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TuJIIH'I'~ Plain~

Many desire action tougher
Ohwans expresst:&gt;d m~arl)
unammous support Sunda)
night £or President Nnwn's
plan to combat the energy
cr1sis. but man)' persons pol1ed
by United Press Intcrmltlonal
said tl1ey felt he should have
taken
mo re
s tnngen t
measUres.
"AS usual what he said was
the epitome of Nixon doctrm e ·
not enough a nd too late,'' sa id
Mr s. Richard Ma tuska , an asSistant advertising man ager
from Bay Vill age. " Whe n 1t
comes tune to reduce home
ht'atmg otl we are far beyond
the stage where gas rat10nmg
should
have been
implemen ted . He should have
done more and a long t1m e ago
AS far as the steps he outhned,
I don't thmk it will c ause any
real hardships at a ll "
John Tomc1k, a p rofessional
eng mee r wlt h the Cit y of
Columbus agreed with Mrs .
Mat uska .
•'! think the steps will help 1!
everybody complies with them .
Bull thmk other actwn should
have been taken as welJ , mcluding the reduc tiOn of the
fl ow of oil the nation is export-

111~ .

The PrCSidCnl 's proposals

uff('l only .an unme&lt;ha te SQ \u-

uon ~md they will not help m
the long run . I thmk we should
!!.Cl mo\ ing as quickly as poss!blt· m th(' .an•a of m;,ss tr;•nsjXlrtatiOn "
Otht.'l' opmaons expressed Incl uded
- ··J don 't thmk too much of
1t. I don 't believe trucks s hould
go fa ster than cars. It's dangerous . And he d1dn 't say any Uung about hiS Jet fly ing

Memorial
•
servzces

set Tuesday
Memort al serv ices wilJ be
held at 7. 30 p m Tuesday at
the Kmgdom Hall m Middleport for Ga ry W Gilland, 31,
who d1ed F nday m Cle veland .
He was a former r eside nt of
New Haven, W. Va ., havin g
moved to Cleveland a bout two
yea rs a go,
He 1s sur vived by his w1fe,
Karen: a daughter , Julia Ann,
age 5; h1s pa ren ts, John Blame
Gilland and Sylvia Mourmng
Gilland , New Haven, and his
twin brothe r , Larry .
He was a member of the
Midwest Co ngregatiOn of
J e h o vah 's Witn e sse s .
Cleveland , where services
were held. Lane Damels,
mmister of the Middleport
congregation, Wlll be m charge
of the local serv1ce .
HOLZER BIRTHS
(Nov 24)

Mr and Mrs Ro g er O' Del l,
Gallip olis , a son .
Mr . and
Mrs
Eugene
R1 c kard , New Haven , a son
Mr
and Mrs
Thoma s
Ro wl ey, G all ipoli s, a daught er
Mr and Mrs John Johnston ,
Rodney , a dauohter

{ Nov 251

and Mrs
RiChard
Grenier , Wel ls ton , a son ,
Mr and Mrs Donald Han .
n1ng , M iddleport . a daughter
Mr and Mrs Larry Clark ,
Ga lli pOl iS, a daug hter .
Mr

" Adolescence

and

snowdnfts are about the
only
problems
that
di sappear 1f you 1gnore
them long enough."

The " FRI E NDLY ONE S"

at the Pom eroy Cement
Block Co have all the
mater i al s you need to
patch y our roof for the bad

weather ahead J ust co me
m and let us know what you

need
IT'S A GOOD
IDEA TO - DO IT NOW •

Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
- Phillip Donovan, Syracuse;
William Watson, Pomeroy;
Diane Searles, Chicago; Jennie
Holley, Pomeroy .
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Ray Barber, Ann Sellers,
Freda Manuel, Elwyn Yost.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Keith Mattox, Pomeroy; Vicki
Hood, Pomeroy; Gladys Cross,
Rutland ; Ralph
Brooks,
Tuppers
Plams;
Wanda
Russell, Reedsville; James
Hanlon, Letart, W. Va .
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Lute Stanley, l)iane Searles,
Christine Branham, Bess1e
Parsons, Mane Dom1gan,
Keith Mattox.

Sm·ic·h•

the rLOun1 r y ~til the
tlllll' " scud J, t lllt"~ Wolti' . ( :tJ(.
w11 Lms .
- ··Hf' made a lot of st•n.st•,
11w stcp:s will bring people
do:scr ;md will bnng back
a l"u lUld

:\c·w ~

Grover Fowler
of Mason dies

News

• ••

in Briefs

(Continued from Page I)

•

Time smd that the same day the $100,000 from the Seafarers
went to Nixon's campatgn committee, the umon borrowed
$100,000 from the Chemical Bank of New York The magazme
said, "No loan should have been necessary 1f the mony had come
from voluntary contnbutions of members as required by law.
"Moreover, the Nixon committee waited three months to
report the union 's contribution, though the law clearly states that
donations must be reported w1thin 48 hours of rece1pt," the
magazine said. It sa1d the President has supported record
government subsidies for maritime mdustries.

NUW

One of the biggest

TWO EVENINGS
EACH WEEK

BUFFET
DINING

bargains you'll ever
find is our Checking
Account service

MONDAY EVENING
AND TUESDAY EVENING

~
Conveme~ce,
~

s afety
and a cceptable tax

5 to 9 JQ----AII you can eat, (or AI a Cartel.

records ... plus a

favorable connection
w1th a s trong fman c ial
m s mutton. Where
could you get a
better deal?

The Farmers Bank
and Savings Co.

W1d e Menu
Ch oH. e

Dnnk s and

Desser t Extra

Order our regular men u ever-, , , ~ ;, ; .;; ;u 10.

The MEIGS INN

E•.ch Depositor
-:..:;- ·: ;,- ~
-

-Jf[)(;Al-· Df f' O~il

----

"

•

•

-~

--

iN'JUR~"'Cl

-

COII.PdlATION

1Uf'l )
DF.THO I'I'
Preside nt N1xo n's new energyS.Ivmg. me::tsures a r e expected
to push mo re America ns into
snwll ca rs and send alrea dy

slumpmg new ca r sales eve n
lower .
imme dia t e
on ly
The
rea ctwn to the President's

Santa coming to
New Haven soon
NE W HAVEN - Santa will
come to New Haven next
Saturday and plans lor the
Winter Festival Parade are
s hapmg up to be " The best in
the history of the parade ." Th1s
w11l be one
of many
highlighting events in lbe twoday Fes llval.
The parade will get under
way at 2 p.m . from Midway
Drive and proceed through the
town. After the parade Santa
will be statiOned at the New
Ha ven Grade School where the
young ones w11l have a chance
to visit with him and receive a
treat.
The Rev. William DeMoss,
Parade Chairman, to date has
received many float enii'les as

we ll as parade horses,
bicycles , etc. Th1s year there
will be no deadline for noat
entries
and
c lubs ,
organizallons and orders are
bemg encouraged to parucipate.
Entry may be made or more
information may be received
by calling 882-2877 or 882-2824.
Trophies will be awarded to
first, sec ond and third place
winners .
In the event persons do not
get regiStered ahead of time,
they may join lbe parade group
by entermg at the end of
M1dway Dnve and should be
there by 1 :30 p m . next
Saturday.

Kingsbury News, Notes
Th e 25th wedding anmversary of Mr . and Mrs. John
Dean was celebrated Sunday,
Nov . llth . They were married
Nov.
11, 1948
at
the
Presbyterian manse at Middleport w1th the Rev. Homer G.
McM11len, officiating The host
and hostess for the anniversary
celebratiOn were the1r oldest
son and wtfe, Mr . and Mrs.
John Walter Dean . A lovely
dmner was served at noon w1th
a 25th wedding anniversary
cake served with punch and
coffee in the afternoon. Those
calhng were Mr. and Mrs .
Kenneth Markins of Racine,
Mr and Mrs. Robert R1ed,
Da v1d
and
Rodney
ol
Pataskala , Mr. and Mrs .
Gerald Gilkey, Tammy, R1ck
and Cindy, Athens, Mr. and
Mr s Cla1r Waggoner ol
Harrisonville, Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Paynter of Caprenter,
Mr and Mrs . Sanford Well of
Albany, Mrs Duane Bncker,
Mrs. Kenneth Smith, Canton,
Mrs. Ronald McNally and
daughier of Athens, Mrs .
Lester Arnold and B1lly and
Mrs . Hazel Arnold. The
honored guests received many
lovely gifts . Sending gifts were
Mr and Mrs. James Haley,
Mr and Mrs John Gillogly,
Mark and David, Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Terrell and callmg
from h1s Air Force base m
Michigan was Mr . and Mrs.
Dean's
youngest
son.
R1chard, who was unable to
attend the anmversary observance.
Missionary Club
The Kingsbury M1sswnary
Club met at the home of Mrs.
Neva King. The evening was
spent on several projects which
the club IS mterested m. The
mJsswnary club sponsor the
Rev . John Jesburg. The newly
elected officers of the club
began their dut1es and mclude
President, Mrs . ·Yvonne
Young; vice president, Mrs.
Mary
Lou
Houdershelt;
secretary, Mrs. Anita Dean;
treasurer, Mrs. Grace White.
The devotional meeting was
led by Mrs Delores King with
scripture taken from Psalms in
keeping with Thanksgiving.
The
secretary ' s
report
followed . Refreshments were
served at the close of the
meeting with prayer by Mrs.
Virginia Dean. Those attending
were Mrs. Janeth Beal, Mrs.
Grace White, Mrs. Anita Dean,
Mrs . Delores King, Mrs.
Yvonne Young, Mrs. Virginia
Dean, Mrs. Neva King and
Helen King. The next meeting
will be at the home of Mrs.
Delores King . Each member is
asked to bring a gilt for a
. Christmas gift exchange.
Recent vtsitors of Mrs. Hazel
Arnold were Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald McNally and daughter
of Athens, Mr. and Mrs. Lester
Arnold and Billy of Westerville , Mr and Mrs. Nathan
Arnold and sons of Chester.
Rece nt visitors of Mr . and
M1 ~ Wayne Beal were Mr . and
Mrs . Roger Young and Wesley,

Sunday mght message was
fr om General Motors, which
satd : "We share his concern
and believe if we all work
together we c an certainly get
through this difficult time."
But one uxlustry executive
was e ve n more caut10uS,
saymg " the threat of rationing
is s tlll there, and that 's not
going to help us."
Ne w car sales have been off
about 11 per cent from last
year ' s record pace since the
1974 models were introduced in
September.
The
midNovember ligures due from the
" big lour" today will show
another slwnp .
The thought ol what the
future may hold in the form of
gas rationing or a ban on
Sunday driving is making some
people hold off on a new car
purchase.
' 'I've been looking at the
small cars, but l 'm not sure
what I'll do until this energy
thing is straightened out, "
remarked Joe Morgan, a 28year-oJd suburban insurance

Former resident
dies in Columbus

Mr. and Mrs. Kirk Chevalier of
Chester, Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Well, Miss Demse Hendricks
and Roger Dixon .
Mr. and Mrs . Philip Harrison
and Rodney of Colwnbus were
weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Olen Harrison .
Alvm Smith, who is stattoned
1n Washington, D. C., spent the
weekend recently with h1s
parents, Mr. and Mrs Elmo
Smith.
Mr. Raymond Arnold, who
has lived in th1s ne~ghborhood
for several years. moved to
Middleport.
Mr. Bobby Vance has purchased the W1lham Beal farm .
Visitors Saturday evemng of
Mr. and Mrs. John Dean were
Miss Sandra Sm1th and Charles
and Susie King . Also VIsiting
Monday were Mr and Mrs.
Sanlord Well o£ Albany and
Rev . Jay Stiles also of Albany

Mrs. Bessie C. Ohlinger, a
former Middleport resident,
died Sunday at the age of 85 in
Riverside Hospital, Columbus.
Mrs. Ohlinger, born in Leon,
W.Va., was the daughter of the
late Charles and Sarah See
Winebrenner. She was also
preceded in death by Tom
O'Leary, her f~st husband;
her second husband, Carl
Ohlinger; one son, Robert
Stewart, and three brolbers
and three sisters.
She is survived by Mrs.
Clyda Payne, Columbus, wilb
whom
she
lives ;
two
brothers, Dale WinebreMer,
St . Petersburg, Fla., and

William Homer Winebrenner,

Pomeroyi
three
grandp
children, and three greatgrandchildren.
Services will be held Wednesday a\ 2 p.m. at lbe
Rawhngs Coats Funeral Home
with the Rev. Steve Skaggs
ofliciating. Burial will be in the
Cheshire
Gravel
Htll
LINE BURSTS
Cemetery . Friends may call at
NAHA, Japan ( UPI) - A gas the funeral home Tuesday, 2-4
pipehne burst today, causing and 7-9.
part of Okinawa's major c1ty to
crumble and paralyzmg the
DIVORCES ASKED
central part of the island .
Three persons have filed for
Pollee said the ground suddenly caved in shortly before divorce m Meigs County
dark, wiping away several Common Pleas Court: Ruth A.
structures and five lanes of six~ Michael, Rt. I, Rutland, from
David 0. Michael, 205 Rock St.,
lane Highway 58.
Pomeroy, gross neglect of
duty; Margie Hunnel, Rt. 1,
Extremes
Middleport, from John R .
So great is the difference Hunnel, Rt. I, Middleport, and
between lighted and shad·
owed spots on the moon that Judy McHaffie, 244 Sycamore
an unprotected person would St., Middleport, from George
burn in the searing sunltght McHaffie, Jr., 244 Sycamore
or freeze quickly in the St., gross neglect of duty and
extreme cruelty.
shadow of a rock .

Nine additional •·yes ', votes for Extended Area
Telephone ~rvJre- fr om Chester to the Pomeroy exchange of
lhe General Telephone Company are Meded , arcording tu
Mrs. Sandra Sheets GrUfllb .
Mrs. Griffith said Monday that 314 yes votes have heen
receh•ed. About 65 cards are stiU out.
Therr will be no increase in the proposed telephone basic
rate of $1.10. Mrs. Griffith was informed by the Publl&lt;
Utllliles Commission th•t the $1.10 is the maximum rate alld
it is possible the basic rate may e"en be lowered.
Deadline lor re&lt;eipl of the cards Is Saturday, Dec. 1.

salesman touring the justcompleted Detroit auto show.
11Wby
should I invest in a
new car now and then see it s1t
in the g arag e?" he said.
" Anyway , a couple of dealers I

talked to won't even g1ve me
what my old car (a lull-sized
1972 Buick Electra ) is worth
and they want sticker pnce for
the s maller model I was
looking at. "
General Motors Corp., the
world 's largest automaker,
already has reacted to the
slwnp in sales which have hit
the full-size alld intermediates
the hardest. The compacts,
subcompacts and luxury
models are selling at record or
near record rates with a wait of
two months not uncommon for
some subcompact.
GM plans to shut 16 of its
assembly· plants during the
week before Christmas, cutting
79,000 mtermediate and fullsize cars from its prllduction
schedules.

Residents are urged to mail in tbeir cards as qllickly as
possible.

.

POMEROY
992·3629
a.._.·PH.
_ _...,
_______
_ _•''

Nov, 26 - 27

THE FRIENDS OF
EDDIE COYLE
&lt;Technicolor)
Robert Mitchum
Peter Boyle

Ferdinand the Bull
Foatba II Now &amp;

Then

Show Starts 7 p.m.

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1973

PHONE 992·2156

.

LDS ANGELES ( UPI )Experts familiar with the
recorder involved say Rose
Mary Wocxls' version of how a
key White House tape was
erased describes an accident
that 1s either technically impossible or highly unlikely.
The Los Angeles Times
questioned technicians and exp
ecutives in the audio industry,
who deal wtth the Uher 5000.
M1ss Woods told a federal
judge that she had accidentally
punched the "record" key
instead of the "stop" key while
transcribing from the tape, but
kept her loot down on a pedal
control that allows secretaries
to control the tape by foot
movements while typing. That
forced the tape through with
the recording head activated,
she said, erasing the recording
of the first meeting between
Pres1dent NIXon and H. R.
Haldeman after the Watergate
break-in.
"I don't believe that can be
done/' said George Munyan,
service manager for Magnetic

..... ..
'

Holiday season w.e lcomed
Crowds lined the
business
section
sidewa lks in Middleport
Monday night as the
community officially
welcomed the Christmas
holiday season. A parade
through the business
section
was
well
received and in conjunction
with
the
opening of the season.
Merchants staged a
moonlight sale offering
special prices.
Mid-

dleport Police Department. •he parade included equipment of the
Middleport
Fire
Department
and
Emergency Squad, The
Meigs, Southern and
Kyger Creek
High
School bands, the Riggs
Royal Kad-ettes, clowns.
the newly crowned
junior misses of Meigs
County and Southeastern
Ohio, Peggy O'Brien and
.Jan Holter, the Glo-ettes
of Mrs. Gloria Buck
Wallace Girl Scout

Troop 39, Miss Brenda
Taylor,
Big
Bend
Regatta queen, the bus
of the Middleport First
Baptist Church and
several
commercial
vehicles including some
from the Royal Crown
Bottling Co ..
Jlighlighting
the
parade, naturally, was
Santa and his helpers
riding the traditional
float of the local
Chamber of Commerce.

AT TOP - Santa
arriving during Middleport's
official
welcoming
of
the
h?liday season.
ABOVE - Santa and
his helpers, Fred Lewis,
Manning Kloes and Ed
Durst, I to r, posed for
the Sentinel camera
before meeting hundreds of youngsters in
the 1 drive-through
facility of the Citizens
National Bank where
Santa distributed his
candy treats.

~;;~
!?.!:~~b~!'!.~~
J

Hoover Convertible Sweepers

Ss

.

4i :;:

By United Press International
WASHINGTON -UNITED AIRUNES today announced it
will furlough more than 1,1100 employes, including 300 pilots, and
cancellOO daily nights because of the fuel crisis.
Edward E. carlson, president of the nation's largest airline,
said the cancellations had been scheduled even before President
Nixon announced Sunday an additional 15 pet. cut ir. jet fuel
delivery for the airlines. carlson indicated that tbe new cutback
would result m shll more layoffs.
Before United announced its cuts, the airline industry had
trimmed more than 500 flights from its domestic schedule on
grounds of jet fuel shortages.

H,.

·a
. v0 · .•

'

..

BEIRUT -THREE ARAB HIJACKERS freed 255 captives
from a commandeered a Dutch jumbo jet on Malta today and
took an airline official as a voluntary hostage in exchange for
Holland's agreement to limit support for Israel. The plane left
Malta and landed in the Persian Gulf state of Dubai.
The hijacked airliner followed an erratic course after
leaving the Mediterranean island of Malta, apparently searching
for a friendly Arab state that would permit the plane to land.
Officials of Royal Dutch KLM airline in Amsterdam said lbe
plane touched down m Duba1 at 11:32 a.m. Amsterdam time.
Airport spokesman in Malta said the last of the 247 passengers
and eight stewardesses aboard the giant plane slid down
emergency chutes unharmed early today at a remote section of
Malta's Luqa Airport, ending a 37-hour ordeal.

Attachments for every cleaning need.

s2495 TOOLS ............ SALE s17n
s1495 TOOLS............ SALE ssn

WASHINGTON - A HOUSE SUBCOMMITTEE today
begins public hearings on charges of corrupt loan activity in the
Small Business Administration (SBA) and poss1ble connections
with the Nixon administration.
Initial Witnesses before the Small Business subcommittee
will be asked about loan practices in the Richmond, Va ., SBA
office that reportedly have resulted 1n more than $11 million in

( Rl

D1sney Cartoons :
Trick or Treat

OJ The Meigs-Mcuon Area

Shenff

Led by the

:· II .
.. .

At the Kanauga meetmg
ofllt1al s genera lly ag reed that
it w&lt;;~ s im pounded federal
fund s that h&lt;ts he ld up plann inJ,;
any major improve ments of
State Route 124.
In other bus mess, Ingels
reported that a s of Monday
there were 53 paid members hips. In regard to membcrs hap , It was broug ht out that
dues a r e payable the first of
Jul y. New members paying
(Continued on Page 10 )

TEN CENTS

TV! Corp., a firm selling the
German-made Uher.
Carl
Bennett, service
manager for Martell Electronics of Los Angeles, the
chief U .S. importer of Uher
machines, said the m1stake
descnbed by Miss Woods was
lbeoretically possible, but the
chances she would make such a
mtstake "are very , very low
because of the way it (the
recorder) is designed." He said
there "is no reason at all" for
any competent secretary to
make such an error.
"Th1s whole thing stinks to
high heaven. I just don't
believe it. It's just ridiculous,"
said Frank Larkin of Aud1o
Video Craft Inc., who has sold

Uher recorders for many
years.
"It's not something a person
could do accidentally," he said.
"They make it very difficult to
put the machine in the erase
positiOn just so people won't
accidentally erase their recordings."
BeiUlettnoted that the erased

Car kills deer

SPECIAL SALE
-Two speed motor
-Cleaner adjusts to rug pile depth
-Large Throw away bag holds more dirt
-Vinyl outer jacket - wipes clean

'

'

We carry disposable
bags, brushes and belts
for
all
Hoover
Sweepers.

Tonight &amp; Tuesday

ln~re.t.

Heconstruc tJOn of the highway fr(Hl1 the Route 7 by-pass
back of P omeroy - Middleport
to the Salem Center area is
rega rded as i:l c ritica l need m
view or the major ind ustria l
development m northwestern
Meigs County.
Cha rte r members ur ge d
citizens wn te letters an regard
to the proJect directed to State
Sen. Harry Armstrong, Cong .
Clarence Miller , and State
Rep. Oakley Collins .

DES MOINES, Iowa (UPI )The Agriculture Depa rtment is
sharply mcreasing tts fina ncial
• uppor t ol rural development
programs now that Congress
has a pproved fund mg of new
projects a uthon zed by a 1972
Rura l Deve lopme n t Ac t ,
Ag r'i c ultur e
As s 1s\an\
Sec reta r y Will Erwin sa id
today.
E rwin , in a speech prepared
for deliver y her e to a national
confer ence on rura l developm ent, added that total loans
and grants by his department 's
Farmers Home Administration
(FHA ) reac hed a new record of
more tha n $3 7 billion in the
1972-73 hscal yea r. In the c urrent 1973-74 year , he a dded, the

loan-and-g rant goal IS nearly
$3 .9 billion .
In Washingto n, however ,
other officials said they had no
word yet on whether the White
House would permit them to
spend $150 million for rural water a nd sewer grants in the
curren t fiscal year. Congress
included t hat fund in the overall $3 .9 billion F HA lendingspending tota l and Agriculture
De part ment off1c1a ls r e portedly have asked the Wh1te
House to allow them to use at
least part of the gr a nt money.
In the last hscal year, the
admm istration impounded all
but $30 m1llion of the $100 rrullion Congress a ppropriated for
fContinued on Page 10)

oods' story false?

(Continued from Page •)
action on the energy bill :
- A nationwide speed lumt of
50 m1les per hour for cars and
55 m.p.h. for trucks and buses,
which run more efficiently at
the higher speed. In the
meantime, states were urged
to adopt those limits and
motorists to comply voluntarily. A 200,000 gallon da1ly
saving was foreseen .
- A ban from 9 p .m .
Saturdays to mHinight Sunday
on the sale of gasoline for
automobiles. trucks, pleasure
boats, private airplanes and
recreational vehicles. Nixon
asked gas stations to voluntarily comply thiS weekend. A
50,000 gaUon daily saving was
anticipated.
- Prohibition of the use of
outdoor lighted s1gns except
when business places are open.
-A prohibitiOn on the use of
Christmas lights outside homes
or businesses.
he
had
in
his
As
first
energy crisis ad·
dress three weeks ago, •
Nixon asked householders to
set the thermostat at 68
degrees.
Nixon said the White House
would forego outside Christmas lighting this year, but he
announced no plans to curta~!
his personal travel to his home
at Key Biscayne, F1a or his
weekend retreat at Camp
David, Md. His trips in the
midst of a fuel shortage have
drawn crlllcism in Congress
and elsewhere.
John Love, Nixon's energy
adviser, told reporters even the
national Chrisimas tree, on the
ellipse south of the White
House, will be dark this year.
But Gerald L. Warren, presidential press S)X)kesman, said
later it would have lights, hut
only 10 per cent as many as in
years past.

Open Friday and Saturday 9:30 to 9 pm

$57.77

To The

Adl liillt:slrati,m.
C ur C Pn.•s1dent Earl l n ~el s,
repcwh ng on a meetmg at the
Holiday Inn m Kanauga las t
week With Cong . Clarence E .
M11l e r 1H.-Lancaster ) and
oUte r state and area highway
officia ls, sa1d a task force
made up of mem ber s fro m
Ga lil a, Meigs and Vinton
Counties ha d set as top pnority
the wademng or r e-construc hon
of SR 124 in the western part of
Meigs Coun ty.

President

Open Weekdays 9:30 to 5 pm

FOR ·THIS SALE

Mudern11.mg or
I' N·onstruc twn of Slate Route 124 in
western Me1gs CoWlty may be
closer today.
The Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce Monday fo\ lowmg
its noon luncheon at U1e Meigs
Inn , a pproved a resolution to
br1 ng all poss ible influence on
elected pub lic officia ls lo have
fede ral money relea.sE!d that is
already a llocated lor highway
improvement but which has
bee n Impounded by lhe Nixon

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL. XXV NO. 158

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

REGULAR •89.95

Highway money wanted

Devo~d

MEIGS THEATRE

POMEROY, OHIO
$10,000.00 Maximum Insurance For

Detroit may shift gears

Jh I•, H·lyn Bru klt•:oo

Mr. :.nd Mrs. Hobe rt
S;•u nd&lt;'r:&gt; &lt;t r(' announcmg the
b1rth of .i 1Jin !-4.Jii,&lt;ll St J usl&gt;-.'h
Hospita l 1n Parkt•rsburg . They
have
three daughtE&gt;rs .
more of a home life m the
Mr and Mrs Shade Annation But J don ·t know tf
der
so n of White Sul phcr
people will believe what he
says what wtth his mvolvement Sprmgs, W Va ., and Mrs.
m the Watergitte scandal,' ' Bcrm ce Hawkey and da ug hter ,
sa1d
M1·s
.ludy
Day, Donna , of MI. Z1on. W Va ,
we re gu ests of Mrs . Ha wkey's
La ke wood .
- " ! expected ever yth ing I sis ter . Mr and Mrs. Dinsmore
heard , but I think he could have Boyles
Mrs . Wanda Sprague ungone furt her a nd elimi nated a ll
de
rwent surgery at St. J oseph
advertising s1gns. As far as
turru!!_g down the thermostat, 1l Hosp1tal in Parkersburg last
makes me a ngry to look across week .
Mrs. E dith Betzmg a nd Rev.
the street at my neig hbor 's
Mrs , Robert Meece were
a
nd
house and see the temper a ture
at 62 degrees w1th doors open Sunda y dinner guests of Mrs.
all day. I thmk if 11 has to be Freda Mtller and s ister . M1ss
done, we all should do it, " said' Le nora Betzmg of Chester .
Mrs . Ell ie Watso n has
Mrs. E d gar Smith , Columbus.
returned
home from Veterans
-"I thmk he was qutte sincer e and I'm willmg to go w1th Memonal Hospital m Pomeroy
him 100 per cent. But I thmk wher e she was a medical
somethm g should have bee n patient.
Mrs . Ma ud Seals of Kent ,
done ye ars ago to av01d the
present cnsis ," sald Charles Ohio, s pent Fnda y and
Saturda y her e w1th Mrs .
Snyder , Columbus.
- " If people comply w1th the Delma Dotson and on Fnday
regulations, I thmk the r esult evenmg. Mrs. Dotson honored
w1ll be good. But I don 'I thmk Mrs . Seals w1th a birthday
people w1ll comply ," said supper . Oth er s present for the
Thomas Cepek, South Euchd. occasiOn besides those mentiOned , were Mrs. Grace Kuhn
and Mrs . Lola Grifhn.
Mrs. Audre)' Torrence underwent major surgery at
Camden Clark Hosp1tal Friday
and is r ecovering satisfacMASON - Gr over Cleve tonly. Mr . and Mrs Marvin
Fowler, 88, Mason , d1ed Walker visited her on Sunday
Sunday at Veterans Memorial and also vis1ted Mrs. Pearl
Hospital. Mr . Fowler, a Cole at St. Joseph Hosp1tal.
bla&lt;ksmith , carpenter and
Mrs. Rtchard Spencer and
farmer, was born ApnllO, 1885 family and Mrs. Guy Callaway
at West Columbia, the son of attended a bridal shower
the late John and Delilah Sayre Saturday evemng at the home
Fowler His wife died in 1967. of Mrs. Oscar Pennmgton for
Mr. Fowler is survived by Otto Marcinko and Mtss
lour daughters, Mrs. Elizabeth Sandra VanMeter . The couple
Wooten, Columbus ; Mrs . rece1ved lovely gifts.
Harriett VanMatre, West
Thanksg1vmg supper guests
Columbia; Mrs . Margaret of Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Rosenberger, Mason, and Mrs. Spencer and fam1ly were Mr.
Josephine
Kearns,
Pt . and Mrs. Howard Flanders of
Pleasant; two sons, Richard near Guysville, and Mr and
and Jack Fowler, both of Mrs. Dinsmore Boyles
Mason; 16 grandchildren, and
Those from a d1stance
20 great-grandchildren.
commg for the funeral of Fon
Funeral services will be held Halsey were Mr . and Mrs.
Tuesday at 1:30 p. m. at the Robert Halsey of Dayton, Pvt.
Foglesong Funeral Home with Ray Watson of Texas and Mr.
the Rev. George Hoschar of- and Mrs. Myron McKenzie of
ficiating . Burial will be m the Columbus
Suncrest Memorial Park, Pt.
PERON CONFINED
Pleasant . Fmnds may call at
BUENOS AIRES (UPI)
the funeral home anytime .
President Juan D. Peron , 7ff,
MEETING PUT OFF
recuperatrng fr om an illness
MASON - Wahama Athletic ofhc1ally des cnbed as a
Boosters were to meet this bronchial mfect10n. spent the
evening, but the meeting has ftfth consecutive da) confined
been postponed until Monday, to h1s home Sunday
Dec. 3, at 7 p. m. at the
Wahama gym.
$140,000 STOLEN
MEETING SET
BUTTE , Mont. (UP!)
RACINE - Southern Band Robbers surpnsed three Wells
Boosters will meet Tuesday at Fargo guards as they opened a
7 30 p. m. All members are bank vault and escaped with
urged to attend .
$140,000.

Just a .few more yes votes

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

r Continued on Page 10)

•

Cleveland

Industrialist
Howard Metzenbaum announced today he would seek
the Democratic nomination for
the U.S. Senate and pledged to
"follow the dictates of the
people on the directions the
nation should be taking."
Metzenbaum, at a news
conference here, said many socalled experts say people are
rapidly becoming more and
more diSinterested in govern·
ment.
"During the senate term for
which I am now running our
nation w11l celebrate its 200th
anniversary and will confront
the gravest problems it has •
laced in those 200 years.
' 'Maybe we have grown too
large too fast," he said in a
statement. "Certainly during
that lime the political leaders,
especially those of today, got
far away from the people.
"I intend to reserve this
procedure and follow the
d1ctates of the people on
directions the nation should be
taking," said Metzenbawn.
Metzenbawn will probably
oppose John Glenn in the
Democratic pnmary in May
for the opportunity to seek the
sea\ bemg vacated by Sen.
William B. Saxbe, R.Ohio, who
announced he would not seek

he has been1 named attorney
general-designate by President
Nixon.
If Saxbe's nomination 1s
co nfirmed , Gov. John J.
Gilligan will then name a
Democrat to fill the seat lor the
remainder of the term which,
will expire Dec. 31, 1974.
"Your guess is as good as
mine about that," said Metzenbaum when asked if ' he
lbought Gilligan would appoint
him to the unexpired term.

85 DEER BAGGED
Approximately 85 deer were
k1lled Monday in Meigs
County, the first day of Ohio's
1973 deer season, Gary Swope,
Meigs County Game Warden
reported.

JAYCEES TO MEET
The regular bi-mcnthly
meeting of the Me1gs County
Jaycees will be held Wednesday at 8 p m. at the
Pomeroy Village Hall. All
young men between the ages of
18 and 35 who want to become
involved in their community
(Meigs County) and develop
leadership within themselves,
are cordially mVIted.

Robert C. Hartenbach's Dept. mvestigated
three traffit accidents, two
Monday and one early today.
Only one deer was killed.
At 4;42 p.m. Monday an auto
driven by Alva Holsinger, Jr.,
37, Ht. 2, Racine, was traveling
north on Fifth St., in Racine
when an auto driven by Ann S.
Wiles, 22, Racine, turned left in
lront of Holsinger from Main
St. onto Fifth:
Moderate damage was
caused to Holsinger's auto,
while Wiles' also had moderate
damage to its right rear
quarter panel.
No Injuries were reported.
However, Mrs. Wiles was cited
for failing to yield right of way
at an intersection.
One hour later on Twp. Rd.
141 approaching the junction
with SR 143 in Scipio Twp, near
Horner Hill, a pickup truck
dr1ven south by Dale C.
Warner, 47, Rt. I, Mmersville,
had its front wheels drop
suddenly into a 21oot by 20 inch
d1tch across the road. Deputies
said the road apparently caved
in due to a' water line installation being done by the

Paul 's Pipeline Company. No
injuries were reported.
A deer was struck and k1lled
at 6:30a.m. today on SR 7, one
tenth mile south of CR 5 m
Salisbury Twp., when an auto
driven by Edward Lee Feustel,
32, Kanauga, traveling north,
hit an 8 pt. buck that jwnped
from the left side of the road
mto Feustel's path.
No injuries were reported to
Feustel but moderate damage
was incurred by the left front
side of his vehicle.

portion wa s described a s
containing a hwmnmg sound.
That puzzled him , he said,
because if the tape had been
erased by the Uher's own
recording
head
"there
shouldn't be anything but a
slight hissmg nmse."

The techmc1ans said the
bummmg nmse m1ght have
resulted if a microphone had
been plugged mto the recording Circuit at the time Miss
Woods says it was accidentally
switched on, but then the mike
should have picked up external
' ''unds, such as a telephone
call .

Soliciting set
Members of Middleport
Fire Department will solicit
the village Sunday, Dec. 2,
lor Items for Christmas
baskets for the needy
beginning at I p.m. Names of
needy families may be
s ubmitted to any member or
at Middleport Village Hall
until Dec. 15.
Those
who will
be
receiving baskets wUI be
notflied by mail and they
may pick up the baskets at
Middleport Fire Station on
Dec. 23. This is an annual
project sponsored by the
department.
::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::;;:::::::::::::::::.:·:=:·:·:·:·:;:·:

Weather
Lows tonight in the 40s in the
north and 50s in the south.
Showers likely an~ cooler
Wednesday with highs in the
50s in the north and the 60s in
the south.

••

•

1

Diddle wins
•
settlement zn.

wage dispute
RACINE - A wage dispute
between
Floyd
Diddle,
Syracuse, and the Southern
Local Schools has heen setUed
out of court with an award of
$1,300 to Diddle, a former
custodian at Southern Local.
The Ohio Association of
Public School Employees
(OAPSE) filed an appeal in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court in September, 1972, on
behalf of Diddle who was
terminated earlier that month.
Diddle, employed by the school
district under a continuing
contact, through OAPSE,
contended the termination
letter recetved by Diddle
contain~d insuHtcient grounds
for termination.

-...I
•

•/

Stocks at

'
'

•

'
'

2-year low
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
Dow Jone~ industrial average
Monday plummeted 29.05
poinls to a two-year low in the
fifth-worst drop in history.
Some analysts blamed a lack of
fa1th in President N1x:on's
energy conservation program
for the massive losses.
Robert Amster of Rosenkrantz, Ehrenkrantz, Lyon &amp;
Ross said that after the
President's energy speech was
delivered Sunday night, ''The
American people realized
we've got real problems, and
the administration .an 'I hail us
out of them."
The closely watched indtcator, which finished at
824.95, has dropped more than
29.05 points on only four other
occasions. During the Great
Crash of 1929, 11 fell 38.33 on
Oct. 28 and 30.57 on Oct. 29. On
Sept. 2(l, 1955, following President Dwight D. Eisenhower's
heart attack, it plunged 3l.Jl9,
and on May 28, 1962, Pres1dent
John F. Kennedy's fight with
(Continued on Page 10)

1

'

ONE OF THE FIRST HUNTERS to bag a deer Monday was Henry Salser, right, On the left
is Dennis Evans who was with Salser when he brought down the 13 point buck in the Forest Run
area .

Heavy trucks restricted
Heavy trucks will be permitted only on three Middleport streets according to a
decision reached by Middleport Council Monday night.
Those three streets are Second
and Third Avenues and Locust
St. (Route 7) .
The
ban
followed
a
d1scussion of the high costs of
maintaimng the streets of the
village and of damage caused
by heavy truck traffic. Council
agreed Wlanimously to keep
heavy truck traffic off all but
the three streets. The matter,
however, w1ll be left to the
discre lion of the police
department because there are

times heavy trucks must travel
other streets
to
make
deliveries, to move people, and
for other necessary reasons.
Mayor John Zerkle asked
council to cons1der what steps
can be taken to increase the
revenue of the village. He said
that m all businesses when
costs mcrease then the
businesses
must
make
arrangements for more in~
come.
He po1nted out that labor and
replacement of parts and
equipment have greatly increased in cost. Also, a recent
raise given employes by
council should have been a

f

I

William Undsey, a salesman
for Magnellc TV!, said he
doubted that the accident
described by Miss Woods could
have happened that way
because features designed into
the machine, precisely to
prevent such accidents, would
have stopped her.
BeiUlett said that if Miss
Woods had a looto0perated
control for the recorder, as she
said, there would have been no
reason lor her to press the
"stop" button with her hand as
she said she meant to do. She
could have stopped the
machine with her foot, he said.
"There would be no need for a
transcnber to press the record
or stop buttons at all," he said.

'

gradual salary increase plan
spannmg over several years,
he said. Council members are
asked to offer ideas they have
on increasing income to meet
rising costs of lbe village.
Maintenance Supervisor
Harold Chase reported the
swimming pool and the marina
have been winterized. He
announced also that the final
pickup of leaves will be this
Wednesday.
Attending the meellng were
Mayor Zerkle, Chase, ClerkTreasurer Gene Grate, and
councilmembers Jean Morgan,
Lawrence Stewart, David
Ohhngcr an~ F'red Hoffman.

�3- The Dail)' Sentinel , ~hddleport-Pomeroy, 0., Nov. 27, 197~

2 - 11te Dt1ilv Sentuwl M1ddJt'port-Pomeru\ , 0 . No\' . ZJ . 197:t

.

•

Energy
Plea I• S
Working

=~::::;:;.;::::::;:-5:·:·:·:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:~:::;:;:;:;;;.;-::.:-:-:-:·:·~:!:·:·:::::::;;;:;:;::::·:·:-:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·.·=::·::::::.

:~I

~~arm ta:~.. 1om 1 )()~~·~ pmhkms

~j~j

CO LUMBUS t UP!) .- The Ohto (ieneral Asscmbl)• has
bfen urged to use caution in wntmg a nen law t o ~~ farm lands on agncultural value rathC'r than as an mvestment
and to con!ine property tax relief to farnu:~rs whu need it
N ~; w YVI\ K I UPI J
UCLA
most - those on the frmges of urban~areas .
&lt;': State Sen . Mich&lt;lel J . Malone) . R.('mcmnah , said the :,: 1s a unanimous choace to repeat
;::: lawmakers will begtn such work in JanW:try ut response to a :-: it" natiomil che:unp1 on, but the
Allanli c Coast Conference 1s
constitutional amendment adopted m November f.;'.. expected to provide the most
authoming spe&lt;;ial ta• treatment for farmlands .
,.,
"The main selhng point for this amendment was the need ... excitement in maJor college
basketball this se&lt;Json, accord·
. tobput fa lid onf stphetrastlintg
turalt Ia1dnd valuets onhthe .. mg to the United Press In·
ur an rmge o
a e,
a oney o a mee mg ere
tcrnatlonal pre~eason ratmgs.
Monday of the Ohio Farm Bureau Federation .

~.:', .:~;

'~.~:

•• :=
••

By C. W. ORR
Urtited Press International
Businesses and state governments have begun voluntanly
complying wtth President
Nixon 's plea to conserve
energy.
Several major m1 companies,
mcluding Standard of Ohio
(Sohio ), Phillips Pet roleum Co.
and Skelly Oil Co., said they
would close their company·
owned stattons at 9 p.m.
Saturdays and all day Sundays.
Sohto Vtce Prestdent Robert
Griffin also asked independent
dealers with Sohto franchises
to join in the weekend
closings.
Th e New York State
Thruway Authority announced
it was closing gasoline stations
on the 559-mile toll r oad on
Sundays. The thruway 1tself
and restaurants along it will
still open SUndays, however.
Limits Remain Lower
New York state already had
lowered speed limits to 5()
miles an hour m response to an
earlier plea from Nixon .
Authortty Chairman R . Burdell
Bixby satd even Utough Nixon
ts asking for a 55 m .p.h. !unit
for trucks and buses, it will
remain at 50 m .p.h . for safety
reasons.

.':

~.grMicuJ1

~.:~·.:~

l·i·,·l··'l='.
.:

,:~~,:'~.

ill~~~~~~E:r;~:;i;eEJ~i:~37~:::e::~:~~ -~·',r.t_l:

• miltee, wtll help write Ute law .

:

~t-:-:·:·:·:;:·:·:·:·:::·:·:::·:::::::;:::::::;:;.;::-:=:-:=:-:=:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:{-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·::;.;-;:;::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:~::·:·:·:::::::::::::;:;::
Robert Jacobs, executive
secretary of Ute Illinois and
Indtana Gasoline Dealers As·
sociations, said his groups
support Saturday mght and
Sunday closings. But he said
since stations would lose 15 to
20 per cent of weekly sales,
they wtll fight for reduced
rents charged by major oil
companies.
Fifteen tru ckmg firms m
Mi chigan said they would
voluntarily slow thell' trucks to
55 m.p .h . to save fuel.
Clncago's Lindbergh Beacon
atop Playboy Towers on North
Michigan Avenue will be
darkened because of th e
energy crists. Playboy En·
terprtces Inc said it would turn
off the world's most powerful
aviation beacon to encourage a
spirit of cooperation among
Chicagoans."
WUI Ask Approval
The avenue may not be

completely dark. The North
Michigan Avenue Association
said it wtll ask for approval to
h ght the tradittonal small
ftahan bulbs m trees lining the
avenue during the Christmas
season. Electrtctty used in
Clncago is produced "almost
entirely by coal and atomic
power," and not by petroleum,
the assocmtton noted .
The associatiOn also recom·
mended that s tores along
Michigan Avenue continue
hghting first·floor windows to
aid police patrols after dark.
Most power companies in
New England announced cuts
of 5 per cent in voltage during
peak early evenm g hours to
save as much as 1,300 barrels
of fuel oil a day.
The most no!lceable effect on
the public may be shrinkage of
television pictures, a spokesman for Northeast Utthties
satd .

