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I

1o _ The Dalb Sentinel, Middleport-Pom~ro,y, 0., November 13, 1968

. . . . ..

WEDNES:&gt;AY
POMEROY
Cf!A PTEH
80,
Royal Arch Masons, stated meeting, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. at

the Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Companions urged to attend.
SOUTHERN BAND Jloosters,
7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Racine
High School.
HOLIDAY BAZAAR, Trini~
UnllL-d Church or Christ, sponsored by Women's Guild; lunch eon at noon, homemade gift it-

ems and novelties, Daked goods.
OHIO ETA Pill Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, 8:15 p.m.
Wedncsd!lJ', Columbus and South·
ern Ohio Electric· Co., social
room. RC\'. Bill Perrin guest

speaker.
WHITE ROSE LODGE 291, at

llle American Legion Hall In
Middleport, 1:30 p.m. Wednes day .
THURSDAY
POMERO\' _ MEIGS COUNTY Young Democrat Club's reg-

ular meeting Thursday, Nov. 14.
Democrat HQ, Pomeroy.
AFTERNOON CffiCLE, Mid.
dleport Heath United Methodist
Church, 2 p.m. Thursday; Mrs.
Clara Hennesy. Mrs . Nan Moore,
program le~:~.ders; Mrs. Grace
French, Mrs. Frances Wilson,
Mrs. Lorena [Iavis , hoetesses.
MEIGS CHAPTER DAV will
observe Veterans Day with 6:30
p m dinner at hall in Pome -

r~." Thursda,}'. Veterans of all

wars and familie s invited.

ments.
pAST OFFICERS,

Ra c i ne
Chapter 134, O.E.S. Bp.m. Thursday, home or Mrs.
Grimm;
Mrs. Jane Hill asststing hostess.
FRIDAY
THIRD FRIDAY Club, 7:30
. Friday night, home ol Mrs. Everett Dailey, Ann St., Pomeroy.
FALL FESTI'V AL, Salisbury
Elementary School, Friday, 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. spon!Jored by
P. T. A. Door prizes, rood an:l
game booths.
MASON _ The Ma!IOn Mothers
Club Christmas Bazaar Nov. 15
and 16, Muon Methodist Church;
on Friday, 10 a.m. to 8p.m .;Saturda.y, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m
Tbb year's bazaar reatures
a sweet shop, white elephant
sale, and Christmas and miscellaneous handmade i t e m s.
Free corree will be served The
public is welcome.

&amp;:rt

SATURDAY

BEAN SLIPPER, 4 to 6 p.m .,
Saturda,y , Southern High School ,
Racine. Sandwiches, pie, corn
bread, beans, drinks. Sponsored by Future Business Leaders
of America.
BAKE SALE and llazaar, Portland United Methodist Church
W.S.C.S.• Saturday at the Duke
Cleaners in Pomeroy from 9 a .
m. to 5 p.m .
BAKE SAlE will be held by
Ule junior auxiliary members of
F'eeney - Bermett Post 128, American Legion, !J a.m Saturday
at Dudley e. Florist in Middleport.

Joe Struble of Drew Webster
Post 39, American Legion, s}:H)ke
on "Americanism" when t h. e
Pomeroy Elementary PT 1\ met

Monday night at the school.

War I 'ieteran, a guest.
Colors were advanced by Drew
Webster Post and the pledge to
the flag was led by Don Hunnel,

Recital Theme
Is Based Upon
American Lore
"America of Thee I Sing"' will
be the theme of a recital to be
presented by the pupils of Mrs.
Paul Powell, New Haven, at 2:30
p.m. 9mda,y in the Wahama High
School caleteria.
The recital will be presented
in four segments, "Indian Mu sic " ••Stars and &amp;ripes, •• ••Dixiel~nd and Folk Tunes," a n d
.. Americans and the Tunes They
Enjoy,,, the latter in tribute to
servicemen and women.
Organ, piano, voice, and accordion selections will be included 00 the pro,~am . Awards
for outstanding work over the
past year will be presentedtothe
students by Mrs. Powell. The
recital is open to the public.
There is no admission charge.

ASK TO WED

PT. PLEASANT - Three couples have ~tpplied for marriage
licenses in the office of the county clerk. They w e r e Joseph
Franklin Greenlee, 79, Charles ton, and Cora Bell Sommer. 78,
Leon; Carmine Allen Borgan,
22, Columbus, and PhyiUs Ann
Fry, 22, Columbus, and Jack
MOND.\'r'
CANDYSI"RIPER S, Monday, 6:- Reitmire, 21, Hartford, and Kar30 p m. at Veterans Memorial en Teresa Greene, 16, Columbus.
Hospital .

Church Class Meeting
Planned December 16
The Christmas project of re-

membering re:'!idents of l he
Meigs County Infirmary will be
continued tt1is year by the Daughters of Ruth l"lass of tt1c Pomeroy United Methodist Church.
Meeting Mondajo· nigtlt at t h e
churct1 for tt1eir annual Tllanksgi\'ing dinner, the members decided to select a resident at the
county home for a holiday remembrance . Plans were made for
the Christmas meeting to be held
on December 16 at the home or
MIBS Lydia Ebersbach.
Members responded to roll
calJ with comments on "Wh.y I
Am Thankful." There was group
singing of .. Come Thou Thankrul People, Come.'' Miss Nelle
Bing presented devotions using
scripture from Acts 17 and the
theme, "Sticks and Stones." She
commented, "We as offsprings
~ God should not atLempt to

manipulate the will of God by
parading our \'irtues, but go back
to God for guidance.'' The group
sang, "We Thank Thee Lord."
The Thanksgiving program was
presented by Mrs. Ethel 5:lewart, president. Readings included .. Thank Goodness., by Mrs.
Dessie Patterson; ..Being HapPY wtth Uttle" by Miss l.¥dia
Ebersbach; .. Givln' Thanks" by
Mrs. Glen Hiles; "Our Thankfulness for Freedom" by Mrs.
Eva Alward, and "Being Happy
Always,'' by Miss Ada Genheimer .
A poem entitled '"'Thanksgiving" composed by Mrl. Grace
Gloeckner, unable to attend OOe
to illness, was read by Mislil
Lucretia Genhelmer. Mrs. Stewart read "TWO Thankful Frogs"
and the Lord'lil Prayer ln wdson concluded the meeting.

I

....,.

-.....

..
~

ttsm•• and she gave a reading
entitled "MJ' Son" and concluded with a pr.a,yer by George

Washington.
The ~et Da.v and Self-Denial
program was conducted by Miss
Bess Sanborn who spoke about
mission work ln China and the
problems of TokYo, the largest
city in the world. She reported
that the offering this .vear goes
to urban ministry In Asia and
educational work in the United
States.
During the business meeting
conducted by Mrs. Nan Moore,
members were remi.1tded of the
holiday bazaar scheduled for Dec.
s. Mrs. Moore announced that
the cookbooks will be avall~le
in early December .
A report on the recent World
Community Day observance was
made by Mrs. David Entsminger tile was gi'ien a vote of
thanks from the w.s.c.s. ror
having ser'ied for 10 years as
key woman from the H eat h
Church. Mrs. James Criswell
was appointed to the position.
Mrs. Perry Mitch. Mrs. Wal ter lb,yes and Mrs. Keruleth Byer
served refreshments.

tin .

Mr. and Mrs. c. H. Wtse,
Jr. of Waverly spent th9 weekend at their Middleport home.
Mr. and Mrs. Everett Bach~
ner alld daughters, Comie and
Mn. Karen Brown, were weekend vistton in Columbus with
Mlsa Mary Schaaf, Mr. and Mrs.
Edison Wessa, and Mr. and Mrs.
William Moore.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kessinger returned Saturday from a se" era! days' visit in Columbus. They
went especially to visit M r s.
Kathern Roush Smith, who remains a patient at Mount Car-

Mn. RI,Y Riggs f1 Pomero.v
relurned Tueoday from &amp;loth

Mrs. Thomas Schoonover en- Thomas Werry.
Others presenting gib to Mhs
tertained recertly at the POJneroy United Methodist Church s• Crew were Mrs. Robert Miller,
clal room with a bridal shower Mrs. Bobb) Foster, Mrs. F'loyd
honoring Miss Pamela Crew. Harrison, Mrs. Paul Eichinger,
bride-elect of Airman Donald E. Mrs. V. D. Edwards, Mrs, Raymon:l
smith, Mrs. Charles
Napper.
Spires,
Mrs.
David Reed, Miss
Guests were Mrs. James SlsShirley
Ash.
Mrs.
Tommy Sim~
son, Mrs. John Sisson, Mrs.
mons,
Mrs.
Jerry
Schoonover.
Charles DUI, Mrs. George FolMrs.
Kermit
Walton,
Mrs. Lesmer, Mrs. Don H, Miller, Mrs.
ter
Haning,
Mrs.
John
Beaver,
Richard Well and Amy, Mrs. Les
Mrs.
Karl
Krautt.er,
Mrs.
Terry
Price, Mrs. Orville Napper, Mrs.
Ohlinger,
Mrs.
Denver
Kapple,
Charles Miller' Mrs. Lawrence
Morarity, Mn. Lowell Winge~t, Mrs. Russell Moore, Mrs. Jolm
Mrs. Leo Crew, Miss Robin TW'nbull, Mrs. Marvin King,
Crew, Miss TammieSchoooover, Mrs. Trell Schoenle~, and Mrs.
Miss DebbieSchoonoverardMrs. Richard Fet~.

e

The term "Iron Curtain" came

Point where 1he visited 'htr son-

Into .POJ]U.lar use atter Winston
Churchill declared in 1946 that

'

the Soviet Union had rung down
an UJron Curtain" across East ~
em Europe

Make Elberfelds 'In
Pomeroy
Your
Shopping Center
LOW
LOW

BRUSSELS (UPO - The United States and its allies today dlseuaaed
ftring nuclear "warning shots" over the Mediterranean aoo Baltic Seas in
case of a Soviet bloc attack on Western Europe, diplomatic sources said.
British Defense Secretary Denis Healey proposed such action dw-ing the
opening round of an Atlantic Alliance strategy session making plans In view
of the Soviet bloc inwsion of Czechoslovakia, the allied sources said.
The conference sources said Healey suggested the firing as a possible
deterrenL They said he proposed they be tired in a "demonstrative man-

PRICES
AT

ner." apparently aimed at warning but not hitti~ an,y Communist aggression force. West Gennan Defense MJnister Gerhard Schroeder was reportlid to have warned the conference that the use of Nike and other nuclear
antiaircraft mtssiles - apparently against a non-nuclear attack- rrUght escalate the irKenaity or any conflict in Europe,
ln Bonn, West German, American and other allied omcials were re-

VISITS GRANDMOTHER
George Ginther, a student at
Ohio State University, spent the
weekend in Pomeroy with his
grandmother, Mrs. Rose Ginther. Pomeroy R. D. Other recent guests of Mrs. Ginther were
Lelah Sharp, Mr. and Mrs. Clar ence 9\arp, Madeline and Jimmy
of Cleveland, and Mr and Mrs.
Albert sparks of Hayden.,.ille,

NOVEMBEH 13
NOT OPEN

THLRS, • Fill -SAT.
NOVEMBER l4 • 15 - 16
"CUSTEH OF Ttl E.: WE.'•iT"
{Technicolor)

Robert Shaw-Ty Hardin
CO LORCARTOON:
Dog Snah·her
SHOW STARTS 7 l', M.

Tradt

quislle adt for
eit her Mother or
Grandmother, it is

personalized with
the birthstones of
'your c~:;~.._,.

Big voluu! Nrl•m holf ~rnd full s li~s ond
owns
ond Bab~ Doll po jGmot, fo_ncy
0.
-- ~ .. 1..,, siJel. Your d1or.:e:
tnmmlt'd ,

1~

ea.

LADIES' WHITE

HALF
SLIPS

LOU
... PILLOWS

Big
BonGnz G
borgoin buy
eosy c"'"' while
cnnonholf•lip•
with
ey.,let
tri m, sizes S·M·

L.

Shr.dd•d foam
lllled
lounw•r
~lllow• 1 FJr-:ttr
Eorly "m•ncon
print patt•rns.

Soft vinyl uppers, flexible
moulded soles. Slip·on styles
in block, brown and Ioden .
Sites 5-10.

ry.

· "You wUJ pt my insurance ao:ll hope It will make "'' to you some
for whit I cost yw.
nWhen I lett I owed seventy..five cents a~ the _poolroom and a
dcilar to Mike. When you get the money l want you to pay these bills
tor me. Maybe you had better pay a little extra for interest for
the boys might think it was coming after such a long wait.

WlmOUT FURTHER COMMENT, this brings us to the addresses
for aeveral aervicemen who would like to hear from Meigs Countians
durtqr the holiday season - or probably anytime for that matter:
SP4 Mark E. DaYis 1 US 51879699, 55 MP Co.; APO San Franelsco. CAUL, 96358. (Mark ls aerv1rw in Korea with the military
polke.)
Stephen K. HeOOenon. RA 11551117, 6tJ.7th Engineer Co. P. L.,
APO san Francilco, Calif., 96232, (Ste'ie is serving In Thalland.)
Lt. Barry L. Watson, 05250468, 515th Transportation Co.,
APO Son Francisco, C&amp;l.it 96308. (Servl~ in Vietnam).
PSG E-1 Roy F. rume, RA 15525938, Co. B, lot !hi., 35th Int,
APO San Francisco, 96355. (Serv1ng in Vietnam.)

3 Pc. MOULDED
LUGGAGE SETS

1

$ !c~
FLANNELETTE GOWNS

Compares at $20.00. High quality mat•
ching moulded luggage with aluminum
dust valance. Podded, quil
lining.

88

66~"-~\lt

AFTER MISSING SEVERAL weeks or classe s due to Illness.

Eddie Lou Howery has returned to his dutieJI at U1e Southern High
School on a part..tirne basis,
Having 1 trequent need for oxygen, Eddie Wu has devised a
l)'ltem to hav~ oxygen in his car and also there is Ox;'{gen in hJs
classroom when he needs it.

set

3 ROLL PIG.
Christmas Gift
WRAP
PAPER

THE RECENTLY RESURFACED road under the Pmneroy ..
Maaoa Brltfce is being traveled more ao:l more as motorists discover its \'llue in saving time and avoiding traffic congestion by
traveling the hUI route. The road Is for upriver traltlc only.

45

49"_.;;;,&amp;

Ends Sticky
.;.;SII;.;.;,.ff.;,;;Ha~ir_ __

MILTON BRADLEY'S FAMOUS

MONOPOLY GAME

Community Launches
Plan for Youth Place

complete

72

24x45" BOLO WOVEN BRAIDED

RAINBOW RUGS
from

S30 .00

.,

in the upper 30a and low toJ.
clouelr lritll oecam-J

MootJ.v
.-'

'.

rain or showers and warmer
Friday,

In Brussels, the sources said the allied leaders made oo decision on
Healey•s proposal durlrw: a two-hour discussion. Secretary of state Dean
Rusk. Derense Secretary Clark M. Cllfford and Treasury Secretary Henry
H. .Fowler led the American delegation to a three-da,y gathering of foreign, ·
defense and finance ministers of the 15-nationNorth Atlantic Treaty OrganIzation. Preaident Johnson's three key aides aimed at preulng their allies, especially rich but comparative!,).· WKlerarmed West Germany, to do
more for cOO'Imon defense.

Colorful,rever5ible, machine washoble. Will
brighten any room in
the house.

LARGE
SURE·GRIP

SPRING
CLOTHES PINS

$1~.~

Rllll• fte, Poli.becl hanlw""'
with strong ueel sptiop,

~

!

(

Smootb. •Uper·•~ronr.

In 14K 101d

LARGE SIZE EXPANDABLE

WOODEN ~~~~~
COAT
:~~..c~l~;
ho ll

··'·

1M'

cl 0"

$1 0 0
each

NEW YORK (U PO- L'.S. and charge," said Ahmed Namer,
foreign officials today investi - 43, in halting English. He spoke
gated the Hstrong des abroad" for his two sons, Hussein, 20,
of "Ulree Yemini Arabs, jailed and Abdo, 18. They were held
and charged with plotting to kill today under $25,000 bail each.
President-elect Richard M. NixThe three shipping clerks who
on.
worked In a Manhattan ladies
The investigation was aimed garment factory and shared a
at the possibility the alleged three-rom tenement. were ar.
plot wu part oC an international rested in a pollee raid Saturday.
conspiracy or that it was linked In the $57 -a-month nat, officers
to the murder of Sen. Robert F. found two rifles, b.dlets, two
Kenn~, whose accused assasswitchblade knives and letters
sin also is an Arab.
from persons in the Arab world.
A
Brooklyn
grand
jury
Assistant Dlst. Atty. Harold
indicted the
three Yemini Rosenbaum told Criminal Court
immigrants Wednesday on con- Judge John R. Starkey Wednesspiracy and weapons possession day the three suapects had
charges. They pleaded innocent . ''strong ties abroad'' and that
11
We are not guil~ of this the Secret Service and U.S.

Nixons
Go Out
On Town
NEW
YORK
(UPO- President-elect Richard M. Nixon
took hb family out on the town
Wednesday night-the tbeater,
then a fashionably late supper
at a Chi-Chi restaurant. Everybody seemed to have a rousing
good time.
Although he h~:u1 been working
hard since the election on
setting up a White House staff
and conferring frequently by
telephone With ke,y members of
Congress, only or late has Nixon
begun to show signs of
unwinding after a rlgurous
political campaign.
The theater-and-supper evening was one example. Another
sign was his plan to leave chilly
New York Friday for his
favorite resort, Key Bisca.,vne,
Fla., where he wtll stay at least
throogh the weekend.
Nb:Cil, his wt!e Pat, and their
daughters Julie and Tricia, lett
their Fifth Avenue apartment

~~:m::::::::::::::

CINCINNATi (UPO -

The

government h now richer by a
case of hand grenades and 20
machine guns aa the ns~lt or
less than a month of reg:istr·a tion.
And, the lntemal Revenue
here reported Wednesda.¥ it
had registered another 75 ma chine guns, nve silem.:ers, two
bazookaa and four cannons
since the start of the month.

Part II Biru

Bids wtU be opened about next
Jan. 7. for Part n 0( the pool
clearing for the Racine Locks
and Dam on the Ohio River
The Huntington District, Corps
of Engineers, said advance notice to prospective bidders are
being issued for tbe project which

holds an a.PProximate value or
$100,000 to $500,000.
The work will consist of clearing and disposing of all trees,
brush and fences along both
shores of the Ohio River in clud~
.ing the islands between elevation 562.0 and lhe existing oor.
mal pool elevations of the upper

Pilno for providing a meeting
youth organizations or
Chelter were made at 4 meeting
held at U.e former 001.\rthouse
In Chester Tuesday night.
Robert Mills, chairman ot the

place for

committeemen of Scout Pack 235,
moderated the discuasJon . TakIng part were Mro. Mary lhmter, Mrs. Betty Hawk, Mra. Kenneth Davil, Mrs. M,yrna Carpenter, Henry Hwter, represent-

Ina Girl Scouts; James Haye1,
""''"'"'Jilng Bczy Scouts, &amp;IMI Nat
i

'

Corpenter, Richard Bartoo, Robon IIIUa aDd Mrs. BOlly Rawllnp repreaentlng tile c u b
Seouta. Also atteud1na wi'ls Ken-

Davia.
An .....Uve aommltlee waa

aetfl

. - ID OYer- tile complete
(leelloa of the haU. These fltncUtllla will Include cmUnued ren.

ovating of the hall, fire protec-

Uon, instllllUlce, by-laws KOVem-

were accompanied by ment propert;y line at Belleville
Nh:on's good friend from Key Locks and Dam tothepotntWhere
elevation 560.0 meets the sur(Continued on page 10)
face or low water In eacb triThey

butary.

John C. Frick
Dies Wednesday

Work oo tile project is to be
started M.thUJ 10 days alter receipt or notice to proceed Is received by the .'RJcceaaft.IJ bidder
and la to be completed within
180 days.

ing its use, creation or a name
J&lt;oim Carl Frick, 90, Pomeroy,
for the new organization, terms
died In Holzer Medical Center
Cor a lease on the hall, and inWednesda,y attemoon. He was a
stallation of utilities.
member of the Enterprise United
·' From the executive commit.· Methodist Church.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
tee, a chairman Crorn each IJ'OUP
HOSPITAL
He is survived by two dough.
and a treasurer will be named.
ADliOSSIONSHelen Bartels
ters, Mrs. Eldon (AilJIOs) Weeks,
MUb was elected recording sscSyracuse;
Emmett
Bal1elr., SyraPomeroy. and Mrs. Albert (Emretary for the general commitcu~e;
Wally
Cottrlll,
Lqsvllte,
ma) Burkhart, Clarksville, and
tee.
Claudia
OWens,
Mt.
Vernon;
Hara son, Paul, Pomeroy; me ala..
Elected to the execuUve comry
Yarbl'OU!Ih,
Rutland;
Harey
ter, Mrs. Mary Angel, Covingmittee were Nat Carpenter for
ton, Ky.; one brother, William, · Hinton, Pomeroy; Alary Newluu,
tne CUb Scouts, Henry Hunter for
also ol CovlnKt&lt;rn; eight !P'and- Lmg Bottom; Gertrude Frazier,
the Grl Scouts and James Ha,yea
chllclren, 12 areatgrandchlidren, Ravenswood; Alicia Jeffers, New
ror tbe Boy Scouts. 'lbe reneral
Haven; Elale Welch, Pomeroy;
and several nieces and nephewa
committee will meet m the secFuneral service• will be held Rlta Lutdermll~ Pom~, Etond Monday 'bt tach month at Saturday at I p.m. at Ewing ta Custer, (Vraeuse.
7:30p.m
DISCHARGES - Wilbur LeifChapel with the Rev. WiUiamAirThe (lUbUc iB innted to lillY of
heit,
Elmer Ohlinpr, Gertnode
..., aDCI tile Rev. Menzel SmiU,
tho meetings to be held at the
Drake,
!lllrie,v Pyles, rifuaaen
olllciating. F.-lends may call ot
former courthouse.
Wr~
Dana,
Pabicla
the funeral home aayt.ime

Attorney were interested in
"man,y, many aspects of the
case.
The New York Dally News
said the FBI, Central Intel ligence Agency and England's
Scotland Yard were part of an
international investigation of the
alleged plot on Nixon's life.
Federal authorities were investigating a possible link: with
Kennedy's murder in Los
Angeles last June, and a report
that one or more of the Narners
traveled to CaiUornia this year.
~rhan
B. Sirhan, charged
with Kermedy's murder, is a
Jordanian who is said to have
resented the New York senator's pro-Israeli statements.
Authorities investigated to
determine if Namer, a naturalized U.S. citizen from Yemen
on the Arabian peninsula, might
also have resented Nixon's
campaign pledge to help ltreng.
then lsrael. HusSein also Is a
naturalized U.S. citizen but

Abdo still is a Yemini citizen.
An Wt.idenllfied J n f o r m e r
lipped

pollee

to

lhe

alleged

murder plot, saying that Namer offered him ua large Sl.lm" to
join lhem. Authorities said they
were interested in learning how
three men who earned small
salaries could have obtained
such a large sum.

TROPHY WINNERS - Steve it&gt;auldlng (seated), left, and Jolwr Haglroa, rf11rt, orore Most Valuable Back and Most Valuable Lineman during Wednesday night's annual footbal.l ~
at Kyger Creek High School. StarDing In rear, left to right, are Coach Howard Lee Miller, Jof'n'w
Bench. guesl speaker~ aOO Asst. Coach John Sang. More than 200 attended the banquet honoriJw
the 1968 Southern Valley Athletic Conference Champions.

Airport, Rio Grande
BenefitfromGran~
Federal grants for two Gallia
County projects have been approved by the Appalachian Regional Commission according to
Albert G. Giles, director of the
Ohio o( Apf!ala&lt;hla, and lOth
District Congressman Clarence
E. Miller.
One is a $9,450 grant to prOvide constructioo of an .27 mile
access road to the Gallia . Meigs

is "for additional runds for the jacent to the airport.
physical education building OrLocated near GaJUpolis, the
iginally, $228,070 was approved airport was orlt&lt;lnall,y placed In
for this strul1ure, but due to operation as an emergency me,rising costs, the grant was in- sure after tbe collapse of theSia
creased to $387,092. Total cost ver Brldge across the Ohio Rlnr
of the structure will be $753,- in December, 1967
962. TIUe 1 will provide$194,519
The 174 acre site is owned
an:! private gifts $172,361 toward by Gallia Co..,cy and is mllll8pd
the Rio structure.
by the Community Improvement
Gile6 said when the 0,27 ac- Corporation, a non-profit orpn.
Regional Airport in Gallla Coon.
cess road Js completed, it will ization, Giles said.
Q&gt;.
provide easy access to the airTotal cost of the access road
The other is a $159,012 grant
port rrom U, S, Rt. 35, and project Is $13,500. The statewlll
for Rio Grande College's new
State Ht. 7. It Wilt also sen-e as provide $4,050, according to
physical educati.on building at
an inlet to lnWstrial Park ad- Cong. lllllier.
Rio Grande.
Giles, also a member ol the
Appalachian Regional Commis.sion, said the $9,450 grant was
approved dllring the commission•s meeting Wednesday Ln

Chevy Guests to Come

To be Opened

MR. AND MRS, KENNETH IVILCOX have the highest praise shor~ alter 8 p.m Wednellday
for WUlia Anthony who rescued Utelr five-year--old daughter, Darla, and drme under police escort to pool or dams Nos. 22 and 21 upwho waa attacked recently by a rat as slle walked along a Middle· Broadway's Palace Theater for streams to the government progort sidewalk.
the flag-waving musical based percy line at t.hv Ba.IJeviUe Locks
Awarently, no one heard the child'e serums but WIUIR who on the life of George M. Cohan, and Darn, and upstream along
na work.Jnaln his shq) dose by. The rodent had to be knocked frmt .. George Ml" starring Joel both shores of aH tributaries of
Darla's left hand where lt had taken a tl.nn hold.
the Ohio River between locks
Grey.
and dam N..t 22 and the governFriends Carne

99

A BIRTHSTONE
FOR EACH CHILD

enttne

Cloucb' &amp;IMI 1101 11 cold wD
occasional rlln loni!lhl. ._,

ported today to be eJQ&gt;ectlng a Communist squeeze this weekeiXI agaimt
Western traltlc routes to and from West Berlin. 110 mUes deep inside
East Germany, The officials inBonn,aceordingtodl_plomatic reports, said,
however, the ComrnWllstsqueezewu note~ctedtogo to the length of provoking a Runlan • American confrontation.

Dear Father,

"I am sorry l wa6 such a bad boy at home. ( am sorry that I
Clused you so much worry. T~e Doc says I am going West arxl I
Wll1t you aU to know I realize I was a poor son to you and feel lor-

pr.

TRICOT DUSTERS

j.

ooch

"Goodbye, rather".
The writer ot tt1e letter died at Cari:igny,

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11

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FOOTWEAR

Machine

Ben brought with him several letters of the World War I era,
Theae were letters written by American servicemen as they II,}·
dying in Europe.
Following ia one of them. can you Imagine the grief of the
father when he received the brief but pointed content?
May 29, 1918

GIRLS' FLEECE LINED

L/&gt;.DIES' VINYL CASUAL

Sizes
5 to
10

Thil week, we observed Veterans Day across tM nation and
Meigs County, of cow-se, was not without its special activities for
the day.
Ben Turner, a former Meigs County Representathe and for·
marly of Pomeroy, returned rrom Lancaster where he now resides
to attend the Veterans Da,y observance of Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
American Legion, in Middleport. Ben Is a charter member of the
po&amp;L

AQUANET HAIR SPRAY

\l ~r k

Recalling the tale
of Cornelia,
mother of ancient
Rome, who de ·
scnbed her most
valuable worldly
possessions by
pointing to her
children and sey
ing, "These are my
jewels," we pre·
sent this modern
day symbol .
the mother'&amp; birth ·
stone ring . Beau·
tiful ly fashioned in
elegant style with
textured Floren ·
tine finish , each
ring has synthetic
birthstones del1
cately &amp;et on a
ch1 ld. A most u

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Fine rayon tricot.

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• Full Slips • Half Slips

Chaic:e of piGin col·
ou or pointed ·" pot·
leon '
Worm "'"•P'"
weqr 'far co ld winh•
nighh, S.in1 1·14.

Every
Mother
wants
to own

· circl et of 14K jold

128 MILL ST.-MIDDLEPORT-VALUES FOR NOV. 14-16
BRIEF STYLE LADIES
LJ\(;EHIE HIOT!
RAYON TRICOT

The Harrison'iille School carnival will be held Saturday at the
school starling at 1 p.m. and
ending at II p.m.

MEJGS THtATRE

at

Weather

Probe Yemini Ties

Is Saturday

An investiture and rededication service for the Salisbury
Thomas P. Bayard was the
Brownie Troop, Cadette Troop first ambassador of the Uni208, and JLUtior Troop 100 will ted States.
be held at 2 p.m. Sunday at the
Salisbury Elementary School.
Parents and friends of t h e
scouts are invited.
TONIGHT ONLY

•

NATO Considering Nuclear
Warning Shots at

post commander. r rank Vaughan

Service Planned

&lt;

VOLX~N~0~-~14~4____________________~PO~M~~~O~Y2-M::I=DD~L=E~POR~T~,O~H~I~O~____________T~H~U~RS=D~A~Y~N~O~V~E~M~B~ER~I4~,1~9~68~---------------------~ff~N~C=E~N~T~S

Carnival at

The art picture which has been
on display at the Pomeroy National Bank will be awarded at
the carnival.
Members of the PTA handling actlvitles at the carni\'al
wUI be Joel Mane, t t1 e cane
toss; Hnrold Mane, the fortune
teller; Thelma Campbell, silhouettes; Mrs . Harper and Mrs. Me CLUte, sweet shop; Mr. Campbell,
dart game; Gracie Wilson ~d
Violet Dillon, sock hop; Conn1e
Chapman and Mrs. LeMa Oberhol:ler. country store; James
Dillon, weight guessing; Ellen
Wirth and Phillis Bragg, f i s h
pond; Tommy Lower~·, balloon
clown; 1\manda Morns, pocket
lad,y; Doris rox and Helen Oberholzer, pick-a...noodle: Mrs. Nel lie Dorgan, Mrs . Eblin, M r s.
Vance, and Faye Cotterill, kit chen.

'

lkvoMd To The lnteret~ll Of The Meigi-MtuOn Area

Harrisonville

gave devotions.
During the meeting presided
over by Mrs. Jack Carsey plans
were made for tile annual Christmas treat. Named to the treat
committee were Mrs. Richard
Follrod, chairman; Mrs . Richard
Joneli, Mrs. Tom Clelland, and
Mrs. Leo Crew.
Robert Morris, principal, repor;led that the playgrOWld improvement will becompJetednext
spring when the weather is satisfactory. A ' rummage sale was
plaru1ed, with \the date to b~ announced later. ,Mrs. HerbertSeUl,
health commidee chairman, reported that ' the eye check. at the
school ha!{been completed.
It was decided to organize a
basketball team of PTA mother s
to play the mothers of the Syracuse PTA. 1\ report ontheA.S.C.
dimer was given by Mrs. Charles Lewis who thanked those
who assisted. The attendance banner was won by the third grade.

•

Now You Know

mel Hospital.

Americanism is Topic

PAST COlJNCILORS, Daugh~ruble, noting Utat the Amerters of America Lodge, Sarah ican Legion was founded 50 years
Diddle home, Thursday, 7:30 p. ago this month, said the Lem.
gion has a deep interest in youth
XI GAMMA Mu Chapte r , Beta
and education, and pride in serSigma Phi sorority, Thursda:l·,
'iing God and country. He intro7:311 p.m.' social room or Sout~
duced Lawrence Smith, a World
ern and Colwnbus Ohio Electrtc

Co.
BRADBURY PTA, 7:30 Thurs&lt;f a y, Bradbury
Elem_ent.ary
School; speaker, a state htghway
patrolman; door prize; fifth grade
room mothers have refresh-

Mr. and Mrs. Bob Houda5helt
and sana ha'ie returned from a
visit in Urbana and Columbua
with i-elatives,
Mr. and Mrs. John Lyons
leave tmight for Pontiac, Mich .
They are going especially for the
Saturday wedding of their son,
Tol'hlny.
Mr. and Mrs. James Criswell are in Pittsburgh, Pa. visiting her sister, Mrs. Helen Mar-

ln·-law and daughter, ·Mr·and Mra.
Gene Hester, ~ their infant
daughter, Jilt Eliza~eth.

RETURNS HOME

Shower Given Miss Crew

Patriotism is Theme
Of WSCS at Church
••Patriotism" was the program
theme of the Veteran' an..¥ meet.
ing of the Women's Societ;y oC
Christian Service or the Middl~­
port Heath United Methodist
Church.
Mrs . James Brewington, program chairman, said, "Patriotism is living for your country
and willing to die for your country.'' She described a patriot as
one with world vision putting the
love or God rirst.
Portions of themes written by
children, fourth graCe and above,
00 the meaning of patriotism
were read by Mrs. Brewington,
who also talked on the impressions or children when they see
the rlag !Uld sing the "S t a r
Spangled Banner."
To conclude the program on
patriotism. Mrs. o. P. Klein
played "God of Our Fathers"
as members read the words.
She sang .. God Bless America"
and "My Country 'Tis of Thee."
The patriotic theme was also
carried oot in devotions given
by Mis.s Frieda FaehnJe. After
singing, "America the Beau~ ­
ful," Mrs. Brewington le~ m
the pledge to the nag. M I s s
Faehnle's topic was .. Patrie-

'

Pressure of the prospect of
rolling a perrect game ¥Pirentl.y got to DonWUsonoCMiddleport Wednesday night at the
Pomeroy Bowlirw Lanes.
Wilson, bowling in the Wednesday Night Mixed League,
rolled 10 consecutive strikes.
However, he hit ott center on
his next try and had to be satisfied with a 284 game.

Washington.

Coo.g. Miller said the Rio grant

PHAGUE (UPO - Thoi90-man
Ccrnmunist party Central COin·

mittee which wlell!ls all political
power in Czechoslovakia met toda,y in a crucial session that will
decide whether die • hard sta.I~
inists win out over the liberal
faction whose reforms brought
on the Sovmt invasiOI\
After Ql)roval of the agenda,
Alexander Dubcek read a report .

on the ftrsi point of the qenda: I
"The main task of the party in the
coming period." That means the
party line: that must be set out
in these days or occlf)ation.
The other main point or the
agenda is an "anal,ysisotthepostJanuary development," or how
Dubcek's program for creating
what he has called "socialism
with a human face" has tared
since he ousted stallnJst Antonin
Novitny lOmonthsaguandlaunched a program of. liberallz:ation.
TWO CALI..S ANSWERED
The Middleport emeraency
squad answered two calls Wed-nesdl,y. to tile home of Jerry
Wanl. rrom where Kathryn Farrow, a maternltypatiert,wastaken to Pleaaont Valley Hospital,
AIMI later to tile heme of Mrs, Larcy Fox, Cuator st., w11o wu taken to Holzer Medical ~r lor
modlcal treatment.

The Meigs County Jaycees annOWlced today special guests
Crom the Chevrolet Motor Division will attend the 1969 Meigs
County Junior Miss Pageant.
Fraternity House
They will be Warren Dalley,
sales
promotion manager oC the
ATHENS, Ohio (UP0 - FifDetroit
divisional office, arxi Edteen members of Tau Kappa
die
Bogges,
sales representative
Epsilon fraternity escaped with for
the
Charleston
zone.
out lnjury early today when their
As
one
of
the
national
sponsors
homes near the Ohio Universiof
the
Junior
Miss
Pageant.
Chev.
ty campus was extensivel.,y darnaged by fire.
Fire Chief Charles Dalton said
UNIT 'lJMMONED
the fire started in a nrst floor
The
~racuse emergency unit
room and spread up an open
was
summonded
Wednesday at
sta.lrcase to the second floor .
aboul
9:50
p.m.
for
Etta Custer,
The cause of the fire was not
Third
St.,
who
had
fallen and
immediately determined . Loss
sustained
injury
to
her
left leg
was estimated at $13,000. Two
and
hip.
~e was removed by
~ the 15 men living in the fraternity house had to climb out squadmen to Veterans Memor ial Uospital wh~re she was a.dseeond floor windows.

Tau Kappas Escape

Showdown in
Prague Meet

For Jr. Miss Pageant

mitted.

rolet contributes more t h &amp; n
$250 ,000 in scholarships and
prizes awarded in local aoo stale
pageants leading to the finals in
Mobile, Alabama. Awards In the
national pageant total almost
$50,000 with the top prize being
a 1$10,000 scholarship.
The local pageant will be held
Sunday, No". 24, at 8 p. m. at the
Meigs Junior HighSchool In Pomeroy. Advance tickets are selUrw
for $1 from any Jaycee member,

TWO DAY SALE
The PorUand Uni ted Methodist

ChW'ch WSCSwiJI hold a bake sale
and bazaar Friday and Saturday
at the Duke Cleaners in Pcm~..
cro~ ~rom 9 a. rn.. to 5 p. m. It is
announced elsewhere as onsaturda,y only.

Astronauts to Brush

Moon in Spring, '69
I;&gt;

KENNEDY (UPI)- al'OWid earth for
Gemtni specetJight veterans mc:mth.
Thomas Stall'ord, John YOUng
The Apu.Uo 10
and ElJpne Cei1u111 have been mark U\e second
named to Oy Apollo 10 to witflln of the four~ogged
CAPE

11 w.ys last
mission will

spacecraft. They are scbeWJ_.
for a Dec. 21 Iaundo,

The Aj)ollo 10 mlallan orlll
include vlrtual)J&lt; OVOI'Ytflla&amp; fn I
moon tandl!ig sequoaoo "'""P'
10 mlles ~ the moon nert spacecraft,
called a lunar the actual toudodolm Ajrallo
spring on a decisive rebearBa.l lllOWle, together with the threeprogram director Samuel 1'1111for a summer lunar lliiJlding,
man command ship, The lunar
nrlecl aut
A dodalon to proceed next to lander" a Orst mamecl space test lips earlier tbla a
lllndln!l
berore
,
tile
Apollo
U
a moon landing with Ai&gt;ollo 11 will be in earth orbit m the
Ollht
'
in JUly hinges an tht~ outcome Apollo 9 mission 1n late
ol Apollo JO•s mission.
February.
The Al&gt;oflo 10 plu calla IIDr
The three astrooauts, off:l.cial Apollo 8 astronauts Frank Slaf!ord aDd
to . . .
l.Y assigned to the .tnmitious Borman, James Lovell and
Young
In
the
orb11iat
Oight. We&lt;bollday, were tile WUU1m Anders will be the ftrst
COIIUnond
ahlp
111111
tiel
1-11!
backup pilots to the Apollo 7 Americana to try to orbit the
crew wbl.eh flew 1he first moon, but they will not be the lUDar -~· to ......
r-,t I '"' the
; '•
IIIADDed Apollo command ahlp carrying the moon landing so,ooo
aurf'aee
manned Dight
moon landing

c.......

j

•.

\

�(
2 - The Daily sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0., Thursday, Nowmber 14, 1968

·

"Reach!"

