<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="11431" 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/11431?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-04T01:03:53+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="42399">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/2087b5af57193867cdb82af1e8212122.pdf</src>
      <authentication>f7301861736c87843b5575c5a7c92fe2</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="36012">
                  <text>Mayor Legar Presides at -Last Council Meeting
l'IJarles Legar ended 14
:;Irs
as mayor of Pomeroy
1
Monday night when he
presided over the final council
sesswn of 1971.
~l a yor Legar was the subject
of remarks by the veteran
Pulice Chief Jed Webster, who
said it " has been a pleasure to
ll'i&gt;rk under the mayor for
ma ny years." Legar did not
run for reelection last fall .
Council accepted th e
of
William
resig nation
Boronick as a member of the
Middleport Board of Public
Affairs as of Dec . 31. Baronick
will be Pomeroy's new mayor
on Jan. I.

Holland Smith, employed as
a part -time police officer, was
put un full tu ne and advenisement.s for $4;G:ll worth
of radio equipment whic h will
be paid for by ll11· Ohio Law
Enf or cement Plan ning
Agency, Department of Urba n
Affairs. were authiii'IZed. Bids
will be ope n on .Jan. 17.

from the parking meter fund to
the cemetery fund and reappropriated $100,000 to the
sewer revenue fund, $3 ,500 to
the general fund, $500 to the
fire department fund, $2,300 to
th e department fund , and
$4,700 to the water fund . Mrs.
Jane Walton said the appropriations made last night
were paper changes in acThe ma yor' s report for cordance with instructions by
November showing receipts of the state auditor.
$:178.40 for the month was
approved and a I'Pquest for a
Council made no aploading zone near the Francis pointment to the board of
Florist Shop was referred to public affairs following
the safety committee.
Baronick 's resignation. Other
Council transfrrrrd $1,000 members of the board are E. F.

Robinson and Robert Hysell.
Also completing 14 years
service Monday night was
Councilman Franklin Rizer. In
January, two new councilmen
will begin terms of office. They
are James Mees, now serving
by appointment in a vacancy,
and William Stauffer, elected
in November. Stauffer was
present last night.
Others attending were
Baronick, Council members
Don Collins, Rizer, Mees, Mrs.
Elma Russell, and Ralph
Werry; Chief Webster, Clerk
Jane Walton, and Mayor
Legar.

There Were Some Laughs, too
HOLIDAY HAPPINESS Is sharing, students of the
Salisbury Elementary School are learning. Students have
brought to school 224 gifts which will make Christmas a little
brighter for residents of the Meigs County Infirmary, the
Meigs County Children's Home and rest homes of the area.
Representing the six classes of the school taking part in the
project arP front row, from the left , Kathleen Parker, Brian

COLUMBUS ( UP! \
Humor was in plentiful suppl!·
at the St&lt;.~te h ou se in 1971 , and
must of its was full publicized.
Here however, are some
'
ca refully
preserved and
hitherto unreleased ge ms
which helped observers and

Teaford and Jeff Nottingham ; back row, from the left, David
Lunsford, Carl Nottingham, and Shirley Landaker . Teachers
and students will gift wrap all of the items which will be
delivered by Principal John Lisle and PTA members Wednesday. Candy, cookies and fruit also contributed by the
students will be delivered too.

participants maint&lt;tin their
sanity during the frantic year :
Rep . Ches ter T. Cruze, H-Cincinna ti,cs ta blishe;la creclibili ty
ga p with both fr fe nds and foes
with this statement in defense
of one of his bills.
"There is absolutely no way

this bill can be changed to
make it a better or worse bill,"
Cruze declared.
Another Cincinnatian proposed a personal property tax on
the college degrees of educators
to help finance slate spending.

Now You Know

·weather

Ostriches sometimes attain a
height of eight feet and a
weight of 300 lb~ .

Cloudy and colder tonight,
chance of snow flurries north.
Lows tonight in the .20s .
Variable cloudiness and colder
tomorrow, chance of snow
flurries northeast. Highs in the
upper 30s to lower 40s in the
south .

I

Devoted To The

POM EROY·MIODLEPORT, OH 10

VOL. XXIV NO. 175

lntere.~t.~

Of Tllf' Meigs -Ma..~on :fn•a

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 21 , 1971
-

Bhutto Forgives
State's Enemies
By United Press International
President Zulfiquar Ali
Bhutto today appointed Nurul
Ami as vice president and then,
as chief martial law administrator , Bhutto issued a
series of directives including
one freeing students, laborers
and peasants jailed by the
military government.
In a speech to the na lion
Monday night Bhutto asked the
Pakistani people to give him
time to restore the country to
democracy . He also pledged to
regain East Pakistan, lost in
the 14-{iay-war with India, but
Indian sources in New Delhi
said this was for Pakistani
consumption.
Bhutto's directives as broadcast by Radio Pakistan includ-

ed :
Sentences against students,
laborers and peasants passed
by the military courts will
stand remitted .
All pending death sentences
handed down by ordinary
criminal courts will be commuted to transportation (exile )
for life .
Whipping sentences will not
be administered .
Government offi cia ls will
ti ghten measures against
smuggling, hoardin g and
profiteering.
Forbade travel abroad by
Pakistanis except students
going abroad for education and
gd've rnment officials.
Ordered government minis-

·---------------------------,
:
7\T
•
B .f
1

,

In a letter to the governor's
Tax Study Committee, the writer contended educators should
be willing to repay the "tax dollers" which financed. their education. The misspelling, no
doubt, was an attempt to ex(Continued on Page 10)

,ews.•• zn

rre :; :

:

