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GOP Committee Split on Spiro Agnew zn 1972
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Republican
National Committee members appear to
be split about evenly between those who
already favor the renomination of Vice
President Spiro T. Agnew in 1972 and those
waiting for cues from President Nixon
about his choice for a running mate.
They also seem to be almost unanimous
in their belief Nixon will seek a second
term.
There are murmurs of dissent from a
few who want a full-time national party

1,.

chairman, but no significant opposition is
being expressed to the President's choice
of Sen. Robert J. Dole of Kansas for the
post.
Economy Boost Mentioned
These attitudes toward the 1972 national
ticket and the national committee
chairmanship came in replies to questions
submitted by UPI in advance to committee
members assembling today for three days
of meetings. More than 90 of the 158

Now You Know
Only vertebrate creatures
possess livers.

•

committee members were contacted.
State chairmen scheduled a series ot
closed meetings today to be followed by
sessions of the full national committee
Friday and Saturday. Dole's election to
succeed Rep. Rogers C.B. Morton of
Maryland, who will be nominated to be
Secretary of Interior, is set for Friday
afternoon.
Of committee members who answered a
UPI puestion about the possible need for
major changes in policies or political

strategy, 32 mentioned a robust economy
as an aid to GOP victory in 1972. But a
number of these suggested that Nixon
administration policies already ensure a
healthy economic climate next year.,
.
In the survey, comm1ttee members were
asked if they assumed Nixon would run in
1972 and, if so, whether they favored
Agnew's renomination. Ten declined to
answer any of the questions, but of those
who replied none expressed doubt the

President would seek a second term.
Two Oppose Agnew
To the Agnew question, 34 replied
directly they favored renominatinn of the
vice president, although a few added
qualifying phrases such as "at this time."
An exactly equal number deferred to the
President, 23 saying merely the choice was
for Nixon to make and h answering they
would favor or not object to Agnew if the
President wanted him.
Eleven who replied to some of the

questions gave a "no comment" or "not
sure" answer about Agnew.
Edward Janeway of Vermont said he
opposed keeping Agnew and preferred a
younger Republican such as Sen. Howard
H. Baker Jr. of Tennessee, Sen. Charles H.
Percy of Illinois or Sen. Robert W. Packwood of Oregon.
"I don't really think I do," said Mrs.
Donald T. Gibbs of Rhode Island, when
asked if she favored Agnew's renomination.

The Daily Sentinel
Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Area

VOL. XXVI

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 190

Weather
Cool tonight, chance of drizzle
and light rain mainly east,
chance of snow tonight north
and east. Lows tonight in the
20s. Friday cooler, chance of
snow flurries northeast.

THURSDAY, JANUARY 14, 1971

TEN CENTS

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

No-Strike For~nula
Agreed on for OU

WENDELL HOOVER

Hoover Will Head Drive
Wendell W. Hoover, Pomeroy
Route 2, general sales
representative of the Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric Co.,
11 Middleport, has been named to
head the 1971 Cancer Crusade of
the Meigs County Sancer
Society.
Hoover is a member of the
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce,
the
PomeroyMiddleport Lions Club and
Heath Methodist Church,
Middleport. He movP-&lt;1 to Meigs
County two years ago and
•
resides on a 40-acre farm on old

Route 33 with his wife, Martha,
a first grade teacher at the
Salisbury Elementary School,
and two children, Laura, a fifth
grader at the school, and Andrew, 12, who attends Meigs
Junior High School in Middleport.
Employed by Columbus and
Southern Ohio for 3~ years,
Hoover came here from
Hillsboro. The annual crusade
- a fund drive for fighting
cancer - will be underway in
April.

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
University President Claude R.
Sowle and officers of a blue
collar workers union agreed
early today to a series of steps
to prevent a threatened strike
at the 18,000-student school.
The plan was announced after
a marathon six-hour meeting in
the office of Gov. John J. Gilligan that included state Attorney General William J. Brown,
Herschel M. Sigall, director of
Council 21 of the American
Federation of State, County and
Municipal Employes, Sowle and
members of their staffs.
Under terms of the agree;aent, officials of the southeastern Ohio university and the
union of non-academic employes will meet "as soon as possible" to discuss the disagreement.
Should that fail, a four-member panel of administrators and
union representatives are to
meet with a referee selected by
th"C governor.
If the panel cannot produce
a compromise, the referee will
be empowered to make recommendations which would be

F

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Reasonable men in war
FT. McPHERSON, GA. -THE OFFICER JURY in the My
Lai court-martial of Sgt. Charles E. Hutto will be asked to decide
if a ''reasonable man" would have obeyed orders to shoot unarmed women and children. The six-man panel, all veterans of
Vietnam, was expected to get the case by midafternoon today
following final arguments by the prosecution and defense and the
judge's charge.
The defense rested its case Wednesday. Although Hutto did
not testify in his own defense, several witnesses testified that
Hutto's unit had orders from the company commander, Capt.
Ernest L. Medina, to destroy My Lai and kill all its occupants.

No ivory tower for the governor
COLUMBUS - GOV. JOHN J. GILLIGAN pledged Wednesday night to keep his administration "open and visible" to the
news media of the st... te to prevent himself from living in an
"ivory tower atmosphere."
Speaking to a meeting of Sigma Delta Chi, the professional
journalism fraternity, Gilligan said public officials need the press
to tell them what is happening in the cities, the state and the
nation.

Newark has police again

•
/

NEWARK, OHIO- STRIKING NEWARK police went back
to work today for the first time in a week, but they served notice
the "sick call'' will be on again in 60 days if their contract dispute
is not settled.
The 57 officers finally accepted Wednesday a $1,000 salary
increase offer they rejected on Monday, but continued to demand
negotiation of hazardous duty pay and a cost of living clause.
They gave city officials until the middle of March to settle that
part of the negotiations. Mayor J&amp;mes Alexander, who along with
other officials had spent the past week in patrol cars on a regular
basis, said the "sick" officers will not be paid for the period they
were out unless they present a certificate from a doctor proving
they were ill.

Union Carbide is doubtful

•
••

MARIETTA, OHIO - UNION CARBIDE SAID it is considering shutting down two furnaces at its ferro-alloy plant here
as a last resort if air pollution control standards cannot be met.
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has ordered the
plant to deliver no later than Jan. 19 a "written commitment" to
meet an April1972 deadline on reducing sulfur oxide emission.
Fred Charles, plant manager, said the company cannot bring
about the reduction by that date. A recent plan submitted by
Union Carbide was turned down by the federal agency because it
was not fast enough. "The odds are very slim anything can be
worked out," Charles said. If the furnaces were closed, about 500
employes would be affected, he said.
CLASS OMITIED
Omitted from those contributing to the Christmas
activities of the Meigs County
Children's Home was the
Willing Workers Class of the
Long Bottom Methodist Church.

GETS GRANT
WASHINGTON (UPl) - A
$2,383,110 federal grant has
been given Youngstown, Ohio,
for the construction of a 10-story
apartment building for the
elderly.

WASHINGTON (UPI) -A
federal grand jury has charged
that Robert T. Carson, a top
aide to Sen. Hiram Fong, RHawaii, offered a $100,000
political contribution to a
deputy attorney general in an
unsuccessful attempt to fix a
securities fraud case involving
a New York Mafia boss.
Fong suspended Carson, 64,
without pay pending the outcome of the case, and his office
issued a statement saying Fong
knew nothing of the events
leading to the indictment.
The federat grand jury,
meeting in New York, indicted
Carson on charges of perjury
and conspiracy to fix an
indictment brought against
John "Johnny Dio" Dioguardia,
identified by federal officials as
captain of the Luchese family
of the Cosa Nostra in New
York.
The indictment against Dieguardia, brought Nov. 19,
charged he and 15 others had
attempted to seize control of an
investment company and increase the value of its stock
through manipulation of unregistered stock. Dioguardia is
serving a six-year sentence on
a separate bankruptcy fraud
conviction.
The indictment against Carson, announced by the Justice
Department Wednesday, also
included conspiracy charges
against Edward Adams, 80, and
Joseph Bald, 41, both of New
York City.
The indictment said Deputy
Attorney General Richard G.
Kleindienst "immediately and
categorically rejected'' an offer
by Carson Nov. 24 of a $100,000
political contribution. It was not
specified in the Justice Department
announcement
specifically where the money
originated or whom it
ultimately was intended.
SUPPER AT 5
A soup supper will be held at
the Eastern High School
beginning at 5 p.m. Friday
preceding the Eastern-North
Gallia basketball game. The
senior class is sponsoring the
event.

binding on both parties.
The meeting began in the
state capital after the union
agreed to postpone a strike
vote by its 900 members at the
university in Athens.
The dispute centered about
the union's contention that
workers should be allowed to
work their lunch periods and

be paid overtime for that work.
He said the governor and
General Assembly should enact
laws to prevent such situations
from occurring again either at
his school or other state campuses.
"Under the current state
laws, both the scope of negotiations with public employes and

the issue which may be resolved directly by them and
their employers are clouded by
unreality and uncertainty," said
Sowle. "The resolution of these
vital issues must be faced."
A strike by non-academic employes at OU in 1967 closed
down the university for 10
days.

Project Freedont Endorsed
"Project Freedom," a public
program to secure signatures
protesting the treatment of
American prisoners of war in
Vietnam, was endorsed by the
Pomeroy-Middleport Lions
Club following its noon luncheon
Wednesday at the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church.
Tom Cassell, president,
presented a letter outlining
plans for a house-to-house
canvass in May to secure
signatures on letters to be sent
to Hanoi. The letters will express American public opinion

against Hanoi and its failure to
abide by the provisions of the
Geneva Convention. Heading
the program locally is the Rev.
Bill Perrin with Mrs. Ben
Neutzling serving as cochairman.
Terry Ohlinger, Meigs High
School teacher and advisor for
the school's chapter of the
Fellowship
of
Christian
Athletes, spoke after lunch. The
purpose of the fellowship, he
said, is to encourage athletes to
follow and accept Christ in their
lives and in their partidpation

in athletics. It is a movement of
faith and action designed to
make athletes more God conscious, honest and, consistant in
their living, Ohlinger said.
Accompanying him to the
meeting were Dallas Weber and
John Thomas, Meigs High
School athletes.
A joint r.1eeting of the Lions
Club and the Middleport Rotary
Club was announced for Jan. 22
in Middleport. Joe Hanning,
Nelsonville, zone chairman,
announced zone projects of
clubs.

MRS. OPAL RHODES, an employe of the Dutton Drug
Co. in Middleport, displays a sign employes made to promote
the sale of Vitamin C which has been recommended by Dr.
Linus Pauling, California, two-time Nob91 prize winner, for
use in fighting the common cold.

Vitamin C in Heavy Demand for Colas
Sev!~~~!~O~~~~~~

Linus
Pauling, California, twice a
Nobel prize winner, recommended in his book "Vitamin c
and the Common Cold" the use
. cm
. f"1ght"mg colds.
of V'ta
1 mm
Despite some criticism on the
recommendation,
Meigs
Countians are purchasing large
quantities of Vitamin C, sold
without a prescription in
Pomeroy and Middleport drug
stores.
In his book, Dr. Pauling
charges that studies conducted

Sellers IS
•
Fire OJ.ie£

At Racm·e
Paul Sellers was elected fire
chief and president of the
Racine Fire Dept. in a recent
organizational meeting.
Others elected were Earl
Cleland, vice president; Walter
Cleland, secretary-treasurer;
Pete Simpson, trustee; Marion
Sloter, assistant fire chief; Pete
Simpson, Captain; Glen Rizer,
first
lieutenant;
Walter
Cleleand, first aid chief; Earl
Cleland, assistant chief; Gary
Joe Wolfe, first aid captain, and
Larry Spencer, first aid
lieutenant.
Committees appointed were:
grievance, Douglas Johnson,
Jr., Henry Lyons, Pete Simpson; by laws, Glen Rizer, Henry
Lyons, and Earl Cleland;
finance, Larry Wolfe, Paul
Sellers and Walter Cleland;
safety, Carl Cleland, Glen
Rizer, Henry Lyons, Paul
Sellers and Walter Cleland, and
public relations, Pete Simpson.
Thirteen fire calls were answered by the department last
year. There were 88 emergency
runs, 490 man hours logged by
the emergency squad, and 2794
miles driven.
Total emergency runs made
to the several townships were
Lebanon 13, Letart 14, Sutton 28,
Racine Village 29, Chester 3,
and Syracuse Village 1.
LODGE TO MEET
There will be a special
meeting of Racine Lodge 461,
F&amp;AM, at 7:30p.m. Tuesday at
the temple to confer the master
mason degree.

in some quarters on the use of
the vitamin in fighting the
common cold have not been
effective because the amount of
Vitamin C given was not
adequate. He recommends in
some instances several grams
daily.
On the other hand, a recent
Medical Letter on Drugs and
Thereapeutics circulated
widely by an independent
agency warns that large doses
of Vitamin C may cause other
physical problems.
As a result of Dr. Pauling's

book and questions arising from
it, the federal government has
indicated that tests and studies
will be conducted on the
California doctor's theory.
Four local drug stores were
contacted Wednesday afternoon
on the demands for Vitamin C.
At Swisher-Lohse in Pomeroy,
Harold Lohse reported that
Vitamin C sales are "up
sharply." The drug store has
run out of it due to the heavy
demand but replacement
supplies were secured easily_
At Nelson's Drugs, Phar-

macist Hugh McPhail said that
Vitamin C sales have at least
doubled. The store has run out
due to the demand since Dr.
Pauling's book but replacement
supplies have been easily
secured.
In
rt at the Village
Pharmacy, ban Meadows,
owner
and
pharmacist,
reported that sales of Vitamin C
at his store have been "spectacular" and "tremendous".
"Normally we have sold a lot
of Vitamin C in winter apparently because there has been

an old wives' tale that it is good
for fighting colds. However,
sales are now really spectacular," Meadows commented. The store has run out
several times but replacement
supplies have been easily
secured.
Dale Dutton, owner of the
Dutton Drug Co., also in Middleport, reported that he has
purchased an enormous supply .
which is selling rapidly. Said
Dutton: "We have sold more
Vitamin C in the past month
than we sold all of last year."

:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::;::

CALLING ALL TALENT
The Chester
Alumni
Association is sponsoring a
variety sho at the Chester
Grade School at 8 p. m.
Saturday, Jan. 23. All
residents with talent who
would like to take part in the
production are asked to call
985·3855 for complete instructions. Proceeds will go
to the senior class of Eastern
High School.

Co-Op Goal is 275 Fantilies
The Meigs County Farm
Bureau will aim for 275 member
families in its membership
drive which got underway
today, Henry Frank, Pomeroy,
Farm Bureau president, said.
The county goal is expected to
be reached by Feb. 2. Frank
indicated the county's mail
campaign already has produced

244 members in 1971.
Growth chairman for this
year's campaign is Bob Burdette of Pomeroy. Other
members of the membership
committee are Henry Frank,
Rex Shenefield, Mrs. Ziba
Midkiff, Mrs. Pearl Williams,
Roy Miller, Mrs. Roy Holter,
John Colwell, Mrs. Edison

February Drive Is Planned by Heart Group
The annual heart fund drive
in February was planned by the
Meigs County Heart Association
Tuesday night at Trinity
Church.
Dr. R. E. Boice, vice
president, presided at the
meeting attended by Gary
Spears, field consultant of the
Central Ohio Heart Assn.

Ralph Werry will head the
1971 drive which will include a
Queen of Hearts Ball, a balloon
sale on Feb. 6, a bowling
tournament, and observance of
Heart Sunday on Feb. 21.
Conducting the Heart Sunday
house-to-house canvass in
Pomeroy will be Xi Gamma Mu
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi

Sorority, while the Middleport
Business and Professional
Women's Club will conduct the
drive in Middleport on that
Sunday. Plans were also made
to bring a heart specialist to
Pomeroy on Feb. 2 who will
speak at a public meeting in
Trinity Church.

Hollon, Don Wilson, Thomas
Sayre and Wayne Roush.
"We are anticipating one of
our best membership campaigns in years. We are building
on last year's excellent campaign. We also believe that
farmers realize that Farm
Bureau is working for them on
the local, state and national
levels, because it is a farmeroriented and farmer-controlled
organization. Farmers working
through Farm Bureau have
accomplished many marketing
and legislative victories. Every
farmer in the county will be
offered the opportunity to join
the Farm Bureau to help
themselves
through
its
organized team effort," Frank
said.

17
Die
in
Sr.
Citizens'
Home
.
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UPI)fire in the basement of a
church-operated residence
home for senior citizens sent
thick clouds of black smoke
rolling through the building
early today.
Nine of the elderly patients,

unable to reach the balconies of
their apartments, died of smoke
inhalation and 58 were taken to
hospitals, five in critical
condition.
The blaze was discovered
about 2 a.m. in the Westminister Terrace Presbyterian Home

Annual Canvass Begins Monday
The yearly canvass of
business telephone customers in
the Pomeroy-Middleport area
begins next Monday.
Kenley Krinn, Athens district
commercial manager, said
General Telephone DirE-ctory
Co. representatives will call on
businessmen to review and
confirm listings for the 1971
phone directory being com-

piled. This canvass lasts until
Feb. 5. Closing date is April 9,
the deadline for residential
customers to make changes in
the new directory.
The 1971 directory is
scheduled for delivery in June.
Included in the book with
Pomeroy and Middleport are:
Letart Falls, Portland, Racine
and Rutland.

in suburban Beuchel, a fouryear-old, luxurious four-story
residence home with individual
apartments housing 94 persons.
When the alarm was sounded,
most of the elderly men and
women residents were able to
make their way to their
individual apartment balconies,
as they had been instructed in
regular fire drills.
Smoke billowing up from the
basement area suffocated some
whose aprtments were directly
above the fire area.,
Deputy Coroner William Anderson revised the death count
downward after initial reports
from police at the scene had
listed 17 dead.
It was one of the nation's
worst disasters in homes for

the elderly since 36 died in a
fire at a nursing home in
Marietta, Ohio, a year ago.
Most of the victims in that fire
also died of smoke inhalation,
caused by dense black smoke
from rubber backmg of the
building's carpeting.
Most of the residents were
rescued from their balconies,
and were taken to a nearby
church and other buildings until
ambulances could take most of
them to hospitals for treatment.

WRESTLING TODAY
The Meigs High wrestling
squad will have a match with
South Point today at 5:55 p. m.
at Meigs High School.

