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16- The DailJ' Sentinel, Porneroy-l\-tiddh.'IJUI1.

(l.

Charter Members
Are Recognized

3

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Olarter members were honored dui'lil~ the 50th anniversaf} ~
aervance of Theodorus Counc1l 17, Daughters of Amenca, Monday
night at the 1001' Hall.
Charter members present for the 6:30p.m. chicken dmner were
Nancy Walker, the oldest; Alma WaOO&amp;ll of Columbus, and Ethel
Canterbury. The) were presented w1th handkerchiefs tied w1th blue

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Gifts for "Operation Sa n t a
Claus" at the Southeastern Ohio
Mental Health Center, Athens,
w1ll be contributed by membtr(s
of the Middleport Garden Club
Meeting Monday night at the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. social room, club
members were asked to take
their unwrapped gifts for the patients to the Electric Co office
prior to Dec. 1. Gift wrappings
are to be included with each gin.
Plans were made during t h e
meeUng conducted by Mrs Carl
Horky to participate In the annual all-county Christmas flower show to be staged Nov. 30
and Dec 1 at the Pomeroy Ele
mentary School. Theme of the;
show will be "Christmas Ideals"
and the Middleport club has been
assigned the artistic arrangements class of "The Old and
the New, 11 arrangements interpretive of the New Year. At
least six arrangements are to be
exhibited 10 the assigned category and members were urged
to enter p1eces in the invitation al classes.
A report of the Region 11,
Ohio Association of Garden
Clubs, meeting held Saturday at
Eastern High School was given

WEDNESDAY
BQ.','WORTH COUNCIL 46, Roy-

by Mrs. John Kincaid. The certificate and $25 cash award for
ftktng second place in the d i strict in the Sears Beauttricatiou
ProJect was presented to Mrs.
Garen ~sbury at the regiOnal session. Mrf~. Stansbury was
chairman of the Welfare Depart·
ment bullcUng planting which won
the award.
Plans were made £or the annual Christmas party to be held
on Dec, J6 at the home of Mrs.
Horky. Members will have a $1

WA.'iffiNGTON (lJPI) - Amen~
icans, within the next 50 years
or so, will be usmg more water
than nature provides. according
to a blunt and urgent rcpot1
submitted
to
Congress by
President Johnson.
The report, termed "sobering" b) the President, carr ied
"stark warnings" to the country, Johnson said. He pointed
specifically to pollution destroy-

with Thanksgiving tllougfits . Mrs.
E. 0, T~wksbary, ways and means
committee, reported on proceeds
from bl)ttle cap redemption of
$12,96, and the rummage sale,

al and Select Masters, will hold
GOT A STRING OF EXTEIUOR Chrisunas lights you won't be
stated assembly, Wednesday, 7:$42 JO. I
usl111
this year? Perhaps you'd like to e1ther loan or donate tht:m to
30 p.m. at the Pomeroy Masonic
Temple. All companions are urg- the Rose Garden Club of 'f\c&gt;pers Plains.
Displf\yed at the meeting were
The clu•. ia acrourwi~ around trying to get together enough deced to attend.
three
arrangements. They were
SYRACUSE THIRD Wedneedl)' orations so that the vntage can have a community Christmas tree.
a
symmetrical
arrangement of
rtbbons.
Homemakers Club 10 LDL Wed- If you have some lights to either loan or donate, just call Mrs. Carl
assorted
;
rruit
and wheat wiU•
Seated with them at a table at the front of the hall wen: Edith
nesday at Syracuse Municipal Barnhill, Mrs. James Stout, Mrs. Kenneth Griffith, or Mrs. J. S,
candles
and
green
velvet ribboa
Wakel,) of Marietta, d1strid deput) and past state councilor; Ed1th
Park with "holiday decorations" Davis, and someone will stop by to pick them ~on
a
w~n
tray
made
by Mr~
Betzing of Tuppers Platns, past state councilor; Fa.}e Parlin, Mar'Mtere's no problem about securi~ a tree - Mr. and Mrs. F'rank
as topic. Mrs. John5auvage, Mrs.
Kincaid;
a
wicker
compote
wltll
ietta, dislnct assodate vice councilor and district trustee; MarHarr)' L. Bailey aOO Mrs. Her- Goebel wUI be providing that. The village tree is one or two projects
rrult
and
yellow
taper
by
MrS:.'
guet Se1denabel, deputy state councilor, and Della Stahl, cou nc1lor
gift
exchange.
They
are
to
take
man London, leaders. Those at- being planl'8:! by the civic-minded gardeners. They will also be spooa Christmas arrangement lo be Lloyd Blafkwood; and an uranaeof Theodorus counc1l.
tending to take llbl8 service. sorhlg a home decorat111K col&amp;estandwill be awarding several prizes.
used in decorating the Horky ment of fruit and chrysantheThe table was centered Willl a tiona! Bank and The Farmers
Beverage to be furnished by hos-- ~etimes just a little Incentive goes a long way toward encouragmums by' Miss Haute Zerkl'
Bank and Savings Co. Laura Bishrail arrangement flanked by gold
home.
llW residents to decorate, Be a participant!
tesses.
Mrs. Leo Gerling was wel com - using scales as the container.
tapers in gold holders Centenng op, a member of the l'OWlCil ,
CLASS 12, Heath U n i t e d
came from Columbus for the obed as a new member Tickets A compote of sage supplied by
the other tab les were red, wh1te
IF YOU HAVEN'T YET GOTTEN thai holiday package oil to
Methodist Church, 7:30 Wednesservance Mrs. Bet1lng gave the
for
the holiday demonstration and Miss Nell,ie Zerkle was distriband blue decorations used w it h
day; Miss Bess Sanborn, devo- your serVJceman In Vietnam, perhaps you might be interested In the
blessmg pl"ecedingthe meal. Napto be conducted by Mrs., uted to the members.
workshop
wh1te tapers, small American
tions; Mrs. James Criswell, pro- Red Cross "News and Cues" on what's right for him.
kins carried out the patriotic
Betty
Fast,
WSAZ-TV 1 CharlesF lags, and book replt cas mscrib
Besides the usual presweetened drinlts 1 potato sticks, and canned
gram; Miss Nellie Zerkle, Mrs.
Program at themeetlngfeatur.
theme .
ton,
were
on
sale at the meeted "Climb Unttl Your Dream s
meats. the Red Cross suggests bath powder, band aids, wash and
Juanita
Bachtel,
Mrs.
H
at
t
i
e
ed
an article entiUed "Rainbow
During the meeting winch fol .
Ing. The workshop will be held
Come True.'' The piano decora Smith, and Mrs. carroll Swan- dri packets, batteries, high intensity lamps, ballpoint pens, mailing
of
Tulip
Color" by Jackson a n d
on Dec. 5 at the Middleport Eletion was blue with the inscnp- lowed the dinner, each of the
labels, scotch tape, greetl~ cards, and would you believe It son,
hostesses.
Perkins presented by Mrs. M. c.
mentary School under sponsortion, "Loyalty, Love and Patrio- charter members and visitors
PAST PREWENTS, Ladles underwear for the "oceasioml emergency, laurdries being what they
Wilson. Miss Frieda Faehnle
spoke bnefly A vote of thanh.s
ship of the Middleport Amateur
tism" in gold and was used w1th
Auxiliary of Drew Webster Post are."
gave hints from the A.vent Garwas given to Mrs. Parhn for
blue candles in crystal holders
Gardeners.
ltl, American Legion, meet at
The patnotic motlfwas carried servmg as pianist
Thank you notes were read at dener.
DOUBLE TROUBLE HAS COME the way of Mildred Headley,
7:30 Wednesday night, home ot
The hatvest arrangement made
Second nommation of officers
the meeting from Miss Harrie
out in the decorations of the aMl ·
Mrs. Pearl Knapp, 1803 Chest- T\.l)pers Plains. Not only is her husbaocl hospitalized, but she has
by Mrs Kincaid centered t h e
versary cake which was msc1 ib- was JCoade Correspondence was
Marie Smith and Mrs. E. M.
received word of the death of her sister's husbard. He died or innut St., Gallipolis.
Wood, both for flowers receiv- refreshm(lnt table. Hostesses
ed "56th •\ nmversan Thevdorus read pertaining to the annual
juries received when he was struck by a car in Columbus last Wedwere Mrs William Morris, Mrs.
TIIURSDAY
Chnstmas party at the Ameried whtle hospitalized.
Council i7, D. of '1."
nesday.
J,
E. Harley, and Mrs. Kincaid.
POMEROY Elementary PTA
Favors were booklets of Bible can Beauty Hall In LrttJe HockMembers responded to roll call
verses inscnbed "J6th \nniv er- mg for state officers, deputies, ladies will meet Syncuse Ele-IN CASE YOU'VE WONDERED, the Middleport Ministerial Asaary ." Members also recetved d1stncl officers, and the chor- mentary PTA lldies, 7:30 p.m. BOClation again this year will be having a community service on
al group_ on J)e(' J at 1:30 p.m. Thw-sday in basketball game at Thanksgl vlng Eve. U will be held at the Mount Moriah Baptist Church,
favors from the Pomeroy NaThose attending are to take a Pomeroy Jwtior High SchooL ard the Rev. Allir'ey Miller of the Nazarene Church w11l be the
An all - church Thanksgiving snut.-ins, and to send cards lO ber" bY Mrs. Grueser; ''The
covered dish and their own ta- Adults 50 cents, children 25 I!JPeaker.
Gift of the Pilgrims" by Mrs
dinner party was planned for servicemen.
ble service. Reservations are to cents. Refreshments sold
Mrs.
Clltford
Phtllips
presidEar
l Reashaw; ''LetUsBeThankTWIN
iibrlnette• w111
Tuesday night at the MinerBville
be made with Mrs. Marjorie staed
at
the
business
meeting
durful"
by Mrs. Hartemachj ''The
United Methodist Church when
cy, Little Hocking, before Nov. meet Thursday, Nov 21, 7:30
Dutch
Thanksgiving"' by Mra.
ing:
which
time
communications
the Women's Society o( Chris25 There will be a $1 gin ex~ p.m. in the social room of The
Brooks
Sayrej "Give ThankB for
were
read
from
Mrs.
James
RichColumbus &amp; Southern Ohio Electian Service met Monday night
change
Simple
Things" by Mrs. Pugh;
ards,
dis..rict
WSCS
official,
re
at the home of Mrs. William Rus.
Cards pledging allegiance to tric Company.
garding
the
charter
meeting,
and
"An
Occasion
ror Thanks" by
PORTLAND
HOMEMAKERS
sell
the new president will be order Bryan
c;p.
regarding
scisMrs,
stella
Grueser;
"The Tread
the
Mrs Eugene Forbes and Mrs.
ed for distribution to the mem - Club, Thursday at 11 a.m. at
of
Sacred
Foots"
by
Mrs. OsUrooks Sayre were appointed to sors for sale b) the group.
bers It was reported that addi- the home of Mrs. ~ Diddle;
mer
Roush;
"Irish
Blessings"
n was ~ided to send moneY
tional cosmetic bags will be or- potluck dinner at noon; topic of
a silver and ye llow color scheme purchase thf! turkey. Table decTwo bridal showers honoring
to
Mrs. Edward Simpson for a by Mrs. Russellj "Thanksglvlng,
the
afternoon
sess1on,
"Fabric
dered and sold by the group with
in the decoration of lhe gift ta - orations will be made by Mrs.
Mrs James Batey, the former
gift certificate in conjunction with A Day of Thanks" by Mrs Mclhe money to go to the home and Finishers "
ble. Refreshments or ice ueam, Karl Grucser, Mrs. Herbert
Charlene Davis, were held rethe World CommwU.ty Day pro- CaUum; j'Lest We Forget" by
WOMEN'S ASSOCIATION, Midorphans fund .
cake, nuts and coffee were serv· Pugh, Mrs Lillian Starcher, and
cently at her Middleport home.
Ject or Church Women United. Mrs. Slche Brown; j'Be KiOO" by
ed .
Mrs RuBsell.
The traveling prize donated dleport Jo irst United PresbytenMrs Dooald !Iauck and Mrs.
Mrs Norman McCallum and Mrs. Starcher, and "Memorles
by Ethel Smith was won by Mrs. an Church, 7:30 ThursdaJ night
Mrs. Denver Rice and Mrs.
Christmas activities were disof Our Forefathers" and "MayRoy Mayer entertained Saturday
- '" ..
th
cussed and it was decided that Mrs. Grueser presented the proat the churcll; annual thank ofCora Beegle.
1
1
flower,"
by Mrs. Phillips.
Ker011 na ......n won
e game
gram using a
Thanksgi vlng
fering; nominating committee to night Wlth a shower They used
prizes. The guest list mcluded in heu of a gift exchange, each
A
salad
course was served by
theme. Group singing of ..Faith
meet and reporl; Mrs. Paul HapMrs. Richard Pickens, Mrs. Eu- member will contribute a dollar
the
hostesses,
Mrs. Russell and
of Our Fathers," and scri&amp;ture
tonstall, program; Mrs. Janet
gene French, Mrs c. E. Young, to the church carpet fund. A potMrs
PUgh,
at
the conclusion o[
TfiLHSDAY
Inventor
Lewis, devotions. Hostesses,
'alt c ook Mr ( 1
luck dinner will be held on Dec. [rom Psalm 95, by Mrs. Otto
1\
Mr ' .
er r
s,
s. eo
TWI-L.IGHT Garden Club, 7:30
Hartenbach opened the program. the meeting
In 1714, the English parha· Mrs. Edward Crooks, Mrs. Dale
Kerns, Mrs. William Robson, 16 Plans were also made to fix
1
p.m.
Thursday,
at
Pomeroy
BapReadings included "Novemment offered 20,000 pounds Walbw-n, Miss MaT) Park, Mrs.
Mrs Lillie Hauck, Mrs. Edlson a basket ror a needy family at
tlst Church basement; Mrs. Pearl
sterling to the discoverer of Rodney Downing, aOO Miss MarCLE~NER FOR ALL
Baker, Mrs Jack Satterfield, Jr
C•hrlilllsltm
. asltllm
. ..
a method or fmding out longt· garet Sauer.
Mora, member of the Chester
TYPES OF FLOOR
tude w1thm 30 miles after a
Miss Hazel Van Cooney, Mrs.
Garden
Club,
guest
demonstraMAGNOLIA TEMPLE, Pythian
COVERING'
sea voyage of s1x weeks It
Leland Brown, Mrs Donald Lowtor.
Sisters,
potluck dinner, 6:30 p,
t
c' LtANSE)(THA THICK
was awarded to John Harri·
THIS WEEK END Elberftlds are having a B1g
ery,
Mrs. Ira Butcher, Mrs
FRIDAY
R lJ(j S 1
son Inventor of lhe marme m,, D. A. V. hall, Pomeroy; memAdo lph Saelens, Mrs Uay CunI ." ~ •
Sale of our fine quality Mens Work Uniforms 1n
BOSWORTH COUNCIL46, Roychronometer, according to the bers to bring table serVlce.
• C LEANS WAlL TO
ningham,
Mrs.
Oscar
Roush
,
Encyclopaedia Br1tannica
al and Select Masters, annual
!he Busy Mens and Boys Departmenl on lhe
WALL CARPETING '
EPISCOPAL CHURCH Women
Mrs. Theo Neutzling, Mrs. John
insp~Uon, fr1da,y, 7:30p.m. Dillt CLEANS THIN OU)
luncheon, 12:30 p, m. Thursday;
1st noor . And you can really save on the Work
Harrison. Mrs James Johnson,
DOOR- TYP t.: CARI'l T'
guests w1ll be church women of ner at 6:30 for comparuons arrJ
Miss Elizabeth La Rue, Mrs C.
t EVEN CLEANS BARt
Suits you need. All sizes and all lengths.
Christ Church in Point Pleuant ladies; Elmer Williams, Jackson,
II. Wise, Mrs. Wendell Rllllce,
FLOORS 1
grand
conductor
of
GraOO
Counand St. Peter's Church m GalliMiss Dorothy Caldwell, Mrs
cil of Ohio, inspecting officer.
AMAZING#¥ &amp;OW
TONIGHT, NOVEMBER 20
polis; speaker, the Rev. William
Paul Uavis, Mrs Paul BaptonIIITRODUCTOitY
NOT OP),;N
Black, rector of the"Churchoflhe
l"OREST RUN W.S.C. S. bake
stall, Mrs George Batey and
II'Nt:/11-Y
Good Shepherd, Athens.
sale friday at Duke Dry CleanMrs J. J. Davis.
I HURSDA\, FRIDAY
ROCK SPRINGS
Health ers, Pomeroy, begmning at 10 a.
Entertaining with a shower last
AND SATURDAY
Club, 1:15 p. m. lbursday, home
m.; special reature, homemade
Wednesday
night was Mrs. Don NOV. 21-22-23
of Mrs. Uugh Bearhs; Mrs. Maxbreads and rolls,
ald
Mayer.
She carried out a
Don Knotts
2tO
ine Arnold has the program; Mrs.
WILLING WORKERS Class of
green,
silver
and yellow color
"TilE Sll AKIJ-:ST GUN IN
O. lu 11e Permol'lent Prnt Ponh mode of SO% Fortrel
ITB nE FIRST
"-rice Abbott the cortest..
the F.nterprise United Methoc:hsl
scheme
and
the
gift table cen.
Polyetler ond 5 0'l'o cotton w1th e11ol releoee f 11,ilh
THE WEST•'
ALL PUIIP08E
Al l 11.zet 29 to SO woitt. Hove no-tore tunnel bel;
Church, 7:30 p, m , friday, home
terpiece was a bride and groom
(Techmcolor)
ROCK SPRINGS Gro~, 7:30
loopt. Groduoted rite, oe1nfo1Ced e•oteh, e.tro tlrong
UPRIOH1'
of Mrs. Thomas Bentz.
surrounded by daisies and 1vy.
poekell B lac k ol1ve, Spu..1ce if"""• Khoko ond CharThursday, at the hall; brtng gifts
AND
ct Et,ll. I
PAST MATIWNS, Evangelme
cool ~'")'
The
cake
decorated
ln
yellow
and
for
the
Southeastern
Ohio
Mental
"SEHGEANT HYKER"
Chapter 172, Order of the Easttopped With a miniature bride
(Technicolor)
Health Center, Athens, a n d
Pe1monent Preee Shhte To Match ,, tnee 14~ to
ern Star, 7:JU Friday night at the
and
groom was served with punch
Thanksgiving
articles
for
the
proLee Mar111n-Bradford Dallman
20, Two bu110fl thru IICip poe kelt, a,r;hored but! one,.
home of Mrs. lames Clatworthy,
lllllro long lo l l with gunett. Block 11love, Spruce
and nuts.
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
gram.
grHn, l&lt;hako and Charcolllurey.
Pomeroy; Mrs. Theo Neutzli~.
Games were pla,yedwithpri~es
assisting hostess.
being won by Mrs. Cheryl Fry
and Miss Kay Farnsworth. Others
WWAMA HIGII SCHOOL Soph- on the KUest list were Mrs. Iva
omore class sponsors dance par- Sisson, Miss Marilyn Swan, Mrs
ty, friday, 8 to 11 p. m. Thepu~
Joe Custer, MrB. Rosetta Redolie 1s welcome. Jays in charge.
vian, Mrs. Judy Crooks, Miss
SATURDAY
Carolyn Sa.tterf1eld, Miss Karen
HOLIDAY BAZAAR, Hutland
McEihiMey, Mrs l,yM Stump,
Methodist Church WSCS, Satur- Mrs Yvonne Scally, Mrs. Clnda
day beginrung at 9 a. m., RutlaOO Abbott, Mrs Amy Humphreys,
Pants 1n sizes 29 to 50 Sanfouzed shrunk.
Department
Store,
featuring
Bootso1l dnll pockets, Spruce green, Black
Mrs Sandra Luckeydoo, Miss
homemade g 1ft items and baked Sand.)' Simpson, Mrs Coleen Oh,oltve, grey . Shtrts to match 1n SIJ.es 14!'2 to
20 . Two flap pockets . Full cut and expertgood•linger, Miss Susie Neutzling,
HIGH SCHOOL DANCE
ly tailored . Spruce green, Black olive,
Mrs. Twila Matheney, Mrs. Kaday, 8 to 11 p. m ., at the Meigs tie Well and MissTexanna White.
grey.
Jligh School auditorium in Mid~
Recalllnlil the tale
dleport. Jayli will emcee.
of Cornel1a,
mother of anctent
Rome, who de
scnbed her most
ll'&amp;luable worldly
CanKln Becomes
possessoons b)'
pomtlnli: to her
Molo•
0
S.nohre&lt;l•
choldren and say
"'rion B·~•~
l&lt;n i ~O
tnli!. • These are my
d""""""'•
duo1 e.,,
Jewe ls." we pre
sent th1s modern
MASON - Richard W. Carday symbol
the mothers b•rth
son, Mason , has JOined the junPlans were made to send g1fts
stone nng Beau
ior membership ranks ot Hol- to the county home for Christt1fully fash1oned 1n
S11e!; 6 to 18 1n regulars, Slims, Husk·
stein · Frlesian Association of mas at the No11embcr meeting
eleiant style w•th
tes . A very well made Slack w1th dropp•
te11tured Floren
America. To quality, candidates of the Star Garden Club Thurst1ne f1n1sh. each
ed
belt loops, tapered legs 1 cuffed.
must
be
under
21
years
of
age,
No• l W•y
da)' at the home or Mrs. Norman
'Nop A&lt;I•IW'
rmg has synthetiC
ro .. ,, (;ont•&lt;O&lt;
wheelo lor utr•
50%
Fortrel Polyester, 50% Cotton. All
successrully
completed
one
have
Will.
Members
arc
to
bring
gifts
O.O•p Ptl• A1111,
''" n&lt;ry
bnthstones del1
Permanent press.
clun ~~ "'"
year'B work In a 4-11 or voca- to the next meetmg.
cately set on a
wclet of 14K sold
tional agriculture dairy proJect,
The club's partlcJpahQTl in the
one for each
and
own
at
lea&amp;t
one
RegisterChristmas Flower show will be
ch1ld A most ex
first ttml! atl 1n one
ed Holstein
"door decorations." The show
QUISite &amp;1ft for
clezmer.......e~cltJSIIte H•gh ·
e•ther Mother or
Lo w Med•um power con
is to be held at the Pomeroy
Grandmother 1t IS
trol pl1.1s amazm11 ''NAP
E lementary School, Nov. 30 ADAPTS" cleans. htilhf!s.l
personalized w1th
from
S30.00
In
14K
aold
Dec. 1.
pt le russ' Try ,, you ' ll
the borthstones of
IS
buy tf1 A.ll r.1~tal hous m g
The President. Mrs. V1rg1l
your ch01ce
-s up~r power motorAtkins, preuded over lhe busieasy roll wheels.
Take advantage of the Sole Prices all over the store. Big Sale af Girl.: Dres .. s
ness meeting. Gilts were:z.ought
on. the 2nd floor. Sale of Berkllne Chain - Dinette Sets - Kroehler ll.lving Room
to the meeting to be used for ''OpSu1tes on the 3rd floor . Sole ofT oys, in the Toy Buildlnt on Front Street. Shop in ever
eration Santa Cle.us" at the Athdepartment. Open all day Thursday til 5 PM and both Friday and Saturday nights 'tJ
ens Mental Health Center.
!UPON REQUEST)
9 PM.
Mrs. Virgil Atkms recci\'ed
Our Uac.. J Good Clunint
first, Mrs. Robert Jewell secom, and Mrs. Gerald Minor third,
on their arrangements of "NaAttl!nd the Jun~or
ture's Products.'' Mrs. Orion
Pomeroy
992-5421
MtSs Pogeant
1'\elson received the hostess gift..

Now You Know

r

The worst mine disaster in
the UnJted ~tes occurred at
Monongah, W, Va., Dec. 6, 1907
when 361 persons died.

VOL XXI NO 149

m
m
6:

.,

Bridal Showers Given
For Mrs. James Batey

SAVE
asyouBUV
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Permanent Press

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WORK UNIFORMS
Sale I 8. 90 a suit

Better

S39!ot

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t
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I

To Send Gdts

u,..

~

H· F Assn. Junior

~l un a O l~ ro

•

A BIRTHSTONE
FOR EACH CHILD

2-Hour
DRY CLEANING

I

PERMANENT PRESS

Ivy Style Slacks
3.89

BE SURE TO REGISTER in the Drapery Department on the second floor
!or the Luuage Drawine to be held this Saturday night. No purchase
necessary and you don't have to be present to win.
·

SERVIa

INGELS

I

To Patients

Sale! Boys 4.59

FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT

Robinso11's Cleaners

Elberfelds In

•

y

Variable cloudiness and not 10
cold today, tonight IUid Frldll.

TEN CENTS

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1968

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

An

Pontiff Missed Ordeal

Richard Jacks

Grants for

Figured

New Wing

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today

Pending

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the Money crisis

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QP

DEFENSE

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Chance ol light snow ln the extreme northeast portion toni&amp;htHig!Js this afternoon In the upper 30s and 40s. Low tordgN
mostly in the 30s.

Devored To fhe Interests Of The Meigs·MtuOn Area

Tax Being

S.tur-

Garden Club

Areas with particularly severe
problems mcluded the lower
Colorado Hiver bas10- chiefly m
Arizona- and Ole Rio Grande
area of New Mexico and Texas.
In Arizona, the report sa1d, the

ar-..

Weather

qt

e

run.

depeWble water sLtJ.Pb' air.,.
dy was irw.deq,uate to meat
needs. In the Rio Grande
it said, projected eeonomle
growth could not be maintained
unless problems are solved.
In the Great LakeB region,
mcreased water use would ....
to the setiOlUi pollution prabo
lems already plaguing Lakes
Michigan, Erie and Ontario, d.- ·
report said.

the

WORK UNIFORMS
Salel 7.50 a suit

~rlltofl.r

including estimates that expected use of water In America by
the )ear 2020 would exceed
natural runoff- the traditional
sl(Jpl,y of water for mankind.
The report, prepared by the
Water Hesources Council head-ed by Interior Secretary Stewut L. Udall, included regional
evaluations of water resources:
- Alaska, with Its "extensive
and impressive" water resOUr-

wither because or its shortsight-edness," Johnson said in 1
letter forwarding the 472 page
report.. "The hard lessons of
history are clear, written on lhe
deserted sands and ruins or
once proud civilizations."
Johnson said ample supplies
of water to sl{JPorl a growing
population and an eJqJaOOing
economy could not be taken for
granted. The report, he said,

could gel enough water b)'
transrer fnnn the north to the
populous south, but desaltillt
ard waste water reclamation
m1ght prove cheaper m the long

uu

Cotton Twill

Every
Mother
wants
to own

the nation's rivers, the
recent dtoughl 1n the Northeast
aOO the "nightmare of ravaging
noods still hovermg over too
man} American communities.
He urged Congress to give top
prlor1ty to the problems of
drooght, Goods and pollution.
"A nation I hat faiiB to plan
intelligently ror the development
and protection of its precious
waters w1ll be condemned to

New Bridge Construction
Maintaining Speedy Pace

MEIGS TIIATRE,

(

i~

ces, has perhaps lhe fewest
water problems. Other areas
not considered critical included
the Pac1flc Northwest, Tennessee, Hawaii and Puerto Hico.
- The lower M1ssissipp1 region
was v1ewed as ~'water rich" and
a
strategic area for ruture
economic development because
of the heavy now ol the
Mississtppi River.
- Call forma, the report said,

Miss Cagney Heads
Pageant Judging

/ a r; ) 1/rle

'
'II

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out.,.

EUREKA

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be here

Introducing
the NEW

do

..i&lt;'

Mrs Goy TIIJ'Ior of Brldptrapped men prayed, quietly
MANNINGTON, W, Va. {UP0 Jeopard.¥ the lives of the men." whispering the 23rd Psalm port., W.Va., a mather fl seven,
·•we have no way of knowing
stood in silence and IOI'r'OW oeu
- Deadly gas from a tourth
their
rate." Davis said "These together .
the
mine where her huabaDI
maJOr explmnon spread today
Close To Traged,y
meo are all well trained and
and
brother-in
· law were
Ulrough miles of tire-ravaged
The mining families are as
there are ways of saving
trapped.
tunnels in an lDlderground soft
yousetf in a situation of this used to tragedy as anyone can
.. He had told me U there 'I'I'U
coal mine, virtually eliminating
be. It has visited them twice in
kind "
ever an explosion it would be
all hope any of 78 trapped
A spreading ball or black a week
SAIGON (UP!)- Communist
miners would be found alive.
On No\'
11, !ire swept. best not to come,'" Mn. Taylal'
smoke hung over the mine
guns bombarded Hoi An in the
The spread of the gas put off
through a Farmington fUrniture said of her husband. "But I had
entrance today At the Church
to. ru
till they brinl
costliest shelling of a South
indefinitely the start of rescue
of God of Prophecy at nearby store newly laden with Christ- them out. ru never lose taldl
Vietnamese
city
since the
efforts, officials said
mas toys Four per!IOlls were
until they get the iast man
bombing of North Vietnman
There was no 1:ontact with the Farmington , W Va, w i v e s, killed, Including a chlld.
brothers, sons and (riends of the
stopped Nov. 1, U.S. spokesmen
78 men since the first violent
said today. A South Vietnamese
explosion trapped them 700 reet
general forecast a new Red
underground in the Mannington
offensive.
mine before dawn Wednesday.
Two sudden barrages into Hoi
Ragmg fires and two more
An on wemesda.Y slanuned into
gas blasts spread thick smoke
a hotel, the central market
and Oames through most of the
place and a street crowded Wlth
m1ne's seven miles of tunnels.
home.b&gt;und school
children
The explosions were so potent
Officials said two persons died
they peeled paint off automo.
and 27 were wounded, 19 of
biles parked above ground at
them youngsters.
the mine site.
Reseue teams could not enter
Gen
[)Q
Cao Trl, South
A Phi Beta Kappa, Miss Cag- the Athens Jaycee&amp;; now thelr
Jeanne Cagney, well . known
chairman of the board; a mem·
Vietnamose commander of the
the
No
9 shaft of the
ney 1s dean or the College of Fine
actress and Radio, Television
ber
of the Athens Business A..,
provinces around Saigon, said in
Mannington roal mine because
Arts, Ohio Univers1ty. She is
UFE FOR A NUMBER OF VIETNAMESE orphans wUI, perhaps, be just a bit brighter this
and Broadway personality, heads
90ciatlon,
AthenS Red Crc.s, and
Blen Hoa today the Communists
the fires turned the seven miles
married to Prof Jack Morrison
Christtnas - thanks to the eUorts of Pomeroy Girl Scout Tr~ 61. Through donations from se'oa five - member team or judges
Athens
Rotary
Club, wbo teeei't•
are now in hiding, regrooping
or tunnels into an oven
of Ohio University They have
eral grOI.I)s and itnividuals plus the money-making projects of members, 32t Individual gifts were
for the Sixth Annual Meigs COWl·
~B
hiO
B.&lt;.
'ftgl-ee
Above ground, a chill wind
and refitting for a winter-spring
two daughters, Mary Am and
purchased for the oll)hans. Wednesday, memben of the troop and their leaders mailed the tw~
College, Dubuque, ]owa, and
stacked snowflakes mao a sign cy Junior Miss Pageant ~day, Terry.
offensive,
large boxes containing the gifts to Sgt. Thorne Cotterill who will see that the items are distributed
Nov, 24 at the Meigs Junior lligh
Masters
and Ph.D from Ohio
· "We are COIII.dent' their unit!
at a nearby companY store
Pageant General Chairman
at the Hoi Due Anh Orphanage at Saigon. Pictured with the OOxes, from left to right, m the Pomauditorium.
University.
The sign said· 01 Through these
" · · · ~1Qll....become acUve again once
Miss Cagney, who has appear - Ralph Werry said the (our other
ero)' Post Office are Crystal Glaze, Debbie Bailey, Lisa. ntornas and Patt.Y Heaton. A daugilter or
Ralph E Zmser, Marietta, past
portals pass lhe finest coal
they are refitted and re·
ed for 12 years on .. Queen For a members of the JUdging panel president of the Marietta Ja.y •
Sgt. Cotterill- Jill - is a member or the Pomeroy troop:
grouped," he said. Allied troops
miners in the world."
Day" as fashion coordinator , al.J are·
cees, past district 24 Jaycee
Mine off1clalS said they could
fOWld two big arms caches on
Dale F . Nit:z.schke, assistant
so has performed m mov1es. Two
vice
president and a past .iudlll
stop the fires by cutting oil the
Saigon's doorstep Wednesday,
were Yankee Doodle Dandy and dean, College o( Educator, Ohio
for
the
Meigs C&lt;Junty J\Ulior Ml..
oxygen feeding the flames. But
one
ot
them
with
1,000
Unhersity; a past president of
Time of Your Life.
Pageant.
that
would
suffocate
the
miners
grenades
otricials Usted 19 children
Russell W. Miller, Daytoa, ill
if tl'ley were still aJove.
his third straight year as prell·
among the wounded
Some Rescued
dent of Ohio Jwtlor Miss Inc.; a
Hoi t\n, 340 miles north of
\\'hen the first blast rocked
past president of the Dayton JarSaigon and 20 miles south of Da
the hill countrY before dawn
cees, a JCI eenator, and a din
Nang, is in the middle of a
Wednesda.Y, it trapped 99 men
ending the graveyard shift.
VA'riCAN Cff'Y (UPI)- Pope
"If Circumstances had been in many community projects in
Communist buildup of troops
Twenty-one miners were res- PatJI Vl told North V1etnamese
more fa\iorable, rest assured Dayton.
wllo battled allied soldiers
Cong. Hechler noted that he felt
al1ts
present
stage.
cued.
srlmewere
lUted
in
Roman
Catholics
t
o
d
a
y
he
that
we certainly would have
By MAXINE WALTERS
Mrs. Lmda De Haven, whO lJ
during the weekend and lost
Sweeney satd the bridge was a the new span would definitely buckets lowered 700 feet down
would
have
liked
to
visit
their
come
personally among you in charge of the set .00 art. de·
POINT PLEASANT - Fall or
more than 500 men.
"special, special" project of stimulate state tnterest in upthe shaft
country and share U\ their most mllingly , to encourage you sign or the Ohio Junior Mil&amp;
1969 is still the elQ)ected compleHit Seoond City
President Johnson, who appomt- grading State Rt. 2, but none of
H.
Davis,
president
of
ordeal
circumstances had in your hard trials and to make
David
Pageant; in her third year wttb
It was one ot two maJQr South tion date for the new bridge crossed a task force to speed ~ con- those present could g1ve al'\Y an- the Consolidation Coal Co.
been
more
favorable
"
you feel how deeply we share in the Ohio Junior Miss Pagea!L
Vietnamese citlP&amp; shelled Wed- ing the Ohio n ver between Henstruction. When a mmimum of swers on what, when or how Rts.
which owns the mine, said six
The ponti.(( made the remark
them," the Pope wrote.
!&lt;mday night
Judge6 aad
nellday and toda,y. A Viet Coog derson, W.Va., and Kanauga,O.,
three years and a maximum of 2 or 17 would be l.{igraded. Both
blasts whicll ripped through the
in a letter to Archbishop
"We would like at least to be special guest will be honored wltk
mortar barrage caused light according to .John L. SWeeney,
fi11e year!-! construction was men- these state rou&amp;e&amp; leading to the
shai't Wednesday were "of such Joseph-Marie TTin-nhu-Khue of present by )OUf side in some a bull'et at the Trinity United'
Assistant Secretary o{ the U. s.
damage and casualties in My
tioned, President Johnson stated new 1800 loot •J)In are subject
magnitude as lO place in great
Hanoi. The message marked a way
through this message,
Church of Chnst in Pomeroy.
Tho, second largest city in the Department of Transportation. this was intolerable as there to Ooodlng coril!ttlons.
HUN11RS TO MEET
religious occasion, The cent.ena- recallmg that we must give the
Sweeney, along with CongressMekong Delta, spokesmen said.
must be means of crossing the
Meigs county coon Hunters ry of the consecration of Mary assistance or our ministry first
man Ken Heckler 1 John T. DorIn Salgoo, U.S. Ambassador
river much sooner.
sey, a.rea engineer for the State
will meet Friday at 7:30 p. m. at
of what was then the Apostolic of aU to those undergoing
(Continued oo poge 10)
The money problem was taken
Road Comm1ss1on, aOO Hobert
the
club
house
on
Snow
Ball
Hill.
Vicarate of West Tonkin
tribulation.''
care of quickly with U1e AppalNelson (D), Hunungt.on, member
achian Comm1ssion funding the
of the House of Delegates, tourinitial phases such as riglti.-Qfed the area or construction on lhe
· ngwooring fees.
West Virginia side Wednesday ways and;
• r
ii breakdown of the esFuneral services for Richard
:::::,:
'&lt;f "
morning, then held a press conLum•lcd $ 4,184,855 was given
R.
Jacks, 69, RD 1, LangsviUe,
Gordon H. Caldwell, Meigs
ference.
as:
who
died Wednesda.y of an apparSweeney said the new $14,auditor, said
llis
Federal govermnellt, $7.2 milent
heart
attack while hWtting on
o{flt) is now in the process of
184,855 four lane bridge would
lionj $1 million from the Ohio-his
farm,
w1ll be held Saturday
le
taxes on the 1968 tax
set a world record m the time in
West Virginia Appa.lachian and
at
2
p.
m.
at the Martin Funeral
dl(Jlicate which will be turned
which it would be completed.
rest normal 50-50 ABC road pr~
Home
in
Rutland
with Rev. Ira
;Iii\\:
over to the county treasurer and
C~. Heckler noted the short
gram; State of Ohio, $2.4 million
Wellman
officiating.
Burial will
opened by him for collection as
construction time was made pos•
and West Virginlt', $4.6 million.
be in Miles Cemeter).
··::::.
soon as the twO office&amp; complete
sible only through the combined
Jotm Dorsey, commenting on
A coal miner and farmer aD
efforts of the States of Ohio and
the
work.
Standing appllcatlons for HillUle construction work, stated
···:·: of his lire, he was a member 41'
The auditor asked taxpayers
West Virginia, Bureau of Public
Burton and Appalachian Fund
there were three construction
·:: .. : the Meigs Pentecostal ChJrch.
to heed Ulat 1 large portion of
Roads, arrJ the Appalachian Regrants were reviewed by the Vetcompanies
working separate
lie was preceded in death by
any incraa.se in taxes on the 1968
gional Commission, and without
erans Memorial Hospital Board
shifts, and to date there has been
three sons and three brotheri.
dl.t)licate is due to an inc1·ease
lhe team work of Sen. Jennings
of Trustees and the Meigs Counlittle hold-~ on wealher. But
Survivors include his wife, Av.
Gov.
James
Rhodes
Randolph,
in
rates.
ty Hospital Commission in joint
aoodlng of the rillers this winter
a nell; three daughters, Mrs. BetHe rurther pomted out that the
and Sen. Clarence Miller, in bi·
session at the hospital Wednesor early spring could cause de.
ty R~e, Langsville; Mn. Jaae
new appraisal is based upon a
partisan
team
work,
along
with
day night. status of the applicalays more thananyt:hillJ' else, he
Spurlock, Richwood, aOO MrL
1962 replacement of property,
the leadership of Pres1dent L. B.
tions continued In the "unacted
Mervel Lane, Marion; three sona.
whereas the previous valuatioos
Johnson, 1t could not ha.ve been said.
on" &lt;:ategory.
Ray, of Brewton. AlL; Richard,
were on a 1956 rep lacement.
The hospital commission, a
Jr., MinersvUle, and Gerald, (t
causing most of the increase in
bub' of 10 memberB which has
Marion; three 11isters, 0 11 l 1
evaluation.
responsibility
any new con\.·: Gotschall. Baltimore, Md.; Otj..
A!lditor Caldwell requests that
struction on the non - prolit
By United Press International
l;y Cleland, Lancaster, and Ethel
eacll ta"PtYer consider what hts
county-&lt;~Wned facility, has had
BONN (UPO - West German Finance Minister Fra~osef own replacement coal would be
Priddy, Middleport. and tiro
applications on rile for the past
strauss said today he thought "the outline or a solution is slowly today when he thinks ot "fair tax
brothers, Virgil, RD 1, Rutlud.
three years for grants to assist
comirw into sight" at a crisis meedng of the world'B 10 richest e\'lll!Ation."
and IlonJOntln, of lrooton.
in construction or a new 40-bed
non-Cmununlst nationB called to avert world economic chaos.
'
Friends may call at the fUneral
"Records oo file are "osidve
wing.
The financial chiers dismiBsed thelr aides and went into a proor that ln many cases the ceilh&lt;ltne Frlc!ay and until thelimeof
Applications Cor the granls have
service&amp; on S.turdly.
I been refiled amually since they strictly prhate session as the international monetary situation ing priee of real pr~rty is 10 ·:::-~
deteriorated arxl the French franc, the British pound sterling ancl per cent to 100 per cent greater
Meigs CounQ' COI"'OWr H..,
were initially placed. Overall
the U. S. dollar dipped to record lows on the Wool Berlin money than true evaluation as deter:?,&gt;!•,•
Ewing and Sllorlfl'o Depul3' J ...
cost of the proposed construction
AW AllllS \\iON - Tile s..dy Tlme-..,1 eovenge last Jan. 7 of ""'oYOry operotlon&amp; In
Tillis "ere called after Uta dbmarkets.
.
mined
by
the
IP.Praisera.''
caldwas earlier esllmated at $750,connectio:lwl• Ute Silver Bridge Disaster haa won thlrclplace in a National Publications Award
The crudal session was reported split on deJvaluatloq measures w.U said,
cowry of the body alaboUt 2p.m.
000.
contest for
t CD News Photos of the Year sponsored~ the Natio01l Association of State Civil
with the United states aad West Genna!IY pitied aplnsl France aad
The RutlaadVol-rFin~
I)
H~.q~:h Cusler. hospital commla.Defenle
_ tors. Above, James F. Worster, Sr.. Deputy Dlrector or Ohio Civil Derensa, acceptBritain. 8\rauss OMe more r.._,eated Weat German,y's ~ refusal
partment
wao oummoned ol 2:lll
!IIEIGS illijNERAL HOSPITAL
sion president, presided over the
ed the ~ certificates at the assoclatioo barquet Nov. 13 during a Fall Conference at J&amp;ckson,
to revab1e the mark 'IJ'f¥ard troJn its preseut worth of &amp;fll'roxlmatep m. Wednoliiii.Y lo .-.:h to r
ADMISSIONS - Gerald Shum•
joiTil session. The tx.rd of trU&amp;Mil~...~ Ttmes-Seri:inel's Pat Houck and Ohio C-D Public Information omcer Ralph D-J Fuhr
Mr. JackL Hls body wu IOCIIOd
I.Y 25 centa.
way, RttedavlUe.
tees, rct;ponsible for actual opo.
~pictures shown 011 the paste~ above. Mrs. Houck also wrote the story in comectiOP with
"We will not change our position" against re""ua.Uon, Strauss
bl
firemen and reUUvn.
DISCHARGES - Ethel Johneration of the hos.Pital, co!XIucttold newsmen dw-ing a lunch brQk.
its regular business session
son, ClllJ'encu Jones.
(COOII"""!i.J¥1 Page 10)
following the joint meeting.

