<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="11430" 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/11430?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-02T14:27:15+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="42398">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/d289d0655f27be63b521b7b369256d51.pdf</src>
      <authentication>3dafd1119d1daddd18fc98ddc0ed059d</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="36009">
                  <text>Now You Know

Weather

Dwn dwn bullets, prohibited
for military use by in·
ternational treaty, 'are so
· called because they were first
made In the 19th century at the
British army arsenal at Dum

I

Devoted To The Interests OJ The Meigs-Mason Area

Dum fnrlia .

VOL XXIV ·. NO. 174

POM EROY·M IDDlEPORT, OHIO"

MONDAY, DECEMBER 20, 1971

PHONE 992·2156

•
IODS

KEVIN WA6 POING J. iHO!lOOO.i{ JOS

(f.' 1971 by

TEN CENTS

•

10

OF Cf-I~CKI~~f TH5 HUj.l. OF
HE~THER A~ PAilT OF fH~
~E.F'ARATION FOil OUR PROJEC:nli
TJ;(AN~AT~ANTic: C~0661NG OF TH~ COMIIoJG
5E'MON. U~UA~~Y, IT WA~ NOT
JO~I.Y SOATING WE'ATHF'~.

Lows lonight In . the 30s.
Mostly cloudy Tuesday with a
chance of rain or snow in the
north. Highs Tuesday in the
lower 4U, north and upper 411s
lo lower 50s in the south.

•

-

..

Cigarette Tax in
E!foct a{ Once; .

NEA, lnc.,

Income Tax Jan. 1

ASSISTING WITII the sacking of 400 bags of candy Tuesday night were Gladys Stewarl,
assistant scout leader, Kathryn Johnson and Carole Proffitt, scout leader. Mason Girl Scout
Troop 5921ook on the chore of preparing 400 bag.s of candy for Santa lo give to the kiddies
Tuesday night . Trea.ts will be distributed from the Mason Fire Station at 7p.m.

Lethal Acid Pollution
--Entering Skull Creek

®
HI DIN' FUM

HE'S INA

R-ROTTEN
RALPH IE.-

ONUSUAU."f'
ROTTEN
MOOD

r----

AI-I 'LL BE BACK
TOMORR'I, AND
TM~E CARE. 0 ' IT.

A COWARDL'I BUI,L'f!!-

STAND UP TO HIM- AN'

AI-\ 15 TAKIN' TH' ADVICE
OF A OLDER HEAD. AH IS
STA'iDIN' UP TO 'Ia-

-5C•.'-

50THIS

15WI-\AT
HAPPENS!!'

SEE WHAT HAPPE.NS!!

TO.DA'/-

A I-\ HAS TOOK A DISLIKE.
TO TH' SI-\APE 0 ' '/ORE
NOSE . AH'D IN&lt;.JO'I IT MORE
IF IT WAS FlAT-

TAKE TH'AD\/ICE OF A

OL.DI.R HEAD-HE'S MEREL'&gt;'

WHAT
MAKES HIM
LEAVE "(0'
ALONE "'

PA'ITLESS PERKINS !!
'/0' IS LIKEWISE. 51-\ALLER
AN' WEAKER THAN
ROTT~ RALPHIE-

IFAHTAKES
TH'ADVICE
OF A OLDER
HEAD AGIH,

AH'LL

COLUMBUS (UPI)-The
Ohio Public Interest Action
Group (OPIAG) charged today
that "sulfurlc acid pollution,
lethal emugb lo deslroy all
aquatic life, is flowing unim·
peded in a Belmont and
Guernsey County stream, the
direct result of strip mining by
the Hanna Coal Co."
Officials of OPIAG, an off.
shoot of conswner protection
advocate Ralph Nader's ef·
forts, said they have asked
state Attorney General
Wllllam J . Brown to lake legal
action and requested the Ohio
Water Pollution Control Board
to . investigate "this en·
vtronmental hazard ."
"Acid water lethal enough to
destroy aU aquatic life is pres·
ently flowing unimpeded lnlo a
tributary of Skull Fork, a
stream which crosses the bor·
der of &amp;!!mont and Guernsey
Counties," said John Geer,
OPIAG director. "The results
of a preliminary investigation
by OPIAG indicate the water,
polluted by sulfuric acid, is the
direct result of strip mining by
Hanna Coal Co., a subsidiary of
Consolidation Coal."

BUT AH GOT SOME lltTR'f'

BRAINS WHICH IS A\/AILA~E.
FO' A .PRICE., YOKUM-

ON L'l TH' AAICE. I$ HIGH
-T£RRI&amp;L"f HIGH!!

NEVAH
GIT AN'&gt;'
OLDER-

by Crooks &amp; Lawrence

CAPTAIN EASY
l-IKe TROLl Ell-~ FOR
PALL!~' VICTIM TO T~i:'
WIL~? Of' A &lt;:AD
!..IKe '{OLJ~

WIIJD RATHER KEEN,

SUT A HU'-1Tf.R'7 MOON! COULD'VE
~55N OLJT STA~KI'-16 MOOSE: ...
E~C£PT
'

'

fOt:&lt;;. THAT BOL!NDER!
'

I

&gt;

He likened the area's condi·
lion to the Piedmont Lake area
"where substantial environmental damage to the
lake has already been repor.
ted."
"Acid water has formed all
along the spoil banks adjacent
to the stream (Skull Fork
tributary) and is and will
I

1

I

6FVR-~!

GOOD •THir.JG

I

GRA&amp;&amp;~"

THI7 : CAF&lt;;.
RO&amp;e~
I'

AHA1 MOIJ AMI! .WE 'AV'f;-

f!&gt;EAR MEAT IN :ZE
MORt.JII\JG! .

CAPE KENNEDY - A LARGE NEW communications
satellite cricled earth today, awaiting the final orbital step in a
$29.5 million rnisBion to add thousands of Trans-Atlantic
telephone circuits to the communication service.
The Intelsat 4 spacecraft was launched Sunday night Into a
great egg..tlaped orbit reaching 22,300 miles high. It was the last
space shot of the year from the cape and project officials said it
was flawless.

SAN FRANCISCO- AN AIR FORCE pilot who had brought
his cargo plane more than 500 miles on one engine before ditching
it in the sea and was pulled to safety Sunday moments before the
aircraft sank In the Paclflc. The pilot, Capt. Donald Henderson,
25, tried 1o t.-lng the disabled plane to land but 22 miles off the
caUforrtia coast he ran out of fuel and had to crash. The crash
forced metal against Henderson and he was trapped in the cockpit.

Staff Sgt. Michael Fish, 25, of Oswego, Ore., one of a team of
peramedlcs from Hamilton AFB in California there to help with
the rescue, jwnped Into the water, shattered the cockpit window
and pulled out Henderson from water which had already reached
his chin.
WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT Nixon's swnm!t session
with Britlsh Prjme Minister Edward Heath beginning today in
Bermuda is an attempt lo bolster saRging An~lo-{\merican ties
(Continued on Page 12)

continue to bleed directly into
the stream channels," Kieffer
said.
He said laboratory analysis
of the water at various toea·
lions was done by the EC(Ilogy
Club at Ohio University,
Zanesville, under the super·
vision of Prof. James Haefner.
''PH readings, which rneas·
ure water acidity, lodicate a
highly acidic condition both upstream and downstream from
the treatment devices,"
Kieffer said. "The readings of
the artificially impounded
waters were 3.1 and readings of
3.6 were found in the supposedly treated water downstream. Fish and other aquatic
life are destroyed in any water
body with a pH of approximately 4.5 or less."
Environmental attorney Suzann~ Spitz said the "S&lt;H:alled
treatment device appears to be
illegally operated."
"The Water Pollution
Control Board has repeatedly
notified Hama that any acid
mine drainage in future
operations requires a permit,"
she said. "We have examined
the permit records of the board
and all pending requests for ,.
permits, and Hanna has
neither applied for, nor·
presently has such a permit."

I

By United Press lnternaliooal
WINDSOR, ONT. - THE FOUR ''POLITE" bandits who
staged Canada's biggest bank robbery- $1,139,000 in Canadian
and U.S. currency - apparently knew the operation of the Royal
Bank of Canada down to the smallest detail.
The four, wearing ski masks and t.'ightly covered coveralls,
were in and out of the downlown bank in less than 15 minutes
Saturday morning and had a !JO.minute headstart on police. The
best clue police had today was the green station wagon in which
they were seen after leaving through a side entrance.

-·
HMPH~

tive.u

,---------------------------,
I
7\. T
•
B
.
.f.
I
: 1 'ews ... rn
r1e s ;

BLAZ.E:$! IF l CAN JLJ$1
FIND THAT 5-PIKISD TIM !lEI&lt;:.
lM1?7SD DRIVING UP HER&amp;
... AH, TH!::RE' IT 17 1

Bl-A?TE:D 5-HAME- ~
l-ITHe ETHEL.~Et&lt;.TA

"The acid condition is well
known to Hama Coal Co.,"
said Frederick V. Kieffer,
OPIAG env(ronmentalist.
" If the strip coal mining pattern of Hanna and other firms
is continued, the reservoirs for
the city of Barnesville, Barkcamp State Park Lake,
Senecaville Lake and other city
waters will assuredly be af.
fected by acid mine drainage
pollution," Kieffer said.
Kieffer said Hama had made
ineffective efforiS to stop the
alleged pollution.
"Two da11111 have been constructed at two separate locations to impound the acid wa·
ter, along wiih timing devices
to reduce its acidic condition,"
Kieffer said. "The devices are
primitive and totally ineffec-

Two Drivers
Are Cited
Three cars were damaged
and two drivers were cited 1o
court in two accidents in·
vestigated over the weekend by
Pomeroy police.
At ~:15 a.m. Sunday a car
driven by Edward Stark, 23,
Pomeroy, traveling west oo
Route 7 in Pomeroy, went out
of control, skidded 48 feet,
jwnped a curb, went llown an
embankment and hit a wall.
The car was a total loss said
police. Stark, who suffered a
bomp on his head, was cited to
mayor's court for reckless
opera lion . A passenger,
Oarence Hutchens, 30, Middleport, had possible rib Injuries.
Two cars were moderately
damaged at 8:50p.m. Saturday
on West Main St., one driven by
Richard King, 31, New Haven,
stopped in its lane of traffic and
was struck in the rear by a car
driven by Linda Rupe, 16,
Pomeroy. There were no injuries. Miss Rupe was cited to
juvenile cGurt for failing lo
maintain assured clear
distance.

)
•

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Gov.
John J. GUiigan today signs the
giant $7.686 billion budget into
law, making the slate personal
income tax official, effective
Jan. 1.
An immediate effect of the
governor's noon signing ceremony will be to increase the
tax on a pack of cigarettes by
three cents. The state's income
tax ranges from one.IJaH to 3\'.o
per cent.
Individuals will file returns
for 1972 at the same time they
me their federal returns with
an April 15, 1973 deadline. The
state Taxation Department is
gearing up for withholding the
levy from paychecks starting
the first of the year.
The new budget, effective
through June 30, 1973, will pr~r
vide extra funds for most state
agencies. For the first time in
six months, agencies will be
free from interim budgets
which have frozen programs at
existing levels.
The governor also convenes
the state Apportionment Board
today In response to a Oeveland federal court order.
The governor and two other
Democrats pushed through a
legislative reapportionment
plan
last
Sepl.
30
over Republican objections. The court ordered the
board to reconvene to correct
mistakes in the plan, mainly
inserting names of municipalities left out of the description.
The state Supreme Court last
Friday turned down a Republican attempt to force the board
to do the entire job over again

by considering minority plans.

However, the GOP members
may try again after today's
meeting, since the high court
ruled that action ordered by
the federal court must be compie ted first.
Congressional redistricting
is the concern of the House
State Goverrunent Committee
today, as it begins hearings on
Republican and Democratic
plans submitted last week.
Democrats hope to retain
their
current
seven
congressional seats and get a
reasonable chance at winning
eight more in next year's
elections by changing boun·
daries.
Republicans hope to change
the lines to up their districts
from 17 lo 19 and eliminate the
district of U.S. Rep. Wayne L.
Hays, [).{)hio, who lives in
F1ushing, Belmont County.
The redistricting must be
done in time for the secretary
of state to prescribe primary
election procedures. Filing
deadline is Feb. 2.
House Speaker Charles F.
Kurfess, R·Perrysburg, said he
hopes a plan will be ready for
floor consideration at least by
the middle of January.
Although both chambers
have adjourned until next year,
the House Ways and Means
Committee plana to convene
during the holiday recess: ·
Committee members are to
consider legislation resulting
from last Friday's state Board
of Tax Appeals ruling that all
classifications of property
must be assessed at 35 per cent
of true value.

Judging to Be Tuesday
Judging of the annual
Pomeroy home decorating
contest, sponsored by the
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce, will begin at 7 p.m.
TueSJiay.
Mrs. Margaret Ella Lewis
and Tom Cassell have been in
charge of the annual event
which offers merchandise
prizes contributed by Columbia
Gas of Ohio, the Colwnbus and
Soulhern Ohio Electric Co. and

the Ohio Power Co., to the
three homes judged best in the
religious, secular and entrance
or doorway categories. Second
prize in each category is $10,
third prize $5.
Registration is required and
lhose who have not yet
registered may do so by calling
Cassell at 992-5192 or Mrs.
Lewis at 992-5308. Mrs. Lewis
should not be called until after
4 p.m. Those registering must
indicate what category they
are entering.

EXTENDED WEATHER
Ohio Extended OuUook,
Wednesday through Friday:
Chance of raiD or snow
north aud a chance of raiD
south on Wednesday and
Thursday foUowed by partly
cloudy on Friday. Daytime
highs will be moslly ill 30s
north to tbe low to mid 40s in
the soutb. Nlgbt-Ume lows
mostly ill 20s north and the
mid 30s ill the south.

LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downlown
Pomeroy at 11 a.m. Monday
was 48 degrees, under cloudy
skies.

; ;; ;; ; :; ~ji;;;J:M:W

DIVORCES ASKED
Divorce actions have been
filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Betty R.
Brigner, Middleport, against
Oyde Eugene Brigner, Circleville, and James B. White,
Albany, against Barbara
White, Jackson.

MEMBERS OF MASON GIRL SCOUT TROOP 592 did their good deed for the commiDiity
when they met at the Mason Fire Station and sacked 400 bags of candy for Santa to distribute
Tuesday night. Busy sacking candy were, 1-r, Teresa Proffitt, Diana Johnson, Carla McFarland, Tammy Elias and Brenda Stanley.

Louden Directing
·Meigs Libraries
The board of trustees of the
Pomeroy . Middleport Public
Libraries today announced the
appointment of Jonathan E.
Louden as director of the
Pomeroy and Middleport
Libraries.
This is a new position,
created to coordinate the
services of the two libraries so
as to better utilize resources
available in both locations.
Louden
received
his
Bachelor's Degree from
Defiance College and his
Master 's
Degree
in
Librarianship from Western
Michigan University.
Louden started his career in
library work with the State
Library of Ohio in the book·
mobile division at Napoleon .
He advanced to head the unit
there where service covered
five counties with a circulation

Sixteen winners of $5 gift promotion program.
Winners may pick up their
certificates at Pomeroy stores
were selected Friday afternoon prizes at the clothing store
at the New York Clothing where drawings are held. No
House as part of the Pomeroy purchase is required for
Chamber of Conunerce holiday participating in the program.
There will be a drawing
Thursday, Dec. 23, at which
time a $500 award will be
among the prizes.
Merchants are to have their
tickets at the clothing slore by
noon on Dec. 23.
Winners were Darewyn
Enevoldsen, Mason; Russell
Lacey, New Lexington; Hilton
Wolfe, Racine; Vicki Deem,
Pomeroy; Fay Lacey, New
Lexington; Mrs . Lester
SHOPPING DAYS Adkins, Letart, W. Va., Rt. 2;
TO CHRISTMAS Candace Carleton, Pomeroy,
Rt. 3; Gene Houdashelt,
Pomeroy; Nancy Buskirk,
READ OUR ADS
Middleport; Fern D. NCll'l'is,

\

TAKING SINGING PARTS In the annual Christmas
program Wednesday at 1 p.m. at Syracuse Elementary
School are mem'lers of the second grade class. Left to right
are, Darla Evans, Melodi Cundiff, Susan Jett, Jackie Zerkle

of nearly 300,000 volumes
annually. He was transferred
to Colwnbus where he was the
institutional consultant for the
state library. Louden assumed

16 Winners Announced In Pomeroy

(

1

MR. LOUDEN

the directorship of the GaiDa
County District Library in 1969
and the same position with the
Briggs Lawrence County
Library in February, 1971. He
· will continue to hold these
positions and serve in the new
poei\lon In Melgo County on
Saturdays.
It is the desire of the local
library board to meet the
expanding library needs of the
conununity by re-evaluating
Its present operation and
consider other avenues of
aervice as the county grows
and, as a result, have its
library needs expand . Louden
expects growth in the library
operation in terms of "units of
service" rendered. He said
"This is possible because of the
fine staff and dedicated board
which make up the Pomeroy Middleport Libraries."

'

'

'&lt;

\

'

.,

\

Racine; Jane &amp;lggle, Racine;
Fern Showalter, Rt. I, Long
Bottom; Clarice Allen,
Chester; Eleanor Wingett,
Syracuse; Aline Estep,
Pomeroy, and Opal Barr,
Middleport.

Nixon Aides

Stress Jobs
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
administration believes the
new agreement to devalue the
dollar and adjust international
currency exchange rates will
eventually produce more than
half a million new jobs for
American workers.
President Nixon, in hailing
the weekend settlement as "the
most significant monetary
agreement in the history of the
world," stressed international
economic stabillty rather than
domestic dividends.
But members of his administration stepped in to offer
the unemployment-fighting
aspects of the arrangement
lUlder which the United States
will devalue the dollar by 7.89
per cent and the major free
world traders will up the exchange value of their
currencies by an average of 12
per cent. The dollar
devaluation - to be accomplished by raising the price
of gold from $35 an ounce to $38
- will take place once
Congress approve~,
presumably early next year.

';
and Denise Deem. The musical comedy "I'm Getting Nuttln'
For Christmas" Is under the direction of Miss Beverly Price.
Members of the other fiVe classes at the school will also
participate in the program. The public is invited tO attend.

SERVICEl! SET
Services at the Pomeroy
Church of Christ will be held at
7:30 Christmas Eve.

�'
3- The Dilly S.lllel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. 20, 1971

2- 'I1!e Dilly Semlne1, Mlddleport-Pooueroy, 0., Dec. 20, 1971

WIN AT BRIDGE

Dividend for a Weight Watcher

EDITORIAL

Big Difference BfARY'S WORlD
in. Play

Child Core Inequity
In New Tax Low
Because of ·· family-weakening implications·· in one
., section of the welfare reform bill . involving government
subsidization of child development centers. P1·esident
Nixon vetoed the entire bill.
Then , because he wanted most of the baubles Congress
had hung on the tax bill "Christmas tree ." he turned
around and signed into law a deduction which will , in
effect. pav mothers to neglect their children.
This is the provision which will permit working couples
whose combined incomes are under $18,000, who have
children under 15 and who file a joint return . to deduct
as a "business expense" the cost of baby sitters or
domestic help or the very' same day care centers the
President is so leery about-up to $4,800.
To repeat : The working mother struggling along with
her husband on a mere $18,000 a year may now have the
benefit of government ·subsidized maid service to the tune
of $400 a month. tIn the 20 per cent bracket , this would
be $80 a month in actual tax savings .)
Not only that, but the working mother who is helpin~
father keep the wolf from the door with a combined in·
come as high as $27 ,600 can also claim partial benefits.
depending upo n the number of children .
Meanwhile . the mother who thinks that the most im·
portant job in the world is caring for her family and
whose husband is trying to support that family by him·
self on maybe $7.000 or $8.000 a year will be tapped for
their full tax liability . If the wife is sickly and needs out·
side help with the housework or would like some lime off
from the kids, that's their problem.
Talk about tax loopholes for the wealthy . This one was
tailor-made for the middle class- specifically, 7 million
working mothers with young children in families with
total income of more than $10,000 (plus those mothers
who will now decide to go out and get some of the gravy ).
It is also one more proof that it pays to lobbY: What
was once a sensible provision aimed at helping widowed,
divorced or single parents and couples with income below
$6,000 was ballooned out of all proportion thanks to the
lobbying efforts of a group called "Mothers United for
Fair Taxation ."
"Fair" taxation'
As National Observer writer Michael Malloy has
pointed out, the idea is unfair in its very conception since
tt discriminates unjustly among working mothers . ALL
mothers work, and those who look after a house full of
kids all day work harder than those who spend the same
hours strumming an electric typewriter in an air-con·
ditioned office.
But the new law will subsidize only mothers who go
OUT to work, and it will subsidize those who need it least.
The mother who drudges over someone else 's ironing for
$1.50 an hour pays so little income tax that the deduction
will hardly affect her .
Child care is not a "business expense," a cost of going
to work, says Malloy . It is a cost of raising a family. one
which every family faces, and it is greater when only one
parent works than when both work.
For example. if a mother could earn $8,000 as a sec·
retary but elects to stay home with her kids, it "costs"
her $6,000 for child care. But if she does go out to work
and pays someone $90 a week to look after them , now,
thanks to Uncle Sam , it costs her only $4,500 a year, and
she has money left over to buy a new car or refurnish the
living room .
. Not only is the new deduction grossly unfair, it is a
slap in the face of every mother who is old-fashioned
enough to believe that her ciiildren need her more than
she needs a higher standard o( living.
If America 's future lies with its youth, by all that's
rational we ought to be paying mothers to stay with their
children , not encouraging them to leave them .
\tUWSPit.PER ENTERPRISE

~SSN .)

BRUCE BIOSSAT

A Nixon Victory?
Gloom in 2 Camps
By BRUCE BIOSSAT
WASHINGTON !NEAl
Quite a few influential Democrats, proud of their "rea lism, " are privately saying they have little chance to beat
President Nixon next year. Conversely, some hardheaded Republicans are saying Nixon has little chance
to win .
I am convinced this kind of talk from Democrats is
not self-serving nonsen se intended to disarm and lull the
President. They really believe it.
They are dazzled b~ the powers of the office, and by
any president's capactty to command events. They figure
Mr. Nixon is going to surprise and disconcert them from
now until next November . They know the Vietnam war
is slipping into the shadows. They look for an economic
trick or two. And they think he'll J;eep running around
the world.
The Republican hard-heads don't see it that way at all .
Using three or four different measuring rods , they argue
that their own man is in serious straits and will need
enormous skill and luck to win.
These GOP types, impressed less by Mr. Nixon being
the mcumbent than by the Democrats' majority hold on
the electorate , think their rivals are just befogged. Says
one GOP analyst :
"They're used to winning with an embarrassment of
rlches, to overpowering us with brute strength. Seeing
Ntxon in the White House and their own multiplicity of
candidates, the; don 't sense the smell of victory . They're
not used to gauging the close ones."
In this man's view, the Democrats may not realize
how well off they are for 1972 "until everybody gets
to~ether" after they choose a presidential nominee in
Mtamt next July . Wistfully he added :
"! wish I had their vote power."
Mr . Nixon's drawbacks ?
The big one; according to the argument, is the Republi·
cans' continuing status as a minority party , compounded
by the President's evident inability to attract extra oersonal support. The GOP doubters ask :
·
" If we're so well off, where's the 50 per cent'
It is a fact, measurable by the polls, that Mr. Nixon
hov~rs around the 42-44 per cent mark when positioned
agamst a strong potential rival like Sen. Edmund Muskie
or Sen. Edward Kennedy . He doesn't gain.
To underscore the President's difficulties realists in
his party tick off big blocks of voters he won last time
but is in trouble with now : Farmers, small businessmen,
the severely pinched elderly. It's assumed, of course .
that he won't cut it with the blacks and the young.

NORTH

Vikings Take Over

20

• K9S

•'

"K 73

+H

Top Sp0_t Jn SVAC .

,foKJ963
WEST

EAST

.72

.J\0843
.42
+Q96
,foA84

"QJtOB
+Kl08532
,fo7

SOUTII
·. :.

~

·.

North Gallia's Pirates, playing without the
services of 6-4 junior forward Gary Crosswhite and .
5-11 senior guard Pat Stout were jolted from the top
spot in the Southern Valley Athletic Conference
Saturday night 81-79, by the unbeaten Symmes
Valley Vikings.
The victory gave Coach Wayne White's Vikings
undisputed first place in the league standings with
a perfect 5-() slate. The Lawrence Countians are 6-0
.in all games.
.
North Gallia dropped to 4-1 in the league and 4-2
overall. The Pirates are now in a second place tie
with the Eastern Eagles.

(D)

.AQ6
"A965
A7
,fo QtOS 2

+

.

West

Both vulnerable
North East Soulh
lN.T.

Pass 3 N.T. Pass Pass
P...
Opening lead- + 5

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Oswald: "Let's start an argument. What would you
lead against three no-trump
with the West cards?"
Jim: "You won't get any
argument from me. I open
c, 1971.br NEA,
the five of diamonds. I assume the question refers to
"Snap out ol it, Charlie-the Christmas cord season rs
rubber bridNe."
almost o~er!"
Oswald: I didn't expect
any argument from you, but
I do expect some from dupli,
cate players. In rubber
bridge, West wants to at· r-----------~---------------1
. "• . ,
' ,.,,
. ,, ·' ' .
tack in a suit that may give
him a chance to set the contract. The heart lead is safe,
• but there isn't enough tricks I
I
I
1
in that suit if he does hit his
By Helen Bottel
1
I
I partner."
I
Jim: "Dunlicate is another
'
Brass virtuoso Pete Condoli 's expected to story. The diamond lead may
BY JACK O'BRIAN
HER CUP RUNNETH OVER
ride up to declarer's acewed Edie Adams, Ernie Kovacs' widow ... queen.
AND IT'S NOT EVEN
The heart lead is Dear Helen:
Diamonds have been Carol atannlnl!'s best most unllkelv to giv• rl•AN ICE SHOW
I spend days making beautiful dresses for my granddaughter
N'YAWK TALK ... Ron Field's atlacks on friends since she starred in ''Gentlemen Prefer clarer ari extra heart trick." and love seeking her look pretty.
Oswald: "This illustrates
Blondes," and now her inwstments are In gold:
theauthorsofhis "On the Town," Betty Camden
But after a trip to Sunday School, she comes home with a
Carol's poured all her spare cash into· the one of the differences be· ruined dress. Why do Sunday school teachers feel children must
and Adolph Green; Ron only slaged it and
tween rubber bridge and
designed the dances ... His devastating com- Kimberly area of Australia - where 6,0011 match-point duplicate. The have orangeade, grape juice - food or drink that permanently
people live on ranches, running to a million difference bet we en three stains clothes? After all, they are only there for an hour or so,
ment: "The show was 'frozen' in Boston -in
acres or more ... David Cassidy's only a couple and four no-trump may mean and they get food at home. - GRANDMA
1944" ... Inside stuff- N. Y. State Att'y Gen'l
of years out of his teens, and he's already a lot of match pomts. In rub- Dear Grandma:
Louis Lefkowitz will retire after this term. He'll
be past 70 ... 5th Ave.'s illegal peddlers (the shopping for a onHnan helicopter (that's what
If you can't turn off the juice (after all, fruit drinks are good
$1 for JACOBY MOOEIH l&gt;oot
sudden stardom does for the fantasies of a kid s..d
jewelrY and accessories hucksters hustle their
ta: "Win at ltirl,.," (c/o tllis newJ· for kids) then how about sending along a plastic dress protector
who just wanted pop's car keys a few record hits poporl, P.O. lor 49, llodio Cifl' with yotD' granddaughter? It would come In handy for other
wares illegally in front of the poshest stores)
ago).
make fon ..,es. Some of them haul in $300a day,
Station, N.., York, N.Y. 10019.
Sunday school activities too - youngsters no longer sit quietly
Chaos
in
Red
Paradise:
Castro's
CUban
mostly profit.
a11d listen to Bible verses these days . They participate ! - H..
Harper's Bazaar's Dec. issue has a news service head at the UN knows he's belng ber bridge, it means little."
Jim: "Looking at all the Dear Helen:
fascinating peek into ex-NBC bulletin shooter tailed, especially when he's visiting Mao's Red
Each time I read about another appropriation for some
cards, we see that the dia·
Sander Vanocur's private life and public China man here ... Concord Hotelman Phil rnond lead knocks out the idiotic thing or some monumental mistake that has cost us
hangups: he admits his affair with Shirley Greenwald's new baby was named Abraham ace of diamonds right away tupayers money, I think: If over half our congressmen and
MacLaine (the least well-kept secret in Jac~.!On Greenwald; was there a President and South goes down two. senators were women, I'll bet the country would not be running
decades) and whacks away at network news, of named Greenwald? Not yet? ... Elliott Gould's Against a heart lead, he has In the red. This goes for state and local gowrrunent, too.
suddenly feeling a casting chill ... The Stage time to set up the clubs and
which he was a recently disgruntled member;
make an overtrick."
.1'ilL
•
,
he's gruntled tho over his $85,000 "educational" DeUy's gone fancy.pantsy : its new little wipers
0 s w a 1d: "We 11. y 0 u
. Women are budgeters. They Ulle to get thetr moneys worth,
TV salary, recently revealed ... Perry Como's are "Napkins by TtffBII)'" ... Jack Douglas' wouldn't want me to get you and they are sharp bargamers..They also, for the most part, see
literary lunacy, "Shut Up and Eat Your to commit yourself and then how ridiculous It Is to throw good money after bad - and they
winter-special was a warm, lovely TV hour.
· Mitzi Gaynor and Women's Wear Daily's Snowshoes," was bought.by Richard &lt;Zenna for . s.bow .a .~au~ ~here you were woulcm't be so susceptible tO lobbytsl:l for they'\'~! had !P-eat
Bess Winaker would make a likely Madison a film ... Julie Budd's 17th birthday present wrong. 11,,
experience In "seeing through" men's little con games. ·
iNiws~.,.~ INTElPalll ASSN.I
If women would only start trusting other women, they could
Square Garden main event: Bess's critique of from RCA Records: a $100,0011 budget to
Mitzi's Chicago performances: "Mitzi Gaynor promote her "Julie Budd" album.
join forces and elect female candidates -for we surpass men in
Jimmy Cagney's priclnl! homes on I.oog
is a middle-aged matron with a flabby stomach
population as well as brains. Come on, gals, get political! And
The biddilll! hu been:
and heavy thighs. But she's got guts" ... Bar- Island. You bet he has the cash! ... Johnny
men, If you want your taxes lowered, vote for women!
West
North East
bara Eden on the Bob Hope TV special flung Ray's writing his autobiography ... Zaa Zsa's
South LEAGUE. MEMBER
"bumps and grinds" that would've got Margie latest suitor is realtor Robert Kert ... The
Db;• Dear Member:
Pass
2•
Pass
Hart arrested just a few generations of fuzz "Fiddler" film is doing brisk business on Bdrm all for more women in politics - but before we can vote
You, South, hold:
ago; burlesque theaters' back-,'Jtage had police wy., ditto the longest ...un Bdwy stage original- • AQ4 "KU AQ1085 "'K 109 for them, we must persuade them to run for office. Many won't and the troupe at nearby Westbury Music Fair
signs warning, "No bumping or grinding."
though they are highly qualified - becauSe they're convinced a
What do you do now?
There's no freeze on heroin - theN. Y. hauled in a staggering $8'15,325 for six very Uve
A-Bid three diomonds to see woman can't win that their own sex won't stand behind them.
price for the sad victims almost doubled ... TV's weeks; more than the stage original did at its what your partner will rebid. In
UntU we females learn to see each other as persons, no!
Bill Cullen is too thin . His doctors tell him to hittest .. . More than thls-year's-eatnip this situation a new suit bid is adversaries, we haven 'I got much chance at the polls . .
fatten up and he doesn't know how ... Otto Engelbert Humperdinck grossed in the same a force.
... Pity!- H.
TODAY'S QUESTION
Preminger's "Such Good Friends" film is based Music Fair.
Dear Helen:
Your partner continues to
on a very real shocker: the book's author lived
rm the confused and frustrated wife of a man I recently
three spades. What do you do
the plot personally - married to a N. Y. Times
Uttle Johnny, the Call-lor-Philip-Morris now?
learned Is a homosexual.
Answer Tomorrow
man who died after a quick-,'Jurgery incident, midget pitchman generations of coffin nails
He Is a devoted father ( we haw three lovely children), a
Ulis Gould (her new married name) found dead ago, now emceeing the N. Y. Playboy Club's
good provider, and appears wry masculine in every way. I
hubby's big black book hidden in a drawer in shows, !&gt;Bid he sold .millillllll but never should
couldn't ask for a better husband - and I continue to love him which he'd listed all the gals he'd swung with, have smoked 'em: "I might have made it big as
but, though he's tried ptrychiatry and prayer, and has continuing
including their sexual ratings; Ulis discovered a basketball player" ... Few tourists knew what
affection for me, he can't change.
they were her "good friends"; the book was an the devU "The Grand Funk Railroad" was when
He has tried to make me understand his feelings. He goes out
exciting shocker, and the film is Otto-matlcally the rock-group hired the block4ong Times
once a week. All other times, he is a devotedfamllyman.
a must. Who told us? Lois' mother, fashion .SQuare billboard just to spread Its name across
When I first learned about it, we separated. Now we're back
designer Jo Copeland. Proudly. In front of ~ Bdwy. two years ago. They'll do it again - cost
together, for I realize how much the children and I need him.
witnesses.
$100,0011- next summer.
They were devastated when he left- and of course they'll never
know why. To them, he's the greatest Dad of all.
The Almanac
Presently, we're "just frlends." My husband is very good to
The doubters make another argument which I have
reported before: That Mr. Nixon is in a bad crunch in
By United Press Interullonal
me. I know I could newr be happy with another man, for my
every one of the four big northern states he took in 1968.
Today is Monday, Dec. 20,
whole life revolved around him and the children. I can't hate
namely, California, Illinois, Ohio, New Jersey . He can't
the 354th day of 1971 ..
him. But can I continue to live this way? And am I the only wife in
afford to lose any of them at least not without nicking
The
moon
is
between
its
new
the world with this problem? - CONFUSED WIFE
up offsetting electoral vote~ somewhere else. And these
phase
and
first
quarter.
The
first
school
of
jourDear
Wife:
are not deemed to be in sight.
The morning stars are nalism In the United States
More wives than you realize face this situation-and many
And then. there's the stubbornly sluggish economy. A
Mercury
and
Jupiter.
":as
founded
at
the
Unlverlike
you stay with lt - for the same reasons which brought ·
qutck d1p IIllo hlst?ry makes it plain American voters ,
stty
of
Missouri
at
Colum·
you
The evening siMs are Venus, bia, Mo., by Walter Wil· and your' hwrband together again.
habttually penalize tncumbents who are caught with their
economrc markers down . And , though Mr. Nixon is pres- Mars and Saturn.
llams in 1908, The World
The question you may ask yourself is: "Can !'live with my
ently orr an "activist" kick which voters seem to like
Those born on this day are Almanac recalla. Enroll- . problem or will it eventually destroy me?" If the good in your life
history also suggests they will judge him finally on how ii
under the sign of Sagittarius.
ment for the first school outwelgha the misery, then perhaptr you can -but only you can
all works out. Prospects for a healthy slash in unemHarvey
Firestone
of
tire
year
was 97 students--84 make the decision - H
ployment don 't look too bright.
·
·
manufacturing fame was born men and 13 women-and
So, some key Republicans ihink their gloom is real and
the first degree was granted
Dec.
20,
1868.
that their rivals' gloom is only a haze which will lift.
in 1909 to Charles Arnold.
On this day In history:
Adds one Republican :
·
.
In 1803 the U.S. government r----------::---:----:--------------,
"Things are not that secure for us . The signs simply
officially, . took over from
They1l
It Every Time ®
aren 't there ."
(NEWSPAPER ENT£R.f.IJ5E )I.S.SN .J . _
France territory acquired in ~================-'lr=::'~============J.
the Uluisiana Purchase.
'F!E UPPERJ:.RUS'rS ~E EA"N TO PLEASE
'mEN I:.(;W THE HAVENOrS FllOM Ttl!oO.CCO
In 1864 Union Gen. William ·" IN T~E CHRISTMJooS TREE DePT. ·· ·
I&lt;CJI&gt;,D AND NOJ111NG SUITS '!OM···· • •
Bloody Squash
Slippery
Ball
Sherman
completed
his
"March
·•
•••
o, " . o : . •
•. 0 :!.
b
•
•
•
, •• ~
The Yale squash racquets
When
the
Bu!falo
Bills
re·
to
the
Sea"
·and
arrived
at
--....~.
"
"
•
•
•
• •· •
team will tour England next covered s e v e n Clnelnnatl Savannah, Ga.
"·
spring, competing against
0 x f o r d, Cambridge and set
rumbles
in a reeord
1969 game,
they .In 1922 the 14 Rwrsian ~'l~tt~~tj
the NFL
for most
other teams. It will be the opponents' bobbles grabbed republics combined to form the
third Yale team to make the In a single game.
Union of Soviet Socialist Repubtrip.
lics.
In 1952 a U.S. Air Force
Globemaster plane crashed at
Moses Lake in Washington
6RI~CIO\l5,~~E 1• IT
state, killing 87 servicemen.

&lt;&gt;

.·:~.·

!~ e. ~

Coach Jim Foster's Pirates
ran into trouble at the beginning of the game when
Crosswhite was unable to start
due to a bout with the flu.
Stout was ejected by officials
at 3:52 in the initial stanza for
what was termed "elbowing."
No Viking had to leave the
gym.
Another Pirate, 6-2 Tony
Glassburn, filled in well for
Crosswhite until he reinjured
his collarbone which was
broken during the past football
season.
Big Arthur Clark, 6-5 senior
center, also sat out most of the
first half with three personals.
He managed only one point for
the Pirate cause in the half.
The Pirates moved into a 1913 advantage at the end of the
first period but fell behind 42-35
at the half.
Danny Wilson, 5-11 senior,
one of the loop's leading
scorers, pumped in eight points
In leading the Viking
comeback. Phil Robinson, 5-10
junior, another hot-£hooting
ace for Symmes Valley
dumped in six points.
North Gallia came back to
cut the lead to one point going
into the final eight minutes of
action. Crosswhite managed to
score eight points before
leaving.
With 35 seconds remaining,
Jene Myers canned a foul shot
giving the VIkings a nne point
)ead. J;lob\p'o~ converted
linotlier foul Sltot with just one
second left giving Symmes
Valley its final margin of
victorv.
Wilson led all scorers with 30
points on 12 baskets and six

.

!Helen Help Us !

r------------------------------------------

Voice along Broadway !

I

1"

HI:.~ 10 ~ELP YOU
THE.Pl'S~I

GEl Fil'-EO
IN TIME FOR
CHRISTMAS!

A thought for today: American poet Walt Whlbnan said,
''Once fully enslaved, no nation,
state, city of this earth, ever
afterward resumes its liberty."

AND REGISTER
Drawing is 6: 00 p.m.
December 22 at
Hart's Used Cars.

t ..

~·

ll!·m·r·r in !!K"I·I

IF YOU DON'T WIN ONE, BUY ONE!
00
00 TO
PRICED FROM
WE HAVE AFINE DISPlAY. COME IN AND SEE

..

$329

Mason Co. Bank • $25.00 Savings Bond
Appalachian Tire Co., Pt. Pleasant - Battery
New Haven Super Mkt - Gift Certificate
Oliver's American Oil Station - Gift Certificate
Millers Super Market - Gift Certificate
Flecher's Texaco - Gift Certificate
Batey Hardware • Gift Certificate
Burian Sunoco - Gift Certificate
Raney's Market • Gift Certificate
Dairy Haven - Gift Certificate
New Haven Furniture - Set of Lamps
JlrS Pizza - 9" Pizza .
Pt. Pleasant-Mason Auto. Glass - Gift Certificate
Opea AU Day Stmday
For lbe cODvelllence of 011r cuatomen.

~

,,•
'

.

~MM_.MM_.MM._

'

Knights Drop Second In Row
third place in the six-team
Spring Arbor Tournament.
The Ohio Knights lost by the
same score in overtime to ·
Spring Arbor Friday night, to
account for its only other loss
this season in 11 starts.
Urbana, led bv Mark Todd

SPRING ARBOR, Mich .
(UP!) - Dennis Johnson
poured in 48 points, including a
field goal which sent the game
into its third overtime period
and another which won it, to
hand Ferris State a 109-108
victory over Urbana of Ohio
Saturday night in the battle for

with 32 points, had a 44-39 in·
termission lead but dropped
back in the second half, and
then rallied to tie it up at the
end of the regulation game 8282 when Todd dropped in one of
two free throws . Urbana's Bill
Aikman hit two foui shots to lie

Bucks Meet Brown

Opener

Dillard Invitational, New Orleans
Xavier 102 Dillard 72 (cham.
pionshlp)
S.outhern La . 106 Texas
College 86 !consolation 1

"

'' .