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 14, 1971

Sowle R·e-Petitions for
SEO Educational Plan
ATHENS
Ohio University
President Claude R. Sowle has
again asked the Ohio Board of
Regents to consider a comprehensive plan for higher
education in Southeastern Ohio
that would allow two-year
regional colleges associated
with the university to offer both
technical
and
academic
education.
The Ohio University plan was
first submitted to the Regents in
response to their Master Plan
proposal for State Policy in
Higher Education announced in
November. Sowle says the
Regents' revised proposal,
announced Dec. 28, still does not
correct the problems facing
two-year institutions and allows
further fragmentation of
educational effort.
"If the December 28 revision
of the Master is allowed to
prevail, we not only will have
lost for the foreseeable future
the chance to change the
present chaotic structure of

higher education in the State of
Ohio, but also we will have
compounded that chaos and its
attendant duplication, waste
and conflict," says Sowle in a
letter to the Regents.
Sowle argues that continuation and proliferation of
independent two-year institutions mitigates against
comprehensive planning for
educational needs and allows
duplication of programs within
a community.
Neither of the Regents'
proposals, says Sowle, solves
the problems that two-year
institutions have with accredttahon, vertical mobility of
students, recruitment of faculty
and students, and transfer of
students and credits.
The plan for Southeastern
Ohio submitted by Sowle would
have present Ohio University
branches merge with neighboring technical institutes or
develop technical programs if
no local institutes exist.

Organized as regional colleges,
they would offer three kinds of
programs, technical education,
associate in arts - a two-year
degree program, and transfer
programs for continuation of
work at universities.
A possible exception would be
the Tri-County Technical Institute located about 15 miles
from Ohio University's main
four-year campus in Athens. It
might be a technical college
working cooperatively with the
university.

PT. PLEASANT
LIVESTOCK SALES CO.
PT. PLEASANT, W.VA.
Saturday, Jan. 9, 1971
HOGS -175 to 220 16 to 18.25;
Heavies 14 to 18; Ughts 17 to 20;
Fat Sows 14.50 to 17; Boars 13 to
15.25; Ptgs 3.25 to 10; Stock
Shoats by Hd. 15.50 to 24.
CATTLE - Heifers 18 to
22.60: Fat Cqws 17 to 22; Canners 10 to 19; Bulls 23
to 25.50; Milk Cows 100
to 165; Stock Cows 137 to
176; Stock Steers 20.90 to 25.50;
Stock Heifers 18.50 to 21; Stock
Steer Calves 22.50 to 28.50;
Stock Heifer Calves 20.75 to
27.75.
VEAL CALVES -Tops 48;
Seconds 45.75; Medium 40 to
43.50; Common &amp; Heavies 33 to
44.30.

Hairston's Shot
Knocks Off Loop
Leading Tigers

SEOAL Standings

A layup by 6-5 junior forward Harry Hairston in
the closing seconds of the game enabled Rio Grande
College to slip by Kentucky Intercollegiate Athletic
Conference leader Union, 76-75, at Barbourville,
Ky., Wednesday night.
The Bulldogs entered last
night's contest with a 5-1 conference record, and for the
second year in a row, the
visiting Redmen downed Coach
Art Lanham's alma mater in

Mrs. Bradshaw is Appointed
Aide to County Prosecutor

the Bulldogs' own backyard.
The defeat left Union with an
8-8 season record, and 5-2
conference mark. Rio is now 6-7
on the year, and 3-4 in conference play.
Rio has five conference
games left on its 1970-71
schedule - four of them will be
in the friendly confines of the
Paul R. Lyne Center.
Tony Bass contributed 32
points for Rio Grande last night
to take game scoring honors.
Roger Bentley added 17. Bill
Swafford had 25 for Union,
followed by Terry Smallwood
with 19.
Union led 36-34 at halftime.
The
game
see-sawed
throughout the second half.
Bernard Williams hauled
down 14 rebounds for the
Redmen. Rio out-rebounded the
Bulldogs, 43-26.
Rio plays at Ohio Dominican
Saturday night.
Box score:
RIO GRANDE - 34-42-76:
Bass 32, Bentley 17, Hairston 10,
Lambert 8, Baker 9.
UNION- 36-39-75; Childers
2, Wilson 13, Swafford 25,
Smallwood 19, Sizemore 14.

!Helen Help Usi

Mason County

News Notes

Careful South
Makes Contract

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Voice along Broadway i

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tz:an:1-~tW!&amp;IJ

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HOSPITAL NEWS

•

Avg
(2)
( 5)

(4)
( 1)
(12)
(6)
( 10)
(9)
(13)

(7) 1
(3)
(16)
(15)
(8)
(11)
(14)

...

(17)
(1~

(19)

I '

OVERALL SCORING (As of Jan. 9)
Name, Team
FG
FT Pts. (G) Avg.
C. Robinson, Fed-Hocking
82
95 249 (9)
27.7
D. Poling, Starr-Wash.
124
34 282 (11)
25.6
M. Shaw, Logan
82
66
230 (9)
25.6
R. Sinnott, Starr-Wash.
87
80 262 ( 11)
23.8
M.Rouse,Jackson
85 45
215 (10)
21.5
R. Eblin, Waverly
67
38
172 (8)
21 .5
A. Couladis, Athens
79
50
208 ( 10)
20.8
H. Caldwell, Eastern
64 56
184 (9)
20.4
T. Howard, Wahama
39
18
96 ( 5)
19.2
P. Miller, Waverly
64
24
152 (8}
19.0
SOUTHEASTERN OHIO ATHLETIC LEAGUE
!SEOALJ SCORING
Name, Team
FG FT Pfs. (G) Avg.Al
M. Shaw, Logan
67
56
190 (6}
31 .7
C. Kitchen, Ironton
48
14
140 (5}
22.0
A. Couladis, Athens
51
29
131 (6)
21.8
R. Eblin, Waver ly
51
27
129 (6}
21.5
M. Rouse, Jackson
48
28
124 (6)
20.7
P. Miller, Waverly
51
16
118 (6)
19.7
Bud Christian , Ironton
41
18
100 (6}
16.7
Jeff Tyo, Meigs
29 38
96 (6)
16.0
Gary Martin, Jackson
39
18
96 (6)
16.0
R. Ratcliff, Wellston
32
26
90 (6)
15.0
MID-OHIO VALLEY CONFERENCE
(MOVC) SCORING
)..
Name, Team
FG FT Pfs. (GJ Avg.
J. Bankes, Miller
25
3
53 (3)
17.7
Sam Hern, Miller
11
12
34 (2)
17.0
Gary Risley, Alexander
19
8
46 (3)
15.3
R. White, Alexander
18
9
45 (3)
15.0
Jim Murphy, Glouster
12
5
29 (2)
14.5
G. Brooks, Alexander
19
4
42 (3)
14.0
S. Brown, Alexander
10 21
41 (3)
13.7
Jim Wright, Glouster
11
5
27 (2)
13.5
P. Kiener. M i ller
15
7
37 (3)
12.3
J. Seel, Alexander
13
6
32 (3)
10.7
TR~VALLEY CONFERENCE
(TRI-VALLEYJ SCORING
Name, Team
FG FT Pts. (G) Avg.
C. Robinson, Fed-Hocking
37 39
113 (4)
28.3
E. Driggs, Fed-Hocking
21
18
60 (4)
15.0
G. Barber, VInton County
19
7
45 (3)
15.0
J. Meeley, Belpre
9
24
42 (3)
14.0
Hoy Seck inger, Nels· York
16
7
39 ( 3)
13.0
B. Lower, Nels-York
18
0
36 (3)
12.0
J. Mitchem, Warren Local
13
10
36 (3}
12.0
R. Prater, V inton County
9
17
35 (3)
11.7
M. Eliopulos, Belpre
12
6
30 (3}
10.0
J. Park, Belpre
9
12
30 (3)
10.0
(VARSITY&gt;
Logan
274 6 45.7 SEOAL STANDINGS
Athens
254 6 42.3
TEAM
W L Pts. Opp. Meigs
246 6 41.0
Waverly
5 1 519 330 Ironton
223 6 37.2
Athens
5 1 464 353 Wellston
191 6 31.8
Jackson
4 2 457 388 Gallipolis
160 6 26.7
Meigs
4 2 395 388
Personal Fouls
Ironton
3 3 387 399 Team
No. G Avg.
Logan
1 5 354 422 Athens
81 6 13.5
Wellston
1 5 330 507 Wellston
88 6 14.7
Gallipolis
1 5 281 400 Gall ipolis
102 6 17.0
MOV STANDINGS
Waverly
105 6 17.5
TEAM
W L Pts. Opp. Logan
111 6 18.5
Alexander
2 1 255 216 Meigs
113 6 18.8
M i ller
2 1 227 214 Ironton
120 6 20.0 I,
Glouster
0 2 109 161 Jackson
126 6 21.0
Eastern
0 0
0
0
INDIVIDUAL LEADERS
TRI-VALLEY STANDINGS
Field Goal Percentage
TEAM
W L Pfs. Opp. Name, Team
FGM-FGA Pet.
Federal-Hocking 4 0 284 209 D. Smith, A.
37· 55
.673
Warren Local
2 1 239 215 Couladis, A.
51- 80
.638
Belpre
1 2 165 183 Eblin, W.
51- 90
.567
Vinton County
1 2 147 209 Werry, M.
21· 41
.512
Nelson .. York
0 3 155 184 Ferguson, G.
25· 53
.472
(RESERVE)
Free Throw Percentage
SEOAL STANDINGS
Name, Team
FTM-FTA Pet.
TEAM
W L Pts. Opp. M. Shaw, L.
56- 75
.747
Meigs
5 1 272 238 Eblin, W.
27- 38
.711
Athens
5 1 239 185 Tyo, M.
36- 51
.707 fll•
Ironton
5 1 236 209 Green, A.
18- 26
.692
Waverly
3 3 250 220 Martin, J.
18- 26
.692
Jackson
2 4 256 232
Rebounds
Gallipolis
2 4 196 216 Name, Team
No. G Avg.
Logan
1 5 214 254 M. Shaw, L.
114 6 19.0
Wellston
1 5 174 283 Rouse, J .
94 6 15.7
MOVC STANDINGS
Martin, J.
94 6 15.7
TEAM
W L Pts. Opp. Kitchen, I.
72 5 14.4
Alexander
3 0 211 125 Eblin, W.
74 6 12.3
Miller
1 2 152 179
THIS WEEK'S SCHEDULE
Glouster
0 2
77 136
Eastern
0 0
0
0
FRIDAY
TRI-VALLEY
SEOAL
TEAM
W L Pts. Opp. Meigs at Athens
Belpre
3 0 147 106 Gallipolis at Wellston
Warren Local
2 1 112 115 Jackson at Ironton
Federal-Hocking 2 2 159 149 Waverly at Logan
Vinton County
1 2 102 120
MOVC
Nels.· York
0 3 109 139 Glouster at Miller
Tri-Valley
Vinton County at
TEAM STATISTICS
Field Goal Percentage
Nelsonville- York
Team
FGM-FGA PCT.
others
Athens
188-391
.481 Federal-Hocking at Alexander
Waverly
210-459
.458 North Gallia at Eastern
Jackson
181-410 .441 Ravenswood at Wahama
Meigs
132·329
.401 Starr-Washington at Ohio Deaf
Ironton
168-430 .391
SATURDAY
..a
Gallipolis
105-274 .383
SEOAL
Logan
134-395
.339 Athens at Gallipol is
Wellston
120· 407
.295 Ironton at Waverly
Wellston at Jackson
Free Throw Percentage
Team
FGM-FGA PCT. Logan at Meigs
Waverly
99-149
.664
Tri-Valley
Jackson
95-147
.646 Belpre at Warren Local
Meigs
131 -210
.624
others
Athens
88-149 .591 Nelsonville-York at Alexander
Gallipolis
71 · 122
.582 Eastern at Waterford
Logan
86-149 .577 Zane Trace at Glouster
Ironton
51 - 90
.567 Vinton County at Miller
Wellston
90-168
.536 Federal-Hocking at Sheridan
Southern at Hannan Trace
Rebounds
Team
No. G Avg. Chapmansville at Pt. Pleasant •
TUESDAY (Jan. 19)
Jackson
290 6 48 .3
Waverly
275 6 45.8 Wahama at Winfield
Pf. Pleasant at Barboursville