Good Omens Slwwing Up .for Nixo~
restrained hope that the new oo. Yet, they might well 00 so,
even started, ted by a put of
President may not be indicted a- U only because tlley can scarcea foreign press corps here which
ly be altogether happy with their
so resented his accession ln the head of time for his conduct of accomplishments to date.
foreign relations is, however,
tragic death of John Kennedy
It all depends, really, on a
yet to be available, though all
that it lost the smallest touch
single
but troublesome [actor.
must deeply hope it will be
ot objectlvUy or rairness.
By
and
large, their central inforthcoming The big question
Thuugh it is, of course, too
terest
Is
in foreign policy. Three
ts whether the New Left poliearly to he certain, it really
successive
Presidents- Elsenticians and journalists ot this
does awear that this time the
hower,
Kennedy
and Johnson country will be willing to walt
White House newcomer may be
have
had
to
cope,
often cursin~
(or the evidence before putting
permitted some time in oO'ice
wearily
in
the
nighttime,
with an
in tbe classic thumbs-down gesbefore final judgments are made
endless
file
of
volunteer
and
upon him. Even the left - wing ture.
importunate
Secretaries
or
State
Having first destroyed the
British journalist John Freeman,
liberal Johnson Administration from the Old and the New Lett
whom Prime Minister Haro~d
and then, at the Chicago con· who believed their mission to be
Wilson has with rare unwisdom
vention and later, having busily not the proper one of reporting
tapped to be British Ambassahelped to polish ott the Presi- and criticizing but a mission acdor here in succession to the
&lt;iential aspirations of the liber- tually to rule.
able Sir Patrick Dean, has now
If Nixoo can somehow find a
been good enough to recant his al Hubert Humphrey, it would wa,y out of this maze, then all
imperiously hostile earlier views be irony, indeed, if they should may indeed be well with toreign
now glve some grace to the far
oC President-elect Nixon.
affairs.
The critical ingredient in this more conserntive Richard Nix-

helps nobody but the enemies of
BY WILLIAMS. WHITE
WASHlNGTON - The omens tills country.
Even the auwmatically critiCor the new Presidency of Richard Nlxon on the overmasterlng cal Europeans in France a n d
issues or world policy are pret- Britain are thus far showing
ty promising - U only he is some dl sposition to wait and
given U!.e chanl.-e inside this na- see before deciding that Nixon
tion that is beini offered to him simply won't do. They have aPparently awakened at last to the
from abroad.
The Russians have responded fact that the people of the Unitto Nixon's electioo by avoiding ed States choose the President
the more violent of those denun- of the United Stales and that
this is the way it will continue
ciation!! of the West which have
been a strident feature of their In be
Silly as it sounds, this ciramual celebration~; of the Bolcumstance is of capital imporshevik Revolution.
The South Vietnamese have tanee. For it gives Nixon some
heartily welcomed the outcome prospect at least of being judghere of last Tuesday. So much ed upon what he may do or not
is this the case, indeed, that do rather than upon the extrathey are already trying to di- ordinary criteria by which much
vide Nixon from the sitting Pres- ul the European press condemnident Lyndon Johnson. ooly to ed Lyndon Johnson before he
find that this game won't work.
The President is in simple
truth doing everything in !lis
power to smooth Nuon's wa,y in
the great transitioo, and Nixoo
is replying wilh an equivalently
BY MRS. FI!ANOS MORRIS
sensible graciousness Both are
The Baptist Esther Missionary
true political professionals and
Circle met Monday evening, No'tMr. and Mrs. Walter Swett retherefore lmow that to practice
HOLZEH MEDICAL CENTER: ett E. Grant, Middleportj Mrs. 11, with Mrs. Edna. Pickens, hostcently
spent a two weeks vacation
politics beyond the water's edge
Visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p, m, Roger K. Deem, Pomeroy; Mrs. ess, at her home.
at lrx:han Hocks Beach in FloriThe meeting opened with devoParents only on Pediatrics Ward. Leora ZwiUing, Pomeroy; Emda. They also visited Mr. and
ADMJSSIONS
mitt R. Renrroe, Flatwoods, Ky.; tions by Mrs. Helen Simpson,
Mrs. John IUwlln.gs at Orange
Mrs. Gary M. Harrison, 124 1/z C. Frank Meadows, Greenup, Ky.; whose subject was" For the Beau.
Park, Florida.
Third Ave.; Gregory T, Bane, Stanley E. Walton, Wellston; Mrs. ty of the Earth." ln the business
Mr. and Mrs. Emzie Davis of
23 Gallia Ave.; Mrs. Roy H. See. John J. Blair, catlettsburg, Ky.; session, the White Cross work
Parkersburg visited with Paul
RL l Gallipolis; Mrs. Thomas c. John W, Wiseman, Willow Wood, was discussed and a pre-Thanks.
and William C. Peck and Mr.
Runioo, Kerr; Mrs. E. Kendall Mrs • .John R. Thacker, Wellston. giving service to be held at the
Mrs. J:ffie Hoosier, who haR
and Mrs. Edgar Crabtree.
cimrch on Sunday evening, Nov.
Deckard, Rt. 2 Gallipolis; Mrs.
BIRTHS
been a medical patient at the
A large crowd attended t h e
24, with dedication of the White
Grover
M.
Smith,
Ht..
2
GalliMrs.
Roy
H.
See,
HL
1
Galli~
Veterans Memorial llospital, 1s
skating party sponsored by the
Cross
items and a missionary
polis;
Mary
Alice
Elkins,
RL
2
polis,
son,
9:34
L
m.
Wednesday;
now slow!} rec uperating at home.
( arpenter Baptist Church youth
centered film strip, in color,
Russell
Scott,
Rt.
l
Mrs.
Everett
E.
Grant,
MiddleGallipolis;
Mr. and Mr~. Gene Dalton and
group on l"riday eveningatDow•s
Gallipolis; Mrs. Stephen K. port, son, 3:17 p. m. Wednesday; on Jonah. Roll call was answered
two children and lhe latter's
Hollercade at :'&gt;/elsonville.
Darst, Pt. Pleasant; Mrs. Ever- Mrs. Stephen K. Darst, Pt. Pleas- by seven members with a Bible
mo1her, !\.trs. IJallon, of Marion,
Hon.ald Estep of Chicago was
ant, son, 10:09 p. m.. Wednesday. verse. The program tlleme was
were weekend guests of tl1e lata guest of his cousin. Mrs. Tom
Dl~CHARGES
"Giving 'Thanks!' Readings were
ter's daugl1ter, Mrfi. llarry 1·.
l'auber and family,
Mrs.
A.lbert
B.
Avery,
Mrs.
given
using the Thank!lgiving
Erlcwine and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Stevens
Robert
B.
carte,
Mr8.
Dolly
The session closed with
theme.
M1. and Mrs. Handall Smith or
and children, LondorDerry, spent
Chapman,
Mrs.
John
W.
Conger,
silent
prayer
and the singing ot
l!azard, Ky., were r L·ct.•nl weeka weekend with her mother. Mrs.
Mrs.
Alva
H.
Cook,
Mrs.
I
d
a
"My Prayer." During the social
end guests of her parents, Mr.
Eclna l·auber, and mherrelatives
Cranston, Mrs.
Kenneth W_ hour, re£reshments were servOO
and Mrs. Marvin 1Nils01L
in the area.
Dempsey, Mrs. Clyde B. Fraz:. by Mrs. Pickens. assisted by her
Mrs. 1\nna O~d1n spent a night
Mr. and Mrs. Heed Jeffers
ier. Mrs. Wayne W. Gilkey, Fred daughter, Mrs. Ollie Mae Cozart.
wit11 Mrs. HlMd1e t\elsonand at·
were Sunday dirutcr guests of
Mr. and Mrs. W_ N_ Brammer
Gaol, Mrs. Gary M. Harrison,
tended the supper at the Columtheir son.1n--law arK! daughter, The rooms being built on the
Mrs, Virgil 0. Layne, David S. of Cleveland came Wednesday for
bia Chapel Churl h.
Mr. and Mr"'. Lavern Jordan and Carleton Church have been comLoudermilk. Mrs. Aldene Miller, his mother, Mrs. Helen Younce,
pleted.
Lawrence C11apman, who has
famil}.
Miss
carla J. Nortoo, Hay G. who will be taking treaUnents at
Mrs.
Olen
Harrison
Mr.
and
been a mcdtcal patient at the CalMr. and Mn;_ William Lawson,
Seurles,
Vernon Vanover, Mrs. the Clevelard Clinic,
had
as
visitors
recentl)
~1r.
and
lipolis Clime, IS now ru.:uperatGlen aOO Cheryl, spent Sunda.}' in
Mrs. Hazel Carnahan Is a paVel'non
Vanover,
Mrs. Becky B.
Mrs.
nale
Harrison
and
son
ard
ing: a l home.
Charleston, W_ Va,, where they
tient at Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. and Mrs. 1\. ('.Smith and
visited relatives and called to see Mr. Philip Harrison, Columbus. Vinson, Quentin M. White, Janet
Edward Barton is convalescing
Arm
Horky,
Mrs.
Harley
F.
Shu..
a.
n
d
Mr,
and
Mrs.
John
Dean
daughters or {.olumbus visilt::d
her mother, Mrs. Bert Witllrow.
pert
and
Mrs.
Marvin
King,
at
the home or Blanche Biggs arxl
sons
and
Mrs.
Lenora
Dean
had
her parents and attended a footA C()unty Officers Conferen~:c
··J r
•
Xfs.
Barton W8!5 released
as
recent
visitors
Mr.
and
'Mrs.
baU game. · I he Children remainwa~ ~noVJlCQ.d for November 18
Veterans
Memorial Hospital abet
Paul
Paynter
of
Carpenter,
Mrs.
PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL
ed with their grandparents who
at Rock Springs Grange !Tall
brought
to
the home ofherdaugh·
Clair
Waggoner
or
Rutland
aOO
Nov.
14
took them home Sunday,
when the Columbia Grange No.
Mrs.
Sylvia
Bryson
o(
Canton.
ter.
ADMJTTED
Harold
Clark,
Mr. and Mrs. (;ro1·cr Stout
2435 l1eld 1ts regular meeting on
Mrs. George (Addie M a e)
Kenny Hartle~ who is attending
Pt. Pleasant; Mrs. James Wilw
were weekend vis itors wtlh Mrs.
1·r1day evening with Mendal Jorof Mason, W. VL, visited
Brown
at
Vienna,
0.,
spent
a
rescllool
Iiams,
Leon;
Mrs.
Glassco
Fair·
Stout's ch ildren, the l!arold nodan, master. in charge.
cent
weekend
with
his
parents,
recently
with Blanche Biggs and
row,
Dayton,
0.;
Edna
Swick,
lens, Max Bolcns, Mr. and \Irs.
Those attended the football banMr.
and
Mrs.
KeMeth
Hartley.
the
Bartons.
Middleport;
John
Byrus,
Pt..
Austin Wogan and famll:, and ML
quet at Alexander High School in
Sardra Beal and girl friend
S.SgL and Mrs. Steven Jacobs
Pleasant; Mrs. Albert Springand Mrs. Keith Weaver and famhooor of the football team were
and
children of Middleport visitvi
sited
a
recent
weekend
with
ston,
Mason;
Lona
Bowles,
Robily_
Mrs. rom Fauber, Walter and
Mrs.
Wayne
Beal
a
n
d
ed
her
grandparents, Mr. and
Mr.
and
ertsburg;
Donald
Fowler,
LeMr. and Mrs. McElwain of
Robby
Goebel, Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs.
Henry
Roush, Sunday. T.·
family,
tart;
Mrs.
Luther
Johna,
Buf~
rranklin, Ohio, were rN·ent week
Dolphus Burke aOO Glen Lawson.
Sgt.
Jacobs
recently returned
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Wayne
Beal
and
falo; Edward Show, Ft. Pleasend dsitors of his sister, Mr.
The affair was sponsored by the
Karla
visited
over
the
weekend
from
Vietnam.
anl
and Mrs. Sherman Ballengee.
'iparlan Club,
Mr. and Mrs. George Neigler
with Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hkks
DL1)CHARGED - Van Robbins,
Norma Gillogly and Mrs. Eland
Mrs.
Roma
Beal
of
Bristol,
and
children aoo Mrs. F'rankle
Pt. Pleasant; Robert Harper, Pt.
ma Ellis, Alban.y, accompanied
•• &lt;''!V~ ~
spentSundayinColumbus
Neigler
Term.
Pleasant; Mrs. VirgU Harper,
Mrs. F.va McKnight to Columbuti
'~-~~~
Mrs.
Elizabeth
Murray
had
as
with
JWle
Neigler and Mr. and
West Columbia; Mrs. Jack Hend-on Thursday where they attended
Cross and children.
Mrs.
Clyde
weekend
visitors
Mr.
and
Mrs.
ricks, Pt. Pleasant.
the annual Golden Age Hobb;y Show
'
William
Murray
of
Columbus
and
Mrs.
Ann
Coe spent several
BIRTHS - Mr. and Mrs. James
and sale. The sale features arti·
Mr.
and Mrs. Dana Murray and Williams, Leon, a son. Mr. and da,ys in Akron visitirfg ~r niece
cles made by seniol' citizens and
Mrs. Glassco Fairrow, Dayton, and family, Mr. and Mr~ John
many handmade items arc avail- son of Richmond, Va.
Miss carol Hall, who is a stu- 0., a son.
Davis.
able.
Mrs. Ivan Powell, Jr. and
The Bus)' Bee Society or the dent at Grayson, Ky., college was
home
over
a
recent
weekend
to
daughters,
Lori and Ivarma, were
Carpenter Baptist Church met
visit
her
parents,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
THE DAILY SENTINEL
recent guests or Mr. and Mrs.
with Mrs. Emma Whittington on
Carl
Hall and also 'o'isited Mr.
DEVOTED
TO
INTEREST
OF
Larry
Taylor and Camily at GalThursday evening. Mrs. Vivian
and
Mrs.
Joe
Hall.
MEIGS·MASON
AREA
lipolis.
Gaston gave devotions using the
Mr. and Mrs, Nev White and
RICHARD S. OWEN, PUIR1SHER
Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Grimm
theme, "Tha.:tksgi\ing." Others
Chuter T a11ne hill, Editor
and daughter of Pataskala were
had
as
weekend
visitors
family
present were Ida Cheadle, Mae
Publi•hed doily ••cept Saturday by recent weekend guests ofhtsparJordan, Keziah Dye, Freda Smith, Mrs. White•s sister and family.
The
Ohio Volley Publlthll'lg Company
od 1 k
do someUung about it Don't be
Mr. and Mrs. Charles King had
110 Meet&gt;.anie St., Pom•roy, Ohio: ents, Mr. and Mrs. R er C
Helen
Jeffers and Bonnie
releKaled to U1e status or a secas recent visitors Mr. and Mrs.
45769. BUii~u Office Phone 992· Grimm..
Cheadle.
2156, Editoria l Phone 992-2157 ..
ond class citizen
Eddie
King
and
Joey
ofHarriso~
Mrs. Theodore Boring or Me~
Second don POlloi• poid ot Pame•
Your civil rights are beinp; de .
roy, Ohio.
Artllur spent Monday afternoon ville.
nied when you cannot Creely par National adv•rlitln'OI repretenlotlve
with her sister - in -law, Mrs.
Bollineiii·Gallagher, lne,, 12 Eotl
ticipate in your own destiny , PeoGoldie Gillogl)'. Mrs, Gillogly is
4ht Sr., New Yor~ Ci t~ , New Yorio.
ple are fighting and dymg for
Sub,crlpllon rot••: Deliver•d by
somewhat improved at this time. bers and guests anerded the cereNew Yor••s PopulaUoa
coorler wh.,e ovailable 45 cents per
these rights. Don't let them slip
Mr. aOO Mrs. Heed Jeffers monies.
New York state's population
we•k; ane ye11r 1n advance ot the
away from you.
Mrs. Mar)' Jordan and Mrs.
Doily ~ntinel Office, $23 ... 0. Sl• per square mile. according to
and Mary Jordan, local, and HerU&lt;ln't let yourself be controlled
month1, $11.70. Tlwee ,onths, $5.85. the federal census
Mae
Jordan
will
be
advisors
for
1960, ls
man Cordra.)', Athens, were in
By Mot!W Route where eorrier •••·
by a small raction that doesn't
Spencer, W. \'a., for the funeral a baking club or the Columbia
~iu
not ovollob le : One month $1,50. slightly more than 338 perknow you exist until it is time
By moil: One yeor $10.00. Si• month. sons , as compared with about
or Lewis Cordray. Mr. Cordray Make-It 4-H Girls. The club wlll
to tabulate your taxes. Again I
$5.25.
n ... month• $3.00. Subscrlp·
was an uncle of Mrs. .Jeffers and meeting during the winter months IIQII'I prtce on dud•• Su"doy T ime1• 49 persons per square mile for
sa,y, think in your own mind how
the United States as a whole.
for this project.
Mr. Cordray,
lentlnel.
you can help change this system
Mrs. Faye Jordan has returned
that should have dissolved years
from Ann Arbor, Mich., where
ago.
she spent the past two weeks with
Bob Curtis,
her so~i~law and daughter, Mr.
New IIaven
and Mrs. Max McCallie. She went
especiaUy at this time lo attend
Installation or the Eastern star
Officers when Mrs, McCilliewas
Dear Mr. Editor:
installed as Matron of the Ann
He your Cront page article . _ . Arbor Chapter, About 400 memGarbage Ordinance .•. of TuesFOR YOUR VOTE Of CONFIDENCE
day, I\ov. 12, 1968 It would appear that Middleport mately the same monthly cost?
The sche&lt;.k.lled hours of operaVillage Council is indirectly subtion
also work against individual
sidizing, or at least promoting
garbage
hauling as persons workthe use of private garbage coling
8
to
4
or9to5woo't have suflection as opposed to individual
SINCERELY
ficient
time
to haul their own gar.
personal garl;age collecUon.
YOUR CONGRI:SSMAN
This is apparent from the ralh· bage_
lf we are going to have modern,
er exorbitant rate schedule pertaining to individuals hauling r I g i d I y controlled garbage
their own garbage and \he sched- dumps, with their Incident higher
uled rates Cor .. garbage collec- operating costs, then wll.Y not go
tors." Why should a rational per- the rest of the route with public
son haul his own garbage, say, garbage collection by franchised
three times a month for a total collectors or publicly.owned and
or $1.SO (by car), when he can operated methods'?
Pd. Pol. Adv.
W R. Anderson,
httve the convenience or an enPomeroy
terpnse hauling it for approxi-

1.l .;, ....

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Social Notes

B\ J H K O'BHL\1\
\ OIU\ Another TV

network'.s after

\Bl ·'s

ni

ek

Cuett. whose morning telecasts

are the lightest, rreshesl, most
inteJiigent chattercasts in the
tube .. .. ,\s we reported months
ago. the T\ nev.s is in for .'&gt;Orne
irldsivc federal scrutin.Y; not to
control it - just to show the almost unanimoos slanting by seleclion of film. tape and analysis
(which is editoria.li:nng under a
defensively reverential cop-out)

YOL'1 H .\SJ&lt;ED t OH IT
This column is ror young people, their problems and pleasures, their troubles and fun. As
with the rest of Helen Help US!,
it welcomes laughs but won't
dodge a senous question with
a brush-off.
Send your teenage questions
to YOt:TII ,\SI\ED FOH IT, care
of Helen Help l iS! this newspa pe&lt;.
W,\1\jTF.D, ·\ DIVORCE
FROM PARENTS
Dear Helen :
Just like married people get
divorces, I'd like to divorce rt1J
family.
M_y mother hates me, and my
Cather couldn't care less. My
family is a whole army against
me. You can hear my mother
screaming at me clear down
the street. BoU1 parents figure
by yelling louder or tutting hard er and groundmg me, they will
make things better.
My mother sees se;.: in e\·erythmg, and trusts nobody . My
friend~ aren't friends. but she
thinks all teenagers ever do is
have orgies, lf she had her way,
she'd send me tu the dot:tor ev ery month for an examinauoo to
sec if I'm still "purr&gt; ' 1
1\ boy I know mmed away
and S('nt me a letter \ou know
how all lud~ sib'll "I1JV" on
their notes. Well he pnnted 1t
in those fat, psychedelic letlers,
and my mother said it was "a
picture of the sex ~rt" and he
waR "depraVt-d
. " l!c lUSt wrote
friendly !lungs. We nev('r dated,
'cause they don't allow me to,
rm over 16, do well m school
and earn fTlj own money, which
they mostly taRe away from me,
ror ''board and room''
J•d run away, but my brother
did, and he ended up in Juvy.
I have a girl friend whose
mother and father are wonderful. They see how lhmgs are and
want me to come live with them
I don't dare mention it at home .
Rut I'm getting so nervous I
bl.lfst into tears if anybody looks
at me
What can r do?- J .\1\IE~ HOM
HOC IIE~1 ·r:n

De.ar J'-'nie :
U thinp are as bad as they
appear from your IIJ .pagc let Wr. a foster home is just about
the only solution. Since a good
one is waiting, it may take only
a discussion with JU\'enilc auth-

,,

2nd class, he says

Illegal Payoffs Pose Big Problem
NEW YORK (UPD- The U.S. high a~ $7,500 to ••eight or 10"
Olympic Committee and the members of the U.S. tra(·k
Amateur Athletic Union agree squad, but said the next step,
that some hanlcy -pank;y went on lnc:luding possible revocation of
among
American track and medals, was up to the AAU.
rield athletes In the Mexico City
But an AAU ometal said his
Olympic Garnes but the two group must first have a report
groups can't get together on from the U.S. Olympic Commitwhat to 00 next about those tee on its investigation of the
taking Ulegal payotts.
alleged pa.yotts. A USOC outclal
Avery BrWldage, president or said, "We•re Interested in
the Jnternallona.l Olympic Com- getting evidence on it, but at
mittee, Wednei:Mlay accepted the this time we're nat doing
likelihood there were payoffs as anything on it. "

CHIC AGO

Old Salem

l\'E\\

The Dally Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0,, Thursc:~aL Nove~!' !4, 1968

(U PD

-

fi' s a

gray world for Leo HIIJ'den oC
No 2 ranked Ohio State and It
has nothing to do with school
colors.
Hayden, tailback for the Scarlet and Gray clad Wlbeaten
Buckeyes, sutrered an eye injury against Wisoonsin last
weekend. lie returned to action
in time for Wednesday's over time practice session but he
worked out in dark glasses.
However , Hayden, shades and
all, was expected to be ready
lor llie Bucks' trip to Iowa.
Coach Woody Hayes said he
also expected Rex Kern to be
back in action against the
Hawkeyes. Kern, Ohio State's
top signal caller, injured an
ankle against Michigan State
and had to leave the field, to

be replaced by another sopho- the starting lineup when Inmore, Ron Maciejowski.
diana entertains MiMesot.a SatIn fact, the only Ohio State urday. The quarterl&gt;ack who
player who'll be on the injury starred in U!.e Rose Bcwl game
list, HIJies said, is co-eaptaln last New v .... ~.,·'s Da.y was hurt
Dick Worden, who may be lost in Indiana's conquest of MichiCor the season as a result or a gan State. Coach Johnn,y Pont
knee InJury suffered against said Gonso will be able to play
Purdue.
against the Gophers but Greg
While the Buckeyes were Brown will be the No. 1 signal
working overtlme Wednesda.,y, caller for the contest.
Coach Ray Nagel's Iowans
other replacements In the
were taking things easy. The
Hoosier starting eleven include
nawkeyes practiced for 90 min- Tom Fleming for Injured fullutes in sweat clothes. Nagel back Hank Pogue and Rick
said the Hawks are ready men- Thompson for injured tailback
tally and physically for Ohio John lsenbarger _
The Gophers, who had their
State and he sees no reason to
do what he did last week- show final heavy contact drill of the
the team films of the last beat- week, were at full strength Cor
Ing they took at the hands or Indiana.
their rivals.
Dick Emmerich will start at
Harry Gonso will be out or fullback again this weekend for

ro-----------------------..
FflfiNISIIINCS
w;th a FLAIR for fASHION
Fall Fashioned

Kingsbury

KNIT

News, Notes

SHIRTS

i

T urlle and mock turtle neds
and Nel1ru co ll oro. Cottont,
Cre~lont,
Orion 5. Wool.
Long
and thorl t le e~•• ·
White and popular foil eo lof!.

frin

'1

SWEATERS
The popular V-netk pullover

and llll'tle nee~.

8.00 to 12.95
CARDIGANS
New foil hue1, Tlie popular
green1, ruth, golds e~nd
blu••·
Wools,
Sh1tlonds,
Alpoeos and Orlont.

9.95 to 17.95

._,_.... ""

or

the whole route

THANK YOU

I

)

I
I

\
I

!
I

I

DOWNIE-GROSS, INC.
Pomeroy

"Home of Arrow Shirts"

Northwestern,
which
plays lllinois,
Injured first
stringer
Bob
Olson wa11 back at practice
Wednesday after missing the
Iowa game, but he apparent.J.y
has lost his job to Emmerich.

Players Pick
Unser, Bench
For Honors
SL

3.50 to 6.00

Make Grid Awards

All.Stan@

Aware of Reports
indl.viduals involved of their
Brundage said his group was medal a, If dealrod.
aware of reports of illegal
Ollan Cassell, an AAU ol'l'lctaJ,
payoffs during the games in said "Our hands are tied'' unUl
Mexico City last month. The 80- tile AAU gets the USOC report,
year-old IOC president said the which was begun in Mexico
matter would be laken up nnt City.
by the AAU, which controls
"We camot do an,ythl.ng until
track and field athletes in the we receive that report. They
U.S., then brought up at the han not presented that kind of
1969 meeting o( the Internation· progresa report," Casaell said,
al Amateur Athletic Federation. The U.S. Olympic Committee
Brundage said the AAU has has jurisdiction for the investlthe authority tn strip the p.Uoo, he said, because the
reported payoffs came while the
athletes were under USOC

Worden Only Buck Injury

Racine Events

Carpenter
News, Notes

·\mazing how Ule networks up; she was shot in "t:asmoRoyheld out for a Humphrey last - ale, '' electrocuted in •• Arrividcrdilch surge long after the Ul' ci, Baby" and winds up in a.
and AP gave the last crucial cage in her latest, "Chitty Chitty Bang Bang. ••
states to Nixon.
Italian Couturier Valentino who
Greek King Constantine's marriage has its problems: he's dresses them both said the new
obsessed with gettin~ back on and past Mrs. Onassis (Jackie
his throne while his Q_teen ..\Me- and Tina) rhoose amal.ingly sim Marie is listening to hermotller, ilar styles; so alike he might be
Uenma1·k's Queen Ingrid, who dressing the soune woman, he
doesn't want daughter to go back marveled .... .\t the "Personal to Greece now •.•. Hope star Arm a it)'" TV taping, Sheila MacRae
Qua.J.·le has her Blue Cross pair.l opined "The title must befitting
toda.y's generation i~ 'The Committed Generat ion ' 11 ... T!Jey
sure should be ... \nother cliche
dangled at th e htppie set is,
''They do have their convictions
for sitms, marijuana, fighting
wiU1 cops, resisting arrest, e-tc.
The list of Democrats to run
agamst John Lmdsay for N, Y.
mayor is short but lengthening
every day: Con~. John M. Murorities and your parents to place phy of Brooklyn~~ten Island;
you there. Surely your rriend's Dean !lester of N,'I,U., etc---·
parents wlil go to bat for you. The se lf-rippl(.'(} wa\e hoping to
splash Kennedy in-law S t e v e
Ask tllem! - II,
Smith into Gracie Mansion might
Dear Helen:
My Dad and I have a little ar- have been taken faintly seriousgument. When my boy friend ly a year or two ago, before his
comes over, he usually holds my charisma expired.
hand, or sometimes lightly puts
an arm aroWld me. No mushy
stuff though. We aren't t h e
(ype.
I see nothing wrong w1th this,
but Dad practically thruws a
fil. lie sa.ys it's very disrespectful, especially when rve got
younger sisters around.
I can see where he might obJect to an arm over my shoulder (thouWl not reaJly), but hold ing nw hand'? I JUst wish my
mother and father would show
their affection like this in front
of us. It would make us all feel
closer. .\BEHDLEN TEEN
Dear Teen:
I think your attitude is healthTo the Editor :
ier than your father's.
To the citizens in the bend
Take a lesson from your teen,
area agam you have been relegatPop!- H.
ed lO the status of a second rate
Dear Helen:
You had so many blasts al citizen. At a recent meeting held
October 29 by the Mason County
.Jade, K. K. and IJeadeUe, that
you rna) not want another, but School board your children's fur had to tell yoo these spoiled ture was once again decided without you being rree to participate
brats need a good whacking. When
in il. According to an article
tlley call anyone over 3U "old
thai appeared in the Pomt Pleasbats" the) aren't speaking for
ant
Hegister, Oct. 3U, an (open)
af1...V teens but themselves But
airing
concerning the proposed
they're creating an impression
survey
of the Mason County
that all teens must live down.;
system
was held at the
school
If 1 did the crude things Deadette brags about at her "skat - board orrice.
Mtcr reading this article you
ing: rink love-ins'' I sure wouldwill find the greatest majority of
n't brag!
people there were from the Point
I belong to a "gang" too.
Pleasant area. There was one
We are the Mighty Hlackjacks,
lay
man there from the bend area.
but a nicer name is "soul SiSSince
there was no prior notice
ters.'' Our block dances a n d
of
the
meeting these people must
parties don't get us reputations.
have
been
privately in\'ited to
We try to do good, not bad, and
you
wonder who did
attend.
Do
maybe it's just a little harder
the inviting? Your elected offifor us_
See, I'm black. But besides cial must not have been invited
being proud of it, I feel I am because he wasn't there.
~ and think. prople! Think
blessed for it because r have
how
low you must rank in the
learned to appreciate what rve
minOs
of these public officials.
got and take things as they come.
Think
or
all the taxes that come
My parents don't bow to my ev from this area and then think of
ery command, and neither does
how little you have to say about
the world - and r like it that
how they are spent. Plink of the
way!
person or persons whose salaries
I think those three should not
you have help(.'() to pay ror countonly chew oo a b;:,r of soap as
les s years and then think of how
you said. llelen, but douse it
they have let you down. Think
with double strength mouthwash!
about all this and then decide in
- BOHN BLMK
your own mind how best you can

3 -

I

Washington White Paper

(UP0- Center

LOUIS

fielder IJel Unser of the
Washlngton Senators and catcher
Johnny
Bench
or the
CinciMati Reds easily captured
honors for rookies of l:tte year
Wednesday in a poll oC pla.yers
taken by the Sporting News.
The players also picked Stan
Bahnsen of the Yankees and
Jerry Koosman of the Mets for
rookie pitchers of the year for
the American and National
leagues.
Bench, the first NationaJ
League catcher to take the
rookie prize, received 136 votes
in the poll, with his closest
contender, Bobby Bonds, receiving 13. Unser tallled 92 votes, 60
more than roolde third baseman
Bob Cox of the Yankees, named
on 32 ballots.
Bahnsen, fighting early tendencies to throw wild, closed
the season to lead the Yankees
with 161 strikeouts and a 2.06
ERA. He posted a 17-12 record.
Koosman was named to the
National League All-Star team
after winning 11 games to four
losses. He finished a 19~12

season shutouts
with theand
Mets,
including
• • • • • • • - • • • • - • • • - - - - - - - • •. . seven
a 2.08
ERA.

control.
Brundage said hla IOC would
come in oob oo general survey
or the sltuatim aDd the
neces.sit;y or controlling Identification marks on Qrlpment rA.
any kind.

An insight Into the life ot'apr~

fessioJal baseballpli.Yer was!JI.ven last evening during the aMual

Kner Crook Hlgll School football
boDquet.
Johnny Bench, catcher fol· the
Cinchvati Reds, was the featured
speaker.
Bench centered his talkaround
the m&amp;".Y incidents lnabigieague
p!.yer' s career, both on and of!
the field, A question and answer
period was held following Bench's
talk. Bench was a member or the
1968 National League All Star
team and hassincebeenchosento

Hayes Scores 54 In
122-120 Cage Victory

Cashed Travelers Checks
Roby said in Birmingham.
By United Press International
Ala.
Monday
that several
The
San Diego
Rockets'
Ame'rlcan athletes cashed traveBasketball
Association
Natlooal
len'
checks
for
amounts
ranging up to $7,500 during the fans have a distinct feeling that
rorrner All - American Elvin
Olympic Games.
,
Hayes
will be quite a pro
fioby said there still waa not
basketball
player once he gets
enough EWidence to lake action
against those involved- Even
though he knew their names-because j•Since those checks are
the same as cash it is
Lmpossibl e to pin down the
people who were making the
J)B.)'otfs and just what the
pa.yotrs were for."
The
Mexican
government
turned over some of the used
checks and they were traced to
NEW YORK (UPD The
West German banks, Roby said
Rumors
during the games American Footllall League toimplicated a West German shoe day announced pairings (or a
firm in the payoffs. Roby did playoff in the event the tight
Western Division race ends in a
not name any firms.
Roby said the travelers' tie.
Plans for a possible playoff'
checks apparently were issued
blank, and the athlelea filled in were announced by league
their names, then countersigned president Milt Woodard following a coin Lossing ceremony
them when they cashed them.
Wednesday in his office.
One U.S. athlete took his
Representatives for Kansas
track shoe to an Olympic shop
San Diego and Oakland
Ci(y,
and found $500 stuffed inside
parti
clpated
in the coin fiip to
when he got it back. Roby said.
.. 1 stU I have the money. Ten decide pairings ror the playoff
crisp $50 bills all numbered in should extra games become
necessary to determine the
sequence," Roby added.
division championship. Kansas
City currently leads with an 8-2
record while the Chargers and
Raiders are a half game behind
ABA STANDINGS
with 7-2 records.
By United Press International
In the event of a twO-way tie,
East
game1 will be pla.yed otf oo
W. L. Pet. GB Dec. 21 or 22, depending on
Minnesota . _ .. 5 2 .714
television commitments. Kansas
'h City would piiiJ' at Oakland, San
KentuckY _ .. . . 6 4 .600
New York _ . .4 4 .500 1ih Diego would play at Kansas
Miami . . . . . 3 4 .429 2
City, or San Diego would play
Indiana . . . . . 2 7 .222 4
at Oakland, depending on which
West
two teams were involved in the

Tentative

Plans Made

For Playoff

Pro Standings

W. L. Pet. GB

Oakland. . . . . . 9 2 818
New Orleans .. 4 4 500
Los Angeleo .. 3 4 .429
Denver _ . . .3 4 .429
Hoostoo . . ... 2 3 . 400
Dallas . . . . . . 1 4 200
Wednesday's Results
Kentucky 115 Los Angeles
(01\ly game acheduled)
Thursday•s Games
Los Angeles at New York
Oakland at Dallas
Houston at Denver
(Oni.Y games scheduled)

31h

4
4
4
5
108

playoff
In case of a tllree-way Ue,

Oakland would play at Kansas
CU;v the weekend of Dec. 21-22,
with the wimer meeting San
Diego at San Diego the weekend
of Dec. 28.:.!9.
The AF L title game between
Eastern
and
Western
the
Divisions Is scheduled Dec. 29
and the same date wouJd
remain ln the event of a twoteam tie In the West A playoff
involving three teams would
push back the title game to Jan.
5.

TIRES

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(r1trnd1

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wintN-InH; hun trend dr.ll8R

lhat comes on our
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2

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winter tlrn.

A Ratings
COLUMBUS (UP0 -The final
United Press International high
school Class A coaches ratings,
with first place votes and wonlost records in parenthesis:
Teams
Points
1. Cory-Rawson (1) (9-0)
220
2. West Musklngwn (4) (10-1)215
3. Norwalk St. Paul (3) (10-0) 163
4. Newark Gath. (2) (10-0} 137
5. McDonald (2} (9-0)
135
6. Brilliant (4} (10-0)
91
7. Riverdale (I) (10..0)
89
8. Lorain Clearview (2)(g..0-0 82
9. Mogadore (9~1)
60
10. Fairfield Union (1) (10-0) 58
Second 10: 11- Portsmouth Notre Dame 53; 12. Shtui,yside 51;
13. Mt. Sterling Plains 35; Sa~
dus~ st. Mary's 33; 14. Lorain
St. Mary's 24i 15. Grand Valley
aM Mechanicsburg 23 each; 17.
Dover St. Joseph 21; 18. Caving·
ton 20; 19. Newcomerstown 19;
20. Dalton and Marion catholic
18 each.

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POMEROY, 0.
,_., V0 [ P0 Hl 13AEW&gt;N (, CO M rA N Y Of CI N ( I NNA TI O H IO

Join the Enjoyers
when you're in a beer frame of mind

Wednesday' • Fight Results
By United Press Jnternatiooal

West

W. L. Pet. GB

LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPD -

Jlmm.y Rosette, 163, San Diego,
Call!., ouq,olnted Dub Hwttley,
160, Los Angeles (10).

the feel of things.
He's not bad right now, they
point out, alter a season-cecord
54-point performance which led
llie Rockets to a 122-12U victory
over the Detroit Pistons. Hayes
made 20 field goals and sank 14
of 17 free throws in his mmrt
brUUant performance as a pro.
The Baltimore Bullets beat
the Cincinnati Royals 115-111for
their first victory al Cincinnati
Gardens since No\'. 6, 1964 and
the Atlanta Hawks downed the
Seattle Supersonics 142-113 in
other games.
The Bullets snapped the
Royals' six..game wirurlng streak
as Earl Monroe scored 33 points
and Kevin Looghery added 24.
Jerry Lucas had 26 for the
Royals.
Lou Hudson led the Hawks
with 28 points and Jim Davis
had 22 while Lem,y Wilkens
paced SeatUe with 27.

the Sporting News All National Creek graduate, •erved •• MaaLeague squad and fteldlng team. ter of ceremonies..
The t:anquet meal, served to
Another highlight was the presentation of the most w.Iuable line-- 210 persons, was preparedbytbe
(ootbaiJ mother L Rev, David Sedman and back awards.
Steve Spauldllll. a senior quar· zlol gave the invocation whDe
terblck, was honon.-d as the moat Rev. Frank Cbeesebrew pro...alUible back whlle John Hughes, nounced the benediction.
Other players recelvirw let.a 235-i&gt;ound tackJe, was present..
ed the best lineman trOIJhy. The ters included: Juniors - Tom
selections were made by their Hysell. Jon Rothgeb, DanPol.c~
Mike Haskins and Jackie He~
teammates.
Head Coach Howard Lee Mill- son. Sophomores - Gt.ry saunder, who guided the Bobcats to ers, Robert Metzger, Wade Henth6ir second straight Southern son. John Hudson, Walter LoveValley Athletic Conference title, da} and Mike Wickline,
Freshmen - Mike Beebe, G1ry
presented letters to the 37 team
Collins, Louie LoOOen, Jess Loumembers.
Nine seniors, Greg Peck, Mike den, Terry Moles, Jackie ParThompson. Gary Fisher, Barton sons, Bill Roush, Richard RumSbunp, Ron QuUien, Rick Moody, ley, Glenn Smith, Darrlel SWishPerry Beebe, John Hughes a n d er, Hick Whobrey, Kenny BlankSteve Spaulding were presented enship, Gary Johnson, Johnnie
trophies by Miss Patsy Fields, Metzger, Steve Kalinowski, ~
advisor for the 1\Yger Creek Pep aid Masters and Mike Conkle.
Miss Patsy Ftelc:ts presented
Club.
Cc:..ch Miller announced that cheerleadlng aJJards, Manager
Jwliors Dan Polcyn, Jon Rothgeb, awards were given to John Scott,
Jackie Henson, and Tom Hysell Jimmy Bias and Johnny Roush.
The 1968 captains, Perry Beewill serve a.s captai ns for the
1969 squad, Dale Rothgeb, Jr., be, Ron tluillen and Rick Moody
WJEH News Director and Kyger were also honored.

:.os Angeles . .9 4
Phoenix • . . . . 5 5
Atlanta . .
.7 7

.692
.500
.500

2'h
2'h

San Fran. . .. 6 7 .462 3
San Dlog&lt;&gt; .. 6 7 .462 3

General

NBA Sf ANDINGS
Chicago . . . . 6 9 .400 4
By United Press lnterntitlonal Seattle . . . .4 13 .235 7
East
Wednesday's Results
W. L. Pet GB Baltimore 115 Clnchmati 111
Cincinnati . . . . 9 3 .750
San Diego 122 Detroit 120
Baltimore .... lt 4 .733
Atlanta 142 Seattle 113
(Only games scheduled)
Boston •.•.•. 8 3 .727
'h
Thursda.y's Games
Philadelphia .. 5 4 .556 21h
Detroit ... . .. 6 6 .500 3
Cincinnati at New York
New York .... 5 10 .333 51h Detroit n. Phoenix at TUcson
Mllwaukee . . . 3 8 .273 5'h
(Oni.Y gamea a&lt;beWiodl

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�(
2 - The Daily sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0., Thursday, Nowmber 14, 1968

·

"Reach!"

