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10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Dec. 4, 1972

ar~~~~~~!~:~~r~~~~ ~.~.

Laura Leifheit is buried today
SYRACUSE Funeral
servaces lor · Mrs . · Laura
I-eifheit, 88, Syracuse, who
died Friday at the Parma
Community Hospital, were
held 10 a. m. today with the
Rev. Marshall Larimore of.
. ficiating .

at

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight &amp; Tuesda y
December 4-S

FUZZ
(Technicotor)

Burl Reynolds
Jack· Westo n

IGPJ
Colorcartoons:

Who's Watching You
Wt)at 's on Your Mind?
Show Starts 7 p.m.

-

Mrs. Leifheit, a member of
the Syracuse Uni ted Methodist earthquake today that caused ii
Church. was prece~ed in death bo ll buildings lo sway briskly · )'!
by her husband, William H. for mure than a minute . There £~
Leifheit.
were nu immediate reports or 1~
Su rviving
are
three .dnmage ur casualties.
~
da ughters, Mrs. Kathryn
\:&lt;
Pelet·s. Al"cadia ; M,rs. Esther
:;~j
Am spoker, Columbus, and
MEETING SET
;~~j
Mrs. Ruth Jovari, Parma
Opera tin~ engineers or Local . ;~;j
Heights ; eight grandcllildren, 18 'II
t tl .
\h t the :·...,:·:
wt rnee us mon a
20 great-gran~child ren, and
·
h
·
:::,
11 10 At ens tns te ad of ·:·:
Elks
Ha
several nieces and nephews.
Burial was in Beech Grove
I.
Ceme "'ry.
LODGE TO MEET
Installa hon of officers will be
held when Pomeroy Lodge 164,
F&amp;AM, meets at 7::io p. m.
Wednesda y. All Mastet;
Masons are in vi ted .

·.y..--:.._.._.:;•,..

1f.

!Continued !rum Page I )
that the principle of North Vietnam's
retr•,at be inscribed one way or another i~
tlle agreement." If this were dpne, there
·would be no difficulty in finding a formula ..
The Florid« White House Press
spokesn:'an said the afternoon meeting
'te"as belmg abottethnd~dde by full seven-man .
ams
sa s.· ·ed b Ha"
Kiss" rom
anger, accompam
y ag, was
tll f" t t fth
·
· H

..

.

•

'

You can get mo re car for less money with our
help. Now, that should appeal to your senses .as
much as that factory-fresh, new-ca r smell.
II you're thin ki ng about a new car, discuss your
financing with the wide-awake bank before you
start sniffing at cars.
Then, when you lmy that new car o11d get a good
deal because of wide-awake bank l"llte financing,
your nose will t·eally tickle with the sweet smell of

23

success.

Borrow-less financing on new &amp; used cars

· ~·
• 'The ll'irle-mfltli:e 1111/o lo1111

itc::&gt;-----:.J
11// SOfilS)~

Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co.
POMEROY, OHIO
Member of Federal Reserve System
On Fridays Our Drive· In Window is Open 9 a .m, to 7 p.m .

(Conlinuouslyl .

$10,000 Ma xi mum Insurance tor Each De.,ositor

" No one i s completely
worthless . he can at lea st
serv e hiS ne ighbors as a
bad el(a mple ."

Most people want a power
too l that wil l se rve th em for
years on end ... A name
they recogni ze for quali ty
... At a Pri ce they cah

alford .. .. We 'are able· to
give all th ls to ·you with

BLACK and DECKER
POWER TOOLS. Come In
today and let the
" FRIENDLY ONES" help
choose just the right
or tools for the work
have in mind ...

State's Sunday "blue laws,"
which forbid the sale of vir~
tually anything other than
perishable food.
For tbe past II years, the
store has opened especially so
people too old or infirm to fight
the crowds during normal
shopping hoW"S can do their
Christmas shopping at their
own pace. Any profits the store
makes go back to the hospitals
and institutions which house
the old and cripppled shoppers,
said a store spokesman.
Clerks who volunteer to work
tlle morning without pay serve
tlle special shoppers.
"We've opened on tlle first
Sunday of December every

Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
- Charlotte Kimes, Hartford;
Ernest Hudnall, Langsville;
Junior Autherson , Minersville;
Charles Carroll, Long Bottom;
Goldie Wyant, Pomeroy;
Robert Barrett, Middleport;
Ruth Carr, Pomeroy ; Ava
Gilkey, Harrisonville ; Angie
Eblin, Pomeroy, and Mamie
Buchanan , Pomeroy.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
. - Earl Custer, Catherine
Roush, Marvin Darst, David
Davidson, Mary Still, Betty
Ca ldwell , Zelma Cundiff,
Angela Callahan and James
Hawk.
.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Elmont Bosworth , Dexter;
Floyd Brown, Rutland ; Hilda
Carnahan , Long Bottom; Jo
Ann Conkle, Cheshire, and
James Wolfe, Middleport.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Wanda Jones, Harrison
Robinson, Marcy Rose, Mary
Russell and Cecil Higgenbotham.

'

'

ATHENS -

Bill Rohr , . was construction of the 13,()8G.

year since 1961/' the store
spokesman said. "We've never
had a problem before ..
"If you could see tllem when
they get tllere-they all seem
so delighted. It must be one of
tlle happiest da)'l! for tllem

each_year."
The store manage!llent was
"dumbfoWJded and shocked,"
he said, when Fischer walked
in witll tlle summons about
noon, half-an-ltour before· the
store was to close.
Raymond McDermott, an
assistwtt chief inspector and
commander of the Bronx
borough, had ordered Fischer
to serve tlle sununons.
McDermott, in turn, was
acting on orders from Bronx
District Attorney Burton
Roberts.
Last week, Roberts said, he
received a formal complaint
from ArthW" Wolfson, secrelary-treasW"er of the New York
State Retail Labor CoWlcil
demanding tllat a swnmons be
handed out if the store opened.
"We have a rule that if a
formal complaint is made, then
a smnmons is served," Roberts
said. ''The law says stores
must close on Sunday. Court
litigation will detel'Tiline any
other result in the case."
"This is an aMual event for
us," said tlle spokesman for
Alexander's. "It's going to stay
that way. There's no reason
why we shouldn't continue it."

structure which rates with tlle
finest in the nation .
Lutz guided his Ironton High
24th annual all-league football School ~ to the SEOAL
banquet at the Ironton High championship this · year, his
SChool cafeteria ThW"sday.
first with the Tigers. They went
Heading the lost of honorees through the league Wlbeaten in
at the 6:30p.m. banquet will be seven games, and posted an 8-2
Bob Lutz, Ironton meneor who overall record.
,
was named Coach of the Year,
A native of Ironton Wld
and Ken Culbertson of Logan , · graduate of Ironton St. Joe
picked as the Most Valuable High School and Marshall
Player. Also to be honored are University, Lutz was an
41 players who gained all- assistant at Oak Hill lor two
league, honorary all-league or years and at St. Joe for one
year before being named head
honorable mention status,
Rohr is in his loth year as coach at Ironton St. Joe.
He · held the St. Joe head
athletic director at Ohio
.
A
native
'of
coaching
position for three
University
Massillon, Ohio, he is a years before taking the Ironton
graduate of Massillon High post this year. During his three '
&amp;hool and Ohio Wesleyan years at St. Joe, his "'"ms won
University. He served on the a championship (1969), placed
grid staff of Paul Brown at second to South Point (1970)
Massillon, served in the Air and shated a tri-championship
Force, then went to Ports- witll South Point and Coal
mouth High School, where he Grove (1971).
·
was basketball coach for five
Culbertson, a 6'2", 206-jloWld
years and athletic director tlle senior fullback, is a tllree-year
final foW" yea rs.
veteran lor tlle Chieftains, and
In 195!, he was named head was named to the all-league
basketball coach at Miami team in botll his junior ''Wld
University, a post he held for senior years. He has been one
six years dW"ing which his · of the top rushers In the league
teams won three Mid· each of the past three seasons,
American Co nfer e nce and gained 723' yards in 113
championships and tied for carries, a 6.4 average, this past'
another. From Miami, he went year .
To be honored as all-league
to Northwestern University,
where he served as basketball players are: Alex Topping,
coach until accepting the Ohio Charlie Adkins, Les Champlin
U. post.
and Don Wood of Atllens; Mike
During his tenure at Ohio Wolfe and Mike Berridge of
Univ ersity, Bobcat Athletic Gallipolis; Keith Parker, Bill
schedules have been upgraded, Markin, Dave Kriebel, Terry
and the school has continued to Parker and Greg Spence of
Win the Mid-American Con- Ironton; Tom Stevenson, Dan
fea·ence Reese Trophy (all- Morrow and Ken Valentine of
· sports trophy ) on numerous Jackson; Mike Mojzerx and
occasions. Also coming dW"ing Culbertson of Logan; Bill
his tentu"e at Ohio University Chaney and Andy Vaughan of

Meigs; Bill Maloy Wld John

Larry Dixon wtd Randy Hatten
of Wellston.
Two players, Eddie Martin of
Wellston and Dave Berry of
Ironton,
were
granted
honorary all-league status,
reserved for players felt
deseriling of all-league honors
but who misSed a number of
games due to injury.
.
Honorable mention honorees
are Jim" Fuller and Phil
Strekal, Atllens; Kaven ~eets
and John Walter, Gallipolis;
Terry Mowery and Bruce
Carter, Ironton; Doug Jude .
and Arlie neStephen, Jackson ;
John Bachus and Kevin Berry,
Logan; Dallas Weber Wld Lou
McKinney, Meigs; Jobn
Law59n and Tim Anderson,
Waverly ; Wld Willie Fox and
Bill Starkey, Wellston.
Tickets for lbe banquet are
available at league schools.
They are priced-at $3.50 each.
Tuesday is tlle deadline for '
ticket ptu"chase.

YOUR CHRISTMAS SHOPPING CENTER

Women's Jeans
TODAY'S. MOST SOUGHT-AFTER
SPORTSWEAR LOOK NOW AT
· ti)UDAY P,RICES.
OU~

ENTIRE SELECTION OF MISSES ~

ARSON POSSIBLE
. DAYTON, Ohio (UP!) ~
Fire officials were in. vestigaling the possibility of
arson ln SaiW"day's $125,000
blaze lit Mercer Foundry here.
OfllclaiB said an CIIIP-loyee
reporting for work saw a
person running from the scene.
No injtu"les resulted from tlle
two-alarm fire .

Top off you~ jeans with

a smock, jeanitress, or
shirt and shrink top from our
l~rge selection.

•

RULING EXPECI'ED
CINCINNATI (UP!)- U. S.
District . Court Judge Carl B.
Rubin is elQ)CCted to make a
decision on tlle Dayton school
integration case after Dec. 13,
the day final briefs are to be
submitted,
A l!Hiay hearing on the case
ended Friday in Rubin's courtroom here.
The NAACP has !Ued suit
charging Dayton schools are
"!!regaled because of the Dayton school board.

READY-TO-WEAR, SECOND nooR

SHOP OUR THffiD FLOOR
FURNITURE DEPARTMENT
FOR GIF"IS FOR YOUR HOME

SHIRT
.FINISHING

SHOP WEEKDAYS .9:30 10 5 PM
FRIDAYS MD SATURDAYS .9:30 10 9 PM

•

In AI9-0ut At 5

' Gin BOWANZA
MERatANT

BAKER FURNITURE

.

.

MIDDL£PORT, 0.

ROOinson's Ceallers .
216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy

ELBEftFELDS IN POMEROY
I ,

I
I

BY KATIE CROW
The resignation of Henry
Werry as fire chief was accepted by Pomeroy council
Monday night.
Council had tabled Werry's
resignation from its last
meeting in the absence of
Mayor William Baronick.
Council Monday night commended Werry for "a job well
done." Werry had been chief
.,

'

BEFORE THE NEW BASKETBAlL season began, bead
coach Carl Wolfe was certain of "a good bench" this campaign. Bill VaughWl made that prediction look good Friday
night at Rock Springs when he led a third quarter rally hit·
ting foW" straight field goals on drive-in layups. Above,
Vaughan is goal-bound with the ball and at left he has gone up
for a big two-pointer. Meigs defeated Jackson in its SEOAL
opener, 67{)7.

but hoped to dcvelup
ils J)l;t,gram even more by
adding one or possibly two
mini-buses tu tra nsport the
elderly, and provide hot meals ·
when Iiley' might be in
Pome roy or Middleport
shopping.
Mrs. Thomas said the council
is eligible lor state funding if 40
pel. uf its budget is obtained
lucally . Last year $1 ,5110 was
t•aised in a matter or two weeks
ft'nm donations made by individuals, organizations and
Ineal business establishmentS.
She also declared the agency is
eligible to receive reve nue
sharing.
HOLIDAY LIGHTS
Jack Kerr, pt·esident, said

publil' reaction to the new
Clll'istm~s lights. is excellent.
He dit:e.ciA.'&lt;l Carolyn Thomas,
scerelai·y, to write a let"'r to
Jack ·Crisp than king him for
help provided in erecting the
lights. Kerr also expressed his
thanks tu Fred Morrow of the
Ohio Power Company lor help.
Morrow said an outline is
made of what is needed next
year to erect the lights, Ohio
Power gladly would help solve
Ihe problem which would make
pull.ing up the li ghts much
easier.
Kerr di sclosed that the
Ch ris lmas decorations and
erecting the lights cost $600.
Donations to defray this expense wou ld be greatly ap-

lli"Ctial.ed by the chamber.
a Christmas season home
!lob .Jacobs commended lighting contest in Pomeroy.
Mayor William Baronick 'and Contest rules will be anP1m1eroy Council for the new nounced.
n1ercury vapor lights on the
Kerr welcomed John Fultz
lwu village parking lots. He
and
Mike Zirkle of the Meigs
suggested a letter be sent to
Tire
Center as new chamber
Mayor Baronick stating the
chamber 's appreciation for members.
whal he found to be "an exAUending were Kerr , Ted
ce llent step forward ."
Reed , John Fultz, Wendell
The chamber voted to join fl uuver, Virgil Teaford, Bill
Grueser, Richard Chambers,
1he Ohio Festival Association
again which next year will Tum Casse ll , Bob Jacobs,
dislt·ibute 2,000 publica tions, Ralph Graves , Elea nor
listing "II fes tivals in Ohio to Thomas, C. E. Blakeslee, Jack
slalc parks and a ll Chambers Carsey , Dennis Keney , Earl
of Commerce organizations in In~e l s, Jim Mees, Fred
Morrow, Carolyn Thomas,
Ohio.
The local C of C will sponsor Beulah Jones and Katie Crow.

and four parking spaces .
Council will order a meter
placed at the extra parking
space. It also was suggested
lhat Calvin Lan e, street
s uperintendent , s hould
straig hten parkin g meter
standards.
The Ohio Water and
Pollution Control Board in a
lel.ter gave the village until
May 15, 1973 to begin plans for

the past 10 years. He will
remain as a member of the
Pomeroy Police Dept. ,
Council in other business
ag reed to hire Bob White to cut
down several trees on Fisher
St. at a cost of $150. White also
will haul the trees away.
Mayor Baronick told council
that Don Covert, owner and
operator of the CoW"! Street
Cab Co. has three taxi licenses

the change over of its storm.
sewers to sanitary sewer.s.
A letter was also read from
Max Farley, Division 10
engineer of the State Departmen t of Highways, Marietta ,
advising council that traffic at
.the intersection of Butternut
Ave., and U.S. Route 33 at this
time does not warrant a traffic
signal.
Council also discussed

Devoted To The lnteresu Of The Meiga·Mmon Area

Safety air
bags order
is delayed

·-

CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
U. S. Sixth Circuit CoW"t of
Appeals today postponed the
use of air bags as safety
devices in automobiles until a
" reasonable time" after
IW"ther tests.
. The coW"t ordered the project
' back to the U.S. Department of
Transportation and the
Natlo~al ]'l[lhiVaY . Trame
Safely Administration .
· The coW"t also said all fW"·
ther specifications for testing
"be made in objective terms''
so they will asstu"e comparable
results among ·testing agendes. Two federal agencies had
ordered that the airbags be
standard in all automobiles
beginning in 1975.
The order was appealed by
Chrysler Corp., Ford Motor
Corp:, American Motors Corp.,
Jeep Corp., and Automobile
Importers of Ameri ca.
POLICEMAN WANTED
Jed Webster announced
,today he is accepting ap.plications for
parttime
policemen. Webster asks
everyone interested to contact
him personally.

..

JUNIORS ·TEENS JEANS IS REDUCED
FOR THIS SAl£.
DENIMS • OORDUROYS ,. VELVETS IN MANY
FASHION COLORS

~~ ride~"

Werry commended for 'a job well ·done'

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Discharges:
Jeffery
Frishette, Point Pleasant ;
Mrs .
Joseph
Bennett,
daughter, James Shell, Point
Pleasant; Robert Tillis, Point
Pleasant; Charles Wolfe ,
Gallipolis; Floyd Stover and
Mrs . Josephine Thornton,
Point Pleasant; Harold
Rickard, Clifton; Unda Ball,
West Columbus; Terry Jordan;
Buffalo; Hattie Radcliff,,Leon; .
Charles Hersko, Bryan Ball,:
both Point Pleasant; Julie:
Gerlach, Ravenswood ; JameS:
Ball, Pliny ; Mrs. Aaron Bright;
Edna Durst, Point Pleasant,
and Rena Wayan, Ashton.

ELBERFELDS IN, POMEROY.

QUARANTINE LIFI'ED
WEST LAFAYE'ITE, Ind.
(UPI) - A quarwttine on three
east-central Indiana counties
has been lifted, but quarantines remaIn in two other
counties because of hog
cholera .
The quarantine was lifted
from parts of Madison, Henry
Wld Hancock counties Friday
when health officials said no
new cases of hog cholera had
been foWJd in tlle area for more
than a montll. Animals from
those areas now can be moved
to slaughter houses witllout restrictions or Inspection.
Quarwttines remain in effect
in areas of Wells wtd Carroll
counties.

Ust Our FrH Parking Lot

The Pomen y Chamber .of
Commerce Monctay endorsed
lhe. pt·ogtam uf the Meigs
Cnunl.y Council on Aging and
inviled money contributions to
help Jefray costs of new
ChristmaS' lights followin g its
noon-luncheon at tt.e Meigs
Inn.
Speaking on behalf of the
Council on Aging was Mrs.
Eleanor Thomas, project
director. In troduced by C. E.
Blakeslee, Mrs. Thomas ex.
plained that there are over
2,700 senior citizens in Meigs
County over 65 yea rs or age . Of
these, 1,000 have been interviewed.
Mrs. Thomas explained tha t
lhe council is making •·great

24th SEO ·banq

LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown
Pomeroy at 11 a, m. Monday
was 54 degrees, under cloudy
skies.

.· SAME DAY
SERVICE

Council on·Aging endorsed

&gt;' athle tic director at Ohio seat Convocation Center, a Shoemaker of Waverly; Wld

Meanest job ever

~lot (car deals stmt here

'·

- -~m7o·i{i·;·~~g·N·;;=·.'"···"-~··. -:. . . "'.!R ohr .speaker or
Y~~,...·z."U.O.o"N'...("{,o-:•:-:-.-.:-:·:'..:.-..:·~

University will be the. main
:;~i~l ~~aantg;, ~a~ n;h~~::~~:g .l-~ ~0:~~:.~:;,;~~~:;~::;:,:,:,:::,,,,,:,:::&lt;X&lt;@~:~::~ speaker
when the Southeastern
Ohio Atllletic l-eague holds its

NEW YORK I UP! ) - About
800 old and handicapped
people, half of them in
wheelchairs , were at a
department store's annual
nonprofit Yuletide shopping
party when a policeman
walked in with a summons.
"I've done a lot of rotten
things in this job but this has
go t to be the rottenest," said
patrolman Kenneth Fischer
after he handed over the
swnmons .
The store, the Bronx branch
of Alexander 's, was charged
with violati ng New York

/JitlfoeJ

?'

VOL. XXV NO. 163

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

~ecret
PARIS (UPI) - North
Vietnamese and American
spokesmen said tlleir Vietnam
peace negotiators would not
confer , \Qday .llllt anQther
. lti~ill!ilh.tlie Clirrent round of
secret talks \Viii take place
Wednesday.
The Hanoi spokesmwt said
tlle next session, the third of
tlle current series, would begin
at 4:30a.m. EST Wednesday,
but he declined to say where.
Neitller side explained why
tlle session today was canceled.
A spokesman for President
Nixon announced Monday that
presidential adviser Henry A.
Kissinger would confer again
today witll Hanoi envoys I.e
Due Tho and Xuwt Thuy. They
met in two sessions Monday
over a period of five hoW"S,
continu!ng the secret direct
talks which first began Aug. 4,
1969 in Paris.
During Kissinger's last
series of meetings late last

~...m.:::w;&gt;x'x&amp;:W»:

""' '.'*-e;.;!JZ::

~i

ews.. in Briefsr
By United Press International
NASHVILLE, TENN. - ACCORDING to a new petition filed

in federal court James Earl Hay was the victim of a "legal
lynching" by two attorneys and an author who took advantage of
his plight for monetary gains. The petition was part of a bulky
package of legal documents filed Monday in Wl attempt to gain
Ray a new trialln tlle 1968 assassination of civil rights leader Dr.
Martin Lutller King Jr.
"In Short," tlle petition said, "Ray's guilt was determined by
tlle judge, tlle defense counsel, and ou~ide pressu~;;s. but not by
a jwy or the admission of Ray himseH. Pohlleal and extrajudicial pressur~s, not due process, detenrun~d t~ r~lt. It
was in effect, a legal lynching. " Ray pleaded guilty m Crunmal
Court at Memphis on March 10, 1969, to tlle rifle-slaying of King
in exchange for a 99-year sentence. King was shot to death on
April 4, 1968, as he stood on tbe balcony of tlle Lo':lline Hotel at
Memphis, where he had gone to assist blacks mvolved m a
garbage strike.
SAIGON - JET FIGIITER-BOMBERS knocked out tllree
!ridges in Nortll Vietnam Monday, the U. s: command said
today, and major fighting was reported along Soutll Vietnam's
Central Coast.
·
·
. Jet pilots reported destroying tllree railroad bridges with
..fWB!l!&gt;ye" television-guided bombs, 1tlle command sa~d: The
· !ridges, like,-8h other targets reported, w~e fu fhe Pa~aildfe
utll of the ~ Parallel which runs 65 miles below Hanoi. The
:mmand also aMounced an Air Force A7 Corsair jet fighter·
bomber was lost over North Vietnam Saturday. The command
said tlle pilot Is missing .
COLUMBUS - mERE JS AN "URGENT" need to pay
legislators and county elected officials more, a special study
commisSion told Gov. John J. Gilligwt and the Ohio General
AsaelllbiY Monday. The nine-member El~ed Official and
Judicial Compensation Review Cornmisston, appointed ·by
Gilligan, recommended boollting legislative ~ries from $)2,750
to $l4,000 a year and Increasing tlle salarres of nine elected
coWltY offices 10 to 22 pet.
Those offices include auditor treasurer, clerk of courts,
de commt=mer sheriff prosecutor, engineer and
recor rHo
, ward L ~ Tol. conunission cha
. Innwt, said
coroner.
·
,
'
boosted In f
our
111 tile report the pay oflbolle olllciall has not been
(CGntlmled on page 12)
"1,

PHONE 992·2156

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1972

t

month, tlle two sides took meeting with Kissinger.
occasional breaks to confer
The Americans outlined the
witll their governm~mts .
contents of tlle talks to Saigon's
The North Vietnamese said representatives and Kissinger
today ,l)lt\1' -119SOt!i\P{J IJIB\ cabl.od- report on Ill• IJI'b§r!lii
with Mrs. NgllYen nil ~lhli; \lie -· ur t&gt;IIJ~on·. _........, •
Neither side, however, said
VietCongforelgnminlsler,and
briefed her on tlle Monday bow the talks were.going .

Smart, Downmg
•
set retirement
•

Retirement of two long-time
officers of the Citizens National
Bank in Middleport was announced SaLW"day night when
directors, officers and employes held their annual
Christmas dinner at the Meigs
Inn.
PaulS. Smart announced his
retirement as president of the
bank effective at the end of this
year. He has completed 43
years of service.
Rodney Downing announced
his retirement as chairman of
the board of directors and as a
director. He has completed 33
years service with the bank.
Bernard
Fultz,
vice
president and director of tlle
bank, presented Mr . Smart a
1973 Ford Country Squire
station wagon In recognition of
his long service to the firm.
Harold
E.
Hubbard,
executive vice president,

•

presented Mr. Downing a new
color , television set in
recognition of his long service.
Officers to succeed Mr. Smart
and Mr. Downing will be
elected at the annual meeting
in January, !973.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Rodney Downing, Mr. and Mrs..
Paul S. Smart, Mr. and Mrs.•
Harold E. Hubbard, Mr. and
Mrs. Manning Kloes, Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth McElhinny , Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Wilcox, Mr.
and Mrs. Edward Durst, Mr.
and Mrs. Gerald Anthony, Mr.
and Mrs. John Davis, Mr. and
Mrs. Roscoe Fowler, Gene
Grate, Chester King, Edith
Wood, Mr. and Mrs. Edgar
Reynolds, Mr . and Mrs.
Bernard Fultz, Mr. and Mrs.
Dale Dutton, Mr. and Mrs.
James Arnold , and Mary
Hindy.

Upriver communities
in home lighting contest
RACINE - Residen\s of tllis
area are being invited to enter
a Christmas home decorating
lighting contest to be staged by
the ladies auxiliary of the
Racine Fire Department and
the Bend O' the River ·Garden
Club.
First, second and third prizes
will be awarded winners in
three categories, overall
secular, overall-non. . secular,.
and entrance way. Judges wlll
be ' Mrs. John Terrell, Mrs.
Robert Thompson and Mrs.
·Lloyd Moore of Pomeroy.
The contest is ooen to

Gallia consolidation
d
h
K
c
B
d
oppose y •
oar .
-- • ·

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Kyge r Creek's Board of
Education Monday night
un animously adopted a
resolution against consolidation of the schools in
Gallia CoWJty.
The action follows a countywide meeting Nov. 21 with Dr.
Tom Quick, Assistwtt State
Superintendent of Schools, who
urged consolidation of the
county's live school districts in
order to distribute among
county school districts :'the
wea lth" derived from the
Kyger Creek Power plant and
the new Gavin Power Plant in
the Kyger Creek School
District.
Total coWJty consolidation, It
was pointed out, would mean
that the educational system
would be under the jW"isdictlon
of one board, either tlle present
county board or one made up of
members from the county's
live boards .
The board met with a
delegation of parents from
Addaville School concerned
about overcrowded conditions
in the fourth and filth grades
there.
Accordin g to elementary
principal Walter Rife, 40 pupils
are enrolled in the foW"th grade
taught tiy Mrs. Roc helle
Foster, and Mrs. Joyce Hawks
has 39 students in her fifth
grade.
The parents said they were
"gravely concerned" about the
crowded conditions since the
' teacllers are "finding it im·
possible to . devote any Individual attention due to the
children.

residents of Racine proper and
to those in I.etart Falls, Apple
Grove, Dorcas and areas inbetween. Those wishing to take
part must register which may
be done by compleUng the
application in today's Daily
Sentinel and mailing it to Mrs.
Edward Simpson, Racine, by
Dec. 19. Anyone wishing more
information on the contest may
contact Mrs. Bert Grimm,
I.e tart Falls.
Officials of the two
A $75,675 damage suit has
organizations are urging been filed in Gallla County
residents of the sector to take Common Pleas CoW"t against
part in the event.
The Great Atlantic and Pacific
Tea Company, Inc., 357 Maler
Place, Columbus, Ohio and
HO~E LIGHTING CONTEST
Gold
Kist Inc., 3348 Peach Tree
I wish to enter the Racine area Holiday
Rd., Northeast Atlanta, Ga.
Home Decorating Contest.
Catherine Ruth Collins, liO'h
First Ave., Gallipolis, filed the
:"&gt;&gt;ame
action on behalf of her three·
year old son, Clayton Mark
Add1·ess
Snyder.
According to the petition,
defendant
Gold Klst Inc .,
M,v category: &lt;check onel Religious - supplies chicken and chicken
non-religious
entranceway - parts to the A&amp;P Company,
which ope'rates a store at 735

:=:::=:=:=:=:=:=;;:::::::::;:=:=:::=:=:=:=:::::::::::~::::::::~:w::::-.:::·:::::·:~1

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Gallla County Schools Supt. Clarence Thompson's
reaction to Kyger Creek's decision drew Ibis comlJienl
today:
"I expected them to oppose consolidation, but hopefully,
after I meet with tbe Kyger Creek board next month, they
will be able to see that consolidation Is the best way to insure
all the students of Gallla County of a quality education."

The gro up offered three
possible solutions to correct the
problem. The board took their
suggestions under advisement.
It was decided to see if a
solution can be found by the
start of the second semester.
Four classrooms were added to
the school in 1968.
Following
a
brief
discussion with two oi the
parents, the board agreed
that due to the numerous
lights and other disturbances reported at the high
school dances, ail future
Kyger Creek dances will be
closed affairs 1limited to KC
high school students and
alumni only) ,
In other action , permission
was granted to Mrs. Cheryl
Enyart to attend an Ohio
Education Association meeting
and board clerk Doris Roush
was authorized to transfer
vHrious fund s within the
budget. Attending were Dale
Rothgeb , Jr ., president ;
viceRobert
Haskins ,
president; Roy Grose, James
Preston and Bill Price,
members, and Doris Roush,
Gordo n,
clerk;
Esther
bookkeeper , an d Comer

Bradbury, superintendent.
At Mercerville, the Hannan
Trace Board of Education took
no action on the consolidation
issue. County Superintendent
Clarence E. Thompson at·
tended to e&lt;plain conwlidation
which would Involve ail county
schools and possibly the
Ga llipolis City School System.
Thompson urged the board "to
give it serious thought."
Due to a shortage of substitute bus drivers, Supt.
Dennis Murdock was granted
permission to employ substitute bus drivers as needed.
Anyone in the district wishing
to do substitute drivinr should
contact Murdock or Anne
Belville, board clerk.
Ruby Shockley, Title I'
coordinator, was authorized to
employ another aide.
Henry Dillon was approved
as a home instructor lor Kathy
Halley and Tom Belville was
named baseball coach.
Attending
were DicK
Cremeens, president; Vinton
Rankin, vice-president; Billy
Halley, Herman Sisson, and
Murray Church, members;
Anne Bellville, clerk, and Supt.
Dennis M. Murdock.

Advisory
group
'
,.
pia~ election
on Wednesday
The Meigs County C.A.P.
Advisory Committee will meet
Wednesday, Dec. 13, in the
Pomeroy C.A.P. Office located
in lhe courthouse, at I :30 p.m.
Officers will be elected for the
coming year as wlll executive
board members to · replace
those )Vhose "'rms of office
have expired.
A funding chart and information on the programs and
activities of the Community
Action Program will be
presented by the stall. Anyone
may become a member just by
attending, and all interes"'d
person.c; are invited.

Rue Motors
awarded bid
Bids to sell a new cruiser to
the Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept. were opened today by the
Meigs County board of commission ers. The successful
bidder was Tom Rue Motors, of
Middleport, ChryslerPlymouth dealer at $2,595.83.
Other bids were submitted by
Smith and Nelson, $3,500, and
Pomeroy Motors, $3,3110.
The commissioners also
approved the Hutchinson
sulxlivision located on New
Lima Road in Rutland
Township . Attending were
Charles R. Karr, Bob Clark
and Warden Ours, commissioners. and Martha
Chambers, clerk.

$75,675 asked in suit

I

'

TEN CENS

plugged storm sewers that
cause overflow water to stand
on streets, especially in front of
the Pomeroy courthouse.
Council agreed that if the
board of public affairs does not
take care of the situation
council would hire a contractor
to make the necessary repairs
and present the bill to the
board.
It was announced tllat bids
for the new lire station will be
advertised in the next two
weeks . Approximately 14
people will be hired to erect the
new building.
Jed Webster said Chuck
Bartels as a part-time
dispatcher is doing a "fine
job." Webster also asked that
an extra policeman be hired
but the matter was tabled.
Webster submitted . the
following report for November: investigated 21 accidents,,
made ·31 arrests, issued 937
parking meter tickets,
collected $2,649 from meters,
and traveled 4,8~7 miles.
Attending were Mayor
Baronick , Ralph )Verry,
William Snouffer, Elm a
Russell,. Jim Mee&amp; and Don
Collins, council members;
Jane Walton, clerk, and Chief
Webster.

Second Ave., Gallipolis.
Plaintiffs contend that on
Oct. 17, 1972, Catherine Ruth
Collins purchased two Gold
Kist chickens under the brand
name of "Super Right" in·
clueing the giblets from the
meat counter o! the A&amp;P Store
in Gallipolis. Mrs. Collins says
she properly cooked and
seasonally prepared the
chicken. She states that
plaintiff Clayton Mark Snyder
ate some of the giblets and
became violently ill resulting
In seven days hospitalization .
Mrs. (\. tins says the giblets,
were diseased, WlWholesome ·

and unfit lor hwnan con·
sumption and was the
proximate cause of her son's
illness. She seeks $75,000 in
damages and $675 for medical
expenses plus costs,

'

Weather
Lows tonight mostly in . the
40s in the entire state , Rain
changing to snow flurries
tomorrow and tW"ning colder.
Temperattu"es in lite 40s and ILl,,"'"'"" 1l,1&lt;· ,-.,..j fW,~ I
GIVf MOHf Ill f.HIIi'.l~~~ ',JAil
50s lowering Into the 308.

...
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�r
3- The Datly Sentinel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Oec 5 1972

2- The Daily Sentinel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Dec 5,1972

PRES 1DENTS OF MANIFEST DESTINY

by Patterson and Patrrck

lo\\ kt ~ I'M luu. tljxi iiii iiiiii U \\ '" du e.
p1111\111h lo lw~ 11nlm dull pu soo1ht) 111d :-.u Cl ll
du1h It lhc Ulll ddm~ hllltd ol poh lll' I 1 lu ~
tuhuud 11 md nullotJC \Ilk J "" \pplu ll l'tu tt
II llln J llllcs llut h 111 111 I , 11 " ( 1" \lld
Sllphtn l&gt;ougl" I&lt; ughr to 1 slluisr II I t I lo11 1
dl\ !'i H rht. l&gt;unvuu1l un \l lltt 11111 IX, ., P1 uH
uuucd on tht li th IHII&lt; 1 11" "' 11111111 &lt; I n the
~'irh l'~trc c clsth dcl t 11ul h" t 11\\U \11111
'"P&lt;rror md I"' II h1~ P" ' "'""l d t uuhd "' C.u1
llmhcld Smtt &gt;&gt;4 ro ~ 1 ckttoJrl 1 ti l'
\lhuuc1 tht \mu~tlnd'll " '" ' rh tg l111h ~ ,
l11d Ill Pltrct I hl\ !(t I I '\t rt hum r 11 II h S Ill hu 11
'' mp tth~ts 1 t lei ht 111 ule unmtst tl tl•h plun til
lm 111\Ugural or111on I htlll\l th 11 til l&lt; l11n1 "1
P1u n

Slf\

By Helen and' Sue Bone!

o,;

ftlldt: lS It &lt;.:~IStS Ill dl!ttrllll St ltD

Dear Rap
I ve been readmg about the Foster Grandparents program
where rettred people sort of adopt kuls m children s hospitals
and make them feel wanted and loved
Our gtrls club would hke to do UtlS tn reverse adopt old
people who are alone m rest homes It wouldn t be like Candy
Stripers but rather each gJrl would have ONE grandpa or
grancbna and be a spectal fr1end We hear a lot of Utese people
don t have anyone at all to vtstt wtUt or wnte to
How do we go about 1t' -THE GIRl.')
Dear Gtrls
Here s how one gtrl realized a sunilar dream
Two years ago Sara Harvey 1a high school JUniOr made a
fteld trip w1th her PSYChology class to Western State Hosp1tal m
Staunton Vtrgmta Saddened by Ute aloneness and vacant
wa1tmg of the gertatnc ward pettents she orgaruzed ProJect
Grandpa and soon had over fifty volunteers
Each of the young people m Ute group adopted an elderly
man at Western State and on a one~ne bas1s wrote letters
sent gtfls and made monUtly VISits
Results of thetr kmdnesses were strikmg In fact Utey are
often called The Miracle Workers of Staunton Men who had
been withdrawn and depressed for years have unproved men
tally and phystcally almost beyond belief Silent ones are talkmg
agam They watch for Ute mail live for Utose VISits of Ute1r
grandchildren
The volunteers• They love what they re domg 1t s great
makmg someone else a httle happter They even enJOY Ute
monUtly s1x.1Jour round tr1p from Utetr homes m Arlington to Ute
State Hospttal And Utey re much appreCiated too Among many
congratulations 1s a recent letter whtch reads
It ts deeply reassurmg to hear of acttvely concerned and
dedicated youthful cttJZens as you Because you have sacrificed
ltme and energy to brmg JOY mto the hearts of oUters you have
not only gamed m personal rewards but have also added un
measurably to the v1tahty of Ute entire commwuty
The letter was s1gned Patrtcla Ntxon - HELEN AND SUE
P S Why don t you g1rls make up a plan based on ProJect
Grandpa (but mcluding Grandmas too if you WISh)' Then call
the dtrector of a local rest home or state hosp1tal and ask for a
meetmg so Utat you can talk 1t over
I m sure you Foster Grandchildren would g1ve elderly
people someUtmg to live for Hope the tdea catches on tn other
ctties toot
Dear Helen and Sue
Help
I have a brg problem He IS fiVe feet mne mches tall and I m
only foW' feet eleven
I like h•m very much but he has other mterests namely a 1
cerlam g1rl who ts five feet five
How can 1 brmg hts mterests down to my level' - LOSING
HOPE FAST
Dear LHF
Forget hetght and concentrate on personahty and don t
thmk httle of yourself or others will too - SUE

IS IU,. Ol!

lllztd ill tht ( tli)Sll!lltlllll

l l1 t( lhl SO( llltd
c.:ompronusc.: 11lllStllt:s m.: str tth l nstltllllon II
I tcnmtly hope rh It Ihe &lt;JlllSIIIm " tt ltsl
\hruptl) shJttong ln•m 1 wnul11ton st md tJ II
,lt\lr} P1crn '' 1s blunt md tggn:ssn r conur n Ill!
the \11m lest Dcsttn y ot \mtrll t I he 1&gt;&lt; ill I
1\\\ \dmtntstr tt11111 "til not he uHHrt llul In till
tmud tordx•dmgs ot '' d Irom cxpansto 1 h,
dnlared
our tttttttdt " t nHttJll 11111 ut
p&lt;&gt;stlmn on the glol&gt;c rcndu the tujtttstltt n c I tu
tIll) posS~SSHl!lS IJO{

Fourteenth Pres1dent Frankl n Perce

(Adm n olrat on March 4 1853 March 3 1857)

Rottlmg !he 5aber of Manift 1 /Jerimy

I he only Presrdcnt to mmmtt hts tn tugurtl
address Ill memory md dd11 cr tt ts tn or ttton
hanklm !'terce s J li 1) 11ord 'P'&lt;&lt;h rmgcd trum
a latssrz t ttrc att ttlldc on the ht • 1 tng ISsUe ot sin
&lt;r} to rmlrng the 'ahcr of \11nt fcst Dcstmy rcgml
mg the L S role m 11 orld 1tl tt rs
\ tun lm mg rorstcnng youth Ptlrcc 11 "' the
srxth child of a dtstmgmshed t uhcr and 111 alcoholtc
mother He "ts on the 1crge ott ulurc rn hrs JUmor
}tar at BmHlom College "hen he put huusclt on
1 Spartan reg1men that en thkd htm to hntsh th1nl
tn hts class- 11 htch tncludcd I ongtcl lo" tnd
l-la\1 thorne- at the age ot 19
P1ercc stuthed and pnnt&lt;cd la11 lor l11c ye trs
hllnre runnmg succc&lt;Sfu ll v for the '\n1 llttnp
sh1re l eg1slaturc on the same llcket "htch rc
elected hts father gmernor I hus hegm an unam
hJttous career that earned the chansmattt Pterce
almost casually through House and Scnare- mclud
mg conrrmcrstal sen tee as t hrtgld~tr general m
the \1c xtcan \\ ar-ro the II h1tc I louse

Reedsville
News, Notes
Recent viSitors at the Hetzer
Jlise home were ¥r_,.;nd,l"'r.f
'~-He&amp;eritl4elle W Va
Mrs - M~P,et " Hetz~r • ac
compamed' Mr
Mrs Ar
lhur Hetzer to their home for a
VISit
Mr and Mrs Jeff Foster and
fam1ly spent a day with
relahvesatNewHaven W Va
Pat Qumn and Crystal Hall of
Utile Hockmg VISited Wtlh
Mrs Opal Randolph
Mrs Opal Randolph and
Mrs Rose Thomas spent
Thanksg1vmg wtlh Mrs
Gladys Baughman and Jack
Gale of Gahanna
Mr and Mrs Roy Coleman
of Ravenna spent a few days
wtth Mr and Mrs Claude
Smtih
Thanksgtvmg Day guests of
Mr and Mrs Car I Barnhart
were Mr and Mrs Charles
Barnhart and family of Tup
pers Platns Mr and Mrs
Grary Barnhart and family of
Logan and Donald Barnhart
Recent guests of Mr and
Mrs Waller Brown were Mr
and Mrs Btl! Thomas and son
Matthew of En on Miss Naorru
Pickens of AUtens Rev and
Mrs Clifford Thomas of
Jackson and Mr and Mrs
Steve Cowdery of Parkers
burg W Va
l'hanksgJVmg company at
Ute home of Mr and Mrs
Lawrence Rose were Mr and
Mrs Thomas J Rose and
famtly of Akron and Mrs
Annabelle Rose and children
David and Lor1 of Belpre
Jean Whitehead student at
Oh10 State Untversity
Columbus spent her holtday

and

Kingsbury
News, Notes
Thankagtvmg guests of Mr
and Mrs Ralph Carl and
Rodney were Mr and Mrs
VIrgil Carl and children
Thanksgiving vls1tors of
Mrs Hazel Arnold and Waller
were Mr and Mrs Patrick
Williams and children of
McArUtur, Mr and Mrs Lester
Arnold and Billy of Cohun bus,
Mr and Mrs NaUtan Arnold of
tllelter and Mr and Mrs
llctiiiJd McNally of Athena
Mr and Mrs Patrick
WIIIWn (BerUta Arnold) are
announcing the arrival of a
baby air! Saturday at a
Cbllllcothe, Ohio hoapltal The
WIIU.o'"' have a 11111, David,
IIIII IIIOCiw &amp;lrl, Paula

"

"1th111 Ollf JIIII Sl!JUt 11 tllll
ttuHiv tmport tnt lot our P" ttl ttott
tnt! rht
pc Ill ot the 11 odd
I he Prcstdmt appomtcd jdllrslln I) 1\ ts st u t
t tn "' 11 1r promoted md stgmd rill J, tiS ''
'&gt;cbrtskt \u 11hrch rcpcablllll \I ts" ur ( m
prottllst of IH20 md mIlk popul tr \Ill u ct~nl\
the II\\ ot the land reg trdmg ,j 11 t n
In lwctgn tft urs I'JcrlC stgnnl the hts t It 1 It
ptct lltthjtpm tautl} tpprmcd of ltetltt' tu II tl
It 1111 \\ tlk&lt;r s lmarre attempts to 111 1kt '\" tr tg u t
\mcnt: tn p&lt;lsst.:ssHm fl'"'iflltu..l It
unpiled threats of trmed P"" ll 111 tht O srcnd
\lantl&lt;sto to forte Spatn to sell ( uln to the L ntttd
States and pard \lcxtm $10 mtlhon for ~' &gt;l&gt;
square miles of land 11 htch 11011 form s p tn t I
\rrzona 1nd '\c11 \lc&gt;tu &gt;
Pterce ts usually rated 1 hclo\\ 11 cngc Ptcst
dent hy hJStonans "ho trc pr nc to r tttk ts grt 11
those Prcstdcnts \1 ho 111tld 1 ts t pctson tl
Jl&lt;"'er- Jacks •n lmcoln frtnkltn Ro"' "'clt- tnd
as bclo\1 11 erage thost "ho try 11 llrl 1 t 111 tht
11111 of the people IS exprcmd thro11gh thm p 1111
and the Congress- ! tllmort l'tcru ( 1oltdgc
Prone toalwholtsm supctsltltous ngtdh put
san Pteree nllcrthclcss consuenltou slv and , 1
pably earned out the 1110 1111Jor 11ms ot hts ptttl
to expand the Jl'lll cr of both the tn slttutton of sit\
cry and the L mtnl St ttcs of \meqc 1
1 pn1sla\t:n