PT. PLEASANT - Mrs.
"The Federal Government
Junia Jo Bradshaw has been will pay 60 per cent of the salary here that I feel has been lacking
appointed Administrative for an additional person to be because of lack of personnel is
the need for records to be made
Assistant to the Mason County added to the staff of this office.
in many proceedings in Justice
Prosecuting Attorney's office, During the past two years I
according
to
Prosecutor have seen a definite necessity of Peace Courts and various
hearings before administrative
Michael Shaw.
for a field representative to act bodies which I represent by
Shaw said, "I definitely feel as my assistant during the
vitue of being Prosecuting
her addition to the prosecuting conduct of
various in- Attorney."
attorney's office will be an asset vestigations. We need some
Mrs . Junia Jo Bradshaw has
to the people of Mason County." body who is experienced in the
been
an official court reporter
Shaw added, "She will have
I
I direct responsibility for the field of criminal law, in- in Mason County, Gallia and
vestigations and the taking of Meigs County, Ohio for a
l
By Helen Bottel
1 work with various police of- statements.
number of years. She has
ficers in their investigations of
"Further, I feel that my office worked in the field of court
linebacker for the Green Bay criminal offenses. She is
YOUTH ASKED FOR IT!
This column is for young Packers. We don't know presently assisting me in the should provide additional reporting and criminal inpeople, their problems and whether he's kidding us or not. development of a program of guidance and instruction to the vestigation with various police
pleasures, their troubles and Could you please tell me if Mr. instruction for the justices of various constables, justice of officers and prosecuting atfun. As with the rest of Helen
was on that team the peace in the conduct of trials the peace and police officers torneys both in the other
with regard to their criminal
Help Us!, it welcomes laughs between 1960 and 1965? and rules of criminal evidence. investigations, evidence and the counties and in Mason County.
but won't dodge a serious THIRD GRADER
She has worked on special conduct of the trials in the lower
question with a brush-off.
Dear R.G . :
matters for me in the past and I courts.
Send your teenage questions
A morning at the library found her work to be very
"Still another requirement
to YOUTH ASKED FOR IT, netted this information: The competent and thorough. She
care of Helen Help US! this Green Bay Packers once had a will make records, transcripts
newspaper.
player whose last name was the of records of many important WIN AT BRIDGE
LIVING UP TO
same as your teacher's. Justice of Peace cases and
IMAGE IS TOUGH
Whether he's your teacher or Administrative hearings and, in
Dear Helen:
not is for him to prove -and he general, she will be available to
By Alma Marshall
Boy, do I have a hard life!
easily can if he wants to. - H. assist and supplement in the
Just because my Dad is a
(The things I do for my investigation of offenses from
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
policeman, I'm not trusted to do correspondents! ! )
my office."
anything. Like once I wanted to Dear Helen:
Continuing, Shaw said, "I
NORTH
14
WEST COLlJMBIA, W.Va.- After
go downtown with five of my
I am a high school senior who have high expectations of
• 8653
history and affluence of the town of West Columbia, written by the
girl friends, but my parents disagrees with "Parent of a developing an efficient criminal
.Q73
said, "No, hippies hang around Red-Eyed Grind." For nearly 12 investigation
late John L. Mason, I want to share it with you. In letters to a
• QJ62
unit
and
down there." I can't go years I have had homework cooperation of the various
newspaper of that time (1907), Mason refers to his home town as
4t54
anywhere unless an adult takes every night and it hasn't killed police agencies in the county.
WEST
EAST
West Columbia, of which he wrote many interesting stories about
• 7
.1094
me.
me yet. I have not lost sleep
not only the town, but its citizens and its many business places.
"My office pledges at th:s
• J98 6
• K 105
It's bad enough that my dad over it either. If I have stayed time to make our entire staff
In 1859 West Columbia was the best town - he wrote - bet• 9743
• 1085
thinks all kids are like the ones up past my usual bedtime it's available to any agency, to
ween Pittsburgh and Cincinnati along the Ohio. River. The
4oKJ83
4oA972
he busts, but it's always being because I goofed off earlier and assist and direct in any inSOUTH (D)
population was around 3,000. There was no better place on the
brought up"lhat 1 .. have to set a had to cram.
.AKQJ2
vestiation, and to do so to the
face of the map to make money legitimately than was offered at
.A42
good example - what would
Homework isn't " busy work." best of our ability. Without
West Columbia. In 1857 the people of the surrounding areas went
+AK
people think if a policeman's kid It' s a continuation of the mutual cooperation by the
to West Columbia to vote and to make purchases.
... Q106
learning that you can't get various police agencies in the
did this or that ... "
Part of the town below the mouth of Ice Creek was laid out in
North-South vulnerable
I love my folks, Helen, but I entirely at school. It also county and my office the people
West
North East South
1847byproprietors John Hall, Moses Michael and McCulloch with
wish I could be just an ordinary develops responsibilities and of Mason County can be the only
2 ...
Thomas G. Hogg, surveyor . The first settlers were Lemuel
' kid and not - DADDY'S LIT- other good work habits you'll ones to suffer.
Pass
2•
Pass
Harpold,
Samuel Yeager, Robert Adams, H. P. VanMatre, H. G.
Pass
3•
Pass
TLE ANGEL
keep all your life.
"With this addition to my
Stanford and Dr. A. L . Knight. In 1847 the first salt well was bored
Pass
Pass
Pass
Dear Angel:
As for the "Parent," it's her staff I hope to foster a conand coal mines were opened.
Opening Jead-4t 3
Preachers' kids, teachers' privilege to forbid her child to tinuing feeling of that mutual
Also in 1847, Lemuel Harpold commenced a tannery business
kids, politicians' kids .... advice study late, but in my house, endeavor by all of the police
South's two-club call was where all kinds of hides could be purchased. The business concolumnists' kids - almost such study was always praised agencies of the county to do our
artificial forcing opening tinued for 13 years . A Mr. Sherman erected a large flour mill. The
every child must live up to an - especially when grades came best to work together for a fair the
used by- nearly all experts
image, unless he has the kind of out. - A BETA CLUB M~M­ and firm law enforcement of the today. North's two-heart- re- Russell brothers, Lewis and Col. Timothy, did a thriving business
parents he'd rather live down. BER
sponse was JACOBY MOD- with a saw and planing mill. Their specialty was making salt and
law .
Your father is more aware of Dear Helen :
ERN
and showed from 4-6 coal barges.
"This office has been in
h
i
g
h-eard
points. It also
In 1849 Thomas Brock, a native of Canada, built a foundry and
dangers because he must deal
I agree with the "Parent of a communication
with
the
with them every day. And so Red-Eyed Grind" that if you Government Committee on committed the partnership machine shop which afterwards passed into the possession of A.
perhaps
he's
over- can't learn in seven school Crime and Delinquency with to game or higher. In JA- E. Sargeant, who continued the business until 1874 when it was
COBY MODERN the twoapprehensive. Also, he may be hours, forget it! Adults don't regard to obtaining federal club opening forces to game destroyed by fire.
hitting the " What will the bring their work home from the funds from the committee to except when partner gives
Lemuel Sargeant operated a large foundry and boiler works
people think?" button too hard. office, at least smart ones don't. enlarge the scope of the office of the artificial two-diamond in West Columbia many years and did a fine business. The
(Don't we all?)
So why should school kids work Prosecuting Attorney in its response to show 0-3 high- foundry turned out all kinds of castings; the boiler department
How about writing him a all day and all evening too? And service to the people of Mason card points . In that case it was kept busy building new boilers and repairing old ones.
letter that gives your side while also weekends, doing reports County. 'Further, I have talked only forces to one trick beIn 1866 the physicians in West Columbia were Drs. Knight,
low game.
understanding his ? You'd be and themes?
McMahan, Flickinger, and Griffith. Druggists were Dr. A. L.
with the Mason County Court
South's
four-spade
contract
surprised how often the pen can
If teachers want us to slave 10 and obtained their approval to would be reached in any Knight, John Taylor and another named Biggs. The latter also
loosen up the tongue and get to 12 hours a day, plus several use part of the $2400.00 per year system but this way North operated a saddlery and harness shop.
real conversation going. - H. hours on Saturday and Sunday, provided in my budget, which, had no worries about giving
Before the Civil War, and for many years after hostilities
Dear Helen :
they'd better put in that kind of for the past two years has not an immediate spade raise.
ceased, dry docks were maintained where barges and steam
Our teacher says he was a time too! - MAD STUDENT been used.
West opened the three of boats were docked. These were destroyed by fire in 1858. Powerful
clubs. East took his ace and
r---~---------- - --------------------------- returned the deuce. South's machinery was used whereby a steam boat or barge could be
10 lost to West's jack and pulled up on the ways and repaired. A large force of workmen was
West continued with the kept busy. This industry too is gone, no trace being left even to
king.
mark the spot where it stood.
At this point it would have
I
. been a cinch for South to
HY JACK O'BRIAN
THE OLD EUGENE Davis home where the late John L.
English firemen, those shy lads, "Anything Goes" revival .... A lose his c o n t r a c t. If he
NEW YORK - Mrs. Spiro were too embarrassed to saintly film is expected to be ruffed in dummy he would Mason spent many happy days is gone. Davis conducted a
Agnew's such a big fan of the examine ladies' fireproof indicted.
make the rest of the tricks grocery store and saloon but he decided to go west. He sold his
Him He &amp; Me tidy-rock group, nighties, so the Liverpool Fire
Hotels here have one trade if t r u m p s broke 2-2 but residence and business to A. C. Mason and John Windon who
a g a i n s t the actual and
she 's sugges ted the three Dept. had to hire a lady ingroup
under
automatic rather normal 3-1 break he continued the business as partners for a short time.
beatniks to the White House as spector to test such hot items .... suspicion when they check in Other merchants were Sam Yeager, Matthew Cohen,
would have been shut out of
an exciting party-popper .... At L'Aiglon, the Cliff Robertshow folk; scads of skips .... dummy forever and would Aumiller and Zuspan, Mrs. John Bird, B. J . Taylor and John
Bdwy. bookies know there 's a sons (Dina Merrill) said they'll Barbra Streisand confides to have had to lose two heart McCombs, A. D. Strinback and John Mason. Saloon keepers were
recession : betting's way down "never" co-star in a flick; fans she doesn't have a good tricks.
Sam Lewis, Sam Yeager, Stewart and Troeger.
.... Lovely, leggy, film-stage might shatter their marriage. enough sense of humor; when
South was about to fall
In 1859 the coal diggings, at what was known at the high bank,
actress had to give up her
Duke Ellington at Clos serious, she's never funnier .... into the trap when he saw was in full blast. Diggers were getting good wages (in 1859) they
Manhattan apartment - broke Normand ordered his personal "Scrooge" set a brand new that he had a fine safety
received $3 to $5 per hundred bushels.
and can't get roles .... "1776" energy-fix: Coca Cola with four world's record gross at Radio play at his disposal. He discarded
a
heart
from
dummy
Mason reported that the cost of living in 1909 remained much
director Peter Hunt &amp; wife have teaspoons of sugar .. .. Silent City Music Hall in its 6th week on the third club.
the same as in 1857 and reported that flour per harrell was $7.50,
an announcement .... And so has film star Esther Ralston's
This w o u I d not h a v e
- $376,000 - biggest weekly
Mass. Sen. Edward Brooke, his writing her memoirs .... Guy movie take anywhere in the helped him if either oppo- wheat per bushel $1.25, chickens per dozen $1.50, eggs per dozen 9
Bakery's Recipe
and 10 cents, butter per pound 15 cents, coffee per pound, 15 cents
pals whisper .... Have a tiny Lombardo's brother Carmen world
An average bakery forDon't mention nent held all the trumps but and potatoes per bushel, 50 cents.
irony : Frank Sinatra gave (who sings like Tony Randall) is recession to Liberace : He's i1 took care of the actual 3-1
mula for white enriched
During 1875, L. K. Harpold purchased the old Temperance bread requires 100 pounds
Andre Previn his first im- ailing .... Guy's New Year's Eve booked clear into 1972 .... Un- split. He simply won the
portant job on his radio show Waldorf telecast reached 55 per derground Warhol star Viva h e a r t shift with his ace, Banner office at Pomeroy, moved it to West Columbia, and began of flour, about 65 pounds of
drew t r u m p s with three
"Command Performance" cent of the TV audience - says she'll name her baby leads, cashed his ace and publication of the West Virginia Monitor. The paper was a six water, 2% pounds of yeast.
2 pounds of salt, 7 pounds of
almost before Mia was born ; meaning he had more viewers Valerian, whichever the sex. king of diamonds, led his column folio, very neat typographically and full of live local news. sugar, 4 pounds of nonfat
even sent Andre to his own than all other TV stations
deuce of trumps to dummy's Finally Harpold moved the office to Pt. Pleasant and sold out the dry milk, 3 pounds of shorteight and discarded his two plant to John A. Gibbons. The West Virginia Monitor was enin g, 1 eQrichment wafer
tailor to be groomed Sinatra combined . . . . If Charles Boyer
style .... Mama Mia!
Peter Duchin has his little hearts on the high dia. published on Main Street.
and 6 ounces of yeast food,
could do a good Italian accent,
monds.
according to Encyclopaedia
Several stars turned down the he'd be great as "The God- townhouse up for $500,000 if you
!Newspaper Enterprise Assn.)
Britannica.
USO for years out of simple father ."
have that much on yr.u .... Sofright, but now cop out insisting
"Love Story" is doing for called wrong - side • of - town
they're "against the war in Paramount
what
"The and all, The Library spot's a
Vietnam"; but are they agains t Graduate" did for Joe Levine quick bonanza even during this
derson, Earl A. Howell, III,
our lads serving over there ? .... saved him ; Para also has "The reces s .... Vocalis t Dolores
Holzer Medical Center, First Ja&lt;'kson, a daughter ; and Mr. Charles Ray Hunter, Mrs.
The b idding has been :
Fans who wrote to Mae West for Godfather" a nd its built-in O'Neill of the great old Gene
Ave. and Cedar St. General and Mrs. Edward N. Burdette Steven L. Kearns, Roy R.
North
East
South visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p. m.
a "personal souvenir" got some audience ... . "Love Story" is Krupa and Artie Shaw bands· West
Middleport, a son.
' Kincaid, Jr ., Mrs. Warren W.
Dblc
Pass
2 'I
- her nail clippings (How No. 1 on both hard cover and and radio's "Chamber Music 1 •
Maternity visiting hours 2.30 to
DISCHARGES
Miller, Mrs. Lillian E. Noe,
~
•
3
•
Pass
?
cuticle!) .... Now that Dick paperback best-peddler lists Society of Lower Basin St." now
4:30 p . m . Parents only on
Elmer Bailey, Farnum L. William E. Province, William
You, South, h old:
Cavett's booking hot-word .... Shubert Alley scuttle has plays a new percussion inPe1iatrics Ward.
Brumfield, Charles Leo Carter R. Scutt, Mr~. William L. Will,
confrontations, why not Phyllis Michael J . Pollard offered a strument - a typewriter : &amp;he's .8743 .J986 +Kl043 4t7
BIRTHS
John A. Cunningham, Mrs: Mrs. Retha M. Wilson, Mrs.
What do you do now ?
(Mrs. Bennett) Cerf and mag $100,000 advance guarantee by a columnist on the Harlem
A- Pass. If you have a conMr . and Mrs . Benny L. Wayne H. Dockery, Mrs . Hershal R. Yates, Jr., Mrs.
writer Gloria Ste inem , in the Theatre Guild to play the Valley N. Y. Times (Just one ser\'ativc
partner you might bid Stafford, New Haven, a son; George W. Farra, Carter Long Grace Yates, and Barron
training already for one .... role Victor Moore created in the more time, Doll) .
fnur heart,,
Mr . and Mrs. Thomas G. Boroff, Franklin, Mrs . John C. Hen- Epling .

r---------------------------1

·.

1970-71 BASKETBALL STANDINGS AND SCORING
(Includes games through Jan. 9)
OVERALL STANDINGS (Through Jan. 9)
TEAM
w L Pet. Pts. Opp.Off. Avg. Def.
Eastern
9 0 1.00 704 475 78.2 (4) 58.2
Federal· Hocking
8 1 .889 751 498 83.4 (2) 55.3
Waverly
7 1 .875 652 438 81.5 (3) 54.8
Starr-Washington
9 2
.818 921 564 83.7 (1) 51.3
Alexander
8 2
.800 765 672 76.5 (6) 67.2
Athens
8 2
.800 737 561 73.7 (7) 56.1
Meigs
5 2
.714 476 435 68.0 (8) 62.1
Jackson
7 3
.700 779 596 77.9 (5) 59.6
Miller
7 3
.700 676 656 67.6 (9) 65.6
Wahama
3 2
.600 299 290 59.8 (12) 58.0
Southern
5 4
.556 487 481 54.1 (16) 53.4
Ironton
4 6
.400 630 716 63.0 (10) 71.6
Vinton County
3 7
.300 593 706 59.3 (13) 70.6
Nelsonville- York
2 6
.250 433 475 54.1 (16) 59.4
Gallipolis
2 6
.250 426 509 53.3 (18) 63.6
Logan
2 7
.222 489 628 54.3 (15) 69.8
Point Pleasant
1 6
.143 436 552 62.3 (11) 78.9
Wellston
1 7
.125 457 675 57.1 (14) 84.4
Glouster
0 8
.000 391 678 48.9 (19) 84.8

!

-·

Second Daughter
.
Born to Dunfees
Mr. and Mrs. Kendall E.
Dunfee are announcing the
birth of their second daughter,
Kenda Ann, at the Holzer
Medical Center, Dec. 31.
The infant weighed six
pounds, 14 ounces. Mr. and Mrs .
W. H. Dunfee of Middleport and
Mr. and Mrs. James E. Hawley
of Pomeroy are the grandparents. Mrs. Hazel Duncan of
Glo•tster, Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Hawley of Minersville, and Mr.
and Mrs . Albert Smith of
Pomeroy
are
greatgrandparents. Mrs. Edith Hood
of Minersville is the baby's
great-great-grandmother.
Mr. and Mrs . Dunfee have
another daughter, Wendi, age
one.

C.

��4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan.14, 1971

Coach Pat Penn have beaten

New London Snaps 59-Game, t~!!?;~:\~;~~!~~).
• s ak
Three- Y ear L OSing
tre
~~~~:r:: j~~i~r. 6;~~~!:ingB~:.

im;~:'''';;:~:i'~;:::~~~'~j!-11
~~
..
•'

by Chet Tannehill

Alan Walters with a 25 point

~~~

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS (UPI) - High
School basketball notes from
around the state:
Monty Kerr, 6-foot-7 center
for Zane Trace (Guernsey), put
on a one-man performance in
the Warriors' 74-58 win over
Barnesville Saturday night.
Kerr, who averages in the
neighborhood of 30 points, hit 23
field goals and eight of nine free
throwsfor 54 points. Zane Trace
is unbeaten in eight games.
Two long losing streaks were
broken Saturday night. New
London, whose string of frustrations had reached 59 games,
beat Mansfield Christian 93-72,
the Wildcats' first win in nearly
three years. The same night,
Southeast on Por tage County
broke its 35-game losing streak
with a 69-65 win over Rootstown.
Oakwood of Paulding County
had its 1-game winning streak
snapped last weekend by
Kalida, 5753. Kalida, which
went into the game with a 1-9
mark, hit on nine of ten shots
from the floor in the last quarter
to come from eight points
behind.