Good Omens Slwwing Up .for Nixo~
restrained hope that the new oo. Yet, they might well 00 so,
even started, ted by a put of
President may not be indicted a- U only because tlley can scarcea foreign press corps here which
ly be altogether happy with their
so resented his accession ln the head of time for his conduct of accomplishments to date.
foreign relations is, however,
tragic death of John Kennedy
It all depends, really, on a
yet to be available, though all
that it lost the smallest touch
single
but troublesome [actor.
must deeply hope it will be
ot objectlvUy or rairness.
By
and
large, their central inforthcoming The big question
Thuugh it is, of course, too
terest
Is
in foreign policy. Three
ts whether the New Left poliearly to he certain, it really
successive
Presidents- Elsenticians and journalists ot this
does awear that this time the
hower,
Kennedy
and Johnson country will be willing to walt
White House newcomer may be
have
had
to
cope,
often cursin~
(or the evidence before putting
permitted some time in oO'ice
wearily
in
the
nighttime,
with an
in tbe classic thumbs-down gesbefore final judgments are made
endless
file
of
volunteer
and
upon him. Even the left - wing ture.
importunate
Secretaries
or
State
Having first destroyed the
British journalist John Freeman,
liberal Johnson Administration from the Old and the New Lett
whom Prime Minister Haro~d
and then, at the Chicago con· who believed their mission to be
Wilson has with rare unwisdom
vention and later, having busily not the proper one of reporting
tapped to be British Ambassahelped to polish ott the Presi- and criticizing but a mission acdor here in succession to the
&lt;iential aspirations of the liber- tually to rule.
able Sir Patrick Dean, has now
If Nixoo can somehow find a
been good enough to recant his al Hubert Humphrey, it would wa,y out of this maze, then all
imperiously hostile earlier views be irony, indeed, if they should may indeed be well with toreign
now glve some grace to the far
oC President-elect Nixon.
affairs.
The critical ingredient in this more conserntive Richard Nix-

helps nobody but the enemies of
BY WILLIAMS. WHITE
WASHlNGTON - The omens tills country.
Even the auwmatically critiCor the new Presidency of Richard Nlxon on the overmasterlng cal Europeans in France a n d
issues or world policy are pret- Britain are thus far showing
ty promising - U only he is some dl sposition to wait and
given U!.e chanl.-e inside this na- see before deciding that Nixon
tion that is beini offered to him simply won't do. They have aPparently awakened at last to the
from abroad.
The Russians have responded fact that the people of the Unitto Nixon's electioo by avoiding ed States choose the President
the more violent of those denun- of the United Stales and that
this is the way it will continue
ciation!! of the West which have
been a strident feature of their In be
Silly as it sounds, this ciramual celebration~; of the Bolcumstance is of capital imporshevik Revolution.
The South Vietnamese have tanee. For it gives Nixon some
heartily welcomed the outcome prospect at least of being judghere of last Tuesday. So much ed upon what he may do or not
is this the case, indeed, that do rather than upon the extrathey are already trying to di- ordinary criteria by which much
vide Nixon from the sitting Pres- ul the European press condemnident Lyndon Johnson. ooly to ed Lyndon Johnson before he
find that this game won't work.
The President is in simple
truth doing everything in !lis
power to smooth Nuon's wa,y in
the great transitioo, and Nixoo
is replying wilh an equivalently
BY MRS. FI!ANOS MORRIS
sensible graciousness Both are
The Baptist Esther Missionary
true political professionals and
Circle met Monday evening, No'tMr. and Mrs. Walter Swett retherefore lmow that to practice
HOLZEH MEDICAL CENTER: ett E. Grant, Middleportj Mrs. 11, with Mrs. Edna. Pickens, hostcently
spent a two weeks vacation
politics beyond the water's edge
Visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p, m, Roger K. Deem, Pomeroy; Mrs. ess, at her home.
at lrx:han Hocks Beach in FloriThe meeting opened with devoParents only on Pediatrics Ward. Leora ZwiUing, Pomeroy; Emda. They also visited Mr. and
ADMJSSIONS
mitt R. Renrroe, Flatwoods, Ky.; tions by Mrs. Helen Simpson,
Mrs. John IUwlln.gs at Orange
Mrs. Gary M. Harrison, 124 1/z C. Frank Meadows, Greenup, Ky.; whose subject was" For the Beau.
Park, Florida.
Third Ave.; Gregory T, Bane, Stanley E. Walton, Wellston; Mrs. ty of the Earth." ln the business
Mr. and Mrs. Emzie Davis of
23 Gallia Ave.; Mrs. Roy H. See. John J. Blair, catlettsburg, Ky.; session, the White Cross work
Parkersburg visited with Paul
RL l Gallipolis; Mrs. Thomas c. John W, Wiseman, Willow Wood, was discussed and a pre-Thanks.
and William C. Peck and Mr.
Runioo, Kerr; Mrs. E. Kendall Mrs • .John R. Thacker, Wellston. giving service to be held at the
Mrs. J:ffie Hoosier, who haR
and Mrs. Edgar Crabtree.
cimrch on Sunday evening, Nov.
Deckard, Rt. 2 Gallipolis; Mrs.
BIRTHS
been a medical patient at the
A large crowd attended t h e
24, with dedication of the White
Grover
M.
Smith,
Ht..
2
GalliMrs.
Roy
H.
See,
HL
1
Galli~
Veterans Memorial llospital, 1s
skating party sponsored by the
Cross
items and a missionary
polis;
Mary
Alice
Elkins,
RL
2
polis,
son,
9:34
L
m.
Wednesday;
now slow!} rec uperating at home.
( arpenter Baptist Church youth
centered film strip, in color,
Russell
Scott,
Rt.
l
Mrs.
Everett
E.
Grant,
MiddleGallipolis;
Mr. and Mr~. Gene Dalton and
group on l"riday eveningatDow•s
Gallipolis; Mrs. Stephen K. port, son, 3:17 p. m. Wednesday; on Jonah. Roll call was answered
two children and lhe latter's
Hollercade at :'&gt;/elsonville.
Darst, Pt. Pleasant; Mrs. Ever- Mrs. Stephen K. Darst, Pt. Pleas- by seven members with a Bible
mo1her, !\.trs. IJallon, of Marion,
Hon.ald Estep of Chicago was
ant, son, 10:09 p. m.. Wednesday. verse. The program tlleme was
were weekend guests of tl1e lata guest of his cousin. Mrs. Tom
Dl~CHARGES
"Giving 'Thanks!' Readings were
ter's daugl1ter, Mrfi. llarry 1·.
l'auber and family,
Mrs.
A.lbert
B.
Avery,
Mrs.
given
using the Thank!lgiving
Erlcwine and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Stevens
Robert
B.
carte,
Mr8.
Dolly
The session closed with
theme.
M1. and Mrs. Handall Smith or
and children, LondorDerry, spent
Chapman,
Mrs.
John
W.
Conger,
silent
prayer
and the singing ot
l!azard, Ky., were r L·ct.•nl weeka weekend with her mother. Mrs.
Mrs.
Alva
H.
Cook,
Mrs.
I
d
a
"My Prayer." During the social
end guests of her parents, Mr.
Eclna l·auber, and mherrelatives
Cranston, Mrs.
Kenneth W_ hour, re£reshments were servOO
and Mrs. Marvin 1Nils01L
in the area.
Dempsey, Mrs. Clyde B. Fraz:. by Mrs. Pickens. assisted by her
Mrs. 1\nna O~d1n spent a night
Mr. and Mrs. Heed Jeffers
ier. Mrs. Wayne W. Gilkey, Fred daughter, Mrs. Ollie Mae Cozart.
wit11 Mrs. HlMd1e t\elsonand at·
were Sunday dirutcr guests of
Mr. and Mrs. W_ N_ Brammer
Gaol, Mrs. Gary M. Harrison,
tended the supper at the Columtheir son.1n--law arK! daughter, The rooms being built on the
Mrs, Virgil 0. Layne, David S. of Cleveland came Wednesday for
bia Chapel Churl h.
Mr. and Mr"'. Lavern Jordan and Carleton Church have been comLoudermilk. Mrs. Aldene Miller, his mother, Mrs. Helen Younce,
pleted.
Lawrence C11apman, who has
famil}.
Miss
carla J. Nortoo, Hay G. who will be taking treaUnents at
Mrs.
Olen
Harrison
Mr.
and
been a mcdtcal patient at the CalMr. and Mn;_ William Lawson,
Seurles,
Vernon Vanover, Mrs. the Clevelard Clinic,
had
as
visitors
recentl)
~1r.
and
lipolis Clime, IS now ru.:uperatGlen aOO Cheryl, spent Sunda.}' in
Mrs. Hazel Carnahan Is a paVel'non
Vanover,
Mrs. Becky B.
Mrs.
nale
Harrison
and
son
ard
ing: a l home.
Charleston, W_ Va,, where they
tient at Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. and Mrs. 1\. ('.Smith and
visited relatives and called to see Mr. Philip Harrison, Columbus. Vinson, Quentin M. White, Janet
Edward Barton is convalescing
Arm
Horky,
Mrs.
Harley
F.
Shu..
a.
n
d
Mr,
and
Mrs.
John
Dean
daughters or {.olumbus visilt::d
her mother, Mrs. Bert Witllrow.
pert
and
Mrs.
Marvin
King,
at
the home or Blanche Biggs arxl
sons
and
Mrs.
Lenora
Dean
had
her parents and attended a footA C()unty Officers Conferen~:c
··J r
•
Xfs.
Barton W8!5 released
as
recent
visitors
Mr.
and
'Mrs.
baU game. · I he Children remainwa~ ~noVJlCQ.d for November 18
Veterans
Memorial Hospital abet
Paul
Paynter
of
Carpenter,
Mrs.
PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL
ed with their grandparents who
at Rock Springs Grange !Tall
brought
to
the home ofherdaugh·
Clair
Waggoner
or
Rutland
aOO
Nov.
14
took them home Sunday,
when the Columbia Grange No.
Mrs.
Sylvia
Bryson
o(
Canton.
ter.
ADMJTTED
Harold
Clark,
Mr. and Mrs. (;ro1·cr Stout
2435 l1eld 1ts regular meeting on
Mrs. George (Addie M a e)
Kenny Hartle~ who is attending
Pt. Pleasant; Mrs. James Wilw
were weekend vis itors wtlh Mrs.
1·r1day evening with Mendal Jorof Mason, W. VL, visited
Brown
at
Vienna,
0.,
spent
a
rescllool
Iiams,
Leon;
Mrs.
Glassco
Fair·
Stout's ch ildren, the l!arold nodan, master. in charge.
cent
weekend
with
his
parents,
recently
with Blanche Biggs and
row,
Dayton,
0.;
Edna
Swick,
lens, Max Bolcns, Mr. and \Irs.
Those attended the football banMr.
and
Mrs.
KeMeth
Hartley.
the
Bartons.
Middleport;
John
Byrus,
Pt..
Austin Wogan and famll:, and ML
quet at Alexander High School in
Sardra Beal and girl friend
S.SgL and Mrs. Steven Jacobs
Pleasant; Mrs. Albert Springand Mrs. Keith Weaver and famhooor of the football team were
and
children of Middleport visitvi
sited
a
recent
weekend
with
ston,
Mason;
Lona
Bowles,
Robily_
Mrs. rom Fauber, Walter and
Mrs.
Wayne
Beal
a
n
d
ed
her
grandparents, Mr. and
Mr.
and
ertsburg;
Donald
Fowler,
LeMr. and Mrs. McElwain of
Robby
Goebel, Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs.
Henry
Roush, Sunday. T.·
family,
tart;
Mrs.
Luther
Johna,
Buf~
rranklin, Ohio, were rN·ent week
Dolphus Burke aOO Glen Lawson.
Sgt.
Jacobs
recently returned
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Wayne
Beal
and
falo; Edward Show, Ft. Pleasend dsitors of his sister, Mr.
The affair was sponsored by the
Karla
visited
over
the
weekend
from
Vietnam.
anl
and Mrs. Sherman Ballengee.
'iparlan Club,
Mr. and Mrs. George Neigler
with Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hkks
DL1)CHARGED - Van Robbins,
Norma Gillogly and Mrs. Eland
Mrs.
Roma
Beal
of
Bristol,
and
children aoo Mrs. F'rankle
Pt. Pleasant; Robert Harper, Pt.
ma Ellis, Alban.y, accompanied
•• &lt;''!V~ ~
spentSundayinColumbus
Neigler
Term.
Pleasant; Mrs. VirgU Harper,
Mrs. F.va McKnight to Columbuti
'~-~~~
Mrs.
Elizabeth
Murray
had
as
with
JWle
Neigler and Mr. and
West Columbia; Mrs. Jack Hend-on Thursday where they attended
Cross and children.
Mrs.
Clyde
weekend
visitors
Mr.
and
Mrs.
ricks, Pt. Pleasant.
the annual Golden Age Hobb;y Show
'
William
Murray
of
Columbus
and
Mrs.
Ann
Coe spent several
BIRTHS - Mr. and Mrs. James
and sale. The sale features arti·
Mr.
and Mrs. Dana Murray and Williams, Leon, a son. Mr. and da,ys in Akron visitirfg ~r niece
cles made by seniol' citizens and
Mrs. Glassco Fairrow, Dayton, and family, Mr. and Mr~ John
many handmade items arc avail- son of Richmond, Va.
Miss carol Hall, who is a stu- 0., a son.
Davis.
able.
Mrs. Ivan Powell, Jr. and
The Bus)' Bee Society or the dent at Grayson, Ky., college was
home
over
a
recent
weekend
to
daughters,
Lori and Ivarma, were
Carpenter Baptist Church met
visit
her
parents,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
THE DAILY SENTINEL
recent guests or Mr. and Mrs.
with Mrs. Emma Whittington on
Carl
Hall and also 'o'isited Mr.
DEVOTED
TO
INTEREST
OF
Larry
Taylor and Camily at GalThursday evening. Mrs. Vivian
and
Mrs.
Joe
Hall.
MEIGS·MASON
AREA
lipolis.
Gaston gave devotions using the
Mr. and Mrs, Nev White and
RICHARD S. OWEN, PUIR1SHER
Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Grimm
theme, "Tha.:tksgi\ing." Others
Chuter T a11ne hill, Editor
and daughter of Pataskala were
had
as
weekend
visitors
family
present were Ida Cheadle, Mae
Publi•hed doily ••cept Saturday by recent weekend guests ofhtsparJordan, Keziah Dye, Freda Smith, Mrs. White•s sister and family.
The
Ohio Volley Publlthll'lg Company
od 1 k
do someUung about it Don't be
Mr. and Mrs. Charles King had
110 Meet&gt;.anie St., Pom•roy, Ohio: ents, Mr. and Mrs. R er C
Helen
Jeffers and Bonnie
releKaled to U1e status or a secas recent visitors Mr. and Mrs.
45769. BUii~u Office Phone 992· Grimm..
Cheadle.
2156, Editoria l Phone 992-2157 ..
ond class citizen
Eddie
King
and
Joey
ofHarriso~
Mrs. Theodore Boring or Me~
Second don POlloi• poid ot Pame•
Your civil rights are beinp; de .
roy, Ohio.
Artllur spent Monday afternoon ville.
nied when you cannot Creely par National adv•rlitln'OI repretenlotlve
with her sister - in -law, Mrs.
Bollineiii·Gallagher, lne,, 12 Eotl
ticipate in your own destiny , PeoGoldie Gillogl)'. Mrs, Gillogly is
4ht Sr., New Yor~ Ci t~ , New Yorio.
ple are fighting and dymg for
Sub,crlpllon rot••: Deliver•d by
somewhat improved at this time. bers and guests anerded the cereNew Yor••s PopulaUoa
coorler wh.,e ovailable 45 cents per
these rights. Don't let them slip
Mr. aOO Mrs. Heed Jeffers monies.
New York state's population
we•k; ane ye11r 1n advance ot the
away from you.
Mrs. Mar)' Jordan and Mrs.
Doily ~ntinel Office, $23 ... 0. Sl• per square mile. according to
and Mary Jordan, local, and HerU&lt;ln't let yourself be controlled
month1, $11.70. Tlwee ,onths, $5.85. the federal census
Mae
Jordan
will
be
advisors
for
1960, ls
man Cordra.)', Athens, were in
By Mot!W Route where eorrier •••·
by a small raction that doesn't
Spencer, W. \'a., for the funeral a baking club or the Columbia
~iu
not ovollob le : One month $1,50. slightly more than 338 perknow you exist until it is time
By moil: One yeor $10.00. Si• month. sons , as compared with about
or Lewis Cordray. Mr. Cordray Make-It 4-H Girls. The club wlll
to tabulate your taxes. Again I
$5.25.
n ... month• $3.00. Subscrlp·
was an uncle of Mrs. .Jeffers and meeting during the winter months IIQII'I prtce on dud•• Su"doy T ime1• 49 persons per square mile for
sa,y, think in your own mind how
the United States as a whole.
for this project.
Mr. Cordray,
lentlnel.
you can help change this system
Mrs. Faye Jordan has returned
that should have dissolved years
from Ann Arbor, Mich., where
ago.
she spent the past two weeks with
Bob Curtis,
her so~i~law and daughter, Mr.
New IIaven
and Mrs. Max McCallie. She went
especiaUy at this time lo attend
Installation or the Eastern star
Officers when Mrs, McCilliewas
Dear Mr. Editor:
installed as Matron of the Ann
He your Cront page article . _ . Arbor Chapter, About 400 memGarbage Ordinance .•. of TuesFOR YOUR VOTE Of CONFIDENCE
day, I\ov. 12, 1968 It would appear that Middleport mately the same monthly cost?
The sche&lt;.k.lled hours of operaVillage Council is indirectly subtion
also work against individual
sidizing, or at least promoting
garbage
hauling as persons workthe use of private garbage coling
8
to
4
or9to5woo't have suflection as opposed to individual
SINCERELY
ficient
time
to haul their own gar.
personal garl;age collecUon.
YOUR CONGRI:SSMAN
This is apparent from the ralh· bage_
lf we are going to have modern,
er exorbitant rate schedule pertaining to individuals hauling r I g i d I y controlled garbage
their own garbage and \he sched- dumps, with their Incident higher
uled rates Cor .. garbage collec- operating costs, then wll.Y not go
tors." Why should a rational per- the rest of the route with public
son haul his own garbage, say, garbage collection by franchised
three times a month for a total collectors or publicly.owned and
or $1.SO (by car), when he can operated methods'?
Pd. Pol. Adv.
W R. Anderson,
httve the convenience or an enPomeroy
terpnse hauling it for approxi-

1.l .;, ....

..

'

!I
I

Social Notes

B\ J H K O'BHL\1\
\ OIU\ Another TV

network'.s after

\Bl ·'s

ni

ek

Cuett. whose morning telecasts

are the lightest, rreshesl, most
inteJiigent chattercasts in the
tube .. .. ,\s we reported months
ago. the T\ nev.s is in for .'&gt;Orne
irldsivc federal scrutin.Y; not to
control it - just to show the almost unanimoos slanting by seleclion of film. tape and analysis
(which is editoria.li:nng under a
defensively reverential cop-out)

YOL'1 H .\SJ&lt;ED t OH IT
This column is ror young people, their problems and pleasures, their troubles and fun. As
with the rest of Helen Help US!,
it welcomes laughs but won't
dodge a senous question with
a brush-off.
Send your teenage questions
to YOt:TII ,\SI\ED FOH IT, care
of Helen Help l iS! this newspa pe&lt;.
W,\1\jTF.D, ·\ DIVORCE
FROM PARENTS
Dear Helen :
Just like married people get
divorces, I'd like to divorce rt1J
family.
M_y mother hates me, and my
Cather couldn't care less. My
family is a whole army against
me. You can hear my mother
screaming at me clear down
the street. BoU1 parents figure
by yelling louder or tutting hard er and groundmg me, they will
make things better.
My mother sees se;.: in e\·erythmg, and trusts nobody . My
friend~ aren't friends. but she
thinks all teenagers ever do is
have orgies, lf she had her way,
she'd send me tu the dot:tor ev ery month for an examinauoo to
sec if I'm still "purr&gt; ' 1
1\ boy I know mmed away
and S('nt me a letter \ou know
how all lud~ sib'll "I1JV" on
their notes. Well he pnnted 1t
in those fat, psychedelic letlers,
and my mother said it was "a
picture of the sex ~rt" and he
waR "depraVt-d
. " l!c lUSt wrote
friendly !lungs. We nev('r dated,
'cause they don't allow me to,
rm over 16, do well m school
and earn fTlj own money, which
they mostly taRe away from me,
ror ''board and room''
J•d run away, but my brother
did, and he ended up in Juvy.
I have a girl friend whose
mother and father are wonderful. They see how lhmgs are and
want me to come live with them
I don't dare mention it at home .
Rut I'm getting so nervous I
bl.lfst into tears if anybody looks
at me
What can r do?- J .\1\IE~ HOM
HOC IIE~1 ·r:n

De.ar J'-'nie :
U thinp are as bad as they
appear from your IIJ .pagc let Wr. a foster home is just about
the only solution. Since a good
one is waiting, it may take only
a discussion with JU\'enilc auth-

,,

2nd class, he says

Illegal Payoffs Pose Big Problem
NEW YORK (UPD- The U.S. high a~ $7,500 to ••eight or 10"
Olympic Committee and the members of the U.S. tra(·k
Amateur Athletic Union agree squad, but said the next step,
that some hanlcy -pank;y went on lnc:luding possible revocation of
among
American track and medals, was up to the AAU.
rield athletes In the Mexico City
But an AAU ometal said his
Olympic Garnes but the two group must first have a report
groups can't get together on from the U.S. Olympic Commitwhat to 00 next about those tee on its investigation of the
taking Ulegal payotts.
alleged pa.yotts. A USOC outclal
Avery BrWldage, president or said, "We•re Interested in
the Jnternallona.l Olympic Com- getting evidence on it, but at
mittee, Wednei:Mlay accepted the this time we're nat doing
likelihood there were payoffs as anything on it. "

CHIC AGO

Old Salem

l\'E\\

The Dally Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0,, Thursc:~aL Nove~!' !4, 1968

(U PD

-

fi' s a

gray world for Leo HIIJ'den oC
No 2 ranked Ohio State and It
has nothing to do with school
colors.
Hayden, tailback for the Scarlet and Gray clad Wlbeaten
Buckeyes, sutrered an eye injury against Wisoonsin last
weekend. lie returned to action
in time for Wednesday's over time practice session but he
worked out in dark glasses.
However , Hayden, shades and
all, was expected to be ready
lor llie Bucks' trip to Iowa.
Coach Woody Hayes said he
also expected Rex Kern to be
back in action against the
Hawkeyes. Kern, Ohio State's
top signal caller, injured an
ankle against Michigan State
and had to leave the field, to

be replaced by another sopho- the starting lineup when Inmore, Ron Maciejowski.
diana entertains MiMesot.a SatIn fact, the only Ohio State urday. The quarterl&gt;ack who
player who'll be on the injury starred in U!.e Rose Bcwl game
list, HIJies said, is co-eaptaln last New v .... ~.,·'s Da.y was hurt
Dick Worden, who may be lost in Indiana's conquest of MichiCor the season as a result or a gan State. Coach Johnn,y Pont
knee InJury suffered against said Gonso will be able to play
Purdue.
against the Gophers but Greg
While the Buckeyes were Brown will be the No. 1 signal
working overtlme Wednesda.,y, caller for the contest.
Coach Ray Nagel's Iowans
other replacements In the
were taking things easy. The
Hoosier starting eleven include
nawkeyes practiced for 90 min- Tom Fleming for Injured fullutes in sweat clothes. Nagel back Hank Pogue and Rick
said the Hawks are ready men- Thompson for injured tailback
tally and physically for Ohio John lsenbarger _
The Gophers, who had their
State and he sees no reason to
do what he did last week- show final heavy contact drill of the
the team films of the last beat- week, were at full strength Cor
Ing they took at the hands or Indiana.
their rivals.
Dick Emmerich will start at
Harry Gonso will be out or fullback again this weekend for

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Northwestern,
which
plays lllinois,
Injured first
stringer
Bob
Olson wa11 back at practice
Wednesday after missing the
Iowa game, but he apparent.J.y
has lost his job to Emmerich.

Players Pick
Unser, Bench
For Honors
SL

3.50 to 6.00

Make Grid Awards

All.Stan@

Aware of Reports
indl.viduals involved of their
Brundage said his group was medal a, If dealrod.
aware of reports of illegal
Ollan Cassell, an AAU ol'l'lctaJ,
payoffs during the games in said "Our hands are tied'' unUl
Mexico City last month. The 80- tile AAU gets the USOC report,
year-old IOC president said the which was begun in Mexico
matter would be laken up nnt City.
by the AAU, which controls
"We camot do an,ythl.ng until
track and field athletes in the we receive that report. They
U.S., then brought up at the han not presented that kind of
1969 meeting o( the Internation· progresa report," Casaell said,
al Amateur Athletic Federation. The U.S. Olympic Committee
Brundage said the AAU has has jurisdiction for the investlthe authority tn strip the p.Uoo, he said, because the
reported payoffs came while the
athletes were under USOC

Worden Only Buck Injury

Racine Events

Carpenter
News, Notes

·\mazing how Ule networks up; she was shot in "t:asmoRoyheld out for a Humphrey last - ale, '' electrocuted in •• Arrividcrdilch surge long after the Ul' ci, Baby" and winds up in a.
and AP gave the last crucial cage in her latest, "Chitty Chitty Bang Bang. ••
states to Nixon.
Italian Couturier Valentino who
Greek King Constantine's marriage has its problems: he's dresses them both said the new
obsessed with gettin~ back on and past Mrs. Onassis (Jackie
his throne while his Q_teen ..\Me- and Tina) rhoose amal.ingly sim Marie is listening to hermotller, ilar styles; so alike he might be
Uenma1·k's Queen Ingrid, who dressing the soune woman, he
doesn't want daughter to go back marveled .... .\t the "Personal to Greece now •.•. Hope star Arm a it)'" TV taping, Sheila MacRae
Qua.J.·le has her Blue Cross pair.l opined "The title must befitting
toda.y's generation i~ 'The Committed Generat ion ' 11 ... T!Jey
sure should be ... \nother cliche
dangled at th e htppie set is,
''They do have their convictions
for sitms, marijuana, fighting
wiU1 cops, resisting arrest, e-tc.
The list of Democrats to run
agamst John Lmdsay for N, Y.
mayor is short but lengthening
every day: Con~. John M. Murorities and your parents to place phy of Brooklyn~~ten Island;
you there. Surely your rriend's Dean !lester of N,'I,U., etc---·
parents wlil go to bat for you. The se lf-rippl(.'(} wa\e hoping to
splash Kennedy in-law S t e v e
Ask tllem! - II,
Smith into Gracie Mansion might
Dear Helen:
My Dad and I have a little ar- have been taken faintly seriousgument. When my boy friend ly a year or two ago, before his
comes over, he usually holds my charisma expired.
hand, or sometimes lightly puts
an arm aroWld me. No mushy
stuff though. We aren't t h e
(ype.
I see nothing wrong w1th this,
but Dad practically thruws a
fil. lie sa.ys it's very disrespectful, especially when rve got
younger sisters around.
I can see where he might obJect to an arm over my shoulder (thouWl not reaJly), but hold ing nw hand'? I JUst wish my
mother and father would show
their affection like this in front
of us. It would make us all feel
closer. .\BEHDLEN TEEN
Dear Teen:
I think your attitude is healthTo the Editor :
ier than your father's.
To the citizens in the bend
Take a lesson from your teen,
area agam you have been relegatPop!- H.
ed lO the status of a second rate
Dear Helen:
You had so many blasts al citizen. At a recent meeting held
October 29 by the Mason County
.Jade, K. K. and IJeadeUe, that
you rna) not want another, but School board your children's fur had to tell yoo these spoiled ture was once again decided without you being rree to participate
brats need a good whacking. When
in il. According to an article
tlley call anyone over 3U "old
thai appeared in the Pomt Pleasbats" the) aren't speaking for
ant
Hegister, Oct. 3U, an (open)
af1...V teens but themselves But
airing
concerning the proposed
they're creating an impression
survey
of the Mason County
that all teens must live down.;
system
was held at the
school
If 1 did the crude things Deadette brags about at her "skat - board orrice.
Mtcr reading this article you
ing: rink love-ins'' I sure wouldwill find the greatest majority of
n't brag!
people there were from the Point
I belong to a "gang" too.
Pleasant area. There was one
We are the Mighty Hlackjacks,
lay
man there from the bend area.
but a nicer name is "soul SiSSince
there was no prior notice
ters.'' Our block dances a n d
of
the
meeting these people must
parties don't get us reputations.
have
been
privately in\'ited to
We try to do good, not bad, and
you
wonder who did
attend.
Do
maybe it's just a little harder
the inviting? Your elected offifor us_
See, I'm black. But besides cial must not have been invited
being proud of it, I feel I am because he wasn't there.
~ and think. prople! Think
blessed for it because r have
how
low you must rank in the
learned to appreciate what rve
minOs
of these public officials.
got and take things as they come.
Think
or
all the taxes that come
My parents don't bow to my ev from this area and then think of
ery command, and neither does
how little you have to say about
the world - and r like it that
how they are spent. Plink of the
way!
person or persons whose salaries
I think those three should not
you have help(.'() to pay ror countonly chew oo a b;:,r of soap as
les s years and then think of how
you said. llelen, but douse it
they have let you down. Think
with double strength mouthwash!
about all this and then decide in
- BOHN BLMK
your own mind how best you can

3 -

I

Washington White Paper

(UP0- Center

LOUIS

fielder IJel Unser of the
Washlngton Senators and catcher
Johnny
Bench
or the
CinciMati Reds easily captured
honors for rookies of l:tte year
Wednesday in a poll oC pla.yers
taken by the Sporting News.
The players also picked Stan
Bahnsen of the Yankees and
Jerry Koosman of the Mets for
rookie pitchers of the year for
the American and National
leagues.
Bench, the first NationaJ
League catcher to take the
rookie prize, received 136 votes
in the poll, with his closest
contender, Bobby Bonds, receiving 13. Unser tallled 92 votes, 60
more than roolde third baseman
Bob Cox of the Yankees, named
on 32 ballots.
Bahnsen, fighting early tendencies to throw wild, closed
the season to lead the Yankees
with 161 strikeouts and a 2.06
ERA. He posted a 17-12 record.
Koosman was named to the
National League All-Star team
after winning 11 games to four
losses. He finished a 19~12

season shutouts
with theand
Mets,
including
• • • • • • • - • • • • - • • • - - - - - - - • •. . seven
a 2.08
ERA.

control.
Brundage said hla IOC would
come in oob oo general survey
or the sltuatim aDd the
neces.sit;y or controlling Identification marks on Qrlpment rA.
any kind.

An insight Into the life ot'apr~

fessioJal baseballpli.Yer was!JI.ven last evening during the aMual

Kner Crook Hlgll School football
boDquet.
Johnny Bench, catcher fol· the
Cinchvati Reds, was the featured
speaker.
Bench centered his talkaround
the m&amp;".Y incidents lnabigieague
p!.yer' s career, both on and of!
the field, A question and answer
period was held following Bench's
talk. Bench was a member or the
1968 National League All Star
team and hassincebeenchosento

Hayes Scores 54 In
122-120 Cage Victory

Cashed Travelers Checks
Roby said in Birmingham.
By United Press International
Ala.
Monday
that several
The
San Diego
Rockets'
Ame'rlcan athletes cashed traveBasketball
Association
Natlooal
len'
checks
for
amounts
ranging up to $7,500 during the fans have a distinct feeling that
rorrner All - American Elvin
Olympic Games.
,
Hayes
will be quite a pro
fioby said there still waa not
basketball
player once he gets
enough EWidence to lake action
against those involved- Even
though he knew their names-because j•Since those checks are
the same as cash it is
Lmpossibl e to pin down the
people who were making the
J)B.)'otfs and just what the
pa.yotrs were for."
The
Mexican
government
turned over some of the used
checks and they were traced to
NEW YORK (UPD The
West German banks, Roby said
Rumors
during the games American Footllall League toimplicated a West German shoe day announced pairings (or a
firm in the payoffs. Roby did playoff in the event the tight
Western Division race ends in a
not name any firms.
Roby said the travelers' tie.
Plans for a possible playoff'
checks apparently were issued
blank, and the athlelea filled in were announced by league
their names, then countersigned president Milt Woodard following a coin Lossing ceremony
them when they cashed them.
Wednesday in his office.
One U.S. athlete took his
Representatives for Kansas
track shoe to an Olympic shop
San Diego and Oakland
Ci(y,
and found $500 stuffed inside
parti
clpated
in the coin fiip to
when he got it back. Roby said.
.. 1 stU I have the money. Ten decide pairings ror the playoff
crisp $50 bills all numbered in should extra games become
necessary to determine the
sequence," Roby added.
division championship. Kansas
City currently leads with an 8-2
record while the Chargers and
Raiders are a half game behind
ABA STANDINGS
with 7-2 records.
By United Press International
In the event of a twO-way tie,
East
game1 will be pla.yed otf oo
W. L. Pet. GB Dec. 21 or 22, depending on
Minnesota . _ .. 5 2 .714
television commitments. Kansas
'h City would piiiJ' at Oakland, San
KentuckY _ .. . . 6 4 .600
New York _ . .4 4 .500 1ih Diego would play at Kansas
Miami . . . . . 3 4 .429 2
City, or San Diego would play
Indiana . . . . . 2 7 .222 4
at Oakland, depending on which
West
two teams were involved in the

Tentative

Plans Made

For Playoff

Pro Standings

W. L. Pet. GB

Oakland. . . . . . 9 2 818
New Orleans .. 4 4 500
Los Angeleo .. 3 4 .429
Denver _ . . .3 4 .429
Hoostoo . . ... 2 3 . 400
Dallas . . . . . . 1 4 200
Wednesday's Results
Kentucky 115 Los Angeles
(01\ly game acheduled)
Thursday•s Games
Los Angeles at New York
Oakland at Dallas
Houston at Denver
(Oni.Y games scheduled)

31h

4
4
4
5
108

playoff
In case of a tllree-way Ue,

Oakland would play at Kansas
CU;v the weekend of Dec. 21-22,
with the wimer meeting San
Diego at San Diego the weekend
of Dec. 28.:.!9.
The AF L title game between
Eastern
and
Western
the
Divisions Is scheduled Dec. 29
and the same date wouJd
remain ln the event of a twoteam tie In the West A playoff
involving three teams would
push back the title game to Jan.
5.

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A Ratings
COLUMBUS (UP0 -The final
United Press International high
school Class A coaches ratings,
with first place votes and wonlost records in parenthesis:
Teams
Points
1. Cory-Rawson (1) (9-0)
220
2. West Musklngwn (4) (10-1)215
3. Norwalk St. Paul (3) (10-0) 163
4. Newark Gath. (2) (10-0} 137
5. McDonald (2} (9-0)
135
6. Brilliant (4} (10-0)
91
7. Riverdale (I) (10..0)
89
8. Lorain Clearview (2)(g..0-0 82
9. Mogadore (9~1)
60
10. Fairfield Union (1) (10-0) 58
Second 10: 11- Portsmouth Notre Dame 53; 12. Shtui,yside 51;
13. Mt. Sterling Plains 35; Sa~
dus~ st. Mary's 33; 14. Lorain
St. Mary's 24i 15. Grand Valley
aM Mechanicsburg 23 each; 17.
Dover St. Joseph 21; 18. Caving·
ton 20; 19. Newcomerstown 19;
20. Dalton and Marion catholic
18 each.

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POMEROY, 0.
,_., V0 [ P0 Hl 13AEW&gt;N (, CO M rA N Y Of CI N ( I NNA TI O H IO

Join the Enjoyers
when you're in a beer frame of mind

Wednesday' • Fight Results
By United Press Jnternatiooal

West

W. L. Pet. GB

LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPD -

Jlmm.y Rosette, 163, San Diego,
Call!., ouq,olnted Dub Hwttley,
160, Los Angeles (10).

the feel of things.
He's not bad right now, they
point out, alter a season-cecord
54-point performance which led
llie Rockets to a 122-12U victory
over the Detroit Pistons. Hayes
made 20 field goals and sank 14
of 17 free throws in his mmrt
brUUant performance as a pro.
The Baltimore Bullets beat
the Cincinnati Royals 115-111for
their first victory al Cincinnati
Gardens since No\'. 6, 1964 and
the Atlanta Hawks downed the
Seattle Supersonics 142-113 in
other games.
The Bullets snapped the
Royals' six..game wirurlng streak
as Earl Monroe scored 33 points
and Kevin Looghery added 24.
Jerry Lucas had 26 for the
Royals.
Lou Hudson led the Hawks
with 28 points and Jim Davis
had 22 while Lem,y Wilkens
paced SeatUe with 27.

the Sporting News All National Creek graduate, •erved •• MaaLeague squad and fteldlng team. ter of ceremonies..
The t:anquet meal, served to
Another highlight was the presentation of the most w.Iuable line-- 210 persons, was preparedbytbe
(ootbaiJ mother L Rev, David Sedman and back awards.
Steve Spauldllll. a senior quar· zlol gave the invocation whDe
terblck, was honon.-d as the moat Rev. Frank Cbeesebrew pro...alUible back whlle John Hughes, nounced the benediction.
Other players recelvirw let.a 235-i&gt;ound tackJe, was present..
ed the best lineman trOIJhy. The ters included: Juniors - Tom
selections were made by their Hysell. Jon Rothgeb, DanPol.c~
Mike Haskins and Jackie He~
teammates.
Head Coach Howard Lee Mill- son. Sophomores - Gt.ry saunder, who guided the Bobcats to ers, Robert Metzger, Wade Henth6ir second straight Southern son. John Hudson, Walter LoveValley Athletic Conference title, da} and Mike Wickline,
Freshmen - Mike Beebe, G1ry
presented letters to the 37 team
Collins, Louie LoOOen, Jess Loumembers.
Nine seniors, Greg Peck, Mike den, Terry Moles, Jackie ParThompson. Gary Fisher, Barton sons, Bill Roush, Richard RumSbunp, Ron QuUien, Rick Moody, ley, Glenn Smith, Darrlel SWishPerry Beebe, John Hughes a n d er, Hick Whobrey, Kenny BlankSteve Spaulding were presented enship, Gary Johnson, Johnnie
trophies by Miss Patsy Fields, Metzger, Steve Kalinowski, ~
advisor for the 1\Yger Creek Pep aid Masters and Mike Conkle.
Miss Patsy Ftelc:ts presented
Club.
Cc:..ch Miller announced that cheerleadlng aJJards, Manager
Jwliors Dan Polcyn, Jon Rothgeb, awards were given to John Scott,
Jackie Henson, and Tom Hysell Jimmy Bias and Johnny Roush.
The 1968 captains, Perry Beewill serve a.s captai ns for the
1969 squad, Dale Rothgeb, Jr., be, Ron tluillen and Rick Moody
WJEH News Director and Kyger were also honored.

:.os Angeles . .9 4
Phoenix • . . . . 5 5
Atlanta . .
.7 7

.692
.500
.500

2'h
2'h

San Fran. . .. 6 7 .462 3
San Dlog&lt;&gt; .. 6 7 .462 3

General

NBA Sf ANDINGS
Chicago . . . . 6 9 .400 4
By United Press lnterntitlonal Seattle . . . .4 13 .235 7
East
Wednesday's Results
W. L. Pet GB Baltimore 115 Clnchmati 111
Cincinnati . . . . 9 3 .750
San Diego 122 Detroit 120
Baltimore .... lt 4 .733
Atlanta 142 Seattle 113
(Only games scheduled)
Boston •.•.•. 8 3 .727
'h
Thursda.y's Games
Philadelphia .. 5 4 .556 21h
Detroit ... . .. 6 6 .500 3
Cincinnati at New York
New York .... 5 10 .333 51h Detroit n. Phoenix at TUcson
Mllwaukee . . . 3 8 .273 5'h
(Oni.Y gamea a&lt;beWiodl

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r··.· ·~ . ·. ~. . ~, .

.a - The Dlib Sentinel,

Pomeroy-Middleport, 0., Thursday, No·v ember

31 School
Visits are

6th Class Graduates
PT. PLE.\S.\1\T -

ML•mber s
cla ss or
Psychiatric Nursing \ides or Lakin State llospi tal were honored
today at 2 p. m. in lhc Medical
Center classroom .
l Brooks Smith . ~tpt. or Ma aon County Schools. presented
certificates to IJextc r M. L"owtlS,
Gallipolis Ferry; Emma 1\. Dun can, Pt. Pleasant; Ma rgaret I.
Hart, Leon ; Mary L lll.'ll SOn,
Red House; Dorothy llig-!Pnbotham, Burfalo; noxi(' lliggi nbotham, Robet·t sburg; ~ l:iri c !.egg,
Robertsburg: 1\athlt.'en Mayes,
Henderson; Lucinda Mitehell,
West tolumbia: 1\lar~TUC'rile Neal.
Pt. Pleasant; Willo~=:eneOhlin~er.
New Hav en; l"onstanee Hcitmi.rc,
Letart; Hosie Smith, Mason: !leva

bf the sixth

graduatin~

Wheatcrart, !.eon; and Gloria
Whittington, Leon. Instructors
were Mr s. Katll~· 1\lng, n.N., Mrs.
Lorenc GoAAin s, t,P.N., and
Mrs. Margaret Francis, ''HE instru(·tor.
c;uest speaker was 1\ermeth
SJ. mmons , ..\rea Manpower Coordinator. with Lowell Cook. vocB·
tional supervisor or Mason('ounty schools and Mrs. Lillian ~u­
ler of the Department of Employment Securit,'' , givin~ brief remarks.
Dr 1\ennetll Byrne, superintendent of Lakin &amp;ale llospital,
ga"·e the welcome address and
th e He\' 1\enneth Show gave the
invocation.

Reported

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Q- \VIu ! lf(l .~ rl11' rrl'(l for of
t!1e ('(Ill/It' s trip .. J_m/ ,• lJrJliiiJii
t\ 1!1111' . . :'
A- llarolrt L (ira v. The
pam· I firs1 ap p(•arE'd ·i n I he
Chica go Tribunr a nd New
Ynrk Da ilv News in 1924 and
quick ly g&lt;i. in ed po pu larit ~·.

2-Hour

DRY ClEANING
SERVIa

(/ - When

IUPON REQUEST)

('nlunlbi L~

sl't

Pantasote Net

t!11• fir.~t time
fool

l ht!

!JJI

NnrrJ1 Amencnn mniufmul?

Our Usu1l Good Cluning

Robinson's Cleaners
991-5428

Pomeroy

It'll-~

A- Co lumbu s Ia n de d in
llo nd ura s in 1502 Tlw la n ding took pla&lt;'t' on his fourlh
and last trip to th e Nrw
Wnrld

LAY AWA

Healthily Up
T 11 e
Pantasote Company
Ci\MEX) &amp;l'hicved record level s
in sales and ear ni ngs during the
40 weeks endL'f:i Oc lober 4, 1968,
it wa s anrlOt.mced today b.r Charles /\. 1\' yman , chairman of the
board. l)re-tax inL·omc wa s Sl ,536,H2, a11 increase of 71 percent over pre -tax im·ome of$898,56!.1 achieved during the romparable period Ialit ~e ar.
1\;e l in rome after allnwing for
the Federal income tax surcharge
amounted to $717, 029, for an ad\'anee of 53 (lereent over la st
year's 40-week net income of
$167,256. On a per-share basi:'.,
nel earnings increased to 32
cents a ~hart' fmm 20 e(' nls a

11

NOW I

1

A DEPOSIT WILL

HOLD ITI
ACCUTION CAllNIUlR " I" 14K fOld.

•rPIItd

Wllerprool' Gill
flauru on
a •ll 01 sl/wlf fldli btulh dlil. l~ ­
m i ~ OOS doh 1nd lllndl.
f:IDO.DO

sales for the manufactHrl' r of
\' irtlO I re s i n~. l·ompotUlds, lilm s
and pat:kagin..:, infamswcar, eonverh:d plas l it: fabri l':'. , and pla stic and rubber industrial parLs
rose H pern:~ lll to $:JG,I51,019
fl'om $31,fl05,721l.

•JIIST

ttiE

····~·
A\IIIITE

gniUP

101U make Ita Initial

appearance on Nov. 30 when the Big Ben Mins trel Association holds a party In Middleport. Members of the grolt)
which will use the name, "Your Bon-d of Edm.:ation," are,
leO to rigbt, Eric Chambers, Bill Fr11ncis, Artie Casd aOO
Kim Neal. The band will also be one of three groups to be
featured on Dec. 23 at a Chri stmas dance to be held at
Southern lligh Sc hool in Racine,

PT. PU::.&lt;\SANT - The Western Soil Conservation District
will recognize a noteworthY
event du r ing a luncheon meeting on Nnv. 18 at the Pleasant
Poinl Hesort at noon.
The l,OOO,OOOth foot of tile
will be insta!Jed in Mason County through the Di strict progra m _ Mason Count.r is the rlrst
in West Virgi nia to achieve
this goal . The nearest cOWlty
to Mason is Monroe wlli ch has
insta lled 61lii,UIJU feet to date.
Fo llowing the luncheon the
group will pmceed to the C.
C. Lewis Farm where the
l ,UUU,OOOth root wiU be install ed in th e ground .