By United Press International
PHNOM PENH- TilE CABINET OF PREMIER Lon Nol's
shaky government appeared about to fall , and local newspaper
reports said the premier told colleagues he would resign .
Sources said In Tam, currently president of the constituent
assembly would head a new government.
SAIGON -NORTil VIETNAMESE commandos early today
raided the secret Laotian base of CIA-supported guerrilla leader
Gen . Vang Pao despite massive American air strikes carried out
against increased resistance by North Vietnamese MIGs and
missiles. Gen. Thongphan Knocksy, the official Laotian military
spokesman, said in Vientiane that the military si tuation in Laos
was deteriorating rapidly since the strategic Plain of Jars fell to
the North Vietnamese on Monday.
The situation also was serious in Cambodia where a string of
Communist successes have threatened the capita l of Phnom
Penh and brought a grave political c'risis that threatens the
government of Premier Lon No!.
COLUMBUS - GOV. JOHN J. GILLIGAN today told fiscal
officers in his administration that from now on they are "going to
have to account to Ohioans on how well we are using the public
money entrusted to us ."
Gilligan, in remarks prepared for delivery to a Fiscal
Planning Workshop, urged the fiscal officers to "place strong
personal emphasis on good management" in administering the
$7.8 billion budget which he signed Monday . "I want to be able to
tell the public that we are using their money carefully, prudently
and effectively ," he said. "For me to be able to say that, you
must do it.
'
" I can assure you that now that the budget battle is over, I
too will be placing personal emphasis on working with you to
streamline operations, improve services and establish appropriate priorities for spending," said Gilligan.
MIAMI - TilE CAPTAIN AND FIVE MEN stayed aboard a
Cypriot tanker loaded with molasses to fight an engine room fire ,
raging out of control just off Cuba 's north coast, after an
American merchant ship rescued 34 seamen from the flaming
ship today.
The pilot of a Coast Guard plane on the scene said the U. S.
merchant vessel Green Port had taken board 34 crewmen, from
the tanker, the Calypso, and there were no injuries . The Green
Port stayed on the scene waiting for the U. S. Coast Guard cutter,
the Diligence, which was due late today.
WASHINGTON-THE TREASURY Department says the 10
pet. surcharge on imports, which increased the cost of foreign
cars and many other products used by Americans, would be
lifted i.rruneqiately but there would be no refunds.
A Treasury spokesman said the surcharge would not have to
be paid on any goods in transit to the United States, clearmg
(Continued on Page 10 )

I

I

ters and other officia ls to fly
tourist class when they travel
abroad.
UP!
co rre s pond e nt
Frederick H. Marks, reporting
fr om Islamabad, sa id th.
gove rnment was virtually at a
standstill waiting for the result
of Bhutto's deliberations and
consultations with political and
military leaders.
Monday Bhutto 1 fired seven
ge nera ls including former
President Agha Mohammad
Yahya Khan . Yahya Khan was
ousted shortly after he had
turned over the government to
Bhutto .
He named Gen. Gul Hassan
commander in chief of the
armed forces and said the
general would act as defense
minister and foreign minister .
Today he appointed former
Foreign Minister Azia Ahmad
as secretary general of the
Foreign Ministry.
Bhutto, in a speech Monday
night , promised to reunite
Pakistan and warned India not
to become too compla cent
about its recent military
victories.

TEN CENTS
PHONE 992-2156
·--·- - - - - -- - -- - - - -

.Home Contest
Ends Tonight

EVERYONE IS JOINING IN the Christmas project of
the Salisbury Elementary School to hl'lp the l e~s fortunate.
These three women are too engrossed in th eir work Monday
afternoon to notice The Sentinel camera as they were ironing
good used clothing for distribution to lhr underprivileged
From the left are Mrs . Jack Welker , Mr' 1-:d Kennedy and
Mrs. William Pullins . Gifts, candy , cookt•·s and fruit, given
by students, are also to be delivered tlu' wt·ek to the un derprivileged.

Jud gin g 111 thl' hom e
decorating l'ontcst will be
cundul'lcd lo111g ht in PtHil!'roy
and the final drawing iu the
Chri stmas shopping prou1ution
will be conducted Friday .
Jack Ke rr, president of the
Pomen•y Chamber of Commerce, which bas sponsored
the promotion ~t'ltvity, told
membt•rs of lhe r hmnber
Monda y in a uoo11 111ee ting at
Bowers ' Drivt•-111 l!cslaurant
$1 ,725 was donated by rncrchants to fin;HIL'l' tlH' program .
Kerr !'Xprcsscd his th;,tnks to
local lllel'!' han ts for their
cooperation i11 pmmoli ng the
' 's Ut' c· c s s f ul Chr ist ma s
promotion ." lie ;,dso thanked
village· offi cials for freeing the
parking ml'lers om· week prior
to Christmas.
('ham her rn l'rn hcrs agreed
tu ha_w the Ihull drawing for
gift cwtlfkult•s which ln1'! udt·s u $500 uward on
FrldHy at 2 p.m. at the New
York ('Jothlng House. It was
anniHint·cd earlier that the

final drawing would be held
on Thursday.
Merchants are tu have their
tickcL~ at the clothing store by
I ::lO p.m. on Friday, Kerr said.
Judl(ing of the annual home
decorating contest will be held
this evening with the judges
meeting at Crow's Steak House
at li : ~O p.m.
Th e annull l event offers
merchandise prizes contributed by Columbia Gas of
Ohio , the Columbu s and
Southern 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.
It was announced that items
belonging to the Meigs Pioneer
and Historical Society which
have been housed in the 'o ffice
quarters on the left of the
courthouse steps, have been
moved .

Chamber members were
interested in the location for a
Meigs County Information
Center.ll was suggested that a
request for the office space be
made today to the Meigs
County Commissioners.
A letter was read by Kerr
from Rev . V. Gibbs, recording
secretary of stale, Junior
Order of United American
Mechanics,
to
contact
congressman Ken Hechler of
West VIrginia, and congressman Clarence Miller
of Ohio, asking them not to
relocate SR 33 from Rock
Springs to Ravenswood where
a bridge would be built but to
keep SR 33 at its present
location
going through
Pomeroy, Middleport and the
bend on the West Virginia side.
Astudy of the suggestion will
be made by chamber members
and a letter will be directed to
Rev . Gibbs.

Albert Defends
75 Names Drawn for Jury Duty Party's Record
!\ames of 75 persons drawn
for possible petit or grand jury
duty dru ing the January term
of court were announced today
by Mrs. Evelyn Lucke, Meigs
Coun ty Clerk of Courts.
Names drawn for the grand
jury are Ronald E. Hart,
Racine; Margaret E. Ohlinger,
Middleport; Dalla s Hill ,
Ra cine; Josephine Hargraves,
Middleport ; Nancy B. Reed ,
Pomeroy; Clay Tuttle, Middl eport ; Margi e Ben edum,
Reedsvi ll e; Blanche Wolfe,
Middl eport ; Paul Si sson,
Pomeroy Route 4; Charles
VanCooney, Middleport ; David
Grate , Rutland ; Leo Morris,
Rutland Route I ; Charles E.
White, Middleport ; William H.
Hoback, Racine Route I ;
Granvi lle Stout , Albany Route
~; Nick Grueser , Rutland;

HolidRy Schedule
Set for Weekends
The regular edition of The
IJally Sentinel Friday, Dec.
24, will Include the Sunday
Times-Sentinel for Dec. 26 In
order that employes of the
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
may have Christmas at
home with their families .
Regular publication of the
Daily Sentinel will be
resumed Monday.
Friday, Dec. 31, the same
schedule wlll be repeated so
as to permit New Year's Day
to be a holiday.

