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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

�.

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Dec. 6, 1972

by Patterson and Patrick

PRE.SIDENTS OF MANIF~ST DESTI~Y

: 3- The Da1ly Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Dec. 6, 19n

Helen Help

Us.

Th1rteenth Prooidont Millard fillmore
(Admlnlltrat•on July 10, 1850-Morch 3, 1853)

Last Whtg and Ftrsl "Know-Nothmg"
Htstory has not been kmd to Millard Fillmore
So critical has heen the verdict of the last Whtg
Prestdent and first "Know-Nothing" candidate that
1t 1s necessary w remember histonans are tyranmzed by facts and that"htstorical facts are usually
compromtses on the part of both actors and narrators.
H1s s1gning of that melange of socio-economic
facts, the Compromtse of 1850, sounde~ his political death knell. So explosive was the natiOnal mood
on slavery that any President ":'ould have ~en
crucified for signmg the crazy qmlt of self-servmg
notions which transformed what should have been
primanly a moral issue for all Americans into a
partisan political 1ssue for a few power-hungry
men. It split the nation down the middle.
.
The Compromise of 1850, the most destructiVe
and shortest t9mpromist in American history, was
_sponsored bv such eminent statesmen as Henry

BRUCE BIOSSAT

\~

\l:.~§t'!~G\Ol'f. !N,Ei\1
The thinned-down posse of Republican governors gathermg at Phoemx predictably wtll be gnpmg that Prest·
dent Nixon didn't lend a real hand thts fall to some of
thetr campatgnmg brethren and other candtdates But
their party problem 1s btgger than that
Put aside for the moment all the stuff about how both
parties are weakenmg, how the lies of allegiance to them
have grown fragile, etc They still do extsl, they still are
used as vehtcles for elechng people to ma)or office, and
they must be measured by certam standards of per
formance
The thlng to say about the Republlcans ts that they are
poor party-butlders and have been for a long lime
When they were plunged mto mmonty status by Frank·
Un Roosevelt's ascendancy, the GOP took a long lime
to wake up to what had happened to them For a whtle
thereafter, the only limes they won anythmg btg were
when voters got mad at the Democrats and reacted at
the polls, as m the GOP resurgence m 1938 and its 1946
v1ctor:es reflectmg accumulated trnlation and wearmess
after World War II
Gen Dwtght Eisenhower' s personal populanty brought
the party, ln 1952 and 1956, tis ftrst real chance to come
back, to regam ma)ortty status The Republicans blew tl
Who would believe that a party whose candtdate won
the 'prestdency by 9 5 million votes m 1956 could drop to
a pathetic total of 14 governors, 154 of 435 U S House
members and a third of the Senate seats in 1958 1
Some very skillful men had been involved in gettmg
Eisenhower nominated and elected the first time If they
did not exactly vanish into the woodwork, they evtdently
were distracted by other tasks thereafter, and certainly
their numbers did not mcrease.
Smce that pertod, they've relied mostly upon diVISIOns
within the tangled Democratic party to brmg them what
successes they've had They did get back mto heavy
dommance of the governors' ranks, not long .ago possessmg the governors' chairs m all the btg northern
states down to the population level of Mtssoun Their
edge was 31 to 19 But here we are m 1972 and 1t's the
Democrats 31 to 19
Moreover, the Republicans are m a spell where they're
gomg to have the presidency once agam for at least etght
years, and once more they're showmg virtually no talent
for party-butldmg
Every pohltcal analyst worth hts salt knows the American voters, in considerable degree, are up for grabs
The opportumty Is golden But tf the Democrats are fal·
termg, so are the Republicans
.
They have a posittve gemus for fteldmg lousy candl·
dates They don't seem, on the whole, to know how to
.butld up good men for the great quest for office They
play at politics hke college graduates who meet from
time to time for reumons A lot of them behave between
elecllon years as 1f politics were a dtslasteful exerCise
that had to be gone through penodtcally, but mercifully
did not last long
This, of course, doesn't free Mr. Ntxon from some
blame. For he and the people who brought him to success
·surely have grasped the party's need for butldmg up The
point IS that the burden of fatlure has to be widely
sbared.
·
' TIM! GOP does have some brtght excephons, like Govs
Daniel Evans of Washmgton. Robert Ray of Iowa. WJI.
Uam Milliken of MJchtgan. Francts Sargent of Massachulelts They work at 1t Most of the rest are a bunch
of country-clubbers who now are complaining ' that Mr.
Nixon didn't help them make 11 down the fairway
n

•

6

EAST

.53
• 983
• 984 2
4874 2

•

Bench, named the Natwnal
League's Most Valuable
Player in 1970 and 1972, satd
the leston had not bothered him
and he was not concerned
about the outcome.
"I'm gomg to be 100 per
cent," Bench, who turns 25 on
Thursday, satd at hts home
here. "I thmk of 1t m that
manner
"That's what the doctors say
and that's what I have to

1•

4NT.
6•

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
SIX spades ts a/retty JlOod
contract. It woul be a cmch
agamst a heart or diamond
lead, but when we saw the
hand played West opened a
trump
Byron Greenberg of Tulsa ,
who was declarer, planned
his play before winning the
first lrtck. He saw no reason
not to draw trumps and so
he played a second round of
the trump smt.
Then he led a heart to
dummy's queen and really
went into a huddle when the
queen held
Some players huddle for
no apparent r e a s o n but
eventually Byron found a

Southern trips K C five
Btg Ron Htll, 6-3 semor
center, scored four Pomts m an
overhme Tuesday mght at
Ractne m leadmg the Southern
Tornadoes to a hard-foughl, 7871 vtclory over the Kyger
Creek Bobcats
Htll was the game "s leadmg
scorer wtth 26 pomts, 20 of
those came m Ute second half
The wm evened Southern 's
SVAC record at 1-1 wh tle the
Bobcats also dropped to 1·1.
The regulation game ended,
71-71 followmg a tymg free
throw by the Bobcats' Joe
S!tdham, 6-2 sophomore
center
Dunng the overhme,
however, Coach Jun Arledge's
Bobcats went cold, mtssmg all
etght shots attempted.
Bestdes Htll's four pomts,
Bob Mtller, 5-9 JUniOr guard,

believe," he sa1d

Bench was the yo ungest
MVP 10 Natlonal League
history when gtven that award
m 1970, Ute year he socked 148
RBI's, a club record, and 45
home runs The Reds lost the
World Sertes that year to the
Baltimore Ortoles
Bench had an off-year m 1971
when he btl 238, had 134 htts
and only 'll homers, but he had
another good year thts season,
hitting .270 wtth 40 homers.
The Reds lost Ute 1972 World
Senes to the Oakland A's m
seven games
Weeks "Dotng r4otblng"
Bench has kept the knowledge of the spot on his lung to a
few close fnends and famtly.
He satd he decided to "leave it
up to the hospttal or the club to
announce 1t."
If the operation ts per-

fonned, Bench smd doctors
told hun he wtll spend "etght
weeks domg nothing" durmg
convalescence
Dr George Ballou, head
team physJctan , satd "'tt ts
anllctpated Bench wtll be
ready m lime for spr10g
trammg "

Gonzalez satd today's "one
!mal test" on Bench would be
to cbeck tbe bronchtal tubes
"and hopefully fmd what the
cause (of the spot) IS "
"The test has only an
oulstde chance of showing what
the cause ts and tl 's the last
posstble thmg we can do
(before surgery),'' Gonzalez
satd "If tt doesn't show what
the ~ause ts, we'll have to
proceed as scheduled on Monday"
Bench IS tentatively scheduled to enter the hospttal on
Saturday.

UMBRELLA OF HANDS - Bobcats John Rumley (35)
and George CUrry (31), 11111 a cover over Mike Nease (32) of
the Southern Tornadoes who has the ball down 'on the floor ,

and unable to get a shot off. Southern won the SVAC game
last night 7&amp;-71 In overtime.

22

11MI1

·Devils chalk

\

pI ay th a t was sure to brmg

d
f llik ki
d bled
home the slam 1f West held rna e '."e ee e a ng, never ou
me, ~ung on my every
the ace of hearts. Let's see word, mtroduced me to her young, groovy frtends.
1! you readers can fmd' this
By contrast my w1fe's honesty became "naggmg," and the
sure-thmg play.
kids ''held me down." So I told myself I deserved more apByron Simply cas.hed dum- prectatton - and moved in wtth my gtrlfriend
my's ace of clubs and led the
1
dis
ed
d do ·
be
four of hearts to his 10• ~ot
soon cover peace an a rahon can deadly dull.
West took his jack and ~und Thts woman clmgs.She threatens suicide if I leave her. ! suspect
himself caught m the tolls of she ts trying to get pregnant. Worst of aU, I said so many mean
an early end-play
thmgs to my wife that I don't think she would take me back.
It didn't matter what he
Alii want ts to go home to my family where 1 belong. I was
led. Byron was s~re to take never meant for this new wild crowd un.at
d whe
the rest of the trtcks.
,
· "'' can a man o
n
The ace of hearts 1e ad he s stuck wtth lymg in a bed he was a fool to make? - CONwould set up Byron's kmg FUSED FOOL
6 00 - Truth or Conseq 6 , News 3, 4, a. 10 15 Sesame St 20
Byron would ruff in dummy,
Around The Bend 33
' '
'
get to dtscard one of dum- Dear Fool ·
6
~~News
3,
4,
6,
B
.
10,
15.
J
Dream
of
Jeann1
e
13
Hathayoga
my's dtamonds on the good
J
f·
d
heart and trump his third
umpouto 1t - an go home' Yourwifemaymakethmgs
7 00 - News 6, 10. Whats My L1ne B. Truth or Conseq 3 Beat
diamond with dummy's last pretty rough for a while, but I'll bet she'll take you back. Wives
the Clock 4, Anythmg You Can Do 13, Samt 15 KnoV: Your
trump. A low heart would are hke that ... usually. - H.
Schools 33
·
allow the dtamond discard
7 30 - To Tell The Truth 6, The Judge 10 Pollee Surgeon 3 4
Protectors 8, Beat The Clock 13,' Andy Grltf 1th '15;
Immediately
Hodg'Jeodge Lodge 20. EpiSode Action 33
A diamond lead would take
8 30 - dam 12 3, 15 , Paul Lynde 6, 13; Appomfmenf wllh
care of the dtamond loser
Desll'lJ'i 8, 10, How Do We Get From Here to There 20 33
and Byron could ruff both his - - - - - - , - - - B
3MOIIII layhouse New York 20, Handfuls of Ashes'33 ; Cool
h e a r t s wIt h dummy's
on 3, 4, 15, Julie Andrews 6, 13
The
Slntilel
•
AK65
•
AK65
UZ
.KQ3
trumps
9 00 - Medical CenterS, 10: Chapter 33, 33.
·
DIVOTID
TO
Till
A low club lead would give What do you do now?
,
IIITIRIST 01'
9·30 - Movie " The Wild Heart" 6, 13
MilOS-MAlON ARIA
dummy a. club tr1ck and al- A-Jump to lour ~~~. This
10 00 - Search3, 4,15 ; Soul33, News20 , CannonS 10
'
low Byron to discard one of shows very good hearts •and CHIITIR L. TAIIIIIHILL, II OO - News3,4, 6, 8,10,13, 1S
lxec.
••·
11 ~~Th Jochnny Carson 3, 15; Vlrgln1an 6, Madhouse 90 6 Movies
his diamonds while the king lenea It up to your partner to
IOIIRT HOII'LICH,
e ouch" 13, "Wake of the Red W1tch" 10
'
of clubs lead would be SUI- move tow1rd a slam. Remember,
Clly ldllor
I
00
-'
News
4
hi• hand rnlly still be a very
Publls~td dally
tx&lt;tpt
cide for the defense
Saturday by Tht Ohio Vtllty 130 - News 13
strong oM.
IHEWIPAPER EHTERPRIIE ASSH )
Publishing Company, 111
THURSDAY, DEC 7, 1972
TODAY'S QUI!STION
Court St., Pomtrov. Ohio,
6 oo - Sunrise Seminar 4, Sacred Heart 10
Your partner continues to five flllt lullntu Office Phono
H2 2156, EdiiO.IIl Phone H2. 6 15 - Farmt1me 10
hearts. What do you do now?
2157.
6 20 - Paul Harvey 13
Stc- CIIU postage Plld tl
The bidding has been
6 30 - Columbus Today 4, Bible Answers B. America's
Problems 10
Sellol $1 lot JACOIV MOOUH booll Pomtroy, Ohio.
West North Eost
Nttlonol tdvtrllllno 6 45 - Corncob Report 3
to. ~'Win Qt lridtt," (c/o dtis lltWI· rtprounlttlvt
lottlntlll· 6 55 - Fllntstones 13
paper!, 10. lo• 419, R..Jio Cilr Gtlltghor, Inc, ll Etsl 42nd
Pass
Pass
7 oo - Today 3, 4, 15, CBS News 8, 10 . News 6
St., Ntw York City, Now York
Statioo, How Yorl, NY. 10019.
Pass
Pass
• SuUcrlpllon rttu: Ot· 7 30 - Romper Room 6, Sleepy Jolters 8, Rocky 8. Bullwlnkle
You, South, hold
13
•
llvtrtd by cerr ltr whtrt
ovolltblt Sll contt ptr wttk: 8 oo - Capt Kangaroo 10. Sesame St 33, New Zoo Revue 13, •
ly Motor Routt whtrt ctrrltr
lassie 6
:
11rvlct not 1\lllllblt Ont
8 30- Jack LaLanne 13. New Zoo Revue 6, Romper Room a. •
month St 75 ly mtll In OhiO
- Ben Casey 13 , Concentration 6, What Every Woman :
tnd W. vo., Ont yttr SI ...O. 9 00
Wan!$ to Know 3, Paul Dixon 4, Phil Donahue 15. Captam •
Sl• monthS $7 25. Thrtt
Kangaroo 6, Friendly Junction 10
•
monlhl u.so. Subscription
,
price lncludts Svndty Tlmn- 9 30- Jeopardy 6, To Tell the Truth 3, HazelS
Sonllntl
10 oo - D1ck Van Dyke 13, Dinah Shore 3, IS. Columbus Six
Calling 6, Joker's Wild 6, 10
10 30 - Spill Second 3
11 oo - Password 13
1
11 30 - Bew1tched 13, Hollywood Squares 3, 4, 15, Love of [1fe 8, •
10
'
12 00 - Password 6. News 10; Jeopardy i. 1s; Jackie Oblinger 8 :
1 00 - All My Children 6, 13: News 3, It's Your Bet 8 Green •
Acres 10. Walch Your Child 15
~
harm than good. I want to goes on to something else. I cine will be picked u b the
circulation
in
thd
armp
ymus
1
30
Three
on
•
Match
3,
4,
15,
ABC's
Playbreak
6,
13,
As
the
emphasize that thts is not a am 60 years old and have to
•
• World Turns 8, 10
•
recommendation a g a 1n s t work to keep up
cle just about as fast as by 2 oo - qaysof our Llves3:~. 15 , Guiding Llght8,10
hypnosis, but rather a rec•
Dear Reader-Other than the circulation in the hlp 2 30 - DOctors 3, 4, 15, Edge of Night 8, to.
ommendation to use 11 prop- comfort,
muscle.
So,
this
Is
Why
your
3
00
Another
World
3,
4,
t5,
General
Hospllal6,
13,
love
Is
A
doesn't make lillY doctor said it didn't make
erly, tf 1t is mdicated at ali differenceIt whether
Many Splendored Thing 8, 10, Behmd the Lmes 20.
•
the Injec- any diflerence
3
30
Return
to
Peyton
Place
3.
4,
IS
,
One
Life
to
Live
6, 13
I would like to caution you tion ls made In the arm
In
·
Secret Storm 8, 10
'
against seemg someone who the hlp 'I:he unportant or
purIf
you
take
something
by
4
00
MISter
Cartoon.
Banana
Spl•ls
3,
Merv
Grltlln
4,
Flint
wlll do hypnosis who 1s not pose of most Injected medl- mouth, It hllll to be absorbed
stones 6, Love American Style 13: Somerset 15, Gilligan's '
trained to handle the total cmes is to either put 11 under by the dleestive tract and
Island 8; Sesame Street 20, 33: Movie " Jailhouse Rock" 10
problem In its proper profes- the skm (subcutaneous) or some m ed lc in e s are de- 4 30Petticoat Junction 3: Andy Grlffllh 15: Dick Van Dyke 4
sional settmg.
strayed
by
the
dl~sllve
5
00
Dick Van Dyke 15, Ponderosa 3, 4, Merv Griffin 4. Mr
mto the muscle (IM). A med- . .
th
d
Roberts
20, 33.
Dear Dr. Lamb - I have icine placed under the skin )Wces 1n e stomac al) s 30 - Marshall
Dillon 15, Elec co. 33 Dragnets G
p1
USMC 13.
•
· omer Y e
permc10us anem1a . About rather than in the muscle Is the various enzymes. Sbll
four years ago after a series absorbed slowly. This Is B!IOther way to take medl- 6 00 - News 3, ~. 8. 15, News 6, 8, 10, 1 Dream of Jeannie 13 '
Designing Women 33
';
of B-12 1D)ections my doctor somethnes useful. Usually CIDe is to Inhale it. Various
put me on one Injection of the med1cine can be put un- sprays are used this way and 7·00 - What's My Llho 8, Big Red Jubilee IS ; News 6, 10. Beat •
The Clock 4 ; Amazing World of Kreskin 13, Elec. Co 20, :
B-12 a month. The nurse der the skm in altnost any ,the medicine Is absorbed by
the
cl!"culatlon
through
the
Course
of Our Times 33, Truth or Consequences 3
•
region
of
the
body
stressed that the hlp was the
tun~.
This
Is
usuaUy
v:r.r
7
~ru~·~.
s:ftdYouKI
In
Court
I,
Hollywood
Squares·J;
'l"o
Tell
the
:
proper place for 1t. A year
Muscles have good circulasome m • 20; 8 lack
• Journal
ngdom
ago I moved and changed tion and medtclne injected rap · ""-·"··
~.......,.I
33. 101Lassie 8; Beatthe Clock 13: Zoom
' .•
doctors and the nurse there Into the muscle Is rapldiy cines can be aamlnlslered by 8 00 - Flip Wilson 3, ~. IS ; Mod Squad 6, 13; Advocates 20 33 :
' '
gave me the InJection In the picked up by the blood rubbing them on the akin. The Waltons 8, 10.
arm. I asked the doctor if it stream and carried through(NIWSPAPil IHTEIPIIII ASIH.) 9 00 - Ironside 3, 4, 15 ; International Performance 20, 33, ~
_
Assignment VIenna 13, Ora Roberts On Campus 6 Movie
shouldn't be In the hlp in- out the body If a I ar ge
5eo4 ,_ ._...., 111 Or. l.aoob,
"'The African Queen" 8. 10.
'
•
stead,. of the arm and he said needle is used or a large
lo
~
oo
...
iQ
00
Owtn
Manhall6,
13,
Dean
Marlin
3,
4,
15,
Mountaineer
Jt didn't m a k e any differ- amount inject~ then a large
·-· "' ..,
, r. •
Sports 33: News 20
ence, so I don't know which muscle as founo1 over the blp 1551, hlllt Cilr
H" r..t, 11 oo- News3. 4. 6, a,1o, 13, 1s.
:
one was right. I am always 1s used. For a smaU amount N.Y. IOO,.Itro-tfDr,L..N'o ti 30 - JC!Mny Cenon J , 4,15: Truman Capae Behind Prison •
fatigued imd started to take with a small needle, the arm boollltt eo "'"" wo/rltt, IMI 30 Walls 6. 13.
:
vitamins. I told my doctor muscle is more convenient. &lt;fair 111 do - .Urea oM oot II 40-Movles "Eagle Sqyedron" I; "Some Came Running" 10. •
1 00 - San Q.lenlln 6, t3.
~'
and he just shrugs It off and When done right the medl· lot •~.to.~or Wtlrlt" HN/et.
I 30 - News 13.
,.

Tel~vision

South

CINCINNATI (UP!) - John,. ny Bepch, the young Cincmnati
' Red constdered one of Ute
finest catchers m baseball
' history, IS expected to enter a
• hosptlal here th ts weekend to
" have a leston removed from his
, right lung
Asurgeon satd "overwhelm" mg odds are lhat 1t IS bemgn "
SUrgeon Dr Luts Gonzalez
satd he would perform new
tests today on Bench, 24, but
" believed surgery would be
' necessary. The operation was
" scheduled at Chrtst Hospttal
next Monday.
Gonzalez satd the spot was
found on Bench's lung durmg
the Reds' ann ual team physicals m late September He
contmued to play, however,
mcludmg the NatiOnal League
pennant playoffs and the
World Sertes
Gonzalez satd the spot was
"most likely the result of a
fungus mfectton or a httle
bemgn tumor, one of those two
thmgs Overwhelmmg odds are
that It IS bemgn "
"100 Per Cent" OK
"'The appearance on the xrays IS much more mdtcaltve
of a bentgn leswn rather than a
mahgn one," he sa1d. "We
thmk everythmg IS 10 hts
favor."

1D

Log

DIIJ

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

~ up

third win

:
Gall!pol!s chalked up its thtrd strmght
,bastetbi\11 ,t p umph , Q~-· tre . rP!I-1! Tuesd11-y nJght,
dow,ning Coacli '' Lewis D' Antoni's sblboorn
Chesapeake Panthers 56-48 in a hard-fought
defensive struggle.
Gtl Price, 6-4 junior center, paced the Gallians'
attack with 26 points and 14 rebounds. Senior forward Jtmmy Noe pumped m 12 points for the
visitors The 6-3 Noe played another outstandmg
defensive game, and controlled both boards with 17
rebounds
LOGAN - Ken Culbertson, the Chieftains' big 205
lb. running back, won
honorable mention listing on
the AAA All-()blo football
squad announced today by
the UPI. No other player of
Logan, Athens, Meigs, or
Jackson, the AAA schools In
the Southeastern Ohio
League, was ranked.
Lineman of the Year
award went to Bob Brudzlnski, 6-4, 205 lb. defensive
end from Fremont Ross;
Back of the Year was Mike
Gayles, 5-10, 170 lb., of
Cincinnati Princeton.
AAA Coach of the Year is
Joe Novak, Warren Western
Reserve.

s-.

0

.•

.,

....

'

SURGERY SCHEUULt;;U
NEW YORK (UP! ) - Runrung back John Rtggtns of the
New York Jets underwent
surgery on hts nght kneecap
Tuesday mght and wtll m1ss

tlle team 's !mal two games of
the year He rushed for 944

yards thts season and ts four
shot t of the team record held
by Matt Snell

Redmen drop 69•61 dec1s10 n
Steve Kinser, 6-4 Lancaster
semor, pumped m 22 pomts to
pace Coach Dick Reynolds'
Otterbem cardinals to a 6~1
basketbaU tnwnph over Coach
Art Lanham's Rto Grande
College Redmen before approxunately 1,200 fans at Lyne
Center Tuesdsy mght
The Redmen held the lead
lwtce mtdway m the ftrst half,
but fell behind 34-26 at the
halftune mternusston
Rto pulled wtthm one pomt
with six minutes remammg,

GE COLOR TV

Hypnosis Can Be a Tool-

,.L-

BASKETBALL BALLET - Kyger Creek's Clay Hudson
(21) and Southern's Rod Holman (22) are basketball players,
not danCers, although lh1s cl'1ance exposure bf some of the
act10n Tuesday mght m Racme doesn't prove tt.

..

But It's No Sure Cure

By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
Dear Dr. Lamb - Do you
believe in hypnosis tf you
need hell;' Wtth a sex problem
like havmg to adJUSt to Ufe
without sex? Please answer
as I need help
Dear Reader - BasicaUy,
hypnosis ts a tool that the
doctor can use to help managll medical problems For
difficulty In one's sex life of
the nature w h I c h you describe, It 1s probably wise to
see a psychiatnst If he
wants to use hypnosis m the
process ol analyzing y o u r
problem, that is lme I am
afraid that hypnosis by itself,
however, Will not solve the
•
to shove aU the work on b a s I c problems and that
these need to be explored to
the olher
achieve the results you de·
B7 P111L PASTORET
sire The PEYOhiatrist would
TID a fellow out to lunch
no doubt like to know why
no'a Jooklne for c:ompllyou have to live wtthout sex
•tl, and 1011'0 have to unand explore 1 h 1s problem
JirJD a ''ftlh" dinner.
with you Hypnosts, wtthout
going into these problems
and
your basic attitudes,
What's
sauce
for
the
gooae
A IIHC dull II o aign
is a superflctal apmerely
gell
spilled
mostly
on
our
tie
tM&amp; fOIIW IIIIJittrecllww
during the holiday dlllner. proach and could cause more

• • •

l

:
'
An End-PI ay• Deve Iops EorIy DearI Helen
have lost the most precious thmg life: my family I
thought! had laDen hopelessly m love With another woman. She

By BRUCE BIOSSAT
!"

••

+++

Republicans Still
Weak in Politics

\Bench to have
-lung surgery

Clay, Damd Webster, Stephen Douglas and Lewis
Cass. Fvcn 1hc great advocate of State's Rights,
John C. Calhoun, was willing tn compromise to
By Helen Bottel
the extent uf having dual Prestdcnts, (&gt;De for the
North, another lor the South.
But above .II, the compromise was the pmudest
work of the Great Pactficatnr, llcnry Clay, and
Ban the Cocktail Party?
Clay not on ly was Prestdent Ftllmnrc's longtime
Dear Helen
tdol, but also the leader of Ftllmore's party. There
My spouse absolutely hates and detests cocktail parties. So
do
I,
but sometimes we're mvited by friends who don't unwas, then, nothing unusual about a Whtg President
derstand thts. I would go, because I d!DI't want to hurt thetr
stgn tng a btll that Whtg stalwartS Clay and Webster
feelmgs. But he says, " If they want to see us, they can inVIte us to
thought \~as the best posstble under the circumdinner, not to some pay-back-obligation IDOb scene."
stances What was remarkable was that Fi llmore
It's very hard to explain this to friends, so we keep saying
ncr got to be Prestdent in the first pl~ce.
.
we're busy and don't go anywhere. And the word gets around that
The civic-mmded, personable and conservauve
we're unsoctal.l'm afraid we'Dend up with no friends and 1may
Fillmore had risen to the cha1rmansh1p of the powhave to fling myself over the bridge.- MEREDITII
erful House Ways and Means Committee m Tyler's
•\ dmimstrau on. He rettred from Congress in 1843
Dear Meredith :
because of dtssatisfacuon with Tyler's polictes and
Cocktail parties are like the weather · Everybody complains
unsuccessfully sought the governorshtp of New
bitt nobody does anythmg about litem.
Maybe these suggesllons will help ·
•
York and the vtce presidential nomination the fol1 Arrtve late and leave early. In all that din;-who'llllllSS
lowing year. In 1848 he became the Whtg vice presyou•
tdential nommee, assummg the PresidencY, when
2 Arrive early, before the mob scene, meet congemal friends
President Taylor dted after 16 months m office.
Where Taylor might have vetoed the comprnm- wtth the same idea in mmd, and go on to a quiet, conversational
dinner .
tsc bill, Fillmore signed the measures wtth satisfac3 Sit on the sidelines and observe. (Remember how, years
wm, believmg they constituted a "final settlement" ago, our Saturday rught fun was people-watchmg from a parked
of the slavery tssue. Nevertheless, two of the laws car on Main Street?) Or mingle, with a note pad, writing down
lowered hts popularity· the admission of California Utose little gems of trtVIa you can laugh about later. (Perhaps
as a free state hurt him in the South, and Norther- you'D be taken for a SOCiety reporter or author and treated with
ners bmerly resented being held accountable for special deference.)
4. Get roaring drwtk and hang by your knees from the
returnmg runaway slaves under the Fugtttve Slave
chandeliers. Your name will soon be expunged from cocktail
Law.
party
lists.
Defeated for renomination in 1852 by Gen.
5. Inasmuch as you can neither bear nor be beard, practice
Winfield Scott, Fillmore's career hit rock bottom
m 1856 when he got only Maryland's electoral votes hp-sync. It saves the vocal cords.
6. Sit out on the terrace looking remote, glamorous,
as the presidential nominee of both the Whtgs and
profound, amused, mysterious ... whatever ... if you're lucky, a
the
anti-Catholic,
anti-tmmigrant
"Know- kindred soul wiU sit down beside you.
Nothings."
7.lf it's a big party you can't refuse (and you also can't bear
More successful as a man than as a President, gomg), stay home, but can the hostess next day and congratulate
Fillmore's life was characterized by courage, mod- ber on a smaBbing success. ~e'll never admit not seeing"you.
esty and frankness . While visiting England, the ex- (But check with someone first - tbe baBb might have bombed.)
8. Get tbe word arowtd that you have this Inner ear trouble
President declined to accept an honorary doctorate
on the grounds that his accomplishments did nor and the hum of a crowd turns you homictdal.
9. Start a "Ban Cocktail Parties" campaign. You m~ght be
merit such an honor. Upon his death, Alexander
surpriSed
how many will Jwnp on the bandwagon. - H.
H . Stephens, conciliatory · Vice President of the
+++
Confederacy, paraphrasing a remark made by Dear Helen ·
Christ about Nathaniel, wrote of Fillmore
We have people health insurance, even maintenance in"There indeed is a man in whom is no guile ." surance on our TV sets - so lVhy doesn't somone come up with
In these umes, when the presidential "credi- PET health msurance? I think It would be a winner - and would
bility gap" se_ems to grow ev~ WJ~er _and deeper, probably make a lot of money for some enterpl-1smg company. such a tribute is of more endurtng stgntficance than PET OWNER
a presidential ranking of ~peat."
'-'"""' IW'I'
MIOUn
Dear Owner
Maybe some enterprtsmg vetermartan will see thts column
and try 11 And tf he makes a million, I hope he remembers he
read
1t first m llliU' - H
WIN AT BRIDGE

but the Ohio Conference team
held on to chalk up tis thtrd
VIctory m four starts thts
wmter
Rto Grande dropped to 1-2on
Ute year
Ironton's Steve Bartram
paced the Redmen wtth 16
pomts Bartram suffered a
spramed ankle late m the
game
Capt Ron Lambert added 13
points
Jackson 's
6-5
sophomore , Mike Rouse,
~Jtllled 12 markers for the home
club.
Steve Traylor, Otterbem's
outstanding 6-0 semor guard,
did not make the trtp. Traylor
Will take part m the ftrst an·
nual East-West Shrme Bowl
football tilt at Columbus, and 1s
engaged m drills for that postseason event.

Beat

The Early
Snow!

49995
23" WALNUT CONSOLE
SPECTRA BRIGHT TUBE
"• 'AUtomatic Fine Tuiline
• Automatic Duuisine

H&amp;R FIRESTONE

And Retreadable Casing

Rumley had seven pomls
durmg the stanza whtle Hudson
canned mght Nease and Htll
paced Southern durmg the
pcrtod
Coach Bob Ord's Tornadoes
\ted the score with 14 pomts m
th e second pertod led by
Curfman's ftve markers
The Bobcats moved mto a
four-pomt 1ead at the end of
three pertods Hudson and
Davtd Clay, 6-3 Jumor center,
led the attack wtth stx pomts
each Htll agam paced Southern wtth 10 pomts
StaltsltCS show southern
sank 30 of 54 held goal attempts
for a hot 55 pet whtle Kyger
Creek htt only 28 of 84 for 33
pet The Tornadoes canned 18
of 31 at the foul hne whtle the
Bobcats managed to btl only 15
of 33 from the chartty slrtpe.

Nebraska places 3
on All America
NEW YORK (UP! ) - The
Umvers1ty of Nebraska,
though somewhat of a dtsappomtm ent dunng the 1972
coUege football season, continued to reap the harvest of
lndtvtdual honors today when
three members of the Cornbusters' squad were named
to Umted Press lnternahonal
All-Amertca team
The Cornhuskers, the preseason chm ce to wtn the
national title but who ftmshetl
runth after comptlmg an 8-2-1
record, placed Hetsman
Trophy wmner Johnny
Rodgers, Outland Trophy
rectptent Rtch Glover and
defenstve end Wtllle Harper on
the Ali-Amertca squad as
selected by 230 sportswnters
and sportscasters from across
the nation
The balloting for Rodgers
was untque He recetved votes
for two postllons- wtde
recetver and ranmng backand got enough · support for
both to have made the squad at
etther position Smce .he
recetved more votes for wtde
receiver, however, he was
named All-Amenca at that
post!ton
Oklahoma, whtch beat out
Nebraska for the Btg Etghl
Conference tttle, national
champton Southern Califorma,
Purdue and Tennessee each

placed two players on the
squad while Texas, Alabama,
North Carolina, Louistana
State, Amona State, Penn
State, Notre Dame, Ohto State,
Mtchtgan, Mtchigan State and
Colorado each had one player
selected
The offenstve squad constsls
of Rodgers at wtde recetver,
Charles Young of Southern Cal
at light end, Jerry Stsemore of
Texas and Pete Adams of
Southern Cal at the tackles,
John Hannah of Alabama and
Ron Rusnak of North CBrohna
at the guards, Tom Brahaney
of Oklahoma at center, Bert
Jones of um at quarterback
and Greg Pruitt of Oklahoma,
Otts Annstrong of Purdue and
Woody Green of Anzona State
at the runmng backs
Named to the defensive 111111
were Harper and Bruce
Bannon of Penn State at end,
Greg Marx of Notre Dame and
Dave Butz of Purdue at tackle,
Glover at mtddle guard, Randy
Gradtshar of Ohio State and
Jamte Rotella of Tenni)SSee at
lmehacker and Brad Van Pelt
of Mtchtgan State, Rand y
Logan of Michigan, Cullen
Bryant of Colorado and Conrad
Graham of Tennessee at the
deep backs
Oklahoma named four players to the second wut, Including light end AI Chandler,

offensive guard Ken Jones,
defenstve tackle Derland
Moore and mtddle guard
LUCIOUS Selmon
Others named to the second
learn offenstve un1t were wtde
recetver Barry Smtih of
Flortda State, lackles Paul
Seymour of Mtchtgan and John
Htcks of Ohio State, guard Btll
"Sktp " Singletary of Temple,
center Jtm Krapf of Alabama,
quarterback Gary Huff of
Flonda State and runmng
backs Charlie Davis of
Colorado, Howard Stevens of
Louisville and Anthony DaVIs
of Southern Cal
The second team defensive
squad conststs of Roger Goree
of Baylor and Tall Bennett of
Ollnots at end, Moore and
George Hasenohrl of Ohio Slate
at tackle, Selmon at mtddle
guard, Richard Wood of Southern Cal and Bud Magrum of
Colorado at linebacker and
Jackie Wallace of Arizona, Bob
Popelka of Southern Methodist,
Joe Blahak of Nebraska and
CalVIn Jones of Washmgton m
Ute secondary.
Glover, a 6-1, 234-pounder
who preVIously was voted the
top lineman m Ute nation, was
Ute top vote-getter with 216
votes and Stsemore, a 6-4, 26{).
pounder, was second wtth 194
votes

KC held a 53-39 reboundmg
advantage wtlh Curry leading
Ute way wtlh 16 !hie led the
Tornadoes with 15 rebounds.
Htll led all scorers wtlh 211
pomts, Nease had 18 and
Curfman canned 13 points.
Rumley and Hudson topped the
Bobcats wtlh 17 pomts each.
Southern won the reserve
game, 63-54 behind the hot
shooting of Pete Sayre and
Mttch Nease Sayre poured in
22 pomts whtle Nease had 20
Dave WISe had 21 pomls in
leadmg the Bobcats
Kyger Creek will host
Eastern Frtday mghl Southern IS at Glouster.
Kyger Creek (71) - Me·
Carty, 317, Curry, 3-4·10,
Hudson, 6·5 17, Rumley, 7 3 17,
St i d~am . 3 2 a. Clay, 4 0-8;
Tabor, 2 0 4, Cremeans, 0-0.0.
Totals 28-ll-71
Southern {78J - lhle, 3-2-1;
Curfman. 53 13. Hill. 9 8-26;
Nease, 8 2 18, Holman , 3·0.6;
Ord, o 1 I, M1ller. 2 2 6. Toto is,
30 16-78.
By Quarters
KC
23 13 23 12 D-71
s
22 14 19 16 7--78

SEO' ljtandings
TEAM

ALL GAMES

GallipoliS
Wav ~Jrl y

W L P OP

3 0 194 147
l

0 17 45

Porisrnou th
3 1 246 236
Logan
2 1 192 168
South Po1nl
2 2 273 232
Ironton
I 1 128 117
Ch esapeake
1 1 11 ~ 10!1
Me1gs
I I 117 118
Alhens
1 2 156 164
Jackson
I 2 142 191
Fed Hocking
0 2 79 124
Wel lston
0 2 94 141
Saturday's Results
Portsmoulh 70 South Polnl61
New Lexington 45 Federal
Hock ing 31
Tuesday's Res ult
56 Chesapeake
Fnday's Games.

Ga llipolis

48

Wellston at Gallipolis
Wav erly at Mei gs
Logan at Jackson
Athens at Ironton

Chesapeake at Coal Grove

High School
Basketball
Results
By United Preulnternattoul
Millersport G6 Bloom carroll 53
Grove City 76 Westland 57
Whitehall 57 Upper Arllngton
54

Lancaster Ftshlr~ •~~ ~
Winchester 80
•'
Fatrfieid
Unlon
63
Pickerington 47
Berne Union 94 Uberty Union
64

Watkms Memorial 63 North·
ridge G6
Ubca 60 Ucklng Valley 48
Lakewood 78 Ucking Heights
51
New U!xlngton 61 Crooksville
57
Galllpolis 56 Chesapeake 48 '
Ft Frye 73 Waterford 61
Alexander 57 Glouster 28

•
H
•
d
Rodgers wms e1sman awar v~~n~~~n~~t;,e~dl:":~n~"Y

NEW YORK (UP I) J ohnny Rodgers andh 1s fnend
The Cardinals out-rebounded and Nebraska teammate, Rtch
Rto, 41-36 Rto hit mne of II free Glover, were loungmg around
throws fo r 81 pet. Otterbem htl an d talkmg Tuesd ay afternoon
rune of 17 free throw attempt• m Glover's house m Jersey
for 53 pet Fteld goal per- City when the telephone rang
Glover, an All-Amen ca
centages and IOdtvtdual
rebounds were not ava tlable defenstve mtddle guard and
The Redmen wtll host a one of the mam reasons for the
tough Georgetown, Ky , ftve at Cornhuskers' success over the
Lyne Center on Thursday. last three years, answered the
phone
Ttpoff tune is 8 p m
"I'm from the Hetsman
Box score of Tuesday's
contest·
commtttee," lhevotcesatd "Is
OTTERBEIN (69) - Mam 4 Johnny Rodgers there'"
1 9, K1n ser 8 6 22 Stemen 0 1
Glover handed the phone to
1 Real i 4 0 8, Deckard 4 19
Rodgers
Horner 3 o 6 Reed 50 10 ,
Bromley 10 4 TOTALS "Johnny, thts 1s the He!Sman
30 6 9
comnuttee
. Congratulations,
RIO GRANDE {61) you've
won
the Hetsman
Bartram 6 4 16 Hart 4 1 9,
Lamberl6 113. W1 ll lamsO 0 o. trophy "
Rouse 5 2 12 Bo ll•nger 2 0 4,
Rodgers didn't answer. He ,
Thom pson 1 0 2. Fausna ugh l
dropped
the phone and sa td
13. Stewart 1 0 7 TOTALS 26 9 61
somewhat increduously,
Halthm e Score -- Ott ed&gt;e1 n
"Wow, I ,won Ute Hetsman I
34 RIO 26
really won 1t."
After all, he IS the greatest
all-purpose offenstve player In
college football history He's
had a spectacular season,
rushmg for 267yards and seven
touc hdowns, recetving 55
passes for etght TD 's,
averagmg 15 8 yards per pun!
return with two TD's and
averagmg 16 7 yards per
kickoff return--all Utat cap-

MUD &amp; SNOW
RETREADS
2 FOR

had two free throws and Verne
Ord canned a chanty toss
Durmg the heche fourth
pertod, Southern erased a fourpomt KC lead wtth baskets by
Ntck lhle, Norman Curfman,
Htll and Mtke Nease The
Bobcats came back on a basket
by George Curry, 6-0 semor
center Baskets by Htll and
Nease plus lhree converted
free throws gave the Totnadoes a lhree-pomt lead
Kyger Creek cut tl1e lead to
one pomt on a long basket by
John Rwnley, 6.(} Jumor forward
In the wamng seconds of the
pertod, the Bobcats mtssed
four free throws
1n a fast movmg first pertod,
KC held a 23-22 lead behmd the
shootmg of Rumley and Clayd
Hudson , 5-10 JUniOr guard

'l-~

~-\\e

pmg a brtlhant career durmg
which he scored •'5 touc h•
downs
But Rodgers wasn't conf1den t of wmntng" lh e award,
symbol of college football's
best player, and he had the
feelmg he might be gettmg a
raw deal from some of the 934
votmg sports wnters and
broadcasters who would be
gomg agamst him because they
considered ht s off-th e-field
problems more unportant than
his on-the-fteld herotcs.
Rodgers' off-the-fteld problems stemmed from what he
called a "prank" at the end of
his freshman year at Nebraska
when he and a few fnends held
up a gas staUon and got away
wtth $90 He was convicted, put
on probalton and had his
drtver's license suspended
Subsequently, he was ptcked
up and held on susptcion of
possessing martjuana, though
no evtdence was found, and last
sprmg he was arrested agam
for runmng a stop stgn whtle
drlvtng with a suspended
license
It has been a long way back
for Rodgers He has trted to rtd
himself of the "bad boy" 1!1lage
by vislttng hospita ls and
schools, but some of the pubhc
and some of sports writers do

FREE

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check in the mat I for $3.50. You just can't beat
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•

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CHRISTMAS SPECIAL

~CHRISTMAS IS~.. GOODYEARS

12rH ALBUM OF GREAT SONGS

$

Value

5 Tubes of Gleem II Toothpaste

MOST ALL PASSENGER
SIZES

Youngstown Rayen 64 Young•·
town Norlh 63
not forgive or forget eastly
Youngstown South 5~ Youngs·
More voters, however, chose y town
WoodrowWIIson44
n stown
Ursuline 70
to give credit wbere 1t is due
~uus~l nlown Filch 54
and Rodgers recetved 301 ftrst- Hubbard 64 Lakeview 49
Warren Harding 62 Howland 53
I votes and 1,310 pomts m McDonald
pace
75 Jackson Milton 38
the voting as compared to 117 West Middlesex 48 Badger 47
ftrst-place votes and 968 for his Bloomfield 6 Farmington 67
Bristol 57 Commodore Perry 41
close frtend, Oklahoma run- Bellaire 74 John Marshall 68
nlng back Greg Pruitt. Glover
was thtrd with 99 first place mostly wtthout a father,
votes and 652 pomts
wmnmg the Helsman was an
For Johnny Rodgers, a afftrmation of his abtbty to
young man who was born to overcome even Ute heaviest
poverty and who grew up handicaps

Pomeroy

only

Today's mosl popular entertai ners wtlh your
favortte Chnstm as Carols
The Carpenters,
Bing Crosby. Barbra Stretsand, Frank Sinatra,
juhe Andrews Andy Wtlhams. Tony Bennett,
and many, many more
14
In alii

RllER OIL CO.
........ .,,
m -1111

•

�.

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Dec. 6, 1972

by Patterson and Patrick

PRE.SIDENTS OF MANIF~ST DESTI~Y

: 3- The Da1ly Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Dec. 6, 19n

Helen Help

Us.