BY PAUL (MOONBEAM) CLIFFORD
Basketball in the late 20s and early 30s was an entirely dif.
ferent game than it is played today.
There was no ten-second rule, and no penalty foul shots. You
had the use of the complete floor, and after each basket or suc·
cessful free throw there was a center jump at the middle of the
court.
Coach Ray Farnham had a veteran team returning when the
1931-32 season opened. He had six players with experience in Tip
Dye, Fred Crow, Bill Grueser, Eddie Guinther, Dick Winebrenner
and the late Bruno Pierotti. Crow was the only big man on the
team, standing a little over 6'3". Dick Winebrenner was an even
6; and gave Fred valuable help on the banking boards.
Words cannot describe the ball handling ability of Tip Dye. He
THE 1931-32 POMEROY BASKETBALL SQUAD was a genius at dribbling the ball. I recall when the other four
Kneeling, Wm. Grueser, Edison Guinther, Wm. Dye, Leland
players would sit down in the middle of the floor, and Tip would
Sisson, George Clifton, Marvin Finlaw, manager; standing,
continue to control the ball himself. It was quite a show! Bill
Coach Farnham, Don Holter, Wm. Winebrenner, Fred Crow,
Grueser wasn't far behind in his ball handling ability; the two of
Ralph Sisson and Bruno Pierotti. It wasn't unusual for the
them put on a fantastic show. Grueser also was one of the finest
little guy, front row, third from left, to control the ball during
two-handed set shooters I have ever seen.
a game while his mates took a breather sitting on the floor.
Farnham believed in defense. He was particularly emphatic
The next year the State Athletic Association put in the tOin having his players block out on tlie defensive boards. In fact, I
second rule, after Tip Dye's sensational ball control feats in
have seen him take a player out of a game because he permitted
the state tournament. Dye, now athletic director of
his opponent to beat him on a defensive rebound. And so it was
Northwestern University, will emcee - with Fred Crow that the Panthers, even without great height, almost always
the Farnham Dinner in Pomeroy Jan. 23.
managed to control the boards.
Pomeroy fans will long remember the 25-game winning
streak of the Panthers that season. Carl Schaefer was writing for go all the way. If Pomeroy had been shooting up to par they
the Pomeroy paper at that time, and I believe that John Gilmore probably would have won. Once they had taken a lead they would
was also helping on sports. They saw that the Panthers received have been hard to over come. Many thought that the new glass
state wide publicity.
banking boards at the Coliseum were the cause of the poor
Pomeroy had two real scares during the regular season. shooting, but Coach Ray Farnham had no alibis.
Early in the year they only managed to beat Middleport 20-18, and
Other members of that great 1931-32 team were the late Don
later had to go overtime to beat Hamden 31-26. Hamden had a fine Holter, Ralph Sisson, Leland Sisson and George Clifton. All saw
ball club led by the big Sprague twins. A combination off a good considerable action throughout the year, and all had a lot to
COLUMBU (U~I) - Ohio
team and a band box gym almost beat the Panthers. The fans contribute toward the fine season.
Dominican's
Ken Richardson
became quite excited, and there was almost a riot after the game.
It is questionable whether the 1931-32 team or the 1932-33 team
I recall_that Mrs. Sprague was going to hit the late Judge Fred was greater. Pomeroy's stalling tactics and ball control had much scored 39 points and led in
W. Crow (Fred's dad) over the head with an umbrella, and that to do with the rule changes that were made the following season. game-high rebounds with 18 to
manager Marvin Finlaw had to crawl out the dressing room This was the year when the ten second rule was put into effect. We keep his team ahead all the way
to a 105-88 basketball victory
window in order to escape the crowd.
hope to give you some highlights of the 1932-33 season in the next Wednesday night over Walsh.
The Stewart team that the Panthers beat twice that season few days.
Richardson, who shot 74 per
won the Class B District title, but was beaten in its first game by
POMEROY BASKETBALL 1931-32
cent from the field and 85 per
Sugar Creek in the state tourney .
Tuppers Plains 12 cent fr om the floor, was
Pomeroy30
When tournament time rolled around, Pomeroy fans were Pomeroy 17
Chester 5 followed in scoring by Jim
almost frantic. They almost filled the old Ohio U. gym. Pomeroy Pomeroy 16
Marietta 9
responded by walloping Washington Court House 27-13 in the Pomeroy23
Pt . Pleasant 8
opening round. Then the Panthers slipped past Nelsonville 19-10 in Pomeroy 11
Stewart 7
Youth Gets Nod
the second round, and beat Chillicothe 22-12 in the semi-final Pomeroy26
Pt. Pleasant 12
SACRAMENTO, Calif., (UPI)
game.
Logan12 - Gov. Ronald Reagan has
Pomeroy22
This set up a battle of unbeatens as Greenfield with its great Pomeroy39
Ravenswood 14 appoin ted
a
21-year-old
.furuny Hull also had gone through the season without defeat. Hull Pomeroy20
Middleport 18 University of California student
had averaged over 20 points per game, which was almost un- Pomeroy 16
Stewart 9 to a four-year term on the State
believable in those days.
Pomeroy 19
Gallipolis 15 Air Resources Board.
So Coach Farnham set his strategy. He figured that if he Pomeroy31
He is John G. Holmes of
Hamden 26
could stop Hull, then the Panthers could win. He assigned the task Pomeroy 19
Athens 11 Goleta, a junior majoring in
of guarding Hull to Tip Dye. Pomeroy was the underdog, and a Pomeroy28
Nelsonville 15 chemistry and chemical
standing room only crowd saw Tip hold Jimmy Hull to only two Pomeroy46
Wellston 16 engineering at the university's
free throws ! Crow, Winebrenner and company controlled the Pomeroy23
Rome 11 Santa Barbara campus. Holmes
boards, and Pomeroy came up with an easy 37-12 win. So now on Pomeroy18
Middleport 7 is the third student to be apto Columbus!
Gallipolis 9 pointed to a major state board
Pomeroy21
When the Panthers took the floor at the Fairground's Pomeroy26
Glouster 10 by Reagan.
Coliseum in Columbus against Defiance, Pomeroy was prac- Pomeroy37
Russell , Ky. 6
tically deserted. Although Pomeroy was the smallest school in the
DISTRICT TOURNEY
SUSPECT IS ARRESTED
tourney they probably had the largest turnout of fans with the Pomeroy27
Washington C. H. 13
COLUMBUS
(UPI)
exception of Columbus North. The late Ben Ewing and his Ger- Pomeroy 19
Nelsonville 10 Richard Lee Forbes, 29 ,
man Band were on hand to provide entertainment as every cage Pomeroy22
Chillicothe 12 Columbus, was held in jail here
fan in town went to the big city to see the Panthers play.
Greenfield 12 today pending a federal court
Pomeroy37
Defiance had a big center by name of Zirkle, but Crow took
appearance on a charge of
STATE TOURNEY
care of him and the Panthers won 17-13 to advance to the semi- Pomeroy 17
Defiance 13 transporting to Ohio a car stolen
finals against powerful Akron West. In this game Crow had six Pomeroy 14
Akron West 23 from the Chittum Buick Co. at
points, Dye and Grueser five and Guinther one. Dye really stole
Parkersburg, W. Va.
the hearts of the crowd with his ball handling. They just had never
seen anything like that before.
Akron West had an experienced club that had been beaten in beat Ohio Northern 85-60 and
the semi-finals of the state tourney the previous year. They had Bluffton topped Findlay 74-63.
two huge Negro brothers, Andy and Earl Averitt, who were both
Vance Scores 29
6'7", and in addition a fine forward in Labbe, and a good guard in
Kent State, behind Ruben
Hensall. Dick Boughner, who later played at Ohio State, was a sub Vance's 29 points, made short
on the team.
work of Ohio U. Craig Love
Pomeroy took an early lead as Dye tossed in a field goal, and scored 23 points for the Bobthen the Panthers with their ball control held on for the balance of cats.
the first quarter with that slim 2-0 margin. It looked as if an upset
Kent is now 7-4 and 1-1. Ohio
might be in the making. However in the second period the Pan- U. is 7-3 and 1-1.
thers missed layup after layup as they experienced their coldest
Tom Dinger tallied 24 points
Clothing for Little Boys and
for Wooster, but the high point
shooting of the season.
Girls.
Meanwhile, Akron West tossed in nine points and had a 9-2 man was Doug Mason, who
lead at halftime. The Panthers tried desperately to come back, scored 29 for losing Mt. Union.
Infant thru Size 12
Wooster is now 4-0 in the OC
but still trailed HHI at the end of the third period.
At one point in the final stanza Pomeroy had cut the lead to and 12-1 overall.
Their sure to warm up t o our
Central State won its lOth
four points, but with a little over three minutes to play Crow
g roovy styles. Mot her will be glad
fouled out, and the Panthers couldn't come back. The final score game of the season in demolto know th ey're long on wear,
was 23-14. Dye scored 12points and Winebrenner two, while Andy ishing Ohio Northern, 2-9,
short on care. All sensibly priced
Mike Byrd paced the winners
Averitt was high for West with nine.
to save you more.
Pomeroy fans were heartbroken over the defeat. Many with 22 points.
Ken Richardson came through
openly cried. Practically everybody thought their Panthers could
with 39 points and gra bbed 18
rebounds to lead Ohio Dominican's winning attack. DominiWatch For Our January Clearance
can, in its first varsity year,
Sale Sund ay In The Sunda y Timesis 6-3.
Sentinel.
Jim Price of Louisville made
good on four key foul shots in
the final two minutes to c1·ush
a Dayton rally. The Flyers'
ON T H E T I N MID DLE PORT
By United Press International 75; Akron whipped Cleveland Tom Crosswhite scor ed a gameMiami of Ohio, the nation's State 95-75; Waynesburg (Pa.) high 29 points .
fourth ranking defensive team, beat Malone 68-62; Marietta
won its third str aight Mid- slipped by West Virginia WesAmerican Confer ence game leyan 93-91.
Wednesday night defeatin g
Also Ohio Dominican squashed
Western Michigan.
Walsh 105-88; Central State
Miami, now 7-3 and 3-0, held
the Broncos scoreless for the
last five minutes to win 61-57.
Larry Garlock led the attack
with 17 points.
It was Western's first league Odrinex can help you become
WOM E N S A N D MI SSES FAS HIONS BY
contest. TheRedskins previously the trim slim person you want to
beat Kent State and Toledo . be. Odrinex is a tiny tablet and
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They take on Bowling Green da ngerous drug s. No starving .
Saturday.
No s pecial exercise. Get rid of
In other MAC action, Kent excess fat and live longer .
State gave Ohio U. its first Odrinex has been used sucleague defeat, 78-68. Toledo cessfully by thousands all over
edged former MAC member the country for over 12 yea rs.
The regula r pri ce for Odrinex is
Also Reduced Girls Coats, Skirts, Blo uses, Slacks, Go w ns,
Marshall 71-69 .
S3.25 and $5.25 for the large
In the Ohio Conference, Otter- economy size.
Vests, Pajamas and Other s.
bein swept by Wittenberg 72-60, FRE E OFF ER: Buy either size
New
Denison beat Ohio Wesleyan 90- Odnnex and receive another
Store Hours
one
FR
EE.
You
must
lose
ugly
78 and Wooster downed Mt.
Monday thru
fat or your money wiII be
Friday
Union 97-81.
refunded by your druggisl. No
BANI&lt;AMERICARD
9 ti I 5
In other games, Ohio State questions asked. Sold wilh this
Saturday
beat West Virginia 83-74; Louis- gua rantee by DUTTON DR UG
9 t il9
ville downed Dayton 73-68 ; Rio STORE
. MI DDLEPORT
MAI
L
OP..OEr&gt;
c;
FILL
ED
Grande edged Union !Ky. ) 76-

Harry Fish leigh, 6-foot-4
senior, scored 36 points in Mentor's 78-62 loss to Painesville
Harvey Saturday night. Fishleigh hit on 17 of 24 shots from
the floor, but his teammates
were not quite so hot, connecting on only nine of their 32 attempts.
Topranked Columbus Walnut
Ridge went into last weekend's
games outscoring its opponents
by a fraction over 29 points a
game and matched the spread
in both its victories. The Scots
dumped Columbus Mohawk 9263 on Friday night and came
back Saturday with a n 84-55 win
over Columbus Whetstone.
Garaway (9-1) has regained
the services of 6-foot-7 Bill Andreas, who missed the Pirates'
first eight games after undergoing a rib operation.
Andreas, brother of former
Ohio State Buckeye Dan Andreas, m issed Garaway's only
loss, a one point, overtime affair to Mansfield St. Peter's.
Unbeaten Boardman, second
ranked in the Bord of Coaches'
Class AAA ratings, has handed
three teams their only losses.

Listed among the Spartans'
victims are Farrell, Pa. (9-1 ),
Campbell Memorial (6-1) and
Youngstown Ursuline (7 1).
Boardman has outscored its
eight foes by an average of 81-53
per game and beat Ursuline last
weekend 81-54 .
On the surface, it looks like
Coshocton (6-4) is below par
when compared with Redskin
teams of the past few years. But
Coach Bill Bowman's squad has
dropped three of those games,
all to Class AAA teams, by a
total of seven points, 48-50 to
Dover ,
40-42
to
New
Philadelphia and 51-54 to
Ashland. Only Mansfield Malabar holds a decisive win over
the Redskins, 76-65.
Tim Grieser, all-Ohio running
back at Archbold High School,
is also an outstanding basketball player. Grieser scored 26
points Saturday night to lead
the Blue Streaks to an 83-66
victory over Stryker.
Columbus Ready, fourth
ranked in Class AA, has posted
three of its 11 straight wins over
some pretty good AAA competition. The Silver Knights of

Winning does present some
problems as Walnut Ridge
officials have found out. The
Ridge gymnasium is much too
small to accommodate all those
who want to see the Scots play,
so officials purchased a closed~
circuit television setup and
games are shown in the auditorium.
A top game in the Class AA
ranks this weekend will find ~
fifth rated Lima Central Catholie, led by 6-foot-8 Joe Fisher
with a 30.4 average, at second f
ranked Delphos St. Johns on
Sunday night. Both teams are
unbeaten.
•

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Dominican Posts Sixth
Win O.f Year, 105-88

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Underwood with 22 points.
Gene Bayer was high for
Walsh with 22.
Ohio Dominican is now 6-3
and Walsh is 5-6. Dominica will
host Rio Grande College
Saturday night.
All ODC games are being
played at the Salesian Center,
80 South Sixth St., in Columbus.
Easiest way to to the gym is to
get on I-71 to come to the
downtown area. If you are
coming to Columbus on I-70 you
can pick up I 71 near the
downtown area. Get off 1-71 at
the Main Street exit and go west
on Main Street several blocks
till you come to Grant Ave. Turn
right (North) on Grant Avenue
and go several blocks until you
come to State St. Turn left
(West) on State St. and go one
block to 6th St. The gym is on
the corner of 6th and State.

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THE PARTY WILL BE OVER SOON - SO DON'T BE LATE!

I

�5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 14, 1971
State of Oh10, Department of
Insurance,
Certificate
of
Compliance
The
un
dersigned, Superintendent of
Insurance of the State of Oh10,
hereby certifies that Ml DLAN D
INSURANCE COMPANY of
NEW YORK, State of NEW
YORK has complied with the
laws of this State applicable to it
and is authorized during the
current ,-ear to transact in this
state its appropriate business of
insurance. Its financial con .
dition is shown by its annual
statement to have been as
follows on December 31, 1969
Admitted assets, $18,914, 157.72;
Liabilities, $15,070,800.08; Net
Assets, $3,843,357.64; Capital.
$1,000,000.00;
Surplus ,
$2,843,357.64;
Income,
$11,014,032.23;
Expenditures,
$6, 703,351.52.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I
have hereunto subscribed my
name and caused by seal to be
affixed at Columbus, Ohio, this
day and date, Oct. 23, 1970. Fred
B. Smith, Superintendent of
Insurance of Ohio.

"How can I get the most meat
for my moeny?" was one of the
500 questions asked by
homemakers and answered by
Extension economists, Lois A.
Simonds,
Marketing
Information and Edgar P.
Watkins, Food Distribution, in
their publication, "Responses
To More Than 500 Food
Marketing Questions Asked by
Ohio Homemakers, 1968-1970."
You, too, probably are
wondering what things need to
be considered while food
shopping, especially for meats,
since they are the most ex-

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BEN, FRANKLIN®
PHONE
992-3498

Safety Expert Will Give PTA Program

Knowing How to Purchase Meat

202 East Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY NIGHTS TIL·9

'

pensive items on your list.
Meat offers the best example
of how to use cost per serving as
a guide to buying. A cut of meat
that sells for a lower price per
pound may, because of bone and
fat, be more costly than one at a
higher per pound price. By
knowing the approximate
number of servings per pound
you can expect from the various
cuts of meat, you can figure cost
per serving. Generally, the
following is a good guide: Bony
meat, 1-2 servings per pound;
moderate bone, 2-3 servings per
pound ; little bone, 3-4 servings
per pound; no bone, 4-5 servings
per pound.
For example, if you decided
you wanted to serve beef, but
were unsure of which cut, to
find the most economical choice
on a cost per serving basis you
might find the following
situation: Short ribs at 59c per
pound divided by 1 serving per
pound equals 59c per serving.
Blade chuck roast at 79c per
pound divided by 2 servings per
pound equals 39.5 cents per
serving. Round steak at 99c per
pound divided by 3 servings per
pound equals 33c per serving,
so, the cut with the highest price
tag per pound may be the most
economic~l choice on a cost per
serving basis.
Deciding whether to buy
hamburger, ground beef,
ground chuck, or ground round
may depend on how you plan to
use it. If you are making chili,
hamburger will work, even
though it has a higher fat
content. If you are making
patties, or meat balls, which
you want to hold together, you
may want less fat content.
For roasting, a tender beef
cut is needed, since roasting is a
dry heat method of cooking. The
rib and loin cuts are generally
the more tender ones from the

beef carcass.
Less tender cuts of meat can
be just as tasty and nutritious.
The difference is they must be
cooked for longer periods of
time with moisture.
Less tender cuts of meat can
cook just as quickly as tender
cuts but the less tender ones will
be tougher than ever. Low
temperature for longer periods
of time with added moisture are
all keys to better meat cookery
and more satisfaction from the
food dollar when using less
tender cuts.
Although the term steak
implies tenderness to some, it is
misleading. Steak refers to the
way the meat is cut and has

nothing to do with tenderness or
quality. For example, a porterhouse or T-bone steak would
be quite tender while a flank
steak would not.
Purchasing food and storing it
in a freezer can be more costly
than buying items on sale
weekly. The reasons are the
cost of electricity over the
period of time the food was
stored made it more expensive
than
purchasing
items
regularly.
For further information, get
Ohio Extension publication
MM-200, Buying Meat for
Locker or Home Freezer from
the County Extension Office.

A party for 44 patients at the
Southeastern Ohio Mental
Health Center in Athens was
staged Tuesday night by the
Homebuilders Class of the
Middleport Church of Christ.
Music was provided by Mrs.
Margaret Newnan at the piano,
Junior White on bass, and
Denver Rice on the guitar. The
group sang old and popular

songs and hymns. Refreshments of cookies, bananas,
candy bars, and hot chocolate
were served.
Candy, gum, jewelry and a
handkerchief were presented to
each of the women, and the
male patients received hose and
shaving cream. Going over for
the party besides those who
provided the music were

A program on drugs will be
presented by Mrs. Kenne!h
Scites, home health nurse, for
the Meigs-Gallia Community
Action Program at the Jan. 26
meeting of the Meigs TOPS
Knotchers.
Plans for the special program
were announced at Tuesday
night's meeting of the club. An
invitation to the public has been
extended by the group. lt will be
presented at 7:30 p. m. in the
dining room of the Meigs

County Infirmary.
Membership
in
the
organization designed to take
off pounds sensibly (TOPS) is
open to everyone with a weight
problem. Persons with a weight
problem are invited to attend
any of the 7:30 p. m. Tuesday
meetings held at the Infirmary.
Crowned queen of the week
for weight loss was Mrs. Vera

OPEN DAILY
.._.
.
.
8
:
00
AM to 1o: 00 PM_
111111

DEBBIE CONKLIN
County Extension Agent
Home Economics

Sunday 10:30 AM
to 12:30 PM and
5:00 to 9:00PM

Charles Newnan, Mr. and Mrs.
William T. Grueser, Mr. and
Mrs. Denver Rice, Mr. and Mrs.
Norman Yeauger, the Rev.
Raul lin Moyer, Mrs. Lawrence
Stewart, Mrs. Osby Martin,
Herman Kincaid, and Mrs. Carl
Roach. Carl Wright, a hospital
supervisor, and four of his
assistants helped with the
party.

Wayne Swisher, Harold Lohse, Kenneth
McCullough, and Charles Riffle are your
friendly pharmacists at Swisher and Lohse
Rexall Drugs. They
have low prescription
prices and
prompt
service and discount
drug prices seven days
a week. Let us serve you
for all your prescription
and drug needs.

Holcolm. Mrs. Marie Birchfield
was runner-up. The previous
week, Miss Bernice Durst was
queen, and Mrs. Edith Gardner,
runnerup. The TOPS prayer
and pledge opened the meeting.
Seventeen members including
one KOPS (keep off pounds
sensibly) and 11 TOPS attended.

Let us provide your
health needs

Ninth Birthdays Celebrated

A flower motif was carried
out at a party honoring Jenell
Kelly, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Kelly, and Laurel Spencer,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Mrs. Roy Winebrenner and Spencer, on their ninth birthElizabeth Merritt entertained days.
Sunday at the Winebrenner
home with a dinner party in
observance of the birthday
a~niversary of William G.
Wmebrenner.
Guests were Mr. and Mrs.
The call to prayer and selfGarry French and Garry, Jr., denial service was a feature of
Dayton; Tommy Weaver, Mr. the Tuesday night meeting of
and Mrs. William Gordon the Women's Society of
Winebrenner, Mary, Paula and Christian Service of the
Rebecca, Syracuse. Calling in Pomeroy United Methodist
the afternoon were Miss Darla Church.
Ebersbach, Marietta, and Jean
Miss Lydia Ebersbach conSauvage, Syracuse .
ducted the service which inOn Thursday evening, Mr. eluded group reading of a
and Mrs. William Gcrdon prayer after which self-denial
Winebrenner hosted a surprise envelopes were collected. Miss
birthday dinner honoring Mrs. Ebersbach also presented the
Roy Winebrenner. Elizabeth program using the topic,
Merritt and Tommy Weaver ''Deaconesses and Training
were guests.
Layette in Christian Ministry."
Prayer was given by Mrs. Elsie
Smith.
Mrs. Clara Thomas read the
New Year's Wish from
"Guideposts".
Mrs. Gerald Wildermuth
conducted the business meeting
when it was reported that 26
calls to shut-ins were made. A
report was also given on the
Jan. 7 visitation day.
Mrs. Ruth Barnitz and Mrs.
Thomas served a dessert
2)6 E. 2nd
Pomeroy
course. Mrs. Pauline Roush was
Phone 992-5428
a contributing hostess.

Methodist WSCS
Meets on Tuesday

•

RISCRI!IIONS

TOPS Knotchers to Hear Home Health Nurse

Birthday Occasion

II

will be recognized and
presented gifts. The posters will
be judged on Tuesday with a
winner to be selected from each
grade. Parents are urged to be
present for the meeting. An
executive committee meeting
will be held at 7 p.m.

Party Given 44 Patients at Health Center

Dinner Highlights

DISCOUNT

Ralph Dixon, director of
Safety Instruction, Southern
Division of the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co., will
present a program on safety at
the 7:30 p.m. Tuesday meeting
of the Salisbury P.T.A.
Safety po'Ster contest winners

The party was held Saturday
at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Kelly. A pink, yellow and white
color scheme was carried out in
the decorations. Favors were
paper flower corsages in pink
and yellow. Games were played
with prizes going to Lori Kloes
and Mindy Long. Melinda
Demoskey won the door prize.
Cake, ice cream and punch
were served. Nut cups carried
out the flower motif and were
used as name cards at the table.
Pink tapers fl~ked a cake
decorated with flower replicas
and containing two dolls, one in
pink and one in yellow, for the
honored guests. The cake was
baked by Laurel's grandmother.
Other guests at the party
were Rhonda Snyder, Sara
Diddle, Kim Donahue, Julie
Biron, Tina Spencer, and
Tommy Kelly. Unable to attend
were Becky Long, Sheila and
Janet Horky.