Dr. Holzer to

JYI'. PL E."SANT - The a ctivities report of the M a so n
Counl;y Heal th Nurses ror the
month or October has been re leased .!lhowing the nurses made
31 school visits, 648 llisioo tests
were done with 48 of tllese being
rererred to doctors ror rurther
examination and possibly gla.!IS~
es. Thirty-four tine tests were
done as a screening ror tuben"ll·
losis.
Miss Sharon Brinker, PUN,
presented programs on "Measles" in two PTA meetings. Mrs.
Mary Lunch, PIIN, and Mrs. Sonya Call of the T .B. and Health
AsSO(' iation appeared on W.JEHTalk of the Tom~, to discus s th e
Mobile X-r ay unit in the county .
One tllousand two hundred eightythree persons had x-ra,ys on the
mobile unit U1 e last or October.
Seventy-lour x-rays were taken
in the llealth IJcpartmcnt in the
regular 11: -ray clinic,
Eleven women attended t h e
Family Planning Clini c with Dr .
Hobert Slack and IJr. John Grubb
serving as elinicians .
F.igllt children were examined
in Child llealth Lonference with
Dr . Narcellcs in attendance. Mrs.
Rilly Daniel and Mrs. David Lan ham assisted tile public hea lth
nurses with tfli s clinic.
Two hundred rirty two immu ni zations were gi'lcn in lhe clinics throughout the coonty to im munize against the following di seases: diphtheria,
tetanus,
whoopin g cough , smallpox, polio
and measles.
Eigllty-four llomc and office
visits were made by the nurses
for \'ar iou s types of health services.

Speak Friday
I~T.

I'L b\S,,;o.;T- Charles E.
llol zcr, .Jr., Mil, (' hier of st.a(f
of llo llcr Medical (enter and
\'iCe president of tile board or
tr us lecs or the llolzel' Hospital
Fotmdation, will bl' the guest
speake r al Friday's meeting or
the Pt. l'leasant Woman's Club
to be he ld in the Presbyterian
l' hun.:h beginning al 7;4.j p.m.
,_l_lr. !lolzer will use as his topic
· ~·The r-.oew llolzer Hospital."
The Health and Safel,y Deparlrnenl with Mrs. C. G. l:Jauerle,
.r\dditinna l p la ns for tflcdl'mon- ehairma n and Mrs. 1.. S. Corr ick,
s tration of Chri stma -; arrange- co-dmirman, has charge of the
ments and derorat iom; tu be pre- program. l\lu s ical entertainment
s ente&lt;l by Mrs. BetlJ I"Bsl of wi ll be presented by an ensemble
Charlc~wn, \\'. \'a., were made of 2A voices from 1\_.,ger Creek
in a rcu.: nt tommittel' meet ing of J!igl1 Scho1'J l under the diredion
U1 e Middlcpo1·t Amateur Garden- of John Math eny.
ers Club at the home of Mr &lt;;.
l larold Lollsc.
Mr s. Fa~t is hoste~s uf L h c
tary Sdmol a uditorium, Pearl SL
"Garden Club of the 1\ ir" shown
at 'i:J(J p. m. on Thu rsda,y, De c. 5.
on WCI!S..T\', Uannel S, at 4:-i:,
It will be ope r1 to the public.
p. m. on Sa turda) s.
\1r!\. Lohse and Mrs . GLI) HeynHer dcmon:,tration will be preold .~ are chairmen of the event.
!&gt;cnted in the Middleport Elemcn( Hl1ers att endinF; the pia nni r~t s ess ion wet·e Mrs. Arlhu r Str11uss ,
Mr~. 11a rr.) Moore, Mrs. Waller
Crooks, Mr s. Glen Lambert and
Mr s. (;ra~e Pratt, club president. Mrs. Loh~c served refresh·
mems.

Demonstration

Wrotf' About Falls
F athr r Loui s He nnepin , a
French Recolle('t missionary
who accompanied LaSalle's
expedition to the area in 1678.
was the first white man tu
write extensively about the
.. beautiful river Niagara ."
Hennepin said Niagara Valls
··has nu equal."

:- I - Tho 111111)' Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, o .•
lleserve District No. 4
State No. 223-X

GOESSLER
Jewelry Store

PomeroJ

I

J
--------------------'Wh•n caae_ crown an&lt;!
'""'• '" ' "

' " " ' " ' ''"'"' 6 ' • •

c..,.~l"

.., , ~ .,

' "

HI "'Uti
t ~l•••nca _ ot necuu•v Gueranl•• •• lor o"" l uU rta&lt;

1~&gt;5

FRESH

business on October 30th, 1968, published in accordance with a call made by
the Federal Re~terve Bank of this district pursuart to the provisions or the
Federal Reser'le Act.

ASSETS

LAKE PERCH, COD AND
SOLE FILLET
GRIMES .
GOLDEN $ 00
bu.

lb.

RED DELICIOUS
2'4" Size

3. 50

bu.

DAVIS ICE &amp; PRODUCE

12 COLE ST.

992-2658

POMEROY, ·o.

1

nual Christmas dinner to be held
· at the Manin Restaurant. It was

'

' vOted during the meeting to place
a memorial bronze
on lhe

Smart

TeamMate

DemaOO deposit s of individuals, partnerships,
and corporations •••• . ..•• . • , ...••.. ... •..• $2,322,611.31
Time and savings deposits or individual s,
partnerships, and corporatioos . . . . • • . . . • . . ... • 5,131,637.23
Deposits of United States Govermnent . . , ••...••••.. ,
48,526.68
Deposits of Stales and political subdivisions . . . , . . . . . . •
711,069.17
Certified and o£ficers' checks, etc, . . . . • • . . . . . . • o • • • , 46,237.22
TOTAL DEPOSITS .. , , , , , . , , . , 8 260 081.61
Total demand deposits. , . • . • 2,792,944. 8
Total time 11nd savings deposits .• 5,467,137.23
Other liabilities . . . . • , • .. .. , ..•....• . . . . . .. .•• 232,008, 80

TOTAL LIABILITIES , , . . , , , , , . , . , . , .. , , . , .... , $8,492,090. 41

YOUTHS
OXFORD

.•

'

BOX

I

CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
Common stock - total par value ••....•...•• , ••... 267,495.00
No. shares authorized - 12,000
No. shares oulstandi~ - 10,699, 8
Surplus • . • . . . • .. ••. , •• ...•......•.• • . .. • ••• 194,493,00
UIXIivided profits . . . . . . . . . . . . . , ...•.. , •.....•.• 211,836.98

S.uiblp Priced

0.

TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS . . . . , .. , , , .. , ........ 673,824.98
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND CAPITAL ACCOUNTS , . , , •. , 9,165,915.39
MEMORANDA
Average or total deposits ror the 15 calendar days ending
willl the call date • , •••. o • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • , $8,212,549.16
Average of total loans for the 15 calendar days
e ndi~ with call date . . . . . . • • . . . . • • o • • • • • • • • • 5,571,325.29
Loans as shown in "Assets" are after deduction or
valll(ltion reserves of . . . . . . . . • , . . . • . • . . . . . . , 24,907.25

•I
'

erett Dailey, Ann St., Pomeroy.

FALL FESTIVAL, Soilsbury
Elementary School, Friday, 6:-

30 to 9:30 p.m. t~~onsored by
P.T. A. Door prizes, rood all!

'j

'

i

"

game booths.
MASON - The Mason Mothers
Club Christmas Bazaar Nov . 15
and 16, Mason Methodist Church;
on Fric~Q, 10 a.m. to 8p.m.; saturday, 10 a.m. to f p.m
'Thil year• a bazaar features

a sweet shop, whllA! elephant
sale, and Christmas and miscellaneous handmade I t e m s.
Free corree will be served The
public Ia welcome.
MIDDLEPORT GIRL Scout
Troop 5, Frlda.Y after school at

THEODORE T, REED, JR.
Directors

HAROLD E. SMITH

Many Gilts
From Infant
ToSize

I

.

12

I
~

·

1
_..

f
C
0

the Scout House ror investiture
and Oy~p service.
MYF OF Rutland UnilA!d Meth.
odlst Church sponsoring family

~ot\d
hildn ,
'b
Fashions ... E~ns

night at eittlr&lt;h Frl~. Potluck
suwer. 6:30 p.m. followed by
slides of their trip to Alrica
as missionaries by Mra. Amos
Tlllis. Special invitation extended to MYF and coqregation or
Rock ~rings United Methodist
Church.

&amp;\TURDAY

DEODORANT

srz

..-•.-oecss.,-~

79e Phillips

MILK

79C

DEDICATION

OF

~

goes into every
prescription at
U!fVe

Excedrin

MEDI-TRATING

COUGH
SYRUP

SUCH AS:

Carters - Gowns &amp; Pajamas
Brushed Colton Knit, Brushed Tricot
Pastels and Prints

ON THE T IN MIDDLEPORT 0.

LIQUID SWEETNER

·

Soturday. SOUthern Hlah School

R4cine. Sandwiches, pie, cor~
bread, beans, drinks. Sfonsored by Future Business Leaders
of America.
BAKE SALE and Bazaar, Portland United Methodist Church
W.S.C.S., S.turday at the Duke
Cleaners in Pomeroy from 9 a.
rn. to 5 p.m.

BAKE &amp;\LE !rill be held by
the jll1ior awdliary members of
Feeney - Bennett Post 128, Am -

erican Legion, 9 a.m. S.tur~
at Dudleys Florist In 111lddleport.
A !UGH School dance part,y
Sotur~, 8 to II p .m . at the
Metgs Junior High auditorium
in Pomeroy. The Jays wUl emcee. Public welcome.

THANKS

BUFFERIN
TABLETS

TO THE MANY

69~

1.19

CEPACOL
Mouth Wash &amp; Gargle

VOTES AND 'UPPORT

I

GIVEN ME ON NOVEMBE 5th.

PEPTOBISMOL

IT WAS GREATLY APP ECIATED

FOR
UPSET
STOMACH

i·

'
,.
''

Pd. Pol. Ad.

SINCERELY
OAKLEY C. COLLINS

.

.. . - ..

~~':!";. -.~·· ':"'~'::~--:k~-~-~

; _"'!. ':'""

~

_;.

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

"Launched into Action" was the
program topic presented by Mrs.
Glenn Dill when the Women's Society of Christian Service met
TuesdQ night at the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church.
Mrs. Dill commented on t h e
need for helping others alklapoke
specifically or welcomlrw n e w
families into the cmununity and
church. Mrs. Everett Thomas
talked or a rorelgn stulent which
she had taught.
Mrs. Robert Warner con1uct·
ed the meeting during which time
a report was given on the soup
sale and bazaar held Election
Day. It was also noted that several members atter1led theW orld
Community Day observance or
Church Women United.
Forty sick calls were made by

BY aileen

Catch yourself o star this season and shine on!

Hand Washable

·SLACKS
·SKIRTS
·JACKETS
·TOPS

Solids and
Florals In
Coral Mint
Brown and
Dark Green

A DIVISION OF AI(EEN

members during the paat month.
The Lion's Club dinners being
served at the churcll twice a
month now were discussed. Mrs.
Kermit Waltor~t Mrs. Karl Krautter, Mrs. Gerald Wlldermutlland
Mrs. Allen Eichinger served the

IN BRIGHT HOLIDAY COLORS

diMer Tueftdll night
Prayer by Miss Lydia Ebenbach concluded the meeting and
refrestunents were served by
Mrs. Thomas and Mrs. Leverett
noush.

.,

.::

AT

:-:.
Chester Grade School. Jitney lll4t* ::::
per 4 to 7 p. m.; festival rrom 7:· ::-:
30 to 10 :30; numerous games
and lood booths. Prbtce andprbtcess will be named, door prizes
awarded, and personnel from
Seepy Jetrera Show on band. )
HARRISONVILLE Grange, 7 p.
m. Tl.lrkey dimer at the hallj
brlng a covered dish.

SUNDAY
INVESTITURE, 2 p. m Soliobury

Elementary

Reg. 1.00

School for
Brownie. Cadette and J u n I
troops.
REVIVAL SERVICES, RuUand
United Methodist Church beginning 7:30 p.m. &amp;m~. running

or

MENNEN

Invited.
MONDW
ANNUAL GRANGEoll'icersand
members conrerence, 8 p. m.
Mon~. Rock SPrings hall . Ali
membera brtog dmuts. Year's
program wlll be discussed. Tick-

:~e.,;:~~le

for the all

Rea. 1.98

.:::

:;:

66e

1.39

SOMINEX

~ ~:~

Y0-5 SHAMPOO

1.32

VEGETABLE
COMPOUND

,'

:·

65~

Reg. 1.00

BRUSHES

66~

::;:

:::·

Hospital.

Reg. 89c
PACQUINS

Missionaries

Reg. 45e

Church of the Nazarene at 7:30

The Rov. and Mrs. Rhoden,
mluionaries to Japan, are on
furlough holding eervlces among

Churches or the Nazarene. Thls
is their oecood furlough IInce
being IIBtgned to Jopan In 1957.
Bosides delivering a misalon81')' messaae, Rev. Rhoden wtn
colored slide• IIIII there
will be a tllopiiJ of JapaMie
uUtact1.
. The Rev. Mr. Rhoden rec:eived bis Malter'l Degree in r""
llglon from Pall8dena Collep bt
PaleCiena, Ca!U., and ltutlled the
Jopaneoe 1 . . _ for • year at
the Univenlty II( Wallldngtm Ia
Sslttle before aotng to J.,.._

It iJ estlmalod that mor•
honeymooners visit Niagara

FaUs in September than in

-

·~~

46~
PINKHAM

92~

30 p rn. at Veterans Nemorlal

P m Frlda3.

COLD TABLETS

;.

GILLETTE FOAMY
LEMON LIME

Speak Friday

Reg. 69c
BROMO QUININE

Reg. 98c

J,O.F. CLASS, Pomeroy United
Methodist Church, 6 p m . Monda,y
at the church for the amual
Thanksgiving dimer .

Baby Magic
Cleansing Oil

LOTION 5% oz. 43

through Nov, 27; Rev. C. J. Lemley, pastor, will speak. Public

June.

I

MariCMI Fnndo IIIII Xelth, Mloa
Mrs. Charles Boyles, Mrs. Ar· Thelma Boyer, Mra. H o 10 r
thur St001r4 Mra. Tom Kelly, Lcq, Mro. Richard Long and
Mra. Marioo Van Meter, Mra. Mn.
Marie frlnctL Mrt.
Perry Hotrman and Frances, Roach and her diuptar, Trudy,
Mra. Marion Hawk and Mary, aened retreatmentL

Line Of Sportswear Co-Ordinates

exchange.
A report was given on the
sale of greeting cards, knives,
ntpkins, towels arx1 other items,
ani It was noted that the s~ond
chUd welfare report has been
submitted.
The traveling prize donated
by ~ra. Powell was awarded to
Mrs. HyselL Mrs. Martin and
Mrs. catherine w e 1 s h c~
hostesss, served re£restun'ents.

The Rev. Maurice M. Rhod-

VOTERS FOR YOUR

Mra. Lawrence fnnct1, MrL

Don 1'bornii1, Mrs. Susan Rlwl~·· Mrs.
WUIIom Grueoer,

Help to Others 1s Needed

en, Jr., ..UI &amp;peak at the Rut! IIIII

''·

•

Jewish H()JJ91talatDenver,Colo. ,
and that a gift was sent to Brian
Marshall during his confinement
at t'hUdren' s Hospital Gifts or
money were earlier presented to
the parents or the three cystic
fibrosis children in the county,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Marshall
aJXI Mr. and Mrs. Earl Holman.
Read at the meeting was a let.ler from Violet Aichhob of New
Washington, state chapeau, thank-

CANDYSTHIPERS, Mon~, 6:-

Children's

compounds prescriptions,

other health produch.

home of Mra. Julia Hysell. There

1

Slar!: of lhe Season ... Beautiful New HoliMy

an American

ni'versary dllller, 6:30 p .m . Monat the ball. Bring a covered
dioh and table service

MY SINCERE

45~

every pharmoci st as he

dispenset medication and

gion, was read. '11leSalonextelded thanka to the Racine Post for

wlll be a potluck dimer and a gift

Frida; in P~r6~ " "' 1··

Current and Exciting

A thani&lt; you note from Alburt
Roush, commander of Feeney·
Bemett Post 128, American Le-

It was noted that dimes and

.:: -·S: . ~ _.!. . .-1 ;..~,:- . ,..:. ~

-~r::e~,;;~·;·~;;hr~';Porl~

Don Runnel.

birthday earth have been sent to
three children at the National

! .',:

/ I ' J:.f'"' ' .J:.

Mrs. C.rl Rolch entertained

by Chapeau Iva Po.-en. p l a n a
were mlde ror prepartns two

THEODORUS COUNCIL 17,
FALL FESI'IVAL Soturday at Daughters of America, 56th an-

you

OAKLEY C. COLLINS

SUCARYL

BEAN SUPPER, 4 to 6 p.m. ,

During the meeting conducted

•

new members recently welcomed
into tho Solon were Mrs. Jolm
Boyd, Mrs. Jack Caney and Mrs.

~

~
98~

SWEATERS

'THE KIDDIE SHOPPE

the guiding principle for

VICKS

, .,.

Come In And Lay-A-Way
for Christmas While There
Is A Beautiful Selection!

Extra-Strength
Pain Relief

and your heohh needs is

79C

:;~.~

Size .4 to 12

Swisher &amp; Lohse
Rexall Drugs
The desire to

FRIDAY
FRIDAY

Club, 7:30
Friday night, home of Mrs. Ev-

i

low of the llelgo Caunl¥ SOlon
710, Elaht et For1;y, held lloodiJ
night· at the home ol Mrs. Oob¥
Martin.
It 10U reported t'-1 lnlddltlon
to the Salon cortrlbutlon, part;..
nero are making lnllvldual eontrlbuUons to the Al.ociaUon 1&lt;&gt;taliRK 121. Sewral of the Salon
member• aaslsted inmaUiqpreo.
p&amp;i ations for the ann.al O.rtstmas Seal sale or the TB IJ"CH.I).

.

' ;. ' o~ ~

low the Salon for o gift presented Frldll night 10lth • toy parcy II
to her at a recent recepdon. her Wrlaht St. home in Pomeroy.
Pllna were made ror se\oeral
lira. Harle_y Johnsoo ""' the
members to lttenl the Pouvlor demollJtrator. Gwsts were Mrs.
to be hold In Colwnbus, Dec. 7-11 Ted Warner and P1tiy, Mrs.
at the Pick-Carter HoteL Three ~~hn- ~ttnu and Mary, Mra.

flag.
Presented at the meeUng was
an endorsement rn.n the Toledo
MEIGS CHAPTER DAV ..UI Thanksgiving beokets ror needy Soloo 101 for Doris Stanlrlff,d&amp;observe Veterans Day with 6:30 famllies. The gTOlll also dis- . . partmentalll concierge,l96g..70,
p.m. dinner at hall in Pome· cUB sed plans ror the cand,y sale to nominee.
roy, Thursdoy. Veterons of all be conducted Frida)' and saiurIt was voted to change t h e
wars and families invited.
day at Kroger'•, and ror the meeting time from the second
PAST COUNCILORS, Daugh- cystic tlbrosla house- to- hwse Monday to the secon! Thursday
ters of America Lodge, Sarah canvass to gel wderway l h i s of each mooth. Theamual Christ·
Diddle home, Thursday, 7:30 p . week.
mas party will be held at the

THIRD

I

I, Paul t::. Kloes, Ca shier, of the abolle-named bank do hereby declare
that this report of corxlition is true to the best or my knowledge and belief.
PAUL E. KLOES
We, lhe undersigned dire&lt;"iors, attest the correctness or this report of
condition and declare that it has been examined by us and to the best of our
knowledge and belief is true and correct.
THERON JOHNSON

Church, 2 Jl.m. Tbunday; Mrs .
Clara Heme I)', Mrs. Nan Moore,
program leadera; Mra. Grace
French, Mrs. France1 Wil1011.,
Mrs. Lorena Davis, hosteasea.

Sigma Phi Sororlt;y, Thursday,
7:30 p.m., social room ot Southern and Columbus Ohio Electric
Co.
BRADBURY PTA, 7:30 Thursd a y, Bradbury
Elementary
Sdu:d; speaker, 1 state highway
patrolman; door prize; Otth grade
room mothers have rerreshments.
PAST OFFICERS, R 1 c I n e
Chapter 134,0.E.S. 8p.m. Thursday, home or Mrs. Bert Grimmj
Mrs. Jane Hill assisting hostess.

Black
C-0-E Width

I
I

THIJR!IlAY
POI\IEROY - MEIGS COUNTY Yotlllll Democrat Club's regular meetfn8Thur~, Nov. 14.
Democrat l1q, PomeJW.
AFTERNOON CmCLE, ll14·
dleport Heeth United M - I l

XI GAMMA Mu Chapter, Beta

sa.99

\,

A $10 contrlbuUon to lhelllelp
County Tuberculotil 1111:1 Health
AssociiUon na made at a meat-

m.

TUSSY

Anti-Acid &amp; Laxative

Censor ship o( Literature in the
school curriculum was the topic
of a national expert in lhe teaching or Enr~li sll when the English
,\ss.n. of Ohio met in its 10th annual conventi on NO\'. 9 on the
Ohio SU:tte Uni.,.ersit.Y campus.
lle was Hober t F. Hogan, executive secretary of the National
t'oun cil of Teachers o£ English.
Attending from the Pomeroy
Elementary So:'hool star£ were
Miss Carolyn Smith and Mrs.
Hobert D. Roberts.
During lun cheon session, Dr.
Ilana Still , J)ean or ·'cademic Atfairs. Clarion Slate Lollege,
('!arion , l'a., demonstrated his
topic , "Head to Me'' with read·
ings ft·om classical prose and
poetry .
Mr s. l'harlotte S, !lurk , chair man, Elementary Section, N.C.
T .1-: ., prese nted the afte rnoon
program. She illustrated ways
in whi ch l'hildren can be stimu la ted to prod uce ..:rcalive writillg, espcl"ia liJ in the field or
poolry.
llr . .lames ~- Rri tton, Header in Ecka catlon and Ilead of the
En~dish Departme nt, l nivel' slt,,•,;
of London, also addressed the
group. lie pn•s cnted ~a mpl es of
ercative l'lritin~,: from children
in "rhools of l.ancastershire,
England ,

,,

ror

old pulpit Bible gl ven to the
church by lhe late Harley sanborn.
David Dant presented dev.
tiona usi11:: the title "Thlnksghing ror the Status Quo." Preparing the oyster lltf)per were Mn.
McNeil, and Mrs. Hood. Thetables were decorated in Thanksgiving theme.
AtteOOing were Mr. and Mrs.
Darst, Mr. and Mrs. McNeU, Mr.
and Mrs. Hood, Mr.and Mrs. Hubbard, Mr. and Mrs. Warner, Mr.
and Mrs. Willi&amp; Anthony, Edbon
Baker, the Rev. Charles Simons,
Wesley Simons and Mr. and Mrs.

Ll ABIUTIF-~

1.00

Censorship
Discussed

New omcers f1 the Hearthatone Class were elected Tues·
;: day night during a business meet• ing whteh followed an oyster di•
: ner at the Middleport first Bap: till Church.
Elected were Paul Smart, pres·
: ideM; John Werner, vice presi·
. deM; Mrs. MUton Hood, secre: tary; •nd John McNeU, treasur. er. Mrs. Smart was named card
: and nower chalnnan for the
· class.
Plana were made
the an~

of Pomeroy, Ohio, a member of the Federal Rese rve System, at the close of

'

MAGNESIA

Curriculum

~

The Farmers Bank and Savings Company

Being Planned
That's the most an Accu tron&amp; timepiece wi ll gain o r lose io
one month . And we'll guarantee •t. t Accutron looks like a
watch . But 1t 1sn 't. ll doesn 't have a ma in spring, a hairspring,
or a ba.lance wheel . Accutron has replaced them with an
eiJ!oCt ronJc ·powered t unmg fo rk . ll s plits eac h seco nd into 360
eQu~l parts. And makes the Accutron t imepiece s o precise, it
won t gam or lose an average of more than two seconds a day.

•
•

r~

Donations Made

~ New Officers ore Elected

.

Cash, balances with IXher banks, aOO cash
items in process of collection • . . . . . ..••••• .. . $1,193,335.44
United States Goverrunenl obligations . • . . .• .••• . o • • 1,4811,2'79.37
Obligations of States an:l political subdivisions •••••••. 536,657. 19
Other securities , . , • • . . ..• , • . • . . . • • • . • . • • • • • •
9,000.00
Other loans and discounts . • . . .•• • . ..• • •••.•.• .•. 5,595,292.33
Bank premises, rurniture and fixtures, and other
assets represertlng bank premises . • . • • • • • . . • • . . 251,096.22
Real estate owned other than bank premises o • • • • • • • • • •
87,000.00
Other assets . .• . ••..••....•• . .... . • , , • . . • • . . • 5,254.84
TOTAL ASSETS . . . . . . . . . • . . • . . . ... .. • . • . . . • • . .$9,165,915.39

No&gt;·c"lllll

•

&gt; '

REPORT OF CONDITION OF

Thur~,

.... r ..l

FEENAMINT

COLD CREAM

32

l'::·-----...,;llij

59~

Reg. 75c

~

VISIT OUR NEWLY

LISTERINE
50~

REMODELED BEAUTY
BAR
AND GET A FREE CHANCE
ON A $16_95 WIGLET OR HAIR
FALL····
ALSO FREE CHANCE ON FABERGE
CDLO~NE AND DU-STING POWDER
SET OR HELENA RUBENSTEIN
BEAUTY KIT.
': .: ···:·:. :'•'•' .
. ::. :.

46~
·::: ·..·

Reg. 57c
IPANA

TOOTHPASTE

38~

Reg. 58c
KLEENITE

DENTURE
CLEANSER

38/t
"

�.. ..

~

.

'

r··.· ·~ . ·. ~. . ~, .

.a - The Dlib Sentinel,

Pomeroy-Middleport, 0., Thursday, No·v ember

31 School
Visits are

6th Class Graduates
PT. PLE.\S.\1\T -

ML•mber s
cla ss or
Psychiatric Nursing \ides or Lakin State llospi tal were honored
today at 2 p. m. in lhc Medical
Center classroom .
l Brooks Smith . ~tpt. or Ma aon County Schools. presented
certificates to IJextc r M. L"owtlS,
Gallipolis Ferry; Emma 1\. Dun can, Pt. Pleasant; Ma rgaret I.
Hart, Leon ; Mary L lll.'ll SOn,
Red House; Dorothy llig-!Pnbotham, Burfalo; noxi(' lliggi nbotham, Robet·t sburg; ~ l:iri c !.egg,
Robertsburg: 1\athlt.'en Mayes,
Henderson; Lucinda Mitehell,
West tolumbia: 1\lar~TUC'rile Neal.
Pt. Pleasant; Willo~=:eneOhlin~er.
New Hav en; l"onstanee Hcitmi.rc,
Letart; Hosie Smith, Mason: !leva

bf the sixth

graduatin~

Wheatcrart, !.eon; and Gloria
Whittington, Leon. Instructors
were Mr s. Katll~· 1\lng, n.N., Mrs.
Lorenc GoAAin s, t,P.N., and
Mrs. Margaret Francis, ''HE instru(·tor.
c;uest speaker was 1\ermeth
SJ. mmons , ..\rea Manpower Coordinator. with Lowell Cook. vocB·
tional supervisor or Mason('ounty schools and Mrs. Lillian ~u­
ler of the Department of Employment Securit,'' , givin~ brief remarks.
Dr 1\ennetll Byrne, superintendent of Lakin &amp;ale llospital,
ga"·e the welcome address and
th e He\' 1\enneth Show gave the
invocation.

Reported

THIS NEW "MOD" MUSIC

QUICK QUIZ
Q- \VIu ! lf(l .~ rl11' rrl'(l for of
t!1e ('(Ill/It' s trip .. J_m/ ,• lJrJliiiJii
t\ 1!1111' . . :'
A- llarolrt L (ira v. The
pam· I firs1 ap p(•arE'd ·i n I he
Chica go Tribunr a nd New
Ynrk Da ilv News in 1924 and
quick ly g&lt;i. in ed po pu larit ~·.

2-Hour

DRY ClEANING
SERVIa

(/ - When

IUPON REQUEST)

('nlunlbi L~

sl't

Pantasote Net

t!11• fir.~t time
fool

l ht!

!JJI

NnrrJ1 Amencnn mniufmul?

Our Usu1l Good Cluning

Robinson's Cleaners
991-5428

Pomeroy

It'll-~

A- Co lumbu s Ia n de d in
llo nd ura s in 1502 Tlw la n ding took pla&lt;'t' on his fourlh
and last trip to th e Nrw
Wnrld

LAY AWA

Healthily Up
T 11 e
Pantasote Company
Ci\MEX) &amp;l'hicved record level s
in sales and ear ni ngs during the
40 weeks endL'f:i Oc lober 4, 1968,
it wa s anrlOt.mced today b.r Charles /\. 1\' yman , chairman of the
board. l)re-tax inL·omc wa s Sl ,536,H2, a11 increase of 71 percent over pre -tax im·ome of$898,56!.1 achieved during the romparable period Ialit ~e ar.
1\;e l in rome after allnwing for
the Federal income tax surcharge
amounted to $717, 029, for an ad\'anee of 53 (lereent over la st
year's 40-week net income of
$167,256. On a per-share basi:'.,
nel earnings increased to 32
cents a ~hart' fmm 20 e(' nls a

11

NOW I

1

A DEPOSIT WILL

HOLD ITI
ACCUTION CAllNIUlR " I" 14K fOld.

•rPIItd

Wllerprool' Gill
flauru on
a •ll 01 sl/wlf fldli btulh dlil. l~ ­
m i ~ OOS doh 1nd lllndl.
f:IDO.DO

sales for the manufactHrl' r of
\' irtlO I re s i n~. l·ompotUlds, lilm s
and pat:kagin..:, infamswcar, eonverh:d plas l it: fabri l':'. , and pla stic and rubber industrial parLs
rose H pern:~ lll to $:JG,I51,019
fl'om $31,fl05,721l.

•JIIST

ttiE

····~·
A\IIIITE

gniUP

101U make Ita Initial

appearance on Nov. 30 when the Big Ben Mins trel Association holds a party In Middleport. Members of the grolt)
which will use the name, "Your Bon-d of Edm.:ation," are,
leO to rigbt, Eric Chambers, Bill Fr11ncis, Artie Casd aOO
Kim Neal. The band will also be one of three groups to be
featured on Dec. 23 at a Chri stmas dance to be held at
Southern lligh Sc hool in Racine,

PT. PU::.&lt;\SANT - The Western Soil Conservation District
will recognize a noteworthY
event du r ing a luncheon meeting on Nnv. 18 at the Pleasant
Poinl Hesort at noon.
The l,OOO,OOOth foot of tile
will be insta!Jed in Mason County through the Di strict progra m _ Mason Count.r is the rlrst
in West Virgi nia to achieve
this goal . The nearest cOWlty
to Mason is Monroe wlli ch has
insta lled 61lii,UIJU feet to date.
Fo llowing the luncheon the
group will pmceed to the C.
C. Lewis Farm where the
l ,UUU,OOOth root wiU be install ed in th e ground .

Dr. Holzer to

JYI'. PL E."SANT - The a ctivities report of the M a so n
Counl;y Heal th Nurses ror the
month or October has been re leased .!lhowing the nurses made
31 school visits, 648 llisioo tests
were done with 48 of tllese being
rererred to doctors ror rurther
examination and possibly gla.!IS~
es. Thirty-four tine tests were
done as a screening ror tuben"ll·
losis.
Miss Sharon Brinker, PUN,
presented programs on "Measles" in two PTA meetings. Mrs.
Mary Lunch, PIIN, and Mrs. Sonya Call of the T .B. and Health
AsSO(' iation appeared on W.JEHTalk of the Tom~, to discus s th e
Mobile X-r ay unit in the county .
One tllousand two hundred eightythree persons had x-ra,ys on the
mobile unit U1 e last or October.
Seventy-lour x-rays were taken
in the llealth IJcpartmcnt in the
regular 11: -ray clinic,
Eleven women attended t h e
Family Planning Clini c with Dr .
Hobert Slack and IJr. John Grubb
serving as elinicians .
F.igllt children were examined
in Child llealth Lonference with
Dr . Narcellcs in attendance. Mrs.
Rilly Daniel and Mrs. David Lan ham assisted tile public hea lth
nurses with tfli s clinic.
Two hundred rirty two immu ni zations were gi'lcn in lhe clinics throughout the coonty to im munize against the following di seases: diphtheria,
tetanus,
whoopin g cough , smallpox, polio
and measles.
Eigllty-four llomc and office
visits were made by the nurses
for \'ar iou s types of health services.

Speak Friday
I~T.

I'L b\S,,;o.;T- Charles E.
llol zcr, .Jr., Mil, (' hier of st.a(f
of llo llcr Medical (enter and
\'iCe president of tile board or
tr us lecs or the llolzel' Hospital
Fotmdation, will bl' the guest
speake r al Friday's meeting or
the Pt. l'leasant Woman's Club
to be he ld in the Presbyterian
l' hun.:h beginning al 7;4.j p.m.
,_l_lr. !lolzer will use as his topic
· ~·The r-.oew llolzer Hospital."
The Health and Safel,y Deparlrnenl with Mrs. C. G. l:Jauerle,
.r\dditinna l p la ns for tflcdl'mon- ehairma n and Mrs. 1.. S. Corr ick,
s tration of Chri stma -; arrange- co-dmirman, has charge of the
ments and derorat iom; tu be pre- program. l\lu s ical entertainment
s ente&lt;l by Mrs. BetlJ I"Bsl of wi ll be presented by an ensemble
Charlc~wn, \\'. \'a., were made of 2A voices from 1\_.,ger Creek
in a rcu.: nt tommittel' meet ing of J!igl1 Scho1'J l under the diredion
U1 e Middlcpo1·t Amateur Garden- of John Math eny.
ers Club at the home of Mr &lt;;.
l larold Lollsc.
Mr s. Fa~t is hoste~s uf L h c
tary Sdmol a uditorium, Pearl SL
"Garden Club of the 1\ ir" shown
at 'i:J(J p. m. on Thu rsda,y, De c. 5.
on WCI!S..T\', Uannel S, at 4:-i:,
It will be ope r1 to the public.
p. m. on Sa turda) s.
\1r!\. Lohse and Mrs . GLI) HeynHer dcmon:,tration will be preold .~ are chairmen of the event.
!&gt;cnted in the Middleport Elemcn( Hl1ers att endinF; the pia nni r~t s ess ion wet·e Mrs. Arlhu r Str11uss ,
Mr~. 11a rr.) Moore, Mrs. Waller
Crooks, Mr s. Glen Lambert and
Mr s. (;ra~e Pratt, club president. Mrs. Loh~c served refresh·
mems.

Demonstration

Wrotf' About Falls
F athr r Loui s He nnepin , a
French Recolle('t missionary
who accompanied LaSalle's
expedition to the area in 1678.
was the first white man tu
write extensively about the
.. beautiful river Niagara ."
Hennepin said Niagara Valls
··has nu equal."

:- I - Tho 111111)' Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, o .•
lleserve District No. 4
State No. 223-X

GOESSLER
Jewelry Store

PomeroJ

I

J
--------------------'Wh•n caae_ crown an&lt;!
'""'• '" ' "

' " " ' " ' ''"'"' 6 ' • •

c..,.~l"

.., , ~ .,

' "

HI "'Uti
t ~l•••nca _ ot necuu•v Gueranl•• •• lor o"" l uU rta&lt;

1~&gt;5

FRESH

business on October 30th, 1968, published in accordance with a call made by
the Federal Re~terve Bank of this district pursuart to the provisions or the
Federal Reser'le Act.

ASSETS

LAKE PERCH, COD AND
SOLE FILLET
GRIMES .
GOLDEN $ 00
bu.

lb.

RED DELICIOUS
2'4" Size

3. 50

bu.

DAVIS ICE &amp; PRODUCE

12 COLE ST.

992-2658

POMEROY, ·o.

1

nual Christmas dinner to be held
· at the Manin Restaurant. It was

'

' vOted during the meeting to place
a memorial bronze
on lhe

Smart

TeamMate

DemaOO deposit s of individuals, partnerships,
and corporations •••• . ..•• . • , ...••.. ... •..• $2,322,611.31
Time and savings deposits or individual s,
partnerships, and corporatioos . . . . • • . . . • . . ... • 5,131,637.23
Deposits of United States Govermnent . . , ••...••••.. ,
48,526.68
Deposits of Stales and political subdivisions . . . , . . . . . . •
711,069.17
Certified and o£ficers' checks, etc, . . . . • • . . . . . . • o • • • , 46,237.22
TOTAL DEPOSITS .. , , , , , . , , . , 8 260 081.61
Total demand deposits. , . • . • 2,792,944. 8
Total time 11nd savings deposits .• 5,467,137.23
Other liabilities . . . . • , • .. .. , ..•....• . . . . . .. .•• 232,008, 80

TOTAL LIABILITIES , , . . , , , , , . , . , . , .. , , . , .... , $8,492,090. 41

YOUTHS
OXFORD

.•

'

BOX

I

CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
Common stock - total par value ••....•...•• , ••... 267,495.00
No. shares authorized - 12,000
No. shares oulstandi~ - 10,699, 8
Surplus • . • . . . • .. ••. , •• ...•......•.• • . .. • ••• 194,493,00
UIXIivided profits . . . . . . . . . . . . . , ...•.. , •.....•.• 211,836.98

S.uiblp Priced

0.

TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS . . . . , .. , , , .. , ........ 673,824.98
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND CAPITAL ACCOUNTS , . , , •. , 9,165,915.39
MEMORANDA
Average or total deposits ror the 15 calendar days ending
willl the call date • , •••. o • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • , $8,212,549.16
Average of total loans for the 15 calendar days
e ndi~ with call date . . . . . . • • . . . . • • o • • • • • • • • • 5,571,325.29
Loans as shown in "Assets" are after deduction or
valll(ltion reserves of . . . . . . . . • , . . . • . • . . . . . . , 24,907.25

•I
'

erett Dailey, Ann St., Pomeroy.

FALL FESTIVAL, Soilsbury
Elementary School, Friday, 6:-

30 to 9:30 p.m. t~~onsored by
P.T. A. Door prizes, rood all!

'j

'

i

"

game booths.
MASON - The Mason Mothers
Club Christmas Bazaar Nov . 15
and 16, Mason Methodist Church;
on Fric~Q, 10 a.m. to 8p.m.; saturday, 10 a.m. to f p.m
'Thil year• a bazaar features

a sweet shop, whllA! elephant
sale, and Christmas and miscellaneous handmade I t e m s.
Free corree will be served The
public Ia welcome.
MIDDLEPORT GIRL Scout
Troop 5, Frlda.Y after school at

THEODORE T, REED, JR.
Directors

HAROLD E. SMITH

Many Gilts
From Infant
ToSize

I

.

12

I
~

·

1
_..

f
C
0

the Scout House ror investiture
and Oy~p service.
MYF OF Rutland UnilA!d Meth.
odlst Church sponsoring family

~ot\d
hildn ,
'b
Fashions ... E~ns

night at eittlr&lt;h Frl~. Potluck
suwer. 6:30 p.m. followed by
slides of their trip to Alrica
as missionaries by Mra. Amos
Tlllis. Special invitation extended to MYF and coqregation or
Rock ~rings United Methodist
Church.

&amp;\TURDAY

DEODORANT

srz

..-•.-oecss.,-~

79e Phillips

MILK

79C

DEDICATION

OF

~

goes into every
prescription at
U!fVe

Excedrin

MEDI-TRATING

COUGH
SYRUP

SUCH AS:

Carters - Gowns &amp; Pajamas
Brushed Colton Knit, Brushed Tricot
Pastels and Prints

ON THE T IN MIDDLEPORT 0.

LIQUID SWEETNER

·

Soturday. SOUthern Hlah School

R4cine. Sandwiches, pie, cor~
bread, beans, drinks. Sfonsored by Future Business Leaders
of America.
BAKE SALE and Bazaar, Portland United Methodist Church
W.S.C.S., S.turday at the Duke
Cleaners in Pomeroy from 9 a.
rn. to 5 p.m.

BAKE &amp;\LE !rill be held by
the jll1ior awdliary members of
Feeney - Bennett Post 128, Am -

erican Legion, 9 a.m. S.tur~
at Dudleys Florist In 111lddleport.
A !UGH School dance part,y
Sotur~, 8 to II p .m . at the
Metgs Junior High auditorium
in Pomeroy. The Jays wUl emcee. Public welcome.

THANKS

BUFFERIN
TABLETS

TO THE MANY

69~

1.19

CEPACOL
Mouth Wash &amp; Gargle

VOTES AND 'UPPORT

I

GIVEN ME ON NOVEMBE 5th.

PEPTOBISMOL

IT WAS GREATLY APP ECIATED

FOR
UPSET
STOMACH

i·

'
,.
''

Pd. Pol. Ad.

SINCERELY
OAKLEY C. COLLINS

.

.. . - ..

~~':!";. -.~·· ':"'~'::~--:k~-~-~

; _"'!. ':'""

~

_;.

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

"Launched into Action" was the
program topic presented by Mrs.
Glenn Dill when the Women's Society of Christian Service met
TuesdQ night at the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church.
Mrs. Dill commented on t h e
need for helping others alklapoke
specifically or welcomlrw n e w
families into the cmununity and
church. Mrs. Everett Thomas
talked or a rorelgn stulent which
she had taught.
Mrs. Robert Warner con1uct·
ed the meeting during which time
a report was given on the soup
sale and bazaar held Election
Day. It was also noted that several members atter1led theW orld
Community Day observance or
Church Women United.
Forty sick calls were made by

BY aileen

Catch yourself o star this season and shine on!