John C. Scragg , Hutland ;
Martha Lee, Racine Houle I;
Jessa M. Brannon, Middleport ;
Grace Price, Long Bottom;
Donna Williamson , Hutland;
Irene Hupp, Long Bottom;
Phylli s Boyles, Tuppers
Plain s; Howard Dailey,
Middleport; Vera Crow,
Pomeroy .
Names drawn for possible
petit jury duty are Ernest
Nicholson, Rutland; Howard
Ervin , Ha cin e Route I;
Frances Ca rleton, Pomeroy
Route ~ ; Shirley Bishop,
Rutland ; Lena McKinley,
Middleport ; Donald Brewer,
. Portland ; Lind sey Lyo ns,
Tuppers Plains;
John T.
Wolfe, Racine ; Denver Nelson,
Middleport ; Rose Marie
Grindstaff , Racine Route I ;
James J . Guinther , Syracuse ;
Dale Pigo tt, Long Bottom ;

Mrs. II ;IITj (Jslwrnc·, Lonl(
Bottom ; \1artha B. Fry,
Middlepurl; l'l'orl Ca naday,
Rutla ncJ
11av1d
Hi ggs,
Pomeruy \{r,u l!- 4; 1-:rnrna
Whittingt•m, Allwny l(outc :1;
Grace Hawle y, Mtddlc port ;
Helen Dic:nt·r, " ''"'c·r••Y; Joe
Turner , Mtd dl cporl ; Hen
Bickers, HaC'Irll' ; San1ucl A.
Gibbs, Hulland; r:arland
Caldwell , l'llllll'r&lt;&gt;) H••ute :1;
John fl u)'!'' · I "'"g Bollorn ;
Kim Neal , :vl11ldlc·purt.

Harry Ttpt•&gt;n, \liddlcport ;
Lawrenc ·c Jlall . \1111dlcport ;
Mildred Alk11 c·. l'urne roy
Route 4; l'hd fl . Baldwin,
Pomen&gt;j Huu tc· ::: Ch;trles T.
Chapm on, Syrac·usc; Violet
Millh onc , Tuppers Pl ain s;
Hiram Slawter , Midd leport
Route I ; Char
lllakeslee,
Pomero): Kath) Jl ,,,,cJ, Mid-

it·'

dl cport; .John Henderson,
Reedsville; Huth A. Smith,
Minersville; Itoy H. Pooler,
Porr1croy ; C. 0. Newland ,
Reedsvill e; Cora Beegle,
Hacine ; Bonnie Mae Cheadle,
Albany Route :1; Leonard
Ca lvin , Ewington; Vera
VanMeter , Pomeroy; Robert
Burson , Pomeroy ; Hi chard R.
Rosenbaum, Pomeroy; Julia
Williams, Middleport; Hobart
Vineyard, Heedsville; Earline
Stob~Jrt , Ra ci ne; Wayne Chase,
Albany Route 2; Clyde Dalton,
Hutland Route I, and Charles
G. SheeL~ . Harrisonville .
Attending the drawing were
Mrs. Lucke, the Rev . Freeland
Norris and Lauren Hoffman,
jury com mi ssioners; Judg e
John C. Bacon and James
Souls by , represe nting the
department of Sheriff Robert
Hartenbach.

Summit Talks to End Today
HAMILTO N, Bermuda
WPI )- President Nixon and
British Prime Minister Edward Heath conclude their
summit talks today in
agreement that the historic
"special
Anglo-American
relationship" is a thing of the
past - but a a new partnership
must be forged for the future.
Spending some eight hours
together Monday, Nixon and
Heath frankly acknowledged
that the old traditional ties
between their two countries
must loosen whea Britain
enters the Common Market

next yeor and turns toward
Europe.
Their two.&lt;Jay meeting , with
no "structured agenda," was
the fourth in a seri es of
sessions Nixon has scheduled
with maj or allied leaders in
preparation for his trips to
China and the Soviet Unio n
early in 1972.
•
At a bla ck tic dtnncr hosted
by Heath on the HfJya l ;-,:avy
guided missile destroyer, HMS
Glamorgan , Nixo n noted in his
formal toast tha t the rr:l&lt;~tinn ­
ship "which meant so much in
195~ . in 1957, and in 1971 rat

previous U.S.-British summits
in Bermuda ) - "is not the
same.
"The fa ct that it is not the
same does not mean that it is
still not very necessary, and
perhaps even more important
than It was.
"We live 1n a world where
ihere are dangers on the scene
today that no one cou ld forPsce
25 years ago, at the end of
World War II, or even 10 years
ago in 1961," Nixon said .
He said tha t while Heath
seeks to explore n1:w opIContinued on Pa ~-:e 10)

WASHINGTON (UPI) Speaker Carl Albert today
accused President Nixon of

Decorations
Are JU dged
Winners in the annual
Syracuse holiday home
·decorating contest were
selected Monday night. Cash
prizes were presented. The
event is staged by the Women 's
Auxiliary of the Syracuse Fire
Department .
Taking first place in the
religious category was Mrs.
Morris Harvey. Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Huston were first in the
non-religious category for
homes . Both received $10.
First place for religious
doorway went to Jack Slavin
and first place in the nonreligious window went to Mr.
and Mrs. Karl Kloes.
Judges gave honorable
mention to Mrs . Kathleen
Francis and Mrs . Gladys
Robson. Judges were the Rev.
Dwight Zavi\z, Mrs. Charles
Blakeslee and Mrs. Frank
Cheese brew. Mayor Herman
London escorted the judges.
At the conclusion of the tour
the judges and Mrs. Zavitz
were served refreshments at
the auxil iary headquarters
near the park and presented
gifts . Auxiliary members
present for the social hour
were Mrs. Ada Slack, Mrs.
Agnes White and Mrs . Elva
Dailey .