Hoi

ern

ol

••

Shells

Plan Thanksgiving Dinner Party

2

w

.·:·:·:·:·.· ·:·:·: ;~:;:;.:·:•, ;:,:;:.:;:;: :;: : : : : :~:=: : -:·!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!·~:·:·:·:-.:~~~:~::::~·!·!·!~-:'~h:.:».».~~ J:I'.~.I &lt;Sl~l:l l i &lt;'JfOSijJ%; ':': :,~-;,._.;. :-:•:«o!·X·:·:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:· · ·:0:~·!·!·:· ·:

Americans of 2018 Face Deserted Sands, Dry Ruins

Middleport Garden Club Ladies
Doing 'Operation Santa Claus'

\\'cdncs..l.1~, Nov. 2fl, 1968

... :;.,.:·:·:·:·x·:·:·:·:·· :···:·:····

, ~r

rr
s

Dies Hunting

�.-

2 -

The Dally Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0., Thursday, Nov. 21, 1968__

COmpo.er Burt Bacharach decided he couldn't work properly
without the right atmosphere and

Mason Area
News~

TH :\1\"SFERREU GUILT
MAI\ES HER A SLAVE

Dear Helen:
My father committed suicide
three years ago. A short time
afterward I met a man w h o
somf'what resembled him, and
wilo had JUSt separated {rom his
wife. lie hatl a big drinking problem :~nd ttlrcatened to take his
life.
Thout;h I am married to a ri.ne
man I tried to console this Cel·
low who, I later discovered, was
an alroholic and m need of psychiatry
He had financ-ial troubles, so
1 loaned him a good deal of
money whirh I probably won't
get bark. But rd be willing to
fo rget it if I could just be rid
of the worr;.· Each Lime I tell
him Pm through, he says he
can't lio,.c without me and he'!!
kill himseH. rm trying to get
111m mto an alcohol treatment
center , which will cost ar01md
$20U for five days. Where do I
go rrom there"? He's had treatment before. without success.
1 suppose I feel that I could
have saved m..v father's life had
l t ricd huder, and now, if I
turn Uus derelict loose, history
will repct~t 1tself. ·\ t age 50,
I can't face another tragedy .
The mall has a good Job (which
he hates). but his bills seem to
keep him broke .
l low l'an I gel free without
feeling guilty.' - CONSClfNri::

they visit each other's apartments as if they belonged there.
1\boot all I can get out of
her is, "We like each other very
'much." He appears to be a nice
person, but
SJould I insist that she come
home to live so she won't completely ruin her good reputa~
lion? Sb.e was raised in a rtne,
moral home. - UNBEUF.VING

Dear Un:
H you've raised your daughter with the right attitudes you
can trust her to make the right
decisions lor her time and place.
Perhaps ttley won't follow your
strict limitalions, but - she's
free and 23 .... and limes have
cha11ged - II.
Dear Helen :
In our neighborhood there's a
13-year..old boy who gets away
with murder - and Pm afraid
it miglll be wst that unless he
is stopped He has a v.'ild temper . Recently. if he hadn't been
pulled off a younger boy, t h e
child might ha.,·e been permanentls inJured . l:lewasb~nghis
head on the sidewalk, and choking him.
The parents think he is won derful, never reprimand him,
always say he was picked on
E\'en when the school complains,
they threaten to "gel the prin cipal's job ."
The kid sasses back, and dares
us to tell his father He's got a
gang now, and we're afraid a
BOLND
bad situation will get worse.
near l".B.:
r thmk you need psychiatric Wh.&lt;it c11n be done':' - THE
NEIGHBORS
counseling more ttlan does this
Uear Neigllbors:
parasite who has found an easy
lC talking to the boy's par mark and is playing her for all
ents doesn't help, tell them you ' ll
she's worth .
Weak and disturbed he Is, but call the police at the next sign
so long as he has you to lean of trouble. When a wild teen
organu:es a gang, lhe next stop
on . he m&lt;~y never help himself.
·r .1u've expiated your father's is juvenile hall - and this usuall y jar s a doting falher out of
death far Loo long . f\ow 1t's time
hi
s lethargy. - H.
for psychological insight - and
freedom from vncarned guilt!
This column is dedicated lo
1 urn your alcoholic over to an
family
living, so if you're hav expert, and get back to the man
ing
k.id
trouble
or JUSt plaintrouwho really needs you: y o u r
b le, let Helen help YOU. Stle
husband! - H.
will also welcome }'our own aDear Helen :
Our daughter is 23. ~e has musing experiences Address
,. met a man of 2G They n~ver llc.len Bolte! in ca.re ofthisnewsmention marriage . but she goes paper
off on weekends with him, and

New Haven Social Events

·.

,,
l

·,

of appeal. Carol Anderson,
16, of Edison, N.J.• leans ••
a hay rake at the New Jersey state fairgrounds Ia
Trenton. The New Jersey
state fair, tbe oldeat IB
America, waa first chart-

ered by Encland's KlDC
George in 1745.

Fri!'ndship Class
Treat Servicemen
l'I.IFTO:"-J - The Friendship
Class of the Clifton L'nited Methodist Church sent 20 Christmas
box~ s to servi rem en stationed ov ersea s. Some are stationed in
\'ictnam. !\orca , Germany and
Okmawa .
Those to receive the Christmas remembrances are J ames
I . VanMeter, Michael A. Fields,
Jackie L. VanMeter . \!fred L.
Housh, Thomas H. 1\imes. ,J.
P. Karschnik, Harry Joe Sn11th,
Denver Gibbs, Booth \'v. Huff.
man.
Okey VanMeter, lJaVJd J. Arthur. l\ennetl1 1.. nass Carby
Sawyer , !.loyd D. Moore, Da \ id .1 . Castle , llerberi. N. F:lliott. Bobby Hay Bailey , Hoy
,\. Young, Marshall M. Bland
and Charlie D. Oliver .

Harri~onville
Ttle Harrisonville P.T.A. Carni\•al, all da,y last Saturday and
into the evening, was well attended anli a distinct success
The art landscape oil painting, donated by .loan Greene, was
won by Freda Greuser of Pomeroy . The electric hot dogger, won
by narbara Black. was donated
by /\rnold Grate; the carving
knife , donated by Mrs. Nellie
Borgan and Mrs. Joyce Vance
was won by Mrs. Gheen and the
blanket , donated by the I'.T.A.,
was won hy Ronnie Vance.
Cake walks were won b~ Cattly
Stanley, Teresa Hayes and An cil Cross. The cider walk was
won by Nora Jordan.
School Candidates, who were
crowned and received gifts, were
Princess, L i n d a Donahue;
Prince, Lanny Chapman; queen,
Honda McGrath 'lrtdKing, James
Clark .
Thanks ar e extended Lo all who
helped stage the carnival , said
Mr s. Joyce Vance , JYfA president.

Notes

Mr. and Mrs. Uobert Compduck Sen. Morse.
BY JACK O'BRIAN
soo aOO Connie of Middleport,
Pinta! zed folk -diva Brenda
NEW YORK - Chuck Perey
have moved to. Haven Heights.
Lee's
expecting her second heir
has a Rig Job offer wtth Nixon
Mr. Cqmpson is employed on
ln '69 .... Ro~ Marciano and
.•. . The Peter Findlay s r1 the
construction in Alaska. He reRocky Graziano arm - wrestled
57th st. arl gallery set will
turns home for a visit every
at the 57th St. Olock Full O'Nuts;
vernissage the new baby early
two months.
TV could've made a special of
In '69 . . . The Denniston SlaterMrs. Alma Peck, Mrs. Sharon
the no-&lt;Ontest •••. Cary Grant
Averell Dalltz romance is serJacobs and Mike, Mrs. Sharon
can star with any gal at I h e
Peck, Lisa and Lorrie all or ious enough ror Denny to toss;
film-top but he'll co-star with
a big birthday bash ror t h e
Chillicothe, Ohio, visited recentex-wife Dya.n Cannon in ap;y fu.
grass widow of Moe Dalitz of
ly with Mrs. William Camp and
ture filmi she states flatly there
Ule Vegas - Cleveland - Detroit
family of Mason.
ls no chance of a reunion; and
hushall register.
Mr. and Mrs. William SWHt
further, she posltively won~ wed
N. Y. state Sen. Paul Bookand children or Carrollton, Ky.,
aga.ln in the foreseeable decade
visited recently with Mr. and son wUI toss his yarmulke into
.... Babe Dtdrlkson's widower
Mrs. Albert Swatzel, and son, the ring for N, Y. mayor; he
George Zaharias is dating Groulooks like a young L or n e
Norman, and with Mr. and Mrs.
Greene .... A prominett gal sent: cho's ex-wife Kay.
Dana SWift in MiddleporL
Sllrley Mac Laine is at t h e
Miss Donna Jeffers of Colum- the following telegram to her_
point where she hates autograph
bus, Ohio, visited rl:!cently wiili fiancee punning his first name:
seekers ..•. Helen O'COI\nell, who
"Wayne
Wayne
Go
Awa,y"
....
her sister and brother-l~aw,
loves •em, busted the M I a m i
Same
must•ve
been
sent
to
lameMr. and Mrs. Bob Oliver and
Beach EdenRoc'saltendancerec(amily.
ord and returns for another melMr. Curtis McDaniel, Jr., of
odic attack this month .... BrigJenkinstoWn, Pa. , visited recentitte Bardot was introduced to
b with his parents, Mr. and
playmate
Patrick GlUe by her
Mrs. Curtis McDaniel, Sr., In
last previous lunmate, Gig! RtzMason.
Theme of Program
d . .•. The Ford in Omar Starr.t.rs. James Loyd and son,
it's present is Mias America,
Kevin of Marion, Indiana; Mrs.
MASON- ''Thanksgiving'' was Judith AM Ford.
Stanley Saunders and family of
"The Green Carnation" was
the
theme or the program of the
Columbus, were here to attend
a 1966 fUm rating shrugs, athe funeral of their uncle, Mar- Loyal Helpers Sunda,y S c h o o I
bout Oscar Wlldei with the new
Class
of
Albright
United
Methocus McDaniel in Point Pleassexual who • cares permissivedist
Cllurch
at
a
recent
meeting
ant, and vi sited their parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis McDaniel, at the home of Mrs. Evelyn Ste- ness the Peter Finch film wlll
wart with Mrs. Roberta Yoong be reissued with additional exMason.
plicit sex - deviaUon sequences
of
Clifton as co-hostess.
Mark Gilkey, seven year old
only Implied In the '66 stiff.
Mrs.
Young
read
the
scripson of Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Barbara Hutton's reported
\rilkey of Clifton, is recuperat- ture and Mrs. llomer Johnson
from her ''Prince" but
led
in
prayer.
Mrs.
Dorothy
Carting from a tonsillectomy at the
wright
read"SacrificeofThanksVeterans Memorialllospital. Ue
is expected to return to his giving," and Mrs. Homer Johnson, .. A Basket of Thanksgivhome on Tuesday.
Charles Blake, Clifton, under- ing," Mrs. Ruth Riley, HThankwent an appendectomy on Mo00a)' fulness, Little Blessings,'' Mrs.
morning at the Veterans Memor- Bill Clay; "Give Thanks,'' Mrs.
ial Hospital. lie is the son of Darrell Jenks and Mrs. Verla
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Blake, Clif- Workman read "Thanksgivintl:."
Winners in the Bible Quiz con[O~
test
were Mrs. Homer Johnson,
Visiting with Mrs. Fred JohnMrs
.
Ruth Riley and Mrs. Darson, ?-.1r. and Mrs. Tom Hedrell
Jenks.
The latter also won
man and attending the wedding
the
door
prize.
of Hay Redman and Joyt·c Long

Thanksgiving is

OIOOSE FLEXSTEEl

BAKER FURNITURE

..-

••

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early this week and will a loss. The Uon&amp; are heavy
L'Omplete the task of filling the favo~ites.
Sixth-ranked Kansas is a oneremaining berths after Saturpoint favorite over Missouri, a
dlly's games.
Gator Bowl participant.
Buckeyes Slight Favorite
Georgia, which accepted a
Second-ranked Ohio Slate is
favored by follJ" points to make &amp;!gar Bowl bid, Is idle this
its rtrst Rose Bowl trip since weekend as is seventh.....-anked
the 1957 club. The Buckeyes, Texas, one 0( the teams
seeking their first perfect involved in the three-way fight
record since 1954, have an 8-0 for the Southwest Conference
battle and a
mark while Michigan State is 8- championship
contender
for
the Sugar or
1.
Cotton
nowls.
Top-ranked USC, also 8-0,
Tennessee Favored
tangles with cross-city rival
Eight-ranked
Tennessee, one
UCLA witll the O.J. Simpson-led
of
the
Cotton
B-owl
teams, is
Trojans favored by 14.
favored
over
Kentucky
and
Penn State, pride of the F..ast
bowl-hopeful
Arkansas
(No.
9)
and ttle nation's third-rated
is
picked
by
six
over
Texas
team, takes on arch rival
Pittsburgh as the Nlttany Lions Tech.
A big game In the West sends
prepare for lhelr Orange Bowl
Wyoming
against .1\rizooa at
appearance againsl Kansas and
Tuc800
with
the
Western
shoot for their ninth win without
Athletic Conference title and a
bowl bid at stake
In the F..ast, the big game is
the Yale-Harvard battle al
Cambridge for the Ivy League
title. Yale enteres the contest
with the nation's longest wina~ ~RR.A'/ O,I..P!!RMAN
ning streak among the major
colleges (16) and is a seven
Newspaper Enterprise Associ1tlon
point favorite.
Stanford and Calllornia tangle
on the West Coast for the glory
that comes with winning t h e
game and the Golden Bears are
. No ~ack. of confidence in Ohio State's Rose Bowl prelen·
favored by six.
~1ons .m Columbus . Even before the Buckeyes faced Mich·
In other big ravalries, Utah
1gan m the Rose Bowl showdown-three weeks before to
plays utah state, Syracu10e
be exact-a gro up of local citizenry chartered and HUed a
tangles with West VIrginia,
plane for Pasadena.
Wa.l!.hington faces Washington
The "Joe Must Go" fever In Philadelphia, with banners
State,
Duke
is at NorU1
urging the departure of beCarolina,
Louisiana
State at
leaguered Coat!h Joe Ku·
Tulane, Oregon at Oregon State,
harlcb of the Eagles, bas
been caught by the playBoston at Massachusetts, India: en. "Now," notes 3'7-yearna at Purdue, Baylor at
. old placekicker Sam Baker,
Southern Methodist and Air
· "they add, 'And Take Sam
Force at Colorado.
By STEVE SM!L,\N!CII
UPI S)Jorts Writer
The cupboard will be almost
bare
Saturday
£or college
footbaJl teams looking ror bowls
but the oldest cup of them all,
the Rose Bowl, wtll be there
waiting to be picked up by
either Ohio State or Michigan
:SOuthern California already
has its hands on the Rose Bowl
as the West Coasl representa·
tive in the Pasadena classic and
the CO-{)wner will be established
Saturday when Ohio state and
Michigan clash in ttle Hlg Ten
title game.
Sb.ould the contest e~d in a
tie, Ohio ~te would represent
the Midwest since Michigan
visited Pasadena more recently
than the Buckeyes.
The Rose, Sugar, Cotton and
&amp;m Bowls signed four schools

KO.DDaN Hl6lfiCihTo
FOR THE YOUNG INFANT THRU 12

SLIPS

DRESSES

Cotton Blend &amp; Nylon

BY
Nanette, Cinderella
and Polly Flinders

Lan By

CARTER

Infant
thru sizlt 12

Gditt1! 1/0llltl4ltt

'Sky-High' Fans

THE KIDDIE SHOPPE
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. Interesting bit a b o u t
· hot Cincinnati U. passer
. Greg Cook, whom the pros
. like !he's 6-4 and can throw

992-3535

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279 W. Main

Pomeroy,

0.

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· a football 50 yards off his
ear without shiCting his
feetJ . Because he broke his
hand as a sophomore, Cincy figured he'd be around

Posts 13th

through the '69 collegiale

NBA Win

season. But the coach at
that time played the tall
·quarterback in the last two
games of the season--and
Greg suspects it's because
Joe Kuharleb
the coach knew his job was
~one and had no interest
~ ~~g Coo~·~ eli.gibility for his successor. ...

' Alitllftr Clncy aote: The pro baoketbaD Royals are plenty
"&amp;loomy about tbolr attendance figures. They play n of

ABOUT
VICKS
PO-RUB
.... 1.09

SYLVANIA

NOW

AGI

tbelr home games Ia Cleveland this season and two in
Omaha. Does that add up to a future move? ...
Before El~ridge Dickey gets to moaning too deeply about
the pr&lt;!Crastmation of the Oakland Raiders in breaking the
. c_olor Line at quarterback, he should be reminded that the
f~rst great T-~B in pro ~all, S1d Luckman, spent his entire
f1rst season w1th the Ch1cago Bears as a running halfback
. . . because Papa Bear George Halas wanted him to get
the full feel of the offense ... And Heisman Trophy winner
· Gary Behan, who wants to play quarterback as badly as
~Ickey, Isn't crying publicly because the Redskins ha\:e

htm at halfback ....
Omen: Biggest upset of the pro grid 11eason was New
York Giant~· win at Dallas, sparked by qb Fran Tarkenton.
His brothers oame: DaUas Tarkenton . . . .
Penn State All-American Ted Kwalick, a cinch No . 1
draft choice as a tight end, got straightened out for his
future caree.~ bv seeing the ~ovie ~ersion of '·Paper Lion."
Notes Ted. It made me thmk tw1ce about turning pro. I
never real.ly kne~ ho~ t?,ugh they were . And I was im• pressed w1th thc11 pnde . . .. In Nittany Lion country
; they t~ll y~u the tou~hest ~uy on the undefeated team j~
defenstve lmeman M1ke Reid . . . .

That Ohio State rain of sophomore talent Isn't about to
end. Next year's soph crop wUI dred.(c uo a phenomeaal
placekicker named Stan White to solve the one problem

FLASHCUBES
Reg. $2.25

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$129

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Lot~ of rumors ~urrounding the bankrolling of the new
American Professional Golfers ( APG) tour because even
the conservatives figure It'll take a cool half million bucks
to operate the first year. But Billy Booe, the old Yale halfback who's the administrative boss of the new setup
denies them all when he says at least half the tourna:
ment ~ros are carrying the ~n~~al. freight by doubling up
on the1r dues-paymg $2.50 mitiatJOn and advancing the
same amount for their first year's dues-so thai the office
personnel can get paid . .. .
The revved-up Mlnuesota VJkiugs are aow elalming that
Carl Eller. their double-duty deleulve end, has passed
Deacon Jones or the Rams as the most feared rusher In

\ ; · !he NFL . . . .
Between you'n'me, desp1te all his game-breaking heroics
f a lot of guys close to the Giants will tell you Homer JoneS
,Z: doesn't deserve ;;toll-pro. ranking because he drops the short
.• . ones, sulks and 1akes 1t when he's not in on the play.

1.
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wlll be Big Ten champion and replacing Tom Harmon, with
CHICAGO (UP0
Ohio will represent the conference in 2,349 yards to 2,J34.
toach Woody Hayes of the
the Roac Bowl against No. 1
~e's quaMerlNlck Rex Kern
Buckeyes,
who are ranked No.
is ready, and so Is Michigan's ranked Southern California.
2
in
the
country,
said all hands
"We
hope
our
regular
plays
aJI-llme rushing leader Ron
will
be
healthy
for
the contest.
work,"
said
Michigan
Coach
Johnson.
Kern,
who
was
knocked
out
nump
Elliott.
What
Elliott
All eyes will be on these two
of
five
Buckeye
games
with
inmeant
was
that
he
hopes
that
young collegians when the Big
juries,
returned
last
week
to
Ten "game of the year," pitting Johnson, who last week gained
lead
the
team
to
its
victory
347
yards
rushing
to
set
a
Big
the
conference's undefeated
Buckeyes and Wolverines Ten record, wtll have a good over upset-minded Iowa.
Hayes said the Buckeyes
against each other, takes place day.
wollld
complete their preparaThe
205..pound
Detroiter
is
alSaturday in Columbus.
tion
on
Thursday for the Saturso
the
team's
all-lime
rusher,
Regardless of the outcome,
day
game,
with a "no-pads"
either Michl.gan or Ohio State
workoul
In other Big Ten action, Mich igan State will lake oo Northwestern, Dlinois will play Iowa,
whlle Wisconsin plays Mimesola, and Indiana is at Purdue.
Several key players might be
missing when the final games
are
played among the remaindORLANDO, Fla. (UPO - U
Previously, the bowl matched
er
oC
lhe conference. Among
the Richmond Spiders get by small college opponents, but
them are Ton,y Ornatek, Dlinois
William and Mary Saturday, this year the format was
they have a good chance of ap- changed to pit the winner of the center suffering from a neck inpearing in the Tangerine Bowl Southern and Mid - American jury; halfbacks Bob Pernell and
Rick Thompson or Indiana; tacagainst Mid - American Confer- conferences.
kle
Ken Price of Iowa and tacence winner Ohio University.
Ohio University, now 9..0, and
kle
Brandt Jackson of WisconRichmond, 5..0 in Southern ranked 17th oo the United Press
Conference play, Is favored to International major college foot- sin.
beat the Colonials and a vic - ball ratings, already has the
tory would likely ensure the MAC title in the bag. It winds
conference Iitle.
up the season Saturday against
But the Citadel, 4-1 in con- Northern llllnois, but the outference play, is still in conten- come will not affect the trip
tion· should it defeat F..ast Car- here.
olina Saturday and Richmond is
Last year, bowl sponsors deupset.
cided they 1Vanted to switch
The post season football clas- from small to major college
sic will be played for the first contenders and signed a tWOUme this year at night on Dec . year pact witt! the two confer27 - a day belore the Gator ences.
OUR FINEST DUALITY
Bowl Game at Jacksonville.
NEW TREADS

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the plall"e !"

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RAWLINGS.HONDA .SAL
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Richmond Eyes Tangerine

Michigan

Bowl Berth This Weekend

Offense

'Solid'
ANN AHROR, Mh·h. (UPOMichigan•s oticnse has been
solid all season and Bump
Elliott figures it stlould be good
enoogh for
the
Big Ten
championship game with Ohio
State this Saturday.
"U it doesn•t work. then we'll
try something else, I guess,''
Ell iott said Wednesday as the
Wolverines went through a
nearly two-hour practice to
prepare for the game which
also will decide the Big Ten's
representative to the Rose Bowl
on New Year•s Day.
"We hope our regular plays
ment regarding the game that
will pit the Woh•erines (8-1)
against the Ruckeyes (8..0).
Those regular pla,v.s are built
around record-breaking llalrback Ron Johnson who gal ned
an incredible 347 yards and
scored five touchdowns against
Wisconsin last Saturday . This
set
an
NCAA single-game
rushing record, broke three Big
Ten marks and a bevy of
Michigan records, including one
built by Tom Harmon when he
was at Michigan.
The 205..pound senior from
Detrott now is Michigan's all time rusher with 2,34!1 yards,
replacing Harmon who had
2, 134.
Wi.tb Johnson leading the
Michigan offense, one of El liott's prOOlems is going to be
the Ohio State defense whicll he
praised highly.
Of Buckeye roving linebacker
Jack Tatum, Elliott said: "If 1
knew how we would play him, r
probably wollldn't say an,ywa.y."
"It should be a good-hitting
game,'' he added.

By t:nited Press International
It's pretty hard to overlook a
6-foot, 9-inch player, even in the
National Basketball Association
but that has been ~ Scott'~
fate during much of his sevenseason pro career.
Tllere was no overlooking the
former Portland Universit.v star
Wednesday
night,
however
when he scored six points in the'
last four minutes to pace the
Baltimore Bullets to a L14-110
victory over tbe .san Diego
Rockets.
T{le RulletB' 13th win in 17
gamOs enabled them to retain
their half..game Eastern Division lead over the Boston
Celtics who rolled over the
Seattle &amp;lpersonlcs, 139-92.
AD A ;-r ANV!NGS
Earl Monroe scored 28 points,
By United Press International
Ken Loughery had 26 and Gus
F...ast
Johnson added 20 for the Bullets
W, L. Pet . GB
while Scott weighed in with 14 Minnesota .. . . 7 3 . 700
points and 17 rebounds. Jim Kentucky. . .. 8 6 .571 1
Barnett scored 36 points and Miami .. .. ... s .J .500 2
Elvin Hayes had 26 and pulled New York . , ... 4 7 .364
down 23 rebounds for the
lnd.iMa . . , • • •4 9 .308 41/2
Rockets.
West
Tom
Sanders
and .John
W, L. Pet. GB
Havlicek scored 21 points each,
Oal&lt;land ...•.. 11 2 R46
Bailey Howell had 20 and 8111
Los Angeles .. 5 5 .SOO 41h
Russell 13 as the Celtics opened Denver , .. . 5 6 .455 5
up a 66-65 halftime lead over
New Orleans .. 5 6 .455 5
the Supersonics and led by as Dallas .... . . 3 5 .375 5th
many as 34 points during the Houston ... .. 3 6 . 333 6
third period . Art Harris led the
Wednesday's Results
outclassed SonJ.c.s with 16.
Kentucky 109 Denver tO I

Standings

ALL STYLES
ALL COLORS

Lay Away Now At

Downie-Gross
"The Men's Stor•"
Pome-roy
A1TEND 1!. SUPPORT
J~.

MIS S PAGEANT

WINTER

work," was Elliott's understate-

Browns p repare For Eagles

(rtlrUdl on sound llrt bodln)

You

a~t

the tame type ol

wlnler·lr~c!IOn

th•t comu on
'"Suburbanitt~""

CLEVELAN!l (LPO -

The

leading the league In interceptions gained with 24 and touchdowns scored through the air
with 21
Cleveland is also
among lhe top four in total
yardage
gained
w1th 3,401
yards.
Philadelphia leads the league
in only one department . .. and
not one they are likely to brag
about, The Eagles have returned more kickotTs. 29, than
any other team in the National
Football League.
Browns quarterback Bill Nelsen, honored Wednesday by the
Cleveland Touchdown Club as
tops on the orrense, is currently
rated sixth best in the NFL.
He has completed 108 of 202
passes for 1,564 yard.s and 16
touchdowns.
Nelsen's completion percentage is 53 .5 per cent, only 4.1
- - - - --per cent less than No . 1 rated
Miami 141 New York 126
Don Meredith of the Dalla.'i
Indiana 106 Houston 94
Cowboys.
Oakland 129 Los Angeles 125
Nelsen beat out Leroy Kelly
(Only games scheduled)
for the Touchdown Club honor,
Thursday's Games
the club's rules stipulate the
same player cannot receive the
Indiana at New Orleans
New York at Dallas
award two years in a row. WalOakland at Denver
ter Johnson won the award for
(Only games scheduled)
the best performance on the defense.
Thursday's Games
Atlanta at Detroit
Milwaukee at Chicago
(Only games scheduled)

Cleveland Browns moved inside
for practice Wednesday because
of bad weather. but they didn't
lei up in their preparations for
the Philadelphia Eagles.
The Browns feel Philadelphia,
which narrowly missed beating
New York last week. can't be
expected to lay down and die
despite their baleful 0-10 record
The statistics indicate, however:
that the Browns don't have
to worry about.
Philadelphia, beset with internal problems including a
"Dump (head coach) Kuhar ich" movement, is given little
chance to upset the Browns.
Cleveland Is favored to win by
more than two touchdowns .
The Browns will be going into
Sunday's game at the stadium

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1969] UN !OR MISS PAGEANT
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1967 HONDA CA77

7

-.----- .... --·-----

Big Ten t'ootball Uoundup

Gentle eye catching

Lucky Guesser is

District Convention held rerentTOWN CfH JNCIL MEETINC
The New Haw·en Town Lotm- 1.\• at Madison . W. Va . was giv Winner ofs Honda
cil met in regular session and en by Mrs. Bumgardner. A rethey wish lo announce thai there port on the Junior Garden Club,
MASON - Hussell Capehart.
will be no hunting with firearms The Proud Planters, was giv ~
Mason, won a Honda for guessen by the October leaders, Mrs .
within the Corporation limits
ing within one point the score
'Tom !loffman and Mrs. Hob·
Th1 s will be strictly enfor ced
of the Marshall .Western M..ichiA delegalion from the New Ha- ert Layne. The club voted to
glln game. A representative or
give a Christmas party for the
ven Woman's Club mel with the
Coca -Lola informed Mr. CapeLoundl and dis~·ussed the pos - club 11t their next meeting, Dec.
hart of his good forlWle and
cember 20 . A committee was
sibillty of expanding the library
reported that the Honda would
A representative from Pruden- appointed to serve with the Debe delivered within the next week
cember leaders to rrepare Cor
tial Insurance Compan..Y . Mr. Joe
or 10 days .
the party: Mrs Phi l Batey, Mrs.
Cook met with the group and
The contest end s December
discussed t&lt;;roup insuram·e for Harry Miller , Mrs . Roy Jones ,
7.
TI1e next game will be this
Mrs . Mel (lark , Mrs. James met on Tuesday evening forlheir Saturday. November 23. The distown employees
regular monthly meeting with
They discussed the laying of Housh, Mrs David l'ields . .Jr
trict in which he enlered the
Mrs . George Burns was ac- pres ident. John Hoffman, presid- contest is made up of Parkers~
a sewer line to the Humphreys
ing. Th1s meeting was held on
property line in the Ma,y-0 Ad- cepted into the club as a memthe
second Tuesday because of the burg, Huntington , Beckley, spenber. Mrs . David Fields, .Jr. was
dition They voted to pay all
re):..'lllar night being eled.ion da,y. cer and Logan.
bills due They 11lso voted to appointed to serve on the tele The group voted to give 11n
phone committee .
purchase two sinks and water
appreciallon
dinner to the band
The next meeting will be held
THE DAILY SENTINEL
tank for the water department,
for
their
effort
on tag day . It
and to install a dust to dawn at the Alex - Quillen Memorial
DEVOTED TO INTER EH OF
was announced that this was the
ME IGS· MASON A~EA
hght al the sewerage disposal Bwlding wilh Mrs. Da\'id t"ields,
largest tag day with the total ~I C HARD S. OWEN, P UBLISH E R
Jr
,
Mrs.
William
Gibbs,
Mrs
.
plant.
C hester T of\neh lll, Edotor
Harold Bumgardner as hostess- amount being over $I ,UOO . The
Attending the meeting w e r e
Publishe
d da il y eKcept Saturdo~ by
dinner will be held at the school
Mayor Thomas Grmstead, re- es. The annual Christmas part.Y
T he Oh io II all e y Pub lhhin9 Company ,
will be held at this time, gift ex- with Mrs. llobert Gilmore ser- 110 Muhanic 5t., Pomewy, Ohio ,
corder Helen Fields , eound l
ving as chairman .
45769 . B., s irw~u Dlfica Phone 992change and candy exchange.
members Jack Hess , Gary Hoosh,
2156, Edit01iol Phone 992•2157 . .
They
alsodiscussedtheChristRefreshments were served to
Arthur Thabet, Lewis Summers
Sec ond clou po s tage paid ot Pome•
mas part..y and dance held an- roy, Ohi o.
Also attending were Donald Oh- those attending: Mrs. Carroll
Nai iOngl &lt;Jdverflslng representative
Adams, Jr. Mrs. Phil B~ey, nually for the band but final Boltlnei ii·G..,llagher, Inc ., 12 f&lt;:uot
linger and William Kimes.
plans
will
be
made
at
the
next
Mrs. Donald Bumgardner, Mrs.
4111 St . , New Yorl. C ily, N•w York .
REI3LCCA CffiCl f MEETS
meeting. Plans were discussed
Sub•c•iption rotn : De livered b'f
The Rebecca Cirde of l he Harold Bumgarner, Mrs. Pete
cc rrier where OYOI !a ble 45 cefliS p41r
for
ttle
band's
trip
and
enterLutheran Lhureh Women ml'l on Burris, Mrs. Mel Clark, Mrs .
wMI.; one yeGr on odvonc11 11! the
ing the competition at Virginia Dolly Sentinel Ofllce, $23.40, :,x
Wednesday afternoon at t h e David Fields. Jr., Mrs. William
Beach on June 15 through JWJe month1, $11.70 . Thre" mo,lh $ , $5.85 ,
churrh with Mrs . H. H. \anee Gibbs, Mrs. Tom Hoffman, Mrs.
By Moton ~oute ... here carrier s11r•
20, 1969.
1
ames
Rousll
,
Mrs.
Roy
Jones
vi c " not available : One month $1.50.
as hostess The lesson for the
Several money - making pl·o- By "'"II: Oroe ~gr $10.00. Si)l month1
day was a contJnuation of the and tlle hoste.sses. Mrs. Miller
Jects
were discussed but no def- $5.25 . Thne mDnlhs $3.00. SvbH:rip•
study book, Mighty Mts of God , and Mrs. Layne .
l ion pdce incl..,jel Sunday Tim••·
inite plans were made. The next
WAllAM A HAND BOOSTERS
led by Mrs .J Y. Mr(,rew ,\
l-ntin•L
The Wahama Band Boosters meeting will be on Uet·ember 3.
shurl busmess meeting was con ducted by Mrs \ance. leader
Refreshments were scr\Oed to
those attendmg . Mrs . J . \' . Me·
IUIIAMrlll
Grew , Mrs. William Bu ssell.
I!Fillll
Mrs Annie P. Roney , Mrs . Edna
CDIITIUCTIONI
Burris . Mrs. Donald Bumgard Wbatevei your -taste in furniture,
ner Mrs Otto Grimm . ~ r g
you can choose with confidence
Wilham Powell, Mrs Harry Lay from F:lexslieel. Whether you sene . Mrs Herman LayneandMrs
lect contemporary, traditionlll, moVanre
dern or colonial, you will find an
Ci\RIJEN CLL1B MH:TJN( ;
impecc.able elegance in every piece
The Neha.clima Garden Club
that wtll be a proud addition to
met at the Atex-Quillcn Memor your home. This distinctive FlexIal Building With Mrs !lar ry
steel styling is available in oofas, 1969 Junior Min Pogeont, Pom•roy
aectionals, suites, chairs, and a J,. High Aud. No•. 24-B,QO PM
Miller and Mrs Hobert Layne
unique sofa-sleeper. Hundreds and
• as hostesses . Devotions were
hundreds of fabrics, all dororatorled by Mrs I ayne readmg a
se1ected for beautiful correctnesa
poem "Just fur Today ." Mr s
give you a choice of solids in 1 va:
Donald Humgardner , vi ce pre s riet~ of rich weaves, print"' , quilted
ident, presided 1n the absen(·e
fabncs,
matelasses, broca ; ~s. and
of the president. The roll tall
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
other
fashionable
fabrics.
was answered with "My (,reatest Blessing.''
1\ report oo the Ohio . r.uyan

two~year-old daughter

Lea Nikki and he's again working smoothly on the "Promises,
Promises"
tryout tour.
she checked Into the L. A. Bel
Jack Rollins and Charles Jotte
Air as "Princess Don Na Champack" .... Here's an unusual who discovered flocks or comedy stars - Woody Allen, Nichcouple these days: .. Miss Uniols &amp; May, Joan Rivers, Dick
verse" COrinne Tsopei's date
Cavett, etc. - finally decided
at the Golden Room was Dr.
to invest their taste and judgStephen Sax - her husband.
ment further: they've prodUcSally Ann Howes goes in shorted
Woody Allen's imminent moly for a m.Jnor shoulder excavavie, "Take the Money and RlO\."
tion .•.. ABC's Mr. Cool Dick
Cavett finally lost cootrol al- Joffe Is producing the film version of Woody's •4J)on•t Drink
ter listening to Timothy Leary's
the
Water" and the a&amp;tute twonoosense on the wonders ofaome
are producing (with David
"'grasa,'' lnformed LearY and
Merrick)
Woody's next Bc:IWy.
the network viewers what he
comedy, HPia,y It Again, Sam, n
thought of him; lat~ligiz­
plus a three..picture ABC - TV
ed and lnvited him back; r o r
deal; smart young lads.
what?

FREEl BALANCEI

on Salurday, in Middleport were:
Mrs. Frances Gehring, nonnie
and Sally; Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Ward and Hegina, all or New
Cumberland, W. Va.; Vickie
Werr1, New Manchester, W. Va.
Mrs. l{obcrt Lieving of Huntington, visiled l1cr moltwr, Mrs.
Clara nou5h and with Mr. and
Mr5. Adlai Licvmg.
Mrs. Amelia Gabelcin accompanied Mrs. Lievlng here, and
visited Monday and Tuesday with
Mr. Christy Bletner.

their

~· -

Kern 'Ready' For Big Tilt

AII..Stara@

sent for wife Angle Dickinson
IUld

·-· , _,_,_.. ....

•
~

~~

Black or White

$11·95 $12·95

ALL
13 Inch

Plus Tax

All
14-15
inch

Plus Tax

NO TRADE IS NEEDED

SAFETY STUDS INSTALLED AT
ADDITIONAL·COST.

RACINE SERVICE STAT ION

Enjoy a Hudepohl
THE BEER WITH ENJOYMENT BREWED RIGHT IN

�.-

2 -

The Dally Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0., Thursday, Nov. 21, 1968__

COmpo.er Burt Bacharach decided he couldn't work properly
without the right atmosphere and

Mason Area
News~

TH :\1\"SFERREU GUILT
MAI\ES HER A SLAVE

Dear Helen:
My father committed suicide
three years ago. A short time
afterward I met a man w h o
somf'what resembled him, and
wilo had JUSt separated {rom his
wife. lie hatl a big drinking problem :~nd ttlrcatened to take his
life.
Thout;h I am married to a ri.ne
man I tried to console this Cel·
low who, I later discovered, was
an alroholic and m need of psychiatry
He had financ-ial troubles, so
1 loaned him a good deal of
money whirh I probably won't
get bark. But rd be willing to
fo rget it if I could just be rid
of the worr;.· Each Lime I tell
him Pm through, he says he
can't lio,.c without me and he'!!
kill himseH. rm trying to get
111m mto an alcohol treatment
center , which will cost ar01md
$20U for five days. Where do I
go rrom there"? He's had treatment before. without success.
1 suppose I feel that I could
have saved m..v father's life had
l t ricd huder, and now, if I
turn Uus derelict loose, history
will repct~t 1tself. ·\ t age 50,
I can't face another tragedy .
The mall has a good Job (which
he hates). but his bills seem to
keep him broke .
l low l'an I gel free without
feeling guilty.' - CONSClfNri::

they visit each other's apartments as if they belonged there.
1\boot all I can get out of
her is, "We like each other very
'much." He appears to be a nice
person, but
SJould I insist that she come
home to live so she won't completely ruin her good reputa~
lion? Sb.e was raised in a rtne,
moral home. - UNBEUF.VING

Dear Un:
H you've raised your daughter with the right attitudes you
can trust her to make the right
decisions lor her time and place.
Perhaps ttley won't follow your
strict limitalions, but - she's
free and 23 .... and limes have
cha11ged - II.
Dear Helen :
In our neighborhood there's a
13-year..old boy who gets away
with murder - and Pm afraid
it miglll be wst that unless he
is stopped He has a v.'ild temper . Recently. if he hadn't been
pulled off a younger boy, t h e
child might ha.,·e been permanentls inJured . l:lewasb~nghis
head on the sidewalk, and choking him.
The parents think he is won derful, never reprimand him,
always say he was picked on
E\'en when the school complains,
they threaten to "gel the prin cipal's job ."
The kid sasses back, and dares
us to tell his father He's got a
gang now, and we're afraid a
BOLND
bad situation will get worse.
near l".B.:
r thmk you need psychiatric Wh.&lt;it c11n be done':' - THE
NEIGHBORS
counseling more ttlan does this
Uear Neigllbors:
parasite who has found an easy
lC talking to the boy's par mark and is playing her for all
ents doesn't help, tell them you ' ll
she's worth .
Weak and disturbed he Is, but call the police at the next sign
so long as he has you to lean of trouble. When a wild teen
organu:es a gang, lhe next stop
on . he m&lt;~y never help himself.
·r .1u've expiated your father's is juvenile hall - and this usuall y jar s a doting falher out of
death far Loo long . f\ow 1t's time
hi
s lethargy. - H.
for psychological insight - and
freedom from vncarned guilt!
This column is dedicated lo
1 urn your alcoholic over to an
family
living, so if you're hav expert, and get back to the man
ing
k.id
trouble
or JUSt plaintrouwho really needs you: y o u r
b le, let Helen help YOU. Stle
husband! - H.
will also welcome }'our own aDear Helen :
Our daughter is 23. ~e has musing experiences Address
,. met a man of 2G They n~ver llc.len Bolte! in ca.re ofthisnewsmention marriage . but she goes paper
off on weekends with him, and

New Haven Social Events

·.

,,
l

·,

of appeal. Carol Anderson,
16, of Edison, N.J.• leans ••
a hay rake at the New Jersey state fairgrounds Ia
Trenton. The New Jersey
state fair, tbe oldeat IB
America, waa first chart-

ered by Encland's KlDC
George in 1745.

Fri!'ndship Class
Treat Servicemen
l'I.IFTO:"-J - The Friendship
Class of the Clifton L'nited Methodist Church sent 20 Christmas
box~ s to servi rem en stationed ov ersea s. Some are stationed in
\'ictnam. !\orca , Germany and
Okmawa .
Those to receive the Christmas remembrances are J ames
I . VanMeter, Michael A. Fields,
Jackie L. VanMeter . \!fred L.
Housh, Thomas H. 1\imes. ,J.
P. Karschnik, Harry Joe Sn11th,
Denver Gibbs, Booth \'v. Huff.
man.
Okey VanMeter, lJaVJd J. Arthur. l\ennetl1 1.. nass Carby
Sawyer , !.loyd D. Moore, Da \ id .1 . Castle , llerberi. N. F:lliott. Bobby Hay Bailey , Hoy
,\. Young, Marshall M. Bland
and Charlie D. Oliver .

Harri~onville
Ttle Harrisonville P.T.A. Carni\•al, all da,y last Saturday and
into the evening, was well attended anli a distinct success
The art landscape oil painting, donated by .loan Greene, was
won by Freda Greuser of Pomeroy . The electric hot dogger, won
by narbara Black. was donated
by /\rnold Grate; the carving
knife , donated by Mrs. Nellie
Borgan and Mrs. Joyce Vance
was won by Mrs. Gheen and the
blanket , donated by the I'.T.A.,
was won hy Ronnie Vance.
Cake walks were won b~ Cattly
Stanley, Teresa Hayes and An cil Cross. The cider walk was
won by Nora Jordan.
School Candidates, who were
crowned and received gifts, were
Princess, L i n d a Donahue;
Prince, Lanny Chapman; queen,
Honda McGrath 'lrtdKing, James
Clark .
Thanks ar e extended Lo all who
helped stage the carnival , said
Mr s. Joyce Vance , JYfA president.

