and he fu turn
Mrs. Ethel Chevalier; was Racine ; Monte Ray Wolfe,
el(ecutive vice president; Paul will report to the Central Office born ln. Meigs County the Minersville ; Doris Hay,nes,
Company.
.
DireCtors reelected were E. Kloes, vice president: in Columbus.
daughter of the lllte Tom and Middleport; Lorena Bissell,
·Theodore T. Reed, Jr., Roger W, Hysell, cashier, and
Frank Childers has served 23 Alice Snodgrass Coates. She Long Bottom ; Florence
Ponleruy; Thereon\ Johl180n, Dorothy B. Will, lloanne J. years with the Bureau. He is a spent her entire life in .Meigs Chaffin, Athens; Joan Evans,
Racine; E. Robert Schellhase, Russell, and Evelyn G. Lan· ~alive of Gallia County .and ,County. She was married to Reedsville; W2llace Hill ,
Canton; Leslle F. Fultz, C. ning, assistant cashiers.
IS a member of the Amencan .John R. Chevalier who Racine.
Wayne SWilher, lind Richard
Mr. Reed reported to the L~g~on
·Veterans
A&lt;l· preceded her in death in 1952. DISCHARGED - Faurice
~
Fullrod, ill of Pomeroy; shareholders that .1971 wa5 il numstratlon ~nd the. Mason!c · Mrs. Chevalier 11 survived Neece, Dorothy Mcl&gt;anlel,
· •Fred W. Crow and Harold E. "very successful year", total Lodge. These. positions w11l by two sors, Carl, ,If Water- James Autherson, Ralph
Smith, both ol SyrRcuae, and resources increalllng 10.6 pet. become effec}1ve Januar~ 24. ,1continued ~n pqe I)
Fi&gt;ster, Nancy ·cole. 1. ,

Officers

· We're Having ASal&amp; at our Waret.ouse
Ill . MechaniC' ~
1 .

approprlatldn·sultln Gallia County Comlnon Pleas Caurt against
Pavld W. Brigs, Merrill P. Briggs and Bea\rlce B. White, all of
Rt. 1, Cbesb!re'; Carl M. Poston, Worthington; Ohio Fuel das
. Coolpany, ColwnOO.; Calumbua and Southern Ohio Electric ·
CGrnpanf, and ~ 9hlo {leU Telephone Company. ·
·
Plainll!f !11111.eie clefendlntl are owners or claim legal 01'
equltable Interest .in certain property located in Cheshire Twp.
Ohio Power ill seeking 4.712
acres of land which It claims Is another transfer station at
'
.' ~ry fOI' an overload, which point the coal is
. conveyor b!llt and associated weighed, sampled and
equipment which will feed coal distributed to the furnaces, a
to the James M. Gavin Plant. stock pile and the service road.
The uWity further contends
According to the petition, a
facility will be erected on 3.142 that there has been a
acres ·sought to receive coal disagreement over the COin'
transported
the Meigs pensation for the property and
Mine. The facility will. conalst rights sought. Ohio Power
of a transfer station where the asked the coutt to take the
coal ill aceejrted, a coqveyor necessary steps needed to
belt, about 1,500 feet. l011g, appropriate the property.

SAN JIRAl\ICI8CO - WEST COAsT shippers, saying an

. · 2.50
Black and White and tolar 1V Sets
BE THRIFTY! SAVE ALL OF YOUR SALEsLIPSFROM ·
I