~11:18lll:l8lm&gt;:t:r.:o:.. ~-.....::::~::-.».:~~&gt;:::~~&amp;~::we;:~ .... ~-:;:

o

BY JACK O'BRIAN
SO WHO NEEDS A

wm~~~:~fJ~~~;s'!imefUe
splie

Ra!lzlWOI s official
With' he1 M pl'mce '
hubby will be aonounced any edition Mayor
Lindsay s rUMmg for something hts hrur now
Is chopped shorter our spy at Jerry s m
Bergdorf s cl1p jomt reports
Sen Jun
Buckley s wearmg an I Am a Capitalist
button
Sarge Shriver s reported aruuous to
challenge Buckley In the next N Y senatortal
batlle he d better watch out for Ute hab1t of
tilting wmdrmlls a Ia hunself and George
McGuff
Nlpsey Russell s1gned a longplay
pact w1Ut the Dean Martin TV show tf 1t gets
any lower m the" ratings the pact nught be
whacked Ntpsey and Vivian Blame are two
stars who somhow can I get bOOked on JohMy
Carson s sprawl
Truman Capote s analysiS of actors ( If
they re good actors they re dwnb ) has
corroboration from Sit John G1elgud who
recently bemoaned m print the shallowness of
his own mtellect never reads books, papers etc
Hlgh-Q actress Jill St John who dated
Henry Kissmger (they he around and match
wtts apparently) brought Tnunan s mstant
analysts She can t act he s right
Warren Beatty must use a jet today 1! s
Zou"Zou he's nuzzhng Orthodox Israelis are
~rate claim the good TV shows over Utere are
on Friday mghts - Ute1r Sabbath - when Utey
can't peek The U S Senate s doing a quiet
deep probe of JFK Airport ftrmS sweetheart
labor pacts Stripper Blaze Starr s peeling off
her mammolrs
First Blacula, next ' Blackensteln," then
Wilt Chamberlatn as a cafe au lalt Robmson

~

~

Crusoe
Joe Namath as hiS Fnday'
Brttam s Labor Party s soctahsm doesn t keep
tt from 4\PPII!g !jeep onto ptll'e capitalism 1t~
" /!enslon ¥und
a huge chunk of GKN maybe
Ute biggest n\osl capJtahsllc engmeenng
behomoth m Bntarn Call tt JOb msurance
Horny Schneider 34 thmks shes commg up
anctent Just a couple years more m fl1cks Uten
I ll ded1cate myself to the theater
Ftrst
rughter at darlmg ltttle Jtll Corey s opemng at
Dangerfield's was Gordon Parks who took Jtll
Ute photo that appeared on ltfe s cover almost
20 years ago Jtll also last week appeared on
Dorothy Collins syndicated radto show they
remmtsced about Ute Htt Parade Utey - dif
ferent tunes - starred on
All those guys wearmg women s duds tn
clubs and TV (Jun Batley Mtlton Berle Flip
Wtlson Altce Cooper Rocky Graz1ano even ) Utey re all looking a bit matronly The swttch
of rock Jernts to jazz IS no puzzle they re gomg
broke rockmg H1lly s on Ute Bowery reports 1ts
b1z jumped 100 pet w1Ut good JBZZ (Cinco
Hamtlton etc ) Wonder when Melma Mer
court s extending her credJbthty gap she
promised tf Ntxon won she d go home to Greeee
and go to jail
Romantic restaurant
Monstgnore
London s lrtal of the porno-mag Oz
which poured porn on purpose Into school k1ds
was so loaded w1Ut filth Ute London voices of
expedience grabbed 1t to adjust tts evtdence to
the theater Now 11 s bemg unported to the
Anderson Theatre here next week Its court
evidence gtves tl 1t s clauned redeemmg
value It has mus1c by John Lennon and Mick
Jagger who seem on Ute screammg Side of
anyUtmg

owns

vacalton wtth Mr and Mrs
Ernest
Whitehead
and
daughters
Mr and Mrs Ernest RuUt
spent Thanksg1vmg wiUt Mr
and Mrs Garrett Reed of
Coolvrlie
Karen Humphrey student at
Oh10 State Umverslty spent
her ThanksgtVtng holiday wiUt
her parents Mr and Mrs By Lawrence Lamb, M D
Charles Hwnphrey and Robin
Dear Dr Lamb - Some
_ Mrs L Balderson time back I read an articlE
on cancer whrch stated that
a substance could be Injected
the cancer cell arrestmg
1ht Dai1J Seulilll mto
1t Is th1s process avatlable
OEVOTID TO THI
to the ~ublic• I read the arti
tNTIIIIIT 01'
cle wtth Interest but dtd not
MIIGS MASON All lA
CHUTIII L TANNIHILL
know I would be personally
lxtc lei
interested
My husband tS In
ItO IE ItT HOII'LICH
his late 30s and we have a
City leiter
Publllhed dally txctpt small child He had a mabg
5aturdiY bY Tht OhiO Vlllty nant tumor removed from
Publlshinv Compeny
111
Court St
Pomtroy Ohio hts colon but the doctor satd
45769 Buslntss Offlct Phone 11 had alteady spread to two
992 IIS6 EditOrial ,hont 992 small spots on h1s hver This
lt!7
Stcond tiiS&amp; po&amp;logo paid ot has been three months ago
Pomtroy OhiO
What can you say about th1s
Nlflonal advertising process and Is there any pos
rtpr utn t 1 t "' t
1Dt11ntlll
Gelleghor tnt 12 !111 dnd stblllty that Utis process
St Naw York City lolow York could be available to my
Subacrlptlon rate• Ot husband and would 1t work
llvtrtCI by ctrrltr Whtrt on the hver'
IVtlltblt 50 Cl'fttl ptr Wltk
ly Motor Routt where c1rrltt
Dear 'Reader - You must
ltrv let not tvalltbll One be refertmg to the work of
month 11 75 ly !)loll In Ohio
and w Yo One yHr 11• 00 Dr Edmund Klein of Boswell
"' monthl 17 2S Throe Memorial Inst1tute m Buf
months u 50 SUbsctlpllon falo New York He has been
prru lntludH lunaoy Tlmtl
doing research on treating
Stntlnot
breast cancer and skm can

+++
Dear Losmg Hope
And remember - short gJrls have one btg advantage they
can always look up to a guy - wh1ch makes hun feel protective
and therefore more mterested - HELEN

;,;.o;.o::: ::;:;-..., :::......~

Voice along Br'Way

&amp; THIIIBS

Generation Rap

BY PAUL CRABTREE
Dtd 1 ever tell you about my friend Ute Boy Named After
Batman•
ThiS was a long time ago kuls before Batman," the highest
of htgh camp because an overmght sensation (sllort.lfved,
however) back m Ute 1966 TV season - and later spawned a
perfectly awful cartoon Sfll'les
Th1s was m Ute early Forties when Batman w!IJ only a comic
hook, put out by the same people who published Supennan
One of my very best fnencls became tbe Boy Named After
Batman He really did This lS a true story Backfiring Batmobiles do you Utink I d make Utis up •
Oh he had another name all right - Harlin Gibson He
hated,\ but I don t know wby (I hated my name, too, but in my
opllllon Utere was more to tbe sa1d for Harlin Gibson than for
Paul Crabtree, and besides my mother had forbidden me at the
age of silt: to have my name changed to 'I'lm Tyler," the hero of
another popular cormc character of Ute time )
Old Harlin really had a hangup about 'IJ(\rlln " Utougb And
be had nowhere to turn because his parents over m Jackson
County Ohto hadn t had Ute forestght to gJve him a middle
name or even an mttial, llke tn Harry S Truman
Now m those days the almost-teen crowd had the idea that
adults knew absolutely noUtmg - mcludlng Ute true Identity of
Ute Caped Crusader or Superman or Ute Flasll, or the Green
Lantern or Captam America or Ute Spectre Only kids, we
surmtsed knew that Batman -m real life -was Bruce Wayne
So, Harlm Gibson became Harlin Bruce Gibson He said so
on hts school records and the autbor11ies accepted It, since It was
certamly better Ulan Harlin No-Middle Name Gibson
Later he JOmed Ute Navy and calmly advised tbe recruiting
offtcer that hlS name was Harlin Bruce Gtb6on Then be went a
stepfurtber andbegansJgttmgeverything 'H B G1b6on"
Old Harlin fmally got nd of Ute Harlin" altogether and
became sunply Bruce Gtbson once he id been away from his
home town a few years He brought hiS wife along to see us one
tune and she adormgly called him Bruce '
Afew years later he showed up With a different wife, and she
called hun Bruce too
I ve lost track of old Harlin tn the past few years Suffering
surnames Robm, strike Utat last sentence I meant to say I've
lost track of old Bruce Ute past few years The last I heard he
had retired from Ute Navy and was Uvmg m Hawaii
Holy Honolulu t I d like to renew old acquaintances someday
wtth good old - er - Bruce GtbBon The only trouble is Utat I'm
afrrud I d be compelled to ask him if he got rtd of "Harlin en
tirely and now 1s known as Bruce Wayne Gtbson
That m1ght be unfortunate, because Harlin could always
whip Ute hell out of me ma fight and I unaglne Bruce could still
manage 11 too - smce mreahty he lS the Caped Crusader

+++
ON THE TV DIAL Another Marshall U basketball game,
Uruvers1ty of North Carollll8-Charlotte, 7 30, WMtJL.TV
A
look at Ute hot Umted Mine Workers elecllon 8 30, WOUB-TV

WIN AT BRIDGE

Television Log

Bidding Review Locates Ace
,.,,.,,.,...,.,.,..,,.,,.,~~,.-..,

"' ; t&lt;

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

No Cures Yet, However

~t~~i.i~o~~. : ' 1",
&lt;li A Q

" ro 7 4 2
+K3
• J 8 6 32
WEST
EAST
• 10 8 53 2
• K 9 76
., G
., A 8
+ J 10 9
+Q a 6 54
4
• A 10 9
• Q5
SOUTH
• J4
" K Q J 9 53
+ A7 2
• K7
Eas t West vulnerable
West North East Soulh
Pass
Pass 1 ¥
Pass o .,
Pass
Pass Pass Pass
Openmg lead- + J .

4.,

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

las\.~ad{ iill~ntirny s clul:i

Jatko you see why South
elected to play the seven of
clubs• No tt wasn t because
East held Ute queen and no•
the ace It was because when
South Rev1ewed the b1ddmg
he remembered that East
hml passed m second seat
East had shown up with
the ace of hearts and was
marked With the queen of
diamonds If he d1dn t hold
the kmg of spades South
was sure of hts contract If
he dtd hold the kmg of
spades he couldn t also hold
Ute ace of clubs but m1ght
hold the queen
Therefore when South
played the low club he had
giVen h 1m s e If the best
chance to make hts contract
(HEWSPAPU EHTERPliSE ASSN )

South won the dtamond
lead wtth dummy s kmg and
led a low heart East played
the etght and South won t he
tnck He played h1s ace of
dmmonds ruffed h1s last
dmmond m dummy and
threw Eaat m wtth the ace
of trumps
East led the five of clubs
and after a shght amount of
thought South played h1s
seven spot West took hts ace
and shtfted to a spade but
the defense had all the tr1cks
they were gomg to get South
rose With dummy s ace led
a club to h1s kmg and smce
East s queen of clubs had
fallen South was able to re
turn to dummy wtth the 10
of trumps and get nd of hts
~

Pass
Pass
Pass
You

1¥

Pass
Pass
5t
Pass
South hold
3NT

.AK65 ¥AK65 t3Z .KQ3
What do you do now?

A-Btd six hearts You have
little Interest in seven SJD&lt;e
your partner bid Just three no
trump at his se&lt;ond turn to oct
TODAY S QUESTION
tr lnstead of b dd,tng threhase nbod·
ump your Par n e r

•I

l

~

l

VflW UrtJ

n rt

1

00 - News 3 4 a tO 15 Around the Bend 33 Sesame Street
20
6 30 - News 3 4 6 a 10 15 I Dream of Jeann e 13
7 00 - News6 10 What s My Linea Elec Co 20 Andy Grlthth
15 Beat The Clock 4 Truth or Conseq 3 Saint 15 Elec Co
20 I ve Got A Secret 13
7 30 - To Tell The Truth 6 Prl&lt;e Is Right 8 10 Beat the Clock
13 RFD20 FeastofLanguage33 ThJSisYourLife3
a 00 - Temperatures Rising 6 Maude a tO Bonanza 3 4 15
Ohto ThiS Week 20 Age of Anxtely 33 Bonanza 3 4 15
8 30 - Hawaii F ve Oa Btl IMoyers Journal :W Ask fhe Mayor
10
9 00 - BehtndTheLtnes20 Bold0nes3 4 15
9 30 - Blatk Journal 20 Movte AWar of Children a tO
tO 00 - Marcus Welby M D 6 13 News 20 F~rst Tuesday 3 4
15 Business Tempo 33
II 00 - News Weather Sports 3 4 6 8 tO 13 15
II 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Vlrgtntan a Madhouse 90 Movce
Someth ng of Value 10 Claud•lle Inglish 13
I 00 - You r Health 4
1 30 - News 4 13
6

WEDNESDAY NOV 6 1972
Sun rise Seminar 4 Sacred Hearl tO
Farmtlme tO Farm Report 13
Paul Harvey 13
Columbus Today 4 Bible Answers 8 Urban League 10
7 00 - Today3 4 15 CBS News8 10 News6
7 30 - Sleepy Jeffers 8 Romper Room 6 Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
13
8 00 - Capt Kangaroo tO New Zoo Revue 13 Sesame St 33
T mmy &amp; Lassie 6
a 30 - Jack Lalanne 13 New Zoo Revue 6 Romper Room 8
a 55 - Local News 13
9 00 - Paul Dixon 4 Phtl Donahue 15 Whaf Every Woman
Wants to Know 3 Concentration 6 Capt Kangaroo 8
Frtendly Junction 10 Ben Casey 13
9 30 - Elec Co 33 To Tell The Truth 3 Jeopardy 6 Hazel 8
tO 00 - D nah Shore3 15 Columbus Sox Calling 6 Jokers Wild
8 10 Dltk Van Dyke 13
10 30 - Concentration 3 15 Phil Donahue 4 Pr~te Is Right 8 10
5 1
3
11 o o"~ s~r;~~1h~ Century 3 15 Love Amerl&lt;an Style 6 Gambit
00 15 25 30 -

B 10 Password 13

three clubs over your two 11 30 - Hollywood Squares 4 15 Love of Lite 8 10 Bewltthed 6
spades What do you do now•
13 Sesame St 20
12 00 - Jeopardy 3 15 Password 6 Bob Brauns 50 50 Club 4
News 13 Contact a News 10
12 30 - Spilt Second 6 Searth for Tomorrow 8 10 Who What
Where 3 15
t 00 - News Weather Sports 3 All My Children 6 13 Its Your
Bel&amp; Green Acres 10 Walth Your Child 15
1 20 - Luctlle Rivers 3
I 30 - 3 On A Match 3 4 15 Lets Make A Deal 6 13 As The
World Turns 8 10
2 00 - Days of Our Lives 3 4 15 Newlywed Game 13 Mlk4
Douglas 6 Guiding Light 8 10
mcreased mctdence of diver 2 30 - Datln~Game13 Doctors4 15 EdgeofNighla 10
tJculoSIS and even colon can 3 oo - Anot er World 3 15 General Hospital &amp; 13 Love
Splendored Thing 8 10 RFD 20
cer There are other factors 3 30 - Return to Peyton Place 3 4 15 One Life to Live 6 13ttl!
of course bestdes food
Secret Storm 8 10 Ohio This Week 20
•
4 00 - Mr Cartoon J Somerset 15 Sesame St 33 Lovd::
One of the best signs of Amerl&lt;an Style 13 Merv Grllfln 4 Fllnlstoneo 6 Gilligan oC
cancer of the colon is an un
Island a Movie The Naked Streer to
011
explamed change 111 bowel 4 25 - Sports Club 6
!!
habits If a persol! stlii'ts 4 » - t ove Lucy 6 Andy Grlffllh15 Peftlcoat Junction 3.:;1
Merv Griffin 8 Daniel Boone 6
~
d I
di
eve
opmg
drdecur
rend!
ar
5
00Mr
Rogers33
Dick
Van
Dyke
15
Ponderosa3
Dente~
•
1
r hea or su en1y eve 1ops
Boone 6
"
constipatton he should seek 5 30- Mars~all Dillon 15 Elec Co 33 Dragnet 8 Gomer Pyl
medtcal attention tmmed•
USMC tJ Hodgepodge Lodge :W
.,!
ately If cancer of the colon 6 00 - Truth or COnseq 6 News 3 4 8 10 15 Sesame St 20~
1s detected before It has
Around The Bend 33
spread 1t can often be total 6 3D-News 3 ~ 6 8 10 15 I Dream of Jeannie 13 Hot!'JIY~J~~
ly removed and permanently 7
News 6 10 Whars My Line a Truth or eo,seq 3'
t•
cured As m moot other the Clock 4 Anything You Can Do 13 S.lnt t5 1 KhcJ!v Yo;;,;
types of cancer the earlier Schools 33
~
the detection the greater the 7 30 - To Tell The Truth 6 Tttt Judge 10 Pollee Svt'gtan'- ~. §
likelihood of successful treat
Protectors I Bet The Clock IJ Andy Grllfilll 15,
t
Hodgepodlll lodge 20 Eplsodo Acffon 33
men
8 JO - Adam 12 3 IS Paul Lynde 6 13 APIICII~ ,w1ttt
{NtWSPAPll IHTUPliSl ASSN )
Destiny 8 10 How Do We Get From Htre to Tllfrd0, Jl,
_
8 JO - Playhouso New York 20 ~ndfuls of Ashes 31 1 Cool
Million 3 4 15 Julie Andr- 6, 13
s..d .,.., q""litft' to Or t.IIIIJ 9 00 - Medical Center a 10 Chlpter33 33
•• arro ol lllh _,,.,.. P 0 lor 9 JO - Movie The Wild Htart" 6 13
1551 lo~loCI!rStotloo H... rort10QO -Search3 • 15 Soul33,1j-20 CannonR,lO
NY 10019 fwo&lt;ofJrofOr tOIIIIJ's 11 OO - NeWJ3 4 6 8 10 13, 15
boolfot "" ltolrtt wtlt't. ..- 50 11 JO - John~ CariGI13 15, VIrginian 1 MadhouH 90 61 t,lov...
tlftb to tlto 11111,... olltl osA 1 r:oThe ~ ~ 13 Wa~o or the Rid Wlltti" 1ft
tor ·~.a,., w.,.hr .....,,,
1 30 - N- 13

Immunity and Cancer Studied
cer He d1d mJect a sub
stance directly mto the
tumor cells The substance
he used was tubercultn the
same substance used for skm
testmg for tuberculosts The
reason the skm test works 1s
that a person who has been
exposed to tuberculosig de
velops an tmmumty to 1t and
when you mJect the tuber
culm matenal m the skm the
body s 1 m m u n e system
causes a reaction to occur
Dr Klem has taken advan
tage of thts prmc1ple by m
Jectmg tuberculin mto the
tumor and then the body s
Immune system mobilizes
and causes a reactton 111 the
tumor If the body s Immune
react•on ts severe enough 1t
wtll literally r e J e c t the
tumor cells He has had
some early success m the
treatment of patrents w1th
breast cancer and skm can
cer w1Ut this technique It IS
still m the research phases
and after the tnit1al encour
agmg results m a small se

r1es of breast and skm can
cers 1t w1ll no doubt be
tested m other forms of
cancer
Cancer of the colon 1s a
fatr ly common disorder It ts
much more common m mod
ermzed nattons such as..Jhe
Umted States than 1t 1s m
undeveloped countnes Many
mvestigators thmk th1s IS
due to the differences m our
d1et pomtmg out that we
tend to eat large amounts of
concentrated foods such as
sweets and bakery products
and do not get as much
roughage in our dtet as 1s
obtamed by lndtv1duals who
cat natural foods such as un
processed cereals vegetables and raw frmt
Our refmed foods often
move raptdly through the
small mtestme and remam
m lhe colon a long time In
Part because of lack of bulk
The -end result ts an mcrease
m constipation (leadmg to
the til advtsed laxative habtt
and, trrltable colon) and an

SAN FRANCISCO (UPI ) - If
the l.os Angeles Rams go on to
~
wm Ute NFC West Utey ought to
cut m Roman Gabrtel s
il acupuncturist for a shce df the
playoff money
""" 'l
By MILTON RICHMAN
No questron w1Utout Ute
O.mese needle-roan the Rams
lJPI Sports Edttor
.JI.(UV
New York (UP!) - uan uevtDe was dnvmg along m h1s car wouldn t be where Utey are
1!'htin he turned on the radio and recogniZed the vo1ce he heard today-a half-game off Ute lead
rn the race for ftrst m Ute NFC
unmedtately
Jh
West w1Ut Atlanta and San
He s ould ve It was his own
Franctsco
ThiS was a year-and-a-half ago shortly afrer he had gtven up
Gabrtel bothered by elbow
what had all Ute earmarks of a lifelong JOb as athlettc d1rector
tendomtls
smce the second
•,z:• and head football coach w1lh the Umverstty of Mtssoun to take
game of Ute season was ready
over as general manager and head coach of the Green Bay
to call tt a year unttl someone
Packers
\" '
recommended he try acupunc
Much was made of the fact Utat here was Dan Devtne commg ture WtUt nothing to lose and
fresh out of Ute college ranks to take over the two top JObs w1th a everythmg to gam Gabrtel
JrOfesstonal club That doesn t happen very often Usually a man agreed to take the trealmenls
' eiUter plays professtonally or comes m as an asststa nt then
Monday mght Gabe directed
" works hiS way up
a flawless Los Angeles attack
But DeVIlle came m cold and he was comutg mto a place and and threw a prur of touchdowns
'"' ' mto a JOb where one of h1s predecessors tbe late Vmce Lom
m the bargam as the Rams
"l
bardt had grown mto a legend
upset Ute San Francrsco 49ers
26-16
All the QuestloDB
It sttll hurts (the elbow)
Did he Utink he could ever poss1bly take Ut1s mans place' D1d
• he feel he could bnng the Pack back' Why' How' When?
.-. - The truth IS nobody Will ever replace Vmce Lomhardt at Green
;;: Bay Phil Bengtson could ve have told DeVIlle that But tt s also
true Devme has restored some of the Packers prev1ous d1grutv
~·" particularly among themselves and even if he ISn t another
Vmce Lombardi and never wtll be the effect essenttally IS the
same
because Green Bay ts back on top agam and concetvably
hn
could keep on gomg to Ute Super Bowl
' " Devme remembers how he was bombarded wtUt questtons
"" when he f1rst came to Ute Packers He remembers how he was
riding along m his car that evenmg a year-and-a half ago and
" how he heard hunself bemg mterv1ewed
SOUTH BEND lnd (UP!) I was really tired of listerung to myself make statements but Coach Fred Taylor srud Tues
" Utat was and shillS really part of my JOb he says I tr1ed to day mght he was not overly
• explain Utat to my squad Ute part of my JOb was to answer enUtused by Oh10 Stale s 81 75
" quest tons somebody would ask me I hadn t even coached a down wm m overtune over Notre
yet, and suddenly I had become an e~pert on pro football and the Dame
We did not generate any of
' Green Bay Packers Quite frankly I couldn t take much more
fense
saJd Taylor It was
Utat rught I was rtdmg home. hslenmg to myself bemg m
stmilar to our game Frtday
tervtewed I was makmg myself stck So I turned the rad1o off
mght
He Wasn't Enchanted
We dtd look better towards
That IS something Ute late Vmce Lombardi mtght have done
the
end and had a couple of
He wasn t that enchanted w1Ut mterv1ew sesswns
chances \0 wm tt m regulation
Devme also plays more or less than same type football Lorn
time he satd but dtdn t
bardi did In a nutshell do what you do best and keep on domg tt
11te Bucks lost to the Uruver
stay wtth yoW' ground game The sweep IS Ute dommant factor
stty of Washmgton Frtday
"' Throw only when you have to
rught
You walk mto the Packers dressmg quarters now and Utere
Oh1o State ranked 17th na
are still some s1gns Utere Lombardt put up
t10nally was e1ght pomts down
Uke • We can t spell success w1lhout you and There s no wtUt over ftve mmutes to go
_ laughter m losmg but the fact lS Devme made sure to estabhsh 'allied behmd Allan Hornayk
: his own tdentity after takmg over the Packers and although Ute
Hornayk s Jump shot from
• name Lombardi still comes up from tune to time and no doubt Ute corner With I 16 left tn
always will Devme and the late Lombardi are nothmg at all overtune put the Buckeyes
1 alike
•
To begm wtth, Devtne doesn t appeal to his players emoltons
the way LoolllMiio~Mi,or,f!Rth!!~~ !fter he took ~
J job Devine il'l!lt'll'ilway some~ot tlie so-caued Lombardi players
~ and brought In his own
~ He sent quarterback Don Hern to Denver-Lombard• always
~was high on Horn-m the first deal he made and 1t worked out
Velma Matlack Cassady
fine for the Packers because they acquired Ute Broncos f1rst
Leola Cooper Clem Cooper
draft chmce, who turned out to be John Brockington
Lowell
Matlack
Faye
Others Sent Peeking
Malia,k Carl Matlack Lourse
Others who Devtne sent pecking were Donny Anderson Jun
M Matlack DoroUty Lambert
Grabowski, TraVIS Williams and Lionel Aldrulge All bore the
John Lambert to Raymond
Lombardi stamp
Cla1r casstdy 38'h A Ohve
Most of DeVIlle s deals have been good ones
Pat E Mitchell Marcella
He got MacArUtur Lane unhappy m St Lou1s for Anderson
Soe Mttchell to Marvm B
' and Lane lS one of Ute btg reasons the Packers are atop the W1lson Roberta H Wilson
' Central DtvlSion m Ute NFC nght now The former Cardmals
Rutland
Davtd L Huddleston Mary
runnmg back has been domg a tremendous JOb blockmg for
Ann Huddleston to Jesse
Brockmgton and Is Ute leadmg pass receJVer on the club as well
Morns
Dorothy Morns
as Ute second leadmg rusher
Parcel Sutton
Lane likes bemg wtth the Packers and alUtough he never
Trustees Hysell Run Free
played for Lombardi he sees some of Lombardi s mfluence still
MeUtodtst O.urch to VIctor H
With the club
You know how the sweep works well tt s JUSt been handed Cremeans Marjorie Ann
down from Lombardi to Bengtson to Devme he says These Cremeans, 13 10 A Rutland
Russell Qmllen Velma
guys love to run a sweep bemg a Packer you always Utmk of
Quillen to Robert L LewiS
Lombardi His name always seems to come up some way
Marvel L leWIS 25 A , letart
" Everybody used to be afraid of hun says Lane
Franklm Real Estate Co to
Everybody's Still Scared
General Telephone Co Ease
' Everybody s s!Jll scared of him
Vmton
When he f~rst arrtved tn Green Bay DeVIlle was always bemg
Marvtn D Miller Helen
compared wiUt Lombardi Not so much anymore although as Mtller Minme M Marsha, aka
Lane says, Lombardi s name always seems to pop up some way
M1M1e Marsh to Franklin Real
" Devtne is In the second year of a ftve year contract now He Estate Co Parcel Salem
obvwusly is beginning to feel more at home than he dtd a year
Donald Gosney RuUt Gosney
'8lld a half ago
to Valley Lumber &amp; Supply Co
During Monday s press conference m Green Bay, for example
lnd Lots, Mtddleport
Bernard J Eynon Norma
someone asked him how he felt about Ute game wtth second.place
M!Mesota commg up this Sunday Was he looking ahead to 1!? Eynon Emtl G Eynon
Geraldine Eynon Carrol F
Devtne used to answering all kinds of questions by now sa1d
The only Utmg I look ahead to Is the re-hlrmg of Ute head Netgler Wanda 0 Netgler
Robert Re1ber Wlima B
coach
Retber, Ivan Watson, Marjorte
Now there s somethmg Lombardi wouldn t say
E Watson to Terry Wolfe
That wasn t his kind of hwnor
Deborah Wolfe, 92 A , Sutton
Polly A Spence Paul N
Spence Edgar J Hartung
season and career money Sharon A Hartung to Harry
RECORDS SET
" NEW YORK (UPI) - Jack w10mng records the PGA Michael Carleton Candace
Nicklaus who ftnlshed tn the announced Monday He won Elaine Carleton Parcels
money tn all 19 tourneys tn $320 542 to boost hiS career Salisbury
wh1ch he took pert set smgle total to $1 703 705 99
Kenneth L
Hartung,

-·, Today's

::·! Sport Parade
""'"

....
,,

gg_

Gabnel satd but I can throw
the ball Ute way I used to and
alii care about now 1s staymg
together long enough to ftntsh
the year WIUt the t1Ue
No questton Gabrtel was Ute
man of Ute hour m Monday
mght s g¥fle played before a
crowd of 61 215 at Candlestick
Park and a national televtston
aud1ence He threw Ute ball 26
tunes completmg 11 passes for
175 yards Hts scormg stnkes
covered 26 yards to Bob Klem
and 39 yal'ds to WJ!Ite Elltson
And when he wasn t throwmg
Ute ball he dtd a fme JOb of out
guessmg the San Francisco
defense w1Ut vartous ruonlng
plays
The strangest play of all
though was called by Coach
Tommy ProUtro the ftrst time
Ute Rams got Ute ball
In essence four linemen and
two runrung backs spltt off
about etght yards from Ute rest
of Ute team Elltson lmed up In

Bucks slip by

Irish, 81-75

i

Transfers

6
6
6
6

The b1ddmg has been
w..t North East

College BKB Results By Umfed Wynsbrg 108 Wash&amp;Jetl 50
Wstmnstr Pa ao Allghny 68
Press International
Duquesne 43 Stubnvl 34
Dowl ng 53 Queens 50
St Bon a3 Bwlng Grn 70
Thos More 65 Xavier 0 64

Don Sllmskt made two free
Utrows WJUt I 52 left to put Ute
lrtsh ahead, 6~7 before War
dell Jackson s jump shot 18
seconds later !ted rt agam
Btll Andreas a sophomore
had 19 pomls to back up Hor
nayk tn the Oh10 State scormg
column whtle center Luke
Wttte had 14 and Jackson had
10
Ohto State (81) - Hornyak
10 2 22 Andreas 9 I 19 Wttle 7
0 14 Jacson 4 2 10 Gerhard J.
2 a Wenner 4 0 8 Wolle 0 0 0
Merchant 0 0 0 Totals 37 7 81
Notre Dame (75)- Novak 3
0 6 Schumal II 5 27 Crotty 2
4 8 Brokaw 8 2 1a Clay 7 0 14
Stltnsk t 0 2 2 Varga 0 0 0
Stevens 0 0 0 Totals 31 13 75
Ha fl me Notre Dame 97
Oh o Stale 29
Regulat1on t 1me 69 69
Fouled out none

Tolal fouls Ohto Slate 18
Notre Dame 15
A - 10 112

College cage
ratings by UPI

Purdue
looks for
new coach

Iowa 79 Kentucky 66

V ncenncs 117 S W M 1ch 79
Wabash 72 Earlham 59

S C Sl 73 Fayttevl 71
Bentley 78
S Peters 78 Stnhll 68
Ill ao Vlpra so 62
So Car 76 liN L V 49
N C St 144 Ga Sou tOO
Loyola il l 79 Loras 65
0 Roberts 90 WIS 74
Fa rlld a2 Stn Hall 71
Pttt 99 Rutgers 73
College grid
Mont 71 Stout St 60
Murray St 83 Mo Wsn 71
West Ga a9 Wsn Ky aa
ratings by UPI
Ok St 96 Corps Ch rstJ a3
NEW YORK IUPI) The Prar e Vw 74 Grfti blng 68
Un ted Pr ess Internal onal top Sante F• 68 Ft r.W!i 63
20 ma or college football teams Weber St 84 Lyla Cal 74
w lh f r st place votes and won
los t r ecord s n parentheses

IF na l Week)

Team

1 Sou Cal 135) Ill 0)
2 Oklahoma Ito I)
J Oh o Slat e 191)
• Alebama (lO I)
5 Texas (9 I)
6 M chtgan 110 I)
7 Aubu rn (9 11
8 Penn State 110 I)
9 Nebraska (8 2 I)
tO La Sl (9 I I)
11

Pomts Houston 77 Colorado 72

Tennessee (9 21

12 Notre Dame (B2)
13 Ar z Sf 19 2)
14 IT e)Colo(aJ)
14 iTe)No Car (91)
16 Lou svtlle 19 I)
17 IT e) UCLA (a 3)
17 (Te) Wash Sl (74)
17 !Tie) Utah St Ia 31
20 San Otego Sl (tO t)

L\FAYETIE lnd (UP!) Purdue began Ute search for a
new football coach today
following the res1gnation of
Bob DeMoss who produced
great quarterbacks but failed
to produce a winnmg team
DeMoss who developed Len
Dawson Bob Gnese and
:~:~:::::::::::::::::* M1ke
Phtpps when he
was an asstslant coac h
res tgn ed Monday after
lh1ee years as head coach
ABA
Slandongs
m wh1ch Ius record was 13 18
By Umted Press Interna tional
East
nus has been the toughest
w I pet g b dectsJon of my life
sa1d
Carol1 na
11 621
ta 13 552 2 DeMoss who mststed he was
V rgm a
16
14 t2 53a 2 , not pushed out My fam1ly
Ken lucky
New York
10 14 417 5 ' and my untverslty come ftrst
Memph s
9 IB 333 8
w1UtmeandlfeelthatUteywlll
West
w I pet g b both benefit by my deCISIOn to
lndtana
17 9 654
leave coaching
Denver
12 I1 522 3 '
The Boilermakers were one
Utah
15 14 517 3 '
San o ego
14 16 467 s of Ute preseason favorites for
Dallas
8 15 348 7 ' the Big Ten champtonshlp this
Monday s Results
year but flntshed wtth a
Carol
na
132
Dallas
110
dtsappomting
6-5 overall
(Only game scheduled )
Tuesdays Games
record They lost Ute1r ftrst
1No games scheduled)
three games whtle DeMoss
WHA Standtngs
SWitched to Ute Wishbone of
By Un1fed Press lnternahonal fense and Uten back to a
East
wltptsglga Power I but eventually
Cleveland 15 10 1 31 93 70 worked into contention for Ute
New Eng
15 9 1 31 107 ao Btg Ten tttle before losing to
New York 1412 0 28 111 95 Mtch 1gan
State
and
Quebec
12 10 1 25 82 78
Ottawa
12 11 1 25 87 99 Michigan
Ph Ia
6 17 o 12 69 no DeMoss wlll become an
Wesl
~~lll'~lto Athletic Dirf!lli.Pf ...
l 1 '"I"' • WI I I Pll: gt ' gl111
ge King '\ltlO llllld 'lht!!'t! t
Winnipeg 17 11 2 ~6 109 B7
1
Mnnesola 13 9 t 2~ 7~ ao lflll/,1 no ,preSSllfRH\I'haiSRAWell 1
Los Ang
13 14 t 27 ~3 97 on llob tn h1s decision-making
Alberta
12 14 2 26 85 98 process
Houston
11 13 t 23 at 82
Ch cago
5 15 I II 55 72 King satd Ute replacement
Monday s Results
for DeMoss must be ' a top.
New England 7 Ottawa 2
fltght
coach and a class guy
1Only game scheduled)
and satd he hopes a new coach
Tuesday s Games
Quebec at W1nn1peg
can be chosen Within a couple
Cleve at Ph ladelphta
of weeks
Ch cago at Mmnesota

Lock Haven 75 Jumata 58

W dner 65 Glssbro 55
St Fran Pa 83 Sl V nc 60

350
302
237

209

172
150
144
13T
66

59
35
14

•s

5
4

3
3
3

2

What do you do about the
Santa.ctown the-ch1mney bit
1f you hve m a 20 story htgh
nse' Try to con the ktds mto
the mcmerator as bemg a
gocd1e chute•

Pro Standings

REGUlAR tl9 91

(ut!'MJ

199

aEGUlAI3 60

New York at Houston

(Only games scheduled)

NFL Stand&gt;ngs
By Un1ted Press Inter national

BARBS

By PHIL PASTORET
East
Dtsc JOCks who play by the
w It pet pi pa
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
x
Wa
sh
11
1
o
917
295
1
60
charts
are record players
Un ted Press Internal onal lop
Dallas
9
3
0
750
282
193
• • •
20 maJOr college basketball
NY
G
ants
7
5
0
5a3
295
221
Punk km v•e IS the aw
teams w th f rst place votes and
2 9 I 20a 145 266 jul stuff your mother m
won lost records m paren St Louts
Ph lade!ph a
theses (Ftrst Week )
2 9 1 20ll 110 307 law bakes
Pomts
Team
• • •
Central
I UCLA t31) (3 01
310
w
I
t
pet
pi
pa
You have only x num
2 FlordaSt (10)
235 Green Bay 8 4 0 667 251 199
3 Maryland (2 O)
ber of days till Chmtmas
183 Mmnesota
7 5 0 5a3 277 209 to get the beverage cans
4 Mtnnesota (2 0)
166
Oelrolt
7 5 0 583 284 252 from the video football
5 Marquette (I O)
130
3 a t 292 t83 235
6 Long Beach St II 0)
105 Chtcago
season out from under the
West
7 No Car St (2 0)
94
furmture
7 5 0 583 255 237
B SW La ( I 0)
70 Allan fa
9 Kentutky t I 0)
54 San Fran 6 5 I 542 313 232
Los Ang
6 5 I 542 260 22a
tO Pennsylvanta (I O)
40
NewOrlns
2 9 I 208 ta5 314
Mondays Game
II Kansas St (2 0)
33
Amer•can Conference
NY Jets at Oak twll te
12 North Carol na t2 0) 32
East
I Only game scheduled!
13 tl&gt;e) M1ch (I 0)
30
13 ( lte) Mmphs St (I 0) 30
12w 0I 0t 1pet
000 346
pf 158
pa • - - - - - - - - - .
15 (t e) 0 Robrts 10 0)
22 ,. M1am
7 5 0 583 341 274
15 (t e) Sou Cal (2 0) 22 NY Jets
more 5 7 0 417 225 212
17 Oh10 St (I I)
20 Balli
Buffalo
3 9 0 250212339
18
18 Prov den&lt;e 10 Ol
New Eng 2 10 0 167 154 391
17
19 lfle) Jaxonvl (1 0)
Central
19 (t e) Tenn (1 01
17
VALU•
wlfpct pfpa
RATIED
Ptltsbrgh 9 3 0 750 ~10 170
Cleveland a 4 o 667 215 2t5
Jackquelyn Sue Hartung to C nc•nnat 7 5 0 5a3 214 ta5
USED CARS
I II 0 Oll3 144 310
Harry Mtchael Carleton Houston
West
Candace Elame Carleton
w It pel pi pa
X Oaklnd
8 3 I 708 313 211
Parcels, Salisbury
Kan C ty
6 6 0 500 246 230
Umon Trust Natl Bank San
Otego 4 7 1 375 249 282
Exec Trus Sophia R Poole Denver
3 9 0 250 242 316
x Cl nched dlvJS on fllle
dec to Anna Bowser Bailey
Monday s Results
Owen Cochran Bowser Helen
V 8 motor auto trans and
Los Ang 26 San Franc sco 16
steer•ng
power
Jackson Bowser Fred Meals
IOnly game stheduled)
Bowser to Neila Hutton Floyd
Saturday s Games
Cleve
at Cmc nnat1
0 Baker, Helen E Baker
Washtnglon
at Dallas
Arlus R Baker Mary E
IOnly games scheduled )
No payments until after
Baker, Pauline Beattie exec
Sunday s Game'
Jan I 197l
Atlanta at San Fran
Harold P Taylor dec Pauline
Balttmore al Kan C ty
Peattle, Clarence R Peattle
Chtcagoal Philadelphla
Donald M Wolf, Irma Jean
DetrOJt at Bulfalo
You II Like Our Quality
Green Bay at Mtnnesota
Wolf, Richard A Taylor Ada
Way
of Oolf19 Business
Los Angeles at St Louis
E Taylor to Uruted States of
GMAC
FINANCING
M1amt at NY G1ants
992
5342
Pomeroy
New Eng at New Orleans
Opeo Evenings Til I 00
Suste
P llsburgh at Houston
Til 5 PM, Set
San Otego at Denver
Lemley to Sam N Arnold Ruth
!Only games scheduled)
E Arnold, Lot, Syracuse
Leo C Kennedy Jr , Julia A
Kennedy to Fred C Rider
Verdie M R1der , 6 A
Salisbury
PHO~E 992 2342
L, Edgar Reynolds Adm
MIDDLEPORT, 0
Horace McElhinney to Terry
WUIIs Jeanne Willis, 100 A.,
Salisbury
Howard L Folden, dec'd to
Leona Folden Carol A
Folden Loyal A Folden,
Myrtle Queen, Aff Trans ,
Qllumbla
Largest
Herman B Bailey, dec'd to
Doria L Finnigan, Mary Jean
Harrilon, Cert Trans Mldcleport
Nahona I Conference