Glouster Tuesday night. Southwestern is idle until Jan . 7.
By Quarters
Southern
25 49 61 77
Southwestern 12 24 35 51
Southern 1771 - J. Hubbard,

-

Wins its

••

.

canned 13 of 33 foul attempts .
. Southern also captured the
reserve game, 10-38. Milch
Nease led the winners with 12
points.
The Tornadoes will host

with 15pointseach. Dale Whitt,
6-1 junior forward , had nine
points.
Southern hit 43.5 pet. from
the floor and 52 pet. at the
chilrity stripe. Southwestern

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Coach
Fred Taylor's revamped lineup
gets a second test Monday
night when Ohio State entertains Brown University in one
of the Buckeye's two home
contests this week.
Although junior center Luke
Witte and sophomore Dan Gerhard led the scorin~ with 22
points each, Taylor's new
faces provided some much
The Mark V independent needed punch to the atlack in
basketball squad won its Saturday night's 82-70 win over
opening round match from Butler.
Sophomore Gary Repella,
American Car and Foundry of
Huntington at Fairland High starting at guard for the first
School Sunday afternoon in the time, had 10 points; junior Bob
Fairland independent basket- Siekmann, formerly the top forward sub, had eight; and soph
ball tournament.
Mark V, sponsored by Bucky Wardell Jackson, who didn't
Walters of Middleport, was led start but saw his most extensby "Pistol" Pete Anderson of ive service, had 10 points and
Gallipolis with 29 points. The 6- 10 rebounds.
"It's no reflection on any1 guard scored the first eight
points for the winners and kept one," Taylor said, "but we
them ahead throughout the needed some more scoring and
wanted to start some different ·
game with his long shots .
Other scorers were 6-5 Mike people."
,
Fenderbosch with 15; 6-6 Gary . Hornyak, the Buckeyes leadFender bosch with 7, Ron mg scorer last yea~ w1~ a 22.5
Ferguson·!: ukd Sin\'Mitchell . ,llY~!Ige "ba&amp; .bet~.IIJinactive for
r:' ~- 1·15 d Ch' nearly . •two . months with a
0' aII 0 f "'"&gt;~
po ' an
tp bruised · ht h I H dr
d
Haggerty wt 5, Doxie Walters
rtg ee · e esse
4, and Rick Van Matre I, of Lhe last two games, but was
Meigs, and Tony Fields of lone player among the !~man
Wahama with 2.
traveling squad who didn t see
Other members of the team action aga~t Butler.
but unable to attend Sunday's
Taylor s,a•d tf Hornyak gets
game are Jeff Tyo and Dave the doctors okay, he could get
Fife of Meigs and Jack (Beep) a "to~en appearance" in this
Mathews of Gallipolis.
week s ga~es ..
Mark v will play tonight at
Saturdays wm over the Bull7:30against !nco No. I. Mark V dogs, the fourth in five games
appears to have a good shot at for the seventh.,.~nked Bucktaking home all the marbles ~yes, started out hke the prevbecause the team it defeated 10us.contests with the Buckeyes
Sunday was said to have one of havmg trouble putting the ball
the best of the 13 teams com- in the basket and bemg unable
peting
to take advantage of thetr su. BY QUARTERS
peri or height.
Mark v
12 29 42 66
But after a 33-28 halftime
American C&amp;F 10 26 41 59 edge, the Bucks pulled out of
danger in the second half,
mainly because of their 27-13

CHESAPEAKE- The Meigs
Marauders wrestling team
opened its season here Friday
and Saturday with a fifth place
finish in a field of eight in the
Chesapeake Wrestling Tournament.
Four Marauder grapplers
were among the top four in
their divisions. Ken Moore in
the 119 lb. class was a third by
a decision over the fourth place
finisher. John Thomas also
finished third In the 155 lb.
class by a pin over the fourth
place finisher. ·
Alan McLaughlin was fourth
in the 132 lb. class and Roger
Pearch was fourth in the 126 lb.
class.
Other Marauders taking part
in the tournament were Mike
Harrison, Jeff Musser, Robbie
Harris, Rick Gaul, Terry
Pickens, Ted Lehew, John
Lehew, and Jon Grueser.
Teams competing were
Ironton,
Barboursville,
Chesapeake, Milton, Guyan
Vall•y, Proctorville- Fairland,
and Huntington East.
The Marauders travel to
Nelsonville Tuesday to batUe
the NelsonvUle-York Buckeyes
at 6 p.m. Coached by Fenton
Taylor, the Marauders will
open at home January Iii
against South Point at 7:30.

~ '

$}29

his, brother, Jerry, ripped the
nets for 17 points while 6-1
Bruce Hart added 13 points.
Mark Smith, 5-8 senior
forward and Gil Trowbridge, 58 junior, paced the Highlanders

MarkV

Finish in

GIVEN BY HART'S USED CARS

'

•

InadditiontoJimHubbard,

5th Place

...'

Thirteen play•rs have inter&lt;"epted lour passes in one
Nt'L game. The player to do
11 mosl recent/" wa• WilliP
1:mwn: who ~ 'n p p c d fnul'
:-\1•w \ nrk P••~~~·~ whill.• pi11V·
l ~H/

southern, paced by the
brother combination of Jim
and Jerry Hubbard, captured
its second victory of the season
Saturday night, 77-51 over the
Southwestern Highlanders.
The win pushed the Tornadoes record to :1r3 in the
SVAC and 2-4 overall. Southwestern dropped to 0-6 in the
league and 0-7 overall.
Led by the shooting of Jim
Hubbard, 5-11 senior forward,
the Tornadoes jumped into a
25-12lead at the end of the first
stanza. Hubbard had 14 points
during the surge.
Coach Asa Bradbury's
Tornadoes widened their
margin to 49-24 at the half. The
Meigs Countians were in
command, 61-35 at the end of
three periods.

rebol!llding edge in the fin•! 20
minutes.
Taylor said he didn't change
anything for the second half.
"It was just a matter of everyone working a little hard·
er," he said.
Senior Mark Minor, who
started at the other forward
spot but failed to score, caught

Taylor 's eye for the defensive
job he did on the Bulldogs'
leading scorer, Oscar Evans,
who went into the game averaging 25 points per contest.
Evans finished with 17, II
from the free throw line, but
Taylor said "nine of them

came after the game wasn't in
doubt."

Hannan·Trace
Has Third Straight

it 88-81! at the end of the first
overtime.
After Johnson put Ferris
Stale into the third overtime
play, his team pushed to a 107105 lead with 43 seconds to go.
Aikman hit one of his two free
throw chances and J ohn
Plunkett dropped in a field
goal , putting Urbana ahead
108-107, only to see Johnson
race off with the ball and toss
in the winning fielder .

ApiJ reason to

INSURE

·-..us ...

Your
lnsur1nce
A9ent
• "'•'• Warner

SATURDAY'S
OHIO COLLEGE
BASKETBALL SCORES
United Press International

Ohio Slate 82 Butler 70
Bowling
Green
Bonaventure 84

87

St.

Toledo 92 Mor r is Harv ey 81
Miami 58 Dayton 51
Xavier 71 Auburn 60

Utah Stale 68 Kent State 61
Brigham Young 82 Cinc innati

79

Ohio Dominican 91 Cedarvill e

90

Wooster 133 Wilberforce 60
Moun t Un ion 105 Blackburn
I Il l.) 79

Ball State 107 Kenyon 80
Ashland
120
Alderson .
Broaddus 96

Whether you .
auto,
life
homeowners
surance, we will ae!11gr11
a policy' .to fit
individual
requirements
Discuss your speci·flc
needs with us .

Capital 86 West Liberty 77
Point Park 96 Malone 79
Ferris State 109 Urbana 108 tJ
ot)

Fairmont Sta t" 81 Ste ubenville

Coach Paul Dillon 's Hannan
Trace Wildcats posted their
third straight victory Saturday
night by upending the Hannan
Wildcats, 56-31 in a non-league
game.
The win gave the Wildcats a
3-3 record. Hannan Trace is 2-3
in the SVAC.
Big Mike Caldwell, 6-5 junior
center, Jed the Gallians with 16
points and 28 rebounds. Don
Wells, 6-4 sophomore forward,
had 16 points and Keith Swain,
5-11 senior guard, added 10
points.
Hannan Trace led 11-8 at the
end of the first period, 26-17 at
the half and 37-23 going into the
fourth stanza.
The Wildcats sank 21 of 72
field goal attempts for a cold 29

.

8+20· Bruce Hart, 5-3-13;
.
Jerry Hubbard, 7-3-17; B. Hart,
2-5-9; Hill, 1-0-2; Ihle, 1-0-2Jenkins, 5-1-11; Kiser, 1-1-3 ;
Holman, 0-0-0; Nease, ().(1..0 and
Hill , ().(1..0. Totals 30-17-77.
Southwestern (51) - Smith,
6-3-15; Trowbridge, 7-1-15;
Dillon, 0·1-1; Wood, 2-2-6;
Lewis, 1-2-4; Stevens, 0-0-0;
Jenkins, 0-0-0; Fortner, 0-1-1 ;
Whitt, 3-3-9. Totals 19-13-51.

pet. Hannan hit only 13 of 88 67
attempts for a very poor 14 pet.
Hannan Trace also won the
reserve game, 55-16. Swain
pumped in 23 points for the
winners.
The Wildcats are idle until
Tuesday, Dec. 27 when they
will host an alumni squad.
By Quarters
Hannan Trace
II 26 37 56
Hannan
8 17 23 31
H1,UIIllln Tr~ce (~61 .- Swain
4-2-10; CaldwellS-6-16; Wells 64-16; Lusher 2-0-4; Ours 3-2~;
Shaffer 1-0-2 and Waugh 0-0-0.
Totals 21-14-56.
Hannan (31) -Holley 3-2-8;
Barnett 3-1-7; Smith 2-0-4;
Dalton 1-0-2; Edmonds 2-2~;
125 E. Main
Black 1-0-2; Varjie 1-0-2. Totals

Davis-Warner Ins.

Phone m-2%6
St.
Pomeroy

114 Court

For
HOLIDAY
SHOPPING ...

1~1.

992-2171
Pomeroy, 0 .

Grapplers

RUPP MINI SCRAMBLER

'
,.•

Stepping In

Symmes Valley (811 Wilson 1:/Ai-30; Roach 3-4-10;
Taylor 2-2~; Robinson 10-5-25;
Myers 4-2-10; Willis 0-0-0.

JUST STOP IN AT HARTS

Do

\S 1-\ALf TILL

32-1~79.

You May Win These
Great Gifts For
Christmas

' The1bys That'lalked: a Christmas Fantasy
ttli1,, SAt\1A CLA\15,
·PU:A9e1 SIR 1.

free throws. Robinson added
25 points on 10 baskets and five
foul shots; Jack Taylor and
Keith Roach had 10 points
each.
'
Clark paced the Pirate attack with 25 points ; Larry
Justus, 6-4 senior forward,
canned 16 points and Harvey
Brown pumped in 13 markers.
Symmes Valley connected on
31 of 67 field goal attempts for
46.2 pet. and 19 of 33 charity
tosses for 57.5 pet.
The Pirates hit 32 of 70 field
goal attempts for 45 pet. and 15
of 27 free throws. North Gallia
held a 48-34 rebounding edge.
.Justus pulled down 21 while
Clark had 14. Roach paced the
winners ·with 13.
Pirate Coach Jim Foster said
he was proud of the effort
displayed by his substitutes T.
J. Robinson, Keith Weddington
and Don Robinette. They
played under a lot of pressure
and handicaps, he said.
The Pirates won the reserve
tilt, 52-44. Daimy Miller paced
the winners with 15 markers.
Terry Pine tossed in 14 for the
losers.
Both teams are idle until
after the Christmas holidays.
By Quarters
North GaUia
19 35 58 79
Symmes Valley
13 42 59 81
North Gallta (79) -Justus 80-16 ; Clark 9-7-25 ;Stout 0-3-3;
Brown 6-1-13; Glassburn 4-0-8;
Eggleton 0-0-0; Weddington 2-04; Robinson 0-2-2; Cro~white
3-2-8 and Robinette 0-0-0. Totals

Southern Tops .Southwestern, 77-51

__

.•

f

THIS WEEK'S
OHIO COLLEGE
BASKETBALL SCHEDULE
United Press International
Monday
Brown at Ohio State
Ohio University at Michigan
Tourney

Toledo at Michigan Tourney
Kent State at Santa Clara
St. Vlncenrs at Akron
Malone at Mount Union
San Francisco Stale at
Cleveland Stale
West Florida Univ. at Rio
Grande
Walsh at Point Park

Marion

Tour~y

lnvitafional

!Heidelberg, Wooster, Findlay,
American International)
Tuesday

Ohio

Univ.

at

Michigan

Tourney
Toledo at Michigan Tourney

Clemso·n at Cincinnafi

Kenyon at Wright Stale
Ohto Dominican at Youngstown State
West Florida Univ . at Rio
Grande
Capital Classic !Capital, Alma,
Berea, Edinboro)
Marion

·- ·

lnvitafional Tourney

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

The

Dai~

Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS · MASON AREA
CHESTER L: TANNEHILL ,
Exec. Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH ,

•

City Editor

Published

daily

For he was a jolly good fellow.

except

Saturday by The Ohio Valley
Publishing Comptmy, 111
CGurf St ., Pomeroy, Ohio,
45769. Business Office Phone

992 -2156, Editorial Phone 992 -

2157.

Second class postage paid at
Pomeroy, Ohio .
National ad\l'ertlsing .

representative Bottinelli Gallagher . Inc ., 12 East 42nd
St.. New York City , New York .
Subscription rates : De .
livered by carrier where
available so cents per week ;

Sy Motor Route where carrier
service not a\lailable : One
mon th Sl.75 . By ma i l in Ohio
and W. Va ., One year $14 .00.
SiK months S7 .2S . Three
months S4 ,50 . Subscription
' pri ce includes Sundil ·. Ttmes.
S4:ntinel".

···-- -- -

----- .

.

'

.
' ·

Afew drinks never stopped him before.
Maybe they never stopped you . either. But no mat·
ter how sober you feet , three or four drinks during
the hour before getting behind the wheel increase
your chances of having an accident by seven times.
Si• drinks, and you 're ten times more likely to have
one. And no amount of coffee changes these oddo,
Every hol iday season . traffi c accidents increase

by 25%. And jol ly QOOd fellows are !he major reason
'":n

if vn u··.-·' h:tr'

fr. '''

.! .

· L-

let a fr iend drive you

horne. Or take a taxi. Now you've probably heard all
this before. And your new car dealer

hopes 'that you 'll be around to hear it
agam next year.

......,

;~~'\
!
1 !
\

I

I

..

:

·..•••rllo•'•

Dealers d isplaying this seal subscribe Ia lhe NAOA
Code of Bu siness Pra ctiCes. Addre ss correspondence to Consume r
Relal 1ons Sen.1 ce. 2000 ' K"" Slreel N.W., Wasl') lngt on. D.C. 20006

National Automobile Dealers Association

One in a seri('s preser,ted by N.A.O .A., The O:~ily Senfinel

and the Tri -County Automobile Dealers Assoc .

�'
3- The Dilly S.lllel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. 20, 1971

2- 'I1!e Dilly Semlne1, Mlddleport-Pooueroy, 0., Dec. 20, 1971

WIN AT BRIDGE

Dividend for a Weight Watcher

EDITORIAL

Big Difference BfARY'S WORlD
in. Play

Child Core Inequity
In New Tax Low
Because of ·· family-weakening implications·· in one
., section of the welfare reform bill . involving government
subsidization of child development centers. P1·esident
Nixon vetoed the entire bill.
Then , because he wanted most of the baubles Congress
had hung on the tax bill "Christmas tree ." he turned
around and signed into law a deduction which will , in
effect. pav mothers to neglect their children.
This is the provision which will permit working couples
whose combined incomes are under $18,000, who have
children under 15 and who file a joint return . to deduct
as a "business expense" the cost of baby sitters or
domestic help or the very' same day care centers the
President is so leery about-up to $4,800.
To repeat : The working mother struggling along with
her husband on a mere $18,000 a year may now have the
benefit of government ·subsidized maid service to the tune
of $400 a month. tIn the 20 per cent bracket , this would
be $80 a month in actual tax savings .)
Not only that, but the working mother who is helpin~
father keep the wolf from the door with a combined in·
come as high as $27 ,600 can also claim partial benefits.
depending upo n the number of children .
Meanwhile . the mother who thinks that the most im·
portant job in the world is caring for her family and
whose husband is trying to support that family by him·
self on maybe $7.000 or $8.000 a year will be tapped for
their full tax liability . If the wife is sickly and needs out·
side help with the housework or would like some lime off
from the kids, that's their problem.
Talk about tax loopholes for the wealthy . This one was
tailor-made for the middle class- specifically, 7 million
working mothers with young children in families with
total income of more than $10,000 (plus those mothers
who will now decide to go out and get some of the gravy ).
It is also one more proof that it pays to lobbY: What
was once a sensible provision aimed at helping widowed,
divorced or single parents and couples with income below
$6,000 was ballooned out of all proportion thanks to the
lobbying efforts of a group called "Mothers United for
Fair Taxation ."
"Fair" taxation'
As National Observer writer Michael Malloy has
pointed out, the idea is unfair in its very conception since
tt discriminates unjustly among working mothers . ALL
mothers work, and those who look after a house full of
kids all day work harder than those who spend the same
hours strumming an electric typewriter in an air-con·
ditioned office.
But the new law will subsidize only mothers who go
OUT to work, and it will subsidize those who need it least.
The mother who drudges over someone else 's ironing for
$1.50 an hour pays so little income tax that the deduction
will hardly affect her .
Child care is not a "business expense," a cost of going
to work, says Malloy . It is a cost of raising a family. one
which every family faces, and it is greater when only one
parent works than when both work.
For example. if a mother could earn $8,000 as a sec·
retary but elects to stay home with her kids, it "costs"
her $6,000 for child care. But if she does go out to work
and pays someone $90 a week to look after them , now,
thanks to Uncle Sam , it costs her only $4,500 a year, and
she has money left over to buy a new car or refurnish the
living room .
. Not only is the new deduction grossly unfair, it is a
slap in the face of every mother who is old-fashioned
enough to believe that her ciiildren need her more than
she needs a higher standard o( living.
If America 's future lies with its youth, by all that's
rational we ought to be paying mothers to stay with their
children , not encouraging them to leave them .
\tUWSPit.PER ENTERPRISE

~SSN .)

BRUCE BIOSSAT

A Nixon Victory?
Gloom in 2 Camps
By BRUCE BIOSSAT
WASHINGTON !NEAl
Quite a few influential Democrats, proud of their "rea lism, " are privately saying they have little chance to beat
President Nixon next year. Conversely, some hardheaded Republicans are saying Nixon has little chance
to win .
I am convinced this kind of talk from Democrats is
not self-serving nonsen se intended to disarm and lull the
President. They really believe it.
They are dazzled b~ the powers of the office, and by
any president's capactty to command events. They figure
Mr. Nixon is going to surprise and disconcert them from
now until next November . They know the Vietnam war
is slipping into the shadows. They look for an economic
trick or two. And they think he'll J;eep running around
the world.
The Republican hard-heads don't see it that way at all .
Using three or four different measuring rods , they argue
that their own man is in serious straits and will need
enormous skill and luck to win.
These GOP types, impressed less by Mr. Nixon being
the mcumbent than by the Democrats' majority hold on
the electorate , think their rivals are just befogged. Says
one GOP analyst :
"They're used to winning with an embarrassment of
rlches, to overpowering us with brute strength. Seeing
Ntxon in the White House and their own multiplicity of
candidates, the; don 't sense the smell of victory . They're
not used to gauging the close ones."
In this man's view, the Democrats may not realize
how well off they are for 1972 "until everybody gets
to~ether" after they choose a presidential nominee in
Mtamt next July . Wistfully he added :
"! wish I had their vote power."
Mr . Nixon's drawbacks ?
The big one; according to the argument, is the Republi·
cans' continuing status as a minority party , compounded
by the President's evident inability to attract extra oersonal support. The GOP doubters ask :
·
" If we're so well off, where's the 50 per cent'
It is a fact, measurable by the polls, that Mr. Nixon
hov~rs around the 42-44 per cent mark when positioned
agamst a strong potential rival like Sen. Edmund Muskie
or Sen. Edward Kennedy . He doesn't gain.
To underscore the President's difficulties realists in
his party tick off big blocks of voters he won last time
but is in trouble with now : Farmers, small businessmen,
the severely pinched elderly. It's assumed, of course .
that he won't cut it with the blacks and the young.

NORTH

Vikings Take Over

20

• K9S

•'

"K 73

+H

Top Sp0_t Jn SVAC .

,foKJ963
WEST

EAST

.72

.J\0843
.42
+Q96
,foA84

"QJtOB
+Kl08532
,fo7

SOUTII
·. :.

~

·.

North Gallia's Pirates, playing without the
services of 6-4 junior forward Gary Crosswhite and .
5-11 senior guard Pat Stout were jolted from the top
spot in the Southern Valley Athletic Conference
Saturday night 81-79, by the unbeaten Symmes
Valley Vikings.
The victory gave Coach Wayne White's Vikings
undisputed first place in the league standings with
a perfect 5-() slate. The Lawrence Countians are 6-0
.in all games.
.
North Gallia dropped to 4-1 in the league and 4-2
overall. The Pirates are now in a second place tie
with the Eastern Eagles.

(D)

.AQ6
"A965
A7
,fo QtOS 2

+

.

West

Both vulnerable
North East Soulh
lN.T.

Pass 3 N.T. Pass Pass
P...
Opening lead- + 5

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Oswald: "Let's start an argument. What would you
lead against three no-trump
with the West cards?"
Jim: "You won't get any
argument from me. I open
c, 1971.br NEA,
the five of diamonds. I assume the question refers to
"Snap out ol it, Charlie-the Christmas cord season rs
rubber bridNe."
almost o~er!"
Oswald: I didn't expect
any argument from you, but
I do expect some from dupli,
cate players. In rubber
bridge, West wants to at· r-----------~---------------1
. "• . ,
' ,.,,
. ,, ·' ' .
tack in a suit that may give
him a chance to set the contract. The heart lead is safe,
• but there isn't enough tricks I
I
I
1
in that suit if he does hit his
By Helen Bottel
1
I
I partner."
I
Jim: "Dunlicate is another
'
Brass virtuoso Pete Condoli 's expected to story. The diamond lead may
BY JACK O'BRIAN
HER CUP RUNNETH OVER
ride up to declarer's acewed Edie Adams, Ernie Kovacs' widow ... queen.
AND IT'S NOT EVEN
The heart lead is Dear Helen:
Diamonds have been Carol atannlnl!'s best most unllkelv to giv• rl•AN ICE SHOW
I spend days making beautiful dresses for my granddaughter
N'YAWK TALK ... Ron Field's atlacks on friends since she starred in ''Gentlemen Prefer clarer ari extra heart trick." and love seeking her look pretty.
Oswald: "This illustrates
Blondes," and now her inwstments are In gold:
theauthorsofhis "On the Town," Betty Camden
But after a trip to Sunday School, she comes home with a
Carol's poured all her spare cash into· the one of the differences be· ruined dress. Why do Sunday school teachers feel children must
and Adolph Green; Ron only slaged it and
tween rubber bridge and
designed the dances ... His devastating com- Kimberly area of Australia - where 6,0011 match-point duplicate. The have orangeade, grape juice - food or drink that permanently
people live on ranches, running to a million difference bet we en three stains clothes? After all, they are only there for an hour or so,
ment: "The show was 'frozen' in Boston -in
acres or more ... David Cassidy's only a couple and four no-trump may mean and they get food at home. - GRANDMA
1944" ... Inside stuff- N. Y. State Att'y Gen'l
of years out of his teens, and he's already a lot of match pomts. In rub- Dear Grandma:
Louis Lefkowitz will retire after this term. He'll
be past 70 ... 5th Ave.'s illegal peddlers (the shopping for a onHnan helicopter (that's what
If you can't turn off the juice (after all, fruit drinks are good
$1 for JACOBY MOOEIH l&gt;oot
sudden stardom does for the fantasies of a kid s..d
jewelrY and accessories hucksters hustle their
ta: "Win at ltirl,.," (c/o tllis newJ· for kids) then how about sending along a plastic dress protector
who just wanted pop's car keys a few record hits poporl, P.O. lor 49, llodio Cifl' with yotD' granddaughter? It would come In handy for other
wares illegally in front of the poshest stores)
ago).
make fon ..,es. Some of them haul in $300a day,
Station, N.., York, N.Y. 10019.
Sunday school activities too - youngsters no longer sit quietly
Chaos
in
Red
Paradise:
Castro's
CUban
mostly profit.
a11d listen to Bible verses these days . They participate ! - H..
Harper's Bazaar's Dec. issue has a news service head at the UN knows he's belng ber bridge, it means little."
Jim: "Looking at all the Dear Helen:
fascinating peek into ex-NBC bulletin shooter tailed, especially when he's visiting Mao's Red
Each time I read about another appropriation for some
cards, we see that the dia·
Sander Vanocur's private life and public China man here ... Concord Hotelman Phil rnond lead knocks out the idiotic thing or some monumental mistake that has cost us
hangups: he admits his affair with Shirley Greenwald's new baby was named Abraham ace of diamonds right away tupayers money, I think: If over half our congressmen and
MacLaine (the least well-kept secret in Jac~.!On Greenwald; was there a President and South goes down two. senators were women, I'll bet the country would not be running
decades) and whacks away at network news, of named Greenwald? Not yet? ... Elliott Gould's Against a heart lead, he has In the red. This goes for state and local gowrrunent, too.
suddenly feeling a casting chill ... The Stage time to set up the clubs and
which he was a recently disgruntled member;
make an overtrick."
.1'ilL
•
,
he's gruntled tho over his $85,000 "educational" DeUy's gone fancy.pantsy : its new little wipers
0 s w a 1d: "We 11. y 0 u
. Women are budgeters. They Ulle to get thetr moneys worth,
TV salary, recently revealed ... Perry Como's are "Napkins by TtffBII)'" ... Jack Douglas' wouldn't want me to get you and they are sharp bargamers..They also, for the most part, see
literary lunacy, "Shut Up and Eat Your to commit yourself and then how ridiculous It Is to throw good money after bad - and they
winter-special was a warm, lovely TV hour.
· Mitzi Gaynor and Women's Wear Daily's Snowshoes," was bought.by Richard &lt;Zenna for . s.bow .a .~au~ ~here you were woulcm't be so susceptible tO lobbytsl:l for they'\'~! had !P-eat
Bess Winaker would make a likely Madison a film ... Julie Budd's 17th birthday present wrong. 11,,
experience In "seeing through" men's little con games. ·
iNiws~.,.~ INTElPalll ASSN.I
If women would only start trusting other women, they could
Square Garden main event: Bess's critique of from RCA Records: a $100,0011 budget to
Mitzi's Chicago performances: "Mitzi Gaynor promote her "Julie Budd" album.
join forces and elect female candidates -for we surpass men in
Jimmy Cagney's priclnl! homes on I.oog
is a middle-aged matron with a flabby stomach
population as well as brains. Come on, gals, get political! And
The biddilll! hu been:
and heavy thighs. But she's got guts" ... Bar- Island. You bet he has the cash! ... Johnny
men, If you want your taxes lowered, vote for women!
West
North East
bara Eden on the Bob Hope TV special flung Ray's writing his autobiography ... Zaa Zsa's
South LEAGUE. MEMBER
"bumps and grinds" that would've got Margie latest suitor is realtor Robert Kert ... The
Db;• Dear Member:
Pass
2•
Pass
Hart arrested just a few generations of fuzz "Fiddler" film is doing brisk business on Bdrm all for more women in politics - but before we can vote
You, South, hold:
ago; burlesque theaters' back-,'Jtage had police wy., ditto the longest ...un Bdwy stage original- • AQ4 "KU AQ1085 "'K 109 for them, we must persuade them to run for office. Many won't and the troupe at nearby Westbury Music Fair
signs warning, "No bumping or grinding."
though they are highly qualified - becauSe they're convinced a
What do you do now?
There's no freeze on heroin - theN. Y. hauled in a staggering $8'15,325 for six very Uve
A-Bid three diomonds to see woman can't win that their own sex won't stand behind them.
price for the sad victims almost doubled ... TV's weeks; more than the stage original did at its what your partner will rebid. In
UntU we females learn to see each other as persons, no!
Bill Cullen is too thin . His doctors tell him to hittest .. . More than thls-year's-eatnip this situation a new suit bid is adversaries, we haven 'I got much chance at the polls . .
fatten up and he doesn't know how ... Otto Engelbert Humperdinck grossed in the same a force.
... Pity!- H.
TODAY'S QUESTION
Preminger's "Such Good Friends" film is based Music Fair.
Dear Helen:
Your partner continues to
on a very real shocker: the book's author lived
rm the confused and frustrated wife of a man I recently
three spades. What do you do
the plot personally - married to a N. Y. Times
Uttle Johnny, the Call-lor-Philip-Morris now?
learned Is a homosexual.
Answer Tomorrow
man who died after a quick-,'Jurgery incident, midget pitchman generations of coffin nails
He Is a devoted father ( we haw three lovely children), a
Ulis Gould (her new married name) found dead ago, now emceeing the N. Y. Playboy Club's
good provider, and appears wry masculine in every way. I
hubby's big black book hidden in a drawer in shows, !&gt;Bid he sold .millillllll but never should
couldn't ask for a better husband - and I continue to love him which he'd listed all the gals he'd swung with, have smoked 'em: "I might have made it big as
but, though he's tried ptrychiatry and prayer, and has continuing
including their sexual ratings; Ulis discovered a basketball player" ... Few tourists knew what
affection for me, he can't change.
they were her "good friends"; the book was an the devU "The Grand Funk Railroad" was when
He has tried to make me understand his feelings. He goes out
exciting shocker, and the film is Otto-matlcally the rock-group hired the block4ong Times
once a week. All other times, he is a devotedfamllyman.
a must. Who told us? Lois' mother, fashion .SQuare billboard just to spread Its name across
When I first learned about it, we separated. Now we're back
designer Jo Copeland. Proudly. In front of ~ Bdwy. two years ago. They'll do it again - cost
together, for I realize how much the children and I need him.
witnesses.
$100,0011- next summer.
They were devastated when he left- and of course they'll never
know why. To them, he's the greatest Dad of all.
The Almanac
Presently, we're "just frlends." My husband is very good to
The doubters make another argument which I have
reported before: That Mr. Nixon is in a bad crunch in
By United Press Interullonal
me. I know I could newr be happy with another man, for my
every one of the four big northern states he took in 1968.
Today is Monday, Dec. 20,
whole life revolved around him and the children. I can't hate
namely, California, Illinois, Ohio, New Jersey . He can't
the 354th day of 1971 ..
him. But can I continue to live this way? And am I the only wife in
afford to lose any of them at least not without nicking
The
moon
is
between
its
new
the world with this problem? - CONFUSED WIFE
up offsetting electoral vote~ somewhere else. And these
phase
and
first
quarter.
The
first
school
of
jourDear
Wife:
are not deemed to be in sight.
The morning stars are nalism In the United States
More wives than you realize face this situation-and many
And then. there's the stubbornly sluggish economy. A
Mercury
and
Jupiter.
":as
founded
at
the
Unlverlike
you stay with lt - for the same reasons which brought ·
qutck d1p IIllo hlst?ry makes it plain American voters ,
stty
of
Missouri
at
Colum·
you
The evening siMs are Venus, bia, Mo., by Walter Wil· and your' hwrband together again.
habttually penalize tncumbents who are caught with their
economrc markers down . And , though Mr. Nixon is pres- Mars and Saturn.
llams in 1908, The World
The question you may ask yourself is: "Can !'live with my
ently orr an "activist" kick which voters seem to like
Those born on this day are Almanac recalla. Enroll- . problem or will it eventually destroy me?" If the good in your life
history also suggests they will judge him finally on how ii
under the sign of Sagittarius.
ment for the first school outwelgha the misery, then perhaptr you can -but only you can
all works out. Prospects for a healthy slash in unemHarvey
Firestone
of
tire
year
was 97 students--84 make the decision - H
ployment don 't look too bright.
·
·
manufacturing fame was born men and 13 women-and
So, some key Republicans ihink their gloom is real and
the first degree was granted
Dec.
20,
1868.
that their rivals' gloom is only a haze which will lift.
in 1909 to Charles Arnold.
On this day In history:
Adds one Republican :
·
.
In 1803 the U.S. government r----------::---:----:--------------,
"Things are not that secure for us . The signs simply
officially, . took over from
They1l
It Every Time ®
aren 't there ."
(NEWSPAPER ENT£R.f.IJ5E )I.S.SN .J . _
France territory acquired in ~================-'lr=::'~============J.
the Uluisiana Purchase.
'F!E UPPERJ:.RUS'rS ~E EA"N TO PLEASE
'mEN I:.(;W THE HAVENOrS FllOM Ttl!oO.CCO
In 1864 Union Gen. William ·" IN T~E CHRISTMJooS TREE DePT. ·· ·
I&lt;CJI&gt;,D AND NOJ111NG SUITS '!OM···· • •
Bloody Squash
Slippery
Ball
Sherman
completed
his
"March
·•
•••
o, " . o : . •
•. 0 :!.
b
•
•
•
, •• ~
The Yale squash racquets
When
the
Bu!falo
Bills
re·
to
the
Sea"
·and
arrived
at
--....~.
"
"
•
•
•
• •· •
team will tour England next covered s e v e n Clnelnnatl Savannah, Ga.
"·
spring, competing against
0 x f o r d, Cambridge and set
rumbles
in a reeord
1969 game,
they .In 1922 the 14 Rwrsian ~'l~tt~~tj
the NFL
for most
other teams. It will be the opponents' bobbles grabbed republics combined to form the
third Yale team to make the In a single game.
Union of Soviet Socialist Repubtrip.
lics.
In 1952 a U.S. Air Force
Globemaster plane crashed at
Moses Lake in Washington
6RI~CIO\l5,~~E 1• IT
state, killing 87 servicemen.

&lt;&gt;

.·:~.·

!~ e. ~

Coach Jim Foster's Pirates
ran into trouble at the beginning of the game when
Crosswhite was unable to start
due to a bout with the flu.
Stout was ejected by officials
at 3:52 in the initial stanza for
what was termed "elbowing."
No Viking had to leave the
gym.
Another Pirate, 6-2 Tony
Glassburn, filled in well for
Crosswhite until he reinjured
his collarbone which was
broken during the past football
season.
Big Arthur Clark, 6-5 senior
center, also sat out most of the
first half with three personals.
He managed only one point for
the Pirate cause in the half.
The Pirates moved into a 1913 advantage at the end of the
first period but fell behind 42-35
at the half.
Danny Wilson, 5-11 senior,
one of the loop's leading
scorers, pumped in eight points
In leading the Viking
comeback. Phil Robinson, 5-10
junior, another hot-£hooting
ace for Symmes Valley
dumped in six points.
North Gallia came back to
cut the lead to one point going
into the final eight minutes of
action. Crosswhite managed to
score eight points before
leaving.
With 35 seconds remaining,
Jene Myers canned a foul shot
giving the VIkings a nne point
)ead. J;lob\p'o~ converted
linotlier foul Sltot with just one
second left giving Symmes
Valley its final margin of
victorv.
Wilson led all scorers with 30
points on 12 baskets and six

.

!Helen Help Us !

r------------------------------------------

Voice along Broadway !

I

1"

HI:.~ 10 ~ELP YOU
THE.Pl'S~I

GEl Fil'-EO
IN TIME FOR
CHRISTMAS!

A thought for today: American poet Walt Whlbnan said,
''Once fully enslaved, no nation,
state, city of this earth, ever
afterward resumes its liberty."

AND REGISTER
Drawing is 6: 00 p.m.
December 22 at
Hart's Used Cars.

t ..

~·

ll!·m·r·r in !!K"I·I

IF YOU DON'T WIN ONE, BUY ONE!
00
00 TO
PRICED FROM
WE HAVE AFINE DISPlAY. COME IN AND SEE

..

$329

Mason Co. Bank • $25.00 Savings Bond
Appalachian Tire Co., Pt. Pleasant - Battery
New Haven Super Mkt - Gift Certificate
Oliver's American Oil Station - Gift Certificate
Millers Super Market - Gift Certificate
Flecher's Texaco - Gift Certificate
Batey Hardware • Gift Certificate
Burian Sunoco - Gift Certificate
Raney's Market • Gift Certificate
Dairy Haven - Gift Certificate
New Haven Furniture - Set of Lamps
JlrS Pizza - 9" Pizza .
Pt. Pleasant-Mason Auto. Glass - Gift Certificate
Opea AU Day Stmday
For lbe cODvelllence of 011r cuatomen.

~

,,•
'

.

~MM_.MM_.MM._

'

Knights Drop Second In Row
third place in the six-team
Spring Arbor Tournament.
The Ohio Knights lost by the
same score in overtime to ·
Spring Arbor Friday night, to
account for its only other loss
this season in 11 starts.
Urbana, led bv Mark Todd

SPRING ARBOR, Mich .
(UP!) - Dennis Johnson
poured in 48 points, including a
field goal which sent the game
into its third overtime period
and another which won it, to
hand Ferris State a 109-108
victory over Urbana of Ohio
Saturday night in the battle for

with 32 points, had a 44-39 in·
termission lead but dropped
back in the second half, and
then rallied to tie it up at the
end of the regulation game 8282 when Todd dropped in one of
two free throws . Urbana's Bill
Aikman hit two foui shots to lie

Bucks Meet Brown

Opener

Dillard Invitational, New Orleans
Xavier 102 Dillard 72 (cham.
pionshlp)
S.outhern La . 106 Texas
College 86 !consolation 1

"

'' .

Glouster Tuesday night. Southwestern is idle until Jan . 7.
By Quarters
Southern
25 49 61 77
Southwestern 12 24 35 51
Southern 1771 - J. Hubbard,

-

Wins its

••

.

canned 13 of 33 foul attempts .
. Southern also captured the
reserve game, 10-38. Milch
Nease led the winners with 12
points.
The Tornadoes will host

with 15pointseach. Dale Whitt,
6-1 junior forward , had nine
points.
Southern hit 43.5 pet. from
the floor and 52 pet. at the
chilrity stripe. Southwestern

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Coach
Fred Taylor's revamped lineup
gets a second test Monday
night when Ohio State entertains Brown University in one
of the Buckeye's two home
contests this week.
Although junior center Luke
Witte and sophomore Dan Gerhard led the scorin~ with 22
points each, Taylor's new
faces provided some much
The Mark V independent needed punch to the atlack in
basketball squad won its Saturday night's 82-70 win over
opening round match from Butler.
Sophomore Gary Repella,
American Car and Foundry of
Huntington at Fairland High starting at guard for the first
School Sunday afternoon in the time, had 10 points; junior Bob
Fairland independent basket- Siekmann, formerly the top forward sub, had eight; and soph
ball tournament.
Mark V, sponsored by Bucky Wardell Jackson, who didn't
Walters of Middleport, was led start but saw his most extensby "Pistol" Pete Anderson of ive service, had 10 points and
Gallipolis with 29 points. The 6- 10 rebounds.
"It's no reflection on any1 guard scored the first eight
points for the winners and kept one," Taylor said, "but we
them ahead throughout the needed some more scoring and
wanted to start some different ·
game with his long shots .
Other scorers were 6-5 Mike people."
,
Fenderbosch with 15; 6-6 Gary . Hornyak, the Buckeyes leadFender bosch with 7, Ron mg scorer last yea~ w1~ a 22.5
Ferguson·!: ukd Sin\'Mitchell . ,llY~!Ige "ba&amp; .bet~.IIJinactive for
r:' ~- 1·15 d Ch' nearly . •two . months with a
0' aII 0 f "'"&gt;~
po ' an
tp bruised · ht h I H dr
d
Haggerty wt 5, Doxie Walters
rtg ee · e esse
4, and Rick Van Matre I, of Lhe last two games, but was
Meigs, and Tony Fields of lone player among the !~man
Wahama with 2.
traveling squad who didn t see
Other members of the team action aga~t Butler.
but unable to attend Sunday's
Taylor s,a•d tf Hornyak gets
game are Jeff Tyo and Dave the doctors okay, he could get
Fife of Meigs and Jack (Beep) a "to~en appearance" in this
Mathews of Gallipolis.
week s ga~es ..
Mark v will play tonight at
Saturdays wm over the Bull7:30against !nco No. I. Mark V dogs, the fourth in five games
appears to have a good shot at for the seventh.,.~nked Bucktaking home all the marbles ~yes, started out hke the prevbecause the team it defeated 10us.contests with the Buckeyes
Sunday was said to have one of havmg trouble putting the ball
the best of the 13 teams com- in the basket and bemg unable
peting
to take advantage of thetr su. BY QUARTERS
peri or height.
Mark v
12 29 42 66
But after a 33-28 halftime
American C&amp;F 10 26 41 59 edge, the Bucks pulled out of
danger in the second half,
mainly because of their 27-13

CHESAPEAKE- The Meigs
Marauders wrestling team
opened its season here Friday
and Saturday with a fifth place
finish in a field of eight in the
Chesapeake Wrestling Tournament.
Four Marauder grapplers
were among the top four in
their divisions. Ken Moore in
the 119 lb. class was a third by
a decision over the fourth place
finisher. John Thomas also
finished third In the 155 lb.
class by a pin over the fourth
place finisher. ·
Alan McLaughlin was fourth
in the 132 lb. class and Roger
Pearch was fourth in the 126 lb.
class.
Other Marauders taking part
in the tournament were Mike
Harrison, Jeff Musser, Robbie
Harris, Rick Gaul, Terry
Pickens, Ted Lehew, John
Lehew, and Jon Grueser.
Teams competing were
Ironton,
Barboursville,
Chesapeake, Milton, Guyan
Vall•y, Proctorville- Fairland,
and Huntington East.
The Marauders travel to
Nelsonville Tuesday to batUe
the NelsonvUle-York Buckeyes
at 6 p.m. Coached by Fenton
Taylor, the Marauders will
open at home January Iii
against South Point at 7:30.