.to

._1.29 ·

f I or· a I

Excellent
,

· ELBERFELDS JANUARY
FURNITURE SALE

·Egg Plates
~~~o~~t~~~.

45" wide Patterns.

l

' 1h Price

Salad and devil.ed egg
plate. While with

· Aannelette

On The 3rd F1oor

4,95

Slush Mugs

Printed

~II colors and widths .

5~

Sale 150

, Reg . 4.00

59c

Ribbon

7.95 Electric

Tumbler Sets

28". 48'l L- Sale 39c

Specia~

I'~FFa:m~o~u~s~M~a~ke~r~----------~------------~~--~::::_:~::___Jk-----~~~~:_--~

Womens

.

1------.:--..,....--------J
150 Glass

1---~---------------------~
2.95 Slacks . . . . - . Sale 2.00
3.95 Slacks . - .. - . Sale 2.50
Girls Slacks
4.95 Slacks .. - .. . Sale 3.00
Sizes 7 to 14.

. Speciaf Sale- including chairs . riding toys .
dolls · games · doll furniture and many other
items . ·

Snack Keepers

care.

'

News... in BriefS

Reg. 1.09 Double Curtain Rods
·
· 28" - 48" L -:;- Sale 79c

Save on the toys you need
Thursday · Friday and Saturday

------------------------Sl1pcwer Sweaters

such as snarled city transportation and better health

,
Devoted To 17ae. lntereatl Of 17ae M~iga·Mason Area
POMEROY·MiDDLEPORt, QH!O
TliURSDAY, JANUARY
20, 1972
PHONE 992·2156
..

NO. 19Z

- '

Reg. 55c Single Curtain Rods

2•69 .

auo Power Company, Canton, Wednesday atternoon filed an

.NO. XXIV

•..

White heavy gauge steel baked enamel finish.
Brackets and nails .

"Kyger Creek" scarlet and grey and "Southern" purple anc
gold with school name embroidered on In script.

Half-Price • 9r to 6.48

Station in Coal Conveyor
From Meigs Mine to Gavin

Skid resistant · Decorator colors . Washable.
Included in group - 26" Round, Contour, and
21 x34.

....
SALE 7.50
..•
· · · · · · · SALE 6.50
. - ..
SALE 6.00
SALE 5.50'
- ..
· · · • • . SALE 5.00
.
SALE 4.50

'

'

Regular $1 .19 • $1.39 - $1.49

Coat style and slipovers. Good selection of sizes,
colors and styles.

0

. 4. 772 Acres Land .Needed for

1 Group·Th,.Ow Rugs

·SALE! MENS SWEATERS

•

0

Blue • Green · Yellow Border.

---

FLAG RAISED- Edgar Vanlnwagen; left, World War
U veteran and survivor of the Bataan Death Marctl, and
Lawrence Smith, World War I ~teran, members of Drew
Webster Post 119/ Amerlcati Legion, raiae a .1ew American
nag as pupils oft~ schoollaok on at C!)rernonies Wednesday
afternoon at the Salisbury Elementary School. The flag,
whicn Oe'W over the capitol in Washington, was secured by
Mrs. J. M. Thorn\011, a member of the Drew Webster Post
Auxiliary, from Cong. Clarence Miller. Mrs·. Edith Fox gave
a prayer' and Pam Powers, junior auxiliary chairman of
Alpericanism, led the children in thepl~ge to the flag. Mrs.
Kenneth Harris, auxiliary Alilericanism chainnan, made the
presentatiOll to Principal John Lisle. Others on hand from the
auiill'fY unit were Mrs. Harty Davis, presjdEmi, Mrs.
Thornton and Mrs. Grace Pratt, as was Eddie Whaley of the
po~,
. .

Ohio Power
Files .Suit

..

.

c

· Sale 3.00
Sale 3.50 ·
Sale 4.50
· Sale 5.SO
. . site 6.5o

3.95 .· 5.95 . •
7.95 - ·
10.95 . ·
12.95 · ·

~rown .

Bleached Unen Toweling
.

Snap front coat style.

---------------------Boys 7.95 Lined Western Jackets ·

Sizes B'h to 10112. Well known brand .

____

Heavy vinyl. Black

Stevens P

Sale 8.44

TEENS AND CHUBBY SIZES

8.95 .. Sale 5.50
10.95- . Sale 6.50
......

Wide-All Colton .
{Stock on hand)

Special 8.00

WESTERN JACKETS
Blu e denim or brown . Corduroy collar.
Washable. Sizes 36 to 50 .

---1

FLIG,HT
BAGS

Sale 9.69

Sizes8to 18

8.95 Robes and Dusters
10.95 Robes and Ousters

-

Check.
Gingham

COVERALLS

2nd floor
5.9~

0

'_6.95;_21x27 Standard
- - - sale 5.95·
- .
8.95-21x31 Queen ••. -- - -- Sale 7.95
10.95-21x37 King. - -- ---. Sale 9.95

Sale! Lee 10.98

WOMENS ROBES AND DUSTERS
4.95 Robes and Dusters

0

....

Mens Wrangler 9.95 Scherpa Lined
5.95 Skirts
7.95 Skirts
· 8.95 Skirts
10.95.Skirls
12 .95 Skirts

.•

legislators: ."HOI'e at home, we
are making progress toward
our goal of a new prosperity
without war.
" Industrial production,
consumer spending, retail
toward makin~ full use of that sales aqd personal income all
technology here on earth, in have been rising. Total em.- ·
harnessing the wonders of ployment and real income are
sciencetotheserviceofman." the highest in history. New
Sees Economic Progress
home-building starts Qlis past
He announced he would year reached the highest level
subl:nlt in the near future a new ever . Business and._consumer
programoffederalpartnership . confident have both been
in technica,l r esearch and riSing. Interest t.ates are down
development which would in- and the rate of lnnation is
elude government incentives to down. We can look with con·
achieve new breakthroughs in fidence to 1972 as the year
day-to-day living.
when the back of inflation will
Of the laggard economy, the fmally be broken ."
President told the assembled
(continued on page 8)

Urges Demoeratle Congress to enact
backlog of legislation for a ''new prosperity,
without war. "

0
'

Mens 29,95 Sport Coats in Sizes
36 to 46 . • . . . • • . . . • . . • · 5ale 19.90 · 1-......,-----~-;,_--69c
$9.95
Boys 15.95 Sport ·coats in Sizes
6 to 20 - · - · · · - . -· . . . . . . 5i1le 11.90

Womens
Skirts .

Knit
Accessories

'
, r ·'b

While Fortrel Filled - · will not mat or lump.
Stays buoyant and resilient . Machine .
washable · machine dryable.

Grey Fi sher stripe cloth or CMivewood caftan twill . 100 per
cent cotton. Sanforized shrunk . Sizes 36 to so. Shorts .

Womens and Girls

Special .
yard

·5Pecial Sale! Sport Coats .·

SALE 15.00
SALE 10.00
SALE 11.00
SALE 18.1111
SALE 21.00
SALE 24.00
SALE 36.1111
SALE 30.00
SALE 42.00
SALE 48.00
SALE 52.00
SALE 60.00

18" wide. Good selection
paHerns. Regular 59c yd.

1.49
3
Serene·Bed Pillows

· SALE 99c
· · · SALE l9c
. SALE 49c

Well 'known makes, big savings in the Ready ·Ia
Wear Sale, 2nd Floor.
·.

While they last .

•

many other uses.

Sale! Womens uniforms,
Uniform Dresses and Uniform .Pants Suits

WOMENS COATS

Stick-on Plastic '

Pure Polyester

Chiffons, lwills, prints. ,solids.
REG.1.98SCARFS . • . . .
REG. 1.25 SCARFS . . . . .
REG. 1.00 SCARFS

'AI! Vinyl .

New! Washable. Ideal for
filling: Pillows, Cushions.
Toys, Comforters and

.

11.95 DRESS ES
13.95 DRESSES
14.95 DRESSES
16.50 DRESSES
17.50 DRESSES
l9.SO DRESSES
25.00 DRESSES
29.50 OR ESSES

.CLING

Poly-Fil -

Rings

1

1

Fresident··Points Nation
To More Bread, Guns

~THURSDAY·---FRID4Y.. SATURQAY

RCPOAT

I

COLUMBUS (UPI )-The
first legal step to let the voters
of the state. decide whether or
·not they want a personal in·
come tax took place . Wednesday in the offices of state
At!Drney General William J .
Brown.
Seven Republican state
representatives filed pilot
petitions with Brown showing
the form of their proposed
C&lt;lnstltutional amendment,
which they hope to get on the
November ballot.
If the petitions are approved,
the group wl! l be allowed to

circulate them across the state
in hopes of obtaining ' 318,414
signatures by Aug. I, enough to
place the Issue on the ballot.
If voters get the issue and if
they approve lt, the state would
be preventeil from collecting
the graduated I&gt; to 31&gt; per cent
state income tax starting Jan.
I, 1973 and a vote ·oi the people
of Ohio would be needed before
it could be collected again.
Rep. Joseph P. Tulley, R·
Mentor, spok~an for the
group, said he expects petitions
to be on the street in every
corner of the state by Feb. I if

Brown's offiee acts swiftly.
Tulley said the job of collect.
ing signatures will be turned
oves" .to tnpayers of all pollti·
cal affiliations. He said the
campaign's cost - $7,000 to
$10,000 - would be borne pri·
vately by donations.
The oilier six legislators are
Reps. Raymond Luther of
Newark, Cllester T. Cruze of
Cincinnati, Richard G. Reichel
ol Maaslllon, Robert E. Netzley
of Laura, Howard A. Knight of
Fremont and Robert E. Levitt,
House majority leader from
Canton.

Saigon Troops Fight Back
SAIGON (UPI )-South Vietnamese tr9ops backed by
American planes launched a
new 45,00Q.man drive around
Saigon today m
' an effort to
slow the ·tempo of Viet Cong
attacks wh1'ch rose by 72 per
cent throughout South Vietnam
last week.
Th e South 'Vietnamese
military. cotp111and announced
the new operation and said it
was spearheaded. by Saigon
troops withdrawn last week
· from Cambodia to meet the
increasing Communist threat
Inside South Vietnam.
· To the north in the Central
Highlands, four waves of
Thailand-based 852 bombers
hit a communist stronghold
known as base area 609 near
the point where Laos, Cam·
bodla 'and South Vietnam come
together .
· ·
lJPI eorr,espondent l)onald
A. navis reported from ·Pleik~.

230 miles north of Saigon, said
the B52s dropped more than 350
tons of ex~loslves In the
highlands in the fourth C&lt;ID·
secutive day of the most
sustained aerial attacks in the
area in nearly two years. _
The aim of the raids ani! the
new campaign near Saigon was
to take the steam out of a
Conununist \!ulldup apparently
planned for the Tet or lunar
new year, which lalla Feb. 15
this year. That would be just
before President Nixon's visit
to Peking on Feb. 21.
Five Gls Killed ·
As the new ·South Vietnamese
operation was disclosed, the
U.S. command aMounced that
fiveGis were killed In Vietnam
battlefield action last week to
Iring to 45,637 the ·itwnber of
American• killed Ill more than
n years of fighting in Vietnam.
Atotal of 390 South Vietnamese
were killed!

The South Vietnamese death
toll when compared with the
221 killed the previous week
alohg with the 1,034 Canununist
troops killed following the 800
slain the week belore served to
reflect the stepped-up groUJ!d
fighting .
A South Vietnamese ranger
unit was shelled .by Communists Wednesday and later
ambushed 25 miles northwest
of Saigon near the Michelin
rubber plantation. •
The South Vietnamese com·
niand said the rangers killectlO
Viet Cang while suffering one
killed and four . wounded. All
five South Vietnamese casualties were· caused by a land
mine, military spokesmen
said.
'
The U.S. conunand said one
Alilerican helkopter Cfei'Til8n
wu wounded Wedne.day when
a U.S. Atmy AHI Cobra
(Continued on pege 8)

�'

•

2- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport,Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 20,1972 .

.

~ ~:.! Generation Rap . ll

u

know myself, but I'D trY to te you :
· I. I have no boy friends. . •
2. I have very few girl friends-no one to talk to at aU, not
even to eat lunch with.
3. I find my home life increasingly unbearable.
4. At school, it seems as If eyeryone (white) iS sociaUy
against me or prejudlce4- yes, even my teachers. My own
people (black) consider me a "Tom" or "oreo," so they don't like
me.
5. Worst of aU, I've kept aU my problems and feelings
(mostly of hate) inside me . It's almost Uke having a time bomb
in there, and I'm quietly waiting for it to go off ... Writing this
letter- you don't know how much courage It took. I'm afraid it
,
,
will just be tossed away. Maybe you get so many letters you
won't even see this oqe .
Don't suggest that I talk to my mother or family. She's
changed so much Hind it strange to say "Mom." She has her own
friends . When she notices me, it's to give me a beating. I get one
almost every day, with two, sometimes four belts. I have no
sisters, and my brothers do things that get me in trouble--that's
why I get so many beatings.
Everywhere, I find the doors 'Closed and locked. Even the
door to God. I find myself becoming more and more estranged
from Godasmyproblemsincreaae. !know it's wrong, but 1can't

STORM OO'ORS
~ ', # &amp;WINDOWS

It jl I

&amp;

.

BLIND STOP OR OVER LAP
WIMDOWS

VALLEY WMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO. .
MIDDLEPORT

992-2709

-

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----

'

.

I

~--~

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Lee Lunsford, Oak lliU, a daughter ; Mr.
and Mrs. Larry E. Clonch, Pt.
Pleasant, a daughter ; Mr. and
Mrs. Allan Lee Harris,
Pomeroy, a son ; Mr. and Mrs.
Ra y 0 . Laudermilt, Rutland, a
son ; Mr. and Mrs. David R.
Altizer, Pairiot, a son; and Mr . .
and !&gt;Irs. Charles E. Burgess,
Crown City, a son.
Discharges
Timothy A. Keefer, Lynn M.
Fleming, Dana L. Kessinger,
Tamara S. Hoffman , Mrs.
Robert J. Hawk and son, Carl
F. McGuire, Eleanor J. Hart. man, Rose G. Brown·, Mrs.
Mary J. VanFoosen, Myrtle A.
SomerviUe, Linda M. Schuler,
!delle Lafave, Julia N. Kirby,
John E. Houck, Roscoe M.
Harrison, Mrs. George Allen
Ehman and daughter, Joseph
F. Calvert, Clan B. Cox,
Chester T. Coy, John J. Dower,
Dan Edwards; Richard 0 .
Danbury, Ruth 0. Coyan,
Wayne B. Harbarger, Mrs.
Ruby L. Snyder, Jerry L. Long,

HEATING
AND CENTRAL
AIR CONDITIONING
~LECTRIC

GAS - OIL -

eFREE ESTIMATES
eFREE DELIVERY
•EASY TERMS
eSALES AND SERVICE

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT
MIDDLEPORr, 0.

..

JANUARY CLEARANCE SALEI

CONTINUES
The Savings Are Great
Famous Name Brands·On Sale

'

-

.

'

'

'

WASiliNGTON (UPI) - The
Cost of Uving Council Wed-·
nesday exempted the nation's
smallest retail s tores and
luxury rental apartments from
price controls.
The announcement said the
action was being taken to
eliminate red tape and to allow
government agents to keep a
sharper eye on bigger business
operations.
The council's order' which
was recommenqed by the
Price Commission, will apply
to:
- The U million retails
outle ts that do less than
$1110,000 in annual sales. The
"mom and pop" neighborhood
store is typical of this group,
the council said.
- Apariment units renting
for $500 a month or more,
-Owner-occupied dweJUngs
of four units · or less which
operate
under
rental
agreements longer than one
month.
- Single family rental
dwellings on longer than
month-to-month rental
agreements where the landlord
owns four units or less.
The council said retail stores '
covered by the order account
for 75 per cent of the natfon's
total retail outlets but account
for only about 15 per cent of aU
retail sales .
Not covered by the exemption order, however, were such
small service firms as laun·
dries and dry cleaning
establishments,. restaurants,
television repair shops and
yard .and gatden care service
centers.

Shop or Field
Ph. 992-2511

CHASE
HARDWARE,

From Golf Balls to D1wRiverSheetst

' '

Js\

7

WEST

:
2
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• 2
• 9

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• A K Q 10 7 4 :1 .

t K J 10 4 a+ Q R;, 2
• 10 9 8.142ofo K
SOU1ll
•AKJ108543
6

•

!.,. ~ 73

Both vulnerable
North llo.•t South
·
3 • · 4•
Pas.~ 6 4 ., .. Pass Pass
Pass
J
Open in~ lead- • 9
West

-

'

Jackson ·Undeidogs Here:on .Frid~y

p~~:~~r~Jx~~ a~~:~~ced

recently . expropriated·
AlllericarMI\'med CGppet ~
and
the new Paklltan gOVen!· .
thrown one diamond and a Wednesday that the United
bunch of hearts. Dummy States will retliliate against ment ol President Zulflkar AU ·
sfill held three clubs and a ·foreign governments that seize Bhutio has recently anllCllJIICed
diamond.
' · · · private American property natlonaiizaUon of lome private
Then ~e professor led a without payment by cutting off industry ~!though American : ·
low club , Wen t up With · 'd . itd
. I
f
· dummy's ace ; d r 0 p p e d 81 . a opposmg oana rom investments have not been
~
the World Bank and other affected.
s.,.HI lot' JACOIY MDDnH 1&gt;oo1r agencies. Nixon ouUine&lt;! hls
to: "Wi• ot lridfO," rc/o r•i• _,_ tough policy concerning ex·
popor), .P.O. lo• 419,
City proprlation of prlv~te property
Stotioo, Hew York, H.Y. 10019.
inafour-pageslatementisSued
b)' the 'White llouae.
East's. singleton king a.nd The President cited no
FOR OUR
· ed th 1
·
scor
e s am.
,
. nations in hls statement but the
, "~ow did you work ,that ,government of Chile has
out?" asked the student. "I
., ·
would have lost ~ fln~sse to
. .
,
that singleton king." '
BQRDEN TO SPEAK
· "~.e-ggar.s can't be choos- . The Rev. Nyie Borden will be
ers, re~hed the _professor. guest speaker at the
11 West · eld the king lt was Harrisonville First United
not go 1 n g to drop and I
would have to lose a -club 'Presbyterian Church Sunday
·trick eventually. My on I y at 10:30·a.m.
chance was to drop a single- l""'!..._.;._..,_ _llllli_~-~-~--!il-,
ton king and it came off."
,

.,.,io

\

•

'

I

The Meigs .Marauder cagers · slrifl$ to · four against the
. are.at honie this Frida)' for a · Ironmen. Meigs il .$.4 'in aU
.southeastern Ohio Athletic g•mea and .. 3-4 in league
League face-off with ceDar- competition, good for fifth
dwelling Jackson . The pla.ce, the spot that was
Marauders. won the first "rellei'Ved'~ "for them in pre·
meetinll, 62-58, in the league sea1011 Pretuctiona.
opener for both squads.
.
Jackson, on the other· hand,
Coach Carl Wolfe's Uvened· •. Ia 1~ for the year and 1-4 in
up Marauders, who are riding league play. Coach AI Burger's
a three-game win streak, will Ironmen received .their · only
be favored to increase 'that win atthee~pense of the Logan
.
.
+Wt+++++++••t-&gt;••+++t++++~••ooouon+r.++t+t•
'' ·
·
·
(

LGGK
· SALE·

Up tight over big bills ? '

By Oswald &amp; James Ja~oby
~
The student could not wait
to leap from his chair to see
how the professor was going
lo play the six-spade contract. Afier alJ, the student
(NEWSPAP!R ENTERPRISE ASSN,.!
had bid the slam without ;
• · .· . ·
knowing whether there would ·
pe a play for it.
When he saw the profesThe bidding ~as been:
sor's cards he knew he had West North East
made ·a bad bid. Hopefully
he watched to see what, if Pass 2 •
Pass
anythin,g, the professor could · Pass 4 •
Pass
~o to save the sinking ship.
You, South, hold:
East won the · first trtck ' .AKQJ1865 .A3Z +KS.Z
with the lO of hearts and
What do you do now?
continued the suit. The proA-Bid rour no-trump. This
fessor ruffed high; played a
time
It is Blukwood, You plan
couple of rounds of trumps ;
to
bid
six if he shows an ace.
lf d a diamond to the ace;
TODAY'S QUESTION
ruffed a diamond and ran off
aiJ his trumps but one.
Your partner bids five hearts
By this time West had dis- to show two aces. What do you
carded two diamonds and do now?
HATS-· P.J.'S - GOWNS
three clubs and East had
COATS - JACKETS

the g ro'ov. ,. est .

992-2171

125 E. Main

SALE

Special
Sale On

CONTINUES

·* tl %oFF

Pomeroy

Mattei Toy$

And Many other Toy Un.es And Big ~mllbl!ent
Of Games Many Priced Far. Ben Oor Cost
·

Closing out to IIUiko .room for new 1972
items that wilt be coming in 190n.

SNOWSUITS- DRESSES
&gt;LUOU;)I=;) - SPORTSWEAR

~ TH==E :::=--======-~

s:

SETS.

Reg. 1.49

S HOPP

.&amp;.GIL '
TRASH rNt

·-__·2·-·
-_,
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,

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THE T IN MIDDLEPORT

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tab l et

and

easy

to

take .

MONADEX will help curb your
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weigh less . Contains no
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YOU I'!\ life

n,•..

$lart

t9_d1y ,

MON'A'OEX costs $3.oo'tor

a 20

day SUpply . ~ose, uOiy fah •or
your money will be refunded
with no questionS asked.

A thought for today: British MONADEX Is sold with this
poet Philip Bailey said, "II guarantee by : Swlstulr &amp; Lohse
111 E. ·MIIn, Pomeroy, &amp;
matters not how long we live, Drugs,
Dutton DrUg Store, Mld~leport.
but how."
M•il Orders Filled.

BEN,FRANKUN•

~e~~s~
CANDIES

PHONE
, 992·3498

. 2o2 E11t !Min St.

·

Pomeroy~ Clttlo

OI'IH I'RIDAY l SATURDAY HIGIITS TIL·9

·

.

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

'

va1entin.e's iaay
feb.l~

Locust St.

MidtlltpoH

'
The Eastern Eagles and the "firehouse five" in Racine has
Southern Local .Tornadoes pull a surprising 5-5 overaU record
double duty this weekend, each and is 3-4 in SVAC play. The
•playing Friday and Saturday Tornadoes host the Wahama
White Falcons Friday night.
night.
The Eagles, coached by The Falcons, 341 for the year,
second-year. head mentor Bill defeated Ravenswood, 99-94,
Phillips, trave.l ,to Glouster and Pt. ~leaaant; 66-57, last
·
,Friday night to battle the 2-8 week, . , ·
Saturday rught, still at home,
Tomcats .in a non.SVAC tilt.
Saturday evening; Eastern the Tornadoes play SV AC foe
goes into an impor,tant league Southwestern. The llighlanmstch-up at Symmes Valley. ders, coached by Richard
Eastern is 6-2 in southern Hamilton, are having a ro'cky
VaUey• Confecence play w~ile time, having lost aU of their
slating
7-2 overaU record. first 10 starts. Southern won
· S)'!IU11es VaUey, a haU a game the first meeting, 77-58.
behind league-leading North
The Southern attack features
Gallia, is6-1 in the SVAC and 7·
2 overall. The E;agles need the . the SVAC's sixth and eighth
win in. order to stay in the best point-makers in 5-11 senior
running for the SVAC ti.tle. A Jim llubbard, 15.4, and cousin
: Symmes ·vaUey Joss would Jerry Hubbard, 5-10 junior;
severely dampen its chances of wha ·scores at a 14.6 cUp in
league play.
winning the crown.
Other Tornado starters are
Leading the Eagles to . date
playmaker
and defensive
h8s been Dennis Eichinger, the
.area's seventh leading scorer, speCialist, Brett Hart,
- at 18.9 per game : Other senior; Bruce Hart, the Tor·
Easterners seeing plenty of nadoes top tebounder and a 6-1
action are Bob CaldweU, the senior and 1).11 ' junior Nick
SVAC's fifth top scorer at 15.8; Ihle . 'one of the Tornado
Alan DlivaU, Randy Boring,• strongpoints ·has .been their
Randy '(oung, and Dave strong bench which has the
likes of Tim lhle, Ron Hill, and
Milhone.
Coach Asa •Bradbury's Mike Nease.

~s~g
.

·

. 3&lt;
:wm-.. Agtdn' ·.

when you buy the '
' 144-teblet elzel

·YOU SAVE 4.98

144 Tablets FREE

you buy the
SPECIAL "Limited· Time'' · when
288-tablat elzel
OFFER _;_SAVE TODAY! YOU SAVE 8.69

Whe n you srend mone,r
uut or t own it is gone.

'

Mon ey spent a[ home sta ys
at h ome. It return s in
many way's. In m ore
successful businesses .
i .mProv~ments, expan rdom
uml new construct ion .

Dollars in cre~se in value
and provide more taxes
that improve parks,
playgrounds. street s
ani.l S(.'h ools. '

OEVOTEO TO THE
INTE«ESTOI'
'MEIGS·MASON AREA
CH.ESTER L. TANNEHILL,
Exec . Ed.
·
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
City Editor

72 Tablets FREE

It keeps travelin g with
little chance o( returning.

'P ubl ished darr.v exqpt
Saturday bv The Oh io Valley

Publishing company, 111
court
·st.. Pomeroy . Ohio.
•s-769. Businns Off ice Phone
992·2156, Editoriot Phone '992·
2157.
Second class po•toge paid at
Pomeroy. Ohio.
, National advertising
represe~tative
Bott inelli ·
· Gallagher , Inc .. 12 East •2nd
St ., New York City, New York .
1 Su~scription roles: De ·
: iiv~red • by carrier where
available 50 cents per week ;,
1

By Motor Route where carrier
Service. not available : One

. mohlh · sus . By mail in Ohio
' and w.. va .• One year $U.OO .
: Six months $1.25 . Thre ej
mo{lths· $4 .50 . Subscr1pt lon
pri(e include• Sundlly Times..
I Sen)lnel.
.
·
' ..-..

RED FOIL HEARTS .........$1.00 to $4.25

NOW A

If all purc hases thttt c oul~l
he m tuJe at home were
made .a t home think of 'all
the improvements t h !l.t
wuuld he. poss ible.

·

.

oma d0. F1'()8h

~

-

WinSqu«Uer
RACINE - The Southern
Ht' gh School freshman
basketbaU. squad squeaked by
Kyger Creek •"""'
,..~nesdaIf here
43 to 39. Southern was 10 out of
their thr lin
18 at
ee OW e.
For Southern, Donald
high' 'thlO · •·
Shafferwas
WI
pom ....
Tlm-Maurerhad9, Terry Sayre
8, Dave Clark 5, Dave Jenkins
4 Buddy Ervin 3, and Tom
.;--~·rt and Glenn Simpson 1
IHUJUICI ·
1
each. For Kyger Creek, Terry
"
·
·
ith 1
Lucas led aU scorers W I ·
' Southern'S record is 3-3.
•

"PROfESSIONAL

The.Farmers Bank
and ~Savinp Co.

Be assured that your pre·
scripfions arefillea preciselyand promptly. We are dedi.
.
cated to being .qf service fpr
dll yout family health ~eeds.

POMEROY, mtiO
Member Federal . Reserve
System
On Frld1ys Our . Drive-In
Window Is Open 9 l.m. to 7
p.m., CContlnuouslyl.
·
StO,OOO MIXimum 1nsur1nce
For E1ch Depositor

· 4 RegistQI PharmacistS-·to Sene You
•

Prescriptions Is .Our Main Business
I

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO .
.'

.
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
University's Tommy Corde,
who scored 45 points in the
Bobc11ts' two gan'iea lastweek,
including 22 in the 71-M victory
over Toledo, has been selected
the Mid-Aillerican Conference
player of the week.
Corde, the point man in
Coach Jim' Snyder's 1·2-2 of.
fense, also popped in 23 against
Kent State during the week as
the Bobcats grabbed first place
in the conference.
In hls first two years at OU,
Cordewasthoughtofmoreas.a
gclod baD handler, but the
senior from Maysville, Ky.,
has blossomed into a top scorer
this year, leading the Bobcalll
in scoring with a 19-6 average
while stiU running the offensive
show. Corde also leads the
Bobcats in field goal percentage with 49.2.
Also nominated for player of
the week .honors were Bowling
Green·~
Brian Scanlan,
Miami's Darren Dunlap, Tim
Hannan of Toledo and Charlie
Sidwell of Western Michigan.

QUITS UNDER FIRE
EUGENE, Ore. (UPI)
Jerry Frei, who had only one
winning season in five as head
football coach at the University
of Oregon, quit under fire
Wednesday, and an assistant
coach quickly became a
contender for the job.
Dick Enright, 37, who had a
brilliant high school coaching
reco'rd after graduating from
USC and playing a year with
the Los Angeles RamS, an·
nounced he was applying for
Frei's job. Enright, who had a
75-5 record with Gardena
(Calif.) lligh School in eight
years, had hls professional '
playing career tenninated ·by
an automobile accident.

"I just toss
my troubles ,
over my
shoulder"
Avoid heating problems
wilh clean burning healing
oil from Rizer's. Phone 992·
2101 tor . prom pi and
reliable metered delivery

service.

Great Midwinter
__............
Catalog Values In
·-~;.;:;....liiiiil
I

CONSOLE
COLOR TV
'

.
OePaul79 Wls-Green Bay67
Assumption 94 Clark 89
Holy Cross 8D Colgate 78
Wooster 98 John Carroll 69
Toledo 76 Bowling Green 53
Wittenberg 56 Cent. St. 52
Defiance 73 Findlay 58.
Phlla . Tex. 72 Scranton 62
Kings 81 Gannon 63
Urbana 88 Rio Grande 86
Akron 87 Buffalo 68

BEST BUY

All the Features

II

• Chromi.. control lets you get color
miK you prefer at the tum ot a knob
e Lighted channel selectors make tuning

a sna~ven in darkened viewing rooms

\.\\~\\

•

. A25 lb. Box Of Russell Stoler
~Candy To ~ _Given Away
Feb. 13th

W. l . T. Pis

·--'-'"--

We Work
With Your
Dodot

Keep home e111.rned dolla r"
home nwn e~ dollarr&lt;.

East

OfTh e W eek

'

The Daily Sentinet . \

H.l.P' .UILD
OP"P"OfiTUNITV

owned dollars

By United Press International

MAc Ul.yer

·,---~----..

Keep home earned
dollars home

Pro Stand"

Boston
30 7 7 67
New York
29 7 7 65
Montreal
26 11 7 59
Toronto
20 15 10 so
18 20 7 43
By fRED DOWN ·
Valuable Player Awards Detroit
12 25 5 29
UPI Sports Writer
during his tS.year career with Vancouver
Buffalo
9 26 10 28
NEW YORK (UPI)-Sandy the New York Yankees and
· West
Koufax, who packed his great· New York Melli between 1947
w. L. T. Pis
30 9 5 65
ness, into four seasons, and and 1965, won entry into the Chicago
Minnesota
23 15 7 53
Yogi Berra and Early Wynn, haU with 339 votes aitd Synn, California
14 24 10 38
who spread their lriUiance who won 300 games during a 23- St. Louis
15 23 7 37
12 25 8 32
over a longer period of time, year [ll!rlod from 1939 through Pittsburgh
Philadelphia
12
22 8 32
were elected to basebaU's Hall 1963, made it witp 301.
los Angeles
11 32 4 26 .
of Fame Wednesdiiy in voting
Kiner Falls Short
Wednesday's Res~ Its
that suggested the stars ol the
Ralph Kiner, former home- Montreal I Toronto 0
modern era Will soon achieve f1!ll king of tbe Pittsburgh Minnesota 4 Detroit 1
Vanc0\Jver6 Pittsburgh I
the recognition that has been Pirates, fell 65 votes short of Chicago 2 California 0
granted to tbose of the distant the required m (75 per cent) New York 5 los Angeles 1
IOnlfgamesscheduledl
past.
and was · followed by Gil
hursday's Games
Kou!ax, who may have been Hodges (161), Johnny Mize Vancouver
at Buffalo
the lll'ost dominant pitcher in (157), Enos Slaughter (149), Chicago at Philadelphia
IOn Iy games scheduled)
basehaU history during hls Pee Wee Reese (t29), Marty
glory ye~rs with the Los Marion (120) and Bob Lemon
AKL Standings
Angeles Dodgers from 1963 (117).
"'"~By United Press International
through 1966, led the trio .into
It was the first time since
East
W. L. T. Pis
the shrine at Cooperstown, 1955 that the BBWAA ·elected
26 12 7 S9
Boston
N.Y.,whenhereceived344ofa more than one player and may Nova Scot ia
22 13 9 53
17 14 9 43
possible 39t votes In the mean that the voters are Springfield
14
21 9 37
Provid
ence
balloting by the Baseball. determined to give 8s much
15
23 5 35
Rochester
Writers Association
of reco
. gru'tion to the stars of the
West
W. L. T. Pis
America (BBWAA).
1940-45 era as the special Old
20 13 6 46
. Berra, who won three Most f!mers Committee. has been Hershey
Cinclnnotl
18 19 9 45
giVing the great players of Baltimore
20 17 s 45
18 18 6 42
.
basebaU's early d~ys. Forty- Cleveland
Richmond
·
17 19 7 41
nine of the players m the Hall. Tidewater
10 ·28 4 24
.
of Fame have been voted in by
Wednesday's Results
·
the BBWAA whereas 59. have Richmond] Springfield 3
Cincinnati 3
Dlbeen elected by the Old Timers Rochester~
Boston 2 Hershey 1
.C
Committee, which ~riginallr,
IOnlygamesscheduledl
was formed as a backup
Thursd1y'sG.1mes
Nova Scotia at Boston
IF./
group.
IOnlygamescheduled)

PT. PLEASNIT, W. Va. - The Meigs Marauder wrestling
team lost a squeaker to a powerful Pt. Pleasant Big Black squad
here Wednesday afternoon, 33-27.
Coach Fenton Taylor's.Marauders are now t.,'l on the year.
