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                  <text>Resume of tax story promised
WASHINGTON

tU Pl l

-

had dtnner and a pnvate talk

Presaden1 N1xon reportedly will

with the President at the White
send every member of Con. House Tuesday nig:ht sa1d he
gress thas week a "packet " •of told them the package would be
Information on has personal on tt.s way shortly
fmances and mcome taxes , but
That some\\hat contrada&lt;·k-'d
not hlS actual tax returns
senators who lll('t w1th Ntxon
Some of 37 congressmen who the day before. some of whom

said ht• p1'11UII st.'(! hi lll&lt;-tke
pubhc hitj adual returns Ntxon
has Sllld he pwrt un l ~ · nonunaJ " ln&lt;:ume taxl"s m 1970 and

Torrential rams caused the
three deaths, all m Tennessee
Donrue Ayers, 1, was crushed
m the collapse of hiS horne,
undermmed by swtrhng ram
water . Albert Dantels and
Antoma Denese Forbes, 11 ,
drowned m flooded ditches
Tornadoes mjured 70 persons
m MlSSISstppi, 42 in Alabama
and 16 m Tennessee.
The worst-h1t area was
Desoto County, MISS., where

Doctor will pay
$2 million fine
SACRAMENTO , Calif.
(UP! ) - A drug-addt cted
surgeon called "an ogre, a
monster feedmg on human
flesh 11 was ordered Tuesday to
pay $2rnlllion to a dying cancer
patient in a malpractice smt.
Dr . John G. Nork, 45, an
orthopedic surgeon, was
chargep with perforrnmg unnecessary back surgery on a
grocery clerk that resulted in
tw o smctde attempts and
termmal cancer.
The Judgment was ordered
by Supenor Court Judge G
Abbott Goldberg, who Issued a
scathmg 196-page opm10n m
wh1ch he called the trml "a
grand Guignol of med1cal
horrors."
The Mercy Hospital, m which
the operation on Gonzalez was
performed, was ordered to pay
$1 7 million for suffering,
medical costs and lost wages
past and future . The $2 million
JUdgment ag8111st Nork was
pumtlve,
Nork, who admitted he was
addicted to " uppers and dow-

ners" from 1963 to 1970, had
previously
lost
two
malpractice cases totaling
more than $1 mtlhon and faces
25 more malpractice smts.
The surgery was preformed
on Albert Gonzales, 32, a
grocery clerk who wentlo Nork
after suffermg a whtplash
mjury m an auto accident.
HIS attorneys satd that
needless back fusion surgery
performed by Nork created
such emotional reaction and
pam that it triggered terminal
cancer. They said Gonzales
had three years to live.
Judge Goldberg said that
''Dr. Nork for mne years made
a practice of performmg unnecessary surgery, and performmg it badly, sunply to line
his pockets."
Nork admitted he had performed unnecessary surgery
on at least 38 patients.
"Dr Nork not only harmed
Gonzales' back, but he also
rumed hLS personahty,'' the
JUdge satd m his decisiOn.
"Certamly nothing about him
showed that he was m fact an
ogre, a monster feeding on
human flesh "

Ford
needs
House

schools were raked w1th h1gh
wmds
Civtl Defense dtreclor W E.
Wilroy Jr . estimated at least
115 trader homes were destroyed at the Redwood
Estates trailer park and between 2().30atthe Desoto woods
trailer park
Most residents were away at
work when the storm htt.
Wtlroy satd MISsissippi Gov
Btll Waller called out about 75
members of Senatobia and
Hernando Natwnal Guard
units to stand watch agamst
lootmg at the trailer parks and
nearby schools which also
SIIStalned damages.
The injured included SIX
yotmgsters at the Horn Lake
Elementary school, a fifthgrade boy at Southaven, Elementary School and a teacher
at Horn Lake.
The tornado demolished the
roof of Horn Lake High School,
caused roof damage at
Southaven Elementary, and
destroyed two mobile units and
heavtly damaged another at
Southaven
Wtlroy credtted qmck-thmkmg school officl31s for the
safety of the students. About
2, 400 students were m class at
the two schools when the storm
struck.
''The only reason there were
no more injuries Is because
they put mto pracUce thetr
natural disaster tramtng they
had jiiSt taken," he satd

By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - My
friend Rogers returned from a
road trip, wan and vtslbly
shaken, and laid a commumcation on my desk.
" Socwlogtsts and psycholo·
gists have correctly perceived
that many people undergo
distinct personality changes
when they get behind the wheel
of an automob1le," 1t sa1d
"The 98-pound weakling
whom bullies mturudate on the
beach by ktckmg sand m hiS
face becomes an aggressive,
menacing tlger m traffic,
roarmg along m a din of
squeahng hres and screeching
brakes.
''The bullies, meanwhile, turn
mto httle old lad1es Jn tenms
shoes, holdmg up trafftc,
blockmg mtersectwns and trymg to make a left from the
nght hand Jane
Understanding Comes Late
"Although long aware of
these aberratiOns, behaviorists
are only now beginning to
understand the CaliSe, which is
simply a loss of means of
communication.
" When a boy motonst sees a
gll'l motonst h1s only means of
sotmdmg a mating call is to use
a device mtended by DetrOit to
serve as a get-out-of-my-way

ANNUAL CHRISTMAS

BAZAAR

THIS COMING SATURDAY,
DECEMBER 1
TRINITY CHURCH, POMEROY

lunch will be served from 11:00 A.M. till 2
PM. at the church- For free home delivery in
Pomeroy - Middleport - Mason area , call in
reservations to 992-5124 or 992-3832 through
Thursday. Price $1.50.
Sp()nsored By

lshed the call that she had
pushed the wrong controls on
the tape ma chme, s he told US
DIStnct Court Judge John J
Smca, but she doesn't recall
any phone calls lastmg as long
as 18 mmutes.
The tape, mdudmg an 18mmute hwn, was played in
Sinca 's court. But even the
portions which weren't erased
gave no mformatton about
Watergate
Only Isolated words and
phrases could be deciphered
Nixon was heard ordermg a
bowl of consomme from his
steward. J ohn D. Ehrhchrnan
said the press "overresponded"
to someUung- what 1t was was
mandible-and Nixon replied :
"Don' t worry, the hell w1th 1!. "
In other developments
- Nixon recently sa1d the
leaders of the Senate Watergate
comm1ttee had agreed not to
mvesligate some umdentlf1ed
"very highly sensthve matters," but Sen. Howard H
Baker Jr., R-Tenn. , the vicechairman of that committee,
sa td Tuesday he's not so sure
the panel should stay away
from the subJect The questiOn,
Baker said, IS whether the
alleged nahonal security "matters" actually concern Watergate
- Former Attorney General
Elhot L Richardson satd he
proposed to the Whtte Houseand still beheves- that Nixon
should meet with rankmg
members of the Watergate
committee along with the
spectal prosecutor Richardson
was mtennewed on the D1ck
Cavett Show on ABC-TV

the Lighter side

WASHINGTON (UP!) Vtce Presidential nominee
Gerald R. Ford centered his
drive for confirmation m the
House today, bolstered by a 92.3 Senate vote of approval.
The histortc Senate vote
came Tuesday as Ford's wife,
Betty, and family fnends
watched from the gallery and
Ford hllJISelf watled a few feet
from the House chamber, m
the office of Senate Republican
Leader Hugh Scott.
It was the frrst time a branch
of Congress acted under the
25th Amendment, ratifted in
1967, whtch provtdes for
majority votes in tbe House signaJ
and Senate to confirm a
''No wonder so many boy
president's nomination to fill a motorists are mvolved m
vacancy m the vtce presidency
accidents. They're frustrated .
Even a dog has an expressiVe
tail to wag
''And when you consider a
dog also has a bark and a
growl, you begm Jo see where
the National Htghway Traffic
Safety AdmtniStratwn went
wrong .
"NHTSA has been concermng
Itself with bumpers, harnesses
and aJrbags when it should
have been domg something
about the horn.
" Cars should come equipped
with dtstinctive, universally
recognized signals that cover
the whole range of messages
motorists need to convey.
Door prizes will be awarded.
There's No Gainsaying
Drawings wi II be held for Presidentia 11
"How much more understand
vyreath Quilt. There will be collecmg, coopera~n.'e and safe

hbles, . baked goods, oil paintings;
ceram1cs &amp; other handmade crafts too
numerous to mention. Come in and
browse around. Free coffee.

lly Alma Marshall

11 t-n' lvt'd a letter from~ mL-e l~dy mfornung me of the good
thtnks sht• only obht.eratcd
~··"'Is by Mr and Mrs Othe Roach, Letart, Houle 1 She sa •d the
Meanwhile, the mystery of f1vc or SIX mmutes ' when she rn&lt;id lt:admg to theJi"alrVIew Commwuty Cemetery at tunes has
the cras1n~ of 18 mmutes of il stopped lranscnbmg the tape to bt-en almost Impassable but now thanks to Mr and Mrs Roach,
answer a telephone
the Iant.' lcadmg to the cemetery has a crushed stone surface
Sht.• rcahzed when she fm -

a tornado wat ch until thJs two trailer parks and two

mormng.

:~~:

1972

Three states hit hard
MEMPHIS, Term . (UP!) Tornadoes and thunderstorms
lashed parts of Tennessee.
MISSISSippi and Alabama
Tuesday , demohshmg two
trailer parks and blowmg the
roof off a school filled wtth
chtldren. Thr~e persons were
killed and at least 128 others
mjured
The turbolence, spawned by
a fast-moVIng cold front, kept
sect10ns of Alabama. Georgia,
the Carolmas and Tennessee on

kt'_\ P' t•sutcu1Jal tape dt.'i!~Ht.'d
m; 'i1x1m 's Sl'( ICI..&lt;u v. Ruse
Mc:H y Wuud':i. tt'stlfu.'tl m
fedt&gt;r .ti 111urt Tuesday she

ga msaymg that the monotonal
horn, whtch can only express
Itself through length and
frequency of beeps, IS woefully
marbculate.
Half the hme you can 't even
guess why another motonst 1s
honkm g at you-Or even tf you
are the one he IS honkmg at .
Cars need the eqmvalent of a
bark and a growl as well as a
taiL wag Here are a few of the
baste messages a horn should
be able to transmit
_:_If you had used your turn
Indicator m time I cou1d have
gotten mto a better lane, you
fathead.
--Get back on the pavemen t,
dammtl, you're slingmg gravel
on my wmdshield.
-( To trucks ) For God's sake
pull off on the shoulder and
free th1s strmg of cars you've
been holdmg up for 50 miles .
Yes, commWJicatton 1s the
key to happy motormg

l\lrs Hoach reached etther by telephone or letter , many
people who liSe the ce metery askmg for cash donatwns to help
finance repa 1r of the road Enough responded to make repa1rs
possible
Although Mrs. Roach ISm very poor hea lth - confmed to her
home most of the ttme - she remembers those who are as she Is,
and even the less fortwtate, w1ti1 cards and flowers
Dista nce IS no handicap m her muustry. When she recetv es a
note from a distant c1ty or a nearby neighbor exprcssmg happmess any gratiftcahon for her thoughtfulness, she IS truly blest.

LETART - The Cherokee Homemakers Club met at the
home of Mrs. David Dewhurst Tuesday evemng , Nov 20
DevotLOns were by Mrs. Olhe Browmng whtch mcluded a theme
and scripture and prayer by Mrs. Luther Smith Six members
answered roll.
The president appomted the followmg cornrntttee chairwomen . C1tlzensh1p, Mrs. Wilham T. White ; Cultural Arts, Mrs.
Ollie Browrung; Health, Mrs Wilham Grinstead; and Safety,
Mrs Mina Johnson Members were asked to select prOJeCts for
the commg year.
Plans were made for the arumal ChriStmas dumer to which
the group has mv1ted their husbands on Dec. 17 at Roush's
Restaurant. Four members expected to attend the Chnstmas
Workshop at Cedar Lakes on November 27. Mrs Oscar Casto
discussed the lesson, "Home Ecology "
The president announced that flowers had been sent to Mrs
Olga Housh, Mrs. Wtlharn Wh1te, Mrs. Kate Roush and Mrs
Wilham Grmstead Present were Mrs. Ollie Browrung, Mrs. K
K Settes, Mrs. Charles Stone, Mrs . Luther Smith, Mrs . Oscar
Casto, Shelley and Kun, Mrs. David Dewhurst and Teka .

PT. PLEASANT - Trooper Rtchard Young, Safety
EducatiOn Offtcer, Company B, South Charleston, showed shdes
and narrated the acttVIIles of the West V1rgm1a State Pohce
durmg the Sliver Bndge and Buffalo Creek dlsasteiS when the
Mason Homemakers met recently at the home of Mrs. 1:\ay Fox
here.
Mrs. Dorothy Cartwnght presented devollonals, " Aboundmg
W1th Thanksgiving," followed by Scnpture and a thought for the
day, and Mrs. Alburttce Young read a poem, "A Thankful
Hea rt. " Mrs. George Carson gave the lesson, "How to Conserve
the Natton's Energy and Save Money Too." The club Christmas
party will be on Dec. 17.
Refreshments were served to Trooper Young, Richard and
Mtke Young, Mrs Alborllce Young, Mrs. Dorothy Cartwnght,
Mrs Cecil Smtth, Mrs Lawrence Roush , Mrs George Carson,
Mrs Matilda Noble, Mrs Lloyd Wllharns, Mrs Elmer Van
Meter, Mrs Evelyn Stewart, Mrs. J Marshall, Mrs Landon
Smith and Mrs . Vtcki L Keefer, extension agent - home
demonstration, and Mrs. Fox
MASON -Members of the Mason Junior Girl Scout Troop
487 have had a full schedule of actiVIties the past month.
An unpressiVe candlelight ceremony wtth the Girl Scout
Promtse and Laws was the settmg for the Court of Awards
Program Badges earned last year and dunng the swnmer were
awarded to Lisa Stewart, Tern Johnson, Karen Brown, Ang1e
Proffitt, Nellie Esque, Judy Hall, Brttta VanMeter, Susie James,
Patty Estep, Debbte Smtth, Tanya Cundiff, and Tom SISk . Angle
Proffitt was also awarded the Stgn of the Star and the Stgn of the
Arrow, two of ilie h1ghest hon ors that can be achieved m JUnior
scoutmg
Fnendshtp pms were presented to the new JuniOr scouts,
GeorgtaJma VanMeter, flene VanMeter, Donna McDamel, Beth
Weaver , Lisa and Lon MCCauley, Beverly Hubbard, Kay
Johnson, J1ll Johnson, Connie Ellison , and Regina Rayburn
Following the ceremony plans were discussed to parhc1pate m a
commumty project and refreshments were served by Jane II Call,
scout leader, and Manlyn Cundiff, asststant.
Wttches , ghosts, and gobhns was the settmg for a Halloween
costume party. Costumes were judged and pmes were presented
to Angie Proffitt, the most Ol'lgtnal; Karen Brown, ugliest, and
Bntta VanMeter, funmest. Later they dunked for apples, enjoyed
relay races and had refreshments.
The troop recently went on a hayride and wiener roast m the
TNT area. Attendmg were Lisa Stewart, Terr1 Johnson, Karen
Brown, Angie l'roffttt, Beth Weaver, Suste James, Patty Estep,
Debbte Smith, Lisa and Lon McCauley, Dorma McDamel,
Beverly Hubbard, and Connie Eltison Guests were Sharon

By United Press lntemalional

Commercta l DC9 Jetliners
crashed durmg separate " foulweather landmgs In Chattanooga, Tenn., and Akron,
OhiO, Tuesday, but there were
no deaths Thirty-stx persons
were mJured , one sertously .
An Atlanta-to-Chicago Delta
A1rhnes )e l carrymg 77 persons
burst mto names Tuesday mght
after crashmg wht le trymg to
land m a thunderstorm at
Chattanooga .
Everyone aboard walked offthe craft, but the ptlot, Capt
Ralph Hackley of Boston, and a
passenger were hospitalized
with back tnjunes Eight other
persons, mcludmg two stewardesses, were treated for mmor
mJurles and released
An Eastern A1rlmes DC9,
landmg durmg a hght ram at
the Arkon-Canton
Airport,
crashed when tt was unable to
stop and rolled off the end of
the rWlway , lnJUnng all 26
persons aboard.
16 Admitted to Hospitals
Sixteen persons, mdudmg the
pilot and co-p1lol, were admitted to six Akron area hospitals ,
all but one m satisfactory or
fmr condttton Olga Holley, 66,
Holly Htlls, Fla., was placed m
the mtenstve care umt of
Barberton Citizens Hosp1tal
John Stacy, 28, Dallas, a
passenger aboard the Delta
]etlmer said, "It all happened
so fa st. There wasn't any pamc
Wltil we came to a s top and
then people started screammg,
wh1ch is to be expected ."
The a1rlmer, Fhght 516 from
Atlanta to Chicago with a
stopover 1n Chattanooga, circled Lovell F1eld for about 15
mmutes before trymg an
mstrwnent landmg m the
VIOlent thunderstorm .
" On approach, everythmg
was normal but I heard a

thump when Jt htt the runway,''
Stacy said. "It hit the runway,
tilted over and the left wing
was knocked off, and tl bounced
back up.
It Slides on Fuselage
" It shd on the fuselage and
came to a stop off the runway
at about a 45-degree angle.''
Stacy satd
Eastern offtcials m M1aml
satd the1r fltght JOO was en
route from Miami to the AkronCanton atrport vta Pittsburgh
and landed wtth visibility of
about a rnde and a half with a
200-fool cloud ce1hng
Gary Fouts, 24, Greensburg,
who lives near the airport, was
one of the first to the accident.
"I grabbed my car and shot
on down to see what happened /' he said after hearmg a
"very loud thump- hke two
cars crashmg ' '
"When I got there, I saw the
plane in a depression at the end
of the runway wtth the tail split
off and a large yellow raft
mflated near one of the doors,' '
Fouts sa1d . " I guess it was
accidentally blown up
" People were moaning and I
helped pull about four of them
from the plane before more
emergency workers arrtved,"
he said. "It was a mess "

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Paul
ADMISSIONS
Stemmetz, Jr ., Pomeroy ;
Herman Osborne, Reedsville;
Bea Jay Autherson, Racme;
Bertha Hobstetter , Pomeroy;
Emelie Bennett, V1enna, W.
Va , Lenna Lenz, Coolville;
Drexel Lambert, Rutland; Ida
White, Pomeroy; Leonard
Stover, Rae me.
DISCHARGES - Jeanette
Duffy , Vtckl Hood, Vera
Beegle, Frank Zirkle.

James, Laura James, and Esther Estep
Adults assistmg were Janell Call, Mr. and Mrs Dana
Johnson , Mr and Mrs. Pearhe Estep, Mrs Donald James, and
George Carson.
ActiVIties planned for the rernamder of November include a
money-makmg proJect As a serVIce project, the girls made
Thanksgtvmg favors for the children at Holzer Medical Center
and Pleasant Valley Hospttal
MASON - The mus1cal program presented at Mason Umted
Methodtst Church Sunday by the Pt. Pleasant Area Youth Chmr
under direction of Gary Stewart was well rece1ved •
The message m miiStc sung by the choir entitled, "It's All
About Love," offered young people an opportunity to "spread
the word" man exc1tmg, dramatic way.
Selectwns mcluded, It's All About Love, "In These Troubled
Tunes, The Beautiful Gospel of Love, How's Your Fellow Man?,
To Love lS to GlVe, No Greater Love, It All Comes Back to You,
Reach out for Hun, A New World ts Commg, and, It's All About
Love
At the concluswn of the program the chotr and youths of
Mason Umted Methodist Church JOined ma soctal hour.

MEMBERS OF THE Sunshine Class of the Mason Umted
MethodiSt Church were bosy agam recently preparmg ThanksgiVIng remembrance t rays offrwt. Fifty were diStributed to area
res1dents The member s of the class met early m the evening and
enJoyed a potluck supper. Along with diStributing the frwl, a
VISLtahon was enJoyOO

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
SHOP THURSDAY 9:30 TO 5 PM
OPEN BOTH FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9:30 TO 9 PM

Table Cover Sale
Save now on Table Linens for gifting or
your own use for the Holidays during this
sale. Our entire stock of vinyls and
cloths is included.

SQUARES • OBWNGS OVALS- ROUNDS

Sale Priced!

motorists would Ulen become !"
Yea and verily 1 There is no

MEIGS THEATRE
Tomght &amp; Thursday
Nov 28 29

NOT OPEN

Fn Sat . sun
Nov 30, De-c 1 2

FEAR ISTHE KEY
ITechnJcolor)
IPGl

ACE ELl&amp;

.ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

•

. "' .....
. DECISIONS, DECISIONS - Lucille Leifheit, Mary
Skmner and Ann Lambert (I to r) above, had thetr work cut
out for them Wednesday evemng when they judged the 120
beautifully custumed dolls whtch had been entered m the

French costume the winner
A French costumed doll m whtte velvet wtth red trun
ftfth from left, was named grand prize w1rmer Wednesday in
the annual Dress-A-Doll Contest of The Farmers Bank and
Savmgs Co. The doll was costumed by MarJone Sfakianos,
Rt. I Shade, who wtll rece1ve a $50 savings bond. Other dolls,
by classes, JUdged wmners were costumed by (I tor ), Altce
Globokar, Pomeroy, sensible dress ; Donna DaVIdson,
Rutland, kmt-crocheted; Jane Harns, Pomeroy Route 3;
nationality doll; Mary LISle, Syracuse, character (an 18th
centurv aueen). the grand pnze wmner: Dtana Roush.
Pomeroy Route 3, fancy dress , Gatl Hovatter, Middleport,
bride, and Pam Evans, Pomeroy Route 3, age 13, m the 15
and under div1s1on F.arh w11l rP.C'P.Ive a S25 savings bond
Mrs J oanne Williams exhibits the dolls

Devoted To The

Tapes show
ntore ----WASHINGTON (UP! ) There are still more gaps m
PresJdent Ntxon 's Wa tergate
tapes.
The President's lawyer says
these are not s1gniflcant The
prosecution Isn't so sure. More
hght may be shed when the
tapes are exa mmed m commg
days by stx techmcal experts,
PICked JOintly by the White
House and prosecutiOn
White House counsel J Fred
Buzhardt told U S DIStnct
Judge John J Slnca Wednesda y that, m addttton to gaps
prevt oiiSiy reported, the tapes
contam a number of "spots"
where there ts "no apparent
conversation " Asststant
Watergate Prosecutor Richard
BenVemste said some of the
blank.s last "several mmutes "
Ben-Vemste said he found
that puzzling, be cause th e
recording syste m was uvotce
activated," which means It
was supposed to turn on when
someone talked, but not otherwise
Buzhardt said there was no
mystery, because th e system
could be activated by nmses
such as a passmg truck Whtte
House a1de Stephen Bull told
UP! he has known the system
to turn on rrom the sound of a n
electric typewriter clackmg
next door, even though no one
spoke. He sa•d that would

account for blank spots
In other developments ,
- The White House said the
PreSident wtll begm sendmg
detailed mformatton to members of Congress Fnday about
his personal fmances, taxes,
purchases of homes and other
controve r sies ''It will be
complete InformatiOn and 11
will lay to rest all the
mis co nceptions that have
grown over the past months,"
sa1d Deputy Press Secretary
Gerald Warren.
- Former Attorney General
Elliot L. Richardson reiterated
to newsmen that he never
s upported limitation of former
Prosecutor Archibald Cox's
authon ty to get mformatwn--&lt;t
ve rswn which the White House
has disputed
The President's secretary,
Rose Mary Wouds, contended
m court she m1ght have caused
a fiVe-mmute "gap" m one
tape , but not 18 mmutes. Also,
she said, she canll(lt be held
a ccountable for " erasing"
anythmg, because no one has
shown there was anythmg on
the tape to erase when she got
I(

" I don't know ... " she sighed
toward the end of two-and-ahalf days on the witness stand.
" I have tried to explam 11 every
way I possibly can."

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

iNews .• in Briefsfl·
By United Press International
Wi\SHINGTON - HOUSE LEADERS, under strong
pressure from electton reform advocates, have agreed to
e&lt;~mprom1se wtth the Senate on legtslatmn to finance elections
for prestdent wtth federal tax funds. If Senate leaders go along
wtth the compromise, the Watergate-msptred reform plan would
be attached to a bill ratsmg the cetlmg on the publtc debt from
$465 billion to "'75 7 btllion, whtch miiSt be passed before !llidrught Fnday.
Prestdent NIXon then would be hard pressed to veto the btll
becaiiSe at lllidntght Frtday the debt ceiling would revert to its
"permanent" level of $400 billton, and the government would be
tmable to pay 1ts btlls because the public debt is now far beyond
$400 btllton. The Senate on Tuesday attached to the debt cetling
btll amendments that would fmance both presidential elections
and House and Senate electtons from tax funds . In addition, there
would be 50 pet . matching funds for prestdential primaries.
Under the Senate btll, no pnvate contribUtions would be
allowed for general electtons. Prestdential candidates would be
gtven $21 mtllton in public flinds; Senate candidates, $175,000;
and House members, $90,000
WASHINGTON - OlUO REPUBLICAN Sen. Robert Taft Jr
voted in favor of a btU Wednesday to include most of the cost of
drugs under the Medicare health insurance for the elderly
Ohio's other GOP senator, Wtlliam Saxbe, was listed as absent or
not votmg. The Senate approved the legislation, 77-11.
VIENNA - AN INTERNATIONAL TASK FORCE of
scientists using a gtant computer conceded today it was too late
to head off a worldwide energy criSis sparked by Arab otl cutbacks. West German Chancellor Willy Brandt predtcted,
however, Europeans would manage to cope with the crisis by
dressing warmly, preparing for a recession aud slowing down on
highways.
In London, temperatures dropped today to 19 degrees, a 73year low, followmg a gove rnment call for cuts in electric use to
avoid total blackouts Citizens across Britain went to post offices
get gasoline ration books for use if the fuel crunch gets worse.
The International Institute of Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA)
fed information on the energy crisis into their huge computer
headquarters for two days in Vtenna and concluded today, "We
can do nothtng about tt.''
"If an tnstitute like this had been created I~ years ago it
(Continued .on Page 12)

lntere~~IJJ

Of The

annual Dress-A-Doll Contest of The Farmers Bank and
Savmgs Co The bank wtll observe open hoiiSe from 2 to 4
p.m. Sunday to gtve the pub he an opportunity to see the dolls
which wtll be g1ven to under pnvileged children for Christmas

Meig5-Ma&amp;On Area

PHONE 992-2156

Merger wanted; strike settled

w

Barry Newman
Suzy Kenda II

ROGEROFTHESKIES
{Techmcolor-)
(PG)

•

COLUMBUS (UP!) -The Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio Is considering a request by General Telepl1Qne Co.,
headquartered in Marlon, to merge with the Northern Ohio
Telephone Co.
The two firms are subsidiaries of General Telephone and
Electronics Corp., Stamford, Coon.
Meanwhlle, Local 986 of the lnternatiooal Union of
Electrical Workers and representatives of Northern meeting
m Sandusky, Wednesday agreed on a oew contract covering
1,300 workers. Details of the new pact were not revealed,
pending ratification of the C&lt;Inlract.
The old contract expired Nov. 24.
....,.,•,•,•,•,•.•,•;,o.•.•.•.•.....•.:.····:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·;·:·:·:-:-:·:-:·:·:.;:;.;.;.;-:·:·:·:=:·:=:·:=:·:-:::::::=:·:·:·:·:·:·;·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:

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• •••••• • 0 • • •

Ohio

• •

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loaded
up with power
IS

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The
presidents of Ohio's eight power comparues satd Wednesday
Ohwans would have plenty of
electricity thts wmter and
there is no need for a ban on
decorative ChriStmas lighting.
B. John Yeager, prestdent of
the ClnciiUiati Gas and Electric
Co said Ohio plans can produce 15 to 20 per cent more
power than they are now turnmg out if needed.
The eight preSidents discussed the sttuatton Wednesday in a meeting called by
the Public Utilities Commlssion.

Yeager satd Ohw utilities
generate from 90 to 99 per cent
of their electrtctty with coal
and use fuel oil only for
peaking bo•lers and flame
stabilization and there 1s plentr
of coal in the Buckeye State.
lraw Wlutman, director of
the Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency, told UP! on
Nov. 17 that there would be no
shortage of electricity because
of the abondance of coal.
However, the uhlity presidents said they cannot meet the
Environmental Protection
Agency requtrements for the
liSe of low sulphur coal by 1975.

Gilligan dons his label
CLEVELAND (UPI)--Gov.
John J . Gilligan Wednesday
rught told 1,400 representatives
of orgaruzed labor his administration "could quite hterally
wear the union label."
"The things that labor SUPports are nght for this state ...
are right for this nation, n he
sa1d.
The governor spoke at a dinner billed as a "Salute to Gov.
John J . Gilligan" by organized
labor.
Gilligan satd he paid more in
stare income taxes ($1155) than

Saws are· stolen
Chain saws valued at $1,200
were stolen sometime early
Thursday at the Pomeroy
Home and Auto Store on East
Mam St.
'
Pollee Chtef Jed Webster
said a section of a wmdow m
the front of the store was
broken out and the saws
removed from ~e window
display. Henry Herman of the
BCl at London was called to
assist the investigatiOn.

Nixon did m federal income
taxes and added "and I don't
have a San Clemente either."
'One of the prmcipal dinner
speakers
was
Matthew
Demore, rettred secretary ..
treasurer of the International
Association of MachiniSts, who
pointed to the Watergate
scandal and told the crowd not
to lose faith in the Democratic
system of government.
"What Rtchard Nixon has
done for politics is what Jack
the Ripper dtd for the young
ladies of London," said
Demore.
"The labor movement must
not lose heart/' he said. "We
miiSt not give up. We milS! not
give in to the cynics."

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Middleport E-R squad
answered a call at 8:05 a.m.
Thursday to Pearl St. for
Flavey Sigman who was suffering chest pains. He was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where he was admitted.

aycees make 1974
a year for service
The Metgs County Jaycees,
w1th thetr largest membership
m perhaps a decade, determmed Wednesday night to
make 1974 a year of community
servlce m their home county.
Commlttees were orgamzed to
help ratse funds for the
organization's several countyWide projects
Three new comnuttees, a
~~save Bottle Caps," scrap
newspaper drtve, and a raffle,
were orgamze~ and are now
busy w1th plans.
Jaycee Treasurer VInce
Knight will head the Bottle Cap
Committee, Larry Spencer,
Meigs County Clerk of Courts,
will head the Rafne Committee, and Denny Fobes wtll
head the Scrap Newspaper
Drtve. Spencer wtll be assisted
by comrruttee members Larry
Le hew, Roger Ztegler and
Knight Fobes wtll be assiSted
by co-chamnan Dave Russell.
One-half of one cent can be
obtamed per bottle cap, and
area residenls are requested to
save all Royal Crown Cola and
Nehi pop bottle caps for the
project. It was also suggested
that a busmess in Athens wtll
pay $20 per ton for scrap newspaper, and Fobes stated that
diStrtbutwn pomts will soon be
set up across the county where
Metgs Counllans can drop off
all old newspapers.
In ot~er Jaycee action at the
.
'
meeting m Pomeroy town hall
attended by the largest number
of Jaycees m years, Kntght
gave the lhtrd and !mal

Weather
Clearmg and cold tomght
wtth lows In the upper 20s to
lower 30s. Fnday mcreasing
cloudiness north and mostly
sunny south. Warmer. Htghs m
the upper 41Js to m•d 50s
TREATED, RELEASED
The Pomeroy E-R squad was
called to the Norman Smith
horne on FISher St. at about 11
a.m. Wednesday for Sharon
Smith who was taken to
Veterans Memonal Hospital
where she was treated and
released.

New instant millionaire
HARRISBURG (UP!) Vincent L. Yotmg, a carpenter
from Shoemakersville, Berks
County, has found a way to
beat the htgh cost of buymg
meat.
Hill secret: buy your lottery
ticket m a butcher shop.
Young did, and today he ts $1
million richer and can afford to
boy all the steaks he wants.
The 44-year-&lt;Ild carpenter
Wednesday became Pennsylvania's 12th millionaire
lottecy wilmer at the drawings
m Harrisburg.
Young said he and hls wife,
Elame, never thought they

'

would become mUlionaires and
were satisfied with the lives
they had built for themselves
afid their 13-year-&lt;Ild son, John.
"Whatever we have we have
worked and saved for all our
lives," Mrs. Young said. "We
have been happy, but we never
dreamed we would ha•;e this
much money "
The Youngs will recetve their
$1 milhon prtze in $50,000 Installments over the next 20
years.
11
l'm not going to retlre, 11 he
said. "I've got to keep working."
Young said he usually buys

I

TEN CENTS

readmg of the reviSed constitution and by-laws, plans
were flnabzed for the diStrict
Jaycee meeting at the Metgs
on Jan.
6, plans
Inn
were
made
to
attend
the January All - State
meeting m Cmcmnati, and for
"Jaycee Week," to be held
January 2().26.
Knight also reported that the
Red Ball Sticker campaign ts
near completion, w1th the only
snag now bemg publicity so
that Metgs Countians know
where to ptck up the stickers.
Area ftre departments have the
stickers, which are to be placed
in the upper left hand corner of
a room where a small chtld or
mvahd sleeps, so that m case of
fire , ftremen w1ll know where
to go first to gtve atd.

PreSident Richard Poulin
announced that many people
complemented the Jaycees on
thetr work m helpmg children
dunng tnck-or-treat mght.
Halloween patrols walked the
streets m Pomeroy, Middleport
and Syracuse to help insure
safety of the children during
the evenrng.
Poulin also read a letter from
the pres ident of the Ohio
Jaycees, Larry Hoffman,
congratulating the Metgs
Cotmty organizatiOn on 1ts
success during M-Night, the
membership drive held two
weeks ago. Hoffman termed
the program, "fantastic."
It was also voted to allocate
up to $50 to order pins for new
members and to order 12 new
vests for the new members.

Jaycee members also explained to new members the
Jaycee programs such as
" Speak-Up," " Spoke," and
"Spark Plug," all deSigned to
help
Jaycees
acquire
leadership traimng and an
ability to speak before groups
of people
Rtck Crow volunteered to
give a "Speak-Up" at the next
meeting, to be held December
12 at town hall. ,
Poulin recogmzed two new
Jaycee offtcers, Robert Buck,
new external vice president,
and Don
Nelson,
new
secretary Buck replaces
Rolph Werry who had to resign
the post due to health and a
heavy work load. The pledge to
the nag was led by Dave
Russell.

GM lays off 300 men
DETROIT (UP!) - The effects of the energy cnsiS
spread today as General
Motors Corp. announced 300
workers will be laid off mdefimtely because of slumping
big car sales.
The layoffs are at the Fisher
Body fabncatmg plant m
Kalamazoo, Mich., where
another 700 workers will be laid
off for one week before
Christmas time at the same
time 16 assembly plants,
employing 105.,000 workers.
curtail big car produ~tion .

The 300 workers are the first
to be told not to return to work
until they're called. They'll get
preferential treatment when
jobs become avatlable at the
plant.
A GM spokesman indicated
more layoffs both temporary
and permanent, could be expected m the supplier plants
that feed •the parts that keep
the assembly lines rolling. As
production is cut back at an assembly plant, fewer parts are
needed.
The Kalamazoo plant ernploys 2,600 workers and manu-

3,000 temporarily made idle
CLEVELAND (UPI)-About
3,000 workers at General Motors Corp.'s FISher Body Division plants m Ohw are expected to be laid off temporarily
becaiiSe of the firm 's deciston
to shut down 16 of its 22 assembly plants the week before
ChrtStmas
Nearly 1,500 of the 2,645
workers at the plant here are
GURNEY SAYS WAIT
NEW ORLEANS (UP!)
Sen . Edward J . Gurney, R
Fla ., satd Wednesday Congress
should not constder impeaching President NIXon until
speCial Watergate prosecutor
Leon Jaworski can document
proof
of
presidential
misconduct.

at least four 50-cent lottery
tickets and one ticket each for
the Lucky 7 and Baker's Dozen
1S'I'UDY COMPLETED
lotteries. He said he has won
Maclolm
B Orebaugh, admoney only once before- $40
ministrative specialist of the
in the 50-cent lottery.
The Youngs bad taken John Community Mental Health
out of school for the day "be· Board, has completed the
cause even if we don't win, it Department of Mental Health
was a good chance for htm to and Mental Retardation
Continuing Educatwn Institute
see the state Capitol.''
1
John seemed overwhelmed on 'respondmg to persons in
by hts parents' good fortune. cnses."
Asked what the ftrst thing he
A 24-hour day service may
wants hiS parents to buy him, well be needed in a communtty
John shot a quick glance at his whose problem does not confather and replied modestly: vemently arise durmg the 8
"Oh, I guess some more stuff a .m to 5 p.m . service hours of
for my train set."
commumty chmcs.

expected to be laid off the week
of Dec.h!7.
Plant Manager Rolland F.
Smtih said a final deciSion on
the layoffs would be made
Monday.
About 1,400 workers at the
Fisher Body plant in Mansfield
wtll be furloughed four days
begumlng Dec. 12, satd Plant
Manager Carl Gardner.
At the Euclid Fisher Body
plant about !50 workers wtll be
latd off for five days begirmmg
Dec. 10.
CHECKS HELD UP
COLUMBUS- State Audttor
Joseph T. Ferguson said
Wednesday
December's
welfare c heck to Aid to
Dependent Children recipients
wtll be delayed through failure
of the State Welfare Department to provide hts offtce w1th
audit test informatiOn against
overpayment

21

SHOPPING DAYS
TO CHRISTMAS
~

facturers metal stamping such
as roofs and quarter panels for
the big cars produced at the 16
assembly plants where pruduction is being cut back.
The spokesman satd the affected workers are mostly
"temporary employes" who
were hired since the start of the
1974-model year and haven't
achieved seniority that would
entitle them to special layoff
benefits.
GM sttllwon' t say how many
workers will be idled at the 16
assembly plants for one week
beginnmg Dec. 17. Those who
have one year semonty Wlll be
entttled to up to 95 per cent of
their regular take-home pay,
less $7 50 for work-related expenses like lunches and bus
fares .
The threat of layoffs also
face Chrysler and Ford
workers although
those
comparues have not announced
any productton cutbacks.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Mlld Saturday and Sunday
chance of showers late
Sunday or Monday and
turning cooler.
Daytime high Saturday
and Sunday, from the mid
50s to mld 60s, and from the
mid"'' to mid 50s Monday.
Overnight lows Jn the low
to mid 40s Saturday and
Sunday, and In the 30s
Monday.
SEVERAL FINED
Fmed by Pomeroy Mayor
Don Collins Wednesday mght
were Jon W. Bunce, Middleport, $10 and costs, reckless
operation; Paul Steinmelz,
Pomeroy, $5 and costs,
trespassmg, and an additional
$20 for use of profamty m front
of a female, and Linda Lipscomb, Syracuse, $5 and costs,
' failure to yteld nght of way.
Assessed costs only was Hugo
C.
Kaptema,
Pomeroy ,
charged with assured clear
d1stat~ .:e

\

�3 :- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Nov _29 1973
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-~

Today's

Sport Parade

!I

ami dominates dream _team
tht&gt; fi r st two teams.
Unbeateu Mmnu got 12 plc~y­
crs on the f1rst two umts whtlc
Kent had e 1 ~ht f1rst team selections among then· 11 players selected on the two lop un1ts
The ballotmg was done by

COLUMBUS iUPI) - The
All-MAC footba ll team announced Thursday ts domtnated by
~
~
~ league champion Miamt and
Mld-Amerlcan Conference r un(EDITOR'S NOTE: Milton Richman is on vacatlon. Today's
nerup Kent State w1th the two
Sport Parade guest writer is Martin I.Ader of the New York
schools hlllng 23 of the 47 spots
staff).

I

By MARTIN LADER

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PICfURES FROM the Camporee held on November 1&amp;17-18; Row one, Retreat, Indian dancers at campfire, Scouts
from troop 257 preparing fire; ROW TWO, a winter camp
Site, group pictures of Troops Nos. 200, 232, 242, 249, 257, 259

by the editor
James Reston of the New York Tunes wrote Monday that at
some pomt the American people probably are gomg to have to

thmk al:xmt the consequences of mdeciswn, that

IS,

about not

bemg able to resolve the NIXon questton, not bemg able etther to
belteve m hun or to get rid of hun. Reston goes on to argue these
po10ts:
- There are many JlllSolvable problems, like booze or the
RusSians, but NIXon tsn 'tone of them. lt may be that triflmg wtth
NIXon for three more years may dangerously ID]ure our con-

fidence m ourse1ves and our mshtubons.
- When people are deeply perplexed and sense that
something ts deeply wrong m thetr political lives and 10 the
country, action is often preferable to aimless Inaction.
- For over 10 years Amencans have been m a war they
thought they could netther wm nor end; been battered by racial
troubles, street demonstrations, mflation, trade deficits, dangers
of dope, and what to do about the kids. AU have seemed beyond
their controL
- Watergate and its attendant scandals are merely the
latest chapter m this diSIUuswmng Amertcan story. For awhtle
we couldn't beheve 1t, then we couldn't Ignore it and were mad
about tt, and now we arc receding into a kmd of protecttve, feeble
cyrucism, a fLre that Mr. Nixon ts fanrung with every available
weapon at his command.
SOON WE SHOULD BE CELEBRATING the 189th anruversary of the Btll of Rtghls, though we likely won't, because
we have forgotten what tt meant It remams a useful gwde,
however, to the deepest questions of our time. It dtd not
presuppose the infant United States would have lhmgs easy. It
didn't put the government above the people, but the people above
the government.
Long ago Walter Lippman wrote, "The fundamental
question whtch faces us everywhere and m many forms has to do
wtth the nature of man, and most preciSely, whether adult men
and women are to be regarded as havmg that freedom of will
which wtll make them personally responsible for thetr conduct "
Going beyond the ISsue of personal responstbility, Lippman
argued that "the people" were ultimately accountable for the
conduct of thetr government, not only at the next election, and
Uta! thetr fatlure to defend ~he rights and prmctples they
mherited would weaken both them and the natton.
Some would hold, therefore, that the American people are
responstble for the Whtte House plumbers, all the crunes, conspiracies, burglanes, extortions, forgeries, deceptions, or
payoffs of the Watergate scandals. True or not, events suggest
strongly the Amencan people have a responstbtlity to petition the
government for redress and the establishment of leaders and
procedures they can trust
'
Today there IS confusiOn on this pomt. The national debate IS
shaping into whether we are bemg fatr to NIXon instead of
whether we are bemg frur to America, which ts not the same
thing. Haldeman and Ehrlichman had to go, not because they
had lost the confidence of the President but because they had lost
the conftdence of almost everybody else.
Vice-President Agnew had to go because he messed around
wtth his income tax and got some free whtskey and groceries, but
NIXon messed around with our freedom, ran a war in Cambodta
wtthout the consent of Congress, decetved hts constituents about
tl, and set up a secret police force m the Whtte House.
Lots of us wtU excuse all thts. Many admire the President's
guts for !tghting for hts life. But if we do this we carmot restore
enough 'confidence and trust m enough people to enable the
Prestdent to preside over ambiguous policies whtch m the end
have to be taken on fatth m the mtegrtty and good JUdgment of
the Prestdent.
Nor can Americans, insists Reston, ~~avmd the consequences
ol three more years of indeclston . Not to deetde it IS one way of
deciding ttl lndeeiswn can only assure that the doubts and
frustratioos and cynicism of the peQille. oarttcularly the rising
generatioo, will deepen."

&gt;

' 1

I

Only public opmwn will move the Bouse Jud1 c1ary Commtttee to Impeach and the Senate to stt m JUdgment The
evidence at thi1) pom t m time, as the Watergaters say, Js that the
people are !tred and bored wt th the whole th mg, whtch ts the
Prestdent 's hope , and Amen ca 's problem
I WOULD CONCLUDE THIS ar!tcle wt!h wha t has to be
regarded a demoralizmg conclusion by Wtlham S Whtte,
distinguished conserv: ttve JOurna hst and author , who has been a
staunch supporter of the Prestdent smce Watergate Whtle wrote
for pubhcatLon Monday .
uwatergate . IS cau smg both a n munense inJustice and an
unmense danger to the country Itse lf For, no matter who did
what to whom m this matter, "Wa te rgate'' IS affi xtng a 2oth
century scarlet letter fha vmg noth10 g to do wtth sex) upon the
brow of the whole profess ion of pubhc affatrs ThiS IS not only
unfatr. It IS absurd
"Far worse, It can eastly become a kmd of Gresham's law of
polittcs m which the bad (and mept or phony) dri ves out the good
(and able ) prac!t!toner of wha t IS after all nothmg less than the
techmque of leading and servmg the people.
"Already, for one tllustratwn, tt LS plam that a huge problem
for both parttes IS that of fmdmg decent and able men who wtll be
willmg wtth any truly htgh motivation or morale to run for office.
(Self-appomted good guys wtll be m abundand supply; but then
they are JUSt what are not needed.) Heretofor e, the embarrassment has been to beat off the s"arms of perfectly
capable asptranis who had the notiOn that servmg m Congress
was not an Ignoble career
"Now, the shoe IS mdeed on the other foot Where are to be
found the men who , already successful at somethmg else, can be
persuaded to take a chan ce on wmmng an offtce only to fmd
themselves held m public regard as little better than thteves or
moral burglars ?
"In short, there IS a vast sttllness loose m the land and tt
persiSts m the face of the demonstrable fact that whatever the
Watergate 'horrors' may have been they were comrrutted not by
pohttc~ans but rather by nonpoht icians or even anbpohltctans

Kiashuta at Chester reopened
Pictures and story by Raymond Sutherland
CHESTER - After months of preparation, Camp Ktashuta
was ready
Ready for Its !trst Boy Scout Camporee in three years.
Weekend before last, seven troops converged at the camp for two
days of campmg and fun.
Arnv10g late Fnday evening, the scouts packed food and
eqwpment across the old swmgmg bridge to lhetr camp sttes
Many pitched tents in the dark as small flakes of snow floated
down. The others gathered wood for a warllllng fire. Late and a
httle cold, everyone prepared thetr beds and settled down for the
rught.
Saturday morning brought a bnght sun and breakfast; a
breakfast of bacon and eggs, pancakes, and hot cocoa. After
clean-up, each scout was free to browse around and meet with his
fellow campers.
The afternoon was a time for learning. Classes were held m

Ftrst Atd, Conservation, and Cookmg · only a few of the many
sktlls a scout learns.
Traditionally, a part of any campmg trtp is the campfire .
Saturday eve rung we were fortunate to have the TBAL-COOZVO Lodge No. 457 dance team These dancers are members of
the Ordef of the Arrow. The Order IS a national brotherhood of
Scout Honor campers which ortgmated in the very early years of
Scouting and ts deeply rooted in the Indian culture and
ceremonies of our nation. In conJunction Wlth the dances, each
troop performed a skit or song.
After a full day, the melodtc tones of taps sounded through
the wmter rught. The end of a btg day and a lime to reflect back
on your life today.
Sunday mornmg, after rehgwus services were held, all
troops cleaned up thetr camp sites and prepared to go home.
Before leaVJng, however, everyone said thetr farewells wtth the
affirmation of campmg together agam soon.

Dr. Lawrence E. Lamb

Pills and headaches

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I have
been on btrth control pills for a
number of years. During the
past two years I have begun to
have what my doctor calls
migrame headaches. He took
''fhc consequence is a spreading idea among the public
me off the ptlls for four months
that the kind of a man we shall need in future for public office
to see tf my headaches would
-which Is to say for the practice of politics - is a man who
stop, and they dtd Not one
knows nothing whatever of 'politics 1 ' is determined to have
headache the whole time I was
nothing to do with it, and thlliks of the profession as little
off the ptll .
shori of a dirty word.
I )&gt;egan the ptll agam
"The curse of thts country has , of course, always has been because we defimtely do not
that 'the purttan ethic' of which we are m many ways properly want more children. I am
proud, does have one very bad component. ThiS IS a tendency to
having the headaches on the
confuse moralizmg - that IS to say, a harsh and often unJust average of one a week. My
finger-pomting to prove one's own goodness - with that qutte question IS, do you think my
different quality called morahty. The further trouble ts that we headaches wtll stop completely
seem always to pomt that kind of a fmger most unspanngly at tf I qwt the ptll completely?
those in public positiOn .
,
Also, I noticed that whtle I
"For some four decades as a journalist and author 1 have
was off the pill my sex drtve
had perhaps greater than average contact wtlh every kind of
increased sharply. Now that I
profession and wtth busmess,large and small . I here assert that am back on the pill I've nottced
the general run of polillctans has at least as much 'honesty; a decrease . Do ptlls decrease
mtellectual honesty as well as money honesty , and about three
the sex drive m some women?
times as much altrmsm and genuine desLre to serve as any other
If I thought the change would
group I know ,
be a lasting one I would gladly
qwt them, permanently.
DEAR READER - To begin ,
With,
mtgrame headaches are
H tgh Senes ~ An n Radford
Pomeroy Bowlmg Lan es
49 4
caused or precipitated by
Mornmg Gloru~s League
Seco nd
H 1gh
Se r 1e s Nov. 20, IY/;$
many different factors. There
M ar gar et Foll ro d 471
Team
Pomts
Tea m H 1gh G a me - G &amp; J
are reqports of some women
Excels•or Oil Co
56
Au t o Part s 777
Newell Sunoc:o
53
havmg mcreased attacks wtth
Te am H 1gh Ser tes - G &amp; J
G &amp; J Auto Parts
49
Au to P art s 22 44
btrth control pllls. And, your
Pocklmgton Const
46 '
G 1bbs Grocery
4.4
htstory certainly suggests that
Spencer's Market
40
they may be a factor m your
Htgh lndtvidua l G am e - A nn
Radford 194
1
Haga
r
is
a
Hebrew
name
case
.
Sec ond H1gh lnd Game
;y]('an1116
"
forsaken
"
I would not like to tell you
~arqaret F ol lrod 186

Local Bowling

I

and religious ceremonies; ROW THREE, Middleport
Emergency Squad, Troop 259 preportng dinner, crossing
swinging bridge, and Pomeroy Emergency Squad.