~ '

$}29

his, brother, Jerry, ripped the
nets for 17 points while 6-1
Bruce Hart added 13 points.
Mark Smith, 5-8 senior
forward and Gil Trowbridge, 58 junior, paced the Highlanders

MarkV

Finish in

GIVEN BY HART'S USED CARS

'

•

InadditiontoJimHubbard,

5th Place

...'

Thirteen play•rs have inter&lt;"epted lour passes in one
Nt'L game. The player to do
11 mosl recent/" wa• WilliP
1:mwn: who ~ 'n p p c d fnul'
:-\1•w \ nrk P••~~~·~ whill.• pi11V·
l ~H/

southern, paced by the
brother combination of Jim
and Jerry Hubbard, captured
its second victory of the season
Saturday night, 77-51 over the
Southwestern Highlanders.
The win pushed the Tornadoes record to :1r3 in the
SVAC and 2-4 overall. Southwestern dropped to 0-6 in the
league and 0-7 overall.
Led by the shooting of Jim
Hubbard, 5-11 senior forward,
the Tornadoes jumped into a
25-12lead at the end of the first
stanza. Hubbard had 14 points
during the surge.
Coach Asa Bradbury's
Tornadoes widened their
margin to 49-24 at the half. The
Meigs Countians were in
command, 61-35 at the end of
three periods.

rebol!llding edge in the fin•! 20
minutes.
Taylor said he didn't change
anything for the second half.
"It was just a matter of everyone working a little hard·
er," he said.
Senior Mark Minor, who
started at the other forward
spot but failed to score, caught

Taylor 's eye for the defensive
job he did on the Bulldogs'
leading scorer, Oscar Evans,
who went into the game averaging 25 points per contest.
Evans finished with 17, II
from the free throw line, but
Taylor said "nine of them

came after the game wasn't in
doubt."

Hannan·Trace
Has Third Straight

it 88-81! at the end of the first
overtime.
After Johnson put Ferris
Stale into the third overtime
play, his team pushed to a 107105 lead with 43 seconds to go.
Aikman hit one of his two free
throw chances and J ohn
Plunkett dropped in a field
goal , putting Urbana ahead
108-107, only to see Johnson
race off with the ball and toss
in the winning fielder .

ApiJ reason to

INSURE

·-..us ...

Your
lnsur1nce
A9ent
• "'•'• Warner

SATURDAY'S
OHIO COLLEGE
BASKETBALL SCORES
United Press International

Ohio Slate 82 Butler 70
Bowling
Green
Bonaventure 84

87

St.

Toledo 92 Mor r is Harv ey 81
Miami 58 Dayton 51
Xavier 71 Auburn 60

Utah Stale 68 Kent State 61
Brigham Young 82 Cinc innati

79

Ohio Dominican 91 Cedarvill e

90

Wooster 133 Wilberforce 60
Moun t Un ion 105 Blackburn
I Il l.) 79

Ball State 107 Kenyon 80
Ashland
120
Alderson .
Broaddus 96

Whether you .
auto,
life
homeowners
surance, we will ae!11gr11
a policy' .to fit
individual
requirements
Discuss your speci·flc
needs with us .

Capital 86 West Liberty 77
Point Park 96 Malone 79
Ferris State 109 Urbana 108 tJ
ot)

Fairmont Sta t" 81 Ste ubenville

Coach Paul Dillon 's Hannan
Trace Wildcats posted their
third straight victory Saturday
night by upending the Hannan
Wildcats, 56-31 in a non-league
game.
The win gave the Wildcats a
3-3 record. Hannan Trace is 2-3
in the SVAC.
Big Mike Caldwell, 6-5 junior
center, Jed the Gallians with 16
points and 28 rebounds. Don
Wells, 6-4 sophomore forward,
had 16 points and Keith Swain,
5-11 senior guard, added 10
points.
Hannan Trace led 11-8 at the
end of the first period, 26-17 at
the half and 37-23 going into the
fourth stanza.
The Wildcats sank 21 of 72
field goal attempts for a cold 29

.

8+20· Bruce Hart, 5-3-13;
.
Jerry Hubbard, 7-3-17; B. Hart,
2-5-9; Hill, 1-0-2; Ihle, 1-0-2Jenkins, 5-1-11; Kiser, 1-1-3 ;
Holman, 0-0-0; Nease, ().(1..0 and
Hill , ().(1..0. Totals 30-17-77.
Southwestern (51) - Smith,
6-3-15; Trowbridge, 7-1-15;
Dillon, 0·1-1; Wood, 2-2-6;
Lewis, 1-2-4; Stevens, 0-0-0;
Jenkins, 0-0-0; Fortner, 0-1-1 ;
Whitt, 3-3-9. Totals 19-13-51.

pet. Hannan hit only 13 of 88 67
attempts for a very poor 14 pet.
Hannan Trace also won the
reserve game, 55-16. Swain
pumped in 23 points for the
winners.
The Wildcats are idle until
Tuesday, Dec. 27 when they
will host an alumni squad.
By Quarters
Hannan Trace
II 26 37 56
Hannan
8 17 23 31
H1,UIIllln Tr~ce (~61 .- Swain
4-2-10; CaldwellS-6-16; Wells 64-16; Lusher 2-0-4; Ours 3-2~;
Shaffer 1-0-2 and Waugh 0-0-0.
Totals 21-14-56.
Hannan (31) -Holley 3-2-8;
Barnett 3-1-7; Smith 2-0-4;
Dalton 1-0-2; Edmonds 2-2~;
125 E. Main
Black 1-0-2; Varjie 1-0-2. Totals

Davis-Warner Ins.

Phone m-2%6
St.
Pomeroy

114 Court

For
HOLIDAY
SHOPPING ...

1~1.

992-2171
Pomeroy, 0 .

Grapplers

RUPP MINI SCRAMBLER

'
,.•

Stepping In

Symmes Valley (811 Wilson 1:/Ai-30; Roach 3-4-10;
Taylor 2-2~; Robinson 10-5-25;
Myers 4-2-10; Willis 0-0-0.

JUST STOP IN AT HARTS

Do

\S 1-\ALf TILL

32-1~79.

You May Win These
Great Gifts For
Christmas

' The1bys That'lalked: a Christmas Fantasy
ttli1,, SAt\1A CLA\15,
·PU:A9e1 SIR 1.

free throws. Robinson added
25 points on 10 baskets and five
foul shots; Jack Taylor and
Keith Roach had 10 points
each.
'
Clark paced the Pirate attack with 25 points ; Larry
Justus, 6-4 senior forward,
canned 16 points and Harvey
Brown pumped in 13 markers.
Symmes Valley connected on
31 of 67 field goal attempts for
46.2 pet. and 19 of 33 charity
tosses for 57.5 pet.
The Pirates hit 32 of 70 field
goal attempts for 45 pet. and 15
of 27 free throws. North Gallia
held a 48-34 rebounding edge.
.Justus pulled down 21 while
Clark had 14. Roach paced the
winners ·with 13.
Pirate Coach Jim Foster said
he was proud of the effort
displayed by his substitutes T.
J. Robinson, Keith Weddington
and Don Robinette. They
played under a lot of pressure
and handicaps, he said.
The Pirates won the reserve
tilt, 52-44. Daimy Miller paced
the winners with 15 markers.
Terry Pine tossed in 14 for the
losers.
Both teams are idle until
after the Christmas holidays.
By Quarters
North GaUia
19 35 58 79
Symmes Valley
13 42 59 81
North Gallta (79) -Justus 80-16 ; Clark 9-7-25 ;Stout 0-3-3;
Brown 6-1-13; Glassburn 4-0-8;
Eggleton 0-0-0; Weddington 2-04; Robinson 0-2-2; Cro~white
3-2-8 and Robinette 0-0-0. Totals

Southern Tops .Southwestern, 77-51

__

.•

f

THIS WEEK'S
OHIO COLLEGE
BASKETBALL SCHEDULE
United Press International
Monday
Brown at Ohio State
Ohio University at Michigan
Tourney

Toledo at Michigan Tourney
Kent State at Santa Clara
St. Vlncenrs at Akron
Malone at Mount Union
San Francisco Stale at
Cleveland Stale
West Florida Univ. at Rio
Grande
Walsh at Point Park

Marion

Tour~y

lnvitafional

!Heidelberg, Wooster, Findlay,
American International)
Tuesday

Ohio

Univ.

at

Michigan

Tourney
Toledo at Michigan Tourney

Clemso·n at Cincinnafi

Kenyon at Wright Stale
Ohto Dominican at Youngstown State
West Florida Univ . at Rio
Grande
Capital Classic !Capital, Alma,
Berea, Edinboro)
Marion

·- ·

lnvitafional Tourney

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

The

Dai~

Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS · MASON AREA
CHESTER L: TANNEHILL ,
Exec. Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH ,

•

City Editor

Published

daily

For he was a jolly good fellow.

except

Saturday by The Ohio Valley
Publishing Comptmy, 111
CGurf St ., Pomeroy, Ohio,
45769. Business Office Phone

992 -2156, Editorial Phone 992 -

2157.

Second class postage paid at
Pomeroy, Ohio .
National ad\l'ertlsing .

representative Bottinelli Gallagher . Inc ., 12 East 42nd
St.. New York City , New York .
Subscription rates : De .
livered by carrier where
available so cents per week ;

Sy Motor Route where carrier
service not a\lailable : One
mon th Sl.75 . By ma i l in Ohio
and W. Va ., One year $14 .00.
SiK months S7 .2S . Three
months S4 ,50 . Subscription
' pri ce includes Sundil ·. Ttmes.
S4:ntinel".

···-- -- -

----- .

.

'

.
' ·

Afew drinks never stopped him before.
Maybe they never stopped you . either. But no mat·
ter how sober you feet , three or four drinks during
the hour before getting behind the wheel increase
your chances of having an accident by seven times.
Si• drinks, and you 're ten times more likely to have
one. And no amount of coffee changes these oddo,
Every hol iday season . traffi c accidents increase

by 25%. And jol ly QOOd fellows are !he major reason
'":n

if vn u··.-·' h:tr'

fr. '''

.! .

· L-

let a fr iend drive you

horne. Or take a taxi. Now you've probably heard all
this before. And your new car dealer

hopes 'that you 'll be around to hear it
agam next year.

......,

;~~'\
!
1 !
\

I

I

..

:

·..•••rllo•'•

Dealers d isplaying this seal subscribe Ia lhe NAOA
Code of Bu siness Pra ctiCes. Addre ss correspondence to Consume r
Relal 1ons Sen.1 ce. 2000 ' K"" Slreel N.W., Wasl') lngt on. D.C. 20006

National Automobile Dealers Association

One in a seri('s preser,ted by N.A.O .A., The O:~ily Senfinel

and the Tri -County Automobile Dealers Assoc .

�I

,.

"

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., llee. 20,1971

I

•

By JOE CARNICELLI
UPI Sports Writer
The National Football Lea·
gue's regular season windup
proved to be a day of glory for
Stanford alumni, both old and
young .
· John Brodie, Stanford '56,
threw three touchdow n passes
and ran for the decisive score
as the San Francisco Forty
Niners captured the National
Conference Western Divison
title with a 31-27 victory over
the Detroit Lions. San Francis·
co needed the victory since Los
Angeles had beaten Pittsburgh
earlier 23-14 and the Rams
would have taken the crown if
the Forty Niners had faltered .
And on the East Coast, two
members of Stanford's class of
'70 -Jim Plunkett and Randy
Va taha -combined their talents to lead the New England
Patriots to a stunning 21-17
upset of the Baltimore Colts.
Plunkett threw two TD passes
to Vataha , the second an II&amp;.
yard play -as the Patriots
Wppied the Colts from the AFL
Eastern Division title.
The Colt loss, combined with
Miami's 2Hlrout of Green Bay ,
gave the Dolphins the Eastern
title and dropped the Colts to
second, though Baltimore still
qualifies for the playoffs as
best second place team.
Playoff Lineup
The playoff picture shapes up
this way:
In the National Conference ,
Minnesota, the Central winner,

. Make 49 payments, SOc
to $10.00 and we make
the

50TH

The Athens County
Savings &amp; loan Co.

296 Second St .
Pomeroy, Ohio

Nlember Federal Home Loan

Bank
Member Federal Savings &amp;
Loan Insurance Corp . All
accounfs insured up to

$20,000.00.

plays host to Dallas, which
wraped up the Eastern ~rown
Saturday with a 31-12 triumph
over St. Louis, on Christmas
Day. The Vikings are early
three-point favorites .
And Washington. the "wild
card" team with the best
second-place finish in the NFC,
is at San Francisco Sunday,
with the Forty Niners an early
line four-point choice.

In the AFC, Miami is at
Kansas City Christmas Day,
with the Chiefs a four-point
pick, and Cleveland plays host
to Baltimore Sunday, with. the
Colts favored by four .
In other NFL action Sunday,
Cleveland upset Washington 2013, Philadelphia routed the New
York Giants 41·28, AUanta
edged New Orleans 24-20,
Minnesota downed Chicago '1:1·

Pro Standings
NBA Standings
By United Press International
Atlanti!: Conference

Eastern Division
W. L. Pet.
Boston
22 12 .674
New York
18 13 .581
Philade:phia 14 19 .424
Buffalo
12 19 . .387
Central Division
W. L. Pet.
Baltimore
12 20 .375
Cleveland
11 23 .324
Atlanta
10 22 .312
Cin cin nati

10

22

GB

.312

2112
/ 1/ 2
81/ 2
GB
2
2
2

Western Conference
Midwest Division

Mrlwaukee
Ch1cago

Phoenix
De troit

W. L. Pet. GB
30 4 .882

Final NFL Standings
By United Press lnternotional
Americ:an Conference
East
W. L. T. Pet.
x-Miami
10 3 1 .769
V-Ba l timore
10 4 0 .714
NY Jets
6 8 0 .429
New England
6 8 0 .429
Buffalo
1 13 0 .071
Central
x-Cieveland
Pittsburgh
Houston
Cincinnati

Pacific Division
W. L. Pet. GB

Allen~

W. L.

10 3
8 4
6 8
4 9

WASHINGTON (UPI )-From
listening to the dressing room
comments of coaches George
Allen and Nick Skorich Sunday,
you'd scarcely believe it's the
season
to be jolly or that their
T. Pet.
1 .769 teams were in the pro football
2 .667
0 .429
1 .JOB

National Conference

East
W. L. T. Pel.
Los Angeles
31 3 .912 ...
•·Dallas
11 J 0 .786
Seattle
22 14 .611 10
9 4 1 .692
V-Washington
Golden State 18 16 .529 13
Philadelphia
6
7 1 .462
1
Houston
12 23 .3 43 19 12
St.
Louis
4
9 I .308
Port land
8 25 .242 22'/'
NY Giants
4 10 0 .286
Sunday 's Results
Central
M ilwaukee 111 Baltimore 96
W. L. T. Pel.
Los Angeles 154 Phila 132
x-M
innesota
11 3 0 .786
Atlanta 101 Cincinnati 99
Detroit
7.61.538
Chicago 119 Cleveland 101
Chicago
6 8 0 .429
Portland 114 Detroit 113
Green Bay
4 8 2 .333
Seattle 130 Phoenix 127 loll
West
(only games scheduled)
W. L. T. Pel.
Monday's Games
x.San Fran
9 5 o .643
No Games Today
LosAngeles
a 5 1 .615
Atlanta
7 6 1 .538
A.BA Standings
New Orleans
4 8 2 .J3J
By United Press International •·Clinched division title
East
y-Ciinche1 •layoff spot
W. L. Pel. GB
Saturday's Results
Kentucky
23 8 .742 ... Dallas J1 St. Louis 12
Virginia
21 14 .600 4
(Only game scheduled)
Pittsburgh
16 20 .444 9 1/2
Sunday's Results
Flor idians
IS 19 .441 9112 Atlanta 20 New Orleans 20
New York
14 18 .437 9112 Kansas City 22 Buffalo 9
Carolina
12 21 .364 12
NY Jets 35 Cincinnati 21
West
Cleveland 20 Washington 13
W. L. Pet. GB San Franci sco 31 Detroit 27
Utah
23 9 .719 ... Mia mi 27 Green Bay 6
Indiana
19 13 .594 4
Los Angeles 23 Pittsburgh 14
Memphis
14 18 .437 9
Minnesota 27 Chicago 10
1
Denver
12 19 .387 10 / 2 New England 21 Baltimore 17
Da llas
12 22 .353 12
Oakland 21 Denver 13
Sunday's Results
Philadelphia 41 NY Giants 28
Dallas 137 Pittsburgh 121
Houston 49 San Diego 33
(only game scheduled)
!Only game scheduled)
No Games Today
Saturday's Playoff Gomes
Dallas at Minnesota
Miami at Kansas City
SABRES CUT SQUAD
Sunday's Playoff Games
BUFFALO, N.Y. (UPI )- Baltimore at Cleveland
The Buffalo Sabres have sent Washington at San Francisco
left winger Butch Deadmarsh
NHL Standings
and defenseman Paul TerBy United Press lnternotional
bench to their minor league
East
affiliates. Terbench was
W. L. T. Pis.
21 5 6 All
returned to Salt I:.ake City of New York
21 6 3 45
the Western Hockey League . !~~?,neal
19 4 7 45
and Deadmarsh was sent back Toronto
15 9 8 J7
10 16 6 26
Cincinnati of the American Detroit
8 20 4 20
League.·
Vancouver
Buffalo
721620
West
W, L. T. Pis.
Chicago
23 7 3 49
Minnesota
19 9 4 42
California
10 16 7 27
Philadelphia
10 16 5 25
Pittsburgh
10 18 5 25
St. Louis
9 19 5 23
Los Angeles
7 2J 1 15
Sundoya Results
California J Montreal 3
Toronto 4 Philadelphia 0
New York 1 Minnesota 1
Boston 2 PIttsburgh 2
Buffalo 5 Vancouver 1
· Chicago 2 St. Louis 0
!Only games scheduled)
No Games Today .

.:ookie, hit Vataha with the liByard bomb on a third.and-11
situation on the New England
12 and caught the Colt.s
completely by surprise. "As I
walked up to the line, I thought,
damn, what did I do," said
Plunkett. "But then I figured if
he was covered I could throw it

away."
Vataha raced past rookie
cornerback Rex Kern and set a
club reception record with 51.
The 1,000.Yard Club
Larry Csonka and .Jim Klick
drove over for one-yard TDs in
the third period to help Miami
over Green Bay and give the
Dolphins the Eastern title.
Csonka 's 67 yards &amp;ave him
1,051 -the first time a Miami
player has surpassed the 1,000.

yard mark. Green Bay's John
Brockington gained 73 yards to
finisll with 1,099 and break the
rookie record set by Cookie
Gilchrist by three yards.
Duane Thomas' four TDs
Saturday carried the Cowboys
to their sixth straight title.
Thomas scored three times on
three-yard rushes and added a
53-yard run .
Roger WilliamB' 57-yard kick·
off return, an interception by
Coy Bacon and Gene Howard's
fumble recovery set up 13 first
quarter points as the Rams
beat the Steelers to force San
Francisco into a win-{)r.else
situation .
Mike H6well's 118-yard return
with an interception set up a
game-winning TD pass from

championship playoffs.
Allen was noticeably unjolly
over the Washington Redskins'
20-13 loss to the Cleveland
Browns.
"We did our best. We made
too many mistakes. We have

Saturday's High
School Cage Scores
United Press International

Defiance 72 Ottawa·Giandorl

Saturday
Akron Buchtel 56 Cuyahoga
Falls 54
Akron East 70 Akron Hobal 39
Chamberlin 60 Ravenna 44
Barberton 72 Akron Kenmore

60

39

45

Manchester 102 Norton 100
Nordonia 51 Solon 49
Waterloo 74 Mogadore 61
North Royalton 55 Brunswick

44
Orrville 65 Norwayne 51

Black River 82 New London 57
Streetsboro 84 Crestwood 58
Strasburg 65 Dalton 49
Southeast 77 Kent State 74
Bay Village 66 Medina 65
Triway 86 Waynedale 78
Zane Trace I Ross) IJ
Chillicothe Flaget 68
Paint Valley 83 Hillsboro 76
South Point 72 Chillicothe 59
Newark Catholic 60 Danville A9
lucas 72 East Knox 55
Centerburg 51 New Albany 43
Columbus South 101 Springfield
South 69
Lemone Monroe 109 Columbus

Mohawk 8J
Columbus St. Charles SJ
Columbus Academy 50
Columbus Wehrle 72 Hamilton
Township 53
Greenfield McClain 8J
Columbus Hartley 70
Alexander 79 Nelsonvil le· York
60

Dublin 65 Triad 55
Cincinnati Courter TeCh 79

Cie Benedictine 84 Cle East 66
Cle Glenville 70 Cle John Hay
62
Cie John Adams 57 Cie J F K 49
Beachwood 69 Fairport Harbor
Columbia 83 Cleve Lutheran
West 61
Sandusky 63 Elyria 62
Cleve Max Hays 77 Cleve South

63

Twinsburg 60 Ravenna 44
Cleve East Tech 92 Cleve
Coll inwood 64
Cleve Holy Name 66
Cleve John Marshall60
Brush 53 Normandy 50
Bay Village 65 Medina 55
Cleve Chane! BJ Cleve
Cathedral Latin 69
Richmond Heights 59
Cleve Lutheran East 45
Mar ion 79 Mansfield 67
Cleve St. Ignatius 64 Cleve
West Tech 59
Euclid 71 Lakewood 52
East Cleve Shaw 81 Garfield
Heights 69
Ashtabula Harbor 77 Madison
59
Gi I mour 55 Borromeo 46

Cleve Heights 74 Shaker
Heights 51
North Royalton 55 Brunswick
44

Nordonia 51 Solon 49
Painesville Harvey 79
Ashtabula Edgewood 64
Claymont 77 Wooster 66

no excuses. We lost to a better team," Allen summarized
shortly before sawing off furth·
er post-game questioning by
newsmen.
He declined to comment on
Washington 's first playoff
game against the San Francisco '49ers next Sunday, or his
team's season record of 9+1
which gained them the NF.~'s
wild card spot for the best
second-place finish.
"After losing, I don 't think
· I'm in a good frame of mind
to comment on that," he snapped.
Skorich wasn't in a much
more lovely mood even though
the Browns won their division
and finished the season with a
sixth straight win for a !h'i record. "They made mistakes that
hurt," he commented.
" It came down to turnovers
and the interception by Mike
Howell was the big turning
point - that and the job the
defense did in holding tliem
off."
Skorich, who produced a divi·
sion winner in his first year as
head coach in Cleveland, said
he had no particular feeling
about facing the Baltimore
Colts in Cleveland Sunday instead of the Miami Dolphins.
The interception he referred
wcame in the fourth quarter,
when Howell raced an inter·
ception 68 yards from his own
six to the Redskin 26 and· set

+++

Oral Roberts, who has a
darned·good basketball team
himself at Oral Roberts U.,
has a Christmas special at 7
p.m.. Ch. 7. If you miss It then,
catch it Wednesday at 8 p.m.,
Ch. 6, or Thursday at 9 p.m.,
Ch. 2.

- __-

¢

Superiors Budget

lb.
WELKER'S

Looking for a piano
tuner ·who strikes
the right ehord?

+++

Ch . 11 has two Christmas

FRYERS
;

/1
,.

SUPERIORS
ASSORTED

LUNCH MEATS
lb:

79~

lb. 39~

59¢

-quart

1

/z gal.

53~

gal.

~ ~ h•pected

Closed Christmas Eve 6 p.m.

99~

SUPER MARKET • Open

Yellow
Pages

ALL DRAWINGS
HELD IN THE
POMEROY
PARKING LOT

9 to 10 • Sun. 0 to 10

PHONE: 992·3480

Corner Mill and Second Sts.

"We Reserve The R.ght To Limi t Ouont iti?..::

SOFT DRINKS SALE!

FAYGO POP
ORANGE, STRAWBERRY, ROOT BEER

+++

Shasta

ICosh &amp; Corry

·Dudley's Florist

cans

8
PAK

" Mr . Soft
Ford, 4 ·~ . m .,
Street," 11 :30
10.

+++

$1
6
16 oz.

16 oz. bots.

e

QT. BOTTLES
EACH

¢

FRISKIES
CAT FOOD

COKE

Pomeroy Stores
Open Evenings

PIES

WHIPPED TOPPING

1
oo
3containeiS .

' suranct

· ro oz.

Clttond Roolty
Smllll Nelson Auto Slits
The Dilly Sentinel
WMPO Rodfo
Athena Mtnenger
Formers
Bank
&amp;
S..vlngs
Pomeroy Notlonol Bank
Athens Co. Sovlngs &amp;
Loon, (Meigs Bronch)

WAGON

10~

Hoffman House

Edon Brand

Dill Pickles

Toilet Tissue

49¢

39~

4 roll
pkg.

SHERBET

BANQUET

Holiday Delight!

Orange, Lime, Rainbow

1h gal.

PIE SHEUS
l
·rAK

29~

49~

PURITY

SEALTEST ICE CREAM
SA"DWICHES
6 pak 49~

APPLES
RED DELICIOUS
GOLDEN DELICIOUS

8

THURSDAY ONLY SALE!
r

BROWN &amp; SERVE

ROLLS
For The Holiday!

Coconuts

3

FOR

•1

RC COLA

8=~ 69~
11111111
Ula

IIAIT SIZE

.P,E 69~

LB.
LIMI T
1 PE.R F.-.MilY

French's SunQcu
No pur chase is necessarY to
recei ve free tickets at par ·
licipatlng stores.

89¢

Sa)J LAD

EACH
RICH'S

4 lb. bag

FOR DESSERT

MINCE
PUMPKIN

These participating merchants are .
now giving freP. tickets:
Pomeroy Flower Shop
The Fabric Shop
Seors Cotalog Store
Hartley's Shoes
K&amp;C Jewelers
(CONTRIBUTORS)
Pomeroy Ben Franklin
Dovls·Wirner ln .
lo'a's Dress Shop

Ocean FISh
Aawr

CHUCK

quart

Stoti.On

MARK V
STORE

Free Parking All This Week In Pomeroy Parking Lot

GOOD
ONLY

AT

MARK v
STORE
l

WITH THII COU,ON

WITMOUT

.m••ot 12·26-71
COUPON
UMIT i COUtlooti Nli PU

,,

$1

FRISKIES

GUM

. . . . . . . . . . 5 ~~~ 1.00
Cola, Root Beer, Gingerale and
Orange. Mix or Match.
28 oz.

3FOR

llffiE

1 lb.
box

s};ou:,;o

BANQUET FROZEN

REG. 49'
SPECIAL

SPECIAL OFFER

:~~tw~~

Serving : Gallipolis,
Middleport &amp; Pomeroy, 0 .,
&amp;Mason Co., W. Vo.

BABY PANTS

WRIGLEY'S
Speafillint, Double

Gingerale, Lemon-Ume,
Whiskey Sour &amp;Tom Collins Mix

MIDOLEPORT, 0._

GERBER'S VINYL

LARGE 14 OZ.
BAG, ONLY

5
1
00
BOTTLES.......................... OOHies •

3-10-17-24

Dai~

We Accept Federal Food Stumps

::.. Goodies

THROW-AWAY

·GIVEN AWAY EACH FRIDAY

CLOSED
CHRISTMAS DAY

POTATO CHIPS

POINSETTIAS
10% off

Moore's Store
Pomeroy Cement Block
J&amp; R Sports Shop
trow's Steok House
Swisher &amp; Lohse Drugs
Chapman's Shoes
Blue &amp; Grey Reslourant
Goenler's Jewelry .
Stllfler's Dopt. Store
Marguerite's Shoe Store
Pomeroy Londmork
Kroger Store
Elberltlds · Dopt. Store
The L&amp;Z Shop
Ebersboch Hordwore
New York ClotHing
House
Pomeroy Motor Co.
G&amp;J Auto Pll'rts
Welker's Ashlond
Station

FRESH OYSTERS

Special! SCOT lAD

I

•

Superilo

•

WELKER'S
FRESH DRESSED
STEWING

SEALTEST MILK

BY FAIRMONT

The teams battled just about
even until the Chapa outaccred
the Condors 18-11 early in the
third period to go ahead to
stay,
George carter led the Condors in scoring with 32 points.
The loss left the Condors in a
three-way tie for third place in
the ABA East with Virginia
and the Floridlalll, 9~ pmes
behind the league-leading Kentucky Colonela and 5~ pmes
behind secood-place Virgnla.
In the ABA West, Ulah le.ds
Indiana by 4 games with Dllllaa
in last place 12 games back.
There were no games sclleduled for tonight.

Nelson's Drugs

AND

lb. ss~

SCOt L3d

Gin CERTIFICATES

DUCKS

CHICKENS

himself.

p.m.

FRESH DRESSED
'

(seen at lla .m. and 10:30 p.m.
Tuesday on Ch. 9) .

TUESDAY: Ch. 9 continues
And football on Monday to del iver Christmas goodies,
nights is still around . See with " Santa and Christmas/'
Arkansas "VS . Tennessee 1:30 p.m.: "The Night Before
(which pounded proud Penn Christmas," 2 p.m. ; and the
State In Its finale) in the Houle Consort with a program
Liberty Bowl , 9 p.m., Ch . 12. of ancient Christmas music, 3

*
*
*
VALUABLE MERDiANDISE

•

\ '·,

mas at Boys Town," 9 p.m.

MOVIES :
Touch," Glenn
and " Mys!ery
p.m., both Ch .

lb.

lb.

outrebounded the Condors 52-29
and made 62.5 of their field
goal attempta.
Jones finished the evening
with 33 points while teammate
Donny Freeman hit for 30

PITTSBURGH (UP!) Steve Jones of the AHA's
Dallas Chaparral is noted for a
high, arching jump shot.
Sunday night against the
Pittsburgh Condors Jones hit
16 out of 18 from the floor, all
but one of them from 15 to 20
feet, to lead the Chaps to a 137·
121 vicwry. He caused Coodor
coach Mark Binstein to exclaim:
"Jones was unbelievable tonight. '!bat was the greatest
perfonnance I've ever seen by
any guard in any league.
Jones' shots were 80 high they
had ice on them."
The game, which was the
only coolest in the league
Sunday night, marked the
fourth loss in a row for the
Condors after winning five
straight.
Beinstein had nothing but
praise for the Chaps, who

BUTTERBALLS

Fresh, Mealy Pork

Jones Hits From Afar,
Chaps Win, 137 To 121

+ ++

Given Away Dec. 24 ·

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

Superiors Choice Lean Beef

Sherk and the second effort
ended on the Cleveland eight
yard line when a fourth-down
pass by Kilmer was broken up
by John Garlington.
It was the 12th straight victory for the Browns over Wash·
ington teams, dating back to
1962.

up the winning touchdown.
Five plays later Bill Nelsen
shot a four-yard scoring pass to
reserve end Chip Glass to snap
a· 13-13 tie.
The Redskins threatened
twice more but one drtve was
halted on an interception of a
Bill Kibner pass by Jerry

FOOD BUYS "~
69¢
Ground Beef•••••••••• !b:
7
9
¢
Ground Chuck ••.•••••~~
3
$1
Sliced Bacon.........
5
$1
Neck Bones...........
3
9
¢
Sliced Bologna•.••••• ~·
Merry
Aii"'M~~arWiene.s ....~· 59~ Christmas!
From ·usDA Choice Beef

Sem i;.Boneless
Finest Flavor
Tender
Delicious

Ohio State basketball Is in specials worth a loolc : " An
the spotlight again ton ight, American Chrisimas," at 8
taking on Brown, about whose p.m. lsee11 Tuesday at 9:30
record I know nothing . 7: JO p.m. and Wednesday ot 10:30
p.m ., Ch . 4.
a.m. on Ch. 91. and " Christ.

'500 CASH ·

~~'
ro: ..c/·

SUPERIORS

CALL POINTVIEW : 992 · 2505

.

In a world looking for answers
maybe God-is the place to start.
God is hope. God is now.

Bill Nelsen to Chip Glass as the the game's only TO u he ran
Browns beat Washington and 211 . yards with an intercepted
Pete Liske threw three TO paSS ln the Chiefs' triwnph
passes as the Eagles put on over Buffalo, the Bllls' 13th lou
their biggest offensive show of in 14games.
Ken Houston set two records
the season in routing the
by returning a pair of
Giant.s.
intercepUons for touchdOWllll
Aerial Attack
Bob Berry tlirew a 22-yard within 34 seconds in the Oilers'
TO pass to Ken Burrow with 34 upset of San Diego. Houston's
seconds left as Atlanta downed TDs gave him a record 10 for
the Saints and Bob Lee threw a hls career and four this 1Je8son.
Pete Banaszak ran two yards
pair of scoring passes to Bob
Grim in the Vikings' victory for the deciding score in
Oakland's victory over the
over the Bears.
Joe Namath threw two Broncos as the Raiders' Fred
touchdown passes, including a Biletnikoff clinched the pass
74-yarder wDon Maynard and receifing title and Denver's
little-used Clifford McClain Floyd Uttle took the AFC
streaked 6J yards for another rushing championshlp for the
score as the Jets bombed second straight year.
Cincinnati, l!obby Bell provided

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

GIVE-AWAY

HY?

.,:;·

Skorich Unjolly After Tilt

MERCHANTS
GOLD STAR CHRISTMAS

.All m1n grappl1 with th1 q~tstions ...
'Why poouty i&gt;t a la&gt;td of pi1Hty1 'Why lontliHtss
iH a world that would jo~n haHdsl 'Why war wbtH
tht tmpuls1 of thr hrart is lo loon Jbr aching
chasm hetwew the real and thr ideal, wrrywhm
proookts tht qutstioH . . .

'·1'.

HALF OR WHOLE

Cincinnati Tall 61 River View 63 Dover 51
Batavia 71 Macon Eastern 68 Northwestern 50 Hiland 40
Waynesville 65 Blanchester 6J Garaway 78 Zanesville Rose·
Lebanon 78 Goshen 54
crans 60
Little Miami 69 Clinton Massie Indian Valley South 78
58
Conotton Valley 41
Middletown 92 Richmond Sheridan 74 Tri·Valley 62
(ind.l 87
Canton Timken 59 New
Bellbrook 85 Wilmington 77
Philadelphia 52
Oak Hills IS Anderson 73
Canton lincoln 61 Steubenville
Flnnetown 92 Mount Healthy 64 52
Colerain 72 Norwood 63
Massillon 73 Akron Firestone
lockland 65 Taylor 62 (ot)
50
North College Hill 64 St. Louisville 76 Jackson 60
Bernard 52
North Canton Hoover 59
Reading 80 Forest Park 64
Marllngton 52
Harrison 60 Wyoming 55
Minerva 71 West Branch 48
Cincinnati Elder 78
Canton Lehman 61 Sandy
Cincinnati Walnut Hills 54 Valley 49
Mariemont 61 Amelia 60
Tuslaw 57 East Canton 34
Cincinnati McNicholas 75
Northwes1 69 Tuscarawas
New Richmond 54 Valley 64
Hamilton Garfield 72
Middletown 92 Richmond
Cincinnati Woodward 62 (Ind .) 87
Sycamore 74 Cincinnati Cayton Alter 8J Middletown
Moeller 69
Fenwick 57
New Lexington 59 West Valley Forge 68 Parma 60
AHL Standings
By United Press International Musklngum 54
Elyria Catholic 67 Mldview 65
Maysville 77 Philo 76 lot)
East
Bloomfield 80 Baptist Christian
W. L. T. Pis. Fort Frye 70 Warren Local 49 61
Boston
234349 Perry Miller 72 Vinton County
Nova Scotia
14 10 8 36 68
Springfield
1111729 Hebron Lakewood 63 Licking
11 17 4 26 Valley 57
Rochester
Providence
8 17 7 23 Portsmouth 84 Ironton 57
Upper Arlington 66 Cols .
West
W. l . T. Pis. Marion Franklin 51
Baltimore
16 13 4 36 Beallsville 77 Woodsfield 69
Hershey
15 8 5 35 New Concord Glenn 54 CrooksCleveland
13 11 6 32 ville 52
Richmond
12 15 5 29 Zane Trace (Guernsey) 74
Cincinnati
10 14 8 28 Shenandoah 62
Tidewater
7 20 3 17 Edon 86 Edgerton 71
Montpelier 57 Pettisville S6
Sunday's Results
Ayersvllle 53 Stryker 40
Nova Scotia 4 Cincinnati 4
North Central 59 Hicksville 55
Boston 5 Providence 2
Patrick Henry 87 Fairview 69
Hershey 2 Richmond 2
Archbold
105 Van Wert 89
Rochester 4 Springfield 2
Della 72 Wauseon 46
Baltimore 5 Tidewater 4

w

'

pset

Colts

';.i
."},_'

&gt;.

W. L. T. Pet.
9 s 0 .643
6 8 0 A29
4 9 1 .308
4 10 0 .286

West

x.KansasCity
Oakland
21 10 .677 71/2
• Ul 15 .545 11112 San 01ego
12 21 .364 17 112 Denver

10, the New York Jets-defeated
Cincinnati 36-21, Kansas City
whipped Buffalo 22-9, Houston
outlasted San Diego 49-33 and
Oakland beat Denver 2l-!3.
Brodie Jobu Elite Group
Brodie threw TD passes of 12
yards to Dick Witcher, 10 to
Ken Willard and 30 to Gene
Washington to become only the
seventh quarterback in NFL
history to throw more than 200
TO passes. He ran 10 yards for
the final TD.
The Forty Niners' final
march came after Detroit
quarterback Greg Landry was
foiled in a fourth-and-{)ne
attempt at the San Francisco
40.
Plunkett, whose two TD
passes set a record for an NFL

..

;:a;l;i-0,

/

�I

,.

"

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., llee. 20,1971

I

•

By JOE CARNICELLI
UPI Sports Writer
The National Football Lea·
gue's regular season windup
proved to be a day of glory for
Stanford alumni, both old and
young .
· John Brodie, Stanford '56,
threw three touchdow n passes
and ran for the decisive score
as the San Francisco Forty
Niners captured the National
Conference Western Divison
title with a 31-27 victory over
the Detroit Lions. San Francis·
co needed the victory since Los
Angeles had beaten Pittsburgh
earlier 23-14 and the Rams
would have taken the crown if
the Forty Niners had faltered .
And on the East Coast, two
members of Stanford's class of
'70 -Jim Plunkett and Randy
Va taha -combined their talents to lead the New England
Patriots to a stunning 21-17
upset of the Baltimore Colts.
Plunkett threw two TD passes
to Vataha , the second an II&amp;.
yard play -as the Patriots
Wppied the Colts from the AFL
Eastern Division title.
The Colt loss, combined with
Miami's 2Hlrout of Green Bay ,
gave the Dolphins the Eastern
title and dropped the Colts to
second, though Baltimore still
qualifies for the playoffs as
best second place team.
Playoff Lineup
The playoff picture shapes up
this way:
In the National Conference ,
Minnesota, the Central winner,

. Make 49 payments, SOc
to $10.00 and we make
the

50TH

The Athens County
Savings &amp; loan Co.

296 Second St .
Pomeroy, Ohio

Nlember Federal Home Loan

Bank
Member Federal Savings &amp;
Loan Insurance Corp . All
accounfs insured up to

$20,000.00.

plays host to Dallas, which
wraped up the Eastern ~rown
Saturday with a 31-12 triumph
over St. Louis, on Christmas
Day. The Vikings are early
three-point favorites .
And Washington. the "wild
card" team with the best
second-place finish in the NFC,
is at San Francisco Sunday,
with the Forty Niners an early
line four-point choice.