72 OiEVY
NOVA 4 DOOR

• 39
VAlUE

239

SWIVEL LANTERN
8.48 VAliJE

588

C/N COAlED 81AOES
hand e Ul opp oved cho gtr

unit

Rugged I pltct
lpoll vh b•um

case

4 /2

" yl (00 ed

hond • 1land

DISS'I'ON

~~
GRASS SHEAR
Pu a~bvl

whe

f

on 1heora cui g au ortr
Pt monen! bo le es

e

tho gt o ~e tnl g hl

1999
TEFLON COATED BLADES

•2695

~~~~-~~;~:e.r-~L:em~~l;ey,

RnREADIDI

sou•D TIRE IOOIEI

.2

'
fir

it..

ke~

FAULK ON TEAM
Announcement Monday of
the All SEOAL Football
banquet at Ironton High
School Thursday evening
omttted the name of Metgs
High s star runnmg back
Chuck Faulk who won All
League reeogmtlon
Others to be recognized
from the Metgs Marauder
football team are B1ll
Chaney and Andy Vaughan
all league
and
Lou
McKmney and Dallas
Weber honorable mention

the other Rams pomls Steve
Spurner threw his 17Ut and
18th scortng passes of the
year- tops m Ute NF~nd
Bruce Gossett booted a 31 yard
fteld goal for the San Francisco
pomts
The 49ers and Rams now are
6-5-1 wtUt two games to play
San FranciSCO hosts Atlanta
next Sunday whtle the Rams
play at St l.oms The 49ers
then fmish against Mmnesota
the Rams agrunst Ute Ltons and
the Falcons who are 7-5 at Ute
moment agamst Kansas City

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

WINTER TIRE SALE
WINTER TREADS

now 2-l ahead for good at 77 75
and they wrapped tt up by
scormg the !mal four points
The lr1sh led 37-29 at half
tune and held Ute edge almost
until Ute end But Ohto State
moved WIUtm two pomts 67~ ,
wtUt an 6-2 scormg surge and
fmally tied tt wtUt 2 33 left m
regulatton play on a 20 foot
Jump shot by Dan Gerhard who
flipped 1t m form Ute top of Ute

front of Lance Renlzel w1Ut t11e
spltl group whtle three
linemen Wide recetver Jack
Snow and runmng hack Jun
Bertelsen stayed togeUter
Bertelsen took a stratght
snap from center hke tn Ute
old smg!e wmg days whtle
Snow went mto mohon to Ute
nght 3ertelsen ran t.o hts left
and Elhson came around to
meet htm took the hall and ran
stratght ahead for a gam of
mne yards
Davtd Ray who had 19 fteld
goals commg mto the game
added four more-of 32 12 19
and 42 yards-U&gt; account for

Downing-Childs Agency Inc.
INSURANCE • BONDS
MUTUAL FUNDS

Plus a 54 &amp; up per Hre F E T and 2 ,....,.bit

tlrn

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO
POMIROY

M2·2094

Meigs County's Oldest and

Insurance Agency

•
I

I I

(

MIC~IOAH

lAOOER

table ha1 fully Jlrlptd court lines op~n1lo
5 119 x30 hrvh Fold• for lforagt Non11lore top

Gtnn

POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK CO.
The Department Store of

Building Since 1915

�r
3- The Datly Sentinel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Oec 5 1972

2- The Daily Sentinel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Dec 5,1972

PRES 1DENTS OF MANIFEST DESTINY

by Patterson and Patrrck

lo\\ kt ~ I'M luu. tljxi iiii iiiiii U \\ '" du e.
p1111\111h lo lw~ 11nlm dull pu soo1ht) 111d :-.u Cl ll
du1h It lhc Ulll ddm~ hllltd ol poh lll' I 1 lu ~
tuhuud 11 md nullotJC \Ilk J "" \pplu ll l'tu tt
II llln J llllcs llut h 111 111 I , 11 " ( 1" \lld
Sllphtn l&gt;ougl" I&lt; ughr to 1 slluisr II I t I lo11 1
dl\ !'i H rht. l&gt;unvuu1l un \l lltt 11111 IX, ., P1 uH
uuucd on tht li th IHII&lt; 1 11" "' 11111111 &lt; I n the
~'irh l'~trc c clsth dcl t 11ul h" t 11\\U \11111
'"P&lt;rror md I"' II h1~ P" ' "'""l d t uuhd "' C.u1
llmhcld Smtt &gt;&gt;4 ro ~ 1 ckttoJrl 1 ti l'
\lhuuc1 tht \mu~tlnd'll " '" ' rh tg l111h ~ ,
l11d Ill Pltrct I hl\ !(t I I '\t rt hum r 11 II h S Ill hu 11
'' mp tth~ts 1 t lei ht 111 ule unmtst tl tl•h plun til
lm 111\Ugural or111on I htlll\l th 11 til l&lt; l11n1 "1
P1u n

Slf\

By Helen and' Sue Bone!

o,;

ftlldt: lS It &lt;.:~IStS Ill dl!ttrllll St ltD

Dear Rap
I ve been readmg about the Foster Grandparents program
where rettred people sort of adopt kuls m children s hospitals
and make them feel wanted and loved
Our gtrls club would hke to do UtlS tn reverse adopt old
people who are alone m rest homes It wouldn t be like Candy
Stripers but rather each gJrl would have ONE grandpa or
grancbna and be a spectal fr1end We hear a lot of Utese people
don t have anyone at all to vtstt wtUt or wnte to
How do we go about 1t' -THE GIRl.')
Dear Gtrls
Here s how one gtrl realized a sunilar dream
Two years ago Sara Harvey 1a high school JUniOr made a
fteld trip w1th her PSYChology class to Western State Hosp1tal m
Staunton Vtrgmta Saddened by Ute aloneness and vacant
wa1tmg of the gertatnc ward pettents she orgaruzed ProJect
Grandpa and soon had over fifty volunteers
Each of the young people m Ute group adopted an elderly
man at Western State and on a one~ne bas1s wrote letters
sent gtfls and made monUtly VISits
Results of thetr kmdnesses were strikmg In fact Utey are
often called The Miracle Workers of Staunton Men who had
been withdrawn and depressed for years have unproved men
tally and phystcally almost beyond belief Silent ones are talkmg
agam They watch for Ute mail live for Utose VISits of Ute1r
grandchildren
The volunteers• They love what they re domg 1t s great
makmg someone else a httle happter They even enJOY Ute
monUtly s1x.1Jour round tr1p from Utetr homes m Arlington to Ute
State Hospttal And Utey re much appreCiated too Among many
congratulations 1s a recent letter whtch reads
It ts deeply reassurmg to hear of acttvely concerned and
dedicated youthful cttJZens as you Because you have sacrificed
ltme and energy to brmg JOY mto the hearts of oUters you have
not only gamed m personal rewards but have also added un
measurably to the v1tahty of Ute entire commwuty
The letter was s1gned Patrtcla Ntxon - HELEN AND SUE
P S Why don t you g1rls make up a plan based on ProJect
Grandpa (but mcluding Grandmas too if you WISh)' Then call
the dtrector of a local rest home or state hosp1tal and ask for a
meetmg so Utat you can talk 1t over
I m sure you Foster Grandchildren would g1ve elderly
people someUtmg to live for Hope the tdea catches on tn other
ctties toot
Dear Helen and Sue
Help
I have a brg problem He IS fiVe feet mne mches tall and I m
only foW' feet eleven
I like h•m very much but he has other mterests namely a 1
cerlam g1rl who ts five feet five
How can 1 brmg hts mterests down to my level' - LOSING
HOPE FAST
Dear LHF
Forget hetght and concentrate on personahty and don t
thmk httle of yourself or others will too - SUE

IS IU,. Ol!

lllztd ill tht ( tli)Sll!lltlllll

l l1 t( lhl SO( llltd
c.:ompronusc.: 11lllStllt:s m.: str tth l nstltllllon II
I tcnmtly hope rh It Ihe &lt;JlllSIIIm " tt ltsl
\hruptl) shJttong ln•m 1 wnul11ton st md tJ II
,lt\lr} P1crn '' 1s blunt md tggn:ssn r conur n Ill!
the \11m lest Dcsttn y ot \mtrll t I he 1&gt;&lt; ill I
1\\\ \dmtntstr tt11111 "til not he uHHrt llul In till
tmud tordx•dmgs ot '' d Irom cxpansto 1 h,
dnlared
our tttttttdt " t nHttJll 11111 ut
p&lt;&gt;stlmn on the glol&gt;c rcndu the tujtttstltt n c I tu
tIll) posS~SSHl!lS IJO{

Fourteenth Pres1dent Frankl n Perce

(Adm n olrat on March 4 1853 March 3 1857)

Rottlmg !he 5aber of Manift 1 /Jerimy

I he only Presrdcnt to mmmtt hts tn tugurtl
address Ill memory md dd11 cr tt ts tn or ttton
hanklm !'terce s J li 1) 11ord 'P'&lt;&lt;h rmgcd trum
a latssrz t ttrc att ttlldc on the ht • 1 tng ISsUe ot sin
&lt;r} to rmlrng the 'ahcr of \11nt fcst Dcstmy rcgml
mg the L S role m 11 orld 1tl tt rs
\ tun lm mg rorstcnng youth Ptlrcc 11 "' the
srxth child of a dtstmgmshed t uhcr and 111 alcoholtc
mother He "ts on the 1crge ott ulurc rn hrs JUmor
}tar at BmHlom College "hen he put huusclt on
1 Spartan reg1men that en thkd htm to hntsh th1nl
tn hts class- 11 htch tncludcd I ongtcl lo" tnd
l-la\1 thorne- at the age ot 19
P1ercc stuthed and pnnt&lt;cd la11 lor l11c ye trs
hllnre runnmg succc&lt;Sfu ll v for the '\n1 llttnp
sh1re l eg1slaturc on the same llcket "htch rc
elected hts father gmernor I hus hegm an unam
hJttous career that earned the chansmattt Pterce
almost casually through House and Scnare- mclud
mg conrrmcrstal sen tee as t hrtgld~tr general m
the \1c xtcan \\ ar-ro the II h1tc I louse

Reedsville
News, Notes
Recent viSitors at the Hetzer
Jlise home were ¥r_,.;nd,l"'r.f
'~-He&amp;eritl4elle W Va
Mrs - M~P,et " Hetz~r • ac
compamed' Mr
Mrs Ar
lhur Hetzer to their home for a
VISit
Mr and Mrs Jeff Foster and
fam1ly spent a day with
relahvesatNewHaven W Va
Pat Qumn and Crystal Hall of
Utile Hockmg VISited Wtlh
Mrs Opal Randolph
Mrs Opal Randolph and
Mrs Rose Thomas spent
Thanksg1vmg wtlh Mrs
Gladys Baughman and Jack
Gale of Gahanna
Mr and Mrs Roy Coleman
of Ravenna spent a few days
wtth Mr and Mrs Claude
Smtih
Thanksgtvmg Day guests of
Mr and Mrs Car I Barnhart
were Mr and Mrs Charles
Barnhart and family of Tup
pers Platns Mr and Mrs
Grary Barnhart and family of
Logan and Donald Barnhart
Recent guests of Mr and
Mrs Waller Brown were Mr
and Mrs Btl! Thomas and son
Matthew of En on Miss Naorru
Pickens of AUtens Rev and
Mrs Clifford Thomas of
Jackson and Mr and Mrs
Steve Cowdery of Parkers
burg W Va
l'hanksgJVmg company at
Ute home of Mr and Mrs
Lawrence Rose were Mr and
Mrs Thomas J Rose and
famtly of Akron and Mrs
Annabelle Rose and children
David and Lor1 of Belpre
Jean Whitehead student at
Oh10 State Untversity
Columbus spent her holtday

and

Kingsbury
News, Notes
Thankagtvmg guests of Mr
and Mrs Ralph Carl and
Rodney were Mr and Mrs
VIrgil Carl and children
Thanksgiving vls1tors of
Mrs Hazel Arnold and Waller
were Mr and Mrs Patrick
Williams and children of
McArUtur, Mr and Mrs Lester
Arnold and Billy of Cohun bus,
Mr and Mrs NaUtan Arnold of
tllelter and Mr and Mrs
llctiiiJd McNally of Athena
Mr and Mrs Patrick
WIIIWn (BerUta Arnold) are
announcing the arrival of a
baby air! Saturday at a
Cbllllcothe, Ohio hoapltal The
WIIU.o'"' have a 11111, David,
IIIII IIIOCiw &amp;lrl, Paula

"

"1th111 Ollf JIIII Sl!JUt 11 tllll
ttuHiv tmport tnt lot our P" ttl ttott
tnt! rht
pc Ill ot the 11 odd
I he Prcstdmt appomtcd jdllrslln I) 1\ ts st u t
t tn "' 11 1r promoted md stgmd rill J, tiS ''
'&gt;cbrtskt \u 11hrch rcpcablllll \I ts" ur ( m
prottllst of IH20 md mIlk popul tr \Ill u ct~nl\
the II\\ ot the land reg trdmg ,j 11 t n
In lwctgn tft urs I'JcrlC stgnnl the hts t It 1 It
ptct lltthjtpm tautl} tpprmcd of ltetltt' tu II tl
It 1111 \\ tlk&lt;r s lmarre attempts to 111 1kt '\" tr tg u t
\mcnt: tn p&lt;lsst.:ssHm fl'"'iflltu..l It
unpiled threats of trmed P"" ll 111 tht O srcnd
\lantl&lt;sto to forte Spatn to sell ( uln to the L ntttd
States and pard \lcxtm $10 mtlhon for ~' &gt;l&gt;
square miles of land 11 htch 11011 form s p tn t I
\rrzona 1nd '\c11 \lc&gt;tu &gt;
Pterce ts usually rated 1 hclo\\ 11 cngc Ptcst
dent hy hJStonans "ho trc pr nc to r tttk ts grt 11
those Prcstdcnts \1 ho 111tld 1 ts t pctson tl
Jl&lt;"'er- Jacks •n lmcoln frtnkltn Ro"' "'clt- tnd
as bclo\1 11 erage thost "ho try 11 llrl 1 t 111 tht
11111 of the people IS exprcmd thro11gh thm p 1111
and the Congress- ! tllmort l'tcru ( 1oltdgc
Prone toalwholtsm supctsltltous ngtdh put
san Pteree nllcrthclcss consuenltou slv and , 1
pably earned out the 1110 1111Jor 11ms ot hts ptttl
to expand the Jl'lll cr of both the tn slttutton of sit\
cry and the L mtnl St ttcs of \meqc 1
1 pn1sla\t:n

~11:18lll:l8lm&gt;:t:r.:o:.. ~-.....::::~::-.».:~~&gt;:::~~&amp;~::we;:~ .... ~-:;:

o

BY JACK O'BRIAN
SO WHO NEEDS A

wm~~~:~fJ~~~;s'!imefUe
splie

Ra!lzlWOI s official
With' he1 M pl'mce '
hubby will be aonounced any edition Mayor
Lindsay s rUMmg for something hts hrur now
Is chopped shorter our spy at Jerry s m
Bergdorf s cl1p jomt reports
Sen Jun
Buckley s wearmg an I Am a Capitalist
button
Sarge Shriver s reported aruuous to
challenge Buckley In the next N Y senatortal
batlle he d better watch out for Ute hab1t of
tilting wmdrmlls a Ia hunself and George
McGuff
Nlpsey Russell s1gned a longplay
pact w1Ut the Dean Martin TV show tf 1t gets
any lower m the" ratings the pact nught be
whacked Ntpsey and Vivian Blame are two
stars who somhow can I get bOOked on JohMy
Carson s sprawl
Truman Capote s analysiS of actors ( If
they re good actors they re dwnb ) has
corroboration from Sit John G1elgud who
recently bemoaned m print the shallowness of
his own mtellect never reads books, papers etc
Hlgh-Q actress Jill St John who dated
Henry Kissmger (they he around and match
wtts apparently) brought Tnunan s mstant
analysts She can t act he s right
Warren Beatty must use a jet today 1! s
Zou"Zou he's nuzzhng Orthodox Israelis are
~rate claim the good TV shows over Utere are
on Friday mghts - Ute1r Sabbath - when Utey
can't peek The U S Senate s doing a quiet
deep probe of JFK Airport ftrmS sweetheart
labor pacts Stripper Blaze Starr s peeling off
her mammolrs
First Blacula, next ' Blackensteln," then
Wilt Chamberlatn as a cafe au lalt Robmson

~

~

Crusoe
Joe Namath as hiS Fnday'
Brttam s Labor Party s soctahsm doesn t keep
tt from 4\PPII!g !jeep onto ptll'e capitalism 1t~
" /!enslon ¥und
a huge chunk of GKN maybe
Ute biggest n\osl capJtahsllc engmeenng
behomoth m Bntarn Call tt JOb msurance
Horny Schneider 34 thmks shes commg up
anctent Just a couple years more m fl1cks Uten
I ll ded1cate myself to the theater
Ftrst
rughter at darlmg ltttle Jtll Corey s opemng at
Dangerfield's was Gordon Parks who took Jtll
Ute photo that appeared on ltfe s cover almost
20 years ago Jtll also last week appeared on
Dorothy Collins syndicated radto show they
remmtsced about Ute Htt Parade Utey - dif
ferent tunes - starred on
All those guys wearmg women s duds tn
clubs and TV (Jun Batley Mtlton Berle Flip
Wtlson Altce Cooper Rocky Graz1ano even ) Utey re all looking a bit matronly The swttch
of rock Jernts to jazz IS no puzzle they re gomg
broke rockmg H1lly s on Ute Bowery reports 1ts
b1z jumped 100 pet w1Ut good JBZZ (Cinco
Hamtlton etc ) Wonder when Melma Mer
court s extending her credJbthty gap she
promised tf Ntxon won she d go home to Greeee
and go to jail
Romantic restaurant
Monstgnore
London s lrtal of the porno-mag Oz
which poured porn on purpose Into school k1ds
was so loaded w1Ut filth Ute London voices of
expedience grabbed 1t to adjust tts evtdence to
the theater Now 11 s bemg unported to the
Anderson Theatre here next week Its court
evidence gtves tl 1t s clauned redeemmg
value It has mus1c by John Lennon and Mick
Jagger who seem on Ute screammg Side of
anyUtmg

owns

vacalton wtth Mr and Mrs
Ernest
Whitehead
and
daughters
Mr and Mrs Ernest RuUt
spent Thanksg1vmg wiUt Mr
and Mrs Garrett Reed of
Coolvrlie
Karen Humphrey student at
Oh10 State Umverslty spent
her ThanksgtVtng holiday wiUt
her parents Mr and Mrs By Lawrence Lamb, M D
Charles Hwnphrey and Robin
Dear Dr Lamb - Some
_ Mrs L Balderson time back I read an articlE
on cancer whrch stated that
a substance could be Injected
the cancer cell arrestmg
1ht Dai1J Seulilll mto
1t Is th1s process avatlable
OEVOTID TO THI
to the ~ublic• I read the arti
tNTIIIIIT 01'
cle wtth Interest but dtd not
MIIGS MASON All lA
CHUTIII L TANNIHILL
know I would be personally
lxtc lei
interested
My husband tS In
ItO IE ItT HOII'LICH
his late 30s and we have a
City leiter
Publllhed dally txctpt small child He had a mabg
5aturdiY bY Tht OhiO Vlllty nant tumor removed from
Publlshinv Compeny
111
Court St
Pomtroy Ohio hts colon but the doctor satd
45769 Buslntss Offlct Phone 11 had alteady spread to two
992 IIS6 EditOrial ,hont 992 small spots on h1s hver This
lt!7
Stcond tiiS&amp; po&amp;logo paid ot has been three months ago
Pomtroy OhiO
What can you say about th1s
Nlflonal advertising process and Is there any pos
rtpr utn t 1 t "' t
1Dt11ntlll
Gelleghor tnt 12 !111 dnd stblllty that Utis process
St Naw York City lolow York could be available to my
Subacrlptlon rate• Ot husband and would 1t work
llvtrtCI by ctrrltr Whtrt on the hver'
IVtlltblt 50 Cl'fttl ptr Wltk
ly Motor Routt where c1rrltt
Dear 'Reader - You must
ltrv let not tvalltbll One be refertmg to the work of
month 11 75 ly !)loll In Ohio
and w Yo One yHr 11• 00 Dr Edmund Klein of Boswell
"' monthl 17 2S Throe Memorial Inst1tute m Buf
months u 50 SUbsctlpllon falo New York He has been
prru lntludH lunaoy Tlmtl
doing research on treating
Stntlnot
breast cancer and skm can

+++
Dear Losmg Hope
And remember - short gJrls have one btg advantage they
can always look up to a guy - wh1ch makes hun feel protective
and therefore more mterested - HELEN

;,;.o;.o::: ::;:;-..., :::......~

Voice along Br'Way

&amp; THIIIBS

Generation Rap

BY PAUL CRABTREE
Dtd 1 ever tell you about my friend Ute Boy Named After
Batman•
ThiS was a long time ago kuls before Batman," the highest
of htgh camp because an overmght sensation (sllort.lfved,
however) back m Ute 1966 TV season - and later spawned a
perfectly awful cartoon Sfll'les
Th1s was m Ute early Forties when Batman w!IJ only a comic
hook, put out by the same people who published Supennan
One of my very best fnencls became tbe Boy Named After
Batman He really did This lS a true story Backfiring Batmobiles do you Utink I d make Utis up •
Oh he had another name all right - Harlin Gibson He
hated,\ but I don t know wby (I hated my name, too, but in my
opllllon Utere was more to tbe sa1d for Harlin Gibson than for
Paul Crabtree, and besides my mother had forbidden me at the
age of silt: to have my name changed to 'I'lm Tyler," the hero of
another popular cormc character of Ute time )
Old Harlin really had a hangup about 'IJ(\rlln " Utougb And
be had nowhere to turn because his parents over m Jackson
County Ohto hadn t had Ute forestght to gJve him a middle
name or even an mttial, llke tn Harry S Truman
Now m those days the almost-teen crowd had the idea that
adults knew absolutely noUtmg - mcludlng Ute true Identity of
Ute Caped Crusader or Superman or Ute Flasll, or the Green
Lantern or Captam America or Ute Spectre Only kids, we
surmtsed knew that Batman -m real life -was Bruce Wayne
So, Harlm Gibson became Harlin Bruce Gibson He said so
on hts school records and the autbor11ies accepted It, since It was
certamly better Ulan Harlin No-Middle Name Gibson
Later he JOmed Ute Navy and calmly advised tbe recruiting
offtcer that hlS name was Harlin Bruce Gtb6on Then be went a
stepfurtber andbegansJgttmgeverything 'H B G1b6on"
Old Harlin fmally got nd of Ute Harlin" altogether and
became sunply Bruce Gtbson once he id been away from his
home town a few years He brought hiS wife along to see us one
tune and she adormgly called him Bruce '
Afew years later he showed up With a different wife, and she
called hun Bruce too
I ve lost track of old Harlin tn the past few years Suffering
surnames Robm, strike Utat last sentence I meant to say I've
lost track of old Bruce Ute past few years The last I heard he
had retired from Ute Navy and was Uvmg m Hawaii
Holy Honolulu t I d like to renew old acquaintances someday
wtth good old - er - Bruce GtbBon The only trouble is Utat I'm
afrrud I d be compelled to ask him if he got rtd of "Harlin en
tirely and now 1s known as Bruce Wayne Gtbson
That m1ght be unfortunate, because Harlin could always
whip Ute hell out of me ma fight and I unaglne Bruce could still
manage 11 too - smce mreahty he lS the Caped Crusader

+++
ON THE TV DIAL Another Marshall U basketball game,
Uruvers1ty of North Carollll8-Charlotte, 7 30, WMtJL.TV
A
look at Ute hot Umted Mine Workers elecllon 8 30, WOUB-TV

WIN AT BRIDGE

Television Log

Bidding Review Locates Ace
,.,,.,,.,...,.,.,..,,.,,.,~~,.-..,

"' ; t&lt;

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

No Cures Yet, However

~t~~i.i~o~~. : ' 1",
&lt;li A Q

" ro 7 4 2
+K3
• J 8 6 32
WEST
EAST
• 10 8 53 2
• K 9 76
., G
., A 8
+ J 10 9
+Q a 6 54
4
• A 10 9
• Q5
SOUTH
• J4
" K Q J 9 53
+ A7 2
• K7
Eas t West vulnerable
West North East Soulh
Pass
Pass 1 ¥
Pass o .,
Pass
Pass Pass Pass
Openmg lead- + J .

4.,

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

las\.~ad{ iill~ntirny s clul:i

Jatko you see why South
elected to play the seven of
clubs• No tt wasn t because
East held Ute queen and no•
the ace It was because when
South Rev1ewed the b1ddmg
he remembered that East
hml passed m second seat
East had shown up with
the ace of hearts and was
marked With the queen of
diamonds If he d1dn t hold
the kmg of spades South
was sure of hts contract If
he dtd hold the kmg of
spades he couldn t also hold
Ute ace of clubs but m1ght
hold the queen
Therefore when South
played the low club he had
giVen h 1m s e If the best
chance to make hts contract
(HEWSPAPU EHTERPliSE ASSN )

South won the dtamond
lead wtth dummy s kmg and
led a low heart East played
the etght and South won t he
tnck He played h1s ace of
dmmonds ruffed h1s last
dmmond m dummy and
threw Eaat m wtth the ace
of trumps
East led the five of clubs
and after a shght amount of
thought South played h1s
seven spot West took hts ace
and shtfted to a spade but
the defense had all the tr1cks
they were gomg to get South
rose With dummy s ace led
a club to h1s kmg and smce
East s queen of clubs had
fallen South was able to re
turn to dummy wtth the 10
of trumps and get nd of hts
~

Pass
Pass
Pass
You

1¥

Pass
Pass
5t
Pass
South hold
3NT

.AK65 ¥AK65 t3Z .KQ3
What do you do now?

A-Btd six hearts You have
little Interest in seven SJD&lt;e
your partner bid Just three no
trump at his se&lt;ond turn to oct
TODAY S QUESTION
tr lnstead of b dd,tng threhase nbod·
ump your Par n e r

•I

l

~

l

VflW UrtJ

n rt

1

00 - News 3 4 a tO 15 Around the Bend 33 Sesame Street
20
6 30 - News 3 4 6 a 10 15 I Dream of Jeann e 13
7 00 - News6 10 What s My Linea Elec Co 20 Andy Grlthth
15 Beat The Clock 4 Truth or Conseq 3 Saint 15 Elec Co
20 I ve Got A Secret 13
7 30 - To Tell The Truth 6 Prl&lt;e Is Right 8 10 Beat the Clock
13 RFD20 FeastofLanguage33 ThJSisYourLife3
a 00 - Temperatures Rising 6 Maude a tO Bonanza 3 4 15
Ohto ThiS Week 20 Age of Anxtely 33 Bonanza 3 4 15
8 30 - Hawaii F ve Oa Btl IMoyers Journal :W Ask fhe Mayor
10
9 00 - BehtndTheLtnes20 Bold0nes3 4 15
9 30 - Blatk Journal 20 Movte AWar of Children a tO
tO 00 - Marcus Welby M D 6 13 News 20 F~rst Tuesday 3 4
15 Business Tempo 33
II 00 - News Weather Sports 3 4 6 8 tO 13 15
II 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Vlrgtntan a Madhouse 90 Movce
Someth ng of Value 10 Claud•lle Inglish 13
I 00 - You r Health 4
1 30 - News 4 13
6

WEDNESDAY NOV 6 1972
Sun rise Seminar 4 Sacred Hearl tO
Farmtlme tO Farm Report 13
Paul Harvey 13
Columbus Today 4 Bible Answers 8 Urban League 10
7 00 - Today3 4 15 CBS News8 10 News6
7 30 - Sleepy Jeffers 8 Romper Room 6 Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
13
8 00 - Capt Kangaroo tO New Zoo Revue 13 Sesame St 33
T mmy &amp; Lassie 6
a 30 - Jack Lalanne 13 New Zoo Revue 6 Romper Room 8
a 55 - Local News 13
9 00 - Paul Dixon 4 Phtl Donahue 15 Whaf Every Woman
Wants to Know 3 Concentration 6 Capt Kangaroo 8
Frtendly Junction 10 Ben Casey 13
9 30 - Elec Co 33 To Tell The Truth 3 Jeopardy 6 Hazel 8
tO 00 - D nah Shore3 15 Columbus Sox Calling 6 Jokers Wild
8 10 Dltk Van Dyke 13
10 30 - Concentration 3 15 Phil Donahue 4 Pr~te Is Right 8 10
5 1
3
11 o o"~ s~r;~~1h~ Century 3 15 Love Amerl&lt;an Style 6 Gambit
00 15 25 30 -

B 10 Password 13

three clubs over your two 11 30 - Hollywood Squares 4 15 Love of Lite 8 10 Bewltthed 6
spades What do you do now•
13 Sesame St 20
12 00 - Jeopardy 3 15 Password 6 Bob Brauns 50 50 Club 4
News 13 Contact a News 10
12 30 - Spilt Second 6 Searth for Tomorrow 8 10 Who What
Where 3 15
t 00 - News Weather Sports 3 All My Children 6 13 Its Your
Bel&amp; Green Acres 10 Walth Your Child 15
1 20 - Luctlle Rivers 3
I 30 - 3 On A Match 3 4 15 Lets Make A Deal 6 13 As The
World Turns 8 10
2 00 - Days of Our Lives 3 4 15 Newlywed Game 13 Mlk4
Douglas 6 Guiding Light 8 10
mcreased mctdence of diver 2 30 - Datln~Game13 Doctors4 15 EdgeofNighla 10
tJculoSIS and even colon can 3 oo - Anot er World 3 15 General Hospital &amp; 13 Love
Splendored Thing 8 10 RFD 20
cer There are other factors 3 30 - Return to Peyton Place 3 4 15 One Life to Live 6 13ttl!
of course bestdes food
Secret Storm 8 10 Ohio This Week 20
•
4 00 - Mr Cartoon J Somerset 15 Sesame St 33 Lovd::
One of the best signs of Amerl&lt;an Style 13 Merv Grllfln 4 Fllnlstoneo 6 Gilligan oC
cancer of the colon is an un
Island a Movie The Naked Streer to
011
explamed change 111 bowel 4 25 - Sports Club 6
!!
habits If a persol! stlii'ts 4 » - t ove Lucy 6 Andy Grlffllh15 Peftlcoat Junction 3.:;1
Merv Griffin 8 Daniel Boone 6
~
d I
di
eve
opmg
drdecur
rend!
ar
5
00Mr
Rogers33
Dick
Van
Dyke
15
Ponderosa3
Dente~
•
1
r hea or su en1y eve 1ops
Boone 6
"
constipatton he should seek 5 30- Mars~all Dillon 15 Elec Co 33 Dragnet 8 Gomer Pyl
medtcal attention tmmed•
USMC tJ Hodgepodge Lodge :W
.,!
ately If cancer of the colon 6 00 - Truth or COnseq 6 News 3 4 8 10 15 Sesame St 20~
1s detected before It has
Around The Bend 33
spread 1t can often be total 6 3D-News 3 ~ 6 8 10 15 I Dream of Jeannie 13 Hot!'JIY~J~~
ly removed and permanently 7
News 6 10 Whars My Line a Truth or eo,seq 3'
t•
cured As m moot other the Clock 4 Anything You Can Do 13 S.lnt t5 1 KhcJ!v Yo;;,;
types of cancer the earlier Schools 33
~
the detection the greater the 7 30 - To Tell The Truth 6 Tttt Judge 10 Pollee Svt'gtan'- ~. §
likelihood of successful treat
Protectors I Bet The Clock IJ Andy Grllfilll 15,
t
Hodgepodlll lodge 20 Eplsodo Acffon 33
men
8 JO - Adam 12 3 IS Paul Lynde 6 13 APIICII~ ,w1ttt
{NtWSPAPll IHTUPliSl ASSN )
Destiny 8 10 How Do We Get From Htre to Tllfrd0, Jl,
_
8 JO - Playhouso New York 20 ~ndfuls of Ashes 31 1 Cool
Million 3 4 15 Julie Andr- 6, 13
s..d .,.., q""litft' to Or t.IIIIJ 9 00 - Medical Center a 10 Chlpter33 33
•• arro ol lllh _,,.,.. P 0 lor 9 JO - Movie The Wild Htart" 6 13
1551 lo~loCI!rStotloo H... rort10QO -Search3 • 15 Soul33,1j-20 CannonR,lO
NY 10019 fwo&lt;ofJrofOr tOIIIIJ's 11 OO - NeWJ3 4 6 8 10 13, 15
boolfot "" ltolrtt wtlt't. ..- 50 11 JO - John~ CariGI13 15, VIrginian 1 MadhouH 90 61 t,lov...
tlftb to tlto 11111,... olltl osA 1 r:oThe ~ ~ 13 Wa~o or the Rid Wlltti" 1ft
tor ·~.a,., w.,.hr .....,,,
1 30 - N- 13

Immunity and Cancer Studied
cer He d1d mJect a sub
stance directly mto the
tumor cells The substance
he used was tubercultn the
same substance used for skm
testmg for tuberculosts The
reason the skm test works 1s
that a person who has been
exposed to tuberculosig de
velops an tmmumty to 1t and
when you mJect the tuber
culm matenal m the skm the
body s 1 m m u n e system
causes a reaction to occur
Dr Klem has taken advan
tage of thts prmc1ple by m
Jectmg tuberculin mto the
tumor and then the body s
Immune system mobilizes
and causes a reactton 111 the
tumor If the body s Immune
react•on ts severe enough 1t
wtll literally r e J e c t the
tumor cells He has had
some early success m the
treatment of patrents w1th
breast cancer and skm can
cer w1Ut this technique It IS
still m the research phases
and after the tnit1al encour
agmg results m a small se

r1es of breast and skm can
cers 1t w1ll no doubt be
tested m other forms of
cancer
Cancer of the colon 1s a
fatr ly common disorder It ts
much more common m mod
ermzed nattons such as..Jhe
Umted States than 1t 1s m
undeveloped countnes Many
mvestigators thmk th1s IS
due to the differences m our
d1et pomtmg out that we
tend to eat large amounts of
concentrated foods such as
sweets and bakery products
and do not get as much
roughage in our dtet as 1s
obtamed by lndtv1duals who
cat natural foods such as un
processed cereals vegetables and raw frmt
Our refmed foods often
move raptdly through the
small mtestme and remam
m lhe colon a long time In
Part because of lack of bulk
The -end result ts an mcrease
m constipation (leadmg to
the til advtsed laxative habtt
and, trrltable colon) and an

SAN FRANCISCO (UPI ) - If
the l.os Angeles Rams go on to
~
wm Ute NFC West Utey ought to
cut m Roman Gabrtel s
il acupuncturist for a shce df the
playoff money
""" 'l
By MILTON RICHMAN
No questron w1Utout Ute
O.mese needle-roan the Rams
lJPI Sports Edttor
.JI.(UV
New York (UP!) - uan uevtDe was dnvmg along m h1s car wouldn t be where Utey are
1!'htin he turned on the radio and recogniZed the vo1ce he heard today-a half-game off Ute lead
rn the race for ftrst m Ute NFC
unmedtately
Jh
West w1Ut Atlanta and San
He s ould ve It was his own
Franctsco
ThiS was a year-and-a-half ago shortly afrer he had gtven up
Gabrtel bothered by elbow
what had all Ute earmarks of a lifelong JOb as athlettc d1rector
tendomtls
smce the second
•,z:• and head football coach w1lh the Umverstty of Mtssoun to take
game of Ute season was ready
over as general manager and head coach of the Green Bay
to call tt a year unttl someone
Packers
\" '
recommended he try acupunc
Much was made of the fact Utat here was Dan Devtne commg ture WtUt nothing to lose and
fresh out of Ute college ranks to take over the two top JObs w1th a everythmg to gam Gabrtel
JrOfesstonal club That doesn t happen very often Usually a man agreed to take the trealmenls
' eiUter plays professtonally or comes m as an asststa nt then
Monday mght Gabe directed
" works hiS way up
a flawless Los Angeles attack
But DeVIlle came m cold and he was comutg mto a place and and threw a prur of touchdowns
'"' ' mto a JOb where one of h1s predecessors tbe late Vmce Lom
m the bargam as the Rams
"l
bardt had grown mto a legend
upset Ute San Francrsco 49ers
26-16
All the QuestloDB
It sttll hurts (the elbow)
Did he Utink he could ever poss1bly take Ut1s mans place' D1d
• he feel he could bnng the Pack back' Why' How' When?
.-. - The truth IS nobody Will ever replace Vmce Lomhardt at Green
;;: Bay Phil Bengtson could ve have told DeVIlle that But tt s also
true Devme has restored some of the Packers prev1ous d1grutv
~·" particularly among themselves and even if he ISn t another
Vmce Lombardi and never wtll be the effect essenttally IS the
same
because Green Bay ts back on top agam and concetvably
hn
could keep on gomg to Ute Super Bowl
' " Devme remembers how he was bombarded wtUt questtons
"" when he f1rst came to Ute Packers He remembers how he was
riding along m his car that evenmg a year-and-a half ago and
" how he heard hunself bemg mterv1ewed
SOUTH BEND lnd (UP!) I was really tired of listerung to myself make statements but Coach Fred Taylor srud Tues
" Utat was and shillS really part of my JOb he says I tr1ed to day mght he was not overly
• explain Utat to my squad Ute part of my JOb was to answer enUtused by Oh10 Stale s 81 75
" quest tons somebody would ask me I hadn t even coached a down wm m overtune over Notre
yet, and suddenly I had become an e~pert on pro football and the Dame
We did not generate any of
' Green Bay Packers Quite frankly I couldn t take much more
fense
saJd Taylor It was
Utat rught I was rtdmg home. hslenmg to myself bemg m
stmilar to our game Frtday
tervtewed I was makmg myself stck So I turned the rad1o off
mght
He Wasn't Enchanted
We dtd look better towards
That IS something Ute late Vmce Lombardi mtght have done
the
end and had a couple of
He wasn t that enchanted w1Ut mterv1ew sesswns
chances \0 wm tt m regulation
Devme also plays more or less than same type football Lorn
time he satd but dtdn t
bardi did In a nutshell do what you do best and keep on domg tt
11te Bucks lost to the Uruver
stay wtth yoW' ground game The sweep IS Ute dommant factor
stty of Washmgton Frtday
"' Throw only when you have to
rught
You walk mto the Packers dressmg quarters now and Utere
Oh1o State ranked 17th na
are still some s1gns Utere Lombardt put up
t10nally was e1ght pomts down
Uke • We can t spell success w1lhout you and There s no wtUt over ftve mmutes to go
_ laughter m losmg but the fact lS Devme made sure to estabhsh 'allied behmd Allan Hornayk
: his own tdentity after takmg over the Packers and although Ute
Hornayk s Jump shot from
• name Lombardi still comes up from tune to time and no doubt Ute corner With I 16 left tn
always will Devme and the late Lombardi are nothmg at all overtune put the Buckeyes
1 alike
•
To begm wtth, Devtne doesn t appeal to his players emoltons
the way LoolllMiio~Mi,or,f!Rth!!~~ !fter he took ~
J job Devine il'l!lt'll'ilway some~ot tlie so-caued Lombardi players
~ and brought In his own
~ He sent quarterback Don Hern to Denver-Lombard• always
~was high on Horn-m the first deal he made and 1t worked out
Velma Matlack Cassady
fine for the Packers because they acquired Ute Broncos f1rst
Leola Cooper Clem Cooper
draft chmce, who turned out to be John Brockington
Lowell
Matlack
Faye
Others Sent Peeking
Malia,k Carl Matlack Lourse
Others who Devtne sent pecking were Donny Anderson Jun
M Matlack DoroUty Lambert
Grabowski, TraVIS Williams and Lionel Aldrulge All bore the
John Lambert to Raymond
Lombardi stamp
Cla1r casstdy 38'h A Ohve
Most of DeVIlle s deals have been good ones
Pat E Mitchell Marcella
He got MacArUtur Lane unhappy m St Lou1s for Anderson
Soe Mttchell to Marvm B
' and Lane lS one of Ute btg reasons the Packers are atop the W1lson Roberta H Wilson
' Central DtvlSion m Ute NFC nght now The former Cardmals
Rutland
Davtd L Huddleston Mary
runnmg back has been domg a tremendous JOb blockmg for
Ann Huddleston to Jesse
Brockmgton and Is Ute leadmg pass receJVer on the club as well
Morns
Dorothy Morns
as Ute second leadmg rusher
Parcel Sutton
Lane likes bemg wtth the Packers and alUtough he never
Trustees Hysell Run Free
played for Lombardi he sees some of Lombardi s mfluence still
MeUtodtst O.urch to VIctor H
With the club
You know how the sweep works well tt s JUSt been handed Cremeans Marjorie Ann
down from Lombardi to Bengtson to Devme he says These Cremeans, 13 10 A Rutland
Russell Qmllen Velma
guys love to run a sweep bemg a Packer you always Utmk of
Quillen to Robert L LewiS
Lombardi His name always seems to come up some way
Marvel L leWIS 25 A , letart
" Everybody used to be afraid of hun says Lane
Franklm Real Estate Co to
Everybody's Still Scared
General Telephone Co Ease
' Everybody s s!Jll scared of him
Vmton
When he f~rst arrtved tn Green Bay DeVIlle was always bemg
Marvtn D Miller Helen
compared wiUt Lombardi Not so much anymore although as Mtller Minme M Marsha, aka
Lane says, Lombardi s name always seems to pop up some way
M1M1e Marsh to Franklin Real
" Devtne is In the second year of a ftve year contract now He Estate Co Parcel Salem
obvwusly is beginning to feel more at home than he dtd a year
Donald Gosney RuUt Gosney
'8lld a half ago
to Valley Lumber &amp; Supply Co
During Monday s press conference m Green Bay, for example
lnd Lots, Mtddleport
Bernard J Eynon Norma
someone asked him how he felt about Ute game wtth second.place
M!Mesota commg up this Sunday Was he looking ahead to 1!? Eynon Emtl G Eynon
Geraldine Eynon Carrol F
Devtne used to answering all kinds of questions by now sa1d
The only Utmg I look ahead to Is the re-hlrmg of Ute head Netgler Wanda 0 Netgler
Robert Re1ber Wlima B
coach
Retber, Ivan Watson, Marjorte
Now there s somethmg Lombardi wouldn t say
E Watson to Terry Wolfe
That wasn t his kind of hwnor
Deborah Wolfe, 92 A , Sutton
Polly A Spence Paul N
Spence Edgar J Hartung
season and career money Sharon A Hartung to Harry
RECORDS SET
" NEW YORK (UPI) - Jack w10mng records the PGA Michael Carleton Candace
Nicklaus who ftnlshed tn the announced Monday He won Elaine Carleton Parcels
money tn all 19 tourneys tn $320 542 to boost hiS career Salisbury
wh1ch he took pert set smgle total to $1 703 705 99
Kenneth L
Hartung,

-·, Today's

::·! Sport Parade
""'"

....
,,

gg_

Gabnel satd but I can throw
the ball Ute way I used to and
alii care about now 1s staymg
together long enough to ftntsh
the year WIUt the t1Ue
No questton Gabrtel was Ute
man of Ute hour m Monday
mght s g¥fle played before a
crowd of 61 215 at Candlestick
Park and a national televtston
aud1ence He threw Ute ball 26
tunes completmg 11 passes for
175 yards Hts scormg stnkes
covered 26 yards to Bob Klem
and 39 yal'ds to WJ!Ite Elltson
And when he wasn t throwmg
Ute ball he dtd a fme JOb of out
guessmg the San Francisco
defense w1Ut vartous ruonlng
plays
The strangest play of all
though was called by Coach
Tommy ProUtro the ftrst time
Ute Rams got Ute ball
In essence four linemen and
two runrung backs spltt off
about etght yards from Ute rest
of Ute team Elltson lmed up In

Bucks slip by

Irish, 81-75

i

Transfers

6
6
6
6

The b1ddmg has been
w..t North East

College BKB Results By Umfed Wynsbrg 108 Wash&amp;Jetl 50
Wstmnstr Pa ao Allghny 68
Press International
Duquesne 43 Stubnvl 34
Dowl ng 53 Queens 50
St Bon a3 Bwlng Grn 70
Thos More 65 Xavier 0 64

Don Sllmskt made two free
Utrows WJUt I 52 left to put Ute
lrtsh ahead, 6~7 before War
dell Jackson s jump shot 18
seconds later !ted rt agam
Btll Andreas a sophomore
had 19 pomls to back up Hor
nayk tn the Oh10 State scormg
column whtle center Luke
Wttte had 14 and Jackson had
10
Ohto State (81) - Hornyak
10 2 22 Andreas 9 I 19 Wttle 7
0 14 Jacson 4 2 10 Gerhard J.
2 a Wenner 4 0 8 Wolle 0 0 0
Merchant 0 0 0 Totals 37 7 81
Notre Dame (75)- Novak 3
0 6 Schumal II 5 27 Crotty 2
4 8 Brokaw 8 2 1a Clay 7 0 14
Stltnsk t 0 2 2 Varga 0 0 0
Stevens 0 0 0 Totals 31 13 75
Ha fl me Notre Dame 97
Oh o Stale 29
Regulat1on t 1me 69 69
Fouled out none

Tolal fouls Ohto Slate 18
Notre Dame 15
A - 10 112

College cage
ratings by UPI

Purdue
looks for
new coach

Iowa 79 Kentucky 66

V ncenncs 117 S W M 1ch 79
Wabash 72 Earlham 59

S C Sl 73 Fayttevl 71
Bentley 78
S Peters 78 Stnhll 68
Ill ao Vlpra so 62
So Car 76 liN L V 49
N C St 144 Ga Sou tOO
Loyola il l 79 Loras 65
0 Roberts 90 WIS 74
Fa rlld a2 Stn Hall 71
Pttt 99 Rutgers 73
College grid
Mont 71 Stout St 60
Murray St 83 Mo Wsn 71
West Ga a9 Wsn Ky aa
ratings by UPI
Ok St 96 Corps Ch rstJ a3
NEW YORK IUPI) The Prar e Vw 74 Grfti blng 68
Un ted Pr ess Internal onal top Sante F• 68 Ft r.W!i 63
20 ma or college football teams Weber St 84 Lyla Cal 74
w lh f r st place votes and won
los t r ecord s n parentheses

IF na l Week)

Team

1 Sou Cal 135) Ill 0)
2 Oklahoma Ito I)
J Oh o Slat e 191)
• Alebama (lO I)
5 Texas (9 I)
6 M chtgan 110 I)
7 Aubu rn (9 11
8 Penn State 110 I)
9 Nebraska (8 2 I)
tO La Sl (9 I I)
11

Pomts Houston 77 Colorado 72

Tennessee (9 21

12 Notre Dame (B2)
13 Ar z Sf 19 2)
14 IT e)Colo(aJ)
14 iTe)No Car (91)
16 Lou svtlle 19 I)
17 IT e) UCLA (a 3)
17 (Te) Wash Sl (74)
17 !Tie) Utah St Ia 31
20 San Otego Sl (tO t)

L\FAYETIE lnd (UP!) Purdue began Ute search for a
new football coach today
following the res1gnation of
Bob DeMoss who produced
great quarterbacks but failed
to produce a winnmg team
DeMoss who developed Len
Dawson Bob Gnese and
:~:~:::::::::::::::::* M1ke
Phtpps when he
was an asstslant coac h
res tgn ed Monday after
lh1ee years as head coach
ABA
Slandongs
m wh1ch Ius record was 13 18
By Umted Press Interna tional
East
nus has been the toughest
w I pet g b dectsJon of my life
sa1d
Carol1 na
11 621
ta 13 552 2 DeMoss who mststed he was
V rgm a
16
14 t2 53a 2 , not pushed out My fam1ly
Ken lucky
New York
10 14 417 5 ' and my untverslty come ftrst
Memph s
9 IB 333 8
w1UtmeandlfeelthatUteywlll
West
w I pet g b both benefit by my deCISIOn to
lndtana
17 9 654
leave coaching
Denver
12 I1 522 3 '
The Boilermakers were one
Utah
15 14 517 3 '
San o ego
14 16 467 s of Ute preseason favorites for
Dallas
8 15 348 7 ' the Big Ten champtonshlp this
Monday s Results
year but flntshed wtth a
Carol
na
132
Dallas
110
dtsappomting
6-5 overall
(Only game scheduled )
Tuesdays Games
record They lost Ute1r ftrst
1No games scheduled)
three games whtle DeMoss
WHA Standtngs
SWitched to Ute Wishbone of
By Un1fed Press lnternahonal fense and Uten back to a
East
wltptsglga Power I but eventually
Cleveland 15 10 1 31 93 70 worked into contention for Ute
New Eng
15 9 1 31 107 ao Btg Ten tttle before losing to
New York 1412 0 28 111 95 Mtch 1gan
State
and
Quebec
12 10 1 25 82 78
Ottawa
12 11 1 25 87 99 Michigan
Ph Ia
6 17 o 12 69 no DeMoss wlll become an
Wesl
~~lll'~lto Athletic Dirf!lli.Pf ...
l 1 '"I"' • WI I I Pll: gt ' gl111
ge King '\ltlO llllld 'lht!!'t! t
Winnipeg 17 11 2 ~6 109 B7
1
Mnnesola 13 9 t 2~ 7~ ao lflll/,1 no ,preSSllfRH\I'haiSRAWell 1
Los Ang
13 14 t 27 ~3 97 on llob tn h1s decision-making
Alberta
12 14 2 26 85 98 process
Houston
11 13 t 23 at 82
Ch cago
5 15 I II 55 72 King satd Ute replacement
Monday s Results
for DeMoss must be ' a top.
New England 7 Ottawa 2
fltght
coach and a class guy
1Only game scheduled)
and satd he hopes a new coach
Tuesday s Games
Quebec at W1nn1peg
can be chosen Within a couple
Cleve at Ph ladelphta
of weeks
Ch cago at Mmnesota

Lock Haven 75 Jumata 58

W dner 65 Glssbro 55
St Fran Pa 83 Sl V nc 60

350
302
237

209

172
150
144
13T
66

59
35
14

•s

5
4

3
3
3

2

What do you do about the
Santa.ctown the-ch1mney bit
1f you hve m a 20 story htgh
nse' Try to con the ktds mto
the mcmerator as bemg a
gocd1e chute•

Pro Standings

REGUlAR tl9 91

(ut!'MJ

199

aEGUlAI3 60

New York at Houston

(Only games scheduled)

NFL Stand&gt;ngs
By Un1ted Press Inter national

BARBS

By PHIL PASTORET
East
Dtsc JOCks who play by the
w It pet pi pa
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
x
Wa
sh
11
1
o
917
295
1
60
charts
are record players
Un ted Press Internal onal lop
Dallas
9
3
0
750
282
193
• • •
20 maJOr college basketball
NY
G
ants
7
5
0
5a3
295
221
Punk km v•e IS the aw
teams w th f rst place votes and
2 9 I 20a 145 266 jul stuff your mother m
won lost records m paren St Louts
Ph lade!ph a
theses (Ftrst Week )
2 9 1 20ll 110 307 law bakes
Pomts
Team
• • •
Central
I UCLA t31) (3 01
310
w
I
t
pet
pi
pa
You have only x num
2 FlordaSt (10)
235 Green Bay 8 4 0 667 251 199
3 Maryland (2 O)
ber of days till Chmtmas
183 Mmnesota
7 5 0 5a3 277 209 to get the beverage cans
4 Mtnnesota (2 0)
166
Oelrolt
7 5 0 583 284 252 from the video football
5 Marquette (I O)
130
3 a t 292 t83 235
6 Long Beach St II 0)
105 Chtcago
season out from under the
West
7 No Car St (2 0)
94
furmture
7 5 0 583 255 237
B SW La ( I 0)
70 Allan fa
9 Kentutky t I 0)
54 San Fran 6 5 I 542 313 232
Los Ang
6 5 I 542 260 22a
tO Pennsylvanta (I O)
40
NewOrlns
2 9 I 208 ta5 314
Mondays Game
II Kansas St (2 0)
33
Amer•can Conference
NY Jets at Oak twll te
12 North Carol na t2 0) 32
East
I Only game scheduled!
13 tl&gt;e) M1ch (I 0)
30
13 ( lte) Mmphs St (I 0) 30
12w 0I 0t 1pet
000 346
pf 158
pa • - - - - - - - - - .
15 (t e) 0 Robrts 10 0)
22 ,. M1am
7 5 0 583 341 274
15 (t e) Sou Cal (2 0) 22 NY Jets
more 5 7 0 417 225 212
17 Oh10 St (I I)
20 Balli
Buffalo
3 9 0 250212339
18
18 Prov den&lt;e 10 Ol
New Eng 2 10 0 167 154 391
17
19 lfle) Jaxonvl (1 0)
Central
19 (t e) Tenn (1 01
17
VALU•
wlfpct pfpa
RATIED
Ptltsbrgh 9 3 0 750 ~10 170
Cleveland a 4 o 667 215 2t5
Jackquelyn Sue Hartung to C nc•nnat 7 5 0 5a3 214 ta5
USED CARS
I II 0 Oll3 144 310
Harry Mtchael Carleton Houston
West
Candace Elame Carleton
w It pel pi pa
X Oaklnd
8 3 I 708 313 211
Parcels, Salisbury
Kan C ty
6 6 0 500 246 230
Umon Trust Natl Bank San
Otego 4 7 1 375 249 282
Exec Trus Sophia R Poole Denver
3 9 0 250 242 316
x Cl nched dlvJS on fllle
dec to Anna Bowser Bailey
Monday s Results
Owen Cochran Bowser Helen
V 8 motor auto trans and
Los Ang 26 San Franc sco 16
steer•ng
power
Jackson Bowser Fred Meals
IOnly game stheduled)
Bowser to Neila Hutton Floyd
Saturday s Games
Cleve
at Cmc nnat1
0 Baker, Helen E Baker
Washtnglon
at Dallas
Arlus R Baker Mary E
IOnly games scheduled )
No payments until after
Baker, Pauline Beattie exec
Sunday s Game'
Jan I 197l
Atlanta at San Fran
Harold P Taylor dec Pauline
Balttmore al Kan C ty
Peattle, Clarence R Peattle
Chtcagoal Philadelphla
Donald M Wolf, Irma Jean
DetrOJt at Bulfalo
You II Like Our Quality
Green Bay at Mtnnesota
Wolf, Richard A Taylor Ada
Way
of Oolf19 Business
Los Angeles at St Louis
E Taylor to Uruted States of
GMAC
FINANCING
M1amt at NY G1ants
992
5342
Pomeroy
New Eng at New Orleans
Opeo Evenings Til I 00
Suste
P llsburgh at Houston
Til 5 PM, Set
San Otego at Denver
Lemley to Sam N Arnold Ruth
!Only games scheduled)
E Arnold, Lot, Syracuse
Leo C Kennedy Jr , Julia A
Kennedy to Fred C Rider
Verdie M R1der , 6 A
Salisbury
PHO~E 992 2342
L, Edgar Reynolds Adm
MIDDLEPORT, 0
Horace McElhinney to Terry
WUIIs Jeanne Willis, 100 A.,
Salisbury
Howard L Folden, dec'd to
Leona Folden Carol A
Folden Loyal A Folden,
Myrtle Queen, Aff Trans ,
Qllumbla
Largest
Herman B Bailey, dec'd to
Doria L Finnigan, Mary Jean
Harrilon, Cert Trans Mldcleport
Nahona I Conference

72 OiEVY
NOVA 4 DOOR

• 39
VAlUE

239

SWIVEL LANTERN
8.48 VAliJE

588

C/N COAlED 81AOES
hand e Ul opp oved cho gtr

unit

Rugged I pltct
lpoll vh b•um

case

4 /2

" yl (00 ed

hond • 1land

DISS'I'ON

~~
GRASS SHEAR
Pu a~bvl

whe

f

on 1heora cui g au ortr
Pt monen! bo le es

e

tho gt o ~e tnl g hl

1999
TEFLON COATED BLADES

•2695