Hand Washable

·SLACKS
·SKIRTS
·JACKETS
·TOPS

Solids and
Florals In
Coral Mint
Brown and
Dark Green

A DIVISION OF AI(EEN

members during the paat month.
The Lion's Club dinners being
served at the churcll twice a
month now were discussed. Mrs.
Kermit Waltor~t Mrs. Karl Krautter, Mrs. Gerald Wlldermutlland
Mrs. Allen Eichinger served the

IN BRIGHT HOLIDAY COLORS

diMer Tueftdll night
Prayer by Miss Lydia Ebenbach concluded the meeting and
refrestunents were served by
Mrs. Thomas and Mrs. Leverett
noush.

.,

.::

AT

:-:.
Chester Grade School. Jitney lll4t* ::::
per 4 to 7 p. m.; festival rrom 7:· ::-:
30 to 10 :30; numerous games
and lood booths. Prbtce andprbtcess will be named, door prizes
awarded, and personnel from
Seepy Jetrera Show on band. )
HARRISONVILLE Grange, 7 p.
m. Tl.lrkey dimer at the hallj
brlng a covered dish.

SUNDAY
INVESTITURE, 2 p. m Soliobury

Elementary

Reg. 1.00

School for
Brownie. Cadette and J u n I
troops.
REVIVAL SERVICES, RuUand
United Methodist Church beginning 7:30 p.m. &amp;m~. running

or

MENNEN

Invited.
MONDW
ANNUAL GRANGEoll'icersand
members conrerence, 8 p. m.
Mon~. Rock SPrings hall . Ali
membera brtog dmuts. Year's
program wlll be discussed. Tick-

:~e.,;:~~le

for the all

Rea. 1.98

.:::

:;:

66e

1.39

SOMINEX

~ ~:~

Y0-5 SHAMPOO

1.32

VEGETABLE
COMPOUND

,'

:·

65~

Reg. 1.00

BRUSHES

66~

::;:

:::·

Hospital.

Reg. 89c
PACQUINS

Missionaries

Reg. 45e

Church of the Nazarene at 7:30

The Rov. and Mrs. Rhoden,
mluionaries to Japan, are on
furlough holding eervlces among

Churches or the Nazarene. Thls
is their oecood furlough IInce
being IIBtgned to Jopan In 1957.
Bosides delivering a misalon81')' messaae, Rev. Rhoden wtn
colored slide• IIIII there
will be a tllopiiJ of JapaMie
uUtact1.
. The Rev. Mr. Rhoden rec:eived bis Malter'l Degree in r""
llglon from Pall8dena Collep bt
PaleCiena, Ca!U., and ltutlled the
Jopaneoe 1 . . _ for • year at
the Univenlty II( Wallldngtm Ia
Sslttle before aotng to J.,.._

It iJ estlmalod that mor•
honeymooners visit Niagara

FaUs in September than in

-

·~~

46~
PINKHAM

92~

30 p rn. at Veterans Nemorlal

P m Frlda3.

COLD TABLETS

;.

GILLETTE FOAMY
LEMON LIME

Speak Friday

Reg. 69c
BROMO QUININE

Reg. 98c

J,O.F. CLASS, Pomeroy United
Methodist Church, 6 p m . Monda,y
at the church for the amual
Thanksgiving dimer .

Baby Magic
Cleansing Oil

LOTION 5% oz. 43

through Nov, 27; Rev. C. J. Lemley, pastor, will speak. Public

June.

I

MariCMI Fnndo IIIII Xelth, Mloa
Mrs. Charles Boyles, Mrs. Ar· Thelma Boyer, Mra. H o 10 r
thur St001r4 Mra. Tom Kelly, Lcq, Mro. Richard Long and
Mra. Marioo Van Meter, Mra. Mn.
Marie frlnctL Mrt.
Perry Hotrman and Frances, Roach and her diuptar, Trudy,
Mra. Marion Hawk and Mary, aened retreatmentL

Line Of Sportswear Co-Ordinates

exchange.
A report was given on the
sale of greeting cards, knives,
ntpkins, towels arx1 other items,
ani It was noted that the s~ond
chUd welfare report has been
submitted.
The traveling prize donated
by ~ra. Powell was awarded to
Mrs. HyselL Mrs. Martin and
Mrs. catherine w e 1 s h c~
hostesss, served re£restun'ents.

The Rev. Maurice M. Rhod-

VOTERS FOR YOUR

Mra. Lawrence fnnct1, MrL

Don 1'bornii1, Mrs. Susan Rlwl~·· Mrs.
WUIIom Grueoer,

Help to Others 1s Needed

en, Jr., ..UI &amp;peak at the Rut! IIIII

''·

•

Jewish H()JJ91talatDenver,Colo. ,
and that a gift was sent to Brian
Marshall during his confinement
at t'hUdren' s Hospital Gifts or
money were earlier presented to
the parents or the three cystic
fibrosis children in the county,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Marshall
aJXI Mr. and Mrs. Earl Holman.
Read at the meeting was a let.ler from Violet Aichhob of New
Washington, state chapeau, thank-

CANDYSTHIPERS, Mon~, 6:-

Children's

compounds prescriptions,

other health produch.

home of Mra. Julia Hysell. There

1

Slar!: of lhe Season ... Beautiful New HoliMy

an American

ni'versary dllller, 6:30 p .m . Monat the ball. Bring a covered
dioh and table service

MY SINCERE

45~

every pharmoci st as he

dispenset medication and

gion, was read. '11leSalonextelded thanka to the Racine Post for

wlll be a potluck dimer and a gift

Frida; in P~r6~ " "' 1··

Current and Exciting

A thani&lt; you note from Alburt
Roush, commander of Feeney·
Bemett Post 128, American Le-

It was noted that dimes and

.:: -·S: . ~ _.!. . .-1 ;..~,:- . ,..:. ~

-~r::e~,;;~·;·~;;hr~';Porl~

Don Runnel.

birthday earth have been sent to
three children at the National

! .',:

/ I ' J:.f'"' ' .J:.

Mrs. C.rl Rolch entertained

by Chapeau Iva Po.-en. p l a n a
were mlde ror prepartns two

THEODORUS COUNCIL 17,
FALL FESI'IVAL Soturday at Daughters of America, 56th an-

you

OAKLEY C. COLLINS

SUCARYL

BEAN SUPPER, 4 to 6 p.m. ,

During the meeting conducted

•

new members recently welcomed
into tho Solon were Mrs. Jolm
Boyd, Mrs. Jack Caney and Mrs.

~

~
98~

SWEATERS

'THE KIDDIE SHOPPE

the guiding principle for

VICKS

, .,.

Come In And Lay-A-Way
for Christmas While There
Is A Beautiful Selection!

Extra-Strength
Pain Relief

and your heohh needs is

79C

:;~.~

Size .4 to 12

Swisher &amp; Lohse
Rexall Drugs
The desire to

FRIDAY
FRIDAY

Club, 7:30
Friday night, home of Mrs. Ev-

i

low of the llelgo Caunl¥ SOlon
710, Elaht et For1;y, held lloodiJ
night· at the home ol Mrs. Oob¥
Martin.
It 10U reported t'-1 lnlddltlon
to the Salon cortrlbutlon, part;..
nero are making lnllvldual eontrlbuUons to the Al.ociaUon 1&lt;&gt;taliRK 121. Sewral of the Salon
member• aaslsted inmaUiqpreo.
p&amp;i ations for the ann.al O.rtstmas Seal sale or the TB IJ"CH.I).

.

' ;. ' o~ ~

low the Salon for o gift presented Frldll night 10lth • toy parcy II
to her at a recent recepdon. her Wrlaht St. home in Pomeroy.
Pllna were made ror se\oeral
lira. Harle_y Johnsoo ""' the
members to lttenl the Pouvlor demollJtrator. Gwsts were Mrs.
to be hold In Colwnbus, Dec. 7-11 Ted Warner and P1tiy, Mrs.
at the Pick-Carter HoteL Three ~~hn- ~ttnu and Mary, Mra.

flag.
Presented at the meeUng was
an endorsement rn.n the Toledo
MEIGS CHAPTER DAV ..UI Thanksgiving beokets ror needy Soloo 101 for Doris Stanlrlff,d&amp;observe Veterans Day with 6:30 famllies. The gTOlll also dis- . . partmentalll concierge,l96g..70,
p.m. dinner at hall in Pome· cUB sed plans ror the cand,y sale to nominee.
roy, Thursdoy. Veterons of all be conducted Frida)' and saiurIt was voted to change t h e
wars and families invited.
day at Kroger'•, and ror the meeting time from the second
PAST COUNCILORS, Daugh- cystic tlbrosla house- to- hwse Monday to the secon! Thursday
ters of America Lodge, Sarah canvass to gel wderway l h i s of each mooth. Theamual Christ·
Diddle home, Thursday, 7:30 p . week.
mas party will be held at the

THIRD

I

I, Paul t::. Kloes, Ca shier, of the abolle-named bank do hereby declare
that this report of corxlition is true to the best or my knowledge and belief.
PAUL E. KLOES
We, lhe undersigned dire&lt;"iors, attest the correctness or this report of
condition and declare that it has been examined by us and to the best of our
knowledge and belief is true and correct.
THERON JOHNSON

Church, 2 Jl.m. Tbunday; Mrs .
Clara Heme I)', Mrs. Nan Moore,
program leadera; Mra. Grace
French, Mrs. France1 Wil1011.,
Mrs. Lorena Davis, hosteasea.

Sigma Phi Sororlt;y, Thursday,
7:30 p.m., social room ot Southern and Columbus Ohio Electric
Co.
BRADBURY PTA, 7:30 Thursd a y, Bradbury
Elementary
Sdu:d; speaker, 1 state highway
patrolman; door prize; Otth grade
room mothers have rerreshments.
PAST OFFICERS, R 1 c I n e
Chapter 134,0.E.S. 8p.m. Thursday, home or Mrs. Bert Grimmj
Mrs. Jane Hill assisting hostess.

Black
C-0-E Width

I
I

THIJR!IlAY
POI\IEROY - MEIGS COUNTY Yotlllll Democrat Club's regular meetfn8Thur~, Nov. 14.
Democrat l1q, PomeJW.
AFTERNOON CmCLE, ll14·
dleport Heeth United M - I l

XI GAMMA Mu Chapter, Beta

sa.99

\,

A $10 contrlbuUon to lhelllelp
County Tuberculotil 1111:1 Health
AssociiUon na made at a meat-

m.

TUSSY

Anti-Acid &amp; Laxative

Censor ship o( Literature in the
school curriculum was the topic
of a national expert in lhe teaching or Enr~li sll when the English
,\ss.n. of Ohio met in its 10th annual conventi on NO\'. 9 on the
Ohio SU:tte Uni.,.ersit.Y campus.
lle was Hober t F. Hogan, executive secretary of the National
t'oun cil of Teachers o£ English.
Attending from the Pomeroy
Elementary So:'hool star£ were
Miss Carolyn Smith and Mrs.
Hobert D. Roberts.
During lun cheon session, Dr.
Ilana Still , J)ean or ·'cademic Atfairs. Clarion Slate Lollege,
('!arion , l'a., demonstrated his
topic , "Head to Me'' with read·
ings ft·om classical prose and
poetry .
Mr s. l'harlotte S, !lurk , chair man, Elementary Section, N.C.
T .1-: ., prese nted the afte rnoon
program. She illustrated ways
in whi ch l'hildren can be stimu la ted to prod uce ..:rcalive writillg, espcl"ia liJ in the field or
poolry.
llr . .lames ~- Rri tton, Header in Ecka catlon and Ilead of the
En~dish Departme nt, l nivel' slt,,•,;
of London, also addressed the
group. lie pn•s cnted ~a mpl es of
ercative l'lritin~,: from children
in "rhools of l.ancastershire,
England ,

,,

ror

old pulpit Bible gl ven to the
church by lhe late Harley sanborn.
David Dant presented dev.
tiona usi11:: the title "Thlnksghing ror the Status Quo." Preparing the oyster lltf)per were Mn.
McNeil, and Mrs. Hood. Thetables were decorated in Thanksgiving theme.
AtteOOing were Mr. and Mrs.
Darst, Mr. and Mrs. McNeU, Mr.
and Mrs. Hood, Mr.and Mrs. Hubbard, Mr. and Mrs. Warner, Mr.
and Mrs. Willi&amp; Anthony, Edbon
Baker, the Rev. Charles Simons,
Wesley Simons and Mr. and Mrs.

Ll ABIUTIF-~

1.00

Censorship
Discussed

New omcers f1 the Hearthatone Class were elected Tues·
;: day night during a business meet• ing whteh followed an oyster di•
: ner at the Middleport first Bap: till Church.
Elected were Paul Smart, pres·
: ideM; John Werner, vice presi·
. deM; Mrs. MUton Hood, secre: tary; •nd John McNeU, treasur. er. Mrs. Smart was named card
: and nower chalnnan for the
· class.
Plana were made
the an~

of Pomeroy, Ohio, a member of the Federal Rese rve System, at the close of

'

MAGNESIA

Curriculum

~

The Farmers Bank and Savings Company

Being Planned
That's the most an Accu tron&amp; timepiece wi ll gain o r lose io
one month . And we'll guarantee •t. t Accutron looks like a
watch . But 1t 1sn 't. ll doesn 't have a ma in spring, a hairspring,
or a ba.lance wheel . Accutron has replaced them with an
eiJ!oCt ronJc ·powered t unmg fo rk . ll s plits eac h seco nd into 360
eQu~l parts. And makes the Accutron t imepiece s o precise, it
won t gam or lose an average of more than two seconds a day.

•
•

r~

Donations Made

~ New Officers ore Elected

.

Cash, balances with IXher banks, aOO cash
items in process of collection • . . . . . ..••••• .. . $1,193,335.44
United States Goverrunenl obligations . • . . .• .••• . o • • 1,4811,2'79.37
Obligations of States an:l political subdivisions •••••••. 536,657. 19
Other securities , . , • • . . ..• , • . • . . . • • • . • . • • • • • •
9,000.00
Other loans and discounts . • . . .•• • . ..• • •••.•.• .•. 5,595,292.33
Bank premises, rurniture and fixtures, and other
assets represertlng bank premises . • . • • • • • . . • • . . 251,096.22
Real estate owned other than bank premises o • • • • • • • • • •
87,000.00
Other assets . .• . ••..••....•• . .... . • , , • . . • • . . • 5,254.84
TOTAL ASSETS . . . . . . . . . • . . • . . . ... .. • . • . . . • • . .$9,165,915.39

No&gt;·c"lllll

•

&gt; '

REPORT OF CONDITION OF

Thur~,

.... r ..l

FEENAMINT

COLD CREAM

32

l'::·-----...,;llij

59~

Reg. 75c

~

VISIT OUR NEWLY

LISTERINE
50~

REMODELED BEAUTY
BAR
AND GET A FREE CHANCE
ON A $16_95 WIGLET OR HAIR
FALL····
ALSO FREE CHANCE ON FABERGE
CDLO~NE AND DU-STING POWDER
SET OR HELENA RUBENSTEIN
BEAUTY KIT.
': .: ···:·:. :'•'•' .
. ::. :.

46~
·::: ·..·

Reg. 57c
IPANA

TOOTHPASTE

38~

Reg. 58c
KLEENITE

DENTURE
CLEANSER

38/t
"

�. ',,• ~• •' •' &lt;· ',,'.,.., :.

_ , . . Dolly SonUnel, Pomeroy·Middlopnrt, o;~

'111urodoJ, Nowmbor

Editor is B&amp;PW Speaker

.'.·:

14, 1968

Operetta. Will be Colorful

club.
The meeting tollowed a dinner
at the Martin Restaurant. Marcia
Hawk wu a guest. Plans were
made ror the aMual Christmas
party to be held on Dec. 10 at the
home ot Mrs. strauss.
Think you ootes were read
from Mrs. Janet Korn, Mr~Wil·
ma Sargent and Mrs. Nellie Vale.
The traveli~ prize was won by
Miss Dorinda Wilson. A sUert
auction was held during a con.
ehdln,g 50Cial hour.

Chesler TamehUl, executivf
editor of The Ohio Valley Pu~
lhhi~ Co., was guest speaker
at Tuesday night's rneettng ofthe
Middleport Business aJ¥1 Profes·
sional Women's Club held at the
Columbia Gas of Ohio omce,
In his talk, Tarmehllldlscussed
the part which new !C)apers pll)'
in public relations. He was intro-duced by Mrs. Arthw- Strauss,
public relations chairman for the

SPEAKER ANNOUNCED
IJr. Fred Luchs, Athens, will
be guest speaker at the 10:30 a.

m.

POtls WR.rfE. A'BOUT' 1"t-iE
GLPI&lt;IES oF Al.llUMN THE ]

R&lt;S'rO'~

for a variety or costuming and IB
under the direction of Mrs. Alice

Prepare Operetta

Nease, vocal music supervisor.
The accompanying photos point
up the attracli vc costuming.
And, come late Friday night,
uOOoubtedly there'll be a lot of

T HE fall icliogf' 5 or it s
pr!l'lli••'
r~gho
•• ow ,
c"O
lots oF l ~ l~s w1ll b.. ""'
dri~ing

ore&gt;~nd
IO
!80'
it.
BelorO' YO U go, stop ;, h•••
le&gt;r quo lity Sof..io goso l i~e
ond mol OJ oi I

LARRY'S
SOHIO
SERVICE
W. MAIN

POMEROY, 0.

Centerpieces
and Decorations
Are Lovelier
From

Arrows oa Coins
Some earlier U.S. silver
coins have small arrows on
each side of the date. This
marking was first used from
1853 to 1855 to Indicate a reduction in the silver content
of the coins.

Paul Dean BramlOO and .lame~ Davis as the foxes.

By BOB HOEFUCII
President of 11w llarnyard."
The operetta, with Mrs . HorEve n children 81 the Tuppers
Plains Elementary School are ace Karr accompanying, provides
lea r ning that "there's no business like show business."
Wednesday morning, classes
at the school took a back seat as
lhe youngs ters donned colorful
costumes tomovcthroughadress
rehearsal for their operetta,
"The F.ar ly Bird Gets The
\\o'orm."
There was a "bug" hither artd
yon as the small fry moved
through their roles but these are
expected tl) be iroocd oo1 by curtain time whjch is 7:45 p, m.
Friday.
The stage has been converted
into a chicken house ror the mus-ical which deals with a political
theme and the campaign of "Mr.

prourd parents who also will
agree, "there's no business like

DUDLEY'S FLORIST
59 H. 2nd A••·
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

MAGNUS

···r'

THESE "SWEET AND LOVELY" LITTLE GIRIB are In
the roles of "dawn elves" for the Tuppers Plai11s Sd1?"1 operetta, "The Earl'-• Bird Gets the Worm," The gro~ t?cl~es :
front row, 1. w r., Beth lleadlcy, !'\ nita Watson, Soma Carr,
Angela Hensley, Tamm,&gt;· nusscll, Tammy Fortne)'; second
row, Patty Pullins, Cathy Collins, Janet Benedum, Shirley
Bennett, .Janet Brooks, Teresa Benedum, Arlene. Connolly,
and back row, Jenny Sprague, Brenda sampson, D1all8 Massar, Hila Sams, BreOOa Boyles, Robill Ritchie, Deana flensley.

show bullineiL ''

.... S21.15
!. "fASY-111" IllS

T•c..........,. .
-~-t..p·

lq. ~.51

TDTAL REG. YAWE $61.40
Dill!
-usE ouRHAHDY 0. Y:A.iA Y" PLAN
FOR ALL YOUR GIFT BUYIHGI

-

I

I

"
I

-----------

HURRY! ... A few Flower Bulbs for fall plant·
ing. Still lime to plant for spring blooms.

BEN

Chester WSCS Meets

Gift Suggestions For
The Handy Man.-------·

PHONE
POMEROY
OPEH FRI. &amp; SAT .
nickle, 5beUa sampson, Martloa Myers, Pamela !Biser, Mike
992-3498
HIGHTS TIL 9
sandertll,
Hoger Westfall,
arxl second
Hobert
row,
Grossnickle,
standing,;a~Vl~.d~M~s:th~e~ny:·:AI:a~n~D=u~,.U=~·
Debra Mill hone. Lana Ben- -~=:::::::::::::::::::::~
edum and Donna Lantz.

DRILL
1!4" &amp; 3/8"
Grip
Handle Drill
thai gi~~ th" greole51

comlo•t and c ontrol.
Powerf u l, c omp ad , li ght ... ~ight to ol s •to t
dr il l last, occuoatety . Woth cc c eno"e ~ t ~Y
0 1, 0 pn l i~h . shgr pell , b1111, •ond , cl eo n , mt •
pgint . U·IDO %" DRilL $10.~9 . Jl 7 HP, '1150
RPM .

U·l24 3/8" DRILL
U·1 2ol J/ 8" DRilL
SU.olol. 1/7 HP ,
1000 RPM. Douhle

------------------~----------,

November 7th

the Chester WSCS was held at the
churd1 on Nov. 7. They used
"lie Speaketh St ill," taken from
The Methodist Woman, as their
topic .
The hymn, ".Jesus Calls Us,"
was stJng and a prayer was given
by Mrs. Casto. 1\.trs. l~ice read
sketches about the Old Testament prophets being spokesmen
tor God.
Others a ss il;ting were Mrs.
Ravmolld Frank, M r s. Waid
SpCncer, Mrs. Hobert Bailey,
Mrs. Billy Windon, Mrs. Donald
Mora and Mrs. Elhel Orr. The
Lord's Prayer in unison concluded the program.
The business meeting, in
charge of the president, included
the secretary's report, ro11 call,
and dues paid, with 17 members
presenL A communication was
read from Mrs. IUchards concerning cha rter memberships.
1\ freewill offering for the Call
to Prayer and Self Denial was
taken.
The Christm as part}' will be
held Dec. 12 at 12 o'clock at the

BY BLACK &amp; DECKER
SANDERS

on

(We Ate Hot Op•n On Sundays)

SIMON'S

church. A planned potluck dinner
will be servcJ with Mr s. Woodrow Mora as chairman. A $1
gift exchange will be held and
each member rna)' invite a guest.
J:he soc iel~ has ordered candle~ io sell.
1\ sympathy card was sent to the
Heid Young family and get-well
card s sen t to Mrs. Iva Singers,
Mrs. Letha Woods and Mr. Eber
Gillian. Thirty-seven sick calls
were reported. The program
leaders for Dc&lt;"cmber are Mrs.
Harold Spenecr and Mrs. Billy
Windon.

POMEROY

CHUCK

992-2057

1••

Middleport

FINE FOR SEASONING-SLICE[)

Bacon Ends.-----3 lbs. 79~
Sausage.------•· 2 lb. 1.00
OUR OWN MIX-HOME MADE

.

FRESH PORK

Cu-230-IDElUXE
de!Jch;~ble ~hoe

no"

5AW. W••P ·•tound
' or c lose ..or- . ~curalt= llil!·

.;ut IIUrrllnum ln&amp;lt Jd/Uimtnl. ll:lp fr nct 1M
w mbin1lion bl.lrde. Cuh : 90' 2:t, " , 45 ' !14"

(D)

\

l HP

Gu-llO n.·· s•w.

REGUI.i·RlV

nz.u.

C?) U·l40·1 FINISHING SAMDER KIT.
t.21 .41 ~AlLIE. $AilE $4.5J. Furnllur e '' " '~ h ·
1 n~ matfrr ~l\ on m utto -pu r t)ol~ pt astic c ~rrr •n R
ca&lt;• n Poe ces U·l 40 ''" ""'"~ S.dndet f'-&amp; MP .
21) sneets ab•~~•ve pdp@&lt;. P HI•! c ;~s;e 524.88

USE OUR
LAY·A·WAY
PLAN FOR
CHRISTMAS

EBERSBACH HARDWARE
"Everything In Hardware"
MAIN ST.

'·

POMEROY

PU

r

LARD

25
lb.

&lt;"

, .

, .

...

_ , _ .,

-

--

•

-

•

•

/'

0

•

•

,.

•

,

• . . . . ,. • . • -. ,..

...

15 New Books ·

In Circulation

•

Fltt.een new books ha~e been
put m tho shelves ol the Middleport Public Ubrary. They are;
Nurae in Flight, Humphries; Girl
In Love, Gilmer; Island Castle,
Comina; Desert Adventure, ~le­
er; Saddles North, Hamilton;
Nurse Cbrlaly, Way; Crulae of
Cho Golden Poppy, Soars; Walt
For Me, Sighter; Roswell Heritage, Ford; Rustlers at Cycone
Pass, Floren; Your Growing
Child and Soc, Arnstein; EMPO&lt;I·
ont Motherhood, Nlcholsoo; Bll1.7 Graham and Seven Who Were
Saved, Glllensm; Portrait of Lee
Harvey Oawald, Oswald, and Sex,
Fertllll;y and Blrlb Control, Ros101110.

MR. AND MRS. GRA~
She wore bJack accessoriesanda
corsage of rosebuds from her
bridal bouquet.
Out of town guests here for tile
wedding were Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Randolph and daughter,Bellew
fortaine; Mr. and Mrs. Frank Rif·
fie and family, Radcliff', Ky.; Mr.
and Mrs. Delbert Bissell and fam.

ily, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Rol&gt;
ert Grate, Marion; Mrs. David
Canon, Cincinnati; and .Judy and
Elaine Musser, Middletown.
Mr. am Mrs. Grate res ide at
Rutland,

Miss carrol Am Lyons, librarian, said library hours are

noon

w ap m

Monday through

Saturdays.

UNDERGOES SURGERY

Mrs. Robert Craig, Middle.
port, underwent back surgery
Tuesday at St. Marys Hospital
1n Huntington. Her room number
h 533. 9Je expect11 to be con~
lined to the hospital at least two
weeks and will wear a brace for
six months.

r• • •~ r · "' · • ·

· · r· · ·· • •

I

'

eel for Jan. 13 at the home ttl

2 Girl Scout Consultants Named
New consultants to Mra. Rich·
ard Vaughan and Mrs, PhU Ohlinger, who are troop organlz.
era, were named at a meeting of
Neighborhood 1, Four Rivers Girl
Scout Council Tuesday In the ,..
clal room ot the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric CO. In
Mtddloporl.
The new consultants are Mrs.
Bernice McKlMey, Pomeroy, and
Mrs. Bernard Fultz, Brownie
tr(I(IJIS; Mrs. Wallace Fowers,
juniors; and Mrs. Frank Powers,
eadettes.
Durln(l: the meeting conducted
by Mrs. I. R. NeN, neighborhood
chairman, resignations of delegates and alternates to the Cowlell were accepted and the vacancies filled. Mrs. Doma Grate
was named asadelegateandMrs.
Wanda Vining and Mrs. McKinney as alternates. other delegates to the C(IUilCil are Mrs .
Neal, M r s. Ohlinger, Mrs.
Vaughan, and Mrs. Fred Gibbs.
A meeting of the Four RiversCouncil was announced for Nov.
20 at the North Parkersburg Bap..
tist Church from 10 a.m. to 12:30
p.m . Mrs . Neal has been nomlnatod to serve on a Council committee.
The camp stamp program was
explained by the neighborhood

Mro. Nol&gt;y Sovoge, Caolrillo
Ridge.
Leader 1 and assl1tant11 Inter·
oiled In attendlnl any ol tho
workshops or the CouncU meet-

from 10 a.m. to 1 p m. was an- Neal will serve u cookie ctWrnounced for Nov. 18 at the Way- man for the count;)'.
Also amiounced at the rneetlng
llide Methodist Church at Vienwas
a leaden' session on the inl are asked to contact Mrl.
na. Those attending are to take
Neal regarding lranaportaU..,,
new
design
for learning ache&lt;Ula sack lunch. Alao announced
was a songs and games workshop
to be held at st. Andrews Church,
Parkersburg. W, Va., and a second one to be held at the Jackson CounQ' Bank at Ravenawood
from 7:30 to 9:30p.m. the same
day ,
Scout leaders were reminded
ROME BEAUTY
BANANA.
NORTHERN SPY
that all nelgtborhood registraJONATHAN
RED
WINESAP
tions are We at the Parkersburg
GOLDEN
CORTlAND
DELICIOUS
office before Dec. 23.
The girl scout calendar sale
SWEET CIDER • B SIZE POTATOES
currently underway will continue
GROCERIES • LUNCH MEAT
through Nov . 30 Discussed at
the meeting was the armual girl
scout cookie sale. A lWlcheon to
klckol! the aale will be held on
Jan. 7. Mrs. Vaughan and Mrs.
W, Ma;n 992·2582 Pomeroy

jot~

APPLES

MIDWAY MARKET

:·.

TV STAMPS ON ALL PURCHASES

ANY SIZE

2 '35·00
for

LOU'S ASHLAND
992-3535

chairman and Mrs. Mary Hunter

279 W. Ma;n

of Chester was named chairman.
A. badge workshop to be held

Mrs. Tracy.
Plans were made for ti~eannu.al
Cbrlatmu parcy to be hold oo
the regular meeting date. There
wlU be a 50 cent gift exchange
and a potluck suwer.

e

SERVICE

Bridal Shower is
Given in Portland

lEG. 1.39

Pomeroy,

0.
;:;:;:;·

PUSH BUTTON

CONTAc LILT
LILT

:~

Box ·

~~

ANTI~PERSPIRANT

for making fertilizer.

G &amp; A GARAGE

7 A.M.-9 P.M.
SPECIAL

iW&amp;».'tt7

5.95

BALANCING

1e 50

Pepto.

Bismoi
8 oz.

SToMACH
Rea. 1.09

11C

STOP IN
and YOU'LL SEE
THURSDAY, FRIDAY
SATURDAY &amp; SUNDAY
FOR THESE SPECIALSI
TONI'S

DIPPITY-DO

Reg. 1.25

FAST, FREE DELIVERY.'
I

BAYER

ASPIRIN

~

100 ct.
Reg.

Only

98c

69~

CORN HUSKERS

LOTION~::.-1.09

lotion Med . Sz..
Jar Med . SJ. .

Your

Tube Lge . Sz. .

Cho;ce

59j.
"

Ree. 1.05

-ALL-TYPES
- -OF ----MECHANIC II'ORK

VASELINE

FAST-ECONOMICAL

IIAD.!MAIIOt

HAIR
TONIC

LOCATED-NEXT TO RACINE
SERVICE STA
. .... .

ONLY

REG. 2.00

BECAUSE .,.

PoaliPftr

FULL TIME MECHANIC

MOUTHWASH
REG. 1.15

It's Easy To Fill
Your Medidne Chest

teases.

Horseshoe crabs are useful

Reg. 2.60

AT NELSON'S

RIGHT GUARD

A bridal shower honoring Ml10
Linda Yost, Porlland, bride-elect,
ot James Daniel McTurner, was
held recently at the Gayle Price
home with M:lu &amp;~zanne Price
and Miss Beverly Price all hotGuests were KathY Ross, Pat
Lennox, Pam Sten, U1 Munch,
Ruth Meldrwn, EUeen Newman, .
Flo Szabo, and Maraha Gllderslee~e. all students at Marietta
College; and Debbie Roush, Nancy Yost, Paula Sayre, Krista
Yost, &amp;Isle Kush!, Bev Price,
Mrs. Carolyn Price, Mrs. Edna
Price, Mrs. Margaret Yoa~ and
Mrs. Mabel Marshall.

SCOPE

REG., SUPER, GENTLE

10 ct

Clear and Clean in the bottle
and on your hair!

24 Hour Wrecker Service

&gt;

Cold ••r &amp; Wine-Carry Out Onlyl

POMEROY, 0.

.:.a 'mt'.. t

25

FRENCH CITY

7 lbs. $1

BRW HOWE. AND LEATHER SUPPLY
992·2774

Thanksgiving Memories," and
Mrs. Pearl Reynolds gavethepo.
em, "An Old Fashioned Tllanka·
giving." Quizes and games oo
Thanksgiving wore played at the
conclusioo or the program.
During the meeting CO!lWcled
by Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Atklnd,
six worthy high priestesses were
lntroduced and welcomed. They
were Mrs. Wim, Mr11. Barbara
Dupn, Mlas Edith Hutsinplller,
Mrs. Lear, Mrs.Cheesebrewand

-·--------

OLEO

:

_1'

bride changed into 1 sheath dress.

ADAMS OR HOLSUM
1vs.

VISTA-HALLMARK OF EXCELLENCE
IN BICYCLE QUALITY AND AT
POPULAR PRICES
BUY NOW OR USE LAYAWAY PLAN

Rutland.
For a short weddlrv trip the

(SPEED TYPE)

Bread------------ 5 1.00

n•·.

or

Side Bacon--------~b~ 59~

S44,4.4

SAVE $-4.45. (Jtttor chute ke~~ ' wwdusl IWIY
!tom .work Bnel 1nd a~plh 1d1U1tmenh Cui~ :
90'
45' 114" . 1 HP . 7'1•" como iutlon
1
rip lenct included .
S27.77

COLEMAN
HEATING

'--St.

Bologna·--------- 2lbs.1.00

·~

yrs.

Mlcld!eport, 0.

SLICED ALL MEAT
HOME LAUNDRY

Mrs. Elizabeth Lear read
• -This Ill A Thankful Time,"
Ruby Diehl~ted. ••My

OWE IIAIDWARE

ROAST·-----------·

Mr. Gene Grate of Rutland
served as bestman for his brother, and Mr. RonnJe Grate am Mr.
Mike Grate, Rutlall!, cousins or
the groom, were the ushers. Miss
Devonla BlsseU In a pink organdy
dress with white accessories was
the flower girl.
Altar deeoraUons included ar·
rarwements or white gladioli and
palms, two seveD-branch candelabra. A white kneelirw bench, the
aisle e11rpeted In white, and white
satin bows on the family p e w a
completed the setting. Guests at
the wedding and reception were
registered by Mrs. Douglas Bissell of Reedsville, sister·t~law
of the bride.
For her daughter's weddirw:,
Mrs. Bissell wore a blue linen
dress with blue aDd white acces-sories am a corsage blue tint·
ed carnations. Mrs. Grate wore
a fiowered chilton dress with
matching accessories and a carnation corsaae.
A reception honorlrw the couple
Wlt.S held at the Rutland American
Legion Hall. The bride' a table
was adorned with a rour.Uered
wedding cake t~ped with the
tndltional miniature bride and
groom. AssisUrv with the serv.
q '¥ere Mrs. Roae carson, Rutlam.; Mrs. Roger Bissell, Mid·
dleport, and Miss VIckie Grate,

on oplrltual blesoings.

SALES

-------------------------USDA CHOICE

NOV. 17-23

l

A birthday tribute
Mrs. Lllllan Stiefl', Middleport, was given
during the Thanksgiving potluck
Blipper of Mary ~rlno 37, White
~rlne of Joruaalem, F rlday night
at tho IOOF hall.
Yellow mums with turkey fig.
urine acceaaorles decorated the
table. Mrs. Stlefl is organist for
the .!llrtne.
Mrs. Pauline Atkins, worthy ·
high priestess, talked on Thanksgiving, Ita hlswcy and observance. A three • part medltatl.oo
entitled .. Let Us Give Thanks
For - " was given by Mrs. Paul
Winn, on civil blesalngs, Mrs.
Nell1e Tr_acy on material blessings and Mrs. Frank Choosobrow

FRESH
TURKEYS

Satuodoy Til 9

992-3975

In a noor.Jength gown of ChantUly lace Mlu Karen Sue 811·
sell, daughter or Mr. and Mrs.
Charlea L Bissell of Chester,
became the bride ot Mr. David
Ln'renc:e Grate, 5()11 ol Mr. and
Mrs. Arnold Gnte, Rutland.
The wedding waa an event of
July 20 at 7:30 in the evening at
the Rutland Church of the Naza.
rene. The He~. Herbert Grate,
brother or the bridegroom, offi.
elated at the double ring cere.
mmy, A program or traditional
wedding muaie was presented by
Miss Debra Smith, organisL Mr.
Alan Blackwood, RutlarrJ, sang
"I Love You Truly" and 01 More.' '
As the bride approached the al·
tar, escorted by her father, the
bridegroom sang "To My Bride.''
Her gown was fashioned with a
fitted bodice featuring a scall(JIJed
neckline with irridescentaccenta
am long slee~es. her pillbox
headpiece, tram which reu a cha~
tllly lace veil, wu embeUtshed
with irridescent accents, T h e
bride carried a bouqut~t or white
rosebuds and daisies.
The bride's attendanl.s were
Miss Naomi Bissell, sister of
the bride, the maid of honor' aoo
Mrs. Dwlsht Bissell, Reedsville,
am Mrs. Delbert Bissell, Columbus, both sisters·irr.law of t h e
bride, They wore lace gowns of
aqua, pink and yellow, respectiveb. with matching ~leces and
carried large mwns with stream·
ers to match their gowns.

Maple Lawn

WE ACCEPT FOOD COUPONS
Open Every Week Day 9:00 to 7:00
E. MAIH ST .

WE ARE TAKING
ORDERS NOW
FOR

MARKET

JOIN THE
JET SET

CIRCULAR SAWS

FRANKUN

s-1111. I"!JJItrOIO,GrqHocknoy,llarlo, cak!well,PatcyGron·

OLDER ClllLDREN OF THE TUPPERS PLAINS Elementary
Sl'hool, cast as hunters, w1.'1r bright red hunting ja ckets and hats
for Ull'ir pa rt in the oper&lt;.'tta Friday nighL Piuurcd arc, seated
across fr ont, I. tor. , Sue Burke, Linda calaway, Debbie Burns,
.Jenny Bailey, Cheryl Kt1lm, ntioda l·ortney, \ ' in re nt l.a(·omb;

::;:

Bissell-Grote Wedding is Noted

w

,--an • ...,.

111111

.
1

:.... J .::=:.

.f"

o-p , _

lq. ~IllS
4. lltlll S811G IDS
1M F•miiJ
WtlhmA l.ftiOIII '

196_8

.~ :• .•· • •.' ." !'.'

Birthday Tribute is Given

I. llttTliASSOCIIIIJCtt
[!wprtt T••tUN •

Dallr Sentinel, Pomeroy·Middleport, 0,, 1hursday, November 14,

•

Ktl'llll

,_ . lq. ~IUD

"'

A MINIMUM AMOUNT HOLDS All PUFICH.tSESI

Mrs . Pearl Casto and Mrs.
Fred Hice were program leaders whe n the rl:g-ular meeting of

I
'

Having A Party?

~ndaymorningworkshopser·

vices at the Middleport First
United Presbyterian Church on
Nov. 17 and Nov. 24.

ABO\'E ARE SOME Of THE BARNYARD "characters"
featured in the T111pers Plains Elementary School operetta.
Left to righ t are Ton,ya Keebaugl1, representing an eggplant;
John Sheets, a hawk; Jeff Gilland, a clown, and Tim Spencer,

1 - . The

.

,
,I · ; . ,

,Re1. a,c

You
Pay
Only

Family Size

66e
TOOTHPASTE

�. ',,• ~• •' •' &lt;· ',,'.,.., :.

_ , . . Dolly SonUnel, Pomeroy·Middlopnrt, o;~

'111urodoJ, Nowmbor

Editor is B&amp;PW Speaker

.'.·:

14, 1968

Operetta. Will be Colorful

club.
The meeting tollowed a dinner
at the Martin Restaurant. Marcia
Hawk wu a guest. Plans were
made ror the aMual Christmas
party to be held on Dec. 10 at the
home ot Mrs. strauss.
Think you ootes were read
from Mrs. Janet Korn, Mr~Wil·
ma Sargent and Mrs. Nellie Vale.
The traveli~ prize was won by
Miss Dorinda Wilson. A sUert
auction was held during a con.
ehdln,g 50Cial hour.

Chesler TamehUl, executivf
editor of The Ohio Valley Pu~
lhhi~ Co., was guest speaker
at Tuesday night's rneettng ofthe
Middleport Business aJ¥1 Profes·
sional Women's Club held at the
Columbia Gas of Ohio omce,
In his talk, Tarmehllldlscussed
the part which new !C)apers pll)'
in public relations. He was intro-duced by Mrs. Arthw- Strauss,
public relations chairman for the

SPEAKER ANNOUNCED
IJr. Fred Luchs, Athens, will
be guest speaker at the 10:30 a.

m.

POtls WR.rfE. A'BOUT' 1"t-iE
GLPI&lt;IES oF Al.llUMN THE ]

R&lt;S'rO'~

for a variety or costuming and IB
under the direction of Mrs. Alice

Prepare Operetta

Nease, vocal music supervisor.
The accompanying photos point
up the attracli vc costuming.
And, come late Friday night,
uOOoubtedly there'll be a lot of

T HE fall icliogf' 5 or it s
pr!l'lli••'
r~gho
•• ow ,
c"O
lots oF l ~ l~s w1ll b.. ""'
dri~ing

ore&gt;~nd
IO
!80'
it.
BelorO' YO U go, stop ;, h•••
le&gt;r quo lity Sof..io goso l i~e
ond mol OJ oi I

LARRY'S
SOHIO
SERVICE
W. MAIN

POMEROY, 0.

Centerpieces
and Decorations
Are Lovelier
From

Arrows oa Coins
Some earlier U.S. silver
coins have small arrows on
each side of the date. This
marking was first used from
1853 to 1855 to Indicate a reduction in the silver content
of the coins.

Paul Dean BramlOO and .lame~ Davis as the foxes.