In the AFC, Miami is at
Kansas City Christmas Day,
with the Chiefs a four-point
pick, and Cleveland plays host
to Baltimore Sunday, with. the
Colts favored by four .
In other NFL action Sunday,
Cleveland upset Washington 2013, Philadelphia routed the New
York Giants 41·28, AUanta
edged New Orleans 24-20,
Minnesota downed Chicago '1:1·

Pro Standings
NBA Standings
By United Press International
Atlanti!: Conference

Eastern Division
W. L. Pet.
Boston
22 12 .674
New York
18 13 .581
Philade:phia 14 19 .424
Buffalo
12 19 . .387
Central Division
W. L. Pet.
Baltimore
12 20 .375
Cleveland
11 23 .324
Atlanta
10 22 .312
Cin cin nati

10

22

GB

.312

2112
/ 1/ 2
81/ 2
GB
2
2
2

Western Conference
Midwest Division

Mrlwaukee
Ch1cago

Phoenix
De troit

W. L. Pet. GB
30 4 .882

Final NFL Standings
By United Press lnternotional
Americ:an Conference
East
W. L. T. Pet.
x-Miami
10 3 1 .769
V-Ba l timore
10 4 0 .714
NY Jets
6 8 0 .429
New England
6 8 0 .429
Buffalo
1 13 0 .071
Central
x-Cieveland
Pittsburgh
Houston
Cincinnati

Pacific Division
W. L. Pet. GB

Allen~

W. L.

10 3
8 4
6 8
4 9

WASHINGTON (UPI )-From
listening to the dressing room
comments of coaches George
Allen and Nick Skorich Sunday,
you'd scarcely believe it's the
season
to be jolly or that their
T. Pet.
1 .769 teams were in the pro football
2 .667
0 .429
1 .JOB

National Conference

East
W. L. T. Pel.
Los Angeles
31 3 .912 ...
•·Dallas
11 J 0 .786
Seattle
22 14 .611 10
9 4 1 .692
V-Washington
Golden State 18 16 .529 13
Philadelphia
6
7 1 .462
1
Houston
12 23 .3 43 19 12
St.
Louis
4
9 I .308
Port land
8 25 .242 22'/'
NY Giants
4 10 0 .286
Sunday 's Results
Central
M ilwaukee 111 Baltimore 96
W. L. T. Pel.
Los Angeles 154 Phila 132
x-M
innesota
11 3 0 .786
Atlanta 101 Cincinnati 99
Detroit
7.61.538
Chicago 119 Cleveland 101
Chicago
6 8 0 .429
Portland 114 Detroit 113
Green Bay
4 8 2 .333
Seattle 130 Phoenix 127 loll
West
(only games scheduled)
W. L. T. Pel.
Monday's Games
x.San Fran
9 5 o .643
No Games Today
LosAngeles
a 5 1 .615
Atlanta
7 6 1 .538
A.BA Standings
New Orleans
4 8 2 .J3J
By United Press International •·Clinched division title
East
y-Ciinche1 •layoff spot
W. L. Pel. GB
Saturday's Results
Kentucky
23 8 .742 ... Dallas J1 St. Louis 12
Virginia
21 14 .600 4
(Only game scheduled)
Pittsburgh
16 20 .444 9 1/2
Sunday's Results
Flor idians
IS 19 .441 9112 Atlanta 20 New Orleans 20
New York
14 18 .437 9112 Kansas City 22 Buffalo 9
Carolina
12 21 .364 12
NY Jets 35 Cincinnati 21
West
Cleveland 20 Washington 13
W. L. Pet. GB San Franci sco 31 Detroit 27
Utah
23 9 .719 ... Mia mi 27 Green Bay 6
Indiana
19 13 .594 4
Los Angeles 23 Pittsburgh 14
Memphis
14 18 .437 9
Minnesota 27 Chicago 10
1
Denver
12 19 .387 10 / 2 New England 21 Baltimore 17
Da llas
12 22 .353 12
Oakland 21 Denver 13
Sunday's Results
Philadelphia 41 NY Giants 28
Dallas 137 Pittsburgh 121
Houston 49 San Diego 33
(only game scheduled)
!Only game scheduled)
No Games Today
Saturday's Playoff Gomes
Dallas at Minnesota
Miami at Kansas City
SABRES CUT SQUAD
Sunday's Playoff Games
BUFFALO, N.Y. (UPI )- Baltimore at Cleveland
The Buffalo Sabres have sent Washington at San Francisco
left winger Butch Deadmarsh
NHL Standings
and defenseman Paul TerBy United Press lnternotional
bench to their minor league
East
affiliates. Terbench was
W. L. T. Pis.
21 5 6 All
returned to Salt I:.ake City of New York
21 6 3 45
the Western Hockey League . !~~?,neal
19 4 7 45
and Deadmarsh was sent back Toronto
15 9 8 J7
10 16 6 26
Cincinnati of the American Detroit
8 20 4 20
League.·
Vancouver
Buffalo
721620
West
W, L. T. Pis.
Chicago
23 7 3 49
Minnesota
19 9 4 42
California
10 16 7 27
Philadelphia
10 16 5 25
Pittsburgh
10 18 5 25
St. Louis
9 19 5 23
Los Angeles
7 2J 1 15
Sundoya Results
California J Montreal 3
Toronto 4 Philadelphia 0
New York 1 Minnesota 1
Boston 2 PIttsburgh 2
Buffalo 5 Vancouver 1
· Chicago 2 St. Louis 0
!Only games scheduled)
No Games Today .

.:ookie, hit Vataha with the liByard bomb on a third.and-11
situation on the New England
12 and caught the Colt.s
completely by surprise. "As I
walked up to the line, I thought,
damn, what did I do," said
Plunkett. "But then I figured if
he was covered I could throw it

away."
Vataha raced past rookie
cornerback Rex Kern and set a
club reception record with 51.
The 1,000.Yard Club
Larry Csonka and .Jim Klick
drove over for one-yard TDs in
the third period to help Miami
over Green Bay and give the
Dolphins the Eastern title.
Csonka 's 67 yards &amp;ave him
1,051 -the first time a Miami
player has surpassed the 1,000.

yard mark. Green Bay's John
Brockington gained 73 yards to
finisll with 1,099 and break the
rookie record set by Cookie
Gilchrist by three yards.
Duane Thomas' four TDs
Saturday carried the Cowboys
to their sixth straight title.
Thomas scored three times on
three-yard rushes and added a
53-yard run .
Roger WilliamB' 57-yard kick·
off return, an interception by
Coy Bacon and Gene Howard's
fumble recovery set up 13 first
quarter points as the Rams
beat the Steelers to force San
Francisco into a win-{)r.else
situation .
Mike H6well's 118-yard return
with an interception set up a
game-winning TD pass from

championship playoffs.
Allen was noticeably unjolly
over the Washington Redskins'
20-13 loss to the Cleveland
Browns.
"We did our best. We made
too many mistakes. We have

Saturday's High
School Cage Scores
United Press International

Defiance 72 Ottawa·Giandorl

Saturday
Akron Buchtel 56 Cuyahoga
Falls 54
Akron East 70 Akron Hobal 39
Chamberlin 60 Ravenna 44
Barberton 72 Akron Kenmore

60

39

45

Manchester 102 Norton 100
Nordonia 51 Solon 49
Waterloo 74 Mogadore 61
North Royalton 55 Brunswick

44
Orrville 65 Norwayne 51

Black River 82 New London 57
Streetsboro 84 Crestwood 58
Strasburg 65 Dalton 49
Southeast 77 Kent State 74
Bay Village 66 Medina 65
Triway 86 Waynedale 78
Zane Trace I Ross) IJ
Chillicothe Flaget 68
Paint Valley 83 Hillsboro 76
South Point 72 Chillicothe 59
Newark Catholic 60 Danville A9
lucas 72 East Knox 55
Centerburg 51 New Albany 43
Columbus South 101 Springfield
South 69
Lemone Monroe 109 Columbus

Mohawk 8J
Columbus St. Charles SJ
Columbus Academy 50
Columbus Wehrle 72 Hamilton
Township 53
Greenfield McClain 8J
Columbus Hartley 70
Alexander 79 Nelsonvil le· York
60

Dublin 65 Triad 55
Cincinnati Courter TeCh 79

Cie Benedictine 84 Cle East 66
Cle Glenville 70 Cle John Hay
62
Cie John Adams 57 Cie J F K 49
Beachwood 69 Fairport Harbor
Columbia 83 Cleve Lutheran
West 61
Sandusky 63 Elyria 62
Cleve Max Hays 77 Cleve South

63

Twinsburg 60 Ravenna 44
Cleve East Tech 92 Cleve
Coll inwood 64
Cleve Holy Name 66
Cleve John Marshall60
Brush 53 Normandy 50
Bay Village 65 Medina 55
Cleve Chane! BJ Cleve
Cathedral Latin 69
Richmond Heights 59
Cleve Lutheran East 45
Mar ion 79 Mansfield 67
Cleve St. Ignatius 64 Cleve
West Tech 59
Euclid 71 Lakewood 52
East Cleve Shaw 81 Garfield
Heights 69
Ashtabula Harbor 77 Madison
59
Gi I mour 55 Borromeo 46

Cleve Heights 74 Shaker
Heights 51
North Royalton 55 Brunswick
44

Nordonia 51 Solon 49
Painesville Harvey 79
Ashtabula Edgewood 64
Claymont 77 Wooster 66

no excuses. We lost to a better team," Allen summarized
shortly before sawing off furth·
er post-game questioning by
newsmen.
He declined to comment on
Washington 's first playoff
game against the San Francisco '49ers next Sunday, or his
team's season record of 9+1
which gained them the NF.~'s
wild card spot for the best
second-place finish.
"After losing, I don 't think
· I'm in a good frame of mind
to comment on that," he snapped.
Skorich wasn't in a much
more lovely mood even though
the Browns won their division
and finished the season with a
sixth straight win for a !h'i record. "They made mistakes that
hurt," he commented.
" It came down to turnovers
and the interception by Mike
Howell was the big turning
point - that and the job the
defense did in holding tliem
off."
Skorich, who produced a divi·
sion winner in his first year as
head coach in Cleveland, said
he had no particular feeling
about facing the Baltimore
Colts in Cleveland Sunday instead of the Miami Dolphins.
The interception he referred
wcame in the fourth quarter,
when Howell raced an inter·
ception 68 yards from his own
six to the Redskin 26 and· set

+++

Oral Roberts, who has a
darned·good basketball team
himself at Oral Roberts U.,
has a Christmas special at 7
p.m.. Ch. 7. If you miss It then,
catch it Wednesday at 8 p.m.,
Ch. 6, or Thursday at 9 p.m.,
Ch. 2.

- __-

¢

Superiors Budget

lb.
WELKER'S

Looking for a piano
tuner ·who strikes
the right ehord?

+++

Ch . 11 has two Christmas

FRYERS
;

/1
,.

SUPERIORS
ASSORTED

LUNCH MEATS
lb:

79~

lb. 39~

59¢

-quart

1

/z gal.

53~

gal.

~ ~ h•pected

Closed Christmas Eve 6 p.m.

99~

SUPER MARKET • Open

Yellow
Pages

ALL DRAWINGS
HELD IN THE
POMEROY
PARKING LOT

9 to 10 • Sun. 0 to 10

PHONE: 992·3480

Corner Mill and Second Sts.

"We Reserve The R.ght To Limi t Ouont iti?..::

SOFT DRINKS SALE!

FAYGO POP
ORANGE, STRAWBERRY, ROOT BEER

+++

Shasta

ICosh &amp; Corry

·Dudley's Florist

cans

8
PAK

" Mr . Soft
Ford, 4 ·~ . m .,
Street," 11 :30
10.

+++

$1
6
16 oz.

16 oz. bots.

e

QT. BOTTLES
EACH

¢

FRISKIES
CAT FOOD

COKE

Pomeroy Stores
Open Evenings

PIES

WHIPPED TOPPING

1
oo
3containeiS .

' suranct

· ro oz.

Clttond Roolty
Smllll Nelson Auto Slits
The Dilly Sentinel
WMPO Rodfo
Athena Mtnenger
Formers
Bank
&amp;
S..vlngs
Pomeroy Notlonol Bank
Athens Co. Sovlngs &amp;
Loon, (Meigs Bronch)

WAGON

10~

Hoffman House

Edon Brand

Dill Pickles

Toilet Tissue

49¢

39~

4 roll
pkg.

SHERBET

BANQUET

Holiday Delight!

Orange, Lime, Rainbow

1h gal.

PIE SHEUS
l
·rAK

29~

49~

PURITY

SEALTEST ICE CREAM
SA"DWICHES
6 pak 49~

APPLES
RED DELICIOUS
GOLDEN DELICIOUS

8

THURSDAY ONLY SALE!
r

BROWN &amp; SERVE

ROLLS
For The Holiday!

Coconuts

3

FOR

•1

RC COLA

8=~ 69~
11111111
Ula

IIAIT SIZE

.P,E 69~

LB.
LIMI T
1 PE.R F.-.MilY

French's SunQcu
No pur chase is necessarY to
recei ve free tickets at par ·
licipatlng stores.

89¢

Sa)J LAD

EACH
RICH'S

4 lb. bag

FOR DESSERT

MINCE
PUMPKIN

These participating merchants are .
now giving freP. tickets:
Pomeroy Flower Shop
The Fabric Shop
Seors Cotalog Store
Hartley's Shoes
K&amp;C Jewelers
(CONTRIBUTORS)
Pomeroy Ben Franklin
Dovls·Wirner ln .
lo'a's Dress Shop

Ocean FISh
Aawr

CHUCK

quart

Stoti.On

MARK V
STORE

Free Parking All This Week In Pomeroy Parking Lot

GOOD
ONLY

AT

MARK v
STORE
l

WITH THII COU,ON

WITMOUT

.m••ot 12·26-71
COUPON
UMIT i COUtlooti Nli PU

,,

$1

FRISKIES

GUM

. . . . . . . . . . 5 ~~~ 1.00
Cola, Root Beer, Gingerale and
Orange. Mix or Match.
28 oz.

3FOR

llffiE

1 lb.
box

s};ou:,;o

BANQUET FROZEN

REG. 49'
SPECIAL

SPECIAL OFFER

:~~tw~~

Serving : Gallipolis,
Middleport &amp; Pomeroy, 0 .,
&amp;Mason Co., W. Vo.

BABY PANTS

WRIGLEY'S
Speafillint, Double

Gingerale, Lemon-Ume,
Whiskey Sour &amp;Tom Collins Mix

MIDOLEPORT, 0._

GERBER'S VINYL

LARGE 14 OZ.
BAG, ONLY

5
1
00
BOTTLES.......................... OOHies •

3-10-17-24

Dai~

We Accept Federal Food Stumps

::.. Goodies

THROW-AWAY

·GIVEN AWAY EACH FRIDAY

CLOSED
CHRISTMAS DAY

POTATO CHIPS

POINSETTIAS
10% off

Moore's Store
Pomeroy Cement Block
J&amp; R Sports Shop
trow's Steok House
Swisher &amp; Lohse Drugs
Chapman's Shoes
Blue &amp; Grey Reslourant
Goenler's Jewelry .
Stllfler's Dopt. Store
Marguerite's Shoe Store
Pomeroy Londmork
Kroger Store
Elberltlds · Dopt. Store
The L&amp;Z Shop
Ebersboch Hordwore
New York ClotHing
House
Pomeroy Motor Co.
G&amp;J Auto Pll'rts
Welker's Ashlond
Station

FRESH OYSTERS

Special! SCOT lAD

I

•

Superilo

•

WELKER'S
FRESH DRESSED
STEWING

SEALTEST MILK

BY FAIRMONT

The teams battled just about
even until the Chapa outaccred
the Condors 18-11 early in the
third period to go ahead to
stay,
George carter led the Condors in scoring with 32 points.
The loss left the Condors in a
three-way tie for third place in
the ABA East with Virginia
and the Floridlalll, 9~ pmes
behind the league-leading Kentucky Colonela and 5~ pmes
behind secood-place Virgnla.
In the ABA West, Ulah le.ds
Indiana by 4 games with Dllllaa
in last place 12 games back.
There were no games sclleduled for tonight.

Nelson's Drugs

AND

lb. ss~

SCOt L3d

Gin CERTIFICATES

DUCKS

CHICKENS

himself.

p.m.

FRESH DRESSED
'

(seen at lla .m. and 10:30 p.m.
Tuesday on Ch. 9) .

TUESDAY: Ch. 9 continues
And football on Monday to del iver Christmas goodies,
nights is still around . See with " Santa and Christmas/'
Arkansas "VS . Tennessee 1:30 p.m.: "The Night Before
(which pounded proud Penn Christmas," 2 p.m. ; and the
State In Its finale) in the Houle Consort with a program
Liberty Bowl , 9 p.m., Ch . 12. of ancient Christmas music, 3

*
*
*
VALUABLE MERDiANDISE

•

\ '·,

mas at Boys Town," 9 p.m.

MOVIES :
Touch," Glenn
and " Mys!ery
p.m., both Ch .

lb.

lb.

outrebounded the Condors 52-29
and made 62.5 of their field
goal attempta.
Jones finished the evening
with 33 points while teammate
Donny Freeman hit for 30

PITTSBURGH (UP!) Steve Jones of the AHA's
Dallas Chaparral is noted for a
high, arching jump shot.
Sunday night against the
Pittsburgh Condors Jones hit
16 out of 18 from the floor, all
but one of them from 15 to 20
feet, to lead the Chaps to a 137·
121 vicwry. He caused Coodor
coach Mark Binstein to exclaim:
"Jones was unbelievable tonight. '!bat was the greatest
perfonnance I've ever seen by
any guard in any league.
Jones' shots were 80 high they
had ice on them."
The game, which was the
only coolest in the league
Sunday night, marked the
fourth loss in a row for the
Condors after winning five
straight.
Beinstein had nothing but
praise for the Chaps, who

BUTTERBALLS

Fresh, Mealy Pork

Jones Hits From Afar,
Chaps Win, 137 To 121

+ ++

Given Away Dec. 24 ·

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

Superiors Choice Lean Beef

Sherk and the second effort
ended on the Cleveland eight
yard line when a fourth-down
pass by Kilmer was broken up
by John Garlington.
It was the 12th straight victory for the Browns over Wash·
ington teams, dating back to
1962.

up the winning touchdown.
Five plays later Bill Nelsen
shot a four-yard scoring pass to
reserve end Chip Glass to snap
a· 13-13 tie.
The Redskins threatened
twice more but one drtve was
halted on an interception of a
Bill Kibner pass by Jerry

FOOD BUYS "~
69¢
Ground Beef•••••••••• !b:
7
9
¢
Ground Chuck ••.•••••~~
3
$1
Sliced Bacon.........
5
$1
Neck Bones...........
3
9
¢
Sliced Bologna•.••••• ~·
Merry
Aii"'M~~arWiene.s ....~· 59~ Christmas!
From ·usDA Choice Beef

Sem i;.Boneless
Finest Flavor
Tender
Delicious

Ohio State basketball Is in specials worth a loolc : " An
the spotlight again ton ight, American Chrisimas," at 8
taking on Brown, about whose p.m. lsee11 Tuesday at 9:30
record I know nothing . 7: JO p.m. and Wednesday ot 10:30
p.m ., Ch . 4.
a.m. on Ch. 91. and " Christ.

'500 CASH ·

~~'
ro: ..c/·

SUPERIORS

CALL POINTVIEW : 992 · 2505

.

In a world looking for answers
maybe God-is the place to start.
God is hope. God is now.

Bill Nelsen to Chip Glass as the the game's only TO u he ran
Browns beat Washington and 211 . yards with an intercepted
Pete Liske threw three TO paSS ln the Chiefs' triwnph
passes as the Eagles put on over Buffalo, the Bllls' 13th lou
their biggest offensive show of in 14games.
Ken Houston set two records
the season in routing the
by returning a pair of
Giant.s.
intercepUons for touchdOWllll
Aerial Attack
Bob Berry tlirew a 22-yard within 34 seconds in the Oilers'
TO pass to Ken Burrow with 34 upset of San Diego. Houston's
seconds left as Atlanta downed TDs gave him a record 10 for
the Saints and Bob Lee threw a hls career and four this 1Je8son.
Pete Banaszak ran two yards
pair of scoring passes to Bob
Grim in the Vikings' victory for the deciding score in
Oakland's victory over the
over the Bears.
Joe Namath threw two Broncos as the Raiders' Fred
touchdown passes, including a Biletnikoff clinched the pass
74-yarder wDon Maynard and receifing title and Denver's
little-used Clifford McClain Floyd Uttle took the AFC
streaked 6J yards for another rushing championshlp for the
score as the Jets bombed second straight year.
Cincinnati, l!obby Bell provided

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

GIVE-AWAY

HY?

.,:;·

Skorich Unjolly After Tilt

MERCHANTS
GOLD STAR CHRISTMAS

.All m1n grappl1 with th1 q~tstions ...
'Why poouty i&gt;t a la&gt;td of pi1Hty1 'Why lontliHtss
iH a world that would jo~n haHdsl 'Why war wbtH
tht tmpuls1 of thr hrart is lo loon Jbr aching
chasm hetwew the real and thr ideal, wrrywhm
proookts tht qutstioH . . .

'·1'.

HALF OR WHOLE

Cincinnati Tall 61 River View 63 Dover 51
Batavia 71 Macon Eastern 68 Northwestern 50 Hiland 40
Waynesville 65 Blanchester 6J Garaway 78 Zanesville Rose·
Lebanon 78 Goshen 54
crans 60
Little Miami 69 Clinton Massie Indian Valley South 78
58
Conotton Valley 41
Middletown 92 Richmond Sheridan 74 Tri·Valley 62
(ind.l 87
Canton Timken 59 New
Bellbrook 85 Wilmington 77
Philadelphia 52
Oak Hills IS Anderson 73
Canton lincoln 61 Steubenville
Flnnetown 92 Mount Healthy 64 52
Colerain 72 Norwood 63
Massillon 73 Akron Firestone
lockland 65 Taylor 62 (ot)
50
North College Hill 64 St. Louisville 76 Jackson 60
Bernard 52
North Canton Hoover 59
Reading 80 Forest Park 64
Marllngton 52
Harrison 60 Wyoming 55
Minerva 71 West Branch 48
Cincinnati Elder 78
Canton Lehman 61 Sandy
Cincinnati Walnut Hills 54 Valley 49
Mariemont 61 Amelia 60
Tuslaw 57 East Canton 34
Cincinnati McNicholas 75
Northwes1 69 Tuscarawas
New Richmond 54 Valley 64
Hamilton Garfield 72
Middletown 92 Richmond
Cincinnati Woodward 62 (Ind .) 87
Sycamore 74 Cincinnati Cayton Alter 8J Middletown
Moeller 69
Fenwick 57
New Lexington 59 West Valley Forge 68 Parma 60
AHL Standings
By United Press International Musklngum 54
Elyria Catholic 67 Mldview 65
Maysville 77 Philo 76 lot)
East
Bloomfield 80 Baptist Christian
W. L. T. Pis. Fort Frye 70 Warren Local 49 61
Boston
234349 Perry Miller 72 Vinton County
Nova Scotia
14 10 8 36 68
Springfield
1111729 Hebron Lakewood 63 Licking
11 17 4 26 Valley 57
Rochester
Providence
8 17 7 23 Portsmouth 84 Ironton 57
Upper Arlington 66 Cols .
West
W. l . T. Pis. Marion Franklin 51
Baltimore
16 13 4 36 Beallsville 77 Woodsfield 69
Hershey
15 8 5 35 New Concord Glenn 54 CrooksCleveland
13 11 6 32 ville 52
Richmond
12 15 5 29 Zane Trace (Guernsey) 74
Cincinnati
10 14 8 28 Shenandoah 62
Tidewater
7 20 3 17 Edon 86 Edgerton 71
Montpelier 57 Pettisville S6
Sunday's Results
Ayersvllle 53 Stryker 40
Nova Scotia 4 Cincinnati 4
North Central 59 Hicksville 55
Boston 5 Providence 2
Patrick Henry 87 Fairview 69
Hershey 2 Richmond 2
Archbold
105 Van Wert 89
Rochester 4 Springfield 2
Della 72 Wauseon 46
Baltimore 5 Tidewater 4

w

'

pset

Colts

';.i
."},_'

&gt;.

W. L. T. Pet.
9 s 0 .643
6 8 0 A29
4 9 1 .308
4 10 0 .286

West

x.KansasCity
Oakland
21 10 .677 71/2
• Ul 15 .545 11112 San 01ego
12 21 .364 17 112 Denver

10, the New York Jets-defeated
Cincinnati 36-21, Kansas City
whipped Buffalo 22-9, Houston
outlasted San Diego 49-33 and
Oakland beat Denver 2l-!3.
Brodie Jobu Elite Group
Brodie threw TD passes of 12
yards to Dick Witcher, 10 to
Ken Willard and 30 to Gene
Washington to become only the
seventh quarterback in NFL
history to throw more than 200
TO passes. He ran 10 yards for
the final TD.
The Forty Niners' final
march came after Detroit
quarterback Greg Landry was
foiled in a fourth-and-{)ne
attempt at the San Francisco
40.
Plunkett, whose two TD
passes set a record for an NFL

..

;:a;l;i-0,

/

�..

7- Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Dec. 20,1971 ·

6- Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Dec. 20, 1971

Party Planned
For Children

Americans ·Asked to Think of What's Right about Their Country
Americans should look with
pride on achievements of the
past 25 years, according to
Paul Smart, president of the
Citizens National Bank in
Middleport.
· Speaking to members of the
Middleport • Pomeroy Rotary
Club Friday even~ at Heath
Church, following dinner
served by ladies of the church,
Smart reeled off statistic after
statistic proving advances in
material comforts since Worl'd
War II.
" Too often Americans
discount those years since the
War," Rotarian Smart said,
"ignoring what has been accomplished." He added,

"Instead of thinking about
what's wrong with America,
we should think about what's
right about it. "
As for the economic system
that made all this possible,
"We should build on ou r
system of free enterprise
system that has produced the
greatest, most affluent society
in history , not seek to replace
it," Smart said.
l The history of mankind
shows material progress
precedes significant ad·

Age of Pericles. After Rome
became the dominant military
and economic power in the
Mediterranean, its system of
law preserved the declining
empire :;oo years. Colis~g
finally to invaders and a sick

economy, the fonns of Rome's
laws remain basic to Western
Civilization today.)
·
Some examples of American
production and distribution
miracles cited by the speaker
were:

Over 95 pet. of the homes
with
electricity
have
television. There were none 25
Yellrs ago.
Air conditioning is common ;
rare before.
Per capital inc.ome is far

above Its level of a quarter
century ago.
Population has increased 25
pet., production has seen the
grOSB national product almost
double.
Medical science, p;eventing

Eight More Nursing Homes are 'On the Carpet'

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Eight
more nursing homes have been
told they will not get welfare
vancements in science, payments if deficiencies
philosophy , art and education. threatening the health and
Athens of Greece became safety of patients are not
prosperous as a mercantile hub corrected by Dec. 31.
of the ancient world before the
The state Welfare Depart· ·

ment has issued warning let.
ters or taken action against 77
nursing homes around Ohio so
far for not meeting minimum
health and safety standards.
The latest to receive notificalion were the Detwiler Residence Hall, Wauseon ; Maria

Parkway Nursing and Rehabil·
itation Center Inc., Cleveland;
Medic Home-Health Center,
Columbus; Blake Nursing
Nursing Home, Centerburg;
Erie Care Center Inc., Sandusky; Fai!'field Nursing Home,

Infant
mortality
and
lengthening the life span of
everyone,
has
made
tremendous strides.
(Thus America, wl'h its
unequalled affiuence, is in
position
to
contribute
signlflcanUy to further ad·
vances in hwnanity's historical
struggle . to -live free from

Hamilton; Hillview Nursing
Home, Flushing; and Marie's
Home for Aged, Lewisville. ·

CRIMSON WINS ND..E CREW
LUXOR, Egypt (UPI)-Har·
vard University won the Luxor
International rowing race on
The first three are skilled the Nlle River Sunday, defeatnursing homes and the others ing crews from Yale, Oxford,
intermediate care facilities. Cambridge and Egyptian uni·
verslties.

Green Thumb
Notes • •.•

tragedy.)
Richard Poulin waa a guest
of Dennis Keney. President C.
E. Blakeslee opened the
business meeting and had Vice
Presldentiohn Will complete it
as Blakeslee had to attend
another meeting.
This Christmas week the
club will meet Wednesday at
Heath Church at 6 p.m.

A weekly feature of Melp
County Garden Club memben.

Canfield 62 Badger 58
ChampiM 56 Lakeview S2
Howland 7'1 Labrae 77
Newton Falls 92 Liberty 80
Lordslown 71 Ledgemont ~~
Sharon ( Pa.) Kennedy 70
Warren Kennedy 69
Brookfield 53 Pymalunlng
Valley so
Columbiana 78 Girard SJ

BY MRS. ETHEL ARBAUGH
Role Garden Club, Tuppers Plains
"Autwnn has come
The leaves tell u8 so;
Winter is here
With Its Ice and snow.
Now don't forget
Your Friend the bird.
Start feeding him
And if you do,
Great will be the reward
With no sweeter music
Than the song of the bird."

BIG BEND AREA MERCHANTS SERVE YOU BEST

HOLIDAY GIFT SUGGESTIONS OF THE WEEK
.
•

••

·~
•••

K &amp; CJEWELERS

MACHINE

ALWAYS IN STYLE

POWER SANDERS
POWER DRIU.S
JIGSAWS
AT BIG
SAVINGS
PICKENS HARDWARE

•• •

*
.

THE FABRIC SHOP

MASON, W. VA.

.

fll.ih •• MlL_••

··~ ·~·

MOOII 1100

M.ODEl 5t2

GM THf IIIIU Ou111001S •••
GM A IEIIIIIITOII
NYLON 66: Siruclural nylon and ordinance steel

:.

t•••
·*

combine to olve the most accurate, dependable.22

auto-loading rille ever. Holds 1• long rifle car- .
!ridges.
MODEL 1100: Five sholaulomallc shotgun. Gives
up lo ss percent less recoil ... up lo stven limes .

HIDDEN
PURSE-UADER

-:

••

~·
· · ....

long!!r life. . ·

MOOEL Sii: 22 cellber boltai:lion, tubular repeater
has strongest most powerful boltever designed for a
22 caliber hunting rifle. Amazing accurary. Perfect
balance.
·

EBERSBACH HAR~ARE
POMEROY

~;;. ~:·--·· · ~: ~·:
'

•

••

A party for the Community
Class for Retarded Children
was planned lor January when
the Middleport Child Conservation League met Thursday night at the home of Mrs.
John Blaker, Syracuse, for a
holiday party.
Mrs. Charlene Arnold will
handle the purchase of hair
brushes for the children. A
letter was read from the class
thanking the CCL for a Thanks·
giving party. At that time each
of the boys was given a· shoe
shine kit, l!lld the girls were
given sewing kits.
It was noted that the League
has received a certificate of
appreciation from the Ohio
CCL for contributing to the
state scholarship fund in
memory of Mrs. Harold Hood.
Mrs. Gene Houdashell
presided at the meeting which
opened with the Mother's
Prayer and devotions from St.
Luke 2, 11-14, by Mrs. Robert
Schmoll.
Christmas games were

Christmas: Legends and Lore

-

~••

l

•
ONCE AGAIN IT'S CHRISTMAS
There are two sides to Cluistmas. There is the inside and the
outatde. 'the outatde Is quite visible with trees, boll:·, decorations,
gaily decorated show windows, and gifts wrapped with fancy
paper. Tbe outatde of Ou1stmas cannot only be aeen, but It can be
heard in carols, chimes, organ music, choir voicea, and sleigh
bells. The oulslde of Christmas can also be tasted in turkey and
a-anberry sauce, mince and pumpkin pies, and popcorn and
candy.
The inside penetrates below the surface and ties within the
hearts of men. Christmas is the time when customs and
traditions are brought forth . Most of our tfadltions, legends, and
lore originated In Europe. There are many plant legends.
CHRISTMAS TREE
Some say \)le Christmas tree was first used in Geramny. One
of the legends is that Martin Luther, one snowy Christmas Eve
cut a small snow-covered fir tree, lrought it into his home and
trimmed It with many candles.
CHRISTMAS ROSE
The Christmas rose - the gift of Madelon. While the Three
Wl.se Men were on their way to Bethlehem, bearing their gifts to
the aui8t Child they came upon Madelon tending her sheep. Site
wept bitterly because she had no gift to give. Suddenly the
fragrance of lilies spread over the groWld. Madelon saw an
angel, who asked her why she was crying. She answered that she
bad no gift for the Holy Child. The angel waved her lily wand
whereupon the whole path was bordered with Christmas roses,
which Madelon gathered for her gift to the infant Jesus.
HOlLY
Flowers and greens h&amp;ve captured the heart of man and
yield their !ranches and blooms at Christmas time. Holly is as
much a part of Christmas as plum pudding. Its green leaves and
red berries adorn our greeting cards, gift tags, and our wrapping
paper. It was considered as the burning bush, a symbol of Mary.
The red berries represented the blood drops from the cruel
thorns in the crown of Jesus and It was called the Christ Thorn.
The leaves, always green, signaled eternal life.
't'_Amerlcan and English h~y ,are the two most common kinds.
~ most beautiful of all hollies Is the Chinese. Much I'I10re
commonly grown than any other holly is the Japanese.
POINSETTIA
The poinsettia has been called the radiant flower of
Chr\.stmas. We are Indebted to Joel R. Poinsettia of South
Carolina for the discovery of this colorful plant.
Almost everyone thinks of the poinsettia as a flower. But it is
not a flower. That is, the bright crlmaon leaves are not a flower.
If you want to search for It, It consists of the little inconspicuous
red and gold blouoms which cluster at the center of the brilliant
whorl of leaves we usually think of as petals.
To the people of Mellco the poinsettia is the ''flower of the
holy night."
MISTLETOE
Legend tells us that mtsteletoe began Its existence as a
bandlome forest tree, but became a dwarf through shame of
having allowed Itself to be used for the making of the crOSB.
The mistletoe, symbol of love and peace and named the
Golden Branch, Is fuU of romance. In flower language mistletoe
means ''Give me a kiss."
"The misteletoe bough at our·Christmas board, Shall bang to
the honor of Christ, Our Lord."
JERUSALEM CHERRY
The Jerusalem Cherry Is an ornamental plant which adds to
the beauty of Christmas. We are told that this plant dates back to
the sixteenth century, when, It was Introduced Into England from
Madeira. In caring for the Jerusalem Cherry It should be
watered moderately, kept fairly cool, and receive a great deal of
sunshine.
AZALEA
When an Azelea is delivered to your door at Christmas time,
Its greeting to you is this - "Take care of yourself for me."
There are more than one hundred species in the Azalea family.
BEGONIA
The Christmas Begonia is a well-loved Dower during the
Christmas season.
ROSE OF JERICHO
Legend tells WI that the Rose of Jericho sprang up on the
desert wherever the feet of the VIrgin Mother stepped during the
Oight to Egypt.
ROSEMARY OR ''SEA·DEN"
The Rosemary has a most remarkable heritage in con·
nection with Christmas. It was once the choice Cluistmas
decoration.
CHRISTMAS CACI'US
The delicate, pink flowers of the &lt;llristmas Cactus adds to
the beauty of Christmas. In grandmother's day almost everyone
had a Cactus. Today it Is becoming a favorite again. It grows
year after year, always blooming at Christmas time. It Is a
native of Brazil.
CYCLAMEN
The Cyclamen Is a lovely plant to give at Christmas time. In
the Holy !And this Dower was dedicated to Mary for the "red
throat atits heart," which looked like a drop of blood, symbolized
the sword of sorrow that pierced Mary's heart.
BY TREE
The Bay Tree bas been telling of victory and triumph since
the days of ancient Greece. Legend says that the Bay Tree, with
Its purple berries and lance-like leaves, sheltered the holy famlly
during a thunderstorm. It was believed that lightning would
never strike a Bay Tree. Its branches were carried into the
homes at Christmas time as a protection against misfortune.

..

Gifts are Exchanged
Members of the Magnolia
Club met at the home of Mrs .
Ella Smith recently for a
Christmas dinner party and
gift exchange.
Mrs. Ethel Stewart had
charge of the Christmas
program which opened with
group singing of "Silent
Night ," a prayer, and
devotions by Mrs. Iris Kelton
from Luke . Members ex·
changed gifts and games were
played wlth prizes going to
Mrs. Gladys Cackler, Mrs.
Edna Reibel, Mrs. Bertrwn
Smith and Mrs . Bertha
Canaday.
The program included
reading as follows : "Christ·
mas"by Mrs. Reibel; "A Time
for Memories" by Mrs. Kelton ;
"Reverence" by Mrs. Ellen

A visit from Santa with
treats for the children was a
feature of the annual Christ·
mas program Sunday night at
the Middleport First United
Presbyterian Church.
Scripture by Lewis Sauer,
superintendent, opened the
program which was presented
under the direction of Mrs.
Everett Bachner and Mrs.
Russell Lyons.
Beth Vaughan announced the
primary recitations which
were by Terri Sprouse, Michele
Zirkle, Zandra Vaughan, Berke
Lyons, Tommy Kelly, Cindy
Crooks, Pam Crooks, Sheila
Horky, Janel! Kelly, Cathy
Coleman, Becky Coleman,
Debbie Coleman, and Nancy
Wallace.

John Rudolph_ and Eva
Rudolph of Zanesville, and Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Grueser of
Crooklvllle were In Pomeroy
Wednesday for th,e funeral
~ervlces of William Grueser.

.

..

'

ByMflS. LYLEBALDERSON Hospital, Parkersburg, W. Va.
Jodi Smith, second grade Grandparents are Mr . and
at
Riverview Mrs. Frank Bise and great
student
Elementary School, daughter
Wednesday at Mason Youth of Mr. and Mrs. Dale Smith is a grandmother is Mis. Mabel -,
Hetzer, local.
Center beginning at ll a.m.
patient at Children's Hospital,
Visiting with Mrs . Bess
POMEROY · MIDDLEPORT Columbus.
Larkins recently was Mrs.
Alfred Cashdollar is a patient Doris Marks of Olester and
Lions Club, Wednesday noon,
Pomeroy United Methodist at Camden-Clark Hospita-l, Mrs. James Carruthers and
Parkersburg, W. Va.
Church; gift exchange.
Penny of U&gt;uisville.
Dale Boston, student at the
OHIO VALLEY ComMr. and Mrs. R. E. Williams
Institute
of and Mr. and Mrs. Warren
mandery, 7:30 p.m. Pomeroy Electronic
Masonic Temple . AU knights to Louisville, Ky., is spending the Pickens visited Mr. and Mrs.
come in full uniform . Knights holiday vacation with his Dale Williams of Harrisonville,
and their ladies will visit the parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Sunday.
children's ho"le and the Meigs Boston and family .
Don Buchanan has returned
County Infirmary .
home after being a patient at
St.
Joseph's
hospital.
Parkersburg, W. Va .
Mr. and Mrs. J . D. Kibble of
Parkersburg, W. Va., visited at
lhe H. E. Kibble home and R.
E. Williams home Wednesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Foster
May it be bright a~d
By BERTHA PARKER
(Dolores Bise ) are announcing
beautiful, filled wtth
Sabbath School attendance the birth of a daughter, horn
cheer.
Dec. 12 at the Free Methodist Dec . 15 at Camden-Clark
Church was 115, offering for
the day was $145.00.
Mr . James Gilmore is recently of Mr. and Mrs.
Serving: Gallipolis,
Pomeroy, Middleport, 0.
visiting his Navy friends in Nor man Schaefer.
Mrs. Pearl Jacobs has been
&amp; Mason Co., W.Va.
Alabama .
Mr . Herman Kaspar , reported ill.
Dayton , spent several days
here with relatives. He went
deer hunting but no luek.
OPEN NIGHTS 1ll 9 UN.TIL CHRISTMAS
Mrs. Bertha Parker received
a letter from her daughter,
Mrs. Harold Talley, stating
that Mr : Talley had been
promoted to Chief Master
*SLIPPERS
Sergeant with the Air Force.
They are now living in
*SHOES

Lau:rd Cliff
News Notes

.a..\,_,... \\.......\\
"' &lt;.~'\

Dudley's Florist

IDEAL GIFTS FOR ALL

Missouri .

Mr . and Mrs. Charles D1ehl
were in Columbus Friday. Mr .
Diehl went for medical
checkup.
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Stahl,
Stockdale, Mr. and Mrs. Vern
Story and John, Colwnbus, Mr.
and Mrs. Wm . Perry, Athens,
Mr . David Schaefer, Ohio
University , were vbitors

*HANDBAGS
*MEN'S and BOYS' SOCKS
*HOSIERY

"We Wish You A Merry
Christmas ," '' Christmas
Angels" and "Away in the
Manger" were sung by the
children. Nancy Wallace and
Sheila Horky sang "Rudolph"
and there was a piano solo by
Sheila . Mrs. Bachner played
for the primary program.
James Buchanan gave a
reading on the meaning of the
advent wreath . There was a
skit by Bill Vaughan, Don
Vaughan, Ernie Zlnunerman,
and Tommy l&lt;lwery and the
junior choir presented several
numbers. Directors of the choir
are Mrs. Dwight Azvitz and
Mrs. Wallace. Mrs. Paul
HaptonstaU accompanied the
choir. Santa distributed treats
to the children.