having imposed a deliberate
slowdown on the economy. He
said the Democratic Congress
had to prod Nixon into his
current fight against inflation
and unemployment.
The Oklahoma Democrat
said economic prospects still
are unclear but "we stand
ready to take further
initiatives as required to bring
our economy back to full
prosperity and full employment."
Albert called a post-session
(Continued on Page 10)

Worker Hurt

In Rutland
Rushed to the Holzer Medical
Center just before noon Mon·
day, after falling an estimated
38 fee tonto a concrete sidewalk
in Rutland, was Wayne Edwards, 30, Huntington, W. Va.
Edwards was working at the
front of the Rutland Dept. Store
on scaffolding, installing
aluminum siding near the top
of the building when he apparently lost his footing .
William Hobstetter of the
Rutland Branch of the
Pomeroy National Bank saw
Edwards fall and called the
Middleport E-R squad. Before
the squad arrived, Edwards
was removed by Martin
Ambulance. Edwards appeared to be in.iured in the
pelvic area.

�2- The DIIUySedlllel,Ml ,. pwl.f'wauy,o.• Die. 21.1rn

The Toys That'Thlked: a Christmas Fantasy

WIN AT BRIDGE

.._.::~___;,.

A Hand for
All Reasons

FASTER,
EL!:PHANT 1•...-.._

Year-Round Game

--

'

Rio Nips West Florida 101-100 In 2 Overtimes

Zl

NORTH

.1+

4 J972

-- - ---

AK86

~

---

... J 764

WEST
4 KB
. KJI083
• Ql09

... A95

3 -The Dati) Sentinel. Mtddleporl·Pomeroy, 0 , Dec 21. 197t

the Sports

EAST
4 54
. Q9652
+ 5432

By Chet Tannehill

... 102

SOUTH (D)

4A Ql063
• A4
• J7

EDITORIAL

Sincere Holcum

How Will History
Look at Azores?
Recent lm tory 1s studded w1th pulittcally loaded place
names , thooe handy geographic labels we have gotten
mto the hailit of affiXIng to some of the more momentous
events 111 the often devw us and contrad ictory dealings of
natiOns seckmg advantage or survtval
Mentwn the place 11 occun ed and an event Itself ts
reca lled "' th all tis conn o I a t 1on s of tnumph or dts
as ter-somettmes a btl of both dependmg upon pomts of
view
M11mch ts perhaps as diSmal an example as comes 1m
medi ately to mmd a word by now so negallvely colored
that 1\ has almost become a common noun , a synon ym
ior failure and betrayal Pear t Har bor stands for a dts
aster ol a dtfferenl order and Yalta 1s st1ll good for an
argument m some quarters
In a cnsts·donnnated wotld , examples wtth posttt ve
connotallon s a re not so easily ctted But there arc such as
Bretton Wood s the 1944 monetary confe rence whtch blue
pnnted one flll ancw l struct ure of the post World War II
world and sought to ensure that so long as men of good
sense ra little good will as well would help) were m
charge of the nal10nal tteas u11es the fatlu re of coopera
twn and communicat ion wh1ch made of the grea t depres
• s10n a world wide dtsaster would not occur agatn Bret
ton Woods stands fot a successful meldmg on natwnal
mterests to the be neftt of the lllternat10nal community
At lhts pomt we m1ght well wonder how history ts go mg
to load refere nce to the Azores Wtll the mtd AtlantiC
meellng between the Fre nc h and Amcncan prestdents
wh1c h made devaluatw n of the dollar offtctal be recalled
as a gtan t step forwa rd m renovat mg the Bretton Woods
structure to confm m to the realittes and reqUirements of
the world of the 70s and beyond' Or Will 11 be rem em
bered tf at all, as mere ly another convolutiOn m the con
tmumg cun ent &lt;:ns1s')
To say that the Azores dects1on was momentous ts the
easy oart To spell out exac tly what the practtcal econom
tc effects wtll be ts somethm g else In a se n se, the
Azores announcement was merely the public yteldmg of
that pound of contnt10n other nattons, wtlh France m the
forefront , have demanded for our economtc sms--chromc
budget deftctts and our preference for exportmg mflat10n
rather than acce p!Jng the unpleasant consequences of
dealing wtth 1! at home For all practtcal purposes, the
dollar was devalued m August when Prestdent Ntxon
ended gold converltbtltty and maJor tradmg natw ns let
values of the!f currenctes float
Costs of 1m ports wtll be affected upward , whtch IS what
the soectal 10 per cent added duty IS s upposed to have ac·
complished already Exports should ptck up , now pnced
1n cheaper dollars, prov1dmg we do not promptly rem
flate our pnces But pmes and wages at home, where a
dollar ts a dollar no matter how much gold 1t does or does
not theorettcall)' contatn, wtll be determmed by how ef
fecllvely we dea l wtth home-generated mflalion pressures
In the long run tf !ogre IS permttted to prevail , the
Azo res rallflcatton of devaluatiOn should take pressure
off the dollar as the leadmg reserve currency and accel
crate the ex1slln g trend toward demonttiZmg gold whtch
may soon become too expenstve to use for money anyway 1
and the subst1tuhon of bookkeepmg credtts m settlmg ac
counts among nat10ns-an arttftclal money such as the
Amencan·favored Standard Drawmg R1ghts whtc h the
InternatiOnal Monetary Fund has already 1nslltuted The
res ultlllg vas tly greater flextb tilty tn m!ernat10nal reserve
funds-potentially mftmte expanston of suppl y to meet
demand- plus conttnwng good sense a nd wtll should put
world trade and fm ance on a much firmer foundalion fo1
decades to come
How htstory colors future reference to the Azores wtlt
depend on what Washmgton, Pans and other key captlats
make of the present opportumt1es It 1sn't the end of the
currency crtsts But 11 could be as wa s satd at another
turmng pomt m recent htstory, the end of the begmnmg

AS DffiECTOR

"

