<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="18022" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/18022?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-28T21:33:37+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="51185">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/a676e23f9caf067f162c1ad2c83640c0.pdf</src>
      <authentication>7d881c16dbf068174059cd09f9655caa</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="57334">
                  <text>In - The Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Nov

1~.

1973

Celeste

President cheered
KEY BISCAYNE , Fla. tUP! )
President N1xon paused
tcxlay m h1s Watergate recovery drive , apparently to rest

and assess the momentum arter
a whirlwmd week of appeals for
acceptance by Congress, the
pubtic and the press of
evidence he sciys w1U clear him
of suspicion.
The President took the time
out at his home here a fter
drawmg a highly sympathetic
crowd estimated at about 20,000
durmg a campaign-style visit
Sunday to Macon , Ga., and
getting what one aide described
as a &lt;~tremendous reaction " to
the defense N1xon offered
Saturday night in a nationally

marking the 90th birthday of
televised news conference.
Indtcat10ns were that Ntxon rormer Hep Carl M Vmson, D·
would go on with his in~nsely Ga , longtune cha~rman of the
personal bid to rebound from House Armed Services Commit·
Watergate, wtth the next move lee, and the lOOth anmversary
commg Tuesday when he of Mercer University's law
scheduled a tnp to Memph1s, school.
In Saturday's news conferen~
Tenn., for a talk with Repubti·
ce, Nixon was questioned
can governors meetmg there .
almost
exclusively about Water·
" We 've got to take 'em on,"
the White House ch1ef of staff, gate and vigorously proclalffied
Alexander M. Ha1g Jr ., told that he was innocent of any
reporters traveling with the wrongdomg in conection w1th
PresJdenl in 'referrtng to cntics the bugging scandal or any
related activ1t1es .
of Nixon
At one pomt, he was moved
Nixon focused on national
defense and d1d not mention to declare : "I made my
Watergate during a 21).mmute riuslakes, but mall my years of
speech in Ma con Sunday where
he took part in ceremomes

News

• ••

public hfc , I uever profited
rrom pubhc service ... and m all
of my years of public life, I
have never obstructed JUStice
... I welcome this kmd or
exammat1on because people
have got to know wheU1er or
not their President ts a crook
Well, I'm not a crook. l have
earned everythmg I have got."
The President promised dur·
mg the sess10n with the
Associated Press Managmg
Edttors AssociatiOn m Orlando,
Fla , that he soon would make
public assorted documents,
including a rundown ~n his
personal fmanc1al records.

•

zn Briefs

Japan blackmailed

(Continued from Page 1)
over the 102-mlle-lon g waterway

VIENNA ( UPl ) - Arab ml Israel to qualify for supplies of
producmg nations parllally Arab mi.
" The OrganizatiOn of Arab
relaxed their oil cutbacks for
Europe toda y, but Saudi Oil Exportmg Co untries
Arabia Oil Minister Sheikh Ah· (OAPEC ) ha s dec1ded that
med Z. Yamam told Japan 1! those countries wh1ch are
must sever relation s with affected by reductiOns Will he
exempted on the condition that
they ass1st the Arabs in a very
s1gmf~eant way and force the
Israelis to withdraw from
occupied Arab territories~"
Amani said.
" Japan cannpt help us
•
•
m1litanly, so the second thmg
to do is cut relations w1th
Israel," Yamani said. Yamani
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - The
Supreme Court agreed today to spoke to newsmen after a
three-hour
meeting
of
review an order that calls for
integration of Detroit's mostly ministers of the 12 members of
the OrganizatiOn of Oil Ex·
black mner city schools with
those of the surroundmg white porting Countries. (OPEC).

NEW YORK - UNION PRESIDENT Richard J . V1zzmi , who
called a strike of New York C1ly 's 10,000 firemen Nov 6 after
reporting members voted " overwheimingly" m favor of the
walkout, now says he lied about the result s of the stnke vote. The
membership had actually voted agamst the walkout, 4,119 to
3,827 according to a umon spokesman .
Paul
Buiar,
public
r ela twns
counsel of
the
Uniformed
Firefighters
AssociatiOn,
sa1d
Sunday
Vizzini "was concedmg he was forced mto makmg an
inaccurate statement" on the secret ballot stnke vote results
Nov . 2. Buiar srud he could not comment further because Vizzim
made an agreement with a New York televisiOn statwn to explam
his action on the air tonight.

Highest court

to rule

on mtegratton

suburbs.
DINNER AT CHURCH
The eventual opinion, to be
The Pomeroy Church of
issued after arguments later
Chr1st w1ll host all Me1gs
this term, 1s expected t0
County Churches of Christ at a
resolve the Widespread conThanksgiving dinner, Wed·
troversy over mtegration. of
nesday at 6 p. m. Turkey and
metropolitan schools across
ham will be furmshed.
county tines.
Members of other churches are
The h1gh court acted on
to bring a covered dish. The
Michigan's appeal from a
guest speaker will be Dean
ruling on June 12, 1973, by the
Mills, President of Ohio Bible
6th U. S. C~rcuit Court of Ap·
Institute .
Everyone
is
peals in favor of the NAACP
welcome.
Legal Defense Fund ( LDF),
ATTEND FUNERAL
which started the lawsuit, The
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Kesler·
circuit
court somewhat
modified a rulmg m LDF's son, son Roy, and Mrs. Ben
favor by U, S. District" Judge Buck, all of Rock Springs, were
in New Lexmgton, Ohio, over
Stephen J. Roth of Detroit.
the weekend for the funeral of
their sister-in-law, Mrs .
William Shoemaker, formerly
of Me1gs County.

MEIGS lHEATRE
Tontght &amp; Tuesday
.

PAPER MOON
Ryan O' Neal
Tatum O'Neal

GP

Cotorcartoons:
It Am't Easy
.

Rolling Along

H1tch-H1kers

Adults: SUO 1 Children, 75c
Show Starts 7 p.m .

GUESTS AT PARTY
Thirty-two pupils of the
Meigs Comm'Unity School and
six teachers were guests at a
party at George Hobstetter's
cabm located on Flatwoods
Road, Fnday. Refreshments
were furnished by the Pomeroy
National Bank.

YOUR FULL SERVICE BANK

----------

TEL AVIV - DAVID BEN-GUR!ON , former prune mm1ster
of Israel and one of the founders of the J ew1sh state, was m
"serious conditwn" today after being partially paralyzed by a
stroke.
Doctors at Tel Hashomer ho Spital outside Tel Aviv said the
white-haired, 87-year-&lt;&gt;ld elder st atesman was felled Sunday by a
cerebral hemorrhage that paralyzed hiS nght side. " I don 't kn ow
in which direction he's gomg, but I'm optimislic," Dr. Bolesla"
Goldman said. "He's in quite good shape for the Situation he's m
But it's too early to tell . It takes time for the damage to heal."
DALLAS - TWO BLACK MISSIONARIES from South
Africa Will fight sm among the nalives of Texas. But the Rev. and
Mrs Jerry Nkesi deny that their ministry IS mtended as a
spiritual example of "man b1tes dog .''
The traditional story of missionary travel in the past has
been of whites going from the Umted States to Afnca to
Christianize the blacks . The Rev. Nkesi, 44, and h1s w1fe sa1d
putting down U. S miSSIOnaries was not even m their mmds when
they dec1ded to come to the United Slates.
They said they were not the f~rst Africa n miSSIOnaries to
come to the United States and did not expect to be the last . The
Nkesis visited Dallas in 1970 and he sa1d he was "shocked by the
sinfulness" he saw among the young .
.
VIENNA - THE WORLDWIDE ENERGY crunch eased
slightly today with Arab nations partially relaxing 01! cutbacks to
Western Europe and, Ch~na offering to sell Middle East
petroleum to America s Asian fr~ends.
.
The Arab ml nations agreed Sunday at a meetmg m V1enna to
call off a new five per cent cut m Cummon Market petroleum
shipments scheduled to go mto effect next month .
,
In other developments, Romama beca me the first Cum·
munist nation to order tough fuel rattoning measures to cope with
expected energy ~hortages and Belgmm joined Holland m
banrung Sunday driVIng. Foretgn MmiBtry offiCials m Bangkok
said China has offered to sell surplus M1ddle East ml to Tha1land,
on~ of Amerka's major allies, and other umdentif1ed Southeast
As1an countnes.
A CAMBODIAN AIR FORCE T28 FIGHTER-BOMBER
attacked Phnom Penh's ornate presidential palace today,
dropping a ton of bombs on the Chamcar Mon but missing
President Lon Nol.
Official sources said one of four 250-pound, Amencan-made
bombs landed only 100 yards from the six-star general, but d1d
not harm hun. Three other persons were reported k11led and 10
wounded. Witnesses said the single-&lt;&gt;ngme, propellor-dnven
plane made two passes over the offiCial presidenlial residence,
which is just outside the mam downtown area of the capital city.
An antiaircraft gun on the palace grounds failed to fire on the
T28, they said.

Open Thanksgiving Day
11 TO 3 PM

Your spa r e dollar s
can wo rk: 24 hour s
a day. You ca ne.

In a ce ruftcate of
depos J' or a sa vmg account wah
us , theygr owda1ly

BUFFET DINNER

wlthout a ttent ton

or r1 s k

TURKEY AND DRESSING
ROAST BEEF
And All The Trimmings

The Farmers Bank

•

Dine Out At
The

and Savings Co.

Meigs. Inn

POMIROY, OHI\J
Slt..... to Mll•imurn

1n~our•nc•

PH. 992-3629

t-v.·

loc- Ool&gt;otllor

'

POMEROY, OHIO__......,
.
,,l .... "! t

-- -..

ftll[~AI

.

Ofi'O~ IT

---

IN~UR

.. N([

-----··--

(QRPQIIATION ·

-------

·--

l

(C'unllnued frum

pa~e

1

Few visit now at
Kennedy homestead

ed through next F'ebruary
None of the money or organi·
zation ts from Gilligan or tht&gt;
state , he sa1d ,
The youthful former Rhodes
scholar and disciple of all three
Kennedy
. brothers had been re-.
ga rded as a top prospect for
stateWide offa.:e ever since he
came to the General Assembly
in 1971.
He
qui ckly
gained
recognition as one of tile top
freshmen in the House
Democrahc caucus, and late in
1972 was chosen to head the
Cuyahoga Cuunty Democratic
delegation, largest m the
Genera l Assembly.
Celeste was picked as Democratic wh1p when the party
took control of the House this
year. The position was created
efpecially to mclude the Cuyahoga Cuunty delegate leader,
but he immediately made him·
self a working member of the
leadership team and a liason
w1th the governor's staff.
Celeste was instrumental
this year m negollating an
ethics bill for public officials
and em ployes - the No. I
pr1or1ty of the Gilligan ad·
ministration.
He also steered major legislatiOn on public pensiOn and
Med1ca1d reforms through the
General Assembly, and got a
controversial house-to~house
voter registratiOn bill through
th e House before 1t was stalled
in the Republican-controlled
Senate
Celeste was the top House
Democratic spokesman on
campaign financing legislation
in the recently completed
spec1al sesswn. Although he
was
unsuccessful
in
negotiationg a b1ll, Gilligan
last week termed his work
"heroic" m introducmg him at
a press conference
This was only one tipoff that
Celeste was to become the
handpicked choice of the
governor to run with him.
Celeste had been speculated
as a potential candidate for
lieutenant governor eartier in
the year, along with state
Transportation
Department
Director Phillip Richley and
former
Public
Utilities
CommissiOn Chairman Henry
W Eckhart
Eckhart ~truck out on his
own several weeks ago, an·
nouncmg his candidacy.
Celeste , meanwhile, made
contacts with county chairmen ,
and VISits to 30 counties. He .
attended special organized
labor dinners for Gilligan in
Dayton and Clncmnati, making
his presence well known with
hand-shaking trips through the
audience.
As1de from earning com·
mendat10ns from the governor,
who does not normally waste
buuquets, Celeste kept up his
own press relations with
releases on his activities.
Only last Thursday, he
issued a paU" of news releases
on his pension bill .
Celeste has had one of the
highest " batting averages" for
successful legislation in the
House this year. Half his eight
b11ls got throug.~ one chamber,
and three were enacted into
law.
He also sponsored an unsuc·
cessful constitulional amend·
ment which would have
required that the governor and
l~eutenant governor
run as a
team, with a single vote being
cast for each party's team.
C~ leste graduated magna
cum laude from Yale in 1959
and was elected to Phi Beta
Kappa .
He taught at Yale and at·
tended the 1960 Democratic
National Convention to help
organize yough for Sen. John
F . Kennedy in his successful
presidenllal b1d
Celeste then went to Oxford
University on a Rhodes
scholarship
to
study
economics, politics and
philosophy . In England, he met
his w1fe, Dagmar, a student
from Vienna.
Celeste
returned
for
graduate work at Yale and in
1963 went to Washmgton as a
staff officer for the Peace
Corps' Latin America division.
Later that year: he joined the
U.S. Foreign Service and was
assigned to the American
Embassy at New Delhi.
In New Delhi, he served as
exeoutive
assistant
to
President Kennedy's am·
bassador to India, Chester
Bowles, former governor of
C'.onnecticut.
While the Celestes were in
India, three of their five
children were born. Upon their
return lD !967, they settled in
Cleveland, and Celeste was
active in campaign work on
behalf of Robert and Edward
Kennedy, He also worked in
Gilligan's campaign for the
U.S. Senate.
He is pres1dent of National
Housing Consultants, Inc., in
Cleveland, '

By DONALD O'HIGGINS
Josephine S8ld, "but the num·
DUNGI,NSTOWN , Ireland · bers have dwindled in the past
(U P! ) - Josephine Ryan few years."
s1ghed softly as she pushed
It was just 10 years ago last
open the door of the tiny, tin· June that the tiny community
roofed shack in her backyard. was caught up in the feverish
" We keep it locked nowa- ,...excitement of a presidential
days," she said. " A lot has visit when Kennedy dropped in
happened in the past 10 years." for a cup of tea with his Irish
Josephine, daughter of Mrs. cousins.
"!will never forgetlt as long
Mary Ryan, a third cousin to
the late President John F. as I tive," Josephine said. All
Kennedy, acts as guardian of aroUDd her in the small farm·
the ancestral homestead in bouse parlor were reminders
Dunganstown, a clutter of of that day. Signed pictures of
cottages too small to rate President Kennedy ...American
recognition on the map.
flags ... telegrams ...and in the
" It makes me sad every time place of honor a photograph
I come In here," Josephine showing the young, bronzed
Eaid, looking around the two- President kissing his cousins.
roomed cottage where Ken..
"That's where he sat for his
nedy's greal"flrandfather lived
cup
of tea," she said, pointing
before he set sail for the U.S.
more than a century ago to to a wooden bench near the
found the Kennedy dynasty, open peal fire.
Kennedy's visit sent shock
" We still get a fair number of
waves
of prosperity booming
tourists calling to see it,"

through uie area. Hotels. shops
and scores of little, saw-dusted
bars did a bumper trade in
souvenirs, Irish-made handi·
crafls and pottery. •
Visitors, once a rarity,
became conunonplace , Small,
winding roads built for donkey
carts were choked with
automobiles heading for the
Kennedy hone stead, The Ryan
family erected a small plaque,
featuring the U.S. and Irish
flags, m the rough wall of their
farmhouse.
" The Kennedy Homestead,"
it read, simply.
Inside, they opened a visitors
book for signatures and they
went into the souvenir business
themselves.
11All that ls over now," said
Josephine. "We don't sell them
any more."
No one tikes to remember
back
the day in November
when an assassin's bullet m
faraway Dallas killed a part of
themselves.
"It just doesn't bear thinking
about," Josephine said. "We
want to remember President
Kennedy as he was among usgay, smiling, at home."

w

••

I GM, UAW in accord ~

In 187~, Wllliam Marcy
Tweed, leader of New York's
Tammany Hall, was sentenced
to 12 years m prison for
DETROIT (UPI) -General Motors Corp. aud Uolted ~
defrauding the city of $12
Auto Workers negotiators, weary after almoat 24 boW'S of $:
million.
nonstop hargalnlng, reached agreement today on a new
Also in 187~, the National
national contract.
~~
Women's Christian Temperance
..,
The settlement came only 90 minutes before the slarl of ~
!~ a scheduled series of mlnlstrlkes at selected General ~ Union was organized in Cleve·
land, Ohio.
;~: Motors plants across the counlry.
'
~~
The word began going out from union negotlawrs at
;~: about 8:30 a.m. that a tenllltlve agreement bad been
There's no one more smug
o!~
~l reached. The oHlclal anoouncement was expected later
than the guy next m hne,
from union and company bargainers.
,:;: waiting for you to catch up on
your part of the job.
:~:::~....~~«&lt;·=~··=--~·~"o"o;.t,····~·............................
~

I

COLUMBUS ( UPll - It will
take 95 years and cost $283
m1lllon to reclalffi all abandon·
cd
strip
mmed
lands
In
the state
and additiOnal $440 million to
reclaun deep mmes, according
to a report presented to the
Ohio Board of Unreclmmed
Strip Mmed Lands Monday
The board, established under
1972 strip mine legislation, will
study the .report prepared by
Skelly &amp; Loy Consulting En·
gineers, Columbus, and make
recommendati ons for a fmal
document to be pnnted by next
Jan. 31.
Battelle Memonal Institute
and the Ohio State Un iversity
school of la ndscape a rch1tec·
ture, and Arthur Young &amp; Co.,
Toledo, also participated m
wnting the report, which covered a 35-coun ty area of eastern
and southea stern OhiO.
The consultants sa1d the

energy - conSt"l \'Gillon balll~·
co uld
alter
the
l1me
period
and
cost.Y but
recommended that Immediate steps be taken to reclaim
land m 23 of 79 watersheds
studied
Uttle Raccoon Creek In
Gallia, Jackson and Vinton
counties and the Raccoon Creek
and Elk Fork areas of Gallla,
Meigs and Vinton counties were
rated as the top two pnority
watersheds. The rating was on
the basis of cost effectiveness,
amount of pollution, develop·
men! demand, density of stnp
mines, economtc need, pub1ic
visibility" and visual quality.
L(Jng Term Project
More than 368,000 acres have
been strip mmed, of which 24,·
000 a rc s hU active and w11l be
reclaimed by Ohio's str1ct law,
the consultants said.
"Based upon the prese nt an.
nual funds available for stnp

*

SHOP WEEKDAYS 9:30 10 5 PM
OPEN BOTH FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9:30 TO 9 PM

Crepeset (R&gt; Nylon Sleepwear
by

approximately 95 years to re- four each 1n Mcigs 1 Murg.tn
clatm all abandoned strip mine and Muskmgum counlles.
Also recommended m the
· lands w Ohio," the report said.
report.
Theconsultan ts recommended
-Stnp mme operators rea long-range program to re· clatmmg abandoned lands
claim first the lands wh1ch should rece1ve a bounty of $100
would produce the most value to $300 per acre paid from
for the money spent on im- severance tax funds and forprovements. It cost an aver~ felted perfornmnce bond money .
age of $1,370 to reclaim a smgle
- The state shoule Implement
acre, the report sa1d, and the
1mprovement raises the average reclamation on private land
fa1r market value only by $25 w1th co nsent of the owner
rather than attemphng to ac·
to $50 an acre.
Stone Creek and Tuscarawas qUire the land and later sen It
- ''Quick-start'' reclamation
R1ver tnbutanes were listed as
the third priority watershed m projects should be undertaken
the s tate in the r eport. Raccoon unmed1ately w1th federa l help
Cr eek headwaters m Athens· at Big Four Hollow, Vmton
Hocking-Me1gs-Vinton wa s County; McMahon Creek ; Huff
fourth , along w1th Rush Creek Run , Ca rroll and Tuscarawas
in Fairfield, Hockwg and Perry counties, and Duck Creek m
Washmgton and Noble counties.
counties.

~\~'
~-,._:; ,·

Six basic watersheds ill Meig:~, Galli.a

COLUMBUS ( UP!) - The foilowing 1s Hockmg, Me1gs and Vmton counties, $5 .1 Coshocton and Muskingum counties, $5.2 .
a hst, not m order, of the 2J top-pnonty mdhon. $10.1 m1lhon.
m11llon, $2 8 million .
·:· watersheds for reclaumng abandoned
Monday Creek; Athens, Hocking and
Lower Wills Creek, Coshocton and
_\.!.,!
counties; $4 4 m11iion, $69 3
count 1es, $2.9 million, $4.2

::::~::St~r~:Ot,y ~e';,.,"~t::':~rn~n~ ~~~r1n.

. report to the Oh10 Board of'unrecla~med
,::; Strip Mme Lands.
:!!!
Dollar amo un ts represent the
·~: est1mated cost of reclaimmg abandoned
~m st np mmes a nd deep mmes :
:;:;
•
:.!.!,:
lee Creek a nd Ohio River tributaries,
:·: Lawrence County, $1.5 million, $200,000.
:,~ Oh10 River tr1butanes, Gall1a and
&gt;,: Mc1gs counties, $16.9 million, $2 m1lllon
Little Ra ccoon Creek: Gallia, Jackson
and Vmton counties; $6 6 million, $34 .1
§ million.
J:! Raccoon Creek and Elk Fork Raccoon
~ Creek; Gallia, Meigs and Vinton coun~
~ ties , $3.1 m11lion, $9.9 million .
;:;: Leadmg Creek , Meigs County, $16 .8
;:;: million, $4.6 million.
~~~~ Raccoon Cr eek headwaters , Athens,

~
~:;

~~~~gum

Sunday Creek; Athens, Morgan and
Perry counties : $940,000, $15.2 m1lllon.
West Fork of Duck Creek, Noble and
Washmgton counties, $9.4 m illi on, $1.2
million.
Rush Creek; Fairfield, Hocking and
Perry counties; $6.7 million , $14 million .
Moxahala Creek; Morgan,Musk1ngum
and Perry counties; $21 3 million, $106 7
million .
Muskingum River tnbulanes, Morgan
County, $8 .1 million, $9.4 m illiOn.
East a nd Middle Forks of Duck Creek,
Noble and washmgto~ count1es, $7.4
mtllion, $0.
Jonathan Creek; Lickmg, Morgan ,
Muskingum and Perry co unties ; $800,000
and $59.7 m111wn
Mu skingum Rtver tributar1es m

McMahon Creek, Belmont County, $1.5 -~
million, $44 million.
·
Tuscarawas River tributaries , f
Coshocton and Tuscarawas counties, $2.3 ;~
m1lhon, $5 mtlhon.
1=:

§

'*

Wheelmg Creek , Belmont and Harrison
count10s, $6.3 million, $25.6 million .
.;::
Stone Creek and Tuscarawas River ~
tributaries, Tuscarawas County, $6.2 ~
mi111on, $7.3 million.
j:1
Cross Cree k, Harri son and Jefferson !ili
counties, $12.1 million, $0
!.$.
Co notton
Cr eek, Carroll
and ;~
Tuscarawas, counties, $2 6 mtllion , $3::;:
m1lllon
1~
Yellow Creek ; Ca rroll , Columbiana ~!:
and Jefferson counties, $4.9 m1ll10n and ;::
$7.4 million.
~

;t-:.:::-:-:·~~·=~=~=::·:::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::·:::·:::·:•:o:•:::·:·:·:~·:-:·:·:·:·::::::::::::::::."::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·::::::::.:-:=:::-::::;:;:::::;o;o:•: ·:·: ·:·:-:-:-:-:·:·:·:-=·=·=~·:·:·:::::::::::::::·:·:·:-:·:-:-:·:•:o;o:•:•::: :.o:::::·•:•:.:.:-:-:-:-:~

Devoted To The lnterul6 Of The Meigs-MUMJn Area

VOL XXV NO 154

ett1n
WASHINGTON ( UP! ) Wh1le Sen. William B. Saxbe,
R.Oh10, waits m the wwgs, the
Senate Jud1c1ary Committee 1s
trymg to figure out by m1dmght
tomght whether he is ell g1ble to
be attorney general.
The comm ittee ts con~
sidenng a bill deSigned to
rem ove a conshtuttonal road~
block to Saxbe's nommat10n
and ts und er mstructions to
rep ort to the Se~ate by m1d·
mght.
But AssiStant Democra tic

Leader Robert C. Byrd, W. Va .,
a commtltee member who
chaired the hearmgs Monday,
says no legislation can solve
Saxbe's problem and that
President Nixon should begin
lookmg for another nominee.
Sax be's problem Is that the
Constitution says that no
member of Congress can be
appointed to a civil office If
during hls elected term
Congress raised the pay for
that office.
Saxbe was a senator when

ISRAEL AND EGYPI' REPORTED A TRUCE stalemate
today over the crucial ISsue of troop pullbacks, the only pomt still
to be settled m the M1ddle East cease-fire agreement.
The two s1des failed to reach an agreement on the sensitive
ISsue Monday and tl posed the mam roadblock to a fuli-Beale
M1ddle East peace conference expected to get under way early
next year in Geneva. Despite U1e stalled talks, Israeli and
Egypt1an troops agreed to set up three JOint teams at the Suez
Canal today to search for m1ssing troops in the Smai Desert.
' WASHINGTON - THE WHITE HOUSE, pleading the illness
of one of its lawyers, has been granted a week's delay in
SUITendermg the first of President Nixon's subpoenaed
Watergate material. Chief U. S. DIStrict Court Judge John J.
Sirica granted the delay Monday shortly after the Senate ap.
proved legislation extending the life of the Watergate grand jury
- the body which eventually will receive NIXon's Watergate
matenal.
In the Senate, the decision to extend the life of the grand jury
- reported anxious to complete their work - was passed and
sent to the Wh1te House on a vo1ce vote and without any op.
position . The grand jury was due to complete its 18-month tenure
on Dec, 5. Nixon has 10 days, not including Sundays, to dec1de
whether to s1gn the legislation.

A very lovely, feminine threesome. Be cool ana comfy in
these truly luscious Phil Maid creations, generously
embroidered in multi-color floral design or scalloped bib
yoke. Contrasting piping. Choose pink or blue. S-M·L.

Shop the First Floor Lingerie Department for the
Complete Collection of Philmaid Sleepwear, Slips, Half
Slips and Panties.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
'

KEY BISCAYNE, FLA. - PRESIDENT NIXON turned to
the nation's Republican governors today in his Watergate
counter-&lt;&gt;ffensive, facing demands for specific new information
to answer charges against him. Nixon arranged to fly to Mem·
phis, Tenn., for an early afternoon meeting with the 19-member
\{lepublican Governors Association before returning to
Washington.
He was understood to want the private session so he could
personally defend his Watergate record before the state
executives and convince th\llll that their clear-cut backing for
him would help reduce the scandal's damage to the GOP.
Pollster .George Gallup told the governors Monday Watergate
was sure to pose "serious problems" for the GOP In next year's
elections. If the congressional races were held now, he said,
Democrats might win enough seats to be in position to reverse
any Nixon veto.

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992·2 156

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1973

•

MEMPHIS, TENN - SEVENTEEN Republican governors
locked themselves m a room for three hours Monday, thrashed
out considerable differences and emerged with an agreed
resolution on Watergate . "We applaud the determmatwn of the
President to make full disclosure to the public concermng
Watergate,'' 1t sald Nixon v.;as to make an appearance at the.
governors' meeting later today
In quieter tlmes the resolution would seem lukewarm, but
Gov . Linwood Holton of Virg1ma, outgmng chairman of the
Republican Governors Association descnbed it as something of a
mtracle - a unarumous expresston by a group of men, ''all prima
donnas m their own right," written, discussed and agreed upon
"wtthout dtssent 11 m about 20 mmutes. The same resolution
praised Nixon for hiS handlmg of foreign affairs, particularly the
Middle East war; his anll&lt;nflatton efforts; and h1s "forthright"
statement and recommendabons on the energy crisis.

w

I

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

By United Press International
COLUMBUS (UP! ):.... STATE SEN Stanley J . Aronoff, R·
Cincmnati, was to announce hiS candidacy today for lieutenant
governor at a news conference here Several Republicans have
expressed interest m seekmg the nommation, wtth state Sen.
Heward C Cook of Toledo and former state Rep Keith Me·
Namara of Columbus havmg already declared .
At least five Democrats have announced mtentions to run for
the position, w1th state R ~.P Richard F Celeste of Cleveland the
latest. Celeste reportedly is Gov John J Gilligan's choice as a
runnmg mate next year, although the two posts are elected
separately. The lieutenant governor 's office is to be vacated next
year when Republican John W. Brown steps as1de to run for the
U. S. senate seat of W11liam SaXbe, the attorney general·
designate. Ohio's No. 2 state pos1t10n w11l pay $30,000 m. UJ75.
Brown gets $17,000.

'

~

The United States las t used
mounted cavalry as an armed
force durmg the early weeks of
World War II in a vain defense
of the Philippines.

fiVe;;;::r;=n;;;ftl

'

l&lt;'IVl' of the cnllcal \\ah: r ~
sheds are m Perry Count) .10d

.•.-o'orF.,;/V~

0 • , . ' .0' ••, ............. • . . . . . . .· : - : •: · :• :

Cloudy tomght w1th showers
likely west portion and over the
state Wednesday. Low tomght
m 40s and low 50s Htgh
Wednesday m upper 50s and
low 60s.

.....-....-...-.·.-.-.·...-.~.-.•• .rr.r.o;.._.;.o.•.QQ&gt;.--».V.•,_v,

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

'

......... '.•....•••..•-.-........... '.-..••... ·:,;,·;,;,· •••••••.
.-·.
o•••••••
o;o~;o
~·=·•.........
.·.·•.•;-.,-.•,.................
~-··!.-·("~~-.....,......b.,-'N
- • - ' ........
•· • •.'••
• • • • • • • o'
•'...
'"''
• • o• •
•..•...•.•.
• •' • •,••"
• • • ,_. ""-".". o'o.o.-.•,&lt;;.•&lt;1',"•

~-.r.-.-.,.,·,····································
••••••••••
• • • • • • • • • ' • • • • • • • • • • •·.••••••••••· ' .• ••••· ' •••••'•. . . . . . . .' •••• 0.,•0 •, ••••••• ' .........• . • . . . . . . . . . . .· -0 ,.'!.•.o;o.. ...• •••••••
•}t
- ~~

Art·as Cmwt.• ntratt•d

Now You Know

f

• .-.-.

unn&lt;' r~·el,untion fr om lh(' SC\erence tnx levied un the s~.&lt;~te's
mincrHI mdustr~es. lt w1ll lakt&gt;

Weather

..w..::-:5
·!!~
:-··

.~~:::::::-m:.-::::::::::::::::::::::;7.-:;:;:::::;:;:.-:;:.:·:«-~:..«~::-:~:=:=t-:=:::.::::::;.~~'&gt;:::~

~~

$723 Million price on mined land reclamation 1

answer ton

Waiting in the wing, Nixon's llominee for
aUomey gelleral is unruffled, ready for fate
Congress raised the salary for
the attorney general from
$3~, 000 to $60,000.
To put things nght, the ad·
ministratwn wants Congress to
cut the pay for the job back to
$35,000, which would mean
Saxbe would take a cut from
h1s senator's pay of $42,500
But Byrd said Monday e
thinks lhe constitutional
language IS ''so clear that 1t

can •t be waived,'' and that : " If
the bill is passed then I would
have no alternalive but to vote
agamst Mr. Saxbe "
Sens. Sam Ervin, D·N .C.,
and Ph1llp Hart , D-M1 ch ,
agreed w1th Byrd. But Sen.
Hugh Scott, R-Pa., sa1d, "I
think it (the bill) is perfectly
conslltuional. ' '
The committee heard from
four constitutional law
professors, only one of whom

believed the corrective bill
was constitutional.
Saxbe appeared unruffled.
" I'm a great behever in
destiny," he told UP!. "If I'm
de s tined to be attorney
general, 1t'll work out"
Asked if he was thinking
about asking Nixon to with·
draw his name from con.
s1deratwn, Saxbe sharply
rephed, "No.' '

Two new units planned
at Poston power plant
ATHENS - Columbus and
Southern
Ohio
Electric
Company announced Monday
plans to construct two new
generatmg units at the existing
Poston Generating Station
near here.
The two coal.f1red un1ts,
designated Poston No. 5 and 6,
would each have a capacity of
375,000 kilowatts and a com·
bined cost of approximately
$220 million.
Fred V. Stine, vice president
of Generation and Transmission at Columbus and
Southern, announced that "an
application for construction
permtts has been made to the
Ohio Environmental Protec-

NEEDSTREETS~LEAR

The Middleport police
department announced today
all cars must be off Pearl and
Lmcoln Sts. Wednesday
morning by 7 a.m. Street
surfacing will begin at that
time. Any cars on those two
streets will have to be towed
away.

lion Agency and complete
plans are contingent upon therr
approval "
•
Stine explained that 11 takes
approximately five to six years
to construct coal-fired umts
and the Poston add1tion 1s part
of Columbus and Southern's
overall effort to satisfy the
projectrd energy requirements
of 1ts customers m the late 70s
and early 80s.
The two units, very similar m
s1ze and concept to Columbus
and Southern's units 5 and 6
under construction at 1ts
Conesville Generating Station
in Coshocton County, will be
designed to meet Ohio's en·
vironmental regulations.
When completed, the ad·
d1tion of Units 5 and 6 w1ll raise
Columbus and Southern ' s
annual contributwn to property
taxes in Athens County by
approximately $3.6 m111ion
based on current rates of
taxation.
Construction on the new units
is scheduled to begin next
summer. Unit 5 1s expected to
be m operation by 1978 and Umt
6 by 1979.

Stme also outlmed plans to
equip the existing un1ts 1
through 4 at the Poston Stalion
w1th high efficiency electrostatic precipitators to meet
State Air Pollution standards.
" These precipitators w1ll
remove over 99 pet. of the fly
ash particles produced by
burning OhiO coal," he added .
The company's program for
eq¢pping all units m operation
w1th electrostalic precipitators
at its Poston, Conesville and
Piqua generating stations will
begm in 1974 and cost an
estimated $15 million.

GALLIA·ME!GS POST State Highway Commander Ernest Wigglesworth is flanked by two
new patrolmen who joined the local post this week. At nght is Bruce D. Wallace, Middleport.
On left is Lanry Evans, 22, a native of Nelsonville. Wallace graduated from the Ohio Patrol
Academy's 98th class last Thursday. Evans graduated from the Academy in October and
served ~n the staff at Wilmington nea_r Cincinnati before his transfer to the Gallia-Meigs 'post.
Evans IS mamed to the former Sh~rley Pyles, Racme. They presently reside in Racine.
Wallace is married to the former Gloria Buck. They have one son. The GaUia-Meigs Post now
has 13 uniformed offiCI!rs, an all-time high for the post in Its 4().year history.

DOWN TO 3 CANDLES
Middleport Mayor John
Zerkle said today that due to
the energy crisis special
holiday lighting In the village
will be limited to three
lighted candles, one at each
entrance to the village and
one in the business section.

E·R UNIT TO MEET
The regular bi-monthly
busmess meetmg of the
Pomeroy E·R squad w11l be
held Wednesday evemng due to
Thanksgiving on Thursday.
Officers will be elected.
MRS. HARLEY HURT
The Middleport E·R squad
was called a~ 2:35 a .m. today
for. Mrs. James Harley who
·was taken to Holzer Medical
Center w1th a possible broken
hlp.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
Carl
Greenlees, Pomeroy; Harry
Krautter, Minersville; Leo
Vining, Pomeroy; Jeanette
Duffy, Syracuse; Okey Bennett, Parkersburg; W1mfred
Carpenter, Lexington; Ray
Barber, Reedsville. •
DISCHARGED
Effie
Watson, Rema Chafin.

Union Terrace
to get water
Pomeroy councll Monday
night agreed to let the Leading
Creek Conservancy District
furnish water to residents on
Union Terrace.
Mayor Donald Collins ex·
plamed that Charles Legar of
the board of public affairs
asked hun to learn council's
desires m the matter of who
would serve the area,
Pomeroy, or the Leading Creek
Distr1ct.

It was noted that there are
stx to seven homes in the area
and it would cost ap.
proximately $62,000 to get
water to them,
Although council agreed to
let the Leading Creek district
service the residents, it was
stipulated there could be no
expansion without council's
approval.
Unon Terrace is generally
(Continued on Page 8)

President Nixon handed powers to meei crisis
the President can:
WASHINGTON (UPI) The National Energy
~mergency Act of 1973, as approved Monday by the Senate,
g1ves the President the power to:
- Order gasoline rationing;
-Set up ratiorung of an) ot her fuel he considers scarce
during the emergency;
- Require power plants using "cleaner" fuels such as
natural gas or low-&lt;iuUur oils, to convert to "dirtier" fuels
such as high~ulfur oil or coal, when the convenion is
possible;
- Offer Incentives for use of mass transit and other
efficient modes of trausportatlon such as car pools;
- Hold up for the time belug certain clean air
requirements, to accommodate the emergency use of
"dirtier" fuels;
- Direct that oil wells on federal lands be produced at
their maximum efficient rate;
- Order a halt to exports of oil products considered
scarce;
.
- Limit tbe amount of energy businesses use;
- Make arrangements with other nations to alleviate
United Slates fuels problems.
'

WASHINGTON ( UP!)- The
Senate has voted Pres1dent
Nixon the sweeping powers he
requested to deal w1th the
energy crisis, and the admimstralion was reported constdermg a plan to ban Sunday
gasoline sales.
The Senate passed the
energy emergency bill, 78 to 6,
Monday. If approved by the
House it would allow Nixon to
ration gasolme and other fuels,
lun1t energy use Dy business
'
relax clean a1r rules and curb
oil exports.
Meanwhile, a Cabinet-level
admm1stration task force, was
reported by The Washmgton
Pos t to have recommended to
President NIXon Monday that
he ban sale of gasoline from 9
p m Saturdays until midnight
Sundays in order to discourage
Sunday dnving .
The Post sa1d the plan also
called for a ll).gallon limit on
gasoline sales per vehicle from

.

•

midnight Fndays to 9 p.m.
Saturdays to make it harder to
gas up ahead of tlffie for a
Sunday dr1ve. The proposals
were sa1d to have been made
by the Special Energy Action
Group, headed by NIXon's
energy adviser John A Love,
25 Per Cent on Weekends
About 25 per cent of the
nation's gasoline consumption
occurs on weekends, accordmg
tO the government.
The Post quoted sources as
saymg Love would announce
withm 10 days a plan to
allocate home heating oil to the
nation 's 100,000 distributors.
The Senate-passed bill allows
Nixon to order rat10mng of
gasoline or any other fuel. He
could ban export of any scarce
fuel. He could order certain ml
wells to be allowed to flow
faster than their rated efflc~ent
capacity.
He could force power plants
that ca n sWitch from "clean"

'

but scarce fuels to "dirty" but
plentiful ones to do so
He could ease up on clean-air
requirements.
He could set a specific
re&lt;luction of energy use by
businesses, He could provide
mcentives for car pooling and
use of mass trans1 t.
If the bill passes the House
and Nixon signs it, he would be
required to outline a nationwide
rationing and conservation plan
able to cut energy use by 10 per
cent within 10 days and at least
25 per cent within a month, But
he would not be required to
impose it .
Other Energy Developments
In other Washmgton energy
developments Monday :
- Treasury Secretary George
P . Shultz said h1s " instmct is
against" rationmg but uthe
problem is such that we will
have to take some sharp and
decislve acuon .''
- The White House said its

Christmas lighting will be
sharply reduced . The Pentagon .
said 1ts 10 assistant secretaries
of defense w1ll give ' up their
Chrysler limousines for more
economical cars.
- Agriculture Secretary Earl
L. Butz sa1d 1t would be useless
to cut off wheat sales to the
Arab nations in retaliation for
the ml boycott.
...Spokesmen for the tran·
sportation industry said that
despite the fuel shortage,
Thanksgiving holiday travelers
should encounter " no special
problem."
- Pos tmaster General Elmer
T. Klassen told Congress the
energy crisis could seriously
d1srupt detivery of Christmas
mail.
LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown
Pomeroy Tuesday at 11 a.m.
was 6l degrees under partly
SUO•lY skies . ·
;

,j
n

I,
•

I

�.vo.AN'K~&lt;w•...• • ....... ,_.~ ••••· ·~·&gt;"·bo;o;•.•;o.....-,•••,•;:..~;-~-!'~:-:~

Vo'"6'··.-.-.·.·,·N·'~ ~C OOfO ~~A•.AA.w.•n,w.-....,.,•,·.-,-.•,•.-.•.•.•.?,•,•,•:•: ;t:•,·,•,•,•,•.;·:·:"::_._.~.::;;~Ht-.v.....-...&lt;::• ·'Y.- • -:,.•••-..;'1!·;.;.-f.'•CA.o!o.- •
&lt;;,o,•.•.•.•.•,•,•,•o'o'~•'•
;~·~~-· ·~V&lt;J,"o'•'•..-.•,•.•,, • • • o'O'o o •' • • -• .~ •

~

• ••• ' ' ' • ' '

3- The Daily Sentinei,Middleoort-Pomerov. 0 Nov. 2fi,l973

~

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

A message of. thankfulness
,IIY Hap P. JtlrRI

tenbach; back row, I tor, Debbie Osborne, Jeannie Harrison,
Tonya Keebaugh, Barbara Fultz, Vickie Manley, Judy Owen,
Esther Lowery, June Ann Wamsley, Rhonda Hudson, Trudy
Roach, and Marcia Dillard.