Th1rteenth Prooidont Millard fillmore
(Admlnlltrat•on July 10, 1850-Morch 3, 1853)

Last Whtg and Ftrsl "Know-Nothmg"
Htstory has not been kmd to Millard Fillmore
So critical has heen the verdict of the last Whtg
Prestdent and first "Know-Nothing" candidate that
1t 1s necessary w remember histonans are tyranmzed by facts and that"htstorical facts are usually
compromtses on the part of both actors and narrators.
H1s s1gning of that melange of socio-economic
facts, the Compromtse of 1850, sounde~ his political death knell. So explosive was the natiOnal mood
on slavery that any President ":'ould have ~en
crucified for signmg the crazy qmlt of self-servmg
notions which transformed what should have been
primanly a moral issue for all Americans into a
partisan political 1ssue for a few power-hungry
men. It split the nation down the middle.
.
The Compromise of 1850, the most destructiVe
and shortest t9mpromist in American history, was
_sponsored bv such eminent statesmen as Henry

BRUCE BIOSSAT

\~

\l:.~§t'!~G\Ol'f. !N,Ei\1
The thinned-down posse of Republican governors gathermg at Phoemx predictably wtll be gnpmg that Prest·
dent Nixon didn't lend a real hand thts fall to some of
thetr campatgnmg brethren and other candtdates But
their party problem 1s btgger than that
Put aside for the moment all the stuff about how both
parties are weakenmg, how the lies of allegiance to them
have grown fragile, etc They still do extsl, they still are
used as vehtcles for elechng people to ma)or office, and
they must be measured by certam standards of per
formance
The thlng to say about the Republlcans ts that they are
poor party-butlders and have been for a long lime
When they were plunged mto mmonty status by Frank·
Un Roosevelt's ascendancy, the GOP took a long lime
to wake up to what had happened to them For a whtle
thereafter, the only limes they won anythmg btg were
when voters got mad at the Democrats and reacted at
the polls, as m the GOP resurgence m 1938 and its 1946
v1ctor:es reflectmg accumulated trnlation and wearmess
after World War II
Gen Dwtght Eisenhower' s personal populanty brought
the party, ln 1952 and 1956, tis ftrst real chance to come
back, to regam ma)ortty status The Republicans blew tl
Who would believe that a party whose candtdate won
the 'prestdency by 9 5 million votes m 1956 could drop to
a pathetic total of 14 governors, 154 of 435 U S House
members and a third of the Senate seats in 1958 1
Some very skillful men had been involved in gettmg
Eisenhower nominated and elected the first time If they
did not exactly vanish into the woodwork, they evtdently
were distracted by other tasks thereafter, and certainly
their numbers did not mcrease.
Smce that pertod, they've relied mostly upon diVISIOns
within the tangled Democratic party to brmg them what
successes they've had They did get back mto heavy
dommance of the governors' ranks, not long .ago possessmg the governors' chairs m all the btg northern
states down to the population level of Mtssoun Their
edge was 31 to 19 But here we are m 1972 and 1t's the
Democrats 31 to 19
Moreover, the Republicans are m a spell where they're
gomg to have the presidency once agam for at least etght
years, and once more they're showmg virtually no talent
for party-butldmg
Every pohltcal analyst worth hts salt knows the American voters, in considerable degree, are up for grabs
The opportumty Is golden But tf the Democrats are fal·
termg, so are the Republicans
.
They have a posittve gemus for fteldmg lousy candl·
dates They don't seem, on the whole, to know how to
.butld up good men for the great quest for office They
play at politics hke college graduates who meet from
time to time for reumons A lot of them behave between
elecllon years as 1f politics were a dtslasteful exerCise
that had to be gone through penodtcally, but mercifully
did not last long
This, of course, doesn't free Mr. Ntxon from some
blame. For he and the people who brought him to success
·surely have grasped the party's need for butldmg up The
point IS that the burden of fatlure has to be widely
sbared.
·
' TIM! GOP does have some brtght excephons, like Govs
Daniel Evans of Washmgton. Robert Ray of Iowa. WJI.
Uam Milliken of MJchtgan. Francts Sargent of Massachulelts They work at 1t Most of the rest are a bunch
of country-clubbers who now are complaining ' that Mr.
Nixon didn't help them make 11 down the fairway
n

•

6

EAST

.53
• 983
• 984 2
4874 2

•

Bench, named the Natwnal
League's Most Valuable
Player in 1970 and 1972, satd
the leston had not bothered him
and he was not concerned
about the outcome.
"I'm gomg to be 100 per
cent," Bench, who turns 25 on
Thursday, satd at hts home
here. "I thmk of 1t m that
manner
"That's what the doctors say
and that's what I have to

1•

4NT.
6•

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
SIX spades ts a/retty JlOod
contract. It woul be a cmch
agamst a heart or diamond
lead, but when we saw the
hand played West opened a
trump
Byron Greenberg of Tulsa ,
who was declarer, planned
his play before winning the
first lrtck. He saw no reason
not to draw trumps and so
he played a second round of
the trump smt.
Then he led a heart to
dummy's queen and really
went into a huddle when the
queen held
Some players huddle for
no apparent r e a s o n but
eventually Byron found a

Southern trips K C five
Btg Ron Htll, 6-3 semor
center, scored four Pomts m an
overhme Tuesday mght at
Ractne m leadmg the Southern
Tornadoes to a hard-foughl, 7871 vtclory over the Kyger
Creek Bobcats
Htll was the game "s leadmg
scorer wtth 26 pomts, 20 of
those came m Ute second half
The wm evened Southern 's
SVAC record at 1-1 wh tle the
Bobcats also dropped to 1·1.
The regulation game ended,
71-71 followmg a tymg free
throw by the Bobcats' Joe
S!tdham, 6-2 sophomore
center
Dunng the overhme,
however, Coach Jun Arledge's
Bobcats went cold, mtssmg all
etght shots attempted.
Bestdes Htll's four pomts,
Bob Mtller, 5-9 JUniOr guard,

believe," he sa1d

Bench was the yo ungest
MVP 10 Natlonal League
history when gtven that award
m 1970, Ute year he socked 148
RBI's, a club record, and 45
home runs The Reds lost the
World Sertes that year to the
Baltimore Ortoles
Bench had an off-year m 1971
when he btl 238, had 134 htts
and only 'll homers, but he had
another good year thts season,
hitting .270 wtth 40 homers.
The Reds lost Ute 1972 World
Senes to the Oakland A's m
seven games
Weeks "Dotng r4otblng"
Bench has kept the knowledge of the spot on his lung to a
few close fnends and famtly.
He satd he decided to "leave it
up to the hospttal or the club to
announce 1t."
If the operation ts per-

fonned, Bench smd doctors
told hun he wtll spend "etght
weeks domg nothing" durmg
convalescence
Dr George Ballou, head
team physJctan , satd "'tt ts
anllctpated Bench wtll be
ready m lime for spr10g
trammg "

Gonzalez satd today's "one
!mal test" on Bench would be
to cbeck tbe bronchtal tubes
"and hopefully fmd what the
cause (of the spot) IS "
"The test has only an
oulstde chance of showing what
the cause ts and tl 's the last
posstble thmg we can do
(before surgery),'' Gonzalez
satd "If tt doesn't show what
the ~ause ts, we'll have to
proceed as scheduled on Monday"
Bench IS tentatively scheduled to enter the hospttal on
Saturday.

UMBRELLA OF HANDS - Bobcats John Rumley (35)
and George CUrry (31), 11111 a cover over Mike Nease (32) of
the Southern Tornadoes who has the ball down 'on the floor ,

and unable to get a shot off. Southern won the SVAC game
last night 7&amp;-71 In overtime.

22

11MI1

·Devils chalk

\

pI ay th a t was sure to brmg

d
f llik ki
d bled
home the slam 1f West held rna e '."e ee e a ng, never ou
me, ~ung on my every
the ace of hearts. Let's see word, mtroduced me to her young, groovy frtends.
1! you readers can fmd' this
By contrast my w1fe's honesty became "naggmg," and the
sure-thmg play.
kids ''held me down." So I told myself I deserved more apByron Simply cas.hed dum- prectatton - and moved in wtth my gtrlfriend
my's ace of clubs and led the
1
dis
ed
d do ·
be
four of hearts to his 10• ~ot
soon cover peace an a rahon can deadly dull.
West took his jack and ~und Thts woman clmgs.She threatens suicide if I leave her. ! suspect
himself caught m the tolls of she ts trying to get pregnant. Worst of aU, I said so many mean
an early end-play
thmgs to my wife that I don't think she would take me back.
It didn't matter what he
Alii want ts to go home to my family where 1 belong. I was
led. Byron was s~re to take never meant for this new wild crowd un.at
d whe
the rest of the trtcks.
,
· "'' can a man o
n
The ace of hearts 1e ad he s stuck wtth lymg in a bed he was a fool to make? - CONwould set up Byron's kmg FUSED FOOL
6 00 - Truth or Conseq 6 , News 3, 4, a. 10 15 Sesame St 20
Byron would ruff in dummy,
Around The Bend 33
' '
'
get to dtscard one of dum- Dear Fool ·
6
~~News
3,
4,
6,
B
.
10,
15.
J
Dream
of
Jeann1
e
13
Hathayoga
my's dtamonds on the good
J
f·
d
heart and trump his third
umpouto 1t - an go home' Yourwifemaymakethmgs
7 00 - News 6, 10. Whats My L1ne B. Truth or Conseq 3 Beat
diamond with dummy's last pretty rough for a while, but I'll bet she'll take you back. Wives
the Clock 4, Anythmg You Can Do 13, Samt 15 KnoV: Your
trump. A low heart would are hke that ... usually. - H.
Schools 33
·
allow the dtamond discard
7 30 - To Tell The Truth 6, The Judge 10 Pollee Surgeon 3 4
Protectors 8, Beat The Clock 13,' Andy Grltf 1th '15;
Immediately
Hodg'Jeodge Lodge 20. EpiSode Action 33
A diamond lead would take
8 30 - dam 12 3, 15 , Paul Lynde 6, 13; Appomfmenf wllh
care of the dtamond loser
Desll'lJ'i 8, 10, How Do We Get From Here to There 20 33
and Byron could ruff both his - - - - - - , - - - B
3MOIIII layhouse New York 20, Handfuls of Ashes'33 ; Cool
h e a r t s wIt h dummy's
on 3, 4, 15, Julie Andrews 6, 13
The
Slntilel
•
AK65
•
AK65
UZ
.KQ3
trumps
9 00 - Medical CenterS, 10: Chapter 33, 33.
·
DIVOTID
TO
Till
A low club lead would give What do you do now?
,
IIITIRIST 01'
9·30 - Movie " The Wild Heart" 6, 13
MilOS-MAlON ARIA
dummy a. club tr1ck and al- A-Jump to lour ~~~. This
10 00 - Search3, 4,15 ; Soul33, News20 , CannonS 10
'
low Byron to discard one of shows very good hearts •and CHIITIR L. TAIIIIIHILL, II OO - News3,4, 6, 8,10,13, 1S
lxec.
••·
11 ~~Th Jochnny Carson 3, 15; Vlrgln1an 6, Madhouse 90 6 Movies
his diamonds while the king lenea It up to your partner to
IOIIRT HOII'LICH,
e ouch" 13, "Wake of the Red W1tch" 10
'
of clubs lead would be SUI- move tow1rd a slam. Remember,
Clly ldllor
I
00
-'
News
4
hi• hand rnlly still be a very
Publls~td dally
tx&lt;tpt
cide for the defense
Saturday by Tht Ohio Vtllty 130 - News 13
strong oM.
IHEWIPAPER EHTERPRIIE ASSH )
Publishing Company, 111
THURSDAY, DEC 7, 1972
TODAY'S QUI!STION
Court St., Pomtrov. Ohio,
6 oo - Sunrise Seminar 4, Sacred Heart 10
Your partner continues to five flllt lullntu Office Phono
H2 2156, EdiiO.IIl Phone H2. 6 15 - Farmt1me 10
hearts. What do you do now?
2157.
6 20 - Paul Harvey 13
Stc- CIIU postage Plld tl
The bidding has been
6 30 - Columbus Today 4, Bible Answers B. America's
Problems 10
Sellol $1 lot JACOIV MOOUH booll Pomtroy, Ohio.
West North Eost
Nttlonol tdvtrllllno 6 45 - Corncob Report 3
to. ~'Win Qt lridtt," (c/o dtis lltWI· rtprounlttlvt
lottlntlll· 6 55 - Fllntstones 13
paper!, 10. lo• 419, R..Jio Cilr Gtlltghor, Inc, ll Etsl 42nd
Pass
Pass
7 oo - Today 3, 4, 15, CBS News 8, 10 . News 6
St., Ntw York City, Now York
Statioo, How Yorl, NY. 10019.
Pass
Pass
• SuUcrlpllon rttu: Ot· 7 30 - Romper Room 6, Sleepy Jolters 8, Rocky 8. Bullwlnkle
You, South, hold
13
•
llvtrtd by cerr ltr whtrt
ovolltblt Sll contt ptr wttk: 8 oo - Capt Kangaroo 10. Sesame St 33, New Zoo Revue 13, •
ly Motor Routt whtrt ctrrltr
lassie 6
:
11rvlct not 1\lllllblt Ont
8 30- Jack LaLanne 13. New Zoo Revue 6, Romper Room a. •
month St 75 ly mtll In OhiO
- Ben Casey 13 , Concentration 6, What Every Woman :
tnd W. vo., Ont yttr SI ...O. 9 00
Wan!$ to Know 3, Paul Dixon 4, Phil Donahue 15. Captam •
Sl• monthS $7 25. Thrtt
Kangaroo 6, Friendly Junction 10
•
monlhl u.so. Subscription
,
price lncludts Svndty Tlmn- 9 30- Jeopardy 6, To Tell the Truth 3, HazelS
Sonllntl
10 oo - D1ck Van Dyke 13, Dinah Shore 3, IS. Columbus Six
Calling 6, Joker's Wild 6, 10
10 30 - Spill Second 3
11 oo - Password 13
1
11 30 - Bew1tched 13, Hollywood Squares 3, 4, 15, Love of [1fe 8, •
10
'
12 00 - Password 6. News 10; Jeopardy i. 1s; Jackie Oblinger 8 :
1 00 - All My Children 6, 13: News 3, It's Your Bet 8 Green •
Acres 10. Walch Your Child 15
~
harm than good. I want to goes on to something else. I cine will be picked u b the
circulation
in
thd
armp
ymus
1
30
Three
on
•
Match
3,
4,
15,
ABC's
Playbreak
6,
13,
As
the
emphasize that thts is not a am 60 years old and have to
•
• World Turns 8, 10
•
recommendation a g a 1n s t work to keep up
cle just about as fast as by 2 oo - qaysof our Llves3:~. 15 , Guiding Llght8,10
hypnosis, but rather a rec•
Dear Reader-Other than the circulation in the hlp 2 30 - DOctors 3, 4, 15, Edge of Night 8, to.
ommendation to use 11 prop- comfort,
muscle.
So,
this
Is
Why
your
3
00
Another
World
3,
4,
t5,
General
Hospllal6,
13,
love
Is
A
doesn't make lillY doctor said it didn't make
erly, tf 1t is mdicated at ali differenceIt whether
Many Splendored Thing 8, 10, Behmd the Lmes 20.
•
the Injec- any diflerence
3
30
Return
to
Peyton
Place
3.
4,
IS
,
One
Life
to
Live
6, 13
I would like to caution you tion ls made In the arm
In
·
Secret Storm 8, 10
'
against seemg someone who the hlp 'I:he unportant or
purIf
you
take
something
by
4
00
MISter
Cartoon.
Banana
Spl•ls
3,
Merv
Grltlln
4,
Flint
wlll do hypnosis who 1s not pose of most Injected medl- mouth, It hllll to be absorbed
stones 6, Love American Style 13: Somerset 15, Gilligan's '
trained to handle the total cmes is to either put 11 under by the dleestive tract and
Island 8; Sesame Street 20, 33: Movie " Jailhouse Rock" 10
problem In its proper profes- the skm (subcutaneous) or some m ed lc in e s are de- 4 30Petticoat Junction 3: Andy Grlffllh 15: Dick Van Dyke 4
sional settmg.
strayed
by
the
dl~sllve
5
00
Dick Van Dyke 15, Ponderosa 3, 4, Merv Griffin 4. Mr
mto the muscle (IM). A med- . .
th
d
Roberts
20, 33.
Dear Dr. Lamb - I have icine placed under the skin )Wces 1n e stomac al) s 30 - Marshall
Dillon 15, Elec co. 33 Dragnets G
p1
USMC 13.
•
· omer Y e
permc10us anem1a . About rather than in the muscle Is the various enzymes. Sbll
four years ago after a series absorbed slowly. This Is B!IOther way to take medl- 6 00 - News 3, ~. 8. 15, News 6, 8, 10, 1 Dream of Jeannie 13 '
Designing Women 33
';
of B-12 1D)ections my doctor somethnes useful. Usually CIDe is to Inhale it. Various
put me on one Injection of the med1cine can be put un- sprays are used this way and 7·00 - What's My Llho 8, Big Red Jubilee IS ; News 6, 10. Beat •
The Clock 4 ; Amazing World of Kreskin 13, Elec. Co 20, :
B-12 a month. The nurse der the skm in altnost any ,the medicine Is absorbed by
the
cl!"culatlon
through
the
Course
of Our Times 33, Truth or Consequences 3
•
region
of
the
body
stressed that the hlp was the
tun~.
This
Is
usuaUy
v:r.r
7
~ru~·~.
s:ftdYouKI
In
Court
I,
Hollywood
Squares·J;
'l"o
Tell
the
:
proper place for 1t. A year
Muscles have good circulasome m • 20; 8 lack
• Journal
ngdom
ago I moved and changed tion and medtclne injected rap · ""-·"··
~.......,.I
33. 101Lassie 8; Beatthe Clock 13: Zoom
' .•
doctors and the nurse there Into the muscle Is rapldiy cines can be aamlnlslered by 8 00 - Flip Wilson 3, ~. IS ; Mod Squad 6, 13; Advocates 20 33 :
' '
gave me the InJection In the picked up by the blood rubbing them on the akin. The Waltons 8, 10.
arm. I asked the doctor if it stream and carried through(NIWSPAPil IHTEIPIIII ASIH.) 9 00 - Ironside 3, 4, 15 ; International Performance 20, 33, ~
_
Assignment VIenna 13, Ora Roberts On Campus 6 Movie
shouldn't be In the hlp in- out the body If a I ar ge
5eo4 ,_ ._...., 111 Or. l.aoob,
"'The African Queen" 8. 10.
'
•
stead,. of the arm and he said needle is used or a large
lo
~
oo
...
iQ
00
Owtn
Manhall6,
13,
Dean
Marlin
3,
4,
15,
Mountaineer
Jt didn't m a k e any differ- amount inject~ then a large
·-· "' ..,
, r. •
Sports 33: News 20
ence, so I don't know which muscle as founo1 over the blp 1551, hlllt Cilr
H" r..t, 11 oo- News3. 4. 6, a,1o, 13, 1s.
:
one was right. I am always 1s used. For a smaU amount N.Y. IOO,.Itro-tfDr,L..N'o ti 30 - JC!Mny Cenon J , 4,15: Truman Capae Behind Prison •
fatigued imd started to take with a small needle, the arm boollltt eo "'"" wo/rltt, IMI 30 Walls 6. 13.
:
vitamins. I told my doctor muscle is more convenient. &lt;fair 111 do - .Urea oM oot II 40-Movles "Eagle Sqyedron" I; "Some Came Running" 10. •
1 00 - San Q.lenlln 6, t3.
~'
and he just shrugs It off and When done right the medl· lot •~.to.~or Wtlrlt" HN/et.
I 30 - News 13.
,.

Tel~vision

South

CINCINNATI (UP!) - John,. ny Bepch, the young Cincmnati
' Red constdered one of Ute
finest catchers m baseball
' history, IS expected to enter a
• hosptlal here th ts weekend to
" have a leston removed from his
, right lung
Asurgeon satd "overwhelm" mg odds are lhat 1t IS bemgn "
SUrgeon Dr Luts Gonzalez
satd he would perform new
tests today on Bench, 24, but
" believed surgery would be
' necessary. The operation was
" scheduled at Chrtst Hospttal
next Monday.
Gonzalez satd the spot was
found on Bench's lung durmg
the Reds' ann ual team physicals m late September He
contmued to play, however,
mcludmg the NatiOnal League
pennant playoffs and the
World Sertes
Gonzalez satd the spot was
"most likely the result of a
fungus mfectton or a httle
bemgn tumor, one of those two
thmgs Overwhelmmg odds are
that It IS bemgn "
"100 Per Cent" OK
"'The appearance on the xrays IS much more mdtcaltve
of a bentgn leswn rather than a
mahgn one," he sa1d. "We
thmk everythmg IS 10 hts
favor."

1D

Log

DIIJ

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

~ up

third win

:
Gall!pol!s chalked up its thtrd strmght
,bastetbi\11 ,t p umph , Q~-· tre . rP!I-1! Tuesd11-y nJght,
dow,ning Coacli '' Lewis D' Antoni's sblboorn
Chesapeake Panthers 56-48 in a hard-fought
defensive struggle.
Gtl Price, 6-4 junior center, paced the Gallians'
attack with 26 points and 14 rebounds. Senior forward Jtmmy Noe pumped m 12 points for the
visitors The 6-3 Noe played another outstandmg
defensive game, and controlled both boards with 17
rebounds
LOGAN - Ken Culbertson, the Chieftains' big 205
lb. running back, won
honorable mention listing on
the AAA All-()blo football
squad announced today by
the UPI. No other player of
Logan, Athens, Meigs, or
Jackson, the AAA schools In
the Southeastern Ohio
League, was ranked.
Lineman of the Year
award went to Bob Brudzlnski, 6-4, 205 lb. defensive
end from Fremont Ross;
Back of the Year was Mike
Gayles, 5-10, 170 lb., of
Cincinnati Princeton.
AAA Coach of the Year is
Joe Novak, Warren Western
Reserve.

s-.

0

.•

.,

....

'

SURGERY SCHEUULt;;U
NEW YORK (UP! ) - Runrung back John Rtggtns of the
New York Jets underwent
surgery on hts nght kneecap
Tuesday mght and wtll m1ss

tlle team 's !mal two games of
the year He rushed for 944

yards thts season and ts four
shot t of the team record held
by Matt Snell

Redmen drop 69•61 dec1s10 n
Steve Kinser, 6-4 Lancaster
semor, pumped m 22 pomts to
pace Coach Dick Reynolds'
Otterbem cardinals to a 6~1
basketbaU tnwnph over Coach
Art Lanham's Rto Grande
College Redmen before approxunately 1,200 fans at Lyne
Center Tuesdsy mght
The Redmen held the lead
lwtce mtdway m the ftrst half,
but fell behind 34-26 at the
halftune mternusston
Rto pulled wtthm one pomt
with six minutes remammg,

GE COLOR TV

Hypnosis Can Be a Tool-

,.L-

BASKETBALL BALLET - Kyger Creek's Clay Hudson
(21) and Southern's Rod Holman (22) are basketball players,
not danCers, although lh1s cl'1ance exposure bf some of the
act10n Tuesday mght m Racme doesn't prove tt.

..

But It's No Sure Cure

By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
Dear Dr. Lamb - Do you
believe in hypnosis tf you
need hell;' Wtth a sex problem
like havmg to adJUSt to Ufe
without sex? Please answer
as I need help
Dear Reader - BasicaUy,
hypnosis ts a tool that the
doctor can use to help managll medical problems For
difficulty In one's sex life of
the nature w h I c h you describe, It 1s probably wise to
see a psychiatnst If he
wants to use hypnosis m the
process ol analyzing y o u r
problem, that is lme I am
afraid that hypnosis by itself,
however, Will not solve the
•
to shove aU the work on b a s I c problems and that
these need to be explored to
the olher
achieve the results you de·
B7 P111L PASTORET
sire The PEYOhiatrist would
TID a fellow out to lunch
no doubt like to know why
no'a Jooklne for c:ompllyou have to live wtthout sex
•tl, and 1011'0 have to unand explore 1 h 1s problem
JirJD a ''ftlh" dinner.
with you Hypnosts, wtthout
going into these problems
and
your basic attitudes,
What's
sauce
for
the
gooae
A IIHC dull II o aign
is a superflctal apmerely
gell
spilled
mostly
on
our
tie
tM&amp; fOIIW IIIIJittrecllww
during the holiday dlllner. proach and could cause more

• • •

l

:
'
An End-PI ay• Deve Iops EorIy DearI Helen
have lost the most precious thmg life: my family I
thought! had laDen hopelessly m love With another woman. She

By BRUCE BIOSSAT
!"

••

+++

Republicans Still
Weak in Politics

\Bench to have
-lung surgery

Clay, Damd Webster, Stephen Douglas and Lewis
Cass. Fvcn 1hc great advocate of State's Rights,
John C. Calhoun, was willing tn compromise to
By Helen Bottel
the extent uf having dual Prestdcnts, (&gt;De for the
North, another lor the South.
But above .II, the compromise was the pmudest
work of the Great Pactficatnr, llcnry Clay, and
Ban the Cocktail Party?
Clay not on ly was Prestdent Ftllmnrc's longtime
Dear Helen
tdol, but also the leader of Ftllmore's party. There
My spouse absolutely hates and detests cocktail parties. So
do
I,
but sometimes we're mvited by friends who don't unwas, then, nothing unusual about a Whtg President
derstand thts. I would go, because I d!DI't want to hurt thetr
stgn tng a btll that Whtg stalwartS Clay and Webster
feelmgs. But he says, " If they want to see us, they can inVIte us to
thought \~as the best posstble under the circumdinner, not to some pay-back-obligation IDOb scene."
stances What was remarkable was that Fi llmore
It's very hard to explain this to friends, so we keep saying
ncr got to be Prestdent in the first pl~ce.
.
we're busy and don't go anywhere. And the word gets around that
The civic-mmded, personable and conservauve
we're unsoctal.l'm afraid we'Dend up with no friends and 1may
Fillmore had risen to the cha1rmansh1p of the powhave to fling myself over the bridge.- MEREDITII
erful House Ways and Means Committee m Tyler's
•\ dmimstrau on. He rettred from Congress in 1843
Dear Meredith :
because of dtssatisfacuon with Tyler's polictes and
Cocktail parties are like the weather · Everybody complains
unsuccessfully sought the governorshtp of New
bitt nobody does anythmg about litem.
Maybe these suggesllons will help ·
•
York and the vtce presidential nomination the fol1 Arrtve late and leave early. In all that din;-who'llllllSS
lowing year. In 1848 he became the Whtg vice presyou•
tdential nommee, assummg the PresidencY, when
2 Arrive early, before the mob scene, meet congemal friends
President Taylor dted after 16 months m office.
Where Taylor might have vetoed the comprnm- wtth the same idea in mmd, and go on to a quiet, conversational
dinner .
tsc bill, Fillmore signed the measures wtth satisfac3 Sit on the sidelines and observe. (Remember how, years
wm, believmg they constituted a "final settlement" ago, our Saturday rught fun was people-watchmg from a parked
of the slavery tssue. Nevertheless, two of the laws car on Main Street?) Or mingle, with a note pad, writing down
lowered hts popularity· the admission of California Utose little gems of trtVIa you can laugh about later. (Perhaps
as a free state hurt him in the South, and Norther- you'D be taken for a SOCiety reporter or author and treated with
ners bmerly resented being held accountable for special deference.)
4. Get roaring drwtk and hang by your knees from the
returnmg runaway slaves under the Fugtttve Slave
chandeliers. Your name will soon be expunged from cocktail
Law.
party
lists.
Defeated for renomination in 1852 by Gen.
5. Inasmuch as you can neither bear nor be beard, practice
Winfield Scott, Fillmore's career hit rock bottom
m 1856 when he got only Maryland's electoral votes hp-sync. It saves the vocal cords.
6. Sit out on the terrace looking remote, glamorous,
as the presidential nominee of both the Whtgs and
profound, amused, mysterious ... whatever ... if you're lucky, a
the
anti-Catholic,
anti-tmmigrant
"Know- kindred soul wiU sit down beside you.
Nothings."
7.lf it's a big party you can't refuse (and you also can't bear
More successful as a man than as a President, gomg), stay home, but can the hostess next day and congratulate
Fillmore's life was characterized by courage, mod- ber on a smaBbing success. ~e'll never admit not seeing"you.
esty and frankness . While visiting England, the ex- (But check with someone first - tbe baBb might have bombed.)
8. Get tbe word arowtd that you have this Inner ear trouble
President declined to accept an honorary doctorate
on the grounds that his accomplishments did nor and the hum of a crowd turns you homictdal.
9. Start a "Ban Cocktail Parties" campaign. You m~ght be
merit such an honor. Upon his death, Alexander
surpriSed
how many will Jwnp on the bandwagon. - H.
H . Stephens, conciliatory · Vice President of the
+++
Confederacy, paraphrasing a remark made by Dear Helen ·
Christ about Nathaniel, wrote of Fillmore
We have people health insurance, even maintenance in"There indeed is a man in whom is no guile ." surance on our TV sets - so lVhy doesn't somone come up with
In these umes, when the presidential "credi- PET health msurance? I think It would be a winner - and would
bility gap" se_ems to grow ev~ WJ~er _and deeper, probably make a lot of money for some enterpl-1smg company. such a tribute is of more endurtng stgntficance than PET OWNER
a presidential ranking of ~peat."
'-'"""' IW'I'
MIOUn
Dear Owner
Maybe some enterprtsmg vetermartan will see thts column
and try 11 And tf he makes a million, I hope he remembers he
read
1t first m llliU' - H
WIN AT BRIDGE

but the Ohio Conference team
held on to chalk up tis thtrd
VIctory m four starts thts
wmter
Rto Grande dropped to 1-2on
Ute year
Ironton's Steve Bartram
paced the Redmen wtth 16
pomts Bartram suffered a
spramed ankle late m the
game
Capt Ron Lambert added 13
points
Jackson 's
6-5
sophomore , Mike Rouse,
~Jtllled 12 markers for the home
club.
Steve Traylor, Otterbem's
outstanding 6-0 semor guard,
did not make the trtp. Traylor
Will take part m the ftrst an·
nual East-West Shrme Bowl
football tilt at Columbus, and 1s
engaged m drills for that postseason event.

Beat

The Early
Snow!

49995
23" WALNUT CONSOLE
SPECTRA BRIGHT TUBE
"• 'AUtomatic Fine Tuiline
• Automatic Duuisine

H&amp;R FIRESTONE

And Retreadable Casing

Rumley had seven pomls
durmg the stanza whtle Hudson
canned mght Nease and Htll
paced Southern durmg the
pcrtod
Coach Bob Ord's Tornadoes
\ted the score with 14 pomts m
th e second pertod led by
Curfman's ftve markers
The Bobcats moved mto a
four-pomt 1ead at the end of
three pertods Hudson and
Davtd Clay, 6-3 Jumor center,
led the attack wtth stx pomts
each Htll agam paced Southern wtth 10 pomts
StaltsltCS show southern
sank 30 of 54 held goal attempts
for a hot 55 pet whtle Kyger
Creek htt only 28 of 84 for 33
pet The Tornadoes canned 18
of 31 at the foul hne whtle the
Bobcats managed to btl only 15
of 33 from the chartty slrtpe.

Nebraska places 3
on All America
NEW YORK (UP! ) - The
Umvers1ty of Nebraska,
though somewhat of a dtsappomtm ent dunng the 1972
coUege football season, continued to reap the harvest of
lndtvtdual honors today when
three members of the Cornbusters' squad were named
to Umted Press lnternahonal
All-Amertca team
The Cornhuskers, the preseason chm ce to wtn the
national title but who ftmshetl
runth after comptlmg an 8-2-1
record, placed Hetsman
Trophy wmner Johnny
Rodgers, Outland Trophy
rectptent Rtch Glover and
defenstve end Wtllle Harper on
the Ali-Amertca squad as
selected by 230 sportswnters
and sportscasters from across
the nation
The balloting for Rodgers
was untque He recetved votes
for two postllons- wtde
recetver and ranmng backand got enough · support for
both to have made the squad at
etther position Smce .he
recetved more votes for wtde
receiver, however, he was
named All-Amenca at that
post!ton
Oklahoma, whtch beat out
Nebraska for the Btg Etghl
Conference tttle, national
champton Southern Califorma,
Purdue and Tennessee each

placed two players on the
squad while Texas, Alabama,
North Carolina, Louistana
State, Amona State, Penn
State, Notre Dame, Ohto State,
Mtchtgan, Mtchigan State and
Colorado each had one player
selected
The offenstve squad constsls
of Rodgers at wtde recetver,
Charles Young of Southern Cal
at light end, Jerry Stsemore of
Texas and Pete Adams of
Southern Cal at the tackles,
John Hannah of Alabama and
Ron Rusnak of North CBrohna
at the guards, Tom Brahaney
of Oklahoma at center, Bert
Jones of um at quarterback
and Greg Pruitt of Oklahoma,
Otts Annstrong of Purdue and
Woody Green of Anzona State
at the runmng backs
Named to the defensive 111111
were Harper and Bruce
Bannon of Penn State at end,
Greg Marx of Notre Dame and
Dave Butz of Purdue at tackle,
Glover at mtddle guard, Randy
Gradtshar of Ohio State and
Jamte Rotella of Tenni)SSee at
lmehacker and Brad Van Pelt
of Mtchtgan State, Rand y
Logan of Michigan, Cullen
Bryant of Colorado and Conrad
Graham of Tennessee at the
deep backs
Oklahoma named four players to the second wut, Including light end AI Chandler,

offensive guard Ken Jones,
defenstve tackle Derland
Moore and mtddle guard
LUCIOUS Selmon
Others named to the second
learn offenstve un1t were wtde
recetver Barry Smtih of
Flortda State, lackles Paul
Seymour of Mtchtgan and John
Htcks of Ohio State, guard Btll
"Sktp " Singletary of Temple,
center Jtm Krapf of Alabama,
quarterback Gary Huff of
Flonda State and runmng
backs Charlie Davis of
Colorado, Howard Stevens of
Louisville and Anthony DaVIs
of Southern Cal
The second team defensive
squad conststs of Roger Goree
of Baylor and Tall Bennett of
Ollnots at end, Moore and
George Hasenohrl of Ohio Slate
at tackle, Selmon at mtddle
guard, Richard Wood of Southern Cal and Bud Magrum of
Colorado at linebacker and
Jackie Wallace of Arizona, Bob
Popelka of Southern Methodist,
Joe Blahak of Nebraska and
CalVIn Jones of Washmgton m
Ute secondary.
Glover, a 6-1, 234-pounder
who preVIously was voted the
top lineman m Ute nation, was
Ute top vote-getter with 216
votes and Stsemore, a 6-4, 26{).
pounder, was second wtth 194
votes

KC held a 53-39 reboundmg
advantage wtlh Curry leading
Ute way wtlh 16 !hie led the
Tornadoes with 15 rebounds.
Htll led all scorers wtlh 211
pomts, Nease had 18 and
Curfman canned 13 points.
Rumley and Hudson topped the
Bobcats wtlh 17 pomts each.
Southern won the reserve
game, 63-54 behind the hot
shooting of Pete Sayre and
Mttch Nease Sayre poured in
22 pomts whtle Nease had 20
Dave WISe had 21 pomls in
leadmg the Bobcats
Kyger Creek will host
Eastern Frtday mghl Southern IS at Glouster.
Kyger Creek (71) - Me·
Carty, 317, Curry, 3-4·10,
Hudson, 6·5 17, Rumley, 7 3 17,
St i d~am . 3 2 a. Clay, 4 0-8;
Tabor, 2 0 4, Cremeans, 0-0.0.
Totals 28-ll-71
Southern {78J - lhle, 3-2-1;
Curfman. 53 13. Hill. 9 8-26;
Nease, 8 2 18, Holman , 3·0.6;
Ord, o 1 I, M1ller. 2 2 6. Toto is,
30 16-78.
By Quarters
KC
23 13 23 12 D-71
s
22 14 19 16 7--78

SEO' ljtandings
TEAM

ALL GAMES

GallipoliS
Wav ~Jrl y

W L P OP

3 0 194 147
l

0 17 45

Porisrnou th
3 1 246 236
Logan
2 1 192 168
South Po1nl
2 2 273 232
Ironton
I 1 128 117
Ch esapeake
1 1 11 ~ 10!1
Me1gs
I I 117 118
Alhens
1 2 156 164
Jackson
I 2 142 191
Fed Hocking
0 2 79 124
Wel lston
0 2 94 141
Saturday's Results
Portsmoulh 70 South Polnl61
New Lexington 45 Federal
Hock ing 31
Tuesday's Res ult
56 Chesapeake
Fnday's Games.

Ga llipolis

48

Wellston at Gallipolis
Wav erly at Mei gs
Logan at Jackson
Athens at Ironton

Chesapeake at Coal Grove

High School
Basketball
Results
By United Preulnternattoul
Millersport G6 Bloom carroll 53
Grove City 76 Westland 57
Whitehall 57 Upper Arllngton
54

Lancaster Ftshlr~ •~~ ~
Winchester 80
•'
Fatrfieid
Unlon
63
Pickerington 47
Berne Union 94 Uberty Union
64

Watkms Memorial 63 North·
ridge G6
Ubca 60 Ucklng Valley 48
Lakewood 78 Ucking Heights
51
New U!xlngton 61 Crooksville
57
Galllpolis 56 Chesapeake 48 '
Ft Frye 73 Waterford 61
Alexander 57 Glouster 28

•
H
•
d
Rodgers wms e1sman awar v~~n~~~n~~t;,e~dl:":~n~"Y

NEW YORK (UP I) J ohnny Rodgers andh 1s fnend
The Cardinals out-rebounded and Nebraska teammate, Rtch
Rto, 41-36 Rto hit mne of II free Glover, were loungmg around
throws fo r 81 pet. Otterbem htl an d talkmg Tuesd ay afternoon
rune of 17 free throw attempt• m Glover's house m Jersey
for 53 pet Fteld goal per- City when the telephone rang
Glover, an All-Amen ca
centages and IOdtvtdual
rebounds were not ava tlable defenstve mtddle guard and
The Redmen wtll host a one of the mam reasons for the
tough Georgetown, Ky , ftve at Cornhuskers' success over the
Lyne Center on Thursday. last three years, answered the
phone
Ttpoff tune is 8 p m
"I'm from the Hetsman
Box score of Tuesday's
contest·
commtttee," lhevotcesatd "Is
OTTERBEIN (69) - Mam 4 Johnny Rodgers there'"
1 9, K1n ser 8 6 22 Stemen 0 1
Glover handed the phone to
1 Real i 4 0 8, Deckard 4 19
Rodgers
Horner 3 o 6 Reed 50 10 ,
Bromley 10 4 TOTALS "Johnny, thts 1s the He!Sman
30 6 9
comnuttee
. Congratulations,
RIO GRANDE {61) you've
won
the Hetsman
Bartram 6 4 16 Hart 4 1 9,
Lamberl6 113. W1 ll lamsO 0 o. trophy "
Rouse 5 2 12 Bo ll•nger 2 0 4,
Rodgers didn't answer. He ,
Thom pson 1 0 2. Fausna ugh l
dropped
the phone and sa td
13. Stewart 1 0 7 TOTALS 26 9 61
somewhat increduously,
Halthm e Score -- Ott ed&gt;e1 n
"Wow, I ,won Ute Hetsman I
34 RIO 26
really won 1t."
After all, he IS the greatest
all-purpose offenstve player In
college football history He's
had a spectacular season,
rushmg for 267yards and seven
touc hdowns, recetving 55
passes for etght TD 's,
averagmg 15 8 yards per pun!
return with two TD's and
averagmg 16 7 yards per
kickoff return--all Utat cap-

MUD &amp; SNOW
RETREADS
2 FOR

had two free throws and Verne
Ord canned a chanty toss
Durmg the heche fourth
pertod, Southern erased a fourpomt KC lead wtth baskets by
Ntck lhle, Norman Curfman,
Htll and Mtke Nease The
Bobcats came back on a basket
by George Curry, 6-0 semor
center Baskets by Htll and
Nease plus lhree converted
free throws gave the Totnadoes a lhree-pomt lead
Kyger Creek cut tl1e lead to
one pomt on a long basket by
John Rwnley, 6.(} Jumor forward
In the wamng seconds of the
pertod, the Bobcats mtssed
four free throws
1n a fast movmg first pertod,
KC held a 23-22 lead behmd the
shootmg of Rumley and Clayd
Hudson , 5-10 JUniOr guard

'l-~

~-\\e

pmg a brtlhant career durmg
which he scored •'5 touc h•
downs
But Rodgers wasn't conf1den t of wmntng" lh e award,
symbol of college football's
best player, and he had the
feelmg he might be gettmg a
raw deal from some of the 934
votmg sports wnters and
broadcasters who would be
gomg agamst him because they
considered ht s off-th e-field
problems more unportant than
his on-the-fteld herotcs.
Rodgers' off-the-fteld problems stemmed from what he
called a "prank" at the end of
his freshman year at Nebraska
when he and a few fnends held
up a gas staUon and got away
wtth $90 He was convicted, put
on probalton and had his
drtver's license suspended
Subsequently, he was ptcked
up and held on susptcion of
possessing martjuana, though
no evtdence was found, and last
sprmg he was arrested agam
for runmng a stop stgn whtle
drlvtng with a suspended
license
It has been a long way back
for Rodgers He has trted to rtd
himself of the "bad boy" 1!1lage
by vislttng hospita ls and
schools, but some of the pubhc
and some of sports writers do

FREE

'J.so

You buy live Large Family Size Tubes lor
53.45 and Gleem II will send you a refund
check in the mat I for $3.50. You just can't beat
th1s deal . It is not necessary to take this ad to
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on lesser quiJnltttes too. Let everyone have
their own tube . .

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..------------------""1
MEIGS TIRE CENTER
CHRISTMAS SPECIAL

~CHRISTMAS IS~.. GOODYEARS

12rH ALBUM OF GREAT SONGS

$

Value

5 Tubes of Gleem II Toothpaste

MOST ALL PASSENGER
SIZES

Youngstown Rayen 64 Young•·
town Norlh 63
not forgive or forget eastly
Youngstown South 5~ Youngs·
More voters, however, chose y town
WoodrowWIIson44
n stown
Ursuline 70
to give credit wbere 1t is due
~uus~l nlown Filch 54
and Rodgers recetved 301 ftrst- Hubbard 64 Lakeview 49
Warren Harding 62 Howland 53
I votes and 1,310 pomts m McDonald
pace
75 Jackson Milton 38
the voting as compared to 117 West Middlesex 48 Badger 47
ftrst-place votes and 968 for his Bloomfield 6 Farmington 67
Bristol 57 Commodore Perry 41
close frtend, Oklahoma run- Bellaire 74 John Marshall 68
nlng back Greg Pruitt. Glover
was thtrd with 99 first place mostly wtthout a father,
votes and 652 pomts
wmnmg the Helsman was an
For Johnny Rodgers, a afftrmation of his abtbty to
young man who was born to overcome even Ute heaviest
poverty and who grew up handicaps

Pomeroy

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"HOLIDAY"

MIXED NUTS
1 LB. PKG.

IN SHELL'

HUNTS
BIG JOHN

APPLES

CHILl .

RED DELICIOUS
WINESAP
Y2 BUSHEL

•

221fi OZ. CAN

. EVERYDAY
lDW PRICE

NEW
FRESH
I

. PINTO
BEANS

CABBAGE

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''

~

1

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~

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'BOLOGNA

We Will
Close
At 6 p.m.
.rues., Dec. 12

EVERYDAY
lDW PRICE

CHUNK STYLE
ONLY

ELM HILL

WIENERS.
12 OZ. PKG.

DOZEN
FOR
210 SIZE

For Employes .
0

CAMPBELL

Christmas Party
At Meigs Inn

·PEPSI-COLA

TOMATO
SOUP

OR

32 oz.
BOTTLES

7 UP

'

NO UEPOSIT
•

BOmE

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I

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· NO DEPOSIT
I

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:HT. d. owns
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8- The 9&amp;Uy Sentinel, ]'y'IJddleport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. 6, 1972

.~

f,

~

..