Tax secrets will come out
WASHINGTON ( UP! ) President Nixon is preparing to
make public details of his income ta•es, perh&lt;lps this week.
Meanwhile, after a fourmonth court battle, U.S. Dis·
trict Court Judge John J. Sirtca
today has custody of 10 of
Ntxon' s Watergate tapes, in·
cluiling one wtth an llknmute
hum- which has taken on new
significance.
Sen. Gale W. McGee, D·
Wyo ., quoted the President as
lelhng SIX senators at the Whtte
House Monday night " that he
was going to lay on the table all
of his income tax returns" mcluding 1970 when news
accounts say he paid $792 and
1972 when he reportedly paid
$676. Ni.an luis said only that
he paid "nominal swns" those
years.
The White House added:
"We will have something to say
in coming days."
Sirica now must decide
which of Ntxon's tapes should
be shown to a grand jury. The
White House said lull! are
cove red by• presidential
se~recy and and should not be
given the grand jurors.
One tape of a 54-minute
conversation between Nixon
and hts former aide, H. R.
Haldeman, contains only a
hum for 16 minutes. Rose Mary
Woods, Nixon's personal secretary, told Sirica Monday

she apparantly " caused the
gap" by mtstakenly pushmg a
button whtch made the
machine erase the tape while
she answered the telephone.
Prosecutors charged that
PT. PLEASANT
LIVESTOCK SALES CO.
Pt. Pleasant, W, Va.
Nov. 24,1973
HOGS - 175 to 220 43 to 51,
Heavies 39.50 to 43.75, Lights 37
to 46, Fat Sows 37 to 36.85, Pigs
15 to 28, Stock Shoats 36 to 45.
CATTLE - Steers 36 to 41,
Heifers 32.75to 36.50, Fat Cows
34 to 36, Canners 26 to 32, Bulis
37 to 45, Stock Cows and Calves
317.50 to 501.50, Stock Steers 42
to 46, Stock Heifers 34 to 37 50,
Stock Steer Calves 45 to 53,
Stock Heifer Calves 39.25 to
46.30.
VEAL CALVES - Tops
57.50, Seconds 55.50, Medium 49
to 51.25, Common &amp; Heavies 47
to 49, Culls 45 to 46 .50.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS
Ruth
Cheadle, Cheshire ; Hazel
Phtllips, Wellston ; Bonnie
Proctor, Mtddleport ; Robert
Staats, Middleport ; Edith
Osborne, Long
Bottom;
Anestine Carsey, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGES
Steve
Eblin, Kay Hockman, Stanley
Hutton, Jerry Owens.

Packers lose 20-6
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) Washington and Ken Willard
Joe Reed may have come of while snapping a !our-game
age but the jury is still out on losing streak. However, it was
Jerry Tagge.
only their fourth victory
The two young quarterbacks agamst seven losses and
hooked up in Monday night's hardly is cause for celebration.
nationally televtsed NFL game
"! really enjoyed this
and when it was all over, Reed game," said Washington, who
and th e San Francisco 49ers rushed for 94 yards and scored
ha d a 2~ vtctory over Tagge San Francisco's first touch·
and the Green Bay Packers. down on a one-yard smash.
Reed, starting his third "We finally put it together. The
stratght game at quarterback, blocking was there, the holes
completed only five of 16 were there. I just hope we can
passes for 44 yards. On the keep it up because it will make
surface, that looks like a very for a lot nicer winter.''
mediocre performance, but it
TheOtherTD
was far from Utat.
Spurrier threw 20 yards to
San Francisco Coach Dick Ted Kwalick for San FrancisNolan let Reed call his own co's other touchdown and
ga me and that's 'where the Bruce Gossett made it 12 field
second.year man , who started goals in a row without a miss
the 1973 season on the taxi on boots of 25 and 22 yards.
squad, really shone, leading
Green Bay got its only points
the 49ers to a 1~ edge mlo the on field goals of 35 and 15 yards
fourth quarter before bowing by Chester Marco!.
out for Steve Spurner because
Two pass interceptions by
of a grom muscle pull.
Dave WHcox on Tagge, an
Nolan is Pleased
interference penalty on AI
" I was really pleased with MatUtews and a personal foul
Reed 's effort," said Nol;m. on Jim Hill figured in 17 of San
"He called a good game and, Francisco's points, and th&lt;lt
h&lt;ld he not been hurt, I don't upset Packer Coach Dan
know if I would have replaced Devine, whose club now stands
him with Spurrier."
3-6-2.
Reed , who played his collegi"Those penalties and interate ball at Mtssissippi State,
ceptions hurt- you're damn
seemed pleased, too, with play right they do," said Devine . "I
calling agatnst the Packers
don't even want to talk about
and was apprectattve Nolan let . them. They make me sick to
my stomach."
him.
" The coach went along with
Tagge completed 10 of 18
rne," he said, "and I think I passes for 107 yards before
being relieved by Jim Del
built a lot of confidence out of
that. We didn 't go into the
Gaizo tn the fourth quarter.
Where the 49ers really won
game wiUt any definite plans
the game was up front on
other than to see if we could
e~ecute better than we had
defense . They held hard·
running John Brockington and
been doing."
That the 49ers did, putling
MacArthnr Lane to 119 yards,
to(jether their besl ruMing
and toot made the difference.
pme of the year behind Vic

only that part of the conversa tion
deahng
WLth
Watergate was erased.
Haldeman's written notes of
the conversation, which were
subpoenaed, mdicated he and
Ntxon disc ussed a public
relations "counter-attack" to
the Watergate affair during the
18 mmutes which were erased.
In other developments:
- The White House accused
Spectal Prosecutor Leon
Jaworski of "leakmg" to the
press stones relating to the Illminute gap and a Seafarers'
Umon contribution to the Nixon
campaign. .
-Chwf Counsel Samuel
Dash s aid the
Senate
Watergate committee ts
having trouble gettmg in·
formation
concerning a
$100,000 gtft to C. G. "Bebe"
Rebozo, from both the White
House and the Hughes Tool Co.,
headed by . btllionaire Howard
Hughes. He indicated further
public hearings will be delayed
until January.

.......
The Daily Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS· MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL.

Exec . Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
C1ty Editor

Publt 5hed datly !!K eep!

Saturday by The Ohio Valley

PubliShing Company , 11 1

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In

Ttmes

Golf awards presented

UCLA picked to
•
repeat m NCAA

UCLA, which has won seven

consecutive NCAA lltles and
three stratght UP! national
championshtiJ6, received all 34
ftrst.p!ace votes cast by the
ratmgs board to eastly outdis·
tance last year's runnerup,
NorUt Caroltna State, in Ute
battle for the pre-season top
spot.
North Carohna State, which
went undefeated m 27 games
last year but missed a shot at
th e NCAA tournament because
of proba lion, got all 34 second·
place votes and was 107 points
ahead of the thtrd-place fuushcr, Indiana.
The Wolfpack, which returns
thr ee starters from last year 's
squad, wtll get •ts chance to
wrest the No. I rankmg away
from the Brums when the two
teams tangle at the St. L&lt;mis
Arena on Dec. 15.
North Ca rolina State, a
member of the ACC, was one of
three teams from that confer·
ence to fmtsh in the top flve in
the balloting. North Ca rolina
was fourth and Maryla nd ,
which meets UCLA Saturday

mghl m tL., season opener, was
ftfth
Louisv•lle, coached by e•·
UCLA assistant Denny Crwn,
came in sixth in the voting
followed
in
order
by
Marq uette, Notre Dame,
Providence aoo San Francisco.
UCLA, whi ch opens tts
season at home Friday mght
against Arkansas, has won 75
games in a row and is favored
to win its eighth straight NCAl\
championship.
Five coaches from each
geographical section of the
co untry comprise the UP!
ratings board. Each week they
vote on the top 10 teams and
pomts are awarded on a !().9-37-&amp;-5-4-3-2-1 basis for votes
from first through lOth.
N EW YORK ( UPI) ~ The
Un1 t ed Pr ess Internationa l'S
Boa rd of Co aches ma jor college
basketball pre .season ratmgs
W1th num ber of f •r sf .place votes
in parentheses
Team
Po ints
1 UCLA (34)
340
2 North Carolina St .
306
J lnd1a na
4 North Carolina
157
5 Maryland
104
102
6 LOUISVil l e
85
7 MarQuette
8 Notre Dame
69
9 Prov1dence
10 Sa n F r anc1sco
66
11 Ken tucky
63
44
12 Long Beach St
13 Houston
14 Kansa s St.
21
15 Memph is Sf
20
17
16 Ja c ksonville
17 A laba ma
15
18 UN ·Las Vegas
13
19 A ri zona
20 South Carolina

,.,

"
,.

"

"

OSU., Michigan
dominate stars
CHI CAGO ( UPn - Big Ten
co-&lt;: hampt ons Ohio State and
M1chtga n dominated the 1973
all-&lt;:onfe•·e nce football team
chosen for United Press Internattonal by Ute coaches and announced today.
Both the Wolvennes and the
Buckeyes placed four men on
the fir st offenstve unit and Ohto
State, the league leader in
defense, placed stx men on the
ftrst de fenstv e umt whtle
Mtchtgan landed two places.
Named from Ohto Siate to
th e offensive' team were
tackles John Hicks and Kurt
Schumacher , guard Jim
Kregel and running back
Archie Griffm, the league.
leadmg individual indiVIdual
rusher with more than 1,000
yards.
Chosen for the first defensive
team from the Buckeyes were
end Van DeCree, tackle Pete
Custck, guard Vic Koegel, line·
backers Randy Gradishar and
Rick Middleton and defensive
back Net! Colzie .
Mtchtgan's stars on the of.
fenstve urut were guard Mike
Hoban , quarterback Dennis
Frankhn, who suffered a
broken collar bone in the 1().10
lte wtth Ohto State, fullback Ed
Shuttlesworth, and wingback

Clint Haslerig.
The Wolverines on the defensive urut were tackle Dave Gal·
lagher and defensive back
Dave Brown.
Completing the offensive
team were ttght end Steve
Craig, Northwestern, center
Mtke Webster, Wisconsin, and
spltt end Garvin Roberson,
illinois.
Other players on the defensive unit were end Steve Ne1ls,
Minnesota, and defensive
backs Bill Simpson, Michigan
State, and Mike Gow, fllinolS .
It was the second stratght
year that Hicks, Shuttlesworth,
Gradishar, Brown and Simpson made the all conference
team, while Craig, Webster,
Roberson aoo Franklin were
on the second unit a year ago.
Htcks, Griffin aoo Gallagher
were the only unanimous
choices, while Gradishar,
Simpson and Colzie came
within one point of unanimous
selection

PT
PLEASANT
Presentatton of golf awards to
the men and women , announcement of a Christmas
party, and a ftlm on the
Master 's Golf Tournament
highlighted the annual Hidden
Valley Countr y Club Golf
Awards banquet Saturday
mght at the Moose Club here.
Election of Lillian Greene as
ne•t year's pres tdent of the
Women's Golf Association was
announced . Other new officers
are Thelma Gelwicks, vtce·
president;
Ltllian Hyer,
secr etary, and Norsie Anderson, treasurer.
Defmite plans for the annual
Christmas Dance on December
22, will be released later .
It was an evening of fun fr om
beginning to end . Winners of
awards m the Husband-Wife
Tournament , sponsored annually by Citizens National
Bank, were secret until the
trophy presentations were
made. The "Most Improved"
golfer award m the women's
division also was kept

secret.
Mary and Robert Adkins
took the top honor m the
Husband-Wife tourney, having
low gross in the first flight.
Charles Lanham, president of
Cthzens National
Bank,
prese nted trophtes to the
Adkinses and other winners :
First Flight - The winners
and George Morrow, low net.
Second Flight - Mary and
George Ingels, low gross;
Thelma and Art Gelwicks, low
net.
Third Flight - Eva and
Arnold Batley, low gross;
Berme and Bill Gilmour, low
net.
Winnie Morrow, who has
been playmg golf only two
years, won two titles, Ullian
Greene presenting her a trophy
for the Most Improved Golfer,
and a pin from the West
V.irginia Assoctatton . The state
award is presented to the lady
golfer who plays closes t to her
handicap.
George
Morrow,
club
president , mtroduced the
diners at the speaker's table,
Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Greene,
Mr . and Mrs . Charles Lanham,
Mr. and Mrs. Ntal Mmton and
Mrs. George Morrow.

Brighten the Day
For A Shut In
Send A

FOLIAGE
GARDEN

•4.00
Dudley's
From

59 N. Second St.

Bo would change
selection system

Nial Minton made several of Tom Fisher presented trophies
the trophy presentatiOns when to Mary Arnold, •winner. and
special recognition was given Mary Ingels, second, with
to Paul Somervtlle who not semi.ftnalists being Dtana
only wa s one of the winners Bodkins and Soma Wellman.
Lillian Hyer, cO&lt;hairman of
fr om the club in the West
Virgima Moose Tournament at tournamenls. announced the
Clarksburg last summer, but Club Champions in the
won top honors m the City Ice Women's Division .
Norsie Anderson, top trophy,
and Fuel Handicap Tour·
nament. He was declared club Sarah Buffington, runner-up;
champion. Tom Rose shared Mary Adkins, first, Wmnie
the state honor with Somer- Morrow, second, first flight ,
and medahst and low pltlt
ville.
Dave Eisel was runner-up m wmners were Mary Adkins,
the club champiOnship flight . Norise Anderson, Alice Marie
Other club championship Icard and Eva Bailey.
Through the courtesy of City
tournament winners were :
F~rst Fhght Btll Pauley Ice and Fuel Company and the
with Eustace WLison, runner- C&amp;P Telephone Co., a film
presentation of last spring's
up .
Second Flight - George Master's Tournament was
Morrow, winner : Harley Hart- shown. A dance followed with
Gary Stewart and his combo
ley, runner~up
Third Fhght - Jim Fisher furnis hmg live music.
winner ; Art Hartley, runner up .
Winners of the City lee and
Fuel Handicap tournament tn
addition to Sommerville were
Tom Ftsher, second place, and
Bill Buffington Sr. and Bob
For Sale
Oliver, se mi-finalists.
In the Shopper's Mart CAMPER tr uck top Cal lafter S
p m , 882 2335
HandL c ap Tournament,
11 21 3tc
(formerly kn own as Ftsher's .,
. , . .__,
...____ _

ANN ARBOR, Mich (UP! )
- Coach Bo Schembechler
feeling his , Michigan tea.~
suffered a " great Wrong" m
not being selected to go to Ut e
Rose Bowl , wants Ute authority
to detennine which team goes
placed in the h&lt;lnds of the bowl
committee .
He also charged tn em
emotion-laden speech Monday
that Big Ten Commissioner
Wayn e Duke " engineered "
Ohio State's selectton desptte
being tied H\-10 and outpla)ed
for Utree quarters by Mi chigan
in their battle of unbeatens last
Saturday.
"Every bowl (except ours ) is
scouted," Schembechler sa1d.
" A football committee should
select Ute team it wants to play
in the Rose Bowl and if the Big
Ten doesn't hke it, it can
diSsolve the pact. The Rose
Bowl should come out and get
whoever they want.
''I want Way ne Duke to come
and explain to my team why
they aren 't good enough to play
in the Rose bowl/' Sc h em~
bechlet· smd, hts normally

too late tc

be classified

.....

_, ,....

__

---··-.--, ......... ,.....
" Pleased
to

controlled votce breaking with
emotion .
" ! want h1m to tell Demus
Franklm that m his medical
opinion, he cannot play," he
sa1d . "I want him to tell Larry
Ctpa - look hun ngh• in the eye
-and tell him he 's not good
enough to quarterback my
team m Ute Rose Bowl."
"1 have been m contact with
University
of
Michtgan
authorities regarding thts
matter," Duke replied from
Chi cago, " and will be m further contact wtth th ese
authontLe s regardLng the
overall matter ."
The Big Ten commisswner
satd Schembechler's feeling he
''engmeered " Ohw State mto
the Rose Bowl was "totally
absurd."
" If he didn 't engineer it, he
at lea s t mfluenced tt by
pomtmg out Franklin's in~
jury," Schembechler sa id .
"Th1s is th e f1rst time he 's ever
been to a Mtchigan game th&lt;lt
he dtdn't show up in the locker
room . He didn't show up in the
other one (Ohto State's),

COLUMBUS, Ohw (UPI ) "This time we will not fail
you," said Ohio State Coach
Woody Hayes, whose Buckeyes
will return to the Rose Bowl
New Year's Day to avenge a 42·

BEAUTIFUL PORTRAITS
IN NATURAL LIVING COLOR

17 loss to Southern California.
"I think we've been gLven a
respite," Hayes told a r ecord
Football Appreciatton banquet
crowd Monday night. " We 've
been given a second chance

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
and
Uoyd
Mclaughlin

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GMC FINANCING
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Open Evenings Unti16:0Q-Til5p.m. Sat.

Now! lay It Away

SINGER

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f'trestone

Sewing Machine
For Christmas '73

and this time we will not fail
you."
The No. :Hanked Buckeyes
were selected to represent the
Big Ten in the Jan. I classic by
the conference's athletic directors desptte a 1().10 tie with
Mtchtga n Saturday and an
equal 7.().1 conference record.
Two of the top awards
h&lt;lnded out Monday night went
to th e sensational sophomore
tailback Archie Griffin, who
ga ined 163 yards in the
MLchLgan encounter and was
the workhorse for
the
Buckeyes all season.
The 5-ll, 16().pounder from
Columbus was named the top
off ens ive sophomore per~
former and h1s squad members
voted him the most valuable
player on the team .
Gnffm easily topped the
previous OSU single season
rushmg mark held by John
Brockington by gaining 1,426
yards for the regular season.
Griffin is thtrd on the list of
career Buckeye rushers after
only two seasons.
Cornerback Tim Fox of
Canton received the defensive
award as the top sophomore.
John Hicks, called "the best
lmeman we've ever had," by
Hayes, picked up the award for
that position . Safety Neal
Colzie was selected the most
valuable player 10 the 60-0
Homecoming victory' over
Northwestern.
The award for the best
defenstve tackle was shared by
Pete Cusick and Arnie Jones.
''l didn 't even know they had
an award for the best defenstve
tackle," joked Ute 6·2, 25().
pound Cusick.

lhepcoplctn

peot»le

small deposit will hold

The Fabric Shop
115 W Second

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992-2284 .

POMEROY, OHIO

ANNUAL CHRISTMAS

BAZAAR

HURRY!

THIS COMING SATURDAY,
DECEMBER 1
TRINITY CHURCH, POMEROY

FAMOUS Fl RESTONE

~!~tlf·
WHITEWALLS

Door prizes will be awarded.
Drawings will be held for Presidential I
Wreath Quilt. There will be collec.
tibles, baked goods, oil paintings;
ceramics &amp; other handmade crafts too
numerous to mention. Come in and
browse around. Free coffee.

22
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Plus SOc per tire
Fed Ex tax and
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off your car

Cu t•i out to remmd you
Dial 1nterstate coils d"ecl and you save 44% to 60 °lo, com pared
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And , if you can wa•t 'td alter 11 PM any day, tha t coost·ta-coost
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You r phone drol•s one olihe best money savers ever invented
Try rl lor d,stan ce, an d see fo r yourself

Lunch will be served from 11:00 A.M. till 2
P.M. at the church. For free home delivery in
Pomeroy · Middleport · Mason are~, call in
reservations to 992-5124 or 992-3832 through
Thursday . Price $1.50 .
Sponsored By

MEIGS COUNTY
HUMANE SOCIETY
0

'

The coach of the Wolverines,
more distraught with the
dec1sion than he ever has been
over the few football games
he's lost, retterated his belief
the 6-4 vote's " biggest issue
was Franklin. But there were
others, petty things -and if not
that, ignornace .
"George King ( Purdue
athlebc director) h&lt;lsn 't seen
an Ohio State football game in
two years," he said . " A great
wrong has been done to those
kids, a great wrong .
" You know what's wrong
with the younger generation?"
Schembechler as ked. " The
way the older generation is
scurrying around, loolqng out
for Utemselves, I wouldn't trust
them eLther."
The trate Michigan coach
blasted Michigan State as one
of the six schools that voted
aga tnst him Bump Elliott of
Iowa, Bill Orwig of Indiana,
Paul Gtel of Minnesota, and of
course Don Canham, were the
athletic directors who voted for
the Wolverines.

'We won't fail you'-Woody

Present .

M1nors mus.t

etther . "

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&amp;EnERALTELEPHOnE
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POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO
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POMEROY, 0.

Pro

St1mding.~

NFL Stamt1ngs
Bv Un i t ed Press ln1ern•t•onal
Amencan Conference

x M iarn ,

East
w . I.

f.

I

0

5

0
0

10

NY Jet s

••

Balt1mor e

1

Buffalo
New EnQ i and

•••

8

0

•

0

545
36&lt;
213
181

w.

I.

f.

per.

'

3
3

0
I

3

1

Central
P ittsburgh
Cleveland
Cm ci nnat 1
Hovston

pet.

1
1

4

1 10

0

NEW YORK (UP! . - Alaba·
711 rna is the new No. 1 team m
68 1
636 college football .

0 .091

West

w L t. pet.
Denver
6 3 2 636
Oakland •
6 4
1 .59l
Kansas C1ty
6
4
1 591
San D1ego
2 8
l 111
Naltonal Confer e nc e
East

w.

Wash ington
8
Dallas
7
Philadelphia
4
St . LOUIS
3
NY . G1ants
2
Central

I.

pet.

0
0

711
636

6
1

I

'

I

6

I

I

w. I . I .
10 l 0

x M innesota

Det r oit
Green Bay
ChICago

I.

3
4

•

3
3
West

6
'
w. I.
9 2
8
3

'
0

•••
318
111

pet .
.909

409
364

213

t . pet .

Los Angeles
0 818
A tlanta
0 727
San Fra nc isco
4 7 0 364
New Orleans
4 7 0 .364
X· (flnChed d iV ISIOn Iitle
Monday ' s Results
San F rancisco 20 Green Bay 6
( Only game scheduled l
Sunday's Games
Ba1t1more at N Y Je t s
Cleve land at Kansas C1 t y
Oakland at Houston
San Diego at N ew England
De trO it at St LOUIS
Los Angeles at Chicago
New Orleans vs Green Bay
at M II wauk ee
NY Giants at Washington
Philadelph i a at San Fran c ,sco
Buffalo at Atlanta
Dalle~s at Denver
Mm nesota at Clncmna t i
(On ly games schedu l ed)
Monday ·~ Games
P1t tsb urgh at Miam,
(Only game sc hed u l ed)
----~-- -

A~ A Assoc1ation
By United Press lnternatronal
East
w. I. pet . g .b.
Kentucky
15
5 750
Caroltna
69 2
New York
10 12 455
6
V1rgm1a
7 12 368
}lh
MemphiS
364
' 14
West
w 1. pet . g .b.
Denver
11
9 550
San Anton io
11 12 478
1 1/ 2
Ind iana
10 11 476
m
Ufah
10 12 455
San D1ego
8 13 381
Monday ' s Results
Ca rolina 94 Kentu cky 82
(Only game scheduled)
Tuesday 's Games
Virg1n1a at Memphi S
Sa n D !ego at lnd 1ana
Utah at Denver
(Only games scheduled )

" '

'

l'h

WHA Standings
By Untted Press International
East
w. 1. t. pts gf ga
Nw Englnd 13
9
1 27 88 77
Quebec
12 11
1 25 9.4 80
Chi cago
11
7 1 23 7 1 63
Cleve l and 10
2 22 10

e

Tide takes over top
•
spot zn UPI ratings

n

Toronto
8 12 31 97480
NewJersey 7 13 2 16 52 85
West
w. I. t. pts gt ga
Edmonton 1.4
6 0 28 78 56
Houston
11
6 1 23 71 52
Minneso ta 11
8 1 23 80 68
Winn ipeg
9 11
2 20 77 77
Va ncouver 8 14
0 16 74 93
Los Angel es 7 16 0 14 60 86
Monday '~ Results
New England .&lt;1 New Jersey 2
(O nly game scheduled )
Tuesday's Games
W 1nn1peg at Los Angeles
Quebec at Toronto
(Only games scheduled )

Jones, a junior as is Cusick,
played linebacker last season
but was moved to the tackle
spot when Vic Koegel returned
as a regular and started every
game. Cusick is a two-year
regular.
Regarding the Michigan
game, Hayes did not defend
himself against criticism for
not passmg until
I :01
remained.
However, he noted that
quarterback Cornelius Greene
inJured his right thumb and
had practiced only once Ute
week prior to the game.
"I don't offer that as an
alibi," Hayes said. "That is a
fact. Corny's thumb was nearly
twice as big as the other and
that makes it a little difficult to
grip the ball."
Hayes also said the 6-4, 225pound junior fullback Champ
Henson may be ready by Rose
Bowl time, adding "if working
hard has anything to do with it,
this man will be ready to play."
Henson, also honored at
Monday's banquet, led the
nation in scoring as a
sophomore but injured a knee
in the second game this season
and sidelined after surgery.
The Almanac
By Unlled Press lntematlonal
Today is Tuesday, Nov. 27,
the 331st day of 1973 with 34 to
follow .
The moon is between the new
phase and first quarter.
The morning stars are
Mercury and Saturn.
The evening stars are Venus,
Mars and Jupiter.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Sagittarius.
American hi~torian Charles
Beard was born Nov. 27, 1874.
On this day in history:
In 1901, the War Department
authorized creation of the Army
War College to instruct com·
missioned officers.
In 1945, President Truman
named Gen. George Marshall
special representative to China.
In 1962, all 97 penons aboard
a U.S.·bound jet were killed
when it crashed in Peru .

i:. uergy released by just
one pound of the sun woulcj
keep a kitchen stove going
with all burners on for sev·
era! hundred years.

The Crimson Tide, shooting
for tis thl!'d national tiUe since
1961 and the first since 1964,
moved rnto the top spot after
Ohio State- which had been

No I most of the season- was
tted by Michigan.
The IIJ..O Tide received 22
first.place votes from the
Umted Press International
Board of Coaches to outpoint
second-place Oklahoma, 33().
299, whtle the Buckeyes fell to
th1rd following the tie with

Quick start in
second half is
big difference
.

.

Coach Art Lanham's Rio Grande College
Redmen, following a 35·35 halftime tie against
visiting Tiffin University , ripped off 18 straight
unanswered points during the first 5:06 of action in
the second half enroute to a surprisingly easy 88·73
Mid-Ohio Conference victory over Coach George
Janson 's Dragons at Lyne Center before approximately 700 spectators Monday evening.
Tiffin, after falling behind IMJ
during the first two minutes of
play, led the Redmen only
twice during the contest. The
VISitors were on top 1().8 with
14 : 3lleft in the first half.Jt was
23-22, Tiffin, with 7:50
remaining in the initial half.
Dan Bollinger, 6-5 junlor
forward from Zanesville, put
Rio ahead for keeps, 21·23,
with a long jumper at the
7:10 mark In the first half.
Tiffin did, however, tie it up
at 31, 33, and 35-all before
halftime.
Rio's second half onslaught
was led by speedy guards Steve
Bartram, former Ironton Tiger
standout, and Stoutsville ' s
Dean Fausnaugh.
Bartram tallied 17 of his
game-high 25 points in the
second h&lt;llf, including five
quick markers in the first
minute of play in the final half.
Fausnaugh tallied II of his 13
points tn the last h&lt;llf, and
Bollinger picked iip II of hiS 21 pomts durmg the final 20
minutes of play.
Galllpolfs' Jimmy Noe, a 64 freshman, and Bolllnger
kept Rio m""lng ln the first
half. Noe popped In 10 of his
15 marken during the first
20 minutes of action.
Bollinger had 10.
After Rio shot a cool 34 pet.
from the field in the first half
(17 of 50) the Redmen canned
20 of 38 field goal attempts in

LINE BURSTS
NAHA,Japan(UPI ) -A gas
pipeline burst today, causing
part of Okinawa's major city to
crumble and paralyzing the
central part of the island .
Police said the ground sud·
denly caved in shortly before
dark, wiping away several
structures and five lanes of six·
lane Highway 56.

the fina l half to finish the night
wtth 37 of 88 attempts for 42
pel. From the foul ctrcles, Rio
was 14 of 21 for 67 pet. The
Redm en hauled down 39
rebounds. Bollinger and Rock
Hill 's big 6·7 center Jtm
Stewart hauled down 11
rebounds each for Rio. The
Redmen had only 14 turnovers,
and committed IS personal
fouls .
Tiffm, nnaking its debut in
the MOC, htt 43 pet. from the
field , smkmg 33 of 76 attempts.
The Dragons were 7 of 11 at the
foul circles for 63 pet. The
visttors had 33 rebounds ,
Richard Wheat, a 6-1 fresh·
man , led the losers with six
rebounds. Tiffin was gwlty of
23 turnovers. The visitors had
16 personals. It wa s the
Dragons season opener.
Dave Bookmyer, a 6-1
freshman, led the visitors
with 16 markers. Wheat
finished with 14.
It was Rio Grande's third
straight hardwood vtctory in as
many outings. The Red men
journey to Findlay Wednesday
for a non-league encounter.
Prior to the varsity game
Monday, the Rio Jayvees
trounced visiting Ashland
Business College 98-58 in the
prelimmary game.
The Fairland High School
band performed during the
halftime intermission.
Here's Monday's box score:
TIFFIN 1731 - Wheat, 5.4.
14; Bookmyer , 8-0-16 ; Short, 00·0, Carlton, 2-0-4, Menear, 4·08; Clouse, 1-2·4 ; Johnson , 1.0.2 ;
Mack, 4·1 ·9; Smith, 1-0 ·2; Vitt,
2 0-4; Harralson, 3·0-6 ; Homer,

M•chtgan .
Alabama is now in the team
to beat for the national
championship with only arciJ.
rtval Auburn left on the
Cnmson Tide's regular season
schedule.ln accordance with a
dec1sion of the Amencan
Football Coaches Association,
UPI 's national championship IS
based on regular season play
only.
Oklahoma 's 9·0·1 Sooners
can close an unbeaten season
this weekeoo with a victory
over Ok lah oma State. An
NCAA probation bans coach
Barry Switzer's team from
postseason play.
Ohio State , whtch had replaced Southern California the
second week of the season as
the nation's top team, lost tts
No. I ranking in the tie with
Michtgan, but won the right to
meet USC in the Rose Bowl m a
vote of the conference athletic
directors.
Notre Dame, which will play
Alabama in the Sugar Bowl,
moved ahead of Mtchigan into
fourth place with 233 points.
Michtgan is fifth with 216
points.
Penn State completed a
perfect ll..O regular season wtth
a 35-13 co me-from -behind
VIctory over the Ftesta Bowlbound Pitt Panthers. The
Ntttany Lions face LSU m the
Orange Bowl, hoping to
duplicate victories there in 1968
and 1969, which also capped
perfect seasons .
Southern Ca l's 23-13 win over
UCLA boosted the 'l'ro jans two
places to seventh as LSU fell to
eighth, followed in order by
Texas and UCLA.

Bartram, 11 -3· 25 ; Fausnaugh,

6-1·13 ; Hart, t-0·2: Bollinger. 9·
3-21; Smith, o.o.o; Stewart. 1·0·
2; Swinehart, 1·1-3; Morgan, 0·
0-0; Noe, 7·1·15; Schafer, 0·2·2:
Redd, 0-3-3 ; Robinson, 1·0·2.
TOTALS 37·14·88.
Halftime score Rio 35,
Tiffin 35.

College Ratings
NEW YOR K ( U P! ) The
Urp ted Pr ess
Internat iOnal's
Board of Coa ches ma 1or colleQ._e
footbal l rat i ng s w i th n umber of
fi rst pla c e vot es 1n paren
theses ( E le v en th Week )
Team
Potnh
1 Alabama (22) ( 10 0 )
330
2 . Oklahoma (9 ) (9 0 · 1)
J Ohio St. (21n l ( 9 0 1)
4 Notre Dame (I) ( 9 0)
233
5 M !ch 1gan (1 '~) ( 10 0 1)
116
6 Penn State f 11 OJ
207
7 Southern Cal (9 1 1 l
136
8 LSU (9 1)
85
9 Texas (8· 2)
80
10 UCLA ( 9 2 )
11 Arrtona St ( 10 1)
30
12 Nebraska ( 8 2 1 )
10
13 Tell!as Tech ( 10· l l
1
1.4 Ho uston ( 9 I)
15 Kan sas (7 3 1 J
3
16Miam ., O ( 100 )
17 Mar yland (8 3 )
I

,.,
'"

"
•
'

U[JJI]~ITIRiflll .

Spider 's silk is so fme
(somet im es
onl y
one
millionth of an inch in
diameter ) that most people
think of 1t as fragile. Ac·
tually , the drag lines of
many sp1ders have greater
tensil e strength than steel
Silk of spi ders was long
used for making cross
hairs of the f1nest optical
Instrumen ts, and most
bomb s1tes used by fliers of
World War II employed
this spec ial substan ce
Our
e nginee r s
have
designed a good looking ,
space sav mg water refiner
by c ombining the strength
of steel and the corrosion
proof bonding of · plastic.
Each resin tank of a water
refiner has a tasteless,
odorless
plast1c
liner
bonded to a score of steel
and sealed on the outside

with a

"What is it,
Doctor?"
Some

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msurance pays all hospital
and surg1cal expe nses other poli c ies 1nclude
dlsab111ty income
The
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has various poltc1es to best
meet your needs .

DowningChilds
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2-0·4. TOTALS JJ.7.73.
RIO GRANDE (88)

NEW YORK {UPI. Gary Matthew• Isn't euclly
a household name yet but the
San Francisco Giants think
be lias the potential to beone
some day.
Matthews, who Wll!l
WOJ'Jied about just making
the club In spring tralnlng,
achieved the lint pinnacle
on his way to widespread
recognltloo by the fans
Monday when he was named
the National League's
Rookie of the Year by a
landslide margin.

thick

foam

In ·

sulation and plastic . This
form s
a
four . ply
lamrnatron
that stops
condensation and helps
ma~ntam
water
tern ·
peraiure, yet is not bulky
nor unsightly . The water
never iou ches metal , and
your Wilter refiner IS
formed from solid colored
telephon e. fype plastic for
max1mum lrfe , beauty and
easy c are Years ahead
performan ce,
features ,
styling.
Delivers
an
unlim ite d
su pply
of
Ref ined Water . Call 882 ·

2525.

220 N. 2nd
MIDDLEPORT

SAYRE
.HARDWARE
812· 2525
NeW

W. Va
•

Central Operating Company's
11'

Philip Sporn Plant
New Haven, W.Va.

Has Job Openings For Permanent Employment In The, Following
Skills
MechanicS
Instrument Repairmen
'

These Jobs Provide Excellent Wages And A Benefits Program Which Includes
Ufe Insurance, Medical Insurance, Disabillity Insurance , Sick Leave, Vacations,
Holiday, And Retirement.
Although A Strike Is In Progress, The Company Continues To Operate The Plant.

APPLICANTS MAY CALL C304) 882-2126 (collect)
BElWEEN THE HOURS OF 7:30AM TO 4:00 PM

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Post OlllH lox 361, Now HIYift, Wosl Vlrvlnla 25165
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\

'

�3- The Dail)' Sentinel , ~hddleport-Pomeroy, 0., Nov. 27, 197~

2 - 11te Dt1ilv Sentuwl M1ddJt'port-Pomeru\ , 0 . No\' . ZJ . 197:t

.

•

Energy
Plea I• S
Working

=~::::;:;.;::::::;:-5:·:·:·:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:~:::;:;:;:;;;.;-::.:-:-:-:·:·~:!:·:·:::::::;;;:;:;::::·:·:-:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·.·=::·::::::.

:~I

~~arm ta:~.. 1om 1 )()~~·~ pmhkms

~j~j

CO LUMBUS t UP!) .- The Ohto (ieneral Asscmbl)• has
bfen urged to use caution in wntmg a nen law t o ~~ farm lands on agncultural value rathC'r than as an mvestment
and to con!ine property tax relief to farnu:~rs whu need it
N ~; w YVI\ K I UPI J
UCLA
most - those on the frmges of urban~areas .
&lt;': State Sen . Mich&lt;lel J . Malone) . R.('mcmnah , said the :,: 1s a unanimous choace to repeat
;::: lawmakers will begtn such work in JanW:try ut response to a :-: it" natiomil che:unp1 on, but the
Allanli c Coast Conference 1s
constitutional amendment adopted m November f.;'.. expected to provide the most
authoming spe&lt;;ial ta• treatment for farmlands .
,.,
"The main selhng point for this amendment was the need ... excitement in maJor college
basketball this se&lt;Json, accord·
. tobput fa lid onf stphetrastlintg
turalt Ia1dnd valuets onhthe .. mg to the United Press In·
ur an rmge o
a e,
a oney o a mee mg ere
tcrnatlonal pre~eason ratmgs.
Monday of the Ohio Farm Bureau Federation .

~.:', .:~;

'~.~:

•• :=
••

By C. W. ORR
Urtited Press International
Businesses and state governments have begun voluntanly
complying wtth President
Nixon 's plea to conserve
energy.
Several major m1 companies,
mcluding Standard of Ohio
(Sohio ), Phillips Pet roleum Co.
and Skelly Oil Co., said they
would close their company·
owned stattons at 9 p.m.
Saturdays and all day Sundays.
Sohto Vtce Prestdent Robert
Griffin also asked independent
dealers with Sohto franchises
to join in the weekend
closings.
Th e New York State
Thruway Authority announced
it was closing gasoline stations
on the 559-mile toll r oad on
Sundays. The thruway 1tself
and restaurants along it will
still open SUndays, however.
Limits Remain Lower
New York state already had
lowered speed limits to 5()
miles an hour m response to an
earlier plea from Nixon .
Authortty Chairman R . Burdell
Bixby satd even Utough Nixon
ts asking for a 55 m .p.h. !unit
for trucks and buses, it will
remain at 50 m .p.h . for safety
reasons.

.':

~.grMicuJ1

~.:~·.:~

l·i·,·l··'l='.
.:

,:~~,:'~.

ill~~~~~~E:r;~:;i;eEJ~i:~37~:::e::~:~~ -~·',r.t_l:

• miltee, wtll help write Ute law .

:

~t-:-:·:·:·:;:·:·:·:·:::·:·:::·:::::::;:::::::;:;.;::-:=:-:=:-:=:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:{-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·::;.;-;:;::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:~::·:·:·:::::::::::::;:;::
Robert Jacobs, executive
secretary of Ute Illinois and
Indtana Gasoline Dealers As·
sociations, said his groups
support Saturday mght and
Sunday closings. But he said
since stations would lose 15 to
20 per cent of weekly sales,
they wtll fight for reduced
rents charged by major oil
companies.
Fifteen tru ckmg firms m
Mi chigan said they would
voluntarily slow thell' trucks to
55 m.p .h . to save fuel.
Clncago's Lindbergh Beacon
atop Playboy Towers on North
Michigan Avenue will be
darkened because of th e
energy crists. Playboy En·
terprtces Inc said it would turn
off the world's most powerful
aviation beacon to encourage a
spirit of cooperation among
Chicagoans."
WUI Ask Approval
The avenue may not be

completely dark. The North
Michigan Avenue Association
said it wtll ask for approval to
h ght the tradittonal small
ftahan bulbs m trees lining the
avenue during the Christmas
season. Electrtctty used in
Clncago is produced "almost
entirely by coal and atomic
power," and not by petroleum,
the assocmtton noted .
The associatiOn also recom·
mended that s tores along
Michigan Avenue continue
hghting first·floor windows to
aid police patrols after dark.
Most power companies in
New England announced cuts
of 5 per cent in voltage during
peak early evenm g hours to
save as much as 1,300 barrels
of fuel oil a day.
The most no!lceable effect on
the public may be shrinkage of
television pictures, a spokesman for Northeast Utthties
satd .

Tax secrets will come out
WASHINGTON ( UP! ) President Nixon is preparing to
make public details of his income ta•es, perh&lt;lps this week.
Meanwhile, after a fourmonth court battle, U.S. Dis·
trict Court Judge John J. Sirtca
today has custody of 10 of
Ntxon' s Watergate tapes, in·
cluiling one wtth an llknmute
hum- which has taken on new
significance.
Sen. Gale W. McGee, D·
Wyo ., quoted the President as
lelhng SIX senators at the Whtte
House Monday night " that he
was going to lay on the table all
of his income tax returns" mcluding 1970 when news
accounts say he paid $792 and
1972 when he reportedly paid
$676. Ni.an luis said only that
he paid "nominal swns" those
years.
The White House added:
"We will have something to say
in coming days."
Sirica now must decide
which of Ntxon's tapes should
be shown to a grand jury. The
White House said lull! are
cove red by• presidential
se~recy and and should not be
given the grand jurors.
One tape of a 54-minute
conversation between Nixon
and hts former aide, H. R.
Haldeman, contains only a
hum for 16 minutes. Rose Mary
Woods, Nixon's personal secretary, told Sirica Monday

she apparantly " caused the
gap" by mtstakenly pushmg a
button whtch made the
machine erase the tape while
she answered the telephone.
Prosecutors charged that
PT. PLEASANT
LIVESTOCK SALES CO.
Pt. Pleasant, W, Va.
Nov. 24,1973
HOGS - 175 to 220 43 to 51,
Heavies 39.50 to 43.75, Lights 37
to 46, Fat Sows 37 to 36.85, Pigs
15 to 28, Stock Shoats 36 to 45.
CATTLE - Steers 36 to 41,
Heifers 32.75to 36.50, Fat Cows
34 to 36, Canners 26 to 32, Bulis
37 to 45, Stock Cows and Calves
317.50 to 501.50, Stock Steers 42
to 46, Stock Heifers 34 to 37 50,
Stock Steer Calves 45 to 53,
Stock Heifer Calves 39.25 to
46.30.
VEAL CALVES - Tops
57.50, Seconds 55.50, Medium 49
to 51.25, Common &amp; Heavies 47
to 49, Culls 45 to 46 .50.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS
Ruth
Cheadle, Cheshire ; Hazel
Phtllips, Wellston ; Bonnie
Proctor, Mtddleport ; Robert
Staats, Middleport ; Edith
Osborne, Long
Bottom;
Anestine Carsey, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGES
Steve
Eblin, Kay Hockman, Stanley
Hutton, Jerry Owens.