~~~~-~~;~:e.r-~L:em~~l;ey,

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FAULK ON TEAM
Announcement Monday of
the All SEOAL Football
banquet at Ironton High
School Thursday evening
omttted the name of Metgs
High s star runnmg back
Chuck Faulk who won All
League reeogmtlon
Others to be recognized
from the Metgs Marauder
football team are B1ll
Chaney and Andy Vaughan
all league
and
Lou
McKmney and Dallas
Weber honorable mention

the other Rams pomls Steve
Spurner threw his 17Ut and
18th scortng passes of the
year- tops m Ute NF~nd
Bruce Gossett booted a 31 yard
fteld goal for the San Francisco
pomts
The 49ers and Rams now are
6-5-1 wtUt two games to play
San FranciSCO hosts Atlanta
next Sunday whtle the Rams
play at St l.oms The 49ers
then fmish against Mmnesota
the Rams agrunst Ute Ltons and
the Falcons who are 7-5 at Ute
moment agamst Kansas City

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

WINTER TIRE SALE
WINTER TREADS

now 2-l ahead for good at 77 75
and they wrapped tt up by
scormg the !mal four points
The lr1sh led 37-29 at half
tune and held Ute edge almost
until Ute end But Ohto State
moved WIUtm two pomts 67~ ,
wtUt an 6-2 scormg surge and
fmally tied tt wtUt 2 33 left m
regulatton play on a 20 foot
Jump shot by Dan Gerhard who
flipped 1t m form Ute top of Ute

front of Lance Renlzel w1Ut t11e
spltl group whtle three
linemen Wide recetver Jack
Snow and runmng hack Jun
Bertelsen stayed togeUter
Bertelsen took a stratght
snap from center hke tn Ute
old smg!e wmg days whtle
Snow went mto mohon to Ute
nght 3ertelsen ran t.o hts left
and Elhson came around to
meet htm took the hall and ran
stratght ahead for a gam of
mne yards
Davtd Ray who had 19 fteld
goals commg mto the game
added four more-of 32 12 19
and 42 yards-U&gt; account for

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�•
Sentinel, Mlddloport.-Pcmeroy, 0., Dec. ~. 1972

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Dec. 5,1972

Bruins unanimous choice as country's top five
Thompson flips
in 40, NC ·romps
lly United Press lntemallonal

'

David Thompson continues
to draw superlatives wherever
II!! plays and North · Carolina
State's point-production continues to border on the
88tronomical.
Thompson, ri highly touted
lllphon\ore from Shelby, N.C.,
poured in 40 ppints Monday
night as tl1e :oeventh-ranked
Wolfpack set a school scoring
record by clobbering Georgia
Soutl\ern, 144-100. The previous
record-139 points- was set
three years ago against AtlanUc Christian.
Seven State players hit in
double figures, with 7-foot-4
Tom Burleson hitting 21 points
aod Rich Ho!dt 20. Thompson,
a 6-li whiz, sparked a 76-point,
second-ball burst that snapped
the school record and handed
the Wolfpack its third victory
without a defeat.
"I couldn't believe anybody
was that good," said Georgia
Southern Coa~b J. E. Rowe.
"I'd pay money to see. him."
In other action involving
ranked teams, li'lorida State
(2) ripped Eastern Kentucky,
rl-70, Minnesota (4) routed
Wl.&amp;consin-Milwaukee, 79-M,
Kentucky (9) was upset, 79-M,
by Jowa.

Kansas State trill)llled Utah,
65-59, Michigan cruised past
Oregon State, 68-57, Oral
Roberts dowlied Wisconsin , 9076, and.Ohio.State edged Notre
Dame, 81-75, in overtime.
Ron King's 20 points carred
Florida State over Eastern
Kentucky and Dave Winfield ·
came off the bench to score 14
points and take down eight
rebounds as Minnesota downed
Wisconsin-Milwaukee. Kevin
Kunnert, Iowa's 7-1 center,
scored 17 points to spark the
upset over Kentucky and
Henry Wilmore hit 26 in
leading Michigan past Oregon
State.
Ernie Kusnyer scored 16 of
his 22 points in the second half
as Kansas State topped Utah
IU)d David ·vaughn and Rich
Fuqua combined lor 49 points
in Oral Roberts' victory over
Wisconsin. Allan Hornyak's 22
points, including the go-ahead
basket in overtime, carried
Ohio State past Notre Dame.
Elsewhere, Kevin Joyce's 18
points helped South Carolina
stop Nevada-Las Vegas, 76-49,
and 'Nlck Weatherspoon had 29
points and 19 rebounds to pace
Dlinois to an ~2 rout of
Valparaiso.

NEW YORK (UPI )- lf the
early returns are any indication , the Bruins of UCLA will
be hard, il not downright impossible, to stop in their que&amp;1
for a seventh straight NCAA
college basketball championship.
.
UCLA, winner of its first
three games this season and
currently riding a 411-game
winning streak, second longest
in major college history. \vas

the unanimous choice of the
United Press International's
Hoard of Coaches again this
week as the top team in. the
'country: The Bruins received
first -place nOds from all · 31
coaches who participated in
thi s week's balloting and
finished with 310 points.
F1orida State, beaten by
UCLA in last season's NCAA
championsh ip game, remained
in second place with 235 points

Cougars humble Chaps
DALLAS
( UPI)-THE
Carolina Cougars utilized Billy
Cunningham on offense and
Joe Caldwell on defense,
holding Dallas' leading scorer
Rich Jones to lour points, and
routed the Chaparrals, 132-110,
Monday night .
It was the only game in the
American Basketball Association Monday night. All tl1e
teams are idle tonight.
Cunningham scored 28 points
and paced the Cougars to a 5944 halltirrfe lead and the
Cougars were never headed.
The victory increased

Tonight's games
I High School)
Gallipolis at Chesapeake
North Gallla at Southwestern
Symmes Valley at Hannan

Trace

Kyger Creek at Southern
(College)

Otterbein at Rio Grand£&gt;

Carolina's Eastern Division
lead over second-place
Virginia by two full games
behind Indiana.
Hob Netolicky paced the
Chaparrals with 24 points.
Carolina's widest lead came
with 8:02lelt at 11~79 . The loss
was the sixth straight at home
for the Chaps.
POPULATION UP
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Census Bureau estimated
today the ·American population
reached lm,298,000 Oct. I, up
159,000 from Sept. I.
The population was up 1.7
million from Oct. I, 1971, or 0.8
per cent.
'
Census Bureau officials said
the September increase inCluded a natural gain-e&lt;cess
births over deaths~! about
131,000, pius net immigration of
27,000. ..

following its seasnn-&lt;rpening.
109-97 victory over Georgia
Southern wh.ile Maryland (2-ll),
Minnesota (2-ll) and Marquette
(!.())retained their positions as
the third, fourth and filth
ranked teams, respectively.
The first change among the
top ten saw Long Beach State,
a 90-63 victor over North Texas
State, move up from eighth to
sixth in place of Ohio State (II) following a 67~ loss to
WMhington .
North Carolina State (2.())
jumped from loth to seventh;
Southwestern Louisiana ( I-ll)

replaced Long Beach State at
Midwest: Fred Taylor, Ohio
eighth; Kentucky, despite a 75- · State; James Snyder, Ohio U.;
66 triumph over Michigan Harv Schmid!, Diinois; Digger
State, fell from seventh to ninth Phelps; Notre Dame; Ray
and Pennsylvania (1-0) went Meyer, DePaul.
from ninth to tenth to round out
Midlands: Joe Cipriano, Nethe Top Ten .
braska; Ted Owens, Kansasi
Here by secUons are the Norm Stewart, Missouri; Maucoaches · who comprise the ry John, Iowa State; Abe
United Press International Lemons, Oklahoma City.
Major College Basketball
South: Frank McGuire,
Ratings Hoard:
South Carolina; Dean Smith,
East: Hob · Harrison, Har- North Carolina; Lefty Driesell,
vard; Harry Litwack, Temple; · Maryland; Roy Skinner,
"Red" Manning, Duquesne; Vanderbilt; Hugh Durham,
Frank Mulzoff, St. John's; Florida State.
Larry Weise, St. Bonaventure.
Southwest: Guy Lewis,

Ruu se and

DHIP

each had 12, and Dan Bollinger
came orr the bench to score 11.
Rio Grande enters tonight's
game with a 1-11 record while
Orrerbein is 2·1. The Cardinals
are playing their first road
game of the season after
bearing Wilberforce and
Oberli n and losing Saturday to
Akron, 87-72.
Against Wilberforce, Rio
won 106-84 and Otterbein

Th ompson

Tampa starter out
with gun shot wound
TAMPA, Fla. (UPI) University of Tamp~ fullback
Ernie Dubose should be
recovered enough from a
gunshot wound in the leg to
play in the Spartans'
Tangerine Bowl game against
Ken t State Dec. 29, according
to university officials.
A spokesman said, however.

NEW YORK (UP!) -Just. as
Herman Weinstein stepped into
the subway car, someone
grabbed the case he was

Dubose - the Spa rta ~s second
leading scorer - will miss
practice for a week because of
the small caliber wound below
his left knee.
Dubose told police he was
shot trying to rescue a girl.
John Salla of the Hillsborough County sheriff's office
said Dubose..told him he was
driving near Myrtle Hili
ceme te ry about noon Sunday
when he saw a man struggling
with a girl.
Dubose said he stopped and
was told by the man to leave.
He said he asked the girl if she

car;rying and fled.

needed hel~ anl1 tl:@i hlbt\ pulled

RAT POISON STOLEN

defeated the Bulldogs, 103-79.
Ot terbein, a member of the
rugged Ohio Conference,
finished third in league play
last season with an overall
record of 16,8. Otterbein
whipped the Redmen last
January at Westerville by a
score of 87-71. Gone from that
team are four Cardinal .starte rs plus coach Curt Tong.
Tong's job was awarded to
Dick Reynolds, an assistant
coach and former player at
Otterbein .
The lone returning starter is
ail-purpose athlete Steve
Traylor. Traylor, a 6' guard,
just finished lip the football
season with the Cardinals. He
was named to the AilConference team last week and
also has lettered in baseball.
Traylor· averaged 11.3 points
per game last season.
Otterbein, while under Curt
Tung ,
played
pattern
ba.sketbail; however, new head
coach Reynolds hints Otterbein
may open up their attack this
season. The Cardinals start
th ree se ni ors and two

Board of Directors, Granville; John Hauck, Ohio Tourist
Center, Founder, Granville; Charles R. Vessels, Account
Representative, Ohio Tourist Center, Claysville; Earl R.
Voorhies, President, Ohio Tourist Center Inc., Granville;
Mayor Robert Scott, Mayor, Cambridge, and Dr. A. B.
Humphrey, Account Representative, Ohio Tourist Center,
Gahanna.

·

Houston, Bob Prewitt, SMU;

PORK
VALUES

Beryl Shipley, · Southwestern:
Louisiana; Ned Wulk,

Arizona:

state.
•
Mountains: "Sox" Walleth,!

.~

Colorado; Bill Strannlgan,
Wyoming; Lou Henson, New
Mexico State; Bill Foster,
Utah; Gene Visscher, Weber
State.
Pacific: Johnny Wooden ,
UCLA; Bob Boyd, Southern
California; Howie Dallmar,
Stanford; M~rv Harshman,
Washington; Ralph Miller,
Oregon State.

.

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· · w·1eners ........................ .1.~ : ..·49*
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Inspected

The Fairland Dragons high :
school band will perform this ~
even ing as the guest pep band. •
The Point Pleasant high school :
stage band entertained during ;
Saturday's homecoming·game. ~
Coach Bob Leith's JV team, :
after dropping a 81-79 decision :
to Wilberforce, meets the Ohio ;
University- Chillicothe branch
team beginning at 5:45 p.m.

By

'

Boston Butt
ROAST

· SUPERIORS
USDA CHOICE

sophomores. It is a typical
Otterbein team with very little
height, but good size. The
Cardinals tallest starters are 11
6'4
.
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a pistol and shot him.
Dubose said the couple then
fieri through the cemetery. He
said he crawled to his car an'd
drove to Tampa . General
Hospital where he was treated
and released.
Dubose scored six touchrains to the Bible and our
religious heritage. Motels and downs in Tampa's 9·2 regular
campgrounds will be added as season, rushing for 579 yards in
demand for these ac- 11 2 carries and catching nine
passes for 116 yards.
commodations· increases.

16 oz.
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Ground broken for huge
Biblelands project in Ohio
CAMBRIDGE, Ohio - Last historians and archaeologists
Sunday afternoon ground was the very highest scholarship in
broken near Cambridge to developing this center will be
begi n construction on the obtained. The reproductions,
multi-million dollar Biblelands arrangements , and exproject. The president of Ohio planations will be designed to
Tourist Center, Earl R. teach as accurately as possible
Voorhies, guided the plow, a the history of the Judeacopy of a 2,000 year oldi Christian religion, without
advoca ling the doctrine of any
Palestinian plow!
Voorhies said, "We are doing parti cu lar denomination .
an enormous amount of Modern teaching aids will be
research to make this center as used to make this easy to unaccurate and meaningful as derstand and interesting to
possible, so we decided to start experience.
Primarily, it will be an inwith the plow for the
spiring learning center.
ceremony.''
Th ere · will be numerous
Soon one will be able to visit
the Holy Land without paying activities to entertain children
$1,000 to go and worry about while they are discovering how
mortar shells and terrorist interesting the Bible really is.
Voorhies said he hopes that
bombs. In fact, one won't even
the
first phase of Bibieiands
have to suffer tetanus and
cholera shots, because he can will open next summer. It will
see· how it was in the Land of feature a series of cycioramic
Abraham, Moses and Jesus scenes depicting highlight
and never leave even Ohio.
events of the Old Testament.
In the actual countries of the These scenes will be created in
Bible, things are not like they authentic style settings and
were during the life of Christ. will present artistic imInstead of a temple there is a pressions or the characters
Mohall)medan mosque. Where sculptured in life size wax
there was a manger there is a ligures.
bullcllng, and so on from one
The ligures will be dressed in
dllappointmenl to another. The appropriate attire and will be
museums there contain arranged in a dramatic
genuine artifacts, but they are tableau. Walking through the
arranged so that un- cin~ra ma settings, one will feel
derstanding is difficult for almost like he was there when
anyone but a scholar.
the event happened. Whl,le
Agroup of Christian business observing the scene, a tape
men In Ohio are committed to recorded explanation will help
daillll pnething about it. They the individual understand how
incorpQrated "Ohio Tourist it relates to the faith and the
Center" lll1d laiUiched a $30 · Bible history.
miWon "Biblelanda" project to
Ther~ will also be craft shops
be buUI llllf here. It will be where art and arUfacls of the
·located on alartle tract olland biblical world, and replicas of
purchued by the Ohio Tourist pottery will be made . In
Center at the world 'a largest several lakes ·stocked with
lll~erc:~~ance. 1-10 lll1d I-77.
different kinds of flsh, tourists
JiW.Ianda will feature will be able to fish and take
~ Ill the life and their catch to a Galilean
un. ot the blblleal world. In restaurant to have it cooked
eollallorallon with biblical · according to ,old world recipes
•

.

bon Haskins, Texas El Pa10;:

· The suitcase was filled with
dangerous poison Weinstein
uses in his job as a rat killer in
the subways. So far the suitcase has not been found.

BIBI.ELANDS BEGUN WITH PALESTINIAN PI..OWJ..eft to right are Frank Roughton, Director of Productions,
Ohio Tourist Center, Inc., Granville; W. Grant Halley,
Project C&lt;Hlrdinator, Ohio Tourist Center, Inc., Granville;
Thomas Massalas, Ohio Tourist Center, Inc., Founder,
Newark; Harold Sargent,
. TreaSID'er of Ohio. Tourist Center

.

~-m
•.:.;e::..;!__S_ee__O~u~r..;.N.;..;e;.;w;...·;;;;L~oo_k~!~N~ew~·~F_..;lo,;...o;;.;r~N;.;e;..;.;w~Wl..;i.;;.de;,;r..;A;..:A.:.:is;.:.:le;.;s~·~·~· •

•

Cardinals invade Lyne
Center or cage battle
Coach Art Lanham 's Rio
Grande Redmen, after a brief
rwo day rest following
Saturday night's homecoming
win over Wilberforce, will
meer the Otterbein Cardinals
ar Lyne Center this evening.
Tipufl time is 8 p.m. Rio, iQ
downing Wilberforce Saturday,
placed five men in double
figures. Ron Lambert collected
24. Steve Bartram 23, Mike

.

or American style.
Phase · Two will feature a
theat re lor the presentation of
a spectacular live drama on
the Life of Christ.. An "8lectronic Maps" display outlining
t.he complete history of the
biblical world will be completed in Phase Two.
Phase Three will consist of
reproductions of important
places in towns and villages
throughout Bible history.
F'or example, Ur will be the
location of Bedowin style tents
such as may have been used by
Abraham. Damascus will have
fascinating bazaars. There will
be rides on camels, donkeys,
and horses. Ox earls, and
chariot rides will be available
for those who prefer not to sit
on an animal. A piayiand
pyramid lor children will
display how pyramids w~re
built. A place is provided
where children can help make
bricks with mud and straw as
the Jews did in Egypt.
The wilderness area, though
without a MI. Sinai, will have a
reconstruction of the tabernacle according to the best

r·esea rch available. A replica
or Solomon's Temple will also
be one of the most significant
features of Biblelands.
A
Roman
Fortress,
Palestinian inn, an authentic
manger and a carpenter shop
wi ll ai l be interestin g
reproductions from the time of
Jesus.
A museum of biblical archaeology will
display
mrlhentic artifacts from excavations in the Holy Land. A
statue of a "Smiling Christ"
will represent Jesus in an
important but seldom seen
·attitude in art.
In ail , there will be
representatives ·or Egyptian,
Heb r ew, Assyrian,
Babylonian, Persian, Greek
.and Roman culture as it per-

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Sentinel, Mlddloport.-Pcmeroy, 0., Dec. ~. 1972

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Dec. 5,1972

Bruins unanimous choice as country's top five
Thompson flips
in 40, NC ·romps
lly United Press lntemallonal

'

David Thompson continues
to draw superlatives wherever
II!! plays and North · Carolina
State's point-production continues to border on the
88tronomical.
Thompson, ri highly touted
lllphon\ore from Shelby, N.C.,
poured in 40 ppints Monday
night as tl1e :oeventh-ranked
Wolfpack set a school scoring
record by clobbering Georgia
Soutl\ern, 144-100. The previous
record-139 points- was set
three years ago against AtlanUc Christian.
Seven State players hit in
double figures, with 7-foot-4
Tom Burleson hitting 21 points
aod Rich Ho!dt 20. Thompson,
a 6-li whiz, sparked a 76-point,
second-ball burst that snapped
the school record and handed
the Wolfpack its third victory
without a defeat.
"I couldn't believe anybody
was that good," said Georgia
Southern Coa~b J. E. Rowe.
"I'd pay money to see. him."
In other action involving
ranked teams, li'lorida State
(2) ripped Eastern Kentucky,
rl-70, Minnesota (4) routed
Wl.&amp;consin-Milwaukee, 79-M,
Kentucky (9) was upset, 79-M,
by Jowa.

Kansas State trill)llled Utah,
65-59, Michigan cruised past
Oregon State, 68-57, Oral
Roberts dowlied Wisconsin , 9076, and.Ohio.State edged Notre
Dame, 81-75, in overtime.
Ron King's 20 points carred
Florida State over Eastern
Kentucky and Dave Winfield ·
came off the bench to score 14
points and take down eight
rebounds as Minnesota downed
Wisconsin-Milwaukee. Kevin
Kunnert, Iowa's 7-1 center,
scored 17 points to spark the
upset over Kentucky and
Henry Wilmore hit 26 in
leading Michigan past Oregon
State.
Ernie Kusnyer scored 16 of
his 22 points in the second half
as Kansas State topped Utah
IU)d David ·vaughn and Rich
Fuqua combined lor 49 points
in Oral Roberts' victory over
Wisconsin. Allan Hornyak's 22
points, including the go-ahead
basket in overtime, carried
Ohio State past Notre Dame.
Elsewhere, Kevin Joyce's 18
points helped South Carolina
stop Nevada-Las Vegas, 76-49,
and 'Nlck Weatherspoon had 29
points and 19 rebounds to pace
Dlinois to an ~2 rout of
Valparaiso.

NEW YORK (UPI )- lf the
early returns are any indication , the Bruins of UCLA will
be hard, il not downright impossible, to stop in their que&amp;1
for a seventh straight NCAA
college basketball championship.
.
UCLA, winner of its first
three games this season and
currently riding a 411-game
winning streak, second longest
in major college history. \vas

the unanimous choice of the
United Press International's
Hoard of Coaches again this
week as the top team in. the
'country: The Bruins received
first -place nOds from all · 31
coaches who participated in
thi s week's balloting and
finished with 310 points.
F1orida State, beaten by
UCLA in last season's NCAA
championsh ip game, remained
in second place with 235 points

Cougars humble Chaps
DALLAS
( UPI)-THE
Carolina Cougars utilized Billy
Cunningham on offense and
Joe Caldwell on defense,
holding Dallas' leading scorer
Rich Jones to lour points, and
routed the Chaparrals, 132-110,
Monday night .
It was the only game in the
American Basketball Association Monday night. All tl1e
teams are idle tonight.
Cunningham scored 28 points
and paced the Cougars to a 5944 halltirrfe lead and the
Cougars were never headed.
The victory increased

Tonight's games
I High School)
Gallipolis at Chesapeake
North Gallla at Southwestern
Symmes Valley at Hannan

Trace

Kyger Creek at Southern
(College)

Otterbein at Rio Grand£&gt;

Carolina's Eastern Division
lead over second-place
Virginia by two full games
behind Indiana.
Hob Netolicky paced the
Chaparrals with 24 points.
Carolina's widest lead came
with 8:02lelt at 11~79 . The loss
was the sixth straight at home
for the Chaps.
POPULATION UP
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Census Bureau estimated
today the ·American population
reached lm,298,000 Oct. I, up
159,000 from Sept. I.
The population was up 1.7
million from Oct. I, 1971, or 0.8
per cent.
'
Census Bureau officials said
the September increase inCluded a natural gain-e&lt;cess
births over deaths~! about
131,000, pius net immigration of
27,000. ..

following its seasnn-&lt;rpening.
109-97 victory over Georgia
Southern wh.ile Maryland (2-ll),
Minnesota (2-ll) and Marquette
(!.())retained their positions as
the third, fourth and filth
ranked teams, respectively.
The first change among the
top ten saw Long Beach State,
a 90-63 victor over North Texas
State, move up from eighth to
sixth in place of Ohio State (II) following a 67~ loss to
WMhington .
North Carolina State (2.())
jumped from loth to seventh;
Southwestern Louisiana ( I-ll)

replaced Long Beach State at
Midwest: Fred Taylor, Ohio
eighth; Kentucky, despite a 75- · State; James Snyder, Ohio U.;
66 triumph over Michigan Harv Schmid!, Diinois; Digger
State, fell from seventh to ninth Phelps; Notre Dame; Ray
and Pennsylvania (1-0) went Meyer, DePaul.
from ninth to tenth to round out
Midlands: Joe Cipriano, Nethe Top Ten .
braska; Ted Owens, Kansasi
Here by secUons are the Norm Stewart, Missouri; Maucoaches · who comprise the ry John, Iowa State; Abe
United Press International Lemons, Oklahoma City.
Major College Basketball
South: Frank McGuire,
Ratings Hoard:
South Carolina; Dean Smith,
East: Hob · Harrison, Har- North Carolina; Lefty Driesell,
vard; Harry Litwack, Temple; · Maryland; Roy Skinner,
"Red" Manning, Duquesne; Vanderbilt; Hugh Durham,
Frank Mulzoff, St. John's; Florida State.
Larry Weise, St. Bonaventure.
Southwest: Guy Lewis,

Ruu se and

DHIP

each had 12, and Dan Bollinger
came orr the bench to score 11.
Rio Grande enters tonight's
game with a 1-11 record while
Orrerbein is 2·1. The Cardinals
are playing their first road
game of the season after
bearing Wilberforce and
Oberli n and losing Saturday to
Akron, 87-72.
Against Wilberforce, Rio
won 106-84 and Otterbein

Th ompson

Tampa starter out
with gun shot wound
TAMPA, Fla. (UPI) University of Tamp~ fullback
Ernie Dubose should be
recovered enough from a
gunshot wound in the leg to
play in the Spartans'
Tangerine Bowl game against
Ken t State Dec. 29, according
to university officials.
A spokesman said, however.

NEW YORK (UP!) -Just. as
Herman Weinstein stepped into
the subway car, someone
grabbed the case he was

Dubose - the Spa rta ~s second
leading scorer - will miss
practice for a week because of
the small caliber wound below
his left knee.
Dubose told police he was
shot trying to rescue a girl.
John Salla of the Hillsborough County sheriff's office
said Dubose..told him he was
driving near Myrtle Hili
ceme te ry about noon Sunday
when he saw a man struggling
with a girl.
Dubose said he stopped and
was told by the man to leave.
He said he asked the girl if she

car;rying and fled.

needed hel~ anl1 tl:@i hlbt\ pulled

RAT POISON STOLEN

defeated the Bulldogs, 103-79.
Ot terbein, a member of the
rugged Ohio Conference,
finished third in league play
last season with an overall
record of 16,8. Otterbein
whipped the Redmen last
January at Westerville by a
score of 87-71. Gone from that
team are four Cardinal .starte rs plus coach Curt Tong.
Tong's job was awarded to
Dick Reynolds, an assistant
coach and former player at
Otterbein .
The lone returning starter is
ail-purpose athlete Steve
Traylor. Traylor, a 6' guard,
just finished lip the football
season with the Cardinals. He
was named to the AilConference team last week and
also has lettered in baseball.
Traylor· averaged 11.3 points
per game last season.
Otterbein, while under Curt
Tung ,
played
pattern
ba.sketbail; however, new head
coach Reynolds hints Otterbein
may open up their attack this
season. The Cardinals start
th ree se ni ors and two

Board of Directors, Granville; John Hauck, Ohio Tourist
Center, Founder, Granville; Charles R. Vessels, Account
Representative, Ohio Tourist Center, Claysville; Earl R.
Voorhies, President, Ohio Tourist Center Inc., Granville;
Mayor Robert Scott, Mayor, Cambridge, and Dr. A. B.
Humphrey, Account Representative, Ohio Tourist Center,
Gahanna.

·

Houston, Bob Prewitt, SMU;

PORK
VALUES

Beryl Shipley, · Southwestern:
Louisiana; Ned Wulk,

Arizona:

state.
•
Mountains: "Sox" Walleth,!

.~

Colorado; Bill Strannlgan,
Wyoming; Lou Henson, New
Mexico State; Bill Foster,
Utah; Gene Visscher, Weber
State.
Pacific: Johnny Wooden ,
UCLA; Bob Boyd, Southern
California; Howie Dallmar,
Stanford; M~rv Harshman,
Washington; Ralph Miller,
Oregon State.

.

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· · w·1eners ........................ .1.~ : ..·49*
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7

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No Limit on Quanlity.

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Inspected

The Fairland Dragons high :
school band will perform this ~
even ing as the guest pep band. •
The Point Pleasant high school :
stage band entertained during ;
Saturday's homecoming·game. ~
Coach Bob Leith's JV team, :
after dropping a 81-79 decision :
to Wilberforce, meets the Ohio ;
University- Chillicothe branch
team beginning at 5:45 p.m.

By

'

Boston Butt
ROAST

· SUPERIORS
USDA CHOICE

sophomores. It is a typical
Otterbein team with very little
height, but good size. The
Cardinals tallest starters are 11
6'4
.
.

Fresh, Tender and lean

32 oz.
pkg.

.16 Ol
bots.

$ 39

•

~

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•

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NORTH STAR ·

CAPE ANN

CHRISTMAS TREES
AND SANTAS

PERCH

SPECIAL SALE!

I'
•'

t;,.

...,.

.

••
..

a pistol and shot him.
Dubose said the couple then
fieri through the cemetery. He
said he crawled to his car an'd
drove to Tampa . General
Hospital where he was treated
and released.
Dubose scored six touchrains to the Bible and our
religious heritage. Motels and downs in Tampa's 9·2 regular
campgrounds will be added as season, rushing for 579 yards in
demand for these ac- 11 2 carries and catching nine
passes for 116 yards.
commodations· increases.

16 oz.
bots.

pkg.
'

J

RHODES

BIRDS E.YE

White Bread

AWAKE

5

••

l~b.

49e

Gpak

lvs.

COCA-COLA

79~

9oz.
can

'

Diet Rite. Cola
16 oz.

•

29~

•

Ground broken for huge
Biblelands project in Ohio
CAMBRIDGE, Ohio - Last historians and archaeologists
Sunday afternoon ground was the very highest scholarship in
broken near Cambridge to developing this center will be
begi n construction on the obtained. The reproductions,
multi-million dollar Biblelands arrangements , and exproject. The president of Ohio planations will be designed to
Tourist Center, Earl R. teach as accurately as possible
Voorhies, guided the plow, a the history of the Judeacopy of a 2,000 year oldi Christian religion, without
advoca ling the doctrine of any
Palestinian plow!
Voorhies said, "We are doing parti cu lar denomination .
an enormous amount of Modern teaching aids will be
research to make this center as used to make this easy to unaccurate and meaningful as derstand and interesting to
possible, so we decided to start experience.
Primarily, it will be an inwith the plow for the
spiring learning center.
ceremony.''
Th ere · will be numerous
Soon one will be able to visit
the Holy Land without paying activities to entertain children
$1,000 to go and worry about while they are discovering how
mortar shells and terrorist interesting the Bible really is.
Voorhies said he hopes that
bombs. In fact, one won't even
the
first phase of Bibieiands
have to suffer tetanus and
cholera shots, because he can will open next summer. It will
see· how it was in the Land of feature a series of cycioramic
Abraham, Moses and Jesus scenes depicting highlight
and never leave even Ohio.
events of the Old Testament.
In the actual countries of the These scenes will be created in
Bible, things are not like they authentic style settings and
were during the life of Christ. will present artistic imInstead of a temple there is a pressions or the characters
Mohall)medan mosque. Where sculptured in life size wax
there was a manger there is a ligures.
bullcllng, and so on from one
The ligures will be dressed in
dllappointmenl to another. The appropriate attire and will be
museums there contain arranged in a dramatic
genuine artifacts, but they are tableau. Walking through the
arranged so that un- cin~ra ma settings, one will feel
derstanding is difficult for almost like he was there when
anyone but a scholar.
the event happened. Whl,le
Agroup of Christian business observing the scene, a tape
men In Ohio are committed to recorded explanation will help
daillll pnething about it. They the individual understand how
incorpQrated "Ohio Tourist it relates to the faith and the
Center" lll1d laiUiched a $30 · Bible history.
miWon "Biblelanda" project to
Ther~ will also be craft shops
be buUI llllf here. It will be where art and arUfacls of the
·located on alartle tract olland biblical world, and replicas of
purchued by the Ohio Tourist pottery will be made . In
Center at the world 'a largest several lakes ·stocked with
lll~erc:~~ance. 1-10 lll1d I-77.
different kinds of flsh, tourists
JiW.Ianda will feature will be able to fish and take
~ Ill the life and their catch to a Galilean
un. ot the blblleal world. In restaurant to have it cooked
eollallorallon with biblical · according to ,old world recipes
•

.

bon Haskins, Texas El Pa10;:

· The suitcase was filled with
dangerous poison Weinstein
uses in his job as a rat killer in
the subways. So far the suitcase has not been found.

BIBI.ELANDS BEGUN WITH PALESTINIAN PI..OWJ..eft to right are Frank Roughton, Director of Productions,
Ohio Tourist Center, Inc., Granville; W. Grant Halley,
Project C&lt;Hlrdinator, Ohio Tourist Center, Inc., Granville;
Thomas Massalas, Ohio Tourist Center, Inc., Founder,
Newark; Harold Sargent,
. TreaSID'er of Ohio. Tourist Center

.

~-m
•.:.;e::..;!__S_ee__O~u~r..;.N.;..;e;.;w;...·;;;;L~oo_k~!~N~ew~·~F_..;lo,;...o;;.;r~N;.;e;..;.;w~Wl..;i.;;.de;,;r..;A;..:A.:.:is;.:.:le;.;s~·~·~· •

•

Cardinals invade Lyne
Center or cage battle
Coach Art Lanham 's Rio
Grande Redmen, after a brief
rwo day rest following
Saturday night's homecoming
win over Wilberforce, will
meer the Otterbein Cardinals
ar Lyne Center this evening.
Tipufl time is 8 p.m. Rio, iQ
downing Wilberforce Saturday,
placed five men in double
figures. Ron Lambert collected
24. Steve Bartram 23, Mike

.

or American style.
Phase · Two will feature a
theat re lor the presentation of
a spectacular live drama on
the Life of Christ.. An "8lectronic Maps" display outlining
t.he complete history of the
biblical world will be completed in Phase Two.
Phase Three will consist of
reproductions of important
places in towns and villages
throughout Bible history.
F'or example, Ur will be the
location of Bedowin style tents
such as may have been used by
Abraham. Damascus will have
fascinating bazaars. There will
be rides on camels, donkeys,
and horses. Ox earls, and
chariot rides will be available
for those who prefer not to sit
on an animal. A piayiand
pyramid lor children will
display how pyramids w~re
built. A place is provided
where children can help make
bricks with mud and straw as
the Jews did in Egypt.
The wilderness area, though
without a MI. Sinai, will have a
reconstruction of the tabernacle according to the best

r·esea rch available. A replica
or Solomon's Temple will also
be one of the most significant
features of Biblelands.
A
Roman
Fortress,
Palestinian inn, an authentic
manger and a carpenter shop
wi ll ai l be interestin g
reproductions from the time of
Jesus.
A museum of biblical archaeology will
display
mrlhentic artifacts from excavations in the Holy Land. A
statue of a "Smiling Christ"
will represent Jesus in an
important but seldom seen
·attitude in art.
In ail , there will be
representatives ·or Egyptian,
Heb r ew, Assyrian,
Babylonian, Persian, Greek
.and Roman culture as it per-

.Paper .owesI ..................................3
•
4
·
Roberts Cooktes .......... ;.................

Christmas ifts with an
old-fashioned rl
~~"

'

T

BIG VALUE

16 oz.
bottles

DRINKS SALE!

'
Jge.
cans

'

go~

.,

••
•

••
•
•'·
•'
'•
•

SAME . DAY
SERVICE
In At 9- 0ut At 5
U•e Our Free Parking Lot

•
'''
•••

Robinson's Ceaners

•
'

••'

216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy

c

pak

tl oz.
pkgs.

Sealtest Milk ...:~.~.~.:.~ .........................
Wilson's Milk . ~~~-~~~~:-~~.............. 5
Corn Muffin Mix ·-~~~~.~.............. 10 ~:rs.
Graham Crackers ..~~~.~~~~~.................~~~· 69~
29~
SeaItest HaIf &amp; HaIf .......................
Jolli-lolli Ice Pops . ~.~.~~~~.~.~.~ ........... ;:r 49e
·Heavy Duty
Dry. Non-Fat

'.

SHIRT
FINISHING

DAD'S ROOT BEER

Jumbo
Rolls ·

gal.
crt.

Give someone in your family a bit of the
past thai can be used every day inlo the future.
Our Decorator Cradlephones come in several
styles. If vour liuing room is period Italian
Renaissance give the

......"•.,,.,,,.

SCOT LAD

WITH THIS COUPON WHEN
YOU BUY A_ lO .OZ. JAR OF

LOW PRICED

IIIII II

AIIELL HOISE•
COFFEE .
'

AT MARK V SUPER MARKET

10 OZ. JAR ONLY 99~
-------

.

SOLO CUP BATHROOM
DiSPENSER
· Specta
lntr?ductory 10~ ·
\
.
I Offer
WITH 25 FREE PASTIC CUPS" '"':""" """'~.-.............. · ·

WITH COUPON

D• COUPON PEl F,!IILY •_!FU f;!!!S_J.?-30.72 =
.. .
'

pint
only

_

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$
qts.

1

Throw-Away Bottles

•

LA·Z.· BOV

CHAIRS
Now you con buy. tha\
comfortable
La·Z·Boy
cha ir

you 've

always

dreamed of at our tow
prices.

Authorized Dealer

. MASON

FURNITURE

Horm1n Gr1to
Muon, W. V1.

, 777·5592

Mediterranean Cradlephone.
Rooms done in Louis Quatorze (or any other
Louis} will be enhanced with our Antique White
Cradlephone (not shown}. And, if you wan I to
come home bearing a classic Greek gift pick up
our·figured Grecian Cameo Cradlephone.
The Candlestick model is perfect for every
American home. Its styling comes right out of
the roaring twenties,
Call your General Telephone Gift Spedallst
who will help you select phones for everyone on a
good old·fashioned Christmas list. Even including
avant·garde styles. if you prefer something
modern to ring in the New Year.
.,

·1

&amp;

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HLM. .........

CLIP and
REDEEM TODAY!

In Oru froduce Department
Washington Red or
New Florida

CUcumbers ·
and
Peppers

Golden Delicious

APPLES
'

· 99~

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10 · S~n. 10 to 16
We Accept Federal Food Stamps
PI:IONE: 992-3480 _

Sts. ·we A-ve n.

'

..,

Ta Limit

.,

¢
each

•

�•

'

'
7-:- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-PO!neroy, 0., Dec. 5,1972

Officers
elected

MR. AND MRS. ROLLINS

'

Couple phnning open_ house
•

!

Mr. and Mrs. Roy E. Rolllns wiU observe t)leir 50th
wedding anniversary on SWJday, Dec. 17, with an open house
from 2to 4 pm. at their RD 3 Pomeroy home. Mr. and Mrs.
Rollins were married on Dec. 16,1922 at the home of the Rev.
Wesley Garrison, Putman County, Walker Ridge, W. Va.
They are the parents of six children, Mrs. EWJice Herdman,
Columbus; Miss Rena Rollins, at home; Orville Rollins of
AIIBion, Mass.; Mrs. Mary Scarberry, Muncie, Ind.; Mrs.
Glenda Benedum, ReedsviUe; Denver Rqllins, Grove City,
and one is deceased. Mr. and Mrs. Rollins have 16 grandchildren, one foster grandchild, and five greatgrandchildren.