I

Hannan Trace's Wild.cats
bounced back from a disap,._ ""'-II •• "1 1 t
kt
'I&lt;· ,...... ng,..,..., oss as wee o
:,., defeat the Symmes Valley
~ Vlklngs, 63-:i8 Tuesday night at
~
~ Mercerville. The win g~ve
• · Coach Paul Dillon's Wildcats a
2-lmarkintheSouthern Valley
Athletic Conference.
Coach Wayne White's
.
V'iki'ngs are Q-1 ' thIS sea.&lt;On.
Randy Halley and Mark Swain
paced the Wildcats in the
fourth period. Halley canned
four foul shots for Hannan
Trace's final points. Swain, a
junior, replaced John Lusher,
6-1 junior who fouled out with
· ·
four minutes remamong,
scored six points.
The game see-:;awed until
Hannan Trace gained the
upper hand midway in the final
;fit quarter.
Synunes Valley led 16-14 at
the end of the first stanza but
trailed, 30-28 at the half and 41:r1 going into the final eight
minutes.
Four players hit double
figures lor the winners. Lusher
led the way with 16 points;
Mike Caldwell, IHi senior had
IS points; Don Wells, 6-5 junior

I'

t

••
•

. . ·. . . . s;:i
Soc1al ~

Calendarl

WEDNESDAY
JUNIOR SO Unit 39,
American 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.
( Wednesday . All Master
Masons invited .
POMEROY WCTU Christmas meeting at the home of
Mrs. Robert Warner, Wed. nesday . Covered dish dinner at
noon,
MIDDLEPORT
FIREMEN'S Auxiliary, Wednesday night at 6:30 p.m.
i~· holiday potluck at
the
firemen's hall with a $2 gift
exchange.
DREW WEBSTER Post 39,
American Legion, Ladies
Auxiliary , Wednesday, 7:30
p.m. with guest speaker on
civil defense. Public invited.
MEETING· OF Ladles
Auxiliary, Drew Webster Post
39,
American
Legion,
scheduled this evening is
cancelled. Juniors will meet at
the hall at 7:30 p. m.
THURSDAY
CATHOLIC WOMEN'S Club
~ at Sacred Heart Church, 8 p.m.
Thursday for regular monthly
meeting. Take gift exchange.
Meeting precede() by mass at
7: IS p. m. Take cookies .and
sandwiches.
AUXILIARY or Veterans
Memorial Hospital will
decorate the hospital Thursday. Members are urged to
atlend to help with the
Christmas decorations.
-e- CHILDREN'S Home Citizens
Committee, 12:30 p.m. Thurs·
day at the Children's Home.
. LAUREL Cliff Better Health
· Club,6:~0p.m.ThursdayatU1e
Meigs County Infirmary with
Mrs. Mildred Jacobs as
hostess. Members are to take
an exchange gift.

center, dumped in 12points and
Rodney Dunfee, senior guard,
had 10 points.
Jamie l..afon led the Vikings
with 18 points while Jene
Myers canned 14 points.
Statistic-wise, Hannan Trace
hit 24 of 55 field goal attempts
while Symmes Valley made 22
of 67. The Wildcats held a big
rebounding edge with 52
rebounds. CaldWell had 20 for
the winners while Jene Myers
gra bbed 12 for S~es Valley.
Hannan Trace won its third
straight reserve game, .38-34.
Bill Hall had 16 points for the
Wildcats while Hilgenberg had
12 for Symmes Valley .
The Wildcats will meet North
Gallia Friday night. Symmes
Valley will host Southwestern.
·
Box Score
Symmes Valley (SS) - Corn,
2·6·10' Dunfee, 1·1·3; Lafon, 8·
1·18 ; Jene Myers. 5 · ~ · 14 ; Webb,
o.o.o; Jaye Myers , 1·1·3;
Robinson , 5·0·10. Totals 21-14·
58 iiannan Trace (63) Caldwell . 6·3·15; Halley, O· ~ · ~ ;
Lusher, 1.1·16; Swain, 3·0·6;
Wells, 5·1·11; Dunfee, J.4.1o.
Totals 24·15·63.
By Quarters:
16 12 9 21 - 56
~~
1~ 16 11 11- 63

Pro Smndings

Lakers
lOth
of
13
with.
Bucks
ByUpil~:;r~~~n~~~~~alional
Eas1ern Conference

Atlantic Division
w. I. pet. g;b .
Boston
lO 3 ·870
2
;
Central w.
Oivisio,n
1. pet. g.b.
S..ltimore
1J 12 .520
Atlanta
1J .13 .500
'·'
· Houston
10 ·15 .400 3
Cleveland
9 18 .333 5
Western Conference
Midwest Division
w. I. pet. g.b.
Milwitukee
18 7 .720
t;hicago
11 7 .708
•,
KC-Omaha
15 12 .556 4
Detroit Pacific 'givJ:ion417 7'12
w. 1. pet. g. b.
Los Angeles 11 4 .840
Golden Sta le 16 9 .640 5
Phoenix
11 15 .423 10'1'
Seat lie
8 21 .176 15
Porlland
6 18 .150 14'12
Tuesday's Results
New York 115 KC.Omaha 103
Buffalo 108 Phoeni x 97
Atlanta 122 Portland 111
Baltimore 103 Cleveland 100
Chicago no Detroit 106
Los Ang 116 Milwaukee 94
Golden St. 108 Houston 101
(Only games scheduled)
Wednesday's Games
KC·Omaha al Philadelphia
Porlland at Baltimore
Phoenix at Detroit
Milwaukee at Sealtle
.
(Only games scheduled)

~~~:!Chi·

~~ :m:~:~~ ·;::~~n~:e;~t~::~e~:~;~~k:

NHL Standings

Bv United Press International

East
w. I. t. pts gf ga
Montrea l
15 ~ 7 37 109 62
NY Rangers 16 7 3 35 101 69
Boston
15 7 3 33 113 8~
Bullalo
11 8 7 29 93 81
Detroit
11 11 2 2~ 81 80
Toronto
9 13 ~ 22 84 82
Vancouver

8 16 2 18 76 107

NY Islanders 3 17 2 8 48 112
West
w. I. t. pis gf ga
Minnesota
14 8 3 31 83 66
Chicago
14 9 1 30 90 73
Pittsburgh 13 II 2 26 99 63
LosAngeles 121 1 4 2893 67
Philadelphia 11 11 ~ 26 91 93
Allanta
10 13 5 25 65 88
St. Louis
8 11 5 11 61 74
California
~ 15 5 11 61101

THURSDAY
BRICKLAYERS and Masons
Union, Local 32, meeting at 8
p.111. Thursday at Meigs Inn .
ALL OPERATING engineers
Local 18, regular meeting at
Results
Elks Hall, Athens, instead of Los AngTuesdav•s
6 NY Islanders 1
grange hall this month, 7:30 St. Louis 1 Detroil1
Toronto 5 VancoUver 2
p.m. Thur.sday.
(Only games scheduled)
FRIDAY
Wednesday's Games
MARY SHRINE 37, White Buffalo at NY Rangers
at Montreal
Shrine o[ Jerusalem, Friday, 8 Minnesota
Los Angeles at Chicago
p.m. IOOF hall, Pomeroy. Pittsburgh at California
(Only games scheduled)
Polluck supper and $1 gift
exchange.
AHL Standings
By Uni1ed Press lnterna1ional
DANCE following Kyger
East
Creek·Eastern basketball
w. I. t. pts gf ga
game at Kyger Creek spon- Nova Scotia 1~ 6 6 3~ 103 68
15 8 3 33 92 81
sored by sophomore class of Boston
Rochester
1J 8 5 31 96 93
Kyger Creek High School. Jays Providence 97~228471'
Springfield
7 13 ~ 18 89 106
will emcee.
New Hew en ~ 18 3 II 78 125
West
SATURDAY
w. I. t. pis gf ga
HOLIDAY BAZAAR, Mid- Cincinnati
17 8 2 36 116 85
dle~ort Masonic Temple dining Virgin ia
14 8 4 32 100' 81'
Hershey
9
9 6 1~ · 81 77
room ~ a. m. Saturday span·,
Cleveland
8
12 6 11 95 99
so red by DeMolay Mothers' Richmond
9 12 2 20 81 86
Baltimore
~ 1~ 5 13 69 106
Club.
Tuesday's
Results
YOUNG ADULT Class, Hershey 1 Bas 1, lie
Bradford Church of Christ, Cinc i 9 Rochester 1
!Only games scheduled)
Christmas dinner and party at
Wednesday 's Games
the church, Saturday night, Providence
at Richmond
6:30 p. m. $1 gift exchange.
Nova Scotia at Tidewtr
(Only games scheduled)
BOARD TO MEET
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UPl) The Board of Trustees of the
American Basketball AssoCiation will me.Jt here Monday and
Tuesday to hear reports on the
status of merger and the r
possibility of expansion.
WHA Standings

By United Press International

East
w. I. t. pts gf ga
Cleveland 16 10 1 33 97 73
New Eng
15 9 I 31 107 80
15 12 0 30 117 99
New York
13 10 1 27 86 80
Quebec
Ottawa
12 11 1 25 87 99
6 18 0 12 71 11~
Phil a
- West
w. I. I. pts gf ga
Winnipeg
17 12 1 36 111 91
Minnesota
13 10 I 27 78 83
Los Ang
13 1~ 1 27 93 97
Alberta
12 I~ 2 16 85 98
Houston
II I~ 1 23 85 88
Chicago
6 15 1 13 ss 74

By Unit~'() Prc'Ss lnlernalio"al live field goals lor the Laker points, his lowest production in
The Los Angeles l.akers
guard in the third period and he a Laker game since April 18,
made it 10 victories ill 13 went on to top the team wilh 24 1971.
points lor the game.
The loss cut Milwaukee's
Kareem Abdul.Jabbar, who lead to a half-game over
iroundng the Bucks, 116-94,
had been averaging 40.2 points · second place Chi~go in the
Tuesday night. Steady born· in 12 previous contests against Midwest Division. Los Angeles
barding by. Gail Goodrich from
Los .Angeles, was held to 29 maintains a five-game ~ulge
about 20 f&lt;'Pt out resnlterl in
·over Golden State in the
Pacific sector.
Irt other National Basketball
Association action, Chicago
trounced Detroit 130-108; New
York tipped Kansas CityOmaha 125-103; Golden State
!leal Houston 108-101; Atlanta
nipped Portland 122-121; Baltimore edged Cleveland 103.Coach -Jim Foster's North committed 14 turnovers to 100, and Buffalo topped
Gallia Pirates rallied from a North Gallia's II. North Phoenix, 108 -97.
reserve
team
Chicago made it 10 wins iii
three point deficit at halftime Gallia 's
Tuesday night to defeat Coach remained unbeaten with a 43-26 the last 15 games as Chet
Richard Hamilton's South- victory. Sterling Logan led the Walker scored 26 points and
western Highlanders, 51&gt;-49 in a winners with 15 points. Parrell
see-saw battle at South· Ml)]er canned 12 in a losing
cause.
western.
North Gallia, now ~. will
For the second game in a
row, the Highlanders had a play at Hannan Trace Friday
letdown in the third quarter. night . Southwestern, 0-3,
North Gallia outscored SW, 14- travels to Symmes Valley.
SYRACUSE - Remaining
NORTH GALLIA . (55) 8 in that stanza.
~lementary school basketball
Southwestern's Uoyd Wood, Weddington 5·0-10; James 1-1·
5; Robinette 9- ~· 11 ; Robinson 2· games on the Syracuse
6-2 sophomore center and Phil 2·6; Miller 4·0·8; Smith 2 ·0· ~.
schedule are:
Lewis, 6-1 junior forward, were Totals 24·7·55.
Portland at Syracuse, Dec. 6.
SOUTHWESTERN (49) both in foul trouble in the third Dillon
1·2·4; Lewis 1-0.2; Wood
Syracuse at Letart, Dec. II.
period .
4·1·9; Bush 7·8·12; Carter 5·0·
Syracuse at Racine, Jan. 11.
The Highlanders ' Terry 10 ; Crouse 1·0·2. Totals 19·11·
Syracuse at Portland, Jan.
Bush, 5-8 senior guard, was the 49.By Quar1ers :
17.
hottest player on the floor NG
6 17 1~ 18- 55
Letart at Syracuse, Jan. 22.
11 14 8 15-~9
collecting seven baskets and sw
All games will be played at
eight free throws for 22 points.
6:30p.m.
Bush hit eight for eight at the
foul line. Terry Carter, 5-9 OUT OF ACTION .
MONTREAL (UP!) - Desophomore, was the only other
player in double figures with fenseman Jacques Laperriere
will be out of action for ·six NEW ARBITRATOR ,
10.
NEW YORK (UP!) - ArDave Robinette led the weeks with a hand injury, the
Montreal
Canadiens
anchibald
Cox, a former solicitor
Pirates with 22 points on nine
nounced
Tuesday.
He
suffered
general of the U.S. and now a
baskets and four free throws.
a
fractured
and
dislocated
professor at Harvard Law
Keith Weddington, 6-2 junior
right
thumb
in
a
collision
School, Tuesday was named
center, had 10 points; Danny
during
a
practice
session.
the new arbitrator in the Julius
Miller, 5-8 junior guard,
Erving case by ABA Commiscanned eight.
sioner Robert Carlson. ErNorth Gallia outscored
The
ancient
Per
uvian
city
ving's attorney, Louis Nlzer,
Southwestern, l8-15 in the final
qf Chan Cha n, now a crum·
period. Early in the second bled ruin , may once have had objected that he hadn't
period, Southwestern held an housed as many as 250,000 been consulted on the previous
naming of the arbitrator.
eight point lead. Neither team people.
was ever ahead more than
eight points.
According to the charts, the
game was played on an even
basis. North Gallia hit 24 of 71 .
field goals for 35.2 pet. while
Southwestern. hit 19 of 58 for
34'5 pet.
I,,'· I '" ·
, At ll)e charity Mripe, the
Highlanders sank 11 or 14 shots
while North Gallia• converted
seven of 14 free throws.
The visiting Pirates held a 3130 rebounding edge. Wedding
led the Pirates with seven
rebounds while Lewis grabbed
11 lor SW. The Highlanders

Pirates win
second tilt

Syracuse cage
schedule noted

Dec.

~~-;:;;:;::;=;;;::::::==~======
i
- The Christmas Store
54"-56" PLAIN.&amp; FANCY
Mor~

REG. $7.99
VALUE
- The Christmas Store With Mor~
7 PIECE SET HOUSEHOLD ALUMINUM

.

REG.

COOKWARE

$7.99 .
VALUE

-Stiffler's Annual

We Are .
Here .To
Serve You!

Winnipeg 2
Cleve 4 Phil a 3, at
Chicago 3 Minn 1, at
New York 6 Houston 4
(Only games scheduled)
Wednesday's Games
New York at New Eng
Chicago at Winnipeg
(Only games scheduled)

YOUR FRIENDLY STORES

Christmas Opening-

DRESSES

strap and easy-moving leather,

" Step into a pair. You'll ·
have the look of a winner,f

·I

Chapman's Shoes

:

Men's &amp;Ladies

Select from leather !Ike vinyls
and fine grained leather in
black or .brown. Made with

many compartments.

'
i

$500

TO

-The Christmas Store With MDre-

Special Value

Rooted Hair
Washable
Fully Jointed

Open Evenings Starling Dec. 8

which to choose. Slop and shop at

RUBBER BOOTS·
Men •s warm Insulated · Rubber
YD.

price. 12 Inch

Lace Boot

$444

.S.Ir,r,

's A(ln11al

- Stiffler's Annual Christmas Opening-

·Large Assortment

Knit suits, crib sets, dresses and
sportswear . Infants sizes9-12-18 mo.
~

- Stiffler's
.
. Annual Christmas
. Opening-

Ladies' Holiday Costume

Opening

,,

'

Pair

Annual Christmas Opening-

Fine Assortment Men's
Holiday Gift

..

.:,BATH ROBES

'
Beautiful slips for ChriSima!
giving. Lace trimmed fine tricot
full slips wlfh shadow panel . Sizes
32 to 44. Phil Maid brand.

year\.

Sti llier's have Robes Ill for kings,'
See our fine assortmen1 of holiday
gill Bath Robes In asst. colors and
styles.

Priced
From

-

PRICEO
FROM .

- First Floor Stiffler's Annual Christmas Opening

Stl

- The Christmas Store With NDre-

Famous May Queen
Reg. $1.39 Valv.e

Beautiful Fancy California

Gift Suggestion

HOUSE SLIPPERS

DINNERWARE

Ladles' new Iall and Holiday House
Slippers. Select now from a wide
assortmen t of pretty, comlortable
house slippers in many. styles and

colollSigg 5

Di sh
washe r
safe,
Melamine dinnerware.
piece sets. Complete
service for eight.

Rugged
re sis tant.

and

by

BEST GROUP OF ALL
REG. $29.00 and $35.00 VALUE

Allied Chemical.

LADIES'

00

$

PR .
- The Christmas Store With More

stain

Made

TO 10. $5. 99

PAIR

In fancy patterns. 5J.

- The Christmas Store With More-

Annual Christmas

LADIES'

53 PIECE SET MELAMINE

JEWELRY

WINTER COATS

REG. 12.99
- Shop Stiffler's VALUES TO $1.59
Take Your Choice &amp; Save

Ladies , here In thlsgroupyou wio,
dress,
casual and sport styles. Beautiful
fabrics and fake furs . Values to
S35.00. Ma~e your selection early
and put In " Lay.A.Way"1if you
like .
·

.

FABRICS

WAID CROSS SONS

-------- ~~StGre

Waid Cross
Sons, Racine.

Free Tickets ftor

*

, C~

Merchaetl
PrlltS Hfllrtl

Y.

~-- -.,.....,..___ _5':.._

...

WAGNER$

DRINKS
79$

__ _

o·-- -·-----·-· ---

BROCADES

LAMAE

FAB~ICS

PomtrDY

)

OlHERS

12 PRICE

The Fabric Shop
THE SINGER STORE
115 W. Second

992-2284

Pomeroy

''A GOLD STAR STORE"
Free Tic:kets For Mtrch1nts Prizes

:Hies

,.

Compleri
With
Cord

$194 .
..

$2488

Take your choice of a big
selection of. toys thai make
greal stocking sluflers.

Big Christmas Value, ·Six Cup size
,.Electric Percolators . Made of
· enamelled aluminum In your choice
of,three colors. Complete with cord.

.

•

TOY SALE

,•

HOLIDAY
.

RUTLAND. 0.

With Coupon

·

FULL SLI'P$

HOLIDAY WEAR
Toddlers sizes 2 to

·

Chri~tmas

.

.$350.
$.
5
99
'PR. TO'
'
1

Ladle~ ~mous Phil Maid Fancy Lace. lr:lmmet;l

INFANTS &amp; TODDLERS

1

.

~OFF

$1 !:A.
~9 . .$399 :
TO
EA.

First quality all sheer stretch, seamless
Panty Hose. Available in the season's best
shades. Compare al $1 .J9, $ QQ
REG. $1.39 PR.

PR.

we suggest a pair of neatly
tailored pajamas In soli cotton
broadcloth. Sizes A·B·C·D.

Stiffler's in Pomeroy or Mid·

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Boots. Idealfor work or sport wear.
A high quality boot. at a very low

For the man or men on your list

dleport .

EA.

$274
EACH

-Tbe Christmas Store With NDreMEN'S 12 INCH INSULATE·D
REG. $5.99 VALUE '

PAJAMAS

handbags In a variety of sizes and

24 Inch Fully Dressed
.REG. $4.99 VALUE

Men's Coat Style
Broadcloth

SLEEPWEAR
Famous Philmaid Brand fancy

+·

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$goo

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OTHERS AT 1
$7.00 and $9.00

- The Christmas Store With More -

steepwear. Wide selection from

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EA.

- Save Big At Stiffler's-

nylons, brushed nylons. All sizes.

HANDBAGS
s199

HandsOme

brand sport shirts In a
galaxy of colors In stripes.
plain and prints. Sizes S.M.
L·XL.

Shop At Stiffler's

shapes in all the war fed colors .

~. $100

SHIRTS

collection of new holiday styles.
Long or waltz length types in qu ilted

TO

Ladies' Fine Quality
Fall And Winter

·BILLFOLDS

1Luthtr refe" to uppe,.

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Select a gift robe now from our great

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Shop Stiffler's Anct Save!
.. ·.·.· :: ·::.·.·..·.·.·.........·:· ·:·.··· .;.:.. .•: ·.•.• ·.·.;-. .

Opening-

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lind all the newest dress and casual ·
styles. Use our easy lay.away plan .

$19~~.

-The Christmas Store With More -

POMEROY

DUSTERS

now from our fine collection. You will

•

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dresses in a good choice of styles.
Select from a wide variety of colors,
patternS and fabrics In junior,

misses and half sizes.

.

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Select your new fall and winter coat

Chri~tmas

- Stiffler's Annual

LADIES' FALL AND
HOLIDAY DRESS

· A festive collection of new holiday

pedwin.

Annual Christmas Opening

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sports a snoot toe, harneSs

Special AnniveTsary Price .

RUTLAND DEPARTMENT STORE

IN$TAMT1o or. 99~

"'

find some lovely Coats,

REDEEM AT

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T;

BIG SELECTION LADIES'

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:···:·.&gt;:-:· .···:·:·:· -:···:·:·:·.·. :·: .·.·.·.·:·:·•.·:' ··:

:

YOUR FRIENDLY STORES

POLYESTER .KNITS

Tuesday's Results

~~

A regular $7.99 sel at a

t ~·

Many plain colors and
plaids. Shop and save.

::;

very Iow price ~

The high·scoring boot look. It

REG. 5.98

YARD

aluminum , enamelled
outside in red and green .

Christm. ~

SALE STARTS TODAYI

3.98

: ;: .

$100

Big seven piece Cookware

MerrY

plaids,

Each

$588

Set made of good qualify

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Ver y good quality 54-inch ·acetate
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color s an d patt erns. A g!'eal buy .

SAVE BIG
AT
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~ ;

Fully dressed, 2~ inches tall. A good looking
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56" and 60" fabrics from

FABRICS

perature control . Sale Price ...

For His

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BONDED kNIT

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Fully automatic with taste and tern .

WALKING DOLL

C r\stmos

·

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WEST BEND

:·o

0~~ ~i~~/i~ GI!CJ~~ ~al~! 1•
1,OOO's of Yards Reduced!'

BIG 2
STORES

' COffEE

Garfield Heard added 24
against Detroit.' Bob Lanier
netted 19points for the Pistons,
who .won the,first two meetings
with the Bulls this season.
A telephoned threat to an
unidentified ~ick player at
Madison Square Garden failed
to deter New York's carving of
K G. 0 m a h a .
D a v·e
DeBusschere scored a game
and personal high this season
of 28 points. Nate Archibald,
the NBA's leading scorer was
held to 26 points, almost nine
points under his average.
Rick Barry and Caizie
Russell accounted for 24 of
Golden State's 31 points in the
final period as the Warriors
beat Houston. Barry had 30 .
points for the game on 10 field
goals and 10 for 10 from the foul

line. Rudy TQIIIjanovi~h led.
Rocket scorers with 22 points.
Pete Maravich ripped the
cords with a torrid 2().point
fourth' quarter as Atlanta
rallied to defeat Portland .
Pistol Pete netted 31 points for
the game, but .was outgunned
by the Blazers' Geoff Petrie,
who had 39.
Baltimore topiJ!ld Cleveland
on Phil Chenier's hot hand that
brought nine of the Bullets' last
11 points. Wes Unseld's uncontested layup put Baltimore in
front for good with 33 seconds
remaining. Elvin Hayes topped
the winners with 27 points,
while Austin Carr led the Cavs
with 31.
Buffalo broke away from a 54
-all halftiine tie behind Bob
Ka u rfm a n ' s
fine
marksmanship that accounted
for a 27-point total. DiclfVan
Arsdale kept . Phoenix in
contention with a game-high 29
points.

-

·YOUR
CHOICE!

EACH

-The Christmas Store With Mor~
•
. Famous BQbbie Brooks
Russ Togs • Aileen · Red Eye

SPORTSWEAR
A si\Jdy In layered looks. Write
!his down. SeparaiH: tile way
to put together your wardrobe
for winter. Try sweaters, skirts,

and pants, jackets. all sorts o1
vests.

~~~~$gooAnd
-

Up
Setond Floor-

-The Cl]rislmas Store With Ma,,.,._

Special Group Ladies
Better Fall &amp; Winter

HOLIDAY DRESSES
Select a new fall dress now from OtJr
line collodion of new styles. Pretty fall
colors and patterns. Sizes for ~lite,
Junior. misses and half, sizes.

~2

1
ONE
LARGE
RACK

-OFF
REGU~R

PRICE

"'7Second Floor-

88.~

EA&lt;:Hi

- The Christmas Store

' •

;61

WIDE. NECK

.

Reg . S1.59 Value . Fancy
imported Italian . decorative
bottles In assorted sha~s and
colors . Save now,
.·.·::. ·:, :, .. ·.·.·'. . . :.·

$100

ONE BIG TABLE
YOUR CHOICE

TOYS
TOYS
Your choice of a

Values to SU9.
toy the kids will play wi1h
forever , Pick up a few todliy.

EA

TIES

EA.

..·.·.•:,·::::. ·.·.·.· ....· •:. :.•.·:.•:.·.·.•.·::::::. .··.·.....

Stiffler's Annual Christmas Opening

GROUP OF ALL
LAY ONE AWAY
NOW!
....oTHE CHRISTMAS STORE- .
MEN'S
4 In Hand &amp; Rec!di· Tied

FANCY IMPORTED ITALIAN

DECORATIVE
BOTTLES
-

EACH

•:

•::,;-

Choose a gift Tie from our
selection, plain colors, stripes,
and all over patterns In four In
hand and ready·lied lies.

PRICED
FROM
'

~'

�"

,,

·
:HT. d. owns
. r ;:•k •.
·~ , z zng.s

8- The 9&amp;Uy Sentinel, ]'y'IJddleport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. 6, 1972

.~

f,

~

..

I

Hannan Trace's Wild.cats
bounced back from a disap,._ ""'-II •• "1 1 t
kt
'I&lt;· ,...... ng,..,..., oss as wee o
:,., defeat the Symmes Valley
~ Vlklngs, 63-:i8 Tuesday night at
~
~ Mercerville. The win g~ve
• · Coach Paul Dillon's Wildcats a
2-lmarkintheSouthern Valley
Athletic Conference.
Coach Wayne White's
.
V'iki'ngs are Q-1 ' thIS sea.&lt;On.
Randy Halley and Mark Swain
paced the Wildcats in the
fourth period. Halley canned
four foul shots for Hannan
Trace's final points. Swain, a
junior, replaced John Lusher,
6-1 junior who fouled out with
· ·
four minutes remamong,
scored six points.
The game see-:;awed until
Hannan Trace gained the
upper hand midway in the final
;fit quarter.
Synunes Valley led 16-14 at
the end of the first stanza but
trailed, 30-28 at the half and 41:r1 going into the final eight
minutes.
Four players hit double
figures lor the winners. Lusher
led the way with 16 points;
Mike Caldwell, IHi senior had
IS points; Don Wells, 6-5 junior

I'

t

••
•

. . ·. . . . s;:i
Soc1al ~

Calendarl

WEDNESDAY
JUNIOR SO Unit 39,
American 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.
( Wednesday . All Master
Masons invited .
POMEROY WCTU Christmas meeting at the home of
Mrs. Robert Warner, Wed. nesday . Covered dish dinner at
noon,
MIDDLEPORT
FIREMEN'S Auxiliary, Wednesday night at 6:30 p.m.
i~· holiday potluck at
the
firemen's hall with a $2 gift
exchange.
DREW WEBSTER Post 39,
American Legion, Ladies
Auxiliary , Wednesday, 7:30
p.m. with guest speaker on
civil defense. Public invited.
MEETING· OF Ladles
Auxiliary, Drew Webster Post
39,
American
Legion,
scheduled this evening is
cancelled. Juniors will meet at
the hall at 7:30 p. m.
THURSDAY
CATHOLIC WOMEN'S Club
~ at Sacred Heart Church, 8 p.m.
Thursday for regular monthly
meeting. Take gift exchange.
Meeting precede() by mass at
7: IS p. m. Take cookies .and
sandwiches.
AUXILIARY or Veterans
Memorial Hospital will
decorate the hospital Thursday. Members are urged to
atlend to help with the
Christmas decorations.
-e- CHILDREN'S Home Citizens
Committee, 12:30 p.m. Thurs·
day at the Children's Home.
. LAUREL Cliff Better Health
· Club,6:~0p.m.ThursdayatU1e
Meigs County Infirmary with
Mrs. Mildred Jacobs as
hostess. Members are to take
an exchange gift.

center, dumped in 12points and
Rodney Dunfee, senior guard,
had 10 points.
Jamie l..afon led the Vikings
with 18 points while Jene
Myers canned 14 points.
Statistic-wise, Hannan Trace
hit 24 of 55 field goal attempts
while Symmes Valley made 22
of 67. The Wildcats held a big
rebounding edge with 52
rebounds. CaldWell had 20 for
the winners while Jene Myers
gra bbed 12 for S~es Valley.
Hannan Trace won its third
straight reserve game, .38-34.
Bill Hall had 16 points for the
Wildcats while Hilgenberg had
12 for Symmes Valley .
The Wildcats will meet North
Gallia Friday night. Symmes
Valley will host Southwestern.
·
Box Score
Symmes Valley (SS) - Corn,
2·6·10' Dunfee, 1·1·3; Lafon, 8·
1·18 ; Jene Myers. 5 · ~ · 14 ; Webb,
o.o.o; Jaye Myers , 1·1·3;
Robinson , 5·0·10. Totals 21-14·
58 iiannan Trace (63) Caldwell . 6·3·15; Halley, O· ~ · ~ ;
Lusher, 1.1·16; Swain, 3·0·6;
Wells, 5·1·11; Dunfee, J.4.1o.
Totals 24·15·63.
By Quarters:
16 12 9 21 - 56
~~
1~ 16 11 11- 63

Pro Smndings

Lakers
lOth
of
13
with.
Bucks
ByUpil~:;r~~~n~~~~~alional
Eas1ern Conference

Atlantic Division
w. I. pet. g;b .
Boston
lO 3 ·870
2
;
Central w.
Oivisio,n
1. pet. g.b.
S..ltimore
1J 12 .520
Atlanta
1J .13 .500
'·'
· Houston
10 ·15 .400 3
Cleveland
9 18 .333 5
Western Conference
Midwest Division
w. I. pet. g.b.
Milwitukee
18 7 .720
t;hicago
11 7 .708
•,
KC-Omaha
15 12 .556 4
Detroit Pacific 'givJ:ion417 7'12
w. 1. pet. g. b.
Los Angeles 11 4 .840
Golden Sta le 16 9 .640 5
Phoenix
11 15 .423 10'1'
Seat lie
8 21 .176 15
Porlland
6 18 .150 14'12
Tuesday's Results
New York 115 KC.Omaha 103
Buffalo 108 Phoeni x 97
Atlanta 122 Portland 111
Baltimore 103 Cleveland 100
Chicago no Detroit 106
Los Ang 116 Milwaukee 94
Golden St. 108 Houston 101
(Only games scheduled)
Wednesday's Games
KC·Omaha al Philadelphia
Porlland at Baltimore
Phoenix at Detroit
Milwaukee at Sealtle
.
(Only games scheduled)

~~~:!Chi·

~~ :m:~:~~ ·;::~~n~:e;~t~::~e~:~;~~k:

NHL Standings

Bv United Press International

East
w. I. t. pts gf ga
Montrea l
15 ~ 7 37 109 62
NY Rangers 16 7 3 35 101 69
Boston
15 7 3 33 113 8~
Bullalo
11 8 7 29 93 81
Detroit
11 11 2 2~ 81 80
Toronto
9 13 ~ 22 84 82
Vancouver

8 16 2 18 76 107

NY Islanders 3 17 2 8 48 112
West
w. I. t. pis gf ga
Minnesota
14 8 3 31 83 66
Chicago
14 9 1 30 90 73
Pittsburgh 13 II 2 26 99 63
LosAngeles 121 1 4 2893 67
Philadelphia 11 11 ~ 26 91 93
Allanta
10 13 5 25 65 88
St. Louis
8 11 5 11 61 74
California
~ 15 5 11 61101

THURSDAY
BRICKLAYERS and Masons
Union, Local 32, meeting at 8
p.111. Thursday at Meigs Inn .
ALL OPERATING engineers
Local 18, regular meeting at
Results
Elks Hall, Athens, instead of Los AngTuesdav•s
6 NY Islanders 1
grange hall this month, 7:30 St. Louis 1 Detroil1
Toronto 5 VancoUver 2
p.m. Thur.sday.
(Only games scheduled)
FRIDAY
Wednesday's Games
MARY SHRINE 37, White Buffalo at NY Rangers
at Montreal
Shrine o[ Jerusalem, Friday, 8 Minnesota
Los Angeles at Chicago
p.m. IOOF hall, Pomeroy. Pittsburgh at California
(Only games scheduled)
Polluck supper and $1 gift
exchange.
AHL Standings
By Uni1ed Press lnterna1ional
DANCE following Kyger
East
Creek·Eastern basketball
w. I. t. pts gf ga
game at Kyger Creek spon- Nova Scotia 1~ 6 6 3~ 103 68
15 8 3 33 92 81
sored by sophomore class of Boston
Rochester
1J 8 5 31 96 93
Kyger Creek High School. Jays Providence 97~228471'
Springfield
7 13 ~ 18 89 106
will emcee.
New Hew en ~ 18 3 II 78 125
West
SATURDAY
w. I. t. pis gf ga
HOLIDAY BAZAAR, Mid- Cincinnati
17 8 2 36 116 85
dle~ort Masonic Temple dining Virgin ia
14 8 4 32 100' 81'
Hershey
9
9 6 1~ · 81 77
room ~ a. m. Saturday span·,
Cleveland
8
12 6 11 95 99
so red by DeMolay Mothers' Richmond
9 12 2 20 81 86
Baltimore
~ 1~ 5 13 69 106
Club.
Tuesday's
Results
YOUNG ADULT Class, Hershey 1 Bas 1, lie
Bradford Church of Christ, Cinc i 9 Rochester 1
!Only games scheduled)
Christmas dinner and party at
Wednesday 's Games
the church, Saturday night, Providence
at Richmond
6:30 p. m. $1 gift exchange.
Nova Scotia at Tidewtr
(Only games scheduled)
BOARD TO MEET
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UPl) The Board of Trustees of the
American Basketball AssoCiation will me.Jt here Monday and
Tuesday to hear reports on the
status of merger and the r
possibility of expansion.
WHA Standings

By United Press International

East
w. I. t. pts gf ga
Cleveland 16 10 1 33 97 73
New Eng
15 9 I 31 107 80
15 12 0 30 117 99
New York
13 10 1 27 86 80
Quebec
Ottawa
12 11 1 25 87 99
6 18 0 12 71 11~
Phil a
- West
w. I. I. pts gf ga
Winnipeg
17 12 1 36 111 91
Minnesota
13 10 I 27 78 83
Los Ang
13 1~ 1 27 93 97
Alberta
12 I~ 2 16 85 98
Houston
II I~ 1 23 85 88
Chicago
6 15 1 13 ss 74

By Unit~'() Prc'Ss lnlernalio"al live field goals lor the Laker points, his lowest production in
The Los Angeles l.akers
guard in the third period and he a Laker game since April 18,
made it 10 victories ill 13 went on to top the team wilh 24 1971.
points lor the game.
The loss cut Milwaukee's
Kareem Abdul.Jabbar, who lead to a half-game over
iroundng the Bucks, 116-94,
had been averaging 40.2 points · second place Chi~go in the
Tuesday night. Steady born· in 12 previous contests against Midwest Division. Los Angeles
barding by. Gail Goodrich from
Los .Angeles, was held to 29 maintains a five-game ~ulge
about 20 f&lt;'Pt out resnlterl in
·over Golden State in the
Pacific sector.
Irt other National Basketball
Association action, Chicago
trounced Detroit 130-108; New
York tipped Kansas CityOmaha 125-103; Golden State
!leal Houston 108-101; Atlanta
nipped Portland 122-121; Baltimore edged Cleveland 103.Coach -Jim Foster's North committed 14 turnovers to 100, and Buffalo topped
Gallia Pirates rallied from a North Gallia's II. North Phoenix, 108 -97.
reserve
team
Chicago made it 10 wins iii
three point deficit at halftime Gallia 's
Tuesday night to defeat Coach remained unbeaten with a 43-26 the last 15 games as Chet
Richard Hamilton's South- victory. Sterling Logan led the Walker scored 26 points and
western Highlanders, 51&gt;-49 in a winners with 15 points. Parrell
see-saw battle at South· Ml)]er canned 12 in a losing
cause.
western.
North Gallia, now ~. will
For the second game in a
row, the Highlanders had a play at Hannan Trace Friday
letdown in the third quarter. night . Southwestern, 0-3,
North Gallia outscored SW, 14- travels to Symmes Valley.
SYRACUSE - Remaining
NORTH GALLIA . (55) 8 in that stanza.
~lementary school basketball
Southwestern's Uoyd Wood, Weddington 5·0-10; James 1-1·
5; Robinette 9- ~· 11 ; Robinson 2· games on the Syracuse
6-2 sophomore center and Phil 2·6; Miller 4·0·8; Smith 2 ·0· ~.
schedule are:
Lewis, 6-1 junior forward, were Totals 24·7·55.
Portland at Syracuse, Dec. 6.
SOUTHWESTERN (49) both in foul trouble in the third Dillon
1·2·4; Lewis 1-0.2; Wood
Syracuse at Letart, Dec. II.
period .
4·1·9; Bush 7·8·12; Carter 5·0·
Syracuse at Racine, Jan. 11.
The Highlanders ' Terry 10 ; Crouse 1·0·2. Totals 19·11·
Syracuse at Portland, Jan.
Bush, 5-8 senior guard, was the 49.By Quar1ers :
17.
hottest player on the floor NG
6 17 1~ 18- 55
Letart at Syracuse, Jan. 22.
11 14 8 15-~9
collecting seven baskets and sw
All games will be played at
eight free throws for 22 points.
6:30p.m.
Bush hit eight for eight at the
foul line. Terry Carter, 5-9 OUT OF ACTION .
MONTREAL (UP!) - Desophomore, was the only other
player in double figures with fenseman Jacques Laperriere
will be out of action for ·six NEW ARBITRATOR ,
10.
NEW YORK (UP!) - ArDave Robinette led the weeks with a hand injury, the
Montreal
Canadiens
anchibald
Cox, a former solicitor
Pirates with 22 points on nine
nounced
Tuesday.
He
suffered
general of the U.S. and now a
baskets and four free throws.
a
fractured
and
dislocated
professor at Harvard Law
Keith Weddington, 6-2 junior
right
thumb
in
a
collision
School, Tuesday was named
center, had 10 points; Danny
during
a
practice
session.
the new arbitrator in the Julius
Miller, 5-8 junior guard,
Erving case by ABA Commiscanned eight.
sioner Robert Carlson. ErNorth Gallia outscored
The
ancient
Per
uvian
city
ving's attorney, Louis Nlzer,
Southwestern, l8-15 in the final
qf Chan Cha n, now a crum·
period. Early in the second bled ruin , may once have had objected that he hadn't
period, Southwestern held an housed as many as 250,000 been consulted on the previous
naming of the arbitrator.
eight point lead. Neither team people.
was ever ahead more than
eight points.
According to the charts, the
game was played on an even
basis. North Gallia hit 24 of 71 .
field goals for 35.2 pet. while
Southwestern. hit 19 of 58 for
34'5 pet.
I,,'· I '" ·
, At ll)e charity Mripe, the
Highlanders sank 11 or 14 shots
while North Gallia• converted
seven of 14 free throws.
The visiting Pirates held a 3130 rebounding edge. Wedding
led the Pirates with seven
rebounds while Lewis grabbed
11 lor SW. The Highlanders

Pirates win
second tilt

Syracuse cage
schedule noted

Dec.

~~-;:;;:;::;=;;;::::::==~======
i
- The Christmas Store
54"-56" PLAIN.&amp; FANCY
Mor~

REG. $7.99
VALUE
- The Christmas Store With Mor~
7 PIECE SET HOUSEHOLD ALUMINUM

.

REG.

COOKWARE

$7.99 .
VALUE

-Stiffler's Annual

We Are .
Here .To
Serve You!

Winnipeg 2
Cleve 4 Phil a 3, at
Chicago 3 Minn 1, at
New York 6 Houston 4
(Only games scheduled)
Wednesday's Games
New York at New Eng
Chicago at Winnipeg
(Only games scheduled)

YOUR FRIENDLY STORES

Christmas Opening-

DRESSES

strap and easy-moving leather,

" Step into a pair. You'll ·
have the look of a winner,f

·I

Chapman's Shoes

:

Men's &amp;Ladies

Select from leather !Ike vinyls
and fine grained leather in
black or .brown. Made with

many compartments.

'
i

$500

TO

-The Christmas Store With MDre-

Special Value

Rooted Hair
Washable
Fully Jointed

Open Evenings Starling Dec. 8

which to choose. Slop and shop at

RUBBER BOOTS·
Men •s warm Insulated · Rubber
YD.

price. 12 Inch

Lace Boot

$444

.S.Ir,r,

's A(ln11al

- Stiffler's Annual Christmas Opening-

·Large Assortment

Knit suits, crib sets, dresses and
sportswear . Infants sizes9-12-18 mo.
~

- Stiffler's
.
. Annual Christmas
. Opening-

Ladies' Holiday Costume

Opening

,,

'

Pair

Annual Christmas Opening-

Fine Assortment Men's
Holiday Gift

..

.:,BATH ROBES

'
Beautiful slips for ChriSima!
giving. Lace trimmed fine tricot
full slips wlfh shadow panel . Sizes
32 to 44. Phil Maid brand.

year\.

Sti llier's have Robes Ill for kings,'
See our fine assortmen1 of holiday
gill Bath Robes In asst. colors and
styles.

Priced
From

-

PRICEO
FROM .

- First Floor Stiffler's Annual Christmas Opening

Stl

- The Christmas Store With NDre-

Famous May Queen
Reg. $1.39 Valv.e

Beautiful Fancy California

Gift Suggestion

HOUSE SLIPPERS

DINNERWARE

Ladles' new Iall and Holiday House
Slippers. Select now from a wide
assortmen t of pretty, comlortable
house slippers in many. styles and

colollSigg 5

Di sh
washe r
safe,
Melamine dinnerware.
piece sets. Complete
service for eight.

Rugged
re sis tant.

and

by

BEST GROUP OF ALL
REG. $29.00 and $35.00 VALUE

Allied Chemical.

LADIES'

00

$

PR .
- The Christmas Store With More

stain

Made

TO 10. $5. 99

PAIR

In fancy patterns. 5J.

- The Christmas Store With More-

Annual Christmas

LADIES'

53 PIECE SET MELAMINE

JEWELRY

WINTER COATS

REG. 12.99
- Shop Stiffler's VALUES TO $1.59
Take Your Choice &amp; Save

Ladies , here In thlsgroupyou wio,
dress,
casual and sport styles. Beautiful
fabrics and fake furs . Values to
S35.00. Ma~e your selection early
and put In " Lay.A.Way"1if you
like .
·

.

FABRICS

WAID CROSS SONS

-------- ~~StGre

Waid Cross
Sons, Racine.

Free Tickets ftor

*

, C~

Merchaetl
PrlltS Hfllrtl

Y.

~-- -.,.....,..___ _5':.._

...

WAGNER$

DRINKS
79$

__ _

o·-- -·-----·-· ---

BROCADES

LAMAE

FAB~ICS

PomtrDY

)

OlHERS

12 PRICE

The Fabric Shop
THE SINGER STORE
115 W. Second

992-2284

Pomeroy

''A GOLD STAR STORE"
Free Tic:kets For Mtrch1nts Prizes

:Hies

,.

Compleri
With
Cord

$194 .
..

$2488

Take your choice of a big
selection of. toys thai make
greal stocking sluflers.

Big Christmas Value, ·Six Cup size
,.Electric Percolators . Made of
· enamelled aluminum In your choice
of,three colors. Complete with cord.

.

•

TOY SALE

,•

HOLIDAY
.

RUTLAND. 0.

With Coupon

·

FULL SLI'P$

HOLIDAY WEAR
Toddlers sizes 2 to

·

Chri~tmas

.

.$350.
$.
5
99
'PR. TO'
'
1

Ladle~ ~mous Phil Maid Fancy Lace. lr:lmmet;l

INFANTS &amp; TODDLERS

1

.

~OFF

$1 !:A.
~9 . .$399 :
TO
EA.

First quality all sheer stretch, seamless
Panty Hose. Available in the season's best
shades. Compare al $1 .J9, $ QQ
REG. $1.39 PR.

PR.

we suggest a pair of neatly
tailored pajamas In soli cotton
broadcloth. Sizes A·B·C·D.

Stiffler's in Pomeroy or Mid·

PANTY HOSE

Boots. Idealfor work or sport wear.
A high quality boot. at a very low

For the man or men on your list

dleport .

EA.

$274
EACH

-Tbe Christmas Store With NDreMEN'S 12 INCH INSULATE·D
REG. $5.99 VALUE '

PAJAMAS

handbags In a variety of sizes and

24 Inch Fully Dressed
.REG. $4.99 VALUE

Men's Coat Style
Broadcloth

SLEEPWEAR
Famous Philmaid Brand fancy

+·

The Christmas StQre With More -

FAMOUS PHILMAID
FANCY

$goo

Campus

OTHERS AT 1
$7.00 and $9.00

- The Christmas Store With More -

steepwear. Wide selection from

To

new

TO

Choose from newest holiday

EA.

- Save Big At Stiffler's-

nylons, brushed nylons. All sizes.

HANDBAGS
s199

HandsOme

brand sport shirts In a
galaxy of colors In stripes.
plain and prints. Sizes S.M.
L·XL.

Shop At Stiffler's

shapes in all the war fed colors .

~. $100

SHIRTS

collection of new holiday styles.
Long or waltz length types in qu ilted

TO

Ladies' Fine Quality
Fall And Winter

·BILLFOLDS

1Luthtr refe" to uppe,.

NO·IRON SPORT

Select a gift robe now from our great

Budget
Priced

Shop Stiffler's Anct Save!
.. ·.·.· :: ·::.·.·..·.·.·.........·:· ·:·.··· .;.:.. .•: ·.•.• ·.·.;-. .

Opening-

MEN'S CAMPUS

ROBES AND

lind all the newest dress and casual ·
styles. Use our easy lay.away plan .

$19~~.

-The Christmas Store With More -

POMEROY

DUSTERS

now from our fine collection. You will

•

.

COATS

dresses in a good choice of styles.
Select from a wide variety of colors,
patternS and fabrics In junior,

misses and half sizes.

.

LADIES' HOLIDAY GIFT

Select your new fall and winter coat

Chri~tmas

- Stiffler's Annual

LADIES' FALL AND
HOLIDAY DRESS

· A festive collection of new holiday

pedwin.

Annual Christmas Opening

-Stiffler's Annual Christmas Opening-

FINE HOLIDAY

sports a snoot toe, harneSs

Special AnniveTsary Price .

RUTLAND DEPARTMENT STORE

IN$TAMT1o or. 99~

"'

find some lovely Coats,

REDEEM AT

FOLGERS

...

,,

Set

Good at:
Rutland
Dept. Store,
Rutland.

WE ARE HERE
TO SERVE YOU!

T;

BIG SELECTION LADIES'

Sweater Fabrics &amp; Acrylia

Quebec~

:···:·.&gt;:-:· .···:·:·:· -:···:·:·:·.·. :·: .·.·.·.·:·:·•.·:' ··:

:

YOUR FRIENDLY STORES

POLYESTER .KNITS

Tuesday's Results

~~

A regular $7.99 sel at a

t ~·

Many plain colors and
plaids. Shop and save.

::;

very Iow price ~

The high·scoring boot look. It

REG. 5.98

YARD

aluminum , enamelled
outside in red and green .

Christm. ~

SALE STARTS TODAYI

3.98

: ;: .

$100

Big seven piece Cookware

MerrY

plaids,

Each

$588

Set made of good qualify

~oKe\\O

stock. Plains.
flora Is.

Ver y good quality 54-inch ·acetate
bonded knit fabrics. Big se lection of .
color s an d patt erns. A g!'eal buy .

SAVE BIG
AT
STIFFLER'S
~ ;

Fully dressed, 2~ inches tall. A good looking
walking dool with rooted hair. A doll that will
please any little girl. A very special value.

56" and 60" fabrics from

FABRICS

perature control . Sale Price ...

For His

. MAIN ST.

Values To $2 ,99 Yard
BONDED kNIT

PERCOLATOR

Fam ous Wes t Bend coffef&gt; maker - 6 to 9
cup size . Makes perfect co ffee every time.
Fully automatic with taste and tern .

WALKING DOLL

C r\stmos

·

9CUP
WEST BEND

:·o

0~~ ~i~~/i~ GI!CJ~~ ~al~! 1•
1,OOO's of Yards Reduced!'

BIG 2
STORES

' COffEE

Garfield Heard added 24
against Detroit.' Bob Lanier
netted 19points for the Pistons,
who .won the,first two meetings
with the Bulls this season.
A telephoned threat to an
unidentified ~ick player at
Madison Square Garden failed
to deter New York's carving of
K G. 0 m a h a .
D a v·e
DeBusschere scored a game
and personal high this season
of 28 points. Nate Archibald,
the NBA's leading scorer was
held to 26 points, almost nine
points under his average.
Rick Barry and Caizie
Russell accounted for 24 of
Golden State's 31 points in the
final period as the Warriors
beat Houston. Barry had 30 .
points for the game on 10 field
goals and 10 for 10 from the foul

line. Rudy TQIIIjanovi~h led.
Rocket scorers with 22 points.
Pete Maravich ripped the
cords with a torrid 2().point
fourth' quarter as Atlanta
rallied to defeat Portland .
Pistol Pete netted 31 points for
the game, but .was outgunned
by the Blazers' Geoff Petrie,
who had 39.
Baltimore topiJ!ld Cleveland
on Phil Chenier's hot hand that
brought nine of the Bullets' last
11 points. Wes Unseld's uncontested layup put Baltimore in
front for good with 33 seconds
remaining. Elvin Hayes topped
the winners with 27 points,
while Austin Carr led the Cavs
with 31.
Buffalo broke away from a 54
-all halftiine tie behind Bob
Ka u rfm a n ' s
fine
marksmanship that accounted
for a 27-point total. DiclfVan
Arsdale kept . Phoenix in
contention with a game-high 29
points.

-

·YOUR
CHOICE!

EACH

-The Christmas Store With Mor~
•
. Famous BQbbie Brooks
Russ Togs • Aileen · Red Eye

SPORTSWEAR
A si\Jdy In layered looks. Write
!his down. SeparaiH: tile way
to put together your wardrobe
for winter. Try sweaters, skirts,

and pants, jackets. all sorts o1
vests.

~~~~$gooAnd
-

Up
Setond Floor-

-The Cl]rislmas Store With Ma,,.,._

Special Group Ladies
Better Fall &amp; Winter

HOLIDAY DRESSES
Select a new fall dress now from OtJr
line collodion of new styles. Pretty fall
colors and patterns. Sizes for ~lite,
Junior. misses and half, sizes.

~2

1
ONE
LARGE
RACK

-OFF
REGU~R

PRICE

"'7Second Floor-

88.~

EA&lt;:Hi

- The Christmas Store

' •

;61

WIDE. NECK

.

Reg . S1.59 Value . Fancy
imported Italian . decorative
bottles In assorted sha~s and
colors . Save now,
.·.·::. ·:, :, .. ·.·.·'. . . :.·

$100

ONE BIG TABLE
YOUR CHOICE

TOYS
TOYS
Your choice of a

Values to SU9.
toy the kids will play wi1h
forever , Pick up a few todliy.

EA

TIES

EA.

..·.·.•:,·::::. ·.·.·.· ....· •:. :.•.·:.•:.·.·.•.·::::::. .··.·.....

Stiffler's Annual Christmas Opening

GROUP OF ALL
LAY ONE AWAY
NOW!
....oTHE CHRISTMAS STORE- .
MEN'S
4 In Hand &amp; Rec!di· Tied

FANCY IMPORTED ITALIAN

DECORATIVE
BOTTLES
-

EACH

•:

•::,;-

Choose a gift Tie from our
selection, plain colors, stripes,
and all over patterns In four In
hand and ready·lied lies.

PRICED
FROM
'

~'

�.

