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'

12 - The Daily Sent in&lt;!I, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Dec. 20, 1973

!

HOSPITALsonNEWS
and son, Shawn Van Meter,

Holter Medical Center
(Discharges)
Edgar A'rnott, Thelma
Ba~nall, Gladys Blake, LiUian
Bur( Guy Bush, Mrs. William
Carpenter and son, Edna
Cooper, Frank Cottrill, Mary
Davidson, Mrs. Alfred Dye and
daughter, Russell Eblin ,
Lillian Floyd, Deborah Hatten,

Dora

Herrmann,

Verna

Howard, Mrs. U.rry Howell
and daughter, Mrs . Linda
Kennedy a11d son, Bertha
Kingery, Rosalcan Logan,
Michele Martm, Lula Mayes,
Clayton Miller, Margaret
Mtller, Charles Murray, Lola
Neal, John Nelson, Russell
Rankin, Sonya Reynolds, Otto
Sharp, Olie Shuler, Robert
Spencer, John Sturgeon, Mary
Swann, Mrs. Michael Thomp-

Staff given
(Continued from Page I)
of hosptt:!l personnel.
Women honorees rcceaved
pins set witll Jewels. Men
honorees received jewelled tie
tacks .
The GAHS Madngals, under
the direction of Mrs. Anne
Fischer, presented six numbers durmg the evening's
activities. Ida Mills, a student
nurse, presented a half hour of

Nellie Watson, Esta Welch and
Otto Willis.
Birtluq
Mr. and Mrs . Dav&gt;d Johnson,
a son, Bed House, W. Va .; Mr.
and Mrs . McKinely ChriStian,
a son, W1llowood.

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES:
Mrs .
Thurman Smith, Gallipolis
Ferry; Mrs. Val Batley, Pomt
Pleasant; Marsha Harrison,
Middleport; Gloria Hess, Point
Pleasant; Glenn Fmley,
Winfield; Blanche McComas,
Gallipolis Ferry; Roy Cain,
Leon; HerbErt Wallace, Apple
Grove; Ray Keefer , Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Jerry Damey
and son, Gallipolis, and Clara
Stevens, Point Pleasant.

Pollution

application.
In connection with air
Listed below are the award
pollution,
the board dtd not
recipJenll):
propose any controls, but
5 Years Pat E: Adk1ns,
suggested reliance on current
~arbara
Arnold,
Moll1e
Baisden, Eva C Barcus , Betty
nuisance laws ,
J Barsotti, Phyllis F Bo9gs,
Louise H Brink , Nina S Burks,
The board also recomOlive Burnett. Hazel E . Bush . mended that the Ohio En·
Nancy J
Casteel, Ada R
vtronmental
Protection
Caufman, Roy Chanceller,
Clarence S Church , V1rgin1a
Agency
continue
and "imD Clark , Ola M CoP.n, Ellen C
prove" pesticide monitoring
Cur fma n, Edith Damron , Nina
M Dorton , Mary E Downard ,
programs m major watersheds
Conn 1e R Drummond, Lex1e
m Ohio to serve as a warning
Easton, Pauline Eblin , Thelma
R Ebl1n, Stephan R Elberfeld ,
system should a problem arise.
Donna J ElliS , Haria J Eut
The advisory board will
sl er, Paul1ne Fletcher, Pau l J
Gauze, Phyli•S E Glassburn ,
finali&lt;e the proposed program
Huldah F Gordon, Merrill
in February or March and
Gothard, Kather•ne Haffelt,
John M Hager , Wilmer B
make tis recommendations to
HalfhilL At11e Hal l , Ruth Ann
the Ohio Environmental
Ham ilion. Dorothy V Harden.
Dorothy A Hartley , Wilma E
Protection Agency through the
Hazl ett, Sue J Hmkle , George
Ohio Soil and Water Con·
A Hoffman . Gera ldine Howe,
Nellie Huffman , Lonna J
servation
Commission and the
Janey, Rose Z Jet1ers , Ela1ne
Department
of
Natural
Jo nes . Ch ery l D
K mgery,
Armlnta Lambert , George H
by
July
,
1974.
Resources
Lee, Stella M Lovett, Louise
It is then expected that the
Lynn, Ca r l E . Man1skas ,
Nathan le i Me Cum ber , Bar
Ohio
EPA will adopt the
bara H , McK1nley, Emogene
prog ram as rules and
R Mercer. Mary M Moles ,
V1rgrn1a F Moore , Irene E
for agricultural
regulations
Morr1s, George E Moss , Cecil
pollution abatement after
E. Newell. Pamela S. Newell.
Jerry A Nor th, Emma M
public hearings and operate it
Palmer , Mary K Persinger ,
through local soil and water
Ja n e A
Queen , L•nda L .
Roach , Carolyn J
Roberts.
conservation districts and tlle
Karen L Roberts , Robert C.
Roush, Dor1s A. Runyon , Mary
dtvision of soli and water
Beth Russel!, Pearl saunders ,
districts, ODNR, as prescribed
Noah D Sau nder s, Richard A .
by law.
Sa unders,
Nancy
Shaw ,
Dorothy E Shee ts , Helena E
Meigs
County
was
Shiflet. Beren1ce D Skehan,
represented by C. E.
Dorothy Sm1th , Mar garet 0
Smit h , E lsa L Soles, Glenn K
Blakeslee, County Extension
So l es, Jr . Gladys Spa rkman .
Agent; David Perry and Reed
Cameron Spears , Betty J
sp.res , Rache l E Sum ner.
Young , Soil Conservation
William H Swanson. Anna E
Service; Pete Shields, ASCS,
swar t z, Ha zel F Tagg , Ph yllls
Taylor, Dorothea M Thomas.
Orion Roush, Ray Miller, Sam
Lillian I Unroe, James D
Michaels, Bob Spurlock,
Walker, Cathy D
Weaver ,
Margaretta Williams and
Southern Local V&lt;&gt;-Ag, and
Sharon R W 1lson
Everett Holcomb, Meigs Local
10 Yean, - Mary E Angel,
Roy Baisden. J r , LO u ise A.
V&lt;&gt;-Ag.
Betcher, Barbara Betz, Phy llis
Betz, JoAnn Bolmger. Joh n
F Rroyles , Harvey A Bush,
Kay Cameron, Ha rm an L
Dillon, Kate Duncan, Ellen A
Deweese , Sh a ro n Eubanks ,
The Meigs High School
Harold 0 George , Erma E
symphonic
band will present a
Green, Joyce N Harrington,
Freda F Johnson , Clara A
Chrislmas concert tonight at
Jones, Bett y L Koehler, Mary
7: 30 at the high school gym.
Leonard, H elen Llfch t• e l d,
Janice L Lum an, Jerry L
Band Director Dwight Goins
Massie . Nancy L . McGu 1r e,
said there is no admission
Edna Menshouse , Raymond
Morrison , Ru th E Mornson,
charge.
Layun ie M NIbert. Helen L
Numbers the band will
NulL
Mabel
8
Phillips ,
Win• fr ed M Racer, Margaret
present include "Overture
J
Russell, Kay Rutherfo r d.
from The Messiah" by G.
Lure e
Sanders.
Alber t a
1
Saunders. Lucille C Saund ers,
Hand e l;
'C hristmas
Rachae l M Saunders, Wdl1am
Pastorale"
by
Bach;
Shaw, Judith R Smith, Ogden
B
Stevens. Ros1e Ward ,
"Chrtstmas Feshval" by
Vernoka Waugh, Morr1s L
Leroy
Anderson; " Highli ghts
Webster ,
Ann
Wlc..klmc ,
Barbara J W1seman and Hazel
from Man of LaMancha" and
v Woods
an
arrangement
rrom
15 Years - Ethel L Barcus ,
Garnet V Beard, Mary K
"America the Beautiful" by
Burnett,
Charlotte
T
James
D. Poly her.
Cremeens, Fe rne M Davis ,
Ralph C Durst. Ju l1e G
The concert will last apEva n s,1 V 1vian Ferguson, Ella
proximately one hour. The
M Fletcher. Irma H Gabrie ll t,
Hazel Guess, Roger C H1ncs,
public ts invited .
Ethel F
Kuhn, Betty J
Plyma l e. Ann 0 R1ggs , Doris
Rudy, E l mer E Rush. Rilla
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
Rusk , Don C Shaw. Garnet
Sh eets , Florence M Sneller ,
The Middleport E-R squad
Beu lah E Spurlock, De lmil A
was called
Hudson St. for
Stan ley , Belva Stewart and
Thom a!li Evans .
Lenora Vanderslice at 9:19 a.
20 - Years Adeld1a M
m.
Thursday, who was taken to
Broyles. Th elma Gilk1son • .
W11ma W 1-iauck , Jess1e M
Veterans Memorial Hospita l
Ko opman, G1IL&gt;ert L Mayo ,
where she was admi tted as a
Paul Nib ert Tra cy Ragltlnd ,
Elo•se R 1ce, Em 1el A Thomas,
medical patient, A call
Beulah W Ward and Evelena
received by the fire departWilliams
:l5 Years William L
mentat8:51
a.m. Thursday to
Cooper , Elmer W Daniels ,
the Howard Harris home in
Judy E I IJOII. Alberta Koehler,
Gall Nea L Mar1e R1chards.
Cheshire was cancelled before
Evelyn
Roush
and
Sea

There's signs of an old-fashioned
Christmas showing up everywhere
' .

Shop Tonight Til 9 PM-Open Both Friday and Saturday 9:30 to 9 P

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Gertrude
Drake, Vinton ; Thelma Salser,
Rac:-ine; Deborah Grueser,
Minersville ; Raymond
Profritt, Portland; Emmett
McCaskey, Rutland.
DISCHARGED - Nellie
Price, Nina Cale, Ruth Cassell,
Mtldred Hemsley, Sarah
Roush, Leolia Miller, Hobert
Durham.

piano music .

r

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

By JAMES R. KING
United ,Press International
A garbage collector made his rounds in a Santa Claus
outfit, spacemen m orbit were serenaded with Yule music,
and an anonymous person slipped a $1,000 bill mto a
Salvatton Army kettle . To top off the Christmas cheer, third
graders in West Vtrginia tned to convince us all that desptte
a fuel shortage there is definitely no shortage of ''oldfashioned love."
Willi four days left before Christmas, evidence of the
holiday sptrit from around the nation seemed to prove the
third graders were nght.
In Sacramento, Cali!., Ray Valine, who dressed up hke a
g1ant rabbit last Easter and wore an Uncle Sam suit on
Independence Day, painted hiS collection barrels red and
green and made his rounds dressed as Santa Claus.
"I'm a 'Santa-tation' engineer," said Valine, 27, passing
out Santa balloons to hundreds of wide-eyed children. "I'm
a good Santa. The kids like it, although some of them aren't
used to Santa picking up their trash."
In Morgantown, W.Va., an anonymous donor placed a
$1,000 bill m a Salvation Army kettle for the second year in a
row. Capt. William Crabson said tlle bill was found Thursdsy when volunteer workers checked a kettle placed
outside tlle Morgantown National Bank.
And pupils m Adelaide Penc-e's third grade class at
Hepsibah Elementary School in Clarksburg, W.Va., wrote a

( Stop at the office

on th e 2nd floor
tor G1ft Cer.
tificates..
Any
amount

See
the
big
selection
of
clothing for the
toddler. Sizes 1
to 3 and 3 to 6x.
Including pants dresses · shirts socks - blouses sweaters - vests jackets .
Buster
Brown
and
other
famous makes.
Any
of
the
sa lesg irls
will
help you with
your selections.

you

choose.

Give Her
Something
Pretty
See the fine I me of
head scarves on
the lst floor .
Solid colors and
patterns

JUST WHAT
SHE WANTS

Pan t y hose

VOL XXV NO. 176

the

V1S1f

Ch lldrens
2nd

Kayser Gkwes

f loor Card1gans ·
Sllpovers
White
and solid colors
Sizes 3 to 6x and 7
to 14

A b •g assortment •nclud•ng
dre5S glove s tang g loves
dnvmg gloves
leather
gloves . All s1zes- on the
ls t floor

Choose

p1n s earnngs nec klace s
pendants . chains A fme
se l ect1on al l boxed ready
f o wrap and g•ve

Special Sale!

•

Stephenson

the department left its station.

Cormick

SISTER DIES
Leona Kohl of Middleport
has learned from Blanche
Priode Tuck of Miami, Fla., of
the death Dec. 12 of her stster,
Margaret, also of Miami.
Burtal was in Philadelphia, Pa.
The Prtode _ family formerly
resided In Pomeroy.

30 Years Wdl 1am E
(Jac k ) ca rr and Leo Mossman
56 - Years Alma L Me
FOR SALE
TWO STORY brick ap artment
bvildlng , two apartme nts ,
South Third St., Middleport
Sho wn by appointment.
Rodney Do wni ng , Rear Estate
Broker. Phon e 992 3731.

12 20 6tp

Thursday thru Saturday

Decomber 20-22
NOT OPEN

SunAmn.-Tues.
Dec. 23-24-25
HIGH PLAINS
D~IFTER

Clint Eastwood

Show Slam 1 p.m .

'

.

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 21. 1973

buy the one yov want t o
g1ve th1S year .

SALE! KIMBALL PIANOS

At the Toy St ore in the
middl e block. A big
selection of bicycles - 10
speeds - 5 speeds · 3
speeds · sta ndard bikes .
All American m ade For
boys and girls and all at
specia l sa le prices.

Hayes, Roma Nease, and Vicky Johnston; back row king
candidates, Mike Salser, Pete Sayre and Randy Forbes.
Winners will he decided by popular vote of the student body.

CANDIDATES - A king and queen will he crowned
Friday night at a Christmas dance at Southern High School in
Racine . Front row, 1-r, the queen candidates are Bre~ds

Albums, mclud1ng Christma s Albums - Single Records . Plu s
many , many 8 track tapes.

..

8y United Press International

GIVE LUGGAGE

t

Everyone t1kes records or tapes for Christmas Choose from
our big selecti on of rock ' n rol l - popular mu s1c · otd. tfme
favorites coun t ry and western
Mustc Oepa rtm ent - 2nd floor .

POLAROID CAM ERAS

\

FOR
HIM
FOR

HER
See th e many mode ls o f Polaroid

Cameras . Camera Depar tment
on the 1st floor An 1deal gift to
give and to get for Christmas

Buy a matched set or buy Individual pieces .
Good color select1on - Famous Airway line of
lug gage that's so rugged and dependable.

1973

SALE PRICES

SUUARE SHOOTER 2

SALE PRICES

DESKS

Candy's Dandy
For Christmas

Furniture Department
Jrd Floor

SPORT COATS
A fine new group of solid
colors and smart pattern s.
Sizes 36 to 46. Shorts,
regular s, longs. Mens
Depa rtment - lsi floor .

See the wonderful line Jf Fanny
Farmer Candles · Boxed and
ready to give. Choose the
assortment you like - size box
you want.

Also Brach's Candy boxed
or by the bag. Many
varieties.

desks .
Secretanes and studen t
des ks
kne e hol e

BRING YOUR CHILDREN TO SEE SANTA CLAUS AT OUR TOY STORE IN THE MIDDLE BLOCK FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 6 TO 8 PM

.

ELBERFELD$ ·1
•'

EROY
I

PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENTS

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Chance of rain or snow
Monday changing lo snow
flurries on Christmas Day.
Highs in lhe 40s and lows in
the teens on Sunday and by
Tuesday highs In th e 30s and
lows In the 20s.

DEAD IN CAll
The Middleport E·R squad
was called at 10:11 a.m . Thursday for Betty Grady who was in
a car drtven by her son-m-law
which was m front of the
Middleport Fire House. Mrs.
Grady, of Racme, was dead on
arrival of th~ squad.

GENEVA (UP! )- The first
face-to-face Middle East peace
conference got off to a shaky
start today With both Israel and
Egypt threatening to pull out in
a dispute over seating arrangements, delaying the opening
sesswn by 40 minutes.
The conferen ce got un·
derway after a warning from
Beirut that Paleshnian
guerrillas
Will
"crus h
Americans everywhere" until
U.S. support of Israel ceases.
A statement in the- Beirut
new spaper An Nahar and
attributed to Palestmian guerrillas warned Americans that if
the U.S. government continued
to support Israel "we shall
keep our promise to our people,
namely to chase you everywhere and at allllmes to strike

seven separate tables in a
heptagon and assigned ' the
Israelis to sit next to the empty
who organ ized- Monday's at- table where the Syrians, who
tack at Rome airport that left pulled out of the U!l&lt;s Tuesday,
32 persons dead including would have been
The Israeli sources sa td
several Americans.
U.N. Secretary General Kurt Eban, saymg this amounted w
Waldheim gaveled the session ''VJsually ostnictzing'' Israel,
to order at 11 :10 a.m (5 ·10 told Waldhetm on arrival at the
a.m. EST ), bringing together site that he would "go home"
Israel , Egypt , Jordan, the unless this was changed. He
Umted States and Soviet Union dropped his obJection to the
to discuss solvmg the 25-year seventh table itself.
With other delegations arnvArab-Israeh conlhct.
Both Israeh and Egyptian mg amtd strict security....ome
sour ces sa td their foreign members even had their own
mmtsters, Abha Ehan and brtefcases searched - WaldIsma il Fahmi respecttvely, heim ushered them mto
threatened to pull out of the separate rooms and began
talks even before in a last shuttlmg from one to antoher
with proposals as tlle 10:30
minute protocol hassle.
U.N. officials had arranged a.m. startmg time passed.
at you and crush you."
The statement purported to
he from the same guuernllas

Egypllan sour c-es said Fahthreatened Jus walkout
when Waldheim proposed
alphabetical seatmg that would
have put Egypt next to Israel.
Instead , they satd, Fahnu
proposed that the United
Nattons, Uruted States and
Soviet Union be seated bEtween
the Middle East antagonists. lt
was this plan that was at..:cepted.
Waldheim wok his place at
the head of the heptagon and,
from him, clockwise, were the"
Israelis, the SoVIets, tlle Syrian
table, the Joramans , the
United States and the Egyptians.
With tlle Arabs smilmg and
waving to one another and the
other participants somber, the
(Continued on Page 12)
mi

p~o:o:: ~,;:::::::=:·:·:·:·:·:·:=:=:~:::::;:;..;;:;:;:::::::::::::::::·:::::·:::·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~=:

An unusually fine select ion
of de sks - r oll tops -

FUND PROFITS
COLUMBUS (UPiz - The
Ohlo Highway Patrol's 4oth
anniversary party here Nov. 16
resulted in a profit of $23,227,
which was turned over w tlle
state Highway Patrol Retirement Board.
Patrol Superintendent Col.
Robert M. Chiaramonte said
nearly 1,100 persons attended
Ute dinner and dance.

by holidsy music by the Oklahoma State University
singers.
"Oklahoma State University
sends holiday greettngs w
,.
Skylab 3 astronauts Gerald Carr, Edward Gibson and
William Pogue," the spectal recording, played by M1sston
Control Thursday night, said. "And here's a special ChriSt·
mas carol from Bill Pogue's alma mater."
Pogue, a native of Sand Springs, Okla., received a
master's degree in mathii!m~tir~ from OSU in 1960.

Stop '" on the lst floor See
all the different mode ls and

A new sh•pmen t of these f1ne qual1 t y K•mba ll pianos m
consoles and console ttes Cherry Walnut Maple and Pecan
f1n 1shes All w1th padded bench to match Sfop In the m us•c
depar tment on the 2nd floo r - Se lect the K1mba ll p1ano you
want during fh ts sale.
We' ll deliver in time for Chr1stmas.

MEIGS THEATRE

Edward Meislahn, pres1dent of Forencto Furmture
Hentals, wanted all his employes- those m lhe Portland,
Ore ., headquarters as weU as two branch of£ices m Seattle- in one place for the company's annual Chnstmas
party .
So he outfitted one of the ftrm's 22-foot movmg vans wtth
a bar, couches, tables, rugs and lamps , and sent the van off
to Seattle carrymg some of his Portland staff whtle the resl
from there took the train. In Seatlle they joined up with the
workers from tlle branch offtces and the 50 employes had a
party in a truck.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

ews .. in Briefsi!i

· Mens Double Knit

In space, America's Sky lab astronauts were serenaded

Geneva talks shaky

Concert tonight

w

The students took a Chnstmas tree, decorations, homemade cookies and a donatwn to the Walden home Thursday.
"Thank you . You made our tragedy more bearable, " the
Waldens said.

We have a fine selection of
qual1ly
b•nocutars
Complete w1th leather
carrymg case and shoulder
strap

L

Give him the gift of
laye red looks · solids ·
argyles and block des igns
knit sweater vests.
Small, m e dium , large and
ex tra large

''The thing we still have plenty of
Is super, terrific old-fashioned love,
As long as a shortage of love isn't near,
There'll be absolutely nothing to lear.

BICYCLES

' '

Sweater Vests

accidental shootmg

LITTLE
GIRLS
depar tment

On the l st floor

'

FOR

•n all s1zes

Costume Jewelry

About 6lf students at Herbert Hoover Htgh School m
Charleston, W.Va , lned w make the hohday brighter for
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Walden , whose son James Ray Walden,
f8, a student at the school, was ktlled last weekend in an

Devoted To The lntereal8 Of 'f7a,o Meiga-MtuOn Area

SWEATERS

and colors . styles and

lengt hs Plus a good
selection of r egular
nylons 1n Berksh1re and
Eyecatcher br and s

" Everyone is huddled close to keep warm .
Heavy sweaters and socks add to everyone's form.
The thermostat is set at 68 degrees .
To ease the oil shortage everyone agrees.

Nut a light was twinkling on lhe tree.

MilS. OMA WINEBRENNER, Syracuse, celebrated her
90th birthdsy Thursday . Mrs. Winebrenner, mother of mne
children, seven of whom are still 11Vin g, does her own
housework and coo ktng, and "just loves w quilt. " Mrs.
Wmebrenner resides wtth her daughter , Beulah Ward,
director of nursing service at Holzer Medical Center.

BINOCULARS

NYLONS

The twinkle in our eye was all you could see
Because there is a shortage of energy.

Don-i expect to reeeive a Ch riFtPUIS ca rd from Rhode
Island Gov. Philip Noel.
"I would rather spend the money on people who need help
so they can have a better Chrtstmas than spend money on
cards. I can't do both ." Noel said Thursday.

C-'hristmas poem :
.
•.
Twas the night bEfore UtrtSimas-19•3,

CINCINNATI - ONE OF THE TWO Rembrandt paintings
taken last Tuesday from the Cincmnati Taft Museum was located
in a barn near here Thursday night and turned over to police.
'
The second painting is still missing and many officials feel
· the thieves will ask ransom . The painting found in the barn was
"Portrait of an Elderly Lady." A scratch about two inches long
was on the painting, but a museum official doesn't know if the
scratch is new.
CHICAGO - RICHARD CAIN, A TOP Chicago lawman
before he became chauffeur for the city's most feared mobsters,
was gunned w death Thursday in an apparent gangland
execution when he walked into a sandwich shop. His face was
completely disfigured from tlle blast and it took authorities hours
to identify him. He was carrying no identification papers.
Cain, 49, was the onetime protege of ex-gov Richard B.
Ogilvie and later courier and chauffeur for gangster Sam
· "Mooney" Giancana. He was killed by two gunmen wearmg ski
masks as he stood against a wall in Rose's Sandwich Shop not far
from the Loop. The gunmen escaped. Witnesses told authorities
that only 15 minutes earlier tlle former chief investigator for the
Cook County Sheriff's office had been seen conferring with four
men in the restaurant.

Miss Lawson was last seen
going to school Friday
dressed tn orange and blue
striped slacks, red T·shlrt
and a blac~ fur coat with a
silver collar.
Anyone
knowing her whereabouts Is
urged to call the Meigs
County Sheriff's Dept. I

Cost of
living
higher

Christmas spirit strong in our schools
By George Hargraves, Supt.
Meigs Local School District
This was the last day of classes prtor to the
Christmas vacation. The kids were all set for that
final dtsmissal hell at each school today. You can
bElieve tllat all the teachers and principals were
looking forward wit also. During those last couple of
days prior to vacation at Christmas, anticipation
rea1Jy grows mtense m the classrooms. Everyone is
ready for a few days of interruption of the classroom
routine as well as getting ready for the Btg Day.
It is a truly bracing experience w visit schools

Speaking of Schools -- No. 297
and individual classrooms such a brief time prior to
Christmas. If you don 't have the Christmas spirit, you
certain!~ catch 11 from the bubbling enthustasm of
kids in school. Classrooms and halls are brightly
decorated. Trees are gaily trimmed. Faces beam
with warmth. You know that Christmas is near.
I have been exposed w this wonderful preChristmas atmosphere in schools for over two dozen
vears and It never ceases w amaze me with its

warmth and spontaneity. It is certainly a
manifestation of what we call the Christmas spirit . It
seems that the young people have more of tt than
those of us who are a little older.
Perhaps we older folks do have a harder time
recpaturing that special feeling that comes each year
at this time. Maybe it's because we have lo worry
more about paying the bills than the kids do. Maybe
we have to give much more and receive much less
tllan the kids. Maybe entllusiasm just naturally
decreases as the years go flying away.
Whatever the cause or causes may be, Christmas
seems to mean more fo r the young than for the old. I
would like w suggest tllat this should not be so. It
certainly shouldn't bE so if we seek anew the real
meaning of the happening that we call Christmas.
Look beyond the gifts, the trees, the decorations,
tlle music and all the other thmgs that have become a
part of the Christmas observance. Look beyond these
to a remembrance that Chri~tmas IS a large birthday
celebration for the tiny Christ Child whose name was
Jesus and whose brief worldly extstence of thirtythree years changed all of history and every individual's life.

Think of next Tuesday, Oecem)ler 25, as just that.
Thmk of it as a birthday, a very special birthday . A
birthday with deep meaning for all of us and for each
of us. Gifts, decorations, music, merriment , etc., are
all fine things. They are all ways that man has
developed to express the feelings of this spec tal tune .
Nevertheless, I urge you to look beyond alltllese !me
things and recognize once more that we are about to
celebrate the btrthday of Jesus Christ .
If we older folks do this, I am conftdent that we
can match the Christmas enthusiasm of the young.
The true meaning of Christmas has even greater
depth for those of us who are closer to the end of our
lives than we are near to tlle b&lt;lgmning of our lives.
Chnstmas ts not just for the children. It ts not just
meaningful wyoungsters who look forward to the
thrill of opening packages. Chnsimas IS special for
all of us who will let it be special because we know
and feel its true meaning of promise for the future .
Let me speak for th e three thousa nd students and
the two hundred forty employees of the Meigs Local
School District and wish you a very joyous and
meamngful Christmas.

WASHINGTON (UPI )- Big
price increases for fuel, elec·
trtcity and food pushed the cost
of Jiving up 0.7 per cent in
NovembEr and cut tlle purchasing power of the average
American's weekly paycheck
by 0.6 per cent, the government
said today.
Reflecting the worsening fuel
shortages, tlle Labor Depart.
ment's Bureau of Labor Stallstics said home heating oU
MADRID - THE SPANISH GOVERNMENT vowed to prices went up 10 per cent last
maintain order with ''maximwn ftrmness" today following the montll and retail gasoline
killing of Prime Minister Luis Carrero Blanco in the nation's first prices rose 4 per cent.
Prices also rose sharply for
major political assassination in more than three decades.
natural gas, coal and elec
Carrero his bodyguard and chauffeur were killed a block from
Ute U.s: Embassy Thursday by a bomb so pow~rful it blew tlleir tricity.
CHRISTMAS GIFTS - Edison Hobstetter, president of
The BLS said higher costs for
limousine over the roof of the San Francisco de Borja church
County Children's Home, gift money for children tllere, and
tlle
Pomeroy
National
Bank,
at
left,
on
behalf
of
the
bank
fuel
and
electrtcity
accounted
Richard Po~in, president, money for Jaycee programs. The
where he had just attended mass.
presented gifts of money for worthwhlle causes Thursday.
A pollee source srud army explosives experts bElieved the for about one-tllird of the
hank also has given $100 Chrtstmas gifts to each o£ the
The
money
went
to,
I
to
r
,
Ray
Wmmg
for
the
Salvation
Ar·
following: Middleport, Pomeroy, Racine, Rutland, Chester,
bomb, hidden in a 50-foot tunnel under the street, was made out of NovembEr increase of 0.7 per
my's Christmas program ; Mrs. Jean Wtll, general chairman
Reedsville, Syracuse and Bashan Ftre Departments and to
an anti-tank missile. Foreign dignitaries, including U. S. Vice cent in the Consumer Price
for
the
Meigs
County
Humane
Society;
Mrs
.
Mildred
J
acobs,
Index ( CPI).
the Pomeroy, Middleport, Racme and tlle Syracuse
President Gerald Ford, flew to Spain ~o attend Ieday's state
superintendent of the Meigs County Infirmary, gtfts for
Higher pnces for restaurant
Emergency Squads.
funeral for Carrero Blanco, Generalissmo Francisco Franco's
residents there; Mrs. Ralph Harvey, matron at the Meigs
meals and most food purchased
right hand man. '
Family . Many residents over
m grocery stores -except
the years visited the place to
meats, poultry and eggs -;:also
vtcw tis attractive pillared
contributed significantly to the
EXODUS FROM JAIL
Marriage Llcelllle
structure. Several years ago a
Rickey Lee Turner, 23,
LONDON, Ohio (UP! ) - A rise m the cost of living in
public sale was held to dtspose
Columbus, laborer, and Sharon fire in a mattress in a cell in the November, the BLS ·said.
of the furnishings of the Titus
Prices of restaurant meals
The old, abandoned Titus lire Thursday mght, it was ror a nwnber of years, once fam1ly.
Ly~n Ervin, 20, Racine, Madison County jail here early
was the scene of a flounshing
today forced evacuation of tlle went up 1.4 per cent and 1\amily mansion m Rutland reported today .
student.
Ca use of the blaze 1s uuon
Page
12)
(Continued
Township
was
destroyed
by
the
Titus
farmmg
operation
by
The large home, unoccupied
IS prisoners.
deterrmned .

,,

•,

II

THE WINTER STORM THAT DUMPED HEAVY snow
accumulations over northwestern Ohio has moved out of the
state - leaving just an inch or more in other areas of the
Buckeye State. The National Weather Service said some light
snow or snow flumes lingered on in the eastern sectton of the
state late Thursday night and early today.
Elsewhere in Ohio cloudy to partly cloudy skies with brisk
norllierly winds were reported. The weather service said temperatures early today ranged from nine above .ero at Findlay
and Dayton wthe teens and 2tE in other areas of the state. Cold
weather was e.pected to continue today and Saturday witll snow
flurries in the eastern section of the state.

STILL MISSING
Sheila Marie Lawson, 15,
Cheshire, a Meigs High
School student, who has been
missing since Friday, still
has not been located according to the sheriff's
department.

j

Boonsue is
president
MASON , W. Va. ~ Dr.
Aarom Boonsue was elected
prestdent of the Mason County
Medica l Society Monday night
at the Red Carpet Inn.
Dr. Antonio Solo was elected
secretary-treasurer of the
Mason County group which has
16 active members.
Dr. Boonsue is a member of
the medical staff of Veterans
Memorial Hospitaltn Pomeroy
and Pleasant Valley Hospital
at Point Pleasant. He ts a
member of the Amencan,
Southern and Industrial
Medtcal Associations, tlle West
Vtrglnia
Soctety
of
Anesthesiologists,
the
Amencan Association of
anesthesiologists, the National
Rehabilitatwn Association and
the West Virginia Medical
Association. He IS contract
physictan for the U. S. Public
Health Service in this area.
Dr . Solo, a radiologiSt, is
assoctated with Dr . Carl
Thompson and Assoctates,
llmltologtsls. He is associated
\Hth Veteran s Memonal
Hospital and rlt·.~~mt Valley
tiospttal
)

f

.

)

�3- The Daily Sentinel, Middlep&lt;H !-Pomeroy, 0 .. Dec. 21. 1973
t - '1'hl' 11oilv ~n:inel. Mid&lt;ll•mri-Pc:rnerov. 0 . Tlec- 21

r-------------------·-··-·-----,
I -Beat. ..
Colored
I
I
1 hall nnulfl
II Of the Bend
I NEW YORK i UPI) -

197~

Congress
•
pressmg
for hill

HEATH UNITED METHODIST CHURCH CHOIR
Seated, front, I
r, Becky Fultz, Uretta J.
McKinney,
Laura
Hoover,
April
fraser,
Martha Hoover, Judy fraser, Sibley Slack; second
row, Betty Fultz, Phyllis Hackett, Peggy Wood, Barbara

Fultz, Cherole Burdette, Nancy Cole, Sandra Luckydoo;
third row, Ben Phtlson (director ), Beth Fultz, Barbara Archer , Kellce Bwdctte, Robert Bumgarner, Chet Tannehill ;
fourth row, John Compton, Andrew Hoover, Newman Burdette , Wendell Hoover .

Cantata at Heath
What's coming in
to be presented
doll making next?
Sunday afternoon
•

annual Christmas cantata was
moved from the usual morning
worsh1p hour to mid-afternoon
this year by popular request so
as not to conflict w1th worship
in area churches. The public is
mv1ted .
Other sections of the cantata
m the order of !herr presentation are, "0 Jersualem Look About Thee," solo by
Martha Hoover ; "The Annunciation," by Cherole
Burdette, Judy Fraser and
chorus; "The Caravan of the
Magi," men's chorus. "The
Plains of Bethlehem," Martha Hoover, women's chor"The
Departus;
ure of the Shepherds, 11
John Compton, Judy fraser
and men's chorus; "Chnstians
Awake!, 11 the choir; "The
. Virgin's Lullaby," Martha
Hoover; '~ The Adoration,"
Judy Fraser and basses, and
"Adestes fideles," Wendell
Presentation of the choir's Hoover and chmr.

The Coming of the King, a
cantata for Advent and
Chnstmas-tide by Dudw11l
be
ley
Buck,
presented
at
3
p.m.
Sunday at Heath Umted
Methodist Church in Middleport by its choir directed by
Ben Philson.
Soloists featured will be
Martha Hoover, Judy fraser,
Cherole Burdette, Mr. Philson,
John Compton and Wendell
Hoover. April Fraser and
Laura Hoover form a duet for
"Awake! Put on Thy Strength
0Zionl '
Mrs. Phyllis Hackett, contralto, will direct the 2.1-vo1ce
choir when Philson sings the
bass solo, "The Questwmng of
the Magi.'
Newman Burdette opens the
cantata at. the pipe organ
playing "Noel, 11 a prelude for
organ.
1

1

By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON (UPI )
Remember "Tiny Tears," the
first doll w1th sunulated lachrymal glands, and what a
sensation it was the Chnstmas
1t was introduced?
And remember the doll,
whose name I have forgotten,
thai carried reality a step
further by wettrng its diaper? II
was another Yuletide seUout
and presumably thrilled little
girls the country over.
This year, as everyone
knows, the hottest item m the
toy department is a doll called
"Babe Alive" that does more
than just wet 1ts d1aper.
What a jolly time Santa Claus
IS going to have wtth a sleigh
full of those things! Let's hope
he takes along plenty of Chux.
Pm wondering, as I imagine
you are, what the next step Will
be. And believe me, effendi,
there Will be a next step.
Once those toymakers sense a
trend, there's no stopping them .
Next Chrisimas you won 't
find three !lolls in the entire
store that are potty trarned .

And then, I'll wager, \\ie'll see

the mtroductwn of Baby Netlleskm, a doll that does
everything "Baby Alive" does,
m add1tion to wh1ch it develops
diaper rash .
Baby Nettleskm likely will be
followed by Baby Breaksleep, a
doll w1th a bUllt-m llmmg
device that causes it to start
crymg at 2 a.m
The only way to make it hush
w1ll be to get out of bed and
g1ve it a bottle . Should set a
new sales record.
That record, however, surely
Will be broken by Baby
Spitback. It will be a spoon-fed
doll wtth a mmiature Pablum
machme ins1de.
Each time the doll 1s fed a
spoonful of Pablurn, it will spit
back two spoonfuls. Just like a
real baby.
Which brmgs us to Baby
Drool.
No Chrtstmas will be complete w1th a doll that produces
excess saliva , which dribbles
out of 1ts mouth each time 1t IS
ptcked up.
Afler that, I look for toy

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Members of Congress went
back to the drawtng board
today to try to wr1le and pass
by nightfall an emergency
energy bill which won't be
vetoed by President Nixon.
Meanwhile, the threat of a
Omstmas holiday walkout by
airline pilots was averted as
they got goverrunent assurances more jet fuel will be
made available, resulting in
fewer fltght cancellations and
fewer pilot layoffs than predicted .
Members of a House-Senate
conference committee scb.eduled a mormng meel!ng (9
a.m. _EST) to take a second
look at disputed provisions of
an energy bill on which most of
them thought they had agreement Wednesday rught. The
b1ll g1ves President Nixon
broad powers to deal with the
energy crisis, including the
power to ration gasoline if he
chooses.
A maJonty of the corruruttee
members had officially signed
their names to the bill Wednesday night. But what they
actually signed was a largely
blank b11l. Their staffs were
supposed to fill m exact wordmg, following what the
members appeared to have
agreed on in principle.
But when the staffers began
to do that Thursday, disagreements emerged both among
conumttee members and between them and tl]e White
House on key pomts.
Threat Of Veto
· The While Ho\!se objected to
provisions
givmg
a
congressional veto over such
possible administration steps
as mandatory Sunday closing
of gasoline stations, mandatory restriction of gasoline
sales to 10 gallons per
customer and limiting outdoor
lighting.
A White House congressional
liason official termed "unworkable" a provision in the
bill for up to $5(10 milhon rn
special Wlemployment compensation for job loss related to
the energy criSis-to be paid
after an individual's regular
unemployemt benefits run out.
He said 11 would be too hard to
tell which unemployment is
energy related and which isn't.
Committee members found
they disagreed on the timing of
a ban on "windfall profits" for
the oil rndustry, and the While
House asked that that
provision - which it also
wants-be put m a different
bill.
Congressional sources said
Wh1te House officials gave
mttmations of a Presidential
veto unless changes were
made. With Congress racing

Some Ohioans happy as enemy

'companies to start bringing out
specialty dolls. Baby Cribfoot,
for example.
.
Each time this doll is put to
1970 senatortal campaign.
bed, it will get a foot caught
Horne, former1Y of y oungs- between the slats in the side of
town, said lhe IRS never audit- the crib, causing it to wake up
ed his taxes. .
and start crying.
He ran the McGovern cam- The ultimate triumph of the
palgn m the 19th CongressiOnal toy industry undoubtedly will
Distnct.
be Baby Colic.
"A mong Deeen t p eop1e"
An internal mechanism set to
11
1 t~ink it's quite an honor. begm functioning at irregular
1
lmgmngtobemthecompany intervalswillcausethedollto
f
f th
td
t
o some o e mos ecen pe~- make a wailing noise that
pie rn lhe country and I cant continues until it is walked
thmk of anything that could rocked jiggled and patted fo~
have happened to me that 30 10 4:) minutes.
would h_ave ma,,de me _happ1er With a little imagination,
for Ch nsbnas, he sald .
playing dolls can be almost as
An oth er MeG overn worker, much fun as the real thing.
Fredenck R. McConnaughey,
Kettering, was listed . He is
the editor of the Kettering-Oak- - - - - - - - - - - wood Times, a weekly newspaper.
al May 26, 1973, calling for
· tl on
McConnaughey said he con- PreSl'd en t N'1xon 's res1gna
lributed to the McGovern cam- an d th en Nov. 7, 1973, call\ng
paign and also worked as an for his impeachment.
advance and scheduling coordi- Saying he had no idea why
nator for the third Congression- he made it, but was delighted
al District during the McGov- was Arthur Kobacker, Steubenern campaign
.
ville, president of Kollacker
His newspaper ran an editori- Shoe Co. in Brilliant, and also
president of the self-serve PicWay Shoe Marts in Oh10.
'

By United Press International
Several Oh1oans on the list of
"enemies" which White House
Counsel John W Dean III gave
IRS Commisswner Johnnie M.
Walters Sept. II, 1972, said
they were "delighted" to be on
the list.
. Raymond Horne, 44 now an
accoWltant for the Divislon of
Safety and Hyg1ene m Columbus, said It was a nice Christmas present.
Among the 18 Ohioans named
to the list was Cleveland businessman Howard Metzenbaum ,
picked Wednesday to succeed
Willllllll Saxbe in the U.S. Sen1

CRAIG.

ate when Saxbe is sworn in
next month as Attorney General.
Several of those m the Cleveland area on the hst had some
affiliation with Metzenbawn or
worked on his 1970 Senate campaign when he lost to Robert
A. Taft Jr ., ti Republican, m
the general election.
One of those affiliates of Metzenbaum was A1va T. Banda ,
now the chief executive officer
of the Cleveland Indians baseball team. Bonda had been a
partner with Metzenbawn in
business deals in the past.
Also on the list was a "be-

Fun To Be With

hmd the scenes" worker for
Metzenbaum, Gov. J ohn G1II1-.
gan and Sen. George McGovern. He is Norman Wam, Shoker Heights, former general
manager and principal owner
of two Cleveland radio stations.
"Loya1Ame ri eao "
"I'm honored and pr~ud to
be on the hst," he said. "If
I'
th r t ·
h
m on e IS , m sue company as How~rd Metzenbaurn,
and Alba Bonda, I'm honored,
P_roud and delighted I've been
smg Ied ou t as a 1oyal American."
•
Me tz en b awns
accountant
Ronald Cohen of Cleveland
Heights, also appeared on the
list. He thought a contributiOn
to the McGovern campaign got
him and his wife on the list.
Many of those contacted sa 1'd
they could think of no reason
to be put on the list.
Stanley Rothenfeld, Shaker
Heights, president of Palevsky
Industries, Inc., a Cleveland
based products firm, said he
contributed to Metzenbaurn 's

!

I white and blue basketballs

!

By Bob Hoeflich
Gee!

Can t ever recall ever before being able to report thts early
before Christmas that all is pretty well set towards remembering
the under-privileged.
Mrs. Mildred Jacobs reports 1.hat "everythmg ts commg up
roses" for residents at the Meigs County Infirmary. Mrs. Ralph
Harvey reports almost the same story at the Meigs County
Children S Home with the exception of a need for a little more
candy, peanuts and JUS! a bit more frmt for the kids there. Mrs.
Harvey wiU be happy to rece1ve your contribution at anytime.
The Meigs County patients at the Athens State Hospital have
been provided for well with Mrs. Mary Martin again taking on
the chore of headmg a public program to gather up g1fts for some
40 Meigs men and women confined there.
Mrs. Charles Marshall and Mrs. Marlm and Mrs. Gemma
Casci of the senior Ladies Auxiliary of Drew Webster Post 39,
Amencan Legion, and Sherri and Denise Marshall representmg
the post's junior auxiliary met and prepared the boxed gifts for
those patients
Each woman patient from Metgs County confined
to the hospital received a box contaming three pieces of
Jewelry, dustmgor talcum powder, cologne or hand lotiOn, panty
hose, a candy cane and candy bars, shampoo, soap, a towel or
washcloth . Other Items put in some of the boxes for the women,
but not all, included goM1S pajamas, houseslippers, pin
cushions, billfolds, key cases, hairnets and Bible pencils.
Boxes for the men included paperback books, pencils, pens,
toothbrushes, toothpaste, combs, handkerchiefs, candy bars,
deodorant, shaving cream, gum, socks and playing cards. Added
to some of the other men's boxes were tobacco, ties; lighters and
note pads.
Among the contributors were the Wildwood Garden Club,
Racil'e Grange 2600, Mrs. Walter Hayes, Middleport Garden
Club, Nellie and Hallie Zerkle, Drew Webster Post's aux1hary,
Ossie's Recreation Center, Kermit Walter, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Marshall, and the juntor auxiliary of Drew Webster Post. The
boxes were gift wrapped and were taken to the hospital by Mrs.
Marlin and Mrs. Marshall Wednesday.
So, it does look like a nice Omstmas. However, tf you know
of anyone neglected, do let us know,
1

1

1

SPEAKING OF CHRISTMAS, if you men need a haircut,
better be getting 1!. The barbershops of the county w1ll be closed
not only on Christmas but on Wednesday, the day following .
CUFF MANLEY WHO has been everyone's favonte shoe
repairman for about 22 years, has sold his shop on North Second
Ave. m Middleport to Larry Haynes, 27, Syracuse, who took over
on Dec. 11. Larry will continue to operate the shop under the
name of "Cliff's Shoe Repair" from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily.
OTHER SURVIVORS Of Frank Settle who died recently m
Florida besides a nephew, C. H. Wise of Waverly, include nieces,
Ruth W1se and Ruby Sw1ck, both formerly of Middleport, now
residing in Columbus, and a sister, Mrs. Mabel McCormick, of
St . Albans, W. Va.

Betty Jean Grady dies
RACINE - Betty Jean
Grady, 46, of Racine, died m
Middleport Thursday . Mrs .
----------for hohday adJournment
tonight, committee members
decided to have another try at
drafting the proVIsions. A veto
would mean no bill until
Congress returns Jan. 21.
No Xmas Walkout
In other developments:
-The Air L1ne Pilots
Association,
the
union
representing 30,000 pilots,
announced Thursday it will not
stage a Christmas holiday
walkout because it has been
assured by the administration
that jet fuel allocations will be
mcreased, which would mean
fewer cuts in schedules and
fewer pilot layoffs than
predicted.
- Secretary
of
Transportation Claude S. Brinegar
if' d · lin
h
not 1e wr es t ey may be
able to get naphtha type fuel to
supplement regular jet fuel.
-The Labor Department
said nearly 20,000 persons have
been added to unemployment
oompensation roles as a direct
or indirect result of the energy
crisis.
-AFL-CIO President
George Meany said President
Nixon's proposed oil company

Grady was preceded in death
by her parents, George and
Lucy Weaver Justis, and an
infant daughter.
She 1s survived by her
husband, Ronald C. Gracy,
Rae me ; two daughters,
Darlene Justis and Joyce
Grady, both of Racme; four
sons, Steve, Jeff, Tommy and
Jimmy Grady, all at home ;
two grandsons, Scott and Rex
Justis; three sisters, Mary
Watson,
Letart
Falls;
Ehzabeth Gandee, Alliance,
and Dorothy Greathouse,
Racine, and a brother, Paul
Justis, Racine.
Services w11l be held
Saturday at 3 p.m. at Ewmg
Chapel with the Rev. freeland
Norris officiating. Burial will
be in the Letart Falls
Cemetery.
friends may call at the
chapel anytime.

SPFI\KtNG OF

Hair .)LV•~tt.
by

KAY
'~
So

you haven't had any

ravtng compliments or
standtng ovattons about
your hatr lately Perhaps it
IS because those who see
you are the stlent , observtng types Perhaps tf ts

because

your

ha•r

CINCINNATI (UPI) Kenny Anderson is still quret,
but now he 's also confident.
The Cincinnati Bengals
quarterback says this season
has been the "most satisfymg"
of all his years in college and
pro football and he frgures It's
far from over.
"
The Bengals play the Miami
Dolphins in the NatiOnal Football League playoffs Sunday
and Anderson says he and his
teammates are more than
ready.
"I'm very confident in the
abilities of myself and my
teammates going into the
playoffs,'' says Anderson, a
graduate of Augustana College
in Rock Island, m. "A Super
Bowl situation for us doesn't
sound out of place to me at all .
All it takes is three games and I
feel we can play on a par with
any team at any time."
Anderson says his "quiet
personality" may have overshadowed his leadership abilrties his first two years in pro
football, but he feels his performance this year has won
him the respect of his teammates.
"I beat out Virgil Carter for
th1s job, but it took me a long
tune to feel like the team
leader because our persona1Ities are so different," Anderson S3ld. "Virgil is a rahrah type of guy. I'm quiet.
"But, by what has happened
this year, I know I have the
respect of all the players . I
• didn't feel comfortable my first
two years I do now, This has
been the most Satisfymg experience of my life. "
.. An accurate short-yard passer his first two years, Anderson
blossomed into a long-range
touchdown throwing threat this
season.
"TD passes have been the
big difference," the 24-year-&lt;&gt;ld
with the sheepish gnn says. "I
only threw seven last year and
''

McMILLEN'S DILEMMA
COLLEGE PARK, Md .
(UPI ) - Maryland basketball
star Tom McMillen said
Wednesday tha\ he is not yet
certam he wants to accept his
Rhodes scholarship
The 6-11 McMillen said he
may choose mstead to go to
professional school or attempt
to become a professional ball
player after graduation this
June.

The Dai~ Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF

MEIGS· M.HON AREA
CHESTER L TANNI:HILL ,

.

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1

1

1

NFL Playoff Roundup
By VITO STELLINO
The Mmnesota Vikings and
the Washmgton Redskins, prepanng for Saturday's NFC
playoff match, have spent the
week looking for one thmg.
The Vikings were searching
for a place to practice that
wasn't covered by a foot of
snow and the Redskins were
looking for a starting quarterback .
Both had varymg degrees of
success in the search Thursday.
The Vikmgs, who had gone
from Bloomington to Tu1sa
Okla. in search of a field that
wasn ' t covered by snow only to
be hit by a snowstorm, were
able to practice outdoors
Thursday.
And the Redskms got Billy
Kilmer out of the hospital and
on the field practice.
But until Saturday's 1 p.m.
EST test, rt'll be difficult to tell
wh1ch team fared better. The
game will start a weekend of
lour nationally televised playoff
games. Oakland hosts Pittsburgh in the second Saturday
game and Cmcinnati IS at
Miami and Los Angeles is at
Dallas in the two Sunday
games.
Tulsa's Thick Snow
On Wednesday, the snow was
so bad in Tulsa that the Vikings
had to practice indoors And
when one of the team buses
was stopped behind stalled
cars, some of the players got
out and pushed to clear up the
jam.
Some of the drivers looked a
little startled," chuckled one
player. "I don t think some of
them knew what was happening. Here were all these big
guys appearing from nowhere
and pushing their cars. But the
VIkings cleared the way."
On Thursday, coach Bud
Grant was able to have his
team practice outdoors on

Tartan turf.
By Minnesota standards, the
forecast for Saturday Isn't that
bad. The weatherman predicts
temperature highs m the teens
or low 20s. That'll be nothing
like the famous "ice bowl" t1tle
game between Green Bay and
Dallas in 1967.
The Oakland-Pittsburgh rivalry is starting to become one of
the most bitter ones in sports.
This is the fourth meeting
between the two learns in the
last two seasons and Pittsburgh
has won the first three .
But Oakland still contends tl
was robbed by the referee's
decisiOn in the playoff game
between the two clubs in
Pittsburgh last year when
Franco Harris made his celebrated denected catch and ran

1

1

OPEN EVENINGS
MIDDLEPORT

'

~=~:sB:n:::.y::,~n: h:~:;~

Sport Parade

~

By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sports Editor

.f.:_!·

~\
1_!.1,~

drivers

1.__

drill th1s afternoon bzfo re :;.
flying to Miami Saturday
afternoon . The Dolphm ; NEW YORK ! UPI ) - "My name IS not Santa Claus ... ll's
Bengals game is set for 1 p.m . Charles 0 . Fmley ... "
EST Sunday m the Orange
The Oakland A's owner enuncmted each of the WQrds slowly
Bowl.
and clearly .
He did so because he was reacting to a suggestion that wtth the
holiday season being here already, he could show some Christmas sp1rit and look very good an the process, by releasmg his
cla1m on Dick W1lhams so Williams could go work for the New
York Yankees
Charlie Finley tsn 'I gomg to do anything like that though. In
light of Joe Cronin s ruhng, he 's not even sure he's willing to
accept "proper compensation " from the Yankees for W1lhams
anymore So there goes Chnstmas.
"People may thtnk I'm stubborn, but that isn't true," Charlie
l''mley's vmcecame over the phone a little hoarse from his home
tn La Porte, Ind.
"It's just the opposite. I bell eve strongly and firmly in fightmg
for what IS n ght. I'm not stubborn I'm the easiest person m the
to do just that.
world to work for tf the mdiv1dual who IS taking my money is
11
We think we've got a better loy•l and Willing to gtve me a day's work for his pay . If he's not
chance than last season be- wllhng to do mther, he can't play on my team or be a member of
cause we've got a better team. my organizatiOn. H's as simple as that."
Last ~·ear we were not that
Cronin Ruling Rapped
much of a team . We were just
Perhaps 1l's that simple m Charhe Finley's mtnd, but it's not
coming and we knew ·tt.
that simple 10 the mrnds of Dtck W1Ihams and the Yankees. They
" A year ago, we were feel he 's bemg more than merely intransigent, they're convinced
starting three freshmen in the he 's being out-and-out hard-headed .
backfield . We have th ree
A1; for myself, I tlunk Charlie fmley IS getting a b1g kick 011! of
sophomores m the backfield all this.
now.''
What started out as simply an afterthought -making the
The news conference which Yankees gtve up something of value for Williams -has now
had gone smoothly ended become a nationally talked-about matter of prmciple with
suddenly when a radio news- Charlie Frnley . He enJOYS being the focal pomt of all this and the
man asked Hayes about shov- further it goes along, the more his feelings in the matter harden.
ing a camera into the face of
Everybody was hollering for Joe Cronin to make a dectsion. He
Los Angeles Times' photogra- held a formal meeting in Boston with all parties present Wedpher Art Rogers before last nesday and then made his deciston Thursday disapprovmg the
season's Rose Bowl game.
contract Williams Signed last week w1th the Yankees.
''Okay , now we've been
The Yankees feel 11 was a poor decision, a basically inaroWld . long enough," said consistent one OOcause Cronm also ruled that Detroit's signing of
Hayes, standing up. "We've Ralph Honk was morder, and Houk, hke Williams, had two more
g1ven you a good mtervlew and years to go on h1s contract with the Yankees.
we're not going to rehash that
fmley Pleased
one now. We're here to play
Finley, naturally, thinks Cromn, about to give up the American
football."
I,eague presidency, made the proper decision. He even called
The Buckeyes begin the him up and told him so.
Southern Cahforma phase of
Not everybody feels finley is acting like Scrooge in all this.
their workouts today, prac- Some people feel he's actmg properly, and naturally these are
ticing at Citrus College at the poople finley hkes to talk to you about.
Azusa,
Calif.
They 're
"On Wednesday morning when I was in Boston before that
scheduled to vts1t Disneyland meeting, I went into the hotel drug store because I had forgotten
Saturday.
my shavmgeqmpment and wished to buy some," he says. "The
pharmacist recogf\Ized me and sa1d, 'how right you are. A
contract IS a contr~nd m my opm10n there is no way Joe
Cronin can rule against you, so cheer up.'"
That was before Wednesday's formal session.
Critics Of finley
Later that same day, after the hearing had been concluded and
for a touchdown . The Raiders Fmley had traveled to Chicago, he tells of another individual he
ms1st it was an illegal play.
met who was m hts corner.
Scouts Ejected
"AI; I checked into the hotel, the room clerk behind the counter
feelings between the lwo was a fellow who played on the Notre Dame baseball team, and
teams dldn' t improve thts year he told me how proud he was of me because of the stand I had
when Pittsburgh went out to taken," says the A'sowner. ''He sa1d Dick Williams was wrong to
Oakland, beat the Raiders and do what he did."
then charged them with dirty
There are those, however, who see Charlie Finley as some kind
tricks like throwmg an under of villain, one who keeps tightening the screws on both Williams
mflated ball into the game and and the Yankees.
wearmg grease on jerseys. A
To that, he says·
league investigation cleared the
"How could 1 be? I'm only doing what I consider the right
Raiders.
·
thmg."
Then last week, Oakland
Okay, then, Charlie finley is no villain and by his own adcaught three Pittsburgh scouts mission he isn't Santa Claus either.
in its press box scoutmg the
So can he really be - Henry Kissinger as a small boy?
Denver game, using writers'
credentials The men were
ejected and the Pro football
Writers Association has protest- Oakland, w1th the home team JARVIS IS TRADED
ed because the writers didn't held edge, IS hsted as a fourARLINGTON, Tex. (UP!) know their names were being pomt favorite .
Veteran righthander Pat
On Sunday, Miami, wh1ch
used .
Jarvis
Thursday was traded by
won the Super Bowl last year
the Montreal Expos to the
w1th a perfect 17-Q record, is a
Texas Rangers in exchange for
nme-point choice over Cincin- utility man Larry BUttner.
nati. Dallas is listed by two
Jarvis, 32, was 2-1 in 39 inIn other games Thursday over Los Angeles although the
night, Toledo got27 points from Rams won a regular season rungs with the Expos last
Mike Parker, 10 of them late in meeting 37-31 when John Had! year.with a 3.23 ERA. Biittner,
the game, to roll over St. threw four touchdown passes to 27, hit .252 for Texas last
season ln only 83 games.
Marys of California 82~3 for Hal Jackson
the Rockets fourth straight
win; Muskingum dropped its
third straight game on a southern tour 71h10 to Pembroke (N.
C.) .State University; Walsh
beat Thomas More (Ky.) 73'65;
Wright State beat Marietta 7658 and Malone downed Davis
and Elkms (W.Va.) 91~9.
Other games tonight find
Kent state at Penn State, Miami at Cleveland State, Xavier
at Marquette, Wittenberg at
Bellarmine (Ky .), and Tiffin at
Northwood (Ind. ).
1

1

1

indicted
NEW YORK ( UP! )
Twenty-mne persons, Including
Del Insko, president of the
National Assoc1ahon of Harness
Dnvers, and a nwnber of
harness ra cing's top dnvers,
were mdicted Thursday on
charges of conspmng to fix
Superfecta races at two tracks
in the area .
All of the drivers have been
suspended pending the outcome
of their trial, accordmg to the
Umted States Trottmg Association.
The indtctmenl said the
conspirators paid drivers $1,000
for placmg no better than fifth
m certain races on which the
mastermmds bet "about $25,000
to $50,000" on every possible
Superfecta combmation between last Jan . 1 and April 13,
grossing about $3 million on 36
races.
The Superfecta calls for
bettors to pick the first four
horses in exact order . By
knowmg m advance that a
certain horse would finish out
of the money, a better would
have to place bets on fewer
winmng combmahons, thus
msuring himself a profit
because of the high Superfecta
payoffs.
The indictments sa1d the
conspiracy came to light after
Off-Track Betting Corp. officia1s became suspicious about
strange betting patterns and an
mordinate number of Superfecta wms.
All those charged pleaded
mnocent in Brooklyn federal
Court and were released in
thelr own recognizance pending
the trial, for which no date was
set.