Notes

Mr. and Mrs. Uobert Compduck Sen. Morse.
BY JACK O'BRIAN
soo aOO Connie of Middleport,
Pinta! zed folk -diva Brenda
NEW YORK - Chuck Perey
have moved to. Haven Heights.
Lee's
expecting her second heir
has a Rig Job offer wtth Nixon
Mr. Cqmpson is employed on
ln '69 .... Ro~ Marciano and
.•. . The Peter Findlay s r1 the
construction in Alaska. He reRocky Graziano arm - wrestled
57th st. arl gallery set will
turns home for a visit every
at the 57th St. Olock Full O'Nuts;
vernissage the new baby early
two months.
TV could've made a special of
In '69 . . . The Denniston SlaterMrs. Alma Peck, Mrs. Sharon
the no-&lt;Ontest •••. Cary Grant
Averell Dalltz romance is serJacobs and Mike, Mrs. Sharon
can star with any gal at I h e
Peck, Lisa and Lorrie all or ious enough ror Denny to toss;
film-top but he'll co-star with
a big birthday bash ror t h e
Chillicothe, Ohio, visited recentex-wife Dya.n Cannon in ap;y fu.
grass widow of Moe Dalitz of
ly with Mrs. William Camp and
ture filmi she states flatly there
Ule Vegas - Cleveland - Detroit
family of Mason.
ls no chance of a reunion; and
hushall register.
Mr. and Mrs. William SWHt
further, she posltively won~ wed
N. Y. state Sen. Paul Bookand children or Carrollton, Ky.,
aga.ln in the foreseeable decade
visited recently with Mr. and son wUI toss his yarmulke into
.... Babe Dtdrlkson's widower
Mrs. Albert Swatzel, and son, the ring for N, Y. mayor; he
George Zaharias is dating Groulooks like a young L or n e
Norman, and with Mr. and Mrs.
Greene .... A prominett gal sent: cho's ex-wife Kay.
Dana SWift in MiddleporL
Sllrley Mac Laine is at t h e
Miss Donna Jeffers of Colum- the following telegram to her_
point where she hates autograph
bus, Ohio, visited rl:!cently wiili fiancee punning his first name:
seekers ..•. Helen O'COI\nell, who
"Wayne
Wayne
Go
Awa,y"
....
her sister and brother-l~aw,
loves •em, busted the M I a m i
Same
must•ve
been
sent
to
lameMr. and Mrs. Bob Oliver and
Beach EdenRoc'saltendancerec(amily.
ord and returns for another melMr. Curtis McDaniel, Jr., of
odic attack this month .... BrigJenkinstoWn, Pa. , visited recentitte Bardot was introduced to
b with his parents, Mr. and
playmate
Patrick GlUe by her
Mrs. Curtis McDaniel, Sr., In
last previous lunmate, Gig! RtzMason.
Theme of Program
d . .•. The Ford in Omar Starr.t.rs. James Loyd and son,
it's present is Mias America,
Kevin of Marion, Indiana; Mrs.
MASON- ''Thanksgiving'' was Judith AM Ford.
Stanley Saunders and family of
"The Green Carnation" was
the
theme or the program of the
Columbus, were here to attend
a 1966 fUm rating shrugs, athe funeral of their uncle, Mar- Loyal Helpers Sunda,y S c h o o I
bout Oscar Wlldei with the new
Class
of
Albright
United
Methocus McDaniel in Point Pleassexual who • cares permissivedist
Cllurch
at
a
recent
meeting
ant, and vi sited their parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis McDaniel, at the home of Mrs. Evelyn Ste- ness the Peter Finch film wlll
wart with Mrs. Roberta Yoong be reissued with additional exMason.
plicit sex - deviaUon sequences
of
Clifton as co-hostess.
Mark Gilkey, seven year old
only Implied In the '66 stiff.
Mrs.
Young
read
the
scripson of Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Barbara Hutton's reported
\rilkey of Clifton, is recuperat- ture and Mrs. llomer Johnson
from her ''Prince" but
led
in
prayer.
Mrs.
Dorothy
Carting from a tonsillectomy at the
wright
read"SacrificeofThanksVeterans Memorialllospital. Ue
is expected to return to his giving," and Mrs. Homer Johnson, .. A Basket of Thanksgivhome on Tuesday.
Charles Blake, Clifton, under- ing," Mrs. Ruth Riley, HThankwent an appendectomy on Mo00a)' fulness, Little Blessings,'' Mrs.
morning at the Veterans Memor- Bill Clay; "Give Thanks,'' Mrs.
ial Hospital. lie is the son of Darrell Jenks and Mrs. Verla
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Blake, Clif- Workman read "Thanksgivintl:."
Winners in the Bible Quiz con[O~
test
were Mrs. Homer Johnson,
Visiting with Mrs. Fred JohnMrs
.
Ruth Riley and Mrs. Darson, ?-.1r. and Mrs. Tom Hedrell
Jenks.
The latter also won
man and attending the wedding
the
door
prize.
of Hay Redman and Joyt·c Long

Thanksgiving is

OIOOSE FLEXSTEEl

BAKER FURNITURE

..-

••

... .

... . ··,

early this week and will a loss. The Uon&amp; are heavy
L'Omplete the task of filling the favo~ites.
Sixth-ranked Kansas is a oneremaining berths after Saturpoint favorite over Missouri, a
dlly's games.
Gator Bowl participant.
Buckeyes Slight Favorite
Georgia, which accepted a
Second-ranked Ohio Slate is
favored by follJ" points to make &amp;!gar Bowl bid, Is idle this
its rtrst Rose Bowl trip since weekend as is seventh.....-anked
the 1957 club. The Buckeyes, Texas, one 0( the teams
seeking their first perfect involved in the three-way fight
record since 1954, have an 8-0 for the Southwest Conference
battle and a
mark while Michigan State is 8- championship
contender
for
the Sugar or
1.
Cotton
nowls.
Top-ranked USC, also 8-0,
Tennessee Favored
tangles with cross-city rival
Eight-ranked
Tennessee, one
UCLA witll the O.J. Simpson-led
of
the
Cotton
B-owl
teams, is
Trojans favored by 14.
favored
over
Kentucky
and
Penn State, pride of the F..ast
bowl-hopeful
Arkansas
(No.
9)
and ttle nation's third-rated
is
picked
by
six
over
Texas
team, takes on arch rival
Pittsburgh as the Nlttany Lions Tech.
A big game In the West sends
prepare for lhelr Orange Bowl
Wyoming
against .1\rizooa at
appearance againsl Kansas and
Tuc800
with
the
Western
shoot for their ninth win without
Athletic Conference title and a
bowl bid at stake
In the F..ast, the big game is
the Yale-Harvard battle al
Cambridge for the Ivy League
title. Yale enteres the contest
with the nation's longest wina~ ~RR.A'/ O,I..P!!RMAN
ning streak among the major
colleges (16) and is a seven
Newspaper Enterprise Associ1tlon
point favorite.
Stanford and Calllornia tangle
on the West Coast for the glory
that comes with winning t h e
game and the Golden Bears are
. No ~ack. of confidence in Ohio State's Rose Bowl prelen·
favored by six.
~1ons .m Columbus . Even before the Buckeyes faced Mich·
In other big ravalries, Utah
1gan m the Rose Bowl showdown-three weeks before to
plays utah state, Syracu10e
be exact-a gro up of local citizenry chartered and HUed a
tangles with West VIrginia,
plane for Pasadena.
Wa.l!.hington faces Washington
The "Joe Must Go" fever In Philadelphia, with banners
State,
Duke
is at NorU1
urging the departure of beCarolina,
Louisiana
State at
leaguered Coat!h Joe Ku·
Tulane, Oregon at Oregon State,
harlcb of the Eagles, bas
been caught by the playBoston at Massachusetts, India: en. "Now," notes 3'7-yearna at Purdue, Baylor at
. old placekicker Sam Baker,
Southern Methodist and Air
· "they add, 'And Take Sam
Force at Colorado.
By STEVE SM!L,\N!CII
UPI S)Jorts Writer
The cupboard will be almost
bare
Saturday
£or college
footbaJl teams looking ror bowls
but the oldest cup of them all,
the Rose Bowl, wtll be there
waiting to be picked up by
either Ohio State or Michigan
:SOuthern California already
has its hands on the Rose Bowl
as the West Coasl representa·
tive in the Pasadena classic and
the CO-{)wner will be established
Saturday when Ohio state and
Michigan clash in ttle Hlg Ten
title game.
Sb.ould the contest e~d in a
tie, Ohio ~te would represent
the Midwest since Michigan
visited Pasadena more recently
than the Buckeyes.
The Rose, Sugar, Cotton and
&amp;m Bowls signed four schools

KO.DDaN Hl6lfiCihTo
FOR THE YOUNG INFANT THRU 12

SLIPS

DRESSES

Cotton Blend &amp; Nylon

BY
Nanette, Cinderella
and Polly Flinders

Lan By

CARTER

Infant
thru sizlt 12

Gditt1! 1/0llltl4ltt

'Sky-High' Fans

THE KIDDIE SHOPPE
ON THE T IN MIDDLEPORT, 0.
For Limited Time Only
825xU
855xU

28.00

Wltb You.• " ...

ASHLAND SERVICE

. Interesting bit a b o u t
· hot Cincinnati U. passer
. Greg Cook, whom the pros
. like !he's 6-4 and can throw

992-3535

T.v.
STAMPS

279 W. Main

Pomeroy,

0.

Baltimore

· a football 50 yards off his
ear without shiCting his
feetJ . Because he broke his
hand as a sophomore, Cincy figured he'd be around

Posts 13th

through the '69 collegiale

NBA Win

season. But the coach at
that time played the tall
·quarterback in the last two
games of the season--and
Greg suspects it's because
Joe Kuharleb
the coach knew his job was
~one and had no interest
~ ~~g Coo~·~ eli.gibility for his successor. ...

' Alitllftr Clncy aote: The pro baoketbaD Royals are plenty
"&amp;loomy about tbolr attendance figures. They play n of

ABOUT
VICKS
PO-RUB
.... 1.09

SYLVANIA

NOW

AGI

tbelr home games Ia Cleveland this season and two in
Omaha. Does that add up to a future move? ...
Before El~ridge Dickey gets to moaning too deeply about
the pr&lt;!Crastmation of the Oakland Raiders in breaking the
. c_olor Line at quarterback, he should be reminded that the
f~rst great T-~B in pro ~all, S1d Luckman, spent his entire
f1rst season w1th the Ch1cago Bears as a running halfback
. . . because Papa Bear George Halas wanted him to get
the full feel of the offense ... And Heisman Trophy winner
· Gary Behan, who wants to play quarterback as badly as
~Ickey, Isn't crying publicly because the Redskins ha\:e

htm at halfback ....
Omen: Biggest upset of the pro grid 11eason was New
York Giant~· win at Dallas, sparked by qb Fran Tarkenton.
His brothers oame: DaUas Tarkenton . . . .
Penn State All-American Ted Kwalick, a cinch No . 1
draft choice as a tight end, got straightened out for his
future caree.~ bv seeing the ~ovie ~ersion of '·Paper Lion."
Notes Ted. It made me thmk tw1ce about turning pro. I
never real.ly kne~ ho~ t?,ugh they were . And I was im• pressed w1th thc11 pnde . . .. In Nittany Lion country
; they t~ll y~u the tou~hest ~uy on the undefeated team j~
defenstve lmeman M1ke Reid . . . .

That Ohio State rain of sophomore talent Isn't about to
end. Next year's soph crop wUI dred.(c uo a phenomeaal
placekicker named Stan White to solve the one problem

FLASHCUBES
Reg. $2.25

NOW

Reg. $1.79
NOW
AG-1

tbe Buckeyes bave had Ibis fall ....

$129

"BIC"

99

.

!

I1:

:
.-

Lot~ of rumors ~urrounding the bankrolling of the new
American Professional Golfers ( APG) tour because even
the conservatives figure It'll take a cool half million bucks
to operate the first year. But Billy Booe, the old Yale halfback who's the administrative boss of the new setup
denies them all when he says at least half the tourna:
ment ~ros are carrying the ~n~~al. freight by doubling up
on the1r dues-paymg $2.50 mitiatJOn and advancing the
same amount for their first year's dues-so thai the office
personnel can get paid . .. .
The revved-up Mlnuesota VJkiugs are aow elalming that
Carl Eller. their double-duty deleulve end, has passed
Deacon Jones or the Rams as the most feared rusher In

\ ; · !he NFL . . . .
Between you'n'me, desp1te all his game-breaking heroics
f a lot of guys close to the Giants will tell you Homer JoneS
,Z: doesn't deserve ;;toll-pro. ranking because he drops the short
.• . ones, sulks and 1akes 1t when he's not in on the play.

1.
\

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Regular

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SIZE

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$1191

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oz.

roll bar, mirrors, electric starter, large windshield,

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OF REASONABLE DRUG PRICES"

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wlll be Big Ten champion and replacing Tom Harmon, with
CHICAGO (UP0
Ohio will represent the conference in 2,349 yards to 2,J34.
toach Woody Hayes of the
the Roac Bowl against No. 1
~e's quaMerlNlck Rex Kern
Buckeyes,
who are ranked No.
is ready, and so Is Michigan's ranked Southern California.
2
in
the
country,
said all hands
"We
hope
our
regular
plays
aJI-llme rushing leader Ron
will
be
healthy
for
the contest.
work,"
said
Michigan
Coach
Johnson.
Kern,
who
was
knocked
out
nump
Elliott.
What
Elliott
All eyes will be on these two
of
five
Buckeye
games
with
inmeant
was
that
he
hopes
that
young collegians when the Big
juries,
returned
last
week
to
Ten "game of the year," pitting Johnson, who last week gained
lead
the
team
to
its
victory
347
yards
rushing
to
set
a
Big
the
conference's undefeated
Buckeyes and Wolverines Ten record, wtll have a good over upset-minded Iowa.
Hayes said the Buckeyes
against each other, takes place day.
wollld
complete their preparaThe
205..pound
Detroiter
is
alSaturday in Columbus.
tion
on
Thursday for the Saturso
the
team's
all-lime
rusher,
Regardless of the outcome,
day
game,
with a "no-pads"
either Michl.gan or Ohio State
workoul
In other Big Ten action, Mich igan State will lake oo Northwestern, Dlinois will play Iowa,
whlle Wisconsin plays Mimesola, and Indiana is at Purdue.
Several key players might be
missing when the final games
are
played among the remaindORLANDO, Fla. (UPO - U
Previously, the bowl matched
er
oC
lhe conference. Among
the Richmond Spiders get by small college opponents, but
them are Ton,y Ornatek, Dlinois
William and Mary Saturday, this year the format was
they have a good chance of ap- changed to pit the winner of the center suffering from a neck inpearing in the Tangerine Bowl Southern and Mid - American jury; halfbacks Bob Pernell and
Rick Thompson or Indiana; tacagainst Mid - American Confer- conferences.
kle
Ken Price of Iowa and tacence winner Ohio University.
Ohio University, now 9..0, and
kle
Brandt Jackson of WisconRichmond, 5..0 in Southern ranked 17th oo the United Press
Conference play, Is favored to International major college foot- sin.
beat the Colonials and a vic - ball ratings, already has the
tory would likely ensure the MAC title in the bag. It winds
conference Iitle.
up the season Saturday against
But the Citadel, 4-1 in con- Northern llllnois, but the outference play, is still in conten- come will not affect the trip
tion· should it defeat F..ast Car- here.
olina Saturday and Richmond is
Last year, bowl sponsors deupset.
cided they 1Vanted to switch
The post season football clas- from small to major college
sic will be played for the first contenders and signed a tWOUme this year at night on Dec . year pact witt! the two confer27 - a day belore the Gator ences.
OUR FINEST DUALITY
Bowl Game at Jacksonville.
NEW TREADS

. . . ,; --.. . .

c .illtll··~
"Our btat de(t'nae is the iorr
Bpota. Tht&gt;y're railing all onr
the plall"e !"

$450

RAWLINGS.HONDA .SAL
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Richmond Eyes Tangerine

Michigan

Bowl Berth This Weekend

Offense

'Solid'
ANN AHROR, Mh·h. (UPOMichigan•s oticnse has been
solid all season and Bump
Elliott figures it stlould be good
enoogh for
the
Big Ten
championship game with Ohio
State this Saturday.
"U it doesn•t work. then we'll
try something else, I guess,''
Ell iott said Wednesday as the
Wolverines went through a
nearly two-hour practice to
prepare for the game which
also will decide the Big Ten's
representative to the Rose Bowl
on New Year•s Day.
"We hope our regular plays
ment regarding the game that
will pit the Woh•erines (8-1)
against the Ruckeyes (8..0).
Those regular pla,v.s are built
around record-breaking llalrback Ron Johnson who gal ned
an incredible 347 yards and
scored five touchdowns against
Wisconsin last Saturday . This
set
an
NCAA single-game
rushing record, broke three Big
Ten marks and a bevy of
Michigan records, including one
built by Tom Harmon when he
was at Michigan.
The 205..pound senior from
Detrott now is Michigan's all time rusher with 2,34!1 yards,
replacing Harmon who had
2, 134.
Wi.tb Johnson leading the
Michigan offense, one of El liott's prOOlems is going to be
the Ohio State defense whicll he
praised highly.
Of Buckeye roving linebacker
Jack Tatum, Elliott said: "If 1
knew how we would play him, r
probably wollldn't say an,ywa.y."
"It should be a good-hitting
game,'' he added.

By t:nited Press International
It's pretty hard to overlook a
6-foot, 9-inch player, even in the
National Basketball Association
but that has been ~ Scott'~
fate during much of his sevenseason pro career.
Tllere was no overlooking the
former Portland Universit.v star
Wednesday
night,
however
when he scored six points in the'
last four minutes to pace the
Baltimore Bullets to a L14-110
victory over tbe .san Diego
Rockets.
T{le RulletB' 13th win in 17
gamOs enabled them to retain
their half..game Eastern Division lead over the Boston
Celtics who rolled over the
Seattle &amp;lpersonlcs, 139-92.
AD A ;-r ANV!NGS
Earl Monroe scored 28 points,
By United Press International
Ken Loughery had 26 and Gus
F...ast
Johnson added 20 for the Bullets
W, L. Pet . GB
while Scott weighed in with 14 Minnesota .. . . 7 3 . 700
points and 17 rebounds. Jim Kentucky. . .. 8 6 .571 1
Barnett scored 36 points and Miami .. .. ... s .J .500 2
Elvin Hayes had 26 and pulled New York . , ... 4 7 .364
down 23 rebounds for the
lnd.iMa . . , • • •4 9 .308 41/2
Rockets.
West
Tom
Sanders
and .John
W, L. Pet. GB
Havlicek scored 21 points each,
Oal&lt;land ...•.. 11 2 R46
Bailey Howell had 20 and 8111
Los Angeles .. 5 5 .SOO 41h
Russell 13 as the Celtics opened Denver , .. . 5 6 .455 5
up a 66-65 halftime lead over
New Orleans .. 5 6 .455 5
the Supersonics and led by as Dallas .... . . 3 5 .375 5th
many as 34 points during the Houston ... .. 3 6 . 333 6
third period . Art Harris led the
Wednesday's Results
outclassed SonJ.c.s with 16.
Kentucky 109 Denver tO I

Standings

ALL STYLES
ALL COLORS

Lay Away Now At

Downie-Gross
"The Men's Stor•"
Pome-roy
A1TEND 1!. SUPPORT
J~.

MIS S PAGEANT

WINTER

work," was Elliott's understate-

Browns p repare For Eagles

(rtlrUdl on sound llrt bodln)

You

a~t

the tame type ol

wlnler·lr~c!IOn

th•t comu on
'"Suburbanitt~""

CLEVELAN!l (LPO -

The

leading the league In interceptions gained with 24 and touchdowns scored through the air
with 21
Cleveland is also
among lhe top four in total
yardage
gained
w1th 3,401
yards.
Philadelphia leads the league
in only one department . .. and
not one they are likely to brag
about, The Eagles have returned more kickotTs. 29, than
any other team in the National
Football League.
Browns quarterback Bill Nelsen, honored Wednesday by the
Cleveland Touchdown Club as
tops on the orrense, is currently
rated sixth best in the NFL.
He has completed 108 of 202
passes for 1,564 yard.s and 16
touchdowns.
Nelsen's completion percentage is 53 .5 per cent, only 4.1
- - - - --per cent less than No . 1 rated
Miami 141 New York 126
Don Meredith of the Dalla.'i
Indiana 106 Houston 94
Cowboys.
Oakland 129 Los Angeles 125
Nelsen beat out Leroy Kelly
(Only games scheduled)
for the Touchdown Club honor,
Thursday's Games
the club's rules stipulate the
same player cannot receive the
Indiana at New Orleans
New York at Dallas
award two years in a row. WalOakland at Denver
ter Johnson won the award for
(Only games scheduled)
the best performance on the defense.
Thursday's Games
Atlanta at Detroit
Milwaukee at Chicago
(Only games scheduled)

Cleveland Browns moved inside
for practice Wednesday because
of bad weather. but they didn't
lei up in their preparations for
the Philadelphia Eagles.
The Browns feel Philadelphia,
which narrowly missed beating
New York last week. can't be
expected to lay down and die
despite their baleful 0-10 record
The statistics indicate, however:
that the Browns don't have
to worry about.
Philadelphia, beset with internal problems including a
"Dump (head coach) Kuhar ich" movement, is given little
chance to upset the Browns.
Cleveland Is favored to win by
more than two touchdowns .
The Browns will be going into
Sunday's game at the stadium

LOOK! •• FOR
Interior &amp; Exterior
Carpenter Work
Repair and Painting

tread design
011r

nylon

winter llret.

775d4
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WE NOW HAVE EQUIPMENT TO STUD
NEW and RECAPPED TIRES THAT HAVE
THE HOLES INSERTED IN THEM.
1969] UN !OR MISS PAGEANT
POMEROY ]R . ll!Gil AUD .
NOVEMBER 24- 8:00PM

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PHONE 992·2101

POMEROY, 0.

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when you're in a beer frame of mind

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Locust St.
Middleport, 0.

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AT RAWLINGS
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VILLAGE PH

CYCLE.
THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL
1967 HONDA CA77

7

-.----- .... --·-----

Big Ten t'ootball Uoundup

Gentle eye catching

Lucky Guesser is

District Convention held rerentTOWN CfH JNCIL MEETINC
The New Haw·en Town Lotm- 1.\• at Madison . W. Va . was giv Winner ofs Honda
cil met in regular session and en by Mrs. Bumgardner. A rethey wish lo announce thai there port on the Junior Garden Club,
MASON - Hussell Capehart.
will be no hunting with firearms The Proud Planters, was giv ~
Mason, won a Honda for guessen by the October leaders, Mrs .
within the Corporation limits
ing within one point the score
'Tom !loffman and Mrs. Hob·
Th1 s will be strictly enfor ced
of the Marshall .Western M..ichiA delegalion from the New Ha- ert Layne. The club voted to
glln game. A representative or
give a Christmas party for the
ven Woman's Club mel with the
Coca -Lola informed Mr. CapeLoundl and dis~·ussed the pos - club 11t their next meeting, Dec.
hart of his good forlWle and
cember 20 . A committee was
sibillty of expanding the library
reported that the Honda would
A representative from Pruden- appointed to serve with the Debe delivered within the next week
cember leaders to rrepare Cor
tial Insurance Compan..Y . Mr. Joe
or 10 days .
the party: Mrs Phi l Batey, Mrs.
Cook met with the group and
The contest end s December
discussed t&lt;;roup insuram·e for Harry Miller , Mrs . Roy Jones ,
7.
TI1e next game will be this
Mrs . Mel (lark , Mrs. James met on Tuesday evening forlheir Saturday. November 23. The distown employees
regular monthly meeting with
They discussed the laying of Housh, Mrs David l'ields . .Jr
trict in which he enlered the
Mrs . George Burns was ac- pres ident. John Hoffman, presid- contest is made up of Parkers~
a sewer line to the Humphreys
ing. Th1s meeting was held on
property line in the Ma,y-0 Ad- cepted into the club as a memthe
second Tuesday because of the burg, Huntington , Beckley, spenber. Mrs . David Fields, .Jr. was
dition They voted to pay all
re):..'lllar night being eled.ion da,y. cer and Logan.
bills due They 11lso voted to appointed to serve on the tele The group voted to give 11n
phone committee .
purchase two sinks and water
appreciallon
dinner to the band
The next meeting will be held
THE DAILY SENTINEL
tank for the water department,
for
their
effort
on tag day . It
and to install a dust to dawn at the Alex - Quillen Memorial
DEVOTED TO INTER EH OF
was announced that this was the
ME IGS· MASON A~EA
hght al the sewerage disposal Bwlding wilh Mrs. Da\'id t"ields,
largest tag day with the total ~I C HARD S. OWEN, P UBLISH E R
Jr
,
Mrs.
William
Gibbs,
Mrs
.
plant.
C hester T of\neh lll, Edotor
Harold Bumgardner as hostess- amount being over $I ,UOO . The
Attending the meeting w e r e
Publishe
d da il y eKcept Saturdo~ by
dinner will be held at the school
Mayor Thomas Grmstead, re- es. The annual Christmas part.Y
T he Oh io II all e y Pub lhhin9 Company ,
will be held at this time, gift ex- with Mrs. llobert Gilmore ser- 110 Muhanic 5t., Pomewy, Ohio ,
corder Helen Fields , eound l
ving as chairman .
45769 . B., s irw~u Dlfica Phone 992change and candy exchange.
members Jack Hess , Gary Hoosh,
2156, Edit01iol Phone 992•2157 . .
They
alsodiscussedtheChristRefreshments were served to
Arthur Thabet, Lewis Summers
Sec ond clou po s tage paid ot Pome•
mas part..y and dance held an- roy, Ohi o.
Also attending were Donald Oh- those attending: Mrs. Carroll
Nai iOngl &lt;Jdverflslng representative
Adams, Jr. Mrs. Phil B~ey, nually for the band but final Boltlnei ii·G..,llagher, Inc ., 12 f&lt;:uot
linger and William Kimes.
plans
will
be
made
at
the
next
Mrs. Donald Bumgardner, Mrs.
4111 St . , New Yorl. C ily, N•w York .
REI3LCCA CffiCl f MEETS
meeting. Plans were discussed
Sub•c•iption rotn : De livered b'f
The Rebecca Cirde of l he Harold Bumgarner, Mrs. Pete
cc rrier where OYOI !a ble 45 cefliS p41r
for
ttle
band's
trip
and
enterLutheran Lhureh Women ml'l on Burris, Mrs. Mel Clark, Mrs .
wMI.; one yeGr on odvonc11 11! the
ing the competition at Virginia Dolly Sentinel Ofllce, $23.40, :,x
Wednesday afternoon at t h e David Fields. Jr., Mrs. William
Beach on June 15 through JWJe month1, $11.70 . Thre" mo,lh $ , $5.85 ,
churrh with Mrs . H. H. \anee Gibbs, Mrs. Tom Hoffman, Mrs.
By Moton ~oute ... here carrier s11r•
20, 1969.
1
ames
Rousll
,
Mrs.
Roy
Jones
vi c " not available : One month $1.50.
as hostess The lesson for the
Several money - making pl·o- By "'"II: Oroe ~gr $10.00. Si)l month1
day was a contJnuation of the and tlle hoste.sses. Mrs. Miller
Jects
were discussed but no def- $5.25 . Thne mDnlhs $3.00. SvbH:rip•
study book, Mighty Mts of God , and Mrs. Layne .
l ion pdce incl..,jel Sunday Tim••·
inite plans were made. The next
WAllAM A HAND BOOSTERS
led by Mrs .J Y. Mr(,rew ,\
l-ntin•L
The Wahama Band Boosters meeting will be on Uet·ember 3.
shurl busmess meeting was con ducted by Mrs \ance. leader
Refreshments were scr\Oed to
those attendmg . Mrs . J . \' . Me·
IUIIAMrlll
Grew , Mrs. William Bu ssell.
I!Fillll
Mrs Annie P. Roney , Mrs . Edna
CDIITIUCTIONI
Burris . Mrs. Donald Bumgard Wbatevei your -taste in furniture,
ner Mrs Otto Grimm . ~ r g
you can choose with confidence
Wilham Powell, Mrs Harry Lay from F:lexslieel. Whether you sene . Mrs Herman LayneandMrs
lect contemporary, traditionlll, moVanre
dern or colonial, you will find an
Ci\RIJEN CLL1B MH:TJN( ;
impecc.able elegance in every piece
The Neha.clima Garden Club
that wtll be a proud addition to
met at the Atex-Quillcn Memor your home. This distinctive FlexIal Building With Mrs !lar ry
steel styling is available in oofas, 1969 Junior Min Pogeont, Pom•roy
aectionals, suites, chairs, and a J,. High Aud. No•. 24-B,QO PM
Miller and Mrs Hobert Layne
unique sofa-sleeper. Hundreds and
• as hostesses . Devotions were
hundreds of fabrics, all dororatorled by Mrs I ayne readmg a
se1ected for beautiful correctnesa
poem "Just fur Today ." Mr s
give you a choice of solids in 1 va:
Donald Humgardner , vi ce pre s riet~ of rich weaves, print"' , quilted
ident, presided 1n the absen(·e
fabncs,
matelasses, broca ; ~s. and
of the president. The roll tall
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
other
fashionable
fabrics.
was answered with "My (,reatest Blessing.''
1\ report oo the Ohio . r.uyan

two~year-old daughter

Lea Nikki and he's again working smoothly on the "Promises,
Promises"
tryout tour.
she checked Into the L. A. Bel
Jack Rollins and Charles Jotte
Air as "Princess Don Na Champack" .... Here's an unusual who discovered flocks or comedy stars - Woody Allen, Nichcouple these days: .. Miss Uniols &amp; May, Joan Rivers, Dick
verse" COrinne Tsopei's date
Cavett, etc. - finally decided
at the Golden Room was Dr.
to invest their taste and judgStephen Sax - her husband.
ment further: they've prodUcSally Ann Howes goes in shorted
Woody Allen's imminent moly for a m.Jnor shoulder excavavie, "Take the Money and RlO\."
tion .•.. ABC's Mr. Cool Dick
Cavett finally lost cootrol al- Joffe Is producing the film version of Woody's •4J)on•t Drink
ter listening to Timothy Leary's
the
Water" and the a&amp;tute twonoosense on the wonders ofaome
are producing (with David
"'grasa,'' lnformed LearY and
Merrick)
Woody's next Bc:IWy.
the network viewers what he
comedy, HPia,y It Again, Sam, n
thought of him; lat~ligiz­
plus a three..picture ABC - TV
ed and lnvited him back; r o r
deal; smart young lads.
what?

FREEl BALANCEI

on Salurday, in Middleport were:
Mrs. Frances Gehring, nonnie
and Sally; Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Ward and Hegina, all or New
Cumberland, W. Va.; Vickie
Werr1, New Manchester, W. Va.
Mrs. l{obcrt Lieving of Huntington, visiled l1cr moltwr, Mrs.
Clara nou5h and with Mr. and
Mr5. Adlai Licvmg.
Mrs. Amelia Gabelcin accompanied Mrs. Lievlng here, and
visited Monday and Tuesday with
Mr. Christy Bletner.

their

~· -

Kern 'Ready' For Big Tilt

AII..Stara@

sent for wife Angle Dickinson
IUld

·-· , _,_,_.. ....

•
~

~~

Black or White

$11·95 $12·95

ALL
13 Inch

Plus Tax

All
14-15
inch

Plus Tax

NO TRADE IS NEEDED

SAFETY STUDS INSTALLED AT
ADDITIONAL·COST.

RACINE SERVICE STAT ION

Enjoy a Hudepohl
THE BEER WITH ENJOYMENT BREWED RIGHT IN

�. •. ,.... .
~-

Mrs. Powell's Students Present
Recital Sunday at Wahama High

In Service, BallorBoy, Keith Ashley; It'• A Great Country Over
Here. vocal, by The Palettes; Bell
Bottom TrOusers, vocal, b)' Pat-rfcla Keeter; SaiUng, plano, by
Dlarw. Bumgarner; March Right

On, plano, by Donald G.brltach;
Marines Hymn, piano, by Gene

Pickens;

MASON -

Mrs. Paul B. Pow-

ell oC New Haven presented her
piano, organ, voice and accordian students in a recital on Sunday at the Wohamo High School.
The theme for the recital waa
"America, of Thee I Sing." Master of Ceremonies was Rick Pow·
ell, stage manager was Jon Ridg·
way, and !ltage pronwter was J~
&lt;1y Lothey.
The program was divided into
Ove parts, each representing an
era of American mualc.ltopened
wlttl the '~Battle Hymn of the Re-public" pl-_yed on lhe organ arxt
piano by Mrs. Powell and Keith
Ashley, followed by "TheStar
Spangled Banner." The Palettes,
a musical singing group organized by Mrs. Powell consisting
of Donald
Gabritsch, L i s a
Scott, Gene Pickens, Martha

Holiday Ball
T A~K EllliCTEO - ThL' first of five large water storage
tallks , and one pre ss ure la Jlk, l1as been installed for the Tuppers Plains-Chester rural wakr system on the Donald Mora
farm, Roule 7. Th is rank hold s 150,000 ga llons of water. Officials of the $.J mi l l ion wawr s~ stem, finanl'cd by the Farmers
Home Adminis tra t ion and an Economk Deve lopment Administr ation grant, sa it.! the general comraclor, Nardei Constru('tion
Co., is progre .o;sing nwtdl.y on the im;t.allation which will service a large seftion of Meigs County and some of Athens COW1t~,; .
The projcd is app r oximate!:. 60 per cem completed.- Sentinel
Photo.

Last year- primarily due to the lack of an organization to head
the project - Chrisunas gifts for Meigs County patients at lhe Athens State Hospital were not nwnerous.
However, this year a g ro~ has agreed to take on the pr oject,
which should give it a real s hot in the arm.
It seems almost unbelievable, but Meigs County does ha'e 70
patients confined to the Athen s State Jtuspital. There are 39 men
and 31 women.
The grolC) taking over tile project this year will be Meigs Salon
9 and 40 with Mrs. Mary Martin as chairman.
The group will establi sh a headquarters and for a coq:~le of days
before tht: Dec. 10 deadline, the headquarter s will be cpen all day
ao lhat residents wi s hing to donate presents may drop tbem by the
building.
•
What is a('ceptable? Men at the hospital can use socks tobacco
1...
.
•
'
e'll..rettes, p1pes, shaving brushes, tiesarx:l other related items. Women can use any kin:l of cosmetics, jewelry, small purses, stretch
cloves and of course, both the men and women like canti)'.
All of the gifts are to be taken to the headquarters unwrapped,
Mrs. Martin and her groLP will go to the hospit.a.l on Dec. 10 to help
wrap gifts.
Perhaps, you'd like to bring before your grot41 at its December
meeting the possibllit,y of its making some contribution to the effort
- or feel free to do so as an iOOividual.
One grot() which aiW8l'S brightens patients' Christmases at
Athens Hospital Is the Rock Springs -Grange. Whether there is an
organized project or not in Meigs County, the Hock Springs group
bas been one of the most d~lliable.
A little later, Ibis column will be bringing information on tht! location of the collection headquarters for the gift collection au! the
hours II will be open.
In the meantime, how about gi ving it a little thought?

Is Planned
November 30th
PT. PLEASANT - Proceeds
from the ''Holiday Ball'' sponsored by the local Jr. Woman's Club
will be used for the state project
Camp Galahad.
C a m p Calahad, located in
Southern West Virginia, is composed of three camps - Camp
Na!1oma !or diabetic children,
Camp Hraille Crest for blind
children and Camp Apache for
mentally retarded children .
The event will be at the National Guard Armory saturday,
Nov. 30 from 10 p m. to 2 a.m .
A 15" portable black and white
television set with Mrs. Dave
Poore. chairman, will be given
away
The goal of the State Juniors
is to try to pur chase a truck for
Camp Galahad's use. The local
club plan to help by informing
the public of the camp's services
and also by monetary donations.
Mrs. Poore asks that anyone
knowing of children who would
qualify for these camps can contact her at 675..2906.

Krawsczyn ard sally HoJ'Irnan, Beaudru.I, a piano solo, by Mary
then sang "Pledge to the Flag." Biggs; Llbery Bell, piano, by PatThe first part of the recital ty Eblin; Dear Old Glory, vocal
waa Indian Music with the [n... b)' Donald Gabrltsch; Stars a n d
dian malden being portrayed by Stripes Forever, accordian by
Mary Krawsczyn. FOiJ.OII'lng came David Krawsczyn; American EmBig Chief Crazy Horse, a plaoo blem March, piano. by Jenntrer
solo, by Martha Krawsczyni The Patterson, al)d Under the Double
Wigwam, a piano solo, by Eagle, piano, by Shirley Giltey.
Dixieland Music and Folk
Marcy Holbrook, and Rllual
Tunes,
Southern Mister and Mrs.
Donee, a plooo sdo, by Silly
Gene
Pickens
and Sally Hoffman;
Hottman.
Dearie,
vocal,
by S8lly Hottman
American Emblem, stars and
and
Gene
PickenB;
Dixie, piano,
Stripes, featured Betsy Ross,
by Heidi Ashley; On the Levee,
p&lt;JI1rayed and sung by Martha
Krawsczynj Our Emblem, 1 vocal piano, by David Cole; Shortening
Bread. plano, by Susan Powers;
by the Palettes; There are Many
Flags, piano, by Patricia Keef- Oldsmo-Boogie, plano. by Darla
er; Old Flag of Mine, a vocal by Gerlach; When the Saints Go
Sally Hoffman; American t h e Marching In, organ, by David
Cole, and Yankee Doodle Boy,
vocal, by Gene Pickens.
Americans and the Tunes They
Enjoy, Miss Teenager, Linda Holbr~; At the MfJvies, plano, by
Pamela Burton; At the Ball, piano, by Vkki Burton; Always, piPT. PLEASANT - Funeral BOOt by Susan Biggs; Jenn.v LiM
services for Mrs. Carrie A.
Polka, plano, by Itayanna Cole;
Greenlee, 86, of Columbus, for- · Fascination, accordian by Susan
merly or Pl. Pleasant, will be Powers; Let's Dance the Polka,
held Friday 2 p .m. in the Crow- acco'rdian, by Susan Powers and
Hussell Funeral Home with the David Krawsczyn; Shivaree PolRev. James Hicks &lt;tficlatlng. ka, piano, by Carol Randolph;
Burial will follow in Loan Onk You All Polka, piano by Lisa
cemetery. Friends may ca.ll at. Scott; Goodnight My Someone,
the funeral home.
from The Music Man, organ, by
Mrs . Green lee died Tuesda,y Jacque Gabritsch; Somewhere My
night in University HospitaJ ln Love, piano, by Bernita Staats;
Columbus , Ohio, alter a long Hl- Moon River, organ, by Shirley
ness. ~e is survived by two Neigler; Stardust, organ, by Becdaughters, one son, one sister, ki Proffitt; I Can't Sa,y No, vocal,
15 grandchildren, 24 great grand ~ by ShirleyGiltey; Special feature,
children and 2 great - great. organ and vocal, by nick Powell.
grandchildren
Honoring the Men and Women

Service Set for

Mrs. Greenlee

Any Time
Of The
Year.

ADOLPH
SAYS:

Medley

of service
so~a, pinao. by Keith Ashley;
messed Is the Nation, plano and
organ, by Shirley Nelgler and
Shirley GOley.

Mrs. Powell preaeJUd awards
to the rollowing: Perfect atlerd-ance, Jacque Gabritsch and Donaid Gabrltach; Moo\ ootalandlng
student, Keith Ashley; highest
score on written test. Keith Ash-

ley; most memory work. Davkl
Cole; most improvement on their

chic orp.nlzatlons during the
past year 1 Donald GabrUach, u ..
Scott. Marthl Krawsczyn, Silly
Hol!man and Gene Plcke111.
Mrs. PCMell slated lhl\ th11

parUcular instrument, Patb' Eblin, Mary Krawsczyn, Shirley
Neigler and Shirley GUtey: most Palettes then sang ••Battle Hymn
help given to Mrs. Powell for of the Republtc""whlletbeCurtatn
presenting programs to various · wu closing.

1!
1

I

SIMON'S
MARKET

:

WE ACCEPT FOOD COUPONS
Open Every Week Day 9:00 to 7:00

1

Saturday 111 9

:

!

E. MAIH ST.

992-3975

POMEROY

.,! '

II

ORDER'

MapleYOURLawn

FRESH
TURKEY
1
1
TODAY I
1

·-----------------------------J - - - - -

ND

$

Xtra

BEEF ________s!:::1_

lb.

25c SIZE-ANY FLAVOR-THRU NOV. 24

SLICED ALL MEAT

Bologna --------•- 21bs·1. 00
SKINLESS

Wieners·----------· 21b. 98~
SQusage _________ 2 lb. 1.00
OUR OWN MIX-HOME MADE

FRESH, LEAN STREAKED

Sliced Bacon--------2lb.s1
Potatoes._______ 20 Ita. 79~

Buy I- Get l"F

ARRESTS REPORTED
PT. PLEASANT - Arrests
recorded at the county jail during
the past 24 hours are Eva Loretta Lee, 30, .Pt. Pleasant and Arra May Lee, 39, Pl. Pleasant ,
both charged with Intoxication.

--AT THE--

DAIRY VALLEY

OLEO

S)
l
b
s.
7

McCOY'S

MILK
gal.

79~

ADAMS

7

f
ln.

Cold Beer &amp; Wine-Carry Out Onlyl

Across From The Pomeroy--Mason Bridie

Jl {/AS GJJ/{YER.,
$AVESJI LOT(MORJ3
miANUl[OJWY

ROBERT II . WOODS, I, ASTOH, has undert.al1ertllle chore of redecorating the Pomeroy Church or Christ. Numerous improvements
are planned, with Mr. Woods doing most of the work involved. New
red carpeti ng and a red velvet ba ckdr op will be among the improvemems to the sanctuary.
·
. lnciden\Aily, one cannot reali:l.c the beauty of lhc stained glas1
wmdows at the Pomeroy churd1 unle~s he cntl;!rs the chw·ch. The
windows - all given in memof.)-· of loved One!oi dur ing the com;truction
in the 1920's - are stri king. If you haven't .&lt;;ee n them from the i~
terior , feel free lO drop by the church. You'll be welcome.
AT 2 P. M. SLNDAY MEMBERS of the Carleton Chur ch on the
Hoad will dedi cate a new room which ha s been added to the

church. The Rev. Clyde !linton, a rormerpa" tor, wil! be guest speak·
er. The Rev, .Jay Stile"-, pastor, hasextendedan invitation to the pu!).

lie.

a! League
Bottorff, a native of Lincoln,
Neb., succeeds llillma.n Lyons,
who resigned. Hichmoul is a
farm
club for the Atlanta
nra ves.

KEEP YOUR CAR
,.

'

l

f

ON THE GO. - - .. WINTER WEATHER AHEAD'

Permission was given to the
5ltl and 6th grade boys r r 0 m
New Haven Elementary School
to use the building for basketbal.l practice free of charge.
&lt;»mmittees were set up ror
the care or the building and pool:
Activity Committee, Robert GurUs, chairman, Mrs. Davis RoUsh,
Mrs. Neil Haymaker, Mrs. William RusseU; Building Committee, Gary Roush, chairman, Paul
Rlckanl, Danny Roush. WOllam
Kimes, and Mrs Gary Roush;
Pool: James Layne, chairman,
Danny Roush, William Kimes,
Mra. Eugene Hester; Finance:
R. G. Greene. chairman, Mrs.
Cecil Duncan. Mrs, Charles
Smith.
It was decided the Foundation
would sponsor a New Year's Eve
dance, Final plans wtll be announced at a later date.
Any Interested citizen Is wel come to attend the board meetinca or to join the Foundation
membei'shlp dues -are $1.
- Members attending were those
named above and Mrs . P a u I
Jllckard. Mr. and Mrs . Jack
Flesher, Mrs. Roy COOk , and
~ Mrs., A. L. ~rouse, secretary

:.... ~
- •.•.
l ot •1;1; •PE
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i~

,. f

-

~-...---

&gt;v"•·•-·''"••

.......

~ .. :'!',

S"

...

- ·-,·~

Book Fair to
Run 3 Days
'

.