•'

Memorial Service given .for Mrs; Ruth H Thorn.ton
·An impressive memorial
service for Mrs. Ruth H.
Thornton, active charter
member of the Meigs Salon 710, .
Eight and Forty, was conducted
by Mrs. Lula Hampton
I •aumonler, Monday night at•
the home Of Mrs. Evelyn
Young.
A tribute to Mrs. Thornton,
active in all phases Of the
· Salon's work, including cystic
fibrosis drives, was given ·by
Mrs. Hampton. Mrs. Mary
Martin read a poem, and the
closing prayer was by Mrs.
Hampton, The charter was ·
draped by Mrs. Rhoda
Hackett, chapeau. A memorial

Donna Jean Wils-on to wed
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Wilson of Pomeroy are announcmg
the approaching marriage of their daughter, Donna iean, to
·:·Mr. Ray Wayne Johnson , son of Mr. and Mrs. Douglas
Johnson Sr., Racine.
· Miss Wilson, a 1971 graduate of Meigs High School, is
employed at Elberfelds. Mr. Johnson graduated from
Southern High School and is employed at General Tire Sales.
The open church wedding will be an event of Dec. 9 at 7:30·p.
m. at the Dorcas United Methodist Church. The Rev. Ray
Beegle of Wibnington will officiate. A reception wiil follow
· the ceremony.

Blst Birthday ctplebrated
Mr. and Mrs. Willard Hines
entertained at their Pomeroy
Route 2 home Thursday with a
&lt;\inner in observance of the 81st
birthday anniversary of her
mother, Mrs. Charles Woode,
of Chester. Mr. Woode also was
a guest for the dinner.
On Thanksgiving Day, Mr.
and Mrs. Willard Hines and
Mrs. Edith Hines, Pomeroy,
Mrs. Hariett Donovan, Lancaster, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Woode, Chester, and Mr. and
Mrs. ·Ray Hines, David and

Douglas of Belpre, went to
Galiipolis to join Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Hines, Amy and Andrea,
for dinner. On Sunday the
Roger Hines family , Mr. and
Mrs. Willard Hines and Mrs.
Marie Chapman were in Belpre
for a dinner hosted by Mrs.
Ray Hines in observance of her
husband's birthda)' .

SALE PLANNED
RACINE - Racine Chapter
134; OES, will sponsor an article and bake sale Friday and
•
Saturday at the Simpson
•
.'~
PARTYDATESET
building • next to Club
:: The Jolly Bunch Sewing Club Restaurant.
•IW!ll hold its Christmas party at
~e home of Mrs. George
A thought for the day:
:Hackett, Sr. at 7:30 p. m.
::ruesday. Mrs. Hackett and President Franklin Delailo
':Mrs. Don Mullen are hostesses. Roosevelt said, "We, too, born
: !~'here will be a $1 gift ex. 1o freedom and believing in
freedom, are willing to fight to
;;j:hange.
freedom.' '
maintain
,,"

• • •
People who shun alcohol should try the drinks
at a certain tavern we
won't mention.

Mrs. Marshall and daughters,
. were Mrs . Hackett, Mrs .
Eileen Searls; Mrs. Florence
Ricliards, Mrs. Pearl Knapp,
Mrs. Iva Powell, Mrs.
Catherine Welsh, Mrs. Julia

Hy~ll.

Mrs. · Zuelelia Smith,
Mrs. Hampton, Mrs. Nal'y
Martin, . Mrs.. Mary ·· RGulh,
Mrs. Davis, Mrs. Walker, Mrs.
Eunie Brin\&lt;er, Mrs. Bo,d and
Mrs. Fern Cheesebmt.

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

and Health Association Christmas .seals. Donations were
reported.
It was noted that the Salon
has for sale date· calendar
books, calendar towels, ,candy,
dish cloths, Christmas cards,
jewelry and all-occasion cards.
Orders may be placed by
· telephoning 992-2353 or 9927022.
Mrs. Myrtl~ Walker, nurses
scholarship cha irman ,
reported on her program and
asked that a donation be sent in
as a memorial for Mrs. Thornton.
Adinner was served by Mrs.
Young preceding the meeting
to 16 partners and guests, Mrs.
Charles Marshall, Sherri and
Dinise. Secret Sister gifts were
distributed by Denise in the
role of Santa assisted by
Sherrie. Each
partner
presented Sherrie a gift, and
the Salon gave agift to Denise
as did several of the members.
. New secret sister names were
drawn.
It was noted that the next
. meeg!ng will be held ~an. 8 at
. the home of Mrs. Harry Davis.
Attending the dinner besides

Party given .
for birthday
Mrs. David T. Grueser and
Melanie Kay Grueser entertained with a birthday party
at the fanner's home, 105 Plwn
St., Pomeroy, on Dec. 2
honoring their granddaughter
and daughter, Mistee Dawn
Grueser, on her fourth birthday.
A Snow White theme was
carried out for the party.
Streamers were used to create
a false ceiling and were used
with balloons. Dwarfs were
placed at intervals. A
decorated birthday cake inscribed "Happy Birthday,
Mistee Dawn," Fourth," and
four candles, Kool-Aid, ice
cream and cup cakes were
served. The honored guest
received many gifts and money
on the occasion.
Attending were Rodney Allen
Grueser, Lorie Hudson, Amy
Halley, Angie Rickey, Nancy
Baker, Darrin Roush, David
Duffy,
An ~tie
Grueser ,
Christina Hawley, Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Hudson, Mrs.
Robert Halley, Mrs. Thomas
Miller, Mrs. Nettie Moore,
Mrs. Norma Baker, Mrs .
John Grueser, Mrs. David
Grueser and Glen. Mistee
Dawn received phone · calls
from her aunts, Mrs. Betty
Russell, Columbus, and Mrs.
Mary Hogue, Darlington, Pa.
Sending gifts were Mrs. Neva
Grimm and Desiiee Kay and
Mrs. Minnie Johnson.

name to be used at the various
Salon !unctions.
A report was given on hours
spent in the cystic fibrosis fund
drive, and in assisting with the
mailing Of the Tuberculosis

the hfd endowment fund for the
National Jewish Hospital in
Denver, Colo. A donation will
also be sent to the National
Chil~ Welfare Foundation for
cystic fibrosis r~search as a
memorial to Mrs. Thornton,
and a silver tray wiU be
engraved with Mrs. Thornton's

serv.ice had peen held earlier at
the Ewing Funeral Home.
Mrs. John Boyd, children
and youth chairman, presented
Mrs. Charles Marshall with a
check to be used for Christmas
gifts for her daughter, Sherrie,
a cystic fibrosis child. The
Salon also voted to send $25 to

WHERE ECONOMY ORIGINATES

Square Cut 8la~e

IMPORTANT

... FOR YOU!

tba
Alwo

'

custo mer ,

.~00 W. Main • Pomeroy ·
~

"

;::::==

1

.
era prt ce th e follo wyou Wts h we' 11 ·

para b le item a t th

gtve yo u o com ~

e sa me special pri(e.

GUARANTEE:

A&amp;P olf

ers on

guarantee No
.

unc on d lti

a na

Joyce Mae Roush engaged
LETART, W. Va. - Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Roush,
Letart, W.Va . are announcing the engagement of their oldest
daughter, Miss Joyce Mae Roush , to Steve Gillispie, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Jake Gillispie of New Haven. Joyce is a
graduate of Wahama High School and is employed at Neptune Fabric Center in Mason. Steve attended Wahama High
School and is employed at West Virginia Malleable Iron
Company, Pt. Pleasant. A January wedding is planned.

3 lb.
4 lb.
4 lb.
4 lb.

ROUND STEAK
GROUND BEEF
BULK SAUSAGE
PORK CHOPS
2 lb. ALL MEAT WIENERS

For
·The

Freezer

ea.u..L
HIIIRI

4 lb. CHUCK ROAST

lb. ASSORTED LUNCH MEAT

GROUND BEEF
(165) 55 lb.
lb. ROUND STEAK
5 lb. CHUCK ROAST

Wilson.
Third grade : Mark Clinde,
Vicky DeBord , and Jeff
Lambert, ali A; William
Donahue, Patricia Grounds,
Angela Harmon, Danny Riggs,
Brenda Williams.
Fourth grade, Robert
·Harmon, all A, and Nancy
Welsh; Fifth grade, RlchardX.
Hill, Mark Riggs, , Mark
Williams, and Sixth grade,
Julie Nance, David Riggs.

5
5
2

Good thru Sat., Dec. 9th~
At All A&amp;P WEO'S- Cols. Div.

$

..

HARRISO NVILLE
Twenty-two pupils have been
named to the honor roll at
Harrisonville Elementary
School the second six weeks
grading period.
Making the grade o( "B" or
above in all their subjects to be
listed on the roll were:
Second grade :
Robin
Barrett, Ivan Carl, Brent
Finlaw, Mary Lee, Darlene
Nelson, Wendy Tillis, Jimmie

lb. PORK CHOPS

lb. BULK SAUSAGE
lb. LARGE .FRANKS

------Produce
".

(166)

Phone Us ·.~
·Your Orderfi

992-.•.

5 lb.
4 lb.
5 lb.
3 lb.
_4 lb.
3 lb.

GROUND BEEF
SIRLOIN STEAK
CHUCK ROAST
STEW MEAT
SLICED PORK SHOULDER
SLICED BACON
4 lb. ROUND STEAK
3 lb. BULK SAIUSIIGE

WE ACCEPT FED

•

'

$

I

I' '

'

I

•

~

I

Mapf•
Sdu£011

&gt;

T"'"-"'

·~ l:~.o
~

L FOOD

Goa~

a

a~ 1~1:

~Coupon

thru Sat., Dec. 9th, At All A&amp;P WEO'S- Cols. Div,

leUuee.Heads

I
1 'F11ealt,
1

Ccvv..ota, 2-lb.

I l=,.•alt,

Ca.ft,ag&amp; Heads

I

48·01.

btl.

Ba9s

99

¢

W'th

This
Coupon

Sat., Dec. 9th. At All A&amp;P WEO'S- Cols. Div.
i7i\"il

Stalks

Tangelos OR Tangerines

VALUES THIS WEEK!

Cleek Our

'

"; I

\\"Poaeaf, ~'~•----119

Phebe Says

ts, no mofl er

guaran tees it.

witli this coupe~
on Super·Ri9ht 4-lb.

3 lb. SLICED BACON

22,Named for honors list

'

mo ney· bock

50¢

Save

5 lb. GROUND BEH
3 lb. SIRLOIN STEAK
4 lb. SLICED PORK SHOULDER
2

se s tl A&amp;p

'

·

I

matter what it .

who mak es it if A&amp;P II .

1

for e¥er y

e sa me spe · 1 .

to 9 Daily-Sunday t-9

JoyLU,uid,

Salad Tomatoes
b!;':;.39¢

llfor $100

PORK STEAK

1)e.IM§f!Mfl
32-oL
btl.

48

With
This

¢

Coupon

PORK LOIN

.."

·. 5th and PEARL STS.,
RACINE
"The Store With A-Heart,
You WE LIKE"

ROAST

Our USDA Dloice Meat

FRENQ-1 CITY

Meat Loaf Mix

Liver Pudding

We Glad~ Accept Fed. Food Stamps

lb.

lb.

Prices Effective Dec. 6-13

2 I~ kr

Mixed

~

VAllJA.HII

9:00 to 7:00
Saturday 9 to 9

Cans

CLOSED SUNDAYS

FAIRMONT

.BUTTERMILK
•
1f2

gal.

crt.

Rolls
lor .

JUMBO SIZE

Golden Ripe

BANANAS

~·to~

oz.

STOKELY

POTATOES

10~ 89~

!:!Y

•

lor

,

.

'

Double Pizza ...~~.E.:.~.~;:~~--~~.~......................

3 lb.

~~.~

••••••••••

79

4

Hunt's Catsup..~~.~~.~.~~~~...............................~:::·. 49

4

.,

I

~;~Lsgc
Hanover
Salad
.
•
JIFFY
Baking Mix •• • ~···44t
•
EVERYDAY LOW PRICE
~~· 944
Crisco
Shortening
• •
DUNCAN HINES
23-oz.694
Brownie
Mix
•
•
•
JELLO PUDDING OR
s%~•·12c
Pie
filling
•
•
•
.'
DESSERT TOPPING
pkg,

CJGI.

ctn.

1

Pkr.

I

can

pkgs.

.

DUTCH OR 3-BEAN

'

'

REG. OR DRIP

Maxweii ·House • • •
MAXWELL HOUSE
4
~~··99
Max-Pax ~i:sE • • •
BLUE BONNET SOFT
Margarine ru.bs • • • •
AAP FROZEN
Orange Juice . • •'!.~39c
•
HAIR SPRAY
u."••. s109
White
Rain
•
.•
• • •
d5LD REMEDY .
btl.ot$119
n
Coricidin
•
•
•
• •
VACUUM PACKED
Folger's Coffee • •
MAXWELL HOUSE
$191
Max Pax
• •

l·tb.49c

Cans

IN PLASTIC MUG

$279

pkr.

303

Pkg•.

U. S. No. 1 Idaho

COUPON

32 __ounce
KING SIZE

$1

Chicken Broth ..::.~~~.~~..~~~.......................... 6
T
I
4
Northern owe s....................................~
'I
3
Fruit Cockta1 · ~ ··•••••••••••··~ ··•••• •••••••••••••~••••••
Sunshine·Cookies.. ~.~~~~.:~.~.......'............... 3
. ··
&amp;'1-l lt,-. ~ 1
·Nu-Maid Marganne...............................
Coff
$239
'
MaxweII House , ee ............. ............. ~~:.. .
13'1.&lt;'

J

COFFEE
S.lb.
can

1

Monday Thru Friday

Anti-Perspirant •·OL
can

'

~ef
and
Pori!

Right reserved to limit quantities

•

o rr

tng wee k. O r 'f

,_
II'

.."''

o wha t rs honest an d f .

RAINCHECK·
11 a n o d ve rti ~ed
spec" ! .
.
•
M·a nager lor a Ro'l n rIa ',~ ever sold out ask the
c lee !'; . It ent'11
SO ill e it em otth
r es yo u to th e

FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS!
·

A&amp;P POLICY:,

d

I

y

. Fallan lat

COFFEE . '
10 oz.
Jlr

gg"i

Willi
C!IIPOII

•1.., c eii!IJ •us
Gaod AI RMIRI Fa Mat

=.

Freedom
·boK of 7~ w~h This
30 • 7- Coupon
Goo~

tll ru Stt:,o D•t. tlh.

At All A&amp;P WEO'); - Col1. Dl,.

- S.lfy

crookor

Liquid
Plumr

Supreme

32•0io

23•0L49C With This
pk9,
Coupon

btl.

59c:

pkr.

!~_eF~~RT~hip • • •
!~::36c
Margarine

t-••· 4 7 c

With This
Coupon

Pkr.

I

Good thru S.t:r D.c:; 9th.
At All AlP WEO ' :~o- Cols. Oiv,

Good lhru Stl., D•c. fth, ·
AI All AlP WEO 'S- Co!•. Clv.

•

2t-oz.

can

9-Lives Tuna Cat Food . _.. .... ~Jlc

Zesta Crack_ers

FEMININE NAI,KINIV

..... ~t 42c

Sunsweet Prune Juice ..' . _.... 'tit'- 62c
A&amp;P Chili Sauce ... ~ ........·.; n .••. JJc

Nu-Soft
. 3341o4~

7-

btl.

1

With This
Caupan

Qood thr" Sat. Dtc. tth.
•At All " " W&amp;O'S - Cols, Dlv.

4tftc
cupl Ill, 7 50 So01o

with this coupon
. on IO-o1. j-. Instant

Wilh
Co,pon

~ood thru S1t. 01t , ijtt\.
At All AlP WEO' ~ - Colt. Oiv,

Taster's Choice

1

Good t~ru S1 t., o.~ . ''"'·
At All AlP' WEO'S - Coh . Div,

LIMIT ONE ~

,.

·-

•

I

•

Pillsbu~y Fruit 'n Crunch ...... 'it:·79c
Ca~natro.n Hot Coc~ Mix . .. _12 "'· .60c
Sw1ss M1ss Instant Cocoa Mix .. ·~· 79c
Orange Tang with Apothecary Jar 't'79c

Save soc

FABRIC SOFTENER

a

.......

-

-

•

.

�.

•'

Memorial Service given .for Mrs; Ruth H Thorn.ton
·An impressive memorial
service for Mrs. Ruth H.
Thornton, active charter
member of the Meigs Salon 710, .
Eight and Forty, was conducted
by Mrs. Lula Hampton
I •aumonler, Monday night at•
the home Of Mrs. Evelyn
Young.
A tribute to Mrs. Thornton,
active in all phases Of the
· Salon's work, including cystic
fibrosis drives, was given ·by
Mrs. Hampton. Mrs. Mary
Martin read a poem, and the
closing prayer was by Mrs.
Hampton, The charter was ·
draped by Mrs. Rhoda
Hackett, chapeau. A memorial

Donna Jean Wils-on to wed
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Wilson of Pomeroy are announcmg
the approaching marriage of their daughter, Donna iean, to
·:·Mr. Ray Wayne Johnson , son of Mr. and Mrs. Douglas
Johnson Sr., Racine.
· Miss Wilson, a 1971 graduate of Meigs High School, is
employed at Elberfelds. Mr. Johnson graduated from
Southern High School and is employed at General Tire Sales.
The open church wedding will be an event of Dec. 9 at 7:30·p.
m. at the Dorcas United Methodist Church. The Rev. Ray
Beegle of Wibnington will officiate. A reception wiil follow
· the ceremony.

Blst Birthday ctplebrated
Mr. and Mrs. Willard Hines
entertained at their Pomeroy
Route 2 home Thursday with a
&lt;\inner in observance of the 81st
birthday anniversary of her
mother, Mrs. Charles Woode,
of Chester. Mr. Woode also was
a guest for the dinner.
On Thanksgiving Day, Mr.
and Mrs. Willard Hines and
Mrs. Edith Hines, Pomeroy,
Mrs. Hariett Donovan, Lancaster, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Woode, Chester, and Mr. and
Mrs. ·Ray Hines, David and

Douglas of Belpre, went to
Galiipolis to join Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Hines, Amy and Andrea,
for dinner. On Sunday the
Roger Hines family , Mr. and
Mrs. Willard Hines and Mrs.
Marie Chapman were in Belpre
for a dinner hosted by Mrs.
Ray Hines in observance of her
husband's birthda)' .

SALE PLANNED
RACINE - Racine Chapter
134; OES, will sponsor an article and bake sale Friday and
•
Saturday at the Simpson
•
.'~
PARTYDATESET
building • next to Club
:: The Jolly Bunch Sewing Club Restaurant.
•IW!ll hold its Christmas party at
~e home of Mrs. George
A thought for the day:
:Hackett, Sr. at 7:30 p. m.
::ruesday. Mrs. Hackett and President Franklin Delailo
':Mrs. Don Mullen are hostesses. Roosevelt said, "We, too, born
: !~'here will be a $1 gift ex. 1o freedom and believing in
freedom, are willing to fight to
;;j:hange.
freedom.' '
maintain
,,"

• • •
People who shun alcohol should try the drinks
at a certain tavern we
won't mention.

Mrs. Marshall and daughters,
. were Mrs . Hackett, Mrs .
Eileen Searls; Mrs. Florence
Ricliards, Mrs. Pearl Knapp,
Mrs. Iva Powell, Mrs.
Catherine Welsh, Mrs. Julia

Hy~ll.

Mrs. · Zuelelia Smith,
Mrs. Hampton, Mrs. Nal'y
Martin, . Mrs.. Mary ·· RGulh,
Mrs. Davis, Mrs. Walker, Mrs.
Eunie Brin\&lt;er, Mrs. Bo,d and
Mrs. Fern Cheesebmt.

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

and Health Association Christmas .seals. Donations were
reported.
It was noted that the Salon
has for sale date· calendar
books, calendar towels, ,candy,
dish cloths, Christmas cards,
jewelry and all-occasion cards.
Orders may be placed by
· telephoning 992-2353 or 9927022.
Mrs. Myrtl~ Walker, nurses
scholarship cha irman ,
reported on her program and
asked that a donation be sent in
as a memorial for Mrs. Thornton.
Adinner was served by Mrs.
Young preceding the meeting
to 16 partners and guests, Mrs.
Charles Marshall, Sherri and
Dinise. Secret Sister gifts were
distributed by Denise in the
role of Santa assisted by
Sherrie. Each
partner
presented Sherrie a gift, and
the Salon gave agift to Denise
as did several of the members.
. New secret sister names were
drawn.
It was noted that the next
. meeg!ng will be held ~an. 8 at
. the home of Mrs. Harry Davis.
Attending the dinner besides

Party given .
for birthday
Mrs. David T. Grueser and
Melanie Kay Grueser entertained with a birthday party
at the fanner's home, 105 Plwn
St., Pomeroy, on Dec. 2
honoring their granddaughter
and daughter, Mistee Dawn
Grueser, on her fourth birthday.
A Snow White theme was
carried out for the party.
Streamers were used to create
a false ceiling and were used
with balloons. Dwarfs were
placed at intervals. A
decorated birthday cake inscribed "Happy Birthday,
Mistee Dawn," Fourth," and
four candles, Kool-Aid, ice
cream and cup cakes were
served. The honored guest
received many gifts and money
on the occasion.
Attending were Rodney Allen
Grueser, Lorie Hudson, Amy
Halley, Angie Rickey, Nancy
Baker, Darrin Roush, David
Duffy,
An ~tie
Grueser ,
Christina Hawley, Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Hudson, Mrs.
Robert Halley, Mrs. Thomas
Miller, Mrs. Nettie Moore,
Mrs. Norma Baker, Mrs .
John Grueser, Mrs. David
Grueser and Glen. Mistee
Dawn received phone · calls
from her aunts, Mrs. Betty
Russell, Columbus, and Mrs.
Mary Hogue, Darlington, Pa.
Sending gifts were Mrs. Neva
Grimm and Desiiee Kay and
Mrs. Minnie Johnson.

name to be used at the various
Salon !unctions.
A report was given on hours
spent in the cystic fibrosis fund
drive, and in assisting with the
mailing Of the Tuberculosis

the hfd endowment fund for the
National Jewish Hospital in
Denver, Colo. A donation will
also be sent to the National
Chil~ Welfare Foundation for
cystic fibrosis r~search as a
memorial to Mrs. Thornton,
and a silver tray wiU be
engraved with Mrs. Thornton's

serv.ice had peen held earlier at
the Ewing Funeral Home.
Mrs. John Boyd, children
and youth chairman, presented
Mrs. Charles Marshall with a
check to be used for Christmas
gifts for her daughter, Sherrie,
a cystic fibrosis child. The
Salon also voted to send $25 to

WHERE ECONOMY ORIGINATES

Square Cut 8la~e

IMPORTANT

... FOR YOU!

tba
Alwo

'

custo mer ,

.~00 W. Main • Pomeroy ·
~

"

;::::==

1

.
era prt ce th e follo wyou Wts h we' 11 ·

para b le item a t th

gtve yo u o com ~

e sa me special pri(e.

GUARANTEE:

A&amp;P olf

ers on

guarantee No
.

unc on d lti

a na

Joyce Mae Roush engaged
LETART, W. Va. - Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Roush,
Letart, W.Va . are announcing the engagement of their oldest
daughter, Miss Joyce Mae Roush , to Steve Gillispie, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Jake Gillispie of New Haven. Joyce is a
graduate of Wahama High School and is employed at Neptune Fabric Center in Mason. Steve attended Wahama High
School and is employed at West Virginia Malleable Iron
Company, Pt. Pleasant. A January wedding is planned.

3 lb.
4 lb.
4 lb.
4 lb.

ROUND STEAK
GROUND BEEF
BULK SAUSAGE
PORK CHOPS
2 lb. ALL MEAT WIENERS

For
·The

Freezer

ea.u..L
HIIIRI

4 lb. CHUCK ROAST

lb. ASSORTED LUNCH MEAT

GROUND BEEF
(165) 55 lb.
lb. ROUND STEAK
5 lb. CHUCK ROAST

Wilson.
Third grade : Mark Clinde,
Vicky DeBord , and Jeff
Lambert, ali A; William
Donahue, Patricia Grounds,
Angela Harmon, Danny Riggs,
Brenda Williams.
Fourth grade, Robert
·Harmon, all A, and Nancy
Welsh; Fifth grade, RlchardX.
Hill, Mark Riggs, , Mark
Williams, and Sixth grade,
Julie Nance, David Riggs.

5
5
2

Good thru Sat., Dec. 9th~
At All A&amp;P WEO'S- Cols. Div.

$

..

HARRISO NVILLE
Twenty-two pupils have been
named to the honor roll at
Harrisonville Elementary
School the second six weeks
grading period.
Making the grade o( "B" or
above in all their subjects to be
listed on the roll were:
Second grade :
Robin
Barrett, Ivan Carl, Brent
Finlaw, Mary Lee, Darlene
Nelson, Wendy Tillis, Jimmie

lb. PORK CHOPS

lb. BULK SAUSAGE
lb. LARGE .FRANKS

------Produce
".

(166)

Phone Us ·.~
·Your Orderfi

992-.•.

5 lb.
4 lb.
5 lb.
3 lb.
_4 lb.
3 lb.

GROUND BEEF
SIRLOIN STEAK
CHUCK ROAST
STEW MEAT
SLICED PORK SHOULDER
SLICED BACON
4 lb. ROUND STEAK
3 lb. BULK SAIUSIIGE

WE ACCEPT FED

•

'

$

I

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'

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•

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I

Mapf•
Sdu£011

&gt;

T"'"-"'

·~ l:~.o
~

L FOOD

Goa~

a

a~ 1~1:

~Coupon

thru Sat., Dec. 9th, At All A&amp;P WEO'S- Cols. Div,

leUuee.Heads

I
1 'F11ealt,
1

Ccvv..ota, 2-lb.

I l=,.•alt,

Ca.ft,ag&amp; Heads

I

48·01.

btl.

Ba9s

99

¢

W'th

This
Coupon

Sat., Dec. 9th. At All A&amp;P WEO'S- Cols. Div.
i7i\"il

Stalks

Tangelos OR Tangerines

VALUES THIS WEEK!

Cleek Our

'

"; I

\\"Poaeaf, ~'~•----119

Phebe Says

ts, no mofl er

guaran tees it.

witli this coupe~
on Super·Ri9ht 4-lb.

3 lb. SLICED BACON

22,Named for honors list

'

mo ney· bock

50¢

Save

5 lb. GROUND BEH
3 lb. SIRLOIN STEAK
4 lb. SLICED PORK SHOULDER
2

se s tl A&amp;p

'

·

I

matter what it .

who mak es it if A&amp;P II .

1

for e¥er y

e sa me spe · 1 .

to 9 Daily-Sunday t-9

JoyLU,uid,

Salad Tomatoes
b!;':;.39¢

llfor $100

PORK STEAK

1)e.IM§f!Mfl
32-oL
btl.

48

With
This

¢

Coupon

PORK LOIN

.."

·. 5th and PEARL STS.,
RACINE
"The Store With A-Heart,
You WE LIKE"

ROAST

Our USDA Dloice Meat

FRENQ-1 CITY

Meat Loaf Mix

Liver Pudding

We Glad~ Accept Fed. Food Stamps

lb.

lb.

Prices Effective Dec. 6-13

2 I~ kr

Mixed

~

VAllJA.HII

9:00 to 7:00
Saturday 9 to 9

Cans

CLOSED SUNDAYS

FAIRMONT

.BUTTERMILK
•
1f2

gal.

crt.

Rolls
lor .

JUMBO SIZE

Golden Ripe

BANANAS

~·to~

oz.

STOKELY

POTATOES

10~ 89~

!:!Y

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lor

,

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Double Pizza ...~~.E.:.~.~;:~~--~~.~......................

3 lb.

~~.~

••••••••••

79

4

Hunt's Catsup..~~.~~.~.~~~~...............................~:::·. 49

4

.,

I

~;~Lsgc
Hanover
Salad
.
•
JIFFY
Baking Mix •• • ~···44t
•
EVERYDAY LOW PRICE
~~· 944
Crisco
Shortening
• •
DUNCAN HINES
23-oz.694
Brownie
Mix
•
•
•
JELLO PUDDING OR
s%~•·12c
Pie
filling
•
•
•
.'
DESSERT TOPPING
pkg,

CJGI.

ctn.

1

Pkr.

I

can

pkgs.

.

DUTCH OR 3-BEAN

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REG. OR DRIP

Maxweii ·House • • •
MAXWELL HOUSE
4
~~··99
Max-Pax ~i:sE • • •
BLUE BONNET SOFT
Margarine ru.bs • • • •
AAP FROZEN
Orange Juice . • •'!.~39c
•
HAIR SPRAY
u."••. s109
White
Rain
•
.•
• • •
d5LD REMEDY .
btl.ot$119
n
Coricidin
•
•
•
• •
VACUUM PACKED
Folger's Coffee • •
MAXWELL HOUSE
$191
Max Pax
• •

l·tb.49c

Cans

IN PLASTIC MUG

$279

pkr.

303

Pkg•.

U. S. No. 1 Idaho

COUPON

32 __ounce
KING SIZE

$1

Chicken Broth ..::.~~~.~~..~~~.......................... 6
T
I
4
Northern owe s....................................~
'I
3
Fruit Cockta1 · ~ ··•••••••••••··~ ··•••• •••••••••••••~••••••
Sunshine·Cookies.. ~.~~~~.:~.~.......'............... 3
. ··
&amp;'1-l lt,-. ~ 1
·Nu-Maid Marganne...............................
Coff
$239
'
MaxweII House , ee ............. ............. ~~:.. .
13'1.&lt;'

J

COFFEE
S.lb.
can

1

Monday Thru Friday

Anti-Perspirant •·OL
can

'

~ef
and
Pori!

Right reserved to limit quantities

•

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tng wee k. O r 'f

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II'

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o wha t rs honest an d f .

RAINCHECK·
11 a n o d ve rti ~ed
spec" ! .
.
•
M·a nager lor a Ro'l n rIa ',~ ever sold out ask the
c lee !'; . It ent'11
SO ill e it em otth
r es yo u to th e

FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS!
·

A&amp;P POLICY:,

d

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. Fallan lat

COFFEE . '
10 oz.
Jlr

gg"i

Willi
C!IIPOII

•1.., c eii!IJ •us
Gaod AI RMIRI Fa Mat

=.

Freedom
·boK of 7~ w~h This
30 • 7- Coupon
Goo~

tll ru Stt:,o D•t. tlh.

At All A&amp;P WEO'); - Col1. Dl,.

- S.lfy

crookor

Liquid
Plumr

Supreme

32•0io

23•0L49C With This
pk9,
Coupon

btl.

59c:

pkr.

!~_eF~~RT~hip • • •
!~::36c
Margarine

t-••· 4 7 c

With This
Coupon

Pkr.

I

Good thru S.t:r D.c:; 9th.
At All AlP WEO ' :~o- Cols. Oiv,

Good lhru Stl., D•c. fth, ·
AI All AlP WEO 'S- Co!•. Clv.

•

2t-oz.

can

9-Lives Tuna Cat Food . _.. .... ~Jlc

Zesta Crack_ers

FEMININE NAI,KINIV

..... ~t 42c

Sunsweet Prune Juice ..' . _.... 'tit'- 62c
A&amp;P Chili Sauce ... ~ ........·.; n .••. JJc

Nu-Soft
. 3341o4~

7-

btl.

1

With This
Caupan

Qood thr" Sat. Dtc. tth.
•At All " " W&amp;O'S - Cols, Dlv.

4tftc
cupl Ill, 7 50 So01o

with this coupon
. on IO-o1. j-. Instant

Wilh
Co,pon

~ood thru S1t. 01t , ijtt\.
At All AlP WEO' ~ - Colt. Oiv,

Taster's Choice

1

Good t~ru S1 t., o.~ . ''"'·
At All AlP' WEO'S - Coh . Div,

LIMIT ONE ~

,.

·-

•

I

•

Pillsbu~y Fruit 'n Crunch ...... 'it:·79c
Ca~natro.n Hot Coc~ Mix . .. _12 "'· .60c
Sw1ss M1ss Instant Cocoa Mix .. ·~· 79c
Orange Tang with Apothecary Jar 't'79c

Save soc

FABRIC SOFTENER

a

.......

-

-

•

.

�11 - The Daily Sen~inel,Mi~dleport-Pomeroy, o.. Dec. 6, 1872

Two

hospitali~ed

HARTFORD - Two persons
were admitted to Pleasant
Valley Hospital and a third was
treated lor injuries in a tw~ar
collision at 7:15 a. m. today
near Hartford on U. S. 33.
· Rex. E. Roush, 21, Letart,
was admitted with facial
contusions, and Anna Lee
White, 37, Letart, with a
. ·whiplash injury , it was
reported. Both were reported
in "good" condition.
Nancy Nelson , 36, New

.I

after wreck

Total property damages were
Haven, was treated for a time.
estimated
by pollee at ",700; ·
Emergency squad amwhiplash Injury, but was not
admitted. She was a passenger bulances from New Haven and to Ro]ISII's yolk$W!18en, .1,700,
Mason, transpQrted the injured and $500 to Mrs. White's sedan.
in the white car.
· Shortly after the emergency
to the hospital, ·
Roush was cited for failure to vehicles went throUgh town,
Chief deputy 'sheriff Millard
Halstead, who investigated, have vehicle under control. another siren was soWlde&lt;l on·
an Ohio emergency ·vehicle
identified the drive(s as Rex E.
bringing Evelyn Scarberry, 37,
Roush and Anna·Lee White. He
Rt. l, Sherman, Ohio,_ to
Pleasant Valley Hospital
said Roush and Mrs. White
Discharges:
Floyd
Taylor,
Pleasant Valley ·Hospital for
were traveling south on Route
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Charles treatment of facta! contusions
33, when she stopped to make a
Paxton, Gallipolis; Myrt
left turn into Sliding Hill Road, RoiUQS, Leon ; Cynthia Van- received atound 8 a. m. in a
and Roush could not stop in Meter, Mason;· Mrs. David mishap at Rio Grande. She was
treated and released.
AtkinS!&gt;n, Henderson ; Lottie
Wilfong, R, HarUey, Point
Pleasant; Richard Denney,
Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs. Loman
Now! l.af. lt Away
each 2. High scorer for Point Jones, Point Pleasant; Mrs. ' .
Wayne Capehart, New Haven.;.
was Jay Withers with 13.
Richard
~Ieider,
Point
Meigs vs. Eastern at Middleport was won by Meigs BB, Pleasant.
Births: December 3, a
. 39 to 20. For Meigs, Brinley
Sewin_t. M~i~.e
Seth and Ronald Coares each daughter to Mr. and Mrs.
For Christmas '72
had 10, Tim Scites 8, Lonnie David.Fetty, Point Pleasant; a
Small deiJOSII will hold.
Taylor 6, Tim Thomas 3, arid daughter to Mr. ·and Mrs.
Mark Gilkey 2. High Scorer for Roger McGuire, Patriot, Ohio.
Eastern was J. Kuhn with 6. December 5, a son to Mr. and
. .
.
Meigs 7B won 36-26 over Mrs. Olaf Thomas, Point
115 W. Second
992-2284
Easrern. For Meigs, Randy Pleasant, and a son to Mr. and
POMEROY, OHiO
Marshall had 10, Kevin Mrs. Carl Thacker, Ashton.
Yeauger 8, Ron Casci 7, Brent
Arnold 4, Mike Lavendar 3,
Tim Coates and Blaine Qualls 2
each: High scorer for Eastern
~NOTHER
was E. Johnson with 15.

Meigs juniors win 3, lose I

Meigs junior high basketball
. games on Tuesday at Pt.
Pleasant and at home resulted
In three wins and one loss.
..
Meigs SA won 37 to 35 at
.'
Point Pleasant. For Meigs,
Greg Browning had 13, Steve
Randolph and Tom Walters 5
presentation
at
7:30.
Taking
part
in
the
skit
are,
front,
I
to
r,
MEMBERS OF TilE WAHAMA HIGH SCHOOL
each, Allen Stewart and Brian
Teka Dewhurst, Mary Fox, Harriet Thompson, Terry Oliver,
Sophomore Class will present "The Morning After" al the
Hamilton, 4 each, Mark
Greg camp and DwainRussell; back row, Brenda Campbell,
Haggerty 3, Jeff Beaver 2, and
Achievement Variety Show at Wahama High School ThurCharlotte
Edwards
and
Jennifer
Oldaker.
The
show
is
Crenson
Pratt I. High scorer
sday in a matinee performance at I p. m. and an evening
sponsored by the Waharna Student Council.
for Point was Rocky Goodnite
with 16.
Meigs 7A lost to Point
(:;::::::;:,:,g::):S!.!l'&amp;.:WW.:®'~::!f.&lt;
Pleasant 35 to :w. For Meigs,
--------------------------~
Letters of opinion are welcomed. They should be Jess I
Kelly Winebrenner led with 10,
ALL ARE DEAD
1 than300 words long (or be subject to reduction by the editor)
Chuck Follrod 8, Gene Halley
BAYBORO, S.C. (UP!) 1 and must be slgued with the slguee's address. Names may be 1 A miUiary transport plane
(Continued from Page I) .~ and Steve Schneider each 6,
withheld upon publlcatloo, but wiD be revealed on request. 1 carrying 12 crewmen and a
launch hour. The weathermen Brent Stanley and Greg Witte
Lelte~s should be In good taste, addresolog Issues, not per· 1 jet fighter with a lone oc·
said that unseasonable warm,
sonalilles. ·
! cupanl collided In Dlght and moist air would keep tempera·
IT'S CHICKEN
I ., exploded, apparently lures in the middle 70s for the
RACINE '- Fried chicken
I carrying all13to their death, laWJch.
will be served following the
I officials repqrted today.
regular .meeting of Racine
School children in Brevard
I
The accident happened
American Legion Post 602
I about 7:30 p.m. Tuesday County were ordered sent
Thursday night.
I over the coastal swamps home at midday so that school
Otto
Franklin
Harding,
00,
I near this small community, buses would not have to tangle
with the growing traffic push . 1507 Flora Lee Drive, Leeslocated
about
26
miles
north·
MARRIAGE LICENSE
burg ,, Fla., died Saturday
Big question to be answered
All
was
quiet
at
launch
comwest of Myrtle Beach.
Jimmy Lambert, 23, and
Dec. 5, 1972
plex 39, where the Saturn 5 night. Mr. Harding, born in Annett~! Kay Collins, 20, both of
Lyndon, Kan., moved to Leesrocket and its spacecraft modDear Sir:
burg
seven years ago following Rutland Roure 1.
The big question at Robbins and Myers Plant is soon to be
ules stood poised, awaiting the retirement. He was a member
answered.
.
start of the finai hours of the of the Methodist Church. He is
The employees at Robbins and Myers must stop and give a
countdown.
survived by his widow, the
great deal of thought to the way they vote Dec. 14. We cannot let
former Grace McMaster of
BUILDING PLANS
ourselves be influenced by a lot of false statements, "such as the
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Indus- Middleport, a resident of Meigs
U.A.W. makes in their newsgrams."
County 35 years, and a stepPT. PLEASANT - In- trial Nucleonics Corp. plans a daughll!r, Mrs. Alyce Quinlin
As employees at Robbins and Myers, we know the
$6 million building expansion
statements the U.A.W. has made about the working conditions, clement weather apparenUy which will provide 300 new jobs of Can'ton, Ohio.
Save 20 to 40%
!reabnent of the employees and favoritism among employees has caused a few days delay in when construction is comFuneral services and incompletion
of
the
Shadle
Before Christmas
are false.
terment were held Tuesday in
pleted next November.
In our past experience at work we've found our·supervisors Bridge painUng project for this
James E. Reider, vice presi- Leesburg WJder direction of the
SEE OUR AD
and plant manager to be fair and honest In dealing with us. The season. Workmen were back at dent and general manager, Beyers Funeral Home.
. Middleport,
THURSDAY'S SENTINEL
Thursday,
but
not
for
long.
it
most they have ever asked of us, is that we do our jobs to the best
said
a
six-story
office
building
Roger Wood of the West
of our ability. Since Robbins and Myers pays their employees
Virginia Department of High- and tw&lt;HJtory additions for spa~ will double the comgood wages, this is not too much to ask.
ways Tuesday said the con· production and warehouse pany's area.
We would rather work 52 weeks of the year and receive a tractor had two more days of
•
yearly raise and better benefits, than be on strike three or four painting before closing down
months a year.
••
the operation this fall. If clear
Yes, there ~as a time when the labor union was a g09d thing, weather had held, they ex·
but because of their unrellliOnable demands, companies have peeled to complete the painting
found It hard to stay in operation.
today.
It has not been many years ago that when a young person
_A ll the D ress-A-Do ll. dt&gt;ll s ,Hf;' in our lohhy now,
participants who crea ted th is glo ri ous pageant.
A third day will be used for
would graduate from our high schools in Gallia County, they removing cables suspended on
d isplayed 111 all_ the1 r_l1nery tor you to pnjoy. A
Come in now. A•nd remember th ai eac h doll will
would have to look away from home for jobs with a future.
the super structure, then the
IJe.lutllu l co ll ect 1on otd olls !n ,1 v.lriL•Iy of unique
be a happy Ch ri slmas gift to some needy child;
Now we have the greatest industrial and business expansion bridge will remain open,
. ~nd colorful cos iumt'S. Yo u II marvel al the sk il l
!hanks to alii he Dress-A-Doll"' peop le.
in our history . This means that with these industries and business without curtailed traffic, until
~nrl 1111ag1na11on o l lhl' wonderfu l Drl'ss-A- Doll
• rRII.DCMARI( @ Copyrighl197l by Rich~rt! S1ebhi n1 and .-.~~oc i ~ tcs, Inc
Gallia County will grow, giving job opportunities to our young the winter has passed.
Officials said there are no
people and keeping them home .
If we let outsiders, such as U.A.W. tell us how to live our plans to paint the bridge with
:ives, there will not be any more plants want to come to our area paint to kill birds roosting
there, but will keep it under
and we may lose what we have.
Robbins and Myers has proved itself to be fair and-honest study. Several complaints have
been lodged concerning the '
with their employees.
POMEROY. OHIO
thouSands of birds that perch
We do not need a union at Robbins and Myers.
Member or Federal Reserve System
Let us, the employees, make ourselves the winners and meet there daily in season.
On Fridays Our Orin-In Wl~ow Is Optnf1 . ~.1o7 p. m, CC0nttrwoustyl.
our company half way.
S20,000Mixlmum lnsuranc• For Each Otpositor
Vote no on December U. .

SINGER

The Fabric Shop

I

Apollo

I

GOOD BUY .FROM

I

PREMIER

Proctor No. 20612

SILEX
TOASTER

lAKER'S

Otto Harding
Died Saturday

Oui~t

all the features

Mrs. Lena ·Baer died Tuesday
Mrs. Lena Baer, 83, Forest
Run, died Tuesday evening at
her home. A charter member
of the Forest Run Methodist
Church, Mrs. Baer is survived
by two daughters, Helen
Frances Baer, at home, and
Mrs. Mary Kathryn Roush,
Minersville Route 1; three
grandchildren, and seven
great-grandchildren.
Mrs. Baer was preceded in

death by her parents, Lowell
and Mary Fisher Rhodes ; .her
husband, Jacob, in 1971, and
two brothers.
Funeral services will be held
at 1:30 p. m. Friday at the
Ewing Funeral Home with the
Rev. Wendell Stutler officiating. Burial will be in
Gilmore Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
anytime.
'

HECK'S REG. '9.96

FURNITURE
0.

Worms roll~ and coffee ot the iome
ti_me and, has a .cleor , easy to r~tad

WIC350

$16.96

PURR UNTANGLER

ELECTRIC KNIFE

TAPE RECORDER

Nt'"'l Op.~ hondle fgr raw of aper ~:&gt;~Dn . Ideal lor ri;~! 1:01 IIIII ~anii•U ""G · ' "~hul·
l!ln ~d. ejeclion. S!glflleuliHI blodt1 lot ~ IOftly in pl~:&gt;ct . f inver · ~p on · ~:&gt;lt • ...,,,0 1
tlu11on. Hto....,.·dur, MO I(H lor uho po.. .,. hoyli!ull, b..lonud .

$699

14

5

HECK'S REG. ~8.99

88

HECK'S REG. $17.96

JIWII.r DfiiT.

44

'

HECK'S REG.

•39,96
JEWil•r
DII'T.
SOUNDESIGN
AM·FM

GENERAL ELECTRIC

CASSETTE 8ECORDER

G. E. AM-FM

CLOCK RADIO

$21"

e Automatic end of tope ·,hvtoH • Slide·o·
malic T·bor function control • Separate re·

cord lock bv"on • Jocks for mike, earphone
and outo and AC adopter e Remote coolrol
pencil type dynamic microphone and cassette
included

. . .'

$2]88

,,

HECK'S REG. $27.96

•

PERWlATOR

JEWs.•r111'1.

MISf HAIR SETTER

TABLE RADIO
SJ577

$888

I

No. 313
REALTONE

$18.88

All. the ice you need ot the fliP of o
sw1 1ch. Separate ict contoiner for
easy

$34.96

Cube Radio
Heck's Reg. '9.88

POLAROID

SQUARE SHOOTER II

HOT POT
Heck's Reg. 2.77
1

Heck's
Reg. 122.88

Midland
AM Digital

RADIO
Heck's Reg. 123.88

G. E. PERCOLATOR

. . .,., . . .. . .. . . $1 oar

dtllcioi11 cefJH, ""ncty br ...
ll~r 1o odivJI ''''~ of
c.HM. fal~ ·lo-•tod ,..,,kir~t•
Oltldtr """'"" t.llt hrlw PI\IIC~

...........

WAFFLE BAKER
&amp;SANDWICH GRILL
""*"

HECK'S REG
e
$12.96

'•..-.1

VANWYCK

CHROME

MIXER
10 Spttds, lcmg, btvh lfll&lt;, MI.*'!, wh;pt, IJIWifle,
cab IIII!IM. c...., pf..miu1, foloh , •lir1. o\\lfO!IIOii(

....

.

LBX

Double Burner

Remington
RAZOR

HOT PLATE ·
Heck's Reg. 18.99

Heck's Reg. 123.99

saaa

bteftr ffitotf . fioerfip conlrol, twill po-'vl ..__

~~.~,,.,

G44T

HECK'SIIG.
$14.96

.,..,,,.,.

KEITH 'GOBLE FORD
USED CAR LOT
Ml"dleport
I

.

'l

·'

G.E. POWER SPRAY
STEAM IRON

JIWillr DfiiT.

6 delkHwl ~1 -Gfi111 soncfwkha, h!ltllb\ltl'fl, ~....- fr'-• bocan
ortd ~ ond olhtr 'YPt' of footk· Gtooerel !ltcttk O.UW. ,....,. 511&lt;~ C.-ling on grid•
kfflK looch 11'0111 lll(•lflt - ollo••" eaoy c~llin9-Aiml-tic ll9nulllrelrt llldicom .,heft
W&lt;rlflt1 Ofl 'feldy l!lw ...
c...tr.ll1 .017,. YM fot b:ok ing woHitt, ll)int 01' grillioov . ;

..

,,,

JIWIUY
HECK'S
REG.
$9.96

HECK'S

Aluminum

88

HECK'S REG.