Meigs will have a meet this Saturday night at Meigs High School
at '1:30 ag&amp;inst the Wabama White Falcons.
'lb~Marauders' big three, Robbie Harris, 1141b. class; Mike
Harrison, tOO lb. class, and John Thomas, 157lb. class, won their
.fourth.stralght matches without defeat. Big things may be ex(
pected from these great athletes, come the post&lt;~eason tournaments.
The results of Wednesday'smatch with Pt. Pleasant are :

FA NCY SATIN HEARTS FROM $3.95

ColtegoBasktlboiiRttulll
By United PrtsslnltrNIIionol
' uagJ South Car. 80 Niagara 69
. ABA Ston41nos
Dul&lt;e 86 Canlslu• 58
By United Press lnltrNIIional Pem St. 83 Gelfysburg 53
· East
Marshall 81 Miami CO.) 63
W. L. Pel: GB W.Va. Tech 98 Concqrd 61
36 10 .738 ...
Navy 77 Haverford 58
Kentuck y
30 18 .625 7
Florida St. lOS $91Jih Ala. 72
Virg inia
22 27 .449 15'1&gt; Dayton 76 Cincinnati 60 .
New York
Ohio U. 88 Vir. Tech 79
Floridla M 20 28 .41l. 17
Piltsburgh 19· 30 . ~ 18112 North Car. 92 Wake , Forest 77
17 31 .354 20
Hillside 84 Albion 70
Carolina
West
Pennsylvania 74 Villanova 64
W. l. Pel. GB Mercer 93 South Florida 88
Uta h
33 1S .688 ... St. Anselm's 67 Stonehlll 65
Indiana
28 19 .596 4'1' Olivet 100 Mercy 97
.
Memphis
21 28 .429 12''' Citadel 86 Arkans"' St. 48
Denver
19 27 .413 13
Albright 68 Del. Valley S7
Dallas
20 32 .385'15
Dickln.. n 89 Muhlenberg 74
Wedneoday's Results
Western Mich . 70 Ball Sf. 60
Vi rginia 138 Kentucky 132
Fordham 81 Seton Hall 74
Ca rol ina 108 Floridians 104
Marquette 80 Loyola. Ill . 70
Utah U3 Memphis i18
Rice 96 AlA 87
Denver 116 Dallas 92
North Tex. St. 74 Wichita St. 63
!Onlfgamesscheduledl
Abilene Ch ris. 76 Air Force 70
Laniar U. 95 Sam Houston 88
hunday's'Games
Piltsburgh vs.Fiortdians
St. Mary's, Tex. 87 Texas Luth
,
AI Tampa. Flo. 80 ·
Carolina at New York
Bishop 89 Texas Coli . 78
Kentuckyvs. Virginia
Geneva 79 Thiel 64
AI Norfolk, Va. · Pittsburgh 91 Bucknell67
Memphis at Indiana
Providence 87 Fairfield 75
!Onlygamesscheduied)
Oakland 109 Grand Val. 95
Eastern Ill. 100 DePauw 86
I NKL Standings

5-6CordeNamed

LOSE UGLY FAT
IOday. MONADEX IS a tiny

'

a

K IDDIE
AND
INFANT
CRIP

Leading the Iroqmen.w!U be
:the league's fOIII'th leading
tebounder, 6-2 senior center
Steve Keller. Ketler has 77
rebounds, lfed with Waverly's
Mike Oyer at 11.0 per game
clip.
Two other seniors who also
pave the way for the upsetmmded Ironmen are 5-10 guard
Dan Davidson and 6-G forward
Mtke Buckley, All three scored
· in double figures in the first
meeting of the two teams.

Koufax,
.
Berra,,
.
Meigs A Ouhs Wynn Honored
·1n Four Games

i$ the ali$wer

JANUARY

MATIIER WINS BID
P. W. Mather of Cincinnati
was the apparent low bidder at
$9,140 on a project of the U.
Corps • of Engineers for · in·
suilling a main entrance sign,
lightinll facilities and landscaping at the main entrance of
the Belleville-Racine Locks
and Dam in Racine. Second low
bidder was the Thomas Co. of
Huntington, W. Va., $11,908.62
and the third was the Wolter
Construction Co. of Cincinnati,
$14,938.

Chjeftaliis: ~. Jackson, who nels for 528 (J8,7) and gave up 6-2 senior forward-center, Is
was picked to finish dead last · 647 (68.6).
tied with Athena' Dave Smith
in the elght-temn SEOAL, wiD . One cl the moilt surprising • for second in individual
play the Greenfield McLain · statistic of. the league showing rebounding with M (12.0) per
Tigers on · the following up this week is that Meigs, the game. (Vaughan's recordSaturdaynightatJackson. The smallest team, Is leading in breaking 31 grabs came
"AI!," Tigers are one of the top rebounds ! The close-to-the; against non-league . oppooent
teams in central Ohio, having ground but first-to-the-ball wahama, not counting in
handedUpperArllngton,oneof Marauders have 3t3 retrieves league statistics.)
the better tealllil in Ohio, their to their credit ( 44.7) compared
Other starters for the
only loss of the seaS!IJl.
10 ~for second place Athens Marauders will be juniors
.. The Marauders, by \Oirtue of (42.7) . Jackson has · grabbed Jimmy Boggs and Rich Bailey,
their 66-58 scalpiitg .of Logan's 24.1 carooms (34.4), good for both .1).9 guards, and 5-tO forChieftainli .last Fridlly,, have fifth' spot. ,
ward Andy Vaughan.
scored more polnta than they
Steve . Dunfee, 6-0 senior
have allawed. Meigs has found forward, improiring at every
the .hoop for 676 &lt;at.5 &gt; and outing, has risen to sixth in
peflllltted 668 (60.7) .. Jackson, league scoring 'with 98 points,
in nine games, has ruffied the 14.0 per game. Tony Vaughan,

'

Decontrolled

PLUMBING and
HEATING

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f

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20 1·

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to Appropriators

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for

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~

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- adv .

The Best Service

For Men, Women and Children

I

Nancy Downard, Mrs. Conard
Bowen and daughter.

•

The One Chance foi Slam

help it.
Okay, so I'm a self-pitying dummy. But aU I know Is I need
someone-anyone-who wiD understand.- NOT KIDDING
DEAR NOT KIDDING :
Because your Jetter came from our home town, I've already
asked our local paper to put a PERSONAL in GENERATION
RAP, so that we can write to you. If you'd have given us your
name and address, you would have already heard from us.
· The Almanac
I know of an organization that I think will be just great for
By UoltedPress lnterilatlonar
you. The kids are friendly and involved-and they reaDy care.
Today is Thursday, Jan. 20,
It's called "Student Life" and there's a branch in almost every the 20th day of 1972.
high school. Please join---SUE
·
The moon is between its new
phase and first quarter.
DEAR N.K.:
Tbe morning stars are
And-If you haven't already..:.Please send us your name and
Mercury and Jupiter.
address on a stamped envelopeThe evening stars are Venus,
We'd like to get in touch-and there's another reason too:
Mars,
and Saturn.
Prepare yourself for a deluge of letters, N.K., from our great
Th&lt;)!e horn on this day are
readers who always prove how much they care. Their
under
the sign of Aquarius.
correspoitdence is guaranteed to bring almost anyone out of the
American figure skater Carol
miseries.- HELEN
Heiss
was born Jan .. 20, 1940.
NOTE TO READERS : Send your letters to "Not Kidding"
On this day in hiStory:
care of GENERATION RAP (this newspaper) and we 'II forward
In 1892 students at the
them to her.- H. and S.
Springfield Mass., YMCA
NOTE FROM BOTH OF US : Please, PLEASE, if you have a
played the first official basketdesperate problem, Include a stamped, self-addressed envelope. ball game .
Think how it feels to get a suicide note and know there 's no quick
In 1936 King George V of
way to reach the writer !---SUE AND HELEN
Britain died.
.(GOT A PROBLEM? Or a subject for discussion, twoIn 1969 Richard Nixon was
generation style? Direct your questions to either Sue or Helen inaugurated as the 37th presBottel--or both, in care of this newspaper, if you want a com- ident of the United ~tales.
bined answer)
'". .
·' 1 , ...
In 1970 .the United States and
Red Ch!na .resuroed the War.
saw talks.• .1

-!

3-Tbe Dilly S.U.J.IW-dlepott-Pwuenq, o., Jan. 2ll. 1m

'

palachian Regional Com~
..
;f,}
mittee.
~tl
By
Helen
and
Sue
Bottel
·
;:;:i;l
FoUowing the to-week period
ByHELENANDSUEBOTl'EL
,.,
the IO $ides, ol whom Miss ........
ACryforlielp
Baer and Miss · Gilmore are
DEAR
llELEN
AND
SUE
:
two, lv!U be. placed throughout
.
the seven counties that the
I'm 16, black, and need help-fast. Hit doesn't come aoon, I
comprehensive speech, vision will have made the decision and committed suiclde- I even' have
and hearing project now en- a razor in my room. Sometimes I pick 111up and think how it
~ mpasaes .
would be to just not be around any more. But first I thO\)gqt I'd
write to you and see if anyone still cares.
The big question of course, is always WHY? I don't even

ALUMINUM

'

I

'~ti'l'lM~ll!:i!:l:~Mililli!iliftMililllfib::::lilililf:1f:ii:Nlili@t-iMMM · WIN AT BRIDGE

2 Training in Speecft Therapy
Linda Baer, Minersville
Ro~te I, and Betty Lou
Gilmore, Middleport, h~ve
begun , a .to-week · tta ining
period leading to certification
·as speech therapy aides. The
course at Ohio University is
sponsored by . the Ohio
Department of Health and is
being funded by . the Ap-

•

J'

'

•-MORE
THAN TWICE
THE POWER OF
SOME MINI..SAWS
• PLUS-'"' BUILT·IN
,
SHOCK ABSORB~RS
• AUTOMATIC CHAJN .OILING
'. DELUXE FEATURES WORTH
UP TO $5QOO MORE

T

• Two 5-inch oval speak•rs offer rich
.
sound that really tills a room
• Set-and-forget volume control
Cabinet about 39V.x29%l&lt;IB inches deep
'Tube cup ~xtends 6~ in. from back

'HlGHLlGHTS
with Pa.ul.Crabtree

57 X 43101-Contemponry, nlnut ..n_
57 X 43111-tolonial, 1111ple
57 X 43'121-Spanilh, pecan venHr

""HI' .

CALL POINTVIEW: 992 · 2505
' T~e
mid-week blahs
continue. with nothing all
that great on TV tonight. Any
evening that has /' Me and
the Chimp" can't be all good.
a~yhow .

If I w•re absolutely stuck
In front of a TV set tonight,
I'd fli'Obably watch Primus,
1 cape-sword-and-aqualung
syndicated series on Ch, 2 al
7:30 ... Episode Action, the
old movie aerials on Ch. 9at 8·
... then cot to the !e&lt;Ond half
of Flip Wilson at 8:30 (but
lowering the volume during
the ..ngs ol g11est Aretha ·
Franklin, whom I don't go
lor, voice-wise) ... flip. &lt;oin
between Bill Buckley 's
"firl~g . Line" and NET
Pl«yhouse, which repeats a
~lography," "To Be Young,

Gitted and Black," at 9
(again missing 'part of the
shows I ... And then wait for
Dean Merlin at 10, Ch. 2 &amp; 1.
If he wasn'l funny, l'&lt;f catch
the Ch. 11 news.·which Is on
early at 10, and go to bed. It's
that ~ind of evening.

Authorized
Catalog Metthant

+++

MOVIES: "Gal Who Tool&lt;

the West," 4 p.m., and "Act

of Love," 11 :30 p.m., both
Ch . 10.

+ +.+

FRIDAY :

Le a d ing

Democrats are supposed to

respond to the President · ~
Stale of the Union address at
i2:30 p.m., most channels,
b&lt;Jt we can't find out who's
doing the responding.

220 E. Main

-

~meroy

STORE •HOURSs

MON., TUES., WED. &amp; SAT.
.

9:00'toS :OO ·

THURSDAY9:00TO NOO~
FRIDAY9:0tl 1:09:00

I '

�'

•

2- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport,Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 20,1972 .

.

~ ~:.! Generation Rap . ll

u

know myself, but I'D trY to te you :
· I. I have no boy friends. . •
2. I have very few girl friends-no one to talk to at aU, not
even to eat lunch with.
3. I find my home life increasingly unbearable.
4. At school, it seems as If eyeryone (white) iS sociaUy
against me or prejudlce4- yes, even my teachers. My own
people (black) consider me a "Tom" or "oreo," so they don't like
me.
5. Worst of aU, I've kept aU my problems and feelings
(mostly of hate) inside me . It's almost Uke having a time bomb
in there, and I'm quietly waiting for it to go off ... Writing this
letter- you don't know how much courage It took. I'm afraid it
,
,
will just be tossed away. Maybe you get so many letters you
won't even see this oqe .
Don't suggest that I talk to my mother or family. She's
changed so much Hind it strange to say "Mom." She has her own
friends . When she notices me, it's to give me a beating. I get one
almost every day, with two, sometimes four belts. I have no
sisters, and my brothers do things that get me in trouble--that's
why I get so many beatings.
Everywhere, I find the doors 'Closed and locked. Even the
door to God. I find myself becoming more and more estranged
from Godasmyproblemsincreaae. !know it's wrong, but 1can't

STORM OO'ORS
~ ', # &amp;WINDOWS

It jl I

&amp;

.

BLIND STOP OR OVER LAP
WIMDOWS

VALLEY WMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO. .
MIDDLEPORT

992-2709

-

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----

'

.

I

~--~

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Lee Lunsford, Oak lliU, a daughter ; Mr.
and Mrs. Larry E. Clonch, Pt.
Pleasant, a daughter ; Mr. and
Mrs. Allan Lee Harris,
Pomeroy, a son ; Mr. and Mrs.
Ra y 0 . Laudermilt, Rutland, a
son ; Mr. and Mrs. David R.
Altizer, Pairiot, a son; and Mr . .
and !&gt;Irs. Charles E. Burgess,
Crown City, a son.
Discharges
Timothy A. Keefer, Lynn M.
Fleming, Dana L. Kessinger,
Tamara S. Hoffman , Mrs.
Robert J. Hawk and son, Carl
F. McGuire, Eleanor J. Hart. man, Rose G. Brown·, Mrs.
Mary J. VanFoosen, Myrtle A.
SomerviUe, Linda M. Schuler,
!delle Lafave, Julia N. Kirby,
John E. Houck, Roscoe M.
Harrison, Mrs. George Allen
Ehman and daughter, Joseph
F. Calvert, Clan B. Cox,
Chester T. Coy, John J. Dower,
Dan Edwards; Richard 0 .
Danbury, Ruth 0. Coyan,
Wayne B. Harbarger, Mrs.
Ruby L. Snyder, Jerry L. Long,

HEATING
AND CENTRAL
AIR CONDITIONING
~LECTRIC

GAS - OIL -

eFREE ESTIMATES
eFREE DELIVERY
•EASY TERMS
eSALES AND SERVICE

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT
MIDDLEPORr, 0.

..

JANUARY CLEARANCE SALEI

CONTINUES
The Savings Are Great
Famous Name Brands·On Sale

'

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.

'

'

'

WASiliNGTON (UPI) - The
Cost of Uving Council Wed-·
nesday exempted the nation's
smallest retail s tores and
luxury rental apartments from
price controls.
The announcement said the
action was being taken to
eliminate red tape and to allow
government agents to keep a
sharper eye on bigger business
operations.
The council's order' which
was recommenqed by the
Price Commission, will apply
to:
- The U million retails
outle ts that do less than
$1110,000 in annual sales. The
"mom and pop" neighborhood
store is typical of this group,
the council said.
- Apariment units renting
for $500 a month or more,
-Owner-occupied dweJUngs
of four units · or less which
operate
under
rental
agreements longer than one
month.
- Single family rental
dwellings on longer than
month-to-month rental
agreements where the landlord
owns four units or less.
The council said retail stores '
covered by the order account
for 75 per cent of the natfon's
total retail outlets but account
for only about 15 per cent of aU
retail sales .
Not covered by the exemption order, however, were such
small service firms as laun·
dries and dry cleaning
establishments,. restaurants,
television repair shops and
yard .and gatden care service
centers.

Shop or Field
Ph. 992-2511

CHASE
HARDWARE,

From Golf Balls to D1wRiverSheetst

' '

Js\

7

WEST

:
2
+A 9 6
"' i\ Q r,

,,

,

llAST (D)

• 2
• 9

;. ,;

• A K Q 10 7 4 :1 .

t K J 10 4 a+ Q R;, 2
• 10 9 8.142ofo K
SOU1ll
•AKJ108543
6

•

!.,. ~ 73

Both vulnerable
North llo.•t South
·
3 • · 4•
Pas.~ 6 4 ., .. Pass Pass
Pass
J
Open in~ lead- • 9
West

-

'

Jackson ·Undeidogs Here:on .Frid~y

p~~:~~r~Jx~~ a~~:~~ced

recently . expropriated·
AlllericarMI\'med CGppet ~
and
the new Paklltan gOVen!· .
thrown one diamond and a Wednesday that the United
bunch of hearts. Dummy States will retliliate against ment ol President Zulflkar AU ·
sfill held three clubs and a ·foreign governments that seize Bhutio has recently anllCllJIICed
diamond.
' · · · private American property natlonaiizaUon of lome private
Then ~e professor led a without payment by cutting off industry ~!though American : ·
low club , Wen t up With · 'd . itd
. I
f
· dummy's ace ; d r 0 p p e d 81 . a opposmg oana rom investments have not been
~
the World Bank and other affected.
s.,.HI lot' JACOIY MDDnH 1&gt;oo1r agencies. Nixon ouUine&lt;! hls
to: "Wi• ot lridfO," rc/o r•i• _,_ tough policy concerning ex·
popor), .P.O. lo• 419,
City proprlation of prlv~te property
Stotioo, Hew York, H.Y. 10019.
inafour-pageslatementisSued
b)' the 'White llouae.
East's. singleton king a.nd The President cited no
FOR OUR
· ed th 1
·
scor
e s am.
,
. nations in hls statement but the
, "~ow did you work ,that ,government of Chile has
out?" asked the student. "I
., ·
would have lost ~ fln~sse to
. .
,
that singleton king." '
BQRDEN TO SPEAK
· "~.e-ggar.s can't be choos- . The Rev. Nyie Borden will be
ers, re~hed the _professor. guest speaker at the
11 West · eld the king lt was Harrisonville First United
not go 1 n g to drop and I
would have to lose a -club 'Presbyterian Church Sunday
·trick eventually. My on I y at 10:30·a.m.
chance was to drop a single- l""'!..._.;._..,_ _llllli_~-~-~--!il-,
ton king and it came off."
,

.,.,io

\

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I

The Meigs .Marauder cagers · slrifl$ to · four against the
. are.at honie this Frida)' for a · Ironmen. Meigs il .$.4 'in aU
.southeastern Ohio Athletic g•mea and .. 3-4 in league
League face-off with ceDar- competition, good for fifth
dwelling Jackson . The pla.ce, the spot that was
Marauders. won the first "rellei'Ved'~ "for them in pre·
meetinll, 62-58, in the league sea1011 Pretuctiona.
opener for both squads.
.
Jackson, on the other· hand,
Coach Carl Wolfe's Uvened· •. Ia 1~ for the year and 1-4 in
up Marauders, who are riding league play. Coach AI Burger's
a three-game win streak, will Ironmen received .their · only
be favored to increase 'that win atthee~pense of the Logan
.
.
+Wt+++++++••t-&gt;••+++t++++~••ooouon+r.++t+t•
'' ·
·
·
(

LGGK
· SALE·

Up tight over big bills ? '

By Oswald &amp; James Ja~oby
~
The student could not wait
to leap from his chair to see
how the professor was going
lo play the six-spade contract. Afier alJ, the student
(NEWSPAP!R ENTERPRISE ASSN,.!
had bid the slam without ;
• · .· . ·
knowing whether there would ·
pe a play for it.
When he saw the profesThe bidding ~as been:
sor's cards he knew he had West North East
made ·a bad bid. Hopefully
he watched to see what, if Pass 2 •
Pass
anythin,g, the professor could · Pass 4 •
Pass
~o to save the sinking ship.
You, South, hold:
East won the · first trtck ' .AKQJ1865 .A3Z +KS.Z
with the lO of hearts and
What do you do now?
continued the suit. The proA-Bid rour no-trump. This
fessor ruffed high; played a
time
It is Blukwood, You plan
couple of rounds of trumps ;
to
bid
six if he shows an ace.
lf d a diamond to the ace;
TODAY'S QUESTION
ruffed a diamond and ran off
aiJ his trumps but one.
Your partner bids five hearts
By this time West had dis- to show two aces. What do you
carded two diamonds and do now?
HATS-· P.J.'S - GOWNS
three clubs and East had
COATS - JACKETS

the g ro'ov. ,. est .

992-2171

125 E. Main

SALE

Special
Sale On

CONTINUES

·* tl %oFF

Pomeroy

Mattei Toy$

And Many other Toy Un.es And Big ~mllbl!ent
Of Games Many Priced Far. Ben Oor Cost
·

Closing out to IIUiko .room for new 1972
items that wilt be coming in 190n.

SNOWSUITS- DRESSES
&gt;LUOU;)I=;) - SPORTSWEAR

~ TH==E :::=--======-~

s:

SETS.

Reg. 1.49

S HOPP

.&amp;.GIL '
TRASH rNt

·-__·2·-·
-_,
......... ...., ......

,

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

THE T IN MIDDLEPORT

. rr

You can

start losing weight

tab l et

and

easy

to

take .

MONADEX will help curb your
desire for excess food . Eat less -

weigh less . Contains no
dongerous drugs and W.lll not

make you
nervous . No
str:tnuo.us exercise . Chllnge

Make Pom'erov Your Sho1pjiiing_ Center

YOU I'!\ life

n,•..

$lart

t9_d1y ,

MON'A'OEX costs $3.oo'tor

a 20

day SUpply . ~ose, uOiy fah •or
your money will be refunded
with no questionS asked.

A thought for today: British MONADEX Is sold with this
poet Philip Bailey said, "II guarantee by : Swlstulr &amp; Lohse
111 E. ·MIIn, Pomeroy, &amp;
matters not how long we live, Drugs,
Dutton DrUg Store, Mld~leport.
but how."
M•il Orders Filled.

BEN,FRANKUN•

~e~~s~
CANDIES

PHONE
, 992·3498

. 2o2 E11t !Min St.

·

Pomeroy~ Clttlo

OI'IH I'RIDAY l SATURDAY HIGIITS TIL·9

·

.

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

'

va1entin.e's iaay
feb.l~

Locust St.

MidtlltpoH

'
The Eastern Eagles and the "firehouse five" in Racine has
Southern Local .Tornadoes pull a surprising 5-5 overaU record
double duty this weekend, each and is 3-4 in SVAC play. The
•playing Friday and Saturday Tornadoes host the Wahama
White Falcons Friday night.
night.
The Eagles, coached by The Falcons, 341 for the year,
second-year. head mentor Bill defeated Ravenswood, 99-94,
Phillips, trave.l ,to Glouster and Pt. ~leaaant; 66-57, last
·
,Friday night to battle the 2-8 week, . , ·
Saturday rught, still at home,
Tomcats .in a non.SVAC tilt.
Saturday evening; Eastern the Tornadoes play SV AC foe
goes into an impor,tant league Southwestern. The llighlanmstch-up at Symmes Valley. ders, coached by Richard
Eastern is 6-2 in southern Hamilton, are having a ro'cky
VaUey• Confecence play w~ile time, having lost aU of their
slating
7-2 overaU record. first 10 starts. Southern won
· S)'!IU11es VaUey, a haU a game the first meeting, 77-58.
behind league-leading North
The Southern attack features
Gallia, is6-1 in the SVAC and 7·
2 overall. The E;agles need the . the SVAC's sixth and eighth
win in. order to stay in the best point-makers in 5-11 senior
running for the SVAC ti.tle. A Jim llubbard, 15.4, and cousin
: Symmes ·vaUey Joss would Jerry Hubbard, 5-10 junior;
severely dampen its chances of wha ·scores at a 14.6 cUp in
league play.
winning the crown.
Other Tornado starters are
Leading the Eagles to . date
playmaker
and defensive
h8s been Dennis Eichinger, the
.area's seventh leading scorer, speCialist, Brett Hart,
- at 18.9 per game : Other senior; Bruce Hart, the Tor·
Easterners seeing plenty of nadoes top tebounder and a 6-1
action are Bob CaldweU, the senior and 1).11 ' junior Nick
SVAC's fifth top scorer at 15.8; Ihle . 'one of the Tornado
Alan DlivaU, Randy Boring,• strongpoints ·has .been their
Randy '(oung, and Dave strong bench which has the
likes of Tim lhle, Ron Hill, and
Milhone.
Coach Asa •Bradbury's Mike Nease.

~s~g
.

·

. 3&lt;
:wm-.. Agtdn' ·.

when you buy the '
' 144-teblet elzel

·YOU SAVE 4.98

144 Tablets FREE

you buy the
SPECIAL "Limited· Time'' · when
288-tablat elzel
OFFER _;_SAVE TODAY! YOU SAVE 8.69

Whe n you srend mone,r
uut or t own it is gone.

'

Mon ey spent a[ home sta ys
at h ome. It return s in
many way's. In m ore
successful businesses .
i .mProv~ments, expan rdom
uml new construct ion .

Dollars in cre~se in value
and provide more taxes
that improve parks,
playgrounds. street s
ani.l S(.'h ools. '

OEVOTEO TO THE
INTE«ESTOI'
'MEIGS·MASON AREA
CH.ESTER L. TANNEHILL,
Exec . Ed.
·
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
City Editor

72 Tablets FREE

It keeps travelin g with
little chance o( returning.

'P ubl ished darr.v exqpt
Saturday bv The Oh io Valley

Publishing company, 111
court
·st.. Pomeroy . Ohio.
•s-769. Businns Off ice Phone
992·2156, Editoriot Phone '992·
2157.
Second class po•toge paid at
Pomeroy. Ohio.
, National advertising
represe~tative
Bott inelli ·
· Gallagher , Inc .. 12 East •2nd
St ., New York City, New York .
1 Su~scription roles: De ·
: iiv~red • by carrier where
available 50 cents per week ;,
1

By Motor Route where carrier
Service. not available : One

. mohlh · sus . By mail in Ohio
' and w.. va .• One year $U.OO .
: Six months $1.25 . Thre ej
mo{lths· $4 .50 . Subscr1pt lon
pri(e include• Sundlly Times..
I Sen)lnel.
.
·
' ..-..

RED FOIL HEARTS .........$1.00 to $4.25

NOW A

If all purc hases thttt c oul~l
he m tuJe at home were
made .a t home think of 'all
the improvements t h !l.t
wuuld he. poss ible.

·

.

oma d0. F1'()8h

~

-

WinSqu«Uer
RACINE - The Southern
Ht' gh School freshman
basketbaU. squad squeaked by
Kyger Creek •"""'
,..~nesdaIf here
43 to 39. Southern was 10 out of
their thr lin
18 at
ee OW e.
For Southern, Donald
high' 'thlO · •·
Shafferwas
WI
pom ....
Tlm-Maurerhad9, Terry Sayre
8, Dave Clark 5, Dave Jenkins
4 Buddy Ervin 3, and Tom
.;--~·rt and Glenn Simpson 1
IHUJUICI ·
1
each. For Kyger Creek, Terry
"
·
·
ith 1
Lucas led aU scorers W I ·
' Southern'S record is 3-3.
•

"PROfESSIONAL

The.Farmers Bank
and ~Savinp Co.

Be assured that your pre·
scripfions arefillea preciselyand promptly. We are dedi.
.
cated to being .qf service fpr
dll yout family health ~eeds.

POMEROY, mtiO
Member Federal . Reserve
System
On Frld1ys Our . Drive-In
Window Is Open 9 l.m. to 7
p.m., CContlnuouslyl.
·
StO,OOO MIXimum 1nsur1nce
For E1ch Depositor

· 4 RegistQI PharmacistS-·to Sene You
•

Prescriptions Is .Our Main Business
I

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO .
.'

.
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
University's Tommy Corde,
who scored 45 points in the
Bobc11ts' two gan'iea lastweek,
including 22 in the 71-M victory
over Toledo, has been selected
the Mid-Aillerican Conference
player of the week.
Corde, the point man in
Coach Jim' Snyder's 1·2-2 of.
fense, also popped in 23 against
Kent State during the week as
the Bobcats grabbed first place
in the conference.
In hls first two years at OU,
Cordewasthoughtofmoreas.a
gclod baD handler, but the
senior from Maysville, Ky.,
has blossomed into a top scorer
this year, leading the Bobcalll
in scoring with a 19-6 average
while stiU running the offensive
show. Corde also leads the
Bobcats in field goal percentage with 49.2.
Also nominated for player of
the week .honors were Bowling
Green·~
Brian Scanlan,
Miami's Darren Dunlap, Tim
Hannan of Toledo and Charlie
Sidwell of Western Michigan.

QUITS UNDER FIRE
EUGENE, Ore. (UPI)
Jerry Frei, who had only one
winning season in five as head
football coach at the University
of Oregon, quit under fire
Wednesday, and an assistant
coach quickly became a
contender for the job.
Dick Enright, 37, who had a
brilliant high school coaching
reco'rd after graduating from
USC and playing a year with
the Los Angeles RamS, an·
nounced he was applying for
Frei's job. Enright, who had a
75-5 record with Gardena
(Calif.) lligh School in eight
years, had hls professional '
playing career tenninated ·by
an automobile accident.

"I just toss
my troubles ,
over my
shoulder"
Avoid heating problems
wilh clean burning healing
oil from Rizer's. Phone 992·
2101 tor . prom pi and
reliable metered delivery

service.

Great Midwinter
__............
Catalog Values In
·-~;.;:;....liiiiil
I

CONSOLE
COLOR TV
'

.
OePaul79 Wls-Green Bay67
Assumption 94 Clark 89
Holy Cross 8D Colgate 78
Wooster 98 John Carroll 69
Toledo 76 Bowling Green 53
Wittenberg 56 Cent. St. 52
Defiance 73 Findlay 58.
Phlla . Tex. 72 Scranton 62
Kings 81 Gannon 63
Urbana 88 Rio Grande 86
Akron 87 Buffalo 68

BEST BUY

All the Features

II

• Chromi.. control lets you get color
miK you prefer at the tum ot a knob
e Lighted channel selectors make tuning

a sna~ven in darkened viewing rooms

\.\\~\\

•

. A25 lb. Box Of Russell Stoler
~Candy To ~ _Given Away
Feb. 13th

W. l . T. Pis

·--'-'"--

We Work
With Your
Dodot

Keep home e111.rned dolla r"
home nwn e~ dollarr&lt;.

East

OfTh e W eek

'

The Daily Sentinet . \

H.l.P' .UILD
OP"P"OfiTUNITV

owned dollars

By United Press International

MAc Ul.yer

·,---~----..

Keep home earned
dollars home

Pro Stand"

Boston
30 7 7 67
New York
29 7 7 65
Montreal
26 11 7 59
Toronto
20 15 10 so
18 20 7 43
By fRED DOWN ·
Valuable Player Awards Detroit
12 25 5 29
UPI Sports Writer
during his tS.year career with Vancouver
Buffalo
9 26 10 28
NEW YORK (UPI)-Sandy the New York Yankees and
· West
Koufax, who packed his great· New York Melli between 1947
w. L. T. Pis
30 9 5 65
ness, into four seasons, and and 1965, won entry into the Chicago
Minnesota
23 15 7 53
Yogi Berra and Early Wynn, haU with 339 votes aitd Synn, California
14 24 10 38
who spread their lriUiance who won 300 games during a 23- St. Louis
15 23 7 37
12 25 8 32
over a longer period of time, year [ll!rlod from 1939 through Pittsburgh
Philadelphia
12
22 8 32
were elected to basebaU's Hall 1963, made it witp 301.
los Angeles
11 32 4 26 .
of Fame Wednesdiiy in voting
Kiner Falls Short
Wednesday's Res~ Its
that suggested the stars ol the
Ralph Kiner, former home- Montreal I Toronto 0
modern era Will soon achieve f1!ll king of tbe Pittsburgh Minnesota 4 Detroit 1
Vanc0\Jver6 Pittsburgh I
the recognition that has been Pirates, fell 65 votes short of Chicago 2 California 0
granted to tbose of the distant the required m (75 per cent) New York 5 los Angeles 1
IOnlfgamesscheduledl
past.
and was · followed by Gil
hursday's Games
Kou!ax, who may have been Hodges (161), Johnny Mize Vancouver
at Buffalo
the lll'ost dominant pitcher in (157), Enos Slaughter (149), Chicago at Philadelphia
IOn Iy games scheduled)
basehaU history during hls Pee Wee Reese (t29), Marty
glory ye~rs with the Los Marion (120) and Bob Lemon
AKL Standings
Angeles Dodgers from 1963 (117).
"'"~By United Press International
through 1966, led the trio .into
It was the first time since
East
W. L. T. Pis
the shrine at Cooperstown, 1955 that the BBWAA ·elected
26 12 7 S9
Boston
N.Y.,whenhereceived344ofa more than one player and may Nova Scot ia
22 13 9 53
17 14 9 43
possible 39t votes In the mean that the voters are Springfield
14
21 9 37
Provid
ence
balloting by the Baseball. determined to give 8s much
15
23 5 35
Rochester
Writers Association
of reco
. gru'tion to the stars of the
West
W. L. T. Pis
America (BBWAA).
1940-45 era as the special Old
20 13 6 46
. Berra, who won three Most f!mers Committee. has been Hershey
Cinclnnotl
18 19 9 45
giVing the great players of Baltimore
20 17 s 45
18 18 6 42
.
basebaU's early d~ys. Forty- Cleveland
Richmond
·
17 19 7 41
nine of the players m the Hall. Tidewater
10 ·28 4 24
.
of Fame have been voted in by
Wednesday's Results
·
the BBWAA whereas 59. have Richmond] Springfield 3
Cincinnati 3
Dlbeen elected by the Old Timers Rochester~
Boston 2 Hershey 1
.C
Committee, which ~riginallr,
IOnlygamesscheduledl
was formed as a backup
Thursd1y'sG.1mes
Nova Scotia at Boston
IF./
group.
IOnlygamescheduled)