(

that you would not have any
DEAR READER- If wetght
more headaches tf you stopped trainmg and related exercises
the pill permanently. There are are done properly I'm contoo many other thmgs m life fident they are good for your
that can precipitate a head- health . Many a person would
ache and so you may still have develop a healthier body with
them. It does sound as tf you even a fatrly modest program
would not have nearly the of this type. It tsn't necessary
problem, though, that you now to develop exceptionally large
have
muscles to accomplish some
Some women apparently do good. Such programs do help
experience a decrease m develop strength. That helps to
sexual deSire when they are on develop and niamtam good
the pilL However,. there are a
lot of dtfferent kinds of ptlls.
CONTESTANTS NAMED
They have different ratios of
Joyce Ann Davts, daughter
female hormones, TbiS means
that one pill llllght be better of Mr . and Mrs Max Davis, Rt.
suited to one woman than I, Mtddleport, and Ingnd
another. Often some of these Darlene Hawley, daughter of
problems can be solved by Mrs. Dtanne Hawley, 102 Wolfe
usmg a different pilL It IS no Drive, Pomeroy, wtll represent
longer really right to use the Meigs High School in the anblanket tenn 11 pill" as is so nual Daughters of America
often done, because a variety Good Citizenship contest for
of effects can be obtamed from semors.
Selections were based on
the many types of pills
dependability,
service to
available.
and community,
DEAR DR. LAMB- I am 16 school
leadership
and patriotism.
years old and have considered
a weight hfting program.
However, lately I have been
Popcorn kernels ex p a n d
told that having thick muscles
from
30 to 35 times thetr stze
may cause a person to slow or
stop his growth. Is there when popped.
anything to this? Also, what Is
The best golf balls have a
your opinion on weightllfting
sac m the center which
small
and other related Isotonic
exercises? Is it beneficial to ts filled wtth water or castor
otl and liquid sihcon.
~ood health 1 •
)

I

posture And, I suspect that
matptalning good posture even
mto the older years ts much
more Important to health than
many people realize . Such
programs will not stunt your
growth They may even help tt.
Send your questions to Dr.
Lamb, In care of tbls newspaper, P. 0. Box 1551, Radio
City Statlon, New York, N. Y.
10019. Fora copy of Dr. Lamb's
booklet on cholesterol, send 50
cents to the same address and
ask £or "Cholesterol" booklet.

w.

Dai~

Sentinel

OEVOTI:DTOTHI!
INTEREST OF
MEIGS - MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL,
Ellec l!icl
ROIIERT HOI:FLICH,
Clly l!dltor.

Published dally u;cepl
S•Jurday bv The Ohio Valley
Publ ishing Company , 111

Court Sl , Pomeroy , Ohio,
-45769 Bvslnes Office Phone
992 21S6 . Editorial Phone 9'92
2151

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by Gallia hunters

CLEVELAND (UP!) - Three
key Cleveland Browns veterans
missed a heavy workout m the
ram Wednesday but all three,
runmng back Leroy Kelly,
defensive end Nick Roman and
receiver Frank Patts, are
expected to be recovered from
var10us manor mJurtes m time
for Sunday's game agamst the
Chtefs at Kansas City.
Kelly and Pttis recetved
treatment for back injunes and
Roman rested a sore knee. The
mjurtes were sustamed m last
weekend's trtumph over the
Ptttsburgh Steelers.
The Browns previously announced that free safety Tom
Darden will mtss hts second
stratght game wtth a htp mjury
and wtll be replaced by rookie
Van Green.
"Overall, ~e (Green ) IS domg
well for an mexpenenced
rookte," Coach Ntck Skonch

59
65
57

71
94

65
69
ga

33
40
56
.ol.ol

87
75
75

77

Twenty more deer were
killed m Gallia County Wednesday durmg the third day of
the five day gun deer season
ammals
were
Eleven
checked at Bob Saunders'
Quaker stCte Servtce Center m
Galhpohs and nme deer were
checked at the Vmton Otl
Service Center Thus far , 75
deer have been bagged .

28 Pupils make
honors listing
HARRISONVILLE - The
Harrtsonville Elementary
School had 28 pup1ls who made
all A or B 10 the second stx
weeks grad10g penod. Stx had
all A.
Ftrst grade - Mtke Chne,
Katrma Donohue, Jtmmy
Locke, Bettyann Loftis, Linda
Rtggs, Retha Yost.
Second grade - Paula Carl,
Teresa Gilham , Jerry Grounds
(all A). Many Reeves,
Chnsllne Rtggs (all A), Paul
Rtggs, Tma Yost (all !\ )
Third grade - Brent Fmlaw
(all A), Donna Hall, Brad
Largent, Mary Lee, Darlene
Nelson (all A), Julta Spencer,
Wendy Ttllis, Penny Wandling,
Renee WtlliS
Fourth grade ..: Mark Cline
{all A), Vtcky DeBord, Troy
Wtlhs.
Ftfth grade Robert
Harmon .
Stxth ora de - Gary Howard,
Richard K. Htll

satd. " He's done all nght m
passmg situatiOns most of the
ttme and has been great
agams t the run ''
Pltts, a former member of
the Chtefs, hasn't had the
sattsfactton of beat10g hiS old
team yet and neither have the
rest of the Browns. The Chtefs
are the only team m the league
that has never lost to CleveLAFF- A- DAY
land.
Last year, in a game played
here, Kansas Ctty pounded
Cleveland 31-7 as the Browns
fumbled ftve times. The year
before at Kansas Ctty, Cleveland lost 13-7. The only other
meeting between the teants, an
exhtbt!ton game, was a 16-13
Kansas Ctty victory in 1970
Both the Chiefs and the
Browns constder a wm Sunday
to be critical to their dtvtsion ~'Okay. Bill - your uniform '1
tiUe hopes.
back !rom the cleaners."

--------WHA Standtngs

By United Press lnternat•onal

Eut
w. t. t.

Nw Englnd
Quebec
Chicago
Clevelend

9

13
1!2 12
1
11
10 8

Redmen lose first
tilt of year 84-69

pts gl ga

I 27 88 77

1 25 95 83 '
1 23 71 63
2 22 70 72

Toronto
9 12 J , 21 77
New Jersey 7 13
2 16 52
West
w . J t pts gf
Edmonton u
6 o 28 78
Houston
11
6 2 2-4 75
Minnesota 11
9
1 23 83
Winnipeg
9 12 3 21 85
Vancouver 9 14
0 18 79
Los Angeles a 16 0 16 6S
Wednesday's Resuth
Winnipeg 4 Houston 4
vancouver 5 Mlnne$ota 3
(Only games scheduled I
Thursday's Games
Cleveland at Quebec
Houston at New England
e!dmonton at New Jersey
(On tv games scheduled)

81
85

team choices m 1972
Repealing on the £trst team
defense were Kent State tackle
Walt Vrabel , a second team
selection last fall and the btggesl player on thiS year's team
at 6-feet-4 and 265 pounds, and
Maam1's Monos, also a second
team selection last fall.
The coaches voted to have a
t2-man offensive squad, making
room for two w1de rece Lvers, two
runmng backs and a fullback ,
and then a tte at the quarterback spot created a 13-man offenSLve first team.
Players of the Year, both offensively and defenSively. as
well as the MAC Coach of the
Year , wtll be selected by a vole
of the MAC News Medta AssoCiation and announced next
week
GILLOW OPTIONED
LOS ANGELES (UP! )
Goalie Russ Gtllow, off to a
slow start th iS year, was optiOned to the Gree nsboro
Generals of the Southe rn
Hockey League by the Los
Angeles Sharks of the WHA
Wednesday for a "sha rpemng
up " penod.

Gentle Giant strong again
Rufus Mayes ts the No. 1 left
tackle. He's done a good job.
I've got to try to wm my
posibon back."
Tbe Bengals, in a three-way
hght with Ptttsburgh and
Cleveland for the Amertcan
Conference Central OLVlSIOn
lltle, entertam the Mmnesota
Vtkmgs Sunday
It wtll be the ftrst meeting
ever between the teams. The
Bengals have a three-game
wmmng streak gomg and are
yet to lose at home thts season ,
but Minnesota IS one of the
toughest clubs m pro football
and sports a 10-1 record
"The only good thmg about
bemg out was that I got to look
at our football team from a
dtstance and t! helped me put
the Bengals Into perspective, "
Walters said. "I saw that we 've
really developed mto a good
club and tf we don't win it (the
divtston) thts year I think we
w1Jl next year."

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WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS

•

Ru:h. full col or Pr•nted carton

®
#7301
71/i' SAW

2499

PRESIDENT

'

Kentucky at Memphis
Denver et lnd•ana
(Only games scheduled)

gan, Jack Lambert of Kent
State, ~nd Mike Monos of MIami ; and defensive backs Mike
Carter o£ Weste rn Mich1gan and
Dan Rebsch of M~amt
Miles was the only thtrd time
first team selectiOn, whtle Kent
State tight end Garv Ptnkcl
Western M1 chtgan's Rtggw,
Kent State 's Lambert . and
M1am1's Rebsch were all first
team selections a year ago
Other repeaters on the first
team ofrens ave umt were OhiO's
Beams, a second team defenstve
chotce a year ago; Miami's
B1ehle , a second team selection
last fall : Kent State tatlback
Larry Poole and Bowhng Green
fullback Phtl Polak, both second

players on the offcns1ve mterior
!me and all three hneba rkers,
were unan1mous selectiOns while
there were 16 repeaters from
last year's two squads FIVe of
th1s fall 's first team ch01ces
were holdovers from last fall' s
two top umts
Unammously selected were
offenstve tackles Jeff Beams of
Ohw and M1ke Btehle of Mtaml ;
offenstve guards Ketth Young
and Dough Neue ndorf, both of
Toledo; center Dan Cun mngham
of Mtamt; runmng back Paul
M1ies of Bowlmg Green; defenSIVe end Herman Jackson of
Mtamt ; mtddle guard Brad
Cousmo of MLami; hnebackers
Dom Rtggw of Western Mtcnt-

hopes to naal Lt down Wlth a wm
over Georgia Tech Should the
Bulldogs beat the Ye llow
Jackets, they would play
Maryland m the Peach Bowl.
However, should Georgia lose,
the P each Bowl mvttah on
would go to South Carolma.
Alabama wtll meet foutthranked Notre Dame m the
Sugar Bowl and the lnsh warm
up for their New Year's E ve
date in New Orleans by closmg
out the ir regular sea son
against Mtamt (Fla.).
Loutstana State , headed for
Rio's Steve Bartram capNelson Overton was hot m
the orange Bowl agamst Penn the ftrst half and Jerry Davts tul"ed the game's scormg
State, wraps up 1ts season took the scormg lead after honors wtth 24 pomts
agamst
Astro-Bluebonnet mtermtsswn as Fmdlay rolled
The Redmen are now 3-1 on
Bowlbound Tulane; Tennessee, over Rto Grande 84~9 m a loe year The Otlers are 1-Q
which faces Texas Tech m the college baske tball game at
Next RL Ogame IS Monday, at
Gator Bowl, takes on Vander- Findlay Wednesday mght
Ptkevtlle, Ky.
bilt ; Flortda, headed for the
Tangerme Bowl agatnst Mtamt
(0 .) , ftrushes up agamst winless Flonda State; and
Houston takes on Tulsa as the
Cougars warmup for therr
CINCINNATI (UP! ) - Stan of thetr comeback work. But
meeting against Tulane in the Walters, the Cmcinnati Benthere was nothmg I could do
AstroBluebormet Bowl.
gals' "gentle gtant,'' IS back in w1th hepatitiS . I JUst had to res t
Elsewhere, Boston College untform after the most frustratand watt.
plays Holy Cross, Baylor meets mg two months of hts life .
" At certam parts of the day I
Rtce, TCU takes on SMU,
A favorite among Bengal would feel like I was 100 per
Texas-El Paso opposes Bngh- players because of hts pleasant
cent healthy," Walters satd.
am Young , Rutgers fa ces personality, Walters speaks m
" But then later m the day I
Tampa, Iowa State plays San
smooth, gentle tones that belie would have no strength at all "
Otego State and Utah meets hiS 6-foot-ll, 270-pound frame.
A couple of weeks ago
Hawan
Hepahtis took away some of Walters returned to pfacttce
those pounds a couple of and last Sunday for the first
TURCOTTE TO COMPETE months ago and the man who ttme smce early in the season
BOSTON (UP! ) - Ron had won a startmg offensive he dressed for a game. He only
Turcotte, the regular nder for tackle JOb last year as a rookie got in on place ktckmg
both Secrelartat and Rtva found himself sapped of sttuattons but ts itchy to get
back full-time .
Rtdge, has agreed to compete strength
"
It
wa
s
the
most
frustrat10g
" I want to try to play some
m the first North Amertcan
thmg
I've
ever
had
happen
for
this year because ' I thmk tt'll
Rtding Champwnshtp, Dec. 9,
two
reasons,''
the
24-year...ald
help
me a lot for ned year,''
at Suffolk Downs race track.
Turcotte beeame the seventh from Syracuse Umverstty satd. the nattve of Rutherford, N J.
nationally famous jockey to ''I've never been InJured and It said . "I need to end the season
agree to compete m the wm- was the ftrst time I had mtssed m playmg conditiOn because tf I
don't it'll be much harder to
ner-take-all event The others any real playmg time.
the
worst
part
of
it
was
"But
work mto shape for the off.
are: Btll Sho,emaker, Jorge
Velasquez, Brautio Baeza, that 1t wasn't an IDJUfY, 1t was season.
"I'm not lookmg for sympaSandy
Hawley,
Mtke somethmg I couldn't bounce
back
from.
Injured
players
go
thy,
I'm looking for my job,"
Carrozella and Vmce Bracthrough
therapy
and
see
results
Walters added. "Right now
Ciale.

pet . g.b.

Denver
11 10 524
'h
san Antonio
12 12 500
'I&gt;
utah
12 12 soo
'Ia
Indiana
11 11 500
San Diego
8 15 348
Wednesday's Results
VHth 116 Vtrglnta 105
~an Anton tO 104 Kentucky 99
New York 134 San Diego 108
(Only games scheduled)

Thursday's Games

The

20 deer killed

Browns set
for Chiefs

NHL Standtngs
By Untted Press lnternaf•onal
Zast
w 1 t pts gt ga
Bbston
16
o4
2 34 105 58

west

game of the year for a lot of
reasons for us." says Alabama
Coach Bear Brya nt who still
remembers last yea r's contest
agamst Auburn that saw the
Ttgers upset the Crtmson Tide,
17-16, thanks to a parr of
blocked punts that Auburn
turned mto touchdowns.
Should 26-pomt fa vo nte
Alabama stumble agam to
Auburn , second·ranked Oklahoma could grab the natwnal
crown with a VIctory over
Oklahoma State. The Sooners
already have clinched the Btg
Eight title and rate as four
touchdown favontes to close
out their season w1th a wrn over
the Cowboys.
Oklahoma, on probatiOn , IS
prohtbtted from appearing m a
bowl game for the next two
years but one bowl spot still
remams open and GeorglB

By United Press International
" For to years I've heard the
Navy game IS a whole new
season for us," said Army
Coach Tom Cahill. " Well, now
I'll get a chance to test the
validtty of thet statement "
Certamly, a new season
couldn't turn out any worse
than the present one for Army
as the Cadets carry an 0-9
record
mto
Saturday's
nationally televtsed 74th
renewal of their battle wtth
Navy at Philadelphia's John F
Kennedy Stadtum.
"You know how much both
teams will want this one," says
Navy Coach George Welsh,
whose Mtdshtpmen, desptte
wirmmg only three of 10 games
thiS year, still rate as 16-pomt
favorites over the Cadets.
While Army-Navy IS for the
tradillonalists, the seeond half
of Saturday's televtsed football
doubleheader wtll more likely
please the realists who wtll
watch Alabama attempt to lock
up the national championship
wtth a victory over arch-nval
Auburn.
"This is the most important

Pro Standings

ABA Stand mgs
By Untied Pren International
East
w 1 pet . g b .
15
6 714 • 1h
Kentucky
18
8 692
Carolina
11 12 478
5
New York
9 14 391 7
Memphis
8
7 u
333
V1rgmla

coaches or the s1x. schools cum·
petlllg fo1 the l"Onferenre
title · Bo&gt;&lt; ling Green, KcntState,
M1am1 u£ Ohto, Toledo and
Western M1ch1gan
Thtrteen of the 24 first team
selections, mcludmg the hve

Auburn eyes big upset

UP! Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UP! ) - There are those cyn1cal enough across
this land of ours who feel that some sports awards are dectded
more on the basts of public speakmg ability than performance on
the field
say , for example, some orgamzation wants to stage a gala
luncheon to promote its award and has a chotce between Reggte
Jackson and Bert Campanerts, both of whom starred as the
Oakland A's beat the New York Mels m the recent World Series.
Jackson ts an erudite man, well versed in saymg the brtght and
controversial thtngs that sports fans like to hear. As for Campanerls, well, he no speak Engltsh too well and just doesn't make
people laugh the way Jackson does.
Comctdence or not, t! was Jackson who was selected the Most
Valuable Player of the recent World Sertes and, true to form , he
was as big a hit as advertised durmg the award ceremony.
There are those, though, who feel thts abthty to perform before
a microphone was the dectding factor in the chotce of Jackson
over Campaneris.
Among those who believe thts IS Bert Campanerts .
He Accepts Prize
HJ Uunk it's true," Campaneris saJd Wednesday when he accepted a "consolation" pr12e of an RCA home entertamment ktt
as the " Life Saver of the Month" for hts part in Iead10g Oakland
to its playoff and World Series successes m October.
"He can talk, people like to hear hun," Campaneris contmued
in reference to Jackson. "I can't talk like hun."
To be fatr, it would be hard to choose between Jackson and
Campanerts durtng the seven-game senes. Each had nine htts,
Jackson drove in six runs to Campy's three but Campy had a &amp;-3
edge In runs scored and also stole three bases. While Jackson had
two good games and one spectacular one, Gampaneris satd, "!
played seven good games."
The little Cuban-born shortstop starred in the deciSive seventh
game, httlmg Oakland's ftrst homer of the Sertes to drtve m the
first two A's runs and later scormg an Insurance run after
reaching base on a single
" After I hit the homer and played good m the seventh game,
almost everybody on the team told me, 'Campy, I thmk you wm
MVP,' 11 Campaneris said, s1ppmg from a glass of wme. "(Sal)
Bando, (Gene) Tenace, (Jesus) Alou, they all satd tl to me. "
Then, when he learned otherwise, Campy satd, "I never feel so
disappointed II\ my life. I give baseball aU my life. I try hard, but
there's nothmg you can do. Maybe next year."
The 29-year-&lt;Jld shortstop, who htt two homers m the playoff
VJctory over Baltunore after httting only four all season, said he
was able to gam a measure of satiSfaction from the Lifesaver
award.
It's important to Win
"I feel now like I win the MVP ," hesatd " llts unportant to wm
something like this because tl ts something to remember for your
life. When you get older, tt IS ruce to be able to say you won the
MVP .''
Campy, the oldest member of the A's 10 pomt of semonty,
havmg joined the club 10 1964 when tt was still based m Kansas
City, does not Itt the mold of the typical Oakland player He ts
pmt-sized 10 comparison to his teammates at 5-10 and 155 pounds,
he has no facta! hatr (he shaved off hts mustache after getting the
$300 bonus from club owner Charlie Finley ), he actually admtts
that he likes Finl~y and has been treated fatrly by hun, he says
he doesn't want to be traded and he derues that there IS any
fnction among the A's players.
"People aren't mad at one another," he claiDlS. "When we play
in the held everybody plays to wm . We play together and we play
hard No one lS mad at anyone."
And be'd like tt known, 10 case anyone ts constdermg him for
any future awards, that he does speak English After all, hiS wife,
Norma, comes from Kansas City anddoesn'tspeak Spamsh.

N BA Standings
By Untted Prns lnternattonal
Eastern Conference
AtlantiC DIVISIOn
w . 1 pet g . b
Boston
16
3 842
2 28 76
Montreal 13
6
New York
12 11
522
6
7 5 25 84
Buffalo
10 14 417
8 1h NY Rangrs 10
5 25 74
10
7
Phlladelph ta
B 14 36.t
9 lf7 Toronto
1 19 66
Buffalo
9 10
Ctntral Dtvtston
wt.pctgb
1 19 71
Detroi1
9 11
capital
10 9 526
7 15 49
NY tslandrs 4
9
Atlanta
12 11
522
A 14 48
Cleveland
B 16 333
-i l/2 van couver 5 11
West
Houston
7 15 318
4 1/1
w I. t pts gt
Western Conference
Phila
13
6
1 27 58
Midwest DIVISIOn
Ch1cago
9
5
7 25 6-t
w 1 pet g b
Atlanta
10
7
4 2-4 57
M ilwaukee
20
4 833
9
7
4 22 54
Chicago
17
6 739 2th St LoutS
Ptttsburgh 7 11
3 17 55
Defro1t
12 10 545 7
Mtnnesota .o1 11
6 14 58
KC OmahiS
6 18 250 14
Cal1forn 1a 6 14
1 13 48
Paclftc Otvtston
Los
Angeles
5
13
3
13 58
w I. pet . g. b.
Wednesday's Results
LosAngeles
IS
7 682
Montreal 5 Los Ange l es 3
GoldenState
12
7 632
1112
Toronto .t Ptttsburgh J
Portland
10 11 476
4 117
Boston 3 Chtcago 3
seattle
9 17 346
a
Caltforn1a
s M1nnesota 1
Phoen i x
s 16 238 9 1!'.!
(Only games scheduled)
Wednesday's Resul1s
Thursday's Games
Boston 111 cap1ta1 104
St
LOUIS
at Toronto
Houston 114 New York 106
NY Rangers at Phi Ia
Philadelphia 101 Ch1cago 96
Oetrott at Atlanta
Atlanta 130 Buffalo 106
Los
Angeles at Buffalo
Cleveland 96 Oetro1t 91
(Only games scheduled )
Mtlwaukee 127 Seattle 93
(Only games scheduled)
tnursday's Games
K C Omaha at PhoeniX
Portland at Golden State
(Only games scheduled)

on

HOUSE
PAINT

Chrtstenmg of shtps was
practiced m anCient times as
a means to "protect" a ship
and to sooth anxious satlors
The custom ts related to the
pagan practice of pouring
wme and otl on a shtp's altar
which was dedicated to a
goddess whose image was
also carved on the bow of the
boat, The World Almanac
says.

•

Improved burnout protecttld motor
Best value aeneral purpase SIW you c1n buy.

•

1 HP motor Civesl.ll th• power needed to handle tou&amp;h"t
lobs
S1ft1l)' approved for 1 t,r. • •nd 6 1f2 ~ bledet. Smeller blade 11
safll!l)' cov&amp;red by eKtra wldt auard

•

# 7516 JIG SAW KIT
•

•

10 PI ECES

~75 1 5

J•&amp; Saw

U 1338 h l ade asso rt ment { 2

Ul350 co a r~ e woo d 2 U l 351
l1ne wood l U1354 co a r-se
me tal 1 Ul 35'i ft ne me tal
p las.hc

pouch ) U21 51 r1 p lenctl

•
•

Keeps sawd ust away from cuthnl hne for better vtsib1llty.
Accepts opt•onal Ul914 rip fettce
Bevel and depth 111dju1.tm•nts qu•ckly and ..tily rnllldt
7 1Ji. • comb lnltlon blade it standard equipment
Cutt1n1 depth go• 2~·. 45 • 1 %,•, 120V AC. 9 1mps: 1 Hta;
4900 RPM; net wt. 11% 1bs.

•

•
•

plas.h t case

EBERSBACH
HARDWARE

Reg. 17.00 gal.

ga
56
56
73
86

MEETING ENDS
96
HONOLULU (UP!)
90
. Player representatives from
Iiaseball's major league te8Iflll
wound up a two-day closed
meeting Wednesday with
dlscusstons of salary arbitration.

FLC 256 1

I
I

I

Sale

-

'-~

' I

'I '\

$590

\~

Gallon

I

'I

'-'

.

Valley Lumber &amp; Supply Co.
s. Jrd Ave.

'

9'12-2709

.
FLC

"Everything tn Hardware"

~58 1

lll W. MAIN

Midd leP_Ort, 0.

,

\

I

'

992-2811

POMEROY
I

�3 :- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Nov _29 1973
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Today's

Sport Parade

!I

ami dominates dream _team
tht&gt; fi r st two teams.
Unbeateu Mmnu got 12 plc~y­
crs on the f1rst two umts whtlc
Kent had e 1 ~ht f1rst team selections among then· 11 players selected on the two lop un1ts
The ballotmg was done by

COLUMBUS iUPI) - The
All-MAC footba ll team announced Thursday ts domtnated by
~
~
~ league champion Miamt and
Mld-Amerlcan Conference r un(EDITOR'S NOTE: Milton Richman is on vacatlon. Today's
nerup Kent State w1th the two
Sport Parade guest writer is Martin I.Ader of the New York
schools hlllng 23 of the 47 spots
staff).

I

By MARTIN LADER

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PICfURES FROM the Camporee held on November 1&amp;17-18; Row one, Retreat, Indian dancers at campfire, Scouts
from troop 257 preparing fire; ROW TWO, a winter camp
Site, group pictures of Troops Nos. 200, 232, 242, 249, 257, 259

by the editor
James Reston of the New York Tunes wrote Monday that at
some pomt the American people probably are gomg to have to

thmk al:xmt the consequences of mdeciswn, that

IS,

about not

bemg able to resolve the NIXon questton, not bemg able etther to
belteve m hun or to get rid of hun. Reston goes on to argue these
po10ts:
- There are many JlllSolvable problems, like booze or the
RusSians, but NIXon tsn 'tone of them. lt may be that triflmg wtth
NIXon for three more years may dangerously ID]ure our con-

fidence m ourse1ves and our mshtubons.
- When people are deeply perplexed and sense that
something ts deeply wrong m thetr political lives and 10 the
country, action is often preferable to aimless Inaction.
- For over 10 years Amencans have been m a war they
thought they could netther wm nor end; been battered by racial
troubles, street demonstrations, mflation, trade deficits, dangers
of dope, and what to do about the kids. AU have seemed beyond
their controL
- Watergate and its attendant scandals are merely the
latest chapter m this diSIUuswmng Amertcan story. For awhtle
we couldn't beheve 1t, then we couldn't Ignore it and were mad
about tt, and now we arc receding into a kmd of protecttve, feeble
cyrucism, a fLre that Mr. Nixon ts fanrung with every available
weapon at his command.
SOON WE SHOULD BE CELEBRATING the 189th anruversary of the Btll of Rtghls, though we likely won't, because
we have forgotten what tt meant It remams a useful gwde,
however, to the deepest questions of our time. It dtd not
presuppose the infant United States would have lhmgs easy. It
didn't put the government above the people, but the people above
the government.
Long ago Walter Lippman wrote, "The fundamental
question whtch faces us everywhere and m many forms has to do
wtth the nature of man, and most preciSely, whether adult men
and women are to be regarded as havmg that freedom of will
which wtll make them personally responsible for thetr conduct "
Going beyond the ISsue of personal responstbility, Lippman
argued that "the people" were ultimately accountable for the
conduct of thetr government, not only at the next election, and
Uta! thetr fatlure to defend ~he rights and prmctples they
mherited would weaken both them and the natton.
Some would hold, therefore, that the American people are
responstble for the Whtte House plumbers, all the crunes, conspiracies, burglanes, extortions, forgeries, deceptions, or
payoffs of the Watergate scandals. True or not, events suggest
strongly the Amencan people have a responstbtlity to petition the
government for redress and the establishment of leaders and
procedures they can trust
'
Today there IS confusiOn on this pomt. The national debate IS
shaping into whether we are bemg fatr to NIXon instead of
whether we are bemg frur to America, which ts not the same
thing. Haldeman and Ehrlichman had to go, not because they
had lost the confidence of the President but because they had lost
the conftdence of almost everybody else.
Vice-President Agnew had to go because he messed around
wtth his income tax and got some free whtskey and groceries, but
NIXon messed around with our freedom, ran a war in Cambodta
wtthout the consent of Congress, decetved hts constituents about
tl, and set up a secret police force m the Whtte House.
Lots of us wtU excuse all thts. Many admire the President's
guts for !tghting for hts life. But if we do this we carmot restore
enough 'confidence and trust m enough people to enable the
Prestdent to preside over ambiguous policies whtch m the end
have to be taken on fatth m the mtegrtty and good JUdgment of
the Prestdent.
Nor can Americans, insists Reston, ~~avmd the consequences
ol three more years of indeclston . Not to deetde it IS one way of
deciding ttl lndeeiswn can only assure that the doubts and
frustratioos and cynicism of the peQille. oarttcularly the rising
generatioo, will deepen."

&gt;

' 1

I

Only public opmwn will move the Bouse Jud1 c1ary Commtttee to Impeach and the Senate to stt m JUdgment The
evidence at thi1) pom t m time, as the Watergaters say, Js that the
people are !tred and bored wt th the whole th mg, whtch ts the
Prestdent 's hope , and Amen ca 's problem
I WOULD CONCLUDE THIS ar!tcle wt!h wha t has to be
regarded a demoralizmg conclusion by Wtlham S Whtte,
distinguished conserv: ttve JOurna hst and author , who has been a
staunch supporter of the Prestdent smce Watergate Whtle wrote
for pubhcatLon Monday .
uwatergate . IS cau smg both a n munense inJustice and an
unmense danger to the country Itse lf For, no matter who did
what to whom m this matter, "Wa te rgate'' IS affi xtng a 2oth
century scarlet letter fha vmg noth10 g to do wtth sex) upon the
brow of the whole profess ion of pubhc affatrs ThiS IS not only
unfatr. It IS absurd
"Far worse, It can eastly become a kmd of Gresham's law of
polittcs m which the bad (and mept or phony) dri ves out the good
(and able ) prac!t!toner of wha t IS after all nothmg less than the
techmque of leading and servmg the people.
"Already, for one tllustratwn, tt LS plam that a huge problem
for both parttes IS that of fmdmg decent and able men who wtll be
willmg wtth any truly htgh motivation or morale to run for office.
(Self-appomted good guys wtll be m abundand supply; but then
they are JUSt what are not needed.) Heretofor e, the embarrassment has been to beat off the s"arms of perfectly
capable asptranis who had the notiOn that servmg m Congress
was not an Ignoble career
"Now, the shoe IS mdeed on the other foot Where are to be
found the men who , already successful at somethmg else, can be
persuaded to take a chan ce on wmmng an offtce only to fmd
themselves held m public regard as little better than thteves or
moral burglars ?
"In short, there IS a vast sttllness loose m the land and tt
persiSts m the face of the demonstrable fact that whatever the
Watergate 'horrors' may have been they were comrrutted not by
pohttc~ans but rather by nonpoht icians or even anbpohltctans

Kiashuta at Chester reopened
Pictures and story by Raymond Sutherland
CHESTER - After months of preparation, Camp Ktashuta
was ready
Ready for Its !trst Boy Scout Camporee in three years.
Weekend before last, seven troops converged at the camp for two
days of campmg and fun.
Arnv10g late Fnday evening, the scouts packed food and
eqwpment across the old swmgmg bridge to lhetr camp sttes
Many pitched tents in the dark as small flakes of snow floated
down. The others gathered wood for a warllllng fire. Late and a
httle cold, everyone prepared thetr beds and settled down for the
rught.
Saturday morning brought a bnght sun and breakfast; a
breakfast of bacon and eggs, pancakes, and hot cocoa. After
clean-up, each scout was free to browse around and meet with his
fellow campers.
The afternoon was a time for learning. Classes were held m

Ftrst Atd, Conservation, and Cookmg · only a few of the many
sktlls a scout learns.
Traditionally, a part of any campmg trtp is the campfire .
Saturday eve rung we were fortunate to have the TBAL-COOZVO Lodge No. 457 dance team These dancers are members of
the Ordef of the Arrow. The Order IS a national brotherhood of
Scout Honor campers which ortgmated in the very early years of
Scouting and ts deeply rooted in the Indian culture and
ceremonies of our nation. In conJunction Wlth the dances, each
troop performed a skit or song.
After a full day, the melodtc tones of taps sounded through
the wmter rught. The end of a btg day and a lime to reflect back
on your life today.
Sunday mornmg, after rehgwus services were held, all
troops cleaned up thetr camp sites and prepared to go home.
Before leaVJng, however, everyone said thetr farewells wtth the
affirmation of campmg together agam soon.

Dr. Lawrence E. Lamb

Pills and headaches

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I have
been on btrth control pills for a
number of years. During the
past two years I have begun to
have what my doctor calls
migrame headaches. He took
''fhc consequence is a spreading idea among the public
me off the ptlls for four months
that the kind of a man we shall need in future for public office
to see tf my headaches would
-which Is to say for the practice of politics - is a man who
stop, and they dtd Not one
knows nothing whatever of 'politics 1 ' is determined to have
headache the whole time I was
nothing to do with it, and thlliks of the profession as little
off the ptll .
shori of a dirty word.
I )&gt;egan the ptll agam
"The curse of thts country has , of course, always has been because we defimtely do not
that 'the purttan ethic' of which we are m many ways properly want more children. I am
proud, does have one very bad component. ThiS IS a tendency to
having the headaches on the
confuse moralizmg - that IS to say, a harsh and often unJust average of one a week. My
finger-pomting to prove one's own goodness - with that qutte question IS, do you think my
different quality called morahty. The further trouble ts that we headaches wtll stop completely
seem always to pomt that kind of a fmger most unspanngly at tf I qwt the ptll completely?
those in public positiOn .
,
Also, I noticed that whtle I
"For some four decades as a journalist and author 1 have
was off the pill my sex drtve
had perhaps greater than average contact wtlh every kind of
increased sharply. Now that I
profession and wtth busmess,large and small . I here assert that am back on the pill I've nottced
the general run of polillctans has at least as much 'honesty; a decrease . Do ptlls decrease
mtellectual honesty as well as money honesty , and about three
the sex drive m some women?
times as much altrmsm and genuine desLre to serve as any other
If I thought the change would
group I know ,
be a lasting one I would gladly
qwt them, permanently.
DEAR READER - To begin ,
With,
mtgrame headaches are
H tgh Senes ~ An n Radford
Pomeroy Bowlmg Lan es
49 4
caused or precipitated by
Mornmg Gloru~s League
Seco nd
H 1gh
Se r 1e s Nov. 20, IY/;$
many different factors. There
M ar gar et Foll ro d 471
Team
Pomts
Tea m H 1gh G a me - G &amp; J
are reqports of some women
Excels•or Oil Co
56
Au t o Part s 777
Newell Sunoc:o
53
havmg mcreased attacks wtth
Te am H 1gh Ser tes - G &amp; J
G &amp; J Auto Parts
49
Au to P art s 22 44
btrth control pllls. And, your
Pocklmgton Const
46 '
G 1bbs Grocery
4.4
htstory certainly suggests that
Spencer's Market
40
they may be a factor m your
Htgh lndtvidua l G am e - A nn
Radford 194
1
Haga
r
is
a
Hebrew
name
case
.
Sec ond H1gh lnd Game
;y]('an1116
"
forsaken
"
I would not like to tell you
~arqaret F ol lrod 186

Local Bowling

I

and religious ceremonies; ROW THREE, Middleport
Emergency Squad, Troop 259 preportng dinner, crossing
swinging bridge, and Pomeroy Emergency Squad.

(

that you would not have any
DEAR READER- If wetght
more headaches tf you stopped trainmg and related exercises
the pill permanently. There are are done properly I'm contoo many other thmgs m life fident they are good for your
that can precipitate a head- health . Many a person would
ache and so you may still have develop a healthier body with
them. It does sound as tf you even a fatrly modest program
would not have nearly the of this type. It tsn't necessary
problem, though, that you now to develop exceptionally large
have
muscles to accomplish some
Some women apparently do good. Such programs do help
experience a decrease m develop strength. That helps to
sexual deSire when they are on develop and niamtam good
the pilL However,. there are a
lot of dtfferent kinds of ptlls.
CONTESTANTS NAMED
They have different ratios of
Joyce Ann Davts, daughter
female hormones, TbiS means
that one pill llllght be better of Mr . and Mrs Max Davis, Rt.
suited to one woman than I, Mtddleport, and Ingnd
another. Often some of these Darlene Hawley, daughter of
problems can be solved by Mrs. Dtanne Hawley, 102 Wolfe
usmg a different pilL It IS no Drive, Pomeroy, wtll represent
longer really right to use the Meigs High School in the anblanket tenn 11 pill" as is so nual Daughters of America
often done, because a variety Good Citizenship contest for
of effects can be obtamed from semors.
Selections were based on
the many types of pills
dependability,
service to
available.
and community,
DEAR DR. LAMB- I am 16 school
leadership
and patriotism.
years old and have considered
a weight hfting program.
However, lately I have been
Popcorn kernels ex p a n d
told that having thick muscles
from
30 to 35 times thetr stze
may cause a person to slow or
stop his growth. Is there when popped.
anything to this? Also, what Is
The best golf balls have a
your opinion on weightllfting
sac m the center which
small
and other related Isotonic
exercises? Is it beneficial to ts filled wtth water or castor
otl and liquid sihcon.
~ood health 1 •
)

I

posture And, I suspect that
matptalning good posture even
mto the older years ts much
more Important to health than
many people realize . Such
programs will not stunt your
growth They may even help tt.
Send your questions to Dr.
Lamb, In care of tbls newspaper, P. 0. Box 1551, Radio
City Statlon, New York, N. Y.
10019. Fora copy of Dr. Lamb's
booklet on cholesterol, send 50
cents to the same address and
ask £or "Cholesterol" booklet.

w.

Dai~

Sentinel

OEVOTI:DTOTHI!
INTEREST OF
MEIGS - MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL,
Ellec l!icl
ROIIERT HOI:FLICH,
Clly l!dltor.

Published dally u;cepl
S•Jurday bv The Ohio Valley
Publ ishing Company , 111

Court Sl , Pomeroy , Ohio,
-45769 Bvslnes Office Phone
992 21S6 . Editorial Phone 9'92
2151

Seconl;l clus postage paid

at Pomeroy , Ohio
Nlf lonat
llld\ltrtlalng
rtpreuntallvt Botttnelll
Glltavher , Inc . 12 Eut A2ncl

St , Ntw York ,New York
Subscription rates
Dtllvtrtd by ctrrler where
IIIYellabtt S5 t::ants per week;
By Molar Routt whara
carr ltr
tarvlct
not
lll•llablt Ont month. 12 l!ly
mall In Oh lo and W Va , Ont
'Vnr, 11• , Sh. rnontht, rl.50 .
Thrtt
month•,
u 50
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month• •• .10 1 lhl'tt montht.
&amp;6 Subtc:rlptlon price In

C"ludtt

S.nttnet ,

Sundt~

Tlmu

by Gallia hunters

CLEVELAND (UP!) - Three
key Cleveland Browns veterans
missed a heavy workout m the
ram Wednesday but all three,
runmng back Leroy Kelly,
defensive end Nick Roman and
receiver Frank Patts, are
expected to be recovered from
var10us manor mJurtes m time
for Sunday's game agamst the
Chtefs at Kansas City.
Kelly and Pttis recetved
treatment for back injunes and
Roman rested a sore knee. The
mjurtes were sustamed m last
weekend's trtumph over the
Ptttsburgh Steelers.
The Browns previously announced that free safety Tom
Darden will mtss hts second
stratght game wtth a htp mjury
and wtll be replaced by rookie
Van Green.
"Overall, ~e (Green ) IS domg
well for an mexpenenced
rookte," Coach Ntck Skonch

59
65
57

71
94

65
69
ga

33
40
56
.ol.ol

87
75
75

77

Twenty more deer were
killed m Gallia County Wednesday durmg the third day of
the five day gun deer season
ammals
were
Eleven
checked at Bob Saunders'
Quaker stCte Servtce Center m
Galhpohs and nme deer were
checked at the Vmton Otl
Service Center Thus far , 75
deer have been bagged .

28 Pupils make
honors listing
HARRISONVILLE - The
Harrtsonville Elementary
School had 28 pup1ls who made
all A or B 10 the second stx
weeks grad10g penod. Stx had
all A.
Ftrst grade - Mtke Chne,
Katrma Donohue, Jtmmy
Locke, Bettyann Loftis, Linda
Rtggs, Retha Yost.
Second grade - Paula Carl,
Teresa Gilham , Jerry Grounds
(all A). Many Reeves,
Chnsllne Rtggs (all A), Paul
Rtggs, Tma Yost (all !\ )
Third grade - Brent Fmlaw
(all A), Donna Hall, Brad
Largent, Mary Lee, Darlene
Nelson (all A), Julta Spencer,
Wendy Ttllis, Penny Wandling,
Renee WtlliS
Fourth grade ..: Mark Cline
{all A), Vtcky DeBord, Troy
Wtlhs.
Ftfth grade Robert
Harmon .
Stxth ora de - Gary Howard,
Richard K. Htll

satd. " He's done all nght m
passmg situatiOns most of the
ttme and has been great
agams t the run ''
Pltts, a former member of
the Chtefs, hasn't had the
sattsfactton of beat10g hiS old
team yet and neither have the
rest of the Browns. The Chtefs
are the only team m the league
that has never lost to CleveLAFF- A- DAY
land.
Last year, in a game played
here, Kansas Ctty pounded
Cleveland 31-7 as the Browns
fumbled ftve times. The year
before at Kansas Ctty, Cleveland lost 13-7. The only other
meeting between the teants, an
exhtbt!ton game, was a 16-13
Kansas Ctty victory in 1970
Both the Chiefs and the
Browns constder a wm Sunday
to be critical to their dtvtsion ~'Okay. Bill - your uniform '1
tiUe hopes.
back !rom the cleaners."

--------WHA Standtngs

By United Press lnternat•onal

Eut
w. t. t.

Nw Englnd
Quebec
Chicago
Clevelend

9

13
1!2 12
1
11
10 8

Redmen lose first
tilt of year 84-69

pts gl ga

I 27 88 77

1 25 95 83 '
1 23 71 63
2 22 70 72

Toronto
9 12 J , 21 77
New Jersey 7 13
2 16 52
West
w . J t pts gf
Edmonton u
6 o 28 78
Houston
11
6 2 2-4 75
Minnesota 11
9
1 23 83
Winnipeg
9 12 3 21 85
Vancouver 9 14
0 18 79
Los Angeles a 16 0 16 6S
Wednesday's Resuth
Winnipeg 4 Houston 4
vancouver 5 Mlnne$ota 3
(Only games scheduled I
Thursday's Games
Cleveland at Quebec
Houston at New England
e!dmonton at New Jersey
(On tv games scheduled)

81
85

team choices m 1972
Repealing on the £trst team
defense were Kent State tackle
Walt Vrabel , a second team
selection last fall and the btggesl player on thiS year's team
at 6-feet-4 and 265 pounds, and
Maam1's Monos, also a second
team selection last fall.
The coaches voted to have a
t2-man offensive squad, making
room for two w1de rece Lvers, two
runmng backs and a fullback ,
and then a tte at the quarterback spot created a 13-man offenSLve first team.
Players of the Year, both offensively and defenSively. as
well as the MAC Coach of the
Year , wtll be selected by a vole
of the MAC News Medta AssoCiation and announced next
week
GILLOW OPTIONED
LOS ANGELES (UP! )
Goalie Russ Gtllow, off to a
slow start th iS year, was optiOned to the Gree nsboro
Generals of the Southe rn
Hockey League by the Los
Angeles Sharks of the WHA
Wednesday for a "sha rpemng
up " penod.

Gentle Giant strong again
Rufus Mayes ts the No. 1 left
tackle. He's done a good job.
I've got to try to wm my
posibon back."
Tbe Bengals, in a three-way
hght with Ptttsburgh and
Cleveland for the Amertcan
Conference Central OLVlSIOn
lltle, entertam the Mmnesota
Vtkmgs Sunday
It wtll be the ftrst meeting
ever between the teams. The
Bengals have a three-game
wmmng streak gomg and are
yet to lose at home thts season ,
but Minnesota IS one of the
toughest clubs m pro football
and sports a 10-1 record
"The only good thmg about
bemg out was that I got to look
at our football team from a
dtstance and t! helped me put
the Bengals Into perspective, "
Walters said. "I saw that we 've
really developed mto a good
club and tf we don't win it (the
divtston) thts year I think we
w1Jl next year."

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#7301
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2499

PRESIDENT

'

Kentucky at Memphis
Denver et lnd•ana
(Only games scheduled)

gan, Jack Lambert of Kent
State, ~nd Mike Monos of MIami ; and defensive backs Mike
Carter o£ Weste rn Mich1gan and
Dan Rebsch of M~amt
Miles was the only thtrd time
first team selectiOn, whtle Kent
State tight end Garv Ptnkcl
Western M1 chtgan's Rtggw,
Kent State 's Lambert . and
M1am1's Rebsch were all first
team selections a year ago
Other repeaters on the first
team ofrens ave umt were OhiO's
Beams, a second team defenstve
chotce a year ago; Miami's
B1ehle , a second team selection
last fall : Kent State tatlback
Larry Poole and Bowhng Green
fullback Phtl Polak, both second

players on the offcns1ve mterior
!me and all three hneba rkers,
were unan1mous selectiOns while
there were 16 repeaters from
last year's two squads FIVe of
th1s fall 's first team ch01ces
were holdovers from last fall' s
two top umts
Unammously selected were
offenstve tackles Jeff Beams of
Ohw and M1ke Btehle of Mtaml ;
offenstve guards Ketth Young
and Dough Neue ndorf, both of
Toledo; center Dan Cun mngham
of Mtamt; runmng back Paul
M1ies of Bowlmg Green; defenSIVe end Herman Jackson of
Mtamt ; mtddle guard Brad
Cousmo of MLami; hnebackers
Dom Rtggw of Western Mtcnt-

hopes to naal Lt down Wlth a wm
over Georgia Tech Should the
Bulldogs beat the Ye llow
Jackets, they would play
Maryland m the Peach Bowl.
However, should Georgia lose,
the P each Bowl mvttah on
would go to South Carolma.
Alabama wtll meet foutthranked Notre Dame m the
Sugar Bowl and the lnsh warm
up for their New Year's E ve
date in New Orleans by closmg
out the ir regular sea son
against Mtamt (Fla.).
Loutstana State , headed for
Rio's Steve Bartram capNelson Overton was hot m
the orange Bowl agamst Penn the ftrst half and Jerry Davts tul"ed the game's scormg
State, wraps up 1ts season took the scormg lead after honors wtth 24 pomts
agamst
Astro-Bluebonnet mtermtsswn as Fmdlay rolled
The Redmen are now 3-1 on
Bowlbound Tulane; Tennessee, over Rto Grande 84~9 m a loe year The Otlers are 1-Q
which faces Texas Tech m the college baske tball game at
Next RL Ogame IS Monday, at
Gator Bowl, takes on Vander- Findlay Wednesday mght
Ptkevtlle, Ky.
bilt ; Flortda, headed for the
Tangerme Bowl agatnst Mtamt
(0 .) , ftrushes up agamst winless Flonda State; and
Houston takes on Tulsa as the
Cougars warmup for therr
CINCINNATI (UP! ) - Stan of thetr comeback work. But
meeting against Tulane in the Walters, the Cmcinnati Benthere was nothmg I could do
AstroBluebormet Bowl.
gals' "gentle gtant,'' IS back in w1th hepatitiS . I JUst had to res t
Elsewhere, Boston College untform after the most frustratand watt.
plays Holy Cross, Baylor meets mg two months of hts life .
" At certam parts of the day I
Rtce, TCU takes on SMU,
A favorite among Bengal would feel like I was 100 per
Texas-El Paso opposes Bngh- players because of hts pleasant
cent healthy," Walters satd.
am Young , Rutgers fa ces personality, Walters speaks m
" But then later m the day I
Tampa, Iowa State plays San
smooth, gentle tones that belie would have no strength at all "
Otego State and Utah meets hiS 6-foot-ll, 270-pound frame.
A couple of weeks ago
Hawan
Hepahtis took away some of Walters returned to pfacttce
those pounds a couple of and last Sunday for the first
TURCOTTE TO COMPETE months ago and the man who ttme smce early in the season
BOSTON (UP! ) - Ron had won a startmg offensive he dressed for a game. He only
Turcotte, the regular nder for tackle JOb last year as a rookie got in on place ktckmg
both Secrelartat and Rtva found himself sapped of sttuattons but ts itchy to get
back full-time .
Rtdge, has agreed to compete strength
"
It
wa
s
the
most
frustrat10g
" I want to try to play some
m the first North Amertcan
thmg
I've
ever
had
happen
for
this year because ' I thmk tt'll
Rtding Champwnshtp, Dec. 9,
two
reasons,''
the
24-year...ald
help
me a lot for ned year,''
at Suffolk Downs race track.
Turcotte beeame the seventh from Syracuse Umverstty satd. the nattve of Rutherford, N J.
nationally famous jockey to ''I've never been InJured and It said . "I need to end the season
agree to compete m the wm- was the ftrst time I had mtssed m playmg conditiOn because tf I
don't it'll be much harder to
ner-take-all event The others any real playmg time.
the
worst
part
of
it
was
"But
work mto shape for the off.
are: Btll Sho,emaker, Jorge
Velasquez, Brautio Baeza, that 1t wasn't an IDJUfY, 1t was season.
"I'm not lookmg for sympaSandy
Hawley,
Mtke somethmg I couldn't bounce
back
from.
Injured
players
go
thy,
I'm looking for my job,"
Carrozella and Vmce Bracthrough
therapy
and
see
results
Walters added. "Right now
Ciale.

pet . g.b.