Packers lose 20-6
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) Washington and Ken Willard
Joe Reed may have come of while snapping a !our-game
age but the jury is still out on losing streak. However, it was
Jerry Tagge.
only their fourth victory
The two young quarterbacks agamst seven losses and
hooked up in Monday night's hardly is cause for celebration.
nationally televtsed NFL game
"! really enjoyed this
and when it was all over, Reed game," said Washington, who
and th e San Francisco 49ers rushed for 94 yards and scored
ha d a 2~ vtctory over Tagge San Francisco's first touch·
and the Green Bay Packers. down on a one-yard smash.
Reed, starting his third "We finally put it together. The
stratght game at quarterback, blocking was there, the holes
completed only five of 16 were there. I just hope we can
passes for 44 yards. On the keep it up because it will make
surface, that looks like a very for a lot nicer winter.''
mediocre performance, but it
TheOtherTD
was far from Utat.
Spurrier threw 20 yards to
San Francisco Coach Dick Ted Kwalick for San FrancisNolan let Reed call his own co's other touchdown and
ga me and that's 'where the Bruce Gossett made it 12 field
second.year man , who started goals in a row without a miss
the 1973 season on the taxi on boots of 25 and 22 yards.
squad, really shone, leading
Green Bay got its only points
the 49ers to a 1~ edge mlo the on field goals of 35 and 15 yards
fourth quarter before bowing by Chester Marco!.
out for Steve Spurner because
Two pass interceptions by
of a grom muscle pull.
Dave WHcox on Tagge, an
Nolan is Pleased
interference penalty on AI
" I was really pleased with MatUtews and a personal foul
Reed 's effort," said Nol;m. on Jim Hill figured in 17 of San
"He called a good game and, Francisco's points, and th&lt;lt
h&lt;ld he not been hurt, I don't upset Packer Coach Dan
know if I would have replaced Devine, whose club now stands
him with Spurrier."
3-6-2.
Reed , who played his collegi"Those penalties and interate ball at Mtssissippi State,
ceptions hurt- you're damn
seemed pleased, too, with play right they do," said Devine . "I
calling agatnst the Packers
don't even want to talk about
and was apprectattve Nolan let . them. They make me sick to
my stomach."
him.
" The coach went along with
Tagge completed 10 of 18
rne," he said, "and I think I passes for 107 yards before
being relieved by Jim Del
built a lot of confidence out of
that. We didn 't go into the
Gaizo tn the fourth quarter.
Where the 49ers really won
game wiUt any definite plans
the game was up front on
other than to see if we could
e~ecute better than we had
defense . They held hard·
running John Brockington and
been doing."
That the 49ers did, putling
MacArthnr Lane to 119 yards,
to(jether their besl ruMing
and toot made the difference.
pme of the year behind Vic

only that part of the conversa tion
deahng
WLth
Watergate was erased.
Haldeman's written notes of
the conversation, which were
subpoenaed, mdicated he and
Ntxon disc ussed a public
relations "counter-attack" to
the Watergate affair during the
18 mmutes which were erased.
In other developments:
- The White House accused
Spectal Prosecutor Leon
Jaworski of "leakmg" to the
press stones relating to the Illminute gap and a Seafarers'
Umon contribution to the Nixon
campaign. .
-Chwf Counsel Samuel
Dash s aid the
Senate
Watergate committee ts
having trouble gettmg in·
formation
concerning a
$100,000 gtft to C. G. "Bebe"
Rebozo, from both the White
House and the Hughes Tool Co.,
headed by . btllionaire Howard
Hughes. He indicated further
public hearings will be delayed
until January.

.......
The Daily Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS· MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL.

Exec . Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
C1ty Editor

Publt 5hed datly !!K eep!

Saturday by The Ohio Valley

PubliShing Company , 11 1

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In

Ttmes

Golf awards presented

UCLA picked to
•
repeat m NCAA

UCLA, which has won seven

consecutive NCAA lltles and
three stratght UP! national
championshtiJ6, received all 34
ftrst.p!ace votes cast by the
ratmgs board to eastly outdis·
tance last year's runnerup,
NorUt Caroltna State, in Ute
battle for the pre-season top
spot.
North Carohna State, which
went undefeated m 27 games
last year but missed a shot at
th e NCAA tournament because
of proba lion, got all 34 second·
place votes and was 107 points
ahead of the thtrd-place fuushcr, Indiana.
The Wolfpack, which returns
thr ee starters from last year 's
squad, wtll get •ts chance to
wrest the No. I rankmg away
from the Brums when the two
teams tangle at the St. L&lt;mis
Arena on Dec. 15.
North Ca rolina State, a
member of the ACC, was one of
three teams from that confer·
ence to fmtsh in the top flve in
the balloting. North Ca rolina
was fourth and Maryla nd ,
which meets UCLA Saturday

mghl m tL., season opener, was
ftfth
Louisv•lle, coached by e•·
UCLA assistant Denny Crwn,
came in sixth in the voting
followed
in
order
by
Marq uette, Notre Dame,
Providence aoo San Francisco.
UCLA, whi ch opens tts
season at home Friday mght
against Arkansas, has won 75
games in a row and is favored
to win its eighth straight NCAl\
championship.
Five coaches from each
geographical section of the
co untry comprise the UP!
ratings board. Each week they
vote on the top 10 teams and
pomts are awarded on a !().9-37-&amp;-5-4-3-2-1 basis for votes
from first through lOth.
N EW YORK ( UPI) ~ The
Un1 t ed Pr ess Internationa l'S
Boa rd of Co aches ma jor college
basketball pre .season ratmgs
W1th num ber of f •r sf .place votes
in parentheses
Team
Po ints
1 UCLA (34)
340
2 North Carolina St .
306
J lnd1a na
4 North Carolina
157
5 Maryland
104
102
6 LOUISVil l e
85
7 MarQuette
8 Notre Dame
69
9 Prov1dence
10 Sa n F r anc1sco
66
11 Ken tucky
63
44
12 Long Beach St
13 Houston
14 Kansa s St.
21
15 Memph is Sf
20
17
16 Ja c ksonville
17 A laba ma
15
18 UN ·Las Vegas
13
19 A ri zona
20 South Carolina

,.,

"
,.

"

"

OSU., Michigan
dominate stars
CHI CAGO ( UPn - Big Ten
co-&lt;: hampt ons Ohio State and
M1chtga n dominated the 1973
all-&lt;:onfe•·e nce football team
chosen for United Press Internattonal by Ute coaches and announced today.
Both the Wolvennes and the
Buckeyes placed four men on
the fir st offenstve unit and Ohto
State, the league leader in
defense, placed stx men on the
ftrst de fenstv e umt whtle
Mtchtgan landed two places.
Named from Ohto Siate to
th e offensive' team were
tackles John Hicks and Kurt
Schumacher , guard Jim
Kregel and running back
Archie Griffm, the league.
leadmg individual indiVIdual
rusher with more than 1,000
yards.
Chosen for the first defensive
team from the Buckeyes were
end Van DeCree, tackle Pete
Custck, guard Vic Koegel, line·
backers Randy Gradishar and
Rick Middleton and defensive
back Net! Colzie .
Mtchtgan's stars on the of.
fenstve urut were guard Mike
Hoban , quarterback Dennis
Frankhn, who suffered a
broken collar bone in the 1().10
lte wtth Ohto State, fullback Ed
Shuttlesworth, and wingback

Clint Haslerig.
The Wolverines on the defensive urut were tackle Dave Gal·
lagher and defensive back
Dave Brown.
Completing the offensive
team were ttght end Steve
Craig, Northwestern, center
Mtke Webster, Wisconsin, and
spltt end Garvin Roberson,
illinois.
Other players on the defensive unit were end Steve Ne1ls,
Minnesota, and defensive
backs Bill Simpson, Michigan
State, and Mike Gow, fllinolS .
It was the second stratght
year that Hicks, Shuttlesworth,
Gradishar, Brown and Simpson made the all conference
team, while Craig, Webster,
Roberson aoo Franklin were
on the second unit a year ago.
Htcks, Griffin aoo Gallagher
were the only unanimous
choices, while Gradishar,
Simpson and Colzie came
within one point of unanimous
selection

PT
PLEASANT
Presentatton of golf awards to
the men and women , announcement of a Christmas
party, and a ftlm on the
Master 's Golf Tournament
highlighted the annual Hidden
Valley Countr y Club Golf
Awards banquet Saturday
mght at the Moose Club here.
Election of Lillian Greene as
ne•t year's pres tdent of the
Women's Golf Association was
announced . Other new officers
are Thelma Gelwicks, vtce·
president;
Ltllian Hyer,
secr etary, and Norsie Anderson, treasurer.
Defmite plans for the annual
Christmas Dance on December
22, will be released later .
It was an evening of fun fr om
beginning to end . Winners of
awards m the Husband-Wife
Tournament , sponsored annually by Citizens National
Bank, were secret until the
trophy presentations were
made. The "Most Improved"
golfer award m the women's
division also was kept

secret.
Mary and Robert Adkins
took the top honor m the
Husband-Wife tourney, having
low gross in the first flight.
Charles Lanham, president of
Cthzens National
Bank,
prese nted trophtes to the
Adkinses and other winners :
First Flight - The winners
and George Morrow, low net.
Second Flight - Mary and
George Ingels, low gross;
Thelma and Art Gelwicks, low
net.
Third Flight - Eva and
Arnold Batley, low gross;
Berme and Bill Gilmour, low
net.
Winnie Morrow, who has
been playmg golf only two
years, won two titles, Ullian
Greene presenting her a trophy
for the Most Improved Golfer,
and a pin from the West
V.irginia Assoctatton . The state
award is presented to the lady
golfer who plays closes t to her
handicap.
George
Morrow,
club
president , mtroduced the
diners at the speaker's table,
Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Greene,
Mr . and Mrs . Charles Lanham,
Mr. and Mrs. Ntal Mmton and
Mrs. George Morrow.

Brighten the Day
For A Shut In
Send A

FOLIAGE
GARDEN

•4.00
Dudley's
From

59 N. Second St.

Bo would change
selection system

Nial Minton made several of Tom Fisher presented trophies
the trophy presentatiOns when to Mary Arnold, •winner. and
special recognition was given Mary Ingels, second, with
to Paul Somervtlle who not semi.ftnalists being Dtana
only wa s one of the winners Bodkins and Soma Wellman.
Lillian Hyer, cO&lt;hairman of
fr om the club in the West
Virgima Moose Tournament at tournamenls. announced the
Clarksburg last summer, but Club Champions in the
won top honors m the City Ice Women's Division .
Norsie Anderson, top trophy,
and Fuel Handicap Tour·
nament. He was declared club Sarah Buffington, runner-up;
champion. Tom Rose shared Mary Adkins, first, Wmnie
the state honor with Somer- Morrow, second, first flight ,
and medahst and low pltlt
ville.
Dave Eisel was runner-up m wmners were Mary Adkins,
the club champiOnship flight . Norise Anderson, Alice Marie
Other club championship Icard and Eva Bailey.
Through the courtesy of City
tournament winners were :
F~rst Fhght Btll Pauley Ice and Fuel Company and the
with Eustace WLison, runner- C&amp;P Telephone Co., a film
presentation of last spring's
up .
Second Flight - George Master's Tournament was
Morrow, winner : Harley Hart- shown. A dance followed with
Gary Stewart and his combo
ley, runner~up
Third Fhght - Jim Fisher furnis hmg live music.
winner ; Art Hartley, runner up .
Winners of the City lee and
Fuel Handicap tournament tn
addition to Sommerville were
Tom Ftsher, second place, and
Bill Buffington Sr. and Bob
For Sale
Oliver, se mi-finalists.
In the Shopper's Mart CAMPER tr uck top Cal lafter S
p m , 882 2335
HandL c ap Tournament,
11 21 3tc
(formerly kn own as Ftsher's .,
. , . .__,
...____ _

ANN ARBOR, Mich (UP! )
- Coach Bo Schembechler
feeling his , Michigan tea.~
suffered a " great Wrong" m
not being selected to go to Ut e
Rose Bowl , wants Ute authority
to detennine which team goes
placed in the h&lt;lnds of the bowl
committee .
He also charged tn em
emotion-laden speech Monday
that Big Ten Commissioner
Wayn e Duke " engineered "
Ohio State's selectton desptte
being tied H\-10 and outpla)ed
for Utree quarters by Mi chigan
in their battle of unbeatens last
Saturday.
"Every bowl (except ours ) is
scouted," Schembechler sa1d.
" A football committee should
select Ute team it wants to play
in the Rose Bowl and if the Big
Ten doesn't hke it, it can
diSsolve the pact. The Rose
Bowl should come out and get
whoever they want.
''I want Way ne Duke to come
and explain to my team why
they aren 't good enough to play
in the Rose bowl/' Sc h em~
bechlet· smd, hts normally

too late tc

be classified

.....

_, ,....

__

---··-.--, ......... ,.....
" Pleased
to

controlled votce breaking with
emotion .
" ! want h1m to tell Demus
Franklm that m his medical
opinion, he cannot play," he
sa1d . "I want him to tell Larry
Ctpa - look hun ngh• in the eye
-and tell him he 's not good
enough to quarterback my
team m Ute Rose Bowl."
"1 have been m contact with
University
of
Michtgan
authorities regarding thts
matter," Duke replied from
Chi cago, " and will be m further contact wtth th ese
authontLe s regardLng the
overall matter ."
The Big Ten commisswner
satd Schembechler's feeling he
''engmeered " Ohw State mto
the Rose Bowl was "totally
absurd."
" If he didn 't engineer it, he
at lea s t mfluenced tt by
pomtmg out Franklin's in~
jury," Schembechler sa id .
"Th1s is th e f1rst time he 's ever
been to a Mtchigan game th&lt;lt
he dtdn't show up in the locker
room . He didn't show up in the
other one (Ohto State's),

COLUMBUS, Ohw (UPI ) "This time we will not fail
you," said Ohio State Coach
Woody Hayes, whose Buckeyes
will return to the Rose Bowl
New Year's Day to avenge a 42·

BEAUTIFUL PORTRAITS
IN NATURAL LIVING COLOR

17 loss to Southern California.
"I think we've been gLven a
respite," Hayes told a r ecord
Football Appreciatton banquet
crowd Monday night. " We 've
been given a second chance

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
and
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Open Evenings Unti16:0Q-Til5p.m. Sat.

Now! lay It Away

SINGER

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f'trestone

Sewing Machine
For Christmas '73

and this time we will not fail
you."
The No. :Hanked Buckeyes
were selected to represent the
Big Ten in the Jan. I classic by
the conference's athletic directors desptte a 1().10 tie with
Mtchtga n Saturday and an
equal 7.().1 conference record.
Two of the top awards
h&lt;lnded out Monday night went
to th e sensational sophomore
tailback Archie Griffin, who
ga ined 163 yards in the
MLchLgan encounter and was
the workhorse for
the
Buckeyes all season.
The 5-ll, 16().pounder from
Columbus was named the top
off ens ive sophomore per~
former and h1s squad members
voted him the most valuable
player on the team .
Gnffm easily topped the
previous OSU single season
rushmg mark held by John
Brockington by gaining 1,426
yards for the regular season.
Griffin is thtrd on the list of
career Buckeye rushers after
only two seasons.
Cornerback Tim Fox of
Canton received the defensive
award as the top sophomore.
John Hicks, called "the best
lmeman we've ever had," by
Hayes, picked up the award for
that position . Safety Neal
Colzie was selected the most
valuable player 10 the 60-0
Homecoming victory' over
Northwestern.
The award for the best
defenstve tackle was shared by
Pete Cusick and Arnie Jones.
''l didn 't even know they had
an award for the best defenstve
tackle," joked Ute 6·2, 25().
pound Cusick.

lhepcoplctn

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small deposit will hold

The Fabric Shop
115 W Second

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992-2284 .

POMEROY, OHIO

ANNUAL CHRISTMAS

BAZAAR

HURRY!

THIS COMING SATURDAY,
DECEMBER 1
TRINITY CHURCH, POMEROY

FAMOUS Fl RESTONE

~!~tlf·
WHITEWALLS

Door prizes will be awarded.
Drawings will be held for Presidential I
Wreath Quilt. There will be collec.
tibles, baked goods, oil paintings;
ceramics &amp; other handmade crafts too
numerous to mention. Come in and
browse around. Free coffee.

22
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Plus SOc per tire
Fed Ex tax and
2 recappable tires
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Dial 1nterstate coils d"ecl and you save 44% to 60 °lo, com pared
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Wrth ourweekend,roles. you pa y even less For exam ple, you can
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And , if you can wa•t 'td alter 11 PM any day, tha t coost·ta-coost
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You r phone drol•s one olihe best money savers ever invented
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Lunch will be served from 11:00 A.M. till 2
P.M. at the church. For free home delivery in
Pomeroy · Middleport · Mason are~, call in
reservations to 992-5124 or 992-3832 through
Thursday . Price $1.50 .
Sponsored By

MEIGS COUNTY
HUMANE SOCIETY
0

'

The coach of the Wolverines,
more distraught with the
dec1sion than he ever has been
over the few football games
he's lost, retterated his belief
the 6-4 vote's " biggest issue
was Franklin. But there were
others, petty things -and if not
that, ignornace .
"George King ( Purdue
athlebc director) h&lt;lsn 't seen
an Ohio State football game in
two years," he said . " A great
wrong has been done to those
kids, a great wrong .
" You know what's wrong
with the younger generation?"
Schembechler as ked. " The
way the older generation is
scurrying around, loolqng out
for Utemselves, I wouldn't trust
them eLther."
The trate Michigan coach
blasted Michigan State as one
of the six schools that voted
aga tnst him Bump Elliott of
Iowa, Bill Orwig of Indiana,
Paul Gtel of Minnesota, and of
course Don Canham, were the
athletic directors who voted for
the Wolverines.

'We won't fail you'-Woody

Present .

M1nors mus.t

etther . "

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&amp;EnERALTELEPHOnE
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POMEROY, 0.

Pro

St1mding.~

NFL Stamt1ngs
Bv Un i t ed Press ln1ern•t•onal
Amencan Conference

x M iarn ,

East
w . I.

f.

I

0

5

0
0

10

NY Jet s

••

Balt1mor e

1

Buffalo
New EnQ i and

•••

8

0

•

0

545
36&lt;
213
181

w.

I.

f.

per.

'

3
3

0
I

3

1

Central
P ittsburgh
Cleveland
Cm ci nnat 1
Hovston

pet.

1
1

4

1 10

0

NEW YORK (UP! . - Alaba·
711 rna is the new No. 1 team m
68 1
636 college football .

0 .091

West

w L t. pet.
Denver
6 3 2 636
Oakland •
6 4
1 .59l
Kansas C1ty
6
4
1 591
San D1ego
2 8
l 111
Naltonal Confer e nc e
East

w.

Wash ington
8
Dallas
7
Philadelphia
4
St . LOUIS
3
NY . G1ants
2
Central

I.

pet.

0
0

711
636

6
1

I

'

I

6

I

I

w. I . I .
10 l 0

x M innesota

Det r oit
Green Bay
ChICago

I.

3
4

•

3
3
West

6
'
w. I.
9 2
8
3

'
0

•••
318
111

pet .
.909

409
364

213

t . pet .

Los Angeles
0 818
A tlanta
0 727
San Fra nc isco
4 7 0 364
New Orleans
4 7 0 .364
X· (flnChed d iV ISIOn Iitle
Monday ' s Results
San F rancisco 20 Green Bay 6
( Only game scheduled l
Sunday's Games
Ba1t1more at N Y Je t s
Cleve land at Kansas C1 t y
Oakland at Houston
San Diego at N ew England
De trO it at St LOUIS
Los Angeles at Chicago
New Orleans vs Green Bay
at M II wauk ee
NY Giants at Washington
Philadelph i a at San Fran c ,sco
Buffalo at Atlanta
Dalle~s at Denver
Mm nesota at Clncmna t i
(On ly games schedu l ed)
Monday ·~ Games
P1t tsb urgh at Miam,
(Only game sc hed u l ed)
----~-- -

A~ A Assoc1ation
By United Press lnternatronal
East
w. I. pet . g .b.
Kentucky
15
5 750
Caroltna
69 2
New York
10 12 455
6
V1rgm1a
7 12 368
}lh
MemphiS
364
' 14
West
w 1. pet . g .b.
Denver
11
9 550
San Anton io
11 12 478
1 1/ 2
Ind iana
10 11 476
m
Ufah
10 12 455
San D1ego
8 13 381
Monday ' s Results
Ca rolina 94 Kentu cky 82
(Only game scheduled)
Tuesday 's Games
Virg1n1a at Memphi S
Sa n D !ego at lnd 1ana
Utah at Denver
(Only games scheduled )

" '

'

l'h

WHA Standings
By Untted Press International
East
w. 1. t. pts gf ga
Nw Englnd 13
9
1 27 88 77
Quebec
12 11
1 25 9.4 80
Chi cago
11
7 1 23 7 1 63
Cleve l and 10
2 22 10

e

Tide takes over top
•
spot zn UPI ratings

n

Toronto
8 12 31 97480
NewJersey 7 13 2 16 52 85
West
w. I. t. pts gt ga
Edmonton 1.4
6 0 28 78 56
Houston
11
6 1 23 71 52
Minneso ta 11
8 1 23 80 68
Winn ipeg
9 11
2 20 77 77
Va ncouver 8 14
0 16 74 93
Los Angel es 7 16 0 14 60 86
Monday '~ Results
New England .&lt;1 New Jersey 2
(O nly game scheduled )
Tuesday's Games
W 1nn1peg at Los Angeles
Quebec at Toronto
(Only games scheduled )

Jones, a junior as is Cusick,
played linebacker last season
but was moved to the tackle
spot when Vic Koegel returned
as a regular and started every
game. Cusick is a two-year
regular.
Regarding the Michigan
game, Hayes did not defend
himself against criticism for
not passmg until
I :01
remained.
However, he noted that
quarterback Cornelius Greene
inJured his right thumb and
had practiced only once Ute
week prior to the game.
"I don't offer that as an
alibi," Hayes said. "That is a
fact. Corny's thumb was nearly
twice as big as the other and
that makes it a little difficult to
grip the ball."
Hayes also said the 6-4, 225pound junior fullback Champ
Henson may be ready by Rose
Bowl time, adding "if working
hard has anything to do with it,
this man will be ready to play."
Henson, also honored at
Monday's banquet, led the
nation in scoring as a
sophomore but injured a knee
in the second game this season
and sidelined after surgery.
The Almanac
By Unlled Press lntematlonal
Today is Tuesday, Nov. 27,
the 331st day of 1973 with 34 to
follow .
The moon is between the new
phase and first quarter.
The morning stars are
Mercury and Saturn.
The evening stars are Venus,
Mars and Jupiter.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Sagittarius.
American hi~torian Charles
Beard was born Nov. 27, 1874.
On this day in history:
In 1901, the War Department
authorized creation of the Army
War College to instruct com·
missioned officers.
In 1945, President Truman
named Gen. George Marshall
special representative to China.
In 1962, all 97 penons aboard
a U.S.·bound jet were killed
when it crashed in Peru .

i:. uergy released by just
one pound of the sun woulcj
keep a kitchen stove going
with all burners on for sev·
era! hundred years.

The Crimson Tide, shooting
for tis thl!'d national tiUe since
1961 and the first since 1964,
moved rnto the top spot after
Ohio State- which had been

No I most of the season- was
tted by Michigan.
The IIJ..O Tide received 22
first.place votes from the
Umted Press International
Board of Coaches to outpoint
second-place Oklahoma, 33().
299, whtle the Buckeyes fell to
th1rd following the tie with

Quick start in
second half is
big difference
.

.

Coach Art Lanham's Rio Grande College
Redmen, following a 35·35 halftime tie against
visiting Tiffin University , ripped off 18 straight
unanswered points during the first 5:06 of action in
the second half enroute to a surprisingly easy 88·73
Mid-Ohio Conference victory over Coach George
Janson 's Dragons at Lyne Center before approximately 700 spectators Monday evening.
Tiffin, after falling behind IMJ
during the first two minutes of
play, led the Redmen only
twice during the contest. The
VISitors were on top 1().8 with
14 : 3lleft in the first half.Jt was
23-22, Tiffin, with 7:50
remaining in the initial half.
Dan Bollinger, 6-5 junlor
forward from Zanesville, put
Rio ahead for keeps, 21·23,
with a long jumper at the
7:10 mark In the first half.
Tiffin did, however, tie it up
at 31, 33, and 35-all before
halftime.
Rio's second half onslaught
was led by speedy guards Steve
Bartram, former Ironton Tiger
standout, and Stoutsville ' s
Dean Fausnaugh.
Bartram tallied 17 of his
game-high 25 points in the
second h&lt;llf, including five
quick markers in the first
minute of play in the final half.
Fausnaugh tallied II of his 13
points tn the last h&lt;llf, and
Bollinger picked iip II of hiS 21 pomts durmg the final 20
minutes of play.
Galllpolfs' Jimmy Noe, a 64 freshman, and Bolllnger
kept Rio m""lng ln the first
half. Noe popped In 10 of his
15 marken during the first
20 minutes of action.
Bollinger had 10.
After Rio shot a cool 34 pet.
from the field in the first half
(17 of 50) the Redmen canned
20 of 38 field goal attempts in

LINE BURSTS
NAHA,Japan(UPI ) -A gas
pipeline burst today, causing
part of Okinawa's major city to
crumble and paralyzing the
central part of the island .
Police said the ground sud·
denly caved in shortly before
dark, wiping away several
structures and five lanes of six·
lane Highway 56.

the fina l half to finish the night
wtth 37 of 88 attempts for 42
pel. From the foul ctrcles, Rio
was 14 of 21 for 67 pet. The
Redm en hauled down 39
rebounds. Bollinger and Rock
Hill 's big 6·7 center Jtm
Stewart hauled down 11
rebounds each for Rio. The
Redmen had only 14 turnovers,
and committed IS personal
fouls .
Tiffm, nnaking its debut in
the MOC, htt 43 pet. from the
field , smkmg 33 of 76 attempts.
The Dragons were 7 of 11 at the
foul circles for 63 pet. The
visttors had 33 rebounds ,
Richard Wheat, a 6-1 fresh·
man , led the losers with six
rebounds. Tiffin was gwlty of
23 turnovers. The visitors had
16 personals. It wa s the
Dragons season opener.
Dave Bookmyer, a 6-1
freshman, led the visitors
with 16 markers. Wheat
finished with 14.
It was Rio Grande's third
straight hardwood vtctory in as
many outings. The Red men
journey to Findlay Wednesday
for a non-league encounter.
Prior to the varsity game
Monday, the Rio Jayvees
trounced visiting Ashland
Business College 98-58 in the
prelimmary game.
The Fairland High School
band performed during the
halftime intermission.
Here's Monday's box score:
TIFFIN 1731 - Wheat, 5.4.
14; Bookmyer , 8-0-16 ; Short, 00·0, Carlton, 2-0-4, Menear, 4·08; Clouse, 1-2·4 ; Johnson , 1.0.2 ;
Mack, 4·1 ·9; Smith, 1-0 ·2; Vitt,
2 0-4; Harralson, 3·0-6 ; Homer,

M•chtgan .
Alabama is now in the team
to beat for the national
championship with only arciJ.
rtval Auburn left on the
Cnmson Tide's regular season
schedule.ln accordance with a
dec1sion of the Amencan
Football Coaches Association,
UPI 's national championship IS
based on regular season play
only.
Oklahoma 's 9·0·1 Sooners
can close an unbeaten season
this weekeoo with a victory
over Ok lah oma State. An
NCAA probation bans coach
Barry Switzer's team from
postseason play.
Ohio State , whtch had replaced Southern California the
second week of the season as
the nation's top team, lost tts
No. I ranking in the tie with
Michtgan, but won the right to
meet USC in the Rose Bowl m a
vote of the conference athletic
directors.
Notre Dame, which will play
Alabama in the Sugar Bowl,
moved ahead of Mtchigan into
fourth place with 233 points.
Michtgan is fifth with 216
points.
Penn State completed a
perfect ll..O regular season wtth
a 35-13 co me-from -behind
VIctory over the Ftesta Bowlbound Pitt Panthers. The
Ntttany Lions face LSU m the
Orange Bowl, hoping to
duplicate victories there in 1968
and 1969, which also capped
perfect seasons .
Southern Ca l's 23-13 win over
UCLA boosted the 'l'ro jans two
places to seventh as LSU fell to
eighth, followed in order by
Texas and UCLA.

Bartram, 11 -3· 25 ; Fausnaugh,

6-1·13 ; Hart, t-0·2: Bollinger. 9·
3-21; Smith, o.o.o; Stewart. 1·0·
2; Swinehart, 1·1-3; Morgan, 0·
0-0; Noe, 7·1·15; Schafer, 0·2·2:
Redd, 0-3-3 ; Robinson, 1·0·2.
TOTALS 37·14·88.
Halftime score Rio 35,
Tiffin 35.

College Ratings
NEW YOR K ( U P! ) The
Urp ted Pr ess
Internat iOnal's
Board of Coa ches ma 1or colleQ._e
footbal l rat i ng s w i th n umber of
fi rst pla c e vot es 1n paren
theses ( E le v en th Week )
Team
Potnh
1 Alabama (22) ( 10 0 )
330
2 . Oklahoma (9 ) (9 0 · 1)
J Ohio St. (21n l ( 9 0 1)
4 Notre Dame (I) ( 9 0)
233
5 M !ch 1gan (1 '~) ( 10 0 1)
116
6 Penn State f 11 OJ
207
7 Southern Cal (9 1 1 l
136
8 LSU (9 1)
85
9 Texas (8· 2)
80
10 UCLA ( 9 2 )
11 Arrtona St ( 10 1)
30
12 Nebraska ( 8 2 1 )
10
13 Tell!as Tech ( 10· l l
1
1.4 Ho uston ( 9 I)
15 Kan sas (7 3 1 J
3
16Miam ., O ( 100 )
17 Mar yland (8 3 )
I

,.,
'"

"
•
'

U[JJI]~ITIRiflll .

Spider 's silk is so fme
(somet im es
onl y
one
millionth of an inch in
diameter ) that most people
think of 1t as fragile. Ac·
tually , the drag lines of
many sp1ders have greater
tensil e strength than steel
Silk of spi ders was long
used for making cross
hairs of the f1nest optical
Instrumen ts, and most
bomb s1tes used by fliers of
World War II employed
this spec ial substan ce
Our
e nginee r s
have
designed a good looking ,
space sav mg water refiner
by c ombining the strength
of steel and the corrosion
proof bonding of · plastic.
Each resin tank of a water
refiner has a tasteless,
odorless
plast1c
liner
bonded to a score of steel
and sealed on the outside

with a

"What is it,
Doctor?"
Some

Acc1denf · Health
msurance pays all hospital
and surg1cal expe nses other poli c ies 1nclude
dlsab111ty income
The
Downing -Childs
Agency
has various poltc1es to best
meet your needs .

DowningChilds
Agency, Inc.

2-0·4. TOTALS JJ.7.73.
RIO GRANDE (88)

NEW YORK {UPI. Gary Matthew• Isn't euclly
a household name yet but the
San Francisco Giants think
be lias the potential to beone
some day.
Matthews, who Wll!l
WOJ'Jied about just making
the club In spring tralnlng,
achieved the lint pinnacle
on his way to widespread
recognltloo by the fans
Monday when he was named
the National League's
Rookie of the Year by a
landslide margin.

thick

foam

In ·

sulation and plastic . This
form s
a
four . ply
lamrnatron
that stops
condensation and helps
ma~ntam
water
tern ·
peraiure, yet is not bulky
nor unsightly . The water
never iou ches metal , and
your Wilter refiner IS
formed from solid colored
telephon e. fype plastic for
max1mum lrfe , beauty and
easy c are Years ahead
performan ce,
features ,
styling.
Delivers
an
unlim ite d
su pply
of
Ref ined Water . Call 882 ·

2525.

220 N. 2nd
MIDDLEPORT

SAYRE
.HARDWARE
812· 2525
NeW

W. Va
•

Central Operating Company's
11'

Philip Sporn Plant
New Haven, W.Va.

Has Job Openings For Permanent Employment In The, Following
Skills
MechanicS
Instrument Repairmen
'

These Jobs Provide Excellent Wages And A Benefits Program Which Includes
Ufe Insurance, Medical Insurance, Disabillity Insurance , Sick Leave, Vacations,
Holiday, And Retirement.
Although A Strike Is In Progress, The Company Continues To Operate The Plant.

APPLICANTS MAY CALL C304) 882-2126 (collect)
BElWEEN THE HOURS OF 7:30AM TO 4:00 PM

TO ARRANGE AN INTERVIEW

PHILIP SPORN PLANT
Post OlllH lox 361, Now HIYift, Wosl Vlrvlnla 25165
TotophoM: ,,.. coo1o :MI 112·1111

An Equal Opportunitr Empqer
\

'

�· St.•ntmel. ·
~~·:.:·=·=·:·=·=-:·:-:-:-:·~~-:-:-.-::~-:-:-:-:-:-=-:·=·=·;:= -=·=. :-:·=~::--

E .

-:·::·:·:·: ,.,.·.:-:···:·:·:::.:·:·:·:·~;::::.:-:·&gt;:&lt;::::-::::::;::::::1:~

Social : : n;oy
llli Calendad fun night

!\:

Mr. and Mrs. Danny Joe Taylor

Taylor-Duncan vows read
POINT PLEASANT - The
Good
Shepherd
United
Methodist Church, Rt. 2, Point
Pleasant, was the setting for
the ca ndleli ght wedding
ceremony Oct. 26 when Delphia
Dale Duncan, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Lake Richard
Duncan, 2624 Lincoln Ave.,
Point Pleasant, became .the
bride of Danny Joe Taylor, son
of Mr. and Mrs. John H.
Taylor, Letart. The bride is the
granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Holland, Rt. 2 Leon,
' and Mrs. Delphia M. Duncan,
Fairborn , formerly of Point
Pleasant. The groom is the
grandson of Mrs . Essie Gibbs,
Letart.
The 7:30 p .m. double-ring ·
ceremony was read by the Rev.

Earl Perkins. Mrs. Irene

with blue candles flanked by a
three tiered wedding cake. The
cake was decorated in blue and
white, topped with two white
doves.
Hostesses for tile receptio;,
were Mrs . Ruth Herdman,
Mrs . Alice Rife and Mrs.
Beverly Holland. Mrs . Patsy
Holland registered the guests.
For her daughter's wedding,
Mrs . Duncan chose a dress of
peach and beige print. She
wore beige accessories and a
peach carnation corsage with
white ribbon . For her son's
wedding, Mrs. Taylor chose a
navy and white dress. Her
corsage was of white car.
nations .
For her going-away en~
semble the new Mrs. Taylor
selected a blue and white dress
with black accessories and the
white rosebud corsage from
the bridal bouquet.

Brand presented one-half hour
of nuptial music before the
wed'ding. Rod Brand, soloist,
accompanied by Mrs. Brand,
The couple s pent their
sang " When God Gave Me
honeymoon
in the mountains of
You," " Whither Thou Goest,''
and " The Wedding Prayer ." West Virginia. They are noW at
The · bride was given in home to \heir friends at 85 1h
marriage by her father. She Burdette Additi on, Point
· appeared in a gown of bridal Pleasant.
Mrs. Danny Taylor is a
satin covered in lace featuring
a scoop neckline with natural graduate of Point Pleasant
waisUine and full skirt forming High School. Taylor. a
a self train. The lace sleeves graduat e · of .Wahama High
came to a point over the hand . School is an employe of Kaiser
Her silk illusion. veil was at- . AILJIJlinum, Ravenswood.
tached to a juliet cap of the
Out-&lt;&gt;f-town guests included
s8me fabric as the gown. Her
Mrs.
James Davis, Jim and
only jewelry was a pearl
pendant, a giftfrom the groom. Karla, Mr . and Mrs. Darrell
She carried a white Bible, a gift Stover, all· of Ashton, W. Va .;
from the groom , topped by Mrs. Virginia Duncan , Lee Ann
small white carnations and and Brian . ·Dayton; Mrs.
blue baby's breath centered by Delphia M. Dun ca n, Mrs .
white rosebuds with white Kathy Jordan , Mr. and Mrs.
Doug Arrington, al of Fairstreamers.
Mrs. Denice Stover served as born; Mr . and Mrs. Charles E .
matron of honor. She wore a Holland , Mr. and Mrs. Darrell
gown of carressible satin in an D. Holland , Canal Winchester;
orange floral pattern on white Mr . and Mrs. Gene Herdman,
and
Jeanne ,
background featuring a scoop Sherri
Pickerington;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
neckline, fitted high waist, and
full skirt. The waist was ac- James Rife, Columbus; Mr.
cented by an orange velvet and Mrs. Dale E. Duncan and
ribbon. She wore a velvet Denice, Charleston, W. Va .;
ribbon and net headdress and Mrs . Kate Duncan, Gallipolis;
carried a spray of orange Mr . and Mrs: Stuart McComas ,
tinted carnati~ns with orange Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va. ; Pam,
streamers. Miss Malea Dun- Stacy and .Jimmy Duncan,
New Haven, W. Va.; Velma
can, sister of the bride, and
Hoffman; Donald Hoffman,
Miss Debbie Hunt, friend of the
bride, wore gowns ide ntica l to Shelby Hoffman, Audrey
the matron of honor in blue Hoffman, Elaine McKinney,
floral accented with blue velvet Garnett Aten, Goldie Rollins,
ribbon. They wore a velvet Genevieve Roush, Mrs. Ora
Hart, Mrs . Essie Gibbs, Mr.
ribbon and net headdress, and
and Mrs . Roger Taylor and
carried a spray of blue tinted
Gina, J ohnny Taylor , Ruby
. with
blue
carnations
Grimm
and Liva, Barbara and
streamers. Miss
Teresa
Dwtcan , sister of the bride, and. Darla Gerlach, all of Letart;
Miss Sherri Herdman , cousin Edna Foglesong, Judy Waugh,
of the bride, serVed as junior Timmy and Scotty, Hun·
bridesmaids . Their gowns tington, W. Va. ·
were similar to those of the
bridesmaids, in green floral
accented by deep green velvet
ribbon. They wore a velvet
ribbon and net headdress and
carried a spray of green tinted
car~ations
with
green
streamers. Miss J eanne Herd-man, cousin of the bride , and
Miss Gina Taylor, niece of the
groom, weN: flower girls. Miss
Herdman 's dress was identical
to the junior bridesmaids and
Miss Taylor's was identical to
the bridesmaids. The flower
girls carried baskets of
assorted colored daisies.
Roger Taylor served as best
man for his brother, Master
Mark Duncan, cousin of the
bride, served as ringbearer.
Charles E. Holland, Canal
Winchester , James A. Rife ,
Columbus, Darrell D. Holland,
Canal Winchester; Gene
Herdman, Pickerington, uncles of the bride; Stuart McComas, Gallipolis Ferry, and
Johnny Taylor. Letart, brother
of the groom, served as ushers.
Jimmy David and Mike Taylor
aerved as taper lighters.
Immediately following the
wedding ceremony, a reception
was held in the social room of
the church. The bride's table
wu covered with a blue and
white tablecloth and centered

1'UESDAY
MF.IGS Riding Club , 7::l0
p.m., Roc·k Springs Grange
HalL
.
A FILM , ·•Don't Call Me,
God ; I ' ll Call You", will be
s ho"n at 7:30 p.m . at the Mt.
Hermon UB Church. 1'he
public is invited to attend the
showing of the color film .
JUNIOR American Legion
Auxiliary , Feeney~Bennet Post
128, 6 p.m . at the hall .
AMERICAN
Legion
1\uxiliary, Racine Post 602,
meets at 7:30 p.m . at the
Legion Hall.
LADIES Auxiliary of Drew
Webs ter Post 39 of the
American Legion, 6:30 p.m .
potluck dinner . Meat to be
furnished.
WEDNESDAY
AMERICAN . Legion
Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, 6:30 potluck dinner,
with the legionnaires as guests.
Meeting of both auxiliary and
legion at 7:30 p.m.
OHIO Valley Commandry,
.s tated conclave, 7:30 p.m. at
the Pomeroy Masonic Temple.

/\ fWl mghl witl1 ~all\t'S &lt;.~nd
rcfrc slnucnls wa s enjoyC'd

rccenlly by the Sunda y School
classes of ~ r~des one through
e1~ht at th e Heath Uni ted
Me th odist Ch urch. About 30
boys and gir ls attended the
party . He[reshments of hotdogs , chips and Kool-A id were
se rved .
The junior high class of the
ch urch met the re recently to
paint their Sunday School
room . Taking part were Tracy
Burdette , Juli e Kitchen,
Jennifer Wise, David Horton,
Julie Byer and J oni MuJTa y.
DAUGHTER BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Meier,
Rt. I , Middleport, are announcing the birth of a 7lbs., 15
ozs. daughter . Nicole Renee ,
Nov . 19 al th e Holzer Medical
Center . Grandparents are Mrs.
Elizabeth Stumbo , Middleport.
and Mrs. Be.r nadine Meier,
Pomeroy. Mrs. N. R . Stumbo,
Sharpes, Fla ., is the greatgrandmother . The Meiers also
have a two year old daughter,
Elise .

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club, Wednesday at the .
Meigs Inn.
WILDWOOD GARDEN Club,
7:30 p .m . Wednesday at the
home of Mrs . Betty Milhoan .
MIDDLEPORT LITERARY
Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday , home
of Mrs . Forest BachteL Mrs.
William Frecker to review
"The First Mrs. Hemingway' '
by Alice Hunt Sokoloff.
Response, a work by Heming-

Mr l.lnci Mrs. Hvberl Turner,
G&lt;;~ry &lt;Jnd S:.tnd~ and Utcil'
gr andsetn , Travis Mit:hael,
Buc-yrus, were the Thanks·
g1ving weekend ~ uests of his
parents , Mr . i!Od Mrs. Joe
Turner and Connie See.
Mr. and Mrs. Karl Owen
spe nt the weekend in Colwnbus
visiting relatives. They were
Thanksgiving dinner guests of
and
Mrs .
Paul
Mr .
Winebrenner . Mrs. John Goodri ch. Dayton, Mr . and Mrs.
J ohn Bowman, Pata skala, and
Miss
Susan
Bowman,
Columbus, were also guests at
the Winebrenner home.
Mrs . Pearl Reynolds and
Mrs. F'reda Welling returned
from Akron Monday after
visiting there with relatives of
Mrs . Reynolds . They were
Thanksgiving dinner guests of
Mrs. Clifford Strine, Hayesville .
Mr. and Mrs . Dale Roush and
children, St. Albans, and Mr .
and Mrs. Larry Flowers ,
Columbus, were holiday guests
of Mr. and Mrs . Albert ·Roush
and family .

FREE

•
Lions l1e down for king:·
stze catnaps that may last
20 hours at a stretch .