14

Pass

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Look at the North South
cards only There ts a paten
hal spade slam Is tt a good
slam ' The answer ts that ·1t
ISn't
There ts a su re club loser
and declarer has to ptck up
the km g of spades Then
tsn't 1t a 50 per cent slam '
Not qUite' There m1ght well
be two club losers Sutts
have been known to break
4·1
Thts 1sn t the sort of slam
that people get around to
btddmg South has a mce
comfortable spade opemng
and most North players
would ta ke the stmple ro ute
to game of JUSt btddmg tt
Suppose you are declarer
West opens the ace of clubs
and co ntmu es the sutt after
receiVIng an encouragmg 10
spot from East Do you try
the trump fwesse'
It doesn t matter much m
rubber br1dge Your con·
tract IS sa fe, but m duphcate
you had better forget about
the fmesse and settle for
ftve odd If you do fmesse,
West wtll gtve hts partner '
ruff and you wtll make JUSt
tour for a very bad score
Thts hand was played tn
a duplicate game At some
tables West overcalled wtth
two hearts Thts tsn't a very
good call Hts hand IS too
balanced to tnd1cate any rea·
son to compete when vulner.
able
At a couple of tables, East

scene

;uc·

He shakes ever v hand on the bus. "does' the Toledo
alfport go 1ng and comm g, ts the last to leave " place so
everyone can see and greet htm They all know who
they're greetmg He may be an old face but he IS very
much a known face
for Humphrey m 1971, thts ts mdeed heady stuff Watch
mg htm hstenmg to htm m pnvate conv ersatiOn you
ge t the feehng he sees htmself as a seasoned old btrd who
knows just about everythmg there 1s to know about run
mng for prestdenl
lie has wanted the tlung from at leas t as far back as
that fam ous etght·hour chat wtt h the Sovtet leader
Khrushchev m 1959 when he was flung onto the natwn s
front pages
He looks back uoon 1968, wtth the Chtcago conventwn
debacle and hts close loss to Ptestdent Ntxon as an unfalf
lest He was like a quarterback wtth a bad arm Hu m
phrey s handtcap was hts mescapably close lie to Lyndon
.Johnson and the controverstal Vtetnam wa r Says he
'In IOOll I fell I had a load to carry
1! was a very
dtfftcullltme m th ts country '
To Hube rt, then, 1972 1s not Just another go " He sees
1t as h1s 'great opportumty" the chance to btd for the
htgh spot Without handtcaps imposed by events and by
other men Glowmg, he adds
TOday I'm my own man
th1 s ts my show "

Metromedta Records veep smglng m Central
Park for contrtbutions He tells us weekend
troubadours twangmg away for handouts make

Pas.&lt;;

More than one old Marshall grad, and others not grads but
followers of Herd basketball from Metgs and Galha came home
Saturday mght from Huntmgton tmgling wtth the convtctton they
had wttnessed a fme basketball team defeat seventh ranked St
Jo ~llS tn the fmal round of the Marshall Memonal Tournament
Hundreds of others who watched the game on the tube rna)
have fa tied to rece tve the tmpact of that howlmg mob of fans 1
did, watchmg sporadtcally only
One Herd fan, Bob Saunders of Gallipolis, testtfted he had
never, ever, been a part of such a charged crowd at a basketball
game as m HlUltington Saturday rughl
Marshall went after tts 7th stra tght vtc\ory last mght
(without defeat) agatnst the Un~&gt;ers1ty of Mame t:i-1), wuuung

Openmg lead- • A

BOWLING GHr,EN Oh1 ' \IEAJ
[he mmd boggles Sen Hubert Humphrey the '"epres
stble, m a bus again In ano ther ca mpa1 gn' Nu 11 s not a
tn ck of the memory, a flashback to We&gt; t VlfgJni J '" 1960
It 1s 1971 and tl s all true
Stxty years old now but slill calhng up resourc'' of un
flaggmg e nergy Hubert spends a day probably muc h like
a thousa nd olhers he has put 1n on the pres1dentw l tratl
'" the last dozen years- lalkmg to farmers , 11\llmg a
nurs mg home, chattermg away under hot pte" confer
ence lights m an atrport gnndmg through a long heartng
on rural developme nt meeling wtlh pme pockd ~ e Gov
.John Gtl li gan Democ1 at
Tech ntcall} he's not yet a candtdate f01 the W7! Demo
c ral~e prestdenttal no mmat10n but that little f, mailty
w11l soon be Wken ca(e gf
I expe&lt;..:t to go he says later m an airplane JIJ 11 rv1ew
Wha t he means by go' you have l&lt;' see to br 111 ve He
1s a genumel) good-hearted man, but the onl y ~ ·• I I can
charactenze h1s road-show performance Js tu s(1 Y that he
ts the absolute master of Si ncere hokum
On a day uf raw raut, here we go mto the Wo,,d County
Nurs mg Home to see elderly, somet imes ICI"' ""d folks
who are sttl1ng out thelf last years
' I gotla say hello to th1s old gentleman h01 e says
Hum phrey as he comes upon a thmmn g man of% restmg
m a wheelchair He roam s through comdors ""' ks hops,
hosptta lltke 1ooms, bubblmg ht s effu sive g r eet ' "~' to the
old people, the staff a1des the wattresses
S1ng those Chnstmas carols good today
I II JUSt
hold your hand
Ito a man pamtmg pottery 1 I wuuldn 't
be good at th iS l can't hardl y patnt the stde of a barn
Ito women workmg wtth fabric 1 my wtfe 1s an expert
needlepomter-she JU St needlepomts up a storm
I'm
you ha ve a marvel
so pleased to see th ts ntce facility
ous kttchen Good factllttes mean so much
Ito a fellow
who has seen htm on the tube! that televiSion gets us all
acquamted, doesn t tt'"
The good·Wtl l sptgot IS never lut ned off Whettver he IS
even tf only for moments Hu mphrey works the hum an