By BOB HOEFUCII
President of 11w llarnyard."
The operetta, with Mrs . HorEve n children 81 the Tuppers
Plains Elementary School are ace Karr accompanying, provides
lea r ning that "there's no business like show business."
Wednesday morning, classes
at the school took a back seat as
lhe youngs ters donned colorful
costumes tomovcthroughadress
rehearsal for their operetta,
"The F.ar ly Bird Gets The
\\o'orm."
There was a "bug" hither artd
yon as the small fry moved
through their roles but these are
expected tl) be iroocd oo1 by curtain time whjch is 7:45 p, m.
Friday.
The stage has been converted
into a chicken house ror the mus-ical which deals with a political
theme and the campaign of "Mr.

prourd parents who also will
agree, "there's no business like

DUDLEY'S FLORIST
59 H. 2nd A••·
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

MAGNUS

···r'

THESE "SWEET AND LOVELY" LITTLE GIRIB are In
the roles of "dawn elves" for the Tuppers Plai11s Sd1?"1 operetta, "The Earl'-• Bird Gets the Worm," The gro~ t?cl~es :
front row, 1. w r., Beth lleadlcy, !'\ nita Watson, Soma Carr,
Angela Hensley, Tamm,&gt;· nusscll, Tammy Fortne)'; second
row, Patty Pullins, Cathy Collins, Janet Benedum, Shirley
Bennett, .Janet Brooks, Teresa Benedum, Arlene. Connolly,
and back row, Jenny Sprague, Brenda sampson, D1all8 Massar, Hila Sams, BreOOa Boyles, Robill Ritchie, Deana flensley.

show bullineiL ''

.... S21.15
!. "fASY-111" IllS

T•c..........,. .
-~-t..p·

lq. ~.51

TDTAL REG. YAWE $61.40
Dill!
-usE ouRHAHDY 0. Y:A.iA Y" PLAN
FOR ALL YOUR GIFT BUYIHGI

-

I

I

"
I

-----------

HURRY! ... A few Flower Bulbs for fall plant·
ing. Still lime to plant for spring blooms.

BEN

Chester WSCS Meets

Gift Suggestions For
The Handy Man.-------·

PHONE
POMEROY
OPEH FRI. &amp; SAT .
nickle, 5beUa sampson, Martloa Myers, Pamela !Biser, Mike
992-3498
HIGHTS TIL 9
sandertll,
Hoger Westfall,
arxl second
Hobert
row,
Grossnickle,
standing,;a~Vl~.d~M~s:th~e~ny:·:AI:a~n~D=u~,.U=~·
Debra Mill hone. Lana Ben- -~=:::::::::::::::::::::~
edum and Donna Lantz.

DRILL
1!4" &amp; 3/8"
Grip
Handle Drill
thai gi~~ th" greole51

comlo•t and c ontrol.
Powerf u l, c omp ad , li ght ... ~ight to ol s •to t
dr il l last, occuoatety . Woth cc c eno"e ~ t ~Y
0 1, 0 pn l i~h . shgr pell , b1111, •ond , cl eo n , mt •
pgint . U·IDO %" DRilL $10.~9 . Jl 7 HP, '1150
RPM .

U·l24 3/8" DRILL
U·1 2ol J/ 8" DRilL
SU.olol. 1/7 HP ,
1000 RPM. Douhle

------------------~----------,

November 7th

the Chester WSCS was held at the
churd1 on Nov. 7. They used
"lie Speaketh St ill," taken from
The Methodist Woman, as their
topic .
The hymn, ".Jesus Calls Us,"
was stJng and a prayer was given
by Mrs. Casto. 1\.trs. l~ice read
sketches about the Old Testament prophets being spokesmen
tor God.
Others a ss il;ting were Mrs.
Ravmolld Frank, M r s. Waid
SpCncer, Mrs. Hobert Bailey,
Mrs. Billy Windon, Mrs. Donald
Mora and Mrs. Elhel Orr. The
Lord's Prayer in unison concluded the program.
The business meeting, in
charge of the president, included
the secretary's report, ro11 call,
and dues paid, with 17 members
presenL A communication was
read from Mrs. IUchards concerning cha rter memberships.
1\ freewill offering for the Call
to Prayer and Self Denial was
taken.
The Christm as part}' will be
held Dec. 12 at 12 o'clock at the

BY BLACK &amp; DECKER
SANDERS

on

(We Ate Hot Op•n On Sundays)

SIMON'S

church. A planned potluck dinner
will be servcJ with Mr s. Woodrow Mora as chairman. A $1
gift exchange will be held and
each member rna)' invite a guest.
J:he soc iel~ has ordered candle~ io sell.
1\ sympathy card was sent to the
Heid Young family and get-well
card s sen t to Mrs. Iva Singers,
Mrs. Letha Woods and Mr. Eber
Gillian. Thirty-seven sick calls
were reported. The program
leaders for Dc&lt;"cmber are Mrs.
Harold Spenecr and Mrs. Billy
Windon.

POMEROY

CHUCK

992-2057

1••

Middleport

FINE FOR SEASONING-SLICE[)

Bacon Ends.-----3 lbs. 79~
Sausage.------•· 2 lb. 1.00
OUR OWN MIX-HOME MADE

.

FRESH PORK

Cu-230-IDElUXE
de!Jch;~ble ~hoe

no"

5AW. W••P ·•tound
' or c lose ..or- . ~curalt= llil!·

.;ut IIUrrllnum ln&amp;lt Jd/Uimtnl. ll:lp fr nct 1M
w mbin1lion bl.lrde. Cuh : 90' 2:t, " , 45 ' !14"

(D)

\

l HP

Gu-llO n.·· s•w.

REGUI.i·RlV

nz.u.

C?) U·l40·1 FINISHING SAMDER KIT.
t.21 .41 ~AlLIE. $AilE $4.5J. Furnllur e '' " '~ h ·
1 n~ matfrr ~l\ on m utto -pu r t)ol~ pt astic c ~rrr •n R
ca&lt;• n Poe ces U·l 40 ''" ""'"~ S.dndet f'-&amp; MP .
21) sneets ab•~~•ve pdp@&lt;. P HI•! c ;~s;e 524.88

USE OUR
LAY·A·WAY
PLAN FOR
CHRISTMAS

EBERSBACH HARDWARE
"Everything In Hardware"
MAIN ST.

'·

POMEROY

PU

r

LARD

25
lb.

&lt;"

, .

, .

...

_ , _ .,

-

--

•

-

•

•

/'

0

•

•

,.

•

,

• . . . . ,. • . • -. ,..

...

15 New Books ·

In Circulation

•

Fltt.een new books ha~e been
put m tho shelves ol the Middleport Public Ubrary. They are;
Nurae in Flight, Humphries; Girl
In Love, Gilmer; Island Castle,
Comina; Desert Adventure, ~le­
er; Saddles North, Hamilton;
Nurse Cbrlaly, Way; Crulae of
Cho Golden Poppy, Soars; Walt
For Me, Sighter; Roswell Heritage, Ford; Rustlers at Cycone
Pass, Floren; Your Growing
Child and Soc, Arnstein; EMPO&lt;I·
ont Motherhood, Nlcholsoo; Bll1.7 Graham and Seven Who Were
Saved, Glllensm; Portrait of Lee
Harvey Oawald, Oswald, and Sex,
Fertllll;y and Blrlb Control, Ros101110.

MR. AND MRS. GRA~
She wore bJack accessoriesanda
corsage of rosebuds from her
bridal bouquet.
Out of town guests here for tile
wedding were Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Randolph and daughter,Bellew
fortaine; Mr. and Mrs. Frank Rif·
fie and family, Radcliff', Ky.; Mr.
and Mrs. Delbert Bissell and fam.

ily, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Rol&gt;
ert Grate, Marion; Mrs. David
Canon, Cincinnati; and .Judy and
Elaine Musser, Middletown.
Mr. am Mrs. Grate res ide at
Rutland,

Miss carrol Am Lyons, librarian, said library hours are

noon

w ap m

Monday through

Saturdays.

UNDERGOES SURGERY

Mrs. Robert Craig, Middle.
port, underwent back surgery
Tuesday at St. Marys Hospital
1n Huntington. Her room number
h 533. 9Je expect11 to be con~
lined to the hospital at least two
weeks and will wear a brace for
six months.

r• • •~ r · "' · • ·

· · r· · ·· • •

I

'

eel for Jan. 13 at the home ttl

2 Girl Scout Consultants Named
New consultants to Mra. Rich·
ard Vaughan and Mrs, PhU Ohlinger, who are troop organlz.
era, were named at a meeting of
Neighborhood 1, Four Rivers Girl
Scout Council Tuesday In the ,..
clal room ot the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric CO. In
Mtddloporl.
The new consultants are Mrs.
Bernice McKlMey, Pomeroy, and
Mrs. Bernard Fultz, Brownie
tr(I(IJIS; Mrs. Wallace Fowers,
juniors; and Mrs. Frank Powers,
eadettes.
Durln(l: the meeting conducted
by Mrs. I. R. NeN, neighborhood
chairman, resignations of delegates and alternates to the Cowlell were accepted and the vacancies filled. Mrs. Doma Grate
was named asadelegateandMrs.
Wanda Vining and Mrs. McKinney as alternates. other delegates to the C(IUilCil are Mrs .
Neal, M r s. Ohlinger, Mrs.
Vaughan, and Mrs. Fred Gibbs.
A meeting of the Four RiversCouncil was announced for Nov.
20 at the North Parkersburg Bap..
tist Church from 10 a.m. to 12:30
p.m . Mrs . Neal has been nomlnatod to serve on a Council committee.
The camp stamp program was
explained by the neighborhood

Mro. Nol&gt;y Sovoge, Caolrillo
Ridge.
Leader 1 and assl1tant11 Inter·
oiled In attendlnl any ol tho
workshops or the CouncU meet-

from 10 a.m. to 1 p m. was an- Neal will serve u cookie ctWrnounced for Nov. 18 at the Way- man for the count;)'.
Also amiounced at the rneetlng
llide Methodist Church at Vienwas
a leaden' session on the inl are asked to contact Mrl.
na. Those attending are to take
Neal regarding lranaportaU..,,
new
design
for learning ache&lt;Ula sack lunch. Alao announced
was a songs and games workshop
to be held at st. Andrews Church,
Parkersburg. W, Va., and a second one to be held at the Jackson CounQ' Bank at Ravenawood
from 7:30 to 9:30p.m. the same
day ,
Scout leaders were reminded
ROME BEAUTY
BANANA.
NORTHERN SPY
that all nelgtborhood registraJONATHAN
RED
WINESAP
tions are We at the Parkersburg
GOLDEN
CORTlAND
DELICIOUS
office before Dec. 23.
The girl scout calendar sale
SWEET CIDER • B SIZE POTATOES
currently underway will continue
GROCERIES • LUNCH MEAT
through Nov . 30 Discussed at
the meeting was the armual girl
scout cookie sale. A lWlcheon to
klckol! the aale will be held on
Jan. 7. Mrs. Vaughan and Mrs.
W, Ma;n 992·2582 Pomeroy

jot~

APPLES

MIDWAY MARKET

:·.

TV STAMPS ON ALL PURCHASES

ANY SIZE

2 '35·00
for

LOU'S ASHLAND
992-3535

chairman and Mrs. Mary Hunter

279 W. Ma;n

of Chester was named chairman.
A. badge workshop to be held

Mrs. Tracy.
Plans were made for ti~eannu.al
Cbrlatmu parcy to be hold oo
the regular meeting date. There
wlU be a 50 cent gift exchange
and a potluck suwer.

e

SERVICE

Bridal Shower is
Given in Portland

lEG. 1.39

Pomeroy,

0.
;:;:;:;·

PUSH BUTTON

CONTAc LILT
LILT

:~

Box ·

~~

ANTI~PERSPIRANT

for making fertilizer.

G &amp; A GARAGE

7 A.M.-9 P.M.
SPECIAL

iW&amp;».'tt7

5.95

BALANCING

1e 50

Pepto.

Bismoi
8 oz.

SToMACH
Rea. 1.09

11C

STOP IN
and YOU'LL SEE
THURSDAY, FRIDAY
SATURDAY &amp; SUNDAY
FOR THESE SPECIALSI
TONI'S

DIPPITY-DO

Reg. 1.25

FAST, FREE DELIVERY.'
I

BAYER

ASPIRIN

~

100 ct.
Reg.

Only

98c

69~

CORN HUSKERS

LOTION~::.-1.09

lotion Med . Sz..
Jar Med . SJ. .

Your

Tube Lge . Sz. .

Cho;ce

59j.
"

Ree. 1.05

-ALL-TYPES
- -OF ----MECHANIC II'ORK

VASELINE

FAST-ECONOMICAL

IIAD.!MAIIOt

HAIR
TONIC

LOCATED-NEXT TO RACINE
SERVICE STA
. .... .

ONLY

REG. 2.00

BECAUSE .,.

PoaliPftr

FULL TIME MECHANIC

MOUTHWASH
REG. 1.15

It's Easy To Fill
Your Medidne Chest

teases.

Horseshoe crabs are useful

Reg. 2.60

AT NELSON'S

RIGHT GUARD

A bridal shower honoring Ml10
Linda Yost, Porlland, bride-elect,
ot James Daniel McTurner, was
held recently at the Gayle Price
home with M:lu &amp;~zanne Price
and Miss Beverly Price all hotGuests were KathY Ross, Pat
Lennox, Pam Sten, U1 Munch,
Ruth Meldrwn, EUeen Newman, .
Flo Szabo, and Maraha Gllderslee~e. all students at Marietta
College; and Debbie Roush, Nancy Yost, Paula Sayre, Krista
Yost, &amp;Isle Kush!, Bev Price,
Mrs. Carolyn Price, Mrs. Edna
Price, Mrs. Margaret Yoa~ and
Mrs. Mabel Marshall.

SCOPE

REG., SUPER, GENTLE

10 ct

Clear and Clean in the bottle
and on your hair!

24 Hour Wrecker Service

&gt;

Cold ••r &amp; Wine-Carry Out Onlyl

POMEROY, 0.

.:.a 'mt'.. t

25

FRENCH CITY

7 lbs. $1

BRW HOWE. AND LEATHER SUPPLY
992·2774

Thanksgiving Memories," and
Mrs. Pearl Reynolds gavethepo.
em, "An Old Fashioned Tllanka·
giving." Quizes and games oo
Thanksgiving wore played at the
conclusioo or the program.
During the meeting CO!lWcled
by Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Atklnd,
six worthy high priestesses were
lntroduced and welcomed. They
were Mrs. Wim, Mr11. Barbara
Dupn, Mlas Edith Hutsinplller,
Mrs. Lear, Mrs.Cheesebrewand

-·--------

OLEO

:

_1'

bride changed into 1 sheath dress.

ADAMS OR HOLSUM
1vs.

VISTA-HALLMARK OF EXCELLENCE
IN BICYCLE QUALITY AND AT
POPULAR PRICES
BUY NOW OR USE LAYAWAY PLAN

Rutland.
For a short weddlrv trip the

(SPEED TYPE)

Bread------------ 5 1.00

n•·.

or

Side Bacon--------~b~ 59~

S44,4.4

SAVE $-4.45. (Jtttor chute ke~~ ' wwdusl IWIY
!tom .work Bnel 1nd a~plh 1d1U1tmenh Cui~ :
90'
45' 114" . 1 HP . 7'1•" como iutlon
1
rip lenct included .
S27.77

COLEMAN
HEATING

'--St.

Bologna·--------- 2lbs.1.00

·~

yrs.

Mlcld!eport, 0.

SLICED ALL MEAT
HOME LAUNDRY

Mrs. Elizabeth Lear read
• -This Ill A Thankful Time,"
Ruby Diehl~ted. ••My

OWE IIAIDWARE

ROAST·-----------·

Mr. Gene Grate of Rutland
served as bestman for his brother, and Mr. RonnJe Grate am Mr.
Mike Grate, Rutlall!, cousins or
the groom, were the ushers. Miss
Devonla BlsseU In a pink organdy
dress with white accessories was
the flower girl.
Altar deeoraUons included ar·
rarwements or white gladioli and
palms, two seveD-branch candelabra. A white kneelirw bench, the
aisle e11rpeted In white, and white
satin bows on the family p e w a
completed the setting. Guests at
the wedding and reception were
registered by Mrs. Douglas Bissell of Reedsville, sister·t~law
of the bride.
For her daughter's weddirw:,
Mrs. Bissell wore a blue linen
dress with blue aDd white acces-sories am a corsage blue tint·
ed carnations. Mrs. Grate wore
a fiowered chilton dress with
matching accessories and a carnation corsaae.
A reception honorlrw the couple
Wlt.S held at the Rutland American
Legion Hall. The bride' a table
was adorned with a rour.Uered
wedding cake t~ped with the
tndltional miniature bride and
groom. AssisUrv with the serv.
q '¥ere Mrs. Roae carson, Rutlam.; Mrs. Roger Bissell, Mid·
dleport, and Miss VIckie Grate,

on oplrltual blesoings.

SALES

-------------------------USDA CHOICE

NOV. 17-23

l

A birthday tribute
Mrs. Lllllan Stiefl', Middleport, was given
during the Thanksgiving potluck
Blipper of Mary ~rlno 37, White
~rlne of Joruaalem, F rlday night
at tho IOOF hall.
Yellow mums with turkey fig.
urine acceaaorles decorated the
table. Mrs. Stlefl is organist for
the .!llrtne.
Mrs. Pauline Atkins, worthy ·
high priestess, talked on Thanksgiving, Ita hlswcy and observance. A three • part medltatl.oo
entitled .. Let Us Give Thanks
For - " was given by Mrs. Paul
Winn, on civil blesalngs, Mrs.
Nell1e Tr_acy on material blessings and Mrs. Frank Choosobrow

FRESH
TURKEYS

Satuodoy Til 9

992-3975

In a noor.Jength gown of ChantUly lace Mlu Karen Sue 811·
sell, daughter or Mr. and Mrs.
Charlea L Bissell of Chester,
became the bride ot Mr. David
Ln'renc:e Grate, 5()11 ol Mr. and
Mrs. Arnold Gnte, Rutland.
The wedding waa an event of
July 20 at 7:30 in the evening at
the Rutland Church of the Naza.
rene. The He~. Herbert Grate,
brother or the bridegroom, offi.
elated at the double ring cere.
mmy, A program or traditional
wedding muaie was presented by
Miss Debra Smith, organisL Mr.
Alan Blackwood, RutlarrJ, sang
"I Love You Truly" and 01 More.' '
As the bride approached the al·
tar, escorted by her father, the
bridegroom sang "To My Bride.''
Her gown was fashioned with a
fitted bodice featuring a scall(JIJed
neckline with irridescentaccenta
am long slee~es. her pillbox
headpiece, tram which reu a cha~
tllly lace veil, wu embeUtshed
with irridescent accents, T h e
bride carried a bouqut~t or white
rosebuds and daisies.
The bride's attendanl.s were
Miss Naomi Bissell, sister of
the bride, the maid of honor' aoo
Mrs. Dwlsht Bissell, Reedsville,
am Mrs. Delbert Bissell, Columbus, both sisters·irr.law of t h e
bride, They wore lace gowns of
aqua, pink and yellow, respectiveb. with matching ~leces and
carried large mwns with stream·
ers to match their gowns.

Maple Lawn

WE ACCEPT FOOD COUPONS
Open Every Week Day 9:00 to 7:00
E. MAIH ST .

WE ARE TAKING
ORDERS NOW
FOR

MARKET

JOIN THE
JET SET

CIRCULAR SAWS

FRANKUN

s-1111. I"!JJItrOIO,GrqHocknoy,llarlo, cak!well,PatcyGron·

OLDER ClllLDREN OF THE TUPPERS PLAINS Elementary
Sl'hool, cast as hunters, w1.'1r bright red hunting ja ckets and hats
for Ull'ir pa rt in the oper&lt;.'tta Friday nighL Piuurcd arc, seated
across fr ont, I. tor. , Sue Burke, Linda calaway, Debbie Burns,
.Jenny Bailey, Cheryl Kt1lm, ntioda l·ortney, \ ' in re nt l.a(·omb;

::;:

Bissell-Grote Wedding is Noted

w

,--an • ...,.

111111

.
1

:.... J .::=:.

.f"

o-p , _

lq. ~IllS
4. lltlll S811G IDS
1M F•miiJ
WtlhmA l.ftiOIII '

196_8

.~ :• .•· • •.' ." !'.'

Birthday Tribute is Given

I. llttTliASSOCIIIIJCtt
[!wprtt T••tUN •

Dallr Sentinel, Pomeroy·Middleport, 0,, 1hursday, November 14,

•

Ktl'llll

,_ . lq. ~IUD

"'

A MINIMUM AMOUNT HOLDS All PUFICH.tSESI

Mrs . Pearl Casto and Mrs.
Fred Hice were program leaders whe n the rl:g-ular meeting of

I
'

Having A Party?

~ndaymorningworkshopser·

vices at the Middleport First
United Presbyterian Church on
Nov. 17 and Nov. 24.

ABO\'E ARE SOME Of THE BARNYARD "characters"
featured in the T111pers Plains Elementary School operetta.
Left to righ t are Ton,ya Keebaugl1, representing an eggplant;
John Sheets, a hawk; Jeff Gilland, a clown, and Tim Spencer,

1 - . The

.

,
,I · ; . ,

,Re1. a,c

You
Pay
Only

Family Size

66e
TOOTHPASTE

�J •

'

•'

~

,.

.·

,

\

n. Dolly Sentinel, Pcone~-MidiiiOI&gt;OI'I. 0., Thuraday, Novomllor U, 1988

8-

A LITTLE 'HOMEWORK' Watching Want Ads Bring Top Grade Results

IT'S A
IZ..PIEC:E BAND
I HIRED TO PLAY
"HAPPY BIRFDA'I"

HARK!!
WHAR'S ALL
THAT PURTY

Notice

WANT AD
INFORMATION

DEADLINES

J '·"'·

o,, 8ef..,, Pultliutio"

Moftchr OeediiM 9 ' ·'"·
ca-•llati•n• &amp; Cl!ffettion•
Will Ita ecceptH v,.U 9 • -• - f ...
Dar of P-*lintien
REGULATIONS
The Publhh1r reserv11 the ri11ht
to adlt Ot ••i•~' on~ alit deemed 11b•
1-o::tio...,ble. T h. r.ubHthar will nco!
• '-• reapontible or
lncorroct int1rtion.

thon

m Ofl

one

5 calltt per WOfd o.,. interlill'l

Mi.,;..,...., Chor .. 7!ic
12 c1nt1 pi• _.,;,d tlwM contiCu•

II

CDI'Ifl , . ,

lnaertion•
:;15 ,., cent

Woul ••• contaevt•"•

D•tCou"' .,.

pcoio:l •••

eM a.la ,_;d woth in 10 dart
CARD 01" THANKS&amp;. OBITUARY

II SO fw SO word "''"'"'"'"' · Ea
...tlltio..wtl woul le

BLIND ADS
A1hlitia,.l
,..,,_,,

~c (her,.

!H';-.11\(ver·

OFF ICE HOUR$
1 :]0 ,'.., to 5 :00 P-• - Daily
I!I :JO o . m. Hl 12:00 Noon Sall.trday

Card Of Thanks
WE WISH to express our sincere thanks and gratitude to
our many friends, neigbbors
and relatives for their kindness, sympathy and floral ofrerings extended to us during
the death of our stster and
ciau.ghter, Alice Frances McHaffie . Special lilanks to Rev.
Wendel StuUer, Mrs. David
Nease, organist, the Ewing
Funeral Home and the pallbearers.
Mr. and Mrs. James
McHaffie, Dorothy,
Rebecca and VIrgil
McHaffie.
ll-14-ltc

tHICKEN BARBECUE SUN·
DAY NOV. 17 sponsored by
the Racine Fire Dept. to be
held at the fire bouse start.
lng at IZ noon.
11-7-811:
AUCTION , Friday, N&lt;&gt;v. 15 at
7 30 p.m. Adams Auctloo
House. Rulland, Ohio.
II-lUI&lt;
A REVIVAL starting at Freedom Gospel Mission at Bald
Knobs, Sunday, Nov. 17, 7:30
p.m. Rev 0 . H. Cart, Evan·
gelisl, Rev . E. J. Griffith.
Pastor. special singing, pub.
lie is invite&lt;!.
ll-ls-3tc

1fJU, DO sewing in my home

for Christmas. Carolyn Lowis. !'hone 992-2271. 11-1-l!tc

feet river frontage, railroad
on olher aide . Three camp
sites rented. four more to

MUlliC every F'rlday and Saturday at Jack'• Club on Harrlsonvllle Road off Rt. 7.
lJ·IUI&lt;

For ChriJtmu Giving!
Pocket Sin
New Tutament &amp; PJalms

THE PUBLIC and friends are

1 WEEK ONLY
ThiJ Fine i.OO Value Only

BIBLES

50c

mvited to visit lhe new Cam·

WHILE THEY LAST
eo Beauty Shop, 1600 Nye
Ave., Pomeroy, opened this
week. Opening specials today
Budget
and Fricay are $17.50 perma·
992·5896
nent for 113.50. 115.25 lor
$10.75. '111e shop is open !rom AKC Puppies, Scottles, CockeTB,
8:30A.M. to 8 P.M. each day.
Poodles. Westles and Schnauzll-14-2tc
Phone 992·7207.
ers, Barkaroo Kl'!l., Coolville,

"~,\Y!~~s

For Rent

Notice

COMPLETE LINE

Big T rad .. ln Alfowon~e

POMEROY
992·2181
Jock W. Cor..y,
•

Mgr.

ForS.Ie

~~.~.,

Phone 9921012.

All Legal Benrages

ll-12-6tc

11-13-3tc

HOBSTETTER
REALTY
0.,....

ZIG UG-OMATIC. well 1mown
WILL DO sewing at home apartments. Close to school.
make sewing machine. h a s
tippers .
pockets. pegging.
Phone
992-5434.
10.18-tfc
many
features : makes buthemming. alterations, etc.
tonholes,
darns, mends, withMrs. Freddie Thabet. Maoon,
FIJRNlSHEO
apartment,
4
out attachments, sews on all
Phone 773-5651.
4-30-tfc
rooms and bath. Marion Reytypes or fabrics. Free home
nolds
,
Mason,
W.
Va.
Phone
demonstration.
Pay balance
THERE WILL be a gun shoot
773-SI47.
ll-121fc
of
~2.98 or monthly payments.
SUndlly, Nov. 17 beginning at
Ca'l 1!112-3218.
11-8-6lc
noon at the
Forked Rtm
~TORAGE SPACE, storase lor
Sportsman Club. Everyone is
boats. trailers, cars, campers, COMPLETE SHOE REPAIR
welcome .
11-12-Stc
etc. Write P.O. Box 329, Pomoutfit, contact Wm. R. Thoma,
eroy. Phone 992-2'198 or see
phone 992-3817.
11·12-&amp;lc
VACANCY for two elderly peoDick Seyler.
ll-12-12tc
ple. Prefer private paid pa7fJ BALES hay. 40 cents a bale.
tient. . Phone Mason, 773-5185.
FURNISHED
APARTMENTS
Call 992'2'140.
11-~3tp
10-3-tlc
in Middleporl. All utilities
paid. Rowley &amp; Reed, MidWILL DO BABYSnTING evendleport, Phone 992-2776.
:969 ZIG-ZAG sewing machine.
ings and weekends, Phone
111-22-tfc
This machine makes button992-5957.
ll-3-12tc
holes , dams, blind hems. This
'!RAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile
machine like new. has factory
~OTICE TO TAXPAYERS
Court, S}racuse, Ohio on State
warranty. Pay $5 per month
NOTICE is hereby given, In
Ill. 1:11, Pnone W2-Z91il.
or 148.21 cash. Call 992-2836.
compliance
with Sectlon
8-ll-UC
11-l~tc
5715.17 revised code, that the
tu returns of Meigs County,
FAT LEGHORN heno, 6 to 71bs
for the year 1968, have been nlREE oedroom trailer, M &amp;.
G
Market,
three
miles
south
revised and the valuations
7U centa. Paul Sayre, Port01 MlO&lt;Jleport on H.t. 1.
land. Phone 843-2286. 11 ·14~tp
completed and are open for.
11-14-.ltp
public inspection at the office
SORRELL Riding Mare s~
of the County Auditor in the
years old $150, black Apaloosa
Court House, Pomeroy, Ohio. TRAILER SPACE, ready to
hook up. private, plenty of
riding horse. four years old,
Complainls against any valuroom fur children to play.
$175. Phone 9!12-6793. 11"14-31p
ation or assessment, except
Phone
W2-3904.
8-14-tlc
the valuations fixed and as·
,954 F-100 FORO Pickup truck,
se.ssments made by the Tu
FOUR
ROOM
HOUSE
and
bath,
excellent running condition
Commissioner of Ohio, will be
unfurnished , 1650
Lincoln
and tires. $225. Phone 992heard by the County Board
Heights. Phone 997...1874.
2740
11-14"3tc
of Revision, at its office in
10-211-tfc
the Court House, Pomeroy,
~ARM Morning coal stove with
Uhio, on or after February 15,
FOUR
ROOM
hoW!e,
Laurel
fan, heats 3 to 4 rooms, used
1969. Complamts must be
St.,
Pomeroy,
newly
reoovat·
less
than two months. GlP.nn
made in writing, on blanlu
ed.
Call
W2-5293.
10-31-tfc
Jewell,
Downington, 0 . Phone
furnished by the County Audioll&amp;-313.\
tU4-I21C
tor and riled in his oHice on
or before the time limited for FOUR ROOM APARTMENT,
bath, furnished or unfurnish- r'IVE ROOM house, bath, bani·
payment of taa:es for the first
ed,
ground floor,
furnace
wood lloors, two finished
half year, or at any time durheal,
phone
!149·35114.
11-ll.Jtc
rooms aownstai.rs, gas fur.
ing which taxes are received
nacc. good neighborhood, call
by tbe County Treasurer, wlthTt-IREE
ROO"'
furnished
apart9!t'l·541J alter 5 p.m. ll-14"6tc
o"t penalty for the first haU
ment,
adulls
only.
Phone
992year.
MJ:i .
ll-131fc FLOOR Demonstrator, 1968 mo.
Gordon H. Caldwell
Auditor of Meigs County.
del stereo. Beautiful walnut
ll-5-101c
For S1le
console, AM &amp; FM radio,
BSR automatic floating turnf'()TATOES,
Phone 843-3254
table, make payments of
Clarence Proflitt, Portland.
GARAGE SALE - 31111 Elm St.,
10-16-Uc
fd.32 or pay fiiU3. Set sold
Middleport, Saturday, Nov.
much hig!Ier. Try it in your
11 .. 12 noon to 8 p.m. Sunday,
POODLE PUPPIES, AKC Toy
home , Phone Mason City 773Nov 17. 12 noon to 5 p.m . MIA5940.
ll'lwte
miniature, $75 and up. Stud
cellaneous woodworldng tools,
service
and
grooming.
Pbooe
lOCket aeta, all type mechani'!:&gt;!CLAIMED Lay·away, 1988
Wl-5443.
II 3 tic
cal toola, tour loch 'lice,
Nelco Sewing Machine, needs
!Witeh boxes, tool boxes, sold- AKC Golden Retriever puppies,
no attachments, sewa on butering guns, pipe vice. valve
SZ4 Aah St., Middleport. 191- tons, monograms, fancy stitgrinder. eoal stove, Simplicity
5443.
&amp;-a-tfe
ches, pay f44.53 or $5.25 a
garden tractor with all atmonth, try it in your home.
tachments , shallow well pump,
lTAY and slraw. Call 992-1122'1.
Phone Mason City 773-5MIJ.
aw. · tools belonged to late
11-8-lztp
11"14-.ltc
Joseph t'~»~&gt;"aite. 11-l:t3tc

SYRACUSE

•n"

Business Services
HADIO &amp; TV REPAIR and antennas installed. John Harrl·
son, Phone 992-2522. 11~ 3l1tc
DOZER. BACKHOE, trencher
and truck service, septic
tank.t;, water lines, basements,
also topsoil. Henry Bahr,
Phone 985-3988 or Roger Bahr,
Phone 985-3958.
11"13-JOto.

t! lft'V

ICHAILII M. HYIILL,
Adrnlnlatrator With the Will
A~tnuld

r::aaw, I:IOW &amp; POilTIR,
""oriMrt fctr Admlnlltrator
11 14; II 211 11 28;
1:1 6; Ul U; 12 18 ltc

C. C. BRADFORD
AUCTIONEER
Complete S&lt;rvl&lt;e
Phoae Mt-3A!l
lladae, ow.
Crltt Bradlonl
5 I tic

WMPO
INFORMATION
NEWS
presenls
LOCAL REPORTS
DAILY
AT
7:SO A.M.
12 NOON
3 P.M.
AND
4:30 P.M.

Am

CONDmONING Relrlgeratlon service. Jack's Refrigeration, T\'ew Haven. hone
8112-207ll.
4 8 tfc

READY - ~TX concrete dellv-

e,..d right to your project.
Fast and eaoy. Free estlmah·s . Phone 992-3234, Goegleln Ready - Mix Co., Middleport, Ohio.
8 311 tic
BUDGET PRICE furniture on
our third floor budget shop.
Baker Furniture. Middleport.
Ohio
! 23 tic

l&lt;eeping Meigs

SEWING
M~CHINES, repair
service. all makes. WY !.2284. The Fabric shop, Pomeroy. Authorized Sln~er Sales
and Service. We Sharpen
Scl=rs.
3-29-tlc

Pomeroy Home &amp; Atrt
Ill E. MaiD

Moat populor •l•e&amp; avolloble.
Limited number of thh prlee.
Fvllr guaranteed. Bulh by o big
lira moker fo1 .• ,

MOORE'S
124 W. MAIN

407 PAGE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Ambassador is the highest
rank in the U.S. diplomatic
service.

Old Town

2290

Now

Onto
-·

15·88

S

MO. 2" AVI.
IIIIDDLIPOIIT

~

. - . . .
o-- - .

F~~ I~ M~ SOUP~-

:

RIJ!J RtC&gt;flT DOWIJ 1\IVD
'WV 1\1\XllliER CM&gt;E OF VJ&gt;!

DESIGNS FOR
!IONNAZ I'

~MAD

~EAOING ,

WEAVING

GAVE JANIE "!I&lt;E EX·
CU5E SHE NEEDS
TO REBT .

AND 50LfTH 5EA

CARVING&amp;!

0

I OOti'T REMEMBER TttERf BEIN'
A [)()OR HERE. "'' BUl IT'S Ttif

atLY- 01/T, '"'"" · ~!If

MOST BE '60ME PlACE
I G\N G£1 THIS Pfl,!L

k'IN~

{)() I COME
TillS 'Md. y ·~·?

Lac., I 1 owner cor, new w·s•w tires, vinyl trim with
bucket seats, console, radio, P .S. &amp; P .B., auto. trans .
dork blue finish with white nylan tap. A real sharpie.

on Mr. and Mrs. Maywood

65 CHEVELLE ....................... ..$1495

Loco! owner car, 4 on the floor, good wide oval W.W.
tires, red vinyl inter1or , white t1ntsh, rad 1o c. neater .
Try it for performance.

Malibu Conv . VB engine, P.G. transmission, new w-s-w
tires, green exterior with white nylon top, green with
vinyl trim.

carter, Long Bottom.
Mrs. Johnston received word
Crom her daughter who Uvea in
F1oridL She reported tOO recent
storm there didn't do them much
damage.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lawson
and daughter moved to Racine r&amp;cently.

1964 CHEVROLET Bel Air 4 Door ......... $995
6 cyl. Std. trans. Radio . Local 1 owner cor, black
finish, spotless clean interior . Good tires .

ACBOSII
1. Undergarment

5. Marble 01:"
pound

1961 CHEVROLET Bel Air Waron .. ,., .. , .$350
Blk. finish, red inter1or. VS eng1ne . Automatic trans .
Radio and healer.

relatives In East Liverpool.

JohnsLon

closet
10. Eskimo
boat

12. Connection
13. Kind of

bendlt

Pre-Winter

1960 FORD FALCON 2 DR ............... $295

1-4 . overdone

White finish. Gaod tires . Automatic . Radio

1.".. Antedl ·
luvia.n

1960 BUICK LeSabre 4 Dr .. __ .. __ ........ $199
Automatic. Power steering, radio

Sped all

nrttaticP.Ily
16. Syllable

or scale

11. RegardlnJ
13. Cook in oil
19. Nozz !~ or

engine

1962 CHEVY II H.T. CPL __ .. ___ ....... $599

20.

Local 1 owner car, good tires, std . Irons . 6 cyl. en·
gine . Radio and Heater . Red finish .

highly
23. Rumple
24. Colot·less

SEE THIS TRUCK BUY!
1965 GMC PICKUP .... _....... __ ._... _.$1295

Winter
Retreads

JJW/~!111;/J..J::~-:.c

DAILY CROSSWORD

9. Kind or

Mrs. Janie Congo is visiting

U.French

river

DOWN
1. Brlliah

18. BoK

......

2 tor s22·oo

----PLEA.SING
TERMS I

We Servin

What Wo Soli

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

Plus Recappable Tire

GENERAL
TIRE SALES

308 ·318 E. MAIN
992-2126
POMEROY
OPEN EVENINGS TIL 8:00

99 2-1161
Middleport, 0.

·--·----........... ,. . ..... _. . ... ... . _._....
.

.

.

,

••••

,

· -

, • •

-.
,

......... .. . .

.... . ..

,

.,.. ~,.

f

..

,~· -·

GLOVE6 ALL WET'

aubdlvlsion.!l 22.Work
the
jaws

2. Fluff
3. Real black
4. Mr. Kettle

5. Ddlnltely

nQt 11tralght
G. In the

middle

or

1. Sisters IUld

others

8. Phlladel·
phla elewn
9. Hardy
character

11 . "Grecian

Urn" p~t

n. Shape

23. Supply
a crew
.z:.. lnvl-

te.tlon

26. Units of
w~ght

27. Good·

reuow
and Hood

28. Carry
29. Unmask
30. Stands up

32. More
altracth"e

\ ·ult-rtlm)·"a A•a•er

35. Parish
pl"ieat, ln

Madrid

36. Surrealist
painter
3·; , Word or
regret
39. Forty wink&amp;

42. Function,
as a motor"

I K tj I
[DUNCIE~

[I I_

I

HIS 15USINE$.

1CIUPER ~

Value

,.c

HOW
LAUNI7RY
TVCOON RAN

Now ...._the cin:letii&lt;Uen

I I ) t ) :::-~~::n.:::-::o:
1.....=::=- 1wiTH AN r I I I n r I I 1

25. Proscribe
26.Gravel

28. Jack.ot.....o.ll·
trades

1"--••rt I

31. Nonsense!
32. One way

Ihonhl.-., IAYIN
lo·o h ·r•l ... ..

to pay
33. Clock

IAKID

OHRTO

rre t

HfACI

Wad••'" ,.,_.. .e+•r

.\tuo""" lf'AI.I iJa.. ....itto&amp;~
._,.;J.,.J to do- fOIIGI A MEAD

36. Blood type
35. Slice
36. Drops bull.
tnawny

Yes, GCMid Selection Of
'69 MODELS
Best Deals, Too!

ALL SIZE$

ESPECIALLY 'CAUSE
YA GOT &gt;'ell. NEW

Unoenmblo the,. !Our Jumbla,
one letter to each square, to
form (our ordinary worda.

18. Useless
stUff
21. Up·

readln1

.. .

LOOT

IN ~ MAlE " '

66 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE CON. • • • • • • $2095

JohnstoJL
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Johnston called on Mr. and Mrs. C. C.

•

IT'S PLA1r1 TO ME lHAT WORD'S OOti'T
MI'AH BfA~ TO "1'00, GiRL!' YQI.J 1YE. B!:EH
"TOLD 111AT '1'0U Nf'-,'N '.~.lANDER IN ThiS
HQJ&amp;, AND IF 't'Ol.l 00--· 'r'OtJ GET
"Tl11'S AND ~ ~!

RE.FilLEO-·CI1lY THEY
GaT so MArn· i{)OMG
,qNO HALL~YS l -,. ,.
FEEl W&lt;E I'M

local 1 owner. Radio, good white wall tires, show·
room clean.

66 CHEVELLE SS 396 H.T. Cpa....... ... $1995

••••

CAN YOU COLLECT
HANDICRAFT

OF E51&lt;1MO

A. LOT CI\EAPEft.!

VS ii11TH ~0 SALES
. R6SISTAI-JCE .. ,

fi;!ESI\ Oi&gt;J YOUR. Mtt.JD

'~-

\

famlb, Syracuse, aOO Mr. and
Mrs. Smith, Pomeroy Route.
Bobby Joe Wolfe and son, Terry, Racine Route, Simon Powell,
local, Lawrence Johnston. local,

...... ,

AND PCt&lt;RY TRAVEL 1

THANK&amp; 1 Vv'INNIE:. Y00

OH \'ES! I'LL 5rr

ANb SKETCH REAM5

,,PAV "TV IV&lt;XJLD B€

FOR 1HOSE OF

H. T. Cpe . Beoutiful gold finish with block v inyl top,
326 cu. in. va engine with 3 speed trans. Console
bu(:ket
seats, vinyl interior, only 23,000 miles by

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jeffers arxl

~

f3(J-/ I

SO FRI~DS, WHILE IT'!&gt;

1967 PONTIAC LeMans ........ . ........ $2195

Powell and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer lcenhow~
er called on Mr. ard Mrs. Charlie Carroll and family,locll,and

•

I MU~T FIND A
WAY 01= TAKING
!T EAeH ON
THIS&gt; TRIP ..

, ·"' ~"""·· Selectl•ltluJ...Prlcel
.

,I

this address.
PauJ Sellers, Mr. aOO Mrs.
Bob Lawson and daughter, Mr.
ani Mrs. Hayes McMurray, local, called on Mr. arK! Mrs. Roy

465 No. 2"d

JANI~-~ILE ~

tury.

,,

.

I]JAiieR ,lli5RE'S ~

Time now to save a pile of money on topquality OK used cars.

Mr. and Mrs. Charley carroll were in Pomeroy one da,y
recently.
Mrs. ' ' Hattie PoweU 1 Bet:t;y
Ward ard Bonney Dalley went
to Columbus to see James Dailey
who is hospitalized at University Hospital, 9th Floor, Room
951. Frierds may send cards to

- May

l.f.