TO OPEN SOON - These 18 dancers wlll open the 20th
annual musiCal of the B1g Bend Minstrel Assocmtion at 8:10
p m Saturday at the Me1gs High School. They are, front row,
I to r, Sandy Curtis, Teresa Taylor, Anita King, Teresa
Wildermuth, Becky Thowa s, Mem Ault, Debbie Har·

NQ end of oil embargo seen
By United Press International
A top energy adviSer warned
Monda y that
the
ad·
mtrustration IS considering a
ban on SUnday driVIng m the
Uruted States. The warning
came just before the Senate
voted to g1ve PfesJdent Nucon
the emergency powers he
wants to deal with the energy
cmas.
There appeared to he no
relief m Sight from Arab oil
producers, who clamped an
embargo on shipments of oll to
the United States for this
country's support of Israel m
the 1973 Middle East war They
vowed a gam Mondsy they
won't relax the embargo
Britam
Monday
cut
dehvenes of all mam oil
products by 10 per cent ef.
fectlve today and asked drivers
to hmtl weekend pleasure
drivmg and observe a
nabonwtde 50 mile an hour
speed limit.
In Germany , Economtcs
M1ruster Hans Fndertchs announced a ban on all private
dr1vmg for the next four
Sundays , and cut the speed
limit on all roads to offset the

shortage of Arab 01!.
Japan Mounts Offensive
Japan mounted a diplomatic
offensiVe to get more Arab oil,
but Arab d1plomais ms1sted
Japan must break diplomatic
relations With Israel to he
exempted from the boycott.
" Japan cannot he lp us
militarily, so the second th10g
to do " to cut relations with
Israel, " said Saudi Arabian oil
mmister, Sheikh Ahmed Z.
Yamam
One energy speclalist, Dr
Quentin Looney, satd Ameri·
cans won't help the energy
crisis even 1f they turn off the~r
electric lights and drive under
50 m.p.h.
Looney sa1d If industry
doesn 't conserve energy, the
President's energy con ·
serva()on program will fail.
" If mdustry could cut energy
consumption by 5 per cent,"
Looney told members of the
Alabama Textile Manufac·
turers Association in Mont·
gomery Monday, "that would
amount to turning out all the
lights in America for a year."
Senate Passes Bill
By a vote of 78 to 6 the Senate

pa ssed the emergency energy
b11l Monday. If approved by the
House 1t would allow Nixon to
rahon gasoline and other fuels,
Hmit energy use by busmess,
relax clean a1r rules and curb
otl exports
Olarles DiBona, an aide to
energy adviser John Love,
warned Congress' Jomt Economic Commlttee a natonwide
han on Sunday drivlllg was
among "very real posa
Slbihties." He said the ad·
muustration is also studymg
cutting off fuel for pnvate
boats and airplanes, closing
serv1ce stations and othPr

}

The

•

l

I

The Washington Post report·
ed today that a pres1denhal
task force headed by Love
recommended that the sale of
gasol10e be banned from 9 p.m.
Saturdays until midmght Sun·
days to discourage Sunday
driving The Post said the plan
calls for a !().gallon lurut on
gasoline sales per vehicle from
midnight Fridays to 9 p.m.
Saturdays to make 1t harder to
gas up ahead of time for a
Sunday dr1ve.

Center warm m winter, cool in the
men and womer1 on th1s stclff. They (llso summer, always properly lighted and
care for Davis Hall where the School of every piece of eqwpment working ef.
Nursmg lS located and the old Cedar r c1ently as IS necessary to opera te such a
1
Street facihty The HousekeP.pmg staff sizable
complex is the responsibility of
acc.:ounts for over 122,000 working hours a
Paul Nibert and hiS staff of 20 men in
year .
physical plant operatiOns. Eight licensed
Nothmg ts more cheerful for a
men are necessary m the boller room On
patlent each mormng than cnsp, amNibert's staff are carpenters, pipe fitmaculate bed !mens and sparkling while ters
plumbers,
electnc1ans,
towels and washcloths. The hospital
la undry staff of 19 full time employees refn'geratton and electronic specialists,
~.
headed by Don Shaw makes posSible the welders, pamters and grounds men .
An emergency power plant ~
dally fresh bedding and towels. So far,
automah
caily operates within five :~
this year the hospital laundry has handled over 1'h milhon pounds of !mens, seconds of a total power failure, for
averagmg over 110,000 pounds a month. protection of pallents 10 the operating ~
In fact, 1t prepares dally 310 lmen bed room, coronary and mtens1ve care areas, :3
packs, as they are called, mcludmg and thetr own rooms. This staff, :=-:
bedspread, sheets, pillowcase, hand and responsible seven days a week around
bath towels, wash cloth and pat1ent the clock, also mamta10s the old hospital, ~
gown, all m plastic bags. They also Davis Hail arid the Sycamore St. ·'.•.
bwldmg.
~«
launder 3,000 staff umforms a month
ANOTHER
SEVEN
DAY
a
week,
;
NOURISHING AND TASTY meals
three t1mes each day are extremely around the clock serv1ce at the medical :
unportant to every patient, and to all the center lS central servlce which sterilizes ~
people who work at Holzer Med1cal and processes mediCal and surgiCal '
Center. This is under the superVISIOn of eqwpment and supplies. There are 116
Mrs. Edna Hackler and her hard working carts diSpatched dally to the emergency
food service staff of 58 Many hands and room, operating rooms, mtensive and
hours of dedicated work are necessary to coronary care areas, medtcal staff
plan and prepare vaned menus that exammmg rooms and each nursmg Wlit
patients select, and prov1de dally meals so that the staff always has complete
for 265 patients and the several hundred proviSIOns for all pat1ents. In addlUon, '
men and women who are employed at the spec1al case carts are prepared for each ·
pallent who IS undergoing surgery. Mrs. &gt;:
hosp1tal.
Over 200,000 general d1et meals for Barbara Shelton and the 20 members of ~
patients are prepared and served m a her staff are responSible for central
~
year at Holzer Me&lt;hcal Center, and over serv1ce functiOns.
AS YOU CAN SEE , there IS only
100,000 special d1et meals. In the
cafeteria, almost a quarter of a m1llion room to mention a few of the many •
employee and VlSttor meals are served m people involved in supporting the ~
a year. Add the 12,000 meals m the operatwn of the hosp1tal. In future !=l
doctors' d10ing room and 12,000 student columns, we 'll go mto some of these
nurse meals, and that tells you why departments 10 greater detail and ~~
abnost 130,000 man-hours of labor are mention other areas that space does not
~
reqwred m Ute food servlce department perm1 t here
Th1s total blendmg of talent,
Mrs Mary Akers, the TherapeutiC
trammg,
dedtcation and expenence on :
D1etic1an VISits patients who have had
spec1al d1ets prescnbed by thetr the part of the staff, together with our
phySICian to asSist 10 planmng meals tha t med1cal and nursmg staffs, g1ves us the
will make such a diet as appeahng as ab1hty to prov1de the best total care for ~
possible. Also pallenls are Informed and our pat~ents . We are grateful for these ~
mstructed concernmg proper diets they capable people who altogether provide
are to follow at home after diScharge the fmes t health care dehvery possible
for all of you who live m the southeastern
from the hospital.
KEEPING THE ENTIRE Med1cal Ohw Valley

1

:i

!il

i

:*

'I

LAFF- A- DAY

NOTICE

Caroline Kennedy will be
16 soon; John nearing 13

NEW YORK (UP!) - caroline and John Kennedy are
personable, natural teen-agers
who seem to bear no scars of
the tragedy that marred their
childhood 10 years ago.
caroline, who will be 16 on
Nov. 'll, and John, whose 13th
birthday IS Nov. 25, are lear-:-~:::::::::·:·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:=:·:=:·:·:·:~:::::::::::::::::::=:::::;::::~:;::_!:::::::::::::~:::;::;:;::::·:·:·:&gt;:&gt;:·:·~·~ ning to know theli' murdered
father, President John F.
I.:
i:~ Kennedy' better as they grow
··· up and talk about him with
members of the family and
by the editor
older friends. Their mother has
I have a recommendation to make to the folks whoever tbey kept the late President's
may be who determined the lumen power and type of yellow memory evergreen for them,
flashing lights at the intersection of county road 5 and the Rt. 7 recalhng often the happy
bypass in Bradbury. On the next good dark mght, clear, cloudy, events 10 thmr two years, 10
ram or snowswept, come down what used to be known as Murray months and two d9ys in the
Hill. You w1ll be approaching the lights and the mtersechon from White House.
the north . I dare you to turn left to enter road 5 cleanly, WithOUt
The Kennedy children have
difficulty , m the blinding yellow flashes . The hghts are much too had several surrogate fathers.
lw1ght 10 the eyes of oncom10g dr1vers . The problem IS not a$ Sen. Edward M. Kennedy and
serwus approaching the mtersect10n slightly uphill from the New York stockbroker Murray
south and turning nghtward into road 5. But from the north 1t is McDonnell came closest to
no easy maneuver
providing them w1th a father
Somebody, some lime soon will be clobbered at that m· figure prior to Mrs. Kennedy's
tersect10n. The State Highway Department Will have to accept at marrwge to Aristotle Onassis,
least part ofthe responsibility if and when It happens .
whose doting role is like that of
a grandfather.
AN AUTUMN JOURNEY (continued) :
Mrs. Kennedy's ma10 con·
The deepenmg gasoline CriSIS already has made my cern has been to guard her
resolution of October to travel leisurely 3,000 miles mto 13 states children from being spoiled
to the east and northeast positively brilliant. The way things are through over10dulgence and
gomg m the gasoline cnsis, thiS year may have been the last that overexposure. At the same
gasolme for such a "vacation " was at reasonable pnces, if at all. time she has not wanted them
VISits to Gettysburg's Civil War battle!lelds, Monticello, to feel that they are isolated or
home of Thomas Jefferson; the Vermont mounta10 home of objects of undue public
Mana von Trapp, Provmcetown on Cape Cod, and Newport, R.I. curioSity. They. accept a cer·
to walk through Cornelius Vanderbilt's summer cottage( ! ) of 70 tam amount of celebrity with
rooms may be muumum requirements of a bona ftde vacation grace, but John does not Uke
from the routmes of earning food for the table and a roo£ bemg photographed.
overhead. Those experiences - among others - were mspll'mg
Mrs.Kennedy
Kennedyfamily
has departed
from
custom
enough.
But well1t may be sa1d that my party ate Its way through by enrolling her children in
those 13 states. This was inspiring to the gastronomic sense but non-Cathohc schools and
no expenence recommended to ~a welght watcher.
schools that draw students
Probably the happ1est evenlllg of dining was found at the from more than one economic
Pheasant Lounge 10 Rutland, Vermont. But along the Atlantic
Coast the selection of sea foods in even ordinary restaurants has class.
caroline's life as an lith
to rank high m the notes of a hungry traveler.
grader at a hoarding school in
In this category , the 1620 Restaurant in Plymouth, Mass. was Concord, Mass., is almost
typiCal . catermg to the tounst trade, (and what Will happen tO normal except for the Secret
these bus mess places when automobiles are grounded?) the 1620
Restaurant offered 11 beef entrees and one each featurmg
•
poultry and ham .
Dai~
On the other hand, the menu listed 20 seafood deiJ.ghts inDEVOTED TO THE
c!udli]ga Turf n' Surf special of brmled filet mignon and New
INTERI.STOF
MEIGS MASON AREA
England lobster tall ($7.95).
CHESTER L TANNEHILL,
e~~:ec . Ect.
The standard offerlllgs, at prices descending from $7.50 to
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
City Edltor.
$3.95, were: baked stuffed lobster, broiled lobster, hot bmled
Publlstled delly tnr;ctpl
S.turdey by n1e OhiO Velley
lobster, lobster newburg or saute, Alaskan King 0-ab horizon
Pubt l ~l'tlng Compeny, 111
casserole, baked Alaskan King Crab, pan-fried rainbow Brook
Court St , Pomeroy, Ohio,
A5769 Bullnn Orrlce Phone
trout, assorted seafood brochette, baked stuffed native fdlet of
992 2156 Ed !lor lei Phone t92
2157,
sole, baked scallop coquille - en casserole, shrimp scampi 1620,
Second clus postage peld
et Pomeroy, Ohio
broiled native schrod, fried clams or scallops, jumbo !ned
Nlflonel edvert l slng
repreuntetlve Bort lnelll
shrunp, broiled bay scallops, seafood newburg, broiled swordfish
GaiiiiQI'Ier , Inc , 12 Eut A2nd
or halibut steak, baked stuffed shrlffip and an assorted seafood
St , Nt-w York ,Ntw York
Subscr i pt i on retel
platter (clams, scallops , shrunp and fillet of sole).
Delivered by carrier where
eveHatlit 55 cents per w.ek ,
This listing should move the JUices in anyone w1th a taste for
By Motor Route whert
carrier
lervlce
not
seafoods.
8¥tlleblt One month, S2 By
But it occurs tome it will be wasted on one of my frtends , the
me 111n OtiiO 1nct w ve , one
Yttr.l1, , Six mMtM;, I 50,
worthy NoJtn Swaekhamer of Mason - one time basketball
Thr..
montj'lt. ,
U 50
E11ewher1 Ill yeer: ''x
coaeh - who teaches history these days at Meigs Htgh.
montlll 1t.50. """ month•.
"
IYbKrlptiGn prlu lft
It Is wasted because Swack's favonte lS not there . And what
CIUdtt. SunCIIY Tlmtl ·
S.ntlntl
Ia his -food dbh? "Gimme a pickerel," says Swack, "'benever
he Ia ....... ~·· • ..., .-vee~.

':· th e da y after . . .

businesses on Sunday, and
closing pubh c parks to
automobiles.

Ex-dve Vlte President
Holzer Medical Coalet
At thlS seaSOO of the year, we become
more aware of the many things we have
to be thankful for and realllllt's unportan t to take the time to eapress our ap·
preciat10n to thoso at the hospital who
help us 1n 110 many ways.
Thi! partteular . - it 110med most
appropriate to show our gratitude to
many memben of our hoopltal s!Jiff on
whom we rely every day of the year to
keep Holzer Medical Center open and
operatmg.
Let me teU you about 110me of these
loyal staff members whll8t supporting
services are so important In providmg
the finest patient care poutble as they
work along with the medical and nurs10g
staffs.
THE NURSE AIDES ON each patient
floor pay important personal attention to
our patienta as they help to make them
more comfortable, aaiat them when they
need to get in or out of bed, sometimes
feed them, and are always close by to
respond to a patient's call. Our aides do
many of the so-called "little tlllngs" that
mean a great deal to a patient. Thelf
concern, warm smile, !riendly ways and
assuring words contribute substantially
to speedy recovery.
When patients call the nursing
station, using the intercom iii their room,
the voice that all.!Wers Is that of the ward
clerk. In addition to anawerlng every
call, the ward clerk helpa maintain
patient eharls and tran.sCrlbes orders
the nursing ahd medical staff leave for
each patient and diatributu them to the
proper area. The ward clerk in her
cherry redjacketlseasy tooee. Mrs. Ann
Enochs Is their supervisor.
THE HOUSEKEEPING STAFF
assures that the more than aGO,OOO square
feet of space m the entire Medkal Center
" kept opoU....Iy cleah. This lJICiudes
ma10talmng and shampooing carpeting
plus necessary spot cleaning numerous
times each day; cleanin&amp; walls and
ce1hngs, and daily trash disposal. In the
sewing room, located at the old hospital,
special items needed at the medical
center are made to order. Mrs. Dorothy
HarUey directs the ef!orta of almost 60

Sentinel

•

JIMMIE'S PASTRY SHOP
In Middleport Will Be

SefVlce agent who guards her. evidence of buckling down to
She hves in a dormitory near his studies this year. His
the Concord Academy, takes a mother helpo him with his
full course of studies and homework.
sports, and enJoys malts w1th
John's taU frame hints that
the girls at Brigham's ice his physique will be like h1l
cream parlor. She exc1tes no father's. He Is brunette and
..JipeClal lllterest 10 the com· goodlooking with brown eyet
mun1ty and has as many set far apart. His look is more
friends as anyone at the school. Bouvier than Kennedy. He
She is an attractiVe blue- talks sports a great deal and
eyed blonde with the Kennedy followed every hit and pileh of
look quiet like her mother, and the recent World Series con·
studious. She IS a camera bug test. His blgest intenlt in
and an excellent horsewoman football is the Harvard team.
and tennis player, But she
John loves his do1a-a
didn't care for her ballet Pekingeseandacockwpnlel
studies and dropped the clas- -and chocolatell he bup at
ses. When she graduates from Ellen's, a shop em upper
Concord llll975 she will attend Madison Ave111e. Mrs. 'lnas81.1
Miss Porter's School, her would like to send Jo.,n to a
mother's abna mater in Far· swnmer camp but difficulty in
mington, Conn.
providing security in such a
Her vacations already are setting has prevented II. The
shifting from carefree child· Onass1ses have been par·
hood summers to experiences ticularly apprehelllive about
of involvement. Last summer, John since the apooure of a
caroline turned up livmg w1th plot by a 1111111 of GreeD and
a family in Clairfield, Tenn., a,n West Ge!'1ll8118 to kidnap him
Appalachian mmmg towrl, for ransom in 11172.
while she helped a !Ibn crew
The Keooedy childna bave.
document the lives of coal showed an above &amp;VItlll
miners. She wore patched blue mterest in pollticll. CaniiJnt
jeans, attended country music campaigned door.to.door flit
concerts with local teenagers John Kerry, U anti:.War eaiidland impressed Cfuirfielders as date for CongteN from MUIIi"just plam folks".
chusetts. John visited the
John 18 lJI the fifth grade at campaign headquarten of WU.
Manhattan's Collegiate School liam Vanden Htlm!l, a falllib'
and 1s one of the liveliest and friend and candidate forMa,.;
most popular members of his hattan district attorney, Ialit
class. Fun has often come November to &amp;et literature to
before work in John's school distribute at his school.
career,
he ___________
shows more
____but
....-;;;;;,.
.,... _______ -&amp;,
Letters of opinion are welcomed. Tbey IIMakl be ' than 3GO words long (or be subject to ndllelloa bJ a.
editor) and must be signed with tbe olpea'o lllldroio.
Names may be withheld upon puhlk&gt;.U.. . . . . . ., •
request, names will be disclosed. Letlel'lloi.ldf lie 1111...
laste, addressing Issues, nol personaUIIee.
:

£) 1

!

,... ~

~~~../~~.. -

• • • ~.. lMUVf.,:
..--.
Clinic supported by sorority

Saturday, Nov. 22-23-24

o•.. - - - - .. . , _.. _ _ ,..

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU 24th

MEAT SPECIALS

DUNCAN HINES

SMOKED

f:~E-~::.~~.:~,6 gc
SUPERIOR'S

ASSORTED

~~~. . . . . . . ~~:.99~
DAIRY BUYS
BLUE BONNET

OLE0.......... 2~~~- 79'
FAMILY SIZE
BROUGHTON

~~:;:E~~. . . . . .89~
FROZEN SPECIALS

I
=~.
~~~?~
.............
49'
I
I

FROSTY ACRES

I
I

STRAWBERRIES
1o-oz.

Norman Amsbary, Mildred Karr, Velma Rat, Vera c:Mir,
Ann Rupe, Lois Rosenbaum, Mary G. Plcke.., Clarlei
Krautter, Shirley Custer, Eleanor Thomas, Ruby Baer,
Margaret Follrod, Jean Werry, Jane Walton, Reva Vaughan,
Rose Sisson, June VanVranken.

RED
RADISHES

32 oz.

WAGNER'S

ORANGE DRINK

39e
Pkg.

COFFEE
18" ALCOA

1;\. ,

I

DO

CRANBERRY

2For

Jelly

STOKELY
29

" G t gant1c

appropnate ad1ect1ves for

the large wha les

wtt1 c h
we1gh more than 2 dozen
elephants! In 1926. a blue

whale that was we1ghed
piece by piece, totaled up to
}36 tons It was 89 ft long ,
with 62 tons of .Pleat, 28 tons
of blubber and a 25 ton
skeleton To support itself,

2/59'

oz.

a whale consumes food by
the ton, in a proce ss that

could almost be called

KELLOGG

CROUIEIIES

or

are ha rdl y

oz.

7

" harvesting " 1t. Wh1l e
feeding, the whale w1ll gulp

39'

60 81 gallons of water. and
then partly close Its mouth
Then using tfs 3 ton tongue
to squeeze water through a
curtain of hair like fringe In
front of its mouth, the
whale will harvest the
"krill" , a shnmp like
Crusta cean on wh1 c h 11
feeds from the water
1
'Giganhc" IS also hardly

FRANKS

STUFFED OUVES

6

oz.

CRACKERS

r----- COUPON ---·--····

39~

the adjective to descnbe
the work load performed
by a Miracle water refiner

It does the work of four
appliances In one - It
clarifies, softens, filters,
and polishes your tap
water, givmg you sparkling
refreshing reftned water In

I
I

with coupon

I
I

return

"Elephantine" IS
hardly the adjective to
And

NEW YORK

un,ted

·:·~

COLUMBUS ( UP!)
''There are a lot of bananas
hanging on this one,"
says
Ohio
State
as·
sistant coach Esco Sark·
kmen, who, as a player
and coach, has gone th rough 31
previous Ohio State-Michigan
clashes
Referring to Saturday's B1g
Ten showdown game at Ann
Arbor. Sarkkinen said, ''I've
been around to see a lot of
Mlchigan.()hio State games,
but I don't th10k I've seen so
many awards up for grabs."
Besides Ute conference title
and Rose Bowl tflp, there is the
prospect of a national cham·
pwnsh1p for the No. 1 rated
Buckeyes or the No 4 ranked
Wolvermes, a chance for the
Helsman award for several
playe r s in the natwnally
televised game, and also ali·
Amencan recognition for
others.
"Obvlllously, this all points
to a nother classic event,"
Sarkkinen sa1d.
Sarkkinen, who was an allAme rican end at Ohio State 10
1939, desc r~bed Saturday's upcommg game as "a hammer
and anVIl chorus "
''There is not going to be a lot
of scoring," he sald
" It will be dec1ded during the
full GO m10utes. Some tune dur·
10g that tune, the momentum
w11l change, either by a break
or a great play."
Sarkkinnen, who was Coach
Woody Hayes' No. I scout
until the B1g Ten did away with
scouting conference opponents
Uus season, sald Mtchigan
"can't be any higher than we
will be," and added, "you don't
get to be 10-0 and 9.{) by luck.
We both have great teams"
Meanwhile, Hayes told the
b1ggest noon press gather10g of
the year Monday that his
team's inJury SltuatiOn was "a
little more aggravating than
usual thiS week, although not
senous."
Ind ep endent W1nter
Cage League
Stand1ngs
lUIQ! S

Ct t1 ze ns Nal' l
El b e rf c! d s
Good year

P u ll m s
N et s

W
3
2
2
1
1
0

L Pts
0 30 7
1 264
1 22 5
2 253
2 198
3 184

He refused, however, to ffis.
close the nature of any of the
10)ur1es, saymg "a good gener·
al doesn't announce hts weaknesses, so we won't armounce
our in]unes."
Hayes did say that everybody who played 10 last Saturday's 55-13 win over Iowa
would be ready to play agalJist
the Wolverines and that W10ghack Brian Baschnagel and
safety Rich Parsons, held out

Lee upstages Tarkenton
By DAVID MOFFIT
UPI Sports Writer
ATLANTA (UP! ) - Atlanta
quar terback Bob Lee must
have p1cked up a few pomters
when he understudied Fran
Tarkenton at Minnesota last
year
Lee stole a page from
Tarkenton's book Monday night
and hiS scrambling enabled the
Falcons to hand the Vikmgs
their ftrst loss of the season, a
20-14 upset tha t could vault

R

,.,

240

275

deCISIVe , WlBffiffiOUS declSIOD

over Emile Griffith of New
York Monday mght 10 a 12·
round non-title middleweight
bout.
Gnffith , g1ving 13 years
away to the 22-year-old
abongme, fought a skillful and
courageous fight, employing
all the expenence of his 93
professtonal contests.
· But the strength-sappmg
power of Mundine's punches
and Griffith's need to chase
after the Australian to keep up
a good scor10g rate told 10 the
end, and Griffith managed to
win only one round- the ninth.
There were no knockdo\vns.

LICENSE APPROVED
WASH!NGTON (UP!) - The
Federal Commerce Com·
miSSIOn anQOunced today the
granting of a license cover10g a
new am radio station for
WWGL by Radio Gallon Inc.

NFL Stand1ngs
By Untted Press International
American \Conference
East
w I. I pet
9
1 0 900
x M1am•
5 5 0 500
Buffalo
N Y Jet s
3 7 0 300
New E ng lan d
3 7 0 300
2 8 0 200
Balt1m ore
Central
w I. I pet
P i ttsburgh
8 2 0 800
Cleveland
6 3 1 650
6
0 600
Cm c1 nnat1
1
0 100
Hou ston
West
w I. t pet .
K an sas C1ty
6
J
1 650
Den ver
~
3 2 600
Oakland
5 4
I 550
San Otego
2 7
I 250
Nahona I Conference
East
w l. I pet
Dallas
7 3 0 700
Wa sh tngto n
7 3 0 700
St L ou IS
3 6 1 350
Ph ll adelph ta
J 6 1 350
N Y G1ants
2 7 1 250
Central
w I. I pet
x Mtnnesota
9 1 0 900
4 5
I 450
Detro•f
Green Bay
3 5 2 400
Ch 1cago
3 7 0 300
west

•
'

w

I

I

pet.

Los Angeles
8 2 0
Atlanta
7
3 0
New Or l ean s
4
6
0
San F ranc1sco
J 7 0
X-CI Inched diVISIOn fltle
Monday's Results
Atlanta 20 Mmnesota 1.:1
(Only game sched11led l
Thursday's Games
Washington at Oetro tt
M1am 1at Dallas
(Only games scheduled )
Sunday's Games
Buffalo at Balt1more

800

700
400
300

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
and
Uoyd
Mclaughlin

FOSTER DRAWS CROWDS
JOHANNESBURG,
South
Afrtca (UP!) - World light
heavyweight champiOn Bob
Foster of the Umted States
drew large crowds-Payfng $2
a head..:..to watch his workout
Monday m preparation for a
title defense here against South
Afnca 's Pierre Foune on Dec.
1
Foster's workout was his
only public appearance 10 the
city before the fight, which is
expected to draw a crowd of
50,000. The rest of the time he 1s
confined to his hotel because he
is enthusiastically mobbed
whenever he steps onto the
street.

s1dehnes, then lofted the ball to
Edd ie Ray to g1ve AUanta a 17·
7lead with 1:10 left to play 10
the f••st half.
"I really thought I was going
to go down," said Lee "I saw
Edd1e stop and I wanted h1m to
go on I think I gave h1m a
wave, I don't even know tha t I
remember hop10g they wouldn' t
notice h1m."
Ray Calehes Ball
Ra y, who didn't eve n know
he'd he playing unbt he learned

shor tly before game t1me that
Art Malone was still IOJured,
caught the ball m the end zone.
"I didn't know what was
gomg to happer.," sa1d the 235·
pound fullback "! JUS! kept
backing up and 11 turned out
that Bob had enough lime to
get fld of the ball."
The wm was the SIXth
straight for the Falcons, who
are now 7-3 and tra1l Los
Angeles by a game m the NFC
West The VIkings, 9·1, had
alre&amp;dy sewed up the NFC
Central for the fifth lime 10 SIX
years
Atlanta's chances of catchmg
the Rams appea r slim, even 1f
they wm their four remammg
games . But the Falcons are m
tram wh1ch resulted in Rio tnumph .
a fight w1th Dallas and
twinpointers, the Redmen held
Rto
Grande
(68 )
Washington, both also 7-3, for
sna ugh , 5 0 10 , Ba r tr am , 5
on for good, outsconng the oF au
that wild-card playoff berth as
10 , Bol ~• ng e r , 4 o a, No e. 8 o
Senators 37-33 10 the !mal half 16 Stewart. 4 1 9 , Swm ehart. best runnerup.
l 0 2, Hart, 1 0 2. La mbe rt, 3 J .
of action.
If the Falcons are the wild·
9 , Morg an , 1 0 2 TOTALS 32 4
From the field, RIO hit 42.7
ca rd team, thetr first playoff
Lander 164) H u r s t 12.4 ,
pet., connecting on 32 of 75 Dudl
foe would be the V1kings at
ey 1 0 2. Stacy 3 3 9 ,
attempts. RIO was four of seven Sm tth 9 5 23, Graham 7 2 16 , Minnesota and V1kmg receiver
on 3 2 a, Goodw 1n 1 0
from the foul circles Rock Henders
John Gilham hopes they make
2, TOTALS 25 · 14 -64 .
Hill's J1m Stewart hauled down
Score at half.
1t because he wants another
R!O 31. Land e r 31
II rebounds for RIO, Noe added
Otf •c 1als Co s by and shot at them
!1ve. Lander outrebounded Rio, Roa ch , Ham11ton Chapt er
"! want to meet them agam
34-23. The visitors had 26 turn·
down the r oad," said G1lham,
overs, Rlo 19. Lander hlt 14 of
who caught one of the V1kmgs'
19 free throws.
touchdown passes Monday
In the prelunmary game, the
mght "I'm glad 11 happened
OU.Ch1llicothe Branch downed
(the loss) when it didn't count.
the Rio Jayvees, 111-90.
Tell 'em to come on . I want
Mr. and Mrs. Dohrman them bad. I never look for no
Next Rio outmg is at home
against Tiffin University on Reed, Kim and Kirk, and Mrs. team but I want them to win
Monday, Nov. 26. Game time IS Alvm Reed spent a weekend that w1ld card "
w1th Mr. and Mrs. John Dupre
8 p.m.
VIkings Pick Up 82 Yards
Box score of Monday's and fam1ly at Fairborn. They
The V1k10gs, No. 2 10 NFC
also visited Gary Barnhart and rushing prior to Monday night,
Mrs. Charles Humphrey who piCked up only 82 yards runmng
are patients at Umversity against the Falcons and more
Hospital , Columbus, Oh10
than half of that came in the
K an sas CtfY at Denver
N ew England at Ho uston
Mrs. Bess Webster of Tup· final period . Mmnesota had
San D1ego at Oakland
pers Plams, recently visited only mght yards, that by
P 1tt sburgh at Cl ev el and
Ch ic ago at Mmn esota
Wlth Mr. and Mrs. R E . passing, m the first period and
Los Ang at New Orl ean s
Wllhams, Anderson B Kibble, only 13 yards rushmg m the
NY G1ant s at Philadelph i a
A t l anta at NY Jets
and Mary Kibble, Mrs. Bess
St LOU IS at C1n C.nnafl
Larkms and Mrs . Mabel
{ Only games scheduled )
Monday's Games
Hetzer
Green Bay at San Fran c. sco
Been invited to dinner?
-Mrs. L. Balderson
{Only game scheduled )

"

Present The
Value-Rated

SPECIAL
1973 TORONADO

PLAYERS SELEUI'ED
NEW YORK (UP!) - Stan
homemaker •n d01ng her
Smith, Erik van Dillen 1 Tom
dally chores. For more
Gorman and Marty R1essen
Information about a
have been selected to play m
"whale" of a hme and
money !aver, call 882-2525
the 1973 Davis Cup Challenge
now about a Miracle water
Round for the United States
refiner.
against Australia.
The matches are to be held at,
Cleveland, Nov. 3().Dec. 2.
The U.S., defending champion, already has defeated
082·2525
Mextco,
O!ile, and Rwnama
r
New Haven. W. Va
'-'-!'&lt;
. _......,._..... each by a score
' of 4·1.
'
I

Full power equ1pment, air conditioning , nice
blue finish, blue vinyl roof. only 8,000 miles.

theses

!Tenth Week i

Po,nn

0) en&gt;
2 Alabama ( 9 01 ( 9 )
3 Oklahoma (8 o 1&gt; t31
'5 M
Jch •o•n no o I
Notre Dame (8 01 (1)
1 Oh10 State !9

336
298
263
Z•8

213

6 Penn S1a1e ( 10 OJ
178
1 LSU (9 O&gt;
149
B UCLA (9 II
101
9 Southern cat 18 1 1&gt;
62
10 Nebraska (8 1 1)
39
11 Texas (1 21
13
12 Ar•zona s1 ate 19 1
10
n Texas Tech 19 1 J
7
H Houston (8 I I
6
u M 1am 1, 0 , 10 o&gt;
2
16 &lt;T•e&gt; Tvlane 18 1 )
1
17 {T•e l Kansas {6 J 11
1
Only 11 1eams rece1ved votes

first half.
_
The Falcons had 275 of thelf
347 total yards m the ftrst half
and Van Brockhn sald, " we ran
rtght at them with nothing
fancy " Dave Hampton, who
caught Lee's f~rst touchdown
pass, paced all runn ers w1th 108
yards.
Falcon rook1e NICk Mike·
Mayer m1ssed held goal tr1es of
46 and 26 yards durmg a
~coreless first pertod but later
added f1eld goals of 25 and 49
yards (he's h1t on 23-&lt;Jf-31 ) and
two converswns to ra1se his
NF!.rlead10g scormg to 96
pomts.
V1kmg Coach Bud Grant was
upset by the offic1at10g Monday
mght He was most unhappy
about a cntlCai call la te m the
game after Lee's fumble was
reco vered by the Vikmgs .
Tar kenton passed 23-yards to
Gilham but 1t was r uled that he
fumbled and Atlanta recovered
at lis own 36.
"I was down,'' sa1d Gilliam.
"The Atlanta players took the
ball away "
"The plays the officials make
are more important than the
ones we make ," said Grant. "I
do11't mean that as a criticism,
but it happens that way."

News, Notes

REPORT IN WEEK
GLASGOW, Ky. (UP!)
Federal
Avlahon
Ad·
mimstration off1c1als say
it w1ll
be
at
least
a week before they report the probable cause of
the crash of a small plane here
Sunday which killed two
Cincinnati-area men.

SENATORS SPUT VOTES
WASHINGTON (UP!) - ~
Sen. Robert Taft voted for a
mot1on to kill a nder to the
energy legislation which would
have outlawed busing to
achieve
school
school
desegregatiOn and Sen .
W1lliam Saxhe voted agamst 11
Monday.
The Senate approved the
motion by a 411-39 roll call vote.

Say Thank You
To Your Hostess
Send Her A

everything but
.
,,,
msurance.
Ta'king a tr1p? Stop for
Tnp Acctdent and Luggage
Insurance at the Downmg
Childs Agency Ask for
Credit Card insurance to
cover use of y our cred1t
card 1f lost or stolen

DowningChilds

THANKSGIVING
CENTERPIECE
From•6.00

AGENCY, INC.

DutUey's
59 N. Second St.
Middle ort, o.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

.

Central Operating tompany's
Philip Sporn Plant
New Haven, W.Va.

Has Job Openings For Permanent Employment In The, Following
Skills
Mechanics
Instrument Repairmen
Laborers
We Will Train Unskilled Applicants.
These Jobs Provide Excellent Wages And A Benefits Program Which Includes
Ufe Insurance. Medical Insurance, Disabillity Insurance , -Sick Leave Vacations
'
'
Holiday, And Retirement.

.

Although A Strike Is In Progress, The Company Continues To Operate The Plant.
882-2126

(collect)

BETWEEN THE HOURS OF 7:30 AM TO 4:00. PM

TO ARRANGE AN~ INTERVIEW

•5200

Karr &amp; VanZandt
" You'll like Our Quality Way
. of Doing Business"
992 -5342
GMC FINANCING
POMEROY
Open Evenings Untii6:0G-Til5p.m. Sat.

·I

lntern at ron•l's

Reedsville

APPLICANTS MAY CALL ( 304)

describe the effort fhts
Relined Water saves the

Th~

IUP I ) -

Pro Standings

228
220
227

AUanta 1nto the wild-card ber th
for the NFC playoffs.
Lee and Tarkenton both
threw two touchdown passes m
the contest But the one that
provided the wmnmg pomts
was a 39-yarder by Lee on a
play that Tarkenton thought he
had patented.
The Falcon quarterback, apparently trapped at midfield ,
broke loose from two would-be
tacklers, nearly lost hiS balance
as he stwnbied toward the

io wins second

With three men finishing 10
double figures, Rio Grande
College pulled away from
Lander College 10 the second
half to defeat the VISiting
Senators 68-64 at Lyne Center
m RIO Grande Monday rught.
It was Rio's second victory
over the South Carolina squad
in three days Rio 1s now 2-0 on
the year Lander dropped to ().
2.
Jimmy Noe's 16 pomts led
the Redmen m scor10g. Steve
Bartram and Dean Fausnaugh
each chipped in w1th 10 points.
Rw trailed most of the first
half before knotting the count
at 31-all Just before the 10·
termlSSIOn.
The Redmen began pressing
lll the second half, and after
PA several qwck steals by Bar·

UNANIMOUS DECISION
. PARIS (UP! ) - Tony Mun·
dine of Australia scored a

HE DID AS EXPECTED
SPOKANE, Wash. (UP! ) Oregon's Steve Prefontaine d1d
exacUy what he was expected
to do Monday, w10 his third
NCAA cross-country individual
champiOnship and lead his
team to an overall ftrst-place
f1msh .
Western Kentucky 's NICk
Rose settled for second pla...'e
after leading the field of 220 of
the natlOn's top collegiate
distance runners for five miles
of the siX·nule course. He
fmished f1ve seconds behmd
the wmner, who was tuned m
28 14 8.
Eastern Michigan's Gordon
Minty fuushed third, followed
by defendmg champ Neil
Cusack of East Tennessee
State and Waigwa Wiison of
Texas El-Paso ,.wh•ch finished
second behind Oregon m the
team race.

However • Ohio State has. not
Staub sa 1d if the Wolverines
of Saturday's encounter, aiso
have a defenstve weakness It lS gotten where 1l lS by passmgwould return.
thrown the ball only 10 8
Hayes was unusually calm In the se condary • but quickly havma
... 'b
1 'they
added
are
very
tough
per
cent
of Ule tune thts year.
for the start of MIChigan week
the
run
,,
It
has
been UJe running of
and greeted the newsmen, agalJISt
•
.
.
.
Michigan ranks second to tailback Arclue Griffm, wJth
many of them from out of town,
with · "Are there any questions Oh10 State rn the Big Ten m 1' 265 yards for the season, and
that I'm going to pass over total defense, but the Wolves quarterback Cornelms Greene
are e1ghth in the conference m who have led the Buckeyes
today?"
Greene has rushed for 643
Assistant coach Ralph Staub pass defense.
"I'm quitesuretheyknow we yards nearly equallmg Machi·
gave a rundown of the Michi, •
lb k
should
be
putting
the
ball
m
the
gan
s
leadmg
rusher,
tal
ac
gan defense, wh1ch he called
rur
up
there,
"
Staub
sa1d.
Chuck
Heater,
who
has
654
"a solid Wlit, believe me."

Press

Rating~

Bcarc;I Qf Coaches major c ollege
foot ball ratmgs. wrth number of
ftrsl place votes tn paren

Team

NEW- YORK (Ul'l ) - S'"ometunes 1t's hard to believe ttult
:erry Hanratty is only 25 years old.
It seems abnost like a generation slJice he and Jim Seymour
olazed onto the scene with such success at Notre Dame 10 196(3
bat before his first collegiate season was half-&lt;Jver he was on the
~ver ofTLme Magazme. Yet Ulat was only seven years ago, and
llOSI of the tune since then has not been filled with the bn tllance
hat many expected of Hanratty after that begmnmg.
This year, however, has been an exception.
Hanratty played so litUe for the Pittsburgh Steelers in 1971 and
972 that he threw a total of only 33 passes m those two seasons.
Je was the for gotten man, but since Terry Bradshaw first was
neffective and later injured this season, Hanratty has shown he
~ill knows how to play.
As Pittsburgh's emergency quar terback he has thrown eight
ouchdown passes, includmg one to Ron Shanklin m each of the
ast five games. For four games those TD passes to Shanklin
Jelped the Steelers win, but even though they were upset by
:Jenver on Sunday, they're still 10 fi rst place and Hanratty was
1Brdly shaken .
He Did What He Always Does
He did what he has done every day of hiS career. He went home
»his wife and three small daughters and forgot about 1t.
''I don' t take the game home with me,'' says Hanratty. ''After I
:orne through that door at mght, that's 1t until I get up m the
01orning to go to practice or look at films . I don'tlellt affect me "
That was exacUy the formula that helped Hanra tty get through
!he last two seasons, years that were hardly pleasant ones for
10meone used to the spotlight who suddenly found himself an
extra.
"!think," Hanratty mused, "that if I had been 37 or 38 years
old in a situation like that I m1ght have qwt. But I'm only 25 and I
never lost confidence m myself and I beheve I have a lot of time
Ln front of me."
Hanratty shared the No 1 quarterback JOb for the Steelers with
Dick Shiner in 1969, hiS rookie year, and with Bradshaw m 1970,
&amp;adshaw's rookte year .In one 1970 game, he reheved Bradshaw
to pull out a Pittsburgh v1ctory and Bradshaw was so upset about
the whole Sltua\lon he predicted "there won't be two Terrys here
next year.u
They're Both Sill! There
He was wrong, of course, because Ule Steelers were burned so
often m the past by hasty quarterback trades they wouldn't do it
agalll, and three years later they 're both still there.
"I've never thought about quitting or askmg to be traded or
anything like that," says Hanratty , who Insists he never got down
on himself durmg hiS two years of mactivity .
Hanratty also has an mteresting ouUook about hiS present
status.
A lot of onlookers, concerned when Bradshaw was 10Jured as
the Steelers approached the toughest part of thm schedule Hanratty took them to successiVe Vlcton es over Cmcmnati,
Washington and Oakland-believed there would be a lot of heat
on Hanratty m this spot But Hanratty 1nsists he feels even less
pressure now than he did du~m g his occas10nal appearances 10
recent seasons.
"It's the difference between bemg a regular startmg pitcher
and a reliever m baseball," he says. "When tlle rellef pttcher
comes in, it's always lJI a tough spot and he has to do 1t un·
mediately, where the starter knows he's gomg to be m there for
awhile.
Nuw There ~s a Routine
"Now that I'm playmg, I know that I start every game even,
that we have 60 minutes and that we have a game plan to follow.
"The last couple of years, everytime I got into a game 1t was
usually a tough s1tuation, or a spot where there were only a
couple of mmutes left, where I had to try and do somethmg
quickly . And you know what can happen when you 're trymg to
rush things, trymg to do the job in a hurry. I don't thmk there's
nearly the pressure now."
One thing that hbs picked up since Hanratty became a starter
again IS his fan mail, but he lJISlSts that most of 1t JUSt comes
ftom "old Notre Dame well·wlShers."
'lbat'snice, says Hanratty, and so 1s wmning. But when you're
a professional who wants to play, there 's one thmg that may be
even better than adulation
"That's getting up on Monday and feel10g those aches and
pains,'' Hanratty say~'It ' s ruce to have that feehn g agam. ''

" Eiephantme"

16 oz.

OCEAN SPRAY

PUMPKIN

39'
594

.

l

~~~~PI~~R~~~::n

For

~-~~:~~~:~~-------J..