PT. PLEASNIT, W. Va. - The Meigs Marauder wrestling
team lost a squeaker to a powerful Pt. Pleasant Big Black squad
here Wednesday afternoon, 33-27.
Coach Fenton Taylor's.Marauders are now t.,'l on the year.
Meigs will have a meet this Saturday night at Meigs High School
at '1:30 ag&amp;inst the Wabama White Falcons.
'lb~Marauders' big three, Robbie Harris, 1141b. class; Mike
Harrison, tOO lb. class, and John Thomas, 157lb. class, won their
.fourth.stralght matches without defeat. Big things may be ex(
pected from these great athletes, come the post&lt;~eason tournaments.
The results of Wednesday'smatch with Pt. Pleasant are :

FA NCY SATIN HEARTS FROM $3.95

ColtegoBasktlboiiRttulll
By United PrtsslnltrNIIionol
' uagJ South Car. 80 Niagara 69
. ABA Ston41nos
Dul&lt;e 86 Canlslu• 58
By United Press lnltrNIIional Pem St. 83 Gelfysburg 53
· East
Marshall 81 Miami CO.) 63
W. L. Pel: GB W.Va. Tech 98 Concqrd 61
36 10 .738 ...
Navy 77 Haverford 58
Kentuck y
30 18 .625 7
Florida St. lOS $91Jih Ala. 72
Virg inia
22 27 .449 15'1&gt; Dayton 76 Cincinnati 60 .
New York
Ohio U. 88 Vir. Tech 79
Floridla M 20 28 .41l. 17
Piltsburgh 19· 30 . ~ 18112 North Car. 92 Wake , Forest 77
17 31 .354 20
Hillside 84 Albion 70
Carolina
West
Pennsylvania 74 Villanova 64
W. l. Pel. GB Mercer 93 South Florida 88
Uta h
33 1S .688 ... St. Anselm's 67 Stonehlll 65
Indiana
28 19 .596 4'1' Olivet 100 Mercy 97
.
Memphis
21 28 .429 12''' Citadel 86 Arkans"' St. 48
Denver
19 27 .413 13
Albright 68 Del. Valley S7
Dallas
20 32 .385'15
Dickln.. n 89 Muhlenberg 74
Wedneoday's Results
Western Mich . 70 Ball Sf. 60
Vi rginia 138 Kentucky 132
Fordham 81 Seton Hall 74
Ca rol ina 108 Floridians 104
Marquette 80 Loyola. Ill . 70
Utah U3 Memphis i18
Rice 96 AlA 87
Denver 116 Dallas 92
North Tex. St. 74 Wichita St. 63
!Onlfgamesscheduledl
Abilene Ch ris. 76 Air Force 70
Laniar U. 95 Sam Houston 88
hunday's'Games
Piltsburgh vs.Fiortdians
St. Mary's, Tex. 87 Texas Luth
,
AI Tampa. Flo. 80 ·
Carolina at New York
Bishop 89 Texas Coli . 78
Kentuckyvs. Virginia
Geneva 79 Thiel 64
AI Norfolk, Va. · Pittsburgh 91 Bucknell67
Memphis at Indiana
Providence 87 Fairfield 75
!Onlygamesscheduied)
Oakland 109 Grand Val. 95
Eastern Ill. 100 DePauw 86
I NKL Standings

5-6CordeNamed

LOSE UGLY FAT
IOday. MONADEX IS a tiny

'

a

K IDDIE
AND
INFANT
CRIP

Leading the Iroqmen.w!U be
:the league's fOIII'th leading
tebounder, 6-2 senior center
Steve Keller. Ketler has 77
rebounds, lfed with Waverly's
Mike Oyer at 11.0 per game
clip.
Two other seniors who also
pave the way for the upsetmmded Ironmen are 5-10 guard
Dan Davidson and 6-G forward
Mtke Buckley, All three scored
· in double figures in the first
meeting of the two teams.

Koufax,
.
Berra,,
.
Meigs A Ouhs Wynn Honored
·1n Four Games

i$ the ali$wer

JANUARY

MATIIER WINS BID
P. W. Mather of Cincinnati
was the apparent low bidder at
$9,140 on a project of the U.
Corps • of Engineers for · in·
suilling a main entrance sign,
lightinll facilities and landscaping at the main entrance of
the Belleville-Racine Locks
and Dam in Racine. Second low
bidder was the Thomas Co. of
Huntington, W. Va., $11,908.62
and the third was the Wolter
Construction Co. of Cincinnati,
$14,938.

Chjeftaliis: ~. Jackson, who nels for 528 (J8,7) and gave up 6-2 senior forward-center, Is
was picked to finish dead last · 647 (68.6).
tied with Athena' Dave Smith
in the elght-temn SEOAL, wiD . One cl the moilt surprising • for second in individual
play the Greenfield McLain · statistic of. the league showing rebounding with M (12.0) per
Tigers on · the following up this week is that Meigs, the game. (Vaughan's recordSaturdaynightatJackson. The smallest team, Is leading in breaking 31 grabs came
"AI!," Tigers are one of the top rebounds ! The close-to-the; against non-league . oppooent
teams in central Ohio, having ground but first-to-the-ball wahama, not counting in
handedUpperArllngton,oneof Marauders have 3t3 retrieves league statistics.)
the better tealllil in Ohio, their to their credit ( 44.7) compared
Other starters for the
only loss of the seaS!IJl.
10 ~for second place Athens Marauders will be juniors
.. The Marauders, by \Oirtue of (42.7) . Jackson has · grabbed Jimmy Boggs and Rich Bailey,
their 66-58 scalpiitg .of Logan's 24.1 carooms (34.4), good for both .1).9 guards, and 5-tO forChieftainli .last Fridlly,, have fifth' spot. ,
ward Andy Vaughan.
scored more polnta than they
Steve . Dunfee, 6-0 senior
have allawed. Meigs has found forward, improiring at every
the .hoop for 676 &lt;at.5 &gt; and outing, has risen to sixth in
peflllltted 668 (60.7) .. Jackson, league scoring 'with 98 points,
in nine games, has ruffied the 14.0 per game. Tony Vaughan,

'

Decontrolled

PLUMBING and
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For Men, Women and Children

I

Nancy Downard, Mrs. Conard
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•

The One Chance foi Slam

help it.
Okay, so I'm a self-pitying dummy. But aU I know Is I need
someone-anyone-who wiD understand.- NOT KIDDING
DEAR NOT KIDDING :
Because your Jetter came from our home town, I've already
asked our local paper to put a PERSONAL in GENERATION
RAP, so that we can write to you. If you'd have given us your
name and address, you would have already heard from us.
· The Almanac
I know of an organization that I think will be just great for
By UoltedPress lnterilatlonar
you. The kids are friendly and involved-and they reaDy care.
Today is Thursday, Jan. 20,
It's called "Student Life" and there's a branch in almost every the 20th day of 1972.
high school. Please join---SUE
·
The moon is between its new
phase and first quarter.
DEAR N.K.:
Tbe morning stars are
And-If you haven't already..:.Please send us your name and
Mercury and Jupiter.
address on a stamped envelopeThe evening stars are Venus,
We'd like to get in touch-and there's another reason too:
Mars,
and Saturn.
Prepare yourself for a deluge of letters, N.K., from our great
Th&lt;)!e horn on this day are
readers who always prove how much they care. Their
under
the sign of Aquarius.
correspoitdence is guaranteed to bring almost anyone out of the
American figure skater Carol
miseries.- HELEN
Heiss
was born Jan .. 20, 1940.
NOTE TO READERS : Send your letters to "Not Kidding"
On this day in hiStory:
care of GENERATION RAP (this newspaper) and we 'II forward
In 1892 students at the
them to her.- H. and S.
Springfield Mass., YMCA
NOTE FROM BOTH OF US : Please, PLEASE, if you have a
played the first official basketdesperate problem, Include a stamped, self-addressed envelope. ball game .
Think how it feels to get a suicide note and know there 's no quick
In 1936 King George V of
way to reach the writer !---SUE AND HELEN
Britain died.
.(GOT A PROBLEM? Or a subject for discussion, twoIn 1969 Richard Nixon was
generation style? Direct your questions to either Sue or Helen inaugurated as the 37th presBottel--or both, in care of this newspaper, if you want a com- ident of the United ~tales.
bined answer)
'". .
·' 1 , ...
In 1970 .the United States and
Red Ch!na .resuroed the War.
saw talks.• .1

-!

3-Tbe Dilly S.U.J.IW-dlepott-Pwuenq, o., Jan. 2ll. 1m

'

palachian Regional Com~
..
;f,}
mittee.
~tl
By
Helen
and
Sue
Bottel
·
;:;:i;l
FoUowing the to-week period
ByHELENANDSUEBOTl'EL
,.,
the IO $ides, ol whom Miss ........
ACryforlielp
Baer and Miss · Gilmore are
DEAR
llELEN
AND
SUE
:
two, lv!U be. placed throughout
.
the seven counties that the
I'm 16, black, and need help-fast. Hit doesn't come aoon, I
comprehensive speech, vision will have made the decision and committed suiclde- I even' have
and hearing project now en- a razor in my room. Sometimes I pick 111up and think how it
~ mpasaes .
would be to just not be around any more. But first I thO\)gqt I'd
write to you and see if anyone still cares.
The big question of course, is always WHY? I don't even

ALUMINUM

'

I

'~ti'l'lM~ll!:i!:l:~Mililli!iliftMililllfib::::lilililf:1f:ii:Nlili@t-iMMM · WIN AT BRIDGE

2 Training in Speecft Therapy
Linda Baer, Minersville
Ro~te I, and Betty Lou
Gilmore, Middleport, h~ve
begun , a .to-week · tta ining
period leading to certification
·as speech therapy aides. The
course at Ohio University is
sponsored by . the Ohio
Department of Health and is
being funded by . the Ap-

•

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•-MORE
THAN TWICE
THE POWER OF
SOME MINI..SAWS
• PLUS-'"' BUILT·IN
,
SHOCK ABSORB~RS
• AUTOMATIC CHAJN .OILING
'. DELUXE FEATURES WORTH
UP TO $5QOO MORE

T

• Two 5-inch oval speak•rs offer rich
.
sound that really tills a room
• Set-and-forget volume control
Cabinet about 39V.x29%l&lt;IB inches deep
'Tube cup ~xtends 6~ in. from back

'HlGHLlGHTS
with Pa.ul.Crabtree

57 X 43101-Contemponry, nlnut ..n_
57 X 43111-tolonial, 1111ple
57 X 43'121-Spanilh, pecan venHr

""HI' .

CALL POINTVIEW: 992 · 2505
' T~e
mid-week blahs
continue. with nothing all
that great on TV tonight. Any
evening that has /' Me and
the Chimp" can't be all good.
a~yhow .

If I w•re absolutely stuck
In front of a TV set tonight,
I'd fli'Obably watch Primus,
1 cape-sword-and-aqualung
syndicated series on Ch, 2 al
7:30 ... Episode Action, the
old movie aerials on Ch. 9at 8·
... then cot to the !e&lt;Ond half
of Flip Wilson at 8:30 (but
lowering the volume during
the ..ngs ol g11est Aretha ·
Franklin, whom I don't go
lor, voice-wise) ... flip. &lt;oin
between Bill Buckley 's
"firl~g . Line" and NET
Pl«yhouse, which repeats a
~lography," "To Be Young,

Gitted and Black," at 9
(again missing 'part of the
shows I ... And then wait for
Dean Merlin at 10, Ch. 2 &amp; 1.
If he wasn'l funny, l'&lt;f catch
the Ch. 11 news.·which Is on
early at 10, and go to bed. It's
that ~ind of evening.

Authorized
Catalog Metthant

+++

MOVIES: "Gal Who Tool&lt;

the West," 4 p.m., and "Act

of Love," 11 :30 p.m., both
Ch . 10.

+ +.+

FRIDAY :

Le a d ing

Democrats are supposed to

respond to the President · ~
Stale of the Union address at
i2:30 p.m., most channels,
b&lt;Jt we can't find out who's
doing the responding.

220 E. Main

-

~meroy

STORE •HOURSs

MON., TUES., WED. &amp; SAT.
.

9:00'toS :OO ·

THURSDAY9:00TO NOO~
FRIDAY9:0tl 1:09:00

I '

�.

"

., •

.

'

. .

.

.

·-'

•
4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 20, 1972

• .,

1 •

Circles Plan Tea

Social
Calendar

I

Pl~ns· for ·the annual
fellowship tea of the B·. H.
Sanborn Missionary Society of
the Middleport First Baptist
Church were completed during
circle meetings Tuesday night.
The tea will.be held on Feb. 7
at the church with women from
·other ·churches in the Rio
Grande Baptist Association
and.of local churches as guests.
i\,~rs .

John Werner, president,

said women of approximately
20 organizations have been
Invited.
The program is being
planned by Mrs. Tony Fowler
who reports that there will be a
guest speaker. Arrangements
for hosting the tea which is a
. highlight of the society's year
were made at the meetings of
the lbree circles.
DORCAS CIRCLE
· Meeting at the home of Mrs.
Bert Bodimer, the Dorcas
Circle made plans to
remember shut-ins for
Valentine's Day and to send a

OPENING
SPECIALS

Vir&amp;inia's
Beauty Parlor
Owner a; Operator
Virginia Hayman
Phone 667-3041
LOcated: On Co. · Road 46
I Success Road), between ·St.
Rt: 7 &amp; Chester Road 241.

gift of money to Amy Tennis,
daughter
of
Thailand
missionaries, whO wili have a
birthday next month. An · offer ing was taken for the
scholarship fund .
Mrs .
Richard
Owen,
chairman, opened the meeting
with a reading on hJanuary"
and "One J;llly at a Time" was
the theme of devotions by Mrs.
Willis Anthony. Several thank
you notes were read.
Mrs. David Darst's program
w~s a review of "Catching Men
for Christ" by James
DeWeerd, who will be coming
to Middleport for an
evangelistic crusade this
spring.
Mrs. Bodimer, assisted by
her daughter,' Elinor, served
refreshments to those named
and Mrs . Fred Hollman, Mrs,
John Fultz, Mrs. Elizabeth
Slaven, Mrs. Ethel Hughes,
Mrs. Harold Hubbard, Mrs.
Kenneth Imboden and Mrs.
)INion Hood.
LOVE JOY CIRCLE
A love gift offering of $13.47
was taken during the meeting
of the Love Joy Circle held at
the home.of Mrs. Paul Smart
Arrangements to sell!!. ,gifts
to several shut-ins andi-a serviceman observing birthdays
in February were made.
Prayer by Mrs. Manning Kloes
and devotions by Mrs. Leora

Sigman from Duet 6 with a
meditation "Junior Gets the
Message" opened the meeting.
THUilSDAY
' ' A Spinning Wheel for
CLASS
12, Heath Methodist
Thailand" was ·the program
Chur¢h,
7:30
Thilrsday night
topic of Mrs. Kloes. Refresh- ·
men ts were served by the Dessert smorgasbord following
hostess to those named and the meeting. Members to take
Mrs. Elizabeth Gardner, Mrs. any kind of a dessert.
TWIN" CITY Shrine Club
Isabelle Winebrenner, Mrs.
Dana Hamrri, Mrs. Mary Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at
Hughes and Mrs . Golda clubhouse in Racine. Refreshments.
Mourning.
WOMI!:N . OF Eastern
ELECT ACIRCLE
Shut-ins will'be remembered Athletic Boosters meet at high
with ·valentine treats by the school 8 p.m. Thursday to plan
Eiecta Circle. Meeting at the for jitney supper to be staged
home of Mrs. Ross Pullen ~nd at 5 p.m. on Friday, Jari. 28, at
Miss Jerry Pullen, the circle schooL
decided also to send ·a gift to
EXECUTIVE Board
the scholarship student meeting,_Pomeroy Elementary
assisted by the Sanborn PTA, I p.m. Thursday at the
sc~
•
Society.
MIDDLEPOR,T Child
Thank you notes were read
Conservation
League, 7:30
from the student, shut-ins and
rest home patients for gifts at p.m. Thursday, Columbus and
Christmas. Devotions to open Southern Ohio Electric Co ·
the meeting were given by skit entitled "The Room u~:
Mrs. Arland King. Mrs. Pullen stairs." Each member :a give
presented the program using a nickel for each y~ar in CCL.
ROCK SPRINGS Better ·
questions answer~d by Billy
Health Club, I: 15 p.m. ThursGraham.
day
home of Mrs. George
Refreshments were served to
those named and Mrs. Tony Skinner. Mrs. Gladys Morgan,
Fowler, chairman ; Mrs . program; Mrs. Amos Leonard •
Robert Richardson, Michl contest
FRIDAY
King, Miss Rhoda Hall, Mrs.
Beulah White, Mrs . Pearl
SOUP SUPPER, beginning
Hoffman, Mrs. John Werner 4:30 p.m. Friday, Wes)eyan
and Mrs. Charles Simons.
United Methodist Church •
Racine, soup, sandwiches,
coffee.

Church Circle Dines
"The Challenge of the New
Year", a program by Miss
Mary
Virginia
Reibel,
highlighted a covered dish
dinner of Friendly Circle at
Trinity Church, Pomeroy,
Tuesday evening.
Miss Reibel's program of
scripture, meditations, prayer
poems, and personal observati9ns challenged her
listener'S to do more reading in
1972, "particularly that best
seller, the Bible".
Thoughts to live by included
the reminder thaI commitments are made to be kept
Copies of the beatitudes for the
healthwise illustrated by Miss
Reibel were gi.ven each
member.
Miss Mary E. Chapman read
scripture from RomarfS 12.
Table decorations for the
dinner carried out a winter
motil with a snowman and

Eskimo lady made by Miss
ReibeL Mrs. W. H. Perrin had
the table grace. Pre-dinner
arrangements were in charge
of Mrs. Leonard Jewell. Mrs.
Herman
Bolinger
was
welcomed by the group'
Miss Elizabeth Fick presided
during the business meeting.
She reviewed the study
material for the new year. Mrs.
Albert Woodard will be
program leader in February·
when the meeting will be held
at a new time, 7:30 p. m.
Plans were made for each
member to take toys for the
children hospitalized at
veterans Memorial Hospital to
the February meeting to be
delivered to the hospital in
March. A number of notes of
appreciation for . holiday
remembrances were reported
by Mrs. JewelL

Council Officers Installed

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Pomeroy

Mrs. Erma Cleland, deputy
slate councilor, installed offleers at the Tuesday night
meeting of Chester Council 323
Daughters of America, at th~
hall. Installed were Thelma
White, vice councilor; Mrs.
Mary Hayes, association junior
past councilor ; Mrs. Dorothy
Lawson, associate councilor ;
Mrs. Mary Jo Pooler, warden ;
Mrs. Helen Wolf, trustee; and
Mrs . Alice Curtis, inside
sentineL
Mrs . Letha Wood was
coun cilor for the meeting.
Members reported ill included
Mrs. Margaret · Tuttle, at
home ;
Mrs . Elizabeth
Wickham, confined to Veterans
Memorial Hospital, and Mrs.
Elizabeth Hayes, recuperating
at home.
Mrs. Hollon, chairman of the
good of the order committee
the past six months, thanked
those who assisted her. The
birthday of Mrs. Pooler was
observed . She was escorted to
the altar by the flagbearers.
Mrs. Cleland presented her
with a card and the members
sang "Happy Birthday."
·
Refreshments were served
during a concluding social hour

by those named and Mrs. lnzy
Newell, Mrs. Golda Frederick
Mrs. Betty Roush, Mrs. Ad~
Neutzling, Mrs . Hattie
Fred2rick, Mrs. ·.Mary K.
Holter, Mrs. Zelda Weber, Mrs.
Ada Van Meter, Mrs. Ethel
Orr, Mrs. Dorothy Myers, Mrs.
Mabel Van Meter, Mrs. Zona
Biggs and Mrs. Doris Koenig.
POWELL ILL
Th e Racine Emergency
Squad answered a call to the
Chrissie Powell residence
Racine Route I, at 2:25 p.m:
Wednesday, Mr. Powell was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where he ·was admitted for medical treatment.

Girl Scout Chairman Res,igning
Mrs. William Ohlinger,
chairman · of the . Big Beild
Neigh borhood of the Four
Rivers Girl Scout Council since
November, 1969, has resigned
effective in Feb;-uary.
Mrs. Ohlinger submitted her
reslgnatioo Wednesday at the
Neighborhood meeting held in
the Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Co. She plans to
continue ~ing active in the
scouting program in other
capacities.
Mrs . 'Roscoe Wise, Mrs.
Bruce Zirkle and Mrs. William
Sheridan w~re appointed to a:

.

· Mrs. VitiDa Piltkoja reported
on the While House Conference
on Aging which she attended in ·
Washington , D. · C. . in
November at the Saturday
meeting of the Meigs County
Retired Teachers Association
at the Pomeroy Elementary
School.
In her talk, Mrs. Pikkoja
cited Meigs County's 13.8 pet.
population ove·r 65 and delved
into the needs of this older age
group'

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HEDDOII SPIN·CASI RIELS
ROOSWIIH POWER GUIOE '
To catd the ble ones!
llfrl. Usr

,le,,545 IIC'

200-8th PRIZES
SIIID 11.\Y·II.\TE CALENDAR
WATCHES Buih lor precision
timin&amp;. 11 jewel, stainless

1!1111011'" STAY WARM'"
tORO/ COROlESS S!RVIHG
DISHES""" food ool too""'"
C1rry tobble witllout cord.

600- 9th PRIZES

Mfra. LIII'!JU: 5t5 - ·

Mh Ust Price: $11.• _.

Mfri.Uit PrQ $7JI . .

steel, hrnlnoos dial

All Men's &amp; Bats'

'

CONTAC

·HAIR
SPRAY

.'

IYIONIIUSOII Sien~ture
Gall S.h from NORTHWESTERN
GOlf CO., 8io~s.
IIHr•. Lbt hk11Uh 1ti

CIOSMIII CO. TRAPMAST£R
SHOIGUNSAcomplete trap
shooting systein hom
CROSMAN ARMS.

Reg. 11.49,

Ebersbach Hardware

I

san ao

. White Rain

Schick Double Edge Plus
Platinum Blades

'

Mfn. llrt h lte:

35- 4th PRIZES

49~

for

ol Recreilioo.

12- 3rd PRIZES

No. 881 .

S's

•

SUNBIAO RUNAIIOUI BOAlS .
14' ilum irrum runabouts frcwn
STARCRAFT, th~ Wrde World

$}33

Reg. 7!r

72's

Reg. '2.19

/

~
Double Edge Blades

REG. 11.89

·.

HALEY$
.M-0

. Absorbine

CEPACOL
20

19.72 AMBAS.SADOR
BROUGHAM
SEDA.N

(Gis &amp; CHI)

I

Reg. '2.61

6 CAMPER

Arth ritic Pain lotion .

Reg.'l.98

3.

~AN OIL HlA Jill
ILICTIIC HIA Jill
WINDCC"/ GLASS - JHIIMOMITIII
PIPE INIULA TION
~
STOVI PIPE, COUAII, UtQULOIIS,
. COAL IUCI!m, ~leo
'

'

Plus A STARFLITE

Mist or Powder

~n·~ Reg. 16.98 to 75.00-Now 11.32 to 50 Oo
ys Reg. 14.98 to 24.5~Now 9,99 to 16
Jackets and Car Coats In both long and short
.' engths. · ·

WIATHD STIII'I'ING
CAULKING COMPOUND
PI.ASTIC SJOIM WINDOWS
HEAT JAPII- DOOR STIIPS
WARM MORNING HEATERS

. ,,,

19

BAYER
ASPI.RIN

16 ()Z.

REG. 11.59

Boyer

SPalS

200's

. Reg. '104

~·~ 59~ e

~OFF
WITH THESE

Reg. s1.69

·PHISO-HEX

Reg. 12.98

Men's &amp; Boys'

YOU CAN'T MISS with

(

Grand "Prize

180's

'

Reg. 11.69.
7 oz. .

VICKS
VAPORUB

NATURE'S REMEDY

Keml's

Menthol

$319

ccsnoN ~-atN · --~· -::~ ·

Thafs At

'

or

By The
Case

i8 ot

Pomeroy

zfor sa~

Quart

SPRAYE.R
REG. 11.50

Reg. $1.85

Want to ·Save
113 Now?

Regular

Similac8
Ready·to·Feed Quart Can

LIQUID

99~

fOR

11.08

'II'PIIIWMI

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

•

30 cc

Geritol
Tablets

15 oz.

6 oz.

36's

Reg. 12.19

VO·S
SHAMPOO

REG. 11.99

•

'1.60
12 Ol.

REG. 11.98

98' yd.

Laurel aur.

l't'h .

~YRUP

· COUGH

'

R~

YOU NEED NOT
BE PRESENT
TO WIN

..

99'

BAYER

.CH.ILDRENS
ASPIRIN
R•g. 43e

. 10 oz.

OR

REG.
11.49

' Tlmed·Roleuo Aspirin

ANO'IHIR .GOOD BUY FROM
BAKER'S

REGULAR

-e--·

....... ...,.. ,:,.,

QUilTED· BATHROBE
MATERIAL

Party for Eddie

Tennessee had the best
record of the nation's major
college football teams over
the period 1966-1970. The Volunteers racked up a 43-7-1
VISIT HOLTERS
mark,
jusi ahead of secondMr. and Mrs. William Fenton
place
Notre Dame, which
of Columbus were recent '
was 41-6-3. Southern Cal was
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Arvil third, Texas fourth and Penn
Holter, Bashan.
State fifth.

REG.

Reported by Speaker

Lunches Planned

Vols' Victorious

IZe

'

conifl'0111'/Jnce on Aging
f;l I f;l

•

a

SOUP SUPPER will be held
beginning at 4:30 p.rri. Friday
at the Wesleyan United
Methodist Church in Racine. Lunch at the Harold Ward
Soup, sandwiches and coffee auction on Jan. 29 will be
served by the Ladies Auxiliary
will be available.
of the Rutland Fire Depart•
DANCE PARTY Friday, 9:30 ment.
P
lans
for
serving at the
'
p.m. to midnight, Wahama
High. School sponsored by auction and also for a jitney
sophomore class following supper in March were made
basketball game. Jays em- during a meeting Tuesday
night. Mrs. Marjorie Davis
ceeing. ,
presided. Refreshments were
SUNDAY
HYMN SING, Stiversville served by Mrs. Maxine Dyer
Community Church, 2 p.m. and Mrs. Louise Eada. The
Sunday. Pastor Edsel Hart traveling prize brought by Mrs.
Davis was won by Mrs.
extends invitation to public.
Virginia MichaeL The next
meeting will be Feb. 15 ivith
Mrs. D)'er to provide the
traveling prize and Mrs. Merle
Foiey and Mrs. Jackie Gaddis
to serve.
RUTLAND - The seventh
birthday ol Eddie Bishop, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Bishop,
By Mn. Bertba Parker·
Rutland,
was observed with a
'
Sabbath
School attendance
pa~ty Tuesday night. Gifts
were presented to Eddie and Jan. 16 at the Free Methodist
games were played and prizes Church was 89. Offering for the
awarded to Richard, Kimberly past two Sundays was $295.65.
Mr . Wyatt Schaefer, Marion
and Buddy Dugan , Danny
visited
his parents, Mr. and
Davis and Timmy Martin.
Mrs. Norman Schaefer over
Refreshments -were served.
Guests were .those named the weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Stahl,
and Ronnie and Patti Dugan,
Stockdale,
Mr. and Mrs. Fritz
Kevm Dugan, Ricky, Mike and
Danny Edwards, Denise, Mark Stahl, New Marshfield visited
and Christy Gaddis, Davis recently with Mr. and Mrs.
·
Davis, Paul Michael, Steve Norman Schaefer.
Mrs.
Kathy
Pullins
remains
Patterson, Carla Smith, Cindy
Musser, Greg Peckham, Craig a patient in Holzer Hospital.
Mrs. Betty Layne and Kristi
Bolin, Teresa Carter · Dixie
of
Middleport visited Sunday
Dugan, and Jeff , Carson.
Sending gifts were Jeff Miller with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Kimberly Birchfield · and h~ Clifford Klein.
grandmother, Mrs . Marie
Bishop,

.

nominating committee and · Thinldng Day was di5cuslied. in; Mrs. Zirkle, Pomeroi
were aske~ to p,esent The international ob8ervanC!! Juili&lt;l's 247; Mrs. Wl.!e, Mid;,
nominations for neighborhood Will be held on Feb. :M&gt; at . dleport Juniors 39; Mrs;
chairman at the Feb, servi&amp;! Middleport. To date nine troops I.ucritla Stobart and MrBj
. team meeUng.
· 'have registered to participate Betty Glass, Middleporl
Leaders were reminded that in the event. They are Mid- Brownies 87 ; Mrs. Lyl~
orders are due for . church dleport Junior Troop 39, India ; Balderson and Marilyn lflin;bulletins to be u.sed on Girl Pomeroy Troop 61, ·Hawati ; num, Reedsville Troop 67;
S!:out Sunday. The cost is $1.45 ·Pomeroy Brownies &amp;G, France; . Mrs. Mary Hunter, Cheslef
per hundred for the bulletins Reedsville Juniors 67, China ; Troop 204; M..S. Patton and
and 90 cents pe~ hundred for Pomeroy Brownies 171, Mrs. Mrs. Ohlinger, ·-Pomeroy
program inserts. Orders are to WilHam Sheridan, United Cadette.;. 208,
be telephoned't.o Mrs. Ohljnger. States; Chester Junior 204,
Cookies sale materials were England; · Cadette 208,
distribtjted and sample cookies · Salisbury, Ireland; · Pomeroy
\vere served with tea and Junior Troop 247, Germany;
GRANGE MEETS
coffee.
and Salisbury Brownies 220, · LETART FALLS - O!)lo
Mexico. Troope are to register Valley Grange ' 2612 Letart
with Mrs . Bob Hoeflich, Falls met at the home of Mni.
Elizabeth Roush Thursday
chairman. ·
Each participating troop 1s evening. Deputy and Mrs;
asked to bave at least one girl Virgil Atkins Installed the
in native costwning, to present following officers: Master,
a. game; dance or song of the Herbert Shields; overseer,
country they represent, and to Mrs . Erma J..ila
w on ; 1ec turer,
provide finger toods PI the Mrs. Mabel Shields; stewl!rd,
country for the scouts. • ·
Eul a woIfe; asst. steward,
In addition, troop leaders are . Herbert Roush ; lady . asst.
She sugge.ited the problems to provide adequate beverage steward, Mrs. Doris Sayre;
of the aged be met through the and cups for the girls in their chaplain, · Mrs. . Bertha
Robinson; treasurer, Early
County Commissioners and troojl.
The scout Christmas sing Roush ; secreIary, Mrs. Herinterested servk&gt;e groups. Mrs.
was
eval~ated during the bert Rousl\; gatekeeper, Mrs. ·
Pikkoja pointed out that in
some communities housing, meeting. Mrs. Shirley Hamm ' Nora Cross; Ceres, Mrs. Mabel
Pomona,
Mrs: food, and transportation to was director of the choral Roush;
church and stores (to shop) are group which presented the sing Elizabeth Roush; Flora, Mrs.
BrOWJd the Christmas tree OJI Iva Orr.
provided.
'
Herbert Shields, master, was
She announced a meeting the Pomeroy parking lot.
Day . camp was discUsSed reported a medical patient at
will be held Jan. 30 at 3 p. m. at
along
with the need for a Veter8118 Memorial Hospital.
the St. Paul Lutheran Church.'
A discussion followed her talk director. Also' discWJSed at the Uterary program by Lectiron what Meigs County can do to meetlng attended by Lynn er Mabel Sblelda included
solve the problems of the aged. Patton, Council advisor, was readings by .Mrs. Pauline
_ A·~·-......., Erma Wllson, Mrs.
Miss Lucille Smith presented a troop camping. Leaders .were
urged to begin now preparing Herbert Roush, Mrs. Doris
gift to the speaker.
New officers were , elected the girls for outings by Sayre, Mrs. Bertha Robinson,
""' .. Sayre.
'
following a report from Mrs. teaching fire building, tent and ""-'·
Refreshments · of pie, cake,
Nan Moore, nominating pitching, lashing, outdoor
committee'chairman. They are cooking, etc. Craft projects coffee and sandwiches were
ser:veel •
Miss Smith, president; Mrs. were also discussed.
Attending the meeting were
Next meeting will be at the
Gladys Hayman, secretary,
and Mrs . Anna Hilldore, Mrs.Sheridan and Mrs. Wayne home or Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
SWisher, Pomeroy Brownies Roush • Feb. 10.
treasurer.
The next meeting will be
April 15 at Trinfly Church,
Pomeroy, beginning with a·
luncheon. A potluck luncheon
preceded Saturday's meeting.
Attending were Miss Smith,
Chester; Mrs. Clara Lochary,
Pomeroy ; Mrs. Blanche
Nelson, Mrs. Ethel Chapman,
Mrs. Martha. Chapman, Mrs.
Solids &amp; Florals 45" To 60" Wide
Anna Ogdin, and Mrs.
_______
,£otton Acetate Filled
Margaret Parsons, Rutland;
Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Wiley, Mrs.
.
60" .Wide
UIO% Polyesler Knits 12.98 yd.
Edith Forrest, Mrs. Uillan ·
Smith, Mrs. Nan Moore, Mrs.
MANY OTHER GOOD BUYS
.
Mary Hughes, Miss Ml1dred
Hawley, Mrs. Geneva Yates,
Middleport; Rachel McBride,
Mrs . Hlllilore, and Mrs.
DISCOUNT FABRICS
Hayman, Syracuse.
ADDISON, OHIO

'

cow•
RELIEF

..,._. TABLETS

IUUDIT RESERVE fLASHLIGHTS
10 l'fll' Emereency Battery.

ENTER

Reg. '198

AS OFTEN
AS YOU

100's 1 $}99

W.ISH

•

FREE ENTRY BLANK

•111

•

·'

•
''

'

,,

I

�.

"

., •

.

'

. .

.

.

·-'

•
4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 20, 1972

• .,

1 •

Circles Plan Tea

Social
Calendar

I

Pl~ns· for ·the annual
fellowship tea of the B·. H.
Sanborn Missionary Society of
the Middleport First Baptist
Church were completed during
circle meetings Tuesday night.
The tea will.be held on Feb. 7
at the church with women from
·other ·churches in the Rio
Grande Baptist Association
and.of local churches as guests.
i\,~rs .

John Werner, president,

said women of approximately
20 organizations have been
Invited.
The program is being
planned by Mrs. Tony Fowler
who reports that there will be a
guest speaker. Arrangements
for hosting the tea which is a
. highlight of the society's year
were made at the meetings of
the lbree circles.
DORCAS CIRCLE
· Meeting at the home of Mrs.
Bert Bodimer, the Dorcas
Circle made plans to
remember shut-ins for
Valentine's Day and to send a

OPENING
SPECIALS

Vir&amp;inia's
Beauty Parlor
Owner a; Operator
Virginia Hayman
Phone 667-3041
LOcated: On Co. · Road 46
I Success Road), between ·St.
Rt: 7 &amp; Chester Road 241.

gift of money to Amy Tennis,
daughter
of
Thailand
missionaries, whO wili have a
birthday next month. An · offer ing was taken for the
scholarship fund .
Mrs .
Richard
Owen,
chairman, opened the meeting