Denver
11 10 524
'h
san Antonio
12 12 500
'I&gt;
utah
12 12 soo
'Ia
Indiana
11 11 500
San Diego
8 15 348
Wednesday's Results
VHth 116 Vtrglnta 105
~an Anton tO 104 Kentucky 99
New York 134 San Diego 108
(Only games scheduled)

Thursday's Games

The

20 deer killed

Browns set
for Chiefs

NHL Standtngs
By Untted Press lnternaf•onal
Zast
w 1 t pts gt ga
Bbston
16
o4
2 34 105 58

west

game of the year for a lot of
reasons for us." says Alabama
Coach Bear Brya nt who still
remembers last yea r's contest
agamst Auburn that saw the
Ttgers upset the Crtmson Tide,
17-16, thanks to a parr of
blocked punts that Auburn
turned mto touchdowns.
Should 26-pomt fa vo nte
Alabama stumble agam to
Auburn , second·ranked Oklahoma could grab the natwnal
crown with a VIctory over
Oklahoma State. The Sooners
already have clinched the Btg
Eight title and rate as four
touchdown favontes to close
out their season w1th a wrn over
the Cowboys.
Oklahoma, on probatiOn , IS
prohtbtted from appearing m a
bowl game for the next two
years but one bowl spot still
remams open and GeorglB

By United Press International
" For to years I've heard the
Navy game IS a whole new
season for us," said Army
Coach Tom Cahill. " Well, now
I'll get a chance to test the
validtty of thet statement "
Certamly, a new season
couldn't turn out any worse
than the present one for Army
as the Cadets carry an 0-9
record
mto
Saturday's
nationally televtsed 74th
renewal of their battle wtth
Navy at Philadelphia's John F
Kennedy Stadtum.
"You know how much both
teams will want this one," says
Navy Coach George Welsh,
whose Mtdshtpmen, desptte
wirmmg only three of 10 games
thiS year, still rate as 16-pomt
favorites over the Cadets.
While Army-Navy IS for the
tradillonalists, the seeond half
of Saturday's televtsed football
doubleheader wtll more likely
please the realists who wtll
watch Alabama attempt to lock
up the national championship
wtth a victory over arch-nval
Auburn.
"This is the most important

Pro Standings

ABA Stand mgs
By Untied Pren International
East
w 1 pet . g b .
15
6 714 • 1h
Kentucky
18
8 692
Carolina
11 12 478
5
New York
9 14 391 7
Memphis
8
7 u
333
V1rgmla

coaches or the s1x. schools cum·
petlllg fo1 the l"Onferenre
title · Bo&gt;&lt; ling Green, KcntState,
M1am1 u£ Ohto, Toledo and
Western M1ch1gan
Thtrteen of the 24 first team
selections, mcludmg the hve

Auburn eyes big upset

UP! Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UP! ) - There are those cyn1cal enough across
this land of ours who feel that some sports awards are dectded
more on the basts of public speakmg ability than performance on
the field
say , for example, some orgamzation wants to stage a gala
luncheon to promote its award and has a chotce between Reggte
Jackson and Bert Campanerts, both of whom starred as the
Oakland A's beat the New York Mels m the recent World Series.
Jackson ts an erudite man, well versed in saymg the brtght and
controversial thtngs that sports fans like to hear. As for Campanerls, well, he no speak Engltsh too well and just doesn't make
people laugh the way Jackson does.
Comctdence or not, t! was Jackson who was selected the Most
Valuable Player of the recent World Sertes and, true to form , he
was as big a hit as advertised durmg the award ceremony.
There are those, though, who feel thts abthty to perform before
a microphone was the dectding factor in the chotce of Jackson
over Campaneris.
Among those who believe thts IS Bert Campanerts .
He Accepts Prize
HJ Uunk it's true," Campaneris saJd Wednesday when he accepted a "consolation" pr12e of an RCA home entertamment ktt
as the " Life Saver of the Month" for hts part in Iead10g Oakland
to its playoff and World Series successes m October.
"He can talk, people like to hear hun," Campaneris contmued
in reference to Jackson. "I can't talk like hun."
To be fatr, it would be hard to choose between Jackson and
Campanerts durtng the seven-game senes. Each had nine htts,
Jackson drove in six runs to Campy's three but Campy had a &amp;-3
edge In runs scored and also stole three bases. While Jackson had
two good games and one spectacular one, Gampaneris satd, "!
played seven good games."
The little Cuban-born shortstop starred in the deciSive seventh
game, httlmg Oakland's ftrst homer of the Sertes to drtve m the
first two A's runs and later scormg an Insurance run after
reaching base on a single
" After I hit the homer and played good m the seventh game,
almost everybody on the team told me, 'Campy, I thmk you wm
MVP,' 11 Campaneris said, s1ppmg from a glass of wme. "(Sal)
Bando, (Gene) Tenace, (Jesus) Alou, they all satd tl to me. "
Then, when he learned otherwise, Campy satd, "I never feel so
disappointed II\ my life. I give baseball aU my life. I try hard, but
there's nothmg you can do. Maybe next year."
The 29-year-&lt;Jld shortstop, who htt two homers m the playoff
VJctory over Baltunore after httting only four all season, said he
was able to gam a measure of satiSfaction from the Lifesaver
award.
It's important to Win
"I feel now like I win the MVP ," hesatd " llts unportant to wm
something like this because tl ts something to remember for your
life. When you get older, tt IS ruce to be able to say you won the
MVP .''
Campy, the oldest member of the A's 10 pomt of semonty,
havmg joined the club 10 1964 when tt was still based m Kansas
City, does not Itt the mold of the typical Oakland player He ts
pmt-sized 10 comparison to his teammates at 5-10 and 155 pounds,
he has no facta! hatr (he shaved off hts mustache after getting the
$300 bonus from club owner Charlie Finley ), he actually admtts
that he likes Finl~y and has been treated fatrly by hun, he says
he doesn't want to be traded and he derues that there IS any
fnction among the A's players.
"People aren't mad at one another," he claiDlS. "When we play
in the held everybody plays to wm . We play together and we play
hard No one lS mad at anyone."
And be'd like tt known, 10 case anyone ts constdermg him for
any future awards, that he does speak English After all, hiS wife,
Norma, comes from Kansas City anddoesn'tspeak Spamsh.

N BA Standings
By Untted Prns lnternattonal
Eastern Conference
AtlantiC DIVISIOn
w . 1 pet g . b
Boston
16
3 842
2 28 76
Montreal 13
6
New York
12 11
522
6
7 5 25 84
Buffalo
10 14 417
8 1h NY Rangrs 10
5 25 74
10
7
Phlladelph ta
B 14 36.t
9 lf7 Toronto
1 19 66
Buffalo
9 10
Ctntral Dtvtston
wt.pctgb
1 19 71
Detroi1
9 11
capital
10 9 526
7 15 49
NY tslandrs 4
9
Atlanta
12 11
522
A 14 48
Cleveland
B 16 333
-i l/2 van couver 5 11
West
Houston
7 15 318
4 1/1
w I. t pts gt
Western Conference
Phila
13
6
1 27 58
Midwest DIVISIOn
Ch1cago
9
5
7 25 6-t
w 1 pet g b
Atlanta
10
7
4 2-4 57
M ilwaukee
20
4 833
9
7
4 22 54
Chicago
17
6 739 2th St LoutS
Ptttsburgh 7 11
3 17 55
Defro1t
12 10 545 7
Mtnnesota .o1 11
6 14 58
KC OmahiS
6 18 250 14
Cal1forn 1a 6 14
1 13 48
Paclftc Otvtston
Los
Angeles
5
13
3
13 58
w I. pet . g. b.
Wednesday's Results
LosAngeles
IS
7 682
Montreal 5 Los Ange l es 3
GoldenState
12
7 632
1112
Toronto .t Ptttsburgh J
Portland
10 11 476
4 117
Boston 3 Chtcago 3
seattle
9 17 346
a
Caltforn1a
s M1nnesota 1
Phoen i x
s 16 238 9 1!'.!
(Only games scheduled)
Wednesday's Resul1s
Thursday's Games
Boston 111 cap1ta1 104
St
LOUIS
at Toronto
Houston 114 New York 106
NY Rangers at Phi Ia
Philadelphia 101 Ch1cago 96
Oetrott at Atlanta
Atlanta 130 Buffalo 106
Los
Angeles at Buffalo
Cleveland 96 Oetro1t 91
(Only games scheduled )
Mtlwaukee 127 Seattle 93
(Only games scheduled)
tnursday's Games
K C Omaha at PhoeniX
Portland at Golden State
(Only games scheduled)

on

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MEETING ENDS
96
HONOLULU (UP!)
90
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Iiaseball's major league te8Iflll
wound up a two-day closed
meeting Wednesday with
dlscusstons of salary arbitration.

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5 - The' Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, u., Nm· . 29, 1!17:1

Right way to insulate
By Hugh P. Kirkel
E.xe£'uth•e \'ire Prt"sidt'nt
Holzer Medical Center
For quite some urn~ there's been a
shortage of nurses al Holzer Medical
Center. We ' re tryin g to remedy the
situation , but the lack of available
nursing personnel continues to be major
problem in our operation . Nurses are
vital members of our hospital family .
They are a very special kind of people
who are trained to care for others, fillin g
a need that can 't be met by any one

without a nursing background and experience.

When a doctor makes a diagnosis and
prescribes treatment for a patient in the
hospital, the nurse carries out that
program with the patient. Today 's nurse
is trained in so many roles. She knows all
about medications-, what they are, what
they do, and how \O administer \hem. She
Wlderstands and can capably use new
and sophisticiated equipment important
in treatment. Nurses rnu15t be able to
teach and supervise others in the
treatm ent of patients. New methods of
care are introd uced almost daily, and
nurses must stay aware of every new
•
•
way to improve patient care.
Let's look at a few of the specific
things a nurse does at Holzer :
She's a " pl~nner, " arranging the
patient's car e under the supervision of a
physician .
She's a ' 'provider," supply ing expert
care for the patient.
She 's also a " teache r," instructing
patients so that they can take part in
their own therapy, both in the hospital
and following dischar ge.
She's a "supervisor " because she
has the responsibility to direct practical
nurses and nurse aides.
She " administers" medications and
treatments prescribed by members of
the Medical Starr.

HOME BAKED

Christmas
Cookl"es
paM EROY
PASTRY

As an .. observer,·~ she evaluates and
re-cords syrriptoms, reactions and the
prog ress of a patient.
She's truly a "helper" in every way
to the patient as she assists patients to
adjust to all kinds of cri sis situations
fa cing them when they are ill .
To be a nurse is a challenge because
the nursing profession is a service, a
scie nce and an art, all together in today's
complex world . The opportunities in
nursing are many and varied and we
need more nurses, right now, at Holzer
Medical Center.
Ever yone who has what it takes to be
a nurse can flnd a place in the nursing
profession . As a high school student
lookin g toward the future or an adult
wanting to start a second career, if you
have a des ire to serve others and have
sympathy , tact and discretion ; if you are
reliable, have a sense
responsibility
along with intelligence, good judgment,
tolerance and adaptability; if you are ln
good health , physically and emotionall y,
then you can combine these traits with an
education in nurs ing and the nursing
profession will ma ke room for you.
Many of our nurse aides, because of
their experience and desire to become a
nurse, are attendin g the Gallia-JacksonVinton J oi nt Vocational School District of
Practic.al Nurslng School of Buckeye
Hills Career Center located in our old
Cedar Street facility. A four-quarter , one
yea r program is available . In fact, 14
members of the first class to graduate
this past August are now on our staff.
A Registered Nurse in a hospital has
various job opportunities. She can be a
private duty nurse employed directly by
a patient for complete personal attention.
She can be assigned to 'ge neral duty care
on the nursing uni ts. She can be a clinic
specialist in coronary care or intensive
care, sUrgery, anesthesia, psychiatry ,
pediatrics, obstetrics and the_li~e . And,

she has the opportunity to become a head
nurse or nursing supervisor , directing
the activities of other nurses, a department or a special service. Home Health
provides another expanding area for
nurses .
We need more nurses and urge young
women and men looking for a career with
a future to consider nursing. As we
mentioned, for thos~ who would like to be
licensed practical nurses there is the
Practical Nursing School of Buckeye
Hills Career Center . Those who desire to
become registered n'urses may want to
apply for acceptance at the Holzer
Medi cal Center School o£ Nursing .
You may be interested to know that,
in memory of Mrs . Homer B. Thomas,
the "Mary S. Thomas Memorial Fund''
was established earlier thi s year. The
purpose of the Fund is to help stud ents
who are eligible for admission to the
Holzer Medlcal Center School of Nursing,
but require financial assistance.
Anyone wishing to make a contribution to this Memorial Fund may do
so by con tacting the Administration
Office at the hospital. As the fund grows
through contributions , more and more
financiai assistance will be available to
deserving students who want to become
nurses through study at the hospital's
School of Nursing. This is an ideal way to
help relieve the problem of a nursing
shortage in this area and at the same
time afford an opportunity to our
deserving young people.
And , to all of you residents of the
area who are graduate nurses : WE
NEED YOU! !
If you are a nurse and want to
become actively involved on a part-time
.or full-time basis, let our Director . of
!Nursing, Mrs . Beulah Ward, hear from
· you. Her telephone nwnber is 446-5311.
We may have just the place for you.

or

Bucks

riddle
Sonics

By GARY KALE
UP! Sports Writer
They all had a great time ·in
Milwaukee Wednesday night.
Coach Larry' Costello apd the
winning Bucks were overjoyed .
Even Blll Russell thought it
was a Iaugher as he watched
his Seattle · SuperSonics lose
their 17th game thls season.
"This one was over early,''
said Russell, who seemed to
spend as much time yakking it
up with the team trainer , the
. timekeeper and assorted
benchwarmers as he did
directing his club.
"There ain't no point in
crying, so you might as well
laugh," Russell chuckled after
Milwaukee clobbered the Sonics, 127-93. "! knew after the
game was only eight minutes
old that we were in for a long
evening.n
Kareem Abdul.Jabbar made
salary of $5,1100 plus expenses given "very careful scrutiny' 1 it appear endless for Russell as
and were among "literally he scored 24 of ~s 32 points in
for the monthly meetings.
Two corners of the state, plus hundreds of Ohioansu con- the first haH. The 7-4 center hit
on 15 of 24 floor shots, collected
central Ohio, were blanked in sidered.
The commission is reQuired 14 rebounds and blocked seven
the commission selections.
This could prove significant in by law to meet wlthin seven shots.
It's Fun
the location of the commission days of the appointment of the
commissioners.
Gilligan's
ap"It's
fun
playing
a game like
offlces and headquarters,
which the members them- pointments are ef£ective this," .Costello said. "EveryFriday.
body had a good time tonight. A
selves will determine .
The group will select one of Jot of. guys got a lot or points
Named to the commission
own members for a 2-year and a lot of guys had a lot of
.
its
were Louis S. Goldman,
Dayton attorney; David F . term as chairman , and then act playing time.
Spencer Haywood, one of
Leahy, Cleveland business as a screening committee for
leader; £ormer State Rep . the governor in his selection o£ Abdul-Jabbar 's favorite
patsies in the pivot, scored only
Bernice K. MacKenzie of an executive director.
That appointment, also sub- 15 points.
Canton; Rlchard S. Rust Jr.,
Mllwaukee's victory P~' the
Cinci'n nati insurance ject to Senate con£irmation,
will
carry
an
annual
salary
of
Bucks
21&gt; games ahead of
: exec utiv e,
and
former
, Cleveland councilwoman Mary at least $26,437 under the Jot- Chlcago in the Mldwest Divitery legislation.
sion. The Bulls dropped a 101-96
E . Yates.
The eommission will deter- 'decision to Phlladelphia. ln
Goldman, Mrs. MacKenzie
mine
the type of lottery to be other NBA action, Boston beat
and
Mrs.
Yates
are
Democrats, while Leahy and conducted; ticket prices, out- Capltal, 111-104, Houston
lets and sales agents; whipped New York, 114-106,
Rust are Republicans.
of drawings; Atlanta downed Buffalo, 130Rust was named to a one- frequency
number
·and
size
o£ prizes, and 106, and Cleveland defeated
year terin, Go1dm3n to a twoyear term, Mrs. Yates to a all other rules and condltions Detroit, 96-91.
Fred Carter scored nine of
three-year term, and Mrs. for the lottery.
The commission will have $2 his 29 points in the fourth
Mac Kenzie and Leahy to fouryear terms, as provided in the million appropriated to start quarter as Philadelphia beat
law adopted last summer by up the lottery. The money is to Chicago for the flrst time in
be repaid to the general fund ·two years. Tom Van Arsdale
the General Assembly .
through
early lottery proceeds. · chipped in with 25 points £or the
The legislature set guidelines
Goldman, 45, is a partner in 76ers. Chet Walker led Chicago
£or the commission after Ohio
voters approved the lottery last the Dayton law £inn o£ Gold- with 30 points.
12th Straight Wll,
May. Sen. Ronald M. Mottl, D- man, Bogin and Fox. A gruaduate
of
Ohio
state
University,
Boston
won its 12th straight
Parma, and Rep. Thomas
Fries, D-Dayton, were major he Is also president of Goldman as John Havlicek led the
engineers of the lottery legisla- Stores in Dayton and Capital Celtics with 24 points. Capital
Facilities Corp.
dropped into a virtual tie with
tion .
Leahy, 64, of Kirtland Hills , Atlanta for the Central lead,
Gilligan said his · nominees
Is
a retired northeast Oliio re- leading the Hawks by only four
for the commissi.on have "the
integrity, the abiiity and the gional manager for Sears, Roe- percentage points. Elvin Hayes
dedication to public service we buck &amp; Co. A graduate o£ the had 23 points for Capital.
Houston almost lost a 30need to assure Ohioans of an Universlty of Detroit, he Is a
honest, well-managed state member of the board of Fisher- point lead but hung on to beat
Fazlo-CostaFoods and tbe Cole New York behind Mike
lottery operation."
Newlin's 26 points, the same
He said the appointees were · National Corp.
· total achieved by Walt Frazier
)tiii'OII'OIIMMMMI:oiiiii'OIII'OIII'OII""'""'II'lll!li'OIIIi'OIIII"'Itoi!MII:OII~I of the Knicks. The Rockets'
lead dwindled to four points in
the third period but Houston
never let the exhausted Knicks
catch up.

.

Lottery.bosses organize

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
new State Lottery Commission,
co nsis tin g of th ree northeastern Ohioans and a pair of
so uthwestern Ohioans, is to
organize next week in
prepara tion £or establishing
the statewide game of chance
by next Spring.
EAST' MAIN STR EET
Gov . John J. Gilligan
992-2971
Wednesday named three men
and two women to -the com·
POMEROY, OHIO
mission, s ubject to Senate
' - - - - - - . ; . . ._ _ _,.. eonfirmation, at an annual

For That
Special

Person
At Christmas

Time

: TRY THE FRESH APPROACH

ANNUAL CHRISTMAS

BAZAAR

:rlmJIIJ~
of favored AMBUSH treats ,
all dre ssed up for
the holidays in a brightly ribb oned,
shimmery see·thru pac kag e.
the set, by DANA

Kenneth Mc-Cullough, R. Ph.

Charles Riffle. R. Ph .

.·

Door pri.zes will be awarded.
Drawings will be held for Presidential !
Wreath Quilt. There will be collectibles, baked goods, oil paintings;
ceramics &amp; other handmade crafts too
numerous to mention. Come in and
brow~e around. Free coffee.
•

Sale!
All Ladies'
· FaShion Boots

Y2

PRICE

-

Buy For Yourself!
Buy For Gills!
All Sales Final!

Marguerite's Shoes
BETTY OHLINGER
POMEROY
102 E. MAl N

fBo&lt;~ .,,,~-~"Me~-

.... ~l•t

t&lt;t4ot ~ ..... ~

Sale Starts Tomorrow
Our: G.ift tu You, Lower
Prices for Christmas on Top
QuaJitv Bmnded Lines.

Pre-Christmas Sale
JUNIORS, MISSES, EXTRA LARGE
SIZES

SLACKS
Values to s15
Washable poly es t ers and
cottons in solids, plaid s and
checks. Many styles , hip
huggers . cuffs , flare leg s,
high waist s.tyles. Buy for
yourself. buy for gifts.

Purchase of ·a

ALL SWEATERS
Choice. of entire .
stock. Pul.lovers
and
card igan s.
P lain
colors,
novelties .

30%
OFF

Body Shirts &amp; Blouses
Values to 19.00
Choice of the Store

$5
•

EA.

DRESS SHOP
AND BEAUTY SALON
MAIN AT SYCAMORE
· Open Sat. 'Til 9 Pomeroy
.

.

ll!rl ~~tlr:t ~ ~ ~ ~ tlr:t t.v~ ~ ~ ~ to\~ ft t ~ .... ' .
Hundreds Of Ideas

·
At
K erm 's Korner

FOR THE MEN ON YOUR LIST

POMEROY

.I

Assorl•d gloves for
warmth, Many lined.

Sweater vests, 'plain and
. plaid .

Gala gift bo•ed men's
toiletries.

..-

•

.&gt;

~--~------~----~----~--~ · --------~~----------~·

C()mpanled by Mrs . Warn er . 1t

•I

~

Mrs.

in memorv ur tht•

late Mrs . F.sta Warner· Larkin
by her brother and his wire.
Mr. ;md Mrs . J ack Warner,

for the children at the Pomeroy
Elementary School was . ap. proved when Xi Gamma Mu
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority met Tuesday nlght at
the Colwnbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Co.
The parachute, it was
reported, is used in an indoor
game by the children. During
the meeting presided over by
Mrs . Carol McCullough , lt was
announced by Mrs . Vikki
Gloeckner that the members '
Christmas party will be held
Dec. 18 at the home of Mrs.
Jennifer Anderson . It was
decided that secret sister
presents wilt be wrapped in
white paper with red bows . .
Mrs. Gloeckner also announced that Dec. 4 at the
Columbia Gas Co. office,
mothers will be g~ests for a
meeting.
Mrs. Texanna Welt reported
on £inal plans for the bazaar
Dec. 8 at 9 a.m. at Trinity
Church basement. A wide
variety of items wlll be
available and there wlll also be
a bake sale held in conjunction
with the bazaar.
Mrs. Carolyn Grueser was
reinstated lnto membership
and was named to the social
committee. The cultural
program on writing was
prepared by Mrs . Beverly
Long and read by Mrs . 1\):cCullough. Refreshments were
served ])y Mrs. Donna Nease.

Alrrnmac
By United Press lnternallonal
Today is Thursday, Nov . 29,
the 333rd day of 1973 with 32 to
follow.
The moon is between the new
phast: and first quarter.
The morning stars are
Mercury and Saturn . .
The evening stars are Venus,
Mars and Jupiter .
Those born on this date are
Wlder the slgn of Sagittarius.
American author Louisa May
Alcott was born Nov. 29, 1832.
On this day in hlstory :
In 1690, the first Army-Navy
football game was played. The
Middies won, ~.
In 1929, Lt. Cindr. Richard
Byrd and three crewmen
became the flrst persons to fly
over the South ~ole.
1n 1963, a Canadian plane
crash near Montreal killed 118
persons .

Cuttcri ll

~ r­

ATHENS - Mr . and M1 s. C.
~later, Ja c:ksonville, were
ret·entl} lumort-'&lt;1 wiU1 a family
dinner l&gt;&lt;.lrty at The Sportsman
in
Attll'n s.
Botl1 were
C&lt;' le braling their birthday
an nivrrsHrics.
Attending were their son-ini&lt;Jw and daughter , Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Darnell, Pomeroy,
and their sons and dHughtersin-law, Mr. and Mrs. Will,iam

E.

Mrs. F\u!'(111t' L' H;rnler1 PolL'i .

ENTF.RTA tN GUESTS
RUTLAND - Thanksglving
weekend guests of Mrs .
Sherman Butler were her son
Latrst es tim(Jtion of t h c and daughter-in-law, Mr. and
e:lrth 's age is from 4 to 4.5
Mrs . Cecil Butler, Findlay .
billion ycao·s.

(n ~ddition to lhe dedication,
Mr . Warner will presen t
several vocal number s, two of
which are " My Task" and
·'Bless This Huuse.' ' A special

~~ parachute "

Olcva

Dunald J ..')h· ..H .'I'l' Mr. Hll~l Mt-s.
.Julin Lisle &lt;tnd sun. Todd , Mr.
and Mrs. H.o~· .Jt·nkms. &lt;IOd

is hop{'() Lhat many will be
present and participate in the
sp~cial service. The Hcv .
Linson Stebbins is the pastor.

Jackson.

196:t, President
SLOW DOWN!
Lyndtm .Johnson &lt;:tppomtt'tl the
COLUMBUS rUPI J - Gov.
W&lt;Jrrt:n o,mmission tu investi- John J . Gilhg•n today ordered
g~te
the a .s:~;t S..'I in&lt;tti on nr stc;tte employes not to drive
Slat(•r, Middlt• purt. and Mr. President John Kennedy .
state vehicles mure than 50
arul Mrs . Etl Slillt.'r, Athens .
miles an hour in an attempt to
Others pr es ent were their
conserve fuel and said
grandchildren and ~reat·
violators will face a variety of
grandchildren. Mr. and Mrs . . P~ul Darnc_ll , Jr ., Pomeroy , disciplinary actions Including
Tom Watkw s. Ch ri s topht•r , Mtss
Linda
Reeves,
suspension from employment.
Tommy
&lt;-i nd
Patrick ; Harrisonville.
The Ohio Highway Patrol,
Co1wnbus; Mr . ::tnd Mrs. Don
Following the dinner the
Gilligan said, will also slop and
Mayer, Pomeroy : Mr. and group went to the home of Mr. issue warning citations to state
Mrs . Fred Slater, Carol ~Wn, and (\Irs . Ed Slater for cake
employes observed driving in
Athens; Mrs. John Sch1eick, and ice cream . Gifts were
excess of 50 miles an hour.
Athens ; Bill Slater, Colwnbus; presented to the couple.
1r1

OF GifTS
THAT

SAVE BIG

LAYAWAY NOW

FAMOUS BRANDS
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2 Matching Speakers
Slide Controls

DEVON .

Reg. $210.00

ASSORTED
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$129.00 Value

4· lb. Box
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2 lb. Box

$2.19

Model 4454·607

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99 ,

BUTTERUP

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Assorted Styles, Fashion Colors
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ORNAMENTS
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HOLIDAY DECORATED ,

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t-te:~able Shaving Head

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Assorted Styles
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Todny:~

NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOUSE

Sponsored By _

MEIGS COUNTY
HUMANE SOCIETY

Harri ~unville

Also

Birthdays celebrated

Thank~gi\· m~

di rllll 'l' g.ll~l&lt;ib ut· Mr . anti Mrs.

l'(';tfiing (.'UUI JlOSl'd by 1hC' !ale
Mrs. Larkin will I.H~ read by

Sorority to
purchase
'parachute '

'

Sunday 10: 30 · 12 :30 and 5 to 9 p.m.

THURSDAY
ANNUAL INSTALLATION,
Evangeline Chapter 172, O.E.S.
Mlddleport Masonic Temple,
7:30p.m .
FREE CLOTHING day at
the Salvation Army, 115 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, fr om 10
a .m. to noon . All area residents
needing dothing invited.
FRIDAY
REVIVAL 7:30 p.m . each
evening at Aposiolic Church,
Racine, with Robert Hall ,
evangelist.
SOUP SUPPER 5 p.m. at
Syracuse Asbury Unlted
Methodist Church. Soup, pie,
sandwiches, coffee and tea will
be served. Proceeds to be used
to remodel basement.
SATURDAY
SQUARE DANCE 8 to 12
midnight
sponsored
by
Harrisonville PTO. Event to be
held in Harrisonville School
gym. Music by The Hilltoppers. Adults 50 cents, students ·
25 cents.
DANCE from 9 to 12 midnight at Pomeroy Junior High
School sponsored by Spanish
Club at Meigs High. Admission
$1.
HYMN SING, 7:30 p .m. at
Freedom Gospel Mission at
Bald Knob. The Rev. and Mrs.
Buddy
Allman,
Athens ,
singers; public invited.

sY !{ ; •• · ;_ : s~-:

::M!HISUNVIJ.JE - A new
PiC!~o Will b{&gt; dl'dk.&lt;~h·d Sund~y
al the Presbyteriau Chun:h in

SUNDAY
BILL KANE, assistant
director of security operaUons,
Ohio University, at Middleport
United Pentecostal Church,
Sunday, 10 a.m. to display
rna terials and show £ilms
relative to drug abuse . Kane
served ln Ohio State Patrol for
14 years. Public invited.
ADVENT " ROUND the
Table" carol sing, 6 p .m .
Sunday at Pomeroy · United
Methodlst Church. Refreshments to be served in " round
the table" style. Public invited .

Lunch will be served from 11:00 A.M. till 2
P.M. at the church. For free home delivery in
Pomeroy - Middlepo.rt - Mason area, call in
reservations to 992-5124 or 992-3832 through
Thursday. Price $1.50.
•

Open Daily 8:00a .m . fo 10 : 00 p.m.

PRESCRIPTIONS
PH.992-2955
Fri en dly Service
112 E. MAl N
POMEROY, 0 .

SA Lf-' /;'N JJ.'i SA '1'., /JIX. 1

I

A fragrantly fresh duo

Also ava ilable in : TABU

\lot ....

D

THIS COMING SATURDAY,
DECEMBER 1.
TRINITY CHURCH, POMEROY

SPRAY COLOGNE &amp; DUSTING POWDER

$6.50

ADDED DUTIES
,
CA RBONDALE , Ill. (UP!) Southern Illinois University
Athletic Dlrector Doug Weaver
has taken on the added duties
of head football coach.
Weaver, 212, became athletic
director only last February,
coming to SIU £rom UCLA
where he was top aide for two
years to football Coach Pepper
Rodgers . .He succeeds Dlck
Towers, who resigned last
Saturday after seven seasons
with a 30-37-2 record.

Piano to be dedicated

D

lnsuliiling yo~r home to save vent a furnate.
"A home which is too tightly
011 heating fuel is a wise 1dea ,
but k.niJwing what you 're doing seak&gt;d, rather than properly
before you insulate could save insul&lt;:tted, won 't allow fresh air
your life, according to J . M. into the furnace for complete
Koebel, manager [or (.oluulbia combus tion of the heatin g
Gas of Ohio, Inc. in the Gallia- fuel," Koebel said. " As a
result, letlutl carbon monoxide
Mcigs area .
ls
formed and can spreCJd .
Koebel noted that healing
throughout
the entire horne ."
equipment needs oxygen to
Koebel urged homeowners to
burn fuel properly, without
creating fwnes, and cautioned con tact local insulation dealers
against sealing furnace room for information on how to plan
adequate
insulation
windows and doors wiUl tapes an
or rags or failing to properly program.

Ill 1ST (; tl Jo:STS

ELECTRIC

-'

HURRICANE
LAMP
UL
APPROVEt

FIREPLACE LOG
Sate, Burns in colors for
3 hours
Case of
6 Logs

$474

88c
Each

-.

•

�-

'

-- ·

,

5 - The' Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, u., Nm· . 29, 1!17:1

Right way to insulate
By Hugh P. Kirkel
E.xe£'uth•e \'ire Prt"sidt'nt
Holzer Medical Center
For quite some urn~ there's been a
shortage of nurses al Holzer Medical
Center. We ' re tryin g to remedy the
situation , but the lack of available
nursing personnel continues to be major
problem in our operation . Nurses are
vital members of our hospital family .
They are a very special kind of people
who are trained to care for others, fillin g
a need that can 't be met by any one

without a nursing background and experience.

When a doctor makes a diagnosis and
prescribes treatment for a patient in the
hospital, the nurse carries out that
program with the patient. Today 's nurse
is trained in so many roles. She knows all
about medications-, what they are, what
they do, and how \O administer \hem. She
Wlderstands and can capably use new
and sophisticiated equipment important
in treatment. Nurses rnu15t be able to
teach and supervise others in the
treatm ent of patients. New methods of
care are introd uced almost daily, and
nurses must stay aware of every new
•
•
way to improve patient care.
Let's look at a few of the specific
things a nurse does at Holzer :
She's a " pl~nner, " arranging the
patient's car e under the supervision of a
physician .
She's a ' 'provider," supply ing expert
care for the patient.
She 's also a " teache r," instructing
patients so that they can take part in
their own therapy, both in the hospital
and following dischar ge.
She's a "supervisor " because she
has the responsibility to direct practical
nurses and nurse aides.
She " administers" medications and
treatments prescribed by members of
the Medical Starr.

HOME BAKED

Christmas
Cookl"es
paM EROY
PASTRY

As an .. observer,·~ she evaluates and
re-cords syrriptoms, reactions and the
prog ress of a patient.
She's truly a "helper" in every way
to the patient as she assists patients to
adjust to all kinds of cri sis situations
fa cing them when they are ill .
To be a nurse is a challenge because
the nursing profession is a service, a
scie nce and an art, all together in today's
complex world . The opportunities in
nursing are many and varied and we
need more nurses, right now, at Holzer
Medical Center.
Ever yone who has what it takes to be
a nurse can flnd a place in the nursing
profession . As a high school student
lookin g toward the future or an adult
wanting to start a second career, if you
have a des ire to serve others and have
sympathy , tact and discretion ; if you are
reliable, have a sense
responsibility
along with intelligence, good judgment,
tolerance and adaptability; if you are ln
good health , physically and emotionall y,
then you can combine these traits with an
education in nurs ing and the nursing
profession will ma ke room for you.
Many of our nurse aides, because of
their experience and desire to become a
nurse, are attendin g the Gallia-JacksonVinton J oi nt Vocational School District of
Practic.al Nurslng School of Buckeye
Hills Career Center located in our old
Cedar Street facility. A four-quarter , one
yea r program is available . In fact, 14
members of the first class to graduate
this past August are now on our staff.
A Registered Nurse in a hospital has
various job opportunities. She can be a
private duty nurse employed directly by
a patient for complete personal attention.
She can be assigned to 'ge neral duty care
on the nursing uni ts. She can be a clinic
specialist in coronary care or intensive
care, sUrgery, anesthesia, psychiatry ,
pediatrics, obstetrics and the_li~e . And,

she has the opportunity to become a head
nurse or nursing supervisor , directing
the activities of other nurses, a department or a special service. Home Health
provides another expanding area for
nurses .
We need more nurses and urge young
women and men looking for a career with
a future to consider nursing. As we
mentioned, for thos~ who would like to be
licensed practical nurses there is the
Practical Nursing School of Buckeye
Hills Career Center . Those who desire to
become registered n'urses may want to
apply for acceptance at the Holzer
Medi cal Center School o£ Nursing .
You may be interested to know that,
in memory of Mrs . Homer B. Thomas,
the "Mary S. Thomas Memorial Fund''
was established earlier thi s year. The
purpose of the Fund is to help stud ents
who are eligible for admission to the
Holzer Medlcal Center School of Nursing,
but require financial assistance.
Anyone wishing to make a contribution to this Memorial Fund may do
so by con tacting the Administration
Office at the hospital. As the fund grows
through contributions , more and more
financiai assistance will be available to
deserving students who want to become
nurses through study at the hospital's
School of Nursing. This is an ideal way to
help relieve the problem of a nursing
shortage in this area and at the same
time afford an opportunity to our
deserving young people.
And , to all of you residents of the
area who are graduate nurses : WE
NEED YOU! !
If you are a nurse and want to
become actively involved on a part-time
.or full-time basis, let our Director . of
!Nursing, Mrs . Beulah Ward, hear from
· you. Her telephone nwnber is 446-5311.
We may have just the place for you.

or

Bucks

riddle
Sonics

By GARY KALE
UP! Sports Writer
They all had a great time ·in
Milwaukee Wednesday night.
Coach Larry' Costello apd the
winning Bucks were overjoyed .
Even Blll Russell thought it
was a Iaugher as he watched
his Seattle · SuperSonics lose
their 17th game thls season.
"This one was over early,''
said Russell, who seemed to
spend as much time yakking it
up with the team trainer , the
. timekeeper and assorted
benchwarmers as he did
directing his club.
"There ain't no point in
crying, so you might as well
laugh," Russell chuckled after
Milwaukee clobbered the Sonics, 127-93. "! knew after the
game was only eight minutes
old that we were in for a long
evening.n
Kareem Abdul.Jabbar made
salary of $5,1100 plus expenses given "very careful scrutiny' 1 it appear endless for Russell as
and were among "literally he scored 24 of ~s 32 points in
for the monthly meetings.
Two corners of the state, plus hundreds of Ohioansu con- the first haH. The 7-4 center hit
on 15 of 24 floor shots, collected
central Ohio, were blanked in sidered.
The commission is reQuired 14 rebounds and blocked seven
the commission selections.
This could prove significant in by law to meet wlthin seven shots.
It's Fun
the location of the commission days of the appointment of the
commissioners.
Gilligan's
ap"It's
fun
playing
a game like
offlces and headquarters,
which the members them- pointments are ef£ective this," .Costello said. "EveryFriday.
body had a good time tonight. A
selves will determine .
The group will select one of Jot of. guys got a lot or points
Named to the commission
own members for a 2-year and a lot of guys had a lot of
.
its
were Louis S. Goldman,
Dayton attorney; David F . term as chairman , and then act playing time.
Spencer Haywood, one of
Leahy, Cleveland business as a screening committee for
leader; £ormer State Rep . the governor in his selection o£ Abdul-Jabbar 's favorite
patsies in the pivot, scored only
Bernice K. MacKenzie of an executive director.
That appointment, also sub- 15 points.
Canton; Rlchard S. Rust Jr.,
Mllwaukee's victory P~' the
Cinci'n nati insurance ject to Senate con£irmation,
will
carry
an
annual
salary
of
Bucks
21&gt; games ahead of
: exec utiv e,
and
former
, Cleveland councilwoman Mary at least $26,437 under the Jot- Chlcago in the Mldwest Divitery legislation.
sion. The Bulls dropped a 101-96
E . Yates.
The eommission will deter- 'decision to Phlladelphia. ln
Goldman, Mrs. MacKenzie
mine
the type of lottery to be other NBA action, Boston beat
and
Mrs.
Yates
are
Democrats, while Leahy and conducted; ticket prices, out- Capltal, 111-104, Houston
lets and sales agents; whipped New York, 114-106,
Rust are Republicans.
of drawings; Atlanta downed Buffalo, 130Rust was named to a one- frequency
number
·and
size
o£ prizes, and 106, and Cleveland defeated
year terin, Go1dm3n to a twoyear term, Mrs. Yates to a all other rules and condltions Detroit, 96-91.
Fred Carter scored nine of
three-year term, and Mrs. for the lottery.
The commission will have $2 his 29 points in the fourth
Mac Kenzie and Leahy to fouryear terms, as provided in the million appropriated to start quarter as Philadelphia beat
law adopted last summer by up the lottery. The money is to Chicago for the flrst time in
be repaid to the general fund ·two years. Tom Van Arsdale
the General Assembly .
through
early lottery proceeds. · chipped in with 25 points £or the
The legislature set guidelines
Goldman, 45, is a partner in 76ers. Chet Walker led Chicago
£or the commission after Ohio
voters approved the lottery last the Dayton law £inn o£ Gold- with 30 points.
12th Straight Wll,
May. Sen. Ronald M. Mottl, D- man, Bogin and Fox. A gruaduate
of
Ohio
state
University,
Boston
won its 12th straight
Parma, and Rep. Thomas
Fries, D-Dayton, were major he Is also president of Goldman as John Havlicek led the
engineers of the lottery legisla- Stores in Dayton and Capital Celtics with 24 points. Capital
Facilities Corp.
dropped into a virtual tie with
tion .
Leahy, 64, of Kirtland Hills , Atlanta for the Central lead,
Gilligan said his · nominees
Is
a retired northeast Oliio re- leading the Hawks by only four
for the commissi.on have "the
integrity, the abiiity and the gional manager for Sears, Roe- percentage points. Elvin Hayes
dedication to public service we buck &amp; Co. A graduate o£ the had 23 points for Capital.
Houston almost lost a 30need to assure Ohioans of an Universlty of Detroit, he Is a
honest, well-managed state member of the board of Fisher- point lead but hung on to beat
Fazlo-CostaFoods and tbe Cole New York behind Mike
lottery operation."
Newlin's 26 points, the same
He said the appointees were · National Corp.
· total achieved by Walt Frazier
)tiii'OII'OIIMMMMI:oiiiii'OIII'OIII'OII""'""'II'lll!li'OIIIi'OIIII"'Itoi!MII:OII~I of the Knicks. The Rockets'
lead dwindled to four points in
the third period but Houston
never let the exhausted Knicks
catch up.

.

Lottery.bosses organize

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
new State Lottery Commission,
co nsis tin g of th ree northeastern Ohioans and a pair of
so uthwestern Ohioans, is to
organize next week in
prepara tion £or establishing
the statewide game of chance
by next Spring.
EAST' MAIN STR EET
Gov . John J. Gilligan
992-2971
Wednesday named three men
and two women to -the com·
POMEROY, OHIO
mission, s ubject to Senate
' - - - - - - . ; . . ._ _ _,.. eonfirmation, at an annual

For That
Special

Person
At Christmas

Time

: TRY THE FRESH APPROACH

ANNUAL CHRISTMAS

BAZAAR

:rlmJIIJ~
of favored AMBUSH treats ,
all dre ssed up for
the holidays in a brightly ribb oned,
shimmery see·thru pac kag e.
the set, by DANA

Kenneth Mc-Cullough, R. Ph.

Charles Riffle. R. Ph .

.·

Door pri.zes will be awarded.
Drawings will be held for Presidential !
Wreath Quilt. There will be collectibles, baked goods, oil paintings;
ceramics &amp; other handmade crafts too
numerous to mention. Come in and
brow~e around. Free coffee.
•

Sale!
All Ladies'
· FaShion Boots

Y2

PRICE

-

Buy For Yourself!
Buy For Gills!
All Sales Final!

Marguerite's Shoes
BETTY OHLINGER
POMEROY
102 E. MAl N

fBo&lt;~ .,,,~-~"Me~-

.... ~l•t

t&lt;t4ot ~ ..... ~

Sale Starts Tomorrow
Our: G.ift tu You, Lower
Prices for Christmas on Top
QuaJitv Bmnded Lines.

Pre-Christmas Sale
JUNIORS, MISSES, EXTRA LARGE
SIZES

SLACKS
Values to s15
Washable poly es t ers and
cottons in solids, plaid s and
checks. Many styles , hip
huggers . cuffs , flare leg s,
high waist s.tyles. Buy for
yourself. buy for gifts.

Purchase of ·a

ALL SWEATERS
Choice. of entire .
stock. Pul.lovers
and
card igan s.
P lain
colors,
novelties .

30%
OFF

Body Shirts &amp; Blouses
Values to 19.00
Choice of the Store

$5
•

EA.

DRESS SHOP
AND BEAUTY SALON
MAIN AT SYCAMORE
· Open Sat. 'Til 9 Pomeroy
.

.

ll!rl ~~tlr:t ~ ~ ~ ~ tlr:t t.v~ ~ ~ ~ to\~ ft t ~ .... ' .
Hundreds Of Ideas

·
At
K erm 's Korner

FOR THE MEN ON YOUR LIST

POMEROY

.I

Assorl•d gloves for
warmth, Many lined.

Sweater vests, 'plain and
. plaid .

Gala gift bo•ed men's
toiletries.

..-

•

.&gt;

~--~------~----~----~--~ · --------~~----------~·

C()mpanled by Mrs . Warn er . 1t

•I

~

Mrs.

in memorv ur tht•

late Mrs . F.sta Warner· Larkin
by her brother and his wire.
Mr. ;md Mrs . J ack Warner,

for the children at the Pomeroy
Elementary School was . ap. proved when Xi Gamma Mu
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority met Tuesday nlght at
the Colwnbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Co.
The parachute, it was
reported, is used in an indoor
game by the children. During
the meeting presided over by
Mrs . Carol McCullough , lt was
announced by Mrs . Vikki
Gloeckner that the members '
Christmas party will be held
Dec. 18 at the home of Mrs.
Jennifer Anderson . It was
decided that secret sister
presents wilt be wrapped in
white paper with red bows . .
Mrs. Gloeckner also announced that Dec. 4 at the
Columbia Gas Co. office,
mothers will be g~ests for a
meeting.
Mrs. Texanna Welt reported
on £inal plans for the bazaar
Dec. 8 at 9 a.m. at Trinity
Church basement. A wide
variety of items wlll be
available and there wlll also be
a bake sale held in conjunction
with the bazaar.
Mrs. Carolyn Grueser was
reinstated lnto membership
and was named to the social
committee. The cultural
program on writing was
prepared by Mrs . Beverly
Long and read by Mrs . 1\):cCullough. Refreshments were
served ])y Mrs. Donna Nease.

Alrrnmac
By United Press lnternallonal
Today is Thursday, Nov . 29,
the 333rd day of 1973 with 32 to
follow.
The moon is between the new
phast: and first quarter.
The morning stars are
Mercury and Saturn . .
The evening stars are Venus,
Mars and Jupiter .
Those born on this date are
Wlder the slgn of Sagittarius.
American author Louisa May
Alcott was born Nov. 29, 1832.
On this day in hlstory :
In 1690, the first Army-Navy
football game was played. The
Middies won, ~.
In 1929, Lt. Cindr. Richard
Byrd and three crewmen
became the flrst persons to fly
over the South ~ole.
1n 1963, a Canadian plane
crash near Montreal killed 118
persons .

Cuttcri ll

~ r­

ATHENS - Mr . and M1 s. C.
~later, Ja c:ksonville, were
ret·entl} lumort-'&lt;1 wiU1 a family
dinner l&gt;&lt;.lrty at The Sportsman
in
Attll'n s.
Botl1 were
C&lt;' le braling their birthday
an nivrrsHrics.
Attending were their son-ini&lt;Jw and daughter , Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Darnell, Pomeroy,
and their sons and dHughtersin-law, Mr. and Mrs. Will,iam

E.

Mrs. F\u!'(111t' L' H;rnler1 PolL'i .

ENTF.RTA tN GUESTS
RUTLAND - Thanksglving
weekend guests of Mrs .
Sherman Butler were her son
Latrst es tim(Jtion of t h c and daughter-in-law, Mr. and
e:lrth 's age is from 4 to 4.5
Mrs . Cecil Butler, Findlay .
billion ycao·s.

(n ~ddition to lhe dedication,
Mr . Warner will presen t
several vocal number s, two of
which are " My Task" and
·'Bless This Huuse.' ' A special

~~ parachute "

Olcva

Dunald J ..')h· ..H .'I'l' Mr. Hll~l Mt-s.
.Julin Lisle &lt;tnd sun. Todd , Mr.
and Mrs. H.o~· .Jt·nkms. &lt;IOd

is hop{'() Lhat many will be
present and participate in the
sp~cial service. The Hcv .
Linson Stebbins is the pastor.

Jackson.

196:t, President
SLOW DOWN!
Lyndtm .Johnson &lt;:tppomtt'tl the
COLUMBUS rUPI J - Gov.
W&lt;Jrrt:n o,mmission tu investi- John J . Gilhg•n today ordered
g~te
the a .s:~;t S..'I in&lt;tti on nr stc;tte employes not to drive
Slat(•r, Middlt• purt. and Mr. President John Kennedy .
state vehicles mure than 50
arul Mrs . Etl Slillt.'r, Athens .
miles an hour in an attempt to
Others pr es ent were their
conserve fuel and said
grandchildren and ~reat·
violators will face a variety of
grandchildren. Mr. and Mrs . . P~ul Darnc_ll , Jr ., Pomeroy , disciplinary actions Including
Tom Watkw s. Ch ri s topht•r , Mtss
Linda
Reeves,
suspension from employment.
Tommy
&lt;-i nd
Patrick ; Harrisonville.
The Ohio Highway Patrol,
Co1wnbus; Mr . ::tnd Mrs. Don
Following the dinner the
Gilligan said, will also slop and
Mayer, Pomeroy : Mr. and group went to the home of Mr. issue warning citations to state
Mrs . Fred Slater, Carol ~Wn, and (\Irs . Ed Slater for cake
employes observed driving in
Athens; Mrs. John Sch1eick, and ice cream . Gifts were
excess of 50 miles an hour.
Athens ; Bill Slater, Colwnbus; presented to the couple.
1r1

OF GifTS
THAT

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ASSORTED
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NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOUSE

Sponsored By _

MEIGS COUNTY
HUMANE SOCIETY

Harri ~unville

Also

Birthdays celebrated

Thank~gi\· m~

di rllll 'l' g.ll~l&lt;ib ut· Mr . anti Mrs.

l'(';tfiing (.'UUI JlOSl'd by 1hC' !ale
Mrs. Larkin will I.H~ read by

Sorority to
purchase
'parachute '

'

Sunday 10: 30 · 12 :30 and 5 to 9 p.m.

THURSDAY
ANNUAL INSTALLATION,
Evangeline Chapter 172, O.E.S.
Mlddleport Masonic Temple,
7:30p.m .
FREE CLOTHING day at
the Salvation Army, 115 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, fr om 10
a .m. to noon . All area residents
needing dothing invited.
FRIDAY
REVIVAL 7:30 p.m . each
evening at Aposiolic Church,
Racine, with Robert Hall ,
evangelist.
SOUP SUPPER 5 p.m. at
Syracuse Asbury Unlted
Methodist Church. Soup, pie,
sandwiches, coffee and tea will
be served. Proceeds to be used
to remodel basement.
SATURDAY
SQUARE DANCE 8 to 12
midnight
sponsored
by
Harrisonville PTO. Event to be
held in Harrisonville School
gym. Music by The Hilltoppers. Adults 50 cents, students ·
25 cents.
DANCE from 9 to 12 midnight at Pomeroy Junior High
School sponsored by Spanish
Club at Meigs High. Admission
$1.
HYMN SING, 7:30 p .m. at
Freedom Gospel Mission at
Bald Knob. The Rev. and Mrs.
Buddy
Allman,
Athens ,
singers; public invited.

sY !{ ; •• · ;_ : s~-:

::M!HISUNVIJ.JE - A new
PiC!~o Will b{&gt; dl'dk.&lt;~h·d Sund~y
al the Presbyteriau Chun:h in

SUNDAY
BILL KANE, assistant
director of security operaUons,
Ohio University, at Middleport
United Pentecostal Church,
Sunday, 10 a.m. to display
rna terials and show £ilms
relative to drug abuse . Kane
served ln Ohio State Patrol for
14 years. Public invited.
ADVENT " ROUND the
Table" carol sing, 6 p .m .
Sunday at Pomeroy · United
Methodlst Church. Refreshments to be served in " round
the table" style. Public invited .

Lunch will be served from 11:00 A.M. till 2
P.M. at the church. For free home delivery in
Pomeroy - Middlepo.rt - Mason area, call in
reservations to 992-5124 or 992-3832 through
Thursday. Price $1.50.
•

Open Daily 8:00a .m . fo 10 : 00 p.m.