,

~

.R

2 59'
$239

Good at: Rutland Dept. Store

CRANBERRIES

·11

3 lb. can

FOLGERS
COFFEE
10~ 3 lb. can

2For

Sport Parade

~

game

~

I

w-coupon

FOLGERS

or

.

J.1IRA~;;Le~

For

NABISCO PREMIUM

Pkg.
•
1 -~P~R~O"!'!D"!!"U~C~E-=B~U~t~S--1

CELERY

2 85'

CAKE MIX

ALUMINUM FOIL

I

Commissioners of Meigs County:
We the members of Preceptor Beta
Sigma Ph1 Sorority, do earnestly requeet !.iliilt twti
necessary to keep the Pediatric Otolngleal DalliGIItit:
Meigs County.
A child can only be truly "handicapped" by 1M neclecl ol'
thoughUessness of those adults responsible fGr Ill* ftlare.

.I

Closed Thursday, Friday and

Today's

College

PHILIP SPORN PLANT
Post Office lox 361, Nft Haven, Wnt VlrtJinla 25241

Tole,.,.,.: oroa coclo 304 112·1111

All Equal Opportunity EmpJo,er

�.vo.AN'K~&lt;w•...• • ....... ,_.~ ••••· ·~·&gt;"·bo;o;•.•;o.....-,•••,•;:..~;-~-!'~:-:~

Vo'"6'··.-.-.·.·,·N·'~ ~C OOfO ~~A•.AA.w.•n,w.-....,.,•,·.-,-.•,•.-.•.•.•.?,•,•,•:•: ;t:•,·,•,•,•,•.;·:·:"::_._.~.::;;~Ht-.v.....-...&lt;::• ·'Y.- • -:,.•••-..;'1!·;.;.-f.'•CA.o!o.- •
&lt;;,o,•.•.•.•.•,•,•,•o'o'~•'•
;~·~~-· ·~V&lt;J,"o'•'•..-.•,•.•,, • • • o'O'o o •' • • -• .~ •

~

• ••• ' ' ' • ' '

3- The Daily Sentinei,Middleoort-Pomerov. 0 Nov. 2fi,l973

~

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

A message of. thankfulness
,IIY Hap P. JtlrRI

tenbach; back row, I tor, Debbie Osborne, Jeannie Harrison,
Tonya Keebaugh, Barbara Fultz, Vickie Manley, Judy Owen,
Esther Lowery, June Ann Wamsley, Rhonda Hudson, Trudy
Roach, and Marcia Dillard.

TO OPEN SOON - These 18 dancers wlll open the 20th
annual musiCal of the B1g Bend Minstrel Assocmtion at 8:10
p m Saturday at the Me1gs High School. They are, front row,
I to r, Sandy Curtis, Teresa Taylor, Anita King, Teresa
Wildermuth, Becky Thowa s, Mem Ault, Debbie Har·

NQ end of oil embargo seen
By United Press International
A top energy adviSer warned
Monda y that
the
ad·
mtrustration IS considering a
ban on SUnday driVIng m the
Uruted States. The warning
came just before the Senate
voted to g1ve PfesJdent Nucon
the emergency powers he
wants to deal with the energy
cmas.
There appeared to he no
relief m Sight from Arab oil
producers, who clamped an
embargo on shipments of oll to
the United States for this
country's support of Israel m
the 1973 Middle East war They
vowed a gam Mondsy they
won't relax the embargo
Britam
Monday
cut
dehvenes of all mam oil
products by 10 per cent ef.
fectlve today and asked drivers
to hmtl weekend pleasure
drivmg and observe a
nabonwtde 50 mile an hour
speed limit.
In Germany , Economtcs
M1ruster Hans Fndertchs announced a ban on all private
dr1vmg for the next four
Sundays , and cut the speed
limit on all roads to offset the

shortage of Arab 01!.
Japan Mounts Offensive
Japan mounted a diplomatic
offensiVe to get more Arab oil,
but Arab d1plomais ms1sted
Japan must break diplomatic
relations With Israel to he
exempted from the boycott.
" Japan cannot he lp us
militarily, so the second th10g
to do " to cut relations with
Israel, " said Saudi Arabian oil
mmister, Sheikh Ahmed Z.
Yamam
One energy speclalist, Dr
Quentin Looney, satd Ameri·
cans won't help the energy
crisis even 1f they turn off the~r
electric lights and drive under
50 m.p.h.
Looney sa1d If industry
doesn 't conserve energy, the
President's energy con ·
serva()on program will fail.
" If mdustry could cut energy
consumption by 5 per cent,"
Looney told members of the
Alabama Textile Manufac·
turers Association in Mont·
gomery Monday, "that would
amount to turning out all the
lights in America for a year."
Senate Passes Bill
By a vote of 78 to 6 the Senate

pa ssed the emergency energy
b11l Monday. If approved by the
House 1t would allow Nixon to
rahon gasoline and other fuels,
Hmit energy use by busmess,
relax clean a1r rules and curb
otl exports
Olarles DiBona, an aide to
energy adviser John Love,
warned Congress' Jomt Economic Commlttee a natonwide
han on Sunday drivlllg was
among "very real posa
Slbihties." He said the ad·
muustration is also studymg
cutting off fuel for pnvate
boats and airplanes, closing
serv1ce stations and othPr

}

The

•

l

I

The Washington Post report·
ed today that a pres1denhal
task force headed by Love
recommended that the sale of
gasol10e be banned from 9 p.m.
Saturdays until midmght Sun·
days to discourage Sunday
driving The Post said the plan
calls for a !().gallon lurut on
gasoline sales per vehicle from
midnight Fridays to 9 p.m.
Saturdays to make 1t harder to
gas up ahead of time for a
Sunday dr1ve.

Center warm m winter, cool in the
men and womer1 on th1s stclff. They (llso summer, always properly lighted and
care for Davis Hall where the School of every piece of eqwpment working ef.
Nursmg lS located and the old Cedar r c1ently as IS necessary to opera te such a
1
Street facihty The HousekeP.pmg staff sizable
complex is the responsibility of
acc.:ounts for over 122,000 working hours a
Paul Nibert and hiS staff of 20 men in
year .
physical plant operatiOns. Eight licensed
Nothmg ts more cheerful for a
men are necessary m the boller room On
patlent each mormng than cnsp, amNibert's staff are carpenters, pipe fitmaculate bed !mens and sparkling while ters
plumbers,
electnc1ans,
towels and washcloths. The hospital
la undry staff of 19 full time employees refn'geratton and electronic specialists,
~.
headed by Don Shaw makes posSible the welders, pamters and grounds men .
An emergency power plant ~
dally fresh bedding and towels. So far,
automah
caily operates within five :~
this year the hospital laundry has handled over 1'h milhon pounds of !mens, seconds of a total power failure, for
averagmg over 110,000 pounds a month. protection of pallents 10 the operating ~
In fact, 1t prepares dally 310 lmen bed room, coronary and mtens1ve care areas, :3
packs, as they are called, mcludmg and thetr own rooms. This staff, :=-:
bedspread, sheets, pillowcase, hand and responsible seven days a week around
bath towels, wash cloth and pat1ent the clock, also mamta10s the old hospital, ~
gown, all m plastic bags. They also Davis Hail arid the Sycamore St. ·'.•.
bwldmg.
~«
launder 3,000 staff umforms a month
ANOTHER
SEVEN
DAY
a
week,
;
NOURISHING AND TASTY meals
three t1mes each day are extremely around the clock serv1ce at the medical :
unportant to every patient, and to all the center lS central servlce which sterilizes ~
people who work at Holzer Med1cal and processes mediCal and surgiCal '
Center. This is under the superVISIOn of eqwpment and supplies. There are 116
Mrs. Edna Hackler and her hard working carts diSpatched dally to the emergency
food service staff of 58 Many hands and room, operating rooms, mtensive and
hours of dedicated work are necessary to coronary care areas, medtcal staff
plan and prepare vaned menus that exammmg rooms and each nursmg Wlit
patients select, and prov1de dally meals so that the staff always has complete
for 265 patients and the several hundred proviSIOns for all pat1ents. In addlUon, '
men and women who are employed at the spec1al case carts are prepared for each ·
pallent who IS undergoing surgery. Mrs. &gt;:
hosp1tal.
Over 200,000 general d1et meals for Barbara Shelton and the 20 members of ~
patients are prepared and served m a her staff are responSible for central
~
year at Holzer Me&lt;hcal Center, and over serv1ce functiOns.
AS YOU CAN SEE , there IS only
100,000 special d1et meals. In the
cafeteria, almost a quarter of a m1llion room to mention a few of the many •
employee and VlSttor meals are served m people involved in supporting the ~
a year. Add the 12,000 meals m the operatwn of the hosp1tal. In future !=l
doctors' d10ing room and 12,000 student columns, we 'll go mto some of these
nurse meals, and that tells you why departments 10 greater detail and ~~
abnost 130,000 man-hours of labor are mention other areas that space does not
~
reqwred m Ute food servlce department perm1 t here
Th1s total blendmg of talent,
Mrs Mary Akers, the TherapeutiC
trammg,
dedtcation and expenence on :
D1etic1an VISits patients who have had
spec1al d1ets prescnbed by thetr the part of the staff, together with our
phySICian to asSist 10 planmng meals tha t med1cal and nursmg staffs, g1ves us the
will make such a diet as appeahng as ab1hty to prov1de the best total care for ~
possible. Also pallenls are Informed and our pat~ents . We are grateful for these ~
mstructed concernmg proper diets they capable people who altogether provide
are to follow at home after diScharge the fmes t health care dehvery possible
for all of you who live m the southeastern
from the hospital.
KEEPING THE ENTIRE Med1cal Ohw Valley

1

:i

!il

i

:*

'I

LAFF- A- DAY

NOTICE

Caroline Kennedy will be
16 soon; John nearing 13

NEW YORK (UP!) - caroline and John Kennedy are
personable, natural teen-agers
who seem to bear no scars of
the tragedy that marred their
childhood 10 years ago.
caroline, who will be 16 on
Nov. 'll, and John, whose 13th
birthday IS Nov. 25, are lear-:-~:::::::::·:·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:=:·:=:·:·:·:~:::::::::::::::::::=:::::;::::~:;::_!:::::::::::::~:::;::;:;::::·:·:·:&gt;:&gt;:·:·~·~ ning to know theli' murdered
father, President John F.
I.:
i:~ Kennedy' better as they grow
··· up and talk about him with
members of the family and
by the editor
older friends. Their mother has
I have a recommendation to make to the folks whoever tbey kept the late President's
may be who determined the lumen power and type of yellow memory evergreen for them,
flashing lights at the intersection of county road 5 and the Rt. 7 recalhng often the happy
bypass in Bradbury. On the next good dark mght, clear, cloudy, events 10 thmr two years, 10
ram or snowswept, come down what used to be known as Murray months and two d9ys in the
Hill. You w1ll be approaching the lights and the mtersechon from White House.
the north . I dare you to turn left to enter road 5 cleanly, WithOUt
The Kennedy children have
difficulty , m the blinding yellow flashes . The hghts are much too had several surrogate fathers.
lw1ght 10 the eyes of oncom10g dr1vers . The problem IS not a$ Sen. Edward M. Kennedy and
serwus approaching the mtersect10n slightly uphill from the New York stockbroker Murray
south and turning nghtward into road 5. But from the north 1t is McDonnell came closest to
no easy maneuver
providing them w1th a father
Somebody, some lime soon will be clobbered at that m· figure prior to Mrs. Kennedy's
tersect10n. The State Highway Department Will have to accept at marrwge to Aristotle Onassis,
least part ofthe responsibility if and when It happens .
whose doting role is like that of
a grandfather.
AN AUTUMN JOURNEY (continued) :
Mrs. Kennedy's ma10 con·
The deepenmg gasoline CriSIS already has made my cern has been to guard her
resolution of October to travel leisurely 3,000 miles mto 13 states children from being spoiled
to the east and northeast positively brilliant. The way things are through over10dulgence and
gomg m the gasoline cnsis, thiS year may have been the last that overexposure. At the same
gasolme for such a "vacation " was at reasonable pnces, if at all. time she has not wanted them
VISits to Gettysburg's Civil War battle!lelds, Monticello, to feel that they are isolated or
home of Thomas Jefferson; the Vermont mounta10 home of objects of undue public
Mana von Trapp, Provmcetown on Cape Cod, and Newport, R.I. curioSity. They. accept a cer·
to walk through Cornelius Vanderbilt's summer cottage( ! ) of 70 tam amount of celebrity with
rooms may be muumum requirements of a bona ftde vacation grace, but John does not Uke
from the routmes of earning food for the table and a roo£ bemg photographed.
overhead. Those experiences - among others - were mspll'mg
Mrs.Kennedy
Kennedyfamily
has departed
from
custom
enough.
But well1t may be sa1d that my party ate Its way through by enrolling her children in
those 13 states. This was inspiring to the gastronomic sense but non-Cathohc schools and
no expenence recommended to ~a welght watcher.
schools that draw students
Probably the happ1est evenlllg of dining was found at the from more than one economic
Pheasant Lounge 10 Rutland, Vermont. But along the Atlantic
Coast the selection of sea foods in even ordinary restaurants has class.
caroline's life as an lith
to rank high m the notes of a hungry traveler.
grader at a hoarding school in
In this category , the 1620 Restaurant in Plymouth, Mass. was Concord, Mass., is almost
typiCal . catermg to the tounst trade, (and what Will happen tO normal except for the Secret
these bus mess places when automobiles are grounded?) the 1620
Restaurant offered 11 beef entrees and one each featurmg
•
poultry and ham .
Dai~
On the other hand, the menu listed 20 seafood deiJ.ghts inDEVOTED TO THE
c!udli]ga Turf n' Surf special of brmled filet mignon and New
INTERI.STOF
MEIGS MASON AREA
England lobster tall ($7.95).
CHESTER L TANNEHILL,
e~~:ec . Ect.
The standard offerlllgs, at prices descending from $7.50 to
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
City Edltor.
$3.95, were: baked stuffed lobster, broiled lobster, hot bmled
Publlstled delly tnr;ctpl
S.turdey by n1e OhiO Velley
lobster, lobster newburg or saute, Alaskan King 0-ab horizon
Pubt l ~l'tlng Compeny, 111
casserole, baked Alaskan King Crab, pan-fried rainbow Brook
Court St , Pomeroy, Ohio,
A5769 Bullnn Orrlce Phone
trout, assorted seafood brochette, baked stuffed native fdlet of
992 2156 Ed !lor lei Phone t92
2157,
sole, baked scallop coquille - en casserole, shrimp scampi 1620,
Second clus postage peld
et Pomeroy, Ohio
broiled native schrod, fried clams or scallops, jumbo !ned
Nlflonel edvert l slng
repreuntetlve Bort lnelll
shrunp, broiled bay scallops, seafood newburg, broiled swordfish
GaiiiiQI'Ier , Inc , 12 Eut A2nd
or halibut steak, baked stuffed shrlffip and an assorted seafood
St , Nt-w York ,Ntw York
Subscr i pt i on retel
platter (clams, scallops , shrunp and fillet of sole).
Delivered by carrier where
eveHatlit 55 cents per w.ek ,
This listing should move the JUices in anyone w1th a taste for
By Motor Route whert
carrier
lervlce
not
seafoods.
8¥tlleblt One month, S2 By
But it occurs tome it will be wasted on one of my frtends , the
me 111n OtiiO 1nct w ve , one
Yttr.l1, , Six mMtM;, I 50,
worthy NoJtn Swaekhamer of Mason - one time basketball
Thr..
montj'lt. ,
U 50
E11ewher1 Ill yeer: ''x
coaeh - who teaches history these days at Meigs Htgh.
montlll 1t.50. """ month•.
"
IYbKrlptiGn prlu lft
It Is wasted because Swack's favonte lS not there . And what
CIUdtt. SunCIIY Tlmtl ·
S.ntlntl
Ia his -food dbh? "Gimme a pickerel," says Swack, "'benever
he Ia ....... ~·· • ..., .-vee~.

':· th e da y after . . .

businesses on Sunday, and
closing pubh c parks to
automobiles.

Ex-dve Vlte President
Holzer Medical Coalet
At thlS seaSOO of the year, we become
more aware of the many things we have
to be thankful for and realllllt's unportan t to take the time to eapress our ap·
preciat10n to thoso at the hospital who
help us 1n 110 many ways.
Thi! partteular . - it 110med most
appropriate to show our gratitude to
many memben of our hoopltal s!Jiff on
whom we rely every day of the year to
keep Holzer Medical Center open and
operatmg.
Let me teU you about 110me of these
loyal staff members whll8t supporting
services are so important In providmg
the finest patient care poutble as they
work along with the medical and nurs10g
staffs.
THE NURSE AIDES ON each patient
floor pay important personal attention to
our patienta as they help to make them
more comfortable, aaiat them when they
need to get in or out of bed, sometimes
feed them, and are always close by to
respond to a patient's call. Our aides do
many of the so-called "little tlllngs" that
mean a great deal to a patient. Thelf
concern, warm smile, !riendly ways and
assuring words contribute substantially
to speedy recovery.
When patients call the nursing
station, using the intercom iii their room,
the voice that all.!Wers Is that of the ward
clerk. In addition to anawerlng every
call, the ward clerk helpa maintain
patient eharls and tran.sCrlbes orders
the nursing ahd medical staff leave for
each patient and diatributu them to the
proper area. The ward clerk in her
cherry redjacketlseasy tooee. Mrs. Ann
Enochs Is their supervisor.
THE HOUSEKEEPING STAFF
assures that the more than aGO,OOO square
feet of space m the entire Medkal Center
" kept opoU....Iy cleah. This lJICiudes
ma10talmng and shampooing carpeting
plus necessary spot cleaning numerous
times each day; cleanin&amp; walls and
ce1hngs, and daily trash disposal. In the
sewing room, located at the old hospital,
special items needed at the medical
center are made to order. Mrs. Dorothy
HarUey directs the ef!orta of almost 60

Sentinel

•

JIMMIE'S PASTRY SHOP
In Middleport Will Be

SefVlce agent who guards her. evidence of buckling down to
She hves in a dormitory near his studies this year. His
the Concord Academy, takes a mother helpo him with his
full course of studies and homework.
sports, and enJoys malts w1th
John's taU frame hints that
the girls at Brigham's ice his physique will be like h1l
cream parlor. She exc1tes no father's. He Is brunette and
..JipeClal lllterest 10 the com· goodlooking with brown eyet
mun1ty and has as many set far apart. His look is more
friends as anyone at the school. Bouvier than Kennedy. He
She is an attractiVe blue- talks sports a great deal and
eyed blonde with the Kennedy followed every hit and pileh of
look quiet like her mother, and the recent World Series con·
studious. She IS a camera bug test. His blgest intenlt in
and an excellent horsewoman football is the Harvard team.
and tennis player, But she
John loves his do1a-a
didn't care for her ballet Pekingeseandacockwpnlel
studies and dropped the clas- -and chocolatell he bup at
ses. When she graduates from Ellen's, a shop em upper
Concord llll975 she will attend Madison Ave111e. Mrs. 'lnas81.1
Miss Porter's School, her would like to send Jo.,n to a
mother's abna mater in Far· swnmer camp but difficulty in
mington, Conn.
providing security in such a
Her vacations already are setting has prevented II. The
shifting from carefree child· Onass1ses have been par·
hood summers to experiences ticularly apprehelllive about
of involvement. Last summer, John since the apooure of a
caroline turned up livmg w1th plot by a 1111111 of GreeD and
a family in Clairfield, Tenn., a,n West Ge!'1ll8118 to kidnap him
Appalachian mmmg towrl, for ransom in 11172.
while she helped a !Ibn crew
The Keooedy childna bave.
document the lives of coal showed an above &amp;VItlll
miners. She wore patched blue mterest in pollticll. CaniiJnt
jeans, attended country music campaigned door.to.door flit
concerts with local teenagers John Kerry, U anti:.War eaiidland impressed Cfuirfielders as date for CongteN from MUIIi"just plam folks".
chusetts. John visited the
John 18 lJI the fifth grade at campaign headquarten of WU.
Manhattan's Collegiate School liam Vanden Htlm!l, a falllib'
and 1s one of the liveliest and friend and candidate forMa,.;
most popular members of his hattan district attorney, Ialit
class. Fun has often come November to &amp;et literature to
before work in John's school distribute at his school.
career,
he ___________
shows more
____but
....-;;;;;,.
.,... _______ -&amp;,
Letters of opinion are welcomed. Tbey IIMakl be ' than 3GO words long (or be subject to ndllelloa bJ a.
editor) and must be signed with tbe olpea'o lllldroio.
Names may be withheld upon puhlk&gt;.U.. . . . . . ., •
request, names will be disclosed. Letlel'lloi.ldf lie 1111...
laste, addressing Issues, nol personaUIIee.
:

£) 1

!

,... ~

~~~../~~.. -

• • • ~.. lMUVf.,:
..--.
Clinic supported by sorority

Saturday, Nov. 22-23-24

o•.. - - - - .. . , _.. _ _ ,..

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU 24th

MEAT SPECIALS

DUNCAN HINES

SMOKED

f:~E-~::.~~.:~,6 gc
SUPERIOR'S

ASSORTED

~~~. . . . . . . ~~:.99~
DAIRY BUYS
BLUE BONNET

OLE0.......... 2~~~- 79'
FAMILY SIZE
BROUGHTON

~~:;:E~~. . . . . .89~
FROZEN SPECIALS

I
=~.
~~~?~
.............
49'
I
I

FROSTY ACRES

I
I

STRAWBERRIES
1o-oz.

Norman Amsbary, Mildred Karr, Velma Rat, Vera c:Mir,
Ann Rupe, Lois Rosenbaum, Mary G. Plcke.., Clarlei
Krautter, Shirley Custer, Eleanor Thomas, Ruby Baer,
Margaret Follrod, Jean Werry, Jane Walton, Reva Vaughan,
Rose Sisson, June VanVranken.

RED
RADISHES

32 oz.

WAGNER'S

ORANGE DRINK

39e
Pkg.

COFFEE
18" ALCOA

1;\. ,

I

DO

CRANBERRY

2For

Jelly

STOKELY
29

" G t gant1c

appropnate ad1ect1ves for

the large wha les

wtt1 c h
we1gh more than 2 dozen
elephants! In 1926. a blue

whale that was we1ghed
piece by piece, totaled up to
}36 tons It was 89 ft long ,
with 62 tons of .Pleat, 28 tons
of blubber and a 25 ton
skeleton To support itself,

2/59'

oz.

a whale consumes food by
the ton, in a proce ss that

could almost be called

KELLOGG

CROUIEIIES

or

are ha rdl y

oz.

7

" harvesting " 1t. Wh1l e
feeding, the whale w1ll gulp

39'

60 81 gallons of water. and
then partly close Its mouth
Then using tfs 3 ton tongue
to squeeze water through a
curtain of hair like fringe In
front of its mouth, the
whale will harvest the
"krill" , a shnmp like
Crusta cean on wh1 c h 11
feeds from the water
1
'Giganhc" IS also hardly

FRANKS

STUFFED OUVES

6

oz.

CRACKERS

r----- COUPON ---·--····

39~

the adjective to descnbe
the work load performed
by a Miracle water refiner

It does the work of four
appliances In one - It
clarifies, softens, filters,
and polishes your tap
water, givmg you sparkling
refreshing reftned water In

I
I

with coupon

I
I

return

"Elephantine" IS
hardly the adjective to
And

NEW YORK

un,ted

·:·~

COLUMBUS ( UP!)
''There are a lot of bananas
hanging on this one,"
says
Ohio
State
as·
sistant coach Esco Sark·
kmen, who, as a player
and coach, has gone th rough 31
previous Ohio State-Michigan
clashes
Referring to Saturday's B1g
Ten showdown game at Ann
Arbor. Sarkkinen said, ''I've
been around to see a lot of
Mlchigan.()hio State games,
but I don't th10k I've seen so
many awards up for grabs."
Besides Ute conference title
and Rose Bowl tflp, there is the
prospect of a national cham·
pwnsh1p for the No. 1 rated
Buckeyes or the No 4 ranked
Wolvermes, a chance for the
Helsman award for several
playe r s in the natwnally
televised game, and also ali·
Amencan recognition for
others.
"Obvlllously, this all points
to a nother classic event,"
Sarkkinen sa1d.
Sarkkinen, who was an allAme rican end at Ohio State 10
1939, desc r~bed Saturday's upcommg game as "a hammer
and anVIl chorus "
''There is not going to be a lot
of scoring," he sald
" It will be dec1ded during the
full GO m10utes. Some tune dur·
10g that tune, the momentum
w11l change, either by a break
or a great play."
Sarkkinnen, who was Coach
Woody Hayes' No. I scout
until the B1g Ten did away with
scouting conference opponents
Uus season, sald Mtchigan
"can't be any higher than we
will be," and added, "you don't
get to be 10-0 and 9.{) by luck.
We both have great teams"
Meanwhile, Hayes told the
b1ggest noon press gather10g of
the year Monday that his
team's inJury SltuatiOn was "a
little more aggravating than
usual thiS week, although not
senous."
Ind ep endent W1nter
Cage League
Stand1ngs
lUIQ! S

Ct t1 ze ns Nal' l
El b e rf c! d s
Good year

P u ll m s
N et s

W
3
2
2
1
1
0

L Pts
0 30 7
1 264
1 22 5
2 253
2 198
3 184

He refused, however, to ffis.
close the nature of any of the
10)ur1es, saymg "a good gener·
al doesn't announce hts weaknesses, so we won't armounce
our in]unes."
Hayes did say that everybody who played 10 last Saturday's 55-13 win over Iowa
would be ready to play agalJist
the Wolverines and that W10ghack Brian Baschnagel and
safety Rich Parsons, held out

Lee upstages Tarkenton
By DAVID MOFFIT
UPI Sports Writer
ATLANTA (UP! ) - Atlanta
quar terback Bob Lee must
have p1cked up a few pomters
when he understudied Fran
Tarkenton at Minnesota last
year
Lee stole a page from
Tarkenton's book Monday night
and hiS scrambling enabled the
Falcons to hand the Vikmgs
their ftrst loss of the season, a
20-14 upset tha t could vault

R

,.,

240

275

deCISIVe , WlBffiffiOUS declSIOD

over Emile Griffith of New
York Monday mght 10 a 12·
round non-title middleweight
bout.
Gnffith , g1ving 13 years
away to the 22-year-old
abongme, fought a skillful and
courageous fight, employing
all the expenence of his 93
professtonal contests.
· But the strength-sappmg
power of Mundine's punches
and Griffith's need to chase
after the Australian to keep up
a good scor10g rate told 10 the
end, and Griffith managed to
win only one round- the ninth.
There were no knockdo\vns.

LICENSE APPROVED
WASH!NGTON (UP!) - The
Federal Commerce Com·
miSSIOn anQOunced today the
granting of a license cover10g a
new am radio station for
WWGL by Radio Gallon Inc.

NFL Stand1ngs
By Untted Press International
American \Conference
East
w I. I pet
9
1 0 900
x M1am•
5 5 0 500
Buffalo
N Y Jet s
3 7 0 300
New E ng lan d
3 7 0 300
2 8 0 200
Balt1m ore
Central
w I. I pet
P i ttsburgh
8 2 0 800
Cleveland
6 3 1 650
6
0 600
Cm c1 nnat1
1
0 100
Hou ston
West
w I. t pet .
K an sas C1ty
6
J
1 650
Den ver
~
3 2 600
Oakland
5 4
I 550
San Otego
2 7
I 250
Nahona I Conference
East
w l. I pet
Dallas
7 3 0 700
Wa sh tngto n
7 3 0 700
St L ou IS
3 6 1 350
Ph ll adelph ta
J 6 1 350
N Y G1ants
2 7 1 250
Central
w I. I pet
x Mtnnesota
9 1 0 900
4 5
I 450
Detro•f
Green Bay
3 5 2 400
Ch 1cago
3 7 0 300
west

•
'

w

I

I

pet.

Los Angeles
8 2 0
Atlanta
7
3 0
New Or l ean s
4
6
0
San F ranc1sco
J 7 0
X-CI Inched diVISIOn fltle
Monday's Results
Atlanta 20 Mmnesota 1.:1
(Only game sched11led l
Thursday's Games
Washington at Oetro tt
M1am 1at Dallas
(Only games scheduled )
Sunday's Games
Buffalo at Balt1more

800

700
400
300

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
and
Uoyd
Mclaughlin

FOSTER DRAWS CROWDS
JOHANNESBURG,
South
Afrtca (UP!) - World light
heavyweight champiOn Bob
Foster of the Umted States
drew large crowds-Payfng $2
a head..:..to watch his workout
Monday m preparation for a
title defense here against South
Afnca 's Pierre Foune on Dec.
1
Foster's workout was his
only public appearance 10 the
city before the fight, which is
expected to draw a crowd of
50,000. The rest of the time he 1s
confined to his hotel because he
is enthusiastically mobbed
whenever he steps onto the
street.

s1dehnes, then lofted the ball to
Edd ie Ray to g1ve AUanta a 17·
7lead with 1:10 left to play 10
the f••st half.
"I really thought I was going
to go down," said Lee "I saw
Edd1e stop and I wanted h1m to
go on I think I gave h1m a
wave, I don't even know tha t I
remember hop10g they wouldn' t
notice h1m."
Ray Calehes Ball
Ra y, who didn't eve n know
he'd he playing unbt he learned

shor tly before game t1me that
Art Malone was still IOJured,
caught the ball m the end zone.
"I didn't know what was
gomg to happer.," sa1d the 235·
pound fullback "! JUS! kept
backing up and 11 turned out
that Bob had enough lime to
get fld of the ball."
The wm was the SIXth
straight for the Falcons, who
are now 7-3 and tra1l Los
Angeles by a game m the NFC
West The VIkings, 9·1, had
alre&amp;dy sewed up the NFC
Central for the fifth lime 10 SIX
years
Atlanta's chances of catchmg
the Rams appea r slim, even 1f
they wm their four remammg
games . But the Falcons are m
tram wh1ch resulted in Rio tnumph .
a fight w1th Dallas and
twinpointers, the Redmen held
Rto
Grande
(68 )
Washington, both also 7-3, for
sna ugh , 5 0 10 , Ba r tr am , 5
on for good, outsconng the oF au
that wild-card playoff berth as
10 , Bol ~• ng e r , 4 o a, No e. 8 o
Senators 37-33 10 the !mal half 16 Stewart. 4 1 9 , Swm ehart. best runnerup.
l 0 2, Hart, 1 0 2. La mbe rt, 3 J .
of action.
If the Falcons are the wild·
9 , Morg an , 1 0 2 TOTALS 32 4
From the field, RIO hit 42.7
ca rd team, thetr first playoff
Lander 164) H u r s t 12.4 ,
pet., connecting on 32 of 75 Dudl
foe would be the V1kings at
ey 1 0 2. Stacy 3 3 9 ,
attempts. RIO was four of seven Sm tth 9 5 23, Graham 7 2 16 , Minnesota and V1kmg receiver
on 3 2 a, Goodw 1n 1 0
from the foul circles Rock Henders
John Gilham hopes they make
2, TOTALS 25 · 14 -64 .
Hill's J1m Stewart hauled down
Score at half.
1t because he wants another
R!O 31. Land e r 31
II rebounds for RIO, Noe added
Otf •c 1als Co s by and shot at them
!1ve. Lander outrebounded Rio, Roa ch , Ham11ton Chapt er
"! want to meet them agam
34-23. The visitors had 26 turn·
down the r oad," said G1lham,
overs, Rlo 19. Lander hlt 14 of
who caught one of the V1kmgs'
19 free throws.
touchdown passes Monday
In the prelunmary game, the
mght "I'm glad 11 happened
OU.Ch1llicothe Branch downed
(the loss) when it didn't count.
the Rio Jayvees, 111-90.
Tell 'em to come on . I want
Mr. and Mrs. Dohrman them bad. I never look for no
Next Rio outmg is at home
against Tiffin University on Reed, Kim and Kirk, and Mrs. team but I want them to win
Monday, Nov. 26. Game time IS Alvm Reed spent a weekend that w1ld card "
w1th Mr. and Mrs. John Dupre
8 p.m.
VIkings Pick Up 82 Yards
Box score of Monday's and fam1ly at Fairborn. They
The V1k10gs, No. 2 10 NFC
also visited Gary Barnhart and rushing prior to Monday night,
Mrs. Charles Humphrey who piCked up only 82 yards runmng
are patients at Umversity against the Falcons and more
Hospital , Columbus, Oh10
than half of that came in the
K an sas CtfY at Denver
N ew England at Ho uston
Mrs. Bess Webster of Tup· final period . Mmnesota had
San D1ego at Oakland
pers Plams, recently visited only mght yards, that by
P 1tt sburgh at Cl ev el and
Ch ic ago at Mmn esota
Wlth Mr. and Mrs. R E . passing, m the first period and
Los Ang at New Orl ean s
Wllhams, Anderson B Kibble, only 13 yards rushmg m the
NY G1ant s at Philadelph i a
A t l anta at NY Jets
and Mary Kibble, Mrs. Bess
St LOU IS at C1n C.nnafl
Larkms and Mrs . Mabel
{ Only games scheduled )
Monday's Games
Hetzer
Green Bay at San Fran c. sco
Been invited to dinner?
-Mrs. L. Balderson
{Only game scheduled )

"

Present The
Value-Rated

SPECIAL
1973 TORONADO

PLAYERS SELEUI'ED
NEW YORK (UP!) - Stan
homemaker •n d01ng her
Smith, Erik van Dillen 1 Tom
dally chores. For more
Gorman and Marty R1essen
Information about a
have been selected to play m
"whale" of a hme and
money !aver, call 882-2525
the 1973 Davis Cup Challenge
now about a Miracle water
Round for the United States
refiner.
against Australia.
The matches are to be held at,
Cleveland, Nov. 3().Dec. 2.
The U.S., defending champion, already has defeated
082·2525
Mextco,
O!ile, and Rwnama
r
New Haven. W. Va
'-'-!'&lt;
. _......,._..... each by a score
' of 4·1.
'
I

Full power equ1pment, air conditioning , nice
blue finish, blue vinyl roof. only 8,000 miles.

theses

!Tenth Week i

Po,nn

0) en&gt;
2 Alabama ( 9 01 ( 9 )
3 Oklahoma (8 o 1&gt; t31
'5 M
Jch •o•n no o I
Notre Dame (8 01 (1)
1 Oh10 State !9

336
298
263
Z•8

213

6 Penn S1a1e ( 10 OJ
178
1 LSU (9 O&gt;
149
B UCLA (9 II
101
9 Southern cat 18 1 1&gt;
62
10 Nebraska (8 1 1)
39
11 Texas (1 21
13
12 Ar•zona s1 ate 19 1
10
n Texas Tech 19 1 J
7
H Houston (8 I I
6
u M 1am 1, 0 , 10 o&gt;
2
16 &lt;T•e&gt; Tvlane 18 1 )
1
17 {T•e l Kansas {6 J 11
1
Only 11 1eams rece1ved votes

first half.
_
The Falcons had 275 of thelf
347 total yards m the ftrst half
and Van Brockhn sald, " we ran
rtght at them with nothing
fancy " Dave Hampton, who
caught Lee's f~rst touchdown
pass, paced all runn ers w1th 108
yards.
Falcon rook1e NICk Mike·
Mayer m1ssed held goal tr1es of
46 and 26 yards durmg a
~coreless first pertod but later
added f1eld goals of 25 and 49
yards (he's h1t on 23-&lt;Jf-31 ) and
two converswns to ra1se his
NF!.rlead10g scormg to 96
pomts.
V1kmg Coach Bud Grant was
upset by the offic1at10g Monday
mght He was most unhappy
about a cntlCai call la te m the
game after Lee's fumble was
reco vered by the Vikmgs .
Tar kenton passed 23-yards to
Gilham but 1t was r uled that he
fumbled and Atlanta recovered
at lis own 36.
"I was down,'' sa1d Gilliam.
"The Atlanta players took the
ball away "
"The plays the officials make
are more important than the
ones we make ," said Grant. "I
do11't mean that as a criticism,
but it happens that way."

News, Notes

REPORT IN WEEK
GLASGOW, Ky. (UP!)
Federal
Avlahon
Ad·
mimstration off1c1als say
it w1ll
be
at
least
a week before they report the probable cause of
the crash of a small plane here
Sunday which killed two
Cincinnati-area men.

SENATORS SPUT VOTES
WASHINGTON (UP!) - ~
Sen. Robert Taft voted for a
mot1on to kill a nder to the
energy legislation which would
have outlawed busing to
achieve
school
school
desegregatiOn and Sen .
W1lliam Saxhe voted agamst 11
Monday.
The Senate approved the
motion by a 411-39 roll call vote.

Say Thank You
To Your Hostess
Send Her A

everything but
.
,,,
msurance.
Ta'king a tr1p? Stop for
Tnp Acctdent and Luggage
Insurance at the Downmg
Childs Agency Ask for
Credit Card insurance to
cover use of y our cred1t
card 1f lost or stolen

DowningChilds

THANKSGIVING
CENTERPIECE
From•6.00

AGENCY, INC.

DutUey's
59 N. Second St.
Middle ort, o.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

.

Central Operating tompany's
Philip Sporn Plant
New Haven, W.Va.

Has Job Openings For Permanent Employment In The, Following
Skills
Mechanics
Instrument Repairmen
Laborers
We Will Train Unskilled Applicants.
These Jobs Provide Excellent Wages And A Benefits Program Which Includes
Ufe Insurance. Medical Insurance, Disabillity Insurance , -Sick Leave Vacations
'
'
Holiday, And Retirement.

.

Although A Strike Is In Progress, The Company Continues To Operate The Plant.
882-2126

(collect)

BETWEEN THE HOURS OF 7:30 AM TO 4:00. PM

TO ARRANGE AN~ INTERVIEW

•5200

Karr &amp; VanZandt
" You'll like Our Quality Way
. of Doing Business"
992 -5342
GMC FINANCING
POMEROY
Open Evenings Untii6:0G-Til5p.m. Sat.

·I

lntern at ron•l's

Reedsville

APPLICANTS MAY CALL ( 304)

describe the effort fhts
Relined Water saves the

Th~

IUP I ) -

Pro Standings

228
220
227

AUanta 1nto the wild-card ber th
for the NFC playoffs.
Lee and Tarkenton both
threw two touchdown passes m
the contest But the one that
provided the wmnmg pomts
was a 39-yarder by Lee on a
play that Tarkenton thought he
had patented.
The Falcon quarterback, apparently trapped at midfield ,
broke loose from two would-be
tacklers, nearly lost hiS balance
as he stwnbied toward the

io wins second

With three men finishing 10
double figures, Rio Grande
College pulled away from
Lander College 10 the second
half to defeat the VISiting
Senators 68-64 at Lyne Center
m RIO Grande Monday rught.
It was Rio's second victory
over the South Carolina squad
in three days Rio 1s now 2-0 on
the year Lander dropped to ().
2.
Jimmy Noe's 16 pomts led
the Redmen m scor10g. Steve
Bartram and Dean Fausnaugh
each chipped in w1th 10 points.
Rw trailed most of the first
half before knotting the count
at 31-all Just before the 10·
termlSSIOn.
The Redmen began pressing
lll the second half, and after
PA several qwck steals by Bar·

UNANIMOUS DECISION
. PARIS (UP! ) - Tony Mun·
dine of Australia scored a

HE DID AS EXPECTED
SPOKANE, Wash. (UP! ) Oregon's Steve Prefontaine d1d
exacUy what he was expected
to do Monday, w10 his third
NCAA cross-country individual
champiOnship and lead his
team to an overall ftrst-place
f1msh .
Western Kentucky 's NICk
Rose settled for second pla...'e
after leading the field of 220 of
the natlOn's top collegiate
distance runners for five miles
of the siX·nule course. He
fmished f1ve seconds behmd
the wmner, who was tuned m
28 14 8.
Eastern Michigan's Gordon
Minty fuushed third, followed
by defendmg champ Neil
Cusack of East Tennessee
State and Waigwa Wiison of
Texas El-Paso ,.wh•ch finished
second behind Oregon m the
team race.

However • Ohio State has. not
Staub sa 1d if the Wolverines
of Saturday's encounter, aiso
have a defenstve weakness It lS gotten where 1l lS by passmgwould return.
thrown the ball only 10 8
Hayes was unusually calm In the se condary • but quickly havma
... 'b
1 'they
added
are
very
tough
per
cent
of Ule tune thts year.
for the start of MIChigan week
the
run
,,
It
has
been UJe running of
and greeted the newsmen, agalJISt
•
.
.
.
Michigan ranks second to tailback Arclue Griffm, wJth
many of them from out of town,
with · "Are there any questions Oh10 State rn the Big Ten m 1' 265 yards for the season, and
that I'm going to pass over total defense, but the Wolves quarterback Cornelms Greene
are e1ghth in the conference m who have led the Buckeyes
today?"
Greene has rushed for 643
Assistant coach Ralph Staub pass defense.
"I'm quitesuretheyknow we yards nearly equallmg Machi·
gave a rundown of the Michi, •
lb k
should
be
putting
the
ball
m
the
gan
s
leadmg
rusher,
tal
ac
gan defense, wh1ch he called
rur
up
there,
"
Staub
sa1d.
Chuck
Heater,
who
has
654
"a solid Wlit, believe me."

Press

Rating~

Bcarc;I Qf Coaches major c ollege
foot ball ratmgs. wrth number of
ftrsl place votes tn paren

Team

NEW- YORK (Ul'l ) - S'"ometunes 1t's hard to believe ttult
:erry Hanratty is only 25 years old.
It seems abnost like a generation slJice he and Jim Seymour
olazed onto the scene with such success at Notre Dame 10 196(3
bat before his first collegiate season was half-&lt;Jver he was on the
~ver ofTLme Magazme. Yet Ulat was only seven years ago, and
llOSI of the tune since then has not been filled with the bn tllance
hat many expected of Hanratty after that begmnmg.
This year, however, has been an exception.
Hanratty played so litUe for the Pittsburgh Steelers in 1971 and
972 that he threw a total of only 33 passes m those two seasons.
Je was the for gotten man, but since Terry Bradshaw first was
neffective and later injured this season, Hanratty has shown he
~ill knows how to play.
As Pittsburgh's emergency quar terback he has thrown eight
ouchdown passes, includmg one to Ron Shanklin m each of the
ast five games. For four games those TD passes to Shanklin
Jelped the Steelers win, but even though they were upset by
:Jenver on Sunday, they're still 10 fi rst place and Hanratty was
1Brdly shaken .
He Did What He Always Does
He did what he has done every day of hiS career. He went home
»his wife and three small daughters and forgot about 1t.
''I don' t take the game home with me,'' says Hanratty. ''After I
:orne through that door at mght, that's 1t until I get up m the
01orning to go to practice or look at films . I don'tlellt affect me "
That was exacUy the formula that helped Hanra tty get through
!he last two seasons, years that were hardly pleasant ones for
10meone used to the spotlight who suddenly found himself an
extra.
"!think," Hanratty mused, "that if I had been 37 or 38 years
old in a situation like that I m1ght have qwt. But I'm only 25 and I
never lost confidence m myself and I beheve I have a lot of time
Ln front of me."
Hanratty shared the No 1 quarterback JOb for the Steelers with
Dick Shiner in 1969, hiS rookie year, and with Bradshaw m 1970,
&amp;adshaw's rookte year .In one 1970 game, he reheved Bradshaw
to pull out a Pittsburgh v1ctory and Bradshaw was so upset about
the whole Sltua\lon he predicted "there won't be two Terrys here
next year.u
They're Both Sill! There
He was wrong, of course, because Ule Steelers were burned so
often m the past by hasty quarterback trades they wouldn't do it
agalll, and three years later they 're both still there.
"I've never thought about quitting or askmg to be traded or
anything like that," says Hanratty , who Insists he never got down
on himself durmg hiS two years of mactivity .
Hanratty also has an mteresting ouUook about hiS present
status.
A lot of onlookers, concerned when Bradshaw was 10Jured as
the Steelers approached the toughest part of thm schedule Hanratty took them to successiVe Vlcton es over Cmcmnati,
Washington and Oakland-believed there would be a lot of heat
on Hanratty m this spot But Hanratty 1nsists he feels even less
pressure now than he did du~m g his occas10nal appearances 10
recent seasons.
"It's the difference between bemg a regular startmg pitcher
and a reliever m baseball," he says. "When tlle rellef pttcher
comes in, it's always lJI a tough spot and he has to do 1t un·
mediately, where the starter knows he's gomg to be m there for
awhile.
Nuw There ~s a Routine
"Now that I'm playmg, I know that I start every game even,
that we have 60 minutes and that we have a game plan to follow.
"The last couple of years, everytime I got into a game 1t was
usually a tough s1tuation, or a spot where there were only a
couple of mmutes left, where I had to try and do somethmg
quickly . And you know what can happen when you 're trymg to
rush things, trymg to do the job in a hurry. I don't thmk there's
nearly the pressure now."
One thing that hbs picked up since Hanratty became a starter
again IS his fan mail, but he lJISlSts that most of 1t JUSt comes
ftom "old Notre Dame well·wlShers."
'lbat'snice, says Hanratty, and so 1s wmning. But when you're
a professional who wants to play, there 's one thmg that may be
even better than adulation
"That's getting up on Monday and feel10g those aches and
pains,'' Hanratty say~'It ' s ruce to have that feehn g agam. ''

" Eiephantme"

16 oz.

OCEAN SPRAY

PUMPKIN

39'
594

.

l