THOMAS IS SUED
SAN DIEGO (UP! ) - Duane
Thomas, moody Washington
Redskins ruruung back, has
been sued for $12,264 by the San
Otego Chargers football team.
In the federal court suit filed
Wednesday it was charged that
Thomas refused to repay loans
made to him by the club
between Oct. '1:1, 1972, and July
25, 1973,

A-C·M·I·A
ATHENS COUNTY
MONTHLY

INCOME
ACCOUNT
Interest Checks
Mailed Monthly
or Quarterly

The Athens County

Savings &amp; loan Co
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohto
All Accounts Insured To

$20,000 by FSLIC.

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By United Press International
Mount Union College handed
Rochester
Institute
of
Technology its first basketball
loss of the season Thursday
night and advanced into the
finals of its own Holiday
Tournament.
Mount Union rolled to an
easy 911-71 win over RIT in the
second game after Hiram
downed Juniata (Pa.) College
87-74 in the opener.
The Purple Raiders will
meet Hiram for the title tonight
after RIT and Juniata play for
consolation honors.
The tournament IS only one
of seven Ohio teams will be involved in tonight. Also on the
schedule, Ohio University
takes on top-ranked UCLA.
Ohio State plays Stanford in
the first round of the University of Kentucky Invitational
Tournament, Capital plays
Grove City ( Pa.) in the Capital
City Classic, Dayton hosts the
Dayton Invitational , Rio
Grande is in the Norfolk (Va.)
Tournament and Akron in the
Kentucky Wesleyan Tournament.

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Mount Union in finals

, MOBILE HOMES
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Today's

JOHN HOSPITALIZED
MilES, Iowa iUPI ) - ~aury
John, head basketball ooach at
Iowa State, wiJl miss the
Cyclones' game friday night
at Tulsa because he will be in
the hospital for more tests.
Doctors said they were
unsure what was aihng John
but hoped thts week 's tests
would clear up the mystery.

NFL playoffs begin Saturday

LARRY'S

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

'

bombastic m his previous Rose
Bowl trips from Columbus, was
smiling and affable during his
news conference.
He also lauded McKay's
University of Southern California players, calling Trojans'
flanker Lynn Swann " the
fastest man in the country.'
"Last spring Paul Brown
(coach of the Cincinnati Bengals) visited the West Coast
and he came back and told me
he 'd seen this !ella (Pat)
Haden," recounted Hayes .."He
sa1d, 'Boy, he's about as good a
college quarterback as I've
ever seen' and Paul doesn't
lavish praise like that."
Making his stxlh trip IQ the
Pasadena, Calif., classic in 23
years at Ohio State, Hayes will
be out to end a string of four
straight New Year's Day wms
by the Pacific-11. Two of the
defeats were suffered by his
Buckeyes, including a 42-17
thrashing at the hands of USC
last season.
" It would be prestigious for
us if we went ahead and won
th1s one/' the Ohio State coach
noted. "It's a prest1gious game
and naturally we'd like to win 11
and I think we have thP :lbihty

By JIM COUR
UP! Sports Writer
LOS ANGELES (UPI)
Watch out, John McKay.
Woody Hayes is going to kill
you with kindness.
Hayes and his Ohio State
football team arrived in Southern California's bright sunshine from the frigid Midwest
Thursday and Ha :x:_e~ immediately began lav1shmg
praise on h1s Rose Bowl
coachmg counterpart.
"I think it s about time
someone realizes what John
McKay has meant to American
oollegiate football," the Buckeyes' coach sa1d at a Los
Angeles Airport news conference.
"He's been the chief mnovator m the last 10 years. He's
outdistanced all of the other
coaches and 1ts no secret that a
lot of us one way or another
have tried to copy the things he
does in h1s "!' formation.
" I thmk he utilizes the
runmng of his tailback and the
passing of his quarterback
better than anyone else does in
college football ."
The 59-year-&lt;&gt;ld Hayes, often

.. Frank Gheen, Sales Mgr.

A GIFT-A-RAMA STORE

We will close 5 P.M. Christmas Eve. Closed
Tuesday and Wednes!lav. December 25-26.

X 50'

u.-..g·"'

1:1:

Woody buttering
up John McKay

1

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1----------....;,.-1

Anderson rderred to rookie
Isaac Curtis, the speedster who
caught mne TO 1J3Sses, and
veteran Olarley Joiner, obtained from Houston m a trade
last year. Because he was
mjured much of the year,
Joiner only caught 13 passes,
but they went for 214 yards.
Joiner, who helped the

"There were two reasons for
!l. Our offensive linP really ~ot
the job done this year and 11
gave me- that e-xtra tune I
needed to read the defenses
and spot my receiver. But the
big thing has been our two wide
receivers. They're JUSt what
we need to go long ."

'

PORTABLE STEREO:

Pointview Cable TV Business

Will Be Closed Christmas Day.

Ttmn ·

nomad·

NOTICE"'

Office Will Close At Noon,
Monday, December 24, And

Buslnes Off1ce Phone

992 2156 Editor ial Phone 992'
2157
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111 Pomeroy, Oh oo

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ROIERT HOEFLICH .
City Editor

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ctudu Sunday
Sentinel

fLOWERS
For All Occasions

Saturday durmgg ~th:~en~t~o~~~:~~
finals and cl
playoffs.
Wilt Chamberlain, under a
$1.8-m!lhon three-year cor1- 11
tract as player-coach of the
San D~ego Conqwstadors, will
do the color commentary
alongside Ray Scott, announcer of the Green Bay
Packer football games.
Chamberlain will not announce, however, tf his team
makes the playoffs.
"What we're concerned wlth
ts getting the exposure, not so
much a long or especially
lucrative contract," Storen
said. "Our problem is gettmg
our product recogmzed at a
national level

Anderson a confident man

,,

excess profits tax is an "utter
deception" since the tax, he
said, will be passed on to
consumers in the form of
higher
prices.
,.;;,....;...,
___~--. .

1

be bouncing on
sCreens in more than
cent of the country
Jan . 30, when the
Sports Network begins
telecasts
of
Basketball Association
Mike Storen,
of the ABA only 31&gt;
achieved one of his maa)j~o:r~~~~l}
when he announced T
that Hughes would telecast
over 140 stallons the ABA
Star game Jan. 30 and then
"Game of the Week"

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�3- The Daily Sentinel, Middlep&lt;H !-Pomeroy, 0 .. Dec. 21. 1973
t - '1'hl' 11oilv ~n:inel. Mid&lt;ll•mri-Pc:rnerov. 0 . Tlec- 21

r-------------------·-··-·-----,
I -Beat. ..
Colored
I
I
1 hall nnulfl
II Of the Bend
I NEW YORK i UPI) -

197~

Congress
•
pressmg
for hill

HEATH UNITED METHODIST CHURCH CHOIR
Seated, front, I
r, Becky Fultz, Uretta J.
McKinney,
Laura
Hoover,
April
fraser,
Martha Hoover, Judy fraser, Sibley Slack; second
row, Betty Fultz, Phyllis Hackett, Peggy Wood, Barbara

Fultz, Cherole Burdette, Nancy Cole, Sandra Luckydoo;
third row, Ben Phtlson (director ), Beth Fultz, Barbara Archer , Kellce Bwdctte, Robert Bumgarner, Chet Tannehill ;
fourth row, John Compton, Andrew Hoover, Newman Burdette , Wendell Hoover .

Cantata at Heath
What's coming in
to be presented
doll making next?
Sunday afternoon
•

annual Christmas cantata was
moved from the usual morning
worsh1p hour to mid-afternoon
this year by popular request so
as not to conflict w1th worship
in area churches. The public is
mv1ted .
Other sections of the cantata
m the order of !herr presentation are, "0 Jersualem Look About Thee," solo by
Martha Hoover ; "The Annunciation," by Cherole
Burdette, Judy Fraser and
chorus; "The Caravan of the
Magi," men's chorus. "The
Plains of Bethlehem," Martha Hoover, women's chor"The
Departus;
ure of the Shepherds, 11
John Compton, Judy fraser
and men's chorus; "Chnstians
Awake!, 11 the choir; "The
. Virgin's Lullaby," Martha
Hoover; '~ The Adoration,"
Judy Fraser and basses, and
"Adestes fideles," Wendell
Presentation of the choir's Hoover and chmr.

The Coming of the King, a
cantata for Advent and
Chnstmas-tide by Dudw11l
be
ley
Buck,
presented
at
3
p.m.
Sunday at Heath Umted
Methodist Church in Middleport by its choir directed by
Ben Philson.
Soloists featured will be
Martha Hoover, Judy fraser,
Cherole Burdette, Mr. Philson,
John Compton and Wendell
Hoover. April Fraser and
Laura Hoover form a duet for
"Awake! Put on Thy Strength
0Zionl '
Mrs. Phyllis Hackett, contralto, will direct the 2.1-vo1ce
choir when Philson sings the
bass solo, "The Questwmng of
the Magi.'
Newman Burdette opens the
cantata at. the pipe organ
playing "Noel, 11 a prelude for
organ.
1

1

By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON (UPI )
Remember "Tiny Tears," the
first doll w1th sunulated lachrymal glands, and what a
sensation it was the Chnstmas
1t was introduced?
And remember the doll,
whose name I have forgotten,
thai carried reality a step
further by wettrng its diaper? II
was another Yuletide seUout
and presumably thrilled little
girls the country over.
This year, as everyone
knows, the hottest item m the
toy department is a doll called
"Babe Alive" that does more
than just wet 1ts d1aper.
What a jolly time Santa Claus
IS going to have wtth a sleigh
full of those things! Let's hope
he takes along plenty of Chux.
Pm wondering, as I imagine
you are, what the next step Will
be. And believe me, effendi,
there Will be a next step.
Once those toymakers sense a
trend, there's no stopping them .
Next Chrisimas you won 't
find three !lolls in the entire
store that are potty trarned .

And then, I'll wager, \\ie'll see

the mtroductwn of Baby Netlleskm, a doll that does
everything "Baby Alive" does,
m add1tion to wh1ch it develops
diaper rash .
Baby Nettleskm likely will be
followed by Baby Breaksleep, a
doll w1th a bUllt-m llmmg
device that causes it to start
crymg at 2 a.m
The only way to make it hush
w1ll be to get out of bed and
g1ve it a bottle . Should set a
new sales record.
That record, however, surely
Will be broken by Baby
Spitback. It will be a spoon-fed
doll wtth a mmiature Pablum
machme ins1de.
Each time the doll 1s fed a
spoonful of Pablurn, it will spit
back two spoonfuls. Just like a
real baby.
Which brmgs us to Baby
Drool.
No Chrtstmas will be complete w1th a doll that produces
excess saliva , which dribbles
out of 1ts mouth each time 1t IS
ptcked up.
Afler that, I look for toy

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Members of Congress went
back to the drawtng board
today to try to wr1le and pass
by nightfall an emergency
energy bill which won't be
vetoed by President Nixon.
Meanwhile, the threat of a
Omstmas holiday walkout by
airline pilots was averted as
they got goverrunent assurances more jet fuel will be
made available, resulting in
fewer fltght cancellations and
fewer pilot layoffs than predicted .
Members of a House-Senate
conference committee scb.eduled a mormng meel!ng (9
a.m. _EST) to take a second
look at disputed provisions of
an energy bill on which most of
them thought they had agreement Wednesday rught. The
b1ll g1ves President Nixon
broad powers to deal with the
energy crisis, including the
power to ration gasoline if he
chooses.
A maJonty of the corruruttee
members had officially signed
their names to the bill Wednesday night. But what they
actually signed was a largely
blank b11l. Their staffs were
supposed to fill m exact wordmg, following what the
members appeared to have
agreed on in principle.
But when the staffers began
to do that Thursday, disagreements emerged both among
conumttee members and between them and tl]e White
House on key pomts.
Threat Of Veto
· The While Ho\!se objected to
provisions
givmg
a
congressional veto over such
possible administration steps
as mandatory Sunday closing
of gasoline stations, mandatory restriction of gasoline
sales to 10 gallons per
customer and limiting outdoor
lighting.
A White House congressional
liason official termed "unworkable" a provision in the
bill for up to $5(10 milhon rn
special Wlemployment compensation for job loss related to
the energy criSis-to be paid
after an individual's regular
unemployemt benefits run out.
He said 11 would be too hard to
tell which unemployment is
energy related and which isn't.
Committee members found
they disagreed on the timing of
a ban on "windfall profits" for
the oil rndustry, and the While
House asked that that
provision - which it also
wants-be put m a different
bill.
Congressional sources said
Wh1te House officials gave
mttmations of a Presidential
veto unless changes were
made. With Congress racing

Some Ohioans happy as enemy

'companies to start bringing out
specialty dolls. Baby Cribfoot,
for example.
.
Each time this doll is put to
1970 senatortal campaign.
bed, it will get a foot caught
Horne, former1Y of y oungs- between the slats in the side of
town, said lhe IRS never audit- the crib, causing it to wake up
ed his taxes. .
and start crying.
He ran the McGovern cam- The ultimate triumph of the
palgn m the 19th CongressiOnal toy industry undoubtedly will
Distnct.
be Baby Colic.
"A mong Deeen t p eop1e"
An internal mechanism set to
11
1 t~ink it's quite an honor. begm functioning at irregular
1
lmgmngtobemthecompany intervalswillcausethedollto
f
f th
td
t
o some o e mos ecen pe~- make a wailing noise that
pie rn lhe country and I cant continues until it is walked
thmk of anything that could rocked jiggled and patted fo~
have happened to me that 30 10 4:) minutes.
would h_ave ma,,de me _happ1er With a little imagination,
for Ch nsbnas, he sald .
playing dolls can be almost as
An oth er MeG overn worker, much fun as the real thing.
Fredenck R. McConnaughey,
Kettering, was listed . He is
the editor of the Kettering-Oak- - - - - - - - - - - wood Times, a weekly newspaper.
al May 26, 1973, calling for
· tl on
McConnaughey said he con- PreSl'd en t N'1xon 's res1gna
lributed to the McGovern cam- an d th en Nov. 7, 1973, call\ng
paign and also worked as an for his impeachment.
advance and scheduling coordi- Saying he had no idea why
nator for the third Congression- he made it, but was delighted
al District during the McGov- was Arthur Kobacker, Steubenern campaign
.
ville, president of Kollacker
His newspaper ran an editori- Shoe Co. in Brilliant, and also
president of the self-serve PicWay Shoe Marts in Oh10.
'

By United Press International
Several Oh1oans on the list of
"enemies" which White House
Counsel John W Dean III gave
IRS Commisswner Johnnie M.
Walters Sept. II, 1972, said
they were "delighted" to be on
the list.
. Raymond Horne, 44 now an
accoWltant for the Divislon of
Safety and Hyg1ene m Columbus, said It was a nice Christmas present.
Among the 18 Ohioans named
to the list was Cleveland businessman Howard Metzenbaum ,
picked Wednesday to succeed
Willllllll Saxbe in the U.S. Sen1

CRAIG.

ate when Saxbe is sworn in
next month as Attorney General.
Several of those m the Cleveland area on the hst had some
affiliation with Metzenbawn or
worked on his 1970 Senate campaign when he lost to Robert
A. Taft Jr ., ti Republican, m
the general election.
One of those affiliates of Metzenbaum was A1va T. Banda ,
now the chief executive officer
of the Cleveland Indians baseball team. Bonda had been a
partner with Metzenbawn in
business deals in the past.
Also on the list was a "be-

Fun To Be With

hmd the scenes" worker for
Metzenbaum, Gov. J ohn G1II1-.
gan and Sen. George McGovern. He is Norman Wam, Shoker Heights, former general
manager and principal owner
of two Cleveland radio stations.
"Loya1Ame ri eao "
"I'm honored and pr~ud to
be on the hst," he said. "If
I'
th r t ·
h
m on e IS , m sue company as How~rd Metzenbaurn,
and Alba Bonda, I'm honored,
P_roud and delighted I've been
smg Ied ou t as a 1oyal American."
•
Me tz en b awns
accountant
Ronald Cohen of Cleveland
Heights, also appeared on the
list. He thought a contributiOn
to the McGovern campaign got
him and his wife on the list.
Many of those contacted sa 1'd
they could think of no reason
to be put on the list.
Stanley Rothenfeld, Shaker
Heights, president of Palevsky
Industries, Inc., a Cleveland
based products firm, said he
contributed to Metzenbaurn 's

!

I white and blue basketballs

!

By Bob Hoeflich
Gee!

Can t ever recall ever before being able to report thts early
before Christmas that all is pretty well set towards remembering
the under-privileged.
Mrs. Mildred Jacobs reports 1.hat "everythmg ts commg up
roses" for residents at the Meigs County Infirmary. Mrs. Ralph
Harvey reports almost the same story at the Meigs County
Children S Home with the exception of a need for a little more
candy, peanuts and JUS! a bit more frmt for the kids there. Mrs.
Harvey wiU be happy to rece1ve your contribution at anytime.
The Meigs County patients at the Athens State Hospital have
been provided for well with Mrs. Mary Martin again taking on
the chore of headmg a public program to gather up g1fts for some
40 Meigs men and women confined there.
Mrs. Charles Marshall and Mrs. Marlm and Mrs. Gemma
Casci of the senior Ladies Auxiliary of Drew Webster Post 39,
Amencan Legion, and Sherri and Denise Marshall representmg
the post's junior auxiliary met and prepared the boxed gifts for
those patients
Each woman patient from Metgs County confined
to the hospital received a box contaming three pieces of
Jewelry, dustmgor talcum powder, cologne or hand lotiOn, panty
hose, a candy cane and candy bars, shampoo, soap, a towel or
washcloth . Other Items put in some of the boxes for the women,
but not all, included goM1S pajamas, houseslippers, pin
cushions, billfolds, key cases, hairnets and Bible pencils.
Boxes for the men included paperback books, pencils, pens,
toothbrushes, toothpaste, combs, handkerchiefs, candy bars,
deodorant, shaving cream, gum, socks and playing cards. Added
to some of the other men's boxes were tobacco, ties; lighters and
note pads.
Among the contributors were the Wildwood Garden Club,
Racil'e Grange 2600, Mrs. Walter Hayes, Middleport Garden
Club, Nellie and Hallie Zerkle, Drew Webster Post's aux1hary,
Ossie's Recreation Center, Kermit Walter, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Marshall, and the juntor auxiliary of Drew Webster Post. The
boxes were gift wrapped and were taken to the hospital by Mrs.
Marlin and Mrs. Marshall Wednesday.
So, it does look like a nice Omstmas. However, tf you know
of anyone neglected, do let us know,
1

1

1

SPEAKING OF CHRISTMAS, if you men need a haircut,
better be getting 1!. The barbershops of the county w1ll be closed
not only on Christmas but on Wednesday, the day following .
CUFF MANLEY WHO has been everyone's favonte shoe
repairman for about 22 years, has sold his shop on North Second
Ave. m Middleport to Larry Haynes, 27, Syracuse, who took over
on Dec. 11. Larry will continue to operate the shop under the
name of "Cliff's Shoe Repair" from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily.
OTHER SURVIVORS Of Frank Settle who died recently m
Florida besides a nephew, C. H. Wise of Waverly, include nieces,
Ruth W1se and Ruby Sw1ck, both formerly of Middleport, now
residing in Columbus, and a sister, Mrs. Mabel McCormick, of
St . Albans, W. Va.

Betty Jean Grady dies
RACINE - Betty Jean
Grady, 46, of Racine, died m
Middleport Thursday . Mrs .
----------for hohday adJournment
tonight, committee members
decided to have another try at
drafting the proVIsions. A veto
would mean no bill until
Congress returns Jan. 21.
No Xmas Walkout
In other developments:
-The Air L1ne Pilots
Association,
the
union
representing 30,000 pilots,
announced Thursday it will not
stage a Christmas holiday
walkout because it has been
assured by the administration
that jet fuel allocations will be
mcreased, which would mean
fewer cuts in schedules and
fewer pilot layoffs than
predicted.
- Secretary
of
Transportation Claude S. Brinegar
if' d · lin
h
not 1e wr es t ey may be
able to get naphtha type fuel to
supplement regular jet fuel.
-The Labor Department
said nearly 20,000 persons have
been added to unemployment
oompensation roles as a direct
or indirect result of the energy
crisis.
-AFL-CIO President
George Meany said President
Nixon's proposed oil company

Grady was preceded in death
by her parents, George and
Lucy Weaver Justis, and an
infant daughter.
She 1s survived by her
husband, Ronald C. Gracy,
Rae me ; two daughters,
Darlene Justis and Joyce
Grady, both of Racme; four
sons, Steve, Jeff, Tommy and
Jimmy Grady, all at home ;
two grandsons, Scott and Rex
Justis; three sisters, Mary
Watson,
Letart
Falls;
Ehzabeth Gandee, Alliance,
and Dorothy Greathouse,
Racine, and a brother, Paul
Justis, Racine.
Services w11l be held
Saturday at 3 p.m. at Ewmg
Chapel with the Rev. freeland
Norris officiating. Burial will
be in the Letart Falls
Cemetery.
friends may call at the
chapel anytime.

SPFI\KtNG OF

Hair .)LV•~tt.
by

KAY
'~
So

you haven't had any

ravtng compliments or
standtng ovattons about
your hatr lately Perhaps it
IS because those who see
you are the stlent , observtng types Perhaps tf ts

because

your

ha•r

CINCINNATI (UPI) Kenny Anderson is still quret,
but now he 's also confident.
The Cincinnati Bengals
quarterback says this season
has been the "most satisfymg"
of all his years in college and
pro football and he frgures It's
far from over.
"
The Bengals play the Miami
Dolphins in the NatiOnal Football League playoffs Sunday
and Anderson says he and his
teammates are more than
ready.
"I'm very confident in the
abilities of myself and my
teammates going into the
playoffs,'' says Anderson, a
graduate of Augustana College
in Rock Island, m. "A Super
Bowl situation for us doesn't
sound out of place to me at all .
All it takes is three games and I
feel we can play on a par with
any team at any time."
Anderson says his "quiet
personality" may have overshadowed his leadership abilrties his first two years in pro
football, but he feels his performance this year has won
him the respect of his teammates.
"I beat out Virgil Carter for
th1s job, but it took me a long
tune to feel like the team
leader because our persona1Ities are so different," Anderson S3ld. "Virgil is a rahrah type of guy. I'm quiet.
"But, by what has happened
this year, I know I have the
respect of all the players . I
• didn't feel comfortable my first
two years I do now, This has
been the most Satisfymg experience of my life. "
.. An accurate short-yard passer his first two years, Anderson
blossomed into a long-range
touchdown throwing threat this
season.
"TD passes have been the
big difference," the 24-year-&lt;&gt;ld
with the sheepish gnn says. "I
only threw seven last year and
''

McMILLEN'S DILEMMA
COLLEGE PARK, Md .
(UPI ) - Maryland basketball
star Tom McMillen said
Wednesday tha\ he is not yet
certam he wants to accept his
Rhodes scholarship
The 6-11 McMillen said he
may choose mstead to go to
professional school or attempt
to become a professional ball
player after graduation this
June.

The Dai~ Sentinel
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1

1

NFL Playoff Roundup
By VITO STELLINO
The Mmnesota Vikings and
the Washmgton Redskins, prepanng for Saturday's NFC
playoff match, have spent the
week looking for one thmg.
The Vikings were searching
for a place to practice that
wasn't covered by a foot of
snow and the Redskins were
looking for a starting quarterback .
Both had varymg degrees of
success in the search Thursday.
The Vikmgs, who had gone
from Bloomington to Tu1sa
Okla. in search of a field that
wasn ' t covered by snow only to
be hit by a snowstorm, were
able to practice outdoors
Thursday.
And the Redskms got Billy
Kilmer out of the hospital and
on the field practice.
But until Saturday's 1 p.m.
EST test, rt'll be difficult to tell
wh1ch team fared better. The
game will start a weekend of
lour nationally televised playoff
games. Oakland hosts Pittsburgh in the second Saturday
game and Cmcinnati IS at
Miami and Los Angeles is at
Dallas in the two Sunday
games.
Tulsa's Thick Snow
On Wednesday, the snow was
so bad in Tulsa that the Vikings
had to practice indoors And
when one of the team buses
was stopped behind stalled
cars, some of the players got
out and pushed to clear up the
jam.
Some of the drivers looked a
little startled," chuckled one
player. "I don t think some of
them knew what was happening. Here were all these big
guys appearing from nowhere
and pushing their cars. But the
VIkings cleared the way."
On Thursday, coach Bud
Grant was able to have his
team practice outdoors on

Tartan turf.
By Minnesota standards, the
forecast for Saturday Isn't that
bad. The weatherman predicts
temperature highs m the teens
or low 20s. That'll be nothing
like the famous "ice bowl" t1tle
game between Green Bay and
Dallas in 1967.
The Oakland-Pittsburgh rivalry is starting to become one of
the most bitter ones in sports.
This is the fourth meeting
between the two learns in the
last two seasons and Pittsburgh
has won the first three .
But Oakland still contends tl
was robbed by the referee's
decisiOn in the playoff game
between the two clubs in
Pittsburgh last year when
Franco Harris made his celebrated denected catch and ran

1

1

OPEN EVENINGS
MIDDLEPORT

'

~=~:sB:n:::.y::,~n: h:~:;~

Sport Parade

~

By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sports Editor

.f.:_!·

~\
1_!.1,~

drivers

1.__

drill th1s afternoon bzfo re :;.
flying to Miami Saturday
afternoon . The Dolphm ; NEW YORK ! UPI ) - "My name IS not Santa Claus ... ll's
Bengals game is set for 1 p.m . Charles 0 . Fmley ... "
EST Sunday m the Orange
The Oakland A's owner enuncmted each of the WQrds slowly
Bowl.
and clearly .
He did so because he was reacting to a suggestion that wtth the
holiday season being here already, he could show some Christmas sp1rit and look very good an the process, by releasmg his
cla1m on Dick W1lhams so Williams could go work for the New
York Yankees
Charlie Finley tsn 'I gomg to do anything like that though. In
light of Joe Cronin s ruhng, he 's not even sure he's willing to
accept "proper compensation " from the Yankees for W1lhams
anymore So there goes Chnstmas.
"People may thtnk I'm stubborn, but that isn't true," Charlie
l''mley's vmcecame over the phone a little hoarse from his home
tn La Porte, Ind.
"It's just the opposite. I bell eve strongly and firmly in fightmg
for what IS n ght. I'm not stubborn I'm the easiest person m the
to do just that.
world to work for tf the mdiv1dual who IS taking my money is
11
We think we've got a better loy•l and Willing to gtve me a day's work for his pay . If he's not
chance than last season be- wllhng to do mther, he can't play on my team or be a member of
cause we've got a better team. my organizatiOn. H's as simple as that."
Last ~·ear we were not that
Cronin Ruling Rapped
much of a team . We were just
Perhaps 1l's that simple m Charhe Finley's mtnd, but it's not
coming and we knew ·tt.
that simple 10 the mrnds of Dtck W1Ihams and the Yankees. They
" A year ago, we were feel he 's bemg more than merely intransigent, they're convinced
starting three freshmen in the he 's being out-and-out hard-headed .
backfield . We have th ree
A1; for myself, I tlunk Charlie fmley IS getting a b1g kick 011! of
sophomores m the backfield all this.
now.''
What started out as simply an afterthought -making the
The news conference which Yankees gtve up something of value for Williams -has now
had gone smoothly ended become a nationally talked-about matter of prmciple with
suddenly when a radio news- Charlie Frnley . He enJOYS being the focal pomt of all this and the
man asked Hayes about shov- further it goes along, the more his feelings in the matter harden.
ing a camera into the face of
Everybody was hollering for Joe Cronin to make a dectsion. He
Los Angeles Times' photogra- held a formal meeting in Boston with all parties present Wedpher Art Rogers before last nesday and then made his deciston Thursday disapprovmg the
season's Rose Bowl game.
contract Williams Signed last week w1th the Yankees.
''Okay , now we've been
The Yankees feel 11 was a poor decision, a basically inaroWld . long enough," said consistent one OOcause Cronm also ruled that Detroit's signing of
Hayes, standing up. "We've Ralph Honk was morder, and Houk, hke Williams, had two more
g1ven you a good mtervlew and years to go on h1s contract with the Yankees.
we're not going to rehash that
fmley Pleased
one now. We're here to play
Finley, naturally, thinks Cromn, about to give up the American
football."
I,eague presidency, made the proper decision. He even called
The Buckeyes begin the him up and told him so.
Southern Cahforma phase of
Not everybody feels finley is acting like Scrooge in all this.
their workouts today, prac- Some people feel he's actmg properly, and naturally these are
ticing at Citrus College at the poople finley hkes to talk to you about.
Azusa,
Calif.
They 're
"On Wednesday morning when I was in Boston before that
scheduled to vts1t Disneyland meeting, I went into the hotel drug store because I had forgotten
Saturday.
my shavmgeqmpment and wished to buy some," he says. "The
pharmacist recogf\Ized me and sa1d, 'how right you are. A
contract IS a contr~nd m my opm10n there is no way Joe
Cronin can rule against you, so cheer up.'"
That was before Wednesday's formal session.
Critics Of finley
Later that same day, after the hearing had been concluded and
for a touchdown . The Raiders Fmley had traveled to Chicago, he tells of another individual he
ms1st it was an illegal play.
met who was m hts corner.
Scouts Ejected
"AI; I checked into the hotel, the room clerk behind the counter
feelings between the lwo was a fellow who played on the Notre Dame baseball team, and
teams dldn' t improve thts year he told me how proud he was of me because of the stand I had
when Pittsburgh went out to taken," says the A'sowner. ''He sa1d Dick Williams was wrong to
Oakland, beat the Raiders and do what he did."
then charged them with dirty
There are those, however, who see Charlie Finley as some kind
tricks like throwmg an under of villain, one who keeps tightening the screws on both Williams
mflated ball into the game and and the Yankees.
wearmg grease on jerseys. A
To that, he says·
league investigation cleared the
"How could 1 be? I'm only doing what I consider the right
Raiders.
·
thmg."
Then last week, Oakland
Okay, then, Charlie finley is no villain and by his own adcaught three Pittsburgh scouts mission he isn't Santa Claus either.
in its press box scoutmg the
So can he really be - Henry Kissinger as a small boy?
Denver game, using writers'
credentials The men were
ejected and the Pro football
Writers Association has protest- Oakland, w1th the home team JARVIS IS TRADED
ed because the writers didn't held edge, IS hsted as a fourARLINGTON, Tex. (UP!) know their names were being pomt favorite .
Veteran righthander Pat
On Sunday, Miami, wh1ch
used .
Jarvis
Thursday was traded by
won the Super Bowl last year
the Montreal Expos to the
w1th a perfect 17-Q record, is a
Texas Rangers in exchange for
nme-point choice over Cincin- utility man Larry BUttner.
nati. Dallas is listed by two
Jarvis, 32, was 2-1 in 39 inIn other games Thursday over Los Angeles although the
night, Toledo got27 points from Rams won a regular season rungs with the Expos last
Mike Parker, 10 of them late in meeting 37-31 when John Had! year.with a 3.23 ERA. Biittner,
the game, to roll over St. threw four touchdown passes to 27, hit .252 for Texas last
season ln only 83 games.
Marys of California 82~3 for Hal Jackson
the Rockets fourth straight
win; Muskingum dropped its
third straight game on a southern tour 71h10 to Pembroke (N.
C.) .State University; Walsh
beat Thomas More (Ky.) 73'65;
Wright State beat Marietta 7658 and Malone downed Davis
and Elkms (W.Va.) 91~9.
Other games tonight find
Kent state at Penn State, Miami at Cleveland State, Xavier
at Marquette, Wittenberg at
Bellarmine (Ky .), and Tiffin at
Northwood (Ind. ).
1

1

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indicted
NEW YORK ( UP! )
Twenty-mne persons, Including
Del Insko, president of the
National Assoc1ahon of Harness
Dnvers, and a nwnber of
harness ra cing's top dnvers,
were mdicted Thursday on
charges of conspmng to fix
Superfecta races at two tracks
in the area .
All of the drivers have been
suspended pending the outcome
of their trial, accordmg to the
Umted States Trottmg Association.
The indtctmenl said the
conspirators paid drivers $1,000
for placmg no better than fifth
m certain races on which the
mastermmds bet "about $25,000
to $50,000" on every possible
Superfecta combmation between last Jan . 1 and April 13,
grossing about $3 million on 36
races.
The Superfecta calls for
bettors to pick the first four
horses in exact order . By
knowmg m advance that a
certain horse would finish out
of the money, a better would
have to place bets on fewer
winmng combmahons, thus
msuring himself a profit
because of the high Superfecta
payoffs.
The indictments sa1d the
conspiracy came to light after
Off-Track Betting Corp. officia1s became suspicious about
strange betting patterns and an
mordinate number of Superfecta wms.
All those charged pleaded
mnocent in Brooklyn federal
Court and were released in
thelr own recognizance pending
the trial, for which no date was
set.

THOMAS IS SUED
SAN DIEGO (UP! ) - Duane
Thomas, moody Washington
Redskins ruruung back, has
been sued for $12,264 by the San
Otego Chargers football team.
In the federal court suit filed
Wednesday it was charged that
Thomas refused to repay loans
made to him by the club
between Oct. '1:1, 1972, and July
25, 1973,

A-C·M·I·A
ATHENS COUNTY
MONTHLY

INCOME
ACCOUNT
Interest Checks
Mailed Monthly
or Quarterly

The Athens County

Savings &amp; loan Co
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohto
All Accounts Insured To

$20,000 by FSLIC.

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25" COLOR
TELEVISIONS
Early

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Osborne

I Sears

VALUES
SEARS
Catalog Merchant

I 220 E Main
Pomeroy
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PH. 992-2178

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72 Cadillac Sed. DeVille, power, air: ...... ·'5500
72 Cadillac Sed. DeVille, power, air ...... •'5500

Or a smart Contemporary styling.
Cabinet: 42112" W, 31112" H, 24:V4" D.
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Give an
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ABOUT
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Call Phil Globokar
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70 Olds 98 lux. Sed., full pow., air, v-roof '2295
70 Olds 98 Hoi. Sed., power, air ...........12095
70 Camaro H.T. Coupe, V-8 auto., P.S... --'1995
70 Ford Wagon, air ........................ 11495'
69 Pontiac Bonn., 2 Dr. H.T., v-roof, air... 11095
69 Mercuiy Montego 4 Door, V-8, auto..... '995
69 Nova Cpe., 6 cyl., std. trans........... !1395
69 Olds 88 H.T. Cpe., power, air ........... '995
69 Chev. Imp. H.T. Cpe., V-7 auto........ 11295
68 Chev. 1f2 I. Pickup, V-8, speed ........ -11295

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USED CARS

By United Press International
Mount Union College handed
Rochester
Institute
of
Technology its first basketball
loss of the season Thursday
night and advanced into the
finals of its own Holiday
Tournament.
Mount Union rolled to an
easy 911-71 win over RIT in the
second game after Hiram
downed Juniata (Pa.) College
87-74 in the opener.
The Purple Raiders will
meet Hiram for the title tonight
after RIT and Juniata play for
consolation honors.
The tournament IS only one
of seven Ohio teams will be involved in tonight. Also on the
schedule, Ohio University
takes on top-ranked UCLA.
Ohio State plays Stanford in
the first round of the University of Kentucky Invitational
Tournament, Capital plays
Grove City ( Pa.) in the Capital
City Classic, Dayton hosts the
Dayton Invitational , Rio
Grande is in the Norfolk (Va.)
Tournament and Akron in the
Kentucky Wesleyan Tournament.

-··r· ------------·I

Next Door to the

-WINTER HOURS91o 6 Mon.-Sat.
Clos•d Sundays

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,
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Ph; 992-7777
Pomeroy, Ohio
"Jones Boys"

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Mount Union in finals

, MOBILE HOMES
:
'

(
Ill

:i Harness

Today's

JOHN HOSPITALIZED
MilES, Iowa iUPI ) - ~aury
John, head basketball ooach at
Iowa State, wiJl miss the
Cyclones' game friday night
at Tulsa because he will be in
the hospital for more tests.
Doctors said they were
unsure what was aihng John
but hoped thts week 's tests
would clear up the mystery.

NFL playoffs begin Saturday

LARRY'S

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

'

bombastic m his previous Rose
Bowl trips from Columbus, was
smiling and affable during his
news conference.
He also lauded McKay's
University of Southern California players, calling Trojans'
flanker Lynn Swann " the
fastest man in the country.'
"Last spring Paul Brown
(coach of the Cincinnati Bengals) visited the West Coast
and he came back and told me
he 'd seen this !ella (Pat)
Haden," recounted Hayes .."He
sa1d, 'Boy, he's about as good a
college quarterback as I've
ever seen' and Paul doesn't
lavish praise like that."
Making his stxlh trip IQ the
Pasadena, Calif., classic in 23
years at Ohio State, Hayes will
be out to end a string of four
straight New Year's Day wms
by the Pacific-11. Two of the
defeats were suffered by his
Buckeyes, including a 42-17
thrashing at the hands of USC
last season.
" It would be prestigious for
us if we went ahead and won
th1s one/' the Ohio State coach
noted. "It's a prest1gious game
and naturally we'd like to win 11
and I think we have thP :lbihty

By JIM COUR
UP! Sports Writer
LOS ANGELES (UPI)
Watch out, John McKay.
Woody Hayes is going to kill
you with kindness.
Hayes and his Ohio State
football team arrived in Southern California's bright sunshine from the frigid Midwest
Thursday and Ha :x:_e~ immediately began lav1shmg
praise on h1s Rose Bowl
coachmg counterpart.
"I think it s about time
someone realizes what John
McKay has meant to American
oollegiate football," the Buckeyes' coach sa1d at a Los
Angeles Airport news conference.
"He's been the chief mnovator m the last 10 years. He's
outdistanced all of the other
coaches and 1ts no secret that a
lot of us one way or another
have tried to copy the things he
does in h1s "!' formation.
" I thmk he utilizes the
runmng of his tailback and the
passing of his quarterback
better than anyone else does in
college football ."
The 59-year-&lt;&gt;ld Hayes, often

.. Frank Gheen, Sales Mgr.

A GIFT-A-RAMA STORE

We will close 5 P.M. Christmas Eve. Closed
Tuesday and Wednes!lav. December 25-26.

X 50'

u.-..g·"'

1:1:

Woody buttering
up John McKay

1

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1----------....;,.-1

Anderson rderred to rookie
Isaac Curtis, the speedster who
caught mne TO 1J3Sses, and
veteran Olarley Joiner, obtained from Houston m a trade
last year. Because he was
mjured much of the year,
Joiner only caught 13 passes,
but they went for 214 yards.
Joiner, who helped the

"There were two reasons for
!l. Our offensive linP really ~ot
the job done this year and 11
gave me- that e-xtra tune I
needed to read the defenses
and spot my receiver. But the
big thing has been our two wide
receivers. They're JUSt what
we need to go long ."

'

PORTABLE STEREO:

Pointview Cable TV Business

Will Be Closed Christmas Day.

Ttmn ·

nomad·

NOTICE"'

Office Will Close At Noon,
Monday, December 24, And

Buslnes Off1ce Phone

992 2156 Editor ial Phone 992'
2157
Second clan postage paid
111 Pomeroy, Oh oo

Solid-state stereo features

1505 AM ·FM Stereo Receiver System
D Automatic FM Stereo SwtiCh1ng
0 Front-Panel S tereophon e Jack
0 Full Complemenl of External Connections for Phone and Tap e OWalnutFmtsh Wood Cabmets o 18Y." W x
3Yf' H x 10" 0 (matn unttl 8!i:' w x
H)" H x 5~" 0 (speaker unt ts l

Euc Ed

ROIERT HOEFLICH .
City Editor

with the purchase of this

Everywhere

l h•d 18 ttus ye•r.

still

looks healthy and radtant
and well kept T herefore,
no comment The time to
push the pantc button tS
when
they
do
start
r emark tng about how your
ha tr used to look or how the
~ray ts begmntng to snea~
m here and there. Thts i.s
th e time to be con cerneti
and do some remodelmg If
these alarmtng htnts are
. being dropped yo ur way~
then use your head. for a
pede stal on which t6
di sp lay a new ha1r style
and shade w h1ch will mak e
th em all tak e a second look
Any woman who wants to
recapture lhat radiant,
healthy look for her hair
and wear a crow n of
shimmenng hlghltghts and
new fa sh 1on , can do so by
v•slt1ng
us,
where
knowled9e , exper•ence ,
and skdl are our guarantee
ol sa t1 sfac t lon

ctudu Sunday
Sentinel

fLOWERS
For All Occasions

Saturday durmgg ~th:~en~t~o~~~:~~
finals and cl
playoffs.
Wilt Chamberlain, under a
$1.8-m!lhon three-year cor1- 11
tract as player-coach of the
San D~ego Conqwstadors, will
do the color commentary
alongside Ray Scott, announcer of the Green Bay
Packer football games.
Chamberlain will not announce, however, tf his team
makes the playoffs.
"What we're concerned wlth
ts getting the exposure, not so
much a long or especially
lucrative contract," Storen
said. "Our problem is gettmg
our product recogmzed at a
national level

Anderson a confident man

,,

excess profits tax is an "utter
deception" since the tax, he
said, will be passed on to
consumers in the form of
higher
prices.
,.;;,....;...,
___~--. .

1

be bouncing on
sCreens in more than
cent of the country
Jan . 30, when the
Sports Network begins
telecasts
of
Basketball Association
Mike Storen,
of the ABA only 31&gt;
achieved one of his maa)j~o:r~~~~l}
when he announced T
that Hughes would telecast
over 140 stallons the ABA
Star game Jan. 30 and then
"Game of the Week"

'o:~·:;:;.;:.:::;:;.;:,:;.;:;::·:· :·:·:·;-:::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·;·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:::·::::::::::~:::::::::::;:;:::::::::::-:::::::::::::::::::::::~~

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Conl&amp;mporary, Early American and MWittrf'llne•n
styling. All have 100% solld•ttate ch11111. Plus
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and sound • 70 ·click m" pos1ttons for UHF chan~
nels • AFC . Automatic Ftne Tumng Control • Slide
Volume Control • lllumtnated Channel Wmdows •
Computer Tested Ctrcu1try• Authentic cabmet
craftsmanshiP 1n a style to com plement your decor.

YOUR
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MIDDLEPORT 0.
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68 Chevelle Coupe, V-8 motor, auto. .. ..... '995
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68 Olds 98 H.T. Sed., V-roof, air ............'995
68 Olds Cut. H.T. Sed., V-8, auto., P.s...... '995
67 Ford Galaxie 2 Door ..................... s595
66 Buick 4 Door, V-8, auto. •........••..•. $295
65 Dodge 2 Door, V-8 Auto. ............. ~ ... ~5
61 Chev. 4 Door, V-8 Auto. •...............1145

Karr &amp; VanZandt
"You'll Like Our Quality Way
of Doing Business"
9'12-5342 · GMC FINANCING ·
POMEROY
Open Evenings Untii6:0~Ti15 p.m. Sat.

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4- The Daily Senti.oel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Dec. 21, 1973

Williams: Can't manage in NY,
won't manage Oakland in 1974
York and won 't manage in make his " most complex
B!' GIL PETERS
UPI Sports Writer
Oakland.
decision' ir. 15 years as league
BOSTON ( U PI) Dick
And unless the c louds pa rt president. " Cronin, eagerly
Williams can't manage in New and a miracle saves him, Dick awaiting a Jan. 1 retirement,
Withams has managed himself heard more than 11 hours of
out of baseball for two years.
testimony over two days on the
Williams , of[icially became Williams case and a similar
tied to his Oakland Athleti c matter involving Ralph Hook's

CtOW'S

contract-and

to A's owner

jump from the Yankees to the
Detroit Tigers before making
separate rulings.
Cronin ruled in Iavor of
Houk, reasoning that he had
resigned and his resignation
had been accepted by the
Yankees before he signed with
Detroit.
The outgoing league president
said he was glad the problems
arose because they s howed
" that some baseball rule must
be apptied to cover managers'
contracts. There is no such rule

N BA Standtn9S.
By Un ited Pre-s-s. tntern•tion.at
Eas.lern Conference
Atl.ilnftc Division
w
1 pel. g.b.
Boston
24
6 .800
N e w Yort-:
19 lA .576 6• )
Buffalo
14 18 AJB 11
Philadelphia 11 21 .344 14
Centr.al Division
w I pel . 9.b.
Cap ita l
16 13 ..552 Atlanta
15 16 .484
2
Houston
11 21 .333
1
Cleve land
11 23 .324 7 •')
'Nestern Conference
Midwest Div ision
w
1 pet . g.b.
Milwaukee
27
6 .818
Chicago
15 10 .714 3
Detroit
21 13 .618 6'··
Kc .omaha
10 25 .286 18
Pac:ific Div ision
w 1 pet. g. b.
Golden State 16 12 .571
LosAngeles
19 15 .559
Portland
14 19 .424
Seattle
14 24 .J68 7
Phoenix
12 22 .353 7
Ttt.ursday •s Results
Capital 98 K .C. Omaha 92
(only game scheduled !
Friday's Games
New York at Buffalo
Seattle at Cleveland
Atlanta at Houston
Gol den State at Detroit
Philadelphia at Los Angeles
Boston !!If Portland
!Only games scheduled )

STEAK

Laurel Cliff

HOUSE

•

•

News Notes

Open Tonight &amp; Saturday Til

A holiday dinner party at the
home of Mrs. Don Grueser with
Mrs. Stacey , Arnold as co.
hostess_preceded a meeting of
the Wildwood Garden Club
Wednesday night.
The Grueser home was
extensively decorated for the
, .., occasion, An open fire burned
and on the hearth was an oldfashioned iron pot filled with
pine cones. Gifts for the exchange were placed beneath
the Chrisbnas tree .
Mrs. Karl Grueser extended
the welcome with Mrs. Alfred
YealJ8er giving devotions from
SI.J:uke and St. Matthew. Mrs.
Vernon Nease had grace
preceding the turkey dinner.
Th;:tnk-you notes were read
from shut-ins and neighbors
who received Christmas
baskets [rom the c lub .
Members responded to roll call

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• Annual Christmas party of
the Past Presidents' Club of the
American Legion Auxiliary of
Drew Webster Post 39, was
held Wednesday night at the
home of Mrs. Ben Neutzling.
The house was decorated for
th e holid;1y season. Cohostesses for the party were
Mrs. Grace Pratt and Mrs.
Edith Sauer.
Mrs. Ellen Couch presided,
and opened the meeting with a
Christmas prayer , The officers' reports were given by
Mrs. Iva Powell and· Mrs. Faye
Wildermuth , Games were
played with Miss Freddie
Houdashelt, a g uest, and Mrs.

All Kinds!
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On

Stanley Tool
Gift Sets

WE WILL

Oecot1tor delianed
for the moat
contemporary room
..Uing•. Grillntcl
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cebl net. Automatic:
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DELIVER
THRU
DEC.24

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5 PIECE GROUP WITH VOCALIST
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INSURANCE
Cor. Second &amp; Court

SATURDAY NIGHT 10 TIL 2

Pomeroy

Ph. 992-5120,

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STATE AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE CO
01!10 FARMERS
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WESTFIELD COMPANIES
WESTERN RESERVE MUTUAL INS. CO. ·
LIGHTNING ROD MUTUAL
Use Our Budget

FIRST
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992-3629
Pomeroy
.
Closed Monday &amp; Tuesday, Dec. 24 &amp; 25

other board members present,
Earl C. Hayes, Jr., James C.
Strafford and William L.
Howland, Portsmouth, Ernest
McFarland , Manchester ,
Robert Vallery, Waverly and J.
Sherman Porter, Gallipolis.
John P. Irwin, executive vice
president, discussed briefly the
grow th and progres of the club
for 1973 and complimented Phil
Globokar, Pomeroy, and John
R. Bates and Paul Dotso.1,
Portsmouth, for outstanding
perfonnance in membership
sales and renewals. An award
for 15 years of service was
presented to Howerd Kiebler
and five year awards to Mrs . J .
V. Beaver, Mrs. Willard Kuhn
and James Conroy , New
err.ployes introduced were
Mrs. Arthur Darnbrough, Jr.,
Gallipolis, and Misses Tammy
Henry and Sandra Underwood,
Portsmouth. J. T. Isaacs, Ohio
AAA director
of
club
promotion , represented the
state association.
Christmas ·songs were
presented by Miss Underwood
and Miss Karla Bloomfield,
accompanied by Mrs. Michael
Kornhoff.
Door prizes were awarded to
Mrs. Carl Spradlin , Mrs .