Mrs. Bonnie Pickens ol lhe
Bradford Church of Christ was
elected pt·esident of the Meigs
Chris I ian Women's Fel.lowship
at a meeting Thursday night al
·the. Bradbury Church.
Other officers elect&lt;:d for the
year were Mrs . Thelma
Osborn e of the Pomeroy
Church, vice president; Mrs.
Marylin Wilson or the Bradbury Church, secretary; and
Wilma Davidson of the Zion
Church, treasurer . The
position of news reporler will
be filled at a later date.
During the business meeting
presided over by Mrs. Merle
Johnson, il was agreed to send
a donation to the Christian
Children's Home in Woosf,er.
The next meeting will be held
on Jan . 25 at the Bradford
Church of Christ with the installalion of new officers at
lltal lime. Devotions were by
Mrs.. Johnson, and a social
how· was enjoyed by the 26
women attending,

Sgt. Keefer to

reCruit aro""d
hometown area

1 Soc·i~T·~~w1.J Howe~ of Jackson
:···: ·......

,','.'

~~

·

-~

i Calendar~i
»

.
.·
.JACKSON . - David G.
TUESDAY
H"wcll of Jackson has been
ANNUAL BAZAAR Mid- natt&lt;L'&lt;l as member of the
di t'P&lt;• rl's
Heath United National Easler Seal Society
Methodist Church beginntng ~
a.n• . Tuesday; luncheon from
II a.m. lu 2 p.m.; various
handmade articles available.
'.J'
INSTALLATION of officers •
1-l.~
of Pomeroy Chapler 186, OES, IS Ce~vltJ .
Tuesday, 7:45p.m. at temple .
GOI~DEN· RULE Class,
NEW HAVEN - Kelly Ann
Pomeroy Church of Christ, . Gardnet' celebrated her third
meets 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at biri!Jday with a party at the
home of Mrs. Evelyn Smith for . home of her parents, Mr. and
a Christmas parly. There will Mt·s. Robert Gardner of New
be a grab hag gift exchange. Haven. After ~he ~pened her
CHESTER COUNCIL 323 many lovely gifts, tee cream,
. ' cake and punch were served to
Daught~rs
of A~enca, Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Fields
nonunalton and elec!Jon of
d T" M
d M Carl A
.
an ·d '"'•
ofr1cers,
quar t er 1y b"trthdays to G·
. J r. an
Mr rs.
d Mrs 1·
8
be observed, 7:30p.m. Tuesday Wa~ -~~' ~:· Lo: ~ G"b·bs•
OHIO ETA PHI Cbapter, M~sl W~llia~s G~~dne~, ~rs:
Bela Sigma Ph1 Soronty, 7.30 C"'·ky Gardner, and Kelly's
p.m. Tuesday, Columbus and
.
.
.
Electrl·c bt ulher, Chrtstapher.
Oh10
I
Soultern
,,
,;
Sending gifts were Mrs. Park
cull~ral program on Peapl~. McDaniel Sr. and Staci Lyn
'
demonslratton by Sally s·
Biackie, home economist.
tmpson.

Third birt/.Jd411
ted

PT. PLEASANT - Army
Floyd M. Keefer,
Poi nt Pleasant, ha s been
selected to return to his home
town area for temporary duly
as an assistant recruiter for the
82nd
Airborne Division's unit of
AChristmas offering of $87 to lhe meeting wilh Mrs. John
be used on a- special project Werner, president, giving a choice program at Fl. Bragg,
POMEROY WCTU Christwas received at Monday prayer for the season by Helen N.C. While serving in the area,
night's meeting of the B. H. Steiner Rice. The group sang Sgt. Keefer will work with local mas meeting at the home of
Sanborn Missionary Society at "0 Little Town of Bethlehem," recruit et·s to obtain enlislees Mrs. Robert Warner, Wedthe Middleport First Baptist and Mrs. Kloes, chairman of rm· lhe Army in general and for nesday . Covered dish dinner at
noon.
lhe Love joy Circle, gave lite 82nd specifically.
Church.
Under
the
·unit
of
choice
MIDDLEPORT
FIREThe offering represent~d devotions entitled "'The
enlistment option, an enlistee MEN 'S Auxiliary, Wedmoney saved by members Shepherds.''
"is Anybody Listening" was is guaranteed a minimum or 16 nesday night at 6:30 p.m.
throughout the year in small
red Christmas stockings. Mrs. lhe theme of the love gift months with a unit of his holiday potluck al the
firemen's hall with a $2 gift
dedication service with Mrs. choice.
Charles
Searles
gave
a
reading
•
Sgl . Keefer is regularly exchange.
on sharing as each member Charles Simons, Mrs. Pearl
deposited her offering in a Hoffman, Mrs. Fowler, and assigned as a squad leader in
DREW WEBSTER Post 39,
the
division
's
Company
B,
2nd
plate at the altar beside a Mrs. Fred Hoffman presenting Battalion, 504th' Infanlry. The American Legion·, Ladles
·
worship eenlet !able featuring readings.
Auxiliary. Wednesday , 7:30
sergea
nt
entered'
the
Army
in
.a huge red candle, a poinsettia
Readings interspersed with November 1965 and was last p.m. with guest speaker on
·l with holly and an open Bible. carols were featured on the
civil defense. Public invited.
stationed
in
Vietnam.
! Members decided to continue Christmas program presented
. ,.
THURSDAY
b
the
Electa
Circle
Mrs
H1s
f"
"'
"
•
Floyd
G.
Keefer,
the project ior another year.
Y
•
· lives a1 2124 Lincoln Ave. His
BRICKLAYERS and Masons
1
Mrs. Gerald" Anthony, Mrs. Gerald
Anthony at the organ
' f S . h 1.
Unic 1 n~,ocal 32 meeting at 8
· F tt
" f1~nlu Nio.Jt~ ' with "' el .• ~Ia • IV$.13 1Y ~e e- .,, ,, ,
. ,. ••• J. I 1 ..
~ ~ lii/'nm
·
Lp~ al\d Miss pI"Y Ill
_..,. a . · " " ifle, N. ~- '"''I. '
lJ.tll ,•' uritd~ :~t ,•Me gs nn . "
I FJ1d e oual~ilell w~re · Mt·$. etit·~ gman rea mg he
.
'
ALL OPERATING engineers
st L k ·
·
. ·
, apj1oi
· 16 a committee to Ch · lrrl l-· t f
n
s
8&gt; s ory rom . u e.
Local
18,
regular
meeting
II lh
. le d at
f
select the special project for Mrs Fowler read , "The
0
.
.
.
.
,
Elks
Ha
,
A
ens,
ms
a
which the Christmas offering Pt•tceless Gtfl of Chrtstmas,
gran ge hall this month, 7:30
Miss Rhoda Hall version of " Is
will be used.
p.m . Thursday.
V t
Plans were made during the There a Santa Claus'" and
1
t~;j
AUXILIARY of e erans
meeting to join other members Mrs. Fred Gtbbs, Jr., "A Story
Memorial Hospital will
. lhers."
of the church in a Christmas of Two Bto
decorate the hospital Thurscaroling party on sUnday. Mrs.
RACINE - Plans for a day. Members are urged to
A dessert smor_gasbord w_as
Willis Anthony, Mrs. Tony served at the soctal hour wtlh Christmas lighting contest to atte nd to help with the
Fowler and Mrs. Paul Smart Mrs. Kloes, Mrs. Fred Lewis, be held in the Racine area were Christmas decorations.
were named to consider a and Miss Hall as hostesses. The completed at the Monday night
CHILDREN'S Home Citizens
suitable way to use the $2,000 table was covered in gree n meeting of lhe Bend 0 ' the Committee, 12 :30 p.m. Thursbequ,ealhed to the Society by with while lace trim, and River Garden Club held at the day at the Children's Home.
the late Miss Bess Sanborn.
centered witH a holly and red home of Mrs. Andrew Cross.
LAUREL Cliff Better Health
An organ prelude of carols by berry arrangement with
Mrs. Robert Kuhn, county ' Club, 6:30p.m. Thursday at the
Mrs. Gerald Anthony opened tapers.
contact chairman, and Mrs. Meigs County Infirmary with
Wilson Carpenler, Region 11 Mrs. Mildred Jacobs as
treasurer , reported on the hostess. Members are to take
recent regiona l meeting in an exchange gift.
Nelsonville, The clubs of Gallia
and Meigs Counties were
FRIDAY
awarded second in the stale in
MARY
SHRINE
37, White
gat·den therapy for their work
al the Gallipolis Stale Institute, Shrine of Jerusalem, Friday, 8
wilh Meigs County receiving a p.m . IOOF hall, Pomeroy.
lhird in the stale for group Polluck supper and $1 gift
Christmas shows and an exchange.
honorable mention for its
SISTER VISITED
Mrs . Raymond Frank,
Rega tta show.
By Bob Hoeflich
A therapy program was Pomeroy, visited over the
planned at GSI in early spring weekend with her sister, Murl
Middleport firemen SWJday will begin their annual door-to- or summer. Entering the Sears Ours, Bashan .
Civic Beautification Program
door campaign to coilect food items for Christmas baskets.
As In the past, residents who will not be home Sunday af- was discussed .
VISITED HERE
Members discussed par·
ternoon- the firemen will start at 1 p.m. -are asked to place
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer John·
their contributions on their porches. You may give staple foods licipation in the county
'
son,
Jr. of Wheeling, W. Va.
Christmas show over the
or money.
Anyone wishing to submit a name for a basket may do so by weekend. Mrs. Carpenler led were the weekend guest~! of Mr.
contacting any fireman or calling village hall by Dec. 1~. Pickup devotions, using lhe theme, and Mrs . Paul Grueser,
'" Sermon on the Mount" with Middleport,
9f the baskets by the recipients will be on Saturday, Dec. 23, at scripture
from Matthew 6. Her ·
the firemen's hall. Firemen will make no deliveries this year.
thought was to be more like the
lilies, which neigher toil nor
DR. AND MRS. R. R. PICKENS have moved into their spin, and to seek contentment . .
beautiful new home on Lincoln Hill, overlookihg the Beautiful Mrs. W. 0. Barnilz had the ·
Ohio -'- and what views they have! .;,II of the furniture hasn't - prayer and Mrs. Bert Grimm,
arrived, but the Pickens will be holdi~~g an open house for friends president, read the .club poem.
In thenearfuture so that their friends may see this prelty special Helpful Christmas hint~! were
home.
given by men\bers In response
to roll call.
JOHN MOHLER, MIDDLEPORT Route 1, hangs right in
Program for the evening was
there with biB song writing.
the art of judging, and floral
A novelty rock 'n roll nwnber, "My Hair," is coming out on arrangements were discussed.
Frontier Records any day now, and Mohler's "Cbristmas Money The annual Christmas dinner
Treee" Ia out now on the "Hit Records" International label.
will be held at the Meigs Inn,
Mohler bas been advised that Action Records staff has Dec. 19, with a gift exchange
picked his longplily record of so~~gs lnclnding ''Rambow Valley," and party following at the
''Snowballs In the Rockies" and some sacred tWJes as the best home .of Mrs. Ben Philson .
Refreshments were served.
~~tended play record of 1972. Mohler will receive a trophy for the
honor,
Scr~eanl

Offering received

!

1

.' .

Contest wt'll
be J:p on50 ,..,d

Bazaar phnned
A holiday bazaar will be
s taged by the DeMolay
Mothers' Club Saturday in the
Middleport Masonic Temple
dining room beginning at 9
a.m. Homemade candy,
cookies, needlework and
various Christmas articles will
be available.
Insl&lt;tllation of the new of.
firers of the Meigs Chapter,
Order of DeMolay, has been set
fur Dec. 22 at 7:30p.m. at the
Masonic Temple. A banquet
will be held at 6:30p.m. for the
DeMolays and installing , officers. The installation is open
lu the public.

FAMILY DINED
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Ours entertained Sunday with a family gathedng.
Allending were Mr. and Mrs.
James Cornell; Mrs. Mildred
Fra nk, and Ri ck Gaul,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Johnson, Mrs. Howard Blazer
and Teresa , Debbie Johnson,
Belpre ; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Johnson and Shad of Coolville ·
..
'
Mro and Mrs. ~tchard 6a'1!.
Mark and 'David' Chester·
M Gl d ·De '
d
'
rs. a ys
em an son,
Roget'
' . p ot·tla nd·' Mr. an d Mrs.
Douglas Circle, Carmel; Mr.
. d M
H
C
an
rs. erman arson,
Bas han,. Mr. an d Mrs. Allen
Stobart Rick Tammi and
T·
'M.ddl ' t
any a, 1 epor .
GUESTS HERE
~NE Thanksgiving
wee\emt-guests of Mr. and
Mrs. J. M. Gaul were Mr. and
Mrs. Larry D. Clay, Ann Aroor, Mich. and Mr. and Mrs.
Victor E. Gaul of Garden City,
Mich. They were joined at the
Gaul home for a dinner on
Saturday by Mr. and Mrs. D. J.
Morgan, Route 3, Pomeroy.
The weddi11g anniversaries of
Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Gaul and
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Gaul were
observed.

Of the· Bend

THE SALVATION ARMY is in the process of collecting good
liNd lo;,a for dlllrlbutlon to underprivileged children for Christ- ·
- · U ,ou have any contributions, pleaae leave them at the
Army'• headquarters oil Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.
I
PAUL BRADFORD, 8 WOODSIDE DR., Athens, son of Mr.
ed Nfa. OltD Brldford, Racine, was recently awarded the Best
11 lhe Profeaional Divialoft for his entry in the 1972 annual
. .4111tltlllll of Art lultructlon Schoola of Minneapolia, Minn.
He na a wimw In competition which thouaands of entries
t•enll tram .very atate In the union, an the provinces
1114~,_.. C0181biH. n.e contest Is sponsored
N aall for lllltudenta, former student.t and
Bc...,d II a dlllper It Ohio IJnivenlty,.

Now! Lay It Away

SINGER

· ·

'

OPEN SUNDAYS

·11 YEARS OF SERVING THE
PEOPLE OF THE OHIO VALLEY!

1 P.M.
TO
6
P.M.
. .......................

A DISCOUNT

WE SALUTE OUR FOUNDER--THE LATE JAMES T. FISHER
OF SHOPPERS MART---1962

DEPART ME NT .STORE
SHOP THE STORE NEAREST YOU ·

.
POINT PLEASANT
. STARTS
WEDNESDAY
9:30A.M.

USE IN

I

SILVER BRIDGE
PLAZA
STARTS
WEDNESDAY
10:00 A.M.

MASON, W.VA.
STARTS
WEDNESDAY
9:30A.M.

or OUTDOOR!

Founder's Day Special Purchase!

12 INCH VINYL .HOLLY

BOYS CREW SOCKS

WITH
BERRIES
TION

Colored Crew Socks, with stripe on top.
Sizes 71ft to 10112. You sa ve 20c on each pair.
Get his supply Wednesday morning.

54¢

Seconds
Of
J9c
Quality

.

CAR~ VACUUM

'

CLEANER
Complete With Brush
Nozzle AHachment
and Extra Long
Cord. Gift Boxed

Give Your Tables a Fresh New Look
for the Holiday Seasons, or Give One
for a Gilt.
SIZE 52x52

$3~~

$ 57 :

UNIQUE GIFT!

BIG 12 INCH
YEttOWftG£S
TELEPHONE

a
Make !his Christmas a ·
. memorable one with gifts they'll
cherish for years to comt. .

Size c91h Bulbs

AND

We hove the perfect jewelry gift
for each one on your list.

EVERY
NIGHT

OUTDOOR
LIGHT
SETS

A $1.00 VALUE

UL approved. Give the

One side cork, the other

ADDRESS
BOOK
For Those People
Who Seem to
Have Everytuing!

••s

¢

COMPA~E!

SHOPPING
REMINDER

outside of your · home a

fe stive look .
Decorate outside this year!
warm,

~EFT$344
15

FOR HIM &amp; HER

SEl

slate. Handy for messages
to the family~ Nice for gifts.

50¢

270 Count

METALIZED
ICILES
Big 270 count of fireproof

icicles priced far below
their retail value. Hurry,
only 200 boxes each store.

Sale
Oo
Wed.
·Morn

12¢

BOX

Hand decorated. Contain w.. candles to
give that romantic air,- can be reused with
r:egu lar warmer candle$,

'COSTUME JEWELRY.
'

'Lhlldu7ick"- A . '10.95 Value!

Finest
, ttolldar
Selection

Speed Dry - Style - Straighten or Wave

GIFT HER WITH

ELECTRIC ·HOT STYLING

COMB-BRUSH

Blow:; l-lol Air, Has Off-On Switch
Complete with Drying Unit. Fine Comb

'8ul.ova

t92-2284 ·

llld

·ACCUTION

.II.....,.Cllalct

Coarse Comb, Finishing Brush

ALL STEEL

9 FEET-PLASTIC

MINIATURE TR
2 CELL
LIGHT SET
FLASHLIGHT

HOLLY
GARLAND

,.;, 94e

Sizes 8 to 18 and 32 to 44
Easy care polyesters, brushed clenlms,
colton twills in the newest wide Palano leg
or culled leg. Gill yourself- be in slyle for

DOUBLE FLASHER!

With Bllrries

Outdoors

fashion
pants

SET OF 40 - 6 Volt

REGULAR29
S9c
BE
EARLY!

$2~8
VALUE

'$}99

"SHINY BRITE" · BEAUTIFUL 1%" ROUND .STYLEt .

it.

lhe season.

. .~ , . NEW PASTEL COLORS

·~$394 TO $894

TREE ORNAMENTS
ARTCARVED
RINGS !
TO CHERISH

Dellllltlul

· TO GIVE

landertll
TO GET

eSolid Blue • Solid Red • Solid Gold

DAD GLAD
MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS ~
DRESS SHIRTS, TOO!
He expocts shirts - so why disappoint
him? Select from all the new fashion looks
and colors lor tho season. Why pay more?

Daratiw Clocb

Slftwplltt and
Kr-.a
Gift ltt11ts .

700 W•.Main . Pomeroy
'

(Save A Little More With Us)

A Usefu I Gift - On Sale!

POMEROY, OHIO

FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS!.

'

SELF SEitVICE

PLENTY
OF
FREE PARKING

GOESSLER'S

The Fabric Shop

Y to Y DIIUy-sunday 1·1

. PAY

WREATHS

PRINTS-SOLIDS
PLAIDS-FANCIES
Sizes Sm to X-Lg.

·Goessler 's Jewelry Store
, ·.

'

NOW

AFTER
CHRISTMAS

~ PRICE
lola's Dress Shop

Small deP&lt;&gt;sit will hold.

ARRANGEMENlS .

59 N. Second St.
Middleport

BANkAMERICARD

ChrjsTmas

atRISTMAS
Dudley's florist

'

'·"

.

For Christmas '72

115 W. Second

PLENTY
OF FREE
PARKING!
.
CHARGE.IT · SHOP WHERE SAVINGS ARE GREATER! OPEN NIGHTS TILL 9 P.M~

.

Sewlnc}"achine

thl

See Our Nice Selection

STARTING
WEDNESDAY
MORNING! .

.

on national hoard

.

-CUB SCOUT Pack 24a,
Middlepot"l, will meet tonight
ar 7 p.111. at lhe American
Legion hall .
WEDNESDAY
JUNIOR SO Unit 39,
Amet·ican Legion Auxiliary,
Wednesday , 7:30 p.m. at
Legion Hall. After the civil
defense program, a workshop
will be held.
INSTALLATION OF officers
when Pomeroy Lodge 164,
F&amp;AM. meets at 7:30 p.m.
Wedn esday . All Master
Masons invited.

toher. honoring more than 11
•
quarter of a century of servtce
to the handicapped.
In
addition' to new
.
responsibilities on the pollc)'·
making·· body with the.·
Natklnal Soelety, lie will alse
be on call for represeotatloo
B"ard of Directors for a tHree- .
of the Society lo a speaking_·
yc&lt;~~· term lo expire in 197ft.
rapacity and as a consultant
Howell was one ol eight
for local and state satieties ...
community leaders from
The Easter Seal Soelety is.
aeross the counlry selected to
the oldesl"and largest national
set·ve .the National Society. The
agency .serving the physically
election was held al the recent ·
handicapped. It was founded in
National Easter Seal Society
Elyria, Ohio in 1919 by
convention in Chicago. The
Rotariim Edgar .F. Allen and
Ohiu delegate received more
has grown to more than 3,000
voles in the election than any
centers and offices &amp;erving
other candidate.
approximately 4Q0,009 hanThe new national board
dicapped children and adults
member has a continuous
each year. The Society is
history of service lo the han- .
f~nded solely through volundicapped . He began affiliation
DAVID HOWELL
tary contributions from the
wilh the Easter Seal Society
public in the Annual Easler
more than 30 years ago as a
Seal
mail campaign, the natiop
Slate
University
where
he
b f h J k c ty
mem er o t e ac son oun · received his Bachelor of wide telethon and other special
Society for Crippled Children Science and•· LLB . He is a events sponsored on behalf of
an d Ad uIts Boa• d of D"tree tors, member of the Jackson County the Society. ·
succeeding his father who was American Legion 40 and 8; the
Crippled Children Committee Masonic Bodies ; Reserve
Chairman of the Jackson Officer Association where he
Rol.&lt;~ry, and has served as a
I .al delegate to the s•·te holds the rank of Colonel, and
o·t h·e r ' c 0 m rm u n it y
oc
·
"'
Society; been a member of the organizations.
Ohio Societ)! Board of DirecAdditional activities include
turs; and was a national
Table Cloths, Napkins.
parlicipation in the Aladdin
Oinlier
&amp; Luncheon Plates,
delegate including a term as Temple Shrine, Ohio State
Bows
&amp; Ribbon.
·
secretary to lhe House of University Association, .
Delegates of the Nation-al B.P.O., Elks, Sigma Phi EpEaster Seal Society.
silon, Phi Kapjllt Sigma. He
Howell was president of the was received the Ohio· Society
Ohio Society two terms in 1956- "Uncommon Man" Award at
ft7 and 1~7.
the Ohio Society 53rd Annual
POMEROY
Howell is a graduate of Ohio Meeting .in Columbus In OcI

.

COURT ST.

~A Gold Star Store''

USE OUR LA }:'-A JJ:'A Y PLAN

.::::~;,X OF 12 7
FESTIVE atRISTMAS DESIGNS
'

GIFT BOXES
SOLVE YOUR PRO.BLEM BOX
NEEDS AT SHOPPER'S MART!
Bo•ts, gaitly decorated in iustobovtariy sizt. For ohoes.
glass itemo, shirts, lingerie, robes, bllnktls and o!Mr
hltnl to lind box sizts. DISCOUNT PRICED,

WHITE or BLUE

13 OZ. CAN- 69' VALUE
WHIL''E STOCK LASTS/

We Have Dozens of Small Tie-Ons and
Novelty Items That You Won't See In
Larger Stores.

.IREPROOF 'VINYL TREEs·
These are piiSIIc lreoslhot will fold up for otorage !o use
ne•t year. Perfect height lor many tables. Prices good
while our supply Ia sis.

2 FT. SIZE

PO. ROY

TO

&lt;

�•

'

'
7-:- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-PO!neroy, 0., Dec. 5,1972

Officers
elected

MR. AND MRS. ROLLINS

'

Couple phnning open_ house
•

!

Mr. and Mrs. Roy E. Rolllns wiU observe t)leir 50th
wedding anniversary on SWJday, Dec. 17, with an open house
from 2to 4 pm. at their RD 3 Pomeroy home. Mr. and Mrs.
Rollins were married on Dec. 16,1922 at the home of the Rev.
Wesley Garrison, Putman County, Walker Ridge, W. Va.
They are the parents of six children, Mrs. EWJice Herdman,
Columbus; Miss Rena Rollins, at home; Orville Rollins of
AIIBion, Mass.; Mrs. Mary Scarberry, Muncie, Ind.; Mrs.
Glenda Benedum, ReedsviUe; Denver Rqllins, Grove City,
and one is deceased. Mr. and Mrs. Rollins have 16 grandchildren, one foster grandchild, and five greatgrandchildren.

Mrs. Bonnie Pickens ol lhe
Bradford Church of Christ was
elected pt·esident of the Meigs
Chris I ian Women's Fel.lowship
at a meeting Thursday night al
·the. Bradbury Church.
Other officers elect&lt;:d for the
year were Mrs . Thelma
Osborn e of the Pomeroy
Church, vice president; Mrs.
Marylin Wilson or the Bradbury Church, secretary; and
Wilma Davidson of the Zion
Church, treasurer . The
position of news reporler will
be filled at a later date.
During the business meeting
presided over by Mrs. Merle
Johnson, il was agreed to send
a donation to the Christian
Children's Home in Woosf,er.
The next meeting will be held
on Jan . 25 at the Bradford
Church of Christ with the installalion of new officers at
lltal lime. Devotions were by
Mrs.. Johnson, and a social
how· was enjoyed by the 26
women attending,

Sgt. Keefer to

reCruit aro""d
hometown area

1 Soc·i~T·~~w1.J Howe~ of Jackson
:···: ·......

,','.'

~~

·

-~

i Calendar~i
»

.
.·
.JACKSON . - David G.
TUESDAY
H"wcll of Jackson has been
ANNUAL BAZAAR Mid- natt&lt;L'&lt;l as member of the
di t'P&lt;• rl's
Heath United National Easler Seal Society
Methodist Church beginntng ~
a.n• . Tuesday; luncheon from
II a.m. lu 2 p.m.; various
handmade articles available.
'.J'
INSTALLATION of officers •
1-l.~
of Pomeroy Chapler 186, OES, IS Ce~vltJ .
Tuesday, 7:45p.m. at temple .
GOI~DEN· RULE Class,
NEW HAVEN - Kelly Ann
Pomeroy Church of Christ, . Gardnet' celebrated her third
meets 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at biri!Jday with a party at the
home of Mrs. Evelyn Smith for . home of her parents, Mr. and
a Christmas parly. There will Mt·s. Robert Gardner of New
be a grab hag gift exchange. Haven. After ~he ~pened her
CHESTER COUNCIL 323 many lovely gifts, tee cream,
. ' cake and punch were served to
Daught~rs
of A~enca, Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Fields
nonunalton and elec!Jon of
d T" M
d M Carl A
.
an ·d '"'•
ofr1cers,
quar t er 1y b"trthdays to G·
. J r. an
Mr rs.
d Mrs 1·
8
be observed, 7:30p.m. Tuesday Wa~ -~~' ~:· Lo: ~ G"b·bs•
OHIO ETA PHI Cbapter, M~sl W~llia~s G~~dne~, ~rs:
Bela Sigma Ph1 Soronty, 7.30 C"'·ky Gardner, and Kelly's
p.m. Tuesday, Columbus and
.
.
.
Electrl·c bt ulher, Chrtstapher.
Oh10
I
Soultern
,,
,;
Sending gifts were Mrs. Park
cull~ral program on Peapl~. McDaniel Sr. and Staci Lyn
'
demonslratton by Sally s·
Biackie, home economist.
tmpson.

Third birt/.Jd411
ted

PT. PLEASANT - Army
Floyd M. Keefer,
Poi nt Pleasant, ha s been
selected to return to his home
town area for temporary duly
as an assistant recruiter for the
82nd
Airborne Division's unit of
AChristmas offering of $87 to lhe meeting wilh Mrs. John
be used on a- special project Werner, president, giving a choice program at Fl. Bragg,
POMEROY WCTU Christwas received at Monday prayer for the season by Helen N.C. While serving in the area,
night's meeting of the B. H. Steiner Rice. The group sang Sgt. Keefer will work with local mas meeting at the home of
Sanborn Missionary Society at "0 Little Town of Bethlehem," recruit et·s to obtain enlislees Mrs. Robert Warner, Wedthe Middleport First Baptist and Mrs. Kloes, chairman of rm· lhe Army in general and for nesday . Covered dish dinner at
noon.
lhe Love joy Circle, gave lite 82nd specifically.
Church.
Under
the
·unit
of
choice
MIDDLEPORT
FIREThe offering represent~d devotions entitled "'The
enlistment option, an enlistee MEN 'S Auxiliary, Wedmoney saved by members Shepherds.''
"is Anybody Listening" was is guaranteed a minimum or 16 nesday night at 6:30 p.m.
throughout the year in small
red Christmas stockings. Mrs. lhe theme of the love gift months with a unit of his holiday potluck al the
firemen's hall with a $2 gift
dedication service with Mrs. choice.
Charles
Searles
gave
a
reading
•
Sgl . Keefer is regularly exchange.
on sharing as each member Charles Simons, Mrs. Pearl
deposited her offering in a Hoffman, Mrs. Fowler, and assigned as a squad leader in
DREW WEBSTER Post 39,
the
division
's
Company
B,
2nd
plate at the altar beside a Mrs. Fred Hoffman presenting Battalion, 504th' Infanlry. The American Legion·, Ladles
·
worship eenlet !able featuring readings.
Auxiliary. Wednesday , 7:30
sergea
nt
entered'
the
Army
in
.a huge red candle, a poinsettia
Readings interspersed with November 1965 and was last p.m. with guest speaker on
·l with holly and an open Bible. carols were featured on the
civil defense. Public invited.
stationed
in
Vietnam.
! Members decided to continue Christmas program presented
. ,.
THURSDAY
b
the
Electa
Circle
Mrs
H1s
f"
"'
"
•
Floyd
G.
Keefer,
the project ior another year.
Y
•
· lives a1 2124 Lincoln Ave. His
BRICKLAYERS and Masons
1
Mrs. Gerald" Anthony, Mrs. Gerald
Anthony at the organ
' f S . h 1.
Unic 1 n~,ocal 32 meeting at 8
· F tt
" f1~nlu Nio.Jt~ ' with "' el .• ~Ia • IV$.13 1Y ~e e- .,, ,, ,
. ,. ••• J. I 1 ..
~ ~ lii/'nm
·
Lp~ al\d Miss pI"Y Ill
_..,. a . · " " ifle, N. ~- '"''I. '
lJ.tll ,•' uritd~ :~t ,•Me gs nn . "
I FJ1d e oual~ilell w~re · Mt·$. etit·~ gman rea mg he
.
'
ALL OPERATING engineers
st L k ·
·
. ·
, apj1oi
· 16 a committee to Ch · lrrl l-· t f
n
s
8&gt; s ory rom . u e.
Local
18,
regular
meeting
II lh
. le d at
f
select the special project for Mrs Fowler read , "The
0
.
.
.
.
,
Elks
Ha
,
A
ens,
ms
a
which the Christmas offering Pt•tceless Gtfl of Chrtstmas,
gran ge hall this month, 7:30
Miss Rhoda Hall version of " Is
will be used.
p.m . Thursday.
V t
Plans were made during the There a Santa Claus'" and
1
t~;j
AUXILIARY of e erans
meeting to join other members Mrs. Fred Gtbbs, Jr., "A Story
Memorial Hospital will
. lhers."
of the church in a Christmas of Two Bto
decorate the hospital Thurscaroling party on sUnday. Mrs.
RACINE - Plans for a day. Members are urged to
A dessert smor_gasbord w_as
Willis Anthony, Mrs. Tony served at the soctal hour wtlh Christmas lighting contest to atte nd to help with the
Fowler and Mrs. Paul Smart Mrs. Kloes, Mrs. Fred Lewis, be held in the Racine area were Christmas decorations.
were named to consider a and Miss Hall as hostesses. The completed at the Monday night
CHILDREN'S Home Citizens
suitable way to use the $2,000 table was covered in gree n meeting of lhe Bend 0 ' the Committee, 12 :30 p.m. Thursbequ,ealhed to the Society by with while lace trim, and River Garden Club held at the day at the Children's Home.
the late Miss Bess Sanborn.
centered witH a holly and red home of Mrs. Andrew Cross.
LAUREL Cliff Better Health
An organ prelude of carols by berry arrangement with
Mrs. Robert Kuhn, county ' Club, 6:30p.m. Thursday at the
Mrs. Gerald Anthony opened tapers.
contact chairman, and Mrs. Meigs County Infirmary with
Wilson Carpenler, Region 11 Mrs. Mildred Jacobs as
treasurer , reported on the hostess. Members are to take
recent regiona l meeting in an exchange gift.
Nelsonville, The clubs of Gallia
and Meigs Counties were
FRIDAY
awarded second in the stale in
MARY
SHRINE
37, White
gat·den therapy for their work
al the Gallipolis Stale Institute, Shrine of Jerusalem, Friday, 8
wilh Meigs County receiving a p.m . IOOF hall, Pomeroy.
lhird in the stale for group Polluck supper and $1 gift
Christmas shows and an exchange.
honorable mention for its
SISTER VISITED
Mrs . Raymond Frank,
Rega tta show.
By Bob Hoeflich
A therapy program was Pomeroy, visited over the
planned at GSI in early spring weekend with her sister, Murl
Middleport firemen SWJday will begin their annual door-to- or summer. Entering the Sears Ours, Bashan .
Civic Beautification Program
door campaign to coilect food items for Christmas baskets.
As In the past, residents who will not be home Sunday af- was discussed .
VISITED HERE
Members discussed par·
ternoon- the firemen will start at 1 p.m. -are asked to place
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer John·
their contributions on their porches. You may give staple foods licipation in the county
'
son,
Jr. of Wheeling, W. Va.
Christmas show over the
or money.
Anyone wishing to submit a name for a basket may do so by weekend. Mrs. Carpenler led were the weekend guest~! of Mr.
contacting any fireman or calling village hall by Dec. 1~. Pickup devotions, using lhe theme, and Mrs . Paul Grueser,
'" Sermon on the Mount" with Middleport,
9f the baskets by the recipients will be on Saturday, Dec. 23, at scripture
from Matthew 6. Her ·
the firemen's hall. Firemen will make no deliveries this year.
thought was to be more like the
lilies, which neigher toil nor
DR. AND MRS. R. R. PICKENS have moved into their spin, and to seek contentment . .
beautiful new home on Lincoln Hill, overlookihg the Beautiful Mrs. W. 0. Barnilz had the ·
Ohio -'- and what views they have! .;,II of the furniture hasn't - prayer and Mrs. Bert Grimm,
arrived, but the Pickens will be holdi~~g an open house for friends president, read the .club poem.
In thenearfuture so that their friends may see this prelty special Helpful Christmas hint~! were
home.
given by men\bers In response
to roll call.
JOHN MOHLER, MIDDLEPORT Route 1, hangs right in
Program for the evening was
there with biB song writing.
the art of judging, and floral
A novelty rock 'n roll nwnber, "My Hair," is coming out on arrangements were discussed.
Frontier Records any day now, and Mohler's "Cbristmas Money The annual Christmas dinner
Treee" Ia out now on the "Hit Records" International label.
will be held at the Meigs Inn,
Mohler bas been advised that Action Records staff has Dec. 19, with a gift exchange
picked his longplily record of so~~gs lnclnding ''Rambow Valley," and party following at the
''Snowballs In the Rockies" and some sacred tWJes as the best home .of Mrs. Ben Philson .
Refreshments were served.
~~tended play record of 1972. Mohler will receive a trophy for the
honor,
Scr~eanl

Offering received

!

1

.' .

Contest wt'll
be J:p on50 ,..,d

Bazaar phnned
A holiday bazaar will be
s taged by the DeMolay
Mothers' Club Saturday in the
Middleport Masonic Temple
dining room beginning at 9
a.m. Homemade candy,
cookies, needlework and
various Christmas articles will
be available.
Insl&lt;tllation of the new of.
firers of the Meigs Chapter,
Order of DeMolay, has been set
fur Dec. 22 at 7:30p.m. at the
Masonic Temple. A banquet
will be held at 6:30p.m. for the
DeMolays and installing , officers. The installation is open
lu the public.

FAMILY DINED
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Ours entertained Sunday with a family gathedng.
Allending were Mr. and Mrs.
James Cornell; Mrs. Mildred
Fra nk, and Ri ck Gaul,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Johnson, Mrs. Howard Blazer
and Teresa , Debbie Johnson,
Belpre ; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Johnson and Shad of Coolville ·
..
'
Mro and Mrs. ~tchard 6a'1!.
Mark and 'David' Chester·
M Gl d ·De '
d
'
rs. a ys
em an son,
Roget'
' . p ot·tla nd·' Mr. an d Mrs.
Douglas Circle, Carmel; Mr.
. d M
H
C
an
rs. erman arson,
Bas han,. Mr. an d Mrs. Allen
Stobart Rick Tammi and
T·
'M.ddl ' t
any a, 1 epor .
GUESTS HERE
~NE Thanksgiving
wee\emt-guests of Mr. and
Mrs. J. M. Gaul were Mr. and
Mrs. Larry D. Clay, Ann Aroor, Mich. and Mr. and Mrs.
Victor E. Gaul of Garden City,
Mich. They were joined at the
Gaul home for a dinner on
Saturday by Mr. and Mrs. D. J.
Morgan, Route 3, Pomeroy.
The weddi11g anniversaries of
Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Gaul and
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Gaul were
observed.

Of the· Bend

THE SALVATION ARMY is in the process of collecting good
liNd lo;,a for dlllrlbutlon to underprivileged children for Christ- ·
- · U ,ou have any contributions, pleaae leave them at the
Army'• headquarters oil Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.
I
PAUL BRADFORD, 8 WOODSIDE DR., Athens, son of Mr.
ed Nfa. OltD Brldford, Racine, was recently awarded the Best
11 lhe Profeaional Divialoft for his entry in the 1972 annual
. .4111tltlllll of Art lultructlon Schoola of Minneapolia, Minn.
He na a wimw In competition which thouaands of entries
t•enll tram .very atate In the union, an the provinces
1114~,_.. C0181biH. n.e contest Is sponsored
N aall for lllltudenta, former student.t and
Bc...,d II a dlllper It Ohio IJnivenlty,.

Now! Lay It Away

SINGER

· ·

'

OPEN SUNDAYS

·11 YEARS OF SERVING THE
PEOPLE OF THE OHIO VALLEY!

1 P.M.
TO
6
P.M.
. .......................

A DISCOUNT

WE SALUTE OUR FOUNDER--THE LATE JAMES T. FISHER
OF SHOPPERS MART---1962

DEPART ME NT .STORE
SHOP THE STORE NEAREST YOU ·

.
POINT PLEASANT
. STARTS
WEDNESDAY
9:30A.M.

USE IN

I

SILVER BRIDGE
PLAZA
STARTS
WEDNESDAY
10:00 A.M.

MASON, W.VA.
STARTS
WEDNESDAY
9:30A.M.

or OUTDOOR!

Founder's Day Special Purchase!

12 INCH VINYL .HOLLY

BOYS CREW SOCKS

WITH
BERRIES
TION

Colored Crew Socks, with stripe on top.
Sizes 71ft to 10112. You sa ve 20c on each pair.
Get his supply Wednesday morning.

54¢

Seconds
Of
J9c
Quality

.

CAR~ VACUUM

'

CLEANER
Complete With Brush
Nozzle AHachment
and Extra Long
Cord. Gift Boxed

Give Your Tables a Fresh New Look
for the Holiday Seasons, or Give One
for a Gilt.
SIZE 52x52

$3~~

$ 57 :

UNIQUE GIFT!

BIG 12 INCH
YEttOWftG£S
TELEPHONE

a
Make !his Christmas a ·
. memorable one with gifts they'll
cherish for years to comt. .

Size c91h Bulbs

AND

We hove the perfect jewelry gift
for each one on your list.

EVERY
NIGHT

OUTDOOR
LIGHT
SETS

A $1.00 VALUE

UL approved. Give the

One side cork, the other

ADDRESS
BOOK
For Those People
Who Seem to
Have Everytuing!

••s

¢

COMPA~E!

SHOPPING
REMINDER

outside of your · home a

fe stive look .
Decorate outside this year!
warm,

~EFT$344
15

FOR HIM &amp; HER

SEl

slate. Handy for messages
to the family~ Nice for gifts.

50¢

270 Count

METALIZED
ICILES
Big 270 count of fireproof

icicles priced far below
their retail value. Hurry,
only 200 boxes each store.

Sale
Oo
Wed.
·Morn

12¢

BOX

Hand decorated. Contain w.. candles to
give that romantic air,- can be reused with
r:egu lar warmer candle$,

'COSTUME JEWELRY.
'

'Lhlldu7ick"- A . '10.95 Value!

Finest
, ttolldar
Selection

Speed Dry - Style - Straighten or Wave

GIFT HER WITH

ELECTRIC ·HOT STYLING

COMB-BRUSH

Blow:; l-lol Air, Has Off-On Switch
Complete with Drying Unit. Fine Comb

'8ul.ova

t92-2284 ·

llld

·ACCUTION

.II.....,.Cllalct

Coarse Comb, Finishing Brush

ALL STEEL

9 FEET-PLASTIC

MINIATURE TR
2 CELL
LIGHT SET
FLASHLIGHT

HOLLY
GARLAND

,.;, 94e

Sizes 8 to 18 and 32 to 44
Easy care polyesters, brushed clenlms,
colton twills in the newest wide Palano leg
or culled leg. Gill yourself- be in slyle for

DOUBLE FLASHER!

With Bllrries

Outdoors

fashion
pants

SET OF 40 - 6 Volt

REGULAR29
S9c
BE
EARLY!

$2~8
VALUE

'$}99

"SHINY BRITE" · BEAUTIFUL 1%" ROUND .STYLEt .

it.

lhe season.

. .~ , . NEW PASTEL COLORS

·~$394 TO $894

TREE ORNAMENTS
ARTCARVED
RINGS !
TO CHERISH

Dellllltlul

· TO GIVE

landertll
TO GET

eSolid Blue • Solid Red • Solid Gold

DAD GLAD
MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS ~
DRESS SHIRTS, TOO!
He expocts shirts - so why disappoint
him? Select from all the new fashion looks
and colors lor tho season. Why pay more?

Daratiw Clocb

Slftwplltt and
Kr-.a
Gift ltt11ts .

700 W•.Main . Pomeroy
'

(Save A Little More With Us)

A Usefu I Gift - On Sale!

POMEROY, OHIO

FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS!.

'

SELF SEitVICE

PLENTY
OF
FREE PARKING

GOESSLER'S

The Fabric Shop

Y to Y DIIUy-sunday 1·1

. PAY

WREATHS

PRINTS-SOLIDS
PLAIDS-FANCIES
Sizes Sm to X-Lg.

·Goessler 's Jewelry Store
, ·.

'

NOW

AFTER
CHRISTMAS

~ PRICE
lola's Dress Shop

Small deP&lt;&gt;sit will hold.

ARRANGEMENlS .

59 N. Second St.
Middleport

BANkAMERICARD

ChrjsTmas

atRISTMAS
Dudley's florist

'

'·"

.

For Christmas '72

115 W. Second

PLENTY
OF FREE
PARKING!
.
CHARGE.IT · SHOP WHERE SAVINGS ARE GREATER! OPEN NIGHTS TILL 9 P.M~

.

Sewlnc}"achine

thl

See Our Nice Selection

STARTING
WEDNESDAY
MORNING! .

.

on national hoard

.

-CUB SCOUT Pack 24a,
Middlepot"l, will meet tonight
ar 7 p.111. at lhe American
Legion hall .
WEDNESDAY
JUNIOR SO Unit 39,
Amet·ican Legion Auxiliary,
Wednesday , 7:30 p.m. at
Legion Hall. After the civil
defense program, a workshop
will be held.
INSTALLATION OF officers
when Pomeroy Lodge 164,
F&amp;AM. meets at 7:30 p.m.
Wedn esday . All Master
Masons invited.

toher. honoring more than 11
•
quarter of a century of servtce
to the handicapped.
In
addition' to new
.
responsibilities on the pollc)'·
making·· body with the.·
Natklnal Soelety, lie will alse
be on call for represeotatloo
B"ard of Directors for a tHree- .
of the Society lo a speaking_·
yc&lt;~~· term lo expire in 197ft.
rapacity and as a consultant
Howell was one ol eight
for local and state satieties ...
community leaders from
The Easter Seal Soelety is.
aeross the counlry selected to
the oldesl"and largest national
set·ve .the National Society. The
agency .serving the physically
election was held al the recent ·
handicapped. It was founded in
National Easter Seal Society
Elyria, Ohio in 1919 by
convention in Chicago. The
Rotariim Edgar .F. Allen and
Ohiu delegate received more
has grown to more than 3,000
voles in the election than any
centers and offices &amp;erving
other candidate.
approximately 4Q0,009 hanThe new national board
dicapped children and adults
member has a continuous
each year. The Society is
history of service lo the han- .
f~nded solely through volundicapped . He began affiliation
DAVID HOWELL
tary contributions from the
wilh the Easter Seal Society
public in the Annual Easler
more than 30 years ago as a
Seal
mail campaign, the natiop
Slate
University
where
he
b f h J k c ty
mem er o t e ac son oun · received his Bachelor of wide telethon and other special
Society for Crippled Children Science and•· LLB . He is a events sponsored on behalf of
an d Ad uIts Boa• d of D"tree tors, member of the Jackson County the Society. ·
succeeding his father who was American Legion 40 and 8; the
Crippled Children Committee Masonic Bodies ; Reserve
Chairman of the Jackson Officer Association where he
Rol.&lt;~ry, and has served as a
I .al delegate to the s•·te holds the rank of Colonel, and
o·t h·e r ' c 0 m rm u n it y
oc
·
"'
Society; been a member of the organizations.
Ohio Societ)! Board of DirecAdditional activities include
turs; and was a national
Table Cloths, Napkins.
parlicipation in the Aladdin
Oinlier
&amp; Luncheon Plates,
delegate including a term as Temple Shrine, Ohio State
Bows
&amp; Ribbon.
·
secretary to lhe House of University Association, .
Delegates of the Nation-al B.P.O., Elks, Sigma Phi EpEaster Seal Society.
silon, Phi Kapjllt Sigma. He
Howell was president of the was received the Ohio· Society
Ohio Society two terms in 1956- "Uncommon Man" Award at
ft7 and 1~7.
the Ohio Society 53rd Annual
POMEROY
Howell is a graduate of Ohio Meeting .in Columbus In OcI

.