~~~~PI~~R~~~::n

For

~-~~:~~~:~~-------J..

,

~

.R

2 59'
$239

Good at: Rutland Dept. Store

CRANBERRIES

·11

3 lb. can

FOLGERS
COFFEE
10~ 3 lb. can

2For

Sport Parade

~

game

~

I

w-coupon

FOLGERS

or

.

J.1IRA~;;Le~

For

NABISCO PREMIUM

Pkg.
•
1 -~P~R~O"!'!D"!!"U~C~E-=B~U~t~S--1

CELERY

2 85'

CAKE MIX

ALUMINUM FOIL

I

Commissioners of Meigs County:
We the members of Preceptor Beta
Sigma Ph1 Sorority, do earnestly requeet !.iliilt twti
necessary to keep the Pediatric Otolngleal DalliGIItit:
Meigs County.
A child can only be truly "handicapped" by 1M neclecl ol'
thoughUessness of those adults responsible fGr Ill* ftlare.

.I

Closed Thursday, Friday and

Today's

College

PHILIP SPORN PLANT
Post Office lox 361, Nft Haven, Wnt VlrtJinla 25241

Tole,.,.,.: oroa coclo 304 112·1111

All Equal Opportunity EmpJo,er

�•

•
4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Nov . 7.tl. 1973

5- Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport·Pomeroy, 0., Nov. 20, 1973
"
.
:~~)»,--:y.,.W;'o$'$-?h:=X(.$;:'io.

Archie does his best--always
ma gazin e

i ntC"r\"l('w

as

believing Pr es ideflt N1xon
should r esi~n beca use he has
hopeless ly lost his credibi lity

UY EDITH FO"-"
t do declare! I'll never move again .~ that is - move from
cne town to another-one house to another-and barely one

with the American people.

room to another.
Whew! I'm all tuckered out'
I've heard it said, "One moving is as bad as a fire." I used to
tllink it meant one moving destroyed as much as a fire . I
imagined movers banging up the dining room table, breaking the
best plates and losing forever some small but valuable trinkets.
Moving to my mind just about finished everything one had. Then
a few years, after I heard this quote , I discovered that moving
meant getting rid of as much accumulated junk as a fire .
What a mass of things we accumulate in attic, cellar and all
through the house. One never reali•es hOW much there is until.he
has to move or a fire gets rid of it. But there is one good thing
about moving as compared to a fire: When we move, we have to
do the sorting ourselves. We have to decide what to keep and
what to throw away, what is important enough to save and what
we can cheerfully give to the trash man.
l almost put on a floor show for the trash man each week,
hoping to keep him cheerful as he carted away all the "has

The conserv~t ive Republican

Congressman .·· ran
in
presidential primaries against
Nixon las t year.
"You don't mind what the
opposition says, you don't mind
if they call you an S.O.B., you
don 't mind if they say vari ous
things," Ashbrook said.
" But if they start laughing at
you or think you're crazy or a
joke, at that point you're in
trouble and never regain your
credibility . I don't think there
is any way he can re gain his
credibility."
Some previously staunch
supporters of the President,
Ashbrook said, "Now feel as if
they have been' led down the
garden path."
For the first time in his six
House terms, Ashbrook said he
was receiving mail from
Republican party officials in
Ohio which were critical uf the
President.
" I think it's just a sense of
fru s tration that enough is·
enough)s enough, and I've had
enough of enough," Ashbrook
said. "They are fed up with the
President, fed up and tired of

beens."
Really, It's a good thing once in a while to have to move just
so that one is compelled to consider the value of each possession.
And the farther off one mo:ves, or the smaller the next house, then
the more real and important the prob1em becomes. You can 't

take everything, so what will you take ? How do you select which
is valuable and which isn't? It is usually fairly easy to discov er
the trash. The very necessity to move reveals that you come
across something and exclaim, "Goodness ! Why did I ever keep
that?" and out it goes.
Of course, if you weren't going to move you would stiU keep
it, cluttering up your home and your life with it.
If is far more difficult , however, to choose between things
which have value. It is not a question now of one being trash;
these are both things we can use, things which help make life
easier and more pleasant. But we can't take them both. Which
will we take, which discard ? Wha t standard are we to use to
determine the answer ?
The moral of this is: This kind of decision faces us all con·
stantly. Not that every one is going to move. ll would be easier if
we were. Nor prbnarily does it concern possessions and things,
for that decision is an easier one to make .
The choice which faces us constantly is between various
values in life itseif. That decision you and I have to make.

Pilot plant
planned to
convert coal
CLEVELAND I UP! I - A $73
million
demonstration plant
will be built nea r Toledo to test
the commercial feasibility of
conve rti ng coat to cleanburn ing liquid and solid fuels,
it was ann ounced Monday.
Old Ben Coal Corp., a sub·
sidiary of Standard Oil of Ohio
!Sohio ) in making public the ·
plans f~r the mul ti&lt;ompany
projec t, said it would ta ke five
years to build the plant ad·
jacent to Sohio's refinery in
northwestern Ohio. The plant
would have the capacity to
process 900 tons of coal per
da y.
DeWitt W. Buchana n, Jr.,
president of Old Ben said at
least 15 firm s will participate
in the demonstration plant,
including Sohio, Old Ben and
Consolidated Coal Co.
'' We hope this process will be
commercially feasi ble and
help toward reducing the
import problem ," Buchanan
sa id . "During the next two
decades, demand for electricity is expected to quadruple
1

By GE ' E CAODES
CPI Sports Writer
COJ.UM BUS, Ohio t UPI 1 - lt
makes no d1 Frerence whether
it's wtnles..'5 Iowa or unbeaten
M1 ch1gan, Ohio State's Archie
Gnffin gives them all his best
effor.t.
Last Saturday, with thoughts
of lhis week's Big TPr'l ti tle

showdown with the Wolverines
admittedly dancing through his
head, the :&gt;-9, 180-pound Griffin
riddled Iowa with a school
record 246 yards.
The performance, which
paced the top-ranked Buckeyes
to a »13 victory over Iowa,
earned Griffin his second

Gr.·"'vesz'de
servz'ce held
a
Graveside services for Mrs.
Grace Hess, who died in
Co lumbus rece ntly , were
conduc ted al l :30 p.m. ll!onday
at:, th e Beech Grove Cemetery,
Pomeroy.
R~la ti ves and friends at·
tendmg were Mr. and Mrs . .
John (Martha Ruth ) Calhoun,
daughter and son.m-law , Mr.
and Mrs . Je rry (Judy )
Greenlee of New Stratt.svtlle,
and Miss Alice Ca lhoun,
and we must have a cleanburning domestic fuel to meet
the demand ,"
The coal conv.ersion process
yields a low.sulfur fuel with
about 16,000 BTU's per pound
as compared to 8,000 to 12,000
for a pound of unprocessed
coal.
Buchanan said the convers ion process has been
successfully tested through the
research and pilot plant state;;,

granddaughters
of
the
deceased , and John Calhoun lll
of Colwnbus, a grandson.
Also attending were three
sisters, Mrs . Helen Shuler,
Middleport ; Mrs. Wilma
Osborne and Mrs. Ruth Evans,
Pomeroy; nieces and nephews,
Mr . and Mrs. Nathan Roush,
·Syracuse; Mrs. Mary Sauvage,
'Louis Osborne and Harry
Osborne, Jr .• Pomeroy; Mrs.
Mildred Harris and Mrs . Verna
Snowden, Gallipolis.
Several cousins attending
included Miss Leona Kohl,
Middleport; Mrs. Mary
Webster, Pomeroy; 1\'lr, and
Mrs . Howa rd Lafe and
daughters, Mrs. Roberta Card,
and Mrs . Barbara Roush,
Michael Smith and Miss
Debbie Roush, Columbus .
Unable to attend were two
nephews, Earl William Hess of
San Diego, and Charles Hess of
Michigan.

Midwest Ba ck of the Week
honor this season.
"I thought some about
Michigan during the week and
it worried me," said the
Buckeyes' sophomore sensation.
"but I didn't look past Iowa . I
hate to look past a team
because those are the ones who
knock you off . !learned that in
high school."
Griffin's 246 yards against
Iowa, the ninth straight game
he has surpassed the JOI).yard
mark this year, pushed him to
1,265 yards for the season,
breaking the Ohio State single·
season rushing mark previously
held by John Brockington.
Breaking his own single..garne
rushing record which he had
set last year ~s a freshman
against North Carolina was the
second goal Griffin had set for
himseli this season . The other
was to gain more than 1,000
yards which he accomplished in
eight games.
·
But, if he hadn't been for his
understudy at tailback, senior
Elmer Lippert, he might not
have gotten a shot at the
individual mark.
"Coach (Woody) Hayes was
going to take me out, " Griffin
said, "but Elmer asked him to
let me stay in so I could get the
35 more yards l needed. If he
(Hayes) had told me to come
out, I would have but I wanted

It's IW'key time and whether you're a novice or a veteran at
preparing the bird, there are certain things about which the cook
' needs to be cautioned.
So, today, let's talk turkey with tips from Meigs County
Extension Agent Marta Guilkey.
Miss Guilkey advises that a bird, fresh or thawed, should
never be left at room temperature for more than an hour. Poultry
should be completely cooked at one time, not partially. cooked
one day and fini$ed the next since this lets germs grow.
After the meal, she says, all stuffing should be removed from
Ole turkey and the meat, dressing and the lefto&lt;Jver grayy should
be refrigerated at once. When reheating, the food should reach a
minimum temperature of 165 degrees to kill any bacteria which
might have started to grow.

· THE POINT PLEASANT HIGH SCHOOL.gradualion class of
1924 will definitely have a 50th class reunion in 1974. II is
necessary to communicate with each member of the class; we
need assistance in locating each one.
· l want to especially thank Fred· Spencer of Mason for fur·
nishing me with our 1924 yearbook which includes the following
nam~. including many which are deceased: Imogene Amos,
Marguerite Asher, David Batey, Aline Cilrlmill, Alice Can·
terbury, Ethel Bell, Mary Dower, Vivian Fisher, Omar Greenlee,
Charles Kenny, Anna Miller, Alzona Rigney, Elizabeth Robinson, Daniel Sayre, Christine Stortz, Vaugh Spencer, Garnet
Tillis, Cinderella Winter, Mildred Adams, Daisy Barnett , Frank ·
Black, Lucille Bumgarner, Bonnie Canterbury, Belle Darst, Eva
Eads, Helen Fry, Bertha Jenkins, Charles Lewis , William
Powell, Alice Roach, Julia Lewis Roseberry. Clarence
Schneidner, Elizabeth Shelines, Margaret Stribling, Samuel
Theis, George Wilson, Jewell Arrington, Eunice ·Barnett, Ruth
Bletner, Camille ·Black, Odin Clendenin, Edith Darst, Rolland
Fisher, Marie Foglesong, Lola Johnson, Loretta McCombs,
Laura Rhoades, Catharine Robinson, Hester Roush, Zodie
Sebrell, Fred Spencer, Frank Shaffer, and Louise White.
·
~t me hear from each of you if it is only to inform me about
yourself. Many of you will be needed to help plan our reunion . Let
me know of all those you have information about. Let's make this
50th anniversary of the Pl. Pleasant" High School Class of 1924 a
huge ·success.
My telephone number 675-4836, address, Edith Fox , 2607
Garfield Ave., Pl . Pleasant 25550.

.
'
~!:!::»'!::::::::~*

S , I ~ Magnolza club
~;
OCI a i ptans party
ltea lend ar;~~,

TUESDAY
FRIENDLY Circle, Trinity
Church, 7:30 p.m. Mrs. Roy
Mayer, pro~ram leader.
SYRACUSE • MINERS·
VILLE baseball boosters 7:30
p.m. at Municipal building.
Plans for rummage sale to be
made. All persons urged to
attend.
ANNUAL
Thanksgiving
· dinner, for members of Drew
Webster Post 39 7 p.m. at post
home. Meeting to follow.
OHIO, ETA PHI CHAPTER,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority 7:30
TUesday night at the Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric Co.
Cultural program by Mrs.
Wilma Reece and Mrs. Susan
Baer. Janet ' Pickens and
Barbara Logan, hostesses.
. MEETING AT Long Bottom
United Methodist Church now
in progress through Wed·
llfsday, 7:30p.m. nighUy. The
Rev. Paul Hawks . guest
speaker ·TUesday and Wed·
' nesday.
FRIDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Women's
Fellowship at Dexter, 7:30p.m.
Love gifts to be turned in for
WooSter Children's Home.

!HAVE JUST RETl,JRNED FROM a state board meeting of
extension homemakers at North Bend State Park, Ritchie
County. Believe you me, the scenery was breathtaking. The
rustic seclusion, modern luxury and first class facilities of our
State Park is almost unbelievable. We were given the "red
carpet trealment" as the summer tourists had all left.
We met to hear reports of various committees: evaiuate
work done and to make and elaborate on plans for our national
meeting in Morgantown in 1976.
In Mason County, the. Bi-Centennial project of the extension
homemakers is to locate. move and restore a one room school
house,"in order to help preserve our American heritage.
·
We need cooperation of'·every organization in Mason County
and we welcome suggestions . Each individual will be given
credit for his donations and time spent on this worthwhile
project.
The extension homemakers Bi..Centennial Committee includes this reporter as chairwoman, Mrs. Howard Garland and
Mrs. otis Randolph, with Carl Cook , extension agent, and Vicki
Keefer , extension homemakers~ agent as advisors. Let us hear
from you.
"SACRIFICE OF THANKSGIVING" will be the sermo n
topic of Rev. James Dempsey Wednesday evening, 7:30p .m. at
New Haven United Methodist Church. The Thanksgiving service
will be sponsored by Mason United Methodist Parish.
A COMBINED THANKSGIVING service will be held at
Hartford Baptist Church, Thursday morning at 10 with Rev.
James Dempsey delivering the me ssage. This is a combined
effort of the Baptist and United Methodist Church held each year.

POMEROY LANES

"•·

Spencer's Market

G&amp;J Auto Parts ·
Gibbs Grocery
High Ind . Game -

Within 10 years he ' ll be
grad ua ted, looking for a job. U
e lectric power isn 't available,
his job won ' t be.
We are a nation built on
ele c tric energy . Our entire
economy hums to the tune of
generators that run all industries.
Within 10 years we must
build as much new generating
capabi lity as we've built in our

•
BLACK &amp;
WHITE TV

•

STEREO

H igh Series -

J6·

35
34
Myrtle

Jl;'ln Jenkins 471,

·••

f

CAPPING CEREMONIES - Five girls were capped
Monday night in ceremonies at the Veterans Memorial
Candystripers' meeting. Conducting the capping ceremonies
were Mrs. Pam Theiss, director, pictured left , and Mrs.
Donald Deiner, assistant director. Completing the required
10 hours of volunteer service to receive their caps were, left

A program is underway in
Meigs County to collect Christ·
mas gifts for residents who are
confined to the Southeastern
Ohio Mental Health Center in
Athens.
Mrs. Mary Martin again will
chair the project. A collection
center has been set up at ·the
Davis Insurance Co. office at
the corner of Court and West
Second Sts., Pomeroy.
No item is too small to give,
Mrs. Marlin said. Items are to
be delivered unwrapped to the
insurance office. Contributors
are not required to provide any
wrapping paper or ribbon.
There etre 25 men and 17

entire history. We must tiave
trillions of BTU's of heat available from some fuel to provide
the power needed in the 1980's
-and use the fuel in a way that
causes a minimal impact on the
environment.
Obviously such a massive
program creates the opportunity for differences of opinions
and priorities. Our promise io
you Is simply this: We recognize
the necessity to preserve the
environment for future genera- .
tlons (our children will live here,
too) and will take every respon sible measure to do so. We also

must recognize the need for
electric power-and will take
every responsible action to
make sure it's available . In fact,
we are obligated by law to do
so.
In fulfillment of these two
objectives - we'll do our best to
strike an acceptable balance
between environmental considerations and the need for additional electric: power.

'

MASOM FURNITURE
•

•
..

•

I

''

1 '
'

I

A donation to the Middleport
firemen's Chrlsbnas project of
preparing baskets for, needy
families was made by Class 12
of the Heath United Methodist
Church, Middleport, at a
meeting Thursday night at the
Church.
The class also made plans to
remember
the
church
custodian and the children of
the Meigs County Home during '
.the holiday seasoli. There will
be a gift exchange among the
members at the December
meeting.
· New officers were elected ·
and Include Mrs . Mary
Rinehart, president; Mrs, L.
W, McComas, vice president;
Mrs.
Glenn
Lambert,
oecretary; Mrs. Fred Hibbs;
treasurer.
A program on Thanksgiving
lhouahts was presented by
Mrs, Forrest Bachtel who read
a column written by the late
Mrs, Slnclalr Lewis, In the

women . from Meigs County
confined to the center and
these will benefit from the
program . Members of the
auxiliary of Drew Webster
Post, American Legion, will go
to Athens before Chrislmas to
help wrap the presents. All
articles should be left at the
insurance office by Dec. 5.
Items suitable for giving,
Mrs. Martin said, include shoe
strings, pens, biUfolds, purses,
stamps, statio~ery, belts,
cigarettes, candy, s having
cream, ·after s have lotion,
hose, socks, soap, wash cloths,
clothing and other related
articles.

Officers elected
New officers were elected at
the Thursday night meeting of
the Twin City Shrinettes at the
home of Mrs . Neacil Carsey,
Middleport.
Elected were Mrs. Bonnie
Miller, president; Mrs. Erma
Yoho, vice president; ' Mrs.
Emma Clatworthy, secretary;
and Miss Shirley Beegle,
treasurer . Installation w.ill ,
take place at the December
meeting .
It was reported that Mrs.
Ruth Swisher is home .from the
hospital. Mrs . Mary Bowen
was initiated at the ceremonial
in Columbus Nov. 3, it was
announced.
The deadline for taking
donations on a rug donated by

Mrs. Cora Beegle was set for
Dec. 8 at the Miller Bros.
Service Station in RuUand. The
money will go to the Crippled
Children and Burns Institute
and will be taken to Columbus
in the spring.
Mrs. Yoho turned over a
check for $20 for the benefit of
the Burns Institute and
Crippled Children. She had
mado Raggedy Ann and Andy
dolls and took donations on
them.
The Chrislmas party was
changed from the re gular
meeting night to Dec. 11 at the
home of Miss Shirley Beegle.
Each member is to take a $2
exchange gift.
The prize package donated
by Mrs. Bonnie Miller was won
by Mrs. Emma Clatworthy.
·Refreshments were served
by Mrs. Jane Walton assisted
by Mrs. Carsey to Mrs. Cora
Beegle, Miss Shirley Beegle,
Mrs. Emma Clatworthy, Mrs,
Bonnie Miller, Mrs. Evelyn
Napper Leach and Mrs. Erma
Yoho.

Christm.a s party plans were
made durmg a meeting of the
Magnolia Club Thursday night
at the home of Mrs. Ethel
Stewart.
The dinner will be held at the
Red Carpet Inn with a party to
follow at the home of Mrs. Ella
Smith. There will be a gift
exchange . .
Mrs . Smith, president,
opened the meeting with the
Lori:l's Prayer. Mrs. Burton
Smith gave devotiOns using' a
Thanksgiving theme with
"Thinking and Thanking" and
a prayer poem, "Thanks Be to
God! " The treasurer reported
a balance of $44.40 in the
treasury. It was voted to raise
the annual dues to $3.
The program by Mrs .
Georgia Watson included a
Herman Caudill, Violet L.
poem on Thanksgiving, and Caudill to George P. Celani,
two games, both pertaining to JoAnn Celani, 3.5 Acres,
the holiday. Mrs . Doris Chester.
Graeser will have devotions for
Milo Nugent, Ruth N~gent to
a bouquet of radiantl
the next meeting with everyone Charles P. Bailey, Doris M.
fresh
autumn
to have a reading or qui• for Bailey, 18.81 Acres, Lebanon.
the program.
Coy Hawk to Lester Hawk,
Games were played with Parcels, Orange.
prizes going to Mrs. Grueser,
Clarence A. Lambert, Sally
Mrs. Gladys Cuckler, Mrs. Ella .J . Lambert to Shanlilal
Smith and "Mrs. Bertha Goradia, .20 Acre, Rutland
Village.
Canaday.
1
Charles L. Jeffers, gdn.,
Attending besides those
named were Miss !rna Jesse, Theresa Hines to Pentajay
Mrs. Iris Kelton, Mrs. Ethel Company, Int. in Parcels,
Stewart and Mrs. Margaret Bedford.
Orner G. Hines, Grace Hines,
Rose.
Ruby Mulligan, Mabel Lee,
Guy W. Lee, Lena Hamm to
Pentajay Company, Parcels,
Marlene Wilson 446 .
High
Team
Game
Bedford.
Poc kllngton ConstruCtion 811 .
CUT FLOWER
Randall Richardson, Sue
Hlgh Team Series - Spencer 's
Market, 2198 .
Carol Richardson to John P.
ARRANGEMENTS ·
Gibboney, 118 Acres, Bedford.
W. E. Boggess, Mannie
Boggess, aka Minnie Boggess
to Charles Rittenour, Jean
Cash &amp; Carry·
column she spoke about the
Rittenour,
31
Acres
and
100
.
many things _which people .Rd., Olive.
never stop to think about that
J. Robert McElhinny, Louise
are a benefit received with no
M. McElhinny to J. Robert
effort made on anyone's part, McElhinny,
59 N. Second St.
M.
Louise
theselnclude health, beauty of
Middleport, 0.
McElhinny, Lot, Middleport.
nature, music, prose and
William B. Witte, Sarah Sne
poetry, love and friendship .
Witte to Joseph W. Jones, Ruby
Mrs. Bachtel described the J. Jones, Lot 4, Chester.
First Thanksgiving in 1621
when the pilgrims setUed in
New England and George
Washington's proclamation in
1789 tllat made Thanksgiving
an official day.
·
The meeting opened with 8
plano prelude by Mrs. Rinehart
and poetry on Thanksgiving.
Mrs. Harry Chesher was
devotional leader and uaed
scripture from Isaiah outlining
the reasons for the day of
thanks. She concluded with
prayer. Mrs. James Jividen
COLUMBUS AND EOUTHERN OHIO ELECTRIC COMPANY
and Mrs. Emma Wayland
served as hooteseea aaslsted by
Mrs. L. E. McComas .

Meigs

Property

Transfers

'I

REUTER

to right, Brenda campbell, Cathy Rizer, Cindy Thomas ,
Cheryl Lehew and Debbie Boatright. Others who have
qualified to receive their caps, but not present for the
ceremonies, were Madelyn Pickett, Mary C. Smith and
Melanie Walding.

I

Collect gifts

AGENTS,

Loyal Women meet
!loliday party plans were
'
made
during the Thursday.
night meeting of the Loyal
Women's Class of the Mid·
dleport Church of Christ.
The dinner party will be Dec.
6 at 6 p.m. at the church and
will feature an old-fashioned
Christmas pr ogram with
rec itations by Mrs , Edgar
Reynolda. Mrs. Eleanor Lohse
will have charge of the shut-in
boxes which will be prepared
following the dinner. Miss
Mildred Hawley and Mrs .
Martha Childs will handle the
table decorations for the
dinner.
Bazaar plans were discussed
and the Thanksgiving prayer
service at the Middleport
United Presbyterian church
was announced. Meinbers
were urged . to attend the
community service.
Miss Frances Roush was
elected president of the class,
aQ office held for the past five
years by Mrs . Oscar Roush.
· Devotions to open the meeting
were given by Mrs. Childs who
read Psalm 105, 1·5. Her topic
was friendship and she read an
article ~ertaining to memories
oi childhood titled "Over the
Hills to Grandma's House"
from Ideals.
• ''
· Reported il1 were Mrs.
Carrie Smith, Leslie Ervin and
Ed Haggetty, aU · confined to
tile Holzer Medical Center, and
Mrs. Margaret Boyer and Mrs.
Nelle DeWees.
· Mrs. Reynolds, chairwoman
of the basket and recipe
folders, reported on sales. At
the meeting were Mrs. Clara
Dilgard, Cleveland, a member
of the class and the old&lt;&gt;St

member in years of service in
the c hurch, and Mrs. Freda
Welling, Punta Gorda, Fla.
Alice Robeson presented the
pr ogr~m on · a Thanksgiving
theme using a meditation on
prayer, thankfulness and
praise taken from "The Quiet
f!our."
Refrestunents were served
by Mrs. Martha Childs, Mrs.
Grace Pratt, Mrs. Mary Bailey
and Mrs. Lena Wolfe.

GERALD REUTER
LARRY BROGAN
ED NA SC HOENLEB

Women and
Children's

Auto· Fire
Accident &amp; Health
Homeowners
Bonds

SNOW AND

DRESS BOOTS

107 Sycamore
Pomeroy, o.

heritage house
PHONE
992-5130

Your Thorn MeAn Stor~
MIDDLEPORT

STUS
lE
OF

$2,000.

PEOPLE TRUST US TO HANDLE
SA)/ INGS OF OVER $150,000,000.
lf vou n ceJ ·a lo&lt;t n , you need ~o mco nc vo u c:1.n
m1 st._\X' hate ver the am o um you need. ·
Cin• Loan is a J itTenmt kinJ o f Ju an
w mpan~' . We h a nd le S(lvings roo . If peojl ie
tr us t l1s to ma nn t;e the ir sadn gs , yo u kno\\'
vou can nu ~ t us to hand le ym:r lo a n .
\Vhat makes us a differe nt kind of
loa.n compaay, mlkes us a better kinJ of
loa n company.

'

·ciTY LOAN
&amp;SAVING~ .125 E. Main St.·992·217!
Pomeroy, 0.

THE

THANKSGIVER

Class ·makes donation

'

I

J7
46
42

Sisson 185, Mary Porter 173 ;

0 US, e's

ZENITH
COLOR TV

'

November 6, 1973

Newell Sunoco
Excelsior 011 Co .
Pockllngton Construction

r--------------.. "'

HERMA N GRATE
77l·SS9'l
1\"ISON, W. VA .

.

~

THOUGHT FOR THE DAY - "Our lives - regardless of
circwnstances - are overflowing with re~son s for thankfulnesS"."

The Rev. and Mrs. William
Knittel have returned home
from a four day school of
missions held in CoJwnbus.
The school was directed
toward miss ionary work with
approximately 25 familie s
from the foreign mi ssionary
field repre sented in @ din g
Wearin~ bifocals wouldn't
Shanha and Liberia , Thai ~-nd , be so diflocult if they didn't
Austria, Germany, Columbia, keep moving th e curbs.
Jamaica, Nicaragua , Ecuador
and Venezu ela .
The Rev. Mr . Kn ittel was
appointed by the Un ited
Pentecostal
Church International to serve as home
mission director ave r the
southeastern section of Ohio.
He also attended a two day
session for home mission of
schools. He is serv in g~ .on the
board of home missions for the
Slate of Ohio.
LARRY B~9GAN
The Rev . Mr. Knittel is also
AGENT
youth director for the
southeastern section of Ohio.
He has served slx years as
youth director and is servin g
INSURANCE
on the state board of the yo uth
AGENCY, INC.
department.

By Charlene Hoefltcb

HOW TO COOK ATURKEY
Many years ago Rose S. Reynolds gave instructions for
preparing a turkey which even the newest bride could follow, and
it became a part of the Tried and True Recipes Book compiled by
the Amateur Gardeners Club about 20 years ago.
So for those of you without experience, we offer rules from
Rose for a tastier turkey come Thanksgiving Day.
Select a young turkey which has firm yellow flesh and a
flexible breast bone, allowing 8 to 12 pounds for .an average
famlly. Remove pinfeathers and wash inside and out.
Most tur1&lt;eys are improved with steaming. To steam place
on rack in a roaster with a litUe water in lbe bottom. Cover and
place over low lire, steaming the turkey Ul)lil the flesh can be
pricked with a fork. Remove from the fire and stuff with
dressing.
The opening may be covered with the gizard or an end slice
of bread held in place with toothpicks. Return to tbe roaster, rub
with salt and pepper, and place thin slices of salt pork over the
bird to insure juicy meat. Cover and bake in moderate oven 2to 4
hours, depending on the size of the turkey. Remove the cover the
last hail hour. Take the turkey out of the roaster, and make
brown grayy of stock or giblet gravy as preferred.
·Dressing: Eight to 10 cups ground, stale beead or toast
crumbs, 3 medium onions, minced, 2 tablespoons ground sage,
salt and pepper to taste. Moisten with warm water (stock from
steaming may be used ).

A'ITEND MEETING
Mrs. Dora Heaton and Mrs.
faye Pratt of the Winding
Trail Garden Club attended the
Region !1, Ohio Association of
Garden Clubs, meeting held
recently at the Eastern High
School.

Attend school

'

Fun With Food

to break the record .again. I
might not get another chance."
Although Griffin rushed for
246 yards, he scored only once,
while fullback Bruce Ella, with
11 yards in nine carries, got
four touchdov:ns. But it doesn't
bother Griffin.
"When I came to Ohio State I
knew that when we aot down
close to the goal line the
fullback would be carrying the
ball," he said. "All that
matters is that the team
scores."
Griffin, who has a younger
brother being highly recruited
as a running back thiS fall,
says he doesn't have time to
worry about whether a team is
keying on him.
"Coach Hayes told me before
Saturday's game they might be
keying on me /' he said, "and if
they did there would be other
guys running the ball more.
"But that's okay because I
like to block to repay them for
what they do for me," he
continued, "and they do a heck
of a lot."
Griffin feels he has improveJ
since the season began, al~
though he has had "a few
minor injuries that" have slowed
me down a litUe.
"All in all I'm better," he
continued, 41 ! reel if you can't
improve, you shouldn't be out
there.''

LOOKING FOR SOMETHING really , really special for
dessert ? How about fro•en cranberry velvet pie - delightfully
different, and you make it any time and it's always ready to
serve.
·
FROZEN CRANBERRY VELVET PIE
I I'• cups fine vanilla wafer crumbs, 6 tablespoons butter or
margarine, melted; one B-ounce package cream cheese, softened; one cup whipping cream, ¥4cup sugar ,lh teaspoon vanilla
and one !!&gt;ounce can whole cranberry sauce, drained.
Combine crumbs and melted butter or margarine; press
finnly into bottom and sides of buttered !).inch pie plate. Chill
until firm, Meanwhile, beat cream cheese until fluffy. Combine
.whipping cream, sugar and vanilla; whip until thickened but not
stiff . Gradually add to whipped cream cheese, beating until
smooth and creamy. Set aside a few whole cranberries from
sauce for garnish. Fold remaining cranberry sauce into whipped
mixture. Spoon into chilled crust, and freeze firm.
Remove from freezer 10 minutes before serving. To serve,
top with additional whipped cream and the reserved berries.

THANKSGIVING THOUGHTS - An unknown author .
penned these thought provoking lines : We once saw a man draw
some sinaiJ black ovals on a sheet of·paper. We looked, but could
make nothing of them. They seemed just an irregular assemblage of black dots. Then, however, he drew a few lines, put in a
few rests and a clef sign at the beginning, and we immediately
saw that those black dots were actually musical notes. On
sounding· them we were singing, "Praise God From Whom All
Blessings Flow."

.

"4.95

DUDLEY'S A.ORIST

We're all workif1J

to make OtJr com111111ities

brfjhter, happier and better.

.

,,,.

'

' increases in value.
on iL ) And it never
have been considering the purchase of The lonf!er you ~sc ic the more ic depretheir own phones. We arc rhe first to ad- ciates. And so does your ori.J.:.i nal capital
mit char there are adva ntages to owning
invesrmenc.
telephone egui pmem- if you 'rca phone
Then, the re's maintenance. For a
company. We'vt: done it for years. How· simple system you'll catl in outs ide help
ever, what's good fo r us is not necessarily now and chen. A ve ry complex set-up
goOd for you.
·
may rcquirc~that you puc a man on staff
A telephone system s·tarcs out cost· so you r vi cal communications don·t grind
int: big money. (You' re bu)' ing more to a halt in the n1.idst of a business day.
than just a black plastic box with a dial
As you can sec, ownint: a phone sysSome of ou r business customers

rem is not as simple as it rnay seem.
We've spem decades at it . Thac's why
we cao pro:vide your business with the
serv ice; cquipmeln ;tnd expert advice
rou need .

Call us for a consultation. There is
no extra char}-:t for information. And, of
course, t here's no obti~adon to buy any
C&lt;IU 1p111Cilt.

(?j i~

GEnERAL TELEPHOnE
•

I.
•I

/

'

I

,,

�•

•
4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Nov . 7.tl. 1973

5- Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport·Pomeroy, 0., Nov. 20, 1973
"
.
:~~)»,--:y.,.W;'o$'$-?h:=X(.$;:'io.