REG. 10.88

88

HECK'S REG.
$24.96

27

5

ICE CRUSHER

1

~29.96

5 19~

lnslanl·on cirtuitry. Digital leaf typo tiack. 3 Y," widerange speaker. 60-minuto slup switch. llg~ted dock face.
Wake up to music. Built-in AM·FM antennao. Slide rule
lighled tuning dial. Built-in automatic frequency control.
Push bu"on tontrois for AM·FM and manual,
walnut groin sire: 11% "x6"x-4".

HECK'S REG.

IIWilltr D,T,

EMPIRE
32-CUP

DIGITAL CLOCK RADIO

G. E. AM-FM

SCHICK

'1395

'

88

'

HECK'S REG.
$9.96

ONLY

3rd Ave.

. SOUNDESIGN

"''·

CAS SEnE

•

$

2 DOOR

JEWIllY

HECK'S REG.

JIWilltrDfiiT.

Gently untongle1 ho ir in ieconds wet or dry , withowt creme rin5e,
without breaking hoir, without splitting ends.

Heck's Reg.

1970
MAVERICK

1288

5

VANWYCK

BLENDER

Check This One!

HECK'S REG.
$44.96

GILLEnE

Waring 14 Speed

USED CARS

SAME DAY
SERVICE

IN I. 2nd, Pomeroy

MUNSEY
BROILER BAKER

d1o~ for heot seHmg. Prepo"'5 a1 big o
vonety of foods o' the khchtn range.
Het~vy duly rod element,

IIWEUY
Df/IT.

REGAL
POLY
PERC

POSITION FILLED
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio (UP!)
- Dr. William A. Kinnison will
take over the newly created position of vice president for administration at Wittenberg college.
Kinnison, currently vice
president for university affairs, wiD act for the university
president in his absence.
The poaition, recommended
by a task force, will incorpora.te all business and
support functions of the
university in one office.

ON

SHIRT
FINISHING
Ust OUr FI'H Pll'klnt Ul

T~· lC

G. E.

TRIAL IN DOUBT
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI ) .John McClellari, charged ·with
the 1970 killing of a Toledo
policeman, may face trial
again if Lucas County
Prosecutor Harry Friberg is
successful in getting a re-trial
date.
Both of McClellan's previous
trials ended in hung jw:ies.
McClellan Is charged in the
shooting of Patrolman William
Mlscannon in September 1970.

In At 9-0ut At 5

tion.

11e1Jded to make
your house--dean-,

HECK'S
REG.
$29.96

Ida's, Pomeroy

R&amp;M Committee
(Names (12) withheld by request) .

• So lid Sta te Performance • 4-Speed AutomQtic Re-

co rd Changer • Holds Up To Silc Records • Positive
Size Selection • 12", 10", 7" Discs • Repeat Play Op-

$2418

causes delay

The Farmers Bank &amp;Savings Co.

and power·

ing job CtOsier!

Bad weather

-The Dress-A-DoH*doUs are on display.

STEREO PHONOGRAPH

ful. Compo( I for
maneuverability
and equipped with

.

BAKER

G. E.

CANISTER
VACUUIII
CLUMER

--

-·....--·'.·_.:..- - ...

Heck's Reg. 119.96
'

88

�11 - The Daily Sen~inel,Mi~dleport-Pomeroy, o.. Dec. 6, 1872

Two

hospitali~ed

HARTFORD - Two persons
were admitted to Pleasant
Valley Hospital and a third was
treated lor injuries in a tw~ar
collision at 7:15 a. m. today
near Hartford on U. S. 33.
· Rex. E. Roush, 21, Letart,
was admitted with facial
contusions, and Anna Lee
White, 37, Letart, with a
. ·whiplash injury , it was
reported. Both were reported
in "good" condition.
Nancy Nelson , 36, New

.I

after wreck

Total property damages were
Haven, was treated for a time.
estimated
by pollee at ",700; ·
Emergency squad amwhiplash Injury, but was not
admitted. She was a passenger bulances from New Haven and to Ro]ISII's yolk$W!18en, .1,700,
Mason, transpQrted the injured and $500 to Mrs. White's sedan.
in the white car.
· Shortly after the emergency
to the hospital, ·
Roush was cited for failure to vehicles went throUgh town,
Chief deputy 'sheriff Millard
Halstead, who investigated, have vehicle under control. another siren was soWlde&lt;l on·
an Ohio emergency ·vehicle
identified the drive(s as Rex E.
bringing Evelyn Scarberry, 37,
Roush and Anna·Lee White. He
Rt. l, Sherman, Ohio,_ to
Pleasant Valley Hospital
said Roush and Mrs. White
Discharges:
Floyd
Taylor,
Pleasant Valley ·Hospital for
were traveling south on Route
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Charles treatment of facta! contusions
33, when she stopped to make a
Paxton, Gallipolis; Myrt
left turn into Sliding Hill Road, RoiUQS, Leon ; Cynthia Van- received atound 8 a. m. in a
and Roush could not stop in Meter, Mason;· Mrs. David mishap at Rio Grande. She was
treated and released.
AtkinS!&gt;n, Henderson ; Lottie
Wilfong, R, HarUey, Point
Pleasant; Richard Denney,
Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs. Loman
Now! l.af. lt Away
each 2. High scorer for Point Jones, Point Pleasant; Mrs. ' .
Wayne Capehart, New Haven.;.
was Jay Withers with 13.
Richard
~Ieider,
Point
Meigs vs. Eastern at Middleport was won by Meigs BB, Pleasant.
Births: December 3, a
. 39 to 20. For Meigs, Brinley
Sewin_t. M~i~.e
Seth and Ronald Coares each daughter to Mr. and Mrs.
For Christmas '72
had 10, Tim Scites 8, Lonnie David.Fetty, Point Pleasant; a
Small deiJOSII will hold.
Taylor 6, Tim Thomas 3, arid daughter to Mr. ·and Mrs.
Mark Gilkey 2. High Scorer for Roger McGuire, Patriot, Ohio.
Eastern was J. Kuhn with 6. December 5, a son to Mr. and
. .
.
Meigs 7B won 36-26 over Mrs. Olaf Thomas, Point
115 W. Second
992-2284
Easrern. For Meigs, Randy Pleasant, and a son to Mr. and
POMEROY, OHiO
Marshall had 10, Kevin Mrs. Carl Thacker, Ashton.
Yeauger 8, Ron Casci 7, Brent
Arnold 4, Mike Lavendar 3,
Tim Coates and Blaine Qualls 2
each: High scorer for Eastern
~NOTHER
was E. Johnson with 15.

Meigs juniors win 3, lose I

Meigs junior high basketball
. games on Tuesday at Pt.
Pleasant and at home resulted
In three wins and one loss.
..
Meigs SA won 37 to 35 at
.'
Point Pleasant. For Meigs,
Greg Browning had 13, Steve
Randolph and Tom Walters 5
presentation
at
7:30.
Taking
part
in
the
skit
are,
front,
I
to
r,
MEMBERS OF TilE WAHAMA HIGH SCHOOL
each, Allen Stewart and Brian
Teka Dewhurst, Mary Fox, Harriet Thompson, Terry Oliver,
Sophomore Class will present "The Morning After" al the
Hamilton, 4 each, Mark
Greg camp and DwainRussell; back row, Brenda Campbell,
Haggerty 3, Jeff Beaver 2, and
Achievement Variety Show at Wahama High School ThurCharlotte
Edwards
and
Jennifer
Oldaker.
The
show
is
Crenson
Pratt I. High scorer
sday in a matinee performance at I p. m. and an evening
sponsored by the Waharna Student Council.
for Point was Rocky Goodnite
with 16.
Meigs 7A lost to Point
(:;::::::;:,:,g::):S!.!l'&amp;.:WW.:®'~::!f.&lt;
Pleasant 35 to :w. For Meigs,
--------------------------~
Letters of opinion are welcomed. They should be Jess I
Kelly Winebrenner led with 10,
ALL ARE DEAD
1 than300 words long (or be subject to reduction by the editor)
Chuck Follrod 8, Gene Halley
BAYBORO, S.C. (UP!) 1 and must be slgued with the slguee's address. Names may be 1 A miUiary transport plane
(Continued from Page I) .~ and Steve Schneider each 6,
withheld upon publlcatloo, but wiD be revealed on request. 1 carrying 12 crewmen and a
launch hour. The weathermen Brent Stanley and Greg Witte
Lelte~s should be In good taste, addresolog Issues, not per· 1 jet fighter with a lone oc·
said that unseasonable warm,
sonalilles. ·
! cupanl collided In Dlght and moist air would keep tempera·
IT'S CHICKEN
I ., exploded, apparently lures in the middle 70s for the
RACINE '- Fried chicken
I carrying all13to their death, laWJch.
will be served following the
I officials repqrted today.
regular .meeting of Racine
School children in Brevard
I
The accident happened
American Legion Post 602
I about 7:30 p.m. Tuesday County were ordered sent
Thursday night.
I over the coastal swamps home at midday so that school
Otto
Franklin
Harding,
00,
I near this small community, buses would not have to tangle
with the growing traffic push . 1507 Flora Lee Drive, Leeslocated
about
26
miles
north·
MARRIAGE LICENSE
burg ,, Fla., died Saturday
Big question to be answered
All
was
quiet
at
launch
comwest of Myrtle Beach.
Jimmy Lambert, 23, and
Dec. 5, 1972
plex 39, where the Saturn 5 night. Mr. Harding, born in Annett~! Kay Collins, 20, both of
Lyndon, Kan., moved to Leesrocket and its spacecraft modDear Sir:
burg
seven years ago following Rutland Roure 1.
The big question at Robbins and Myers Plant is soon to be
ules stood poised, awaiting the retirement. He was a member
answered.
.
start of the finai hours of the of the Methodist Church. He is
The employees at Robbins and Myers must stop and give a
countdown.
survived by his widow, the
great deal of thought to the way they vote Dec. 14. We cannot let
former Grace McMaster of
BUILDING PLANS
ourselves be influenced by a lot of false statements, "such as the
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Indus- Middleport, a resident of Meigs
U.A.W. makes in their newsgrams."
County 35 years, and a stepPT. PLEASANT - In- trial Nucleonics Corp. plans a daughll!r, Mrs. Alyce Quinlin
As employees at Robbins and Myers, we know the
$6 million building expansion
statements the U.A.W. has made about the working conditions, clement weather apparenUy which will provide 300 new jobs of Can'ton, Ohio.
Save 20 to 40%
!reabnent of the employees and favoritism among employees has caused a few days delay in when construction is comFuneral services and incompletion
of
the
Shadle
Before Christmas
are false.
terment were held Tuesday in
pleted next November.
In our past experience at work we've found our·supervisors Bridge painUng project for this
James E. Reider, vice presi- Leesburg WJder direction of the
SEE OUR AD
and plant manager to be fair and honest In dealing with us. The season. Workmen were back at dent and general manager, Beyers Funeral Home.
. Middleport,
THURSDAY'S SENTINEL
Thursday,
but
not
for
long.
it
most they have ever asked of us, is that we do our jobs to the best
said
a
six-story
office
building
Roger Wood of the West
of our ability. Since Robbins and Myers pays their employees
Virginia Department of High- and tw&lt;HJtory additions for spa~ will double the comgood wages, this is not too much to ask.
ways Tuesday said the con· production and warehouse pany's area.
We would rather work 52 weeks of the year and receive a tractor had two more days of
•
yearly raise and better benefits, than be on strike three or four painting before closing down
months a year.
••
the operation this fall. If clear
Yes, there ~as a time when the labor union was a g09d thing, weather had held, they ex·
but because of their unrellliOnable demands, companies have peeled to complete the painting
found It hard to stay in operation.
today.
It has not been many years ago that when a young person
_A ll the D ress-A-Do ll. dt&gt;ll s ,Hf;' in our lohhy now,
participants who crea ted th is glo ri ous pageant.
A third day will be used for
would graduate from our high schools in Gallia County, they removing cables suspended on
d isplayed 111 all_ the1 r_l1nery tor you to pnjoy. A
Come in now. A•nd remember th ai eac h doll will
would have to look away from home for jobs with a future.
the super structure, then the
IJe.lutllu l co ll ect 1on otd olls !n ,1 v.lriL•Iy of unique
be a happy Ch ri slmas gift to some needy child;
Now we have the greatest industrial and business expansion bridge will remain open,
. ~nd colorful cos iumt'S. Yo u II marvel al the sk il l
!hanks to alii he Dress-A-Doll"' peop le.
in our history . This means that with these industries and business without curtailed traffic, until
~nrl 1111ag1na11on o l lhl' wonderfu l Drl'ss-A- Doll
• rRII.DCMARI( @ Copyrighl197l by Rich~rt! S1ebhi n1 and .-.~~oc i ~ tcs, Inc
Gallia County will grow, giving job opportunities to our young the winter has passed.
Officials said there are no
people and keeping them home .
If we let outsiders, such as U.A.W. tell us how to live our plans to paint the bridge with
:ives, there will not be any more plants want to come to our area paint to kill birds roosting
there, but will keep it under
and we may lose what we have.
Robbins and Myers has proved itself to be fair and-honest study. Several complaints have
been lodged concerning the '
with their employees.
POMEROY. OHIO
thouSands of birds that perch
We do not need a union at Robbins and Myers.
Member or Federal Reserve System
Let us, the employees, make ourselves the winners and meet there daily in season.
On Fridays Our Orin-In Wl~ow Is Optnf1 . ~.1o7 p. m, CC0nttrwoustyl.
our company half way.
S20,000Mixlmum lnsuranc• For Each Otpositor
Vote no on December U. .

SINGER

The Fabric Shop

I

Apollo

I

GOOD BUY .FROM

I

PREMIER

Proctor No. 20612

SILEX
TOASTER

lAKER'S

Otto Harding
Died Saturday

Oui~t

all the features

Mrs. Lena ·Baer died Tuesday
Mrs. Lena Baer, 83, Forest
Run, died Tuesday evening at
her home. A charter member
of the Forest Run Methodist
Church, Mrs. Baer is survived
by two daughters, Helen
Frances Baer, at home, and
Mrs. Mary Kathryn Roush,
Minersville Route 1; three
grandchildren, and seven
great-grandchildren.
Mrs. Baer was preceded in

death by her parents, Lowell
and Mary Fisher Rhodes ; .her
husband, Jacob, in 1971, and
two brothers.
Funeral services will be held
at 1:30 p. m. Friday at the
Ewing Funeral Home with the
Rev. Wendell Stutler officiating. Burial will be in
Gilmore Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
anytime.
'

HECK'S REG. '9.96

FURNITURE
0.

Worms roll~ and coffee ot the iome
ti_me and, has a .cleor , easy to r~tad

WIC350

$16.96

PURR UNTANGLER

ELECTRIC KNIFE

TAPE RECORDER

Nt'"'l Op.~ hondle fgr raw of aper ~:&gt;~Dn . Ideal lor ri;~! 1:01 IIIII ~anii•U ""G · ' "~hul·
l!ln ~d. ejeclion. S!glflleuliHI blodt1 lot ~ IOftly in pl~:&gt;ct . f inver · ~p on · ~:&gt;lt • ...,,,0 1
tlu11on. Hto....,.·dur, MO I(H lor uho po.. .,. hoyli!ull, b..lonud .

$699

14

5

HECK'S REG. ~8.99

88

HECK'S REG. $17.96

JIWII.r DfiiT.

44

'

HECK'S REG.

•39,96
JEWil•r
DII'T.
SOUNDESIGN
AM·FM

GENERAL ELECTRIC

CASSETTE 8ECORDER

G. E. AM-FM

CLOCK RADIO

$21"

e Automatic end of tope ·,hvtoH • Slide·o·
malic T·bor function control • Separate re·

cord lock bv"on • Jocks for mike, earphone
and outo and AC adopter e Remote coolrol
pencil type dynamic microphone and cassette
included

. . .'

$2]88

,,

HECK'S REG. $27.96

•

PERWlATOR

JEWs.•r111'1.

MISf HAIR SETTER

TABLE RADIO
SJ577

$888

I

No. 313
REALTONE

$18.88

All. the ice you need ot the fliP of o
sw1 1ch. Separate ict contoiner for
easy

$34.96

Cube Radio
Heck's Reg. '9.88

POLAROID

SQUARE SHOOTER II

HOT POT
Heck's Reg. 2.77
1

Heck's
Reg. 122.88

Midland
AM Digital

RADIO
Heck's Reg. 123.88

G. E. PERCOLATOR

. . .,., . . .. . .. . . $1 oar

dtllcioi11 cefJH, ""ncty br ...
ll~r 1o odivJI ''''~ of
c.HM. fal~ ·lo-•tod ,..,,kir~t•
Oltldtr """'"" t.llt hrlw PI\IIC~

...........

WAFFLE BAKER
&amp;SANDWICH GRILL
""*"

HECK'S REG
e
$12.96

'•..-.1

VANWYCK

CHROME

MIXER
10 Spttds, lcmg, btvh lfll&lt;, MI.*'!, wh;pt, IJIWifle,
cab IIII!IM. c...., pf..miu1, foloh , •lir1. o\\lfO!IIOii(

....

.

LBX

Double Burner

Remington
RAZOR

HOT PLATE ·
Heck's Reg. 18.99

Heck's Reg. 123.99

saaa

bteftr ffitotf . fioerfip conlrol, twill po-'vl ..__

~~.~,,.,

G44T

HECK'SIIG.
$14.96

.,..,,,.,.

KEITH 'GOBLE FORD
USED CAR LOT
Ml"dleport
I

.

'l

·'

G.E. POWER SPRAY
STEAM IRON

JIWillr DfiiT.

6 delkHwl ~1 -Gfi111 soncfwkha, h!ltllb\ltl'fl, ~....- fr'-• bocan
ortd ~ ond olhtr 'YPt' of footk· Gtooerel !ltcttk O.UW. ,....,. 511&lt;~ C.-ling on grid•
kfflK looch 11'0111 lll(•lflt - ollo••" eaoy c~llin9-Aiml-tic ll9nulllrelrt llldicom .,heft
W&lt;rlflt1 Ofl 'feldy l!lw ...
c...tr.ll1 .017,. YM fot b:ok ing woHitt, ll)int 01' grillioov . ;

..

,,,

JIWIUY
HECK'S
REG.
$9.96

HECK'S

Aluminum

88

HECK'S REG.

REG. 10.88

88

HECK'S REG.
$24.96

27

5

ICE CRUSHER

1

~29.96

5 19~

lnslanl·on cirtuitry. Digital leaf typo tiack. 3 Y," widerange speaker. 60-minuto slup switch. llg~ted dock face.
Wake up to music. Built-in AM·FM antennao. Slide rule
lighled tuning dial. Built-in automatic frequency control.
Push bu"on tontrois for AM·FM and manual,
walnut groin sire: 11% "x6"x-4".

HECK'S REG.

IIWilltr D,T,

EMPIRE
32-CUP

DIGITAL CLOCK RADIO

G. E. AM-FM

SCHICK

'1395

'

88

'

HECK'S REG.
$9.96

ONLY

3rd Ave.

. SOUNDESIGN

"''·

CAS SEnE

•

$

2 DOOR

JEWIllY

HECK'S REG.

JIWilltrDfiiT.

Gently untongle1 ho ir in ieconds wet or dry , withowt creme rin5e,
without breaking hoir, without splitting ends.

Heck's Reg.

1970
MAVERICK

1288

5

VANWYCK

BLENDER

Check This One!

HECK'S REG.
$44.96

GILLEnE

Waring 14 Speed

USED CARS

SAME DAY
SERVICE

IN I. 2nd, Pomeroy

MUNSEY
BROILER BAKER

d1o~ for heot seHmg. Prepo"'5 a1 big o
vonety of foods o' the khchtn range.
Het~vy duly rod element,

IIWEUY
Df/IT.

REGAL
POLY
PERC

POSITION FILLED
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio (UP!)
- Dr. William A. Kinnison will
take over the newly created position of vice president for administration at Wittenberg college.
Kinnison, currently vice
president for university affairs, wiD act for the university
president in his absence.
The poaition, recommended
by a task force, will incorpora.te all business and
support functions of the
university in one office.

ON

SHIRT
FINISHING
Ust OUr FI'H Pll'klnt Ul

T~· lC

G. E.

TRIAL IN DOUBT
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI ) .John McClellari, charged ·with
the 1970 killing of a Toledo
policeman, may face trial
again if Lucas County
Prosecutor Harry Friberg is
successful in getting a re-trial
date.
Both of McClellan's previous
trials ended in hung jw:ies.
McClellan Is charged in the
shooting of Patrolman William
Mlscannon in September 1970.

In At 9-0ut At 5

tion.

11e1Jded to make
your house--dean-,

HECK'S
REG.
$29.96

Ida's, Pomeroy

R&amp;M Committee
(Names (12) withheld by request) .

• So lid Sta te Performance • 4-Speed AutomQtic Re-

co rd Changer • Holds Up To Silc Records • Positive
Size Selection • 12", 10", 7" Discs • Repeat Play Op-

$2418

causes delay

The Farmers Bank &amp;Savings Co.

and power·

ing job CtOsier!

Bad weather

-The Dress-A-DoH*doUs are on display.

STEREO PHONOGRAPH

ful. Compo( I for
maneuverability
and equipped with

.

BAKER

G. E.

CANISTER
VACUUIII
CLUMER

--

-·....--·'.·_.:..- - ...

Heck's Reg. 119.96
'

88

�.

.

..

.

'

.•

.' .

'\

.

..

..
. '

'

12 - .The Dally Sentinel,Mlddleport·P&lt;meroy, 0., Dec. 6,1972

.......,

......,

OPIIIUJ
9:30 TO 9

9:30 T0 .9

.

OPEII DAILY
• 9:30 TO 9 ·

9-.30 TO 9 .
r'

SUIIDAY

HAVOLINE
ROBERK
CAR ANTENNA
COMPLETE WITH LEAD WIRE
Easy 1o insta ll. Idea l for the econ·
omy-minded person.

MOTOR OIL

The LUBRI MATIC Lever Gun-is
the standard of the industry.

.1 0W40

Load s. w i t~ a cartridge, or

Pi&lt;k·up panel .and small
truck mirror provid~
better, safer rear traffic

bul_k grease·.

viewing! ' Fully adjusta ·

• All TEMPERATURE PREMIUM .

\

·

'

QUART

HECK'S REG.
$2.99 .

sot

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.

591

3

3PAKFUSEES

PRESTONE

SEALER
STOP LEAK

For protection on the high ·

ways in day or night. A must
for any highway emergency.

•

HI-TEMP

IC11~

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG. 74' EACH

99(
'

• I

A11Tti11DTWI,T. ' '

HECK'S REG . $7.44

TOYDII'T.

DOLL HOUSE

MaOe1 unique condlet ot •o•r"'ll &lt;~mbumr•onl ol '"~
•hope unU calor • ~ lb• .,.0 , • ( •&lt;h.tl••• melltng pol
with \..,o 'PUUh • Pat h~d~r • :r,,,_M mold laom1 . 18"
1&gt;01k o l l~oU care onU bro1ded wrdun g • Wod· rod •
s;, lcblell al Mn 10"' coi~""Q • r.. ~f&gt;O&lt;h of reo. r•l
l..w ond blue • SnndoiwooU l&lt; f' ~ t • :.&gt;4 po~ ~ rllu1 lrotod

$466

$5.28

HECK'S REG. 6.44

HECK'S REG. $7.66

TOY DEPT.

TOY DEPT.

TONKA

PLAYSKOOL

LITTLE DAPPER DA

ALLIGATOR OR DUNE

OR DRESSY BESSY

BU~GY

59

00

HECK'S REG.
89 1
AITDIMinW IJIIT. .

EACH
HECK'~ REG. TO $4.28

TOY /JEI'T.

25 LIGHT TREE LIGHT SET
I

,._

..

C-7 1/J

'

3 STYLES
CHOICE

$199
,
EACH

HECK'S REG •
$4.28

HECK'S REG. $3 . 12

TDYIIEPT.

TtiYDE,.

SIZE

·- ·
..... .

· ;:

"MITRE BOX

GALVANIZED

STANLEY

GARBAGE
CAN
$166

8-POINT

HANDSAW
The perfect all around saw lor the home ·
owner or occasional hobbyist.

$299
HECK'S REG. $4.18

HECK'S REG. '2.66

fT'!\
STANLEY

STANLEY

POCKET SURFORM

PLANE SURFORM
File Type, &lt;uts Faster Than Metal File or Wood

Po&lt;ket Style- For One-Hand Use.

Rasp

$144

$]22

'

· f4ECK'S REG. $2.00

HECK'S REG. $4.92

STANLEY

IUgkl all metal Mitre Box can be used with ':lither a back or
panel saw, A sliding key secures saw guide at proper angle
as well as depth Of cut. Saw guide is easily and quickly M!f at
90, 60, ~.5 and 30 degrees. One adjusting Krew provides
propir tension lor 1awt of different lttickneu. Bose is pro vid·
ed with bolt tlots for m0t1nting to bench.

CARPENtERS

s3aa

SQUARE

$1'66

HECK'S REG. $3.9?

$544

HECK'S REG.

BALLS

CHOICE

$8.~3

,.,

.

the discriminating handyman. The H1297 level
features three "360" T. M. vials, two plumb, one
level; each protected with dustaproof vial covers.

,$2"

HECK'S REG. $6.53

IA,.WAif 1111.

2•/c" GLASS TREE ORNAMENTS
9 PIECES e ASSORTED STYLES

66\ACH
HECK'S lEG. 84'

SAWHORSE
BRACKET

STANLEY
12 FOOT

•

POWIRLOCK

TAPE

For use with standard 2by 41umber. Holes
for screws or nails provide for permanent
construction.

SET OF TWO

$266

$l44

HECK'S REG.
$3.78

HECK'S REG. $3.50

•

STANLEY

160Z.

fDYDEI'T.

50 LIGHT MIIIIIATURE TIEELIGHT
SET WITH 5 WA YFLASHEI .
SO.lite, 5-Way Twinkling Aelion. 2 Spore 8ulb1- l Flasher and 1 Reg.
impro ved heavy duly bran p rong plug , heovy duty locke t and im·

HAMMER

Design permits blade to be held in
usual manner or at a.n angle for use
as a scraper. Lightweigltt aluminum
handt. is in two sections- provides
blade storage. Furnished with No.
1991 blades.

'High &lt;arbon s'"l hood with
baked enamel finish and pol·
ished bell face. Straight grain
hi&lt;kory handle la&lt;quered .
Available with curved dow
and ripping dow.
'

$188
HECK'S REG. $2.59

~1
ll.'
-,
&lt;

.

.

1

·. ~
....

HECK'S RIG. $21,77

TOY /JEI'T.
METAL

CHRISTMAS TREE STAND

CHRISTMAS
GIFTWRAP
5 ROLL PACKAGE

HECK'S REG . 94'

26"x280" PAPER
OR
26"x 135 " FOIL

TOT DEPT.

CHOICE

16i' WREATHS

18" 275 STRAND

e 2 STYLES

HECK'SREG. $2 .22

TDY/JEPT.

--------------1
TDYDEI'T.

TtiYIIIT.

-----·1112•P.AC~K------- · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - JUMBO CHRISTMAS BOV(S

CHOICE

$1~~

HECK'S REG. 24' EACH

HECK'S REG. $2.66

35 LIGHT MINIATURE TWIIIIKLE
TREE LIGHT SETS

HECK'S REG . $1.24

TDY/JEPT.

32" LIFE SIZE

SNOWMAN OR
SANTA
Hiolily decorated with li le·like ltotur 1.

DELUXE GARLAND

~:.~~~~~;b',~;;:;(~~~~·,.~~.~~~~;~i. 'd

4 ,x 25 , GOLD OR SILVER

CHOICE

CHOICE
HECK'S REG. $5 .88
HICK'S IIG. 56'

. HECK'SRIG. $1.66

TtiYIIIPT.

.,
/,

TDYDEPT.

SILVER ICICLES

77'-

HICK'SIIG.
$1.05

$399

2 FOR 29(

. $188

UTILITY
'KNIFE

. HERCULES

tree II and and store ·
ble ca rton . Flame re ·

HECK'S REG. $1 .4 7

TtiY.,T. .

STANUY

writeu' Loborotorle~
Inc. • Compht le with

tordant.

77c

CHOICE

prove~ wire ,

'

DEALERS CHOICE GAME

TOYDE,T.

$]99

HECk'S REG. $4.62

tlme, • 5 yeor warran·
ty 011 bronchts, Of'l ly .
Cla u lfied by Under·

PARKER BROS.

HECK'S REG. $1 .38

3 PIECE SET 5 Sh" high
or one 16\i" high
A new level of 'quality for the costacons cious
handyman. Featuring two "360" T. M. vialsone. plumb, one level- in open vial stations; conventent hand holes-attractive, sturdy, popular
level with the do -it-your-selfer. Comes in 24"
length only.

e1 . • leu auemb ly

HECK'S REG . $4.99

TtJY/JE,T.

PLUSH CHRISTMAS
STOCKINGS
.
LEVEL
A new level of quality far lhe professional and

I St ronger .t. . l rod

trH top tonstru ction e
Fewer 1fick-in branch·

ASSORTED COLORS

HECK'S REG.
97'

IAI.WAII

24" ALUMINUM

YIEE

hau li ng vehicle I .

12 PIECES

74~CH

HECK'S REG.

$252

2•h." SATIN

2-STYLES

..

CHIISTMAS

A gionl '" looM·
tng popvlor roo d

TDYIIIIT.

CHRISTMAS PLAQUE

'"{

SCOJCII Pill;.;,

HECK'S REG •
$4.99

.33

TOY /JEI'T.

~

~ ROADMASJER. SE~

13" To iL Fully jointed . Roo,ted, Hoi &lt;,. , . ,
beouty aids.

20 GALLON

l1:}

TOOTSIETOY

BEnY'S BEAUTY
Do ll wears tw o piece stock set &amp;
come~ with c&amp;rT!plete assortment of

..... ~.w~ ..

33 PIECE-SERVICE FOR FOUR

S]!!H

$299

HECKrSREG.
1 1.48

PLASTIC TEA SETS

CHOICE

CHOICE

'

•

A modeoo &lt;on le..,po•or y doll hO Ui f' wr!k ~ &lt;O "'P~Iely fur
ni•hed &lt;On m• S\uu ly llt&lt;l uolorlul ly &lt;lero &lt;oled ln\lde and
our Enll'"""' "d lor tmy "~' d "'"'mbfy Plo\IO&lt; l u.,rrlu• • •I ol
the lalt~ l m~derr• Ue1•911 Woodo• &gt; gnd .Mio• O•t ~;~lolh &lt; , rn
clud,no;~ Iorge bcJ,. ••odo .. r:loo• Of"'"' 11 \o ·· long 11 "'"
high, 11" deep

...

}i?:!"[.. if!

TV

RALLY CAR WAX

BRAKE

ss99.
WOLVERINl

TIJY .11'1.

12 oz.

PRESTONE

FLUID

sealer
atcp
~flO

x5lxl6 1'1"

HECK'S REG. $11.44

'

$100

Nolu •ol wood !rome . Two ~ided c~a l kb oord ,
One side green. the olher block . Si'te- 35 1h

san
'

FOR

FLOOR CHALK BOARD

'1''

Dt~n"l kl ollow r~lld lo pilat ••ol cop!e r ..,;u;.,n,
Po,...rfu1 •pinnin~ 8-incll "IIIOrt octuoll~ prO•id~ oir lilt
and d ri•t! Soh ll 1in'il t un - iMi oQ., .:.nd ourdoo.,r
Throrrle la ll or tlow , . , &amp;un high
di~ IQ.., . ' "'
&lt;..,. lt.e o•t•a,.,ur·~ · ... hirl o .. oy! M occe"o•ie1 •hown
i ndu~' Pa ..trul b1 bot11rhn no r included

Aii'IDIIDTIVI /JilT.

2

REVERSIBU

VERTIBIRD
POWER COPTER

HECK'S REG.
49 1 EACH

lionel proudly inlroduces !he Mighty Sound ol Steam with the Silver Sta r
Here tS tota l ttalism: Hf!Odlight, smoke an d now the sound ol ~leom . The ~; t.
V:' gray engine hov$e~ the power fu l Pullmor motor , the layout is the poplllo r
frgure 8, and forwa rd and re'ferse are con trolled by the t ron ~lorme r .

TDYDEPT.

MATTEL

HECK'S
REG.
$1.22

SILVER STAR ELECTRIC TRAIN SET

S]188

EACH
HECK'S REG, $17.99

HECK'S REG.
$2.44

FOR

SJOO

1277

CAP PISTOL
HOLSTER SET

GUMOUT

,.

$p9

$

No w with total teom conlrol.
con lr o l oll22 rnen and
'""Y plo y I hoy moko .
'!' o~..

SPIRIT OF '76

ONE PINT

GREASE TUBES

NITWT.17.70Z.

88(

CHOICE

YIJIIT.

HECK.'$ REG. $8.99

CARTRIDGE

39( .

CONFERENCE

sass
•

SCOUR

FOOTBALL GAME
AMERICAN OR NATIONAL

HECK'S REG. $10.66

$499

a oz.

TUDOii ELECTRIC

WITH BENCH
HOT PINK·COLORED KEYS. Size
of Piano: 19 Yi" x 151!2 " x 21 ".
Size of Bench 9JA "x 6 \4 "x I J Y2 ''

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.
59 1
MITOMDTIVl IJE,T.

STP
GAS TREATMENT

36- EY ·
PIANO

hie, eXtra IarOe 611 x 11"
head size, completely
ruit and vibratTo-n

$ 66

$177

:I'

PICK-UP TRUCK MIRROR

. '

' ~
I·-.

···~ -~

1

,'~ ('

,

•tJ'

r '

'

HECK'S RIG, $1 ,77

. TtiYMPT.

.' TOYDEI'T.

�..

, .

15- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. 6,1972

"-The Ually :sent mel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., uec. ij, 1972

OPRIAILY
9:30 TO 9 .

OPEIIAILT
9:30 TO 9

OPEIDAI.Y
9:30 TO 9

..

OPEl DAILY
9:30 TC) 9

PRICES IN EFFECT lOW THICOUGH SUNDAY DEC. 10 WHILE QUANTITIES LAST
MEIIIIEII PHOTO CUBE
GIFT ASSORTMENT

HIClUIES,
1.5 01

•~in

broc•• . U
1.~

or . w1ld "'0" . q,.;
or.

b~rni•Md ~!M r ,

7 oz.

GILLETTE
.
SUPER STAll LESS

RIGHT GUARD

BLADES S's

LADIES

DRESS
SHIRTS

SWEATERS

'3''
HECK'S REG. 14.88

Sizes 15 to 17

HECK'S REG.
99 1

HECK'S REG.
79'

COSMEnC
DEPT.

kii tocn.j lh &lt;,ol .. ood• n (Orri •
ino cole, lwo con\ 11'1 poli1h,
two applicoto... t w(l b•~•h• 1
and b~ lhg clo!hl.

· ·77&lt;

c

.

SHOE CARE KIT

DEODORANT

&lt;l he • ""'"'·

HECK'S
REG.
$1.99

~SQUIRE

MENS

,.

HECK'S REG.

COSMETIC
Dl,,

CDSMITK Dl,.

1'1&gt;:.
l'li.... •
.....} ••

99

$6 .99

•

'
'

WilliE RAil

70Z.

BRUT 33

- ""

SPLASH-ON

JERGENS
LOTION ·

• R~G ULAR

e HARD·TO·HOLD

• UNSCENTED

$158
HECK'S REG.

$1.99

BAYER ASPIRIN

1501• .

HAIR SPRAY
130Z.

68c

88&lt;

. HECK'S REG.
99 1

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG. 4.66
1

.·68(

SALT AND PEPPER
SHAKERS

HECK'S REG.
94 1

66

BAKEWARE

•

.SALE

·. '

"~':

COFFEE
CUPS

CHOICE

CHOICE
HECK'S
REG.

for

•

.· ,··.:·

c,~~c Made of f lOO% sanfbrized cotton ,

Availa ble in sizes small, medium, large
a nd extra large, 30- 42.

. . ;, ' i 'i .-( ":· :· . .

;··:"~

...

•

"

I

.

·::"-.

l

'

~

3 GARMENTS IN PACIKUE

..-.....: '

·;:.~:'"' .:.:"

CHOICE

. t

NDfiSIWAIE
IIIPT.

$

' '
',

KROMEX ASSORTMENT
OVAL TRAY, LAZY SUSAN,
ROUND TRAY

., ••

PLASTIC

WESTERN

Denim. Available in slru 29·38.

$599
HECK'S REG. $6.99

eLEMON

IIHSIWAII

$244
HICK'SIIO.
$3.21

..

.,.,,.,
,.
e LEMON

®POLO SHIRT
e 6 TO 2A MONTHS e lONG Sl EEVE

$2.44

e DACRON AND COTTON e ASSORTED PAIIERN5

. MiN'S

DRESS
SOCKS
nylon,

Orion,

banlon material

HICK'S REG.

$2.39

$1.21

IIHSifiAII ""'·

IIHsntAIIIBT.

$2"

11'' TEFLON
GRIDDLE
'

ePOPPY

e GREEN
e LEMON

HICK'S 110.

$3.21 ..

HECK'S REG.
78c PAIR

..,,., '
•r.

$2" '

22

~

..•
"••
.•..
••

$3.21

.
-..••••
••

I LONG SLEEVE

'5.88
ClOTNIM
DEPT..

e GRIPPER

I ASSORTED PATTERNS AND STRIPES

@

BOXER SLACKS

LADIES' FLANNEL

I WOVEN TWil l

e SIZE, 1·2·3·-4
I ASSORTED SCUD COl ORS

. SLEEP GOWNS

CHOICE

$144

AND

Comfortable sleep gowns in long
and waltz length s t y le~ . Available
in prinh and solids !n ~izes small ,
medium, Iorge ond 42 -48 ..

HECK'S REG . TO 1.99

ClOTHING
DEPT.

INTRODUCING
NEW TODDLER

'PAMPERS
SJ19 .

HKIK'S 110.

HECK'S REG •

I SHOULDER I DURENE

SIZE CHART FOR CHI L DR EN'S SHI RTS, PANTS
SIZ E;

AG E
WE IGHT
HEIGHl"

For Babies over 25 lbs.

CLOTHM /JEP~

I

'

'
,,.,.

tt•111 M C 18-t-4 MC t•l VRS
I
2J.Z6
27-29

30-31

lZ•34

•

5

loA VRS ••5 VR S

35·37

3S·38
3t·AO

39"44
41"4]

•

6X/7

5•6VRS

6•7 VR S

45 ... 9

50"5A

4A"-46

.U•AII

$

:, .

•
11

SIZE CHART FOR IN FANTS ' SHI RTS PANTS
, ,

•MO'o~

HECK'S REG.

6·MOS

11•MOS

18-MOS

3-6 M09

I•IZ MOS

IZ-11 MOS

ti•U MOS

$2.88

H~IGHT

25·t7

U·U

30"31

:Jl•U

ClOTHING DEPT.

WE IG Joi T

i•-11

.U·U

17•U

SIZE

AGE

.....

j

!
~
I

•

.......""'
...•
••
hr

•

.•••
.•

-.....

·-...·•

•

l

tate·$1ripei·SOiids and loncies.

&gt;

~&amp;

•

on uylts in polye~ ter-~ni t-ace-

... l;::l

$3.79
ltlSII/Uf. .T.

HICK'S 110.

MEN'S FASHION TIES ·
A.,aflable in regvlor and hook $17&amp;

il 6 TO 2-4 MONTHS e KNIT
• DUREJ:IIE DACRON AND CTION
e ASSORTED SOLID COlORS

e SIZE: 1·2-3--4

2PAIR

$100

BOXER PANTS

{S) POLO SHIRT

all.

•n

I

'

in assorted co lon . One size lib

2QT. TEFLON SAUCE POT
e GREEN

HECK'S

(j)

WELCOME
MAT

e POPPY

elastic woisf . Ftotu rl ng
stitched crease a nd swirl pat·
tern . Assorted colors .

SPORT SHIRTS ·
$188

look sharp th e casua l way wi th
thue· permonl!nt prnt ~part shirU
tha t NEVER NEED IRONING .
Styled with o two bvtton (vff and
regv lor colla r. A&gt;~a i loble In prints
and soli d ~ in 1izes 4, 5 &amp; ·6-16.

IIOISIWAII ,T.

Soft cut ra indrops g i~e ihis 5 pie ce cocktail set .a dis·
1inctiveness all its own- Makes an ideal gift item .

10" TEFLON FRY PAN

Stylis h pull-on knit pants with

IOYS'
PERMANENT
PRESS

ClDTNIN'

ClOTNINfi DEPT.

SET .
•GREeN

Durable jean~ rnode of Hl!avy Sanforized

•••

HECK'S REGULAR
TO 72' EACH

HICK'S lEG.

ePOPPY

JEANS

ICE CUBE TRAYS

sse

HECK'S REG. '2.21

PANTS

LEE

HECK'S REG.

THERMOS

LADIES POLYESTER
DENIM&amp; CORDUROY

RYDER

•322
ALLAD IN 1 PT.

ClOTHING
DEPT.

'

MEN 'S

PACitOF 2

HECK'S REG. •5.66

..

'

$7.88

HECK' S REG.
TO $2 .9 5

'! '

HECK'S
REG. 85'

A. DEEP PIE PLATE WITH CUTTER
B. COOKIE PAN WITH HANDLES
C. ROUND CAKE PAN WITH CUTTER
D. SQUARE CAKE PAN
F. LOAF PAN
F. OBLONCi BISCUIT PAN

HECK'S
REG.

$2~E~ACKICE

iL~f\~'-""~J

"

$2.18

.99

"T'' SHIRTS
BOXER SHORTS
. BRIEFS

.j~,i~\J!t~t'.

·cERAMIC DECORATED

MllOUATCH

\.

•"
•

iloiJSIWAII ,T.

Small, Medium
and large

DERBY
BRAND
UNDERWEAR

·•

~-

.

BODY SUIT

MEN'S

,, '

$16.88

·

tra large . All permanent press
ma te ria l. Sizes: S, M, l , XL

'

HECK'S REG. 18.94

LADIES NYLON

S l eeve~ and available in size s

..

HECK'S REG.

$

small, medium , large, ond ex -

HECK'S REG. s2.99

. ALUMINUM

·ASHTRAYS

' fltllr.

or stripes . Fea turing Bell

'

li /
·'

SPORT SHIRTS
"Spo rt about" in pri nts, solids ,

e SL ACK AN D WHIT E e POP.PY
e GREENe LEMON

/

MEN'SFASHION

','V· .

ASSORTED

'

' .""'-'

DI/IT.

$

'6''

..

'

HECK'S REG. '2.88

Flare legs, color s wine,
grey, brown .. rum .

:~-,:

;,

'177

SLACKS

".;.'

i

SPORT
SHIRTS

7 PC.·DECORATED TEFLON II
COOKWARE.SET

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

CERAMIC

CORDUROY

MENS .,.

CDSMIT/t " "·

Ill HECK'S

0
\

(OSMETit

CDSMITK IIPT.

CDSMITK Dl/11.

LADIES

•

lOO's

$1 .28

'
''

I

..

�,.

...

~

.

.,

\,.

I

'

.
•·
•

17 ~The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport,Pcnteroy, o .• Dec. 6, 1972

IPIIIIAIY

OPEl lAilY

9;30 TO 9

9:30 TO 9

SUIDAY

SUIDAY

'· Eight and Forty Pouvior attended
I

.Mrs. RhO~a Hackett,
chapeau of Meigs County Salon
710, Eight and Forty, Mrs.
M)'l'tle Walker, and Mrs. Mary
Mlrtin were In Columbus over
11ie weekend for the Eight and
f«&lt;J Oepar..,mental Pouvior
at lhe Plck-Ftirt Hayes Ho"'l.
A breakfast was . held
lllarday morning with the
dlrl.tmas theme carried out in
tilt lable decorations. Corsages
Pi-esjln~. to the ~9 part. llers attending, gold for
departemental chapeaux
PQie, red for partners and
p-een for officers.
Distinguished guests
pre&amp;enied were Mrs. Delores
Kilgore, Mansfield, fifth
dlatrlct president; George
Glaub, Columbus, grand correIIPOOdent, Forth and Eight;
Mrs. · Martin, Pomeroy,
national' ·pouvior member and
Area D children and youth

HUNTING
VEST · .
,1400

HECK'S
REG. $~.99

· WIICHESTER

HECK'S REG. l6.99

SAFT-BAC

AUTOMATIC SHOTGUN

• L.ightweight ~ P\,Jh-bvHon relea1e • Tr!plt·lug, r~totino bolthe9d • leu
"9t1cea ble reco1le llustproof, hlgh·ttrength forged aluminum recei'ler. Sk.~ b ·
Jta,tiortl" less opporent rwcoil in o ruggedly built outolooder. Push ·bvtton
odion feleose for in1tant, lumble·lree tood ing. Unique self-compensating
gas 1ysttl.,.. automaticoU)I adjvsh for standard and m'ognum loads. bdu 1ive
front·lo(kin_g, rotolil'lg stee l bolthtad IOt::lu into lfeel barrel , bree~h . Ru,l·
proof, high-strength oluminum reuiVer. Engina·tu rned steel bolt. Solid wol·
nvl 1tock and for•·end. Crcmbolt safeff..

513
COUMAN

DELUIE 2-BURNER
STOVE

HECK'S REG. $144.95

HUNTING
COAT

'14"

$}588

SPRINGFIELD

AUTOMATIC RIFLE

HECK'S REG.
1
17.99

MASON - · The regular the present by giving in unison
monthly meeting of the Uni~ the purpose of United
Methodlat Women was held on Methodist Women. Program
Monday evening in Mason was closed by singing, "They'll
United Methodist Church · Know we 'are Christians by Our
aanctuary. The title of the Love."
program was "Sing unto the
Members of the Clifton
Lord a New Song." Mrs. Fred Charge and New Haven Uni"'d
(Sarah) S!Ji!ncer was program Methodist Church were guests.
leader.
Among those attending were
The group. celebrated the Mrs. Howard Burris, Mrs.
offlclal changl~g of tlle name of Charles Weaver, Mrs . Harold
Women's Society of Christian Bumgarner, Mrs. Ollie Roush,
Service to Uni~ Methodist Bess K. Smith, Mrs. Roy Test,
Women. Af"'r the call to "Mrs. Ray Proffitt, Mrs.
worship, the group .sang, Clarence McCloud, Mrs. John
"Joyful, Joyful We Adore Chattin, Mrs. Smith, Mrs .
Thee." A.li'members answet€d · Dorothy Cartwright, Mrs.
the que8tlons, Who are you?, Charles Yeager, Mrs. Lester
and what are you doing here? Zerkle,
Miss
Esther
Wtthdlfferent members taking MacKnight, Mrs . Margaret
a part In remembering. tlle Pickens, Mrs. Roy Harless,
past. After .first looking to the .Mrs. Howard VanMatre, Mrs.
:;crtpture for h-ope for the Dallas Walker, Mrs. Clarence
tuture, some of the members Baier, Mrs. Reuben Stewart,
pve their ideas of hope for.lhe Mrs. Russell Capehart and
future, followed by rejoicing in Mrs. Fred S!Ji!ncer.