SUPER SAVINGS

Flats News

called

,

LUe expectancy a m o n g
birds varies widely. A robin
lives about 12 years while
eagles have apparently sur~
vived for more than a cen-

8' Fleetside Body. H. Duty Tires . 6 cyl. eng. Heater

COMBINA liON

•

GOEGLEIN GRAVEL

POMEROY

Pomeroy

Mrs. Laura Circle of Dorcas
visited Mrs. Mary Circle onSundiY afternoon.
Margaret Ann Carleton called
at the Robert Lee hmte on Sunday afternooJL

DIAL !192·3284

775xU White Side,..olla

Enterloined

ZEBCO

'10' AN' ME GOT A Bl~ SECRET '\
THIS SADIE HAWKINS DAt-I.
/
GEN'RAL - eUT Al-l WON'T
TALK-AN ' 'YO' CAIN'T!!

SuD!ay,

ull ply nrlo;~n.

faur

Well As

ZEBCO
ROD AND REEL

~---- ----·-

Mr. and Mrs. John WUson and
dtughter of Columbus, Mr. and
Mrs. Shelby Pickens and £amUy
or Itlcine, R. D., Mr, and Mrs.
Darrell Taylor or creston, and
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hudson and
son or Racine were guesl8 or
Mr. and Mrs. Allan Taylor on

• Delivery
• Quick Service
• Finishine
• Sand &amp; Gravel

Heo~{, duty, e•tro deep treada,

NEW SHIPME-NT

1

Pomeny!- 0

SPECIAL
SNOW Tl RESALE

Mason Area
Informed As

This Week's

'. "

Carmel News
By the Day

• Free Estimates• Quality Concrete
• Certi fled Strenath

-GUARANT£EDPHONE 992-2094

Gallia and

CIGARETTE vending machines
and service. ABC Enterprises,
Mason. W. Va . Phone 7'73-5M3.
""tfc

Re1. $25.95

of l'flle ltta.. ef

Core Mel""•"· Decoelllld

NAne&gt;J'S
CAPITAL

Bollcbaer Ra&lt;lilt.c&gt;r To The
~esl Heater Core.

5.55

...

NOTICI

&amp;e¥0111&gt;

r~

THE'

From the Largest Truek or

Hocklneport, Ohio
Phone 667-3370

PH, 9112-2113

CHAIII.Lia M. HYIILL , IT AL.,
O.hndtntt.

Juae Evelyn Pulllna, wh..e pl.u•
oC n:aldence 1.1 c-o Ancbor BIW&amp;.rdt.
Potat Pleuant, W . VI ., Ctrl 8e)'l.ell,
wboH pl ace of realdencr: 11 unllnowa;
t rle u~known be ire, devlaeu, llli'l·
tl~ l.
admln ..tntton and eae.:ut.on,
If any, of Carl Bo)'tet, deceued~ Arthur Boylr:a, who.e p lacl! of rl!lllat ·nce 11 unllnoWll ; t.be unknown beln,
a.-vWees , le,l a ~u. admlnlatraton and
CKI:CIII.ort, I( lilY, Of Arthur BoJlel,
~rceated; and W!llilm BOYles, WbOIII:
J'lace or re•ldeDclt Ia Rout~ J, '13:1
i:utern Street, Lllle Wdea, Flol'lc!a,
,...JIJ Uol&lt;e noll"" tbat on the l:ltb da)
d Non!mber. 1968. tbe undertlfned
(.harlet M. H,,ell,
Admlllialrator,
With the WILl Anneud of Cora MelnI:ILI"t, deceaud, fll~
hla pl!tltlun
11~11l n ~l you and olhen In the Pm·
bate Court ol Me\p County, Oblo,
11rayln; for authority to 11:11 the enlire tnlerert In tbe real e.tate bare \at.fter deuc r lbed. to pay lbe debtl
of decedent 10.11CI &lt;:QUI of ~ra­
\.lon, to-wil e
Tbe followl.nl" real nlate lltue\·
ad in t ha Coun ty ol Maig1, in 1he
State ul Ohi o and In the V1ll.&amp;tla
of l'omeror,
Beln11 that pari of 100 A . Lot
.303 i n Town 2, llenl"e 13 u1 Ohio
Company"• Pur~haae and deacrlbeC
u followa . to-wit; 40 feet on Dabney Street ao ulled (aa ahown 011
Plat Boall No . 2 In the offlee o1
the Reeorder of Met.r• CountJ on
P&lt;tlle 14 BB Lu~-..11 SU • nd J"UDnlnll
bact at tblt Width 100 feet; adJoinlnl a nd weal of Uw lot now
or fotmerlv owDed bY Phllht Bom·
"'"· I he lot l,ere co n~•r•d be·
I,... No. 4(1 In Debne,. Addition to
Pomeroy 111 per above mentton..S
pllt.
Heinl! a 1trtp of land eateodin1
b•ek tow•~ the bill 20 feel •nd
anj:l of Lot No. 46
. iAddlUon to romen&gt;y
IJI
ll&amp;' a 1trtp 20 f eet batll b,- 4ll
le"t in 'lridl.b adjolnin1 UN! rear
and of Lot No . fl, Said lut No. to
beln1 lite ..me lot deed8d by C.
W . Dabney to GiL'Dlll! Sbii!JDI bJ
deed dated No•. 3, 1856 aM ,..
curded In Vol. 18 .. t pa1e 243 ot
the Recordl or Melp Cowaty, Obio.
REn:.R.ENCI DEED: VoJ . Ull, Pill:
80 and Vol. 114 . .,.,11, 411 of the
Deed Reeord.l of Mei.MI COII.Dty,
Ohio.
You a re required to an.,l'er Lbto
111 ld Petltkln hy the fth day of IIDU·
l'lr:r, lgs(l, or Juda:ment bY dltfaull
l.l'il..l be rendered .&amp;lllinlt )'OU.

H.a

Sc•awarzel Marine

!;XPERT
Wheel Alignment

a,.

No. IP,Hr

tJuW Wfi HAV&lt;' TO

5PACE'

FROM, PAW?

OORIML DtPLOMATlC
CHAf.I'J£/.S ... Ili.Jf

10

BLAETTNARS

rtalntlff,

GEO. HOIISIEIIER,
SYRAOJSE - 8 room brick.
bath, basement, forced air
heat, 3 lots, $21!,000.00.
SYRACUSE - 6 room one Door
home, bath, forced air beat,
double garage, breezeway,
1969 WALNUT stereo console
level lot. $20,000.00
with AM &amp; FM radio, !-chanRU11.AND - 84 AcreJI, 15 bo~
nel speaker system. 4-speed
tom, 2 barns, large 8 room
Intermix changer. Take over
home, 112 baths, basement.
payments of $6 per month or
Also 5 room house. Minerals.
pay balance due IIO'I.Z2. Call
$211 ,000.00
992-28.'16.
ll- 1~tc
HELEN or VIRGO. 'fEAF!JRD

rURN1SHED and unlurnl•hed

.;~nd

MIIGI COUNTY, OHIO
CHAIII.LU M. HYIIU.. , Adrnlnlttr1tor
Wlltl th• Will AftiiiiiCIId Gf the llt.. e
of Core ~lnltlrf, Decell!lotd,

Reo.-IIZ1511

FOR BE'ITER cleaning, to keep
colors gleaming, use Blue
Lustre carpet cleaner. Rent
electric shampooer 11. Baker
Furniture.
ll~U«c

75~

Remoin In RG•kad cor
.,.lth .,.arm aoap
l : Sprayed
then o high preuuro

Insurance

IN THl ,.108ATI c;:OUIT

fLI6Hf

6-9\lz-18
On Display
115 Soon
To Arrive

'

1,q'--:- • ·- • • -11 to 6
Sot. • - • • • ••••• -9 to 7
Sun. -- - - • -- - • ·11 to

AUTOMOBILE Insurance beel
eancelled? Lost your operator's license·! can 992--2961.
6 Ia Uc

O'BRIEN &amp; CROW
REALTY COMPANY
POMEROY - I story frame,
6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, bath,
part garage, u!Uily room, 3
lots for a total or 100 • 180.
Good buy $5,000.00
MINERSviLLE - 2 story
frame . 7 rooms, 4 bedrooms,
batb recently remodeled, in
rood condition, garage and
workshop . $9,000.00
~YRAOJSE - I story frame,
; rooms, 2 bedrooms, bath,
all on 4 level lots, garden. includes forced air heating
stove. $6,500.00
HENRY E. CLELAND
O!Hc....m-Z%51

11-I0-311tc

CAR I'IASH

(Hot It DriW"e~Thru)

~UR~r~D

Yf_S,. WE-'V£ 9££t.l

TI&gt;YIIJG TO D£AiWITH HIM fal.INJRE'
1HAN A Y£Nl. THIWIJ6H

EXPERIENCED
la411ttr Senlct

EYINRUDE
69's Are Here

dnte ol aoh water to
mok• car •hioe
]. Allendont on duty

The Former
Home Re staurant
In Middleport

Real Estate For Sale

Ohio, Phone 667-3654.

Business Servi,es

THE 7-11
CAFE NOW
OPEN
FOR
BUSINESS,

SIEGLER and
TROPIC·AIRE Heaters

!967, l!ldiO THREE bedroom
trailer with 8 • 20 awning.
SIX ACRES bottom land, 650
See at 810 s. 4th Middleport.

ll rent. Stdlable for Industry or
thro"llh Nov. 17, at the Hobhousing project or sand and
son Christian Union Church
gravel. CaU Mason 773-5147.
with Rev . 'll'Oy l''ields. Night11-1~
ly services at 7:30 p.m. Also
will be a countywide prayer NEW FOUR room Hot Blast
meeting SUnday, Nov. 17, at
coal heal~r. Phone Coolvlne
11-l~tc
2 p.m. O'Dell Manley, pastor,
667·3337.
11-U-3tc

GENTLE MARE PONY and
colt, Phone 992-5888. ll-14"3tc

$avo Mowllnotoll Howl

llARLY AMERICAN stereo,
1968 model stereo AM&amp;F'M
radio combination, dual speaker system. Balance due, 1811.78, or 31onthly payments or
$1.20. Ca li 1192-3218.
ll-8-6tc

WEEKEND meeting, Nov.

1 WISH to npress my sincere
lhanks to my friends and past.c&gt;r, Rev. W. 0. McClurg who
Wanted
visited me during my slay In ANTIQUES, furniture, dishes.
the Holzer Hospital, for the
miscellaneous. Mrs. Howard
many cards, flowers and pray:
Cecil, 800 W. Main St., Pomeers said in my behaM. Also
roy.
1-25-tlc
thanks to Or. Holzer, Or.
Harder and nurses who cared
For Sale or Trade
for me. May God's blessings,
STORE Equipment for house
be With each one.
trailer. M &amp; G Fond Market,
Helen M. Younce.
three mile! south of Middle·
11•14-ltc
port on Rt. 7.
ll-14-3tp

Notice

ForS.Ie
STEREO RADIO romblnaUon,
four-speed intermixed changer, four ~ speaker sou od
•ystem, lovely walnut finish.
This set just a few months
old. Pay balance of $89.98 or
monthly payments. Call 9923218.
ll-8-61c

A 6AfHllfii
STATIOfJ

lo\AK"-5 A

FER 'IE, MAW

MUSIC COMIN'

If!; (l&lt;'tJCIAL TOaR
SP,Aai f'f/D611M11HAT

RDI'IN

MATTER OF FACT, I'M NOT
LETTING YOI) OUT O F MY

38.Ktnd of
•teak
40. Genus
o1. lily

A CJon&gt;lornm Qwo-.

.fl. Trap
42. Wrong

IYQKYGY

b.ousufor

•tonc-

JIPVC

thra\vers

41 l.l.ut

UNTIL THIS THING'5 fiUTTONED
UP. MA'AI CAN ~JNCl HER II"'SPJ·
i('ATIO;i EL&gt;SE WHERE . 170 tOO
~I' ME ORUMMONOr

1

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Hore"a how to work It:
o\XYDLBAAXB
Ia LONGFELLOW
One tetter 1lmply atandl for another. lb. this •ample A ta Ulld
ror the thno L'1, X tor the two o•Ji. .~. Bin&amp;'le leUen. .,_...
trophle•, tho Jeqlh and torWta.Uon of tho wordl are all blllta.
Euh day the codo leUer• on &lt;llfleru.l.

CPP

CEY

YQYAXCEKTD
SP.A.QU;

KHZPMMKIQX

YnterdaJ'•

Crypto~taote:

XPV

EYJA

TPCEKTD

Klt

UU.-UQFlR

.A PROFESSOR IS ONE WHO

TALKS IN SOI&lt;EONE ELSE'S SLEEP. AUDI!N

WYSTAN HUGH

�J •

'

•'

~

,.

.·

,

\

n. Dolly Sentinel, Pcone~-MidiiiOI&gt;OI'I. 0., Thuraday, Novomllor U, 1988

8-

A LITTLE 'HOMEWORK' Watching Want Ads Bring Top Grade Results

IT'S A
IZ..PIEC:E BAND
I HIRED TO PLAY
"HAPPY BIRFDA'I"

HARK!!
WHAR'S ALL
THAT PURTY

Notice

WANT AD
INFORMATION

DEADLINES

J '·"'·

o,, 8ef..,, Pultliutio"

Moftchr OeediiM 9 ' ·'"·
ca-•llati•n• &amp; Cl!ffettion•
Will Ita ecceptH v,.U 9 • -• - f ...
Dar of P-*lintien
REGULATIONS
The Publhh1r reserv11 the ri11ht
to adlt Ot ••i•~' on~ alit deemed 11b•
1-o::tio...,ble. T h. r.ubHthar will nco!
• '-• reapontible or
lncorroct int1rtion.

thon

m Ofl

one

5 calltt per WOfd o.,. interlill'l

Mi.,;..,...., Chor .. 7!ic
12 c1nt1 pi• _.,;,d tlwM contiCu•

II

CDI'Ifl , . ,

lnaertion•
:;15 ,., cent

Woul ••• contaevt•"•

D•tCou"' .,.

pcoio:l •••

eM a.la ,_;d woth in 10 dart
CARD 01" THANKS&amp;. OBITUARY

II SO fw SO word "''"'"'"'"' · Ea
...tlltio..wtl woul le

BLIND ADS
A1hlitia,.l
,..,,_,,

~c (her,.

!H';-.11\(ver·

OFF ICE HOUR$
1 :]0 ,'.., to 5 :00 P-• - Daily
I!I :JO o . m. Hl 12:00 Noon Sall.trday

Card Of Thanks
WE WISH to express our sincere thanks and gratitude to
our many friends, neigbbors
and relatives for their kindness, sympathy and floral ofrerings extended to us during
the death of our stster and
ciau.ghter, Alice Frances McHaffie . Special lilanks to Rev.
Wendel StuUer, Mrs. David
Nease, organist, the Ewing
Funeral Home and the pallbearers.
Mr. and Mrs. James
McHaffie, Dorothy,
Rebecca and VIrgil
McHaffie.
ll-14-ltc

tHICKEN BARBECUE SUN·
DAY NOV. 17 sponsored by
the Racine Fire Dept. to be
held at the fire bouse start.
lng at IZ noon.
11-7-811:
AUCTION , Friday, N&lt;&gt;v. 15 at
7 30 p.m. Adams Auctloo
House. Rulland, Ohio.
II-lUI&lt;
A REVIVAL starting at Freedom Gospel Mission at Bald
Knobs, Sunday, Nov. 17, 7:30
p.m. Rev 0 . H. Cart, Evan·
gelisl, Rev . E. J. Griffith.
Pastor. special singing, pub.
lie is invite&lt;!.
ll-ls-3tc

1fJU, DO sewing in my home

for Christmas. Carolyn Lowis. !'hone 992-2271. 11-1-l!tc

feet river frontage, railroad
on olher aide . Three camp
sites rented. four more to

MUlliC every F'rlday and Saturday at Jack'• Club on Harrlsonvllle Road off Rt. 7.
lJ·IUI&lt;

For ChriJtmu Giving!
Pocket Sin
New Tutament &amp; PJalms

THE PUBLIC and friends are

1 WEEK ONLY
ThiJ Fine i.OO Value Only

BIBLES

50c

mvited to visit lhe new Cam·

WHILE THEY LAST
eo Beauty Shop, 1600 Nye
Ave., Pomeroy, opened this
week. Opening specials today
Budget
and Fricay are $17.50 perma·
992·5896
nent for 113.50. 115.25 lor
$10.75. '111e shop is open !rom AKC Puppies, Scottles, CockeTB,
8:30A.M. to 8 P.M. each day.
Poodles. Westles and Schnauzll-14-2tc
Phone 992·7207.
ers, Barkaroo Kl'!l., Coolville,

"~,\Y!~~s

For Rent

Notice

COMPLETE LINE

Big T rad .. ln Alfowon~e

POMEROY
992·2181
Jock W. Cor..y,
•

Mgr.

ForS.Ie

~~.~.,

Phone 9921012.

All Legal Benrages

ll-12-6tc

11-13-3tc

HOBSTETTER
REALTY
0.,....

ZIG UG-OMATIC. well 1mown
WILL DO sewing at home apartments. Close to school.
make sewing machine. h a s
tippers .
pockets. pegging.
Phone
992-5434.
10.18-tfc
many
features : makes buthemming. alterations, etc.
tonholes,
darns, mends, withMrs. Freddie Thabet. Maoon,
FIJRNlSHEO
apartment,
4
out attachments, sews on all
Phone 773-5651.
4-30-tfc
rooms and bath. Marion Reytypes or fabrics. Free home
nolds
,
Mason,
W.
Va.
Phone
demonstration.
Pay balance
THERE WILL be a gun shoot
773-SI47.
ll-121fc
of
~2.98 or monthly payments.
SUndlly, Nov. 17 beginning at
Ca'l 1!112-3218.
11-8-6lc
noon at the
Forked Rtm
~TORAGE SPACE, storase lor
Sportsman Club. Everyone is
boats. trailers, cars, campers, COMPLETE SHOE REPAIR
welcome .
11-12-Stc
etc. Write P.O. Box 329, Pomoutfit, contact Wm. R. Thoma,
eroy. Phone 992-2'198 or see
phone 992-3817.
11·12-&amp;lc
VACANCY for two elderly peoDick Seyler.
ll-12-12tc
ple. Prefer private paid pa7fJ BALES hay. 40 cents a bale.
tient. . Phone Mason, 773-5185.
FURNISHED
APARTMENTS
Call 992'2'140.
11-~3tp
10-3-tlc
in Middleporl. All utilities
paid. Rowley &amp; Reed, MidWILL DO BABYSnTING evendleport, Phone 992-2776.
:969 ZIG-ZAG sewing machine.
ings and weekends, Phone
111-22-tfc
This machine makes button992-5957.
ll-3-12tc
holes , dams, blind hems. This
'!RAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile
machine like new. has factory
~OTICE TO TAXPAYERS
Court, S}racuse, Ohio on State
warranty. Pay $5 per month
NOTICE is hereby given, In
Ill. 1:11, Pnone W2-Z91il.
or 148.21 cash. Call 992-2836.
compliance
with Sectlon
8-ll-UC
11-l~tc
5715.17 revised code, that the
tu returns of Meigs County,
FAT LEGHORN heno, 6 to 71bs
for the year 1968, have been nlREE oedroom trailer, M &amp;.
G
Market,
three
miles
south
revised and the valuations
7U centa. Paul Sayre, Port01 MlO&lt;Jleport on H.t. 1.
land. Phone 843-2286. 11 ·14~tp
completed and are open for.
11-14-.ltp
public inspection at the office
SORRELL Riding Mare s~
of the County Auditor in the
years old $150, black Apaloosa
Court House, Pomeroy, Ohio. TRAILER SPACE, ready to
hook up. private, plenty of
riding horse. four years old,
Complainls against any valuroom fur children to play.
$175. Phone 9!12-6793. 11"14-31p
ation or assessment, except
Phone
W2-3904.
8-14-tlc
the valuations fixed and as·
,954 F-100 FORO Pickup truck,
se.ssments made by the Tu
FOUR
ROOM
HOUSE
and
bath,
excellent running condition
Commissioner of Ohio, will be
unfurnished , 1650
Lincoln
and tires. $225. Phone 992heard by the County Board
Heights. Phone 997...1874.
2740
11-14"3tc
of Revision, at its office in
10-211-tfc
the Court House, Pomeroy,
~ARM Morning coal stove with
Uhio, on or after February 15,
FOUR
ROOM
hoW!e,
Laurel
fan, heats 3 to 4 rooms, used
1969. Complamts must be
St.,
Pomeroy,
newly
reoovat·
less
than two months. GlP.nn
made in writing, on blanlu
ed.
Call
W2-5293.
10-31-tfc
Jewell,
Downington, 0 . Phone
furnished by the County Audioll&amp;-313.\
tU4-I21C
tor and riled in his oHice on
or before the time limited for FOUR ROOM APARTMENT,
bath, furnished or unfurnish- r'IVE ROOM house, bath, bani·
payment of taa:es for the first
ed,
ground floor,
furnace
wood lloors, two finished
half year, or at any time durheal,
phone
!149·35114.
11-ll.Jtc
rooms aownstai.rs, gas fur.
ing which taxes are received
nacc. good neighborhood, call
by tbe County Treasurer, wlthTt-IREE
ROO"'
furnished
apart9!t'l·541J alter 5 p.m. ll-14"6tc
o"t penalty for the first haU
ment,
adulls
only.
Phone
992year.
MJ:i .
ll-131fc FLOOR Demonstrator, 1968 mo.
Gordon H. Caldwell
Auditor of Meigs County.
del stereo. Beautiful walnut
ll-5-101c
For S1le
console, AM &amp; FM radio,
BSR automatic floating turnf'()TATOES,
Phone 843-3254
table, make payments of
Clarence Proflitt, Portland.
GARAGE SALE - 31111 Elm St.,
10-16-Uc
fd.32 or pay fiiU3. Set sold
Middleport, Saturday, Nov.
much hig!Ier. Try it in your
11 .. 12 noon to 8 p.m. Sunday,
POODLE PUPPIES, AKC Toy
home , Phone Mason City 773Nov 17. 12 noon to 5 p.m . MIA5940.
ll'lwte
miniature, $75 and up. Stud
cellaneous woodworldng tools,
service
and
grooming.
Pbooe
lOCket aeta, all type mechani'!:&gt;!CLAIMED Lay·away, 1988
Wl-5443.
II 3 tic
cal toola, tour loch 'lice,
Nelco Sewing Machine, needs
!Witeh boxes, tool boxes, sold- AKC Golden Retriever puppies,
no attachments, sewa on butering guns, pipe vice. valve
SZ4 Aah St., Middleport. 191- tons, monograms, fancy stitgrinder. eoal stove, Simplicity
5443.
&amp;-a-tfe
ches, pay f44.53 or $5.25 a
garden tractor with all atmonth, try it in your home.
tachments , shallow well pump,
lTAY and slraw. Call 992-1122'1.
Phone Mason City 773-5MIJ.
aw. · tools belonged to late
11-8-lztp
11"14-.ltc
Joseph t'~»~&gt;"aite. 11-l:t3tc

SYRACUSE

•n"

Business Services
HADIO &amp; TV REPAIR and antennas installed. John Harrl·
son, Phone 992-2522. 11~ 3l1tc
DOZER. BACKHOE, trencher
and truck service, septic
tank.t;, water lines, basements,
also topsoil. Henry Bahr,
Phone 985-3988 or Roger Bahr,
Phone 985-3958.
11"13-JOto.

t! lft'V

ICHAILII M. HYIILL,
Adrnlnlatrator With the Will
A~tnuld

r::aaw, I:IOW &amp; POilTIR,
""oriMrt fctr Admlnlltrator
11 14; II 211 11 28;
1:1 6; Ul U; 12 18 ltc

C. C. BRADFORD
AUCTIONEER
Complete S&lt;rvl&lt;e
Phoae Mt-3A!l
lladae, ow.
Crltt Bradlonl
5 I tic

WMPO
INFORMATION
NEWS
presenls
LOCAL REPORTS
DAILY
AT
7:SO A.M.
12 NOON
3 P.M.
AND
4:30 P.M.

Am

CONDmONING Relrlgeratlon service. Jack's Refrigeration, T\'ew Haven. hone
8112-207ll.
4 8 tfc

READY - ~TX concrete dellv-

e,..d right to your project.
Fast and eaoy. Free estlmah·s . Phone 992-3234, Goegleln Ready - Mix Co., Middleport, Ohio.
8 311 tic
BUDGET PRICE furniture on
our third floor budget shop.
Baker Furniture. Middleport.
Ohio
! 23 tic

l&lt;eeping Meigs

SEWING
M~CHINES, repair
service. all makes. WY !.2284. The Fabric shop, Pomeroy. Authorized Sln~er Sales
and Service. We Sharpen
Scl=rs.
3-29-tlc

Pomeroy Home &amp; Atrt
Ill E. MaiD

Moat populor •l•e&amp; avolloble.
Limited number of thh prlee.
Fvllr guaranteed. Bulh by o big
lira moker fo1 .• ,

MOORE'S
124 W. MAIN

407 PAGE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Ambassador is the highest
rank in the U.S. diplomatic
service.

Old Town

2290

Now

Onto
-·

15·88

S

MO. 2" AVI.
IIIIDDLIPOIIT

~

. - . . .
o-- - .

F~~ I~ M~ SOUP~-

:

RIJ!J RtC&gt;flT DOWIJ 1\IVD
'WV 1\1\XllliER CM&gt;E OF VJ&gt;!

DESIGNS FOR
!IONNAZ I'

~MAD

~EAOING ,

WEAVING

GAVE JANIE "!I&lt;E EX·
CU5E SHE NEEDS
TO REBT .

AND 50LfTH 5EA

CARVING&amp;!

0

I OOti'T REMEMBER TttERf BEIN'
A [)()OR HERE. "'' BUl IT'S Ttif

atLY- 01/T, '"'"" · ~!If

MOST BE '60ME PlACE
I G\N G£1 THIS Pfl,!L

k'IN~

{)() I COME
TillS 'Md. y ·~·?

Lac., I 1 owner cor, new w·s•w tires, vinyl trim with
bucket seats, console, radio, P .S. &amp; P .B., auto. trans .
dork blue finish with white nylan tap. A real sharpie.

on Mr. and Mrs. Maywood

65 CHEVELLE ....................... ..$1495

Loco! owner car, 4 on the floor, good wide oval W.W.
tires, red vinyl inter1or , white t1ntsh, rad 1o c. neater .
Try it for performance.

Malibu Conv . VB engine, P.G. transmission, new w-s-w
tires, green exterior with white nylon top, green with
vinyl trim.

carter, Long Bottom.
Mrs. Johnston received word
Crom her daughter who Uvea in
F1oridL She reported tOO recent
storm there didn't do them much
damage.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lawson
and daughter moved to Racine r&amp;cently.

1964 CHEVROLET Bel Air 4 Door ......... $995
6 cyl. Std. trans. Radio . Local 1 owner cor, black
finish, spotless clean interior . Good tires .

ACBOSII
1. Undergarment

5. Marble 01:"
pound

1961 CHEVROLET Bel Air Waron .. ,., .. , .$350
Blk. finish, red inter1or. VS eng1ne . Automatic trans .
Radio and healer.

relatives In East Liverpool.

JohnsLon

closet
10. Eskimo
boat

12. Connection
13. Kind of

bendlt

Pre-Winter

1960 FORD FALCON 2 DR ............... $295

1-4 . overdone

White finish. Gaod tires . Automatic . Radio

1.".. Antedl ·
luvia.n

1960 BUICK LeSabre 4 Dr .. __ .. __ ........ $199
Automatic. Power steering, radio

Sped all

nrttaticP.Ily
16. Syllable

or scale

11. RegardlnJ
13. Cook in oil
19. Nozz !~ or

engine

1962 CHEVY II H.T. CPL __ .. ___ ....... $599

20.

Local 1 owner car, good tires, std . Irons . 6 cyl. en·
gine . Radio and Heater . Red finish .

highly
23. Rumple
24. Colot·less

SEE THIS TRUCK BUY!
1965 GMC PICKUP .... _....... __ ._... _.$1295

Winter
Retreads

JJW/~!111;/J..J::~-:.c

DAILY CROSSWORD

9. Kind or

Mrs. Janie Congo is visiting

U.French

river

DOWN
1. Brlliah

18. BoK

......

2 tor s22·oo

----PLEA.SING
TERMS I

We Servin

What Wo Soli

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

Plus Recappable Tire

GENERAL
TIRE SALES

308 ·318 E. MAIN
992-2126
POMEROY
OPEN EVENINGS TIL 8:00

99 2-1161
Middleport, 0.

·--·----........... ,. . ..... _. . ... ... . _._....
.

.

.

,

••••

,

· -

, • •

-.
,

......... .. . .

.... . ..

,

.,.. ~,.

f

..

,~· -·

GLOVE6 ALL WET'

aubdlvlsion.!l 22.Work
the
jaws

2. Fluff
3. Real black
4. Mr. Kettle

5. Ddlnltely

nQt 11tralght
G. In the

middle

or

1. Sisters IUld

others

8. Phlladel·
phla elewn
9. Hardy
character

11 . "Grecian

Urn" p~t

n. Shape

23. Supply
a crew
.z:.. lnvl-

te.tlon

26. Units of
w~ght

27. Good·

reuow
and Hood

28. Carry
29. Unmask
30. Stands up

32. More
altracth"e

\ ·ult-rtlm)·"a A•a•er

35. Parish
pl"ieat, ln

Madrid

36. Surrealist
painter
3·; , Word or
regret
39. Forty wink&amp;

42. Function,
as a motor"

I K tj I
[DUNCIE~

[I I_

I

HIS 15USINE$.

1CIUPER ~

Value

,.c

HOW
LAUNI7RY
TVCOON RAN

Now ...._the cin:letii&lt;Uen

I I ) t ) :::-~~::n.:::-::o:
1.....=::=- 1wiTH AN r I I I n r I I 1

25. Proscribe
26.Gravel

28. Jack.ot.....o.ll·
trades

1"--••rt I

31. Nonsense!
32. One way

Ihonhl.-., IAYIN
lo·o h ·r•l ... ..

to pay
33. Clock

IAKID

OHRTO

rre t

HfACI

Wad••'" ,.,_.. .e+•r

.\tuo""" lf'AI.I iJa.. ....itto&amp;~
._,.;J.,.J to do- fOIIGI A MEAD

36. Blood type
35. Slice
36. Drops bull.
tnawny

Yes, GCMid Selection Of
'69 MODELS
Best Deals, Too!

ALL SIZE$

ESPECIALLY 'CAUSE
YA GOT &gt;'ell. NEW

Unoenmblo the,. !Our Jumbla,
one letter to each square, to
form (our ordinary worda.

18. Useless
stUff
21. Up·

readln1

.. .

LOOT

IN ~ MAlE " '

66 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE CON. • • • • • • $2095

JohnstoJL
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Johnston called on Mr. and Mrs. C. C.

•

IT'S PLA1r1 TO ME lHAT WORD'S OOti'T
MI'AH BfA~ TO "1'00, GiRL!' YQI.J 1YE. B!:EH
"TOLD 111AT '1'0U Nf'-,'N '.~.lANDER IN ThiS
HQJ&amp;, AND IF 't'Ol.l 00--· 'r'OtJ GET
"Tl11'S AND ~ ~!

RE.FilLEO-·CI1lY THEY
GaT so MArn· i{)OMG
,qNO HALL~YS l -,. ,.
FEEl W&lt;E I'M

local 1 owner. Radio, good white wall tires, show·
room clean.

66 CHEVELLE SS 396 H.T. Cpa....... ... $1995

••••

CAN YOU COLLECT
HANDICRAFT

OF E51&lt;1MO

A. LOT CI\EAPEft.!

VS ii11TH ~0 SALES
. R6SISTAI-JCE .. ,

fi;!ESI\ Oi&gt;J YOUR. Mtt.JD

'~-

\

famlb, Syracuse, aOO Mr. and
Mrs. Smith, Pomeroy Route.
Bobby Joe Wolfe and son, Terry, Racine Route, Simon Powell,
local, Lawrence Johnston. local,

...... ,

AND PCt&lt;RY TRAVEL 1

THANK&amp; 1 Vv'INNIE:. Y00

OH \'ES! I'LL 5rr

ANb SKETCH REAM5

,,PAV "TV IV&lt;XJLD B€

FOR 1HOSE OF

H. T. Cpe . Beoutiful gold finish with block v inyl top,
326 cu. in. va engine with 3 speed trans. Console
bu(:ket
seats, vinyl interior, only 23,000 miles by

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jeffers arxl

~

f3(J-/ I

SO FRI~DS, WHILE IT'!&gt;

1967 PONTIAC LeMans ........ . ........ $2195

Powell and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer lcenhow~
er called on Mr. ard Mrs. Charlie Carroll and family,locll,and

•

I MU~T FIND A
WAY 01= TAKING
!T EAeH ON
THIS&gt; TRIP ..

, ·"' ~"""·· Selectl•ltluJ...Prlcel
.

,I

this address.
PauJ Sellers, Mr. aOO Mrs.
Bob Lawson and daughter, Mr.
ani Mrs. Hayes McMurray, local, called on Mr. arK! Mrs. Roy

465 No. 2"d

JANI~-~ILE ~

tury.

,,

.

I]JAiieR ,lli5RE'S ~

Time now to save a pile of money on topquality OK used cars.

Mr. and Mrs. Charley carroll were in Pomeroy one da,y
recently.
Mrs. ' ' Hattie PoweU 1 Bet:t;y
Ward ard Bonney Dalley went
to Columbus to see James Dailey
who is hospitalized at University Hospital, 9th Floor, Room
951. Frierds may send cards to

- May

l.f.

SUPER SAVINGS

Flats News

called

,

LUe expectancy a m o n g
birds varies widely. A robin
lives about 12 years while
eagles have apparently sur~
vived for more than a cen-

8' Fleetside Body. H. Duty Tires . 6 cyl. eng. Heater

COMBINA liON

•

GOEGLEIN GRAVEL

POMEROY

Pomeroy

Mrs. Laura Circle of Dorcas
visited Mrs. Mary Circle onSundiY afternoon.
Margaret Ann Carleton called
at the Robert Lee hmte on Sunday afternooJL

DIAL !192·3284

775xU White Side,..olla

Enterloined

ZEBCO

'10' AN' ME GOT A Bl~ SECRET '\
THIS SADIE HAWKINS DAt-I.
/
GEN'RAL - eUT Al-l WON'T
TALK-AN ' 'YO' CAIN'T!!

SuD!ay,

ull ply nrlo;~n.

faur

Well As

ZEBCO
ROD AND REEL

~---- ----·-

Mr. and Mrs. John WUson and
dtughter of Columbus, Mr. and
Mrs. Shelby Pickens and £amUy
or Itlcine, R. D., Mr, and Mrs.
Darrell Taylor or creston, and
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hudson and
son or Racine were guesl8 or
Mr. and Mrs. Allan Taylor on

• Delivery
• Quick Service
• Finishine
• Sand &amp; Gravel

Heo~{, duty, e•tro deep treada,

NEW SHIPME-NT

1

Pomeny!- 0

SPECIAL
SNOW Tl RESALE

Mason Area
Informed As

This Week's

'. "

Carmel News
By the Day

• Free Estimates• Quality Concrete
• Certi fled Strenath

-GUARANT£EDPHONE 992-2094

Gallia and

CIGARETTE vending machines
and service. ABC Enterprises,
Mason. W. Va . Phone 7'73-5M3.
""tfc

Re1. $25.95

of l'flle ltta.. ef

Core Mel""•"· Decoelllld

NAne&gt;J'S
CAPITAL

Bollcbaer Ra&lt;lilt.c&gt;r To The
~esl Heater Core.

5.55

...

NOTICI

&amp;e¥0111&gt;

r~

THE'

From the Largest Truek or

Hocklneport, Ohio
Phone 667-3370

PH, 9112-2113

CHAIII.Lia M. HYIILL , IT AL.,
O.hndtntt.

Juae Evelyn Pulllna, wh..e pl.u•
oC n:aldence 1.1 c-o Ancbor BIW&amp;.rdt.
Potat Pleuant, W . VI ., Ctrl 8e)'l.ell,
wboH pl ace of realdencr: 11 unllnowa;
t rle u~known be ire, devlaeu, llli'l·
tl~ l.
admln ..tntton and eae.:ut.on,
If any, of Carl Bo)'tet, deceued~ Arthur Boylr:a, who.e p lacl! of rl!lllat ·nce 11 unllnoWll ; t.be unknown beln,
a.-vWees , le,l a ~u. admlnlatraton and
CKI:CIII.ort, I( lilY, Of Arthur BoJlel,
~rceated; and W!llilm BOYles, WbOIII:
J'lace or re•ldeDclt Ia Rout~ J, '13:1
i:utern Street, Lllle Wdea, Flol'lc!a,
,...JIJ Uol&lt;e noll"" tbat on the l:ltb da)
d Non!mber. 1968. tbe undertlfned
(.harlet M. H,,ell,
Admlllialrator,
With the WILl Anneud of Cora MelnI:ILI"t, deceaud, fll~
hla pl!tltlun
11~11l n ~l you and olhen In the Pm·
bate Court ol Me\p County, Oblo,
11rayln; for authority to 11:11 the enlire tnlerert In tbe real e.tate bare \at.fter deuc r lbed. to pay lbe debtl
of decedent 10.11CI &lt;:QUI of ~ra­
\.lon, to-wil e
Tbe followl.nl" real nlate lltue\·
ad in t ha Coun ty ol Maig1, in 1he
State ul Ohi o and In the V1ll.&amp;tla
of l'omeror,
Beln11 that pari of 100 A . Lot
.303 i n Town 2, llenl"e 13 u1 Ohio
Company"• Pur~haae and deacrlbeC
u followa . to-wit; 40 feet on Dabney Street ao ulled (aa ahown 011
Plat Boall No . 2 In the offlee o1
the Reeorder of Met.r• CountJ on
P&lt;tlle 14 BB Lu~-..11 SU • nd J"UDnlnll
bact at tblt Width 100 feet; adJoinlnl a nd weal of Uw lot now
or fotmerlv owDed bY Phllht Bom·
"'"· I he lot l,ere co n~•r•d be·
I,... No. 4(1 In Debne,. Addition to
Pomeroy 111 per above mentton..S
pllt.
Heinl! a 1trtp of land eateodin1
b•ek tow•~ the bill 20 feel •nd
anj:l of Lot No. 46
. iAddlUon to romen&gt;y
IJI
ll&amp;' a 1trtp 20 f eet batll b,- 4ll
le"t in 'lridl.b adjolnin1 UN! rear
and of Lot No . fl, Said lut No. to
beln1 lite ..me lot deed8d by C.
W . Dabney to GiL'Dlll! Sbii!JDI bJ
deed dated No•. 3, 1856 aM ,..
curded In Vol. 18 .. t pa1e 243 ot
the Recordl or Melp Cowaty, Obio.
REn:.R.ENCI DEED: VoJ . Ull, Pill:
80 and Vol. 114 . .,.,11, 411 of the
Deed Reeord.l of Mei.MI COII.Dty,
Ohio.
You a re required to an.,l'er Lbto
111 ld Petltkln hy the fth day of IIDU·
l'lr:r, lgs(l, or Juda:ment bY dltfaull
l.l'il..l be rendered .&amp;lllinlt )'OU.

H.a

Sc•awarzel Marine

!;XPERT
Wheel Alignment

a,.

No. IP,Hr

tJuW Wfi HAV&lt;' TO

5PACE'

FROM, PAW?

OORIML DtPLOMATlC
CHAf.I'J£/.S ... Ili.Jf

10

BLAETTNARS

rtalntlff,

GEO. HOIISIEIIER,
SYRAOJSE - 8 room brick.
bath, basement, forced air
heat, 3 lots, $21!,000.00.
SYRACUSE - 6 room one Door
home, bath, forced air beat,
double garage, breezeway,
1969 WALNUT stereo console
level lot. $20,000.00
with AM &amp; FM radio, !-chanRU11.AND - 84 AcreJI, 15 bo~
nel speaker system. 4-speed
tom, 2 barns, large 8 room
Intermix changer. Take over
home, 112 baths, basement.
payments of $6 per month or
Also 5 room house. Minerals.
pay balance due IIO'I.Z2. Call
$211 ,000.00
992-28.'16.
ll- 1~tc
HELEN or VIRGO. 'fEAF!JRD

rURN1SHED and unlurnl•hed

.;~nd

MIIGI COUNTY, OHIO
CHAIII.LU M. HYIIU.. , Adrnlnlttr1tor
Wlltl th• Will AftiiiiiCIId Gf the llt.. e
of Core ~lnltlrf, Decell!lotd,

Reo.-IIZ1511

FOR BE'ITER cleaning, to keep
colors gleaming, use Blue
Lustre carpet cleaner. Rent
electric shampooer 11. Baker
Furniture.
ll~U«c

75~

Remoin In RG•kad cor
.,.lth .,.arm aoap
l : Sprayed
then o high preuuro

Insurance

IN THl ,.108ATI c;:OUIT

fLI6Hf

6-9\lz-18
On Display
115 Soon
To Arrive

'

1,q'--:- • ·- • • -11 to 6
Sot. • - • • • ••••• -9 to 7
Sun. -- - - • -- - • ·11 to

AUTOMOBILE Insurance beel
eancelled? Lost your operator's license·! can 992--2961.
6 Ia Uc

O'BRIEN &amp; CROW
REALTY COMPANY
POMEROY - I story frame,
6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, bath,
part garage, u!Uily room, 3
lots for a total or 100 • 180.
Good buy $5,000.00
MINERSviLLE - 2 story
frame . 7 rooms, 4 bedrooms,
batb recently remodeled, in
rood condition, garage and
workshop . $9,000.00
~YRAOJSE - I story frame,
; rooms, 2 bedrooms, bath,
all on 4 level lots, garden. includes forced air heating
stove. $6,500.00
HENRY E. CLELAND
O!Hc....m-Z%51

11-I0-311tc

CAR I'IASH

(Hot It DriW"e~Thru)

~UR~r~D

Yf_S,. WE-'V£ 9££t.l

TI&gt;YIIJG TO D£AiWITH HIM fal.INJRE'
1HAN A Y£Nl. THIWIJ6H

EXPERIENCED
la411ttr Senlct

EYINRUDE
69's Are Here

dnte ol aoh water to
mok• car •hioe
]. Allendont on duty

The Former
Home Re staurant
In Middleport

Real Estate For Sale

Ohio, Phone 667-3654.