All the latest -

and the best -

in

health products are stocked on our
shelves,

available

whenever

you

need them. We're proud of the role
'•

we play in helping to keep our fellow
citizens in the best of possible health!

2-HOUR
CLEANING

(Upon Request)

Discontinued
Patterns and Roll Ends

FACTORY CLOSEOUTS!

"

Reg. Price
12xl2'5" Spanish Gold ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••• s119.95
12x 17'2" Roya~ Blue •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $}44.50
12x15 Beige ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••.•.•••.•• $139.95
12x 11'2" Shell Brown
$109.95
·········•··•··················
12x12 Tortisshell ···································t $109.95
12xl0 Avacado Green, ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $79.95
12x11 Rally Red •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $109.95
12xl5 Avacado Tweed ............................... $139.95
9xl5 Green Tweed •••••••.•••••••••••.•••••.•••..•.• $89.95
12xl2 Tweed •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $109.95
9x12 Braided Oval Rugs ............................ Sfi9.95

Sale
SJ8.00
$88.00
$80.00
'69.95
SS9.95

WESTINGHOUSE - - The Multi-Speed Laundromat
Washer With Weigh-To-Save loading Door
Install
AnywhereIn A Mere
27 Inches Of
Floor Space

~9.95

$]9.95
$80.00
'69.95
'69.95
$39.95

Have a space problem
in your laundry room?
Switch
to
the
Westinghouse Laundry
Twins! They stack in
only 27" of floor space and they let you wash
and dry at the same
time. Or stow them sideby-side in only 54 inches! Any way you look
at them the Laundry
Twins "stack up" - and
"stow
away"
beautifully!

·-----------------------------·

Come early, these carpets will go fast! Don't delay, if you
need any of the above sizes. These are a II extra nice rugs.
,All 501 Nylon.

_____________________________ _

20%

ON ALL

FURNITURE

OFF

It's Our Big JanWJry Clearance!

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

MASON FURNITURE
HERMAN GRATE

773-5592

YOUR
BEST
BUY

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

MASON, W. VA.

Both For
OVERALL DIMENSIONS
Height
Stacked
Undercounter

Width

70"

27"

25"

54"

*25"

..

~ ·~

..

WATER HEATER
ONLY

'89.95

Jacket diameter 20112 " , height from floor including
nipples 32", nipple size l/4", between nipples 8",
height of electric outlet 24', a" , immersion type 4500
watt lower and upper twin elements . Capacity 52
gal., well insulated white enameled outer jacket. 5
YEAR OUTRIGHT WARRANTY.

$425

GAS MODELS

*Door Projects Additional l.l\',"

Washer Model LTlOOSXA
Dryer Model DEHlOSAO

50 Gallon

30 Gallon

,.

•

·,'

.......
:'·:

·,··

.

. .
. ; •. .:

,...

;

....
.. ,.

.,

• j:
~I •,

EBERSBACH
HARDWARE
Phone 992-2811

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOn
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

'

Only

Depth

347!J.6"

MOR-FLO , . .
52 GAL GLASS LINED
ELECTRIC

110 W. Main
··::

:

... :· ··:··

···:·::: · :·:· ·· . .

Pomeroy

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Jan.14,1971

~ C~-;;~~~ r-S~ci;l ~l ~~~='~'~'l!,,~,ad~~eners Project Make~'·'"~~.(~'" ~~~ver
~
,

c

Orner

By Charlene Hoeflich

\

hnagine having everyth'mg you owne d so
t 1en. No msurance,
·
no possl.bl.ll·ty of recovery.
That's what happened to Dick and Katie Well and daughter
while enroute to Florida. They turned around and came back
home and are now with Katie's parents, Pete and Vicky Morarity.
It happened at Cleveland, Tenn. The family had spent the
night at a Holiday Inn there and Katie went to the car to get
· th
·
th'
something a bou t 7 m e mornmg, every mg was gone - U-Haul
trailer and all. It contained all of their clothes except a few
. .
t
.
.
't
. th
t
can
,sewmgmachine,
1
h gesmasw casem ecar,a eev1s10nse
dis h es, pots and pans, h ousehold appI'1ances, an d toys.
Police finally located the trailer at a nearby shopping center
but everything in it was gone.
'
The family had no choice but to turn around and come home.
Dick now plans to fly down to Fort Lauderdale where the family
hopes to settle, get a job and an apartment, and then send for
Katie. He received his master degree from Ohio University last
summer. For the past three quarters, Katie has been going to

Ca 'end ar

issue of "The Garden Path,'' the
official magazine of the Ohw
Association of Garden Clubs,
THURSDAY
features a picture pertaining to
REGULAR meeting Meigs the awar d -wmmng
· · CIVIC
· · project
·
DAV, 7:30 p.m. Thursday at of th e R utl an d F nen
· dl y Garhall, Butternut Ave., Pomeroy; All veterans welcome, refresh-.
ments . Jacob Turner, adjutant.
OS 0 0 I
XI GAMMA MU Thursday
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Brewer
M7:45 p.mtF. llhoodme of Mrs. and
David
en tertained
argare o r ·
c·
numerous guests dw·ing the
0
AFTERNOdN
ChlrC1e, 2 p.m. holidays at their home in
Heath Metho ist
urch. Mrs. Sti'versvl.lle.
Rose
McDade,
devotions;
Their guests included Mr. and
Emerson Jones, Lesson; Mrs.
Mrs.
Nan Moore , Mrs. Nelle Davis Mrs. Kenneth Brewer, Teresa
and Mrs. Garnet Entsminger, and Kenneth, Mr. and Mrs.
hostesses.
Harold Brewer hand Jane, Mr.
PAST COUNCILORS, D of A, and Mrs . Jo n Beall and
p. m. Thursday, home of Mrs. Rhonda and Mark, Mr. and
7
Mabel Wolfe.
Mrs. Edgar Brewer, Mr. and
SOUTHERN LOCAL School Mrs. John Dobbins and Dennis