Especially
If It Comes From

Goessler's
JEWELRY
STORE

COURT ST., POMEROY

4-PIECE COFFEE SERVICE
Silverplalo HI'Vico lnducltt hay,
coHee pot, 1u1ar, creamer.

CUSTOM MADE
FOR MOTHER

Club Officers Are Installed
Officers of the Women 's
Association of the Middleport
First United Presbyterian
Church were installed in a
candlelight ceremony by Mrs.
Marcus Chambers Thursday
night.
Meeting at the church, the
officers lighted small candles
from a large one symbolic of
the light of Christ. Installed
were Mrs. Thomas Kelly,
president; Mrs. Jack Satterfield, vice president; Mrs.
Dwight Wallace, secretary ;
and Mrs . Walter Waddell,
treasurer.
Mrs. Karl Owen, retiring
president , conducted the
meeting during which time the
Association agreed to provide
toys for the children
hospitalized at Veterans
Memorial
Hospital
in
February. The toys for tots
project is sponsored by the
Women's Auxiliary of the
hospital.

"On Cloud 9"
In meteorology. cloud formations are numbered from
one to nine. the latter being ·
the highest storm cloud . rr
you are on top of "Cloud !1,"
you are in tlw s unli ~ hl .

A prayer for missionaries iri
Pakistan was given by Mrs.
Waddell. Devotions were given
by Mrs . Owen and Mrs.
Chambers reviewed the last
chapter of the study book,
"Where Tomorrow Struggles
to be Born.''
Sandwiches, punch and
Christmas cookies were served
by the hostess.

Rinq

Styl•

No. 68

1

Stainless
Steel Ware
53 Pieces

l99~P

-- -.. .,. .SHIRt
- - --"""'"--"'

J.OO

f5

additional for

each

birthstone.

Set with radiant
birthstones- one
stone for each
member of the
family . Ring can
made to hold
from two to five
birthstones . In
precious 10 kl .
ye llow or white
I .

FINISHING
SAME DAY
SERVICE
In At 9-0ut At 5
Use Our Free Parking lot

Robinson's Ceaners
216

E. 2nd, Pomeroy

3 ROOMS
NEW·

FURNIJURE
•'349.95

$35

ATIEND FUNERAL

Couch ; "Lesend of the Tiny
Star" by Mrs. Cuckler; "An
Old Fashioned Christmas" by
Mrs.
Margaret
Rose;
"Christmas Treat" by Mrs.
Canaday, and "Recipe for
Christmas" by Mrs. Smith.
Other readings were "There
Will Always be a Christmas"
by Georgia Watson, "Each
Renews
His
Christmas
Promise" by Mrs. Smith, and
nSanta's Surprise Party" by
Mrs. Doris Grueser.
Officers for 1972 were
named. They are Mrs. Stewart,
president ; Mrs. Smith, vice
president; Mrs. Grueser.
secretary ; and Mrs. Watson,
treasurer. Mrs. Canaday will
host the January meeting. New
names for secret pals were
drawn .

MONDAY
MEIGS MEN's fellowship,
Pomeroy Church of Christ, 7:30
p.m. Monday.
HARRISONVILLE Elementary School Christmas
program, Monday, 7:30 p.m.
Door prizes to be given.
THE ODOR US Council 17,
Daughters of America, IOOF
hall, 6 p.m. Monday. Turkey
dinner with members to take a
· covered dish. $1 gift exchange.
MIDDLEPORT Business
and Professional Women's
Club. , 8 p.m. home of Mrs.
Harry S. Moore, with Mrs.
Pearl Reynolds as co-hostess.
$1 gift exchange .
MEIGS Chapter, Order of
DeMolay, Monday, 7:30 p.m.
Middleport Masonic Temple.
Mothers Club will meet in
basement.
TUESDAY
WOMEN'S Auxiliary ,
Veterans Memorial Hospital ,
potluck Christmas dinner and
party, hospital dining room, 6
p.m. Tuesday, $1 gift ex·
change.
CHESTER LODGE 323,
Tuesday, 6:30p.m. Christmas
dinner. Meeting and party to
follow. $1 gilt exchange.
GROUP II, Presbyterian
Church, 7:30p.m. home of Mrs.
Harry S. Moore, with Mrs.
Joseph Bailey, co-hostess. $1
gift exchange.
WEDNESDAY
CHRISTMAS Dance ,
Wednesday, 8:30-11:30 p.m.,
Southern High School. Music
by "Willie" sponsored by
Southern High Tri-M. Ad·
mission, $1.50.
ANNUAL Christmas party
for all retired or laid off em·
ployes of Local Union 5171

News, Notes -

Treats for Children

"Christ was born on Christmas Day .
Wreathe the holly, twine the bay."

'

played with prizes going to
Mrs. Raymond Stewart, Mrs.
·Waller Morris, Mrs . Don
Mullen, Mrs. Schmoll, Mrs.
Pal Duffy, Mrs. Don Thomas,
Mrs. Houdashelt, and Mrs.
Blaker. Members responded to
roll call by telling what they
enjoy most about Christmas.
Homemade baubles were
exchanged.
Before the gift exchange
wrappings were judged. Mrs.
Schmoll won the prize for the
prettiest and Mrs. Dan White
the one for the most original
package.
Refreshments of date nut
cake, raspberry punch, and
nuts were served by Mrs.
Arnold, Mrs. Morris, Mrs.
Clarissa Kennedy, Mrs.
Mullen, Mrs. Stewart and Mrs.
Blaker. A Santa motif was
carried out in the decorations
and the centerpiece was a
platter of homemade candy.
Peanut butter bonbons made
by Mrs. Arnold were the
favors .

Social Calendar

Het~•lsville

:oo "Dowll-

Balan~e On
Convenient
Terms.
- ~ -- - - -

MASON
:.FURNITURE
W.Va.
Mason,

"

OPEN
EVENINGS

"A Gold Star Store"·
Ftee TICkets Here

�..

7- Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Dec. 20,1971 ·

6- Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Dec. 20, 1971

Party Planned
For Children

Americans ·Asked to Think of What's Right about Their Country
Americans should look with
pride on achievements of the
past 25 years, according to
Paul Smart, president of the
Citizens National Bank in
Middleport.
· Speaking to members of the
Middleport • Pomeroy Rotary
Club Friday even~ at Heath
Church, following dinner
served by ladies of the church,
Smart reeled off statistic after
statistic proving advances in
material comforts since Worl'd
War II.
" Too often Americans
discount those years since the
War," Rotarian Smart said,
"ignoring what has been accomplished." He added,

"Instead of thinking about
what's wrong with America,
we should think about what's
right about it. "
As for the economic system
that made all this possible,
"We should build on ou r
system of free enterprise
system that has produced the
greatest, most affluent society
in history , not seek to replace
it," Smart said.
l The history of mankind
shows material progress
precedes significant ad·

Age of Pericles. After Rome
became the dominant military
and economic power in the
Mediterranean, its system of
law preserved the declining
empire :;oo years. Colis~g
finally to invaders and a sick

economy, the fonns of Rome's
laws remain basic to Western
Civilization today.)
·
Some examples of American
production and distribution
miracles cited by the speaker
were:

Over 95 pet. of the homes
with
electricity
have
television. There were none 25
Yellrs ago.
Air conditioning is common ;
rare before.
Per capital inc.ome is far

above Its level of a quarter
century ago.
Population has increased 25
pet., production has seen the
grOSB national product almost
double.
Medical science, p;eventing

Eight More Nursing Homes are 'On the Carpet'

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Eight
more nursing homes have been
told they will not get welfare
vancements in science, payments if deficiencies
philosophy , art and education. threatening the health and
Athens of Greece became safety of patients are not
prosperous as a mercantile hub corrected by Dec. 31.
of the ancient world before the
The state Welfare Depart· ·

ment has issued warning let.
ters or taken action against 77
nursing homes around Ohio so
far for not meeting minimum
health and safety standards.
The latest to receive notificalion were the Detwiler Residence Hall, Wauseon ; Maria

Parkway Nursing and Rehabil·
itation Center Inc., Cleveland;
Medic Home-Health Center,
Columbus; Blake Nursing
Nursing Home, Centerburg;
Erie Care Center Inc., Sandusky; Fai!'field Nursing Home,

Infant
mortality
and
lengthening the life span of
everyone,
has
made
tremendous strides.
(Thus America, wl'h its
unequalled affiuence, is in
position
to
contribute
signlflcanUy to further ad·
vances in hwnanity's historical
struggle . to -live free from

Hamilton; Hillview Nursing
Home, Flushing; and Marie's
Home for Aged, Lewisville. ·

CRIMSON WINS ND..E CREW
LUXOR, Egypt (UPI)-Har·
vard University won the Luxor
International rowing race on
The first three are skilled the Nlle River Sunday, defeatnursing homes and the others ing crews from Yale, Oxford,
intermediate care facilities. Cambridge and Egyptian uni·
verslties.

Green Thumb
Notes • •.•

tragedy.)
Richard Poulin waa a guest
of Dennis Keney. President C.
E. Blakeslee opened the
business meeting and had Vice
Presldentiohn Will complete it
as Blakeslee had to attend
another meeting.
This Christmas week the
club will meet Wednesday at
Heath Church at 6 p.m.

A weekly feature of Melp
County Garden Club memben.

Canfield 62 Badger 58
ChampiM 56 Lakeview S2
Howland 7'1 Labrae 77
Newton Falls 92 Liberty 80
Lordslown 71 Ledgemont ~~
Sharon ( Pa.) Kennedy 70
Warren Kennedy 69
Brookfield 53 Pymalunlng
Valley so
Columbiana 78 Girard SJ

BY MRS. ETHEL ARBAUGH
Role Garden Club, Tuppers Plains
"Autwnn has come
The leaves tell u8 so;
Winter is here
With Its Ice and snow.
Now don't forget
Your Friend the bird.
Start feeding him
And if you do,
Great will be the reward
With no sweeter music
Than the song of the bird."

BIG BEND AREA MERCHANTS SERVE YOU BEST

HOLIDAY GIFT SUGGESTIONS OF THE WEEK
.
•

••

·~
•••

K &amp; CJEWELERS

MACHINE

ALWAYS IN STYLE

POWER SANDERS
POWER DRIU.S
JIGSAWS
AT BIG
SAVINGS
PICKENS HARDWARE

•• •

*
.

THE FABRIC SHOP

MASON, W. VA.

.

fll.ih •• MlL_••

··~ ·~·

MOOII 1100

M.ODEl 5t2

GM THf IIIIU Ou111001S •••
GM A IEIIIIIITOII
NYLON 66: Siruclural nylon and ordinance steel

:.

t•••
·*

combine to olve the most accurate, dependable.22

auto-loading rille ever. Holds 1• long rifle car- .
!ridges.
MODEL 1100: Five sholaulomallc shotgun. Gives
up lo ss percent less recoil ... up lo stven limes .

HIDDEN
PURSE-UADER

-:

••

~·
· · ....

long!!r life. . ·

MOOEL Sii: 22 cellber boltai:lion, tubular repeater
has strongest most powerful boltever designed for a
22 caliber hunting rifle. Amazing accurary. Perfect
balance.
·

EBERSBACH HAR~ARE
POMEROY

~;;. ~:·--·· · ~: ~·:
'

•

••

A party for the Community
Class for Retarded Children
was planned lor January when
the Middleport Child Conservation League met Thursday night at the home of Mrs.
John Blaker, Syracuse, for a
holiday party.
Mrs. Charlene Arnold will
handle the purchase of hair
brushes for the children. A
letter was read from the class
thanking the CCL for a Thanks·
giving party. At that time each
of the boys was given a· shoe
shine kit, l!lld the girls were
given sewing kits.
It was noted that the League
has received a certificate of
appreciation from the Ohio
CCL for contributing to the
state scholarship fund in
memory of Mrs. Harold Hood.
Mrs. Gene Houdashell
presided at the meeting which
opened with the Mother's
Prayer and devotions from St.
Luke 2, 11-14, by Mrs. Robert
Schmoll.
Christmas games were

Christmas: Legends and Lore

-

~••

l

•
ONCE AGAIN IT'S CHRISTMAS
There are two sides to Cluistmas. There is the inside and the
outatde. 'the outatde Is quite visible with trees, boll:·, decorations,
gaily decorated show windows, and gifts wrapped with fancy
paper. Tbe outatde of Ou1stmas cannot only be aeen, but It can be
heard in carols, chimes, organ music, choir voicea, and sleigh
bells. The oulslde of Christmas can also be tasted in turkey and
a-anberry sauce, mince and pumpkin pies, and popcorn and
candy.
The inside penetrates below the surface and ties within the
hearts of men. Christmas is the time when customs and
traditions are brought forth . Most of our tfadltions, legends, and
lore originated In Europe. There are many plant legends.
CHRISTMAS TREE
Some say \)le Christmas tree was first used in Geramny. One
of the legends is that Martin Luther, one snowy Christmas Eve
cut a small snow-covered fir tree, lrought it into his home and
trimmed It with many candles.
CHRISTMAS ROSE
The Christmas rose - the gift of Madelon. While the Three
Wl.se Men were on their way to Bethlehem, bearing their gifts to
the aui8t Child they came upon Madelon tending her sheep. Site
wept bitterly because she had no gift to give. Suddenly the
fragrance of lilies spread over the groWld. Madelon saw an
angel, who asked her why she was crying. She answered that she
bad no gift for the Holy Child. The angel waved her lily wand
whereupon the whole path was bordered with Christmas roses,
which Madelon gathered for her gift to the infant Jesus.
HOlLY
Flowers and greens h&amp;ve captured the heart of man and
yield their !ranches and blooms at Christmas time. Holly is as
much a part of Christmas as plum pudding. Its green leaves and
red berries adorn our greeting cards, gift tags, and our wrapping
paper. It was considered as the burning bush, a symbol of Mary.
The red berries represented the blood drops from the cruel
thorns in the crown of Jesus and It was called the Christ Thorn.
The leaves, always green, signaled eternal life.
't'_Amerlcan and English h~y ,are the two most common kinds.
~ most beautiful of all hollies Is the Chinese. Much I'I10re
commonly grown than any other holly is the Japanese.
POINSETTIA
The poinsettia has been called the radiant flower of
Chr\.stmas. We are Indebted to Joel R. Poinsettia of South
Carolina for the discovery of this colorful plant.
Almost everyone thinks of the poinsettia as a flower. But it is
not a flower. That is, the bright crlmaon leaves are not a flower.
If you want to search for It, It consists of the little inconspicuous
red and gold blouoms which cluster at the center of the brilliant
whorl of leaves we usually think of as petals.
To the people of Mellco the poinsettia is the ''flower of the
holy night."
MISTLETOE
Legend tells us that mtsteletoe began Its existence as a
bandlome forest tree, but became a dwarf through shame of
having allowed Itself to be used for the making of the crOSB.
The mistletoe, symbol of love and peace and named the
Golden Branch, Is fuU of romance. In flower language mistletoe
means ''Give me a kiss."
"The misteletoe bough at our·Christmas board, Shall bang to
the honor of Christ, Our Lord."
JERUSALEM CHERRY
The Jerusalem Cherry Is an ornamental plant which adds to
the beauty of Christmas. We are told that this plant dates back to
the sixteenth century, when, It was Introduced Into England from
Madeira. In caring for the Jerusalem Cherry It should be
watered moderately, kept fairly cool, and receive a great deal of
sunshine.
AZALEA
When an Azelea is delivered to your door at Christmas time,
Its greeting to you is this - "Take care of yourself for me."
There are more than one hundred species in the Azalea family.
BEGONIA
The Christmas Begonia is a well-loved Dower during the
Christmas season.
ROSE OF JERICHO
Legend tells WI that the Rose of Jericho sprang up on the
desert wherever the feet of the VIrgin Mother stepped during the
Oight to Egypt.
ROSEMARY OR ''SEA·DEN"
The Rosemary has a most remarkable heritage in con·
nection with Christmas. It was once the choice Cluistmas
decoration.
CHRISTMAS CACI'US
The delicate, pink flowers of the &lt;llristmas Cactus adds to
the beauty of Christmas. In grandmother's day almost everyone
had a Cactus. Today it Is becoming a favorite again. It grows
year after year, always blooming at Christmas time. It Is a
native of Brazil.
CYCLAMEN
The Cyclamen Is a lovely plant to give at Christmas time. In
the Holy !And this Dower was dedicated to Mary for the "red
throat atits heart," which looked like a drop of blood, symbolized
the sword of sorrow that pierced Mary's heart.
BY TREE
The Bay Tree bas been telling of victory and triumph since
the days of ancient Greece. Legend says that the Bay Tree, with
Its purple berries and lance-like leaves, sheltered the holy famlly
during a thunderstorm. It was believed that lightning would
never strike a Bay Tree. Its branches were carried into the
homes at Christmas time as a protection against misfortune.

..

Gifts are Exchanged
Members of the Magnolia
Club met at the home of Mrs .
Ella Smith recently for a
Christmas dinner party and
gift exchange.
Mrs. Ethel Stewart had
charge of the Christmas
program which opened with
group singing of "Silent
Night ," a prayer, and
devotions by Mrs. Iris Kelton
from Luke . Members ex·
changed gifts and games were
played wlth prizes going to
Mrs. Gladys Cackler, Mrs.
Edna Reibel, Mrs. Bertrwn
Smith and Mrs . Bertha
Canaday.
The program included
reading as follows : "Christ·
mas"by Mrs. Reibel; "A Time
for Memories" by Mrs. Kelton ;
"Reverence" by Mrs. Ellen

A visit from Santa with
treats for the children was a
feature of the annual Christ·
mas program Sunday night at
the Middleport First United
Presbyterian Church.
Scripture by Lewis Sauer,
superintendent, opened the
program which was presented
under the direction of Mrs.
Everett Bachner and Mrs.
Russell Lyons.
Beth Vaughan announced the
primary recitations which
were by Terri Sprouse, Michele
Zirkle, Zandra Vaughan, Berke
Lyons, Tommy Kelly, Cindy
Crooks, Pam Crooks, Sheila
Horky, Janel! Kelly, Cathy
Coleman, Becky Coleman,
Debbie Coleman, and Nancy
Wallace.

John Rudolph_ and Eva
Rudolph of Zanesville, and Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Grueser of
Crooklvllle were In Pomeroy
Wednesday for th,e funeral
~ervlces of William Grueser.

.

..

'

ByMflS. LYLEBALDERSON Hospital, Parkersburg, W. Va.
Jodi Smith, second grade Grandparents are Mr . and
at
Riverview Mrs. Frank Bise and great
student
Elementary School, daughter
Wednesday at Mason Youth of Mr. and Mrs. Dale Smith is a grandmother is Mis. Mabel -,
Hetzer, local.
Center beginning at ll a.m.
patient at Children's Hospital,
Visiting with Mrs . Bess
POMEROY · MIDDLEPORT Columbus.
Larkins recently was Mrs.
Alfred Cashdollar is a patient Doris Marks of Olester and
Lions Club, Wednesday noon,
Pomeroy United Methodist at Camden-Clark Hospita-l, Mrs. James Carruthers and
Parkersburg, W. Va.
Church; gift exchange.
Penny of U&gt;uisville.
Dale Boston, student at the
OHIO VALLEY ComMr. and Mrs. R. E. Williams
Institute
of and Mr. and Mrs. Warren
mandery, 7:30 p.m. Pomeroy Electronic
Masonic Temple . AU knights to Louisville, Ky., is spending the Pickens visited Mr. and Mrs.
come in full uniform . Knights holiday vacation with his Dale Williams of Harrisonville,
and their ladies will visit the parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Sunday.
children's ho"le and the Meigs Boston and family .
Don Buchanan has returned
County Infirmary .
home after being a patient at
St.
Joseph's
hospital.
Parkersburg, W. Va .
Mr. and Mrs. J . D. Kibble of
Parkersburg, W. Va., visited at
lhe H. E. Kibble home and R.
E. Williams home Wednesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Foster
May it be bright a~d
By BERTHA PARKER
(Dolores Bise ) are announcing
beautiful, filled wtth
Sabbath School attendance the birth of a daughter, horn
cheer.
Dec. 12 at the Free Methodist Dec . 15 at Camden-Clark
Church was 115, offering for
the day was $145.00.
Mr . James Gilmore is recently of Mr. and Mrs.
Serving: Gallipolis,
Pomeroy, Middleport, 0.
visiting his Navy friends in Nor man Schaefer.
Mrs. Pearl Jacobs has been
&amp; Mason Co., W.Va.
Alabama .
Mr . Herman Kaspar , reported ill.
Dayton , spent several days
here with relatives. He went
deer hunting but no luek.
OPEN NIGHTS 1ll 9 UN.TIL CHRISTMAS
Mrs. Bertha Parker received
a letter from her daughter,
Mrs. Harold Talley, stating
that Mr : Talley had been
promoted to Chief Master
*SLIPPERS
Sergeant with the Air Force.
They are now living in
*SHOES

Lau:rd Cliff
News Notes

.a..\,_,... \\.......\\
"' &lt;.~'\

Dudley's Florist

IDEAL GIFTS FOR ALL

Missouri .

Mr . and Mrs. Charles D1ehl
were in Columbus Friday. Mr .
Diehl went for medical
checkup.
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Stahl,
Stockdale, Mr. and Mrs. Vern
Story and John, Colwnbus, Mr.
and Mrs. Wm . Perry, Athens,
Mr . David Schaefer, Ohio
University , were vbitors

*HANDBAGS
*MEN'S and BOYS' SOCKS
*HOSIERY

"We Wish You A Merry
Christmas ," '' Christmas
Angels" and "Away in the
Manger" were sung by the
children. Nancy Wallace and
Sheila Horky sang "Rudolph"
and there was a piano solo by
Sheila . Mrs. Bachner played
for the primary program.
James Buchanan gave a
reading on the meaning of the
advent wreath . There was a
skit by Bill Vaughan, Don
Vaughan, Ernie Zlnunerman,
and Tommy l&lt;lwery and the
junior choir presented several
numbers. Directors of the choir
are Mrs. Dwight Azvitz and
Mrs. Wallace. Mrs. Paul
HaptonstaU accompanied the
choir. Santa distributed treats
to the children.

Especially
If It Comes From

Goessler's
JEWELRY
STORE

COURT ST., POMEROY

4-PIECE COFFEE SERVICE
Silverplalo HI'Vico lnducltt hay,
coHee pot, 1u1ar, creamer.

CUSTOM MADE
FOR MOTHER

Club Officers Are Installed
Officers of the Women 's
Association of the Middleport
First United Presbyterian
Church were installed in a
candlelight ceremony by Mrs.
Marcus Chambers Thursday
night.
Meeting at the church, the
officers lighted small candles
from a large one symbolic of
the light of Christ. Installed
were Mrs. Thomas Kelly,
president; Mrs. Jack Satterfield, vice president; Mrs.
Dwight Wallace, secretary ;
and Mrs . Walter Waddell,
treasurer.
Mrs. Karl Owen, retiring
president , conducted the
meeting during which time the
Association agreed to provide
toys for the children
hospitalized at Veterans
Memorial
Hospital
in
February. The toys for tots
project is sponsored by the
Women's Auxiliary of the
hospital.

"On Cloud 9"
In meteorology. cloud formations are numbered from
one to nine. the latter being ·
the highest storm cloud . rr
you are on top of "Cloud !1,"
you are in tlw s unli ~ hl .

A prayer for missionaries iri
Pakistan was given by Mrs.
Waddell. Devotions were given
by Mrs . Owen and Mrs.
Chambers reviewed the last
chapter of the study book,
"Where Tomorrow Struggles
to be Born.''
Sandwiches, punch and
Christmas cookies were served
by the hostess.

Rinq

Styl•

No. 68

1

Stainless
Steel Ware
53 Pieces

l99~P

-- -.. .,. .SHIRt
- - --"""'"--"'

J.OO

f5

additional for

each

birthstone.

Set with radiant
birthstones- one
stone for each
member of the
family . Ring can
made to hold
from two to five
birthstones . In
precious 10 kl .
ye llow or white
I .

FINISHING
SAME DAY
SERVICE
In At 9-0ut At 5
Use Our Free Parking lot

Robinson's Ceaners
216

E. 2nd, Pomeroy

3 ROOMS
NEW·

FURNIJURE
•'349.95

$35

ATIEND FUNERAL

Couch ; "Lesend of the Tiny
Star" by Mrs. Cuckler; "An
Old Fashioned Christmas" by
Mrs.
Margaret
Rose;
"Christmas Treat" by Mrs.
Canaday, and "Recipe for
Christmas" by Mrs. Smith.
Other readings were "There
Will Always be a Christmas"
by Georgia Watson, "Each
Renews
His
Christmas
Promise" by Mrs. Smith, and
nSanta's Surprise Party" by
Mrs. Doris Grueser.
Officers for 1972 were
named. They are Mrs. Stewart,
president ; Mrs. Smith, vice
president; Mrs. Grueser.
secretary ; and Mrs. Watson,
treasurer. Mrs. Canaday will
host the January meeting. New
names for secret pals were
drawn .

MONDAY
MEIGS MEN's fellowship,
Pomeroy Church of Christ, 7:30
p.m. Monday.
HARRISONVILLE Elementary School Christmas
program, Monday, 7:30 p.m.
Door prizes to be given.
THE ODOR US Council 17,
Daughters of America, IOOF
hall, 6 p.m. Monday. Turkey
dinner with members to take a
· covered dish. $1 gift exchange.
MIDDLEPORT Business
and Professional Women's
Club. , 8 p.m. home of Mrs.
Harry S. Moore, with Mrs.
Pearl Reynolds as co-hostess.
$1 gift exchange .
MEIGS Chapter, Order of
DeMolay, Monday, 7:30 p.m.
Middleport Masonic Temple.
Mothers Club will meet in
basement.
TUESDAY
WOMEN'S Auxiliary ,
Veterans Memorial Hospital ,
potluck Christmas dinner and
party, hospital dining room, 6
p.m. Tuesday, $1 gift ex·
change.
CHESTER LODGE 323,
Tuesday, 6:30p.m. Christmas
dinner. Meeting and party to
follow. $1 gilt exchange.
GROUP II, Presbyterian
Church, 7:30p.m. home of Mrs.
Harry S. Moore, with Mrs.
Joseph Bailey, co-hostess. $1
gift exchange.
WEDNESDAY
CHRISTMAS Dance ,
Wednesday, 8:30-11:30 p.m.,
Southern High School. Music
by "Willie" sponsored by
Southern High Tri-M. Ad·
mission, $1.50.
ANNUAL Christmas party
for all retired or laid off em·
ployes of Local Union 5171

News, Notes -

Treats for Children

"Christ was born on Christmas Day .
Wreathe the holly, twine the bay."

'

played with prizes going to
Mrs. Raymond Stewart, Mrs.
·Waller Morris, Mrs . Don
Mullen, Mrs. Schmoll, Mrs.
Pal Duffy, Mrs. Don Thomas,
Mrs. Houdashelt, and Mrs.
Blaker. Members responded to
roll call by telling what they
enjoy most about Christmas.
Homemade baubles were
exchanged.
Before the gift exchange
wrappings were judged. Mrs.
Schmoll won the prize for the
prettiest and Mrs. Dan White
the one for the most original
package.
Refreshments of date nut
cake, raspberry punch, and
nuts were served by Mrs.
Arnold, Mrs. Morris, Mrs.
Clarissa Kennedy, Mrs.
Mullen, Mrs. Stewart and Mrs.
Blaker. A Santa motif was
carried out in the decorations
and the centerpiece was a
platter of homemade candy.
Peanut butter bonbons made
by Mrs. Arnold were the
favors .

Social Calendar

Het~•lsville

:oo "Dowll-

Balan~e On
Convenient
Terms.
- ~ -- - - -

MASON
:.FURNITURE
W.Va.
Mason,

"

OPEN
EVENINGS

"A Gold Star Store"·
Ftee TICkets Here

�t- The
20, 1971
. D.uy lnlnel,
. Mid I ... l-FWaoy, 0 ., Dec.
.

I- The o.ilY ~1, M!Meport-Pomero~. 0., Dec. 20, 1971
- Hair of ,Ute dog. (No, no,

No Perfect Cure for Hangover
WASHINGTON (UPI) -You had the perfect hangover cure.
c:811't really cure a hangover, It consisted of this and that and
7QII can only ouUast it. If you something else.
But P.G. Wodehouse, Ute
1111 long enough.
How's that for a sour note as great bumorLs! who created
each passing day remor- Bertie and Jeeves, is, alas, a
. Mlessly brings closer the humorist, not a medical scienOuistmas wassailing and New tist.
Year's carousing?
And the medical scientists
Sour or not, it seems to be say that neither Jeeves' formula (whatever it wasl nor any
Crlle.
Bertie Wooster always said
bla valet, fellow named Jeeves,

other that has been scientifically tested will produce an
instant cure for a big, bad
hangover .
But in case, quite by accident, you do drink too much
on Christmas or New Year's,
what can you do next day to get
a bit of bairn and surcease
from pain?
Aspirin and a little solid food,

- Raw oysters, chili peppers,

".Jleep it off." Some vitamin Bl

no. Just makes the ultimate vitamins, various drugs. (No may help.
scientific proof that they help
penalty worse. )
--Steak sauce and tomato at all.)
- Prussic acid; a pistol shot
juice or beer, while wine, or
half.;md-half, with beaten up in the head; decapitation.
raw egg. (Doesn't work.)
(Those are extreme "cures,"
- Black coffee, of course. and the medical community
Mugs of it. (If you've tried it does not recommend them.)
you know it doesn't really
Dr. Gertrude Maengwynhelp.)
Davies, professor of phar- Ice bags, cold showers, macology at Georgetown
breathing pure oxygen - if you University here, has concluded
can get it . (Old wives' tales, after much research that Ute
according to the National one best way of getting over Ute
Institutes of Health.)
miseries of a hangover is to

if you can lake it, may help.
Sleeping it off is better, if you
can.
But all this is still a matter of
surviving, not curing, your
hangover.
Human beings, who get
hungover by the millions at
holiday ·time, must have invented millions of hangover
, cures. Consider :

So, how about preventing
hangovers? A brochure
recentiy issued by the National Institutes of Health
suggesLs :
- Don't gulp. The faster you
drink Ute quicker you get
drunk.
- Drink sitting down and
relaxed. You'll get tight less
quickly Ulan if you drink
standing up.
-Watch your drinking when
you're emotionally upset,

under stress, or tired. ·The
drink wiU get to you quicker m
such circumstantes.
"If you choose to drink, Ute
best way to avoid a hang~~er,"
according to the Nlij, 1s. to
drink responsibly - slppmg
~lowly, with food In t~e
stomach, under relaxed soc1al
circumstances, and paying attention to your responses to the
alcoholic beverages so (that)
intoxication is avoided."
What is seems to boil down to
is that the time to prevent a
hangover is the night before.

vvecare----------~

LEGAL NOTICE
... NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

Administrltrix With the
W ill Annexed
N·o . l0S89
Est ate of FREDA FAUBER

Otceased .
Noti ce is h ereby given that
VIVIAN POSTON whose Po:.t
Office Address is 6046 Sedgw1ck
Road , Wort h ing to n, Oh io has

bHn duly appo inted as Ad ministrat rix w i th the Will an nexed of the Estate ot Freda
Fauber la te of Meigs County,
Ohio , deceased
D ated

th i s

9th

day

'

of

December l 971
John C. Bacon
Acting Judge of

the Probate Court
Meigs Cou n ty , Oh io

( 12 1 13, 20 , 27 , 31

TIMES FOR HOLDING
COURTS OF APPEALS .

•
•

Pack 245 Boys
Receive Awards
Selwyn Smith, completing
bla tenn as cubmaster of
Middleport
Pack
24S,
presented awarda at a Pack
meeting Thursday night at Ute
American Legion hall.
Receiving the awards were
Tom Kelly, a bobcat pln; John
Byer, KelUt Black and Danny
Smith, two year service stars;
Dorael Thomas, Keith Doss
and Lealie Whittington, one
year service stars; Mrs.
I'rances Whittington, a one
year leader's pln, and Frank
Martin, a bobcat pin.
Mrs . Eulah Francis an nounced that good toys are
needed for projects of Pack
245. Aparty wiU be held at the
Community Class for Retarded
Olildren Wednesday, a vial!
wiU be made to the Meigs
County Chlldren's Home and a
party will be held at the Meigs
County Infirmary.
II was noted Utat Mark Tyree
remains a patient at the Holzer

SELF-BASTING

Turkeys a::~c •
Turkeys .::~c.

ATHENS Co unty on th e 17th

la.tb.
oncl up lb.

SELF-BASTING

ot OCTOBER .

GALLIA County on the Jrd
dayot FEBRUARY and the 14th
day of SEPTE MBER .
HIGHLAND County on the 4th
day of APRIL and the 17th day

10 to 11
• Pounclt lb.

49c;

55c

BUTTERB"Ll

FRESH

Turkeys •.~;~~m •

Turkeys
Turkeys

l .. lb.

up

HONEYSUCKLE

• •

FRESH

Turkeys

•

l ..lb.
up

• •

I

ID to 17
poundo

lb.

59c:

of OCTOBER.
HOCKING County on the 18th
day of APRIL and the 14th day

Basketa of fruit for shut-ins
wiU be prepared by members
of the Minersville Women's
Society of Christian Service as
a special Christmas project.
MeeUng Thur!lday at Ute ·
church for a Chrislmas dinner
and party, Ute women also
decided to prepare a basket for
a needy person In the communlty. In lieu of exchanging
gifts, members contributed

ot NOVEMBER .

JACKSON County on the 7th
day Of MARCH and the Jr d da y

Cafffie·1 NeWS,

of OCTOBER .
LAWRENCE County on the .
8th day of MARCH and the 4th
dey of OCTOBER
MEIG S County on the 2n d day
ofF E B R.UAR Y and the 13th day

ot SE PTEMBER .

By the Day

PtCKAWAY County on th e
2nd day of MAY and the 16th
day of NOVEMBER
PI KE Cou nt y on the 22nd day
of MARCH and the 31st day of

Mr. and Mrs. Lee Harris of
Springfield, 0. spent Ute week
end with Mr. and Mrs. Horner
Orcle, Verna and Wavle .
'!be Shelby Pickens family
and Mr. and Mrs. Gene Hud8011, all of SyraQIIIe villted Mr.
and Mrs. AlWI Taylor on

the 19th day

of APRIL and lhe 151h day of

NOVEMBER

*

SCIOTO Co unty on the 23rd
day of MARCH and the 1st day

of NOVEMBER .

VINTON County on th e lst
day
r: e BRUAR Y and the 12th

o·:

d.y Of SE PTEMBER .

t»~ASHINGTON County on the
1!ihdayof FEBRUARY and the
26th day of SEPTEMBE R
Sai d terms to begin at 9 : 30
o'clock A .M .
Homer E . Ab ele
Ear l E . Stephenson
Gordon B. Gray
Judges .

SW!day.

.......

"·' ·

·.••

Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Circle
and family of Columbus spent a
few days with Mrs. . Mary
Circle. Mr. and Mrs. James
Circle of New Haven called on
&amp;mday at the Circle home.
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas
Johnson of Racine called at the
borne of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
E. Johll80n and family and
Betty VanMeter.

, ,., . _, ·.
BONELESS BOTTOM ROUN D

Beef Roast •
Fresh Sausage
Fresh Oysters
Jumbo Shrimp

(121 13 , 20. 27 . Jt

•

•

COUNTRY TREAT

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No. 20582
Estate of Anna Mozella Burton

•

79c
s-o.. ggc
• can
1-tb.
• pk(.

•

CAP "N JOHN STANDARD

Deceased.
Noti ce is herebv q iven that

Gold ie Hawk of Pomeroy , Oh io,
has been dul y appo i n tee
exec utr ix of the Estate of Anna

Conducting the opening for
the meeting were Troy Edwards, Jeffrey Whlttlnglon,
Keith Doss, Greg Laudermilt,
and Leslie Whittington. Den 3
had the slUt wiUt Ray Stewart,
Tony Scott, Randy Batey,
Bobby Fox and Frank Martin
participating. The boys sang
"Jingle Bells" and "SUent
Night" to close Ute meeting,
and gave the Lord's Prayer ln
wtison.
Soft drinks, cookies and
coffee were served ".ly Judy and
Jill Smith assisted by Mrs.
Jean Thomas.

• •

money into Ute treAsury. Miss
Clara Garland, Mrs. Lettie
Rae, and Mrs. Edna Wiggins,
all iU, will be sent gifts.
A poinsettia, presented by
Mr . and Mrs . Lawrence
Douglas, centered Ute dinner
tsble. '!be group sang "Silent
Night" and Mrs . Mildred
Phillips gave devotions .
Prayer was by Mrs. EUtel
Stewart. Readings were "One
Solitary Life" by Mrs. June
Sayre; "The Forgetfulness of
Christmas" by Mrs. Stewart,
"Legend of the Christmas
Tree" by Mrs . Phillips ;
"Legend of the Nativity Scene"
by Mrs. Stella Grueser;
"Legend of Ute Star" by Mrs.
Mary Russell ; "Why Dec. ~"
by Mrs . Clara McMaster;
"Angels" by Mrs. Anna
Hartenbach; "The Manger
Scene" by Mrs. Sadie Brown;
"The Yuletide Log" by Mrs.
Hosmer Roush ; "Mistletoe" by
Mrs. Lillie Starcher; and the
origin of "Silent Night" by
Mrs. Doris Grueser.
Attending the dinner meeting
besides those named were Ute
Rev. and Mrs. Forrest Donley,
Miss Dorothy Har tenbach ,
Mrs. Adolph Grueser, Mrs.
Freda Mitch, Mrs. Gertrude
Mitchell, Mrs. Mary Pugh,
Mrs. June Sayre, Mrs. Elsie
Forbes, Mrs. Hazel McCullum,
and Mrs. Charles Grueser.

Mo zella Burton , deceased , tat e
Pomero y, Meigs Co unty,
Ohio .
Cred itors are required to f ile
their claims w ith sa id fiduciary
within f our months .
Dat ed this 8th day ot

Antiquity

• •

December 1971 .

Holiday Nut Meats!
IN THE SHELL

Mixed Nuts
Walnuts ~~H~tc •
Mixed Nuts::~~~ .
Virginia Peanuts ~$1 69
I

CANADIENS RECALL
MONTREAL (UPI ) - The
Montreal Canadiens recalled
right winger Chuck Arnasson
&amp;mday night. Arnasson was
lrought up from Nova Scotia of
tbe American Hockey League
to replace injured Guy Lafleur.

I

II&amp;P BRI\NO

WHO?

Christmas Candy Buys!

If Yoo Read The Sentinel

BR ...CH "S ASSORTED

.. . You Know!

Chocolates •
Royal Luster :::E l&amp;-os. 45C
Thin Mints ::tE • '~:.. 49c
Ribbon Candya~:~~~s ~:.:·39c
11-lb.

•

$429

bo•

• pkl.

WHAT?
If You Read The Sentinel
... You Know !

Holiday Fro'len Foods!
BIROSEn

Cool Whip •
Handi Whip a::!~o • ~ 3t
Strawberries a~!~o 3:::: SlOO
French Fries s::!~o 3;~~ s1oo

WHEN?
If Yoo Rtlld The Sentinel
. .. You Know!

WHERE?

Easy Off Oven Cleaner ..
$1.39
..
punch Applo - ' "' 41.~.•• 43c
Hawauan
Zesta Crackers .. . ... . . . .';~".'
Pillsbury Holiday Cooki;.,. .. ~·i 98c
Morton F: J:&lt;:.:ln Fruit Pies . .':;:.~· 59c
Morton Frozen Cream Pies . 1:i:~ · 39c
Gaines Dog Meal .. .. 25 ~:~ 53,09 .
18..''49c
'
r•
Nab.IStn
rt ~ Newt on ~
... . .....
. "
1
:;;::·

s.... .. ·

If You R..d Tho SentiMI
. .. You Know!

4:r

·wHY?

ll You ltHd Till Sentinel
... 1 Know!

,.

'--- -~----·---

,....., ... ,..__

Holiday Store Hours
MONDAY . 9AM to
TUESDAY
9AMto
WEDNE7.'lAY 9 AM to
THURSDAY 9 AM to
FRIDAY
9 AM to

6 PM
9PM
9PM
9PM
6 PM

Clbsed Christmas Day

~~""-....:..=-

.

Compare These Prices!
FRESH AlP

·EggNog

•

• •

BLUE BONNET

Margarine •
Rey'nolds Wrap
HEAVY DUTY

Sko,59C
eiiL,

By MRS. RAYMOND PRICE
Mrs. Helen Norris vialted
Mr. and Mrs. Fritz Buck
Monday.
Weekend vlBitors of Mr. and
· Mrs. Oval Diddle were Mrs.
Pearl Adams of Letart Falls,
Mrs. Mabel Brace, Racine and
Wald Diddle of Kentucky and
three children of Middleport
and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Diddle
of St. Albans.
O.arles Hupp has opened a
new grocery store ln Ute former Shain and Philson
building.
Mr. and Mrs. Lowell McNickle vialted Mrs. Charles
McNickle who is ln Holze.Holpital.
Muine Sayre of Racine
spent an afternoon with Mrs .
Raymond Pierce.
Mr. and Mrs. Fritz Buck
vlBited over the weekend In
Columbus and were dinner
guest, Sunday of Mrs. Cora
Buck and Mr. and Mrs. John
Foster and son, Robert.