Archie does his best--always
ma gazin e

i ntC"r\"l('w

as

believing Pr es ideflt N1xon
should r esi~n beca use he has
hopeless ly lost his credibi lity

UY EDITH FO"-"
t do declare! I'll never move again .~ that is - move from
cne town to another-one house to another-and barely one

with the American people.

room to another.
Whew! I'm all tuckered out'
I've heard it said, "One moving is as bad as a fire." I used to
tllink it meant one moving destroyed as much as a fire . I
imagined movers banging up the dining room table, breaking the
best plates and losing forever some small but valuable trinkets.
Moving to my mind just about finished everything one had. Then
a few years, after I heard this quote , I discovered that moving
meant getting rid of as much accumulated junk as a fire .
What a mass of things we accumulate in attic, cellar and all
through the house. One never reali•es hOW much there is until.he
has to move or a fire gets rid of it. But there is one good thing
about moving as compared to a fire: When we move, we have to
do the sorting ourselves. We have to decide what to keep and
what to throw away, what is important enough to save and what
we can cheerfully give to the trash man.
l almost put on a floor show for the trash man each week,
hoping to keep him cheerful as he carted away all the "has

The conserv~t ive Republican

Congressman .·· ran
in
presidential primaries against
Nixon las t year.
"You don't mind what the
opposition says, you don't mind
if they call you an S.O.B., you
don 't mind if they say vari ous
things," Ashbrook said.
" But if they start laughing at
you or think you're crazy or a
joke, at that point you're in
trouble and never regain your
credibility . I don't think there
is any way he can re gain his
credibility."
Some previously staunch
supporters of the President,
Ashbrook said, "Now feel as if
they have been' led down the
garden path."
For the first time in his six
House terms, Ashbrook said he
was receiving mail from
Republican party officials in
Ohio which were critical uf the
President.
" I think it's just a sense of
fru s tration that enough is·
enough)s enough, and I've had
enough of enough," Ashbrook
said. "They are fed up with the
President, fed up and tired of

beens."
Really, It's a good thing once in a while to have to move just
so that one is compelled to consider the value of each possession.
And the farther off one mo:ves, or the smaller the next house, then
the more real and important the prob1em becomes. You can 't

take everything, so what will you take ? How do you select which
is valuable and which isn't? It is usually fairly easy to discov er
the trash. The very necessity to move reveals that you come
across something and exclaim, "Goodness ! Why did I ever keep
that?" and out it goes.
Of course, if you weren't going to move you would stiU keep
it, cluttering up your home and your life with it.
If is far more difficult , however, to choose between things
which have value. It is not a question now of one being trash;
these are both things we can use, things which help make life
easier and more pleasant. But we can't take them both. Which
will we take, which discard ? Wha t standard are we to use to
determine the answer ?
The moral of this is: This kind of decision faces us all con·
stantly. Not that every one is going to move. ll would be easier if
we were. Nor prbnarily does it concern possessions and things,
for that decision is an easier one to make .
The choice which faces us constantly is between various
values in life itseif. That decision you and I have to make.

Pilot plant
planned to
convert coal
CLEVELAND I UP! I - A $73
million
demonstration plant
will be built nea r Toledo to test
the commercial feasibility of
conve rti ng coat to cleanburn ing liquid and solid fuels,
it was ann ounced Monday.
Old Ben Coal Corp., a sub·
sidiary of Standard Oil of Ohio
!Sohio ) in making public the ·
plans f~r the mul ti&lt;ompany
projec t, said it would ta ke five
years to build the plant ad·
jacent to Sohio's refinery in
northwestern Ohio. The plant
would have the capacity to
process 900 tons of coal per
da y.
DeWitt W. Buchana n, Jr.,
president of Old Ben said at
least 15 firm s will participate
in the demonstration plant,
including Sohio, Old Ben and
Consolidated Coal Co.
'' We hope this process will be
commercially feasi ble and
help toward reducing the
import problem ," Buchanan
sa id . "During the next two
decades, demand for electricity is expected to quadruple
1

By GE ' E CAODES
CPI Sports Writer
COJ.UM BUS, Ohio t UPI 1 - lt
makes no d1 Frerence whether
it's wtnles..'5 Iowa or unbeaten
M1 ch1gan, Ohio State's Archie
Gnffin gives them all his best
effor.t.
Last Saturday, with thoughts
of lhis week's Big TPr'l ti tle

showdown with the Wolverines
admittedly dancing through his
head, the :&gt;-9, 180-pound Griffin
riddled Iowa with a school
record 246 yards.
The performance, which
paced the top-ranked Buckeyes
to a »13 victory over Iowa,
earned Griffin his second

Gr.·"'vesz'de
servz'ce held
a
Graveside services for Mrs.
Grace Hess, who died in
Co lumbus rece ntly , were
conduc ted al l :30 p.m. ll!onday
at:, th e Beech Grove Cemetery,
Pomeroy.
R~la ti ves and friends at·
tendmg were Mr. and Mrs . .
John (Martha Ruth ) Calhoun,
daughter and son.m-law , Mr.
and Mrs . Je rry (Judy )
Greenlee of New Stratt.svtlle,
and Miss Alice Ca lhoun,
and we must have a cleanburning domestic fuel to meet
the demand ,"
The coal conv.ersion process
yields a low.sulfur fuel with
about 16,000 BTU's per pound
as compared to 8,000 to 12,000
for a pound of unprocessed
coal.
Buchanan said the convers ion process has been
successfully tested through the
research and pilot plant state;;,

granddaughters
of
the
deceased , and John Calhoun lll
of Colwnbus, a grandson.
Also attending were three
sisters, Mrs . Helen Shuler,
Middleport ; Mrs. Wilma
Osborne and Mrs. Ruth Evans,
Pomeroy; nieces and nephews,
Mr . and Mrs. Nathan Roush,
·Syracuse; Mrs. Mary Sauvage,
'Louis Osborne and Harry
Osborne, Jr .• Pomeroy; Mrs.
Mildred Harris and Mrs . Verna
Snowden, Gallipolis.
Several cousins attending
included Miss Leona Kohl,
Middleport; Mrs. Mary
Webster, Pomeroy; 1\'lr, and
Mrs . Howa rd Lafe and
daughters, Mrs. Roberta Card,
and Mrs . Barbara Roush,
Michael Smith and Miss
Debbie Roush, Columbus .
Unable to attend were two
nephews, Earl William Hess of
San Diego, and Charles Hess of
Michigan.

Midwest Ba ck of the Week
honor this season.
"I thought some about
Michigan during the week and
it worried me," said the
Buckeyes' sophomore sensation.
"but I didn't look past Iowa . I
hate to look past a team
because those are the ones who
knock you off . !learned that in
high school."
Griffin's 246 yards against
Iowa, the ninth straight game
he has surpassed the JOI).yard
mark this year, pushed him to
1,265 yards for the season,
breaking the Ohio State single·
season rushing mark previously
held by John Brockington.
Breaking his own single..garne
rushing record which he had
set last year ~s a freshman
against North Carolina was the
second goal Griffin had set for
himseli this season . The other
was to gain more than 1,000
yards which he accomplished in
eight games.
·
But, if he hadn't been for his
understudy at tailback, senior
Elmer Lippert, he might not
have gotten a shot at the
individual mark.
"Coach (Woody) Hayes was
going to take me out, " Griffin
said, "but Elmer asked him to
let me stay in so I could get the
35 more yards l needed. If he
(Hayes) had told me to come
out, I would have but I wanted

It's IW'key time and whether you're a novice or a veteran at
preparing the bird, there are certain things about which the cook
' needs to be cautioned.
So, today, let's talk turkey with tips from Meigs County
Extension Agent Marta Guilkey.
Miss Guilkey advises that a bird, fresh or thawed, should
never be left at room temperature for more than an hour. Poultry
should be completely cooked at one time, not partially. cooked
one day and fini$ed the next since this lets germs grow.
After the meal, she says, all stuffing should be removed from
Ole turkey and the meat, dressing and the lefto&lt;Jver grayy should
be refrigerated at once. When reheating, the food should reach a
minimum temperature of 165 degrees to kill any bacteria which
might have started to grow.

· THE POINT PLEASANT HIGH SCHOOL.gradualion class of
1924 will definitely have a 50th class reunion in 1974. II is
necessary to communicate with each member of the class; we
need assistance in locating each one.
· l want to especially thank Fred· Spencer of Mason for fur·
nishing me with our 1924 yearbook which includes the following
nam~. including many which are deceased: Imogene Amos,
Marguerite Asher, David Batey, Aline Cilrlmill, Alice Can·
terbury, Ethel Bell, Mary Dower, Vivian Fisher, Omar Greenlee,
Charles Kenny, Anna Miller, Alzona Rigney, Elizabeth Robinson, Daniel Sayre, Christine Stortz, Vaugh Spencer, Garnet
Tillis, Cinderella Winter, Mildred Adams, Daisy Barnett , Frank ·
Black, Lucille Bumgarner, Bonnie Canterbury, Belle Darst, Eva
Eads, Helen Fry, Bertha Jenkins, Charles Lewis , William
Powell, Alice Roach, Julia Lewis Roseberry. Clarence
Schneidner, Elizabeth Shelines, Margaret Stribling, Samuel
Theis, George Wilson, Jewell Arrington, Eunice ·Barnett, Ruth
Bletner, Camille ·Black, Odin Clendenin, Edith Darst, Rolland
Fisher, Marie Foglesong, Lola Johnson, Loretta McCombs,
Laura Rhoades, Catharine Robinson, Hester Roush, Zodie
Sebrell, Fred Spencer, Frank Shaffer, and Louise White.
·
~t me hear from each of you if it is only to inform me about
yourself. Many of you will be needed to help plan our reunion . Let
me know of all those you have information about. Let's make this
50th anniversary of the Pl. Pleasant" High School Class of 1924 a
huge ·success.
My telephone number 675-4836, address, Edith Fox , 2607
Garfield Ave., Pl . Pleasant 25550.

.
'
~!:!::»'!::::::::~*

S , I ~ Magnolza club
~;
OCI a i ptans party
ltea lend ar;~~,

TUESDAY
FRIENDLY Circle, Trinity
Church, 7:30 p.m. Mrs. Roy
Mayer, pro~ram leader.
SYRACUSE • MINERS·
VILLE baseball boosters 7:30
p.m. at Municipal building.
Plans for rummage sale to be
made. All persons urged to
attend.
ANNUAL
Thanksgiving
· dinner, for members of Drew
Webster Post 39 7 p.m. at post
home. Meeting to follow.
OHIO, ETA PHI CHAPTER,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority 7:30
TUesday night at the Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric Co.
Cultural program by Mrs.
Wilma Reece and Mrs. Susan
Baer. Janet ' Pickens and
Barbara Logan, hostesses.
. MEETING AT Long Bottom
United Methodist Church now
in progress through Wed·
llfsday, 7:30p.m. nighUy. The
Rev. Paul Hawks . guest
speaker ·TUesday and Wed·
' nesday.
FRIDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Women's
Fellowship at Dexter, 7:30p.m.
Love gifts to be turned in for
WooSter Children's Home.

!HAVE JUST RETl,JRNED FROM a state board meeting of
extension homemakers at North Bend State Park, Ritchie
County. Believe you me, the scenery was breathtaking. The
rustic seclusion, modern luxury and first class facilities of our
State Park is almost unbelievable. We were given the "red
carpet trealment" as the summer tourists had all left.
We met to hear reports of various committees: evaiuate
work done and to make and elaborate on plans for our national
meeting in Morgantown in 1976.
In Mason County, the. Bi-Centennial project of the extension
homemakers is to locate. move and restore a one room school
house,"in order to help preserve our American heritage.
·
We need cooperation of'·every organization in Mason County
and we welcome suggestions . Each individual will be given
credit for his donations and time spent on this worthwhile
project.
The extension homemakers Bi..Centennial Committee includes this reporter as chairwoman, Mrs. Howard Garland and
Mrs. otis Randolph, with Carl Cook , extension agent, and Vicki
Keefer , extension homemakers~ agent as advisors. Let us hear
from you.
"SACRIFICE OF THANKSGIVING" will be the sermo n
topic of Rev. James Dempsey Wednesday evening, 7:30p .m. at
New Haven United Methodist Church. The Thanksgiving service
will be sponsored by Mason United Methodist Parish.
A COMBINED THANKSGIVING service will be held at
Hartford Baptist Church, Thursday morning at 10 with Rev.
James Dempsey delivering the me ssage. This is a combined
effort of the Baptist and United Methodist Church held each year.

POMEROY LANES

"•·

Spencer's Market

G&amp;J Auto Parts ·
Gibbs Grocery
High Ind . Game -

Within 10 years he ' ll be
grad ua ted, looking for a job. U
e lectric power isn 't available,
his job won ' t be.
We are a nation built on
ele c tric energy . Our entire
economy hums to the tune of
generators that run all industries.
Within 10 years we must
build as much new generating
capabi lity as we've built in our

•
BLACK &amp;
WHITE TV

•

STEREO

H igh Series -

J6·

35
34
Myrtle

Jl;'ln Jenkins 471,

·••

f

CAPPING CEREMONIES - Five girls were capped
Monday night in ceremonies at the Veterans Memorial
Candystripers' meeting. Conducting the capping ceremonies
were Mrs. Pam Theiss, director, pictured left , and Mrs.
Donald Deiner, assistant director. Completing the required
10 hours of volunteer service to receive their caps were, left

A program is underway in
Meigs County to collect Christ·
mas gifts for residents who are
confined to the Southeastern
Ohio Mental Health Center in
Athens.
Mrs. Mary Martin again will
chair the project. A collection
center has been set up at ·the
Davis Insurance Co. office at
the corner of Court and West
Second Sts., Pomeroy.
No item is too small to give,
Mrs. Marlin said. Items are to
be delivered unwrapped to the
insurance office. Contributors
are not required to provide any
wrapping paper or ribbon.
There etre 25 men and 17

entire history. We must tiave
trillions of BTU's of heat available from some fuel to provide
the power needed in the 1980's
-and use the fuel in a way that
causes a minimal impact on the
environment.
Obviously such a massive
program creates the opportunity for differences of opinions
and priorities. Our promise io
you Is simply this: We recognize
the necessity to preserve the
environment for future genera- .
tlons (our children will live here,
too) and will take every respon sible measure to do so. We also

must recognize the need for
electric power-and will take
every responsible action to
make sure it's available . In fact,
we are obligated by law to do
so.
In fulfillment of these two
objectives - we'll do our best to
strike an acceptable balance
between environmental considerations and the need for additional electric: power.

'

MASOM FURNITURE
•

•
..

•

I

''

1 '
'

I

A donation to the Middleport
firemen's Chrlsbnas project of
preparing baskets for, needy
families was made by Class 12
of the Heath United Methodist
Church, Middleport, at a
meeting Thursday night at the
Church.
The class also made plans to
remember
the
church
custodian and the children of
the Meigs County Home during '
.the holiday seasoli. There will
be a gift exchange among the
members at the December
meeting.
· New officers were elected ·
and Include Mrs . Mary
Rinehart, president; Mrs, L.
W, McComas, vice president;
Mrs.
Glenn
Lambert,
oecretary; Mrs. Fred Hibbs;
treasurer.
A program on Thanksgiving
lhouahts was presented by
Mrs, Forrest Bachtel who read
a column written by the late
Mrs, Slnclalr Lewis, In the

women . from Meigs County
confined to the center and
these will benefit from the
program . Members of the
auxiliary of Drew Webster
Post, American Legion, will go
to Athens before Chrislmas to
help wrap the presents. All
articles should be left at the
insurance office by Dec. 5.
Items suitable for giving,
Mrs. Martin said, include shoe
strings, pens, biUfolds, purses,
stamps, statio~ery, belts,
cigarettes, candy, s having
cream, ·after s have lotion,
hose, socks, soap, wash cloths,
clothing and other related
articles.

Officers elected
New officers were elected at
the Thursday night meeting of
the Twin City Shrinettes at the
home of Mrs . Neacil Carsey,
Middleport.
Elected were Mrs. Bonnie
Miller, president; Mrs. Erma
Yoho, vice president; ' Mrs.
Emma Clatworthy, secretary;
and Miss Shirley Beegle,
treasurer . Installation w.ill ,
take place at the December
meeting .
It was reported that Mrs.
Ruth Swisher is home .from the
hospital. Mrs . Mary Bowen
was initiated at the ceremonial
in Columbus Nov. 3, it was
announced.
The deadline for taking
donations on a rug donated by

Mrs. Cora Beegle was set for
Dec. 8 at the Miller Bros.
Service Station in RuUand. The
money will go to the Crippled
Children and Burns Institute
and will be taken to Columbus
in the spring.
Mrs. Yoho turned over a
check for $20 for the benefit of
the Burns Institute and
Crippled Children. She had
mado Raggedy Ann and Andy
dolls and took donations on
them.
The Chrislmas party was
changed from the re gular
meeting night to Dec. 11 at the
home of Miss Shirley Beegle.
Each member is to take a $2
exchange gift.
The prize package donated
by Mrs. Bonnie Miller was won
by Mrs. Emma Clatworthy.
·Refreshments were served
by Mrs. Jane Walton assisted
by Mrs. Carsey to Mrs. Cora
Beegle, Miss Shirley Beegle,
Mrs. Emma Clatworthy, Mrs,
Bonnie Miller, Mrs. Evelyn
Napper Leach and Mrs. Erma
Yoho.

Christm.a s party plans were
made durmg a meeting of the
Magnolia Club Thursday night
at the home of Mrs. Ethel
Stewart.
The dinner will be held at the
Red Carpet Inn with a party to
follow at the home of Mrs. Ella
Smith. There will be a gift
exchange . .
Mrs . Smith, president,
opened the meeting with the
Lori:l's Prayer. Mrs. Burton
Smith gave devotiOns using' a
Thanksgiving theme with
"Thinking and Thanking" and
a prayer poem, "Thanks Be to
God! " The treasurer reported
a balance of $44.40 in the
treasury. It was voted to raise
the annual dues to $3.
The program by Mrs .
Georgia Watson included a
Herman Caudill, Violet L.
poem on Thanksgiving, and Caudill to George P. Celani,
two games, both pertaining to JoAnn Celani, 3.5 Acres,
the holiday. Mrs . Doris Chester.
Graeser will have devotions for
Milo Nugent, Ruth N~gent to
a bouquet of radiantl
the next meeting with everyone Charles P. Bailey, Doris M.
fresh
autumn
to have a reading or qui• for Bailey, 18.81 Acres, Lebanon.
the program.
Coy Hawk to Lester Hawk,
Games were played with Parcels, Orange.
prizes going to Mrs. Grueser,
Clarence A. Lambert, Sally
Mrs. Gladys Cuckler, Mrs. Ella .J . Lambert to Shanlilal
Smith and "Mrs. Bertha Goradia, .20 Acre, Rutland
Village.
Canaday.
1
Charles L. Jeffers, gdn.,
Attending besides those
named were Miss !rna Jesse, Theresa Hines to Pentajay
Mrs. Iris Kelton, Mrs. Ethel Company, Int. in Parcels,
Stewart and Mrs. Margaret Bedford.
Orner G. Hines, Grace Hines,
Rose.
Ruby Mulligan, Mabel Lee,
Guy W. Lee, Lena Hamm to
Pentajay Company, Parcels,
Marlene Wilson 446 .
High
Team
Game
Bedford.
Poc kllngton ConstruCtion 811 .
CUT FLOWER
Randall Richardson, Sue
Hlgh Team Series - Spencer 's
Market, 2198 .
Carol Richardson to John P.
ARRANGEMENTS ·
Gibboney, 118 Acres, Bedford.
W. E. Boggess, Mannie
Boggess, aka Minnie Boggess
to Charles Rittenour, Jean
Cash &amp; Carry·
column she spoke about the
Rittenour,
31
Acres
and
100
.
many things _which people .Rd., Olive.
never stop to think about that
J. Robert McElhinny, Louise
are a benefit received with no
M. McElhinny to J. Robert
effort made on anyone's part, McElhinny,
59 N. Second St.
M.
Louise
theselnclude health, beauty of
Middleport, 0.
McElhinny, Lot, Middleport.
nature, music, prose and
William B. Witte, Sarah Sne
poetry, love and friendship .
Witte to Joseph W. Jones, Ruby
Mrs. Bachtel described the J. Jones, Lot 4, Chester.
First Thanksgiving in 1621
when the pilgrims setUed in
New England and George
Washington's proclamation in
1789 tllat made Thanksgiving
an official day.
·
The meeting opened with 8
plano prelude by Mrs. Rinehart
and poetry on Thanksgiving.
Mrs. Harry Chesher was
devotional leader and uaed
scripture from Isaiah outlining
the reasons for the day of
thanks. She concluded with
prayer. Mrs. James Jividen
COLUMBUS AND EOUTHERN OHIO ELECTRIC COMPANY
and Mrs. Emma Wayland
served as hooteseea aaslsted by
Mrs. L. E. McComas .

Meigs

Property

Transfers

'I

REUTER

to right, Brenda campbell, Cathy Rizer, Cindy Thomas ,
Cheryl Lehew and Debbie Boatright. Others who have
qualified to receive their caps, but not present for the
ceremonies, were Madelyn Pickett, Mary C. Smith and
Melanie Walding.

I

Collect gifts

AGENTS,

Loyal Women meet
!loliday party plans were
'
made
during the Thursday.
night meeting of the Loyal
Women's Class of the Mid·
dleport Church of Christ.
The dinner party will be Dec.
6 at 6 p.m. at the church and
will feature an old-fashioned
Christmas pr ogram with
rec itations by Mrs , Edgar
Reynolda. Mrs. Eleanor Lohse
will have charge of the shut-in
boxes which will be prepared
following the dinner. Miss
Mildred Hawley and Mrs .
Martha Childs will handle the
table decorations for the
dinner.
Bazaar plans were discussed
and the Thanksgiving prayer
service at the Middleport
United Presbyterian church
was announced. Meinbers
were urged . to attend the
community service.
Miss Frances Roush was
elected president of the class,
aQ office held for the past five
years by Mrs . Oscar Roush.
· Devotions to open the meeting
were given by Mrs. Childs who
read Psalm 105, 1·5. Her topic
was friendship and she read an
article ~ertaining to memories
oi childhood titled "Over the
Hills to Grandma's House"
from Ideals.
• ''
· Reported il1 were Mrs.
Carrie Smith, Leslie Ervin and
Ed Haggetty, aU · confined to
tile Holzer Medical Center, and
Mrs. Margaret Boyer and Mrs.
Nelle DeWees.
· Mrs. Reynolds, chairwoman
of the basket and recipe
folders, reported on sales. At
the meeting were Mrs. Clara
Dilgard, Cleveland, a member
of the class and the old&lt;&gt;St

member in years of service in
the c hurch, and Mrs. Freda
Welling, Punta Gorda, Fla.
Alice Robeson presented the
pr ogr~m on · a Thanksgiving
theme using a meditation on
prayer, thankfulness and
praise taken from "The Quiet
f!our."
Refrestunents were served
by Mrs. Martha Childs, Mrs.
Grace Pratt, Mrs. Mary Bailey
and Mrs. Lena Wolfe.

GERALD REUTER
LARRY BROGAN
ED NA SC HOENLEB

Women and
Children's

Auto· Fire
Accident &amp; Health
Homeowners
Bonds

SNOW AND

DRESS BOOTS

107 Sycamore
Pomeroy, o.

heritage house
PHONE
992-5130

Your Thorn MeAn Stor~
MIDDLEPORT

STUS
lE
OF

$2,000.

PEOPLE TRUST US TO HANDLE
SA)/ INGS OF OVER $150,000,000.
lf vou n ceJ ·a lo&lt;t n , you need ~o mco nc vo u c:1.n
m1 st._\X' hate ver the am o um you need. ·
Cin• Loan is a J itTenmt kinJ o f Ju an
w mpan~' . We h a nd le S(lvings roo . If peojl ie
tr us t l1s to ma nn t;e the ir sadn gs , yo u kno\\'
vou can nu ~ t us to hand le ym:r lo a n .
\Vhat makes us a differe nt kind of
loa.n compaay, mlkes us a better kinJ of
loa n company.

'

·ciTY LOAN
&amp;SAVING~ .125 E. Main St.·992·217!
Pomeroy, 0.

THE

THANKSGIVER

Class ·makes donation

'

I

J7
46
42

Sisson 185, Mary Porter 173 ;

0 US, e's

ZENITH
COLOR TV

'

November 6, 1973

Newell Sunoco
Excelsior 011 Co .
Pockllngton Construction

r--------------.. "'

HERMA N GRATE
77l·SS9'l
1\"ISON, W. VA .

.

~

THOUGHT FOR THE DAY - "Our lives - regardless of
circwnstances - are overflowing with re~son s for thankfulnesS"."

The Rev. and Mrs. William
Knittel have returned home
from a four day school of
missions held in CoJwnbus.
The school was directed
toward miss ionary work with
approximately 25 familie s
from the foreign mi ssionary
field repre sented in @ din g
Wearin~ bifocals wouldn't
Shanha and Liberia , Thai ~-nd , be so diflocult if they didn't
Austria, Germany, Columbia, keep moving th e curbs.
Jamaica, Nicaragua , Ecuador
and Venezu ela .
The Rev. Mr . Kn ittel was
appointed by the Un ited
Pentecostal
Church International to serve as home
mission director ave r the
southeastern section of Ohio.
He also attended a two day
session for home mission of
schools. He is serv in g~ .on the
board of home missions for the
Slate of Ohio.
LARRY B~9GAN
The Rev . Mr. Knittel is also
AGENT
youth director for the
southeastern section of Ohio.
He has served slx years as
youth director and is servin g
INSURANCE
on the state board of the yo uth
AGENCY, INC.
department.

By Charlene Hoefltcb

HOW TO COOK ATURKEY
Many years ago Rose S. Reynolds gave instructions for
preparing a turkey which even the newest bride could follow, and
it became a part of the Tried and True Recipes Book compiled by
the Amateur Gardeners Club about 20 years ago.
So for those of you without experience, we offer rules from
Rose for a tastier turkey come Thanksgiving Day.
Select a young turkey which has firm yellow flesh and a
flexible breast bone, allowing 8 to 12 pounds for .an average
famlly. Remove pinfeathers and wash inside and out.
Most tur1&lt;eys are improved with steaming. To steam place
on rack in a roaster with a litUe water in lbe bottom. Cover and
place over low lire, steaming the turkey Ul)lil the flesh can be
pricked with a fork. Remove from the fire and stuff with
dressing.
The opening may be covered with the gizard or an end slice
of bread held in place with toothpicks. Return to tbe roaster, rub
with salt and pepper, and place thin slices of salt pork over the
bird to insure juicy meat. Cover and bake in moderate oven 2to 4
hours, depending on the size of the turkey. Remove the cover the
last hail hour. Take the turkey out of the roaster, and make
brown grayy of stock or giblet gravy as preferred.
·Dressing: Eight to 10 cups ground, stale beead or toast
crumbs, 3 medium onions, minced, 2 tablespoons ground sage,
salt and pepper to taste. Moisten with warm water (stock from
steaming may be used ).

A'ITEND MEETING
Mrs. Dora Heaton and Mrs.
faye Pratt of the Winding
Trail Garden Club attended the
Region !1, Ohio Association of
Garden Clubs, meeting held
recently at the Eastern High
School.

Attend school

'

Fun With Food

to break the record .again. I
might not get another chance."
Although Griffin rushed for
246 yards, he scored only once,
while fullback Bruce Ella, with
11 yards in nine carries, got
four touchdov:ns. But it doesn't
bother Griffin.
"When I came to Ohio State I
knew that when we aot down
close to the goal line the
fullback would be carrying the
ball," he said. "All that
matters is that the team
scores."
Griffin, who has a younger
brother being highly recruited
as a running back thiS fall,
says he doesn't have time to
worry about whether a team is
keying on him.
"Coach Hayes told me before
Saturday's game they might be
keying on me /' he said, "and if
they did there would be other
guys running the ball more.
"But that's okay because I
like to block to repay them for
what they do for me," he
continued, "and they do a heck
of a lot."
Griffin feels he has improveJ
since the season began, al~
though he has had "a few
minor injuries that" have slowed
me down a litUe.
"All in all I'm better," he
continued, 41 ! reel if you can't
improve, you shouldn't be out
there.''

LOOKING FOR SOMETHING really , really special for
dessert ? How about fro•en cranberry velvet pie - delightfully
different, and you make it any time and it's always ready to
serve.
·
FROZEN CRANBERRY VELVET PIE
I I'• cups fine vanilla wafer crumbs, 6 tablespoons butter or
margarine, melted; one B-ounce package cream cheese, softened; one cup whipping cream, ¥4cup sugar ,lh teaspoon vanilla
and one !!&gt;ounce can whole cranberry sauce, drained.
Combine crumbs and melted butter or margarine; press
finnly into bottom and sides of buttered !).inch pie plate. Chill
until firm, Meanwhile, beat cream cheese until fluffy. Combine
.whipping cream, sugar and vanilla; whip until thickened but not
stiff . Gradually add to whipped cream cheese, beating until
smooth and creamy. Set aside a few whole cranberries from
sauce for garnish. Fold remaining cranberry sauce into whipped
mixture. Spoon into chilled crust, and freeze firm.
Remove from freezer 10 minutes before serving. To serve,
top with additional whipped cream and the reserved berries.

THANKSGIVING THOUGHTS - An unknown author .
penned these thought provoking lines : We once saw a man draw
some sinaiJ black ovals on a sheet of·paper. We looked, but could
make nothing of them. They seemed just an irregular assemblage of black dots. Then, however, he drew a few lines, put in a
few rests and a clef sign at the beginning, and we immediately
saw that those black dots were actually musical notes. On
sounding· them we were singing, "Praise God From Whom All
Blessings Flow."

.

"4.95

DUDLEY'S A.ORIST

We're all workif1J

to make OtJr com111111ities

brfjhter, happier and better.

.

,,,.

'

' increases in value.
on iL ) And it never
have been considering the purchase of The lonf!er you ~sc ic the more ic depretheir own phones. We arc rhe first to ad- ciates. And so does your ori.J.:.i nal capital
mit char there are adva ntages to owning
invesrmenc.
telephone egui pmem- if you 'rca phone
Then, the re's maintenance. For a
company. We'vt: done it for years. How· simple system you'll catl in outs ide help
ever, what's good fo r us is not necessarily now and chen. A ve ry complex set-up
goOd for you.
·
may rcquirc~that you puc a man on staff
A telephone system s·tarcs out cost· so you r vi cal communications don·t grind
int: big money. (You' re bu)' ing more to a halt in the n1.idst of a business day.
than just a black plastic box with a dial
As you can sec, ownint: a phone sysSome of ou r business customers

rem is not as simple as it rnay seem.
We've spem decades at it . Thac's why
we cao pro:vide your business with the
serv ice; cquipmeln ;tnd expert advice
rou need .

Call us for a consultation. There is
no extra char}-:t for information. And, of
course, t here's no obti~adon to buy any
C&lt;IU 1p111Cilt.

(?j i~

GEnERAL TELEPHOnE
•

I.
•I

/

'

I

,,

�•
6- The Dally Sent111el, Mlddleport-Pomero) 0 • Now 20, 197J

Syracuse
News, Society
By Jean Hall
Rtchard Duckworth and
••nes Whl'" VISited Sunday
ne
K:
•and Monua.y
at H untmgton
Mr and
With lheir brotb •r
'" •
Mrs Ml llard Due k wor tb wh 0
accompamed them home on

Monday
Sadie Theuner and Jean Hall
VlSlted Tuesday evemng at

Veterans Memonal Hospttal

With Emma Hayman
Mr and Mrs Jac'k Grueser
Mason, W Va, Mr and Mrs
Tom Grueser and family of
Pomeroy, and Mrs Ph1lhp
Donovan, local, were Sunday
guestsofthetrparents,Mr and
Mrs George Grueser
Mrs David Parsons, Ricky,

7- The DailySentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Nov 20,1973

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
ADS
oNFORMAno•
DEADLINES
s PM Day Before Publiclltton
Monday Oeadtme 9 a m
Cancellat.on - Correcllons
wdl be accepted until 9 a m for
Da-v of Pubhc at•on
' REGliLATfONS
The PubiJsher reserves the
r1ght to ed 1! or rep~ct any lids
deemed Ob1ect lonal
The
Publ ts her will not be r-espon
Sible for more than one 1n
correc' msert•on
RATES
For Wtlnt Ad Serv•ce
scents per Wor-d one •nserllon
M1n1mum Charge Sl 00
,. cents per word three
consecut •ve 1nsert lons
26 cents per word s•x con
secut•ve msert1ons
25 Per Cent D1scount on pa•d
ads and ads pa•d Wtthm 10
days
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY ~
52 oo for 50 word m 1n
3~um Each add•l tonal word
WANT

Wayne and Bnan, and Mrs
Elizabeth RICe and Sue, VISited

Ad~~~~~~~n~~n;sc Charge per

m Athens recenUy

8

OFFICE HOURS

~0 ! ~

,~ ~ .J' ~ ~a~~vn

10

Mrs James Wh1te and Mary Saturday

Beth of Dunbar, W Va , spent
Monday afternoon With Agnes
White and Richard Duckwortb
They also VISited her motber,
Mrs Rose Schwarz and s1ster,
Mary Nollge and family at
Mason
Sunday guests of Mrs Ada
Slack were her daughter, Mrs
Harley E Johnson, Tammy,
Cheryl and Terry, of Wolf P.n
Recent Sunday guests of Mr
and Mrs William R1zer were
their son, Mr and Mrs Ken·

neth Rizer, Racme
Eugene Hudson and Robert
Bailey of Pennsylvama spent a
recent afternoon and evemng
wltb Mrs Myla Hudson
Mr and Mrs Robert Harden
and Debbie spent a recent
weekend at Marwn wltb their
son, Mr and Mrs Robert A
Harden and Enc Enroute
home they stopped at London
to visit their otber son, Mr and
Mrs JIDl Harden
Spendmg a day recenUy w1th
Elva Dalley were her brother,
Mr and Mrs Pat Autherson ,
Newark
Mrs Mildred Pierce and
Tina spent Sunday evenmg
w1th Mr and Mrs Paul Pierce,
Randy and Scottie, Mason, W

Va
Mr and Mrs Dave Lipscomb
and Shawn VISited recently
w1th his parents, Mr and Mrs
Allen lipscomb and family of
Hemlock Grove.
Mr and Mrs. Gerald Wells
and daughters, Gallipolis, Mr
and Mrs Clarence Cornell of
Portland and Mr and Mrs
Jerry Cornell and farmly of
East Liverpool were recent
guests of Mr and Mrs Dale
Teaford and family
Conme Moranty and Bob
Hansford of Columbus spent
!be weekend w1th Mrs Paulme
Morarity . VISltmg on Sunday
Wltb Mrs Moranly was her
son, Mr and Mrs Marty
Morarit)i.
Mr and Mrs James Harden
of London, Ohio were recent
weekend viSitors of !be former's parents, Mr and Mrs
Robert Harden and Debbie
Mrs. Gene Sinuns, Tommy
and Deatra Jo, Columbus,
spent a weekend w1tb Mr and
Mrs Harry Clark While here,
Deatra Jo celebrated her 12th
bU'tbday

Langsville
Mr and Mrs Ronme Gorby
of Myrtle Beach, S C , spent a
weekend w1tb hiS parents, Mr
and Mrs Carl Gorby
Dale Wr1ght IS ser1ously 1ll at
Veterans Memorial Hosp1tal
Mr and Mrs Harry Laing of
Cleveland were called to the
home of her brotber, Dale
Wnght, who IS senously ill
Mr and Mrs Chester Messer

and chLldren, Teressa and
Danny, Magnetic Sprmgs,
Ohio, spent !be weekend wltb
her motber, Elvll'a Barr Otber
Sunday dmner guests were Mr

and Mrs Duane Barr and son,
Shawn, of Oak Hill, Mr «nd
Mrs Larry Barr, Dav1d and
Michelle of Rutland , M1chael
Barr of Glenville, W Va, and
MISS Marge Riggs of Pomeroy
Mrs Francis Willcox IS a
surgical patient at Holzer
Hospital It 1s reported she Is
domg fme and expects to be
released from !be hospital

soon

0

IN MEMORY of our father and
grandfather La wren ce R

Wh•tlatch who passed away
so sudd enly e1ghf years ago
on Nov 21 1965

Social Notes
Mr and Mrs Joe Bissell and
Kenny VISited Mr and Mrs
OtiS Casto at Reedsville
Mr and Mrs Ke1th Ridenour
and sons of Keno VISited Er-

nestine Hayman
Mr and Mrs Tom Drake,
Reynoldsburg, and Mr and
Mrs David G Smith, Marietta,
spent the weekend w1th Mr,
and Mrs Dav1d Sm1th
M1ke Larkms who has been a
patient at Holzer Medical
Center m GallipoliS has

returned home
Mr and Mrs Howard Young
of Paden C1ty, W Va, spent
several days with Mr and Mrs
Garth Sm1th
Mr and Mrs Larry Curtis
and family of Keno VISited
Mary P1erce

Mr and Mrs Don Sisson of

Vtenna, W Va , were recent
vtsttors of Serena Stsson
Mr and Mrs Hank Holter
and fam1ly were dmner guests
of Mrs Hanson Holter, Forest
Run

Mr and Mrs Ronme Best
and daughters of Fairfax,

part1es
Thanks
g.vmg November 16th and
17fh Chr•Simas Dec '21st and
22nd New Years Eve Dec
31st Ava•tabte tor pnvate
part ies Monday Tue sday
Thursday evenings Sat and
Sunday afternoons Open
Wed Fr.dav and Sa turday
even1ngs 7 30 10 30 Call 985
3929 985 3803 or 985 9996
1!1J12tc

holtd&lt;ty

The Almanac
By United Press International
Today IS Tuesday, Nov 20,
!be 324tb day of 1973 w1th 41 to
follow

The moon ts approachmg Its
new phase

mormng

stars

are

Mercury and Saturn

The evenmg stars are Venus,
Mars and Jup1ter
Those born on thiS date are
under !be s1gn of ScorpiO
John Merle Coulter, Ameri-

can

botamst,

colomes

She

teacher

was

Peregrme WhJte
In 1945, 24 top

leaders

went

on

(0

•

·---~

1970 CHEVELLE MALIBU
U69S
door gold flntsh spotless clean ~ntenor , V 8 eng me
automat1c, power steenng rad10 A honey of a buy
$1295
1970 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill
4 door V 8 automatiC power steenng, radto good t1res
blue f1n1sh spotless intenor
$1195
1970 DODGE POLARA
4 door factory a1r automatic transmtSSJon power
steenng &amp; brakes good wh1te wall t res wh1te ftnlsh ,
vmyl roof radio heavy duty suspens1on

and

named
German

trial

at

YOUR BUILDING
D-0-L-L-A-R
With Ski lied
Craftsmanship

I

D. L.
MOORE &amp; SONS
PH. 992-6675

PRICE
CONSTRUCTION
Ro'!fmg - Spoutmg
K1tchens &amp; Bathrooms
Complete Remodeling

e.\.

Stalo Farm
Is Them
For afl your

~"

Wanted To Do

~"""

WILL do paper hangmg and
pa1nl1ng Call Arthur Musser BRUSH HOG S 4x5 ft

L 4J

~"

~~

For Sale

Ph 992 7155

~~

.. I ..
.. l.:'illil!l
- [ l l r tl

........
.
.A.
...

You'll like our competent
dependable servtce
Call Athens, Ohm
593-5035 Collect
HOLIDAY SPEC IAL PRATT S
BEAUTY SALO N November
12th through 24t h Real1stlc
Perm for t•nted bleached or
hard to hold ha1r made w1fh
natural organiC protem
Regular $30 perms for $15
Regu lar $25 perms for $12 50
Call today for appotntment
ask tor Ma c or Debb • 992
375 1
11 11 12tc

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

OPEN
THANKSGIVING DAY
If you want to gel out
try Gaul's Turkey
SPECIAL
Open 9to?

GAUL'S

SHAKE HAVEN
SR 7

Chesler,

0.