NEW

HAvEr(

- - ' The Alex

•

ner. Patty Hill, Barbara Mathe- Burris, :t.arlotte Hoffman, Char11¥, Janie casto, Reba llerdman, lolle Grlnun, Robert Ohlinger,
Jerry Cuto. Dobra Hurt, Henry Addle Rhodes, Gail Adkina. Glr1
llunl , llarriet ThOmJ)IIfr'l, Janet Anowood, Beverly ~. Diane
Neul, Martha U. Crump, Jane
Cooper, Damon Morgan. Jr. (2),
Charles Watterson, M I n d y
YOWl!I, Ein'l L~ c:'lrle11, Frances
Lltchlteld, William Litchfield,
Diana GleM, Roberta Dowell,
Janice Lanier, Sarah William-

4-H Event

ln

BLUE RffiBONS - Katrlnka
Hart (2), :!iberrle stalnaker, Johnny Cullen, Denise li1ll!let (2),
Ruth Newberry (2), Tommy Cullen, Aaron Weaver, David Newberry, Martha NUes, Paula Bam-,
ette (3), Debbie Barnette (2), Patricia Keefer, Juanita Weaver,
Darlene Newberry, Linda Newberry (2), Teresa McDermitt (2),
Jack Cullen (2), Jack 91iflet, Jr ,
Johnny Cullen, Kenny Fry, MaxIne Weaver, Linda Hussell, Debbie McConlhay. Vicki McCoolhay .
Bever)J Yeager, Roxanne Wallis
(3), Carla Crookham, S h a r on
Froendt (2), Walter Roush, Ktu"en Froendt, Brendft Uarmon,
Tara Lee Lanier, Watula Oliver,
Gretchen WUson, Patdcla Fowler, Gloria Miller (2), Carol Bennett Ill). Georgia Fowler (2),
Lana Randolph, Charlene R a ndolph, Ley McCOy (2), Margaret
Buckalew, David Fowler, Sammie Doolittle, Martha Harmon,
Kay Harmon.
Anita Diane Tucker, Pamella
Seafier, Cynthia Douglass, Kim
Tacket~ Karen King (2}, Linda
Hall, Charlene Herdman, Marte
Fowler (3), Grayson Joseph Miller (5), Linden Mlller (2), Melissa Miller (2), Basil Greene ,
Byron ~inn , Carl Hall, Charles Herdman, Tammie Lievtng, .
Linda Bumgardner CO, Debra
Roush (2), Mary Bumgarner,
Teka Dewhurst (2), Vicki Bumgardner (2). VIcki Lleving, Tammy Sayre, Pauletta Randolph (2),
Jesse McClure (2), stella Randolph (2), Jayne Hart (2), Robert Dewhurst, Alan Hart, Joyce
LucUie Roush, Cindy Lievlng,
Donna McClure (2), Lesa Scott,
Danny Dewhurst (2). John E.
On! (2),
Ray Barnette, Beth
Ord, Carolyn Barnette, ElizaM
beth Ord, Lawahana McClure,
Susan Shirley, Lodisa Sayre,
Doug Sayre (2). Sondra !l!lrley,
Diana Livingston, Dennie Casto
(2), James Casto, Cllris Sayre
(3).
Debra Hunt {2), Susan H i 11,
Diama Absten, Alice Hunt, Dulene I.J.ylllgston, Plllllela H u n t,
Diana Casto, Rebecca Bletner
(3}, Denise Weclge (2), Debbie
Sayre, Ronnie Wedge, William
Livingston, Guy Keefer, Jerry Casto, Plrlllip Miller, John
David Little, Chules S t e v e n
Wedge, George Jr. Keefert Roger Stone, Carolyn Blolner, Kathy
Sayre, Diane Bwngarner, Debbie HOffman, Sue Bwngarner,
Judy Lathey, Thomas S a y r e,
Comie Hoffman, Angela Sayre,
Harry Haynes, Roger Bennett,
Berna Jean Burcham, C a t h y
D8rst, Valerie White, J o a n
Grimm, Ellen Moore, Marilyn
Denise McDaniel, Catherine PhilUps, David Phillips, Nancy Morgan, Donna Tattersoo, G a I e
Plants, Jane Cooper, Neesha
Voight, Robert Darst, Barbara

c

nam, Marsha Chapman, Debor-

ah BreMan, Mark Rayburn, Jay
Chapman, David Scholz, Barry
Henry, Jenny Arrington, Rita
Garland (2), Deborah Blake, Kim
Henry, steve Holland, Donald
Nott, Maureen HUey, carolyn
H~s (2), Rita Ryan, Billy Fry,
Connie GUland, Robin Johnson,
Cecilia Smith, Bonnie Rayburn,
Barbara Lewis, Paula Bocook,
D\Wile Johnson, Crystal Fruth.
David Smith, Michael Foreman, Scott Kebler, Karl Kebler, Kathy Foglesong, Clnda Foglesoog, Debra Stewart, Jane L
Swartz, Cheryl Burns (2), Penny Burris, Beverly Canon, ~elton Hoffman. ~rlotte Hoffman
(2), Bill Brinker (2), Mary Ar +

Utur, Joy Arthur, Nedra Cullen,Donna Winebremer 0), Terri
Oliver, Shirley Gerlach, Caral Friend, Darla Gerlach, Martlyn Grimm, ~l'llby HofCman,
Richard Wolfe, Tony Thompson,
Randy Parsons, Gary Hoffman,
stephen Gerlach, Debra Wolfe,
Kathy Keathley, Marlene Roush,
Pam Whittington, Janis Lynch,
Addi~ Rhodes (2), Judy R a YM
burn G!), Douglas Adkins, Judy
Halstead, Debra Crump, Harriette Rhodes. Debbie COttrill ,
Sarah Gregory, Patty Caudill,
Keith Durst, Jotm Gerlach, Bud~
dy Cottrill, Marilyn Poe, Angeline Rogar, Bridget Park, Sarah
Flowers, Martha Cottrill, Randall Wedge, John Holstein, Donna Thornton, John Watterson and
Bryan stover.
RED RffiBONS- Karen Fro~
endt (2), Juanita Weaver . Maxine Weaver (2), Joyce Berkley,
Beverly Yeager, Carla Crook·
ham, Rebecca Berkley, Denise
~iflet, Sharon Froendt (2), Beeky Fry, MJchael Newberry, Carolyn Keefer, Debbie Barnette~},
Steven Newberry, Carol Newber ·
ry, John Wilson , BUiiame McCoy, Gerald Buckalew, Guy David Doolittle, Jim Wll son, ca"rol
BeMett, Billy Toney, Sharon Flora, Meltssa Miller (2), Tamara
Cadle, Linden Miller (4), Karen
King, Billy King, Curtis 311M

Kl"'jacket. ,RI~hanl

""""""",.,.;,
Douglas Whoitcrarf, Charles
Held, Mike Legg, William R.
Hussell, Vicki Bumgardner,Donna McClure, Stella Randolph(2).
Jayne Hart, Pauletta Randolph
(2), Rroert Dewhursl (2), A I a n
Hart, Jesse McClure (3), John
Bumgarner, Bruce Hussell.
Treva Schultz, Angela Schultz
(2), Betty Campbell, Barbara McDermott, Marie Sayre, Kathy Sayre, Dl.anld. Absten, Christina
Absten, Debbie Sayre, Richard
Sayre, Cecil Absten, Jr , George
Jr. Keefer, Diana Casto, James
Casto (2), Doug Sayre, Chris
Sa,yrr~. 'Roberl Hunt, WUIIamLivlngston, Janet Sayre, Barry Haynes, Thomas Sayre, H a r r i e t
Thompson, Janellen Grimm, Jeri
Sue White, Janie Phillips, Jennifer stone, Debra Love, Mary Jane
Getty, Cathy D&amp;!"st, Pamela
Wheeler, David Phillips, Jimmy
TatterSQn, Charles Chambers,
Kathy Butler, Kimbetl,y Butler,
Tamara Tolliver, Mary Dabney,
David Watterson, Ernie Watterson, Teresa Purkey, &amp;le Liev ing. Brent Clark, Judy Llevlng
(2), Pamela Simpkins, Mlchael
Lleving, Sleila Lleving (2).
Gloria Young, Georgina Mc Causland, Goorgiama &amp;»nmer,
Mary Willlamaon, Bill Brinker, Randy Jackson, Diama Glenn,
Denny Glenn. Ame WllUamson,

.b.li

(2), Cathy Crump, Debra Beck.ner, Michael Beckner, Brenda
c. Roush (2), Marilyn Goodnite,
Charles Hoaman, Bernita staats,
Danny Litchfield, Samuel Scarberry, Robert L. Roush (2), Mar.o
vin C. Roush, Nathan C. YonM
ker, Kelley Wallace, Holly Johnson, Cheryl Lanier, Deborah
Breman . Stephanie L Scholz,
Timothy Cottrill, M. Melll!ll!la
Mowrey, Marilyn Wallis, Teresa
Nott, Steve Holland, Rocky SturM
geon, Gale Wa.IIJs, Rita Garland
Cn, Susan Fox, &amp;.!san 1babet,
Bonnie Rayburn, Barbara Lewis,
Connie Hughes, Ceclla Smith (2),
Beverly Carson CZ), Mary Fox,
Guyla Roush, Comie Lewis, Debbie Gilland, Thomas Foreman,
Donald Gabrltsh, Geoffrey Ca.brltsh, Ricky Burris, D a v i d
Smith, Sbelton Hoffman (2), Denise ParBOils, Nora Friend, Joyce Keathley, Barbara RotLgefl,
Patricia Wolfe, Mitchell Cullen,
Joseph Cullen, Sherry Arthur,
Kathy Friend, Carol Handley,
Harriette Rhodes, Belinda Litchfield, Roberta Heib, Danny Ra_y burn, Leslie Krodel, Lisa Krodel, Abra Burris, Robin Henry, Slaron WoHingbarger (2}.
WHITE R[880NS ~ Joy c eBerkley (3) , Rebecca Berkley,
Carolyn Berkley, Debbie McConlhay, Becky Fry, SherrleStalnaker, Aaron Weaver (2), James
Elias, Johnny Cullen, .Jimmie
staats {2), Karen Froendt, Jackie Srnith, Vicki McCooiha,y, Don
McCoy, Billiame McCoy, JuanM
ita Cantrell, Margaret Buckalew,
Guy David Doolittle, David row.
-ler, Robin Burdette (2), Carol$n
Doles, Deborah Thornton, Den-:
sil Sa.yre, Stella Randolph, Jayne
Hart, Lesa Scott, Robert Hendrick, Kent Sayre, Mary Bumgar.

, ""

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1

1i'

HOUIMY

'7M«!I
CALL
992·Jl57

HOME LAUNDIY
Pickup and Deifvery

No. S.Cond Middlo rt, 0.

HEAT WITH A
Portable Electric

A modern, dependable Gas dr)'t!r saves in so many
ways. Time. for instance. No more clothes line hang-ups. No waiting
for the sun to shine. Thmk olall the things you can do with the time you save.
And a Gas dr)'t!r saves Mom the back aches of lugging loads of laundry to and from
a long, long clothes line. No more bending and stretching,
Not only does a Gas clothes dryer save wear and tear on Mom. it saves
wear and tear on clothes. A Go,. dryer tumble dries the most delicate clothes
safely ... gently. They come out soft, fluffy, sweet-smelling as a day in May.
And of course, since a penny-a-load Gas dryer does the job for a fraction of
the colt of drying clothes with eleclricity, you can figure ~·n save well aver $100
in operating costs over the life ol the dryer.
A gas dryer is a time saver, a clothes saver, a Mom saver and a money saver.

• COMPLETE MOTOR TUNE-UP
• COMPLETE BRAKE SERVICE
BATTERIES, TIRES, LUBRICATION
WASH JOBS, QUALITY PRODUCTS

MECHANIC ON DUTY
9 to 5 Week Da s-9 to 12 Sat.

THINK OF ALL THE THINGS YOU CAN DO WITH THE MONEY YOU SAVE WITH GAS.

W. MAIN

HEATER
'•A•uh&gt;,.cttlc Thermostat

elnotanl Ribbon Hoat
• Tip_Ov., Safety Control

.I%9 J~nior Miss PAgeanl ·Pomeroy· Jr. High Aud.

.,

.

"1" - •

'

•· J

.~ ~ ~~..,..~r~.-.,:.it¥.~~~--..;.,,4" .:,....,. ........- .:..M~_..;._ ..~.-. '-&gt;_"''·'·'"''":"':-":''~':::'""~.":::'""':~.-.-..;.;.;;o;,o;;,;;..-":!i;iiiiiifiifjNioifrj.l!iiiliioiO&lt;.~

,: .... •,-,: ...; .....

WALl CHARM
SEMI GLOSS

4.75 v••·J.55qi.
5.25••1. J. 65 .t.

3.00 gol.
·suo qt.
DI$COHTIHUEO COLORS

SUPPLY

YOUTH
OXFORD

C. Housh, Sonya Yonker, Marion
Ricky t .ltchfleld, Rita
G.rland. Kay Schaekel, Cindy
Worl&lt;man, Jenny Thabet, Permy

Walson,

Black
C-D-E Width

Sclentlllc Heller

IHES

Scientists believe that the
magnetic pole- the point
where the compass loses its
directive force- is found in·
side the molten core Gf the
earth.

AT THE

GIFTS
ALL
AGES

• Riding Toys
• Hobby Sets
• Christmas Trees
And Trimmmgs

1969 JUNIOR
MISS PAGEANT
Pomeroy Jr. High
Aud. - Now. 24
8:00P.M.

RIGHT
GUARD
DEODORANT
Reg.
1.39

92

MEN'S SUNBEAM SHAVER

GIFT BOXES

19.98 VALUE
ShavllmOster
shaYer with
stainlen 1tnl shoving heod .
Prec:i1ion-honed
stoiroleu
steel blades . Professional
borbor type trimmer. Flip-top
latch . U.l. Approved. lndi·
Yidually boxed.

14.98
Eoeh pock c.,_t•lno ) lloolltel
poly wfoppo4 with heocl•r·
-Aoollfte41 Chriotmoo closl•n•-

SUNBEAM-HAll'

Rei. 1.09

CLIPPER KIT

VICKS

VAPO
RUB

12C
Rei· t:~St
\fil' s

~~'(tl

~s''''"

t,St
For The Men

BRUT AND
POMEROY, 0 .

.

PAINT SPECIAL yfiti}

ger.

-." '
'"

'BEATTf-JE RUSf-11

DIYCLEAI

H-r, Pam llaie•. CCionle~
or, Janie Wol~. V Wolflnlb&amp;rkor, ()pol WblllliQIIor·

dal•~r. Charles Oldaker, Brenda

GET INSTANT
0

......

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""'·

' Ralph Batey, a student at Glen· Quillen Memorial Library Is
viDe State CoUeie, spent the sponsoring a book fair, celebratweekend here yisitlng his par- ing National Book Week, with
onto. Mr. and Mrs. Filii Batey. the theme, "Go Places W i t h
DaMY Harbour hal returned Bookol", Thursday, Nov. 21 and
home after spending the past Friday, Nov. 22, 10 a.m. to noon
three years aerving in the U. S. and 3:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m . each
Marine corps. He just return- day, and saturday, Nov. 23, 10
ed from a tour of duty in Viet- a.m to 4 p.m.
The fair will be at the Thabet
man. He is married to the former Dianne Miller of NeW Ha~ building next door to Batey's
ven and they are the parents Hardware here.
Adults and children ue invitof a daughter, Wendy. DaMJ' is
ed
to see and select good books.
the son of Mr. and Mrs, Stan
Mrs.
Edwin stein, Jr., libruHarbour of Mason.
ian,
said,
uwe will have lots of
Debra McKnight, daughter of
paperbacks
and hardback books
Mr. and Mrs. James McKnight
will
be
lurnlshed
by the Log Cabundenienf- a tonaillectomy rein
Bodt
Store
of
Gallipolis,
Ohio.
cently at Holzer Hospital.
miss
thla
qlPOrtunlty!"
Don't
Mr. and !qs. ,,obert Cooke and
stone, Paul Douglas Meadows, 7
Mr._aod ~s. DIIUI,f Ymker _atDavid Kayser, Cathy Darsl (2).
tended the homecomltlll lootball
Darrell Stover, Alex Bryan,
pme at West Virglnla univerJames Dabney I
Randy 0 1 e att,y, Morgantown 1 recently. Mr. COURTSHIP
grove, Lury Crum, Beclcy Daband Mrs. Cooke' 1 son Phil is a
LONDON (UP!)- A courtship new (2), Calvena Spurlock, Ansenior at the UniversitY.
U.t started on the tennis courts ita Flsher,DooaldGIIIIsple, WanMr. and ·Mrs. Lloyd Roush vishal!l resulted in the engagement da Watterson, James Watter1011,
ited recently with their daugh- 1
SUaan Pyles, Diane McCOy, Jimt.tr and family, Rev. and Mrs. of British net star Peter Curtis my Davis, Sheila Lieving, John
and American Wlghtman C141
John Barringer and Stephen at
Johnson, Dale Johnson, Chester
player Mary Ann Eisel.
BurtooviUe, Md.
Roush,
C&amp;rol.yn Roosh, Barbara
Miss Eisel, of st. Louls, has
Beth Ann Layne, daughter of
Clark
(2),
Judy Llevlng (2), Terbeen ln England. the put six
Mr . and Mrs. James Layne, was
weeks competing in the current esa Purkey. GewatUia Johnson (2).
a recent patient at Holzer Medseries of indoor meets. The Cheryl U.wls, Linda S.adle, Nan .
i&lt;:a.l Center .
cy stanley, Georgianna. Sommer
cO\I)le plans to marry next
J~q RldgwBJ' ..... or Mrs. Char(2),
Susan Stanley (2), Reed Blain,.
September.
les Smith, a atudl'nt at Lindsey
Roger Hopson, Michael Ilq).son,
Military School. Wheeling, W.
Steve stanley, Pam. Sommer, Ju~
Va. vialted recettly at the home
lie Sommer CZ&gt;, ._Sidney Barker,
COMPLETES COIJ~'SE
cir his parento.
Sammy WUiiamson, Danny wn.
Pr. PLEASANT - Arm,y PriMr. and Mrs. Larry Hesson
Hamson, Mike Stanley, Bill Bar~
and children are vacationing for vate Emil E. Horrtnan. 23, son ker, Michael Dowell, Janice Latbe month at Miami Beach, Flor- ol Mr. and Mrs. Emll L. Hoffnier (3), Sarah WUiiamson, RoIda. Tttey will aloo visit rela- man, Routu 1, Point Pleasant,
berta Dowell, Michael Dowell,
completed nine weeka ot advanc- Mary Rawson, JerryLanler,Rantives while there.
Mrs. WIUlam Gibbs Is a pa- ed ln!antry tralnillg Nov, 9 al Fl.
dy Jackson.
tient at Holzer Medical Center. McClellan, AIL
Vicki Atkln6011, Chris McDaniel (ll), Howard Sayre, Lora Nash,
_ Judy Kalil! ()l), 011!1\er Gallowa.Y,
Jolrl Sayre, Della McDaniel 00,

DROP IN AT

' "."f·..·'

--~

Top Toppers, Happy Helpers, &amp;!san Spears, Elaine Rayburn, ~ Ka.v Dowell, Becky Williamson,.
lilli Billies, Leon Luckies, and Debra Wallace, Dennis Rayburn, Janice Lanier, Barbara WllllamMa.tine Rickard, Marilyn Good- son, Jerry Lanier, Brenda Wink·
Old Town Mountaineers· Red
nlte,
Keith D. Roush, David E. ler, Jotrl Sayre, Chester CaJbLucky !lar and Tranblazera';
Rousb,
Barbara Thomas, Cheryl way (2), Dat~id Winkler, Robyn
White, Beech Hill Telstars and
Lanier
(3),
Johanna Scholz (2),
Walla~. Martha Gaskins, DarGreen, Choctaw Chargers.
Debt
Miller
(3),
Teresa
Brenlene
Spears, Elaine Ra,yburn,
The following received ribbons
Frank 'Beckner, Debra Fields,
nan,
Bobby
Watson
,
Robin
BurM
Pamela
Rayburn, Doria Spears MaJC.ine Rickard. Georf;l:! c. 01oo their Individual 4-H proJects:

n.

Ki~sbury

NEW MM'AGEH
RICHMOND,
\'a.
(U'ORoger .1. Bottorff, a former
Universily of Nebraska ba~eball
player, has been named general
of
the
Hidunond
manager
Braves team in the Int.erna ti oo-

Coooty Amual 4-H Achievement
banquet Saturday, Nov. 16, at PL
Pleasant Jr. High School recognized hoy a and ldrls who did outstandlng work in their 4-H club
and 4-H projects.
Over 500 4-H members, parents, and 4-H leaDers heard Rooaid Gilkeson speak of the value
of 4..fl and challenge them to
greater participatlon. Gilkeson is
a graduate of West Virginia University, was in 4-H for eight
years, and was state public speak~
lng winner. He praised t h e
4-H'ers for outstanding accomplishments in Mason County.
The master of ceremoniea was
Damy Rayburn, older 4 H clW
member of the Trallblazers 4M
B
Club. The Mason Cooney 4-H
All gars plamed the event with
Violet Thomas heading up the
colorlul decorating. Favors were
given to the 4-H members by the
Citizens National Bank. Centerpieces were donated by Buffington's Greenhouse and The Flower Nook.
Receiving Natlooal 4-HAwards
lor outslanding work in their '
particular project field we r e
steve Stanley, Aaron Weaver.
Dale Johnson, John Johnson, Pen1\Y Burris, Diana Absten, Cheryl
Burns. Denise Wedge, Judy Loth.
ey, Marie Fowler, Ronnie Wedge"
Henry HWlt, Georglanna Sommer,
Maxine Weaver, Debbie Hoffman,
Carla Crookham, Randy Jackson,
Cheryl Lanier, Debbie Miller,
Carolyn Bletner, Darrell Stover,
BeclQr Dabney, Mary Rawson,
Rita Garland, Mlke Hopson, Rog.
er Hopson, Donna Winebremer,
Cheryl Bums, Robert Dewhurst,
Addie Rhodes, Roxanne Wallis,
Stella Randolph, Debbie MeCmlhay, WOllam Livingston. Jesse
McClure, Alan Hart, ~ella Lievlng. John BUI Cullen, Charlene
Randolph, Angela Sayre, and HarM
rlelte Rhodes.
Clubs receiving ribbons were,
Blue, Hop To lt, Busy Fours,
Happy Hustlers, 4 - Corners,
Mountain
Climbers,
WiDing
Workers, Letart Pioneers, Tip

vem!ier .

U.S. N0. 1

2 For 1 Sundae Sale

Pf. PLEASANT - The Mason

RECREATION FOUNDATION
The New Haven Recreation
FoundaUon Board met on November 8 at the City Building
with Donald Ohlinger presiding.
ll was aMOunced that Mrs. Cedi Duncan had accepted t h e
Job of treasurer of the board.
They voted to accept the resignation of LeWis C&amp;peharl as a
member ot the board and as
prealdent. He resigned be('ause
of moving out or state. Donald
Ohlinger was elected as president to fill the vacancy, and
Robert GIU"tis was elected as
vice president to WI the vacancy &amp;II Donald Ohlinger waa the
vice..presldent. William Kimes
Wa&amp; elected to CUI the vacancy
d. Lewis Capehart as a member
ot the board.
A dtscuuion of aupervl&amp;ion
at the Stating Rink waa held and
they are asking Cor volunteers
to help sell tickets, work the
concession stand and supervise
the building. The New Haven
Woman's Club wi11 supervise the
building for the month of No-

~~~~~--~~-- ·
·i·-----------------.------~----.,
1
(Wo Aro Not Opon On S.ndoys)
1

Over 500 Participate

New Haven
Social Events

is available tor an,y clvlt
or partrlotlc pi'OIJ.'IIII ~Jhln 1
half hour' a practice time.
Mrs. Willie (;apetartwaspeat
artist and 11 ang My Budd,)', The

..

The Dally SentineJ, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0., Thursda)', Nov. 21, fal8

S-

grot~)

~·

CANOE SHAVE LOTION

Special

9e

�. •. ,.... .
~-

Mrs. Powell's Students Present
Recital Sunday at Wahama High

In Service, BallorBoy, Keith Ashley; It'• A Great Country Over
Here. vocal, by The Palettes; Bell
Bottom TrOusers, vocal, b)' Pat-rfcla Keeter; SaiUng, plano, by
Dlarw. Bumgarner; March Right

On, plano, by Donald G.brltach;
Marines Hymn, piano, by Gene

Pickens;

MASON -

Mrs. Paul B. Pow-

ell oC New Haven presented her
piano, organ, voice and accordian students in a recital on Sunday at the Wohamo High School.
The theme for the recital waa
"America, of Thee I Sing." Master of Ceremonies was Rick Pow·
ell, stage manager was Jon Ridg·
way, and !ltage pronwter was J~
&lt;1y Lothey.
The program was divided into
Ove parts, each representing an
era of American mualc.ltopened
wlttl the '~Battle Hymn of the Re-public" pl-_yed on lhe organ arxt
piano by Mrs. Powell and Keith
Ashley, followed by "TheStar
Spangled Banner." The Palettes,
a musical singing group organized by Mrs. Powell consisting
of Donald
Gabritsch, L i s a
Scott, Gene Pickens, Martha

Holiday Ball
T A~K EllliCTEO - ThL' first of five large water storage
tallks , and one pre ss ure la Jlk, l1as been installed for the Tuppers Plains-Chester rural wakr system on the Donald Mora
farm, Roule 7. Th is rank hold s 150,000 ga llons of water. Officials of the $.J mi l l ion wawr s~ stem, finanl'cd by the Farmers
Home Adminis tra t ion and an Economk Deve lopment Administr ation grant, sa it.! the general comraclor, Nardei Constru('tion
Co., is progre .o;sing nwtdl.y on the im;t.allation which will service a large seftion of Meigs County and some of Athens COW1t~,; .
The projcd is app r oximate!:. 60 per cem completed.- Sentinel
Photo.

Last year- primarily due to the lack of an organization to head
the project - Chrisunas gifts for Meigs County patients at lhe Athens State Hospital were not nwnerous.
However, this year a g ro~ has agreed to take on the pr oject,
which should give it a real s hot in the arm.
It seems almost unbelievable, but Meigs County does ha'e 70
patients confined to the Athen s State Jtuspital. There are 39 men
and 31 women.
The grolC) taking over tile project this year will be Meigs Salon
9 and 40 with Mrs. Mary Martin as chairman.
The group will establi sh a headquarters and for a coq:~le of days
before tht: Dec. 10 deadline, the headquarter s will be cpen all day
ao lhat residents wi s hing to donate presents may drop tbem by the
building.
•
What is a('ceptable? Men at the hospital can use socks tobacco
1...
.
•
'
e'll..rettes, p1pes, shaving brushes, tiesarx:l other related items. Women can use any kin:l of cosmetics, jewelry, small purses, stretch
cloves and of course, both the men and women like canti)'.
All of the gifts are to be taken to the headquarters unwrapped,
Mrs. Martin and her groLP will go to the hospit.a.l on Dec. 10 to help
wrap gifts.
Perhaps, you'd like to bring before your grot41 at its December
meeting the possibllit,y of its making some contribution to the effort
- or feel free to do so as an iOOividual.
One grot() which aiW8l'S brightens patients' Christmases at
Athens Hospital Is the Rock Springs -Grange. Whether there is an
organized project or not in Meigs County, the Hock Springs group
bas been one of the most d~lliable.
A little later, Ibis column will be bringing information on tht! location of the collection headquarters for the gift collection au! the
hours II will be open.
In the meantime, how about gi ving it a little thought?

Is Planned
November 30th
PT. PLEASANT - Proceeds
from the ''Holiday Ball'' sponsored by the local Jr. Woman's Club
will be used for the state project
Camp Galahad.
C a m p Calahad, located in
Southern West Virginia, is composed of three camps - Camp
Na!1oma !or diabetic children,
Camp Hraille Crest for blind
children and Camp Apache for
mentally retarded children .
The event will be at the National Guard Armory saturday,
Nov. 30 from 10 p m. to 2 a.m .
A 15" portable black and white
television set with Mrs. Dave
Poore. chairman, will be given
away
The goal of the State Juniors
is to try to pur chase a truck for
Camp Galahad's use. The local
club plan to help by informing
the public of the camp's services
and also by monetary donations.
Mrs. Poore asks that anyone
knowing of children who would
qualify for these camps can contact her at 675..2906.

Krawsczyn ard sally HoJ'Irnan, Beaudru.I, a piano solo, by Mary
then sang "Pledge to the Flag." Biggs; Llbery Bell, piano, by PatThe first part of the recital ty Eblin; Dear Old Glory, vocal
waa Indian Music with the [n... b)' Donald Gabrltsch; Stars a n d
dian malden being portrayed by Stripes Forever, accordian by
Mary Krawsczyn. FOiJ.OII'lng came David Krawsczyn; American EmBig Chief Crazy Horse, a plaoo blem March, piano. by Jenntrer
solo, by Martha Krawsczyni The Patterson, al)d Under the Double
Wigwam, a piano solo, by Eagle, piano, by Shirley Giltey.
Dixieland Music and Folk
Marcy Holbrook, and Rllual
Tunes,
Southern Mister and Mrs.
Donee, a plooo sdo, by Silly
Gene
Pickens
and Sally Hoffman;
Hottman.
Dearie,
vocal,
by S8lly Hottman
American Emblem, stars and
and
Gene
PickenB;
Dixie, piano,
Stripes, featured Betsy Ross,
by Heidi Ashley; On the Levee,
p&lt;JI1rayed and sung by Martha
Krawsczynj Our Emblem, 1 vocal piano, by David Cole; Shortening
Bread. plano, by Susan Powers;
by the Palettes; There are Many
Flags, piano, by Patricia Keef- Oldsmo-Boogie, plano. by Darla
er; Old Flag of Mine, a vocal by Gerlach; When the Saints Go
Sally Hoffman; American t h e Marching In, organ, by David
Cole, and Yankee Doodle Boy,
vocal, by Gene Pickens.
Americans and the Tunes They
Enjoy, Miss Teenager, Linda Holbr~; At the MfJvies, plano, by
Pamela Burton; At the Ball, piano, by Vkki Burton; Always, piPT. PLEASANT - Funeral BOOt by Susan Biggs; Jenn.v LiM
services for Mrs. Carrie A.
Polka, plano, by Itayanna Cole;
Greenlee, 86, of Columbus, for- · Fascination, accordian by Susan
merly or Pl. Pleasant, will be Powers; Let's Dance the Polka,
held Friday 2 p .m. in the Crow- acco'rdian, by Susan Powers and
Hussell Funeral Home with the David Krawsczyn; Shivaree PolRev. James Hicks &lt;tficlatlng. ka, piano, by Carol Randolph;
Burial will follow in Loan Onk You All Polka, piano by Lisa
cemetery. Friends may ca.ll at. Scott; Goodnight My Someone,
the funeral home.
from The Music Man, organ, by
Mrs . Green lee died Tuesda,y Jacque Gabritsch; Somewhere My
night in University HospitaJ ln Love, piano, by Bernita Staats;
Columbus , Ohio, alter a long Hl- Moon River, organ, by Shirley
ness. ~e is survived by two Neigler; Stardust, organ, by Becdaughters, one son, one sister, ki Proffitt; I Can't Sa,y No, vocal,
15 grandchildren, 24 great grand ~ by ShirleyGiltey; Special feature,
children and 2 great - great. organ and vocal, by nick Powell.
grandchildren
Honoring the Men and Women

Service Set for

Mrs. Greenlee

Any Time
Of The
Year.

ADOLPH
SAYS:

Medley

of service
so~a, pinao. by Keith Ashley;
messed Is the Nation, plano and
organ, by Shirley Nelgler and
Shirley GOley.

Mrs. Powell preaeJUd awards
to the rollowing: Perfect atlerd-ance, Jacque Gabritsch and Donaid Gabrltach; Moo\ ootalandlng
student, Keith Ashley; highest
score on written test. Keith Ash-

ley; most memory work. Davkl
Cole; most improvement on their

chic orp.nlzatlons during the
past year 1 Donald GabrUach, u ..
Scott. Marthl Krawsczyn, Silly
Hol!man and Gene Plcke111.
Mrs. PCMell slated lhl\ th11

parUcular instrument, Patb' Eblin, Mary Krawsczyn, Shirley
Neigler and Shirley GUtey: most Palettes then sang ••Battle Hymn
help given to Mrs. Powell for of the Republtc""whlletbeCurtatn
presenting programs to various · wu closing.

1!
1

I

SIMON'S
MARKET

:

WE ACCEPT FOOD COUPONS
Open Every Week Day 9:00 to 7:00

1

Saturday 111 9

:

!

E. MAIH ST.

992-3975

POMEROY

.,! '

II

ORDER'

MapleYOURLawn

FRESH
TURKEY
1
1
TODAY I
1

·-----------------------------J - - - - -

ND

$

Xtra

BEEF ________s!:::1_

lb.

25c SIZE-ANY FLAVOR-THRU NOV. 24

SLICED ALL MEAT

Bologna --------•- 21bs·1. 00
SKINLESS

Wieners·----------· 21b. 98~
SQusage _________ 2 lb. 1.00
OUR OWN MIX-HOME MADE

FRESH, LEAN STREAKED

Sliced Bacon--------2lb.s1
Potatoes._______ 20 Ita. 79~

Buy I- Get l"F

ARRESTS REPORTED
PT. PLEASANT - Arrests
recorded at the county jail during
the past 24 hours are Eva Loretta Lee, 30, .Pt. Pleasant and Arra May Lee, 39, Pl. Pleasant ,
both charged with Intoxication.

--AT THE--

DAIRY VALLEY

OLEO

S)
l
b
s.
7

McCOY'S

MILK
gal.

79~

ADAMS

7

f
ln.

Cold Beer &amp; Wine-Carry Out Onlyl

Across From The Pomeroy--Mason Bridie

Jl {/AS GJJ/{YER.,
$AVESJI LOT(MORJ3
miANUl[OJWY

ROBERT II . WOODS, I, ASTOH, has undert.al1ertllle chore of redecorating the Pomeroy Church or Christ. Numerous improvements
are planned, with Mr. Woods doing most of the work involved. New
red carpeti ng and a red velvet ba ckdr op will be among the improvemems to the sanctuary.
·
. lnciden\Aily, one cannot reali:l.c the beauty of lhc stained glas1
wmdows at the Pomeroy churd1 unle~s he cntl;!rs the chw·ch. The
windows - all given in memof.)-· of loved One!oi dur ing the com;truction
in the 1920's - are stri king. If you haven't .&lt;;ee n them from the i~
terior , feel free lO drop by the church. You'll be welcome.
AT 2 P. M. SLNDAY MEMBERS of the Carleton Chur ch on the
Hoad will dedi cate a new room which ha s been added to the

church. The Rev. Clyde !linton, a rormerpa" tor, wil! be guest speak·
er. The Rev, .Jay Stile"-, pastor, hasextendedan invitation to the pu!).

lie.

a! League
Bottorff, a native of Lincoln,
Neb., succeeds llillma.n Lyons,
who resigned. Hichmoul is a
farm
club for the Atlanta
nra ves.

KEEP YOUR CAR
,.

'

l

f

ON THE GO. - - .. WINTER WEATHER AHEAD'

Permission was given to the
5ltl and 6th grade boys r r 0 m
New Haven Elementary School
to use the building for basketbal.l practice free of charge.
&lt;»mmittees were set up ror
the care or the building and pool:
Activity Committee, Robert GurUs, chairman, Mrs. Davis RoUsh,
Mrs. Neil Haymaker, Mrs. William RusseU; Building Committee, Gary Roush, chairman, Paul
Rlckanl, Danny Roush. WOllam
Kimes, and Mrs Gary Roush;
Pool: James Layne, chairman,
Danny Roush, William Kimes,
Mra. Eugene Hester; Finance:
R. G. Greene. chairman, Mrs.
Cecil Duncan. Mrs, Charles
Smith.
It was decided the Foundation
would sponsor a New Year's Eve
dance, Final plans wtll be announced at a later date.
Any Interested citizen Is wel come to attend the board meetinca or to join the Foundation
membei'shlp dues -are $1.
- Members attending were those
named above and Mrs . P a u I
Jllckard. Mr. and Mrs . Jack
Flesher, Mrs. Roy COOk , and
~ Mrs., A. L. ~rouse, secretary

:.... ~
- •.•.
l ot •1;1; •PE
.
...... -·'

i~

,. f

-

~-...---

&gt;v"•·•-·''"••

.......

~ .. :'!',

S"

...

- ·-,·~

Book Fair to
Run 3 Days
'

.

NEW

HAvEr(

- - ' The Alex

•

ner. Patty Hill, Barbara Mathe- Burris, :t.arlotte Hoffman, Char11¥, Janie casto, Reba llerdman, lolle Grlnun, Robert Ohlinger,
Jerry Cuto. Dobra Hurt, Henry Addle Rhodes, Gail Adkina. Glr1
llunl , llarriet ThOmJ)IIfr'l, Janet Anowood, Beverly ~. Diane
Neul, Martha U. Crump, Jane
Cooper, Damon Morgan. Jr. (2),
Charles Watterson, M I n d y
YOWl!I, Ein'l L~ c:'lrle11, Frances
Lltchlteld, William Litchfield,
Diana GleM, Roberta Dowell,
Janice Lanier, Sarah William-

4-H Event

ln

BLUE RffiBONS - Katrlnka
Hart (2), :!iberrle stalnaker, Johnny Cullen, Denise li1ll!let (2),
Ruth Newberry (2), Tommy Cullen, Aaron Weaver, David Newberry, Martha NUes, Paula Bam-,
ette (3), Debbie Barnette (2), Patricia Keefer, Juanita Weaver,
Darlene Newberry, Linda Newberry (2), Teresa McDermitt (2),
Jack Cullen (2), Jack 91iflet, Jr ,
Johnny Cullen, Kenny Fry, MaxIne Weaver, Linda Hussell, Debbie McConlhay. Vicki McCoolhay .
Bever)J Yeager, Roxanne Wallis
(3), Carla Crookham, S h a r on
Froendt (2), Walter Roush, Ktu"en Froendt, Brendft Uarmon,
Tara Lee Lanier, Watula Oliver,
Gretchen WUson, Patdcla Fowler, Gloria Miller (2), Carol Bennett Ill). Georgia Fowler (2),
Lana Randolph, Charlene R a ndolph, Ley McCOy (2), Margaret
Buckalew, David Fowler, Sammie Doolittle, Martha Harmon,
Kay Harmon.
Anita Diane Tucker, Pamella
Seafier, Cynthia Douglass, Kim
Tacket~ Karen King (2}, Linda
Hall, Charlene Herdman, Marte
Fowler (3), Grayson Joseph Miller (5), Linden Mlller (2), Melissa Miller (2), Basil Greene ,
Byron ~inn , Carl Hall, Charles Herdman, Tammie Lievtng, .
Linda Bumgardner CO, Debra
Roush (2), Mary Bumgarner,
Teka Dewhurst (2), Vicki Bumgardner (2). VIcki Lleving, Tammy Sayre, Pauletta Randolph (2),
Jesse McClure (2), stella Randolph (2), Jayne Hart (2), Robert Dewhurst, Alan Hart, Joyce
LucUie Roush, Cindy Lievlng,
Donna McClure (2), Lesa Scott,
Danny Dewhurst (2). John E.
On! (2),
Ray Barnette, Beth
Ord, Carolyn Barnette, ElizaM
beth Ord, Lawahana McClure,
Susan Shirley, Lodisa Sayre,
Doug Sayre (2). Sondra !l!lrley,
Diana Livingston, Dennie Casto
(2), James Casto, Cllris Sayre
(3).
Debra Hunt {2), Susan H i 11,
Diama Absten, Alice Hunt, Dulene I.J.ylllgston, Plllllela H u n t,
Diana Casto, Rebecca Bletner
(3}, Denise Weclge (2), Debbie
Sayre, Ronnie Wedge, William
Livingston, Guy Keefer, Jerry Casto, Plrlllip Miller, John
David Little, Chules S t e v e n
Wedge, George Jr. Keefert Roger Stone, Carolyn Blolner, Kathy
Sayre, Diane Bwngarner, Debbie HOffman, Sue Bwngarner,
Judy Lathey, Thomas S a y r e,
Comie Hoffman, Angela Sayre,
Harry Haynes, Roger Bennett,
Berna Jean Burcham, C a t h y
D8rst, Valerie White, J o a n
Grimm, Ellen Moore, Marilyn
Denise McDaniel, Catherine PhilUps, David Phillips, Nancy Morgan, Donna Tattersoo, G a I e
Plants, Jane Cooper, Neesha
Voight, Robert Darst, Barbara

c

nam, Marsha Chapman, Debor-

ah BreMan, Mark Rayburn, Jay
Chapman, David Scholz, Barry
Henry, Jenny Arrington, Rita
Garland (2), Deborah Blake, Kim
Henry, steve Holland, Donald
Nott, Maureen HUey, carolyn
H~s (2), Rita Ryan, Billy Fry,
Connie GUland, Robin Johnson,
Cecilia Smith, Bonnie Rayburn,
Barbara Lewis, Paula Bocook,
D\Wile Johnson, Crystal Fruth.
David Smith, Michael Foreman, Scott Kebler, Karl Kebler, Kathy Foglesong, Clnda Foglesoog, Debra Stewart, Jane L
Swartz, Cheryl Burns (2), Penny Burris, Beverly Canon, ~elton Hoffman. ~rlotte Hoffman
(2), Bill Brinker (2), Mary Ar +

Utur, Joy Arthur, Nedra Cullen,Donna Winebremer 0), Terri
Oliver, Shirley Gerlach, Caral Friend, Darla Gerlach, Martlyn Grimm, ~l'llby HofCman,
Richard Wolfe, Tony Thompson,
Randy Parsons, Gary Hoffman,
stephen Gerlach, Debra Wolfe,
Kathy Keathley, Marlene Roush,
Pam Whittington, Janis Lynch,
Addi~ Rhodes (2), Judy R a YM
burn G!), Douglas Adkins, Judy
Halstead, Debra Crump, Harriette Rhodes. Debbie COttrill ,
Sarah Gregory, Patty Caudill,
Keith Durst, Jotm Gerlach, Bud~
dy Cottrill, Marilyn Poe, Angeline Rogar, Bridget Park, Sarah
Flowers, Martha Cottrill, Randall Wedge, John Holstein, Donna Thornton, John Watterson and
Bryan stover.
RED RffiBONS- Karen Fro~
endt (2), Juanita Weaver . Maxine Weaver (2), Joyce Berkley,
Beverly Yeager, Carla Crook·
ham, Rebecca Berkley, Denise
~iflet, Sharon Froendt (2), Beeky Fry, MJchael Newberry, Carolyn Keefer, Debbie Barnette~},
Steven Newberry, Carol Newber ·
ry, John Wilson , BUiiame McCoy, Gerald Buckalew, Guy David Doolittle, Jim Wll son, ca"rol
BeMett, Billy Toney, Sharon Flora, Meltssa Miller (2), Tamara
Cadle, Linden Miller (4), Karen
King, Billy King, Curtis 311M

Kl"'jacket. ,RI~hanl

""""""",.,.;,
Douglas Whoitcrarf, Charles
Held, Mike Legg, William R.
Hussell, Vicki Bumgardner,Donna McClure, Stella Randolph(2).
Jayne Hart, Pauletta Randolph
(2), Rroert Dewhursl (2), A I a n
Hart, Jesse McClure (3), John
Bumgarner, Bruce Hussell.
Treva Schultz, Angela Schultz
(2), Betty Campbell, Barbara McDermott, Marie Sayre, Kathy Sayre, Dl.anld. Absten, Christina
Absten, Debbie Sayre, Richard
Sayre, Cecil Absten, Jr , George
Jr. Keefer, Diana Casto, James
Casto (2), Doug Sayre, Chris
Sa,yrr~. 'Roberl Hunt, WUIIamLivlngston, Janet Sayre, Barry Haynes, Thomas Sayre, H a r r i e t
Thompson, Janellen Grimm, Jeri
Sue White, Janie Phillips, Jennifer stone, Debra Love, Mary Jane
Getty, Cathy D&amp;!"st, Pamela
Wheeler, David Phillips, Jimmy
TatterSQn, Charles Chambers,
Kathy Butler, Kimbetl,y Butler,
Tamara Tolliver, Mary Dabney,
David Watterson, Ernie Watterson, Teresa Purkey, &amp;le Liev ing. Brent Clark, Judy Llevlng
(2), Pamela Simpkins, Mlchael
Lleving, Sleila Lleving (2).
Gloria Young, Georgina Mc Causland, Goorgiama &amp;»nmer,
Mary Willlamaon, Bill Brinker, Randy Jackson, Diama Glenn,
Denny Glenn. Ame WllUamson,

.b.li

(2), Cathy Crump, Debra Beck.ner, Michael Beckner, Brenda
c. Roush (2), Marilyn Goodnite,
Charles Hoaman, Bernita staats,
Danny Litchfield, Samuel Scarberry, Robert L. Roush (2), Mar.o
vin C. Roush, Nathan C. YonM
ker, Kelley Wallace, Holly Johnson, Cheryl Lanier, Deborah
Breman . Stephanie L Scholz,
Timothy Cottrill, M. Melll!ll!la
Mowrey, Marilyn Wallis, Teresa
Nott, Steve Holland, Rocky SturM
geon, Gale Wa.IIJs, Rita Garland
Cn, Susan Fox, &amp;.!san 1babet,
Bonnie Rayburn, Barbara Lewis,
Connie Hughes, Ceclla Smith (2),
Beverly Carson CZ), Mary Fox,
Guyla Roush, Comie Lewis, Debbie Gilland, Thomas Foreman,
Donald Gabrltsh, Geoffrey Ca.brltsh, Ricky Burris, D a v i d
Smith, Sbelton Hoffman (2), Denise ParBOils, Nora Friend, Joyce Keathley, Barbara RotLgefl,
Patricia Wolfe, Mitchell Cullen,
Joseph Cullen, Sherry Arthur,
Kathy Friend, Carol Handley,
Harriette Rhodes, Belinda Litchfield, Roberta Heib, Danny Ra_y burn, Leslie Krodel, Lisa Krodel, Abra Burris, Robin Henry, Slaron WoHingbarger (2}.
WHITE R[880NS ~ Joy c eBerkley (3) , Rebecca Berkley,
Carolyn Berkley, Debbie McConlhay, Becky Fry, SherrleStalnaker, Aaron Weaver (2), James
Elias, Johnny Cullen, .Jimmie
staats {2), Karen Froendt, Jackie Srnith, Vicki McCooiha,y, Don
McCoy, Billiame McCoy, JuanM
ita Cantrell, Margaret Buckalew,
Guy David Doolittle, David row.
-ler, Robin Burdette (2), Carol$n
Doles, Deborah Thornton, Den-:
sil Sa.yre, Stella Randolph, Jayne
Hart, Lesa Scott, Robert Hendrick, Kent Sayre, Mary Bumgar.

, ""

~

,
1

1i'

HOUIMY

'7M«!I
CALL
992·Jl57

HOME LAUNDIY
Pickup and Deifvery

No. S.Cond Middlo rt, 0.

HEAT WITH A
Portable Electric

A modern, dependable Gas dr)'t!r saves in so many
ways. Time. for instance. No more clothes line hang-ups. No waiting
for the sun to shine. Thmk olall the things you can do with the time you save.
And a Gas dr)'t!r saves Mom the back aches of lugging loads of laundry to and from
a long, long clothes line. No more bending and stretching,
Not only does a Gas clothes dryer save wear and tear on Mom. it saves
wear and tear on clothes. A Go,. dryer tumble dries the most delicate clothes
safely ... gently. They come out soft, fluffy, sweet-smelling as a day in May.
And of course, since a penny-a-load Gas dryer does the job for a fraction of
the colt of drying clothes with eleclricity, you can figure ~·n save well aver $100
in operating costs over the life ol the dryer.
A gas dryer is a time saver, a clothes saver, a Mom saver and a money saver.

• COMPLETE MOTOR TUNE-UP
• COMPLETE BRAKE SERVICE
BATTERIES, TIRES, LUBRICATION
WASH JOBS, QUALITY PRODUCTS

MECHANIC ON DUTY
9 to 5 Week Da s-9 to 12 Sat.

THINK OF ALL THE THINGS YOU CAN DO WITH THE MONEY YOU SAVE WITH GAS.

W. MAIN

HEATER
'•A•uh&gt;,.cttlc Thermostat

elnotanl Ribbon Hoat
• Tip_Ov., Safety Control

.I%9 J~nior Miss PAgeanl ·Pomeroy· Jr. High Aud.

.,

.

"1" - •

'

•· J

.~ ~ ~~..,..~r~.-.,:.it¥.~~~--..;.,,4" .:,....,. ........- .:..M~_..;._ ..~.-. '-&gt;_"''·'·'"''":"':-":''~':::'""~.":::'""':~.-.-..;.;.;;o;,o;;,;;..-":!i;iiiiiifiifjNioifrj.l!iiiliioiO&lt;.~

,: .... •,-,: ...; .....

WALl CHARM
SEMI GLOSS

4.75 v••·J.55qi.
5.25••1. J. 65 .t.

3.00 gol.
·suo qt.
DI$COHTIHUEO COLORS

SUPPLY

YOUTH
OXFORD

C. Housh, Sonya Yonker, Marion
Ricky t .ltchfleld, Rita
G.rland. Kay Schaekel, Cindy
Worl&lt;man, Jenny Thabet, Permy

Walson,

Black
C-D-E Width

Sclentlllc Heller

IHES

Scientists believe that the
magnetic pole- the point
where the compass loses its
directive force- is found in·
side the molten core Gf the
earth.

AT THE

GIFTS
ALL
AGES

• Riding Toys
• Hobby Sets
• Christmas Trees
And Trimmmgs

1969 JUNIOR
MISS PAGEANT
Pomeroy Jr. High
Aud. - Now. 24
8:00P.M.

RIGHT
GUARD
DEODORANT
Reg.
1.39

92

MEN'S SUNBEAM SHAVER

GIFT BOXES

19.98 VALUE
ShavllmOster
shaYer with
stainlen 1tnl shoving heod .
Prec:i1ion-honed
stoiroleu
steel blades . Professional
borbor type trimmer. Flip-top
latch . U.l. Approved. lndi·
Yidually boxed.

14.98
Eoeh pock c.,_t•lno ) lloolltel
poly wfoppo4 with heocl•r·
-Aoollfte41 Chriotmoo closl•n•-

SUNBEAM-HAll'

Rei. 1.09

CLIPPER KIT

VICKS

VAPO
RUB

12C
Rei· t:~St
\fil' s

~~'(tl

~s''''"

t,St
For The Men

BRUT AND
POMEROY, 0 .

.

PAINT SPECIAL yfiti}

ger.

-." '
'"

'BEATTf-JE RUSf-11

DIYCLEAI

H-r, Pam llaie•. CCionle~
or, Janie Wol~. V Wolflnlb&amp;rkor, ()pol WblllliQIIor·

dal•~r. Charles Oldaker, Brenda

GET INSTANT
0

......

- ~-

""'·

' Ralph Batey, a student at Glen· Quillen Memorial Library Is
viDe State CoUeie, spent the sponsoring a book fair, celebratweekend here yisitlng his par- ing National Book Week, with
onto. Mr. and Mrs. Filii Batey. the theme, "Go Places W i t h
DaMY Harbour hal returned Bookol", Thursday, Nov. 21 and
home after spending the past Friday, Nov. 22, 10 a.m. to noon
three years aerving in the U. S. and 3:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m . each
Marine corps. He just return- day, and saturday, Nov. 23, 10
ed from a tour of duty in Viet- a.m to 4 p.m.
The fair will be at the Thabet
man. He is married to the former Dianne Miller of NeW Ha~ building next door to Batey's
ven and they are the parents Hardware here.
Adults and children ue invitof a daughter, Wendy. DaMJ' is
ed
to see and select good books.
the son of Mr. and Mrs, Stan
Mrs.
Edwin stein, Jr., libruHarbour of Mason.
ian,
said,
uwe will have lots of
Debra McKnight, daughter of
paperbacks
and hardback books
Mr. and Mrs. James McKnight
will
be
lurnlshed
by the Log Cabundenienf- a tonaillectomy rein
Bodt
Store
of
Gallipolis,
Ohio.
cently at Holzer Hospital.
miss
thla
qlPOrtunlty!"
Don't
Mr. and !qs. ,,obert Cooke and
stone, Paul Douglas Meadows, 7
Mr._aod ~s. DIIUI,f Ymker _atDavid Kayser, Cathy Darsl (2).
tended the homecomltlll lootball
Darrell Stover, Alex Bryan,
pme at West Virglnla univerJames Dabney I
Randy 0 1 e att,y, Morgantown 1 recently. Mr. COURTSHIP
grove, Lury Crum, Beclcy Daband Mrs. Cooke' 1 son Phil is a
LONDON (UP!)- A courtship new (2), Calvena Spurlock, Ansenior at the UniversitY.
U.t started on the tennis courts ita Flsher,DooaldGIIIIsple, WanMr. and ·Mrs. Lloyd Roush vishal!l resulted in the engagement da Watterson, James Watter1011,
ited recently with their daugh- 1
SUaan Pyles, Diane McCOy, Jimt.tr and family, Rev. and Mrs. of British net star Peter Curtis my Davis, Sheila Lieving, John
and American Wlghtman C141
John Barringer and Stephen at
Johnson, Dale Johnson, Chester
player Mary Ann Eisel.
BurtooviUe, Md.
Roush,
C&amp;rol.yn Roosh, Barbara
Miss Eisel, of st. Louls, has
Beth Ann Layne, daughter of
Clark
(2),
Judy Llevlng (2), Terbeen ln England. the put six
Mr . and Mrs. James Layne, was
weeks competing in the current esa Purkey. GewatUia Johnson (2).
a recent patient at Holzer Medseries of indoor meets. The Cheryl U.wls, Linda S.adle, Nan .
i&lt;:a.l Center .
cy stanley, Georgianna. Sommer
cO\I)le plans to marry next
J~q RldgwBJ' ..... or Mrs. Char(2),
Susan Stanley (2), Reed Blain,.
September.
les Smith, a atudl'nt at Lindsey
Roger Hopson, Michael Ilq).son,
Military School. Wheeling, W.
Steve stanley, Pam. Sommer, Ju~
Va. vialted recettly at the home
lie Sommer CZ&gt;, ._Sidney Barker,
COMPLETES COIJ~'SE
cir his parento.
Sammy WUiiamson, Danny wn.
Pr. PLEASANT - Arm,y PriMr. and Mrs. Larry Hesson
Hamson, Mike Stanley, Bill Bar~
and children are vacationing for vate Emil E. Horrtnan. 23, son ker, Michael Dowell, Janice Latbe month at Miami Beach, Flor- ol Mr. and Mrs. Emll L. Hoffnier (3), Sarah WUiiamson, RoIda. Tttey will aloo visit rela- man, Routu 1, Point Pleasant,
berta Dowell, Michael Dowell,
completed nine weeka ot advanc- Mary Rawson, JerryLanler,Rantives while there.
Mrs. WIUlam Gibbs Is a pa- ed ln!antry tralnillg Nov, 9 al Fl.
dy Jackson.
tient at Holzer Medical Center. McClellan, AIL
Vicki Atkln6011, Chris McDaniel (ll), Howard Sayre, Lora Nash,
_ Judy Kalil! ()l), 011!1\er Gallowa.Y,
Jolrl Sayre, Della McDaniel 00,

DROP IN AT

' "."f·..·'

--~

Top Toppers, Happy Helpers, &amp;!san Spears, Elaine Rayburn, ~ Ka.v Dowell, Becky Williamson,.
lilli Billies, Leon Luckies, and Debra Wallace, Dennis Rayburn, Janice Lanier, Barbara WllllamMa.tine Rickard, Marilyn Good- son, Jerry Lanier, Brenda Wink·
Old Town Mountaineers· Red
nlte,
Keith D. Roush, David E. ler, Jotrl Sayre, Chester CaJbLucky !lar and Tranblazera';
Rousb,
Barbara Thomas, Cheryl way (2), Dat~id Winkler, Robyn
White, Beech Hill Telstars and
Lanier
(3),
Johanna Scholz (2),
Walla~. Martha Gaskins, DarGreen, Choctaw Chargers.
Debt
Miller
(3),
Teresa
Brenlene
Spears, Elaine Ra,yburn,
The following received ribbons
Frank 'Beckner, Debra Fields,
nan,
Bobby
Watson
,
Robin
BurM
Pamela
Rayburn, Doria Spears MaJC.ine Rickard. Georf;l:! c. 01oo their Individual 4-H proJects:

n.

Ki~sbury

NEW MM'AGEH
RICHMOND,
\'a.
(U'ORoger .1. Bottorff, a former
Universily of Nebraska ba~eball
player, has been named general
of
the
Hidunond
manager
Braves team in the Int.erna ti oo-

Coooty Amual 4-H Achievement
banquet Saturday, Nov. 16, at PL
Pleasant Jr. High School recognized hoy a and ldrls who did outstandlng work in their 4-H club
and 4-H projects.
Over 500 4-H members, parents, and 4-H leaDers heard Rooaid Gilkeson speak of the value
of 4..fl and challenge them to
greater participatlon. Gilkeson is
a graduate of West Virginia University, was in 4-H for eight
years, and was state public speak~
lng winner. He praised t h e
4-H'ers for outstanding accomplishments in Mason County.
The master of ceremoniea was
Damy Rayburn, older 4 H clW
member of the Trallblazers 4M
B
Club. The Mason Cooney 4-H
All gars plamed the event with
Violet Thomas heading up the
colorlul decorating. Favors were
given to the 4-H members by the
Citizens National Bank. Centerpieces were donated by Buffington's Greenhouse and The Flower Nook.
Receiving Natlooal 4-HAwards
lor outslanding work in their '
particular project field we r e
steve Stanley, Aaron Weaver.
Dale Johnson, John Johnson, Pen1\Y Burris, Diana Absten, Cheryl
Burns. Denise Wedge, Judy Loth.
ey, Marie Fowler, Ronnie Wedge"
Henry HWlt, Georglanna Sommer,
Maxine Weaver, Debbie Hoffman,
Carla Crookham, Randy Jackson,
Cheryl Lanier, Debbie Miller,
Carolyn Bletner, Darrell Stover,
BeclQr Dabney, Mary Rawson,
Rita Garland, Mlke Hopson, Rog.
er Hopson, Donna Winebremer,
Cheryl Bums, Robert Dewhurst,
Addie Rhodes, Roxanne Wallis,
Stella Randolph, Debbie MeCmlhay, WOllam Livingston. Jesse
McClure, Alan Hart, ~ella Lievlng. John BUI Cullen, Charlene
Randolph, Angela Sayre, and HarM
rlelte Rhodes.
Clubs receiving ribbons were,
Blue, Hop To lt, Busy Fours,
Happy Hustlers, 4 - Corners,
Mountain
Climbers,
WiDing
Workers, Letart Pioneers, Tip

vem!ier .

U.S. N0. 1

2 For 1 Sundae Sale

Pf. PLEASANT - The Mason

RECREATION FOUNDATION
The New Haven Recreation
FoundaUon Board met on November 8 at the City Building
with Donald Ohlinger presiding.
ll was aMOunced that Mrs. Cedi Duncan had accepted t h e
Job of treasurer of the board.
They voted to accept the resignation of LeWis C&amp;peharl as a
member ot the board and as
prealdent. He resigned be('ause
of moving out or state. Donald
Ohlinger was elected as president to fill the vacancy, and
Robert GIU"tis was elected as
vice president to WI the vacancy &amp;II Donald Ohlinger waa the
vice..presldent. William Kimes
Wa&amp; elected to CUI the vacancy
d. Lewis Capehart as a member
ot the board.
A dtscuuion of aupervl&amp;ion
at the Stating Rink waa held and
they are asking Cor volunteers
to help sell tickets, work the
concession stand and supervise
the building. The New Haven
Woman's Club wi11 supervise the
building for the month of No-