Soviets Have Plans for 1972

Uoo1· PlacJLW

MOSCOW (UPI)- If Leonid
Mad e of Bottle C~ps
I. Brezhnev has his way, 1972
will be a year of progress on all
By POLLY !.:RAMER
fronts for the Soviet Union.
II will also be Ute year of
DEAR POLLY - Shenie could make a holiday door or Brezhnev.
wall plaque with her collection of bottle caps. Cut a
The Communist party
Christmas tree of the deslred size out of a flat piece or general secretary and his
Styrofoam . After removing the corks, begin at the lop and policies dominated Ute Soviet
glue bottle caps all over the tree shape. When dry, spray Union during 1971, a year that
with gold paint. Glue tiny colored balls in the caps. AI
the end of the base of the tree, fasten a red or green vel- saw Brezhnev rise to new
vet bow. Use a pipe cleaner on the top back to hang it by. heights of prestige and power.
Various colors of balls may be glued to the caps or just He emerged from beneath a
one color to carry out a certain color scheme. The bow veil of facelessness to r-eveal a
could be the sa me color or a contrasting one.- MRS. bluff, bearish human side of
M. R F.
him that Ute world never had
seen.
· ;,;. ;;: ·}f:.':u•:.' "''"" Polly's Problem ,,,,.,. . ' ·.. : ':1¢'~'~''·;:;'
His emergence was no ac;; DEAR POLLY-Two of my silver-plated pieces ,
cident. It was part and parcel
::, have black marks on them which do not detract too r of a carefully planned Soviet
·' much from their beauty but bother me. Silver polish L
"~~ does not remove thein. I hope someone can recom- ft' public relations campaign that
targeled 1972 as a year of
~ mend something to remove these spots.-ANNA LEE l:
decision for the Soviet Union,
·&gt;i~~*~~"i.44W~.W~'{Mil%$$.":";.smmawtrmxr
):'3't;;
DEAR POLLY - 1 am a former schoolteacher who, like for Europe, for the United
others has tried to instill in the minds of pupils that all States and for the world. ·
Brezhnev and his Soviet
proper names begin with capital letters. My Pet Peeve is
that now on television, signs, advertisements, etc., we colleagues launched, in 1971, a
see such words beginning with small letters which must "peace offensive" that has Ute
confuse the children and certainly defeats the effort of goal of building a new world
teaching them the right method. I know of no reason this order. If he has his way, it will
is done excertto attract attention and they certainly conbe a world order arranged to
fuse a child s learning process.-CHARLOTTE
work to the advantage of the
DEAR POLLY-On the day after Christmas I check Soviet Union and its Comdecorations and wrapping supplies to see what is needed munist allies.
for the next year and then rush downtown to take advanKey Elements
tage of the after-Christmas specials. I find everything
The
key elements of the plan,
needed and often marked down from one-half to one-third
as
seen
by Western diplomats,
the original price. I roll leftover paper very lightly and
store INSIDE the cardboa~d roll for better protection and would be Utese :
-A dissolution of the North
pack the new purchases w1th the leftovers so they are all
together and ready for next Christmas at a much lower Atlantic Treaty Organization
cost than if I had wa1ted unhl the time such thmgs were (NATO) and its East bloc
needed.-AUNT MARY
equivalent, the Warsaw
DEAR POLLY- While playing with her Barbie dolls and Pact.
furniture at my house my
- The abolition of trade and
granddaughter found some
diplomatic policies that discriempty thread spools. She
made darling table and
floor lamps by glueing
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
spools together and topCase No. 10574
ping them with the plastic
HIA
Estate of JOSIE ROU SH ,
tops off hair spray and
Deceased.
Noti ce is hereby given that
starch spray cans. Some
Leora Young of Rt. 1. Rac ine,
were blue and some yellow
Ohio, has been duly appo inted
and they made great lampEx ecu tr ix of th e Es tate of Josie
shades.-MRS. F. W. Sr.
Rou s h , deceased, late of
Racine, Meigs County, Ohio .
Cred ito rs are required to f ile
DEAR POLLY - I solved
their
with said f id u cia ry
the problem of cleaning tinted peau de soie shoes by with inclaims
four months .
spraying them with a spot and soil preventative so cleanDat ed this lOth da y of
ing off spots and smudges presents no difficulty. 1 also Decem ber 1971 .
John c. Bacon
use this to spray my husband' s new ties and it works
Ac ting Probate Judge
great-MRS. L. L.
of sai d Cou nty
[N£W SPA.PER ENTERPRISE .t..SSN . I

M~ W~
.

minor, with mutual distrust
holding Ute level .weU below
what would be expected of two
far smaller nations .
Brezhnev is an orthodox man
whose faith Is firm in the orUtodox dogma Utat capitalism
is sick, and sooner or later It
will die. He would like to be
Utere to claim the body.

MEXICAN TENNIS
MEXICO CITY (UP! )-Joaquin Loyo Mayo captured his
fourth straight Mexican
national tennis title Sunday,
holding off a challenge by
Marcelo Lara in straight sets,
7.f!, 6-4, 6-4. Loyo Mayo had
been top seeded for the event
while Lara was seeded second.

·coMPTON. 0. D.
' OPTOMJT_RIST

OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO 12,2 TO 5 (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT ST.,
POMEROY.

ALL ITEMS
FOR SALE

NOW·-·

A DISCOUNT
DEPARTMENT STOitl

TONIGHTll
Built Up Shoulder

CERAMIC

Entire Stock

ANIMAL
FAMILIES

SCHOOL
SUPPLIES

GIRLS
SLIPS
Sizes 4 to 12

Now Thru Dec. 23rd

Regular $1.00

39~

Price

1121 13, 20, 27

Behind Tight End

you fort •ns

Embroidered

COME TO A

OF OUR NEW CLASS IN

POMEROY

"LOW COST INSURED
AUTO FINANCING

BY NATIONWIDE

Reduced-In Time for You

MENS SWEATERS
Former values to $8.95.
Entire stock markdown
for extra special gift
savings.

and

Shop Your Nearest Shoppers Mart!

ClASSES ALSO MEET WEEKLY
IN GALLIPOLIS Grace United
.

St. Louos Church
91 Slate St.
Tuesdays 7' 30 p.m.
$3.00 Registration

CALL

P.J. PAULEY
PHONE 992·2311

Values To 2Sc -

~~~~~~~. ~. ~ ~ ~~~~

COti.P"N~

You Will Need

TOYS FOR
STOCKINGS
STUFFERS

Methodist Church
2nd &amp; Cedar
Wednesdays 9:30a.m.
$2.00 Week ou ..

107 Spring Ave., l'omeroy

NATIONWIDE

3
Cube
Package

Pullover or Cardigans

Hi$ &amp; Hers - Mr. &amp; Mrs.
Decoraled Florals.

NO REGISTRAJIO.N · NO OBLIGATION

~
NUIONWIO( ll,( INSURANC(

$}47

OPENING MON., JAN. 3, 7:30P.M.
ST. PAUL'S LUTHERAN CHURCH
231 E. SO&lt;ond St., Pomeroy, Ohio

Ea.

A Wide Variety

.WEIGHT G) WATCHERS.
Some t.JIIdns, somelislfllin&amp; inc~ • Pf01ram thM wort.s~

ta All..•rum
til n•M"1411101wtoOMtWfi1C'IIH
,.fOK
10 • f•IIQ.MI Wo&amp;I(MI.. IIOtl.....
It"

-wi!Cllll ••""'"" ,.,..
_,..,...,._ ooC . O..

ftON,o,&amp;.

Ad~nlral

Qua&amp;/g

1972 COMPONENT
STEREO SYSTEMS

First Memorial Day
Gen. John A. Logan of
Murphysboro, Ill., issued the
first. order for the observance of Memorial Day on
May 30, !868, to honor those
who died ln the Clvll War
while he was commander·inchief of the Grand Army of
the Republic, according to
Encyclopaedia Britannica.

PILLOW
CASES

FREE OPEN MEETING

N•llonwlde .

~

Savings For Christmas Shoppers!
Gift Boxed!

BUYING A

u

12 ~_l.ash,e,s .. .·
.
- .'

All are regular 12·.94
shir!s . Sizes 5-M-L.

What
are
wait.

COST OF

a11l1

Sol

"'rlpes, checks..

Finance your new c1r with

Candy treats for chlldren of
the Middleport community wiU
be sacked by members of
Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
American Legion, at 6 p.m.
Wednesday at the hall.
All legionnaires are asked to
assist ln sacking the candy.
The treats wiU be ·distributed
by Santa at the hall between
4:30 and 6 p.m. on Friday.
Earlier ln the afternoon he will
take ireats to Ute Meigs County
Children's Home and the Infirmary . The regular meeting
of the post will be at 7:30
Wednesday night at the hall .

FLASH.
CUBES

Permanent Press,

course.

NEW CAR

Wednesday Eve

"SYLVANIA"

Right out of Stock!

BEAT

Sack Treats on

Be Prepared

SPORT SHIRTS

Milt Morin of the Cleveland Browns gives his wife
Ellen credit for part of his
&lt;uccess: " Ellen has a better
overall view of things than
I do. She sometimes sees
things I doq't because I'm
too wrap])el!!.' up ln &gt;football
while she "looks at things
from the outside. And she
refuses 1o be a crying towel.
She won' t let me rationalize
or make excuses."

THE HIGH

Famous "Brock"-10

Men's White

CHOCOLATE COVERED

DRESS
SHIRTS
No

iron,

polyesler 8.
cotton blend.
lsi
quality.
Regular $2.94.

Box

CHERRIES

$}44
Box

GIRLS
HOUSE
SLIPPERS
1.27 ,

Where've You Been?

oz.

On Sale Tonight

REG.
Unebacller Chuck Hunton
was drafled by the Buffalo
Blllaln 198$ but never played
for them before the KaD881
City Chle(s picked him up on
waivers. When Hunton wu
llcqulred by atruggllng Buffalo from Kansas City lhl•
seuon1 _~ Bllls olflclal asked
him, "wnere have you been?
We were expecting l;OU for
a scrimmage eeven years
ago." Hunton bad a ready
answer: "Oh, 1 w"nt to thr
Super Bowl."

decisive stage in ~ May, when
President Nixon meets Leonid
I. Brezhnev.
Brezhnev will be the man of
Ute hour when Nixon arrives,
and mariy diplomats expect
Nixon wiU have to deal with
him on all the basic Issues.
Those Issues are most likely
to be disannament and trade,
with Brezhnev wary on the first
point and aggressive on the
second. Many persons, including well-infonned Soviet officials, expeclthe Nixon visit to
produce a significant agreement on strategic arms limitation, probably a limitation on
antiballistics missile development. They will also look for
vast increases in trade between two of the world's great
industrial powers. Until now,
trade exchanges have been

minate against the Soviet bloc.
- A complete U.S. withdrawal from Southeast Asia.
- Israeli withdrawal from
Arab land occupied in Ute 1967
Middle East War.
-The establishment of a
modus vivendi with China that
would permit ideological, but
not military, warfare.
- The buildup of Soviet armed forces, both strategic and
tactical, that will be as good as
or better than those of the
United States.
Western diplomats see the
first and the last elements as
the keys to alithe others. Anew
Soviet world order must have
its policemen to enforce it. It is
exactly Utat basic military
point Uta! ·gtves the Soviet bid
credibility.
Soviet bloc armed forces
have never been stronger. In
many military areas the Soviet
Union is quickly surpassing Ute
United Stales, including some
areas of traditional U.S.
dominance, such as nuclear
missile armed submarines.
Man of the Hour
Soviet plans could reach a

Mens Long Sleeve

Legion Men Will

15 to 20 COUNT

of

L......---::----

Hospital, Room 273, and Mrs.
Francis asked that carda be
sent to him. SmiUt announced
the birth of a son to Mr. and
Mrs. Milford Hysell.
In commenting on work with
Ute scouts as cubmaster Smith
Utanked those who had assisted
him and spoke of the urgency
ln securing anoUter cubmaster.

1 tl

dey ofF E BRUAR Y and the 28 th
dey of SE PTEMBER .
BROWN County on the 6th
dey of APRIL and the 19th day

on

Holida~

1

OCTOBER .

ROSS Co unty

P«tU.V"S POINTERS

SfJJ"'Ut - t"ns Remembe,..od

A. D . 1972
STATE OF OHIO , FOURTH
14th) Jud icil!ll D is trict Court of
A.ppee ls
It is ordered that the time of
the beginn ing of the terms of th e
"Court of App eals ot the several
Counties in said
ADAM S County on the 5th day
of APRIL and th e 18th day of

OCTOBER

I

77~

PR.

Here's a Bonus-Regular 29c Pr.

BOYS DRESS SOCKS
Size 7¥2 to lOih
Dark Colors or White
All Cotton, Regular Stock

pr•.

Cottons - Quilts • Dacrons

Don't Forget
Your Christmas
with Patented Exclusive Adrnln.t

BAKER
..

..,.

IIII'LD

Stereo Sound System

SOUND AS IT REALLY SOUNDS

FURNITURE
MID~LEPORT,

O.

Candy
We'll Save
You Money!
SHOP IN

Womens Robes
And Dusters

'2'

4

to

'8

94

PT. PLEASANT OR MASON

..

..._. _ - - _.;...;_,
" ..

~

~.

..
•I

�t- The
20, 1971
. D.uy lnlnel,
. Mid I ... l-FWaoy, 0 ., Dec.
.

I- The o.ilY ~1, M!Meport-Pomero~. 0., Dec. 20, 1971
- Hair of ,Ute dog. (No, no,

No Perfect Cure for Hangover
WASHINGTON (UPI) -You had the perfect hangover cure.
c:811't really cure a hangover, It consisted of this and that and
7QII can only ouUast it. If you something else.
But P.G. Wodehouse, Ute
1111 long enough.
How's that for a sour note as great bumorLs! who created
each passing day remor- Bertie and Jeeves, is, alas, a
. Mlessly brings closer the humorist, not a medical scienOuistmas wassailing and New tist.
Year's carousing?
And the medical scientists
Sour or not, it seems to be say that neither Jeeves' formula (whatever it wasl nor any
Crlle.
Bertie Wooster always said
bla valet, fellow named Jeeves,

other that has been scientifically tested will produce an
instant cure for a big, bad
hangover .
But in case, quite by accident, you do drink too much
on Christmas or New Year's,
what can you do next day to get
a bit of bairn and surcease
from pain?
Aspirin and a little solid food,

- Raw oysters, chili peppers,

".Jleep it off." Some vitamin Bl

no. Just makes the ultimate vitamins, various drugs. (No may help.
scientific proof that they help
penalty worse. )
--Steak sauce and tomato at all.)
- Prussic acid; a pistol shot
juice or beer, while wine, or
half.;md-half, with beaten up in the head; decapitation.
raw egg. (Doesn't work.)
(Those are extreme "cures,"
- Black coffee, of course. and the medical community
Mugs of it. (If you've tried it does not recommend them.)
you know it doesn't really
Dr. Gertrude Maengwynhelp.)
Davies, professor of phar- Ice bags, cold showers, macology at Georgetown
breathing pure oxygen - if you University here, has concluded
can get it . (Old wives' tales, after much research that Ute
according to the National one best way of getting over Ute
Institutes of Health.)
miseries of a hangover is to

if you can lake it, may help.
Sleeping it off is better, if you
can.
But all this is still a matter of
surviving, not curing, your
hangover.
Human beings, who get
hungover by the millions at
holiday ·time, must have invented millions of hangover
, cures. Consider :

So, how about preventing
hangovers? A brochure
recentiy issued by the National Institutes of Health
suggesLs :
- Don't gulp. The faster you
drink Ute quicker you get
drunk.
- Drink sitting down and
relaxed. You'll get tight less
quickly Ulan if you drink
standing up.
-Watch your drinking when
you're emotionally upset,

under stress, or tired. ·The
drink wiU get to you quicker m
such circumstantes.
"If you choose to drink, Ute
best way to avoid a hang~~er,"
according to the Nlij, 1s. to
drink responsibly - slppmg
~lowly, with food In t~e
stomach, under relaxed soc1al
circumstances, and paying attention to your responses to the
alcoholic beverages so (that)
intoxication is avoided."
What is seems to boil down to
is that the time to prevent a
hangover is the night before.

vvecare----------~

LEGAL NOTICE
... NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

Administrltrix With the
W ill Annexed
N·o . l0S89
Est ate of FREDA FAUBER

Otceased .
Noti ce is h ereby given that
VIVIAN POSTON whose Po:.t
Office Address is 6046 Sedgw1ck
Road , Wort h ing to n, Oh io has

bHn duly appo inted as Ad ministrat rix w i th the Will an nexed of the Estate ot Freda
Fauber la te of Meigs County,
Ohio , deceased
D ated

th i s

9th

day

'

of

December l 971
John C. Bacon
Acting Judge of

the Probate Court
Meigs Cou n ty , Oh io

( 12 1 13, 20 , 27 , 31

TIMES FOR HOLDING
COURTS OF APPEALS .

•
•

Pack 245 Boys
Receive Awards
Selwyn Smith, completing
bla tenn as cubmaster of
Middleport
Pack
24S,
presented awarda at a Pack
meeting Thursday night at Ute
American Legion hall.
Receiving the awards were
Tom Kelly, a bobcat pln; John
Byer, KelUt Black and Danny
Smith, two year service stars;
Dorael Thomas, Keith Doss
and Lealie Whittington, one
year service stars; Mrs.
I'rances Whittington, a one
year leader's pln, and Frank
Martin, a bobcat pin.
Mrs . Eulah Francis an nounced that good toys are
needed for projects of Pack
245. Aparty wiU be held at the
Community Class for Retarded
Olildren Wednesday, a vial!
wiU be made to the Meigs
County Chlldren's Home and a
party will be held at the Meigs
County Infirmary.
II was noted Utat Mark Tyree
remains a patient at the Holzer

SELF-BASTING

Turkeys a::~c •
Turkeys .::~c.

ATHENS Co unty on th e 17th

la.tb.
oncl up lb.

SELF-BASTING

ot OCTOBER .

GALLIA County on the Jrd
dayot FEBRUARY and the 14th
day of SEPTE MBER .
HIGHLAND County on the 4th
day of APRIL and the 17th day

10 to 11
• Pounclt lb.

49c;

55c

BUTTERB"Ll

FRESH

Turkeys •.~;~~m •

Turkeys
Turkeys

l .. lb.

up

HONEYSUCKLE

• •

FRESH

Turkeys

•

l ..lb.
up

• •

I

ID to 17
poundo

lb.

59c:

of OCTOBER.
HOCKING County on the 18th
day of APRIL and the 14th day

Basketa of fruit for shut-ins
wiU be prepared by members
of the Minersville Women's
Society of Christian Service as
a special Christmas project.
MeeUng Thur!lday at Ute ·
church for a Chrislmas dinner
and party, Ute women also
decided to prepare a basket for
a needy person In the communlty. In lieu of exchanging
gifts, members contributed

ot NOVEMBER .

JACKSON County on the 7th
day Of MARCH and the Jr d da y

Cafffie·1 NeWS,

of OCTOBER .
LAWRENCE County on the .
8th day of MARCH and the 4th
dey of OCTOBER
MEIG S County on the 2n d day
ofF E B R.UAR Y and the 13th day

ot SE PTEMBER .

By the Day

PtCKAWAY County on th e
2nd day of MAY and the 16th
day of NOVEMBER
PI KE Cou nt y on the 22nd day
of MARCH and the 31st day of

Mr. and Mrs. Lee Harris of
Springfield, 0. spent Ute week
end with Mr. and Mrs. Horner
Orcle, Verna and Wavle .
'!be Shelby Pickens family
and Mr. and Mrs. Gene Hud8011, all of SyraQIIIe villted Mr.
and Mrs. AlWI Taylor on

the 19th day

of APRIL and lhe 151h day of

NOVEMBER

*

SCIOTO Co unty on the 23rd
day of MARCH and the 1st day

of NOVEMBER .

VINTON County on th e lst
day
r: e BRUAR Y and the 12th

o·:

d.y Of SE PTEMBER .

t»~ASHINGTON County on the
1!ihdayof FEBRUARY and the
26th day of SEPTEMBE R
Sai d terms to begin at 9 : 30
o'clock A .M .
Homer E . Ab ele
Ear l E . Stephenson
Gordon B. Gray
Judges .

SW!day.

.......

"·' ·

·.••

Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Circle
and family of Columbus spent a
few days with Mrs. . Mary
Circle. Mr. and Mrs. James
Circle of New Haven called on
&amp;mday at the Circle home.
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas
Johnson of Racine called at the
borne of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
E. Johll80n and family and
Betty VanMeter.

, ,., . _, ·.
BONELESS BOTTOM ROUN D

Beef Roast •
Fresh Sausage
Fresh Oysters
Jumbo Shrimp

(121 13 , 20. 27 . Jt

•

•

COUNTRY TREAT

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No. 20582
Estate of Anna Mozella Burton

•

79c
s-o.. ggc
• can
1-tb.
• pk(.

•

CAP "N JOHN STANDARD

Deceased.
Noti ce is herebv q iven that

Gold ie Hawk of Pomeroy , Oh io,
has been dul y appo i n tee
exec utr ix of the Estate of Anna

Conducting the opening for
the meeting were Troy Edwards, Jeffrey Whlttlnglon,
Keith Doss, Greg Laudermilt,
and Leslie Whittington. Den 3
had the slUt wiUt Ray Stewart,
Tony Scott, Randy Batey,
Bobby Fox and Frank Martin
participating. The boys sang
"Jingle Bells" and "SUent
Night" to close Ute meeting,
and gave the Lord's Prayer ln
wtison.
Soft drinks, cookies and
coffee were served ".ly Judy and
Jill Smith assisted by Mrs.
Jean Thomas.

• •

money into Ute treAsury. Miss
Clara Garland, Mrs. Lettie
Rae, and Mrs. Edna Wiggins,
all iU, will be sent gifts.
A poinsettia, presented by
Mr . and Mrs . Lawrence
Douglas, centered Ute dinner
tsble. '!be group sang "Silent
Night" and Mrs . Mildred
Phillips gave devotions .
Prayer was by Mrs. EUtel
Stewart. Readings were "One
Solitary Life" by Mrs. June
Sayre; "The Forgetfulness of
Christmas" by Mrs. Stewart,
"Legend of the Christmas
Tree" by Mrs . Phillips ;
"Legend of the Nativity Scene"
by Mrs. Stella Grueser;
"Legend of Ute Star" by Mrs.
Mary Russell ; "Why Dec. ~"
by Mrs . Clara McMaster;
"Angels" by Mrs. Anna
Hartenbach; "The Manger
Scene" by Mrs. Sadie Brown;
"The Yuletide Log" by Mrs.
Hosmer Roush ; "Mistletoe" by
Mrs. Lillie Starcher; and the
origin of "Silent Night" by
Mrs. Doris Grueser.
Attending the dinner meeting
besides those named were Ute
Rev. and Mrs. Forrest Donley,
Miss Dorothy Har tenbach ,
Mrs. Adolph Grueser, Mrs.
Freda Mitch, Mrs. Gertrude
Mitchell, Mrs. Mary Pugh,
Mrs. June Sayre, Mrs. Elsie
Forbes, Mrs. Hazel McCullum,
and Mrs. Charles Grueser.

Mo zella Burton , deceased , tat e
Pomero y, Meigs Co unty,
Ohio .
Cred itors are required to f ile
their claims w ith sa id fiduciary
within f our months .
Dat ed this 8th day ot

Antiquity

• •

December 1971 .

Holiday Nut Meats!
IN THE SHELL

Mixed Nuts
Walnuts ~~H~tc •
Mixed Nuts::~~~ .
Virginia Peanuts ~$1 69
I

CANADIENS RECALL
MONTREAL (UPI ) - The
Montreal Canadiens recalled
right winger Chuck Arnasson
&amp;mday night. Arnasson was
lrought up from Nova Scotia of
tbe American Hockey League
to replace injured Guy Lafleur.

I

II&amp;P BRI\NO

WHO?

Christmas Candy Buys!

If Yoo Read The Sentinel

BR ...CH "S ASSORTED

.. . You Know!

Chocolates •
Royal Luster :::E l&amp;-os. 45C
Thin Mints ::tE • '~:.. 49c
Ribbon Candya~:~~~s ~:.:·39c
11-lb.

•

$429

bo•

• pkl.

WHAT?
If You Read The Sentinel
... You Know !

Holiday Fro'len Foods!
BIROSEn

Cool Whip •
Handi Whip a::!~o • ~ 3t
Strawberries a~!~o 3:::: SlOO
French Fries s::!~o 3;~~ s1oo

WHEN?
If Yoo Rtlld The Sentinel
. .. You Know!

WHERE?

Easy Off Oven Cleaner ..
$1.39
..
punch Applo - ' "' 41.~.•• 43c
Hawauan
Zesta Crackers .. . ... . . . .';~".'
Pillsbury Holiday Cooki;.,. .. ~·i 98c
Morton F: J:&lt;:.:ln Fruit Pies . .':;:.~· 59c
Morton Frozen Cream Pies . 1:i:~ · 39c
Gaines Dog Meal .. .. 25 ~:~ 53,09 .
18..''49c
'
r•
Nab.IStn
rt ~ Newt on ~
... . .....
. "
1
:;;::·

s.... .. ·

If You R..d Tho SentiMI
. .. You Know!

4:r

·wHY?

ll You ltHd Till Sentinel
... 1 Know!

,.

'--- -~----·---

,....., ... ,..__

Holiday Store Hours
MONDAY . 9AM to
TUESDAY
9AMto
WEDNE7.'lAY 9 AM to
THURSDAY 9 AM to
FRIDAY
9 AM to

6 PM
9PM
9PM
9PM
6 PM

Clbsed Christmas Day

~~""-....:..=-

.

Compare These Prices!
FRESH AlP

·EggNog

•

• •

BLUE BONNET

Margarine •
Rey'nolds Wrap
HEAVY DUTY

Sko,59C
eiiL,

By MRS. RAYMOND PRICE
Mrs. Helen Norris vialted
Mr. and Mrs. Fritz Buck
Monday.
Weekend vlBitors of Mr. and
· Mrs. Oval Diddle were Mrs.
Pearl Adams of Letart Falls,
Mrs. Mabel Brace, Racine and
Wald Diddle of Kentucky and
three children of Middleport
and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Diddle
of St. Albans.
O.arles Hupp has opened a
new grocery store ln Ute former Shain and Philson
building.
Mr. and Mrs. Lowell McNickle vialted Mrs. Charles
McNickle who is ln Holze.Holpital.
Muine Sayre of Racine
spent an afternoon with Mrs .
Raymond Pierce.
Mr. and Mrs. Fritz Buck
vlBited over the weekend In
Columbus and were dinner
guest, Sunday of Mrs. Cora
Buck and Mr. and Mrs. John
Foster and son, Robert.

Soviets Have Plans for 1972

Uoo1· PlacJLW

MOSCOW (UPI)- If Leonid
Mad e of Bottle C~ps
I. Brezhnev has his way, 1972
will be a year of progress on all
By POLLY !.:RAMER
fronts for the Soviet Union.
II will also be Ute year of
DEAR POLLY - Shenie could make a holiday door or Brezhnev.
wall plaque with her collection of bottle caps. Cut a
The Communist party
Christmas tree of the deslred size out of a flat piece or general secretary and his
Styrofoam . After removing the corks, begin at the lop and policies dominated Ute Soviet
glue bottle caps all over the tree shape. When dry, spray Union during 1971, a year that
with gold paint. Glue tiny colored balls in the caps. AI
the end of the base of the tree, fasten a red or green vel- saw Brezhnev rise to new
vet bow. Use a pipe cleaner on the top back to hang it by. heights of prestige and power.
Various colors of balls may be glued to the caps or just He emerged from beneath a
one color to carry out a certain color scheme. The bow veil of facelessness to r-eveal a
could be the sa me color or a contrasting one.- MRS. bluff, bearish human side of
M. R F.
him that Ute world never had
seen.
· ;,;. ;;: ·}f:.':u•:.' "''"" Polly's Problem ,,,,.,. . ' ·.. : ':1¢'~'~''·;:;'
His emergence was no ac;; DEAR POLLY-Two of my silver-plated pieces ,
cident. It was part and parcel
::, have black marks on them which do not detract too r of a carefully planned Soviet
·' much from their beauty but bother me. Silver polish L
"~~ does not remove thein. I hope someone can recom- ft' public relations campaign that
targeled 1972 as a year of
~ mend something to remove these spots.-ANNA LEE l:
decision for the Soviet Union,
·&gt;i~~*~~"i.44W~.W~'{Mil%$$.":";.smmawtrmxr
):'3't;;
DEAR POLLY - 1 am a former schoolteacher who, like for Europe, for the United
others has tried to instill in the minds of pupils that all States and for the world. ·
Brezhnev and his Soviet
proper names begin with capital letters. My Pet Peeve is
that now on television, signs, advertisements, etc., we colleagues launched, in 1971, a
see such words beginning with small letters which must "peace offensive" that has Ute
confuse the children and certainly defeats the effort of goal of building a new world
teaching them the right method. I know of no reason this order. If he has his way, it will
is done excertto attract attention and they certainly conbe a world order arranged to
fuse a child s learning process.-CHARLOTTE
work to the advantage of the
DEAR POLLY-On the day after Christmas I check Soviet Union and its Comdecorations and wrapping supplies to see what is needed munist allies.
for the next year and then rush downtown to take advanKey Elements
tage of the after-Christmas specials. I find everything
The
key elements of the plan,
needed and often marked down from one-half to one-third
as
seen
by Western diplomats,
the original price. I roll leftover paper very lightly and
store INSIDE the cardboa~d roll for better protection and would be Utese :
-A dissolution of the North
pack the new purchases w1th the leftovers so they are all
together and ready for next Christmas at a much lower Atlantic Treaty Organization
cost than if I had wa1ted unhl the time such thmgs were (NATO) and its East bloc
needed.-AUNT MARY
equivalent, the Warsaw
DEAR POLLY- While playing with her Barbie dolls and Pact.
furniture at my house my
- The abolition of trade and
granddaughter found some
diplomatic policies that discriempty thread spools. She
made darling table and
floor lamps by glueing
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
spools together and topCase No. 10574
ping them with the plastic
HIA
Estate of JOSIE ROU SH ,
tops off hair spray and
Deceased.
Noti ce is hereby given that
starch spray cans. Some
Leora Young of Rt. 1. Rac ine,
were blue and some yellow
Ohio, has been duly appo inted
and they made great lampEx ecu tr ix of th e Es tate of Josie
shades.-MRS. F. W. Sr.
Rou s h , deceased, late of
Racine, Meigs County, Ohio .
Cred ito rs are required to f ile
DEAR POLLY - I solved
their
with said f id u cia ry
the problem of cleaning tinted peau de soie shoes by with inclaims
four months .
spraying them with a spot and soil preventative so cleanDat ed this lOth da y of
ing off spots and smudges presents no difficulty. 1 also Decem ber 1971 .
John c. Bacon
use this to spray my husband' s new ties and it works
Ac ting Probate Judge
great-MRS. L. L.
of sai d Cou nty
[N£W SPA.PER ENTERPRISE .t..SSN . I

M~ W~
.

minor, with mutual distrust
holding Ute level .weU below
what would be expected of two
far smaller nations .
Brezhnev is an orthodox man
whose faith Is firm in the orUtodox dogma Utat capitalism
is sick, and sooner or later It
will die. He would like to be
Utere to claim the body.

MEXICAN TENNIS
MEXICO CITY (UP! )-Joaquin Loyo Mayo captured his
fourth straight Mexican
national tennis title Sunday,
holding off a challenge by
Marcelo Lara in straight sets,
7.f!, 6-4, 6-4. Loyo Mayo had
been top seeded for the event
while Lara was seeded second.

·coMPTON. 0. D.
' OPTOMJT_RIST

OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO 12,2 TO 5 (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT ST.,
POMEROY.

ALL ITEMS
FOR SALE

NOW·-·

A DISCOUNT
DEPARTMENT STOitl

TONIGHTll
Built Up Shoulder

CERAMIC

Entire Stock

ANIMAL
FAMILIES

SCHOOL
SUPPLIES

GIRLS
SLIPS
Sizes 4 to 12

Now Thru Dec. 23rd

Regular $1.00

39~

Price

1121 13, 20, 27

Behind Tight End

you fort •ns

Embroidered

COME TO A

OF OUR NEW CLASS IN

POMEROY

"LOW COST INSURED
AUTO FINANCING

BY NATIONWIDE

Reduced-In Time for You

MENS SWEATERS
Former values to $8.95.
Entire stock markdown
for extra special gift
savings.

and

Shop Your Nearest Shoppers Mart!

ClASSES ALSO MEET WEEKLY
IN GALLIPOLIS Grace United
.

St. Louos Church
91 Slate St.
Tuesdays 7' 30 p.m.
$3.00 Registration

CALL

P.J. PAULEY
PHONE 992·2311

Values To 2Sc -

~~~~~~~. ~. ~ ~ ~~~~

COti.P"N~

You Will Need

TOYS FOR
STOCKINGS
STUFFERS

Methodist Church
2nd &amp; Cedar
Wednesdays 9:30a.m.
$2.00 Week ou ..

107 Spring Ave., l'omeroy

NATIONWIDE

3
Cube
Package

Pullover or Cardigans

Hi$ &amp; Hers - Mr. &amp; Mrs.
Decoraled Florals.

NO REGISTRAJIO.N · NO OBLIGATION

~
NUIONWIO( ll,( INSURANC(

$}47

OPENING MON., JAN. 3, 7:30P.M.
ST. PAUL'S LUTHERAN CHURCH
231 E. SO&lt;ond St., Pomeroy, Ohio

Ea.

A Wide Variety

.WEIGHT G) WATCHERS.
Some t.JIIdns, somelislfllin&amp; inc~ • Pf01ram thM wort.s~

ta All..•rum
til n•M"1411101wtoOMtWfi1C'IIH
,.fOK
10 • f•IIQ.MI Wo&amp;I(MI.. IIOtl.....
It"

-wi!Cllll ••""'"" ,.,..
_,..,...,._ ooC . O..

ftON,o,&amp;.

Ad~nlral

Qua&amp;/g

1972 COMPONENT
STEREO SYSTEMS

First Memorial Day
Gen. John A. Logan of
Murphysboro, Ill., issued the
first. order for the observance of Memorial Day on
May 30, !868, to honor those
who died ln the Clvll War
while he was commander·inchief of the Grand Army of
the Republic, according to
Encyclopaedia Britannica.

PILLOW
CASES

FREE OPEN MEETING

N•llonwlde .

~

Savings For Christmas Shoppers!
Gift Boxed!

BUYING A

u

12 ~_l.ash,e,s .. .·
.
- .'

All are regular 12·.94
shir!s . Sizes 5-M-L.

What
are
wait.

COST OF

a11l1

Sol

"'rlpes, checks..

Finance your new c1r with

Candy treats for chlldren of
the Middleport community wiU
be sacked by members of
Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
American Legion, at 6 p.m.
Wednesday at the hall.
All legionnaires are asked to
assist ln sacking the candy.
The treats wiU be ·distributed
by Santa at the hall between
4:30 and 6 p.m. on Friday.
Earlier ln the afternoon he will
take ireats to Ute Meigs County
Children's Home and the Infirmary . The regular meeting
of the post will be at 7:30
Wednesday night at the hall .

FLASH.
CUBES

Permanent Press,

course.

NEW CAR

Wednesday Eve

"SYLVANIA"

Right out of Stock!

BEAT

Sack Treats on

Be Prepared

SPORT SHIRTS

Milt Morin of the Cleveland Browns gives his wife
Ellen credit for part of his
&lt;uccess: " Ellen has a better
overall view of things than
I do. She sometimes sees
things I doq't because I'm
too wrap])el!!.' up ln &gt;football
while she "looks at things
from the outside. And she
refuses 1o be a crying towel.
She won' t let me rationalize
or make excuses."

THE HIGH

Famous "Brock"-10

Men's White

CHOCOLATE COVERED

DRESS
SHIRTS
No

iron,

polyesler 8.
cotton blend.
lsi
quality.
Regular $2.94.

Box

CHERRIES

$}44
Box

GIRLS
HOUSE
SLIPPERS
1.27 ,

Where've You Been?

oz.

On Sale Tonight

REG.
Unebacller Chuck Hunton
was drafled by the Buffalo
Blllaln 198$ but never played
for them before the KaD881
City Chle(s picked him up on
waivers. When Hunton wu
llcqulred by atruggllng Buffalo from Kansas City lhl•
seuon1 _~ Bllls olflclal asked
him, "wnere have you been?
We were expecting l;OU for
a scrimmage eeven years
ago." Hunton bad a ready
answer: "Oh, 1 w"nt to thr
Super Bowl."

decisive stage in ~ May, when
President Nixon meets Leonid
I. Brezhnev.
Brezhnev will be the man of
Ute hour when Nixon arrives,
and mariy diplomats expect
Nixon wiU have to deal with
him on all the basic Issues.
Those Issues are most likely
to be disannament and trade,
with Brezhnev wary on the first
point and aggressive on the
second. Many persons, including well-infonned Soviet officials, expeclthe Nixon visit to
produce a significant agreement on strategic arms limitation, probably a limitation on
antiballistics missile development. They will also look for
vast increases in trade between two of the world's great
industrial powers. Until now,
trade exchanges have been

minate against the Soviet bloc.
- A complete U.S. withdrawal from Southeast Asia.
- Israeli withdrawal from
Arab land occupied in Ute 1967
Middle East War.
-The establishment of a
modus vivendi with China that
would permit ideological, but
not military, warfare.
- The buildup of Soviet armed forces, both strategic and
tactical, that will be as good as
or better than those of the
United States.
Western diplomats see the
first and the last elements as
the keys to alithe others. Anew
Soviet world order must have
its policemen to enforce it. It is
exactly Utat basic military
point Uta! ·gtves the Soviet bid
credibility.
Soviet bloc armed forces
have never been stronger. In
many military areas the Soviet
Union is quickly surpassing Ute
United Stales, including some
areas of traditional U.S.
dominance, such as nuclear
missile armed submarines.
Man of the Hour
Soviet plans could reach a

Mens Long Sleeve

Legion Men Will

15 to 20 COUNT

of

L......---::----

Hospital, Room 273, and Mrs.
Francis asked that carda be
sent to him. SmiUt announced
the birth of a son to Mr. and
Mrs. Milford Hysell.
In commenting on work with
Ute scouts as cubmaster Smith
Utanked those who had assisted
him and spoke of the urgency
ln securing anoUter cubmaster.

1 tl

dey ofF E BRUAR Y and the 28 th
dey of SE PTEMBER .
BROWN County on the 6th
dey of APRIL and the 19th day

on

Holida~

1

OCTOBER .

ROSS Co unty

P«tU.V"S POINTERS

SfJJ"'Ut - t"ns Remembe,..od

A. D . 1972
STATE OF OHIO , FOURTH
14th) Jud icil!ll D is trict Court of
A.ppee ls
It is ordered that the time of
the beginn ing of the terms of th e
"Court of App eals ot the several
Counties in said
ADAM S County on the 5th day
of APRIL and th e 18th day of

OCTOBER

I

77~

PR.

Here's a Bonus-Regular 29c Pr.

BOYS DRESS SOCKS
Size 7¥2 to lOih
Dark Colors or White
All Cotton, Regular Stock

pr•.

Cottons - Quilts • Dacrons

Don't Forget
Your Christmas
with Patented Exclusive Adrnln.t

BAKER
..

..,.

IIII'LD

Stereo Sound System

SOUND AS IT REALLY SOUNDS

FURNITURE
MID~LEPORT,

O.

Candy
We'll Save
You Money!
SHOP IN

Womens Robes
And Dusters

'2'

4

to

'8

94

PT. PLEASANT OR MASON

..

..._. _ - - _.;...;_,
" ..

~

~.

..
•I

�.-

...
,.
r

..i

'
..,.'·..
,.,.

S~';ii~'";i(jj;;;"i,fieds Get Action! Sentinel~lassifieds Get Results!
For Rent
by Gill Fox

SrDE GLANCES

FURNISH E 0 sleeping room .
over Wine Store. Rent by
month . Phone 992-5293.
11 -26-tlc

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS

OF
QUALITY
1970 CAMARO COUPE

2 BEDROOM mobile home in
Racine area . Phone 9'12-6329.
12-14-lfc

350 V·B engine, automatic, power steering console,
beautiful dark green, finished with green vinyl roof . Less
than 12,000 miles by local owner , radio, new w.w tires . A
· sharp model pri ced to please.

$2995

"Phase 1 was over before I figured out who the
good guys were !"

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB
It's Called Hypoglycemia

The Low Blood
Sugar Disease

and have your own route and
make good money? Call
Brown's in Middl epor t 992 .
5113 , distributors of Koscot
Kosmetics.