Day"; and Mrs, Bikacsan,
· " The Gift of God 's Love."
Other readings were " A
Christmas Letter" by Mrs.
Helen Pickens ; " Fear Not, My
Little Town " by Mrs. Cozart;
" Let Us Live Christmas Every
Day" by Mrs. Martha Lou
Beegle ; " God Bless Your
Christmas" by Mrs . Mildred
Hart ; "The Flight Into Egypt"
by Mrs. Phyllis Bailey . The
Lord's Prayer in unison coneluded the program.
Refr eshments were served
by the hostess, and gifts were
exchanged. The l3eegle home
was decorated for the season
and Chris tma s music was
played .
DANCE PLANNED
TUPP ERS PLAINS-A New
Year 's Eve square dance has
been planned by the Tuppe rs
Plains Boosters' Club. The
dance will be at the school from
9 p .m . t o 1 a .m . with Ross
Branham and the Coun try CutUps to provide the banjo and
fiddle musk. Cha rge will be $2
a couple and food and other
refreshments will be sold.

~~~~::~; B~i:~~'; ~~ ro~~ ~~eg~~a~·~in~~ .. ::%,~e~! P'#'toi~~lj)~r}l!d~~toiRr"

was beautifully decorated by
Bonnie Fields and Roberta
Maynard, Wilbur Leifheit gave
the invocation. Following the
dinner a gift exchange was
held.
Orpha ·Fields, president,
presided.
It was announced that money
instead of Christmas gifts had
been sent to the home mission
of Dora Champion in Pittsburgh. Each year Church o[
God societies send Christmas
gifts or money to the home
missions throughout the United
States. Christmas gifts locally
will be taken to Lakin State
Hospital. Members are tq bring
their gifts to thechurch as soon
as possible.
The Spiritual Ufe Director ,
Delores Taylor, reminded
members that the Christ's
birthday offering will be
received Sunday, Dec. 23. The
theme this year is " Be Born in
Us Today". She also reminded
the members that the prayer
vigil hour for the local society
will be Dec . 25 from 8,9p.m. ·
Ja~uary hostesses will be Iva

were then asked what the :nost .
de s1red spiritual gift the y
would like to receive. As each
member named a ·gift, Mrs.
Fields gave them wrapped
gifts containing sc•iptures
pertaining to the gifts they
wished to possess. Some of , ,
these were faith, self control,
love, patience, peace, power,
strength and joy. Devotions
were in charge of Delores
Taylor who gave two readings,
11
New
Wardrob e"
and
"Light"'.
Attending. were Wilbur and
Julia Le iiheit, Susie Bess,
Ethel Underwood, Orpha
Fields , Sue Erwin, Becky
Reed, Viola Roush, Pansy Fry ,
Bonnie Fields, Delores Taylor,
Eleanor Davis , Sarah Gibbs,
Rena
Johnson,
Roberta
Maynard and Grace Cunningham .

LAJ E ·
SHOPPERS
·

We'll Help You .
Play Santa Claus
WE CAN HELP YOU COMPLETE
-tzy-:.-...
0
YOUR CHRISTMAS LIST
~ ~~
TONIGHT &amp; SATUROAY
TIL 9 PM
OPEN MONDAY TIL 5 PM

heri,age house
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

o~~~{o6#~P#t4FSs~~~fh~

FOR THE LAST MINUTE SHOPPERS
. OPEN EVENINGS

PLAN PARTY
RACINE
Annual
Christmas party . of the
American Legion Auxiliary of
Racine , Post 602, will be
Friday, pee. 28, at the hall.
There will be a $1 gift exchange
and members . are to take
cookies for refreshments. Eacli
member is to contribute
something for the program in
the way of a reading or a game.
If a game requires prizes then
the person ·conducting it is to
provide those .

FAMOUS BRAND GIFTS
FOR
HER

Jantzen , Catalina , Betty Rose,
Coddington , Pendleton, Lady
Manhattan Blouse$, Moiud Hosierv.
Flexnit Girdles &amp; Bras, Gay Gibson ,
Berkshire and Hobnobber Dresses,
Meeker Bags and Biltfolds.

AAA Club enjoys party

"

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c.
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DAVIS

Sunday eveni ng for Grace
Episcopal Church Sunday
school classes and the youth
group. Accompanied by the
teac hers, and the Rev . and
Mrs . Harold Deeth, the group
caroled shut-ins and then
returned to the Parish House
SATURDAY
for a party and trimming of the ·
FREEDOM Gospel Mission, tree.
Bald
Knob,
Ch ristma s
Refreshments .were served
program 7:30 p. m. The public by Mr. and Mrs. Roger Dillard
is invited.
Mr · and Mrs. Aaron Kelton'
CHRISTMAS program, 7:30 Mr · and Mrs. Frank Sisson '
p. m. at Carle ton Church, Mrs. Herbert Seth and Mrs:
Kingsbury Road . Santa Claus Dan Meadows. The birthday of
to be present. Public invited. Jennifer Meadows was obFLATWOODS - Methodis t served. She was presented with
a decorated cake and the group
Church Christmas program,
!
SYRACUSE - A gift for a Moore, Mrs . Crow and Mrs. J.
sang "Happy Birthday".
I ; needy person and cards to shut- 0 . Roedel were hostesses. The 7:30 p. m .; singing, scripture
reading and a 16 mm film,
&lt;
ins were the projects taken on sa lad course was served from
'• by Grace Episcopa-l Church the decorated dining room " The Nativity". Public inIS PATIENT
vlcted.
• Women mee ting Thursday at
SYRACUSE
Carson
table to members and guests,
SUNDAY
the home of Mrs. Fred Crow, with Mrs. Moore presiding at
Hayes, Syracuse, is a surgical
CHRISTMAS pr og ram at patient at the Holzer Medical
Syracuse, for a holiday party. Ute tea and coffee service. For
Hemlock Grove Christian Center.
Mrs. Harry Moore presided favors, . Mrs. Moore presented
Church
, 7 p .m . Everyone
at the meeting with · Mrs. eac h g uest with cerami c
welcome. Santa is expected.
Theodore Reed readin g a praying hands which she had
FRIDAY
Chri s tma s story by Peter made.
LLOYD
HUFFMAN ,
Marshall. Mrs . Reed , Mrs.
SANTA TO Arrive at Racine
evange list, will hold a weekend
Fire Station at 2 p. m .
•
r eViv8.1starting this evening at
•
CHRiSTMAS Program at the MI . Olive Community
Eagle Ridge Co mmunitv Church, Long Bottom; · 7: 30
A dinner at the Red Carpet Mrs·. Grueser had deVotions
each night ; public invited .
Church, 7:30 p.m.
Inn followed by a party and gift and each member read a
SUNDAY
CHRISTMAS program, 7:30
'' exchanged at the home of Mrs . favorite Christmas s tory or p , m . at Mason, W. Va. First OHIO VALLEY CO M, · Ella Smith highlighted the poem . Games were played with
24,
Knights
Baptist Church, by teenagers MANDERY
•• December meeting of the prizes being won by Mrs. E thel and youth under leadership of Templar, annual visitation 7
Stewart, MI's. Bertha Canaday,
Magnolia Club this week .
Mrs. Paul Wears. Public in- p.m . to the Children 's Home
•
Secret pals were revea led Mrs. Ella Smith and Mrs.
aild. Meigs Co unty Infirmary.
vited :
with the gift exchange and a Georgia Watson, Mrs. Smith
All Sir Knights to wear
HOLY COMMUNION, 10:30
gift was presented to Mrs. serve d punch, homemade . .
uniforms and be at the temple
Smith from the club members. candy, and cookies to those a . m . Grace Episcopal Church, at 7 p.m.
Mrs. Smith also gave gifts to named and Mrs. Burton Smith, Pomeroy .
CHRISTMAS
PROGR.Al\:1,
'
the Christmas committee, Mrs. Mrs. Ellen Couch, Mrs. Gladys
7:30p.m. at the First Baptist .
MONDAY
,. Iris K~lton, Mrs. Margaret Clickler and Miss Erna Jesse.
Church, Racine.
·
CHRISTMAS EVE family .
Rose and Mrs . Doris Grueser.
MONDAY
service, 9 p. m. Grace
'
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST
Episcopal Church, Pomeroy,
Church, 7:30 p.m . Christmas
LEGAL
Christmas carols and church
Eve candlelight service w(th
school pageant followed by
Holy Comrhunion.
·
· the choir to present cantata,
" Prepare Him Room."
MONDAY
THE RACINE Baptis t
•
Church will present · a
.
THE TAX BOOKS ARE NOW OPEN
Christmas Eve service at 7:30
,•'
FOR
THE
DEC::EMBER
OR
FIRST
p ., m. The choir .will present a
'
cantata titled " Prepare Him
HALF COLLECTION OF THE 1973
Room" .
Eighty corporate board
REAL ESTATE TAXES. ALSO FOR
•.,.
TRADITIONAL Christmas members, employees and gueDELINQUENT TAX. CLOSING
Eve service at Enterprise ts attended the annual
p
DATE WILL BE JANUARY 20, 1974.
United Methodist Church, 7 p. Christmas party of the
Automobile Club of Southern
m.
Ohio at the Elk 's Country Club,
Portsmouth, Dec. 15 .
Guests were greeted by Mr.
•
and Mrs. Howard !Gebler, Mr.
"•
and Mrs. James Conroy and
•
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sieling.
'
Each person brought a gift
•
wrapped toy to be presented IQ
the Salvation Army.
~
•
Walter Thimmes, club
•u
promotion director , acted as
._,,·..
. :·,,
master
of ceremonies and
"
introduced David A. Vetter,
•
A
president,
who recognized
•

.,.

ON ZENITH TELEVISION

Vldto Range Tuning

EACH MONDAY 10 TIL 4

th
:
:
:
you . :.,:.:
•
..
go caro ltng

MEIGS COUNTY REAL
ESTATE OWNERS

•

-.

C

.

Volt.lot Rtgul1tor

Free Insurance Counseling By An

.

•'•

• Solld-8tale Super

Problem?

.-. ....

i

•
•

10 GAL AQUARIUM

Includes Ag. Pump, Filter.
Heater, Floss Charcoal,
Book .
·

RACINE - Holiday projects
were planned during a meeting
of the Ruth Missionary Circle
ol the . Racine Baptist Church
recently at the home of Mrs .
Martha Lou Beegle .
It was noted that $5 had been
sent to Lidya Zamora. Baptist
Sc holarship gir l, and that
Chris tmas fruit baskets would
be prepared and delivered to
shut-ins. Mrs. Helen Pickens ,
president, read from Luke 2
and presented a meditation
till e d " Happy Birthday,
··-&lt;
' ._ ,,., ,
Jesus.' ' Mrs. Ollie Mae Cozart
. "' . ,.
!. &gt;·
gave " A Fres h Look at .
Christmas.' ' F'or a carol sing,
HONORED - A dinner was given recently in honor of Marie Roush and Avice Frecker who
Mrs. Walter Bikacsan was at
retired from Racine Village Council. Mrs. Roush served 14 years and Mrs . Frecker 10 years.
the organ . Mrs. Barbara Gheen
Harriet Neigler was also honored for having served as village treasurer for 10 years. Mrs .
gave "The First Christmas
Neigler will go in as a member of village co uncil the first of the year. Shown are, frorit row, 1-r,
Gift" ; Mrs. Nondus Hen.dri cks,
Marie Roush , and Avice Frecker ; back row, Mae Cleland, Grace Roush , Harrie t Neigler, Lynn
"To Show the Way," a parable ;
Hart , Glenn Rizer , .Charles Pyles, Larry Wolfe and He nry Lyons.
Mrs. Marjorie Grimm, " The
.~::~;:~:::o::;;;;;;:::?..i:::::~;8*:~:::::::::~:::~:::::::::i:!:i:o:~:i:;:;:::o;:~:::::::;:::::::::::::::~~::::::::::::::::::::::::: :::::::::::~~ She pherd's Field'' and ''Gift s,''
hU~~''Ch
Mrs. Emma Adams, "The
f'
Legend of the Holly, " Kathy
Wo od s, ''Christma s " ; ·Mrs.
NEW HAVEN
The CapehartandSarahGibbs.
···· Sandra Boothe, "'l'he More the
Woman 's Missionary Society
The pro gram by Orpha Years "; Mrs . Mary Kay Yost,
of the New Haven First Church Fields, had the theme, " What " We've Come a Lon g Way
A caroling party was held of God held their annual Do You Want for Christmas?" Smce that First Chnstrnas

'

Mag'nolia club has meet

Local Bowling

992-2115

FRIDAY
CHRISTMAS PROGRAM, 7
p. m . at Church of Christ in
Christian Union. Everyone
welcome.
PAST MATRONS Evangeline Chapter, Order of
Eastern Star, 7:30p.m . at tl1e ·
home of Mrs. Mary Hughes.
Christmas party with $2 gift
exchange.
OHIO VALLEY Chapter
Adopt.a.Child Today, Inc., will
meet at the home of Dennis and
Donna Pariseau, in Glen Roy
between Jackson and Wellston
on Rt. 93 north , at 8 p. m.
C HRISTMAS
DANCE ,
Southern High School 9 p .m. to
12 a. m . Sponsored by Tri M
Club. Music by " Woodquilt".
Admission $1.25 per person, $2
couple.
ANNUAL CHRISTMAS play
at the MI. Moriah Church of
God, 7:30p. m .; public invited.
SYRACUSE PRESBYTERIAN Church Christmas play,
" The Christmas Voice", 7:30 p.
m . at the church.
CHRISTMAS program at the
Morning Star United Methodist
Chur ch, Racine, at 7:30 .p . m.
Santa to attend. Everyone
invited.

'F

'

u,..,..,.,_....,r..,...

•

Calendad

Circle meets

(

•

Now!!

.._...ted

'

Pearl Knapp, wmnlng the most
prizes, and Mrs . Gladys
Cummings, the booby prize.
For refreshments the guests
were seated around the table.
Sala d, sandwiches, and cookies
in red and green were served.
Members enjoyed a gift exchange around the lighted tree.
Attending besides those named
were Mrs. Grace Pratt, her
dalJ8hter, Mrs. Ruth Powers, a
guest, Mrs. Leona Smith, Mrs.
Rhoda Hackett, Mrs. Mary
Martin and Mrs . Jessie
Houdashelt.
Mrs. Wildermuth will ha ve
the January meeting with Mrs .
Leona Smith as co-hostess.

!!:.

'

Women plan projects

Your Choice
Of The Store!

L&gt;cal Bowling

--·

•

~

1om Boy

..._.ienh

by giving a Christmas poem.
Gardening lips by Mrs .
Clifford Phillips included
Pt·otecting plants from winter
injury by placin g mulch
around them, staking and
fencing yoWlg evergreens and
putting up snow fe nces . Blue
ribbons were awarded to Mrs.
Edison Hollon for her Christ·
mas wreath, and to Mrs. Don
Grueser [or the decorations of
her home. Guests for the
e vening were ~Mrs . Louise
Hines and the Grueser
children. Attending Attending
besides those named were Mrs.
Pat Thomas, Mrs . Henry
Thomas,
Mrs .
Eurana
Thomas, Mrs. Dorothy Smith,
Mrs. Fred Nease, Mrs. Denv:er
Holter, Mrs. Chuck Bartels,
Mrs . Dwight Milhoan , Mrs ..
Mason Fisher and Mrs. Homer
Holter.

Holiday party ·held

thP. Fabulous

"

...

....

•

WE WILL CLOSE AT 6 PM CHRISTMAS EVE

f:

X&lt;:!'&gt;Z!~~~Z:::«::::::::;::::~::::::::»::·::::::~~

.. Club has party · i Social .!j

''"

Charlie Finley- Thursday when
American League President Joe
Cronin put the kabosh on the
New York Yankees' signing of
Williams while he s till was
under contrac t to the Athletics .
now .' '
" I still hope to be the
manager of the Yankees," said
If Williams was left jobless
Home of
By Bertha Parker
by the ruling, the Yankee
Williams, who guided Oakland
NHL Slandlngs
Sabbath School attendance management was left speechto two straight world championBy United .Press International
Dec
.
16
at
the
Free
Methodist
less. New York came out of
ships. " I definitely will not be
East
w
I t pts gf ga
Church
was
101.
Offering
was
going back to manage Oakland.
the hearings 0-2-losing one Boston
22 4 3 41 140 78
$90.20.
Fifteen
choir
members
manager and unable to hire the
I think I made that clear on
Montreal 18 7 5 41 102 77
were
present.
other. ·
several occasions."
N.Y. Rngrsl4 9 93712098
A Christmas program will be
Yankees Indignant
The undisputed winner in the
Toronto
15 11
6 36 109 88
given
Sunday
evening,
Dec.
23.
Yankee President Gabc Paul Buffalo
case was Finley and he gloated
14 13 4 3'l 103 99
All are welcome.
in his triumph .
couched the team's disappoint~ Detroit
12 17 3 27 101 137
Mr. and. Mrs. Lennie Lyons men! in soft terms but it is N.Y. IslndrsS 16 9 19 70 97
Tough Decision
Vancouver 6 17 6 18 71 109
" I immediately called Joe are announcing the birth of a known that privately New York
West
w I t pts gf ga
Cronin in Boston after hearing dalJ8hter, Leslie Nicole, born officials feel ''we was robbed." Ph il a
18 7 4409049
the decision and told him I was Dec. ·13 at Holzer Medical
There still is a c hance
14 5, 10 38 97 54
proud of him and so happy for Center.
Williams can manage the ~~ 1t~~~
13
10 6 32 82 13
Merlin Tracy and Harry ·Yankees next season, bUt only Atlanta
baseball," said Finley, who
13 12 6 32 76 84
somehow always gels hi.s way Bolinger attended the fun eral if Finley ·is allowed to grab the Minnesota 9 14 7 25 87 101
in the end. " There's no question of their aunt, Mrs. Osborn heart from New York 's farm L.os Angeles 9 17 5 23 83 104
P ittsburgh 9 11 4 22 80 112
in my mind but that he made Bradshaw, Warren.
system.
Cali
fornia 7 22 3 17 74 126
Order' By Phone
Lee Foglesong, Millfield,
the right decision. I think the
Finley reportedly would cut
Thursday 's Results
2 Buffalo 2
And Toke Em Home
decision he reached was so visited recently with Georgia the legal ties that bind Williams Montreal
NY
Rangers
5 Detroit 2
Diehl and Charles Diehl.
for outfielder-first baseman Boston 6 P ittsbUrgh 5
obvious ."
992-5432
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Stahl o[ Otto Veloz and pitcher Scott Philadelphia 9 Vancouver J
The decision was less obvious
Conly games scheduled /
to Cronin who, at 67, had to Stockdale visited recently with McGregor-the cream Qf the
Friday's Games
ST . Louis at Atlanta
Mr . and Mrs . Norlfian Yankees' minor league crop,
(only game scheduled)
Schaefer.
But, in Finleyesque fashion,
Mr. and Mrs . .Norman the A's owner said after the
Schaefer and Mrs. Fern Dora decision that he may not want
College Basketball Results
Story visited recently with Mr. to give Williams away " for any
By United Press International
and Mrs. Fritz Stahl of New compensation" Iiow that he
Tournaments
holds all the cards.
Mt
Union
Holiday(PA)CoH
Tournament
Marshfield.
Hiram 87 Juniata
. 74
YOUR DOG DESERVES
The local church people held
"It's
true
that
I
had
said
I
Mt
Un
98
Roch
I. of Tech . 11
A SQUARE MEAL
Rotary Tournament
their potluck dinner and wo uld be[ ore b ut as far as my Bridg 92
N.C.(G reen sboro) 73
Christma s party Saturday thoughts on that subject now, I
· --evening at the Rock Springs ba ve no corrunent," Finley said · Prov idence 105East
wm &amp; Mar y 75
Grange Hall. There were 100 from his LaPorte, Ind. home. 0 1d Domin ion 113 s Fla 81
0 owling 85 NYAC 80
persons present.
So, un less the Yankees can Hunter
75 Weslyari 71
file suit and win that suit, Dick Oneonta St. 75 Hobart 57
Williams ·is 8 clay pigeon in , Bates 98 Hami lton .95· (otl
Charlie Finley's legal cage.
Soulh.
OHIO COLLEGE
Ci tadel 59 Georgia St . 55
BASKETBALL SCORES
Ga So uthern 94 Rider 72
By United Press International
N.C. 83 Virginia Te ch 78
O.C. of all ·~ and breed. w!ll wodl, pl1y and lhri"e
Toledo 82 St . Ma rys (Ca lif . ) 63
Furman 69 Davidson 62
, • ~ nllltrihonallr~bll!l•need complete me1l. Euenlial
.Pembroke I N. C.J 51. 70
·~ combined In urioUs lutW"es to proVide
Mu sk ingum 50
Midwest
- . . . . •ppetit• appeal, 1nd tilt' re~ult is il roane do1
Wright. State 76 Marietta 58
Notre Dame 99 Denver 59
laod. that you ean reed dr,. or tnoist with complete
Malone 9·l 'Davis &amp; Elkins 69
Ma lon e ·91 Davis &amp; Elkins 69
SkYLINE LANES
Tol 82 St . Mary's· !Cal.) 63
Wal sh· 73 Thoma.s More (Ky.)
Keith Goble Ford
Pembrook St . 70 Muskingum 50
'
65
Bowling League
lied Dot Food h tP«laOy
.Wright Sf . 76 Mar Coil. 58
OS
U.
Newa
rk
95
OU.Lan
caster
Won lost Walsh 73 Thomas More 65
willl inere-ased vit•·
69
Team 5 ·
92
36 Milton 76 Hillsdale 70
01hoo A, D and. Er with lnTeam 4
84
44 Mids Tech 98 Rice 1-k Tech 62
Mount Union
crtllld water-tehable ¥1tamlns 1
Team
1
80
48 EAU Claire 67 SW Texas 59
Holiday
Tournament
with ldlled c:ondensed Rsh aoluI·
78
so- Bradley 80 Washington 76
Hiram 87 Juniata t Pa .) Coll ege Team 4
We.J with added com kibbles·
Team a
76
52 Nebraska 73 Northern Iowa 55
74
and ...... lncrtued added r..:
Team 2
65
63
Mount Union 98 Rochester IT Team 11
64
64
Southwest
71
Team 10
57
71 Loyola fii1J92 Wic h St. 70
Team 13
56
72 Fresno St. 96 N Texas St. 95
tw ..... P¥0 them the
Team 14
54
74
,.,. - -&amp;hod Red ROM Dol
51
77 Athl In Act ion 60 BYoung 56
Team 9
Foo4
Team 12.
51
77 Montana
69 Seattle 63
2 COACHES NAMED
learn 6
44
84 Whitman 84 W Baptist 65 ·
Available In Bags &amp; Nuggets
42
86
Team
3
.
1
Pepperdine 102 Chicago St 69
IOWA CITY, Iowa (UPI) On Dec. B, 1973, Tea m 5 took a· Cal Poly SLO 74 Sacto St 53
· 25 &amp; 50 Lb. Sizes
Bob Commings; newly appoint- po ints from Team 14 . Ralph Chapman 95 Life 54
Johnston was high for Tearn 5 wn Mont 100 Columbia Basin so
ed head football coach at Iowa with
545 pins , and HelEm
University, Thursday an- Oseland was high for Team 14
494 pins .
nounced the first two appoint- .with
Team 9 took 6 points from
ments to his coaching staff.
Tea'm B, Ronnie Cremeens was
Pomeroy
high tor Team 9 with 504 pins,
Named by Commings were and
TRI COUNTY LEAGUE
Charlie Nea l was high tor
•
December 18,1973
Howard Vernon, who will be Team 8 with 466 pins
"Your Complete Farm Supplier"
Pis
Team
3
took
8
points
from
serve as offensive coordinator Team 13. Helen Thomas was Sears Catalog Merchants
'76
72
and Larry Coyer, who will be higH for Team 3 with 496 pins Roach's Gun Shop
Midwest
Steel
Co.
68
wash
igh
for
and
Wayne
Shaver
defensive coordinator.
Rawlings Auto Sates
68
Team 13 with 521 pins .
50
Team 10 took 6 points from . H&amp;R Firestone
Team ll. Mike Floccar i was Pomeroy Ce'ment Block Co , 48
High Ind. -Garhe - A. L.
high for Team 10 with 495 pihs
and Charles· Lupton (s Ob) was Phelps Jr. 232, Dale Davis, 227.
high tor Team 11 with 491 pins . Henry Clatworthy 213.
High Series - A. l. Phelps ,
Team 7 ·took ·a po ints from
Team 6. Elmer Stanley was Jr . 597, Larr't Thorn as 595,
high for Team 10 with 495 pins Jack Peterson 591.
Team
High
Gaime
and Maurey Pridemore (sub)
wa s high for Team 6 with 518 Pomeroy ce-ment Block Co .
972, Pomeroy Cemer:t Blacl·
pins .
Team 4 took 6 points from Co . 2720.
Team 2. Jack Janey was high
POMEROY LANES
for Team 4 with 593 pins and
BEND LEAGUE
Jack Mink was high for Team 2
December.17, 197l
with 523 pins .
pts
Team 1 took 6 points from
81
Team 12. Benny Neal fsub l Shake Haven
73
was high for Team 1 with SJI Crow•s Comets
69
pins and JaCk Ferguson was Four Aces
61
high for Team 12 With 497 pins . Top Cats
39
High single game for the Three Nuts &amp; A Bolt
38
ladies for the evening was 194 Three Hits &amp; A·Mis
High Ind. Game - Ray
pins held by Helen Oseland and
tor the men was 243 pins held Roach 235, Chester Knight 221.
Ray Roach , 214 .
by Benny Neat (sub) .
Complete
High Series - Ray Roach
High series tor the ladies was
518 total pins, held by Maurey 662, A. L. Phelps Jr . 586 , Joe
Pr idemore and tor the men 593 Sisson 562 .
Team High Game and Series
total pins held by Jack Janey.
- Top Cats 756, 2155.

•

~ - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Dec. 21, 1973

Gift Wrap
Gift Certificates
BankAmericard

Globokar, Mrs. Beaver, Mr.
Darnbrough, Mr. McFarland,
1\ir, Howland and Mr. Shaffer .
Members of the corrtmittee in
charge of arrangements for the
party were Mr. Thinunes, Mrs.
William Dunran, Mrs. Robert
Sieting, Mrs. K. 0. McGlone,
Mrs. J. V. Beaver, Mrs. Glenn
Martin, Mrs. Carl Spradlin and
Misses Judy Simpson and
Helen Anderson.
Howard Kiebler was in
charge of the Salvation Army
toy collection.
A cash bonus was paid Dec.
10 to all eligible employees.

FOR HIM
Arrow &amp; Career Club 'Shirts, Arrow, Jockey &amp; Puritan
Sweaters, Hubbard &amp; Levi's Slacks, Interwoven Socks ,
Curlee, Merit &amp; Warren Sewell Suits &amp; Sport Coats;
Excello Ties, Meeker Wallets &amp; Key Cases .

Bahr Clothiers
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

r---------------------------------------------.,
-Frigidaire
Skinny Mini.
Fits almost
anywhere.
(Only 2 feet wide)

.Permanent Press
Care.
In both Wa she r &amp; Dryer .
Helps no·iron clothes keep
th e1r promise.

Dacron dryer
lint screen.
Fine mesh remo't'es lint par·
tic l es. Easy to reach for
cleaning.

Installs almost
anywhere.

2-Speed Washer.

Where the wash is- kitchen,
bath, nursery . . . anywhere
you can get adequate wir·
ing, plumbing and vent ing.

Regular plus Delicate set·
tings for the fabric fle:~~i bil ·
jty a fami IY washer mus t
have.
"

Family-Size.

$ ~389

Wa shes and dries family size loa ds- at the sam e
time or independently.

Mode l tC·2
laundry Center

J

BAKER
FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

\

(

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4- The Daily Senti.oel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Dec. 21, 1973

Williams: Can't manage in NY,
won't manage Oakland in 1974
York and won 't manage in make his " most complex
B!' GIL PETERS
UPI Sports Writer
Oakland.
decision' ir. 15 years as league
BOSTON ( U PI) Dick
And unless the c louds pa rt president. " Cronin, eagerly
Williams can't manage in New and a miracle saves him, Dick awaiting a Jan. 1 retirement,
Withams has managed himself heard more than 11 hours of
out of baseball for two years.
testimony over two days on the
Williams , of[icially became Williams case and a similar
tied to his Oakland Athleti c matter involving Ralph Hook's

CtOW'S

contract-and

to A's owner

jump from the Yankees to the
Detroit Tigers before making
separate rulings.
Cronin ruled in Iavor of
Houk, reasoning that he had
resigned and his resignation
had been accepted by the
Yankees before he signed with
Detroit.
The outgoing league president
said he was glad the problems
arose because they s howed
" that some baseball rule must
be apptied to cover managers'
contracts. There is no such rule

N BA Standtn9S.
By Un ited Pre-s-s. tntern•tion.at
Eas.lern Conference
Atl.ilnftc Division
w
1 pel. g.b.
Boston
24
6 .800
N e w Yort-:
19 lA .576 6• )
Buffalo
14 18 AJB 11
Philadelphia 11 21 .344 14
Centr.al Division
w I pel . 9.b.
Cap ita l
16 13 ..552 Atlanta
15 16 .484
2
Houston
11 21 .333
1
Cleve land
11 23 .324 7 •')
'Nestern Conference
Midwest Div ision
w
1 pet . g.b.
Milwaukee
27
6 .818
Chicago
15 10 .714 3
Detroit
21 13 .618 6'··
Kc .omaha
10 25 .286 18
Pac:ific Div ision
w 1 pet. g. b.
Golden State 16 12 .571
LosAngeles
19 15 .559
Portland
14 19 .424
Seattle
14 24 .J68 7
Phoenix
12 22 .353 7
Ttt.ursday •s Results
Capital 98 K .C. Omaha 92
(only game scheduled !
Friday's Games
New York at Buffalo
Seattle at Cleveland
Atlanta at Houston
Gol den State at Detroit
Philadelphia at Los Angeles
Boston !!If Portland
!Only games scheduled )

STEAK

Laurel Cliff

HOUSE

•

•

News Notes

Open Tonight &amp; Saturday Til

A holiday dinner party at the
home of Mrs. Don Grueser with
Mrs. Stacey , Arnold as co.
hostess_preceded a meeting of
the Wildwood Garden Club
Wednesday night.
The Grueser home was
extensively decorated for the
, .., occasion, An open fire burned
and on the hearth was an oldfashioned iron pot filled with
pine cones. Gifts for the exchange were placed beneath
the Chrisbnas tree .
Mrs. Karl Grueser extended
the welcome with Mrs. Alfred
YealJ8er giving devotions from
SI.J:uke and St. Matthew. Mrs.
Vernon Nease had grace
preceding the turkey dinner.
Th;:tnk-you notes were read
from shut-ins and neighbors
who received Christmas
baskets [rom the c lub .
Members responded to roll call

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•'

'!----'=-==---!

• Annual Christmas party of
the Past Presidents' Club of the
American Legion Auxiliary of
Drew Webster Post 39, was
held Wednesday night at the
home of Mrs. Ben Neutzling.
The house was decorated for
th e holid;1y season. Cohostesses for the party were
Mrs. Grace Pratt and Mrs.
Edith Sauer.
Mrs. Ellen Couch presided,
and opened the meeting with a
Christmas prayer , The officers' reports were given by
Mrs. Iva Powell and· Mrs. Faye
Wildermuth , Games were
played with Miss Freddie
Houdashelt, a g uest, and Mrs.

All Kinds!
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On

Stanley Tool
Gift Sets

WE WILL

Oecot1tor delianed
for the moat
contemporary room
..Uing•. Grillntcl
American Welnut cotor
cebl net. Automatic:
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DELIVER
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DEC.24

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5 PIECE GROUP WITH VOCALIST
Fine Group From Lancaster ·

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They Play It All!

INSURANCE
Cor. Second &amp; Court

SATURDAY NIGHT 10 TIL 2

Pomeroy

Ph. 992-5120,

••

We Represent

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•

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Plan for Easier Payments

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(:1•.

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STATE AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE CO
01!10 FARMERS
.
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WESTFIELD COMPANIES
WESTERN RESERVE MUTUAL INS. CO. ·
LIGHTNING ROD MUTUAL
Use Our Budget

FIRST
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lHE MEIGS

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Syotom

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socte' t

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has dtnner
'
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·

992-3629
Pomeroy
.
Closed Monday &amp; Tuesday, Dec. 24 &amp; 25

other board members present,
Earl C. Hayes, Jr., James C.
Strafford and William L.
Howland, Portsmouth, Ernest
McFarland , Manchester ,
Robert Vallery, Waverly and J.
Sherman Porter, Gallipolis.
John P. Irwin, executive vice
president, discussed briefly the
grow th and progres of the club
for 1973 and complimented Phil
Globokar, Pomeroy, and John
R. Bates and Paul Dotso.1,
Portsmouth, for outstanding
perfonnance in membership
sales and renewals. An award
for 15 years of service was
presented to Howerd Kiebler
and five year awards to Mrs . J .
V. Beaver, Mrs. Willard Kuhn
and James Conroy , New
err.ployes introduced were
Mrs. Arthur Darnbrough, Jr.,
Gallipolis, and Misses Tammy
Henry and Sandra Underwood,
Portsmouth. J. T. Isaacs, Ohio
AAA director
of
club
promotion , represented the
state association.
Christmas ·songs were
presented by Miss Underwood
and Miss Karla Bloomfield,
accompanied by Mrs. Michael
Kornhoff.
Door prizes were awarded to
Mrs. Carl Spradlin , Mrs .

Day"; and Mrs, Bikacsan,
· " The Gift of God 's Love."
Other readings were " A
Christmas Letter" by Mrs.
Helen Pickens ; " Fear Not, My
Little Town " by Mrs. Cozart;
" Let Us Live Christmas Every
Day" by Mrs. Martha Lou
Beegle ; " God Bless Your
Christmas" by Mrs . Mildred
Hart ; "The Flight Into Egypt"
by Mrs. Phyllis Bailey . The
Lord's Prayer in unison coneluded the program.
Refr eshments were served
by the hostess, and gifts were
exchanged. The l3eegle home
was decorated for the season
and Chris tma s music was
played .
DANCE PLANNED
TUPP ERS PLAINS-A New
Year 's Eve square dance has
been planned by the Tuppe rs
Plains Boosters' Club. The
dance will be at the school from
9 p .m . t o 1 a .m . with Ross
Branham and the Coun try CutUps to provide the banjo and
fiddle musk. Cha rge will be $2
a couple and food and other
refreshments will be sold.

~~~~::~; B~i:~~'; ~~ ro~~ ~~eg~~a~·~in~~ .. ::%,~e~! P'#'toi~~lj)~r}l!d~~toiRr"

was beautifully decorated by
Bonnie Fields and Roberta
Maynard, Wilbur Leifheit gave
the invocation. Following the
dinner a gift exchange was
held.
Orpha ·Fields, president,
presided.
It was announced that money
instead of Christmas gifts had
been sent to the home mission
of Dora Champion in Pittsburgh. Each year Church o[
God societies send Christmas
gifts or money to the home
missions throughout the United
States. Christmas gifts locally
will be taken to Lakin State
Hospital. Members are tq bring
their gifts to thechurch as soon
as possible.
The Spiritual Ufe Director ,
Delores Taylor, reminded
members that the Christ's
birthday offering will be
received Sunday, Dec. 23. The
theme this year is " Be Born in
Us Today". She also reminded
the members that the prayer
vigil hour for the local society
will be Dec . 25 from 8,9p.m. ·
Ja~uary hostesses will be Iva

were then asked what the :nost .
de s1red spiritual gift the y
would like to receive. As each
member named a ·gift, Mrs.
Fields gave them wrapped
gifts containing sc•iptures
pertaining to the gifts they
wished to possess. Some of , ,
these were faith, self control,
love, patience, peace, power,
strength and joy. Devotions
were in charge of Delores
Taylor who gave two readings,
11
New
Wardrob e"
and
"Light"'.
Attending. were Wilbur and
Julia Le iiheit, Susie Bess,
Ethel Underwood, Orpha
Fields , Sue Erwin, Becky
Reed, Viola Roush, Pansy Fry ,
Bonnie Fields, Delores Taylor,
Eleanor Davis , Sarah Gibbs,
Rena
Johnson,
Roberta
Maynard and Grace Cunningham .

LAJ E ·
SHOPPERS
·

We'll Help You .
Play Santa Claus
WE CAN HELP YOU COMPLETE
-tzy-:.-...
0
YOUR CHRISTMAS LIST
~ ~~
TONIGHT &amp; SATUROAY
TIL 9 PM
OPEN MONDAY TIL 5 PM

heri,age house
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

o~~~{o6#~P#t4FSs~~~fh~

FOR THE LAST MINUTE SHOPPERS
. OPEN EVENINGS

PLAN PARTY
RACINE
Annual
Christmas party . of the
American Legion Auxiliary of
Racine , Post 602, will be
Friday, pee. 28, at the hall.
There will be a $1 gift exchange
and members . are to take
cookies for refreshments. Eacli
member is to contribute
something for the program in
the way of a reading or a game.
If a game requires prizes then
the person ·conducting it is to
provide those .

FAMOUS BRAND GIFTS
FOR
HER

Jantzen , Catalina , Betty Rose,
Coddington , Pendleton, Lady
Manhattan Blouse$, Moiud Hosierv.
Flexnit Girdles &amp; Bras, Gay Gibson ,
Berkshire and Hobnobber Dresses,
Meeker Bags and Biltfolds.

AAA Club enjoys party

"

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DAVIS

Sunday eveni ng for Grace
Episcopal Church Sunday
school classes and the youth
group. Accompanied by the
teac hers, and the Rev . and
Mrs . Harold Deeth, the group
caroled shut-ins and then
returned to the Parish House
SATURDAY
for a party and trimming of the ·
FREEDOM Gospel Mission, tree.
Bald
Knob,
Ch ristma s
Refreshments .were served
program 7:30 p. m. The public by Mr. and Mrs. Roger Dillard
is invited.
Mr · and Mrs. Aaron Kelton'
CHRISTMAS program, 7:30 Mr · and Mrs. Frank Sisson '
p. m. at Carle ton Church, Mrs. Herbert Seth and Mrs:
Kingsbury Road . Santa Claus Dan Meadows. The birthday of
to be present. Public invited. Jennifer Meadows was obFLATWOODS - Methodis t served. She was presented with
a decorated cake and the group
Church Christmas program,
!
SYRACUSE - A gift for a Moore, Mrs . Crow and Mrs. J.
sang "Happy Birthday".
I ; needy person and cards to shut- 0 . Roedel were hostesses. The 7:30 p. m .; singing, scripture
reading and a 16 mm film,
&lt;
ins were the projects taken on sa lad course was served from
'• by Grace Episcopa-l Church the decorated dining room " The Nativity". Public inIS PATIENT
vlcted.
• Women mee ting Thursday at
SYRACUSE
Carson
table to members and guests,
SUNDAY
the home of Mrs. Fred Crow, with Mrs. Moore presiding at
Hayes, Syracuse, is a surgical
CHRISTMAS pr og ram at patient at the Holzer Medical
Syracuse, for a holiday party. Ute tea and coffee service. For
Hemlock Grove Christian Center.
Mrs. Harry Moore presided favors, . Mrs. Moore presented
Church
, 7 p .m . Everyone
at the meeting with · Mrs. eac h g uest with cerami c
welcome. Santa is expected.
Theodore Reed readin g a praying hands which she had
FRIDAY
Chri s tma s story by Peter made.
LLOYD
HUFFMAN ,
Marshall. Mrs . Reed , Mrs.
SANTA TO Arrive at Racine
evange list, will hold a weekend
Fire Station at 2 p. m .
•
r eViv8.1starting this evening at
•
CHRiSTMAS Program at the MI . Olive Community
Eagle Ridge Co mmunitv Church, Long Bottom; · 7: 30
A dinner at the Red Carpet Mrs·. Grueser had deVotions
each night ; public invited .
Church, 7:30 p.m.
Inn followed by a party and gift and each member read a
SUNDAY
CHRISTMAS program, 7:30
'' exchanged at the home of Mrs . favorite Christmas s tory or p , m . at Mason, W. Va. First OHIO VALLEY CO M, · Ella Smith highlighted the poem . Games were played with
24,
Knights
Baptist Church, by teenagers MANDERY
•• December meeting of the prizes being won by Mrs. E thel and youth under leadership of Templar, annual visitation 7
Stewart, MI's. Bertha Canaday,
Magnolia Club this week .
Mrs. Paul Wears. Public in- p.m . to the Children 's Home
•
Secret pals were revea led Mrs. Ella Smith and Mrs.
aild. Meigs Co unty Infirmary.
vited :
with the gift exchange and a Georgia Watson, Mrs. Smith
All Sir Knights to wear
HOLY COMMUNION, 10:30
gift was presented to Mrs. serve d punch, homemade . .
uniforms and be at the temple
Smith from the club members. candy, and cookies to those a . m . Grace Episcopal Church, at 7 p.m.
Mrs. Smith also gave gifts to named and Mrs. Burton Smith, Pomeroy .
CHRISTMAS
PROGR.Al\:1,
'
the Christmas committee, Mrs. Mrs. Ellen Couch, Mrs. Gladys
7:30p.m. at the First Baptist .
MONDAY
,. Iris K~lton, Mrs. Margaret Clickler and Miss Erna Jesse.
Church, Racine.
·
CHRISTMAS EVE family .
Rose and Mrs . Doris Grueser.
MONDAY
service, 9 p. m. Grace
'
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST
Episcopal Church, Pomeroy,
Church, 7:30 p.m . Christmas
LEGAL
Christmas carols and church
Eve candlelight service w(th
school pageant followed by
Holy Comrhunion.
·
· the choir to present cantata,
" Prepare Him Room."
MONDAY
THE RACINE Baptis t
•
Church will present · a
.
THE TAX BOOKS ARE NOW OPEN
Christmas Eve service at 7:30
,•'
FOR
THE
DEC::EMBER
OR
FIRST
p ., m. The choir .will present a
'
cantata titled " Prepare Him
HALF COLLECTION OF THE 1973
Room" .
Eighty corporate board
REAL ESTATE TAXES. ALSO FOR
•.,.
TRADITIONAL Christmas members, employees and gueDELINQUENT TAX. CLOSING
Eve service at Enterprise ts attended the annual
p
DATE WILL BE JANUARY 20, 1974.
United Methodist Church, 7 p. Christmas party of the
Automobile Club of Southern
m.
Ohio at the Elk 's Country Club,
Portsmouth, Dec. 15 .
Guests were greeted by Mr.
•
and Mrs. Howard !Gebler, Mr.
"•
and Mrs. James Conroy and
•
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sieling.
'
Each person brought a gift
•
wrapped toy to be presented IQ
the Salvation Army.
~
•
Walter Thimmes, club
•u
promotion director , acted as
._,,·..
. :·,,
master
of ceremonies and
"
introduced David A. Vetter,
•
A
president,
who recognized
•

.,.

ON ZENITH TELEVISION

Vldto Range Tuning

EACH MONDAY 10 TIL 4

th
:
:
:
you . :.,:.:
•
..
go caro ltng

MEIGS COUNTY REAL
ESTATE OWNERS

•

-.

C

.

Volt.lot Rtgul1tor

Free Insurance Counseling By An

.

•'•

• Solld-8tale Super

Problem?

.-. ....

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•

10 GAL AQUARIUM

Includes Ag. Pump, Filter.
Heater, Floss Charcoal,
Book .
·

RACINE - Holiday projects
were planned during a meeting
of the Ruth Missionary Circle
ol the . Racine Baptist Church
recently at the home of Mrs .
Martha Lou Beegle .
It was noted that $5 had been
sent to Lidya Zamora. Baptist
Sc holarship gir l, and that
Chris tmas fruit baskets would
be prepared and delivered to
shut-ins. Mrs. Helen Pickens ,
president, read from Luke 2
and presented a meditation
till e d " Happy Birthday,
··-&lt;
' ._ ,,., ,
Jesus.' ' Mrs. Ollie Mae Cozart
. "' . ,.
!. &gt;·
gave " A Fres h Look at .
Christmas.' ' F'or a carol sing,
HONORED - A dinner was given recently in honor of Marie Roush and Avice Frecker who
Mrs. Walter Bikacsan was at
retired from Racine Village Council. Mrs. Roush served 14 years and Mrs . Frecker 10 years.
the organ . Mrs. Barbara Gheen
Harriet Neigler was also honored for having served as village treasurer for 10 years. Mrs .
gave "The First Christmas
Neigler will go in as a member of village co uncil the first of the year. Shown are, frorit row, 1-r,
Gift" ; Mrs. Nondus Hen.dri cks,
Marie Roush , and Avice Frecker ; back row, Mae Cleland, Grace Roush , Harrie t Neigler, Lynn
"To Show the Way," a parable ;
Hart , Glenn Rizer , .Charles Pyles, Larry Wolfe and He nry Lyons.
Mrs. Marjorie Grimm, " The
.~::~;:~:::o::;;;;;;:::?..i:::::~;8*:~:::::::::~:::~:::::::::i:!:i:o:~:i:;:;:::o;:~:::::::;:::::::::::::::~~::::::::::::::::::::::::: :::::::::::~~ She pherd's Field'' and ''Gift s,''
hU~~''Ch
Mrs. Emma Adams, "The
f'
Legend of the Holly, " Kathy
Wo od s, ''Christma s " ; ·Mrs.
NEW HAVEN
The CapehartandSarahGibbs.
···· Sandra Boothe, "'l'he More the
Woman 's Missionary Society
The pro gram by Orpha Years "; Mrs . Mary Kay Yost,
of the New Haven First Church Fields, had the theme, " What " We've Come a Lon g Way
A caroling party was held of God held their annual Do You Want for Christmas?" Smce that First Chnstrnas

'

Mag'nolia club has meet

Local Bowling

992-2115

FRIDAY
CHRISTMAS PROGRAM, 7
p. m . at Church of Christ in
Christian Union. Everyone
welcome.
PAST MATRONS Evangeline Chapter, Order of
Eastern Star, 7:30p.m . at tl1e ·
home of Mrs. Mary Hughes.
Christmas party with $2 gift
exchange.
OHIO VALLEY Chapter
Adopt.a.Child Today, Inc., will
meet at the home of Dennis and
Donna Pariseau, in Glen Roy
between Jackson and Wellston
on Rt. 93 north , at 8 p. m.
C HRISTMAS
DANCE ,
Southern High School 9 p .m. to
12 a. m . Sponsored by Tri M
Club. Music by " Woodquilt".
Admission $1.25 per person, $2
couple.
ANNUAL CHRISTMAS play
at the MI. Moriah Church of
God, 7:30p. m .; public invited.
SYRACUSE PRESBYTERIAN Church Christmas play,
" The Christmas Voice", 7:30 p.
m . at the church.
CHRISTMAS program at the
Morning Star United Methodist
Chur ch, Racine, at 7:30 .p . m.
Santa to attend. Everyone
invited.

'F

'

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•

Calendad

Circle meets

(

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Now!!

.._...ted

'

Pearl Knapp, wmnlng the most
prizes, and Mrs . Gladys
Cummings, the booby prize.
For refreshments the guests
were seated around the table.
Sala d, sandwiches, and cookies
in red and green were served.
Members enjoyed a gift exchange around the lighted tree.
Attending besides those named
were Mrs. Grace Pratt, her
dalJ8hter, Mrs. Ruth Powers, a
guest, Mrs. Leona Smith, Mrs.
Rhoda Hackett, Mrs. Mary
Martin and Mrs . Jessie
Houdashelt.
Mrs. Wildermuth will ha ve
the January meeting with Mrs .
Leona Smith as co-hostess.

!!:.

'

Women plan projects

Your Choice
Of The Store!

L&gt;cal Bowling

--·

•

~

1om Boy

..._.ienh

by giving a Christmas poem.
Gardening lips by Mrs .
Clifford Phillips included
Pt·otecting plants from winter
injury by placin g mulch
around them, staking and
fencing yoWlg evergreens and
putting up snow fe nces . Blue
ribbons were awarded to Mrs.
Edison Hollon for her Christ·
mas wreath, and to Mrs. Don
Grueser [or the decorations of
her home. Guests for the
e vening were ~Mrs . Louise
Hines and the Grueser
children. Attending Attending
besides those named were Mrs.
Pat Thomas, Mrs . Henry
Thomas,
Mrs .
Eurana
Thomas, Mrs. Dorothy Smith,
Mrs. Fred Nease, Mrs. Denv:er
Holter, Mrs. Chuck Bartels,
Mrs . Dwight Milhoan , Mrs ..
Mason Fisher and Mrs. Homer
Holter.

Holiday party ·held

thP. Fabulous

"

...

....

•

WE WILL CLOSE AT 6 PM CHRISTMAS EVE

f:

X&lt;:!'&gt;Z!~~~Z:::«::::::::;::::~::::::::»::·::::::~~

.. Club has party · i Social .!j

''"

Charlie Finley- Thursday when
American League President Joe
Cronin put the kabosh on the
New York Yankees' signing of
Williams while he s till was
under contrac t to the Athletics .
now .' '
" I still hope to be the
manager of the Yankees," said
If Williams was left jobless
Home of
By Bertha Parker
by the ruling, the Yankee
Williams, who guided Oakland
NHL Slandlngs
Sabbath School attendance management was left speechto two straight world championBy United .Press International
Dec
.
16
at
the
Free
Methodist
less. New York came out of
ships. " I definitely will not be
East
w
I t pts gf ga
Church
was
101.
Offering
was
going back to manage Oakland.
the hearings 0-2-losing one Boston
22 4 3 41 140 78
$90.20.
Fifteen
choir
members
manager and unable to hire the
I think I made that clear on
Montreal 18 7 5 41 102 77
were
present.
other. ·
several occasions."
N.Y. Rngrsl4 9 93712098
A Christmas program will be
Yankees Indignant
The undisputed winner in the
Toronto
15 11
6 36 109 88
given
Sunday
evening,
Dec.
23.
Yankee President Gabc Paul Buffalo
case was Finley and he gloated
14 13 4 3'l 103 99
All are welcome.
in his triumph .
couched the team's disappoint~ Detroit
12 17 3 27 101 137
Mr. and. Mrs. Lennie Lyons men! in soft terms but it is N.Y. IslndrsS 16 9 19 70 97
Tough Decision
Vancouver 6 17 6 18 71 109
" I immediately called Joe are announcing the birth of a known that privately New York
West
w I t pts gf ga
Cronin in Boston after hearing dalJ8hter, Leslie Nicole, born officials feel ''we was robbed." Ph il a
18 7 4409049
the decision and told him I was Dec. ·13 at Holzer Medical
There still is a c hance
14 5, 10 38 97 54
proud of him and so happy for Center.
Williams can manage the ~~ 1t~~~
13
10 6 32 82 13
Merlin Tracy and Harry ·Yankees next season, bUt only Atlanta
baseball," said Finley, who
13 12 6 32 76 84
somehow always gels hi.s way Bolinger attended the fun eral if Finley ·is allowed to grab the Minnesota 9 14 7 25 87 101
in the end. " There's no question of their aunt, Mrs. Osborn heart from New York 's farm L.os Angeles 9 17 5 23 83 104
P ittsburgh 9 11 4 22 80 112
in my mind but that he made Bradshaw, Warren.
system.
Cali
fornia 7 22 3 17 74 126
Order' By Phone
Lee Foglesong, Millfield,
the right decision. I think the
Finley reportedly would cut
Thursday 's Results
2 Buffalo 2
And Toke Em Home
decision he reached was so visited recently with Georgia the legal ties that bind Williams Montreal
NY
Rangers
5 Detroit 2
Diehl and Charles Diehl.
for outfielder-first baseman Boston 6 P ittsbUrgh 5
obvious ."
992-5432
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Stahl o[ Otto Veloz and pitcher Scott Philadelphia 9 Vancouver J
The decision was less obvious
Conly games scheduled /
to Cronin who, at 67, had to Stockdale visited recently with McGregor-the cream Qf the
Friday's Games
ST . Louis at Atlanta
Mr . and Mrs . Norlfian Yankees' minor league crop,
(only game scheduled)
Schaefer.
But, in Finleyesque fashion,
Mr. and Mrs . .Norman the A's owner said after the
Schaefer and Mrs. Fern Dora decision that he may not want
College Basketball Results
Story visited recently with Mr. to give Williams away " for any
By United Press International
and Mrs. Fritz Stahl of New compensation" Iiow that he
Tournaments
holds all the cards.
Mt
Union
Holiday(PA)CoH
Tournament
Marshfield.
Hiram 87 Juniata
. 74
YOUR DOG DESERVES
The local church people held
"It's
true
that
I
had
said
I
Mt
Un
98
Roch
I. of Tech . 11
A SQUARE MEAL
Rotary Tournament
their potluck dinner and wo uld be[ ore b ut as far as my Bridg 92
N.C.(G reen sboro) 73
Christma s party Saturday thoughts on that subject now, I
· --evening at the Rock Springs ba ve no corrunent," Finley said · Prov idence 105East
wm &amp; Mar y 75
Grange Hall. There were 100 from his LaPorte, Ind. home. 0 1d Domin ion 113 s Fla 81
0 owling 85 NYAC 80
persons present.
So, un less the Yankees can Hunter
75 Weslyari 71
file suit and win that suit, Dick Oneonta St. 75 Hobart 57
Williams ·is 8 clay pigeon in , Bates 98 Hami lton .95· (otl
Charlie Finley's legal cage.
Soulh.
OHIO COLLEGE
Ci tadel 59 Georgia St . 55
BASKETBALL SCORES
Ga So uthern 94 Rider 72
By United Press International
N.C. 83 Virginia Te ch 78
O.C. of all ·~ and breed. w!ll wodl, pl1y and lhri"e
Toledo 82 St . Ma rys (Ca lif . ) 63
Furman 69 Davidson 62
, • ~ nllltrihonallr~bll!l•need complete me1l. Euenlial
.Pembroke I N. C.J 51. 70
·~ combined In urioUs lutW"es to proVide
Mu sk ingum 50
Midwest
- . . . . •ppetit• appeal, 1nd tilt' re~ult is il roane do1
Wright. State 76 Marietta 58
Notre Dame 99 Denver 59
laod. that you ean reed dr,. or tnoist with complete
Malone 9·l 'Davis &amp; Elkins 69
Ma lon e ·91 Davis &amp; Elkins 69
SkYLINE LANES
Tol 82 St . Mary's· !Cal.) 63
Wal sh· 73 Thoma.s More (Ky.)
Keith Goble Ford
Pembrook St . 70 Muskingum 50
'
65
Bowling League
lied Dot Food h tP«laOy
.Wright Sf . 76 Mar Coil. 58
OS
U.
Newa
rk
95
OU.Lan
caster
Won lost Walsh 73 Thomas More 65
willl inere-ased vit•·
69
Team 5 ·
92
36 Milton 76 Hillsdale 70
01hoo A, D and. Er with lnTeam 4
84
44 Mids Tech 98 Rice 1-k Tech 62
Mount Union
crtllld water-tehable ¥1tamlns 1
Team
1
80
48 EAU Claire 67 SW Texas 59
Holiday
Tournament
with ldlled c:ondensed Rsh aoluI·
78
so- Bradley 80 Washington 76
Hiram 87 Juniata t Pa .) Coll ege Team 4
We.J with added com kibbles·
Team a
76
52 Nebraska 73 Northern Iowa 55
74
and ...... lncrtued added r..:
Team 2
65
63
Mount Union 98 Rochester IT Team 11
64
64
Southwest
71
Team 10
57
71 Loyola fii1J92 Wic h St. 70
Team 13
56
72 Fresno St. 96 N Texas St. 95
tw ..... P¥0 them the
Team 14
54
74
,.,. - -&amp;hod Red ROM Dol
51
77 Athl In Act ion 60 BYoung 56
Team 9
Foo4
Team 12.
51
77 Montana
69 Seattle 63
2 COACHES NAMED
learn 6
44
84 Whitman 84 W Baptist 65 ·
Available In Bags &amp; Nuggets
42
86
Team
3
.
1
Pepperdine 102 Chicago St 69
IOWA CITY, Iowa (UPI) On Dec. B, 1973, Tea m 5 took a· Cal Poly SLO 74 Sacto St 53
· 25 &amp; 50 Lb. Sizes
Bob Commings; newly appoint- po ints from Team 14 . Ralph Chapman 95 Life 54
Johnston was high for Tearn 5 wn Mont 100 Columbia Basin so
ed head football coach at Iowa with
545 pins , and HelEm
University, Thursday an- Oseland was high for Team 14
494 pins .
nounced the first two appoint- .with
Team 9 took 6 points from
ments to his coaching staff.
Tea'm B, Ronnie Cremeens was
Pomeroy
high tor Team 9 with 504 pins,
Named by Commings were and
TRI COUNTY LEAGUE
Charlie Nea l was high tor
•
December 18,1973
Howard Vernon, who will be Team 8 with 466 pins
"Your Complete Farm Supplier"
Pis
Team
3
took
8
points
from
serve as offensive coordinator Team 13. Helen Thomas was Sears Catalog Merchants
'76
72
and Larry Coyer, who will be higH for Team 3 with 496 pins Roach's Gun Shop
Midwest
Steel
Co.
68
wash
igh
for
and
Wayne
Shaver
defensive coordinator.
Rawlings Auto Sates
68
Team 13 with 521 pins .
50
Team 10 took 6 points from . H&amp;R Firestone
Team ll. Mike Floccar i was Pomeroy Ce'ment Block Co , 48
High Ind. -Garhe - A. L.
high for Team 10 with 495 pihs
and Charles· Lupton (s Ob) was Phelps Jr. 232, Dale Davis, 227.
high tor Team 11 with 491 pins . Henry Clatworthy 213.
High Series - A. l. Phelps ,
Team 7 ·took ·a po ints from
Team 6. Elmer Stanley was Jr . 597, Larr't Thorn as 595,
high for Team 10 with 495 pins Jack Peterson 591.
Team
High
Gaime
and Maurey Pridemore (sub)
wa s high for Team 6 with 518 Pomeroy ce-ment Block Co .
972, Pomeroy Cemer:t Blacl·
pins .
Team 4 took 6 points from Co . 2720.
Team 2. Jack Janey was high
POMEROY LANES
for Team 4 with 593 pins and
BEND LEAGUE
Jack Mink was high for Team 2
December.17, 197l
with 523 pins .
pts
Team 1 took 6 points from
81
Team 12. Benny Neal fsub l Shake Haven
73
was high for Team 1 with SJI Crow•s Comets
69
pins and JaCk Ferguson was Four Aces
61
high for Team 12 With 497 pins . Top Cats
39
High single game for the Three Nuts &amp; A Bolt
38
ladies for the evening was 194 Three Hits &amp; A·Mis
High Ind. Game - Ray
pins held by Helen Oseland and
tor the men was 243 pins held Roach 235, Chester Knight 221.
Ray Roach , 214 .
by Benny Neat (sub) .
Complete
High Series - Ray Roach
High series tor the ladies was
518 total pins, held by Maurey 662, A. L. Phelps Jr . 586 , Joe
Pr idemore and tor the men 593 Sisson 562 .
Team High Game and Series
total pins held by Jack Janey.
- Top Cats 756, 2155.