HECK'S REG,
$22,99

HECK'S REG. '179,95

COLEMAN
FUEL
GALLON

HECK'5 REG.
$1.39

ATHLETIC
SOCKS
~ ~ 160 ··~

JONES STYLE

HIPWELL

CAMP LANTERN

-HUNTING HAT--.
!

;• T•

"':;··

:....&gt;·

~ .. '~

·.,.~!,

.

I

~_-e-;&lt;.1

~ ~ i~ ~.,. ¢·~

".

'

'

HECK'S RJG. •2.38

HECK'S
REG. ggc

HECK'S REG. $1.99

DAISY PUMP
THERMAL .
COTTON

SC&amp;KS
2 PAIR

B. B. GUN
EVEREADY

Reliable trouble-free pump aclion and
simu:oJted silver engraved receiver. 50
shot automatic feed. Adjustable ramp·
type sights.

Hi.CK'S REG. $17.99

2 "D" CELL

FLASHLIGHT

'

~ctivities
.,

~ MASON - A variety of actlvlliel had been planned for
Mason's United Methodist
Church slarting Dec. 17 when a
Christmas Canatata entitled,
~ 'Love Came Down at Christmas" will be presen~ at 9:45
a.m. 4urlng the morning
worship service dir~c~ by
Mra . . Nolan Swackhamer,
uiltB~ by Mrs. Rliy Proffitt.
Mr. Kay Wilson will serve as
· narrator.
On December 5, church
members and class teachers
pthered at the church for a

•

,....,~- .(

DAISY P.ELLET

HECK'S REG.

OR

$1.08

'

VISITED HERE
.CLIFTON ...:_ Mrs . Ethel
McDermitt of Pompano Beach,
Fla., and her son and family,
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd McDermitt
and lamlly of Parrolton, Ga.
vlllled a week with Mr. and
Mrs. Uoyd Willlams.

88 RIFLE

•

SEAWAY
QUART SIZE

HECK'S
"D" SIZE
BATTERIES

NO. 880

CANTEEN

HECK'S REG. '25.99

Wl'!'H IELT.

.-···

.

HECK 'S llEG.
$3.99

fLASH LiCXI
l&amp;nERY

tuberculosis work. A graduate
nu.rse applying must be be·
tween 23 and 35 years of age,
in teres~ in teaching nursing,
doing administrative work, or
working in the field of tuber. culos is treatment. The

chmrm:u1 i:Jskt.'i.l fur OHJI'l' thi..;

s~u,~ l el. o n.

yeilr than the $905 contribu i·:d nocris of the National Jew ish
by Ohio in 1971-72. She "skerl Hospital in Denver and asked
for a S!Ji!clal fund ra ising for endowment of Ohio's 23rd
project in each peti t Sillon.
bed at a cost of $1 ,000. Among
The cha!Ji!aU annQun ~ed that the pledges was $23 from the
the Ia marc he next year will be M~ igs County Salon by Mrs.
held July 22-23 at the Holiday Hackett, chapeau. Mrs. Martin
lhn West at Maumee.
gave $!), and Mrs. Berkley
, A report on the Area D · presen~ Miss ·Singleton with
Conference on children and . an afghan for a fund ra ising
youth was given by Miss Penny ' project.

2-PIECE

OUTER

RAIN SUIT
' ~

·• .. ' .
(

'j
~'

..•,
'

"

'
I

WINCHESTER

SUPER X·
SHOTGUN
SHELLS

177 Cal
500 cl

WIICHESTER

22 LONG RIFLE

22

AMMO

VISIT IN GJtd'TON
CLIFTON, W. Va.- Charles
and son, Charles, visited
recently with Mrs. Harry Shaw
at Grafton, W. Va. .
·

Miller

Broils!
Bakes!
Fries!
Warms!

**stainless
Steel Sole Plate
UseS Tap Water
*25 Big Steam Ports
*Up Front Qlntrols
* EXtra Large Heel Rest
$

Reg. $16.95
SAVE
•4.07

Model 4018

Model 8668

....- ,

Blends

88

*Mixes
*WhiPS
*Purees
*Diops

•

1 ·at
i

HECK'S REG.

$4.10 '

HECK'S
REG. 97'

HICK'S RIG. $1,.99

I

I

$

.

SAVE $4.07

SOLID STATE
CONTROLS

1

* Extra Long Cord
* Au tom atic:
Sw~ch

* High Volume
Air Flow

potluck dinner. Mrs. Clarence
McCloud, wlfe of the pastor,
was in charge of worship.
Later, teachers of the Sunday
School classes went to their
rooms to decorate them and
the sanctuary for Christmas.
"Hanging of the Green" as it
is called, is a new venture in
this church 's beautification
project for the holidays. Ac·
cording to Mrs. Ray Proffitt, it
is hoped this will be a yearly
project.
FIFTH SON BORN
Ason ~ their fifth - born to
. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Barnitz of
Mason, W. Va., Nov. 29, at the
Holzer Medical Center, has
been named John Michael.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Marmie Me·
Million of Mason and pa..,rnal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
W. 0. Barnitz, Pomeroy. Rufus
Dorsey of Mt. Nebo, W. Va., Ia
a great-grandparent.
In 1933, Americans crowded
in\o liquor stores , bars and
cafes to buy their first legal
alcholic beverage in 13 years.

Ue
SAVE '5.07
* On~ S'h Inches Long
* Self.Qeaning Fan
* Powerful Motor
Complete With Canying Case

$.

*

88

* Instant Speed Selection
King Size Capacity
* No-Tip Power Un~
*Powerful
600 Watt Motor
Reg. '29.95

*

SAVE: .
*Time!
*Water!
* Detergent!
*Space!
*Money!

HERE'S THE WASHER

for apartments
... for mobile
homes
I

REG. s169.00

SAVE 520.00.

'
''
,.

HICK'S REG.

$

3.29

•••

lliiiUWGOe ... lhHt...;._______ Ut
'a liS aal.... ._. ________~

'
j

*
*

HOOVER HANDIVAC
* Powelful Motor
* Lightweight
* New Edge Cleaning
* Throw-Away Bag
Convenient Sw~ch
Perfect For
Quick Pick-ups
Full 1 Yr••Warranty

*
*
*

_ . . . . CIL .... ..,_. ______ ._
IOU lilt! NCAI.td .....,_:_ _ _ _ u t

_,_ . :n........

'.;'

' 1

V 1111 Cll ... M II
IIRACOAIC. W. .............
fliP I T '7 0 Tt 1111111

.. .

'.10

II'

'

~

I'I'Gt.

r ......

88

$

SAVE s10.07

Hoover Shampoo
Polisher

.88 '
SAVE
$10.07

•

~\'\·\\)\)\

~-

.

SEE IT!
TRY IT!
BUY IT!

*Home
*Patio
*Camper
*Car

•Boat
*Office

Reg. 131.95

,__. . . ,;i)
*Scrubs
*Polishes
*Buffs
*Shampoos
*Waxes
REG. $31.95
Model 2910

SAYRE HDWE. &amp; FURN.·

• ...

H0GG &amp; ZUSPAN

Reg. $74.95

Spin-Drying Washer I

......N,.. . . . . . . ....; ____ ""7____..:

,.

· * Power Strub
*Wet Pic~-up
Applies Wax
Shampoos Carpet
* And It Picks Up The
Scrub Water Too!

Hurry!
Limited n ... n+;+;,.,

WASHER 24 LBS. IN
JUST 30 MIN.!

•,

FLOOR·A·MATIC RUG &amp;FLOOR COIDITJIMER

.88

Use It Everywhere!
··:'

Model 3614

NEW~

HOOVER~

Model 8945

SAVE •10.07

* No Sp~ial Plumbing
Required!
* Lightweight~ Rolls
On Casters
*Turbo Action Agitation
*Spate Age Tub

EACH

65(
HICK'S RIG.
$9.60

*Large 12x12 Cooking Surface
* Super Accurate Heal Control
* Two-Pos~ion Broiler Rack
*Warming Tray lnclud!!.d
* Parts Immersible
Reg. 142.95

STAINLESS
STEEL BLADES

HOOVER
HAND HELD
.
HAIR DRYER

Safety

SPECIAL BONUS BUY!
.limited

.

12(

MILK CARTON .
B. B. SHOT

HOOVER BROILER · LID FRY-PAN

THURS., FRIDAY, SAT.
ONLY I

'HOOVER STEAM-DRY IRON

SOOROUIIS

66~

$]99
HECK'S RIG.
$6.99

NATIONAL
PELLETS

history , scrapbook and
memory book. Mrs. Huston
no~ that the history won first
place in Area D with the scrapbook winning second.
Publicity . handbooks were
distributed. Mrs. Martin spoke
briefly bringing greetings !rom
the national organization. Next
pouvior meeting will be held
Feb. 24-25 at the Fort Hayes
Hotel In Columbus. ·

FROM ·

HECK'S REG. 16'

WFS

· Partnership chairman, Mrs.
Edna Miller, reported 989 dues
paid to date , noting that there
are five goal salons out or 41.
Meigs Coun ty with 23 partners
was first. Them~ for this year
is uBusy as a Bee in '73."
A request for prayers for
the Book of Prayer was made
by Mrs. Huston who presented
Mrs. Martin, departemental
chapeau passe, with . he.r

She repor ted on

of church planned""

1

HECK'S
REG. 58'

chairman
of
nurses'
scholarships that the Eight and
Forty during the past 10 years
bas awarded 161 graduate
nurses scholarships or $1,000
or $1,500 . to further their
education ·in nur·sing for

United Methodist women .
met M~nday at the church

.Two Burnen . 11 "
between centers. 3 V2
pint fuel c-:~pacity .

REMINGTON 30.06

chairman.
A processional of the officers
O!Ji!ned the meeting with the
flags being advanced by Mrs.
Reva Cihla, Ia concierge, ,and
Mrs. Donna Paul, Mrs. Donna
Crispin, colorbearers, and
Mrs. Helen Billings and Mrs.
Rae Shode, color guards.
Introduced and bringing
greetings 'were departemental
cha!Ji!aux passe, Mrs. Ann
McCudden, Mrs . Violet ·
Aicbolz, Mrs. Hazel Elliott,
'Mrs. Louisa Kramenbuhl, Mrs.
Anna Krueger, Mrs. Ethel Van
Fossen, MrJi. Elizabeth
Mrs .
Bernice
Gilbert,
Christensen, Mrs . Virginia
Rabe, and Mrs. Mary Martin.
Mrs. Martin and Mrs. Walker
were among those attending
Nationale Marche reporting at
the meeting.
It was reported by the

•

L!~~!_~--~----~--~~1 ----~--------~~=NIW~:HA;V~E:N~,:W~.VfA=·~ ,
)

�,.

...

~

.

.,

\,.

I

'

.
•·
•

17 ~The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport,Pcnteroy, o .• Dec. 6, 1972

IPIIIIAIY

OPEl lAilY

9;30 TO 9

9:30 TO 9

SUIDAY

SUIDAY

'· Eight and Forty Pouvior attended
I

.Mrs. RhO~a Hackett,
chapeau of Meigs County Salon
710, Eight and Forty, Mrs.
M)'l'tle Walker, and Mrs. Mary
Mlrtin were In Columbus over
11ie weekend for the Eight and
f«&lt;J Oepar..,mental Pouvior
at lhe Plck-Ftirt Hayes Ho"'l.
A breakfast was . held
lllarday morning with the
dlrl.tmas theme carried out in
tilt lable decorations. Corsages
Pi-esjln~. to the ~9 part. llers attending, gold for
departemental chapeaux
PQie, red for partners and
p-een for officers.
Distinguished guests
pre&amp;enied were Mrs. Delores
Kilgore, Mansfield, fifth
dlatrlct president; George
Glaub, Columbus, grand correIIPOOdent, Forth and Eight;
Mrs. · Martin, Pomeroy,
national' ·pouvior member and
Area D children and youth

HUNTING
VEST · .
,1400

HECK'S
REG. $~.99

· WIICHESTER

HECK'S REG. l6.99

SAFT-BAC

AUTOMATIC SHOTGUN

• L.ightweight ~ P\,Jh-bvHon relea1e • Tr!plt·lug, r~totino bolthe9d • leu
"9t1cea ble reco1le llustproof, hlgh·ttrength forged aluminum recei'ler. Sk.~ b ·
Jta,tiortl" less opporent rwcoil in o ruggedly built outolooder. Push ·bvtton
odion feleose for in1tant, lumble·lree tood ing. Unique self-compensating
gas 1ysttl.,.. automaticoU)I adjvsh for standard and m'ognum loads. bdu 1ive
front·lo(kin_g, rotolil'lg stee l bolthtad IOt::lu into lfeel barrel , bree~h . Ru,l·
proof, high-strength oluminum reuiVer. Engina·tu rned steel bolt. Solid wol·
nvl 1tock and for•·end. Crcmbolt safeff..

513
COUMAN

DELUIE 2-BURNER
STOVE

HECK'S REG. $144.95

HUNTING
COAT

'14"

$}588

SPRINGFIELD

AUTOMATIC RIFLE

HECK'S REG.
1
17.99

MASON - · The regular the present by giving in unison
monthly meeting of the Uni~ the purpose of United
Methodlat Women was held on Methodist Women. Program
Monday evening in Mason was closed by singing, "They'll
United Methodist Church · Know we 'are Christians by Our
aanctuary. The title of the Love."
program was "Sing unto the
Members of the Clifton
Lord a New Song." Mrs. Fred Charge and New Haven Uni"'d
(Sarah) S!Ji!ncer was program Methodist Church were guests.
leader.
Among those attending were
The group. celebrated the Mrs. Howard Burris, Mrs.
offlclal changl~g of tlle name of Charles Weaver, Mrs . Harold
Women's Society of Christian Bumgarner, Mrs. Ollie Roush,
Service to Uni~ Methodist Bess K. Smith, Mrs. Roy Test,
Women. Af"'r the call to "Mrs. Ray Proffitt, Mrs.
worship, the group .sang, Clarence McCloud, Mrs. John
"Joyful, Joyful We Adore Chattin, Mrs. Smith, Mrs .
Thee." A.li'members answet€d · Dorothy Cartwright, Mrs.
the que8tlons, Who are you?, Charles Yeager, Mrs. Lester
and what are you doing here? Zerkle,
Miss
Esther
Wtthdlfferent members taking MacKnight, Mrs . Margaret
a part In remembering. tlle Pickens, Mrs. Roy Harless,
past. After .first looking to the .Mrs. Howard VanMatre, Mrs.
:;crtpture for h-ope for the Dallas Walker, Mrs. Clarence
tuture, some of the members Baier, Mrs. Reuben Stewart,
pve their ideas of hope for.lhe Mrs. Russell Capehart and
future, followed by rejoicing in Mrs. Fred S!Ji!ncer.

HECK'S REG,
$22,99

HECK'S REG. '179,95

COLEMAN
FUEL
GALLON

HECK'5 REG.
$1.39

ATHLETIC
SOCKS
~ ~ 160 ··~

JONES STYLE

HIPWELL

CAMP LANTERN

-HUNTING HAT--.
!

;• T•

"':;··

:....&gt;·

~ .. '~

·.,.~!,

.

I

~_-e-;&lt;.1

~ ~ i~ ~.,. ¢·~

".

'

'

HECK'S RJG. •2.38

HECK'S
REG. ggc

HECK'S REG. $1.99

DAISY PUMP
THERMAL .
COTTON

SC&amp;KS
2 PAIR

B. B. GUN
EVEREADY

Reliable trouble-free pump aclion and
simu:oJted silver engraved receiver. 50
shot automatic feed. Adjustable ramp·
type sights.

Hi.CK'S REG. $17.99

2 "D" CELL

FLASHLIGHT

'

~ctivities
.,

~ MASON - A variety of actlvlliel had been planned for
Mason's United Methodist
Church slarting Dec. 17 when a
Christmas Canatata entitled,
~ 'Love Came Down at Christmas" will be presen~ at 9:45
a.m. 4urlng the morning
worship service dir~c~ by
Mra . . Nolan Swackhamer,
uiltB~ by Mrs. Rliy Proffitt.
Mr. Kay Wilson will serve as
· narrator.
On December 5, church
members and class teachers
pthered at the church for a

•

,....,~- .(

DAISY P.ELLET

HECK'S REG.

OR

$1.08

'

VISITED HERE
.CLIFTON ...:_ Mrs . Ethel
McDermitt of Pompano Beach,
Fla., and her son and family,
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd McDermitt
and lamlly of Parrolton, Ga.
vlllled a week with Mr. and
Mrs. Uoyd Willlams.

88 RIFLE

•

SEAWAY
QUART SIZE

HECK'S
"D" SIZE
BATTERIES

NO. 880

CANTEEN

HECK'S REG. '25.99

Wl'!'H IELT.

.-···

.

HECK 'S llEG.
$3.99

fLASH LiCXI
l&amp;nERY

tuberculosis work. A graduate
nu.rse applying must be be·
tween 23 and 35 years of age,
in teres~ in teaching nursing,
doing administrative work, or
working in the field of tuber. culos is treatment. The

chmrm:u1 i:Jskt.'i.l fur OHJI'l' thi..;

s~u,~ l el. o n.

yeilr than the $905 contribu i·:d nocris of the National Jew ish
by Ohio in 1971-72. She "skerl Hospital in Denver and asked
for a S!Ji!clal fund ra ising for endowment of Ohio's 23rd
project in each peti t Sillon.
bed at a cost of $1 ,000. Among
The cha!Ji!aU annQun ~ed that the pledges was $23 from the
the Ia marc he next year will be M~ igs County Salon by Mrs.
held July 22-23 at the Holiday Hackett, chapeau. Mrs. Martin
lhn West at Maumee.
gave $!), and Mrs. Berkley
, A report on the Area D · presen~ Miss ·Singleton with
Conference on children and . an afghan for a fund ra ising
youth was given by Miss Penny ' project.

2-PIECE

OUTER

RAIN SUIT
' ~

·• .. ' .
(

'j
~'

..•,
'

"

'
I

WINCHESTER

SUPER X·
SHOTGUN
SHELLS

177 Cal
500 cl

WIICHESTER

22 LONG RIFLE

22

AMMO

VISIT IN GJtd'TON
CLIFTON, W. Va.- Charles
and son, Charles, visited
recently with Mrs. Harry Shaw
at Grafton, W. Va. .
·

Miller

Broils!
Bakes!
Fries!
Warms!

**stainless
Steel Sole Plate
UseS Tap Water
*25 Big Steam Ports
*Up Front Qlntrols
* EXtra Large Heel Rest
$

Reg. $16.95
SAVE
•4.07

Model 4018

Model 8668

....- ,

Blends

88

*Mixes
*WhiPS
*Purees
*Diops

•

1 ·at
i

HECK'S REG.

$4.10 '

HECK'S
REG. 97'

HICK'S RIG. $1,.99

I

I

$

.

SAVE $4.07

SOLID STATE
CONTROLS

1

* Extra Long Cord
* Au tom atic:
Sw~ch

* High Volume
Air Flow

potluck dinner. Mrs. Clarence
McCloud, wlfe of the pastor,
was in charge of worship.
Later, teachers of the Sunday
School classes went to their
rooms to decorate them and
the sanctuary for Christmas.
"Hanging of the Green" as it
is called, is a new venture in
this church 's beautification
project for the holidays. Ac·
cording to Mrs. Ray Proffitt, it
is hoped this will be a yearly
project.
FIFTH SON BORN
Ason ~ their fifth - born to
. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Barnitz of
Mason, W. Va., Nov. 29, at the
Holzer Medical Center, has
been named John Michael.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Marmie Me·
Million of Mason and pa..,rnal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
W. 0. Barnitz, Pomeroy. Rufus
Dorsey of Mt. Nebo, W. Va., Ia
a great-grandparent.
In 1933, Americans crowded
in\o liquor stores , bars and
cafes to buy their first legal
alcholic beverage in 13 years.

Ue
SAVE '5.07
* On~ S'h Inches Long
* Self.Qeaning Fan
* Powerful Motor
Complete With Canying Case

$.

*

88

* Instant Speed Selection
King Size Capacity
* No-Tip Power Un~
*Powerful
600 Watt Motor
Reg. '29.95

*

SAVE: .
*Time!
*Water!
* Detergent!
*Space!
*Money!

HERE'S THE WASHER

for apartments
... for mobile
homes
I

REG. s169.00

SAVE 520.00.

'
''
,.

HICK'S REG.

$

3.29

•••

lliiiUWGOe ... lhHt...;._______ Ut
'a liS aal.... ._. ________~

'
j

*
*

HOOVER HANDIVAC
* Powelful Motor
* Lightweight
* New Edge Cleaning
* Throw-Away Bag
Convenient Sw~ch
Perfect For
Quick Pick-ups
Full 1 Yr••Warranty

*
*
*

_ . . . . CIL .... ..,_. ______ ._
IOU lilt! NCAI.td .....,_:_ _ _ _ u t

_,_ . :n........

'.;'

' 1

V 1111 Cll ... M II
IIRACOAIC. W. .............
fliP I T '7 0 Tt 1111111

.. .

'.10

II'

'

~

I'I'Gt.

r ......

88

$

SAVE s10.07

Hoover Shampoo
Polisher

.88 '
SAVE
$10.07

•

~\'\·\\)\)\

~-

.

SEE IT!
TRY IT!
BUY IT!

*Home
*Patio
*Camper
*Car

•Boat
*Office

Reg. 131.95

,__. . . ,;i)
*Scrubs
*Polishes
*Buffs
*Shampoos
*Waxes
REG. $31.95
Model 2910

SAYRE HDWE. &amp; FURN.·

• ...

H0GG &amp; ZUSPAN

Reg. $74.95

Spin-Drying Washer I

......N,.. . . . . . . ....; ____ ""7____..:

,.

· * Power Strub
*Wet Pic~-up
Applies Wax
Shampoos Carpet
* And It Picks Up The
Scrub Water Too!

Hurry!
Limited n ... n+;+;,.,

WASHER 24 LBS. IN
JUST 30 MIN.!

•,

FLOOR·A·MATIC RUG &amp;FLOOR COIDITJIMER

.88

Use It Everywhere!
··:'

Model 3614

NEW~

HOOVER~

Model 8945

SAVE •10.07

* No Sp~ial Plumbing
Required!
* Lightweight~ Rolls
On Casters
*Turbo Action Agitation
*Spate Age Tub

EACH

65(
HICK'S RIG.
$9.60

*Large 12x12 Cooking Surface
* Super Accurate Heal Control
* Two-Pos~ion Broiler Rack
*Warming Tray lnclud!!.d
* Parts Immersible
Reg. 142.95

STAINLESS
STEEL BLADES

HOOVER
HAND HELD
.
HAIR DRYER

Safety

SPECIAL BONUS BUY!
.limited

.

12(

MILK CARTON .
B. B. SHOT

HOOVER BROILER · LID FRY-PAN

THURS., FRIDAY, SAT.
ONLY I

'HOOVER STEAM-DRY IRON

SOOROUIIS

66~

$]99
HECK'S RIG.
$6.99

NATIONAL
PELLETS

history , scrapbook and
memory book. Mrs. Huston
no~ that the history won first
place in Area D with the scrapbook winning second.
Publicity . handbooks were
distributed. Mrs. Martin spoke
briefly bringing greetings !rom
the national organization. Next
pouvior meeting will be held
Feb. 24-25 at the Fort Hayes
Hotel In Columbus. ·

FROM ·

HECK'S REG. 16'

WFS

· Partnership chairman, Mrs.
Edna Miller, reported 989 dues
paid to date , noting that there
are five goal salons out or 41.
Meigs Coun ty with 23 partners
was first. Them~ for this year
is uBusy as a Bee in '73."
A request for prayers for
the Book of Prayer was made
by Mrs. Huston who presented
Mrs. Martin, departemental
chapeau passe, with . he.r

She repor ted on

of church planned""

1

HECK'S
REG. 58'

chairman
of
nurses'
scholarships that the Eight and
Forty during the past 10 years
bas awarded 161 graduate
nurses scholarships or $1,000
or $1,500 . to further their
education ·in nur·sing for

United Methodist women .
met M~nday at the church

.Two Burnen . 11 "
between centers. 3 V2
pint fuel c-:~pacity .

REMINGTON 30.06

chairman.
A processional of the officers
O!Ji!ned the meeting with the
flags being advanced by Mrs.
Reva Cihla, Ia concierge, ,and
Mrs. Donna Paul, Mrs. Donna
Crispin, colorbearers, and
Mrs. Helen Billings and Mrs.
Rae Shode, color guards.
Introduced and bringing
greetings 'were departemental
cha!Ji!aux passe, Mrs. Ann
McCudden, Mrs . Violet ·
Aicbolz, Mrs. Hazel Elliott,
'Mrs. Louisa Kramenbuhl, Mrs.
Anna Krueger, Mrs. Ethel Van
Fossen, MrJi. Elizabeth
Mrs .
Bernice
Gilbert,
Christensen, Mrs . Virginia
Rabe, and Mrs. Mary Martin.
Mrs. Martin and Mrs. Walker
were among those attending
Nationale Marche reporting at
the meeting.
It was reported by the

•

L!~~!_~--~----~--~~1 ----~--------~~=NIW~:HA;V~E:N~,:W~.VfA=·~ ,
)

�'•

BARNEY

16- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport"Pomeroy, 0 ., Dec. 6,1972

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Senti'!_~[ Classifieds Get Results!

,.

.

'

I'

In

. WANT:rADS'
INFORMATION
DEADLINES

·

.S P .M. Day, ' Before Publ ica t ion .

Memory
IN LOV ING MEMORY . 0~
JAMF S A ROBSO N WHO
PASSED /\WAY DEC 6, 19.1-1 .

Chades Sinclair

Monday Deadl ine 9 a .m.

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Cancellallon - Corrections

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Will be a ~·ce pt ed unti19 a .m . for
Day of Publication
REGULATIONS

The Publisher reserves the

' right to edit or reiect an,y ads
deeme d
objectional .
The
•ubi is her will not be responsibl e
for more than one incorrect
Insert ion .

RATES

For Want Ad Service
5 cents per Word one insertion
Minimum Charge 75c

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cents _ per

word

c.A:oo~FTJ~:~Ks

Sl.SO for SO word minimum.
Each additional word 2c.

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BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge
Advertisement .

,1.

per

OF-FICE HOURS

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8;30 a.m. to 5 :00p .m . Daily,
8 : 30 a .m . lo 12 : 00 Noon
Satu rday .

Rock·Springs

News Notes
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By Mrs. Ooha Offutt
Mr. and Mrs . Orland Floyd
accompanied by Jay Wiseman
and Sue Blaine spenl
Thanksgiving Day at the home
or Holly and Hazel Sayre,
Cottageville, W. Va.
Enjoying a turkey dinner
with all the trimmings at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Hines, Gallipolis, on Thursday
were Mr. and Mrs. Willard
Hines , Mrs. Edith Hines ,
Pomeroy, Mr . and Mrs.
Charles Woode, Chester, and
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Hines,

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Chase Hardware

4 Dr., v.a, automa t ic, P. steerin g, blk . v inyl trim, w hil e
fini sh, good tires.

· Leading Creek Consehan.cy
Dis:lrlct, Meigs County , Ohio .
Separate sea l ed bids or
Co mbination Bid tcir :
SECTION I - EDA Project

-=.t

W.lgon, /.se~ ts,

li ni'&gt;h.

v.a, std . trans.• goqd tires,

POMEROY

EXPERT

KUHL'S

HOME·&amp; AUTO

Wheel Alignment
'5.55

BARGAIN CENTER

5995
radio, grn.

Rt. 7 11 at caution

992-2094
606 E. Main Pomeroy

light~"

TUPPERS PLAINS

1'168 OPEL

Clean &amp;+gu~ranlee&lt;J.
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NEW l;lfRNiTUR'E
· Sola Bed j &amp; Reel iners.
Discount P~!ced .

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closed for the first time in
history above 1,000. Economic
analysts credit the latest upturn in stocks to a number of
factors ~ among them indications that profits are rising
and a ge neral public con.
fidence
that
the Administration's broad economic
policies will keep inflation
under control.
·
During i he first year of the
New Economic Policy, the cost
of living was cut by one half,
the number of civilian jobs
increased by 2.5 million , the
economy increased at a rate of
almost nine percent ( the
highest since 1965), real weekly
spendable earnings rose four
percent (three times the
average rate from 1960 to
1968), pt·oductivity or output
per man-hour increased 4.3
pel., the biggest gain since
1966.
This evidence of economic
improvement is ' encouraging
bul inflationary pressures are
still great 1especially in light of
excessive government spending) and unemployment
remains at an unacceptable
level. We still have a tough
battle ahead and that is why, in
all probability, the President
will ask for and receive the
authority to continue controls.
What form the economic
stabilization program will take
next year is matter or considerable conjecture. Possibly,
a Phase m is at hand which
will ref lect a continued
loosening of controls in certain
areas and a strengthening in
others.

CHRISTMAS

Frank Porter , Attorney , Box
4!16, Pomeroy , Oh io 45769
F . W . Dodge Company , 2506
Willowbrook Pkwy. No. 30(
India napolis, Ind .
F . w. Dodge Company , 1333
w. Fifth A'lle .• Columbus, Ohio .
F.
Dodge Company, 252B
Kemper Lane, Cincinnati, Ohio
F . w. Dodge Company, .4114
E .' State Blvd ., Ft . Wayne,
In diana
F. W. Dod~e Compan.y , .37 15
Bardstown Road , Lou 1S v 111e ,
Kentucky
F . W . DodgeCompany , 4117th
Ave nue , i)ittsburgh , Pa .
F . w . Dodg!? Company, 6081,,
Tennessee Ave ., Charleston, W .
Virginia
Bui lders Exchange of Louis vil le, Lou isvi lle , Kentucky
construct ion League , 1456 N.
Delaware, I ndian apolis , In ·
dian a
&lt;;: ommonwealth
Systems
Corporation , Engineer
Ohio Contractors Association,
50
North
Third
Street,
Co lumbu s, Ohio 43215
Se parate copies of th e
co mplete bidding documents
and plans far each ~iv isi on of
theworkmaybeob tam edatthe
oflice Of the Engineer , Com monwealth
Systems
.Cor ·
poration, 1000 N. Madison
Ave nue , Greenwood , Indiana
46 142 upon payment of the
fol lowing amounts :

w.

and
Bid
Documents
tor
Divlsions Al, A2 and E 1, $20.00.
Book No . 2 - Spec if ica tions
and Bid Docu ments for Division
B 1, $20.00 .
Book No . 3 - Specif ic ations
and Bid Doc uments for Division

C. $20. 00.

Boo k No . 4 - Spec if ic ations
and Bid Documents lor Division
D, S20.00
Se parate Sets of Plan s for
Div ision A 1. A2, B L c and D,
Book No . 5 - Specif ica tions
and
Bid
Documents
lor
Di\liSions AJ and E2 . $20 .00 .
Book No . 6 - Specifications
and Bid Documen t s tor Division

B2 . S20.00.
Sepa rat e Sets of Plans for
Division A3 and B2. 130 .00 Each.
Payment for plan s and
spec if ications
are
non ·
re fundable .
The owner reserves the righ t
to waive any informalities or to
relec t any or ell bids .
t:ac h bidder must deposit
w ith his bid se curity in the
amo unt. form and sub ject to !he
co ndit ions prov ided in the tn .
form.:ition Fo r Bidders .
Attention of bidders Is par called
to
the
t icula rly
requireme nts as to conditio ns ot
empl oyment to be observed and
mi nim um wage rates to be paid
under the contract .
No bidder may withdraw n ls
bid wi th in 90 days after the
actua l date of the opening
thereof .
F&gt;roposal
and
Standa rd
Questionnaire and Financia l
stat ement for Bidders Sha ll be
e~~:ecuted on the forms provided
by the Engineer .

President,
Lead ing Creek
Conservancy District
Rutland , Ohio .45775

ORDINANCE NO.

991 · 12

An Ordinance TO INCREASE

THE FEE FOR PARKING
METER VIOLATIONS .

11 -29-30ip

12-5-31c

3 ROOM furnished house. adults
only ; phone 992-5592.
12-5-lfc

PLUMBING and Heating man,
eX p eri e nced ; if not ex per ienced and hones t, do not --------~apply ; phone 992 -2511 or 992 - TWO new mobile homes, never
3918.
li ved in : phone 992 ·2511 .
12-6-tlc
12-5-lfc
. . . .
• ·- __ ·- ____ ----·-25 to 35 YEARS ol age, sing le
1.o ba bys1-1b. Y d ay 1·n my Ji ome ,
1f c an dnve; preferable to MUST se ll, due to divorce; 1972
liv e .in ;
phone
992 -3184
a track stereo, in walnut
dayfime or 992 -6131 after 7
console
. Pay balance of $98.80
p.m .
or pay S7 .55 per month ; phone

Lost

992-5331.

skirt

conlacl Icy Dailey , Porlland,
Ohio or c all 84J.2121.

Wh '

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p·

k

.

tspenng
lnes. can eep
money , please _return papers
to Robert Rtflle , · Rt . 2,
Rac ine.

ches,

12-5-31p

dleport or Pom eroy, Satur day ; reward; phone 992-7022
before 10 a.m.

12-5-31p

N0t'ICe
r-----------,

HEATING &amp;
COOLING
Furnace Controls
HUMIDIFIERS

darn s and makes buttonholes.

.-

We talk to you
. like a person.

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE rates . Ph . 446·
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell,
Ovmer &amp; Operator .

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S-12-tfc

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C: BRADFORD, Auctioneer

Phone 949-3821

5-1-lfc

fairgrounds on old Rt. 33;

Buy 2
.._. .. Pairs

~ig- zags,

1

house, 3 bedrooms , excellent
loca tion. close to school and
city ; contact Lou Osborne or

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Vb:gil B; '

Teaford, Sr.

Broker

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VILLAGE
3 BEDROOMS - Bath. large

Real Estate Fbr Sale
.10USE In Long Bollom;";inone
985-3529.

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6·11·1fc
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8 ROOM hou ~e and bath, nice
large lot,o Mlural gas, buill-In
cabinets In kitchen, close to

~

radio station

phone 'W2·2602 .

in

Bradbury;

11 -27-JOip

Yardstick: one hand quilted ;
Mrs. John Bailey, Flatwoods

Rd., or phone 985-3565.
12-6-31p

1970 HOMETTE

12 x 60

housetrailer, 2 bedroom, with
or without air -con.ditioner and

CLELAND·
REALTY
601 E. MIIn

Pomeroy

washer : pay off ap.
proximately $3,700 : Farfesa

elecfric

combo

organ

THE WORLD KNOWS,
McGLUTTON'S 1,000

and

m.

amplifier. $300 ; phone '
3685.
12-6-6fp

----AKC registered Brittany

spaniel pups: 2 males - 2
temales ; SSO each; Ed Linscott, 5 miles on SR SOA from
Al~ens ; phone 448-2089.
&lt;;
12·6-41C

lOMAKEOUR

BURGER'S THE
TASTIEST.!!.

Care-Free
Party
Preparations at a Low,
Low Cost - Whether It
be a Wedding · An·
niversary get-together
or a Special Holiday,
we will cater delicious
dishes to · your home
or party rooms .
CA. LL 992-5786

WINNIE WINKLE
OH-OH!

STEADY

NOW.

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I . JU&amp;T
SAW PlAIT
L~VE . I5 HE:
I\ORKING .
FORUe.?

JERRY, KEN PlAIT JOt N&amp;
THE 60NNAZ STAFF IN
THE MORNING-. tM GOING
HOME: 10 PREPARE FOR
OUR NEXT MCETI~.

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ANO JArs? '!HAT Nl(i.J(T IN
P!Arr'6 IIOTEL RO:JM ....

-SHAMMY'S
CATERING SERVICE
POMEROY, OHIO

large

din ing ,

and

front porch. Large level lot.
Ideal lor garden or pony .
Want $10,500.00.
WANT TO BUILD?
8 ACRES - On proposed
water line and blackfop
road. Asking $4500.00.
BRICK
4 BEDROOMS - Large
living , dining, kltchel"! , and

foyer. 2 porches. Barn, and a
string of garages . 2 acres of

good land . Ask ing only
$21,500.00.
ONE ACRE
NEAR TOWN - 4 bedroom
home. Kitchen and large

0' DELL WHEEL alignment

'(OU TH'

located at Crossroads, Rl. 12A.

ONl-Y ONE
WHAT Kif.!

Complete front end service,

tune up and brake service.
Wheels balanced elec' Ironically .
All
work
guaranteed .
Reasonable
rates. Phone 742-3232 or W2·'
321~. - ·... , ,:. '7-2f-lfc

\-\EAR ME,

A'r'TENTION FARMERS.
Largest choice of all breeds of
A. I. Sires by phoning Leland
Parker m -2264. Pomeroy or
call station for service, Information or direct sales.

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SEE

.,,

11·9·30fc

us"i'CiR':

Awnings, storm

·rJnu: ORPHAN ANNIE

doors and windows, carport$,

marquees, alumlnum sldln~
and railing. A. Jacob, sales
representative. For 1 free
estimates, phone Charles
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
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3·2-lfc'

•·•!Hili) riME lrllll eE THE lAST TIME,
~HAAA ••• FOR. OHE OF US!

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KIU. THE HEAD
AHD 'roO DESTROY
lHE 800'1' ···

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:BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
Septic fanks Installed. George
(Bill) Pullins. Phone m-2A78.
A-2S-ffc

l'e!lerday's Cryploquole: GREAT MEN REJOICE IN AD-VERSITY JUST AS BRAVE SOLDIERS TRIUMPH IN WAR SENECA
.
.

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SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
SEWAGE SYSTEMS
,
-CLEANED,' REPAI~·E-[f.'
MILLER SANITATION,
STEWART, OHI~. . PHONE •
662-3035.
.
10·4·1fc

(C 1872 Kinr FtatUNII Syndicate, Inc.)

ACROSS
I. -

(attack)

DOZt 1&lt; and back hoe Work,
pbnds and septic fanks; ditching service; lop soil, flit
dirt, limestone ; B&amp;K Ex-'
cavating . Phone 992-5367,_
Dick Karr, Jr.
9-1-tfc

10. Seaweed
derlva·
live
11. Food
13. Contribute
14. Unwill·
ing
15. Samuel's
mentor
16. Log
cabin

TURNED OFF
ONL'I'

CRIES

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G &amp; E APPLIANCE Repair ;
repair of all laundry equip·
ment, refrigeration equip·
ment

and house

614-992-6050.

into

5. Wahine 1s
nso long"

wiring; call

boy
17. Regret
18. Herbert's

11·24·30fp

operetta

SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. W2·22&amp;1. .
The Fabrlc Shop, Pomeroy.·
A~lhorlzed Singer ·Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.·

"The - "

12 wds.)
20. Sweet
potato
21. Uncover
22. Compul-

3-29-lf~

39. Present
40.French
city
41. Overly

JJ&amp;~l!J!:;-"-'!:::!!:!-'
Vllltl'llllllltlheoelaurJumblll,
.- lellor lo -h .......... lo
tor• four ordln•rJ wordo.

ornate

DOWN

1. Lay

odds
2. Quick
on one's
!eel
3. Noted
newscaster
( 2 wds.)
4. Before
5. Fit
lor
plowing
6. Knock
down

7. Unclose

(poet.)

Yes t• ~ rday's Answer
8. Noted
24. Generally
news·
25. "Ballad
caster
0[ Re ad·
(2wd s.)

ing - "

9. Sooth"
27. Conduits
12. Abounded 29. Hucksters
16. Put on1-- 30. Chris o!
19. Joustin g
tennis
ga rb
31. U.S. naval
22. Tndi c
hero
langu:age
36. Timoresc
:!3. Tran sfer.

as an
estate

I

SA SIB

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1'R.EXE

·===-.

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GRECLY

coin
37. Villain's

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CHECKS ON A HO!I:5Ei

cry

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ELNA and White Sewing'
Machines .. . servlce on all
makes. Reasonable rates .

dini ng . Full basement. Some
The Sewing Center, Mid ·
long needle pines. Asking
dleporl.
Ohio.
$12,000.00.
·
11-16-tfc
LOTS-ACRES-FARMS
HOUSES SCARCE, DON'T .AUTOMOBILE Insurance beeni
BELIEVE IT. WE HAVE · cancelled?
Lost. yo~n
operator's license? Call 992·'
PLE NT)', SOME THAT
2966.
YOU CAN MOVE INTO
i
6-15-lfC'
TOMORROW. COME SEE
FOR YOURSELF.
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CEILING Tile &amp; Wall Paneling
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
lnslallafl0&lt;1- reasonable; for
ASSOCIATE
estimate, call 'W2-5471.
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS
_12·5-Jtp
99N3ts _ ·- ___ .

pjlfi~---.,.;;::;-::,::;:;::::::::;::;::;\ .,.~------, ·l';;~~:;;;;;,:;;:;;,r;;;;;~~;:-;;;;-_--,..

--;::::;=:;=:;====:::firITWliATI'IFFfRfNCE
DOES
::
MA&lt;Ef IT W"'i 5DRT OF
YOUR GOAT':; H!AI&gt;~URLII SYMBOl~, AGESTURE OF
P!ON'I EXPlAIN
~PIENCE 10 lliE OLD

IH THIS FOLD£11, Pll&gt;
liE, MRS. !JARS~

liSTf~ TOME,

LAPi! CALYF CAN

EXPLAIN WH'f, BUT lOLJR HUSTLER
MUST NfVfR GET HIS HAiP50N

THIS FILE, OR PEOPLE ARE

GOING TO GET HURT!

STOP IT, COLONELLEE-'. ..

1()(J NIAI&lt;E THE KEEPfR

OF THE fAITH SCIJ;;":;,PISUTKff;;.'J

KIND OF"'

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23. Miss
Duke
25. Avarice
26. De· d
prave
27.Art
movement
28. Locker-

(AMwwt,

y_..,.. [J_., IAOLI
-

I liN)

THYMI HOOICID IIWm'

,.., "• - •I ,.,... """" IHio """"'

111-THI HIIU

room

denizens
29. Excited
32. Exasperate
33. Split .pulse
34. Tossed,
Cockney
style
35. Dellcates-

'ftXJ'RE SWFF~G ...THE ~lf!LE

5A'&lt;~ NOTI-IING Af!OUT
61VIN6 CHRI~TMA$

.

r

Rfm

goody
37. Freshly
38. FQOtball
team

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DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here'tl how to work it:
AXYDLBArA.XR
Is L 0 N G 'f E L L' 0 W
One letter simply stands for anotherr. In this sample A is
used lor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

iT

D;¥N'T?

I{OU CAN'T llLUFF
AN CtO i~EULOGIAN

CRYPTOQUOTE8
XFDO GTW JZOP GTW BND TO RFD
Y·ZPD TJ RFD QBCTNZRG , ZR ZY RZQD

AP.PLES, Flfzpalrlck Or·
chards, State Route 689,
Phone Wilkesville 669-378S. ,
8·30·*
....

R T N D J TN Q.- Q B N'V R X B Z 0

2SALESMEN ,
TO SERVE YOU

741-4211

,.

Rutlind ·

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AN I T~ jiiO'T ,., iHLNI(
AIJOUT WHAT :t'M
CHAil&lt;OIN' YA I

C:AU.ED ME!

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LIKE
TH'
SMELL
0'
THIS---

I RWREO
"TWI-.T'S WHY 'lA

VACUUM Cleaner new 1972
model. Complete with all
cleaning tools. Small paint
damage in shipping. Wlll .take
527 cash or budge! plan
available. Phone 992-5641. ·
12-6·61c

·coAL, Limestone, Excelsior
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
(-12-llc

DON'T

CATERING

1972 ZIG-ZAG Sewing machine
left In layaway. Beautiful
pastel color, full siie model.
All buill-in to butlonhole, do
slrelch sewing and fancy
stitching. Pay just S48.7S cash
or terms available. Trade-Ins
accepted. Pllone 'W2·5641. 12·6-6tc

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AH

RESTAURANTS WILL
STOP AT NOTHJ"'G

PARTY PLANNING?
LET US 00 THE

with 1970 65x12 3 bedroom

living ,

r .1 PAIR FREE
The best buy in the area·.
Have slacks &amp; jeans for the
whole family. Save One·Third.
.9 0 _
POMEROY
·
.r.:. Jack w. Carse~. Mgr.·
·
Phone99l-218 1 ·

1 HA1E 10

SA'{ 11-i IG, 'KI~ .•

W indsor mob ile home with
expando.

1220 Washington Blvd.
423-7521
BELPRE, 0.

ON PANTS&amp;JEANS

Thursdar.·
evenings, Sat . and Sun . a ·
lernoons ; phone 985·3929, 9859996 or 985-4141.
11 -26-12fc

Veterans 'who suffered in·
The Veterans Administration
· · I'
f d
Be it ordained by the Council
11 -26-121c
expended almost half a billion junes m me o . uty are of the Village of Middleport as
. dollars in federal funds for awarded compensation 1o11ows:
. I That II shall be unlawful .HAYMAN'S Auction - a goOd
Ohio ve_terans during the past regardless of any other 'tncol)le forSecany
person to park any
place to go each Friday
they
may
have.
Older
veteans
\lehicle
in
an aree ser'lled by a
evening, 7 p.m. at Laur~l
liscal year. A tabulation shows
Parking Meter unless there Is
Cliff on old Rl. 7, 1 mile wes\
that $495,984,944 was spent for and those totally disabled from unlapsed lime indi cated on the ol
Rock Springs Fairground.
Ohio's 1.6 million veterans causes other than active duty face ol lhe meter . II shall also ·
10·10-lfc
unlawful to con1inue to park
'
from all wars during this and who have iimited income ~e
1n such a sp~:~ce after all tlrne
KOSCOT
KOSMETICS
&amp;
WIGS.
are
awarded
pensions.
indicated
on
the
face
of
a
meter
'
period.
'd
d has expired .
SPECIALS MO.NTHLY .
sec . 11 . Any person who
ThiS' is an increase of $46 Slalewl e compensation an
PHONE HELEN JANE
ordinance shall pay
BROWN , MIDDLEPORT,
million over fiscal year 1971. pension costs amounted to violates this
50 cents for each ol· OHIO 991-5113.
272,693,699,
of
whl
'
ch
$422,675
•
line
of
$
Meigs county received $600,815
tense . Each one (1) hour or
12-3·11C
went to Meigs' veterans.
fraction thereof ot cont in ued
during the year:
Educalional costs of the VA ~:f!~~i~." Shall be a separate
Lucius M. Merritt, Director
Sec . Ill. II any line imposed
of the VA Rfgional Office in in the stale amounted to
7,100 ,915 . These read- under Sec . II is nol pold wilhin
$6
Cleveland, said over $390
twe':ty .four (24J hours, then an
juslment
·
a
n\1
vocalonaf
addrllonol
line of Sl.oo shall be
miUlon had been paid directly
0
to Ohio: veterans through his rehabilitation expenditures as~~~s~t _f Jr~fnc:n~~o~~; 0807 "
amounted to $104,006 in this her~by repealed only insofar as
office.
it is lnconsio; tent w th this or .
d inance .
Not under his jurisdiction are county.
Insurance and indenmitles
Sec . V. This ordinance shall
llle state's five VA hospitals,
lake elfect and be in force from
and tbe remainder of the eK- were paid to Ohio veterans in and after January 1. 1973.
Po'ssed the 13th day of
penditurea was for their the amount of. $47,62ll,660 with - · November
1972 .
·
veterans
David'W. OHlinger
9Petltlng and construction this - county's
President of Council
eMil u well as tbe ularie$ of receiving $74,!34.
Allest : Gfne Grate
Clerk
IIIII tllllpioytes In the Regions I
Ill} 11 1112) 6&gt; 2t

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chance to buy low, f ix up,

Tues..

operator, Sandra Trussell
Kern$ .

estimates . Phone 992-3284.
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co ..
Middleport. Ohio.
6-30-lfc '

MILLER
and sell. Located In town on
•
street near stores .
l MOBILE HOMES .' · goad
Asking only 17500.00.