with a reading on hJanuary"
and "One J;llly at a Time" was
the theme of devotions by Mrs.
Willis Anthony. Several thank
you notes were read.
Mrs. David Darst's program
w~s a review of "Catching Men
for Christ" by James
DeWeerd, who will be coming
to Middleport for an
evangelistic crusade this
spring.
Mrs. Bodimer, assisted by
her daughter,' Elinor, served
refreshments to those named
and Mrs . Fred Hollman, Mrs,
John Fultz, Mrs. Elizabeth
Slaven, Mrs. Ethel Hughes,
Mrs. Harold Hubbard, Mrs.
Kenneth Imboden and Mrs.
)INion Hood.
LOVE JOY CIRCLE
A love gift offering of $13.47
was taken during the meeting
of the Love Joy Circle held at
the home.of Mrs. Paul Smart
Arrangements to sell!!. ,gifts
to several shut-ins andi-a serviceman observing birthdays
in February were made.
Prayer by Mrs. Manning Kloes
and devotions by Mrs. Leora

Sigman from Duet 6 with a
meditation "Junior Gets the
Message" opened the meeting.
THUilSDAY
' ' A Spinning Wheel for
CLASS
12, Heath Methodist
Thailand" was ·the program
Chur¢h,
7:30
Thilrsday night
topic of Mrs. Kloes. Refresh- ·
men ts were served by the Dessert smorgasbord following
hostess to those named and the meeting. Members to take
Mrs. Elizabeth Gardner, Mrs. any kind of a dessert.
TWIN" CITY Shrine Club
Isabelle Winebrenner, Mrs.
Dana Hamrri, Mrs. Mary Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at
Hughes and Mrs . Golda clubhouse in Racine. Refreshments.
Mourning.
WOMI!:N . OF Eastern
ELECT ACIRCLE
Shut-ins will'be remembered Athletic Boosters meet at high
with ·valentine treats by the school 8 p.m. Thursday to plan
Eiecta Circle. Meeting at the for jitney supper to be staged
home of Mrs. Ross Pullen ~nd at 5 p.m. on Friday, Jari. 28, at
Miss Jerry Pullen, the circle schooL
decided also to send ·a gift to
EXECUTIVE Board
the scholarship student meeting,_Pomeroy Elementary
assisted by the Sanborn PTA, I p.m. Thursday at the
sc~
•
Society.
MIDDLEPOR,T Child
Thank you notes were read
Conservation
League, 7:30
from the student, shut-ins and
rest home patients for gifts at p.m. Thursday, Columbus and
Christmas. Devotions to open Southern Ohio Electric Co ·
the meeting were given by skit entitled "The Room u~:
Mrs. Arland King. Mrs. Pullen stairs." Each member :a give
presented the program using a nickel for each y~ar in CCL.
ROCK SPRINGS Better ·
questions answer~d by Billy
Health Club, I: 15 p.m. ThursGraham.
day
home of Mrs. George
Refreshments were served to
those named and Mrs. Tony Skinner. Mrs. Gladys Morgan,
Fowler, chairman ; Mrs . program; Mrs. Amos Leonard •
Robert Richardson, Michl contest
FRIDAY
King, Miss Rhoda Hall, Mrs.
Beulah White, Mrs . Pearl
SOUP SUPPER, beginning
Hoffman, Mrs. John Werner 4:30 p.m. Friday, Wes)eyan
and Mrs. Charles Simons.
United Methodist Church •
Racine, soup, sandwiches,
coffee.

Church Circle Dines
"The Challenge of the New
Year", a program by Miss
Mary
Virginia
Reibel,
highlighted a covered dish
dinner of Friendly Circle at
Trinity Church, Pomeroy,
Tuesday evening.
Miss Reibel's program of
scripture, meditations, prayer
poems, and personal observati9ns challenged her
listener'S to do more reading in
1972, "particularly that best
seller, the Bible".
Thoughts to live by included
the reminder thaI commitments are made to be kept
Copies of the beatitudes for the
healthwise illustrated by Miss
Reibel were gi.ven each
member.
Miss Mary E. Chapman read
scripture from RomarfS 12.
Table decorations for the
dinner carried out a winter
motil with a snowman and

Eskimo lady made by Miss
ReibeL Mrs. W. H. Perrin had
the table grace. Pre-dinner
arrangements were in charge
of Mrs. Leonard Jewell. Mrs.
Herman
Bolinger
was
welcomed by the group'
Miss Elizabeth Fick presided
during the business meeting.
She reviewed the study
material for the new year. Mrs.
Albert Woodard will be
program leader in February·
when the meeting will be held
at a new time, 7:30 p. m.
Plans were made for each
member to take toys for the
children hospitalized at
veterans Memorial Hospital to
the February meeting to be
delivered to the hospital in
March. A number of notes of
appreciation for . holiday
remembrances were reported
by Mrs. JewelL

Council Officers Installed

65ZYYt i!Ow"

&amp;~Y ­

Gold Filltd

$3.95

Ytllow

Gold F11!1d

$3.95
65-'S-

652S-

Sttrllltt
SiMr

6585-

Siefllftl

Sttrllftl

Silftf

SI IYtr

$4.95

$4.95

$6.50

Goesslers
JEWELRY
STORE
Court St.

Pomeroy

Mrs. Erma Cleland, deputy
slate councilor, installed offleers at the Tuesday night
meeting of Chester Council 323
Daughters of America, at th~
hall. Installed were Thelma
White, vice councilor; Mrs.
Mary Hayes, association junior
past councilor ; Mrs. Dorothy
Lawson, associate councilor ;
Mrs. Mary Jo Pooler, warden ;
Mrs. Helen Wolf, trustee; and
Mrs . Alice Curtis, inside
sentineL
Mrs . Letha Wood was
coun cilor for the meeting.
Members reported ill included
Mrs. Margaret · Tuttle, at
home ;
Mrs . Elizabeth
Wickham, confined to Veterans
Memorial Hospital, and Mrs.
Elizabeth Hayes, recuperating
at home.
Mrs. Hollon, chairman of the
good of the order committee
the past six months, thanked
those who assisted her. The
birthday of Mrs. Pooler was
observed . She was escorted to
the altar by the flagbearers.
Mrs. Cleland presented her
with a card and the members
sang "Happy Birthday."
·
Refreshments were served
during a concluding social hour

by those named and Mrs. lnzy
Newell, Mrs. Golda Frederick
Mrs. Betty Roush, Mrs. Ad~
Neutzling, Mrs . Hattie
Fred2rick, Mrs. ·.Mary K.
Holter, Mrs. Zelda Weber, Mrs.
Ada Van Meter, Mrs. Ethel
Orr, Mrs. Dorothy Myers, Mrs.
Mabel Van Meter, Mrs. Zona
Biggs and Mrs. Doris Koenig.
POWELL ILL
Th e Racine Emergency
Squad answered a call to the
Chrissie Powell residence
Racine Route I, at 2:25 p.m:
Wednesday, Mr. Powell was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where he ·was admitted for medical treatment.

Girl Scout Chairman Res,igning
Mrs. William Ohlinger,
chairman · of the . Big Beild
Neigh borhood of the Four
Rivers Girl Scout Council since
November, 1969, has resigned
effective in Feb;-uary.
Mrs. Ohlinger submitted her
reslgnatioo Wednesday at the
Neighborhood meeting held in
the Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Co. She plans to
continue ~ing active in the
scouting program in other
capacities.
Mrs . 'Roscoe Wise, Mrs.
Bruce Zirkle and Mrs. William
Sheridan w~re appointed to a:

.

· Mrs. VitiDa Piltkoja reported
on the While House Conference
on Aging which she attended in ·
Washington , D. · C. . in
November at the Saturday
meeting of the Meigs County
Retired Teachers Association
at the Pomeroy Elementary
School.
In her talk, Mrs. Pikkoja
cited Meigs County's 13.8 pet.
population ove·r 65 and delved
into the needs of this older age
group'

'~.08 ,__-.,_-.. _-.

170's

--

59~

MINT
26 oz.

"

79~
Buy the Larger Sizes and Save

DiERAmL D

.

·2-HOUR
CLEANING

2

1.19

'·

SINGLE TRAY
200's ONLY

(Upbn Request)

.ROBIN.SON'S
CLEANE-RS
·
210 2nd
E.

Ph011e 992-5428

60L

aa~

DAN
CUPID
SAYS

MICR_I·N

Absorbi ne, Jr.

Oral ~ntiseptic ~

12 oz.

. ~ 119

'

Reg. 11.50
4oz.

oz.

Flavored or Plalp'

Reg. '1.98

Outerwear

Wilkinson Sword

4oz.

'1.19

2
~

/

llfu. lbt , lei: UU5 tiC~

Reg. 14.95

-PEPTO-BISMOL

.SWEATERS.

Main Shit

Ph. 992·2811
l'allleiOf, 0.

I

"Till ~TOt OP
IWON¥'' 111110 ' ' •

Midi. part;'
. O.

ttZ-5759

Kerm's Komer

Ne!i York Clothing
· POMEROY, (1110

~---.......~--...1-..r',.__~~.........--..~...., ....~.......--~;.......J
•

...____
=

Reg. st98

.NORFOR.,S

16ot

Reg. '2.50
24's

/100- 5th PRIZES
lliiCIOn EIECUTN£ TENNIS
RICKElS fo"" BANCROfT
Americf s ohMs! racket '
minufxturer.

,..,

lflrs,' Lilt flrict: $4CI •••

100-&amp;th PRIZES
HEDDOII SPIN·CASI RIELS
ROOSWIIH POWER GUIOE '
To catd the ble ones!
llfrl. Usr

,le,,545 IIC'

200-8th PRIZES
SIIID 11.\Y·II.\TE CALENDAR
WATCHES Buih lor precision
timin&amp;. 11 jewel, stainless

1!1111011'" STAY WARM'"
tORO/ COROlESS S!RVIHG
DISHES""" food ool too""'"
C1rry tobble witllout cord.

600- 9th PRIZES

Mfra. LIII'!JU: 5t5 - ·

Mh Ust Price: $11.• _.

Mfri.Uit PrQ $7JI . .

steel, hrnlnoos dial

All Men's &amp; Bats'

'

CONTAC

·HAIR
SPRAY

.'

IYIONIIUSOII Sien~ture
Gall S.h from NORTHWESTERN
GOlf CO., 8io~s.
IIHr•. Lbt hk11Uh 1ti

CIOSMIII CO. TRAPMAST£R
SHOIGUNSAcomplete trap
shooting systein hom
CROSMAN ARMS.

Reg. 11.49,

Ebersbach Hardware

I

san ao

. White Rain

Schick Double Edge Plus
Platinum Blades

'

Mfn. llrt h lte:

35- 4th PRIZES

49~

for

ol Recreilioo.

12- 3rd PRIZES

No. 881 .

S's

•

SUNBIAO RUNAIIOUI BOAlS .
14' ilum irrum runabouts frcwn
STARCRAFT, th~ Wrde World

$}33

Reg. 7!r

72's

Reg. '2.19

/

~
Double Edge Blades

REG. 11.89

·.

HALEY$
.M-0

. Absorbine

CEPACOL
20

19.72 AMBAS.SADOR
BROUGHAM
SEDA.N

(Gis &amp; CHI)

I

Reg. '2.61

6 CAMPER

Arth ritic Pain lotion .

Reg.'l.98

3.

~AN OIL HlA Jill
ILICTIIC HIA Jill
WINDCC"/ GLASS - JHIIMOMITIII
PIPE INIULA TION
~
STOVI PIPE, COUAII, UtQULOIIS,
. COAL IUCI!m, ~leo
'

'

Plus A STARFLITE

Mist or Powder

~n·~ Reg. 16.98 to 75.00-Now 11.32 to 50 Oo
ys Reg. 14.98 to 24.5~Now 9,99 to 16
Jackets and Car Coats In both long and short
.' engths. · ·

WIATHD STIII'I'ING
CAULKING COMPOUND
PI.ASTIC SJOIM WINDOWS
HEAT JAPII- DOOR STIIPS
WARM MORNING HEATERS

. ,,,

19

BAYER
ASPI.RIN

16 ()Z.

REG. 11.59

Boyer

SPalS

200's

. Reg. '104

~·~ 59~ e

~OFF
WITH THESE

Reg. s1.69

·PHISO-HEX

Reg. 12.98

Men's &amp; Boys'

YOU CAN'T MISS with

(

Grand "Prize

180's

'

Reg. 11.69.
7 oz. .

VICKS
VAPORUB

NATURE'S REMEDY

Keml's

Menthol

$319

ccsnoN ~-atN · --~· -::~ ·

Thafs At

'

or

By The
Case

i8 ot

Pomeroy

zfor sa~

Quart

SPRAYE.R
REG. 11.50

Reg. $1.85

Want to ·Save
113 Now?

Regular

Similac8
Ready·to·Feed Quart Can

LIQUID

99~

fOR

11.08

'II'PIIIWMI

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

•

30 cc

Geritol
Tablets

15 oz.

6 oz.

36's

Reg. 12.19

VO·S
SHAMPOO

REG. 11.99

•

'1.60
12 Ol.

REG. 11.98

98' yd.

Laurel aur.

l't'h .

~YRUP

· COUGH

'

R~

YOU NEED NOT
BE PRESENT
TO WIN

..

99'

BAYER

.CH.ILDRENS
ASPIRIN
R•g. 43e

. 10 oz.

OR

REG.
11.49

' Tlmed·Roleuo Aspirin

ANO'IHIR .GOOD BUY FROM
BAKER'S

REGULAR

-e--·

....... ...,.. ,:,.,

QUilTED· BATHROBE
MATERIAL

Party for Eddie

Tennessee had the best
record of the nation's major
college football teams over
the period 1966-1970. The Volunteers racked up a 43-7-1
VISIT HOLTERS
mark,
jusi ahead of secondMr. and Mrs. William Fenton
place
Notre Dame, which
of Columbus were recent '
was 41-6-3. Southern Cal was
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Arvil third, Texas fourth and Penn
Holter, Bashan.
State fifth.

REG.

Reported by Speaker

Lunches Planned

Vols' Victorious

IZe

'

conifl'0111'/Jnce on Aging
f;l I f;l

•

a

SOUP SUPPER will be held
beginning at 4:30 p.rri. Friday
at the Wesleyan United
Methodist Church in Racine. Lunch at the Harold Ward
Soup, sandwiches and coffee auction on Jan. 29 will be
served by the Ladies Auxiliary
will be available.
of the Rutland Fire Depart•
DANCE PARTY Friday, 9:30 ment.
P
lans
for
serving at the
'
p.m. to midnight, Wahama
High. School sponsored by auction and also for a jitney
sophomore class following supper in March were made
basketball game. Jays em- during a meeting Tuesday
night. Mrs. Marjorie Davis
ceeing. ,
presided. Refreshments were
SUNDAY
HYMN SING, Stiversville served by Mrs. Maxine Dyer
Community Church, 2 p.m. and Mrs. Louise Eada. The
Sunday. Pastor Edsel Hart traveling prize brought by Mrs.
Davis was won by Mrs.
extends invitation to public.
Virginia MichaeL The next
meeting will be Feb. 15 ivith
Mrs. D)'er to provide the
traveling prize and Mrs. Merle
Foiey and Mrs. Jackie Gaddis
to serve.
RUTLAND - The seventh
birthday ol Eddie Bishop, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Bishop,
By Mn. Bertba Parker·
Rutland,
was observed with a
'
Sabbath
School attendance
pa~ty Tuesday night. Gifts
were presented to Eddie and Jan. 16 at the Free Methodist
games were played and prizes Church was 89. Offering for the
awarded to Richard, Kimberly past two Sundays was $295.65.
Mr . Wyatt Schaefer, Marion
and Buddy Dugan , Danny
visited
his parents, Mr. and
Davis and Timmy Martin.
Mrs. Norman Schaefer over
Refreshments -were served.
Guests were .those named the weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Stahl,
and Ronnie and Patti Dugan,
Stockdale,
Mr. and Mrs. Fritz
Kevm Dugan, Ricky, Mike and
Danny Edwards, Denise, Mark Stahl, New Marshfield visited
and Christy Gaddis, Davis recently with Mr. and Mrs.
·
Davis, Paul Michael, Steve Norman Schaefer.
Mrs.
Kathy
Pullins
remains
Patterson, Carla Smith, Cindy
Musser, Greg Peckham, Craig a patient in Holzer Hospital.
Mrs. Betty Layne and Kristi
Bolin, Teresa Carter · Dixie
of
Middleport visited Sunday
Dugan, and Jeff , Carson.
Sending gifts were Jeff Miller with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Kimberly Birchfield · and h~ Clifford Klein.
grandmother, Mrs . Marie
Bishop,

.

nominating committee and · Thinldng Day was di5cuslied. in; Mrs. Zirkle, Pomeroi
were aske~ to p,esent The international ob8ervanC!! Juili&lt;l's 247; Mrs. Wl.!e, Mid;,
nominations for neighborhood Will be held on Feb. :M&gt; at . dleport Juniors 39; Mrs;
chairman at the Feb, servi&amp;! Middleport. To date nine troops I.ucritla Stobart and MrBj
. team meeUng.
· 'have registered to participate Betty Glass, Middleporl
Leaders were reminded that in the event. They are Mid- Brownies 87 ; Mrs. Lyl~
orders are due for . church dleport Junior Troop 39, India ; Balderson and Marilyn lflin;bulletins to be u.sed on Girl Pomeroy Troop 61, ·Hawati ; num, Reedsville Troop 67;
S!:out Sunday. The cost is $1.45 ·Pomeroy Brownies &amp;G, France; . Mrs. Mary Hunter, Cheslef
per hundred for the bulletins Reedsville Juniors 67, China ; Troop 204; M..S. Patton and
and 90 cents pe~ hundred for Pomeroy Brownies 171, Mrs. Mrs. Ohlinger, ·-Pomeroy
program inserts. Orders are to WilHam Sheridan, United Cadette.;. 208,
be telephoned't.o Mrs. Ohljnger. States; Chester Junior 204,
Cookies sale materials were England; · Cadette 208,
distribtjted and sample cookies · Salisbury, Ireland; · Pomeroy
\vere served with tea and Junior Troop 247, Germany;
GRANGE MEETS
coffee.
and Salisbury Brownies 220, · LETART FALLS - O!)lo
Mexico. Troope are to register Valley Grange ' 2612 Letart
with Mrs . Bob Hoeflich, Falls met at the home of Mni.
Elizabeth Roush Thursday
chairman. ·
Each participating troop 1s evening. Deputy and Mrs;
asked to bave at least one girl Virgil Atkins Installed the
in native costwning, to present following officers: Master,
a. game; dance or song of the Herbert Shields; overseer,
country they represent, and to Mrs . Erma J..ila
w on ; 1ec turer,
provide finger toods PI the Mrs. Mabel Shields; stewl!rd,
country for the scouts. • ·
Eul a woIfe; asst. steward,
In addition, troop leaders are . Herbert Roush ; lady . asst.
She sugge.ited the problems to provide adequate beverage steward, Mrs. Doris Sayre;
of the aged be met through the and cups for the girls in their chaplain, · Mrs. . Bertha
Robinson; treasurer, Early
County Commissioners and troojl.
The scout Christmas sing Roush ; secreIary, Mrs. Herinterested servk&gt;e groups. Mrs.
was
eval~ated during the bert Rousl\; gatekeeper, Mrs. ·
Pikkoja pointed out that in
some communities housing, meeting. Mrs. Shirley Hamm ' Nora Cross; Ceres, Mrs. Mabel
Pomona,
Mrs: food, and transportation to was director of the choral Roush;
church and stores (to shop) are group which presented the sing Elizabeth Roush; Flora, Mrs.
BrOWJd the Christmas tree OJI Iva Orr.
provided.
'
Herbert Shields, master, was
She announced a meeting the Pomeroy parking lot.
Day . camp was discUsSed reported a medical patient at
will be held Jan. 30 at 3 p. m. at
along
with the need for a Veter8118 Memorial Hospital.
the St. Paul Lutheran Church.'
A discussion followed her talk director. Also' discWJSed at the Uterary program by Lectiron what Meigs County can do to meetlng attended by Lynn er Mabel Sblelda included
solve the problems of the aged. Patton, Council advisor, was readings by .Mrs. Pauline
_ A·~·-......., Erma Wllson, Mrs.
Miss Lucille Smith presented a troop camping. Leaders .were
urged to begin now preparing Herbert Roush, Mrs. Doris
gift to the speaker.
New officers were , elected the girls for outings by Sayre, Mrs. Bertha Robinson,
""' .. Sayre.
'
following a report from Mrs. teaching fire building, tent and ""-'·
Refreshments · of pie, cake,
Nan Moore, nominating pitching, lashing, outdoor
committee'chairman. They are cooking, etc. Craft projects coffee and sandwiches were
ser:veel •
Miss Smith, president; Mrs. were also discussed.
Attending the meeting were
Next meeting will be at the
Gladys Hayman, secretary,
and Mrs . Anna Hilldore, Mrs.Sheridan and Mrs. Wayne home or Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
SWisher, Pomeroy Brownies Roush • Feb. 10.
treasurer.
The next meeting will be
April 15 at Trinfly Church,
Pomeroy, beginning with a·
luncheon. A potluck luncheon
preceded Saturday's meeting.
Attending were Miss Smith,
Chester; Mrs. Clara Lochary,
Pomeroy ; Mrs. Blanche
Nelson, Mrs. Ethel Chapman,
Mrs. Martha. Chapman, Mrs.
Solids &amp; Florals 45" To 60" Wide
Anna Ogdin, and Mrs.
_______
,£otton Acetate Filled
Margaret Parsons, Rutland;
Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Wiley, Mrs.
.
60" .Wide
UIO% Polyesler Knits 12.98 yd.
Edith Forrest, Mrs. Uillan ·
Smith, Mrs. Nan Moore, Mrs.
MANY OTHER GOOD BUYS
.
Mary Hughes, Miss Ml1dred
Hawley, Mrs. Geneva Yates,
Middleport; Rachel McBride,
Mrs . Hlllilore, and Mrs.
DISCOUNT FABRICS
Hayman, Syracuse.
ADDISON, OHIO

'

cow•
RELIEF

..,._. TABLETS

IUUDIT RESERVE fLASHLIGHTS
10 l'fll' Emereency Battery.

ENTER

Reg. '198

AS OFTEN
AS YOU

100's 1 $}99

W.ISH

•

FREE ENTRY BLANK

•111

•

·'

•
''

'

,,

I

�'

..

•
.

•'

•

I'

1:-ThtDaUySenttDel,Middleport-Porneroy:~·-·Jlln. ll,19'12

.·

_

__.

_

,

_

.

_

.,

.

,

.

,

Sentinel Classifieds -Get Action! Se_n tinel Classifieds .Get Results.
. WANT ADS
In Memory
INFORMATION
IN · LOVING memory of our
DEADLINl:S
husband, father and grand- ,
P.M.
Day
Before
Publication
lather, Dal ton A. Grover, who
was killed in· a coal mine f ive · Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
Years ago today .
.
·
Cancellation a. Corrections
You are not forgotten , Oear Will be accepted until 9 a.m. for
Dalton, nor will you eve·r be.
Day of. Publication

As long as we live, We'll keep
on loving you . We often dream

REGULATIONS ,

The Publisher reserves the
about you •. how sad it is to · right to edit or re j~ ct any ads
wake up and know you were
deemed obj ect ional . The .
c.nly with us for a little· while
publisher will not be
in a dream . We will always
responsi ble for more than one
i'er"ember th e wa ·y yo u
incor rect insertion .

looked . The way you spoke
and sm iled. The little things
you said and did, are with us

all the while. We keep looking
forward to !hat blessed home
above, w here we hope to meet

again . and again will share
our love.

Sadly missed by wife, Myrtle,

children ,
grand child ren ,
sis ters and brother.

1-20-Hc
IN MEMORY pf Rollin Carroll
on his birthday, Jan . 19th.
God has his picture in a gold
trame with his name on the
scroll in Heaven's Hall of
F'ame . His sisters, Eleanor
Bahram , Margaret Rose,
brother John Carroll.

1-20-ltc

RATES
For Want Ad Se r v ice
5 cents per ""Word one inser t ion
, . Minlrrl um Char9e 75c
12 ce nt s per word th r~
con Secutive Insertions.
18 cents ·per word she· consecutive insertions.
25 Per Cent Discount on pa id

ads and ads paid with in 10
days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

$1 .50 for SO word min imum.

Each addit ional word 2c.
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per ·
Advertisement.

OFFICE HOURS
8:30a .m. to 5:00 p.m. Da ily,
8: 30 a . m. to 12: 00 Noon
Saturda y.

Notice

Employment Wanted

I WILL NOT be responsible lor
·LOTS and yards cleaned . Write
any de bts c ontracte~ b(.
Box 320, Rutland. Oh io.
anyone other than mysel .
l-29-6tp
Signed : Harry W. Pi ckens,
Sr .
1-19-31p

Lost

MALE

SIAMESE

cat

on

Mechani c Street , Pomeroy . If

•found call 992-3271 .

l-20 -3 tc

LEGAL NOTICE
County .

t0-18-Ifc

Main,
formerly
Duk e
Cleaners, starts Thursday at 9
a. m.
·

Mobile Homes For Sale
60Xl2, 2-bidroom, all-electric,
air conditioned, 8x20 ft. Porch
arid aluminum awning ,
aluminum skirting, com -

992-3825.

plelely s etup.
location. Owner leaving stale .
Phone 949-4892 or 992-5272.
1-10-tfc

l-19-12tc

Probate Court · GUN SHOOT, Forked Run ·
Spor tsman Cl.ub , Sunday ,
To the Executri x of the
Jan . 23, t2 noon .
estate ; to such of the follow ing
as are resident s of the state of
l-19-3tc
Oh, io, viz : - the surviv ing
spouse , the next of kin , the SHOOTING MATCH, Saturday,
benef iciaries under the wltl ;
Jan. 22, at the Racine Planing
and to the attorney. or attorneys
Mill
at 6 p. m. Factory choke
representing any ot the
guns only. Assorted meats.
aforementi,ned persons :
Sponsored by the Syra cuse
Anna
Molelle
Burton ,
Fire Dept.
Deceased , No. 20582,. PQmeroy ,
Oh io, Salisbury Township .
l -19-31c
You are hereby notified that
the
Inventory
and
AP ·
pre isement of the estate of the
aforementioned, deceased, late
of sa id County, was filed In this
Court , Said Inventory and
Appraisement will be for
Friday &amp; Saturday
hearing before thIS Court on the
1220 Washington 'Blvd.
7th day ot February , 1972, at
Nights-10 Til 2
Belpre, Ohio
10 :00 o'clock A.M .
Any per'son · desiring to t ile
exceptions thereto must f ile
FOR THE BEST deal in a new
them at least five d11ys pr ior to
or used mobile home, try
the date. set tor hearing .
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
Given under ·my hand and
Kanauga, Ohio.
·
seal of said Court,·this lllth day
of January, 1972.
12-17-90fc
Music by Red Stewart

12' - 14' • 24' - WiDE

MILLER

DANCE

MOBILE OOMES

Whispering Pines ,
NHe Cub

John c. Bacon
By Ann B. Watson,

(li

20, 28

Deputy Clerk

-

•:

Alfred

Socinl Notes

and the Ambassadors.

c BAND
- •..4 P. •
&amp;
21~_EMALE SINGE~S

Walchers (R,) Class in
Pomeroy write : We ight
Watchers ( Rl , 1863 Section
Rd., Cincinnati. Ohio 45237.
10-3-tfc

l-18-12tc

•

!ike s perSOn.
,.-

'•

WMP0/1390

TRAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile
Court, Rf. 1241 Syracuse, Ohio
. 992-2951.
4-2-tfc
1 BEDROOM trail er,

I O... d ttv

beside Blue Tartan . Phone

992-9941.

l-20-3tp
\

•

8 · 10 - 12 wides, 1 to 4

Belpre, Ohio by Kaiser
Aluminum , phone 423·9531.

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

you

seh:~ctlon

•

overweight ladies, teens and
men interested in a Weight

For Rent

We talk to

MOBILE - HOMES.- -Large

bf;drooms, b~n.k _r_et&gt;9s ~nd
, . used, soml!~p/'atti~a(ly ' n~w. ·
'--~---------1
Save up to v•. R. A. or Don
ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT ...
Miller, 705 Farson Street,

Sunday -School attendance on
Jan. 16 was 31, the offering
$13.22. Worship services were
held at 11 with the Rev. Jacob S-'11/E up to one hall. Bring your
Lehman bringing the message • sick TV to Chuck's TV shop,
151 Butter.nut Ave:, Pomeroy.
from Luke 1( : 11-19. AtPhone 992-5080.
tendance was 'll.
11 -21 -tfc
Mrs. Mary Amos was hostess
to a baby shower at her home WANT WORK at home addressing and stuffing en ·
here on Thursday evening,
vetopes? Rush self-stamped
January 13, for Ruth Brooks.
envelope to F. Uribe, Box 36,
Albany, Ohio, 45710.
Games were played and prizes
1-6-IIC
awarded the winners, led by
Linda WlUiams. The honoree NEEDLECRAFT SHOP at
Syra cuse Corp., Open House,
received many useful and
Sunday, Jan . 23, 2 p. m. to 5 p.
beautiful gifts.
m. Register for door prizes.
Refreslunents of ice cream
Come and look around .
-l-20-31p
and cup cakes centered with a
bootee, potato chips, coffee and
SHOWALTER ' S Wet Pet Shop,
tea were served to those
Ghesler, Of1io. Phone 985-3356.
menUoned above and Mrs.
Tr oplcal s and supplies,
beautllul male Bellas - $1.98.
Mildred B~ks and daug~ter
Open
daily, 9 a. m. to 9 p. m., 7
of Coolville, Marilyn Robinson,
days per week.
Dorothy 'RRbinson, Charlotte
1-20-31p
Van Meter, Genevieve Guthrie,
SHOOT. Sunday, Jan . 23, 1
Mary Carr, Clara Follrod, GUN
p. m.. Mile Hill Road, 20 lb.
Nina Robinson, Wilma Hensteak , hams, ba cons. Spon derson, Edna Findling, Helen . sor ed by Rac ine Fire Dept.
l-20-3tc
WOOde, Thelma Henderson and
Aaron Williams. Others ,
KOSCOT KOsMETICS and wigs
unable to attend, sent gifts.
,. for sal e. Brown's. Phone 992Weekend
guests
of
5113.
Genevieve Guthrie were Mr.
i2-31-llc
and Mrs. Delbert Yost and
TAX servi ce, daily
family and Mrs. Ella Yost of INCOMEexcept Sunday, evenings by
Sugar Grove, Ohio,
appointment. Mrs . Wanda
Eblin, . Laurel Cliff Road. 1
Mrs. Iris Carr is recovering
mile'
west of Meigs County
from major surgery in the
Fairground on Rt. 7 by·pa ss.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Phone 992-2272.
l-3-301c
where she has been confined
lor three weeks.
Week of Prayer and Self- Female Help Wanted
"enial services wiU be held at 5 LADIES needed Immediately,
Alfred church on Tuesday, Jan . . full or part tline, 550 to $60 .l
week , no investment. Phone
25 at 7:45 p. m. with June
.
.'
949.
-4365.
Stearns as program leader,
1-19-3fc
and Tuppers Ptains members
joining in the services, and Wanted To Buy
possibly others. Other people
OLD
POCKET
knives,
and other · ·churches are
especia ll y Case XX . Also
have other old knives to trade
welcome to attend.
· or sell. Ph one 99 2-2343.
i-i8-lfc
Since law is the rule of hu- ·
man conduct, the ultimate
end of which is happiness, OLD FURN ITURE, Ro und Qak
and indeed, the common tables, Brass beds, dishes,
happiness, it is necessarily clo cks, and -or comp lete
always ordain e d for the households . Wr ite M. D.
common good.-Saint Thom- Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Call 992-6271 .
as Aquinas.
12-17-tfc

-992 2094
606 E. Main · Pomeroy

For Sale
GOOD HAY. Phone 992-3658.
1-19-tfc
10 HEAD Holstein cows, fresh
and c lose up Springers .
Homer Circle, phone 949-2177.
l-18-3tc
- - - - - - -- WALNUT Stereo-radio com binalion,dual volume control ,
~ spee d ·'" term 1xed changer. 4
speaker sound system,

Balan ce $67 .83 . Use our
budge 1 1erms. c a 11 992·7085 ·
t-l9-61 c
MAPLE. Early American

VACUUM CLEANER. New
Salesman's Demonstrator
has cleaning_ l!lftachments

phis the new Electro Suds for
shampooing carpet. Only
$27.50 cash price or terms
available. Phone 992-5641.
l-19-6tc

SMITH NELSON MOTORt INC.
Pll. 992·2174
Pomeroy

COAL, limestone . Excelsior

,. .Cleltmd.

36" X 23" X ,009

Aluminum
Sheets
USED OFFSE-T PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

20'
8 for $1.00

The

Daily Sentin~l
. 111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

6048.

PoinU•I,uant &amp; Mason _
; AUtO. Gl!-ASS' ' t' •
' rr AI CQiftarct, MQr.'
.
Phonh04-77l-5710
Route l3 ,. Mason, W· Va.

automatic , factory stereo CONTRACT-OR ,

for resort ,

------

fruit. Minerals .

Modern 3 bedrooms, basement

Nice kitchen, dishwasher
Fully carp.eled. Carport
Fenced.
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
Associate
H2-332S
. 992-2378
l-16-6tc

1'

\'
, I

.,

H•&amp; AAILEI&gt; kL

MV ex•Ms... '
'

WHI~

1$ PRETTV IWI,

WHEN VOIJ CONSII&gt;Eit HE
CAN SIT tN TilE SACK OF

THE: ROOM .. .'

T~E CITY IS IN

- \

,i"J

...1111!&gt; SiE OVER
EVERYONE$
SHOULDERl

•m..,. ...4. ""' • T..... ... us. '-'· Olf. I·Zn

iHI5 WI\&amp; ALL
iHE'I COULD AFFORD!

FINANCIAl. TROUEILE,
56T. BLOlTER,

•

,"'"'ilijj"ca,ctty
' Moytlg
2.

.'

Maytog

HIIOOf Htat

Orytrt
.,
Surround clothes
'With gentle, even
heat . No hot spots,
·overdrylng .t

..'

I

-.
742-4211

Arnold Grate

'•

.

•'

,----,.

RAWLINGS
JANUARY··- SPECIAtS
FROM
'

C lm .. ooto. "'"- 'Ullot.H,.Off.

DEP-ENDABLE CITY
992•2151 or 992-2152 MIDDLEPORT
Prices In Effect Til ~n. 31 . _

$1695

ACROSS
I. Shopper's
aid
·
5. Stand
(one) in
good -

$1595

1968 Rebel SST
1968 Mustang

$1495

Convertible, V-8, autom&lt;~tic, summer really '
never left.

8' Fleetslde, V-8 engine, std. trans .. clean cab, good tires,
color while.
.

1968 Coronet

tires, 2 speed r. axle, solid cab &amp; was used on paVed roads.

1966 Polara

.

1964 -CHEVROLET--s395 _
·1955 CHEVROLET___:_·-$495
2 Ton H. Duty il4" C. A., 825 tires, 2 speed, rear axle, V-8

Diavolo"

~ Or - Sed., V-8, HI lie, p. -st ., choice of 2o both

1

very nice.

.'USE!) CAR SPECIALS '
.1970 Camlro Coupe _ _ _ $2795

992-2126

Pumeroy

MUSTANG 2 DR. HT .
Fl RE·BIRD '400' 2 DR. HT
MAVERICK 2 DR. SED,
CHARGER 2 DR. HT.
TEMPEST LtMANS COUPE

196~
1970
1969
1967
"1965
1968

COUNTRY SQUIRE WAGON
HORNET SST 2 DR.- SED.'
POLARA 4 DR. SED.
V.W TRANSPORTER DELUXE
SKYLARK 2 DR. HT. AMERICAN. WAGON (2)

'

.

. See Emt~rst.n

.

_..

M·:.-JI.K

KIJ

II

LATE IN ~D
AND DELAYED.

I I

I

I I .I toouirnled
form

I

· V
h.

Now arranp lht clreledlotten
the aurprloe IIIIWer, a
byJhubovo culoOIL

~~lliii~II~Siiita~INSWII~In;ll_~'ITJ{ 111 J-D"

(AJuWflN IOIIIOnDW)

Jumbl••' CHAII

- ~ATIO

fAMOUS MANAOI

An ...·.-r~ fat•ir,

nu1tller - MAMA

Yr.ttrr4ay'•
fl

t(fAH, I L~TTHc CA,e ... I HAVE
TO SPEND EACH LUNCH HOOR NO!Ii .
~N6 THE

STUD&lt;/ IT, 'THE WJRE I'MCONVINCED I

WA'S Rt611T... AN~IAl&lt;\\', LeT METALK
10 M~ A1TORNE't', WILL'(()!!?

burglar
IM II.Y

CRYPTO(lUOTE - Her~'s how to wo~k it:

A X Y D L B A'_ A X R
Is ' LON -GFE .LLOW·
One _letter simply stands for another. In this sample' A ·is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
a~ostrophes, the length and formation of the words are aH