•

~ - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Dec. 21, 1973

Gift Wrap
Gift Certificates
BankAmericard

Globokar, Mrs. Beaver, Mr.
Darnbrough, Mr. McFarland,
1\ir, Howland and Mr. Shaffer .
Members of the corrtmittee in
charge of arrangements for the
party were Mr. Thinunes, Mrs.
William Dunran, Mrs. Robert
Sieting, Mrs. K. 0. McGlone,
Mrs. J. V. Beaver, Mrs. Glenn
Martin, Mrs. Carl Spradlin and
Misses Judy Simpson and
Helen Anderson.
Howard Kiebler was in
charge of the Salvation Army
toy collection.
A cash bonus was paid Dec.
10 to all eligible employees.

FOR HIM
Arrow &amp; Career Club 'Shirts, Arrow, Jockey &amp; Puritan
Sweaters, Hubbard &amp; Levi's Slacks, Interwoven Socks ,
Curlee, Merit &amp; Warren Sewell Suits &amp; Sport Coats;
Excello Ties, Meeker Wallets &amp; Key Cases .

Bahr Clothiers
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

r---------------------------------------------.,
-Frigidaire
Skinny Mini.
Fits almost
anywhere.
(Only 2 feet wide)

.Permanent Press
Care.
In both Wa she r &amp; Dryer .
Helps no·iron clothes keep
th e1r promise.

Dacron dryer
lint screen.
Fine mesh remo't'es lint par·
tic l es. Easy to reach for
cleaning.

Installs almost
anywhere.

2-Speed Washer.

Where the wash is- kitchen,
bath, nursery . . . anywhere
you can get adequate wir·
ing, plumbing and vent ing.

Regular plus Delicate set·
tings for the fabric fle:~~i bil ·
jty a fami IY washer mus t
have.
"

Family-Size.

$ ~389

Wa shes and dries family size loa ds- at the sam e
time or independently.

Mode l tC·2
laundry Center

J

BAKER
FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

\

(

I

•

�•

'

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. 21, J9i3

•

o

•
•

t'he {);uly Senllnel, ~hddleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Der . 21 , 1973
CELEBRATE
home of Mrs. Beulah Whtte. An
The 30th weddm g an- anni\'ersary cake na s served
niversary of .Mr , and Mrs. with ice {'ream and coffee .
Charles White, and the 11th of Others atlcndin~ were Mr . and
Mr . and Mrs. Thomas Darst Mrs . How a rd Well , Mt·s .
were observed Sunday evening Florence Hannay -.and -£raig
with a family celebration at thP Darst.

IIAMILTON , Ohiu (IJ PI ) - Mrs . t:mil Asher reeeivcd a
dull for her lHh birthday Thursday beea ust&gt; in her happy
moments she rt•members hrr years as a y•Jwtg muthe r . l\1rs.
Asher had tltree &lt;·hildrcn. She has 16 grandC'Ilildrf"n, 34 J!rea tgrandehildren and ll great-great-gnndchildreu.
"l feel like 1 struck my se('tmd .growth ll years agu," s ht"
so1id rrum lll'r residence at the Ct·t•lcr Haven Nursing llnm e
hen· ... 1'\'c been i11 bcHedt ca lth sint·c I was IOOthan I was for
a lung time.•·
Mrs . A~her. the great-great-granddaughter of a
Cherokee Indian, was born Dec, 20, 1862, in a lug cabin in
Murgan County, Ky. Slw lived alone i~ Hamilton until she had
a stroke at the age of 101.
She has poor vision , but ca n roll around th e room s at the
home in a chair.

.

Bombs hit hotel
71 FORD ......................... s2195
'I• Ton , 4 sp., camper top, real good condition .

68 FORD.............................s895
1;,

Ton long bed ,

4

sp.

67 DODGE ....................... ..S595
1h

Ton .

59 FORD ......................... ..S395
1h

LONDON (UP I ) - Ex ·
tremists se t off two bombs
outside the Hilton Hotel in
London today and pos tal
workers in Dublin found two
oth ers in a pre -Ch ri stmas .
terror campaign that spanned

Ton, long bed .

71 VEGA .........................~1495
2 Dr., 4 sp.

72 FORD ........................ J1995
Galaxie 500 , 302 engine, A-1 cond.

70 PONTIAC ................. J l295
4 Dr. ,· aood condition .

See Ray Rigg s or Roger Riebel

RIGGS USED CARS
985-4 100 '
Chesler, 0.

located on St. Rl. 7
'

"

.

Santa coming in
RACINE - Santa will arrive
here at the fire station Sunday
at 2 p.m. when treats will be
distributed to children 12 years
old and younger. The event is
being sponsored by the
auxiliary of the flre department.
Jars have been .Placed in
business establishments for
donations to help pay for the
treats. The auxUiary extends
its thanks to the WSCS and
others who have donated .
WILL HAVE SERVICE
LANGSVILLE - A prayer
se rvice
and
Christma s
program will be held Christ·
mas night, 7:30 p.m . at the
Midway Community Church,
Langsville-Dexter Road .
Worley Haley is the pastor and
the public is inviled to ·a ttend .

countr ies.
The Hilton bombs packed
inside
empty
Cigarette
packages blew the hood off a
ear parked beside the U. S. ·
owned hotel ln the fa shionable
Mayfair district but caused no
injuries . A Scotl an d Yard
spokesman blamed the Irish
Republican Army ( fRA) for
the blast, but sa id there was no
· indication why the outlawed
Roman Catholic ext r emi st
group picked the Hilton .
The letter bombs discovered
in the Irish Republi c's capital
were defused befor e they
exploded .
twu

IRS held firm against Dean but didn't object, either

Observe birthday
Mrs. Mithae) Davis entertained recently with a party
111 observance of the fourth
llirtiH.Iety

or her

son, Mi&lt;.:kcy .

Blue and white streamers
wilh birthday balJoons were
featured in the decorations.
Hats were given to the
t• hildrcn . Attending were Mrs.

Health club
packs goodies
Cans of cookies and candies
for shut-in s were packed
· following the annual Christmas
po,tluck of the Rock Springs
Belter Health Cl ub Tuesday at
the Rock Springs United
Methodist Church .
Attending the dinner and
assisting with the cans were
Mrs. William Radford , Mrs .
Scott FOlmer , Mrs. Amos
Leonard, Mrs. Welby Whaley,
Mrs . AmoS Leonard, Mrs.
William F olmer , Mrs. Hugh
Bearhs, Mrs. Harold Blackston, Mrs. G. J . Morgan , Mrs.
Lewis Grueset, Marcella
Snowden, Mrs. Arlee Abbott,
Mr s . Fred Goeglein, Mrs .
George Skinner, Mrs. Wendell
Jeffers, Mrs . William Grueser,
Mrs. Opha Offutt, and a guest,
Timmy Jeffers .

Rosemary Hysell and Julie,

We Have
SX-70
Polaroid Land Camera

Mrs. Honald Harrison, Jeannie
Davis , Mrs. Shirley Gibbs and
Gina, Mrs . Sheila Carsey and
dimghter, Kenda, Tammy and
Shelle Capehart, Mason, W.
Va.: Mrs . John Bryan, Middleport, g randmother , and
J ohn Bryan, Mickey's grandrather, who carne as Santa.
Othe rs presenting gUts were
Mrs. Christine RusseU, Lorain :
Mrs. Sammy Bryan, Colum·
bus,
Mickey 's
paterna]
g r andmother, Mrs . Freda
Davis,. and Mrs. Roxie Oiler .

The

new

instant picture
cO:mera . Plenty of fitm
flashbulbs on hillnd for this

""d

model.

PROGRAM SLATED ,
RUTLAND - A Christmas
program will be presented at
the Rutland Church of the
Nazarene al 7 p.m. Sunday.
F ollowing the program, a
Christmas play will be
presented by the young people .
The public is invited.

OUS BRANDS

FRESH CHRISTMAS 1Q %
ARRANGEMENTS
OFF

DAIRY
DESSERT

CASH AND CARRY

FROM

McCLURE'S
DAIRY
ISLE
Middleport, 0 .
Locust St.

Also Playboy JlUblisher Hugh
By MIKE FEINSILBER
One of those who was audited supporters of Hberal causes. Woodward, P'olly llt: r gen , Gt.•rJr Fran(•e:-; " Sissy'' Fan~ nthold,
Hefn er . diplomat
An g l er
WASHINGTON (UP!)
paid taxes of more than $1
Among the prominent people H ~ c kmctn , JoSCJlh E. IRvine, furmer Texas Democratic
Biddle
Duke
,
Harvard
and Herb Alpert ; Painter f.\. Ubernatoria I nominee ;
Congressional
investigators million in one year, Wood wort~ on the list were :
Professor Juhn Kcnn cih
have concluded that the In· said .
Jean
Westwood
and Gcoq:ia O'Krefe ; Sen . William Howard M. Mctzenbaum of
Galbraith , cos metie nt.aker
lerna\ Revenue Service did not
He said most of the enemies Lawrence O' Brien , both Pl·oxmire. D-\Yis.: Hep . Bella Clcvrlimd , who was designated
Max Factor , Xerox executive
buckle under pressures from appeared to be supporters of former Democratlc national Abzug, D·N. Y.: forml'r IHS Wednesday to fill the vacant
Palevsky,
liber a l
Mortimner Senate seat of William B. Max
John W. Dean Ill, autbor of a 1972 Democratic presidential chairmen; e11tertainers Burt Commis sioner
philanthropisls Philip Stern
Caplin ; £ormer
Defen se Saxbe, the nc"w attorn£&gt;y
"screw our political enemies" nominee George S. McGovern Lancaster, Shirley Macl.aine,
and
Stewart Mott, Harvard
memo, when he came up with a or his contributors or wealthy Paul
Newman,
Joanne Secretary Clark M. Cliffo,d ; general.
list of 575 "enemies."
At the same time, former
IRS Commissioner Johnnie M.
Walters did not complain to the
Justice Department about
White House efforts to turn the
ms into a political apparatusan apparent violation of the
law.
Reporting Thursday on the
results of a six-month investigation into the IRS'
behavior under political
pressure,
the
Joint
Congressional Committee on
Internal Revenue Taxation
said it found no evidence the
taxmen conducted harassing
audits against the 575 tax·
payers on Dean's list.
Laurence N. Woodworth,
chief of staff for the joint
committee, was not as
sanguine about the IRS'
I
response to reported White
House s uggestions that the
8ANKAMERICARD
taxmen take it easy on seven
" friends ."
Woodworth refused to
identify any of the friends
except . oneNew York
osteopath Kenneth Riland, who
treated President Nixon and
accompanied him to China and
who is under indictment for
evaslon of taxes.
Shull!'s Advice
-Others who reportedly were
singled out for favorable tax
treatment · include actor John
Wayne and evangelist Billy
Graham, who has denied
trying to use his influence with
the Chief Executive to get out
of tax troubles.
The existence of the list of 575
'•enemies'' was not known Wltil
Left Hand
Woodworth's staff began its
Bottle
investigation.
Walters said Dean, counsel
to the President, presented him
Regular &amp; lime Aftershave $2.~U Va lu e
with the list on Sept. 11, 1972,
and asked htm ' 'to see what
Alter Shave-Cologne
type of information could be
.Dice Gift Set
developed concerning the peo.
$6.00
ple· on the list."
Walters said he turned to his
Value
superior' Treasury secretary
George P. Shultz, who told htm
4%
to "do nothing ".
11.75 Value
So, Walters said, he locked
.
th e list in his safe and took it
·~
with htm when H
eleft govern·
('IU 1')/""
Razor Bottle
ment service on May 21, 1973.
$3.25 Value
4 oz .
Remained SUenl
But neither he nor Shultz
$2.50
infonned the Justice Department, the investigators said.
Last summer, Dean testified
about his memo on " how we·
can use the available federal
inachillery to screw our politifor me .
cal enemies."
$1.50 Value . $121
He told the Senate Watergate
4 oz. Aft'\!r Shave
Commitlee that at a now
famous Sept. 15, 1972, meeting
Nixon complained about the
IRS' political irresponsiveness.
Dean said be replied lhe IRS
was staffed by a ~ monstrOus "
bureaucracy of left-&lt;&gt;ver
Democrats. Nixon replied he
would change things after the
by Faberge
election.
But Dean did not tell the
Wate~gate committee about
Fishing Ree l Decanter
his visit with Walters four days
with 4 Fishing Lures
before that meeting.
15.50 VALUE
. $440
· Woodworth said Walters got
the Impression Dean wanted
tax audits on the 575 "and life
made tough on them."
AQUA VELVA
Walter's Reaction
Beer Stein Deca
r "My impression is JohMie
S4.00 Value
Walters was horrified," Wood·
worth told reporters.
Woodworth's check showed
_ . , Aqua Velva .
that the 575 taxpayers had
Lectric Shave
undergone about twice as
$2.09 Value
many audits as would be
normal for people in their
brackets.
But ' he said the "enemies"
were scrutinized not out of
political motives but because
as a class they tended to have
more entertainment deductions and other checkworthy
4 oz. Shave Lotion
deductions than most taxFree Shave Cream
After Shave
payers.
Shave Cream
$3 .00 'Jalue 99~

Professor Geo1·ge Wald, Sculptor Alexander Calder.
Among the McGovern staff
people or supporters were:
Gary Hart , Frank Mankiewicz,
Pierre Salinger, Gordon Weil,
Ann e Wexler 1 Adm . Gene
Larocque, Rich•rd Dougherty
and Kirby J ones.

OPTOMETRISTS
181 N. Second Ave.
MIDDLEPORT
PH. 992-3279
Office

ttours

iP ·

by

poin1ment : Mon .- Fri . 9 til ot,
Sa1urda~ 9 until noon.

OF GifTS
THAT SAY..

ALL

FROZEN

Dr. T. J. Bradshaw
Dr. Mitton Mason

DUDLEY•s FLORIST
Middleport,
0..
-

LAYAWAY NOW

OLD SPICE GIFT SET

·'

$}93

SAVE BIG
.....-master
charge
••• ,_,..,... &lt;..
0

l
1

Prince Matchabelli

COLOGNES

•

Wind Song
Beloved

•

. CRCI-IET

·a fragrance
·
as inCJividual as IJOU ~re

OLD SPICE

MODEL WU9114JS
25N screen (measured dragonally )
Motorola Quasar Works In A Drawer
Col or TV. _Early Am_erican Stylmg .
lns~a · Matrc Colo r Tuning. 100%
s.olrd_Slate- no tube s.' Plug -I n
c •rcurt modu les. Instant Pic lure and
Soun~. Ouasar -Bright P1cture Tube.
Genume tempered hardboard w 11h
prlrHed Rustic Maple grained frnr sh .
Decora l rYe parts of non ·wood
maleria l. Caslers.

TROUBLE
AFTER SHAVE

...ESPECIALLY IN nME
FOR CHRISTMAS ...

-

IICHIII WVI1DI.
"-dl•rrane•n $1ytlng.

LARRY'S
WAYSIDE FURNITURE

MOTOROLA
'

~rM6WerCOLORTV
100% Solid Stite Ch•nla .. :no..tubel

SOli~ Srete c:lrcult mOduiet' replace all Cfta•ll tub...' t(
circuit modu!J repla~nt Ia ever nMCI~ ~ 1 ..m~ tldt--

'

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

.:::.. can f1uf

.':

..

l

II! .,. exchanqe n,ot:~ui•L. ~~~ ~ . ~t

lntti.MIIIcll C."VIor tuning
~

CONSOLE COLOR TV
Biggest pi c ture m color TV! lns la·

M'olorol1 M1trlx Bl'lght Picture TU!Mj

eutom•lc nne tuning lnltllntty.

Slack matl:f.~t aurroundt ._, cotor dot.. ..• the conti"Mt
MlkM, the COIOI'I IPPMr... harp, CritP with exc.lt.ltt detall.. ;25· picture (diagonal)" ... blggttt In coldr TV. · :

Mal ic Color Tuning, Works in a Drawer chass rs .

·=-··= .. . ,. _" ". . . . ,.

Early Ameri can credenza styling , Rus tic Map le
finish, Model WL9t9JS
·

• I

~II ~·

. . Y...._ TOI'iit &lt;:01.....

the Total ayatem ••• for Total Value
Motorola Quasar Works In A Drawer
Color TV. lnsta-Matic Color iuning .
Med iterra nean Styling. 100% Solid
State-no tubes . Plug-in circuit
modules. Instant Picture and Sound.
Quasar Brigh t Picture lube. Genu ine
tempered hardbo~rd with printed
· Mission Pecah grained f inish.
DecoratiYe parts of non-wood
mold ed materi al. Casters.

I

OPEN NIGHTLY
TIL 9 PM
no tubft to bum out.
Solid
cln:ull modul• plug
In and out lor .... of 1tMot.
If ,.pllctmtnt II e\ltl' nttdtd,
an .xchanot module can bl
plugged In br • MMct

•tat•

technlelln,

U~Ut11y

In h holM.

• lniUint ~tteture 11nc1 SOuM
• Motorola Matrtx 8ttght Plctufr'

,....

•IHu.mlnalildCher\MI Nuniblf'
• Verilbtt TON Control
MoiOfOII make~ rttnate control ...., by
ellm/nlftno 11'11 ~ cofol lldjuttment I L----...,..,.,=:/""'"'',...J '
butiOnl rrom 1•.,.
lnatrr·MMic eotor
Tuning hiiiPI hlnctltr N cotot bll~t~eln; al
tN Ill M ,ou dO 11 ,.._ ... ~um Nt on/off
... dllnQOVHFIUHF- ... ldjUOI
volume from ecroa 11'11 room 8tt 1
demOnltraiiOn.,. .:,

'

'"·""'"•

Model TL91ZSJP.
2S" piCture (m.Uuted diagorwllyl.

Cases will be
checked--Bates

'

•

•
•

•

•miiW.

t.ted rt•rf':lnt•n Styling,

LARRY'S WAYSIDE FURNITURE

l

1 •

I .

WAS '839.95

'

'

'

$J39

'•

95

SPECIALLY PRICED
.

•

- -

SPLASH COLOGNE. ...........$3.75

THE

Dana

AMBUSH
and TABU
Christmas Gift Sets

._..

TRAVEL KIT

' £aty tOt hno caltfr1. ·

CORNER OF THIRD &amp; OLIVE STREETS
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

oz.

ROMAN BRIO

190% IQUD
ITATI CHo\1811

WITH

SPRAY MIST.. ..... ~3.50 &amp; '6.00

.

----------··............., ..•

25H screen (measured diagonally) ·
Molorola Ouasar Works In A Drawer
Col.or TV. Mediterranean Styling.
lnsta-Matic Color Tuning, 100%
Solid Stale- no tubes. Pl ug-in circuit
modul~s .' Instant Picture and Sound .
Quasar- Bright Picture Tube. Genu rne
tempered hardboard with printed
Classic Peca n grained f inish. Cas ters .

COLOONE.. ..........$3.50 &amp;'6.00

'3.50

.,

DOUBLE SHOP-A-RAMA
TICKETS TODAY &amp;
SATURDAY

.•

Collection Set

3.2

MODEL WU9t08JW
25" screen (measured diagonally)

MODEL WU9116JP

SKIN BRACER

AQUA VELVA

.

VALUE TIME PRICED .

SKIN
BRACER

BRUT

Pulh DM button ._, IUIOmatiCIIIty bllanct thf, . . bye.
lntenllty, contralt/bf'tghlnns ... you ceQ -.. ~

25" diag. Quasar II

AFTER SHAVE
oz.

lI.

HAl KARATE

Revlon

Deodorant

$488

$7.50 Value

COLUMBUS (UPI) - State
Welfare Director Charles
Bates today asked an county
welfare departments to check
every one of the Aid to
Dependent Children cases by
next March for eligibility and
accuracy and payments.
Bates said the review was
necessary to comply wlth the
. revised policy arid eligibility
and accuracy of granl.
He said the scope of the 100
per cent revlew was to substantiate that each recipient
continues to meet all eligibility
criteria, and that the amount o'
his grant is computed
correcUy.
Bates asked the review 'to be
completed by March 31, 1974.
He sold each department
would be reimbursed f2,09 per
reviewed.

ROMAN BRIO
4 oz. After Shave

$"}49

$2.50 Value

AFTER SHAVE WITH
FREE DEODORANT
$4.25 Value $r7

ROMAN BRIO
AFTER SHAVE
6 oz.

Chariot Decanter
55.00 Value

'2"

HAl KARATE
AFTER SHAVE
6 oz.

Chess Knight Decanter
$4.50 Value

1/2

PRICE
SALE
SWEET EARTH

HAl KARATE
ACCESSORY CASE
After Shave, Deodorant
Shave Cream
$5.50 Value

Eterna '27'
Cream
Regular Price
$7.50

FLOWER FRAGRANCES
$275

$375

case

I'
I

I

\

l

'

�•

'

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. 21, J9i3

•

o

•
•

t'he {);uly Senllnel, ~hddleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Der . 21 , 1973
CELEBRATE
home of Mrs. Beulah Whtte. An
The 30th weddm g an- anni\'ersary cake na s served
niversary of .Mr , and Mrs. with ice {'ream and coffee .
Charles White, and the 11th of Others atlcndin~ were Mr . and
Mr . and Mrs. Thomas Darst Mrs . How a rd Well , Mt·s .
were observed Sunday evening Florence Hannay -.and -£raig
with a family celebration at thP Darst.

IIAMILTON , Ohiu (IJ PI ) - Mrs . t:mil Asher reeeivcd a
dull for her lHh birthday Thursday beea ust&gt; in her happy
moments she rt•members hrr years as a y•Jwtg muthe r . l\1rs.
Asher had tltree &lt;·hildrcn. She has 16 grandC'Ilildrf"n, 34 J!rea tgrandehildren and ll great-great-gnndchildreu.
"l feel like 1 struck my se('tmd .growth ll years agu," s ht"
so1id rrum lll'r residence at the Ct·t•lcr Haven Nursing llnm e
hen· ... 1'\'c been i11 bcHedt ca lth sint·c I was IOOthan I was for
a lung time.•·
Mrs . A~her. the great-great-granddaughter of a
Cherokee Indian, was born Dec, 20, 1862, in a lug cabin in
Murgan County, Ky. Slw lived alone i~ Hamilton until she had
a stroke at the age of 101.
She has poor vision , but ca n roll around th e room s at the
home in a chair.

.

Bombs hit hotel
71 FORD ......................... s2195
'I• Ton , 4 sp., camper top, real good condition .

68 FORD.............................s895
1;,

Ton long bed ,

4

sp.

67 DODGE ....................... ..S595
1h

Ton .

59 FORD ......................... ..S395
1h

LONDON (UP I ) - Ex ·
tremists se t off two bombs
outside the Hilton Hotel in
London today and pos tal
workers in Dublin found two
oth ers in a pre -Ch ri stmas .
terror campaign that spanned

Ton, long bed .

71 VEGA .........................~1495
2 Dr., 4 sp.

72 FORD ........................ J1995
Galaxie 500 , 302 engine, A-1 cond.

70 PONTIAC ................. J l295
4 Dr. ,· aood condition .

See Ray Rigg s or Roger Riebel

RIGGS USED CARS
985-4 100 '
Chesler, 0.

located on St. Rl. 7
'

"

.

Santa coming in
RACINE - Santa will arrive
here at the fire station Sunday
at 2 p.m. when treats will be
distributed to children 12 years
old and younger. The event is
being sponsored by the
auxiliary of the flre department.
Jars have been .Placed in
business establishments for
donations to help pay for the
treats. The auxUiary extends
its thanks to the WSCS and
others who have donated .
WILL HAVE SERVICE
LANGSVILLE - A prayer
se rvice
and
Christma s
program will be held Christ·
mas night, 7:30 p.m . at the
Midway Community Church,
Langsville-Dexter Road .
Worley Haley is the pastor and
the public is inviled to ·a ttend .

countr ies.
The Hilton bombs packed
inside
empty
Cigarette
packages blew the hood off a
ear parked beside the U. S. ·
owned hotel ln the fa shionable
Mayfair district but caused no
injuries . A Scotl an d Yard
spokesman blamed the Irish
Republican Army ( fRA) for
the blast, but sa id there was no
· indication why the outlawed
Roman Catholic ext r emi st
group picked the Hilton .
The letter bombs discovered
in the Irish Republi c's capital
were defused befor e they
exploded .
twu

IRS held firm against Dean but didn't object, either

Observe birthday
Mrs. Mithae) Davis entertained recently with a party
111 observance of the fourth
llirtiH.Iety

or her

son, Mi&lt;.:kcy .

Blue and white streamers
wilh birthday balJoons were
featured in the decorations.
Hats were given to the
t• hildrcn . Attending were Mrs.

Health club
packs goodies
Cans of cookies and candies
for shut-in s were packed
· following the annual Christmas
po,tluck of the Rock Springs
Belter Health Cl ub Tuesday at
the Rock Springs United
Methodist Church .
Attending the dinner and
assisting with the cans were
Mrs. William Radford , Mrs .
Scott FOlmer , Mrs. Amos
Leonard, Mrs. Welby Whaley,
Mrs . AmoS Leonard, Mrs.
William F olmer , Mrs. Hugh
Bearhs, Mrs. Harold Blackston, Mrs. G. J . Morgan , Mrs.
Lewis Grueset, Marcella
Snowden, Mrs. Arlee Abbott,
Mr s . Fred Goeglein, Mrs .
George Skinner, Mrs. Wendell
Jeffers, Mrs . William Grueser,
Mrs. Opha Offutt, and a guest,
Timmy Jeffers .

Rosemary Hysell and Julie,

We Have
SX-70
Polaroid Land Camera

Mrs. Honald Harrison, Jeannie
Davis , Mrs. Shirley Gibbs and
Gina, Mrs . Sheila Carsey and
dimghter, Kenda, Tammy and
Shelle Capehart, Mason, W.
Va.: Mrs . John Bryan, Middleport, g randmother , and
J ohn Bryan, Mickey's grandrather, who carne as Santa.
Othe rs presenting gUts were
Mrs. Christine RusseU, Lorain :
Mrs. Sammy Bryan, Colum·
bus,
Mickey 's
paterna]
g r andmother, Mrs . Freda
Davis,. and Mrs. Roxie Oiler .

The

new

instant picture
cO:mera . Plenty of fitm
flashbulbs on hillnd for this

""d

model.

PROGRAM SLATED ,
RUTLAND - A Christmas
program will be presented at
the Rutland Church of the
Nazarene al 7 p.m. Sunday.
F ollowing the program, a
Christmas play will be
presented by the young people .
The public is invited.

OUS BRANDS

FRESH CHRISTMAS 1Q %
ARRANGEMENTS
OFF

DAIRY
DESSERT

CASH AND CARRY

FROM

McCLURE'S
DAIRY
ISLE
Middleport, 0 .
Locust St.

Also Playboy JlUblisher Hugh
By MIKE FEINSILBER
One of those who was audited supporters of Hberal causes. Woodward, P'olly llt: r gen , Gt.•rJr Fran(•e:-; " Sissy'' Fan~ nthold,
Hefn er . diplomat
An g l er
WASHINGTON (UP!)
paid taxes of more than $1
Among the prominent people H ~ c kmctn , JoSCJlh E. IRvine, furmer Texas Democratic
Biddle
Duke
,
Harvard
and Herb Alpert ; Painter f.\. Ubernatoria I nominee ;
Congressional
investigators million in one year, Wood wort~ on the list were :
Professor Juhn Kcnn cih
have concluded that the In· said .
Jean
Westwood
and Gcoq:ia O'Krefe ; Sen . William Howard M. Mctzenbaum of
Galbraith , cos metie nt.aker
lerna\ Revenue Service did not
He said most of the enemies Lawrence O' Brien , both Pl·oxmire. D-\Yis.: Hep . Bella Clcvrlimd , who was designated
Max Factor , Xerox executive
buckle under pressures from appeared to be supporters of former Democratlc national Abzug, D·N. Y.: forml'r IHS Wednesday to fill the vacant
Palevsky,
liber a l
Mortimner Senate seat of William B. Max
John W. Dean Ill, autbor of a 1972 Democratic presidential chairmen; e11tertainers Burt Commis sioner
philanthropisls Philip Stern
Caplin ; £ormer
Defen se Saxbe, the nc"w attorn£&gt;y
"screw our political enemies" nominee George S. McGovern Lancaster, Shirley Macl.aine,
and
Stewart Mott, Harvard
memo, when he came up with a or his contributors or wealthy Paul
Newman,
Joanne Secretary Clark M. Cliffo,d ; general.
list of 575 "enemies."
At the same time, former
IRS Commissioner Johnnie M.
Walters did not complain to the
Justice Department about
White House efforts to turn the
ms into a political apparatusan apparent violation of the
law.
Reporting Thursday on the
results of a six-month investigation into the IRS'
behavior under political
pressure,
the
Joint
Congressional Committee on
Internal Revenue Taxation
said it found no evidence the
taxmen conducted harassing
audits against the 575 tax·
payers on Dean's list.
Laurence N. Woodworth,
chief of staff for the joint
committee, was not as
sanguine about the IRS'
I
response to reported White
House s uggestions that the
8ANKAMERICARD
taxmen take it easy on seven
" friends ."
Woodworth refused to
identify any of the friends
except . oneNew York
osteopath Kenneth Riland, who
treated President Nixon and
accompanied him to China and
who is under indictment for
evaslon of taxes.
Shull!'s Advice
-Others who reportedly were
singled out for favorable tax
treatment · include actor John
Wayne and evangelist Billy
Graham, who has denied
trying to use his influence with
the Chief Executive to get out
of tax troubles.
The existence of the list of 575
'•enemies'' was not known Wltil
Left Hand
Woodworth's staff began its
Bottle
investigation.
Walters said Dean, counsel
to the President, presented him
Regular &amp; lime Aftershave $2.~U Va lu e
with the list on Sept. 11, 1972,
and asked htm ' 'to see what
Alter Shave-Cologne
type of information could be
.Dice Gift Set
developed concerning the peo.
$6.00
ple· on the list."
Walters said he turned to his
Value
superior' Treasury secretary
George P. Shultz, who told htm
4%
to "do nothing ".
11.75 Value
So, Walters said, he locked
.
th e list in his safe and took it
·~
with htm when H
eleft govern·
('IU 1')/""
Razor Bottle
ment service on May 21, 1973.
$3.25 Value
4 oz .
Remained SUenl
But neither he nor Shultz
$2.50
infonned the Justice Department, the investigators said.
Last summer, Dean testified
about his memo on " how we·
can use the available federal
inachillery to screw our politifor me .
cal enemies."
$1.50 Value . $121
He told the Senate Watergate
4 oz. Aft'\!r Shave
Commitlee that at a now
famous Sept. 15, 1972, meeting
Nixon complained about the
IRS' political irresponsiveness.
Dean said be replied lhe IRS
was staffed by a ~ monstrOus "
bureaucracy of left-&lt;&gt;ver
Democrats. Nixon replied he
would change things after the
by Faberge
election.
But Dean did not tell the
Wate~gate committee about
Fishing Ree l Decanter
his visit with Walters four days
with 4 Fishing Lures
before that meeting.
15.50 VALUE
. $440
· Woodworth said Walters got
the Impression Dean wanted
tax audits on the 575 "and life
made tough on them."
AQUA VELVA
Walter's Reaction
Beer Stein Deca
r "My impression is JohMie
S4.00 Value
Walters was horrified," Wood·
worth told reporters.
Woodworth's check showed
_ . , Aqua Velva .
that the 575 taxpayers had
Lectric Shave
undergone about twice as
$2.09 Value
many audits as would be
normal for people in their
brackets.
But ' he said the "enemies"
were scrutinized not out of
political motives but because
as a class they tended to have
more entertainment deductions and other checkworthy
4 oz. Shave Lotion
deductions than most taxFree Shave Cream
After Shave
payers.
Shave Cream
$3 .00 'Jalue 99~

Professor Geo1·ge Wald, Sculptor Alexander Calder.
Among the McGovern staff
people or supporters were:
Gary Hart , Frank Mankiewicz,
Pierre Salinger, Gordon Weil,
Ann e Wexler 1 Adm . Gene
Larocque, Rich•rd Dougherty
and Kirby J ones.

OPTOMETRISTS
181 N. Second Ave.
MIDDLEPORT
PH. 992-3279
Office

ttours

iP ·

by

poin1ment : Mon .- Fri . 9 til ot,
Sa1urda~ 9 until noon.

OF GifTS
THAT SAY..

ALL

FROZEN

Dr. T. J. Bradshaw
Dr. Mitton Mason

DUDLEY•s FLORIST
Middleport,
0..
-

LAYAWAY NOW

OLD SPICE GIFT SET

·'

$}93

SAVE BIG
.....-master
charge
••• ,_,..,... &lt;..
0

l
1

Prince Matchabelli

COLOGNES

•

Wind Song
Beloved

•

. CRCI-IET

·a fragrance
·
as inCJividual as IJOU ~re

OLD SPICE

MODEL WU9114JS
25N screen (measured dragonally )
Motorola Quasar Works In A Drawer
Col or TV. _Early Am_erican Stylmg .
lns~a · Matrc Colo r Tuning. 100%
s.olrd_Slate- no tube s.' Plug -I n
c •rcurt modu les. Instant Pic lure and
Soun~. Ouasar -Bright P1cture Tube.
Genume tempered hardboard w 11h
prlrHed Rustic Maple grained frnr sh .
Decora l rYe parts of non ·wood
maleria l. Caslers.

TROUBLE
AFTER SHAVE

...ESPECIALLY IN nME
FOR CHRISTMAS ...

-

IICHIII WVI1DI.
"-dl•rrane•n $1ytlng.

LARRY'S
WAYSIDE FURNITURE

MOTOROLA
'

~rM6WerCOLORTV
100% Solid Stite Ch•nla .. :no..tubel

SOli~ Srete c:lrcult mOduiet' replace all Cfta•ll tub...' t(
circuit modu!J repla~nt Ia ever nMCI~ ~ 1 ..m~ tldt--

'

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

.:::.. can f1uf

.':

..

l

II! .,. exchanqe n,ot:~ui•L. ~~~ ~ . ~t

lntti.MIIIcll C."VIor tuning
~

CONSOLE COLOR TV
Biggest pi c ture m color TV! lns la·

M'olorol1 M1trlx Bl'lght Picture TU!Mj

eutom•lc nne tuning lnltllntty.

Slack matl:f.~t aurroundt ._, cotor dot.. ..• the conti"Mt
MlkM, the COIOI'I IPPMr... harp, CritP with exc.lt.ltt detall.. ;25· picture (diagonal)" ... blggttt In coldr TV. · :

Mal ic Color Tuning, Works in a Drawer chass rs .

·=-··= .. . ,. _" ". . . . ,.

Early Ameri can credenza styling , Rus tic Map le
finish, Model WL9t9JS
·

• I

~II ~·

. . Y...._ TOI'iit &lt;:01.....

the Total ayatem ••• for Total Value
Motorola Quasar Works In A Drawer
Color TV. lnsta-Matic Color iuning .
Med iterra nean Styling. 100% Solid
State-no tubes . Plug-in circuit
modules. Instant Picture and Sound.
Quasar Brigh t Picture lube. Genu ine
tempered hardbo~rd with printed
· Mission Pecah grained f inish.
DecoratiYe parts of non-wood
mold ed materi al. Casters.

I

OPEN NIGHTLY
TIL 9 PM
no tubft to bum out.
Solid
cln:ull modul• plug
In and out lor .... of 1tMot.
If ,.pllctmtnt II e\ltl' nttdtd,
an .xchanot module can bl
plugged In br • MMct

•tat•

technlelln,

U~Ut11y

In h holM.

• lniUint ~tteture 11nc1 SOuM
• Motorola Matrtx 8ttght Plctufr'

,....

•IHu.mlnalildCher\MI Nuniblf'
• Verilbtt TON Control
MoiOfOII make~ rttnate control ...., by
ellm/nlftno 11'11 ~ cofol lldjuttment I L----...,..,.,=:/""'"'',...J '
butiOnl rrom 1•.,.
lnatrr·MMic eotor
Tuning hiiiPI hlnctltr N cotot bll~t~eln; al
tN Ill M ,ou dO 11 ,.._ ... ~um Nt on/off
... dllnQOVHFIUHF- ... ldjUOI
volume from ecroa 11'11 room 8tt 1
demOnltraiiOn.,. .:,

'

'"·""'"•

Model TL91ZSJP.
2S" piCture (m.Uuted diagorwllyl.

Cases will be
checked--Bates

'

•

•
•

•

•miiW.

t.ted rt•rf':lnt•n Styling,

LARRY'S WAYSIDE FURNITURE

l

1 •

I .

WAS '839.95

'

'

'

$J39

'•

95

SPECIALLY PRICED
.

•

- -

SPLASH COLOGNE. ...........$3.75

THE

Dana

AMBUSH
and TABU
Christmas Gift Sets

._..

TRAVEL KIT

' £aty tOt hno caltfr1. ·

CORNER OF THIRD &amp; OLIVE STREETS
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

oz.

ROMAN BRIO

190% IQUD
ITATI CHo\1811

WITH

SPRAY MIST.. ..... ~3.50 &amp; '6.00

.

----------··............., ..•

25H screen (measured diagonally) ·
Molorola Ouasar Works In A Drawer
Col.or TV. Mediterranean Styling.
lnsta-Matic Color Tuning, 100%
Solid Stale- no tubes. Pl ug-in circuit
modul~s .' Instant Picture and Sound .
Quasar- Bright Picture Tube. Genu rne
tempered hardboard with printed
Classic Peca n grained f inish. Cas ters .

COLOONE.. ..........$3.50 &amp;'6.00

'3.50

.,

DOUBLE SHOP-A-RAMA
TICKETS TODAY &amp;
SATURDAY

.•

Collection Set

3.2

MODEL WU9t08JW
25" screen (measured diagonally)

MODEL WU9116JP

SKIN BRACER

AQUA VELVA

.

VALUE TIME PRICED .

SKIN
BRACER

BRUT

Pulh DM button ._, IUIOmatiCIIIty bllanct thf, . . bye.
lntenllty, contralt/bf'tghlnns ... you ceQ -.. ~

25" diag. Quasar II

AFTER SHAVE
oz.

lI.

HAl KARATE

Revlon

Deodorant

$488

$7.50 Value

COLUMBUS (UPI) - State
Welfare Director Charles
Bates today asked an county
welfare departments to check
every one of the Aid to
Dependent Children cases by
next March for eligibility and
accuracy and payments.
Bates said the review was
necessary to comply wlth the
. revised policy arid eligibility
and accuracy of granl.
He said the scope of the 100
per cent revlew was to substantiate that each recipient
continues to meet all eligibility
criteria, and that the amount o'
his grant is computed
correcUy.
Bates asked the review 'to be
completed by March 31, 1974.
He sold each department
would be reimbursed f2,09 per
reviewed.

ROMAN BRIO
4 oz. After Shave

$"}49

$2.50 Value

AFTER SHAVE WITH
FREE DEODORANT
$4.25 Value $r7

ROMAN BRIO
AFTER SHAVE
6 oz.

Chariot Decanter
55.00 Value

'2"

HAl KARATE
AFTER SHAVE
6 oz.

Chess Knight Decanter
$4.50 Value

1/2

PRICE
SALE
SWEET EARTH

HAl KARATE
ACCESSORY CASE
After Shave, Deodorant
Shave Cream
$5.50 Value

Eterna '27'
Cream
Regular Price
$7.50

FLOWER FRAGRANCES
$275

$375

case

I'
I

I

\

l

'

�•

SEVE N TH - DAY

Yr NTt ST

u

.

,,'

'

POMEROY
POMEROY TRINITY
~ev W H Pc rrm . pastor Roy
May er Su pt Chu rch sc hoo l.
9 15 &lt;' m wOrSh ip , 10 2J am
youth cho~r reh~&gt;arsal Monday.
6 3(1 p m , Mrs Marvm Burt.
d ! rP c tor
senior
c hoir
reht&gt;ar Sal 7 JO p m . Thurs
day .
Mrs
Paul
N ease .
d ,rector
POMEROY C HUR C H OF
THE NAZARENE
Co r ner
Union and Mulberry
Rev
Cly d e V Henderson , pa stor
Sun day school , 9 30 a .m , G len
morn1nQ
M cCl ung , su p!
worsh ip , \0 30 a .m , eve n .nQ
serv1ce . 7 30 . m i d we ek ser
v1ce , Wednesday , 7 30 p rn

-•••
.•

••
•

·-•

GRACE EPISCOPAL - The
Rev . Harold Deeth , rector
Church serv tces, 10 JO am . •
Holy communion first Sunda)l
of month , church s.chool , 10 . 30
am for nursery thro ugh 12

••

POMEROY CHUR C H OF
CHRIST - John F Amstu t z,
pastor Bible school, 9 30 am ;
worsh ip , 10 : 30. adult worship
s~rv ice and
young people's
meeting , both
7 30
p m
Combtned Bible study and
prayer meeting, Wednesda y ,
'f 30 p m
THE SALVATION ARMY
Envoy Ray W W1nmg . Off•cer
1n cha r ge
Sunday, 10 am ,
Hol•ness meet1ng . 10 30 am.
Sun day School Young People 's
Leg ton , 7 p m . Thursday , 1 lo J
p m , Lad •es HarTJe Le.:Jgu.; . ~
e_m , Pr ep classes

•

•

ST . PAUL LUTHERAN Corner Second and Sy camore
Sts , Pomeroy , the
Rev
W i lliam M•dd le worth , pa sto r
Sunda y Sc hoo l. 9 30 a m ,
church serv•ces 10 30 am .

.\\t'll10f"t,11

SACRED HEART
Rev
r tlthcr f\crnilrd KraiCOVIC ,
p., &lt;;. IOr
PhOflP
997 1825
&lt;.,,l iUI' ditV t•v r11 1nQ Mass, I JO
p n• "vnd,lV M.:~s~ t1 1U1d 10
am Co nh&gt;S'&gt;• On &lt;:.. Sa turday , 1
lJO pm
POMEROY FIRST 8AP ·
TIST
f..:ob~ rt Kvnn , pastor .
W d l 1i'H l1 Wo Tc;on , Sun day S&lt;hOOI
su~ l "u nd&lt;lY sc hoo l Q: JO ~ m ,
BY I
6 j) 111
A1bl£:: Study ,
!At'tJnf'sday 7 p m , (hOif
prMIICC. Wrdncsday , 30 p m
POMEROY
WESLEYAN
HOliNESS C HUR C H
Harr tson vdlc
Road
Rev .
O ' OC'II Manley , P&lt;' Stor H enr y
Ebhn
~ unda y
Sc hool Su p!
5u nd,ly Sc hool 9 30 a m .
Evenrng worsh ip 1 30 p m ,
Prayer and Pra1se service.
Thursday , 7 30 p m .
NEASE
SETTLEME NT
CHA PEL
Non
denom•naf•onal , Ge orge S
O il er. P.;t sto r Sunday School 10
a rn Wor sh•P Se rv iCe II am
Sunday n1g ht se rvrces 7' 30
p m
Wednesday Prayer
meeting 7 30 p m
Everyone
w elcome
POMEROY
WESTS ID E
CHURCH OF CHRIST, 700 W
Mam 5 1
Loren T STephens ,
e vangt&gt;l• s t , phone 992 7856
Co n se rv a T•v e.
non
•ns lr umental Sunday wor ship ,
tO am , A 1bl e s tudy 11 am ,
wor sh1p , 6 p m
Wednesday
81 ble s tudy , 1 p m
MIDWAY
COMMUNti"Y
CHURCH
(non
denom•na t •onal) ,
Langsville
Oe)( l er Road , the Rev Worley
Ha ley , pastor Sunday schoo l ,
• 10 a. rn , ev('nlllg worShip , 7 JO
p m
Prayer
mee t 1ng ,
Tu esday , 7 30 p .m , YOIJih
grovp , Fr•day , 7 30 p m

a

; leper. The disease with wh1ch he was afflicted was the most
deadly and socially objectionable possible for a person to have.
There was no known cure for it, and to this day there is none. An
individual with leprosy was eventually cast out from society and
literally left to d1e. This was Naaman's future, when word came
to him and hls king of a prophet in Israel who could rid h1m of the
leprosy. He immediately went to Israel in his search for relief of
his affliction.
Elisha told him, "Go and wash in Jordan seven times, and
• thy flesh shall come again to thee, and thou shalt be clean". (II
: • Kings 5: 10) The next verse tells us he was wroth, having thought
' God would have him do some great thing. He complamed about · the Jordan, and generally resiSted the sunple, clear command of
God to wash seven times in Jordan and his leprosy would be
:· cleansed.

&lt;

But we read in verse 14, th at when " he went down, and

· dipped himself seven times in Jordan, according to the saying of
:,. the man of God, his flesh came again like unto the flesh of a httle
child, and he was clean ."

We are able to fully understand what transpired here, God
, told the man what to do, not some great thing wherem the man
; could glory, but a simple act which would require the man to
;. hwnble himself and accomplish something purely because God
; said do it. No other jusllfication coUld Naaman giVe for a grown
man washmg himself seven tunes in old muddy Jordan. And his
.:· leprosy was with him until he was~ed all seven times! But when
:. he accomplished exactly what God said do, it was gone!
Sin is a spiritual disease, completely unacceptable to God.
•. Saul was a sinner of the vilest sort, persecutmg the ch1ldren of
.:• God, even to death . (Acts 22:4) As he journeyed to Damascus to
:; continue this persecution, Christ appeared to him and talk•d w1th
:. him face to face. Saul believed on Jesus, as evidenced by h1s own
·:: question to Him, "What shall I do, Lord?" (vs. 10). The Lord told
·:: him, "Arise and go into Damascus; and there it shall be told thee
· of all things which are appointed for thee to do." We learn from
the ninth chapter that Saul apparently repented of hiS sins
against Christ, for he prayed for three days Without food or drink,
in waiting for mstruction to be given him. Wlien the man of God
came to him, this Armamas, he told Saul, "Why tarriest thou,
arise and be baptized, and wash away thy sins." (Acts 22 : 16)
I believe it is readily apparant to the open minded reader
that the water mwhich Paul (Saul) was baptized had no power to
wash away his sins. The waters of Jordan certainly had no power
to wash away Naaman's leprosy! God removed his disease of the
body after Naaman bent his will to God's will. After Naaman had
done all that God said do' Naaman's washing was the sym·
bolizing of his fa1th in what God had promiSed, and sure enough,
when he washed seven times, God kept His end of the bargain
and removed the leprosy. Naaman certainly did not wash to show
a symbol or some such idea, because h1s leprosy had "already
no reason imaginable to draw that

men today take exactly the same language, when it IS
'· said Yet
to Sau1 about sm, and say his sins were " already forgiven ' ',
so tlle baptism he submitted to was to ''show that £org1veness" .

;. We recognize that the water m baptism today has no power to
wash away sins. Man obeys the command to be baptized, and
God removes the disease of sin, just as he removed Naaman's

leprosy, but not before! Naaman was not clean unhl after he
obeyed,and the same is true m Saw's case. The Bible tells us so,
in spite of man's complicated explanations, or argwnentation.

Apple Grove

AlfreftenT.Stephens

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Miller
visited Mrs. Delphia Cwnrruns
Saturday at the home of her
daughter, Mrs. Ruth Circle at
Gallipolis. They also visited

Sunday School attendance on
Dec. 16 was 49, the offering
$18,58. Worship services were
held at II o'clock with the Rev.
Meece speaking from Isaiah
9:6. Attendance was 26, of.
fering $1G .47 and pledges

their daughter, Mrs . Bob
Cornwell and saw the parade
2
through town welcoming Santa .. $ ~~· and Mrs. Clair Follrod\

C~';".;. Becky Proffitt and Jeff
Dono~ew visited Mr. and Mrs
Roy Donohew Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs . Gerald

~

Stevie and Kathy, attended the
Buckley-Wolf weddmg at the
Chester Umted Methodist
Church, Sat., Dec. 15, at 2:30.
Stevie was an usher Others
attending from this area were

Hayman and son, Keith, were
dinner guesls of Mr. and Mrs.
Gene Jewell Saturday at ~ii:~~Jo~p~~~~· !.~":'::;
Letart, W Va., Route .
th p ul B kl f .1
Mrs. June Wickersham and
e a
uc ey ami Y·
son, Jeff, and Tlffi spent the
Attending the above were
weekend in Colwnbus With Mr. Dana Swartz, Virgie Swartz
and Mrs. Don Hodge.
(widow of Robert Swartz ) and
Mr . and Mrs. Erwm their daughter , Patty and
'. Gloeckner visited over the family' of Columbus and Fae
Kimes of Athens.
• weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
;: Larty Badgely at Fairfax, Va.
Eddie Parker of Columbus
:. Mrs. Gloeckner remained for spent the weekend with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur
.;; an indefinite visit.
'•· Mr. and Mrs . Herbert Roush Parker and sister, Martha
:. and Mrs. Erma Wilson were Poole and son, Will.
:, shOpping in Point Pleasant and
Alfred's church program will
;. Galllpoll.s Saturday.
be held Sunday, Dec. 23
'·· Mrs. Gerald Hayman and begmning at 7:30. All are
:: 11011 • Keith visited Mrs. Bertha

' Roblnlon Sunday.
• The

United Methodist
•' Wcmen'a Society held thetr
•- ..-! Clriltmas party at the
. : Lellrt Fallll Community Hall

; Tuuday eYtllling.
•

l ll'i'lf"

HO S I&gt;tiJI.