~----'====---,.1
available for private parties, 1WO quilts ; Lone Star and

Parasol
Boutique Beauty Salon
openinq Nov. 28th next to
Skate-A-Way Roller Rink ;
open Tuesday thru Saturday
and Tuesday even1n9s; phone
985-4141 for appornlmenl ;

CONCRETE

delivered right fa your
project . Fast and easy. Free

4

l

SKATE-A-Way Holiday Parlies; Thanksgiving, Dec. lsi.
Christmas, Dec. 15th; New
Year's, Sal .. Dec . 30th ; open
Wed. , Fri .. Sat., 7:30·10:30;

ANNOUNCI~G

.

AN ACRE Iof, 1'12 mlies North of

.

992-2448
Pomeroy, 0.

Mon .,

R EADY-M'ix

AKC Toy Poodle puppies,
110 Mechanic St.
wormed and shots, well-bred
Pomeroy,
Ohio 41769
budget lerms. Call 992-7085.
and healthy , $75. P~one
·\
12-5-6lc
Coolville 667·6214.
11-22-121p
NEW LISTING
MODERN walnut slyle stereoSTART YOUR FUTURE radio , AM -FM slyle , 4
New brick business building .
spea ker so und system, 4 Mobile Homes For Sale
spee d automatic changer . , .
Has 4 large rooms . Ideal for
Balance $68.79. Use our CASH pard for all makes and contractor, store, etc . Best of
budget lerms. Call 992-7085.
models of mobile homes . location if you want in on the
12-5-61c
Phone area code 614-423-95;;1. '
- -- - - - - ·
4-lJ.tfc ground floor . 2900 sq. ft. 1100
paneled and tiled. 2 ceramic
ONE In ter national tandem
Plenty of parking. No
baths.
wheel trailer with 12 ply fires;
Information
over the phone .
one No. 330 Rambler Station
c. Air Conditioners ·
Wagon , good condition; see
NEW LISTING
•Awnings
Earl Werner , Bradbury close
RENOVATED
3
to WMPO Radio Station.
bedrooms,
new
bath,
new
···Underpinning " ,
12-5-31c
·kitchen. paneling and many
other
features. Large lot.
Complete mQblle home' ·
GIVE an Aquarium this Christ Asking
$6500.00.
'Service plus gigantic'
m as from Showalter' s Wet
'display
of
mobile
homes
4
BEDROOMS
Pel Shop, Chester, Ohio.
;~I
ways
avallabl&lt;'
at
...
'•
LEVEL LOT - Here's your
12·3-61p

BROTHERS

Dozer &amp; End loader work,
ponds, basement, land·
scaping. We have 2 SIR I •
dozers, 2 size loaders. Work
done by hour or contract,
Free Eitimates. We olso
haul fill .dirt, fop soil. Dump
trucks and low-boy for hire.
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3525
after 7 p.m. or phone 9f1.
5232.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Ph. 992-2174
Pomeroy

· speed automatic changer .
Balance $77 .54. Use our

ARNOLD

•.. If! BRITAIN
DEVALUES iHE
POUN D '%

YO~ FORGOT 10 TAKE
OFF 'Ptlt..lR APRON 'THIS
MORNING . ..---'1

Ott 'ieAH 1

-

From the lar~esf T,.,r~,.
Bulldozer Radiator to fhe
Small~sf Heater Core.
Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specia~st

Real Estate For Sale

Take over payment of $5.55
per month or. pay bala~ce of Pets~ For Sale
$46.11. Phone 992-5331."
POODLE
puppies AKC;
12-5-61c
apricot, black, silver ; will
hold till Christmas; phone
EARLY American stereo-radio
992-5443.
combination, AM-FM radio, 4
11 -19-tfc

Hot Water Heaters
Plumbing
Electrical Work

••. Wil-L I WEIGH
MORE OR i.SSS ...

11M ~:IN:; AT 110116
AG.I~N , DESPITE
'Jt)t;IR EFFOR'!S.

URTH MOVING

buflonholes,
blind hems. overcasts, etc.
call 992-5898.
· $85. Call Ravenswood 273-9521
' 11 -26-lfc
or 273-9893.
11 -30-tlc
,--:--------,
- .

emb~olderies ,

sp eaker sound sys tem ,

Open ITII 5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main•. Pomeroy, 0.
.

Racine. Ohio

machine . Like new in walnut
cabinet . Makes design stit-

•

MAN'S brown billfold between
Fiv e
Points
Grill
and

YES, AND ! 1VE
'BEEN WONDERIN~
$/PPIE ...

MV WIFE 1-V.G FINALLY
910PI"!:D LGTENiN0 10
'lOUR \'.OMENS LIB VIEw;.

WILL CUT or trim trees,
reasonable. Also clean ouf
Hill.
12-6-6lc
basements, allies and cellars.
Phone 949-3221.
HOUSE FOR SALE, 114 Bri ck
SINGER Automafic sewing Slreel, Pomeroy, Ohio; brick
11-22-JOic

This ' machine

overcas ts,

Stop In an!l See Our
Floor Display.

Crill Bradford

Middleport. Ohio
PMtlllel .to Middleport

12-5-61c

machine.

from

maroon ' 67 Buick, if found

Pomeroy. Home &amp; Auto

Locally Grown
Fresh Cut
Scotch Pine

BroWnell Avenue

1972 DELUXE zig -zag sewing

RI GH T fende r

FURNITURE

Complete Service

BRADFORD'S

For Sale

12-5-61c

an !I

TREES

Zuspan, Ma5on, W. Va.

·

1 •

S30.00 Each .
SECTION 2

(I ll 15, 22, 29 (12) 6, 41

nearly $ h Billion

Oh ·o

SECTION 1- EDA No . 06-01 - AMERICAN Legion Auxiliary &amp;
00955
8 an d 40 st'Iver p1n
. .tn M'd
Book No . 1 - Spec if icat ions
1-

Jack W. Crisp,

veterans collect

@)t

Motor Co.

BLEI.J[)J,

DON'T LET M'l
MAN SNUFFY
HEAR THAT,
ELVINEY

On Most
Amerlcon
Cars' ..
'
I
'
' .
' -GUARANHED-'
Phone 992-2094

OFFICE SUPPLIES

Used furnitvre, appliances .

S79S

~~~~~~::;i;vic ;;··~~dd w·~~' -Pomeroy

Ohio's 1.6 million

....

SPEND TIME
SAVE .$'s

S l ~1 li?n wag~n. ~ . ige finish. good tires, a.speed tr ans.
Belpre.
mr ss ron, ra d1 o. fol.. clean un_
i t and very econom ica l.
Mrs. G. J _ Morgan en- No . 06-01 -00995
Div ision A I Raw Water
te rla in~d Mr. and Mrs. R L.
Transmission Ma i n and Ap
Gollhardt and daughter, p urte nanc ~s~.
LAYAWAY FOR XMAS
Kathy , Columbus; on WedOpen lo 7; closed Mondays
nesday ond Thursday.
Division B 1 Steel Water
Dinner guests on Thursday Slorage
Tanks and Foundat ;ons
OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
al the home of Mr. and Mrs . - Dlyision C - Treatment P la n-t
.,rwEROY OHIO
D;v;sion D - Wells and Well
,_
'
._. llIf I HAV'!.
Roger Morgan , Middleport,
Pumps
•
. w-----~~--~--~------~~------~---~
ToGo
were Mrs. G. J. Morgan, Mr.
Division E1 - serv;ce Meter
Wanted To Buy
...
Take Me To
and Mrs. R. L. Gotthardt, (F urnish On l y l
SECTION 2.
WANTE;D _;__• Old ~prlghl
Kalhy, Columbus; Mr. Bob
DiviSion A3 - Treated Waler Notice
pianos , grand pianos, . old
Ma i ns , Se rvi ces and Ap ·
THE SHOP
Moore, Columbus; Mrs. Vilma purtenances.
pump organs , Any condition.
Division
82
_
Stee
l
Water
I
Wlt.l.
NOT
be
responsible
for
Paying
SlOeach
,
Write
giving
Pikkoja and Sam Goradia,
P~EA!~~~.T,:RIDGE ROAD
Storage Tank. and Foundations .
r-ny debts ~on t rac t ed fo r by
directions. Witten Piano Co.,
POMERdY, O.
Pomeroy .
Div ision E2 ·- Service Meters
anyon e other than myself .
Box 188, Sardis, Ohio 43946.
"Custom Meat Cutting"
Chet Tannehille was a visitor (Fu rni sh OnlyJ .
Signed: Allen Roush .
12-1-6tp
Quick and Courteous Service
12
6
31p
::;-:::-:,----,-------DALE
DICK
at the Mark Tannehills on tor the Construct ion of a new
OLD Furn~ture. oak tables,
~ITTLE
VAUGHN
Tha nksgiving Day .
rural
wat er
s upply
and GUN Shoot , also rifle matches
992 ·3814
992-3374
organs, dt shes, clocks, brass
d istri bution system , will be
Ronald and Maria Bylicki , rece ived .by th e Leading Cree k
open si tes onl y and special
beds, or complete households
Let Dick and Dale Hetp You
Write M. D. Miller, Rl. 4; _with Your Meat Problems • .
Athens, were dinner guests at Co nse rvan cy District , M eigs deer slug mat ch; Forked Run
Sportsman Club, Sunday,
.Pomeroy
, Ohio . Call 992-6271.
Ct:~unty, at Rulland Elementary
the Roy Grues~r residence on S...: hool Auditorium, Colleg e Dece mber lOth, 17 noon .
6-28-lfc
For Sale
Thursday.
Avenue, Rutland , Ohio 45 775
11 -6-Jic
u ntil 12 :00 o'clock ( E . S T . )
NOW WRECKING lhe former
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Dece mber 13th, 1971, and then
For Rent
TWO f!lmily yard sa le, Friday
Epple's Grocery Store
Weeks on Thursday were Mr. a1 said place publicly opened and Satu rday, Dec. 8th and 3 AND 4 ROOM fur nished and
building
in Pomeroy . All
read aloud .
unfurnished
apartments.
and Mrs. John Weeks and and
9th ; if cold, held inside ;
kinds of building materials
Proposals may be forwarded
for sale on lhe lob including 2
famil} of Gallipolis, Mr . and by r egistered mail addressed to ' dishes. clothing, toys, small .. Phone 'W2-5434 .
4-12-llc
furniture, bottles ; aL E.lmer
said Board of Trustees, Leading
and 3 in . heavy material,
Mrs. Carl Jennings and Mrs. Creek
Conservancy District. in
Pickens reside nce ; Letar t 3:-F~U:-R~N
5heeti ng and cherry stair
=
I S:-H
"E"o=--ro_o_m_s_a_n-.,d-,-bath.
~·rancis Scholl . ·
ca re of Mr , Hck W Crisp ,
Falls; by Mrs. Elmer Pickens
railing; call 'W2-5946 or 882·
Rutland , OhiO 45775 .
Norlh Second Ave .• Midilnd Mrs. Eber Pickens.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Faulk President,
3219
.
The l'nformat ion for Bidder s,
dleport; references required;
11·6-Jic
11 -10-lfc
spent Thanksgiving Day with Form of Bid, Form of Contra c t,
phone 992-5293.
Plans, Speci f i cations, and
11 -29-tfc
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Hollon of
Forms of Bid Bond. Per - l'elp Wanted
tormance arid Payment Bond,
1
Columbus.
and ~ther documents ~ay be CAB driver ; apply in person at TRAILER spaces; extra large
lois, $25 a monlh, Velma
exa mmed at the follow1ng :
Twin City Cab, Middleport ,

Clarence

1

S129S

1968 CHEVY BELAIR

SHHH !!

+-II, /V\OII&gt;JI QJE

Business Services-

~~--__ ]

116'! L HEVY61SCAYNE

ADVERTISEMENT
FOR BIDS
Project Number 06-01 ·00995

Middleport, Ohio .

Washington
By
Report Miller

The statutory authority
under which
the
Administration initiated and
, maintained both · the !)O.{lay
wage-price freeze and the
Phase II economic plan expires
on April 30, 1973. An act of
Congress will be necessary to
extend
the
Economic
Stabilization Act and most
economic observers are
· predicting lh&lt;it the President
will ask Congress for authority
to keep the controls. The
Chairman of the Pay Board
told the Joint Economic
Committee of Congress that he
is opposed to any -drastic
changes in the wage controls
program until prices had.
remained stable for a test
period of "six to eight
months." At the same
hearings, the head of
the Price Commission voiced optimism about the
effect of the Phase II economic
stabilization program and
crediled the economic plan
with reducing the rate of infla tion.
Phase H began just over a
year ago and was basically a
i;lst of the nation's willingness
to comply with economic
restraints which were imposed
at the end of the 90-day freeze.
The Administration contends
that Phase II has brightened
business prospects and slowed
the rate of inflation to a point
where definite gains are being
recognized by the consumer. A
rising tide of economic optimism was reflected to a
degree recently when the Dow
Jon es industrial average

'QUALITY

1? 6 lip

LEGAL NOTICE

--------------------------1I
,-

,.

Of

associated with

thre ~

con secu tive insertions.
18 cents per word six con
·secutlve insertion s
25 Per Cent D'lscount on paic
ads and ads. pa id within 10 days .

'

MAQNA

is no longer

Pomerty
•tor Co.

2 SIGNS

f.\ I, SVfiiL,

f·H.

I

rl -

~~
•

�'•

BARNEY

16- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport"Pomeroy, 0 ., Dec. 6,1972

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Senti'!_~[ Classifieds Get Results!

,.

.

'

I'

In

. WANT:rADS'
INFORMATION
DEADLINES

·

.S P .M. Day, ' Before Publ ica t ion .

Memory
IN LOV ING MEMORY . 0~
JAMF S A ROBSO N WHO
PASSED /\WAY DEC 6, 19.1-1 .

Chades Sinclair

Monday Deadl ine 9 a .m.

'

Cancellallon - Corrections

.'

•I •t•
• 1•,
1

•

'-

..

Will be a ~·ce pt ed unti19 a .m . for
Day of Publication
REGULATIONS

The Publisher reserves the

' right to edit or reiect an,y ads
deeme d
objectional .
The
•ubi is her will not be responsibl e
for more than one incorrect
Insert ion .

RATES

For Want Ad Service
5 cents per Word one insertion
Minimum Charge 75c

n

'

I'

"'.

cents _ per

word

c.A:oo~FTJ~:~Ks

Sl.SO for SO word minimum.
Each additional word 2c.

---

BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge
Advertisement .

,1.

per

OF-FICE HOURS

' .

8;30 a.m. to 5 :00p .m . Daily,
8 : 30 a .m . lo 12 : 00 Noon
Satu rday .

Rock·Springs

News Notes
.:;
·~

::t
....,.,
,,

.,,,

,,

•

·'

By Mrs. Ooha Offutt
Mr. and Mrs . Orland Floyd
accompanied by Jay Wiseman
and Sue Blaine spenl
Thanksgiving Day at the home
or Holly and Hazel Sayre,
Cottageville, W. Va.
Enjoying a turkey dinner
with all the trimmings at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Hines, Gallipolis, on Thursday
were Mr. and Mrs. Willard
Hines , Mrs. Edith Hines ,
Pomeroy, Mr . and Mrs.
Charles Woode, Chester, and
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Hines,

'

"
·'4'·
'I

,,··..
••J
,, ..
,·.•:··

..

-

'.

"'

,.

'·

-,

...

'

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
II
I

Chase Hardware

4 Dr., v.a, automa t ic, P. steerin g, blk . v inyl trim, w hil e
fini sh, good tires.

· Leading Creek Consehan.cy
Dis:lrlct, Meigs County , Ohio .
Separate sea l ed bids or
Co mbination Bid tcir :
SECTION I - EDA Project

-=.t

W.lgon, /.se~ ts,

li ni'&gt;h.

v.a, std . trans.• goqd tires,

POMEROY

EXPERT

KUHL'S

HOME·&amp; AUTO

Wheel Alignment
'5.55

BARGAIN CENTER

5995
radio, grn.

Rt. 7 11 at caution

992-2094
606 E. Main Pomeroy

light~"

TUPPERS PLAINS

1'168 OPEL

Clean &amp;+gu~ranlee&lt;J.
___ '
NEW l;lfRNiTUR'E
· Sola Bed j &amp; Reel iners.
Discount P~!ced .

I
I
I
I
I
I
II

closed for the first time in
history above 1,000. Economic
analysts credit the latest upturn in stocks to a number of
factors ~ among them indications that profits are rising
and a ge neral public con.
fidence
that
the Administration's broad economic
policies will keep inflation
under control.
·
During i he first year of the
New Economic Policy, the cost
of living was cut by one half,
the number of civilian jobs
increased by 2.5 million , the
economy increased at a rate of
almost nine percent ( the
highest since 1965), real weekly
spendable earnings rose four
percent (three times the
average rate from 1960 to
1968), pt·oductivity or output
per man-hour increased 4.3
pel., the biggest gain since
1966.
This evidence of economic
improvement is ' encouraging
bul inflationary pressures are
still great 1especially in light of
excessive government spending) and unemployment
remains at an unacceptable
level. We still have a tough
battle ahead and that is why, in
all probability, the President
will ask for and receive the
authority to continue controls.
What form the economic
stabilization program will take
next year is matter or considerable conjecture. Possibly,
a Phase m is at hand which
will ref lect a continued
loosening of controls in certain
areas and a strengthening in
others.

CHRISTMAS

Frank Porter , Attorney , Box
4!16, Pomeroy , Oh io 45769
F . W . Dodge Company , 2506
Willowbrook Pkwy. No. 30(
India napolis, Ind .
F . w. Dodge Company , 1333
w. Fifth A'lle .• Columbus, Ohio .
F.
Dodge Company, 252B
Kemper Lane, Cincinnati, Ohio
F . w. Dodge Company, .4114
E .' State Blvd ., Ft . Wayne,
In diana
F. W. Dod~e Compan.y , .37 15
Bardstown Road , Lou 1S v 111e ,
Kentucky
F . W . DodgeCompany , 4117th
Ave nue , i)ittsburgh , Pa .
F . w . Dodg!? Company, 6081,,
Tennessee Ave ., Charleston, W .
Virginia
Bui lders Exchange of Louis vil le, Lou isvi lle , Kentucky
construct ion League , 1456 N.
Delaware, I ndian apolis , In ·
dian a
&lt;;: ommonwealth
Systems
Corporation , Engineer
Ohio Contractors Association,
50
North
Third
Street,
Co lumbu s, Ohio 43215
Se parate copies of th e
co mplete bidding documents
and plans far each ~iv isi on of
theworkmaybeob tam edatthe
oflice Of the Engineer , Com monwealth
Systems
.Cor ·
poration, 1000 N. Madison
Ave nue , Greenwood , Indiana
46 142 upon payment of the
fol lowing amounts :

w.

and
Bid
Documents
tor
Divlsions Al, A2 and E 1, $20.00.
Book No . 2 - Spec if ica tions
and Bid Docu ments for Division
B 1, $20.00 .
Book No . 3 - Specif ic ations
and Bid Doc uments for Division

C. $20. 00.

Boo k No . 4 - Spec if ic ations
and Bid Documents lor Division
D, S20.00
Se parate Sets of Plan s for
Div ision A 1. A2, B L c and D,
Book No . 5 - Specif ica tions
and
Bid
Documents
lor
Di\liSions AJ and E2 . $20 .00 .
Book No . 6 - Specifications
and Bid Documen t s tor Division

B2 . S20.00.
Sepa rat e Sets of Plans for
Division A3 and B2. 130 .00 Each.
Payment for plan s and
spec if ications
are
non ·
re fundable .
The owner reserves the righ t
to waive any informalities or to
relec t any or ell bids .
t:ac h bidder must deposit
w ith his bid se curity in the
amo unt. form and sub ject to !he
co ndit ions prov ided in the tn .
form.:ition Fo r Bidders .
Attention of bidders Is par called
to
the
t icula rly
requireme nts as to conditio ns ot
empl oyment to be observed and
mi nim um wage rates to be paid
under the contract .
No bidder may withdraw n ls
bid wi th in 90 days after the
actua l date of the opening
thereof .
F&gt;roposal
and
Standa rd
Questionnaire and Financia l
stat ement for Bidders Sha ll be
e~~:ecuted on the forms provided
by the Engineer .

President,
Lead ing Creek
Conservancy District
Rutland , Ohio .45775

ORDINANCE NO.

991 · 12

An Ordinance TO INCREASE

THE FEE FOR PARKING
METER VIOLATIONS .

11 -29-30ip

12-5-31c

3 ROOM furnished house. adults
only ; phone 992-5592.
12-5-lfc

PLUMBING and Heating man,
eX p eri e nced ; if not ex per ienced and hones t, do not --------~apply ; phone 992 -2511 or 992 - TWO new mobile homes, never
3918.
li ved in : phone 992 ·2511 .
12-6-tlc
12-5-lfc
. . . .
• ·- __ ·- ____ ----·-25 to 35 YEARS ol age, sing le
1.o ba bys1-1b. Y d ay 1·n my Ji ome ,
1f c an dnve; preferable to MUST se ll, due to divorce; 1972
liv e .in ;
phone
992 -3184
a track stereo, in walnut
dayfime or 992 -6131 after 7
console
. Pay balance of $98.80
p.m .
or pay S7 .55 per month ; phone

Lost

992-5331.

skirt

conlacl Icy Dailey , Porlland,
Ohio or c all 84J.2121.

Wh '

·

p·

k

.

tspenng
lnes. can eep
money , please _return papers
to Robert Rtflle , · Rt . 2,
Rac ine.

ches,

12-5-31p

dleport or Pom eroy, Satur day ; reward; phone 992-7022
before 10 a.m.

12-5-31p

N0t'ICe
r-----------,

HEATING &amp;
COOLING
Furnace Controls
HUMIDIFIERS

darn s and makes buttonholes.

.-

We talk to you
. like a person.

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE rates . Ph . 446·
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell,
Ovmer &amp; Operator .

.

S-12-tfc

------

C: BRADFORD, Auctioneer

Phone 949-3821

5-1-lfc

fairgrounds on old Rt. 33;

Buy 2
.._. .. Pairs

~ig- zags,

1

house, 3 bedrooms , excellent
loca tion. close to school and
city ; contact Lou Osborne or

-

\

--I

Vb:gil B; '

Teaford, Sr.

Broker

'
.

.. .

VILLAGE
3 BEDROOMS - Bath. large

Real Estate Fbr Sale
.10USE In Long Bollom;";inone
985-3529.

'

6·11·1fc
.
..
8 ROOM hou ~e and bath, nice
large lot,o Mlural gas, buill-In
cabinets In kitchen, close to

~

radio station

phone 'W2·2602 .

in

Bradbury;

11 -27-JOip

Yardstick: one hand quilted ;
Mrs. John Bailey, Flatwoods

Rd., or phone 985-3565.
12-6-31p

1970 HOMETTE

12 x 60

housetrailer, 2 bedroom, with
or without air -con.ditioner and

CLELAND·
REALTY
601 E. MIIn

Pomeroy

washer : pay off ap.
proximately $3,700 : Farfesa

elecfric

combo

organ

THE WORLD KNOWS,
McGLUTTON'S 1,000

and

m.

amplifier. $300 ; phone '
3685.
12-6-6fp

----AKC registered Brittany

spaniel pups: 2 males - 2
temales ; SSO each; Ed Linscott, 5 miles on SR SOA from
Al~ens ; phone 448-2089.
&lt;;
12·6-41C

lOMAKEOUR

BURGER'S THE
TASTIEST.!!.

Care-Free
Party
Preparations at a Low,
Low Cost - Whether It
be a Wedding · An·
niversary get-together
or a Special Holiday,
we will cater delicious
dishes to · your home
or party rooms .
CA. LL 992-5786

WINNIE WINKLE
OH-OH!

STEADY

NOW.

•

I . JU&amp;T
SAW PlAIT
L~VE . I5 HE:
I\ORKING .
FORUe.?

JERRY, KEN PlAIT JOt N&amp;
THE 60NNAZ STAFF IN
THE MORNING-. tM GOING
HOME: 10 PREPARE FOR
OUR NEXT MCETI~.

I
I

~

ANO JArs? '!HAT Nl(i.J(T IN
P!Arr'6 IIOTEL RO:JM ....

-SHAMMY'S
CATERING SERVICE
POMEROY, OHIO

large

din ing ,

and

front porch. Large level lot.
Ideal lor garden or pony .
Want $10,500.00.
WANT TO BUILD?
8 ACRES - On proposed
water line and blackfop
road. Asking $4500.00.
BRICK
4 BEDROOMS - Large
living , dining, kltchel"! , and

foyer. 2 porches. Barn, and a
string of garages . 2 acres of

good land . Ask ing only
$21,500.00.
ONE ACRE
NEAR TOWN - 4 bedroom
home. Kitchen and large

0' DELL WHEEL alignment

'(OU TH'

located at Crossroads, Rl. 12A.

ONl-Y ONE
WHAT Kif.!

Complete front end service,

tune up and brake service.
Wheels balanced elec' Ironically .
All
work
guaranteed .
Reasonable
rates. Phone 742-3232 or W2·'
321~. - ·... , ,:. '7-2f-lfc

\-\EAR ME,

A'r'TENTION FARMERS.
Largest choice of all breeds of
A. I. Sires by phoning Leland
Parker m -2264. Pomeroy or
call station for service, Information or direct sales.

'
SEE

.,,

11·9·30fc

us"i'CiR':

Awnings, storm

·rJnu: ORPHAN ANNIE

doors and windows, carport$,

marquees, alumlnum sldln~
and railing. A. Jacob, sales
representative. For 1 free
estimates, phone Charles
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
•
3·2-lfc'

•·•!Hili) riME lrllll eE THE lAST TIME,
~HAAA ••• FOR. OHE OF US!

----

KIU. THE HEAD
AHD 'roO DESTROY
lHE 800'1' ···

----,-,---

:BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
Septic fanks Installed. George
(Bill) Pullins. Phone m-2A78.
A-2S-ffc

l'e!lerday's Cryploquole: GREAT MEN REJOICE IN AD-VERSITY JUST AS BRAVE SOLDIERS TRIUMPH IN WAR SENECA
.
.

--

SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
SEWAGE SYSTEMS
,
-CLEANED,' REPAI~·E-[f.'
MILLER SANITATION,
STEWART, OHI~. . PHONE •
662-3035.
.
10·4·1fc

(C 1872 Kinr FtatUNII Syndicate, Inc.)

ACROSS
I. -

(attack)

DOZt 1&lt; and back hoe Work,
pbnds and septic fanks; ditching service; lop soil, flit
dirt, limestone ; B&amp;K Ex-'
cavating . Phone 992-5367,_
Dick Karr, Jr.
9-1-tfc

10. Seaweed
derlva·
live
11. Food
13. Contribute
14. Unwill·
ing
15. Samuel's
mentor
16. Log
cabin

TURNED OFF
ONL'I'

CRIES

--~---

G &amp; E APPLIANCE Repair ;
repair of all laundry equip·
ment, refrigeration equip·
ment

and house

614-992-6050.

into

5. Wahine 1s
nso long"

wiring; call

boy
17. Regret
18. Herbert's

11·24·30fp

operetta

SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. W2·22&amp;1. .
The Fabrlc Shop, Pomeroy.·
A~lhorlzed Singer ·Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.·

"The - "

12 wds.)
20. Sweet
potato
21. Uncover
22. Compul-

3-29-lf~

39. Present
40.French
city
41. Overly

JJ&amp;~l!J!:;-"-'!:::!!:!-'
Vllltl'llllllltlheoelaurJumblll,
.- lellor lo -h .......... lo
tor• four ordln•rJ wordo.

ornate

DOWN

1. Lay

odds
2. Quick
on one's
!eel
3. Noted
newscaster
( 2 wds.)
4. Before
5. Fit
lor
plowing
6. Knock
down

7. Unclose

(poet.)

Yes t• ~ rday's Answer
8. Noted
24. Generally
news·
25. "Ballad
caster
0[ Re ad·
(2wd s.)

ing - "

9. Sooth"
27. Conduits
12. Abounded 29. Hucksters
16. Put on1-- 30. Chris o!
19. Joustin g
tennis
ga rb
31. U.S. naval
22. Tndi c
hero
langu:age
36. Timoresc
:!3. Tran sfer.

as an
estate

I

SA SIB

I

1'R.EXE

·===-.

I
I I 01

I I ()I I I I
GRECLY

coin
37. Villain's

•

CHECKS ON A HO!I:5Ei

cry

•

l

sion

ELNA and White Sewing'
Machines .. . servlce on all
makes. Reasonable rates .

dini ng . Full basement. Some
The Sewing Center, Mid ·
long needle pines. Asking
dleporl.
Ohio.
$12,000.00.
·
11-16-tfc
LOTS-ACRES-FARMS
HOUSES SCARCE, DON'T .AUTOMOBILE Insurance beeni
BELIEVE IT. WE HAVE · cancelled?
Lost. yo~n
operator's license? Call 992·'
PLE NT)', SOME THAT
2966.
YOU CAN MOVE INTO
i
6-15-lfC'
TOMORROW. COME SEE
FOR YOURSELF.
'
I
CEILING Tile &amp; Wall Paneling
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
lnslallafl0&lt;1- reasonable; for
ASSOCIATE
estimate, call 'W2-5471.
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS
_12·5-Jtp
99N3ts _ ·- ___ .

pjlfi~---.,.;;::;-::,::;:;::::::::;::;::;\ .,.~------, ·l';;~~:;;;;;,:;;:;;,r;;;;;~~;:-;;;;-_--,..

--;::::;=:;=:;====:::firITWliATI'IFFfRfNCE
DOES
::
MA&lt;Ef IT W"'i 5DRT OF
YOUR GOAT':; H!AI&gt;~URLII SYMBOl~, AGESTURE OF
P!ON'I EXPlAIN
~PIENCE 10 lliE OLD

IH THIS FOLD£11, Pll&gt;
liE, MRS. !JARS~

liSTf~ TOME,

LAPi! CALYF CAN

EXPLAIN WH'f, BUT lOLJR HUSTLER
MUST NfVfR GET HIS HAiP50N

THIS FILE, OR PEOPLE ARE

GOING TO GET HURT!

STOP IT, COLONELLEE-'. ..

1()(J NIAI&lt;E THE KEEPfR

OF THE fAITH SCIJ;;":;,PISUTKff;;.'J

KIND OF"'

'
'

23. Miss
Duke
25. Avarice
26. De· d
prave
27.Art
movement
28. Locker-

(AMwwt,

y_..,.. [J_., IAOLI
-

I liN)

THYMI HOOICID IIWm'

,.., "• - •I ,.,... """" IHio """"'

111-THI HIIU

room

denizens
29. Excited
32. Exasperate
33. Split .pulse
34. Tossed,
Cockney
style
35. Dellcates-

'ftXJ'RE SWFF~G ...THE ~lf!LE

5A'&lt;~ NOTI-IING Af!OUT
61VIN6 CHRI~TMA$

.

r

Rfm

goody
37. Freshly
38. FQOtball
team

''

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here'tl how to work it:
AXYDLBArA.XR
Is L 0 N G 'f E L L' 0 W
One letter simply stands for anotherr. In this sample A is
used lor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

iT

D;¥N'T?

I{OU CAN'T llLUFF
AN CtO i~EULOGIAN

CRYPTOQUOTE8
XFDO GTW JZOP GTW BND TO RFD
Y·ZPD TJ RFD QBCTNZRG , ZR ZY RZQD

AP.PLES, Flfzpalrlck Or·
chards, State Route 689,
Phone Wilkesville 669-378S. ,
8·30·*
....

R T N D J TN Q.- Q B N'V R X B Z 0

2SALESMEN ,
TO SERVE YOU

741-4211

,.

Rutlind ·

I
i

Ii
I'

AN I T~ jiiO'T ,., iHLNI(
AIJOUT WHAT :t'M
CHAil&lt;OIN' YA I

C:AU.ED ME!

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

LIKE
TH'
SMELL
0'
THIS---

I RWREO
"TWI-.T'S WHY 'lA

VACUUM Cleaner new 1972
model. Complete with all
cleaning tools. Small paint
damage in shipping. Wlll .take
527 cash or budge! plan
available. Phone 992-5641. ·
12-6·61c

·coAL, Limestone, Excelsior
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
(-12-llc

DON'T

CATERING

1972 ZIG-ZAG Sewing machine
left In layaway. Beautiful
pastel color, full siie model.
All buill-in to butlonhole, do
slrelch sewing and fancy
stitching. Pay just S48.7S cash
or terms available. Trade-Ins
accepted. Pllone 'W2·5641. 12·6-6tc

..

AH

RESTAURANTS WILL
STOP AT NOTHJ"'G

PARTY PLANNING?
LET US 00 THE

with 1970 65x12 3 bedroom

living ,

r .1 PAIR FREE
The best buy in the area·.
Have slacks &amp; jeans for the
whole family. Save One·Third.
.9 0 _
POMEROY
·
.r.:. Jack w. Carse~. Mgr.·
·
Phone99l-218 1 ·

1 HA1E 10

SA'{ 11-i IG, 'KI~ .•

W indsor mob ile home with
expando.

1220 Washington Blvd.
423-7521
BELPRE, 0.

ON PANTS&amp;JEANS

Thursdar.·
evenings, Sat . and Sun . a ·
lernoons ; phone 985·3929, 9859996 or 985-4141.
11 -26-12fc

Veterans 'who suffered in·
The Veterans Administration
· · I'
f d
Be it ordained by the Council
11 -26-121c
expended almost half a billion junes m me o . uty are of the Village of Middleport as
. dollars in federal funds for awarded compensation 1o11ows:
. I That II shall be unlawful .HAYMAN'S Auction - a goOd
Ohio ve_terans during the past regardless of any other 'tncol)le forSecany
person to park any
place to go each Friday
they
may
have.
Older
veteans
\lehicle
in
an aree ser'lled by a
evening, 7 p.m. at Laur~l
liscal year. A tabulation shows
Parking Meter unless there Is
Cliff on old Rl. 7, 1 mile wes\
that $495,984,944 was spent for and those totally disabled from unlapsed lime indi cated on the ol
Rock Springs Fairground.
Ohio's 1.6 million veterans causes other than active duty face ol lhe meter . II shall also ·
10·10-lfc
unlawful to con1inue to park
'
from all wars during this and who have iimited income ~e
1n such a sp~:~ce after all tlrne
KOSCOT
KOSMETICS
&amp;
WIGS.
are
awarded
pensions.
indicated
on
the
face
of
a
meter
'
period.
'd
d has expired .
SPECIALS MO.NTHLY .
sec . 11 . Any person who
ThiS' is an increase of $46 Slalewl e compensation an
PHONE HELEN JANE
ordinance shall pay
BROWN , MIDDLEPORT,
million over fiscal year 1971. pension costs amounted to violates this
50 cents for each ol· OHIO 991-5113.
272,693,699,
of
whl
'
ch
$422,675
•
line
of
$
Meigs county received $600,815
tense . Each one (1) hour or
12-3·11C
went to Meigs' veterans.
fraction thereof ot cont in ued
during the year:
Educalional costs of the VA ~:f!~~i~." Shall be a separate
Lucius M. Merritt, Director
Sec . Ill. II any line imposed
of the VA Rfgional Office in in the stale amounted to
7,100 ,915 . These read- under Sec . II is nol pold wilhin
$6
Cleveland, said over $390
twe':ty .four (24J hours, then an
juslment
·
a
n\1
vocalonaf
addrllonol
line of Sl.oo shall be
miUlon had been paid directly
0
to Ohio: veterans through his rehabilitation expenditures as~~~s~t _f Jr~fnc:n~~o~~; 0807 "
amounted to $104,006 in this her~by repealed only insofar as
office.
it is lnconsio; tent w th this or .
d inance .
Not under his jurisdiction are county.
Insurance and indenmitles
Sec . V. This ordinance shall
llle state's five VA hospitals,
lake elfect and be in force from
and tbe remainder of the eK- were paid to Ohio veterans in and after January 1. 1973.
Po'ssed the 13th day of
penditurea was for their the amount of. $47,62ll,660 with - · November
1972 .
·
veterans
David'W. OHlinger
9Petltlng and construction this - county's
President of Council
eMil u well as tbe ularie$ of receiving $74,!34.
Allest : Gfne Grate
Clerk
IIIII tllllpioytes In the Regions I
Ill} 11 1112) 6&gt; 2t

--~---

chance to buy low, f ix up,

Tues..

operator, Sandra Trussell
Kern$ .

estimates . Phone 992-3284.
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co ..
Middleport. Ohio.
6-30-lfc '

MILLER
and sell. Located In town on
•
street near stores .
l MOBILE HOMES .' · goad
Asking only 17500.00.

~----'====---,.1
available for private parties, 1WO quilts ; Lone Star and

Parasol
Boutique Beauty Salon
openinq Nov. 28th next to
Skate-A-Way Roller Rink ;
open Tuesday thru Saturday
and Tuesday even1n9s; phone
985-4141 for appornlmenl ;

CONCRETE

delivered right fa your
project . Fast and easy. Free

4

l

SKATE-A-Way Holiday Parlies; Thanksgiving, Dec. lsi.
Christmas, Dec. 15th; New
Year's, Sal .. Dec . 30th ; open
Wed. , Fri .. Sat., 7:30·10:30;

ANNOUNCI~G

.

AN ACRE Iof, 1'12 mlies North of

.

992-2448
Pomeroy, 0.

Mon .,

R EADY-M'ix

AKC Toy Poodle puppies,
110 Mechanic St.
wormed and shots, well-bred
Pomeroy,
Ohio 41769
budget lerms. Call 992-7085.
and healthy , $75. P~one
·\
12-5-6lc
Coolville 667·6214.
11-22-121p
NEW LISTING
MODERN walnut slyle stereoSTART YOUR FUTURE radio , AM -FM slyle , 4
New brick business building .
spea ker so und system, 4 Mobile Homes For Sale
spee d automatic changer . , .
Has 4 large rooms . Ideal for
Balance $68.79. Use our CASH pard for all makes and contractor, store, etc . Best of
budget lerms. Call 992-7085.
models of mobile homes . location if you want in on the
12-5-61c
Phone area code 614-423-95;;1. '
- -- - - - - ·
4-lJ.tfc ground floor . 2900 sq. ft. 1100
paneled and tiled. 2 ceramic
ONE In ter national tandem
Plenty of parking. No
baths.
wheel trailer with 12 ply fires;
Information
over the phone .
one No. 330 Rambler Station
c. Air Conditioners ·
Wagon , good condition; see
NEW LISTING
•Awnings
Earl Werner , Bradbury close
RENOVATED
3
to WMPO Radio Station.
bedrooms,
new
bath,
new
···Underpinning " ,
12-5-31c
·kitchen. paneling and many
other
features. Large lot.
Complete mQblle home' ·
GIVE an Aquarium this Christ Asking
$6500.00.
'Service plus gigantic'
m as from Showalter' s Wet
'display
of
mobile
homes
4
BEDROOMS
Pel Shop, Chester, Ohio.
;~I
ways
avallabl&lt;'
at
...
'•
LEVEL LOT - Here's your
12·3-61p

BROTHERS

Dozer &amp; End loader work,
ponds, basement, land·
scaping. We have 2 SIR I •
dozers, 2 size loaders. Work
done by hour or contract,
Free Eitimates. We olso
haul fill .dirt, fop soil. Dump
trucks and low-boy for hire.
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3525
after 7 p.m. or phone 9f1.
5232.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Ph. 992-2174
Pomeroy

· speed automatic changer .
Balance $77 .54. Use our

ARNOLD

•.. If! BRITAIN
DEVALUES iHE
POUN D '%

YO~ FORGOT 10 TAKE
OFF 'Ptlt..lR APRON 'THIS
MORNING . ..---'1

Ott 'ieAH 1

-

From the lar~esf T,.,r~,.
Bulldozer Radiator to fhe
Small~sf Heater Core.
Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specia~st

Real Estate For Sale

Take over payment of $5.55
per month or. pay bala~ce of Pets~ For Sale
$46.11. Phone 992-5331."
POODLE
puppies AKC;
12-5-61c
apricot, black, silver ; will
hold till Christmas; phone
EARLY American stereo-radio
992-5443.
combination, AM-FM radio, 4
11 -19-tfc

Hot Water Heaters
Plumbing
Electrical Work

••. Wil-L I WEIGH
MORE OR i.SSS ...

11M ~:IN:; AT 110116
AG.I~N , DESPITE
'Jt)t;IR EFFOR'!S.

URTH MOVING

buflonholes,
blind hems. overcasts, etc.
call 992-5898.
· $85. Call Ravenswood 273-9521
' 11 -26-lfc
or 273-9893.
11 -30-tlc
,--:--------,
- .

emb~olderies ,

sp eaker sound sys tem ,

Open ITII 5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main•. Pomeroy, 0.
.

Racine. Ohio

machine . Like new in walnut
cabinet . Makes design stit-

•

MAN'S brown billfold between
Fiv e
Points
Grill
and

YES, AND ! 1VE
'BEEN WONDERIN~
$/PPIE ...

MV WIFE 1-V.G FINALLY
910PI"!:D LGTENiN0 10
'lOUR \'.OMENS LIB VIEw;.

WILL CUT or trim trees,
reasonable. Also clean ouf
Hill.
12-6-6lc
basements, allies and cellars.
Phone 949-3221.
HOUSE FOR SALE, 114 Bri ck
SINGER Automafic sewing Slreel, Pomeroy, Ohio; brick
11-22-JOic

This ' machine

overcas ts,

Stop In an!l See Our
Floor Display.

Crill Bradford

Middleport. Ohio
PMtlllel .to Middleport

12-5-61c

machine.

from

maroon ' 67 Buick, if found

Pomeroy. Home &amp; Auto

Locally Grown
Fresh Cut
Scotch Pine

BroWnell Avenue

1972 DELUXE zig -zag sewing

RI GH T fende r

FURNITURE

Complete Service

BRADFORD'S

For Sale

12-5-61c

an !I

TREES

Zuspan, Ma5on, W. Va.

·

1 •

S30.00 Each .
SECTION 2

(I ll 15, 22, 29 (12) 6, 41

nearly $ h Billion

Oh ·o

SECTION 1- EDA No . 06-01 - AMERICAN Legion Auxiliary &amp;
00955
8 an d 40 st'Iver p1n
. .tn M'd
Book No . 1 - Spec if icat ions
1-

Jack W. Crisp,

veterans collect

@)t

Motor Co.

BLEI.J[)J,

DON'T LET M'l
MAN SNUFFY
HEAR THAT,
ELVINEY

On Most
Amerlcon
Cars' ..
'
I
'
' .
' -GUARANHED-'
Phone 992-2094

OFFICE SUPPLIES

Used furnitvre, appliances .

S79S

~~~~~~::;i;vic ;;··~~dd w·~~' -Pomeroy

Ohio's 1.6 million

....

SPEND TIME
SAVE .$'s

S l ~1 li?n wag~n. ~ . ige finish. good tires, a.speed tr ans.
Belpre.
mr ss ron, ra d1 o. fol.. clean un_
i t and very econom ica l.
Mrs. G. J _ Morgan en- No . 06-01 -00995
Div ision A I Raw Water
te rla in~d Mr. and Mrs. R L.
Transmission Ma i n and Ap
Gollhardt and daughter, p urte nanc ~s~.
LAYAWAY FOR XMAS
Kathy , Columbus; on WedOpen lo 7; closed Mondays
nesday ond Thursday.
Division B 1 Steel Water
Dinner guests on Thursday Slorage
Tanks and Foundat ;ons
OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
al the home of Mr. and Mrs . - Dlyision C - Treatment P la n-t
.,rwEROY OHIO
D;v;sion D - Wells and Well
,_
'
._. llIf I HAV'!.
Roger Morgan , Middleport,
Pumps
•
. w-----~~--~--~------~~------~---~
ToGo
were Mrs. G. J. Morgan, Mr.
Division E1 - serv;ce Meter
Wanted To Buy
...
Take Me To
and Mrs. R. L. Gotthardt, (F urnish On l y l
SECTION 2.
WANTE;D _;__• Old ~prlghl
Kalhy, Columbus; Mr. Bob
DiviSion A3 - Treated Waler Notice
pianos , grand pianos, . old
Ma i ns , Se rvi ces and Ap ·
THE SHOP
Moore, Columbus; Mrs. Vilma purtenances.
pump organs , Any condition.
Division
82
_
Stee
l
Water
I
Wlt.l.
NOT
be
responsible
for
Paying
SlOeach
,
Write
giving
Pikkoja and Sam Goradia,
P~EA!~~~.T,:RIDGE ROAD
Storage Tank. and Foundations .
r-ny debts ~on t rac t ed fo r by
directions. Witten Piano Co.,
POMERdY, O.
Pomeroy .
Div ision E2 ·- Service Meters
anyon e other than myself .
Box 188, Sardis, Ohio 43946.
"Custom Meat Cutting"
Chet Tannehille was a visitor (Fu rni sh OnlyJ .
Signed: Allen Roush .
12-1-6tp
Quick and Courteous Service
12
6
31p
::;-:::-:,----,-------DALE
DICK
at the Mark Tannehills on tor the Construct ion of a new
OLD Furn~ture. oak tables,
~ITTLE
VAUGHN
Tha nksgiving Day .
rural
wat er
s upply
and GUN Shoot , also rifle matches
992 ·3814
992-3374
organs, dt shes, clocks, brass
d istri bution system , will be
Ronald and Maria Bylicki , rece ived .by th e Leading Cree k
open si tes onl y and special
beds, or complete households
Let Dick and Dale Hetp You
Write M. D. Miller, Rl. 4; _with Your Meat Problems • .
Athens, were dinner guests at Co nse rvan cy District , M eigs deer slug mat ch; Forked Run
Sportsman Club, Sunday,
.Pomeroy
, Ohio . Call 992-6271.
Ct:~unty, at Rulland Elementary
the Roy Grues~r residence on S...: hool Auditorium, Colleg e Dece mber lOth, 17 noon .
6-28-lfc
For Sale
Thursday.
Avenue, Rutland , Ohio 45 775
11 -6-Jic
u ntil 12 :00 o'clock ( E . S T . )
NOW WRECKING lhe former
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Dece mber 13th, 1971, and then
For Rent
TWO f!lmily yard sa le, Friday
Epple's Grocery Store
Weeks on Thursday were Mr. a1 said place publicly opened and Satu rday, Dec. 8th and 3 AND 4 ROOM fur nished and
building
in Pomeroy . All
read aloud .
unfurnished
apartments.
and Mrs. John Weeks and and
9th ; if cold, held inside ;
kinds of building materials
Proposals may be forwarded
for sale on lhe lob including 2
famil} of Gallipolis, Mr . and by r egistered mail addressed to ' dishes. clothing, toys, small .. Phone 'W2-5434 .
4-12-llc
furniture, bottles ; aL E.lmer
said Board of Trustees, Leading
and 3 in . heavy material,
Mrs. Carl Jennings and Mrs. Creek
Conservancy District. in
Pickens reside nce ; Letar t 3:-F~U:-R~N
5heeti ng and cherry stair
=
I S:-H
"E"o=--ro_o_m_s_a_n-.,d-,-bath.
~·rancis Scholl . ·
ca re of Mr , Hck W Crisp ,
Falls; by Mrs. Elmer Pickens
railing; call 'W2-5946 or 882·
Rutland , OhiO 45775 .
Norlh Second Ave .• Midilnd Mrs. Eber Pickens.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Faulk President,
3219
.
The l'nformat ion for Bidder s,
dleport; references required;
11·6-Jic
11 -10-lfc
spent Thanksgiving Day with Form of Bid, Form of Contra c t,
phone 992-5293.
Plans, Speci f i cations, and
11 -29-tfc
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Hollon of
Forms of Bid Bond. Per - l'elp Wanted
tormance arid Payment Bond,
1
Columbus.
and ~ther documents ~ay be CAB driver ; apply in person at TRAILER spaces; extra large
lois, $25 a monlh, Velma
exa mmed at the follow1ng :
Twin City Cab, Middleport ,

Clarence

1

S129S

1968 CHEVY BELAIR

SHHH !!