Miss Coats christened
Dr. Rus.&lt;ell Mcrntyre, uncle
Laura Beth Coats. daughter
of
the infant, offi ciated at the
of Dr. ~nd Mrs. Stephen Coats,
Flin t, Mich., was t:hr!stened t:hri stening service held during
Sunday at the Heath United the morning Worship servjce.
Dr. and Mrs. Stephen Coats,
Methodist Church.
Laura Beth, Sean and Wayne,
Flint, and Dr. and Mrs. Russell
Mcintyre and daughter, Lisa,
SET CL.O'l'HING DAY
Burtonsville, Md ., we re the
free clothing day will be holiday weekend guest. of Mr .
held at the Salvation Army, 115 and Mrs. Charles Gaskill . Mrs.
Butternut Ave ., Pomeroy , Walter Hayes, grandmother of
Thursday from 10 a .m. to noon. Dr. Coats and Mrs. Mcintyre ,
All area residents in need of joined
the
family
for
clothing are invited .
Thanksgiving dinner . She
accompanied her grandson and
family to Flint for a visit.
ATTEND GATHERING
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil J ohns on,
Rt. 2, Pomeroy, spent the
HOME BAKED
holiday with the Robert
Bendula family at Cleveland.
They went for a combined
Thanksgiving - Christmas
celebration and were joined
there by their eldest daughter,
Prof. Hazel A. Johnson, who
arrived from Columbia,. S. C.,
Nov . 20. She returned there
Monday to resume her
tea c hing at the University of
EAST MAIN STREET
South Carolina, Mr. and Mrs.
Johnson were accompanied to
Pomeroy by their grandson,
POMEROY, OHIO
Robby, who will remain here
for a visit.

LARRY ~ROGA~

SUPER MARKET - Open Daily 9 to 10 • Sun. 10 to 10

AGENT

REUTER

Second

INSURANCE
AGENCY, INC.
AGENTS '
GERALD REUTER
LARRY BROGAN
EDNA SCHOENLEB

Christmas
Cookies
POMEROY
PASTRY

Auto-Fire
Accident &amp; Health
Homeowners
Bonds
107 Sycamore
Pomeroy, 0.

992-2971

e

HOME MADE PURE PORK

SAUSAGE.......... .'~·.
BOLOG N A~~-~~.~~~~E.~~-

Boneless Boston BtJtt Style
SUPERIORS

'1

lb.

PHONE
992 -5130

SUPERIORS USDA

USDA CHOICE
LEAN BEEF

POLISH
SAUSAGE

SUPERIORS SLICED

BACON

¢
lb.

88

1\lltdrig(ln

U

-

·REGULATION NET

588
REG. 6. 99

SPECIAL!

$ 19

l-Ib.

*

-••

*

~

" The Truth" teen group of
the Sandusky Church of the
Nazarene will not be able to
perform Dec . 1 and 2 at the
Middleport Ch ur ch of the
Nazar ene beca use of . the
gasoline stations closing on
Sundays thereby rr\aking it
impossible for the group to
refill their vehicle befo r e
starting back home to Sandusky.
The Middleport Church of the
Nazarene, however, will still
hold a special visitor s day
Sunday with Sunday school at
9:30 a.m. There will be a
family dinner at · the Middleport Eleme ntary School
following church services.

FLEA
COLLARS
.
.

MAIL
POUCH

BACKBOARD
&amp;GOAL

36" x 54" fibergla ss board wi.ll not chip , peel or warp .
Rou nd bJr &lt;&gt;l'&lt;e l goal ha&amp; heavy duty, al l-weather pal~

net. Pre·mOII \ted goal folds up for stora ge.

ITEMS SOLICITED
Residents with any kind of
holiday items are invited to
exhibit them at the " Holiday
Happening" Friday at St.
Paul's Lutheran Church, Miss
Martha Guilkey , Meigs County
Extension Agent, advises. The
" Happening" will get un derway at 10 a. ln . a nd continue
until 3 p. m. with a potluck at
noon . The public is invited to
attend . There will be a
registration fee of 75 cents.

3

for

·

2,12 lb.

·

.

box

011&gt;
'¥

.

•
00
1
4
·
HOMINY.•••••••••••••••

VAN . CAMP'S White or Yellow
·

BATTERIES

.

No. 2
cans

••

••

9 LIVES CAT FOOD. 3 ~!~sz.$1

CORD SIZE

·

.

16

.

ON COR REGULAR 1.69

°

0

oz.2 311&gt;

each

'¥

$129

BUFFET DINNERS •••••••• ~~~: ••
16 oz.

SCOT LAD

e

WITH '3.00 OR MORE PURCHASE

e
49
·

ORANGE JUICE ••••••••••c;~..

29e
ONION RINGS •••••••••••b.o~.
99e
ICE MILK •••••••••••••••••• !~ ~.
3qts.99e
COFFEE WHITENER.....
ORE IDA

.

oz.

7

BURLAP

with BATIERIES

BULLETIN
BOARDS
REG.
4.99

388

Assorted Colors
Heavy, colo rful bur·
lap co~er1ng over

insulation board .
Pinewood frame .

39

REG .
3.39

SCOT PRIDE

gal
1

FRIDAY ONLY

Goca-Cola
Big 32 oz. bots.

qt.
bots.

for

c

Relurnable Bottle

Dairy
Buy!!

Fairmont·Buttermilk. Vz GAL 59~

BANANAS

REG,538

6.99

POMEROY CEMENT

to make wr commllflities

brighter, happier and better.

BLOCK CO.

COLUMSUS AND SOUTHERN OHIO ELECTRIC COMPANY

RC COLA
16 OL
bois.
PAK

•

I

Home Made

BREAD &amp; ROLLS
VALU•\f~t

F

GIANT SIZE

OXYOOL

79~

MARK V
SUPER WITH THII COUltON
. MARKET---WITHOUT

COU,.ON

12-14-73

LIMIT 1 COUPON PER PURCHASE

MAXWELL aa.·COFFEE

REGULAR
DRIP ELEC. PERK

2lb. can $1.7 9

WITH THIS COUPON
o.lffer exp ires 12-28-73

2.19

REGUlAR RETAIL 1

MARK V.
11;'..,;~~~.. , VALUABLE

COUPON .

. .. •'

22 II. 01.11 pl. 6 II. 01.}

J o T SIZE
ONLYY

lb.
WITH THIS COUPON WHEN
· YOU BUY A_ 10 OZ. JAR OF

.FLORIDA GRAPEFRUIT

each

. CABBAGE

lb.

. RED RADISHES

ea.

10¢

last11t

HOllE•
COFFEE

AT-=MA~R~K~V~S::.::.TO::.::RE:___ _

10 OZ. JAR ONLY

$109

- -Oil£- COUPON
-- - - - - -OfftiW'IIIlS
- ..... - .12-7-73
PUfAMlll•

I .

&gt;.. 0Uf'~N

Mark V lOc Produce Buys!
Choice Golden Fruit

Wem all working

Byler's Home Bakery

·.

M_EADOW RICH ·

FLASHLIGHT

Fresh Daily! ·

ONLY

·
box
FRENCH FRIES •••••••••••••••
SCOT LAD

PAK
16 oz.

(uY.§·YIIC)

Health &amp; ·Beauty Aids

FROZEN FOODS

LA

elders, Felix Alkire, Kenneth
Welsh and Clair Waggoner
joined the ladies as they had
just conCluded a meeting of the
Session in a11other room.
A white elephant sale was
held at the close of the meeting .

Discount Drugs

•

Tuna &amp; Egg, Super Supper, Liver .&amp; Creamed Gravy

88

REG.
49.95

.

ROYAL GELATIN ••••••••••• ]

ss~
.

98

Check Our Price!

1-lb .

FEED THE BIRDS

LONG liFE

CHEWING
TOBACCO
; 5 ~or

PARKAY

PANASONIC

APPLE JACK

Reg.

1
e
MARGARINE ••••••••••••• ~k.g~ 39
e
59
SUNFLOWER SEED •••••b:~..
·

FOR SALADS &amp; DESSERTS

BIG MAN OR
FIBERGlASS

LITTLE CIGARS ••••••••• ~:r:~n.~

$2.79

3 For 2 Sale!

PRO-SHOT

WINCHESTER

59¢

Now

.Sweet or Regular

carton

·-

SIDE BACON

SPECIAL!

FOLDS FOR
EASY STORAGE

!...adder

c TableTems Set crawn
3 'iii'- &gt; TABLE TENNIS SET
0 r-:JI g,J - · 4 PLAYER SET
..,~ Pii! J ·LAMINATED HANDLES

IN CTN .

Everyone . expressed
pleasure that the church was
recently papered wit:1 &amp;. most
elegant and appropri,:: f.-. ~ ·aper .
They were proud, too, that they
had had a part in it, as the
paper was paid for from the
Le nd-A-Hand treasury.

SUPERIORS FRESH

pkg.

•

r--- - - - - - - -- - --

SUPERIORS
USDA CHOICE

e Pork Roast ,

SUPERIORS USDA CHOICE

Lend-A -Hand Society met
HARRIS0NV1LLE - The
Harrisonville Church Lend-AHtmd Ladies' Society met at
the chw·ch for its November
meeting
with
Mar ga ret
Douglas as hostess and .
Frances Alkire assisting.
There were 17 members and
two g uests present.
Devotions included songs,
prayers, and readings in
keeping with the Thanksgiv.ing
season.
Refreshments were 's erved in
the large Sunday Sehoul room
and Rev . Stebbins and the

PARKING
AFTER
5:00 PM

tb.

. MIDOLE PORT, 0

" We Reserve The Right To Limit Quantities"

Any
Amount
lb.

Fqlding tahle has du ral.JIP green . nor1 ·&amp;1are tmish top w1th
l l1lty stnped court hnes. l t&gt;R~ are mou nted on easy rollmg .
2" cas ter !:. -oper1s to 5' ~ g· x 30" hr~o~h Folds &lt;wtomat•colly .

Special
servzces
changed

W•' Af'('f!pl Feclernl Food Stilmps
PHONE: 992-3480

GROUND BEEF

TABLE
*TENNIS
TABLE

ON-~REET

M\OUPTO

"AUTO FOLD"

way.
THURSDAY
REVIVAL at Chester Church
of God , 7:30 each evening
through Dec. 2. The Rev.
Chester Estep , Chilli cothe,
evangelist. Special singing
each evening. The public is
invited.

..
Middleport . .
,: . Personal Notes \~

Nov . 27. l973

t

�· St.•ntmel. ·
~~·:.:·=·=·:·=·=-:·:-:-:-:·~~-:-:-.-::~-:-:-:-:-:-=-:·=·=·;:= -=·=. :-:·=~::--

E .

-:·::·:·:·: ,.,.·.:-:···:·:·:::.:·:·:·:·~;::::.:-:·&gt;:&lt;::::-::::::;::::::1:~

Social : : n;oy
llli Calendad fun night

!\:

Mr. and Mrs. Danny Joe Taylor

Taylor-Duncan vows read
POINT PLEASANT - The
Good
Shepherd
United
Methodist Church, Rt. 2, Point
Pleasant, was the setting for
the ca ndleli ght wedding
ceremony Oct. 26 when Delphia
Dale Duncan, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Lake Richard
Duncan, 2624 Lincoln Ave.,
Point Pleasant, became .the
bride of Danny Joe Taylor, son
of Mr. and Mrs. John H.
Taylor, Letart. The bride is the
granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Holland, Rt. 2 Leon,
' and Mrs. Delphia M. Duncan,
Fairborn , formerly of Point
Pleasant. The groom is the
grandson of Mrs . Essie Gibbs,
Letart.
The 7:30 p .m. double-ring ·
ceremony was read by the Rev.

Earl Perkins. Mrs. Irene

with blue candles flanked by a
three tiered wedding cake. The
cake was decorated in blue and
white, topped with two white
doves.
Hostesses for tile receptio;,
were Mrs . Ruth Herdman,
Mrs . Alice Rife and Mrs.
Beverly Holland. Mrs . Patsy
Holland registered the guests.
For her daughter's wedding,
Mrs . Duncan chose a dress of
peach and beige print. She
wore beige accessories and a
peach carnation corsage with
white ribbon . For her son's
wedding, Mrs. Taylor chose a
navy and white dress. Her
corsage was of white car.
nations .
For her going-away en~
semble the new Mrs. Taylor
selected a blue and white dress
with black accessories and the
white rosebud corsage from
the bridal bouquet.

Brand presented one-half hour
of nuptial music before the
wed'ding. Rod Brand, soloist,
accompanied by Mrs. Brand,
The couple s pent their
sang " When God Gave Me
honeymoon
in the mountains of
You," " Whither Thou Goest,''
and " The Wedding Prayer ." West Virginia. They are noW at
The · bride was given in home to \heir friends at 85 1h
marriage by her father. She Burdette Additi on, Point
· appeared in a gown of bridal Pleasant.
Mrs. Danny Taylor is a
satin covered in lace featuring
a scoop neckline with natural graduate of Point Pleasant
waisUine and full skirt forming High School. Taylor. a
a self train. The lace sleeves graduat e · of .Wahama High
came to a point over the hand . School is an employe of Kaiser
Her silk illusion. veil was at- . AILJIJlinum, Ravenswood.
tached to a juliet cap of the
Out-&lt;&gt;f-town guests included
s8me fabric as the gown. Her
Mrs.
James Davis, Jim and
only jewelry was a pearl
pendant, a giftfrom the groom. Karla, Mr . and Mrs. Darrell
She carried a white Bible, a gift Stover, all· of Ashton, W. Va .;
from the groom , topped by Mrs. Virginia Duncan , Lee Ann
small white carnations and and Brian . ·Dayton; Mrs.
blue baby's breath centered by Delphia M. Dun ca n, Mrs .
white rosebuds with white Kathy Jordan , Mr. and Mrs.
Doug Arrington, al of Fairstreamers.
Mrs. Denice Stover served as born; Mr . and Mrs. Charles E .
matron of honor. She wore a Holland , Mr. and Mrs. Darrell
gown of carressible satin in an D. Holland , Canal Winchester;
orange floral pattern on white Mr . and Mrs. Gene Herdman,
and
Jeanne ,
background featuring a scoop Sherri
Pickerington;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
neckline, fitted high waist, and
full skirt. The waist was ac- James Rife, Columbus; Mr.
cented by an orange velvet and Mrs. Dale E. Duncan and
ribbon. She wore a velvet Denice, Charleston, W. Va .;
ribbon and net headdress and Mrs . Kate Duncan, Gallipolis;
carried a spray of orange Mr . and Mrs: Stuart McComas ,
tinted carnati~ns with orange Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va. ; Pam,
streamers. Miss Malea Dun- Stacy and .Jimmy Duncan,
New Haven, W. Va.; Velma
can, sister of the bride, and
Hoffman; Donald Hoffman,
Miss Debbie Hunt, friend of the
bride, wore gowns ide ntica l to Shelby Hoffman, Audrey
the matron of honor in blue Hoffman, Elaine McKinney,
floral accented with blue velvet Garnett Aten, Goldie Rollins,
ribbon. They wore a velvet Genevieve Roush, Mrs. Ora
Hart, Mrs . Essie Gibbs, Mr.
ribbon and net headdress, and
and Mrs . Roger Taylor and
carried a spray of blue tinted
Gina, J ohnny Taylor , Ruby
. with
blue
carnations
Grimm
and Liva, Barbara and
streamers. Miss
Teresa
Dwtcan , sister of the bride, and. Darla Gerlach, all of Letart;
Miss Sherri Herdman , cousin Edna Foglesong, Judy Waugh,
of the bride, serVed as junior Timmy and Scotty, Hun·
bridesmaids . Their gowns tington, W. Va. ·
were similar to those of the
bridesmaids, in green floral
accented by deep green velvet
ribbon. They wore a velvet
ribbon and net headdress and
carried a spray of green tinted
car~ations
with
green
streamers. Miss J eanne Herd-man, cousin of the bride , and
Miss Gina Taylor, niece of the
groom, weN: flower girls. Miss
Herdman 's dress was identical
to the junior bridesmaids and
Miss Taylor's was identical to
the bridesmaids. The flower
girls carried baskets of
assorted colored daisies.
Roger Taylor served as best
man for his brother, Master
Mark Duncan, cousin of the
bride, served as ringbearer.
Charles E. Holland, Canal
Winchester , James A. Rife ,
Columbus, Darrell D. Holland,
Canal Winchester; Gene
Herdman, Pickerington, uncles of the bride; Stuart McComas, Gallipolis Ferry, and
Johnny Taylor. Letart, brother
of the groom, served as ushers.
Jimmy David and Mike Taylor
aerved as taper lighters.
Immediately following the
wedding ceremony, a reception
was held in the social room of
the church. The bride's table
wu covered with a blue and
white tablecloth and centered

1'UESDAY
MF.IGS Riding Club , 7::l0
p.m., Roc·k Springs Grange
HalL
.
A FILM , ·•Don't Call Me,
God ; I ' ll Call You", will be
s ho"n at 7:30 p.m . at the Mt.
Hermon UB Church. 1'he
public is invited to attend the
showing of the color film .
JUNIOR American Legion
Auxiliary , Feeney~Bennet Post
128, 6 p.m . at the hall .
AMERICAN
Legion
1\uxiliary, Racine Post 602,
meets at 7:30 p.m . at the
Legion Hall.
LADIES Auxiliary of Drew
Webs ter Post 39 of the
American Legion, 6:30 p.m .
potluck dinner . Meat to be
furnished.
WEDNESDAY
AMERICAN . Legion
Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, 6:30 potluck dinner,
with the legionnaires as guests.
Meeting of both auxiliary and
legion at 7:30 p.m.
OHIO Valley Commandry,
.s tated conclave, 7:30 p.m. at
the Pomeroy Masonic Temple.

/\ fWl mghl witl1 ~all\t'S &lt;.~nd
rcfrc slnucnls wa s enjoyC'd

rccenlly by the Sunda y School
classes of ~ r~des one through
e1~ht at th e Heath Uni ted
Me th odist Ch urch. About 30
boys and gir ls attended the
party . He[reshments of hotdogs , chips and Kool-A id were
se rved .
The junior high class of the
ch urch met the re recently to
paint their Sunday School
room . Taking part were Tracy
Burdette , Juli e Kitchen,
Jennifer Wise, David Horton,
Julie Byer and J oni MuJTa y.
DAUGHTER BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Meier,
Rt. I , Middleport, are announcing the birth of a 7lbs., 15
ozs. daughter . Nicole Renee ,
Nov . 19 al th e Holzer Medical
Center . Grandparents are Mrs.
Elizabeth Stumbo , Middleport.
and Mrs. Be.r nadine Meier,
Pomeroy. Mrs. N. R . Stumbo,
Sharpes, Fla ., is the greatgrandmother . The Meiers also
have a two year old daughter,
Elise .

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club, Wednesday at the .
Meigs Inn.
WILDWOOD GARDEN Club,
7:30 p .m . Wednesday at the
home of Mrs . Betty Milhoan .
MIDDLEPORT LITERARY
Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday , home
of Mrs . Forest BachteL Mrs.
William Frecker to review
"The First Mrs. Hemingway' '
by Alice Hunt Sokoloff.
Response, a work by Heming-

Mr l.lnci Mrs. Hvberl Turner,
G&lt;;~ry &lt;Jnd S:.tnd~ and Utcil'
gr andsetn , Travis Mit:hael,
Buc-yrus, were the Thanks·
g1ving weekend ~ uests of his
parents , Mr . i!Od Mrs. Joe
Turner and Connie See.
Mr. and Mrs. Karl Owen
spe nt the weekend in Colwnbus
visiting relatives. They were
Thanksgiving dinner guests of
and
Mrs .
Paul
Mr .
Winebrenner . Mrs. John Goodri ch. Dayton, Mr . and Mrs.
J ohn Bowman, Pata skala, and
Miss
Susan
Bowman,
Columbus, were also guests at
the Winebrenner home.
Mrs . Pearl Reynolds and
Mrs. F'reda Welling returned
from Akron Monday after
visiting there with relatives of
Mrs . Reynolds . They were
Thanksgiving dinner guests of
Mrs. Clifford Strine, Hayesville .
Mr. and Mrs . Dale Roush and
children, St. Albans, and Mr .
and Mrs. Larry Flowers ,
Columbus, were holiday guests
of Mr. and Mrs . Albert ·Roush
and family .

FREE

•
Lions l1e down for king:·
stze catnaps that may last
20 hours at a stretch .

Miss Coats christened
Dr. Rus.&lt;ell Mcrntyre, uncle
Laura Beth Coats. daughter
of
the infant, offi ciated at the
of Dr. ~nd Mrs. Stephen Coats,
Flin t, Mich., was t:hr!stened t:hri stening service held during
Sunday at the Heath United the morning Worship servjce.
Dr. and Mrs. Stephen Coats,
Methodist Church.
Laura Beth, Sean and Wayne,
Flint, and Dr. and Mrs. Russell
Mcintyre and daughter, Lisa,
SET CL.O'l'HING DAY
Burtonsville, Md ., we re the
free clothing day will be holiday weekend guest. of Mr .
held at the Salvation Army, 115 and Mrs. Charles Gaskill . Mrs.
Butternut Ave ., Pomeroy , Walter Hayes, grandmother of
Thursday from 10 a .m. to noon. Dr. Coats and Mrs. Mcintyre ,
All area residents in need of joined
the
family
for
clothing are invited .
Thanksgiving dinner . She
accompanied her grandson and
family to Flint for a visit.
ATTEND GATHERING
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil J ohns on,
Rt. 2, Pomeroy, spent the
HOME BAKED
holiday with the Robert
Bendula family at Cleveland.
They went for a combined
Thanksgiving - Christmas
celebration and were joined
there by their eldest daughter,
Prof. Hazel A. Johnson, who
arrived from Columbia,. S. C.,
Nov . 20. She returned there
Monday to resume her
tea c hing at the University of
EAST MAIN STREET
South Carolina, Mr. and Mrs.
Johnson were accompanied to
Pomeroy by their grandson,
POMEROY, OHIO
Robby, who will remain here
for a visit.

LARRY ~ROGA~

SUPER MARKET - Open Daily 9 to 10 • Sun. 10 to 10

AGENT

REUTER

Second

INSURANCE
AGENCY, INC.
AGENTS '
GERALD REUTER
LARRY BROGAN
EDNA SCHOENLEB

Christmas
Cookies
POMEROY
PASTRY

Auto-Fire
Accident &amp; Health
Homeowners
Bonds
107 Sycamore
Pomeroy, 0.

992-2971

e

HOME MADE PURE PORK

SAUSAGE.......... .'~·.
BOLOG N A~~-~~.~~~~E.~~-

Boneless Boston BtJtt Style
SUPERIORS

'1

lb.

PHONE
992 -5130

SUPERIORS USDA

USDA CHOICE
LEAN BEEF

POLISH
SAUSAGE

SUPERIORS SLICED

BACON

¢
lb.

88

1\lltdrig(ln

U

-

·REGULATION NET

588
REG. 6. 99

SPECIAL!

$ 19

l-Ib.

*

-••

*

~

" The Truth" teen group of
the Sandusky Church of the
Nazarene will not be able to
perform Dec . 1 and 2 at the
Middleport Ch ur ch of the
Nazar ene beca use of . the
gasoline stations closing on
Sundays thereby rr\aking it
impossible for the group to
refill their vehicle befo r e
starting back home to Sandusky.
The Middleport Church of the
Nazarene, however, will still
hold a special visitor s day
Sunday with Sunday school at
9:30 a.m. There will be a
family dinner at · the Middleport Eleme ntary School
following church services.

FLEA
COLLARS
.
.

MAIL
POUCH

BACKBOARD
&amp;GOAL

36" x 54" fibergla ss board wi.ll not chip , peel or warp .
Rou nd bJr &lt;&gt;l'&lt;e l goal ha&amp; heavy duty, al l-weather pal~

net. Pre·mOII \ted goal folds up for stora ge.

ITEMS SOLICITED
Residents with any kind of
holiday items are invited to
exhibit them at the " Holiday
Happening" Friday at St.
Paul's Lutheran Church, Miss
Martha Guilkey , Meigs County
Extension Agent, advises. The
" Happening" will get un derway at 10 a. ln . a nd continue
until 3 p. m. with a potluck at
noon . The public is invited to
attend . There will be a
registration fee of 75 cents.

3

for

·

2,12 lb.

·

.

box

011&gt;
'¥

.

•
00
1
4
·
HOMINY.•••••••••••••••

VAN . CAMP'S White or Yellow
·

BATTERIES

.

No. 2
cans

••

••

9 LIVES CAT FOOD. 3 ~!~sz.$1

CORD SIZE

·

.

16

.

ON COR REGULAR 1.69

°

0

oz.2 311&gt;

each

'¥

$129

BUFFET DINNERS •••••••• ~~~: ••
16 oz.

SCOT LAD

e

WITH '3.00 OR MORE PURCHASE

e
49
·

ORANGE JUICE ••••••••••c;~..

29e
ONION RINGS •••••••••••b.o~.
99e
ICE MILK •••••••••••••••••• !~ ~.
3qts.99e
COFFEE WHITENER.....
ORE IDA

.

oz.

7

BURLAP

with BATIERIES

BULLETIN
BOARDS
REG.
4.99

388

Assorted Colors
Heavy, colo rful bur·
lap co~er1ng over

insulation board .
Pinewood frame .

39

REG .
3.39

SCOT PRIDE

gal
1

FRIDAY ONLY

Goca-Cola
Big 32 oz. bots.

qt.
bots.

for

c

Relurnable Bottle

Dairy
Buy!!

Fairmont·Buttermilk. Vz GAL 59~

BANANAS

REG,538

6.99

POMEROY CEMENT

to make wr commllflities

brighter, happier and better.

BLOCK CO.

COLUMSUS AND SOUTHERN OHIO ELECTRIC COMPANY

RC COLA
16 OL
bois.
PAK

•

I

Home Made

BREAD &amp; ROLLS
VALU•\f~t

F

GIANT SIZE

OXYOOL

79~

MARK V
SUPER WITH THII COUltON
. MARKET---WITHOUT

COU,.ON

12-14-73

LIMIT 1 COUPON PER PURCHASE

MAXWELL aa.·COFFEE

REGULAR
DRIP ELEC. PERK

2lb. can $1.7 9

WITH THIS COUPON
o.lffer exp ires 12-28-73

2.19

REGUlAR RETAIL 1

MARK V.
11;'..,;~~~.. , VALUABLE

COUPON .

. .. •'

22 II. 01.11 pl. 6 II. 01.}

J o T SIZE
ONLYY

lb.
WITH THIS COUPON WHEN
· YOU BUY A_ 10 OZ. JAR OF

.FLORIDA GRAPEFRUIT

each

. CABBAGE

lb.

. RED RADISHES

ea.

10¢

last11t

HOllE•
COFFEE

AT-=MA~R~K~V~S::.::.TO::.::RE:___ _

10 OZ. JAR ONLY

$109

- -Oil£- COUPON
-- - - - - -OfftiW'IIIlS
- ..... - .12-7-73
PUfAMlll•

I .

&gt;.. 0Uf'~N

Mark V lOc Produce Buys!
Choice Golden Fruit

Wem all working

Byler's Home Bakery

·.

M_EADOW RICH ·

FLASHLIGHT

Fresh Daily! ·

ONLY

·
box
FRENCH FRIES •••••••••••••••
SCOT LAD

PAK
16 oz.

(uY.§·YIIC)

Health &amp; ·Beauty Aids

FROZEN FOODS

LA

elders, Felix Alkire, Kenneth
Welsh and Clair Waggoner
joined the ladies as they had
just conCluded a meeting of the
Session in a11other room.
A white elephant sale was
held at the close of the meeting .

Discount Drugs

•

Tuna &amp; Egg, Super Supper, Liver .&amp; Creamed Gravy

88

REG.
49.95

.

ROYAL GELATIN ••••••••••• ]

ss~
.

98

Check Our Price!

1-lb .

FEED THE BIRDS

LONG liFE

CHEWING
TOBACCO
; 5 ~or

PARKAY

PANASONIC

APPLE JACK

Reg.

1
e
MARGARINE ••••••••••••• ~k.g~ 39
e
59
SUNFLOWER SEED •••••b:~..
·

FOR SALADS &amp; DESSERTS

BIG MAN OR
FIBERGlASS

LITTLE CIGARS ••••••••• ~:r:~n.~

$2.79

3 For 2 Sale!

PRO-SHOT

WINCHESTER

59¢

Now

.Sweet or Regular

carton

·-

SIDE BACON

SPECIAL!

FOLDS FOR
EASY STORAGE

!...adder

c TableTems Set crawn
3 'iii'- &gt; TABLE TENNIS SET
0 r-:JI g,J - · 4 PLAYER SET
..,~ Pii! J ·LAMINATED HANDLES

IN CTN .

Everyone . expressed
pleasure that the church was
recently papered wit:1 &amp;. most
elegant and appropri,:: f.-. ~ ·aper .
They were proud, too, that they
had had a part in it, as the
paper was paid for from the
Le nd-A-Hand treasury.

SUPERIORS FRESH

pkg.

•

r--- - - - - - - -- - --

SUPERIORS
USDA CHOICE

e Pork Roast ,

SUPERIORS USDA CHOICE

Lend-A -Hand Society met
HARRIS0NV1LLE - The
Harrisonville Church Lend-AHtmd Ladies' Society met at
the chw·ch for its November
meeting
with
Mar ga ret
Douglas as hostess and .
Frances Alkire assisting.
There were 17 members and
two g uests present.
Devotions included songs,
prayers, and readings in
keeping with the Thanksgiv.ing
season.
Refreshments were 's erved in
the large Sunday Sehoul room
and Rev . Stebbins and the

PARKING
AFTER
5:00 PM

tb.

. MIDOLE PORT, 0

" We Reserve The Right To Limit Quantities"

Any
Amount
lb.

Fqlding tahle has du ral.JIP green . nor1 ·&amp;1are tmish top w1th
l l1lty stnped court hnes. l t&gt;R~ are mou nted on easy rollmg .
2" cas ter !:. -oper1s to 5' ~ g· x 30" hr~o~h Folds &lt;wtomat•colly .

Special
servzces
changed

W•' Af'('f!pl Feclernl Food Stilmps
PHONE: 992-3480

GROUND BEEF

TABLE
*TENNIS
TABLE

ON-~REET

M\OUPTO

"AUTO FOLD"

way.
THURSDAY
REVIVAL at Chester Church
of God , 7:30 each evening
through Dec. 2. The Rev.
Chester Estep , Chilli cothe,
evangelist. Special singing
each evening. The public is
invited.

..
Middleport . .
,: . Personal Notes \~

Nov . 27. l973

t

�7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-?omeroy, 0 ., Nov. '0, 1973
•

t'LAI" II VMN SING
A h)1111l sin~ will be held at
BELLEVUE - Mr. and Mrs.
i
:30
p.m . Satur~1y at tl}e
Dale Maidens ll~ former
Fr~edLtill
Gusp('l Mis.'iton at
Roberta Kraueter. Racine l are
announcing t~ adoption of a Bald Knob . Sin~crs will be thclhree and one-hall month old Ht~\', and l\lrs. Buddy Allman.
son, Colin Robert. Paternal ALh&lt;'ns. The public 1s m\'lled.
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Maidens. Frednckl&lt;lwn, and Eldon Kraeuter and
~ the late Mrs. Lucille Kraeuter
IS P 1\Tif:NT
are the maternal grand
Edward Kitchen, Sr., is a
, parents. Mr. and Mrs . Maidens patient &lt;:tt the Holzer MedicaJ
Center, noorn 208.
\ reside in Bellevue.
4

20% OFF SALE
ENTIRE STOCK

.•'

•

FABRICS
AND NOTIONS ENDS NOV. 30

.

Celebrating Our 14th Anniversary

. •

:$500FF
REG .
PRI CE

TOUCH&amp;SEW'
sewing machine with
carrying case or your
choice of cabinets

Save $50 whether you
prefer a carrying c.1sc 01

beautiful cabine t! This
mach ine has many stretch
and dec orative stit ches,
even spced-b,1st ing, plu s.
built-in b utt onho ler, .nl cl
the exclusive Singgct
pu sh-butl o n fr ont
drop-i n bobbi n.

We

ha~e

a Cred tt Plan destgncd lo Itt your budget

We also have a libera l trade-in policy

,11I'P1'10Vf0 IIIIIQifl OEHHI

"A Tr.tdem;v k ol the SINGER COMPAN'f

The Fabric Shop
115 W. 2nd

Ph. 992·2284

POMEROY. OHIO

S. Ztrk.Jt•. 125 Pt•&lt;Jt'Otk 400 of the uver rour and a
A \' t
P•1meruy, has been quarter million it'reernasons in
America and the
;m&lt;.~rded the desiKnatit.n of Nortb
Knrght of the York Cross of Philippines to qualify this year.
II(' served as Master of
Hun••ur. highest in the York
Hilc of Frecn1asonry, con· Pomeroy Lodge of Masons in
ferrcd onl)· on those who have 1970, High Priest of Pomeroy
held the highest office in each Chapter, Royal Arch Masons in
of the (our bodies or the rite. 1972, Master of Bosworth
Zirkle thus became one the Council, Royal and Select
('omparative handrul or about Masters in 1968, and Com.
mander of Ohio Vallel Com.mandery, Knight Templar, in
1910 . He wa s elected to
membership in the Ohio
Priory, and was confirmed by
the Convent General of the
Order on Nov. 21.
I);JfHI)
1 • I

Officers and patrols were elected at a recent meeting of
Cadette Troop 52 at the Pomeroy Elementary School.
Officers elected were Susan Wright, scribe: Cathy Blaettnar,
treasurer ; Joni Murray. scrapbook; and Cheryl LeFebre.
telephone chairwoman.
The patrols are " The lmpossibles" with Melody Snouffer as
leader and Susan Wright , Jan e Sisson, Teresa Taylor, Cheryl
L-eFebre. Cindy McKinney as members: and "Sweet Cirolines''
with Paige Smith as leader. and Joni Murray, Cathy Blaettnar,
Nita Ruschel. Diane Smith and Jilly Baity as members. Diane
and Jill are new members or the troop .
.
L.ast week the first ballroom dance session with Gerald
Powe11 as instrudor was held. Powell is a former Arthur Murray
dance teacher.
SALISBURY BROWNIE TROOP 220
Members of the Brownie Troop of Salisbury rode in the
Christmas parade in Pomeroy Friday afternoon. The vehicle was
driven by Mrs. Maxine Hart, leader, who was accompanied by
Mrs. Donna Hatfield, assistant leader.
The girls at a recent meeting made Thanksgiving centerpieces. Work on Christmas projects wiU begin at a meeting
tonight at the school.
MIDDLEPORT TROOP 39
Monday night the members or Troop 39 marched in the
Christmas parade in Middleport. On Friday they assisted in
preparing the approximately 800 treats distributed by Santa
following the parade .
At a meeting of the troop last Monday night, the scouts made
turkey replica favors for use on Thanksgiving Day at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
DAUGHTER BORN
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
Dennis Eynon Racine, announce the birth of a daughter,
Christina Dawn , Nov. 11.
Grandparents are Mr . and
Mrs. Emil Eynon, Racine , and
the Rev. and Mrs. Paul Sellers,
Hamden. Great grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Arnell G.
Sellers a nd great-grandmother
is Mrs. Rents Pinion , Dayton.
I

NIECE IS ILL
Mrs. W. A. Morgan received
word Monday of the critical
illness of her niece, Mrs.
Way n e
Wilson,
Upper
Arlington, a former Meigs
CoWJty resident. Mrs . Wilson is
confin ed to Mt . Carmel
Hospital.

Use Our Christmas Lay-Away!

~

Arabs girding up for oil war

Zirkle is made Knight

ADOPT SON

GIVE
GIFT SLIPPERS
From The . ..

heritage house
For Christma s
Your Thorn MeAn .Store

MIDDLEPORT ,.O.

Cabinet
Great sound from
stereo records. S-track
stereo tape cartridges
AM-FM ·and stereo FM
radio . Eight-speaker , - - stereo sound system
teatures two powerfu l
tO-inch woofers for
dynamic bass. Con~
venient slide controls
and push-bullon functJon select or.

or

1

Pomeroy . . .
Personal Notes

•

A thought lor the day : British
author Rudyard Kipling said,
"The silliest woman can
manage a clever man , but it
needs a very clever woman to
manage a fool. "

Face it. Grandma and gran dpa aren't wild
abou t running up an d down stai rs
anymore, even if it i~ you on the oth er en d
of the line . So why not give them a
Chris t mas presen t that 's &gt;ure to save them
the trouble. A very col orful, very·easy·to·
reac h bedside ex tension phone. fes t ively
'gi ft-wrapped ju st for c alling in ·your o rd er.
So they can love you from afar and near.
w h ichever suits them at the time.

'

j

'I

To order your
gift-wrapped phone,call679 · 2111.

Sout.heastem Ohio
Telephone Company
Mid-Continent~ Corpanllan

•
:

~···

may go

SAN FRANCISCO (UPI )-

: Agriculture Secretary Earl L.
~ Butz oold dairy farmers today

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
'.

BERYL WARD

Adjutant

Ohio Disabled American
Veterans State Adjutant Beryl
U. Ward will represent the
Ohio Deparlment at an " open
meeting" of the Pomeroy DAV
to be held Wednesday, Nov. 28,
at 7:30 p.m. at the DAV
Chapter Home, 124 Butternut
St.
Educated under the Gl bill,
Ward is a graduate of Sinclair
College, Dayton, where he
received an associate degree in
business administration. He
was awarded a bachelor or
science degree fr om Ci n ~
ci nnati 's Salmon P. Cha se
College in 1950. He is married
and he and his wife, Virginia,
live in Columbus.
Ward served with the 162n!]
Infantry, 41st Division, in the
Southwest Pacific during WW
II . He was wounded in action in
New Guinea in 1943 and was
awarded the bronze sta r
medal, the purple heart and the
combat infantry badge.
A t·r
b
[ DAV
1 e mem e r o h h
Chapter on
No .numerous
9, Dayton ,Departe as
served
ment and National Committees. Among other offices
held, he has been National
Chief or starr ror the 1972-73
year, Secretary of the 7th
National
District,
and
Chairman and a member of the
National Convention Finance
and Dues Committee.
Ward is also editor of the
quarterly Ohio DAV State
News with a circulation of
32,000 and the monthly Ohio
DAV Information .Bulletin ,
The Ohio DAVis a state-wide
veterans organization of
almost 33 thousand members.
The · Disabled American
Veterans was congressionally
chartered in 1932 to work for
the physical, mental, social
.and economic rehabilitation of
what are now more than 3
million wounded and disabled
veterans Qf all wars.

1

BY GLENNA SHULER
.Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Fife of
Middleport spent a day
recently with Mr . and Mrs.
John Veith .
Keith Bradbury, Columbus,
and Bobby Wood , Canal
Winchester, Mr. and Mrs .
Leslie Hawley, Middleport, Dr.
and Mrs. P . E . Stanley,
Pomeroy, visited recently with
Mrs . Perry Bradbury. ·
Mr . and Mrs. Marlin Rife
spent a day recently with Mr.
and Mrs. Alva Rife, Rt. I
Middleport.
Visiting the Robert Conkle
family a day recently were Mr.
and Mrs. James Lambert, Rt. I
Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs. Eddie
Caruthers, Rt. 7, Mr. and Mrs.
Mike Conkle, Kyger, Mr. and
Mrs. Melvin Coen, local.
Kenneth Searls and · Mrs.
Franklin Wray of Columbus
spent a weekend withMr. and
Mrs . Paul Searls.
Joey Leach, Porter, called on
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Leach and
Arthur a day recently.
Mr. and Mrs. James Conkle
spent a recent evening with
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Leonard at
Chester.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Searls
called on Mr. and Mrs. Asel
Searls in Middleport a recent
day . .
Mrs,, William Larkins,
Hannibal, spent a day with Mr.
and Mrs. Alex ShUler.

STILL IN ~ED
WASHINGTON (UP!) Although administration of·
licials are still looking lor a
balanced budget June 30, 1974
- the end or the fiScal yearthe federal budget was $5.5
billion in the red at the end of
October.. Treasury Department
said Monday the government
wok in $17.6 billion last month
but spent $23.1 billion, leaving
a $5.5 billion shortfall lor
October.

levels, dairymen have been
pinched by high feed costs.
However, ~ predicted there
are some ''strong signals of
better days ahead" ror milk
farmers.
One real hope of relief, Butz
said, lies in tbe !act that per
capita C&lt;&gt;ns umption or fluid
milk - the hi g hest-priced
dairy product - recently
ended a 2!&gt;-year downtrend.

. .• TO CHERISH
CHRISTMAS AFTER CHRISTMAS

an agreement on troop pull·
backs. The two sides scheduled
another sessio n for Wed·
nesday.
Arab leaders, including
kings, presidents and guerrilla
chiefs, met for the second day
l&lt;lday at a sununit conference
in Algiers.
Leaders Considering Paper
Political sources said the
leaders were considering a
working paper extending the
oil embargo to other countries
besides the United States and
Holland . They said new nations
to be hit might be Rhodesia,
South Africa and Portugal.
Tiie sources said the paper
would also demand Israeli
withdrawal !rom Arab Ianda
seized in the 1961 Middle East
war, including parts of Jerusalem. Secretary of. State Henry A.
Kissinger's call for a Middle

the administration is willing to
: negotiate away protective
" dairy import quotas.
: Butz added, however, · in · a
: speech prepared for delivery to
• lhe National Milk Producers
~ Federation · (NMPF ), he has
taken a "strong position"
, against allowing foreign
: govenunents to continue to
subsidize the cheese, butter
• and other dairy foods they ship
. to the U.S.
.: "This administration is pre" pared to put the matter or
:" quotas on the negotiating table
• (in order ro get other C&lt;&gt;untries
to liberalize trade terms for
;," U.S. grain and other products),
. but we're not going to give
IN
~ them away ... ,'' Butz said .
PUTNAM VI LLAG
11
...,
1 have taken a strOng posiSHOPPING CENT
... lion in favor of countervailing
• duties l&lt;l avoid urifair competit«"' lion in our markets. In -other
:: words, if we liberalize import
quotas in the United States, we
must have some companion
mechanism that protects our
~ fanners against the threat of
• subsidized C&lt;&gt;mpetition," Butz
said .
."BROCK"
Under C&lt;&gt;WJtervailing duty
plans, a foreign dairy product
• arriving in the U.S. wilh its
price artificially lowered beDECANTERS
cause or a home-country sui&gt;• sidy would be hit with a U.S.
import tax offsetting the subsi·
1o Ounce Box!
:: dy. Such duties are already
" provided by U.S: law and the
:. NMPF is currently pressing a
• legal fight to force the treasury
Wonderfu I Gift Items
to C&lt;&gt;llect Utem on some current
•
• imports lroni the European
Common Market.
·
Dairy leaders have criticized
• the administration's moves toward expanded imports or milk
.
· products, asserting the result
.
would be a shrinking ·u .S. industry. But Butz insisted l&lt;lrlay
• that tllere "can be no rational
alternative w rree trade," and
~ predicted that U.S. dairymen ,..._ _ _ _...._i;o.Q;______...._____Iiio\

Eo1st peace conferem:e next

monlh was also expected to
figure prominently in the Arab
stand.
lsraeli Deputy Prime Minister Yigal Allon told a student
group in Tel Aviv Monday the
troop pullback issue would be
the first item to be settled at
the full-scale peace conference
if not settled during the desert
troop talks.

Carol's
Coiffeurs Is
Announcing
Marilyn Clark

•

THE SHOP
To Our Customers ~
Please call for ap pointment to get your Beef or
Pig processed.
Effective this year , all deer
processed:
S20.00 Plus Pork
All deer have to be skinned
and tagged before we can

COLOR TV

•
BLACK &amp;
WHITE TV

•

STEREO

CAROL'S
COIFFEURS

Call These
Numbers Please
Dick Vaughan
Dale Little
.