The picture shows Mrs.
Homer Parker and Mrs.
William Willford with a window
display promoting the cleanup
portion of the club's project,
" Let 's Make Rutland A

~~~~~~· d~~~~~y T~~~~-edTh:

~l~;~r~t:~~~!o~~tl;:; ~~~-fo,.

third place in the O.A.G.C. state
contest which is sponsored by story telling of each club's
Sears. Mrs Parker and Mrs. project is featured in the
Tom .Stewart were co-&lt;:hairmen magazine.
· t·
Th e magazine lists the
of th e prOJeC
on the cover Rutan
Other p1cures
· t
l d cubasbeingadonorto
l
are of the work of the Jefferson the Wahkeena fund, as second
Hills Club, Region 12, first place place winner in the state
SOCIETY TO MEET
state winner; the Afternoon publicity book content, and as
and Kerry, Columbus; Lars
A meeting of the Philathea Gardeners of Region 5, second first place winner in Region 11
Lunderist, an exchange student Society of the Middleport place state winner, and in that category.
fir
Church of Christ scheduled this
from Sweden, a guest of the
Dobbins family; Mr. and Mrs. evening at the church will be
held instead at 7:30p.m. at the
Charles Sirneral and Tisha
J ane, F m
. dlay; Mr. an d Mrs. home of Miss Mildred Hawley. MONAD.EX will
. help you tose weight. MONAD EX is a tiny tablet ,
Larry Close, Marietta; Mr. and
and easily swallowed. Start losing weight now. Contains no
Mrs. Clyde Close and Leland,
dangerous drugs and does not make you nervous. MONAD EX
Rita , Wayne and Roy, Waterre~ucesless.
yourFor
desire
excesssakefood. Helps
youofeat
less-fat.
so You
you
yourfor
health's
get rid
excess
weigh
ford. Sending gifts to the Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. must lose ugly fat or your money will be refunded by your
Brewer family but unable to Ronald Beegle and family and druggist with no questions asked. MONAD EX costs $3.00 and is
come home for the holidays Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Donnan sold with this guarant_ee by: Swishe: &amp; Lohse - Pomeroy &amp; ..
were Miss Linda Close, and family, Newburgh, Ind.
Dutton Drug Store- Middleport- Mall Orders Filled.
donkey drawn cart of trash
along with flowers in containers
for beautification.
The proJ·ect won for the
Friendly Gardeners a first

8
H t t H I'd G t
rewers
s
ay ues s

DON'T BE fAT

college. Dick taught school and assisted coaching football in
Meigs Local District several years.

DistrictOAPSEChapter, 7:30p.
m. tonight at high school. All
non-&lt;:ertified employes invited.
NEWLYWEDS MR. AND MRS. RICHARD PUMPHREY
SENIOR GIRL Scout Troop
were honored Saturday night at the Rock Springs United 198, 7 this evening at Enterprise
Methodist Church.
United Methodist Church.
RACINE Merchants Assn.,
The party for the couple, married Dec.1, was planned by Mrs.
Robert Sloan for the congregation of the Rock Springs Church tonight, 8 at town hall. All
merchants urged to be present.
which Mr. Pumphrey pastors.
It began with a potluck dinner. Games were played and a
SHADE RIVER Lodge 453,
money tree was presented to the couple. Currentlv Mr. Pumohrev F &amp;AM, Chester, 7:30 p.m.
is travelling one day a week to Delaware for seminary work. He Thursday regular meeting;
and his wife reside in the Methodist parsonage at'Rutland.
work in I. A. Degree; all master
masons invited.
FRIDAY
DR. TOM SKINNER, son of Art and Mary, will complete his
DANCE
FOLLOWING
internship in oral surgery at the Cleveland General Hospital in
July and then will be ready for his two year residency. He has his basketball game, Wahama High
classes at Case-Western Reserve.
School, Friday, 9:30 to midTom, married with two youngsters, graduated from the night; Jays to emcee.
School of Dentistry at Ohio State before going to the armed forces
DANCE FRIDAY, Southern
three years. Twentyofhis29yearshavebeenspentinschool.
Junior High 9:30 to 11:30 p.m.;
music by Willie. Sponsored by
band boosters.

Layette Shower Given
Mrs. Maxine Dorst and Mrs.
Mary Frazier, Middleport,
entertained recently with a
layette shower honoring Mrs.
Robert C. Rawlings of Mansfield.
A pmk and blue color scheme
was carried out in the
decorations arranged by Mrs.
Carol Mowrey. Games were
l ed ·th ·
b ·
b
P ay WI pnzes emg won y
Mrs. Franklin Martin, Mrs.
William Grueser, Mrs. Michael
Gerlach, and Mrs. Rachael
Craig. The games were conducted by Mrs. Mowrey and
Mrs. Michael Davis.
Mrs. Frazier and Mrs. Dorst,
aunt and mother respectively,
of the honored guest , were
assisted in serving cake, potato
chips, mints, ice cream, coffee

MEIGssA~~¢~

and soft drinks by Dolly
Mowrey.
Guests at the shower besides
those named were Mrs. Edith
Jay, Mrs. Clyda Allensworth,
Mrs. Flossie Allensworth, Mrs.
Carl Brannan, Mrs. Susan
Rawlings , Mrs. Gertrude
Miller, Mrs. Dorothy Roach,
Mrs. Howard Wilson , Mrs.
F
ranees Martin, Mrs. Nellie
Hanson, Mrs. Dorothy Bryan,
Mrs. Richard Rawlings, and
Mrs. Kim Mowrey.
Others presenting gifts were
Miss Janice Couch, Mrs. Roxie
Oiler, Mrs. Mary Dorst, Mrs.
Alma Frazier, Mrs. James
Johnson , Mrs. Raymond Kloes
and aughter, Marianne, Mrs.
Dona d Fox, and Mrs. Clarence
Dean.

Retired
Teachers Assn., Saturday, 12:30
p.m. at Pomeroy Elementary
School; covered dish luncheon ,
bring own table service; slides
of world trip by Mildred
Hawley.
Ballplayer to Evangelist
" Billy " Si.mda y , the gr eat
evangelist, was once a m ajor
league b a s e b a ll player .
From 1883 until his conversion in 1890. he playe d in
turn on several team s of the
1\'ational League .

R•IflgS
}

are for
OVe.

Convention on Sunday
The Hocking Sub-District
Association
and
Baptist
Training Union convention will
be Sunday at the Forest Run
Baptist Church.
The 1 p.m. meeting will follow
a luncheon at noon. The Rev.
Samuel Jackson will be guest
speaker at 2 p.m. Mrs. Ethel
Riley of Glouster, sub-&lt;listrict
superintendent, will preside
with Miss Christine Robinson

Arrangements Shown
At Bank in Rutland
Floral arrangements ranging
from holiday themes to dried
winter pieces were displayed by
Mrs. Fred Williamson, Mrs.
Harold Wolfe, and Mrs. Joe
Bolin at the Rutland Branch of
the Pomeroy National Bank
during the month of December.
Supplying floral pieces to the
bank is one of the many civic
projects carried out by the
Rutland Friendly Gardeners.
Mrs. Bruce May serves as
chairman for this phase of the
project. Mrs. May and Mrs.
Howard Birchfield will serve
as co-chairmen of c ivic
beautification for this year.
Another member of the club,
Mrs. James Carpenter, made
swags of pine boughs and cone~
adorned with red velvet bows
for the double doors of the
Rutland Church of Christ.
VISIT RELATIVES
Mrs. Harold E. Weaver ,
Michael and Peggy, of St.
Louisville, spent New Year's
here with her mother , Mrs. Roy
Winebrenner, Syracus e , and
her brother and sister-in-law,
Mr.
and
Mrs .
Gordon
Winebrenner and family, and
Elizabeth Merritt.

Wifdirr~MPECIALISTS g
CERTIFIED WELDER

Portable Equipment
Shop or Field
Ph. 992-2511

Chase Hardware
Locust St.

Middleport

serving as district secretary.
Mrs . Emma King, Athens, will
be chairman of the program.
Special services will also be
held at the church on Jan. 24.
Sunday school at 9:30 a.m.
under the direction of Mrs.
Cornelius Bunch and devotional
service at 10:45 by Deacon
Robert Armstrong will be
followed by a sermon by the
Rev. Eddie Buffington, a
student at the Kentucky
Christian College, Grayson, Ky.
The afternoon program at 2
p.m. will feature slides of
Rhodesia, Africa by Gordon
Medetaph , also a student at the
Kentucky Christian College. He
is attending the college under
sponsorship of a missionary
group .
The
women ' s
organization of the church with
Mrs. Minnie Green, president,
and Mrs. Zeulelia Smith, vice
president, will conduct a
devotional period at the afternoon service. The public is
invited.

GOLDEN-MEMORY

k!CarveCi

the L&lt;ive Ring T&gt;&lt;
people.

Love is wha t engagements are
all about. You know. And we
know too. Becau se we 're Love
Ring people. We feature Art
Carved Love Rings. They say
love in so ma ny ways. Within
our superb ArtCarved collection
is your very own dia mond Love
Ring. Let us s how it to you.
Pncr• subject to chanfl e

baud on curunt value of gold

GOESSLER
Jewelry Store
Pomeroy

Court St.
Authorized

h_cCa rved

Jeweler

Thomas Clothiers Semi-Annual Clearance Sale!
Famous Brands

MEN'S SUITS
• HART SCHAFFNER &amp; MARX
• GRIFFON • BOTANY 500
• PAlM BEACH
REG. 55.0 0 - - - - - - - · NOW
REG. 65.00------- NOW
REG. 95.00 - - - - ---NOW
REG. 125.0o, _______ NQW

44.00
52.00
76.00
99.00

Group Of 50

MEN'S SUITS
% PRICE

All Brands, most all si zes.
Buy 2 and really save!

Large Group Of

MEN'S SPORT COATS
... to be
up-to-date
What with the
advances made
in medicine,
keeping abreast
of new pharma ceuticals is a
"must" here!

llillagr Jqurmary

¥2

PRICE

DRESS &amp; CASUAL HATS
Reg. 5.00 to 16.00

Now 3.96 to 11.76

BOYS' WEAR

REDUCED
20% to 40%

MEN'S TOPCOATS
&amp;ALL WEATHER COATS
REDUCED 20% to 50%
Choose from ... London Fog,
Plymouth, Town n Trail , Botany 500.

MEN'S DRESS SLACKS
Reg. 9.00 to 28.50

Now 6.96 to 19.96
Special Table of

MEN'S DRESS SHIRTS
% PRICE
Famous ,Brand In

LADIES' WEAR
Reduced 25% to 50%
Save on
Coats - Blouses - Suits
Sweaters - Skirts - Dresses
Slacks - All Weather Coats

Special Table Of

MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS
NOW 1h OFF
Button Down Collars ,
Collars, A fine selection.

Regular

Men's Jackets
and Suburban Coats
Reg. 19.95 to 75.00

NOW 15.96 to 55.96
MEN'S SWEATERS
Reg. 11.00 to 22.00

NOW 8.76 to 16.46
MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS
Reg. 5.00 to 11.00

NOW 3.96 to 8.76
Large Group Of

SHOES - SAVE 40%
Broken Lots Crosby
Boston ians, Florsheims.

Square,

FLORSHEIM VALUES
Reg. 24.95
Now As
Low As ...

15.00

�7-The

•

0., Jan. 14, 1971

Clairol
Lipstick

All In Favor Of Big Savings

!l
r

•

Listen!
You Should
Know About....

NELSON'S
BEAUTY
.BUYS!

Regular 1. 25

Only
~

MAX FACTOR
Tried &amp; True Hair Spary
With Built-In Conditioner, 13

Save Big When You Buy The Large Size At

NELSON'S PRESCRIPTION DRUG STORE
40's

•

BAYER
ASPIRIN

For Children

..........

--

.....

Reg. 2.61

•
Cotton

Vaseline
~

Reg. 98
12 oz. 66~ 5.8

babY

powder

;t;,

r'-....

_.

40's
pow der

KOTEX

10 oz.

-....~~

20 oz.
bottle

Reg. 2.49

48's

$1.49

CORRECTOL
LAXATIVE

6

,-

~~!~~t~~
TABLETS

26 oz.

fAJiifll, f f f-

U~(f StOMA_
CM !~~~la!~I_O~ IIIA~III.II\1

TABLETS 200's

Reg. 1.39

Reg. 1.69

'1.09

•

PREU

PALMOLIVE

FAMILY SIZE

:~
MINT FI.A V0R£D

$1 29

Reg.
1.79

sse

MILK OF MAGNESIA

bottle

FAMILY SIZE

RAPIDSHAVE

=rrJ HAIR
~~ SP
\rnli RAY
\Bll
~~·- 1

~

Shampoo
Reg.

1.65

99~

Reg.

1.64

99~

Reg. 1.19

Reg. 235
.

T',)OTH PASTE

lloz.

Reg.

98~

Regular or Super

Reg. 1.95

24 oz.

2.29

FAM llY
SIZE

60's

COUGH MIXTURE
Reg. 1.98

V0-5

2.50

CEPACOL

ALLER EST
TABLETS

PHILLIPS'

t:~ 44

1

Reg.

49°

Vicks
Form uIa

oz.$1.33 oz. $1.55 oz. $1.29
NYQUIL

~

ro:!f

~-

Reg. 1.85

VICKS'

•

" Sore Throat Pain "

36's

Reg. 2.19

"'~•III'IJRO~;UM lll1'

Swabs

ASPERGUM

•

v.c:t&lt;fo'

Bubble Bath Beads 2.00
Bath Oil Parfait,--3.00
Body Moisturizer__ 2.50

:::,.-:;:::-::;:.!::..:·. '" '"'

Reg. 89c

Vicks
Si nex

oz..___ Only 88'

a\\eflst

Reg. 1.50

$2 99 99~

Q-Tips

590

PAIN
LOTION

CONTAC
CAPSULES
Reg.
4.95

170's

Reg.

1.35

&amp;NA.Trnu

Reg. 39c

Reg. 1.08

55's

Absorbine
Arthritic

PUn' U MOUIS

New Emeraude
BATH LINE

AMBUSH SPRAY
Bath Powder, 8 OZ.·---------.Only 3.50 Foamy Bubble Bath

STOP IN AND GET FREE ENTRY BLANK IN LARGE SIZE SWEEPSTAKES!

•

~

$1.17

66e

CONCENTRATE

Reg.

Reg.
1.09
3 oz.

1.09

.Tube

FREE! ••• 120 PRIZES

•

Grand Prize

1971 DODGE POLARA SEDAN
_.___----..,..:u4]c:§,
CORICIDIN
lOO's

$}

•

4 SECOND PRIZES
WASTE KING UNIVERSAL
PORTABLE/ CONVERTIBLE
DISHWASHERS WITH MAPLE
CUTTING BOARD TOPS

4

TABLETS
Reg. 3.98

"

-.

lllaury• tind e~onc• with morw ro.m lonlon-Oviol
ride New grille, front ' """" b"m,.n ond toilli&amp;hh de
• ian ai- tfw luxury J.ot. to tho DOOGE .-oLAllA - tho
ltlnd .,f cor yov ol-r• wonW to ownJ

99

5 THIRD PRIZES
SYNCHRONEX SUPER 8
SOUND· ON· FILM
MOVIE SYSTEMS

HEAD &amp;
SHOULDERS

A. a nd 0 Oon•mo nt
Ab) O•b ne Arlhui•C P• •n L0110n
AbiOICI •ftct Jr

..

• ·-------------0 TABLETS

...,., ,

AIPhl Ket1
ASPC:IIJ\Itn

Reg . 4.98
lOO's

16 FOURTH PRIZES
ARVIN CASSETTE
TAPE RECORDERS
WITH AMI FM RADIOS

80 FIFTH PRIZES
IONA 7-SPEED
PULSE ACTION
CONTROL PUSH
BUTTON BlENDERS

96 SIXTH PRIZES
"MATCHBOX" MOTORWAY.
EXCITING
MOTORIZED ROADWAYS

98 SEVENTH PRIZES
PRESTO TOUCH 'N BRUSH
DELUXE CORDLESS
AUTOMATIC TOOTHBRUSHES

'

Att•ong-o -t ol

::.
:.;: -.
_rlfv

Bab)

B &amp;)f'l Asp •t•n lor

e ••u.

SHAMPOO

Jb'

n

BtOt'llo.l od
C I IO•d l fld B•l• S&amp;IIS

C ep i COI 20 01
C•I •IOI Cond•l•01"1°

'

300 EIGHTH PRIZES
1 DOZEN
Xl PLUS GOLF BALLS
BY MacGREGOR.
THE GREATEST NAME
IN GOLF

t:noldt~o&gt;t'l

8&amp;~ tc

B 1 11c ~ $ 1 1

.-:

.

~•o • c

e.. ~., "''"'"n '300 .5

Cl&amp;•rol

Gtelt Bod)

C•• ·'0'

K•noress

•••

-FAMILY

Reg l f•l'll
fall&amp; HOIO l

LOTION

CI I •IOI Kondl'f'S I 1A• Mill .. •,.,.ll•d

350 NINTH PRIZES
OHIO ART
"TWIRL-0-PAINT"
FA NTASTIC WAY TO
PAINT ORIGINAL PICTURES

Col"'d oloOI"'•f

C•t!&amp;l llol Vlntsh.ng Crea m I 2 Oz
COII\.tdll'l 0

Contl e 1TM1

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Cooe 60s
COIFICI~I S 60S

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CwShoO'\ Crop 1 Ot
Oenn .•nn Ooa (le r l •rlt"l$
o .a perefle
(nll mo

Rucy-to U) e 3&amp;' 01

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PLUS·2so MORE PRIZES- A YEAR'S suPPLY OF ANY ONE oF THE FEATURED LARGE SIZES- NOTHING To BUY- FREE ENTRY BLANKS AT couNTERS
BRECK BASIC
Reg. 3.95

Don't Miss The Boat. . .
TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE LARGE SIZE

soz.$239~_s_~_IN_G_S_N_~~M_._._··~~~~~
STOP IN ....ENTER THE LARGE SIZE - SWEEPSTAKES
FREE ENTRY BLANKS.
(NO PURCHASE NECESSARY&gt;

I

,

-FAMILY
TUBE
-FAMILY JAR
YOUR CHOICE

99~

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 14, 1971

Bargains, Bargains, and More Bargains In Sentinel Classifieds •
LEGAL NOTICE
Business Services
LEGAL NOTICE

IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
JESSE MORRIS,
R. D. 2,

Pomeroy, Ohio,
Plaintiff,
vs.
MEDA ELOISE MORRIS,
Address unknown,
Defendant.
No. 14,791
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
Meda Eloise Morris, whose
place of residence is unknown
will take notice that on the 6th.
day of January, 1971, the undersigned filed his Complaint
against her in the Common
Pleas Court of Meigs County,
Ohio, praying for a divorce,
custody of minor child, and
other rei ief on the grounds of
gross neglect of duty and extreme cruelty. The Complaint
also prays that the following
real estate be awarded to the
Plaintiff:
Situate in Bedford Township,
Meigs County, Ohio, in Section
7, Town 3, Range 13, beginning
at the Southeast corner of Arthur Story's land; thence south
on said line to the road leading
from Harrisonville to Pomeroy;
thence East along said road to
the Pomeroy and Athens Road;
thence North along said road to
the East line of Arthur Story's
land; containing three acres,
more or less, and being all of the
tract lying west of the road.
This cause may be heard on 28
days after the last publication of
this notice, which date is the
19th. day of March, 1971.
Jesse Morris,
Pia in tiff
Crow, Crow &amp; Porter,
Attorneys for Plaintiff
( 1) 7, 14, 21, 28 (2) 4, 11. 18, 7tc

NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY
AND ~PPRIASEMENT
The State of Ohio, Meigs
County . P rebate Court
To the Executor or Ad ·
ministrator of the estate; to
such of the following as are
residents of the State of Ohio,
viz: - the surviv ing spouse, the
next of kin, the beneficiaries
under the will; and to the attorney
or
attorneys
representing
any
of
the
aforementioned persons:
HOMER LOVETT, No. 20408,
Lebanon Twp ., Meigs Co., Ohio.
You are hereby notified that
the
Inventory
and
Ap praisement of the estate of the
aforementioned, deceased, late
of said County, was filed in this
Court . Said Inventory and
Appraisement will be for
hearing before this Court on the
1st. day of Feb., 1971, at 10 : 00
o'clock A .M .
Any person desiring to file
exceptions thereto must file
them at least five days prior to
the date set for hearing.
Given under my hand and
seal of said Court, this 12th. day
of Jan ., 1971.
F H . O' Brien
Judge and ex-officio
,...
Cl erk of said Court

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P.M. Day Before Publication
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
Will be,.ccepted until 9 a.m. for
Day of Publication
REGULATIONS
The Pub I is her reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads
deemed
objectional.
The
publisher will not be responsible
for more than one incorrect
inserti6n.
RATES
For Want Ad Service
. 5 cents per Word one insertion
Minimum 'Lfla·rge 75c
12 cents per word three
consecutive insertions.
18 cents per word six con.
secutive insertions.
25 Per cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$1.50 for 50 word· minimum.
Each additional word 2c.
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per
Advert is em ent.
, OFFICE HOURS
B:30'a.m. to 5:00p.m. Daily,
8:30 a.m. to 12:00 Noon
Saturday.

Notice

WILL
DO
sewing
and
alterations, 1151/~ W. Second
St., Pomeroy.
1-8-12tp
WILL not be responsible for
any debts contracted by
anyone other than myself.
Albert McDaniel, Rutland,
Ohio.
1-12-3tp

INCOME TAX service, daily
except Sunday. Evenings by
appointment only. Phone 9922272. Mrs. Wanda Eblin,
located on Rt. 7 bypass, one
mile south of fairgrounds.
12-31-30tc
GUN SHOOT. Mile Hill Road,
Sunday, January 17, ' p. m.
Beef, bacon, half hog.
Sponsored by Racine Fire
Department.
1-14-3tc
WILL not be responsible for
any debts contracted by
anyone other than myself.
Barbara McDaniel, Box 144,
Rutland, Ohio.
1-14-3tc

Lost
THANKSGIVING night one
female walker hound in
vicinity of Leading Creek,
Ohio near Rutland. 21/~ years
old. Black and white spotted,
dark head with brown spot
over each eye, white across
end of nose, mostly white on
body with white legs and tail.
When lost had collar with
name plate. Reward $150 for
recovery of this female dog.
Ph. 475-2981 from 8 a.m. to 6
p.m. except Sunday or write
Leslie Marcum, Box 165,
Delbarton, W. Va., or Huntington, W. Va. Ph. 429-2920.
1-6-10tc
LOST: PAl R of lady's black
gloves on N. Second Ave.,
Middleport. Reward. Phone
(304) 675-4267 or 675-3358.
1-5-tfc

------------------LOST, brown and white, small

miniature collie. Name,
"Johnny." Reward. Contact
Albert Zahl, Racine. Phone
247-2162.
1-12-6tp

Notice
GUN SHOOT, Syracuse Fire
Dept. Assorted meats. Every