PRESCRIPTIONS
PH.992-2955
Fri en dly Service
112 E. MAl N
POMEROY, 0 .

SA Lf-' /;'N JJ.'i SA '1'., /JIX. 1

I

A fragrantly fresh duo

Also ava ilable in : TABU

\lot ....

D

THIS COMING SATURDAY,
DECEMBER 1.
TRINITY CHURCH, POMEROY

SPRAY COLOGNE &amp; DUSTING POWDER

$6.50

ADDED DUTIES
,
CA RBONDALE , Ill. (UP!) Southern Illinois University
Athletic Dlrector Doug Weaver
has taken on the added duties
of head football coach.
Weaver, 212, became athletic
director only last February,
coming to SIU £rom UCLA
where he was top aide for two
years to football Coach Pepper
Rodgers . .He succeeds Dlck
Towers, who resigned last
Saturday after seven seasons
with a 30-37-2 record.

Piano to be dedicated

D

lnsuliiling yo~r home to save vent a furnate.
"A home which is too tightly
011 heating fuel is a wise 1dea ,
but k.niJwing what you 're doing seak&gt;d, rather than properly
before you insulate could save insul&lt;:tted, won 't allow fresh air
your life, according to J . M. into the furnace for complete
Koebel, manager [or (.oluulbia combus tion of the heatin g
Gas of Ohio, Inc. in the Gallia- fuel," Koebel said. " As a
result, letlutl carbon monoxide
Mcigs area .
ls
formed and can spreCJd .
Koebel noted that healing
throughout
the entire horne ."
equipment needs oxygen to
Koebel urged homeowners to
burn fuel properly, without
creating fwnes, and cautioned con tact local insulation dealers
against sealing furnace room for information on how to plan
adequate
insulation
windows and doors wiUl tapes an
or rags or failing to properly program.

Ill 1ST (; tl Jo:STS

ELECTRIC

-'

HURRICANE
LAMP
UL
APPROVEt

FIREPLACE LOG
Sate, Burns in colors for
3 hours
Case of
6 Logs

$474

88c
Each

-.

•

�•

•

•

•
6 - ·The Daily &amp;~ntim•L

Mtddlt•IX&gt;rt-P()Illt'l'o~. U .. 1\t•\' . ~ · . l'ld

i\Jursing funds released

Auxiliary has meet
An appropriation fur hohday

gifts for each of M€&gt; i~s ('nunty 's
4.2 mf'n and women at the

Athens Mental Health Cente~·
has ~een made by the
American Legion Auxiliary of
Drew Webster Post 39.
Meeting Tuesday night at the
hall, the unit voted to give $50
for the purchase of gifts and
named Mrs . Catherine Welsh
to make the purchases . It was
also decided that a box will be
placed at the hall , and members were asked to make

con tributions of new or unused

Rt"~ld at the IH€'t•lin~ \\.1:-- ;1
kttl'r from ~1r s . E~tl lt'r T1pph.•.
D1s trit' l 8 presid('nl. thnnkm!!
the unit for a gift prcst.•nlt•ll to

her rt'('ently . Thl' unit also
ret·eivcd et note from lhl' Mc1~s
Community Sl'11q.yl for a
contribution . CHid i..l rani of
thanks from the Mctnhart
family for flowers .'
Mrs . Pratt thanked Mrs.
Davis and Mrs. Robert Couch
for the Amrrkan Education
Week display . A gift will be
presented to Edgar Vanlnwagen for assisting &lt;.~t the
game s parties.
Mr s .
Neutzling,
Ame ri canism chai rw oman,
read an article titled " I Am the
Flagpole Awaiting My Crown" .
Mrs. Ellen Couch reported on
cards and flowers sent to Mrs.
Jean Hart who ha s been
hospitalized and to Mrs . Allen
Eichinger on the loss of her
sister.
Activities of the junior
auxiliary members were
reported by Mrs. Da vis,
counselor. She said that the
local juniors were the first to
send cancelled postage stamps
to Mrs. Miriam Junge for use
by the veterans in a speCial
project. It was noted that 12
candles· were sent to Mrs.
Helen Sloan , for veterans

items to be taken to the Athens
Health Center along with the
special gifts from the
Auxiliary . Plans were made to
meet at the hall Dec. 5 to wrap
tlle gills prior to their delivery .
Other contributions included
$15 to the Children's Home at
Xenia, $41to the Department of
Ohio, Ameri can
Legion
AuJ&lt;iliary for the purchase of
gifts for hospitalized veterans,
and $16.40 for gifts lor underpriviledged children.
The unit also made a gift of
$100 to the Drew Webster Post.
During the meeting the group
made plans to serve the Red
Cross bloodmobile Dec. 17 at
the Pomeroy Elementary
School, 1 to 6 p.m. Mrs. Ellen
Couch as community service
chairwoman will have charge hospitals, with two bein g sent
of soliciting cookies, sand- to the Athens Mental Health
wiches, coffee and orange juice Center.
fror\t the auxiliary members .
Mrs . Davis reported that loot
bags , flower arrangements and
f Mrs. Grace Pratt presided at
!the meeting which followed a cups of ice cream will be sent
chicken dinner hosted by Mrs . to the December party at the
Ben Neutzling, Mrs. Harry Athens Mental Health Center;
Davis, Mrs . J;loy Reuter , Mrs. tllat 100 candy canes will be
Paul Casci and Miss Erma distributed to the veterans at
Smith. The Thanksgiving motif tlle Chillicothe hospital, the
was carried out in the ones at the Athens Mental
decorations. Mrs . Gerald Health Center, and the children
· Wildermuth . won the door of the Meigs Community
prize.
SchooL Also to be sent to
Mrs . Wildermuth reported Ch illicothe will ' be candle
tllat to date the unit has 150 replicas made of a washcloth
paid members but lacks 14 to and soap along with candy
make quota . It was mentioned bars. Game prizes are being
that membership has· dropped collected by the ju!liors for the
since the conclusion or the parties at Athens and the girls
Vietnam War, but Mrs. are also soliciting sandwiches
Wildermuth stressed thai the and cookies.
obligation of the auxiliary
It was reported that the
members to the disabled pecans to be .sold by the unit
veterans and their families will arrive soon. Mrs. Davis, .
president of the
Past
continues .
The charter was draped for Presidents; Parley , announced
Mrs. Carrie Meinhart and a · the Christmas party for Dec, 19
memorial service was con· at the Neutzling home. There
dueled by Mrs. Pratt and Mrs. will be a $1 gift exchange.
Appointed to serve at the
Edith Sauer, chaplain. Mrs.
Neutzllng .played
Mrs. games parties wei'e Mrs.
Meinhart 's favorite hymn , Davis, Nov. 30; Mrs. Casci,
''Somewhere,
Somewhere,'' Dec. 3; Miss Smith, Dec . 7;
It was reported · that 30 Mrs . Lena Nesselroad and
pounds of candy had been sent Mrs . Frances Hunnel, Dec. 10;
to the Chillicothe Veterans Mrs. Reuter, Dec. 14; Mrs.
Hospital in November and that Gladys Cummings, Dec . 17 ;
· $5 had been given to the district Mrs . Pearl Knapp and Mrs. Iva
president for a treat at the Powell, Dec. 21; 'and Mrs.
Chillicothe Veterans Hospital Wildermuth, Dec. 28.
There will be no meeting in
birthday party Decc 13. The
unit will also send to December. January hostesses
Chilllcothe ditty bags, wheel will be Mrs. Powell and . Mrs.
chair arm covers with pockets Cwnmings. A program on civil
lor personal Items, six dozen defense by Mrs. Hunnel and
towel bibs, homemade cakes one on veterans affairs and
and
candy,
toothpaste, rehabilitation by Mrs . Casci
brushes, stationary and loot will be presented then . The unit
bags .
Eight
floral decided to order 2,500 poppies
arrangements Were also made for the May Poppy Day ob. for the party .
servance.

Christmas arrangements exhibited
RACINE
Christmas
arrangements were e.hibited
by members of the Bend ()' the
River Garden Club at the home
here of Mrs. Edward Simpson
Monday
evening.
The
arrangements, made by Mrs.
Bert Grimm , club president,
and Mrs. Wilson Carpenter,
exemplified the type of designs
which the club will make to s.ell
for purpose of further
beautification of the Letart
Falls cemetery. The club won
$55 in the Sears Community
Improvement program this_
past summer and voted to
enter the program again this
year. Members again· ex·
pressed appreciation to all
persons of the community who
had helped in the project.
The thought for the · month
was read by Mrs. Andrew
Cross, Mrs. James Diehl read
the club poem and Mrs. Ernest
Wingett gave devotions with a
Thanksgiving theme . She
stressed that persons be thankful for our talents, great ot

small, and use them - noting
that the world would be very
dull if only the "best birds of
the forest sang". She urged
that everyone look for beauty
everywhere.
Mrs. Grimm announced that
she had made an arrangement
for the Rutland Garden Club's
Christmas show and that other
members had attended t e
show . She asked thai andwiches be donated for the
Meigs County Flower show,
"Jolly Old Saint Nicholas,"
which will be staged at the
Pomeroy Elementary school
this weekend, Dec. I and 2.
Mrs. Grimm will write the
Green Thumb Notes for the
Sentinel this month and Mrs.
Wingett will present a program
on WMPO in January.
The next meeting of the club
will be a dinner at the Meigs
Inn Dec. 19 at 6:15 p.m.,
followed by a party and gift
exchange at the home of Mrs.
Carpenter.
The hostess served refresh~

SI-I F:RRY KrNf; , who with her sister , Kathy , did sm:h il
trcnwndous job on "Top of the World" in tlw Fitll i'~ollh:s
Saturday ni"'ht , is now off to Colorado Springs.

Shc'IJ be there Ulrec weeks with 18 students from Malone
College, c.tnton, on a winter recreational field study for physkal
education majors.
Actually what they will be doing is recreationa l activities in
the Rocky Mountains including skiing, ice skatlng, elementary
mountain climbing, and tobogga ning. The group will stay at
Cam p CaU:lmount on the north slope of Pike 's Peak part of the
time and then will travello Brekenridge, Colo., to explore one of
the world 's top ski villages, wcalh~ r permitting, of course.

MRS. HOWARD Nolan, who heads up the Christmas craft
display for the Meigs County Garden Club's annual holiday show
th is weekend is inviting anyone and everyone with Christmas
craft items or ideas to display in the ex hibit.
She is particulal'ly interested in articles made from throwaway kinds of materials. This is strictly an ed ucational exhibit
and that means there will be no judging of the display.
Homemade gift suggestions, decorations, novelties will all be
welcomed .
Tile show will be held a t the Pomeroy Elementary School
Saturday and Sunday. Exhibits are to be in place Saturday
before noon, but if Saturday morning is not a convenient time for
yo u to take your craft exhibits to the school, there will be garden
club members there to r eceive things Friday evening from about
5: JO to 6:30p.m.
FERN AND Frank Cheesebrew are moving today to
Shawnee where the Rev. Mr. Cheesebrew will assume the
pastorate of a two&lt;hurch charge. For the pa st few years they
have been in the Racine area pastoring United Methodist
Churches there, and befor e that were in Gallia County. Actually,
the move to Shawnee which is-in Perry County, is their first away
from the Beautiful Ohio. Before entering the ministry, the couple
spent 27 yea rs of married life in Middleport.
SINCE IT WOULD seem we'll all be spending a little more
·time with each other on the home frorlt, what with the energy
crisis, perhaps a few suggestions on constructive ways to while
the hours away might be appropriate.
.
Crafts are a craze with some but all too' many of us like to
adm ire the works of others, but never have had the time or the
know-how to actually gel involved.
Craft kits abound in the marketplace .. , but for the most part
they are expensive, much too expensive for what you get. The
1
'something from nothing'' crafts are the popular ones, and there
are books in every library to tell you how to "go creative" with
plastic boitles , empty thread spools, bits and pieces of
materials, plastic doilie s, the cardboard rolls from plastic wraps
and toilet tissue,· etc.
· Perhaps the most versatile of these things is the plastic
bottle . And it's our guess that around the laundry room there 's at
least one bleach or softener bottle, empty or nearly so.
Don't Ulrow it away !
Make it into a Christmas card holder, a contain~r for small
gifts or goodies, or a centerpiece, and use it year after year . .
How? We'll pass along the instructions given to us.
Fjrst , however, you should know !hat bottles should be rinsed
thoroughly inside and out, and labels and glue spots removed.
Plastic bottles can be cut with sharp kitchen shears - never,
never use a razor blade. Use a soft pencil to mark the places to be
cut on the bottle and proceed slowly because straight cutting
·requires practice. Any type of white glue is satisfactory,for use in
bottle-craft.
Now for the directions ; Cut off the top section of a I II gallon
bleach bottle at the top edge of the label panel. Now cut this
straight edge into eight points each about 2 inches deep. Spray
with gold enamel. Glue in four green felt Christmas tree shapes
on every other point and on the alternate points glue felt
diamond shapes of your own color ·choice. Then decorate the
trees with sequins, place a yarn ball or bow at the top, and add
some rickrack or other trim you have on hand.
You now have a creation attractive enough to hold the
.Christmas cards or heap with colorful baubles and use as a
centerpiece.But the nicest part of all is, you made it yourself.

FA C has new hours
The French Art Colony
annoWlces member.volunteers
have come forward to enable
Riverby to be open Thursdays
from 10 a .m.-4 p.m. This adds
one more day to the schedule of
open galleries . The galleries
are also open Saturday and
Sunday from Ito 5 p.m., and on
Tuesdays from 10 a.m . to 3
p.m.
The Colony has scheduled an
upholstery class beginning
Monday, Jan. 7 and Thursday,
Jan. 10, which will continue for
six, two·hour sessions . The
course will be taught by Mrs.'
Jimmie Evans and participants are to bring a small
stool, chair seat or equivalent
ments at a table centered with
an arrangement in keeping
with Thanksgiving.

article to work on .
The cost of the class is $12 for
French Art Colony members
and $15 to those who are not
members. Membership is $10
per individual and $15 per
family.
The number in the class will

LOSE ·,;GLY FAT
Start los i ng weight today OR
MONEY BACK. MONAOEX is
· a tiny tablet that w ill help curb
your desire for excess food.
East tess weigh tess . Contains
no dangerous drugs and w ill
not make you nervous . No
strenuous exercise. Change
your !i fe . ·. . sta rt today .
MONAD EX costs $3 .00 for a 20
day supply and $5 .00 for twi ce
the amou nt . Lose ug ly fat or
your mon ey will be refunded
with no questions asKed by :
Swisher &amp; Lohse Drug , 112 E .
'Main, Pomeroy &amp; Dutton Drug
Store, Middleport . Mail Orders
Filled.

New designs
WOMAN'S VIEW
By GAY PAULEY
UP! Women's Editor
NEW YORK (UP! )
They 're the young Turks of the .
fashion world. They're the new
breed of designers who believe
in the dressmaking art but
reject the high luxury tradition
of the conservative older
houses.
They're the young influentials bringing good style
to more and more women
through boutiques or their own
.featured corners in depart·
rnent stores.
They 're the likes of Clovis
Ruffin, Stephen Burrows and
Calvin Klein. Most still are in
their late 20s or early 30s.
Ruffin, Burrows and Klein
were participants this week in
the semi-annual fashion openings which the American
Design,e rs Group stages for
vlsitirig ·reporters from news·
papers, television and radio.
The spring '74 fashions repre·
sen ted both the new establishment and also the old- the
labels such as Mollie Parnis,
Bill Blass and Geoffrey Beene.
Ruffin, born in Clovis, N. M.
(thence his first name), is one
of the most unconventional of
the youth group. He said his
Ruffinwear collection was designed for a new generation
which "wants loud, cheap
clothes ." Many of his spring
things were in the $30 to $40
retail price range.

(·aplt~tlon
~n;pnated

grant fund s apby Congress for
fi sca l ye;:Jr 1973 , only
$16,800,000 had been obligated

~ "

II

! ; I :1

1

1 5 orc0

GOI"'G
OUT OF BU·S
···INESS
11

1974

Authorized

~~r~~~gsecrek1ry to schools of

MOTOROLA J.V.'S

The NLN complaint auegeo
that " The acts of the Secretary
and the Director are illegal.
The redu ction of the amounts
obligated for suc h annual
ca pitation grants by the
Secretary and the failure to

NO TRADE INS

Above
Cost

All SALES CASH

JOHNSON'S
T.V.
0.
949·3151
RACINE,

~~~~ _DAILY 10 TO 9
SUNDAY 12 TO 8

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK - 8:00 to 8:00
WE ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH SUN. DEC. 2, WHILE QUANTITIES LAST

,~~'l~jf91~~!~1~tE.tt''~B~!i;;!;l 1~;'1

Carpenter's Grocery ~:~~
These Prices Good Friday &amp; Saturday Only

PEPSI-COLA
12 OUNCE
BOTTLES

6 49¢
FOR

USDA CHOICE
Sugar Cured
Ready To Eat

$

39

M-24

Center Cut

French City Wieners ••••••••• .lb. 95e
Ohio Valley Bacon •••••••••·•• lb. 1.09
lb
e
B
95
aeon
•••••
.
:
•••
.
.........
•
Slab

•

EACH

image . rcngefi n·
der - for weH -focused movie~ •

-s peed s

forv• o rd ,

th reading onto loke · up reel.

HECK'S REG.

$189.96

JEWElRY DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $99.96

HECKS REG. $84,Q6

JEWElRY DEPT.

JEWElRY DEPT.

I

.77&lt;

$139

n..,.~~nmc~

ond for flash

$26.96

JEWElRY DEPT.

C)\ 126-12
KODACOLOR

FILM

$]88

88&lt;

HECK'S REG.
$4.29

HECK' S REG.

..w...lly

lao.'\llondJ"alllli*-~

.\i~Ww!,ily~~~

99'

illllbt:foot )'QUieya " ' " " " -

$1

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YD!jtllor.oko..-.r~

ol tlorty ond bnlll~m 111\o
.... hodlryll!yW.,,._

JEWEl/IY .
DEPT.

111 -~ .

SUPER 8

SUNSET

MOVIE LIGHT
•roll¥ &lt;c~'~' ''"9 &lt;on· ~•u• Ia•_ on do&lt;&gt;•

TRIPOD

f'" ' "' ~ '

N oi • ·~ tic&lt;&gt; •

e Sturdy light oliuminum con·
sl ruc tion • Sere moun t l or
camera • fully adjustable to

3 ONLY

m&lt;&gt;••• ""' ~ •n g

a.ll angles •

DON'T PLAY
THERMQ!;; I~T ROULE I I E

$1 Q99
HECK'S REG .
$31.88

JEWElRY DEPT.

CAMERAS
MODELS A-20, A-30, A-40
· HECK'S REG. , $. ~
~ 99

i

JEWELRY DEPT.

JEWEl/IY
DEPT.

SLIDE INTERVIEWER

ELECTRONIC
STROBE

99
$159
HECK'S REG. ·

HECK'S REG.

$5.96

$169.99

•
•

FLASH
CUBES

$1499

68e

!

I

I

HECK'S REG.

$18.88

JEWElRY DEPT.

.'

•

SYLVANIA
HI POWER

HECK'S REG.

JEWElRY DEPT.

17.99

I

c!Ju ~MBIAGA&amp;
Gas is precious .. .
pure energy .. .
use it wisely.

..

i

HECK'S REG.
$14.96

KAKO

1

And the gas you don't use, you
don 't have to pay for. That
means even more. as prices rise.

1

$14.96

SUNSET

LIGHT
FOR.. KODAK POCKET

Remember, set your thermostat at the
lowest comfortable temperature. Heating costs increase 3% for every degree
your thermostat is moved above 70°.
A few degrees will save a lot of gas.

HECK'S REG.

REG.
$1:1.88 .

ST~()BE

Right now. you can help by conserving
the natural gas you use in your home.
Simply set your thermostat at the
lowest comfortable temperature.

Fold1 for e asy

l rol"' sport Ol"' d l!orage.

I

league. Your pharmacist has those first ciders you need .

I

1/ IOOsecpnc;l .' .. 1/ 40sec-

JEWElRY DEPT.

... ,......to~_,...,.,.._
wiM rco-lhe ~ ..u.... :.. JUJI

99 '

Shu t ler ~p eed :

socke l •

HECK'S REG. 69.96

~·~r

s ~n c..~ ~ \O&lt;r&lt;"I,Qh l o" m~O\ cn»i y IO lOp Ql Ony to n'!•~ J oghl .. @;g!il .
&lt;&lt;&gt;"'PO&lt;I eo'' ro '"@
or&gt;d ''" , y Co•, "'''r "'"'''""' •vi&gt;&lt;! ~ M
•er, c "'"Ctl"'

Difference

'

• Puce-element lens , tr ipod

H~CK'S R~G.

new~i'O.
...

HECK'S
REG.

HECK' S REG.
$1.68

PEAS
16 oz . cans

Fealures : Slide change - forward
by push b u l ton o l pr oj e c to r.
Three·posilion swit ch- " tAMP ,"
" ' FA,N ,' ' " OFF ." 500-Wo ll ,
120-Voh DEK lamp .

FILM

RE(&gt;ULAR

PbLAROID

LARGE SWEET

5

KIT

SLIDE PROJECTOR

.

FOR

It's the

little scratches or burns or bites need
quick core . It heips keep them in the minor

and

Automatic th read i ng on lo takeup
reel . St i ll &amp; reverse con tra! lo r hu ·
mo ro us e lf ec l ~ . Br illion ! p ic t ure ·
z.oo m len s.

KODAK

POLAROID
COLORPAK

Fast Aid?

'"

reve rse

PROJECTOR

MILK

$188

First Aid

357Z

$169 99 $8999 $7499

HECK'S REG. $42.96

SLIDE FILE

•

8 or

~ti l l ~ and fully a uiCima t ic fi l m

Sports-type viewfinder

KODAK
POCKET INSTAMATIC

BELL &amp; HOWELL
SUPER 8

8mm
fil m capa ci t y ., t h re e p !ojec t ic:o n.

SuperimpO~ed

'
We have Christmas Toys
and
Children's Records. · A good
variety of fresh Christmas
candy.

be limited, so those interested
are asked to sign up early.
Register by calling Janet
Byers, 446-1903, or Bess Grace,
446-0953.

Feo l ure ~ 4QQ. f oo t ~ uper

Po wer zoom lens (9 to 21 mm ) e .

$]799

VALLEY BELL

LARGE
HEAD

All lhe feature s of Xl33 plu s: •

JEWElRY DEPT.

gal.
only

LETTUCE

Automatic

exposure • CdS eleclric eye
• Fast f/ 2 .7 lens.

USDA CHOICE- PIECE

Nightime 12's

MOVIE CAMERA
e
No !&gt;ettings

KODAK
DUAL EIGHT

·MOVIE CAMERA

KODAK
SUPER 8

WHOLE HAM, lb. I *'1.09

Daytime IS's

1 ONLY

KODAK
LOW LIGHT

AIRQUIPT

BlACK &amp;
WHITE TV

HERMAN GRATE
173-5592
MASON. V'/. VA .

July 11 , U. S. District Court
Judge Gerhard A. Gesell had
gran ted a preliminary injunction in favor of NLN and
ordered that Caspar Weinberger, secretary of the
Department
of
Health,
Education, and Welfare, " shall
continue to obJigate to qualified
and approved schools of
nursing their share of all
remaining funds appropriated
for annual capitation grants for
fiscal year 1973," pending a
final determination on the
merits of the case in favor of
NLN.
NLN fil ed suit June 29
against Roy Ash, director of_
th e Office of Management and
Budget, and Caspar Weinberger, secretary of the
Department
of
Health ,
Education
.
, and Welfare. The

'"and"ted by c ongress.
Of ll1.c $:18,500,000 nursing

The energy crisis is one of America's
most serious problems. Columbia
Gas is doing everything it can to develop
new and additional sources of gas to
help solve the problem.

,

MASON FURNITURE

16.

ALL MERCHANDISE MUST GO

nurs lllg •wg•niz•liun

At is."i ur were capi~tion
grant fund :-; authorized and

7- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Nov . 29, 1973

.'

.

STEREO

'\ l·: w YOHK
A U. S.
I )1'\Lnd Cuurt, :-.l'11\'. 1!1, ordl'rcd
n: k·H~' nf llllllthllS &lt;Jf dollars In
unpuuru.lt'f.t funds for schools uf
nursi 11~ 1Wt1un" itlt' whidJ are
nwmbcrs uf the !\alivllal
I Pa;.:ue fqr Nursing .
The &lt;·uurl order in favor of
the Ne~twnal League fur
Nursin,g by Judge Thomas A.
Flannery , U. S. District Court
fm· the District of Columbia ,
fo llowed a hearing on the
merits of the case Friday, Nov .

- cldV .

ZENITH
COLOR TV

•

plcmcnlation, ~ntl is therefore
unlilwful &lt;:~S an ~buse of his
thscl"elifm and as il violation fJf
m passH'Ig the Al..'t and in itp- his statutory duty to plaintiff
and to the schools of nursing."
\1..\ '&gt; lllt .,..,i.J :o. 111._. J1rst 1111- proprie~lin~ funds fur 1L'i im·
fJIIIJilthJu•n l Ul'tiOtJ brought by a ;;,;;;..;...;;_ _ _ _~~~~~~~~~~~~--,
tJhlt~Lttl' "II fund s apprupnalt..'f.l
fur ' suf'f1 t:nWt pr t1~ram
vutJ:Jtc!i the intent IJf C(Jngrcss

KODAK SUP~R 8

MOVIE FILM

DIAMOND
CASE FOR SWING E

CAMERA
$399

I
DUAL 8 REEL AND

CANS

88(--....

HECK'S REG.

\\~~ H:~::s
\ "'jj~~··~:-!Jll ; $2.44

\L?:- HWElRY DEPT.

$1.19

CASE
FOR

POCKET
$17~
HECK'S REG •

$2.44

I
l
I

NoCk-40

�•

•

•

•
6 - ·The Daily &amp;~ntim•L

Mtddlt•IX&gt;rt-P()Illt'l'o~. U .. 1\t•\' . ~ · . l'ld

i\Jursing funds released

Auxiliary has meet
An appropriation fur hohday

gifts for each of M€&gt; i~s ('nunty 's
4.2 mf'n and women at the

Athens Mental Health Cente~·
has ~een made by the
American Legion Auxiliary of
Drew Webster Post 39.
Meeting Tuesday night at the
hall, the unit voted to give $50
for the purchase of gifts and
named Mrs . Catherine Welsh
to make the purchases . It was
also decided that a box will be
placed at the hall , and members were asked to make

con tributions of new or unused

Rt"~ld at the IH€'t•lin~ \\.1:-- ;1
kttl'r from ~1r s . E~tl lt'r T1pph.•.
D1s trit' l 8 presid('nl. thnnkm!!
the unit for a gift prcst.•nlt•ll to

her rt'('ently . Thl' unit also
ret·eivcd et note from lhl' Mc1~s
Community Sl'11q.yl for a
contribution . CHid i..l rani of
thanks from the Mctnhart
family for flowers .'
Mrs . Pratt thanked Mrs.
Davis and Mrs. Robert Couch
for the Amrrkan Education
Week display . A gift will be
presented to Edgar Vanlnwagen for assisting &lt;.~t the
game s parties.
Mr s .
Neutzling,
Ame ri canism chai rw oman,
read an article titled " I Am the
Flagpole Awaiting My Crown" .
Mrs. Ellen Couch reported on
cards and flowers sent to Mrs.
Jean Hart who ha s been
hospitalized and to Mrs . Allen
Eichinger on the loss of her
sister.
Activities of the junior
auxiliary members were
reported by Mrs. Da vis,
counselor. She said that the
local juniors were the first to
send cancelled postage stamps
to Mrs. Miriam Junge for use
by the veterans in a speCial
project. It was noted that 12
candles· were sent to Mrs.
Helen Sloan , for veterans

items to be taken to the Athens
Health Center along with the
special gifts from the
Auxiliary . Plans were made to
meet at the hall Dec. 5 to wrap
tlle gills prior to their delivery .
Other contributions included
$15 to the Children's Home at
Xenia, $41to the Department of
Ohio, Ameri can
Legion
AuJ&lt;iliary for the purchase of
gifts for hospitalized veterans,
and $16.40 for gifts lor underpriviledged children.
The unit also made a gift of
$100 to the Drew Webster Post.
During the meeting the group
made plans to serve the Red
Cross bloodmobile Dec. 17 at
the Pomeroy Elementary
School, 1 to 6 p.m. Mrs. Ellen
Couch as community service
chairwoman will have charge hospitals, with two bein g sent
of soliciting cookies, sand- to the Athens Mental Health
wiches, coffee and orange juice Center.
fror\t the auxiliary members .
Mrs . Davis reported that loot
bags , flower arrangements and
f Mrs. Grace Pratt presided at
!the meeting which followed a cups of ice cream will be sent
chicken dinner hosted by Mrs . to the December party at the
Ben Neutzling, Mrs. Harry Athens Mental Health Center;
Davis, Mrs . J;loy Reuter , Mrs. tllat 100 candy canes will be
Paul Casci and Miss Erma distributed to the veterans at
Smith. The Thanksgiving motif tlle Chillicothe hospital, the
was carried out in the ones at the Athens Mental
decorations. Mrs . Gerald Health Center, and the children
· Wildermuth . won the door of the Meigs Community
prize.
SchooL Also to be sent to
Mrs . Wildermuth reported Ch illicothe will ' be candle
tllat to date the unit has 150 replicas made of a washcloth
paid members but lacks 14 to and soap along with candy
make quota . It was mentioned bars. Game prizes are being
that membership has· dropped collected by the ju!liors for the
since the conclusion or the parties at Athens and the girls
Vietnam War, but Mrs. are also soliciting sandwiches
Wildermuth stressed thai the and cookies.
obligation of the auxiliary
It was reported that the
members to the disabled pecans to be .sold by the unit
veterans and their families will arrive soon. Mrs. Davis, .
president of the
Past
continues .
The charter was draped for Presidents; Parley , announced
Mrs. Carrie Meinhart and a · the Christmas party for Dec, 19
memorial service was con· at the Neutzling home. There
dueled by Mrs. Pratt and Mrs. will be a $1 gift exchange.
Appointed to serve at the
Edith Sauer, chaplain. Mrs.
Neutzllng .played
Mrs. games parties wei'e Mrs.
Meinhart 's favorite hymn , Davis, Nov. 30; Mrs. Casci,
''Somewhere,
Somewhere,'' Dec. 3; Miss Smith, Dec . 7;
It was reported · that 30 Mrs . Lena Nesselroad and
pounds of candy had been sent Mrs . Frances Hunnel, Dec. 10;
to the Chillicothe Veterans Mrs. Reuter, Dec. 14; Mrs.
Hospital in November and that Gladys Cummings, Dec . 17 ;
· $5 had been given to the district Mrs . Pearl Knapp and Mrs. Iva
president for a treat at the Powell, Dec. 21; 'and Mrs.
Chillicothe Veterans Hospital Wildermuth, Dec. 28.
There will be no meeting in
birthday party Decc 13. The
unit will also send to December. January hostesses
Chilllcothe ditty bags, wheel will be Mrs. Powell and . Mrs.
chair arm covers with pockets Cwnmings. A program on civil
lor personal Items, six dozen defense by Mrs. Hunnel and
towel bibs, homemade cakes one on veterans affairs and
and
candy,
toothpaste, rehabilitation by Mrs . Casci
brushes, stationary and loot will be presented then . The unit
bags .
Eight
floral decided to order 2,500 poppies
arrangements Were also made for the May Poppy Day ob. for the party .
servance.

Christmas arrangements exhibited
RACINE
Christmas
arrangements were e.hibited
by members of the Bend ()' the
River Garden Club at the home
here of Mrs. Edward Simpson
Monday
evening.
The
arrangements, made by Mrs.
Bert Grimm , club president,
and Mrs. Wilson Carpenter,
exemplified the type of designs
which the club will make to s.ell
for purpose of further
beautification of the Letart
Falls cemetery. The club won
$55 in the Sears Community
Improvement program this_
past summer and voted to
enter the program again this
year. Members again· ex·
pressed appreciation to all
persons of the community who
had helped in the project.
The thought for the · month
was read by Mrs. Andrew
Cross, Mrs. James Diehl read
the club poem and Mrs. Ernest
Wingett gave devotions with a
Thanksgiving theme . She
stressed that persons be thankful for our talents, great ot

small, and use them - noting
that the world would be very
dull if only the "best birds of
the forest sang". She urged
that everyone look for beauty
everywhere.
Mrs. Grimm announced that
she had made an arrangement
for the Rutland Garden Club's
Christmas show and that other
members had attended t e
show . She asked thai andwiches be donated for the
Meigs County Flower show,
"Jolly Old Saint Nicholas,"
which will be staged at the
Pomeroy Elementary school
this weekend, Dec. I and 2.
Mrs. Grimm will write the
Green Thumb Notes for the
Sentinel this month and Mrs.
Wingett will present a program
on WMPO in January.
The next meeting of the club
will be a dinner at the Meigs
Inn Dec. 19 at 6:15 p.m.,
followed by a party and gift
exchange at the home of Mrs.
Carpenter.
The hostess served refresh~

SI-I F:RRY KrNf; , who with her sister , Kathy , did sm:h il
trcnwndous job on "Top of the World" in tlw Fitll i'~ollh:s
Saturday ni"'ht , is now off to Colorado Springs.

Shc'IJ be there Ulrec weeks with 18 students from Malone
College, c.tnton, on a winter recreational field study for physkal
education majors.
Actually what they will be doing is recreationa l activities in
the Rocky Mountains including skiing, ice skatlng, elementary
mountain climbing, and tobogga ning. The group will stay at
Cam p CaU:lmount on the north slope of Pike 's Peak part of the
time and then will travello Brekenridge, Colo., to explore one of
the world 's top ski villages, wcalh~ r permitting, of course.

MRS. HOWARD Nolan, who heads up the Christmas craft
display for the Meigs County Garden Club's annual holiday show
th is weekend is inviting anyone and everyone with Christmas
craft items or ideas to display in the ex hibit.
She is particulal'ly interested in articles made from throwaway kinds of materials. This is strictly an ed ucational exhibit
and that means there will be no judging of the display.
Homemade gift suggestions, decorations, novelties will all be
welcomed .
Tile show will be held a t the Pomeroy Elementary School
Saturday and Sunday. Exhibits are to be in place Saturday
before noon, but if Saturday morning is not a convenient time for
yo u to take your craft exhibits to the school, there will be garden
club members there to r eceive things Friday evening from about
5: JO to 6:30p.m.
FERN AND Frank Cheesebrew are moving today to
Shawnee where the Rev. Mr. Cheesebrew will assume the
pastorate of a two&lt;hurch charge. For the pa st few years they
have been in the Racine area pastoring United Methodist
Churches there, and befor e that were in Gallia County. Actually,
the move to Shawnee which is-in Perry County, is their first away
from the Beautiful Ohio. Before entering the ministry, the couple
spent 27 yea rs of married life in Middleport.
SINCE IT WOULD seem we'll all be spending a little more
·time with each other on the home frorlt, what with the energy
crisis, perhaps a few suggestions on constructive ways to while
the hours away might be appropriate.
.
Crafts are a craze with some but all too' many of us like to
adm ire the works of others, but never have had the time or the
know-how to actually gel involved.
Craft kits abound in the marketplace .. , but for the most part
they are expensive, much too expensive for what you get. The
1
'something from nothing'' crafts are the popular ones, and there
are books in every library to tell you how to "go creative" with
plastic boitles , empty thread spools, bits and pieces of
materials, plastic doilie s, the cardboard rolls from plastic wraps
and toilet tissue,· etc.
· Perhaps the most versatile of these things is the plastic
bottle . And it's our guess that around the laundry room there 's at
least one bleach or softener bottle, empty or nearly so.
Don't Ulrow it away !
Make it into a Christmas card holder, a contain~r for small
gifts or goodies, or a centerpiece, and use it year after year . .
How? We'll pass along the instructions given to us.
Fjrst , however, you should know !hat bottles should be rinsed
thoroughly inside and out, and labels and glue spots removed.
Plastic bottles can be cut with sharp kitchen shears - never,
never use a razor blade. Use a soft pencil to mark the places to be
cut on the bottle and proceed slowly because straight cutting
·requires practice. Any type of white glue is satisfactory,for use in
bottle-craft.
Now for the directions ; Cut off the top section of a I II gallon
bleach bottle at the top edge of the label panel. Now cut this
straight edge into eight points each about 2 inches deep. Spray
with gold enamel. Glue in four green felt Christmas tree shapes
on every other point and on the alternate points glue felt
diamond shapes of your own color ·choice. Then decorate the
trees with sequins, place a yarn ball or bow at the top, and add
some rickrack or other trim you have on hand.
You now have a creation attractive enough to hold the
.Christmas cards or heap with colorful baubles and use as a
centerpiece.But the nicest part of all is, you made it yourself.

FA C has new hours
The French Art Colony
annoWlces member.volunteers
have come forward to enable
Riverby to be open Thursdays
from 10 a .m.-4 p.m. This adds
one more day to the schedule of
open galleries . The galleries
are also open Saturday and
Sunday from Ito 5 p.m., and on
Tuesdays from 10 a.m . to 3
p.m.
The Colony has scheduled an
upholstery class beginning
Monday, Jan. 7 and Thursday,
Jan. 10, which will continue for
six, two·hour sessions . The
course will be taught by Mrs.'
Jimmie Evans and participants are to bring a small
stool, chair seat or equivalent
ments at a table centered with
an arrangement in keeping
with Thanksgiving.

article to work on .
The cost of the class is $12 for
French Art Colony members
and $15 to those who are not
members. Membership is $10
per individual and $15 per
family.
The number in the class will

LOSE ·,;GLY FAT
Start los i ng weight today OR
MONEY BACK. MONAOEX is
· a tiny tablet that w ill help curb
your desire for excess food.
East tess weigh tess . Contains
no dangerous drugs and w ill
not make you nervous . No
strenuous exercise. Change
your !i fe . ·. . sta rt today .
MONAD EX costs $3 .00 for a 20
day supply and $5 .00 for twi ce
the amou nt . Lose ug ly fat or
your mon ey will be refunded
with no questions asKed by :
Swisher &amp; Lohse Drug , 112 E .
'Main, Pomeroy &amp; Dutton Drug
Store, Middleport . Mail Orders
Filled.

New designs
WOMAN'S VIEW
By GAY PAULEY
UP! Women's Editor
NEW YORK (UP! )
They 're the young Turks of the .
fashion world. They're the new
breed of designers who believe
in the dressmaking art but
reject the high luxury tradition
of the conservative older
houses.
They're the young influentials bringing good style
to more and more women
through boutiques or their own
.featured corners in depart·
rnent stores.
They 're the likes of Clovis
Ruffin, Stephen Burrows and
Calvin Klein. Most still are in
their late 20s or early 30s.
Ruffin, Burrows and Klein
were participants this week in
the semi-annual fashion openings which the American
Design,e rs Group stages for
vlsitirig ·reporters from news·
papers, television and radio.
The spring '74 fashions repre·
sen ted both the new establishment and also the old- the
labels such as Mollie Parnis,
Bill Blass and Geoffrey Beene.
Ruffin, born in Clovis, N. M.
(thence his first name), is one
of the most unconventional of
the youth group. He said his
Ruffinwear collection was designed for a new generation
which "wants loud, cheap
clothes ." Many of his spring
things were in the $30 to $40
retail price range.

(·aplt~tlon
~n;pnated

grant fund s apby Congress for
fi sca l ye;:Jr 1973 , only
$16,800,000 had been obligated

~ "

II

! ; I :1

1

1 5 orc0

GOI"'G
OUT OF BU·S
···INESS
11

1974

Authorized

~~r~~~gsecrek1ry to schools of

MOTOROLA J.V.'S

The NLN complaint auegeo
that " The acts of the Secretary
and the Director are illegal.
The redu ction of the amounts
obligated for suc h annual
ca pitation grants by the
Secretary and the failure to

NO TRADE INS

Above
Cost

All SALES CASH

JOHNSON'S
T.V.
0.
949·3151
RACINE,

~~~~ _DAILY 10 TO 9
SUNDAY 12 TO 8

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK - 8:00 to 8:00
WE ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH SUN. DEC. 2, WHILE QUANTITIES LAST

,~~'l~jf91~~!~1~tE.tt''~B~!i;;!;l 1~;'1

Carpenter's Grocery ~:~~
These Prices Good Friday &amp; Saturday Only

PEPSI-COLA
12 OUNCE
BOTTLES

6 49¢
FOR

USDA CHOICE
Sugar Cured
Ready To Eat

$

39

M-24

Center Cut

French City Wieners ••••••••• .lb. 95e
Ohio Valley Bacon •••••••••·•• lb. 1.09
lb
e
B
95
aeon
•••••
.
:
•••
.
.........
•
Slab

•

EACH

image . rcngefi n·
der - for weH -focused movie~ •

-s peed s

forv• o rd ,

th reading onto loke · up reel.

HECK'S REG.

$189.96

JEWElRY DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $99.96

HECKS REG. $84,Q6

JEWElRY DEPT.

JEWElRY DEPT.

I

.77&lt;

$139

n..,.~~nmc~

ond for flash

$26.96

JEWElRY DEPT.

C)\ 126-12
KODACOLOR

FILM

$]88

88&lt;

HECK'S REG.
$4.29

HECK' S REG.

..w...lly

lao.'\llondJ"alllli*-~

.\i~Ww!,ily~~~

99'

illllbt:foot )'QUieya " ' " " " -

$1

ori\Worlll)"JJoflllll....., ,~,.
YD!jtllor.oko..-.r~

ol tlorty ond bnlll~m 111\o
.... hodlryll!yW.,,._

JEWEl/IY .
DEPT.

111 -~ .

SUPER 8

SUNSET

MOVIE LIGHT
•roll¥ &lt;c~'~' ''"9 &lt;on· ~•u• Ia•_ on do&lt;&gt;•

TRIPOD

f'" ' "' ~ '

N oi • ·~ tic&lt;&gt; •

e Sturdy light oliuminum con·
sl ruc tion • Sere moun t l or
camera • fully adjustable to

3 ONLY

m&lt;&gt;••• ""' ~ •n g

a.ll angles •

DON'T PLAY
THERMQ!;; I~T ROULE I I E

$1 Q99
HECK'S REG .
$31.88

JEWElRY DEPT.

CAMERAS
MODELS A-20, A-30, A-40
· HECK'S REG. , $. ~
~ 99

i

JEWELRY DEPT.

JEWEl/IY
DEPT.

SLIDE INTERVIEWER

ELECTRONIC
STROBE

99
$159
HECK'S REG. ·

HECK'S REG.

$5.96

$169.99

•
•

FLASH
CUBES

$1499

68e

!

I

I

HECK'S REG.

$18.88

JEWElRY DEPT.

.'

•

SYLVANIA
HI POWER

HECK'S REG.

JEWElRY DEPT.

17.99

I

c!Ju ~MBIAGA&amp;
Gas is precious .. .
pure energy .. .
use it wisely.

..

i

HECK'S REG.
$14.96

KAKO

1

And the gas you don't use, you
don 't have to pay for. That
means even more. as prices rise.

1

$14.96

SUNSET

LIGHT
FOR.. KODAK POCKET

Remember, set your thermostat at the
lowest comfortable temperature. Heating costs increase 3% for every degree
your thermostat is moved above 70°.
A few degrees will save a lot of gas.

HECK'S REG.

REG.
$1:1.88 .

ST~()BE

Right now. you can help by conserving
the natural gas you use in your home.
Simply set your thermostat at the
lowest comfortable temperature.

Fold1 for e asy

l rol"' sport Ol"' d l!orage.

I

league. Your pharmacist has those first ciders you need .

I

1/ IOOsecpnc;l .' .. 1/ 40sec-

JEWElRY DEPT.

... ,......to~_,...,.,.._
wiM rco-lhe ~ ..u.... :.. JUJI

99 '

Shu t ler ~p eed :

socke l •

HECK'S REG. 69.96

~·~r

s ~n c..~ ~ \O&lt;r&lt;"I,Qh l o" m~O\ cn»i y IO lOp Ql Ony to n'!•~ J oghl .. @;g!il .
&lt;&lt;&gt;"'PO&lt;I eo'' ro '"@
or&gt;d ''" , y Co•, "'''r "'"'''""' •vi&gt;&lt;! ~ M
•er, c "'"Ctl"'

Difference

'

• Puce-element lens , tr ipod

H~CK'S R~G.

new~i'O.
...

HECK'S
REG.

HECK' S REG.
$1.68

PEAS
16 oz . cans

Fealures : Slide change - forward
by push b u l ton o l pr oj e c to r.
Three·posilion swit ch- " tAMP ,"
" ' FA,N ,' ' " OFF ." 500-Wo ll ,
120-Voh DEK lamp .

FILM

RE(&gt;ULAR

PbLAROID

LARGE SWEET

5

KIT

SLIDE PROJECTOR

.

FOR

It's the

little scratches or burns or bites need
quick core . It heips keep them in the minor

and

Automatic th read i ng on lo takeup
reel . St i ll &amp; reverse con tra! lo r hu ·
mo ro us e lf ec l ~ . Br illion ! p ic t ure ·
z.oo m len s.

KODAK

POLAROID
COLORPAK

Fast Aid?

'"

reve rse

PROJECTOR

MILK

$188

First Aid

357Z

$169 99 $8999 $7499

HECK'S REG. $42.96

SLIDE FILE

•

8 or

~ti l l ~ and fully a uiCima t ic fi l m

Sports-type viewfinder

KODAK
POCKET INSTAMATIC

BELL &amp; HOWELL
SUPER 8

8mm
fil m capa ci t y ., t h re e p !ojec t ic:o n.

SuperimpO~ed

'
We have Christmas Toys
and
Children's Records. · A good
variety of fresh Christmas
candy.

be limited, so those interested
are asked to sign up early.
Register by calling Janet
Byers, 446-1903, or Bess Grace,
446-0953.

Feo l ure ~ 4QQ. f oo t ~ uper

Po wer zoom lens (9 to 21 mm ) e .

$]799

VALLEY BELL

LARGE
HEAD

All lhe feature s of Xl33 plu s: •

JEWElRY DEPT.

gal.
only

LETTUCE

Automatic

exposure • CdS eleclric eye
• Fast f/ 2 .7 lens.

USDA CHOICE- PIECE

Nightime 12's

MOVIE CAMERA
e
No !&gt;ettings

KODAK
DUAL EIGHT

·MOVIE CAMERA

KODAK
SUPER 8

WHOLE HAM, lb. I *'1.09

Daytime IS's

1 ONLY

KODAK
LOW LIGHT

AIRQUIPT

BlACK &amp;
WHITE TV

HERMAN GRATE
173-5592
MASON. V'/. VA .

July 11 , U. S. District Court
Judge Gerhard A. Gesell had
gran ted a preliminary injunction in favor of NLN and
ordered that Caspar Weinberger, secretary of the
Department
of
Health,
Education, and Welfare, " shall
continue to obJigate to qualified
and approved schools of
nursing their share of all
remaining funds appropriated
for annual capitation grants for
fiscal year 1973," pending a
final determination on the
merits of the case in favor of
NLN.
NLN fil ed suit June 29
against Roy Ash, director of_
th e Office of Management and
Budget, and Caspar Weinberger, secretary of the
Department
of
Health ,
Education
.
, and Welfare. The

'"and"ted by c ongress.
Of ll1.c $:18,500,000 nursing

The energy crisis is one of America's
most serious problems. Columbia
Gas is doing everything it can to develop
new and additional sources of gas to
help solve the problem.

,

MASON FURNITURE

16.

ALL MERCHANDISE MUST GO

nurs lllg •wg•niz•liun

At is."i ur were capi~tion
grant fund :-; authorized and

7- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Nov . 29, 1973

.'

.

STEREO

'\ l·: w YOHK
A U. S.
I )1'\Lnd Cuurt, :-.l'11\'. 1!1, ordl'rcd
n: k·H~' nf llllllthllS &lt;Jf dollars In
unpuuru.lt'f.t funds for schools uf
nursi 11~ 1Wt1un" itlt' whidJ are
nwmbcrs uf the !\alivllal
I Pa;.:ue fqr Nursing .
The &lt;·uurl order in favor of
the Ne~twnal League fur
Nursin,g by Judge Thomas A.
Flannery , U. S. District Court
fm· the District of Columbia ,
fo llowed a hearing on the
merits of the case Friday, Nov .

- cldV .

ZENITH
COLOR TV

•

plcmcnlation, ~ntl is therefore
unlilwful &lt;:~S an ~buse of his
thscl"elifm and as il violation fJf
m passH'Ig the Al..'t and in itp- his statutory duty to plaintiff
and to the schools of nursing."
\1..\ '&gt; lllt .,..,i.J :o. 111._. J1rst 1111- proprie~lin~ funds fur 1L'i im·
fJIIIJilthJu•n l Ul'tiOtJ brought by a ;;,;;;..;...;;_ _ _ _~~~~~~~~~~~~--,
tJhlt~Lttl' "II fund s apprupnalt..'f.l
fur ' suf'f1 t:nWt pr t1~ram
vutJ:Jtc!i the intent IJf C(Jngrcss

KODAK SUP~R 8

MOVIE FILM

DIAMOND
CASE FOR SWING E

CAMERA
$399

I
DUAL 8 REEL AND

CANS

88(--....

HECK'S REG.

\\~~ H:~::s
\ "'jj~~··~:-!Jll ; $2.44

\L?:- HWElRY DEPT.

$1.19

CASE
FOR

POCKET
$17~
HECK'S REG •

$2.44

I
l
I

NoCk-40

�/

,.

--·--- -·- - ____________ ,

9- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Nov. 2!&gt;. 1973

World food stack
.opposed
by
F-B
..