+-II, /V\OII&gt;JI QJE

Business Services-

~~--__ ]

116'! L HEVY61SCAYNE

ADVERTISEMENT
FOR BIDS
Project Number 06-01 ·00995

Middleport, Ohio .

Washington
By
Report Miller

The statutory authority
under which
the
Administration initiated and
, maintained both · the !)O.{lay
wage-price freeze and the
Phase II economic plan expires
on April 30, 1973. An act of
Congress will be necessary to
extend
the
Economic
Stabilization Act and most
economic observers are
· predicting lh&lt;it the President
will ask Congress for authority
to keep the controls. The
Chairman of the Pay Board
told the Joint Economic
Committee of Congress that he
is opposed to any -drastic
changes in the wage controls
program until prices had.
remained stable for a test
period of "six to eight
months." At the same
hearings, the head of
the Price Commission voiced optimism about the
effect of the Phase II economic
stabilization program and
crediled the economic plan
with reducing the rate of infla tion.
Phase H began just over a
year ago and was basically a
i;lst of the nation's willingness
to comply with economic
restraints which were imposed
at the end of the 90-day freeze.
The Administration contends
that Phase II has brightened
business prospects and slowed
the rate of inflation to a point
where definite gains are being
recognized by the consumer. A
rising tide of economic optimism was reflected to a
degree recently when the Dow
Jon es industrial average

'QUALITY

1? 6 lip

LEGAL NOTICE

--------------------------1I
,-

,.

Of

associated with

thre ~

con secu tive insertions.
18 cents per word six con
·secutlve insertion s
25 Per Cent D'lscount on paic
ads and ads. pa id within 10 days .

'

MAQNA

is no longer

Pomerty
•tor Co.

2 SIGNS

f.\ I, SVfiiL,

f·H.

I

rl -

~~
•

�''

'

Now You Know .

ZO ,__:TIM&gt; 'Daily Sentine1,1w(iddleport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. 6, !972 ·

•

FFEP is recognized in
consumer education field .

Students on honolr· list
The Meigs High School honor Brenda Barton , Jef1 Birchfield,.
roll for the second six weeks • Rick Bol in , Donna Boyd, Diana
~riod

grading

b~en

has

an -

nounced .
Making a grade of "8" or
abqve In all their subjects to be
named to the roll were :

SENI'ORS - Edgar Abbott,

·D i ana
Aleshire ,
Shirley
Aleshir e, B·arbara Archer .

George Arnott, Linda Atkin $0n, Richard Bailey, Lynne
Baker . Debra Barnhart ,

El izabeth Blaettnar , J im
!!o9gs, Sarah Boyles, Franc1s
BrOderick, Jon Bunce, Janice

Burns, Terry Cadle, Judy

.Carsey ,

Debb 1e

Car son.

Michael Carder, Steven Cot.
terill. Jeff Darst, Brenda
Donahue, Robin Duckworth,
~anni e

Ebersbach ,

Merr1

Ebersbach, Jeff Fields. Donna
Francis, seth Fultz, Terry
George, David Gerard, Debra

Gilliam , Kay Gilmore, Karen

Hale , Sheila Hawk , Greg

Hayesr Randy Haynes, Denise
Hendncks, Connie Herdman,

Carsey, Shelly Clark , Tom
Cle land , Vicki Clelland, Joyce
Davis , Ri ta Davis, Russell
Davi s, Barbara Demoskey,

Andrew

English,

Dinah

Erlewine , Theodore Fisher.
Sandra Floccari, Brian Friend,
Conn1e Garnes, Venida Gibbs.
David Grant, Cathy Harr1son ,
Ingr id Hawl ey, Denise Hawley,
Ja cque line Hutton, James Hill,
Mary Janey , Susie Jeffers,
Dana Johnson , Ezra Kizer ,
Mary Krawsc zy n, Kei th Little ,

M1 chael May, Diane McAngus,
A lan Mill s,

Susan Morr1son,
Willia m
Myers ,
Brenda
Ne l son, T ina Ni eri, Sonya
Ohlinger , Diana Painter, Roxie
Patterson. Debra Pier ce,
Debra Powell , Donna Powell,
, Mike
Ric hards.
Diane
Ridgway , Jo Rosenbaum,
Sandra
Ru sc hel ,
Debra
Schaefer, Jeanie Schne ider,
Patty Searles, Wayne Sear les,

Gail Sizemore. Albert Smith,
Marlene Hutton, Steve Jewell, J1ll Sm ith, Tina Spires, Rick
Debbie Jewett, Will.iam Stobart, Brenda Van : Meter ,
Kennedy, Randall Lipscomb, Pau l Voss , Sherman White .
Ragena McGuire, Eugene
SOPHDMOR ES - Sharon
McK inney,
Edith Mees, BinQ, Teresa Burchett, Julia
Richard Mendenhall. Sherry Capehart. Jo Chafin , Jennifer
M ichael. Heidi Milhoan, David Chapman, Marcella Charles,
Mitchell,

Ki mberly

Mowery ,
John Nelson , Desiree Pike,
Da vid Reeves , Christine
Robinson . Ava Sayre, Mike
Sayre ,
James
Schmoll.

Stephen

Warn er,

Dalla s Weber, Patti Well,
Sharon Wilson, Mindy Young.
JUNIORS Christine
Bail ey, David Barnhart.

5%

Karen l"il lis, Steven Walburn,

Jay Whi·te, Brenda WilL Linda
Williams., Pamela Wilson .

FRES1HMEN - Synlhla
Allen, Kathy Baker, Sandra
Carle1on. George Carper,
Karen
Colema n ,
Ginger
Cullurns, t l&gt;eggy Cunningham,

M1ckey Davenport , Cindy
Eads, Sc,o•ll Frazier, Cherie
Fry, John l' ultz, Crystal Glaze
Cindy Glat.te, William Gloyd.
Julie Hann m, Darla Harper ,
Andrew ' Hoover ,
laura
Hoover, 1 Drema H ova tter,

James Hu;tr'on, Debbie Janey,
Bonita Johp ~ton , Debbie Kauff,
Glenn KeM&gt;edy, Mona King,
La \Nrehce,

Debra

Mi chae l

Magnotta, : Vicki Manl ey,
Charles Mar shall, Janel Maue,
M i l che ll

Mea doW s,

Sc hoonover 1 Pamela Shockey,

Richard

Dillon , Melod ie Faulkner, Lois

Hayes, Mau ree n Hennes sy,

Lmda Sigm,an, Angela Sisson,
Dale Sisson, Pon Sm ith, Peggy

Snyder, Tarnra Stanley, Mike
Swick, Me li ~;·;a Thomas. Donna
Thornton, Greg Van Meter,

Terry Whalt&gt;y, Earl Wood.

15 Rio studer.11ts
in '72 Who's ~,Who
'

RIO GRANDE - Fifteen Rio
Grande College students have
been selected to appear in the
1972 edition of "Who's Who
Among Students in American
Universiti.es and Colleges. "
They were selected by a
campus nominating committee
and reviewed by the editors of
the directory.
Criteria used by the campus
groups and the editorial board
in cl ud e academic
achievement, service to the
commu nity, leadership in
educa tiona]
and
extracurricular activities,
citizenship and future potential.
Selected at Rio Grande were
Maria De Castro, Rio Grande,
English, member of Chi
Omega Alpha ; Rita De Vault,
Galliplis, English, member of
Chi Omega Alpha; Georgena
Harrison , Gallipolis,
Mathematics, member of Chi
Beta Phi; Ronald Harris,
Columbus, Physical
Education, member of the

I

FalCons down Hannan

~

College ratings

$1295vALUE

NEW YORK (UP II __: The
United Press International top

20 pre-season college division

basketball teams with first

place
votes and won -lost
records as of Sunday Dec . 3 in
parentheses {First Week)
Team
Points

l. S.F.Auslin (19) 14-0)
2. Ky . St. (2) (2-0)
3. Eau Claire (2) (2-0)
4. Roanoke (5) (3-0)
5. Tenn. St. 12) (2-l )
6. Akron (2-0)
7. Phjla . Tex. ll ·O)
8. La . Tech (2-1)
9. Evansvil le (0-l)
10. Augstna, Ill . (3 0)
11. Assu mption (I) (1 -0)
12. Sam Hous. St . (2-0)
13. Eastern Mich. ( 1-1)
14. Bentley 13-0)
15. Seattle Pac. 12-0)
16. Fairmnt St. (l -0)
17. Fla . Sou. (l -2)
18. Albny . Ga . St. (2-01
19. Xavier, La. (0-0)
20. McNeese St. (I) (2-0)

296
239
,186
183
120
105
76
74
73
56
47
46
32
22
21
20
24
18
15
13

Angela Fry is

November bride

MEIGS THEATRE

CART Free

i

I~:::;:;:::::~Ca:r~A:uto:Ra:c:in:g~,---~'

·Ingels Furniture.

42 KINDS

To BeG1ven

GifT BONANZA
Away
STORE if -t;F~
*~'

.._

v

.

--------,---- Frid,y, Ott. 22, t972 . 7 P.M.

,,

and mixed nut!f.

:

Now taking \ orders for Christmas
turkeys, ha rt;s, chickens, etc. Place
your order now.

~imon's

VOL XXIV NO. 165

Market

115W ~MAIN ,
PO~EROY, OHIO

to war

~

• SPACE CENTER, Houston (UP!) - Apollo 17's astronauts
rocketed through space today on the final and most difficult
chapter of America's planned exploration of the moon, sailing
smoothly despite an electronic failure that delayed their
deparlure by aimost three hours and forced them to step up their
speed slightly.
Noonday brightness briefly flooded Cape Kennedy at 12:33 a.
m. EST as their Saturn 5 rocket, tall as a 36-.story buildtng,
roared off tis launch pad and traced an orange comel trail into
the sky toward a Sunday rendezvous witlt the moon. The moon
landing is set for Monday.

SPEAKER NAMED
Rev. Noel Hennan will be
guest speaker durinc Fliday
night services at Plants
Memorial Church near the
~cine Ulcl!s and Dam, Ser•
vices will startat 7:30. Dr, Bob
Persons, pastor, invites the
public to attend.

Practical Gifts of Work Clothes
BUSY MENS DEPARTMENT ON THE 1st FLOOR
Another

B~

stewardaildJimmyNoeHeiiiSley,juniorsteward.Other new
officers elected Nov. 3 were Ezra J. Sheets, junior warden ·
Theodore T. Reed, Jr., treasurer; Brooks Sayre, tyler, and
John Bacon, trustee. Bacon was the outgoing master. The
new lllasler, Ebersbach, is employed at the Ebersbach
Hardware Co. in Pomeroy He live . S
'th h' 'f
Sally, They have a son Da~id h S_l~ ra~se Wlte IS WI e,
'
• w 0 ts In In rgar n.

biasi:;f~:!o~f~~:~:~~~~ao~~i~~~:~00~~:~a wpeatched !lie
1

A ast-second electronic circuit failure delayed the launch 2

hours and 40 mtnules - and threatened to postpone it for an
enttre month . But techructans at the Cape and in Alabama
worked out a way to bypass the faulty gear and get the flight
. W»:,..;,q;,o;.oN,•-'oY,•,•A._.••,•.•,o,o.o,oO" '.' • ,_. • ' • • "&lt;I' • ' ' o! ' ' ' '' ' ' ' o' ' ' ,_..._, • •,- 'N •
started safely.
~;o.w...-~•....-;o;·.-.·.-,•,.,•;o:•.~•:.-.-:•!i!"!-!•;o!O:•!•.•!•!•!•!Y!•!•!•,•!•:;: ••,..;•:•:•.•:••.,.:0::::::::~:!;».!:8":!::~::::~~;;;g;;;_:;;~;;;:;;:::::;;:*;;:~;;3:!;8;;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;;
..•.
Despite its late start, Apollo 17was going so smoothly that a
~:;
•'•'
~-::
,
course correction maneuver scheduled for this mornig was
canceled. The astrona uts had fired an extra strong - and very
·''-:·:
i
accurate - blast of the top stage of their rocket to break out of
PARIS (UPI) -The Vlel Cong said today Saigon Is blocking a Vietnam peace accord
~;
Earth orbirtoward the moon, going a little faster than originally
and dented Paris news reports that a cease-fire agreement has already been reached In
~1
planned to make up lost time.
direct secret talks between Henry Kissinger and Hanoi envoys.
~;;
Astronauts Eugene A. Cernan, Ronald E. Evans ancl
Arriving for today's lltth session ol the semi-public weekly peace talks the Viet
1111
KANSASCITY, Mo. (UP! ) - Harrison H. "Jack" Schmitt locked the command ship and moon
Cong. forelgo minister, Madame Nguyen Thl Blob said South Vletnam ·o~osed the
;!~ Despite a weakened heat'! and
agreement and was plannlug the liquidation of political prisoners. "We demand the
:::: labored breathmg , former landing craft nose-to-&lt;1ose and cast off the spent top stage of the
United States and Saigon guarantee the security of aU prisoners and set them free, " Mrs.
~~~: President Harry S Truman , 88, Saturn rocket five hours after launch.
Mission controllers at Houston reported the discarded rocket
Blnb told reporters. Her statement came as lbe French press circulated stories saying a
;:;: rallied sharply today. Doctors
stage
was on a true course to slam into the moon's lace Sunday peace slgoiDg Is Imminent.
'::::
said his health was critical but while Apollo 17 is behind the moon - about 124 miles east of
MeanwbUe, wllb a Paris newspaper quoting, "a sure source" as saying thai peace
his daughter said, "I have
settlement already has been rerched, talks on ending the Vietuam War continued todav
.... great faith that he's going to
at two levels at the weekly seml-jlubUc Paris peace talks and In direct secret talks
:;:;
between Keary A. Kls~lnger and Hanoi's top envoys.
::!: come out of this ail right."
Physicians attending the
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
'lbelour delegations to the regularly scheduled talks agreed to meet early today lor
&amp;l na tion 's 33rd chief executive
Cold Saturday and Sunday,
the 1119th Ume and the Amerfcaas said Kissinger, President Nixon's top security adviser
~; said their primary concern was
· woulcl' ~er privately with Hanoi poUtboro member Le Due Tho and other North
ij whether Truman's heart was wannlng Monday. Chance of
snow flurries Saturday
VIetnamese officials later tOday.
:~
strong enough.
mainly in the northeast and a
In Wasb!ngton, White HOUle press secretary Ronald Ziegler said Kissinger sent
"President Trwna.p 's con- chance of snow Monday.
several cables to Nixon during tbe night on the progress of Wednesday's talks. Nixon
~~
dition ts improved, but his age
cabled inslhletf0111 back to hlo chief negotiator and there were other exchanges between
~~ and the potential of sudden Highs in the upper 20s in the
to the lower 30s In the
~ ~· ~~~~~~-J,-JwbeD ~~~ IJol'e.llll~ lor obeday. · _ _. ~ chanJl~ requir~s tbat he .con- , north
I
south
Saturday and Sunday,
"
t:vo:!~»;...;:.
. . o!.w,x.·.-..··..······~oo:. ........... ...... .... ... , o.:.- ..... ;-,·.- ·'I·
•. • ••:rc ·?i&amp;nsa :, .or&gt;;
'·· • .••••••••••
·~ .•r.r.«~•..-.y;o;;•;-oo•,•, .•.~•;.o;.•:.t.•.•· .~..o!!•.•.•,•:·:-:•:•:::•:•:•:•:•!O:•:•!•:O!•!o!•!•!l!·»~.~.:~.y;!f{o;."!-.•:· tinue to be de scribed as
warming to the ]ow to mid
.
"'
·
..
critical,"
said
a
medical
30sln
the north and near 40 In
'
•
,&gt;; .. $;;'J '1 ".1 r:t , ; , . ?.~:&amp;.:::::::::::~::::::1
•
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov.
state ment at Research the south Monday. Lows 15 to John J. Gilligan said today a
Hospital at 10 a.m. (EST).
25.
threat by the federal government to withhol~ from the
states federal matching funds
for public welfare was
"burea ucratic demogoguery"
By United Press International
imposed
by
"faceless
COLUMBUS - A MASSIVE EFFORT TO register all drug
John R. Heiskell, Sr., 60,
bureaucrats" who do not kn ow
prograllll in Ohio has been launched by the Bureau of Drug former organizational director
what
they are doing.
Abuse' in the Ohio Department of Mental Health and Mental for the Farm Bureau in Ga!lia
"This is just another inRetardation. Gov, Jolm J . Gilligan, is calling the move "un- and Meigs Counties, died
Five defendants fo rfeited
stance of the federal governprecedented," said the program would assist more than 220 Wednesday afternoon in a
~
bonds and six others were fined
ment imposing an inworkable
Wlrelated, drug progr8Ill8 in Ohio .
Marietta Hospital.
Wednesday night b'y Pomeroy
new program on the states,
~e program's objectives are :
A native of Circleville, Mr.
Mayor William Baronick.
then trying to pass the blame to
-Ji:nable the bureau to know what needs exist in Ohio's drug Heiskell was well-known in this
Forfeiting bonds were Phil
progralna; enable the bureau's assistance program to gear its area for his work in Farm
WASHINGTON (U P!) - Fisher, Syrcuse , $25, in - the sta tes when the program
efforts toward's areas of deficiency, and to pinpoint successful Burea u affairs, the Gallia Boosted by big spurts upwards toxication; Wtliiam Witte, doesn't work," sa id Gilligan.
"This so called 'simplified
programs and provide relevant information to less effective Coun ty Junior Fair, and other in November, wholesale prices Pomeroy, $25, running a red
prograllll throughout the state.
increased at a faster rate light; Robert Rawlings, method ' of filing for welfare
civic projects.
For the past 12 years, Mr. during the first year of Middleport, $50, reckless benefits was dreamed up by
BRUSSEUI-'nm UNITED Sl'ATES, Britain and France Heiskell had served as Farm President Nixon's Phase II operation, and $100, leaving the lhe federal bureaucrats despite
announced today that they will open contacts with East Germany Director lor WSAZ television in wage-pnce controls than scene of an accident; Judy warnings from states that it
''with a view to sometime later establishing diplomatic Huntington. He had resigned before prices were frozen, the Landers, Pomeroy, $50, assa ult would lead to widespt'ead overrelations." ·
payments.
that position this year tQ work government said today .
and battery and James Kiser,
"ll has done just that and
The agreement, worked out privately Wednesday night, w.S in the Marietta area, but lived
The Labor Department's Racine, $13.70, speeding.
now the federal government is
officially relayed today to the winter meeting of the foreign with his family at Rt. 3, South Bureau of Labor Statistics said
Fined were Leland Saxton,
ministers of the North AUantic Treaty Organization (NATO ) by Point.
wholesale prices went up 5.4 Pomeroy, $100 and costs and trying to pin the blame on
French FOI'elgn Minister Maurice Schumann. West Germany
Survivors include his wife, per cent in the 12 months since three days in jail, driving while states that didn 't want the
program in the firs t pla-ce,"
agreed with the decision. The other 11 NATO allies were asked to Charlotte; four daughters, the Phase II controls began in
'Continued on Page II )
sa id Gilligan.
agree to a communique leaving them all free to work toward Mrs. Dwight Cohagon, Mrs. Nov:ember, 1971.
relaUons with East Germany, thus ending 'll years of offici.: James Robinson, Mrs. Salim
In\Jthe 2V. months of 1971
ostracism for the East Berlin regime.
before
the wage-price freeze
Tabrus and Miss Virginia
Heiskell, and a son, John R. was imposed, wholesale prices
AKRON - GOODYEAR TIRE lc RUBBER CO., largest
Heiskell, Jr ., and eight went up an an annual rate of
American tire inaker, may revolutionallze the industry with its
only 5.2 per cent.
grandchildren.
announcement wpush four lines of steel belted radial tires with
Wholesale prices, which
Funeral services will be held
"the largest adwrtising ef(ort in the history of tbe rubber in- at 2 p. m. Sunday from the usually precede movements in
dustry." Although Goodyear has made radials for a, number of
Trinity Episcopal Church in conswner prices, went up at an
years, It has put Its malo sales effort into its belted Polyglas tires
Huntington with Dr. Robert . even htgher annual rate, 5.7
with bias plies. ·
Thomas officiating. Burial will per cent, during the past six
The announcement Wednesday could mean the entire quality
be in Highland Memorial months, the bureau said.
tire market, both for new cars and reylacement tires, will move
Wholesale prices, aftet
Gardens at South Point.
into steel belted radials in the next few years. All lflajor
Friends . may call at the declining 0.2 per cent In Oc·
American tire'companies, Goodyear, Firestol)e, B. F. Goodrich, , Schneider Funeral Home in tober, shot up by 0.6 per cent in
unirOyal and General Tire, are currently producing radial steel
November mainly because of a
Chesapea.ke Saturday.
belted tires. Michelin, the French finn that did much to pioneer
1.6 per cent rise in prices for
the radial in Europe, just announced it will build a •large factory
farm products ahd processed
in the United States to make the steel belted radials.
foods and feeds.
This was the largest increase
CALLED TWICE
COWMBUS- GOV. JOHN· J. GO..IJGAN has commuted
The Pomeroy E-R squad in the Wl)oiesale Price Index
the sentences ol three aging Prohibition Era gangsters, making
answered two calls late since July.
them eligible for release from prison after serving nearly 40
Wednesday, at 11 :20 p.m. for
years fill" fOlD' murders. GllUgan issued the commutations of
Mrs. Richard Freeman, 1610
John Rai, 68, Ralph Caraello, 66; and Serafino Sinatra, alias John
Lincoln Heights, who was
(Wop) English, on Nov. 10,, but it was not divulged until Wedtaken to Veterans Memorial
nesday.
Hospital where she was treated
The Ohio Adult Parole Board is expected to make a final
clectalon early next week. A favorable ruling would allow the for an illness and released and
for Mrs. Hazel Moore, Union
inmate•' release in early 1973.
Ave., who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
SAIGON -GOVERNMENT ·TJWOPS CHASING guerrillas
about 11 :30 p.m. and admitted
wbo roc:lr.eted South VIetnam's largest allied air base pinned
as a medical patient.
clown a Communilt battalion in two villages near Saigon today,

Vzet wng denies peace agreement reached

T
rum an
*:
r aliIes

Gilligan
hits at

r

'

~ungling

".!,'!,'!!'

Shipment

~~~LIE~ORK

INSTALLATION HELD - Laurance Ebersbach,
Syracuse, second from left, front, was installed master of
Pomeroy Lodge 164, F&amp;AM, Wednesday night at the temple.
Others instaUed,l tor, front are, Don Miller, senior warden;
Ben Philson, 12th Masonic District deputy grand master
Racine, installing officer; Thomas C. Edwards, secretary:
and Dale Smith, chaplaili; back row, Bruce Zerkle, senior
deacon; Arlos Casto, junior deacon; Phil Ohlinger, senior

i(

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

PANTS

ews.. in Briefsf·· Heiskell
is dead
1

All sizes 29 wa ist to 44 waist .
Se l eci your correct l ength .

Navy Blue . Dark Dl ive . Forest
Green . Army Tan . Charcoal.
Lee Tech Twill Panls and Shirts
are perfect for Christmas gifts.
50 per cen t Polyester, 50 percent

5 Forfeit
court bond

sharp rise

Wrangler Scherpa
Lined Blue Denim
Western Jackets
Sizes 36 to 50 waist length . snap
front .

Big Ben Qui It Lined Coveralls
Brawn Duck or Green Herringbone. Sizes 36 to

50. Serviceable, warm appreciated gift.

Mens Work and Dress Socks
A complete seleclion of his favorite style. We'll
help you find his proper size In the sock he likes
best.

Mens Work and Dress Belts
All sizes 28 to 50-waist in the popular wide belts

pl us ~ new shipment of 111.- Inch wide work belts .
Genv1ne lea,ther . Black or Brown.

Mens Sweat Shirts
See the big selection of hooded sweat shirts and
regular pullovers. All sizes. Small through extra
large an~ a brand new fleece lined zipper Irani
coat style sweat shirt you can wear as a chore
sweater .
'

And there are many, many other excellent items for you to
see.
·
'

The "(oy Store

Hallmark Christmas Cards

'
of 10 speed ·
Just received another shipment
Racing Bicycles. Buy these Bikes or .
regular Bikes now during the big Bicycle :
Sale - Watch lor the time and place of ,
Santa Claus arrival soon.

Dn the lsi Floor select Christmas cards
now . Plenty of good buys In boxed
assortments - plus Individual cards. Toke
lime while shopping to see this tine line of
cards.

Be thrifty! Save all of your sales lips from

E~BERFELDS

Wholesale
•
•
pnces
m

Cotton - never need ironing .

IN POMEROY
f!1t
I

, Don't forget to visit the otl•r departments all over
tton during this
Holiday Season. The Llngtrle • Hosiery • Accessorltt • HDUIIWII'II ancl
Linens departments on thllst floor - Womens and Chll*eM Rtady·foWear • Drapery and Music Departments on the 2nd floor 1nd the Furniture and Floor Covering dePirtment on the 3rd floor. AIIO tflt
Warehouse on Mechanic Str•t.

TEN CENTS""•

PHONE 992-2156

true

BY GARY CLARK

MOBILElV

I

Det,oled To The ln.teresl3 Of Tlw.Meigs-Mason Area
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO.
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 7, 19712

then cllled in air strikes that flattened the area, field reports
lllid,
~ air war over North VIetnam, U.S. Navy jet flgbterLOim
bOmbed the runwaYJ at two MIG !lases Wednesday, U.
command apotesmen 11ld, hitting a missile site and knocking
out alley railroad bridge. One of the strikes was only six miles
belaw file 30th Parallel bomblilg halt Une imposed by President

s.

Nixon.

PICKETS WJTIIDRAWN
SPACE CENTER, Houston
(UP! ) - Pickets for the
striking maintenance workers
were withdrawn today until
after the Apollo J7 Hight,

a on
where Apollo 14 landed lit 1971. The shock waves, equal to the
explosion of II tons of TNT, will be recorded by instruments left
behind by previous moon crews.
On Monday, Cernan and Sclunitt are due to'land on the lunar::
surface at mid-aftern®n EST, and about four hours later tO··
begin three days of exploration in a mountain-rimmed valley ··
which planners hope will be more scientifically ]X'Oductive than
any moon visit to date.
With their ship soaring smoothly on course this morning,
Cernan, Evans and Schmitt ate a space meal of beef and gravy,
chicken stew, ambrosia, gingerbread,-and brownies, and then
prepared for their first sleep period in space,
·
Looking back toward home from a distance of more than .
~.ooo miles, Schmitt told mission control: "H there ver was a
fragile appea ring piece of blue in space, it's the Earth right
now."
~
The biggest problem seemed a mysterious - and apparently
harmless - tepeatedsquealing of the spacecraft's master alarm ~
tone. That, mission control indicated, was lor the prese~t merely ;
a nagging irritant.
.
"
At 5: I~ a. m. EST Apollo 17 was 14,9511 miles from earth
traveling at a speed of 10,873 miles per hour.

Citizen group ·
•
opposmg vote
MASON - Citizens banded
together here in protest against
mandatory garbage collections
and apparently don't want a
public vote on the issue.
Their protest had been heard
by town council which Is
making plans to put t he
question before the people for
vote , Mayor Roy llarless said
today tentative date for the
referendun1 is December 15.
The citizen group In a
meeting last night attended by
35 to 40 persons agreed they
don't agree with the town ordinance , do not want a vote, but
do wantto get a layer and "lind
out what's what".
A committee of three was
appointed to proceed with this
and then to report hack to the
group with legal counsel at

another meeUng which has
been tentatively set for
Monday evening. Appointed to '
the committee were Ira
Atkinson, Joe Young and
Harry Roush.
Objection is being expressed
on mandatory collections
"rather than have' it voluntary" members of the ciU..111
group said·. Through Uie ct.'
dinance passed and levied
some few months aco.
households are being char1ed
$2.80 per month for garbage
collection~ ol!ce a week: ~
contract for this was awarded "';
to A. 0 . Powers,
#1
••
Also during the meeUnglaat "!1,
nigh I, dissatisfaction was
expressed on the procedure
used for relieving a fonner
police chlef.

Athens .dealer to
get 18 ambulances_
ATHENS - Officials of
Southeast Ohio Emergency
Medical Service (SEOEMS)
announced this week that Page
Chevrolet of Athens was low
bidder on the modulance-type
vehicles specified for use in
most of the counties taking
part in the Emergency Medical
Care Project. The vehicles are
on order.

CHRISTMAS TIME -Employes oltbe Pomeroy NatiQ!ll!l Ban!! prepared an old-fashioned
Christmas tree for the lobby Tuesday evening in connection with the bank's IOOth anniversary
this year. Employes made many old-fashioned decorations lor the tree .inCluding crocheted
bells, strands of cranberries and popcorn, gilded walnuts and wishbones, and other items.
Ill , ,.,.Jt" 'Ill~ t..d f:9._t.,Jil
Decorating the live tr·ee, from the left, are Linda Spencer, Marilyn Wolfe, Maxin~ Griffith ~nd
1 Joan Wolfe.
GIVl MORE 10 CHRISTMAS SEAlS

December first was the ef· ·
fective contract date with
Page and a 30 to GOilay waiUng .,
period for delivery Is an- ~ '
ticipated. The order was lor 18
modulance-type ambulances,
partially equipped, and in an
Omaha Orange color. A
modulance is a modular ambulance unit designed to fit any
one-ton standard pickup cab
and chassis. When the chassiJ
begins to wear out' or iJ :-:
damaged , the patient com- :::
partment can be transferred ;;:,
easily to a new chassis.
' •'
Within the modulance there
is room for the EMTs
(Emergency Med ica l
Technicians) and for the lifesupport systems needed. It . ·:
comes equipped with built-in · ·,,
suction equipment, additional
internal lighting, built-in
oxygen systems, closed cabinet
space, and light extrication
equipment. The modulance Is
built by the Modular Am·
bulance Corporation in Dallas,
Texas. Bid price was $12,413.51
per vehicle.
Two van-type ambulances
will be ordered at a future date,
According to SEOEMS, the
counties of Gailla, Hocking and
Athens will receive the first
ambulances, which should be
delivered in groups of five or
six. These colll!lies were given
priority because of the ,
emergency situation caused by
· the local funeral directors .,
dropping their ambulance , •
service .
When in full service,
SEOEMS w!U consist ol a fleet
of 2P up-to-date properly
equipped ambulanceS lOcated
throughout the seven~ty '
area of Athens, Gallla,
Hocking, Jaek80n, Lawrence,
Meigs and Vinton ..

a

'.
' I

I

I

tonis'ht

Clear and. cold early
followed by increasing
cloudiness late tonight. Lows In •
the teens. Cloudy and wanner
tomorrow with rain llke)y,
probably beginning as snow or
sleet. Highs in the 30s and'!!
lower 40s.
'il

enttne

I

points while Hannan managed only 12 to give the White Falcons .
a 66 to 35 advantage. Dingey fouled out with I: 23left in the third ·
quarter
and had to watch the remainder of the game from the
The Wahama White Falcon basketball team opened their 1972bench.
73 Campaign on a winning note yesterday afternoon by
The final canto saw numerous turnovers once again as was the
defeating the Hannan Wildcats. 81 to 43.
case throughout the contest. Wahama racked up 15 points to
Rob Lambert, Mark Mitchell and Rllger Dingey were the
Hannans 8 to give them their first victory fo the season by an 81leaders for head coach Grant Barnett's squad. The White
·
Falcons pulled down a total of 64 rebounds during the course of 43 score.
Team statistics' show thil" Whlte Falcons stealing the ball a
the game but committed an amazing total of 41 turnovers.
of 2ll times. They pulled 64 rebounds and attempted 83 shots
total
The game began with the Falcons jumping out to an early lead
of which the hit 36·to give them a 43 percent sh®ting percentage,
which they never relinquished, Roger Dingey got into early foul
there
were 11 assists and 7 blocked shots and that enonnous
trouble by picking up his third late in the first quarter. Mike
Lewis and Dingey supplied the power on the boards and Dingey amount of 41 turnovers.
Individually, Robbie Lambert had eight steals and 24 points on
and Lambert supplied the offensive scoring threat.. The first
12 baskets. Mark Mitchell took rebounding honors with 18 while
quarter score was 19 to 9.
The second period saw Mark Mitchell team up with Lewis to Dingey grabbed II apd Lewis 10. Dingey scored 12 points and
Mitchell 11 to round out the scorers who hit in double figures.
control the boards as Dingey was forced to set out. Mitchell,
The annual alumni game will be played tonight at the
didn't see any action during the first canto pulled down seven
Wahama High Gym to give the home town fans a chance to see
rebounds, Lambert once again carried the biggest part of the
the
1972-73 edition of the White Falcons. Such graduates as Bill
scoring load as the White Falcons outscored their opponents 22
Zuspan, Bob Greene, Dick Tennant, Gary Sisk, Gary Fields and
to 14 to give them a 41-23 half-time lead.
John Zuspan will see action agains the reserve team at 6:30.
'The third stanza saw Dingey get back into the game and the
Danny
Rizer, Dave Gillispie, Tim Howard, Randy Crawford
White Falcons were at full strength. Once again Lewis, Dingey
and Jerry Keyes heads the list of g1 aduates who are slated to go
and Michell controlled both boards allow·the Wildcats only one
•
against
the varsity at 8:00p.m. An exciting night of basketball
shot most of the time, Lambert continued to score along with
Mitchell and Dingey to widen the lead .. Wahama dropped In 25 will begin at 6:30 so don't miss it.

Weather

•

A smaU' tuft of sUcky cloth
serves as a nose scratcher
inside the Apollo 17 astronauts'
space !lehnets,

I

·

~

student judidary; Ron Hayes,
Vinton , Physical Education ,
member of .lllpha Sigma Phi;
Vincent Hill, Gallipolis,
Mathematics, member of
Archon; Robert Lawson, Oak
Hill; Phys:i.cal Education,
College BKB Resu lts
active in .sports activities;
5 per cent per yoor pold Cl!
By
United
Press International
John Martlilndell , Wellston,
Regular Pas- Sllvlnga.
East
No Minimum. Interest from
MathematiC!I, member of the Cornell 74 Penn 51. 65
dale of dtpoolt lo dale of
band and choir; Alvis Moore, Bos St. 94 Brdgwtr St. 75
withdrawal. ~nterest com.
Brandeis 90 MIT 65
pounded ,quarterly. lnltrnt
Columbus,
Communications Del. 93 Rndlph-Mcn 74
peld .a long as an _,
comprehennive , active _in Fordham 95 Yale 81
account Is maintained.
St. 58 Alfred 53
music and drama ; Brian , Frdnia
Pace 78 Yeshiva 61
NEW HAVEN - Angela Fry,
Raines, H nrrisburg ,. Pa ., St. Jos .. Pa. 92 Rider 51
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Physical Education, member Bos U. 87 Nrtheastn 74
Ralph Rottgen, New Haven,
W. Ptrsn 72 Mn tc lr St. 67
of the ch&lt;•ir; Ned Riegel, Chyny
St. 82 Mnmouth 67
and Robert Marcinko, son of
Circleville,
Mathematics, Ind ., Pa. 67 Cal., Pa 64
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Marmember of Chi Beta Phi ; Wynsbrg 90 Dvs&amp;Eikns 86
Oneonta 57 New Paltz 55
cinko, Sr., Tuppers Plains,
Peggy Sandl!rs, Chillicothe, Jrsy Cty St. 76 Pratt 39
were married on Nov. 21 at the
Tho Atllens c:.-ty
English; Millie Thompson, Hartlord 77 Williams 70
,............ Co.
C)mrch of Christ at Pomeroy.
Bos Coli. 85 Rhde Is. 75
Point Pleas .ant, W. Va ., Glenvl
~s,p..!St.
77 Salem 72. ot
Rev, Allen performed the
. .......,,01119
C'ommunica\io·ns, member of Wheelng 74 Aldsn-Brdds 66
double ring ceremony.
South
z,eta Theta l ~hi : Margaret
All ' -~~ lntUI'9d To
The bride wore a blue gown
Dvdsn 100 E.Car . 80
m.ooo.OO by FSLIC.
T:racy, Rio G1•ande, Engiish, Ja
xonv l70 Fla.Tech 50
with white accessories. Her
member of La.mbda Omicron Louisvl 75 Dayton 58
corsage was of white mums.
Psi, a nd Rdbert Willey, No. Car. 128 Dartmouth 86
LSU 94 Memphis St. 81
Miss
Teresa Marcinko of
Newark, N. J ., Physical Melh 124 Va. Wslyan 66
Middleport was maid of honor.
Education, member of Alpha Guilford 81 Pleiller 78
Mr . Mar~ inko is attending
Upsa la 87 Wash.,Md. 73
Sigma Phi. ·
Towsn St . 91 G. Mason 70
Mala Technical School in
Howard 82 Va . St. 73
Columbus,
and is employed by
Midwest
SCM Corporation there. Mr.
Creighton 90 Sou. Il l. 70
Taylor 77 Andersn 72
and Mrs . Marcinko are
FIFTH GRAUE WINS
Cncrdla , Ill . 79 Hope 71
residing at 692 S. Richardson,
Winner of a membership Beckley 103 Ohio Val. 62 .
Beloit 93 Carroll 68
Columbus.
contest staged by the Pomeroy Detroit
81 UW Whtewtr 49
PTA was the fiftl'l grade. The Iowa St. 86 UC DaviS 80
$10 award will be divided Marian 82 Frnkln 80
Marquette 56 Tenn . 30
between the two classes. Mrs. Wooster 94 Wil brfrce 74
Earl Thoma, president, reports McKndre 70 lnd .St .. Evnsvl69
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Kent St. 83 W.Va . Tech 60
that PTA membership now Capital
ADMITTED
Kenda
67 Heidlbrg 53
stands at 201.
Ottrbn 69 Rio Grnde 61
Chaney, Shade; Clyde Smith,
Dnisn 97 J. Crrll 72
Mt. Alto, W. Va.; Sam Hale,
Indiana 72 Kansas 55
Rutland; John Russell,
DePaul 88 Nrthwstn 80
Sl. Louis 97 Mo.-St. L 76
Clark,
Pomeroy;
Fred
The first stage of the Sat- DePauw 95 Centre 76
Pomeroy; lola Collins, Reedsurn-V moo n rocket[ generates
Southwest
ville;
Joyce Kerns, Midas much energy 1~er second N.Mex . 88 N.Mex.St. 67
Cenlnary
86
E.
Tex.
Bap
59
as a mtllion automobile en·
dleport; Charles Clark, Point ·
Trltn St. 57 Astn Coli . 54
gines.
Pleasant ; Mildred Sisson,
Dal. Bap 75 Okla . Bap 71
Baylor 72 Ab. Chris 69
Pomeroy; Dennis Palmer,
McMurr y 85 Lbbck Chris 82
LeTourneau 93 Baptist Chris- Racine, and Jimmy Graham,
Pomeroy.
tian 62
West
DISCHARGED - Kathleen
Adms Sl. 77 SntaFe 74
Tonight &amp; Thur'Sday
Arnott, William Snyder,
Mont.St. 64 StoutSt. 62
December 6-7
·Roberta Dailey, Roger Adkins,
Air Force 81 Tulane 59
NOT OPEN
Gonzga 54 Wash. St. 52
Bobbie Roy, Mary Weaver,
Kenda Chaney , Margaret
ALLISON HONORED
Friday &amp; Saturd;~y
with purchase of ·
December 8-9
NEW YORK (UP!) - Bobby Nichols, Charlotte Kimes,
Tho TAMPA •· 02004W
THE CULPEPPI: R
Allison of Hueytown, Ala. was Francis Benedum and Delores
Gracefully slim, cabinet In
CATTLE' COMPANY
Grained Walnut color. 0;1:~~·~
honored Tuesday as Martini &amp; Cundiff.
I Technicolor)
Vldeo Range Tuning 81
Gary Grimes
Rossi Driver of . the Year lor
Billy "Green" Bu••h
1972. He was presented by a
SUPER FEATURES!
'
lPG)
check for $7,500 and was
• Cuttom "Ptrml·8tt11 VHF
MEDICINE
Fine Tuning
presented a trophy by William
BALL CARAVAI.~
• 3-Stogo I.F. Ampllflor
!Technicolor)
France, president of the
• Automtllc " Fringe-Lock"
IG P)
National Association for Stock
FIGURES RELEASED
Circuit
Show Starts 7 p.m.
Sixty-three films were shown
NOW ONLY
120 times to ait audience of
~. 297 persons during November
tt!' Dl•aon•l PlcWre
according to a Gallia Co~nty
7 Room-to-Room Mobility
District Library represen.
!alive.
·
Book circulation figures
revealed 4,988adult books were
borrowed at the main library
while 1,331 were borrowed
from the bookmobile for a total
-...:,._~.;- I
of 6,319. Juvenile books
OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS
borrowed totaled 1,658 at the
PH. 992-2635
MIDDLEPORT
library, and 7,190 from the
bookmobile
for a total of 8,848.
.
I '
Grand total from both units in
SPECIAL DI,SCOUNT to churches and
1973
November was 15,167.
organizations. 'Also shelled peanuts; walnuts
OEPOSIT AT ANY MIDDLEPORT
PINTO

INTEREST

teacher guides and ac- , ,
companying sludent problem
books, the sludent simula~ ­
step-by-step, .. real
life ·
situatiops. · For example, .'
students are shown hoW to~
is a unique program of basic endorse and sign cheeks, how ·
financial educa lion designed to to balance a bank statement,
help the young people become where to·get credit and how to.
better money managers of main lain a good credit rating ...
their personal finances, sai4 The books contain practice:
Reed, who added that "We are fonns, such as checks, deposit:
very happy to be able to slips, check registers and
provide our school with these signature cards.
tested, effective educational
The booklets also give in-.
materials."
formation about the Truth-in-:
Reed said, "the high school lending law, and list legal and:
materials a~"e unique in their social agencies where the :
strong emphasis on problem consumer can seek 'help if they :
solving and learning-by- suspect fraud or misrep-:
doing. " Through the use of resentation.

RICK JONES
Rodney David (Rick)
········-;.·• •-... ..... . . .. ............._.... ......;o •••••• • ,................... . ...
•
Jones, son of Mr. and Mrs. ::::··.-..
-••.:.·.);:.:.:.:o:·:·:·:·:·=-··=·=·· =·=·······x·:o!·:"..!·.·:=~·:::-~:::-:·:-:~:·.·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~s::~&amp;::::::&gt;.::::::::::::::::z::::::::~:~:::~::;;::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::~:::::o.::::::::::::::::::=::::::::rh""1
William C. Jones of Flatwoods, has enlisted int he U,
S. Navy and is now in
training at Orlando, Fla.

Kim

Couch, Car la Crisp, Sandra

Conger,

Smith , Charlotte Snyder , Vicki Kelly, Deborah Kennedy ,
Ch ristine Stanley, Delores
Stanley, Greg Stewart, Jane
Thomas, Ri char d William
Vaughan, Kay Ward, Gary
Warn er,

zoppolmJs 1 John R. Thomas,

Curf 1s, Len ora Davis, Bonnie

Char l es

The Fmily Financial received the national Golden
Education Program I FFEP), Coin Award in recognition for
a
personal
money being a outstanding public
management course being affairs program that is
used at Meigs High Sch®l, was primarily designed for comrecently honored nationally as munity involvement rather
an ''outstanding'' ' consumer than lor profit to the bank,"
education program, according said Reed. The presentation
to Theodore Reeq, president of was made by the Bank
the Fatmers Bank and Savings f\larketing Association at its
Company, sponsor of the ~7th annual convention held
recently in Miami, Florida.
Program for the school.
The Family Financial
"We are pleased to announce
that this important program Education Program, or FFEP,

Oebbie Me Laughlin, Ralp~
McMill il h, Peggy Murphy,
Sharon "'urray, Roger Nelson,
Delbert O'Dell. Phil Ohlln9er,
Judy Ov ven, Debra Prl~dy,
Rose Ran.,burg, Anita Ratlifl,
J&lt;enneth Rife, Bryan Shank,
Gwen S heels , Sam. Ter·

Ohlin9er. L.a rry Pickens, Judy
Radlord, B" uce Reed, Sharon
-Riggs, Glor i,, Roush, Rebecca
Roush, Mary Ruschel , Tammy

Rose Colburn, Ann Colwell,

Deborah Schuck, Everett Frase r , Be l inda Friend,
Schuler,"Becki Seeli9, Dorothy Barbara Fultz, Cynthia ·
Seth, Jeff Shank, Vicki Sin - Garnes, Regina Harrison, Joy

clair , Connie Smith, Rebecca

Scherr y
Lane j
Nancy ·
Lawren ce, Barbara Lewis,
Diana Lewis, Diana Lynch
Anita K 1ng , Vlrglnia McCune:

•

I •

:

'i

•

'

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