COURT ST.

~A Gold Star Store''

USE OUR LA }:'-A JJ:'A Y PLAN

.::::~;,X OF 12 7
FESTIVE atRISTMAS DESIGNS
'

GIFT BOXES
SOLVE YOUR PRO.BLEM BOX
NEEDS AT SHOPPER'S MART!
Bo•ts, gaitly decorated in iustobovtariy sizt. For ohoes.
glass itemo, shirts, lingerie, robes, bllnktls and o!Mr
hltnl to lind box sizts. DISCOUNT PRICED,

WHITE or BLUE

13 OZ. CAN- 69' VALUE
WHIL''E STOCK LASTS/

We Have Dozens of Small Tie-Ons and
Novelty Items That You Won't See In
Larger Stores.

.IREPROOF 'VINYL TREEs·
These are piiSIIc lreoslhot will fold up for otorage !o use
ne•t year. Perfect height lor many tables. Prices good
while our supply Ia sis.

2 FT. SIZE

PO. ROY

TO

&lt;

�'

' J

'
Dec. ~.1972

8-The

Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec.~. 1972

'

.

11
R 0 WE OPENED OUR FIRST SHOPPfRS-MART--SO IN PlACE OF AN
ANNIVERSARY SALE - WE HONOR OUR FOUNDER - THE LATE JAMES J. FISHER •-

.

. I!

STARTS WEDNESDAY -MORNING -IN PT. PLEASANT • MASON-· SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
...._.._.--~ -.· A

SALUTE TO
- OUR FOUNDER

Accent your mantels,
tables, doorways with
severa l of these Christmas
a.rrangements .
Choose

lowest possible price. Lafe.r,

tor Shopper Marts . we
mi ss Jim , Fisher. for he was

~r:::c~~t:at~:: ;~~y w~~~i:sg

·

SHOP THE STORE MOST CONVENI-ENT FOR YOU! .

r----------· p---------------..
..

-Founder's Day Sale-

Good GifUtem for Working Men!

MINIATURE BOTTLES

How:e ver, his teachings and
beliefs remain with us and our
salespeople.
·'
- ·

CUT
GLASS!
While
They
-Last

r--!!"""-..~~~~.-.­
S CUP SIZE! ',
COMPLETE WITH CORD

White or Colors
Si.~es 10 to' 12 •

$

. GIFT
BOXED!

PAIR

. EA.

$.

Complete _With --.:_e~m Name

-Founder's Day Sale-

44¢ro94¢

.'

•

SET OF 7 GIFT BOXES

B~~s

Set
While They Last!

MEN'S
SIZES

EA.

VAWE

90$9

LI.NED VINYLS

'1ALLY ·HO". MEN'S DRESS
GLOVES
AFTER
SHAVE

'
3
94~.
.

PAIR.

87~

STUFFED
ANIMALS

TOBOGGANS
OR FACE MASKS
87
. TO $}

77¢

SMALL BOYS

4

Why Pay
More?

Silver. Gold Red . Blue

44e
PLASTIC LINER

Keeps Clothes
Fresh and Clean

711,.

FOR MANY YEARS OF
USE IN YOUR HOME!

: Boys' Pockets and Needs!

BOYS NO IRON

.

Le Pages' Regular 39c

Size 6 to 18. Solids or
stripes . Crew necks. collar
nec:ks, mock turtle necks.
Long s leeve.

·

Monotone And Two Color Embroidery
Mr. and Mrs.
His and Hers$
, Asst. Flora Is

,

2 Ft. Tall
TREE
4 Ft. Tall
TREE

A

Big Color
Selection!

Christmas Wrap

$244

CARDS AND
TAGS

$744

,4~ !~~rds
ktr~ma

ao~~~ch

Dispenser
MENS
For her gift- take a look at our
collection of budget priced
robes. A very nice selection.
Come see,

g~EA.,

$227

One Piece Pan
Shape!
Sturdy ! $3.19 Value ·

tO

A Pair Will Add the Warm Look!

TREE AND FLOOR
COVER -

8"
,

ELECTRICAL
LAMP
POST
40" Tall
. 3 Color Tone!

UL
· Approved

Size 3t"x32" .• 38c

'·

tO Colors

.$5 94 $1294 ~:: 6 7I ~

METAL TREE STAND

Large
Regular32"x48"
79c size&amp;

·ORLON
DRESS
SOCKS -

LONG OR SHORT STYLES!

SIZE C71f2 LIGHT BULBS

A SHEET OF SNOW!

Solid Colors .
or
16~ Roll
Designed

·16¢.

LePages Regular 27c

6l~ox

Replacement l:lulbs For
Your Indoor Ught Sets
Everyday Low· Price -

.

WRAP TAPE

CELLO TAPE

Every ·Day

FIREPROOF ICICLES
1000 -COUNT
$1.00 VALUE !
Metalized -

Tags

41 ~

CHRISTMAS

$ 94
·

EA.

PR.

13

¢

rllllttle ;rule 1o1

a Jllr.y. ""')'CIUI'I tomorrow1

..u L apPrmed.

.,.

FANTASTIC LOW PRICE!

P~~~s~~c

I

_

iA'cii·

SAFE and INEXPENSIVE!

:ART GUN
26~

TO EACH
STOMER

-

381NCHES
TALL!

Rooted hair dolls , fashion
dolls, doll s in cradles - we
specia lize in the small
inexpensive dolls, shop our
collection, soon.

¢
To $1.94

OPEN TILL 9 PM

6 NIGHTS •••

Red With
Yellow Flame

CERAMIC HOT POT

COMPARE!

Brain Teasers
3 TYPES

White With
Chicken Design!$
Warms Water
Each
For Soup, Tea
~-----J or Instant Coffee ·
GIFT BOXED

~0!.A4. AGES

JIGSAW

PUZZlES

·

BEAUTIFUL ,BLOWN GLASS
s,..a.1

UD VASES·

DISCOUNT
PRICED!

WOODEN
PUZZLES

PLAY
SETS
Several

They'll Give
You AChallenge

Styles

66~up

F,RICTION
CARS

Designs
Push · They Go!

64~

6

77 ~-

Wonderful giftsl E1ched s_tytos, modern
tri·color model s, hobnail designs. A really
big selection · In just about any color of
the rainboW. S inch to 12 inch sites.

A 01SCOUN,T

$5.94

O£PA RT ME NT STOlt£

$ 27

SHOP OUR BUSY LITTLE STORES
PT. PLEASANT · MASON • SILVER BRIDGE PLAzA

.

EA·.

I

" .

'

I

UP

ALWAYS SOMETHING NEW AND DIFFERENTYOU'LL FIND UNUSUAL GIFTS HERE! !

Olhers$394
$2.94
to

'

Choose From 10
STYLES!

DOLLS

liitleren1
costumes for her
' play dolls . By
· ''Topper".

8

CHINESE
CHECKERS

77¢ m.46¢

DOLL
OUTFITS

LIMIT

. -~..

d~teve.

ELECTRICAL
NOEL
CANDLE

94

Fits All The Fashion Dolls

STOCK UP AT THIS
NEW LOW PRICE!
ON SALE WEDNESDAY-

NOEL
CANOL

Opague nylon tricot,
· lace trim on bodice
an d hem.

BUDGET PRICED INEXPENSIVE TOYS - RIO TV

BATTERIES

PKG.

SOlids,H!)urs_
pronto, ! ftorals .
with s nap or bu1ton
fronts. Not just a handful,
but dozens to select from.
Shor 1 sleeve and long

Auembles In

NYLON TRICOT

$

SIZE Cor D

For Her
At Home

4~" II DE - '38%" HIGH.

,.
SET

Featuring
no · iron
polyester blends in so lids,
embroidered front or fancy
trimmed styles. Every
important color. All Sizes

We Remember The Little
Inexpensive Gift Items!
Dozens of Suggestions

Large 42 Inch Size

UL ·
APPROVED!
Red With
Two Colot
Trim

I

3 PLY FIBER IOARD

'
Complete wllll

6.6" 38~

GUN and
HOLSTER

LIST PRICE IS $2.98! .

ELECTRIC FIREPLACE

Pack of 4 red tissue bells.
inc:h size.

1

HOLIDAY WOMEN'S
BLOUSES , SizeSLIPS
32 to 44

ELECTRICAL

· All C_ome with Stand and Can Be Shaped!

.

RED PAPER

christmas gift

Here's Your Bonus
SPECIAL BUY!

CHRISTMAS
TREES
PILLOW CASE SETS

SHIRTS
SET OF 7

ARTIFICIAL SCOTCH PINE

SCHIFFLI EMBROIDERED- BOXED

FASHION KNIT

TREE LIGHT SET
g::t ~::P o:~~Y:: $}27

74

' And
Desig~ed
In C~lor
SIZe To F If

l'

'

Stunt cars that rOll over, go in circles, won '! fall off tables. Tooting
. trams: b~rkmg dogs, roaring panda s, s_~ngmg Santas. All operate. on .
llashhght batterie s. ·

30 Square Feet Total
3 . Different Printed
Designs in Each Pack

1J

EXPANDS
TO ~8 INCHES!

ISCOUNT PRICE!

GIFT WRAPPING
PAPER

'·

87

JUMBO SIZE •

Stands Alone or Hangs
Blue. Red, Orange or Yellow
High Impact Plastic

3 Roll Package

Box

Discount Priced -

EXPANDO iACI

You'll need plenty so save
yourse lf 21c on each package of thi s
pretty paper. 60 square feet in each
pack .

tiNSEL
GARLAND
Really Brighten any Tree

Items. Great

!0 ~E~S ':"' WOODEN!

SPICE RACK

6 ROLL PACK OF
26" PAPER

3 in. Wide- 15 Ft. Long

0111~

Ea .

TO

·~ ~;fQYS

Box

plus doufts ot

tor stocking stulferlll

COMPLETE W_ITH 5 ~OTH~CAR_!_ JARS!

$ 37

¢

H~-

BUns, watches, jack oetl, return bolla

Each

OF 75

e Metal

Whistles, ptiy d1819ro, .Puzzles, doll a,

4

THEY ALL LOVE OUR
BATTERY OPERATED

AMENT HANGERS

TOYS

$594..,_' ._

To 7

Flare leg corduroy or cotton
· twi II
s lacks
comes
with
" ~trrait

'IALU EST(), 25c

$227

Small terry and felt
animals - up to large
sta nd-up plush sty les. A
size for every age. Visit the
M,lrt for your small toy

SHIRT AND
PANT SETS
SIZE

(~_ij ....

Sets

RED
-BULL

A Big Variety!

~:

~

; Set of 20- Single Flasher------- --sse
Set of 35- Double Flasher-------- $1.47
_Set of so - Triple Flasher.-------· $2.27
, _ _. EVERYDAY DISCOUNT PRICES-NOT
JUST WEEKEND SPECIALS!

Boys and Men's

BOYS
SOCKS

CERAMIC

,.._......MINIATURE LIGHT SETS

ONLY 6 TO .SELL ·
IN EACH STORE

Stripe Top!
Crew Style

'

el.ong Gowns
•Waltz Gowns
•Pajamas
ePegnoir

MART SAVES YOU CASH ON

When we say Sa le- you know we·
•n::~~~:tit. This set has beautif ul
I•
finish face, carries a
Day Warranty. . You'll save close
to sso.oo on each .set - so look
these over Wednesday morning
_
- you'll buy!

Beat
The
Cold!

PRETTY
SLE'Lvp WE'./:1.,4R

STYLE GOWNS!

AM-FM RADIO and
TAPE PLAYER
COMPLETE WITH TWO SPEAKERS

herself. -~

Holiday pastel c:olorsAn fabric:s of
she.er overlay nylon, nYlon tri c:ot or
brushed nylon .. Flannelettes too in
gowns Or man .Jailored pajamas . A
host of sty les and colors. Wonderful,
usetul gifts .

~~~~NY ·$
' ..

$, 39

$1.69

GOWNS
OR
PAJAMAS

BRUSHED TRICOT
FABRICS, ~00

N.F.L. Teams - Browns, B~ngals,
Jets, Colts, Chiefs, etc. Be-ys or
men' s sites. Regular value to 52.49.
Grey with team color &amp; name
printed on front

¢

ALL
STORES

I ..

T.-SHIRTS

Set conlains box for sweater,
., hirt , lingerie, hose, necktie, ,
sock s and trinket. Decorated
Chri stma s designs.
·

STARTS
WED.

•

''

1.49 Value!

1

N.F.L DIRTY GREY

Perpetual c_al~n-dar
Revolves For Daily
•1~
- Date. Pencil Caddy
Handy For Pencils or
Pens. Gift Box~d .

shed never g1ve

Pedestal Types . Stacks
Soda Designs · Florals

66

'

Lit~le Iuxurie.s you know \j;_. · · ·'l ~

DECORATED CERAMIC MUGS

GIRLS FLANNEL ·

A DISCOUNT
DfPART Mf. NT STOitl

'

To $1.17

-. Founder's Day Sale-

MEN'S CUSHION FOOT SOCKS · ELECTRIC PERCOLATORS

ANTibUE
STYLED!

TOMK. FISHER
PRESIDENT
ER'S STORES, INC.

EST. FISHER

·-

from B styles.

under hi s guiding hand We opened

pl~nncd

'

'

NIQUE GIFT - PENCil' WEL
CHRISTMAS ARRANGEMENTS WITH PERPETUAL CALENDAR

priced ·merchandise, sold at the

the Silvar
Bridge
Pl .. zanow
. Webeing
also
havc
2 other
locations

.,.

Santas, La.mp Posts, Colorful

.- 11 vears- ago- we opener.J .our
hr.;. I_Shopper's Mart - in uptown
· Pond Pleasant. Jim· Fisher felt
lh ,tt the people ot the Ohio Valley
were entitled to I he newest tre.nd
ii1 modern Retailing, a true
di &lt;:.count store. He started that
tiny store with quality , · popular

our G&lt;~llipolis and Ma:~on stOres .
We hrtv~ since closed our small
downtown · GallipOlis store a~
opened our n~w modern store in

. .

.

'

..

�'

' J

'
Dec. ~.1972

8-The

Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec.~. 1972

'

.

11
R 0 WE OPENED OUR FIRST SHOPPfRS-MART--SO IN PlACE OF AN
ANNIVERSARY SALE - WE HONOR OUR FOUNDER - THE LATE JAMES J. FISHER •-

.

. I!

STARTS WEDNESDAY -MORNING -IN PT. PLEASANT • MASON-· SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
...._.._.--~ -.· A

SALUTE TO
- OUR FOUNDER

Accent your mantels,
tables, doorways with
severa l of these Christmas
a.rrangements .
Choose

lowest possible price. Lafe.r,

tor Shopper Marts . we
mi ss Jim , Fisher. for he was

~r:::c~~t:at~:: ;~~y w~~~i:sg

·

SHOP THE STORE MOST CONVENI-ENT FOR YOU! .

r----------· p---------------..
..

-Founder's Day Sale-

Good GifUtem for Working Men!

MINIATURE BOTTLES

How:e ver, his teachings and
beliefs remain with us and our
salespeople.
·'
- ·

CUT
GLASS!
While
They
-Last

r--!!"""-..~~~~.-.­
S CUP SIZE! ',
COMPLETE WITH CORD

White or Colors
Si.~es 10 to' 12 •

$

. GIFT
BOXED!

PAIR

. EA.

$.

Complete _With --.:_e~m Name

-Founder's Day Sale-

44¢ro94¢

.'

•

SET OF 7 GIFT BOXES

B~~s

Set
While They Last!

MEN'S
SIZES

EA.

VAWE

90$9

LI.NED VINYLS

'1ALLY ·HO". MEN'S DRESS
GLOVES
AFTER
SHAVE

'
3
94~.
.

PAIR.

87~

STUFFED
ANIMALS

TOBOGGANS
OR FACE MASKS
87
. TO $}

77¢

SMALL BOYS

4

Why Pay
More?

Silver. Gold Red . Blue

44e
PLASTIC LINER

Keeps Clothes
Fresh and Clean

711,.

FOR MANY YEARS OF
USE IN YOUR HOME!

: Boys' Pockets and Needs!

BOYS NO IRON

.

Le Pages' Regular 39c

Size 6 to 18. Solids or
stripes . Crew necks. collar
nec:ks, mock turtle necks.
Long s leeve.

·

Monotone And Two Color Embroidery
Mr. and Mrs.
His and Hers$
, Asst. Flora Is

,

2 Ft. Tall
TREE
4 Ft. Tall
TREE

A

Big Color
Selection!

Christmas Wrap

$244

CARDS AND
TAGS

$744

,4~ !~~rds
ktr~ma

ao~~~ch

Dispenser
MENS
For her gift- take a look at our
collection of budget priced
robes. A very nice selection.
Come see,

g~EA.,

$227

One Piece Pan
Shape!
Sturdy ! $3.19 Value ·

tO

A Pair Will Add the Warm Look!

TREE AND FLOOR
COVER -

8"
,

ELECTRICAL
LAMP
POST
40" Tall
. 3 Color Tone!

UL
· Approved

Size 3t"x32" .• 38c

'·

tO Colors

.$5 94 $1294 ~:: 6 7I ~

METAL TREE STAND

Large
Regular32"x48"
79c size&amp;

·ORLON
DRESS
SOCKS -

LONG OR SHORT STYLES!

SIZE C71f2 LIGHT BULBS

A SHEET OF SNOW!

Solid Colors .
or
16~ Roll
Designed

·16¢.

LePages Regular 27c

6l~ox

Replacement l:lulbs For
Your Indoor Ught Sets
Everyday Low· Price -

.

WRAP TAPE

CELLO TAPE

Every ·Day

FIREPROOF ICICLES
1000 -COUNT
$1.00 VALUE !
Metalized -

Tags

41 ~

CHRISTMAS

$ 94
·

EA.

PR.

13

¢

rllllttle ;rule 1o1

a Jllr.y. ""')'CIUI'I tomorrow1

..u L apPrmed.

.,.

FANTASTIC LOW PRICE!

P~~~s~~c

I

_

iA'cii·

SAFE and INEXPENSIVE!

:ART GUN
26~

TO EACH
STOMER

-

381NCHES
TALL!

Rooted hair dolls , fashion
dolls, doll s in cradles - we
specia lize in the small
inexpensive dolls, shop our
collection, soon.

¢
To $1.94

OPEN TILL 9 PM

6 NIGHTS •••

Red With
Yellow Flame

CERAMIC HOT POT

COMPARE!

Brain Teasers
3 TYPES

White With
Chicken Design!$
Warms Water
Each
For Soup, Tea
~-----J or Instant Coffee ·
GIFT BOXED

~0!.A4. AGES

JIGSAW

PUZZlES

·

BEAUTIFUL ,BLOWN GLASS
s,..a.1

UD VASES·

DISCOUNT
PRICED!

WOODEN
PUZZLES

PLAY
SETS
Several

They'll Give
You AChallenge

Styles

66~up

F,RICTION
CARS

Designs
Push · They Go!

64~

6

77 ~-

Wonderful giftsl E1ched s_tytos, modern
tri·color model s, hobnail designs. A really
big selection · In just about any color of
the rainboW. S inch to 12 inch sites.

A 01SCOUN,T

$5.94

O£PA RT ME NT STOlt£

$ 27

SHOP OUR BUSY LITTLE STORES
PT. PLEASANT · MASON • SILVER BRIDGE PLAzA

.

EA·.

I

" .

'

I

UP

ALWAYS SOMETHING NEW AND DIFFERENTYOU'LL FIND UNUSUAL GIFTS HERE! !

Olhers$394
$2.94
to

'

Choose From 10
STYLES!

DOLLS

liitleren1
costumes for her
' play dolls . By
· ''Topper".

8

CHINESE
CHECKERS

77¢ m.46¢

DOLL
OUTFITS

LIMIT

. -~..

d~teve.

ELECTRICAL
NOEL
CANDLE

94

Fits All The Fashion Dolls

STOCK UP AT THIS
NEW LOW PRICE!
ON SALE WEDNESDAY-

NOEL
CANOL

Opague nylon tricot,
· lace trim on bodice
an d hem.

BUDGET PRICED INEXPENSIVE TOYS - RIO TV

BATTERIES

PKG.

SOlids,H!)urs_
pronto, ! ftorals .
with s nap or bu1ton
fronts. Not just a handful,
but dozens to select from.
Shor 1 sleeve and long

Auembles In

NYLON TRICOT

$

SIZE Cor D

For Her
At Home

4~" II DE - '38%" HIGH.

,.
SET

Featuring
no · iron
polyester blends in so lids,
embroidered front or fancy
trimmed styles. Every
important color. All Sizes

We Remember The Little
Inexpensive Gift Items!
Dozens of Suggestions

Large 42 Inch Size

UL ·
APPROVED!
Red With
Two Colot
Trim

I

3 PLY FIBER IOARD

'
Complete wllll

6.6" 38~

GUN and
HOLSTER

LIST PRICE IS $2.98! .

ELECTRIC FIREPLACE

Pack of 4 red tissue bells.
inc:h size.

1

HOLIDAY WOMEN'S
BLOUSES , SizeSLIPS
32 to 44

ELECTRICAL

· All C_ome with Stand and Can Be Shaped!

.

RED PAPER

christmas gift

Here's Your Bonus
SPECIAL BUY!

CHRISTMAS
TREES
PILLOW CASE SETS

SHIRTS
SET OF 7

ARTIFICIAL SCOTCH PINE

SCHIFFLI EMBROIDERED- BOXED

FASHION KNIT

TREE LIGHT SET
g::t ~::P o:~~Y:: $}27

74

' And
Desig~ed
In C~lor
SIZe To F If

l'

'

Stunt cars that rOll over, go in circles, won '! fall off tables. Tooting
. trams: b~rkmg dogs, roaring panda s, s_~ngmg Santas. All operate. on .
llashhght batterie s. ·

30 Square Feet Total
3 . Different Printed
Designs in Each Pack

1J

EXPANDS
TO ~8 INCHES!

ISCOUNT PRICE!

GIFT WRAPPING
PAPER

'·

87

JUMBO SIZE •

Stands Alone or Hangs
Blue. Red, Orange or Yellow
High Impact Plastic

3 Roll Package

Box

Discount Priced -

EXPANDO iACI

You'll need plenty so save
yourse lf 21c on each package of thi s
pretty paper. 60 square feet in each
pack .

tiNSEL
GARLAND
Really Brighten any Tree

Items. Great

!0 ~E~S ':"' WOODEN!

SPICE RACK

6 ROLL PACK OF
26" PAPER

3 in. Wide- 15 Ft. Long

0111~

Ea .

TO

·~ ~;fQYS

Box

plus doufts ot

tor stocking stulferlll

COMPLETE W_ITH 5 ~OTH~CAR_!_ JARS!

$ 37

¢

H~-

BUns, watches, jack oetl, return bolla

Each

OF 75

e Metal

Whistles, ptiy d1819ro, .Puzzles, doll a,

4

THEY ALL LOVE OUR
BATTERY OPERATED

AMENT HANGERS

TOYS

$594..,_' ._

To 7

Flare leg corduroy or cotton
· twi II
s lacks
comes
with
" ~trrait

'IALU EST(), 25c

$227

Small terry and felt
animals - up to large
sta nd-up plush sty les. A
size for every age. Visit the
M,lrt for your small toy

SHIRT AND
PANT SETS
SIZE

(~_ij ....

Sets

RED
-BULL

A Big Variety!

~:

~

; Set of 20- Single Flasher------- --sse
Set of 35- Double Flasher-------- $1.47
_Set of so - Triple Flasher.-------· $2.27
, _ _. EVERYDAY DISCOUNT PRICES-NOT
JUST WEEKEND SPECIALS!

Boys and Men's

BOYS
SOCKS

CERAMIC

,.._......MINIATURE LIGHT SETS

ONLY 6 TO .SELL ·
IN EACH STORE

Stripe Top!
Crew Style

'

el.ong Gowns
•Waltz Gowns
•Pajamas
ePegnoir

MART SAVES YOU CASH ON

When we say Sa le- you know we·
•n::~~~:tit. This set has beautif ul
I•
finish face, carries a
Day Warranty. . You'll save close
to sso.oo on each .set - so look
these over Wednesday morning
_
- you'll buy!

Beat
The
Cold!

PRETTY
SLE'Lvp WE'./:1.,4R

STYLE GOWNS!

AM-FM RADIO and
TAPE PLAYER
COMPLETE WITH TWO SPEAKERS

herself. -~

Holiday pastel c:olorsAn fabric:s of
she.er overlay nylon, nYlon tri c:ot or
brushed nylon .. Flannelettes too in
gowns Or man .Jailored pajamas . A
host of sty les and colors. Wonderful,
usetul gifts .

~~~~NY ·$
' ..

$, 39

$1.69

GOWNS
OR
PAJAMAS

BRUSHED TRICOT
FABRICS, ~00

N.F.L. Teams - Browns, B~ngals,
Jets, Colts, Chiefs, etc. Be-ys or
men' s sites. Regular value to 52.49.
Grey with team color &amp; name
printed on front

¢

ALL
STORES

I ..

T.-SHIRTS

Set conlains box for sweater,
., hirt , lingerie, hose, necktie, ,
sock s and trinket. Decorated
Chri stma s designs.
·

STARTS
WED.

•

''

1.49 Value!

1

N.F.L DIRTY GREY

Perpetual c_al~n-dar
Revolves For Daily
•1~
- Date. Pencil Caddy
Handy For Pencils or
Pens. Gift Box~d .

shed never g1ve

Pedestal Types . Stacks
Soda Designs · Florals

66

'

Lit~le Iuxurie.s you know \j;_. · · ·'l ~

DECORATED CERAMIC MUGS

GIRLS FLANNEL ·

A DISCOUNT
DfPART Mf. NT STOitl

'

To $1.17

-. Founder's Day Sale-

MEN'S CUSHION FOOT SOCKS · ELECTRIC PERCOLATORS

ANTibUE
STYLED!

TOMK. FISHER
PRESIDENT
ER'S STORES, INC.

EST. FISHER

·-

from B styles.

under hi s guiding hand We opened

pl~nncd

'

'

NIQUE GIFT - PENCil' WEL
CHRISTMAS ARRANGEMENTS WITH PERPETUAL CALENDAR

priced ·merchandise, sold at the

the Silvar
Bridge
Pl .. zanow
. Webeing
also
havc
2 other
locations

.,.

Santas, La.mp Posts, Colorful

.- 11 vears- ago- we opener.J .our
hr.;. I_Shopper's Mart - in uptown
· Pond Pleasant. Jim· Fisher felt
lh ,tt the people ot the Ohio Valley
were entitled to I he newest tre.nd
ii1 modern Retailing, a true
di &lt;:.count store. He started that
tiny store with quality , · popular

our G&lt;~llipolis and Ma:~on stOres .
We hrtv~ since closed our small
downtown · GallipOlis store a~
opened our n~w modern store in

. .

.

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�I

•

.

r

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..

L

10 - Tilt&gt; Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. 5, 1972 ·

,_.....,....___-

Sentinel ·Classifieds Get ActiOn! Sentinel Classifieds. Get Results!
!
ZSIGNS
Ponaeroy
Record k eepmg
Business
Services·
OF
Motor Co.
.__.
GUALnY
'
:C. changes coming
'!"''
KUHL'S
. .
'''I

e

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''

.

I

·

DEADLINES

·

~ -~'
I
).~~

I --

~

!
~

,.
!

Cancellation - Corrections
Will be accepted until 9 a .m . for
Day of Publicat ion
REGULATIONS
The Publishe r rrserv es lh1
right to edll or r~ject any ad ~

~*·

-~· '
~:±

SPEND TIME
SAVES's

1970 CAMARO
11999
Hardtop coupe, local la·w mileage, 1-owner ca r, 307 engine, 3-speed transmission, power steering, bucket
seats, console, shar p blUe finish , radio. SHARP IS THE
WORD)
1911 PINTO FORO
11599
' -door , local 1-owner, low mileage, good tires. clean inferia~. green fini sh, radio, 2000cc engi ne, 4-speed.
1968 CAMARO CONVT,
51695
Local 1-own·ei-, low mi leage car. beavtitul cream finish
with black top, bucket' seats. with console, new white-wall
tires, power steering, and automatic tra nsmission. radio.
ONE OF THE SCARC E ONES. AND AS NICE AS THEY
COME.