,

NEW YORK (KFS) -Otto Prerrunger told
us the amazmgly unpredictable Elame May
actually wrote the screenplay for his newest
"Such Good Fnends" corruc-flhocker· "It was m
her contract that she must not get billing as the
writer Elame only wants wrttlng credit If she
also dtrects a f1lm"
Actress Esther Dale
decorates the offtctal scrtbble-hstings Bdwy
jress agent Lee Sabin son turned actor in "Such
Good Frtends"
Bdwy 's theatre.
concentratiOn slowly IS decentrahzmg;
Seymour Kaba ck's Mercer Arts Center
downtown on Mercer St - ftve Uteaters shortly will add the 5th, the Brecht, when
$300,000 in alterallons are completed It's our
suspiCion the N Y theater distrtct tS set to shlft
again as ttlong ago traveled from the Bowery to
14th St , then 23rd , later to 42nd , now north from
that sad and seedy sm-street - and east, to the
3rd Ave and 57th St -florth area (27 movte
theaters already and film-magnate Joe Levme,
who owns scads or 3rd Ave real estate,
prorruses to build three film houses - and two
legit theaters).
Mike Lee opened the Mustc Barn on E 64th
St (see') and etther IS ftghting mflation or
facmg the recession'~ truth floor show seven
nights a week and charges netther cover nor
_minimum
Fmest supper club star around,
Bobby Short disports m the Carlyle Hotel, way
uptown - Madison Ave and 76th St .
James Lale, real surname Lategano, who
works days at the Fulton Fish Market and tttled
his first song albwn just that, has a nifty sense
of self;~lmed lrumor: told us about the time he
was hired to entertain a convention, started
singing hlS "Fulton Fish Market" chanteys, all
about the big, rough, tough, steel-ltook..armed,
strong flshmen - and half the audtence walked
out - they were Women's Libbers Then he
shifted to prelty"flll"l-1-love·you songs and the
rest of some 600 in the early audience flounced
out in a pink huff - they were Gay
Llberatlonlsts ... James wu discovered by a

Pass

Hy HRlKh IHOSSAT

!Voice along Broadway !
BY JACK O'BRIAN
MAY FLOWERS ONLY

p..,

Irrepressible HH
Blazes '72 Trail

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

I

... KQ83
Both vulnerable
West Nurth East Soulh

BRUCE BIOSSAT

I~

dectded to sacnftce at five
We don l approve of that bid
at all and those Easts who
dtd make 1t found them·
selves pay 1n g I 100 powt
penalhes

I.

The btddmg ha s been
Wrst
North
East

Military Shrugs
Off Even Nixon

Pass
Pass

2•
3.

Pass
Pass

B' RA V CRO\ILEY
South

Dble
3+
?

You South hold
4 AQ4.K6 +AQI08 5... KI09
What do you do now?
A-Bid four no-t rump

If

partner doesn't hold an are ,
f1ve spades should still be safe
TODAY 'S QUESTION
Your partner b1ds hve dtamonds to show one ace What do
you do now?

··· ·e:::».».::&amp;:::::!w-.&amp;~;~z:~oo:::o»&gt;..:?n&gt;.:.~&amp;..-..:,.aoz~·:::-h!~.,

i
~

i

(Got a problem? Or a subject for d!Bcuuion, two-generaUon
style? Dirett your que.tlona to eilher Sutor Helen Bollel -or
both, in care of thli newspaper, !I you want a combinadon
mother4auebler -wer.}
PARENTS A HANDY EXCUSE
Dear Sue and Helen
I am 17, Bo Is 19 We went together SIX months and
everything seemed perfect I really thought tt was love He's the
type who always KNOWS he's right, so I tried every way to
change so I'd he just the way he wants a girl. I thought I succeeded We never even fought.
But suddenly he decided we shouldn't see each other so much
because his parents "were hassling hun " He suggested that we
oooltt for a month
Two days later I saw him with another girl, and after that he
was always with this girl.
Finally I decided to have II out so I asked him if tt was all
over He said, "Yes," but not becall5e of the girl. In the time he
hadn't seen me, he said, he looked at "us" with an open mind and
realized we were so different In thoughts, ideals and
backgrounds that we'd never make It But he still loves me, he
added.
I have a lot of love Invested in him and the way I feel now, I'll
By United Press lnlernatlonal
always
have But when hl8 mind Is made up, no one can change
Today 18 Tuesday, Dec 21st,
tt, and he's so dam sure he's always right! Is he this time? the J55th day of 1971
ThiS IS the fll"sl day of wmter HURTING
The moon Is between tts new
SUE'S VIEWS
Dea Hurtin
phase and ftrst quarter
r
g
The mormng stars are
More and more guys, It seems, are U8Uig the copout, "My
Mercury and Jupiter
parents are hassling me; let'acool!t for a while ." Guess It gtves
The evening stars are Venus, them time to think up a new excuse. Really, a simple "It's over"
Mars and Saturn
would be lots kinder.
Those born on thlS date are
The next dodge - your two personaUUes couldn't make 11 under the sign of Capricorn
doesn •t go down either. Opposites usually attract The dilSovtet Premier Josef Stalm ferences add excitement. Maybe what Bo LS trying to say Is,
was born Dec. 21, 1879
"We're getung too much aline and It's a drag."
On thlS day m hiStory
I'm glad you wrote thiB letter (though I'm sorry you're
In 1620 the Pilgrims set foot hurting} because It g1ves me a chance at a bit of advice · Gtrls,
for ~ fll"st time on Amen can don't change for your guy 10 you'll be like him. He doesn't really
sot! at Plymouth, Mass
want that becaWJe'then he sees in you a reOection of hJnlSelf
In 1912 the US Supreme What a ~ 1
Court upheld the validity of Slit·
And guys Say what you mean ' Aclean break heals faster. _
week dtvorces granted m SUE
Nevada .
Dear Hurting ·
In 1944 horse racing was
1 don't thlnk much of a fellow who leaves a relatlonslup
suspended m the United States
~--I' air adyd d And h he' "a!
right" to
for ~ duration of World War hanging w,..,., t s e
ea .
w en s ways
boot - weU, you'liiiOOnreallze how wrong he was for you. (Say m
11
about a month, or maybe less !I you make the clean break
The Daily Sentinel yourself.) - HELEN
DEVOTED TO THE
Dear Sue and Helen:
1NT EREsT oF
I broke my wrist roller-6kaUng down a steep hill l got my
CH~~~~~'tA~~:::~~~L, cast off three weeks ago but now I'm scared stlfl of even the
Exec Ed.
smallest hill. Will 1ever get over 11• - J M.
ROBERTHOEFLICH
DearJ·.
City Edttor
Pubr !S hed da1 1y ex cept
Yea! But only lfyou thlnltof thatfear as a challenge. And try
Satvrdav by The OI'I•O V alley
Pubt ,s h'"g company , 111 the baby hills first . - SUE
Court st. Pomeroy , Oh,o Dear
45769 Busmeu Oft• c~ Phone
J .:
9922156, Ed•torra l Phone 99 2
Howaboutregalnlngyourconfldence!narink'Excusemelf
2157
I make noises like a mother, but roller lkatee on st...,
Sidewalk
Second class post•ge pa•a i!ll
.......,..
Pomeroy. Oh,o
hills can be hazardous not only to tbe wearer but to the person he
0
r • ~ ,'.',', n~: /,.: d
~ ~ ,g meets on the way down. (And I know, because I once crashed into
Gallagher, Inc, 12 Eut &lt;2nd ' a lady carrying two dozen eggs beck in my roller..UUng
StSubsc,
, New York
New York
•
ptlonCityrates
De prime.}- HELEN