~~~~~--~~-- ·
·i·-----------------.------~----.,
1
(Wo Aro Not Opon On S.ndoys)
1

Over 500 Participate

New Haven
Social Events

is available tor an,y clvlt
or partrlotlc pi'OIJ.'IIII ~Jhln 1
half hour' a practice time.
Mrs. Willie (;apetartwaspeat
artist and 11 ang My Budd,)', The

..

The Dally SentineJ, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0., Thursda)', Nov. 21, fal8

S-

grot~)

~·

CANOE SHAVE LOTION

Special

9e

�.......

6 -

Dalb

The

Sentirel, Pomeroy·Middltpor1, 0., Thursday, NoY, 21, 1968

C•IICallcol lo,l &amp; Carract ian1
Will I.e coccaplati until 9 a .... l01
Oe&lt;r el P ... bliutia,.

REGULATIONS
The P...blhhar ra t arvu the rililhl
to •.lit or r•i• cr ""~ 11.! 1 deemed ob·
jco cl ior&gt;obla . Tk. publ-ish•r will nol' · t
b• ••tf&gt;Ontl b l• for mor• lhGn ona
ii'ICillroac l int er! ion .

For We

Male Help Wanted
~EED

CASID

Sell

lam...

Knapp Aerolred Shoes, full or
part time. High cvnuni!sionll
plus bonus. Complete Une lor
men and women. lilquipmenl
!umished free. Write I&lt;&gt; Gor·
don Rae, Distrt&lt;l Sales Mgr.,
3fi.B4 Darbyshire Drive, Columbus, Ohio, 43221. ll~l.Jic

f., Wa,t Ali s.,.. ,ca
5 Clnll pa• Worll o- i ntell icuo

Employment Wanted

Mi"'"'""' C ho•o• 75c
11 ~ •ntt F&gt;•' word lhr•• co ntiCu ·

u,.
in••'''"'"'
II c•••.. ,., 'lllord

•• • co nta curi"l
latarf oon t
25 ,., cant D • .co~o.nl on l)o)•d odt
aMI ooh poo d wolh on 10 d11r•
CARD OF TH,.H I&lt;$ &amp; OSIT U ... RY

Sl ~ 0 lor SO "' &lt;"d "' ' "' "'""' Eo
.. OIIIIoonal •o•d 1c
S LI NO AD S
A.tilllotoo-1 2Sc Choro• pa r A.l.,.ar -

OfF IC E HOUR !!
1 ,30 a ~ m to 5 OCl P·"' Dod ~
111 : 30 a ·"' · l o 12 :00 Noon Sa t urda y

WILL BABY SIT ....tday~ In
my home for small child or
1 small children. Phone Ma-

son m-5326.

11·1Htc

Lost
!.OST in Pomeroy : Stamped
envelope addressed to City
National Bank and Trust Co.
!f found, call ~.
11-!Ntc

In Memory

Wanted

L"f LOVING memory of my ANTIQUES, furniture, d1lhM.
mlsceOpneous , Mrs. Boward
dear brother, Charles 0 . Mul.
Cec:ll, 800
Main St., l'aJu.
ford. who passed away seven
yean ago, on Nov. 21 , 1961:
I'OJ.
~~·

w.

A loved one from us has gone,
A voic-e we loved is still ,
A place Is vacm1t In crur lives
Which ne~er can be fil1ed .
Sadly missed by his
sister. Mrs Betty
Goodall. and family.
11·2Htn
IN MEMORY of our father and
grandfalber. Lawrence Whitlatch, who passed away so
sudden on Nov . 21 , 1965 :
What we would give to see

your smile,
To sit and

talk

with

you

awhile;
The blow was sudden,
shock severe

the

To part with you , we loved

so dear .
We often sit and think of you :

The things you used to say
and do.
We wonder why yoo had to
die

Without a chance to say goodbye.
So sad:y missed by hll
children and grandd&gt;lldren.
11·21·1tp

Notice
'·

;UN SHOOT. Sunday, Nov . 21,
at tbe Rlrtland American Le.
gton Farm.
11·20-31r

Dance
Saturday night,
10 p.m. til 2 a.m.
Whispering Pines
Nile Club
Music by th e
Bored' of Education

rusrc EVERY

Friday and
Saturday at Jad&lt;'s Club on
HarriaonvUie Road off Rt. 7.
11·20-ltc

10wing at home llppers, pockets, pegging.
hemming, alterations, etc.
Mrs. Freddie Thabet. M89on,

IJU. DO

Pbone

17:\.~1

4-ll).tfc

ACANCY lor two elderly peo.
pll. Prefer prlvau paid pa· Phooe Mason, 77Uta5.
lu.tlc

..

POI'ATOES,
C'llnDI:e

~

111.1

Pntm.li. ...,

lf.1Nie

POODLE PlJPPWI, AKC TOJ
miniature, fiS ond ap. Iliad

..moe IIIII poommt P'-

URKEY SIIDOT, Racine Gun
Club. Sunday, Nov 24 , start·
log Ume l p.m. Free eats .
llrinl! your 22 rilles. Thm
...til a!&amp;o be a live turkey
· Open sites only.
lH9-5tc

Help Wanted

NEED liELP. :Ill hours $46.
Buay Fuller Brusb lady needs
I people with CM2I to dellvor
..lalogues and take orders.
For appointment phooe UZ.
• .
11·1711tc

For Sale or Trade
:Clfil CHEVY pickup, %-ton, wilh
camper , for sale or trade .

Salem St .. Rutland.

ll -21~tc

For Rent

POMEROY

P'URNJSIIED APARTMENTS
In Middleport All ullllllell
paid. Rowley &amp; Reed, Middleport, Pbone IIJZ.Z778.

to.:.uc

'I'RAIT.ER LOTS. Bob's Moblle
Court, Syracuse, Ohio on State
Rt. 124, Phone IIIJ2.2951.
8-ll·lfc

11- ~lp

5 ROOM house, partially fur ..
nished . Gas furnace. Third
St., Mason . Phone 8111.29'11.
11-IH!p

!lOUSE. :&gt;room• and batli, ulil·
lty room, nice location. Phone
992'21185 after 5 p.m. 11-l~te
! ROOM apartment, close

to

downtown Pomeroy. Call lllJ2.
%143 before 5 p.m. 11-l~fc
4 ROOM rtlRNJSIIED apart·
meot, bath and sbower, fur-

11·20-'1&lt;

11·2J.tfc

da7l a - k from UO AM
to 4:10 PM. Pbone 742-162Z.

f

11·1Uie

OOLUR DAY S SALE
We' v • Red uc e d Our A lum dy L ow
Pri cal
Reg . 1.49 Mens

.. 1.00

DRES S SHIRTS . .
Rei_- 1.119

. .. 1.00

LADIE S PURSES .
Re9 . 1. 29 P atte d

1.00

VINYL FLOWERS ..
R .. g. J 9c ea c h
Soo p i n T urtl e Sp ong •

J fo r 1.00

Ra&lt;;r. 49c eo . Lod iat

HEAD SC ARVE S .. . . 3 lo r 1.00
R ... g. 8 lor 1.00
. 10 loo 1.00
GLASSES . . .
Rag. 2. 99 Jonie

RUG CLEANER .... ..... 1.00
Reg. 35c eo. l SO 'llfott

LIGHT BU LSS .... . . -4 lo r 1. 00
Sa le en d1 Mon . 5: 00P . M.

Yost, Portland.
2242.

Phone SO.
11-20.Sip

ROY'S GUITAR and amplifier,
""" year old. Used very UtIle. Phone IIJZ.7%88. 11-2t).31c
SHE'I'LAND PONY , very gtnl·
le. Phone 74:1-SUS. 11·21-l!p

-+--

1966 FIAT

.ilso two snow tim

IUS 11: 15. used ve-y 1il' !e, r"lay
be seen at 270 Walnut St ..
Middleport or phone 992-7110

after 5 p.m.

11-21 -31p

one Noble E fiat alto au..
phone $11$.
Bob 1'nlaall.
Phone ~.
IHT«e

TWO BEDROOM new home In TWO RIDING HORSES. 0 no
five galled l1)lll 4 yean old,
Mason , gas heat, utility room.
four slocldng feel, one I l ~ o
Velma Zuspan. Phone m.
galled, black stocking feel,
5750.
11-I!Hitc
see Arnold Grau, Rutland.
phone 74J.4211, after 5 p.m.
TRAILER, Brown's Trailer
phone 742-5501.
11'17...,
Park,
Minersville,
Ohio.
Phone !192-3324.

•!MI4 FORD V 8, I pass. Wag.
on, Auto. Trans. Radio and

Heater. Good Condition, fiOO.
Call after 5 P .M. !19U!IM.

11·18-tlp

EXCELLENT, efficient IIIII
economical. 'ftud'o Blue IJJO.
For Sale
Ire carpet and upholatery
!n'EREO: Walnut COMOle with
&lt;leaner. Rent electric obam·
4-SjMIOII chantor. kpeaker
pooer fl. Baker Fum!ture.
system. Balance due $71.54 or
ll·INfA:
1&amp;.75 per mont!1. Phone
Dll.
11-~ WARM 'fominll coolll!avo 111111
fan, ],,all 3 to 4 IVOIDI, uoecl
MINNEAPOLIS Moline Tractor,
leu tl!an two mont118. Glenn
1952, phone IIIJ2.51t13 after 7
Jewell, £lownlnllon. o. I'IIGne
p.m.
IH91tr
6!1f.3135.
IU4-121e

m

Nelco sewing macbine. Needs

(~··

M:r· .: . ·• • . ·· ·II to6
Sot. • • • • • • • • • • ·9 to 7

stit-

I
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II
I
I

I
I
I
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-GUARAJIII'EED-

• Free Estimates. '

PHONE 992-2094

• Quality Concrete

•

I
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THIS RIE SELECTION OF
HOUDIY·PRICED ~· USED
CARS CAN MIKE YOUR
HOLIDAY AMERRY ONE.

II
I

1967 PONTIAC LeMans . .... . ..... . . . . , .$2195
H. T . Cpe. Bea utiful gold fin•s h with b lo ck vinyl top,
326 c u . in . V8, eng ine wi th 3 s peed tran s. Console
bu c ke t
seat s, vinyl interior , only 23, 000 miles by
lo co ! I ow ner . Rad io , good white wall tir es , show·
room c lean .

66 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE CON .w~~

ED?s. $1995

Loc ol l owner c ar , new w· s·w t ires , vin yl trim with
bud: e t seats , con so le, ra di o, P .S. &amp; P . B., auto .tron s .
dar k blue fini s h with wh it e nylo n top . A real s harpie .

66 CHEVELLE SS 396 H.T. Cpe.

.$1995

W
.w.

Loc al owne r c:o r, 4 on the floor, good wide oval
tires, red VI ny l tnt ertor, whil e t 1n 1sh , ra di O 6 heater
Tr y 11 for pe rf or mo nce .
.

1I

• Certified Strength

Pomfroy~.o

E. Main

die hor!le , a""~;.:roximately 900

HeO" l' duty, e.tra d•• P haod1 ,
lour lull ply nr lon.
7751114 Whit• Sidewolla

ONLY

Sl8.95

Moat

•I•••

populo•
number a t

""oiloble.

I
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I

I

II
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Loco! 1 owner co r, good tires, std . Iron s . 6 cyl. en•
g ine. Ra di o an d Hea ter. Re d fin is h .

POMEROY

Real Est1te For Sale.

For Salt~

Loc al 1 o wner car , VB e ng ine , s td . tran s . , radio &amp;
h eater. We know you wil l like this one .

1962 MERCURY Comet 4 Doo1 .. . ..... . ... $595
6 cyl. engin e, o ulomol ic trans . Radio &amp; heater . local
1 owne r c or and pr1 ce d t o go .

'69 MODELs
Best Deals, Too!

1

I

~-;. ~w.

••: .

.Whot

-

-- -

.

R4al Estate For Sale

L

I
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E. MAIN
992-2126
POMEROY
OPEN EVENINGS TIL 8:00

1
1
1

fun For Ali! Jr. Miu Pog•ant, Sun., Nov . 2-4,8 p. m.

I

·I

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

. f '"".

.

. . ..

~.

;

,.,

.,,_,.," ..

- ...

·

...-

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

~

~

..

~

-

,..-

,.

. , . , .........

~p

,

-·

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

-

'P'' '""""'

1' :

II

··-·-....

From the Largest Truc'k or
Bull&lt;bzer Rodiator To Tile
Smallest Heater Core.
Pomeroy

WINNIE WINKLE

bedrooms,

batb,

.'

Buslnlll S.rvhn

OOLitR, BAU\Ikllt, trwcba

ond truc:lt woke, IOplle
tanks, water llDel, bu r+lltl,
lllo topooll. Heary Bthr,
Pbone 11811 11118 cr llapr BUr,
I'IIGne 11811 1811
111U!IIo
SEWING

1214. The Fabric &amp;bop, J'Gm.

Autborlled Singer 81111
Service. We . Sblrpea
ldaora.
Ja.llc
en&gt;y.

IIIII

0.

..,., ...

......

I

Crill aaB •
I I lfc

TilE &amp;AHARA

aU

furnace beat. WILL TRADB
FOR 8MAILER PUCE.

$6.500.00
RACINE - TILE IIV8INEB8
ROOM. Tiled floora, ce!llna
gu beater, toUel, hot water
tank, WW llPKED' ON '1'11111
ROOM. f6,900 .00
CLOSE TO POMEROY AND
MIDDLEPORT - LUre Now
ranch type, !.,.ge Uvln&amp; room,
3 large bedroolllB, batb, lai1e
level lot with euy - ·
117,1100.00
HENRY CLELAND
om 111
111.-IIZI.

8usln111

{

AIVD l &amp;UE:l!E A BIG MOUTH
IS nl£ SIGIV cr A BROKEIJ

I

I

/..QSE:

I &amp;UEIIe:
11-IAT VJA'i. A
THREAT!

!

I

can't tell ljOU much,

Pl14lli6, but Mr Jasper
and I are
i
toqether on a
confidential

maHer!

Servlcei

NOBOO'f" RIGtm..Y Kl'40WS
~IL E! AN' Wf:'I?E NOT Ftx!N'
T'FIHO OUT, SO LottG AS
CHIEF HOW GEtm.Y'Q ABI. E
1' liOLO 001 AGtN''5EC0110 M!

. •n

M4tc
BODGET PRICI!l fWrdbue 411
oar third Door bodpt lhop.
Baker Fum!ture, Middleport.

' • lie

Oblo.

lnturence
AU'l'OMOBlLE lr4W CCI beet
.._w? Loll :rour opnt.
.... lkeme! CaD • 2111
I II Ire
LIBERTY CONTENDERS
MEMPHIS (UPO
The
University of Mississippi Rebels
will have to wait a Cew days to
learn who their opponent wiU be
In the Dec. 14 Liberty Bowl
!O(tball game.

DAILY CROSSWORD

Ole Miss, car rying a fh3
rerord, accepted an invitaUon
Tue&amp;day to play in the bowL
AF. "Bud" Dudley, the bowl's

ACit088

Investment of $2,190 to $3,960 cash required
secured by inventory and equipment. You must
hawe a good car and be able to devote at least

4 to 12 houn per week.
If you are interested, have the desire, drive, determination and want to be suocessful in a growIng business of your own, write us today. Please
enclose name, addreu and telephone number.

WE WELCOME INVESTIGATION

GENERAL
TIRE SALES

IHTER·STATE DIST. CO.
535 South Second West
Salt Lake City, Utah 84101

992-7161
Middl•port, 0.

4. Bratn

bet
-t. LJttle
troublemak~r

1. Killer
whale
8. One who
achie veH

The Nta~ara Is one of the
few rivers m the world to flow·
in a northerly direction.

YOU CAN EARN $800
. OR MORE A MONTH
BASED ON YOUR EFFORTI

3. Speak

I . Roulette

executive director, said the
other team would be chosen
later.

Become a distributor in one of America's Jarg·
est and fastest growing industries. This is a new
concept in the field of vending. No experience
required . All accounts are contracted for, and set
up by our company. You merely restock locationsJ
with our National Brand product~.

Recappoble Tire

I

caarr.

blft!D"t,
hardwood noon, pordwt,

SPARE TIME INCOME
DISTRIBUTOR FOR THIS AREA

s22·00

FINISH JN9PECT!N3
MY CD/I.\PANY'5

WHilE l VISIT

10. C ompll!l.'!iOn

•'

All SIZES
for

.U.S No. 2nd

c. IIBAD'OIID

AUCI'IONBD
Oom,W. ltddlll

Winter
Retreads
Plu1

MACIIINES, repelr

oerv!ce, aD mUel. WY 1-

Pre-Winter
Spedall

2

u..-

... eurNMrru.

~'lOWINNIE

fOMEROY - I otory !ramo, I

-.all

RADIO &amp; 1V REPAI!t IIIII •
iDIIalled. Jol1!1 Bam.
1111, Pbone liD .. 114 IOic

II
I
I

co. II

MOTOR

.I

1 11 ·t

IIELEN or VIRGIL TEAFORD

MSOCIATES

IN SVRAaiSE

-==::::. - -'

TERMS!

! ''

::.R=·~Co

Business Servlcet

.
-;.L~A~N; -1
1

-

S.ll

I POMEROY
II ~318
308

-

11&lt;ACJ()M&lt;5-

NE.Tv..tc::JRI("'

Alit CONDmONING Rettlpro
model stereo, be'lutlful waJ.
allon WYice. Jaclt'a JWrlt.
nut console AM &amp; FM radio,
eraUon, New Haftll. hone
BSR automatic Ooallng turn
18ND71.
' • de
table. Make paymenta of GEO, HO&amp;iiEI IER. Bnbr
NfriEROY
2
large
lots,
oot
or
f6.32 or pay 1114.23. Set oold
hi&amp;h water, house 4 I'OOIIUI . READY • liJX eonerell deliYmuch higher. Try 11 in )'®f
ered riP! to your proJeel
bath, only $25011.
home. Phone Muon City 77J.
hot ond Ill!'. """' 5910.
11-21.~ POMEROY - Warm I n10m
maiM. Phone 119111M, 0.,..
brick, bath, lull buement, hot
water beaU.C. only f6440, ~ .
USED SPINET plano, Azl conMIDDLEPORT
- 7 1001111, bath,
dition, light walnut Onllh,
fumace. baoement and ga$495. Wendell's, 1209 Garfield
rage, uking 114,1100.
CIGARETTE veudJna m , I w
Ave ., Parkersburg, W. VI.
FOR
RENT
200
acre
:arm.
IIIII Hnlce. ABC Eulai*bel,
Phone !IH401.
11~1-211c
We ne«&lt; omall farms.
v-, W. Va. Phone 7'INIII,

your wife a nice home lor
I 'BUY
Xmu, large lot. 3 bedroom
I with closets, knotty pine Jdt.
eben, good cabinet!, one &amp;
I one hall balba, Iargt llvlll(
1 room, atone front, needl 1111'1f
spouting, new oepllc link,
I forced
furnace, full h I ment forair children
to play.
Liberal
financing.
1 D. R. WOOD, ......
Sl, Gallipoiio, 0.
I• . !Z LocutI'MIIe
4ff'1. .
11·1Mie
II

I
1
1

Yes, Good Selection Of

HOBSTETTER
·REALTY

FLOOR DEMONSTRATOJi; iii

1

1963 CHEVROLET Impala H.T. Cpe .... .. . $995

t..AND ro lliS o. 5.
FOR tiS SPACE'

0

•01 PAGE
MIDOLEPORT, OHIO

MOORE ' S
124 W. MAIN

gree n

1962 CHEVY II H.T. CPE ... .. .. . .... . . . . $599

GOEGLEIN GRAVEL

thla prlc•.
F~,~Uy go.~aron•••li - B~,~llt by a b111
t lr• r~~oker for . . ,
Limlled

II SKATE-A-Way holiday portieo.
Malib u Conv . V8 e ngine, P .G. tronsmiu ion, new w-s-w
Frhll)r, Nov.
t i ~e s,
exter ior w ith white nylon top ,
w ith
I 'l'lla!lbiltrmc.
11, New Yean Eve, TUol.,
v m y l trtm.
I Dec. 21, 7:SO to 12:111. OpeD
Chrlltmas Eve. Clooed OJrlaJ.
1964 CHEVROLET Bel Air 4 Door ... . . . ... $995 · I mao. Open Wednes'sy, J'ri.
6 c:y l. Std . tra ns . Ra d io . Local 1 owner cor, black I
clay, Satunlay, 7:10 I&lt;&gt; 10:1!1.
fini s h, s potless cl ean inte ri o r. Good tires .
I Available lor partleo, MIJo.
clay, 'lllelday IIIII 'J'bunday
I
n!gilll, l!alurcia7 IIIII 8ulllla)'
1961 CHEVROLET Bel Air Wagon ..... . . . .$350 I
llfternoool. PboDo !18518ZII or
Blk . fini s h, red interior. VB e ng ine . Auto ma t ic Irons .
•u•.
U-17-alte
Ra d io a nd heate r.
I
1960FORDFALCON2DR ...... . .... . ... $295 II
White fin1 s h. Good t ire s . Automati c. Radio

DIAL 992·3284

Plus 2.19 f•derol To~

65 CHEVELLE . . .. .. ... . .. . .~~~ $1495 .$1395
gree n

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

SPECIAL
SNOW TIRE SALE

lbs. , very gentle. Phone UZ.
;265,
11·21·3tp

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

I

'fO CoJV/NCe
PRI'Mu;&lt;R 1\Jfl 1b
lEASE IMFI:JJ&lt;rAIIf

O'BlUEN A CROW
REALTY COMPANY

Pomeroy Home &amp; Aut

·-----------------~
II
~
II

II
I
I

~

Real &amp;tate For Sale

s:ss·

GOOD USED Hanlwlck gu
range , Norge refrigerator,
large size Warm Morning gu
heater, two-wheel trallor. Call
~.
11·21-'IA:

ll-21-29tc

lfQefN AAP.rJeS IN
eet.61'\VIA 'R:l fRY

..,..... S.rtlct

PH. 99:1.2143

!;XPERT
Wheel Alignment

u.-

Parkenburg,

IJU15HFIID'S DRIVIN'
Mf PlUMB WILD·· UNDEI&lt;.FOOT
I'LL BE TICKLED
LONGPieN1ic
PINK WHEN HE CAN

BLAETTNARS

the purchase of a new Wur·
lilzer piano. Good quality
guitar outfit. $34.95; Good selection of Estey cbonl organs,
lt.'l9.50 up; lifetime guarantee on reeds. Wendell's. 1209 BLAOK AND whiu gelding oad.
Garfield Ave.,

Hocklneport, Ohio
Phone 667-3370

•
.-

,.

EXPERIENCED

Schawarzel Marine

Sun. • • • • • • • • •

PIONEER TRAVEL traDer,
'67: 2(1 fool, self.((lntalued,
carpeting, air conditioner,
good condition. Phone Muon
7'13-5'1'71.

W. Va. Phone 48S-4401 .

·7srh··) ·

l

GERT'S a gay girl, ready lor
a whirl after cleaning ..,.
ches; pay $44.iiS or ~.25 a
pets with mue Lustre, rent
month. Try It in your home.
electric ohampooer II, Tlny'l
Phone Mason City 'I'IU!MG.
Bargalnland.
11-li0-41A:
IHl.Jic

tons , monograms, rancy

69's Are Here
6-9%-18
On Display
115 Soon
To Arrive

CAR WASH

R•moln in p_ark•d eor
: Sproyad with warm nap
ono:l th.n o high pratsvre
rlnt• of toh wol•r to
mo:oka cor thin•
3 . An•ndanl on dllfy

m attachments, sews on bul·

MAPLE STEREO radio ..,..
oole, 111611 model stereo AM J:
FM radio com!Jlnallm, 4·
speed automatic changer. BaJ.
ance due $911.:111 or 'paymenl.l
a! $7 per monlb. Call 9ft.mll.
11-li«c

nace heat, private parking, ONE CONN B fiat clarinet $46,
out of all floods . 3 blocks from
post office. 992 5932 from 12
p.m. to 6 p.m
11·191!c

radio, automatic floating turn
table. Take over paymenll cl
16 per month, or pay b-1....,
due, 188.18. 'lblll 1101 oold,
much blgber. Try II iD your
home. Call IIIJ2.18!11. IHMie

Mgr .

TRACIUR CHAINS, S heating
stoves, one good three point
tractor blade, 18 bead a! eat.
lie, phone a.e.t« 111151891.
li·IUIJI 16-INCH SADDLE. Like new.
Pllone 74:1-5265.
11·21·3tp
KENMORE automatic wuber,
l'rtgldalre tefrlgerator: lll!IIIU r:HI\ISTMAS SPECfAL! Free
electric bathroom heater, all !ife-size walking do11 and 3
1n good oondltlon. Phone New
months of plano Jessona by
Haven m.ms.
11-1511tp teacher of yoor choice with

SLEEPING roo11111 , e68 South NOO FORD truck and 12 foot
Third Ave., Mlddleporl. Phone
flat dump bed, f2(10 . Dave
9ft.Sm.

Jack W. Carsey,

UNCLAIMED LAY·AWAY, 1161

Oblo, PlioDe !18'1.Jtl4.
11·1Nllle

FOUR ROOM HOUSE and bath. 196'/ OLDS (442), purehased an.
anfurnilhed, 11160
IJnooln
other car. Sell lor balance
lleighiB. Pbme 192#1t
due. MIISO!I 77:\.S2112. ll-191tp
11).2f.tfc
1965 CHEVROLET ~ ·l&lt;m truck,
SEVEN ROOM apartment In
long wheel base with over
Middleport, newly cleaned and
load. Its. all new 6-ply com·
compleuiy redecorated. front
mercia! tires. In excellent
and back porches and entrarr
condition . $1250. Pllone Rav·
ca. Fur Information eaD
enswood 27t4625.
mmo.
11·17-tfc
l7 PICK·UP, In good shape ;
FOUR ROOM furnlabecl aport.
new paint, $300, or will trade
ment. All utnttlel paid. PlioDe · for ca!lle. G. A. Deem, Ra11913871.
11-JS.tfc
cine.
11·21).31p

IDd Congreso , Athena. 11·17itc

'llULD like baby oilier to are
for two dlikln!n in my home

PoodiH, Weotlel IIIII lck=
en, Barbroo Kl'a., OJolvUie,

992-2181

•

EYINRUDE

EARLY AMERICAN otereo,
1966 conao!e with AM ond P11

For Sale

AKC Puppies, Seottlol, Cocbn,

'l'RAlLER SPACE, ready to lo~n~~S Budget ~!!?J.,,
6 _ _ __.
hook up, private, plenty of '---...;.";.;'·;;;58:.;9;:.
room for children to play. 196'/ SUPER Sport Jmpalla.
Phone m-3904.
!J.14-Uc
Phooe 992-2768.
11-19-&amp;p

tact Mr. Rllfle at BBF, Union
AR MAID and wallres&amp; want·
ld. Must be 21 yearo old.
Wldspertng Pine! Nile Club.
l'llone IIIJ2.1M3.
IUWIA:

....

boall. traDers, CMII, campers,

ole. Write P.O. Box 329, Pomen&gt;y. Phone 9921'1111 or IH
Dick Seyler.
II· J2.12le

.

MlM!eport. -

FURNISHED and unfurnllhed
apartment.. Cl... to achooL
Phone II9UIM.
10.1J.tfe SEVERAL NICE GUNS. ..,.
teet RaJ~ Priddy, Ill Laarol
FURNISHED apartment, f
St., Pomeroy or call IIIJ2.3581 .
rooms and bath. Marion Rey1117«&lt;:
nolds, Ma11011, W. Va. Phone
'I'IU147.
11·121fc 111M MUSTANG 11n&gt; door hard'
lop, $9SG. Gene Dodson, phone
STORAGE SPACE, storage for
mau.
tt-1741]1

Fti&amp;'IISHEO THREE ROOM
APARTMENT with bath,
Adults, 212 Solrth Fifth Ave ..
Middleport, phone !192-S43S.

WJ! OR FEMALE, lull time,
clay or nlglrt sbilla optn, con-

621 Alb Sl,
6441.

If you like It, buy It lor oab'
138 cash or 15.110 per maDilL
can IIIJ2.28311.
11-1-

Big Trad ... ln Allowonc•

u • de

IIIJ2.540.

zag sewing machine to your
home 10 yua may Oil II.

SIEGLER and
TROPIC·AIRE Heaters

1'&lt;0UNG· UNS

Business Services

TRY BEFORE fUll buf. We
wtll bring thll IJ6II model ...

COMPLETE LINE

1

I ALREADY SENT TH '
SCHOOLMARM TWENTV
•GIT WELL" CARDS

'IEP · · HAVtN •

GO BACK 105CHOOL

~rSale

Save Howl Install Now!

AKC GoldeD Relrleoer .........

R.HE S

.

.. ·-·--

BAHNn

A LITTLE 'HOMEWORK' Watching Want Ads Bring Top Grade Results
.
WANT AD
INFORMATION
OUOLINES
5 • ·"" · Dor B•foo-• Publiulio.,
MarMI•r l'"e•liliM 9 a . m.