objectio nal .
ThE
wi ll not be respons ible

publisher
for more .lhan one lncorrec l
insertion .
RATES

~1,

resuli 111 the hospitalization of.
For Wan t Ad Service
fi \'e ur fllore employees within
S cen ts per Word one inse rt ion
M ini mu m Charge 75c
48 hours to the nearest Occents per word three
cupationa l Safety and Health co 11
n ~ecu t lve inser tions.
18 cents per word Six con
Admi nist ration area director.
·secutlve
inser tion s.
Ohio employers wou ld report to
25 P er Cent Discount on pa iC
the OSHA office loca ted at 848 ads and ads p'aid wilh ln 10 days
CARD OF THANKS
f edera l Office Building, 219
&amp; OBITUARY ~·
Sl.SO for 50 word mi n im um
So ut h Dearborn Street,
Ea ch additional word 2c .
Chicago, Illi nois 60604.
BLIND ADS
Addi tiona l 25c Cha r ge pe1
If any small employer has
Advert isement .
been nolified in writing by the
OFFICE HOURS
OPEN EVES. 8:00 I'.Itt.
8:30a .m. lo 5 :00p .m. Daily
Bureau of Labor Statistics that
1'j:IMEROY, OHIO
8 : 30 a . m . to 12:00 Noor
~•
bu sincsses fr om record he has bee n selec ted to par- Safurday .
•~ ~. keeping requirements , em· !kipate in a ·survey of oc~
Notice
•- • playe rs who had no more than cupalional inj uries and
Card ct Thanks
. ~
. _ -- seven employees at any one illnesses, such ewployer will
WE W1 5H to express our si n- For Rent
CE ILING Tile &amp; Wall Paneli ng
,.-- lime durin g the calendar year be required to maintain the log
ce re thanks to Dr . Telle, Dr ..
Installation - reasonable ; for
\
imm ediat ely preceding the and make reports for the
McGowan and the nu rsing TRA I LER in Pomeroy. Phone
estimate. call 9n5471 .
staff of Veterans Memorial
99?3318.
current calendar year need not period of'time specified in the
l2-5-3tp
Hospit-al
for
thei
r
kind
and
12-331c
nut ice. This amendme nt
is no longer
'
1 "" main tain the log ·and th e
considerate care of Mary
~ ' su.ppl e mentary re co rd . becomes ·effective January 1,
3
FUR
N
ls-HED-roo,;;-;-;;;;dbalh,
Elizabe th Stivers .
Norl h Second Ave .. Mid - for Sale
John Stivers and daughter,
I • Likewise, they will not be 1973.
associated
w~h
references required;
dleport;
Gail
1 .1 . required to prepare or pos t the
Except for the abo·.'e change,
12-5- ltp
phone 992-5293 .
NOW WRE CKI NG the former
~ ·'·summary .
eve rythin g else previously
ll -29-tfc
Epple 's
Grocery
Sto r e
build ing in Pome roy. All
f'~\~ :·
But caution: "small em- publicized regardin g the Ocllelp Wanted
TRA ILER spaces; extra large
ki nds of bui lding materials
ployers" refe rred to here are cu patwnal Safety and Health
CAB driver ; apply in person at
lots, S25 a month, Velma
for sal e on the iob including 2
~~~ still re quired to report Acl st ill applies to the farm
Zuspan , Mason , W. Va.
Twin Cily Cab. Middleport .
and 3 in. heavy material.
Middleport, Ohio
ll -29-30tp
.
'j ~ • fat ali ties or accidents that employer.
shee ting and cherr y stair
Ohi o.
12-5-3tc
railing ; ca ll 992-5946 or 882·
3219.
·~·
·~
3
ROOM
furnishe
d
house,
adolfs
t .....
25 To J5 YEARS of age, single
lt -10-ffc
onl y; phone 992-5592 .
lo babysi t by day in my home,
The Almanac
12-5-ftc
if can dri ve; preferable to
By United Press International
APPLES. Ftfzpafrick Orlive ·in ; ph one 992 · 3184
chards, Stale Route 689,
Today is Tuesday, Dec. 5, the daytime or 992·6131 after 7 TWO new mobile homes, never
lived in ; phone 992·25 11.
Phone Wilkesville 669-3785.
p.m
.
3401h day of 1972 with 26 to
12-5-lfc
8-30-ftc
12-5-6fc ----~----follow .
·•·
The moon is in its new phase.
ONE PONY saddle and bridle,
For Sale
Lost
$25; · one 16" bicycle, $12.50;
The morning sta rs are
RIGHT
fender
ski
rt
from
phone 992-5815 .
MUST
se
ll
,
due
to
divorce;
1972
Mercury, Venus, Mars and ma roon '67 Bu ick, if found
'
12-l-3tc
8
track
stereo,
in
wal
nut
I ·,
Saturn .
conlact Icy Dailey, Portland, console . Pay balance of $98 .80
1• .
The evening star is Jupiter. Ohio or ca H 843-2111.
or pay $7 .55 per month ; phone
i"" Community leaders meeting training courses and round...
12-5-3fc
992-533 1.
Those born on this date are
~·· recenUy under the leadership tables covering program Ideas
12-5-6tc
MAN 'S brown bi llfold between
•'·• of E1t1erson Evans heard the for unit leaders. ca mping under the sign of Sagittarius.
·
-American movie-maker Walt Five Poin ts Grill and 1972 DELU XE zig -zag sewing
; 'i "Story of Scouting" in Gallia, events on weekends and week Disney
Whispering Pines ; can keep mac hine . This ma chine
was born Dec. 5, 1901.
~ Meigs and Mason Counties long ex perien ces at Camp
money, please return papers overcasts, embr oide r ies,
Locally Grown
On this day in history:
to Robert Riffl e, Rt. 2, darns artd makes buttonholes.
~-" from Richard Monk, president Arrowhead, spec ial events
In 1776, the firs t scholastic
Racine .
Fresh Cut
Ta ke over pa ymen t of S5,55
l:.;' of the Tri-8tate Area Council, such as Ke ep America
12-5-3fp per month or pay balance of
fraternity
in
AmericaPhi
Scotch
Pine
~ . Boy Scouts of · America, who Beautiful Day, dealing with
Sd6.21.
Phone
992-533
1.
Beta Kappa- was orga nized at AMER ICAN Leg ion Auxi liary &amp;
3.{ ouUiried the need of Scouting in co nservation projects , and William
12-5-6tc
&amp; Mary College in
B and 40 sliver pin in Mid::f~ this area and ways to make it Operation Reach which endl eport or Pomeroy, Satur. EAR LY Ameri can stereo-radio
r.:~· happen.
deavors to make our young Virginia.
day·; reward ; phone 992-7022 combi na tion, AM -FM radio, 4
In 1848, President James Polk ""lore 10 a.m.
Brownell Avenue
·: Personnel to administer the people aware of the drug
speake r sou nd sys tem, 4
Middleport, Ohio
confirmed
the
discovery
of
gold
12-5-Jtp
speed automatic chang er.
scouting program are being problems.
Po1ra
lle
l ,to Middleport Hill.
in
California·
,
leading
to
'
the
Balance S77.5d. Use our
,
secured. Two key people
In all of its activities, which
budget terms. Call 992-70ll5.
:
already selected are Richard are being improved to relate to famed ''Gold Rush " of 1848 and Notice
12-5-6tc COAL. Limestone, Excelsior
'49.
~ • Roy, plant manager at Cluis ouf young people of today, the
Salt Works. E. Main St.,
In 1933, Prohibition was
MODERN
walnut
p omeroy . Ph one 992 ·3891 .
1 :. Craft, as the M-G-M District basic Ideals of Scouting still
.
AM FMst ylet stereo1e, 4
radro,
·
s
Y
4·12-ff c
when
Utah
became
abolished
~-"' Chainnan, and Roger Sam- remain: cha ra cter develop.
spea_
k
.Et,r
s9un?
sy~
tem
t
4
,
.
.
,
""
"' •
lp~ 30th slil.!l_lo r'\ti[y,~jst 1 .l
1 ~ j.
1!1·1fii'Nl#i!)i) Au \tima tk 'sewrn
1-,..~~·i"" as the new District . rnent, cili'(,fnship traini'!~n
•"\!&gt;~~~-·
~!(tQln~
l
l
.
fhang
f,'¢\
· · - · Exi!Cufive!!:' ~
·
· physical and mental Iilli~. kllendmeill'til' th e u.S!e~n~UJ- .I Bal ancEt• . ~68 . 79 . }.Jse d.U:~ ;.,.:~\ m i_ic hloe. Uk.i! new in walnut
fulion.
··
'
:Udget terms. Call 992-7lltil.
cabinet. Makes design stit ';"
They plan to reeruit and
Emerson Evans has agreed
12-Htc
ches. zig-za gs. buttonholes.
In 1963, former New York
·~ train needed adult volunteers to head up the financial effort
--~---..,--~
blind hems, overcas ts, etc .
governor
and
sena
tor,
Herbert
, •· to serve the institutions in the M-G-M District in order
ONE lnlernal ion"a l tandem
$85. Call Ravenswood 273-9521
wheel trailer with 12 pl y fires;
or 273-9893.
.. sponsoring 35 units with a to help make this program a Lehman , died.
one No. 330 Rambler Station
Furnace
Controls
ll -30-ttc
• membership of 650 boys ages 8- reality. He has selected the
Wag on, good condition ; see
A
.
thought
for
the
day
:
Ea rl Werner, Bra dbury close
HUMIDIFIERS
' 20. Efforts also will be made to following men to give
Auto Sales
American
historian
Henry
to
WMPO Radio Station .
.:#: ocganize more units to serve leadership in the raising of Brooks Adams said, " Accident Hot Water Heaters
12-5-3tc
1970 DODGE ca r, white wilh
"- more of the some 6,000 boys Of funds in their county: Miles
Plumbing
black top ; new snow tires.
coun
ts
for
much
in
companion4 YEAR
OLD re gi stered
· the Council area
Epling, Gallia; Vitus Hartley,
Electrical Work
Clean and good condition.
ship
as
in
marriage."
pedig re e wh lfe femal e
:
Some of the servi ces Jr ., Mason, and Ferman
Phone 696-11 35.
poodle; phone 882-2638.
l2-3-3fp
l provided by the Tri.State Area Moore, Meigs.
12-3-3tc ---------$ Council will be in the conduct of
· ···----- - SO LID OAK church pews, 18 ?ets For Sale
and 8 feel long. Reasonable.
AKC;
Sy racuse Asbury United POODLE pupp ies
992-2448
Methodi st Church ; phone 992- apricot, black, sil11er ; wi ll
hold fill Christmas ; phone
2039.
.j
Pomeroy, '0.
992-5443.
l2-3-3tc
i-.
11 -19-tf c

By Williarri P. Smith
•_" ,
Area Ext. Agent
•.:.;..,
JA CKSON Effective
'i :., January I. 1973, there
will be
'l 'l ;·, changes in the record keeping
· ,. ...
requirem ents for the Oc~
Ll:, cupa!ional Safety and Health
• • " Act {OSHA1 (or the small
~ i\.. "
'j ·:. empl oye r. Most farme r"~ ~
employers and many other
''I· agri cul tu ral businesses fall
1.~ ..
into this group.
In an effor t to relieve small

.

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·Ponaeroy Motor Co.

BARGAIN CENTER

Rt. 1 " at caution light"
TUPPERS PLAINS
Used furniture. appliances.
Clean &amp; guaranteed .
NEW FURNITURE
Sofa Beds &amp; Recliners .
Discount priced.

LAYAWAY FOR XMAS
Open lo 7; closed Monday$

h',

EXPERT

•

Wheel Alignment
'5.55

'

Charles Sinclair

.l

·-----~-

v··

I

.
'· given leaders

t:

CHRISTMAS
TREES

BRADFORD'S

UH t'll n

- HEATING &amp;

COOLING .

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

~&lt;

Southern Cal unanimous

!

; nia 's Trojans are

1national

~animous

champions, having
1 been
named the No . I
college football team in the
nation for 1972 by all 35 coaches ·
on the United Press International Ratings Board.
Under the guidance of Head
. Coach John McKay, Southern
; Callfornia swept over eleven
t straight opponents to become
~ the only major college team in
the country to finish un defeated and were named No . I

•

Major Speech Expected

COLUMBUS (UP!)
stephen Kahn, recently ap,polnted superintendent of
banks in the Ohio Commerce
· Department, is expected to
make~ m~Jor policy address to
a gathering of state !Ja,nk
supervisors here Wednesday.
, Kohn is to speak on increasing
efforts by federal banking
1 agencies to become involved in
the regulation of statechartered banks, and about
changes in . the regulation
I ji!Uosophy to be adopted by the
; department's banks division.

.l
'j
l

,

I

by all the coaches on the board,
thus outpointing Big Eight
champion Oklahoma ( 10-1),
350-302. The second-ranked
Sooners lost their chance for an
Wlbeaten season and a crack .at
No. I midway through the

three times by the coaches.
For McKay, the 11-0 season
was his second perfect season
at Southern Cal, having also
gone 11-0in 1962, including a 4237 win over Wisconsin in the
&amp;se Bowl.

~a~~o:'a~~~

Real Estate For Sale

they were upset

Ohio State (9-1), Soirthern
California's &amp;se Bowl opponent on New Year's Day,
was third in the final balloting
and Alabama (10-1) dropped to
fourth after falling from the
Wlbeaten ranks on the fmal
Saturday of the season, 17.-16,
to arch-rival Auburn.
Texas (9-1 ), which coasted to
its sixth straight Southwest
Conference crown, wound up
fifth in the final balloting
followed by Michigan (IIJ.l ),
Auburn (9-1), Penn State (101), Ne braska (8-2· 1) and
Louisiana State (9-1-1).
Thecleansweepofall35flrst
place votes by Southern Cal
matched that of UCLA in the
1971-72 final college basketball
d
be Tr ••
rat Ings an gave t
o,..ns
their third national title.
Previously, they were selected
UPI's No. I football teaJTl in
1962 and 1967. Only OkliltOOma
and Texas have been so named.'

FUNDS ASKED

\,

COLUMBUS (UP!) - State
ENGAGEMENT NOTED
Natural Re8ources Director
Warren E. Kunz of 6464 Hog
William B. Nye has asked the
Cay
Trail, Lake Worth, and
U, ' S. Bureau of Outdoor
\ Relreatlm for $67,040 to help Mrs. Mable F. Kunz of Pitts.
! pllrchue property for the burgh, Pa. are announcing the
: propelled Great Seal State engagement of their daughter,
~ Parkin BouCounty. The state ·Linda Ann Kunz, to Mr. Ronald
I 'll8llld prvvtde anOther t67,040 Bruce Grimm, son of Mr. and
}'to buJ • IICI'I!I northeast of Mrs . Roderick E. Grimm,
• Mklttbe. The .. operty in- Racine. A January 13 wedding
~ • ., s tbe )(old Lepn range at Lakeside United Methodist
tad an .the Great Seal 6f Church at Lake Worth is being
planned.

f

t•w
.... .,OIIIo.

CLELAND·
REALTY
601 E. M&lt;tln
Pomeroy

io· ACRES
Just off Rt. 33 - Mostl y
level. barn , garage, out
cellar, 2 sheds. home has 3
B. R., bath, dining R. New
FA furna ce, porches . THE
BUY OF THE YEAR $8,900.
RUTLAND
' room fram e, 2 B.R., bath,
porches, new garage 24x2B
Inside, ·large lot , storm doors
and windows . .J UST S5,500.
30 FENCED ACRES
NEAR TUPPERS PLA INS
- This home has had a tot of
work done , 4 bedrooms,
ba th , 8 ft. base cabi nets,
doub le bowrstnk . New deep
we ll with pump, good spring,
cistern , bu ilding s and
g a r a g e . s 1 2 , 9 oo..
MINEA~'i,tgST 1 ACRE
. MIDDLEPORT - Gra nt St..
grand older home, 9 rooms, 4
bedr oo ms , t&gt;ath, porc hes,
garage apartmen1 for oddltlonal Income, luge
workshop. $18,500.
POMEROY
1 story fra me, new roof. new ·
siding , · new carport, 3
bedrooms, bath, small tot.
$5,000.
.
TO BU Y OR SELL CONTACT US.
HENRY E. CLELANO
992-2259, If no answer 992·
2568
KATHLEEN M. CLELAND
Saleslady-985-4209
HENRY CLELANOJR.
.
Salqsman- 985-4209 ,,
~--~--~--~

ON PANTS &amp; JEANS
ANNOUNCIN G Parasol
Bou11que . Beauty Salon
openlno Nov . 28th next to
Skate-A-Way Roller Rink ;
open Tuesday thru Saturday
and Tuesday evenin~s ; phone
985-4141 for appomtment;
opera tor , Sandra Trussell
Kerns.
ll -26·12fc

Buy 2

~.,. Pairs

·1-PAIR FREE
The. best b~y in 1he are•.
Have stacks &amp; jeans for the
whole family. Save One·
Third.
9..
POMEROY
·ll!liijl Jack W. Cirsey, Mgr.
·
Phone 911:l,-!181

1973 HOLLY Park, 1d x 65, allelectr ic, 2 bedroom, shag
carpe t, washer and dr yer,
$10,600; phon&lt; 992-5709.
12-3-3tc

·- -=----

CASH pa[d for all makes and
models of mobile homes.
Phone ar ea code 6U-423-9531.
4-13-ffc
.:=========~~

1..:..-----------'-J

-----

;========::.-.,
We talk to you
like a person.

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

J'

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OFFICE SUPPLIES

THE CURRENT'

FURNITURE

.. ·'J'OU r-Ia PEOPL.E GAY 11-iERE ARE
NO OF'F'ORTtANITIES P#Y· NORS .

Atw.INISTl&lt;ATION IS
CORRUPT; DECErTFUL .

EATING
IN CLASS, MR.

and

HAADN:&gt;sE,

ANI? DISHON~

BURNS~

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.
YOU'RE
. A660LUTELY RkOiiT,

.If I HAVE

OFFICER BEEBE .
AND 10 lHINK ...

ToGo
Take Me To

THE SHOP
IF' 'iOU WILL MEET
IN FR.OI,IT OF' THE

-I WILL RETURN SALOME:-/ TO 'IOU

IT BETTER E'&gt;E ~
ORAH'LL PE.TRIF'f

UNHARMED AND MAKE AN

NEAP..t;ST
Me Gl-UTTON
RESTAURANT··

ANNOUNCEMENT THAT WILL
PETRI PI 11-tE v.tRI..D !!
SIGNED
GASRO.'/NE McGLUTTON

.,, .

McGUJTTON -

.EARTH MOVING
From the largest
Bulldozer Radiator 1o the
Sma ll~st Heater Core .
Nathan Biggs
Radi~lor Specialist

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
992-2174
Pomeroy

Dozer &amp; End loader work,
ponds, basement, land- .
scaping. We have 2 si1e i '
·dozers, 2 size loaders. Work
done by hour or contract.
Free E:Stimates. We also
haul fill dirt, top SQil. Dump
trucks and low-boy for hire.
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3525
after 7 p.m. or phone 992·

WiNNIE WINKLE
THERE 15 EVEN A PROVISION
li-IAT I CAN BE DISMISSED
FOR~SI;" A PHAASE
11-!AT RECALLS MY

5232.

O'DELL WHEEL alignmenT
located at Crossroads, Rt. 12~ .
Complete front end service,
tune up and brake service.
Wheels balanced electr onically.
All
work'
guaran1eed .
Reasonable
rates . Phone 742-3232 or 992·'
DO.ZE R and back hoe work,
3213.
ponds and septic tanks; dit7-27-tfc
chilig service; top soli , fill .
dirt, Hmestone ; B&amp;K Ex- A T'I'ENT.ION FARMERS .
cavaf rng. Phone 992-5367 •. Largest choice of all breeds ol
D1ck Karr, Jr.
A.l. Sires by phoning Leland
9·l-tfc
Parker 992-2264. Pomeroy or
__
E_L_N_A_ a_n_d__
W_h_it_e-cS-e-wing
call station for service, information o..or direct sales.
Mach ines ... serv ice on all
11 .9.30fc
makes . Reasonable rates .
The Sewing Center , . Mid· WILL CUT or trim trees,
dleport, Ohio.
reasonable: Also clean out
ll -16-tfc
basements, allies and cellars.
~ - - --~-c-------Phone 949-3221.
R EAOY.'M'tx
CONCR FT E
ll -22-301c
delivered right to t,our
,
,
project. Fast and easy . _~ ree _ ~£.1;..\J. ~J:.OJt..}.wnlngs, storm
', . e ~ t Iro ~ tt).. Ph O'l.t,t1,U2ll~ ;&amp;o\li/M!i!:i,l!i\il 'v{t.do"'iJ&gt;;,&lt;;i! f por1s.
"Gi\ell!liln llead'f' IYI\1( -~o .. , IJJ~~quees,.,W,mtnum siding;
Middleport. Ohio. ·~
',,. '' ahH ' raitlrif.''"" Jacob, sales
6-30-ffc ' representative. For . free
·estimates, phone Charles
.
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V..
REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446Johnson and Son, Inc.
:
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell,
, J.2-tfc'
Owner &amp; Operator.
5-12-ffc •BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
Septic tanks lns1alled. George
C: BRADFORD, Auc11oneer
I Bill) Pullins. Phone 992-2478.
Complete Service
4-25-tfc
Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio
SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
( riff Bradford
SEWAGE SYSTEMS
.
5-t-tfc · cLEANED,' REPAIRED~,
MILLER SANITATION,
AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
STEWART,
OHI". . PHONE:
Lost
your
ca ncelled?
662-3035.
operator's license? Call 992·
10-~-tfc
2966.
6-15-tfc-

-----==-

HOUSE FOR SALE, ll4 Brick
Sireet, Pomeroy, Ohio ; brick
house, J bedrooms, excellent
location, close to school and
city ; c0.1ac1 Lou Osborne or
call 992-5898.
11·26-ffc
--------,-A NICE place in the hills of
Meigs County wlfh or without
furniture; ll acres land ; call
949-.)201 for appointment af1er
6 p.m.; be home all day
Saturday and Sunday.
.
,11 ·29-6fp

kl"t'A, SYWESTER!
WI-IAT C'N l DO
FER! '/A?

'

· LAMENTED S'TUDIO

G &amp; E APPLIANCE Repair;
repair of all laundry equipment. refrigeration equipment and house wiring ; call
61 d-992-6050.
l1 -2d-30tp

I LEGAL NOTICE

.

JUDGE

CAMPUS CLAITER

Open8Til5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, D.

•• Air Conditioners
HAY MAN 'S Aucl i ~n - a gOOd
:•Awnings
place to go each Friday
evening , 7 p.rY). at Laur~l 1,600 BALES of good ' mixed
•··Underpinning
Cliff on old Rt. 7, l mile west hay : lSObu. ofcorn ; 1 super(
of Rock Springs Fairground.
- hqmeJ
Farmall tractor with two o..omplete
l0-10-Ifc
ORDINANCE 244
point hitch; 1 sfoke rma1ic ~Service -.- plus gigantic : 1
" An Oretinance Establ ishi ng a
stove; 357 magnum pls1ol ; · \!tsplay of mobile homes :
Special Fund known as The
SELLARDS Market, Rulland, farm machinery ; 65 Ford !always available-at ...
Fed~ral
General Revenue
Ohio Is nQW owned and
LTD ; Rolland Searles,
Sha ring Trust Fund ."
Qperal.ed by Roger E. Car- Rutland . Ohio ; phone 742·
MILLER
penter. 5fore hours are 8 a.m. 4626.
Whereas, the Congress ha s
to 8 p,m. weekday.s.and 12 to 8
enacted
the State and Loc;al
1l-29-6fp ' MOBILE
HOMES
.
p.m. Sunday.
Assistance Act of 1972 provid ing
1220 Washington Blvd.
ll -29-6fc PAINT Damage. 1972 Zig-Zag
a system of general revenue
sharing
with states and units of
423-7521
BELPRE,
O.
sewing mach ines. Stilt In
local
governments,
and
,
KOSCOT KOSMET IC S &amp; WIGS. original ca rtons. No at Whereas, Section 123 la l Ill
SPEC IAL S MONTHLY . tachments needed as our
of the Federal Act requires each
PHONE HELE N JANE control~ are built-ln. Sews Real Estate For Sale
unit of, local go11ernment to
BROWN, MIDDLEPORT, wlfh l or 2 needles, makes
establish a trust fund to receive
OHIO 992-5113 .
buttonholes, sew on but1ons, · SP.E:CIAL: Move In before federal revenue sharing , and
Wheras, the Sureau of In ·
12-J-tfc monograms, and blind hem · wlnier . 4 bedroom ranch
sp,1ctlon
and Supervlllon of
home
on
'A
acre
lot.
Bath
and
stitch. Full cash price S38.50
PUblic Offices has approved the
a halt, built-In kitchen, wall to establishment
or
budget
plan
available.
of a "F ederal
Wanted To Buy
wall carpet and garage. Price General Revenue
Phone 992-564 1.
Trust
$20,750.00; also a 5 bedroom ·Fund" In eachSharing
WANTED ..:. Old upri ght
ll ·29-6fc
municipal
colonial house on a :V.. acre loi. corporation receiving
pianos, grand pianos, old
Bath and a half, buill-In assistance under the Ftderal
pump organs. Any condition·. VACUUM Cleaner new 1972
kitchen, dining room , family· Act, os requ ired by Sec . 5705.12,
Paying S10each. Write giving mode! . Comple1e .with all
rootn and the works, prlcecl of the Oh io Rev ised Codt.
directions . Witten Plano Co., clean rn ~ fools. Small paln1
Now, Therefore. Be It or .
$30,000.00. Call Sherman E. dalned
Box 188, Sardis, Ohio 43946. damage In shipping . Will take
by the Coun cil of the
Summerfield, 985-3598 or 985· VIllage of
12·1-6tp S27 cash or budget p1an
R_aclne, State of Ohio
~177 .
~
.,--=c----.,--:-:available. Phone 992-56~1 .
that :
1t-2-30tc
' tl-29·61c
'OLD FUrniture, oak tables,
Sec . 1. . There Ia hereby
es1abltshed a special fund to be
.
..
,
organs.&gt;lllshes, docks, brass
beds, oncomple1e households.
8 ROOM house and bath, nice known as the "Federtt General
Tru11 Fund "
Wri1e M. D. Millar, Rt. ~.
large lot, natural gas, buill-in RevenuetheSharing
provisions of Sec.
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271. ·
cabinets In kitchen, close to . under
S705 . 1~ of tho Ohio Revised
6-28-lfc
radio station in Bradbury; Code.
phone 992-2602.
Stctlon 2. All monies paid 10
..
,
11 -27-lOtp tho VIllage under lho State and
For Rent
-----'----Local Fla&lt;:al Anlstanco Act of
ALL-ELECTRIC brick home, 1972 ~hall be crodlttd to said
txptndtd In •c ·
3 AND 4 ROOM furnlshecl and
10'12 acres of land; close to fund 1ndwlrh
the terma and
unf urnished apartm.-nts.
school; contact Joyce E. · cordanct
provisions
of said Fldtrel Act.
Phone 992·5.134.
Manual,
Greenwood
Section :t. This Ordinance
4-12-lfc
Cemetery Road, Racine, shell take tffect lnd be In forct
- -- ., - - - - ' - - Ohio.
from and afitr tht Nrrllflt
11-29-6tc parlod a)lowtd by 11w.
3 ROOM house and bath, ideal
for couples, utilities paid,
--------PuStd tltl~ lind day of
near Middleport, phone 992..iOUSE In Long BottoiTi';'p'liftA.l November 1972. C~ertn l'ytn
7791.
985-3529.
-·-,
Moyor
12 .3.Jtc
~11 -trd Attell: Mit Cleland
--~-----~-~--------~~
. ' (lfl 21 (121 5, It

~Qblle

Pomeroy

PomeroY. Home &amp; Auto

Real Estate For Sale

Mobile Homes For Sale

-

992 -2094

606 E. Main

.

.SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 992-2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
AKC Toy Poodle puppies,
Authorized Singer Sales and
wormed and shots, well -bre~
Service.
We Sharpen Scissors.
and healthy . 575. Phone
3-29-ttc,
Coolville 667-62ld.
11 -22-12tp

choice for UPI crown

HOME &amp; AUTO

·-GUARANTEED, · Phone 992:2094

~~

Sco.u ting story

~;'fi_~~~====~~=~ !

POMEROY

On Most American Cars

Chase Hardware

NEW YORK (UP!) - Like
their crosstown rivals in
basketball, Southern Callfor-

•'

Mond.a y Oe.a dline 9 a.m .

d eemed

.~·

---~

WHAT MAKES
'IE SA'I THAT,

TATER'S GITTIN'
. FATTER'N A
BUTTERBALL ,
AUNT LOWI:EIV

. WAN T ADS.
INFORMATION

....

·.s P .M . Day Before ·Pvbli catior

·i'

·: ~ ~­

I

'

I·

DIR!E
NSED

OFA

LOAN I

YOU WILL WORK UNDER OUR
DIRECTION ... SALARY CORRECT...

T&gt;IAT'6 WkAT I 'M
kERE FOJ;J: .,

.JUST A FEW
SIMPLE

SIDDOWio.i !

(OIUii&amp;TIONS!
WHAT All:li YA

TIME; IS OF
THE; ESSENCE,
SIRE!

G.ONNA USE

~EMONEY

FER'!'

'TERM L CORRECT...
JUSTIFIABLE: EXPENSES HMM I
SUPPOiE so.. jf
DOE:S $EfM IN

.

ORDER ...

. GASOLINE ALLEY

LITn.E ORPHAN ANNIE
BUT

IF BY SOME BlACK MAGIC THEY

DO EXII'&gt;T "' WAR BUCKS tllltl MEVER
LIVE TO seT EnS OM THEM AQAIH !
DESTROY, SAHARA'" DESTROY!

NOT A

HAIR OF SAHIB'S HEAD

WILL' BE INJURl'D AS LOH4 AS
I

DRAW BREATH!

Real Estate For Sale

Virgil B.
Teaford, Sr
Broker
111 Mtchlnlc 51.
Olllo 4576t.

DICK TRACY

Pom~n~y,

NEW LISTING
START YOUR FUTURE New brick business building.
Has 4 large rooms. Ideal for
contrador, store, etc. Best of
location if you want In on the
ground floor. 2900 sq. 11. llOO
paneled and tiled. 2 ceramic
baths . Plenty of parking. No
Information over the phone.
NEW LISTING
RENOVATED
3
bedrooms, new bath, · new
kitchen. paneling and many
o1her features . Large lot.
Asking $6500.00.
4 BEDROOMS
LEVEL LOT - Here's your
chance to buy low, fix up,
and sell. Located In town on
good street near stores .
Asking only $7500 .00. ·
VILLAGE
3 BEDROOMS - Bath, large
living, large dining, and
front porch. Large level lot.
Ideal for garden or pony.
Want $10,500.00.
WANT TO BUILD?
·
8 ACRES - On proposed '
water line -and blacktop·
road. Asking $~500,00 . .
BRICK
~ BEDROOMS Large
living, dining, kitchen, and
·foyer. 2 porches. Barn, and a .
string of garages. 2 acres of
good land. Asking Ollly
$21,500.00.
ONE ACRE
NEAR TOWN - 4 bedioom
home. Kitchen and large
dining. Full basement. Some
long needle pines. Asking
$12,000.110.
LOTS-ACR E~FARMS
HOUSES 'SCARCE, DON'T
BELIEVE IT. WE HAVE
PLENTY, SOME THAT
YOU CAN MOVE INTO
TOMORROW. COME SEE
FOR YOURSI:LF.
HELEN L TEAFORD,
ASSOCIATE
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS

~

Yesterday's Cryptoquole: BUT WHY DOES THE CHRISTMAS SEASON ALWAYS COME WHEN THE STORES ARE
AT THEIR BUS!EST?- SOURCE UNKNOWN

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
3. Whip
1. Large
«.Coal denumbers
rivative
6. Billiard
5. Like a
shot
piercing
11. Mohamsound
med is his
6. Fine
prophet
coffee
12. Willow
7. Powdered
13. "-'s AI·
Java
manack"
S.New
(2 wds.)
Mexican
15. Young
Indian
sheep
9. Old
16. l (Ger.)
Italian
l?."Go - "
title
37 Acro;s
lG. Shrew
did!
U. Gelid
(3 wds.)
2%. Thread
17. Manuholder
script leaf
25.Lamb's
18. English
nom de
poet
plume
19. Region of
Z6. Tabulate
Greece
27. "Red zo.
Cash
in the
drawer
Sunset"
28. Jai 29. Berlioz's
11
Harold
in-"
30. Eyeglass
innovation by
37 Across
33. Pay dirt
3f, Scary Ut·
terance
37. American

(C 1972 King Features Syndieatt, [oc,)

JJ&amp;MID~;IJ.J:::!!:!..Jc::
VneeramblethOH r...r JumbiH,
letter to eaeh oquve, to
Corm lour ordhtar7 worda,
Dllt

l IACEE
.
21. Effortless
22. Wild
guess
(colloq.)
23. Buddhist
language
2«. Norway's
patron
saint
27. Suppress
31. Banal
3%. Souihern
constella·
lion

3«. News·
paper
(sl.)

35. French
river
36. Sunday
punch
(sl.)
37. Jujube
38. LeGal·
iienne
39.lnsecl
40. chance!
41. Purview

[ METIIY

•::t::-.."""""

X
I

I KJ I

] I

r...e,••r'•

I

Aoowen Ao o.U.Io jJGtt of

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

Shabby
Penetrate-

DOWN
1. En-

gro~~ed

2. South
African
plant

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXIt
is LONGFELLOW
v ne 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,
apostrophes, the length a~d ,formation of the words are all
hint.s. Each day the code letters are different
CltYPTC&gt;qUOTES
HGVFS LVC GVEKOMV O C FXPVGROSA
EBRS FR WGFPV RKNi\OV GR SGOBJ:,Y J
OC TFG .- 1\VCVMF

-.

fALLIN

.
,.,.,w, Jluoo JJiaoy
r..•..,.

flfldk1td lo- "PIII"

resort

'

LOOK DONN AT.

J...W..o 01111 PIICI 'IIIPLI

Stop

.

WHAi 'A
OF l.el~lte"MIGHT

(-

(2 wds.)
French

.

t) ...,

t] I

statesman

'fNIU
•

lAM
IN

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'
..

L

10 - Tilt&gt; Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. 5, 1972 ·

,_.....,....___-

Sentinel ·Classifieds Get ActiOn! Sentinel Classifieds. Get Results!
!
ZSIGNS
Ponaeroy
Record k eepmg
Business
Services·
OF
Motor Co.
.__.
GUALnY
'
:C. changes coming
'!"''
KUHL'S
. .
'''I

e

'

''

.

I

·

DEADLINES

·

~ -~'
I
).~~

I --

~

!
~

,.
!

Cancellation - Corrections
Will be accepted until 9 a .m . for
Day of Publicat ion
REGULATIONS
The Publishe r rrserv es lh1
right to edll or r~ject any ad ~

~*·

-~· '
~:±

SPEND TIME
SAVES's

1970 CAMARO
11999
Hardtop coupe, local la·w mileage, 1-owner ca r, 307 engine, 3-speed transmission, power steering, bucket
seats, console, shar p blUe finish , radio. SHARP IS THE
WORD)
1911 PINTO FORO
11599
' -door , local 1-owner, low mileage, good tires. clean inferia~. green fini sh, radio, 2000cc engi ne, 4-speed.
1968 CAMARO CONVT,
51695
Local 1-own·ei-, low mi leage car. beavtitul cream finish
with black top, bucket' seats. with console, new white-wall
tires, power steering, and automatic tra nsmission. radio.
ONE OF THE SCARC E ONES. AND AS NICE AS THEY
COME.

objectio nal .
ThE
wi ll not be respons ible

publisher
for more .lhan one lncorrec l
insertion .
RATES

~1,

resuli 111 the hospitalization of.
For Wan t Ad Service
fi \'e ur fllore employees within
S cen ts per Word one inse rt ion
M ini mu m Charge 75c
48 hours to the nearest Occents per word three
cupationa l Safety and Health co 11
n ~ecu t lve inser tions.
18 cents per word Six con
Admi nist ration area director.
·secutlve
inser tion s.
Ohio employers wou ld report to
25 P er Cent Discount on pa iC
the OSHA office loca ted at 848 ads and ads p'aid wilh ln 10 days
CARD OF THANKS
f edera l Office Building, 219
&amp; OBITUARY ~·
Sl.SO for 50 word mi n im um
So ut h Dearborn Street,
Ea ch additional word 2c .
Chicago, Illi nois 60604.
BLIND ADS
Addi tiona l 25c Cha r ge pe1
If any small employer has
Advert isement .
been nolified in writing by the
OFFICE HOURS
OPEN EVES. 8:00 I'.Itt.
8:30a .m. lo 5 :00p .m. Daily
Bureau of Labor Statistics that
1'j:IMEROY, OHIO
8 : 30 a . m . to 12:00 Noor
~•
bu sincsses fr om record he has bee n selec ted to par- Safurday .
•~ ~. keeping requirements , em· !kipate in a ·survey of oc~
Notice
•- • playe rs who had no more than cupalional inj uries and
Card ct Thanks
. ~
. _ -- seven employees at any one illnesses, such ewployer will
WE W1 5H to express our si n- For Rent
CE ILING Tile &amp; Wall Paneli ng
,.-- lime durin g the calendar year be required to maintain the log
ce re thanks to Dr . Telle, Dr ..
Installation - reasonable ; for
\
imm ediat ely preceding the and make reports for the
McGowan and the nu rsing TRA I LER in Pomeroy. Phone
estimate. call 9n5471 .
staff of Veterans Memorial
99?3318.
current calendar year need not period of'time specified in the
l2-5-3tp
Hospit-al
for
thei
r
kind
and
12-331c
nut ice. This amendme nt
is no longer
'
1 "" main tain the log ·and th e
considerate care of Mary
~ ' su.ppl e mentary re co rd . becomes ·effective January 1,
3
FUR
N
ls-HED-roo,;;-;-;;;;dbalh,
Elizabe th Stivers .
Norl h Second Ave .. Mid - for Sale
John Stivers and daughter,
I • Likewise, they will not be 1973.
associated
w~h
references required;
dleport;
Gail
1 .1 . required to prepare or pos t the
Except for the abo·.'e change,
12-5- ltp
phone 992-5293 .
NOW WRE CKI NG the former
~ ·'·summary .
eve rythin g else previously
ll -29-tfc
Epple 's
Grocery
Sto r e
build ing in Pome roy. All
f'~\~ :·
But caution: "small em- publicized regardin g the Ocllelp Wanted
TRA ILER spaces; extra large
ki nds of bui lding materials
ployers" refe rred to here are cu patwnal Safety and Health
CAB driver ; apply in person at
lots, S25 a month, Velma
for sal e on the iob including 2
~~~ still re quired to report Acl st ill applies to the farm
Zuspan , Mason , W. Va.
Twin Cily Cab. Middleport .
and 3 in. heavy material.
Middleport, Ohio
ll -29-30tp
.
'j ~ • fat ali ties or accidents that employer.
shee ting and cherr y stair
Ohi o.
12-5-3tc
railing ; ca ll 992-5946 or 882·
3219.
·~·
·~
3
ROOM
furnishe
d
house,
adolfs
t .....
25 To J5 YEARS of age, single
lt -10-ffc
onl y; phone 992-5592 .
lo babysi t by day in my home,
The Almanac
12-5-ftc
if can dri ve; preferable to
By United Press International
APPLES. Ftfzpafrick Orlive ·in ; ph one 992 · 3184
chards, Stale Route 689,
Today is Tuesday, Dec. 5, the daytime or 992·6131 after 7 TWO new mobile homes, never
lived in ; phone 992·25 11.
Phone Wilkesville 669-3785.
p.m
.
3401h day of 1972 with 26 to
12-5-lfc
8-30-ftc
12-5-6fc ----~----follow .
·•·
The moon is in its new phase.
ONE PONY saddle and bridle,
For Sale
Lost
$25; · one 16" bicycle, $12.50;
The morning sta rs are
RIGHT
fender
ski
rt
from
phone 992-5815 .
MUST
se
ll
,
due
to
divorce;
1972
Mercury, Venus, Mars and ma roon '67 Bu ick, if found
'
12-l-3tc
8
track
stereo,
in
wal
nut
I ·,
Saturn .
conlact Icy Dailey, Portland, console . Pay balance of $98 .80
1• .
The evening star is Jupiter. Ohio or ca H 843-2111.
or pay $7 .55 per month ; phone
i"" Community leaders meeting training courses and round...
12-5-3fc
992-533 1.
Those born on this date are
~·· recenUy under the leadership tables covering program Ideas
12-5-6tc
MAN 'S brown bi llfold between
•'·• of E1t1erson Evans heard the for unit leaders. ca mping under the sign of Sagittarius.
·
-American movie-maker Walt Five Poin ts Grill and 1972 DELU XE zig -zag sewing
; 'i "Story of Scouting" in Gallia, events on weekends and week Disney
Whispering Pines ; can keep mac hine . This ma chine
was born Dec. 5, 1901.
~ Meigs and Mason Counties long ex perien ces at Camp
money, please return papers overcasts, embr oide r ies,
Locally Grown
On this day in history:
to Robert Riffl e, Rt. 2, darns artd makes buttonholes.
~-" from Richard Monk, president Arrowhead, spec ial events
In 1776, the firs t scholastic
Racine .
Fresh Cut
Ta ke over pa ymen t of S5,55
l:.;' of the Tri-8tate Area Council, such as Ke ep America
12-5-3fp per month or pay balance of
fraternity
in
AmericaPhi
Scotch
Pine
~ . Boy Scouts of · America, who Beautiful Day, dealing with
Sd6.21.
Phone
992-533
1.
Beta Kappa- was orga nized at AMER ICAN Leg ion Auxi liary &amp;
3.{ ouUiried the need of Scouting in co nservation projects , and William
12-5-6tc
&amp; Mary College in
B and 40 sliver pin in Mid::f~ this area and ways to make it Operation Reach which endl eport or Pomeroy, Satur. EAR LY Ameri can stereo-radio
r.:~· happen.
deavors to make our young Virginia.
day·; reward ; phone 992-7022 combi na tion, AM -FM radio, 4
In 1848, President James Polk ""lore 10 a.m.
Brownell Avenue
·: Personnel to administer the people aware of the drug
speake r sou nd sys tem, 4
Middleport, Ohio
confirmed
the
discovery
of
gold
12-5-Jtp
speed automatic chang er.
scouting program are being problems.
Po1ra
lle
l ,to Middleport Hill.
in
California·
,
leading
to
'
the
Balance S77.5d. Use our
,
secured. Two key people
In all of its activities, which
budget terms. Call 992-70ll5.
:
already selected are Richard are being improved to relate to famed ''Gold Rush " of 1848 and Notice
12-5-6tc COAL. Limestone, Excelsior
'49.
~ • Roy, plant manager at Cluis ouf young people of today, the
Salt Works. E. Main St.,
In 1933, Prohibition was
MODERN
walnut
p omeroy . Ph one 992 ·3891 .
1 :. Craft, as the M-G-M District basic Ideals of Scouting still
.
AM FMst ylet stereo1e, 4
radro,
·
s
Y
4·12-ff c
when
Utah
became
abolished
~-"' Chainnan, and Roger Sam- remain: cha ra cter develop.
spea_
k
.Et,r
s9un?
sy~
tem
t
4
,
.
.
,
""
"' •
lp~ 30th slil.!l_lo r'\ti[y,~jst 1 .l
1 ~ j.
1!1·1fii'Nl#i!)i) Au \tima tk 'sewrn
1-,..~~·i"" as the new District . rnent, cili'(,fnship traini'!~n
•"\!&gt;~~~-·
~!(tQln~
l
l
.
fhang
f,'¢\
· · - · Exi!Cufive!!:' ~
·
· physical and mental Iilli~. kllendmeill'til' th e u.S!e~n~UJ- .I Bal ancEt• . ~68 . 79 . }.Jse d.U:~ ;.,.:~\ m i_ic hloe. Uk.i! new in walnut
fulion.
··
'
:Udget terms. Call 992-7lltil.
cabinet. Makes design stit ';"
They plan to reeruit and
Emerson Evans has agreed
12-Htc
ches. zig-za gs. buttonholes.
In 1963, former New York
·~ train needed adult volunteers to head up the financial effort
--~---..,--~
blind hems, overcas ts, etc .
governor
and
sena
tor,
Herbert
, •· to serve the institutions in the M-G-M District in order
ONE lnlernal ion"a l tandem
$85. Call Ravenswood 273-9521
wheel trailer with 12 pl y fires;
or 273-9893.
.. sponsoring 35 units with a to help make this program a Lehman , died.
one No. 330 Rambler Station
Furnace
Controls
ll -30-ttc
• membership of 650 boys ages 8- reality. He has selected the
Wag on, good condition ; see
A
.
thought
for
the
day
:
Ea rl Werner, Bra dbury close
HUMIDIFIERS
' 20. Efforts also will be made to following men to give
Auto Sales
American
historian
Henry
to
WMPO Radio Station .
.:#: ocganize more units to serve leadership in the raising of Brooks Adams said, " Accident Hot Water Heaters
12-5-3tc
1970 DODGE ca r, white wilh
"- more of the some 6,000 boys Of funds in their county: Miles
Plumbing
black top ; new snow tires.
coun
ts
for
much
in
companion4 YEAR
OLD re gi stered
· the Council area
Epling, Gallia; Vitus Hartley,
Electrical Work
Clean and good condition.
ship
as
in
marriage."
pedig re e wh lfe femal e
:
Some of the servi ces Jr ., Mason, and Ferman
Phone 696-11 35.
poodle; phone 882-2638.
l2-3-3fp
l provided by the Tri.State Area Moore, Meigs.
12-3-3tc ---------$ Council will be in the conduct of
· ···----- - SO LID OAK church pews, 18 ?ets For Sale
and 8 feel long. Reasonable.
AKC;
Sy racuse Asbury United POODLE pupp ies
992-2448
Methodi st Church ; phone 992- apricot, black, sil11er ; wi ll
hold fill Christmas ; phone
2039.
.j
Pomeroy, '0.
992-5443.
l2-3-3tc
i-.
11 -19-tf c

By Williarri P. Smith
•_" ,
Area Ext. Agent
•.:.;..,
JA CKSON Effective
'i :., January I. 1973, there
will be
'l 'l ;·, changes in the record keeping
· ,. ...
requirem ents for the Oc~
Ll:, cupa!ional Safety and Health
• • " Act {OSHA1 (or the small
~ i\.. "
'j ·:. empl oye r. Most farme r"~ ~
employers and many other
''I· agri cul tu ral businesses fall
1.~ ..
into this group.
In an effor t to relieve small

.

',

·Ponaeroy Motor Co.

BARGAIN CENTER

Rt. 1 " at caution light"
TUPPERS PLAINS
Used furniture. appliances.
Clean &amp; guaranteed .
NEW FURNITURE
Sofa Beds &amp; Recliners .
Discount priced.

LAYAWAY FOR XMAS
Open lo 7; closed Monday$

h',

EXPERT

•

Wheel Alignment
'5.55

'

Charles Sinclair

.l

·-----~-

v··

I

.
'· given leaders

t:

CHRISTMAS
TREES

BRADFORD'S

UH t'll n

- HEATING &amp;

COOLING .

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

~&lt;

Southern Cal unanimous

!

; nia 's Trojans are

1national

~animous

champions, having
1 been
named the No . I
college football team in the
nation for 1972 by all 35 coaches ·
on the United Press International Ratings Board.
Under the guidance of Head
. Coach John McKay, Southern
; Callfornia swept over eleven
t straight opponents to become
~ the only major college team in
the country to finish un defeated and were named No . I

•

Major Speech Expected

COLUMBUS (UP!)
stephen Kahn, recently ap,polnted superintendent of
banks in the Ohio Commerce
· Department, is expected to
make~ m~Jor policy address to
a gathering of state !Ja,nk
supervisors here Wednesday.
, Kohn is to speak on increasing
efforts by federal banking
1 agencies to become involved in
the regulation of statechartered banks, and about
changes in . the regulation
I ji!Uosophy to be adopted by the
; department's banks division.

.l
'j
l

,

I

by all the coaches on the board,
thus outpointing Big Eight
champion Oklahoma ( 10-1),
350-302. The second-ranked
Sooners lost their chance for an
Wlbeaten season and a crack .at
No. I midway through the

three times by the coaches.
For McKay, the 11-0 season
was his second perfect season
at Southern Cal, having also
gone 11-0in 1962, including a 4237 win over Wisconsin in the
&amp;se Bowl.

~a~~o:'a~~~

Real Estate For Sale

they were upset

Ohio State (9-1), Soirthern
California's &amp;se Bowl opponent on New Year's Day,
was third in the final balloting
and Alabama (10-1) dropped to
fourth after falling from the
Wlbeaten ranks on the fmal
Saturday of the season, 17.-16,
to arch-rival Auburn.
Texas (9-1 ), which coasted to
its sixth straight Southwest
Conference crown, wound up
fifth in the final balloting
followed by Michigan (IIJ.l ),
Auburn (9-1), Penn State (101), Ne braska (8-2· 1) and
Louisiana State (9-1-1).
Thecleansweepofall35flrst
place votes by Southern Cal
matched that of UCLA in the
1971-72 final college basketball
d
be Tr ••
rat Ings an gave t
o,..ns
their third national title.
Previously, they were selected
UPI's No. I football teaJTl in
1962 and 1967. Only OkliltOOma
and Texas have been so named.'

FUNDS ASKED

\,

COLUMBUS (UP!) - State
ENGAGEMENT NOTED
Natural Re8ources Director
Warren E. Kunz of 6464 Hog
William B. Nye has asked the
Cay
Trail, Lake Worth, and
U, ' S. Bureau of Outdoor
\ Relreatlm for $67,040 to help Mrs. Mable F. Kunz of Pitts.
! pllrchue property for the burgh, Pa. are announcing the
: propelled Great Seal State engagement of their daughter,
~ Parkin BouCounty. The state ·Linda Ann Kunz, to Mr. Ronald
I 'll8llld prvvtde anOther t67,040 Bruce Grimm, son of Mr. and
}'to buJ • IICI'I!I northeast of Mrs . Roderick E. Grimm,
• Mklttbe. The .. operty in- Racine. A January 13 wedding
~ • ., s tbe )(old Lepn range at Lakeside United Methodist
tad an .the Great Seal 6f Church at Lake Worth is being
planned.

f

t•w
.... .,OIIIo.

CLELAND·
REALTY
601 E. M&lt;tln
Pomeroy

io· ACRES
Just off Rt. 33 - Mostl y
level. barn , garage, out
cellar, 2 sheds. home has 3
B. R., bath, dining R. New
FA furna ce, porches . THE
BUY OF THE YEAR $8,900.
RUTLAND
' room fram e, 2 B.R., bath,
porches, new garage 24x2B
Inside, ·large lot , storm doors
and windows . .J UST S5,500.
30 FENCED ACRES
NEAR TUPPERS PLA INS
- This home has had a tot of
work done , 4 bedrooms,
ba th , 8 ft. base cabi nets,
doub le bowrstnk . New deep
we ll with pump, good spring,
cistern , bu ilding s and
g a r a g e . s 1 2 , 9 oo..
MINEA~'i,tgST 1 ACRE
. MIDDLEPORT - Gra nt St..
grand older home, 9 rooms, 4
bedr oo ms , t&gt;ath, porc hes,
garage apartmen1 for oddltlonal Income, luge
workshop. $18,500.
POMEROY
1 story fra me, new roof. new ·
siding , · new carport, 3
bedrooms, bath, small tot.
$5,000.
.
TO BU Y OR SELL CONTACT US.
HENRY E. CLELANO
992-2259, If no answer 992·
2568
KATHLEEN M. CLELAND
Saleslady-985-4209
HENRY CLELANOJR.
.
Salqsman- 985-4209 ,,
~--~--~--~

ON PANTS &amp; JEANS
ANNOUNCIN G Parasol
Bou11que . Beauty Salon
openlno Nov . 28th next to
Skate-A-Way Roller Rink ;
open Tuesday thru Saturday
and Tuesday evenin~s ; phone
985-4141 for appomtment;
opera tor , Sandra Trussell
Kerns.
ll -26·12fc

Buy 2

~.,. Pairs

·1-PAIR FREE
The. best b~y in 1he are•.
Have stacks &amp; jeans for the
whole family. Save One·
Third.
9..
POMEROY
·ll!liijl Jack W. Cirsey, Mgr.
·
Phone 911:l,-!181

1973 HOLLY Park, 1d x 65, allelectr ic, 2 bedroom, shag
carpe t, washer and dr yer,
$10,600; phon&lt; 992-5709.
12-3-3tc

·- -=----

CASH pa[d for all makes and
models of mobile homes.
Phone ar ea code 6U-423-9531.
4-13-ffc
.:=========~~

1..:..-----------'-J

-----

;========::.-.,
We talk to you
like a person.

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

J'

'

'

OFFICE SUPPLIES

THE CURRENT'

FURNITURE

.. ·'J'OU r-Ia PEOPL.E GAY 11-iERE ARE
NO OF'F'ORTtANITIES P#Y· NORS .

Atw.INISTl&lt;ATION IS
CORRUPT; DECErTFUL .

EATING
IN CLASS, MR.

and

HAADN:&gt;sE,

ANI? DISHON~

BURNS~

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.
YOU'RE
. A660LUTELY RkOiiT,

.If I HAVE

OFFICER BEEBE .
AND 10 lHINK ...

ToGo
Take Me To

THE SHOP
IF' 'iOU WILL MEET
IN FR.OI,IT OF' THE

-I WILL RETURN SALOME:-/ TO 'IOU

IT BETTER E'&gt;E ~
ORAH'LL PE.TRIF'f

UNHARMED AND MAKE AN

NEAP..t;ST
Me Gl-UTTON
RESTAURANT··

ANNOUNCEMENT THAT WILL
PETRI PI 11-tE v.tRI..D !!
SIGNED
GASRO.'/NE McGLUTTON

.,, .

McGUJTTON -

.EARTH MOVING
From the largest
Bulldozer Radiator 1o the
Sma ll~st Heater Core .
Nathan Biggs
Radi~lor Specialist

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
992-2174
Pomeroy

Dozer &amp; End loader work,
ponds, basement, land- .
scaping. We have 2 si1e i '
·dozers, 2 size loaders. Work
done by hour or contract.
Free E:Stimates. We also
haul fill dirt, top SQil. Dump
trucks and low-boy for hire.
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3525
after 7 p.m. or phone 992·

WiNNIE WINKLE
THERE 15 EVEN A PROVISION
li-IAT I CAN BE DISMISSED
FOR~SI;" A PHAASE
11-!AT RECALLS MY

5232.

O'DELL WHEEL alignmenT
located at Crossroads, Rt. 12~ .
Complete front end service,
tune up and brake service.
Wheels balanced electr onically.
All
work'
guaran1eed .
Reasonable
rates . Phone 742-3232 or 992·'
DO.ZE R and back hoe work,
3213.
ponds and septic tanks; dit7-27-tfc
chilig service; top soli , fill .
dirt, Hmestone ; B&amp;K Ex- A T'I'ENT.ION FARMERS .
cavaf rng. Phone 992-5367 •. Largest choice of all breeds ol
D1ck Karr, Jr.
A.l. Sires by phoning Leland
9·l-tfc
Parker 992-2264. Pomeroy or
__
E_L_N_A_ a_n_d__
W_h_it_e-cS-e-wing
call station for service, information o..or direct sales.
Mach ines ... serv ice on all
11 .9.30fc
makes . Reasonable rates .
The Sewing Center , . Mid· WILL CUT or trim trees,
dleport, Ohio.
reasonable: Also clean out
ll -16-tfc
basements, allies and cellars.
~ - - --~-c-------Phone 949-3221.
R EAOY.'M'tx
CONCR FT E
ll -22-301c
delivered right to t,our
,
,
project. Fast and easy . _~ ree _ ~£.1;..\J. ~J:.OJt..}.wnlngs, storm
', . e ~ t Iro ~ tt).. Ph O'l.t,t1,U2ll~ ;&amp;o\li/M!i!:i,l!i\il 'v{t.do"'iJ&gt;;,&lt;;i! f por1s.
"Gi\ell!liln llead'f' IYI\1( -~o .. , IJJ~~quees,.,W,mtnum siding;
Middleport. Ohio. ·~
',,. '' ahH ' raitlrif.''"" Jacob, sales
6-30-ffc ' representative. For . free
·estimates, phone Charles
.
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V..
REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446Johnson and Son, Inc.
:
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell,
, J.2-tfc'
Owner &amp; Operator.
5-12-ffc •BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
Septic tanks lns1alled. George
C: BRADFORD, Auc11oneer
I Bill) Pullins. Phone 992-2478.
Complete Service
4-25-tfc
Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio
SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
( riff Bradford
SEWAGE SYSTEMS
.
5-t-tfc · cLEANED,' REPAIRED~,
MILLER SANITATION,
AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
STEWART,
OHI". . PHONE:
Lost
your
ca ncelled?
662-3035.
operator's license? Call 992·
10-~-tfc
2966.
6-15-tfc-

-----==-

HOUSE FOR SALE, ll4 Brick
Sireet, Pomeroy, Ohio ; brick
house, J bedrooms, excellent
location, close to school and
city ; c0.1ac1 Lou Osborne or
call 992-5898.
11·26-ffc
--------,-A NICE place in the hills of
Meigs County wlfh or without
furniture; ll acres land ; call
949-.)201 for appointment af1er
6 p.m.; be home all day
Saturday and Sunday.
.
,11 ·29-6fp

kl"t'A, SYWESTER!
WI-IAT C'N l DO
FER! '/A?

'

· LAMENTED S'TUDIO

G &amp; E APPLIANCE Repair;
repair of all laundry equipment. refrigeration equipment and house wiring ; call
61 d-992-6050.
l1 -2d-30tp

I LEGAL NOTICE

.

JUDGE

CAMPUS CLAITER

Open8Til5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, D.

•• Air Conditioners
HAY MAN 'S Aucl i ~n - a gOOd
:•Awnings
place to go each Friday
evening , 7 p.rY). at Laur~l 1,600 BALES of good ' mixed
•··Underpinning
Cliff on old Rt. 7, l mile west hay : lSObu. ofcorn ; 1 super(
of Rock Springs Fairground.
- hqmeJ
Farmall tractor with two o..omplete
l0-10-Ifc
ORDINANCE 244
point hitch; 1 sfoke rma1ic ~Service -.- plus gigantic : 1
" An Oretinance Establ ishi ng a
stove; 357 magnum pls1ol ; · \!tsplay of mobile homes :
Special Fund known as The
SELLARDS Market, Rulland, farm machinery ; 65 Ford !always available-at ...
Fed~ral
General Revenue
Ohio Is nQW owned and
LTD ; Rolland Searles,
Sha ring Trust Fund ."
Qperal.ed by Roger E. Car- Rutland . Ohio ; phone 742·
MILLER
penter. 5fore hours are 8 a.m. 4626.
Whereas, the Congress ha s
to 8 p,m. weekday.s.and 12 to 8
enacted
the State and Loc;al
1l-29-6fp ' MOBILE
HOMES
.
p.m. Sunday.
Assistance Act of 1972 provid ing
1220 Washington Blvd.
ll -29-6fc PAINT Damage. 1972 Zig-Zag
a system of general revenue
sharing
with states and units of
423-7521
BELPRE,
O.
sewing mach ines. Stilt In
local
governments,
and
,
KOSCOT KOSMET IC S &amp; WIGS. original ca rtons. No at Whereas, Section 123 la l Ill
SPEC IAL S MONTHLY . tachments needed as our
of the Federal Act requires each
PHONE HELE N JANE control~ are built-ln. Sews Real Estate For Sale
unit of, local go11ernment to
BROWN, MIDDLEPORT, wlfh l or 2 needles, makes
establish a trust fund to receive
OHIO 992-5113 .
buttonholes, sew on but1ons, · SP.E:CIAL: Move In before federal revenue sharing , and
Wheras, the Sureau of In ·
12-J-tfc monograms, and blind hem · wlnier . 4 bedroom ranch
sp,1ctlon
and Supervlllon of
home
on
'A
acre
lot.
Bath
and
stitch. Full cash price S38.50
PUblic Offices has approved the
a halt, built-In kitchen, wall to establishment
or
budget
plan
available.
of a "F ederal
Wanted To Buy
wall carpet and garage. Price General Revenue
Phone 992-564 1.
Trust
$20,750.00; also a 5 bedroom ·Fund" In eachSharing
WANTED ..:. Old upri ght
ll ·29-6fc
municipal
colonial house on a :V.. acre loi. corporation receiving
pianos, grand pianos, old
Bath and a half, buill-In assistance under the Ftderal
pump organs. Any condition·. VACUUM Cleaner new 1972
kitchen, dining room , family· Act, os requ ired by Sec . 5705.12,
Paying S10each. Write giving mode! . Comple1e .with all
rootn and the works, prlcecl of the Oh io Rev ised Codt.
directions . Witten Plano Co., clean rn ~ fools. Small paln1
Now, Therefore. Be It or .
$30,000.00. Call Sherman E. dalned
Box 188, Sardis, Ohio 43946. damage In shipping . Will take
by the Coun cil of the
Summerfield, 985-3598 or 985· VIllage of
12·1-6tp S27 cash or budget p1an
R_aclne, State of Ohio
~177 .
~
.,--=c----.,--:-:available. Phone 992-56~1 .
that :
1t-2-30tc
' tl-29·61c
'OLD FUrniture, oak tables,
Sec . 1. . There Ia hereby
es1abltshed a special fund to be
.
..
,
organs.&gt;lllshes, docks, brass
beds, oncomple1e households.
8 ROOM house and bath, nice known as the "Federtt General
Tru11 Fund "
Wri1e M. D. Millar, Rt. ~.
large lot, natural gas, buill-in RevenuetheSharing
provisions of Sec.
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271. ·
cabinets In kitchen, close to . under
S705 . 1~ of tho Ohio Revised
6-28-lfc
radio station in Bradbury; Code.
phone 992-2602.
Stctlon 2. All monies paid 10
..
,
11 -27-lOtp tho VIllage under lho State and
For Rent
-----'----Local Fla&lt;:al Anlstanco Act of
ALL-ELECTRIC brick home, 1972 ~hall be crodlttd to said
txptndtd In •c ·
3 AND 4 ROOM furnlshecl and
10'12 acres of land; close to fund 1ndwlrh
the terma and
unf urnished apartm.-nts.
school; contact Joyce E. · cordanct
provisions
of said Fldtrel Act.
Phone 992·5.134.
Manual,
Greenwood
Section :t. This Ordinance
4-12-lfc
Cemetery Road, Racine, shell take tffect lnd be In forct
- -- ., - - - - ' - - Ohio.
from and afitr tht Nrrllflt
11-29-6tc parlod a)lowtd by 11w.
3 ROOM house and bath, ideal
for couples, utilities paid,
--------PuStd tltl~ lind day of
near Middleport, phone 992..iOUSE In Long BottoiTi';'p'liftA.l November 1972. C~ertn l'ytn
7791.
985-3529.
-·-,
Moyor
12 .3.Jtc
~11 -trd Attell: Mit Cleland
--~-----~-~--------~~
. ' (lfl 21 (121 5, It

~Qblle

Pomeroy

PomeroY. Home &amp; Auto

Real Estate For Sale

Mobile Homes For Sale

-

992 -2094

606 E. Main

.

.SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 992-2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
AKC Toy Poodle puppies,
Authorized Singer Sales and
wormed and shots, well -bre~
Service.
We Sharpen Scissors.
and healthy . 575. Phone
3-29-ttc,
Coolville 667-62ld.
11 -22-12tp

choice for UPI crown

HOME &amp; AUTO

·-GUARANTEED, · Phone 992:2094

~~

Sco.u ting story

~;'fi_~~~====~~=~ !

POMEROY

On Most American Cars

Chase Hardware

NEW YORK (UP!) - Like
their crosstown rivals in
basketball, Southern Callfor-

•'

Mond.a y Oe.a dline 9 a.m .

d eemed

.~·

---~

WHAT MAKES
'IE SA'I THAT,

TATER'S GITTIN'
. FATTER'N A
BUTTERBALL ,
AUNT LOWI:EIV

. WAN T ADS.
INFORMATION

....

·.s P .M . Day Before ·Pvbli catior

·i'

·: ~ ~­

I

'

I·

DIR!E
NSED

OFA

LOAN I

YOU WILL WORK UNDER OUR
DIRECTION ... SALARY CORRECT...

T&gt;IAT'6 WkAT I 'M
kERE FOJ;J: .,

.JUST A FEW
SIMPLE

SIDDOWio.i !

(OIUii&amp;TIONS!
WHAT All:li YA

TIME; IS OF
THE; ESSENCE,
SIRE!

G.ONNA USE

~EMONEY

FER'!'

'TERM L CORRECT...
JUSTIFIABLE: EXPENSES HMM I
SUPPOiE so.. jf
DOE:S $EfM IN

.

ORDER ...

. GASOLINE ALLEY

LITn.E ORPHAN ANNIE
BUT

IF BY SOME BlACK MAGIC THEY

DO EXII'&gt;T "' WAR BUCKS tllltl MEVER
LIVE TO seT EnS OM THEM AQAIH !
DESTROY, SAHARA'" DESTROY!

NOT A

HAIR OF SAHIB'S HEAD

WILL' BE INJURl'D AS LOH4 AS
I

DRAW BREATH!

Real Estate For Sale

Virgil B.
Teaford, Sr
Broker
111 Mtchlnlc 51.
Olllo 4576t.

DICK TRACY

Pom~n~y,

NEW LISTING
START YOUR FUTURE New brick business building.
Has 4 large rooms. Ideal for
contrador, store, etc. Best of
location if you want In on the
ground floor. 2900 sq. 11. llOO
paneled and tiled. 2 ceramic
baths . Plenty of parking. No
Information over the phone.
NEW LISTING
RENOVATED
3
bedrooms, new bath, · new
kitchen. paneling and many
o1her features . Large lot.
Asking $6500.00.
4 BEDROOMS
LEVEL LOT - Here's your
chance to buy low, fix up,
and sell. Located In town on
good street near stores .
Asking only $7500 .00. ·
VILLAGE
3 BEDROOMS - Bath, large
living, large dining, and
front porch. Large level lot.
Ideal for garden or pony.
Want $10,500.00.
WANT TO BUILD?
·
8 ACRES - On proposed '
water line -and blacktop·
road. Asking $~500,00 . .
BRICK
~ BEDROOMS Large
living, dining, kitchen, and
·foyer. 2 porches. Barn, and a .
string of garages. 2 acres of
good land. Asking Ollly
$21,500.00.
ONE ACRE
NEAR TOWN - 4 bedioom
home. Kitchen and large
dining. Full basement. Some
long needle pines. Asking
$12,000.110.
LOTS-ACR E~FARMS
HOUSES 'SCARCE, DON'T
BELIEVE IT. WE HAVE
PLENTY, SOME THAT
YOU CAN MOVE INTO
TOMORROW. COME SEE
FOR YOURSI:LF.
HELEN L TEAFORD,
ASSOCIATE
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS

~

Yesterday's Cryptoquole: BUT WHY DOES THE CHRISTMAS SEASON ALWAYS COME WHEN THE STORES ARE
AT THEIR BUS!EST?- SOURCE UNKNOWN

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
3. Whip
1. Large
«.Coal denumbers
rivative
6. Billiard
5. Like a
shot
piercing
11. Mohamsound
med is his
6. Fine
prophet
coffee
12. Willow
7. Powdered
13. "-'s AI·
Java
manack"
S.New
(2 wds.)
Mexican
15. Young
Indian
sheep
9. Old
16. l (Ger.)
Italian
l?."Go - "
title
37 Acro;s
lG. Shrew
did!
U. Gelid
(3 wds.)
2%. Thread
17. Manuholder
script leaf
25.Lamb's
18. English
nom de
poet
plume
19. Region of
Z6. Tabulate
Greece
27. "Red zo.
Cash
in the
drawer
Sunset"
28. Jai 29. Berlioz's
11
Harold
in-"
30. Eyeglass
innovation by
37 Across
33. Pay dirt
3f, Scary Ut·
terance
37. American

(C 1972 King Features Syndieatt, [oc,)

JJ&amp;MID~;IJ.J:::!!:!..Jc::
VneeramblethOH r...r JumbiH,
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.
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22. Wild
guess
(colloq.)
23. Buddhist
language
2«. Norway's
patron
saint
27. Suppress
31. Banal
3%. Souihern
constella·
lion

3«. News·
paper
(sl.)

35. French
river
36. Sunday
punch
(sl.)
37. Jujube
38. LeGal·
iienne
39.lnsecl
40. chance!
41. Purview

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2. South
African
plant

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work It:
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is LONGFELLOW
v ne 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,
apostrophes, the length a~d ,formation of the words are all
hint.s. Each day the code letters are different
CltYPTC&gt;qUOTES
HGVFS LVC GVEKOMV O C FXPVGROSA
EBRS FR WGFPV RKNi\OV GR SGOBJ:,Y J
OC TFG .- 1\VCVMF

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12 - Thf naily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Dec. S, 1972

Protest wins
round in

.17 Crew in .last dry run
CAPE KENNEDY tUPI) • The Apollo 17 astronauts, as
·ready as they can be for their
' trip to the moon, get in a final
practice Imlay for the fiery
takeoff Wednesday night
aboard a mighty Saturn 5
rocket .
Everything was going
' Without a hitch in preparations
: for the 9:53p.m. EST blastoff
' of the last three Americans
scheduled to explore the moon
in the $25 billion Apollo
program- Eugene A. Cernan,
'tonald E. Evans and Harrison
H. ' 1Jack" Schmitt.
Gro1111d crewmen were to
bfgin installing flight batteries
In the 36-story Saturn launch
vehicle as the countdown rolled
into the final 28 hours at 7a.m.,
the phase during which
• engineers begin closing hat·
ches and switching on internal
•. power to put the Saturn on
flight status.
., After another day of sleeping
late in their special living
quarters at the spaceport, the
• astronauts planned to climb
' into a mockup of their com·

.

mand cra£t "America" to
l'ehcarse the launch stage of
their 12-&lt;lay mission.
Sclunitt, a civilian geologist,
also planned a practice session
in a moon landing craft
simulator, and the astronauts
hoped to get in one last ride in
T38 jet trainers to prepare
themselves fo r the high "G"
forces they'll encounter as the
Saturn 's 7.6 million pounds of
thrust sends them into the sky
in the first nighttime Apollo
launch.
Ahalf-million people or more
are e&lt;pected to crowd beaches
and waterside vantage points
on the mainland across from
the space center to watch the
Saturn roar away. The temper-

ature at launttl time is expected to be in the middle ~
and winds should be light.
The Apollo spacecraft will
swing twice around the earth
before the Saturn's third stage
engine is ignited a second lime
after the blastoff to kick the
astronauts into a course
toward the moon . They are due
to arrive in lunar orbit Sunday
afternoon .
Mission nommander Cernan,
a 38-year-&lt;Jid Navy captain
making his third space flight,
and the · 37-year-&lt;&gt;ld Schmitt
will land their "f'hRllenr,er"

ILU1ar craft or, the moon's
surface Monday afternoon for
a record 75-hour stay that will
include three sorties across the
surface on foot and in their
battery powered lunar roving
vehicle to collect rock samples
and lay out an array of
scientific instruments.
The moon el(Jllorers will
rejoin Evans, 39, a Navy
commander, in orbit around
the moon and the three will
$tart ror· home Dec. 16, with
splashdown scheduled in the
Pacific Ocean Dec. 19.

Mason

~·

\

Jurors selected

)

91-YEAR-OW PRESIDENT- Mrs. Bertha Filson, left, recently was elected president of
the new Tri-County Chapter of the Marshall University Alumni Association. With her are
Marshall President John G. Barker and Mrs. Gertrude Burdette Bateson. Mrs. Filson; who is
91, graduated from Marshall in 1901 and Mrs. Bateson graduated in 1911. Both are residents of
Point Pleasant.

P'f. PLEASANT - Jurors ··Pleasant ; Max1 ne M. La they,
for I he January term of Mason Letart ; Charles Deal , Ashton .
George F, Kimbrel. Alnia J.
Holzer Medical Center
County Circui t Court were Thompson, Ernest E . Bowser,
1Discharged)
selccteJ Monday afternoon by Mervin D. Roush , Thomas J.
Robert Huddleston, rormnissi£mers Harry Layne Reynolds, Point Pleasant.
Vernon W1lhrow , Leon ; Paul
Lawre nce Wolfe , Pauline and Mrs. Ralph E. Warner ,
F , Wood . Point Pleasant; Mary
Lieving, Angela Young, Mrs. Gra nd jurors are advised to M . Supple, Hender son; Jane
David Simonton and daughter; reporl lo Judge James Lee Elizabeth Bird, New Haven ;
PT. PLEASANT - Most
Ada Wasmer, Harry Martin, Thompson Jan. 2 at 9:30a .m. Ralph L. Morse , Potn l
Pleasan t: Zen a Meadows,
peuple lucky enough to reach
Daphne McLaughlin , James and pclil jw·ors on Jan . 29 at Glenwood .
the
age of 91 years are happy to
Eutsler, Georgina Norris, Scott 9:25a.m. The jurors:
Larry G. Grogan, Clifton ;
Gai
I
Jones.
Leon
;
Ollie
T.
sit back in a rocking chair and
Roberts, Arnold Dempsey,
GRANO JURORS :
Bunigarner, Letart . Roy let lhe world take care of il.&lt;;elf.
Arbuckle
John
F.
Kelsey.
Handa! Denney, Don Russell,
Yauger. Southside ; Robert W.
Sout hside . ·
Tonighl, DecemberS
Nol Bertha Filson,
Ralph Miller, Mrs. Charles
Clendenin - Cl yde N. Bowen Daylong, Henderson ; Mary
FUZZ
Marg
are
t
Fowler,
Ma
xine
L.
The lively Mason County
Keeton and son; Mary J r ., Apple Grove ; Tommy F.
Antal, Point Pleasant .
ITechnicolorl
Kinnard , Henderson .
nonagenarian
recently was
Ferguson,
Cylinda
Frederick,
Keith R. Thornton, Point
Burt Reynolds
Cologne V ict oria L.
and Carrie Adams.
Pleasant : Zelma L Roach, elected president of the new
Jack Wes ton
Keefer, Leon
(Births)
(GP)
Cooper -- Lawrence R Wolf. Letart: Charles D. Yeager, Tri-County Chapter . of the
Mason : Alice M. Icard, Point Marshall University Alumni
Colorca rtoons :
Leta
rt
Mrs. Robert Chapman,
Who's Watching You
Grah am - James A. Marks. Pl easant ; Molli e L. Yauger, Association and she's
Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va ., a New Haven: Mary H. Arnold, Sou lhs1de ; Carl D. Glover ,
What's on Your Mind?
Milton
determined to make it a sucBilly New HaVen .
daughter;
Mrs.
Show Starts 1 p.m.
Delber
t
E.
Stover,
Cot
.
Hannan
AJ\atthew
Long,
cessful
chapter.
Mancring,
Ja ckson,
a
tag evill e; Margar et A.
Gle
nwood
;
Sammie
C.
ilreaking new gro und is
daughter; Mrs. Gerald Rutter, Sturgeon , Ashton .
Capehart, Pl . Pleasant; Olin
Wednesday &amp; Thursday
Wellston, a son and Mrs.
Lewis - William H. Garrett , G. Bla in , Gallipolis Ferry, nothing new for Mrs. Filson.
December 6-7
Mrs
. Jack McNeeley, and Joe Clarence E. Carson. Mason ; The oldest living past president
Charles Sayre, Gallipolis, a
NOT OPEN
Houston F. Sowash, M ilton ;
R. Neel ey . Po int Pleasant.
_daughter.
Wallace
A. Smith Ill. PI , of the West Virginia Education
Robinson - Harley Burns,
Association , she was also one
Pleasant.
P o int
Pleasan t.
Dorothy
Kinniard,
Hogsett
;
of the organization 's first
Union - Charles D. Baker.
Li lah J. Zerkle and Ann E. women president.&lt;;. She also
Leon.
Wagg ener
Patricia Wal sh, Mason; Nacle N. was the first woman to be
Carsey, Mason ; Melvin E. Geilker, Point Pleasant ; Mrs.
Lois l . Austi n, Gallipolis elected superintendent of
Clark, West Columbia .
Alternate
iurors
are, Ferry; linda L. Rodgers, Pt. Mason County schools, holding
Gralram. Carol J. lathey , Plea sant.
Harry Goodnile, Betty Y. I ha l position from 1923 to 1931.
Letart ; DonCIId F. Rou sh, New
Ftsher,
Eli zabeth L. Romans,
"Publicity embarrasses
Ha ven; Hannan, Ralph E.
Pt.
Pleasant
;
Hilda
Hayes,
Barker. Glenwood ; Lewi s,
me," remarked the sprightly
Claude
W.
Nikki A,. . Cremeans. Mae Glenwood ;
former
school teacher in a
Mil ler,
Poin t
Pleasant ; Fri shette, Point Pleasant.
Dan ny Boa rdman. Point telephone interview recently.
Wagg ener, Herman L. Kirby ,
Pleasant ; Donald L. Henry ,
West Columbia .
"A few years ago a HunGa llipoli s Ferry ; Pearley F.
PETIT JURORS
tington newspaper did a
Patricia A. Pyles, Mary K. Sayre. Leon; Marlin F. Price.
feature
story about me and
Towner. D. W. Pothol"., , l='"int Apple Grove.
when-I got my daily paper and
saw my name in big headlines,
I felt just tetrible," she said.
"There are so many people
COOLVILLE - Wade A. Scottish'· Rite, Valley of who have done so much more
Rlchartl!.on t 72, died M01idlY .at Co!llmbils.
than- •J. .lulv~· that .Y 10.1 em""
his hoine here following •n ' Surviving are a son, William barrassed by ali' this atexte.nded illness.
L., Coolville; a daughter, Mrs. tention.''
Mr. Richardson was born at Gene (Bernice) Arnold,
Her modesty and oldFrost, Meigs County, the son of Beverly; two brothers, Guy A. fashioned integrity are two of
the late Lewis and Annetta and Cecil V. Richardson, Sr., the qualities that make her a
Browning Richardson . He was both of Coolville, and si&lt; respected member of the Point
a former employe of the State grandchildren.
Pleasant community, her
Department of Highways and
adopted
home.
Precedin~ him in death were
had operated barbershops in his first wile, Ethel, in 1930; his
Born in Middleport, she
Parkersburg, Guysville and second wife, Helen, in 196tl, and moved lo Mason County at the
Coolville since 1928. He was a a granddaughter.
age of six and has spent her life
former member of the
funeral services will be at 2 there, marrying, rearing a
Coolville village Council and a p.m. Thursday at the While family and leaching hundreds
Middleport, 0.
past master of Coolville Lodge Funeral Home i~lville with of Mason County youngsters
337, F&amp;AM, and belonged to the the Rev. Donll'!d Marken and whose lives have been indelibly
the Rev. Roy W. Rose of- touched by her influence .
ficiating . Burial will be in the Mrs. Filson graduated from
Troy Baptist Cemetery at Marshall in 1901, taught at the
Frost. Masonic rites will be college's training school for a
held at 7:30p.m. Wednesday at year and then returned lo Point
the funeral home where friends Pleasant.
may call anytime after 7 this "I've met every president of
Marshall beginning with
evening.
President Lawrence Corbly in
1901," remarked Mrs. Filson,
"and I've seen a world ol
DIVORCE ASKED
changes over the years
Da~id M. Hindy, Middleport, "!really love the sch~ol and
has flied su1t for d1vorce from was very impressed with Dr
Jan . Hindy, Middleport, (John) Barker, Marshall '~
Don't get caught short at
chargmg gross neglect of duty president, and other school
and extreme cruelty. In other officials who attended the
Christmas shopping time. let
court action the Pomeroy ·recent alumni activation
shopping be a
National Bank is to recover meeting.
pleasure in
from Me~vin R. Dufrthe sum of "I think they're good for
$1,724.88 plus mterest; the Marshall, and I'd like to work
Bureau of Employment Ser· hard for them even if l didn't
vices is to collect the sum of love Marshall so much " she
$4i96.80 from George F. Jarvis, added
'
and Russell Cullums is to The ·alumni group headed by
reco_ver from James · and Mrs. Filson includes alumni
Glorta Jean Morgan $483.55 from Mason County, and Meigs
plus interest.
and Gallia counties in Ohio.
When the younger alumni
chose her as their president,
Mrs. Filson was surprised and
PLEASANT VALLEY
unprepared. "! think I'm too
DISCHARGES: Mrs. Ken- old for this sort of thing," she
neth Martin, Buffalo; Robin protested.
McClaskey, Bidwell; Bry~n But the chapter knew better.
Wrap up next Christma•
King, Point Pleasant; William Many of the members are her
B,Yan, Ashton, and Edgar former students, who learned
with a Chri1tmas Club
Lyons, Mason.
the lessons she !lelieved they
Account.
needed to know to tackle life's
problems.
She didn 'l campaign for this
' PTO. TO MEET
new
office, or even seek it, but
A theeting of the Portland
PTO will be held at 1 p.m. then she didn't campaign much
Wednesday at the school, back in 1923 when she was
county
school
rather than at the usual time. elected
superintendent.
"! didn't know anything
about campaigning and really
PLACE YOUR
didn't care to campaign," she
said.
PITTSBURGH
"My active campaigning just
about stopped when I went up
to a man plowing his field and
asked
him straight out whether
-4CINCINNATl
ORDERS EARLY
he was a . Democrat or a
MIDDLEPORT
Republican," she recalled.
OHIO
"He looked up at me and told
me he thought that wasn't any
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
59 N. Second St.
of my business, and I felt like a
idd
fool.
After that I didn't camHember Federal
Iuurance
.._11Miiiiiii1iii1iiporiii.iti.,Oii.....J paign much," Mrs. Filson said.

President ·Filson full-go

·.------.
MEIGS THEATRE

ANOTHER GOOD BUY FROM
BAKER'S

Wade A. Richardson i.'l dead

BAKER

1

FURNITURE

JOIN OUR CHRISTMAS
CLUB 1973 START
SOCKING IT AWAY
1973

r---------..

lllbens /falioi\DI

.hk

OiRISTMAS
FLOWER

Dudley's Florist .

o•

But she had earned a fine
reputation as a teacher and
was well-known and respected
in the county. Even though
women were rarely in public
life · then, Mrs . Filson
challenged the sex barrier in
county politics and broke'il.
" I remember the finest
compliment anyone ever paid
me," Mrs. Filson noted. "One
night before the election, a
badly crippled man walked
magy miles just to meet me
and tell me he thought I was a
good woman or they wouldn't
lei me run for office. Any kind
of man can run for office, he
told me, but it takes a superior
kind or woman to even enter
the race."

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Thursday through
Saturday - Chance of rain
or snow over the state
Friday and Saturday. Low
temperatures in the teens
Thursday and In the 20s
.Friday and Saturday. Highs
in the 20s and low 30s Thursday and in the 30s and low 40s
Friday and Saturday.

MASON - Clti~ens here who
objected to a mandatory
garbage collection fee system
apparently won a round
Monday night when Mayor Roy
Harless suggested the garbage
service be "left up to the
people" for a final decision.
CQuncil's meeting room was
packed with protesting citizens
objecting to the fee levied
through a town 'ordinance
adopted three months ago . .
After several expressed op·
position to plan, Mayor Harless
made the suggestion that It be
put up to a town vote.
Council thereupon directed .
Mayor Harless to proceed With r
the plan, giving town residimta
a chance to decide the out·
come.
This morning, however,
Mayor ·Harless said a derintte
date for the election has not
been set, but will be announced
soon. In the event the fee
system is defeated, officials
have agreed it will continue on
a voluntary basis.
Council also backed off from
a rormer announcement to
place delinquent fees in the
hands of an agency for
collection. Dec. 4 had been set
as the deadline for delinquent
garbage collection fees, but
council last night agreed to
postpone.this until the outcome
of the election.
Council also agreed to set the
salaries for two town
policemen at $10 per shift.
Saturday, two men, Kenneth
Siders of Mason and James
Ashworth of Pt. Pleasant, were
employed as policemen.

Commenting on her new
office with the alumni group,
Mrs. Filson said, "I'm going to
try to help make a success of
this chapter. lt;s the third time
we've tried to start an alumni
group in this area, and I'm
hoping the third time is
charmed.''
But the fledging ri'ri-County
Chapter knew it would take
more than luck to get the group
moving forward to support the
growing university. They knew
it would take hard work, and a
plucky, spirited lea(\er.
ThaI explains the optimistic
smiles of Marshall officials
when they talk about the new
Tri-County Chapter.
In unflagging loyalty, enthusiasm and effort are the
requirements of a successful
NEW SCHEDULE
leader, Mrs. Filson and her
A new permanenf time
alumni chapter are certain to schedule for baton classes of
be an asset to the university, Mrs. Judy ·Riggs, effective
Wednesday, has been anVeterans Memorial Hospital nounced. ' Under the new
ADMITTED
Shirley schedule, new beginners will
Johnson, Racine; Burdell meet at 6 p.m., corpsmemlii!rs
Black, Pomeroy; Frances at 7 p.m. and team members at
Brown, Pomeroy; Vivian 8 p.m. Classes are held at the
Phelps, Racine; Charles Archery building at Royal Oak
Varian, Hartford; Myrtle Park.
Hayes, Columbus; . Mari,e
Dailey, Pomeroy; J'olargaret
DEER KILLED
,
Smith, Pomeroy; Esther
Barker, Ne~ Haven, . arid
j;!le Me!Ka.·f!ounty. Sherlff 1~
Edmond Arrington, Cheshire. , Dept. r!ported \oday a smau
DISCHARGED - Thomas doe deer was killed Monday at
Williams, Helen Johnson, 8:45p.m. on County Road 50 in
Emmett Bartels, Junior · Olive Twp. when it ran Into the
Autherson, Angela EbJin, path of an auto driven by
Sherry Matson and William Donald E. Bartimus, Reeds·
Buckley.
ville, Rt. I.

SERVICE SET
Funeral services for Larry
K. Lee, 20, Clifton, who died
unexpectedly in Germany
Thursday wher~ he was serving with the Armed Forces,
have been set for I: 30 p.m.
Wednesday at the Clifton
' c
United Methodist Church
where he was a member.
Friends may call at the James
H. Lee residence in Clifton
(Continued from Page I)
a!tar 4:30 p.m. today. Of-•.
ficiating will be the Rev.' years.
James Dempsey. Burial will be
CINCINNATI- GOV, JOliN J, Gilligan told 200 junior high
in Graham Cemetery.
school students here Monday he does oot support legalization
of marijuana. "I'm opP9sed to the legalization of it ... because
we don't know that it's safe over a long period," GIUigan said In a
MEETING CANCELLED
A meeting of the Ladies drug abuse speech at !'&amp;,pie's Junior High. "But we are moving
Au&lt;iliary of Drew Webster in the right direction lly reducing the penalties."
About.ha!! of the 200 7th graders told Gilligan they knew
Post 39, American Legion,
scheduled Wednesday night ' someone who had ta~ !~rugs, 20 said they knew where to go and
has been cancelled. Juniors who to see to buy dr~~f~S and two said they could buy drugs at the
school.
will meet at the hall at 7:30.

News. • • in Briefs

ELBERFELDS I~ POMEROY
GIF'IS FOR EVERYONE ON YOUR UST

OPEN EVERY WEEK DAY
9:30 AM 10 5 PM

recommended
A phased program of highway improvements in Meigs
am! Athens Counties keyed the
detailed analysis of the
potenUal impact of the new
deep coal mines and power
plant being developed by
American Electric Power Co.
and its subsidiaries in Gallia,
Meigs and Vinton counUes in
southeastern Ohio in a study
begun almost two months ago
released today.
This report is the first in a
series of har d recommendations regarding needed

actio~s

and public investments
in the area affected by AEP's
multi-million dollar private
investment.
The analysis, initiated at the
request of several major
federal grant agencies constituting the Federal Regional
Council of Chicago, is being
conducted under the direction
of the Buckeye Hills-Hocking
Valley Regional Development
District and the Ohio Valley
Regional Development
District.
The Washington -based

.f

I

Use our own Sensible Credit $ervice to budget your payments
and we'll deliver what you bu'y in time for Christm1s."
I

ElBERFELDSI. tN
,

r

..... "'

Among the high priorities
are the improvement of seclions · of Routes 124 and ·160
connecting Pomeroy, Wilkesville and the Appalachian
Highwa y; the Route 50 and
Route 33 link around Athens ;
and the improvement of one
mile of county road 27 in Meigs
County.
A total of 14 other priority
road project.&lt;; have also been
proposed, wi th preliminary
cost figures.
Recommenda lions on
preliminary se wer sys tem

VOL XXIV NO. 164

improveme nt needs in a
number of key communities in
the area lo be impacted by the
AEP investments were also
offered by the consultant firm .
Additional detailed work on
sewer needs is currently being
conducted in advance of
meetings with local and state
, officials to be scheduled soon.
Meetings are curre ntl y
scheduled with appropriate
state and federal officials to
d~&gt;cuss the possible liming and
genera l availability
of
financing for the sewer and

•

,.
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Mostly cloudy and colder
tonight with. snow flurries in
the east portion-' Lows tonight
in mid teens. Continued cold.
tomorrow, snow flurries
northeast.

Devoted To The Interests OfTheMelgs-Mason Area

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1972

•

highway improvement
recommendations .not already
scheduled for completion. The
scheduling of additional local
meetings will depend upon the
response from the involved
federal and state officials.
Additional analysis of proposed
improvements and a detailed
analysis of related problems
and projects ' in the areas of
housing,
job
training,
edQcation and other public
facilities is, in the meantime,
being continued by Hammer,
Greene, Siler and Associates.

Weather

enttne
PHONE 992-2 156

TEN CENTS

Final
shoot
•
IS set

riJREE EMPLOYES of the Ohio Department of Health
were in Pomeroy Tuesday to study ppssible development of
additional health facilities. A luncheon was enjoyed at
Crow's Steak House to discuss aspects of the study. From the
left are Delmar A. Canaday, Pomeroy; Mrs . Eleanor Linn,

Health Standards representative of the Ohio Department of
Health; Robert Evans, Medical Care administrator of the
Ohio Department or Health; Mrs. Rhona Kirkpatrick, a
health standarda representative with the department, and
Dr. Harold Brown, Pomeroy.

.

Waverly Here!
By United Press Intel'lllltlonal
, CLEVELtlND - FRANiH.JN:POR&gt;\TH and six ai!SOciates
believetbey have built the better mousetrap. This one drives rats
cra~y. The transistorized device gives off a 'high intensity pitch'
which is unheard by the human ear but "makes any rat within
hearing distance wish he were someplace else," Porath said.
"It's like being Inside a boiler factory for a rat," Porath said.
"It makes them go nuts. They hate it." The group, which calls
itself Pied Piper Industries, will put the device on the market in
several weeks if a test in a rat·infested house is successful.
COLUMBUS - A SPECIAL SENATE subcommittee was
meeting today to consider new and inflated recommendations for
a legislative pay raise, reporting to the full Ways and Means
Committee by afternoon. Appointment of the three-member
subcommittee Tuesday by Sen. Michael J. Maloney, RCincinnati, committee chairman, was the first direct public
move by the la'wmakers to push through a pay hike for themselves by the end of the year.
The subcommittee also was directed by Maloney to write
language for a salary increase for nine county official positions,
including auditor, treasurer, clerk of courts, recorder, commissioner, sheriff, prosecutor, engineer and coroner. Maloney
submitted personal recommendations to the subcommittee
calling for even more than the commission recommended. He
called for higher salaries for officials in larger counties, aud an
extra $1,000 for legislators and top legislative leaders.
CHEYENNE, WYO. ~ FUNERAL SERVICES for Carl L.
Sackett, a pioneer western· lawyer iti Wyoming 70 years, will
be held Thursday in Cheyenne with burial following in Sheridan,
Wyo. Sackett, 96, whose Wyoming ties spanned nearly a century,
was the state's oldest lawyer at his death Monday·. He had
remained active in the law, although he did not maintain an
office.
The son of a buffalo hlUlter was born in a sod house on the
Lodge Pole Trail in southwestern Nebraska. He settled in
Cheyenne in 1879 with his family. That same year the family left
for Sheridan County in a covered wagon where they lived for
several years. Sackett was a Wyoming house Democratic leader
and u.S. Atiorney for Wyoming from1933to 1949.

The Meigs High School
basketball game acheduled
for Frlday'night ·at Waverly
will be played Instead on the
Meigs Door, James Diehl,
Meigs High School principal,
said today. The new Waverly
gyllillasium Is not completed
so the change in scheduling
has been made. Meigs will go
to Waverly for the rematch
on Jan. 26.

Three fined
by Zerkle
Three defendants were fined
and three forfeited bonds in the
court of Middleport Mayor
John Zerkle Tuesday night.
Russell Ferguson, 50,
Middleport, was fined $25 and
costs each on two counts of
assault and battery; William
E. Morton, Shelton, Conn., $100
and costs and three days in jail,
driving while intoxicated, and
$25 and costs for leaving the
scene of an accident, and A. L.
Birchfield, Middleport, was
fined $10 and costs for intoxication.
Forfeiting bonds were Ar·
nold E. Snowden, Jr., 39,
Columbus, $200, DWI; Jerry
Ferguson, Middleport, $50,
assault with a deadly weapon,
and Buddy McKinney, 55,
Middleport, $30, intoxication.

Recowtt
continues
in Mason

PT. PLEASANT - RecoW!t
in the Mason County ASsessor's
race between Jean Burdette
and Orville Sturgeon continued
today after a net change or 13
.
.
.
.
votes showed up in eight
MASON "" An-uod~termmed --tontghl-i!H·:i!O m the new ftre-·-preciiicts Tuesday, narrowing
number of residents tn Mason statton.. .
the margin to 103.
City who have joined to protest
All cttizens of the area are
Sturgeon led Mrs. Burdette
mandatory garbage,fee levied inv~ted to attend, whether their by 116 votes In the official
recently by town offtclals have pos1tions a_re pro or con.
canvass to win the election ion
called a· special meeting
Meanwhtle, Maso~ Mayor the Republican
ticket.
Roy Harless Is preparmg to put However Mrs. Burdette
the issue before town residents. Democr~ tic Incumbent '
While a defininte date has Ml requested the recoW!t and the~
FEES RETURNED
been set, the spectal in turn Mr . Sturgeon also asked
Two Meigs ·county sub· referendum
is tentatively · for it.
divisions received $2,785.75 as scheduled for Dec: 15.
a supplemental distribution in
liquor permit fees, State
RUSSEU. ILL "
Auditor Joseph Ferguson
The Pomeroy ER squad
reports. Statewlse a total of
answered a call to WyUis Hill
LOCAL TEMPS
$5&amp;7,690.~7 was distributed.
The temperature in down- 'at noon Tuesday for John
town
Pomeroy at II a. m. Russell, .who was ill. He was
pomeroy .received a $795.?5
and Salisbury Township' Wednesday was 45 degrees, taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital and admitted.
1111der ch&gt;uli) ~Ides.
. received $1,990.

.
ll
Opposition ca s fior meeting

You'll enjoy shopping in the Furniture Department on the 3rd floor.
Excellent gifts for the home- Grandfather clocks -gun cabinets· living
room suites • dinette sets • picture$ • mirrors · .rockers • chairs • infants
furniture· and many, many other wonderful gift·Ideas.

Meigs County ; Kenne th
Mm·gan, Joe Stewart, Alphus
R. Christensen, Morris
Haskins and Charles Grant of
Gallia County, and Keith
Molihan , Raymond Cottrill ,
Robert B. Will, Jr., Kenneth
Christopher and Fred Weaver,
of Vinton County.
Recommendations on highways included a pha sed
program for improvement of a
diverse range of highway
sections in Meigs, Gallia,
Vinton and neighboring
counties.

As early as the lOth century
the Chinese used magnifying
glasses inserted in frames for
reading aids.

.

SHOP 'TIL 9 PM.

provements in the sewer
systems of "Impact Area "
communities have · been
presented in recent weeks to
the mt.nbers of a local task
force formed recently by
Buckeye Hills and the Ohio
Valley groups to monito1· the
impact analysis and provide
guidance ' to the consultant
firm.
Serving on' the local task
force from the three key impact counties are Horace Karr,
Paul Casci, Robert Clark, Mrs.
Archie Lee and Earl Ingles of

Now You Know

COLUMBUS-GOV. JOHN J. GIWGAN today annoW!ced
Ule appointment of three Democrats, IM!ald . P. Woods,
washington Court House; Roger H. May, C~rclevtlle; and J.
Ronald Castell of Columbus, to the Ohio Expositions Comrilission. ·
They succeed R. Victory Oakley, Robert M. Ward Sr. and
Norman c. Treadon wbose terms expired. Gilligan said the
outgoing members "have contributed m. •ch to the phenomenal
growth of the Ohio State Fair in recent years."

AND ON FRIDAY AND
SATURDAY NIGHTS

consulting firm of Hammer,
Greene, Siler and Asso. has
been employed to complete the
analysis with funds and services provided through
Buckeye Hills and the Ohio
Valley Regional Development
District by the Federal
Economic Development Administration and the Ohio
Department of Economic and.
Community Development.
Prelimina.ry recom mendations on necessary highway improvements and
projected
needed
im-

I.

Truman
IS
• -n·..1
KANSASCITY, Mo. (UP!)Former President Harry S
Truman's condition worsened
during the night and was
assessed today by his personal
physician as serious.
A spokesman for Research
Hospital where the 88-year-old
former President is under
treatment for "fluid in the
lungs" made an unscheduled
conference call to report at
8:20 a.m. (CST) that "Dr .
Wallace Graham has assessed
President Truman's condition
as serious as of 7:55a.m. CST."
The spokesman said there
would be another report on the
president's condition at 10:30
a.m. CST as previously
scheduled.
Truman's condition . earlier
was listed as 11 fair ." Graham
said Truman was being treated
with antibiotics.

Miller's man
in Gallia, !Weigs
Continuing supplements to
the periodic open door
sessions, held by lOth District
Representative Clarence E.
Miller, Wayne Todd , the
Congressman's Di stri c t
Representative , will be in
Gallipolis on Thursday, Dec. 7
frol)l 10 a. m. to noon in the
County Commissioner's office.
'Later the same day, Tudd will
conduct an Open Door in the
Jury Room of the Meigs County
CourtHouse, :Pomeroy, 2 to 4 p.
m.
.
These sessions are held in an
effort to maximize the ser:-ices
of the Tenth CongressiOnal
District Office and to ac·
.commodate the .many r~quests
for information and assiStance
the Congressman receives.
Anyone wishing assistance on
matters relating to the Federal
Government is invited to stop
by at this time.

IN HOSPITAL
The Middleport ER squad
was called at 8:25 a. m. today
for William Blake who was
having difficulty breathing at
home on Middleport Hill. A
Rawlings-Coats ambulance
took Blake to the Holzer
Medical Center.

,.I

By CHARLES E. TAYLOR
CAPE KENNEDY (UP!) Weathermen issued an improved forecast for tonight's
blastoff of the three Apollo 17
astronauts in a star-bla~ing
finale to the $25 billion lunar
exploration program set in
motion by President John F.
Kennedy 11 years ago.
All was in readiness for the
9:53p.m. EST takeoff of Navy
Capt: Eugene A. Cernan, Navy
Cmdr. Ronald E. Evans and
civilian geologist Harrison H.
"Jack" Sclumtt on an expedition to a lunar valley that may
have been the scene of the
moon's last' yolcanic gasp of
life· a billion ·years ago.
.
Cernan and Schmitt will
spend a record-75 hours on the
moon.
"It will be cloudy, but
nothing to preclude the
launch ," said spaceflight
meteorologist Ernest Amman
alter a morning review of
weather data .
He said a cold front moving
swiftly eastward would be in
north Florida by launch time,
pushing cloudy skies several
hundred miles in advance. But
Amman said the clouds over
the spaceport "won't be so
thick as to be of any concern."
The three astronauts slept
late today in their quarters at
the moonport to be well rested
for the start of the 12-&lt;lay, 16hour mission which Cernan
predicts will be America's
most productive flight to the
moon. It also will be the Ia$! for
at least a decade, and perhaps
for this century.
Traffic around the spaceport
was picking up early in the day
and more than half-million •
rocket watchers were expected
to be on the beaches and at
other seaside vantage points by
(Continued on Page 10)

Truck bi"ds
under study
The Meigs County Commi ssioners Tuesday opened
bids from three companies to
sell dump trucks to the Meigs
County Highway Department.
Submitting bids were the
Meigs Equipment Company,
proposal No. 1, with trade-in of
, GMC truck, $7,049 .50; proposal
No. 2; without trade·in,
$7,249.50; Pomeroy Motor Co.,
No. 1, with trade-in, $6,800;
No. 2, without trade,
$7,453.50; Keith Goble Ford,
No.1, with trade-in, $7,095, No.
2, without trade, $7,497,
Bids will be reviewed and
~warded later,
Meeting with the commissioners Monday were Dan
Uoyd, Cay Cross, and Mr.
Ables . of the Southeast
Emergency Medical Service,
Donald Diener, administrator
of
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital, and Hugh Custer and
Pete Shields, hospital trustees
to discuss progress . pf the
regional Emergency Medical
Services Program.

:1.

PRESENTS FIRST PASS - Dr. Alphus R. CbrlstellSen, right, presents the first Golden
Age pass to George Northup, Rio Grande. Mrs. Grant, who organized \he Golden Age unit is at
left.

Golden .Age Passes offered
-~,

..

RIO GRANDE - Dr. Alphus
R. Christensen, President of
Rio Grande College , announced today a special
pr og r~m designed by the
college to provide a community
service to ali citizens 60 years
of age and older who reside in
Galiia, Jackson, Meigs, Scioto
and Vinton counties.
The program provides free
admission to all Rio Grande
College sponsored
and
regularly scheduled Activity
Comm ittee events, athletic
events (does not include
tournaments), artist-lecture
program s, plays, debates,
symposium , art e&lt;hibits, and

musical productions. fn. order
for any citizen 80 or older to be
admitted free to the above
events they must obtain a
Golden Age Pass.
Rio Grande College is, according to Dr. Christensen, "a
local sponsor of an Areawide
Model Project on Aging, which
ts a planning project designed
first to identify the needs of
the elderly in five counties and
then to develop services to
meet those needs. We sincerely
hope the elderly citizens in the
five county project area will
take advantage of this service
and enjoy the many activities
held at the college."
Any person 60 and older

Peace talk
PARIS (UPI) - After an
unexplained 24-hour break,
peace negotiator Henry A.
Kissinger and two Hanoi envoy's resumed talks today
aimed at bringing peace to
Vietnam.
For this third session in the
latest round of direct secret
talks which began in August,
1969, the two sides met in yet
another new localion- Neuilly
sur Seine, on the outskirts of
Paris.
Kissinger arrived first at the
talks site, a two-story house on
the Avenue de Saussaye in one
of the richest areas of Paris. Le
Due Tho, the chief Hanoi
negotiator, arrived 15 minutes
later .
The meeting place, which
French newspaper said was
chosen by the United Stales
side, is the fourth site used by
the two sides in their latest

if
U

11

SHOPPING

OAYSlFIT

It\ n ,..ott, ~ L«e &lt;WI~ I
GIVE MORE TO CHRISTMAS SEALS

wishing to obtain a Golden Age
Pass may do so by contacting
personnally the secretary of
their County Co mini ttee on
Aging or by appearing at the
project headquarters located
on S. College Avenue at Rio
Grande College. The persons to
contact in each county are :
Gallla, Mrs. Ann White at 930
Second Ave., Gallipolis;
Jackson, Mrs. Helen Whitmore
at 904 Massachusetts Ave.,
Wellston ; Meigs, Mrs. Hugh
Custer on Chester Road,
Pomeroy ; Scioto, Mrs. Norma
Veley, Hudson House, 610 Fifth
St., Portsmouth, and Vinton,
Mrs. Mary Brown, 104 E. South
Street, McArthur.

continues ~

series or meetings.
Neither delegation offered an
explanation for the move from
place to place.
Previously the negotiators
met at a villa owned by the
F'rench Communist party in
Gif Sur Yvette outside of Paris,
in a house belonging to the
North Vietnamese mission
in suburban Cboisy le Roi and
at a luxurious villa formerly
the property of a British World
War II aviation hero and now
owned by a Paris industrialist
at SQinte Gemme, 30 miles
west of Paris.
A French jeweler owns the
house where they met today.
There was no reason given
by either the White House or
the U.S. delegation for the
cancellation of Tuesday's
talks, but a spokesman for the
North Vietnamese delegation
said t&lt;iday the session was

called off at the request of the
U. S. negotiators. The U. S.
delegates refused comment.
Kissinger was accompanied
at today's talks by his deputy,
Gen . Alexander Haig, and
State Department official
William S. Sullivan . Tho's
aides were Xuan Thuy, the No.
2 Hanoi negotiator, and the
North Vietnamese vice
minister for foreign affairs,
Nguyen Co Thach.
Kissinger wailed for Tho at
the door of the house and they
went in together. The talks took
place behind closed, gray, steel
shutters on the first floor of the
flat-roofed mansion .
Forty-five minutes after the
talks started, a delivery van
brought food and drinks to the
house. There was a case 'of red
wine, several bottles of soft
drinks and plates of food
covered with while napkins.

Mr. Eddy is indisposed
"Mr. Eddy," the Meigs •
Jackson • Vinton bookmobile is
temporarily out of business .
The bookmobile, which has
been on the road eight years, is
in Marietta where repairs are
being made, and hopefully,
completed shortly.
Patrons of the unit are asked
to hold their books or return ·
them to the bookmobile
headquarters at the corner of
Nye and East Main St. in
Pomeroy, Parents are asked to
have their children return
books to thei~ respective

schools and arrangements will
be made to pick up those books.
While road service is not being
offered residents are invited to
stop by the headquarters in,
··f
Pomeroy.
Meanwhile, it is reported
that Gerstens~ers ,, in
Wooster, the company which
made Mr. Eddy 'J.will ,; be·
completing a new bookmobile
for the three-county area
within 90 days. Service will b~
restored as soon as one of the
two vehicles is available.

,I

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