•

•

SBA m
trouble
WASHINGTON (UP! l - The
possibility of criminal involvement in m illions of dollars of
loans approved by the Rich·
mond, Va ., or£ice of th.e small
Bu s ines s Adm inis tr a ti on
( SBA ) has been raised be£ore a
congressional committee.
Russell Hamilton , former
director of the Philadelphia
regional office of SBA, testi£ied
Wednesday that one employe
in the Richmond office is afraid
to tesli£Y "for fear of his life,"
while the office's fi nancial
director kept a dia ry and
secured a gun to gua rd against
organized crime.
The financial director ,
Kenneth Bowe, was quoted by
Hamilton as saying he s&lt;J
feared organized crime influ·
ence in Richmond lending
activities that he bought a gun
and kept a diary of office
happenings for "insurance."
" U anything happened to
him, it (the diary ) was to go to
the Washington Post," Hamilton said.
Contacted in Richmond,
Bowe denied any knowledge of
organized crime influence and
said he used the .22-caliber

CtlLU MUUS (U Pll - t.uc:;.1s t ·,•uu ty f nnuHi!i:o; iHIH:r"'
t~rdt•rt-d alH1UI 25 s ta lt' P ub lit· W4.• Hom· Ot•pa rt nw nl m vt•stigaturs nut nf l .ut·as Count y Cnurthoust· Wrd•u·sday_.as
lhl'y &lt;'ht.•rkt&gt;d paym ru ts math• b~ tht• dr part men l f 11r pt~:-olblc.·

.Pioneer 10 near to Jupiter's mysterzes

dis(• ripan&lt;'iN".
.
.
.
1 guess tht•y didn 't waut us to find uut wha~ Js.gumg on_Ill
Lucas Cnunty." said Ri rha rd l.iglltner. pubh&lt;' mfur ma twn
~.tffirt•r for thf depa rtm t' nt.
'
. .
Gov. John J . Gilligan has armouneed a stal.t'wJde m-

vt·sti gation into count y welfare dt"partment handling of
we1farc payments aUcr a prelimina ry ~het·k showed 13 per
rent of welfare reripit•nls should nul be on the rolls and 27 pe-r
cent were being overpaid.

ta rget pistol he obtained four
months ago " to shoot targets."
He described the diary as
'' notes,'' sa yi ng: ·'Wh en I
heard something I'd jot it down
.. . things a re getting blown out
of proportion ... most of what I
kn ow now , I read in the
newspaper .''
Hamilton said the diary is
now in a safe in the office of the
SBA's chief legal counsel, Greg
Austin, but Bowe said he made
no copies of his notes and still
has them .
In other testimony Wednesday , Hamilton said SBA Ad·
mini.strator Thomas Kleppe
was "committed" early in his
tenure to r etain Thomas Regan
as the head of the Richmond
office despite reports of serious
problems with loans approved
by the agency and the
recommendations of other key

SBA offi cials to fire Regan .
Hamilton , who supervised
the Richmond office until Nov.
15, said he told all to the
co ngr ess iona l i nvestiga tor s
before going to the SBA with
his informaUon because he
wasn 't sure he could trust any
of his SBA superiors . After the
con gressional inves ti gation
beg an, Hamilton said he
prese nted
identica I
in·
formation to a top SBA official
" in confidence."
But that information was
leaked to Kleppe , Hamilton
said and what followed was a
"CYA-Cover your you-know·
what" in Richmond. He testi·
fied that becau se the confiden·
tial ffiern o was leaked to
Kleppe , some praciices of the
SBA were changed in an effort
to cover up or minimize the
charges.

MDI :'iTAI:&gt;O VIEW, ('"lif. secrets.
The secrets lie a t the hea rt of
1 Ul'( 1
The P ionct!r 10
th(' mystery of how the solar
s pa n•t·raft voyaJ{.ed !o th(•
:;;ystt:m. and the Ear!.""!, were
dc;h; ; .~ magne ta e hel(l of
born. Answers would be ap.lupiter today a nd spt.&gt;d two
plied to eve r yth ing fr om
minu te-s ahead of schedule
produci ng nuclear energy to
towards discovery of the large
controlling Earth weather.
pla ne t's host of aweso me
Pionee r
is
the
fir st
spacecraft to fly past Mars
towards the solar system's
outer planets. Eventually , the
vehicle will become the first to
escape the s&lt;Jiar system and
journey silently into the Milky
way galaxy .
Space Agency controllers
le arned Wednesday that
Jupiter is heavier than
thought-just enough s&lt;J that its

Damage

heavy ·i n

on the way to its target,
~ravlty is pu lli ng Pioneer
Pioneer is mapping Ul e struc·
towe~ r d a
ta r ge t above
ture of Jupiter 's ma gnetic fi•ld
Jup iter 's cloudtop s
two
- a potential death trap for the
minutes raster than calcula ted
spacecr aft. Radiation one ffill·
at blastoff 22 months ago.
lion limes that of Earth's Van
Now 3.2 million miles from
Allen bell could knock out
Jupiter , the 570-pound Pioneer
is r eturning data of great value Pioneer circuitry. and a fleck
in the dust belt could smash a
to Earth computers from its 11
instruments . Information will large · hole in the speeding
"
include 340 color photographs craft.
Jupiter
radiates
three limes
of Jupiter and 10 of its largest
more energy than it receives
moons ..
from
the sun and scientists
A brightly hewed mass 1,300
limes the volume of Earth, wonder what kind of a dynamo
Jupiter rotates so fast it's day produces it.
All that radiation might
is only 10 hours long. II seems
result
i£ Jupiter is a new planet
to be composed largely of
condensing or " falling togehydrogen, helium and other
ther," said scientiSts. Perhaps
ga ses.

Jupiter is not a planet at aU oot
rather a still-born star , a twm
of the sun.
In sp ite of the clouds
shrouding J upiter' Pioneer's
sophis tica ted instrumenti
should be able to tell something
about what the interior COI\Silits
of. One theory is that the corer.!
hydrogen metal and another IS
that the core is liquid .
.
Possibly the most tantalidng
question is whether Jupiter
could support primitive I~
of life. The planet resembles
what the earth is believed to
have been ~ billion years ago ,
and s&lt;Jme scientists are certain
that conditions for ille oh
Jupiter are ideal.

collision

NEW HAVEN - No injuries
·were reported but property
damage was heavy when three
vehicles collided Wednesday at
11 : 15 p.m. on U.S. 33 above
here. Nobody was arrested.
Deputy Rupert Rice iden·
tified the drivers as Mark
Andrew Ke rns, Route I,
Letart ; Jimmie F . Evans,
Minersville, Ohio, and Carl
Gerlach of 32 Windsor Court,
Point Pleasant.
The officer said Evans was
passing Gerlach when Kerns
ran into the rear of Evans'
vehicle, causing it to sideswipe
Gerlach on the left side, after
which Evans ' car ran over an
embankment to the left, tur·
ning up on its driver 's side.
Kerns ' car stopped at an angle,
appro&lt;imately five feet from
the edge of the highway, with
the front of his car over the
embankment.
Gerlach's
" Power company officials
CINCINNATI (UPI) - An pictures of rural Ohio scenery say , 'Well, you'll get used to it'· stationwagon stopped oo the
architect complained to a state to try to convince the com· and that's the crying shame,"
roadway 192 feel on the right
commission Wednesday after- mission that it should make Moore testi£ied. " I'm afraid we
side from Evans.
noon that electrical transmis- ''aesthetic considerations'' will get used to it. Land doesn't
Police estimated damages at
sion towers are " visual pollu- before approving construction have to be that way.
$600
on Kern's vehicle, $260 on
tion" and argued that "piclur· plans of electrial companies.
Evans', and $300 on Gerlach's.
" The power companies say
Similar testimony was heard
esque Ohio areas are being
will·
reimburse
the
land
they
sacri£iced in order to supply from a woman ·representing a owners but they don't realize
conservation group, but two ofp::Jwer ."
money is not the . primary obFuller Moore, 32, who ficials of the Cincinnati Gas jection. I would like to see the
teaches architecture at Miami and Electric Co. Complained power companies investigate
University in Oxford, made a that proposed commlssion other ways of transmitting
Slide show presentation as he rules were tOo strlct.
Although the commission their power, like underground
testified before the Ohio Power
eventually will have the routes."
Siting Commission here.
Edward E . Galloway·, envir· .
Moo•e
superimposed authority to approve or onmenlal engineer for the Clndrawings pf " power towers" on di sapprove power company cincinnati Gas and Electric Co.
construction projects, it is not
Sheriff Robert Hartenbach's
yet in operation, pending testi£ied that the paperwork
Dept.
investigated a single car
adoption of its rules and and demands made on power
companies in the conunission's accident on SR 124 ·in Sutton
regulations.
Twp . about midnight WedAs Moore testified he dis· proposed rules are too bui'·
nesday that injured the driver
played a series of ."before and densome and . too expensive.
and a passenger. The driver
More Expenses
after" pictures.
' 'The· application was arrested.
Moore told the commission
. According to sheriff's
he took pictures of land in requirements should be sim·
deputies,
. Leonard Siders, 49,
Hamilton, Butler and Mont- plified because it will put
gomery counties that the additional expense on the Rt. 2, Racine, was traveling
companies imd eventually the east when he apparently lost
Several Cincinnati Gas and Electric
SYRACUSE public will end up paying the control of his vehicle, hitting a
Christmas projects were Co. plans to dot with towers. bill," echoed Robert B. Grote, utility pole.
After showing scenes of
discussed during a recent
Siders and a passenger in the
also of Cincinnati Gas and
meeting· of the United country homes and rolling hills
auto, Wilma Siders, 63, also of
Electric.
Methodist Women of the as they now exist, Moore suRt.
2, Racine, were taken to
Opposing
Moore's
position
Asbury United Methodist perimposed drawings of towers was Charles M. Cox of the Ohio Veterans . Memorial Hospital
Church held at the home of as he evisioned they would Municipal
Electric by the Racine E-R squad where
look.
Mrs. Donald Lisle.
they were treated and
"These towers are from 125 Association, which he said
The
group
made
released. The auto had heavy
represents 67 of Ohio's 84 cities
arrangements to get gifts for feet to 170 feet high and make that have their own electric
damage. Siders was cited for
the patients at the Syracuse an impaetthat can been seen gystems. He complained that driving while under the in"
Nursing !lome with Mrs . for miles," Moore said. "In the stringent application · fluence of alcohol. ·
William Eichinger and Mrs. past it's been traditional for requirements would delay
Christina Grimm to hamAl~ power companies to disregard "much needed energy facili·
this. Each member was asked the fact that they are
ties."
to take a toy to the Christmas desecrating and visually
"Delays (in energy construc·
party Dec. 4 to be given to the polluting the land .
"I traced the proposed site of lion projects) should be based
children at Veterans Memorial
the line and met concerned on fact and not emotion," he
The tax rate would go from
Hospital.
peopJe," he added. "I saw pic~ said. "Why should there be
its present 5.85 per cent of
The Christmas dinner will be
turesque areas that are going added expense to satisfy the
earnings
to 5.9 per cent. The
Dec. 4 at Crow's Steak House
emotions of the few and not the
to
be
sacri£iced
in
order
to
senate bill also increases the
with the party to follow at the
general public which is inbring
cheap
power
to
northern
amount of earnings subject to
home of Mrs. Lisle where the
terested in energy at low
the tax from the present $10,800
cities.
dessert will be served . New
"How would you like to see a cost?"
to $13,200 a year. _
program books will be
The commission plans more
tower like this in front of your
Neither drugs only required
prepared by Mrs. Dana
home?" Moore .asked, showing hearings in several Ohio cities
periodically nor non-prescri!&gt;Winebrenner. "II was noted that
a slide of a rural home with a in the next 10 days.
tion
drugs, . except insulin,
eight members or the church
tall tower drawn in beside it.
would -be covered.
attended a workshop at Belpre
But drugs for these chronic
..ecently. Going were Mrs. Karl
diseases
common to the elderly
Joes, Mrs. William Eichinger,
would be covered:
,&gt;lrl;, Damon Ferrell, Mrs.
Diabetes, high blood press·
Grimm, Mrs . Lisle, Miss
ure, cardiovascular disease, .
Marcia. Karr, Mrs. John
respiratory disease, chronic
Sauvage and · Mrs. Ted
kidney disease, arthritis,
Hilldore.
The House has approved a
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
Forty shut-in calls were
similar 11 per cent increase, rheumatism, gout, throid
Senate has voted to broaden
made during the past month, il
but has · not considered. the disease; cancer, epUepsy,
Medicare coverage to pay for
P3rkinson' s disease, tuberwas reported. A special thank
Medicare drug extension.
prescription drugs to treat
culosis,
glaucoma
and
offering and a free will offering
Last year, the House
most chronic diseases of the 20
myasthenia gravis.
were taken. The birthdays of
million elderly pers&lt;Jns in the rejected such an amendment
Patients would have to pay $1
Mrs. Eichinger and Mrs .
on grounds it would take too
government health insurance
per prescription. Medicare
Grimm were obser\oed. The
much out of tbe Social Security
program.
would cover the remaining
call to worship was given by
The proposal was attached to trust fund.
Mrs. VUiil Teaford, president,
The new amendment, how~ cost.
a bill raising Social Security
Under
existing
law,
with Mrs. Eichinger presenting
ever, carries an increase in
benefits by 11 per cent- 7 per
Medicare
only
pays
for
drugs
devotions from the Upp er
Social security taxes to pay for
cent upon enactment and 4 per
given to hospitalized patients.
Room, scripture from The
drug coverage.
cent in June, 1974.
PsalmS. a poem, " Things to be
Thankful For", and prayer .
The program prepared by
Mrs. Kloos was given by Mrs.
Hartke said questions
Eichinger. It had a Thanksportation
department's
WASHINGTON
(UPI)
The
giving theme with scripture
estimate of what would be remaining to" be resolved were
Senate
Commerce
Committee
from Psalms 105 and Ill. Mrs.
required to maintain rail tabor protection, abandonment
may
finish
action
today
on
a
llile read two poems, "A
service during the 18 to 20. procedures and a minimum
bill
to
revitalize
northeastern
federal guarantee on the value
Thankful Heart" and " Thank
month planning period .
railroads
under
government
You God for Everything", by
Sen. Vance Hartke, D-Ind ., of the new corporation's lock to
corporations.
Helen Steiner Rice.
said final committee action be given to creditors of. the
The
committee
Wednesday
The meeting closed with
would come as early as today . bankrupt estates in exchange
tentatively
approved
spending
Mi.ss Ka'rr using a poem and a
The committee is con· for railroad property.
$235
million
to
keep
bankrupt
meditation about Psalm 103
sidering legislation that would
and what it means to be thank- railroads in the region.running set up government cor· · The committee also decided
ful people. She concluded with while plans are devised for a porations to finance, plan and Wednesday to allow railroads
Peter Marshall's Thanksgiving new railroad system for the run &amp; new rail system to be 390 days from the date enacted
to decide wbether they will
prayer. Attending besldes east and midwest.
made up of the best lines of
interim
money
is
$150
The
enter the new system, although
th- named were Mrs. Herseven bankrupt railroads. The
mill\pn
more
than
the
house
the corporation could include
bert Parker, Mrs. Alice
voted earlier for the project House has passed its version of them for planning purposes.
Capehart, an!J Mrs . Oms
and is in lin,t with the trans- the le ~ i slation .
Wi ~ nner .
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Christmas gifts

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FbR THE YOUNd SET

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SCHOOL DRESSES

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BILLY THE KID
SLACKS

meeting

Senate votes to
expand Me~care

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UMW has

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Asbury

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on Route 124

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The Fabric Shop

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By Rob Hoef/it·h

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Driver cited

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Of the Bend

SINGER

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landscapes objected to

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Power towers on Ohio's

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tool to keep farm prices above
targe t levels.
The holiday season has rolled in agai n . Santa has bem of.
- Recommended a com· ficia lly welcomed and now comes the round of social al'tivities,
petent and thorough study of
the exasperating problem of gift buying a nd the r eligious serthe sta le welfare system by an
vices at the va rious churches.
resea r ch
i nd e p e n de nt
As a part or the holiday sea s&lt;Jn , Vera and Millard Va n Meter
organization and that welfare
will be staging their fourth open house fr om 1 to 5 P.m . Sundav.
workers be compensated for
There will be refreshments and door prizes. The observance is
helping people get off welfare
th e fourth in the building which the Van Meters' had constructed
rolls.
for their Pomeroy Flower Shop on Pomeroy 's Butternut Ave.
- Co nt inued opposi ti on to
While stopping at the "Oower shop, you can kill two birds with
the distribution or food stamps
one stone. The Farmers Bank and Savings Co. will also be
to strikers .
holding an open house Sunday from 2 to 4 p .m . Refreshments will
- Rejected a motion support~trices.
be served . The bank's open house will give the public an O!&gt;·" Earlier during the three· in g year-round dayli ght
portunity to view the 120 costumed dolls which a r e on display.
.!Jay meeting,
President savings tlrne.
Meigs and Mason women have costumed the dolls as a part of the
;Leonard Schnell cautioned that
- Adopted r e s o lution
bank's "dress a-&lt;loll" contest. They've done a tremendous job!
carry4()vers Of grain next year favoring hunting of both sexes
might once again depress of deer wben the state's deer
MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL SENIOR Jeanie Schneider, one of
prices received by farmer s for population increases to a point
the most faithful
members of the Big Bend Minstrel Association,
.
their crops.
where the animals may create
was scheduled to be in the 2011fannual production last Saturday.
In other action, delegates : undue highway safety hazards.
Jeanie, as usual, attended most of tbe rehearsals, had her
Schnell, a beef and grain
- Adopted policy reoolutions
costumes all set and was ready to go on with the show. However,
opposing the use of wage and farmer from Apple Creek in
she became ill Friday, and instead of being on stage Saturday
price controls as a means of Wayne County, was re-elected
night was a patient at the Holzer Medical Center.
controlling inflation or as a president for a third one-year
There was a pleasant reunion backstage at last Saturday's
means lor distribution of com- term and Glenn Irwin, Marys- " Fall Follies" . Tile former Norma Chapman, now residing in
ville, was re-elected to the vice
modities.
Charleston, ·visited backstage with friends taking part in the
- Voted to continue support presidency.
show. Norma took part in five shows and was an excellent
John Weir, Carrollton, was
of the set-aside provisions of
vocalist. Her last show was 15years ago. She seemed to enjoy her
the current federal farm re~lected treasurer and C.
short but pleasant visit with other veterans of the Big Bend
program and urged the United Willlam Swank, Westerville,
shows.
states secretary of agriculture was re-named executive vice
to use set-aside measure as a president. Nedra Freitag, ColTHE OHIO HOUSE of Represenlatives has sent an official
umbus, was again named .
message of congratulations to Sidney Spencer of Pomeroy for his
!""'·"*"!!!.. ""'·ll"!!lliOI.-.IIIIOI!IIroo!W1111!1tt . assistance secretary .
having been named top driver of the River Valley Colt Circuit for
Glenn Pirtle, Worthingion,
the
past season.
Now! Lay It Away
was named vice president of
The commendation commends Spencer for driving to 33 wins
field services.
and for his being part owner of the two-year-&lt;Jid pacer,
"Farmshead Charlie" and tbe three year-&lt;&gt;ld trotter , "Yum Yum
Girl" .
WILL HOLD SALE
Signing the certificate of congratulations were Oakley C.
Sewing Machine
RACINE - A bazaar and
Collins, representative of House District 92, and A. G. Lancione,
For Christmas
bake sale will be held Friday speaker of the Ohio House.
small deposit wi II hold
and Saturday in the Joe Stobart
building in Racine by the
THE HARD-WORKING members of the Meigs County
Letart Falls P1' A. The sale will
Humane Society will be staging their annual Christmas bazaar at
·115 W. Second
992 -2184 . begin each day at 9 a .m . and
the Trinity Church in Pomeroy Satw-day. The group has
POMEROY , OHtO
continue throughout · the day . assembled an attractive line of articles. Lunch will be served
from ll a.m . to 2 p.m. and there'll be free coffee for shoppers.

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Advisory tells where its ·w arm

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COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Deleg,ates to the 55th annua l meeti,ng of the Ohio Farm Bureau
E ederation here Wednesday
;'(l'ent on record op[&gt;Osing the
roncept of a strategic United
States and world food reserve,
" During tile final session , a
res&lt;Jiution wruv dopted stating
,\he organization fears stock·piles of farm commodities
would have a depressing effect
tlpon domestic and world

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Ry UniH'&lt;I P n~s lntt·rnalimml

Ttw

Weather
Scrvi c~~ has t"Ome up with what
may prove to be it; most
closely watched for ecast a
broadbrush picture of wher e it
will be warmer and where it
will be cold this winter.
The differen ce will mean
shivers or warmth for Americans fa('cd witti a shortage of
heating .fuel that threatens to
last until the spr ing.
In short, the service forecast
warmer temperatures in the
Midwest and most of the South
and Southwest a nd colder than
average readings for the West
Coast and the Northern Gr ea t
Plains. Temper atures for the
East Coast , the Central ·Grea t
Plains a nd Southern California
were' expected to go either
way .
A spokesman for the age ncy
called the December-February
fore cast "highly speculative''
and noted that while simiiar
reports have been prepared for
'the last 15 years for use by
government a gencies, th ey
have not been made public
because they were "considered
too marginal in reliability for
general release."
Public Interest Intense
They were announced this
ye ar because of intense .public
interest, he said.
There were the se other
developments :
- The Arab oil-producing
nations moved at their surmnit

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Franklin County Democratic
Party Screening Committee
Tuesday night gave its
WJqualified support to former
astronaut John Glenn for the
1974 Democratic senatorial
nomination over Cleveland
industrialist Howard Met-

THE KIDDIE SHOPPE
On The T In Middleport, 0.

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The slate of the economy is a However, the Congress
such
major concern in this country acting as though
· today. Volumes have been programs are sacred· and
written about inflation but little above review and change succe:ss has been realized in ha s consistently added to th e
inflationary spiral by spending
controlling it.
beyond our means.
I think it is long past due
If a family or business
that Congress accept its fiscal
responSibility and · cease its spends more than it takes in , it
courtship of deficit spending. soon goes broke, but the
The inflation . we're ex- bureaucrats are trying to find a
periencing is the direct result whipping boy to blame for the
of more than 30 years of economic trouble - the taxpayer. I maintain that it will
Federal deficit spending.
Our government - with the not work.
I urge the Congress to give
approval of the Congress - is
and has been spending $1 out of serious thought to this problem
every $5 circulated in this and give it top priority in all
country. That practice is not decision making. In a way, itts
economically healthy. In fact, like closing the barn door after
the horse is out ... but at least
it is deadly.
we've
got to start reversing
It is not the individual earnings or the s&lt;K:alled lax these foolish practices instead
of acting as though they are
structure causing our financial
problemS. Inflation is the price completely unchangeable.
this

n~tion

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Although A Strike Is In Progress, The Company Continues To Operate The Plant.

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BEIWEEN THE HOURS OF 7:30 AM

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P
_ IICD"OI

PHONE 992-5759
271 N. 11 ~aMI A-.,

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ltJr four Drug NHt/1

SHOES
TO PLEASE

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FROM THE

Village Pharmacy continues to provid
complete and accurate records of your expense on prescription medicine as We have the
past five years.

heritage
house ·
Your Thom MeAn Store
MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

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m4:00 PM

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UH our Convenl1nt lAy-A. WaY Plan.

TO ARRANGE AN INTERVIEW

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· A Small Qeposll Will Hold Your SoltciiOft
As You Ml~• Pay_ments At Your Convltnc•
Give a u.en t-ranklin Gift Certificate for a·ny •moun1 .
MAKE ·POMEROY YOUR SHOPPING CENTER•

MAGNUS

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Chora · vryan Ensemble
J( treble keys, f2 chord

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PHILIP SPORN PLANT

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P"'l Office BoK 361. Now Haven. W.sl Vlrtlnla 2J265

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Tolt,.,..,.: ana COlli 304 112-1111

An Equal Opportunity EmploJer ,

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BEN~FRAN

buttons. Des igner organ
stand
pl us
match ing·
hassock bench with deep
foam

MuSIC Book . Model 668-P

O~ly

. ; no

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KLia...t
lltiW

East Main St.

f """M
¥
fiR 0 Y, OHIO
•·
· GOLD

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00?. 1498

39"

I able Model with same features-29.95

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cush io n . Magn us

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OPEN FRI.&amp;SAT. NIGHTSTIL9
"A GOLD STAR STORE"

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STAR
STORE

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fh::e:::H:.'tH:."B&lt;"B&lt;"B&lt;~~"B&lt;~~'B.~'«-~~~~'Jift!:.:
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"TTi! CIIIA101 Of

IIAIONAILl OIIUO

APPUCANTS MAY CALL ( 304) 882-2126 (collect)

...

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J~armarg

These Jobs Provide Excellent Wages And A Benefits Pro~m Which Includes
Ufe Insurance, Medical Insurance, Disabillity Insurance , Sick Leave, Vacations,
Holiday, And Retirement.

w

Pomeroy, Ohio

Jtllagr

· - - - - - - - - - -. .

are
many
government
econcimists who have elaborate
explanations on its causes, but
the explanation is very simple
- for too long the Federal
Government has spent more
tllan it has taken in.
With all due regard to this
Administration, the While
House has tried to hold down
spending by trimming some
existing federal programs and ·
eliminating others altogether.

OHIO

Has.Job .Openings For Permanent Employment In The Following
Skills
Mechanics
r
Instrument Repairmen

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125 E. Main St. • 992-2171

is paying for years

of unbalanced budgets. There ·

MIDOI.EPOI!ll :

Tuna fi sh ca n r ace thr ough
the ocean a t 47 miles an
hour .

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Railroad plan nearly ready

$398

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New Haven, W.Va.

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City Loan is R dlferent kind of loan
company. We handle over $150,000,000 In
t~avinp for Ohio people. Handlina
people's aa~np requires experi_ence and
integrity. So you know you -can trlllt us
to handle your loan.
We offer you a real undentandina of
money matters. And your situation. We'll
nnanae your loan promptly, dllcftetly, .
expenl.y. You can count On it.
With ollica all over Ohio, we're
ready to ~etve your money needs the
best way for you.
What maka ua a cllft'erei\1 klncl of
loan cQIIlpany, maket Ul a beuer ldncl
of loan company.

DOUBLE
KNITS

Philip _Sporn Plant

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zenbaum.
The
party's
executive committee is expected to accept the recommendation when it meets Dec.
II . The committee said in its
resolution that it recogniZed
"the singular loyalty and
productive efforts of John
Glenn .in behalf of Columbus
and
County Democratic "
candidates."

Central Operating Company's

SALE

! Washington !
! Report ByM~:;~ce l

SIZE 8 THRU 12

COATS - JACKETS
SNOWSUITS

PRE-CHRISTMAS

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

1

JAMES ROUSH ANNOUNCED plans for observing the
club's 25th anniversary when the Pomeroy-Middleport Lions
Club met Wednesday at noon for a luncheon at the Meigs Inn.
The observance will be on Jan . 8 with the Lions' ladies
guests. During the evening the 25th anniversary of chartering the
local club will be marked. A dinner is planned.
N. W. Compton reported that nine pairs of efe glasses had
been issued in .the county and the Rev. Willi~m H. Middleswarth,
Lutheran pastor, was voted into membership.
Speaker for the meeting, presided over by Wendell Hoover,
president, was Mrs. Mary Bacon, a work study coordinator in the
Meigs and Gallia County Schools. Mrs. Bacon reported that she
has 122 students in both counties enrolled in the program.
Students so enrolled attend classes for part of the school day and
then are employed in businesses in the afternoons to gain on the
job training. Mrs. Bacon outlined her duties in the program including !he contact with employers to insure that the training is
being given and that the student is turning in a satisfactory
perlormance. She outlined some of her job placement results.
A guest for the luncheon was John Kerr, Jr., s;llesman for
Radio WMPO.

GLENN ENDORSJ;:D

National

in Ahdcrs tu dassify their av iation by 40 pe r t'(;nt , as has America n Ufc .lllsurance ASsociation in Washington that
&lt;.'ustomers as fr iendly, hostile been suggested .
- The Nati o na l Safet y " we will Hck th e energy crisis
or neutral and supply them
accordingly . Their oil embargo Council said the proposed cut and our country will continue
against the United States and .ill ga soline supplies and high- to gr ow and prosper. ''
Sen. Hubert H. llumohrev .
the Netherlands , whom they way speeds for motorists could
D-Minn
., howe ve r.. said
have cut off for being allies of sa ve as many a s 14,000 lives .
Rep. Gerald F ord, R-Mich., Presid e nt N ixon ha s not
Israel, was extended to the
Lhe vi ce president-designate, proposed means to solve the
white regimes of South Africa
told a meeeting of th e problem that matc h the
and Rhodesia , and to Portugal,
seriousness · of tile thr eat as
whic h has territories in Africa .
explained by administration
BARBS
- The Interior Department
energy experts.
gave t he green light for initial
by l' llll.I'ASTOR ET
" ...They reported that unless
development of shale oil deposIt's a bou t Lime to go do wn voluntary conservation and the
its in Utah, Wyoming and
and
d raw out t ha t S2 we pul mandatory allocation system
Colorado. Secretary Rogers C.
away so ca refull y in th e SIOO works. we are go ing to have
B. Morton als&lt;J said he is ready
Christm as club.
rationing ," he said .
to issue a right-&lt;Jf-way permit
for the trans-Alaska pipeline,
Pre u ~· soon it will be t i nw
·.· ,. ..
"
but he wa rned that neither
for Gr.mdma to begin tlmwi ng
Chris tm as cookit•s.
possible som ce would provide
any fuel in time to help relieve
the current shortage . .
- A Uni ted Press Internationa l survey showed tha t
the na ti on's a irlin es a r e
planning drastic measures in
ca se they run short of jet fuel.
American Airlines will lay off
What to they do with a lithe
214 pilot s in J a nuary, a
pa r ts that neve r turn u.p in
spokesman said , and Uni ted
a sse mble · i.t ·you rs4.! If toy s .
Airlines announced immediate
Don ' t cr y over spil t milk.
layoffs of 300 pilots and 650
(Valu e s To $5.98)
'Th
e s tu ff 's t hi n e n o ug h
flight attendants as well as the
cancelation of 100 da ily !lights r a lready.
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ONLY
beginning Jan. 7.
Yd.
40,000 Could be Laid Off
GIV E PARTY
-Dov . Robert B. Docking of
Mr . and Mrs. John ·Lisle,
Many Beautiful
Kansas said as many as 40,000 P omeroy, enter tai ned Sunday
Match-Males
employes itt the aircraft indus ~ even ing with a fa mily party .
For
Christmas.
try and related concerns in his · honoring their son , Todd , on his
state could be laid off if fuel third birthday . A Cha rli e
allocations cut the supply for Brown cake was served with
ice cream . Guests were Mr .
.
I and Mrs . Roy J enkins, Keith
Lisle, Karen Johnson, Mr . and
Mrs. Herschel Manual, Mrs .
Florence Potts, Mrs. Jeannie
I Allen and Bri an , and Mr . and
·.A:..,~
I Mrs . Donald Li sle.
:A,W."
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9- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Nov. 2!&gt;. 1973

World food stack
.opposed
by
F-B
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SBA m
trouble
WASHINGTON (UP! l - The
possibility of criminal involvement in m illions of dollars of
loans approved by the Rich·
mond, Va ., or£ice of th.e small
Bu s ines s Adm inis tr a ti on
( SBA ) has been raised be£ore a
congressional committee.
Russell Hamilton , former
director of the Philadelphia
regional office of SBA, testi£ied
Wednesday that one employe
in the Richmond office is afraid
to tesli£Y "for fear of his life,"
while the office's fi nancial
director kept a dia ry and
secured a gun to gua rd against
organized crime.
The financial director ,
Kenneth Bowe, was quoted by
Hamilton as saying he s&lt;J
feared organized crime influ·
ence in Richmond lending
activities that he bought a gun
and kept a diary of office
happenings for "insurance."
" U anything happened to
him, it (the diary ) was to go to
the Washington Post," Hamilton said.
Contacted in Richmond,
Bowe denied any knowledge of
organized crime influence and
said he used the .22-caliber

CtlLU MUUS (U Pll - t.uc:;.1s t ·,•uu ty f nnuHi!i:o; iHIH:r"'
t~rdt•rt-d alH1UI 25 s ta lt' P ub lit· W4.• Hom· Ot•pa rt nw nl m vt•stigaturs nut nf l .ut·as Count y Cnurthoust· Wrd•u·sday_.as
lhl'y &lt;'ht.•rkt&gt;d paym ru ts math• b~ tht• dr part men l f 11r pt~:-olblc.·

.Pioneer 10 near to Jupiter's mysterzes

dis(• ripan&lt;'iN".
.
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1 guess tht•y didn 't waut us to find uut wha~ Js.gumg on_Ill
Lucas Cnunty." said Ri rha rd l.iglltner. pubh&lt;' mfur ma twn
~.tffirt•r for thf depa rtm t' nt.
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Gov. John J . Gilligan has armouneed a stal.t'wJde m-

vt·sti gation into count y welfare dt"partment handling of
we1farc payments aUcr a prelimina ry ~het·k showed 13 per
rent of welfare reripit•nls should nul be on the rolls and 27 pe-r
cent were being overpaid.

ta rget pistol he obtained four
months ago " to shoot targets."
He described the diary as
'' notes,'' sa yi ng: ·'Wh en I
heard something I'd jot it down
.. . things a re getting blown out
of proportion ... most of what I
kn ow now , I read in the
newspaper .''
Hamilton said the diary is
now in a safe in the office of the
SBA's chief legal counsel, Greg
Austin, but Bowe said he made
no copies of his notes and still
has them .
In other testimony Wednesday , Hamilton said SBA Ad·
mini.strator Thomas Kleppe
was "committed" early in his
tenure to r etain Thomas Regan
as the head of the Richmond
office despite reports of serious
problems with loans approved
by the agency and the
recommendations of other key

SBA offi cials to fire Regan .
Hamilton , who supervised
the Richmond office until Nov.
15, said he told all to the
co ngr ess iona l i nvestiga tor s
before going to the SBA with
his informaUon because he
wasn 't sure he could trust any
of his SBA superiors . After the
con gressional inves ti gation
beg an, Hamilton said he
prese nted
identica I
in·
formation to a top SBA official
" in confidence."
But that information was
leaked to Kleppe , Hamilton
said and what followed was a
"CYA-Cover your you-know·
what" in Richmond. He testi·
fied that becau se the confiden·
tial ffiern o was leaked to
Kleppe , some praciices of the
SBA were changed in an effort
to cover up or minimize the
charges.

MDI :'iTAI:&gt;O VIEW, ('"lif. secrets.
The secrets lie a t the hea rt of
1 Ul'( 1
The P ionct!r 10
th(' mystery of how the solar
s pa n•t·raft voyaJ{.ed !o th(•
:;;ystt:m. and the Ear!.""!, were
dc;h; ; .~ magne ta e hel(l of
born. Answers would be ap.lupiter today a nd spt.&gt;d two
plied to eve r yth ing fr om
minu te-s ahead of schedule
produci ng nuclear energy to
towards discovery of the large
controlling Earth weather.
pla ne t's host of aweso me
Pionee r
is
the
fir st
spacecraft to fly past Mars
towards the solar system's
outer planets. Eventually , the
vehicle will become the first to
escape the s&lt;Jiar system and
journey silently into the Milky
way galaxy .
Space Agency controllers
le arned Wednesday that
Jupiter is heavier than
thought-just enough s&lt;J that its

Damage

heavy ·i n

on the way to its target,
~ravlty is pu lli ng Pioneer
Pioneer is mapping Ul e struc·
towe~ r d a
ta r ge t above
ture of Jupiter 's ma gnetic fi•ld
Jup iter 's cloudtop s
two
- a potential death trap for the
minutes raster than calcula ted
spacecr aft. Radiation one ffill·
at blastoff 22 months ago.
lion limes that of Earth's Van
Now 3.2 million miles from
Allen bell could knock out
Jupiter , the 570-pound Pioneer
is r eturning data of great value Pioneer circuitry. and a fleck
in the dust belt could smash a
to Earth computers from its 11
instruments . Information will large · hole in the speeding
"
include 340 color photographs craft.
Jupiter
radiates
three limes
of Jupiter and 10 of its largest
more energy than it receives
moons ..
from
the sun and scientists
A brightly hewed mass 1,300
limes the volume of Earth, wonder what kind of a dynamo
Jupiter rotates so fast it's day produces it.
All that radiation might
is only 10 hours long. II seems
result
i£ Jupiter is a new planet
to be composed largely of
condensing or " falling togehydrogen, helium and other
ther," said scientiSts. Perhaps
ga ses.

Jupiter is not a planet at aU oot
rather a still-born star , a twm
of the sun.
In sp ite of the clouds
shrouding J upiter' Pioneer's
sophis tica ted instrumenti
should be able to tell something
about what the interior COI\Silits
of. One theory is that the corer.!
hydrogen metal and another IS
that the core is liquid .
.
Possibly the most tantalidng
question is whether Jupiter
could support primitive I~
of life. The planet resembles
what the earth is believed to
have been ~ billion years ago ,
and s&lt;Jme scientists are certain
that conditions for ille oh
Jupiter are ideal.

collision

NEW HAVEN - No injuries
·were reported but property
damage was heavy when three
vehicles collided Wednesday at
11 : 15 p.m. on U.S. 33 above
here. Nobody was arrested.
Deputy Rupert Rice iden·
tified the drivers as Mark
Andrew Ke rns, Route I,
Letart ; Jimmie F . Evans,
Minersville, Ohio, and Carl
Gerlach of 32 Windsor Court,
Point Pleasant.
The officer said Evans was
passing Gerlach when Kerns
ran into the rear of Evans'
vehicle, causing it to sideswipe
Gerlach on the left side, after
which Evans ' car ran over an
embankment to the left, tur·
ning up on its driver 's side.
Kerns ' car stopped at an angle,
appro&lt;imately five feet from
the edge of the highway, with
the front of his car over the
embankment.
Gerlach's
" Power company officials
CINCINNATI (UPI) - An pictures of rural Ohio scenery say , 'Well, you'll get used to it'· stationwagon stopped oo the
architect complained to a state to try to convince the com· and that's the crying shame,"
roadway 192 feel on the right
commission Wednesday after- mission that it should make Moore testi£ied. " I'm afraid we
side from Evans.
noon that electrical transmis- ''aesthetic considerations'' will get used to it. Land doesn't
Police estimated damages at
sion towers are " visual pollu- before approving construction have to be that way.
$600
on Kern's vehicle, $260 on
tion" and argued that "piclur· plans of electrial companies.
Evans', and $300 on Gerlach's.
" The power companies say
Similar testimony was heard
esque Ohio areas are being
will·
reimburse
the
land
they
sacri£iced in order to supply from a woman ·representing a owners but they don't realize
conservation group, but two ofp::Jwer ."
money is not the . primary obFuller Moore, 32, who ficials of the Cincinnati Gas jection. I would like to see the
teaches architecture at Miami and Electric Co. Complained power companies investigate
University in Oxford, made a that proposed commlssion other ways of transmitting
Slide show presentation as he rules were tOo strlct.
Although the commission their power, like underground
testified before the Ohio Power
eventually will have the routes."
Siting Commission here.
Edward E . Galloway·, envir· .
Moo•e
superimposed authority to approve or onmenlal engineer for the Clndrawings pf " power towers" on di sapprove power company cincinnati Gas and Electric Co.
construction projects, it is not
Sheriff Robert Hartenbach's
yet in operation, pending testi£ied that the paperwork
Dept.
investigated a single car
adoption of its rules and and demands made on power
companies in the conunission's accident on SR 124 ·in Sutton
regulations.
Twp . about midnight WedAs Moore testified he dis· proposed rules are too bui'·
nesday that injured the driver
played a series of ."before and densome and . too expensive.
and a passenger. The driver
More Expenses
after" pictures.
' 'The· application was arrested.
Moore told the commission
. According to sheriff's
he took pictures of land in requirements should be sim·
deputies,
. Leonard Siders, 49,
Hamilton, Butler and Mont- plified because it will put
gomery counties that the additional expense on the Rt. 2, Racine, was traveling
companies imd eventually the east when he apparently lost
Several Cincinnati Gas and Electric
SYRACUSE public will end up paying the control of his vehicle, hitting a
Christmas projects were Co. plans to dot with towers. bill," echoed Robert B. Grote, utility pole.
After showing scenes of
discussed during a recent
Siders and a passenger in the
also of Cincinnati Gas and
meeting· of the United country homes and rolling hills
auto, Wilma Siders, 63, also of
Electric.
Methodist Women of the as they now exist, Moore suRt.
2, Racine, were taken to
Opposing
Moore's
position
Asbury United Methodist perimposed drawings of towers was Charles M. Cox of the Ohio Veterans . Memorial Hospital
Church held at the home of as he evisioned they would Municipal
Electric by the Racine E-R squad where
look.
Mrs. Donald Lisle.
they were treated and
"These towers are from 125 Association, which he said
The
group
made
released. The auto had heavy
represents 67 of Ohio's 84 cities
arrangements to get gifts for feet to 170 feet high and make that have their own electric
damage. Siders was cited for
the patients at the Syracuse an impaetthat can been seen gystems. He complained that driving while under the in"
Nursing !lome with Mrs . for miles," Moore said. "In the stringent application · fluence of alcohol. ·
William Eichinger and Mrs. past it's been traditional for requirements would delay
Christina Grimm to hamAl~ power companies to disregard "much needed energy facili·
this. Each member was asked the fact that they are
ties."
to take a toy to the Christmas desecrating and visually
"Delays (in energy construc·
party Dec. 4 to be given to the polluting the land .
"I traced the proposed site of lion projects) should be based
children at Veterans Memorial
the line and met concerned on fact and not emotion," he
The tax rate would go from
Hospital.
peopJe," he added. "I saw pic~ said. "Why should there be
its present 5.85 per cent of
The Christmas dinner will be
turesque areas that are going added expense to satisfy the
earnings
to 5.9 per cent. The
Dec. 4 at Crow's Steak House
emotions of the few and not the
to
be
sacri£iced
in
order
to
senate bill also increases the
with the party to follow at the
general public which is inbring
cheap
power
to
northern
amount of earnings subject to
home of Mrs. Lisle where the
terested in energy at low
the tax from the present $10,800
cities.
dessert will be served . New
"How would you like to see a cost?"
to $13,200 a year. _
program books will be
The commission plans more
tower like this in front of your
Neither drugs only required
prepared by Mrs. Dana
home?" Moore .asked, showing hearings in several Ohio cities
periodically nor non-prescri!&gt;Winebrenner. "II was noted that
a slide of a rural home with a in the next 10 days.
tion
drugs, . except insulin,
eight members or the church
tall tower drawn in beside it.
would -be covered.
attended a workshop at Belpre
But drugs for these chronic
..ecently. Going were Mrs. Karl
diseases
common to the elderly
Joes, Mrs. William Eichinger,
would be covered:
,&gt;lrl;, Damon Ferrell, Mrs.
Diabetes, high blood press·
Grimm, Mrs . Lisle, Miss
ure, cardiovascular disease, .
Marcia. Karr, Mrs. John
respiratory disease, chronic
Sauvage and · Mrs. Ted
kidney disease, arthritis,
Hilldore.
The House has approved a
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
Forty shut-in calls were
similar 11 per cent increase, rheumatism, gout, throid
Senate has voted to broaden
made during the past month, il
but has · not considered. the disease; cancer, epUepsy,
Medicare coverage to pay for
P3rkinson' s disease, tuberwas reported. A special thank
Medicare drug extension.
prescription drugs to treat
culosis,
glaucoma
and
offering and a free will offering
Last year, the House
most chronic diseases of the 20
myasthenia gravis.
were taken. The birthdays of
million elderly pers&lt;Jns in the rejected such an amendment
Patients would have to pay $1
Mrs. Eichinger and Mrs .
on grounds it would take too
government health insurance
per prescription. Medicare
Grimm were obser\oed. The
much out of tbe Social Security
program.
would cover the remaining
call to worship was given by
The proposal was attached to trust fund.
Mrs. VUiil Teaford, president,
The new amendment, how~ cost.
a bill raising Social Security
Under
existing
law,
with Mrs. Eichinger presenting
ever, carries an increase in
benefits by 11 per cent- 7 per
Medicare
only
pays
for
drugs
devotions from the Upp er
Social security taxes to pay for
cent upon enactment and 4 per
given to hospitalized patients.
Room, scripture from The
drug coverage.
cent in June, 1974.
PsalmS. a poem, " Things to be
Thankful For", and prayer .
The program prepared by
Mrs. Kloos was given by Mrs.
Hartke said questions
Eichinger. It had a Thanksportation
department's
WASHINGTON
(UPI)
The
giving theme with scripture
estimate of what would be remaining to" be resolved were
Senate
Commerce
Committee
from Psalms 105 and Ill. Mrs.
required to maintain rail tabor protection, abandonment
may
finish
action
today
on
a
llile read two poems, "A
service during the 18 to 20. procedures and a minimum
bill
to
revitalize
northeastern
federal guarantee on the value
Thankful Heart" and " Thank
month planning period .
railroads
under
government
You God for Everything", by
Sen. Vance Hartke, D-Ind ., of the new corporation's lock to
corporations.
Helen Steiner Rice.
said final committee action be given to creditors of. the
The
committee
Wednesday
The meeting closed with
would come as early as today . bankrupt estates in exchange
tentatively
approved
spending
Mi.ss Ka'rr using a poem and a
The committee is con· for railroad property.
$235
million
to
keep
bankrupt
meditation about Psalm 103
sidering legislation that would
and what it means to be thank- railroads in the region.running set up government cor· · The committee also decided
ful people. She concluded with while plans are devised for a porations to finance, plan and Wednesday to allow railroads
Peter Marshall's Thanksgiving new railroad system for the run &amp; new rail system to be 390 days from the date enacted
to decide wbether they will
prayer. Attending besldes east and midwest.
made up of the best lines of
interim
money
is
$150
The
enter the new system, although
th- named were Mrs. Herseven bankrupt railroads. The
mill\pn
more
than
the
house
the corporation could include
bert Parker, Mrs. Alice
voted earlier for the project House has passed its version of them for planning purposes.
Capehart, an!J Mrs . Oms
and is in lin,t with the trans- the le ~ i slation .
Wi ~ nner .
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Christmas gifts

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FbR THE YOUNd SET

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SCHOOL DRESSES

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BILLY THE KID
SLACKS

meeting

Senate votes to
expand Me~care

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UMW has

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Asbury

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on Route 124

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The Fabric Shop

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after wreck

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By Rob Hoef/it·h

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Driver cited

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Of the Bend

SINGER

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landscapes objected to

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Power towers on Ohio's

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tool to keep farm prices above
targe t levels.
The holiday season has rolled in agai n . Santa has bem of.
- Recommended a com· ficia lly welcomed and now comes the round of social al'tivities,
petent and thorough study of
the exasperating problem of gift buying a nd the r eligious serthe sta le welfare system by an
vices at the va rious churches.
resea r ch
i nd e p e n de nt
As a part or the holiday sea s&lt;Jn , Vera and Millard Va n Meter
organization and that welfare
will be staging their fourth open house fr om 1 to 5 P.m . Sundav.
workers be compensated for
There will be refreshments and door prizes. The observance is
helping people get off welfare
th e fourth in the building which the Van Meters' had constructed
rolls.
for their Pomeroy Flower Shop on Pomeroy 's Butternut Ave.
- Co nt inued opposi ti on to
While stopping at the "Oower shop, you can kill two birds with
the distribution or food stamps
one stone. The Farmers Bank and Savings Co. will also be
to strikers .
holding an open house Sunday from 2 to 4 p .m . Refreshments will
- Rejected a motion support~trices.
be served . The bank's open house will give the public an O!&gt;·" Earlier during the three· in g year-round dayli ght
portunity to view the 120 costumed dolls which a r e on display.
.!Jay meeting,
President savings tlrne.
Meigs and Mason women have costumed the dolls as a part of the
;Leonard Schnell cautioned that
- Adopted r e s o lution
bank's "dress a-&lt;loll" contest. They've done a tremendous job!
carry4()vers Of grain next year favoring hunting of both sexes
might once again depress of deer wben the state's deer
MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL SENIOR Jeanie Schneider, one of
prices received by farmer s for population increases to a point
the most faithful
members of the Big Bend Minstrel Association,
.
their crops.
where the animals may create
was scheduled to be in the 2011fannual production last Saturday.
In other action, delegates : undue highway safety hazards.
Jeanie, as usual, attended most of tbe rehearsals, had her
Schnell, a beef and grain
- Adopted policy reoolutions
costumes all set and was ready to go on with the show. However,
opposing the use of wage and farmer from Apple Creek in
she became ill Friday, and instead of being on stage Saturday
price controls as a means of Wayne County, was re-elected
night was a patient at the Holzer Medical Center.
controlling inflation or as a president for a third one-year
There was a pleasant reunion backstage at last Saturday's
means lor distribution of com- term and Glenn Irwin, Marys- " Fall Follies" . Tile former Norma Chapman, now residing in
ville, was re-elected to the vice
modities.
Charleston, ·visited backstage with friends taking part in the
- Voted to continue support presidency.
show. Norma took part in five shows and was an excellent
John Weir, Carrollton, was
of the set-aside provisions of
vocalist. Her last show was 15years ago. She seemed to enjoy her
the current federal farm re~lected treasurer and C.
short but pleasant visit with other veterans of the Big Bend
program and urged the United Willlam Swank, Westerville,
shows.
states secretary of agriculture was re-named executive vice
to use set-aside measure as a president. Nedra Freitag, ColTHE OHIO HOUSE of Represenlatives has sent an official
umbus, was again named .
message of congratulations to Sidney Spencer of Pomeroy for his
!""'·"*"!!!.. ""'·ll"!!lliOI.-.IIIIOI!IIroo!W1111!1tt . assistance secretary .
having been named top driver of the River Valley Colt Circuit for
Glenn Pirtle, Worthingion,
the
past season.
Now! Lay It Away
was named vice president of
The commendation commends Spencer for driving to 33 wins
field services.
and for his being part owner of the two-year-&lt;Jid pacer,
"Farmshead Charlie" and tbe three year-&lt;&gt;ld trotter , "Yum Yum
Girl" .
WILL HOLD SALE
Signing the certificate of congratulations were Oakley C.
Sewing Machine
RACINE - A bazaar and
Collins, representative of House District 92, and A. G. Lancione,
For Christmas
bake sale will be held Friday speaker of the Ohio House.
small deposit wi II hold
and Saturday in the Joe Stobart
building in Racine by the
THE HARD-WORKING members of the Meigs County
Letart Falls P1' A. The sale will
Humane Society will be staging their annual Christmas bazaar at
·115 W. Second
992 -2184 . begin each day at 9 a .m . and
the Trinity Church in Pomeroy Satw-day. The group has
POMEROY , OHtO
continue throughout · the day . assembled an attractive line of articles. Lunch will be served
from ll a.m . to 2 p.m. and there'll be free coffee for shoppers.