Saturday night, 6 p.m . ,
Racine Planing Mill.
1-13-3tc
HAYMAN'S Auction House,
Laurel Cliff, now open.
Bedspreads,
dishes,
glassware, rugs.
1-13-4tc

LEGAL NOTICE
Clyde E. Wells, whose place
of residence is unknown and
cannot by reasonable diligence
be ascertained, will take notice
that on the 6th day of January,
1971, the undersigned plintiff,
Flor!tf1ce Carol Wells, filed her
complaint against him in the
By Henr ietta O'Brien Common Pleas Court of Meigs
Chief Deputy Clerk County , Oh io, Case No. 14,794
for divorce on the grounds of
(lJ 14, 21, 2tc gross neglect of duty and ex treme cruelty , and praying for
divorce and other relief. The
said Clyde E . Wells is required
to answer said complaint within
twenty eight days after the last
publication of this notice, which
STATE OF OHIO
date is the 25th day of March,
DEPARTMENT OF
1971. This cause will be for
HIGHWAYS
hearing on the 25th day of
"NOTICE OF
March, 1971, or as soon
RECEIPT OF
thereafter as the Court can
LOCATION APPROVAL"
conveniently hear the same.
CONTRACTSALES LEGAL
COPY NO. 71 -49
FLORENCE CAROL
COLUMBUS, OHIO,
WELLS
JANUARY 7, 1971
Plaintiff
Manning D. Webster
The Ohio Department of Webster and Fultz
Highways
has
received Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Location Approval from the Attorney for Plaintiff
Federal
Highway
Ad )1) 24, 28, (2) 4, 11, 18, 25, 7tc
ministration for State Route No.
U . S. 33, Section 19.24·0.00 in
Athens and Meigs Counties . The
NOTICE OF
proposed project begins near
APPOINTMENT
the junction of ex 1Stmg :,tate
Case No. 20425
Route No . 33 and existing State
Route No. U . S. 50 in the City of Estate of RUTH LOUELLA
FLORY,
Deceased.
Athens, and ends near the
Notice is hereby given that
junction of State Route No . U . S.
33 and County Road No . 20 in Donaldson E. Flory, of 270
Walnut
Street, Middleport,
Meios Countv.
.A hearing for this project was Ohio, has been duly appointed
held Octob-er 2, 1970 in Athens , Executor of the Estate of Ruth
Louella Flory, deceased, late of
Ohio.
Maps or sketches, as well as Meigs County, Ohio.
Creditors are required to file
all oth er information con cerning thi s project, will be their claims with said fiduciary
available to the public for within four months .
Dated this 4th day of January,
viewing at the Division Ten
Highway Office, Muskingum 1971.
F . H. O'Brien
Drive, Marietta, Ohio.
Probate Judge
DIRECTOR OF
of
said County
HIGHWAY S
(1) 7, 14, 21, etc
- · 1
( 1) 14, ltc
(12) 31 (1 J 7, 14, 3tc

ATTENTION - Meigs County
cab patrons: Sharon's Twin
City cab office, 324 N. Second
Ave., Middleport, is open 24
hours daily. Our new phone
number is 992-3280, the same
as a year ago at same
location. Quick service, most
reasonable rates available.
Weekly rates available for
regular customers.
1-14-3tc
FUND RAISING plans for
schools, churches and other
organizations. No investment.
Write c-o Box 729-F, The
Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy,
Ohio.
1-14-6tc

Male Help Wanted

EMPLOYED man. Repair FIREWOOD, Gerald King,
typewriters
part
time.
Oh'10 Ph
Sh d 696
Training furnished. Local
Shade,
·
one
a e
·
1063
interview. Write Regional
·
1. 14.6tp
Manager, Box 25, G le n s h a w , - - - - - - - - - - - Pa. 15116.
HEREFORD baby beef, 30
1-10-12tp
cents pound on foot. Grain
fed, 2 months. Jack Wamsley.
Phone 742-3651.
1-14-3tc
3 ROOM unfurnished apartment. Phone 992-2288.
-----------------7-1-tfc NEW HOME in the Village of
Middleport, 3 bedrooms, bath,
utility room, carport. FHA
TRAILER, Brown's Trailer
financing
available.
Park, Minersville. Phone 992·
Telephone 992-2186 or 9923324.
3600.
9-9-tfc
1-10-6tc
4 ROOM apartment across from
_
Racine High School, with or STAR kills rats qu1ckly, surely.
without recreation center. 2'12 pounds, $1.69. Ebers bach
Phone 949-4910 or 843 2491.
Hardware, Sugar Run Mills,
1-14-Jtp
Pickens Hardware, Mason.
----------------1-5-JOtp
2 BEDROOM apartment, large ------------------kitchen and living room, nice START NEW YEAR off right by
floors, large store room,
saving $41.02 on a Southern
closets in each room. Stove
Cross Royal Belle mattress
and refrigerator furnished.
and box springs. Regularly
Hall carpeted. Hot water
$59.95 each, both for $78.88,
heat. Pomeroy. Write Box
this week only. After sale,
729-C, c-o The Daily Sentinel,
$119.90. Open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Monday through Saturday.
1-12-5tc
Parson's
Furniture and
------------------Appliance Store, 2 mi les north
FURNISHED and unfurnished
of Silver Bridge on Rt. 7.
apartments. Close to school.
Phone Gallipolis 446-9230.
Phone 992-5434.
"Out Our Way, We Deal Your
10-18-tfc
Way."
1-13-4tc
4 ROOMS and bath u n f u r n i s h e d - - - - - - - - - - house, 1650 Linco l n Hts.
STOKER and furnace, good
Phone 992·3874.
condition. $150. Contact Karr
11-15-tfc
Construction
Company,
Phone Chester 985-3341.
4 ROOM house on Laurel St.,
1-13-3tc
Pomeroy. Call Frank Fugate,
992-5293.
11-6-tfc 60x12 FOOT 1970 model Schult
---------......:~:...:..:.::
trai ler. Also, 17 acres of land.
2 BEDROOM, unfurnished
Phone992-6455.
apartment. Newly decorated.
1-6-12tp
326 E. Main St., carport.
See
N.
W.
Compton , HEREFORD bull. Phone 247Goessler's Jewelry.
2161.
1-8-6tc
1-10-5tc

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

Help Wanted

Wanted To Buy

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

For Rent

ATTENTION ladies! Would you WANT TO GO to a warmer
like to try a wig on in the
climate? Rent a camper or
privacy of your own home?
travel trailer from Gaul's
You can. Just call us. We also
Trailer Sales, Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
have the Mink Oil Kosmetics,
11f2.miles north of Chester,
Koscot, of course . Dis Ohio, on Rt. 7. Watch for sign.
tributors, Brown's. Phone
1-3· 12tc
Middleport 992-5113.
12-31-tfc NEW MOBILE home. Adults
- - -- - - - - - - - only. Phone 992-5592.
1-7-tfc
WILL PICK up merchandise
and take to auction on a
percentage basis. Call Jim 50X12 MOBILE home, 2
Adams, auctioneer. Rutland.
bedroom, completely furPhone 742-4461.
nished, Middleport. Phone
9-23-tfc
992-7004.
1-12-3tc
DOZER WORK. Septic tanks,
leach beds. Phone 949-4761. HOUSE, 1676 Lincoln Hts., 2
10-18-tfc
bedrooms, basement, hardwood floors. Attic for storage,
WILL GIVE piano and organ
gas furnace. Call 992-3054.
lessons in my home. Phone
1-12-6tc
992-3666.
8-16-tfc UNFURNISHED house, very
nice, 5 rooms, bath. Full
basement. Phone 992-5847
before 2 p.m. and after 5 p.m.
DRIVERS NEEDED. Train
1-13-3tc
now to drive semi truck, local
and over the road. Diesel or 3-ROOM semi-furnished
apartment in Coats Building,
gas, experience helpful but
Middleport. Call 992 -3641, or,
not necessary. You can earn
over $4.50 per hour after short
to see apartment, inquire apt.
training. For application and
16.
1-13-6tc
interview, call 513-241 -5572 or
write Safety Dept., United
Systems, Inc., c -o Motor 2 BEDROOM house, central
heating, nice yard, $65 month.
Freight Terminal Bldg., 3101
Gano
Rd.,
Sharonville,
1663 Lincoln Hgts. Phone 992·
Cincinnati, Ohio 45241.
3381 or 992-3453.
1-10-12tp
1-14-2tc

Auto Sales

$5.55
-GUARA NTEEDPhone 992-2094

Midd leport, 0 .

SAW FILING, all kinds of
sharpening. Lawn mower
repair. Briggs and Stratton
engine service. Low cost
pickup and delivery. Colmer's
Saw Shop, Mechanic St.,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2804.
1-14-3tc

BACK HOE and end-loader
work. Septic tanks installed.
George (Bill) Pullins. Phone
992-2478.
11-29-tfc

JOHNSON MASONRY, Commercial
or
residential
remodeling. Brick, block,
stone, cement work, garages,
septic tanks. Backhoe work.
Free estimates. Jim, Larry,
Jake. Phone 992-5632.
12-7-30tc

PAINT DAMAGE - 1971 Zig
Zag Sewing Machines. Still in
original cartons. No attachments needed, as our
controls are built-in . Sews
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
buttonholes, sews on buttons,
monograms, and blind hem
stitch. Full case price, $38.50
or terms arranged. Phone 9925641 .
1-12-6tc
- -- - - ------------ELECTROLUX
Vacuum
Cleaner complete with attachments, cordwinder and
paint spray . Used but in like
new condition. Pay $37.45
cash or terms if desired.
Phone 992-5641.
1-12-6tc

Real Estate For Sale
LOTS WITH all utilities.
Restricted subdivision. V2 to
2-acre lots. Phone Chester
985-3301, night 985-3302.
1-6-tfc
OUT-OF -TOWN owner must
sell B-room, vacant modern
house with extra lot in
Pomeroy, $2,750. For information phone 949-2165.
1-3-13tc

SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662-3035.
2-12-tfc
WHEEL Horse Sales and
Service.
Baum
Lumber
Company, Chester, Ohio.
Phone 985-3301.
5-20-tfc
HARRISON'S TV AND AN·
TENNA SERVICE. Phone
992-2522.
6- 10-tfc

DANNIE'S
IS

12 Years As Ohio's LARGEST
MOBILE HOM E DEALER

Celebrating

Country Squire
MUD&amp; SNOW TIRES
All sizes in stock . Lowest
prices . Free installation . We
do studding .
POMEROY
J. W. Carsey, Mgr.
• Phone 992-2181

SAVE

THE PROVEN carpet cleaner,
Blue Lustre, is easy on the
budget. Restores forgotten
colors. Rent electric shampooer , $1 , Baker Furniture,
Middleport .
1-14-6tc

SATISFIED CUSTOMERS

MODERN Wa l nut stereo-radio
combination, dual volume
control, 4 speakers , 4 speed
changer, separate controls.
Balance $69 .52. Use our
budget terms . Call 992 -3352.
1-14-6tc

SO! START THE YEAR OFF RIGHT
JANUARY IS THE
MONTH TO
Dannie's Success Was Built On Service
Dannie Says the Best Advertising
He Has is Thousands of

POMEROY, 0.
MIKE MORRISON
Just Below Pomeroy Bridge
Phone 992-7195

OPEN
,/'"'\Mon. t hru Fri. ,
9to8
•
Sat . 9-S
f.~
\

,n:;,

ATHENS, 0.
M I KE DEVOL
U.S. Route SO E.
Phone 593-3044

COLONIAL Maple stereo-radio
combination, AM, FM radio,
four speakers, 4 speed intermixed changer, separate
controls. Balance $78.39. Use
our budget terms. Call 992·
3352.
. 4-6tc

. 5- 1-tfc

BOOKKEEPING service, Mrs.
Marvin King, 'h-mile north on
Rt. 33. Phone 992-3762. Weekdays 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.,
Saiurdays 9 a.m. to noon.
Evenings by appointment.
12-15-tfc

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Reasonable rates. PhonJohn Russell, Gallipol is 4464782 after 5:30 p. rn.
4-7-tfc

------------------SEWING MACHINES. Repair

service, all makes. 992-2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
3-29-tfc

READY-MIX CONCRETE de·
livered right to your project.
Fast
and
easy.
Free AUTOMOBILE insurance ~e6
estimates. Phone 992-3284.
cance l led?
Lost
your
Goeglein Ready-Mix Co.,
operator's license? Call 992Middleport, Ohio.
2966.
6-30-tfc
6-15-tfc

Insurance

Big Capacity
Maytag
A utomatics
2 speed operation.
Choice of water
temps.
Auto.
water
level
control.
Lint
Filter or Power
Fin Agitator.
Perm a-Press
Maytag
Halo of Heat
Dryers
Surround clothes
with gentle, even
heat. No hot spots ,
no overdrying.
Fine Mesh Lint
Filter.
We Specialize in
MAYTAG
Red Carpet
Service

NEWHOME?
3 and 4 Bedrooms
Built to your specifications.
Sites avai lable now.

No Down Payment
Monthly Payments "'
Lower Than Rent

Pom er oy

AIR CONDITIONING. Refrigeration service. Jack's
Refrigeration, New Haven.
Phone 882-2079.
4-6-tfc

Real Estate For Sale

RUTLAND FURNITURE
742-4211

Arnold Grate

Contact: Mr. MoDdy, Ph. 9927034 at our field office at
Park &amp; Sycamore in Middleport.
JEMO ASSOCIATES, INC.
Formerly K issei! Associates,
Inc.
Ph. 1-262-1531

Rutland, 0.

Cleland Realty
MIDDLEPORT LARGE
LOT, 2 story frame, 3
bedrooms, bath, basement,
CLOSE TO SHOPPING.
$9,500.

2 BEDROOM house, Mason, W.
Va. Bath and kitchen carpeted. Utility room, car port,
storm doors and windows,
stove and dryer included .
Phone Mason 773-5457.
1·10-7tc

POMEROY- CLOSE TO
GRADE SCHOOL, 2
frame, 3 bedrooms,
basement,
garage.
300.

NEW
story
bath,
$13,-

MIDDLEPORT- COTTAGE, 2
bedrooms, bath, glassed in
porch, nice lot. $4,500.
POMEROY- ALMOST NEW,
1 story frame, 3 bedrooms,
bath, garage, lots of ground .
$12,500.
TO BUY OR SELL
CONTACT US
HENRY CLELAND
REALTOR
Office 992-2259
Res. 992-2568
1-10-6tc

HOBSTETTER
REALTY
GeorgeS. Hobstetter, Jr.
Rea I Estate Broker
Phone Chester 985-4186
Hilton Wo lfe, Salesman
Phone 949-3211
RACINE - 6 room house. $6000.
LEBANO N TWP.
Ap·
proximately 100 acres land,
plenty of timber. $9000.
1· 14-3tc

Dodge City News
We need room -- good selection -- all
ready to go at these specia I prices.

1963 Pontiac Catalina--------- $350
2 Dr. h. top, V-8, p. st., p. br., automatic.

1963 Rambler Classic ·--~------$495
4 Dr. Sed., 6 cyl., auto.

These cars are value p riced
for January Clearance

1965 CORVAIR

~95

5002 Dr., local lowmileag·e car, interior extra
clean, medium green finish, all good w-w
tires, radio. Plenty of go in the snow. Just
nicer than the average car.

1965 CHEVROLET

~95

Impala HT Cpe., 327-V-8 engine, 4 speed
trans., white finish, red interior, good tires,
radio.

1966 FORD

sg95

Falcon 2 Dr., 6 cyl. std. trans., all good tires,
smart looking copper finish, radio. Real
economy in this car.

1966 FORD

$1095

Galaxi HT Cpe., 6 cyl. engine, std. trans., air
conditioning, good tires, clean interior, dark
green finish.

1965 PONTIAC

$1095

Tempest St. Wagon, local
owner, low
mileage car, V-8 engine, automatic trans.,
power steering, non-slip rear axle, vinyl interior like new, light blue finish, radio. Save
Today.
NICE SELECTION LATE MODEL CARS

1963 Ford Falcon ------------·$495
1961 Dodge Dart ____________ $295
4 Dr. Sed., std. trans.

4 Dr. Sed. , p. st., p. br., V-8, t -flite .

1963 Dodge Coronet ----------$150
Wagon, V-8, t -flite, p. steering.

1963 Chevrolet Corvair ---------$495
4 Dr. Sed. , 6 cyl., automatic.
1963 Dodge Dart ____________ .t695
Wagon, 6 cyl., t -flite, p. st., air conditioned,
very, very sharp.

Rawlings Dodge City
M iddleport

Complete Service
Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio
Critt Bradford

BLAffiNARS
Ph. 992-2143

HOUSE, 1640 Lincoln Hts.,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
10-25-tfc

N 1C E lot, 40x125 feet. Middleport. Phone 992-5251.
1-5-tfc

CELEBRATION SALE

C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer

From the Largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core.

NEIGLER Construction. For
building or remodeling your
home, Call Guy Neigler,
Racine, Ohio.
7-31-tfc

6-ROOM house, bath. Phone 9922371.
1-10-12tc

For Sale

.EXPERIENCED
Radiator Service

All The Dirt In
One Simple Operation
Homes · Trailers · Public
Buildings, etc. No muss, no
fuss - have your furnace
cleaned today.

606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

Salesman Wanted

~

POWER-VAC
Cleaning System

CHASELocust
HARDWARE
St.

TEAFORD

GET
'EM NOW

DON'T WAIT

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

OLD UPRIGHT pianos, any 1961 FORD F100 pickup. 6
condition, as long as have not
cylinder, new paint, extra
been wet. Paying $10 each.
nice. Phone 742-4423 after 7
First floor only. Mondays will
p.m.
be pick-up day. Write, giving
l -13-3tc
good directions. Witten Piano
Company, Box 188, Sardis, 1964 FORD F100 pickup, 292 VOhio 43946.
8, custom cab, long red stock
Virgil B. Teaford, Sr.
8-20-tfc
racks, heavy springs. Must
Broker
see to appreciate. Phone 742111 Mechanic St.
OLD furniture, dishes, brass
4423 after 7 p.m.
Pomeroy, Ohio
beds, etc. Write M. D. Miller,
1-13-3tc
35 ACRES Near proposed
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio . Call
coal mine. Suitable for
1969 BUICK LeSabre, 2-dr.
992-6271'
building
lots,
trailer
park , etc.
9-1-tfc
hardtop, power steering,
Minerals.
power brakes , air , 18, 000
miles. Excellent condition.
2 HOUSES One rented to
Phone 992-2288.
same party for 6 years. Has 2
11-10-tfc
TEXAS OIL Company has
bedrooms, bath, garage.
opening in Pomeroy area. No
Other has 8 rooms , bath,
experience necessary. Age
forced air furnace, garage,
not
important.
Good
CLEAN 1965 RAMBLER, 770
full basement. 6 Acres.
charader a must. We train.
Classic, 6-cylinder, 4 door,
$18,000.00
Airmail - B. E. Dickerson,
standard shift, $450. Also,
Pres.,
Southwestern
choice cemetery lot, 4-grave TRA I LER LOT Rutland
Petroleum Corp., Ft. Worth,
plot in Meigs Memory GarStreet. Middleport. Only
Texas.
den. Call R. H. Ba llard, phone
$650.00
1-13-4tc
949-2820.
1-8-6tc NEW HOME 3 bedrooms,
bath, utility r oom, and carport. Dining area has sliding
COAL, limestone. Excelsior
glass doors. Living 16 x 19.
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
Half acre. $19,500.00
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891 .
992-3325
1-8-6tc
4-9-tfc
992-2378

Ray Hummel
Says:

I

For Sale

992-2151-992-2152

1967 GMC PICKUP

$1695

1
12 Ton, 8' wide body , 6 cyl. engine, less than
25,000 miles, new tires, h. duty rear springs &amp;
helpers, rear step bumper, blue finish.

New 1971 Models Are
Now A rriving ...
Most Models In Stock!

Pomeroy Motor Co.
Your Chevy Dealer
Open Eves. Til 8
992-2126

Pomeroy

�EEK AND MEEK

BARNEY

WHI\T CNJ Ak.l~ DO

A BIG,OLD ~.

VJlTl-\

BESSIE JANE!!

AJ.JYWAY?

HOW~ TH'NEWLYWEDS

· GITTIN' ALONG?

.,.

5o Do I

·--·BUr u::

\AJOMEN WANT TO
COMPeTE IN A MAI&gt;l'S

WORU&gt;,TL.l~NA60UI
IS r;A.1~ PLAY!

I CONVINCED THE ONNE.R

l JUST FINiSHED
LAUNDER I~ SorJ.~ OF
MV Ut-JDeRTt-HN6S IN

Tt1e BATHROOM AND

HUNG Trl.EM UP To DR'(.

IF 'THAT'S 'THE WAY YOU
cEEL,uERRY JINGLE,
RJRGCT THE WHOLE

OF A FANTASTIC BOUTIQUE
TO TRY 1DP FLIGHT
FASHIONS.

THING!

•
ALLEY OOP

GASOUNE ALLEY

YES, AND GOOD
RIDDANCE, .. HE Jusr

... SAY, WHAT

INSIDE A HUNGRY
TYRANNOSAURUS!

WITH Tli' GLASSIOS?

HAPPENED lO HIS
PARmER, THE ONE

MIGHT WELL E:ND UP

THE BORN LOSER

U'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE
THill'S A PROMISE,
..DADOYu,._ AN' WHAT

I CIII'I'T TAKE CARE
OF .., POHJAB WILL!

0

•

•

I

ems ., NU.. a.

DA ~-~l:-:-Y-C-=-:R~O~SS~W-:-:-::-0-=-R-D__.

TERRY
1 ALMOST HOPE
'(OtJ'~E I?IGHT, THAT
~USE OF l'iORRORS

WA5 AN OfFENSE

AGAINST DECENCY.

47. - AOROSS
1 . Scottish cap
Williams
48. Meshed
•· Fail to
fabric
attend
8. Delicatessen
goody
DOWN
1. Feather's
11. Bancroft
partner
12. Lacking
2. Violently
a sense
of ethics
3. Playwright,
Arthur - 13. Athirst
H . Steinbeck's
4. Lamb's cry
5. H. G. Wells
"The
classic,
Wa~ard
with "The"
15. Sort
(2wds.)
17. Marsh
6. Whine
elder
1. Serious
18. "C'- 8. Cavalry
SiBon"
sword
19. Born (Fr.)
9. Divert
20. - - aside
(postpone)
21. Actual
23. Berate
25. Just on the
market
27. Bird's beak
28. Muffled
31. Liveliness
34. Mr. Landon
35. -- of
Galilee
37. ZsaZsa's
relative
38. New (comb.
form)
39. Filer's aid

lll

sign
26. The
Y ~~~rda)·'o Altawer
age30.Render
less
soundproo!
Mae
32.Beo!use
28. Summer
hat
33. Nursemaid,
British style
29. Mexican
36. Overhead
president
i2.King
(Span.)
(194644. Assembled
1952)

HOARD IT IN
SECRJ::!T !

•

OI