"an easy $50 or $60 a day " Play that on your
welfare check
Manhattan lelia named Fred Ferrazzano
was an agent here, wanted to own a restaurant,
dectded N Y now LS not a proplllous time or
place - and opened Flavto's m San FranciSCO
mstead He's bankrolled by aN Y syndtcate
for $200,000
Dandy Don Meredith may quit
gridcastlng for actmg Dean Martin touts the
gamecaller as another Spencer Tracy Tv
skyrocket Burt Reynolds al!to jotned the
Meredith the Actor Fan Club Mel Ferrer had
a heart attack Had to quit squtrlllg his 3().years.
younger bride to nightly parties and !lay-up
cafes - then tenrus and ndmg at 9 am
Ingrtd Bergman's son, Robertino Rossellini,
wants to wed a 17-year-&lt;&gt;ld Venezuelan beauty
Ingrtd cautioned, "Love her but don't marry
her"
ShubertAlleybuzzhasittheSanunyDavJs.
starred all-black "A Tree Grows in Brooklyn"
ml!Slcal revival has been postponed until Sch·
mulke Jr gets hls strength back ... Donna
McKechnie, best Bdwy, dancer Since Marilyn
Miller, and Ed Sullivan-imitator Will Jordan
hadarrrreally-blg-&lt;tlurpofChinesecomestibles
at the new Number I Son Chinese Noodle Shop
on3rdAve Thelsraell "OnlyFoolsAreSad"
mustcal came toW 47th St. just m time to keep
Tom O'H rg f
Uz!ng th as
t t t'
o an nmmonopo
ree s
theaters: he's the director of "Hair," at the
'Le "
th
tk
the
B lt
I more,' nny at e A inson and
bruninent
•·
U "!Mer City" at the Barrymore .. The
..rae jollity Is at the Edison Theater.
East VtUage htpples now call their giddy
tdiom "Wlngllsh" - "rams" means deltrium
tremens , "searf up " means t o eat ; a 8ll"1 LS a
"tuna", flshy?
Roseland's champ amateur l t vered by carrter wher e
terpers must be photog Jack Abruzzo and wife avadable so cents per week ,
Bv Motor Route where carr,er
they've won more than 40 trophies there . The serme not av~llable One
month Sl 75 By mall tn Oh.o
Gl enn Millerblg-banderuptsintoRoselandJan and
w va , One yoar St&lt; oo
H
The Gay 90s slW has tis speakeasy· SIX monlhs 17 25 Three
J m (' nlh s SA 50
SUb'iCripltOn
aperture on Lhe front door. Smce 1932.
pr. ce mc ludes Sund &lt;JY T•m es

Civilian Control?

(NEWS PA PER ENTE RPRISE ASSN l

By Helen and Sue Bottel

Almanac

Marshall , from the spots I saw Saturday rught, ts a run and
shoot club Everybody from reputatton knew Russ Lee was a
great one He looked great agamst St John's Mtke D'Antoru ,
whose Pop was seen m thts area recently when Chesapeake came
upnver, ts my kind of guard Btg, qu1ck , techmcally all but
flawless, he hils the open man off the fast break consiStently and
accurately And when he has to shoot he's deadly Playmg a
tough defenstve game, Mtke dtdn t draw hts ftrst (and only)
personal foul untll late m the game
There was s~ - 1dte mumblmg among the Sunday mornmg
coffee dnnkers m Pomeroy about the refereemg of the over\ime
vtctor) mer Sl John's But after tnl"lmg opm10ns on that pomt
from other obseners who "ere on the scene there seems to be
httle to cnllctze The referees themselves, ltke the best and most
honest medical docto rs, admit they can't al11ays be nght
Should the Herd perstsl m wmnmg 11 can ha rd!) escape
natwnal ranking I can't lhmk of a better thmg to happen to a
Marshall athle\ic program They need, real bad, somethmg sohd
to cheer about after the tgnommy of bemg booted out of the Mtd
Ameman Conference m all sports and the football squad's
tragedy of a year ago

RAY CROMLEY

Generation Rap

Today'•

Desk

WAS HINGTON IN EA )
Strong dtssat1sfactwn IS 11fe at the h1 ghest Je,els of the
Ntxo n admtnls lratwn w1th U S mtlitary leadet sht p
Thts reporter has found dtssalisfactw n among the Prest
dent's advi sers tn the State Depa1 tment and m the top
ctvthan leadership of the Defense Department ttself It
extsts m the U S Senate among men who have been the
Pentagon's chtef defender s m the past
The restgnatJOn of Deputy Defense Secretary Dav1d
Packard was m part a Jesuit of thts dtssatlSfactlOn It 1s
known that he personally had come to despair of gettmg a
ha ndle on the top mtlitary bra ss Some months ago, m
fac t, a htgh Ntxon advtser who considered Packard the
best offtctal m the nat to n told thts reporter that Packard
had JUSt about g1ven up
The foremost problem bothet1ng the d1ssalisfied men
close to the P1 es1dent ts the mab1 lity of the Pres1denl htm
self to bnng the mtlitary under complete Civ ilian control
Thts ts not a new problem Defense Secretary Me
Namara faced 1t So did h1 s predecessors
llts not that generals and adm~rals defy ciVIlian orders
The problem 1s more so ph1 slica ted The mthtary bureauc·
racy ts se lecllve m the mformatwn tt sends upsta!fs
Intelligence and nonmtelligence mformalion 1s made up
of tens of thousa nds of bits and pieces each subject to
mterpretatton selectiOn a nd mterpolatwn rn thts process ,
eac h man worktn g on the problem mserts an unconscwus
btas based on ht s bac kgro und and perspecttve By the
ltme these btts of mformatwn are selected and analyzed
through a dozen layers m the m1htary shops , 1! ts fre·
quently tm posstble to recogmze the ongmal bas 1c data
It ts on these final well massaged papers that the CIVIlian
heads must make their declSlons
We are not talkmg abo ut diShonesty any more than we
call most sctent1fi c polllical soctal or econom1c resea rch
dishonest It ts extremely dtfflcult. however, to realize
how much unconscwus emotional slant enters mto mter·
pretatwns when me n genmnely believe the defen se of
thetr country ts at stake and that thelf approach 1s neces·
sa ry to stave off catastrophe
One cannot faul t men for such beliefs But they can
res ult tn disaster all the same
These Ntxon adv tsers ha ve been shocked too, by the
mabtlity of US mthlary leaders to adapt to the dtfferent
kmd of war fou nd m V1etnam They were disturbed that
a poorly equtpped , poorly armed and often poorly led
force could so frequ ently outmaneuver us
These Ntxon adv tsers see 1n the mll ttary hterarchy a
fascmatwn for dramatiC new weapons somettmes only
margmally better than those they replace, or very costly
m terms of effecttveness The military develop repeated
costly tmprovements m old gadgetry, rather than constd
ermg whether a parltcutar weapon ts even requtred, or
whether there tsn't some extstmg 1tem that would be as
effechve wtth mmor modtficatwn
Men get promoted because they don't make mtstakes
and don't make waves or have too many unorthodox
(new) tdeas The men who n se to the lop are too ofte n
managenal spectahsts This has led to greater bureaucrahc emp1re butldmg and ummagt nattve solut10ns
It must be emphaSIZed that the advtsers whose prtvate
vtews are re ported here are dcfense·mmded conserva·
ttves, firmly ant1 Commumst Most could be classtfied as
hawks m the Vtetnam war