ZENITH

As a new employee.
She has jo ined Sue
Floyd
and
Becky
McFarland .
Phone 773 -5352 for
appointment.

accept.

992 -3374

•
He also sounded· a warning
shouid be such as to prevent a
over the deadlocked truce
surprise attack!'
ln Cairo, Dr. Hafez Ghanem, talks.
" Our armed rorces are
first secretary or lhe Arab
Socialist Union and one of the watching closely Israel's
nation 's leading politicians , prevarication in implementing
said the ASU planned a cease-£ire arrangements and
political offensive at home and they are fully prepared to
abroad before the peace . intervene if the situation so
requires,'' Ghanem said .
conference opens.

MASON FURNITURE
HERMAN GRATE
MASON . W. VA .

773-SS92

Mason . W . Va .

992 -3884

5th
STORE
OPENING

.

-

We Continue To Grow Thanks To Our Customers

We Opened Our 5th Store
Last Week- Our Christmas Selling Season Kicks Off With This Event!

For
hi

---------------------:_~~~~1~~~~-~!~!t!f~_j

Bulova
and
Accutron

For Christmas

Bulova
Accutron®"'"'"'

Everyone wants a Bu lova
Accutron watch. Come in
now and c hoose for the

names on yovr gift list. Every
Bul ova Accutron has the
famous electronically·driven
tuning fork move ment.
·
Guaranteed accu rate to
withi n a minute a month . ·

ArtCarved
150

1

Foi- hlm
Satin -finish stainl ess stee L
Bur&amp; und~ dia l.

UP

•we wi ll adjust Ia th is precis e tolerance,
if necessary. Guarantee is tor l)ne year .

Christmas Selection

FOR HER
FOR HIM

CHOCOLATE
COVERED
CHERRIES

K110W5 ShopPers art . .

:.Discrimination
"'•

COSTUME
JEWELRY
IN
BEAUTIFUL The New Idea in Gifts-

HOLIDAY
SEL£CTION.

•

~

: development

Sizes

~gs! .

•344TO $594

34
To

.
Nail!

Thermal lined, pile lined in soft vinyl gloves. Brown or
bla ck . Sizes Sm .'Md .'Lg.'X Lg .

17

94e

.8
STYLES

·

60 Square Feet
TO

. .. .

Pastel Colors
A
Useful Gift!

Gifts That He
Will Like!

·.•

..

·.·

..

,.

..

3
..

PAIR

,.

SHOP NOW FOR YOUR
TREE TRIMS - Gin WRAPS
Shoppers Mart
Onl Saves You Mone !

Religious or
General Assortment

UndE.

YS LONG SLEEVE

SHIRTS

CHRISTMAS GREETING CARDS,

Stars-of-the-Month
with a magical six-rayed star tha t reflects light
in subtl e movement across its caboc hon. Abeautiful birthday or anniversary gif t that .gives con·.
st ant pl easu r e. M ade only by Union Carbide .
Corporat ion. Lind C Sta rs-Of-The- Mont h are avail·
ab-le here in fi ne jewelry for men and women.

Neat
prints ,
solids, bold prints -- ·
in zip -front or
button
styles.
Sizes 6 to 18.

Full Bed Size

ELECTRIC
BLANKET

Regular $1.00 Value
80 Square Ft. Paper
or
26 Square Ft. Foil

Fully automatic:. Beacon
quality . Single controL 2
year guarantee. 4 Day
Sale.

SET OF 50

Regular $13.88

MINIATURE
TREE
LIGHTS

99
·'

s

.

BEAUTIFUL!
FEATERED

88

Roll

Long sleeve, ·tull fashioned. Soft
orion acrylic in many different looks
and sizes. Compare with SB.OO shirts.

, rt\tlt1la!

•lf,_,,,,~rs

$
·

FESTIVE HOLIDAY TYPES

Necklaces,
Decorative

Poin se ttias , berries, holly.
sprays - in fact every type of
flower you ' ll need for your
Christmas decorating. Why pay
more?

MEN'S SWEAT SHIRTS
FOR STOCKING STUFFERS

For the girl with spirit, this handsomely tailored pair of
leather accessories will brighten every day. Subtly
tailored in the softest Fandango Cllf. In fashion colors:
11
Tri-Partite" Fi-ench Purse •.•••••••••••• $15.00
KEY GARO• .
$5.00

Clocks,

Si lverpl.ilte
and
Kromex Gift Items.

I

••••• '

• • •• '

Use Our

•••• '

Plan!

COURT ST.

"A Gold Star Store"

Use Our Lay-Away Plan! !
'

'

POMEROY

••

AGREED ON TERMS
: CINCINNATI (UP!)
:itrlking Teamsers, who have
· ~lted publication of lhe city's
:lwo majOr · newspapers since
:Jaturday, reached tentative
~ greement ,with comp~ny
~lcials early this mormng.

Wonderful for
stuffers, or will
kiddies for now.
items are poly
Values to 25c.

stocking
hold the
Most all

wrapped.

$ 17

~

COLORED SWEAT SHIRTS '2.77

SMALL
TOYS

••••••••••••

Goessler's Jewelry Store

White Or Gun metal Grey
·
Fleece Lined
Sizes ·Sm'M'Lg'X L

3 Decorations

94~

Tacs, Tie Bars and
Key
Protectors,

Speidel
Watch
Bands, Ladies; &amp;
Gents '
Ladies '
Diamond Pendants &amp;
Ear Rings, B. David
Pin &amp; Ear Rings,
Pierced Ear Rings,
Cultured
Pearl

PLASTIC
WREATH·

White, Red, etc.

SET

PlACKET OR CREW NECK

14 INCH POLY

DECORATIVE
.'
BIRDS

MEN'S
ACRYLIC KNIT SHIRTS

Continuous
Roll

Prince &amp; Princess
Gardner
Billfords,
Gents' Anson Tie ·

$

. ..

.

PRINCESS GARDNER•

PKG.

NYLON BABY BLANKET

Ja n./Burgundy
.May/Fern Green Scpt.JCOtnll owc r Bl
Fe b / Pl um Pur pi~ June /Sa lrnon Pt nk
Oct / Att~lea Ptqk
July/Claret Red
Nov /Lemon Yf'lloVJ
Mar / Azure Blue
Apf./Shell Whtle A~ t,t ./ M tnt Green
Dec / 8aharna Blue ·

Delightful
To Give
Wonderful
To Get

6 ROLLS
GIFT WRAP

MEN'S DRESS GLOVES

lind€ Stars in twelve birthstone colors.

QiOOSE

s1.00 VAWEI

crew socks with stripe lop.
\Si:zes 6 to I0'12. All cotton.

~

:: is charged in

The trimmed holiday styles are now in stock, White,
pa stel s, prints. Long sleeve .

BOYS SOCKS

;.. can C&lt;&gt;mpete with European '
, farmers.
:. Butz C&lt;&gt;nceded that while ,
: many fanners this year have :
.... seen net incomes rise to record .

••

CHRISTMAS BLOUSES

BUBBLE
BATH

Watch Us ·Grow! ! !
Thanks For Your
Patronage · Now Putnam County .
M Savi

.,

Storys Run

there.

~ quotas

. l l .,""·

The CERVANTE S

Mr. and Mrs. Ron Gotthardt,Columbus, and their son,
B•·uce, a freshman at Ohio
University, and Mr . and Mrs.
Roger Morgan, Middleport,
were Thanksgiving dinner
guests of Mrs. W. A. Mor,gan .
Bruce made tne o. u . soccer
team this fall .
Mr. a nd Mrs. Ches ter Knight
spent the hoiiday visiti ng Mr.
and Mrs . TerryKnightandson,
Stevie, at Caledonia; and Mr.
and Mrs . Dick Knight at
Wintersvllle.
Mr . and Mrs . Bill Matlack,
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, were holiday
weekend guests or Mr. and
Mrs. George Dallas a nd family
at St . Paris. On Sunday they
visited at Wintersville with Mr .
a nd Mrs . Dick Kriight.
Mrs. Ruth Steele . and
daughter, Rebecca Broderick
have retW'ned from an eightday vacation in Bermuda .
They flew there to visit her son ,
Sgt. Elton Steele and family .
Sgt. Steele will be sta tioned
there a nother two years with

The presmd: that takes the
wear and tear out of

•
••
•

1 - ""

!il coming to

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~th~e:_.=u~-~S~-~M~a~r~in~e=s~._ _ _ _

~Dairymen told

.. ...

:--Jl

Modol KS843

!~il DAV event

guaranteed.
A prominent Egyptian politi·
cal leader said in Cairo
Monday Egypt's army was
~&gt;fuUy prepared" to intervene
if desert truce talks with Israel
!ail to break a deadlock over
troop withdrawals along the
Suez Canal.
Generals from Israel and
Egypt held their nin\h meeting
Monday without any reports of

regain lost territory and Israel
said it would be willing to give
up some occupied lands
provided its security was

~

:::::::::::::::::::::::-:::::::::::.::::;::::;~:~:::::::::::;::~:: :::::::::

\\

By Ualted Press lnternatloaal
• leaders of the Arab world
• worked today on a tough plan
: for using the "oil weapon" to

Console Ste-reo in
Lururious Armoire

AJlon sa1d, however-, Israel
would have to return some of
the Arab territory it captured
in the 1967 war, provided there
is a guarantee of Tel Aviv's
secur·ity.
"Territorial changes will be
nec-essary but the changes
sho uld not be exaggerated,"
Alton said. " The settlement

EACH
WOMEN'S

DRESS
GLOVES

~

EACH

A DISCOUNT

OOARTMtNT STOQ~ .
!

RIPLEY~ POINT PLEASANT. MASON, W.VA.

A wide variety
of
leather
I ike · vinyl
gloves. All sizes.

SILVER BRIDGE SHOPPING PLAZA
And Now In The Putnam Village

-

'•
I

.

. ,. .

I.

I

I

�7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-?omeroy, 0 ., Nov. '0, 1973
•

t'LAI" II VMN SING
A h)1111l sin~ will be held at
BELLEVUE - Mr. and Mrs.
i
:30
p.m . Satur~1y at tl}e
Dale Maidens ll~ former
Fr~edLtill
Gusp('l Mis.'iton at
Roberta Kraueter. Racine l are
announcing t~ adoption of a Bald Knob . Sin~crs will be thclhree and one-hall month old Ht~\', and l\lrs. Buddy Allman.
son, Colin Robert. Paternal ALh&lt;'ns. The public 1s m\'lled.
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Maidens. Frednckl&lt;lwn, and Eldon Kraeuter and
~ the late Mrs. Lucille Kraeuter
IS P 1\Tif:NT
are the maternal grand
Edward Kitchen, Sr., is a
, parents. Mr. and Mrs . Maidens patient &lt;:tt the Holzer MedicaJ
Center, noorn 208.
\ reside in Bellevue.
4

20% OFF SALE
ENTIRE STOCK

.•'

•

FABRICS
AND NOTIONS ENDS NOV. 30

.

Celebrating Our 14th Anniversary

. •

:$500FF
REG .
PRI CE

TOUCH&amp;SEW'
sewing machine with
carrying case or your
choice of cabinets

Save $50 whether you
prefer a carrying c.1sc 01

beautiful cabine t! This
mach ine has many stretch
and dec orative stit ches,
even spced-b,1st ing, plu s.
built-in b utt onho ler, .nl cl
the exclusive Singgct
pu sh-butl o n fr ont
drop-i n bobbi n.

We

ha~e

a Cred tt Plan destgncd lo Itt your budget

We also have a libera l trade-in policy

,11I'P1'10Vf0 IIIIIQifl OEHHI

"A Tr.tdem;v k ol the SINGER COMPAN'f

The Fabric Shop
115 W. 2nd

Ph. 992·2284

POMEROY. OHIO

S. Ztrk.Jt•. 125 Pt•&lt;Jt'Otk 400 of the uver rour and a
A \' t
P•1meruy, has been quarter million it'reernasons in
America and the
;m&lt;.~rded the desiKnatit.n of Nortb
Knrght of the York Cross of Philippines to qualify this year.
II(' served as Master of
Hun••ur. highest in the York
Hilc of Frecn1asonry, con· Pomeroy Lodge of Masons in
ferrcd onl)· on those who have 1970, High Priest of Pomeroy
held the highest office in each Chapter, Royal Arch Masons in
of the (our bodies or the rite. 1972, Master of Bosworth
Zirkle thus became one the Council, Royal and Select
('omparative handrul or about Masters in 1968, and Com.
mander of Ohio Vallel Com.mandery, Knight Templar, in
1910 . He wa s elected to
membership in the Ohio
Priory, and was confirmed by
the Convent General of the
Order on Nov. 21.
I);JfHI)
1 • I

Officers and patrols were elected at a recent meeting of
Cadette Troop 52 at the Pomeroy Elementary School.
Officers elected were Susan Wright, scribe: Cathy Blaettnar,
treasurer ; Joni Murray. scrapbook; and Cheryl LeFebre.
telephone chairwoman.
The patrols are " The lmpossibles" with Melody Snouffer as
leader and Susan Wright , Jan e Sisson, Teresa Taylor, Cheryl
L-eFebre. Cindy McKinney as members: and "Sweet Cirolines''
with Paige Smith as leader. and Joni Murray, Cathy Blaettnar,
Nita Ruschel. Diane Smith and Jilly Baity as members. Diane
and Jill are new members or the troop .
.
L.ast week the first ballroom dance session with Gerald
Powe11 as instrudor was held. Powell is a former Arthur Murray
dance teacher.
SALISBURY BROWNIE TROOP 220
Members of the Brownie Troop of Salisbury rode in the
Christmas parade in Pomeroy Friday afternoon. The vehicle was
driven by Mrs. Maxine Hart, leader, who was accompanied by
Mrs. Donna Hatfield, assistant leader.
The girls at a recent meeting made Thanksgiving centerpieces. Work on Christmas projects wiU begin at a meeting
tonight at the school.
MIDDLEPORT TROOP 39
Monday night the members or Troop 39 marched in the
Christmas parade in Middleport. On Friday they assisted in
preparing the approximately 800 treats distributed by Santa
following the parade .
At a meeting of the troop last Monday night, the scouts made
turkey replica favors for use on Thanksgiving Day at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
DAUGHTER BORN
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
Dennis Eynon Racine, announce the birth of a daughter,
Christina Dawn , Nov. 11.
Grandparents are Mr . and
Mrs. Emil Eynon, Racine , and
the Rev. and Mrs. Paul Sellers,
Hamden. Great grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Arnell G.
Sellers a nd great-grandmother
is Mrs. Rents Pinion , Dayton.
I

NIECE IS ILL
Mrs. W. A. Morgan received
word Monday of the critical
illness of her niece, Mrs.
Way n e
Wilson,
Upper
Arlington, a former Meigs
CoWJty resident. Mrs . Wilson is
confin ed to Mt . Carmel
Hospital.

Use Our Christmas Lay-Away!

~

Arabs girding up for oil war

Zirkle is made Knight

ADOPT SON

GIVE
GIFT SLIPPERS
From The . ..

heritage house
For Christma s
Your Thorn MeAn .Store

MIDDLEPORT ,.O.

Cabinet
Great sound from
stereo records. S-track
stereo tape cartridges
AM-FM ·and stereo FM
radio . Eight-speaker , - - stereo sound system
teatures two powerfu l
tO-inch woofers for
dynamic bass. Con~
venient slide controls
and push-bullon functJon select or.

or

1

Pomeroy . . .
Personal Notes

•

A thought lor the day : British
author Rudyard Kipling said,
"The silliest woman can
manage a clever man , but it
needs a very clever woman to
manage a fool. "

Face it. Grandma and gran dpa aren't wild
abou t running up an d down stai rs
anymore, even if it i~ you on the oth er en d
of the line . So why not give them a
Chris t mas presen t that 's &gt;ure to save them
the trouble. A very col orful, very·easy·to·
reac h bedside ex tension phone. fes t ively
'gi ft-wrapped ju st for c alling in ·your o rd er.
So they can love you from afar and near.
w h ichever suits them at the time.

'

j

'I

To order your
gift-wrapped phone,call679 · 2111.

Sout.heastem Ohio
Telephone Company
Mid-Continent~ Corpanllan

•
:

~···

may go

SAN FRANCISCO (UPI )-

: Agriculture Secretary Earl L.
~ Butz oold dairy farmers today

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
'.

BERYL WARD

Adjutant

Ohio Disabled American
Veterans State Adjutant Beryl
U. Ward will represent the
Ohio Deparlment at an " open
meeting" of the Pomeroy DAV
to be held Wednesday, Nov. 28,
at 7:30 p.m. at the DAV
Chapter Home, 124 Butternut
St.
Educated under the Gl bill,
Ward is a graduate of Sinclair
College, Dayton, where he
received an associate degree in
business administration. He
was awarded a bachelor or
science degree fr om Ci n ~
ci nnati 's Salmon P. Cha se
College in 1950. He is married
and he and his wife, Virginia,
live in Columbus.
Ward served with the 162n!]
Infantry, 41st Division, in the
Southwest Pacific during WW
II . He was wounded in action in
New Guinea in 1943 and was
awarded the bronze sta r
medal, the purple heart and the
combat infantry badge.
A t·r
b
[ DAV
1 e mem e r o h h
Chapter on
No .numerous
9, Dayton ,Departe as
served
ment and National Committees. Among other offices
held, he has been National
Chief or starr ror the 1972-73
year, Secretary of the 7th
National
District,
and
Chairman and a member of the
National Convention Finance
and Dues Committee.
Ward is also editor of the
quarterly Ohio DAV State
News with a circulation of
32,000 and the monthly Ohio
DAV Information .Bulletin ,
The Ohio DAVis a state-wide
veterans organization of
almost 33 thousand members.
The · Disabled American
Veterans was congressionally
chartered in 1932 to work for
the physical, mental, social
.and economic rehabilitation of
what are now more than 3
million wounded and disabled
veterans Qf all wars.

1

BY GLENNA SHULER
.Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Fife of
Middleport spent a day
recently with Mr . and Mrs.
John Veith .
Keith Bradbury, Columbus,
and Bobby Wood , Canal
Winchester, Mr. and Mrs .
Leslie Hawley, Middleport, Dr.
and Mrs. P . E . Stanley,
Pomeroy, visited recently with
Mrs . Perry Bradbury. ·
Mr . and Mrs. Marlin Rife
spent a day recently with Mr.
and Mrs. Alva Rife, Rt. I
Middleport.
Visiting the Robert Conkle
family a day recently were Mr.
and Mrs. James Lambert, Rt. I
Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs. Eddie
Caruthers, Rt. 7, Mr. and Mrs.
Mike Conkle, Kyger, Mr. and
Mrs. Melvin Coen, local.
Kenneth Searls and · Mrs.
Franklin Wray of Columbus
spent a weekend withMr. and
Mrs . Paul Searls.
Joey Leach, Porter, called on
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Leach and
Arthur a day recently.
Mr. and Mrs. James Conkle
spent a recent evening with
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Leonard at
Chester.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Searls
called on Mr. and Mrs. Asel
Searls in Middleport a recent
day . .
Mrs,, William Larkins,
Hannibal, spent a day with Mr.
and Mrs. Alex ShUler.

STILL IN ~ED
WASHINGTON (UP!) Although administration of·
licials are still looking lor a
balanced budget June 30, 1974
- the end or the fiScal yearthe federal budget was $5.5
billion in the red at the end of
October.. Treasury Department
said Monday the government
wok in $17.6 billion last month
but spent $23.1 billion, leaving
a $5.5 billion shortfall lor
October.

levels, dairymen have been
pinched by high feed costs.
However, ~ predicted there
are some ''strong signals of
better days ahead" ror milk
farmers.
One real hope of relief, Butz
said, lies in tbe !act that per
capita C&lt;&gt;ns umption or fluid
milk - the hi g hest-priced
dairy product - recently
ended a 2!&gt;-year downtrend.

. .• TO CHERISH
CHRISTMAS AFTER CHRISTMAS

an agreement on troop pull·
backs. The two sides scheduled
another sessio n for Wed·
nesday.
Arab leaders, including
kings, presidents and guerrilla
chiefs, met for the second day
l&lt;lday at a sununit conference
in Algiers.
Leaders Considering Paper
Political sources said the
leaders were considering a
working paper extending the
oil embargo to other countries
besides the United States and
Holland . They said new nations
to be hit might be Rhodesia,
South Africa and Portugal.
Tiie sources said the paper
would also demand Israeli
withdrawal !rom Arab Ianda
seized in the 1961 Middle East
war, including parts of Jerusalem. Secretary of. State Henry A.
Kissinger's call for a Middle

the administration is willing to
: negotiate away protective
" dairy import quotas.
: Butz added, however, · in · a
: speech prepared for delivery to
• lhe National Milk Producers
~ Federation · (NMPF ), he has
taken a "strong position"
, against allowing foreign
: govenunents to continue to
subsidize the cheese, butter
• and other dairy foods they ship
. to the U.S.
.: "This administration is pre" pared to put the matter or
:" quotas on the negotiating table
• (in order ro get other C&lt;&gt;untries
to liberalize trade terms for
;," U.S. grain and other products),
. but we're not going to give
IN
~ them away ... ,'' Butz said .
PUTNAM VI LLAG
11
...,
1 have taken a strOng posiSHOPPING CENT
... lion in favor of countervailing
• duties l&lt;l avoid urifair competit«"' lion in our markets. In -other
:: words, if we liberalize import
quotas in the United States, we
must have some companion
mechanism that protects our
~ fanners against the threat of
• subsidized C&lt;&gt;mpetition," Butz
said .
."BROCK"
Under C&lt;&gt;WJtervailing duty
plans, a foreign dairy product
• arriving in the U.S. wilh its
price artificially lowered beDECANTERS
cause or a home-country sui&gt;• sidy would be hit with a U.S.
import tax offsetting the subsi·
1o Ounce Box!
:: dy. Such duties are already
" provided by U.S: law and the
:. NMPF is currently pressing a
• legal fight to force the treasury
Wonderfu I Gift Items
to C&lt;&gt;llect Utem on some current
•
• imports lroni the European
Common Market.
·
Dairy leaders have criticized
• the administration's moves toward expanded imports or milk
.
· products, asserting the result
.
would be a shrinking ·u .S. industry. But Butz insisted l&lt;lrlay
• that tllere "can be no rational
alternative w rree trade," and
~ predicted that U.S. dairymen ,..._ _ _ _...._i;o.Q;______...._____Iiio\

Eo1st peace conferem:e next

monlh was also expected to
figure prominently in the Arab
stand.
lsraeli Deputy Prime Minister Yigal Allon told a student
group in Tel Aviv Monday the
troop pullback issue would be
the first item to be settled at
the full-scale peace conference
if not settled during the desert
troop talks.

Carol's
Coiffeurs Is
Announcing
Marilyn Clark

•

THE SHOP
To Our Customers ~
Please call for ap pointment to get your Beef or
Pig processed.
Effective this year , all deer
processed:
S20.00 Plus Pork
All deer have to be skinned
and tagged before we can

COLOR TV

•
BLACK &amp;
WHITE TV

•

STEREO

CAROL'S
COIFFEURS

Call These
Numbers Please
Dick Vaughan
Dale Little
.

ZENITH

As a new employee.
She has jo ined Sue
Floyd
and
Becky
McFarland .
Phone 773 -5352 for
appointment.

accept.

992 -3374

•
He also sounded· a warning
shouid be such as to prevent a
over the deadlocked truce
surprise attack!'
ln Cairo, Dr. Hafez Ghanem, talks.
" Our armed rorces are
first secretary or lhe Arab
Socialist Union and one of the watching closely Israel's
nation 's leading politicians , prevarication in implementing
said the ASU planned a cease-£ire arrangements and
political offensive at home and they are fully prepared to
abroad before the peace . intervene if the situation so
requires,'' Ghanem said .
conference opens.

MASON FURNITURE
HERMAN GRATE
MASON . W. VA .

773-SS92

Mason . W . Va .

992 -3884

5th
STORE
OPENING

.

-

We Continue To Grow Thanks To Our Customers

We Opened Our 5th Store
Last Week- Our Christmas Selling Season Kicks Off With This Event!

For
hi

---------------------:_~~~~1~~~~-~!~!t!f~_j

Bulova
and
Accutron

For Christmas

Bulova
Accutron®"'"'"'

Everyone wants a Bu lova
Accutron watch. Come in
now and c hoose for the

names on yovr gift list. Every
Bul ova Accutron has the
famous electronically·driven
tuning fork move ment.
·
Guaranteed accu rate to
withi n a minute a month . ·

ArtCarved
150

1

Foi- hlm
Satin -finish stainl ess stee L
Bur&amp; und~ dia l.

UP

•we wi ll adjust Ia th is precis e tolerance,
if necessary. Guarantee is tor l)ne year .

Christmas Selection

FOR HER
FOR HIM

CHOCOLATE
COVERED
CHERRIES

K110W5 ShopPers art . .

:.Discrimination
"'•

COSTUME
JEWELRY
IN
BEAUTIFUL The New Idea in Gifts-

HOLIDAY
SEL£CTION.

•

~

: development

Sizes

~gs! .

•344TO $594

34
To

.
Nail!

Thermal lined, pile lined in soft vinyl gloves. Brown or
bla ck . Sizes Sm .'Md .'Lg.'X Lg .

17

94e

.8
STYLES

·

60 Square Feet
TO

. .. .

Pastel Colors
A
Useful Gift!

Gifts That He
Will Like!

·.•

..

·.·

..

,.

..

3
..

PAIR

,.

SHOP NOW FOR YOUR
TREE TRIMS - Gin WRAPS
Shoppers Mart
Onl Saves You Mone !

Religious or
General Assortment

UndE.

YS LONG SLEEVE

SHIRTS

CHRISTMAS GREETING CARDS,

Stars-of-the-Month
with a magical six-rayed star tha t reflects light
in subtl e movement across its caboc hon. Abeautiful birthday or anniversary gif t that .gives con·.
st ant pl easu r e. M ade only by Union Carbide .
Corporat ion. Lind C Sta rs-Of-The- Mont h are avail·
ab-le here in fi ne jewelry for men and women.

Neat
prints ,
solids, bold prints -- ·
in zip -front or
button
styles.
Sizes 6 to 18.

Full Bed Size

ELECTRIC
BLANKET

Regular $1.00 Value
80 Square Ft. Paper
or
26 Square Ft. Foil

Fully automatic:. Beacon
quality . Single controL 2
year guarantee. 4 Day
Sale.

SET OF 50

Regular $13.88

MINIATURE
TREE
LIGHTS

99
·'

s

.

BEAUTIFUL!
FEATERED

88

Roll

Long sleeve, ·tull fashioned. Soft
orion acrylic in many different looks
and sizes. Compare with SB.OO shirts.

, rt\tlt1la!

•lf,_,,,,~rs

$
·

FESTIVE HOLIDAY TYPES

Necklaces,
Decorative

Poin se ttias , berries, holly.
sprays - in fact every type of
flower you ' ll need for your
Christmas decorating. Why pay
more?

MEN'S SWEAT SHIRTS
FOR STOCKING STUFFERS

For the girl with spirit, this handsomely tailored pair of
leather accessories will brighten every day. Subtly
tailored in the softest Fandango Cllf. In fashion colors:
11
Tri-Partite" Fi-ench Purse •.•••••••••••• $15.00
KEY GARO• .
$5.00

Clocks,

Si lverpl.ilte
and
Kromex Gift Items.

I

••••• '

• • •• '

Use Our

•••• '

Plan!

COURT ST.

"A Gold Star Store"

Use Our Lay-Away Plan! !
'

'

POMEROY

••

AGREED ON TERMS
: CINCINNATI (UP!)
:itrlking Teamsers, who have
· ~lted publication of lhe city's
:lwo majOr · newspapers since
:Jaturday, reached tentative
~ greement ,with comp~ny
~lcials early this mormng.

Wonderful for
stuffers, or will
kiddies for now.
items are poly
Values to 25c.

stocking
hold the
Most all

wrapped.

$ 17

~

COLORED SWEAT SHIRTS '2.77

SMALL
TOYS

••••••••••••

Goessler's Jewelry Store

White Or Gun metal Grey
·
Fleece Lined
Sizes ·Sm'M'Lg'X L

3 Decorations

94~

Tacs, Tie Bars and
Key
Protectors,

Speidel
Watch
Bands, Ladies; &amp;
Gents '
Ladies '
Diamond Pendants &amp;
Ear Rings, B. David
Pin &amp; Ear Rings,
Pierced Ear Rings,
Cultured
Pearl

PLASTIC
WREATH·

White, Red, etc.

SET

PlACKET OR CREW NECK

14 INCH POLY

DECORATIVE
.'
BIRDS

MEN'S
ACRYLIC KNIT SHIRTS

Continuous
Roll

Prince &amp; Princess
Gardner
Billfords,
Gents' Anson Tie ·

$

. ..

.

PRINCESS GARDNER•

PKG.

NYLON BABY BLANKET

Ja n./Burgundy
.May/Fern Green Scpt.JCOtnll owc r Bl
Fe b / Pl um Pur pi~ June /Sa lrnon Pt nk
Oct / Att~lea Ptqk
July/Claret Red
Nov /Lemon Yf'lloVJ
Mar / Azure Blue
Apf./Shell Whtle A~ t,t ./ M tnt Green
Dec / 8aharna Blue ·

Delightful
To Give
Wonderful
To Get

6 ROLLS
GIFT WRAP

MEN'S DRESS GLOVES

lind€ Stars in twelve birthstone colors.

QiOOSE

s1.00 VAWEI

crew socks with stripe lop.
\Si:zes 6 to I0'12. All cotton.

~

:: is charged in

The trimmed holiday styles are now in stock, White,
pa stel s, prints. Long sleeve .

BOYS SOCKS

;.. can C&lt;&gt;mpete with European '
, farmers.
:. Butz C&lt;&gt;nceded that while ,
: many fanners this year have :
.... seen net incomes rise to record .

••

CHRISTMAS BLOUSES

BUBBLE
BATH

Watch Us ·Grow! ! !
Thanks For Your
Patronage · Now Putnam County .
M Savi

.,

Storys Run

there.

~ quotas

. l l .,""·

The CERVANTE S

Mr. and Mrs. Ron Gotthardt,Columbus, and their son,
B•·uce, a freshman at Ohio
University, and Mr . and Mrs.
Roger Morgan, Middleport,
were Thanksgiving dinner
guests of Mrs. W. A. Mor,gan .
Bruce made tne o. u . soccer
team this fall .
Mr. a nd Mrs. Ches ter Knight
spent the hoiiday visiti ng Mr.
and Mrs . TerryKnightandson,
Stevie, at Caledonia; and Mr.
and Mrs . Dick Knight at
Wintersvllle.
Mr . and Mrs . Bill Matlack,
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, were holiday
weekend guests or Mr. and
Mrs. George Dallas a nd family
at St . Paris. On Sunday they
visited at Wintersville with Mr .
a nd Mrs . Dick Kriight.
Mrs. Ruth Steele . and
daughter, Rebecca Broderick
have retW'ned from an eightday vacation in Bermuda .
They flew there to visit her son ,
Sgt. Elton Steele and family .
Sgt. Steele will be sta tioned
there a nother two years with

The presmd: that takes the
wear and tear out of

•
••
•

1 - ""

!il coming to

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~th~e:_.=u~-~S~-~M~a~r~in~e=s~._ _ _ _

~Dairymen told

.. ...

:--Jl

Modol KS843

!~il DAV event

guaranteed.
A prominent Egyptian politi·
cal leader said in Cairo
Monday Egypt's army was
~&gt;fuUy prepared" to intervene
if desert truce talks with Israel
!ail to break a deadlock over
troop withdrawals along the
Suez Canal.
Generals from Israel and
Egypt held their nin\h meeting
Monday without any reports of

regain lost territory and Israel
said it would be willing to give
up some occupied lands
provided its security was

~

:::::::::::::::::::::::-:::::::::::.::::;::::;~:~:::::::::::;::~:: :::::::::

\\

By Ualted Press lnternatloaal
• leaders of the Arab world
• worked today on a tough plan
: for using the "oil weapon" to

Console Ste-reo in
Lururious Armoire

AJlon sa1d, however-, Israel
would have to return some of
the Arab territory it captured
in the 1967 war, provided there
is a guarantee of Tel Aviv's
secur·ity.
"Territorial changes will be
nec-essary but the changes
sho uld not be exaggerated,"
Alton said. " The settlement

EACH
WOMEN'S

DRESS
GLOVES

~

EACH

A DISCOUNT

OOARTMtNT STOQ~ .
!

RIPLEY~ POINT PLEASANT. MASON, W.VA.

A wide variety
of
leather
I ike · vinyl
gloves. All sizes.

SILVER BRIDGE SHOPPING PLAZA
And Now In The Putnam Village

-

'•
I

.

. ,. .

I.

I

I

�9 --- Tht•D.III\. sentmei,Muldlt•po•ll'.nlu'ltl\ tl

8 _ Tlw Oall) &amp;nune-1. Mllt(Ut'J.IOrl ~ 1 'mlll'III\ ll , '\ tl\ .!I. 11.71

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!

Meigs
Property

Transfers

B!l~ mess

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

•

Geor gf' 1 ht:o1ss, Ca rol The1ss
to George The1ss, Carol The1ss,
Sec 17 Sutt on
Clara Wolfe dec t o Dons
Wolfe, Hennan Wolfe , Sad1r
Bo1kms , Eva Pickens, Cert of

trans , Racme
Eva P1 c kens, Albert B
Botkm, Sad1e M Botkm.
Herman Wolfe, Mildred to
Dons Wolfe. Lot 21, Racme
Dons Wolfe to DenniS

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

S169S
1970 CHEVELLE MALIBU
door gold fln•sh spotless clean •n tenor V 8 engrne
automal•c power s tecrmg rad•o A honey of a buy
! '

1970 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill
S1295
4 door V 8 automatic power steenng radto good ltres
blue fm tsh spotlcs::. •nlenor
1968 CHEV BELAIR
.:1 Door V 8 automahc power s teenng fa ctory atr
good ltres real clean mtenor sharp blue fm• sh
$990

Dolores

Casper,

Robert

Casper. 6 acres, 100 acre Lot
264 , Letart
Olive V Talbott by Randall
R Talbott, atly m fact, to
James J Proffitt, 17 Ac res,
Lebanon
Steven Eblin, Wanda L
Eblin to Manon A Hall,

Parcels, Salisbury

Harrisonvi lJe
Society Ne~ s
Jack Warner and w1fe are
presentmg

the

Presbyterian

Church wtth a ptano m memory
of hiS Sister, Esta Larktns The
event w1ll be Dec 2 at 10 30
a m Mrs Oliva Cotterill will
rectle a poem wntten by Esta
Larkins entitled "The Little
White Church back home "
Mrs Warner w1ll play and Mr
Warner Will smg Everyone IS

mvlted
Mr and Mrs Robert Hall
have purchased the Bob Welsh
property and w1ll move there

soon, better known as the John
Blackwood home
Mr and Mrs M A Epple
spent an evemng w1th Ava
Gilkey recently
Mr and Mrs Jumor Payne
and children had supper w1th
Sally
Welsh
Wednesday

evemng
Junior Payne was able to go
back to work this week after a
stay m tM hospital
Mrs Alta Eastman was able
to leave the hospital and was
returned to the rest home m

:syracuse
Mrs Judy Ste1mtz spent a
day helpmg Sally Welsh get
ready to move to Columbus
She also called on the Junwr

' Paynes
Mr and Mrs K C Welsh
were dmner guests of the
Denzil Welshes of Rutland
Mr and Mrs Larry Clark

: and daughters , Tanra and
Peny of Chester were dmner
guests of the Bob Clarks on
Thanksg1vmg In the afternoon
they called on Roy W1semans,
Ava Gilkey and the Earl
Star keys
Mr and Mrs Clinton Gtlkey,
Tad and Karen of Albany
called on Ava Gilkey Thursday

afternoon
Dmner guests of the Jun1or
Paynes were Mr and Mrs
Donald Weaver and Sally
Welsh and James Cheadle and

son, Columbus, and Sally
Welsh and children Thursday
Mr and Mrs Robert Alkire
VtSlted the Charles Alk1res at

Racme on Wednesday evemng
Mr and Mrs M A Epple
had Thanksg1vmg dmner w1th
h1s daughter, Jamce Waldeck
of Glouster then drove on to
Zanesville for the weekend as
Mrs Epple's grandson un-

derwent

surgery

for

ear

trouble
Bob Blizzard of Denver,

Opportuntbes

W.'lnled to own &lt;Hid operate
ca •ld Y &amp; confec tion ve nd1ng
route Me1gs County .and
s urroundmg area Pleasant
bu-smess H1gh prof1t 1tems
Ca n start part 11me Age or
Nf)e rtence not 1mportant
Requ1r es car and S99S 00 to
S 1 885 00 cash Investment
For deta1l s wrtte and 1nctude
your phone number
Department BVV
3938 Meadowbrook Rd
St Lou1 s Park. MN 55416

~-----------------"
WILL do sewmg rn my home
Phone 992 5866
11'21Dtc
~-----~-~----

OPEN EVES 8 00 PM.
POMEROY, OHIO

CARPE NTER work masonry
work ~eneral remode lrng by
.
hour or con tract Phone 993
L--------------------------~-35 11
11 2 261p
WANT ADS
---------~---MINI BACKHOE servrce Atso
INFORMATION
waterlmes footer s, tr enches
DEADLINES
Cha rl es R Hatfte1 d Rou t e 1
S PM Day Before Publlcat10n
Boll Wade, Auct1oneer
Rutland Ohio Phon e 742
Monday Deadline 9 a m
60 92
Cancel tat ron ~ Correct ro ns
11 13 IBip
will be accepted until 9 am tor
Are You Movmg?
Day of Publlca t ron
REGULATIONS
Cons1dermg
The Publrsher reserv es the
An Auctoon?
rrght to ed 1t or re1ect any ads
deemed Ob1ect1ona1
The
WANTED for Hol ze r Med 1cat
publ rshe r writ not be respon
Center 0 1110 L1censed h rgh
B&amp;G Audion Athens 0 .,
srble for more than one m
pressure borler Operat or
will pay cash for your ent1re
correc t rnsert1on
Apply rn person at the per
RATES
sonnel oH1ce or call A46 5105
household or any good
For Want Ad Servrce
11 27 3tc
mtscel
taneous
•tem
s
or
w
tll
5 cents per Word one msert 1on
-------~--~--hold an auctton for you at
Mrn1mum Charge $1 00
CAR hop wanted also k.t chen
14 cents per word three
your res1dence reasonable
help Apj)ly rn person Crows
consecutrve rnsert 1ons
Steak Hou se
26 cen ts per word sr x con
11 27 10tc
You'll hke our competent,
secut1ve 1nsertrons
-------------~
dependable serv1ce
25 Per Cent D1scount on pad
EX PERIENCED Men and
ads and ads pard w rthr n 10
Call Athens, Oh1o
Women - Men and women
days
w1th skills that com pare w rth
593-5035
Collect
CARD OF THANKS
Navy
occupat1ons
may
&amp; OBITUARY
qual•fY for th e Navy s D1rect
$2 00 for SO word mrn
Pro curement Pet1y Offtcer
1mum Each add1t1onal word FLETCfi.,ER P ano Se rv1 ce
Program (Example Lathe
3c
Tur11ng &amp; Re patr Ca ll 698
O perators
P lu mbers
BLIND AD!t
773 1
Elec
tr
rcrans
Accountrng
Add1t1onal 25c Charge per
11626fp
Cl
erk
Carpenter
Secretary
Advert .sement
e tc ) Sta rt •ng pay S392 to
OFFICE HOURS
$5 38 w1th hoUSing allowance
KOSCOT KOSMETICS B. WIGS
8 30 a m to 5 00 p m Da ly
from $122 to $161 per month
Specral s each month We wrll
8 30. a m
to 12 00 Noon
plus free medrcat and denta l
g la dly show you our lme of
Saturday
com m rssary and P X benef •ts
Kosm et1cs 1n the pr rvacy of
and all G l benef1ts for rr
your home at your con
drv1dua1
family
Good
ven ence Remember Chrrst
promotions travel educat ron
ma s Is not far away so phone
opportun 1tres
and early
He len Jane Brown 992 511 3
reltrement Interested men
11 9Hc
and women contact the Navy
Recrudrng
Statton
22 1
Co lumbus Road
Athens
Ohro tel 593 3566
1126Dic
Call
Steven c Snowden
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
553 Russell Sl
(Gravel Hrtl)
Mr and Mrs Roy Pooler of
Mtddleport, Ohto
Chester VISited Mr and Mrs
Phone 992 7155
1973
MOBILE
Home
3
be droom 1111 bath furnrshed
Floyd Norns Sunday af.
or unfurn• shed lnQu1re at P &amp;
ternoon
J Odds &amp; Ends Sho p M1d
dleport 9tr115 after5call992
M1ss Becky Profitt of Belpre NOH UN TlNG or trespassmg on
3509
my farm rn Ball Run Dale
and Jeff Donohew v1s1ted Mr
)120tfc
Lr ttle
and Mrs
Roy Donohew
11 25 6tp -- ----~ ---~- -........ - - - - &gt;AOBILE Home n Middleport
Saturday evenmg
Adul ts only Phone 992 5592
PIANO
tunma
&amp;
reoarr
nq
Mrs Allee Balser of Letart
11 20 tfc
Lane Dan 1els 259 Broadway
was a Sunday dmner guest of
M1ddleport Phone 992 2082
11 18 12tp FURNI S HED two bedroom
Mr and Mrs Jack Ables
mobrle home for rent rn
Mr and Mrs Don Bell spent NOH UNT IN G or trespaSSing on
Rutland
Call evenmgs or
our farms day or n•ght Dallas
Wednesday mght With Dr and
Sunday 992 3429
DeBord and Goldie Wyant
11 15 6tp
Mrs Earl Grunm at Columbus
Rt 4 Pomeroy
11 25 6tc
on Thursday Mr Bell and
$15 AND UP 4 steep1 ng rooms
~----- ---- -- ~Bruce Hart and Dr Grurun HAVE YOUR trophy mounted
wrth k•tchen a nd l)v tng room
Clean and pr1vate New and
deer heads small an1mal s
enJoyed pheasant and rabbit
modern TV and carpet
and
brrds
Howard
Brrchfleld
huntmg at Washmgton Court
throughout
baths
w tth
Mulberry Street Rutland
showers Mason 773 5580
Phone 742 6834
House TM Bells also vts1ted
11 25 6tp
11 26 tfc
their daughter, Lorna Bell, a
student
at
OhiO
State $200 REWARD for rnformat•on PR lVATE meetmg room for
any organ1zat1on phone 992
leadrng to the arrest and
Umvemty rn Columbus
3975
convrctr on of per son or per
Mr and Mrs Hoyt Ferguson
3 11 tfc
sons who damaged the nght
front
fender
of
my
1969
black
of Camp Conley, W Va , were
Ford LTO on Nelson Road 3 AND 4 ROOM furniShed and
Sunday guests of Mr and Mrs
unfurn ished
apartments
Rutland Oh o The car was
Phone 991 5434
parked on the s1de of the road
Homer Warner
4 12 tf c
Phone Carl Mor-ns Rutland
Mr and Mrs Arnold Hupp
742 469 1
11 27 3tc TRAI LER
and son, Edward, Mr and Mrs
Mason W
Va
coUple only phone 99 2 5693
Jun Hupp VISited Mrs Elsie REVIVAL at Chester Church of
l\ 16tf c
God November 2.~; to Dec 2 -------------Hupp G1bbs, a patient at
7 30 p m Spec1a l s rng 1ng each
tra1ler rdeat for couple
Umvers1ty
Hosp1tal
'"
even•ng Evange l 1st Rev SMALL
10
mtles
north of Pomeroy
Chester
Estep
from
Columbus, Sunday
$7 5 per month Call 992 7479
ChilliCOthe Oh iO Everybody
11 23 tfc
Mr and Mrs Robert Sm1th
welcome
11 27 Stc FURNISHED housetra1ter tor
Sr attended the Jun1or MISs
Pageant at Pomeroy Their
rent Prefer constructron men
only
L•nens laundered
granddaughter,
Valene
Contact after 4 30 p m
Johnson, Racme, was one of ' coRNER cupboards wall
weekly except Sa turday and
sun day
Helen
Rrggs
cupboar
ds
c
hests
old
guns
the contestants and was second
any c ondil 10n Also blue
Rutland Oh•o
11 27 6tp
runnerup
decorated stoneware Wr1te
0
Box
44
Mart
•nsburg
P
Roscoe Scarberry has been
Oh 10 43935 or ca II 1 484 4440
returned to h1s home after
after 7 p m
8 8 90tc
bemg a pat1ent at Holzer
3 BEDROOM house w1th bath
Medical Center
recreatron room utrllty room
NO 1 COPPER 70c Radrators
and washroom
carport
33c brass 3('1c batterres 90c
carpettng m l1vmg room. also,
M A Halt Re edsvr lle Phone
378 6249
electrrc range 1618 Lrncoln
Colorado called hiS aunt, Ava
Heights Available Dec 1
11 8 tfc
Gilkey to tell her h1s Dad, Vern
Cal l 949 2891
11 27 6tc
for
auction ,
Blizzard, was m the hospital WANTED
household goods Tools most
for removal of cataracts
anythtng of value Wtll buy or
sell on commrss Jon Will haul
Mr and Mrs Joe Carsey
Call ?92 3354 or 992 2792
were dmner guests of the Paul
Hayman s
7 25 tfc LOSE werghf wtth New Shape
Tablets and Hydrex Water
Stemetz fam1ly m Pomeroy
OLD furntture oak tables
Pills at Dut1on Drugs m
clocks tee boxes brass beds,
Mtddleport and Nelson Drug
dishes
or
complete
11 27 3tp
Turner
households Wr1te M
D
M11ler Rt 4 Pomeroy Ohro , TWO 735 x 14 snow t.res Used
call 992 6271
one season S30 Phone 965
__.
513tfc
3624 Chester
WA~I-l ':t&lt;ti:-1!
11 27 4tc
STE::L cast1ron etc Ca ll 985
lfJSllF.ANC.E"
4297
EXCELSIOR Salt Works E
11 25 tfc
Main St Pomeroy All k•nds
---------~-~-~
of salt water pellets water
nuggets block salt and own
Oh 10 R rve r Salt Phone 992
BLUE TICK coon hOund •n
3891
v tct nrty of Kmgsbury $100
6 5 tfc:
Reward Phone 992 6959
11 25 6tp
197 3 S lEREORad to com
bmatron w1fh 8 track built rn
take over payments of S7 55
per month or pay $101 50 Call
992 533 I
SMALL tn co lored female dog
10 21 ttc
cla •m or needs good home
Phone 985 4244
-- -------~--- 11 21 6tc KNAPP Shoes order now to
msure pre Xmas del•very
Phone 992 5324
11 18 tfc
APPLE GROVE

Nottce

Help Wanted

Apple Grove

News, Events

For Rent

-.----~---

--------------

Wanted To Buy

For Rent or Sale

For Sale

by Dick

CARNIVAL

______ ________
lost

Found

Mr and Mrs Gene Webster
and daughter, Amta, of
Cleveland spent Tuesday
through Fr~day w1th Mr and
Mrs. Roy Donohew.
Mrs Florence Smith attended grange off1cers conference at Rock Sprmgs on
Monday evemng

,.