,.~

11 . Marine
tJyer
l2. Swamp

13. Peril
16. ft.eiK'rve l-1
18. E."'kimo

\

;l

knife
19. Try tu
equal
20. Withers
:n. Not volatile
24 . Dispatche11
23.

waves
~-

Puett&lt;: time
of day
8 . " Fonnal ""
biro
1. lnvltlng
ln9pectlon
9. Staggered
12. Symbol
for iron

13. Ve ry pou r
ma rk
14 . Columbo or

Hodget&gt;
18. De!lirous

17. Dlsea9e
ol s heep
20. Fender
brut ~

JJtn!J.OOrn~; 14..1 "''-'' J ....J ,_.
hy HI 1'1111 AFI"'O l O . ond fl {) ll l

21. Do a

house·
wl!e'9
job
22. Fat lor

~ ~

Untenmble lhese four Jumbles.
one letter to each square, to
form four ord inary words.

c andl~s

and
...p
23. Small

European
state

' .- ~trnl a ) 'a "••• u

24. Palindrome
in the

tarnlly
26. Nouri!lhed
28. Trapper'!!

....g..
29. Word with
grease or

room

30. Optimi!ltic
Jl. There-

Cor.
33. Bemoan

I

GIMCA

tl)/ I I

36. l'"eather':.

companion
37. Wine

receptacle

1 T LI)
~.'"JRYPIA

Ranch
worker

I

HOW KIDS UKE 10

SEE K11l:HEN 5HEL\IE5.

l.tJU CAME ltl ME FOR l-IEU'.
I&gt;.HD I/OIJ'RE 60!N6 10 6fT IT!

Now arnllle the circledletten
..)!
to form the surprise anawer, u
1
1
~~=~:::!~~~~~;•:ue~e:e•ted by the above cartoon~

241. Paddlellke
organ

27. London'~&gt;

(

)

I .....-........ I[ I

Bailey
or-Vic
21. Plarues
32. 'rUled
the .oil
3f. Card g{lme

r J-( r I
~

JII,.M....: 10010 TWIAK

l -f"tllrrday" •

I

t•~• ..r : ll'lwt 1M

36. Spoken

YILYR

I IIJ

Auwton lonmrr ow•

EMPLOY

'o Ilia
,,._rl-1 LOVIIWI
Milt ' " " '

A~ ..

31.Keep - -

on
38. t..gal paper
31.

TERRY

Chlne~~e

J1land
40. Jolaon a.nd

otherv

A Cqptqrua

41 . Cold and

penetrating

ZWYPM

DOWN

1. Felch
2. J:tnulate

ZXK

TWP1K JZP

Ollvler

qoo-

JXSDZJ

XFF

WJZPK

XKJ WN JPFFBUD P'BP .K

KCBFFNSFFV . -XKBKJWJFP

DAILY CR\'I'TOQUOTE- Hore'o how to work It:
AXrDLBAAXR
LONOFIILLOW
One lett.er simply_BtAndl for another. rn lhls aanlple A a. UMd
ror \he thnJe L'•, X ror thf' twa 0'11, etc. Slftl"lft · letter~. a~­
trpphlel, the laqt.h and formatioa of the worQ are all hint..
Elc:h day Ulr r ()de lettera are different.
lo

......_.. er,p,.._,

801111: PIIOPLE CAN STAY
LONGER IN AN HOUR T'HAN OTHERS CAN nr A WD:a HOWELLS
' N&gt;
•
(f&gt; I - ICJQ J'eat.Uf'H IJBIIicate. lee. ~

-~

"*

lilf'Rf 601N6 TO Hl\'t1! A 6CW
DOCIOR· PAliENT 11ELATIONSHIP.
OR I'M 60!NG lO SLIJ6 'IOU !
DO ~OU l!NDEffiAND?

IT 'S NOT NECES'il.R'I
To SALUTE ...

�.......

6 -

Dalb

The

Sentirel, Pomeroy·Middltpor1, 0., Thursday, NoY, 21, 1968

C•IICallcol lo,l &amp; Carract ian1
Will I.e coccaplati until 9 a .... l01
Oe&lt;r el P ... bliutia,.

REGULATIONS
The P...blhhar ra t arvu the rililhl
to •.lit or r•i• cr ""~ 11.! 1 deemed ob·
jco cl ior&gt;obla . Tk. publ-ish•r will nol' · t
b• ••tf&gt;Ontl b l• for mor• lhGn ona
ii'ICillroac l int er! ion .

For We

Male Help Wanted
~EED

CASID

Sell

lam...

Knapp Aerolred Shoes, full or
part time. High cvnuni!sionll
plus bonus. Complete Une lor
men and women. lilquipmenl
!umished free. Write I&lt;&gt; Gor·
don Rae, Distrt&lt;l Sales Mgr.,
3fi.B4 Darbyshire Drive, Columbus, Ohio, 43221. ll~l.Jic

f., Wa,t Ali s.,.. ,ca
5 Clnll pa• Worll o- i ntell icuo

Employment Wanted

Mi"'"'""' C ho•o• 75c
11 ~ •ntt F&gt;•' word lhr•• co ntiCu ·

u,.
in••'''"'"'
II c•••.. ,., 'lllord

•• • co nta curi"l
latarf oon t
25 ,., cant D • .co~o.nl on l)o)•d odt
aMI ooh poo d wolh on 10 d11r•
CARD OF TH,.H I&lt;$ &amp; OSIT U ... RY

Sl ~ 0 lor SO "' &lt;"d "' ' "' "'""' Eo
.. OIIIIoonal •o•d 1c
S LI NO AD S
A.tilllotoo-1 2Sc Choro• pa r A.l.,.ar -

OfF IC E HOUR !!
1 ,30 a ~ m to 5 OCl P·"' Dod ~
111 : 30 a ·"' · l o 12 :00 Noon Sa t urda y

WILL BABY SIT ....tday~ In
my home for small child or
1 small children. Phone Ma-

son m-5326.

11·1Htc

Lost
!.OST in Pomeroy : Stamped
envelope addressed to City
National Bank and Trust Co.
!f found, call ~.
11-!Ntc

In Memory

Wanted

L"f LOVING memory of my ANTIQUES, furniture, d1lhM.
mlsceOpneous , Mrs. Boward
dear brother, Charles 0 . Mul.
Cec:ll, 800
Main St., l'aJu.
ford. who passed away seven
yean ago, on Nov. 21 , 1961:
I'OJ.
~~·

w.

A loved one from us has gone,
A voic-e we loved is still ,
A place Is vacm1t In crur lives
Which ne~er can be fil1ed .
Sadly missed by his
sister. Mrs Betty
Goodall. and family.
11·2Htn
IN MEMORY of our father and
grandfalber. Lawrence Whitlatch, who passed away so
sudden on Nov . 21 , 1965 :
What we would give to see

your smile,
To sit and

talk

with

you

awhile;
The blow was sudden,
shock severe

the

To part with you , we loved

so dear .
We often sit and think of you :

The things you used to say
and do.
We wonder why yoo had to
die

Without a chance to say goodbye.
So sad:y missed by hll
children and grandd&gt;lldren.
11·21·1tp

Notice
'·

;UN SHOOT. Sunday, Nov . 21,
at tbe Rlrtland American Le.
gton Farm.
11·20-31r

Dance
Saturday night,
10 p.m. til 2 a.m.
Whispering Pines
Nile Club
Music by th e
Bored' of Education

rusrc EVERY

Friday and
Saturday at Jad&lt;'s Club on
HarriaonvUie Road off Rt. 7.
11·20-ltc

10wing at home llppers, pockets, pegging.
hemming, alterations, etc.
Mrs. Freddie Thabet. M89on,

IJU. DO

Pbone

17:\.~1

4-ll).tfc

ACANCY lor two elderly peo.
pll. Prefer prlvau paid pa· Phooe Mason, 77Uta5.
lu.tlc

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POI'ATOES,
C'llnDI:e

~

111.1

Pntm.li. ...,

lf.1Nie

POODLE PlJPPWI, AKC TOJ
miniature, fiS ond ap. Iliad

..moe IIIII poommt P'-

URKEY SIIDOT, Racine Gun
Club. Sunday, Nov 24 , start·
log Ume l p.m. Free eats .
llrinl! your 22 rilles. Thm
...til a!&amp;o be a live turkey
· Open sites only.
lH9-5tc

Help Wanted

NEED liELP. :Ill hours $46.
Buay Fuller Brusb lady needs
I people with CM2I to dellvor
..lalogues and take orders.
For appointment phooe UZ.
• .
11·1711tc

For Sale or Trade
:Clfil CHEVY pickup, %-ton, wilh
camper , for sale or trade .

Salem St .. Rutland.

ll -21~tc

For Rent

POMEROY

P'URNJSIIED APARTMENTS
In Middleport All ullllllell
paid. Rowley &amp; Reed, Middleport, Pbone IIJZ.Z778.

to.:.uc

'I'RAIT.ER LOTS. Bob's Moblle
Court, Syracuse, Ohio on State
Rt. 124, Phone IIIJ2.2951.
8-ll·lfc

11- ~lp

5 ROOM house, partially fur ..
nished . Gas furnace. Third
St., Mason . Phone 8111.29'11.
11-IH!p

!lOUSE. :&gt;room• and batli, ulil·
lty room, nice location. Phone
992'21185 after 5 p.m. 11-l~te
! ROOM apartment, close

to

downtown Pomeroy. Call lllJ2.
%143 before 5 p.m. 11-l~fc
4 ROOM rtlRNJSIIED apart·
meot, bath and sbower, fur-

11·20-'1&lt;

11·2J.tfc

da7l a - k from UO AM
to 4:10 PM. Pbone 742-162Z.

f

11·1Uie

OOLUR DAY S SALE
We' v • Red uc e d Our A lum dy L ow
Pri cal
Reg . 1.49 Mens

.. 1.00

DRES S SHIRTS . .
Rei_- 1.119

. .. 1.00

LADIE S PURSES .
Re9 . 1. 29 P atte d

1.00

VINYL FLOWERS ..
R .. g. J 9c ea c h
Soo p i n T urtl e Sp ong •

J fo r 1.00

Ra&lt;;r. 49c eo . Lod iat

HEAD SC ARVE S .. . . 3 lo r 1.00
R ... g. 8 lor 1.00
. 10 loo 1.00
GLASSES . . .
Rag. 2. 99 Jonie

RUG CLEANER .... ..... 1.00
Reg. 35c eo. l SO 'llfott

LIGHT BU LSS .... . . -4 lo r 1. 00
Sa le en d1 Mon . 5: 00P . M.

Yost, Portland.
2242.

Phone SO.
11-20.Sip

ROY'S GUITAR and amplifier,
""" year old. Used very UtIle. Phone IIJZ.7%88. 11-2t).31c
SHE'I'LAND PONY , very gtnl·
le. Phone 74:1-SUS. 11·21-l!p

-+--

1966 FIAT

.ilso two snow tim

IUS 11: 15. used ve-y 1il' !e, r"lay
be seen at 270 Walnut St ..
Middleport or phone 992-7110

after 5 p.m.

11-21 -31p

one Noble E fiat alto au..
phone $11$.
Bob 1'nlaall.
Phone ~.
IHT«e

TWO BEDROOM new home In TWO RIDING HORSES. 0 no
five galled l1)lll 4 yean old,
Mason , gas heat, utility room.
four slocldng feel, one I l ~ o
Velma Zuspan. Phone m.
galled, black stocking feel,
5750.
11-I!Hitc
see Arnold Grau, Rutland.
phone 74J.4211, after 5 p.m.
TRAILER, Brown's Trailer
phone 742-5501.
11'17...,
Park,
Minersville,
Ohio.
Phone !192-3324.

•!MI4 FORD V 8, I pass. Wag.
on, Auto. Trans. Radio and

Heater. Good Condition, fiOO.
Call after 5 P .M. !19U!IM.

11·18-tlp

EXCELLENT, efficient IIIII
economical. 'ftud'o Blue IJJO.
For Sale
Ire carpet and upholatery
!n'EREO: Walnut COMOle with
&lt;leaner. Rent electric obam·
4-SjMIOII chantor. kpeaker
pooer fl. Baker Fum!ture.
system. Balance due $71.54 or
ll·INfA:
1&amp;.75 per mont!1. Phone
Dll.
11-~ WARM 'fominll coolll!avo 111111
fan, ],,all 3 to 4 IVOIDI, uoecl
MINNEAPOLIS Moline Tractor,
leu tl!an two mont118. Glenn
1952, phone IIIJ2.51t13 after 7
Jewell, £lownlnllon. o. I'IIGne
p.m.
IH91tr
6!1f.3135.
IU4-121e

m

Nelco sewing macbine. Needs

(~··

M:r· .: . ·• • . ·· ·II to6
Sot. • • • • • • • • • • ·9 to 7

stit-

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-GUARAJIII'EED-

• Free Estimates. '

PHONE 992-2094

• Quality Concrete

•

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THIS RIE SELECTION OF
HOUDIY·PRICED ~· USED
CARS CAN MIKE YOUR
HOLIDAY AMERRY ONE.

II
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1967 PONTIAC LeMans . .... . ..... . . . . , .$2195
H. T . Cpe. Bea utiful gold fin•s h with b lo ck vinyl top,
326 c u . in . V8, eng ine wi th 3 s peed tran s. Console
bu c ke t
seat s, vinyl interior , only 23, 000 miles by
lo co ! I ow ner . Rad io , good white wall tir es , show·
room c lean .

66 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE CON .w~~

ED?s. $1995

Loc ol l owner c ar , new w· s·w t ires , vin yl trim with
bud: e t seats , con so le, ra di o, P .S. &amp; P . B., auto .tron s .
dar k blue fini s h with wh it e nylo n top . A real s harpie .

66 CHEVELLE SS 396 H.T. Cpe.

.$1995

W
.w.

Loc al owne r c:o r, 4 on the floor, good wide oval
tires, red VI ny l tnt ertor, whil e t 1n 1sh , ra di O 6 heater
Tr y 11 for pe rf or mo nce .
.

1I

• Certified Strength

Pomfroy~.o

E. Main

die hor!le , a""~;.:roximately 900

HeO" l' duty, e.tra d•• P haod1 ,
lour lull ply nr lon.
7751114 Whit• Sidewolla

ONLY

Sl8.95

Moat

•I•••

populo•
number a t

""oiloble.

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Loco! 1 owner co r, good tires, std . Iron s . 6 cyl. en•
g ine. Ra di o an d Hea ter. Re d fin is h .

POMEROY

Real Est1te For Sale.

For Salt~

Loc al 1 o wner car , VB e ng ine , s td . tran s . , radio &amp;
h eater. We know you wil l like this one .

1962 MERCURY Comet 4 Doo1 .. . ..... . ... $595
6 cyl. engin e, o ulomol ic trans . Radio &amp; heater . local
1 owne r c or and pr1 ce d t o go .

'69 MODELs
Best Deals, Too!

1

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~-;. ~w.

••: .

.Whot

-

-- -

.

R4al Estate For Sale

L

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

1
1
1

fun For Ali! Jr. Miu Pog•ant, Sun., Nov . 2-4,8 p. m.

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. f '"".

.

. . ..

~.

;

,.,

.,,_,.," ..

- ...

·

...-

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

~

~

..

~

-

,..-

,.

. , . , .........

~p

,

-·

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

-

'P'' '""""'

1' :

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From the Largest Truc'k or
Bull&lt;bzer Rodiator To Tile
Smallest Heater Core.
Pomeroy

WINNIE WINKLE

bedrooms,

batb,

.'

Buslnlll S.rvhn

OOLitR, BAU\Ikllt, trwcba

ond truc:lt woke, IOplle
tanks, water llDel, bu r+lltl,
lllo topooll. Heary Bthr,
Pbone 11811 11118 cr llapr BUr,
I'IIGne 11811 1811
111U!IIo
SEWING

1214. The Fabric &amp;bop, J'Gm.

Autborlled Singer 81111
Service. We . Sblrpea
ldaora.
Ja.llc
en&gt;y.

IIIII

0.

..,., ...

......

I

Crill aaB •
I I lfc

TilE &amp;AHARA

aU

furnace beat. WILL TRADB
FOR 8MAILER PUCE.

$6.500.00
RACINE - TILE IIV8INEB8
ROOM. Tiled floora, ce!llna
gu beater, toUel, hot water
tank, WW llPKED' ON '1'11111
ROOM. f6,900 .00
CLOSE TO POMEROY AND
MIDDLEPORT - LUre Now
ranch type, !.,.ge Uvln&amp; room,
3 large bedroolllB, batb, lai1e
level lot with euy - ·
117,1100.00
HENRY CLELAND
om 111
111.-IIZI.

8usln111

{

AIVD l &amp;UE:l!E A BIG MOUTH
IS nl£ SIGIV cr A BROKEIJ

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/..QSE:

I &amp;UEIIe:
11-IAT VJA'i. A
THREAT!

!

I

can't tell ljOU much,

Pl14lli6, but Mr Jasper
and I are
i
toqether on a
confidential

maHer!

Servlcei

NOBOO'f" RIGtm..Y Kl'40WS
~IL E! AN' Wf:'I?E NOT Ftx!N'
T'FIHO OUT, SO LottG AS
CHIEF HOW GEtm.Y'Q ABI. E
1' liOLO 001 AGtN''5EC0110 M!

. •n

M4tc
BODGET PRICI!l fWrdbue 411
oar third Door bodpt lhop.
Baker Fum!ture, Middleport.

' • lie

Oblo.

lnturence
AU'l'OMOBlLE lr4W CCI beet
.._w? Loll :rour opnt.
.... lkeme! CaD • 2111
I II Ire
LIBERTY CONTENDERS
MEMPHIS (UPO
The
University of Mississippi Rebels
will have to wait a Cew days to
learn who their opponent wiU be
In the Dec. 14 Liberty Bowl
!O(tball game.

DAILY CROSSWORD

Ole Miss, car rying a fh3
rerord, accepted an invitaUon
Tue&amp;day to play in the bowL
AF. "Bud" Dudley, the bowl's

ACit088

Investment of $2,190 to $3,960 cash required
secured by inventory and equipment. You must
hawe a good car and be able to devote at least

4 to 12 houn per week.
If you are interested, have the desire, drive, determination and want to be suocessful in a growIng business of your own, write us today. Please
enclose name, addreu and telephone number.

WE WELCOME INVESTIGATION

GENERAL
TIRE SALES

IHTER·STATE DIST. CO.
535 South Second West
Salt Lake City, Utah 84101

992-7161
Middl•port, 0.

4. Bratn

bet
-t. LJttle
troublemak~r

1. Killer
whale
8. One who
achie veH

The Nta~ara Is one of the
few rivers m the world to flow·
in a northerly direction.

YOU CAN EARN $800
. OR MORE A MONTH
BASED ON YOUR EFFORTI

3. Speak

I . Roulette

executive director, said the
other team would be chosen
later.

Become a distributor in one of America's Jarg·
est and fastest growing industries. This is a new
concept in the field of vending. No experience
required . All accounts are contracted for, and set
up by our company. You merely restock locationsJ
with our National Brand product~.

Recappoble Tire

I

caarr.

blft!D"t,
hardwood noon, pordwt,

SPARE TIME INCOME
DISTRIBUTOR FOR THIS AREA

s22·00

FINISH JN9PECT!N3
MY CD/I.\PANY'5

WHilE l VISIT

10. C ompll!l.'!iOn

•'

All SIZES
for

.U.S No. 2nd

c. IIBAD'OIID

AUCI'IONBD
Oom,W. ltddlll

Winter
Retreads
Plu1

MACIIINES, repelr

oerv!ce, aD mUel. WY 1-

Pre-Winter
Spedall

2

u..-

... eurNMrru.

~'lOWINNIE

fOMEROY - I otory !ramo, I

-.all

RADIO &amp; 1V REPAI!t IIIII •
iDIIalled. Jol1!1 Bam.
1111, Pbone liD .. 114 IOic

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MOTOR

.I

1 11 ·t

IIELEN or VIRGIL TEAFORD

MSOCIATES

IN SVRAaiSE

-==::::. - -'

TERMS!

! ''

::.R=·~Co

Business Servlcet

.
-;.L~A~N; -1
1

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S.ll

I POMEROY
II ~318
308

-

11&lt;ACJ()M&lt;5-

NE.Tv..tc::JRI("'

Alit CONDmONING Rettlpro
model stereo, be'lutlful waJ.
allon WYice. Jaclt'a JWrlt.
nut console AM &amp; FM radio,
eraUon, New Haftll. hone
BSR automatic Ooallng turn
18ND71.
' • de
table. Make paymenta of GEO, HO&amp;iiEI IER. Bnbr
NfriEROY
2
large
lots,
oot
or
f6.32 or pay 1114.23. Set oold
hi&amp;h water, house 4 I'OOIIUI . READY • liJX eonerell deliYmuch higher. Try 11 in )'®f
ered riP! to your proJeel
bath, only $25011.
home. Phone Muon City 77J.
hot ond Ill!'. """' 5910.
11-21.~ POMEROY - Warm I n10m
maiM. Phone 119111M, 0.,..
brick, bath, lull buement, hot
water beaU.C. only f6440, ~ .
USED SPINET plano, Azl conMIDDLEPORT
- 7 1001111, bath,
dition, light walnut Onllh,
fumace. baoement and ga$495. Wendell's, 1209 Garfield
rage, uking 114,1100.
CIGARETTE veudJna m , I w
Ave ., Parkersburg, W. VI.
FOR
RENT
200
acre
:arm.
IIIII Hnlce. ABC Eulai*bel,
Phone !IH401.
11~1-211c
We ne«&lt; omall farms.
v-, W. Va. Phone 7'INIII,

your wife a nice home lor
I 'BUY
Xmu, large lot. 3 bedroom
I with closets, knotty pine Jdt.
eben, good cabinet!, one &amp;
I one hall balba, Iargt llvlll(
1 room, atone front, needl 1111'1f
spouting, new oepllc link,
I forced
furnace, full h I ment forair children
to play.
Liberal
financing.
1 D. R. WOOD, ......
Sl, Gallipoiio, 0.
I• . !Z LocutI'MIIe
4ff'1. .
11·1Mie
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Yes, Good Selection Of

HOBSTETTER
·REALTY

FLOOR DEMONSTRATOJi; iii

1

1963 CHEVROLET Impala H.T. Cpe .... .. . $995

t..AND ro lliS o. 5.
FOR tiS SPACE'

0

•01 PAGE
MIDOLEPORT, OHIO

MOORE ' S
124 W. MAIN

gree n

1962 CHEVY II H.T. CPE ... .. .. . .... . . . . $599

GOEGLEIN GRAVEL

thla prlc•.
F~,~Uy go.~aron•••li - B~,~llt by a b111
t lr• r~~oker for . . ,
Limlled

II SKATE-A-Way holiday portieo.
Malib u Conv . V8 e ngine, P .G. tronsmiu ion, new w-s-w
Frhll)r, Nov.
t i ~e s,
exter ior w ith white nylon top ,
w ith
I 'l'lla!lbiltrmc.
11, New Yean Eve, TUol.,
v m y l trtm.
I Dec. 21, 7:SO to 12:111. OpeD
Chrlltmas Eve. Clooed OJrlaJ.
1964 CHEVROLET Bel Air 4 Door ... . . . ... $995 · I mao. Open Wednes'sy, J'ri.
6 c:y l. Std . tra ns . Ra d io . Local 1 owner cor, black I
clay, Satunlay, 7:10 I&lt;&gt; 10:1!1.
fini s h, s potless cl ean inte ri o r. Good tires .
I Available lor partleo, MIJo.
clay, 'lllelday IIIII 'J'bunday
I
n!gilll, l!alurcia7 IIIII 8ulllla)'
1961 CHEVROLET Bel Air Wagon ..... . . . .$350 I
llfternoool. PboDo !18518ZII or
Blk . fini s h, red interior. VB e ng ine . Auto ma t ic Irons .
•u•.
U-17-alte
Ra d io a nd heate r.
I
1960FORDFALCON2DR ...... . .... . ... $295 II
White fin1 s h. Good t ire s . Automati c. Radio

DIAL 992·3284

Plus 2.19 f•derol To~

65 CHEVELLE . . .. .. ... . .. . .~~~ $1495 .$1395
gree n

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

SPECIAL
SNOW TIRE SALE

lbs. , very gentle. Phone UZ.
;265,
11·21·3tp

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'fO CoJV/NCe
PRI'Mu;&lt;R 1\Jfl 1b
lEASE IMFI:JJ&lt;rAIIf

O'BlUEN A CROW
REALTY COMPANY

Pomeroy Home &amp; Aut

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Real &amp;tate For Sale

s:ss·

GOOD USED Hanlwlck gu
range , Norge refrigerator,
large size Warm Morning gu
heater, two-wheel trallor. Call
~.
11·21-'IA:

ll-21-29tc

lfQefN AAP.rJeS IN
eet.61'\VIA 'R:l fRY

..,..... S.rtlct

PH. 99:1.2143

!;XPERT
Wheel Alignment

u.-

Parkenburg,

IJU15HFIID'S DRIVIN'
Mf PlUMB WILD·· UNDEI&lt;.FOOT
I'LL BE TICKLED
LONGPieN1ic
PINK WHEN HE CAN

BLAETTNARS

the purchase of a new Wur·
lilzer piano. Good quality
guitar outfit. $34.95; Good selection of Estey cbonl organs,
lt.'l9.50 up; lifetime guarantee on reeds. Wendell's. 1209 BLAOK AND whiu gelding oad.
Garfield Ave.,

Hocklneport, Ohio
Phone 667-3370

•
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EXPERIENCED

Schawarzel Marine

Sun. • • • • • • • • •

PIONEER TRAVEL traDer,
'67: 2(1 fool, self.((lntalued,
carpeting, air conditioner,
good condition. Phone Muon
7'13-5'1'71.

W. Va. Phone 48S-4401 .

·7srh··) ·

l

GERT'S a gay girl, ready lor
a whirl after cleaning ..,.
ches; pay $44.iiS or ~.25 a
pets with mue Lustre, rent
month. Try It in your home.
electric ohampooer II, Tlny'l
Phone Mason City 'I'IU!MG.
Bargalnland.
11-li0-41A:
IHl.Jic

tons , monograms, rancy

69's Are Here
6-9%-18
On Display
115 Soon
To Arrive

CAR WASH

R•moln in p_ark•d eor
: Sproyad with warm nap
ono:l th.n o high pratsvre
rlnt• of toh wol•r to
mo:oka cor thin•
3 . An•ndanl on dllfy

m attachments, sews on bul·

MAPLE STEREO radio ..,..
oole, 111611 model stereo AM J:
FM radio com!Jlnallm, 4·
speed automatic changer. BaJ.
ance due $911.:111 or 'paymenl.l
a! $7 per monlb. Call 9ft.mll.
11-li«c

nace heat, private parking, ONE CONN B fiat clarinet $46,
out of all floods . 3 blocks from
post office. 992 5932 from 12
p.m. to 6 p.m
11·191!c

radio, automatic floating turn
table. Take over paymenll cl
16 per month, or pay b-1....,
due, 188.18. 'lblll 1101 oold,
much blgber. Try II iD your
home. Call IIIJ2.18!11. IHMie

Mgr .

TRACIUR CHAINS, S heating
stoves, one good three point
tractor blade, 18 bead a! eat.
lie, phone a.e.t« 111151891.
li·IUIJI 16-INCH SADDLE. Like new.
Pllone 74:1-5265.
11·21·3tp
KENMORE automatic wuber,
l'rtgldalre tefrlgerator: lll!IIIU r:HI\ISTMAS SPECfAL! Free
electric bathroom heater, all !ife-size walking do11 and 3
1n good oondltlon. Phone New
months of plano Jessona by
Haven m.ms.
11-1511tp teacher of yoor choice with

SLEEPING roo11111 , e68 South NOO FORD truck and 12 foot
Third Ave., Mlddleporl. Phone
flat dump bed, f2(10 . Dave
9ft.Sm.

Jack W. Carsey,

UNCLAIMED LAY·AWAY, 1161

Oblo, PlioDe !18'1.Jtl4.
11·1Nllle

FOUR ROOM HOUSE and bath. 196'/ OLDS (442), purehased an.
anfurnilhed, 11160
IJnooln
other car. Sell lor balance
lleighiB. Pbme 192#1t
due. MIISO!I 77:\.S2112. ll-191tp
11).2f.tfc
1965 CHEVROLET ~ ·l&lt;m truck,
SEVEN ROOM apartment In
long wheel base with over
Middleport, newly cleaned and
load. Its. all new 6-ply com·
compleuiy redecorated. front
mercia! tires. In excellent
and back porches and entrarr
condition . $1250. Pllone Rav·
ca. Fur Information eaD
enswood 27t4625.
mmo.
11·17-tfc
l7 PICK·UP, In good shape ;
FOUR ROOM furnlabecl aport.
new paint, $300, or will trade
ment. All utnttlel paid. PlioDe · for ca!lle. G. A. Deem, Ra11913871.
11-JS.tfc
cine.
11·21).31p

IDd Congreso , Athena. 11·17itc

'llULD like baby oilier to are
for two dlikln!n in my home

PoodiH, Weotlel IIIII lck=
en, Barbroo Kl'a., OJolvUie,

992-2181

•

EYINRUDE

EARLY AMERICAN otereo,
1966 conao!e with AM ond P11

For Sale

AKC Puppies, Seottlol, Cocbn,

'l'RAlLER SPACE, ready to lo~n~~S Budget ~!!?J.,,
6 _ _ __.
hook up, private, plenty of '---...;.";.;'·;;;58:.;9;:.
room for children to play. 196'/ SUPER Sport Jmpalla.
Phone m-3904.
!J.14-Uc
Phooe 992-2768.
11-19-&amp;p

tact Mr. Rllfle at BBF, Union
AR MAID and wallres&amp; want·
ld. Must be 21 yearo old.
Wldspertng Pine! Nile Club.
l'llone IIIJ2.1M3.
IUWIA:

....

boall. traDers, CMII, campers,

ole. Write P.O. Box 329, Pomen&gt;y. Phone 9921'1111 or IH
Dick Seyler.
II· J2.12le

.

MlM!eport. -

FURNISHED and unfurnllhed
apartment.. Cl... to achooL
Phone II9UIM.
10.1J.tfe SEVERAL NICE GUNS. ..,.
teet RaJ~ Priddy, Ill Laarol
FURNISHED apartment, f
St., Pomeroy or call IIIJ2.3581 .
rooms and bath. Marion Rey1117«&lt;:
nolds, Ma11011, W. Va. Phone
'I'IU147.
11·121fc 111M MUSTANG 11n&gt; door hard'
lop, $9SG. Gene Dodson, phone
STORAGE SPACE, storage for
mau.
tt-1741]1

Fti&amp;'IISHEO THREE ROOM
APARTMENT with bath,
Adults, 212 Solrth Fifth Ave ..
Middleport, phone !192-S43S.

WJ! OR FEMALE, lull time,
clay or nlglrt sbilla optn, con-

621 Alb Sl,
6441.

If you like It, buy It lor oab'
138 cash or 15.110 per maDilL
can IIIJ2.28311.
11-1-

Big Trad ... ln Allowonc•

u • de

IIIJ2.540.

zag sewing machine to your
home 10 yua may Oil II.

SIEGLER and
TROPIC·AIRE Heaters

1'&lt;0UNG· UNS

Business Services

TRY BEFORE fUll buf. We
wtll bring thll IJ6II model ...

COMPLETE LINE

1

I ALREADY SENT TH '
SCHOOLMARM TWENTV
•GIT WELL" CARDS

'IEP · · HAVtN •

GO BACK 105CHOOL

~rSale

Save Howl Install Now!

AKC GoldeD Relrleoer .........

R.HE S

.

.. ·-·--

BAHNn

A LITTLE 'HOMEWORK' Watching Want Ads Bring Top Grade Results
.
WANT AD
INFORMATION
OUOLINES
5 • ·"" · Dor B•foo-• Publiulio.,
MarMI•r l'"e•liliM 9 a . m.

,.~

11 . Marine
tJyer
l2. Swamp

13. Peril
16. ft.eiK'rve l-1
18. E."'kimo

\

;l

knife
19. Try tu
equal
20. Withers
:n. Not volatile
24 . Dispatche11
23.

waves
~-

Puett&lt;: time
of day
8 . " Fonnal ""
biro
1. lnvltlng
ln9pectlon
9. Staggered
12. Symbol
for iron

13. Ve ry pou r
ma rk
14 . Columbo or

Hodget&gt;
18. De!lirous

17. Dlsea9e
ol s heep
20. Fender
brut ~

JJtn!J.OOrn~; 14..1 "''-'' J ....J ,_.
hy HI 1'1111 AFI"'O l O . ond fl {) ll l

21. Do a

house·
wl!e'9
job
22. Fat lor

~ ~

Untenmble lhese four Jumbles.
one letter to each square, to
form four ord inary words.

c andl~s

and
...p
23. Small

European
state

' .- ~trnl a ) 'a "••• u

24. Palindrome
in the

tarnlly
26. Nouri!lhed
28. Trapper'!!

....g..
29. Word with
grease or

room

30. Optimi!ltic
Jl. There-

Cor.
33. Bemoan

I

GIMCA

tl)/ I I

36. l'"eather':.

companion
37. Wine

receptacle

1 T LI)
~.'"JRYPIA

Ranch
worker

I

HOW KIDS UKE 10

SEE K11l:HEN 5HEL\IE5.

l.tJU CAME ltl ME FOR l-IEU'.
I&gt;.HD I/OIJ'RE 60!N6 10 6fT IT!

Now arnllle the circledletten
..)!
to form the surprise anawer, u
1
1
~~=~:::!~~~~~;•:ue~e:e•ted by the above cartoon~

241. Paddlellke
organ

27. London'~&gt;

(

)

I .....-........ I[ I

Bailey
or-Vic
21. Plarues
32. 'rUled
the .oil
3f. Card g{lme

r J-( r I
~

JII,.M....: 10010 TWIAK

l -f"tllrrday" •

I

t•~• ..r : ll'lwt 1M

36. Spoken

YILYR

I IIJ

Auwton lonmrr ow•

EMPLOY

'o Ilia
,,._rl-1 LOVIIWI
Milt ' " " '

A~ ..

31.Keep - -

on
38. t..gal paper
31.

TERRY

Chlne~~e

J1land
40. Jolaon a.nd

otherv

A Cqptqrua

41 . Cold and

penetrating

ZWYPM

DOWN

1. Felch
2. J:tnulate

ZXK

TWP1K JZP

Ollvler

qoo-

JXSDZJ

XFF

WJZPK

XKJ WN JPFFBUD P'BP .K

KCBFFNSFFV . -XKBKJWJFP

DAILY CR\'I'TOQUOTE- Hore'o how to work It:
AXrDLBAAXR
LONOFIILLOW
One lett.er simply_BtAndl for another. rn lhls aanlple A a. UMd
ror \he thnJe L'•, X ror thf' twa 0'11, etc. Slftl"lft · letter~. a~­
trpphlel, the laqt.h and formatioa of the worQ are all hint..
Elc:h day Ulr r ()de lettera are different.
lo

......_.. er,p,.._,

801111: PIIOPLE CAN STAY
LONGER IN AN HOUR T'HAN OTHERS CAN nr A WD:a HOWELLS
' N&gt;
•
(f&gt; I - ICJQ J'eat.Uf'H IJBIIicate. lee. ~

-~

"*

lilf'Rf 601N6 TO Hl\'t1! A 6CW
DOCIOR· PAliENT 11ELATIONSHIP.
OR I'M 60!NG lO SLIJ6 'IOU !
DO ~OU l!NDEffiAND?

IT 'S NOT NECES'il.R'I
To SALUTE ...

�....

· ·- ..... -~-----

I
inspection, Frida.y. 1:30 p. m. Dirr
ner at 6:30 for companions and
ladles; Elmer Williams, Jackson.
grand conductor of Grard Council ol Ohio, inspecting orficer.

Wilberl Josepll F. llalOtill,
Mrs. Charles D. Kisor, Mrs.
John F. Klein, Lawrence Lundy, Mrs. Larry E. Rose, Lee HudRQEer D. McClelland, 2145 isill, Christian E. Schilling, JimEastern Ave.;l\lrs.GilbertG. Ad- my J. Thornton, George R. StewkJns, RL 2 Bidwell; Gilbert G. art, Mrs. .John W. CO~er and
Adkins, Rt 2 BidweU;J. Leorllrd infant daughter, Mrs. James
Hash, Rt. I Bidwell; Mrs. William Newnes and infant son, Mrs. Herr. Large, HL 1 Vinton; MartinT. bert E. Ponn and infant son, Mrs.
Jack B. Stevens am inrantdaughStanle~· . Mason; Miss Jeanene F.
Furbee, Pt. Pleasant; Jan E. Hi- ter, Mrs. Dnid M. Taylor and inley, Clifton; Willard H. Jeffers, fant daugllter.
Jr., Pomero~; Mrs. Clinton E.
Johnson, Portlarw:l; Miss !larric PLEASANT VALLEY IIOSPITAL
M. Smith, Middleport; Mrs. EthADMfl'TED: Opal Rose, Pt.
el J::: . .4.mos, Sy ra tuse; Charles Pleasant; r-.tn. John Watson, .Jr.,
E. Foots, lronh)fl; Mrs. Kenneth Pt. Pleasant; J{onald Thornton,
E. Erline, HL 3 .latkson; Hob- Pl . Pleasant.
ert L Broyles, Ja(.'l\son; Alvin
Dl!SCHARGED: Mrs. Ray Sn._vB. Cordle, Rt. I Flatwoods, Ky.; der, Logan, 0.: Martha Johnson.
William 11. Hard:y, Ashland, Ky.; Pt. Pleasant; James Hash, BidHarr~· L. llartman, .!al·kson: Mrs.
well; Marvin Woolen. Pt. PleasRussell B. Carsey, Jr., Hl I, an t.
IIOJ,.ZEK MEDICAL CENTEH:
Visiting hours 2-4 and 7~8 p.m.
Parerts only on Pediatrics Ward.
ADMISSIONS

Athens; Clifford 11. llogs ten, Ironton; \-Irs. James W. Ew ing,
Sr., The Plains; Mr11.. William
E. Langdon, Ironton; Steven 1::.

Spangler, Ja chson.
DISCH.4HGE&lt;.,
Mrs. Clarence I::. l3ailey, Mrs.
Howard S. BreV~·er, Hn n: C.

Browning, Lori Ann Buck, Mrs.

PLANNED

DINNEH

A potluck fellowship dinner

will be held at 6 p.m on Thanksgi,·ing at the Morning Star United Methodist Church . A program
will fcJ1.ow.

New Day of
Styling and Comfort
Begins with

A

Mrs. Margaret Weaver returned recently from a trip to
Boston, Mas&amp;., New York, arxl
Marylancl. She traveled by jeL
Mrs. W. H. Raub, Mrs. Leon-ard Baird, and Mrs. Leo Altier
and children, Corni~, were the
weekeOO visitors of Mrs. Margaret Clatworthy, Mr. and Mrs.
Lewis Long and Mrs. Virginia
Neutzling. The.}' came especially for lhe wedding or Joy&lt;..-e Long.
Mrs. Perry Hoffman and son,
Frank, spent the weekend in Richwood, W. VL They were called
there by the death of Mrs. Hoffman's stepmother. Mrs. Pearl
Hoffman assisted in the care of
the children during her daughterin-law's absence.
.Jean Craig is recuperating at
home rollowing sw-gery at St
Mary's Hospital in lluntington,
W. \a.
Da\id Sc\'er of Canton and Miss
Marlus Lyons ot Zanesville, both
students at Ohio Uni.,.ersity, spent
U1c weekend here with Mrs. Victor Grim. Surday guests of Mrs.
Grim were her son and daughter-in-law , Mr. arw::l Mrs. l'aul
Grim, of Portsmouth, and nephew, Howard Nagel, or Tulsa,
Okla.
Mrs. John Ketchka and daughters, Kim and Kelly, or Brook... me, are visiting here this week
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Wallace Bradford, aOO Mr. and
Mrs. John Kctr hka, Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. J ohn Lyons and
son, Bernard, returned Wednesday from Marion where they were
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Carleton
SchHlitz. They went especially
for the Saturday wtodding of their
son, Tommy, to Miss Esther
Scl1erlitz.
Mr. ard Mrs. Dwight Wallace
attended funeral servires for his
brother, Dana, held last week in
Marietta.

THURSDAY
POMEUOY Elementary PTA
ladles wtll meet Syracuse EJ~
mentary PTA ladies, 7:30 p.m.
Thursday in basketball game at
Pomeroy Junior High SchooL
Adults 50 cents, children 25
cents. Refreshments sold.
TWIN ClrY 91rlnettes will
meet Thursday, Nov . 21, 7:30
p.m. in the social room of The
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Electric Company.
WOMEN'S ASSOCIATION, Mid·
dleport First United Presbyterian Church, 7:30 Thursday night
at the church; annual thank or~
Cering; l'ldninlating committee to
meet and report; Mrs. Paul H~
tonstall, programj Mrs. Janet
Lewis, devotions. Hostesses,
Mrs. Edward Crooks, Mrs. Dale
Walburn, MJss Mary Park, Mrs.
Rodney DownJng, and Miss Margaret sauer.
MAGNOLIA TEMPLE, Pythian
Sisters, potluck diiUICr, 6:30 p.
m., D. A. V. hall, Pomeroy; members to bring table service.
ROCK SPRINGS Grange, 7:30
Thursday, at the hall; bring gifts
for the Southeastern Ohio Mental
Health Center, Athens, a n d
Thanksgt ving articles for the pro-

gram.
TWI·LIGHT Garden Club, 7:30
p.m. Thursday, at Pomeroy Baptist l'hurch basement; Mrs. Pearl
Mora, member of the Chester
Garden Club, guest demonstra-

tor.

TWIN CIT"'r g..rine Club to
host stag meeting Thursday, Nov.
21, at 8 p.m., at the Pomeroy
Drew-Webster American Legion
hall . Rlustrious Potentate Richard F.. Goudy will attend. Entertainment by the Potentate and
Piccadors .
FRIDAY
BOSWORTH COUNCIL46, Royal and Select Masters, annual

PAST MATRONS, Evangeline
Chapter l12, Order ot the Eastern br, 7:30 Friday nigbt atthe
Middleport Masonic Temple;
Mrs. James Clatworthy and Mrs .
Theo Neutzling, hostesses.
FOREST HUN W,S.CS. bake
sale Friday at Duke Dry L1eal).
ers, Pomeroy, beginning at Ul a.
m. i special feature, llomemade
breads and rolls.
WILLING WORKERS Class ot
the Enterprise United Methodist
Cllurch, 7:30 p. m. Friday, home
of Mrs. 'lbomas Bentz.
PAST MATRONS, Evangeline
Chapter 172, Order of the Eastern Star, 7:30 t'riday night at the
home of Mrs. James Clatworthy,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Theo Neutzlifl_,
as sisting llostess,

fMr Sit"

BlllTHIJAYS OBSERVED
The birthdays of Mrs. Lewis
Hudson and Mrs. Hobert Bailey
were observed at a party given
ln their llonor by a niece, Linda
Young. Rerreshment:; of a decorated birthday cake, ice cream,
potato chips, coffee and KooiAid wer e served to Lewis lludson, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Sear·
les, Gene Chaney , Mrs. Katie
Young, Mr. and Mrs . Howard
Young, Robert Bailey, Hobby Allen Bailey, the host, Linda Young,
and the honored guests, Mrs. Hudson and Mrs. Bailey.

omore class sponsors dance party , Friday, 8 to Up. m. The public is welcome. Ja,Ys in charge.
SATURDAY
HOLIDAY BAZAA R, RuUa1d
Methodist Church WSCS, Saturday beginning at 9 a. m., Rutlard
Department
Store, featuring
homemade gift items arK! baked
goods.
HIGH SCHOOL DANG: Satur~
day, t; to 11 p. m., at the Meigs
High sChool auditorium in Middleport. Jays will emcee..
StJNDAY
SUBDISTRICT MYF meeting,
2 p.m. Sunday, !Ieath Methodist
Church, Middleport; all young
people invited.
XI GAMMA MU Chapter, Beta
Phi Sorority, tea, 6:30p.m . Sunday at home of Yvonne Scally,
Middleport.
MONDAY
SOUTHERN ATHLETIC Boosters. Monday 7:30 p.m. at high
!!IChool, Racine; final plans for
football banquet; Elson ~encer,
president, urges all interested
to be present.
1-!0tfE FHOM W/\H
Cpl. Karl Russell of the U. S.
Marine Corps has arrived home
from Vietnam. lie will be spending a 2S-da~· leave with his pare nts, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Husscll, !{acine Houte 2. Cpl. Hussell was met in Columbus Tuesday by hlsparentsaOO Miss Brenda Norris.

of

Cwll•!ll l)tlvq

Radl•"' Qmrfo~

;tl

rORAHGES~

GRAPEF~UITS " ' ~
TAHGELOES
CRANBERRIES

POTAT0:..4S
ONIONS
•

"PICtURE FRAME" STYLING means new beauty fot
your homel Yes, WARM MORNING has achieved a new
high for styling in gas home .,eoter1. You mu1t se. the~

J~

Mw heoten to oppredote t~ml

MJIT·STREAM" HEAT fLOW AT FLOOR LEYIL •••

r

rt'ltant new comfort! Put •n end to tho1e cold, drafty
floors with WARM MORNING's exclusive " Jet-Stream"

AVARIE~-~
OF APPL'E'S " '
SWEET CIDER
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HOME MADE

thot spreadi a wide carpet of warmth over tt,e floors of
your home.