\.I Y
f'.:t "i i Qr
H (' l hC'rl
Mo1 Q.ln ~a bbr~ltl !'.l hoot , every
Saturd&lt;ly at '1 p m il'\d wor'&gt;h•P
SCf"VICC lo!IOW!OQ ,ll J IS p m

In II Kings 5:1, we begin to read of Naaman,a captain in the

1s

on

' 1 "" 1

:' armies of the king of Syria, a mighty man of valor. but he was a

been removed". There
conclusion .

H CIQhh ,

• '1"\

the Sermonette

~,

AO

toc&lt;'llt'd

welcome.

Several from this area attended funeral services for
Eugene Hawk; son of the late
~lura Taylor at White'~
Funeral Home at Coolvlle at 2
. p. m. Monday.

Open B tble d•Scus!.ton each
tnursddV at 1 30 pm at lt'le
c hurch
" Th C'
Fr•cndly
Chureh ·' ·
GRA~AM
UNITED
METHODIST
.,. .. o Ct m , t 1r s t

Prea cht ng

and second
'•u nOa v-s o t e~ch month , thu' d
anQ f ou rth
Su ndays eac h
month worsh•J) service at 1 30
p nl W ('d n es &lt;Ja.,. e,.tenings at
1 JO. PrayPr etnd B ib le Studv
FIRST SOUT H ER N
BAP TIST
787 Mulberry A\IC •
Pomeroy
aflil1aled
wtlh
SB C
the Rev
Fred H il L

pastor ,
Sunday

Her s hel
sc hool

sc hoot , 9 30

M cC lure .

supf

a .m ,

Sunday

morn mg

pr&lt;tyN rnef'IJOQ , th1rd
,,, " .. " .. di'y. f )C p I l l
G lol:EI\1 RENO
Wor~h • P ll
,1
loc1 olll f l 1"1! • Ufl fily\
{_Jo r(_h ' I I HI•
f0 o) I l l
' ltTAWI rALLS
V\ &lt;l f&lt;.. 1HP
It\ 3 111
lhU r ( h S.(.hO.,I , 9 a tH
lhh lt • &lt; 1•10Y. I 30 1'1 10 evt-rv
o1 "'

MORNING STAR
Wor~h i p
9 10 am , Chvrch School 10 JO
M•d Wecll.
Se rv 1c~ .
Wf'diWSday , 8 p m
MORSE CHAP EL
Wor
'ih1P 11 il m , lSf oitnd ) rd
~ und~'ly o;.
Chu r c h &lt;&gt;choot , 10

"rn
a !ll

PORTLAND
Worshtp 1 30
p m , C hur c h Sc hool 9 30 a .m
SUTTO N
wor ship, 11 am
1nd and 4th Sundavs . Church
S (llOOI 10 am
WESLEYAN IRac1nC!)
Wor shi P 11 am . Church
5c hoot. 10 am
NORTHEA ST CLUSTER
Rev . Robert Meece
Rev St anl ey Brandum
JOPPA - WorShip 10 am ,
Chu r c h Sc hool 9 am ; Prayer
M ee ti ng , Wednesday , B p m
LONG BOTTOM Church
se rv 1ces, 9 am , Sunday
Sc hoO l 9 : 45 am B1ble Study
every Thur sday . 7 30 p m
NORTH BETHEL war sh •P 11 a m , Chu r c h Sc hool 10

wor sh• p . 10 30 am ; Sunday
cva n ge i •SIIc meet mg . 7 : 30pm .
Prayer mcel•ng Wednesday .
7 30 p m
MIDDLEPORT
MT MORIAH BAPTIST
Co rner Fou rth and Ma1n ,
M iddleport Rev Henry Key ,
Jr , pastor Sunday Sc hool , 9 30
am , Mr s Ervm BaumQan;l
ncr , su p l , Morning wor sh1p ,
am
10 45 a m
ALFRED - Su nday sc hool ,
JEHOVAH 'S WITNESSES
9 45 a m
each
Sunday ,
L arry Carnahan , presid1ng
preachtng at 11 am
each
mm•ster Su nday , B1ble te e
Sunday , Pray er mee ting , 7 45
lure . 9 30 d m , Watchtower
p m Wednesday , WSC S, 8p m
!'.Tlldy, 10 30 am , Tue!'.day,
on lhlfd Tuesday each mon th
B1ble study , 7 . 30 p m , Thurs
REEDSVILLE
Sunday
day , m11)1Stry schoo l , 730
schoo l , 9 JO, preaching, 7. 30
p m.
senn c e mect 1ng 8 30
p m Sunday , prayer meeling ,
pm
7 JOp m Tuesday, WSCS, 7 30
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH of
f~r s T Thursday each month
Chn st .n"'~&gt; chr~s t tan Un1on SILVER RIDGE - Wor shtp
L awrence Man l e y , pastor ,
10 a m , Church Sc hoo L 9 am
Mrs Russell Young , Sunday
TUPPERS
PlAINS
Sc hool Su pt
Sun da)l School
WorSh i P 9 a m ,
Church
9 30 a .m
Evenmg worship ,
School. 10 a m
7 30
Wednesday
prayer
KENO
CHURCH
OF
meet•ng , 7 30 p m
CHRIST - George Fredenck ,
MT . MORIAH CHURCH OF
sup t Serv •ce weekly , 9 30 am
GOO ~ Racme Route 2, the
on Sunday Prea c h•ng f1rst and
Rev Ja mes M Mun c y . pastor
third Sun days of month, by
Sunday school, 9 : 45 a . m ,
Clt fford Sm1th , 9 30 a
m,
morn1ng wor ship. 11 am ,
HOBSON
CHRISTIAN
evenmg wor ship, 7 30 p m
UNION Darr e l Ooddnll ,
P r ayer meet1ng , Tuesday , 7 30
pastor
Sunday Sch oo l. 9 30
p m : Young people's meet1ng .
am, Leonard Gtlmore. first
7 30 p m . Thur sday
elder
even 1ng se rv 1ce, 7 30
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
p m
Wednesday
prayer
GOO
Bertha
K1ngrey ,
meet• n g.7J0pm
Su nday
s ubs t •tu t e pa s to r
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF
SchooL
tO a m , worsh1p
serv1ce, 7 p m Sun day Prayer , GOO - RaCine Route 2 The
Rev
Cha r les H and. pastor
rnee t•ng , W ednesday , 7 30 p m
Su nday school. 9 45 am ,
HAZEL
COMMUNITY
mornmg worship . 11 v m
CHURCH - Near Long Bot
Eve nmg serv ices , Tuesday and
tom Esli l H a rt. pa sto r . Roy
Fr •day. 7 30
Brown ,
ass ts tant
pastQr
BEARWALLOW
RIDGE
Svndaysc hool . l Oam, Church
CHURC H OF CHRIST Bible
7 30
p m
each
Sunday
s tudy , 9 30 am , morn 1ng
even m g, prayer meetmg , 7 30
wp r sh1p . 10 30 am , evenl n g
p m Thursday
wor sh• P· 6 30 p m Wednesda)l
MIDDLEPORT
PEN ·
B•b le s tudy, 7 30 P m
T E COSTAL - T hird Ave , th e
Rev W 1ll1am Kn tlfel. pastor .
MT
OLIVE CHURCH
Ro na l d D ug an . Sunday Sc hool
Long BoTtom , Su nday Sc hoo l.
Sup !
Classes for all ages,
10 a m w•th W illard P 1gott,
cve n •ng se rv 1ce , 7 30 p m ,
supt Evanget1s t m essage eac h
B1b le study , Wednesday, 7 30
Su nday ev en m g, 7 30 p m by
p m you lh se rviCeS , Friday .
Elder Russell Clm e, minister
7 30 p m
of the Aposlol •c Fa1 fh B1b le
FREEWILL BAPTIST 1! tudy , ~_ednesday. 7 30 P m .
Co rn er Ash and Plum , M1d
c.l le port
No el
H e rrman .
)T IVERSVILLE
COM pastor
Saturday
even•ng
MUNITY CHURCH - Sunday
se rv 1ce, 7 p rn Sunday school .
sc hool~ervtce . lOa m , Pra yer
10 a m , Su nday eve nmg
mee t1ng , Thv r sda y, 7 p m ;
worsh 1p , 7 p m
Sunday even •nq_serv.ce, 7 p m .
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST
Pomeroy
Harr .son\lllle
FIRST BAPTIST of M•d
dleport. corner of S• xth and
Road , R ic k Morrison , pastor
Palmer Streets
The Rev
Sunday s c hool s upt , Paul
M c Eirov , Sunday sch ool , 9 30
Ste ve Skaggs , pastor Danny
'
Thompson, Sunday School
am ., morn•ng worship and
Su per i ntendent
Sunday
c ommun i on ,
10 30
am .
chu rch school for everyone
even •ng
youth
Sunday
ChriStian
Endeavor
,
6
30
p .m ,
9 15 am , Mornmg worshtP
10 15 am ; Youth acttV1t1es
worship servi c es. Su nday, 7 JO
and Fellowship for Junior and
p m
Wednesday
even1 ng
Sen1or High students 6 p m
prayer meet1ng and Bibl e
Bible Study , 7 30 p m ., M1d ·
stud y , 7 30 P m
week Prayer Se rv. c e Wed
ST JOHN LVl HCK~&gt;~.N nesrtAv 7 · 30 p m
P1n e G rov e, th e Rev Arthur
.:HURCH
OF
CHRIST,
Combs. pastor Sun day school ,
Middleport , 5th and M a •n
9 30 a m , church se rv •c es .
George
Glaze ,
m tn ls f er ,
10 30 am
James Sheets, supenntendent
BRADBURY CHURCH OF
B1b le schooh 9 30 a m ,
CHRIST
B 1ble School, 9 30
mornmg worsh1p , 10.30 am ,
am , morn•n9 worshtp , 10 JO
e ven mg worsh1p , 7 30 p m ,
a m Sunda y even1ng Wor sh•P
prayer serv1ce, 7 p m W ed
Se rv. ce, 7 JO p m , choir
nesday
practiCe Su11day and Wed
nesday , 7 p m , prayer meetmg
MIODLEPOlCT
CHURCH
and Btble Study Wednesday ,
OF THE NAZARENE - Rev .
7 30 p m
Thomas E
weaver , pastor ,
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST Floyd Carson . Sunday school
Rev F r ee land Nor r.1s, pa stor
super-•n tendent Sunday school,
Sunday sc.h ool 10 am , Chur ch
9 30 a m . morning worsh i p,
serv1ce, 7 p m
Wednesday
10 30 , Sunday evangel iS tic
B1blc Study , 7 p m
meeting, 7 p m ,
prayer
RACINE FIRST CHURCH
meetmg, Wednesday , 7 p m
OF
THE
NAZARENE
nday
School
, 9 30 am ,
Su
GRACE BAPTIST - 305 N .
Morn1ng wor shi p . 10 30 am ,
Second Ave , Mtddleport
Even .ng wor sh •P · 7 30 p m ,
Les l ey G H o lt , pastor Svnday
Wednesday
M,1d Week Se rv•c e
school. 10 a m , wor ship ser ·
Sunday Schoo l Sup en ntenden t,
v1ce , 11 am ; worsh•P service.
Gerald W-elt s
Pastor , Rev
7 30 p m . Sunday Wednesday
Morr1s M Wolf e
night prayer se rv 1ce , 7 30
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST Walter p
e 1ka csan , pastor ,
Ronn 1e Salser , s S Supt ,
Sunday Schoo l. 9 30 a m ,
Morning worshiP 10 45 am ,
Sunday even l ng worshtp 7.3 0
THE
UNITED
PRES p m Wednesday eventng B i ble
BYTERIAN MINISTRY OF
Studv .S om
MEIGS COUNTY, Ow1ght
L Zavitz. Pastor D~rector .
DANVILLE WESLEYAN HARRISONVILLE
Rev Lelon Glasure . pastor
Sunday Church Sc hool , 9 30
a m , Mrs Homer Lee , Supt · 'sunday schooL 9 : 30 am .,
youth and !Un•or youth servfce ,
Morn•ng Worsh ip . 10 30 am
6 45 p m .• even ing worship ,
MIDDLEPORT Sunday
7 30 p m , prayer and pratse ,
-=hurch Schoo l, 9 30 am ., John
Wednesda)l, 7 30 P m
•
F
Fultz , Supt , Morn1ng
Worship , 10 30 am
SILVER
RUN
FREE
SYRACUSE Morning
BAPTIST - Sunday School, 10
Worsh1p, 9 am , Sunday
a m ; Henry Davts, supt , 1
Church Sc hoo l, 10 am , Mrs
evenmg service . 7 30 p m
Sampson Hall , Su pt
Prayer meeting , Thursday ,
7 . 30 .p m

MEIGS
COOPERATIVE
PAR ISH
THE UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
Robert T . Bumgarn er
0 ircc1or
POMEROY CLUSTER
R ev . CarlE Hick s
Rev . 0 Wm Sydenstricker
CHESTER - Worsh i p 9 15
a m , Chu r c h Sc hool 10 a m
ENTERPRISE - WorShip, 9
a rn , Ch vr ch Sc l10o t, 10 am
FLATWOODS - Wor s h1p , 11
a m , Chur c h Sc hoo l 10 a m
POMEROY
Wor s hip ,
10 JO a m , Churc h Sc hoo t 9 15
am,UM Y F630pm
ROCK SPRINGS - Worship
10 am , Church Sc hoo l 9 am
UMYF 6 30 p m
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
Rev. Rob ert Bumgarner
HEATH Worsh 1p 10 30
a m , Chu r c h Sc hOol 9 30 a m ,
UMYF7pm
RUTLAND - Worship 9 15
am , Chur c h Sch oo l 10 a m ,
UM Y F 7 pm
SALEM CENTI!R Wor Sh•P 9 a m , Chur ch Sc hoo l 10
am, UMYF Th ursday , 7 p m
SYR ACUSE CLUST~R
Rev. Richard E Jarv1 s
ASBURY Worsh1p 11
a m ; Chur c h Sc hoo l 9 50 a m ,
w scs, 1s t Tuesda)l
FOREST RUN - Worshtp 9
a m , Ch ur ch Schoo l 10 a m ..
WSCS. 3rd Wednesday , 7 JO
pm
MINERSVILLE Wor sh iP
10 a m . Church Sc hoo l 9 am ,
W SCS. 3rd Monday , 7 30 p m .
SYRACUSE
Church
sch oo l , 9 a .m , wor sh •P se r
v •ce, 7 · 30 p m
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Rev . Frank Cheeubrew
Rev . Larry Poling
t.fev . Howard Shiveley
BETHANY
!Dorcas)
Worship, 9 30 a m , Church
Sc hool 10 30 a m
CARMEL WorShip , 11
am , 1st and 3rd Sundays ,
Church Sc hool , 10 am
APPLE GROVE - Worship,
7 30 p ,m f1rst and th i rd Sun .
days , Church school, 9 : 30
a· m , prayer meeting , f1rst
Wednesday , 7 JO p m
EAST LETART - WorSh i p ,
7 30 p m , sec ond and fourth
Sunday s, church school , 9 !30

CHESTER CHURCH OF
GOD ~ Rev
James Sat terfield , pastor Sunday school ,
9 30 am , worshtp serv1ce, 11
a m , even 1ng se rv1 ce, 7 ,
prayer se r v1 c e and youth
ser v •ce, Wednesday , 7 p m
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN
CHURCH - Robert E Musser ,
pas tor
Svnday Sc hool , 9 :3 0
am , Robert Bobo , supt .,
morntng
worship ,
10 30;
Sunda)l even1ng serv1ce. 7 30;
M1d week se rv1 ce , Wednesday ,
7 30 p m .
SYRAC USE · CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE - Rev M .
c Lar 1m ore , pastor Bob
Moore , Sunday Schoo l Sup1
Su nday Sc hool , c lasses for all
ages , 9 30 a . m , morning
worsh 1p , 10 45 . NYP S Su nday ,
6 30 p m , evange l istic service
Sunday , 7 30 p m M•d -week
pray er meettng , Wednesday ,
7 30 p m , M ISS IOnary meet ing ,
sec ond Wedn esd a )I , 1 30 p m
UNITED
FAITH
NON DENOMINATIONAL Rev
Robe rt Sm1th , pastor Sunday
sc hool , 9 JO am , class leader ,
Leo Hill , worsh•P service ,
10 30 a m , c hur ch , 7 30 p m
EDEN
UNITED
.BR E THREN IN CHRIST E tdon R Blake, pastor . Sunday
Sc hpol , 10 a m ,
Wmn•e
Hol Si nger , Sup!
Mornmg
s ermon , 11 am .; Even 1ng
se rv Ic e Chnst1an Endeavor ,
7 30
p m ,
Mts
L)lda
C heval 1er, president
Song
sc rv1ce and sermon, 8 20 M1d
Week prayer meettng Wed ,
nesd ay , 7· 30 p m , Mrs . Mane
Hol s mg er , class leader
'
CHURCH
OF
JESUS
CHRIST - Located at Rutland
on New L1ma Road , next to
Fo rest Acre Park . Rev Ray
Rouse , pastor . Robert Musser ,
Sunday School su pt Sunday
school, 10 30 a m , worShiP
7 JO p .rn B•ble st udy, Wed
nesday , 7 30 p m
Saturday
n1ght prayer servtce , 7 ' 30 p .m '
HEMLOCK
GROVE
CHRISTIAN - Roger Watson,
pastor , Ray Whaley , supt. ,
Morning worship , 9 30 am .,
c hur c h school, 10 . 30 a .m .,
young peoole ' s meetmg, 6 : 30
p m- , E!Vf!i-.lng - worship, 7 · JO
1~. ;:-. " ~ u.,. , W ~.; une s da 'y ;'
7· 30 p m .

I

•
9- Tbe Daily Sentinel. Middlepor:-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. 21, 1973

Ml
UNION BAPTIST
W• v C('&lt;.ol Co11 p.1stor (,• md,l,
c hoot
&lt;oop'
JOL'
\. tyf t'
diUtlot, '·&lt; huol , 9 4S .r m .
( '" fl.tV . _ vt wnq wor o; tup 7 30

Watergate subpoen~s dig deep for information

w, LlnL·~Qay

praye-r .md B.bleo; tudy . I "Ill p m
TUPPERS
PLAINS
C HRI STIA N
C HURCH
EuQ •'tW Underwood , pa~tor .
Ho ward Caldwell . Jr ., Sunday
:)( hool ii&amp;Jp t , &lt;; unday Sc hooL
9 JO
M orn ,n q sermon ,
10 JO &lt;'! m • Sunday e venmg
St' fVICC , 1 p m
LETART FALlS UNITED
8 RET H R EN
R ev Freeland
Norr1 s, pa stor . Floyd Norr1s ,
su p! S1,J11 day sc hool , 9 30a m ,
mornmq sermon . 10 30 am ,
Prayer scrv1ce . Wcdne~day ,
7 30 p m
CHESHIRE CHURCH OF
GOO OF PROPHECY, G P
~ m1lh , pastor
Sunday School ,
10 a m , Ar thvr Hen son. Sup! ,
Morn ing Worship, II am ,
Young Peoples se rvi ce , 7 p m ;
E ven1ng service. 7 30 p m
Wednesday Mid Week Prayer
Service . 7 30 p m , Youth
meeting 6 30 p m ; Evenmg
wor sh1p , 1 JO p m
CHESTER C HUR C H OF
THE NAZARENE
Rev
Herbert Gra te . pastor War sh•P se rv tce, 11 am , and 7 30
p m Sund ay Sunday School,
9 30 am
R1chard
Barton,
su pt Prayer mectmg, Wed
nesday 7 30 p m
BRADBURY CHURCH OF
CHRIST c t.fford Sm•lh ,
m .n. s t er Sunday School 9 30
am , mornmg church 10 30
am , Sunday cvenmg serviCe,
7 30 p m Wednesday serv 1ce, 8
p m
LAUREL CLIFF
FREE
METHODIST - Rev RoM rt
E Buckley , pastor William
Bailey . sup! , Sunday :;c hoot
9 JO am , morn.ng worsh1p ,
10 30 am , evenmg worsh1p ,
7 30 p m Wednesday Chnst1an
Youth CrUsade. 6 30 p m.
prayer meet•ng, 7 : 30 p.m .
T hur sday ch o !r practice, 7
p m
DEXTER
CHURCH
OF
CHR!ST Danny Evan~ .
pa stor, Norman C Wdl , svpl
Sunday Schoo l 9 30 am ,
worsh1p serv.ce, 10 · 30 am
Chr~st•an Endeavor Sunday
even 1ng
REORGANIZED CHURCH
OF
JESUS
CHRIST
OF
LATTER DAY SAINTS Portland Rac.ne Road Ra l ph
John s on , pas t or • Herbert
While , Sunda y Sc hool D•rector
Sunday Schoo l , 9 30 am ,
Morn 1ng wor s h 1p , 10 30 am .
Sunday even m g service 7 p m .
Wednesday eve ning prayer
se r v 1ces . 7 30 n m
BETHLEHEM
BAPTIST ,
Great Bend - Rev Walter P
e 1kac s an . pasTor Sund ay
~c hool , 9 JO am ,
worsh•P
~ ervi ce . Th ur sday, 7 30 p m
CARLETON CHURCH K 1ngsbu ry
Road
Su nday
Sc hool , 9 30 am , Ralph Carl ,
su pt wor sh•P se rv •ce, 10 30
am an d 7 30 p m alternale l y
Praye r mee T•ng, W ed n esday ,
7 30 p m
Rev
J ay Stiles.
c as tor
OLD
DEXTER
CONGREGATIONAL , CHURCH
R ev
Carl
RICha rd s ,
pas to r
Mr s
Wor l ey
Franc iS, Svnday !'.c hool su pt ,
Sunday sch ool . 9 45 am ,
ch iJrch serv •ces r second and
fourth
Su nday s
f ollo w•ng
Sunday sc hoo l , t 1r st and th 1rd

.

WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
Senate Watergate committee 1s
lookiiig for any evidence that
might link F . Donald Nixon,
the President's brother, with
Howard Hughes , Robert L.

"'m ,

Opening
delayed

•
A puppy for Christmas. A warm little creature that looks up at you
with appealing big brown eyes as he teeters on his wobbly legs. That's
something few people can resist.
Before Christmas day is over, though, you may have had a qualm
or two about this little fellow- when he starts te.ething on one of Dad's
new Christmas slippers or on the living room rug .
Bringing up a puppy IS not all pleasure. It is mixed with responsibility-and that's the way 1t IS w1th most thmgs m life. Pleasure, responsibility, work, play- it all goes. to make up a kmd of balance.
Going to church is like that. For home and church make up the
most important balance m your life, each vital to the other. If you've
been neglecting the church side of the scale, then you have been shortchanging yourself. Why not make up for it next Sunday?
Scriptures selected by the American 8 1blt! Soc1ety

Sunday
RevelatiOn

20

1·6

Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday
1sa 1ah

7•10· 16

lsa1ah
91-7

Luke

Fnday
Luke

Saturday

Galat•ans

41-7

1 .26·38

1 39-56

1:57·73

Luke

With the hope it will. in some measure, foster and help sustam that which is
good in family and community life, this feature is sponsored by the busmess
firms and organizations whose names appear below.

7 30

Sunda y eve n •ng s,
p m
LONG
BOTTOM
CHRt STIAN _
Mr
Robe rt
wyat t. pas to r ; Sunday Schoo l
R
ld o b
B bl
S1Jp1 .
ona
s orne ,
' e
School , 9 JO am , pr eachmg
Even my se rv• ces, '
10 45 a m
7 3D p m
HYSELL
RUN
FREE '
METHODIST - Rona ld Wells ,
pastor
Sunday Sc h ool 9 30
am , Mornmg worship , 10 30
am , Young People 's Serv1ce
6 45 p m
Eva ngei1SI1C ser
v• ce,
7 30
p m.
Prayer
rpeeftng , Thursday , 7 30 p m
FREEDOM
GOSPEL
MISSION - Bald Knobs , Rev
L
R
G l uesencamp , pastor ,
Roger Wilfred . Sr , Sunday
Sc hoo! Su p!
Sunday Sc i1 oo t
9 30 a m , Sunday evenmg
wor sh •P 7·30 Prayer m ee tmg ,
Tuesday . 7 30 p m
Ernes t
Dee ter . c la ss le ader
Yo ulh
meetmg , W ednesday, 7·30
p m , Ernest Deeter' , leader
MT . HERMON CHURCH OF
THE UNITED BRETHREN IN
CHRIST Robert Shook ,
pasto r
Sunday sc hool , 9 ·30
am , Ru ssel l Spenc er. supt ,
worsh•P servtce , 10 45 am ,
even ing worsh i p alferna tmg
w 1th C E at 7 30 p .m on
Su nday Pray er me e ting , 7 .30
p rn Wedn es day . Alfre d Wolfe ,
lay leader
WHITE ' S
CHAPEL
Coo lv i lle RD Rev Roy Deeter ,
pastor
Sunday schoo l. 9 30
am • worsh1p se rv• ce. 10 30
am B•ble study and prayer
se r v ,ce, Wednesda)l, 7 JO p m
_
RUTLAND
T&lt;UfLAND CHURCH OF
CHRIST - Ke1th W 1Se, pastor
Sunday School. 9 30 am •• V H
Braley , supt , wor Ship ser v1 c e
and communwn, 10 30 am .
even •ng se rv1 ce. 7 30 p m ,
Wednesday . B 1ble study , 7 JO
p m Re g vlar board meeting ,
lh1rd Sa tvrd ay each month ,
7 30 p .m
RUTLAND
COMMUNITY
C HURCH - Sunday
SchooL
9 30 a m , Worship serv1ce. 11
a m ., Wednesday prayer
meetmg , 7 30 p m
Sunda y
nlght.wo rs hl p, 7 . 30 p .m.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
THE
NAZARENE Rev
Lloyd 0 Grimm , Jr, pastor
Sunday Sc hool , 9 30 am .,
Morn.ng worsh1p , 10 30 am ,
Young people ' s service , 6 45
p m , Evangel•s t ic se rvi c e ,
7 30 p m Wednesday evening
se rv1 c e, 7·30 p m
MASON COUNTY
THE HILAND CHAPEL ,
George Casto , pastor Sunday
Sc hool . 9 JO , evening worship ,
7·30 Thur~day eventng prayer
servi c e, 7 30 p m
MASON FIRST BAPTIST Second and Pomeroy Sts ., Stan
Cra1g , pastor Sunday schoo l,
9 45 a m , wor sht p serviCe , 11
am , training un•on , 6 JO
p .m , even mg worsh i p serv•ce ,
7 30 p .m Mid -week prayer

MONTGOMERY WARD

SEARS

CATA LOGUE STORE

Authonzed Catalog Mer cha nt
Lou Is W Osborne
Ph. 992-2178
Pomeroy
220 E . Ma 1n

Mr and Mrs Charles R Shee ts
Pomeroy
992

106 Cou rt St.

THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.

Nationwide Insurance Co of Columbus, 0
Pomeroy
307 Sprmg Ave.

Dial992 2318

296 W . Second

.
Devoted to Me•gs Mason Area
Pomeroy , 0.
10&lt;i

Vesco and gambling operations of Ute President's brothers,
m Las Vegas and the Bahamas. Edward Nixon.
TI1e requests for infom10!10n
Subpoenas I rom the comrruttee ask for any information in relating to Nixon's family were
White House Iiles that would · included in 60 pages of sul&gt;link the President's brother poenas for tapes of 481 White
with a list of 44 people, in· House conversations and
eluding Hughes and Vesco, and telephone calls and more than
2.1 corporattons.
l,OOOdocwnents , all relating to
Another section of the subpo- the Watergate probe.
ena seeks any memos written
The subpoenas, issued Wed·
by White House aides about F. nesday, give no clue as to what
Donald Nixon ; his son, Donald the committee is investigating.
A. Nixon, who 111 one tune But the list of names linked
worked for Vesco, and another with F. Donald Nixon, com·

By THOMAS CHEATHAM
GENEVA (UP!) - Israelis
and Arabs began their first
face-to-face peace talks in a
quarter-century of conflict
today, but delayed the opening by 40 minutes because of a
dispute over seating arrangements.
The unexpected argument
came after U.N. officials attempted to avoid problems
over the choice of a negotiating
table by setting up six of them
-one lor each delegation .
U.N. sources said the disagreement centered around
Egypt's insistence on, and
Israel's opposition to, a
seventh table lor the absent
Syrians, who pulled out of the
talks Tuesday.
Israel, Egypt and Jordan
were scheduled to open the
historic peace conference at
10:30 a.m. ( 4:30 a.m. EST)
under the auspices of the
United States, SoVIet Union
and United Nations.
,o\11 six delegations arrived at
the Palals des Nations conference hall on time, but the talks
were delayed until the Israelis
dropped theJr objection to the
seventh table.
U.N.Secretary General Kurt
Waldheirn opened tbe conference 40 minutes late. U.S.
Secretary of State Henry A.
Kissinger and Soviet Foreign
Minister Andrei Gromyko sat
at nearby tables.

Tar Heels
now 6-0
By United Press International
Second-ranked North
Carolina had its work cut out
against scrappy Virginia Tech
, Thursday night but Tar Heel
coach Dean Smith figures the
experience was good for his
team.

bined With what tllc committee
has already disclosed it IS
investigating, indicate the fol-

These· items e.re specifically
menhoned in another section of
the subpoep a .

Support the Churc h of Your Choice
Ph , 992·3354
Pomeroy

MARK V STORE

SUNDAY TIMES·SENTINEL

"

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Devoted to the Greater Ohio Valley

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

MIZ MARTHA'S
RESTAURANT &amp; DAIRY BAR

REXALL DRUGS
We Fill All Doc tors' Prescriptions
Pomeroy,

992 2955

Cor Rts 7&amp;554

0.

MAYER &amp; HILL BARBER SHOP

LODWICK'S MARKET
General MerchandiSe
Ph
Tuppe r s Plam s

Ph 367 -7414

Ches h ir e

FULL SERVICE SHOP
Rad ial

667-3280

Cu ts &amp; Toupees ·

120 E. Maon St.

Pom eroy

ROYAL OAK PARK

ROSEBERRY'S. SERVICE STATION

Family Recreation
Sw1mmi ng - Camping

Racine

Ph 949-9591
.

WAID CROSS SONS STORE

OHIO VALLEY BAKING CO.
Bakers of

Holsum Bread

MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD, SR.
REAL ESTATE BROKER
Ph 992-3325

DBA Anthony Plumbing and Heatmg

Middleport

992 3550

110 M ec hani c St.

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

GAUL'S MARKET

Authorized Buick , Pontiac , GMC Dealer

CHESTER. OHIO

500 E. Ma in St.

.
Furniture and Hardware
Home lite Saws
Ph . 9Qj.3308
Chester, 0 .

Middleport

Attend

HEINER'S BAKERY
Bakers of Good Bread

.
M&amp;R

OF

..

'

NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE

~OUiJLINER

.

Pomeroy. 0 .
.

Short Orders-Carry-Out

Chester, Ohio

RACINE FOOD MARKET
The Store With A Heart
Ph. 949-3342

MEIGS TIRE CENTER
And

.

MEIGS TIRE CENTE.R
ALIGNMENT .
-.
Pomeroy
Middleport

.

7: 30pm.

F. J. WALLACE JEWELERS
Bulova Watches- Sales &amp; Service

A Cool Dining Room

Racine

" Kerm's Korner "

Kermit Walton

GAUL'S SHAKE HAVEN

St. Rt.7

Ph 992-3498

Pomeroy

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

I

the Church of your Choice

BEN FRANKLIN .STORE

HUNTINGTON, W. VA.

li

Ph. 992·2174

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

GOEGLEIN READY MIX
.
Phone 992-3284

Ph. 949-5772

Racine

AU WEATHER ROOFING
AND CONSTRUCTION CO.
337 N. 2nd

Middleport, 0 .

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
Church and Office Supplies · Gifts
99 Mill St.
Middleport

SADIE'S MARKET
.

Meats and Groceries
Syracuse, Q _
Ph. 992-3986

.
.,

game."

Groceries &amp; Genera I Merchandise

Virginia Tech, which led the
Tar Heels by as many as eight
in the first half, was led by
Charlie Thomas with 15 points
and Ed Frazier with 10 as It
posted its third loss in five
outings.
The Tar Heels, IHJ, now head
into a Christmas vacation with
the next game set for Dec. 28
against Biscayne, Fla. while
the Atlantic Coast Conference
spotlight shifts to Maryland,
ranked No. 5, and undefeated
Wake Forest, both ol whom are
headed for tournaments on the
road.
The Terps begin competition
tonight in the Cable Car Classic
, at San Francisco, while the
Deacons are in the SUnshine
Classic in St. Petersburg, Fla.
Maryland will meet San
Francisco in the opening round
ol the Cable Car, which also
has St. Joseph's and Santa
Oara as entries. The SUnshine
Oassic includes Western Kentuck:y, LaSalle and Florida
Slate as well as the Deacons.
In other games Thursday
night; third,.anked Notre
Dame romped over Denver 9995, eighth-ranked Providence
trounced William and Mary
1116-75, Loyola of Chicago beat
Wichita State 81,70, Bradle:
edged Washington 81).76, Fairfield whipped Villanova llf.58,
Nebraska ripped Northern
Iowa 73-55, Fresno State nipped
North Texas State 9&amp;-95 in
double overtime and Furnum
defeated Davidson 8&amp;-62.

'

g1ven to the President's close

ized the surveillance for rea·
sons or national secunty mvol ving a foreign country,

reportedly the Dominican
Republic.
F. Donald Nixon is i vice
president of the Marriott chain

restaurants be was operating.
The loan, secured by a piece of
la11d in Whittier, Calif., valued
at $13,000 was never repaid by
F . Donald Nixon, who went
bankrupt wben the restaurants
failed .

N. W. COMPJON, 0. D.·

~OPTOMETRIST
OFFICE HOURS 9: 30 TO 12.2 TO 5 (CLOSE'
AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT !;T .. ·
POMEROY.

OPEN 9 AM-9 PM DAILY • 12 PM-8 PM SUNDAY

LAST MINUTE

tbe

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close and against a good team
... it was a very physiCal
North Carolina was down 41·
39 at the half Thursday night,
but got three straight baskets
in the opening minutes of the
second period and went as
much as 10 up on the Gobblers
before Virginia Tech started a
late rally that moved them
within a point.
But then Carolina went in!D
its four corner offense, forcing
Tech ID foul, and Darrell
Elston got six crucial points,
four on free throws, to ice the
game.
Bobby Jones scored 12 points
in the second half for N.C. and
fmished with 20 to lead all
scorers. Elston totaled 18.
"Elston certainly played
well for us in the clutch," said
Smith. "But Jones was
magnificent throughout the

for Nixon

authorization of electronic sur- . in California .
veillance of his brother. The
In 1956 he received a $205,000
President has said he author- Joan from Hughes lor a chain of

'

"This game should help us,"
Smith said afterwards. " It was

W_. Main

Hu~es

g11t from

friend Charles G . " Bebe"
lowmg areas are involved :
- Any dealings F. Donald Rcbozo.
- Any financial deahngs F.
- The activities of recluse Nixon may have had with
billionaire Howard R. Hughes, Resorts International, a giant Donald Nixon may have had
including President Nixon 's gambhng and hotel operation With former Hughes aides
approval of the sale of Air West in the Bahamas. The concern concernin g rnimng claims,
airlines to Hughes; the lifting and Its three principal offi cers both III the Uruted States and
of a Justice Department anti· are named in the subpoena . It the Dominican Republic .
- Any associations between
trust suit that blocked expan· is the f1rst tune Resorts In·
sion of the Hughes Las Vegas ternational has been men - F. Donald Nixon and fugit1ve
gambli ng em pire, and at- tioned III the Watergate case. financ1er Robert L. Vesco.
- Whtte House reports and
tempts by Hughes to gain a halt
- Any role F. Donald Nixon
to nuclear testing in Nevada. may have played in a $100,000 tapes on President Nixon's

game."

FIRST ~O UTH.ERN BAP TIST - Corner of Secpnd and
Anderson , Mason . Pastor,
Walter Cloud Su nday school
9 45 am , worship serv1ce ,
am . and 7 30 p m Weekly
Bible study, Wednesday , 7 30
p .m .
-

FAIRVIEW
BIBLE
CHURCH , Letart. W VG ., Rt.
-1. Rev
George Hoschar,
pas.tor
Sund.!y School 9 30
am . Prayer and Bible study
7 30 p m
Cott.!ge Prayer
Service Tuesday 10 a m .
WorshiP Service , ThursdaY

.

( General Merchand ise)

ll}US I C

GOD - Second St , Mason , W
Va Cheste r Tennant. pastor.
Sunday school.
10 am ,
morning worshtp, 11 am ,
evangelistic servtce , 7 30 p rn ·
B1ble s tudy and prayer service, '
Wednesday . 7 30 p .m . Phone
773 -5133
HARTFORD CHURCH OF
CHRIST in Chnstian Union The Rev William Cam pbell ,
pastor
Su nda y schoo l , 9 : 30
a .m , James Hughes , supt •
evening service, 7·30 p m .
Wednesday even1ng prayer
meeting , 7 : 30 p . m . Youth
prayer servrce each Tues.day

Ph. 992 3863

Pom eroy

HAYMAN'S

THE DAILY SENTINEL

MASON
C lil.iRCH
UF
CHRIST, P 0 Box 487 , Miller
Sf , Mason , w Va . Sunday
Btble Study 10 a m , -9/orsh !p
11 a .m and 7 p m B 1b le Stu dy
Wednesda y 7 p m , Vocal

US'EM BLY

3001

ME lGS COUNTY BRANCH

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

~ 1 ce , Wedn~sda.1'..!...1...:30 p~m .:..

MASON

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'

POMEROY
POMEROY TRINITY
~ev W H Pc rrm . pastor Roy
May er Su pt Chu rch sc hoo l.
9 15 &lt;' m wOrSh ip , 10 2J am
youth cho~r reh~&gt;arsal Monday.
6 3(1 p m , Mrs Marvm Burt.
d ! rP c tor
senior
c hoir
reht&gt;ar Sal 7 JO p m . Thurs
day .
Mrs
Paul
N ease .
d ,rector
POMEROY C HUR C H OF
THE NAZARENE
Co r ner
Union and Mulberry
Rev
Cly d e V Henderson , pa stor
Sun day school , 9 30 a .m , G len
morn1nQ
M cCl ung , su p!
worsh ip , \0 30 a .m , eve n .nQ
serv1ce . 7 30 . m i d we ek ser
v1ce , Wednesday , 7 30 p rn

-•••
.•

••
•

·-•

GRACE EPISCOPAL - The
Rev . Harold Deeth , rector
Church serv tces, 10 JO am . •
Holy communion first Sunda)l
of month , church s.chool , 10 . 30
am for nursery thro ugh 12

••

POMEROY CHUR C H OF
CHRIST - John F Amstu t z,
pastor Bible school, 9 30 am ;
worsh ip , 10 : 30. adult worship
s~rv ice and
young people's
meeting , both
7 30
p m
Combtned Bible study and
prayer meeting, Wednesda y ,
'f 30 p m
THE SALVATION ARMY
Envoy Ray W W1nmg . Off•cer
1n cha r ge
Sunday, 10 am ,
Hol•ness meet1ng . 10 30 am.
Sun day School Young People 's
Leg ton , 7 p m . Thursday , 1 lo J
p m , Lad •es HarTJe Le.:Jgu.; . ~
e_m , Pr ep classes

•

•

ST . PAUL LUTHERAN Corner Second and Sy camore
Sts , Pomeroy , the
Rev
W i lliam M•dd le worth , pa sto r
Sunda y Sc hoo l. 9 30 a m ,
church serv•ces 10 30 am .

.\\t'll10f"t,11

SACRED HEART
Rev
r tlthcr f\crnilrd KraiCOVIC ,
p., &lt;;. IOr
PhOflP
997 1825
&lt;.,,l iUI' ditV t•v r11 1nQ Mass, I JO
p n• "vnd,lV M.:~s~ t1 1U1d 10
am Co nh&gt;S'&gt;• On &lt;:.. Sa turday , 1
lJO pm
POMEROY FIRST 8AP ·
TIST
f..:ob~ rt Kvnn , pastor .
W d l 1i'H l1 Wo Tc;on , Sun day S&lt;hOOI
su~ l "u nd&lt;lY sc hoo l Q: JO ~ m ,
BY I
6 j) 111
A1bl£:: Study ,
!At'tJnf'sday 7 p m , (hOif
prMIICC. Wrdncsday , 30 p m
POMEROY
WESLEYAN
HOliNESS C HUR C H
Harr tson vdlc
Road
Rev .
O ' OC'II Manley , P&lt;' Stor H enr y
Ebhn
~ unda y
Sc hool Su p!
5u nd,ly Sc hool 9 30 a m .
Evenrng worsh ip 1 30 p m ,
Prayer and Pra1se service.
Thursday , 7 30 p m .
NEASE
SETTLEME NT
CHA PEL
Non
denom•naf•onal , Ge orge S
O il er. P.;t sto r Sunday School 10
a rn Wor sh•P Se rv iCe II am
Sunday n1g ht se rvrces 7' 30
p m
Wednesday Prayer
meeting 7 30 p m
Everyone
w elcome
POMEROY
WESTS ID E
CHURCH OF CHRIST, 700 W
Mam 5 1
Loren T STephens ,
e vangt&gt;l• s t , phone 992 7856
Co n se rv a T•v e.
non
•ns lr umental Sunday wor ship ,
tO am , A 1bl e s tudy 11 am ,
wor sh1p , 6 p m
Wednesday
81 ble s tudy , 1 p m
MIDWAY
COMMUNti"Y
CHURCH
(non
denom•na t •onal) ,
Langsville
Oe)( l er Road , the Rev Worley
Ha ley , pastor Sunday schoo l ,
• 10 a. rn , ev('nlllg worShip , 7 JO
p m
Prayer
mee t 1ng ,
Tu esday , 7 30 p .m , YOIJih
grovp , Fr•day , 7 30 p m

a

; leper. The disease with wh1ch he was afflicted was the most
deadly and socially objectionable possible for a person to have.
There was no known cure for it, and to this day there is none. An
individual with leprosy was eventually cast out from society and
literally left to d1e. This was Naaman's future, when word came
to him and hls king of a prophet in Israel who could rid h1m of the
leprosy. He immediately went to Israel in his search for relief of
his affliction.
Elisha told him, "Go and wash in Jordan seven times, and
• thy flesh shall come again to thee, and thou shalt be clean". (II
: • Kings 5: 10) The next verse tells us he was wroth, having thought
' God would have him do some great thing. He complamed about · the Jordan, and generally resiSted the sunple, clear command of
God to wash seven times in Jordan and his leprosy would be
:· cleansed.

&lt;

But we read in verse 14, th at when " he went down, and

· dipped himself seven times in Jordan, according to the saying of
:,. the man of God, his flesh came again like unto the flesh of a httle
child, and he was clean ."

We are able to fully understand what transpired here, God
, told the man what to do, not some great thing wherem the man
; could glory, but a simple act which would require the man to
;. hwnble himself and accomplish something purely because God
; said do it. No other jusllfication coUld Naaman giVe for a grown
man washmg himself seven tunes in old muddy Jordan. And his
.:· leprosy was with him until he was~ed all seven times! But when
:. he accomplished exactly what God said do, it was gone!
Sin is a spiritual disease, completely unacceptable to God.
•. Saul was a sinner of the vilest sort, persecutmg the ch1ldren of
.:• God, even to death . (Acts 22:4) As he journeyed to Damascus to
:; continue this persecution, Christ appeared to him and talk•d w1th
:. him face to face. Saul believed on Jesus, as evidenced by h1s own
·:: question to Him, "What shall I do, Lord?" (vs. 10). The Lord told
·:: him, "Arise and go into Damascus; and there it shall be told thee
· of all things which are appointed for thee to do." We learn from
the ninth chapter that Saul apparently repented of hiS sins
against Christ, for he prayed for three days Without food or drink,
in waiting for mstruction to be given him. Wlien the man of God
came to him, this Armamas, he told Saul, "Why tarriest thou,
arise and be baptized, and wash away thy sins." (Acts 22 : 16)
I believe it is readily apparant to the open minded reader
that the water mwhich Paul (Saul) was baptized had no power to
wash away his sins. The waters of Jordan certainly had no power
to wash away Naaman's leprosy! God removed his disease of the
body after Naaman bent his will to God's will. After Naaman had
done all that God said do' Naaman's washing was the sym·
bolizing of his fa1th in what God had promiSed, and sure enough,
when he washed seven times, God kept His end of the bargain
and removed the leprosy. Naaman certainly did not wash to show
a symbol or some such idea, because h1s leprosy had "already
no reason imaginable to draw that

men today take exactly the same language, when it IS
'· said Yet
to Sau1 about sm, and say his sins were " already forgiven ' ',
so tlle baptism he submitted to was to ''show that £org1veness" .

;. We recognize that the water m baptism today has no power to
wash away sins. Man obeys the command to be baptized, and
God removes the disease of sin, just as he removed Naaman's

leprosy, but not before! Naaman was not clean unhl after he
obeyed,and the same is true m Saw's case. The Bible tells us so,
in spite of man's complicated explanations, or argwnentation.

Apple Grove

AlfreftenT.Stephens

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Miller
visited Mrs. Delphia Cwnrruns
Saturday at the home of her
daughter, Mrs. Ruth Circle at
Gallipolis. They also visited

Sunday School attendance on
Dec. 16 was 49, the offering
$18,58. Worship services were
held at II o'clock with the Rev.
Meece speaking from Isaiah
9:6. Attendance was 26, of.
fering $1G .47 and pledges

their daughter, Mrs . Bob
Cornwell and saw the parade
2
through town welcoming Santa .. $ ~~· and Mrs. Clair Follrod\

C~';".;. Becky Proffitt and Jeff
Dono~ew visited Mr. and Mrs
Roy Donohew Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs . Gerald

~

Stevie and Kathy, attended the
Buckley-Wolf weddmg at the
Chester Umted Methodist
Church, Sat., Dec. 15, at 2:30.
Stevie was an usher Others
attending from this area were

Hayman and son, Keith, were
dinner guesls of Mr. and Mrs.
Gene Jewell Saturday at ~ii:~~Jo~p~~~~· !.~":'::;
Letart, W Va., Route .
th p ul B kl f .1
Mrs. June Wickersham and
e a
uc ey ami Y·
son, Jeff, and Tlffi spent the
Attending the above were
weekend in Colwnbus With Mr. Dana Swartz, Virgie Swartz
and Mrs. Don Hodge.
(widow of Robert Swartz ) and
Mr . and Mrs. Erwm their daughter , Patty and
'. Gloeckner visited over the family' of Columbus and Fae
Kimes of Athens.
• weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
;: Larty Badgely at Fairfax, Va.
Eddie Parker of Columbus
:. Mrs. Gloeckner remained for spent the weekend with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur
.;; an indefinite visit.
'•· Mr. and Mrs . Herbert Roush Parker and sister, Martha
:. and Mrs. Erma Wilson were Poole and son, Will.
:, shOpping in Point Pleasant and
Alfred's church program will
;. Galllpoll.s Saturday.
be held Sunday, Dec. 23
'·· Mrs. Gerald Hayman and begmning at 7:30. All are
:: 11011 • Keith visited Mrs. Bertha

' Roblnlon Sunday.
• The

United Methodist
•' Wcmen'a Society held thetr
•- ..-! Clriltmas party at the
. : Lellrt Fallll Community Hall

; Tuuday eYtllling.
•

l ll'i'lf"

HO S I&gt;tiJI.

\.I Y
f'.:t "i i Qr
H (' l hC'rl
Mo1 Q.ln ~a bbr~ltl !'.l hoot , every
Saturd&lt;ly at '1 p m il'\d wor'&gt;h•P
SCf"VICC lo!IOW!OQ ,ll J IS p m

In II Kings 5:1, we begin to read of Naaman,a captain in the

1s

on

' 1 "" 1

:' armies of the king of Syria, a mighty man of valor. but he was a

been removed". There
conclusion .

H CIQhh ,

• '1"\

the Sermonette

~,

AO

toc&lt;'llt'd

welcome.

Several from this area attended funeral services for
Eugene Hawk; son of the late
~lura Taylor at White'~
Funeral Home at Coolvlle at 2
. p. m. Monday.