Business Servi,es

THE 7-11
CAFE NOW
OPEN
FOR
BUSINESS,

SIEGLER and
TROPIC·AIRE Heaters

!967, l!ldiO THREE bedroom
trailer with 8 • 20 awning.
SIX ACRES bottom land, 650
See at 810 s. 4th Middleport.

ll rent. Stdlable for Industry or
thro"llh Nov. 17, at the Hobhousing project or sand and
son Christian Union Church
gravel. CaU Mason 773-5147.
with Rev . 'll'Oy l''ields. Night11-1~
ly services at 7:30 p.m. Also
will be a countywide prayer NEW FOUR room Hot Blast
meeting SUnday, Nov. 17, at
coal heal~r. Phone Coolvlne
11-l~tc
2 p.m. O'Dell Manley, pastor,
667·3337.
11-U-3tc

GENTLE MARE PONY and
colt, Phone 992-5888. ll-14"3tc

$avo Mowllnotoll Howl

llARLY AMERICAN stereo,
1968 model stereo AM&amp;F'M
radio combination, dual speaker system. Balance due, 1811.78, or 31onthly payments or
$1.20. Ca li 1192-3218.
ll-8-6tc

WEEKEND meeting, Nov.

1 WISH to npress my sincere
lhanks to my friends and past.c&gt;r, Rev. W. 0. McClurg who
Wanted
visited me during my slay In ANTIQUES, furniture, dishes.
the Holzer Hospital, for the
miscellaneous. Mrs. Howard
many cards, flowers and pray:
Cecil, 800 W. Main St., Pomeers said in my behaM. Also
roy.
1-25-tlc
thanks to Or. Holzer, Or.
Harder and nurses who cared
For Sale or Trade
for me. May God's blessings,
STORE Equipment for house
be With each one.
trailer. M &amp; G Fond Market,
Helen M. Younce.
three mile! south of Middle·
11•14-ltc
port on Rt. 7.
ll-14-3tp

Notice

ForS.Ie
STEREO RADIO romblnaUon,
four-speed intermixed changer, four ~ speaker sou od
•ystem, lovely walnut finish.
This set just a few months
old. Pay balance of $89.98 or
monthly payments. Call 9923218.
ll-8-61c

A 6AfHllfii
STATIOfJ

lo\AK"-5 A

FER 'IE, MAW

MUSIC COMIN'

If!; (l&lt;'tJCIAL TOaR
SP,Aai f'f/D611M11HAT

RDI'IN

MATTER OF FACT, I'M NOT
LETTING YOI) OUT O F MY

38.Ktnd of
•teak
40. Genus
o1. lily

A CJon&gt;lornm Qwo-.

.fl. Trap
42. Wrong

IYQKYGY

b.ousufor

•tonc-

JIPVC

thra\vers

41 l.l.ut

UNTIL THIS THING'5 fiUTTONED
UP. MA'AI CAN ~JNCl HER II"'SPJ·
i('ATIO;i EL&gt;SE WHERE . 170 tOO
~I' ME ORUMMONOr

1

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Hore"a how to work It:
o\XYDLBAAXB
Ia LONGFELLOW
One tetter 1lmply atandl for another. lb. this •ample A ta Ulld
ror the thno L'1, X tor the two o•Ji. .~. Bin&amp;'le leUen. .,_...
trophle•, tho Jeqlh and torWta.Uon of tho wordl are all blllta.
Euh day the codo leUer• on &lt;llfleru.l.

CPP

CEY

YQYAXCEKTD
SP.A.QU;

KHZPMMKIQX

YnterdaJ'•

Crypto~taote:

XPV

EYJA

TPCEKTD

Klt

UU.-UQFlR

.A PROFESSOR IS ONE WHO

TALKS IN SOI&lt;EONE ELSE'S SLEEP. AUDI!N

WYSTAN HUGH

�•

• ~· .,

•

~ ~

• ~, ,

". "

~ ... .., .. .., .. •• ,

., "

, .,

,

., .., ... ' "'' "" '"'I " .... ..., ... - . ......... .... ... "\ '

·~

, .,

....... .. ' _. -'

:•

'

.

.. ..-.. .

I ' •

'

.
,

,..

,..

•

,.
~

lU-

Nixons
(('ontiooed !rom Page
Bis~ne.

Pressure Table Tennis Tourney
Coming this Weekend in Detroit

0

C. G. Rebcno. and Mr.

and Mrs. Hobart Lewis ol New

York. lewis Is president and

editor or

ReaJ~: . ~

P. e:rt. They

SAlGON -

A COMMUNIST FORCE estimated at 1,000 men at--

were later joined a t tht&gt; theater

tacked an outnumbered South VIetnamese Ranger bauallon near Ute

by DeWitt Wallace, founder and
cochairman of the magazine.

C&amp;mbodian border Wedneeday night and todQ and waa tJtrown back
with 287 dood when U. S. llr caYI!rymen joiDed 1lle llllhtlrw. A neorby tlght involvtrw air ca\'l.lrymen ran the Communist losses tor the
&lt;1&gt;3' to 337 dead.
The attacking force wu part of a mic:hty build~.~&gt; ot North Viet-nam and Viet Cq forces in the border area 80 miles northwest ot
Saigon. U. S. Intelligence otftclals put the bulldt~t at 30,000. The
South Vietnunese said It was 60,000. The U. S. lst Air cavalry DLvi sion was moved in to meet the threat

Because police cleared traaic
so effectively on Fifth Avenue
and
Broadwa.Y, lhe Nixons
reached th ~ theater somewhat
unfashionably early- ten mi-

John Tamehill, 16, of Middle-- world team Junior tppolntmert
port Friday nigHt begiiUI lhree Is 17-year-old Glen C..111 o!
cm.rs at pressure-oacked table Lo1 Arlg(des, ranked 14th ln
tennis cOIJU)etltlon at croo Hall men's sirwJ.es and No. 2 junior
in lletrolt.
In Canada and the U. S. The IJ&gt;.
U he ploys .., to his slandonl ternotl..-.1 Squad Is 1 111"..., that

ot
the paat six months the pa,yolt
will be an e~pen~eS"iJl.id four

week trip to West O.rmany, Eng..
land,
llelglum and France next
lime . They waited in an office
sJ)I'Ing.
He would be a member
until It wa s time W take their
of
the
four-man
U. S. team ~:om­
seats and the performance
SAN FRANCISCO - SAN FRANCISCO STATE COLLEGE, oce•
peting
in
the
World
Table Tennis
began immediately.
of violence am disriC)tion for more than a week_ was shut down by
championships
at
Munich,
Ger~
After th e show Ute par ty went the school president Wednesday "Wltil such time as we can open It
mal\)'
In
late
APril
aed
early
back stage to congratulate on a more ratiorw.l basis."
Grey, BetlJ.' Ann r.rove, Jerry
Robert R. Smith announced his decision to close the 18,~ M.oy.
AJ&gt;poinbnent to the team-only
Dodge and oUter members oC student campus shortly after 350 rock--throwing demonstrators claa~
one
player urxler 18 years old
the cast.
ed with a squad of San Francisco riot pollce..and the faculty voted to
wUl
go - depends on a special
One of lhe producers, David suspend clas ses.
rO\nl-robln
Friday night at Cobo
Black, gave Nixon what he said
among
members
or the ll}nternawas ooe of seven existant
CINCINNATI - REV. JAMES GROPPI, who led open housl111
tknl
Squad"
'Illis
gr&lt;q&gt; of 13
original recordings made by demoMtrations in Milwaukee, said he re Wednesday night the Rc:man
players,
11
men
and
two
juniors,
Cohan. this one .. 1 Want to Hear Catholi c Church is speOOing too much time on the subject of birth
includes
man.y
of
those
in
the top
a Yankee Doodle Tune."
c:ontrol.
15
ranked
in
the
U.
S.
and
a few
"There' s just nothing like
"I wi s h to GOO the Church would quit spending so much time on
ranked
below.
coming to the theater and sex, " Father Groppi told the Xavier Universit.,)· Focum Series WedIn official men's rankings for
getting Ule feel of a perfor- nesday night Earlier, he said his sympathy was with priests and lay~
lasl hill ol 1967 and through
the
mance," Nixon tol d Gr ey . " You men rebelling against Pope Paul's encyclical ba~ birth control.
June,
1968, Tannehill last week
make u15 all reel young!'
wu
placed
at 7th. He is the No. 1
Ties up Traffic
CLEVELAND - HIS FIRST YEAR IN OFFICE was "gratifyiOK.''
junior
in
the
u.
arm canada.
In tlle side str eet outside the That was the way Mayor Carl B. Stokes, the first Negro elected rna,yor
His
only
cOOJpetition
for t h e
theater poli ce halted traffic of a major American city summed it IC&gt; Wednesday. "Despite our
again, leaving some frustrated prOOlems, despite the Glenville lncidem, the racial problems, the
motori sts to leap from their fear s and grustrations that have been fed bJi decades of neglect, ••• we
cars and complain bitterly to are moving, '' Stokes told a mootirw of Sigma. Delta Chi, a journalism
unHarmed officers. One man in society.
a red Volkswagen maintained
traffic should not be halted or
MOSCOW - THE SOVIET SPACESHIP ZONO 6 hurtled MOT the
controlled for any one particu· moon today in Russia's latest lunar ttightpreparation eJII)eriment.
A bazaar and bake saJe to be
lar citi zen, regardle ss of his Britain' s Jodrell Bank observatory said it already had rounded the
held at the Duke Cleaners Frl·
statioo . He lost his argument. moon and was headed back to earth.
Then the Kixon party drove to
ln England, Sir Berlllrd Lovell, director of Jodr ell Bank, said day and Saturday was plamed
during a recent meeting ~ the
the fam01.1s r e staur ant, ••21" on
zoro 6 passed within 1,000 to 2, 000 miles of the moon.
Women's Society of Christian
West 52nd street, where they
Service ol the Portland United
went to an upstairs dining room
133 New Vehicles
Methodist Church held at the
and had supper. They remained
home of Mrs. Cora HUt:lln.
at " 2 1" for over an hour and,
Mr s . Thelma Cozart, presi·
again under poll ee escort, drov e
Sold
October
dent, opened the meeting with a
back to their apa rtment.
chain pra.y er. A program of po..
New vehicl e sales In the coun- ems and readings was given by
LOGAN, W. Va. (UPD - The ~ for October totaled 133, ac- Mrs Shirley John&amp;on whose top.
cording to the report of the liUe ic was ..F riends. "
Logan County Board of EduC&amp;·
division
of Evelyn Lucke's Clerk
tion Wednesday refUsed to acFWld raising projects were
of
Courts
office.
cept the resignations of all the
discussed. Prizes were woo by
New vehicles for which titles Mrs. Cozart and Mrs. Carolyn
county's school bus drivers as
were
issued included six trailers, Price. Refreshments were sen.
the drivers' strike for better
two
motorcycles,
26 trucks and ed by the hostess to thoae named
pay and lrlnge benefits wound up
97
cars.
Titles
were
also issued and Mrs. Ruth Ebersbach, Mrs.
P. A. (Chick) llj'sell, 85, for · its lOth day 110(1 lett 12,000 stu.
the
month
for
188
used ve- Esther Roush, Mrs . Carman Hall,
during
mer Middleport resident, died dents without a means of transhicles
including
three
trailers,
Tuesday night at his home in portation.
Mrs. Alice Adams, Mrs. Kathleen
Columbus.
The resignations enmasse re- four motorcylce s, 16 trucks arxl Ward, Mrs. Margie Roush and
Prior to hi s retirement, Mr. sulted from a temporary injunc . 165 cars.
Mrs. Jewett , a 91 year old charHysell wa s employed as an at. tion belng issued against the
ter member ot the organization.
tendarrt at the Merchant Garage drivers by Special Circuit Court
1,Uld Par!Ung Center on Front Judge Haney Oakley Tuesday
Damages are Minor
st. in Columbus. Local residents afternoon. The docurnenl orderr emember M r Hysell as a strong ed the drivers to go back to work
supporter of Middleport athletic and also prohibited them from
Condor St. Fire
teams before he left here in the picketing.
late 1940s.
Logan COlllty janitors and
Minor damages resulted Wed·
He is survived by his wife, mainte1~ce men, who had .ioln·
nesday afternoon from a fire at
Freda Bearhs Hysell, a former ed in a sympatlzy strike with
The Ohio University Pla,yers
Pomeroy school teacher; a dau. the drivers, were back on the job the Frank McColley home on CorP
dor St. In Pomeroy.
will present ••Scattered Showghter, Mrs . John (Jackie) Spill . Wednesday .
Fire Chief HeiU'y Werry said ers" at the Monday night meet·
man, Columbus; two grandchil ··
the
flre apparently was caused by lng ol the Middleport P. T. A. to
Wiring
dren, Keith and Karen 54&gt;11lman:
fumes
from some type of clea~r be held at 7:30 p.m. in the Mid·
three sisters, Mrs. George Fry,
ing
fluid
In the basement where dleport Elementary School audlColumbus, and Mrs. Herbert Fink
McColley
was doing mechanical torlum.
in
and Miss Mabel Hysell, both of
work.
The
lire was ~:onfined to the
CHESTER , W. Va. (UPD - A
Greeters for the meeting will
Middleport .
basement
area
by the department. be the second grade room moth·
FlDlera1 servh.:es will be held lire which destroyed 21 Thor era, and first grade mothers
at 11 a.m. Saturday at the ~aw ­ oughbred horses and a pon.y at
wtll serve refre&amp;hments. A nurDavis West Second Avenue Cha- nearby Waterford Park Race
sery will be provided for pre •
Vehicles Damaged
pel in Columbus. Burial will be Track may have been caused by
school aged children in the teachin Union Cemetery at Columbus. a defective electrical system,
ers' lounge . Mrs. Joe Bailey's
owner Jt.rnes Edwards said to..
'I)vo vehiclefi were moderately
day .
home economics lltudents will be
damaged and one dr iver was citThe fire broke out in a stor - ed to c ourt as a result of an ac- asatsted in the oorsery by cad·
age room in a 48-atall barn ear- cide nt on the lower parking lot ette members of Mrs . Fred Gibbs
ly Wednesday. Firemen from
in Pomeroy Wednesday eveni~, and Mrs. Wallace Powers' Girl
Newell
and
New
CUm
Che&amp;ter,
Scout troop.
PomerQlo· poU ce said.
TOMGHT, F RIDAY
berland
battled
the
flames
for
P.T.A. members are remindPolice said a car driven by
AND SATURDAY
nearly an hour before galning Reva Vaughan, Pomeroy, backed ed that membershipa explre on
NOV. 14-15-16
the up·p er hand but they were un. from a parking spice into a west- Nov, 22 and that membership in
able
to save the bam. Edwards bourxl vehicle driven by Charles the P.T.A. is requirec:Uorvottng.
' " CUSTER OF T HE WEST" '
said damage would exceed $50, - Radford, 19, Pomeroy. Mrs. The Rev . Mu Donahue wUI have
(Te chni color)
000 .
Vaughan was cited to the Court of the invocation .

nutes or more before curtain

Reaular $6.00 and $7.00

Warm Slack Sets
For the girls alzea 3 to 8x and 7 to 14- We have a wide ••
JocUon of two piece matching alack seta ln knlta alii corduroy
pant.l, rnatchlna knit tq)s - In sol1ds and patterRJ - An Ideal
Chrtotmao gift. - Size a 3 to 6xan:l7 to 14. AU J)&lt;lpular prtced.

MEIGS TH£ATRE

Robert Shaw- Ty Hardi n

COLORCARTOON'
Dog Snatcher
SHOW START'S 7 P. M.

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown
Pome roy at 11 :30 a. m. Thur sday, under cloudy skies, was J9
degree s.

Mayor Char les Legar on charges
of failing to yield the right of
woy.

BARBS
By PHIL PASTOR£T
World's highest tempera-

tures occur in deserts, and
other unfriendly climes, such

as bosses' offices.

• • •
First rule in how to
cl imb the l ad d e r of IUC·
cess : Don't step back to
admir e your progress.

• • •
Even the people who don't
decorate for Halloween are
quite apt to have a skeleton
in the closet .
MEIGS GE NERAL HOSPITAL
ADMISSIONS
OtUe Wise-

Your baby's first steps are too important to
trust to anything less than BUSTER BROWN
your ba b y ' s t in y gro w ing feet re q u ire
ve ry spec •ol a ll en1io n . That's w hy we s to ck th i s
11er y specia l B us t er Bro wn s hoe i n a complete ronge

man, Rutland.

DISCHARGES
ling .

Leora ZwU .

We be l1 e 11e

of s •ze s . T ha t's why we fit t his soft , comfortable
I a give exa ctly th e r1gh t amoun t of wiggl~
ro o m, support e nd c o mf ort . A premium qval ity shoe
f itted by e:.:per ts . A c ombinat ion hard to beat
a co mb1 na t ion that o dds up to c onfidence for

shoe

you!

CHAPMAN-CANADAY
Main St.

SHOE STORE

Pomeroy

All You'll Need
Is Your Change
Purse When You

NEW HAVE N - Mr. aed Mrs.
D. W. Hubbard and children, BUb , Brenda and Beverly of Erie,
Pl., and Mrs. Gladys Gouldlrw
ot Buftalo, N.Y., spent the past
several ~s vtsiti~ Mn. Goulding's sisters, Mrs. Harry Bum·
garner, of New Haven. aad Mrs.
Garnet Goodnlte arxl Mrs. Joe
Yoong, of Mason.
They returned home Sunday
accompanied by Mrs. Hubbard's
little 2-year-old gnnbon, Rld&lt;y
Malonskwi, who had apent the

past four weeks here vhlting
with Mrs. Bumgarner and Mrs.

Visit

BAKER'S
BUDGET SHOP

••

4.49

114 inch wldths.

nett.

11te letter Is timely in view of the observance of Veterans Day this week. It wlllstlrmemoriesof numeroua residents
since it contains ma~zy names so tamllJar in Meigs Courdy.

Over 200 Attend Marauder Banquet
Over 200 playerswtdfansturn ed out to hear MlamJ Univer-

a DGir

"Winterette" Flannel

BOYS SIZES....... . _. ................. -·---·-----·-.. ·-·-·-··-·-- -·-·-·---------·-·-1.00
ANOTHER BIG SHIPMENT!

Mens Sweaters

100\ Cotton, 42" and 45" Wide

C&amp;rdipns and Slipovers - In all slzea - A ftne new nlect1011.
what you need tor yourself and tor
gttt. at Olristmls time.
StqJ in right away, Select

Beautiful patterns in this Iorge shipment including
florala, stripes, plaids, and juvenile prints.

49e

SALE I JUST 3S MENS 7.9S

yd.

Whipcord Blanket Llaetl Jackets

Vhh Elb.,felds M.rn_ond Bart Dapartma[!l on thl!' _ht floor and na
rha biG .. laetlon ot ~oeltt lor Man and t::loys •. AII tiJat _ln all the

POPular stylet. J.,k, Drau Soc:!. &amp; -

l&lt;lrbuty Banla11 -

Dovl1 4 0

Fleldcrest Perfection

Permaneat Press SIIHts
Rose Delight

Rockford So ek1. All .W.n1 und Soya Socl!.a are ar-

' om gv o r .

Bouqueh

1.58

multi -colored roses

on pol.y ester cotton 1

Another Shipt... nt

RectiYing
Blankets
lor

of

Po.calo. Blue, Pink, Gald .

Th;, W..k End Onlyl

2

SENTINEL PHOTO.

Bags .

rqngod by • trl• and t l u for yaut ••• Y t~U ooloe tiO!'I. Stop In, look

Sale

-

Hoover Constellation, Hoover Portables in oil numbers,
Hoover Convertibles, Hoover 0 iai·A·Matic, Hoover Cleaning Tools and Hoover Vacuum Cleaner Belts and Cleaner

5oe kt In whlto and •olid colon - AcU., WaDI Soclu - Exocutl ...

Stripe&amp; and prints

- 1 1 m."'ML

Hoover Cleaners

Work Soekt in regular and , hOrt langths - lntul Knlf Soch - Craw

lof10th Sock. -

s~ttporr•

apeUer and.,athletlc direetor at Miami Univenlty and Nolan SWackhamer, a Meigs High teacher
IIIli lll8ll!ber ai 1lle district athletic boord. Shrider played hla hlsh school baskelboll under swack-

and See The Complete Line Of

5.69
Mens and loJS Socks

Prop'alll. r1 the Second amual

VIsit The Drapery Dept.

Chi...,.. - ......

at llle MeJp lllaroudora, - - flun 1lle
tootbaD t.nQUet to express his IIJPreciation for the "tremendous
given by tans to hla team, fellow coaches aDd himselt. Seated are Dick Shrider, banquet

SAYS '111ANKS' -

Slzea amall, medium, larp and extra large. Zl&amp;lpor !nri coot
style - Warm - Washable. Charcoai.IJ'IY, dark green.

Upholstery
Squarn
Ideal for cushions , up·
holstering small bench,
etc.

soe

oach

This years' selection is more beautiful than ever . Con•
non Royal Family- Regal - Cannon

Jacquarcis - Prints - Solid Colors
Towe1 1 embroidered. Appl iquea, Scalloped P11lowcases .

Decorative Wall Clocks
Modern, Traditional ond Contemporary Styling in these

electr.ic and battery operated wall clods. Also a com-

Take you time and look arcund - Alk Elbortelds Ales pqle to demonstrate any toy you IN - Select
Stq&gt; In -

Shrider, Milm1

OFFI!RS CONGRATULA11iJNs - Wilbur 'J'IwNid, p,.._
sldent or the MJddleport - p . . . _ Rotary Cltm, ript, c..,.

Artificial Flowers
and Vegetables

I!Rtulatel Me1p Head Cclch Charles Chancey for
Marauders' IUCCOIIIUII968 1 - -son. The Rotary
Club woo IIJIOIIIOr I)( the bonq..t a u . - by ...,r 200 lana In
Middleport. It wu the se&lt;On:l cOII.Iecudve year the Rotary

the

-

bas hoedecJ the ll!arouder grid ... ..,.... -

PIID'm.

f-

Unh•ralcy
athletic ·director, · dlrecta a
point or advice to members
ol the l\lelp High .
teom during hla talk at 1lle
lflraudor bonquet Thursday
niehL Shrider COI.C:hed the ~
ly unbeaten Mid • American
Conference cap tam at MJ.
ami a taw year• t.ek.

plete line of Kitchen Clocks . S"tylish and dependable
and electric and spring wind Alarm Clocks .

SENTINEL

SENTINEL PHOTO,

Realistic looking polyethylene flowers and foliaie ·
Also o fine selection of nut and vegetable strings for

boxes. Cordless electric and beautiful leatherette

'

In a sentimental mood. he said
Dick Shrider Is his best lrlend
outlicle hls own family, and lhe
finest person he has ever knowncoach Chancey preceded b I s
-ctloos or the squad members with remarks directed to
the tans, noting that their ·~e­
rnmdoua support" was responsible ror the IUeceas the team baa
had. He found the 1968 ~
ooe with a fine aplrlt and wlllID&amp;toworkbard.
Semora

presented were Bo

Ashburn, Derlda Ault, Jim Crow,
Kem,y English, . Randy Hawle;v,
Jom Krawoez.yn, Larry Lemley, ·
!larry Slawter, Jolll S m I t h,
Deon Weber, Jeff Worry, Elbert
(Ccnlmed on _ . Ill)

lly Georp llargravos, &amp;Qlt.
Mole• Local School Dlllrlct
We are IIJIPl"OOCblng the time

Cloudy with occallooal raiD
&amp;bowers tca1&amp;bt and Saturday. Lows tonight In lhelow 5Ga
1 the extreme scuth ami In tM
' , elsewbere. Not mueb t,em.
. ~l 'ture ci:Janae Sotunlay.
or

.,
~.)

...

It was written during World War I, when Co. C of the
Ohlo 7th left for Montgomery, Ala. , aOO the addressee was
the late Ward Hartley.
The letter, in part, states:
"Dear Ward:
'perhlps, you thought I was not goir"W to ar•swer your le~
ter but I've been so busy that it was hard ror me to get start~
ed. To say we hav-e been busy is saying tt mild. We have moved the third time since here am another move Is facing us yet.
''The folks back home would be pleased iC they could see
how we are located in our new shacks. They have board Ooors
and all screened in around the sides and have screen doors.
We are all right In the certer of this great ClliJW.
"We have a dandy compan,y. We see the other companies
drill and we know we are secord to oone here. We have not
had one bit of trouble since we lert horne and not a man has
been on double-duty for misconducL
" Sgt. Smith Is the same big jolly rellow. Sgt.s. Brooks and
Childs are the same hard working Cellows as when in Camp
Hunker, Sgt. Keplar is still on police duty down town. Sgt. Jacobs is the ' old man' as he never leaves camp. Sgt Ackley's
o~ trouble is to get in befstr.Jt§P~ »-~ ~!..!9. ~[. !r~-~, _Dhl~_
River that he can't lay It to a broken car when he IS detained.
Sgt. Feeney is the busiest man in camp hWJting for something
to eat and 1 tell you he is on the job and ftOO.s iL
Sgt.. Dawson usually writes from four to six hours each
night. He says he is writing Cor a Columbus paper but we notJce
he addresses the letter, which looks like a newspaper "hen
completed, to Middleport.
"QJL Rob Webster, leader of the boy scouts squad whose
members are Dan Price, Owen Watson. Eli HyseU, Lincoln
Russell, Earl Parker, Sidney Smith and Dudley Garxiee, has the
rqnrtation of being Lhe crack drill squad instructor of the com~
pany, They like to be called boy scouts in camp but it is a mistake to call them anything but real Uncle Sam soldiers.
"Cpl. HawkiiUI' squad is on the other erxi of the company
arw:l when it comes to heavy drilling and heavY work eve ry day
they have it all over the rest of the squads. They ar c Q:IL
Hawkins, Virgil Edwards, Mack Hawkins, Dennis !1&gt;ire s, James
Haptonstall, Jess Gregory, Dana Pierce and Enoch Rus sell
"Haptonstall has it aU over Major Davis when it comes

TEN CENTS

to a mustache but not quite so pointed as Kaiser Blll'a yet,
but wait a few months and see.
' 'Ll P hillips is on the job all the time when he ia not writ-ing to Middleport trien:ls.
"Oscar Cheath.\m, Ira Jones and Dana Smith are in a bie
(Cortinued

pollshlna cloths, usy applicators and 2 tins Kiwi.
and brown).

HOI Merry Christo,.sl
Early you say? Well possibly, but the "season" does 181!1111 to
get earlier each year. Proof that Otristrnas isn't too tar arounl the
em;oer was 4e.l¥amlllt.l:akl4 .T}!uradal- ll'bw.-c.r.ewa of 'J]J&amp;.OJiio Poww
Co. were busy in the Pomeroy business section putting ttJ the tdlday sea son lights and decorations.
CHARLES W. RAD~·oRD, long · time Meigs County Fair member, has apparently decided to give l(.l his dedicated work to
the Meigs Count,y Fair. He is the only one ol Ove directors wboae
terms expire this year not filing for reelection.
No doubt at all that Charlie has been quite an asset to the lair.
.f'ew will put forth the effort required in staging the aruaaJ ewm.
Radford se rved on the fai r board tor over 30 years and durllw
that time has held every office on the board. He has b-equently beea
called "Mr. Meigs County Fair" and deservedly so ••• he,s beell
a real guiding li ght.

PLANS FOR the Christmas holiday season will be made at 7:10
Friday night when the Middleport Merchants Association meets at
the social room or the Colwnbus and Southern Ohio Electric Co. The
mer chants each yetir offer a prmnotloiB1 program and Friday's ansion should wrap Lp this year's plans.

GOOD NEWS lor Mr. and Mrs. John Taylor ol Middleport.
Mr. and Mrs. Taylor rece lved word that their 11011 Cb-de A.
Taylor, serv1ng on the Une In Vietnam !or six months aboard the
PhlUip D.lgene Grate, son of ship given to valedictorians. of aircraft carrier, the USS America, left Vietram Nov. S.
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Grate of their high school senior class,
Before returning to the states, Taylor's ship 1'fill stop at Au•
RuUilfld. Is a member ot the He has been chosen as a mem· tralia, Wellington, New Zealand, and Rio de Janeiro roUDding out a
'"Pioneer" class of Mount Ver· ber of the college choir called world crui se. Ta_vlor is e• ccted to arrive at Norfolk., VL on Dec.
noo Nazarene College at Mowat tbe "Slnglng Collegians."
15.
Vernon, 0.
Mount Vernon Nazarene College opened Cor the first time
on Oct. 12 of thlt! year with 180
freshmen coming from 10 states.
The college is ooe of nine undergraduate colleges in the United StatesspanaoredbytheChurch
of the Naurene.
Phillip Is a gra&lt;llate ol Rutland lllih School where he was
elec::ted to membership In the
National Hmor Soclecy. AU!ount
Vernon Nazarene College be baa
been awarded an hooor scholarONE FINEil
One peraon waa fined in

Porn~

erQY

Mayor Charlea Leger's
court TtoJrllday evening. Michael
QmderJOn, 19, Wadsworth, m .,

was lined $0 and coats lor failure to yield 1lle rtghl of WIQ'.

weather, rood

and bul

-'lion

Be Thrlhyl Sa•• All Of
Yo111r Soletlips From................ -.

•

.., all the noll·
oblo , _ . . - ha can collect

alan Ia -

...,...- a,ao

on page 10)

Grate in 'Pioneer' Oass

- -· Thla lnformalloo Ia
ol&gt;talned from radio, lhe State
JUalng,y Pllrol, the local P&gt;I)( .the lcboolyeor tho - Iller mq be aueh •• to cauoe to llce, lhe 11ate 11111twor Garap,
arloo tho queatlon, "Will lhere buo drlvera, and lilY other •·
be school ~ Tho - - vlllable ICIUI"Ce. Tblo collected
ill adl COIUDlll will bo to 1D1WW lnformatlao II analyled and I
lOme Q•ldcnl about ado pooll. dtcliilaa II medo booed oo the
at aate trauportatloo
bUll!'.
Tho ~ illho_. 1ID and from ochool for our aw- who DLikeo the cleclllon ...,. dtllla.
Ollee lllo dtelaloD to mecJo to
ool'lllall ado molter. Tile dod-

cases. Complete wltll 2 fine quality brushes, 2 1•1•

ENIOYING MEAL - Sb at 111e lle1p Hllh who Ill ' ' 111e1r liDil Jllnudor J1o p n
~ •• pla,Jva ort p l . - here u tboJ •n.l01od the.o,_ ~. Shan, &amp;all loll, ort Mu
Wbldate?t, ~ EJwllab. Jim c.,., Jell WOIT)', JoluiS!IIIth llld 1fon7 Slowtw, - _ . . , P -

I

Weather

\

RENDEZVOUS - Mr. Eddy, right, and Jezebel, left. ~a brlel roed..,...1burlldQ at 111e
Meigs Councy Boolauoblle Headquarters in Pomeroy. Mr. Eddy has just been retumed trcm
lumbus where he has been Ull!ergolrw: repair after a recem accideri. During his abseace JIIHbel
was loaned by VInton County to the bookmobile operation. The operation covers Joe.._ vlnioa
an:llllalgs Councy. llesplte the fact that Jezebel held only 1,700 books COIIIjiOred to 111e 4.000 Wlllcb
can be carried by Mr. EdctY. the eirculatioo of the bookmobile service wu ma~Did. EddJ 11Q
been put back into dul;y alii Jezebel was returned to her h&lt;me in Vinton T~.

eo-.

Answer Winter Weather Questions
-tron·

Stained solid oak bases. Natural finish solid oak

(bl~

\ ".

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1968

Speaking of Schools-No. 65

Shoe Shine Kits

Boot polish,

PHO

enttne

decoroti" .. purposes .

SAUl TOYS
Yoo can nv. on toys )'OU need thl1 year at Elberlelda. JUit
stq&gt; In the toy department located In the toy bu8dlrw biro doorl
below Court Street on Front Street and SH Elberfeld• Ilia eacelled: aelection of toy1. All tors haw been carefulb' Mleet«&lt;
lor boys and prlo or Ill qes an:l are oole priced , _ lor
Christmas pvlng.

sity Athletic Director D l c k
Shrider and Head Meigs High
Football Coach Charles Chancey
put the finishlng touches on the
Marauders' 1968 football sea.
11011 Thursday night at the high
scfloo1 in Middleport.
The occasion was the second
annual Football Banq.~et honorID&amp; the Meigs Marauder SQU8d
opoosored by the Middleport Pomeroy R&lt;&gt;tar)' Cliffi. B II I
Childs was master of eeremon.
tes.
Following the invocation by the
Rev. BUI Perrin, bllledbyChllds
later as the ''No. 1 .F an" of the
Marauders, high schoolgirls served a steak dimer.
~ider sought to impress upon the squad the importance ot
the years they have immediately ahead or lhem, stressing education be.Yood high school a n d
'Cbelng ready for opportunity
when It comes."
He was introduced by his tor·
mer bJgh school coach, Nolan
Swackhamer, now retired (rom
coaching but teaching hi story In
Meigs High. Swackhamer sketched the development of Shrider
from a fifth grader off a [arm
near Glenford who practiced
shooting a basketball at noon
hour u wtth a sandwich 1n h I s
mouth" to success in the Big
Ten as M undergraduate and
even greater recognition after
Navy servlce in ww n at ou
In the Mld..Amerlam Cooter-

once.

SELECT NOW FROM OUR

Boxed Towels
and Pillowcases

Wllsor

- r picture, !ram left. are VtrPU No.
Ewmtr. Pat
1 am Thelma McMurra.Y. - SENTINEL

1etty Llsh, president; Eleanor

Of'l'he Meig3-MtJM)n Area

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Mrs. Frances Boarhs ol' Middleport has contributed ex~
CB!Jtl from a letter written over 50 year&amp; ago by the late Lt.
Harry Bennett ol Middleport - who later become Capt. Ben!

80" Wide Per Pair

1.99

lnle~Wb

ble, Josettr

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

30" thro111h 90" Leneths

of YOWII men' s vinylbelllln sizes 28 to 36 ancl

your needs and save.

MARRIAGE APPLICATION
L.vm Edward Shuler, 24, Rt. 1,
Racine, fanner, and Jotmanna
Dee Yeaupr, 22,Pomeroy, cashIer.

VOL. XXI NO. 145

Sheer Curtains

men's leather belts in sizes 30 to 44. (Black or brown) Popular

Young. Mr. and Mrs. HubiJord
have just finished harvesdng 26
tonJ of concord grapes.

MERCHANTS TO MEET
The Middleport Merchants A&amp;sociation will meet It 7:30p.m.
Friday In the social room of the
Columbus IU1d :SOUthern Ohio
Electric Co.

Devoted To 7'he

By BOB HOEFLICH

Extra Wide Tailored Curtain of luxul'ious Neva-Pr•u
Docron Ninon. Deluxe tailored 5" bottom hem and lW'
side hems . Never need ironinv. Machine washable, fast
colors. Colors- Beige, Cold, White, Antique Gold, Olive

tSO

at y

•

SWacldwmer. [ro

World War I Letter of Capt. Bennett Arouses Memories

Dacron-Ninon

Mens and Young Mens Belts
groa;t

II

a Sonier Cltbon's Onistmaa !WV. sr-n dlopbuirw 1-•
for sale, in the photo at left are, Donna F01VIer, Lois Weaver,
Mary Berry, Sharon Hotrman. Gladys stewart and Lucille

•

e

Yale Unlverllb' Is the third
olcleat lnstltutlm or hJ&amp;ber
learning In the ·United states af.
tor Harvard Uolverslcy and William and Marl' •

'

Hosiery Wardrobe. No purchase necessary.

Fealllrlng the ~ular plaid prospector jackets in uaorted
plaids - Sizes 8 to 18. Plaid hlpotlcb pleated aklrts - Solid
color wool aed qyloo blen:ll!annel blazer JacketJ - Wool and
nylon Oamel slacks In soUds and plaids - A-line skirts in
matching colors - See thia beautltul 11'01.11 in Elberfelds
Ready To Wear Department on the SecoOO F1oor.

active members. plans to use proeeeda tram the bazaar to
hold birthday parties for chU ;2:-;j,alt lAkin state Hospital, help
transport children to the mentally retarded school and to hold

Now You Know

department on the main floor, rtli ster for a $25.00

Coordinated Groups for Women

Sisters Visited
Past Several Days

floor re1ister for your choice dress. In the Hosiery

SEE OUR OUTSTANDING MATCHING

A special

'l
•

NOW IS THE TIME TO SELECT SEVERAL

OU Players to

F'Ire

win). In tile Ready to Wear department on the 2nd

Sale 3.00

Defective

Blamed

next Saturday nilht. (You need not be present lo

Bobv Dolls - Nite Shirts - Pojomos
Cotton or F Ia nne I

--·---

•
HOLDING &amp;UAAR - Tile lflson Motllero Club lo havl111
I Christmas a.tzaar In the basement of the Mason Methodist
Church with the doors to be q&gt;en untu 8 o'clock tonight am
frm1 10 Lm. unlll 4 p.m. on saturday. The club, with about 25

I

Don'l for1et to re1lster this week for the Dr1wlna

Womens Sleepwear

Hies Tuesday

Present Drama

Ladies

Special Purchase and Solei Well Known Brand

Board Refuses

In

,.~

Ohlo'o teom, hooded by u. ~
C'-"loo Dtl J..., l:.ee, 21)
Clevelan:l- IOpolntabett.ertho!'
ol\l'bed.y In the ooootry - wllti
Tannehill in No. 2, Don Lyonf.
32, ol Dayton, In No. 3, and 1,.
y...-..old Rich Farrell or CoiUJtr
bus, unranked, in No. 4:, il rfl.
preted as st~ccdender. Chief
owoaitlon will come trom New
York and COII!ornio.

Elberfelds are open Both Friday and Saturday Nlpts until 9. Use the Customer Parkin1 Lot on 2nd Street
across from the 2nd Street entrance. VIsit tile 3rd Floor F11nlture for Livln1 Room, Bedroom, Dlnlnl and
Kitchen Furniture. The 2nd floor Music Department - Luuare Department - Drapery and Dress Goods the Carpet Department and tile Ready To Wear Department and the Main Floor Housewares -Mens and Boys
Wear- Shirts and Towels- Hosiery- Llnaerle and Foundation Gannents- School and Office SuppliesGreetlna Cards- Sawine Notions - Gilts - Handbars and Accessories. And don't foqat tnlslt Elbarfelds
Toyland!

This Weekend

P. A. Hysell

champlonah!J);

:~~or;.;the;,;;.;po;st;;.tw;.;o.v~ear;;;.•;.,ha;•~be;.;e.n_..;Cow;;;;'"~·.•~f•the.;.~"".'.l~.o10rnlo-•••-m~,------------------•••••.,

Bazaar Planned

Resignations

on Sunday pla.Yirw a c011'4&gt;1et
round-nlbln by toams lor t h~

•

s.

in

invited to train tor ami aeek IPpol-ent to the team. Consideration tor tppolntmerttotheworld
team also will depend on play in
the Notional Team chalqllonahll&gt;o
Sotunlay oed Suedoy at Cobo.

and Tannehill, No. 2 oo the !IIIIo
men'• team (ot tour), wtU be
m..Urw mall!' of the tq&gt; players
· ol thecauntry. They...,hwUiploy
wroxllnltel1 20 matcheo.
In the 1967 teom &lt;'-"1..,_
shill• Tannehill wooV&lt;lledtheCMJI,.
Smndil!lf ployer or the·- with
1 l&amp;-4 record.
With 42 men's teomo ~
irv _ some state auocladons
are aendi~ several teams- Sat.
urdoy will be spontln eatlbllshll!lf divisions, wtththetopdlvlslon

•

CMcel IChoal, a call II medo
&amp;o two rediD s&amp;Ulm1, WllPO

Lm. eboul t b o and WATIL 11Mif lbtD _ . .

the cancellation .
made In the morning and not the
Sometimes !be coodltlona are night before. So you should not
such that we can have school call the suporlntendent or allY
In ..... parts lho dlatrlct IIIli one else In the everina ooncernnot In otbora. When thlo o11ua- tng this matter because no detlcn exists, lhlo wiU also be Ill· cision will have been made at
nouneed on the radio.
that time. Calls to the ...,....
&amp;metlmea one or mon tuaor to WMPO in t he
oeo are Ul!lble to make their IIIOI1IIng mil only block the efruns due to a:datina t'ondftim• fort to contact WMPQ with an
When ada lo ao, 111e Jndlvid.lal &amp;nll(Q(c:ement.
buo drivers wUI caU WMPO and
So you want to know II
aollllorm them.
ochool will be Clllcolled In lho
In all of liluoeaooayour......,. l\lelp Local Scllool Olllrlc~
I)( ldmnoll,.. Is l!1e redlo. In don't use lhe plme. Uotm 1D
· alii)( theoe coooo the dtclllon 11
(C&lt;!otlnuecJ ... 10)

Deer Killed
By Vehicle

or

-nt

A lar1le bud&lt; door ?till..
ed 011 Route 12f 11 . ......
land In ..... Colllr Ill fill a..
I·

m. thlo-...,..
I)(

Shorlll llabon l!at

oold.
The deer ran !'*&gt; . .

soutbbauadeordrtIL Brwa,31,

~·to"'"

eR'•etedltttOIL

Jn;lrod.

1 •i

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