FACtORY GUARANTEE~ ...

combu,tion chomber for
20 years! Bvmer for life of the heater! 't'o11r auuranc•

See these- and the many, many ol~r dynamic leaturts
of 1he new WARM MORNING g~at heater line
d;sple~y.

PRICES START
AS LOW AS

$115·

BUTTER

now oa

TI4ANI&lt;SGMNG

'I

TO 269.95

I

EBERSBACH HARDWARE

'

,,'{

~~

I

I

~
-

MIDWAY MARKET

"Everylhing In Hardware"

MAIN ST.

•

J~

95

992·2582

POMEROY

.._ _ Attend k Miu Poo•ont, S.n., No•. 24, 8 pm. --~~

COUIIT 0~
MIIGI COUNTY, OHIO
CHAIIL!5 M. HYSELL, Aclmlnl•lrator
With th• Will Annaud of th1 uttte
of Core ~lnh1rt, DICIINdPI•Intlff,

...

CHAIILES M . HYSILa,, IH AL.,.

\

Ho. n,"'

~

NOTICE
June Evelyn PulUllll, wllon pliocw
o( residence 11 c-o Anchor Bllllard•,
Pulnt Pleuant. W_ Va., Carl Bu)'ll!l,
·..,-bQUI Pbce ol re•ldence i~ unJmo,.n;
l~e wtknown
beir'l, devi.oee•, leg;o. .
he5, admlnlatntora and e!lecuton.
II any, of Carl Boyle1, decea~ed; Arthur Buylca, who5e pl.:.c~ ul ruiDfl!.ce Is unknown; the unkn&lt;:~wn ll.elrl,
nrv!sees, legatees. adminlstraton and
cxreutors, if any, of Arthur Doyle•.
~ .. ceated; and William Doyle ~ . whote
rlace of n•ldence is Rout" 3, 13.:1
l!:utern Street, Lake W11le., Florida,
"'Ill lake notice that on the l:lth day
nf Nuvember. 111811. tbe und.enlflled
tharlel M. Hy-ell,
Admlnl1trator,
With the Will AnneiU!d of Cora Melnt.arl. dece.ued, flied
hU
petition
a;;alnst yo u and othen In the Pro·
hale l..'ourt of Melfi Collllt)', &lt;Jbl.o.
"~ ayln&amp; f or authoritY to tell t!HI enlire int.u-e.t In the n:iil eaUtta buelo.lofl.er deelh:rl bed, to pn the debt8
of decedem 1100 cola of alimlnlllr•·
tion. lo ·wlt;
The followin.l real e1tate tltutl·
•d in t he Cou nty al Meig•, in tf•e
State oj Otuo and ill tbe Vllla1e
of Pomeroy ,
Beans that part of 100 A. Lot
303 lo Town .3. B.&amp;nae 13 of Ohio
Company'• Pun:ha.e and deacrlbed
aa fallow1, l.o· wll; 40 led nn Dab·
ney Strut 1o called tu 111own oo
Plod Book No_ 2 in the offic-e o1
the Recol'du ol Me~ Count)' oil
page '" u Loauot SIJ and runnm11.
ba~k at Utat wldLh 100 feet ; adJoining and welt of th" lot now
ur lulf:erlv owned by Philip Som~e•.
he la1 f-oere convey1d b 111No . M In Dlbne)' Addition to
f'omeruy .:;u per above m"'nlloned
pi&gt;&lt;
Beln1 a 1trlp of land e.atend1n.1
b;ac.t. toward the hill .30 leet and
from the ••or end of lot N&lt;&gt;. 46
In Uabney ' a Addllion to ~ooneruy
md;:inA a atrip :W feet back by .,..
feet in width adjotnln.l Ute rear
end of Lot No . .,e. Said lot No. &lt;M
betne lbe ••me lot dHded bY c.
\&lt;\-_ U:obney to Gror1e Shlllll\i b'
deed do1ted Nov. 3, 1115!1 &amp;Dd ft·
rorded m Vol. 13 .. t pa&amp;e 243 of
the Recorda ol Melp County, Ohio.
REF'l:RENCE DEW: Vol. 162, p.wll"
80 :ond Vol . IU , }oiiiO! 4111 of the
Died Recon:ll of Metal County
Oblo.
,
You an- required to an•"n Lbe
liold PeUUon by the lith day of lama,,ry, 1969, or J\ldgmenl bY &amp;.fault
wlll )},. Tendered a~rlll.nat you.
CHAlLIS M. HYIILL ,
Administrator WI"' tM&gt; Will
AnrM.al'd of It'll lltat. of
Cora Mllnll1rt, DI«IMCI
CIOW, CIIOW &amp; POilTia,

lo.w.;·,;M;;;A;;;I~H.__...;.P;;O;M:;;E,;;R:;;O;,:Y_,

Laura Circle, Gretta &amp;mpiKlll,
A Chrl stmu party was planand
Cora Webb were appointed
ned by the Past Officers' Club
on
the
nominating committee to
of Racine Chapter, Order of
Eastern star, meeting recent- report at Ute December meetly al the home ct Mrs. B e r t Ing, which wtll be a Chrtlltmas
GrGrimm of Letart Fans wlth l2 parey at the home
Simpson with Mrs. Letha Mor·
members atten&lt;Hng.
The program was in charge t1 rh co-hostess. Namu we r e
Letha Morris giving a Thrutks- drawn for gtns tor the Chri!dglvlng Reading and Jane H l I I mas party.
who gave the Thanksgiving Prayer. Devotlonal!!l were given by ·.
Letha Morris.
~~

or

soo~:!~~~:n; =~~:"~=-- :~

~

•,
•,

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

.

,•

Hoffman who read "The Pllgrims' Thanksgiving" opened the
meetlng
Mrs. Simons served a dessert
course to those named and Mrs.
Pearl Hoffman, Mrs. M II ton
Hood, Mrs. Beulah White Mrs.
Charles White, Mrs . Jessie Houdashelt, Mrs. Bert Bodimer,
Mrs. E. L. Hughes and Wesley

97C

ond o!woys, phormodsh

LOVE JOY ClllCLF.
THE LOVE JOY CffiCLE members, meeting at the church with
Mrs. Fielding Hawkins as hostess, voted to pa,y for Thanksgiving hmches for 10 needy chil dren at the Middleport school
and to prepare plates of can.
dies, cookies and fruits ror shutIns.
Plans were also made to remember Mrs. Louise Faulkner
with a birthday gift and to send
get-well cards to shut-ins. Jt
was also voted during the meeting to send gifts to several servicemen or the church.
A box of miscellaneous items
will be sent to the Rev . and Mrs.
Vernoo Brooks, mi!!lsionaries at
Mountain View, Oklahoma. Included In the box will be soap,
toothpaste, washclothes, postcards, quilt blocks , gin wrappings and greeting cards.
Mrs . Genevieve Saxton presented devotions using medita·
tlons from Ideah. Mrs. Hawkins
served retreshments during the
concluding social hour.

I

II

&gt;

Shut-ins and elderly melMers program.
Mrs. Philip Globokar served a
of the Trinity Unit.td Church ol
Christ wUI be remembered at dessert course from a table car~
Christmas by members of the rying out a Thanksgiving theme.
Mrs . .John Blaettnar was a conFriendly Circle.
Meeting Tuesday night at the trlbuti~ llostess.
church, the circle completed
plans for the holiday remembrance project. A contribution of
$10 was made to the project of
redecorating the church social
room. The annual holiday dil).
ner was announced for 6:30 on
TUesday, Dec. 10, at Crow's
St.eak House. Mrs. Karl Kautz
wUI present the Christmas proMembers of Jane Howell Tent
gram at the meeting to follow the
95, Daughter or Union Veterans
dinner.
or the Civil War I had a Thanks.
Mrs. Tllomas Young concludgiving diMer Wednesday night at
ed the business session with the
Jean Ball's Restaurant ln Point
Lord's Prayer.
Pleasant.
Ut1lng "A Time to Appreciate
Attending were Mrs . Pearl
and Be Thankful" as the theme,
Reynolds,
Mrs. Frances Bearhs,
Mrs. Bill Perrin presented a
Mrs.
Lillian
Stief!, Mrs . Gladys
Thanksgiving program which i~
Cuck.ler ,1 J.trs. Caddie Wickham,
eluded Psalm 8, and poems, "Be
Mrs. Lena Hamm, Mrs. Helen
Still and Know That I Am God,''
.. Slow Me Down Lord," a n d Miller, and Mrs. Minnie Neutzllng.
Kip!ing's "Lest We Forget."
Next meeting or the tent will
Group singing ot "Now Thank
be
Monday night. At that Ume
We All Our God" and "For the
plans
will be made for the annual
Beauty of lhe Earth," and prayer
Christmas
dtmer and pa.rtJ'.
by Mrs. Perrin concluded the

DUV Members
Dine

65~

ANACIN
TABLETS
PAIN RELIEF

bot.
of

or

Mombero

3~

CEPACOL
THROAT LOZENGERS
For Minor Irritations

the Danville

Wesleyan Church, located at
L&amp;ngS\'iiiC, ltoute 1, state Rt.
325, are cooperating in a worldwide challenge for missionary
conquest In JO COWltries of the
world and is promoting a November Self - Denial offering,
The local pastor, Rev Charles
E, Dozer, will emphasize the
program in Ills message lhis
5\mda, .

Attends Dinner
Mrs. Helen Hayes, Great Bend,
attended the formal dinner of the
English--speaking Union held at
the Columbus Club in Columbus.
Speaker for the affair was Donald Grant, M. S., fellow of the

were

-

Mullie

SERVICE

Robi nson's Oeaners

"originlil"

hlppewa

COMPLETE LINE OF • • •

BOOTS AND SHOES

TONKA

The qualify line for
rhe ou1door man.
Complete seleCiion .

·CARS
and

TRUCKS

to

lrto

Chap11an-Cana~a,

MO. 2.. AVI.

SHOE STORE

MIDDLEPORT

Pomeroy

Ohio

LOW PRICESI

Wednesday

~~
,~~
~ LISTERINE ~~

~~··aq~~

~h

~

IU\\~~

TIMED RELEASE
COLD &amp; SINUS CAPSULES

7

MAMDY PACK

FHEE

3-ROLL TUMS
only

Reg. 1.75 Clai .. l

LOVING $135
CARE

QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

r~.1fl'

l'fU\I~I ~ i, 'iPA ~ PI,IId~

Reg.

100
THERAGRAN
WITH 30 FREE

SQ!JIBB

i

TOTAL

HIGH POTENCY
VITAMIN FORMULA

YOU
PAY

VALUE
11.10

. ~ ~~\,lrlr ,,

u~ur1n '~
'
.
i

23e

I

VITAMINS

REG. 33c

....-. -·..
-·-

CONTAC

THERAGRAN

Just Wonderful

..........
.....
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30 TABLETS

$499

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EXCEDRIN
TABLE-TS
~-

NOW/2 FLAVORS

- :-:-.-·-~ , __ _.,.,. ,... "' ·•·- ·~ - · ·· - - ..-- ..... ..., ____ ..,.. ___ - ........ - .. - .•- ---~-•,..t~~
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. · ·· · · ~· ~·

NEWI Spearmint
••

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REG. 79c PALMOLIVE

""~ · •.,..-~

•

REGULAR•nd

RAPID SHAVE
'!?"'.¥,.__,.f1"".."'-' ~··-~

Mr1.

2-Hour
DRY OE&amp;NING

Auction Planned

This Week's SPECIALS

Royal Geographic Society, London, England. His lqJicwas "England and the English".

Gue1t1

McGhee, Mr1. Pearl 1-kJftman,
Mr. and Mra. Charles White,
Mill Texama Whtie, IIDwanll
day girts for the children at the
Mrs. Beulah White entertain.
WeU, and Jeff Dant.
county home.
ed Wednesday evening with a parMrs. Leonard VanMeter and l;y honoring Mrs. Betty Darst on
Dan White were appointed to 1 her birthday .
committee to place the electric
Pie and coffee were &amp;el'\led and
candles in the windows or Meigs gifts were presented to Mrl.
General Hospital for lhe holiday
seasoJL
Following the meeling, Mrs.
The Thanksgiving dinnerot'RaGrueser conducted a Bible study cine Grange will be held at 6:30
!UPON REQUESn
from the nrst chapter of Mat- p.m . on Wednesda.Y at the grange
thew. The Re~. Haullln Moyer hall. All grange members and
Our U1ual Good CINnl,.
had the prayer to open the meet- thelr guest!!l are welcome .
ing presided over by Mrs. Yeau~
Those attending are to bring
1
ger, president.
items for a ''pig in the poke''
Pome_.,
Refreshments were served by auction, gifis for patients at tbe
Mr. and Mrs. Gerlach, Mr. and Athens state Hospital.
Mrs. Erwin, Mr. aOO Mrs. Grueser, Mr. and Mrs. Leorw.rd Van
Meter and Mr. and Mrs. Yeauger.

ABOUT OUR LOW, LOW

30

BUFFERIN
TABLETS

•

Gerlach.
Members were remlrx:led to
take bottle caps to Sunday School
and Franklin Triplett was appointed chairman of the light
bulb sale.
Plans were made for the a,..
nual Christmas banquet to be held
on Dec. 17. ComnJittees appoint~
ed were Mrs. Dan White, Mrs.
Triplett, alii Mrs. Kenneth Me·
Elhlnny, program; Mrs. RaymoOO
Baker, Mrs. Chester Erwin, and
Mrs. Max Stewart, decorating,
aOO Mrs. William Grueser and
Mrs. Gerlach, tickets.
Jn lieu of exchanging gifts at
the party, members decided to
continue giving to the cheer fuOO
wllich is used to purchase birth-

Darat.

December circle meeting. Mr!!l.
Ted Riley, Jr. presented devolions following a Thanksgiving
poem by Mrs. Willis Anthony to
open the meeting. The love gitt
dedication was conducted by Mrs.
Darst.
Guests at the meeting were
Judy and Dick Owen, Tammy
Richard801l and Barbara Anthony.

HYDRATE &amp;
CODEINE
FOR COUGHS

LOWEST I'RICES

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'

Monthly visits to the Sottlleastern Ohio Mental llcallh Cert.er in Athens to stage parties tor
patienls there will be made by
the llomebuilders Class of the
Middleport Church or Christ.
'lbe class took on the project
at a meeting TueMiay night at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. We~
dell Gerlach. In addition mem~
bers voted tosend$1Ueachmonth
to the Mount Healthy Christian
Home in Cincimati. A contribution wu made to the Cystic Fibrosis fund drive.
FWJre plans also include a
project elUter to buy or donate
rurniture or toys to complete fur.
nishings ror the nursery oft h e
church, arxl another to sene food
at the Walter Bunce sale on Saturday.
It was agreed by members to
sene the Loyal Women's Class
Christmas dinner on Dec. 19.
Mrs. Denver Rice was named
chairman.
Communion for January, February and March will be prepared
by the class and named to the
committee for that were Mr. and
Mrs. Franklin Triplett, Mrs.
Norman Yeauger, Mr. and Mrs.
Denver Rice ard Mr. aOO Mrs.

ELECT A CffiCLE
EACH MEMBER OF the Electa
Circle will provide a toy tor a
child in a needy family as a
special Christmas project, it was
decided when the group met at
the home of Mrs. Richard Owen.
They also decided to take candy , cookies and fruJt to their December meeting to make Christmas plates tor the shut-ins or
the church. Members were reminded to takeitemaforaChrist mas box to be sent to Mike Bratton stationed tn Okinawa to the
December Sanborn Society meeting. At that time the group wiU
a)so complete a box to be sent
to the Rev. Frank t:urry in India.
Pumpkin pies will be baked for
several shut-ins at Thanksgivlng.
Welcomed into the cirde mem ~
bership was Mrs. Robert Rich.
ardson. Mrs. David Darst, Mrs.
Harold Chase and Mrs. John

Plan Remembrance Pro;ect

~

..- .. '

I _.~ :

Simons and Mrs. John Davis,
guest !!I.

TERPIN

products that are not

nature, we ore firsl, lost ,

DORCASCffiCLE
MEMBERS OF the Dorcas Cir·
cle meeting at the home of Mrs.
Charles Sl.moos were reminded
to cootribute to the ''box or
goodies" which will be aent to
Jack Sigman, who is in service.
Items ror the box are to be left
with Mn. Tony Fowler before
the end of November.
It was decided that a gift will
be given to Mrs. Grace Hysell,
a hospilallzedmember,andcards
were signed ror her.
Christmas activities were reviewed and it was reported that
the circle has received approval
to han the youngsters of the
Meigs County Children's Home
as special guests for the amual
church -Christmas pafV. Plans
were made Cor giving presents
to residents or the Meigs Coonty
inti rmary and for remembering
shut--ins with restive trays of
ctddes and candy.
Mrs. John McNeil, chairman,
announced a smorgasbord for the
December meeting of the Sanborn Society. It was noted that
Mrs . Martha Fowler King will
have the program tor the next
circle meeting and she requested tllat every member give a

Parties Will Be Given Patients

·~
"'"Y-...~~~t
I"

Party Given for
Mrs. Betty Dorst

noteS·

&amp; Lohse

of a pharmaceutical

Seotlllel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0., Thurida)', Nw. 21, INII

'PoemGP-bollda¥ ~ead'og __ ·---~ .W.~r .~tt~..,~sk~~ t;o ~~d~s ­
. Thank you
from Mrs. sert for a smorgasbord to be
Virginia Covert and Miss Ferry held at the Sanborn Society.
were read. Prayer by Mrs. Me·
Members were asked to gin
Neil and devotions by Mrs. Fred a poem or hollda,y reading at the

Despite the fact that

69~

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....., ..

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t

:;1.------ Aut~ootzea A!_t(~trvedJe_.., _ _ _ _ _ _...J:

Rexall Drugs

675·2460
PT. PLEASANT W. VA.

....

Pomeroy

ATTEND JR . MISS PAGEANT, SUN., NOV. 24

Swls~er

ASPIRIN

•

~

Court St.

goes into every
prescription at

1.19
5 Gr. USP

clean

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frOIII $2WI.

RINGS

we offer many other

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buns

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love, an ArtCarved
diamond ring is doubly

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matter what length
the engagement, it
can seem eternity when
distance intervenes. This
is when the heart needs
a symbol of love to lean
on. As a true symbol of

For No Reason AI
All-Send Flowers

98~

Trust your home heat to

.

ArtCarved favors the
fll'Bt quotation. No

CREAM

12 II; J2 12; 12 19 lt.e

,.

Christmas
Dear!!

Mr. and Mrs. Harold Black.
ston and children, ~erri, Bob
and nruce were weekendvi!!litors
in Columbus with Mr and Mrs .
F. E. Shaerrer.
Lee Rudisill, patient at Holzer
llospital for the past two weeks,
Is recuperating at home .
:::
The Rev. L. S. &amp;ebblns, Mrs. :::
Margaret Cottrill, and Mrs. Ada :~:
Slack altcnded the Scioto Pres- ;:
bytery meeUng lleld Tuesday at
.Jackson.

Dalb'

Holiday remembrances ror the
lllderprivileged, shut-ins, servicemen, and missiom. 1·ies were
plamed at Tuesc!~ night meetings of the Circles of tl:le B. H.
Sanborn Ml8slonary &amp;:tclet.Y of
the Middlepcl1 Fir8t Baptist
Church.
Mn. Manning Kloes, preaident o1 the Society, presented the
programs at all three circles.
Attired in Indian costume, she
showed slide!!l of India. The program was aimed at ramiliarlzing
the members with the customs
and country preparatory to a
missionary speaker from India
in April.
All three circles decided on
glft!!l for their speciaJ interest
missionaries and for Sheryl Ferry, who attends Ottowa University ln Kansas on a Baptist scholarship.

MAKE THE HEART GROW

bot. of 144

992·5186
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

For Your

ing when the group voted a gen.
crous donation to the "Give to
the Yanks wllo Gave" for Christmas gifts to a hospital tor veterans.

The

Circle Members
Plan Christmas
Time Projects

·:::: ..::::::.:::.:::

TUSSY

Atterf'llya for Adnthtlatntor
11 141; 11 21; 11 :ltl;

TEXACO

9 -

Contests were held by Ben
and Ma.d~ Phil1J011 with prizes
going to Mrs. Jane Hill and
Mrs. Letha Morris.
Arrangements ol Call Oowers
were used as decorations in the
living room and refreshments of
sandwiches and salad were ser~
ved by the hostess, Mrs. Grimm,
and Mrs. Jane Hill, co.bostess.

50~

'"l!

!'&gt;QRGHU~
APPLE

of long, dependable service.

~-08ATE

D.,enclanh.

Party in December Mode

WAIIAMA HIGH SCHOOL Soph·

LEGAL NOTICE
IN THE

Fo~

Arrangements

/

•

�....

· ·- ..... -~-----

I
inspection, Frida.y. 1:30 p. m. Dirr
ner at 6:30 for companions and
ladles; Elmer Williams, Jackson.
grand conductor of Grard Council ol Ohio, inspecting orficer.

Wilberl Josepll F. llalOtill,
Mrs. Charles D. Kisor, Mrs.
John F. Klein, Lawrence Lundy, Mrs. Larry E. Rose, Lee HudRQEer D. McClelland, 2145 isill, Christian E. Schilling, JimEastern Ave.;l\lrs.GilbertG. Ad- my J. Thornton, George R. StewkJns, RL 2 Bidwell; Gilbert G. art, Mrs. .John W. CO~er and
Adkins, Rt 2 BidweU;J. Leorllrd infant daughter, Mrs. James
Hash, Rt. I Bidwell; Mrs. William Newnes and infant son, Mrs. Herr. Large, HL 1 Vinton; MartinT. bert E. Ponn and infant son, Mrs.
Jack B. Stevens am inrantdaughStanle~· . Mason; Miss Jeanene F.
Furbee, Pt. Pleasant; Jan E. Hi- ter, Mrs. Dnid M. Taylor and inley, Clifton; Willard H. Jeffers, fant daugllter.
Jr., Pomero~; Mrs. Clinton E.
Johnson, Portlarw:l; Miss !larric PLEASANT VALLEY IIOSPITAL
M. Smith, Middleport; Mrs. EthADMfl'TED: Opal Rose, Pt.
el J::: . .4.mos, Sy ra tuse; Charles Pleasant; r-.tn. John Watson, .Jr.,
E. Foots, lronh)fl; Mrs. Kenneth Pt. Pleasant; J{onald Thornton,
E. Erline, HL 3 .latkson; Hob- Pl . Pleasant.
ert L Broyles, Ja(.'l\son; Alvin
Dl!SCHARGED: Mrs. Ray Sn._vB. Cordle, Rt. I Flatwoods, Ky.; der, Logan, 0.: Martha Johnson.
William 11. Hard:y, Ashland, Ky.; Pt. Pleasant; James Hash, BidHarr~· L. llartman, .!al·kson: Mrs.
well; Marvin Woolen. Pt. PleasRussell B. Carsey, Jr., Hl I, an t.
IIOJ,.ZEK MEDICAL CENTEH:
Visiting hours 2-4 and 7~8 p.m.
Parerts only on Pediatrics Ward.
ADMISSIONS

Athens; Clifford 11. llogs ten, Ironton; \-Irs. James W. Ew ing,
Sr., The Plains; Mr11.. William
E. Langdon, Ironton; Steven 1::.

Spangler, Ja chson.
DISCH.4HGE&lt;.,
Mrs. Clarence I::. l3ailey, Mrs.
Howard S. BreV~·er, Hn n: C.

Browning, Lori Ann Buck, Mrs.

PLANNED

DINNEH

A potluck fellowship dinner

will be held at 6 p.m on Thanksgi,·ing at the Morning Star United Methodist Church . A program
will fcJ1.ow.

New Day of
Styling and Comfort
Begins with

A

Mrs. Margaret Weaver returned recently from a trip to
Boston, Mas&amp;., New York, arxl
Marylancl. She traveled by jeL
Mrs. W. H. Raub, Mrs. Leon-ard Baird, and Mrs. Leo Altier
and children, Corni~, were the
weekeOO visitors of Mrs. Margaret Clatworthy, Mr. and Mrs.
Lewis Long and Mrs. Virginia
Neutzling. The.}' came especially for lhe wedding or Joy&lt;..-e Long.
Mrs. Perry Hoffman and son,
Frank, spent the weekend in Richwood, W. VL They were called
there by the death of Mrs. Hoffman's stepmother. Mrs. Pearl
Hoffman assisted in the care of
the children during her daughterin-law's absence.
.Jean Craig is recuperating at
home rollowing sw-gery at St
Mary's Hospital in lluntington,
W. \a.
Da\id Sc\'er of Canton and Miss
Marlus Lyons ot Zanesville, both
students at Ohio Uni.,.ersity, spent
U1c weekend here with Mrs. Victor Grim. Surday guests of Mrs.
Grim were her son and daughter-in-law , Mr. arw::l Mrs. l'aul
Grim, of Portsmouth, and nephew, Howard Nagel, or Tulsa,
Okla.
Mrs. John Ketchka and daughters, Kim and Kelly, or Brook... me, are visiting here this week
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Wallace Bradford, aOO Mr. and
Mrs. John Kctr hka, Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. J ohn Lyons and
son, Bernard, returned Wednesday from Marion where they were
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Carleton
SchHlitz. They went especially
for the Saturday wtodding of their
son, Tommy, to Miss Esther
Scl1erlitz.
Mr. ard Mrs. Dwight Wallace
attended funeral servires for his
brother, Dana, held last week in
Marietta.

THURSDAY
POMEUOY Elementary PTA
ladles wtll meet Syracuse EJ~
mentary PTA ladies, 7:30 p.m.
Thursday in basketball game at
Pomeroy Junior High SchooL
Adults 50 cents, children 25
cents. Refreshments sold.
TWIN ClrY 91rlnettes will
meet Thursday, Nov . 21, 7:30
p.m. in the social room of The
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Electric Company.
WOMEN'S ASSOCIATION, Mid·
dleport First United Presbyterian Church, 7:30 Thursday night
at the church; annual thank or~
Cering; l'ldninlating committee to
meet and report; Mrs. Paul H~
tonstall, programj Mrs. Janet
Lewis, devotions. Hostesses,
Mrs. Edward Crooks, Mrs. Dale
Walburn, MJss Mary Park, Mrs.
Rodney DownJng, and Miss Margaret sauer.
MAGNOLIA TEMPLE, Pythian
Sisters, potluck diiUICr, 6:30 p.
m., D. A. V. hall, Pomeroy; members to bring table service.
ROCK SPRINGS Grange, 7:30
Thursday, at the hall; bring gifts
for the Southeastern Ohio Mental
Health Center, Athens, a n d
Thanksgt ving articles for the pro-

gram.
TWI·LIGHT Garden Club, 7:30
p.m. Thursday, at Pomeroy Baptist l'hurch basement; Mrs. Pearl
Mora, member of the Chester
Garden Club, guest demonstra-

tor.

TWIN CIT"'r g..rine Club to
host stag meeting Thursday, Nov.
21, at 8 p.m., at the Pomeroy
Drew-Webster American Legion
hall . Rlustrious Potentate Richard F.. Goudy will attend. Entertainment by the Potentate and
Piccadors .
FRIDAY
BOSWORTH COUNCIL46, Royal and Select Masters, annual

PAST MATRONS, Evangeline
Chapter l12, Order ot the Eastern br, 7:30 Friday nigbt atthe
Middleport Masonic Temple;
Mrs. James Clatworthy and Mrs .
Theo Neutzling, hostesses.
FOREST HUN W,S.CS. bake
sale Friday at Duke Dry L1eal).
ers, Pomeroy, beginning at Ul a.
m. i special feature, llomemade
breads and rolls.
WILLING WORKERS Class ot
the Enterprise United Methodist
Cllurch, 7:30 p. m. Friday, home
of Mrs. 'lbomas Bentz.
PAST MATRONS, Evangeline
Chapter 172, Order of the Eastern Star, 7:30 t'riday night at the
home of Mrs. James Clatworthy,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Theo Neutzlifl_,
as sisting llostess,

fMr Sit"

BlllTHIJAYS OBSERVED
The birthdays of Mrs. Lewis
Hudson and Mrs. Hobert Bailey
were observed at a party given
ln their llonor by a niece, Linda
Young. Rerreshment:; of a decorated birthday cake, ice cream,
potato chips, coffee and KooiAid wer e served to Lewis lludson, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Sear·
les, Gene Chaney , Mrs. Katie
Young, Mr. and Mrs . Howard
Young, Robert Bailey, Hobby Allen Bailey, the host, Linda Young,
and the honored guests, Mrs. Hudson and Mrs. Bailey.

omore class sponsors dance party , Friday, 8 to Up. m. The public is welcome. Ja,Ys in charge.
SATURDAY
HOLIDAY BAZAA R, RuUa1d
Methodist Church WSCS, Saturday beginning at 9 a. m., Rutlard
Department
Store, featuring
homemade gift items arK! baked
goods.
HIGH SCHOOL DANG: Satur~
day, t; to 11 p. m., at the Meigs
High sChool auditorium in Middleport. Jays will emcee..
StJNDAY
SUBDISTRICT MYF meeting,
2 p.m. Sunday, !Ieath Methodist
Church, Middleport; all young
people invited.
XI GAMMA MU Chapter, Beta
Phi Sorority, tea, 6:30p.m . Sunday at home of Yvonne Scally,
Middleport.
MONDAY
SOUTHERN ATHLETIC Boosters. Monday 7:30 p.m. at high
!!IChool, Racine; final plans for
football banquet; Elson ~encer,
president, urges all interested
to be present.
1-!0tfE FHOM W/\H
Cpl. Karl Russell of the U. S.
Marine Corps has arrived home
from Vietnam. lie will be spending a 2S-da~· leave with his pare nts, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Husscll, !{acine Houte 2. Cpl. Hussell was met in Columbus Tuesday by hlsparentsaOO Miss Brenda Norris.

of

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GRAPEF~UITS " ' ~
TAHGELOES
CRANBERRIES

POTAT0:..4S
ONIONS
•

"PICtURE FRAME" STYLING means new beauty fot
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PRICES START
AS LOW AS

$115·

BUTTER

now oa

TI4ANI&lt;SGMNG

'I

TO 269.95

I

EBERSBACH HARDWARE

'

,,'{

~~

I

I

~
-

MIDWAY MARKET

"Everylhing In Hardware"

MAIN ST.

•

J~

95

992·2582

POMEROY

.._ _ Attend k Miu Poo•ont, S.n., No•. 24, 8 pm. --~~

COUIIT 0~
MIIGI COUNTY, OHIO
CHAIIL!5 M. HYSELL, Aclmlnl•lrator
With th• Will Annaud of th1 uttte
of Core ~lnh1rt, DICIINdPI•Intlff,

...

CHAIILES M . HYSILa,, IH AL.,.

\

Ho. n,"'

~

NOTICE
June Evelyn PulUllll, wllon pliocw
o( residence 11 c-o Anchor Bllllard•,
Pulnt Pleuant. W_ Va., Carl Bu)'ll!l,
·..,-bQUI Pbce ol re•ldence i~ unJmo,.n;
l~e wtknown
beir'l, devi.oee•, leg;o. .
he5, admlnlatntora and e!lecuton.
II any, of Carl Boyle1, decea~ed; Arthur Buylca, who5e pl.:.c~ ul ruiDfl!.ce Is unknown; the unkn&lt;:~wn ll.elrl,
nrv!sees, legatees. adminlstraton and
cxreutors, if any, of Arthur Doyle•.
~ .. ceated; and William Doyle ~ . whote
rlace of n•ldence is Rout" 3, 13.:1
l!:utern Street, Lake W11le., Florida,
"'Ill lake notice that on the l:lth day
nf Nuvember. 111811. tbe und.enlflled
tharlel M. Hy-ell,
Admlnl1trator,
With the Will AnneiU!d of Cora Melnt.arl. dece.ued, flied
hU
petition
a;;alnst yo u and othen In the Pro·
hale l..'ourt of Melfi Collllt)', &lt;Jbl.o.
"~ ayln&amp; f or authoritY to tell t!HI enlire int.u-e.t In the n:iil eaUtta buelo.lofl.er deelh:rl bed, to pn the debt8
of decedem 1100 cola of alimlnlllr•·
tion. lo ·wlt;
The followin.l real e1tate tltutl·
•d in t he Cou nty al Meig•, in tf•e
State oj Otuo and ill tbe Vllla1e
of Pomeroy ,
Beans that part of 100 A. Lot
303 lo Town .3. B.&amp;nae 13 of Ohio
Company'• Pun:ha.e and deacrlbed
aa fallow1, l.o· wll; 40 led nn Dab·
ney Strut 1o called tu 111own oo
Plod Book No_ 2 in the offic-e o1
the Recol'du ol Me~ Count)' oil
page '" u Loauot SIJ and runnm11.
ba~k at Utat wldLh 100 feet ; adJoining and welt of th" lot now
ur lulf:erlv owned by Philip Som~e•.
he la1 f-oere convey1d b 111No . M In Dlbne)' Addition to
f'omeruy .:;u per above m"'nlloned
pi&gt;&lt;
Beln1 a 1trlp of land e.atend1n.1
b;ac.t. toward the hill .30 leet and
from the ••or end of lot N&lt;&gt;. 46
In Uabney ' a Addllion to ~ooneruy
md;:inA a atrip :W feet back by .,..
feet in width adjotnln.l Ute rear
end of Lot No . .,e. Said lot No. &lt;M
betne lbe ••me lot dHded bY c.
\&lt;\-_ U:obney to Gror1e Shlllll\i b'
deed do1ted Nov. 3, 1115!1 &amp;Dd ft·
rorded m Vol. 13 .. t pa&amp;e 243 of
the Recorda ol Melp County, Ohio.
REF'l:RENCE DEW: Vol. 162, p.wll"
80 :ond Vol . IU , }oiiiO! 4111 of the
Died Recon:ll of Metal County
Oblo.
,
You an- required to an•"n Lbe
liold PeUUon by the lith day of lama,,ry, 1969, or J\ldgmenl bY &amp;.fault
wlll )},. Tendered a~rlll.nat you.
CHAlLIS M. HYIILL ,
Administrator WI"' tM&gt; Will
AnrM.al'd of It'll lltat. of
Cora Mllnll1rt, DI«IMCI
CIOW, CIIOW &amp; POilTia,

lo.w.;·,;M;;;A;;;I~H.__...;.P;;O;M:;;E,;;R:;;O;,:Y_,

Laura Circle, Gretta &amp;mpiKlll,
A Chrl stmu party was planand
Cora Webb were appointed
ned by the Past Officers' Club
on
the
nominating committee to
of Racine Chapter, Order of
Eastern star, meeting recent- report at Ute December meetly al the home ct Mrs. B e r t Ing, which wtll be a Chrtlltmas
GrGrimm of Letart Fans wlth l2 parey at the home
Simpson with Mrs. Letha Mor·
members atten&lt;Hng.
The program was in charge t1 rh co-hostess. Namu we r e
Letha Morris giving a Thrutks- drawn for gtns tor the Chri!dglvlng Reading and Jane H l I I mas party.
who gave the Thanksgiving Prayer. Devotlonal!!l were given by ·.
Letha Morris.
~~

or

soo~:!~~~:n; =~~:"~=-- :~

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•,
•,

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

.

,•

Hoffman who read "The Pllgrims' Thanksgiving" opened the
meetlng
Mrs. Simons served a dessert
course to those named and Mrs.
Pearl Hoffman, Mrs. M II ton
Hood, Mrs. Beulah White Mrs.
Charles White, Mrs . Jessie Houdashelt, Mrs. Bert Bodimer,
Mrs. E. L. Hughes and Wesley

97C

ond o!woys, phormodsh

LOVE JOY ClllCLF.
THE LOVE JOY CffiCLE members, meeting at the church with
Mrs. Fielding Hawkins as hostess, voted to pa,y for Thanksgiving hmches for 10 needy chil dren at the Middleport school
and to prepare plates of can.
dies, cookies and fruits ror shutIns.
Plans were also made to remember Mrs. Louise Faulkner
with a birthday gift and to send
get-well cards to shut-ins. Jt
was also voted during the meeting to send gifts to several servicemen or the church.
A box of miscellaneous items
will be sent to the Rev . and Mrs.
Vernoo Brooks, mi!!lsionaries at
Mountain View, Oklahoma. Included In the box will be soap,
toothpaste, washclothes, postcards, quilt blocks , gin wrappings and greeting cards.
Mrs . Genevieve Saxton presented devotions using medita·
tlons from Ideah. Mrs. Hawkins
served retreshments during the
concluding social hour.

I

II

&gt;

Shut-ins and elderly melMers program.
Mrs. Philip Globokar served a
of the Trinity Unit.td Church ol
Christ wUI be remembered at dessert course from a table car~
Christmas by members of the rying out a Thanksgiving theme.
Mrs . .John Blaettnar was a conFriendly Circle.
Meeting Tuesday night at the trlbuti~ llostess.
church, the circle completed
plans for the holiday remembrance project. A contribution of
$10 was made to the project of
redecorating the church social
room. The annual holiday dil).
ner was announced for 6:30 on
TUesday, Dec. 10, at Crow's
St.eak House. Mrs. Karl Kautz
wUI present the Christmas proMembers of Jane Howell Tent
gram at the meeting to follow the
95, Daughter or Union Veterans
dinner.
or the Civil War I had a Thanks.
Mrs. Tllomas Young concludgiving diMer Wednesday night at
ed the business session with the
Jean Ball's Restaurant ln Point
Lord's Prayer.
Pleasant.
Ut1lng "A Time to Appreciate
Attending were Mrs . Pearl
and Be Thankful" as the theme,
Reynolds,
Mrs. Frances Bearhs,
Mrs. Bill Perrin presented a
Mrs.
Lillian
Stief!, Mrs . Gladys
Thanksgiving program which i~
Cuck.ler ,1 J.trs. Caddie Wickham,
eluded Psalm 8, and poems, "Be
Mrs. Lena Hamm, Mrs. Helen
Still and Know That I Am God,''
.. Slow Me Down Lord," a n d Miller, and Mrs. Minnie Neutzllng.
Kip!ing's "Lest We Forget."
Next meeting or the tent will
Group singing ot "Now Thank
be
Monday night. At that Ume
We All Our God" and "For the
plans
will be made for the annual
Beauty of lhe Earth," and prayer
Christmas
dtmer and pa.rtJ'.
by Mrs. Perrin concluded the

DUV Members
Dine

65~

ANACIN
TABLETS
PAIN RELIEF

bot.
of

or

Mombero

3~

CEPACOL
THROAT LOZENGERS
For Minor Irritations

the Danville

Wesleyan Church, located at
L&amp;ngS\'iiiC, ltoute 1, state Rt.
325, are cooperating in a worldwide challenge for missionary
conquest In JO COWltries of the
world and is promoting a November Self - Denial offering,
The local pastor, Rev Charles
E, Dozer, will emphasize the
program in Ills message lhis
5\mda, .

Attends Dinner
Mrs. Helen Hayes, Great Bend,
attended the formal dinner of the
English--speaking Union held at
the Columbus Club in Columbus.
Speaker for the affair was Donald Grant, M. S., fellow of the

were

-

Mullie

SERVICE

Robi nson's Oeaners

"originlil"

hlppewa

COMPLETE LINE OF • • •

BOOTS AND SHOES

TONKA

The qualify line for
rhe ou1door man.
Complete seleCiion .

·CARS
and

TRUCKS

to

lrto

Chap11an-Cana~a,

MO. 2.. AVI.

SHOE STORE

MIDDLEPORT

Pomeroy

Ohio

LOW PRICESI

Wednesday

~~
,~~
~ LISTERINE ~~

~~··aq~~

~h

~

IU\\~~

TIMED RELEASE
COLD &amp; SINUS CAPSULES

7

MAMDY PACK

FHEE

3-ROLL TUMS
only

Reg. 1.75 Clai .. l

LOVING $135
CARE

QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

r~.1fl'

l'fU\I~I ~ i, 'iPA ~ PI,IId~

Reg.

100
THERAGRAN
WITH 30 FREE

SQ!JIBB

i

TOTAL

HIGH POTENCY
VITAMIN FORMULA

YOU
PAY

VALUE
11.10

. ~ ~~\,lrlr ,,

u~ur1n '~
'
.
i

23e

I

VITAMINS

REG. 33c

....-. -·..
-·-

CONTAC

THERAGRAN

Just Wonderful

..........
.....
"-···'""''.:

1.59

30 TABLETS

$499

ug

l

'
'r

EXCEDRIN
TABLE-TS
~-

NOW/2 FLAVORS

- :-:-.-·-~ , __ _.,.,. ,... "' ·•·- ·~ - · ·· - - ..-- ..... ..., ____ ..,.. ___ - ........ - .. - .•- ---~-•,..t~~
...........,. - &amp;..,....,.;._ •·
. · ·· · · ~· ~·

NEWI Spearmint
••

I·

REG. 79c PALMOLIVE

""~ · •.,..-~

•

REGULAR•nd

RAPID SHAVE
'!?"'.¥,.__,.f1"".."'-' ~··-~

Mr1.

2-Hour
DRY OE&amp;NING

Auction Planned

This Week's SPECIALS

Royal Geographic Society, London, England. His lqJicwas "England and the English".

Gue1t1

McGhee, Mr1. Pearl 1-kJftman,
Mr. and Mra. Charles White,
Mill Texama Whtie, IIDwanll
day girts for the children at the
Mrs. Beulah White entertain.
WeU, and Jeff Dant.
county home.
ed Wednesday evening with a parMrs. Leonard VanMeter and l;y honoring Mrs. Betty Darst on
Dan White were appointed to 1 her birthday .
committee to place the electric
Pie and coffee were &amp;el'\led and
candles in the windows or Meigs gifts were presented to Mrl.
General Hospital for lhe holiday
seasoJL
Following the meeling, Mrs.
The Thanksgiving dinnerot'RaGrueser conducted a Bible study cine Grange will be held at 6:30
!UPON REQUESn
from the nrst chapter of Mat- p.m . on Wednesda.Y at the grange
thew. The Re~. Haullln Moyer hall. All grange members and
Our U1ual Good CINnl,.
had the prayer to open the meet- thelr guest!!l are welcome .
ing presided over by Mrs. Yeau~
Those attending are to bring
1
ger, president.
items for a ''pig in the poke''
Pome_.,
Refreshments were served by auction, gifis for patients at tbe
Mr. and Mrs. Gerlach, Mr. and Athens state Hospital.
Mrs. Erwin, Mr. aOO Mrs. Grueser, Mr. and Mrs. Leorw.rd Van
Meter and Mr. and Mrs. Yeauger.