Open B tble d•Scus!.ton each
tnursddV at 1 30 pm at lt'le
c hurch
" Th C'
Fr•cndly
Chureh ·' ·
GRA~AM
UNITED
METHODIST
.,. .. o Ct m , t 1r s t

Prea cht ng

and second
'•u nOa v-s o t e~ch month , thu' d
anQ f ou rth
Su ndays eac h
month worsh•J) service at 1 30
p nl W ('d n es &lt;Ja.,. e,.tenings at
1 JO. PrayPr etnd B ib le Studv
FIRST SOUT H ER N
BAP TIST
787 Mulberry A\IC •
Pomeroy
aflil1aled
wtlh
SB C
the Rev
Fred H il L

pastor ,
Sunday

Her s hel
sc hool

sc hoot , 9 30

M cC lure .

supf

a .m ,

Sunday

morn mg

pr&lt;tyN rnef'IJOQ , th1rd
,,, " .. " .. di'y. f )C p I l l
G lol:EI\1 RENO
Wor~h • P ll
,1
loc1 olll f l 1"1! • Ufl fily\
{_Jo r(_h ' I I HI•
f0 o) I l l
' ltTAWI rALLS
V\ &lt;l f&lt;.. 1HP
It\ 3 111
lhU r ( h S.(.hO.,I , 9 a tH
lhh lt • &lt; 1•10Y. I 30 1'1 10 evt-rv
o1 "'

MORNING STAR
Wor~h i p
9 10 am , Chvrch School 10 JO
M•d Wecll.
Se rv 1c~ .
Wf'diWSday , 8 p m
MORSE CHAP EL
Wor
'ih1P 11 il m , lSf oitnd ) rd
~ und~'ly o;.
Chu r c h &lt;&gt;choot , 10

"rn
a !ll

PORTLAND
Worshtp 1 30
p m , C hur c h Sc hool 9 30 a .m
SUTTO N
wor ship, 11 am
1nd and 4th Sundavs . Church
S (llOOI 10 am
WESLEYAN IRac1nC!)
Wor shi P 11 am . Church
5c hoot. 10 am
NORTHEA ST CLUSTER
Rev . Robert Meece
Rev St anl ey Brandum
JOPPA - WorShip 10 am ,
Chu r c h Sc hool 9 am ; Prayer
M ee ti ng , Wednesday , B p m
LONG BOTTOM Church
se rv 1ces, 9 am , Sunday
Sc hoO l 9 : 45 am B1ble Study
every Thur sday . 7 30 p m
NORTH BETHEL war sh •P 11 a m , Chu r c h Sc hool 10

wor sh• p . 10 30 am ; Sunday
cva n ge i •SIIc meet mg . 7 : 30pm .
Prayer mcel•ng Wednesday .
7 30 p m
MIDDLEPORT
MT MORIAH BAPTIST
Co rner Fou rth and Ma1n ,
M iddleport Rev Henry Key ,
Jr , pastor Sunday Sc hool , 9 30
am , Mr s Ervm BaumQan;l
ncr , su p l , Morning wor sh1p ,
am
10 45 a m
ALFRED - Su nday sc hool ,
JEHOVAH 'S WITNESSES
9 45 a m
each
Sunday ,
L arry Carnahan , presid1ng
preachtng at 11 am
each
mm•ster Su nday , B1ble te e
Sunday , Pray er mee ting , 7 45
lure . 9 30 d m , Watchtower
p m Wednesday , WSC S, 8p m
!'.Tlldy, 10 30 am , Tue!'.day,
on lhlfd Tuesday each mon th
B1ble study , 7 . 30 p m , Thurs
REEDSVILLE
Sunday
day , m11)1Stry schoo l , 730
schoo l , 9 JO, preaching, 7. 30
p m.
senn c e mect 1ng 8 30
p m Sunday , prayer meeling ,
pm
7 JOp m Tuesday, WSCS, 7 30
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH of
f~r s T Thursday each month
Chn st .n"'~&gt; chr~s t tan Un1on SILVER RIDGE - Wor shtp
L awrence Man l e y , pastor ,
10 a m , Church Sc hoo L 9 am
Mrs Russell Young , Sunday
TUPPERS
PlAINS
Sc hool Su pt
Sun da)l School
WorSh i P 9 a m ,
Church
9 30 a .m
Evenmg worship ,
School. 10 a m
7 30
Wednesday
prayer
KENO
CHURCH
OF
meet•ng , 7 30 p m
CHRIST - George Fredenck ,
MT . MORIAH CHURCH OF
sup t Serv •ce weekly , 9 30 am
GOO ~ Racme Route 2, the
on Sunday Prea c h•ng f1rst and
Rev Ja mes M Mun c y . pastor
third Sun days of month, by
Sunday school, 9 : 45 a . m ,
Clt fford Sm1th , 9 30 a
m,
morn1ng wor ship. 11 am ,
HOBSON
CHRISTIAN
evenmg wor ship, 7 30 p m
UNION Darr e l Ooddnll ,
P r ayer meet1ng , Tuesday , 7 30
pastor
Sunday Sch oo l. 9 30
p m : Young people's meet1ng .
am, Leonard Gtlmore. first
7 30 p m . Thur sday
elder
even 1ng se rv 1ce, 7 30
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
p m
Wednesday
prayer
GOO
Bertha
K1ngrey ,
meet• n g.7J0pm
Su nday
s ubs t •tu t e pa s to r
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF
SchooL
tO a m , worsh1p
serv1ce, 7 p m Sun day Prayer , GOO - RaCine Route 2 The
Rev
Cha r les H and. pastor
rnee t•ng , W ednesday , 7 30 p m
Su nday school. 9 45 am ,
HAZEL
COMMUNITY
mornmg worship . 11 v m
CHURCH - Near Long Bot
Eve nmg serv ices , Tuesday and
tom Esli l H a rt. pa sto r . Roy
Fr •day. 7 30
Brown ,
ass ts tant
pastQr
BEARWALLOW
RIDGE
Svndaysc hool . l Oam, Church
CHURC H OF CHRIST Bible
7 30
p m
each
Sunday
s tudy , 9 30 am , morn 1ng
even m g, prayer meetmg , 7 30
wp r sh1p . 10 30 am , evenl n g
p m Thursday
wor sh• P· 6 30 p m Wednesda)l
MIDDLEPORT
PEN ·
B•b le s tudy, 7 30 P m
T E COSTAL - T hird Ave , th e
Rev W 1ll1am Kn tlfel. pastor .
MT
OLIVE CHURCH
Ro na l d D ug an . Sunday Sc hool
Long BoTtom , Su nday Sc hoo l.
Sup !
Classes for all ages,
10 a m w•th W illard P 1gott,
cve n •ng se rv 1ce , 7 30 p m ,
supt Evanget1s t m essage eac h
B1b le study , Wednesday, 7 30
Su nday ev en m g, 7 30 p m by
p m you lh se rviCeS , Friday .
Elder Russell Clm e, minister
7 30 p m
of the Aposlol •c Fa1 fh B1b le
FREEWILL BAPTIST 1! tudy , ~_ednesday. 7 30 P m .
Co rn er Ash and Plum , M1d
c.l le port
No el
H e rrman .
)T IVERSVILLE
COM pastor
Saturday
even•ng
MUNITY CHURCH - Sunday
se rv 1ce, 7 p rn Sunday school .
sc hool~ervtce . lOa m , Pra yer
10 a m , Su nday eve nmg
mee t1ng , Thv r sda y, 7 p m ;
worsh 1p , 7 p m
Sunday even •nq_serv.ce, 7 p m .
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST
Pomeroy
Harr .son\lllle
FIRST BAPTIST of M•d
dleport. corner of S• xth and
Road , R ic k Morrison , pastor
Palmer Streets
The Rev
Sunday s c hool s upt , Paul
M c Eirov , Sunday sch ool , 9 30
Ste ve Skaggs , pastor Danny
'
Thompson, Sunday School
am ., morn•ng worship and
Su per i ntendent
Sunday
c ommun i on ,
10 30
am .
chu rch school for everyone
even •ng
youth
Sunday
ChriStian
Endeavor
,
6
30
p .m ,
9 15 am , Mornmg worshtP
10 15 am ; Youth acttV1t1es
worship servi c es. Su nday, 7 JO
and Fellowship for Junior and
p m
Wednesday
even1 ng
Sen1or High students 6 p m
prayer meet1ng and Bibl e
Bible Study , 7 30 p m ., M1d ·
stud y , 7 30 P m
week Prayer Se rv. c e Wed
ST JOHN LVl HCK~&gt;~.N nesrtAv 7 · 30 p m
P1n e G rov e, th e Rev Arthur
.:HURCH
OF
CHRIST,
Combs. pastor Sun day school ,
Middleport , 5th and M a •n
9 30 a m , church se rv •c es .
George
Glaze ,
m tn ls f er ,
10 30 am
James Sheets, supenntendent
BRADBURY CHURCH OF
B1b le schooh 9 30 a m ,
CHRIST
B 1ble School, 9 30
mornmg worsh1p , 10.30 am ,
am , morn•n9 worshtp , 10 JO
e ven mg worsh1p , 7 30 p m ,
a m Sunda y even1ng Wor sh•P
prayer serv1ce, 7 p m W ed
Se rv. ce, 7 JO p m , choir
nesday
practiCe Su11day and Wed
nesday , 7 p m , prayer meetmg
MIODLEPOlCT
CHURCH
and Btble Study Wednesday ,
OF THE NAZARENE - Rev .
7 30 p m
Thomas E
weaver , pastor ,
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST Floyd Carson . Sunday school
Rev F r ee land Nor r.1s, pa stor
super-•n tendent Sunday school,
Sunday sc.h ool 10 am , Chur ch
9 30 a m . morning worsh i p,
serv1ce, 7 p m
Wednesday
10 30 , Sunday evangel iS tic
B1blc Study , 7 p m
meeting, 7 p m ,
prayer
RACINE FIRST CHURCH
meetmg, Wednesday , 7 p m
OF
THE
NAZARENE
nday
School
, 9 30 am ,
Su
GRACE BAPTIST - 305 N .
Morn1ng wor shi p . 10 30 am ,
Second Ave , Mtddleport
Even .ng wor sh •P · 7 30 p m ,
Les l ey G H o lt , pastor Svnday
Wednesday
M,1d Week Se rv•c e
school. 10 a m , wor ship ser ·
Sunday Schoo l Sup en ntenden t,
v1ce , 11 am ; worsh•P service.
Gerald W-elt s
Pastor , Rev
7 30 p m . Sunday Wednesday
Morr1s M Wolf e
night prayer se rv 1ce , 7 30
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST Walter p
e 1ka csan , pastor ,
Ronn 1e Salser , s S Supt ,
Sunday Schoo l. 9 30 a m ,
Morning worshiP 10 45 am ,
Sunday even l ng worshtp 7.3 0
THE
UNITED
PRES p m Wednesday eventng B i ble
BYTERIAN MINISTRY OF
Studv .S om
MEIGS COUNTY, Ow1ght
L Zavitz. Pastor D~rector .
DANVILLE WESLEYAN HARRISONVILLE
Rev Lelon Glasure . pastor
Sunday Church Sc hool , 9 30
a m , Mrs Homer Lee , Supt · 'sunday schooL 9 : 30 am .,
youth and !Un•or youth servfce ,
Morn•ng Worsh ip . 10 30 am
6 45 p m .• even ing worship ,
MIDDLEPORT Sunday
7 30 p m , prayer and pratse ,
-=hurch Schoo l, 9 30 am ., John
Wednesda)l, 7 30 P m
•
F
Fultz , Supt , Morn1ng
Worship , 10 30 am
SILVER
RUN
FREE
SYRACUSE Morning
BAPTIST - Sunday School, 10
Worsh1p, 9 am , Sunday
a m ; Henry Davts, supt , 1
Church Sc hoo l, 10 am , Mrs
evenmg service . 7 30 p m
Sampson Hall , Su pt
Prayer meeting , Thursday ,
7 . 30 .p m

MEIGS
COOPERATIVE
PAR ISH
THE UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
Robert T . Bumgarn er
0 ircc1or
POMEROY CLUSTER
R ev . CarlE Hick s
Rev . 0 Wm Sydenstricker
CHESTER - Worsh i p 9 15
a m , Chu r c h Sc hool 10 a m
ENTERPRISE - WorShip, 9
a rn , Ch vr ch Sc l10o t, 10 am
FLATWOODS - Wor s h1p , 11
a m , Chur c h Sc hoo l 10 a m
POMEROY
Wor s hip ,
10 JO a m , Churc h Sc hoo t 9 15
am,UM Y F630pm
ROCK SPRINGS - Worship
10 am , Church Sc hoo l 9 am
UMYF 6 30 p m
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
Rev. Rob ert Bumgarner
HEATH Worsh 1p 10 30
a m , Chu r c h Sc hOol 9 30 a m ,
UMYF7pm
RUTLAND - Worship 9 15
am , Chur c h Sch oo l 10 a m ,
UM Y F 7 pm
SALEM CENTI!R Wor Sh•P 9 a m , Chur ch Sc hoo l 10
am, UMYF Th ursday , 7 p m
SYR ACUSE CLUST~R
Rev. Richard E Jarv1 s
ASBURY Worsh1p 11
a m ; Chur c h Sc hoo l 9 50 a m ,
w scs, 1s t Tuesda)l
FOREST RUN - Worshtp 9
a m , Ch ur ch Schoo l 10 a m ..
WSCS. 3rd Wednesday , 7 JO
pm
MINERSVILLE Wor sh iP
10 a m . Church Sc hoo l 9 am ,
W SCS. 3rd Monday , 7 30 p m .
SYRACUSE
Church
sch oo l , 9 a .m , wor sh •P se r
v •ce, 7 · 30 p m
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Rev . Frank Cheeubrew
Rev . Larry Poling
t.fev . Howard Shiveley
BETHANY
!Dorcas)
Worship, 9 30 a m , Church
Sc hool 10 30 a m
CARMEL WorShip , 11
am , 1st and 3rd Sundays ,
Church Sc hool , 10 am
APPLE GROVE - Worship,
7 30 p ,m f1rst and th i rd Sun .
days , Church school, 9 : 30
a· m , prayer meeting , f1rst
Wednesday , 7 JO p m
EAST LETART - WorSh i p ,
7 30 p m , sec ond and fourth
Sunday s, church school , 9 !30

CHESTER CHURCH OF
GOD ~ Rev
James Sat terfield , pastor Sunday school ,
9 30 am , worshtp serv1ce, 11
a m , even 1ng se rv1 ce, 7 ,
prayer se r v1 c e and youth
ser v •ce, Wednesday , 7 p m
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN
CHURCH - Robert E Musser ,
pas tor
Svnday Sc hool , 9 :3 0
am , Robert Bobo , supt .,
morntng
worship ,
10 30;
Sunda)l even1ng serv1ce. 7 30;
M1d week se rv1 ce , Wednesday ,
7 30 p m .
SYRAC USE · CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE - Rev M .
c Lar 1m ore , pastor Bob
Moore , Sunday Schoo l Sup1
Su nday Sc hool , c lasses for all
ages , 9 30 a . m , morning
worsh 1p , 10 45 . NYP S Su nday ,
6 30 p m , evange l istic service
Sunday , 7 30 p m M•d -week
pray er meettng , Wednesday ,
7 30 p m , M ISS IOnary meet ing ,
sec ond Wedn esd a )I , 1 30 p m
UNITED
FAITH
NON DENOMINATIONAL Rev
Robe rt Sm1th , pastor Sunday
sc hool , 9 JO am , class leader ,
Leo Hill , worsh•P service ,
10 30 a m , c hur ch , 7 30 p m
EDEN
UNITED
.BR E THREN IN CHRIST E tdon R Blake, pastor . Sunday
Sc hpol , 10 a m ,
Wmn•e
Hol Si nger , Sup!
Mornmg
s ermon , 11 am .; Even 1ng
se rv Ic e Chnst1an Endeavor ,
7 30
p m ,
Mts
L)lda
C heval 1er, president
Song
sc rv1ce and sermon, 8 20 M1d
Week prayer meettng Wed ,
nesd ay , 7· 30 p m , Mrs . Mane
Hol s mg er , class leader
'
CHURCH
OF
JESUS
CHRIST - Located at Rutland
on New L1ma Road , next to
Fo rest Acre Park . Rev Ray
Rouse , pastor . Robert Musser ,
Sunday School su pt Sunday
school, 10 30 a m , worShiP
7 JO p .rn B•ble st udy, Wed
nesday , 7 30 p m
Saturday
n1ght prayer servtce , 7 ' 30 p .m '
HEMLOCK
GROVE
CHRISTIAN - Roger Watson,
pastor , Ray Whaley , supt. ,
Morning worship , 9 30 am .,
c hur c h school, 10 . 30 a .m .,
young peoole ' s meetmg, 6 : 30
p m- , E!Vf!i-.lng - worship, 7 · JO
1~. ;:-. " ~ u.,. , W ~.; une s da 'y ;'
7· 30 p m .

I

•
9- Tbe Daily Sentinel. Middlepor:-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. 21, 1973

Ml
UNION BAPTIST
W• v C('&lt;.ol Co11 p.1stor (,• md,l,
c hoot
&lt;oop'
JOL'
\. tyf t'
diUtlot, '·&lt; huol , 9 4S .r m .
( '" fl.tV . _ vt wnq wor o; tup 7 30

Watergate subpoen~s dig deep for information

w, LlnL·~Qay

praye-r .md B.bleo; tudy . I "Ill p m
TUPPERS
PLAINS
C HRI STIA N
C HURCH
EuQ •'tW Underwood , pa~tor .
Ho ward Caldwell . Jr ., Sunday
:)( hool ii&amp;Jp t , &lt;; unday Sc hooL
9 JO
M orn ,n q sermon ,
10 JO &lt;'! m • Sunday e venmg
St' fVICC , 1 p m
LETART FALlS UNITED
8 RET H R EN
R ev Freeland
Norr1 s, pa stor . Floyd Norr1s ,
su p! S1,J11 day sc hool , 9 30a m ,
mornmq sermon . 10 30 am ,
Prayer scrv1ce . Wcdne~day ,
7 30 p m
CHESHIRE CHURCH OF
GOO OF PROPHECY, G P
~ m1lh , pastor
Sunday School ,
10 a m , Ar thvr Hen son. Sup! ,
Morn ing Worship, II am ,
Young Peoples se rvi ce , 7 p m ;
E ven1ng service. 7 30 p m
Wednesday Mid Week Prayer
Service . 7 30 p m , Youth
meeting 6 30 p m ; Evenmg
wor sh1p , 1 JO p m
CHESTER C HUR C H OF
THE NAZARENE
Rev
Herbert Gra te . pastor War sh•P se rv tce, 11 am , and 7 30
p m Sund ay Sunday School,
9 30 am
R1chard
Barton,
su pt Prayer mectmg, Wed
nesday 7 30 p m
BRADBURY CHURCH OF
CHRIST c t.fford Sm•lh ,
m .n. s t er Sunday School 9 30
am , mornmg church 10 30
am , Sunday cvenmg serviCe,
7 30 p m Wednesday serv 1ce, 8
p m
LAUREL CLIFF
FREE
METHODIST - Rev RoM rt
E Buckley , pastor William
Bailey . sup! , Sunday :;c hoot
9 JO am , morn.ng worsh1p ,
10 30 am , evenmg worsh1p ,
7 30 p m Wednesday Chnst1an
Youth CrUsade. 6 30 p m.
prayer meet•ng, 7 : 30 p.m .
T hur sday ch o !r practice, 7
p m
DEXTER
CHURCH
OF
CHR!ST Danny Evan~ .
pa stor, Norman C Wdl , svpl
Sunday Schoo l 9 30 am ,
worsh1p serv.ce, 10 · 30 am
Chr~st•an Endeavor Sunday
even 1ng
REORGANIZED CHURCH
OF
JESUS
CHRIST
OF
LATTER DAY SAINTS Portland Rac.ne Road Ra l ph
John s on , pas t or • Herbert
While , Sunda y Sc hool D•rector
Sunday Schoo l , 9 30 am ,
Morn 1ng wor s h 1p , 10 30 am .
Sunday even m g service 7 p m .
Wednesday eve ning prayer
se r v 1ces . 7 30 n m
BETHLEHEM
BAPTIST ,
Great Bend - Rev Walter P
e 1kac s an . pasTor Sund ay
~c hool , 9 JO am ,
worsh•P
~ ervi ce . Th ur sday, 7 30 p m
CARLETON CHURCH K 1ngsbu ry
Road
Su nday
Sc hool , 9 30 am , Ralph Carl ,
su pt wor sh•P se rv •ce, 10 30
am an d 7 30 p m alternale l y
Praye r mee T•ng, W ed n esday ,
7 30 p m
Rev
J ay Stiles.
c as tor
OLD
DEXTER
CONGREGATIONAL , CHURCH
R ev
Carl
RICha rd s ,
pas to r
Mr s
Wor l ey
Franc iS, Svnday !'.c hool su pt ,
Sunday sch ool . 9 45 am ,
ch iJrch serv •ces r second and
fourth
Su nday s
f ollo w•ng
Sunday sc hoo l , t 1r st and th 1rd

.

WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
Senate Watergate committee 1s
lookiiig for any evidence that
might link F . Donald Nixon,
the President's brother, with
Howard Hughes , Robert L.

"'m ,

Opening
delayed

•
A puppy for Christmas. A warm little creature that looks up at you
with appealing big brown eyes as he teeters on his wobbly legs. That's
something few people can resist.
Before Christmas day is over, though, you may have had a qualm
or two about this little fellow- when he starts te.ething on one of Dad's
new Christmas slippers or on the living room rug .
Bringing up a puppy IS not all pleasure. It is mixed with responsibility-and that's the way 1t IS w1th most thmgs m life. Pleasure, responsibility, work, play- it all goes. to make up a kmd of balance.
Going to church is like that. For home and church make up the
most important balance m your life, each vital to the other. If you've
been neglecting the church side of the scale, then you have been shortchanging yourself. Why not make up for it next Sunday?
Scriptures selected by the American 8 1blt! Soc1ety

Sunday
RevelatiOn

20

1·6

Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday
1sa 1ah

7•10· 16

lsa1ah
91-7

Luke

Fnday
Luke

Saturday

Galat•ans

41-7

1 .26·38

1 39-56

1:57·73

Luke

With the hope it will. in some measure, foster and help sustam that which is
good in family and community life, this feature is sponsored by the busmess
firms and organizations whose names appear below.

7 30

Sunda y eve n •ng s,
p m
LONG
BOTTOM
CHRt STIAN _
Mr
Robe rt
wyat t. pas to r ; Sunday Schoo l
R
ld o b
B bl
S1Jp1 .
ona
s orne ,
' e
School , 9 JO am , pr eachmg
Even my se rv• ces, '
10 45 a m
7 3D p m
HYSELL
RUN
FREE '
METHODIST - Rona ld Wells ,
pastor
Sunday Sc h ool 9 30
am , Mornmg worship , 10 30
am , Young People 's Serv1ce
6 45 p m
Eva ngei1SI1C ser
v• ce,
7 30
p m.
Prayer
rpeeftng , Thursday , 7 30 p m
FREEDOM
GOSPEL
MISSION - Bald Knobs , Rev
L
R
G l uesencamp , pastor ,
Roger Wilfred . Sr , Sunday
Sc hoo! Su p!
Sunday Sc i1 oo t
9 30 a m , Sunday evenmg
wor sh •P 7·30 Prayer m ee tmg ,
Tuesday . 7 30 p m
Ernes t
Dee ter . c la ss le ader
Yo ulh
meetmg , W ednesday, 7·30
p m , Ernest Deeter' , leader
MT . HERMON CHURCH OF
THE UNITED BRETHREN IN
CHRIST Robert Shook ,
pasto r
Sunday sc hool , 9 ·30
am , Ru ssel l Spenc er. supt ,
worsh•P servtce , 10 45 am ,
even ing worsh i p alferna tmg
w 1th C E at 7 30 p .m on
Su nday Pray er me e ting , 7 .30
p rn Wedn es day . Alfre d Wolfe ,
lay leader
WHITE ' S
CHAPEL
Coo lv i lle RD Rev Roy Deeter ,
pastor
Sunday schoo l. 9 30
am • worsh1p se rv• ce. 10 30
am B•ble study and prayer
se r v ,ce, Wednesda)l, 7 JO p m
_
RUTLAND
T&lt;UfLAND CHURCH OF
CHRIST - Ke1th W 1Se, pastor
Sunday School. 9 30 am •• V H
Braley , supt , wor Ship ser v1 c e
and communwn, 10 30 am .
even •ng se rv1 ce. 7 30 p m ,
Wednesday . B 1ble study , 7 JO
p m Re g vlar board meeting ,
lh1rd Sa tvrd ay each month ,
7 30 p .m
RUTLAND
COMMUNITY
C HURCH - Sunday
SchooL
9 30 a m , Worship serv1ce. 11
a m ., Wednesday prayer
meetmg , 7 30 p m
Sunda y
nlght.wo rs hl p, 7 . 30 p .m.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
THE
NAZARENE Rev
Lloyd 0 Grimm , Jr, pastor
Sunday Sc hool , 9 30 am .,
Morn.ng worsh1p , 10 30 am ,
Young people ' s service , 6 45
p m , Evangel•s t ic se rvi c e ,
7 30 p m Wednesday evening
se rv1 c e, 7·30 p m
MASON COUNTY
THE HILAND CHAPEL ,
George Casto , pastor Sunday
Sc hool . 9 JO , evening worship ,
7·30 Thur~day eventng prayer
servi c e, 7 30 p m
MASON FIRST BAPTIST Second and Pomeroy Sts ., Stan
Cra1g , pastor Sunday schoo l,
9 45 a m , wor sht p serviCe , 11
am , training un•on , 6 JO
p .m , even mg worsh i p serv•ce ,
7 30 p .m Mid -week prayer

MONTGOMERY WARD

SEARS

CATA LOGUE STORE

Authonzed Catalog Mer cha nt
Lou Is W Osborne
Ph. 992-2178
Pomeroy
220 E . Ma 1n

Mr and Mrs Charles R Shee ts
Pomeroy
992

106 Cou rt St.

THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.

Nationwide Insurance Co of Columbus, 0
Pomeroy
307 Sprmg Ave.

Dial992 2318

296 W . Second

.
Devoted to Me•gs Mason Area
Pomeroy , 0.
10&lt;i

Vesco and gambling operations of Ute President's brothers,
m Las Vegas and the Bahamas. Edward Nixon.
TI1e requests for infom10!10n
Subpoenas I rom the comrruttee ask for any information in relating to Nixon's family were
White House Iiles that would · included in 60 pages of sul&gt;link the President's brother poenas for tapes of 481 White
with a list of 44 people, in· House conversations and
eluding Hughes and Vesco, and telephone calls and more than
2.1 corporattons.
l,OOOdocwnents , all relating to
Another section of the subpo- the Watergate probe.
ena seeks any memos written
The subpoenas, issued Wed·
by White House aides about F. nesday, give no clue as to what
Donald Nixon ; his son, Donald the committee is investigating.
A. Nixon, who 111 one tune But the list of names linked
worked for Vesco, and another with F. Donald Nixon, com·

By THOMAS CHEATHAM
GENEVA (UP!) - Israelis
and Arabs began their first
face-to-face peace talks in a
quarter-century of conflict
today, but delayed the opening by 40 minutes because of a
dispute over seating arrangements.
The unexpected argument
came after U.N. officials attempted to avoid problems
over the choice of a negotiating
table by setting up six of them
-one lor each delegation .
U.N. sources said the disagreement centered around
Egypt's insistence on, and
Israel's opposition to, a
seventh table lor the absent
Syrians, who pulled out of the
talks Tuesday.
Israel, Egypt and Jordan
were scheduled to open the
historic peace conference at
10:30 a.m. ( 4:30 a.m. EST)
under the auspices of the
United States, SoVIet Union
and United Nations.
,o\11 six delegations arrived at
the Palals des Nations conference hall on time, but the talks
were delayed until the Israelis
dropped theJr objection to the
seventh table.
U.N.Secretary General Kurt
Waldheirn opened tbe conference 40 minutes late. U.S.
Secretary of State Henry A.
Kissinger and Soviet Foreign
Minister Andrei Gromyko sat
at nearby tables.

Tar Heels
now 6-0
By United Press International
Second-ranked North
Carolina had its work cut out
against scrappy Virginia Tech
, Thursday night but Tar Heel
coach Dean Smith figures the
experience was good for his
team.

bined With what tllc committee
has already disclosed it IS
investigating, indicate the fol-

These· items e.re specifically
menhoned in another section of
the subpoep a .

Support the Churc h of Your Choice
Ph , 992·3354
Pomeroy

MARK V STORE

SUNDAY TIMES·SENTINEL

"

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Devoted to the Greater Ohio Valley

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

MIZ MARTHA'S
RESTAURANT &amp; DAIRY BAR

REXALL DRUGS
We Fill All Doc tors' Prescriptions
Pomeroy,

992 2955

Cor Rts 7&amp;554

0.

MAYER &amp; HILL BARBER SHOP

LODWICK'S MARKET
General MerchandiSe
Ph
Tuppe r s Plam s

Ph 367 -7414

Ches h ir e

FULL SERVICE SHOP
Rad ial

667-3280

Cu ts &amp; Toupees ·

120 E. Maon St.

Pom eroy

ROYAL OAK PARK

ROSEBERRY'S. SERVICE STATION

Family Recreation
Sw1mmi ng - Camping

Racine

Ph 949-9591
.

WAID CROSS SONS STORE

OHIO VALLEY BAKING CO.
Bakers of

Holsum Bread

MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD, SR.
REAL ESTATE BROKER
Ph 992-3325

DBA Anthony Plumbing and Heatmg

Middleport

992 3550

110 M ec hani c St.

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

GAUL'S MARKET

Authorized Buick , Pontiac , GMC Dealer

CHESTER. OHIO

500 E. Ma in St.

.
Furniture and Hardware
Home lite Saws
Ph . 9Qj.3308
Chester, 0 .

Middleport

Attend

HEINER'S BAKERY
Bakers of Good Bread

.
M&amp;R

OF

..

'

NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE

~OUiJLINER

.

Pomeroy. 0 .
.

Short Orders-Carry-Out

Chester, Ohio

RACINE FOOD MARKET
The Store With A Heart
Ph. 949-3342

MEIGS TIRE CENTER
And

.

MEIGS TIRE CENTE.R
ALIGNMENT .
-.
Pomeroy
Middleport

.

7: 30pm.

F. J. WALLACE JEWELERS
Bulova Watches- Sales &amp; Service

A Cool Dining Room

Racine

" Kerm's Korner "

Kermit Walton

GAUL'S SHAKE HAVEN

St. Rt.7

Ph 992-3498

Pomeroy

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

I

the Church of your Choice

BEN FRANKLIN .STORE

HUNTINGTON, W. VA.

li

Ph. 992·2174

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

GOEGLEIN READY MIX
.
Phone 992-3284

Ph. 949-5772

Racine

AU WEATHER ROOFING
AND CONSTRUCTION CO.
337 N. 2nd

Middleport, 0 .

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
Church and Office Supplies · Gifts
99 Mill St.
Middleport

SADIE'S MARKET
.

Meats and Groceries
Syracuse, Q _
Ph. 992-3986

.
.,

game."

Groceries &amp; Genera I Merchandise

Virginia Tech, which led the
Tar Heels by as many as eight
in the first half, was led by
Charlie Thomas with 15 points
and Ed Frazier with 10 as It
posted its third loss in five
outings.
The Tar Heels, IHJ, now head
into a Christmas vacation with
the next game set for Dec. 28
against Biscayne, Fla. while
the Atlantic Coast Conference
spotlight shifts to Maryland,
ranked No. 5, and undefeated
Wake Forest, both ol whom are
headed for tournaments on the
road.
The Terps begin competition
tonight in the Cable Car Classic
, at San Francisco, while the
Deacons are in the SUnshine
Classic in St. Petersburg, Fla.
Maryland will meet San
Francisco in the opening round
ol the Cable Car, which also
has St. Joseph's and Santa
Oara as entries. The SUnshine
Oassic includes Western Kentuck:y, LaSalle and Florida
Slate as well as the Deacons.
In other games Thursday
night; third,.anked Notre
Dame romped over Denver 9995, eighth-ranked Providence
trounced William and Mary
1116-75, Loyola of Chicago beat
Wichita State 81,70, Bradle:
edged Washington 81).76, Fairfield whipped Villanova llf.58,
Nebraska ripped Northern
Iowa 73-55, Fresno State nipped
North Texas State 9&amp;-95 in
double overtime and Furnum
defeated Davidson 8&amp;-62.

'

g1ven to the President's close

ized the surveillance for rea·
sons or national secunty mvol ving a foreign country,

reportedly the Dominican
Republic.
F. Donald Nixon is i vice
president of the Marriott chain

restaurants be was operating.
The loan, secured by a piece of
la11d in Whittier, Calif., valued
at $13,000 was never repaid by
F . Donald Nixon, who went
bankrupt wben the restaurants
failed .

N. W. COMPJON, 0. D.·

~OPTOMETRIST
OFFICE HOURS 9: 30 TO 12.2 TO 5 (CLOSE'
AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT !;T .. ·
POMEROY.

OPEN 9 AM-9 PM DAILY • 12 PM-8 PM SUNDAY

LAST MINUTE

tbe

'

•

OHIO'S FABULOUS DISCOUNTERS!

700 WEST MAIN ST.
POMEROY I OHIO

PRICES GOOD FRIDAY DECEMBER 21st
THRU CHRISTMAS EVE.

CLOSED CHRISTMAS EVE 6:00 PM

WHILE QUANTITIES LAST!

CHRISTMAS BONUS B UYS!

CHRISTMAS BONUS BUYS! CHRISTMAS BONUS BUYS!

CHRISTMAS BONUS BUYS!

------CHRISTMAS BONUS BUYS!

GENERAL

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FILM FOR
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close and against a good team
... it was a very physiCal
North Carolina was down 41·
39 at the half Thursday night,
but got three straight baskets
in the opening minutes of the
second period and went as
much as 10 up on the Gobblers
before Virginia Tech started a
late rally that moved them
within a point.
But then Carolina went in!D
its four corner offense, forcing
Tech ID foul, and Darrell
Elston got six crucial points,
four on free throws, to ice the
game.
Bobby Jones scored 12 points
in the second half for N.C. and
fmished with 20 to lead all
scorers. Elston totaled 18.
"Elston certainly played
well for us in the clutch," said
Smith. "But Jones was
magnificent throughout the

for Nixon

authorization of electronic sur- . in California .
veillance of his brother. The
In 1956 he received a $205,000
President has said he author- Joan from Hughes lor a chain of

'

"This game should help us,"
Smith said afterwards. " It was

W_. Main

Hu~es

g11t from

friend Charles G . " Bebe"
lowmg areas are involved :
- Any dealings F. Donald Rcbozo.
- Any financial deahngs F.
- The activities of recluse Nixon may have had with
billionaire Howard R. Hughes, Resorts International, a giant Donald Nixon may have had
including President Nixon 's gambhng and hotel operation With former Hughes aides
approval of the sale of Air West in the Bahamas. The concern concernin g rnimng claims,
airlines to Hughes; the lifting and Its three principal offi cers both III the Uruted States and
of a Justice Department anti· are named in the subpoena . It the Dominican Republic .
- Any associations between
trust suit that blocked expan· is the f1rst tune Resorts In·
sion of the Hughes Las Vegas ternational has been men - F. Donald Nixon and fugit1ve
gambli ng em pire, and at- tioned III the Watergate case. financ1er Robert L. Vesco.
- Whtte House reports and
tempts by Hughes to gain a halt
- Any role F. Donald Nixon
to nuclear testing in Nevada. may have played in a $100,000 tapes on President Nixon's

game."

FIRST ~O UTH.ERN BAP TIST - Corner of Secpnd and
Anderson , Mason . Pastor,
Walter Cloud Su nday school
9 45 am , worship serv1ce ,
am . and 7 30 p m Weekly
Bible study, Wednesday , 7 30
p .m .
-

FAIRVIEW
BIBLE
CHURCH , Letart. W VG ., Rt.
-1. Rev
George Hoschar,
pas.tor
Sund.!y School 9 30
am . Prayer and Bible study
7 30 p m
Cott.!ge Prayer
Service Tuesday 10 a m .
WorshiP Service , ThursdaY

.

( General Merchand ise)

ll}US I C

GOD - Second St , Mason , W
Va Cheste r Tennant. pastor.
Sunday school.
10 am ,
morning worshtp, 11 am ,
evangelistic servtce , 7 30 p rn ·
B1ble s tudy and prayer service, '
Wednesday . 7 30 p .m . Phone
773 -5133
HARTFORD CHURCH OF
CHRIST in Chnstian Union The Rev William Cam pbell ,
pastor
Su nda y schoo l , 9 : 30
a .m , James Hughes , supt •
evening service, 7·30 p m .
Wednesday even1ng prayer
meeting , 7 : 30 p . m . Youth
prayer servrce each Tues.day

Ph. 992 3863

Pom eroy

HAYMAN'S

THE DAILY SENTINEL

MASON
C lil.iRCH
UF
CHRIST, P 0 Box 487 , Miller
Sf , Mason , w Va . Sunday
Btble Study 10 a m , -9/orsh !p
11 a .m and 7 p m B 1b le Stu dy
Wednesda y 7 p m , Vocal

US'EM BLY

3001

ME lGS COUNTY BRANCH

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

~ 1 ce , Wedn~sda.1'..!...1...:30 p~m .:..

MASON

.

7 LITE MULTIPLE
CHRISTMAS LIGHTS

PRICE
CHRISTMAS BONUS BUYS!

CHRISTMAS BONUS BUYS! CHRISTMAS BONUS BUYS!

CHRISTMAS BONUS BUYS!

REG. 12.99 'TOPPERS'

'MATIEL'S'
HI-DOTTIE
TALKING
DOLL

DAWN
DOLLS
'MAGNUS'
'KENNER'S'
EASY-BAKE OVEN

'OHIO ARTS'

CHORD ORGAN

FARM SET

CLOTHES

FOR DAWN
ALSO • ••
CHRIS1'MAS BONUS BUYS! . CHRISTMAS BONUS BUYS! CHRISTMAS BONUS BUYS!

BRICK FIREPLACE

CHRISTMAS BONUS B UYS!

'SKINNY DIP'

TEFLON COOKWARE

77~

SANDER
7 Piece Set
PRINTED eAvocado
FIBER- eGold
BOARD

·~py
Red

CHRISTMAS BONUS BUYS!

MARX
BIG BLASTER

•9''

2 OZ. SPRAY
COLOGNE

MODEL

OR

NO;

4 OZ. COLOGNE

7410

YOUR atOICE!
I

REG.

I

•

�•

10

II - The Daily Sentinel, Mlddlepo:l-Pomeroy, 0 ., Dec. 21. 1973

Tht• Dati) St-nt tnt' I. M~riri 1 cpor t -Pomt&gt;roy. 0 , l)(&gt;c. 21. 197:1

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
0£AOLJNES
~ P M Day Before Pub l1 cat tOt
Monday Deadltne 9 a m
Cance1ta1 1on
Correct,ons
Wlllbeacceptcdunlll9a m tor
Day of Pub lt cat~on
REGULATIONS
The PubltSher reser¥es the
r1ght to ed1t or re1ect an'! ads
deemed
obtect l onal
The
Pvbltsh er w 111 not be respon
Sible for more than one tn
correct 1nsert1on

RATES

For Want Ad Serv1c~
5 cents per Word one tnsert ion
Mm1rnum Charge Sl 00
lA cen ts per word three
consecu t tve 1nsert tons
26 cen ts per word SIX con
secut tve msert ions
75 P er Cenf 01scount on patd
ad s and ads pa1d Wtthtn 10
davs
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$2 00 for 50 word m tn
imum Each add tl tonal word

Jc

BLIND ADS
Additiona l 25c Charge per
Advert tsement
OFFICE HOURS
8 JOam foSOOpm Da•lv ,
8 30 a m
to 11 00 Noon
Sa t urday