011

"Henry round out you people were nght about 1! be1ng
better JUSt to say nothmg after an auto aCCider! 1"

In 1956, President Eisenhower
ISsued a statement denymg
differences over the Suez Canal
had weakened Amer~can-Br~t­
ISh·French accord over NATO

'

.•

--------------

1973 ZIG ZAG sewmg machine
Th •s mach ne darns em
brotders
overcasts and
monograms all wtthout at
tachments Pay balance of
S41 50 or pay S6 a month Call
992 5331
10 21 tfc

-------------6 TRACK stereo console , due to

damage rn Sh1pment Will sell
for small balance of $99
or
payments
of
$6 99
per month Call 992 5331

Business Services

ICE AND !&gt; NOW
tor lown~hrp~
town s .1r)d busrne!&gt;ses tn
bulk'!! nnd bags lor tle a11d
'&gt;now E:xcels•or ~alt Works
Phon{' 991 3891
II 11 lfc
':loalt

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

1970 BUICK LaSabre 'l dr hard
top v.nyl lop aulo P S •
P B good condttion $1 DM
tO h p
Cub cadet S395
Hom e lrlc !:. pa ce Heater w rlh
thermoslat ~110 Phone 949
1134 or Raymond Rowe End
ot B-roadway Jn Ratrne
11153tc

a VOLUME encyctopedta 1884
very old tee p1ck from Davrs
Ice 1911 Frngerna•l cttp an
old fl oo r lamp Phone 992

5655

25 3tp

ll

WE HAVE all your upholstery
needs
Burlap
den•m
cambr•c foam glue z1ppers
tackmg strrp spnngs and
cl1ps
chrp board
button
tw ine sewrng thread legs
upholslery books dacron
webbrng sp rtng twrne tacks
welt co rd cotton s wtv el
bases and foam foam foam
Pomeroy Recovery 622 East
Ma rn St r ee t Pom eroy Phone
991 7554
11 20 26tc
------~--- --

S-T·R·E·T·C·H
YOUR BUILDING
D-0-L-L·A·R
With Ski lied
Craftsmanship

Lmcoln H1ll Pomeroy , 0

MOORE &amp; SONS

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

BRUSH HOG~
9Y2 5a58 00

4x5 ft

phone

7 15 tfc
- ----~--~---- --

.

Roofing • Spouhng
K1tchens &amp; Bathrooms
Complete Remodeling

__

~--~

Area s Most
Re as onable Pnce s

FURNITURE
Stop In and See
Floor D•~!aY. c

742-6273

FREE EST

From 1he taroest
Bulldozer Radtator to
~ma1 1 est Heater Lore
Nathan 81ggs
Rad1ator Spec1al1st

SMITH NELSON
lt10TORS, INC._

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

WOOD TRUSSES

"'

Built to Your •Specs.
Dehvered to Job Site

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO
7U SSS4 ,
Mason, W Va .

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
•5.55

RUSSELL'S
AUTO TRIM
992-2839

On Most Amen can Cars

Co. Road 5

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992 -2094

Pomeroy .Home &amp; Auto
Open 8 T1ll
Monday thru Saturday
606 E Mam , Pomeroy , O

OPEN
Roger Hysell s
Garage near Crossroads on
St R t 124 all m e chan •cat
work lncludrng automatrc
tran smrSS •ons Monday thru
Sat 8 30 a m to 6 p m Phone
99 2 5682 garage or 992 7121
resrden ce
10 28 26tc

AUTOMOBILE 1nsurance been
c ance ll ed?
Lost
your
operators lrcense Call 992
7418
6 15 ttc

----~----_.,..--

C BRADFORD Auct1oneer
Complete Serv1ce
Phone 949 3821
Racme Ohro
Cr1 tt Bradford
5 1 tfc

- --------------

EXCAVATING dozer loader
and backhoe work
sept1c
tanks tnstatled dump trucks
and to boys for htre wrll haul
fill d1rt top so•l limestone
and gravel Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers day phone 992 7089
n 1ght phone 992 3525 or 992
5232
2 11 ttc
FOR FREE estimates on
aluminum s1d1ng
Storm
Doors and Windows Car
ports Mllrquees and R!!illng
Phone
Charles
L1ste
Syracuse Ohlo Carl Jacob
Sales Represenfat rve V V
Johnson and Son Inc
6 22 tfc

Mobtle Homes For Sale

It's Snow T1re Tome!

CO-OP COUNTRY
SOUIRE 120
Pos1t1ve Stop and Go In Mud
&amp; Snow

ALL SIZES IN STOCK
Let Us Install Now•
SUPER SERVICE STA
... ~ Jack W Carsey, Mgr
~ Phone 992 9932
TWIN
NEEDLE SE WING
MACHINE S 1973 Model Jn
walnut stand All features
built 1n to make fancy des1gns
and do s tretch sew 1ng Also
buttonholes blmd hems etc
S43 34 cash prtce or terms
available Phone 992 2984
11255tc
VACUUM CLEANERS Electro
Hygfene New Demonstrators
has all cleanmg attachments
plus the new Electro Suds for
shampoo.ng carpet Only
S27 50 cash pr1ce or terms
available Phone 992 2984
11 25 5tc
STEREO - Am Fm Rad10 a
track tape comb•nat •on 4 way
speaker
sound
system
Balance $107 52 or use our
budget terms Call 992 3965
11255tc

Auto Sales

DISPERSAL
SALE
28 New Homes To Be
SOLD
At
USED
and
REPOSSESSED
PRICES
To make room for the
many
new
un1ts
arroving m Jan .. 1974.
DELAYED
DELIVERY
AVAILABLE
Woth the excephon of a
small depos1t.

NO MONEY
NEEDED UNTIL
JANUARY 1974
1 YEAR
GUARANTEE
BEST SERVICE
IN
OHIO VALLEY

MILLER
HOMES
DOWNTOWN
BELPRE
OHIO

1962 MERCURY 4 door ex
cellent condrt•on 58 000 ac
tual mrtes extra snow fires
mounted
Harry
Swan
Portland Oh•o 843 2223
1115tfc

--==--=-------·~vi.-; can be
done by appOintment only at
present t1me due to Illness n
family
Phone for
ap
porntment 742 3232
11251fc

----------=- -~-~

SEWING MACHINES Repa 1r
servtce , all makes 992 1284
The Fabrtc Shop Pomeroy
Authorr zed S1nger Sales and
Servr ce We Sharpen Scrssors
3 29 tfc

Pets For Sale
MALE poodl-e puppy black
mmtature Ph;,ne 992 5858
T
1113tfc

l

WIN AT BRIDGE

Class will out in slam bid

'-

BY PAUL CRABTREE

"•w

llrottt·l

ThL" Ttmcs fhey Arc A 't hangmg

H.1p

1 want to t&lt;tlk ,IIXJut H0\13rd Coscll toda)
.
But to unt:re1stand Ho\\ard Cosell, }uu have to underswnd
Crest toothpaste. and I d best t&lt;t1k about Crest toothpaste first, If

1 \\,ml to

~et

marncd m a wh1t.e gown, ve1l and orange

blossoms. but my guy diSagrees bc&gt;&lt;ause he says the last two

About I\\O decades ago, Crest appeared on the scene, and 11
\\as clearly the best toothpaste on the market Procter &amp;
Gamble. the b1g Clncmnat l soap people , ach1eved a s1gmfJcant,
patented break4hrough "1th a stannous fluonde compound that
real!) d1d prevent ca\1tles The prest1g10uS American Dental
Assn endorsed Crest
All that remamed \\a S to tell the Mltmg Mrld of this sur
cess And P&amp;G was very b1g m advert1smg, so that appeared
easy

He s 20 and J'm 16, so I don 't thmk 1t's such a put-&lt;lown for
h1m do yuu' - WAITI NG IMPATIENTLY BUT WAI1!NG
W!BW
Heavens no' We thmk 1t"sgreat that you ' re WIBW. and we're
~u for the ve 1l and ora nge blossoms, but we wonder 1! your f1 anee
1s ma ture enough for them
And at 16,areyou' - IIELEN AUDSU E

+++

It wasn t easy at aU It seems that other toothpastes - m~
eluding brands made by Procter &amp; Gamble - lkld made &gt;UCh

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
l LJngerte
.tram

5 TrJd ent
10 Romaman
CitY
11 lm por

tune

NOTE FROM HELEN Since a few of you readers will
compare my publiShed attitude toward the now-famous
• Pr•sc•lla, ·( that 26-year-&lt;&gt;ldvlrgln I called ' PriSSy "), with the
above reply, my answer m advance
lt"s a far cry from unpabent-16 to repressed-28 One knows
she'snot yet ready, the other LS too ready yet w1th her " No's" H

extr avagant clauns for themselves that no one really believed
that a remarkable ne\\ product had hit the market
The stor) had a happy endmg, but 1t was a long s tory, •ndced
Crest finally got to the top of the sales charts, but only by resortrng to the shoddiest of advert!Smg ca mpaigns ( • Look , Mom, no
caVJtles'" ),and mtlhons spent on TV ne\\spapers, and the like
t Toda) , other products probably are JUSt as good as Crest, smce
patents exptre, and the clear super10nty of Crest \~as short~
lived )
Now com es Howard Cosell, a different breed of cat to the
world o f broadcast sports reportmg A cerlif•able mtellectual
he, too, has a secret mgrechent that makes him uruque among his
peers Lruth
You 'd think the great Amen can sports tan would run pell
mell to flip on the TV set every t1me the dour, acerbiC Cosell
brightened the screen -•f that 's the \\ord - wah h1s ver) spec1al
product of telling the truth as he saw 11
But the sports fans, a t th e outset, didn 't want the truth They
had been ra1sed o n pap the Junk fed to them da ily by sports
reporters and broadcasters \\ho exto lled the local heroes as
paragons of Vlrtue Whealles..,atmg, girl shunmng, loquorabhorrmg AII-Amen cans
Who cared 1f the play-b)iJiay man was a verbal prost itute ,
w1th his every word controlled by franchLse owner of the local
team ' Who wanted to r ead that the noble coach specialized m
teachmg how t o pia) d1rty, and r ecruiting 1llegall)' Who would
sull) the memory of the urunortal Babe Ruth w1th the unvarmshed truth that he "as a bit of a dunw1t, spendmg most of
his off-duty hours, booWig, gamblmg, and womamzmg '
Like the folk s \\ho \\ere hooked on Amm1.&lt;Jent or lpan a,
when Crest appeared the Amencan sports fan JUst d1dn t \\ant to
let go of thetr trea s urer unages- but Cosell persisted, and made

+++

Dear Helen and Sue
You faulted a mother for "snoopmg " through her daughter 's
dresser drawers and wastepaper ba s ket The first, maybe, but
the second - well, here 's my s1de
I am a •snoopy " mother of 12 children , aU still home The
e ntir e fam1ly knows I check out the wastebaskets, and approv es
I've salvag ed enough loot from them to make them all grateful
for the fmal go-through
car keys , deodorant, fmgerna•l poliSh , panty hose, are JUSt a
few of the 1tems that fmd their way to the wastebaskets acCidentally
The clincher came when I found my daughter's expens1ve
wmt watch m her wastebasket It had fallen from her des k when
she put her books down
Our children are mstructed to throw very personal stulf m
t he fireplace or kitchen trash They are ever so grateful for a SNOOPY MOM

31]]~~®/k;,J -''-' .-1 , _
Lnscramble these foor Jumblet,
one letter to each square to
form four ordmary words

NORTH
• J 103

'+K

.J

14 At cu t

; Wntten

rate pr1ces
12 wds &gt;

15
16
l7
18
20
21
22
23
25

- canto
Sea e agle
Bnny
Clemency
Type of
cap

AbJ ect
T emfy
- down
( moder
a ted }
26 Yo 27 Dmy by

6N T

Pass

'./1rqrl 11. T1·,1f01d . S1
erok·'r
llU M!'Chc~tll( Sltr'l't
Pomeroy. Oh1o 1)769

~

DOWN
1 Pasc hal
sy mbol

RU.SU'

I I ....J---,-.,D:r~l ...,

Im~vrA.&lt;.J J

but true , m rar too man) cases

not ror thosesmgled out for cntlctsm, but for CoseU
But so !Tllghty •ere his glfts of analysis , hts blWlt delivery,

and so accurate "'ere hLS bart:s and hLS refusal to treat Amenca s
fav orite games as anythmg more than ~hat they \\ere - games
- that he began to prevail, and developed resp ec~. tf not af
fec t1on
1think respect for Cosell!S gomg to g row, and more like him
will appear on the sports scene, which w1ll be better for hls
comm~ But on the day before I \\Tole tillS, Cosell - ever seekrng
ne• 1dols to destroy- unleashed a br oadside on newspapers and
TV Oh , well

TRUJJS f

"

TAXI BUSINESS - 3 cabs 1n
good condttton 2 have power
Pomeroy LocatiOn $6500 00
35 ACRES - 4 bedroom home
bath basement w1th garage
and two barns
Ask1ng
$17 500 00
SYRACUSE 2 bedrooms
bath
nrce kitchen, full
basement and large garden
Only $9 500 00
POMEROY N1ce sturdy
older home w1th 3 bedrooms
· bath central heat and atr
Modern kitchen w1th large
drnmg 2 porches and 2 car
garage
NEW LISTING - 2 bedroom
bungalow bath. new gas f a
furnace Full basement, and
mce lot for only $10 000 00
BIG THINGS WILL SOON
BEGIN TO HAPPEN IN THE
COUNTY
BUY
NOW
BEFORE IT'S TOO LATE WE
HAVE MANY GOOD BUYS

One letter Slmply stands fo r another In th1s s;~mp le A us
used !or the three L s X for the two 0 b etc S1ngle letters
apostrophes the length and for mat mn of the wo rds are all
hmts Each day the code letters are d1fferent

~ow arn.nr• tho carclod 1ott&lt;ra

CRYPTOQUOTES

0
L:==----==~==============:_~'~":'';abdbythe~~eanoon
to rorm the 1urpriH anawer. u

WJD SRWB

~Prill~tii=SUIPII$I==AHSWBI=lln::.:.......,__,l ''( I I l l ]"

USLVLUDMV

Lr

GLJBSC

(Amt•~n

't nl~:rdn •

\

Jumbl~• AIDlO

MONIY

HINDER

YOTAGE

Am ... cr The good name •he f~l u:ht-n 11ht.'

got mamed-

MAIDEN"

lomoNOW'

carpelmg big klfchen with
tots of cabrnets, 1h acre of
ground Rac•ne Oh•o Call
949 4996
911tfc

Jacob'

• Play did mean the d1f·
ference of a lol oflMPs 1n th1s

f1r st round S\.\' 'ss team

&lt;JUST &gt;JrN&gt;~
ANYWAY.

LEAVE EVERYrniNG 10
ME , AND YOl/1',01'7"

llllL~£'0 !:lAO&lt; "TO

SCJ11..JVL I

WEN~

ecSOR17Yl

GO MD&lt; TO

NEW'rORK!

and was down one
The expert declarer knew
of a better play thai would
work 1f Wes l held K 10 or
,Q·IO doubleton 1n clubs He
led a low club toward dummy
1at tnck two
Wesl rose "1th h1 s qu een
.and led a second spade Now
,South entered dummy w1th a
heart and led the Jack of
c lub s It d1dn ' t matter
whether or not East covered

ALlEY OOP
-AN '-.o: MAH !&gt;16
FRIGH"rENED
FRIEND-

MAHAN'
WIFE!!

West ':; ten wa s gomg to be

1

A'l-1 ISTH'
MOl"HER IN· lAW
OI=A&amp;l~!!

THER'E
GO ON

pickled and &amp;luth was sure of
three c lub tn cks
The bad d1amond break
didn 't hurt He had 12 tnclls

;wtth jwtt three diamonds
I

comln~ In
• N~, 'fV1:iJ'41'Ji It

t

~Tt:JtPHJSE

ASSN l

'

'

I

INFORMATION ABOUT:

u:amJ1JttlU n

JOB OPPORTUNITIES
SOCIAL SECURITY
CONSUMER PROTECTION

•

! 1'he lndd!ng ha• bet&lt;n
North

West

AND
GREAT COUNTRY

·

THE BORN LOSER
•

l. .I-ffi

L•

rass

l..

Pass

?

r~ass

1

You hold

1

What do yoo dQ oow':'

~KH5 ·K~3Z

STEREO
92.1 FM
WMPO

Ea~

27
South

+K

1•

X SORTA DOUBT
StiiUffl{ WILL TAKE

i&gt;E'LL TAKE
IT FER
ME. DOC·

I GOT M'f
OWN SPEOAL
GIRL'! WA'IS

I'J\'\ll'

• 511:&gt;11/MAN f'RACT ICE I IMON

THIS TERRIBLE·T~HIJ'
MEDICINE, LOWEEZ'fBllT 'IE CAlli TRi'

IHE '51L~ER FLAKE5,:_~ND ~of

PI:ACTICE EVE~~ 115...., IF I'M
LPJ"E THE COACH 11/IU. l&lt;ILL ME I

104~3

• A - Hid throe orotn&amp;lllJI Your

)lart•!!r b sh••i•c creat
.ijreoclh but you .-14 •aot ,.

f•t fer the ••oe trldL (&amp;ODe

--Middlopori-Pomeroy

'

I

I

LD

C S I Z C
EIVM

L

DSLW

E L W ' C
ZSLD

S M

- BIMDS M

Yest&lt;rday•s CrypiO&lt;(UOI&lt; THE YOUNG MAN WHO HAS
NOT WEPT IS A SAVAGE, A N D THE Ol;D MAN WHO W1LL
NOT LAUGH IS A FOOL - GEORGE SANTAYANA
(© 19?3 K lnf Future• S yndacat.e, lne )

Pass

CANtT NOT

Here's how to work it
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

IT MAY ~E 11-115 ON
A OOLFER WHEN
HES IN II,

[J

Thus spake Cosell , and millwns of fans responded with hate -

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-

South

match Pomt count b1ddmg
Ina de 11 easy for both declar
ers to reach SIX not rump The
t 3-3 3 dislribUilons and the
wa sted JaCks 1n spades and
hearts left declarer w1lh no
good play for h1 s contract
The mexpert d ec la re r
decided that h1s only hope
would be to fmd a d oubleton
kmg ·queen of club s or a
smgleton kmg or queen 1n the
East hand Then all else he
would need would be a 3-3
d1amond break He laid down
)us ace of clubs at tmk two

36 lncarna
dine
37 Exhaust

valley

The lords of baseball \\ e r e consp~rmg to make a fm e game
deadly dull Muhanuned All deserved to k eep hiS Iitle The
National Football League \\a s rummg 1\self \Hih pia) ·It-safe,
conservalive football Muhammed A11 was out of shape and well
past hiS prune San D1ego had rotten franchises tn football and
baseball Certam pia) ers " ere d ogglllg 1t "1th les s~ha n

'

TUPPERS PLAINS I
story frame 3 bedrooms,
bath , dtntng room ntce
kttchen all eleclnc, garage
and covered breezeway 1
acre 1 year old and hard
wood floors S19 000 00
POMEROY - Just out of
town 2 story frame, 4 ,
bedroc.ms bath 1 paneltng
and ttle some tarpehng
coal
heat,
1 36
acre
$9,500 0()
SYRACUSE - 2 years old 3
bedrooms , bath
uttllty
room , kttchen has lots of
cabmets and range nice
d1n1ng area . hardwood
floors, carpeted tn living
room and hall All electnc
Carport
and
storage
$21,000 00
NEW RT 7 - 1112 acres, 2
wells, approved for septlc
tanks Ideal for homes or
trailers Blacktop road In
$4,500 00
POMEROY - 2 story frame
2 bedrooms, new bath, new
furnace and hot water tank,
range tn kitchen, some
carpetmg Basement wtth
ulllily 16 500 00
HAVE
A
SELLING
PROBLEM• LET US HELP
YOU
HENRY E CLELAND
BROKER
992-2259
If no answer 992 2568

laborer

sktrt
Z7 Awaken
(2 "d' )

41 Secluded

Pass
Openmg lea d- 9•

TEAFORD

Peter

med1c

25. Ballet

34 Mex•·
ca n

cou rse

3\ T .

8'~ Os\l.ald &amp; Jam~

19 P1am st

Whodun~ t

37 ConHag
ratiOn
38 Spot
39 L1kew1se
40 Western

QIO
Q4
• A 984

Pass

Klelne
Nacht
mUSlk"

:!4

30 Kmd of

opera

prtces

32 L uau
hak 1ng
pit
33 Su mmi t
35 Dmner

'+AA

East

_

29 !'rag·
rnent

Hve
31 Tennes
seean

J4

North

.

22 Adflatlc
wmd
23 Cut

denva~

27

\\o est

(3 wds }
9 Acqu1tbl
12 Gouged
out
16 Mozart .s

product

\'either\ ulnerable

Real Estate For Sale

Yesterday•• Answer

28 Macaw
29 Wood
ashes

.AKQ

'

letter
8 Mohon
less

Camsay

52
WEST
EAST
.98 76
.54 2
Y862
.,9 753
+J98 5
+1 07
... QtO
... K763
SOUTH 10&gt;

I

3 Stopped
(4 wds)
4 Nether
lands
commune

5 Dressy .
6 Copper

_

1

DEAD S 1OCK - Will remove
at a reasonable char9e Call
245 5514
8 23 901c

Tempest"
character

13 " The Last

K 6 32

G &amp; E appltance reparr Phone
at the shop 992 3802 Qr 949
4254
112626tp

:t "The

enter
tamrnent

so dom g

maxunum effort Sacnlege

NOTF: TO SUE Glad you Silld thai
l foWld one of my
sca r ves m your wastebasket the other day - and so long as we
have a pack-rat dog, I 'll contmue to "snoop " I But don 't worry I'll never read your throwaways 1 - II EI.EN

sho" 1m !:itlll a vlrgm. and he doesn 't want hiS fnends knowtng
that Hfter four years of us knowmg each other, I st1ll really a.Jil

that makes any SE"nse

111

lh llt •l• ·•· :mol

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

'
I

Generation Rap
'

enemtes

ll&lt;&gt;ar Mom
"llianks for catch~n~ us up We .OOuld hovo: sa1d,
"'Was tebal;ket-&lt;:heck IS only snoopmg when • parent makes like
the CIA Otherwose 1t can be helpful " - SUE

----~ ~-------'-

-------------2 BEDROOM house , 3 years old,

For Sale or Trade

:a

SMALL house
completely
furnrshed Bachelors hrde
away Phone 992 5786
11 27 7tc

--------------

1913 ZIG ZAG sewmg machlne
Take over 8 payments of SS 25
per month or d •scount for 1972 175 KAWASAKI for guitar
ampl1frer Phone 992 7270
cash Ca ll 992 5311
11 A lfc
11 27 6tc

&amp; THINGS

Cry Rape' 8 10 Performance 20 33
19 00 - Polt ce Story 7 4 15 Marcus Wet by M D 6 13 News 70 ,
r
Our Street 33
10 30 - Woman JJ
1) JO - NewsJ 4 6 8 10,13 15 Janakr33
II 30 _.. Johnny Carson 3 4 15 D•ck. Cavett 6 Movies The
1
Nak ed Jungle 8 1 • In Old Chicago 10
A Htgh Wmd m
r Jama1ca
13
1 00 - Tomorrow 3 4 Drck Cavett 13
1:00 - News 4
2.:.30 - News 13
•
1
WEDNESDAY NOV 28 1973
b 00 - Sunnse Semrnar 4 Sacred Heart 10
~ 15 - Urban League 10
6 10 ~ Farm Report 13
~ 25 - Paul Ha(vey 13
6 30 - F1ve Minutes to Ltve By 4 News 6 B•ble Answers 8 The
r
Story 13
~ 35 - Columbus Today 4
6 45 - Corncob Report 3 Farmt•me 10
? 00 - Toda y J 4 15 CBS News 8 10 Romper Room 6, Flrnt
r s tones l3
7 30 - New Zoo Revue6 Rok cy &amp; Butlwrnkle 13
18 00 - New Zoo Revue 13 Sesame St 33 Lass1e 6 Capfa1n
1
Kangaroo 8 10
18 30 - Otck Van Dyke 13 Huck and Yog16
55 - News 13
9 00 - Paul D1xon 4 Fnendly Junctton 10 AM 3 Brady
Bunch 6 Abbott and Costello 8 Cover to Cover 33 Movte
' Never Too Late lJ Phil Donahue 13
9 30 - Secret Storm 8 M•c haels &amp; Co 6 To Tell the Truth 3
9 55 - Chu ck White Reports 10
10 00 - Ornah Shore 3 15 Jo kers Wtld 10 a
O 30 - Battle J 4 15 , S10 000 P yram•d 8 10 M1ke Douglass 6
1 00 - Ga mb 1t 10 Pa ssword 13 Wtzard o t Odds 3 4 15 Hazel 8
ll 30 - Ho ll ywoodSquares3 4 15 Love of L•ie8 10 Bowltng6
Brady Bunch 13 Sesame Street 33
11 55 - CBS News 8 Dan I mel s World 10
12 00 - Jeopardy 3 15 Password 6 Bob Brauns 50 so Club 4
News 1J News 10 8
12 30 - Search tor Tom orrowS 10 Spltt Second 6 3 W s 3 15
~2 45 - Electnc Company 33
12 55 - News 3 15
1 00 - News 3 All My Chtldren 6 13 Not for Women Only 15
Concentrat ion 8 What s My L ne 10
Three on a Match 3 4 15 As the World Turm 8 10 Lets
11 30 Make A Deal 6 13
1 45 -.- Cover to Cover 33
2 00 - Day s ofOur Llves3 4 15 Gu1d1ng Lq~ht8 10 Newlywed
Game 6 13
1 30 - Doctor s3 4 15 Edge of N•ght8 10 G•rltn My L1fe6 13
3 00 - An other World 3 4 15 General Hosp•tat 6 13 Pnce Is
R tght 10 RFD 20 Vtrgtn tan 8
3 30 - Return of Pe yton Place 3 15 One L1fe to Ltve 13 Secret
Storm 10 Phil Don ahue 4 Match Game 73 8 Ftmtstones 6
Olf the Record 20
-4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Some rset IS Sesarne St 33 Love,
Amertcan Style 13 Speedracer 6 Sesame St r eet 20
4 30 - Green Acres 3 Jeopardy 4 ABC After school Spec ta l 6
13 Santa Claus 15 Lucy Show 8
5 00 ~ Mr Rogers 20 33 Bonanza 3 Merv Gr tffm 4 Andy
Grr fltth 8 Bonanza 15
5 30 - Elec Co 33 Gomer P yle 13 Beverly Hdlbtll1es 8
Hodgepodge Lodge LO I Love Lucy 6
5 55 - Ear l N•ghtmga le 15
6 00 - News 3 4 8 10 15 6 ABC News 13 Sesame Street 20
Personality and Behav1oral Development 33
6 30 - News 3 4 6 8 10 15 Hogan .s Heroes 13
7 00 - News 10 WhaJ ' s My L•ne 8 Truth or Conseq 6 Beat the
Clock. 4 Anythtng You Can Do 13 E le&lt;: Co 20 Know Yo ur
1
Schools JJ B11J y Graham Crusade 3 Amerrcan Lrle Styte 15
1 30 - To Tell the Tr uth 6 Sale of the Century 8 The Judge 10
Beatthe Clock 13 All the F un 15 Gettmg There4 Bill f:Jo.oyers
Journal 20 3J TBA IS
8 00 - Sonny &amp; (her 10 , Wmn•e the Pooh J 4 15 D1ck Clark
~;~~~~~s the Rock and Roll Years 6 13 Br lly Graham
1
8

Real Estate For sale

12 x 60 3 BEDROOMS 1969
Globemaster , 10 a c res land ,
gas avarlabte Cab•n located
on McKenz•e R1dge Road
back of Ractne Contact Don
Elliott Box 111B Racrne
1968 CAMARO P S AT Good
OhiO 45771
cond•t•on 6 cyl
good gas
11 25 3tp
mrleage ,
$700
George
Hackett Jr
M1ddlepor't
SALE! SALE! SALE 1 While
Ohro phone 992 2444
Farson Avenue was closed to
11 15 3tp
trafftc we got overstocked on
our Mob1le Homes In order to
FOR SALE or trade 1965 Chevy
clear these homes we have
Impala Phone 667 3652
chopped our pnces as low as
11 25 3tp
f I I I I •,J I I I ; , I ' ;I·' Il
possible 1 1971 60 x 12
r ,, , I.' I Jr)t,J 1'. ! I ',I &lt;&gt;I,'!'
Champ•on 2 bedrooms , was
1973 CHEVROLET Impala
t, •, '·,00: 1,, I I ·
S4,995 now S3 995 1 60 x 12·
v•nyl lop stereo power seats
Rembrandt was S4 795 now
atr condtt1onmg P S , P B
S3 995 (4 bedrooms ), 1 1971 60
99:.&gt;3325 or
Good gas m rleage new car
x 12 Buddy 3 bedroom was
del•very forces sale Call 992
S4 795 now S3 995, 1 60 x 12
99"1.-36 15
2049 before 5 p m , 992 3546
PM C , 2 bedroom, was
after5pm
$5 495, now S4 995 1 60 x 12
11 25 3tc
W.nston , 2 bedroom 2 full TWO bedroom house at 473
baths - th ts untf ts extra
Sycamore Street •n Mn:t
Coronet
6
1968 OOOGE
sharp, was ss 995, now 54,995,
dleport
Vacant Call 992 5310
cylinder standltrd shlft, ex
1 44 x 12 Regent 2 bedroom
112126tc
cellent Shi9pe See ~oy Arms
was 54, 295 now $3,695, 1 1974
992 7149
65 x 12 Detro•ter 2 bedroom ,
11 25 Jfc
front den wtth fireplace
reduced $1 000 lo S7 ,995 We GOOD Investment property , 3
TRUCKS 1968 R Model
furntshed apartments, In
also have a large select ton of
Maxdyne $8 000 also 1968 F
come S210 monthly out of
good used 8 and 10 wrde
state owner For Inform at ron,
Model Maxdyne, S5,500 Call
homes now tn stock The
phone 992 5131 davttme
161Al 962 302A or 962 5299
prices include your del•very
11 25 3tp
11 25 6tc
and complete set up Don t
wart, shop now at Berry
1957 CHEVY 2 dr hardtop 283
Mrtler MObile Home Sates 705 6 ROOMS and bath In town ,
eng me
4 speed
Contact
Farson Street Belpre, Ohto
$11 ooo Call 9923975 or 992
Henry Hill Barber shop m
Used Mobile Homes IS our
2571
Pomeroy
Spec1alty not our s•dellne
9 28 fft
11 21 6tc
• II 27 3tp

11 4 tfc

Television Log

t

I

..

•

&lt;·:·=·=·=·:-·-:-;-, ' •

TUESDAY , NOV 27 lf73
00 - Btl~Graham Crusade J Dusty s lt &lt;lll 13 !\\arLO SI)Oft
r- ~tel~
Cat the Clock 4 News 10 TBA 15 Ete-ctf'"IC Co 10
,
,.u or onsequeoces o What s M'f Line 8
7 30 - World of Surv1val.t To Tell the Truth 6 R FD :10 Mor
: TChh•n1YouBAreJ3 New Pnce Is Rtght8 10, Beat 1he Clod. 13f'
ares lartr s BeU~r World IS
¥ 00 - Chase 3 4 Amer1can Hentage 6 13 Brfly Grahclfll
15, Maude 8, 10 War and Peace 20 33
I 30Crusade
- Brlly Graham CrusadeS Hawau Frve 010
f ~ - Mag1ctan 3, 4 15 . Show Bosrness Salutes M 111on Serle 6,

EX CAVAT ING Do .... ,~ 1arge
and small
Backhoes and
loaders on track and tires
Dump truck - Lo bov s.er
v_1ce Sept 1c tank:i' Installed
George (8111) Pullins phone
992 2478 or 992 7402
1 9 tfc

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE rates Ph t46
4782 Gallfpolfs John Russell,
Owner and Operator
5 12 tfc

0 DEL '- Hr r 1:

Bradbury

COMPLETE
INTERIOR
REPAIR

NEW LARGE rectrnrng charrs MOBILE home repa1r Elec DOZER and bacK hoe work
rn vrny l materral buy now or
ponds and sep trc tanks d1t
1r.cal plul"flb tng and heattng
lay away for Chr stmas Onlv
chrng serv•te fop sort ftll
Phone
992
5656
S89 95 Sw1vel rockers rn
drrt
limestone
B&amp;K
7 15 tfc
velvet nylon and prrnts that
Escavatmg Phone 992 5367 or
make a wonderful grft for
99 2 3861
TANK S cleaned
your wife Only $69 95 All SEP TIC
,
9 1 tfc
Modern Sanrtatro n 992 3954 or
.tem s cash and carry or 60
991
7349
day lay away
Pomeroy
10 23 tfc HARRISON S TV serv tce and
Re c overy
622 E
Marn ,
ser\ltce ca lls Phone 992 2522
Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
2 9 He
112026f.c G &amp; 1:::: Appl•ance Repa 1r Phone
at the shop 99 2 3802 or 949
UPHOLSTERY Fabr cs by the
RON SHEPARD , Floor Wall
4254
yard 54 rnches wrde as low as
Remode lrn g Ce ramr c t rle
10 24 30tp
S1 95 per yard velvets as low
baths Box 260 Rutland 742
as $3 45 Import ed ve lvets ,
3664
TANKS
AROBIC
$9 95 We also have ny lon SEPTIC
6 26 tfc
SEWAGE
SYS
TEM
S
herculon
cotton pr rnts
- --- --------~--CLEANED
REPAIRED
v ny ls and remnanl s by the
p &amp; J Heat1ng &amp; Cool 1ng vas or
MILLER SANITATION
yard or by the p•e ce Pomeroy
Fue l Or! - We have many
STEWART
OH
10
PH
662
Recovery 622 East Mam
furna ce parts and ptumbrng
3035
Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
parts for 10 pet above cost
1o A tfc
215 N Sec ond M•ddleport
11202Dtc
~-~------ ---..---992 3509
FOAM to frll your old couch and ELNA and Wh1te Sewmg
10 31 30tc
Mach.nes
Serv1ce
on
all
cha 1r cush•ons as tow as
makes Reasonabfe rates
$10 95 Upholstery books only
CO NCRETE
The Sewrng Center M•d READY MIX
SOc 4 rnth covered foam
del1vered rrght to your
dteport Oh10
mattresses tor standard s ze
pro1ect Fast and easy Free
ll 16 tfc
bed
$19 95
Pomeroy
est1mates Phone 992 3284
Re covery
622 E
Man
Goeglern Ready Mt)( Co
Pomeroy Phone 992 755 -1
Middleport
Oh 10
11 2026tc
6 30 lf c
8 NI CE ewes 4 reg s tered 4
grade Atso n 1ce slaughte r
lamb Call 949 3073
11207tc

Our

PRE FABRICATED

-------------

PHONE

'

A ·sK us ABOUT

NOY SPEC
$12 so Perm For
Req Hatr S8 50

992 -7474
Johnson Masonry
&amp; (Remodeling I
992 -7608

COAL FO R SALE J AYMAR
Ph "192 2174
Pomeroy
COAL CO MPANY
THE
MEIG S &amp; GALLIA LI NE
STATE
RO UTE
7 AT
CHESHIRE OPEN 7 AM WIL L tr 1m or cut trees and
sh r ubbery Also clean out
TIL L 6 30 PM 5 DAYS A
basements att1cs etc Call
WEEK PHONE 992 5693
949 3221 or 742 4441
11 26 5tc
......_
112 130t c

_______

and

Johmes Beauty
Salon

GROCERY busrness for sa 1o:!
Build1ng tor sate or lease
Phone 773 5618 from 8 30 p m
to 10 p m for appomtment
3 20 ftc
LOT ); of ch rysanthemums for
sale freld grown We on ly
have one color - yel low 10
bun ches for ss we have some
out 1n full bloom some IUSI
buddtnQ Reynolds Flower
Shop Mason W va Call 773
5147
9 26 H e

Patntmg A Spectalty

1•1, .~

9 30 ---- .Movre '

OllfiCE SUPPLIES

All work guaranteed

992 -6675

PRICE
CONSTRUCTION

992 -2094
606 E Maon Pomeroy

Ph. 992-5271

D. L.
PH

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

Gene's
Body Shop

.!i

•

--~

I Ok

~o l k

Employment Wanted

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

For Sale
'•All

RESPONSIBLE
PERSON

J

Manuel. Anna G Manue, Lot
21, Racme
Jane H11l , Dale H11l , Dolly
Wolfe to Donna H11l , Ca rl
Wolfe , Jr , Dolores Casper aka
Dolores Owens, 6 Acre 100 acre
Lot 264, Letart
Donna H11l, Dallas Hill , Ca rl
Wolfe , Jr , Suzann Wolfe to

~

.

\ t1\

�9 --- Tht•D.III\. sentmei,Muldlt•po•ll'.nlu'ltl\ tl

8 _ Tlw Oall) &amp;nune-1. Mllt(Ut'J.IOrl ~ 1 'mlll'III\ ll , '\ tl\ .!I. 11.71

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!