hmls. Each day the eode letters are diiferent.
.

I

_A CryplofJI'am Qlaololion

_,

'

V

UVJ'K

HJEATAKE

HJ

HK WJDO VJ WXATRDWF
HJ~A.TA_-KE HJ

.

,,

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

4 ~'

,.

'(OUR

I CAN'TTALK TO 14ER NOW ...

CLIENT I~
ON Ti-lE
. PHONE

I'M DiCTIO'ING M'( MEMOIRS':

-t!JJ'

A6AIN ..

ENA

RTWU

NHU/{APR. -C.

P.

- W'

FWTDL
NHK
KNVF

Yesterda1's Cryptoquote: INTELLF,CT ANNULS FATE. SO
!'AR AS A MAN TlliNKS, HE IS !'REE.- RALPH WALDO
·JilMF.RSON
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(~ 197~ .J\ing :rfl\!ll t l'.i ~f ll 'l ltit ftl, Tu~.'1

'
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COI6TtTUTION .. REAL

r166'1,f«JH 7 Oil,WELL.THE M:JRE I

1. ~

Jones, Peari .Ash, Hilton Wolfe,
' Wellac•. Amberger, Dick Rlwllngs •

' .

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

f&gt; lUI.,-, ru , .....,. ,, _

43, Having
a hea&lt;l
(comb.
form)
44. Gaelic
DOWN

:::~ ~~Co~~A~A~~~~~gN

Pomeroy' Motor Co.
Your Ch~ Dealer

1966
1968
1970
1970
!968

I not..'I'l'

, ate

EXTRA ' SPECIALS ON UNITS
BELOW •.• . SEE US FOR THE
PRIC::ES •. ·. TOO LOW · TO ADVERTISE.
'

350 V-8 engine, automatic, power steering console, beautiful dark green, finished with green vinyl roof. Less
than 22,000 miles by loc•l owner, radio, new w-w tires. A
sharp mo~l priced Ia please. ·
·

queen

31. In perfect
form
38. Boundary
39. Liquid .
measure
U. Pui ( postpone)
42. Obliter-

.$995

1966 (oronet

f. Journey

UIIICrambleth... four Jumbles,
one Iotter to eoch oquare, to
form four ordinau words.

30. "-

Convertible, \1-8, p .-st., p.-br . , console shift.
Remember what we said &lt;~bout summer.

•;, Ton with 8'. utility body, 6 cyl.

3. " Arrivederci-"

20. Heir
apparent
21. Spanish

' JIJROIMD L
-•.n _.
[j
................,..,
El~4-WG~

4 Or. Sed., Slant Six, ~td. shift. ~ependable '
tr &lt;~nsportation.

2 Ton 84" - cab Ia axle -' 292 cu. in. engine. Good 825x70

2. Garden
dweller

22. Giant
5. Cinder&lt;
of yore
10. Venerall'
6, Pungcnl 23. New
,....~---"!""-.-..-.~ 12. Extensive
odor
Zealand
13. Subdued
7, 'l'hcrcforc
tribe
34. Fastid iou!i
H . Actress
8, Exchange 24. Nol him
3~. Republic
Dickinson
·premium 25. English
• of Ireland
9.
Exploit
ri\'er
~:-r'l"i"'.:l .IS. Succeed36, Getlhe
;:;
ing
II. Descrip' 27. Empower
lead
17. Public
live of
30. Honored
37, Dick
convey.
food
31. Drooping
Tracy's
a nee
16. Bylhe·32, Actress
mate
JR. A "Doctor 18. Epoch
Louise
40.
Caddoan
of the ·
19. Negative 33. Exclurlc
Indian
Church"
2%. liawalian
~~
island
26. Outdo
28. Spirit
lamp
29. Complete

2 Or. H. T., V-8, p. -st., automatic, very nice &amp;
. ready to go.
.
,
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1967 CHEVROLET---.-$1495

'-

Mosh Lint:

~~lAtin

'

Till

spee~

· p-irma.:p,.-,s,··

'4 Ton 8' Steps)de, V-8 e~gine, H. Dul y 15" tires. std.
trans., H. Duty sprgs.. radio, low mileage, 1 owner unlf. ·

Open Eves~

-1. ·

futomatli::s
'··
operation.
Choice of .. water 1 .1
temps·.
Aut.o . .
w1ter
level .
'confrol. · L lnl 1
· Fil1er o,. Power
Fin Agitator.
1

TRUCK
SPECIALS

eng.

APPEAL HAS
SCHOOL IUDDIMf."t 60T
FO'HIM? IODICATION?
NO!- CUf.TUR£? Nor"NO
'/OKUM EVER Blt-J .,..---r-""-1
INT'NJSTED IN
5155'{ STUFF
LIKE. THAT!!

Septic tanks Installed. George
(Bill) Pullins. Phone 992-2418.
4-25-tfc

Dry

-

1-JO

CALL "
HILTON WOLFE, 149-llll
DALE DUTTON, tll-2534

- - - - , - - - - -- --

1968 CHEVROLET

I KNOW, CHIEF
MIDDLEMAN. 1
A6KED 'FOR A
TWO·WA'I RADIO
. 5YGTEM.,,

HE. WAS PUI'I'ICKLY
NOIIMAL.lli,ITiL-AH
TOLE. HIM MAH
~I!! THEN HIS
MIND'SN,APPED -

- - -- - -

1969 Dlev. lmpa~ epe.·---.,---'2095

HOT WATER HEATING

CENTER

I

6-lHfc

·
' 4 BEDROOMS
MODERN kitchen with cook
units. Steel sink. Radiant
heat.-Carport. 7 room in all , 2
drilled wells. Foundation lor
. V-8 engine, automatic trans., p. steering, factory aii2nd house. io ACRES.
_condllloned, good w-w fires , radio, dark green finish with
45 ACRES
.._
spptless Interior.
, ,
Modern 3 bedroom home
Beautiful kilchen . .Full
base'ment with 'den and
. llreplace. Garage, 2 barns
YoUt:~g

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OHIO RIVER
FRONTAGE
1200 FEET. Some land above
flood, some low for boat ·
launching . Drilled well. Ideal

COACH,

~·- ~'-~0----------------------~
,

• cancflted? . Lost
·y·aur
~ator'? license? Call 992· . BACKHOE AND DOZER work,

Virgil B.
TEAFORD, 1966 CHEVROLET_s1695

nace. Garage. Carport. Large
lawn.
b'

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SEPTIC TA'NKS CLEANED ' READY-MIX CONCRETE de·
livered right to your proJect.
REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446Fast
and
easy.
FJee
478:i, Gallipolis. John Russell,
estimates . Phone 992-3284.
Owner &amp; Operator.
Goegleln Ready -Mix Co. ,
5-12-tfc
Middleport, Ohio.
"'
A_U_T_OM
__O_B_I_L_E_17ns_u_r-an_c_e-been
6-30-tfc

1965 FORD LTD, vinyl top,
power steering. power HARRISON'S TV and Antenna
brakes. Phone 742-5042. .
Service. Phone 992-2522.
l-20-3tc
6-10-tfc

double closets,
baths,
beautiful
kitchen llf2with
all - - - - - - - -- ,

Broker
110 Mechanic Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

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Wall
finlsh~r
and
painting.
Richard I. Dubbeld, phooe
742-5825.
l-17-5tc
- -..,:-:--::---,-------,--:-:
SEPJIC tanRs cleaned. Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662-3035.
2-12-tfc

tapec Lotsofextrh. Like new.
Cali 992-2-141 ,alter 5 p.m.
' ' 11 -28-tlc
- -· ·
1967 VOLKSWAGEN, will sell
reasonable. Phone 742-4211 or
742-4931.
l-20-3lc

rate.

BILL NELSON,9;2-U57
TOM t;:ROW, ~-2580

AtL KINDS OF
GLASS
For Every Purpose
we spoclallzt In auto glass ·
. on the spol Installation .
Mirrors· Table tops . Plate
Glass. Small home repairs •
scret;ns - storm windows
repa~eRdE. E ESTIMATE

1·16-6tc
-,9-7-0 -W
- --30. -0-:L,--D-SMO. -:-.,-B-1L-E- .u2;

Salt Works, E. Main St ..
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891 .
. 4 ROOMS
4-9-tfc
-----,----FULL basement, nice corner
POODLE puppies, Sliver Toy,
loi. Room for mobile home,
Park view Kennels, Phone 992- -- $2,500.00.
5443
2 ACRES
·
8-15-tfc All ulilllies available. Located
on blacktop road. $2,500.00
3 BEDROOMS
Large modern kllch~n, and
.dining . Nearly new gas fur - l

For Sale

percen~aQe.

240 Linci&gt;ln St.
MiddlopoJ1, Ohio
Dba Anthony Plumbing
We have a complete Home
Maintenance Service the
year around. No mairer what
your ~~eed. Complete roof or
spoutlno ropolr. Interior or
exterior urpentry. (eltlng
tile ariel Paneling i~ Siding;
Complete Plumbing &amp;
Heating.
Doy llumb4r 992·2550
We hive 24 hr. emergency
servic..
742-:1947
992-5803
.
992-3898 . 742-4761
Wuro.fuitv Insured

garden plot, gas heal. Phone
l-16-6tc
949-3954.
:-,6-9----:-:
V---:0:--L:--K---:S-W:--A:--G- E
- N-, - 2-door
1-20-3tp
sedan, deluxe, 4 speed, radio
- $1, 100; '69 Dodge Swinger
2door ha~dtop; V-8, ~tandard:
yellow w1th black v1nyl lop;
36,000 miles , s-t)ll unij~r
warrahty-st.o7S. Phonef92- -

·SR. -

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'FOUR NEW HOMES
OPEN FQR I!ISPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN ~YRACUSE
ONE HOME IN Ml DOLE PORT
NO MONEY DOWN
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom 516.900.00 home can be purchased with a
mcnthly payment as low as $65.00 for a family with a base
l salary of $5,000.00 a.nd three children. 7'1• Pet. annu~l

From the largest T"""
Bulldozer Radiator to the
-Smallest Heater Core,
Nitllan Biggs
Radiator Speciolist

Auto Sales

built - Ins, carpeted
lhroughout , full basement
wilh recreation room, utility
room, I acre, ALL OF THIS
FOR JUST $21,500.00.
SAVE YOUR ' CAR
st ere o-radio combination .
AND YOUR MONEY,
AM-FM radio, 4 speakers. 4
CLOSE IN
speed changer , separate
POMEROY
- 'l'h story frame,
controls. Balance $79.45 . Use
bath; 6 rooms In all, 3
our budget terms. Call 992bedrooms, full basement,
7085.
large lot. GOING AT JUST
l-19-6tc
16,500.00. WHY PAY RENT
EACH MONTH.
PAINT DAMAGE, 19\71 Zig -zag
sewing machiries. Still in
WE HAVE SOME ACREAGE
or ig inal cartons. No at COMING
UP IN THE NEAR
tachments needed as our
FUTURE.
controls are built in . Sews
HENRY CLELAND
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
REALTOR
buttonholes, sews on buftons,
Ofllce
992-2259
monograms, and blind hem
Residence
992·2568
stifch. Full c~h price, $38.50
l-16-6tc
or budget
an available.
Phone 992-56 .
l-19-6fc

'
F.'hone
992-3975
992-5786

&amp;PLUMBING CO.

cellent location, out of high '68 FORD pickup, 25.000 miles,
wide bed, custom cab water , Ph bath, carpet on two
rooms. new root, practically $1,400 ( '65 Mustang, V-8, 4
new cement block garage,
speed - $225; Phone 992-6048.

East Mal'}
POMEROY
EXCELLENT
INVESTMENT BUY
POMEROY - large brick '
building, 2 story, has $90.00 a
.
mont h ~ncome now, 3 other
lots to sell, CALL FOR INF DR MAT I ON
TODAY
S8,SOO.OO.
'PRACTICALLY
NEW BRICK
- POMEROY - No children
ha~ards in this dead end
street, 3 bedrooms with

•

;;;v;,n

tor

Open8Ti15
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

ALL 'W·~EATHER ROOFING
&amp;CONSTRUCTION

RACINE - 7 room house, ex-

6oa

\:}

1 ' •

1972 MERCURY, 4,000 miles.
11-7-ffc Call 773-5119.
------:--c~---l-14-6tp
HOUSE, 1642 Lincoln Heights.
Call Danny Thompson, 992- 1969 CUSTOM ·. Ford pickup.
2196.
Phone 992-0372.
7-18-tfc
l-19-61c

.

.·'h!,

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Make reserVations
.your
private parties.. banquets,,·
5pecial occasions.

Pomeroy Home &amp;, Auto

Floor Display.

.,
.'

/

' ~.'\. '\ t:::l

,

Ideal for meeting place with or without kitchen
privileges,
Individual Catering
Will seat up to ISO people :

Stop In _and See Our

~'loo-t~

-- v-

Orchid Roonf

Phone 992'2094

FURNITURE

a

-'-~~aiiy

IIIC

'

and

3 BEDROOM ranch type home,
Arbaugh Addition, Tuppers
Plai~s. All . new with total
electric and central air
conditioning, both and o;, fully
carpeted, full basement,
garage in basement. See by
· appointment, phone ,992-2196
or 992-358S. Danny Thompson.
SI
Flnanchig available.
· ·
Real Estate For e
12-JO-tfc
MIDDLEPORT - 6 room house - - - - - - ' -- - and bath , 385 Hamilton Ave ., SIX ROOM house, 133 Butternut
priced reasonably. Phone 992- Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, 2137
2044. ·
Wadsworth Drive, Columbus,
l-18-3tc Ohio, phone 237-4334.
- -- - - - - - 11 -21 -tfc
NICE 2-story home with full - - - - - - - - - - basement, 2 lots, new forced
Phone

Tl.a

~GUARANTEED­

OFFICE SUPPLIES

200 Gallons Fuel Oil When
You Buy Any Siegler Heater
Thru Jan. 15.

Elementary School.
992-7284 to see.

EXP-ERT
Wh!!lll Ali&amp;nment
-$5.55'

POMEROY

HOME &amp; AUTO

Real Estate For Sale

air furnace. Near Pomeroy .

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r

!__· ----------'
Beautiful

piano. Gerald Hoffner , phone

State of Ohio, Meigs

Close to school.

Ph one 992-5434.

INSTRUCTION in organ and

NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY
AND APPRAISEMENT

The

aP.~rtments .

SIEGLER HEATER
GET FREE

A -POlKA-DOtTED,
BOW-TIED
LOUt: BIRD

COULD BE SO MUCH FUt\1,
LOWEEZY

Business Services .-

-------

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GLORV BE!! I .NeVeR·

Business Services

BEAUTIFULLY marked, O'DELL WHEE~ allghment
locared at Crossroads, Rt. t24 .
tur11ished . ut il it.i es paid. . gentle male St. Bernard,__ 1
C9mptete
front elld service,
year
old,
registered
.
Phone
·
available now. Phone 992tune up and brake service.
304-812)250.
'
7384.
l_-20-3tc
l-19-3lc
Wheels
tronlc~lfy .balanced
All
work
alecguaranteed .
Reasonable
WE HAVE one new 23"
rates. Phone 992-3213.
2 BEDROOM mobile home. 12 x · Diagonal Zenith Table Model
60, adults only . Phone 992- for $399 ;, one new 23" ~--:-::-----7·27-tfc
5443.
Diagonal Zenith Console for c. BRADFORD. Auctioneer
1-11-lfc $458 ; one new Motorola
Complete Service
----~---Quasar, maple console for
Phone 949-3821
$578 ; one new 23" Diagonal
Racine. Of1io
NI CE trail er, 1 bedroom, ideal
Motorola Quasar consore for
Crill
Bradford
for couple, 10 miles north· of
S499.9S ; one usei! RCA Ma~le
S-l-Ife
Pom eroy. S65 a month . Phone
Stereo lor $99.95. Rl.denour TV
a. Appliance, phone 985,3301 SEWING MACHINES. Repair
992-7479.
1-4-tfc
or 985-3308.
service, all makes. 992-2284.
l-20-6tc
The Fabric-Shop, Pomeroy.
NEW 2- BEDROOM, double
Authorized
Singer Sales and
wide, mobile home on lot in TROPICAL
FISH, fancy'
Service.
We
Sharpen Scissors.
Syra cuse. Compl etely fur guppies, angels and breeders,
3-29-tfc
nl s~ed . Phone 992-2441 after S
·Bellas and supplies. Phone
~
p.m.
992-5443.
1-3-tfc
12-30-tfc UPHOLSTERING SERVICE,
COII!Piete selection of fabrics
end vinyl to choose from.
I BEDROOM trailer apart - 4 WHEEL · wagon, set of
Pick-up and delivery, Stater
ments, Ideal . for couples .
ha1'rows . Phone 247-2161.
Upholi;terlng, Rt. 3, Port)eroy,
Contact McClure's Dairy Isle,
l-16-6tc
' phone 992-3617.
992-5248 or 992-3436.
12-27-301p
l-9-12tc '52 FORD Tractor, good condition, new rubber - $650; SEPTIC Tanks Cleaned. -Free
HOUSE , 1632 Lincoln Heights, 4
phone 992-6048.
pipe Inspection. Paul Steinr ooms and bath. basement,
l-f6,6tc metz,
phone 742-5864.
pi ct ure window , fenced In
l-18-6tt
yard , all newly painted .
Phone 992-2780 or 992-3432.
INVENTORY SALE
INTERIOR and exterior
1-18-lfc
palnlin"g, roofing and gutter
work done . Phone 843-2826.
Clearance
Sale!
2 BEDROOM mobile home in
1-18-121c
Racine area . Phone 992·6329 .
Buy
Any
Fuel
Oil
12·14-tfc
FURNISHED and unfurnished

•

I&lt;NOWED 811~0 WATCHIN'

2 BEDROOM mobile home,

RUMMAGE SALE at Mid dleport Cab Office, 3rd &amp;

1-19-3tc

For Sale

For Rent

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1:-ThtDaUySenttDel,Middleport-Porneroy:~·-·Jlln. ll,19'12

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Sentinel Classifieds -Get Action! Se_n tinel Classifieds .Get Results.
. WANT ADS
In Memory
INFORMATION
IN · LOVING memory of our
DEADLINl:S
husband, father and grand- ,
P.M.
Day
Before
Publication
lather, Dal ton A. Grover, who
was killed in· a coal mine f ive · Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
Years ago today .
.
·
Cancellation a. Corrections
You are not forgotten , Oear Will be accepted until 9 a.m. for
Dalton, nor will you eve·r be.
Day of. Publication

As long as we live, We'll keep
on loving you . We often dream

REGULATIONS ,

The Publisher reserves the
about you •. how sad it is to · right to edit or re j~ ct any ads
wake up and know you were
deemed obj ect ional . The .
c.nly with us for a little· while
publisher will not be
in a dream . We will always
responsi ble for more than one
i'er"ember th e wa ·y yo u
incor rect insertion .

looked . The way you spoke
and sm iled. The little things
you said and did, are with us

all the while. We keep looking
forward to !hat blessed home
above, w here we hope to meet

again . and again will share
our love.

Sadly missed by wife, Myrtle,

children ,
grand child ren ,
sis ters and brother.

1-20-Hc
IN MEMORY pf Rollin Carroll
on his birthday, Jan . 19th.
God has his picture in a gold
trame with his name on the
scroll in Heaven's Hall of
F'ame . His sisters, Eleanor
Bahram , Margaret Rose,
brother John Carroll.

1-20-ltc

RATES
For Want Ad Se r v ice
5 cents per ""Word one inser t ion
, . Minlrrl um Char9e 75c
12 ce nt s per word th r~
con Secutive Insertions.
18 cents ·per word she· consecutive insertions.
25 Per Cent Discount on pa id

ads and ads paid with in 10
days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

$1 .50 for SO word min imum.

Each addit ional word 2c.
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per ·
Advertisement.

OFFICE HOURS
8:30a .m. to 5:00 p.m. Da ily,
8: 30 a . m. to 12: 00 Noon
Saturda y.

Notice

Employment Wanted

I WILL NOT be responsible lor
·LOTS and yards cleaned . Write
any de bts c ontracte~ b(.
Box 320, Rutland. Oh io.
anyone other than mysel .
l-29-6tp
Signed : Harry W. Pi ckens,
Sr .
1-19-31p

Lost

MALE

SIAMESE

cat

on

Mechani c Street , Pomeroy . If

•found call 992-3271 .

l-20 -3 tc

LEGAL NOTICE
County .

t0-18-Ifc

Main,
formerly
Duk e
Cleaners, starts Thursday at 9
a. m.
·

Mobile Homes For Sale
60Xl2, 2-bidroom, all-electric,
air conditioned, 8x20 ft. Porch
arid aluminum awning ,
aluminum skirting, com -

992-3825.

plelely s etup.
location. Owner leaving stale .
Phone 949-4892 or 992-5272.
1-10-tfc

l-19-12tc

Probate Court · GUN SHOOT, Forked Run ·
Spor tsman Cl.ub , Sunday ,
To the Executri x of the
Jan . 23, t2 noon .
estate ; to such of the follow ing
as are resident s of the state of
l-19-3tc
Oh, io, viz : - the surviv ing
spouse , the next of kin , the SHOOTING MATCH, Saturday,
benef iciaries under the wltl ;
Jan. 22, at the Racine Planing
and to the attorney. or attorneys
Mill
at 6 p. m. Factory choke
representing any ot the
guns only. Assorted meats.
aforementi,ned persons :
Sponsored by the Syra cuse
Anna
Molelle
Burton ,
Fire Dept.
Deceased , No. 20582,. PQmeroy ,
Oh io, Salisbury Township .
l -19-31c
You are hereby notified that
the
Inventory
and
AP ·
pre isement of the estate of the
aforementioned, deceased, late
of sa id County, was filed In this
Court , Said Inventory and
Appraisement will be for
Friday &amp; Saturday
hearing before thIS Court on the
1220 Washington 'Blvd.
7th day ot February , 1972, at
Nights-10 Til 2
Belpre, Ohio
10 :00 o'clock A.M .
Any per'son · desiring to t ile
exceptions thereto must f ile
FOR THE BEST deal in a new
them at least five d11ys pr ior to
or used mobile home, try
the date. set tor hearing .
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
Given under ·my hand and
Kanauga, Ohio.
·
seal of said Court,·this lllth day
of January, 1972.
12-17-90fc
Music by Red Stewart

12' - 14' • 24' - WiDE

MILLER

DANCE

MOBILE OOMES

Whispering Pines ,
NHe Cub

John c. Bacon
By Ann B. Watson,

(li

20, 28

Deputy Clerk

-

•:

Alfred

Socinl Notes

and the Ambassadors.

c BAND
- •..4 P. •
&amp;
21~_EMALE SINGE~S

Walchers (R,) Class in
Pomeroy write : We ight
Watchers ( Rl , 1863 Section
Rd., Cincinnati. Ohio 45237.
10-3-tfc

l-18-12tc

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!ike s perSOn.
,.-

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WMP0/1390

TRAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile
Court, Rf. 1241 Syracuse, Ohio
. 992-2951.
4-2-tfc
1 BEDROOM trail er,

I O... d ttv

beside Blue Tartan . Phone

992-9941.

l-20-3tp
\

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8 · 10 - 12 wides, 1 to 4

Belpre, Ohio by Kaiser
Aluminum , phone 423·9531.

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

you

seh:~ctlon

•

overweight ladies, teens and
men interested in a Weight

For Rent

We talk to

MOBILE - HOMES.- -Large

bf;drooms, b~n.k _r_et&gt;9s ~nd
, . used, soml!~p/'atti~a(ly ' n~w. ·
'--~---------1
Save up to v•. R. A. or Don
ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT ...
Miller, 705 Farson Street,

Sunday -School attendance on
Jan. 16 was 31, the offering
$13.22. Worship services were
held at 11 with the Rev. Jacob S-'11/E up to one hall. Bring your
Lehman bringing the message • sick TV to Chuck's TV shop,
151 Butter.nut Ave:, Pomeroy.
from Luke 1( : 11-19. AtPhone 992-5080.
tendance was 'll.
11 -21 -tfc
Mrs. Mary Amos was hostess
to a baby shower at her home WANT WORK at home addressing and stuffing en ·
here on Thursday evening,
vetopes? Rush self-stamped
January 13, for Ruth Brooks.
envelope to F. Uribe, Box 36,
Albany, Ohio, 45710.
Games were played and prizes
1-6-IIC
awarded the winners, led by
Linda WlUiams. The honoree NEEDLECRAFT SHOP at
Syra cuse Corp., Open House,
received many useful and
Sunday, Jan . 23, 2 p. m. to 5 p.
beautiful gifts.
m. Register for door prizes.
Refreslunents of ice cream
Come and look around .
-l-20-31p
and cup cakes centered with a
bootee, potato chips, coffee and
SHOWALTER ' S Wet Pet Shop,
tea were served to those
Ghesler, Of1io. Phone 985-3356.
menUoned above and Mrs.
Tr oplcal s and supplies,
beautllul male Bellas - $1.98.
Mildred B~ks and daug~ter
Open
daily, 9 a. m. to 9 p. m., 7
of Coolville, Marilyn Robinson,
days per week.
Dorothy 'RRbinson, Charlotte
1-20-31p
Van Meter, Genevieve Guthrie,
SHOOT. Sunday, Jan . 23, 1
Mary Carr, Clara Follrod, GUN
p. m.. Mile Hill Road, 20 lb.
Nina Robinson, Wilma Hensteak , hams, ba cons. Spon derson, Edna Findling, Helen . sor ed by Rac ine Fire Dept.
l-20-3tc
WOOde, Thelma Henderson and
Aaron Williams. Others ,
KOSCOT KOsMETICS and wigs
unable to attend, sent gifts.
,. for sal e. Brown's. Phone 992Weekend
guests
of
5113.
Genevieve Guthrie were Mr.
i2-31-llc
and Mrs. Delbert Yost and
TAX servi ce, daily
family and Mrs. Ella Yost of INCOMEexcept Sunday, evenings by
Sugar Grove, Ohio,
appointment. Mrs . Wanda
Eblin, . Laurel Cliff Road. 1
Mrs. Iris Carr is recovering
mile'
west of Meigs County
from major surgery in the
Fairground on Rt. 7 by·pa ss.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Phone 992-2272.
l-3-301c
where she has been confined
lor three weeks.
Week of Prayer and Self- Female Help Wanted
"enial services wiU be held at 5 LADIES needed Immediately,
Alfred church on Tuesday, Jan . . full or part tline, 550 to $60 .l
week , no investment. Phone
25 at 7:45 p. m. with June
.
.'
949.
-4365.
Stearns as program leader,
1-19-3fc
and Tuppers Ptains members
joining in the services, and Wanted To Buy
possibly others. Other people
OLD
POCKET
knives,
and other · ·churches are
especia ll y Case XX . Also
have other old knives to trade
welcome to attend.
· or sell. Ph one 99 2-2343.
i-i8-lfc
Since law is the rule of hu- ·
man conduct, the ultimate
end of which is happiness, OLD FURN ITURE, Ro und Qak
and indeed, the common tables, Brass beds, dishes,
happiness, it is necessarily clo cks, and -or comp lete
always ordain e d for the households . Wr ite M. D.
common good.-Saint Thom- Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Call 992-6271 .
as Aquinas.
12-17-tfc

-992 2094
606 E. Main · Pomeroy

For Sale
GOOD HAY. Phone 992-3658.
1-19-tfc
10 HEAD Holstein cows, fresh
and c lose up Springers .
Homer Circle, phone 949-2177.
l-18-3tc
- - - - - - -- WALNUT Stereo-radio com binalion,dual volume control ,
~ spee d ·'" term 1xed changer. 4
speaker sound system,

Balan ce $67 .83 . Use our
budge 1 1erms. c a 11 992·7085 ·
t-l9-61 c
MAPLE. Early American

VACUUM CLEANER. New
Salesman's Demonstrator
has cleaning_ l!lftachments

phis the new Electro Suds for
shampooing carpet. Only
$27.50 cash price or terms
available. Phone 992-5641.
l-19-6tc

SMITH NELSON MOTORt INC.
Pll. 992·2174
Pomeroy

COAL, limestone . Excelsior

,. .Cleltmd.

36" X 23" X ,009

Aluminum
Sheets
USED OFFSE-T PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

20'
8 for $1.00

The

Daily Sentin~l
. 111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

6048.

PoinU•I,uant &amp; Mason _
; AUtO. Gl!-ASS' ' t' •
' rr AI CQiftarct, MQr.'
.
Phonh04-77l-5710
Route l3 ,. Mason, W· Va.

automatic , factory stereo CONTRACT-OR ,

for resort ,

------

fruit. Minerals .

Modern 3 bedrooms, basement

Nice kitchen, dishwasher
Fully carp.eled. Carport
Fenced.
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
Associate
H2-332S
. 992-2378
l-16-6tc

1'

\'
, I

.,

H•&amp; AAILEI&gt; kL

MV ex•Ms... '
'

WHI~

1$ PRETTV IWI,

WHEN VOIJ CONSII&gt;Eit HE
CAN SIT tN TilE SACK OF

THE: ROOM .. .'

T~E CITY IS IN

- \

,i"J

...1111!&gt; SiE OVER
EVERYONE$
SHOULDERl

•m..,. ...4. ""' • T..... ... us. '-'· Olf. I·Zn

iHI5 WI\&amp; ALL
iHE'I COULD AFFORD!

FINANCIAl. TROUEILE,
56T. BLOlTER,

•

,"'"'ilijj"ca,ctty
' Moytlg
2.

.'

Maytog

HIIOOf Htat

Orytrt
.,
Surround clothes
'With gentle, even
heat . No hot spots,
·overdrylng .t

..'

I

-.
742-4211

Arnold Grate

'•

.

•'

,----,.

RAWLINGS
JANUARY··- SPECIAtS
FROM
'

C lm .. ooto. "'"- 'Ullot.H,.Off.

DEP-ENDABLE CITY
992•2151 or 992-2152 MIDDLEPORT
Prices In Effect Til ~n. 31 . _

$1695

ACROSS
I. Shopper's
aid
·
5. Stand
(one) in
good -

$1595

1968 Rebel SST
1968 Mustang

$1495

Convertible, V-8, autom&lt;~tic, summer really '
never left.

8' Fleetslde, V-8 engine, std. trans .. clean cab, good tires,
color while.
.

1968 Coronet

tires, 2 speed r. axle, solid cab &amp; was used on paVed roads.

1966 Polara

.

1964 -CHEVROLET--s395 _
·1955 CHEVROLET___:_·-$495
2 Ton H. Duty il4" C. A., 825 tires, 2 speed, rear axle, V-8

Diavolo"

~ Or - Sed., V-8, HI lie, p. -st ., choice of 2o both

1

very nice.

.'USE!) CAR SPECIALS '
.1970 Camlro Coupe _ _ _ $2795

992-2126

Pumeroy

MUSTANG 2 DR. HT .
Fl RE·BIRD '400' 2 DR. HT
MAVERICK 2 DR. SED,
CHARGER 2 DR. HT.
TEMPEST LtMANS COUPE

196~
1970
1969
1967
"1965
1968

COUNTRY SQUIRE WAGON
HORNET SST 2 DR.- SED.'
POLARA 4 DR. SED.
V.W TRANSPORTER DELUXE
SKYLARK 2 DR. HT. AMERICAN. WAGON (2)

'

.

. See Emt~rst.n

.

_..

M·:.-JI.K

KIJ

II

LATE IN ~D
AND DELAYED.

I I

I

I I .I toouirnled
form

I

· V
h.

Now arranp lht clreledlotten
the aurprloe IIIIWer, a
byJhubovo culoOIL

~~lliii~II~Siiita~INSWII~In;ll_~'ITJ{ 111 J-D"

(AJuWflN IOIIIOnDW)

Jumbl••' CHAII

- ~ATIO

fAMOUS MANAOI

An ...·.-r~ fat•ir,

nu1tller - MAMA

Yr.ttrr4ay'•
fl

t(fAH, I L~TTHc CA,e ... I HAVE
TO SPEND EACH LUNCH HOOR NO!Ii .
~N6 THE

STUD&lt;/ IT, 'THE WJRE I'MCONVINCED I

WA'S Rt611T... AN~IAl&lt;\\', LeT METALK
10 M~ A1TORNE't', WILL'(()!!?

burglar
IM II.Y

CRYPTO(lUOTE - Her~'s how to wo~k it:

A X Y D L B A'_ A X R
Is ' LON -GFE .LLOW·
One _letter simply stands for another. In this sample' A ·is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
a~ostrophes, the length and formation of the words are aH
hmls. Each day the eode letters are diiferent.
.

I

_A CryplofJI'am Qlaololion

_,

'

V

UVJ'K

HJEATAKE

HJ

HK WJDO VJ WXATRDWF
HJ~A.TA_-KE HJ

.

,,

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

4 ~'

,.

'(OUR

I CAN'TTALK TO 14ER NOW ...

CLIENT I~
ON Ti-lE
. PHONE

I'M DiCTIO'ING M'( MEMOIRS':

-t!JJ'

A6AIN ..

ENA

RTWU

NHU/{APR. -C.

P.

- W'

FWTDL
NHK
KNVF

Yesterda1's Cryptoquote: INTELLF,CT ANNULS FATE. SO
!'AR AS A MAN TlliNKS, HE IS !'REE.- RALPH WALDO
·JilMF.RSON
'
'

I

(~ 197~ .J\ing :rfl\!ll t l'.i ~f ll 'l ltit ftl, Tu~.'1

'
II

COI6TtTUTION .. REAL

r166'1,f«JH 7 Oil,WELL.THE M:JRE I

1. ~

Jones, Peari .Ash, Hilton Wolfe,
' Wellac•. Amberger, Dick Rlwllngs •

' .

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

f&gt; lUI.,-, ru , .....,. ,, _

43, Having
a hea&lt;l
(comb.
form)
44. Gaelic
DOWN

:::~ ~~Co~~A~A~~~~~gN

Pomeroy' Motor Co.
Your Ch~ Dealer

1966
1968
1970
1970
!968

I not..'I'l'

, ate

EXTRA ' SPECIALS ON UNITS
BELOW •.• . SEE US FOR THE
PRIC::ES •. ·. TOO LOW · TO ADVERTISE.
'

350 V-8 engine, automatic, power steering console, beautiful dark green, finished with green vinyl roof. Less
than 22,000 miles by loc•l owner, radio, new w-w tires. A
sharp mo~l priced Ia please. ·
·

queen

31. In perfect
form
38. Boundary
39. Liquid .
measure
U. Pui ( postpone)
42. Obliter-

.$995

1966 (oronet

f. Journey

UIIICrambleth... four Jumbles,
one Iotter to eoch oquare, to
form four ordinau words.

30. "-

Convertible, \1-8, p .-st., p.-br . , console shift.
Remember what we said &lt;~bout summer.

•;, Ton with 8'. utility body, 6 cyl.

3. " Arrivederci-"

20. Heir
apparent
21. Spanish

' JIJROIMD L
-•.n _.
[j
................,..,
El~4-WG~

4 Or. Sed., Slant Six, ~td. shift. ~ependable '
tr &lt;~nsportation.

2 Ton 84" - cab Ia axle -' 292 cu. in. engine. Good 825x70

2. Garden
dweller

22. Giant
5. Cinder&lt;
of yore
10. Venerall'
6, Pungcnl 23. New
,....~---"!""-.-..-.~ 12. Extensive
odor
Zealand
13. Subdued
7, 'l'hcrcforc
tribe
34. Fastid iou!i
H . Actress
8, Exchange 24. Nol him
3~. Republic
Dickinson
·premium 25. English
• of Ireland
9.
Exploit
ri\'er
~:-r'l"i"'.:l .IS. Succeed36, Getlhe
;:;
ing
II. Descrip' 27. Empower
lead
17. Public
live of
30. Honored
37, Dick
convey.
food
31. Drooping
Tracy's
a nee
16. Bylhe·32, Actress
mate
JR. A "Doctor 18. Epoch
Louise
40.
Caddoan
of the ·
19. Negative 33. Exclurlc
Indian
Church"
2%. liawalian
~~
island
26. Outdo
28. Spirit
lamp
29. Complete

2 Or. H. T., V-8, p. -st., automatic, very nice &amp;
. ready to go.
.
,
'
.

1967 CHEVROLET---.-$1495

'-

Mosh Lint:

~~lAtin

'

Till

spee~

· p-irma.:p,.-,s,··

'4 Ton 8' Steps)de, V-8 e~gine, H. Dul y 15" tires. std.
trans., H. Duty sprgs.. radio, low mileage, 1 owner unlf. ·

Open Eves~

-1. ·

futomatli::s
'··
operation.
Choice of .. water 1 .1
temps·.
Aut.o . .
w1ter
level .
'confrol. · L lnl 1
· Fil1er o,. Power
Fin Agitator.
1

TRUCK
SPECIALS

eng.

APPEAL HAS
SCHOOL IUDDIMf."t 60T
FO'HIM? IODICATION?
NO!- CUf.TUR£? Nor"NO
'/OKUM EVER Blt-J .,..---r-""-1
INT'NJSTED IN
5155'{ STUFF
LIKE. THAT!!

Septic tanks Installed. George
(Bill) Pullins. Phone 992-2418.
4-25-tfc

Dry

-

1-JO

CALL "
HILTON WOLFE, 149-llll
DALE DUTTON, tll-2534

- - - - , - - - - -- --

1968 CHEVROLET

I KNOW, CHIEF
MIDDLEMAN. 1
A6KED 'FOR A
TWO·WA'I RADIO
. 5YGTEM.,,

HE. WAS PUI'I'ICKLY
NOIIMAL.lli,ITiL-AH
TOLE. HIM MAH
~I!! THEN HIS
MIND'SN,APPED -

- - -- - -

1969 Dlev. lmpa~ epe.·---.,---'2095

HOT WATER HEATING

CENTER

I

6-lHfc

·
' 4 BEDROOMS
MODERN kitchen with cook
units. Steel sink. Radiant
heat.-Carport. 7 room in all , 2
drilled wells. Foundation lor
. V-8 engine, automatic trans., p. steering, factory aii2nd house. io ACRES.
_condllloned, good w-w fires , radio, dark green finish with
45 ACRES
.._
spptless Interior.
, ,
Modern 3 bedroom home
Beautiful kilchen . .Full
base'ment with 'den and
. llreplace. Garage, 2 barns
YoUt:~g

.

·

'

OHIO RIVER
FRONTAGE
1200 FEET. Some land above
flood, some low for boat ·
launching . Drilled well. Ideal

COACH,

~·- ~'-~0----------------------~
,