-·

Carmel

News~

1

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results! ~
1 ~B
~~~s~~=e=s=s==S:=e==r::;-;::v=i=ce=s:::::::=~
Lost

2 SIGNS

HOME L ITE
am 5aw nP.&lt;Jr
carme l C1~&lt;.1 r c h
Re war d
Phone 949 1l7 5 Edson Roush
!] 19 41C

OF
QUALITY

Not1ce
NOVEL lY F abr iC Sho p, 130
Wa!!.hlngton Bl¥d . Belp re ,
Ohto Polyester kn•ts , $2 .:19
per yard . sweater terry kn tts ,
S1 29 per yard New sh tpmenr
ot cra ft su pp lies complete l•ne
of Necch • Whtte and Nat•ona l
machtnes
Open
se w mg
Sund ays , noon f li t 5 Da l ly 10
!til 1 p m l tll Chr l stma&amp;
12 10 Af c
SA T U RDAY
DEC
22r 1973
ONLY
NEW
SPANI S H
EARLY
AMERICAN
MODERN
A N D
TRADITIONAL
LIVI N G
ROOM SUITES A ND CHAI~S
AND ALL U PHOL STERY
SUPPLIE S WILL BE 10 P CT
OFF
AL SO
8
TRAC K
TAPES . COUNTRY AND

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

1~:~ :sl:::,~~: ~~SO

1968 CHEVROLET PICKUP
S109S
a Fleclstde loc al 1 owner Irk , V 8 eng me, cus l om cab ,
&lt;wto m.1 t 1c trans , rad•o
1971 CHEVROLET BLAZER
S289S
1 wheel dnve, V a lock1ng fr ont hubs, automa t 1c tran s
mtss•on , power steer ing &amp; brakes , rad 10 good t.res,
veh1 c le of many uses, &lt;:ustom lr tm , whJte l op over blue A
sharp 1 owner trade
1969CHEV BELAIR
S89S
4 Door V 8, automat1 c. power steermg , faclory atr, radto,
good t1 r es , real clean 1n l eno r . sharp blu e fm tsh Retail

\990

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

WESTERN , GOSPEL AND
OPEN EVESB·OD P.M.
ROCK S2 00 EACH SALE l S
THIS SATURDAY , DEC ,
POMEROY, OHIO
1973, 9 AM TILL 8 P M ; L - - -- - - - ___ _:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...J

113~

By the Day
The

twm sons of Mr

and

Mrs Earl Circle, Jerrod and
Jason , celebrated thetr f1rst
- btrthday Fnday mght w1th a
:_ cake tnscnbed ''Jerrod and
Jason" and presents

Atlendmg were Mary K
Yost, Susan and Charles Yost,
Buddy Ervm, L1la, Wav1e and
Verna Ctrcle, Dorothy Harden,
Pam and fullph, Sandy, the
, host and hostess , Carl and

GUN SHOOT , Horner H tl l Gun
Cl ub . Sundav
De c
23,
startmg at 12 noon Fa ctory
choked guns only
12 29 Jt c

ot ground on. St 143,
water tap pa•d Phone 991
J640
11 13 121c

THERE w t11 be no shoot i ng
match at Corn Hollow, Dec
23
12.20 31c

--------------HOME INSURANCE
Call.
Stephen c. Snowden
55J Ru ssell St .

Nancy Ctrcle and Patrese Ice
c r eam and cake v.ere served
Wtlham Carleton of Ra cme

'

~ called

1n

the

commumty

' Sunday afternoon
•

Mr and Mr s Frank Hudson,

• Mr. and Mrs Gene Hudson of
Racine and Mr and Mrs
Shelby P1ckens and fam1ly
were vtsttmg wtth

Mr

and

Mrs Allan Taylor on Sunday.
Mr and Mrs James Circle of
New Haven, Mr and Mrs

(G rav el Hill)
Mtddleport, Oh10
Phone 992 7155

Sta le I arm rtre and

TRUCK dnver needed Call tn
person 667 3131 OhtO Valley
Manufa cturtng Corporalton
12 19 ] IC

IHliiUII't ( l

Casual!~

Company

DUE to the cond ltton of the
butld tng , we w 1l l close De c
31 We. also , wou l d like to
thank all our customers
Loutse 's Bakery , 105 Court
Street
Pomeroy.
Ohtt"J
Vernal and Loutse Wetl
12 9 18tp

-...------------HAVE YOUR trophy mounted ,
deer heads smal l antma l s,
and btrds Howard Btrchf1eld,
Mutberrv StreeL Rutland
Phone 742 68 34
11 26 tf c

Melvm Ctrcle and fam1ly of
Colwnbus were guests of Mrs
Mary CLrcle over the weekend

Tu ppcr:-. Plaintl
Society New~

Eunice Halsey

A LOVELY new Home 112 m11e
f rom Metgs H 1gh School
Three bedrooms. two baths ,
f ull basement w1th two car
garage Large tot \27 ,500
A l so . re ce ntly remodeled
three bedroom ol der home tn
Pr1 ce of 515 ,000
Pome r oy
mcludes f urn tture Owner Will
help f1nance e1ther of these
two prop ert1es Call 593 5667
Athens
12 2 30tc

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

......

Netsel Weatherman called on

Mr and Mrs. Elmer Kaylor
Saturday eve
Mr and Mrs. Jack Stanley of
Athens v1s1ted her brother, Mr
and Mrs Wayne Bnckles
Monday afternoon.
Mr . and Mrs Gerald Guthrie
and son, Don, Alfred, visited
Mr and Mrs Veri Tuttle
Sunday
Verl Tuttle returned home

Saturday from St. Joseph
Hosp1tal m Parkersburg after
surgery and
recovenng sattsfactonly.

undergomg eye

ts

Several from here attended
the Senior Citizens Chnstmas

Party at Pomeroy Thursday,
Dec 13th
Mrs. Nancy Colhns 1s
recuperatmg at the home of
her parents, Mr and Mrs.

Homer Cole after undergomg
surgery at Veterans Memorial
Hospital, Pomeroy
Mr

and Mrs

FURN I SHED two bedroom
mobile home •n Pomerov
$110 per month Phone 992

3429

12 196tp

LARGE 3rd floor apartment for
rent m downtown Pomerov
Call 992 2189 after 5 p m
12 18 6tc

Tom Bar-

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

Ltttle Chtet
E l ectnc Smokehouse

HOUSE for rent tn Chesh1re
Phone 992 5693
12 13 ttc

Smoke Your Own
Turkey
Cheese
F1sh
Game
Jerky, Etc
Regular Pnce S3S 00
Call 992-3166
Joe Rosenbaum

Employment Wanted
EXPER I ENCED
patnfer
lnlenor and extertor Phone
985 3951
12526tp
- -~- - ----- ----

Holiday Special 523.95
SH OOTING MA
Forked
Run Spo rt sman
noon
Sunday Factory ch •ok&lt;'d guns
only
12 20 3tc
MY NAME tS betng f org ed on
checks Do not cash these
chec ks un less you persona iiV
know that I have wr ttten
them
My bank has been
1nstructed not to honor ! hem
Mrs Edna Stobart
12 20 3tp

CARPE NTER work , masonry
work, general remode l mg bY
hour or Contract Phone 992
3511
12 16 26t c

Wanted To Buy
CASH pa1d for all makes ana
models ot mob de homes
Phone area code 614 423 9531
4 13 tfc
NO 1 COPPER 60c, radtators
JOe. brass JOe. batter.es,
S1 00 M A Hal l, Reedsville ,
Oh tO Phone 378 6249
12 20 He

KOSKOT
KOSMETICS
&amp;
WIGS MERRY CH R I STMAS OLD furn 1ture, oak tables ,
clocks, 1ce boxes, brass&lt; beds ,
&amp; GOD BLESS EACH &amp;
d1shes
or
comp l e t e
EVERY ONE OF YOU
H ELE N JA NE
BROWN ,
househo l ds Wr 1te M
D
Mlller, Rt 4, Pomeroy, Oh1o,
MIDDLEPORT OHIO, 992
call 992 6271 •
5113
5_
13_ tfc
12 11 tfc _ _ _ _ _ _ __j _ _ _ _ _ _
GUN SHOOT , Saturday Dec
22, 6 p m Mile H dl Road
Factory choked guns only
Assorted meats Sponsored by
Racme F 1re Dept
12 19 3tc
- ---~ - ----- ---

For Rent or Sale
10 ;Iii 50 MOBILE H OME Phone
992 5693
12
__._ 13 tfc

____________

__

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

thelem) of Dayton and Rev
and Mrs. C. N Watson of
Parkersburg were recent I1
guests of Mrs Effie Watson I
The MethodiSt Church Adult l
Class bad lis monthly meeting
and Chnstmas party at thehome of Mr . and Mrs Chester II
Gorrell with a g1ft exchange I
Monday evenmg A mce tlme I
was had by all

I

Classified Ads
br1ng yuu
extra cash
f Dr
shopping sprees

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

II
I

1

I
I
I

1
I

For Sale
ELECTROLUX Sweeper deluxe
model
Comple t e w1th all
c lean 1n g attachments and
uses paper bags Sl ightly used
but c lean!!. and looks l 1k e new
Wdl sell for $37 25 cash or
terms a¥allable Phone 992
2984
12 5 tfc
LOCUST posts , contact Harold
Evans, Long Bottom. Oh10
Phone 843 2942
12 14 12tp
COAL FOR SA LE . JAYMAR
COAL
COMPANY ,
THE
MEIGS &amp; GALLIA LINE ,
STATE
ROUTE
7
AT
CHESHIRE, OPEN 7 AM
TILL 6 30 PM 5 DAYS A
WEEK PHONE 992 5693
12 17 Si c
QUALITY gu ttars. basses and
amps at bargatn pr 1c es
Tracy Whaley. 130 Ltncoln
Hill Road , Pomeroy , OhiO
12 19 4tc
ONE 250 lb fa t hog
3338

Phone 985
12 193 1p

Big Run

wishing to send her cards may
send them to Room 520 - Sec
ond Floor, Wooster Community
Hospital, Wooster, Oh10 She
hopes to be home for Chnst·

19 HEAD of horses Regtstered
Tenn
Walk i ng
Horses .
Regis t ered Quar ter Horse!!.,
Grade Horses and pon•es $40
and up Call 367 7.481 or 388
9991
12 19 .ttc

Mr and Mrs Dorsel B1ggs
called on Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Young Sunday afternoon.
mas. Mr. Hess was a Metgs
Callers at the home of Inez eountian, son of Mr. and Mrs
EXCEU:tiOR Salt Wor ks , E
fulndolph and Mr and Mrs
Ma 1n St, Pomeroy All kmds
Orner Hess
of sa lt water pellets, water
Clarence Randolph Sunday
Richard Heilman IS a pallent
nuggets , block salt and own
were Mr and Mrs Kenneth
OhiO River Salt Phone 992
at
Veterans
Memonal
Hospital
3891
Siders and Chnstma of Pomt
reeuperatmg
from
surgery
6 5 tfc
Pleasant, Mr and Mrs Donald
Clarence Randolph •ecently SALT "F(fR 1cE:::-Nu ::, Nu&gt;N ,
fulndolph of East Sbade and
called
on J1m Smith.
Rock salt for townsh1ps ,
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence E
towns , and bUSinesses in
bu l ks and bags for 1ce and
Randolph Jr. of Chilli~othe.
snow Excels1or Salt Works
Ziba Midkiff recently called
Phone 992 3891
11 11 ttc
on Dorsel Biggs.
---- - ---- ~---Cheryl Ann Biggs of
CLO SE OU l on new Ztg Zag
Nelsonville spent the weekend
Sewmg Machtnes For sew1ng
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
stretch fabncs , buttonholes ,
fancy des1gns , etc
Pa1nt
Dorset Biggs. She IS a sludent
STEREO
Sltghtly blemiShed ChOICe Of
at Hocking Valley Techmcal
carry1ng case or sewtng
sland $49 80 cash or terms
College.
alt'atlable Phone 992 2984
92.1
Mrs Drexel Hess of Bur1251fc
bank, Ohio Route I fell last
OLD STYLE Maytag wrtnger
FridiY morning and broke her
washer , e){cettent cond 1t 1on
Phone 992 7406
shoulder. ley Sidewalk was the
Mtdd leport Pom eroy
1220Jtp
CllUOO of \he fall . Anyone
---~----------

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

GREAT
COUNTRY

WMPO-FM

'

,

f

{

I

Johnson Masonry
&amp; ( Remodeling l

From the laroest T""rk
Bulldozer Radtator to
~mi'l ll es t Heat e r Core
Nathan Btgg s
Radtator Spectahsl

992-7608
FREE EST

Ph . '992 -'2174

-Gene's
Body Shop

PRE- FABRICATED

8u11t to Vo\.lr''Specs
Dehvtred to Job Stle

Painting A Sp~cialty
All work guaranteed

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO
773-SSS4

~

9 00 - Sanford and Son 3, )1(5 , Brady Bunch 13, Ozz ie's Gtrls 6 .
Washtngton Revtew 20 . West Vtrgmta 1 Law 33 , Ftesta BowllO ,
Calcucct ' s Dept 8
8 30 - Gtrl With Something Eldra 3, 15 , Odd Couple 13, St;lli
Wtves of Henry Vlll6 , Campus Sce ne 33 ; Roll Out• 8, Joan
Sutherland Who ' s Afratd of Opera" 20
9 oo--Needles and Pins 3, 15 , Room 122 13, Masterotece Theater
33 , Movie: " The Chairman" 8, Renlllissance Chnstmas 20
9: 3Q--Brlan Ke1th 3, 4, 15; Adam ' s R1b 13
10 QO--Dean Martin 3, 4, 15 , ABC News Clo~y 6. 13 . News 20 ,
Wash ington Week m Revtew 33

Open 8 T1l S
Monday thru Silturtlay
&amp;06 E Ma.n. Pomeroy , O.

Ma son, W Va .

II OO - NewsJ, 4,6 , 8, 10, 13, 15 , Janakl33
11 JG-Johnny Carson 3, 4, 1S , Rose Bowl Bound 4, Movtes,
"Seven Agatnst the Sun " 8. " Miss on Mars" 10 , " The In
vlnctble Gladtator" 13.
11 4U - Johnny Carson 4
1 00 - Mldntght SpeetaiJ, 4 , Dtek Cavett 13
I 15 - Mov1e, " A Game of Death " 10
2 30 - Focus on Columbus 4 , News I f 3 00 - News 4

See or Call
Bob or Roger Jeffers
Day 992-7089
Night 992-3525
or 992-5232

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1973
6 30 - TV Classroom 8, Kentucky Af1eld 13 , Fa1th for Today 10
7 00 - Netghbors 13 , Farm Front 4 , Fun for Everyone 6 ,
Treehouse Club 9, 10 , Farmbook 3
7 15 - Woman 's Po1nt of VIew 13
7 30 - Man from COSI10 , Sesame St . 20. Gospel6, Abbot1 and
Costello 8. Banana Spl1ts 3 , D1ck Van Dyke 4 , Tree house Club

V1rqll B- TPclford, Sr -

BrokPr

SATURDAY . DEC
22
1973
ONLY
NEW
SPANI SH
EARLY
AMERICAN
MODERN
ANO
TRADITIONAL
LIVING
ROOM
SU ITE S
AND
CHAIRU
AND
ALL
UPHOLSTERY
SUPPLIES
WILL BE
10 PCT OFF
ALSO . 8 TRACK TAPES
COU NTR Y AND WE STER ,
GOSPEL AND ROCK , $2 00
EACH
SA L E
lS
THI S
SATURDAY, DEC 22 1973,9
A M TIL:L B PM FREE
COFFEE AND DONUT S
POMEROY RECOVERY 522
E MAIN ST, POMEROY
PHONE 992 7554
12 20 3tp

HOT WATER HEAT - Warm 3
bedrooms, gas fl•"ft.XUier, full
basement 1111!..1Q \.'-' 'd lots of
shrubbery ~ ~d' garage Next
to new fire house Asktng

$13.500
TRAILER LOT - W1lh sepi!C
tank. well and water tap
Su ttable for large trailer .
Asking only $2 ,800
,;

LEVEL

PLUS

NEARLY NEW - Modern 2
bedrooms , bath , uhltty, and
carport on well dratned lot

608

Auto Sales
1971 PINTO automattc, low
mtleage and 1967 Che¥y
Capr1ce Call 992 7123
12 21 2tp
1966 OLDSMOBILE 350 one
owner A 1 condt t ton. $350 oo
Call 949 2951 after S p m
12203tp

---------------1969 vw , good cond tt to n Rad1o,

rear w •ndow defroster , good
rubber , plus heavy duty
tra 1ler h1tch S995 Also, 185
CC Suzuk i Enduro motor
cyc le , good cond 1l tOn $325
Call 949 4452
12 19 3tc
1968 FORO PICkup tru ck , 36(1
motor , standard Sh tft Phone
949 375A
12 18 5tc
- - - ----~- -----

1966
PLYMOUTH
Sta t ion
Wagon
Clean, good ttres
$300 Phone 992 3866
12 147tc

Restdence, co mmerctal or
mob•le homes. Save on part's
&amp; labor
215 N 2nd Ave
Middleport
Phone 992-3509

DOZER and back hoe work ,
ponds and sept1c tanks, d 1f
chtng serv1ce. top sotl, fill
dtrl.
l tmestone ,
B&amp;K
Escavarmg Phone 992 5367 or
992 3861
9 1 lfc
C BRADFORD , Auct1oneer
Comp lete SerVtee
Phone 949 3821
Racine. Oh10
Cntt Bradford
5 I tfc

EXCAVAT IN G, dozer , loader
and backhoe work
sept1c
tanks mstal led, dump trucks
and lo boys for h1re , wlll haul
flll d~rt. top sod, l 1mestone
and gravel , Ca ll Bob or Roger
Jeff ers , day phone 992 7089.
n tgh t phone 992 -3525 or 992
5232
2 11 tfc
!:~!::WING,

MACHINES Repatr
ser¥tce, all makes 992 2284
The Fabnc Shop . Pomeroy
AuthoriZed S1nger Sates and
Servtce We Sha rp en Sc tssor s
3 29 ttc

-·

------....------~--

EL N A and Wh1te Sewlng
Machines
Service on all
makes Reasonabfe rates
The Sewt ng Cente-r, M 1d
dleporl. Oh10
1l 16 tf &lt;
"

CHARLES R
m1n1 ba ckhoe ,
footers, dratn
742 6092

As the g1rl sa1d , w he n
marnage was menttoned
" Never put off till tomor row
that wh1ch you should have
done day before yesterday 1"

DON'T PUT OFF SEE ING
THESE CALL NOW'
POMEROY
3
ntce
bedrooms
Bath
Some
carpe t tng and panel1ng Gas
f l oor furnace Basement.
Porch
N1ce
Lot SOx200

ASK ING $10,000
WE HAVE A LADIE S
BU SINE SS AND A MANS
BUSINESS FOR SALE Bolh

SELL BY THE lsi of the
MIDDLEPORT -

Bu1ld•ng

or Mobtle H ome lot 70x90.
Ut i11 t1 es, close Wooded area
m exce l lent ne1ghborhood

$2,000
MIDDLEPORT -

LI KE

NEW - Business room and
lovely
apartment
3
bedrooms , (lots of closets).
Bath D1mng room
Hard wood f loors wt t h ca rpehng
over
Hot w ate r
heat
Paneltng Garages.

HAS YOUR PROPERTY
BEE N FOR SA LE TOO
LONG? Let us sell1t for you .

HENRY E. CLELAND
YOUR
FRIENDLY BROKER
992-22!9
If no answer 992-2568

ALL SIZES IN STOCK

DISPERSAL
SALE
New Homes To Be

28

SOLD
At
USED
and
REPOSSESSED
PRICES
To make room for the
many
new
units
arrivmg in Jan., 1974.
DELAYED
DELIVERY
AVAILABLE
With the exception of a
small deposit.

992 -2094
606 E. Mam Pomero_y

OPFICE SUPPLIES

H ATFIELD ,
water lmes ,
ltnes Phone

PIANO tuntnQ &amp; repa~rmg
Lane Dan 1els , 259 Broa dwa y,
Middleport Phone 992 2082
12912tp

E. MAl

year

Posihve Stop and Go In Mud
&amp; Snow

GAS and OIL
SALES &amp; SERVICE

12 6 18t(:

WE HAVE al l your upholsferv
needs ,
Burlap,
den t m .
cambnc, loam glue . Ztppers ,
ta ck tng stnp sprmgs and
c l 1ps, c t tpboard
button
twme. sewt ng thread , legs
upholstery books , dacron.
webbmg , spnn g twm e. tacks,
welt cord, cotton. swtvel
bases and foam , loam , fo&lt;"&lt;m
Pome r oy Recoyery, 622 East
Mam St reet , Pomeroy Phon e
992 7554
112026tc

CO-OP COUNTRY
SQUIRE 120

AND COOLING

.

1964 COLON(AL 10 x 50 2
bedroom mobde home Phone
742 3294
12214tp

AM FM s t ereo rad1o 8 t r ack
tap e com b 1na t1 0n, 4 speaker
sound
system
Ba lance
$103 98. or use our budg e I
terms Call 992 3965
12 9,. lfc

It's Snow Tire Time!

Kerr Street
Pomeroy , Ohto

12x60 1971 Homette, 2 bedroom
mobile home Take over
payments Phone 992 5888
Must be seen to be ap
prectafed
12 20 3tp

are m good locattons and
do1ng an exce ll ent b usm ess
No phone tnformation on
these p lease Come 1n and we
can discuss DE SIRE TO

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

Phone 992·2798

Mobile Homes For Sale

____ _________

S INGER Au t omatiC Z1g Zag
Sewmg Machmes , m se wmg
table Makes buttonholes
sews on buttons , blmd hems ,
et c .Top notch cond tt ton Pay
S51 or terms ava1 l able Phone
992 2984
12 18 lf c

DICK SEYLER, Owner

$9,500

FOAM to fill your old couch and
cha1r cushtons as l ow as
$!0 95 , Upholstery books only
SOc
A tnch covered foam
mattresses lor standa rd S1Ze
bed ,
S29 95 ,
Po me r oy
Recovery
622 E
Ma1n
Pomeroy Phone 992 755A
1120 26tc
....._

PA INT DAMAGE , 1973 ZIG
ZAG SEW IN G MACHINE S
Still In or 1gma l cartons No
attachments needed as our
cont r ols are built 1n
Sews
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
buttonholes , sew on butto ns.
monogram!!. and bl1nd hem
st1 t ch Full cash pnce S38 50
or budget plan avatlable
Phone 992 2984
12 18 tfc

STR IPPE RS"

etc from Furn1ture
Antiques Modern Meta l s
We buy Antiques, Collecftbles , e!c
Ptck-up Serv1ce Available

and

FURNITURE
Stop In and See Our
Floor Di ~ p[ay_.
SE-PTIC
TANKS
c l eaned
Modern San1tat10n . 99? 3954 or
992 7349
10 23 ff c
tor OU tiOtng houses
and kttchen cabme l s Call
Guy N etgler , Radne , Oh10
949 3604
12 20 26tc

TBA 15
J 30 - AFC Playoff Pre Game3.

FARMERS
" H0!1daV
Gree tin gs" from A I Cattle
Technician , Leland Park er
992 2264 Pom eroy restdence
or Coolvil l e 667 -3251
An
swenng Ser¥tee
12 9 13tc

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

DOZER work , land clearmg by
the acre hourly or cont r act.
farm ponds. roads, etc Large
dozer and operator wtlh over
20 years e:xpene nce Put ltns
E:xcavatmg , Pomerov . OhtO
Phone 992 2478
l'l 19 1fc

a

-------------PRICE
CONSTRUCTIO N ,

WIN AT BRIDGE

Roof1 ng . spoullng, kttc h ens
and bathrooms
Complete
remodeling Phone 742 627J
12 3 ti C

Toronto pair use quiet defense

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

WILL tnm or cut trees and
shrubbery
Also , clean out
basements att1cS . etc Call
949 322 1 or 742 4441
1121JOt c

NO RTH

Pets For Sale
BLACK m i n ia tur e male poodle
25 30 lbs AKC Reg1s tered
Call 992 5947
1220 3tc

WEST

==-----

I am a 24-ye-ar-old woman married to a man of 35. 1 can ' t
understand hts ldeas on life. This IS my second marr1age. My

ftrst husband was younger than me - m fact he was a good deal
hke this male fnend I go out w1th.
My present husband knows l would never want to marry my
"boyfriend" because he isn't serious-mmded and £ools around.
like my ex did . We JUst go our for laughs whde my husband IS
studymg or working. (He makes a good hvmg for us and is trymg
to fmish up h1s college work .so he can get a degree, whiCh keeps
him very busy.)
Now why would a man resent his wife having fun, if he knows
she would never leave him for the other guy? He ought to be glad
I'm having a good time - and that he's my first cho1ce. FAITHFUL IN MY FASHION, BUT TIRED OF FOUR WAILS
Dear "Faithful":

Now look! You dumped your fu-st husband because he
"fooled around." SO why the surpr1se when your present husband
resents a stand-m? Do you deserve special privileges you
wou1dn 't extend to your man?
H you want this marnage to last, you'd better start havmg
fun wtth only one - your LEGAL partner.- H.

+++

Dear Helen :
Our government officrals are beating tbe drwns for energy
conservation. But (as of thiS wntmg) l not1ce our state off1ce
buildings are lit up like Christmas trees all mght long, JUS(
because someone high up says 1t's cheaper to let fluorescent
lights burn continuously- saves the elements. Also, I don't see
any top politicians taking the bus to work. Most get sqwred
aroWld in limousmes, and when they go by air, a government
plane makes a long, fuel-consummg, expenstve tnp for just one
small party I thmk this is only okay for the President and Mr.
Kissmger.
H we httle guys are asked to bundle up agamst the cold, drive
50 miles an hour in C"f-pools, turn off every light behind us, and
use our ovens only when it's absolutely necessary ,1t seems to me
the high muckamucks could make a litUe effort too, Right? -

FREEZING , SQUINTING, WALKING and HOPING FOR
BETTER EXAMPLES

24 hours."
Three cheers

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
3'2 . Certam
1 Orange
TV pro
or
grams
Rose
Oppos e~

5

to,
Br1hsh

style

11 Canal
12. ShoY.ily

splendid

for

Wilson ! There

are

hmes when

no one -

tavos

39. Type

of
stockm g
40. European
rlY er

13. M other

DOWN

ot

l Gloc ken

Cast or

sp1c l
2. Moun tam
nymph
3. Erronc

•nd

next

excluding the Alrmghty- 1sn 't exactly sure that It'S gomg to do,
and the Weather Service did a masterful blt of obfuscatiOn over
the past week.
Take Wednesday, for example. Here's what the Weather
San&gt;lce provided on Tuesday to look forward to, all of them from
radio stations in a 50-mile radius of tbe Tr1.County Area:
WKEE, Huntington: Tuesday mght low 25, Wednesday high
40, Chance of ram 40 per cent :ruesday night, 60 per cent Wednesday.
WOUB, Athens : Tuesday night low 14, high Wednesday about
32. Chance of snow 60 per cent Tuesday nignt, 70 per cent Wednesday
WAMX, Ashland. Tuesday night low in m1d-2os, h1gh
Wednesday about rrud-to-upper 308. Chance of snow, or snow
changing to ram, 70 per cent.
And the Wednesday morning AssoCiated Press weather map,
proVIded by the Weather Serv1ce, showed tbe area blanketed by a
solid belt of rain south of the Ohio River, with snow to the north
And what happened' All of the above' No, none of the above.
The Tuesday rught low was nearer 30 than anything else at my
house. The Wednesday high was not 32, or the mid-308, or eVen 40.

38 100 cen -

l4.

Pollux
W or

shtped
15. New

Gumea

Eel

16

dry
16 Deserve

of

Cadmus

23_Astound

muun

land

Like
It''
forest
7. Daughter

Daunted

ta Jns
" wilder
ness"

You

21. Passenge1

22.

wd )

ous
( 4 wds J

6 'A s

(poet )

SWISS

25 Afncan

player

18. Sphere
20_ Unclose

24. FrcnC'h

Spirited
(hyph
deeper
10. SJJr cad
grass to

5. Hockey

(O E )
17. Sunset
color

8 M ean -

9 Become

4. Pasture

town

Yesterday•s~~!;RJ

26. Meal
28 Actor
~1l(: h acl

19. Man handle

22. Top
rated

(h;ph
wd)
23. Cru saders'

toe

29 Lax
33 Cupid

35 - de
sac
36.

M1htar ~

maihng

address

(abbr )

24. He's
Gtovanm

'"Italy
25. Mono-

logist,
Mort 26. Old
Fmnish

poem
27. Metric
land

3JY~~®Ikal-..lf.J-.J,_

measure
28. Break-

U nscramble these four Jumbles.
one letter to each square, lo

30. It's

loyttiNHIII.IINftlll

Of'&lt;lllllll t r l

fast

staple

form four ordinarJ' words.

often

smoked
31. Brazilian
tree

Dear FSWHFBE ·
Right ! And let's hope by the tune your letter hits print, your
hopes will have come true. Meanwhile I forwarded your com·
ments to Washmgton where they might stir up something more
than a form reply .. maybe - H

32. Brown
kiwi

YANGO

I

I I

INKELT

9 Jo-Bob Newhar1 8 TBA 4, Woody Hayes 10
10. 00- Carol Burnette, 10, Grtff 6, 13, The Ktllers 33 .
11 00 - ABC News 6, 13, News 8. 10, 3, M1dmght SpecJal 15
II 1S- Mo v te,"TheCatCreeps"6 , News13
11 30 - M ovtes, " Fear No Evtl " 3, " Mtracle on 34th Street" a
"G unfr,9ht at the 0 K Corr a l" 10; " Ma)ln, Mon ster of
Terror 13 , Rose Bowl Bound 4
11 40 - News 4
12 10 - Mov1e " We're N o Angels " 4
1 QO-- M ov te, " The Eye Creatures" 13

34. Woody

I

plant
36.1ota

0

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it:
WHAT Hi&amp;
'' GHOFCT 510FCY"

AP'PEAFCei::&gt; 'TO !!!E.

B-'-U
v
T.~'Lr:E=-{....,-v
..~ Now~ the tlre1ed Iotton
V"""'\J
'\1 V "'J form: tht auJ]IriR uuwer, u

r ii£1;iijiji.)]iiii;;"';=.J1l
~iif,_

to

au&amp;re•ted by the above cartoon.

1 =
~
~=-=--~--==•~IA[XIIJ[IIJ

I

(Aaewen lo..orrow)

Jambln: GLORY

Yr.•l@rd•r'•

SINGE

GEYSER

lhr rll'fttletter from
h1,. Rid kR h1m - IS GIRL

Anew..r: H'hat

2 30- News 13
2 40 - Mov1e, " Captatn New man , M . D ' ' 4

BUNION

Is

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A IS
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are aU
hints Each day the code letters are different.

CRYPTOQUOTES
GJHIK GJDG GJNJ\X NG LKZUNIINOSK
GH GKSS MJNGK SNK! IHHA BZHM
VH S HZOSNAP . -DEIGNA H'UDSSKF
Yeoltrdll1'• Cryploquolt: CHRISTMAS IS THE SEASON
WHEN YOU NEVER KNOW WHICH IS GOING TO GIVE
OUT FIRST- YOUR MONEY OR YOUR FEET.-ANON
(@ 1973 Km1 Featurea Syndu~ate, lnc.)

+-

Ne1ther vulnerable

West

I

North

East

South

1+

Double

Redble Pass
Pass
Double Pass
Pass Pass
Opemng lead- 4 +

"

10 4·tfC

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

}ASOLINE All.EY

The ftre
mspector
told ~ou
thrs ,

Skeez1x?

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

If you don't tlunk that Eric

Murray and Sammy Kehela
of Toronto are one of the best
patrs m the world just look at
th1s qUlel defense. They were
sort of fixed on the b1ddm11
North's pass of one d1a·
mond redoubled was for busi'
ness Enc siltmg East didn't
care. He would have made an
overtnck 1f allowed to play
there, but South ran to one lD CAN I BELl!OVE
heart Sammy doubled and MY E'IES ••• 1e IT
opened the four of d1amonds. REALLY~/'
South rose with dummy's
ace, d1scarded a club and led

Big &lt;a pacify '~
Maytag
Automatu;s
2 s pe e ~ operawon 1
Qlotce of water
t 'eom p s
A,vt o
water
level. 1
• ontrol
L1nt
&lt;: jlfer or Power
in 'Agitator
Perm a-Press
Maytag
Halo ot Heat
Dryers
;)Urround dothes
With gentle , even
heat No ho t spots ,
no
overdry1ng
Fine Mesh Lint
F 11ter
We 5-peclaltze tn

1 YEAR

GUARANTEE
BEST SERVICE
IN
OHIO VALLEY

~

.RUTLAND

1

MAY.TAG

FURNIT_URE'.R;~~.~~:e•

DOWNTOWN
BELPRE
Rutland
OHIO
741-42!1
Arnold Grate.
L---~~----~ l~~~~--~~--~~~~~~ '

"

'

'.

Pomeroy, Ohio Ph. 992-2174

a spade Ertc.: wOn with the
ace and led a trump
whereupon Sammy cashed
the ace and queen and led a
thtrd trump. South won m his
own hand and led a club
toward dummy's queen and
nght here is where Sammy
separated the men from the
boys. A lesser player would
have let the club go
whereupon ihere would have
been no way left to beat one
hea rt, but Sammy hopped up
w1th Ius kmg and thought for
a wlule.
Then he led the only card
that would enable lum to beat
the contract. He played Ius
low trump.
South's only choice was 1o
cash his good spades and concede the last three tncks for

TilE BORN LOSER

OF
'&gt;OUCAN
COME INL.JANIE .1
KNOW NW1 WHAT A
TRULY CONCE/lNED
FRIEND '&gt;011 AlCE I

Smith Nelson Motors will be closed Friday morning till 12 noon
Dec. 21, open Saturday, Dec. 22 till 12 noon and will be closed
MonGay, Dec. 24th &amp; Tuesday, Christmas Day. So our employes can
enjoy the Holidays. All of us at Smith Nelson want t~ take this opportunity to wish each &amp; every one a Very Merry Chnstmas &amp; Very
Happy &amp; Prosperous New Year. We also want to thank our many
customers for making 1973 a very good year for us.

-.'
•

Pass

-•

__________ ___

'"
•
.

I

I

BAU.O::liJ ~ JJ5T
l\00 OOLLAAS!

~COURSEr
AAVEN'T A RSH

THAT EATS LUMPS
OFSUGARAND
5A'i5
_,..-...,,.._

11.. -~ 1

Wlj&amp;:;j,JI.I..IJ.:£1.164
West

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

NJ ARM~ ~Pl.US

down one

The b1ddmg has been

•

OI&lt;.A'{, 50 '/OJ GOT'\

~ \I:W&gt;.T~

!NEWSPAPER ENTE RPRISE ASSN J

••

When Fun's Not Funny

Dear Helen :

My personal award for Honesty m Broadcast Journalism
goes this year to Bob W1lson , sometime weatherman for WCHSTV m Charleston, who showed an adn11rable burst of candor last
week
That 's when we had a series of heavy snow warmngs,
travelers' advisories, snow watcliCS and hea vy knows what else
- everything but the snow.
Wilson, obviously baffled by the plethora of mforrnation
spewing forth about the b1~ snow, fmaUy offered praiseworthy
cormnentary which the meteorologiSts would do well to copy ·
somethmg hke thls :
"We had a forecast of snow, but there's no accumulation, and
now they 're predictmg ram, although 1t's cold and really looks
like snow now. Only God knows what we really can expect m the

.JI0762

3035

500 E. Main St.

J

••

.KQJ4
'KJ8 5

SEPTIC
TANKS
AROBtC
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
CLEA NED ,
REPAIRED
MILL ER
SA NITATION ,!
STEWART , OHIO PH 662f

GROCERY bus1ness tor sa~
Butldmg f or sale or lease
Phone 773 5618 f rom 8 30 p m
to 10 p m tor appo1ntment
......._ 3 20 ffc

4...

BY PAUL CRABTREE

+

.K 94
SOUTH

MITH NELSON MOTORS INC.

SIN GER sew1ng machmes 1972
model 1n beaut1ful walnut
cabmet Makes des1gn slit
ches, zi g zag , buttonholes,
bltnd hems elc L1ke new
Only 589.95 Call Ravenswood
273 9521 or 273 9893 after 5 00
12 7 lfc

at Urnes

• 92
KQJ82
.A853

+4

-

SHEARED
W HI TE
PINE
Xmas trees , need l es reatly
stay 011 1 KUHL'S BARGAIN
CENTER , Rt 7, "at caUtiOn
l1ghl " Tuppers Plains
12 7 ISle

Us.

ig norance

EAST (0 1
• AS

• 109863
' AQ73

''

FIREWOOD
Can .cleltver
Phone 992 2826 or 992 5565
12 16 12tp

m1ssed me. I thinl&lt;. the Weather SerVIce should follow Wilson's
exarnple, and admit

21

.Q+

G &amp; E appt1a n ce repa tr Phone R"'EADY MI X
CONCRE TE
\
at !he shop, 992 3802 or 949
delivered right to y our
4254
proJect Fast and easy Free
11 26 26fp
est1ma'1es Phone 99 2 3284
-- ----- --- ~ --Goeg l em Ready M1x Co,
M iddleport , Oh!o
AUTOMOtHLE 1nsur ance been
6 30 tfc
cancelled?
Lost
your
opera tor's license Ca ll 992
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
7428
•
6 15 tfc REA SON ABLE rat es Ph A46 4782. Gal llpol ts, Joh n Russe tt.,
Ow rter and Operator
1
s 12 ttc'
-----

It was at least 46degree..along the banl&lt;.s of the Ohio
To err is human, but the Weathe-r Service tS making a career
of 1t, ror there was no snow on the ground, and if any ram fell, 1t

• 72
'10 64
A1097653

O'DELL Allnemenr worK can be
done by appomtment only at
presen t t1me. due- to Illness m
fam tty
Phone
tor
ap
potntment 742 3232
11 2S tfc

- - - - - - - --

4, 15 . Ptckwlck 6

4 00 - Audubon Wtl dl1te Theater 33 AFC Playoff 3, 4, 15 , Death
Va ll ey Days 10
4 30 - Antiques 33 , F1lm 10
5 00 - Sew1ng Skills Tallonng 33, Wrestling 8, Lass•e 10, W 1de
World of Sports 6, 13
5 Jo-An1mal World lO i Making Th tn gs Grow 33
6 00 - N ews 8. Kopycats 10
6 30 - Bever ly H1llb111 1es 9 , Marshall Un1verslty Report 33 ,
N ews 6 , Reasoner Report 13
7 00 - Hollywood SquaresJ, Ca tch 33, Hee Ha w6, 8, Lawrence
Welk 4, 13, 15, In the Know 10
1 30 - That Good Ole Nashvt ll e Music 3 , Zoom 33 A Chnstmas
Tree 10.
8 00 - All tn the Family 8, 10 , Emergency 3, .:1, 15 , Partridge
Fam1ly 13, Tanger me Bowl6, Joan Sutherland Who's Afraid
of Opera 33
30 - MASH 8, 10, War and Peace 33 . Mov1e "Snatc hed " 13
9· 00 - Mary. Tyl er Moore 8, 10 , College Basketball 3. Pnmus 4.
Movte " F ltzwt iiY " IS.

NI::ED A new cetltng or room
panelled. or 1n ter1or palntmg?
Call Ri chard Wtlt , 992 2889
12 18 26tc

SUPER SERVICE STA.

STEREO RAD I O am fm , 8
tra ck tape combmat 1on . 4 we_y
speaker
sound
system
Balance $102 56, or use our
budget terms. Ca ll 992 3965
1216ttc

1S - Bob Daniels 3
30 - NFL Game of the Week J , Nursing Process 15 , Perry
Mason 4
2 00 - Perry Mason 3, Sa tnt 15 , Wild W1ld West 6, Amazmg
World of Kresk m 13
2 30 - Amer1ca 4, Mov1e "The F ltght o1 the Phoen1x" 13
3 00 - You Asked For It 3, Wacky World of Jonat han Wtnters 6 ;

NEIGLER ~

Let U s In stall Now!

9 ... _- JackW Carsey, Mgr
6'itl Phone 992 9932

' 73 6, 13

---------::.:::::-----

NO MONEY
NEEDED UNTIL
JANUARY 1974

MILLER
HOMES

8 OQ-Jake's Place 6 , Lldsville 3, 4, 15 ; Bugs Bunny 13, Popeye
10 , Flintstones 8
8 30 - Inch H1gh Pnvate Eye 3, 4, IS , Yogi's Gang 13 , Huck &amp;
Yog1 6 , Batley Comets 8 , Mister Rogers 20
9 OQ-Sesame St 20 , Addams Fam1ly 3, 4, IS , Super Friends 6,
13 , Mov1e 8, 10
9 30 ~ Emergency 3, 4, 15
10 00 - Elec Co 20 , Butch Casstdy 3, 4, 15 , Lass1e' s Rescue
Rangers 6, 13, My Favonte Marttans 8, 10
10 30 - Star Trek 3, 4, IS; Goober and the Ghost Chasers 6. 13
Jeannte 8, 10 , Zoom 20
11 00 - Sesame Sf 20, S•gmund and the Sea Monsters 3, 4, 15
Brady K1ds 6, 13, Speed Buggy 8, 10
11 30 - Pmk Pa11thers 3, 4, 15, Miss ton : Mag1c 6, 13 . Joste and
the Pussycats 1n Outer SR(Ice 8, 10.
12 00 - Jetsons 3, 4, 15, lns1de Out 20, Movie 13 Bowlmg 6
Everything ' s Arch•e 8, 10
12 30 - Go 3. 4, 15, NFC Playoff Pre Game 8, 10
1 00 - Beatles 3, Chnstmas Story 4 , NF C Playoff 8, 10 , Act1on

PQMEROY
HOME &amp; AlJTO

P&amp;J HEATING

We Strip Paint. Varmshes,

- 2

$15,000
INCOME - 3 bedrooms, bath , 3
porches, 7 rooms m all Near
- ----- -- -- ~ - --stores and court house Only
NEW LARGE recltntng chatrs $3,000 down
tn vmyl mater1al , buy now or 1 7 ACRES W1th large 8
lav away for Ch rtstmas On I¥ room house, balh, f 1replace.
$89 95
Sw i vel rocke r s tn
velvet. nylon and pr•nts that and porch Large barn All
make a wonderful g1ff for minerals except coa l
N1ce
your wtfe On l y $69 95 AI( farm l and of 80 acres $360 per
tlems cash and carry or 60
day
lay awav
Pomeroy acre
8
Recovery
6Z2 E
Matn . NICE OLDER HOME rooms, 4 bedrooms, modern
Pomeroy Phone 992 75.54
112026tc bath, 2 n 1ce enclosed porches
Large gas F A
furnace
UPHO LS TERY Fabncs by the
Garage
Want
$18,000
yard 54 tnches w 1de as low as
$1 95 per yard , velvets as low
as SJ 45 , tmpor.ted ¥e lvels , Buy a warm home wtth plenty
$9 95 We al so have nylon
of room We have several to
hercu l on
cotton
pr Ill IS
show you Just ca ll
v1nv1s , and remnants , by the
yard or by t he p1ece Pomeroy
Recoyerv. 622 East Mam ,
Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
11 20 26fc

VACUUM Cleaner s new 1973
Model
Complete w1fh all
clean•ng tools Sma l l pam f
damage m sh ipp tng Wtll take
$27 cash or budget plan
a¥ailable Pllone 992 2984
12 18 tfc

11

bedroom frame home, and
garage at Downmgton K1tchen
range and heate r Included m

-------------- - -.;rre

TWO STORY bnck apartment
butldtng , two apartments .
South Th1rd Sf, M tddleport
Shown
bv
appotn tm ent
Rodney Down mg . Real Estate
Broker Phone 992 3731
12 20 6tp

ACRE

13.

Dick's
Hoard House

110 Mcchantc Street
Pomeroy, Oh10 -15769

Wall Slrel Week 33

10 30 -

Wat er Ltnes and Power
Lines All work done by the
foot or contract. Also dozer
work and sephc tanks 10·
stalled

WOOD TRUSSES

0.

4

DITCHING SERVICE

Ph . 992 -5271
Lmcoln l·hll Pomeroy.

EXPERT

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

ASK US ABOUT

&amp; THINGS

'•'

6 00 - News 3, 4, 6 , 8, 10, I.S , ABC News 13 , Sesame Street 70 .
Adlerian Counselng Techn1ques 33
6 30 - NB C News 3, 4, 15 , ABC N ews 6; CBS Ne9.'s 8, 10,
Hogan' s Heroes 13
7· 0()-Truth or Consequences J, 6 , Beat the Clock 4, News 10,
What's My line" 8 , W1ld Kingdom 13 1 Spy IS ; Electnc Co 20,
Course of Our T1mes JJ .
7 30 - Porter Wagoner 3, To Tell the Truth 6 , Concentr~tton 8 ,
Wall Street Week 20 · New Treasure Hunt 10 , Beat the
Clock 13 . How Do Your Chtldren Grow 33 . College Bask..etbi'lll

-G UARANTEE()-,.
Phone 992· 2094

Pomeroy

.•.

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 21

On Most Amencan Cars

SMITH NELSON
.-MOTORS, INC.

Area 's Most
Reaso nable Prtces

s

3 AND 4 ROOM furntshed and
· unfurntshed
apart m en t s. ~
Phone 992 5434
4 12 lfc

was

taken to Veterans Memonal
Hosp1tal m Pomeroy after
suffermg a heart attack at her
, home here Thursday.
Mr and Mrs. Terry Deem
and baby have moved from the
Dora Mae Calaway property to
Parkersburg

-

APARTMENTS for rent tn
Mason , W Va , on h ighway
Phone 773 5147
Revnolds
Apartm en Is
12206tc

PRIVATE meetmg room tor
any organuat1on phone 992
3975
3 11 tf c

By Evelyn Brlckles
Sunday School attendance at
the Methodist Church was 61
and offering was $26 .37 .
Worship attendance was 40 and
offermg was $50 84
Mrs

For Rent

992-7474

TWO bedroom house at 47J
S y&lt;&lt;"morc Street m M1d
d teporl vacant Call 992 5310
1121 26tc

For Sale

ENERGY (fiS IS Demanos
NUCLEAR TRAINING FOR
QUALIFIED INDIVIDUALS
The U S N;wy offers the best
nuclear power tra1n1ng tn the
world for those who qualtfy
Openings available for both
offtcer
and
enlts l ed
programs
Full pay and
allowances whtle you tram
F or more tnformat1on ca l l toll
free 800 841 8000 anyttme '
TAKE CO MMAND OF YOUR
FU TURE IN THE NUCLEAR
NAVY
12 19 6tc

Rc q Hatr SS 50

a ACRES

TEAFORD
help Wanted

s 12 SQ Pe-rm For

1111 Jrp

.T elevision Log

Wheel Alignment
•5.55

NOV SPEC

( Mp chnq , one CM 9araqe .
o vl"r an acre ot c,round
1 tatw QQ d~ Road Phone 992

~REE

COFFEE
AND
DONUTS
P OM EROY
RECOVERY 622 E. . MA I N
POMEROY ,
OH 10
ST ,
PHONE 992 •7554
12 20 2t c

W•lh

.I

JohmH Beauty
Salon

... ·-. .·•. ···.:···_.'· · = ·:· :·· -· ··:·=· --·.·-

North

East

I+

2.

Pass

Pass

You, South, hold.

21

1.

South

.... __

---

""",_,c "1'-1".....

WHATWUZ IN
PASSEL URIAH LEFT
BY TH' MAIL BOX,
MAW?

'

.KJ65•2 +AQI065.K43
What do you do now?
A - Jump to three diamonds.

This forcing bid ls the best calla I
your disposal.
TODAY'S QUESTION
Your partner Continues to three
notrump. What do you do now!
I

I

I

II

�•

10

II - The Daily Sentinel, Mlddlepo:l-Pomeroy, 0 ., Dec. 21. 1973

Tht• Dati) St-nt tnt' I. M~riri 1 cpor t -Pomt&gt;roy. 0 , l)(&gt;c. 21. 197:1

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
0£AOLJNES
~ P M Day Before Pub l1 cat tOt
Monday Deadltne 9 a m
Cance1ta1 1on
Correct,ons
Wlllbeacceptcdunlll9a m tor
Day of Pub lt cat~on
REGULATIONS
The PubltSher reser¥es the
r1ght to ed1t or re1ect an'! ads
deemed
obtect l onal
The
Pvbltsh er w 111 not be respon
Sible for more than one tn
correct 1nsert1on

RATES

For Want Ad Serv1c~
5 cents per Word one tnsert ion
Mm1rnum Charge Sl 00
lA cen ts per word three
consecu t tve 1nsert tons
26 cen ts per word SIX con
secut tve msert ions
75 P er Cenf 01scount on patd
ad s and ads pa1d Wtthtn 10
davs
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$2 00 for 50 word m tn
imum Each add tl tonal word

Jc

BLIND ADS
Additiona l 25c Charge per
Advert tsement
OFFICE HOURS
8 JOam foSOOpm Da•lv ,
8 30 a m
to 11 00 Noon
Sa t urday

-·

Carmel

News~

1

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results! ~
1 ~B
~~~s~~=e=s=s==S:=e==r::;-;::v=i=ce=s:::::::=~
Lost

2 SIGNS

HOME L ITE
am 5aw nP.&lt;Jr
carme l C1~&lt;.1 r c h
Re war d
Phone 949 1l7 5 Edson Roush
!] 19 41C

OF
QUALITY

Not1ce
NOVEL lY F abr iC Sho p, 130
Wa!!.hlngton Bl¥d . Belp re ,
Ohto Polyester kn•ts , $2 .:19
per yard . sweater terry kn tts ,
S1 29 per yard New sh tpmenr
ot cra ft su pp lies complete l•ne
of Necch • Whtte and Nat•ona l
machtnes
Open
se w mg
Sund ays , noon f li t 5 Da l ly 10
!til 1 p m l tll Chr l stma&amp;
12 10 Af c
SA T U RDAY
DEC
22r 1973
ONLY
NEW
SPANI S H
EARLY
AMERICAN
MODERN
A N D
TRADITIONAL
LIVI N G
ROOM SUITES A ND CHAI~S
AND ALL U PHOL STERY
SUPPLIE S WILL BE 10 P CT
OFF
AL SO
8
TRAC K
TAPES . COUNTRY AND

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

1~:~ :sl:::,~~: ~~SO

1968 CHEVROLET PICKUP
S109S
a Fleclstde loc al 1 owner Irk , V 8 eng me, cus l om cab ,
&lt;wto m.1 t 1c trans , rad•o
1971 CHEVROLET BLAZER
S289S
1 wheel dnve, V a lock1ng fr ont hubs, automa t 1c tran s
mtss•on , power steer ing &amp; brakes , rad 10 good t.res,
veh1 c le of many uses, &lt;:ustom lr tm , whJte l op over blue A
sharp 1 owner trade
1969CHEV BELAIR
S89S
4 Door V 8, automat1 c. power steermg , faclory atr, radto,
good t1 r es , real clean 1n l eno r . sharp blu e fm tsh Retail

\990

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

WESTERN , GOSPEL AND
OPEN EVESB·OD P.M.
ROCK S2 00 EACH SALE l S
THIS SATURDAY , DEC ,
POMEROY, OHIO
1973, 9 AM TILL 8 P M ; L - - -- - - - ___ _:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...J

113~

By the Day
The

twm sons of Mr

and

Mrs Earl Circle, Jerrod and
Jason , celebrated thetr f1rst
- btrthday Fnday mght w1th a
:_ cake tnscnbed ''Jerrod and
Jason" and presents

Atlendmg were Mary K
Yost, Susan and Charles Yost,
Buddy Ervm, L1la, Wav1e and
Verna Ctrcle, Dorothy Harden,
Pam and fullph, Sandy, the
, host and hostess , Carl and

GUN SHOOT , Horner H tl l Gun
Cl ub . Sundav
De c
23,
startmg at 12 noon Fa ctory
choked guns only
12 29 Jt c

ot ground on. St 143,
water tap pa•d Phone 991
J640
11 13 121c

THERE w t11 be no shoot i ng
match at Corn Hollow, Dec
23
12.20 31c

--------------HOME INSURANCE
Call.
Stephen c. Snowden
55J Ru ssell St .

Nancy Ctrcle and Patrese Ice
c r eam and cake v.ere served
Wtlham Carleton of Ra cme

'

~ called

1n

the

commumty

' Sunday afternoon
•

Mr and Mr s Frank Hudson,

• Mr. and Mrs Gene Hudson of
Racine and Mr and Mrs
Shelby P1ckens and fam1ly
were vtsttmg wtth

Mr

and

Mrs Allan Taylor on Sunday.
Mr and Mrs James Circle of
New Haven, Mr and Mrs

(G rav el Hill)
Mtddleport, Oh10
Phone 992 7155

Sta le I arm rtre and

TRUCK dnver needed Call tn
person 667 3131 OhtO Valley
Manufa cturtng Corporalton
12 19 ] IC

IHliiUII't ( l

Casual!~

Company

DUE to the cond ltton of the
butld tng , we w 1l l close De c
31 We. also , wou l d like to
thank all our customers
Loutse 's Bakery , 105 Court
Street
Pomeroy.
Ohtt"J
Vernal and Loutse Wetl
12 9 18tp

-...------------HAVE YOUR trophy mounted ,
deer heads smal l antma l s,
and btrds Howard Btrchf1eld,
Mutberrv StreeL Rutland
Phone 742 68 34
11 26 tf c

Melvm Ctrcle and fam1ly of
Colwnbus were guests of Mrs
Mary CLrcle over the weekend

Tu ppcr:-. Plaintl
Society New~

Eunice Halsey

A LOVELY new Home 112 m11e
f rom Metgs H 1gh School
Three bedrooms. two baths ,
f ull basement w1th two car
garage Large tot \27 ,500
A l so . re ce ntly remodeled
three bedroom ol der home tn
Pr1 ce of 515 ,000
Pome r oy
mcludes f urn tture Owner Will
help f1nance e1ther of these
two prop ert1es Call 593 5667
Athens
12 2 30tc

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

......

Netsel Weatherman called on

Mr and Mrs. Elmer Kaylor
Saturday eve
Mr and Mrs. Jack Stanley of
Athens v1s1ted her brother, Mr
and Mrs Wayne Bnckles
Monday afternoon.
Mr . and Mrs Gerald Guthrie
and son, Don, Alfred, visited
Mr and Mrs Veri Tuttle
Sunday
Verl Tuttle returned home

Saturday from St. Joseph
Hosp1tal m Parkersburg after
surgery and
recovenng sattsfactonly.

undergomg eye

ts

Several from here attended
the Senior Citizens Chnstmas

Party at Pomeroy Thursday,
Dec 13th
Mrs. Nancy Colhns 1s
recuperatmg at the home of
her parents, Mr and Mrs.

Homer Cole after undergomg
surgery at Veterans Memorial
Hospital, Pomeroy
Mr

and Mrs

FURN I SHED two bedroom
mobile home •n Pomerov
$110 per month Phone 992

3429

12 196tp

LARGE 3rd floor apartment for
rent m downtown Pomerov
Call 992 2189 after 5 p m
12 18 6tc

Tom Bar-

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

Ltttle Chtet
E l ectnc Smokehouse

HOUSE for rent tn Chesh1re
Phone 992 5693
12 13 ttc

Smoke Your Own
Turkey
Cheese
F1sh
Game
Jerky, Etc
Regular Pnce S3S 00
Call 992-3166
Joe Rosenbaum

Employment Wanted
EXPER I ENCED
patnfer
lnlenor and extertor Phone
985 3951
12526tp
- -~- - ----- ----

Holiday Special 523.95
SH OOTING MA
Forked
Run Spo rt sman
noon
Sunday Factory ch •ok&lt;'d guns
only
12 20 3tc
MY NAME tS betng f org ed on
checks Do not cash these
chec ks un less you persona iiV
know that I have wr ttten
them
My bank has been
1nstructed not to honor ! hem
Mrs Edna Stobart
12 20 3tp

CARPE NTER work , masonry
work, general remode l mg bY
hour or Contract Phone 992
3511
12 16 26t c

Wanted To Buy
CASH pa1d for all makes ana
models ot mob de homes
Phone area code 614 423 9531
4 13 tfc
NO 1 COPPER 60c, radtators
JOe. brass JOe. batter.es,
S1 00 M A Hal l, Reedsville ,
Oh tO Phone 378 6249
12 20 He

KOSKOT
KOSMETICS
&amp;
WIGS MERRY CH R I STMAS OLD furn 1ture, oak tables ,
clocks, 1ce boxes, brass&lt; beds ,
&amp; GOD BLESS EACH &amp;
d1shes
or
comp l e t e
EVERY ONE OF YOU
H ELE N JA NE
BROWN ,
househo l ds Wr 1te M
D
Mlller, Rt 4, Pomeroy, Oh1o,
MIDDLEPORT OHIO, 992
call 992 6271 •
5113
5_
13_ tfc
12 11 tfc _ _ _ _ _ _ __j _ _ _ _ _ _
GUN SHOOT , Saturday Dec
22, 6 p m Mile H dl Road
Factory choked guns only
Assorted meats Sponsored by
Racme F 1re Dept
12 19 3tc
- ---~ - ----- ---

For Rent or Sale
10 ;Iii 50 MOBILE H OME Phone
992 5693
12
__._ 13 tfc

____________

__

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

thelem) of Dayton and Rev
and Mrs. C. N Watson of
Parkersburg were recent I1
guests of Mrs Effie Watson I
The MethodiSt Church Adult l
Class bad lis monthly meeting
and Chnstmas party at thehome of Mr . and Mrs Chester II
Gorrell with a g1ft exchange I
Monday evenmg A mce tlme I
was had by all

I

Classified Ads
br1ng yuu
extra cash
f Dr
shopping sprees

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

II
I

1

I
I
I

1
I

For Sale
ELECTROLUX Sweeper deluxe
model
Comple t e w1th all
c lean 1n g attachments and
uses paper bags Sl ightly used
but c lean!!. and looks l 1k e new
Wdl sell for $37 25 cash or
terms a¥allable Phone 992
2984
12 5 tfc
LOCUST posts , contact Harold
Evans, Long Bottom. Oh10
Phone 843 2942
12 14 12tp
COAL FOR SA LE . JAYMAR
COAL
COMPANY ,
THE
MEIGS &amp; GALLIA LINE ,
STATE
ROUTE
7
AT
CHESHIRE, OPEN 7 AM
TILL 6 30 PM 5 DAYS A
WEEK PHONE 992 5693
12 17 Si c
QUALITY gu ttars. basses and
amps at bargatn pr 1c es
Tracy Whaley. 130 Ltncoln
Hill Road , Pomeroy , OhiO
12 19 4tc
ONE 250 lb fa t hog
3338

Phone 985
12 193 1p

Big Run

wishing to send her cards may
send them to Room 520 - Sec
ond Floor, Wooster Community
Hospital, Wooster, Oh10 She
hopes to be home for Chnst·

19 HEAD of horses Regtstered
Tenn
Walk i ng
Horses .
Regis t ered Quar ter Horse!!.,
Grade Horses and pon•es $40
and up Call 367 7.481 or 388
9991
12 19 .ttc

Mr and Mrs Dorsel B1ggs
called on Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Young Sunday afternoon.
mas. Mr. Hess was a Metgs
Callers at the home of Inez eountian, son of Mr. and Mrs
EXCEU:tiOR Salt Wor ks , E
fulndolph and Mr and Mrs
Ma 1n St, Pomeroy All kmds
Orner Hess
of sa lt water pellets, water
Clarence Randolph Sunday
Richard Heilman IS a pallent
nuggets , block salt and own
were Mr and Mrs Kenneth
OhiO River Salt Phone 992
at
Veterans
Memonal
Hospital
3891
Siders and Chnstma of Pomt
reeuperatmg
from
surgery
6 5 tfc
Pleasant, Mr and Mrs Donald
Clarence Randolph •ecently SALT "F(fR 1cE:::-Nu ::, Nu&gt;N ,
fulndolph of East Sbade and
called
on J1m Smith.
Rock salt for townsh1ps ,
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence E
towns , and bUSinesses in
bu l ks and bags for 1ce and
Randolph Jr. of Chilli~othe.
snow Excels1or Salt Works
Ziba Midkiff recently called
Phone 992 3891
11 11 ttc
on Dorsel Biggs.
---- - ---- ~---Cheryl Ann Biggs of
CLO SE OU l on new Ztg Zag
Nelsonville spent the weekend
Sewmg Machtnes For sew1ng
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
stretch fabncs , buttonholes ,
fancy des1gns , etc
Pa1nt
Dorset Biggs. She IS a sludent
STEREO
Sltghtly blemiShed ChOICe Of
at Hocking Valley Techmcal
carry1ng case or sewtng
sland $49 80 cash or terms
College.
alt'atlable Phone 992 2984
92.1
Mrs Drexel Hess of Bur1251fc
bank, Ohio Route I fell last
OLD STYLE Maytag wrtnger
FridiY morning and broke her
washer , e){cettent cond 1t 1on
Phone 992 7406
shoulder. ley Sidewalk was the
Mtdd leport Pom eroy
1220Jtp
CllUOO of \he fall . Anyone
---~----------

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

GREAT
COUNTRY

WMPO-FM

'

,

f

{

I

Johnson Masonry
&amp; ( Remodeling l

From the laroest T""rk
Bulldozer Radtator to
~mi'l ll es t Heat e r Core
Nathan Btgg s
Radtator Spectahsl

992-7608
FREE EST

Ph . '992 -'2174

-Gene's
Body Shop

PRE- FABRICATED

8u11t to Vo\.lr''Specs
Dehvtred to Job Stle

Painting A Sp~cialty
All work guaranteed

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO
773-SSS4

~

9 00 - Sanford and Son 3, )1(5 , Brady Bunch 13, Ozz ie's Gtrls 6 .
Washtngton Revtew 20 . West Vtrgmta 1 Law 33 , Ftesta BowllO ,
Calcucct ' s Dept 8
8 30 - Gtrl With Something Eldra 3, 15 , Odd Couple 13, St;lli
Wtves of Henry Vlll6 , Campus Sce ne 33 ; Roll Out• 8, Joan
Sutherland Who ' s Afratd of Opera" 20
9 oo--Needles and Pins 3, 15 , Room 122 13, Masterotece Theater
33 , Movie: " The Chairman" 8, Renlllissance Chnstmas 20
9: 3Q--Brlan Ke1th 3, 4, 15; Adam ' s R1b 13
10 QO--Dean Martin 3, 4, 15 , ABC News Clo~y 6. 13 . News 20 ,
Wash ington Week m Revtew 33

Open 8 T1l S
Monday thru Silturtlay
&amp;06 E Ma.n. Pomeroy , O.

Ma son, W Va .

II OO - NewsJ, 4,6 , 8, 10, 13, 15 , Janakl33
11 JG-Johnny Carson 3, 4, 1S , Rose Bowl Bound 4, Movtes,
"Seven Agatnst the Sun " 8. " Miss on Mars" 10 , " The In
vlnctble Gladtator" 13.
11 4U - Johnny Carson 4
1 00 - Mldntght SpeetaiJ, 4 , Dtek Cavett 13
I 15 - Mov1e, " A Game of Death " 10
2 30 - Focus on Columbus 4 , News I f 3 00 - News 4

See or Call
Bob or Roger Jeffers
Day 992-7089
Night 992-3525
or 992-5232

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1973
6 30 - TV Classroom 8, Kentucky Af1eld 13 , Fa1th for Today 10
7 00 - Netghbors 13 , Farm Front 4 , Fun for Everyone 6 ,
Treehouse Club 9, 10 , Farmbook 3
7 15 - Woman 's Po1nt of VIew 13
7 30 - Man from COSI10 , Sesame St . 20. Gospel6, Abbot1 and
Costello 8. Banana Spl1ts 3 , D1ck Van Dyke 4 , Tree house Club

V1rqll B- TPclford, Sr -

BrokPr

SATURDAY . DEC
22
1973
ONLY
NEW
SPANI SH
EARLY
AMERICAN
MODERN
ANO
TRADITIONAL
LIVING
ROOM
SU ITE S
AND
CHAIRU
AND
ALL
UPHOLSTERY
SUPPLIES
WILL BE
10 PCT OFF
ALSO . 8 TRACK TAPES
COU NTR Y AND WE STER ,
GOSPEL AND ROCK , $2 00
EACH
SA L E
lS
THI S
SATURDAY, DEC 22 1973,9
A M TIL:L B PM FREE
COFFEE AND DONUT S
POMEROY RECOVERY 522
E MAIN ST, POMEROY
PHONE 992 7554
12 20 3tp

HOT WATER HEAT - Warm 3
bedrooms, gas fl•"ft.XUier, full
basement 1111!..1Q \.'-' 'd lots of
shrubbery ~ ~d' garage Next
to new fire house Asktng

$13.500
TRAILER LOT - W1lh sepi!C
tank. well and water tap
Su ttable for large trailer .
Asking only $2 ,800
,;

LEVEL

PLUS

NEARLY NEW - Modern 2
bedrooms , bath , uhltty, and
carport on well dratned lot

608

Auto Sales
1971 PINTO automattc, low
mtleage and 1967 Che¥y
Capr1ce Call 992 7123
12 21 2tp
1966 OLDSMOBILE 350 one
owner A 1 condt t ton. $350 oo
Call 949 2951 after S p m
12203tp

---------------1969 vw , good cond tt to n Rad1o,

rear w •ndow defroster , good
rubber , plus heavy duty
tra 1ler h1tch S995 Also, 185
CC Suzuk i Enduro motor
cyc le , good cond 1l tOn $325
Call 949 4452
12 19 3tc
1968 FORO PICkup tru ck , 36(1
motor , standard Sh tft Phone
949 375A
12 18 5tc
- - - ----~- -----

1966
PLYMOUTH
Sta t ion
Wagon
Clean, good ttres
$300 Phone 992 3866
12 147tc

Restdence, co mmerctal or
mob•le homes. Save on part's
&amp; labor
215 N 2nd Ave
Middleport
Phone 992-3509

DOZER and back hoe work ,
ponds and sept1c tanks, d 1f
chtng serv1ce. top sotl, fill
dtrl.
l tmestone ,
B&amp;K
Escavarmg Phone 992 5367 or
992 3861
9 1 lfc
C BRADFORD , Auct1oneer
Comp lete SerVtee
Phone 949 3821
Racine. Oh10
Cntt Bradford
5 I tfc

EXCAVAT IN G, dozer , loader
and backhoe work
sept1c
tanks mstal led, dump trucks
and lo boys for h1re , wlll haul
flll d~rt. top sod, l 1mestone
and gravel , Ca ll Bob or Roger
Jeff ers , day phone 992 7089.
n tgh t phone 992 -3525 or 992
5232
2 11 tfc
!:~!::WING,

MACHINES Repatr
ser¥tce, all makes 992 2284
The Fabnc Shop . Pomeroy
AuthoriZed S1nger Sates and
Servtce We Sha rp en Sc tssor s
3 29 ttc

-·

------....------~--

EL N A and Wh1te Sewlng
Machines
Service on all
makes Reasonabfe rates
The Sewt ng Cente-r, M 1d
dleporl. Oh10
1l 16 tf &lt;
"

CHARLES R
m1n1 ba ckhoe ,
footers, dratn
742 6092

As the g1rl sa1d , w he n
marnage was menttoned
" Never put off till tomor row
that wh1ch you should have
done day before yesterday 1"

DON'T PUT OFF SEE ING
THESE CALL NOW'
POMEROY
3
ntce
bedrooms
Bath
Some
carpe t tng and panel1ng Gas
f l oor furnace Basement.
Porch
N1ce
Lot SOx200

ASK ING $10,000
WE HAVE A LADIE S
BU SINE SS AND A MANS
BUSINESS FOR SALE Bolh

SELL BY THE lsi of the
MIDDLEPORT -

Bu1ld•ng

or Mobtle H ome lot 70x90.
Ut i11 t1 es, close Wooded area
m exce l lent ne1ghborhood

$2,000
MIDDLEPORT -

LI KE

NEW - Business room and
lovely
apartment
3
bedrooms , (lots of closets).
Bath D1mng room
Hard wood f loors wt t h ca rpehng
over
Hot w ate r
heat
Paneltng Garages.

HAS YOUR PROPERTY
BEE N FOR SA LE TOO
LONG? Let us sell1t for you .

HENRY E. CLELAND
YOUR
FRIENDLY BROKER
992-22!9
If no answer 992-2568

ALL SIZES IN STOCK

DISPERSAL
SALE
New Homes To Be

28

SOLD
At
USED
and
REPOSSESSED
PRICES
To make room for the
many
new
units
arrivmg in Jan., 1974.
DELAYED
DELIVERY
AVAILABLE
With the exception of a
small deposit.

992 -2094
606 E. Mam Pomero_y

OPFICE SUPPLIES

H ATFIELD ,
water lmes ,
ltnes Phone

PIANO tuntnQ &amp; repa~rmg
Lane Dan 1els , 259 Broa dwa y,
Middleport Phone 992 2082
12912tp

E. MAl

year

Posihve Stop and Go In Mud
&amp; Snow

GAS and OIL
SALES &amp; SERVICE

12 6 18t(:

WE HAVE al l your upholsferv
needs ,
Burlap,
den t m .
cambnc, loam glue . Ztppers ,
ta ck tng stnp sprmgs and
c l 1ps, c t tpboard
button
twme. sewt ng thread , legs
upholstery books , dacron.
webbmg , spnn g twm e. tacks,
welt cord, cotton. swtvel
bases and foam , loam , fo&lt;"&lt;m
Pome r oy Recoyery, 622 East
Mam St reet , Pomeroy Phon e
992 7554
112026tc

CO-OP COUNTRY
SQUIRE 120

AND COOLING

.

1964 COLON(AL 10 x 50 2
bedroom mobde home Phone
742 3294
12214tp

AM FM s t ereo rad1o 8 t r ack
tap e com b 1na t1 0n, 4 speaker
sound
system
Ba lance
$103 98. or use our budg e I
terms Call 992 3965
12 9,. lfc

It's Snow Tire Time!

Kerr Street
Pomeroy , Ohto

12x60 1971 Homette, 2 bedroom
mobile home Take over
payments Phone 992 5888
Must be seen to be ap
prectafed
12 20 3tp

are m good locattons and
do1ng an exce ll ent b usm ess
No phone tnformation on
these p lease Come 1n and we
can discuss DE SIRE TO

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

Phone 992·2798

Mobile Homes For Sale

____ _________

S INGER Au t omatiC Z1g Zag
Sewmg Machmes , m se wmg
table Makes buttonholes
sews on buttons , blmd hems ,
et c .Top notch cond tt ton Pay
S51 or terms ava1 l able Phone
992 2984
12 18 lf c

DICK SEYLER, Owner

$9,500

FOAM to fill your old couch and
cha1r cushtons as l ow as
$!0 95 , Upholstery books only
SOc
A tnch covered foam
mattresses lor standa rd S1Ze
bed ,
S29 95 ,
Po me r oy
Recovery
622 E
Ma1n
Pomeroy Phone 992 755A
1120 26tc
....._

PA INT DAMAGE , 1973 ZIG
ZAG SEW IN G MACHINE S
Still In or 1gma l cartons No
attachments needed as our
cont r ols are built 1n
Sews
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
buttonholes , sew on butto ns.
monogram!!. and bl1nd hem
st1 t ch Full cash pnce S38 50
or budget plan avatlable
Phone 992 2984
12 18 tfc

STR IPPE RS"

etc from Furn1ture
Antiques Modern Meta l s
We buy Antiques, Collecftbles , e!c
Ptck-up Serv1ce Available

and

FURNITURE
Stop In and See Our
Floor Di ~ p[ay_.
SE-PTIC
TANKS
c l eaned
Modern San1tat10n . 99? 3954 or
992 7349
10 23 ff c
tor OU tiOtng houses
and kttchen cabme l s Call
Guy N etgler , Radne , Oh10
949 3604
12 20 26tc

TBA 15
J 30 - AFC Playoff Pre Game3.