Meigs
Property

Transfers

B!l~ mess

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

•

Geor gf' 1 ht:o1ss, Ca rol The1ss
to George The1ss, Carol The1ss,
Sec 17 Sutt on
Clara Wolfe dec t o Dons
Wolfe, Hennan Wolfe , Sad1r
Bo1kms , Eva Pickens, Cert of

trans , Racme
Eva P1 c kens, Albert B
Botkm, Sad1e M Botkm.
Herman Wolfe, Mildred to
Dons Wolfe. Lot 21, Racme
Dons Wolfe to DenniS

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

S169S
1970 CHEVELLE MALIBU
door gold fln•sh spotless clean •n tenor V 8 engrne
automal•c power s tecrmg rad•o A honey of a buy
! '

1970 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill
S1295
4 door V 8 automatic power steenng radto good ltres
blue fm tsh spotlcs::. •nlenor
1968 CHEV BELAIR
.:1 Door V 8 automahc power s teenng fa ctory atr
good ltres real clean mtenor sharp blue fm• sh
$990

Dolores

Casper,

Robert

Casper. 6 acres, 100 acre Lot
264 , Letart
Olive V Talbott by Randall
R Talbott, atly m fact, to
James J Proffitt, 17 Ac res,
Lebanon
Steven Eblin, Wanda L
Eblin to Manon A Hall,

Parcels, Salisbury

Harrisonvi lJe
Society Ne~ s
Jack Warner and w1fe are
presentmg

the

Presbyterian

Church wtth a ptano m memory
of hiS Sister, Esta Larktns The
event w1ll be Dec 2 at 10 30
a m Mrs Oliva Cotterill will
rectle a poem wntten by Esta
Larkins entitled "The Little
White Church back home "
Mrs Warner w1ll play and Mr
Warner Will smg Everyone IS

mvlted
Mr and Mrs Robert Hall
have purchased the Bob Welsh
property and w1ll move there

soon, better known as the John
Blackwood home
Mr and Mrs M A Epple
spent an evemng w1th Ava
Gilkey recently
Mr and Mrs Jumor Payne
and children had supper w1th
Sally
Welsh
Wednesday

evemng
Junior Payne was able to go
back to work this week after a
stay m tM hospital
Mrs Alta Eastman was able
to leave the hospital and was
returned to the rest home m

:syracuse
Mrs Judy Ste1mtz spent a
day helpmg Sally Welsh get
ready to move to Columbus
She also called on the Junwr

' Paynes
Mr and Mrs K C Welsh
were dmner guests of the
Denzil Welshes of Rutland
Mr and Mrs Larry Clark

: and daughters , Tanra and
Peny of Chester were dmner
guests of the Bob Clarks on
Thanksg1vmg In the afternoon
they called on Roy W1semans,
Ava Gilkey and the Earl
Star keys
Mr and Mrs Clinton Gtlkey,
Tad and Karen of Albany
called on Ava Gilkey Thursday

afternoon
Dmner guests of the Jun1or
Paynes were Mr and Mrs
Donald Weaver and Sally
Welsh and James Cheadle and

son, Columbus, and Sally
Welsh and children Thursday
Mr and Mrs Robert Alkire
VtSlted the Charles Alk1res at

Racme on Wednesday evemng
Mr and Mrs M A Epple
had Thanksg1vmg dmner w1th
h1s daughter, Jamce Waldeck
of Glouster then drove on to
Zanesville for the weekend as
Mrs Epple's grandson un-

derwent

surgery

for

ear

trouble
Bob Blizzard of Denver,

Opportuntbes

W.'lnled to own &lt;Hid operate
ca •ld Y &amp; confec tion ve nd1ng
route Me1gs County .and
s urroundmg area Pleasant
bu-smess H1gh prof1t 1tems
Ca n start part 11me Age or
Nf)e rtence not 1mportant
Requ1r es car and S99S 00 to
S 1 885 00 cash Investment
For deta1l s wrtte and 1nctude
your phone number
Department BVV
3938 Meadowbrook Rd
St Lou1 s Park. MN 55416

~-----------------"
WILL do sewmg rn my home
Phone 992 5866
11'21Dtc
~-----~-~----

OPEN EVES 8 00 PM.
POMEROY, OHIO

CARPE NTER work masonry
work ~eneral remode lrng by
.
hour or con tract Phone 993
L--------------------------~-35 11
11 2 261p
WANT ADS
---------~---MINI BACKHOE servrce Atso
INFORMATION
waterlmes footer s, tr enches
DEADLINES
Cha rl es R Hatfte1 d Rou t e 1
S PM Day Before Publlcat10n
Boll Wade, Auct1oneer
Rutland Ohio Phon e 742
Monday Deadline 9 a m
60 92
Cancel tat ron ~ Correct ro ns
11 13 IBip
will be accepted until 9 am tor
Are You Movmg?
Day of Publlca t ron
REGULATIONS
Cons1dermg
The Publrsher reserv es the
An Auctoon?
rrght to ed 1t or re1ect any ads
deemed Ob1ect1ona1
The
WANTED for Hol ze r Med 1cat
publ rshe r writ not be respon
Center 0 1110 L1censed h rgh
B&amp;G Audion Athens 0 .,
srble for more than one m
pressure borler Operat or
will pay cash for your ent1re
correc t rnsert1on
Apply rn person at the per
RATES
sonnel oH1ce or call A46 5105
household or any good
For Want Ad Servrce
11 27 3tc
mtscel
taneous
•tem
s
or
w
tll
5 cents per Word one msert 1on
-------~--~--hold an auctton for you at
Mrn1mum Charge $1 00
CAR hop wanted also k.t chen
14 cents per word three
your res1dence reasonable
help Apj)ly rn person Crows
consecutrve rnsert 1ons
Steak Hou se
26 cen ts per word sr x con
11 27 10tc
You'll hke our competent,
secut1ve 1nsertrons
-------------~
dependable serv1ce
25 Per Cent D1scount on pad
EX PERIENCED Men and
ads and ads pard w rthr n 10
Call Athens, Oh1o
Women - Men and women
days
w1th skills that com pare w rth
593-5035
Collect
CARD OF THANKS
Navy
occupat1ons
may
&amp; OBITUARY
qual•fY for th e Navy s D1rect
$2 00 for SO word mrn
Pro curement Pet1y Offtcer
1mum Each add1t1onal word FLETCfi.,ER P ano Se rv1 ce
Program (Example Lathe
3c
Tur11ng &amp; Re patr Ca ll 698
O perators
P lu mbers
BLIND AD!t
773 1
Elec
tr
rcrans
Accountrng
Add1t1onal 25c Charge per
11626fp
Cl
erk
Carpenter
Secretary
Advert .sement
e tc ) Sta rt •ng pay S392 to
OFFICE HOURS
$5 38 w1th hoUSing allowance
KOSCOT KOSMETICS B. WIGS
8 30 a m to 5 00 p m Da ly
from $122 to $161 per month
Specral s each month We wrll
8 30. a m
to 12 00 Noon
plus free medrcat and denta l
g la dly show you our lme of
Saturday
com m rssary and P X benef •ts
Kosm et1cs 1n the pr rvacy of
and all G l benef1ts for rr
your home at your con
drv1dua1
family
Good
ven ence Remember Chrrst
promotions travel educat ron
ma s Is not far away so phone
opportun 1tres
and early
He len Jane Brown 992 511 3
reltrement Interested men
11 9Hc
and women contact the Navy
Recrudrng
Statton
22 1
Co lumbus Road
Athens
Ohro tel 593 3566
1126Dic
Call
Steven c Snowden
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
553 Russell Sl
(Gravel Hrtl)
Mr and Mrs Roy Pooler of
Mtddleport, Ohto
Chester VISited Mr and Mrs
Phone 992 7155
1973
MOBILE
Home
3
be droom 1111 bath furnrshed
Floyd Norns Sunday af.
or unfurn• shed lnQu1re at P &amp;
ternoon
J Odds &amp; Ends Sho p M1d
dleport 9tr115 after5call992
M1ss Becky Profitt of Belpre NOH UN TlNG or trespassmg on
3509
my farm rn Ball Run Dale
and Jeff Donohew v1s1ted Mr
)120tfc
Lr ttle
and Mrs
Roy Donohew
11 25 6tp -- ----~ ---~- -........ - - - - &gt;AOBILE Home n Middleport
Saturday evenmg
Adul ts only Phone 992 5592
PIANO
tunma
&amp;
reoarr
nq
Mrs Allee Balser of Letart
11 20 tfc
Lane Dan 1els 259 Broadway
was a Sunday dmner guest of
M1ddleport Phone 992 2082
11 18 12tp FURNI S HED two bedroom
Mr and Mrs Jack Ables
mobrle home for rent rn
Mr and Mrs Don Bell spent NOH UNT IN G or trespaSSing on
Rutland
Call evenmgs or
our farms day or n•ght Dallas
Wednesday mght With Dr and
Sunday 992 3429
DeBord and Goldie Wyant
11 15 6tp
Mrs Earl Grunm at Columbus
Rt 4 Pomeroy
11 25 6tc
on Thursday Mr Bell and
$15 AND UP 4 steep1 ng rooms
~----- ---- -- ~Bruce Hart and Dr Grurun HAVE YOUR trophy mounted
wrth k•tchen a nd l)v tng room
Clean and pr1vate New and
deer heads small an1mal s
enJoyed pheasant and rabbit
modern TV and carpet
and
brrds
Howard
Brrchfleld
huntmg at Washmgton Court
throughout
baths
w tth
Mulberry Street Rutland
showers Mason 773 5580
Phone 742 6834
House TM Bells also vts1ted
11 25 6tp
11 26 tfc
their daughter, Lorna Bell, a
student
at
OhiO
State $200 REWARD for rnformat•on PR lVATE meetmg room for
any organ1zat1on phone 992
leadrng to the arrest and
Umvemty rn Columbus
3975
convrctr on of per son or per
Mr and Mrs Hoyt Ferguson
3 11 tfc
sons who damaged the nght
front
fender
of
my
1969
black
of Camp Conley, W Va , were
Ford LTO on Nelson Road 3 AND 4 ROOM furniShed and
Sunday guests of Mr and Mrs
unfurn ished
apartments
Rutland Oh o The car was
Phone 991 5434
parked on the s1de of the road
Homer Warner
4 12 tf c
Phone Carl Mor-ns Rutland
Mr and Mrs Arnold Hupp
742 469 1
11 27 3tc TRAI LER
and son, Edward, Mr and Mrs
Mason W
Va
coUple only phone 99 2 5693
Jun Hupp VISited Mrs Elsie REVIVAL at Chester Church of
l\ 16tf c
God November 2.~; to Dec 2 -------------Hupp G1bbs, a patient at
7 30 p m Spec1a l s rng 1ng each
tra1ler rdeat for couple
Umvers1ty
Hosp1tal
'"
even•ng Evange l 1st Rev SMALL
10
mtles
north of Pomeroy
Chester
Estep
from
Columbus, Sunday
$7 5 per month Call 992 7479
ChilliCOthe Oh iO Everybody
11 23 tfc
Mr and Mrs Robert Sm1th
welcome
11 27 Stc FURNISHED housetra1ter tor
Sr attended the Jun1or MISs
Pageant at Pomeroy Their
rent Prefer constructron men
only
L•nens laundered
granddaughter,
Valene
Contact after 4 30 p m
Johnson, Racme, was one of ' coRNER cupboards wall
weekly except Sa turday and
sun day
Helen
Rrggs
cupboar
ds
c
hests
old
guns
the contestants and was second
any c ondil 10n Also blue
Rutland Oh•o
11 27 6tp
runnerup
decorated stoneware Wr1te
0
Box
44
Mart
•nsburg
P
Roscoe Scarberry has been
Oh 10 43935 or ca II 1 484 4440
returned to h1s home after
after 7 p m
8 8 90tc
bemg a pat1ent at Holzer
3 BEDROOM house w1th bath
Medical Center
recreatron room utrllty room
NO 1 COPPER 70c Radrators
and washroom
carport
33c brass 3('1c batterres 90c
carpettng m l1vmg room. also,
M A Halt Re edsvr lle Phone
378 6249
electrrc range 1618 Lrncoln
Colorado called hiS aunt, Ava
Heights Available Dec 1
11 8 tfc
Gilkey to tell her h1s Dad, Vern
Cal l 949 2891
11 27 6tc
for
auction ,
Blizzard, was m the hospital WANTED
household goods Tools most
for removal of cataracts
anythtng of value Wtll buy or
sell on commrss Jon Will haul
Mr and Mrs Joe Carsey
Call ?92 3354 or 992 2792
were dmner guests of the Paul
Hayman s
7 25 tfc LOSE werghf wtth New Shape
Tablets and Hydrex Water
Stemetz fam1ly m Pomeroy
OLD furntture oak tables
Pills at Dut1on Drugs m
clocks tee boxes brass beds,
Mtddleport and Nelson Drug
dishes
or
complete
11 27 3tp
Turner
households Wr1te M
D
M11ler Rt 4 Pomeroy Ohro , TWO 735 x 14 snow t.res Used
call 992 6271
one season S30 Phone 965
__.
513tfc
3624 Chester
WA~I-l ':t&lt;ti:-1!
11 27 4tc
STE::L cast1ron etc Ca ll 985
lfJSllF.ANC.E"
4297
EXCELSIOR Salt Works E
11 25 tfc
Main St Pomeroy All k•nds
---------~-~-~
of salt water pellets water
nuggets block salt and own
Oh 10 R rve r Salt Phone 992
BLUE TICK coon hOund •n
3891
v tct nrty of Kmgsbury $100
6 5 tfc:
Reward Phone 992 6959
11 25 6tp
197 3 S lEREORad to com
bmatron w1fh 8 track built rn
take over payments of S7 55
per month or pay $101 50 Call
992 533 I
SMALL tn co lored female dog
10 21 ttc
cla •m or needs good home
Phone 985 4244
-- -------~--- 11 21 6tc KNAPP Shoes order now to
msure pre Xmas del•very
Phone 992 5324
11 18 tfc
APPLE GROVE

Nottce

Help Wanted

Apple Grove

News, Events

For Rent

-.----~---

--------------

Wanted To Buy

For Rent or Sale

For Sale

by Dick

CARNIVAL

______ ________
lost

Found

Mr and Mrs Gene Webster
and daughter, Amta, of
Cleveland spent Tuesday
through Fr~day w1th Mr and
Mrs. Roy Donohew.
Mrs Florence Smith attended grange off1cers conference at Rock Sprmgs on
Monday evemng

,.

011

"Henry round out you people were nght about 1! be1ng
better JUSt to say nothmg after an auto aCCider! 1"

In 1956, President Eisenhower
ISsued a statement denymg
differences over the Suez Canal
had weakened Amer~can-Br~t­
ISh·French accord over NATO

'

.•

--------------

1973 ZIG ZAG sewmg machine
Th •s mach ne darns em
brotders
overcasts and
monograms all wtthout at
tachments Pay balance of
S41 50 or pay S6 a month Call
992 5331
10 21 tfc

-------------6 TRACK stereo console , due to

damage rn Sh1pment Will sell
for small balance of $99
or
payments
of
$6 99
per month Call 992 5331

Business Services

ICE AND !&gt; NOW
tor lown~hrp~
town s .1r)d busrne!&gt;ses tn
bulk'!! nnd bags lor tle a11d
'&gt;now E:xcels•or ~alt Works
Phon{' 991 3891
II 11 lfc
':loalt

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

1970 BUICK LaSabre 'l dr hard
top v.nyl lop aulo P S •
P B good condttion $1 DM
tO h p
Cub cadet S395
Hom e lrlc !:. pa ce Heater w rlh
thermoslat ~110 Phone 949
1134 or Raymond Rowe End
ot B-roadway Jn Ratrne
11153tc

a VOLUME encyctopedta 1884
very old tee p1ck from Davrs
Ice 1911 Frngerna•l cttp an
old fl oo r lamp Phone 992

5655

25 3tp

ll

WE HAVE all your upholstery
needs
Burlap
den•m
cambr•c foam glue z1ppers
tackmg strrp spnngs and
cl1ps
chrp board
button
tw ine sewrng thread legs
upholslery books dacron
webbrng sp rtng twrne tacks
welt co rd cotton s wtv el
bases and foam foam foam
Pomeroy Recovery 622 East
Ma rn St r ee t Pom eroy Phone
991 7554
11 20 26tc
------~--- --

S-T·R·E·T·C·H
YOUR BUILDING
D-0-L-L·A·R
With Ski lied
Craftsmanship

Lmcoln H1ll Pomeroy , 0

MOORE &amp; SONS

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

BRUSH HOG~
9Y2 5a58 00

4x5 ft

phone

7 15 tfc
- ----~--~---- --

.

Roofing • Spouhng
K1tchens &amp; Bathrooms
Complete Remodeling

__

~--~

Area s Most
Re as onable Pnce s

FURNITURE
Stop In and See
Floor D•~!aY. c

742-6273

FREE EST

From 1he taroest
Bulldozer Radtator to
~ma1 1 est Heater Lore
Nathan 81ggs
Rad1ator Spec1al1st

SMITH NELSON
lt10TORS, INC._

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

WOOD TRUSSES

"'

Built to Your •Specs.
Dehvered to Job Site

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO
7U SSS4 ,
Mason, W Va .

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
•5.55

RUSSELL'S
AUTO TRIM
992-2839

On Most Amen can Cars

Co. Road 5

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992 -2094

Pomeroy .Home &amp; Auto
Open 8 T1ll
Monday thru Saturday
606 E Mam , Pomeroy , O

OPEN
Roger Hysell s
Garage near Crossroads on
St R t 124 all m e chan •cat
work lncludrng automatrc
tran smrSS •ons Monday thru
Sat 8 30 a m to 6 p m Phone
99 2 5682 garage or 992 7121
resrden ce
10 28 26tc

AUTOMOBILE 1nsurance been
c ance ll ed?
Lost
your
operators lrcense Call 992
7418
6 15 ttc

----~----_.,..--

C BRADFORD Auct1oneer
Complete Serv1ce
Phone 949 3821
Racme Ohro
Cr1 tt Bradford
5 1 tfc

- --------------

EXCAVATING dozer loader
and backhoe work
sept1c
tanks tnstatled dump trucks
and to boys for htre wrll haul
fill d1rt top so•l limestone
and gravel Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers day phone 992 7089
n 1ght phone 992 3525 or 992
5232
2 11 ttc
FOR FREE estimates on
aluminum s1d1ng
Storm
Doors and Windows Car
ports Mllrquees and R!!illng
Phone
Charles
L1ste
Syracuse Ohlo Carl Jacob
Sales Represenfat rve V V
Johnson and Son Inc
6 22 tfc

Mobtle Homes For Sale

It's Snow T1re Tome!

CO-OP COUNTRY
SOUIRE 120
Pos1t1ve Stop and Go In Mud
&amp; Snow

ALL SIZES IN STOCK
Let Us Install Now•
SUPER SERVICE STA
... ~ Jack W Carsey, Mgr
~ Phone 992 9932
TWIN
NEEDLE SE WING
MACHINE S 1973 Model Jn
walnut stand All features
built 1n to make fancy des1gns
and do s tretch sew 1ng Also
buttonholes blmd hems etc
S43 34 cash prtce or terms
available Phone 992 2984
11255tc
VACUUM CLEANERS Electro
Hygfene New Demonstrators
has all cleanmg attachments
plus the new Electro Suds for
shampoo.ng carpet Only
S27 50 cash pr1ce or terms
available Phone 992 2984
11 25 5tc
STEREO - Am Fm Rad10 a
track tape comb•nat •on 4 way
speaker
sound
system
Balance $107 52 or use our
budget terms Call 992 3965
11255tc

Auto Sales

DISPERSAL
SALE
28 New Homes To Be
SOLD
At
USED
and
REPOSSESSED
PRICES
To make room for the
many
new
un1ts
arroving m Jan .. 1974.
DELAYED
DELIVERY
AVAILABLE
Woth the excephon of a
small depos1t.

NO MONEY
NEEDED UNTIL
JANUARY 1974
1 YEAR
GUARANTEE
BEST SERVICE
IN
OHIO VALLEY

MILLER
HOMES
DOWNTOWN
BELPRE
OHIO

1962 MERCURY 4 door ex
cellent condrt•on 58 000 ac
tual mrtes extra snow fires
mounted
Harry
Swan
Portland Oh•o 843 2223
1115tfc

--==--=-------·~vi.-; can be
done by appOintment only at
present t1me due to Illness n
family
Phone for
ap
porntment 742 3232
11251fc

----------=- -~-~

SEWING MACHINES Repa 1r
servtce , all makes 992 1284
The Fabrtc Shop Pomeroy
Authorr zed S1nger Sales and
Servr ce We Sharpen Scrssors
3 29 tfc

Pets For Sale
MALE poodl-e puppy black
mmtature Ph;,ne 992 5858
T
1113tfc

l

WIN AT BRIDGE

Class will out in slam bid

'-

BY PAUL CRABTREE

"•w

llrottt·l

ThL" Ttmcs fhey Arc A 't hangmg

H.1p

1 want to t&lt;tlk ,IIXJut H0\13rd Coscll toda)
.
But to unt:re1stand Ho\\ard Cosell, }uu have to underswnd
Crest toothpaste. and I d best t&lt;t1k about Crest toothpaste first, If

1 \\,ml to

~et

marncd m a wh1t.e gown, ve1l and orange

blossoms. but my guy diSagrees bc&gt;&lt;ause he says the last two

About I\\O decades ago, Crest appeared on the scene, and 11
\\as clearly the best toothpaste on the market Procter &amp;
Gamble. the b1g Clncmnat l soap people , ach1eved a s1gmfJcant,
patented break4hrough "1th a stannous fluonde compound that
real!) d1d prevent ca\1tles The prest1g10uS American Dental
Assn endorsed Crest
All that remamed \\a S to tell the Mltmg Mrld of this sur
cess And P&amp;G was very b1g m advert1smg, so that appeared
easy

He s 20 and J'm 16, so I don 't thmk 1t's such a put-&lt;lown for
h1m do yuu' - WAITI NG IMPATIENTLY BUT WAI1!NG
W!BW
Heavens no' We thmk 1t"sgreat that you ' re WIBW. and we're
~u for the ve 1l and ora nge blossoms, but we wonder 1! your f1 anee
1s ma ture enough for them
And at 16,areyou' - IIELEN AUDSU E

+++

It wasn t easy at aU It seems that other toothpastes - m~
eluding brands made by Procter &amp; Gamble - lkld made &gt;UCh

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
l LJngerte
.tram

5 TrJd ent
10 Romaman
CitY
11 lm por

tune

NOTE FROM HELEN Since a few of you readers will
compare my publiShed attitude toward the now-famous
• Pr•sc•lla, ·( that 26-year-&lt;&gt;ldvlrgln I called ' PriSSy "), with the
above reply, my answer m advance
lt"s a far cry from unpabent-16 to repressed-28 One knows
she'snot yet ready, the other LS too ready yet w1th her " No's" H

extr avagant clauns for themselves that no one really believed
that a remarkable ne\\ product had hit the market
The stor) had a happy endmg, but 1t was a long s tory, •ndced
Crest finally got to the top of the sales charts, but only by resortrng to the shoddiest of advert!Smg ca mpaigns ( • Look , Mom, no
caVJtles'" ),and mtlhons spent on TV ne\\spapers, and the like
t Toda) , other products probably are JUSt as good as Crest, smce
patents exptre, and the clear super10nty of Crest \~as short~
lived )
Now com es Howard Cosell, a different breed of cat to the
world o f broadcast sports reportmg A cerlif•able mtellectual
he, too, has a secret mgrechent that makes him uruque among his
peers Lruth
You 'd think the great Amen can sports tan would run pell
mell to flip on the TV set every t1me the dour, acerbiC Cosell
brightened the screen -•f that 's the \\ord - wah h1s ver) spec1al
product of telling the truth as he saw 11
But the sports fans, a t th e outset, didn 't want the truth They
had been ra1sed o n pap the Junk fed to them da ily by sports
reporters and broadcasters \\ho exto lled the local heroes as
paragons of Vlrtue Whealles..,atmg, girl shunmng, loquorabhorrmg AII-Amen cans
Who cared 1f the play-b)iJiay man was a verbal prost itute ,
w1th his every word controlled by franchLse owner of the local
team ' Who wanted to r ead that the noble coach specialized m
teachmg how t o pia) d1rty, and r ecruiting 1llegall)' Who would
sull) the memory of the urunortal Babe Ruth w1th the unvarmshed truth that he "as a bit of a dunw1t, spendmg most of
his off-duty hours, booWig, gamblmg, and womamzmg '
Like the folk s \\ho \\ere hooked on Amm1.&lt;Jent or lpan a,
when Crest appeared the Amencan sports fan JUst d1dn t \\ant to
let go of thetr trea s urer unages- but Cosell persisted, and made

+++

Dear Helen and Sue
You faulted a mother for "snoopmg " through her daughter 's
dresser drawers and wastepaper ba s ket The first, maybe, but
the second - well, here 's my s1de
I am a •snoopy " mother of 12 children , aU still home The
e ntir e fam1ly knows I check out the wastebaskets, and approv es
I've salvag ed enough loot from them to make them all grateful
for the fmal go-through
car keys , deodorant, fmgerna•l poliSh , panty hose, are JUSt a
few of the 1tems that fmd their way to the wastebaskets acCidentally
The clincher came when I found my daughter's expens1ve
wmt watch m her wastebasket It had fallen from her des k when
she put her books down
Our children are mstructed to throw very personal stulf m
t he fireplace or kitchen trash They are ever so grateful for a SNOOPY MOM

31]]~~®/k;,J -''-' .-1 , _
Lnscramble these foor Jumblet,
one letter to each square to
form four ordmary words

NORTH
• J 103

'+K

.J

14 At cu t

; Wntten

rate pr1ces
12 wds &gt;

15
16
l7
18
20
21
22
23
25

- canto
Sea e agle
Bnny
Clemency
Type of
cap

AbJ ect
T emfy
- down
( moder
a ted }
26 Yo 27 Dmy by

6N T

Pass

'./1rqrl 11. T1·,1f01d . S1
erok·'r
llU M!'Chc~tll( Sltr'l't
Pomeroy. Oh1o 1)769

~

DOWN
1 Pasc hal
sy mbol

RU.SU'

I I ....J---,-.,D:r~l ...,

Im~vrA.&lt;.J J

but true , m rar too man) cases

not ror thosesmgled out for cntlctsm, but for CoseU
But so !Tllghty •ere his glfts of analysis , hts blWlt delivery,

and so accurate "'ere hLS bart:s and hLS refusal to treat Amenca s
fav orite games as anythmg more than ~hat they \\ere - games
- that he began to prevail, and developed resp ec~. tf not af
fec t1on
1think respect for Cosell!S gomg to g row, and more like him
will appear on the sports scene, which w1ll be better for hls
comm~ But on the day before I \\Tole tillS, Cosell - ever seekrng
ne• 1dols to destroy- unleashed a br oadside on newspapers and
TV Oh , well

TRUJJS f

"

TAXI BUSINESS - 3 cabs 1n
good condttton 2 have power
Pomeroy LocatiOn $6500 00
35 ACRES - 4 bedroom home
bath basement w1th garage
and two barns
Ask1ng
$17 500 00
SYRACUSE 2 bedrooms
bath
nrce kitchen, full
basement and large garden
Only $9 500 00
POMEROY N1ce sturdy
older home w1th 3 bedrooms
· bath central heat and atr
Modern kitchen w1th large
drnmg 2 porches and 2 car
garage
NEW LISTING - 2 bedroom
bungalow bath. new gas f a
furnace Full basement, and
mce lot for only $10 000 00
BIG THINGS WILL SOON
BEGIN TO HAPPEN IN THE
COUNTY
BUY
NOW
BEFORE IT'S TOO LATE WE
HAVE MANY GOOD BUYS

One letter Slmply stands fo r another In th1s s;~mp le A us
used !or the three L s X for the two 0 b etc S1ngle letters
apostrophes the length and for mat mn of the wo rds are all
hmts Each day the code letters are d1fferent

~ow arn.nr• tho carclod 1ott&lt;ra

CRYPTOQUOTES

0
L:==----==~==============:_~'~":'';abdbythe~~eanoon
to rorm the 1urpriH anawer. u

WJD SRWB

~Prill~tii=SUIPII$I==AHSWBI=lln::.:.......,__,l ''( I I l l ]"

USLVLUDMV

Lr

GLJBSC

(Amt•~n

't nl~:rdn •

\

Jumbl~• AIDlO

MONIY

HINDER

YOTAGE

Am ... cr The good name •he f~l u:ht-n 11ht.'

got mamed-

MAIDEN"

lomoNOW'

carpelmg big klfchen with
tots of cabrnets, 1h acre of
ground Rac•ne Oh•o Call
949 4996
911tfc

Jacob'

• Play did mean the d1f·
ference of a lol oflMPs 1n th1s

f1r st round S\.\' 'ss team

&lt;JUST &gt;JrN&gt;~
ANYWAY.

LEAVE EVERYrniNG 10
ME , AND YOl/1',01'7"

llllL~£'0 !:lAO&lt; "TO

SCJ11..JVL I

WEN~

ecSOR17Yl

GO MD&lt; TO

NEW'rORK!

and was down one
The expert declarer knew
of a better play thai would
work 1f Wes l held K 10 or
,Q·IO doubleton 1n clubs He
led a low club toward dummy
1at tnck two
Wesl rose "1th h1 s qu een
.and led a second spade Now
,South entered dummy w1th a
heart and led the Jack of
c lub s It d1dn ' t matter
whether or not East covered

ALlEY OOP
-AN '-.o: MAH !&gt;16
FRIGH"rENED
FRIEND-

MAHAN'
WIFE!!

West ':; ten wa s gomg to be

1

A'l-1 ISTH'
MOl"HER IN· lAW
OI=A&amp;l~!!

THER'E
GO ON

pickled and &amp;luth was sure of
three c lub tn cks
The bad d1amond break
didn 't hurt He had 12 tnclls

;wtth jwtt three diamonds
I

comln~ In
• N~, 'fV1:iJ'41'Ji It

t

~Tt:JtPHJSE

ASSN l

'

'

I

INFORMATION ABOUT:

u:amJ1JttlU n

JOB OPPORTUNITIES
SOCIAL SECURITY
CONSUMER PROTECTION

•

! 1'he lndd!ng ha• bet&lt;n
North

West

AND
GREAT COUNTRY

·

THE BORN LOSER
•

l. .I-ffi

L•

rass

l..

Pass

?

r~ass

1

You hold

1

What do yoo dQ oow':'

~KH5 ·K~3Z

STEREO
92.1 FM
WMPO

Ea~

27
South

+K

1•

X SORTA DOUBT
StiiUffl{ WILL TAKE

i&gt;E'LL TAKE
IT FER
ME. DOC·

I GOT M'f
OWN SPEOAL
GIRL'! WA'IS

I'J\'\ll'

• 511:&gt;11/MAN f'RACT ICE I IMON

THIS TERRIBLE·T~HIJ'
MEDICINE, LOWEEZ'fBllT 'IE CAlli TRi'

IHE '51L~ER FLAKE5,:_~ND ~of

PI:ACTICE EVE~~ 115...., IF I'M
LPJ"E THE COACH 11/IU. l&lt;ILL ME I

104~3

• A - Hid throe orotn&amp;lllJI Your

)lart•!!r b sh••i•c creat
.ijreoclh but you .-14 •aot ,.

f•t fer the ••oe trldL (&amp;ODe

--Middlopori-Pomeroy

'

I

I

LD

C S I Z C
EIVM

L

DSLW

E L W ' C
ZSLD

S M

- BIMDS M

Yest&lt;rday•s CrypiO&lt;(UOI&lt; THE YOUNG MAN WHO HAS
NOT WEPT IS A SAVAGE, A N D THE Ol;D MAN WHO W1LL
NOT LAUGH IS A FOOL - GEORGE SANTAYANA
(© 19?3 K lnf Future• S yndacat.e, lne )

Pass

CANtT NOT

Here's how to work it
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

IT MAY ~E 11-115 ON
A OOLFER WHEN
HES IN II,

[J

Thus spake Cosell , and millwns of fans responded with hate -

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-

South

match Pomt count b1ddmg
Ina de 11 easy for both declar
ers to reach SIX not rump The
t 3-3 3 dislribUilons and the
wa sted JaCks 1n spades and
hearts left declarer w1lh no
good play for h1 s contract
The mexpert d ec la re r
decided that h1s only hope
would be to fmd a d oubleton
kmg ·queen of club s or a
smgleton kmg or queen 1n the
East hand Then all else he
would need would be a 3-3
d1amond break He laid down
)us ace of clubs at tmk two

36 lncarna
dine
37 Exhaust

valley

The lords of baseball \\ e r e consp~rmg to make a fm e game
deadly dull Muhanuned All deserved to k eep hiS Iitle The
National Football League \\a s rummg 1\self \Hih pia) ·It-safe,
conservalive football Muhammed A11 was out of shape and well
past hiS prune San D1ego had rotten franchises tn football and
baseball Certam pia) ers " ere d ogglllg 1t "1th les s~ha n

'

TUPPERS PLAINS I
story frame 3 bedrooms,
bath , dtntng room ntce
kttchen all eleclnc, garage
and covered breezeway 1
acre 1 year old and hard
wood floors S19 000 00
POMEROY - Just out of
town 2 story frame, 4 ,
bedroc.ms bath 1 paneltng
and ttle some tarpehng
coal
heat,
1 36
acre
$9,500 0()
SYRACUSE - 2 years old 3
bedrooms , bath
uttllty
room , kttchen has lots of
cabmets and range nice
d1n1ng area . hardwood
floors, carpeted tn living
room and hall All electnc
Carport
and
storage
$21,000 00
NEW RT 7 - 1112 acres, 2
wells, approved for septlc
tanks Ideal for homes or
trailers Blacktop road In
$4,500 00
POMEROY - 2 story frame
2 bedrooms, new bath, new
furnace and hot water tank,
range tn kitchen, some
carpetmg Basement wtth
ulllily 16 500 00
HAVE
A
SELLING
PROBLEM• LET US HELP
YOU
HENRY E CLELAND
BROKER
992-2259
If no answer 992 2568

laborer

sktrt
Z7 Awaken
(2 "d' )

41 Secluded

Pass
Openmg lea d- 9•

TEAFORD

Peter

med1c

25. Ballet

34 Mex•·
ca n

cou rse

3\ T .

8'~ Os\l.ald &amp; Jam~

19 P1am st

Whodun~ t

37 ConHag
ratiOn
38 Spot
39 L1kew1se
40 Western

QIO
Q4
• A 984

Pass

Klelne
Nacht
mUSlk"

:!4

30 Kmd of

opera

prtces

32 L uau
hak 1ng
pit
33 Su mmi t
35 Dmner

'+AA

East

_

29 !'rag·
rnent

Hve
31 Tennes
seean

J4

North

.

22 Adflatlc
wmd
23 Cut

denva~

27

\\o est

(3 wds }
9 Acqu1tbl
12 Gouged
out
16 Mozart .s

product

\'either\ ulnerable

Real Estate For Sale

Yesterday•• Answer

28 Macaw
29 Wood
ashes

.AKQ

'

letter
8 Mohon
less

Camsay

52
WEST
EAST
.98 76
.54 2
Y862
.,9 753
+J98 5
+1 07
... QtO
... K763
SOUTH 10&gt;

I

3 Stopped
(4 wds)
4 Nether
lands
commune

5 Dressy .
6 Copper

_

1

DEAD S 1OCK - Will remove
at a reasonable char9e Call
245 5514
8 23 901c

Tempest"
character

13 " The Last

K 6 32

G &amp; E appltance reparr Phone
at the shop 992 3802 Qr 949
4254
112626tp

:t "The

enter
tamrnent

so dom g

maxunum effort Sacnlege

NOTF: TO SUE Glad you Silld thai
l foWld one of my
sca r ves m your wastebasket the other day - and so long as we
have a pack-rat dog, I 'll contmue to "snoop " I But don 't worry I'll never read your throwaways 1 - II EI.EN

sho" 1m !:itlll a vlrgm. and he doesn 't want hiS fnends knowtng
that Hfter four years of us knowmg each other, I st1ll really a.Jil

that makes any SE"nse

111

lh llt •l• ·•· :mol

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

'
I

Generation Rap
'

enemtes

ll&lt;&gt;ar Mom
"llianks for catch~n~ us up We .OOuld hovo: sa1d,
"'Was tebal;ket-&lt;:heck IS only snoopmg when • parent makes like
the CIA Otherwose 1t can be helpful " - SUE

----~ ~-------'-

-------------2 BEDROOM house , 3 years old,

For Sale or Trade

:a

SMALL house
completely
furnrshed Bachelors hrde
away Phone 992 5786
11 27 7tc

--------------

1913 ZIG ZAG sewmg machlne
Take over 8 payments of SS 25
per month or d •scount for 1972 175 KAWASAKI for guitar
ampl1frer Phone 992 7270
cash Ca ll 992 5311
11 A lfc
11 27 6tc

&amp; THINGS

Cry Rape' 8 10 Performance 20 33
19 00 - Polt ce Story 7 4 15 Marcus Wet by M D 6 13 News 70 ,
r
Our Street 33
10 30 - Woman JJ
1) JO - NewsJ 4 6 8 10,13 15 Janakr33
II 30 _.. Johnny Carson 3 4 15 D•ck. Cavett 6 Movies The
1
Nak ed Jungle 8 1 • In Old Chicago 10
A Htgh Wmd m
r Jama1ca
13
1 00 - Tomorrow 3 4 Drck Cavett 13
1:00 - News 4
2.:.30 - News 13
•
1
WEDNESDAY NOV 28 1973
b 00 - Sunnse Semrnar 4 Sacred Heart 10
~ 15 - Urban League 10
6 10 ~ Farm Report 13
~ 25 - Paul Ha(vey 13
6 30 - F1ve Minutes to Ltve By 4 News 6 B•ble Answers 8 The
r
Story 13
~ 35 - Columbus Today 4
6 45 - Corncob Report 3 Farmt•me 10
? 00 - Toda y J 4 15 CBS News 8 10 Romper Room 6, Flrnt
r s tones l3
7 30 - New Zoo Revue6 Rok cy &amp; Butlwrnkle 13
18 00 - New Zoo Revue 13 Sesame St 33 Lass1e 6 Capfa1n
1
Kangaroo 8 10
18 30 - Otck Van Dyke 13 Huck and Yog16
55 - News 13
9 00 - Paul D1xon 4 Fnendly Junctton 10 AM 3 Brady
Bunch 6 Abbott and Costello 8 Cover to Cover 33 Movte
' Never Too Late lJ Phil Donahue 13
9 30 - Secret Storm 8 M•c haels &amp; Co 6 To Tell the Truth 3
9 55 - Chu ck White Reports 10
10 00 - Ornah Shore 3 15 Jo kers Wtld 10 a
O 30 - Battle J 4 15 , S10 000 P yram•d 8 10 M1ke Douglass 6
1 00 - Ga mb 1t 10 Pa ssword 13 Wtzard o t Odds 3 4 15 Hazel 8
ll 30 - Ho ll ywoodSquares3 4 15 Love of L•ie8 10 Bowltng6
Brady Bunch 13 Sesame Street 33
11 55 - CBS News 8 Dan I mel s World 10
12 00 - Jeopardy 3 15 Password 6 Bob Brauns 50 so Club 4
News 1J News 10 8
12 30 - Search tor Tom orrowS 10 Spltt Second 6 3 W s 3 15
~2 45 - Electnc Company 33
12 55 - News 3 15
1 00 - News 3 All My Chtldren 6 13 Not for Women Only 15
Concentrat ion 8 What s My L ne 10
Three on a Match 3 4 15 As the World Turm 8 10 Lets
11 30 Make A Deal 6 13
1 45 -.- Cover to Cover 33
2 00 - Day s ofOur Llves3 4 15 Gu1d1ng Lq~ht8 10 Newlywed
Game 6 13
1 30 - Doctor s3 4 15 Edge of N•ght8 10 G•rltn My L1fe6 13
3 00 - An other World 3 4 15 General Hosp•tat 6 13 Pnce Is
R tght 10 RFD 20 Vtrgtn tan 8
3 30 - Return of Pe yton Place 3 15 One L1fe to Ltve 13 Secret
Storm 10 Phil Don ahue 4 Match Game 73 8 Ftmtstones 6
Olf the Record 20
-4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Some rset IS Sesarne St 33 Love,
Amertcan Style 13 Speedracer 6 Sesame St r eet 20
4 30 - Green Acres 3 Jeopardy 4 ABC After school Spec ta l 6
13 Santa Claus 15 Lucy Show 8
5 00 ~ Mr Rogers 20 33 Bonanza 3 Merv Gr tffm 4 Andy
Grr fltth 8 Bonanza 15
5 30 - Elec Co 33 Gomer P yle 13 Beverly Hdlbtll1es 8
Hodgepodge Lodge LO I Love Lucy 6
5 55 - Ear l N•ghtmga le 15
6 00 - News 3 4 8 10 15 6 ABC News 13 Sesame Street 20
Personality and Behav1oral Development 33
6 30 - News 3 4 6 8 10 15 Hogan .s Heroes 13
7 00 - News 10 WhaJ ' s My L•ne 8 Truth or Conseq 6 Beat the
Clock. 4 Anythtng You Can Do 13 E le&lt;: Co 20 Know Yo ur
1
Schools JJ B11J y Graham Crusade 3 Amerrcan Lrle Styte 15
1 30 - To Tell the Tr uth 6 Sale of the Century 8 The Judge 10
Beatthe Clock 13 All the F un 15 Gettmg There4 Bill f:Jo.oyers
Journal 20 3J TBA IS
8 00 - Sonny &amp; (her 10 , Wmn•e the Pooh J 4 15 D1ck Clark
~;~~~~~s the Rock and Roll Years 6 13 Br lly Graham
1
8

Real Estate For sale

12 x 60 3 BEDROOMS 1969
Globemaster , 10 a c res land ,
gas avarlabte Cab•n located
on McKenz•e R1dge Road
back of Ractne Contact Don
Elliott Box 111B Racrne
1968 CAMARO P S AT Good
OhiO 45771
cond•t•on 6 cyl
good gas
11 25 3tp
mrleage ,
$700
George
Hackett Jr
M1ddlepor't
SALE! SALE! SALE 1 While
Ohro phone 992 2444
Farson Avenue was closed to
11 15 3tp
trafftc we got overstocked on
our Mob1le Homes In order to
FOR SALE or trade 1965 Chevy
clear these homes we have
Impala Phone 667 3652
chopped our pnces as low as
11 25 3tp
f I I I I •,J I I I ; , I ' ;I·' Il
possible 1 1971 60 x 12
r ,, , I.' I Jr)t,J 1'. ! I ',I &lt;&gt;I,'!'
Champ•on 2 bedrooms , was
1973 CHEVROLET Impala
t, •, '·,00: 1,, I I ·
S4,995 now S3 995 1 60 x 12·
v•nyl lop stereo power seats
Rembrandt was S4 795 now
atr condtt1onmg P S , P B
S3 995 (4 bedrooms ), 1 1971 60
99:.&gt;3325 or
Good gas m rleage new car
x 12 Buddy 3 bedroom was
del•very forces sale Call 992
S4 795 now S3 995, 1 60 x 12
99"1.-36 15
2049 before 5 p m , 992 3546
PM C , 2 bedroom, was
after5pm
$5 495, now S4 995 1 60 x 12
11 25 3tc
W.nston , 2 bedroom 2 full TWO bedroom house at 473
baths - th ts untf ts extra
Sycamore Street •n Mn:t
Coronet
6
1968 OOOGE
sharp, was ss 995, now 54,995,
dleport
Vacant Call 992 5310
cylinder standltrd shlft, ex
1 44 x 12 Regent 2 bedroom
112126tc
cellent Shi9pe See ~oy Arms
was 54, 295 now $3,695, 1 1974
992 7149
65 x 12 Detro•ter 2 bedroom ,
11 25 Jfc
front den wtth fireplace
reduced $1 000 lo S7 ,995 We GOOD Investment property , 3
TRUCKS 1968 R Model
furntshed apartments, In
also have a large select ton of
Maxdyne $8 000 also 1968 F
come S210 monthly out of
good used 8 and 10 wrde
state owner For Inform at ron,
Model Maxdyne, S5,500 Call
homes now tn stock The
phone 992 5131 davttme
161Al 962 302A or 962 5299
prices include your del•very
11 25 3tp
11 25 6tc
and complete set up Don t
wart, shop now at Berry
1957 CHEVY 2 dr hardtop 283
Mrtler MObile Home Sates 705 6 ROOMS and bath In town ,
eng me
4 speed
Contact
Farson Street Belpre, Ohto
$11 ooo Call 9923975 or 992
Henry Hill Barber shop m
Used Mobile Homes IS our
2571
Pomeroy
Spec1alty not our s•dellne
9 28 fft
11 21 6tc
• II 27 3tp

11 4 tfc

Television Log

t

I

..