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Advisory tells where its ·w arm

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COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Deleg,ates to the 55th annua l meeti,ng of the Ohio Farm Bureau
E ederation here Wednesday
;'(l'ent on record op[&gt;Osing the
roncept of a strategic United
States and world food reserve,
" During tile final session , a
res&lt;Jiution wruv dopted stating
,\he organization fears stock·piles of farm commodities
would have a depressing effect
tlpon domestic and world

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Ttw

Weather
Scrvi c~~ has t"Ome up with what
may prove to be it; most
closely watched for ecast a
broadbrush picture of wher e it
will be warmer and where it
will be cold this winter.
The differen ce will mean
shivers or warmth for Americans fa('cd witti a shortage of
heating .fuel that threatens to
last until the spr ing.
In short, the service forecast
warmer temperatures in the
Midwest and most of the South
and Southwest a nd colder than
average readings for the West
Coast and the Northern Gr ea t
Plains. Temper atures for the
East Coast , the Central ·Grea t
Plains a nd Southern California
were' expected to go either
way .
A spokesman for the age ncy
called the December-February
fore cast "highly speculative''
and noted that while simiiar
reports have been prepared for
'the last 15 years for use by
government a gencies, th ey
have not been made public
because they were "considered
too marginal in reliability for
general release."
Public Interest Intense
They were announced this
ye ar because of intense .public
interest, he said.
There were the se other
developments :
- The Arab oil-producing
nations moved at their surmnit

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Franklin County Democratic
Party Screening Committee
Tuesday night gave its
WJqualified support to former
astronaut John Glenn for the
1974 Democratic senatorial
nomination over Cleveland
industrialist Howard Met-

THE KIDDIE SHOPPE
On The T In Middleport, 0.

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The slate of the economy is a However, the Congress
such
major concern in this country acting as though
· today. Volumes have been programs are sacred· and
written about inflation but little above review and change succe:ss has been realized in ha s consistently added to th e
inflationary spiral by spending
controlling it.
beyond our means.
I think it is long past due
If a family or business
that Congress accept its fiscal
responSibility and · cease its spends more than it takes in , it
courtship of deficit spending. soon goes broke, but the
The inflation . we're ex- bureaucrats are trying to find a
periencing is the direct result whipping boy to blame for the
of more than 30 years of economic trouble - the taxpayer. I maintain that it will
Federal deficit spending.
Our government - with the not work.
I urge the Congress to give
approval of the Congress - is
and has been spending $1 out of serious thought to this problem
every $5 circulated in this and give it top priority in all
country. That practice is not decision making. In a way, itts
economically healthy. In fact, like closing the barn door after
the horse is out ... but at least
it is deadly.
we've
got to start reversing
It is not the individual earnings or the s&lt;K:alled lax these foolish practices instead
of acting as though they are
structure causing our financial
problemS. Inflation is the price completely unchangeable.
this

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Although A Strike Is In Progress, The Company Continues To Operate The Plant.

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BEIWEEN THE HOURS OF 7:30 AM

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_ IICD"OI

PHONE 992-5759
271 N. 11 ~aMI A-.,

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ltJr four Drug NHt/1

SHOES
TO PLEASE

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FROM THE

Village Pharmacy continues to provid
complete and accurate records of your expense on prescription medicine as We have the
past five years.

heritage
house ·
Your Thom MeAn Store
MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

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UH our Convenl1nt lAy-A. WaY Plan.

TO ARRANGE AN INTERVIEW

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· A Small Qeposll Will Hold Your SoltciiOft
As You Ml~• Pay_ments At Your Convltnc•
Give a u.en t-ranklin Gift Certificate for a·ny •moun1 .
MAKE ·POMEROY YOUR SHOPPING CENTER•

MAGNUS

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Chora · vryan Ensemble
J( treble keys, f2 chord

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PHILIP SPORN PLANT

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P"'l Office BoK 361. Now Haven. W.sl Vlrtlnla 2J265

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Tolt,.,..,.: ana COlli 304 112-1111

An Equal Opportunity EmploJer ,

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BEN~FRAN

buttons. Des igner organ
stand
pl us
match ing·
hassock bench with deep
foam

MuSIC Book . Model 668-P

O~ly

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KLia...t
lltiW

East Main St.

f """M
¥
fiR 0 Y, OHIO
•·
· GOLD

I!"

00?. 1498

39"

I able Model with same features-29.95

I'

PHONE

cush io n . Magn us

..

OPEN FRI.&amp;SAT. NIGHTSTIL9
"A GOLD STAR STORE"

•

~

.

.

STAR
STORE

·

~

~
~

~

fh::e:::H:.'tH:."B&lt;"B&lt;"B&lt;~~"B&lt;~~'B.~'«-~~~~'Jift!:.:
•

I

"TTi! CIIIA101 Of

IIAIONAILl OIIUO

APPUCANTS MAY CALL ( 304) 882-2126 (collect)

...

"'c

,.

J~armarg

These Jobs Provide Excellent Wages And A Benefits Pro~m Which Includes
Ufe Insurance, Medical Insurance, Disabillity Insurance , Sick Leave, Vacations,
Holiday, And Retirement.

w

Pomeroy, Ohio

Jtllagr

· - - - - - - - - - -. .

are
many
government
econcimists who have elaborate
explanations on its causes, but
the explanation is very simple
- for too long the Federal
Government has spent more
tllan it has taken in.
With all due regard to this
Administration, the While
House has tried to hold down
spending by trimming some
existing federal programs and ·
eliminating others altogether.

OHIO

Has.Job .Openings For Permanent Employment In The Following
Skills
Mechanics
r
Instrument Repairmen

.....•

125 E. Main St. • 992-2171

is paying for years

of unbalanced budgets. There ·

MIDOI.EPOI!ll :

Tuna fi sh ca n r ace thr ough
the ocean a t 47 miles an
hour .

,

m

Railroad plan nearly ready

$398

. 'I

New Haven, W.Va.

Q

*

City Loan is R dlferent kind of loan
company. We handle over $150,000,000 In
t~avinp for Ohio people. Handlina
people's aa~np requires experi_ence and
integrity. So you know you -can trlllt us
to handle your loan.
We offer you a real undentandina of
money matters. And your situation. We'll
nnanae your loan promptly, dllcftetly, .
expenl.y. You can count On it.
With ollica all over Ohio, we're
ready to ~etve your money needs the
best way for you.
What maka ua a cllft'erei\1 klncl of
loan cQIIlpany, maket Ul a beuer ldncl
of loan company.

DOUBLE
KNITS

Philip _Sporn Plant

~

,.

zenbaum.
The
party's
executive committee is expected to accept the recommendation when it meets Dec.
II . The committee said in its
resolution that it recogniZed
"the singular loyalty and
productive efforts of John
Glenn .in behalf of Columbus
and
County Democratic "
candidates."

Central Operating Company's

SALE

! Washington !
! Report ByM~:;~ce l

SIZE 8 THRU 12

COATS - JACKETS
SNOWSUITS

PRE-CHRISTMAS

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

1

JAMES ROUSH ANNOUNCED plans for observing the
club's 25th anniversary when the Pomeroy-Middleport Lions
Club met Wednesday at noon for a luncheon at the Meigs Inn.
The observance will be on Jan . 8 with the Lions' ladies
guests. During the evening the 25th anniversary of chartering the
local club will be marked. A dinner is planned.
N. W. Compton reported that nine pairs of efe glasses had
been issued in .the county and the Rev. Willi~m H. Middleswarth,
Lutheran pastor, was voted into membership.
Speaker for the meeting, presided over by Wendell Hoover,
president, was Mrs. Mary Bacon, a work study coordinator in the
Meigs and Gallia County Schools. Mrs. Bacon reported that she
has 122 students in both counties enrolled in the program.
Students so enrolled attend classes for part of the school day and
then are employed in businesses in the afternoons to gain on the
job training. Mrs. Bacon outlined her duties in the program including !he contact with employers to insure that the training is
being given and that the student is turning in a satisfactory
perlormance. She outlined some of her job placement results.
A guest for the luncheon was John Kerr, Jr., s;llesman for
Radio WMPO.

GLENN ENDORSJ;:D

National

in Ahdcrs tu dassify their av iation by 40 pe r t'(;nt , as has America n Ufc .lllsurance ASsociation in Washington that
&lt;.'ustomers as fr iendly, hostile been suggested .
- The Nati o na l Safet y " we will Hck th e energy crisis
or neutral and supply them
accordingly . Their oil embargo Council said the proposed cut and our country will continue
against the United States and .ill ga soline supplies and high- to gr ow and prosper. ''
Sen. Hubert H. llumohrev .
the Netherlands , whom they way speeds for motorists could
D-Minn
., howe ve r.. said
have cut off for being allies of sa ve as many a s 14,000 lives .
Rep. Gerald F ord, R-Mich., Presid e nt N ixon ha s not
Israel, was extended to the
Lhe vi ce president-designate, proposed means to solve the
white regimes of South Africa
told a meeeting of th e problem that matc h the
and Rhodesia , and to Portugal,
seriousness · of tile thr eat as
whic h has territories in Africa .
explained by administration
BARBS
- The Interior Department
energy experts.
gave t he green light for initial
by l' llll.I'ASTOR ET
" ...They reported that unless
development of shale oil deposIt's a bou t Lime to go do wn voluntary conservation and the
its in Utah, Wyoming and
and
d raw out t ha t S2 we pul mandatory allocation system
Colorado. Secretary Rogers C.
away so ca refull y in th e SIOO works. we are go ing to have
B. Morton als&lt;J said he is ready
Christm as club.
rationing ," he said .
to issue a right-&lt;Jf-way permit
for the trans-Alaska pipeline,
Pre u ~· soon it will be t i nw
·.· ,. ..
"
but he wa rned that neither
for Gr.mdma to begin tlmwi ng
Chris tm as cookit•s.
possible som ce would provide
any fuel in time to help relieve
the current shortage . .
- A Uni ted Press Internationa l survey showed tha t
the na ti on's a irlin es a r e
planning drastic measures in
ca se they run short of jet fuel.
American Airlines will lay off
What to they do with a lithe
214 pilot s in J a nuary, a
pa r ts that neve r turn u.p in
spokesman said , and Uni ted
a sse mble · i.t ·you rs4.! If toy s .
Airlines announced immediate
Don ' t cr y over spil t milk.
layoffs of 300 pilots and 650
(Valu e s To $5.98)
'Th
e s tu ff 's t hi n e n o ug h
flight attendants as well as the
cancelation of 100 da ily !lights r a lready.
,.
ONLY
beginning Jan. 7.
Yd.
40,000 Could be Laid Off
GIV E PARTY
-Dov . Robert B. Docking of
Mr . and Mrs. John ·Lisle,
Many Beautiful
Kansas said as many as 40,000 P omeroy, enter tai ned Sunday
Match-Males
employes itt the aircraft indus ~ even ing with a fa mily party .
For
Christmas.
try and related concerns in his · honoring their son , Todd , on his
state could be laid off if fuel third birthday . A Cha rli e
allocations cut the supply for Brown cake was served with
ice cream . Guests were Mr .
.
I and Mrs . Roy J enkins, Keith
Lisle, Karen Johnson, Mr . and
Mrs. Herschel Manual, Mrs .
Florence Potts, Mrs. Jeannie
I Allen and Bri an , and Mr . and
·.A:..,~
I Mrs . Donald Li sle.
:A,W."
.

I

�10 - Th• Dall) S.ntmel Mtddl•porl PomerO\ 0

No• 29 19•3

Sentinel Classifieds Get R esu~t$1
Not1te

Sund•l School attendance on
Nov 25 "as 41 the offermg

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

$) 7 90

Worshtp ser\ tees v. ere held

at ll o clock '"th the Rev
Robert Meece speakmg fr om
Luke 10 Parabl• of the Good
Samarttan Attendance 'll. as
37 Offenng " as $41 95
Pledges were $35
ThanksglVmg guests of Mr
and Mrs Clarence Henderson
were her mother Edtlh Harper
of Tuppers ria ms and her
Sisler Bertha Wnght of Zanes
VIlle 0 Sunday guests \\ere
hts parents Mr and Mrs Lee
Henderson
Thanksgtvmg guests of Nma
Robmson and Clara Follrod
were Mr and Mrs Carleton
Follrod and Charles of
Pomeroy and Rose and Sue
Ann Follrod of Athens Sunday
guests were Mr and Mrs
Robert Robmson and famtly 01
Belpre 0
Garner
Griffin
spent
ThanksglVlng Day wtlh
relattves at Little Hockmg
Mr and Mrs Clarence
Henderson and Mr and Mrs

Lee
Henderson
vtstted
Mr and Mrs Sherman Hen
1

derson and Pamela Sunday

evemng
Thanksgtvmg dmner guests
of Mr and Mrs Vere Swartz
were Mr and Mrs Vernon
S\\artz and famtly
of
Hockmgport 0 and Rtchard
Swartz of Ravenna 0 who
st.oyed until Sunday Other
recent guests of the Swartzes
were Watd and Katle Swartz of
Athens Robert and Fanme
Bernard of Dutch Rtdge and
Mtllard Swartz, local
Mr and Mrs Dale Kuhn and
famtly of Little Hockmg Mr
and Mrs Terry Swartz and
Sandra Wtlhams and Mandte
were Thanksgtvmg guests of
thetr parents Mr and Mrs
Mtllard Swartz
ThanksgiVIng dmner guests
of Mr and Mrs Wtlham Carr
and famtly were her mother
Hilda Whtte of Keno, and Mr
and Mrs Clair Woode and
Conm of Ctrclevtlle 0 The
Carrs VISited her father
Robert Whtte at Veterans
Hosptt.ol Saturday
Mr and Mrs James Burke of
MISSISSippi VISited Ruby Burke
till Frtday, Mr and Mrs
Wtlham Burke of Flonda ltll
Saturday and Mr and Mrs
Ronme Burke of Cambndge 0
till Sunday All came due to the
death of thetr brother and
father, Thomas Burke A
daughter was born to another
son and wtfe Mr and Mrs
Michael Burke, Pomeroy R D
on Thanksgtvlng day
Mr and Mrs Albert Hoffner
of Pomeroy called on the
Wtlltam Carr family Thanks
gtvmg mornmg, thetr great
aunt Eva Fmlaw of Lancaster
had passed away
Thanksgtvmg weekend
guests of ~nevteve Guthne
were Mr and Mrs Delbert
Yost and famtly and Ella Yost
of Sugar Grove 0
Mr and Mrs Gerald Swartz
and famtly of Mar~ett.o 0 Mr
and Mrs Harold Swartz and
famtly of Wtlhamstown W
Va and Robert Robmson of
Belpre were ThanksgiVIng
dmner guests of Mr and Mrs
Hobart Swartz
Mr and Mrs Clarence
Atherton and family of Long
Bottom spent ThanksgiVIng
Day w1th thetr parents Mr
and Mrs Arthur Ather1on
Rabbtt-hunting for the men
and their guests was the order
of the day m thiS area for
ThanksgiVIng Day
Mr and Mrs Charles D
Woode attended the Chesler
Hymn Smg at Tuppers Plams
U M Church Saturday
evemng

Mason Area

News, Notes

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

1970 CHEVELLE MALIBU
4 door gold f n sh spotless dean

$.1695
V 8 eng ne

n1er or
~utom a f• c power steermg radiO A honey o1 3 buy

1970 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill
$1295
4 door V 8 automat c power stee r ng rad•o good t r es
blue f n sh spot less mtenor

•

1970 DODGE POLAR A
11195
.:1 door fa ctory a r
automatic tran sm ss on
power
s tee r ng &amp; brakes good wh•le wall l1res wh t e fm s h

Btll Wade Auclloneer
Are You Movmg&gt;
Cons•dermg
An Auctton&gt;
B&amp;G Auc t 1on Athen s 0
w1ll pay &lt;:ash 1or your ent r e
household or any good
m sce llaneous 1 t em~ or w II
ho ld an auction lor you at
your res dence rea sonable
You II hke our competent
depe ndable servtce
Call Athens Oh10

593 5035 Collecl

v1nyl r oo t rad o heavy duty sus pens o n

C AMPER !ru c k top Call

p "

after~

aA7 :nh

IY/'J CHEVY

"! Jtc

Blazer and
wMeel dr Ye 4 speed tr ans
m ss on
removable top
excellent cond 1 on Call 992
7105 after " p m
t1 284tc
K 5

TWO 14 nch wh eels and t re s
Call 74? 5377 ~25
11 283 tp
LOSE we gh t w th New Sha pe
Tablets and Hydrex Water
P lis at Dunon Drugs
n
M ddleport and N elson Dr ug
112731P
TWO 735 x 1.4 snow t res used
one se a son S30 Phone 985
382 4 Chester
1\2741C

KO SC OT K.OSMETICS &amp; WIGS
Spec1ats each month we w II
qladly snow you our I ne of EXCEL SIOR Salt Works E
Kosme l cs n the pr va cy of
Man Sf Pomeroy All k.nds
your home at you r con
of salt water pelle ts water
yen ence Remember Chr sl
nuggets block sal t and own
mas s not far away so phone
Oh o R ver Sail Phone 99 2
He en Jane Brown 992 5113
38 91
11 9 tf c
6 5 ttc

NOTICE
HAVE YOUR trophy moun ed

deer h ead s sm a ll an mal s
and b rd s H o wa rd B rc h f eld
Mu lbe rry Stre et Rut l and
~hone 742 68 34
11 2611 C

--------

-- --

N O H U NTING or tre spaSSing on
our farms day or n ght Dal las
DeBord and Go l d1e Wyant
Rt 4 Pomeroy
1115 61 (
PIANO tun no &amp; re o a n Q
Lane Dan1els 259 Bra dw ay
M1ddleport
PI on e 99 1 2082
111 8121p
--------~:._

___ _

NO HUNTING or trespass ng on
my farm n Ball Run Dale
L1ttle
11 256tp
F LETCHER P ano Se rv ce
Tun ng &amp; Repa r Call 698
7731
11 6 26tp

GUARANTEED FAMilY INCOME
Stephen

C

S53 Russell St
(Gravel HtiD
Middleport Ohto
Phone 992 7155

Snowden .
UATI !AIM

St.Jte f&lt;Hm life Insurance Compan~
Hwrp Qlf,cr Bloomlf&gt;(Jion, llllno s

Laurel Cliff
News Notes
BY BERTHA PARKER
Sabhath School attendance
Nov 25 at the Free MethodiSt
Church was 97 Morntng of
fermg was $44 60
TheW M s wtll meet Dec 4
7 30 p m m church basement
Rev Vtrgtl Ktrkpatrtck
South Afnca mtsstonary WI11
speak at the local church Dec 7
at 7 30 p m
Mrs John Story Mrs
Mtldred Ryan Columbus Mr
and Mrs Wtlham Perry
Athens Mr and Mrs Norman
Schaefer were ThanksgiVIng
day guests of Mr and Mrs
Vern Story and son John
Mr and Mrs Phtll WISe
McConnelsville
attended
mornmg servtces at the local
church Sunday
Mr and Mrs Wtlham
Jacobs Columbus spent the
weekend wtth Mr and Mrs
Pearl Jacobs and attended
church services Sunday
mormng

Mrs Georgta Dtehl grand
son Charles Anthony Dtehl
Vlstled over ThanksgiVIng wtth
Rev and Mrs Lewis Arvm
Dtehl near Cleveland
Mrs Dora Holley recently
VISIted fr~ends m Columbus
Mrs Thomas Dorst and
chtldren, Mtlan spent the
weekend wtth Mr and Mrs
James Gthnore
Rev Robert Buckley wtll be
speaking over WMPO 10 15
a m
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday first and second
weeks of December
Mrs Kathy Pulhns IS a
pattent m Holzer Medtcal
Center
Mr and Mrs Ernest Powell
Mr and Mrs Ivan Powell,
Harnsonvtlle road vtstted
Sunday wtlh Mrs Georgta
Dtehl

GAME RESET
DETROIT (UPl ) - The
Mr and Mrs Walden Roush Detrott Ptstons have an
of New York new here and nounced the Oct 10 game
spent Thanksgtvmg wtth her agamst Golden State which
parents Mr and Mrs Fred was canceled JUS! mmutes
Spencer m Mason and with his after the start due to a shppery
parents Mr and Mrs Walden floor has been reset by the
Nattonal Basketball
F Roush m PI Pleasant
Holiday guests of Mr and ' Assoctalwn for March II
The rescheduhng of the
Mrs John Marshall mcluded
Mr and Mrs Phtlhp Smtih and game means the PIStons and
daughters Stephame and Warrwrs will meet on con
Patty Jo Mrs Judy Persmger secutive mghis March II and
Carlene and Johnny all of 12 m Detrott
Columbus Mrs Helen Fell of
and Mrs Jack Johnson and
Pomeroy
family of Glendale W Va
Thanksgtvmg guesis of Mr
and Mrs Kenneth Reynolds Mr and Mrs Rtchard Roush
and famtly mcluded Mr and and famtly AddiSon, Ohw Mr
and Mrs Joey Roush and
Mrs Landon Smtih Mr.s
family,
Columbus Mr and
Eddte Russell Joyce Russell
and Eddte Jr Russell all of Mrs Larry Roush and son
New Haven, Mr and Mrs
West Columbia
Guests of Mr and Mrs Robert Gtbbs and famtly
Lawrence Roush on Thanks Syracuse OhiO Mr and Mrs
giVIng Day mcluded all of the Jack Fox and famtly Clifton
farmly except Ronald Roush Mr and Mrs Gary Harbour
who is stationed m Gemany Barbersville W Va Mr and
'lltoee present mcluded Mr Mrs Mike Roush Pt Pleasant

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 PM Day Before PublicatiOn
Monday Dead I ne 9 am
Ca n cel l al o n - Correct ons
w 1ll be accepted unt I 9 am for
Day of Pub li ca! on
REGULATIONS
The P u b I she r reserves !h e
r ght to ed 1 or re1ec1 any ads
deemed
ob1ect anal
Th e
publ sher w II not b e re spon
s ble for more than on e n
correct msert on
RATES
For Want Ad Scrv1ce
5 cen t s per Word one nsert on
M n1mum Charge $1 00
14 cents per word lhree
conse c ut ve nsert ons
26 c ents per word s x con
secul ve nsert ons
25 Per Cent D scount on pa d
ads and ad s pad w th n 10
days
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$2 00 for 50 word m n
.mum Each add I anal wor d

3c

BLIND ADS
Add tonal 25c Charge per
Advert semen!
OFFICE HOURS
8 30 a m to 5 00 p m Da ly
8 30 a m
to 12 00 Noon
Saturday

In Memory
IN

MEMORY of Henry R
E c h nger
who
d ed
November 29 1967 We are
thankfu l to have shared our
1 ves w th him even th ough 1t
was for such a short t me
Wife Opal Ch ldren Charles
DenniS Dona ld Laura Jean
112911(

IN LOVI NG memory of George
Nesselroad Sr who passed
away
four
years
ago
November 29
The world may change from
year to year
And fr ends from day to day
But memory of the one we oved
W I never fade away
Sad I y m ssed by w fe
cM1 Idren and grandch ldr en
112911p

Card of Thanks
WE WISH to express our thanks
lo the re la t ves neighbors
and fr ends for flowers and
k ndness at the loss of our
w fe and mother Laura E
sc nes A spec a\ tlianks to
Or J J Dav1s as a tr end and
do ctor JoMn H Sc n es Son
cnarles Daughters Coradell
Ruth
Mary Rose
Laura
Jane
11 29 ltp

Lost

--------------K NAPP Shoes order no w to

BLUE T IC K coon hound n
v c n ty of K ngsbury SlOO
---------~-Reward Phone 99? 6959
11 25 6tp 1973 ZIG ZAG sew ng mach ne
Th s mach ne darns
em
bra der s
over c ast s
an d
monog ra ms a ll w Ill out at
ta ch ments Pay ba lance of
U
l 50 or pay $6 a month Ca ll
FARM w th good house W II
992
533 1
pay $150 per month Cal l 83 7
10 21 tf c
839 1 or wr te Odel l Ba l l 3320
Arnsby Road Co ltJmbus OM o
8 TRA CK stereo console due to
43227
damage n sh•pment W1 11 setl
11 28 6t c
for sma ll balan ce of S99
or
paym enfs
of
$6 99
WANTED old upr •ghl p•anos
p er month Call 992 5331
any cond ton
Pay ng $10
each Wr le g ve d reef ons lo
11 4 ti c
W tten P ano Com pany Box
188 Sard s Oh o 43946
11 28 61p 1973 ZlG ZAG sew ng mach ne
Take over 8 payments of 55 25
per month or d scount tor
COR NER c upboards
wall
cas h Call 992 5311
11 4 He
cupboards chests old guns
any co nd ton
A l so b l ue
decorated stoneware Wr te SA LT FOR IC E AND SNOW
p 0
Box .4.4 Mart nsburg
Ro c k sal t for townsM ps
Oh o 43935 or ca l l 1 484 4440
tow ns and blJS nesses 1n
after 7 p m
btJiks and bags for ce and
8 8 90tc
snow Ex ce l s or Sat Works
Phon e 992 3891
WANTED
for
auct on
household goods Tools most
anyth ng of value W II buy or BRUSH HOGS 4x5 ft
phone
sell on comm ss on W II haul
992 5858
Call 992 3354 or 992 2792
1 15 tfc
Hayman s
1 25 tfc

Wanted To Buy

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

-------.---------OLD furnllure oak tables

LOTS of chrysanthemums for
sale f eld grown We only
clocks .ce boxes brass beds
have
one color - yellow 10
or
complete
d s hes
bunches for ss We have some
houseMa i ds
wr te M
D
out n full bloom some ust
M ller Rt 4 Pomeroy Oh o
budd•ng Reyno lds Flower
call 992 6271
Shop Mason w va Ca ll 77 3
5 13 tfc
5147
- - - - - ----'------9 26 tfc
STEEL cast r on etc Call 985
4297
WE HAVE all your upholstery
112511C
needs
Burlap
den m
cambr• C foam g l ue z ppers
tack ng stnp
spr ngs and
cl ps
c h•pboard
button
tw ne sew mg thread
egs
WANTED for Holzer Med cal
upholstery books dacron
cen ter Oh o L censed h gh
webb ng spr ng tw ne tacks
pressure bo l er Operator
welt cord
cotton
sw ve
App ly n person at the per
bases and foam foam foam
sonnel ott ce or cal l 446 5105
Pomeroy Recovery 622 E;ast
11 27 3tc
Man Str eet Pomeroy Phone
992 7 554
CAR hop wanted also k tchen
ll 2026tc
help Apply n person Crows
Steak House
11 27 10tc

Help Wanted

EVERYBODY
Shops the

WANT AD WAY

Nottce

Employment Wanted

For Rent

______ __

____________

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

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

----------

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

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

-------------For Rent or Sale

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

I

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55
Most Amencan Cars

On

- GUARANTEE~

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

WOOD TRUSSES
or

~ ;.
HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

Open 8 Ttl s
Monday thru Saturday
lro06 E . Mam , Pom erov. 0

MATERIALS CO
17l·SSS4 . Mason, W. Va.

__ _____ __,
Johmes Beauly
Salon
NOV SPEC
\12 SO Perm For
Re q Hatr $8 so

------------992 7474

THURSDAY NOV

Lmcoln Htll Pomeroy 0

Pa1ntmg A Spectalty
Area s Most
Reasonable Prtces

All work guaranteed

CBS Plavhouse 90 10
FRIDAY NOV 30, 1973

6 00 6

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

PRICE
CONSTRUCTION•
Roofing Spoullng
Kttchens &amp; Bathrooms
Complete Remodeling

6
6

6
6
7

992 2094
606 E Mam Pomeroy

7

8

OffiCE SUPPLIES

8

8
9

and

Johnson Masonry
&amp; ( Remodehng)

FURNITURE

PHONE

992 7608

742-6273

FREE EST

'

Stop In and See Our
Floor Dtsplay :.

9

9
10

Sunnse Semtnar 4 Sa cred Heart 10
15 - Consumers World 10
20 - Farm Report 13
25 - Paul Harvey 13
30 - Columbus Today 4 B ble Answers 8 Blue R1dge Quartet
13 News 6
.tS - Corncob Report 3 Farmttme 10
00 - Today 3 .:1 15 CBS News 8 10 Fl l ntstones 13 Romper
Room 6
30 - Rocky &amp; Bullwmkl~ New Zoo Revue6
00 - Capt K&lt;mgaroo 8 10 Sesame St 33 Lass1e 6 New Zoo
R:evue 13
30 - Huck &amp; Yog1 6 D1ck Van Dyke 13
55 - News 13
00 - Paul Dixon 4 Phil Donahue 15 Friendly Junctton 10
AM 3
Brady Bunch 6 Abbott &amp; Costello 8
Movte
Arrowneed 13
30 - To Tell the Truth 3 Mu;haels &amp; Co 6 Secret Storm 8
55 - Chuck Whtte Reports 10
00 - DlnahShore3 15 Joker sWlld8 10

10 30 - Baffle 3 4 1S 110 000 Pyram1d 9 10 Mike Douglas 6
AUTOMOBILE msurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
operators 1 cense can 992
7428
6 15 tfc

For the Lowest
t tre t'nces

-

G &amp; E appliance repa1r Phone
at the sh op 992 3802 or 949
4254
ll 26 26tp

m the Area
ll's

------------DEAD S OCK II remove

1
W
at a reasonable charge Call
245 5514
23 90tc

NEW HAVEN
DISCOUNT TIRE

a

THE SHOP
To Our Customers
Please
call
for
ap
po 1ntment to get your Beef or
P g processed
Effect ve th s year all deer
processed
$20 00 Plus Pork
All deer have to be sk nned
and tagged before we can
accept
Call These
Numbers Please
Otck Vaughan
Dale ltftle
992 337 4
992 3884

For Sale
GROCERY bus ness for sa -c
Bu ld ng for sale or lease
Phone 773 5618 from 8 JO p m
10 10 p m for appointment
3 20 ttc
-------------~-

11 00 - GambttB 10 Password13 Wlzardof0dds3 .t 15
11 30 - Hollywood Squares 3 4 15 Brady Bunch 13 Bowlmg 6
....
Love of L1fe B 10 Sesame St 33
11 55 - CBSNewsB Dan I mel sWorld10
12 00 - Jeopardy 3 15 Bob Brauns 50 SO Club 4 New s 8 10 13
Password 6
12 30 - J W s Game 3 15 Search for Tomorrow 8 10 Split
Second 6
12 45 - Elec Co 33

EX
Radla
From the laraest
Bulldozer Radiator to
~ ma11esr H eater Lor~
Nathan B1ggs
Radtator Spectahst

New Haven W Va

882 2817

0 DE LL AI nement work can be
done by appo ntment only at
pre sen t t me due to llness n
fam ly
Phone
for
ap
po ntment 742 3232
11 251fc

------=---=--

SEWING MACHINES Repa ir
serv ce all makes 992 2284
The Fabr c Shop Pomeroy
Authorized S nger Sa les and
Serv ce We Sharpen Sc ssors
3 29 tfc
RON SHEPARD Floo r
Wa ll
Remodel ng CeramIC t le
baths Bo)l 280 Rut l and 742
3664
6 26 tfc
WIL L tr m or cu t tre es and
shrllbbery
A so cl ean out
basements all cs etc Call
949 322 1 or 7.:12 4441
11 21 JOtc

197 3 STEREORado co m
bmat on w th 8 track bu It n
take over payments of $7 55
per month or pay $101 50 Ca I
992 5331
10 21 tf c

12 55 - NBC News 3 15

1 00 - News 3 All My Children 6 13 Not For Women Only 15
What s My line 10 Concentration a

I 30 - 30naMatch3 415

SMITH NELSON
,-MOTORS. INC.

Ph ~92 2174

2 00 - Oats of Our L ves 3 4 15 Newlywed Game 6 13
Gu ding 1ght 8 10
2 30 - Doctors 3 4 15 Edge of N1ght 8 10 G1rl m My Ltfe 6 13
3 00 - Another World 3 4 15 General Hospital 6 13 Pnce 1s
R•ght 10 Lock Stock &amp; Barrel20 V1rgin1an 8
3 30 - Return to Peyton Pla ce 3 15 One Ltfe to Live 13 Secret
Storm 10 Match Game 8 Phil Donahue 4 F11ntstones 6
Handsfu I of Ashes 20
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesame St 20 33 love
Amencan Style 13 Speed Rac er 6 Lucv Show A Mov1e
Flve Against the House 10
4 30 - vreen Acres 3 Jeopardy 4 Hazel 8 Gilligan s Island 13
I love Lucy 6 Santa Claus 15
5 00 - M ister Rogers 20 33 Bonanza 15 3 Merv Grlffln 4
Andy Griffith 8 I Dream of Jeann1e 13 Mlss1on lmposstble

Pomeroy

C BRADFORD Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949 3821
Racine Oh 0
Cntt Bradford
1 tfc

s

--------------EXCAVATING dozer loader
and backhoe work
septic
tanks Installed dump trucks
and lo boys for hire will haul
t 11 d rt top so I I mestone
and gravel Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers day phone 992 7089
n ght phone 992 3525 or 992
5232
2 11 tiC

uP EN
koger
Hysell s
Garage near Crossroads on
S1 Rl 124 all mechan1cal
work nclud ng automat • ._
transm ss ons Monday th!'u
Sat a 30 a m to 6 p m Phone
992 5682 garage or 992 7121
res1dence
10 28 26tc

"

6

5 30 5
6

~

6

7

,

7

•
8

-----------

SEPTIC
TANKS
AROBJC
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS - CLEA NED
REPAIRED
FOR FREE est mates on
MILLER
SANITAT ION 1
alum num s ding
Storm
STEWART O HIO PH 662
Doors and W ndows
Car
3035
\
ports Marquees and Ra llng
1o .:1 tfc
PMone
Charles
Lisle'
Syracuse Ohio Carl Jacob
It s Snow Ttre Ttme'
Sales Representat ve V V
ELNA and Wh te Sewmg
Johnson and Son In c
Mach nes
Serv ce on alt
6 22 tfc
makes Reasonab(e rates
The Se w.ng Center
M1d
--------~
READY MIX
CONCRETE
dleport Oh o
del vered r•ght to your
11 16 lfc
prolect Fast and easy Free
Postflve Stop and Go In Mud
est mares Phone 992 3284
&amp; Snow
P &amp; J Heatm~ool ng Gas or
Goegle1n Ready MIK Co
Fuel 0 I
!lave many
M ddleport Oh o
ALL SIZES IN STOCK
f urnace par
'd plumb ng
6 JO tfc
parts for 10 p O't .. above cos t
2 5 N sec ond M ddlcport
Let Us Install Now 1
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
992 3509
REASONABLE
rates Ph ~6
.,___
10 31 30tc
4782 Gall pols John Rllss'ell
SUPER SERVICE STA
Owner and Operator
9 ... _ Jack W Carsey Mgr DOZER and back hoe work
5 12 tfc
T6iil Phone 992 9932
ponds and sept c tanks d t
ch ng serv ce top so 1 f II
SEPTIC
TANK S cleaned
drt
lmes tone
B&amp;K
Modern San tat on 992 3954 or
Esccwat ng Phone 992 5367 or
992 7349
992 3861
10 23 tfc
9 1 tfc
1972 175 KAWASAKI for gu tar
ampl fer Phone 992 727.0
11 27 61C HARRISON S TV serv ce and
s.erv ce calls PMone 992 2522
2 9 tfc

-....-----

9

____

30 - Odd Couple 13 Marshall News Meeting 33 Roll Out 10

Glrl w1th Somethmg Extra 3 15 French Chef20
9 00 - Masterp1ece Theater 33 Room 222 13 Slx W1ves Henry
...
Vlll6 Mov1e In Cold Blood 8 Movie Woman Obsessed

"
3
" ' ~=~;:-;;;;=;=-:;=.

WIN AT BRIDGE

Dormouse plays relaxed defense
"•

NORTH

Auto Sales

Real Estate For Sale

.86532
• 10 7 6 4
+K 7

____________ _

DISPERSAL
SALE
New Homes To Be

28

SOLD
At
USED
and
REPOSSESSED
PRICES
To make room for the
many
new
umts
arnvtng tn Jan , 1974.
DELAYED
DELIVERY
AVAILABLE
Wtth the excepllon of a
small depostt

NO MONEY
NEEDED UNTIL
JANUARY 1974
1 YEAR

GUARANTEE
BEST SERVICE
IN
OHIO VALLEY

MILLER
HOMES
DOWNTOWN
BELPRE
OHIO

of

All worked, until they were overworked, m thetr ltme
I thmk I've stumbled on the sure-frre long-runrung, cant
lose hit whtch I sub1111t to you and anyone else who may be m
U!resU!d
The Dr Perry Mason Comedy Hour 1
Dr Mason, played by Jerry LewiS, IS a lawyer who prachces
medtcme or maybe tt sa doctor who pracllces law
ThiS means a htgh level of tensiOn ln etther the courtroom or
the operatmg room each week, and sometimes m both as doctor
lawyer Mason draws on his umcanny medical skills to wm hal
flmg court cases, and also delivers lectures on avotding mal
prachce suits bel\\een suturmg an aorta and reducmg a frac
lured clavtcle
But to keep thiS from getting too gmn, he has fatthful fnends
- mcludmg the recepttomsts m hts two offtces In hiS law offiCe,
his secretary IS a madcap redhead, played by Lucille Ball, who
keeps flhng loris wtlh tarts and other pastrtes, and organtzmg
tmpromptu song-and-dance acts among people wattmg to see the
doctor er, lawyer
In hls medical offtce his recephomst IS the show's obligatory
black Moms Mabley, who has soul food sent mto the watting
room at noon dally, and refers to most of his pahents (or clients)
as hankies '

Morns and Lucille are great fr1ends, of course, and about
once a season they actually get to help Dr Mason solve a crtme
or perform an operahon Both harbor a great deal of affection for
Dr Mason's hatd·workmg young tdealisttc assiStant Columbo
Kildare played by Brtan Ketth Ketth s a real sharpte, too
because he has a gang of loveable.IJut-Bhrewd children, roaffilng
the streets as a typtcal slum gang, but really a secret operative
agency for the forces of mceness, and played by the Partridge
Family
Dr Mason usually IS the central ftgure of each show, along
wtth the supporting cast mentioned above However, he has other
semt-regulars on the programs, such as the htlanous hospttal
admmiSirator played by Dom DeLuiSe, who liiSISis on watchmg
delicate operations, but can't gel hiS mask and gloves off- so he
hides the torn remnants m a pattent And then there s the nononsense pohce lieutenant, portrayed by Carol Burnett, who IS a
militant women s bb advocate and a medtcal school dropout
herself Her spectalty IS telling dtrty Jokes to JUtleS and mU!rns
Story Ideas are endless, such as the case m which Dr Mason
fmds an 88 mm shell m the abdomen of a supposed SUICide
V!Citm, or the latf-rwt when attorney Mason proves that a college
professor accused of a ftendtShly·dever murder couldn I have
comrmtU!d the crtme because he had had a pre !ront.ollobotomy
a month before the crtme
Wtth all the JOkes generated by his secretaries assoctates,
and those adorable Partrtdge kids, Dr Perry Mason (Jerry
LewiS) generally plays tt stratght - except for an occas10nal
episode when he leis himself go and has a showdown m an
abandoned bakery, throWIIIg lemon-mermgue ptes at an arch
crmunal, played by Dean Martin
Every angle - rnedacme, law, sttuatlon comedy, relevant
jokes- is covered, except the Western motif I forgot that, but I
think we 11 open each show With Dr Mason facmg a htretl gun
slmger m the mtddle of a dusty, clapboarded Western street In
thiS regular sequence the gunman goes for his '"'"hooter, but
Dr Perry Mason IS qutcker He haulS out a hypodernuc needle
and sprays his foe wtth Mace, pausmg only to read him his
r.()nstitutional nghts before wtpmg him out
9 30 - Bnan Ke1th 3 4 15 Adams Rib 13
10 00 - Love Amencc;~n Style 6 13 News 20 Washmgton Week
m Rev1ew 33 The Blue Knu::~ht 3 4 15

'

Virgins Not Exhncl Teens
Rap
Which RAP letter brought the most response last month ' Ttm
Tim

by THOMAS JOSEPH

The gtrl who wrote What Is a Vtrgm' and stgned herself
'One of an Almost Extinct Species ' htl the jackpot on our
response meter Consensus was Vtrgm teenagers are deflmtely
NOT extmct, and you can have fun wtthout the games once you
shed the tdea that you re the only hold&lt;Jut
Here are some of the better letters

ACROSS

3 Be
1mmment

1 Attlc 5 Wmme
the Pooh
creator

4 Sawbuck
5 Andrett1

s

of auto

racmg
fame

10 Plant

+++

11 Vocat1on

Dear Helen and Sue
12 Seem
One of an Ahnost Extinct Spectes" - ISII t 1
uncndmg
( 3 wds)
I m a vtrgm and I know many more' I have a great
14
Pitcher
s
relattonshtp wtth qmte a few guys In fact, most of my fnends are
asset
guys and I'm far from a tomboy They look at me (and my 15 Geramt s
ftgure) and say Hey I
beloved
OAES IS dead wrong about havmg to Sit at home weekends I 16 Counter
tenor
go to those so-ealled ''wild parties,' and fmd a lot of thmgs to do
17
All guys aren't the the bed or bored" types, believe me We do 20 Inqutre
AmmOS it~
crazy fun things, talk on any toptc ktd around, enJOY life and 23 Gtocon
each other s company, somet1111es discuss problems
da s Sui
CJdiO
Bemg a vtrgm doesn t mean you're dtscrmunated agamst I
eg
lmow many guys who respect a gtrl for 1t - they feel different
24 Rome
about sex than the way they act - and they conSider your
(2 wds )
feelmgs At lot of them aren't all that aruuous to get a heavy thmg 26 Thames
gomg that they nught not be able to control
estuary
27
Buyer
It's an mU!restmg and beautiful expertence to know you can
28
Mthtary
t.olk to a boy on a one.to-one basiS and fmd he underst.onds - and
address
hkes you there because YOU understand, too
(abbr )
If a g1rl doesn't wear her v~rguuty as a halo, and show shld's 29 Boundary
afratd all boys are JUSt panting to knock 11 off she won't have to 30 Thmg
frowned
Sit home on Saturday mght - RESPECTED VIRGIN

8 Born

Yesterday's

(Fr )
9 Go wrong
11 Opposed

22 Character

31
32
33
34
35

m Quo
Vad1s
23 Skm

13 Crtmmal

16 Israeli

cond1hon

port
17 Barren

25 Pretend

Stubby
20 Rockfish
21 On

Texture

Nether
commune

(2

19 Danny or

Prank
Presently
Bugbear
lands

wds )
29 Mush
room
30 Italian

18 Locate

Answer

36 Prefixm

German
names
37 Put on

rtver

lkJ -J.J.I-~

31 Phtltp
pme tree

34 Perpetual
( 2 wds)

38 Vener

,_,.

ated

39 Fragrance

40 Kmdof

by HENRI ARNOI 0 ' ""1 1100 l l tc

code

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square to
form four ordmary words

41 Not

a btl
DOWN

I TAW/.2

1 Heroic

I l

narrative

J

I [

I

!I
"

2 Indo
nes1an
tsland

I

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

[J

Is
AFTE!i: T~EATMENT.
1-105PITA~ PATIENT?
AI&lt;:Ei 6XPEC.TED TO 60
TOWAI&lt;:D THIS WA!i:D

I I J

~

100
stotmkL

(colloq)

Rap
The people 1 hang out wtth aren't hung-up about havmg sex
on every date We don t condemn others but we re waiting for
mamage Meanwhile we have a great time at our weekly

UGUTOD
~ l
Lh_ A

see red

1

upon

+++

JJWJWIDiblE ;-

6 Cau sed to

I. I.

One letter s1mply stands for another In thts sample A is
used for the three L s X for the two 0 s etc Single letters,
apostrophes the length and formation of the words are all

hn\ts Each day the code letters are different
CRYPTOQUOTES
RCFM RJF CFG RCFM OZRJF

Now arrange the mcled letten
to fonn th~ aurpnse answer, u

EZENVCB

suggested by the above cartoon

~I~~==tlle::::SU~RPII~ISE~ANSWIR~hln==,l ''( I I I I I I J"

PQJM
CBJ

(A-wen tomorrow'
Jumblet MACAW
An~,.er

PANSY

OPENLY

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

JUPJJR,

CBJ

SFZOF

FZP

INP

FZP -FXKZVCU

JFTZM

IJKCNUJ

JJKCNUJ

PWJM

KQCRLZBP

Yeoterda,y'• Cf'1pto.auole. A MAN OF FIFl'Y LOOKS AS
OLD AS SANTA CLAUS TO A GIRL OF TWENTY -WU..
LIAM FEATHER

MURMUR

lndmed It! nse to a /uglier let.-'Cl-A RAMP

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE
8UTWWY

WOUL.D
TilEY
I.EAVE

.14
• 85

3
+A64

SOUTH
• Q92
+9 53
Norlh Suuth vulnerable

Wesl

Norlh

•• r

3N

East

South

1•

2N T

Pass

Pass

$0 WHAT5
THE POifJT OF
GRABBING HSR:
r.JOW BEFORE
5 1-IE:S CUI&lt;ED
2

TUPPERS PLAINS -

engme
4 speed
Contact
Henry H II Barber sMop m
Pomeroy
ll 27 3tp
.._

Mobile Homes For Sale

epidemic

i

dances and many get.f.ogethers Yes we belong to a church, but
we don't use our soctal functions for IIIISStonary work We Sllllply
try to assoctate wtth people who have the same values and we
have much fun at the same time
• One of an Ahnost Extinct Spectes should try our crowd A:J
you said, Helen you meet a lot of great teens 111 church or
rehgwus groups thes(days - MIKE

8) Oswald &amp; •ames Jacoby

-------------1957 cHEVY 2 dr hardtop 283
1970 GTO Ram A r IV PS PB
a r cond
new t res
low
mileage Phone {304) 992 2993
11 28 6tp

a veritable

Generation Rap

-:;-:

• A 1063
• AKJ

__ ____________

TRUCKS 1968 R Model
Maxdyne $8 000 also 1968 F
Model Maxdyne S5 500 Call
(614) 962 3024 or 962 5299
11 25 6tc

currently.

~:,~,:::::~~~::::::::::::::~:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·::·:·:•:•:,,:.;•:•l&gt;•:•:•:•Y&gt;:·g..&amp;' ....

+QJIOR2
WEST
EAST
• 54
.KQJ98

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

MALE poodle puppy
black
m n ature Phone 992 5858
1113tfc

and

..

• Q109

Real Estate For Sale

MOBILE home repaar
Elec
1rlca1 pltJmb ng and heat ng
Phone 992 5858
_..
7 15 lfc

29

comedies
polle«:rune shows

sttuat1on

~

»::":-:::: :.=:;::;::;.:o..