• cancflted? . Lost
·y·aur
~ator'? license? Call 992· . BACKHOE AND DOZER work,

Virgil B.
TEAFORD, 1966 CHEVROLET_s1695

nace. Garage. Carport. Large
lawn.
b'

~

•

SEPTIC TA'NKS CLEANED ' READY-MIX CONCRETE de·
livered right to your proJect.
REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446Fast
and
easy.
FJee
478:i, Gallipolis. John Russell,
estimates . Phone 992-3284.
Owner &amp; Operator.
Goegleln Ready -Mix Co. ,
5-12-tfc
Middleport, Ohio.
"'
A_U_T_OM
__O_B_I_L_E_17ns_u_r-an_c_e-been
6-30-tfc

1965 FORD LTD, vinyl top,
power steering. power HARRISON'S TV and Antenna
brakes. Phone 742-5042. .
Service. Phone 992-2522.
l-20-3tc
6-10-tfc

double closets,
baths,
beautiful
kitchen llf2with
all - - - - - - - -- ,

Broker
110 Mechanic Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

(

•

Wall
finlsh~r
and
painting.
Richard I. Dubbeld, phooe
742-5825.
l-17-5tc
- -..,:-:--::---,-------,--:-:
SEPJIC tanRs cleaned. Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662-3035.
2-12-tfc

tapec Lotsofextrh. Like new.
Cali 992-2-141 ,alter 5 p.m.
' ' 11 -28-tlc
- -· ·
1967 VOLKSWAGEN, will sell
reasonable. Phone 742-4211 or
742-4931.
l-20-3lc

rate.

BILL NELSON,9;2-U57
TOM t;:ROW, ~-2580

AtL KINDS OF
GLASS
For Every Purpose
we spoclallzt In auto glass ·
. on the spol Installation .
Mirrors· Table tops . Plate
Glass. Small home repairs •
scret;ns - storm windows
repa~eRdE. E ESTIMATE

1·16-6tc
-,9-7-0 -W
- --30. -0-:L,--D-SMO. -:-.,-B-1L-E- .u2;

Salt Works, E. Main St ..
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891 .
. 4 ROOMS
4-9-tfc
-----,----FULL basement, nice corner
POODLE puppies, Sliver Toy,
loi. Room for mobile home,
Park view Kennels, Phone 992- -- $2,500.00.
5443
2 ACRES
·
8-15-tfc All ulilllies available. Located
on blacktop road. $2,500.00
3 BEDROOMS
Large modern kllch~n, and
.dining . Nearly new gas fur - l

For Sale

percen~aQe.

240 Linci&gt;ln St.
MiddlopoJ1, Ohio
Dba Anthony Plumbing
We have a complete Home
Maintenance Service the
year around. No mairer what
your ~~eed. Complete roof or
spoutlno ropolr. Interior or
exterior urpentry. (eltlng
tile ariel Paneling i~ Siding;
Complete Plumbing &amp;
Heating.
Doy llumb4r 992·2550
We hive 24 hr. emergency
servic..
742-:1947
992-5803
.
992-3898 . 742-4761
Wuro.fuitv Insured

garden plot, gas heal. Phone
l-16-6tc
949-3954.
:-,6-9----:-:
V---:0:--L:--K---:S-W:--A:--G- E
- N-, - 2-door
1-20-3tp
sedan, deluxe, 4 speed, radio
- $1, 100; '69 Dodge Swinger
2door ha~dtop; V-8, ~tandard:
yellow w1th black v1nyl lop;
36,000 miles , s-t)ll unij~r
warrahty-st.o7S. Phonef92- -

·SR. -

''

'FOUR NEW HOMES
OPEN FQR I!ISPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN ~YRACUSE
ONE HOME IN Ml DOLE PORT
NO MONEY DOWN
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom 516.900.00 home can be purchased with a
mcnthly payment as low as $65.00 for a family with a base
l salary of $5,000.00 a.nd three children. 7'1• Pet. annu~l

From the largest T"""
Bulldozer Radiator to the
-Smallest Heater Core,
Nitllan Biggs
Radiator Speciolist

Auto Sales

built - Ins, carpeted
lhroughout , full basement
wilh recreation room, utility
room, I acre, ALL OF THIS
FOR JUST $21,500.00.
SAVE YOUR ' CAR
st ere o-radio combination .
AND YOUR MONEY,
AM-FM radio, 4 speakers. 4
CLOSE IN
speed changer , separate
POMEROY
- 'l'h story frame,
controls. Balance $79.45 . Use
bath; 6 rooms In all, 3
our budget terms. Call 992bedrooms, full basement,
7085.
large lot. GOING AT JUST
l-19-6tc
16,500.00. WHY PAY RENT
EACH MONTH.
PAINT DAMAGE, 19\71 Zig -zag
sewing machiries. Still in
WE HAVE SOME ACREAGE
or ig inal cartons. No at COMING
UP IN THE NEAR
tachments needed as our
FUTURE.
controls are built in . Sews
HENRY CLELAND
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
REALTOR
buttonholes, sews on buftons,
Ofllce
992-2259
monograms, and blind hem
Residence
992·2568
stifch. Full c~h price, $38.50
l-16-6tc
or budget
an available.
Phone 992-56 .
l-19-6fc

'
F.'hone
992-3975
992-5786

&amp;PLUMBING CO.

cellent location, out of high '68 FORD pickup, 25.000 miles,
wide bed, custom cab water , Ph bath, carpet on two
rooms. new root, practically $1,400 ( '65 Mustang, V-8, 4
new cement block garage,
speed - $225; Phone 992-6048.

East Mal'}
POMEROY
EXCELLENT
INVESTMENT BUY
POMEROY - large brick '
building, 2 story, has $90.00 a
.
mont h ~ncome now, 3 other
lots to sell, CALL FOR INF DR MAT I ON
TODAY
S8,SOO.OO.
'PRACTICALLY
NEW BRICK
- POMEROY - No children
ha~ards in this dead end
street, 3 bedrooms with

•

;;;v;,n

tor

Open8Ti15
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

ALL 'W·~EATHER ROOFING
&amp;CONSTRUCTION

RACINE - 7 room house, ex-

6oa

\:}

1 ' •

1972 MERCURY, 4,000 miles.
11-7-ffc Call 773-5119.
------:--c~---l-14-6tp
HOUSE, 1642 Lincoln Heights.
Call Danny Thompson, 992- 1969 CUSTOM ·. Ford pickup.
2196.
Phone 992-0372.
7-18-tfc
l-19-61c

.

.·'h!,

.,

1

Make reserVations
.your
private parties.. banquets,,·
5pecial occasions.

Pomeroy Home &amp;, Auto

Floor Display.

.,
.'

/

' ~.'\. '\ t:::l

,

Ideal for meeting place with or without kitchen
privileges,
Individual Catering
Will seat up to ISO people :

Stop In _and See Our

~'loo-t~

-- v-

Orchid Roonf

Phone 992'2094

FURNITURE

a

-'-~~aiiy

IIIC

'

and

3 BEDROOM ranch type home,
Arbaugh Addition, Tuppers
Plai~s. All . new with total
electric and central air
conditioning, both and o;, fully
carpeted, full basement,
garage in basement. See by
· appointment, phone ,992-2196
or 992-358S. Danny Thompson.
SI
Flnanchig available.
· ·
Real Estate For e
12-JO-tfc
MIDDLEPORT - 6 room house - - - - - - ' -- - and bath , 385 Hamilton Ave ., SIX ROOM house, 133 Butternut
priced reasonably. Phone 992- Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, 2137
2044. ·
Wadsworth Drive, Columbus,
l-18-3tc Ohio, phone 237-4334.
- -- - - - - - 11 -21 -tfc
NICE 2-story home with full - - - - - - - - - - basement, 2 lots, new forced
Phone

Tl.a

~GUARANTEED­

OFFICE SUPPLIES

200 Gallons Fuel Oil When
You Buy Any Siegler Heater
Thru Jan. 15.

Elementary School.
992-7284 to see.

EXP-ERT
Wh!!lll Ali&amp;nment
-$5.55'

POMEROY

HOME &amp; AUTO

Real Estate For Sale

air furnace. Near Pomeroy .

..

l·==========;~===~=====::;-r:====::==::==l

r

!__· ----------'
Beautiful

piano. Gerald Hoffner , phone

State of Ohio, Meigs

Close to school.

Ph one 992-5434.

INSTRUCTION in organ and

NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY
AND APPRAISEMENT

The

aP.~rtments .

SIEGLER HEATER
GET FREE

A -POlKA-DOtTED,
BOW-TIED
LOUt: BIRD

COULD BE SO MUCH FUt\1,
LOWEEZY

Business Services .-

-------

-

•

GLORV BE!! I .NeVeR·

Business Services

BEAUTIFULLY marked, O'DELL WHEE~ allghment
locared at Crossroads, Rt. t24 .
tur11ished . ut il it.i es paid. . gentle male St. Bernard,__ 1
C9mptete
front elld service,
year
old,
registered
.
Phone
·
available now. Phone 992tune up and brake service.
304-812)250.
'
7384.
l_-20-3tc
l-19-3lc
Wheels
tronlc~lfy .balanced
All
work
alecguaranteed .
Reasonable
WE HAVE one new 23"
rates. Phone 992-3213.
2 BEDROOM mobile home. 12 x · Diagonal Zenith Table Model
60, adults only . Phone 992- for $399 ;, one new 23" ~--:-::-----7·27-tfc
5443.
Diagonal Zenith Console for c. BRADFORD. Auctioneer
1-11-lfc $458 ; one new Motorola
Complete Service
----~---Quasar, maple console for
Phone 949-3821
$578 ; one new 23" Diagonal
Racine. Of1io
NI CE trail er, 1 bedroom, ideal
Motorola Quasar consore for
Crill
Bradford
for couple, 10 miles north· of
S499.9S ; one usei! RCA Ma~le
S-l-Ife
Pom eroy. S65 a month . Phone
Stereo lor $99.95. Rl.denour TV
a. Appliance, phone 985,3301 SEWING MACHINES. Repair
992-7479.
1-4-tfc
or 985-3308.
service, all makes. 992-2284.
l-20-6tc
The Fabric-Shop, Pomeroy.
NEW 2- BEDROOM, double
Authorized
Singer Sales and
wide, mobile home on lot in TROPICAL
FISH, fancy'
Service.
We
Sharpen Scissors.
Syra cuse. Compl etely fur guppies, angels and breeders,
3-29-tfc
nl s~ed . Phone 992-2441 after S
·Bellas and supplies. Phone
~
p.m.
992-5443.
1-3-tfc
12-30-tfc UPHOLSTERING SERVICE,
COII!Piete selection of fabrics
end vinyl to choose from.
I BEDROOM trailer apart - 4 WHEEL · wagon, set of
Pick-up and delivery, Stater
ments, Ideal . for couples .
ha1'rows . Phone 247-2161.
Upholi;terlng, Rt. 3, Port)eroy,
Contact McClure's Dairy Isle,
l-16-6tc
' phone 992-3617.
992-5248 or 992-3436.
12-27-301p
l-9-12tc '52 FORD Tractor, good condition, new rubber - $650; SEPTIC Tanks Cleaned. -Free
HOUSE , 1632 Lincoln Heights, 4
phone 992-6048.
pipe Inspection. Paul Steinr ooms and bath. basement,
l-f6,6tc metz,
phone 742-5864.
pi ct ure window , fenced In
l-18-6tt
yard , all newly painted .
Phone 992-2780 or 992-3432.
INVENTORY SALE
INTERIOR and exterior
1-18-lfc
palnlin"g, roofing and gutter
work done . Phone 843-2826.
Clearance
Sale!
2 BEDROOM mobile home in
1-18-121c
Racine area . Phone 992·6329 .
Buy
Any
Fuel
Oil
12·14-tfc
FURNISHED and unfurnished

•

I&lt;NOWED 811~0 WATCHIN'

2 BEDROOM mobile home,

RUMMAGE SALE at Mid dleport Cab Office, 3rd &amp;

1-19-3tc

For Sale

For Rent

}\

.,..

~-

_

..

.

�.
.. ..\

•
a- The Dally Sentinel, MlddlepOrt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Jan. 20, 1972

(Continued from page I)
the historic clllillenges that we
Nixon acknowledged that face, then we. will have falled
joblessness remained high but America . 'We will have failed
noted that "if the more than·. the trust of millions of
two million mep released from Americans, and shaken the
the armed forces and defense- confidence they have a right to
related industries were still on place in their government ...
"That is why my call upon
their wartime jobs, unemplayment would be far lower ." the Congress today is for a high
lower."
statesmanship -oo that in '
The President called at- years to come, Americans will
tention to the political setting . look back and say that t?ecause
of hi.• annual address early in it has withstood the intense
his speech.
pressures of a political year.
Time IS Precious
and achieved such great good
He said : "I know the political for the American people, and
. pressures in this session pf the for the future of this nation Congress will be great. There this was truly a great
are more candidates for the Congres8.'''
presidency in this chamber
Nixon did not enunciate a
today than there probably have shopping list of legislative
been at any one time in the demands but he noted the
whole history of the republic. election-year session "already
There is an honest division of has before it more then 9U
opinion, not orily ·between the ma jor
a dm inis tration
parties but within the parties proposals which. still await
on some issues of foreign policy action."
.
and domestic policy as well."
"1972 is before us," he said.
The President who will bid " It holds precious time in
for a second term in November which to accomplish good for
sounded the same theme in the this nation. We must not waste
closing para·gr a phs of his it. "
.
address.
The President assayed the
"Because this year is an state of the union in these
election year, it will be.a time words :
of great pressure ," he said.
"SUrveying the certainty of
" H we yield to that pressure, rapid change, we can be like a
lt!ld fail to deal seriously with fallen rider caught in the
stirrups--or we can sit high in
the saddle, the masters of
change, directing it in the
course we choose."
(Continued from page I)
Few Detalls Provided
ford, Ohio, ·and Paul, of Long
The President supplemented
Bottom ; a daughter, Mrs. John his half hour address with a
(Garnett ) Hensley , Long 15,000-word written message
Bottom; . one granddaughter, that contained additional
two grandsons, two great- detail, particularly about what
grandchildren; one sister, Mrs. he termed "the unfinished
Mabel Sayre, New Brighten, agenda."
Pa.; two half-brothers, Tom
Nixon provided few details of
Coates, Cincinnati, and John his new program either in the
Coates, Knoxville, Tenn. ; one speech or written message, but
half-sister, Mrs . Luella he stressed it was intended to
Williams, Belleview, Ky ., and create jobs and to help
a number of nieces and American industry compete in
nephews.
world markets.
Funeral services will be held
He said of his new special
Saturday at I p. m. at the program on technology :
~pencer Funeral Home in
"Among these proposals will
Belpre. Burial will be in Sand be an increase next year of $700
Hili Cemetery, Long Bottom. million in civilian research and
Friends may call at the funeral development spending, a 15 per
cent increase over last year's
home anytime,
level and a 65 per cent increase
over 1969. 11
WithouI revealing the exact
total, Ni xon said the budget he
Tonight
will send to Congress Monday
January 10
will increase the 578.8 billion
NOT OPEN
spending for defense although
the mflltary budget as a
January 11-21
percentage of the gross national
HOW TO FRAME
product will cootinue to decline.
A FIGG
'' Str ong military defenses are

Elderly Woman

MEIGS THEATR£

not the enemy of pea ce, " he

(Technicolor)

asserted. "They are the guar -

Don Kn oHs

dian of peace ."

Joe Fl ynn

"G"
RAID ON ROMMEL
ITechnlcolorl
Richard
Burt on
.John Cali cos

"GP"
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

Renews Call For Programs

The Presi dent announced also
he will spe ll out later a new

method of financing the public

schools to relieve some of the

burden of the hard-pressed
property taxpayer. But he said
that program would not be

ready for submi ssion to Con -

Come. As You Are
Eat in the car
·• sandwiches • short orders
• biggest beefburgers in town
• milk shakes· • sundies

McCLURE'S

1 0£.

the Bend

,....... ,

:I·

CQOI,VILLE - Arthur R. reported to three vehlcl,S· barnpend.bylruekaparkedin bypulandwuunabletol)llke
1
Marshall, OO, Coolvill' Rt. 2, involved in separate accid,nla front of
There were ·a left band tum off of Rt, 5 onto
·'
1 died unexpectedly ThursdSy Wednesday.
no
or arretila.
Rt. 3and .hit an irOn pole. 'l'llere
1
By
Rob
Hoeflich
'
1
~orni~g
at
Camden
Clark
The
Meigs
,Counly
Sheriff's
m.
on
Road
were no arrests or injurlu.
1
1
.. .. 1 osp~ tal, Parkersburg, Dept. said two-car accident
followmg surgery.
, occurred at 4:20 p. m. pn SR 124
Ruth Edwards Parker is convinoed it 's a small world. .
Mr .. Marshall was :born in In front of the Villta StaUon In
Ruth and her family moved recently to New Orleans. This
Washington Counly, Ohio, the Racine when Howard. ~
'
'
was reported in The Daily Sentinel. Mrs. Elsie Roush, who lives
~on
of the late Jan\OS and Frank, 42, Racine, was
in Pomeroy, sent a clipping of the move to her daughter, Mrs.
ugusta Jo~on M~hall . He sauth and a car iJrtven by
Paul Wood, the for:mer Jeanne Roush of Pomeroy, also living in ~as a pr~rrunent daii;Y farmer Wayne Smith, 33, Racine, Rt. 2,
Sbop· Friday and SaturdaY riight ul)til 9 p.m.
New Otleans.
~~ Washmgton and Athens ~ onto the roadway In his
Special sale prices now- Furniture departRuth and Jeanne made telepgone contact and had a ball 1 counties·.
.
·
on the 3rd floor. Bedroom Suites, Living
ment
. discussing the old home town. As i.t turns out. both Ruth 's and · He·' is survived by his .wife,
Room Suites, SOfas, Hide-A- Beds, Dinette sets
Jeanne's husbands are employed by Texaco in NewOtleans.
Mrs. Velma V. Marshall; a
Tables - Easy .Chairs. Stop in '-- look around.
son; Lowell, Brl$tol, Va.; three
You'll find excellent quality furniture· and
THE MEIGS COUNTY Agricultural Society, which annually brothers, James, of Belpre,
find that yau can really save during this
stages the Meigs County Fair, has received approval from Ohio's and Francis and Grant, LitUe
sale. · ·
Dir.ector of Agriculture Gene It Abercrombie approving dates Hocking; a sister, Mrs . Lucille
Rodney C. Jlysell, 23, Rt. 2,
Miller, Marietta ; tWo grand- Pomeroy, was charged with
for the 1972fair. They are Aug. 1SthroughAug. l9.
·
children, Rosa and James, of OWl, operating a car without a
IF VOU'RE PUSHING ECOLOGY in yolll' school class, club Bristol ; one step-daughter, driver's Ucense and hit..!kip
"
or organization, perhaps, you'd be lnlerested in a booklet Mrs. Freda Rubie, Mineral followi~g a traffic accident at
.
WednesdayonRt. 7
· ''PI
. a?ts - How They Improve Our Environment"
being' Wells, W. Va., and three step- !0:35p.m.
•
•
grandchildren.
,
two-tenths of a mile nortn of
distnbuted by the Ohio Reclamation Association. The booklets Mr. Marshall was preceded Gallipolis.
'
a comic book type publicatlon !Uid in color _:_ are available and
'
in
death
by
his
first
wife,
According to the Gailia"for free " from distribution to groups. You can 8e!;llre copies by
writing Ohio Reclamation Assn ., 88 East Broad St. , Columbus, Wynona, and . a brother, Meigs Post State Highway
William. Funeral services will Patrol, Hysell's car struck the
Ohio 43215.
be Saturday at 2 p.m. at the rear end of an auto operated by
White Funeral Home in Wanjla Burdette, 37, Rt. 2,
MEIGS COUNTY'S POUTI CAL scene remains a bit quiet at Coolville with burial in
present time with only two weeks remaining unUI the flling Coolville Cemetery. Friends Gallipolis . Mrs . Burdette
suffered minor injuries but was .
deadline for the May primaries.
may call at the funeral home not immediately treated .
There "!'• 10 county offices to be filled In the county this year after noon Friday.
There was moderate damage
so, perhaps, the scene will liven a bit before the Feb. 2 deadline.
to both cars.
·
To be filled this year are two county commissioner posts, clerk of
Asecond mishap occurred at
Milo McDole o£ - 6:50 p, m. on Neighborhood
courts, recorder, coroner, prosecuting' attorney sheriff
treasurer, county engineer and the prob&amp;te judge po:.Utions. '
Rd., where an auto driven by
The county board of elections office, located in the Masonic Long Bottom Dies
Harland · B. Sander~. 16,
Temple bullding in Pomeroy, Is open from 1 to 4 p.m. Monday
Gallipolis,
backed from a
LONG BO'ITOM - Milo H.
through Friday; for the convenience of candidates
McDole, 58, Long Bottom, private driveway and struck a· .
Of course, this is the year also for election of ~b-at com- Route I, died Thursday mor- car owned by Carroll W.
mitteemen with each party to name 40.
ning at Holzer Medical Center. Manley, Middleport. There
Owner and operator of a was minor damage to both
grocery store in Bashan cars.
gress until later in the year.
He renewed his call for
several years, Mr. McDole is
welfare r eform . r evenue shar JllUOD
HICKS TO SPEAK
survived by a sister, Mrs.
ing, health care, env ironmental
~
John
Hiclls, securily ,officer
!.,aura Baker; a brother,
protection, government reorga .
(Continued from Jl8ge I)
at the Hocking Valley
nizati on and a host of other
programs which stalled in the gunshipwasshotdown 13miles Emerson McDole, both of Long Technical College, will be
legislative machinery last year . southeast of the old imperial Bottom; two' nieces, a nephew speaker at a meeting of the
" 1971 was a year of capital of Hue, 390 mlles north and a great-nephew. Preceding
considerati on of these meahim in death were his parents, Chester United Methodist
sures," Nixon said . " Now let us · of Saigon.
Sherman and Ella Batey Youth Fellowship"at 7:30p.m.
join In mak ing 1972 a year of
30TonsofBombsEach
Sunday at the church .on the
action of them- action by the
The U.S. command said each McDole; a sister, Mrs. Millard
Congress, for the nation ana tor of the BS2 missions Included Osborne, and a brother, Creed topic, "The Effects of Drugs."
Hexagons • Enq Tables - Coffee Tables - ·
the people of America ."
Hicks will display satnples of
Despite the long catalog of three aircraft each carrying at McDole.
Commode
Tables - Lamp Tables - Cocktail
Funeral services will be lieid ·drugs. Denise Dean and Betsy
st ill unfinished business, Nixon least 30 tons of bombs.
Tables - Dough Box Table·s.
contrasted hi s three years in
at 1 p. m. Saturday at the Amsbary are in charge of. the ·
office with the strife.fllled final
Ewing Funeral Home with the program. All interested young
years of the adm inistration of
Rev. Frank Cheesebrew of- people are invited, the Rev.
his Dem oc ra tic predecessor ,
ficiating. Burial will be in Sand Robert Card, pastor, said.
Lyndon B. .J ohnson .
Reg . 29.00 Tables - Sale 24.00
Cites Progress Made
Hill Cemetery. Friends may
COMPLETES COURSE
Reg. 29.95 Tables
"When I took the oath · of
- - Sale 25.00
off ice on the steps of lhis
Officers were elected by the call at the funeral home
Glenn
E. Thompson ,
Reg35.90
Tables
Sale 29.00
building ju st three years ago Tuppers Plains Community anytime.
Pomeroy Route 2, a cable
Re!l- 39.00 Tables
Sale 32.00
today, th e nation was ending
Reg. 39.95 Tables
spticer, has received a cerone of the most tortured Club recently at the home of
Sale 32.00
decades in Its his tory ," the Nancy Jo Collins. They are
Reg. 40.00 Tables
tificate for completing a course
Sale 33.00
President recalled . " To recall Nina Jean Ritchie, president·,
Reg
49.00
Tables
In
·
cable
splicing
at
General
Sale 40.00
these troubles is not ~to point
Reg. 52.00 Tables
Telephone Co. of Ohio's plant
finger"s of.blame ... "
Mildred
Brooks, · vice
Sale
· 42.00
-·
FOUR FINED
But he sa id, "The nation has president; Dorothy ·Stout, vice
Reg. 59.00 Tables
training school. In Marlon.
• Sale 41.00
Four defendants fined Thbmpson has been with the
made significant progress in president ; Merle Griffith,
Reg..
59.95 Tables
Sale 49.00
these first years of the 70s. Our
Wednesday nighf by Pomeroy company 10 years. He works in
Reg. 69.95 Tables
Sale 56.00
citi es are no longer engulfed by treasurer, and Norman Weber
civil disorders. Our colleges and Clifford Longenette, Mayor William Baronlck were the Pomeroy area exchanges
Reg- 74.00 Tables
Sale 59.00
and un ive r sit ies have again trustees for three year terms. Wilbert McClain, 39, Racine, in the company 's Athens ,
Reg. 79.00 Tables
Sale 64.00
become places of learning
$100
and
.
c
osts
and
three
days
in
Reg.
89.00
Tables
district.
instead of battlegrounds.
Everyone wishing to join the
Sale 72.00
Reg. 89.95 Tables
"A beginning has been made group is askedtocontactoneof jail, driving while intoxicated ;
Sale . 73.00
'
'
on preserving and protecting the officers. Officers are Carl Sauvage, 22, Pomeroy, $20
Reg.
99.00
Tables
OFFICERS EL~ED
Sale 80.00
the environment. The rate of urging the entire communi"' to and costs, speeding ; Charles
Reg
.
109.95
Tables
Officers
were
elected
for
1972
Sale 88.00
Inc rease in c r ime h-as been
~~
Vaughan,
22,
Pomeroy,
$5
and
Reg119.00
Tables
slowed.
cooperate on the completion of
when the Meigs County Board
Sale 96.00
"Most important .. . the year the fire station in 1972. Several costs, failure to yield the nght of Retardation met Monday
Reg. 119.95 Tables
Sale 97.00
1972 can he the year in which ' money making proJ'ects are of way, and Orvel Davis, 74, night at the courthouse. New ·
Reg. 129.00 Tables
Sale 105.00
Amer1ca may make. the grea .
.
Langsville,
$S
and
costs,
im;
Reg.
149.00
Tables
officers
are
Ed
Kennedy,
test prog ress in 25 years bemg planned. A membership
Sale 120.00
proper backing.
ta~ard achieveing ?Ur goal of drive is underway.
chairnuin ; Grace Weber, vice
be ~n g al peace wil h all the
chairman ;
Nora
Rioe,
na t ions of the world, " Ni xon
secretary, and Helen Williams,
said.
2 Day Sale Friday and Saturday
N ixon did not mention John news reporter, The board will
son by nam e but d id refer
meet on the third Monday of
directly to the late President
each month at the courthouse.
Kennedy, the man who defeated
him In the 1960 presidential
Sent
Childers I 30 mcf
(Continued from page 1)
election.
A large selection of records In popular, easy li stening,
" In our foreign poli Gies, we patient here at WVU Hospital, with head and back Injuries, and
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
country, western and sacred.
have en tered a new era ," Ni xon possibly a spinal fracture. Attendants described his condition as
' ' '~:be Pomeroy E-R squad
sa id. " The world hos changed
"serious."
State
Police
said
the
car,
a
1961
sports
model
was
4.79 Record Albums
answered a call to the Guy.
grea tly in th e 11 _ years since
Sale 3.59
Pres ident John F. Kennedy improperly registered. It crossed from the outer to lnne~ost
5.79 Record Albums
Hysell home. on Dead Man's
- Sale 4.59
sa id, in his inaugural address, line, then slammed against abridge abutment, hurling both men
6.79
Record
Albums
Curve
at
1:24
p.
m
Wednesday
- Sale 5:59
'We shall pay any price, bear
out.
·
for
Mrs.
Nora
Curtis,
who
was
any burden, m eet any hardship,
Also special selections - 1.89 Albums
and support an y fr iend, oppose
ill. She was taken .\0 Veterans
any foe. to assure the survival
THE EGYPTIAN GOVERNMENT ANNOUNCED Wed- Memor,ial Hospital where she
and the success of liberty.'
was admitted.
" Our poli cy has been careful - nesday night and today a series of meBSures designed to put the
You
Can Really Save .All'
The Store
ly and deliberately' adjusted to nation on a war footing In the struggle with lllraei. Cairo Radio
'
meet the new r ea lities of the
ELECTION SET
new world we now live in," said public spending would be cut, imports and luxury goods
During The Big JanuaiJ Sale
The Meigs County Alcohol
Nixon said. "We make ooly would be curbed. and unlverslty students would get increased
those co mm l tm ~n ts we are abl e military training.
and Drug Abuse Committee
·
Mens and boys winter jackets · mens and boys sweaters .
and prepa red to meet ."
will elect officers at a meeting ·
"This
Is
only
the
first
step,"
thf
b-oadcast
said.
The
womens
handbags · winter sleepwear for women . flanIn a r es tatement of his
to be held at 8 this evening at
" Nixon Doctr ine" that other government announced late Wednesday that the armed forces
nelette.robes and dusters. Lots of bargains, too, on the 2nd
nallons must bear more of the
floor - Womens and glr!s coats, jackets, girls sleepwear,
were ready for volunteers provlded they jomup for more than six the St. Paul Lutheran Church
burden of their own defense.
. womens skirts. womens dresses, bedspreads, bed pillows,
in
Pomeroy.
The
public
is
Ni xon said, " where our inter - months.
I luggage, linen toweling, checked gingham, cling, printed
invited .
es ls or our-t r eat y comm itments
flannelette, womens uniforms. Take time to lool&lt; around
ar e not Inv olved, our rol e will
- VIsit every department and really save.
PARISTHE
U.
S
..
DELEGATION
to
the
Vleinam
peace
be limited . We will not
MARRIAGE LICENSES
interv ene militarily .''
talks appealed to the Communists on the third anniversary of the
Robert Ivan Lambert, Jr.,
deadlocked negoUationa today for Information on the fate ol 14 21, Wiikesvllle, and Sandra
U.S. pilots believed to be )l'lsoners of war.
Carol Gardner, 17, RuUand;
Heyward'Isham, deputy chief of the U. S. delegation, said the Homer Griffith, 62, Middleport
pilots were ''known to have been alive on the ground in North and Marjorie Griffith, 57,
Vletnann" but none of them appeared on the Communists' llst of Middleport.
American prisoners, Issued more than a year ago.:

a

&lt;lrivm8

~

~ +-,l
dallyJS,e

For

Him

XXIV NO. 198

Of 'lJie

..-.;:

Meigs-Mt111011 Area

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992·2156

FRIDAY, JANUARY 21,

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

I

'

.

Occasional ·
tables

Nina Ritchie
Is President

'

331h. Record Albums

. MEETING SET
RACINE - The Racine
American Legion Auxiliary
will meet at 7:30p.m. Tuesday
at the post home.

.

,!~~rthe ~and

In All The latest
·Popular Colors On~

Ingels Furn.iture..

$}499

;91·1635

"

OPEN f·RI.

&amp;

SAT. NIGHTS

~DLEPORT

LOCAL TEMPS
The temper111ure In downtown Pomeroy at 11 a: m.
Thurlday was ~9 degrees under
cloudy lklea.

...

January·Sale. of Desks
Roll lop · enclosed · k'nee hole and secretary desks: Walnut
and rnaote finishes . • '
'

419 .oo Roll Top Desk - - - - - - Sale 336' oo
309 .oo Early American
·
'
Roll Top Desk - • - - - - - - Sale 248.00
219.00 Secretary Enclosed Desk- - Sale 178.00
139.00 Secretary Desk • Sale h2 oo
119.00 Knee Hole Desk Sale 99:oo
89,00 Knee Hole Desk Sale 64.00·

Elberfelds In,.Pomeroy
,,

""' . ·~·

"

R-. e'nee.Bur'ke Rece·r·ves
, ,.
''

,
·
-EAs;J.' LIVERPOOL '-- Miss
!Unee Burke, Meigs C_ounh•
''
'
Miss,
wa,
s
.w
.
elcomed
.J."•ior,
.,..
lild
. given the "key to the city"
1&lt;v
~~ MJ.yor Norman Bucher
wltensllearrivedhereMonday
to;. represent M~igs County in

.

.
. M'
the 1972 Ohio State Junior ISS
Pageant. Renee lives at. Elm
Street, . Racine, with her
parents,· Mr. and Mrs. Walter
L. Burke. She is a senior at
Southern Local High SchooL
The official welcome signals

•.• in Briefs

~ ·,;: t:O~Wiif."iffltU~~~"!fficiBI! wid
'

tJNrmj

'4;i o6. ~ riot
~

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
consumer price .index rose by
o.t per cent in December, the
first full month · under
President Nixon's Pbase II
economic · controls , the
government said today.
The Labor Department said
It was the biggest increase
since the wage-price freeze
' was imposed in.August.
The Bureau of Labor Statis·tics (BI.S) said almost twothirds of the increase was
, caused by higher prices for
· food, especially fresh vegetables which are exempt from
price controls. The index for
· food In supermarkets jumped
1.3 per cent last month, more
than twice ita normal increase
for December.
The price index for nonfood
commodities remained unchanged, despite a 0.7"per cent

~h~r. ~~~ ~w~d m~e=-

to report to work today and furloughed 710

wkera for an Indefinite time from its huge Vega and GM Truck
~~~tmbly' ccmple:t