11 -16-tfc'

SAVE up to one half. Bring your
sick TV to Chuck's TV Shop,
151 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.

Phone 992 -5080.

11 -21 -lfc

ABOU T YOUR WEIGHT ...
overweig ht ladies, teens and
men interested in a We ight

Watchers

(R)

Pomer oy

write:

Class

in

Watchers (R), 1863 Section
Rd .. Cincinnati , Ohio 45237.
JO.J.tfc
IN STRUCTIONS in piano and
orga n. Gerald Hoffner , phone

having di zzy spe lls. extre me
exhauston. loud heart beats.
Dear Dr. Lamb-l read vibratmg all ove r my body.
your article on the s·y mp· nervousness. ha vi ng to eat
toms of diabetes and hi gh often and blurry eyesig ht. I
blood sugar. I was extreme- think it must be as se riou s
ly interested because I am as diabetes. Since eatin g a
trying to find out about hypo· high protein diet. my stom ·
glycemia. or low blood sug· ach ulcer condition has im·
ar . 1 would like to hea r all proved 50 per cent. goi ng lo
about this condi tion . I kn ow show that some of the sy mp·
I have it and I am dtetmg tom s I thought were ulcers.
for it. For vears I have been were really th is low blood
sugar condttion .

By Lawrence Lamb. M.D.

Local Bowling
Goble Ford
Mixed League
K~ilh

A close race for first place in

the Keith Goble Ford Bowling
M\xed · L~egve

I~

underway ,

wilh but one week remaining in

the first half. Team No. 4 leads
the league with 84 points, but
Team No. 6 is a close second

with 80 points. Team No. 10 is a

close

third

with

72

points.

Tuesday, December 21 will
decide the firs t half winner

between Team No. 4 and Team

No. 6. Members of Team No. 4
are Ruth

Janey , Captain ;

Garnet Elliott, Mar ilyn Taylor
and Dick Taylor, and Merida
Shaw . Members of Team No. 6
are Ermalie Straight, Bette
Null. Fedorah Doss, Wayne
Doss and Don Horan .
On Tuesday, December 14,
Virginia Grover had an all spare game.
The second half will begin on

Tuesday , December 28. AI the
end of the year , the winners of

the first and second halves will
meet in a roll -off to determine
the first and second place
teams for the 1971 -72 season.
The League is sponsored by

Keith Goble Ford of Mid ·
dleport, Ohio and has seventy
members.

Standings week of December

14:

Team
W. L
No. 4
84 36
No. 6
80 40
No. 10
72 48
No. 8
68 52
No . 13
67 53
No. 2
65 55
No. 5
62 58
No. 7
56 64
No. 3
54 66
No . 11
54 66
No . 12
54 66
No .9
51 69
No . 1
40 80
No. 14
33 87
On Dec. 14, Team No.4 took
si• poi nts from Team No. 14.
Merida Shaw was high for
Team -4 with 541 pin s, and Joh n
Lane was high for Team 14
with 514 pins .
Team No. 6 took eight points
fr om Team No. 13. Don Horan
was high f or Team No. 6 with
534 pin s, and Wayne Sha ver
was hi gh for Team No. 13 with
i94 pins .
Team No. 2 took B points
from Team No. 11. Gilbert

Meal was high for Team No. 2
with 547 pins and John Ll oyd
was high tor Team No. 11 with

"45 pins.

Tee~m No. 1 took 8 points

fr om Team No. 3. Dwig ht
Unger was high for Team No. l
with 518 pin s and Steve Carter
was high for Tea m No. 3 with

Dr. Lamb , please inform
me concerning hypogl ycem·
ia or low blood sugar.
Dear Reader- 0 v e r the
past several months there
have been a large number of
letters . asiUng~l!\. hyp.o- ·
glycemia . It s~rns to be a
very popular diagnosis and .
interestingly eno ugh. most of
the letters are fr om wom en
wi th this problem , not men .
I'll try to gi ve you and the
ot her readers an overview of
the problem in the next few
columns.
The symptom s you descri be are indeed those that
ca n occur from hypoglycemia , but there are a lot of other problems that can and do
cause similar difficulties.
Anxiety states or nervousness often cause similar
problems and the causf is
entirely different. I don 't
want everyone who ha s these
general symptoms to jump
to the conclusion that they
have hypoglycemia, a factor
that I suspect has something
to do with the current popularity of this diagnosis. A
proper diagnosis of hypo glycemia can only be made
by careful laboratory tests .
A person who is actually
having hypoglycemia will
have definite and characteris tic changes in the amount
of sugar in the blood over a
period of hours , and this can
be measured precisely. If
the blood sugar remains
normal throughout adequate
tes tin g of several hour s dura ti on and particularly durin g
the tim e that the person has
sym ptoms, the problem is
not hypoglycemia.
Many of the symptoms you
desc ribed are really caused
by the release of massive
amounts of adrenalin in the
body . The t i n y adrenal
gla nds over eac h kidney re lease adrenalin whenever the
body is stressed or threatened. Thi s hormone is often
sa id tu mobilize the body
for "fight or flight " It is
a powerful hormone and has

many uses in medicine, incl ud ing treating acute asth·
ma , allergic reactions and
shoc k.
Adrenalin is closely re-

501 pins.
Team No. 12 took 6 points
from Team No. 9. J im Isaac
was high for Team No. 12 with
470 pins and Virgin ia Grove r
was high for Team No. 9 with

-487 pins.
Team No. 5 split 8 poin ts with

Team No . 8. Burl Cook was
high for Team No. 5 with 603
pins and Charlie Neal was high
for Team No. 8 with 510 pins.
Team No. 10 split 8 points
with Team No. 7. Gloria Me·
Daniel (sub) was high . lor
Team No. 10 with 553 pins and
Kerm Malone was high for
Team No. 7 with ~54 pins.
High single game for the
ladles tor the evening was 205
pins held by Gloria McDaniel
(sub land regular bowler, Ruth
Janey, had a high of 202 pins.
High series for the ladles was
5.5~ total pins, held by Gloria
McDaniel lsubl. Ruth Janey
531 and for the men 603 total
pins held by Burl Cook .

992.3825.

12-19-6fc
TWO male kit tens to give away .

Phone 992.5327 .
12·17·3tc

Employn ••.Jt Wanted
INTERIOR painting . Call Don
VanMete r 985-3951.
12-19-12tp

Jersey Codets
New Jersey has contrlb·
uted more players to the
West Point football I e a m
than any other state with t3.
The I e a m roster also includes seven playe rs !rum
PeniiSyt-v anta, ·l ·h e . second
best represented state.

SUCCESS ...
Early To Bed
Early To Rise
Work Like Heck
And Advertise
In the

DAILY SENTINEL
Devote&lt;! To The Interests of the Meigs·
Mason Area .

12· 19-Jtc

3 - 750 X 16, B PLY truck tires
- $25: 700 x 18, 8 ply truck
tire; good work pony, large,
_Can_~_~jlCI'tion &amp; Corrections
gentle for children ; phone 949·
Wilt be accepted until 9 a.m. tor 3073.
Day of Publi&lt;alion
12-19-6tc
REGULATIONS

RATES

12-17-6tc

25 Per Cent Discount on pale£

of jewelry ,. opera length
necklace, cham. belt, bracelet.

CARO OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

etc.
All
1lems
very
reasonable . Phone 992-2936.

$1. 50 for 50 word minimum .l

12-17-Jtc

. - - - - - - - - - - - . , · POODLE puppies. Silver Toy,
ft,;kview Kennels. Phone 992
B-15-tfc

WANTED!

SENTINEL
CARRIERS

APPLES -

LARGE farm fresh eggs . Phone
843·2778 .
12·15-6tc

PHONE 992-2156
FOR DETAILS I

BEAUTIFUL Early American

BAR

MAIO

weekend

1

style ,

com .

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets

.

211

8lor$1.oo

The
Daily Sentinel
111 Court 51.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Call 992·2441 after S p.m.
11 ·28·tfc

plus the new Electro suds for

'62 CHEVY Impala , runs good
$100, '52 Chevy pickup, mint
condilion .
Phone
9'12-

shampooing carpet . Only
$27.50 cash price or terms
available. Phone 992-5641.
12-14-6tc

12-J7.JOtp

1968 FORD pickup, custom cab,
wide bed , $1,400 J . '69
Volkswagen, $1,100, '69 Dodge
Swinger. 2 dr. hardtop, V-8,
standard. $1,100 . '64 Ford
convertible, excellent con·

dillon, $500. Phone 992·6048.
J2. 19·4fp

FURNISHED and unfurnished
apartments. Close to school.

Phone 992-5434.

has all clean lng attachments

Christmas Special!

I

23 Cu• Ff'

I
I

12-ll·tfC
124, Syracuse,

Jhlo. 992-2951.

I

REG. $309.00
SAVE $60.00

1
I

1 SALE •249 1
I
.
.
POM!RO~
I
I ... - Jock w. Carsey, Mgr. I

J

·---------I

6:idl

~llone 992·21"

modern

Ca II him at 614-593-3022
· call collect · for
complete details .
Today-'s Army wan1s to
join you at a muc h
!ligher ~alary .

ceramic tile bath. Hot water
heat , basement, and fenced
yard . Phone 742-3171.
12-13-6\p

SEPTIC tanks cleaned . Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph .
662 -~035 .

2-J2.1fc

- - -CONCRETE
-READY·MIX

delivered right to your·
project. Fast and easy. Free

estimates . Phone 992 -3284 .
Goegleln Ready -Mix Co ..
Middleport, Oh io.
6·30·ftC•

Virgil B. - - -- - - TEAFORD

stereo-radio, AM-FM radio, 4speaker sound system. 4-

speed automatic changer,
separate

controls.

Balance

$68.72. Use our budget terms.
Phone 9'12-7085.
12-14-6tc

4·2·tlc LITTLE PIGS, 9 weeks old, SB
each or SIS pair. Phone 9~91 BEDROOM trailer apart". 4882.
ment, ideal for couples.
12-14-6tc
Contact McClure's Dairy Isle,
992·5248 or 9'12-3436.
TWIN
NEEDLE
sewing
12-15-12tc
machine, 1971 model. in new
walnut stand. All features
NEW 2 bedroom. double wide.
built-In to make fancy
mob ile home on !of in
designs. Also buttonholes,
Syracuse . Completely fur ·
blind hems, etc. $43.35 cash
nished . Phone 9'12-2441 after l
price or ternis ava i lable.
p.m.
Phone 9'12-5641.
J2.J4-6tc
12-1~· 6tc

utilities paid . Phone 992·7384
or 992-7133.
. 12-19-Jtc

house , bath,

business or

storage building Phone 985-3529 .

$6,500.
12-19-JOtc

YOi.l'li?€ "TNINKING,

/AI(£ Y0/.1/t MAC&amp;

~€E8€l

HEY, IT

AT

0~[)

/)EVIL'S

DESC'ENrj

'.

BUT WE'LL '-IEED

YOU'RE - SIGH!!- HIR.ALL
RIGHT- SO I CAN'T GIVE

SOME CHANGE

FOR THATPEOPLE Ll KE

~0

OUR CHRI&lt;S&gt;fM~ PAI'rTl&lt;'

YOU ~y CA"*l- BUr I

:?Uos-r " "'' "!'

CAN GI\IE YOU A LOT
OF S'{MPATHY !!-

ME NEVER

-

MlDOLEPORT -

.

tune up and brake s!fvice.

10 room

doubl e house . S3500.00 .
FREE GAS HEAT - 6 room s,

11/:z

NEW

lots .

6e-Yow!

Pomeroy

~POUTING,
ROOF PAINTIN~
NEW &amp; OLD WOR"
All Weather R_ooflng &amp;
Construction Co. and Anthony flumbing &amp; Heating :·
Complete
Plumbing ,
Healing and Ajr Conditioning.

240 Lincoln St., foliddlepoo·t

HE P'IDNT EVE:N

LOOKAT ME ....
vlJ.9T GOT UP
,O.NP' LEFT "THE
TAeLE!

,,, BUT FIRST HE MUST
BE INFOR.MED CJF
TAANAA'S TREACHERY!

GASOLINE

.'

Phone 992-25SO
Insured · Experienced
Work Guaranteed
See - us- tor
Free
Estimate on Furnace
lnst_.lation.

O' DELL WHEEL ollg;\ment
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124. REFRIGERATION and a ir
conditioning service. Repair
Complete front end service.

Broker
110 Mecllanic Street
Pomeroy , Ohio

Wheels balanced
Ironically .
All
guaranteed .

elec work

Reasonable

rates. Phone 9'12-3213.

complete Service
Phone949-3821

Racine, Ohio
Crilt Bradford
5-1-ttc

-------

and servicing refrigeration
unlts also some fleatlng units,

furnaces, etc . Phone 992·3074.
J2.J9.6tc

·BORN l.DSER

BACKHOE AND DOZER work .
Septic tanks installed. George
IBIIII Pullins, Phone 992-WB.
4-25·ttc

N'E'/. roGt8, J.N. I W.DTO SEE 'IOU! ~ISTC~,MV
II'.T1ERV IS LC¥t... I(;W,48:11r
lie A f'VSHJ
~IS GIVIN' AIIIAY THE PIANO HOMER
HIGHTOWER FIXES T' THAT lADY AN'

NEIGLER Building Supply .
Free estimate on building

HER ~ID"· WITHOUT MAKIHCl A DIME
00 THE DEAL .. , PROVES ~ B.!!:D

your new home . Will draw

prints to suit the lay of your
LIST lNG . $6,000.00.
WRECKING and hauling .
land . Call Guy Nelgler,
LETART- 5 rooms , basement.
Phone 9'12·6083.
Racine. Ohio. For repair and
Large loit for garden. Asking
12-17-lOtp
aluminum siding , sotfet and
$5,000.00.
gutter . Call Donald Smith,
MIDDLEPORT 2 apart AUTOMOBILE Insurance
Racine. Ohio.
•
ments - 11 rooms. 2 baths.
been cancelled? Lost your
10·7-tfc
Adj unct to shopping .
operator's license? Call 992· - - - - - P. S. 3 ACRES- 6 room house .
2966.
Dug well, cellar , 3 out '6-15-tfc HARRISON'S TV and Anten~a
buildings. Asking $5500 .00 .
Service. Phone 9'12-2522.
.
'·
NEW LISTING.
6-Jo.tfc
WE HAVE 40 PROPERTIES Mobile Homes F01 Sale
•
FOR
SALE .
HOMEL
BUSINESSES, FARMS AND
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
COMMERCIAL LAND.
service, all makes. 992-228~ .
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
992-3325- 992-2378
Authorized Singer Sales and
HELEN L. TEAFORD
ASSOCIATE
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
NEAR EWING MORTUARY
3-29·tfC
12-16-6tc
NICE 2·slory home with full
basemen!, 2 lots, new forced
air furnace . Near Pomeroy

Elemen ta ry School.
9'12-7384 to see.

Phone.

MILLER

MOBIL£ HOMES
1220 Washington Blvd.
·
Belpre, Ohio

7· 18-t" FOR THE BEST deal in a new
.
SIX ROOM house, 133 Butternu• or used mobile home, try
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
Ave. Contact Ed Hedr ick, 2137
Kanauga,
Ohio.
Wadsworth Dr ive, Columbus,
12·17-90tc
Ohio, phone 237-4334.
n -2t -ttc

Cleland
Realty

.ali £EQQI&lt; J,Jg f!lQf. CREEPY~~

ACROSS
I. English
river
f. Box
I. Famous
Tommy
Dorsey
recording
10. Llama
land
11. Fruit of
the oak
12. Carp at
IS. Rever·
berate
If. Delphi
had a fa.

CARNIVAL

We talk to you
like a persOO.

mous one

WMP0/1390

16. Climb

......_ _ .. .. .

by Dick Tumer

olftfr, ~ lliJT Till!
I.AIIfts A flU$!~~
'ttl JII~TIFY
~ ll:liJ Wli.L

-- ··------ 1

5111! MUST

•

0

0

0

0

Saturday'&amp; Cryptoquote: THE PAIN OF THE MIND IS
~~: THAN THE PAIN OF THE BODY.- PUBLILIUS

35. Redo-

dream

.lence
36. Seeing

(!!) 1971 Kin,l!' Fe11 tures Syndicn te, Inc. )

wds.)
6. Seed coat
(3

red
38. Bugbear

39. Rivet of
Hades
fO. Conduce
41. Secular
DOWN
I . Sing

Sinatra
style
2. Venlilato
3. "Peace
to - "
(4wds.)
4. Nursery
rhyme
Jack

JltJJJW@~;-14.1 !::!!:! .-

7. Maxim
8. Auto
9. "Good
tidings ol
great joy"
(4 wds.)
13. Chemical
salt

15. Rarin '
togo
19. See eye
to eye
%1. Maybe
(2 wds.)

I vllfi\JI&lt;

22. Roman
official
30. Transgressed
31. Substantial
32. Owlish

fl!lr\1&lt;11(1

Unscnmhle these four Jumbleo,
one letter to each oquut, to
form four ordinary wordo.

I

=

H\olll&lt;lltl l l

NEKEL

sound

·33. Brink

37. Turmerk

(I J I I
tTELKJN

t

II

.....
A COMEDOWN ON
~ROADWAY.

minate
Zf. King of

~t:l:lW

OFA
POIJJT Ff!OM
MAPAM'S

Kings
!5. Edwardian
nickname

26. Portuguese

coin

(..._." •••• uowt

%7. Dale
~
Evans'
'"

For Sale or Trade

YOU · ~,

THe

5TAR·X COMPAWY
!&gt;TitUCto&lt; 01~ lto.l
ocro&amp;sR:, IINP THil
5TOCK ~EFT TO

door. Phone 992·

YOIJR:

HU~8Ato.IO

IS WOW Wflllll!

12-17-Jic

,d.

MIU~.

Sabmlafa

HAY, mixed and pure clover .

man ••. ?"

", . , well, he'1 here!"

flo&gt;t•

yoM

1 HAVE A

•JIM ,..,., "'f'Pir-A SHOWII
I SU66E5T THAT THE BOARD
Of EDUCATION BE ltJLO TO W'l
A HERD OFTIIJENTNOUR HoRSES ..

5U66E5TION
TO MAKE.,

'•
I'
~;

t---1 ''--":\::

.,
'·

DAII. Y CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AXYDI.BAAXR

A Cryplograon Quotatlon

"You know that ad we
ran for an 11ggressive,
hard-hitting younr

lumbl•" lUll 01151 fiLLOW THIOAT
Auw•ro TIU.

husband
U. Hebrew
word for
Lord
~9. Germ
31. Promenade
32. Israelite
34. Gaelic

is LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this •amplo A i&lt;
used for the tl)ree L's, X for tho two O's, etc. Single lellrrs.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words aretatl
hints. Each day the code letters arc different.

For Sale

Phone 949-4910.
MOBILE home and house, In SHEARED
White
Pine .
12-14-6tc
Middleport . Both Ideal tor
Christmas tr•es from $4 ;
couple, Phone 992-5247.
.
value priced Chr istmas toys, HAMMOND organ, 2 key."
12-19-6\p gills, glassware at KUHL's
bcYords, full octave base
Bargain Center, Tuppers
pedals, excellent condition,
DAV . home In Pomeroy tor
Plains, Ohio, St. Rt. 7 at the
would make a nice Christmas
~roup meetings : nd parties,
caullqn light. Open 'Iii 9 to 12 gift for home or sma ll church.
phone 992.5247.
24.
Phone 992·6602.
12.19-t2tc
12-17-6tc
12-12·61c

HOWTH!N
1 Rt:MOI'! THE

MIN~?

1967 BUICK, automotlc, 4 door
with air, 1966 Chevelle, 2 door
hardtop, 4 speed, 1964 Ford,
at~ 1 omatlc, .ct

11. Wine and
dine
II. Sesame
19. Moslem
luminary
20. Write an
lO.U.
U. Ter-

ON YOUR DIAL

608 East Main
POMEROY
WISHES EVERYBODY A
GREAT
BIG
MERRY
CHRISTMAS AND A HAPPY
NEW YEAR . THANKS A
MILLION
FOR
YOUR
KINDNESS IN THE YEAR
OF 1971.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
Office 992-2259
Residence 9'12-2568
12-19-6tc

6547 .

'""'IJ(p

IT COULD HAVE BEEN A WHtM ... QR
MIO.HT HIWE BEEH THE YOUH(i MAN'S
TRUE NATURE COMING TO fHE TOP'
~tl fOlJ CAN 00 IS WATCH fillP WAtT
ANttiE!

12' · 14' · 24' · WiDE

2196

2 LONG BOTTOM - Five room

bedroom trailer, furnished,

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Reasonable rates. Ph . 446-m2,
Gallipolis . John Russell,
O..ner &amp; Operator.
5·12-ffc

SR.

style,

Whil e learning about the pay
home for the holidays.

carpeted, built-i n kitchen with
dishwasher , dining room ,

11 ·7-ttc
.I
I .HOUSE. 1642 Lincoln Heights.
I Call Danny Thompson, 99~.

II CHEST FREEZER I

NICE TRAILER, 1 bedroom,
ideal for couple, 10 miles WALNUT,

Monday ,

NICE 3-BEDROOM house, fully

r--------···

1

WHEN WE G010
V/Sif MY lt10'fHEI?•I

twr &gt;WCANT

I KNOW I#'IAT

~

. '-?r==='f='i

SNOWED .i LOOK

ROOFING &amp;CARPENTER
WORK

M2·7608

_I

Real Estate For Sale

heating .

automati c, factorl stereo
VACUUM cleaner. Electro
tape. Lots of extras. ike new .
Hygiene new demonstra1or

AVAILABLE

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

4 ACRES . $10,500.00.
RUTLAND - 3 bedroom
paneled home . Bath , gas

1970 W-30 OLDSMDB ILE "42, '

TRAIL(R lOTS, Bob's Mobile :

raise, have him explain how
you may enlist and stay

FURNITURE

bedroom
home ,
gas
automatic heat . Plains water .

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

o

'

~XPERIENCED

I'll. 992-2174

Kitchens, Baths
Room Additions
And Patios

bath . ce llar . Small barn .
7-27·1fc
Minerals .29 acre . SlJ.SOO.OO. ·- - - - - - - - TUPPERS PLAINS-Modern 2 c. BRADFORD, Auctioneer

. 36" X 23'' X .009

j

SMITH ·NELSON
· MOTORS, INC.

Remodeling

And

Balance $79 .32 . Use our
budget terms. Phone 992-7085.
J2.J4-61c

Wantea To Buy

Court , Rt.

'

Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPLIES

speaker sound system , 4speed automatic changer .

Whispering Pines Nile Club.

6083 .

e:. Main

binalion. AM.FM radio. 4·

fu\ltime and
waitress .

REPRESENTATIVE

ARMY PAY RAISE

stereo -radio

'\

IJCN

Open every day except
MondaY
I P.M. lil7 P.M.

JOHNSON ' MASONRY

9-3·tic

north of Pomero·y . Phone 992·

ABOUT THE NEW

606

Or ~

Mason &amp; Hartford

I

NEKT•OF•Kt,., EMBROtl&gt;eRet&gt;
ON M'l ~EADIIAND.!

for Signs.

From the largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Healer Core .
Nathan Biggs
Radiator Speclolls!

Con,plete

992-2094

chards, State Route 689 ,
phone Wil esvi ll e. 669.3785.

6452.

WANTS TO

Fitzpatri ck

'

I

l FORGOT TO HAVI! MY

MARTHA ROSE, Owner
1
Located on County Road 3~
near Roy a f Oak Park. Watch

RadlatQ
Service

. PdMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

BLIND ADS
DEEP well pump, hot water
Add itional 25c Charge per
heater . Phone 985-3891.
Ad v ertisem~nt .
12-12-6tp
OFFICE HOURS
B· 30 a .m. to 5;00 p.m. Daily,
8:30 a .m. to 12:00 Noon COAL , limestone . Excelsior
Salt Works, E. Main St..
saturday.
Pomeroy . Phone 992 -3891.
4-9-ttc

Help Wanted

I

1

,.

---1{_

HIDDEN
TREASURES
GIFT SHOP

HILTQN WOLFE '.949.3211
DALE DUTTON, 992-2534

.

Each additional word 2c.

10-18-tfc

YOUR LOCAL ARMY

BILL NELSON 992-3657
TOM CROW, 992-2580

For Want Ad Service • · 2 MORE new~y made walnut
5 cents per Word one insertion
gun . cabmets,
Early
Minim um Charge 75c
I Amen can Style, large glass
12 cents per word three, door and drawer whfch lock,
· also space for boots . 1 gateleg
consecut ive insedions.
18 cents per word six conwal.nut table , also se~era l
secutive insertions.
· anfl~ue reproduction p1eces

For Rent

YOUNG MEN

,.· /

·· Dolls, aft dressed in style,
knitted and crocheted'. f Has
to be seen to be appreciated)
Many items you htve been
looking for, for that perfect
gift.

·

,

ads and ads paid within 10 days.

l LWE lo.

WIJG GOIJ6

MONEY-

lea vmg state. Phone 992-6120.

for more than one Incorrectinser tion.
·

The Universit y of Souther n
California has more alumnt OLD FURNITURE. Round Oak
tables, Bra ss beds, dishes,
on active roste rs of Nat ional
clocks,
and ·or com plete
F'ootball League teams than
households
. Write M. D.
any other sc hooL At the start
Miller , Rt . 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
of the 1971 season, t h e r e
Call 992-6271.
were 28 former Trojans car12-17-tfc
rying NFL spears, while sec·
ond place Notre Dame alum · WILL BUY raw furs and beef
hides Saturday and Sunday
ni totaled 26. Ohio Stale wit h
every week . Carl Chevalier , '
25, Grambling with 21 , MichRt. 1, Long Bottom , Ohio.
iga n with 19, Michigan State
12· t5-12tp
with 17, Minnesota with 16
and Houston , Texas , Penn
State and Southern U., each Auto Sales
with 15, rounded out the top 1962 DODGE Polaro 500, low
10.
mileage, excellent condition,
•
phone 992-5427 .
12-15-6tc
lated to the function of a
large part of the nerv ous
system It causes the heart
to speed up . It increases the .
amo unt of blood pumped by
the heart, hence the feeling
of a strong heart beat. Profuse sweating is common .
Tremulousness, nervousness
and dizziness are part of the
picture. The catch is that
many other things can cause
a massive outpouring of
adrenalin besides hypoglyce mia . It is true, however,
that hypoglycem ia can be a
factor in obesity, and stom ach hyperacidity. I'll try to
explain these in the next
colu mns.

I

CARRY

right ·to edit or reject any ads· 1970 60 x 12, 3 BEDROOM
deemed objectional. The mobile home, good condttlon,
publisher will not bo responsible $4.700. swmg set S20. owner

12-14-6tc

Trojon Tolent

PH. 992-7796

JOHIJ.

. ..../

• The Publisher reserves the

Apply in person only .

TALK TO YOU
A good rule for

Bundy clarinet ; Conn, trumpet
with case . Phone 992-2941.

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P.M. Day Before Publication
MQI1day Deadline 9 a.m.

of home or business.

FOUR NEW HOMES ' ·
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
tOO PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom $16,900.00 home can be p&lt;Jrchased with a
monthly paymenfaslow as $65.00 for a family with a base
salltry of Sl,OOO.QO and three children. 7'1• Pet. annual
oercei'ttacte rate.

DOUBLE pic k·UP electric
guitar with amp. and case ;

We igh t

( )

WORKIN' AG'II\I,MAW

[)R i f.J~. ,

1 I&gt;JI\IJ'f TO R I~JC, 110
11-IE IJE.I&gt;J Y£1\R'

\

CLOTHES DRYER IS

Christmas
decorations, wearing
apparel, · jewelry,
ceramics.

From drafting to completion

· OpenS Til'S
Monday lhru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

OLIVER 70 tractor, $325,
Homelite C-51 chain saw, used
very little. $150. Phone
24n547 or 247-2543.
12-19·3fc

i'pt.IEROY, OHIO

deliver. Would you like to
select your own customers

Pomeroy Home &amp; Autci .

11 -28-ttc

OPEN EVES. 8.00 P.M.

immediate needs. Yes we do

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

p.m .

Pomeroy Motor Co.

COMPLETE
BUILDING
SERVICES

.SS.55

zags, buttonholes, blind hems,
etc. Will sell for · SBS. Call
Ravenswood 273·9893 af1er S

Low mileage by local owner with lots of warranty left,
factory air conditioned, V-8 eng ine, turbo.hydromatic, p.
stee r ing , gold body, sa ndalwood viny l top , radio, vinyl
interior, good w-w t ires. This car is loaded with extras.

KOSCOT Kosmetics and wigs .
Yes we have Koscot Produds
and wigs in stock for your

Wheel Alignmeld

SINGER automatic sewing
'machine . Like new, in
beautiful walnut cabinet,
makes design stilches, zig-

4 Dr. , V-8 engi ne, automatic trans ., P.S., factory air , good
tir es, radio &amp; other extras. white fini·sh. clean interior .

Notice

c"tMMl. f\

HA8DCRAFT
.GifT ITEMS

ORIGINAL (;A BINET
COMPANY

EXPERT

For Sale

S2395

1970 CHEVELLE MALIBU HT CPE.

Business Services

'lOUR AUTOMATICAL

'

S2795

• 1970 DODGE POLARA

,I

THANKY,
·PAW

rNL
,os

liLKGJ,C

Dl'

r.J.HZLKCVRM

LTBKWCVDR
rNl.

RVl.H

THEN. IN5TEAO OF ftA~ING A
BUNCH OFSTUPID GMIE5 D\IRtN6
6VM CLASS, Wf CO&lt;.IJ) A~L SAD0LE
UP, {-;~FOR LON6 RIDES...

~._)

?.BZVR .-. r.WRZ:-1

wnrn Ln r:nns
'.

�.-

...
,.
r

..i

'
..,.'·..
,.,.

S~';ii~'";i(jj;;;"i,fieds Get Action! Sentinel~lassifieds Get Results!
For Rent
by Gill Fox

SrDE GLANCES

FURNISH E 0 sleeping room .
over Wine Store. Rent by
month . Phone 992-5293.
11 -26-tlc

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS

OF
QUALITY
1970 CAMARO COUPE

2 BEDROOM mobile home in
Racine area . Phone 9'12-6329.
12-14-lfc

350 V·B engine, automatic, power steering console,
beautiful dark green, finished with green vinyl roof . Less
than 12,000 miles by local owner , radio, new w.w tires . A
· sharp model pri ced to please.

$2995

"Phase 1 was over before I figured out who the
good guys were !"

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB
It's Called Hypoglycemia

The Low Blood
Sugar Disease

and have your own route and
make good money? Call
Brown's in Middl epor t 992 .
5113 , distributors of Koscot
Kosmetics.

11 -16-tfc'

SAVE up to one half. Bring your
sick TV to Chuck's TV Shop,
151 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.

Phone 992 -5080.

11 -21 -lfc

ABOU T YOUR WEIGHT ...
overweig ht ladies, teens and
men interested in a We ight

Watchers

(R)

Pomer oy

write:

Class

in

Watchers (R), 1863 Section
Rd .. Cincinnati , Ohio 45237.
JO.J.tfc
IN STRUCTIONS in piano and
orga n. Gerald Hoffner , phone

having di zzy spe lls. extre me
exhauston. loud heart beats.
Dear Dr. Lamb-l read vibratmg all ove r my body.
your article on the s·y mp· nervousness. ha vi ng to eat
toms of diabetes and hi gh often and blurry eyesig ht. I
blood sugar. I was extreme- think it must be as se riou s
ly interested because I am as diabetes. Since eatin g a
trying to find out about hypo· high protein diet. my stom ·
glycemia. or low blood sug· ach ulcer condition has im·
ar . 1 would like to hea r all proved 50 per cent. goi ng lo
about this condi tion . I kn ow show that some of the sy mp·
I have it and I am dtetmg tom s I thought were ulcers.
for it. For vears I have been were really th is low blood
sugar condttion .

By Lawrence Lamb. M.D.

Local Bowling
Goble Ford
Mixed League
K~ilh

A close race for first place in

the Keith Goble Ford Bowling
M\xed · L~egve

I~

underway ,

wilh but one week remaining in

the first half. Team No. 4 leads
the league with 84 points, but
Team No. 6 is a close second

with 80 points. Team No. 10 is a

close

third

with

72

points.

Tuesday, December 21 will
decide the firs t half winner

between Team No. 4 and Team

No. 6. Members of Team No. 4
are Ruth

Janey , Captain ;

Garnet Elliott, Mar ilyn Taylor
and Dick Taylor, and Merida
Shaw . Members of Team No. 6
are Ermalie Straight, Bette
Null. Fedorah Doss, Wayne
Doss and Don Horan .
On Tuesday, December 14,
Virginia Grover had an all spare game.
The second half will begin on

Tuesday , December 28. AI the
end of the year , the winners of

the first and second halves will
meet in a roll -off to determine
the first and second place
teams for the 1971 -72 season.
The League is sponsored by

Keith Goble Ford of Mid ·
dleport, Ohio and has seventy
members.

Standings week of December

14:

Team
W. L
No. 4
84 36
No. 6
80 40
No. 10
72 48
No. 8
68 52
No . 13
67 53
No. 2
65 55
No. 5
62 58
No. 7
56 64
No. 3
54 66
No . 11
54 66
No . 12
54 66
No .9
51 69
No . 1
40 80
No. 14
33 87
On Dec. 14, Team No.4 took
si• poi nts from Team No. 14.
Merida Shaw was high for
Team -4 with 541 pin s, and Joh n
Lane was high for Team 14
with 514 pins .
Team No. 6 took eight points
fr om Team No. 13. Don Horan
was high f or Team No. 6 with
534 pin s, and Wayne Sha ver
was hi gh for Team No. 13 with
i94 pins .
Team No. 2 took B points
from Team No. 11. Gilbert

Meal was high for Team No. 2
with 547 pins and John Ll oyd
was high tor Team No. 11 with

"45 pins.

Tee~m No. 1 took 8 points

fr om Team No. 3. Dwig ht
Unger was high for Team No. l
with 518 pin s and Steve Carter
was high for Tea m No. 3 with

Dr. Lamb , please inform
me concerning hypogl ycem·
ia or low blood sugar.
Dear Reader- 0 v e r the
past several months there
have been a large number of
letters . asiUng~l!\. hyp.o- ·
glycemia . It s~rns to be a
very popular diagnosis and .
interestingly eno ugh. most of
the letters are fr om wom en
wi th this problem , not men .
I'll try to gi ve you and the
ot her readers an overview of
the problem in the next few
columns.
The symptom s you descri be are indeed those that
ca n occur from hypoglycemia , but there are a lot of other problems that can and do
cause similar difficulties.
Anxiety states or nervousness often cause similar
problems and the causf is
entirely different. I don 't
want everyone who ha s these
general symptoms to jump
to the conclusion that they
have hypoglycemia, a factor
that I suspect has something
to do with the current popularity of this diagnosis. A
proper diagnosis of hypo glycemia can only be made
by careful laboratory tests .
A person who is actually
having hypoglycemia will
have definite and characteris tic changes in the amount
of sugar in the blood over a
period of hours , and this can
be measured precisely. If
the blood sugar remains
normal throughout adequate
tes tin g of several hour s dura ti on and particularly durin g
the tim e that the person has
sym ptoms, the problem is
not hypoglycemia.
Many of the symptoms you
desc ribed are really caused
by the release of massive
amounts of adrenalin in the
body . The t i n y adrenal
gla nds over eac h kidney re lease adrenalin whenever the
body is stressed or threatened. Thi s hormone is often
sa id tu mobilize the body
for "fight or flight " It is
a powerful hormone and has

many uses in medicine, incl ud ing treating acute asth·
ma , allergic reactions and
shoc k.
Adrenalin is closely re-

501 pins.
Team No. 12 took 6 points
from Team No. 9. J im Isaac
was high for Team No. 12 with
470 pins and Virgin ia Grove r
was high for Team No. 9 with

-487 pins.
Team No. 5 split 8 poin ts with

Team No . 8. Burl Cook was
high for Team No. 5 with 603
pins and Charlie Neal was high
for Team No. 8 with 510 pins.
Team No. 10 split 8 points
with Team No. 7. Gloria Me·
Daniel (sub) was high . lor
Team No. 10 with 553 pins and
Kerm Malone was high for
Team No. 7 with ~54 pins.
High single game for the
ladles tor the evening was 205
pins held by Gloria McDaniel
(sub land regular bowler, Ruth
Janey, had a high of 202 pins.
High series for the ladles was
5.5~ total pins, held by Gloria
McDaniel lsubl. Ruth Janey
531 and for the men 603 total
pins held by Burl Cook .

992.3825.

12-19-6fc
TWO male kit tens to give away .

Phone 992.5327 .
12·17·3tc

Employn ••.Jt Wanted
INTERIOR painting . Call Don
VanMete r 985-3951.
12-19-12tp

Jersey Codets
New Jersey has contrlb·
uted more players to the
West Point football I e a m
than any other state with t3.
The I e a m roster also includes seven playe rs !rum
PeniiSyt-v anta, ·l ·h e . second
best represented state.

SUCCESS ...
Early To Bed
Early To Rise
Work Like Heck
And Advertise
In the

DAILY SENTINEL
Devote&lt;! To The Interests of the Meigs·
Mason Area .

12· 19-Jtc

3 - 750 X 16, B PLY truck tires
- $25: 700 x 18, 8 ply truck
tire; good work pony, large,
_Can_~_~jlCI'tion &amp; Corrections
gentle for children ; phone 949·
Wilt be accepted until 9 a.m. tor 3073.
Day of Publi&lt;alion
12-19-6tc
REGULATIONS

RATES

12-17-6tc

25 Per Cent Discount on pale£

of jewelry ,. opera length
necklace, cham. belt, bracelet.

CARO OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

etc.
All
1lems
very
reasonable . Phone 992-2936.

$1. 50 for 50 word minimum .l

12-17-Jtc

. - - - - - - - - - - - . , · POODLE puppies. Silver Toy,
ft,;kview Kennels. Phone 992
B-15-tfc

WANTED!

SENTINEL
CARRIERS

APPLES -

LARGE farm fresh eggs . Phone
843·2778 .
12·15-6tc

PHONE 992-2156
FOR DETAILS I

BEAUTIFUL Early American

BAR

MAIO

weekend

1

style ,

com .

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets

.

211

8lor$1.oo

The
Daily Sentinel
111 Court 51.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Call 992·2441 after S p.m.
11 ·28·tfc

plus the new Electro suds for

'62 CHEVY Impala , runs good
$100, '52 Chevy pickup, mint
condilion .
Phone
9'12-

shampooing carpet . Only
$27.50 cash price or terms
available. Phone 992-5641.
12-14-6tc

12-J7.JOtp

1968 FORD pickup, custom cab,
wide bed , $1,400 J . '69
Volkswagen, $1,100, '69 Dodge
Swinger. 2 dr. hardtop, V-8,
standard. $1,100 . '64 Ford
convertible, excellent con·

dillon, $500. Phone 992·6048.
J2. 19·4fp

FURNISHED and unfurnished
apartments. Close to school.

Phone 992-5434.

has all clean lng attachments

Christmas Special!

I

23 Cu• Ff'

I
I

12-ll·tfC
124, Syracuse,

Jhlo. 992-2951.

I

REG. $309.00
SAVE $60.00

1
I

1 SALE •249 1
I
.
.
POM!RO~
I
I ... - Jock w. Carsey, Mgr. I

J

·---------I

6:idl

~llone 992·21"

modern

Ca II him at 614-593-3022
· call collect · for
complete details .
Today-'s Army wan1s to
join you at a muc h
!ligher ~alary .

ceramic tile bath. Hot water
heat , basement, and fenced
yard . Phone 742-3171.
12-13-6\p

SEPTIC tanks cleaned . Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph .
662 -~035 .

2-J2.1fc

- - -CONCRETE
-READY·MIX

delivered right to your·
project. Fast and easy. Free

estimates . Phone 992 -3284 .
Goegleln Ready -Mix Co ..
Middleport, Oh io.
6·30·ftC•

Virgil B. - - -- - - TEAFORD

stereo-radio, AM-FM radio, 4speaker sound system. 4-

speed automatic changer,
separate

controls.

Balance

$68.72. Use our budget terms.
Phone 9'12-7085.
12-14-6tc

4·2·tlc LITTLE PIGS, 9 weeks old, SB
each or SIS pair. Phone 9~91 BEDROOM trailer apart". 4882.
ment, ideal for couples.
12-14-6tc
Contact McClure's Dairy Isle,
992·5248 or 9'12-3436.
TWIN
NEEDLE
sewing
12-15-12tc
machine, 1971 model. in new
walnut stand. All features
NEW 2 bedroom. double wide.
built-In to make fancy
mob ile home on !of in
designs. Also buttonholes,
Syracuse . Completely fur ·
blind hems, etc. $43.35 cash
nished . Phone 9'12-2441 after l
price or ternis ava i lable.
p.m.
Phone 9'12-5641.
J2.J4-6tc
12-1~· 6tc

utilities paid . Phone 992·7384
or 992-7133.
. 12-19-Jtc

house , bath,

business or

storage building Phone 985-3529 .