• 72

For Sale or Trade

Pets For Sale

101

BY PAUL CRABTREE
We all know that televlSJon shows run tn cycles There was a
penod of medical shows
an era of Westerns
an age of

U':«

+ AKJ

________ _

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

Elec Co 33 Gomer Pyle 13 Hodgepodge Lodge 20

Beverly Hillbillies 8 Trails West 15
55 - Earl Night i ngale 15
00 - News 3 4 8 10 13 6 15 Sesame St 20 Adlenan
Counsel1ng Techmques 33
30 - News 3 4 6 8 10 15 Hogans Heroes 13
00 - Truth or Conseq 3 6 Beat the Block 4 News 10 What s
My Lme 8 Wild Kmgdom 13 Elec Co 20 I Spy 15 Course of
Our T1mes 33
30 - Beat the Clock 13 Porter Wagoner J To Tell the Truth6
Concentration 8 New Treasure Hunt 10 Wall Street Week
20
Johnny Manns Stand UP. and Cheer 15
College
Basketball 4 How Do Your Ch1ldrPn Grow JJ
00 - Washmgton Week 1n Revtew 20 Sanford &amp; Son 3 4 15
Caluccl s Dept 8 Santa Claus 1s Com.ng to Town 6 13 A
Closer Look at Football10 Sounds of Joy 33

n

CO.OP COUNTRY
SQUIRE 120

&amp; THINGS

29 1973

6 00 - New s 3 4 6 8 10 15 Sesame St 10 Ltlias Yoga &amp; You
J:l ABC News 13
6 30 - NBC News 3 4 lS ABC News 6 CBS News 8 10
Hogao s Heroes 13 Your Future ls Now 33
7 00 - Truth or Conseq 3 6 Beat the Clock 4 What s My Lme
8 Elec Co 20 Lets Make A Deal 13 News 10 Vmce L•m
bardt Sctence &amp; Art of Football33 Call of the West 15
7 30 - Hollywood Squares J W1ld Kmgdom 10 Beat the Clock
13 Lookmg Ahead 33 Sale of the Century 4 To Tell the Truth
6 Ozz1e s G1rls 8 Johnny Mann s Sland Up &amp; Cheer t5
Handsful of Ashes 20
8 00 - Waltons 8 0 Flip W1l son 3 4 15 Jacques Cousteau 6
13 Behmd the Lmes 20 33
9 00 - Off the Record 20 lron st de 3 .t 15 Kung Fu 6 13 Men
Who Made the Mov tes 33 Movte The Pumpkm Eater 8

Ph 992 5271

Bu 11tto Your Specs.
Oehvered to Job Stte

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

Television Log

j

Gene's
Body Shop

ASK US ABOUT
PRE FABRICATED

Phone 992 2094

n sure pre Xmas del very
Phon e 992 5324
1118tfc

EXPERIEN C ED Men
and
Women - Men and women
W1lh sk Is that compare w th
N avy
occupat ons
may
qual fy for the Navy s D reel
Procurement Petty Off cer
Program ( Examp e Lath e
Ope rator s
Plumbers
Electr cans
Account ng
Cler k Carpenter Secretary
- - - - -- - - - etc ) Star lmg pay $392 to
WE WISH to express our thanks
$538 w tM hous ng allowance
to all ne1ghbors relat ves
from $122 to $161 per montn
fr ends emergency squads
plus free med.cal and dental
doctors nurses nurses a des
c omm ssa ry and P X benet t s
tMose send ng flowers foods
and al G 1 benef ts for n
cards and Me p n anyway
tam ly
Good
d v dual
Spec al thanks to Rev Zav tz
promo! ons travel educat on
Rev Larmore and Ew ng s
oppor.tun t es
and early
Funeral Home Mrs Howard
ret rement
Interested men
Largent and daugMIN
and women con tact the Navy
112 91tp
Recru t.ng
Sta t on
221
Co lumbu s Road
Athens COAL FOR SALE JAYMAR
COAL
COMPANY
THE
Oh o tel 593 3566
112l'J6tc
MEIGS &amp; GALLIA LINE
STATE
ROUTE
7
AT
SHOOTING Match Rae ne Gun
CHES HIRE OPEN 7 AM
Club Sunday December 2 1
TILL 6 30 PM 5 DAYS A
p m Assorted meats factory
WEEK PHONE9925693
choked guns only
11 26 5tc
WILL do sew ng n my home
11 28 3t c
Phone 992 5866
- - - - - - - -----~
11276tc
NEW LARGE reel n ng chars
GARAGE Sa le at 1126 East
m vlnyl matenal buy now or
Ma n
Street
Pam eroy
lay away for CMr lstmas Onlv
Mostly w nler cloth ng s zes 1 CARPENTER work masonry
$89 95 Sw ¥el rockers n
work general remodel ng by
to 15 Wednesday Thursday
hour or con tra ct Phone 993
Yelvet nylon and pr nts that
Fr day November 28 29 30
11 28 31C
3511
make a wonderful 91ft for'
11226tp
your w fe Only \69 95 All
1tem s casM and carry or 60
NOVELTY Fabr c Sho p 230
day
lay away
Pomeroy
wash ngton S l vd
Belpre MINI BACKHOE serv ce Also
Recovery
622 E
Ma1n
Oh1o Polyester kn ts $2 .49
waterlmes footers trenches
Pomeroy Phone 992 755.4
per yard sweater terry kn Is
Charles R Hatf1eld Route 1
112026tc
Sl 29 per yard New sM pment
Rutland Oh o
Phone 742
of craft supples complete
6092
1 ne of Necch
Wh te and
11 13 18tp UPHOLSTERY Fabr cs by the
yard 54 nches w de as low as
Nat onal Sew ng Ma'M nes
$1 95 per yard velvets as low
open Sund ays 1 t II 5 Oa ly 10
as $3 45 Imported velvets
111 7 p m til Chrstmas
$9 95 We also nave nylon
11 28 Me
hercu lon
cotton
pr nts
v nyls and remnants by the
$200 REWARD for nformatmn V\OBILE Home n M ddleport
yard or by the p ece Pomeroy
f\ d t s nn \
oa,one 992 5592
lead ng to the arres t and
Recovery
622 East Man
1 1 "::: 6
conv ct on of person or per
r v n c v, P o t! oo? 7t;54
sons who damaged the r ght
l12026tc
front fender of my 1969 black FURNISHED two bedroom
Ford L TO on Nelson Road
mobile Mome for rent 1n
Rutland Oh o The car was
Rutland Call even ngs or FOA M to f II your old couch and
cha r cus h ons as low as
parked on the s de of the road
Sunday 992 J-429
$10 95 Upholstery books only
Phone Carl Morns Rutland
11256fp
50c
4 nch covered foam
742 4691
mattresses for standard s ze
11273tc
.__
$15 AND UP 4 sleep ng room s
bed
$29 95
Pomeroy
w th k tchen and I v ng room
Recovery
622 E
Man
REVIVAL at Chester Church of
Clean and private New and
Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
God November 25 to Dec 2
modern TV and
car pel
11...__
20 26tc
7 30p m Spec al s ng ng each
throughotJt
baths
w th
even•ng
EvangeliSt Rev
showers Mason 773 5580
Chester
Estep
from
NEEDLE
SEW ING
ll256tp TWIN
Ch lllcothe Oh o Everybody
MACHINES 1973 Model m
welcome
walnut stand
All features
11 27 5tc PRIVATE meetng room for
bu
It
n
to
make
fancy
des gns
any organ zat on pMone 992
and do stretch sewing Also
3975
buttonMoles blind hems etc
FLOWERS for Chnstmas to~
3 11 tfc
$43 34 cash price or terms
tMe home decor at on Sprays
- -=-==.=-==------- --- ~
ava lable Phone 992 298.4
wreaths
pots baskets for 3 AN 0 4 ROOM furntshed and
11 25 5tc
ceme tery Also lots of g fts
unturn shed
apartments
Sm alley s G ft Shop Ches ter
Phone 992 5434
VACUUM CLEANERS Electro
Oh o Phone 985 :1537
4 12 tfc
Hyg ene New Demonstrators
11296tc
has all clean ng attacMments
KJ.I.ILt:K
Mason
N
Va
plus tMe new Electro Suds tor
SHOOTING
Match
Corn
coup le only phone 992 5693
shampooing carpet
Only
Hollow Gun Club Turn f rst
11 16 tfc
S27 50 cash pnce or terms
r ght after Miles Cemetery
--------~-- avallable Phone 992 2984
Rutland
Factory choked -SMALL tra ler deal tor couple
11 25 5tc
guns only Sunday December
10 m les north of Pomeroy
-- -------~---2 1 p m
S75 per month Call 992 7479 STEREO - Am Fm Rad10 8
)1 29 3tc
11 23 tfc
track tape combmat on 4 way
speaker
sound
system
DUE to II health The Court
Balance $107 52 or vse our
Street Cab w1ll go out Qf FURNISHED housetra ler for
budget terms Call 992 3965
rent Prefer construct on men
bus ness tMe lOth of December
11255tc
only
L nens
laundered
f not sold Will sacr f ce for
Contact after d 30 p m
$5 500 Call 992 7116 Thanks
weekly except Saturday and STA RCRAFT 1974 Tra1lers and
for all the patronage over the
Su nday
Helen
R1ggs
Fold Downs SpeCh)l Christ
past years
11298tp
Rutland Oh o
mas pr•ces CAMP CONLEY
11 27 6tp
STAR CRAFT SALES RT 62
N of Pont Pleasant Beh nd
SHOOTING Match Forked Run
Red Carpet Inn 675 5384
Sportsman Club noon Sun
11 29 3tc
day Factory Choked Guns
only
3 BEDROOM house w th bath Auto Sales
11293tc
recreat on room ut I tv room 1972 GRAND Torino Sport V 8
and washroom
carport
automatic
PS
P B mag
SHOOTING Match Horner H II
ca rpeting 1n 1 11 ng room also
wheels new t1res ¥ery good
Gun Club Rt 143 Sunday
electr c range 1618 Lincoln
cond t1on See Roger Rous)l or
Dec
7 12 noon
Factory
He ghts
Available Dec
1
phone 247 3551
cho k ed guns only
Call 9&lt;~9 2891
11 29 3tc
1129Jtc
!l276tc

-----------

Services
Business
..
.

For Sale

I

1 11- The Daily S.ntmel,Mlddleport Pomeroy, 0, Nov 2!1 1973

TAXI BUSINESS ,...._ 3 cabs 1n
good cond tton 2 have power
Pomeroy Locahon
$6500 00
35 ACRES - 4 bedroom home
bath basement wtth garage
and
two
barns
Ask ng

117 500 00

SYRACUSE -

2 bedrooms

bath
n ce
k tchen
full
basement and large garden

Only $9 500 00
POMEROY N1ce sturdy
older home w1lh 3 bedrooms
batt&lt; central heat and a1r
Modern kitchen wtfh large
d ntng 2 porches and 2 car
garage

NEW LISTING - 2 bedroom
bungalow bath new gas fa
furnace Full basement and
mce lot for only $10 000 00

BIG THINGS WILL SOON
BEGIN TO HAPPEN IN THE
COUNTY
BUY
NOW
BEFORE ITS TOO LATE WE
HAVE MANY GOOD BUYS
HI 1 f N I
'·•··I&lt;:'I)"J 1',

'I ,.·,1

(1f.'l"·

'I .\I r·,IJ('

{ 1 •, ',1_ 1r I,'_ I

&lt;

992 -3325 or
9Q2 .Jb 15
TWO bedroom house at 47:1
Sycamore Street m M1d
dleport vacant Call 992 5310
112126tc
2 BEDROOM house 3 years old
carpet ng b g k1tchen w th
tots of cab nets 12 acre of
ground Racme Oh•o Call
949 4998
9 12 lfc
6 ROOMS and bath m town '
s 11 000 Call 992 3975- or 992
2571
9 28 tfc
SMALL house
completely
furniShed
Bachelors h de
away Phone 992 5786
11277tc

-------------I

1

slory frame 3 bedrooms
bath
dmmg room
nice
k1tchen all electnc garage
and covered breezeway 1
acre 1 year old and hard
wood floors $19 000 00

POMEROY -

Just out of

town
2 story frame
4
bedrooms bath paneling
and ttle some carpettng
coal
heat
1 36
acre

$9 500 00
SYRACUSE - 2 years old 3
bedroo,-ns
bath
utll1ty
room k1tchen has lots of
cab nets and range
mce
dm1ng
area
hardwood
floors
carpeted m liv1ng
room and hall All electrtc
Carport
and
storage

$21 000 00

NEW RT 7 1 1/~ acres 2
wells =~pproved for sept1c
anks Ideal for homes or
railers Blacktop road m

t

1

$4 500 00
POMEROY __,. 2 story frame
2 bedrooms new bath new
furnace and hot water tank
range in kttchen
some
carpeting
Basement w1th
Ullllly $6 500 00

HAVE
A
SELLING
PROBLEM' LET US HELP
YOU
HENRY E CLELAND
BROKER
992 2259
If no answer 992 2568

INFORMATION ABOUT:

Here we are back at the
Mad Hatter s bndge party 111
Wonderland
1 he dot mouse Slltmg East
had awaken long enough to
overcall the Hatters opemng
club btd and had lapsed back
mto somnolence wh1le the
March Hare b1d two notrump
and was 1 atsed to game by
the Hatter
Ahce opened the ftve of
spades The deuce was play
ed !1om dummy and there
v. as the dormouse asleep
agam They prodded htm He
sttrred yawned and played
the nme
The March Hare won wtth
the 10 and led a low club
Altce hopped up wtlh the kmg
and want of anythmg better
to do led her last spade
There was the dormouse
asleep agam
Wakened agam he played
the etght of spades South
ducked but the dormouse
needed no further prods He
led another spade smce there
was no way to keep htm from
gettmg m wtth the ace of
• clubs and wmdmg up wtth a
total of three spade trtcks
CurJOuser and cunouser •
thought Ailee I wonder tf he
was really asleep Had he
played one of hiS htgh spades
at triCk one South would
have ducked and we would
have had no way to beat the
contract

STEREO
92.1 FM
WMPO
~ddleport-Pomen&gt;y

-

&amp;HE&amp; CERTAINLY
BECOME ATTACHED
10 lll'\T IN!i'\NT I

AND 11'~ A JOY10

eEE WINNIE lOOKING
eo WELL eiNCE 'THAT
6115Y CAME: INlO
HER LIF!;I

liN CREDQll'{ 1',;
w.l~il.\'t&gt; -p ~

STRN~DI

ALLEY OOP
I'D !.&amp;AI' AT THE

WEU.

CHANCE, IF I WJ&gt;51:T
l'l'.PECTED IN HAWA! I

THE

IRD

I&lt;JW KINDA LOOKS LIKE

ELSE MIGHT BE
MAKIN TI&lt;~KS INSTEAD
OF US DOESN'T IT?

SOMEBOI)'o(

10 CROWN THE"PlNE

APPLE QUEEN'- _ _,.,

us

~TE

INE:WSI APEH ENTEHPHISE ASSN

JOB OPPORTUNITIES
SOCIA~ SECURITY
CONSUMER PROTECTION

AND
GREAT COUNTRY .

YE&amp;ITWA&amp;
NICE ID HAVE 1HE
1WIN5 HOMe FOR
lHANIGeiVINel

PAW-HAVE 'IE
29

The btdd mg has been
t

Wes&amp;

Nor&amp;h

1+
34
3•

East

Sou&amp;h

Pass
Pass
Pass

1'

SEEN LEETLE
JU6HAII) &gt;

HE S OUT 'iONDER IN
TH WOODS WORKIN ON
THAT RllHMATIC TEST
HE'S GOf TO~'I()_RI'V

I RECKON TH' LEETLE
FELLER WOZ LOOKIN

FER PEACE AN QUIET
SO S HE COULD STUDY
REAL

HE 5 LOOK IN FER
FOUR LEAF CLOVERS
THAT COI!NTS

SENSE OF IXIIN6

IF '(I)V CAN'T WIN'

3+
Pass
Pass
?
You South hold
• K J 6 5 'K 8 3 2 +K 10 4
3
l
What do you do now?

1

I

l

•s

A - Bid three notrump Year
par&amp;ner cant have rour 1p11dh
or he would have bid &amp;hem u 1111
~cond

.. u

-

'

(

I D ~VRE LIKE TO PI.AII

Tf&lt;AT TEAM

FRa~

TAIWAN 1

�10 - Th• Dall) S.ntmel Mtddl•porl PomerO\ 0

No• 29 19•3

Sentinel Classifieds Get R esu~t$1
Not1te

Sund•l School attendance on
Nov 25 "as 41 the offermg

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

$) 7 90

Worshtp ser\ tees v. ere held

at ll o clock '"th the Rev
Robert Meece speakmg fr om
Luke 10 Parabl• of the Good
Samarttan Attendance 'll. as
37 Offenng " as $41 95
Pledges were $35
ThanksglVmg guests of Mr
and Mrs Clarence Henderson
were her mother Edtlh Harper
of Tuppers ria ms and her
Sisler Bertha Wnght of Zanes
VIlle 0 Sunday guests \\ere
hts parents Mr and Mrs Lee
Henderson
Thanksgtvmg guests of Nma
Robmson and Clara Follrod
were Mr and Mrs Carleton
Follrod and Charles of
Pomeroy and Rose and Sue
Ann Follrod of Athens Sunday
guests were Mr and Mrs
Robert Robmson and famtly 01
Belpre 0
Garner
Griffin
spent
ThanksglVlng Day wtlh
relattves at Little Hockmg
Mr and Mrs Clarence
Henderson and Mr and Mrs

Lee
Henderson
vtstted
Mr and Mrs Sherman Hen
1

derson and Pamela Sunday

evemng
Thanksgtvmg dmner guests
of Mr and Mrs Vere Swartz
were Mr and Mrs Vernon
S\\artz and famtly
of
Hockmgport 0 and Rtchard
Swartz of Ravenna 0 who
st.oyed until Sunday Other
recent guests of the Swartzes
were Watd and Katle Swartz of
Athens Robert and Fanme
Bernard of Dutch Rtdge and
Mtllard Swartz, local
Mr and Mrs Dale Kuhn and
famtly of Little Hockmg Mr
and Mrs Terry Swartz and
Sandra Wtlhams and Mandte
were Thanksgtvmg guests of
thetr parents Mr and Mrs
Mtllard Swartz
ThanksgiVIng dmner guests
of Mr and Mrs Wtlham Carr
and famtly were her mother
Hilda Whtte of Keno, and Mr
and Mrs Clair Woode and
Conm of Ctrclevtlle 0 The
Carrs VISited her father
Robert Whtte at Veterans
Hosptt.ol Saturday
Mr and Mrs James Burke of
MISSISSippi VISited Ruby Burke
till Frtday, Mr and Mrs
Wtlham Burke of Flonda ltll
Saturday and Mr and Mrs
Ronme Burke of Cambndge 0
till Sunday All came due to the
death of thetr brother and
father, Thomas Burke A
daughter was born to another
son and wtfe Mr and Mrs
Michael Burke, Pomeroy R D
on Thanksgtvlng day
Mr and Mrs Albert Hoffner
of Pomeroy called on the
Wtlltam Carr family Thanks
gtvmg mornmg, thetr great
aunt Eva Fmlaw of Lancaster
had passed away
Thanksgtvmg weekend
guests of ~nevteve Guthne
were Mr and Mrs Delbert
Yost and famtly and Ella Yost
of Sugar Grove 0
Mr and Mrs Gerald Swartz
and famtly of Mar~ett.o 0 Mr
and Mrs Harold Swartz and
famtly of Wtlhamstown W
Va and Robert Robmson of
Belpre were ThanksgiVIng
dmner guests of Mr and Mrs
Hobart Swartz
Mr and Mrs Clarence
Atherton and family of Long
Bottom spent ThanksgiVIng
Day w1th thetr parents Mr
and Mrs Arthur Ather1on
Rabbtt-hunting for the men
and their guests was the order
of the day m thiS area for
ThanksgiVIng Day
Mr and Mrs Charles D
Woode attended the Chesler
Hymn Smg at Tuppers Plams
U M Church Saturday
evemng

Mason Area

News, Notes

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

1970 CHEVELLE MALIBU
4 door gold f n sh spotless dean

$.1695
V 8 eng ne

n1er or
~utom a f• c power steermg radiO A honey o1 3 buy

1970 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill
$1295
4 door V 8 automat c power stee r ng rad•o good t r es
blue f n sh spot less mtenor

•

1970 DODGE POLAR A
11195
.:1 door fa ctory a r
automatic tran sm ss on
power
s tee r ng &amp; brakes good wh•le wall l1res wh t e fm s h

Btll Wade Auclloneer
Are You Movmg&gt;
Cons•dermg
An Auctton&gt;
B&amp;G Auc t 1on Athen s 0
w1ll pay &lt;:ash 1or your ent r e
household or any good
m sce llaneous 1 t em~ or w II
ho ld an auction lor you at
your res dence rea sonable
You II hke our competent
depe ndable servtce
Call Athens Oh10

593 5035 Collecl

v1nyl r oo t rad o heavy duty sus pens o n

C AMPER !ru c k top Call

p "

after~

aA7 :nh

IY/'J CHEVY

"! Jtc

Blazer and
wMeel dr Ye 4 speed tr ans
m ss on
removable top
excellent cond 1 on Call 992
7105 after " p m
t1 284tc
K 5

TWO 14 nch wh eels and t re s
Call 74? 5377 ~25
11 283 tp
LOSE we gh t w th New Sha pe
Tablets and Hydrex Water
P lis at Dunon Drugs
n
M ddleport and N elson Dr ug
112731P
TWO 735 x 1.4 snow t res used
one se a son S30 Phone 985
382 4 Chester
1\2741C

KO SC OT K.OSMETICS &amp; WIGS
Spec1ats each month we w II
qladly snow you our I ne of EXCEL SIOR Salt Works E
Kosme l cs n the pr va cy of
Man Sf Pomeroy All k.nds
your home at you r con
of salt water pelle ts water
yen ence Remember Chr sl
nuggets block sal t and own
mas s not far away so phone
Oh o R ver Sail Phone 99 2
He en Jane Brown 992 5113
38 91
11 9 tf c
6 5 ttc

NOTICE
HAVE YOUR trophy moun ed

deer h ead s sm a ll an mal s
and b rd s H o wa rd B rc h f eld
Mu lbe rry Stre et Rut l and
~hone 742 68 34
11 2611 C

--------

-- --

N O H U NTING or tre spaSSing on
our farms day or n ght Dal las
DeBord and Go l d1e Wyant
Rt 4 Pomeroy
1115 61 (
PIANO tun no &amp; re o a n Q
Lane Dan1els 259 Bra dw ay
M1ddleport
PI on e 99 1 2082
111 8121p
--------~:._

___ _

NO HUNTING or trespass ng on
my farm n Ball Run Dale
L1ttle
11 256tp
F LETCHER P ano Se rv ce
Tun ng &amp; Repa r Call 698
7731
11 6 26tp

GUARANTEED FAMilY INCOME
Stephen

C

S53 Russell St
(Gravel HtiD
Middleport Ohto
Phone 992 7155

Snowden .
UATI !AIM

St.Jte f&lt;Hm life Insurance Compan~
Hwrp Qlf,cr Bloomlf&gt;(Jion, llllno s

Laurel Cliff
News Notes
BY BERTHA PARKER
Sabhath School attendance
Nov 25 at the Free MethodiSt
Church was 97 Morntng of
fermg was $44 60
TheW M s wtll meet Dec 4
7 30 p m m church basement
Rev Vtrgtl Ktrkpatrtck
South Afnca mtsstonary WI11
speak at the local church Dec 7
at 7 30 p m
Mrs John Story Mrs
Mtldred Ryan Columbus Mr
and Mrs Wtlham Perry
Athens Mr and Mrs Norman
Schaefer were ThanksgiVIng
day guests of Mr and Mrs
Vern Story and son John
Mr and Mrs Phtll WISe
McConnelsville
attended
mornmg servtces at the local
church Sunday
Mr and Mrs Wtlham
Jacobs Columbus spent the
weekend wtth Mr and Mrs
Pearl Jacobs and attended
church services Sunday
mormng

Mrs Georgta Dtehl grand
son Charles Anthony Dtehl
Vlstled over ThanksgiVIng wtth
Rev and Mrs Lewis Arvm
Dtehl near Cleveland
Mrs Dora Holley recently
VISIted fr~ends m Columbus
Mrs Thomas Dorst and
chtldren, Mtlan spent the
weekend wtth Mr and Mrs
James Gthnore
Rev Robert Buckley wtll be
speaking over WMPO 10 15
a m
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday first and second
weeks of December
Mrs Kathy Pulhns IS a
pattent m Holzer Medtcal
Center
Mr and Mrs Ernest Powell
Mr and Mrs Ivan Powell,
Harnsonvtlle road vtstted
Sunday wtlh Mrs Georgta
Dtehl

GAME RESET
DETROIT (UPl ) - The
Mr and Mrs Walden Roush Detrott Ptstons have an
of New York new here and nounced the Oct 10 game
spent Thanksgtvmg wtth her agamst Golden State which
parents Mr and Mrs Fred was canceled JUS! mmutes
Spencer m Mason and with his after the start due to a shppery
parents Mr and Mrs Walden floor has been reset by the
Nattonal Basketball
F Roush m PI Pleasant
Holiday guests of Mr and ' Assoctalwn for March II
The rescheduhng of the
Mrs John Marshall mcluded
Mr and Mrs Phtlhp Smtih and game means the PIStons and
daughters Stephame and Warrwrs will meet on con
Patty Jo Mrs Judy Persmger secutive mghis March II and
Carlene and Johnny all of 12 m Detrott
Columbus Mrs Helen Fell of
and Mrs Jack Johnson and
Pomeroy
family of Glendale W Va
Thanksgtvmg guesis of Mr
and Mrs Kenneth Reynolds Mr and Mrs Rtchard Roush
and famtly mcluded Mr and and famtly AddiSon, Ohw Mr
and Mrs Joey Roush and
Mrs Landon Smtih Mr.s
family,
Columbus Mr and
Eddte Russell Joyce Russell
and Eddte Jr Russell all of Mrs Larry Roush and son
New Haven, Mr and Mrs
West Columbia
Guests of Mr and Mrs Robert Gtbbs and famtly
Lawrence Roush on Thanks Syracuse OhiO Mr and Mrs
giVIng Day mcluded all of the Jack Fox and famtly Clifton
farmly except Ronald Roush Mr and Mrs Gary Harbour
who is stationed m Gemany Barbersville W Va Mr and
'lltoee present mcluded Mr Mrs Mike Roush Pt Pleasant

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 PM Day Before PublicatiOn
Monday Dead I ne 9 am
Ca n cel l al o n - Correct ons
w 1ll be accepted unt I 9 am for
Day of Pub li ca! on
REGULATIONS
The P u b I she r reserves !h e
r ght to ed 1 or re1ec1 any ads
deemed
ob1ect anal
Th e
publ sher w II not b e re spon
s ble for more than on e n
correct msert on
RATES
For Want Ad Scrv1ce
5 cen t s per Word one nsert on
M n1mum Charge $1 00
14 cents per word lhree
conse c ut ve nsert ons
26 c ents per word s x con
secul ve nsert ons
25 Per Cent D scount on pa d
ads and ad s pad w th n 10
days
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$2 00 for 50 word m n
.mum Each add I anal wor d

3c

BLIND ADS
Add tonal 25c Charge per
Advert semen!
OFFICE HOURS
8 30 a m to 5 00 p m Da ly
8 30 a m
to 12 00 Noon
Saturday

In Memory
IN

MEMORY of Henry R
E c h nger
who
d ed
November 29 1967 We are
thankfu l to have shared our
1 ves w th him even th ough 1t
was for such a short t me
Wife Opal Ch ldren Charles
DenniS Dona ld Laura Jean
112911(

IN LOVI NG memory of George
Nesselroad Sr who passed
away
four
years
ago
November 29
The world may change from
year to year
And fr ends from day to day
But memory of the one we oved
W I never fade away
Sad I y m ssed by w fe
cM1 Idren and grandch ldr en
112911p

Card of Thanks
WE WISH to express our thanks
lo the re la t ves neighbors
and fr ends for flowers and
k ndness at the loss of our
w fe and mother Laura E
sc nes A spec a\ tlianks to
Or J J Dav1s as a tr end and
do ctor JoMn H Sc n es Son
cnarles Daughters Coradell
Ruth
Mary Rose
Laura
Jane
11 29 ltp

Lost

--------------K NAPP Shoes order no w to

BLUE T IC K coon hound n
v c n ty of K ngsbury SlOO
---------~-Reward Phone 99? 6959
11 25 6tp 1973 ZIG ZAG sew ng mach ne
Th s mach ne darns
em
bra der s
over c ast s
an d
monog ra ms a ll w Ill out at
ta ch ments Pay ba lance of
U
l 50 or pay $6 a month Ca ll
FARM w th good house W II
992
533 1
pay $150 per month Cal l 83 7
10 21 tf c
839 1 or wr te Odel l Ba l l 3320
Arnsby Road Co ltJmbus OM o
8 TRA CK stereo console due to
43227
damage n sh•pment W1 11 setl
11 28 6t c
for sma ll balan ce of S99
or
paym enfs
of
$6 99
WANTED old upr •ghl p•anos
p er month Call 992 5331
any cond ton
Pay ng $10
each Wr le g ve d reef ons lo
11 4 ti c
W tten P ano Com pany Box
188 Sard s Oh o 43946
11 28 61p 1973 ZlG ZAG sew ng mach ne
Take over 8 payments of 55 25
per month or d scount tor
COR NER c upboards
wall
cas h Call 992 5311
11 4 He
cupboards chests old guns
any co nd ton
A l so b l ue
decorated stoneware Wr te SA LT FOR IC E AND SNOW
p 0
Box .4.4 Mart nsburg
Ro c k sal t for townsM ps
Oh o 43935 or ca l l 1 484 4440
tow ns and blJS nesses 1n
after 7 p m
btJiks and bags for ce and
8 8 90tc
snow Ex ce l s or Sat Works
Phon e 992 3891
WANTED
for
auct on
household goods Tools most
anyth ng of value W II buy or BRUSH HOGS 4x5 ft
phone
sell on comm ss on W II haul
992 5858
Call 992 3354 or 992 2792
1 15 tfc
Hayman s
1 25 tfc

Wanted To Buy

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

-------.---------OLD furnllure oak tables

LOTS of chrysanthemums for
sale f eld grown We only
clocks .ce boxes brass beds
have
one color - yellow 10
or
complete
d s hes
bunches for ss We have some
houseMa i ds
wr te M
D
out n full bloom some ust
M ller Rt 4 Pomeroy Oh o
budd•ng Reyno lds Flower
call 992 6271
Shop Mason w va Ca ll 77 3
5 13 tfc
5147
- - - - - ----'------9 26 tfc
STEEL cast r on etc Call 985
4297
WE HAVE all your upholstery
112511C
needs
Burlap
den m
cambr• C foam g l ue z ppers
tack ng stnp
spr ngs and
cl ps
c h•pboard
button
tw ne sew mg thread
egs
WANTED for Holzer Med cal
upholstery books dacron
cen ter Oh o L censed h gh
webb ng spr ng tw ne tacks
pressure bo l er Operator
welt cord
cotton
sw ve
App ly n person at the per
bases and foam foam foam
sonnel ott ce or cal l 446 5105
Pomeroy Recovery 622 E;ast
11 27 3tc
Man Str eet Pomeroy Phone
992 7 554
CAR hop wanted also k tchen
ll 2026tc
help Apply n person Crows
Steak House
11 27 10tc

Help Wanted

EVERYBODY
Shops the

WANT AD WAY

Nottce

Employment Wanted

For Rent

______ __

____________

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

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

----------

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

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

-------------For Rent or Sale

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

I

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55
Most Amencan Cars

On

- GUARANTEE~

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

WOOD TRUSSES
or

~ ;.
HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

Open 8 Ttl s
Monday thru Saturday
lro06 E . Mam , Pom erov. 0

MATERIALS CO
17l·SSS4 . Mason, W. Va.

__ _____ __,
Johmes Beauly
Salon
NOV SPEC
\12 SO Perm For
Re q Hatr $8 so

------------992 7474

THURSDAY NOV

Lmcoln Htll Pomeroy 0

Pa1ntmg A Spectalty
Area s Most
Reasonable Prtces

All work guaranteed

CBS Plavhouse 90 10
FRIDAY NOV 30, 1973

6 00 6

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

PRICE
CONSTRUCTION•
Roofing Spoullng
Kttchens &amp; Bathrooms
Complete Remodeling

6
6

6
6
7

992 2094
606 E Mam Pomeroy

7

8

OffiCE SUPPLIES

8

8
9

and

Johnson Masonry
&amp; ( Remodehng)

FURNITURE

PHONE

992 7608

742-6273

FREE EST

'

Stop In and See Our
Floor Dtsplay :.

9

9
10

Sunnse Semtnar 4 Sa cred Heart 10
15 - Consumers World 10
20 - Farm Report 13
25 - Paul Harvey 13
30 - Columbus Today 4 B ble Answers 8 Blue R1dge Quartet
13 News 6
.tS - Corncob Report 3 Farmttme 10
00 - Today 3 .:1 15 CBS News 8 10 Fl l ntstones 13 Romper
Room 6
30 - Rocky &amp; Bullwmkl~ New Zoo Revue6
00 - Capt K&lt;mgaroo 8 10 Sesame St 33 Lass1e 6 New Zoo
R:evue 13
30 - Huck &amp; Yog1 6 D1ck Van Dyke 13
55 - News 13
00 - Paul Dixon 4 Phil Donahue 15 Friendly Junctton 10
AM 3
Brady Bunch 6 Abbott &amp; Costello 8
Movte
Arrowneed 13
30 - To Tell the Truth 3 Mu;haels &amp; Co 6 Secret Storm 8
55 - Chuck Whtte Reports 10
00 - DlnahShore3 15 Joker sWlld8 10

10 30 - Baffle 3 4 1S 110 000 Pyram1d 9 10 Mike Douglas 6
AUTOMOBILE msurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
operators 1 cense can 992
7428
6 15 tfc

For the Lowest
t tre t'nces

-

G &amp; E appliance repa1r Phone
at the sh op 992 3802 or 949
4254
ll 26 26tp

m the Area
ll's

------------DEAD S OCK II remove

1
W
at a reasonable charge Call
245 5514
23 90tc

NEW HAVEN
DISCOUNT TIRE

a

THE SHOP
To Our Customers
Please
call
for
ap
po 1ntment to get your Beef or
P g processed
Effect ve th s year all deer
processed
$20 00 Plus Pork
All deer have to be sk nned
and tagged before we can
accept
Call These
Numbers Please
Otck Vaughan
Dale ltftle
992 337 4
992 3884

For Sale
GROCERY bus ness for sa -c
Bu ld ng for sale or lease
Phone 773 5618 from 8 JO p m
10 10 p m for appointment
3 20 ttc
-------------~-

11 00 - GambttB 10 Password13 Wlzardof0dds3 .t 15
11 30 - Hollywood Squares 3 4 15 Brady Bunch 13 Bowlmg 6
....
Love of L1fe B 10 Sesame St 33
11 55 - CBSNewsB Dan I mel sWorld10
12 00 - Jeopardy 3 15 Bob Brauns 50 SO Club 4 New s 8 10 13
Password 6
12 30 - J W s Game 3 15 Search for Tomorrow 8 10 Split
Second 6
12 45 - Elec Co 33

EX
Radla
From the laraest
Bulldozer Radiator to
~ ma11esr H eater Lor~
Nathan B1ggs
Radtator Spectahst

New Haven W Va

882 2817

0 DE LL AI nement work can be
done by appo ntment only at
pre sen t t me due to llness n
fam ly
Phone
for
ap
po ntment 742 3232
11 251fc

------=---=--

SEWING MACHINES Repa ir
serv ce all makes 992 2284
The Fabr c Shop Pomeroy
Authorized S nger Sa les and
Serv ce We Sharpen Sc ssors
3 29 tfc
RON SHEPARD Floo r
Wa ll
Remodel ng CeramIC t le
baths Bo)l 280 Rut l and 742
3664
6 26 tfc
WIL L tr m or cu t tre es and
shrllbbery
A so cl ean out
basements all cs etc Call
949 322 1 or 7.:12 4441
11 21 JOtc

197 3 STEREORado co m
bmat on w th 8 track bu It n
take over payments of $7 55
per month or pay $101 50 Ca I
992 5331
10 21 tf c

12 55 - NBC News 3 15

1 00 - News 3 All My Children 6 13 Not For Women Only 15
What s My line 10 Concentration a

I 30 - 30naMatch3 415

SMITH NELSON
,-MOTORS. INC.

Ph ~92 2174

2 00 - Oats of Our L ves 3 4 15 Newlywed Game 6 13
Gu ding 1ght 8 10
2 30 - Doctors 3 4 15 Edge of N1ght 8 10 G1rl m My Ltfe 6 13
3 00 - Another World 3 4 15 General Hospital 6 13 Pnce 1s
R•ght 10 Lock Stock &amp; Barrel20 V1rgin1an 8
3 30 - Return to Peyton Pla ce 3 15 One Ltfe to Live 13 Secret
Storm 10 Match Game 8 Phil Donahue 4 F11ntstones 6
Handsfu I of Ashes 20
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesame St 20 33 love
Amencan Style 13 Speed Rac er 6 Lucv Show A Mov1e
Flve Against the House 10
4 30 - vreen Acres 3 Jeopardy 4 Hazel 8 Gilligan s Island 13
I love Lucy 6 Santa Claus 15
5 00 - M ister Rogers 20 33 Bonanza 15 3 Merv Grlffln 4
Andy Griffith 8 I Dream of Jeann1e 13 Mlss1on lmposstble

Pomeroy

C BRADFORD Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949 3821
Racine Oh 0
Cntt Bradford
1 tfc

s

--------------EXCAVATING dozer loader
and backhoe work
septic
tanks Installed dump trucks
and lo boys for hire will haul
t 11 d rt top so I I mestone
and gravel Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers day phone 992 7089
n ght phone 992 3525 or 992
5232
2 11 tiC

uP EN
koger
Hysell s
Garage near Crossroads on
S1 Rl 124 all mechan1cal
work nclud ng automat • ._
transm ss ons Monday th!'u
Sat a 30 a m to 6 p m Phone
992 5682 garage or 992 7121
res1dence
10 28 26tc

"

6

5 30 5
6

~

6

7

,

7

•
8

-----------

SEPTIC
TANKS
AROBJC
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS - CLEA NED
REPAIRED
FOR FREE est mates on
MILLER
SANITAT ION 1
alum num s ding
Storm
STEWART O HIO PH 662
Doors and W ndows
Car
3035
\
ports Marquees and Ra llng
1o .:1 tfc
PMone
Charles
Lisle'
Syracuse Ohio Carl Jacob
It s Snow Ttre Ttme'
Sales Representat ve V V
ELNA and Wh te Sewmg
Johnson and Son In c
Mach nes
Serv ce on alt
6 22 tfc
makes Reasonab(e rates
The Se w.ng Center
M1d
--------~
READY MIX
CONCRETE
dleport Oh o
del vered r•ght to your
11 16 lfc
prolect Fast and easy Free
Postflve Stop and Go In Mud
est mares Phone 992 3284
&amp; Snow
P &amp; J Heatm~ool ng Gas or
Goegle1n Ready MIK Co
Fuel 0 I
!lave many
M ddleport Oh o
ALL SIZES IN STOCK
f urnace par
'd plumb ng
6 JO tfc
parts for 10 p O't .. above cos t
2 5 N sec ond M ddlcport
Let Us Install Now 1
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
992 3509
REASONABLE
rates Ph ~6
.,___
10 31 30tc
4782 Gall pols John Rllss'ell
SUPER SERVICE STA
Owner and Operator
9 ... _ Jack W Carsey Mgr DOZER and back hoe work
5 12 tfc
T6iil Phone 992 9932
ponds and sept c tanks d t
ch ng serv ce top so 1 f II
SEPTIC
TANK S cleaned
drt
lmes tone
B&amp;K
Modern San tat on 992 3954 or
Esccwat ng Phone 992 5367 or
992 7349
992 3861
10 23 tfc
9 1 tfc
1972 175 KAWASAKI for gu tar
ampl fer Phone 992 727.0
11 27 61C HARRISON S TV serv ce and
s.erv ce calls PMone 992 2522
2 9 tfc

-....-----

9

____

30 - Odd Couple 13 Marshall News Meeting 33 Roll Out 10

Glrl w1th Somethmg Extra 3 15 French Chef20
9 00 - Masterp1ece Theater 33 Room 222 13 Slx W1ves Henry
...
Vlll6 Mov1e In Cold Blood 8 Movie Woman Obsessed

"
3
" ' ~=~;:-;;;;=;=-:;=.

WIN AT BRIDGE

Dormouse plays relaxed defense
"•

NORTH

Auto Sales

Real Estate For Sale

.86532
• 10 7 6 4
+K 7

____________ _

DISPERSAL
SALE
New Homes To Be

28

SOLD
At
USED
and
REPOSSESSED
PRICES
To make room for the
many
new
umts
arnvtng tn Jan , 1974.
DELAYED
DELIVERY
AVAILABLE
Wtth the excepllon of a
small depostt

NO MONEY
NEEDED UNTIL
JANUARY 1974
1 YEAR

GUARANTEE
BEST SERVICE
IN
OHIO VALLEY

MILLER
HOMES
DOWNTOWN
BELPRE
OHIO

of

All worked, until they were overworked, m thetr ltme
I thmk I've stumbled on the sure-frre long-runrung, cant
lose hit whtch I sub1111t to you and anyone else who may be m
U!resU!d
The Dr Perry Mason Comedy Hour 1
Dr Mason, played by Jerry LewiS, IS a lawyer who prachces
medtcme or maybe tt sa doctor who pracllces law
ThiS means a htgh level of tensiOn ln etther the courtroom or
the operatmg room each week, and sometimes m both as doctor
lawyer Mason draws on his umcanny medical skills to wm hal
flmg court cases, and also delivers lectures on avotding mal
prachce suits bel\\een suturmg an aorta and reducmg a frac
lured clavtcle
But to keep thiS from getting too gmn, he has fatthful fnends
- mcludmg the recepttomsts m hts two offtces In hiS law offiCe,
his secretary IS a madcap redhead, played by Lucille Ball, who
keeps flhng loris wtlh tarts and other pastrtes, and organtzmg
tmpromptu song-and-dance acts among people wattmg to see the
doctor er, lawyer
In hls medical offtce his recephomst IS the show's obligatory
black Moms Mabley, who has soul food sent mto the watting
room at noon dally, and refers to most of his pahents (or clients)
as hankies '

Morns and Lucille are great fr1ends, of course, and about
once a season they actually get to help Dr Mason solve a crtme
or perform an operahon Both harbor a great deal of affection for
Dr Mason's hatd·workmg young tdealisttc assiStant Columbo
Kildare played by Brtan Ketth Ketth s a real sharpte, too
because he has a gang of loveable.IJut-Bhrewd children, roaffilng
the streets as a typtcal slum gang, but really a secret operative
agency for the forces of mceness, and played by the Partridge
Family
Dr Mason usually IS the central ftgure of each show, along
wtth the supporting cast mentioned above However, he has other
semt-regulars on the programs, such as the htlanous hospttal
admmiSirator played by Dom DeLuiSe, who liiSISis on watchmg
delicate operations, but can't gel hiS mask and gloves off- so he
hides the torn remnants m a pattent And then there s the nononsense pohce lieutenant, portrayed by Carol Burnett, who IS a
militant women s bb advocate and a medtcal school dropout
herself Her spectalty IS telling dtrty Jokes to JUtleS and mU!rns
Story Ideas are endless, such as the case m which Dr Mason
fmds an 88 mm shell m the abdomen of a supposed SUICide
V!Citm, or the latf-rwt when attorney Mason proves that a college
professor accused of a ftendtShly·dever murder couldn I have
comrmtU!d the crtme because he had had a pre !ront.ollobotomy
a month before the crtme
Wtth all the JOkes generated by his secretaries assoctates,
and those adorable Partrtdge kids, Dr Perry Mason (Jerry
LewiS) generally plays tt stratght - except for an occas10nal
episode when he leis himself go and has a showdown m an
abandoned bakery, throWIIIg lemon-mermgue ptes at an arch
crmunal, played by Dean Martin
Every angle - rnedacme, law, sttuatlon comedy, relevant
jokes- is covered, except the Western motif I forgot that, but I
think we 11 open each show With Dr Mason facmg a htretl gun
slmger m the mtddle of a dusty, clapboarded Western street In
thiS regular sequence the gunman goes for his '"'"hooter, but
Dr Perry Mason IS qutcker He haulS out a hypodernuc needle
and sprays his foe wtth Mace, pausmg only to read him his
r.()nstitutional nghts before wtpmg him out
9 30 - Bnan Ke1th 3 4 15 Adams Rib 13
10 00 - Love Amencc;~n Style 6 13 News 20 Washmgton Week
m Rev1ew 33 The Blue Knu::~ht 3 4 15

'

Virgins Not Exhncl Teens
Rap
Which RAP letter brought the most response last month ' Ttm
Tim

by THOMAS JOSEPH

The gtrl who wrote What Is a Vtrgm' and stgned herself
'One of an Almost Extinct Species ' htl the jackpot on our
response meter Consensus was Vtrgm teenagers are deflmtely
NOT extmct, and you can have fun wtthout the games once you
shed the tdea that you re the only hold&lt;Jut
Here are some of the better letters

ACROSS

3 Be
1mmment

1 Attlc 5 Wmme
the Pooh
creator

4 Sawbuck
5 Andrett1

s

of auto

racmg
fame

10 Plant

+++

11 Vocat1on

Dear Helen and Sue
12 Seem
One of an Ahnost Extinct Spectes" - ISII t 1
uncndmg
( 3 wds)
I m a vtrgm and I know many more' I have a great
14
Pitcher
s
relattonshtp wtth qmte a few guys In fact, most of my fnends are
asset
guys and I'm far from a tomboy They look at me (and my 15 Geramt s
ftgure) and say Hey I
beloved
OAES IS dead wrong about havmg to Sit at home weekends I 16 Counter
tenor
go to those so-ealled ''wild parties,' and fmd a lot of thmgs to do
17
All guys aren't the the bed or bored" types, believe me We do 20 Inqutre
AmmOS it~
crazy fun things, talk on any toptc ktd around, enJOY life and 23 Gtocon
each other s company, somet1111es discuss problems
da s Sui
CJdiO
Bemg a vtrgm doesn t mean you're dtscrmunated agamst I
eg
lmow many guys who respect a gtrl for 1t - they feel different
24 Rome
about sex than the way they act - and they conSider your
(2 wds )
feelmgs At lot of them aren't all that aruuous to get a heavy thmg 26 Thames
gomg that they nught not be able to control
estuary
27
Buyer
It's an mU!restmg and beautiful expertence to know you can
28
Mthtary
t.olk to a boy on a one.to-one basiS and fmd he underst.onds - and
address
hkes you there because YOU understand, too
(abbr )
If a g1rl doesn't wear her v~rguuty as a halo, and show shld's 29 Boundary
afratd all boys are JUSt panting to knock 11 off she won't have to 30 Thmg
frowned
Sit home on Saturday mght - RESPECTED VIRGIN

8 Born

Yesterday's

(Fr )
9 Go wrong
11 Opposed

22 Character

31
32
33
34
35

m Quo
Vad1s
23 Skm

13 Crtmmal

16 Israeli

cond1hon

port
17 Barren

25 Pretend

Stubby
20 Rockfish
21 On

Texture

Nether
commune

(2

19 Danny or

Prank
Presently
Bugbear
lands

wds )
29 Mush
room
30 Italian

18 Locate

Answer

36 Prefixm

German
names
37 Put on

rtver

lkJ -J.J.I-~

31 Phtltp
pme tree

34 Perpetual
( 2 wds)

38 Vener

,_,.

ated

39 Fragrance

40 Kmdof

by HENRI ARNOI 0 ' ""1 1100 l l tc

code

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square to
form four ordmary words

41 Not

a btl
DOWN

I TAW/.2

1 Heroic

I l

narrative

J

I [

I

!I
"

2 Indo
nes1an
tsland

I

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

[J

Is
AFTE!i: T~EATMENT.
1-105PITA~ PATIENT?
AI&lt;:Ei 6XPEC.TED TO 60
TOWAI&lt;:D THIS WA!i:D

I I J

~

100
stotmkL

(colloq)

Rap
The people 1 hang out wtth aren't hung-up about havmg sex
on every date We don t condemn others but we re waiting for
mamage Meanwhile we have a great time at our weekly

UGUTOD
~ l
Lh_ A

see red

1

upon

+++

JJWJWIDiblE ;-

6 Cau sed to

I. I.

One letter s1mply stands for another In thts sample A is
used for the three L s X for the two 0 s etc Single letters,
apostrophes the length and formation of the words are all

hn\ts Each day the code letters are different
CRYPTOQUOTES
RCFM RJF CFG RCFM OZRJF

Now arrange the mcled letten
to fonn th~ aurpnse answer, u

EZENVCB

suggested by the above cartoon

~I~~==tlle::::SU~RPII~ISE~ANSWIR~hln==,l ''( I I I I I I J"

PQJM
CBJ

(A-wen tomorrow'
Jumblet MACAW
An~,.er

PANSY

OPENLY

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

JUPJJR,

CBJ

SFZOF

FZP

INP

FZP -FXKZVCU

JFTZM

IJKCNUJ

JJKCNUJ

PWJM

KQCRLZBP

Yeoterda,y'• Cf'1pto.auole. A MAN OF FIFl'Y LOOKS AS
OLD AS SANTA CLAUS TO A GIRL OF TWENTY -WU..
LIAM FEATHER

MURMUR

lndmed It! nse to a /uglier let.-'Cl-A RAMP

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE
8UTWWY

WOUL.D
TilEY
I.EAVE

.14
• 85

3
+A64

SOUTH
• Q92
+9 53
Norlh Suuth vulnerable

Wesl

Norlh

•• r

3N

East

South

1•

2N T

Pass

Pass

$0 WHAT5
THE POifJT OF
GRABBING HSR:
r.JOW BEFORE
5 1-IE:S CUI&lt;ED
2

TUPPERS PLAINS -

engme
4 speed
Contact
Henry H II Barber sMop m
Pomeroy
ll 27 3tp
.._

Mobile Homes For Sale

epidemic

i

dances and many get.f.ogethers Yes we belong to a church, but
we don't use our soctal functions for IIIISStonary work We Sllllply
try to assoctate wtth people who have the same values and we
have much fun at the same time
• One of an Ahnost Extinct Spectes should try our crowd A:J
you said, Helen you meet a lot of great teens 111 church or
rehgwus groups thes(days - MIKE

8) Oswald &amp; •ames Jacoby

-------------1957 cHEVY 2 dr hardtop 283
1970 GTO Ram A r IV PS PB
a r cond
new t res
low
mileage Phone {304) 992 2993
11 28 6tp

a veritable

Generation Rap

-:;-:

• A 1063
• AKJ

__ ____________

TRUCKS 1968 R Model
Maxdyne $8 000 also 1968 F
Model Maxdyne S5 500 Call
(614) 962 3024 or 962 5299
11 25 6tc

currently.

~:,~,:::::~~~::::::::::::::~:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·::·:·:•:•:,,:.;•:•l&gt;•:•:•:•Y&gt;:·g..&amp;' ....

+QJIOR2
WEST
EAST
• 54
.KQJ98

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

MALE poodle puppy
black
m n ature Phone 992 5858
1113tfc

and

..

• Q109

Real Estate For Sale

MOBILE home repaar
Elec
1rlca1 pltJmb ng and heat ng
Phone 992 5858
_..
7 15 lfc

29

comedies
polle«:rune shows

sttuat1on

~

»::":-:::: :.=:;::;::;.:o..