Key~•

.

Community College A,Wn

!'-

~
'lbe Melli County Comm]qloaon 'l'llelday alped 1
~ joillt molutioa for the creation oh Comma1Jlty College ,

:f.:. District that wlll be bOUied oa ucl111e fadlltles of Rio

living increased ohly 3.4 per
cent !or all of 1971, down
sharply from the 5.5 per cent
Increase for 1970 and the 6.1
increase In I~ the flr8t two
years of President Nixon's

term:

The price index for services
increased 0,3 per cent, with
higher charges for household
services such aa gas, electricity, telephone rates and proper·
ty taxes accounting for almost
three-fourths of this increase.
The BLS said that in the four
months alter the wage.pr,lce
freeze was Imposed in August,
the consumer price index rose
ataseasonallyadjustedannual
rate of 2.4 per cent, although
Increasing at twice·this rate in
December. During the six
months from March through
August the index lnereued at

RODNEY WALKER
RUTLAND - Airman .
Rodney E. Walker, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Vester Walker
Jr., R. R. 1, Rutland, bas
completed his U. s. Air
Force basic training at tile
Air Training Command's
Lacklud AFB, Tex. and bas
been. assigned to Keesler
AFB, Miss., for aQce
trailllng-in communlcaUOIII •
electronics systems. Airman
Walker Ia a 1978 graduate of
MeiSs High School. His wife,
Dianne, is the dau&amp;bter of
Mr. and· Mn. Robert Swick
of R. ·R. 1, Middleport.

.,
.? Grande CoUege.
Last Friday nl&amp;bt the Commllll"&gt;' College District
wd formally laullcbed ill a apeclal meelilll at Rio
, Gr&amp;Dde Callege atteuded by molt of the commluloaen
"' from Jackson, Gallla, Moll• 111d ViiiiOD C4Mtatfea.
Ollly IOrmala~¥11 by the VInton eommlqion delayed ""'"'e member belli • -..call• ill Florida II needed before llleeollege dlllrfet Ilia baalnell.
In other bulneaa Taelday the commillloaen
reappobtted Mn. DeliVer Weber, Reedlvllle, aad Mn.
Pearl WUIIIIDI, Pllmero)', to the Mmtal Retardalloa
Board for a leur yNr term. Allo, permlalloa wu
granted a.e~ter Tnulllp to )llftt.le a clamp track.
Bernard BoWIUI If the Slate Departmetd el
Health, wllb the comm•toDen, cbecked three poulble
lllllftar)' laadlill lfttl.
.
Atlelldlna: were Charlea R. Kerr, Warden Oan, ucl
Bob aut, colllllllallollen, and Martlla Cbamben,
clerk.
-'·

increaseinnew&lt;arpricesand
other
Increases for gasoline anannualrateof.Upereent.
This appeared to indicate
and reading materials. These that the price freeze slowed
th b .l .
f
. b t higher prices were offset by a considerably · the rate of ad- ~~.&amp;...:.:::::;;; ~·1®.
e egmnmg o · a 11rmg_ uk - Sharp 2.7 per cent decline in vance in the lost of living, but ·
LAST LOTTERY?
eventful and exciting
full
wee
used
r1
nd
. 'ti
h' h
-car p ces a
sma11er that the pace stepped up again
WASHINGTON (UPI ) of pageant activl es w .1chi de creases 1or tires , clothing, 88 soon as the freeze was lifted
Th e se1ec11 ve Servlce today
culminates with
the
two-mg
nods
d
-th
·
some to 11et g
an over e- and increases In prices were announced that ·this year 's
pageant, ·January 21 aqd
at counter drug 1terns.
· 22
u••h
allowed under 11haae II.
draft lottery wlll be be1d
the West Gate Junior •...,
The over-all increase for
RefledloDNoiAccuraW:
Feb. z - several month•
-School in East Liverpool. ·
December, 1"hlch was twice
BLS offlcllils said, however,
earlier' than 1n the lui few
Thousands of dollars ln
d an
scholarships and prizes are at the 0.2 per cent a v ce 1or · · that the consumer price index
yean. It may be the last
stake for Renee and the other November, reflected the ex- is not a fully accurate
lottery whose jlartlclpaall
contestants. Bob Evans, plraUon of the !Mklay freeze reflection of month to month
actually will be draltecL
presidentofBobEvansFarnts, Nov. 14 and the Initial Impact changes lil the cost of living
This year'alottery affecll
allmenbomdnriDIIH3,and
Inc.,RloGrande,willpresenta of the Phase n controls that since same Items aie price
l,IWI coUe•e ,sc.hoiarship and pennlt · some limited price checked only once every three
wiD delermltae the order ill
$ uyv
•
Increases
... olw
' ·~""b'•b ·~-. wiU be called un '
Mlsl L•nrl.
M•,~a.
r of 'Fashi
. _on .
·
"'1' IliOn.... or an- " ""''
.
.
~
&lt;
' "'
s.rv~ee~
ccm u,. ~~- •· -· mon.....
.
- •·--· --.~-....1,.11rtlq1m.

~N;ews
,

here.

'lbe actiona angered United Auto Workers Union Locallll2

Pteaident Gary Bryner, who bas called a strike vote for Feb. 1.
The 4,100 employes not working today were part of the second
llluf\ crew tliat has been released early every day this week for
.what the coffipany termed "poor workmanship."

~.' CINCINNATI - JOHN HERMAN LUSTER, a member of
ilie University of Cincinnati freshman basketball team, was
..!Tested ThuhdaY and charged with two c;ounts of aaaault with a
' · dfadly weapon.
· ' Luster a 6-fooW former high school .All-America from
''llQulavllle,' Ky., allegedly attacked a coed early Thursday
lflornlng In the basement of Sanders Hall, a UC dormitory.
The charge filed against Luster said he cut the girl behind
Ute ear with a lmlfe and IWIIIlg the lmlfe at out missed George
Medfford, night desk clerk at the dorm.

••

~; CINCINNATI- ARAIDING PARTY of 20 policemen burst
~a wareh&lt;Riseln suburban Blue Ash Thursday and confiscated

scholarship to the 1972 Ohio
Junior Miss. Miss Burke will .
also compete for runner-up
scholarship awards and
preliminary awards for best
talent, scholastic, youth fit.- 1
ness, and poise and appearance. Winners of the
preliminaries recelve $100
bonds.
The 1972 Ohio Junior Miss
will represent the State of Ohio
at the America Junior Miss
Pageant in Mobile, Alabama in
May of this year.

The BLS said lhe cost of

(ConUnued on Jlllge 12) ·

Beer Stolen
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept. is invesUgatlng the
breaking and en'·ring
of the
"'
Ray Facemeyer Carry-Out
Store on SR ••t
vo apparently
some time Thursday ••«h•
•..., • or
Friday morning .
Entry was made by breaking
the lock on,the outside door of

if:::.:. ~"W~&gt;.JWJ:.:::O*::::nw

.

'

been struck, suffering two
lacerati0111 to the nooe. A
screen was also cut.
Empty beer cases were
found in the driveway. A Inlet
parked near the store had
damage to a tape player valued
at $140 and the microphone
from a two-way radio WBS
stolen,

the cooler. Approximately 100
cases of beer were taken.
CWB TO MEJ!.T
The front .window was
1be Wildwood Garden Club
broken, appUenUy by ,beer
wtll bold an cipen meelln8 at
botUes thrown through it. A
door l\'!11 al~9 4~!'!aged, 7:~ P·lll· Wednell:lay at tile"
Obltk ll'llftr Co. office In
believe&lt;\ \IY, a hatchet. .
... '
' A dog tied ln the store had rCIIJl'I'Ol',
\

'

Pickens Reappointed Chief· Of Medic~ Staff
,.

Dr. Ray A. Pickens, DO, was.
reappointed - chief of the
medical staff and chairman of
the Pharmacy Committee of
Veterans. Memorial HosPital at
a recent meeting of the board
of trustees.
Other .reappointments to the
active medical staff are J. H.
Ridgway, ·oo, vice chief of

staff and chairman of
Utilization Review Committee
and a member of the
Qualifications and Tissue
Committees; T. B. McGowan,
DO, secretary of medical staff,
chairman of Dietary Committee, member of Utilization
Review and Qualifications
Conlmlttees; C. W. Thompson,

MD,

radiologist, chairman of
Morbity and Mortality Committee,
member
of
Qualifications and Re~ords
Conunittees; L. D. Telle, M.
D., chief of surgery, director of
laboratory, chairman of Tissue
Committee , member of
Library and Infections Committees, and S. J. Blazewlcz,

Md. The courtesy staff cpnalsts
of R. P. Daniels, MP.

'Officers of the board of
trustees In 1972 are Hugh P.
Custer, president; George
Hackett, Jr., vice president,
and Russell Brown; secretary.
Other members are Harold

The consulting slaff conalsta
of J. Weinberaer, MP,
radiologist; G. H. Abels, MD,
internist; G. E. Vallee, MD, .
internist; J . A. Kemp, MD, Sauer, .Andrew Croea, Earl
Internist; H. D. Brown, PPS, a Clark, Wayne Gibbons, ABa
member of the dental staff.
HoU!ni and Early Rou.sh.

Sounds of Industry !Jiscordant to Pioneers

so romantic, he was, norwlthstanding, the founder of Middleport.
BY BOB HOEFLICH
"As I have already stated, they started from Maaaachusettaln
Middleport civic leaders who .today would welcome the
1792,
whence they prooleded on their then perilous - wearisome
arrival of Industry to the community would have found a difjourney to Marietta. Arriving at that place they took refuge In the
ferent attitude 100 years ago.
The author of a history of the Middleport community, blockho~ where tlie~ were·compelled through the hostilities of
published in 18'15, commented with obvious sadne!!B that the the Indiana to remain flve long, weary years. They were five
"peaceful silence" of the town ~ad been replaced by the years of doubt and uncertainty; hardships and Privations; but
with all hope and expectancy. Uke everytliing earthly these five
discordant sounds of all klnda of industry.
''; J
I
'
,
Writer .of the history, which was made a part of sheppard's years drew at last to an end; and the occupants of the blockhouse
,..4
' ~
;, MmDL~WN, OHIO- ARMCO STEEL Corp. announced Middleport Directoi'y, wllll Miss Ida VanDuyn. Miss VanDuyn began to talk of leaving, to find homes for themsel~s .
..
;:rbUI'IIday UJ\! "most revolutionary development in the steel reported in her history of Middleport:
"Early in March of the year 1792, a young man started, in . During the time of waiting, Smith, the younger, met end won
~ in 35 years," a deeJHirawing steel which in some cases .
company with his father, from the Httle town of Roxbury, Mass., his •'fate" In the person of Miss Amy Barker who with h\lr friends
r 'jlractk!ally eliminates breakage."
for the wilds of Ohio. He started out, like many another before had also been staying In the blockhouse.
,;; Orawinllllleels are used for deep-well automobile fenders
During the lattel' part of their stay they were married in
him, and as many another has since, withhlghhopesol finding or
~ other automotive parts,,for washer tubs, other home apMarch, 1797, They moved downriver and bullt a rude hut on the
'.Jllance8 and parts In conSumer products. The company said the rather laying the foundation of his fortune. The name of this
site where the home of the late Miss Sophia Alleri stood.
lqew ,steel !WI developed from special_alloying and vacuum young man was the ordinary one of Benjamin Smith; that of his
''Though ihla home was rude and unomamental and their
Iatner, James Smith. But be the name ever so orillnary or even
"':'
·
(Continued on page 12)

illlegedly pornographic materials with a retall value of $1
flillion
.
&gt;&lt;: ~ton ' County Prosecutor Simon Leis Jr' said seven
. ployea ol Queen City News were loading !llBterials on a truck
lben pollee arrived. He sald the warehouse was a major
i'itrlbutlon C!l!llter for "adult" bookstores in the triojltate area·,
.lii!d contained records, books, magazines, newspapers and objll;ls deiiCritied as being "of an erotic nature."

privations many, In sununel' they fared well. There were the
boundless resources of nature to which they applied not In vain;
If their hut was rude, It was sltlllted In a perfect Eden; the
scenery around was wlldly picturesque and beaullful. There was
the UtUe hut aitlllted on the very edge ef a boundleaa wilderness,
1Jl8jestlc trees spread their protecting anna around the!n on
every side; all points of the horizon wtre marked by hllla whooe
very ruggedneu gave them a protecting Jootr at their feet the
beautifUl Ohio glided by, out of the very depths of which the
Virginia.hl1ls seemed to rise, forming a vivid contrast to the
sparkling rive!' and completing a scene that would have struck
the eye of an artist.
"The spring and sununer montl}ll glided swiftly and
pleasanUy by, each day brlnglnc some new discovery of tile
inellhauatible riches of the surroun~ !CI'est; and when August
was waning, God blessed them with a son,\0 whom they gave the
(Continued on page ·4)

'

.'.

9 Flle· for $525 and 30 Days

rStpdents at 7 Stops in Career Visits
.~.~

$

..

,

·"

'

'

CLUB TO MEET
The Past Matrons Club of
Pomeroy Chapter 186,,. _--~··- I
will meet arflle home of
W. MoMurray tn Mason at.7,:30
p.m. Tuesday,

M
. ayor Bucher and 'Meigs' Junior Miss

'•

,'~

r·~'

'

r;::. ~==:~. ~~pl;: 1
I
~

Rate iS Double the 0.2
Of November; Largest
Since Nixon's Freeze

s•

lower 40s. Friday variable
cloudiness and a litUe warmer
with a chance of showers.
HighS in the 40s north and 111
the 50s south.

..

Devoted To 1Jae lnlerel.b
,,

In the 21111 nCI'th to the mid 3111 ·•
south. Satur&lt;lay doudy ind
:warmer with a chance of rain
'er showers. Highs in the Jilld.
40s to the mid 508.
·

•.'

Sale

Supremlby
Ancl save up to$60
for alimitecl time.

'

at

January
Furniture

Mecli-Rest

j

e·

stegosaurus dinosaur
l!llll:bed 611 tons and had a ·
weighing 21&gt; ounces.

3 .0targes

Sleeping on a lemon?
Trade it for'

I

•

WeAther
. Partly cloudy tontght",Lon

OSP Files

Over

e etc.

:You Know .

Elberfelds January
·Furniture Sale .·

News... in Briefs

~appiness is •••••••••••

• cones • sodas

•

~-&amp;.;.. : --------------·-.;-----·-~· !:":.~.,!, ~:y~~~~A~ !~~~~~

State ·of.Union

•

'

'·

JY GEORGE HARGRAVEs, SUFI'.

I

of the people who work at these locations. Several
Meigs Local Sebool District
trips are taken each year. Every pupU has the opSometlme today you may have seen a bus load of
portunlty to learn about '!1811Y jobs. That's the obpeople travellJig at a time when you felt they
jectlve of Career Orientation . .
cer\aiDly should have been In school. These
WE HAVE THE WINTER quarter group of Ohio
!.;illden&gt;t-travelen-were-ourc,sevepth -gr~•ders. They~l:Jniverslty-junlors-wtth us now- These students
;• were on a:neld trip In Career Otlentstion, a program · majoring in elementary education, are having preHirected by Robert Meier. .
student teaching experience. Ten are at Pomeroy
"'·;, Sill buses were used to transport the students. By Elementary arid 20 are in Middleport Elementary.
• ;':~
1
They are with us on M~nday afternoon, all day
S k"
Sch '
Tuesday, and Wednesday afternoon.
1u
;,.; pea Jng 0
00.--HO. 223
During thia quarter they wiUbe concentrating in
•.science and social studies. Their science instructor at
,111e
way, the transports,tlon edits are Pflid from . the University Ia Or, lester MUJs. Four of our
1
.j)lpadal Career Orientation lunds IJ'Ovided above our
Pllmeroy staff milmbers are also studying with Dn.
~~r state.funda,
Milll in a coursa entitled, "Programs and PracUces
Z; -. They vlalted Rio Grande, the Melga County In Elemlllltar)' Science." The class meets on Wed"::(Courth01118, Middleport Post Office, the Meigs nesdly evening. Attendbig it are Principal Robert
County Shll'lff's Office, tile Athens Fire Department, , Morris plus teachers Mrs. Ina Meadows, Mn.
;
O.W.-Melga State HJibway Patrol Office near
Marjorie 'Glbiifl, and Mrs, Bonnie Fisher,
TO!iiORROW EVENING, Saturday, Jan. 22, will
.~. and the allo Department of Natural
In Melgl caunty.
find a lot of activity at the high school. At 7:30 there Is
" ;1 !_,- atudent did not visit all these places, of a wresttlng niatdl.lf you haven't seen high school
..'.eoune. There
aix ~. and eicb one villted wreltllng, you should give It a try.
· . ~'two or three Jocallona. 'lbe JIII1'P08e of the visits Ia to
AIIO Saturday evening tbere wiU be an ln.4t~!llth graden becc"''I at;qualnted with the jobs dustNI artS exhibit In 'the shop. This exhiblt is meant

:1:

f

,;;B.ourcea

..en

r_

Committees

Seven Republicans and two
Democrats have filed petitions
dustrial aria shop and drawing claSses. However, the with the Meigs Co ty Board of
public aJao Is invited to see the projecta.
.
un .
t
Ben Slawter and Chariee Corder, our inltructors, Elections to"':" for thetr party
have worked with the st~enta In the organization of central conmuttee posts to be
this ellhlblt;--Tbey-al!to bave1lelped 1o establlairan-·fllledJn_May· ~·
· )ildUitrlal Arts Club. The exhibits wiD be appraised
Democrats filing to (late are
by oulllde judges who wiU select ftnt, .econct and Norman C. Will, W~st Rutland
third place w!Mers In both wood and drawing Prec)llt, a_nd Pautine "!olfe,
,_._.. Awards wtJ1 be made to winneri
Letart Prednct: Republi~_ans
~,...w.
flUng indude Cora Beegle,
Wb1 not come to the wrellllln&amp; match, and come R•cine Village · David
1u '
•" to -e '"·Inter~·~ -'-'bit? If
~
•
ear,._. eaou,... - wuo
......:,. oa&gt;u
you Koblentz South Chester· Paul
eome late, drop In ori the nblblt after tbe match. To F. And;ews, Long &amp;ttom;
get to the ublblt, turn Jeftlnakie the frot:~t entrance Marvin Miller, Salem·, John T..
and dowil the t
I' certain there wlll be
M,,,!o to help
a epe. m
Holliday' Dexter ; Elizabeth
eyou.
Hobstetter, Rutland Village, '
NtWSANDNOTES-Today~edtheendof and Ha'rry C. · Hill, ·Letart
.....
.._ tbe 'dpot t f th bool ·
·
the w .. eeme.... ,
m
n o e 8C
year - Precinct.
, Our bulrelball team takes on Jackson at home
Candidates have until 4 p.m.
'tonight ;_ OUr Seciondar)' CouncU ill studying how we on Wednesday, Feb. 2, to ltle.
. ed
1
can belt provide a good consumer ucet on program
BOOSTERS TO MEET
for Our blgb ICbool students - Thfee new school
The Southern Band Boosters
bulel jained the MeJcs Local fief\ early this week. We wlll have a short bustneaa
rtally neeiled lbtm - In the nel:l column I hope to · le&amp;Slon before ,the same at 6
have I report on the llfOilOIId llllnlnl eourie ~ 'Join p.m. Tuesday at the high
lllattheblgh. .ltoli&amp;htllldjonoOIIOWnlght.
school.
pa rticularly for the parenls of students in the in-

.-

·

''

·

· Rodney C. Hysell, 23, Rt. 2, Municipal Court.
Judge Robert s. Betz fined
Pomer~y, was g1ven 30 days ·m
the Gallia County JaU and . Hysell $300 and costs, senfined $525 and costs on three tenced him to 25 days In jaU
state highway patrol charges · and his right to obtain a
this morning in Gallipolis driver's license was suspended
·-for IIU'ee years on a ch8tge Of
DWI. Hysell was fined t200 and
COI!ts 8lld given five days In jail
WO
.
for leaving the scene of an
David T. Starcher, 24, accident and $25 and costs f(l!'
!her ha
Dexter, was sen~nced to an speeding. Ano
c rge of
Indeterminate term at Ohio driving wlth an expired
Penitentiary and Robert driver's Ucense was dlamlssed.
Hudnall, 19 • Albany, to an forf~:.!'ornetwo' ~·!2_~ulnort,
·indeterminate term at Mana,...,..
..,.... ""'"'"
field Reformatory Wednesday PWI and operating a motor by Conunon Pleas .Judge John vel\icle without a lleense.
·
·
C. Bacon. They had pleaded
Glenn Lawson, 42. Rt. 1,
guilty to the brealdng and Middleport, · entered a not
entering of several properUes guilty J!lta to a sberlff'a
"-••tment charge of a'-··=••in rdeigs·County,
,
,...,..
-Starcher was taken Into an·offi~. His hearing wlll be
custody by Meiss County beJd on Feb, !$. Patricia A.
Deputies David Sheets and Sicldel, GaWpolla; pleaded not
Jamet Soulsby on Jan. 12 and gullQ to a,cbatle of hi~ no
Hudnell was apprehended jan, mufller. Her cue will allo be
13.
beard on Feb. U .

T

Sentenced ,

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