$6,500.
12-19-JOtc

YOi.l'li?€ "TNINKING,

/AI(£ Y0/.1/t MAC&amp;

~€E8€l

HEY, IT

AT

0~[)

/)EVIL'S

DESC'ENrj

'.

BUT WE'LL '-IEED

YOU'RE - SIGH!!- HIR.ALL
RIGHT- SO I CAN'T GIVE

SOME CHANGE

FOR THATPEOPLE Ll KE

~0

OUR CHRI&lt;S&gt;fM~ PAI'rTl&lt;'

YOU ~y CA"*l- BUr I

:?Uos-r " "'' "!'

CAN GI\IE YOU A LOT
OF S'{MPATHY !!-

ME NEVER

-

MlDOLEPORT -

.

tune up and brake s!fvice.

10 room

doubl e house . S3500.00 .
FREE GAS HEAT - 6 room s,

11/:z

NEW

lots .

6e-Yow!

Pomeroy

~POUTING,
ROOF PAINTIN~
NEW &amp; OLD WOR"
All Weather R_ooflng &amp;
Construction Co. and Anthony flumbing &amp; Heating :·
Complete
Plumbing ,
Healing and Ajr Conditioning.

240 Lincoln St., foliddlepoo·t

HE P'IDNT EVE:N

LOOKAT ME ....
vlJ.9T GOT UP
,O.NP' LEFT "THE
TAeLE!

,,, BUT FIRST HE MUST
BE INFOR.MED CJF
TAANAA'S TREACHERY!

GASOLINE

.'

Phone 992-25SO
Insured · Experienced
Work Guaranteed
See - us- tor
Free
Estimate on Furnace
lnst_.lation.

O' DELL WHEEL ollg;\ment
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124. REFRIGERATION and a ir
conditioning service. Repair
Complete front end service.

Broker
110 Mecllanic Street
Pomeroy , Ohio

Wheels balanced
Ironically .
All
guaranteed .

elec work

Reasonable

rates. Phone 9'12-3213.

complete Service
Phone949-3821

Racine, Ohio
Crilt Bradford
5-1-ttc

-------

and servicing refrigeration
unlts also some fleatlng units,

furnaces, etc . Phone 992·3074.
J2.J9.6tc

·BORN l.DSER

BACKHOE AND DOZER work .
Septic tanks installed. George
IBIIII Pullins, Phone 992-WB.
4-25·ttc

N'E'/. roGt8, J.N. I W.DTO SEE 'IOU! ~ISTC~,MV
II'.T1ERV IS LC¥t... I(;W,48:11r
lie A f'VSHJ
~IS GIVIN' AIIIAY THE PIANO HOMER
HIGHTOWER FIXES T' THAT lADY AN'

NEIGLER Building Supply .
Free estimate on building

HER ~ID"· WITHOUT MAKIHCl A DIME
00 THE DEAL .. , PROVES ~ B.!!:D

your new home . Will draw

prints to suit the lay of your
LIST lNG . $6,000.00.
WRECKING and hauling .
land . Call Guy Nelgler,
LETART- 5 rooms , basement.
Phone 9'12·6083.
Racine. Ohio. For repair and
Large loit for garden. Asking
12-17-lOtp
aluminum siding , sotfet and
$5,000.00.
gutter . Call Donald Smith,
MIDDLEPORT 2 apart AUTOMOBILE Insurance
Racine. Ohio.
•
ments - 11 rooms. 2 baths.
been cancelled? Lost your
10·7-tfc
Adj unct to shopping .
operator's license? Call 992· - - - - - P. S. 3 ACRES- 6 room house .
2966.
Dug well, cellar , 3 out '6-15-tfc HARRISON'S TV and Anten~a
buildings. Asking $5500 .00 .
Service. Phone 9'12-2522.
.
'·
NEW LISTING.
6-Jo.tfc
WE HAVE 40 PROPERTIES Mobile Homes F01 Sale
•
FOR
SALE .
HOMEL
BUSINESSES, FARMS AND
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
COMMERCIAL LAND.
service, all makes. 992-228~ .
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
992-3325- 992-2378
Authorized Singer Sales and
HELEN L. TEAFORD
ASSOCIATE
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
NEAR EWING MORTUARY
3-29·tfC
12-16-6tc
NICE 2·slory home with full
basemen!, 2 lots, new forced
air furnace . Near Pomeroy

Elemen ta ry School.
9'12-7384 to see.

Phone.

MILLER

MOBIL£ HOMES
1220 Washington Blvd.
·
Belpre, Ohio

7· 18-t" FOR THE BEST deal in a new
.
SIX ROOM house, 133 Butternu• or used mobile home, try
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
Ave. Contact Ed Hedr ick, 2137
Kanauga,
Ohio.
Wadsworth Dr ive, Columbus,
12·17-90tc
Ohio, phone 237-4334.
n -2t -ttc

Cleland
Realty

.ali £EQQI&lt; J,Jg f!lQf. CREEPY~~

ACROSS
I. English
river
f. Box
I. Famous
Tommy
Dorsey
recording
10. Llama
land
11. Fruit of
the oak
12. Carp at
IS. Rever·
berate
If. Delphi
had a fa.

CARNIVAL

We talk to you
like a persOO.

mous one

WMP0/1390

16. Climb

......_ _ .. .. .

by Dick Tumer

olftfr, ~ lliJT Till!
I.AIIfts A flU$!~~
'ttl JII~TIFY
~ ll:liJ Wli.L

-- ··------ 1

5111! MUST

•

0

0

0

0

Saturday'&amp; Cryptoquote: THE PAIN OF THE MIND IS
~~: THAN THE PAIN OF THE BODY.- PUBLILIUS

35. Redo-

dream

.lence
36. Seeing

(!!) 1971 Kin,l!' Fe11 tures Syndicn te, Inc. )

wds.)
6. Seed coat
(3

red
38. Bugbear

39. Rivet of
Hades
fO. Conduce
41. Secular
DOWN
I . Sing

Sinatra
style
2. Venlilato
3. "Peace
to - "
(4wds.)
4. Nursery
rhyme
Jack

JltJJJW@~;-14.1 !::!!:! .-

7. Maxim
8. Auto
9. "Good
tidings ol
great joy"
(4 wds.)
13. Chemical
salt

15. Rarin '
togo
19. See eye
to eye
%1. Maybe
(2 wds.)

I vllfi\JI&lt;

22. Roman
official
30. Transgressed
31. Substantial
32. Owlish

fl!lr\1&lt;11(1

Unscnmhle these four Jumbleo,
one letter to each oquut, to
form four ordinary wordo.

I

=

H\olll&lt;lltl l l

NEKEL

sound

·33. Brink

37. Turmerk

(I J I I
tTELKJN

t

II

.....
A COMEDOWN ON
~ROADWAY.

minate
Zf. King of

~t:l:lW

OFA
POIJJT Ff!OM
MAPAM'S

Kings
!5. Edwardian
nickname

26. Portuguese

coin

(..._." •••• uowt

%7. Dale
~
Evans'
'"

For Sale or Trade

YOU · ~,

THe

5TAR·X COMPAWY
!&gt;TitUCto&lt; 01~ lto.l
ocro&amp;sR:, IINP THil
5TOCK ~EFT TO

door. Phone 992·

YOIJR:

HU~8Ato.IO

IS WOW Wflllll!

12-17-Jic

,d.

MIU~.

Sabmlafa

HAY, mixed and pure clover .

man ••. ?"

", . , well, he'1 here!"

flo&gt;t•

yoM

1 HAVE A

•JIM ,..,., "'f'Pir-A SHOWII
I SU66E5T THAT THE BOARD
Of EDUCATION BE ltJLO TO W'l
A HERD OFTIIJENTNOUR HoRSES ..

5U66E5TION
TO MAKE.,

'•
I'
~;

t---1 ''--":\::

.,
'·

DAII. Y CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AXYDI.BAAXR

A Cryplograon Quotatlon

"You know that ad we
ran for an 11ggressive,
hard-hitting younr

lumbl•" lUll 01151 fiLLOW THIOAT
Auw•ro TIU.

husband
U. Hebrew
word for
Lord
~9. Germ
31. Promenade
32. Israelite
34. Gaelic

is LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this •amplo A i&lt;
used for the tl)ree L's, X for tho two O's, etc. Single lellrrs.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words aretatl
hints. Each day the code letters arc different.

For Sale

Phone 949-4910.
MOBILE home and house, In SHEARED
White
Pine .
12-14-6tc
Middleport . Both Ideal tor
Christmas tr•es from $4 ;
couple, Phone 992-5247.
.
value priced Chr istmas toys, HAMMOND organ, 2 key."
12-19-6\p gills, glassware at KUHL's
bcYords, full octave base
Bargain Center, Tuppers
pedals, excellent condition,
DAV . home In Pomeroy tor
Plains, Ohio, St. Rt. 7 at the
would make a nice Christmas
~roup meetings : nd parties,
caullqn light. Open 'Iii 9 to 12 gift for home or sma ll church.
phone 992.5247.
24.
Phone 992·6602.
12.19-t2tc
12-17-6tc
12-12·61c

HOWTH!N
1 Rt:MOI'! THE

MIN~?

1967 BUICK, automotlc, 4 door
with air, 1966 Chevelle, 2 door
hardtop, 4 speed, 1964 Ford,
at~ 1 omatlc, .ct

11. Wine and
dine
II. Sesame
19. Moslem
luminary
20. Write an
lO.U.
U. Ter-

ON YOUR DIAL

608 East Main
POMEROY
WISHES EVERYBODY A
GREAT
BIG
MERRY
CHRISTMAS AND A HAPPY
NEW YEAR . THANKS A
MILLION
FOR
YOUR
KINDNESS IN THE YEAR
OF 1971.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
Office 992-2259
Residence 9'12-2568
12-19-6tc

6547 .

'""'IJ(p

IT COULD HAVE BEEN A WHtM ... QR
MIO.HT HIWE BEEH THE YOUH(i MAN'S
TRUE NATURE COMING TO fHE TOP'
~tl fOlJ CAN 00 IS WATCH fillP WAtT
ANttiE!

12' · 14' · 24' · WiDE

2196

2 LONG BOTTOM - Five room

bedroom trailer, furnished,

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Reasonable rates. Ph . 446-m2,
Gallipolis . John Russell,
O..ner &amp; Operator.
5·12-ffc

SR.

style,

Whil e learning about the pay
home for the holidays.

carpeted, built-i n kitchen with
dishwasher , dining room ,

11 ·7-ttc
.I
I .HOUSE. 1642 Lincoln Heights.
I Call Danny Thompson, 99~.

II CHEST FREEZER I

NICE TRAILER, 1 bedroom,
ideal for couple, 10 miles WALNUT,

Monday ,

NICE 3-BEDROOM house, fully

r--------···

1

WHEN WE G010
V/Sif MY lt10'fHEI?•I

twr &gt;WCANT

I KNOW I#'IAT

~

. '-?r==='f='i

SNOWED .i LOOK

ROOFING &amp;CARPENTER
WORK

M2·7608

_I

Real Estate For Sale

heating .

automati c, factorl stereo
VACUUM cleaner. Electro
tape. Lots of extras. ike new .
Hygiene new demonstra1or

AVAILABLE

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

4 ACRES . $10,500.00.
RUTLAND - 3 bedroom
paneled home . Bath , gas

1970 W-30 OLDSMDB ILE "42, '

TRAIL(R lOTS, Bob's Mobile :

raise, have him explain how
you may enlist and stay

FURNITURE

bedroom
home ,
gas
automatic heat . Plains water .

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

o

'

~XPERIENCED

I'll. 992-2174

Kitchens, Baths
Room Additions
And Patios

bath . ce llar . Small barn .
7-27·1fc
Minerals .29 acre . SlJ.SOO.OO. ·- - - - - - - - TUPPERS PLAINS-Modern 2 c. BRADFORD, Auctioneer

. 36" X 23'' X .009

j

SMITH ·NELSON
· MOTORS, INC.

Remodeling

And

Balance $79 .32 . Use our
budget terms. Phone 992-7085.
J2.J4-61c

Wantea To Buy

Court , Rt.

'

Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPLIES

speaker sound system , 4speed automatic changer .

Whispering Pines Nile Club.

6083 .

e:. Main

binalion. AM.FM radio. 4·

fu\ltime and
waitress .

REPRESENTATIVE

ARMY PAY RAISE

stereo -radio

'\

IJCN

Open every day except
MondaY
I P.M. lil7 P.M.

JOHNSON ' MASONRY

9-3·tic

north of Pomero·y . Phone 992·

ABOUT THE NEW

606

Or ~

Mason &amp; Hartford

I

NEKT•OF•Kt,., EMBROtl&gt;eRet&gt;
ON M'l ~EADIIAND.!

for Signs.

From the largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Healer Core .
Nathan Biggs
Radiator Speclolls!

Con,plete

992-2094

chards, State Route 689 ,
phone Wil esvi ll e. 669.3785.

6452.

WANTS TO

Fitzpatri ck

'

I

l FORGOT TO HAVI! MY

MARTHA ROSE, Owner
1
Located on County Road 3~
near Roy a f Oak Park. Watch

RadlatQ
Service

. PdMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

BLIND ADS
DEEP well pump, hot water
Add itional 25c Charge per
heater . Phone 985-3891.
Ad v ertisem~nt .
12-12-6tp
OFFICE HOURS
B· 30 a .m. to 5;00 p.m. Daily,
8:30 a .m. to 12:00 Noon COAL , limestone . Excelsior
Salt Works, E. Main St..
saturday.
Pomeroy . Phone 992 -3891.
4-9-ttc

Help Wanted

I

1

,.

---1{_

HIDDEN
TREASURES
GIFT SHOP

HILTQN WOLFE '.949.3211
DALE DUTTON, 992-2534

.

Each additional word 2c.

10-18-tfc

YOUR LOCAL ARMY

BILL NELSON 992-3657
TOM CROW, 992-2580

For Want Ad Service • · 2 MORE new~y made walnut
5 cents per Word one insertion
gun . cabmets,
Early
Minim um Charge 75c
I Amen can Style, large glass
12 cents per word three, door and drawer whfch lock,
· also space for boots . 1 gateleg
consecut ive insedions.
18 cents per word six conwal.nut table , also se~era l
secutive insertions.
· anfl~ue reproduction p1eces

For Rent

YOUNG MEN

,.· /

·· Dolls, aft dressed in style,
knitted and crocheted'. f Has
to be seen to be appreciated)
Many items you htve been
looking for, for that perfect
gift.

·

,

ads and ads paid within 10 days.

l LWE lo.

WIJG GOIJ6

MONEY-

lea vmg state. Phone 992-6120.

for more than one Incorrectinser tion.
·

The Universit y of Souther n
California has more alumnt OLD FURNITURE. Round Oak
tables, Bra ss beds, dishes,
on active roste rs of Nat ional
clocks,
and ·or com plete
F'ootball League teams than
households
. Write M. D.
any other sc hooL At the start
Miller , Rt . 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
of the 1971 season, t h e r e
Call 992-6271.
were 28 former Trojans car12-17-tfc
rying NFL spears, while sec·
ond place Notre Dame alum · WILL BUY raw furs and beef
hides Saturday and Sunday
ni totaled 26. Ohio Stale wit h
every week . Carl Chevalier , '
25, Grambling with 21 , MichRt. 1, Long Bottom , Ohio.
iga n with 19, Michigan State
12· t5-12tp
with 17, Minnesota with 16
and Houston , Texas , Penn
State and Southern U., each Auto Sales
with 15, rounded out the top 1962 DODGE Polaro 500, low
10.
mileage, excellent condition,
•
phone 992-5427 .
12-15-6tc
lated to the function of a
large part of the nerv ous
system It causes the heart
to speed up . It increases the .
amo unt of blood pumped by
the heart, hence the feeling
of a strong heart beat. Profuse sweating is common .
Tremulousness, nervousness
and dizziness are part of the
picture. The catch is that
many other things can cause
a massive outpouring of
adrenalin besides hypoglyce mia . It is true, however,
that hypoglycem ia can be a
factor in obesity, and stom ach hyperacidity. I'll try to
explain these in the next
colu mns.

I

CARRY

right ·to edit or reject any ads· 1970 60 x 12, 3 BEDROOM
deemed objectional. The mobile home, good condttlon,
publisher will not bo responsible $4.700. swmg set S20. owner

12-14-6tc

Trojon Tolent

PH. 992-7796

JOHIJ.

. ..../

• The Publisher reserves the

Apply in person only .

TALK TO YOU
A good rule for

Bundy clarinet ; Conn, trumpet
with case . Phone 992-2941.

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P.M. Day Before Publication
MQI1day Deadline 9 a.m.

of home or business.

FOUR NEW HOMES ' ·
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
tOO PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom $16,900.00 home can be p&lt;Jrchased with a
monthly paymenfaslow as $65.00 for a family with a base
salltry of Sl,OOO.QO and three children. 7'1• Pet. annual
oercei'ttacte rate.

DOUBLE pic k·UP electric
guitar with amp. and case ;

We igh t

( )

WORKIN' AG'II\I,MAW

[)R i f.J~. ,

1 I&gt;JI\IJ'f TO R I~JC, 110
11-IE IJE.I&gt;J Y£1\R'

\

CLOTHES DRYER IS

Christmas
decorations, wearing
apparel, · jewelry,
ceramics.

From drafting to completion

· OpenS Til'S
Monday lhru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

OLIVER 70 tractor, $325,
Homelite C-51 chain saw, used
very little. $150. Phone
24n547 or 247-2543.
12-19·3fc

i'pt.IEROY, OHIO

deliver. Would you like to
select your own customers

Pomeroy Home &amp; Autci .

11 -28-ttc

OPEN EVES. 8.00 P.M.

immediate needs. Yes we do

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

p.m .

Pomeroy Motor Co.

COMPLETE
BUILDING
SERVICES

.SS.55

zags, buttonholes, blind hems,
etc. Will sell for · SBS. Call
Ravenswood 273·9893 af1er S

Low mileage by local owner with lots of warranty left,
factory air conditioned, V-8 eng ine, turbo.hydromatic, p.
stee r ing , gold body, sa ndalwood viny l top , radio, vinyl
interior, good w-w t ires. This car is loaded with extras.

KOSCOT Kosmetics and wigs .
Yes we have Koscot Produds
and wigs in stock for your

Wheel Alignmeld

SINGER automatic sewing
'machine . Like new, in
beautiful walnut cabinet,
makes design stilches, zig-

4 Dr. , V-8 engi ne, automatic trans ., P.S., factory air , good
tir es, radio &amp; other extras. white fini·sh. clean interior .

Notice

c"tMMl. f\

HA8DCRAFT
.GifT ITEMS

ORIGINAL (;A BINET
COMPANY

EXPERT

For Sale

S2395

1970 CHEVELLE MALIBU HT CPE.

Business Services

'lOUR AUTOMATICAL

'

S2795

• 1970 DODGE POLARA

,I

THANKY,
·PAW

rNL
,os

liLKGJ,C

Dl'

r.J.HZLKCVRM

LTBKWCVDR
rNl.

RVl.H

THEN. IN5TEAO OF ftA~ING A
BUNCH OFSTUPID GMIE5 D\IRtN6
6VM CLASS, Wf CO&lt;.IJ) A~L SAD0LE
UP, {-;~FOR LON6 RIDES...

~._)

?.BZVR .-. r.WRZ:-1

wnrn Ln r:nns
'.

�'

I 1 ·

\

\

'

,f~

\

.

12 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Dec. ?AI,1971
•

, ' ' , "' "'

"1

•

u1ts
•

United Press 1nternatlonal
Agha Mohammad Yahya
Khan resigned as president of
Pakistan today and turned
over power to Zulfiqar Ali
Bhutto, the 43-year-old leader
of the nation's most important
political party .
Radio Pakistan said that
Yahya had resigned and that
Bhutto, who had served as his
foreign minister, had replaced
him. It said Bhutto, who rushed
back to Pakistan from New
York , would address the nation
today.
Bhutto is leader of the leftist
Pakistan Peoples' Party.
The change of power apparently meant the end of 13 years
of martial rule, first by
Mohanunad Ayub Khan and,
since March 25, 1969, by Yahya
Khan.
Bhutto was appointed foreign
minister by Yahya during the
14-day war with India, which
ended Friday. He was called
back from New York where he
had
been
representing
Pakistan at the United Nations
and , with only a brief stopover
in Rome, rushed to Islamabad.
Pakistan has been under
martial law since Oct. 7, 1958.
A
government
announcement Sunday said
Yahya would turn over his
authority to a "representative
government" - indicating the
martial law would be ended.
The terse communique spelling Yahya Khan's apparent
downfall came little more than
two days after Pakistan heeded
an Indian call for a cease-fire
in their 14-day war, and three
days after the capitulation of
Pakistani forces in the secessionist province of East Pakis-

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight &amp; Tuesday
December 20-21
THE PROFESSIONALS
(Technicolorl
Lee Mar vi n
Burt La ncaster
"G"
Colorcartoons :
Father's Day Off
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.

~------~~

tan, newly proclaimed as the
nation of Bangia Desh.
At the cease-fire line on the
western front, Indian military
sources in the Kashmir town of

Tennessee have bet country
hams on the outcome.
The traditional gridiron powers, separated only by the
muddy Mississippi, have met
only once in their long history
and Tennessee came out on
top, 14-2, way back in 1907.
Both Tennessee (0..2) and
Arkansas (8-2-1) will be slowed
by offensive injuries but quarterback Ferguson is expected
to go at full speed despite an
aching right shoulder. He
completed 160 of 271 passes for
2,203 yards and 11 touchdowns
during the season, in which
fumbles and defensive lapses
caused the Hogs to fritter away

l)

Around Curoe

,•.~

A single-car accident was
investigated Sunday by the
Meigs County Sheriff's Dept.
on County Road 39at 1:30a. m.
Jack Satterfield, Jr., 25,
Pomeroy, Rt. 4, driving south,
went off the highway on the left
over an embankment into a
creek at a curve.
Satterfield suffered a
' laceration of his nose and a
' bruise of his knee but was not
;immediately treated. No
:citation was issued.
TRUCE DAY SET
: SAIGON (UPI) - President
;Nguyen Van Thieu announced
·plans tonight for a 24-hour
truce throughout South Vietnam for Christmas, New
Year's Day and the Tet lunar
new year.

The LAWRENCE
C4512W
Contemporary styled

compa ct console .

s· X 3" Twin -Cone
Speaker.

ONLY

95

BOND FORFEITED
George Hoschar, Jr., 21,
. Leon, W. Va., forfeited a $25
bond in Pomeroy Mayor
Charles
Legar's
Court
Saturday night posted for
passing on a double yellow line .
Fined $5 and costs for excessive speed for road conditions was Marc French, 19,
Middleport.
r**************'\.
ii A
it
i1
ought -fl

499 i

. NEW ZENITH CUSTOMIZED TUNING!
• Chromacolor Pict ure Tube
· • T1tan 80 Hand cra fted Chass i s

• Super Vtdeo Range Tu ning
Syste m

ZENITH-

• Auto ma tiC Fme- tun1ng Control
• Au toma tiC T 1nt Guard Co nt rol

• Gyro-Drive UHF Channel
Selec to r

The quali ty goes in before the name goes on"

CLIP

&amp;

DEPOSIT AT OUR STORE

DEPOSIT AT MY MllllDORi

GIFT·A·RAMA
SRIIE

ii

Th

F

or

T' d

0 ay
'Tis better to have 10 ed
it and lost than neve/ to
il have loved at' all.
il Alf d Lo d T
ic - re r ennyson
~
it
it

f ,·

* *' *

~:

-fl
Friday$ Only
il The Drive-In Window

NAMI _______________

A'OOttrss _ ____ _ _ _ _ _

!

~

TIL; NO. -

-

- -- - -

t
~

OPEN EVENINGS

INGELS FURNITURE
PH. 992 -2&amp;l~

MIDDLEPORT

~

_.
_.

il
it
-fl
-fl

i

S BAN·K·
and SAVINGS co.
POMEROY, OHIO
Member FDIC
Member Federal
Re~erve System

•

.

..

Hoffa Delivery for Christmas?
DES MOINES, Iowa (UPI) - Preddeld NlxOil II
coulderiDg me.slq former Te~m~ters PrelldeJd Jalllel
R. Hoffa from the federal pealtellilary at Lewtsllar&amp;, Pa.

College Scores

f

~
il
it

"1'

***:...*:'&gt;**~***•*~

--

~ SXo~o!.;;IQOI..~-..'-~'~';p,--.;r.-:0.~~~~:0..~

. Open Until9

TOP

~

9 A.M. to 7 P · M.
~
(Continuously)
Other Banking Hours 9 to 3
and 5 to 7 as usual on
F 'd
rftAaRysM
. ER.
-~ic

~

•

Make· Elberfelds In Pomeroy Your Christmas ·
Gift Shopping Center.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
_ Rena Lightfoot, Pomeroy;
1na Ferrell, Pomeroy; Larry
Sellers, Jr., Pomeroy; Anna
Williams, Pomeroy.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
il- Thomas Greathouse,
il Blanche Nelson, Elsie Pooler,
f Joseph Rudolph, Sr., Pauline
~ Derenberger, Orville Landers,
: John Hanning, Kathleen Noble.
i1 SUNDAY ADMISSIONS -fl Charles Barrett III, Rutland;
_. William Dye, New Haven;
f Harold Gibbs, Hartford;
~ James Roush, Racine; Harvey
~ Erlewine, Rutland; Denise
it Shuler, Langsville; Patty
it Harmon. Rutland.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Minnie Miller, Minnie Jay and
Barbara Baer.

is Open

it

-.

Mrs. Julia Bean Died Saturday

Its Quick! ~
it
f DRIVE IN ..
~
•
t
_. BANKING _..
~

,

Removed

Auto Can't Get

CABINET I

,

Sanctions

BELFAST, NORTIIERN IRELAND - A CHAIN of explosions ripped through stores and offices in downtown Belfast
today, sea tterin~ crowds of Christmas shoppers.
Earlier, a 16-year-old Roman catholic girl was killed when
an ice cream truck in which she was riding rammed a British
army armored truck blocking a road in a catholic neighborhood.

WOOD

,

Died on Sund.ay .

SAIGON -A U. S. JET FIGIITER knocked out a North
Vietnamese radar site Sunday only 90 miles from Hanoi. It was
the deepest American mission into the Communist nation in 13
months.
American officials meanwhile admit1M two U. S. planes
have been brought down over North Vietnam ..n the past 10 days.
Two pilots from one of the downed craft were rescued, officials
said, but no details were available on the second downed jet.

GENUINE

•

Mrs. Van Matre

and reach a new understanding on pressing foreign policy and
trade problems. .
Nixon was to fly to the U.S. Naval Air Station at Kindley
Field, St. Georges Island, at 9:20a.m. EST today and from there
by helicopter to Great Bermuda Island for a formal welcome. It
was th~ fourth in a series of consultative meetings Nixon has
scheduled throughout Yuletide with major allies before he
travels to Peking and Moscow next year. Still to come are talks
with West German Chancellor Willy Brandt in Key Biscayne,
Fla., Dec. 28-29 and with Japanese Prime Minister Eisaku Sato in
San Clemente, Calif., Jan. 6-7.

Hint To Last Minute SantasT

'

James Johnson
Died SaturdJJy

News•.. in Briefs
(Continued from Page

-,

ing flames were visible from that Yahya Khan will resign
the Indian front lines ·on the and appoint a civilian governeastern bank of the Munnawar ment. The brief announcement
Tawi River across from also came amr demonstrators
Chhamb. All civilians were paraded through Rawalpind
believed to have fled the area shouting, "Hang Yahya."
at the outbreak of the war.
, ..................... ··:-J ...
--~v.&gt;l+.'l'l.
The Rwalwapindi communique was issued shortly
after the government-run
Radio Pakistan interrupted an
a trip to the Cotton Bowl.
Tennessee, with only a 1~9 Urdu language broadcast
loss to Auburn and a 32-15 Sunday night and announced
drubbing by Alabama to mar
MASON - Funeral services
College Basketball
Iconsolation)
its record, came on strong as
for James Johnson, 85, Mason,
By United Press International
the season waned and wound
who died Saturday evenipg at
Saturday
Jayhawk Classic
East
Southern Cal 87 Kansas 77
up with a 31-11 rout of
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Harvard
80
Mass
78
1
title
l
previously unbeaten and
will be at 2:30p.m. Tuesday at Temple 57 Penn 52
Brigham Young 82 Cincinnati
Cotton Bowlbound Penn State.
the Foglesong Funeral Home Boston Coli 81 LeMoyne 67
79 (consolation)
Arkansas humiliated Texas,
at Mason.
Dartmouth 93 Seton Hall 82
Husker Classic
the other Cotton Bowl par·
Born March 3, 1886, Mr. Florida 80 Army 71
Syracuse
83
Rutgers
81
Baylor 74 Idaho 52 (consola·
.
Mrs.
Grace
B.
VanMatre,
80,
ticipant, 31-7 th IS year.
Johnson was the son of the late Holy Cross 96 Connecticut 77
tlon)
Tennessee running back Curt Kanauga, died Sunday mor- Noah and Virginia Roach
Nebraska 75 La Sa lie 60
South
Watson is expected to see ning at the Holzer Medical Johnson. He was born in the
Ichampionship)
IOhio! 71 Auhurn All
action despite cracked ribs Center. Born June 2• 1891 at Fairview Community. Besides Xavier
Loyola
_(La) 78 Ga. St 70
M a r s h a I I Memorial Tour.
· the 1ast game
· of th e West Columbia, Mrs. Van his parents, he was preceded in
suffere d J.Jl
Louisiana Tech 110 So. Ill. nament, Huntington, W.Va.
Miss St 8cl Rhode island 72
season. But th e dura bili'ty of Matre was the daughter of the death by his wife, Allie Garren (Edwardsville) 66
(consolation)
his ribs remains in question if late George and Dynda Staats Johnson, in ·1969. He was a Jcksnvlle 83 Wm&amp;Mary 72
Marshall 110 St. Jol:n's
he takes a hard lick on a tackle. Kerwood. Besides her parents, retired coal miner.
Midwest
(N.Y.) 107 (ot) (championship)
'!be big problem for the she was preceded in death by a
Surviving are two daughters, Indiana 94 Notre Dame 29
Arkansas offense of coach daughter, Mrs. Virginia Mrs. Lola Kovalick, Gahanna, Ohio SN2 Butler 70
75 De Paul 64
Frank Broyles is the loss of Matheny, and a son, John Van and Mrs. Mabel Cain, Providence
Iowa st 97 Iowa 94
split end Mike Reppond with a Matre.
Sarasota, Fla.; two sohs, Paul Valparaiso 73 Northwestern 55 . TWO FLYERS
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio
calcium deposit on his leg.
Surviving are her husband, and Forrest of Mason; three Wichita St. 91 So. Ill (Carboh-dale)
83
(UPI)
-Gary Crane, 25, Hol·
Reppond was the leading Harry (Buck) Van Matre; grandchildren, and 16 great- Bradley 100 Gustavus Adolphus
land, an Instructor and charter
55
ca tcher Of Ferguson passes three sons, Howard (Pete), grandchildren.
pilot for Crow Inc., Toledo, and
this year with 56 for 987 yards Mason; Richard, Bellville, W.
Officiatingatserviceswillbe Clemson 82 lnd St. 77 (ol)
Evansville
103
lnd
Central
&amp;2
William
croufleld, 30, Toledo,
and three touchdowns.
Va., and George of Columbus; the Rev. Parker Hinzman with Ball St 107 Kenyon 80 .
were killed Saturday when
five daughters, Mrs. Betty burial to be in the Fairview Bowling Green.87 St. Bona $4
their small airplane crashed
Vanden Dolewert, Toledo;
Marquette 87 Fordham 68
Mrs. Alice Jackson, Maumee; Cemetery. Friends may call at Miami (Ohio) 58 Dayton 51
two miles south of here while
the funeral home any time
Crossfield was taking lessons
Mrs. Elizabeth Johnson, after 4 p.m. today .
Southwest
in
twin-engine aircraft
Columbus; Mrs. Norma
Tulsa 99 Texas Tee 8.4
LIST AUGMENTED
SMU 93 Georgia Tech 70
operation. The Highway Patrol
Jackson, Red House, W. Va.,
New
Mex.
St.
88
Ariz
St.
85
and Mrs. Dorothy Whitehead,
Survivors of Mrs. Freda
said the pilot lost control for an
Hward Payne 77 Sui Ross 70
Orlando,
Fla.;
26
grand·
Meyer
Fauber,
Pomeroy,
not
unknown
reasoO"and the plane
OOLUMBUS (UPI) - Pro19
great- included in the original
plunged into the ground nose
West
fessional sanctions have children,
Utah St 68 Kent St 61
first.
grandchildren,
and
several
obituary,
include
a
half-5ister,
been rl)moved from the
st 88 Portland 58
Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Meyer Oregon
state by the Ohio Education nieces and nephews.
Hawaii 30 Florida St. 1;·
Funeral services will be held Brattin, Columbus ; a nephew, (game called at that point) ·
Association since the 109th
. PASTORS TO CONVENE
at
1:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Richard E. Brattin, Gahanna; Oregon 69 Weber st 67
General Assembly approved
Tournaments
COLUQUS (UPI) - The
the education, tax and ap- Foglesong Funeral Home with a half-5ister, Mrs. Gertrude Fresno Classic
Ohio
Council ol Churches will
lhe
Rev.
Jack
Finnicum
ofMeyer
Spencer,
Newark;
a
propria tions measure.
Cal Poly-Pomona 68 Fresno St. I
sponsor the anrwal Ohio PasGov. John J. Gilligan was ex- ficiating. Burial will be in the niece, Diana J. Spencer, 66 (Iiiii!)
San Diego 90 Cal State tors Convocation here Jan. 24pected to sign the bill today. It Kirkland Memorial Garden, Columbus, and a nephew, Fullerton
84 (consolation)
26. The speakers are to Include
Point
Pleasant.
Friends
may
Robert
D.
Spencer,
Newark
.
grants public schools an extra
Dr. Fredrick William Meuser,
$388 million during the next 19 call at the funeral home any
Utah Classic
time
after
4
p.m.
on
Tuesday
.
DANCE
TUESDAy
60
newly installed president ol the
Utah 74 Washington St
months.
A Christ,mas dance will be (title)
Evangelical Lutheran
Sanctions imposed Sept. 1,
held Tuesday 8:30 p. m. to
Okla . City 100 Yale 99 Seminary here.
1970, pointed out the financial
midnight at the Wahama High (consolation)
crisis of Ohio public schools.
School gym sponsored by the Westmont !Calif.) Maroon and
LODGE TO MEET
The
OEA's executive
Racine Lodge 461, F&amp;AM, Pomeroy and Mason Fire While
committee said the governor
96 Claremont Mudd
will hold a special meeting this Dept. Music will be provided 70 Westmont
(title)
MEETING CANCEllED
and legislative members "on
evening at 7:30 to confer by "The Willie" with the "Over
Wehaton
86
Humboldl
St
78
The
December meeting of
both sides of the political aisle.
the Hill Gang" offering ad- (consolation)
Master
Mason
degrees.
All
the Past Matrons of Pomeroy
. . saw the desperate financial
master masons are welcome. ditional selections;-Admission
Chapter, OES, has been canneeds of the schools and reKentucky Invitation!
is $1.
Missouri 82 California 70 celled.
sponded with their help," ad~·:.:-.»,.:::·:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:.·····-:v·.:·································:::···:-:·~·····-.··············-.~~·
. . . . ~-.··~·-.····:-=····~-:.-..~.;..x.«~·;.«
......-..-.~"11,;,~~ .............·.·.·.·.···:·:·:·····:·· ·.·.·.·.·.··:······· .·..·.·.·
ding they had "put the finan- ;•!•'
o o o o o o o• o o o • • • • • • •'•'•'•, ,•, .•.•,•.,o,•,•,•.•,-.•,•,•,•..•,•,•,•
,•.-,•,•,•;,,•,•,•,•,-....,., ,•,•N,..,,,
.. ..
•'•'
cial needs of public schools •'•'
- .. .
:~!
ahead of party affiliation."
•'•'
"The crisis that exists in :~:
•'•'
·!·:
Ohio's public schools soon will ....
:~:
be ended," said OEA President
Mrs. Julia B. Bean, 81, of the first girl scout troop in Mrs.
Charles
(Betty) be in Mound Hill Cemetery.
William C. McDonald.
widow of the late Dr. Leo C. Gallipolis, first president of the McGinness of Gallipolis and
Friend! may call at the
Bean, a resident of 449 First Tri-County Community Con- Mrs. Theodore Reed Jr., of McCoy • Wetherholl • Moore
Ave., Gallipolis, died unex- cert AsSn., a trustee of ··e Pomeroy; five grand and four Funeral Home from 2-4 and 7-9
Pleasant Valley Hospital
ADMISSIONS: Mrs. pectedly Saturday night of an Holzer Medical Cvtr.-, great~r~children, and two today.
The family requests in lieu of
Genevieve Stahl, Letart; apparent heart attack at the member of the Philomathean sisters, Mrs. Henry Arth and
Club, and former chairman of Miss Ann Baker, both of Zanes- flowers, contributions be made
Harold Shrively, Leon; Millard Holzer Medical Center.
Mrs.
Bean,
a
graduate
of
in her name to various
the Gallia County Cancer ville.
Halstead, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Funeral services will be at charities.
Clara Staats, Clifton; Richard Ohio University, was a former Society.
Professor
of
Dramatics
at
Ohio
Born at Beavertown, Ohio, 10:30 a.m. Tuesday from the
Pallbearers are Dr. H. B.
Thornton, Letart; Edwin Hold,
University,
Athens.
She
was
an
First
United
Presbyterian
Thomas,
Dr. Oscar W. Clarke,
April
25,
1890,
she
was
the
Marie Hurl ow, Point Pleasant,
and Mrs. Nannie Lee, Hen- elder of the First United daughter of the late Charles Church with Rev. Glenn R. Warren F. Sheets, John E.
Presbyterian Church, former and Louise Zenner Baker.
Hueholt and Rev. Unson H. Halliday, James Walker and
derson.
Surviving are two daughters, Stebbins officiating. Burial will Dr. George Davis.
DISCHARGES:
Mrs . member of the Gallipolis
Charles Long, Alice Gaskins, Board of Education, organizer
Robert Vance, Mrs. Nickie
Weaver, Helen Harmon,
Patricia Snodgrass, Clarence
Rice, Houston Branswon,
Thomas Stobart, Paul Bush II,
Mary Meadows, Mrs. Amanda
Murray , Timothy Wolfe,
Frances Litchfield, Mrs .
Thomas Wilson, Larry Willet.
BIRTH: Dec. 19, a son to Mr.
and Mrs. James W. Heaton,
Pomeroy.

Liberty Bowl Tilt Tonight
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UPI)Joe Ferguson and his Arkansas
Razorbacks meet Tennessee's
gritty defense tonight in the
Uberty Bowl with prestige and
a country ham at stake.
A capacity crowd of 50,100 is
expected to stuff into the
modern Uberty Bowl Stadium
for the nationally-televised
(ABC) kickoff at 9 p.m. EST.
Ninth-ranked Tennessee is a
shaky favorite .
It's about the biggest thing
around here since Andy Jackson called for volunteers to
fight the Indiruy; and Governors Dale Bumpers of
Arkansas and Winfield Dunn of

'

before Cbrlstmu, a Del Moine., newapaper reported
today.
According to a copyrighted story ID the Del Mobael
Register by PaUtler Prize wtJmiDC reporter Cbat
Mollenhoff, the declsiOB to free Holfa ''Is eOBtiqellt 1IPOil
the question of ma:dmam poUtleal advantale and
minim~ poUUeal rlak ..."

Indian villages, including
Chhamb, where one of the
biggest battles of the war was
fought.
The sources said that tower·

Udhampur told UPI correspondent M.G. Srinath that
Pakistani forces holding
territory five to seven miles
inside India had set fire to four

'

MOROCCAN GOLF
RABAT, Morocco (UPI)Orville Moody shot a threeunder.par 70 Sunday to win the
$12,000 first prize in the International Moroccan Grand
Prix golf tournament. Moody
finished the 72-hole event with
a total of one-under-par 291 as
Americans captu~ed the first
seven places. Jerry Heard
finished second at 293 followed
by J C Snead (294) Sam
d. ·
w' dk'
Snea (295), Lanny a ms·
(2!Jj), John Miller (295) and
ijilly Casper 1297) .
.,

'

I

She can wear these beautiful
blouses this holiday and after surprise her with several from
our wide selection of dressy and
tailored blouses .

REGULAR &amp;
EXTRA SIZES

YOUR
CHRISTMAS LIST
WITH
®liD~@~

,...... ... .

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
........._....

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="83">
    <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="1803">
                <text>12. December</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="36011">
            <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="36010">
              <text>December 20, 1971</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1842">
      <name>bean</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="126">
      <name>johnson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6414">
      <name>van matre</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