FARMERS
" H0!1daV
Gree tin gs" from A I Cattle
Technician , Leland Park er
992 2264 Pom eroy restdence
or Coolvil l e 667 -3251
An
swenng Ser¥tee
12 9 13tc

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

DOZER work , land clearmg by
the acre hourly or cont r act.
farm ponds. roads, etc Large
dozer and operator wtlh over
20 years e:xpene nce Put ltns
E:xcavatmg , Pomerov . OhtO
Phone 992 2478
l'l 19 1fc

a

-------------PRICE
CONSTRUCTIO N ,

WIN AT BRIDGE

Roof1 ng . spoullng, kttc h ens
and bathrooms
Complete
remodeling Phone 742 627J
12 3 ti C

Toronto pair use quiet defense

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

WILL tnm or cut trees and
shrubbery
Also , clean out
basements att1cS . etc Call
949 322 1 or 742 4441
1121JOt c

NO RTH

Pets For Sale
BLACK m i n ia tur e male poodle
25 30 lbs AKC Reg1s tered
Call 992 5947
1220 3tc

WEST

==-----

I am a 24-ye-ar-old woman married to a man of 35. 1 can ' t
understand hts ldeas on life. This IS my second marr1age. My

ftrst husband was younger than me - m fact he was a good deal
hke this male fnend I go out w1th.
My present husband knows l would never want to marry my
"boyfriend" because he isn't serious-mmded and £ools around.
like my ex did . We JUst go our for laughs whde my husband IS
studymg or working. (He makes a good hvmg for us and is trymg
to fmish up h1s college work .so he can get a degree, whiCh keeps
him very busy.)
Now why would a man resent his wife having fun, if he knows
she would never leave him for the other guy? He ought to be glad
I'm having a good time - and that he's my first cho1ce. FAITHFUL IN MY FASHION, BUT TIRED OF FOUR WAILS
Dear "Faithful":

Now look! You dumped your fu-st husband because he
"fooled around." SO why the surpr1se when your present husband
resents a stand-m? Do you deserve special privileges you
wou1dn 't extend to your man?
H you want this marnage to last, you'd better start havmg
fun wtth only one - your LEGAL partner.- H.

+++

Dear Helen :
Our government officrals are beating tbe drwns for energy
conservation. But (as of thiS wntmg) l not1ce our state off1ce
buildings are lit up like Christmas trees all mght long, JUS(
because someone high up says 1t's cheaper to let fluorescent
lights burn continuously- saves the elements. Also, I don't see
any top politicians taking the bus to work. Most get sqwred
aroWld in limousmes, and when they go by air, a government
plane makes a long, fuel-consummg, expenstve tnp for just one
small party I thmk this is only okay for the President and Mr.
Kissmger.
H we httle guys are asked to bundle up agamst the cold, drive
50 miles an hour in C"f-pools, turn off every light behind us, and
use our ovens only when it's absolutely necessary ,1t seems to me
the high muckamucks could make a litUe effort too, Right? -

FREEZING , SQUINTING, WALKING and HOPING FOR
BETTER EXAMPLES

24 hours."
Three cheers

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
3'2 . Certam
1 Orange
TV pro
or
grams
Rose
Oppos e~

5

to,
Br1hsh

style

11 Canal
12. ShoY.ily

splendid

for

Wilson ! There

are

hmes when

no one -

tavos

39. Type

of
stockm g
40. European
rlY er

13. M other

DOWN

ot

l Gloc ken

Cast or

sp1c l
2. Moun tam
nymph
3. Erronc

•nd

next

excluding the Alrmghty- 1sn 't exactly sure that It'S gomg to do,
and the Weather Service did a masterful blt of obfuscatiOn over
the past week.
Take Wednesday, for example. Here's what the Weather
San&gt;lce provided on Tuesday to look forward to, all of them from
radio stations in a 50-mile radius of tbe Tr1.County Area:
WKEE, Huntington: Tuesday mght low 25, Wednesday high
40, Chance of ram 40 per cent :ruesday night, 60 per cent Wednesday.
WOUB, Athens : Tuesday night low 14, high Wednesday about
32. Chance of snow 60 per cent Tuesday nignt, 70 per cent Wednesday
WAMX, Ashland. Tuesday night low in m1d-2os, h1gh
Wednesday about rrud-to-upper 308. Chance of snow, or snow
changing to ram, 70 per cent.
And the Wednesday morning AssoCiated Press weather map,
proVIded by the Weather Serv1ce, showed tbe area blanketed by a
solid belt of rain south of the Ohio River, with snow to the north
And what happened' All of the above' No, none of the above.
The Tuesday rught low was nearer 30 than anything else at my
house. The Wednesday high was not 32, or the mid-308, or eVen 40.

38 100 cen -

l4.

Pollux
W or

shtped
15. New

Gumea

Eel

16

dry
16 Deserve

of

Cadmus

23_Astound

muun

land

Like
It''
forest
7. Daughter

Daunted

ta Jns
" wilder
ness"

You

21. Passenge1

22.

wd )

ous
( 4 wds J

6 'A s

(poet )

SWISS

25 Afncan

player

18. Sphere
20_ Unclose

24. FrcnC'h

Spirited
(hyph
deeper
10. SJJr cad
grass to

5. Hockey

(O E )
17. Sunset
color

8 M ean -

9 Become

4. Pasture

town

Yesterday•s~~!;RJ

26. Meal
28 Actor
~1l(: h acl

19. Man handle

22. Top
rated

(h;ph
wd)
23. Cru saders'

toe

29 Lax
33 Cupid

35 - de
sac
36.

M1htar ~

maihng

address

(abbr )

24. He's
Gtovanm

'"Italy
25. Mono-

logist,
Mort 26. Old
Fmnish

poem
27. Metric
land

3JY~~®Ikal-..lf.J-.J,_

measure
28. Break-

U nscramble these four Jumbles.
one letter to each square, lo

30. It's

loyttiNHIII.IINftlll

Of'&lt;lllllll t r l

fast

staple

form four ordinarJ' words.

often

smoked
31. Brazilian
tree

Dear FSWHFBE ·
Right ! And let's hope by the tune your letter hits print, your
hopes will have come true. Meanwhile I forwarded your com·
ments to Washmgton where they might stir up something more
than a form reply .. maybe - H

32. Brown
kiwi

YANGO

I

I I

INKELT

9 Jo-Bob Newhar1 8 TBA 4, Woody Hayes 10
10. 00- Carol Burnette, 10, Grtff 6, 13, The Ktllers 33 .
11 00 - ABC News 6, 13, News 8. 10, 3, M1dmght SpecJal 15
II 1S- Mo v te,"TheCatCreeps"6 , News13
11 30 - M ovtes, " Fear No Evtl " 3, " Mtracle on 34th Street" a
"G unfr,9ht at the 0 K Corr a l" 10; " Ma)ln, Mon ster of
Terror 13 , Rose Bowl Bound 4
11 40 - News 4
12 10 - Mov1e " We're N o Angels " 4
1 QO-- M ov te, " The Eye Creatures" 13

34. Woody

I

plant
36.1ota

0

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it:
WHAT Hi&amp;
'' GHOFCT 510FCY"

AP'PEAFCei::&gt; 'TO !!!E.

B-'-U
v
T.~'Lr:E=-{....,-v
..~ Now~ the tlre1ed Iotton
V"""'\J
'\1 V "'J form: tht auJ]IriR uuwer, u

r ii£1;iijiji.)]iiii;;"';=.J1l
~iif,_

to

au&amp;re•ted by the above cartoon.

1 =
~
~=-=--~--==•~IA[XIIJ[IIJ

I

(Aaewen lo..orrow)

Jambln: GLORY

Yr.•l@rd•r'•

SINGE

GEYSER

lhr rll'fttletter from
h1,. Rid kR h1m - IS GIRL

Anew..r: H'hat

2 30- News 13
2 40 - Mov1e, " Captatn New man , M . D ' ' 4

BUNION

Is

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A IS
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are aU
hints Each day the code letters are different.

CRYPTOQUOTES
GJHIK GJDG GJNJ\X NG LKZUNIINOSK
GH GKSS MJNGK SNK! IHHA BZHM
VH S HZOSNAP . -DEIGNA H'UDSSKF
Yeoltrdll1'• Cryploquolt: CHRISTMAS IS THE SEASON
WHEN YOU NEVER KNOW WHICH IS GOING TO GIVE
OUT FIRST- YOUR MONEY OR YOUR FEET.-ANON
(@ 1973 Km1 Featurea Syndu~ate, lnc.)

+-

Ne1ther vulnerable

West

I

North

East

South

1+

Double

Redble Pass
Pass
Double Pass
Pass Pass
Opemng lead- 4 +

"

10 4·tfC

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

}ASOLINE All.EY

The ftre
mspector
told ~ou
thrs ,

Skeez1x?

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

If you don't tlunk that Eric

Murray and Sammy Kehela
of Toronto are one of the best
patrs m the world just look at
th1s qUlel defense. They were
sort of fixed on the b1ddm11
North's pass of one d1a·
mond redoubled was for busi'
ness Enc siltmg East didn't
care. He would have made an
overtnck 1f allowed to play
there, but South ran to one lD CAN I BELl!OVE
heart Sammy doubled and MY E'IES ••• 1e IT
opened the four of d1amonds. REALLY~/'
South rose with dummy's
ace, d1scarded a club and led

Big &lt;a pacify '~
Maytag
Automatu;s
2 s pe e ~ operawon 1
Qlotce of water
t 'eom p s
A,vt o
water
level. 1
• ontrol
L1nt
&lt;: jlfer or Power
in 'Agitator
Perm a-Press
Maytag
Halo ot Heat
Dryers
;)Urround dothes
With gentle , even
heat No ho t spots ,
no
overdry1ng
Fine Mesh Lint
F 11ter
We 5-peclaltze tn

1 YEAR

GUARANTEE
BEST SERVICE
IN
OHIO VALLEY

~

.RUTLAND

1

MAY.TAG

FURNIT_URE'.R;~~.~~:e•

DOWNTOWN
BELPRE
Rutland
OHIO
741-42!1
Arnold Grate.
L---~~----~ l~~~~--~~--~~~~~~ '

"

'

'.

Pomeroy, Ohio Ph. 992-2174

a spade Ertc.: wOn with the
ace and led a trump
whereupon Sammy cashed
the ace and queen and led a
thtrd trump. South won m his
own hand and led a club
toward dummy's queen and
nght here is where Sammy
separated the men from the
boys. A lesser player would
have let the club go
whereupon ihere would have
been no way left to beat one
hea rt, but Sammy hopped up
w1th Ius kmg and thought for
a wlule.
Then he led the only card
that would enable lum to beat
the contract. He played Ius
low trump.
South's only choice was 1o
cash his good spades and concede the last three tncks for

TilE BORN LOSER

OF
'&gt;OUCAN
COME INL.JANIE .1
KNOW NW1 WHAT A
TRULY CONCE/lNED
FRIEND '&gt;011 AlCE I

Smith Nelson Motors will be closed Friday morning till 12 noon
Dec. 21, open Saturday, Dec. 22 till 12 noon and will be closed
MonGay, Dec. 24th &amp; Tuesday, Christmas Day. So our employes can
enjoy the Holidays. All of us at Smith Nelson want t~ take this opportunity to wish each &amp; every one a Very Merry Chnstmas &amp; Very
Happy &amp; Prosperous New Year. We also want to thank our many
customers for making 1973 a very good year for us.

-.'
•

Pass

-•

__________ ___

'"
•
.

I

I

BAU.O::liJ ~ JJ5T
l\00 OOLLAAS!

~COURSEr
AAVEN'T A RSH

THAT EATS LUMPS
OFSUGARAND
5A'i5
_,..-...,,.._

11.. -~ 1

Wlj&amp;:;j,JI.I..IJ.:£1.164
West

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

NJ ARM~ ~Pl.US

down one

The b1ddmg has been

•

OI&lt;.A'{, 50 '/OJ GOT'\

~ \I:W&gt;.T~

!NEWSPAPER ENTE RPRISE ASSN J

••

When Fun's Not Funny

Dear Helen :

My personal award for Honesty m Broadcast Journalism
goes this year to Bob W1lson , sometime weatherman for WCHSTV m Charleston, who showed an adn11rable burst of candor last
week
That 's when we had a series of heavy snow warmngs,
travelers' advisories, snow watcliCS and hea vy knows what else
- everything but the snow.
Wilson, obviously baffled by the plethora of mforrnation
spewing forth about the b1~ snow, fmaUy offered praiseworthy
cormnentary which the meteorologiSts would do well to copy ·
somethmg hke thls :
"We had a forecast of snow, but there's no accumulation, and
now they 're predictmg ram, although 1t's cold and really looks
like snow now. Only God knows what we really can expect m the

.JI0762

3035

500 E. Main St.

J

••

.KQJ4
'KJ8 5

SEPTIC
TANKS
AROBtC
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
CLEA NED ,
REPAIRED
MILL ER
SA NITATION ,!
STEWART , OHIO PH 662f

GROCERY bus1ness tor sa~
Butldmg f or sale or lease
Phone 773 5618 f rom 8 30 p m
to 10 p m tor appo1ntment
......._ 3 20 ffc

4...

BY PAUL CRABTREE

+

.K 94
SOUTH

MITH NELSON MOTORS INC.

SIN GER sew1ng machmes 1972
model 1n beaut1ful walnut
cabmet Makes des1gn slit
ches, zi g zag , buttonholes,
bltnd hems elc L1ke new
Only 589.95 Call Ravenswood
273 9521 or 273 9893 after 5 00
12 7 lfc

at Urnes

• 92
KQJ82
.A853

+4

-

SHEARED
W HI TE
PINE
Xmas trees , need l es reatly
stay 011 1 KUHL'S BARGAIN
CENTER , Rt 7, "at caUtiOn
l1ghl " Tuppers Plains
12 7 ISle

Us.

ig norance

EAST (0 1
• AS

• 109863
' AQ73

''

FIREWOOD
Can .cleltver
Phone 992 2826 or 992 5565
12 16 12tp

m1ssed me. I thinl&lt;. the Weather SerVIce should follow Wilson's
exarnple, and admit

21

.Q+

G &amp; E appt1a n ce repa tr Phone R"'EADY MI X
CONCRE TE
\
at !he shop, 992 3802 or 949
delivered right to y our
4254
proJect Fast and easy Free
11 26 26fp
est1ma'1es Phone 99 2 3284
-- ----- --- ~ --Goeg l em Ready M1x Co,
M iddleport , Oh!o
AUTOMOtHLE 1nsur ance been
6 30 tfc
cancelled?
Lost
your
opera tor's license Ca ll 992
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
7428
•
6 15 tfc REA SON ABLE rat es Ph A46 4782. Gal llpol ts, Joh n Russe tt.,
Ow rter and Operator
1
s 12 ttc'
-----

It was at least 46degree..along the banl&lt;.s of the Ohio
To err is human, but the Weathe-r Service tS making a career
of 1t, ror there was no snow on the ground, and if any ram fell, 1t

• 72
'10 64
A1097653

O'DELL Allnemenr worK can be
done by appomtment only at
presen t t1me. due- to Illness m
fam tty
Phone
tor
ap
potntment 742 3232
11 2S tfc

- - - - - - - --

4, 15 . Ptckwlck 6

4 00 - Audubon Wtl dl1te Theater 33 AFC Playoff 3, 4, 15 , Death
Va ll ey Days 10
4 30 - Antiques 33 , F1lm 10
5 00 - Sew1ng Skills Tallonng 33, Wrestling 8, Lass•e 10, W 1de
World of Sports 6, 13
5 Jo-An1mal World lO i Making Th tn gs Grow 33
6 00 - N ews 8. Kopycats 10
6 30 - Bever ly H1llb111 1es 9 , Marshall Un1verslty Report 33 ,
N ews 6 , Reasoner Report 13
7 00 - Hollywood SquaresJ, Ca tch 33, Hee Ha w6, 8, Lawrence
Welk 4, 13, 15, In the Know 10
1 30 - That Good Ole Nashvt ll e Music 3 , Zoom 33 A Chnstmas
Tree 10.
8 00 - All tn the Family 8, 10 , Emergency 3, .:1, 15 , Partridge
Fam1ly 13, Tanger me Bowl6, Joan Sutherland Who's Afraid
of Opera 33
30 - MASH 8, 10, War and Peace 33 . Mov1e "Snatc hed " 13
9· 00 - Mary. Tyl er Moore 8, 10 , College Basketball 3. Pnmus 4.
Movte " F ltzwt iiY " IS.

NI::ED A new cetltng or room
panelled. or 1n ter1or palntmg?
Call Ri chard Wtlt , 992 2889
12 18 26tc

SUPER SERVICE STA.

STEREO RAD I O am fm , 8
tra ck tape combmat 1on . 4 we_y
speaker
sound
system
Balance $102 56, or use our
budget terms. Ca ll 992 3965
1216ttc

1S - Bob Daniels 3
30 - NFL Game of the Week J , Nursing Process 15 , Perry
Mason 4
2 00 - Perry Mason 3, Sa tnt 15 , Wild W1ld West 6, Amazmg
World of Kresk m 13
2 30 - Amer1ca 4, Mov1e "The F ltght o1 the Phoen1x" 13
3 00 - You Asked For It 3, Wacky World of Jonat han Wtnters 6 ;

NEIGLER ~

Let U s In stall Now!

9 ... _- JackW Carsey, Mgr
6'itl Phone 992 9932

' 73 6, 13

---------::.:::::-----

NO MONEY
NEEDED UNTIL
JANUARY 1974

MILLER
HOMES

8 OQ-Jake's Place 6 , Lldsville 3, 4, 15 ; Bugs Bunny 13, Popeye
10 , Flintstones 8
8 30 - Inch H1gh Pnvate Eye 3, 4, IS , Yogi's Gang 13 , Huck &amp;
Yog1 6 , Batley Comets 8 , Mister Rogers 20
9 OQ-Sesame St 20 , Addams Fam1ly 3, 4, IS , Super Friends 6,
13 , Mov1e 8, 10
9 30 ~ Emergency 3, 4, 15
10 00 - Elec Co 20 , Butch Casstdy 3, 4, 15 , Lass1e' s Rescue
Rangers 6, 13, My Favonte Marttans 8, 10
10 30 - Star Trek 3, 4, IS; Goober and the Ghost Chasers 6. 13
Jeannte 8, 10 , Zoom 20
11 00 - Sesame Sf 20, S•gmund and the Sea Monsters 3, 4, 15
Brady K1ds 6, 13, Speed Buggy 8, 10
11 30 - Pmk Pa11thers 3, 4, 15, Miss ton : Mag1c 6, 13 . Joste and
the Pussycats 1n Outer SR(Ice 8, 10.
12 00 - Jetsons 3, 4, 15, lns1de Out 20, Movie 13 Bowlmg 6
Everything ' s Arch•e 8, 10
12 30 - Go 3. 4, 15, NFC Playoff Pre Game 8, 10
1 00 - Beatles 3, Chnstmas Story 4 , NF C Playoff 8, 10 , Act1on

PQMEROY
HOME &amp; AlJTO

P&amp;J HEATING

We Strip Paint. Varmshes,

- 2

$15,000
INCOME - 3 bedrooms, bath , 3
porches, 7 rooms m all Near
- ----- -- -- ~ - --stores and court house Only
NEW LARGE recltntng chatrs $3,000 down
tn vmyl mater1al , buy now or 1 7 ACRES W1th large 8
lav away for Ch rtstmas On I¥ room house, balh, f 1replace.
$89 95
Sw i vel rocke r s tn
velvet. nylon and pr•nts that and porch Large barn All
make a wonderful g1ff for minerals except coa l
N1ce
your wtfe On l y $69 95 AI( farm l and of 80 acres $360 per
tlems cash and carry or 60
day
lay awav
Pomeroy acre
8
Recovery
6Z2 E
Matn . NICE OLDER HOME rooms, 4 bedrooms, modern
Pomeroy Phone 992 75.54
112026tc bath, 2 n 1ce enclosed porches
Large gas F A
furnace
UPHO LS TERY Fabncs by the
Garage
Want
$18,000
yard 54 tnches w 1de as low as
$1 95 per yard , velvets as low
as SJ 45 , tmpor.ted ¥e lvels , Buy a warm home wtth plenty
$9 95 We al so have nylon
of room We have several to
hercu l on
cotton
pr Ill IS
show you Just ca ll
v1nv1s , and remnants , by the
yard or by t he p1ece Pomeroy
Recoyerv. 622 East Mam ,
Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
11 20 26fc

VACUUM Cleaner s new 1973
Model
Complete w1fh all
clean•ng tools Sma l l pam f
damage m sh ipp tng Wtll take
$27 cash or budget plan
a¥ailable Pllone 992 2984
12 18 tfc

11

bedroom frame home, and
garage at Downmgton K1tchen
range and heate r Included m

-------------- - -.;rre

TWO STORY bnck apartment
butldtng , two apartments .
South Th1rd Sf, M tddleport
Shown
bv
appotn tm ent
Rodney Down mg . Real Estate
Broker Phone 992 3731
12 20 6tp

ACRE

13.

Dick's
Hoard House

110 Mcchantc Street
Pomeroy, Oh10 -15769

Wall Slrel Week 33

10 30 -

Wat er Ltnes and Power
Lines All work done by the
foot or contract. Also dozer
work and sephc tanks 10·
stalled

WOOD TRUSSES

0.

4

DITCHING SERVICE

Ph . 992 -5271
Lmcoln l·hll Pomeroy.

EXPERT

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

ASK US ABOUT

&amp; THINGS

'•'

6 00 - News 3, 4, 6 , 8, 10, I.S , ABC News 13 , Sesame Street 70 .
Adlerian Counselng Techn1ques 33
6 30 - NB C News 3, 4, 15 , ABC N ews 6; CBS Ne9.'s 8, 10,
Hogan' s Heroes 13
7· 0()-Truth or Consequences J, 6 , Beat the Clock 4, News 10,
What's My line" 8 , W1ld Kingdom 13 1 Spy IS ; Electnc Co 20,
Course of Our T1mes JJ .
7 30 - Porter Wagoner 3, To Tell the Truth 6 , Concentr~tton 8 ,
Wall Street Week 20 · New Treasure Hunt 10 , Beat the
Clock 13 . How Do Your Chtldren Grow 33 . College Bask..etbi'lll

-G UARANTEE()-,.
Phone 992· 2094

Pomeroy

.•.

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 21

On Most Amencan Cars

SMITH NELSON
.-MOTORS, INC.

Area 's Most
Reaso nable Prtces

s

3 AND 4 ROOM furntshed and
· unfurntshed
apart m en t s. ~
Phone 992 5434
4 12 lfc

was

taken to Veterans Memonal
Hosp1tal m Pomeroy after
suffermg a heart attack at her
, home here Thursday.
Mr and Mrs. Terry Deem
and baby have moved from the
Dora Mae Calaway property to
Parkersburg

-

APARTMENTS for rent tn
Mason , W Va , on h ighway
Phone 773 5147
Revnolds
Apartm en Is
12206tc

PRIVATE meetmg room tor
any organuat1on phone 992
3975
3 11 tf c

By Evelyn Brlckles
Sunday School attendance at
the Methodist Church was 61
and offering was $26 .37 .
Worship attendance was 40 and
offermg was $50 84
Mrs

For Rent

992-7474

TWO bedroom house at 47J
S y&lt;&lt;"morc Street m M1d
d teporl vacant Call 992 5310
1121 26tc

For Sale

ENERGY (fiS IS Demanos
NUCLEAR TRAINING FOR
QUALIFIED INDIVIDUALS
The U S N;wy offers the best
nuclear power tra1n1ng tn the
world for those who qualtfy
Openings available for both
offtcer
and
enlts l ed
programs
Full pay and
allowances whtle you tram
F or more tnformat1on ca l l toll
free 800 841 8000 anyttme '
TAKE CO MMAND OF YOUR
FU TURE IN THE NUCLEAR
NAVY
12 19 6tc

Rc q Hatr SS 50

a ACRES

TEAFORD
help Wanted

s 12 SQ Pe-rm For

1111 Jrp

.T elevision Log

Wheel Alignment
•5.55

NOV SPEC

( Mp chnq , one CM 9araqe .
o vl"r an acre ot c,round
1 tatw QQ d~ Road Phone 992

~REE

COFFEE
AND
DONUTS
P OM EROY
RECOVERY 622 E. . MA I N
POMEROY ,
OH 10
ST ,
PHONE 992 •7554
12 20 2t c

W•lh

.I

JohmH Beauty
Salon

... ·-. .·•. ···.:···_.'· · = ·:· :·· -· ··:·=· --·.·-

North

East

I+

2.

Pass

Pass

You, South, hold.

21

1.

South

.... __

---

""",_,c "1'-1".....

WHATWUZ IN
PASSEL URIAH LEFT
BY TH' MAIL BOX,
MAW?

'

.KJ65•2 +AQI065.K43
What do you do now?
A - Jump to three diamonds.

This forcing bid ls the best calla I
your disposal.
TODAY'S QUESTION
Your partner Continues to three
notrump. What do you do now!
I

I

I

II

�'
•

••

.

•-

~

•

12 - The Daily Sentinel. ~llddle port - Pomt·ro ) . 0 .. o,..,._21. 19;:1

Southeast Ohio to begin new
intercom net on January 15th
On Jan. 15. 1971, Southeast

SI':OP.MS. said that Jan . 10 was

Ohio's Emergency Med1cal

the

tar~e t

dat e to turn on the

Service (SEOEMSl will be~ in gigantic cornmurlication netoperating one of the mos t work.
The network was designed
complete , so phi s ti ca ted
communicati on networks in by Hoy Hankin , directo; of
the nation.
communications for SEOEMS.
This was ann ounced Thurs~ It has 300 channels, of which
day during a news briefing fur seven will be activated.
area media at the Holiday Inn
Th e sy s tem contains a
in Kanaug a. Mrs. Gay Cruss, ''backbone loop" that can be
public relations director for

extended to 26 counties in Ohio
and seve ral other counties in

West Virginia and Kentucky.
Each resident in SEOEMS'

MEIGS THEATRE

seven county service area

Tonight and Saturday
Oecember21 ·22
NOT OPEN

(Athens, Hock ing, Meigs ,
Vinton, Jackson, Gallia and
Lawrence) will be affected
when the new comm Wlications
sys lem begin s operations .

Sun.-Mon .. Tues.

Dec. 23-24·25

Telephone nwnbers now used

HIGH PLAINS
DRIFTER

to ca ll local ambulance
stations will be replaced by one
toll-free number Cl-800-2727777) , that will put the caller

Clint Eastwood

Show Starts 7 p.m .

tou&lt;.&gt; h with a

response, the dispatcher can

dispatcher ~lt SEOEMS cen tral
h eadquart e r s in Gallipoli s .
Fr om ther e, throu gh the
mi (' r ow;wc communi cati on
ne tw ork , the dispatcher will

turn un the lighls and siren on
the vehicle to coht.act the

squad .

se nd the cl o~ e s t available
ambulance to the location of

and prepare to make the run ,
the dispatcher will give
necessary directions and in-

directl y in

As the emergency medical
technicians start the vehicle

the emergency.

struc tions, also by radio.

The heart of the commun ications is the dispatching
co ntrol co nsole located . a t

After the emerge ncy squod
arrives ·at the scene and while

cen tral headquarters near the

enroute to th e hospital, the

Holzer Medical Center.

EMT , in the rear (patient

Eme rgency teleph one ca lls

compartment ) can talk via

will be made directly to the

radio to the emergency room
or even to the patient 's
physician. Similar operations

central headquarters. The
di spatcher will, after receiving

are see n on tv 's " Emergency."

a call, use built·in screen and
projector and area maps to
pinpoint the exact location o[
the emergency .
The dispatcher will contact
the .squad on a direct radio
channel via the microwave
loop. If he fails to get a

According to Mike Maloski,
Motorola CommWJications, the

communication system has
four major functions:

.

'

' 1~· ., 1:~:,....~ ,~. . ' "l . . '~:
I

··

. .•,
.v

,

'N

i..C:::'c:~

\ •

r ..

. :

"

Cost of
(Continued from Page 1)
grocery prices increased 0.9 per
cent. There were rises of 4.9
per cent for cereals and bakery
products, 3.5 per cent for fruits
and vegetables, and 2.8 per
cent for dairy products.
The BI...S said the November
price rise .cut sharply into the
purchasing power of the average weekly wage of rank and
me workers.
Average wages dropped 3
cents to $147.60, but the actual
purchasing power of gross
average weekly earnings declined 0.5 per cent. Purchasing
power of weekly payments
paychecks, after deductions for
federal taxes and social security, fell 0.6 per cent for a
married worker with three
dependents.
Over the past year, average
gross weekly earnings have
suffered a 1.9 per cent loss in
pw-chasing power and spendable earning~ have lost 3.3 per
cent in pw-chasing power.

loop connecting other counties;

it offers quick emergency

medical services. and is· used
for AHI':HN - Area hospital
emergency radio network.
The system's dispatchers
have over 220 hours of training .
The communication program
is being studied as a model
project over the United States.
Another speaker Thursday
. was Dr. Don campbell, con. - swner education director for
SEOEMS.
Dr: Campbell emphasized
the importance of working with
the public stressing how the
system should be utilized,
giving proper information and
the importance o[ getting the
public to use the system's new
toll-[ree number, 1-800-282-

'

i' l'

it is

centralized for the SEOEMS
headquarters in Gallipolis, it
has the micro~wave backbone

ioJII·ioJII·. .,. ......,........ .......,,...,.......,...,.............,...........,...,...,...,...,...,,....,,.,........,.,.................._

tor the entire communication
system and central SEOEMS
Headquarters will be held at 4
p.m . Wednesday , Jan . 9.
Governor John Gilligan will be
the featured speaker.
Governor Gilligan will also
be the guest speaker that same
evening for the annual board of
trustees meeting at the Holzer
Medical Center. The event will
be held at the Rio Grande
College Cafeteria .
It was also announ ced that
since
SEOEMS
began
operations, the squads have
made 3,200 runs; 13 stations
have been opened, and 20
vehicles are running. Over 200
persons are employed and 372
have been give n special
training as EMTs.

.. ~

: ..

7777.

Mrs. Cross announced that
former dedication ceremonies

'

Geneva
(Continued from Page 1)

Cheshire woman zs killed

Concert well-received
The Mei~s High School
Concert Band directed by
n ... :,J ht Goins presented a well
\ A Christmas concert in
,. ,.
Larry
Morrison
-\ ttdJlurium Thursday night
Before the final number of
the presentation , Connie
(;&lt;'lrnes presented the director
with a girt from band members. In a short talk, Goins said
thot there are only 17 senior
members of the band. He
pointed out thai he is at.
tempting to add new tn·
strumentation and that the
band now has four baritones
and hopes to add more next
year. He introduced assistant
director, Fred Ruth, who was
in the audience.
Goins staled that he had
selected more difficult music

for the concert in order to
provide a grea ter challenge to
the bandsmen rather than to

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharged I
Brian Armes, Margaret
Brackman, David Bradshaw,
Beatri ce Burgess, Bernice
Clair, Story Cool, Deborah
Fraley, May Hall , Scott
Hineman, Elizabeth Jordan,
Albert Kuhn, Sarah Ousley,
Walter
Smith,
Ronald
Stephens, Eules Turner, Mary
Wiley and Roger Wilson .
(Births)
Mr . and Mrs. Harley Crouse,
a son, Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs.
Albert Matney , a son,
Gallipolis .

'

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Ronald
Bostic, Gallipolis Ferry, W.
Va.; Lenora Vanderslice,
Middleport ; Paul Manuel,
Racine ; Helen Knapp, New
Haven ;
Dottie
Nelson,
Pomeroy; Rodney Roush,
Pomeroy i Mayme Custer,
Syracuse; Florence Smith ,
. Racine .
DISCHARGES Carsey .·

Kenneth

have selected simpler music to
make the concert "sound
better" .
Soloists were April Fraser,
Brian Keesee, Ingrid Hawley,

KC board
buys new

Melanie Burt and Diana
Carsey.
•
Selections included "A
Christmas Festival," 11 The
Lighter Side of Christmas,''
"Overture . to the Messiah' "'~
"McArthur Park," 11 Chrisf.mal
Pastorale," " America, the
Beautiful", "Do You Hear
What I Hear?", "Snow Bells'\
.hThe Men of La Mancha" and
Christmas Music for Winds.

•
eqmpment
Kyger Creek's Local Board
o[ Education Thursday night in
special session approved the
purchase of equipment for the
district's three buildings.
The board voted lo buy an
electrostatic copier, stage
curtains and a new bell..-inging
system for the high school; a
spirit duplicator, electric
typewriter and bell system for
the elementary buildings.
John Scott of Cheshire was
employed on a fulltime basis as
custodian at the high school.
In other matters, the board
discussed the transfer o[ a
teacher from Cheshire-Kyger
to Addaville Elementary
School and a student
disciplinary problem.
TWO ASSISTED
SEOEMS made two runs
Thursday, at noon to transport
Lena Wood, a medical pat!ent,
[rom the Arcadia Nursing
Home to Holzer Medical
Center, and at 3:45 to the Nora
Clatworthy, also a medical
patient, from Syracuse Nusing
Home to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

CHESHTRF: - Gallia County's 1973
Christmas Holidays wert• Ju;trred by;~ two
car smash-up Friday at 3:55 p.m. which
claimed the life of a 28-year uld Cheshire
motller and lert two persons in critlt'al
condition at the Holzer Medical Center.
The victim was identified as Mrs.
Carol Little, 28 , Cheshire, an employee of
tl1e Gallipolis Parts Warehouse Company .
Listed in critical condition Saturday
afternoon in the Holzer Medical Center
were Mary Beebe, 22, Cheshire, a
passenger in the .victim's car, and Kenneth
A. Wroblewski, 31, Rl. 3, Gollij&gt;olis, driver
of the other car.
' Mrs . Beebe suffered fractures of both
legs, a broken arm, multiple Lacerations
and abrasions. Wroblewski suffe red
broken ribs, bruises and abrasions. They
were taken to U1e hospital by Lhe Gallia ER squad.
According to the Gallia-Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol, the Wroblewski
vehicle went left of the center striking the
north-bound Little car . The case is still

PICKUP CHANGED
Residents
served
by
Scientific Sanitation Inc., are
reminded that if they receive
trash pickup service normally
on Monday, the pickup for the
next two weeks will be on
Saturday instead , Those
having pickup service nor...
mally on Tuesday will have
pickup service on Wednesday
for the next two weeks.
LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in · down·
town Pomeroy at 11 a.m,
Friday was 25 degrees under
!'
cloudy skies.

••
•

Partly cloudy and cold
tonight and Saturday. Low 2 to
8 above zero in the northwest
and !0 to 20 elsewhere. Highs
Saturday in the 20s.

imder scrutiny by 153 news
r,:~~;;e~~~~sos~~d been [risked

·

_ _ __

~~
~

z!l!!!z

. ·

IIRRI

pomeroy
rutland

.

p.o meroy
national

bank

the bank of
the century
established 1872
-!lor

FDIC

·A

hometown friend.

'

I

{

WASHINGTON (UP!') - · congress
adjourned for the year Saturday in a mood
of weary acrimony, with the House and
Senate blaming each other and the White
House for President Nixon's faiiW'e to win
broad emergency powers to cope with the
energy crisis.
The energy bill , which Senate
Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield once
declared must be passed before Congress
could go heme [or Christmas, sank in a
legislative quagmire during a marathon
session that ended at 1:32 a.m. EST
Saturday.
· The House, rejecting a pared down
Senate compromise on the energy bill,
refused even to adopt an adjournment
resolution during the postmidnight
session.
But it relented in early afternoon, when
Mansfield gave up the fight for passage as
futile, ru1d the Senate swiftly agreed with
the House to quit until the second session o[
the 93rd Congress convenes Jan. 21.
When they return next month, the
legislators will be faced once again with
the emergency energy bill that ran
aground Friday over a proposal to curb
wind[all oil corporation profits stemming
[rom -the fuel shortages.
The President issued a conciliatory
statement expressing regret that "during
this critical period just ahead," Congress
had failed to give him the authority he
requested on Nov. 8.
But Nixon said that as a former member
of Congress, he understood "how difficult
it is in the closing hours o[ a session to
obtain agreement on controversial,
complex legislation." He said be hop~
Congress would move promptly to approve
a "fair and effective" bill when it returns
next =nth.
Mansfield criticized White House aides
[or trying to "dictate" the terms of the

zs. )

TABLECOVERS
SOUTHERN OffiO cOAL CO. EMPLOYES, Point Rock, in lieu of sending
Christmas cards to each other agreed to contribute .to a !lind to provide Christmas
remembrances for children of the Meigs County Children's Home. The idea was
that of William Hylton and Levering Palmer, employes of the coal firm . A total of
$107,50 was raised. The presentation was made Friday arternoon. Children pic·
lured from left to right are Herbie, Becky , Mary and Tom Mitchum. Adults [rom
the lefl are Meigs County Commissioners Henry Wells and Robert Clark; Ellen
Rice, coal company employe who made the presentation to Mrs. Genevieve
Harvey, home matron.

OUR REGULAR 4.50 TABLE

Free With Purchase

Ten candidates .fail
to declare expenses

of a Decorator Round Tablecover.
Table has simulated walnut. wood
grain print on strong corrugated
paperboard. Stands 26" high and is
20" in diameter. Supports over 100
lbs . Makes a great . gift for
·Christmas.

Special Purchase

\

GALLIPOLIS- Ten candidates in the
November General Election failed to We ·
·expense statements prior to Friday's 4
p.m. deadline. .
.
Disqualified from seeking public o[flce

•••

· ·a..ded
Grover uow
1: '

.

AEP photo bid

•

Reg. s3.50 Embroidered Teny Scuff
Sizes small , medium, large in white, pink or
peacock.

MIDDLEPORT - The American
Electric Power Service corp, of New York
has awarded the bid for construction
progt'eSll photographer at the new Mar·
tlnka Coal Mine near Fairmont, W.Va., to
Ken Grover, local photographer,
Grover operates photographic studios
in Middleport and Gallipolis. He has
worked for the American Electric Power
Service Corp, on several construction
projects Including the cardinal Plant at
Brilliant, the Musklngum Plant at
Beverly, Big Sandy at Louisa, Ky,, Amos
Plant at Winfield, W, Va.; the Mitchell
PlantatMoundsville, W.Va., and !he local
Gavin Plant. Grove has also photographed
progt'eSll at the Musklngum mines, Meigs
Mines l and 2, and the conveyor system
linking !he Gavin Plant with the Meigs
Mine near Salem Center.
Photographa are taken on all projects
to show !he progress, equipment installations and design changes.

Sale $1.99 pair

Bring Your Chlldre.n To See Santa Claus At Our
Toy Store In the '-'lddle Block Tonight and
Saturday 6 to 8 PM .

•

Your Christmas Shopping Headquarters

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY-

-..........................................,.......,_ _ _ _- - - - ·· - ·· .....
.. ---~~ designate William Saxbe in the
·
Ohio legislature.
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Decorator ·Round

98

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Familie.~

PRICE 20 CENTS

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Adjournment comes midst weary,
acrimony among Senate, Hou~e,
President Nixon over failure

CHRISTMAS SPECIAL!

We ' ve just received a
lovely selection of colorful
decorator
prints
in
assorted fabrics in 72"
Round Tablecovers.

Your Invited Guest
R euching More
Tl11m 12,000

Congress quits,
no energy hill

SHOPPING DAYS
TO CHRISTMAS

r

of the bridge. "
Forty-six persons were killed when the
span collapsed into the Ohio River at Pt.
Pleasant on Dec. 15, 1967.
Among other points to be decided,
according to the attorneys, are whether
the state wa s negligent for no reviewing
the bridge's design from 1941 through 1967
and if it failed to adequately inspect and
maintain the span.
Trial date on the first claim has been
se t for March 18.

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 23, 1973

Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

·~~;i~n~

to present their cases in
speeches originally scheduled
for Saturday.
The
Arab statements
followed ' those o[ Waldheim,
Soviet Foreign Minister·Andrei
A. Gromyko and U.S.
Secretary of State Henry A.
Kissinger, leaving Israel to be
granted a special a[ternoon
session to make .its . presentation.
The opening session lasted
an hour and 29 minutes.
The seating dispute in the
· anterooms o[ the Palais des
Nations, former home of the
League of Nations, underscored the problems facing
progress in tbe talks, expected
to resume in January after
reeessing this weekend.
The council chamber where
the session took place was the
site o[ two previous end-thewar agreements, on Indochina
in 1954 and Laos in 1961, that
failed to produce peace.
capsule summaries of the
morning's opening Speeches :
- Waldheim said that if there
is no progress in the talks, then
"there will be ever-present
danger that fighting will break
out again." .
~romyko said that the
Soviet Union, while not aiming
for the destruction of Israel,
supports the Arab stand for
Israel's withdrawal [rom all
occupied Arab territory and
the solving of the national
aspirations of the Palestiniaru;.
- Kissinger proposed a four·
step program whereby the
current cease-fire would be
observed, Arab and Israeli
forces would be disengaged,
Israel would withdraw from
Arab land in exchange [or full
peace, and there would be
' ''realistic negotiation.''
- Fahmi and his Jordanian
counterpart, Zeid Rifai, called
for a total Israeli withdrawal
and the establishment of a
Palestinian nation. They said
the Arabs would not accept
' . country-by-country · settlements with Israel but
wanted one package deal.
The original plan had called
for only Waldheim, Gromyko
and Kissinger to speak in the
first session ..
IN LINE FOR JOB
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Columbus, Ohio, attorney John
A. Chester is one o[ two men
under consideration for deputy
attorney generaL Chester
served with Attorney General.

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CHARLESTElN, W. Va . (UP!) Eleven issues have been stipulated as the
basis of legal argun1ent by attorneys in the
trial of $6.3 million in claims [iled against ·
the state in connection with the 1967 Silver
Bridge disaster .
In a stipulation filed with the State
Court of Claims, attorneys agreed one or
the principle points was to determine
whether the state was nejlligent for [ailure
to "warn th e general public of the
potential, discoverable or known dangers

------------------------------------------------------------------------Pomeroy.Middleport

VOL b . NO. 47

SHOP TONIGHT UNTIL 9 PM
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point in bridge suits

3 SECTIONS

An Egyptian spokesman
1
a
victory' for cairo, along with

~!!~~ement h:s

TWO GIRI...S FOUND
POMEROY - Meigs County Sheri[[
Robert C. Hartcn bac h's department
reported that two girls reported missing
[or severa l days we1·e apprehended
Saturday morniug and turned over to
juvenile authoritis.

may call at the funeral home today from 10
a.rn . until 9 p.m.
The patrol investigated 12 accidents
Friday, four at one location on Sanders
Hill. The wrecks were blamed on Icy road
conditions.
The only other injury mishap occurred
at 7: 2!i p.m. on Rt. 553, one and three
tenths miles west of Rt. 7 where Kenneth
R. Williams, 16, Rt. 1, Crown City, lost
control of his car on the ley highway.
The auto skidded off the roadway into
an embankment and tree. Williams was
slighUy injured .

State's negligence key

30 PAGES

EL.B.ERFE LOS IN PO MEROY

room and took their places

GALLIPOLIS - Postmaster Richard
(Dick 1 Bane announced Saturday that the
Gallipolis Post Office window will close at
noon on Monday. Bane added, however ,
tha1 normal mail delivery on all city and
rural routes will be made, and that
collection and dispatching of mail will be
made on a normal basis.
The post office will be closed all day on
Christmas day Tuesday. Normal service
will resume on Wednesdey, Bane concluded.

grandparents, Mr . and Mrs. Oakey
Johru;on, Gallipolis, her mother and
falher-in-law, Mr . and Mrs. Melvin Lillie,
Chcshire,lhree nieces .lnd one nephew and
several aunlo;; and uncles.
Mrs. Little was a member of the Firs t
Baptist Church, Gallipolis, and had been
employed for two years at the Gallipolis
Parts Warehouse Co.
Funeral servi,ces will be held Monday
at 10:30 a.m. at the Rawlings Coats
Funeral Home with the Hev. Bruce Unroe
of Gallipolis, officia ting . Burial will be in
Gravel Hill Cemetery at Cheshire. Friends

Devoted To The Greater Middle Olrio Yallev

green-carpeted conference,.------------------------------------------..
conferees walked into the

w&lt;:~ s

tmts

Mostly cloudy and not as cold
Sunday and Monday with a
chance of rain north portion
Monday. Highs Sunday in the
305 and low 40s. tows Sunday
night in the upper 20s and low
30s. Highs Monday in the upper
30s and 40s.

Weather

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Weather

CLOSING TWO DAYS
Meigs County's barbershops
will be Closed all day Tuesday
and Wednesday, Dec . 25 and 26.

i nvt&gt; ~ tigati o n .

Windows to close
at noon on Monday

NO PAPER TUESDAY
Publisher Richard S. Owen an·
nounced Saturday that the Daily
Tribune and Dally Sentinel wlll go to
press early Monday, and that no papers
will be published on Tuesday In order to
permit employees to observe the
Christmas holiday.

SEVENTII FATALITY - Mrs. Carol Little of Rt. 1, Cheshire, was fatally
ihjured in a two car accident Friday afternoon on Rt. 7, north of the Kyger Creel&lt;
Power Plant. Her compact car (above) was struck by an auto driven by Kenneth
Wroblewski, 31, of Rl. 3, Gallipolis. Wroblewski and a passenger in the LiLLie car,
22-year old Mary Beebe, Rt. I, Cheshire, were listed in critical condltion Sa'turday
at the Holzer Medical Center .

. HOURS SET
Window service at the
Middleport and Pomeroy Post'
Offices Monday, Dec. 24, will
be from 8 a.m. to noon . Ali
other services will be · on
'
regular schedule.

Gallia 's
seventh traffic fawlity of the year.
Mrs. l,iltle was born Feb. 19, 1945 in
Gallipolis. She is survived by her husband,
Wade Lee Little, one son, Timothy Wade,
age five , her parents, Calvin and Dorothy
John•on Clark , Gallipolis, Rt. 2; three
sisters, Mrs. Gary (Janel) Walker, Mrs .
Arthur (Joyce) Clark and Mrs. Steve
(Susan l Sirback, all of Gallipolis, l1cr
undpr

for the next five years were Alex Roese,
James A. Caldwell, Don Leon Russell, Carl
D. Walter, Freeman Owens, John Beaver,
Lucian Palmer, Marie Hall , Dorothy Hall
and Louis R. Ford .
Candidates filing and their expenses are
as follo":s .: .Richard B. Simpson, $56.92;
Homer V11ltoe, $3; Irvm Potter, $25; Paul
Porter, $23.60; James Robert Cochran,
Jr., $28; Frank H. Mills III, $58.93; Ronnie
Delaney, $2.20; Lawrence Craig, $5; J. A.
French, $28.50; Marlin G. Kerns, _$312.48;
Committee for Better Schools, $811.20;
Kenneth Swain, $18; Paul Pope, $68.20;
·Cecil Ray Rice, $68.30 ; Robert Ruf[,
$133,04; Paul E. Wagner, $44; Murray E.
Church, $31.84; A. G. Henson, $13.32;
RIO GRANDE - Bob Evans Farm
Kenneth Alley, $37 ; Coy Barr, $15; Robert
Haskins, 1!6.94; Gilbert Johnsori, $12.50; Foods, Inc., a subsidiary o[ Bob Evans
Charles E. Cox, $20; J . C. Mitchell, $46.48; Farms, Inc., of Columbus, Ohio, has begun
Charles M. VanSickle, $15.50; Charles construction o[ its Hrst Bob Evans
Martin, $10; J.E: Cremeens, $40; Lewis Restaurant in Kentucky, The restaurant Is
Sheets, $41.50; Marvin Ours, $19; Paul located at !he intersection of U. S. Route 42
and Interstate 75 in Florence, which is
Rossite~, $1.75; Lawrence Marti, $30; J ,
within
the greater Cincinnati Metropolltan
W, Goodlin, $21.80; Bruce Stout, $55;
Cordie Smith, $52.66; Jack Camden, area. It is !he fourteenth restaurant in the
$12.84; William D. Petrie, $8.80 ; Franklin . chain, which includes units throughout
. •
Garlic, $1.75; C. William l'l'ice, $31; C. Ohio.
According to Bob Evans, president o[
B. Clary, $2; Virgil Wamsley, $20; Owen
Denney, $10; Henry Van Sickle, $64.33; the p:uent company, the Florence unit is
Earl Shaver, $2!i; Billy Hale, $5; Ralph E. scheduled to open in June, 1974, and will
Angel, $11.44; Ralp~ Miller,. $15; D. W. seat 129. The architect of the 4,200-square
Dewitt, $16.82; Leo Swisher, $77.90; S. 0 . foot restaurant is Frederlck D. Wllliams o[
Columbus; the general eontractor is J. B.
!Continued on Page 2)
Schmitt of Cincinnati.
·

First restaurant in

Kentucky announced

energy bill to the Senate.
House Democratic Leader Thomas P.
O'Neill said "the White House has wilrked
against us ever since we . went to con·
[erence with the Senate and even in the
Sonate yesterday."
In an effort to overcome a filibuster led
by members [rom oil-producing states, the
Senate elifuinated the wind[all profits
section and sent a bare·bones, short-term
bill' to the House.
·
But the House refused to accept it, along
with several alternatives. Rep. Harley
Staggers, D-W . Va., the House floor
manager of the bill, complained that the
Senate was ''using us as doonnats and I,
for
of it." .
Senate Republican Leader Hugh Scott
blamed the House for not accepting his
chamber's watered.P,own version,
claiming "we've legislated, we've passed

one, am tired

a bi1l."
"The House is acting out of pique more
than anything else," Scott said. " It has let
its personal [eelings interfere."
Looking ahead, Sen. Howard Baker, R-·
Tenn., told his colleagues that "we must
not harden into polarization between the
House and the Senate, between Congress
and the White House.
"When we come back, I urge that all o[
us put aside the emotions of the moment,
dampen the fires," Baker added. ''We
can't a[ford the luxury o[ winning or
losing.''
Many members of Congress expressed
belie[ that the President already had the
power to ration gasoline and to implement
other conservation meaSures to reduce
[uel consumption without legislative
authority.

Eight families are
·assured of food
GALLIPOLIS - At least eight indigent Gallia County families were
assured of a Merry Christmas Friday.
Members of the Operating Engineers,
Union Boiler Service Contractors, Gavin
Plant, raised $300 and turned it over to a
Gallia County agency antl asked that it be
used to assure needy [amilies of a happy
Christmas.
Gordon Harris is master mechanic
and Hoadley Garlic union steward of the
donating organization.

Bloodmobile coming
. GALLIPOLIS - The Huntington
Regional Bloodmobile will visit Gallia
County from noon lo 6 p.m. Thursday at
the Grace United Methodist Church.
·
Mrs, Thelma Shaver, Gallia County
Red Cross blood cbalrman said Saturday
that blood is the nicest gi[ts Gallians could
give to their fellowmen .

SACKING CANDY - Approximately 1,600 pounds of candy were sacked
Saturday for 1,800 residents of the Gallipolis State Institute. According to Carl
Waugh of the GSI Nursing Service staff, 100 patients will be spending Christmas
with their families. In addition to the candy furnished by the state, the nursing
service has been busy shopping and wrapping gifts for tbe residents. Sacking the
candy Saturday morning, 1tor, were Ercell Day, James Johnson, Frank McCalla,
Thomas Siders, Richard Mayo, John Lambert, Robert Wood and Gar I Waugh.

Pistol discharges into
leg of hi-fi canier
POMEROY - The Meigs County
Sheriff's Department was busy Friday
night investigating an·accidental shooting,
a hit-skip mishap, and a single car accident in which no one was injured.
At 6:36 p.m. the department was
called to the home of Osby Martin,
Pomeroy, Rt. 3.
Martin, carrying a hl·fl set int&lt;&gt; his
home, went to set it down when a .2!i
calibre automatic pistol he was carrying In
his· pocket accidentally discharged. The
bullet hit him in the hilt leg above the knee.
Martin was taken to Holzer Medical
Center by the Pomeroy ER squad.
At 4:30p.m. on Royal Oak Park Road
a truck ripped out a fence on the . Ivan

Wells property, continued on and tore
down a telephone pole and wires. The
driver faDed to stop. The Incident is under
investigation.
At 6:55 p.m. In Salisbury Twp. on
county road 76, two tenths of a mile from
the Pomeroy corporation line, Richard 0.
Friend, Pomeroy, Rt. 3, traveling south,
escaped possible serious Injury when his
car rolled over four times.
Friend said he was.blinded by the lights
of an oncoming car, pulled too far to the
right, and slipped over an embankment.
The · car turned over four Urnes and
stopped in a strip mine pit. There was light
damage to the car and no Injuries or
·
arrests.

Frecker·is· president
POMEROY- The Meigs County 4,H
Advisory Committee bas elected Charles
Frecker its president for 1974. Other of.
n~ers named were Dorsey Jordan, vice·
president; lf16rid Hawley, secretary, and
Debbie Windon, treasurer.
C. E. Blakeslee, county agricultural
agent, explained the duties of the Advisory
Committee and its collstitution and gave
each member a copy of the constitution.
Staff reports were given by Marta
Guilkey, home economics agent, concerning the junior .leadership program,

and by Blakeslee, on formation of new 4-H
clubs In the couitty.
Other business taken up by the committee Including planning of !he 1974 4-H
calendar, discussion of !he county fair and
planning a boat trip. Others present were
Donna Thornton, Eddie Kennedy, Mandie '
Rose, Niese! Duv$11, Evelyn Well, Lester
Jeffers, Grant Johnson, Brian Windon,
Barbara Jordan and Ingrid Hawley, Exofficio memembers present were Pansy
Jordan, Marta Guilkey, and C. E. Blakeslee .

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