~~~~"ANOTHER (XX

y,..t,.rdav•.•

A Cryptogram Quotation
I

VZIB

JSV
RTD

DOIOTDOTNTIS

DUAL

KTEHZLD

BTFF

UBS

ISV

RL

NUSKHDTUSD. ·-

TSUSC.AUHD
l.'u~rday'•

Cryptoquote: TAKE CARE OF THE MEANS

AND THE END WILL TAKE CARE OF ITSELF. -GANDHJ
~~

J9'll King

IJ toaiiJ".

(Anewen tomorrow)

Jumhl""' HABIT

AXYDLBAAXR
Is L 0 N G F E L L 0 W
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X to1· the two O's. etc. Single lettet·s.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words arc all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

ETML

Now arrange the circled letters
to form the surprise answer, aa

~~~;:;:;~-:-:::~:-=-::~-;:;::~.:s:ug;g~e:s~ted by the above cartoon.

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how

KINOD

WHA'T 'THE

R4J&lt;&gt;H i\

river
•3. Realm
45. Dobbin's
tresses
46. Ina
balanced
way

BAD ENOU0 HoTHEY'Lf..
PAY ANY PRICE- EVE~
If THe Y HAVE TO

0
NEW60~N LARVA'S

~

sapiens

WAI&lt;Jr AN OB..lcCr

b
I I

.111/W/1

FATHER SIGHE!/.

-n . Asian

!3 0M~ ARE:' RE:AL..
fREAK?- ~ IF THe Y

v.s. ,.... OH

10. Helpful
newspaper
listing
(3 wds.)
16. Acute
22. Directed
24. Church-

40. Homo

CAPTAIN EASY

T..w. ...,

Fcntur~s Srndi&lt;'nl~.

In•· )

I

An•w~r:

UPPER

GRUBBY

FAMOUS

Why llof',Y rallrd tlu• rlet•ntor num
"Dad"- HE BROUGHT THEM UP

�~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~----------~~--~------~----------------------------------------------------~--~--~--~---

10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 14, 1971

lll:t:':'~':''l~::{':~:::~:::~::~~=~;;;~::i::~w;;:~;:mll •

Meigs Teachers at In-Service Institute
Something "different" in
teacher training was experienced by two Meigs High
School teachers over the
~hristmas holidays when they
joined 21 other earth science
teachers from Ohio and West
Virginia for a 9 day in-service
institute in Florida.
The teachers were John
Bentley and Mrs . Jeanne
Taylor. The following describes
the experiences of the nine-day
institute at Seacamp, 36 miles
from Key West.
The In-Service Institute was
conducted from Ohio University
under the sponsorship of the

National Science Foundation.
Dr. James Howard and Dr.
Robert Yeats from the Geology
Department at Ohio University
served as the teaching staff
during the five-day session in
the Florida Keys. Dr. Ray
Skinner, Jr., director of the
Institute, representing
Secondary Education at Ohio
University, participated in the
program.
A complete laboratory and
library were available for the
teachers as they collected
numerous specimen of marine
plant and animals for study. A
pontoon boat and four smaller

Ouh Will Hear Childs
Community development will
be the topic of remarks by
William D. Childs of the
Downing-Childs
Insurance
Agency in Middleport to the
Middleport Business and
Professional Women's Club at
7:30p.m. Monday at the office
of the Columbia Gas Co.
Childs, a leader in Middleport
and on the county and regional
level in community develop-

MEIGS TiiEATRE
Tonight, Jan. 14
NOT OPEN
Friday &amp; Saturday
January 15-16
THE MOONSHINE WAR
(Technicolor)
Patrick MaGoohan
Richard Widmark
TICK... TICK ... TICK
(Technicolor)
Jim Brown
l&gt;eorge Kennedy
G
Admission:
Adults $1 .00, Children, 60c
SHOW STARTS7 P.M .

ment, will suggest activities by
which the B&amp;PW club may
improve Middleport. There will
be a question and answer
session.
Another guest at the meeting
will be Mrs. Ben Neutzling of
Pomeroy who will explain the
" Project Freedom" program to
be carried out in Meigs County
in May when signatures will be
secured in a house-to-house
canvass in protest of treatment
of American prisoners of war in
North Vietnam.
Miss Freddie Houdashelt,
chairman of the public relations
committee, is in charge of the
program. Mrs. Grace Pratt,
president, will conduct the
business meeting.
Following the program and
the introduction of other
members of the public relations
committee, a coffee and social
hour will be held with Mrs .
Edgar Reynolds and Mrs. Mary
Kunzelman in charge. All
members are urged to attend
and to bring guests.

We don't
want to
alarm yoU

bClats were used during the
week.
The weather was rather chilly
the first day and the morning
was spent in Coupon Bight. The
teachers tried out their face
masks, snorkels and flippers for
the first time in salt water.
Some teachers had practiced
using
their
underwater
equipment in Lake Hope during
the pre-institute session in
August.
That first day, therefore, was
spent studying the marine flora
and fauna on the base of Key
Largo limestone in a protected
shallow-water environment.

The teachers collected samples
and spent time in the laboratory
keying out the scientific names
for their school collections.
The boats were used the
second day as the teachers
studied a different environment
outside the bight on the patch
reefs in the Atlantic Ocean. The
reefs came within three feet of
the surface. Certain precautions were taken after
some of the teachers came in
contact with jelly fish and one of
the teachers stepped on a
diadima, which is a spiny sea
urchin. Some anxious moments
were experienced as several

Driver Injured
John Brewer
A car was demolished in a
Dies Wednesday one-car
accident Wednesday at
6 p. m. on SR 124, the Meigs
County Sheriff's Dept. reported.
Leota Johnson, 40, Portland,
Rt. 1, traveling southeast, lost
control when her car apparently
hit a rough spot on the highway.
It crossed the highway, went
through a guard rail, over an
embankment, and turned over
on its top at the river's edge.
The driver was taken to
Holzer Medical Center by the
Racine E-R squad suffering
lacerations of her nose and a
hand. The accident is still under
investigation.

PT. PLEASANT - John
Adam Brewer, 57, 1469 Dryden
Rd., Columbus, a former
resident of Point Pleasant, died
at 7:30 a.m. Wednesday in the
St. Anthony Hospital in
Columbus where he was a
patient for the past 11 days. Mr.
Brewer was born in Gallia
County October 12, 1913, a son of
the late Henry Brewer, and
Mrs. Emma Brewer Clark, of
Coolville, 0. He was a retired
employe of the Dealer's
Lwnber Company in Columbus.
Survivors include his widow,
Mrs. Tura Mae Brewer, of
Columbus; four daughters,
Mrs. Florence Shull, Columbus;
Mrs. Marion Hooton, Henderson; Mrs. Joan Hill, Point
Pleasant, and Mrs. Frances
Hairr,
Columbus;
three
brothers, Floyd Brewer,
Rutland;
Ralph Brewer,
Jackson, and Henry Brewer,
Vietnam, and eight grandchildren.
Funeral services will be
conducted Saturday at 1:30 p.m .
from the Wilcoxen Funeral
Home. The Rev. Jack C.
Higgins will officiate and burial
will follow in the Brewer
Cemetery, Point Pleasant, Rt.
2. Visitation hours will be after 4
p.m. Friday.

start that

TAKEN TO HOLZER
The Middleport E-R squad
answered a call at 5:57 a. m .
Thursday to the William Curfman residence on the Turkey
Run Road back of Cheshire.
Curfman, believed suffering a
heart condition, was taken to
Holzer Medical Center.

GOES TOFT. HAYES
One man, a transfer from
Upper Marlbor, Md., to the
local board, has been forwarded
to Fort Hayes in Colwnbus for
induction into the armed forces,
the Meigs County selective
service board 83 reports. He is
Lawrence R . Davis. The board
said 18 other Meigs County
registrants underwent preinduction
physical
examinations Tuesday at Fort
Hayes.

SAVINGS
ACCOUNT

The Farmers Bank
and Savings Co.

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Pomeroy E-R unit answered a call at 8:27 p. m.
Wednesday to the Lowell
Wingett
residence
near
Pomeroy. Wingett was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where he was admitted as a
medical patient.

POMEROY, 0.
M ember Feder al Reserve System
On Fridays Our Drive- In Window
is Open 9 a.m. to 7 p.m ., (Con tinuously).

DEPOSITS NOW INSURED TO $20.000 BY F.D.I.C.

•••••••••••••••
••
••

NOTICE
2 PUPPIES to give
Phone 992-3641.

away.
l -4-3tc

NOW APPEARING
FOR YOUR
DINING PLEASURE

7 P.M. TIL 11 P.M.

••
••

:

r;~;:JE;:;:;@~

••
••
••
•

••
••
•
••
•

•••
•••

••
••
••

;~~::::::;:;::::::···::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;:::;:;:::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;:::??.::

THE MARTIN

: N. 2ND AVE.

Cocktails and Dining

SERVICE NOTED
A county prayer service will
be held at the Lower Light
Mission at 2 p. m. Sunday with
Okey Ahart as leader. The
public is invited.

" The Little Church Around
the Corner" is the popular
name for the Church of the
Transfigura tion in New York
City.

11!\V:'::;~:~::d:;rp::~:l
::::::::

By United Press International

::::::::

PHNOM PENH - SOUTH VIETNAMESE RANGERS and
armor today cleared one of two Communist-held mountain passes
in a 13,0()()..man joint Cambodian-South Vietnamese drive to
recapture Phnom Penh's lifeline to the sea. American B52
bombers flew heavy raids in direct support of the Allied troops.
Military sources said other South Vietnamese rangers were
tightening a vise on the other Viet Cong-held segment of Highway
41.
ISRAELI DEFENSE MINISTER MOSHE DAYAN was
quoted today as saying Israel's military might has grown so
powerful it is the Egyptians who must fear and end of the ceasefire on Feb. 5. His statement leaked out in Tel Aviv as Egypt and
the Soviet Union began crucial talks in Cairo.
Cairo officials have warned repeatedly that the Middle East
cease-fire may not be extended past Feb. 5 if there is no major
progress in the New York talks under auspices of U.N. mediator
Gunnar V. Jarring. France announced Wednesday it had begun a
diplomatic campaign to extend the truce.
PARIS-U.S.AMBASSADORDavid K. E. Bruce today gave
the Communists an updated list of all American servicemen
missing in Indochina and repeated earlier requests for information on men whose fate is still unknown. Bruce told the
Communists at today's 99th session of the talks, "You have both a
legal and a moral obligation to make known the information you
have on these men."
He said, "Over a year ago, at the 48th session on Dec. 30, 1969,
we made such a request of you here directly when we gave you a
list of all American servicemen missing in Southeast Asia and
asked you to indicate those you held prisoner or knew to be dead.
You failed to respond satisfactorily to these requests."

ANOTHER GOOD BUY FROM

·················~····················•

Maxine At The
Electric Organ

Pleasant Valley Hospital
ADMISSIONS
James
McMahan, St. Louis, Mo.; Kelly
Davis, Pt. Pleasa11t; Mrs. John
Wright, Gallipolis Ferry;
Ronald Bostic, Pt. Pleasant;
John Marshall, New Haven;
Beverly Carson, Mason; Jerry
King, Winfield; Mrs. Kenneth
McComas, Glenwood; Mrs.
Donald Saxton, Sissonville;
Mrs. James Hartley, Pt.
Pleasant; Mrs. William Plisko,
Mason.
DISCHARGES - Mrs. Robert
Byer, Victoria Thornton, Connie
Berkely, Mrs. Vitis Hartley, Jr.,
Mrs. Bertha Richard, Mrs.
Willard Jeffers and son, David
Gabritsh, Brown Watterson,
Gay Chapman, Mrs. Eunice
Beller, Mrs. Grover Nibert,
Mrs. Ernest Tucker, Fred
Willet, Mrs. Frank Capehart,
Ortha Ohlinger, Mrs. Harold
Roush, Mrs. Bernard Jordan
and daughter, Carl Mattox,
Cora Plants, Mrs. L. M. Hyatt
and Mrs . J. Ernest Tucker.

FIVE WIN HONORS
Five Meigs County students
at the Tri-State Technical Institute in Nelsonville have been
named to the dean's list for the
fall quarter. Making a perfect
four point average was Edward
Smith of Pomeroy . Arthur
Boyer and David Mora, both of
Pomeroy, and Sandra Johnson,
Portland, and Debra McMillan,
Racine, made an average of 3.5
or better.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Mary Morris,
Pomeroy; Wanda Sprague,
Middleport; Zora Walker,
Pomeroy; Charles Neuman
Syracuse;
Ronald
Carr ~
Pomeroy; Lowell Wingett,
Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED Nellie
Hatfield, Clarence Wolfe, Alice
Russell, Donald Covert, Lyle
Hysell, Jennie Tipton, Fay
Sauer, Sherri Sisson.

BUT--it's time to

four to five foot barracuda
cruised near the reef. More
specimen were collected ineluding sea cucwnbers, starfish, fan corals, vase sponges,
and squid.
On the third morning the fourboat flotilla braved the open
ocean to examine Looe Key
which was eight miles south of
Seacamp on the outer reef in
open ocean. The coleration of
the fish and coral was even
more spectacular at Looe Key
than on the patch reefs. The
first swimmers in the water saw
many large jellyfish and some
observed barracuda again.
The wind picked up and
waves became choppy. Commadore Howard announced that
the weather would get worse so
the flotilla started back to
Sea camp. In addition to the high
seas, the gasoline tanks were
rather low which added to the
excitement. Although
seasickness was at a minimum,
goose pimples and shivering
were quite common. The afternoon was spent in the marine
laboratory starting work on
individual projects. Jerry
McCoy from Berea Junior High
School received the warm
appreciation from everyone on
board the pontoon boat for his
safe piloting.

MIDDlEPORT, 0.•

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

BAKER'S

-----.............-:~
\\lRCUlON
totAtAlRC\1\l
G\\Nll
\flll\)

~;~;~;~;
There's a package of cigar.ettes In one out of every three women's handbag In this
:::::::: country.
~i~i~i~i
Among those women from age 18 to 54, our wives, secretaries, mothers, and teachers,
:;:;:;:; the percentage of smokers is a little higher, say recent statistics released by the National
~;j;~j; Center for Health Statistics of the U.S. Public Health Service. The survey reveals that 34.7
;;;;;~;~ per cent of women aged 18-24 smoke, 43.2 per cent for 25-34, 41.1 per cent from 35-44 and 37.3
:;:;:;:; from 45 to 54.

l:j:ljlj

.1_:_1.:_!_:_,_:

i'_,_l_'i_:i_':_:_::.:

::£E:J~~~~::':!.?::g...:~=,;:-:!.~.~·..7.~:: :~.:; :.·::: :~:

:;::::::

~~~~;l~~

:;:;:;:;

:~l~l~l~

·;:;:;:;:
;:;:;:;:

The same statistics indicate that the proportion of women who smoke a package of
:;:;:;:;: cigarettes or more a day doubled between 1955 and 1966. In 1955, 2.3 per cent of women :;:;:;:;
@m\: smokers smoked more than 21 cigarettes daily. In 1966, the figure was 4.9 per cent. The data lt~1j
:;:;:;:;: also indicates more women are joining the ranks of smokers than are quitting, and that , :;:;:;:;
:~;:;:; those who are starting to smoke heavily are younger.
' ;:;;:;:;
fj;j; Most of the women who have quit smoking are over 54 years of age, or smoked less than ;~;:;:;:
;~;~;~;~ 10 cigarettes a day. Other studies indicate that men and women who quit smoking do so for t~:j::
different reasons. The loc~ Interagency council is.studying these results In hopes of finding :;~~lf
:;:;:;:; effective methods for helpmg men and women to gave up cigarettes.
:;:;:;:;·
:{:::
"In the meantime it is hoped that Increased knowledge of the health effects of smoking ::~;~;~:
;:;:;:;: will help both sexes make a decision to quit." To help spread the word, the council is par· ;~;~;~;~
:~;}~ ticipating in National Education Week on Smoking (NEWonS) from January 11·16, and i:~:l:l:
:;~;~:~:; offering a variety of free literature on smoking and tips on quitting. "H you're Interested, ;:;:;:;:
:;:;:;:; just telephone 992-2688 or contact the American Cancer Society.'~
;:;:;::::

ft

•

•

'!.llm:tM'*''%I1illlill{ol'o;;ert::'''t:~:'f':~:~n:~:lt:M''~l'~'~~m:;r.~:l1'llll!:m:;mwmm'!MmiJ
I~

Elberfelds In Pomeroy Are Open
Fridays and Saturdays Until 9 P.M.
A GOOD TIME FOR FAMILY SHOPPING AND
SAVING IN ELBERFELDS JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE

Women's Skirts

BIG CLEAN UP

WOMEN'S DRESSES
Group I

7.00 Group Ill

12.00

Group II

8.00 Group IV

25.00

About 300 Womens Skirts.
Regularly 2.95 to 12.95.
While they last in this sale.

HALF PRICE

•

Women's Ungerie

Sale!

Women's Handbags
36.00
34.00
30.00
28.00
27.00
12.00
9.00
8.00
7.00
6.00
5.00
4.00

Handbags
Handbags
Handbags
Handbags
Handbags
Handbags
Handbags
Handbags
Handbags
Handbags
Handbags
Handbags

-

-

-

-

Sale 25.19
Sale 23.79
Sale 20.99
Sale 19.59
Sale 18.89
Sale 8.99
Sale 6.79
Sale 5.99
Sale 5.29
Sale 4.49
Sale 3.79
Sale 2.99

Discontinued styles of Womens
Rogers lingerie.
Half Slips - Peignoir Sets
Pajamas - Robes.
1.00 SJips - - 4.00 Half Slips - 25.00 Peignoir Sets
15.00 Gowns - - 13.00 Gowns - - 12.00 Pajamas - 11.00 Robes - - 9.00 Pajamas - 8.00 Baby Doll
Pajamas - - - 7.00 Gowns - - 6.00 Gowns - - -

- - - - - - - - - - - - &amp;
&amp;
&amp;
&amp;

Pajamas
Pajamas
Pajamas
Pajamas

-

- - -

-

Sale 7.49
Sale 5.99
Sale 5.19
Sale 4.49
Sale 3.79
Sale 2.99
Sale 2.59

Big selection- Regular and extra
sizes.

3.88

A good selection . Toddler sizes 2, 3 and 4.
Juven ile si ze 3 to 6x and regular boys size 8
to 18. Select the ones you want and save
now.

- -

-

on
on
on
on
on
on
on

sale
sale
sale
sale
sale
sale
sale

Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale

7.98 Pajamas - - 6.98 Pajamas - - 5.98 Gowns &amp; Pajamas
4.98 Gowns &amp; Pajamas
3.98 Gowns &amp; Pajamas
2.98 Challis Gowns - -

5.99
5.29
4.49
3.79
2.99

•

2.2~

SIZeS.

7.95
11.95
16.95
17.95
18.95

Mens
Mens
Mens
Mens
Mens

Jackets - - - Sale 5.00
Jackets - - - Sale 8.00
Jackets- -- Sale 12.00
Jackets--- Sale 13.00
Jackets - - - Sale 14.00

I

Sale! Boys' CPO Jackets

SALE! BOYS' JACKETS

Jackets Jackets - - - Jackets - &amp; 10.95 Jackets Jackets - Jackets - Jackets
-- -

.I

.A: good selection. Regular and extra large

Women's Cotton House Dresses

6.95
7.95
8.95
9.95
12.95
13.95
17.95

Sale 4.58
Sale 4.08
Sale 3.58

SALE! MEN'S JACKETS

Sale! This Week
A Special Sale Price On

All on sale for

-

•

Women's
Winter Sleepwear

Flannel Gowns and Robes
Sizes 4 to 14
Robes
Robes
Robes
Gowns
Gowns
Gowns
Gowns

Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale

Sale!

Sale! Girts' Sleepwear

10.00
7.98
6.98
6.00
4.98
3.98
3.49

4.18
2.38
13.48
7.58
7.28
6.68
6.28
5.18

-

4.00
5.00
6.00
7.00
9.00
10.00
13.00

SALE OF DOLLS
IN THE IvY DEPARTMENT
2ND FLOOR
Come in and select the ones you want and
save Friday and Saturday.

Another Shipment

Men's and Boys' Dress Belts
Regular widths and the popular
wide belts with hardware type
buckles .
Mens sizes 28 to 50 - Boys sizes 20
to 28. Exceptional Values .

Solid color navy and colorful plaids. Good
selection .
4.95
5.95
6.95
7.95

Boys
Boys
Boys
Boys

CPO
CPO
CPO
CPO

Jackets
Jackets
Jackets
Jackets

-

-

-

-

-

Sale
Sale
Sa le
Sale

3.00
4.00
5.00
6.00

Sale! Men's CPO Jackets
Light and dark plaid patterns. Navy Blue
- Save now.
6.95 Mens
7.95 Mens
8.95 Mens
11.95 Mens
14.95 Mens

CPO
CPO
CPO
CPO
CPO

Jackets
Jackets
Jackets
Jackets
Jackets

-

-

-

Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale

4.00
5.00
6.00
8.00
10.00

ill

January Sale Time in the Furniture Department on t he 3rd
floor •
living Room Suites - Hide-a-Beds - Easy
Chairs - Sofas - Reclining Chairs · Living
Room Tables
Occasional Tables Bedroom Suites - Din ing Room Suites Dinette Sets · Kitchen Furniture.
Visit Elberfelds Furniture Department
and Save.

..

~·

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

CI\Rl't't
\2' ~\de

SALE! KIMBALL PIANOS

You can really save on the piano you want
during this special Kimball sale on the 3rd
floor. Stop in - See all the models on
display and select the one best for you and
your fam i ly .

Trade in your TV on a new

RCA TV
Choose the black and white or
color, whichever you like best.

----·----------------~----------~~------------------------~--------·
Regular $J.50

now *4.99 sq. yd•

FURNITURE
BAKERS Middleport,
0.

Be Thrifty! Save All of Your Saleslips From

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

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