ABOUT OUR LOW, LOW

30

BUFFERIN
TABLETS

•

Gerlach.
Members were remlrx:led to
take bottle caps to Sunday School
and Franklin Triplett was appointed chairman of the light
bulb sale.
Plans were made for the a,..
nual Christmas banquet to be held
on Dec. 17. ComnJittees appoint~
ed were Mrs. Dan White, Mrs.
Triplett, alii Mrs. Kenneth Me·
Elhlnny, program; Mrs. RaymoOO
Baker, Mrs. Chester Erwin, and
Mrs. Max Stewart, decorating,
aOO Mrs. William Grueser and
Mrs. Gerlach, tickets.
Jn lieu of exchanging gifts at
the party, members decided to
continue giving to the cheer fuOO
wllich is used to purchase birth-

Darat.

December circle meeting. Mr!!l.
Ted Riley, Jr. presented devolions following a Thanksgiving
poem by Mrs. Willis Anthony to
open the meeting. The love gitt
dedication was conducted by Mrs.
Darst.
Guests at the meeting were
Judy and Dick Owen, Tammy
Richard801l and Barbara Anthony.

HYDRATE &amp;
CODEINE
FOR COUGHS

LOWEST I'RICES

49~

I

'

Monthly visits to the Sottlleastern Ohio Mental llcallh Cert.er in Athens to stage parties tor
patienls there will be made by
the llomebuilders Class of the
Middleport Church or Christ.
'lbe class took on the project
at a meeting TueMiay night at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. We~
dell Gerlach. In addition mem~
bers voted tosend$1Ueachmonth
to the Mount Healthy Christian
Home in Cincimati. A contribution wu made to the Cystic Fibrosis fund drive.
FWJre plans also include a
project elUter to buy or donate
rurniture or toys to complete fur.
nishings ror the nursery oft h e
church, arxl another to sene food
at the Walter Bunce sale on Saturday.
It was agreed by members to
sene the Loyal Women's Class
Christmas dinner on Dec. 19.
Mrs. Denver Rice was named
chairman.
Communion for January, February and March will be prepared
by the class and named to the
committee for that were Mr. and
Mrs. Franklin Triplett, Mrs.
Norman Yeauger, Mr. and Mrs.
Denver Rice ard Mr. aOO Mrs.

ELECT A CffiCLE
EACH MEMBER OF the Electa
Circle will provide a toy tor a
child in a needy family as a
special Christmas project, it was
decided when the group met at
the home of Mrs. Richard Owen.
They also decided to take candy , cookies and fruJt to their December meeting to make Christmas plates tor the shut-ins or
the church. Members were reminded to takeitemaforaChrist mas box to be sent to Mike Bratton stationed tn Okinawa to the
December Sanborn Society meeting. At that time the group wiU
a)so complete a box to be sent
to the Rev. Frank t:urry in India.
Pumpkin pies will be baked for
several shut-ins at Thanksgivlng.
Welcomed into the cirde mem ~
bership was Mrs. Robert Rich.
ardson. Mrs. David Darst, Mrs.
Harold Chase and Mrs. John

Plan Remembrance Pro;ect

~

..- .. '

I _.~ :

Simons and Mrs. John Davis,
guest !!I.

TERPIN

products that are not

nature, we ore firsl, lost ,

DORCASCffiCLE
MEMBERS OF the Dorcas Cir·
cle meeting at the home of Mrs.
Charles Sl.moos were reminded
to cootribute to the ''box or
goodies" which will be aent to
Jack Sigman, who is in service.
Items ror the box are to be left
with Mn. Tony Fowler before
the end of November.
It was decided that a gift will
be given to Mrs. Grace Hysell,
a hospilallzedmember,andcards
were signed ror her.
Christmas activities were reviewed and it was reported that
the circle has received approval
to han the youngsters of the
Meigs County Children's Home
as special guests for the amual
church -Christmas pafV. Plans
were made Cor giving presents
to residents or the Meigs Coonty
inti rmary and for remembering
shut--ins with restive trays of
ctddes and candy.
Mrs. John McNeil, chairman,
announced a smorgasbord for the
December meeting of the Sanborn Society. It was noted that
Mrs . Martha Fowler King will
have the program tor the next
circle meeting and she requested tllat every member give a

Parties Will Be Given Patients

·~
"'"Y-...~~~t
I"

Party Given for
Mrs. Betty Dorst

noteS·

&amp; Lohse

of a pharmaceutical

Seotlllel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0., Thurida)', Nw. 21, INII

'PoemGP-bollda¥ ~ead'og __ ·---~ .W.~r .~tt~..,~sk~~ t;o ~~d~s ­
. Thank you
from Mrs. sert for a smorgasbord to be
Virginia Covert and Miss Ferry held at the Sanborn Society.
were read. Prayer by Mrs. Me·
Members were asked to gin
Neil and devotions by Mrs. Fred a poem or hollda,y reading at the

Despite the fact that

69~

~~ ..-:t-~·:'lfio-Y'~.LP."!i~O.
....., ..

~

t

:;1.------ Aut~ootzea A!_t(~trvedJe_.., _ _ _ _ _ _...J:

Rexall Drugs

675·2460
PT. PLEASANT W. VA.

....

Pomeroy

ATTEND JR . MISS PAGEANT, SUN., NOV. 24

Swls~er

ASPIRIN

•

~

Court St.

goes into every
prescription at

1.19
5 Gr. USP

clean

""

frOIII $2WI.

RINGS

we offer many other

drop
buns

..,_.

C-ANGELS WING

GOJEWELRY
EISLER
STORE

PRIORITY

Regular or Hard
To Hold

•

..,

1850, and by a unique
Permanent Value
guarantee. Let us give
you an ArtCarved
diamond of your dreams.

DIAMOND

~

Every

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backed by a proud
tradition dating back to

hE Carved

BRITE
HAIR
SPRAY

CITY ICE AND FUEL CO.

...... •'-• "'' ,,..,__., - •1· ... ......,.·.

fr0111 $160.

love, an ArtCarved
diamond ring is doubly

49~

.

l - FEMINA

matter what length
the engagement, it
can seem eternity when
distance intervenes. This
is when the heart needs
a symbol of love to lean
on. As a true symbol of

For No Reason AI
All-Send Flowers

98~

Trust your home heat to

.

ArtCarved favors the
fll'Bt quotation. No

CREAM

12 II; J2 12; 12 19 lt.e

,.

Christmas
Dear!!

Mr. and Mrs. Harold Black.
ston and children, ~erri, Bob
and nruce were weekendvi!!litors
in Columbus with Mr and Mrs .
F. E. Shaerrer.
Lee Rudisill, patient at Holzer
llospital for the past two weeks,
Is recuperating at home .
:::
The Rev. L. S. &amp;ebblns, Mrs. :::
Margaret Cottrill, and Mrs. Ada :~:
Slack altcnded the Scioto Pres- ;:
bytery meeUng lleld Tuesday at
.Jackson.

Dalb'

Holiday remembrances ror the
lllderprivileged, shut-ins, servicemen, and missiom. 1·ies were
plamed at Tuesc!~ night meetings of the Circles of tl:le B. H.
Sanborn Ml8slonary &amp;:tclet.Y of
the Middlepcl1 Fir8t Baptist
Church.
Mn. Manning Kloes, preaident o1 the Society, presented the
programs at all three circles.
Attired in Indian costume, she
showed slide!!l of India. The program was aimed at ramiliarlzing
the members with the customs
and country preparatory to a
missionary speaker from India
in April.
All three circles decided on
glft!!l for their speciaJ interest
missionaries and for Sheryl Ferry, who attends Ottowa University ln Kansas on a Baptist scholarship.

MAKE THE HEART GROW

bot. of 144

992·5186
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

For Your

ing when the group voted a gen.
crous donation to the "Give to
the Yanks wllo Gave" for Christmas gifts to a hospital tor veterans.

The

Circle Members
Plan Christmas
Time Projects

·:::: ..::::::.:::.:::

TUSSY

Atterf'llya for Adnthtlatntor
11 141; 11 21; 11 :ltl;

TEXACO

9 -

Contests were held by Ben
and Ma.d~ Phil1J011 with prizes
going to Mrs. Jane Hill and
Mrs. Letha Morris.
Arrangements ol Call Oowers
were used as decorations in the
living room and refreshments of
sandwiches and salad were ser~
ved by the hostess, Mrs. Grimm,
and Mrs. Jane Hill, co.bostess.

50~

'"l!

!'&gt;QRGHU~
APPLE

of long, dependable service.

~-08ATE

D.,enclanh.

Party in December Mode

WAIIAMA HIGH SCHOOL Soph·

LEGAL NOTICE
IN THE

Fo~

Arrangements

/

•

�......

'

~

. . .

'

Meigs Hounds

Eight County
Plan Given~

. ... " . . ' . ..... -.. ...... . . ... . .
~

~

...

~

.

-

·~

-· --··y · .

Now You Know

•

Weather

enttne

at y

e

1be r1·an&lt;: was first minlcd in
L3G0 b) 1\ing John D of F1·an(·e.
It became the formal monctar}
unit of France in 1799.

•

sunny and warmer todl¥ and
windy oorth portion. HIP In till
30s. Fair and tittle chlllli'O ,.&gt;o,.&gt;''"' - .,..,
temperature tonight. l..oR'
30s. Saturdo..r tncreasi!W do~
ness and continued mild.

Det&gt;oled To The lnlere3~ Of The Meig•-MtuOn Area
By United Press International

At Conference
The Meigs Cotmty health l'Offi mlssion and county supenntendent of schools took part in a

ronferenei:' on comprehensive
speech, hearing and vision programs reeently at Lake !lope,
sponsored by the Ohio Valley

llealth Se-n' ice s FoundaUon, Inc.
llr. Selim Blazewic-z and SUpt.
Robert Howen heard William
Crimm dtrertor of speech, hear ing and \ision for the Ohio Department

of Health, present a

model plan of eo mprchensive services for .\then s, Vinton, Hocking, Me1 gs, Jackson, Lawrence

and Ga llia Counties The proposal provides for screening,
diagnosis . trea tment and thera PY in local sehool distrkts and
public health departments.
Jack FarruJb10n, executive director of the 0\ l!SF, discu ssed
the role of the foundation in as-

sisting in the esta bli s hment of

health services

PAlllS
ALLIED DWLOMATS TODAY said South Vietnam
may JOin Paris negotiations on Vietnam onl)' to sabotage the lalks.
TheJ said President Nguyen Van Thicu or South Vietnam has agreed
"in principle" to end his boy&lt;:ott of the talks and s«ni a delegation
headed bJ his vice president, Nguyen Cao Ky,
The diplomats sa id Thieu believes he will be in a better position inside rather than outside the talks to torpedo any compromi se with the North \ ietnarncse and the VIet Cong.

Over 100 hounds were entered
in the bench show and field trials
held by the Meigs County Fox
Hunters Association on Eagle
Ridge Friday evemng.
Field trial winrters were dogs
LONDON - TIW SOVIET liNtoN, PLISIUNG a diplomatic Eastowned by carl Ward and fl.oy Lee,
West peace offensive, was understood w be counseling moderation
both of Mariena. Dogs owned by
on Hanoi's \'lelnam peael' strateg)'. Diplomatic sources said MosRalph Ow-s, Bashan, and Gary
cow wants the Paris talks to lead to a settlement of the Vietr-.m conVan Meter, Heedsville, took top
flict ard is adv1sing the regime of President Ho Chi MirtJ to exer~
honors in the bench s how.
dse res h·aint in the current difficult maneuvering.
Officials were C. C. Dudding
'n1e moderating So net voice was understood to have been raised
of South Webster, bench show
\n late contacts v.ith the North Vietnamese in Hanoi and with the latjudgej Clayton Dudding, Scott
ter's emoy to t.he Paris talks, key polit.burcau member Le Due Tho
Depot, W. Va., ringmaster, and
while Tho was pas sing through Moscow.
Mel Clark, West Columbia, assisted by his brother, Gerald,
COLUMBliS - 01110 ~'ARM HUllEAU Foderation President !lobMaster of the Hounds.
crt s ummer told delegates to the 50th annual federalion meeting farmCorbett Cleek, Fox Hunters
ers today an: their own "wors t enemies in a day that demands conAssociation pre s ident, announced
stafll dlangc Ill a world or new chaUenges."
all hunlcrs and polential hunters
'''Iesterday' s answers won't !:!Oive the problems,'' Summer said.
are i nvi led to JOin Ute organiza" rhe work done b) our fathers and uncles won't keep our organization. The hunters are plarmi~ a
tion healthy and strong. We need to organize ourselves so that when
large rleld trial this coming
we speak in the marketplace, others listen," he added. D. R, Stan- spring
lield, exeeuh•;e vu:e president of the Fann Bureau, said farmers
would have to be better organized if they want to mamtain a strong

The participants incl uded representathetr; from school dis·
tricts, local health departments agric• tl tw·c. ''
and special ed ucation and health
KE" BISCA\:'IJE, FLA. - PRESIDENT-ELECT BlchardM.Nixon
agencies. Hcpresenting Gallia
holds di scussion .'&gt; with top advisers today amid wgue hints from his
County were Naomi Hose, H. I\".;
press aide of major decisions and impending announcement5.
Carol Cremeans, R. N.; Wilma
Ronald L. Ziegler, l'iixon's press assistant who relays all inBrown, R.t\.; l larence Thompformatioo from Kc) Biscayne hidcawas, said Wednesday night Nixon
son and Grace L, J~ees.
had reached "major policy" decis ions, but hedged on disclosing their
eontenl. Under questioning, he added that they were ''decisions on personnel and in relation to the direction" of the Nixon administration.

Two Vehicles
Are Damaged
~·ehidcs

Two

were damaged

and the dri\er of one of them l'it-

CoUege O.orale To Visit Concert
Tl1e Grande Chorale from Rio
Grande College will be spedal
guests Saturday at 8 p.m. when
the Easte1·n High School Band
p1·esents a winter concert in the
high s&lt;:hool auditorium.

The chorale is W1der the direction of Merlin Ross. Charles
Yeago ts directOr of the Eastern
Band. There will be no admi ssion charge, nowc\ler, donations
at the door will be ac&lt;:epted.

cd to the t·ourt of MI}Or C. 0.
Fisher as the res ult of an accident in ~Uddlepor l at -1:30 p. m.
Wednesday.
Middleport police said a pick(Contmucd from Page 1)
up truck dr ne n b) Hobert\". Haggert), Middleport, travclmg cast
Major money markets r emained dosed pending outcome of the
on Hutlard St., failed to ) icld the meeting of the Ten.
right of 1Uy and s truck a northBASEL, SWIT ZEHLA.ND- INTEHN,\TIOf\&lt;A I. HANKERS are con
boUI"l.l t·ar on 1\"or th Secord St.,
dri\en b~ l"ller~le L. Knight, 20, vin&lt;:L'd the J· rcnch franc, the British poond and maybe the ·\ merican
dollar will continue to be in trouble until 1\0rld cunene) exchange
1\"ew !Iaven.
Damage..-, to th e I\ night car v.ere r ate s are brought up to date. The last time exchaflb&gt;e rates were esestimated at S!iOO wh1le those to tablished for all currencie s was Jul}, 19H, inBretwn Woods, N. H.,
the PL&lt;:kup truch. were estimated when 28 nations got together to straigh ten outtheir money in the fadat Sl5(J. llaggert~ was cited on mg months of World War D.
failun:&gt; to yield ngh t of wa,y.
Since then drastic changes ha1e l.aken place. Defeated West Germam and J apan have become rich. Some ofthe victors, s uch as BritLOL -\L TE~!PS
1111, hove become econornicalJJ weaker.
The temperature in downtown
Pomero~ at II :30 a. m. Thursda,y , under s un llJ skies , wa1; 38
TO Affi OSU TILT
dcg1ees.
Dale Rothgeb, WJEH News
director, a.nnQWJced today that
special arrangements have
been made by WJEH AM and
FM Radio to carry Saturda..v's
·1ONJCirJ, I H:IDAY
One suit for support unde1
Ohio
state . Michigan Big 10
A.J\iD SA ITHDI\Y
the
Reciprocal AKI"eement Act
i:hampionship football game .
NO\. 21-22-23
was file&lt;! and eight cases were
Action will begin at 1:1 5 p.m .
Don Knotts
dismissed Wednesday in Meigs
according
to
Hothgeb
.
"T HF. SHAKli::ST t;U\ U'\
County common pleas court. NanTHE WEST''
cy O'C0r1nor, Chester , filed ror
('I eehni&lt;:olor)
support against Elson O' Connor
,\." \0
of ~mburg, ;.,i. Y,
.\L\RRl \GF: .- \PPLIC.\ TIO:"-l
"SERCEM r R) KEH"
Dismissals included these casDavid Emest Carr, 19, Pom( reehn icolor)
es. Elmer E. Ashworth vs. Ella
eroy. machinist, and Mary Lou
Lee f\1anin-Bradford OoJlman
Wippel, a civil action ror reMd \, nney , HI , Hutland.
SHOW STARTS 7 P. M.
covery of personal property; Buddy Gene Kuhn vs . .t.Ya Jane Kuhn,
divorce, and Joan Wince vs. Norman Wince, Marie L. Sa.,.vre vs .
William -\ , Sayre, Ella Jane Mc Daniel vs. Walter MclJa11iel, Helen Louise McCoyvs. Jesse James
McCoy,
a n d Lois Lorrain
CHORD
Payne
vs.
James Robert haley,
ORGAN
all actions for support under the
ENSEMB•.:.;LE...,_
Reciprocal Agreement Act.

Money Crisis in Paris

Court Receives

MfJGS THEA TIE,

Support Suit

....,.

MAGNUS

c,.,.,

37 ~~:.., • • 12
llvnofts
......'( ~ llaell • full , ...

··"''""

Ill 12'1.95
2 "US! ai!T" LE;S
ltl. 110.10
) liNn IW:!O(! llKI

(lflln ' Tutun ·

~- l•p .

Dftat

,.,.m

••,. lli.95
I !HI!! SONG IOI1lS
6!1 f•mdr fo......tn

••t'-"' , .. ..,.., • .

•

,..,.

llf 1451
&amp;nyone un )ll•r th~ or&amp;lfl ri&amp;ht•••Y
•1th·
owl lmon~ . lbldi numbered keys. ~m 1!1·
lerH ~lwfd butt0111 The -.hole 11m1ly un plar
lillll ~ng !n01"1te $OlliS In }'0111 home !01111hl
tome 1n ~n&lt;l )ll•y the lllaanus Or1an now on

-·

TOTAL REG. VALUE S&amp;l40

0~~'38.85

-use OURHANDY

LA Y:-A.WAY- PLAii"
FOR ALL YOUR GIFT BUYING'

~ Mlii!IMUM

AMOUNT HOLD S ALL PURCHASES!

----------

Toytown Will Be Open Soon ••••
With Assortment and Prices You Want to Pay!
'lie Hon Complete Ltne of Nottonolly Adnr1i$ed

' .\ .

MATT EL TOY~ See Selection Whde Complete.

~~usr Arnved' ~~eu· .\ h1pmen;

BEN
PHONE
992-3498

Bench Show

oTrarakc;rs

FRANK Lit~

POMEROY

OPEN FRI &amp; &gt;AT .

NIGHTS TIL 9

Fire Victim

Is Confined
Confined to Veterans Memorial
Hospital as lhe result or facial
burns suffered Wednesday afternoon when he started a fire with
gasoline is Carmel DeLong of
near Pomeroy,
The Pomeroy emergency squad
removed DeLong to the hospital
Wednesday from the Ward Cafe
near Pomeroy. DeLong, squadmen said, use&lt;! gasoline to start
a fire in a drum. He was taken to
the Ward establishment nearby
where he awaited the arriwl of
the squad. He is in satisfactory
condition and ma.Y be dismiss~-d
from the hospnal today, 1t was
learned.
At \ :28 a.m. Thursday, the
Pomeroy squad was called to the
Pearl Jaeobs home at Laurel
Cliff. Mr. Jacobs wa s taken to
Veterans
Memorial llospital
where he was admitted as a medlcal patient

Jennie Kauff

Dies Wednesday
Mrs. .Iennie Elizabeth Kau!f,
70, Middleport II ill, died Wednesday in llolzer Medical Center.
Mrs, Kaurf was born Oct. 17,
1898 at Bradbur), the daughter
of the late John and Martha Foley
Grogan. She was also preceded
in death by one sonandtwobrothcrs. She was a member of the
Middleport Baptist Church and
of the Royal Neighbors lodge.
She is survived by her husband, John P. Kauff; two daugh~
lers, Mrs. Virgil (Martha Louise) Collins, Nel[,OO\ille, and
Mrs. Max (Miriam) Hickman,
Greeley, Neb.; two sons, Harold
F:. (Gene) Kaufr, Middleport, atkl
John R. (Jack) Kaurr, Pt Pleasant; two brothers, Robert Grogan, Toledo, and Frank Still,
Pomeroy; nine grandchildren,
and two great-grarx:lchildren.
funeral services will be held
Saturday at 2 p. m. at the Rawlings-COI.ts Funeral Home with
the Re\ , Charles Simons officiating. Burial will be in Riverview Cemetery. Friends rna} call
anytime after 9 a. m. Friday.

Plan Annual Danct!
The Meigs High Sc hool Athletic
As.sn. will sponsor its annual
Thanksgiving dance from 8 to J1
p. m. Thu.rsda,y at the htgh school
auditorium in Middleport. The
mfonn.a.J dance will be open to
the public. Emceeing will be the
Jays.

Volunteer Goes
One Me1gs Countian was illductOO into the armed forces in
Colwnbus Wednesda) and three
others urdenr~enl pre-iOOuct ion
physical e:wnin1tions, the Meigs
Count} Selec~i,·e Service Office
reported.
IOOuded at Fort llayes was
Charles L. Hampton, a volullteer. llndergoing physical examinations were George H. Diddle,
Gerald S. Eblin and WI G. Sauvage.

Hoi .An

Charles Allen
Dies Wednesday
Former Portland resident,
Charles Allen, Wellsville, Ohio,
died Wednesday morning in City
Hospital, East Liverpool. He was
the son or the late James and
Jessie Brewer Allen.
He is survived by his wife,
Virgie Cornell Allen ar.;l six
children. Mrs. Loo.ise DeLong,
Pomeroy; M r s. Mabel AM
Miller and Mrs. Barbara Joy,
East Liverpool; Marvin, steubenville, and Melvin and Sam, at
home; 10 grandchildren; four
brothers, Joseph, Wesley. Austin
and Arthur and one sister. Mrs.
Ronald HarL
Funeral services will be tleld
Saturday at 3 p. m from lhe
Mac Leans ~ uneral Home in
Wellsville.

(Conti ooed from Page 1)

Ellsworth Bwlker met for the
first time in nearly a week with
President NKUYen Van Thieu
amid speculation amo,g di~lo...
mats in Paris that South
\ .ietnam was almost rea.lty to
.1 · n the Paris talks.
t.:.S. neadqua.rten announced,
meantlme , that American baUle
deaths last week dJ upped to
their tow est in five weeks.

\oETEHMS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
AlJML'i.SIONS Katherine
Ward, Middleport; Constance
Shields. Pomeroy; Carl Norris,
Athens; Oris Hubbard, Syracuse;
Carmel DeLong, Pomero.) ; Er~
nestine Carsey, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGES - Thomas Reitmire, Glad,ys Dillon, Daniel Hair·
den, Clara Whaley, Osa Boggess.

VOL. XXI NO 150

Two More Explosions Rocl{
Mine Trapping 78 Workers
MANNINGTON, W. V. (UPl)
- Two
additional explosions
toda_v spewed hot, deadly gas
from the Mannington No. 9 coal
mine and jolted slim hopes ror
the survival of any of 78 men
trapped three days in a seven ~
mile maze of turmels 700 feet
underground.
The blastfl for the second time
blew
a
concrete..and-cinderblock cap oU the Mod's RWl
portal, near which nine families
of trapped miners were removed
from
their
homes
because of the carbon monoxide

The Mod'a RWl portal first
was capped Wednesday evening
but the cap was blown oft hours
later .
Piles of cinder block, sand

and cement were stacked at the
mine, for use in the event It
was decided to cap all the
mine's
many
openings
to
extinguish
the
Wldcrground
rtres.
Such a decision would signal
abandonment of all hope for the
ent6mbed men.
Today's explosions, the second
at 4:40 a.m. E."iT, shut orange
and red £ire hi.gtl into the pre-danger.
At least eight explosions, four dawn sky . It was seen for miles
of them major, rocked the mine aroWld.
In Wash~, Interior Secresince before dawn Wednesday,
tary
Stewart L, Udall said
spreading raging fires through
the
nation
no longer "can accept
tunnels and spewing dangerous
or
will
accept
this type ot
gas-containing smoke out of
disaster."
He
said neither
shafts and portals,

"Industry , labor or my department has done enough. We have
been too complacent."
Udall sent John O'Leary,
director of the U.S. Bureau ol
Mines, and J. Cordell Moore,
assistant
secretary of the
interior for mineral resources,
to Mannington for a study of
the accident.
The fires and gas explosions
any
attempts to
prevented
rescue the men trapped 700 feet
undergrQUl1d before dawn Wednesday at the end of th.el.r
graveyard s hift..
Some wives, soos and daughters o! the entombed miners
held to faint hope. Some turned
to prayer at a service led
Thursda.y by the Rev. John
Barnes, a bllnd drcuit preacher
from West Virginia.
'q)ind us together, 0 Lord, so

.. ;

that we may accept the fact,
whatever it mi&amp;tlt be," said the
minister to a small group of
mournen, their races etched
with strain and heartbreak.
Little !Iope
Asked if there was a chance
the trapped miners could be
alive, William Potmdstone, exe cutive vice president of Consoli dation Coal Co. which owns the
mine, said:
"There's alwa.vs a chance, but
I would not at this time want to

U. S. Artillery
Resumes Attacl{s
SAIGON (UPI)- U.S. artillery
shelled North Vietnam for the
first time since President
Johnsoo called off all bombardment or the Comrnwlist nation,
American headquarters said
today.
Two salvos rrom Ll.S. gms
Thursday silenced two antiaircraft machineguns that opened
'fire first on U.S. spotter planes
Crom the northern half ~
Vietnam's border Demilitarized
Zone (DMZ).
Hanoi radio disputed the
report. Its broadcast heard in
Tokyo today said allied artillery
and naval guns had hit three

PARIS WPD - North Vietnam called on Washington today
to open immediate peace talks in Paris while keeping a scat
ready at the conference table for Saigort The new proposal for
direct peace talks with the Americans and without Sligon was
made at a specially called news conference by Ngu)en 1 hanh Le,
chief spokesman for Hanoi delegation leader Xuan ThuJ.
Le linked the new call ror tripartite talks to include Hanoi ,
WashingtOn and the Viet Cong with accusations that the United
States was guilt) or a "serious" violat:ion of the Demilitarized
Zone (DMZ) in Vietnam.

villages in the northern DMZ said, "must bear full responsibifour times previously- on Nov. lity for all the consequences" of
the "extremely brazen provoca16, 17, 20 and 21.
The United states, the radio tive acts."
Protest DMZ Violations
Gen. Creighton W. Abrams'
U.S. conunand has protested
repeatedly the Communists' use
of the DMZ as a military base
in violation of an understanding
that brought
the
northern
bombing halt .
By United Press International
Diplomats in Paris said the
NEW YORK - BACK HOMJ:: AFTER A SIX-DAY workJng vaca-tion ln Florida, President-elect Richard M. Nixon gathered his hmer
&lt;continuedonpagesl
circle around him today ror nuts and bolts discussions on his new ad·
ministration. In addition to the conferences with his ~ranking
White House staff - legislative assistant Bryce N. Harlow, coWlsel
John Ehrlichman ard White House Manager H. R. Halderman - Nixon planned, an aide said, to meet with "a go\'ernor and a former
governor" and other party leaders.
Through llis press spokesman, Ronald L. Ziegler, Nixon dlsCOLUMBUS, Oh.o (UPl) closed Thursday that 10 task forces were studying issues ard possible answers in such areas as welfare, labor -management, fiscal Apollo 7 astronaut Donn Eisele
sa1d today the United States would
policy, transportation, housing and tax laws.
beat the Russians to the moon.
Eisele, a native of Columbus,
CINCINNATI - UNION ELECTRICIANS W'LKED of! local projects Thursday and attended a meeting to discuss a threatened pay was welcomed by a motorcycle
cut for new jow-neymen. Robert Wehmam, business agent for Local escort, a brass band and 2.000
212 of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers , said cheering students as he returned
the meeting was called to discuss a plan submitted by the loeal elec~ to the high school from which
he graduated 20 years ago.
trical contractors association to U.S, District Court.
"We are probably ahead of
The ·contractors proposal was submitted in response to a recent court order by U.S. District Judge Timothy HQB~n barring dis- them (the Russians) but it seems
crimhation against Negroes In admission to the electrical workers to me that they tr) to do things
first even if they don't do them
urUon and in job referral practices.
very well,' ' Eisele said.
Eisele, accompanied by his
NEW YORK - JULIE NIXON'S MARIUAGE to David Eisenhower in the C-athedral or St. John the Divine Is one morth away and It wife Harlet and three children,
said he hoped the cutbacks of
promises to be one of the biggest in the history of New York.
Accordi~ to Women's Wear Daily, which published details of fulkls for the space program
would be restored.
the wedding plans in today's edition, the Dec. 22 ceremony will be
"A lot of our problems are
managed by Priscilla or Boston, the couturiere who mastenninded
social and not monetary arw:l we
details of Luci Johnson's wedding to Patrick Nugent.
can't solve our social ills mereCINCINNATI- TilE TEXACO OIL co. Thursday was Oned $500 ly by doling out huge amounts
or money," Eisele said.
In federal court for polluting the Ohio River.
Philip J. Sch neider, Texaco attorney, told the court the dwnping
oC 52,000 gallons oC gasoline In the river Ma,y 4 was due to negligence
to
on the part of workers who forgot to close a valve on a &amp;ank during
a. reconstruction period at the Texaco Cecillty,

Moon Race

In the Bag

Anti-Smokers

... them what has, gits...
COLUMBUS (UP0 T he
state Cmtrolllng Board approv •
eel Thursda,y Natural ReiiOUrces
Department requests for more
dian hall a million doUera but
denied a roqueol b.Y the depart·
ment for $25,700 IObulldahouse.
The board approved dep&amp;r11Ilent
reqoeola for$501,561.75forwork
on 10 dopartlllent projeets!nvartoua secUoos ol the . - .
The roqueol ....,Umoualy denied was for fund• 10 build a
e a r - house at Zaleski SIBle
Forest In Vlntm Counl,f 10 re-

place a structure more than 100
years old and det&lt;&gt;rlorlated be·
ymd repairs.
The Zaleski req.lest was before
the board twice In the paol and
was postponed. Among .requests
approved was one for $92,700
for design fees for a $1.5mtllloo
project at West Branch Reservoir, CoUnty. II will In-

elude eonsti-uctlon rJ. a swimbathhoUse, marina,
roadways, parking areas lhii5BDItacy facilltlea.

mini beach,

Get Equal Time

WASHINGTON (UP0 - Afederal appeals court, holding there
is "ample evidence" smoking is
probably dangerous to health, has
ruled that broadcasters who air
cigarette commercials must allow equal time ror arguments
against smoking.
In the ruling Thursday, the
District of Columbia COUrt of
Appeals upheld a Federal Com·
munlcations Commission (FCC)
ruling that radio and television
stations have a legal obligation
to carry anti-smoking arguments
if they carry cigarette cmunerclals.

I
-;-,,

TEN CENTS _

_POMEROY -MIDDLEPOR._..T..__
, ~O::_:
H~
IO,__ _ __ _ _ __ _:.F.:.:.:Rf=D:. .:.A~Y•...:..N:..::O::..:V..:;EM:.:..:.::::Bf::.:R...:2:::2.:..:1...:..968:;::__

2 Homes
Struck
By Fire

raise false hopes."
Workers tried to conunwUcate
with the trapped miners Thursday nibilt by banging on an iroo
tube drilled long ago. Their
answer was silence.
"We're far from being in a
posltion where it would be safe
to make a move towards
rescue," Poundst.one said, referring to the cmtlnuing fire and
blasts that turned the mine into
an oven.
Deadly carbon monoXide gas
a lso . spread through the twmels,
and lessened hope the trapped
miners could be alive behind
barricades in unravaged sections of the mine.
Some Rescued
After the fl r st. explosion
rockOO the soft coal mine near
the Pennsylvania border Wednesday, 21 miners were rescued.
Among them was Joseph Salar ,
47 . lie said he would return to
the on!)' job he knows.

Fires destroyed one home and
heavily damaged another in different sections of Meigs County
in the past 24 hours.
The first was Thursday at
4:15 p .m at the Rt. 2, Racine
residence of Stanley Cox. The other occurred at 3:55 a.m. toda)
at the home ol Harley J. Hoff.
man in Salem Center.
Racine firemen said the Cox
residence was completely destroyed. An estimate or $4,000
in damages was made . There
apparently was no insurance on
the structure.
Cause of the Cox fire remained undetermined today. It was reported no one was inside t h e
house when flames broke out,
but it is believed a small explo.
sion rrom some source touched
off the blaze.
Wiring around a ruse box is
believed the cause of the fire
at the Hoffman home in Salem
Center where three rooms were
extensively damaged and the remainder of the seven-roomttructure had smoke and water damage.
Rutland firemen said dalllil£e
to the structure has been esti(Continued on Page 6)

"I figure r m going to dJe
someplace, so it might as well
be tllerc," he said pointing to
the No . 9 shaft.

THIS COMMITIEE FROM THE MIDDLEPORT AMATEUR GardeneraCI&lt;ilmet 'lblrodly night
at the home or Mrs. Harold Lohse in Pomeroy to make plans for a public Ou'istmas nower arranging workshop and demonstration. Betty rast.. Charleston, who conducts the "Garden Club of
the Air" program on WCHS-TV will corduct the workshop which wUI be held at 7:30p.m. on Dec.
5 at the Pearl SL Elementary School in Middleport. Pictured are, front row, lett to right, Mrs.
Walter Crooks, Mrs. Lohse, and Mrs. Guy Reynolds, co- chainnen of the a[fair; Mrs. Grace Pratt,
club president; back row, lert to right, Mrs. Glen Lambert, Mrs. Edgar Reynolds, Mrs. Arthur
Strauss and Mrs. Harry Moore.

.;::=:·:·:·:·:·:·:·::::::::....:::::::;::;:.:·:·:·:·:«-:·:::-m::x::=»·
Fourteen years ago on Nov.
tS, 1954, when an explosion in
the same mine killed Hi of his
fellow workers, , it was Salar's
day off. Wednesda,y , he was
haulted to safety in a big bucket
lowered 7UU feet down the shaft.
"You just can never figure
lhese things out," he said.
"Sometimes you're luck,y and
other times you're not."

Lawrence A, Smith, 47,
Chester, struck and killed a
deer at 7 a.m. 'lllursda.Y on
Rt. 33, five and one - tenth
miles north of the junction of
Rts. 33 and 7, The animal ran
from the west side ol the highway into the path of Smith's
nortllbound car, according to
the Sl.a.te Highway Patrol,
:.;.;:&amp;;!!!!~=:.::~m-::o::&lt;:::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::·

the Money crisis
BONN (UPD - The world's richest trading nations agreed today to lcOO France $2 billion to try to save the t'ranc that face s imminent devaluation. II was a s topgap measure that eased but did not
erd the monetar) crisis.
West German Finance Minister Franz-Joser StrauS!! said West
Germany had refused to revalue upward the mark, now pegged at
25 cents, and he did not announce devaluation of the franc as ex~
pected. In Paris it was generally believed the franc would be devalued by 10 per cent Satw-day.
First report of the $2 billion loan came from British Chancellor of the Exchequer Roy Jenkins who sped from BoM to London
where he told the Hoose or Commons of the loan and announced a
vast new austerity program to cut down spending in Britain. The
British pound (52.40) also is threatened by the world c risis.

Bob Bailey Heads Jr. Fair Board
Bob Bailey , son of Mr . and
Mrs. Robert Bailey, Houle 4,
Pomeroy, was e lected president
or the Meigs COWll,y Junior I~air
Board attheamualmeetingTUesday nigtlt. A 4-11 memtedorfour
years, Bailey is president of the
Meigs Cotmt,y 4-H Junior Leadership Club, a member of the
Harri801WUle Doys 4-H C I u b,
the Meigs County Tractor Chtb
and or the 4-H Advisory CQmmittee.
Elected vice president was
Larry Hollon, a member of the
Souttlern High School FFA. Larry is ttle son of Mr . and Mrs.

Edison Hollon or Minersville.
Melissa Rizer of Pomeroy will
serve as secretary of the Junior fair Board for 1968-69. ~e
is a member of Girl Scout Troop
220 and is the daughter or Mr .
and Mrs . Franklin Rizer .
Treasurer for the year wiU be
Jenny Dean, daughter Q( Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Dean, Chester, Jemy
is a member of the 4-H Jtmior
Leaders, Five Point Star Stitchers, the Meigs ColDlty Better
Livestock 4-11 Clubs, and of the
4-H Advisory Committee.
Other members of the Jun-

ior Fair Board are Kenneth Bolen, AIM Holter, Walter Jordan
- 4-H Boys; Janet Mees, Janice
Eastman, and Terri Miller 4-H Girls; Ricky Pierce and Jell
Donahue - FF A; and Debbie Oillinger and Debbie Lathey - Girl
Scouts.

Give-Away Plan
To Begin Monday
Middleport merchants wtll
offer tickets - without any purchase being necessary - t h i s
coming Mooday, Nov. 26, lnthelr
Christmas Gift Certificate GiveAway.

This was decided Thursday
night when the group met at
offices of the Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Electric Co. with Carl
Horky, Chamber of Commerce
vlce..president, presiding .
Ttle first drawing will be on
the night o( the armual merchants ldck..off parade which is slated ror 6:30 p.m. Monday, Dec.
2. On the same evening, when
Santa Claus wtU make his initial appearance of ttle season,
merchants will sponsor a Moonlight Sale as a special value event
for persons bringing children to
town to visit Santa and receive
candy treats.
Names d. gitt certificate winners eX $50, $30, and $20 will be
drawn on the evening oC the par-

ade and again each day Ulllil
Dec. 23 when five gift certificates of $100 each will be awarded. The overall total or gift certificates to be given out in Middleport for the SUIKII1 is $2.000.
Persons having the winningtlekets in the gift certificate promotion need not be preserrt at
drawings to receive their awards
and tickets can be gotten, without any purchase necessary, at
any
the participating business
houses.
Free parking, a further Christ·
mas service convenience shoppers throug!l courtesy d the C
OF C Merchants Divisioo and th1
village, will begin Friday, Dec.
13, when Middleport stores will
begin staying open evenings
through Christmas.
In other activity of last night's
meeting, It was decided to give
$15 toward prizes to be awarded
by the garden clubs' annual decoration contest in the village .

or

Taxpaying a Habit

Bounty Heap Good
"It looks like your bouni;Y ls
pretty good this year," the
governor told the chiefs of the
shrinking Mattaponi and Pamunk.ey 11-.Jian tribes which still
live on state-maintained reservations in King William County.
Three
centuries ago the
Indians were required to pay 20
beaver skins to the King of
England. The law obviously is
oo longer in effect, but the
lrDians are tradition miOOed.
Virginia governors normally
donate the armW thanksgiving
gins to the need) or to state
institutions.
NEWS &amp; NOTES - We gr&lt;atly
The Mattaponi and Pamunkey
appreciate the man,y people who are fierce~ competitive and
took advantage of oor invitation
usuall) show up on separate
to visit in our schools during Amdays. Thursday, they were both
erican Education Week. The numin town at the same time.
ber or visjts reported was 413.
Godwin accepted the turkey
- Last Tuesday we saw the first
and the fish from Chief 0. T.
piece or structural steel set on
Custalow, head of the Mattlpothe l.l)per aoors or the new higll ni. After 1 few words. GodWin
school building.
stepped around the eopttol to
The crane that is used in this the mansion and accepted the
operation rises 130 feel into the
fOW"-point buck rrom Odef
air. - School will be dismissed
Tecumseh Deerfoot Cook of tbe
one hour and fifteen mlrutes
Pamunk.ey.
early on Wednesday, November
27. There will, or course. be no
school on November 28 or N•
VETERANS MEMORIAL
vember 29. - The Marauder
HOSPITAL
basketball season opens on Frt~
ADMITTED
- Peorl Jacoba,
day, November 29 at home against
P001eroy;
Barbara
Crlbtree. Al·
Jackson. The games will bepla,ybally;
Clyde
Cramlet,
Racl•;
ed in the KYJ11 at Rutland again
Ethel
Stitt,
Racine;
SUllo
C..
this year. - November 27 also
go.
Racine;
IAicllle
Cll.)o.
Pcmmarks the end of the
six
weeks gradi~ period. At thH ero,y.
DISCHARGED - Rl1a 1.&amp;1de,._
polnl the school year wiD be • mlft,
Jolin Groce and CUmel
third cm'IIJleted. Did IOIIleoDI

RICHMOND,
Va.
(UPllAdult advisory members are SMte things get to be a habit,
Mrs. Pat Holter, Mrs. L R. even paying taxes.
The chiefs of two lrdian
Neal, Mrs. Donna Ohlinger, Mr.
Dempsey Bailey, Everett H o 1- tribes met with Gov. Mills E.
comb, C. E, Blakeslee, and Mar- Godwin Jr., Thursday to pay
garet Griffiths. Pete .!i'lields is their taxes- an 18-pourxi turkey,
ttle Senior Fair Board member 13 rockfish and a 141H!ound
in charge eX the Junior Fair. deer.

Speaking of Schools-No. 66

Meaning of Thanksgiving Recalled
By GEORGE HARGRAVES, SW~
Meigs Local School District
Many, many years ago, in the
earb days or settlement on this
continent, the ldea of having a
day set aside for thanksgiving
to God originated. Every school
boy and school girl knows that
pictures or Pllgrhns and turkeys
go with Thanksgiving. As a matter of fact, to some people
Thanksgiving is even called
"Turkey Day."
We human bei~s have a
strange capacity for changing the
true meaning of holiday observances to something other than
that which wa&amp; the origi.rlal purpose. We all share the same
great concern over the loss of
the lrue meaning or Christmas
tn the wave of advertising, buying an1 selling that sweeps over
us during what is called the
01 ChristtniS aeasorL"

Uungs that He has provided for
us. We in America most assured~
l.y have been abundantly placed
with great material wealth. We
have more of more U1ings than
any other oation in the world..
l-or these material girts we must
certainly be thankful
In a larger sense, the persollal freedom and ever expaOOing
opportunity available to the individual American citizen are
even greater reasons ror gratitude.

Yes, we Americans In the sechall of the twentieth century
should engage in Thanksgiving
to God for His bountifUl gifts,
We must also ackrKM"ledge, with
a feeling of deep gratitude, the
great debt owed by our generalion to other generations of Americans who have rought for alii
jealously guarded the rlghts,prlvlleges an3 cpportunlties we
Thenlnogivlng Day was and atUI s hare as American citizens t~
should be 1 day upon which we day. We have just observed Vet.give thanks to God for all the eranl' Day with a tribute to the

om

sacrifices or time, £ortune and
lives contributed by those who
have lived berore us in this
great land.
Truly, there is a boOO between
November l1 when we express
gratin.de to our war veterans
and Thanksgiving Day when we
give humble thanksgiving to our

God.
On next Thursday we wlll all
have Lhe opportunity to visit with
friends and relatives, to see
long. colorful parades, to witness exciting ftJOthall games,aOO
to eat too much. We will also
have the q&gt;portunit;y to offer a
humble pnyer of Thanksgiving.
May I suggest tlat this pray~
er might come first - early on
Thursday morning. I have the
strong feeling that the visiting,
the parades, the football ard the
food will all be much better once
the important part of Thankaglvl..r hi• been acknoWledged by
that simple p~er ol tharil.sgivl..r.

secom

say

that time Dies?

~

1.

'
·-- ·· ·-·- -•"'"

·---

··r•· -- ·-.

'

,.

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            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11038">
                <text>11. November</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="63844">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63843">
              <text>November 21, 1968</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="191">
      <name>allen</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="693">
      <name>greenlee</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1067">
      <name>jacks</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