•

&lt;·:·=·=·=·:-·-:-;-, ' •

TUESDAY , NOV 27 lf73
00 - Btl~Graham Crusade J Dusty s lt &lt;lll 13 !\\arLO SI)Oft
r- ~tel~
Cat the Clock 4 News 10 TBA 15 Ete-ctf'"IC Co 10
,
,.u or onsequeoces o What s M'f Line 8
7 30 - World of Surv1val.t To Tell the Truth 6 R FD :10 Mor
: TChh•n1YouBAreJ3 New Pnce Is Rtght8 10, Beat 1he Clod. 13f'
ares lartr s BeU~r World IS
¥ 00 - Chase 3 4 Amer1can Hentage 6 13 Brfly Grahclfll
15, Maude 8, 10 War and Peace 20 33
I 30Crusade
- Brlly Graham CrusadeS Hawau Frve 010
f ~ - Mag1ctan 3, 4 15 . Show Bosrness Salutes M 111on Serle 6,

EX CAVAT ING Do .... ,~ 1arge
and small
Backhoes and
loaders on track and tires
Dump truck - Lo bov s.er
v_1ce Sept 1c tank:i' Installed
George (8111) Pullins phone
992 2478 or 992 7402
1 9 tfc

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE rates Ph t46
4782 Gallfpolfs John Russell,
Owner and Operator
5 12 tfc

0 DEL '- Hr r 1:

Bradbury

COMPLETE
INTERIOR
REPAIR

NEW LARGE rectrnrng charrs MOBILE home repa1r Elec DOZER and bacK hoe work
rn vrny l materral buy now or
ponds and sep trc tanks d1t
1r.cal plul"flb tng and heattng
lay away for Chr stmas Onlv
chrng serv•te fop sort ftll
Phone
992
5656
S89 95 Sw1vel rockers rn
drrt
limestone
B&amp;K
7 15 tfc
velvet nylon and prrnts that
Escavatmg Phone 992 5367 or
make a wonderful grft for
99 2 3861
TANK S cleaned
your wife Only $69 95 All SEP TIC
,
9 1 tfc
Modern Sanrtatro n 992 3954 or
.tem s cash and carry or 60
991
7349
day lay away
Pomeroy
10 23 tfc HARRISON S TV serv tce and
Re c overy
622 E
Marn ,
ser\ltce ca lls Phone 992 2522
Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
2 9 He
112026f.c G &amp; 1:::: Appl•ance Repa 1r Phone
at the shop 99 2 3802 or 949
UPHOLSTERY Fabr cs by the
RON SHEPARD , Floor Wall
4254
yard 54 rnches wrde as low as
Remode lrn g Ce ramr c t rle
10 24 30tp
S1 95 per yard velvets as low
baths Box 260 Rutland 742
as $3 45 Import ed ve lvets ,
3664
TANKS
AROBIC
$9 95 We also have ny lon SEPTIC
6 26 tfc
SEWAGE
SYS
TEM
S
herculon
cotton pr rnts
- --- --------~--CLEANED
REPAIRED
v ny ls and remnanl s by the
p &amp; J Heat1ng &amp; Cool 1ng vas or
MILLER SANITATION
yard or by the p•e ce Pomeroy
Fue l Or! - We have many
STEWART
OH
10
PH
662
Recovery 622 East Mam
furna ce parts and ptumbrng
3035
Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
parts for 10 pet above cost
1o A tfc
215 N Sec ond M•ddleport
11202Dtc
~-~------ ---..---992 3509
FOAM to frll your old couch and ELNA and Wh1te Sewmg
10 31 30tc
Mach.nes
Serv1ce
on
all
cha 1r cush•ons as tow as
makes Reasonabfe rates
$10 95 Upholstery books only
CO NCRETE
The Sewrng Center M•d READY MIX
SOc 4 rnth covered foam
del1vered rrght to your
dteport Oh10
mattresses tor standard s ze
pro1ect Fast and easy Free
ll 16 tfc
bed
$19 95
Pomeroy
est1mates Phone 992 3284
Re covery
622 E
Man
Goeglern Ready Mt)( Co
Pomeroy Phone 992 755 -1
Middleport
Oh 10
11 2026tc
6 30 lf c
8 NI CE ewes 4 reg s tered 4
grade Atso n 1ce slaughte r
lamb Call 949 3073
11207tc

Our

PRE FABRICATED

-------------

PHONE

'

A ·sK us ABOUT

NOY SPEC
$12 so Perm For
Req Hatr S8 50

992 -7474
Johnson Masonry
&amp; (Remodeling I
992 -7608

COAL FO R SALE J AYMAR
Ph "192 2174
Pomeroy
COAL CO MPANY
THE
MEIG S &amp; GALLIA LI NE
STATE
RO UTE
7 AT
CHESHIRE OPEN 7 AM WIL L tr 1m or cut trees and
sh r ubbery Also clean out
TIL L 6 30 PM 5 DAYS A
basements att1cs etc Call
WEEK PHONE 992 5693
949 3221 or 742 4441
11 26 5tc
......_
112 130t c

_______

and

Johmes Beauty
Salon

GROCERY busrness for sa 1o:!
Build1ng tor sate or lease
Phone 773 5618 from 8 30 p m
to 10 p m for appomtment
3 20 ftc
LOT ); of ch rysanthemums for
sale freld grown We on ly
have one color - yel low 10
bun ches for ss we have some
out 1n full bloom some IUSI
buddtnQ Reynolds Flower
Shop Mason W va Call 773
5147
9 26 H e

Patntmg A Spectalty

1•1, .~

9 30 ---- .Movre '

OllfiCE SUPPLIES

All work guaranteed

992 -6675

PRICE
CONSTRUCTION

992 -2094
606 E Maon Pomeroy

Ph. 992-5271

D. L.
PH

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

Gene's
Body Shop

.!i

•

--~

I Ok

~o l k

Employment Wanted

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

For Sale
'•All

RESPONSIBLE
PERSON

J

Manuel. Anna G Manue, Lot
21, Racme
Jane H11l , Dale H11l , Dolly
Wolfe to Donna H11l , Ca rl
Wolfe , Jr , Dolores Casper aka
Dolores Owens, 6 Acre 100 acre
Lot 264, Letart
Donna H11l, Dallas Hill , Ca rl
Wolfe , Jr , Suzann Wolfe to

~

.

\ t1\

�10

Tht· Dtnh Sent mel. M1ddleport-Pom~·ru~. U.• Nm . 21. W7:.t

Impounded

Rural
~ Conlinul'd

::·:::::::::••;:::::::~::::·:·:·:·:-:-:.-:-:·:·:·:·:~===~=::::::::::::::::::::;:;.::::::;:;:::;::.:·:·:·:·:·:·:.;·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·~=::;:·:·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:::·:·:::::·:·;::::::::::::;:;:::;:;.;.;:;.;-::::;.;~f;

from Pagt' 1l

water..sewcr grants.
Erwin. in a table distnbuted

wilil his speech. said tho $3.9
billion FHA goal for the current fiscal ye(tr also mcluded
pro jcetcd insured and govern-

ment-guaranteed loan.s of $720
milJion for water and sewer
projects , other communi.ty
facilities and rural Industrial
devel opment. In the year

ending last June 30, before the
new $200 million industrial
develo pment Joan program
was launched, O\•erall rural
facility and service loans were
$423.7 million .

VASCARATWORK
RL '-;,AND
Three
defendan ts were fined in

Mayo r Eugene Thompson's
Court Monday night, each for
spcedmg. They were Ronnie L.
Ohlinger, Mason , Roger C.
Whtte, Langsville, Rt. 1, and

Frank M. Bentley, Hamden,
each $10 and costs. They were
cited by Police Chief Bruce
Davis. A VASCAR umt was
used to catch the offenders.

SIGN MISSING
SYRACUSE - A street s1gn
IS missing, police Chief Milton
Varian reported teday. The
Third and Sixth Sts. marker,
last seen on the ground Monday

at .noon, was not there last
evening. Anyone who might
have see n the sign is asked to

tell Varian or Mayor Hermon
London.

MEIGS THEATRE
Ton1g ht , Nov . 27

THE FRIENDS OF
EDDIE COYLE
t Technicolor )
Robert Mifchum
Peter Boy le

I RI
D1sney Cartoons :
Trick or Treat
Ferd1nand the Bull
Football Now &amp; Then
Show Starts 7 p.m .

t r,mhnut."CC frum Pat-:e 1)

late will be pro-rated . Action as
to how next year's dues will lx•
patd will be .t~cted on by lh('
board of directors
I ngels md1cated lhHt when
all pledged mone) is recei\'ed,
there will be approximately

$1 ,700 1n the Christmas fund .
He said a\1 prize-s for the
Ch ri s tma s g1ve-away have
bee n purchased by Mrs .

i:::~ Grandpa without a heart
1Ul' l 1 - The father
of J . Paul Getty lli offered $1

Jl3Y the money, but said the
offer was m~1de wiU10ut any

unlhon Monday night for the
return of the missmg youth , but
the teen·ager's bilhonaare
W&lt;Jndfather reftLS('d to pay a
cent.
Mrs. Gail Harris, mother of

,!)1ring:s ~JttachLod .
Mrs. llarris said she couldn't

HOM~~

the 17-year-&lt;Jld yo uth , annolUlced the offer and attacked

Carolyn Thomas. secretary.
Ingels also reported that

oil billionaire J . Paul Getty for

expenses for the Chri stma s
promotion w11l be less than last

less, old man's arid solitude."
In an open letter to the
alleged kidnapers of her son.

year due to the fa ct that Christ·
mas lights w1ll not be erected
this season in keepmg with the
present need to co nserve
energy.
Jn other bu stness the

chamber agreed to pay the
ex penses of Mrs . Thomas who
attended a chamber meeti ng in
Circlev.IIle .
Members also voted to

remaming " fnced in his love·

Mrs. Harn s sa id her

ex-

husband had agreed to pay $1
million provided she give him
custody of her other three
children.
A spokesman for the fath er
in London confirmed he would

i:

1Conllnued from Page! \
the steel 1rxlustry about prices
sent the average 34.95 points

any nmsom, because it would
cn&lt;..'Oura~e others to ktdnap

lower .
Monday's final average was
the Dow's lowest since Nov. 26,

other of his grandchild ren .
Young Getty d1sappeared 1971, when it hit 816 .59. The
raise all of the $3.4 million last July 9 and subsequent average price of a conunon
ran som demanded by the leners said he had been kid- share declined $1.06.
Donald C. Samuel, president
youth's alleged kidnapers be- na ped . At that time, some or
the
youth's
friends
expressed
of
the Energy Fund, said the
cause the bllhonaire wa s
·•petnfied and not warmed by ske ptici sm about the kid- current trend to sell has not yet
naping , saying the youth m1ght sparked panic selling by the
love.11
"l no longer feel hatred or have staged his own disap. large institutions.
Oils issues have been among
rage , only pity," she said. pP:tr:ln ('(' .
U1e hardest hit in the past
HPity for my Paul who 1s so
The
alleged
kidnapers
sent
a
week,
with Getty off 8, Superior
alone, h1s beloved face mutila·
human ea r to a Rome 13, Atlantic Richfield 611!, and
ted."
She said she was even sorry new spaPer earlier this month Ohio Standard 5.
Gulf Oil, the volume leader,
for the youth's grandfather and then sent another paper a
of
photos
purporting
to
packet
gained 'Is of a point to 21 \'z.
because " his declining life is
show
the
teen-ager
wtth
an
ear
Over
the weekend, the comw1Ulout love."
missin
g
.
They
warned
of
pany denied reports it had
Getty reportedly the world S
richest man , has said through a further mutilation if the ran~ discovered a major oil find off
the west coast of Africa .
spokesman he would not pay som was not paid.
1

1

General Motors, a big loser

recently amid prospects of
lower car sales and auto travel

Dr. Lawrence E. Lamb

restrictions, was second, drop..

purchase membership plaques
and pay dues of $20 to join the

Diet questions bother

Chamber
of
Commerce
Executive of Ohio, the purpose
of whtch is to be mformed of

legislation that affects small
businesses . Ingels agreed to
attend the Ohio Festival
AssociatiOn., meeting
'"
Columbus on Dec. 2 when the
Queen of Queens contest will be
discussed .
Due to the repmr going on at

DEAR DR. LAMB - 1 have
only briefly tried both Dr
Atkins' diet and Dr . Stillman 's
Quick Loss D1et I can 1·eadily
Wlderstand how excess fat s in

not a dime 's worth of dtf~ safe and sens ible weaght
ference m the two approaches. control. The problem is that
The first week of the Atkins' many htgh protein foods also

the Courthouse, there is no heat

Dr. Atkins ' d1et can be harm·

lettuce

m the chamber office located
on the ground floor . The office
will be closed the rest of the

ful. Having heard both doctors
on the same TV talk show at
the same lime, I still fail to see

roughage . The amount is "less

such diets. It ts a source of
excellent protein and calcium

than one cup. " That means the

without overloading the fat

week

until

heat

can

many overweight people

be -·· where Dr. Atkins ' diet, which

restored. Those wishing to
contact Mrs. Thomas may call
her at her home, 992-3128.
Attending were Ingels,

does include two salads (low
carbohydrate ) per day leaving
off all fats would be more
harmful than Dr Stillman 's

Wendell

Richard

diet whi ch does not contain one

Chambers, Bill Grueser, Henry
Cle land, Ted Reed, John
Koebel, Virgil Teaford, C. E.
Blakeslee, Jack Carsey, Bob

gram of carbohydrate.
I have not received
satisfactory answers to this
questiOn fr om either my

Hoover,

Ja cobs, Mrs. Thomas, Beulah
Jones and Katie Crow .

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown Pomeroy at 11 a .m.

Tuesday was 64 degrees, with
light rain falling .

diet allows a salad for lunch contain a lot of fat. That is why
and dinner, of loosely packed fortified skim m1lk is good for
or

othe r

similar

total ca1·bohydrates for the day mtake . Uncreamed co tta ge
would be less than four grams. cheese is also in this category.
Dr. Atkins refers to thLS as Dr . Atkins opposes skim milk
" biologtcally

ze r o

ca r ~

bohydrate." Ard I would agree
that yo u can constder that to be
essentiall y
a
" no-

That
doesn't mean I approve of it.
A properly planned low
carbohydrate, low fat, h1gh
husband s physician or my protein diet to lose we1ght is all
own. We are both very much l'ight. Ehm1nating the fat,

carbohydrate "

diet.

1

overweight and only seem to be
able to lose weight on a very

however, meant it is no longer

the Atkins' diet. The principle
is to elimmate calones . The
two main sources of calories

low carbohydrate, low fat , high
protein diet. My husband has
high blond pressure and many are fats and sweets.
You can plan a diet that
related problems .
includes
fres h vegetables,
We would very much ap·
prectate an answer from you.

DEAR READER - There 's

fruits,

cereals, lean

meats

(chicken, fish, beef) that is
sufficiently low in calories for

ayne R: R upe, 68, dies

YOUR
BANKING
IS OUR
·BUSINESS

Stocks

RUTLAND - Wayne R.
Rupe, 68, Rutland , pa ssed
away unexpectedly Monday
afternoon

in

Veterans

Memorial Hospital.
Born Nov. 12, 1905 m Meigs
County to W1lliam W. and Alma
E. Hysell Rupe, he was
preceded in death by h1s father
and a brother.

w1th the Rev. Lloyd D. Grimm
officiating. Burial will follow in
the Miles Ceme tery, Rutland.
Fnends may call at the Walker

ping 2% to 49%.
Other losers were Ford,
Me Donald's Corp., another
issue adversely affected by
projected declines in motor
travel , and chemicals, com·
puters,

airlines

and air-

crafts.
On the American Stock
Exchange, there was a loss of
35 cents in the average price of
an

Amex common share.
DIVORCES GRANTED

Three divorces granted in

Meigs Coun ty Common Pleas
Court Monday were to
Yealanda Elliott, Rt.l, Racine,
from Donald Elliott, Rt. 1,
Racine, gross neglect of duty

The Associated Press AllDi strict 1Southern Ohio)
Football Team was announced
today .
In Class A circles, Dave Wise
of Kyger Creek made first

an offensive end, Mike Codner,
g~ard and Mitch Ne,ase . a

running back. Eastern s Tun

Bawn was a second team
defensive end choice.
In

Class

AA

circles,

Gallipolis' Pat Boster made
Tabor, also of Kyger Creek, second team guard and Mike
made first team defensive Berridge was a second team
linebacker. Meigs' Dave Wolf
back.
Phil Lewis of Southwestern was named second team of·
made second team delensive fensive end while Marauder J .
end. Two North Galli a backs, D. Story was named a second
Ralph Smith and Sterling team linebacker.
Ironton placed five men on
Logan~ were named second
Ule first team in AA circles,
team defensive backs.
Southern ploced three men and Tiger coach Bob Lutz was
on the second team in Class A tri.eoach of the year in the
play . Jim Williams was named Southern Ohio District.
team guard while Lawrence

News

• • •

•

zn Briefs

(Continued from Page I)
bad loans . CUrtis Prins, chief lnvestigatorfor the House Banking
Committee, has been investigating the Richmond off•:• for one
month. In addition, evidence linking the While House tn .some~
the illegal loan activities is expected to be presented m ear Y
testimony, possibly as early as today.
HUNTINGTON , W. VA. - THE SHORTAGE of available
propane gas has caused a postponement in plans to bwld a $2.~
million factory at the Kyle Industrial Park near here, a state
Commerce Department spokesman said today .
Alex Lawrence of the deparlment's industrial development
division said Roberts Consolidated Industry of Los Angeles bad
planned ground opening ceremonies for the $2.5 million f~c1lity
this fall . However, the contract prepared for the supplier of
propane gas to heatlbe structure was returned uns1gned because
of the iack of fuel, Lawrence said.

Funeral Home anytime after 2 amount of " hard' ' water each

day can gel nearly one-fifth of
will receive friends Wednesday the daily calcium needs that
way . Some of the other
from 2-4 and 7-9.
p.m. Wednesday. The family

minerals in the water may also

be useful .

appointed a member of the

boa rd of directors of the
Leading Creek Conservancy
District for a full five year
term, commencing Dec. 16,

1973.

11 :58 a.m. to Rutland for

Wayne Rupe and at 3:26p.m . to
Route 248 for Edith Osborne.
Both were taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

United Auto Workers returned
to work at nine of 10 Caterpillar
Tractor Co. plants in five states
Monday ending a strike that
began Nov. 15.

Gertrude Stansbury Rupe,
whom he married Nov. 26, 1924,
resided in Arizona the past 14

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Trust Us For
All Money

Calif., and the Rutland Church
of the Nazarene, Mr. Rupe is
Richard R. Rupe, Pomeroy,
and Lewis A. Rupe, Phoenix,

Ariz.; a daughter, Mrs. Donald

•CHECKING ACCOUNTS

(Mary Ann ) Davidson, Indi o,

Mrs. Mabel Reaves, Akron;
eight grandchildren, a greatgranddaughter, and several

.

DR. DANIEL WHITELEY

IN HOSPITAL
Janice Couch, Pomeroy, who
was in an automobile accident

eHOME LOANS

Saturday evening and treated
and released from Veterans
Memorial Hospital and Holzer
Medical Center, today, was
readmitted to Holzer Medical
Center were she will undergo
surgery for a shoulder
separahon she apparently
sustained in the accident.

.OPEN OUR
CHRISTMAS CLUB
TODAY.

Misses' and Juniors' Jeans.

Dr. Whitely

NOV. 29
M e1gs Jr. H1gh Audt .

7,10 PM

Auto Teller Window anH Walk-up Window
Open Friday Evenings 5 to 7 P.M.

Spoil so red by
Middleport fire Dept.

SANTA'S
MAGICAL
WORK SHOP

Starring
JOE EDDIE
MASTE·R MAGICIAN
Featuring

Boozo the Clown

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

Also o1her Famous Stars of
the Big Top . Advance
Ticket s, Adults or child,
$1 25

Great Christmas Fun!!

SOLID COLORS - PLAIDS - P A'I"I'ERNS

York, Dr. Whiteley graduated
from Princeton University in

1961 and the Upstate Medical
Center of Syracuse, New York
in 1965.
After completing his surgical
internship

at

Cincinnati

General Hospital in 1966, Dr.
Whiteley continued there for
his surgical residency which
was completed shortly before
his joining the clinic on Nov. 1.
Medicine is a1 ot new to Dr,
Whiteley. His fahter was a
general practitioner in Jordan,
New York for 45 years and his

OVER 1,000 PAIRS IN STOCK

Domg the
nght thing at ~he right lime .
Loyalty - To your teamOrganization -

mates, coaches, supporters.

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

18.00
15.00
13.00
12.00
11.00
10.00
9.00
8.00
7.25
7.00

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

SALE 11.77
SALE 9.77
SALE 8.47
SALE 7.77
SALE 7.17
SALE 6.47
SALE 5.87
· · • 5.17
SALE 4.67
SALE 4.47

mother was a self-made nurse

who worked with the elder Dr.
Whiteley in his office. A
brother of Dr. Whiteley has
specialized in cancer surgery
and is presently a practicing
surgeon at the Memorial
Hospital for Cancer and Allied
D1seases in New York City.

Rohr also stressed the role of
the high school coach, saymg,
"The coach, with the exception
(Continued on Page 6)

YQ..UR CHRISTMAS SHOPPING HEADQUARTERS

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

COACH, SPEAKER - Bill Rohr, n ght, Ohio Univers1!y athletic director, was the guest
speaker Tuesday night at the Eastern Eagle football banquet held in the h1gh school gym.
Joining Rohr here is the architect of the Eagles' 4-5 season, Spike Berkh1mer. (Pictures continued on Page 6.)

lly United l'ress International
The deadlocked military ta lks between Israel
and Egypt were postponed today until Thursday
following a general hardening of positions by both
sides. Israeli Defense Minister l\1oshe Dayan called
the cease-fire ineffective and Egyptian President
Anwar Sadat warned thai new fighting could sta rt
at any minute.
In Algiers an Arab Summit conference drew to
a close with a fiery speech from Moroccan Ktng
Hassa n 11 promising victory marches 111 the streets
of Damascus and Ca iro and prayers in an Arab
Jerusalem . And there was a pledge to wield the oil
weapon s trongly to gain their objectives agains t
Israel.
Egyptian Prestdent

Anw~:~r

Sadat told the summit con·
ference Tuesday that "the
battl~ has not ended and the
fighting could be resumed at
any minute .'' He said the

"military battle alone cannot
resolve the situati on" and

called for Arab petroleum ·

Devoted To 17w lntereall

VOL. XXV NO. !59

OJ 17w MeigJ·Maaon Area

producmg nations to use their
oil weapon to bring pressure on
Israel's suppor ters.
A United Nations spokesman

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1973

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WASHI NGTON (UP! )- The
govcmment 's new heatin g oil

alloca lion regulations put the
fu e l

co nse rvation

burden

squarely on the back of the
American consumer, to the

tune of a 6-to-Hklegree temperature reduction in their
homes and businesses.

The regulations, published in

the Federal Register, will allocation at the wholesale
require that the end user of level only, but the new
middle distillate fuels - the regulations put the primary
American
consumer-eut responsibility on the final user.
mdoor temperatures or face
The regulations are designed
the prospect of running out of to force consumers to lower
fuel during the coldest months. thermostats 6 degrees 1n
The

a dm i nistration

homes and 10 de grees in
originally had hoped to solve businessesthe amoun t
heating oil shortages by recommended by Nixon in a
nationwide speech Sunday-or
to reduce consumption of other
sca rce fuels by an equivalent
amoWlt.

Year round head
start proposed
The Galba-Me1gs Head Start
" parent advisory committee"

at the Cheshire community
cen ter
Tuesday
voted
unanimously to have the

'

t

li.l.

NEW YORK - PRICES ON THE NEW YORK Stock Exchange closed lower In active trading Tuesday despite two rally
attempts. The Dow Jones Industrial average wavered, but
fmisbed down 7.22polnls at 817.73, its lowesllevel in two years. It
was the lowest close since Nov. 26, 1971, when the blue.ehip in·
dicator hit 816.59.
·
Turnover totaled 19,750,000 shares, compared with Monday's
19,830,000. Analyst Walter X. Burns of Lynch, Jones and Ryan
said Tuesday's two rally attempts "were not too impressive,"
and "next week, or the week after, we may get something that's
playable."
General Motors led the actives, off 'AI to 49¥• on 291,~00
llhares. The company told the United Auto Workers it could not
postpone Its planned layoffs set for Dec. 17. The UAW also said
•
(Conllmled on Page 10 )
.,f ,
1

areas. Direct experience could

swnmer head start program

be substituted for college work.
The salary
would
be
nego tiable, depending on

by Dee. 15 and to request that

education and experlence.

Gallia-Meigs C.A.P. apply for a
•

group that the Head Start
director should have work at
the college level or m related

its program be converted to a

year round status by Feb . 15,
1974.
Th e Parent
AdviSory
Committee also mstructed the
Gallia-Meigs C.A. P. to advertise immediately for a full
time head start director who
will be totally responsible for
the operatiOn of Head Start
programs in Galha and Me1gs
Counties . 11 was agreed by the

The Gallia-Meigs C.A.P. also
has

an

openin g

for

a

bookkeeper who is capable in
double entry bookkeeping.
Applications are available at
the Pomeroy C.A.P. Office,
Gallipolis C.A.P. office, and
the Cheshire Community
Center. Barbara Glassburn ,
president cf the committee,

CUstomers will get an initial
"fill-up" if enough heating oil
is available but after that
supplies will be cut by the
amount necessary to force the
lower temperatures.

Arything left over will be
saved for non-priority use,

including hardship cases and
states are called upon to set up

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Fair Friday and Saturday
with a chance of showers on
Sunday. High temperatures
In the 40s Friday warming up
to the 50s by Sunday. Low
temperatures In lhe upper
20s and low 30s on Friday
and In the 30s Saturday and
Sunday.

presided .

cent of the nonpriority allocabons.

The admimstration said the
limits on heating oil use are
necessary to sp read an~

Windows smashed
in junior high

Vandals struck Gallia
Academy Junior High School
between 5 p.m. Tuesday and
1:55 a.m. today smashing 20
windows in the junior high shop
and gymnasium.
City policy discovered the
vandalism at 3:55 a.m. while
on routine patrol. Officers said
the windows were broken with
bricks.

Weather
Cloudy,

colder

tonight,

chance of flurries in the nor·

theast. Low in low 30s. Clearing
in the south. High temperatures mostly in the 30s.

to review progress of the
remodeling being done at the

Auditor's office, Tuesday was

court house .

Six defendants were fined
and another was assessed costs

only in Middleport Mayor John
Zerkle's Court Tuesday night.
Fmed were Leah Schaefer,
79, Pomeroy, $5 and costs,
running stop sign; Kenneth D.
costs, assured

clea~

distance;

Roger A. Brooks, 26, Reedsville, $10 and costs, speedmg;
Barbara E. Lowe, 18, Middleport , $10 and costs,
speeding; Mike Bolin, Middleport, $25 and costs,
misconduct; Jerry L. Slobart,
22, Middleport, $150 and costs,
driving while intoxicated and
$25 and costs, resisting arrest,
and Lawrence Grady, Jr., 19,
Pt . Pleasant, costs
spin ning tires.

named by the Meigs County Kingsbury Rd., Pomeroy RD .
Commissioners the interim The daughter of Mr. and Mrs .
'
auditor
until the successor of Virgil King, Pomeroy RD, she
Gordon Caldwell, is appointed has been employed in the
by
the Meigs County auditor's office approximately
Democratic Central Com- two years. Mr. White is an
employe of the Philip Sporn
mittee.
plant, who is not working
The committee has from five because of the strike there.
to 15 days to name a successor.
Mr .
Caldwell's
recent
Meeting with the comresignation as county auditor missioners Tuesday were
will become effective Dec. I Bernard
Fultz
and
when Mrs. White will take over representatives of Eesley, Lee
his dulles.
and Vargo architectural firm

'

only ,

,

seeking divorce

('

Two persons filing suit for
divorce in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court, both on
the charges of gross neglect of
duty and extreme cruelty, are
Lillian L. Maynard , 1674
Uncoln Hts., Pomeroy, from

Oscar Maynard, Racine, and
-Marilyn R . Cooper , Middleport, from Gary R. Cooper,
Rt. 1, Portland.
In other court action, Ellen
Tucker, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, was
granted a divorce from John
Tucker, Rl. 4, Pomeroy, and
David R. and Mary E. Wells,
Reedsville, have filed suit for
partition of real estate naming
W. H. Shumway , et al.,
defendant.
WCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown
Pomeroy Wednesday at 11 a.m.
was 60 degrees, under partly
cloud'y skies.

.J

understood that those invited

include Israel, Egypt, Syria
and Jordan. The question of
whether the Palestinians will
be permitted to attend ap.
pears to have been left un-

force to remain, the reports

said .

has settled down .11

He said no agreement had
bee n reached between the

C. E. Blakeslee and Leo
Story representing the Meigs
County Pioneer and Historical
Society also mel with the
commissioners in regard to a
meeting in January to make

Israeli press reports said the

deadlock centered on Egyptian

Foreign Minister Abba Eban

said in Jerusalem Tuesday that
Israel would ms1st on keeping
some captured Arab territory
under an overall peace set~
tlement to insure its security

against future attack.
President Sadat, m a speech
at the Al g1ers conference,
mdlCated pessimism about the

truce talks. "The battle has not
ended and the fi ghting could be
resumed at any minute," he

said.

Nixon whistles
and likes soup
WASHJNGTON (UP!) -

Something, Ehrlichman
Uscomplained,
was being "overtenillg to the first of President
'
Nixon's secret tapes, one. reported.11
11
Don
't
worry
aOOut
it-the
learns that the President
sometimes whistles while he hell with it," Nixon replied.

works, cusses a little and likes

The date of their con-

late morning consomme .

versation was June 20, 1972-

But there is nothing to be
learned about Watergate .
It took a four-month legal
battle to have these sounds
played publicly in U.S. District
Court Tuesday.
A hush fell over Judge John
J. Sirica's courtroom as Rose
Mary Woods, Nixon's personal
secretary, threaded a machine
and punched the ''play" button. Ar awful squawk came out
of the machine.
There was the President's
voice, unmistakable, but distorted by an echo and a low
underlying hum that sounded
like radio transmissions in
early space flights.

just three days after the
Water gate bugging arrests .

plans for the observance of the
bi.eentennial.
The commissioners will meet • " Presidential speeches are
next week on Monday instead full," Nixon seemed to say
of Tuesday.
early in the tape, his words
A!tending were Robert barely and infrequently underClark, Warden Ours, and standable.
Henry Wells, conunissioners
The voice of John D. Ehrlich- .
and Martha Chambers, clerk. man faded in and out,
crackling and sometimes lost
In the drone of an airplane
passing overhead or in the
shuffle of papers.

Blll Kane, assistant
director
of
security
operations In charge of anti·
narcollc operations a\ Ohio
Unlverslly, wlll present
displays and show movies on
drug problems at the Mid·
. dleport United Pentecostal
Church, S. Third Ave., at 10
a.m. Sunday.
Kane, who sen;ed 14
years In lhe Ohio Stale Highway Patrol, has had extensive training In the field
of drugs. All parents and
young people are urged to
alleod by the Rev. William
Knittel, pastor.

A.
1&gt;.,

1

beginning Dec. 18.
A Stale Department
spokesman said the first bids
went out Tuesday. II was

Egyptians .

Expert coming

Two suits filed

Russia are Inviting the
Arabs and Israel to a peace
conference in Geneva

ponement was requested by the

ticipated shortages "equitably generals on a dtsengagement
throughout the nation ."
of Israeli and Egyptian forc es
along the Suez Canal .

Mrs. White, a graduate of
ploye of the Meigs County Meigs High School, and her
husban'd, Harold, reside on

Suez road between Israeli Maj .
Gen . Aharon Yari v and

The regulatiOns will not go
11
The cease-fire is still not an
into effect until Congress has effective one," Dayan told a
passed 'President Nixon's ener- group of American Jewish
gy co nserva ti on le gislation, leaders. "A great deal depends
expected to be law by mid- on what happens at Kilometer
December.
101. It 1s not a cease-fire that

Interim auditor named
Six hit
by fines
Mrs . Grace White, an em-

in Ca1ro said the talks at
Kilometer 101 on the CairO·

WASHINGTON I UP I ! The United States and

decided.
Egyptian
Maj.
Gen .
Mohammed Gamassy were
postponed at Israel's request demands to keep two army
and were rescheduled for 11 dtvisions on the east bank of
a.m. Thursday (4 a.m. EST). the Suez Canal. Israel wants
a ''state reserve ' 1 from 10 per Israeli reports said the post· only o small Egy ptian policing

Chill down, or else

BEIRUT - THREE ARAB GUERRILLAS holding 11
hostages aboard a hijacked Dutch jumbo jet landed in the Persian Gulf sheikdom of Dubai today and won a pledge of safe
conduct for the release of captives and plane.
It was the second time the Arab hijackers ordered the KLM
Boeing 747 down in the tiny oil state during the three-day
hijacking. The plane landed there Tuesday but refueled and took
off. In addition to the new promise of safe conduct, the Arabs
have received assurances that Holland would not permit transit
facilities on its soil for Jews emigrating to fsrael.

,.
I

Coach's role

McCONNELSVILLE, OHIO - OHIO INNS INC., operator of
facilities at Burr Oak state park, and state officials were sued for
$1.1 million in Morgan Cc.unty Common Pleas Court Tuesday by
56 former park workers. The .workers claim Ohio Inns engaged in
unfair labor practices by not recognizing the Hotel and
Restaurant Employes and Bartenders International Union Local
505 as a bargaining agent and by violating the concession contract they had with the state.
The union went on strike last spring and after violence in
mid..,ummer Gov. John J. Gilligan ordered the park lodge and
cabins closed because of danger to guests. The facilities were reopened In October.

POLYESTER/COTTON BLENDS,
BRUSHED DENIMS

Robe rt E . Daniel, administrator of Holzer Medical
Center Clinic, announced today
that Dr. Daniel H. Whiteley has
jomed the cliQic staff as a

attention all the time.

have learned:

COLUMBUS- DELEGATES TO THE 55th annual meeting
of the Ohio Farm Bureau Federation here Tuesday reelected 10
trustees to three-year terms. The re..,lected officials
representing about one-third of the membership of the board
Included Golden Canaday, Northup, operator of a 461klcre
tobacco, dairy and livestock farm, representing Athens, Gallia,
and Meigs counties. He will serve his seventh term.

DENIMS, CORDUROYS,

clinic staff

MIDDLEPORT

today.

'' 1

To hve as a public image An athlete is in the center of

Mohler , 35, Middleport, $15 and

Sizes 3 through 20.

joins Holzer

. .- - - - - - - - - . . , 'general surgeon specializing in
thoracic and vascular surgery.
A native of A,uburn, New

For all your banki"ng
needs you won't find a
better bank. Visit us

a~kPrl

mercial space from Chicago and will have to bus passengers
there as well."

'

•AUTO LOANS

"What do you learn fr om
athletics? " Rohr

airlines. We are also using, for the first time, some block com-

nieces and nephews.

Services will be held at the
Rutland Church of the
Nazarene Thursday at 10 a.m.

yourself into something for the must be able to take the bad
goed of the team - the team w•th the goed.
must come ftrst. ·•

By United Press Internatloual
THE ENERGY CRISIS AND PRESIDENT NIXON'S ordered cutback of jet fUel supplies may result in transportation
problems for Ohio State University fans planning to travel to
California for the Rose Bowl game.
"Some airline passengers will have to be bussed to Windsor,
Ontario, Canada, and then fly from there to Los Angeles," said
Donald Dodds, co-owner of Conlin-Dodds Travel Bureau. m
Columbus, the firm making arrangements for Rose Bowl tnps .
11 We have a couple of planes from TWA and American," said
Dodds, "but for the first time we are using some Canadian

Save Wednesday
During Our Sale of

Calif.; a brother, Gerald S.
Rupe, Middleport; a sister,

eSAVINGS ACCOUNTS
eSAFE DEPOSIT
BOXES

Tolerance - There are no
ever pa1d tum was that, " he
prejudices
on the field of play .
never forgot me," stressed
Per severa n(•e - Life is
cohesiveness m athletics ,
stating 1 '' You submerge nothing but ups and downs; you

carcass.

JEANS SALE

surv ived by his m other, Mrs.
Alma Rupe, Rutland ; two sons,

Matters

BY DENNY FOBES
EASTERN HS - "Competi\ive athletics is the finest
laboratory a player can ever
gel into to prepare for the
game of life."
Thi!. was the theme of an
address by Bill Rohr, Ohio
University Athletic Director,
speaking to approximately 300
persons gathered here Tuesday
evening to honor the 1973 Eagle
football team .
Rohr, who said the greatest
tribute his high school coach

SHOP WEDNESDAY 9:30 TO 5 PM

A member of the Musicians
Union Local 347 m Imperial,

New rnideast
war delayed

Laboratory for living
found in athletics by
OU's athletic director

A NINE POINT BUCK DEER was bagged in the Dexter
area Tuesday, the second day of the deer season in Ohio, by
Harry Bolinger, Pomeroy. Mrs. Bolinger exhibits the 180 lb.

Mr . Rupe , and his wife,

Rutland the past summer.

•

Holzer Medical Center
3
Actions
filed
and recommends using thick
(Discharged)
cream , which is not a good
Clinton Betz,
John
Adrian,
Two persons have filed for
and extreme cruelty ; MaXIne
source of etther calciwn or
E . Haines, Portland, from divorce and another is seeking · John Borden, Bessie Fell ,
protein.
Dana E. Haines, Portland, a monetary judgment in Meigs Brodie Halley, Estalene
DEAR DR. LAMB - We gross neglect of duty. and to County Common Pleas Court. Hughes, Isabelle Maloney,
have recen tly moved to an area
Barbara James~ Pomeroy, Rosa Belle Mason, Porter
Martha J. Haynes, 51, North
where the water is extremely
asks
divorce from John James, McKean, Mrs. Paul Musick
Third Ave., Middleport, from
hard and has a high alkali Gary R. Haynes, Forestville, Jr ., Pomeroy, and Doris and daughter, Willia~ Porter,
content.
Haynes, 144 Mulberry Ave. , Theresa Price, Mrs. Michael
Md ., extreme cruelty.
So many of our neighbors~
Pomeroy, from Basil Haynes, Radabaugh and son, Garnet
youn g and old, buy bottled
144 Mulberry Ave ., Pomeroy , Reynolds, Mrs. Jaryes Shook
spring water for drinkmg and
both for gross neglect of duty and son, Don Snnith, Jr., Lisa
cooking. Can you tell us if hard
and extreme cruelty.
BOND FORFEITED
Tawney, Suzette Williams ,
water is harmful m any way?
Fred Blaettnar, representing Berlin Worrix.
SYRACUSE - Gary A.
DEAR READER - As a Ca rver, Racme, forfeited his Blaettnar Auto Co., 500 E. Main
(Blrlhs)
matter of fact, 1! may be good $20 bond in Syracu~e Mayor St., Pomeroy, is asking for
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Bowden,
for your health. Population Herman London 's Court $~39 . 46 plus interest fr.om a son, Hamden ; Mr. and Mrs.
studies have shown tha t people Monday night posted for Elizabeth Howell, Syracuse. George Johnston, a daughter,
who drink " hard water " are speedmg. Carver was cited by Blaettnar claims that Howell
Langsvllle .
less likely to have heart and Pollee Chief M1lton Vanan .
owes his company the money
vasc ular disease. The di f·
and interest from June 25, 1971,
PLEASANT VALLEY
ference is slight, though, so I
for services rendered and
DISCHARGES
John
hope no one will think th1s is the
materials.
Rollins,
Letart,
and
Tammy
CRISP APPOINTED
solution to all of hts problems.
Byus, Point Pleasant.
Accordmg
to an entry filed in
Water can also be an ImTWO
RUNS
MADE
portant source of calcium. A Meigs County Common Pleas
The Pomeroy E-R squad
STRIKE ENDS
person drinking a reasonable Court, Jack W. Cnsp has been
PEORIA, Ill . ( UP! )
answered two calls Monday, at

years before returning to

'

J\l''s J\ll-IJistrict
Team Is released ·

THE ''NOVEL" IN HANDMADE GIFT items is stressed at the annual Christmas bazaar
of Ohio Eta Phi Chap~r, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority. S?me of the items to be oUered this year are
being displayed in the Pomeroy National Bank. W1th them are left, Debb1 Buck , and Bess•e
Sylvester. Connie Bailey is chairman of the bazaar to be held on Saturday, Dec . 8,at the Trmtty • b.~f=t=!.
Church, Pomeroy, beginning at9 a .m .; Mrs. Buck and Susan Baer are c?""ha~rmen: Mrs. • SHOPPING DAYS
Sylvester is outgoing treasurer of the sorority and is a bank employe. Teammg w•lh Oh10 Eta
C H R I~ T ,...
_· AS
Phi this year for the bazaar will be theJ[iGanuna MuChapter.
'
T0
'"
J '
't
'
I

Water gate prosecutors Rrgued
that Nixon and Ehrlichman,

one of his lop advisers at the
time , probably had talked
about Watergate during their
meeting that morning.
If they did, it was impossible
to detect on the badly garbled
tape.
Shortly after 11 : 15 that
morning, Ehrlichman left and
Nixon apparently rang for a
steward .
"I'd like a little of that
consomme ," he said, then

broke into a cheerful whistle as
he waited.
As the tape reels slowly spun
aroWld, Siri(:a and everyone

jammed Into his courtroom
watched them, transfixed,
leaning forward in their seats
and straining to catch a word
or a phrase from Nixon,
Ehrlichman or H. R.

Haldeman .
" Teleprompter ... when we

get back . .. work better
whenever I go to a place like
that ... I don't want to say that
... either way ... you need help
that's a helluva ... we might go
to Camp David," the tape said.

KC's schools
closed today
High water forced the Kyger
Creek School District to close
its high school and two grade
schools this morning.
Accordmg
to
Frank
Cremeans , Local School
Superintendent, Rt. 554 west of
Cheshire,
the
AddisonBulaville Rd. and Little Kyger
Road were all covered with
water.

The Gallia-Meigs Post Slate
Highway Patrol reported
water closed Rt . 124 in Meigs
County and there was water on
Rt. 218, but the road would be
open for traffic this morning.
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
RACINE - The Racine E-R
squad answered a call at 4:30
p.m. Monday lor Jean Johnson,
Rt. 1, Racine, wbo was having
difliculty breathing. She was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hosnit;;l bY, the sql1admf ·

II

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