_ 74~:: ______ ~_!_J__JOtp _ 99~585~-------.!..:!~fc
REGISTERED Hereford bull
For Rent
Turn1ps SJ 00 bushel bring

TRAILER Mason W Va
couple only phone 992 5693
II 16 tfc

-------------ALL ELECTRIC home
Ar
Ill

baugh add!tton at Tuppers
PlatnS Oh10 2 bedroom wall
to wall carpet beaut1fullarge
k1tchen w•th plenty of cab1net
space Enclosed front and
rear porch ftn1Shed basement
w.th k•tchenette
1 car
garage m basement 100 x 200
landscaped lot Ava11a.01e
around Dec 15 reference or
depos1t requtred $175 per
month plus utd1t les For
appo1ntment phone B F
Godfrey Belpre Oh10 1 423
8400
11206tc

197 3 MOBILE
Home
3
bedroom 1112 bath furn1shed
or unfurn iShed lnqu~re at P &amp;
J Odds &amp; Ends Shop Mtd
dleport 9 ttl I 5 after 5 call 992
3509
1120ffc
--- -------- - -~

For Sale

PAINT DAMAGE 1973 Z1g Zag
Sew1ng Mach1nes St111 In
or~gmal
cartons No at
tachments needed as our
controls are budt m sews
w•th I or 2 needles makes
buttonholes sews on buttons
monograms and blind hem
st•tch Full cash pr1 ce $38 50
or budget plan ava tlable
Phone 992 2984
11 14 6tc

Lost

VACUUM
Cleaners
new
1973 Model Complete w1th all
LOST - 1 brown purse between
clean1nQ toots Small pamt
Veterans
Hosp1tal
and
damage 1n sh1pp1ng Wtll take
Pomeroy Thursday Nov
S27 cash or budget plan
15th Reward Call {J04l 882
ava•lable Phone 992 2984
2206 after 7 p m
11146tc
11 18 Jtc SINGER Auto Z1g Zag Sew1ng
Machmes m sewmg table
Wanted To Buy
Makes buttonholes sews on
buttons bl•nd hems etc Top
NO 1 COPPER 70c Rad1ators
notch cond1t1on Pay S51 or
33c brass JOe battenes 90c
terms ava•lable Phone 992
M A Hall ReedSVIlle Phone
2984
° 11 14 6tc
378 6249

OLD furniture oak tables ,
clocks Ice boxes , brass beds,
dtshes
or
complete
households Write M D
M1ller Rt 4, Pomeroy Oh•o
call 992 6271
5 13th

phone

8 TRACK stereo console due to
damage m Shipment Wdl sell
for small balance of $99
or
payments of
S6 99
per month Call 99:1 ~131
11 4 ffc
1973 ZIG ZAG sew1ng machine
Take over 8 payments of $5 25
per month or d1scount for
cash Call 992 5311
11 4 ttc
SA LT FOR ICE AND SNOW
Rock salt for townsh •PS
towns and busmesses In
bulks and bags for tee and
snow Excels1or Salt Works
PhOne 992 J891
11 11 tfc

LOTS

of t.hrVsanthemums for
sale, held grown We only
have one color - yellow 10
bunches for $5 We have some
out 1n full bloom some 1ust
budd1ng Reynolds Flower
Shop Mason w va Call 773
51.47
9 26 ttc

- -------'-------- -------------197J ST ER E:O RadiO co m

197 ~

MACHINES left m layaway
All bU1it 1n to buttonhole do
stretch sewtng and fan cy
st1tchmg Pay lust $48 75 cash
or terms ava1lable Trade 1ns
accepted Phone 992 2984
11 18 6tc

Want Ad

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

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

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

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

FURNITURE

742-6273

From the Ia roest
Bulldozer Radiator to the
~ma nest Heater Lorb
1
Nathan 81ggs
Radiator Spectalt~t

Bullllo Yollf' •Specs
Dell. .ncl to Jolo Sill

HOGG &amp; ZIJSPAN
MATERIALS tO
77USS4 ,
MoiOfl, W Vo ~

,,
&lt;

RUSSELL'S

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

NEW LISTING - 8 rooms, 4
bedrooms, 1112 baths, gas
furnace Garage and 3 porches
on Moddleport $18.000 00
NEW LISTING - 7 rooms, 3
bedr-ooms, bath, natural gas
heat, and garage Near stores
In Pomeroy $11,000 00
NEAR TOWN - Nice birch
k1tchen with S S cook and bake
untts 3 bedrooms, family
room, carpeting, and nat gas
furnaces $15 000 00
MOBILE HOME LOT - In
Harnsonvllle with water tap
paid sept1c tank, and elec
tnctty
NEW LISTING - One acre
plus of vacant land on Rt 7
near Pomeroy Only $1800 00
NEW LISTING - 1'12 acres of
nearly level land , In meadow
with a fairly good 2 bedroom
home at Downlngton
IF YOU WANT TO BUY, OR
SELL. SEE ONE OF US

AUTO TRIM

•5.55

992-2839

On Most Amencan Cars
-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

L

'MlODTRUm

Wheel Alignment

Co RoadS

Bradbury

COMPLETE
INTERIOR
REPAIR

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
O!l&gt;n 8 Tol5

HARRISON'S TV service and
service calls Phone 992 2522
29

trc

~ADS

1Oct&lt;.- - Will remoVe
at a reasonable char{ile Call
2otS 5514
8 23 90tc

MOBILE home repair Elec
1rlcal plumblngr and heatlnrPhone 992 5858
7 15 t c
READY MIX
CONCRET.:
delivered fight to your
prolect Fast and easy Free
estimates Phone 992 328-4
Goegleln Ready M•X Co 1
Middleport Ohio
6 30 tfc
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED

REASONABLE rates Ph .46
-4782 Gallipolis John Russell ,
owner and Operator
5 12 tfc
1 1 ,,

IS - TBA 33
7 30 - New Dating Gamel, To Tell The Truth 6 , Beat the Clock

Welby,M D 6, 13
10 30 - Woman 33
U OO - News3r4,6,8,10, 13, 15, Jan~kl33
11 30- Johnny Carson 3. 4, 15, Honeymoon Suite 6, 13, Mov1es
" Band of Angels" 8, 'S 0 S Pac1ftc' 10
1 00- Tomorrow 3, A News 13
200-News4
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 21,1973
6 DO- Sunrise Semmar 4 Sacred Heart 10
6 15 - Urban League 10
6 20- Farm Report 13
6 25 - Paul Harvey 13
6 30 - Bible Answers 8 The Story 13 News 6, Ftve Minutes to
1
Live By 4
6 35 - Columbus Today 4
~ .tS - Corncob Reports 3, Farmtlme 10
1 00 - Today 3 4, 15 CBS News 8 10 Fllntstones 13 Romper

WIN AT BRIDGE

NORTH

.76
K8
.AI08642
Wl!ST
EAST
I·•Q532
•4
.J4
.Ql0952
• QJ 10932
65
.KJ975

• KJ976
• AK83

1

C BRADFORD Auct1oneer
..
Complete Service
Phone 949 3821
Racine, Oh10
Cntt Bradford
5 I tfc

-------------EXCAVATING, dozer loader

and backhoe work sepnc
tanks Installed, dump trucks
and to boys for hire will haP,~
fill dtrt, top soli, llmestoQj!
and gravel Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers, day phone 992 70891.:
night phOne 992 3525 or 992
5232

2 11 "'
Hysell'!&gt;
Garage near Crossroads Q(l
St Rt 124 aU mechaniCJel
work includ•no automatic
transmlss•ons Monday thru
Sat 8 30 a m to 6 p m Phorfto
992 5682 garage or 99271~1
residence
10 28 26tc

opffN --.;-Roger

II

E.Xt:AVATI'NG Dozers. lar;e
and small
Backhoes and
loaders on track end tires
Pump truck. - Lo bov SJr
vice Septic tank,e. Installed
George (QIII) P.ulllns phone
992 2478 or 992 7402
'
2 9 tfc
•

--------------·
INFORMATION ABOUT:
JOB OPPORTUNITIES
SOCIAL SECURITY
CONSUMER PROTECTION

AND
GREAT COUNTRY

S'IJREO
92.1 FM

WMPO

TELEPHONE REPAIRMAN &amp; INSTAllER :
Southern Oh1o Coal Company has an opening
for an experienced telephone Installer and •
repa1rman. Must be able to trouble shoot !
w1thout supervision. Knowledge of schematics
and workmg electr•cal prints essential. Good
fringe benefits; starting rate $6.20 per hour.
Contact:

Elec Co 33 Gomer Pyle 13 Beverly Htllb!llles 8
Hodgepodge Lodge 20, Trails West 15
5 55 - Earl Ntghftngale 15
6 00 - News 3 4, 8 6, 10, 15 ABC News 13 Sesame Street 20
Personality and Behavioral Development 33
6 30 - News3 4 6 8 10 15 HogansHeroes13
7 00 - News 10 What s MyeLine 8 Truth or Conseq 3 6 Beat
The Clock 4 Anythmg You Can Do 13 Elec Co 20 Know
Your Schools 33
1 30 - On The Money .4 To Tell The Truth 6 Sale of the Century
8 Pol1ce Surgeon 3 The Judge 10 Beat The Clock 13 Know
Your Ant1ques 20
8 00 - Sonny &amp; Cher 8 10 Adam 12 3, 4 15 , Bill Moyers
Journal 20 3;3 Movie Doctor Doltttle 6 10
8 30-Banacek3,4 15, Confl1cts20 33
9 00 - Cannon B 10
9 30 - Woman 20 Washtngton Debates 33
10 OO - News20 Kotak8 10 LoveStory3 • .4 1510 30 Mountam Scene
TODAY'S QUESTION
Instead of btddmg three dta 11 00-NewsJ,-4, 6, 8 10 1315 Janakl33
monds your partner has b1d three 11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 J F K - A Time to Remember 6,
13 Mov1es No T1me for Sergeants 8 Carmen Jones' 10
hearts over your three dubs 1 00 - Tomorrow 3 4 News 13
What do vou do now'
200-News4

&lt;:: ....-;::&lt;,:,:,:,:,~,,,,,,,,•.,,,.,.:,:-.. :-:-:-::-&gt;:
..),.' ... ~~W.&amp;&amp;

Generation Rap

l

By Helen and Sue Hottel

~&amp;WlJJil~~® lkJ
••v

.,_,,J .....J ,_.

111 NHI AHNOlO •""I 000 LEE

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

...,.-

~

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
1 Tarsus

DOWN

1. Oregon

name

City

5 Ted or

Z. Redolence

Jerry
10 ·Rule Br1

3 OuLda

tann1a"
composer

novel
(3 wds )

11 Descend
ant of

Wahme's
garland
5. Equalize
6. Hobday
hme
7 What
some
ball
players do
4

Lev1
lZ Cahforn1a

City
13 Balanced
It Scotch

uncle
15 Gen
eratJon

Yesterday's Answer

(3 wds)
8 Repeat
9. Unruffled
11. LICit

16. Musical
syUable
17. Federal
law officer

15 The

19. Tnlby,
Pequod's
skipper
eg
20. Shade of
blue
21. Boundary '-;;:-f--t--t2:1. Sailor
"
23. English
essay1st
24 ' Ballad or
Readmg

--"

18 Endorse
ment
21 Fashton
22 Italian
City
Zl. Medieval
weapon
24 Word
with go
25. Move
sideways

27 Belgian
c1ty

28 Mortise
compamon

29. Com1que
or bufla
34. L1benan
nahve
35 Dessert
order

b-+--t-...J

25 Flank
26. NIXIe
27. Compare
(2 wds.)
30. Such
(Fr.)
31. Small fish
32 Calmp
33 Voyage
35 Wmdow
sectiOn
36. H1re
37. Are you
-out?

(2 wds )
38. "Sweet
O'Grady"

39 Sicilian

5 30 -

volcano

TROFY

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

II

is

IGROUTH~

I I

[t)

t
X)
I I

F/M/TS
'

.vna-.

M:OR~Ml!.~

.3

+ A74

CRYPTOQUOTES

A

N

XOTBE'V

QXM

QOEVA

Now arranre the circled !etten

1

"[llJ-[llliJ"

(Auwen tomorrow)

Jumble• GUISE KITTY AGENDA IMPEND
Anewer: Wlral a rollmfHI m dentle lrafftc
nuoht retiUit m - DENTS

OWWMDEV

XBOIH
VM

MU

MU

AVML
VXB

OEZFMIIZ

RNTNEP
WMAV

11M 6T"AI&lt;T1NG A ~VIOLE"NT

North·South vulnerable
West

Pass

Pass
, pass

Pass

North

East

South

Pass

2f

3•

Pass

4+

Pass

Pass

2•
5•

Pass

i"HA1i9 THE 51UPIDe5T" iHINcd
EVER H&amp;\RD CF IN MY WFE

XDFFOIH
Yoaterday'a Cryploquoto: THE GLORY OF NOVELTY IS
SHORT LIVED, AFTER FOUR DAYS RESPECT IS GONE.BALTASAR GRACIAN
(@ 1978 JCantr Future• SJUdtcate,Inc,)

I DRSAD n-tE DAY BH~ c:eciDC6

I

10 &lt;'&gt;TAl&lt;!" A VJOLENT f'R01E6T

IS
n&lt;AT

BAD&gt;

•

u

'

s•

r· Openmg lead-Q+

By Oswald &amp; James Jaeoby
Pess1m1Shc Pete looked
over the dummy and
remarked, "I'm glad a trump
wasn't opened A lucky play·
er would he able to set up
dummy's clubs, p1ck up the
trumps and make seven I'm
gomg to try to ptax as safely
as possible for SIX '
It was well that he d1dn't
try for seven Actually lhe
least b1t of careless play on
hiS pari and he m1ghl not

TilE BORN LOSER

FIRST at- 1-U. , HO)J DID 40&lt;.1
M~ TO
1w.;1C6

,..;r

THI'&gt;

THI~'Z

T/1.~

l.mR 'PJR

t.'OIIli:R\ 'Pv CERr/&gt;.1~~
Tm/lf'TER

011-0W,IT

WE MIGI--I"T

~)

BE COOPED
UP HERE

J

FOR DAYS 1

have made SIX.

Pete won the dtamond 10
dummy and promptly played
the ace of clubs Then he
cashed h1s ace and kmg of BLONDIE
hearts and led a th1rd heart
• West discarded a d1amond
and Pete ruffed m dummy
He returned lo hiS hand by
Teadmg a diamond to n1s ace
and ruffed hiS last heart He
led a low club from dummy
and ruffed 1t w1th h1s kmg of
trumps HIS last d1amond was
ruffed by the ace of trumps
ThiS ser1es of plays had established West's queen as the
,high trump but that h1gh
'trump was the only tr1ck for
the defense
A trump lead by West
would have defeated the
slam, but as 11 was Pete only
made 1t because of h1s
pess1m1sm
He has to cash dummy's
ace of clubs hefore leadmg
the third heart Otherwise,
•West would have been able to
d1scard h1s one club and ruff
the ace He also had to ruff
the f1rst club w1th hiS kmg of
rumps to keep West from
: overruffmg and Jeadmg a
~ trump back
.J

1

••

••
"
•

THila'S A

CON"tiNUIN~

PAAADe

OF

THEMJNHER£

ALL. PAY

"'I'E.or&gt;'

DAY'

(N EWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I

-

, The b1ddong has been:
w..t No·th Eoll

I FEEl LIKE A
SCRAPBOOK '

'''
'

EMPLOYER

•
I

I

I

ME

-GNE

ANU WJ.NIHHUt'

F'RCTrE5r AGA.IN5T" Hl(dH F'RICE5

'
It:

apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hmts Each day the code letters are different

to form the aurpnae answer, aa
'::::::·==·==:::=;-::"-;;-;~s~u~r~r::;ested by the above cartoon.
r Mil .. - -

how to work
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter Simply stands for another In this sample A il
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc Smgle letters.

Rt. No. 3, Box 54
Albany, OhiO 45710
Phone: 614-669-3216
Main office located on Route 689 near Albany
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY

1

ar Readers
Furtber analyzmg computer data on our recent survey " For
Parents Only" on teenage mores of the present day, 11 IS Ill:
teresting to note that of the 35 questions we asked - mv1ting
conunent as weU as sunply "yes" or "no"' answers - more
respondents took the lime to express lhell' v1ews on premarital
sex lhan ahnost any other question
A Montana man, for imtance, opllled, "I hope my daughter
won't have rntercourse because everybody IS domg 11 or to be
popolar I would hope, too, that she would he able to resist unpulslve paSSion But if she enlered a mature, responsible affall', I
wouldn't COIISlder 1! the worst thing m the world What I abhor IS
the current ratber adolescentfiXlllion on sex as a mecharucal act
for IndiVIdual pleasure I've no quarrel w1th healtby, human
sexuality affll'med m loVIng relationships "
A portion of "Yes, my Ideas on sex have changed" voters
were sonply resigned ("Premarital sex freedom IS here, why
fight a losmg battle?") but others wrote
"I now agree· sex Wlth love and comnutment needn't waat
till !be wedding mght There are more unportant thmgs !ban
bemga Vll'grn -ormarrymgyour daughter off as one ,,
" InSistence on VU'gmlty pushed my oldest gll'l mto a bad
mamage that ended m divorce My new slogan gel your
mistakes over before marraage "
"I'm glad my children won't suffer the guilt I fell over
'g1v111g m' before the wedding It ahnost rwned our mamage we 'accused' each other every time we had a f1ght - before we
reconsidered those Puritanical attitudes handed down by our
parents, and realized they were largely ridiculous "
"Dishonesty, 'usllig' olber people, cruelty, war, many tbmgs
are worse than unmamed sex, and I'm glad the younger
generahon IS saymg 1t t,
''My daul!hlers. al(es 14 and 16. have been filled Wltb runs "
"I still feel premantal mtercourse IS psycholog1caUy
damaging, and 1t's safer to wrut but, after discussmg our
Vlewpomt wltb our older teeens, we have told them the decision IS
Uletrs We don't condemn or moralize"
"Hopefully, we have mstilled good values m our children so
that tbey'll make the right choices, even !bough they m1ght not
he what we would have made, back then "
"It's more IDlportant showmg my daughter she need not be
constncted by her sex- tbal she IS man's equal-than thai she

SOutHERN OHIO COAL COMPANY

AN

t

should suppress her sexuality "
"To marry for sex alone IS foolish and disastrous You must
be best friends, and !bat IS much eas1er if you can commun1&lt;sle
mentally and phySically
Thousands of respondents, of course, were m .complete
disagreement w1th the above VIews, were adamant, m fact, that
"marnage ftrst" was the only answer
Tomorrow we shall g~ve !bern "equal time " - HELEN AND
SUE

.Q soumcm +

. o:::=.. -----------.

992 2259

..

+

FOR FREE esttmates on
alum mum S1d1ng
Storm
' Doors and W.ndows car
ports, Marquees and Rllltlnq
Phone
Charles
L1SI1!'
Syracuse Ohio Carl Jacob
Sales Representative v 1V
Johnson and Son, Inc
6 22 1!&lt;

If no answer m 2568

.

• A 108

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

SELLING FAST, ONE OF
THESE COULD HAVE
BEEN YOURS LIST WITH
US TODAY 9 YEARS
EXPERIENCE
HENRY E CLELAND
BROKER

+++

ABC Is Sitting pretty, haVIng already killed Its weakest link
"Bob &amp; Carol &amp; Ted &amp; Allee," but may make another change .;
two before !be new year
Personally, I could gel along w1th several of lhe shows on all
tbree networks, but I'm particularly glad to see "Police Story,"
an honestly-done anlbology, surv1vmg the cug on NBC; "Adam's
Rib/' on ABC; and "Kojak" on CBS (I don't really care for
"Kojak," but so many people like 1t I'm COnVInced I'm the one
who's out of step)

Pessimism
pays off for Pete
.

0 U"1f"LL WHEEL Alignment
located at Crossroads, Rt 124
now back to work Complete
front end service, tune up and
brake
serv1ce
Wheels
balllnced electronicallY. All
work guaranteed Reasonllble
rates Phone 742 3232

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

CBS, which made the fewest changes of all, nevertbeless IS
g1vlng tbeheave-llo to two programs 1t calls losers.
Onus "Rollout," a war ser~es which was over-publicized and
under-talented all !be way aroWJd Goodbye and good riddance
The olber IS "Caluccr's Dept," which frankly appealed to me It
Wish It had been giVen a better chance
The replacements are attractive , however One IS a comedy
ser1es wltb a Western background, called "Dirty Sally " That
name alone IS enough to make me watch a couple of episodes
CBS' other new entry " still a furtber spm-off of Arch1e
Bunker and U. , which spawned 14 Maude" last year The new
show IS "Great Day," chrorucling the adventw-es of Maude's
mrud, Flor1da ThiS may sound like too much of a good tbmg, but
CBS' ate high on the hog With Its Beverly Hillbillies - Petticoat
Junction - Green Acres roiDld-robm, and m TV, success breeds
success, 1t seems

8 30 - Dick Van Dykel3 , Huck and Yogl6
8 55- News 13
9 00 - Paul Dixon 4 Ph1l Donahue 15 Fr iendly Junctton 10,
AM 3 Brady Bunch 6, Abbott and Costello I, Cover to Cover
33 Movie ' The Rains of Ranchlpur" 13
9 30-ToTeHtheTruth3 SecretStorm8 Mlchaels&amp;Co 6
9 55 - Chuck While Reports 10
10 00 - DinahShore3.1 5 Joker'sWIId8,10
10 30- Baffle 3, 4, 15 $10,000 Pyr-am1d 8, 10 Mike Douglass 6
11 OO - Gamb1t8, 10 , Password13 , Wlzardof0dds3,4 15
11 30 - Hollywood SquaresJ, 4 15 , Love of Life 8, 10 Bowling 6
, Brady Bunch 13 Sesame Street 33
11 55- CBS News a Dan I mel's World 10
l2 00 - Jeopardy 3 15 Password 6 Bob Braun's SO 50 Club 4
News 13, News 8, 10
12 30-SearchforTomorrowS 10 SplltSecond6 3Ws3 15
'2 45 - Ele&lt;:trlc Company 33
12 55- News 3, 15
' 00 - News 3 All My Children 6, 13 Not For Women Only 15
Concentration 8, What's My Line 10
:t&gt; 30 - Three On A Match 3, 4 15 As The World Turns 8, 10 ,
Let s Make A Deal 6. 13
1 45 - Cover to Cover 33
2 00- Days of our L1ves 3, 4, 15 Edge of Night 8, 10 Girl In My
L1fe 6, 13
3 00 - Another WO&lt;Id 3 • 15 Edge of Nighl 8 10 , Gorl In My
L1fe 6, 13
3 00 - Another World 3 4 15 General Hospital 6 13 Pnce Is
Roghl 8 10 RFD 20
J 30- Return of Peyton Place 3 15, One Ltfe to L1ve 13 Secret
Storm 10 Phil Donahue 4, Match Game 73 8 Fllntstones 6
Off the Record 20
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3, Somerset 15 Sesame Sf 33 Love
American Style 13 Mer'll Griffin 4 Speeclracer 6 J Love
Lucy8 , Sesame Street20 , Mov•e " V1va Las Vegas 10
4 30 - HazelS, Gilligan's Island 13 , Green Acres 3, Jeopardy 4
I Love lucy 6 Bonanza 15
5 00 - Mr Rogers 20. 33 Bonanza 3 Merv Grtffm 4 Andy
Gr1ff1thS I Dream of Jeannie 13 , Misston lmposs1ble6

Fuel 011 - we have manv l
furna ce parts and plumb1ng
parts for 10 pet above cost
215 N Second Mtddleport
992 3509
10 31 30tc

Remodeling Cerarn•c t1le
baths Box 280 Rutland 742
3664
6 26 tfc

+++

7 30 - Rocky &amp; Bullwinkle 13, New Zoo Revue6
8 00- Rocky ~ Bullwlnkle 13, New Zoo Revue6
8 00 - Capt KangarooS 10, New Zoo Revue1J Sesame Sf 33
Lassie 6

~ c, :&gt;ltng

--------------.
..,
RON SHEPARD Floor, Wall

September.)

Room 6

---.
. . .1--=------P
e..
Gas or
&amp; J ,..

The 1973-74 sea.••on al NBC IS likely to be remembered as one
of total, ururutigated diSBster.
In the early fall, NBC made more program changes !ban
e1ther CBS or ABC, w1th e1ght new weekly senes and two new
hours filled by rotating heroes and hero111es
Four of !be new series have already been sa-alehed off !be
schedule, early next year, and otbers are on shaky footing
Disappearmg mto !be wmler's winds will be "Diana," which
wasn't half-bad, "Love Story," which never really seemed to
jeU, "NBC Follies," which was JUst ternble, and "Needles and
Pins," a one-Joke ser~es !bat had fme acting but little else
Replacmg tbem Will be -surpriSe 1 surjriSe' -a movie m at
least one lime slot (Wednesday mghts, while !be Wednesday
Night Mystery Movie will become the Tuesday Night Mystery
MoVIe). Il's hard to tell what NBC will come up With as
replacements, bul there's nudn1ghl oil bemg burned at the
network's headquarters
(Other evidence IS the fact that sut established NBC
programs are shlftmg time slots early m 1974, makmg the
January lineup almost totally different from lhe way 1! was m

13, RFD 20, World of Survival 4. New Price Is R1ght 8, 10 ,
Charles Blair's BeHer World 15, More Than You Are33
8 00- Peanuts Cartoon 8, 10. War and Peace 20, 33, Thanks
giving that Almost Wasn'l 4, Temperatures Rising 6 13 ,
Chase 3, 15
a Ju - Hawa1l Five 0 8, 15
9 30 - MIJglc lan 3. •· 15
9 30 - Shaft 8, 10. TBA 33
to 00 - News 20 Our Street 33, Police Story 3 4, 15 , Marcus
'
'

PRE-FABRitATED

EXPERT

BY PAUL CRABTREE

Hog~n ' s

7

ASK US ABOUT

------------·
FREE EST

NBC News 3. ' · 15 ABC News 6 CBS News 8, 10
Heroes 13 Your Future Is Now 33
1
1 00- Truth or Consequences 3, 6, Whet's My Lme 8, Beat the
Clock • · News 10, Dusty's Trail 13 Mllrco Sportllte 33 Lee
Trevino' s Golf lor Swingers 15 Electric Company 20

~~o~_ I?'.Wi!L--

NOV SPEC
$12 so Perm For
Reg Hatr S8 so

TUESDAY, NOV 20,197:1

6 30 -

1

Stop In and See Our

John•es Beauty
Salon

TEAFORD

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

___ __________

Aru 'so Most
Reasonable Pnces
All work guaranteed

•

OffiCE SUPPLIES
and

.&amp; THINGS i

,A 00 - News 3 4,' 8, 10, IS, Sesame Slreet 20 ABC News 13
Nur-sing Process 33

992 -2094
606 E M~m Pomero_y '

Painting A SpeciaHy

Scile

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

•
:

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

Lmcoln HtU Pomeroy, 0

ELECTROLUX
Vacuum
Monday thru Saturday
&lt;""
Cleaner complete wlth at
Ph '992 2174
Pomeroy
606 E Ma1n, Pomeroy,O
tachments cordw1nder and
pa1nt spray Used but 1n ltke
new cond1hon Pay S34 45
AUTOMOBILE insurance been
cash or budget plan available Auto Sales
cancelled?
Lost
your
Phone 99 2 2984
1962 MERCURY 4 door ex
operator s license Call 992
11 18 6tc
cellent condition 58 000 ac
7428
tual miles extra snow tires
6 15 tfc
KNAPP Shoes or der now to
mounted
Harry
Swan
tnsure pre xmas del1very
Portland Oh10 843 222J
cleaned
Phone 992 5324
\1 15 tf c SEPTIC"~NRS
Modern San1tatlon 992 3954 or
1118tfc
992 7349
Mobile
Homes
For
Sale
10 23 tfc
HAY for sale Phone 742 5384
11 18 12tc ·,..-.....,--.....,.-------..., G&amp;E Appt;"a;ceRepa~ -Phone
Atr Cond1t1oner'
at the shop 992 3802 or 949
10 WEEK old ptgs $'20 each
phone 949 4490
Awnmgs
' 254
10 24 30tp
1l 18 3tp
Underp1nnmg
SEWING MACHINES Reparr'
COAL FOR sale Jaymar Coal
service all makes 992 2284
Company the Me1gs &amp; GaiJ1a Complete mobile home
The F111bru: Shop Pomeroy
serv•ce
plus
g•gant1
c
l1ne
State Route 7 at
Authonzed Singer Sales and
Chesh1re open 7 am t1ll 6 30 display of mo.lle homes
Service We Sharpen Scissors
p m 5 days a week Phone always available at
3 29 tfc
992 5693
-~::;::---- -- ----- =
11 19 Stc
SEPTIC TANKS AH.Ubtt.:
MILLER
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
STARCRAFT 1974 Travel
CLEANED
REPAIRED
Trailers
and
fold down
MOBILE HOMES
MILLER SANITATION.!
ca mpers
winter prtces
STEWART OHIO PH 662
CAMP CONLEY STAR
3035
1220 Washmgton Blvd
CRAFT SA LE S Rt 62 N of
10 4 tfc
423 752l
BELPRE, 0
Point Pleasant below Red
Carpet Inn Phone (304) 675
DOZER and back hoe work
538.4
ponds and septic tanks dlt
11 19 2tc CASH pa1d for all makes and
chmg service top so11 fill
models of mobile homes
dirt
l1mestone
B&amp;K
Phone area code 614 423 9531
Escavahng Phone 992 5367 or
It's Snow T1re T1me 1
4.13 ttc
992 3861
9 1 tfc
CO-OP COUNTRY BER~Y MILLER M0b1le Home - ------...!.........,.
Sales has a lot lo offer wher:
anu 'ivhde Sewrng
SQUIRE 120
you start shopprng for your t:LI"""'
Mac~ l nes
Service on all
Mobde Home You can beat
makes
Reasonabfe
rates
the htgh deprecrat.on you II
Postftve Stop and Go In Mud
The Sewing Center M1d
have
on
your
home
for
the
&amp; Snow
dleport Oh•O
f1rst two years by shopptng
11 16 tfc
late
model
used
Mob1le
for
a
ALL SIZES IN STOCK
Home Here are some every
day low pr1ces 60x12 PM C
Let Us Install Now 1
$4 995 00 60xl2 Champ1on , Real Estate For Sale
S4 495 00 60x12 Rembradt 2 BEDROOM house J years old
$3 995 00-4 bedrooms 50x 12
SUPER SERVIC~ C.TII
car pet1ng b1g kttchen W1fh
Detro1ter S4 795 00 44x 12
lots of cabmets •; l acre of
9. ~ Jack W Carsey, Mgr
Regent
$379500
65x12
ground Rac1ne Oh10 Call
6itl Phone 992 9932
Detro1ter $8 295 00 60xl2
949 4998
Wtnston
SS 495 00 60x 12
9 12 tfc
P M C $5 995 00- very n1ce
NEW LARGE recl1n1n9 chairS
60x 12
Beverly
Manor
Ill vmyl mater ral buy now or
55 995 00
65x12 L1berty
lay away tor Chr1stmas Only
54 500 00
60x 12
Baron
S89 95 Swtvel rocker 1n
SS 995 00 SOx 10 Detro1ter W1fh
9 28 tfc
velvet nylon and prmts that
3
~xpandos
S3
495
00
SOx
10
make a wonderful 91ft for
RIChardson $2 600 00 55x 10
your W1fe Only $69 95 All
Vmdale
$2 995 00
50x10
1tems cash and carry or 60
Huntmgton . $2 995 oo sox 12
day lay away
Pomeroy
Rttzcraft
$2 995 00 JSx8
Recovery 622 E Mam
Detro1ter
$1 995 00 4Sx8
Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
Anderson,
Sl
995 00 These
112026tc
are mostly all late model
homes and the prices Include
UPHOLSTERY FabriCS by the
your delivery and complete
yard 54 Inches wide as low as
set
up So for an honest to
$1 95 per yard velvets as low
goodness good deal stop m
as $3 45 Imported velvets
today at Berry Mtller Mobile
S9 95 We also have nylon
Home Sales 70S Farson
herculon
cotton pnnh
Street Belpre Ohto phone
vmyls and remnants by the
423 9531 closed Sundays
yard or by the p1ece Pomeroy
MIDDLEPORT - 2 story
11 15 6tc
Recovery 622 East Main
frame home 4 bedrooms
Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
Bath garage Several lots
11 20 26tc Real Estate For
and
parts of lots go with th1s
-----------,---NEW
J
bedroom
all
electric
ASKING
$9,500 00 MAKE
FOAM to f1ll your old COUCh and
home carpet•ng one car
chair cush1ons as low as
AN OFFER
garage over an acre ground
S10 95 Upholstery books only
JUST OFF RT 7 3
on Flatwoods Rd , phone 992
SOc 4 mch covered foam
bedrooms,
New
Bath,
New
2735
mattresses for !.tandard stze
F A furnace, utility room ,
11 15 6tc
bed
$29 95
Pomeroy
Rec room lots of new
Recovery , 622 E Mam --- --~-- ------ Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
F-IGHT room house on 18 acres
paneling and tile new out
112026tc
tn New Haven Will sell on
cellar and storage Large lot
terms Wrena Lauderm lit
$8,000 00
8 NICE ewes 4 reg 1stered 4
( 304) 882 2452
MINERSVILLE - I story
n 18 6tp
grade Also ntce slaughter
frame, 3 bedrooms, bath
lamb Call 949 3073
11 20 7tc 'S'N'AL:L~ house 1deal for a
Lots of base cabmets In
couple or bachelor Fully
kttchen Gas stoves for heat
1967 Po.NTIAC muffler and
furntshed Can be ftnanced
Porches Lots of ground
ptpe used 2 weeks Phone 742
with 5100 down Phone 992
Furn1shed $6,500 00
3266
5186
MIDDLEPORT Nice
11 20 3tc
11 13 6tc
busmess room
Lovely
100 GALLON bulk tank com
apartment over 3 bedrooms.
pressor double 4 Herr1ngbone
bath Dlr:ung room Nice
parlor surge e1ectnc pulsator
kitchen
with lots of cabmets
m llkers
stamlen sttel
Gas
hot
water
heat
prpelme wtth automatic
washer Alamo 50 pius 1968
throughout Hardwood floors
'Jrrqd l\ r, . .f,lcl
vacuum pump Phone (614)
and carpeting 2 garages
I\ I f d, I
843 2256 after 6 p m Dlx1e
ALMOST NEW ASKING
Smtth Route 1 Portland
'I rJt, ( h,"l'' \!•"!
$30.000 00
Oh10
P•II!H lOY Oht&lt;l ,',,'f,&lt;;
PROPERTIES
ARE
11 20 3fc

b1nahon Wtfh 8 track built m
over payments of $7 55
GET YOUR MAH Wl'l1l A
per month or pay $101 50 Call
992 5331
10 21 tfc WE HAVE all your upholstery
needs
Burlap ,
dentm
cambrtc foam glue, zippers
(;'";. .,. .,._' • uU!.tne:~o~ 1"'' ~dre
packmg stnp spr.ngs and
Butldmo for sale or lease
CliPS
chtpboard, button
Phone 773 5618 from 8 30 p m
tw1ne sew.ng thread legs
to 10 p m for appointment
upholstery book' dacron
3 20 tfc
Help Wanted
webb•ng sprtng tw1ne tacks
CARHOP and wa1tress wanted
welt cord cotton sw1vel
Apply 1n person at Crows ONE SMALL John Deere dozer
bases and foam foam foam
wrth heavy duty cab and gnll
Steak House
Pomeroy Recovery 622 East
protector
Good
condition
11 13 lOtc
Mam
Street Pomeroy Phone
Phone 949 5953
992
755.4
11 15 6tc
BEAUTICIAN wanted full or
11 20 26tc
parttlme Helen s Beauty
EXCEL-;;v, .. 3alt Works, E
Shop
Mam St Pomeroy All kmds
11 16 5tc
of salt water pellets water Pets For Sale
nuggets, block salt and owo
VE shopped the rest now
WOULD like ~omeone 'u come
Oh 10 R tver Salt Phone 992 YOU
buy the best at Showalfer s
1n and stay wtth grandson ,
3891
Wet Pet Shop Chester, Ohto
and mvalld husband 6 or 8
6 5 tfc
New sh•pment 111 stock
days dutmg my stay at the
11 4 17tc
hospital Phone 992 7268
ZIG ZAG sewmg mach1ne
11 16 4t c 1973
Th•s machme darns em POODLE groom1ng no ap
brOiders
overcasts and
polntment necessary S5 00
monograms all wrthout at
Employment Wanted
May stay w1th dog Phone
tachments Pay balance of
Coolville 667 3915
S41 50 or pay S6 a month Call
CARPENTER work masonry
11156tp
992
5331
work general remodeling qy
10 21 ttc eE..:. ~ •.::--;-;IJI)II oog, 12 gauge
hour or contract Phone 993
J511
W1nchester Single barrel
__..
11 2 26tp APPROXIMATELY 20 acres of
shotgun both for S35 26 mch
land eKcel/ent building S1te
boy s bicycle $20 Phone 992
MINJ BACKHOE serv1ce Also
Call 742 5223
7208
waterlines footers trenches
10 21 30tp
11 20 3tp
Chari~S R Hatf1eld Route 1
Rutland Oh10 Phone 742 2 REGISTERED H~mpshlre
MALE pobdle puppy black
6092
boars Phone 843 2158
miniature PhOne 992 5858
11 13 18tp
11 15 6tc
11 13 tfc
t~ke

Ph 992-S271

PHONE

own contamer Arnold Hvpp
Letart Falls OhtO Phone 247
'2623
11 15 Stc

--------------ZIG ZAG
SEWING

Gene's
Body Shop

992-7474
Johnson Masonry
&amp; I Remodeling)
992-7608

••''~~." /JL-------~----

.~,

fTelevision Log

...

'

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

•Va , VISited Mr and Mrs
Dav1d Smith
Mr and Mrs Joe Smith
VISited Mr and Mrs Bill
Thurston
Howard Larkms of Portland,
11 8 tfc
Vera Weber of Tuppers Plams
WANTED old upnght p1anos
and Donna Bogard VISited Mr
any cond 1flon pay•nQ $10
and Mrs Fred Larkins
each Wnte and g1ve d1rec
t10nS to Wttten Plano Co Box
Mr and Mrs M1ke Bissell of
189 Sa rd•S OhiO 43946
Columbus VISited Mr and Mrs
11 14 6tp
Joe Bissell
-------------wall
Mr and Mrs Elsworth Dill , 'CORNER cupboards
cupboards chests old guns
Pomeroy, VISited Mr and Mrs
any condtt10n Also blue
decorated stoneware Wr1te
Warren ConnoUy and Mr and
P 0 Box 44 Martmsburg
Mrs Robert Larkins
Oh10 43935 or call 1 484 4440
after 1 p m
Ella Osborn has returned
8 8 90tc•
home from St
Joseph's
WANTED
fu1
ov .. ootJn
Hosp1tal, Parkersburg
household goods Tools most
Mr and Mrs Harold Osborn ,
anyth1ng of value Will buy or
sell on comm1sslon W11l haul
Keno, VISited Ethel Larkins
Call 992 3354 or 992 2792
-VIolet Smith
Hayman 's
7 25 tfc

The

M0f or

5-T-R-E-T=c:i-tI

4

Long Bottom

thought for !be day
Scolu.h
Thomas Carlyle
In 19GB, explosiOn and flre
lAid, "M1111c II well said to be entombed 7a men m a coal
mine at Fannmgton, W Va
the speech
angels "

.-..

QUAL JJY

-----------

Nuernberg before !be JrtternaUonal War Crimes Tribunal
In 1947, Prmcess (later
Queen) Elizabeth of England
marned Royal Navy Lt Ph1hp
Moun !batten

or

t~f

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

her sister, Miss PatrLcLa

rter

...

81 ..... 04 GO I~IIOO J fNI\IOONCl
What
we
would
g1ve
to
see
your
~~---===-=~==~
Smile
...
To s•t and talk w1th you awh•le
KOSMETICS &amp; WIGS 3 AND II ROOM furn1~hed and
The blow was sudden the shock KOSCOT
unfurntshed
apartments
Spectals each month We Wtll
severe
Phone
992
5434
gladly
show
you
our
line
of
To part Wtlh you we loved so
4 12 tfc
Kosmet lcs 1n the pnvacy of
dear
your
home
at
your
con
We often S1t and thtnk of you
ven ence Remember Chnst TRAILER Browns Trailer
The th1ngs vou used to say and
Park 992 3324
mas 1S not far away so phone
do
Helen
Jane
Brown
992
5113
1115tfc
We wonder why you had to d•e
11
9
tfc
W1!hout a chance to say
1973 TRAILER 2112 m1les from
goodbye
Harnsonvtll e Phone 742 3821
So sadly m1ssed by h1S
1118tfc
child ren and grandchildren
B11l Wade, Auchoneer
Mrs Paul Hudson
3 ROOMS and bath turn1shed
11 21 ltc
126 Mulberry Adults and
Are You Movmg?
must have references Phone
992
7660
Cons1dermg
Nottce
l1 18 tfc
PIANO tunma &amp; reoa•rlng
An Auct1on?
Lane oantels 259 Broadwe~y
ROOMS by the week $18 up
M•ddleport Phone 992 2082
Me 1gs Inn Pomeroy
111812tp
B G Aucfton Athen s, 0
7 12 tfc
w111 pay cash for your enf•re
PRIVATE meet1ng room fo r
household or any good
any organ1zat1on phone 992
m1scellaneous 1fems or will
3975
hold an auc,t1on for you at
3 11 tfc
your restdence reasonable

On th1s day m history
In 1620, a baby gll'l arnved
aboard
the Mayflower m
Massachusetls Bay, first child
born m !be New England

A

®
(#.'