• 72

For Sale or Trade

Pets For Sale

101

BY PAUL CRABTREE
We all know that televlSJon shows run tn cycles There was a
penod of medical shows
an era of Westerns
an age of

U':«

+ AKJ

________ _

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

Elec Co 33 Gomer Pyle 13 Hodgepodge Lodge 20

Beverly Hillbillies 8 Trails West 15
55 - Earl Night i ngale 15
00 - News 3 4 8 10 13 6 15 Sesame St 20 Adlenan
Counsel1ng Techmques 33
30 - News 3 4 6 8 10 15 Hogans Heroes 13
00 - Truth or Conseq 3 6 Beat the Block 4 News 10 What s
My Lme 8 Wild Kmgdom 13 Elec Co 20 I Spy 15 Course of
Our T1mes 33
30 - Beat the Clock 13 Porter Wagoner J To Tell the Truth6
Concentration 8 New Treasure Hunt 10 Wall Street Week
20
Johnny Manns Stand UP. and Cheer 15
College
Basketball 4 How Do Your Ch1ldrPn Grow JJ
00 - Washmgton Week 1n Revtew 20 Sanford &amp; Son 3 4 15
Caluccl s Dept 8 Santa Claus 1s Com.ng to Town 6 13 A
Closer Look at Football10 Sounds of Joy 33

n

CO.OP COUNTRY
SQUIRE 120

&amp; THINGS

29 1973

6 00 - New s 3 4 6 8 10 15 Sesame St 10 Ltlias Yoga &amp; You
J:l ABC News 13
6 30 - NBC News 3 4 lS ABC News 6 CBS News 8 10
Hogao s Heroes 13 Your Future ls Now 33
7 00 - Truth or Conseq 3 6 Beat the Clock 4 What s My Lme
8 Elec Co 20 Lets Make A Deal 13 News 10 Vmce L•m
bardt Sctence &amp; Art of Football33 Call of the West 15
7 30 - Hollywood Squares J W1ld Kmgdom 10 Beat the Clock
13 Lookmg Ahead 33 Sale of the Century 4 To Tell the Truth
6 Ozz1e s G1rls 8 Johnny Mann s Sland Up &amp; Cheer t5
Handsful of Ashes 20
8 00 - Waltons 8 0 Flip W1l son 3 4 15 Jacques Cousteau 6
13 Behmd the Lmes 20 33
9 00 - Off the Record 20 lron st de 3 .t 15 Kung Fu 6 13 Men
Who Made the Mov tes 33 Movte The Pumpkm Eater 8

Ph 992 5271

Bu 11tto Your Specs.
Oehvered to Job Stte

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

Television Log

j

Gene's
Body Shop

ASK US ABOUT
PRE FABRICATED

Phone 992 2094

n sure pre Xmas del very
Phon e 992 5324
1118tfc

EXPERIEN C ED Men
and
Women - Men and women
W1lh sk Is that compare w th
N avy
occupat ons
may
qual fy for the Navy s D reel
Procurement Petty Off cer
Program ( Examp e Lath e
Ope rator s
Plumbers
Electr cans
Account ng
Cler k Carpenter Secretary
- - - - -- - - - etc ) Star lmg pay $392 to
WE WISH to express our thanks
$538 w tM hous ng allowance
to all ne1ghbors relat ves
from $122 to $161 per montn
fr ends emergency squads
plus free med.cal and dental
doctors nurses nurses a des
c omm ssa ry and P X benet t s
tMose send ng flowers foods
and al G 1 benef ts for n
cards and Me p n anyway
tam ly
Good
d v dual
Spec al thanks to Rev Zav tz
promo! ons travel educat on
Rev Larmore and Ew ng s
oppor.tun t es
and early
Funeral Home Mrs Howard
ret rement
Interested men
Largent and daugMIN
and women con tact the Navy
112 91tp
Recru t.ng
Sta t on
221
Co lumbu s Road
Athens COAL FOR SALE JAYMAR
COAL
COMPANY
THE
Oh o tel 593 3566
112l'J6tc
MEIGS &amp; GALLIA LINE
STATE
ROUTE
7
AT
SHOOTING Match Rae ne Gun
CHES HIRE OPEN 7 AM
Club Sunday December 2 1
TILL 6 30 PM 5 DAYS A
p m Assorted meats factory
WEEK PHONE9925693
choked guns only
11 26 5tc
WILL do sew ng n my home
11 28 3t c
Phone 992 5866
- - - - - - - -----~
11276tc
NEW LARGE reel n ng chars
GARAGE Sa le at 1126 East
m vlnyl matenal buy now or
Ma n
Street
Pam eroy
lay away for CMr lstmas Onlv
Mostly w nler cloth ng s zes 1 CARPENTER work masonry
$89 95 Sw ¥el rockers n
work general remodel ng by
to 15 Wednesday Thursday
hour or con tra ct Phone 993
Yelvet nylon and pr nts that
Fr day November 28 29 30
11 28 31C
3511
make a wonderful 91ft for'
11226tp
your w fe Only \69 95 All
1tem s casM and carry or 60
NOVELTY Fabr c Sho p 230
day
lay away
Pomeroy
wash ngton S l vd
Belpre MINI BACKHOE serv ce Also
Recovery
622 E
Ma1n
Oh1o Polyester kn ts $2 .49
waterlmes footers trenches
Pomeroy Phone 992 755.4
per yard sweater terry kn Is
Charles R Hatf1eld Route 1
112026tc
Sl 29 per yard New sM pment
Rutland Oh o
Phone 742
of craft supples complete
6092
1 ne of Necch
Wh te and
11 13 18tp UPHOLSTERY Fabr cs by the
yard 54 nches w de as low as
Nat onal Sew ng Ma'M nes
$1 95 per yard velvets as low
open Sund ays 1 t II 5 Oa ly 10
as $3 45 Imported velvets
111 7 p m til Chrstmas
$9 95 We also nave nylon
11 28 Me
hercu lon
cotton
pr nts
v nyls and remnants by the
$200 REWARD for nformatmn V\OBILE Home n M ddleport
yard or by the p ece Pomeroy
f\ d t s nn \
oa,one 992 5592
lead ng to the arres t and
Recovery
622 East Man
1 1 "::: 6
conv ct on of person or per
r v n c v, P o t! oo? 7t;54
sons who damaged the r ght
l12026tc
front fender of my 1969 black FURNISHED two bedroom
Ford L TO on Nelson Road
mobile Mome for rent 1n
Rutland Oh o The car was
Rutland Call even ngs or FOA M to f II your old couch and
cha r cus h ons as low as
parked on the s de of the road
Sunday 992 J-429
$10 95 Upholstery books only
Phone Carl Morns Rutland
11256fp
50c
4 nch covered foam
742 4691
mattresses for standard s ze
11273tc
.__
$15 AND UP 4 sleep ng room s
bed
$29 95
Pomeroy
w th k tchen and I v ng room
Recovery
622 E
Man
REVIVAL at Chester Church of
Clean and private New and
Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
God November 25 to Dec 2
modern TV and
car pel
11...__
20 26tc
7 30p m Spec al s ng ng each
throughotJt
baths
w th
even•ng
EvangeliSt Rev
showers Mason 773 5580
Chester
Estep
from
NEEDLE
SEW ING
ll256tp TWIN
Ch lllcothe Oh o Everybody
MACHINES 1973 Model m
welcome
walnut stand
All features
11 27 5tc PRIVATE meetng room for
bu
It
n
to
make
fancy
des gns
any organ zat on pMone 992
and do stretch sewing Also
3975
buttonMoles blind hems etc
FLOWERS for Chnstmas to~
3 11 tfc
$43 34 cash price or terms
tMe home decor at on Sprays
- -=-==.=-==------- --- ~
ava lable Phone 992 298.4
wreaths
pots baskets for 3 AN 0 4 ROOM furntshed and
11 25 5tc
ceme tery Also lots of g fts
unturn shed
apartments
Sm alley s G ft Shop Ches ter
Phone 992 5434
VACUUM CLEANERS Electro
Oh o Phone 985 :1537
4 12 tfc
Hyg ene New Demonstrators
11296tc
has all clean ng attacMments
KJ.I.ILt:K
Mason
N
Va
plus tMe new Electro Suds tor
SHOOTING
Match
Corn
coup le only phone 992 5693
shampooing carpet
Only
Hollow Gun Club Turn f rst
11 16 tfc
S27 50 cash pnce or terms
r ght after Miles Cemetery
--------~-- avallable Phone 992 2984
Rutland
Factory choked -SMALL tra ler deal tor couple
11 25 5tc
guns only Sunday December
10 m les north of Pomeroy
-- -------~---2 1 p m
S75 per month Call 992 7479 STEREO - Am Fm Rad10 8
)1 29 3tc
11 23 tfc
track tape combmat on 4 way
speaker
sound
system
DUE to II health The Court
Balance $107 52 or vse our
Street Cab w1ll go out Qf FURNISHED housetra ler for
budget terms Call 992 3965
rent Prefer construct on men
bus ness tMe lOth of December
11255tc
only
L nens
laundered
f not sold Will sacr f ce for
Contact after d 30 p m
$5 500 Call 992 7116 Thanks
weekly except Saturday and STA RCRAFT 1974 Tra1lers and
for all the patronage over the
Su nday
Helen
R1ggs
Fold Downs SpeCh)l Christ
past years
11298tp
Rutland Oh o
mas pr•ces CAMP CONLEY
11 27 6tp
STAR CRAFT SALES RT 62
N of Pont Pleasant Beh nd
SHOOTING Match Forked Run
Red Carpet Inn 675 5384
Sportsman Club noon Sun
11 29 3tc
day Factory Choked Guns
only
3 BEDROOM house w th bath Auto Sales
11293tc
recreat on room ut I tv room 1972 GRAND Torino Sport V 8
and washroom
carport
automatic
PS
P B mag
SHOOTING Match Horner H II
ca rpeting 1n 1 11 ng room also
wheels new t1res ¥ery good
Gun Club Rt 143 Sunday
electr c range 1618 Lincoln
cond t1on See Roger Rous)l or
Dec
7 12 noon
Factory
He ghts
Available Dec
1
phone 247 3551
cho k ed guns only
Call 9&lt;~9 2891
11 29 3tc
1129Jtc
!l276tc

-----------

Services
Business
..
.

For Sale

I

1 11- The Daily S.ntmel,Mlddleport Pomeroy, 0, Nov 2!1 1973

TAXI BUSINESS ,...._ 3 cabs 1n
good cond tton 2 have power
Pomeroy Locahon
$6500 00
35 ACRES - 4 bedroom home
bath basement wtth garage
and
two
barns
Ask ng

117 500 00

SYRACUSE -

2 bedrooms

bath
n ce
k tchen
full
basement and large garden

Only $9 500 00
POMEROY N1ce sturdy
older home w1lh 3 bedrooms
batt&lt; central heat and a1r
Modern kitchen wtfh large
d ntng 2 porches and 2 car
garage

NEW LISTING - 2 bedroom
bungalow bath new gas fa
furnace Full basement and
mce lot for only $10 000 00

BIG THINGS WILL SOON
BEGIN TO HAPPEN IN THE
COUNTY
BUY
NOW
BEFORE ITS TOO LATE WE
HAVE MANY GOOD BUYS
HI 1 f N I
'·•··I&lt;:'I)"J 1',

'I ,.·,1

(1f.'l"·

'I .\I r·,IJ('

{ 1 •, ',1_ 1r I,'_ I

&lt;

992 -3325 or
9Q2 .Jb 15
TWO bedroom house at 47:1
Sycamore Street m M1d
dleport vacant Call 992 5310
112126tc
2 BEDROOM house 3 years old
carpet ng b g k1tchen w th
tots of cab nets 12 acre of
ground Racme Oh•o Call
949 4998
9 12 lfc
6 ROOMS and bath m town '
s 11 000 Call 992 3975- or 992
2571
9 28 tfc
SMALL house
completely
furniShed
Bachelors h de
away Phone 992 5786
11277tc

-------------I

1

slory frame 3 bedrooms
bath
dmmg room
nice
k1tchen all electnc garage
and covered breezeway 1
acre 1 year old and hard
wood floors $19 000 00

POMEROY -

Just out of

town
2 story frame
4
bedrooms bath paneling
and ttle some carpettng
coal
heat
1 36
acre

$9 500 00
SYRACUSE - 2 years old 3
bedroo,-ns
bath
utll1ty
room k1tchen has lots of
cab nets and range
mce
dm1ng
area
hardwood
floors
carpeted m liv1ng
room and hall All electrtc
Carport
and
storage

$21 000 00

NEW RT 7 1 1/~ acres 2
wells =~pproved for sept1c
anks Ideal for homes or
railers Blacktop road m

t

1

$4 500 00
POMEROY __,. 2 story frame
2 bedrooms new bath new
furnace and hot water tank
range in kttchen
some
carpeting
Basement w1th
Ullllly $6 500 00

HAVE
A
SELLING
PROBLEM' LET US HELP
YOU
HENRY E CLELAND
BROKER
992 2259
If no answer 992 2568

INFORMATION ABOUT:

Here we are back at the
Mad Hatter s bndge party 111
Wonderland
1 he dot mouse Slltmg East
had awaken long enough to
overcall the Hatters opemng
club btd and had lapsed back
mto somnolence wh1le the
March Hare b1d two notrump
and was 1 atsed to game by
the Hatter
Ahce opened the ftve of
spades The deuce was play
ed !1om dummy and there
v. as the dormouse asleep
agam They prodded htm He
sttrred yawned and played
the nme
The March Hare won wtth
the 10 and led a low club
Altce hopped up wtlh the kmg
and want of anythmg better
to do led her last spade
There was the dormouse
asleep agam
Wakened agam he played
the etght of spades South
ducked but the dormouse
needed no further prods He
led another spade smce there
was no way to keep htm from
gettmg m wtth the ace of
• clubs and wmdmg up wtth a
total of three spade trtcks
CurJOuser and cunouser •
thought Ailee I wonder tf he
was really asleep Had he
played one of hiS htgh spades
at triCk one South would
have ducked and we would
have had no way to beat the
contract

STEREO
92.1 FM
WMPO
~ddleport-Pomen&gt;y

-

&amp;HE&amp; CERTAINLY
BECOME ATTACHED
10 lll'\T IN!i'\NT I

AND 11'~ A JOY10

eEE WINNIE lOOKING
eo WELL eiNCE 'THAT
6115Y CAME: INlO
HER LIF!;I

liN CREDQll'{ 1',;
w.l~il.\'t&gt; -p ~

STRN~DI

ALLEY OOP
I'D !.&amp;AI' AT THE

WEU.

CHANCE, IF I WJ&gt;51:T
l'l'.PECTED IN HAWA! I

THE

IRD

I&lt;JW KINDA LOOKS LIKE

ELSE MIGHT BE
MAKIN TI&lt;~KS INSTEAD
OF US DOESN'T IT?

SOMEBOI)'o(

10 CROWN THE"PlNE

APPLE QUEEN'- _ _,.,

us

~TE

INE:WSI APEH ENTEHPHISE ASSN

JOB OPPORTUNITIES
SOCIA~ SECURITY
CONSUMER PROTECTION

AND
GREAT COUNTRY .

YE&amp;ITWA&amp;
NICE ID HAVE 1HE
1WIN5 HOMe FOR
lHANIGeiVINel

PAW-HAVE 'IE
29

The btdd mg has been
t

Wes&amp;

Nor&amp;h

1+
34
3•

East

Sou&amp;h

Pass
Pass
Pass

1'

SEEN LEETLE
JU6HAII) &gt;

HE S OUT 'iONDER IN
TH WOODS WORKIN ON
THAT RllHMATIC TEST
HE'S GOf TO~'I()_RI'V

I RECKON TH' LEETLE
FELLER WOZ LOOKIN

FER PEACE AN QUIET
SO S HE COULD STUDY
REAL

HE 5 LOOK IN FER
FOUR LEAF CLOVERS
THAT COI!NTS

SENSE OF IXIIN6

IF '(I)V CAN'T WIN'

3+
Pass
Pass
?
You South hold
• K J 6 5 'K 8 3 2 +K 10 4
3
l
What do you do now?

1

I

l

•s

A - Bid three notrump Year
par&amp;ner cant have rour 1p11dh
or he would have bid &amp;hem u 1111
~cond

.. u

-

'

(

I D ~VRE LIKE TO PI.AII

Tf&lt;AT TEAM

FRa~

TAIWAN 1

�----

I~ - The Daily Sentlllcl)1idclleport-Pomeroy. 0 , No" . 1!1,1973

News

• • •

in Briefs

l Continued from Page 1)

would have led to energy policies so that U1is crisis would not be
hit ting us bet ween the eyes as it is now," Eduard Pest()J of West
Gennany said.
ISRAEL AND EGYPT CALLED A NEW ROUND of truce
talks today, with government officials in Cairo reporting new
hopes the two sides would brea k a deadlock over troop withdrawals. Diplomati c sources in cairo said the Uni ted States had
applied new pressure on Israel to clea r away the para lyzi ng
impasse.
The sources said the pressure and Israel's response to it
a ccounted for the postponeme nt of Wednesday's scheduled truce
meeting at the Kilometer 101 checkpoint on the Cairo-Suez h(ghway 60 miles from the f;:gyptian capital. Arab heads of slate
concluded a three -da y swn mit m eeting in Algier s Wednesday
with an officia l warning to Csrael. Laying the gr oundwork for a
Middle East peace confer ence nelrt month, the leaders said there
can be no peace until Israel wi thdraws from all occupied Arab
lands, including Old Jerusalem .
The Arab leaders, incl udin g klngs and presidents from 16
countries, also made plans to bankroll an(]ther war with Israel if
it becomes necessary, accord ing to sour ces at the Algiers
meeting .
TOKYO - A F)RE DESTROYED a crowded department
store in southern Japiln today, killing dozens of persons in the
flash flam es and thick, suffocatin g smoke .
Police said at least 38 persons died and 77 others were injured . . Authorities said they expected the toll to
rise
even
higher
as
r escue
workers
sifted
through
the
.. rubbl e
of
the
burned-&lt;Jul
building. The eight-story Taiyo department store, which
normally closes on Thursdays, opened today for a spec ial Christmas sale and wa s packed with bargain-hunters.
SAIGON - NORTH VIETNAM FOR THE second time in two
weeks today accused the United States of violating the Paris
peace accords by sending spy planes into its airspace. On the
battlefie ld, Communist troops shelled a government base near
the former impe rial capital of Hue with more than 700 rockets
and mortar rounds in seven hours , military sources reported
today.
AU . S. Embassy spokesman refused to confirm or deny the
charge by Hanoi !bat a supersonic SR71 reconn_aissance jet flew
over central Nghe An province of North Vietnam twice Wednesday . The spokesman answer ed "no comment" to all
question s.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
END OF THE MONTH SALE

BfRRrS WORLU
•

Tra

I

MEIGS TliEATRE
Tonight, Nov. 29
NOT OPEN
Fri.-Sat. · Sun .
Nov . 30 , Dec . \ "2
FEAR IS THE KEY
(Technicolorl

I PGI
Barry Newman
Suzy K endall
ACE Ell &amp;
ROGER OF THE SKIES
(Technicolor)

I PGI
~ l i ft

Rober t son
Pam ela Frankl in

master Jim Soulsby announced
today .
The stamp collecting gifts
are specially designed to appeal to persons who are not
necessarily stamp collectors ,
Soulsby said. "They consist of
the 1973 issue of 11Stamps and
Stories," a full-color pocketsized book containing information about more than
2,000 U. S. and U.N. stamps
which sells for $2; six different
stamp collector stamp kits
(United Slates, Canada, Wildlife, Sports, Space and
European Art ) which contain
enough stamps to · start a
collection and provides the
opportun ity to start a collection
on a specific subject (each sells
for $2). and the 1972 souvenir
mint set of s.tampS which is a
sturdy display folder con,.

..

Christmas{;ifts
FOR
HER

'J}j

HANDBAGS
FROM

$499

TO

THE SHOE
;Shoes are Still Sensibly Priced
MIDDLEPORT, 0 .
'

,.

,.

.. ..

If your Mattress
Is lumpyYour Rugs Are
Worn- Your

living Room Suite
Is Faded, and
Torn- The

"'"""''

And the Stove
Won't Cook.

"May I say, sir, St. Croix has enough troubles without
a nut like you going there!"

Mrs. Hart died in Huntington
Mrs. Katherine Clarke Hart , husband ,' John A. Hart, Sr. ,
83, of 618 Third St., Huntington , died in 1969.
Survivors include a son, John·
W. Va., died Tuesday in the
Quinn Personal Care Home A. Hart, Jr., Huntington; two
daughters, Mrs. Jessie (Alice )
there .
Mrs . Hart was born Aug . 22, Stone, Burlington, Ohio, . and
1890, at Graham Station, the Mrs. Annyce Joffee, Colwn·
daughter of the late Herman bus; four grandchildren, one
and Jessie Morris Clarke. Her great-grandchild; a sister,
Mrs . Dana Hamm of Middleport, and four brothers ,
Presley, Winchester, Va .;
Edwin,
New Haven, and Harry
taining the 33 commemorative,
special and memorial stamps and Robert, both of Letart
issued during 1973. The folder Route I.
FWleral services were held
is marked to show where each
at
I: 30 today at the Foglesong
stamp should be mounted and
contains information con- FWleral Home with the Rev .
cerning the designers and Clarence McCloud officiating.
history behind each stamp. Burial was in Graham Station
This kit is priced at $3.
· Cemetery .
These products are published
by the U.S. Postal Service and Leonard Lunsford
available only at Post Offices .
Souvenir stamp albums (mini- died Wednesday
. stamps) are also available for
Leonard Lunsford, Sr., 66,
s tamps issued in 1971 and 1972
died Wednesday night at his
at the post office .
Pomeroy Route 3 home .
Holzer Medical Center
He was preceded in death by
(Discharged)
his parents, Elmer and Nancy
Edmund Campbell, Brenda Lunsford, and by his wife,
Clarkson, Penny Coyan, Kathryn .
Mathew Cummings, Agnes
Surviving are seven sons,
Dodson , Van Dray, Andrew . Charles, Kettering,_ Qhio ;
Eldridge, Frank Fugate, Hollie Kenneth, of Colwnbus; Jack;
Hardman, Karen Hedge, Ada Middleport ; Leonard, Jr.,
Householder, Mrs. John Portsmouth ; Bill, of BarJohnston and daughter, berton, and Don and David,
Chadrick Kiger, Elsie Lakin, both of · Pomeroy; three
Timothy Lawhon, Edna Lyons, daughters, Mrs. Fred (Betty)
Wanda Malone, Wade Maloy, Jenkins, Colwnbus; Mrs. Phil
Donald Massie, Frances (Joyce ) Stanley, Johnstown,
McGown, Clifford Miller, and Mrs . James (Brenda)
Louise Morris, Mrs. Roger Graham, Pomeroy; three
O'Dell and son, Wilbur Plants, sisters, Mrs . Sally Bias,
Thelma Rinehart, Katie Pomeroy; Mrs. Dora White,
Roush, Mrs. Thomas Rowley Williamson, W. Va., and Mrs.
and daughter, 'J effrey Sayre, Rachel Spears, Peack's Mill,
Sr., John Scott, Dorothy Spear, W.Va.; 12 grandchildren, and
Carl Thomas,
Raymond several nieces and nephews.
Thomas, Robert Veith, Penny
Mr. Lunsford was a member
Webb, and Cintra Winebren- of the Lundale, W.Va., Baptist
ner.
Church. FWleral services will
(Births)
be held at 1 p.m. Saturday at
Mr . and Mrs. Samuel the Ewing Funeral Home
Stewart, Jr ., a son, Gallipolis . where friends may call any
time. Burial will be in Rock
Springs Cemetery.
Veterams Memorial Hospital
Admitted - Judith Elklns,
Reedsville; Samuel McKinney,
WANTS HOURS CUT
Rutland; Goldie Rollins,
LANSING, Mich. (UP!)
Letart, W. Va . ; Leonard
The
Michigan
Licensed
Barber, Reedsville ; Ann
Eisenhower, Portland; Amy Beverage Association, with an
Ervin, Middleport; Joseph eye on the energy crisis, urged
Rudolph, Athens; James all clubs and businesses serJackson, Middleport; Leslie ving or selling alcoholic
beverages in Michigan to cut
Whittington, Middleport. '
Discharged - Mabel Wolf, their hours by 15 per cent.
•
Charles Bryson , Drexel
Lambert, Robert While, Ruth
Parsons, Myrtle Walker.
HELP FROM MOM
BOSTON (UP!) The
Pleasant Valley Hospital
eastern portion of the nation
Discharges: Dixie Blevins,
may get some help from
New Haven; Mrs . Roger Boles,
Mother Nature during the
son, Point Pleasant ; Patty
nation's fuel crisis . A professor
Frye, Point Pleasant; French
of meteorology at the .
Casey, Henderson; Mrs. Billy
Massachusetts Institute of
Jo Patterson, Gallipolis; Mrs.
Technology says he expects
James Plants, Pliny ; Mrs.
Ihild winters over the eastern
Lewis Martin, Roberlsburg;
two-thirds of the nation
Ida Preston, Gallipolis; Roy
because of sunspot cycles.
Matheny, Leon.

Mason, W.Va.
'

Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale

Vests
Vests
Vests
Vests

4.75
5.45
6.25
6.85

2

FOR

CUFFED PANTS
Navy, Burg u n dy, Black, Brown . Grey. Ca m e l.

- SALE •7.88
Frida"y and Saturday

TWO CHARGED
MONTEVIDEO (UPI ) - A
rather and son have been
cbarged with operating a while
slave
ring
supplying
Uruguayan
women
for
prostitution in Mrica, a police
spokesman said Wednesday.
Jorge Capocasale, 28, and his
father, Ceferino capocasale,
62, arrested last week, were
charged with pandering and
illicit association.

Men's Flannel Sport Shirts
Sizes small {14· 14 112 ) , medium (15-15 112 ), large
{16-J6112 ) , extra large (17 -J7il2 ). 50 pel . colton . 50
pel. polyes ter. Plaid patterns and solid colors .

$12.99

Friday and Saturday

SALE PRICES

Devoted To The

DENIM FLARES
Western style blue jeans . Slim fit . plenty of room
over boots and heel. Heavy weight blue denim .
Sizes 29 to 46 waist . Select your correct length .

Friday - Saturday Sale

$7.99

Pants · Sk irts . Sh irt Jacs.
Choose solid color s, plaid s.

patterns .
Friday and Saturday

Sale Prices

VOL XXV NO. 161

JEANS
Sa ve during our big sale of
women s Jean s on th e
seco nd lloor . Ove r 1.000
pa ir s for your select ion .

Now At
Sale Prices

Our entire stock of womens slips is reduced for
this sale . Big selection of white and pastel colors.
Mini · short - average and tall lengths. Sizes 32
through 50.

SALE PRICES

Now ready for your selection . Buy them by the
box or select individual Christmas cards . You ' ll
like the Hallmark c ard s thi s year . Cards for
everyone on your li s t . Al l arranged for your easy
selection .
·

WASHINGTON (UPI) - An country to another and inexcusincreasing nwnber of voices ' able failures to produce." Moss
holh in and outside the called for breaklng up the large
government are challenging the oil firms .
White House view (!f the
Senate Democratic Leader
current energy shortage.
Mike Mansfield called on
Some critics, charging that President Nix.on to institute
both gasoline and heating fuel gasoline rationing, adding he
shortages were avoidable, said would fight any attempt to
the-~present crisis was caused impose an increased tax on
by the oil industry and gas. He said rationing would be
inadequate government poli- more equitable than a tax .
cies.
Nixon was reported to have
Fred c. AI vine, a professor at no plans " at this time" to seek
the Georgia Institute. of Tech- either ratio?ing or .an additional
nology and a long-time energy tax on retail gasolme.
expert, told' a Senate investigal·
Nixon was scheduled to meet
ing subcommittee Thursday with his energy council today.
that the lop 10 refining
White House Press Se_cretary
companies reduced production Ronald L. Z1e_gler sal.~ that
some 3 per cent below although ralwmng was somema!'lmwn capacity during the thmg whtch ... we hav~. to have
1972-73 winter season.
conlingenc~. plans for, II IS ~
we really don t
"Se.veral of the giants," he measure
said, "thought ii would be in contemplate at tllis time."
their best int..rests to r.educe
The latest critical views were
production , draw down mven- · added to those of Sen. Hubert
tories, and create ~ · ge~eral · H. Hwnphrey,_ D·Minn., Harttghtemng m the av~~lab1hty of vard economists, conswner
petrolewn products.
groups an others who have
Alvi~." charged the gov.~rn- spoken. out against the adrninis·
menl heav1ly contributed to trat10n s ·energy pol1c1es m
th~ fuel sh.ortage b~ ugrossly" recent days.
m1smanagmg fuel Import programs
Other Developments
si.u Finds Evidence
In other energy developSen. Frank Moss, D-Utah, menls:
told a Se?ate energy subcom- . -'Herbert Stein, chairman of
mtltee h1s staff had found the Council . of Economic
evidence of "mass withholding Advisers said if the Arab oil
of winter fuels, diversions of embargo continues, economic
supply from one area of the growth in the United States

Also Hallmark gift wrap · ribbons and tags- card
inserts
Hallmark stocking stuffers and
novelties . Stop in on the lsi floor - look around
and buy what you need.

Knit Tops
Save on sizes 3 to 6x and 7

Table Cover
SALESave now . Big selection of
squares, oblong s, ovals and
rounds .

to 14 dur ing this sale .

Sale Prices

Fiberglas Ready Made
DRAPERIES
Foam Back - Resist cold · heat · noise . fading .
Specia l purchase of excellent quality 100 per cent
Fiberglas Draperies . 63" and B4" length. At·
tract ive patterns in color s: Red , Celery, Blue.
Gold, Eggshell .
Friday and Saturday

SALE! TONKA TOYS
AT TliE TOY STORE - MIDDLE BLOCK
This sa le includes our entire stock of Tonka
Toys. Tractors · Tractor and Wagon Trenchers .
Highway · Van · Mobile Crane . Wrecker .
Backhoe - Dump Truck and many, many others.
Stop in and make your selection now.

IJVews .• in Briefsll

..

Sale Prices

SALE PRICES
SALE! BICYCLES
T:n speeds- 5 speeds · 3 speeds - sta ndard 26

inch
bikes . Boys and girls models . This sale includes
our entire stock.
All are Ameri~anmade bikes. Nationally known
makes . There s an excellent selection.

payments or overly generous Chr istmas gifts -are not likely to
complain .
Only the person who is not gelling his fair share is liable to
howl. He may have some trouble proving discrimination.
Complaints are to be made to local hoards set up in states whic h
will be given reserves of fuel to han&lt;tle hardship cases.
The regulations do provide £or suppliers to report monthly on
how they have allocated their supplies to distributors. But there
i s no plan at present to ha ve the Internal Revenue Service mak e
s pot checks throughout the country, as it does on price controls.

Now Yo u Know
Queen Victoria had 37 g reat·
grandchildren at the time of
her death in 1901.

Area

TEN CENTS

PHON E 992-2156

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1973

•

•

• I

•

L-

tile subject will come up next
week when U.S. officials meet
with Saudi Arabia's oil minis·
ter, ·sheik Zaki Yamani, who
also serves as a spokesman for
the Organization of Arab
Petrolewn Exporting Countries.
- The Defense Department
announced it is still shipping oil
"to our allies in Southeast Asia, .
in accordance with our military
assistance programs."

i1

I.

- -

\

t'1

'

~.

EXCELLENT PROGRESS is being made on a 20-unil,
two store coloma! style apartment complex being built at the
corner of Front and Wainut Sts. in Midclleporl. Construction
time has been set for eight months. The complex will consist

1.

·
ATHENS _ Gallia County
Engineer Gelnn A. Smith was
among 10 prominent residents
of Southeastern Ohio honored
Thursday night at the Sixth
Annual Southeastern Ohio
Regional CoWJcil recognition
banquet at the Ohio Universit
Inn
Y
s;ruth, a Republican, has
been countY engineer the past
six years He was cited for hi
diligent ' work the past 1~
months with the Gallia Count .
Regional Planning con?'.
mission in establishment of
bd" · ·
1 ·
~::..a/ri::~; ~:!~Y~tJOns for
Honorees were selected by
committees from the counties
in which they resided b ed
as on

contributions to their immediate cpmmWiities.
Other
Gallia
County
honorees have been Gary R.
Short, Dr. Keitll R. Brandeberry, Roger Barron, Bob
Evans, and Clyde Ramsay.
Smith was introduced by
Ramsay, last year's honoree.
Past Meigs CoWl ty recipients
were Bill Childs, Bernard
Fultz, Lindsay Lyons, Edison
Hobstetter and Horace Karr.
others honored Thursday
night were Max Perry of New
Lexington; James R. King, Jr.,
Logan; E . F. Rothe!, Athens;
Roland Pierce, Nelsonville;
William B. McGurk, Ironton;
Rebert N. Switalski, Portsmouth; David Esheleman,

Waverly; John F . Stiffler, Sr.
of Jackson and James N.
Blower of McArthur.
Awards were presented by
Atty . Bernard Fultz of Meigs
:::~~~::~Z~:::I:g~=~g~~::~:::::::::::~::::t.:=:~::=:=:
County .
NFOTOMEET
The regional council . has
The Meigs County Chapter of
been instrumental in the·
National
Farmers
promotion of ,southeastern the
Organization (NFO) will meet
Ohio, especially in industrial,
at 8 p.m. Wednesday in '• the ·
highway,
tourism
and
Vocational Agriculture Room
educational development.
of Meigs High School.
This year the SEORC is
LOCAL TEMPS
providing leadership and
Impetus to develop grass roots
The temperature · in down·
Pomeroy today at II a .m ,
town
support for the completion of
the Appalac~ian Highway from was 50 degrees under sunny
Cincinnati to Belpre and has skies.
been prominent in the
development of tourism as an
industry in the region.

Qme
• k we1£are reJ.Orm
£
·
as k e d

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Gov.
JohnJ. Gilligan Thursday asked
the General Assembly for quick
action on two welfare reform
bills which would provide for
fiscal rewarda and penalties to

State to help
hungup \drivers
over weekends

coun lies based on their perfor·
mance in cutting costly errors
and welfare fraud.
The governor said the bills
would help his administration
betlerhandlethe current countyadministered welfare system,
but have been "pending in the
Senate for many months."
"To date there has been no
action on either bill since they
were referred to subcommittee
last swnmer ," Gilligan said.
"In 1971 the General Aaaembly was strongly encouraged to
enact reform by giving Ohio a
state-administered system. This

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Warm wlth a chance of
showers -mainly Sunday aud
Monday and turning cooler
Tuesday. The highs In the 50s
. to low 60s Sunday and
Monday and In the 40s
Monday. Lows In the 40s
Sunday and Monday and In

was not done," Gilligan said in
a letter to members of the legis·
lature.
" Therefore in 1973 we have
come to the members of the
legislature to request the enactment of legislation that would
assist us in handling the current colUlty.-administered system better," he said.
Gilligan said the new legislation is a "logical and fair ap·
proach" to the current system
of operation in which funds are
provided by the stale but the
investigations handled by the
county.

of 12 one-bedroom apartments and eight two-bedroom
apartments. There will be adjacent"parking for 32 vehicles .
The unit is being constructed by Barr-Circle Development,
Inc., Gallipolis.

Democrats ready
to name auditor
Meigs County Democratic committee's successor·· is
Central Committeemen will appointed.
Wingett stressed that the
meet next Thursday to select
permanent successor to democratic party is eager to
Gordon Caldwell, county select the new auditor ,- and
auditor, whose retirement pointed out that it hopes to
make a final determination on
becomes effective Dec . I.
Ernest A. (Bud) Wingett, Thursday, the first day it can
party chairman said according legally be done.
Wingett said the committee
to state law, the democratic
.
is
looking for a candidate who
party must select a successor
no earlier than 5 days following is a democrat, qualified for the
the resignation and no later post,· and willing to file for rethan after 15 days. Mrs. Grace election in February,
Norman Will, chairman of
White is acting as interim
the
central c.o mmittee, is ·
auditor until the central
heading
the
selection
procedure.

a

Krogh cops felony plea

WASHINGTON (UPI) . Egil 11 Bud" Krogh, a former
presidential aide who once
headed White House group
organized to plug news leaks,
bas decided to plead guilty to a
felony cbarge, it was repor\ed
today. The Washington Post
said Krogh would plead guilty
to a charge involving the
break-in by the "plwnbers"
group of the Los Angeles office
of the psychiatrist of Daniel
Ellsberg, Pentagon Papers
defendant.
In exchange for his guilty
plea, Watergate special
prosecutor Leon Jaworski
agreed to drop perjury charges
contained in an indictment
returned against Krogh Oct. 14.

The Post quoted an associate of Installation of
Krogh as saying Krogh had .
decided to plead gililty to one
cable announced
charge because "he doesn't
have the money to fight the
RACINE - Construction is
under way on a major cable
case."
addition in the northwest area
of the Racine exct)ange,
Another deer lost its life in a General Telephone Co. of Ohio
Meigs County highway Thurs- announced Friday.
Donald H. Pearch, Jr .,
day evening.
Pomeroy
customer service
Sheriff Robert Harlenbach's
Dept. said at 7:15 p.m: Thurs- supervisor, said the $58,900
day, an auto driven west by project win upgrade service
Ricbard L. Bearhs, 33, Rt. 3, and provide for future growth
Pomeroy , on SR 7 one .and one- in the area . PortiOns of the new
quarter miles east of Chester, cable will replace . existing
hit a doe that ran into the path facilities for maintenance
of his car. Bearhs suffered no reasons.
The Racine exchange serves
injuries. Mediwn damage was
796 telephones in a 42 squarereported to the auto.
mile area of Meigs county.

Doe is killed

Climate now the critical school factor

WIN THIS
Register
NOWJ .
pure hase ·

You
need not be
present to win.
See the complete
nec~ssary.

MECHANIC STREET
WAREHOUSE

could slow to near zero .
-The House Public. Works
Committee has approved a
measure which would set a 55
miles per hour naUonal speed
limit for cars, trucks and
buses. Nixon had asked for a 50
mile an hour limit on cars.
- The State Deparlment said
the Arab oil embargo is costing
the United Slates as much as 3
million barrels of oil a day and

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Gov.
Jolm J. Gilligan said Thursday
he is starting a special motorist
service program "to assist
driver&amp; who get caught in the
gas station closings" between 9
GRANVILLE, OHIO - R. W. APPLE, CHIEF New York
p.m. Saturdays and midnight
Times While House correspondent, . said Thursday two
Sundays.
Washington "time bombs" are ready to explode. Apple, speaking
Gilligan said the slate TranS·
at Denison University, said the bombs will determine the surBy GEORGE HARGRAVES, Supt.
portalion Department will
vival of President Richard M. Nixon as leader of the nation.
Meigs Local School District
have six COW'tesy Cars and 11
The lime bombs are, according to Apple, "the possible
We have come to that time of the year when the
· turning openly of his own party on tile President and the · pickup trucks available during
weather
may force serious consideration of the
the next few weekends to assist
possibility that Egll "Bud" Krogh, the head of the Plumbers, will
slraoded motorists who run out posaible cancellation of school. There will also be
say something." Apple said he did not think Congress would
days, such as last Wednesday, when circumstances
of fuel.
Impeach Nixon, and the President was unlike!~ to resign because
The assistance vehicles will
it is not in his character . The only thing that would force Nixon to
Speaking of Schools-No. 295
14
be on the road from 4 p.m.
resign is' COtlSiderable pressure rrom within his own party' ..
Saturdays until 8 a.m. Mon- will not permit the running of certain bus routes. We
Apple said.
days, said Gilligan. the encourage you to listen to the radio for all reports
Apple said Krogh "can cbange the whole ballgame" if he
program will supplement the concerning school closing or individual bus routes.
says the President gave direct orders in the Watergate affair,
We will attempt to keep .S many schools open as
efforts of the Ohio Highway
many
days as possible so we will not be faced with the
Patrol.
EGYPT SAID TODAY THE BREAKDOWN in truce talka
witll israel forced it to reconsider plans to attend a U.S.-backed · The department vebides will prospect of making up days later in the school year or
be equipped with special next June. When a decision is made' to close any or al1
Middle East peace conference. Israeli Prime Minister Golda
syphon devices to transfer schools, that decision will be communicated to area
Meir warned of a possible resumption of fighting. Secretary of
gasoline from their tanks to the radio stations by 6:30a.m. If an individual bus driver
State Henty A. Kissinger, however, said Thursday the United
cars of stranded motorists. cannot run all or part of the route, that bus driver is
Slates was still hopeful a peace conference would get under way
Only enough fuel will be given responsible for informing the radio station so that !lie
and said washington had made "a major commitment to this
public may be informed.
goal."
. .
.
· drivers to get them to lbe
With the threat of fuel shortages due to the
nearest lodging .
The cease-fire Ialka collapsed Thursday m a crlsiS-char~ed
. Gilligan also said he will pro- energy crisis, we may be faced with closing scbool on
atmosphere at the Kilometer 101 checkpoint SO miles from cairo.
ceed with a proi(I'am to encour.. exceptionally cold days. We also face the usual
The negotiations were punctuated by the souods of machine-gun
age Ohio motorisls to volun- problems of snow, ice and high water. We have only
fire and mortar blasts only two miles away. The two sides,
meeting for the lOth time, failed to reach agreement on troop tarily observe a 50 mile-per- five emergency days during a school year. We have
already used one of these at Harrisonville. Conhour speed limit.
withdrawals from the Suez canal region -the crucial issue still
. sequently, we will do everything we can to avoid
. unresolved in tile six.pointcease.flre a,g reemenl. No date was set
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
closing schools, particularly this early in the school
for another session of talks.
The Pomeroy E·R squad was year. We do not want to have to make up days next
called Thursday at 12:58 p.m. spring. I am quite certain that parents and students
LANSING, MICH. - MOTORISTS UNHAPPY with the
1D .101 Kerr St., for John Russell do not want to have to do this eitber .
buckle-up or don't drive safety bells In 1974 cars now have a
''1ho was taken to Veterans
To summarize, let me state: A decision to close
choice - air bags as a $225 option. For that price, G'll will add
M., .;,,rial Hospital and ad· an·y or all schools will be communicated to the radio
· (Continued on Page B)
mit;.ed .
stations as early as possible and hopefully no later

SALE PRICES

No

..

By United Press International
COLUMBUS- A BILL WILL BE introduced in the General
Assembly in January to impose strict requirements on operators
of computer systems to protect th~ rights of individuals whose
personal records are involved. State Sen. Stanley J. Aronoff, R·
Cincinnati, said Thursday ~e prepared the legislation following
his work on a federal committee on automated personal data
systems.
Aronoff's bill also would permit persons to refuse to give
their Social Security numbers on any form unless required by
federal law. "Computer technology and the need for information
bave developed so fast that the individual citizen is virtually
powerless to protect himself from a variety of private invasions,
sometimes• intended and sometimes not," said Aronoff.

Mechanic Street Warehouse

line of Whirlpool
appliances
for

your home.

SAVE YOUR SALESLIPS FOR VALUABLE PREMIUMS

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
.I

Meig~-Mtu0n

~"ilf.'!.~:::::::-:::::::::::;;:;;:;:;:;:::::::-;:::::::::::::::::::::&gt;,:;::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

DRIVE TO OUR

I

Of The

Engz•n eer·
honored

A big selection of Cameras by Polaroid and also
Kodak.
All the latest models and camera accessories
ready.for you to buy. We ' ll gladly help you selec t
the cameras you need for Christmas giving th is
vear . ·
Also a big new selection of Binoculars complete
with leather carrying case. Buy now for
Christmas ills or for yourself.

Friday and Saturday

AND

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

lntere~b

it

CARDS

'6.88

WOMEN'S SLIPS

Girls' Pants

t~~

l~

on eJJrly, lwrd actions in
punishing first violations

•

Special!

Friday - Saturday Sale

_Fri.day and Saturday

II

•

BE SURE TO VISIT TliE CAMERA
DEPARTMENT ON TliE 1ST FLOOR

Young Mens Lee Boot Cut

Misses
Sportswear

i

Save th is weekend on Cristmas Gitl Sets for him
or her during this s al e , Our entire stoc k is included.

HA~LMARK

Sizes 6 to lB. This sale includes our entire stock .
.Sieev.eless shirts · short s leeve knits and long
sleeve styles . An excellent selection..

Famous Maker

' ~~ conserve fUels may depend

•.•.

SALE PRICES

BOYS KNIT SHIRTS

LOCAL TEMPS
The · temperature in downtown Pomeroy at 11 a.m.
Thursday was 38 degrees under
cloudy skies.

•

FOR

~

enttne

COSMETIC GIFr SETS

Friday - Saturday Sale

2

~~ Success of current plan' w

··-·

•

Partly cloudy and a lillie
colder tonight and Saturday.
Lows tonight in the upper 20s to
lower 30s . Highs Saturday in
the 40s.

Our e ntir e s to c k of Misses and Juniors knit lops
is in c lud e d in thi s sal e . Turtl e necks . Ribs .
Shrinks - in a big s el e ction of colors.

SALE PRICES

$8.99

Comm('r c:Jal establ ishm ents and ~owrnmc nt buildm~s mus t cut
ba ck their thermos tats by 10 degfl&gt;es.
The rt..-g ••lations give thP suppli er the power to decide how
mueh fud each house and building needs und r r the eonser vati on
program . The supplier is to use what is known ln the industry as a
" degrecday formula '' which takes into eonsideration the
weather and the size of the building in sc heduling deliveries.
The industry long ha s used the " degree-day formula " device to
schedule automatic deliveries or heating fuel.
Nevertheless, the ability to vary amounlo; each householder
gets will give lhe distributor a tremend ous power. There could be
a grea t temptation to favor customers willin g to ma ke under-theta ble payments or to save back fuel for nonprior ity customers
wi lling to do the same .
At that point, the effective ness of the " com pla int oriented"
enfor cement program is severely s tra i11ed . Individu als .eivin~
and receiving favors- whether they involve under-the-table

Weather

KNIT TOPS

Friday and Saturday
c !97] b) N£A , Inc

CAROL'S
COIFFEURS

FOR THAT BRAND NEW LOOK!

Sweater
Sweater
Sweater
Sweater

Si zes 8 to l B. Colorful plaid patterns . Two
po c k e t s. 65 pet. cotton . 35 p e t .. poly est e r . An
exce ll e nt s tyle .

As a new employee .
She has joined Sue
Flo•yd
and
Be&lt;;ky
McFarland.
Phone 773 -5352 for
appoi n"tment.

SEE BAKER'S IN MIDDLEPORT

5.95
6.95
7 . 95
8.95

BOYS' FLANNEL SHIRTS

Carol's
Coiffeurs Is
'
Announcing
Marilyn Clark

Lamps Are Dingy

Women's 100% Acrylic

MEN'S SWEATER VESTS
Mens
Mens
Mens
Mens

Philatelic gifts available at post office in Pomeroy
New
philatelic
items
which make ideal gifts
for
just
about
anyone
are
available
at
the
Pomeroy Post Office, Post-

Special Purchase!

Sale!

g1ving the Pn:sidcnt g1·catcr fu€.'1 ('onservatlon powt."r!i . The·
administration expefts that the new law will provide pt•netlties of
up to $5,000 for each violation .
·
As of now , ve ry little pla nning has been done on enforcement,
which will be left mostly to local communities. Curre n!Jederal
go\•e riUTlent thinking is to have the enforcement program "complaint oriented " -that is to move only when there ar e specific
complaints of violations, rather than to have wides pread spot
checks on compliance .
The distribution of heating fuel will be a particular problem
area . Distributors will be cut back by 15 per cent of their 1973
expected supplies, 10 per cent WJder wbat they got a year ago. It
will be up to the distributor to see to it thallhe cuts are shared
equitably by customers.
Under the government's regulations, which become effective
December 27, householders will be entitled to get only enough
fuel to heal their homes to a levelS degrees less lban last winter .

WASHINGTON t UPl l - The big test for tile U.S . fuel conservataon program. will come when the rirst violations an.•
spotted .
•
U the governmen t doses its eyes to them ll will be an invitation for a return to the black marketee~ing tbal plagued
World War II controls .
To those who went through il, the lessons of World War II
rationing are clear : if the government had moved mor e
vigorously and more swiftly to enfor ce controls, the end result
probably would have been much grea ter compliance. Instead
officials ra tionalized that on the whole there was cooperation and
started moving too late with too lillie aga inst black a nd gray
marketeer s.
There will be wide areas for possible abuse of the fuel conservation program announced by President NiXon because much
of it depends upon voluntary cooperation ,
More of it will become compulsory after a new law is passed

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9:30 TO 9 PM

Sm al l. medi um . large and ex tr a larg e s izes.
So lid colo r s · patte rn s. U n eck a nd V n ec k sty les .

....

Enforcement is key to conservation

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

I

'

,,
I

••
.,

than 6:30a.m. U the decision is made to have school
and individual bus drivers face problems on their
routes, they are to contact the radio station and state
whether part or all of their route will not be run. The
final decision is up to the parent.
U we decide to have school and the buses do run,
but the individual parent feels lbat it is unsafe for the
student to ride that bus, then the parents should keep
the student at home. We will not force anyone to ride
on a bus in a situation which .lhey feel is unsafe. We
will not force any bus ctfiver to run a route that the
driver feels is unsafe. Listen to tlie radio for the latest
information.
IN OTHER COLUMNS OVER the past several
weeks, I have mentioned the possibility of
establishing an adult sewing class. To this date the
response has not been sufficient to establish such a
class. If you are interested in being in a sewing class,
drop me a note. In that note give me your name,
address and telephone number, You should also let
me know whether you prefer a beginning or an advanced class.
Several weeks ago we had our first Adult Basic
Education clss . This class has been interrupl~ue to
the illness of Mr. Stivers, the director and \heber .
We are attempting to find a substitute who will
assume this responsibility dw-ing Mr. Stivers' absence. We hope to reswne this class within the nelrt
week or so. We appreciate the patience of those who
are interested in being in this class.
The Harrisonville Parent Teachers Organiialion
(PTO) has been quite active in supporting school
projects. With some financial support. from the Board
_,of Education, it has constructed a fine. outdoor

· basketball court on the playground. The PTo has
other projects planned including a square dance this
Saturday night to help raise funds. The dance will be
at Harrisonville Elementa~y School from 8 p.m. until
midnight. The Hill Toppers will provide music. Admission is 50 cents for adults and 25 cents for
students. That's tomorrow night, December I, at
Harrisonville.
FOR THE PAST SEVERAL years we have had
an adult physical fitness program at the Meigs Junior
High Gym in Midclleporl during the winter months.
This program is under the supervision of Charles
Chancey. Most of the activity is basketball and many
people get a lot of enjoyment out of it. This program
will start on Monday, December 3, at 7 p.m. and is
scheduled for each Monday and Tuesday evening
from 7to 9p.m. untilsomeltme in March .
Please note that this program is for adults only . It
is not open to students still in high school. It is a post
high school program. If you are interested in a little
exercise on the basketball court, drop by the gym in
Middleport any Monday or Tuesday evening for the
next few months.
I want to extend my thanks to all those who attended and-&lt;Jr participated in the dedication of the
Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium last Friday evening.
It was a memorable occasion . We plan to have the
plaque and picture installed in the lobby within t he
next few days.
NEWS &amp; NOTES - Coach Brauer's ]\larauder .
basketball-team opens league play at Jackson tonight
- Bob Hoeflich 's show last Saturday night was surely
a good one - We all hope that he has another
program next fall.

't
j

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