2 SI".-H
-~

announces

SKATE A WAY

see

In Memory

Ann Dexter of Hunting!OO spent a day w1tb her
mother, Mrs. Dorotby Wnght
and called on Dale Wnght at
!be hospital
Mr and Mrs Larry Barr and
children, DaVId and Michelle,
vialted wltb her parents, Mr
and Mrs Howard Thoma, and
Thoma, of Lowsv1lle, Ky

ABSOLUTELY
deer huntmg
or hun1 1ng or no
trespass1ng
on
these farms v.rgll Hamm .
Helen Baer Wallace Am
berger Charles Yost vernon
Nease 1von w ell
11 IS 6tp

neods

wnter, was born Nov 20, 1851

Mrs

•LETC H[ R P•ono ,.,v,ce
Tvnmq &amp; Rr&gt;p:-ttr Cal t.98
173 1
11 6 ?(..lp

I Pomeroy
·'

lito A Good Netghbor.

BLIN o ADS

30

N0tlte

Business Services
- ---

F-"f~?~· ~

'

�•
6- The Dally Sent111el, Mlddleport-Pomero) 0 • Now 20, 197J

Syracuse
News, Society
By Jean Hall
Rtchard Duckworth and
••nes Whl'" VISited Sunday
ne
K:
•and Monua.y
at H untmgton
Mr and
With lheir brotb •r
'" •
Mrs Ml llard Due k wor tb wh 0
accompamed them home on

Monday
Sadie Theuner and Jean Hall
VlSlted Tuesday evemng at

Veterans Memonal Hospttal

With Emma Hayman
Mr and Mrs Jac'k Grueser
Mason, W Va, Mr and Mrs
Tom Grueser and family of
Pomeroy, and Mrs Ph1lhp
Donovan, local, were Sunday
guestsofthetrparents,Mr and
Mrs George Grueser
Mrs David Parsons, Ricky,

7- The DailySentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Nov 20,1973

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
ADS
oNFORMAno•
DEADLINES
s PM Day Before Publiclltton
Monday Oeadtme 9 a m
Cancellat.on - Correcllons
wdl be accepted until 9 a m for
Da-v of Pubhc at•on
' REGliLATfONS
The PubiJsher reserves the
r1ght to ed 1! or rep~ct any lids
deemed Ob1ect lonal
The
Publ ts her will not be r-espon
Sible for more than one 1n
correc' msert•on
RATES
For Wtlnt Ad Serv•ce
scents per Wor-d one •nserllon
M1n1mum Charge Sl 00
,. cents per word three
consecut •ve 1nsert lons
26 cents per word s•x con
secut•ve msert1ons
25 Per Cent D1scount on pa•d
ads and ads pa•d Wtthm 10
days
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY ~
52 oo for 50 word m 1n
3~um Each add•l tonal word
WANT

Wayne and Bnan, and Mrs
Elizabeth RICe and Sue, VISited

Ad~~~~~~~n~~n;sc Charge per

m Athens recenUy

8

OFFICE HOURS

~0 ! ~

,~ ~ .J' ~ ~a~~vn

10

Mrs James Wh1te and Mary Saturday

Beth of Dunbar, W Va , spent
Monday afternoon With Agnes
White and Richard Duckwortb
They also VISited her motber,
Mrs Rose Schwarz and s1ster,
Mary Nollge and family at
Mason
Sunday guests of Mrs Ada
Slack were her daughter, Mrs
Harley E Johnson, Tammy,
Cheryl and Terry, of Wolf P.n
Recent Sunday guests of Mr
and Mrs William R1zer were
their son, Mr and Mrs Ken·

neth Rizer, Racme
Eugene Hudson and Robert
Bailey of Pennsylvama spent a
recent afternoon and evemng
wltb Mrs Myla Hudson
Mr and Mrs Robert Harden
and Debbie spent a recent
weekend at Marwn wltb their
son, Mr and Mrs Robert A
Harden and Enc Enroute
home they stopped at London
to visit their otber son, Mr and
Mrs JIDl Harden
Spendmg a day recenUy w1th
Elva Dalley were her brother,
Mr and Mrs Pat Autherson ,
Newark
Mrs Mildred Pierce and
Tina spent Sunday evenmg
w1th Mr and Mrs Paul Pierce,
Randy and Scottie, Mason, W

Va
Mr and Mrs Dave Lipscomb
and Shawn VISited recently
w1th his parents, Mr and Mrs
Allen lipscomb and family of
Hemlock Grove.
Mr and Mrs. Gerald Wells
and daughters, Gallipolis, Mr
and Mrs Clarence Cornell of
Portland and Mr and Mrs
Jerry Cornell and farmly of
East Liverpool were recent
guests of Mr and Mrs Dale
Teaford and family
Conme Moranty and Bob
Hansford of Columbus spent
!be weekend w1th Mrs Paulme
Morarity . VISltmg on Sunday
Wltb Mrs Moranly was her
son, Mr and Mrs Marty
Morarit)i.
Mr and Mrs James Harden
of London, Ohio were recent
weekend viSitors of !be former's parents, Mr and Mrs
Robert Harden and Debbie
Mrs. Gene Sinuns, Tommy
and Deatra Jo, Columbus,
spent a weekend w1tb Mr and
Mrs Harry Clark While here,
Deatra Jo celebrated her 12th
bU'tbday

Langsville
Mr and Mrs Ronme Gorby
of Myrtle Beach, S C , spent a
weekend w1tb hiS parents, Mr
and Mrs Carl Gorby
Dale Wr1ght IS ser1ously 1ll at
Veterans Memorial Hosp1tal
Mr and Mrs Harry Laing of
Cleveland were called to the
home of her brotber, Dale
Wnght, who IS senously ill
Mr and Mrs Chester Messer

and chLldren, Teressa and
Danny, Magnetic Sprmgs,
Ohio, spent !be weekend wltb
her motber, Elvll'a Barr Otber
Sunday dmner guests were Mr

and Mrs Duane Barr and son,
Shawn, of Oak Hill, Mr «nd
Mrs Larry Barr, Dav1d and
Michelle of Rutland , M1chael
Barr of Glenville, W Va, and
MISS Marge Riggs of Pomeroy
Mrs Francis Willcox IS a
surgical patient at Holzer
Hospital It 1s reported she Is
domg fme and expects to be
released from !be hospital

soon

0

IN MEMORY of our father and
grandfather La wren ce R

Wh•tlatch who passed away
so sudd enly e1ghf years ago
on Nov 21 1965

Social Notes
Mr and Mrs Joe Bissell and
Kenny VISited Mr and Mrs
OtiS Casto at Reedsville
Mr and Mrs Ke1th Ridenour
and sons of Keno VISited Er-

nestine Hayman
Mr and Mrs Tom Drake,
Reynoldsburg, and Mr and
Mrs David G Smith, Marietta,
spent the weekend w1th Mr,
and Mrs Dav1d Sm1th
M1ke Larkms who has been a
patient at Holzer Medical
Center m GallipoliS has

returned home
Mr and Mrs Howard Young
of Paden C1ty, W Va, spent
several days with Mr and Mrs
Garth Sm1th
Mr and Mrs Larry Curtis
and family of Keno VISited
Mary P1erce

Mr and Mrs Don Sisson of

Vtenna, W Va , were recent
vtsttors of Serena Stsson
Mr and Mrs Hank Holter
and fam1ly were dmner guests
of Mrs Hanson Holter, Forest
Run

Mr and Mrs Ronme Best
and daughters of Fairfax,

part1es
Thanks
g.vmg November 16th and
17fh Chr•Simas Dec '21st and
22nd New Years Eve Dec
31st Ava•tabte tor pnvate
part ies Monday Tue sday
Thursday evenings Sat and
Sunday afternoons Open
Wed Fr.dav and Sa turday
even1ngs 7 30 10 30 Call 985
3929 985 3803 or 985 9996
1!1J12tc

holtd&lt;ty

The Almanac
By United Press International
Today IS Tuesday, Nov 20,
!be 324tb day of 1973 w1th 41 to
follow

The moon ts approachmg Its
new phase

mormng

stars

are

Mercury and Saturn

The evenmg stars are Venus,
Mars and Jup1ter
Those born on thiS date are
under !be s1gn of ScorpiO
John Merle Coulter, Ameri-

can

botamst,

colomes

She

teacher

was

Peregrme WhJte
In 1945, 24 top

leaders

went

on

(0

•

·---~

1970 CHEVELLE MALIBU
U69S
door gold flntsh spotless clean ~ntenor , V 8 eng me
automat1c, power steenng rad10 A honey of a buy
$1295
1970 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill
4 door V 8 automatiC power steenng, radto good t1res
blue f1n1sh spotless intenor
$1195
1970 DODGE POLARA
4 door factory a1r automatic transmtSSJon power
steenng &amp; brakes good wh1te wall t res wh1te ftnlsh ,
vmyl roof radio heavy duty suspens1on

and

named
German

trial

at

YOUR BUILDING
D-0-L-L-A-R
With Ski lied
Craftsmanship

I

D. L.
MOORE &amp; SONS
PH. 992-6675

PRICE
CONSTRUCTION
Ro'!fmg - Spoutmg
K1tchens &amp; Bathrooms
Complete Remodeling

e.\.

Stalo Farm
Is Them
For afl your

~"

Wanted To Do

~"""

WILL do paper hangmg and
pa1nl1ng Call Arthur Musser BRUSH HOG S 4x5 ft

L 4J

~"

~~

For Sale

Ph 992 7155

~~

.. I ..
.. l.:'illil!l
- [ l l r tl

........
.
.A.
...

You'll like our competent
dependable servtce
Call Athens, Ohm
593-5035 Collect
HOLIDAY SPEC IAL PRATT S
BEAUTY SALO N November
12th through 24t h Real1stlc
Perm for t•nted bleached or
hard to hold ha1r made w1fh
natural organiC protem
Regular $30 perms for $15
Regu lar $25 perms for $12 50
Call today for appotntment
ask tor Ma c or Debb • 992
375 1
11 11 12tc

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

OPEN
THANKSGIVING DAY
If you want to gel out
try Gaul's Turkey
SPECIAL
Open 9to?

GAUL'S

SHAKE HAVEN
SR 7

Chesler,

0.

_ 74~:: ______ ~_!_J__JOtp _ 99~585~-------.!..:!~fc
REGISTERED Hereford bull
For Rent
Turn1ps SJ 00 bushel bring

TRAILER Mason W Va
couple only phone 992 5693
II 16 tfc

-------------ALL ELECTRIC home
Ar
Ill

baugh add!tton at Tuppers
PlatnS Oh10 2 bedroom wall
to wall carpet beaut1fullarge
k1tchen w•th plenty of cab1net
space Enclosed front and
rear porch ftn1Shed basement
w.th k•tchenette
1 car
garage m basement 100 x 200
landscaped lot Ava11a.01e
around Dec 15 reference or
depos1t requtred $175 per
month plus utd1t les For
appo1ntment phone B F
Godfrey Belpre Oh10 1 423
8400
11206tc

197 3 MOBILE
Home
3
bedroom 1112 bath furn1shed
or unfurn iShed lnqu~re at P &amp;
J Odds &amp; Ends Shop Mtd
dleport 9 ttl I 5 after 5 call 992
3509
1120ffc
--- -------- - -~

For Sale

PAINT DAMAGE 1973 Z1g Zag
Sew1ng Mach1nes St111 In
or~gmal
cartons No at
tachments needed as our
controls are budt m sews
w•th I or 2 needles makes
buttonholes sews on buttons
monograms and blind hem
st•tch Full cash pr1 ce $38 50
or budget plan ava tlable
Phone 992 2984
11 14 6tc

Lost

VACUUM
Cleaners
new
1973 Model Complete w1th all
LOST - 1 brown purse between
clean1nQ toots Small pamt
Veterans
Hosp1tal
and
damage 1n sh1pp1ng Wtll take
Pomeroy Thursday Nov
S27 cash or budget plan
15th Reward Call {J04l 882
ava•lable Phone 992 2984
2206 after 7 p m
11146tc
11 18 Jtc SINGER Auto Z1g Zag Sew1ng
Machmes m sewmg table
Wanted To Buy
Makes buttonholes sews on
buttons bl•nd hems etc Top
NO 1 COPPER 70c Rad1ators
notch cond1t1on Pay S51 or
33c brass JOe battenes 90c
terms ava•lable Phone 992
M A Hall ReedSVIlle Phone
2984
° 11 14 6tc
378 6249

OLD furniture oak tables ,
clocks Ice boxes , brass beds,
dtshes
or
complete
households Write M D
M1ller Rt 4, Pomeroy Oh•o
call 992 6271
5 13th

phone

8 TRACK stereo console due to
damage m Shipment Wdl sell
for small balance of $99
or
payments of
S6 99
per month Call 99:1 ~131
11 4 ffc
1973 ZIG ZAG sew1ng machine
Take over 8 payments of $5 25
per month or d1scount for
cash Call 992 5311
11 4 ttc
SA LT FOR ICE AND SNOW
Rock salt for townsh •PS
towns and busmesses In
bulks and bags for tee and
snow Excels1or Salt Works
PhOne 992 J891
11 11 tfc

LOTS

of t.hrVsanthemums for
sale, held grown We only
have one color - yellow 10
bunches for $5 We have some
out 1n full bloom some 1ust
budd1ng Reynolds Flower
Shop Mason w va Call 773
51.47
9 26 ttc

- -------'-------- -------------197J ST ER E:O RadiO co m

197 ~

MACHINES left m layaway
All bU1it 1n to buttonhole do
stretch sewtng and fan cy
st1tchmg Pay lust $48 75 cash
or terms ava1lable Trade 1ns
accepted Phone 992 2984
11 18 6tc

Want Ad

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

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

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

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

FURNITURE

742-6273

From the Ia roest
Bulldozer Radiator to the
~ma nest Heater Lorb
1
Nathan 81ggs
Radiator Spectalt~t

Bullllo Yollf' •Specs
Dell. .ncl to Jolo Sill

HOGG &amp; ZIJSPAN
MATERIALS tO
77USS4 ,
MoiOfl, W Vo ~

,,
&lt;

RUSSELL'S

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

NEW LISTING - 8 rooms, 4
bedrooms, 1112 baths, gas
furnace Garage and 3 porches
on Moddleport $18.000 00
NEW LISTING - 7 rooms, 3
bedr-ooms, bath, natural gas
heat, and garage Near stores
In Pomeroy $11,000 00
NEAR TOWN - Nice birch
k1tchen with S S cook and bake
untts 3 bedrooms, family
room, carpeting, and nat gas
furnaces $15 000 00
MOBILE HOME LOT - In
Harnsonvllle with water tap
paid sept1c tank, and elec
tnctty
NEW LISTING - One acre
plus of vacant land on Rt 7
near Pomeroy Only $1800 00
NEW LISTING - 1'12 acres of
nearly level land , In meadow
with a fairly good 2 bedroom
home at Downlngton
IF YOU WANT TO BUY, OR
SELL. SEE ONE OF US

AUTO TRIM

•5.55

992-2839

On Most Amencan Cars
-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

L

'MlODTRUm

Wheel Alignment

Co RoadS

Bradbury

COMPLETE
INTERIOR
REPAIR

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
O!l&gt;n 8 Tol5

HARRISON'S TV service and
service calls Phone 992 2522
29

trc

~ADS

1Oct&lt;.- - Will remoVe
at a reasonable char{ile Call
2otS 5514
8 23 90tc

MOBILE home repair Elec
1rlcal plumblngr and heatlnrPhone 992 5858
7 15 t c
READY MIX
CONCRET.:
delivered fight to your
prolect Fast and easy Free
estimates Phone 992 328-4
Goegleln Ready M•X Co 1
Middleport Ohio
6 30 tfc
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED

REASONABLE rates Ph .46
-4782 Gallipolis John Russell ,
owner and Operator
5 12 tfc
1 1 ,,

IS - TBA 33
7 30 - New Dating Gamel, To Tell The Truth 6 , Beat the Clock

Welby,M D 6, 13
10 30 - Woman 33
U OO - News3r4,6,8,10, 13, 15, Jan~kl33
11 30- Johnny Carson 3. 4, 15, Honeymoon Suite 6, 13, Mov1es
" Band of Angels" 8, 'S 0 S Pac1ftc' 10
1 00- Tomorrow 3, A News 13
200-News4
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 21,1973
6 DO- Sunrise Semmar 4 Sacred Heart 10
6 15 - Urban League 10
6 20- Farm Report 13
6 25 - Paul Harvey 13
6 30 - Bible Answers 8 The Story 13 News 6, Ftve Minutes to
1
Live By 4
6 35 - Columbus Today 4
~ .tS - Corncob Reports 3, Farmtlme 10
1 00 - Today 3 4, 15 CBS News 8 10 Fllntstones 13 Romper

WIN AT BRIDGE

NORTH

.76
K8
.AI08642
Wl!ST
EAST
I·•Q532
•4
.J4
.Ql0952
• QJ 10932
65
.KJ975

• KJ976
• AK83

1

C BRADFORD Auct1oneer
..
Complete Service
Phone 949 3821
Racine, Oh10
Cntt Bradford
5 I tfc

-------------EXCAVATING, dozer loader

and backhoe work sepnc
tanks Installed, dump trucks
and to boys for hire will haP,~
fill dtrt, top soli, llmestoQj!
and gravel Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers, day phone 992 70891.:
night phOne 992 3525 or 992
5232

2 11 "'
Hysell'!&gt;
Garage near Crossroads Q(l
St Rt 124 aU mechaniCJel
work includ•no automatic
transmlss•ons Monday thru
Sat 8 30 a m to 6 p m Phorfto
992 5682 garage or 99271~1
residence
10 28 26tc

opffN --.;-Roger

II

E.Xt:AVATI'NG Dozers. lar;e
and small
Backhoes and
loaders on track end tires
Pump truck. - Lo bov SJr
vice Septic tank,e. Installed
George (QIII) P.ulllns phone
992 2478 or 992 7402
'
2 9 tfc
•

--------------·
INFORMATION ABOUT:
JOB OPPORTUNITIES
SOCIAL SECURITY
CONSUMER PROTECTION

AND
GREAT COUNTRY

S'IJREO
92.1 FM

WMPO

TELEPHONE REPAIRMAN &amp; INSTAllER :
Southern Oh1o Coal Company has an opening
for an experienced telephone Installer and •
repa1rman. Must be able to trouble shoot !
w1thout supervision. Knowledge of schematics
and workmg electr•cal prints essential. Good
fringe benefits; starting rate $6.20 per hour.
Contact:

Elec Co 33 Gomer Pyle 13 Beverly Htllb!llles 8
Hodgepodge Lodge 20, Trails West 15
5 55 - Earl Ntghftngale 15
6 00 - News 3 4, 8 6, 10, 15 ABC News 13 Sesame Street 20
Personality and Behavioral Development 33
6 30 - News3 4 6 8 10 15 HogansHeroes13
7 00 - News 10 What s MyeLine 8 Truth or Conseq 3 6 Beat
The Clock 4 Anythmg You Can Do 13 Elec Co 20 Know
Your Schools 33
1 30 - On The Money .4 To Tell The Truth 6 Sale of the Century
8 Pol1ce Surgeon 3 The Judge 10 Beat The Clock 13 Know
Your Ant1ques 20
8 00 - Sonny &amp; Cher 8 10 Adam 12 3, 4 15 , Bill Moyers
Journal 20 3;3 Movie Doctor Doltttle 6 10
8 30-Banacek3,4 15, Confl1cts20 33
9 00 - Cannon B 10
9 30 - Woman 20 Washtngton Debates 33
10 OO - News20 Kotak8 10 LoveStory3 • .4 1510 30 Mountam Scene
TODAY'S QUESTION
Instead of btddmg three dta 11 00-NewsJ,-4, 6, 8 10 1315 Janakl33
monds your partner has b1d three 11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 J F K - A Time to Remember 6,
13 Mov1es No T1me for Sergeants 8 Carmen Jones' 10
hearts over your three dubs 1 00 - Tomorrow 3 4 News 13
What do vou do now'
200-News4

&lt;:: ....-;::&lt;,:,:,:,:,~,,,,,,,,•.,,,.,.:,:-.. :-:-:-::-&gt;:
..),.' ... ~~W.&amp;&amp;

Generation Rap

l

By Helen and Sue Hottel

~&amp;WlJJil~~® lkJ
••v

.,_,,J .....J ,_.

111 NHI AHNOlO •""I 000 LEE

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

...,.-

~

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
1 Tarsus

DOWN

1. Oregon

name

City

5 Ted or

Z. Redolence

Jerry
10 ·Rule Br1

3 OuLda

tann1a"
composer

novel
(3 wds )

11 Descend
ant of

Wahme's
garland
5. Equalize
6. Hobday
hme
7 What
some
ball
players do
4

Lev1
lZ Cahforn1a

City
13 Balanced
It Scotch

uncle
15 Gen
eratJon

Yesterday's Answer

(3 wds)
8 Repeat
9. Unruffled
11. LICit

16. Musical
syUable
17. Federal
law officer

15 The

19. Tnlby,
Pequod's
skipper
eg
20. Shade of
blue
21. Boundary '-;;:-f--t--t2:1. Sailor
"
23. English
essay1st
24 ' Ballad or
Readmg

--"

18 Endorse
ment
21 Fashton
22 Italian
City
Zl. Medieval
weapon
24 Word
with go
25. Move
sideways

27 Belgian
c1ty

28 Mortise
compamon

29. Com1que
or bufla
34. L1benan
nahve
35 Dessert
order

b-+--t-...J

25 Flank
26. NIXIe
27. Compare
(2 wds.)
30. Such
(Fr.)
31. Small fish
32 Calmp
33 Voyage
35 Wmdow
sectiOn
36. H1re
37. Are you
-out?

(2 wds )
38. "Sweet
O'Grady"

39 Sicilian

5 30 -

volcano

TROFY

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

II

is

IGROUTH~

I I

[t)

t
X)
I I

F/M/TS
'

.vna-.

M:OR~Ml!.~

.3

+ A74

CRYPTOQUOTES

A

N

XOTBE'V

QXM

QOEVA

Now arranre the circled !etten

1

"[llJ-[llliJ"

(Auwen tomorrow)

Jumble• GUISE KITTY AGENDA IMPEND
Anewer: Wlral a rollmfHI m dentle lrafftc
nuoht retiUit m - DENTS

OWWMDEV

XBOIH
VM

MU

MU

AVML
VXB

OEZFMIIZ

RNTNEP
WMAV

11M 6T"AI&lt;T1NG A ~VIOLE"NT

North·South vulnerable
West

Pass

Pass
, pass

Pass

North

East

South

Pass

2f

3•

Pass

4+

Pass

Pass

2•
5•

Pass

i"HA1i9 THE 51UPIDe5T" iHINcd
EVER H&amp;\RD CF IN MY WFE

XDFFOIH
Yoaterday'a Cryploquoto: THE GLORY OF NOVELTY IS
SHORT LIVED, AFTER FOUR DAYS RESPECT IS GONE.BALTASAR GRACIAN
(@ 1978 JCantr Future• SJUdtcate,Inc,)

I DRSAD n-tE DAY BH~ c:eciDC6

I

10 &lt;'&gt;TAl&lt;!" A VJOLENT f'R01E6T

IS
n&lt;AT

BAD&gt;

•

u

'

s•

r· Openmg lead-Q+

By Oswald &amp; James Jaeoby
Pess1m1Shc Pete looked
over the dummy and
remarked, "I'm glad a trump
wasn't opened A lucky play·
er would he able to set up
dummy's clubs, p1ck up the
trumps and make seven I'm
gomg to try to ptax as safely
as possible for SIX '
It was well that he d1dn't
try for seven Actually lhe
least b1t of careless play on
hiS pari and he m1ghl not

TilE BORN LOSER

FIRST at- 1-U. , HO)J DID 40&lt;.1
M~ TO
1w.;1C6

,..;r

THI'&gt;

THI~'Z

T/1.~

l.mR 'PJR

t.'OIIli:R\ 'Pv CERr/&gt;.1~~
Tm/lf'TER

011-0W,IT

WE MIGI--I"T

~)

BE COOPED
UP HERE

J

FOR DAYS 1

have made SIX.

Pete won the dtamond 10
dummy and promptly played
the ace of clubs Then he
cashed h1s ace and kmg of BLONDIE
hearts and led a th1rd heart
• West discarded a d1amond
and Pete ruffed m dummy
He returned lo hiS hand by
Teadmg a diamond to n1s ace
and ruffed hiS last heart He
led a low club from dummy
and ruffed 1t w1th h1s kmg of
trumps HIS last d1amond was
ruffed by the ace of trumps
ThiS ser1es of plays had established West's queen as the
,high trump but that h1gh
'trump was the only tr1ck for
the defense
A trump lead by West
would have defeated the
slam, but as 11 was Pete only
made 1t because of h1s
pess1m1sm
He has to cash dummy's
ace of clubs hefore leadmg
the third heart Otherwise,
•West would have been able to
d1scard h1s one club and ruff
the ace He also had to ruff
the f1rst club w1th hiS kmg of
rumps to keep West from
: overruffmg and Jeadmg a
~ trump back
.J

1

••

••
"
•

THila'S A

CON"tiNUIN~

PAAADe

OF

THEMJNHER£

ALL. PAY

"'I'E.or&gt;'

DAY'

(N EWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I

-

, The b1ddong has been:
w..t No·th Eoll

I FEEl LIKE A
SCRAPBOOK '

'''
'

EMPLOYER

•
I

I

I

ME

-GNE

ANU WJ.NIHHUt'

F'RCTrE5r AGA.IN5T" Hl(dH F'RICE5

'
It:

apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hmts Each day the code letters are different

to form the aurpnae answer, aa
'::::::·==·==:::=;-::"-;;-;~s~u~r~r::;ested by the above cartoon.
r Mil .. - -

how to work
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter Simply stands for another In this sample A il
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc Smgle letters.

Rt. No. 3, Box 54
Albany, OhiO 45710
Phone: 614-669-3216
Main office located on Route 689 near Albany
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY

1

ar Readers
Furtber analyzmg computer data on our recent survey " For
Parents Only" on teenage mores of the present day, 11 IS Ill:
teresting to note that of the 35 questions we asked - mv1ting
conunent as weU as sunply "yes" or "no"' answers - more
respondents took the lime to express lhell' v1ews on premarital
sex lhan ahnost any other question
A Montana man, for imtance, opllled, "I hope my daughter
won't have rntercourse because everybody IS domg 11 or to be
popolar I would hope, too, that she would he able to resist unpulslve paSSion But if she enlered a mature, responsible affall', I
wouldn't COIISlder 1! the worst thing m the world What I abhor IS
the current ratber adolescentfiXlllion on sex as a mecharucal act
for IndiVIdual pleasure I've no quarrel w1th healtby, human
sexuality affll'med m loVIng relationships "
A portion of "Yes, my Ideas on sex have changed" voters
were sonply resigned ("Premarital sex freedom IS here, why
fight a losmg battle?") but others wrote
"I now agree· sex Wlth love and comnutment needn't waat
till !be wedding mght There are more unportant thmgs !ban
bemga Vll'grn -ormarrymgyour daughter off as one ,,
" InSistence on VU'gmlty pushed my oldest gll'l mto a bad
mamage that ended m divorce My new slogan gel your
mistakes over before marraage "
"I'm glad my children won't suffer the guilt I fell over
'g1v111g m' before the wedding It ahnost rwned our mamage we 'accused' each other every time we had a f1ght - before we
reconsidered those Puritanical attitudes handed down by our
parents, and realized they were largely ridiculous "
"Dishonesty, 'usllig' olber people, cruelty, war, many tbmgs
are worse than unmamed sex, and I'm glad the younger
generahon IS saymg 1t t,
''My daul!hlers. al(es 14 and 16. have been filled Wltb runs "
"I still feel premantal mtercourse IS psycholog1caUy
damaging, and 1t's safer to wrut but, after discussmg our
Vlewpomt wltb our older teeens, we have told them the decision IS
Uletrs We don't condemn or moralize"
"Hopefully, we have mstilled good values m our children so
that tbey'll make the right choices, even !bough they m1ght not
he what we would have made, back then "
"It's more IDlportant showmg my daughter she need not be
constncted by her sex- tbal she IS man's equal-than thai she

SOutHERN OHIO COAL COMPANY

AN

t

should suppress her sexuality "
"To marry for sex alone IS foolish and disastrous You must
be best friends, and !bat IS much eas1er if you can commun1&lt;sle
mentally and phySically
Thousands of respondents, of course, were m .complete
disagreement w1th the above VIews, were adamant, m fact, that
"marnage ftrst" was the only answer
Tomorrow we shall g~ve !bern "equal time " - HELEN AND
SUE

.Q soumcm +

. o:::=.. -----------.

992 2259

..

+

FOR FREE esttmates on
alum mum S1d1ng
Storm
' Doors and W.ndows car
ports, Marquees and Rllltlnq
Phone
Charles
L1SI1!'
Syracuse Ohio Carl Jacob
Sales Representative v 1V
Johnson and Son, Inc
6 22 1!&lt;

If no answer m 2568

.

• A 108

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

SELLING FAST, ONE OF
THESE COULD HAVE
BEEN YOURS LIST WITH
US TODAY 9 YEARS
EXPERIENCE
HENRY E CLELAND
BROKER

+++

ABC Is Sitting pretty, haVIng already killed Its weakest link
"Bob &amp; Carol &amp; Ted &amp; Allee," but may make another change .;
two before !be new year
Personally, I could gel along w1th several of lhe shows on all
tbree networks, but I'm particularly glad to see "Police Story,"
an honestly-done anlbology, surv1vmg the cug on NBC; "Adam's
Rib/' on ABC; and "Kojak" on CBS (I don't really care for
"Kojak," but so many people like 1t I'm COnVInced I'm the one
who's out of step)

Pessimism
pays off for Pete
.

0 U"1f"LL WHEEL Alignment
located at Crossroads, Rt 124
now back to work Complete
front end service, tune up and
brake
serv1ce
Wheels
balllnced electronicallY. All
work guaranteed Reasonllble
rates Phone 742 3232

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

CBS, which made the fewest changes of all, nevertbeless IS
g1vlng tbeheave-llo to two programs 1t calls losers.
Onus "Rollout," a war ser~es which was over-publicized and
under-talented all !be way aroWJd Goodbye and good riddance
The olber IS "Caluccr's Dept," which frankly appealed to me It
Wish It had been giVen a better chance
The replacements are attractive , however One IS a comedy
ser1es wltb a Western background, called "Dirty Sally " That
name alone IS enough to make me watch a couple of episodes
CBS' other new entry " still a furtber spm-off of Arch1e
Bunker and U. , which spawned 14 Maude" last year The new
show IS "Great Day," chrorucling the adventw-es of Maude's
mrud, Flor1da ThiS may sound like too much of a good tbmg, but
CBS' ate high on the hog With Its Beverly Hillbillies - Petticoat
Junction - Green Acres roiDld-robm, and m TV, success breeds
success, 1t seems

8 30 - Dick Van Dykel3 , Huck and Yogl6
8 55- News 13
9 00 - Paul Dixon 4 Ph1l Donahue 15 Fr iendly Junctton 10,
AM 3 Brady Bunch 6, Abbott and Costello I, Cover to Cover
33 Movie ' The Rains of Ranchlpur" 13
9 30-ToTeHtheTruth3 SecretStorm8 Mlchaels&amp;Co 6
9 55 - Chuck While Reports 10
10 00 - DinahShore3.1 5 Joker'sWIId8,10
10 30- Baffle 3, 4, 15 $10,000 Pyr-am1d 8, 10 Mike Douglass 6
11 OO - Gamb1t8, 10 , Password13 , Wlzardof0dds3,4 15
11 30 - Hollywood SquaresJ, 4 15 , Love of Life 8, 10 Bowling 6
, Brady Bunch 13 Sesame Street 33
11 55- CBS News a Dan I mel's World 10
l2 00 - Jeopardy 3 15 Password 6 Bob Braun's SO 50 Club 4
News 13, News 8, 10
12 30-SearchforTomorrowS 10 SplltSecond6 3Ws3 15
'2 45 - Ele&lt;:trlc Company 33
12 55- News 3, 15
' 00 - News 3 All My Children 6, 13 Not For Women Only 15
Concentration 8, What's My Line 10
:t&gt; 30 - Three On A Match 3, 4 15 As The World Turns 8, 10 ,
Let s Make A Deal 6. 13
1 45 - Cover to Cover 33
2 00- Days of our L1ves 3, 4, 15 Edge of Night 8, 10 Girl In My
L1fe 6, 13
3 00 - Another WO&lt;Id 3 • 15 Edge of Nighl 8 10 , Gorl In My
L1fe 6, 13
3 00 - Another World 3 4 15 General Hospital 6 13 Pnce Is
Roghl 8 10 RFD 20
J 30- Return of Peyton Place 3 15, One Ltfe to L1ve 13 Secret
Storm 10 Phil Donahue 4, Match Game 73 8 Fllntstones 6
Off the Record 20
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3, Somerset 15 Sesame Sf 33 Love
American Style 13 Mer'll Griffin 4 Speeclracer 6 J Love
Lucy8 , Sesame Street20 , Mov•e " V1va Las Vegas 10
4 30 - HazelS, Gilligan's Island 13 , Green Acres 3, Jeopardy 4
I Love lucy 6 Bonanza 15
5 00 - Mr Rogers 20. 33 Bonanza 3 Merv Grtffm 4 Andy
Gr1ff1thS I Dream of Jeannie 13 , Misston lmposs1ble6

Fuel 011 - we have manv l
furna ce parts and plumb1ng
parts for 10 pet above cost
215 N Second Mtddleport
992 3509
10 31 30tc

Remodeling Cerarn•c t1le
baths Box 280 Rutland 742
3664
6 26 tfc

+++

7 30 - Rocky &amp; Bullwinkle 13, New Zoo Revue6
8 00- Rocky ~ Bullwlnkle 13, New Zoo Revue6
8 00 - Capt KangarooS 10, New Zoo Revue1J Sesame Sf 33
Lassie 6

~ c, :&gt;ltng

--------------.
..,
RON SHEPARD Floor, Wall

September.)

Room 6

---.
. . .1--=------P
e..
Gas or
&amp; J ,..

The 1973-74 sea.••on al NBC IS likely to be remembered as one
of total, ururutigated diSBster.
In the early fall, NBC made more program changes !ban
e1ther CBS or ABC, w1th e1ght new weekly senes and two new
hours filled by rotating heroes and hero111es
Four of !be new series have already been sa-alehed off !be
schedule, early next year, and otbers are on shaky footing
Disappearmg mto !be wmler's winds will be "Diana," which
wasn't half-bad, "Love Story," which never really seemed to
jeU, "NBC Follies," which was JUst ternble, and "Needles and
Pins," a one-Joke ser~es !bat had fme acting but little else
Replacmg tbem Will be -surpriSe 1 surjriSe' -a movie m at
least one lime slot (Wednesday mghts, while !be Wednesday
Night Mystery Movie will become the Tuesday Night Mystery
MoVIe). Il's hard to tell what NBC will come up With as
replacements, bul there's nudn1ghl oil bemg burned at the
network's headquarters
(Other evidence IS the fact that sut established NBC
programs are shlftmg time slots early m 1974, makmg the
January lineup almost totally different from lhe way 1! was m

13, RFD 20, World of Survival 4. New Price Is R1ght 8, 10 ,
Charles Blair's BeHer World 15, More Than You Are33
8 00- Peanuts Cartoon 8, 10. War and Peace 20, 33, Thanks
giving that Almost Wasn'l 4, Temperatures Rising 6 13 ,
Chase 3, 15
a Ju - Hawa1l Five 0 8, 15
9 30 - MIJglc lan 3. •· 15
9 30 - Shaft 8, 10. TBA 33
to 00 - News 20 Our Street 33, Police Story 3 4, 15 , Marcus
'
'

PRE-FABRitATED

EXPERT

BY PAUL CRABTREE

Hog~n ' s

7

ASK US ABOUT

------------·
FREE EST

NBC News 3. ' · 15 ABC News 6 CBS News 8, 10
Heroes 13 Your Future Is Now 33
1
1 00- Truth or Consequences 3, 6, Whet's My Lme 8, Beat the
Clock • · News 10, Dusty's Trail 13 Mllrco Sportllte 33 Lee
Trevino' s Golf lor Swingers 15 Electric Company 20

~~o~_ I?'.Wi!L--

NOV SPEC
$12 so Perm For
Reg Hatr S8 so

TUESDAY, NOV 20,197:1

6 30 -

1

Stop In and See Our

John•es Beauty
Salon

TEAFORD

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

___ __________

Aru 'so Most
Reasonable Pnces
All work guaranteed

•

OffiCE SUPPLIES
and

.&amp; THINGS i

,A 00 - News 3 4,' 8, 10, IS, Sesame Slreet 20 ABC News 13
Nur-sing Process 33

992 -2094
606 E M~m Pomero_y '

Painting A SpeciaHy

Scile

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

•
:

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

Lmcoln HtU Pomeroy, 0

ELECTROLUX
Vacuum
Monday thru Saturday
&lt;""
Cleaner complete wlth at
Ph '992 2174
Pomeroy
606 E Ma1n, Pomeroy,O
tachments cordw1nder and
pa1nt spray Used but 1n ltke
new cond1hon Pay S34 45
AUTOMOBILE insurance been
cash or budget plan available Auto Sales
cancelled?
Lost
your
Phone 99 2 2984
1962 MERCURY 4 door ex
operator s license Call 992
11 18 6tc
cellent condition 58 000 ac
7428
tual miles extra snow tires
6 15 tfc
KNAPP Shoes or der now to
mounted
Harry
Swan
tnsure pre xmas del1very
Portland Oh10 843 222J
cleaned
Phone 992 5324
\1 15 tf c SEPTIC"~NRS
Modern San1tatlon 992 3954 or
1118tfc
992 7349
Mobile
Homes
For
Sale
10 23 tfc
HAY for sale Phone 742 5384
11 18 12tc ·,..-.....,--.....,.-------..., G&amp;E Appt;"a;ceRepa~ -Phone
Atr Cond1t1oner'
at the shop 992 3802 or 949
10 WEEK old ptgs $'20 each
phone 949 4490
Awnmgs
' 254
10 24 30tp
1l 18 3tp
Underp1nnmg
SEWING MACHINES Reparr'
COAL FOR sale Jaymar Coal
service all makes 992 2284
Company the Me1gs &amp; GaiJ1a Complete mobile home
The F111bru: Shop Pomeroy
serv•ce
plus
g•gant1
c
l1ne
State Route 7 at
Authonzed Singer Sales and
Chesh1re open 7 am t1ll 6 30 display of mo.lle homes
Service We Sharpen Scissors
p m 5 days a week Phone always available at
3 29 tfc
992 5693
-~::;::---- -- ----- =
11 19 Stc
SEPTIC TANKS AH.Ubtt.:
MILLER
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
STARCRAFT 1974 Travel
CLEANED
REPAIRED
Trailers
and
fold down
MOBILE HOMES
MILLER SANITATION.!
ca mpers
winter prtces
STEWART OHIO PH 662
CAMP CONLEY STAR
3035
1220 Washmgton Blvd
CRAFT SA LE S Rt 62 N of
10 4 tfc
423 752l
BELPRE, 0
Point Pleasant below Red
Carpet Inn Phone (304) 675
DOZER and back hoe work
538.4
ponds and septic tanks dlt
11 19 2tc CASH pa1d for all makes and
chmg service top so11 fill
models of mobile homes
dirt
l1mestone
B&amp;K
Phone area code 614 423 9531
Escavahng Phone 992 5367 or
It's Snow T1re T1me 1
4.13 ttc
992 3861
9 1 tfc
CO-OP COUNTRY BER~Y MILLER M0b1le Home - ------...!.........,.
Sales has a lot lo offer wher:
anu 'ivhde Sewrng
SQUIRE 120
you start shopprng for your t:LI"""'
Mac~ l nes
Service on all
Mobde Home You can beat
makes
Reasonabfe
rates
the htgh deprecrat.on you II
Postftve Stop and Go In Mud
The Sewing Center M1d
have
on
your
home
for
the
&amp; Snow
dleport Oh•O
f1rst two years by shopptng
11 16 tfc
late
model
used
Mob1le
for
a
ALL SIZES IN STOCK
Home Here are some every
day low pr1ces 60x12 PM C
Let Us Install Now 1
$4 995 00 60xl2 Champ1on , Real Estate For Sale
S4 495 00 60x12 Rembradt 2 BEDROOM house J years old
$3 995 00-4 bedrooms 50x 12
SUPER SERVIC~ C.TII
car pet1ng b1g kttchen W1fh
Detro1ter S4 795 00 44x 12
lots of cabmets •; l acre of
9. ~ Jack W Carsey, Mgr
Regent
$379500
65x12
ground Rac1ne Oh10 Call
6itl Phone 992 9932
Detro1ter $8 295 00 60xl2
949 4998
Wtnston
SS 495 00 60x 12
9 12 tfc
P M C $5 995 00- very n1ce
NEW LARGE recl1n1n9 chairS
60x 12
Beverly
Manor
Ill vmyl mater ral buy now or
55 995 00
65x12 L1berty
lay away tor Chr1stmas Only
54 500 00
60x 12
Baron
S89 95 Swtvel rocker 1n
SS 995 00 SOx 10 Detro1ter W1fh
9 28 tfc
velvet nylon and prmts that
3
~xpandos
S3
495
00
SOx
10
make a wonderful 91ft for
RIChardson $2 600 00 55x 10
your W1fe Only $69 95 All
Vmdale
$2 995 00
50x10
1tems cash and carry or 60
Huntmgton . $2 995 oo sox 12
day lay away
Pomeroy
Rttzcraft
$2 995 00 JSx8
Recovery 622 E Mam
Detro1ter
$1 995 00 4Sx8
Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
Anderson,
Sl
995 00 These
112026tc
are mostly all late model
homes and the prices Include
UPHOLSTERY FabriCS by the
your delivery and complete
yard 54 Inches wide as low as
set
up So for an honest to
$1 95 per yard velvets as low
goodness good deal stop m
as $3 45 Imported velvets
today at Berry Mtller Mobile
S9 95 We also have nylon
Home Sales 70S Farson
herculon
cotton pnnh
Street Belpre Ohto phone
vmyls and remnants by the
423 9531 closed Sundays
yard or by the p1ece Pomeroy
MIDDLEPORT - 2 story
11 15 6tc
Recovery 622 East Main
frame home 4 bedrooms
Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
Bath garage Several lots
11 20 26tc Real Estate For
and
parts of lots go with th1s
-----------,---NEW
J
bedroom
all
electric
ASKING
$9,500 00 MAKE
FOAM to f1ll your old COUCh and
home carpet•ng one car
chair cush1ons as low as
AN OFFER
garage over an acre ground
S10 95 Upholstery books only
JUST OFF RT 7 3
on Flatwoods Rd , phone 992
SOc 4 mch covered foam
bedrooms,
New
Bath,
New
2735
mattresses for !.tandard stze
F A furnace, utility room ,
11 15 6tc
bed
$29 95
Pomeroy
Rec room lots of new
Recovery , 622 E Mam --- --~-- ------ Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
F-IGHT room house on 18 acres
paneling and tile new out
112026tc
tn New Haven Will sell on
cellar and storage Large lot
terms Wrena Lauderm lit
$8,000 00
8 NICE ewes 4 reg 1stered 4
( 304) 882 2452
MINERSVILLE - I story
n 18 6tp
grade Also ntce slaughter
frame, 3 bedrooms, bath
lamb Call 949 3073
11 20 7tc 'S'N'AL:L~ house 1deal for a
Lots of base cabmets In
couple or bachelor Fully
kttchen Gas stoves for heat
1967 Po.NTIAC muffler and
furntshed Can be ftnanced
Porches Lots of ground
ptpe used 2 weeks Phone 742
with 5100 down Phone 992
Furn1shed $6,500 00
3266
5186
MIDDLEPORT Nice
11 20 3tc
11 13 6tc
busmess room
Lovely
100 GALLON bulk tank com
apartment over 3 bedrooms.
pressor double 4 Herr1ngbone
bath Dlr:ung room Nice
parlor surge e1ectnc pulsator
kitchen
with lots of cabmets
m llkers
stamlen sttel
Gas
hot
water
heat
prpelme wtth automatic
washer Alamo 50 pius 1968
throughout Hardwood floors
'Jrrqd l\ r, . .f,lcl
vacuum pump Phone (614)
and carpeting 2 garages
I\ I f d, I
843 2256 after 6 p m Dlx1e
ALMOST NEW ASKING
Smtth Route 1 Portland
'I rJt, ( h,"l'' \!•"!
$30.000 00
Oh10
P•II!H lOY Oht&lt;l ,',,'f,&lt;;
PROPERTIES
ARE
11 20 3fc

b1nahon Wtfh 8 track built m
over payments of $7 55
GET YOUR MAH Wl'l1l A
per month or pay $101 50 Call
992 5331
10 21 tfc WE HAVE all your upholstery
needs
Burlap ,
dentm
cambrtc foam glue, zippers
(;'";. .,. .,._' • uU!.tne:~o~ 1"'' ~dre
packmg stnp spr.ngs and
Butldmo for sale or lease
CliPS
chtpboard, button
Phone 773 5618 from 8 30 p m
tw1ne sew.ng thread legs
to 10 p m for appointment
upholstery book' dacron
3 20 tfc
Help Wanted
webb•ng sprtng tw1ne tacks
CARHOP and wa1tress wanted
welt cord cotton sw1vel
Apply 1n person at Crows ONE SMALL John Deere dozer
bases and foam foam foam
wrth heavy duty cab and gnll
Steak House
Pomeroy Recovery 622 East
protector
Good
condition
11 13 lOtc
Mam
Street Pomeroy Phone
Phone 949 5953
992
755.4
11 15 6tc
BEAUTICIAN wanted full or
11 20 26tc
parttlme Helen s Beauty
EXCEL-;;v, .. 3alt Works, E
Shop
Mam St Pomeroy All kmds
11 16 5tc
of salt water pellets water Pets For Sale
nuggets, block salt and owo
VE shopped the rest now
WOULD like ~omeone 'u come
Oh 10 R tver Salt Phone 992 YOU
buy the best at Showalfer s
1n and stay wtth grandson ,
3891
Wet Pet Shop Chester, Ohto
and mvalld husband 6 or 8
6 5 tfc
New sh•pment 111 stock
days dutmg my stay at the
11 4 17tc
hospital Phone 992 7268
ZIG ZAG sewmg mach1ne
11 16 4t c 1973
Th•s machme darns em POODLE groom1ng no ap
brOiders
overcasts and
polntment necessary S5 00
monograms all wrthout at
Employment Wanted
May stay w1th dog Phone
tachments Pay balance of
Coolville 667 3915
S41 50 or pay S6 a month Call
CARPENTER work masonry
11156tp
992
5331
work general remodeling qy
10 21 ttc eE..:. ~ •.::--;-;IJI)II oog, 12 gauge
hour or contract Phone 993
J511
W1nchester Single barrel
__..
11 2 26tp APPROXIMATELY 20 acres of
shotgun both for S35 26 mch
land eKcel/ent building S1te
boy s bicycle $20 Phone 992
MINJ BACKHOE serv1ce Also
Call 742 5223
7208
waterlines footers trenches
10 21 30tp
11 20 3tp
Chari~S R Hatf1eld Route 1
Rutland Oh10 Phone 742 2 REGISTERED H~mpshlre
MALE pobdle puppy black
6092
boars Phone 843 2158
miniature PhOne 992 5858
11 13 18tp
11 15 6tc
11 13 tfc
t~ke

Ph 992-S271

PHONE

own contamer Arnold Hvpp
Letart Falls OhtO Phone 247
'2623
11 15 Stc

--------------ZIG ZAG
SEWING

Gene's
Body Shop

992-7474
Johnson Masonry
&amp; I Remodeling)
992-7608

••''~~." /JL-------~----

.~,

fTelevision Log

...

'

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

•Va , VISited Mr and Mrs
Dav1d Smith
Mr and Mrs Joe Smith
VISited Mr and Mrs Bill
Thurston
Howard Larkms of Portland,
11 8 tfc
Vera Weber of Tuppers Plams
WANTED old upnght p1anos
and Donna Bogard VISited Mr
any cond 1flon pay•nQ $10
and Mrs Fred Larkins
each Wnte and g1ve d1rec
t10nS to Wttten Plano Co Box
Mr and Mrs M1ke Bissell of
189 Sa rd•S OhiO 43946
Columbus VISited Mr and Mrs
11 14 6tp
Joe Bissell
-------------wall
Mr and Mrs Elsworth Dill , 'CORNER cupboards
cupboards chests old guns
Pomeroy, VISited Mr and Mrs
any condtt10n Also blue
decorated stoneware Wr1te
Warren ConnoUy and Mr and
P 0 Box 44 Martmsburg
Mrs Robert Larkins
Oh10 43935 or call 1 484 4440
after 1 p m
Ella Osborn has returned
8 8 90tc•
home from St
Joseph's
WANTED
fu1
ov .. ootJn
Hosp1tal, Parkersburg
household goods Tools most
Mr and Mrs Harold Osborn ,
anyth1ng of value Will buy or
sell on comm1sslon W11l haul
Keno, VISited Ethel Larkins
Call 992 3354 or 992 2792
-VIolet Smith
Hayman 's
7 25 tfc

The

M0f or

5-T-R-E-T=c:i-tI

4

Long Bottom

thought for !be day
Scolu.h
Thomas Carlyle
In 19GB, explosiOn and flre
lAid, "M1111c II well said to be entombed 7a men m a coal
mine at Fannmgton, W Va
the speech
angels "

.-..

QUAL JJY

-----------

Nuernberg before !be JrtternaUonal War Crimes Tribunal
In 1947, Prmcess (later
Queen) Elizabeth of England
marned Royal Navy Lt Ph1hp
Moun !batten

or

t~f

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

her sister, Miss PatrLcLa

rter

...

81 ..... 04 GO I~IIOO J fNI\IOONCl
What
we
would
g1ve
to
see
your
~~---===-=~==~
Smile
...
To s•t and talk w1th you awh•le
KOSMETICS &amp; WIGS 3 AND II ROOM furn1~hed and
The blow was sudden the shock KOSCOT
unfurntshed
apartments
Spectals each month We Wtll
severe
Phone
992
5434
gladly
show
you
our
line
of
To part Wtlh you we loved so
4 12 tfc
Kosmet lcs 1n the pnvacy of
dear
your
home
at
your
con
We often S1t and thtnk of you
ven ence Remember Chnst TRAILER Browns Trailer
The th1ngs vou used to say and
Park 992 3324
mas 1S not far away so phone
do
Helen
Jane
Brown
992
5113
1115tfc
We wonder why you had to d•e
11
9
tfc
W1!hout a chance to say
1973 TRAILER 2112 m1les from
goodbye
Harnsonvtll e Phone 742 3821
So sadly m1ssed by h1S
1118tfc
child ren and grandchildren
B11l Wade, Auchoneer
Mrs Paul Hudson
3 ROOMS and bath turn1shed
11 21 ltc
126 Mulberry Adults and
Are You Movmg?
must have references Phone
992
7660
Cons1dermg
Nottce
l1 18 tfc
PIANO tunma &amp; reoa•rlng
An Auct1on?
Lane oantels 259 Broadwe~y
ROOMS by the week $18 up
M•ddleport Phone 992 2082
Me 1gs Inn Pomeroy
111812tp
B G Aucfton Athen s, 0
7 12 tfc
w111 pay cash for your enf•re
PRIVATE meet1ng room fo r
household or any good
any organ1zat1on phone 992
m1scellaneous 1fems or will
3975
hold an auc,t1on for you at
3 11 tfc
your restdence reasonable

On th1s day m history
In 1620, a baby gll'l arnved
aboard
the Mayflower m
Massachusetls Bay, first child
born m !be New England

A

®
(#.'

2 SI".-H
-~

announces

SKATE A WAY

see

In Memory

Ann Dexter of Hunting!OO spent a day w1tb her
mother, Mrs. Dorotby Wnght
and called on Dale Wnght at
!be hospital
Mr and Mrs Larry Barr and
children, DaVId and Michelle,
vialted wltb her parents, Mr
and Mrs Howard Thoma, and
Thoma, of Lowsv1lle, Ky

ABSOLUTELY
deer huntmg
or hun1 1ng or no
trespass1ng
on
these farms v.rgll Hamm .
Helen Baer Wallace Am
berger Charles Yost vernon
Nease 1von w ell
11 IS 6tp

neods

wnter, was born Nov 20, 1851

Mrs

•LETC H[ R P•ono ,.,v,ce
Tvnmq &amp; Rr&gt;p:-ttr Cal t.98
173 1
11 6 ?(..lp

I Pomeroy
·'

lito A Good Netghbor.

BLIN o ADS

30

N0tlte

Business Services
- ---

F-"f~?~· ~

'

�8 - Tlw Daily &amp;nt1rn&gt;l. Mlddlt•port-Pomrroy. 0 .. ~o\ . ''tl.

'

t~i :l

Home trainer made officiai

New restrictions take effect
this week ·onnllnting wildlife
(l)LUMBUS t UPI) - Comprehensive wildlife protection
legislation lakes effect this
week, setting penalties for violating state forest rules, increasing fees for deer and wild
turkey huntin g permits and
lightening stream litter and
other wildlife requirements.
On Tuesday, an omnibus law
authored by Rep. James Mueller, D.Chesterland, takes ef.
feet, raising the deer and
turkey hunting fees from $5 to
$10 and dealing with stream
litter and fishing statutes.
Penalties for stream Htter
violations, deer hunting of-

Bureau chiefs
challenge plan
Two ani-poverty agen cy
officials have challenged a
proposed stale plan for
establishing 15 planning
regions and their policy
boards. At the same time, the
agency officials called on the
state administration to hold· nff
implementing any guidelines
until more equitable and
workabl.e procedures can be
developed.
They were Keith Molihan,
president , Corporation for
Appalachian Development,
and Bennett Stewart, executive
director, Ohio Association of
Community Action Agencies,
who charged that the plan, as
proposed by Dr. David Sweet,
director, ·Ohio Department of
Economic and Community
Development, "would set the
cause of low-income and
rriinority citizen participation
in public decision making back
10 years ."

THANKSGIVING
DINNER
Will Be Served

Thursday
At

SYRACUSE
DRIVE-IN
MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight
November 20·

.PAPER MOON
Ryan 0' Neal
Tatum O ' Neal

GP
Co lorca rtuons:
It Ain't Easy

Rolling Along
Hitch · Hi"kers
A~ulfs:

St.SO

Children, 75c

Show Starts 7 p.m.
Wednesday &amp; Thursda y
November 21·22
·NOT OPEN

Violation Of Fishing And
fenses and v1oJauon of state Ohios 17 state foresls.
fishing and wildlife laws will be
Aside f-rom raising hunting Wildlife l .aws - - A $25 to $500
fine, a maximum 30 days in
increased under Mueller's bill fees, Mueller's bill :
next Jan . 1.
- Expa nds territory for jail. or both.
Violation of Deer Hunting
An immediate $20 to $100 fine
legally using fishing nets to
for violating a.state forest rule the Ohio River adjacent to the Laws - From a $100 to $500
fine or 30 days in jail to a $500
is established , however, under West Virginia border .
a law authored by Sen. Harry
- Gives
state
game fine plus 60 days in jail. or a
Meshel, [)..Youngstown , which protectors the sa me powers or $3,000 fine for an organization.
Violation of the Stream
takes effec t Wednesday.
arrest as law enforcement
Liller
Law - From a $25 to
Until now, there have been ·officers on state wildlife lands.
no penalties or enforcement
- Makes municipal corpora- $500 fine to a $500 fine plus 60
provisions for rules governing tions subject to the state fish days in prison for the first
offense, and $10,000 plus six
and wildlife laws.
- Gives th e d ivis ion of months in jail for subsequent
wildlife authority to expa nd offen ses, and a maximum
$5,000 fine for organizations.
commercia l fishing in Ohio .
Stream littering includes disThese changes will be made
posing
without a permit, of any
in penalties, effective Jan. 1:
Violation of stale wildlife kind of gabrage or trash on
orders - from a $15 to $200 fine sta te land or water, or water ,
to a $250 fine plus 30 days in or on a stream bank where it is
jail, and a $2,000 fine for a li!;ely to be washed into the
corporation or governmental water by flooding .
unit.
·wASHINGTON (UP!) - The
Senate Rules Committee voted
unanim ous ly
today
to
recommend the confirmation
of Rep . Gerald R. Ford"as vice
president.
All nine of the members were
present and voted for confirmation, Sen . Marlow Cook,
R-Ky ., said as he left the halfhour long private session of the
. panel.
Cook said preparation of the
formal committee report
would be completed over the
ARLINGTON, Va. (UP!) those heard one recent alterfour~ay Thanksgiving recess
At
one
time
it
was
Robert
E.
noon.
this week, and the Senate
Lee's
front
lawn
.
Now
a
buried
Few of the visitors any
would start debate of the
gas
line
feeds
an
eternal
flame
longer
come in solid black
nomination on Monday with a
that
marks
the
site
where
John
mourning outfits. The dress
vote expected Tuesday.
F.
Kennedy
lies
buried.
.
varies from shorts to suits,
The cotnmittee action had
Ten
years
after
the
from flashy reds to somber
been expected. Ford, 60, the
assassination
in
Dallas,
greys. And there are ocHouse Republi can leader,
underwent four days of millions still visit the site. They casional hairnets and curlers.
Shutterbugs abourid and the
hearings and extensive in- come from throughout the
nation,
and
from
around
the
scund of feet walking up the
vestigations by the Senate
world
.
marble steps is often drowned
panel.
President Kennedy had visit- out by the click and whir of
ed the hillside just a few weeks cameras.
before his death. Looking over
On either side of the
SURGERY PLANNED
the city and down the Potomac President's tomb are small
RUTLAND - Mrs. Betty River, he was reported to have ,
stoneS' marking the graves of
Jewett, Rutland, sister of Mrs. said, "I could stay here
the two Kennedy children who
Kathryn Dennison, Middleport, forever.''
died before their father-an
is in St. Vincent Hospital ,
Seven million people came to unnamed datlghter stillborn in
Cleveland, awaiti ng her second the grave in the year after the
1956 and a son, Patrick, who
open heart surgery. Cards may assassination. Now, officials
died two days alter his birth in
be sent to Mrs . Jewett in care say, there are about 4 million
1963.
of the hospital. The address is visitors ~ year. After the
The Kennedy gravesite cost
2351 E. 22nd St., Cleveland, Capitol building, the Kennedy
$2.4 million, with the Kennedy
Ohio 44115. Her room number grave and Lincoln Memorial
family paying one-quarter and
is 200.
are tied as the city's great . the federal · government Ule
tourist attractions.
remainder .
·
One recent day Cha rlie
RETURNED HOME
Ibarra Of Aruba Island in the
Roff Scarberry, Racine, RD, Caribbean was at the grave.
has returned home following a ''There are great things that
two months slay at Holzer happen in your life that you
Medical Center. Mr. Scarberry want to see something of," he
Laura E. Seines, 72, Lincoln
suffered a back injury. The said quietly.
St., Middleport , died early
family exte nds their thanks for
The gravesile is simple- just
Monday evening at the Holzer
the many cards received.
a flat, stone-covered area with
l
.
.
MediCal Center .
the eternal name burning in
Born May 25, 1901, in Leon,
the middle. The stones are
W. Va ., she was preceded in
OAPSE TO MEET
granite quarried more than !50
Chapter
17
of
Ohio years ago and collected from death by her parents, Andrew
Rebecca
Deweese
Association of Public School aband oned foundations of and
Employes will meet Monday, barns and stone fences· near Pickens, and her daughter,
Nov. 26 at 7:30 p.m. at the President Kennedy 's home on Ma rtha Magnotta, Middleport,
who passed away in June of
Meigs Junior High cafeteria.
Cape Cod.
this year.
Election of officers will be
Prohabiy every' American
A member of the First
held.
and many a foreigner remembers where he was and what he Baptist Church, · Middleport,
was doing that November day and the Busy Bee Society, she
in 1963 when he heard the news is survived ~y four daughters,
that President Kennedy had Mrs. CoradelJ Casa nova,
been shot in Dallas. This is in Wallingtonford, Conn ., Mrs.
the thoughts of many when Roy (Ruth) Roush, Six Lakes,
they come now to Arlington. Mich.; Mrs. Robert (Mary
Charles McGuaggan was Rose) Mitch, Wheeling, W. Va .,
scheduled to play in a dance and Mrs. Myron (June) Duf.
band in Belfast, Norther n field, Olmsted Falls; one son,
Ireland, when the manager Charles Seines, San Diego,
interrupted with the news that Calif.; two sisters, Mrs. Er·
Grandin ~-.
So.
ended
the
dancing. nestine
Charleston,
W.
Va.,
and
Mrs.
McGuaggan is now a resident
of the United States, in the C. E. Hinkle, Rockledge, Fla.;
Washington area and visils the a son-in.law, Joseph Magnotta,
gravesite oflt.n . "He was a Middleport; two brothers,
great man," McGuaggan said 'fh~ut.iur8 fjc.:Keu.,, Crown Citv.
as he stood before the tomb. and Lester Pickens, St. Albans,
What does he think when he W.Va.; two half-sisters, Mrs.
visits? 11 1 just say a prayer," Elsie McCoy, Vinton, and Mrs.
Tony (Irene) Paris, Columbus;
he answered.
a
hall-brother,
William
On almost any given dsy the
area around the gravesite is Pickens, So. Charleston; 14
grandchildren, and 10 greataswirl with many languagesgrandchildren.
Thai, Spanish, Persian, GerServices will be Friday at 2
man, Swedish were among
p.m. at the Rawlings-Coats
funeral horrie, with the Rev.
Steve Skaggs officiating .
Auto Sales
Burial will be in the Riverview
1965 FOR D station wagon for
sale, cheap . Don Sayre , 632 Cemetery, Middleport.
Gr ant St. , M id dleport , Oh io .
Friends may call at the
ll-20 ·31p
funeral home Wednesday, 2-1
and 7-9 and Thursday, 5·9.
Notice

Title J feJeriJI funds for the
employment of a home trainer·
worker by Lhe Meigs County
Board of Mental Retardation
have been approved. Mrs.
J eanette
Thomas,
administrator of the Meigs
Community School announced
today .
Notification advised that the
federal funds for the program
were retroactive to Aug. 24.
Mrs. Mary Skinner has been
working in the capacity as fulltime home trainer-worker for

•

'

Ford has

all-okay
as Veep

Millions still
visit grav~ of
John Kennedy

Laura E. Seines
died Monday

Open Thanksgiving Day
11 TO 3 PM

BUFFET DINNER

TURKEY AND DRESSING
ROAST BEEF
And All The Trimmings

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

THE J EWEL you've been
wa;t i nQ for , 27 plus mites per
g allon, tess than 7,500 on i t,
1972 Plymouth Cricket 4-door
auto . transmiss ion , twin
c Hrbs and radio . Phone 949·
2789 .
11 · 2.0.Jtc

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

Dine Out At

The

Meigs Inn
PH. 992-3629
POMEROY; OHIO __..""

"

. .

Now!
Lay It Away
-

SINGER

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Robert
Martin, Henderson ; William
Roberts, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Ronald Given, Point Pleasant;
Mert Rollins, Leon; Mrs.
Ernest Thacker, Ewington, 0 .;
Shawn VanMeter, Mason;
Spencer Buchanan, Coolville,
0., arid Charles Board, Southside.

Sewing Machine
For Christmas '73

SPLIT APPROVAL
CLEVELAND
·Stockholders of The Standard
small depos it Will hold
Oil Co. (Ohio) today overwhelmingly approved a !wo,
'115 W. Second
992-1284. for-one conunon stock split at a
. POMEROY, OHIO
special shareholders meeting
here.
.I

The Fabric Shop

'

I

WRITER HONORED Daily S~ntioel sports editor,
Denny Fobes was honored on
his 22nd birthday Monday,
being serenaded by girls at
Southern High School. Fobes
appeared at the school to
take a picture of the TOrnado
basketball team and ln·
te"rview head cage coach
Carl Wolfe when approximately 10 girls broke
out in a hearty rendition of
" Happy Birthday".

Get water

ALL-AMERICANS
DETROIT iUPI) Three Obio Stale players and
three Southern California
players were selected for the
1973 Football News allAmerica team.
Ohio
State
placed
linebacker Randy Gradlshar
and end Van DeCree on the
defensive unit, and OSU's
tackle John Hicks was
picked for the offensive unit.
Southern Cal's end Lynn
Swann and guard Booker
Brown were put on the offe:nslve team and linebacker
Richard Wood on the
. defensive sq uad. Mike
Lantry of Michigan was
. named to tbe team as the
nation's best place kicker.

Another deer
killed by car

(Continued from page I) _
Sheriff Robert C. Harthe area along Union Ave. from · tenbach's department reported
the top of Uni on Ave. hill inside today another deer killed on
the Pomeroy corporation Meigs County's highways.
limits north toward the bypass.
At 5:55p.m. Monday, a buck
COUNCIL AGREED to have crossed into the path of an auto
street department employes to driven by George F. Stewart,
pick up leaves in town Wed· 36, of 957 Broadway, Midnesday, Nov. 28, provided they dleport. Stewart was traveling
are in bags and placed along a south ·on CR 5 in Salisbury
curb.
Twp., approximately I mile
Council also discussed south of SR 124, when the deer
condition of the intersections jumped from the left side of the
on Union and Spring Aves. road into his path .
Mayor Collins is to ·arrange
Light damage was reported
with the Shelly Company when
to Stewart's vehicle. Stewart
it arrives in Middleport to was not injured.
repair streets whereby it wiU
repair the two intersections in
Pomeroy .
A request by Harry Davis,
councilman, for Pomeroy
Scout Troop 249 to sell popcorn
every third Saturday of the
ffionth . in Pomeroy was approved.
Council
discussed
remodeling of jts city hall .
Mayor Collins asked William
Snouffer, counc ilman, to
contact King Construction for
an estimated cost of suc.h work
as lowering ceiling~, paneling,
and repairing the roof.
Pomeroy Police Chief Jed
Webster's report wa? read by
Mayor Collins showing the
department made 31 arrests,
investiga ted 22 acciden ts ,
issued 780 traffic tickets, drove
3,986 miles and collected $3,004
fr9m the s treet and parking lot
tneters 'in October.
Davis reported U!st Francis
Florist had asked for free
meter space for loading. and
unloading. Council noted that
the florist shop has the right to
cap a meter when trucks load
and unload . However, they
couid not remove any more
meters in the village.
· The mayor 's report for
October was accepted showing
receipts of $2,161.30. Attending
were Mayor Collins, Lucien
Poulin,
Ralph
Werry,
Snouffer and Davis , coun·
cilmen; · Jane Walton, clerk,
and
Phyllis
Hennessy,
treasurer.

the IJOard since the beginning assisting in the development
of the fall term_ Her ap- and training of care programs
pointment now becomes of- for those children who are not
£idal, Mrs. Thomas advised. ready or cannot adjust to the
Duties of a home trainer- group experience.
Mrs. Skinner will alsc help
worker are to develop a
homebourid program for those the community and the county
children of Meigs County who to become familiar with the
cannot be served in a services of tbe Meigs Comclassroom situation at this munity School and to direct
time. She will also seek out parents to the appropriate
those children not receiving resource area in order to meet
service and try to enroll them . the child's needs.
The program has been apin the educational training
proved for a 10 month period
center .
and
is completely paid for out
Her duties will also involve
of federal furids . Mrs. Skinner
will be traveling about the
·county locating the children,
going into the homes to offer
assistance to the parents and
the children, and setting up
programs beneficial to the
individual needs.

•

Brown asks

speed cut

by 10 mph
COLUMBUS ( UP!)
Lieutenant Governor John W.
Brown today suggested that
Ohio motorists voluntarily
reduce their speeds by 10 miles
per hour in all speed zones to
conserve fuel.
Brown. also recommended
that Gov. John J. Gilligan give
Ohio's 57,000 state employes
the day off on Christmas Eve
and New Year's Eve to reduce
the amount of energy expended
in stat&lt;\_ office buildings.
" While
the , governor
suggested a reduction of speed
to 60 miles an hour on all state
cars, we suggest that the
motorists of Ohio voluntarily
reduce their speed by 10 miles
an hour, from 70 to 60, 60 to 50,
50 to 40, in which eVer speed
zone they are travelling."
Brown said he is not opposed '
to legis lati ng lower speed
limits "but I think the people of
Ohio would rather do this
volun tarily than through
government regulation.' '
" We must use every means
at our disposal to conserve
energy in every way pos~ible, ''
Brown said. "The last thing I
want to see happen is mandatory controls and mandatory
·
rationing."
1

Hair rules to
apply equally
for both sexes .

CASSETTE RECORDER

Built-in condenJOr microphon-e eliminates need
to hold or tal~ diredly into mike. Pu,h·butlon
controls . Easy-Motic recording. Aulo·S.Iop.
AC b ios." Cossette pop·up . Eo'y forward and
rew ind . Voluml'! co ntrol. Sohtfy · lo~k record
button . Earphone monitor. 3 17" PM dynamic

CINCINNATI (UP! ) - A
schcol may not regulate the
length of hair for males unless
it applies the same to females,
according to a Hamilton
County First District Appeals
Court, otherwise such a
stipulation is discriminatory.
The ruling, which upheld a
Hamilton County Com.mon
Pleas Court deciSion, was
issued in a two-year-&lt;&gt;ld dispute
involving Northwest Local
School District and William
Jacobs, 15. a student.
Jacobs had been suspended
from school, his grades
reduced and remoVed as
president of studerit council at
Colerain High School when he
refused to comply with the
school dress code.

$3 999

•p•o'"

STEREO

&lt;lfiloi~ll a&lt;&lt;iderlt~ lippil'tll 36 ,.nh
hu •tittll'ific dilri lwtio~ ol hiwm .,,., •"" ''" &gt;O!•pl"'•·
SWitc..._ '"' dr y i n•"'"''~ · ,..,,..,~en1 i&gt;reu Iabrie 11.,;doo . W a '"'
...... 11""9"· S b i ~ ....
lonl.. Cot~....,.od ""'"' hond lo
ln..,.Voango&lt;~b!oc&lt;ttdh&gt;&lt; oi...• h&lt;tnd . 8ul1on no&lt;&gt;l• &amp;l...,cood

So!ety HMI leo/ ll""'d'

,,..+

$4299

luit1to take 1&lt;1 a lnend', f.w; e . 'I'
1&lt;hoool or romp ... onrw+..ro you'd
l;l.o
Hogok-1 mpao:l cc"e
re&gt;i&gt;h ..:uH1 , lliiJ , 6" &lt;&gt;•al m&lt;U&lt;~e d
•pe&lt;~lo.o tt dool o.., brighllltr•o mw1ic

$1399

""'""..,.,..d.

12NOO T08PM

lO. rnod--l""~'o ,.d &lt;&lt;&gt;"'P&lt;t.,..,l addo colo• lo yo"' ~-• &lt;&gt; »d
~""''''"&gt;'
o
lll•lt-in ,,.,..,,flo~jodo
Ia•
privot•litle&lt;lii"l9. TI""'"'P"cl
&lt;1\1101'\01&lt; thOI'ICI I ! h,old1 I» !~Ol d! . 1h1111 oH O~&lt;'I'IOiiCI:IIIy .
Solid·•tale ompM!.r wilh u pan&gt;to '1&lt;11....,., bal&lt;tn&lt;o &lt;Hid'"'""

"' Y"'" ,..... "'""''Y"""'·
P"""""''·

"•ho&lt;• ...,...,.,.

''""""" ,.,,. '""'"ll•.

HECK'S REG.
$47.96

JEWElRY
DEPT.

8-TRACK AUTO TAPE PLAYER

In and out fine tuning . Head cleaner. Anti-theft proof. Solid State. New
thumb wheel cont~ols and illuminated channel indicators. Automatic or
manual channel change. Balance control for perfect stereo adjustment .

/ . . . ',

MUNSEY
SELF CLEANING .

\9
$1799

OVEN

New ca talytic cleaning feat ure added . Th i~
broiler cleans ihelf during normal cooking op ·
erotion . Scouring and scraping ore- chores of
the po~l os food ~patten ond greene disappear white you co6k. l15 · l10V AC only.

$2 499

1200W.

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Pomeroy E-R squad was
called at 7:17a.m. today to !18
Laurel St. for Ruth Sansbury
who was taken to Holzer
Medical Cent..r.

ss996
HECK'S REG.

HECK' S REG.
$'2'2.8B

'69.96

GENERAL ELECTRIC

WAFFLE BAKER
SANDWICH GRILL
cheese and to·
malo !.Ondwi(hl!s, fries
bocoo ond eggs, and
bakes waffles.

$2199

JEWElRY
DEPT.

HECK'S REG.
$24.96

It

grill~

JIWilRY DIPT.

JEWElRY
DEPT.

sso

LIGHTED MIRROR

Desi9ned e~pecial!y lor women with glo,,e,
but perfect for oil women who ore 1'!111tro core·
, lui. oboul their · eye moke·up opplicotion . The
· magnifying mirror js many times stronger thOFI
011 normal C05metic morrors.

SffiER

$17 99

HWllRYDEPT.

" '"'" ""'""'' "''••-$2 4..
l i g~l

indi&lt;&lt;ll""' .. hen

lol l oa &lt;lin-c;~ .,1 t wo ,Ji~•• ol
b.,od ioclt&gt;din11 &lt;tdd
Toarl rcl&lt;tr &lt;OIII•cl co~ M 11••·
,.,1,, de&lt;i11d .:t.II'H "''"'"''
&lt;oktro......, . • lmpic.ed fronl
e&lt;tnlr &lt;tl , lo 1 e&lt;tto o l "'"' · •
l&lt;tr~ ....,h,auojl windo., ol·
k&gt;wo leo •&lt;&gt;If . ,...,.;"9 ol &lt;til
co c~ i ng . • R•m&lt;&gt;""bl• crvmb
1ray lor'eo&gt;y clnnng .

•

JEWilR y

I?·CIJP FAMIL V51lE. Styled to

'e"e ycu be&lt;tuldully. Big f&lt;tm•·
lp1Ze l::!e,.t 4 l&lt;t 11 (u p&gt; ,
Sueng l"hleleclcr . T"'·" tlc&lt;k'
;olaty lop. Light 1ignol1 whu
•endy 10 ,.,. • . Kup1 ce llae

.Q J9i"
.. · • ·

$"1"'"~3"'""~~"'\, J &lt;
i•

7-SPEED BLENDER

$1599

" Blend Centra !" for l•t;~lor
&gt;peed\ ond flolh Blond. Sa lod
&gt;lolo.·90() l..oll m~lor . Lo .. ,.,.
"""~ "~ - r~ &lt;ho"• of fovr de c&lt;&gt;
1&lt;1101 &lt;o!ci\ wi1!1 ch,ome &lt;OIIor

HECK'S REG.

'"'

9.96

I

\" j): .:;,..&gt;
"i r i ' ' ·. ·· ~ ··

'

; -.:.J '~ _;·::·:\;/

HECK'S
REG.

$16.96

JIWilRY
DIPT.

R70

GE AM-FM

$'29 96

PERCOLATOR

$5288

HCDc'l ·

GE MIST HAIR
HECk'S
REG. 121.96

HECK'S REG. $B.99

TOASTER OVEN
99
&gt;i•••· •

• Si(lnol

SUNBEAM

UNITREX 8} 9 has a spli t personali ty (for office and/ or ho me use; .
With all these qualitie s, benefits
ond features you'd expect in on ·
otlroc live, durable body. UNI ·
TREX B/ 9 ha s something more ...
a price that'll really turn you on .

JET SET

.s599

GENERAL

UNITREX

ELECTRIC ADDER

SUNBEAM

CAN OPENER

_·,_0db--·· '"

PORTABLE

• Variable speed control conveniently
located fo r dialing 12 ind icoied speeds
or any speed in between. • Full power
at all ~peeds even under hea vy loads .
• Versatile- may be used a s o porta·
ble mi:o~eros well" • Two morke"d od j u~t·
able bowl positions fOr tho roug h mix·
ing in each b owl size. • front beate1
tl je&lt;::tor Co nveniently located fo r qu ick
re lease. e Fingertip speed conlral with
settings clearly marked. a Two mixing
bowls-· 1 h a nd 3 ot capaci ty.

'(::o;F ~"'

RADIO

·\~ . •• • ·,_ · ~.::· !,.. •.
'
.. :--·-

·;

PANASONIC

BALL &amp;CHAIN RADIO

Unique spherkol styling h o big hil wilh young
set . Boltery operation. Built-i n ferrite core on·
tennc-. 2 ':." PM dymami &lt; speaker . Roll ·di ~c
tuning and YOiume controls.

. $2799

$1199

HECK'S REG. ·

•29.96 .

SJ022

MUNSEY 3 QT.

POPCORN POPPE It

Big 3 quart capacity.
Heat resistant gl~ss
co~er. Easy deonmg
and serving . Non·5kid
table legs . Cord includ ·
.d .

HECK'S REG.

3.96

HECK'S liEG. $13.8B

JEWElRY DEPT.

344

$

HECK'S.
REG.
$ ·12.96

JEWElRY

yp 20

STC-'2

VANWYCK

CAN OPENER
KNIFE SHARPENER
GENERAL ELECTRIC

Open::. all ::.ize con5 . Cutting wheel removes
for clea nin g. Non-tilting bose. Sharpens
mo st knives. Sharpen s scissors. Cord stor-

STYLING COMB

Help1 creole and ma intain fuU -IookinQ styles
wi th sp•·oy mi\l or dry. Power drying olla&lt;::h·
ment increa~s air veloci ty for laster drying
befo re styling . Brush and 2 comb oUochments
. , . one fo r dry and one for wet combi!'lg .
Contoured hand le for easy grip and con trol.
car plote with helpful styling 'ip~.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Chance of showers Thursdnv
- . anti ~oR
...,. in about
Saturday.
High
temperatures from mid 40s to
mid 50s. Lows at night in
upper 30s and 40s.

;

COMPONENT STEREO

GENERAL ELECTRIC

HAIR DRYER

(We Will Be Closed Thursday For Thanksgiving)

FLUSH TIME SE'l'
The
Middleport
fire
deparimentannounced today it
will flush fire hydrants Wednesday from 10 p.m. to midnig,ht.

STEAM IRON

htro large hood for the b iggest rollers e Four
t~:mperalure r.ett ings from hoi to coql (plus
perfect settings lor wigs ). • Easy l or 5loroge or
tra veL
-

SHOP WEDNESDAY 9:30 TO 5 PM

TRADE GROWS
MADRID (UP!)- Trade has
grown slowly but surely between Spain and China since
diplomatic relations were
established ln March. A
Spanish Trade Commission
announced that the latest
import from China was 88,000
pounds of frozen rabbit meat.

GENERAL ELECTRIC

SCHICK .
PRO-STYLE

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

LIDDY SUSPENDED
WASHHiGTON (UP!) Watergate conspirator G.
Gordon Liddy was suspended
from practice before the
Supreme Court Monday and
given 10 days to show why he
should not be disbarred. Liddy, .
who was admitted to the New
York bar in 1957, was disbarred
there earlier this year after
disciplinary proceedings were
brought by the Association of
the Bar of the City of New
York.

OPEN

'11

age .

CAMERA KIT

99

HECK'S REG. $14.96

JEWElRY DEPT.

, IONA ELECTRIC

$799
HECI\':i

kEG. 121.96

HECKS REG. $10.96

$1799

SHOE POLISHER .,

W&lt;tl" pi~ &lt;&gt;r&lt;&gt;l hy9ieno centor.
Feo!u re• el&lt;tQ&lt;tnl .,,;• •· &lt;,~c !d l1n·
irl"l which b .. g~'"'~ &lt;&gt;n~ decor.
Hondy &gt;olf.llo"ralle for ~ let
lip&lt; . All &lt;Dni•QIIIn Ul&gt;lral P"""

HECK'S REG.
$21 •96

ef. p,~,.~~~ connol diollct in·
d,.;d...al &lt;ornlo•l. ~th · bvlt&lt;t~
IWitclles fo,·eo\y cor&gt;lo&lt;tl.

JEWElRY DIPT.

HECK'S

RES. 112.96

$999

JEWElRY DEPT.

40 VIP

!.. VAN

RF519

WYCK
AM-FM PORTABLE

Jane Colby PUTS IT ALL TOGETHER IN 100 PER
CENT Polyester and gives you one of the smartest looks
of the new Holiday Season. Plaids and solids in Blue,
Coral or Beige. 8 t? 18.

ICE CRUSHER
HECK'S REG.

'9.96

Be sure to read our Thanksgiving Weekend Storewide
Sale Advertisement in this newspaper Wednesday Night

$]99

TOOT-A-LOOP
RADIO
HECK'S REG.

13.88

SL

TRIPLF

IFE

$}288

II~AO

SHAVER

Compact power handle, odor, heat end grease resistant . 9 " hollow ground
stain less steel slicinn hlades .

HECK'S .
lfEG. 128.88 .

1

RADIO

.

Stylish FM/AM portable radio has horizon1al
design . In white, block, Yiolet ar gold. Horizonto I slide· rule 1unign . 2·step tone control. AFC
· on FM. Built-in FM and AM antennas. 2"Y2"
. speo~er. Carrying strop.

$2488

$2499

"

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

--·•-""'""·'

•
I
0

'

,. 'l

.,

c

•
I

'I.

"

. r(".~

'

I

•

,•
.....

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="744">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11144">
                <text>11. November</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="57336">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="57335">
              <text>November 20, 1973</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="3136">
      <name>scines</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