~AL~

From Seattle the UPI Monday reported a ndiculous
basketball game m \lhtch at one poml there were only three
players on the floor All the others on both squads had fouled out
It was a regular park board ga me between the Supercymcs
and the F1sh Ftve on each team fouled out The btzarre game
had to be called off when the Supers sank a foul shot and the Ftsh,
With only one player left, were unable to take the ball out of
hounds There was no one to pass to 1 (The Supercymcs had
defeated The !'ISh 52-52

~I

A whtle back Sports Desk suggested that valuatle dogs
perhaps are bemg stolen m the Metgs-Galha area and so ld a\lay
from here
ARacme couple that desU"es names withheld called to report
that m the past stx weeks they have had a basset hound and
German Shepherd dogs stolen from thell" farm
These folks agree 100 per cent wtth the surmtse there ts
something dtrty gomg on m dogdom

AI Martm 's desperatiOn shot same h'o teams will ronfrom the key wtth one second d ude a t\\o--game , senes,
remam mg m a second over- startmg at 9 o'clock Galha
tune gave Coach Art Lanham 's County ttme lomghl
Rw Grande Red men a thnllmg
The first half was a see-sa"
101·100 trtumph over hos t West affalf R10 hmshed strong to
Flonda Umverstty m Pen- l&lt;lke a 45-13 half\ime lea d
sacola Monday mght
The Redmen, \lt\h Berme
It \I SS Rto's hflh victor) m Williams and Steve Bartram
se\en games Thr Argonauts on the bench '"th ftve per
are :Hi on the year These sonals , fell behmd SIX pomts

R1u

Jumped ahead four

UN IVERSITY ( 100)

Br ow n

Bryant, 3 3 9 Wolkes

12 8 32 Wdhams 0 1 1 StroJ1g
3 0 6 Jordan 10 I 21 M c Ra e
3J 9
F1tzpalr tc k , 5 1 11

TOTALS

40

20 100

Score by PertodsRio
45 84

91 101
43 84 91 100

WFU

polllls, but agam West
Florida bouuced back, and
appeared lo have the game
all Mappt•d up after Gar)
left
R10, ,tfl e! d tmte out, came

back to wm

1m

AI Martm s last

second shot
Mar tm, a 6·0 sophomore
gua1d returned to Rw 's lineup
for the ru st tlme ln ,} } ear and

" h,t!f He hmshed wtth 12
pomls
C.tpl Bentley ~a s the btg
gun f01 Rw Wlth 28 pomts
Steve B&lt;u tram fnushed w1th :!0
.md Jdckson :-; big M1ke Hou s('
turned 1n a great de fcns iH

eff01 t for the Hedm1' n 1n the
second half
From the flt'ltl. Rto htt 4ti ol

WE HAVE FINE

89 attempts R10 ( ouvertl'd
nmr of 1:J frrc thnms Wl•s l

HAMS

Flonda htt 40 of titi from lh t•
field. and sank 20 of 35 lree
lhro\\s Rto coll ected 4~

CANNED, SMOKED,
SEMI BONELESS
AND BONELESS

nlmunds

Box

~KUJC

Southern Wins
Over Glouster

NEW YORK IUPI) - J tm
Plunkett and Rand} Vataha,
who shared collegiate glory at
Stanford, are now shanng
honors Ill the Natwnal Football
League
Plunkett, the ftrs\ player
chosen m last season's draft,
and Vataha , se lected on the
final round, were among the
three New England Patnots
selected today for the Umted
Press ln ternatwnal 1971 NFL
AJl.Rookte team
Jo mmg Plunkett, the strong.
armed quarterback who won
the Hetsman Trophy last season
as the outstandmg college
football player Ill the nallon,
and Val&lt;lha, a pre-season reject
who flmshed th1rd m the
Amencan Football Conference
m rece1V1ng,1s defenstve tackle
Julms Adams of the Patnots
The Oakland Raiders also
placed three players on the
squad, all on the defensive
team Selected from Oakland

made Charger fans f01 get the
loss of Lance Alworth almost
unmedtately , Joms Vataha at
wtde recetver whtle Jan While
of Buffalo ts the ltght end
In the mlenor offenSive !me,
Vernon Holland of Cmcmnalt
and Marv Mon tgomery of
Denver were chosen at l&lt;lckie
and Henry Alhson of Phtla·
delphta and Larron Jackson of
Denver were named at guard
The center 1s Bruce Jarv1s of
Buffalo
Philadelphia's Rtchard
Harr is was named at one
defenstve end , jotnmg Jones,
and Bob Pollard of New
Orleans was selected w1lh
Adams atdefenstve tackle The
mt dd le hn eba cker ts Ron
Hornsby of the New York
Gtants and Isatah Robertson of
Los Angeles Joms Vtllaptano at
outstde hnebacker
The cornerbacks are Tom
Hayes of Atlanta and Clarence
Scott of Cleveland and safety
were defensive end Horace honors went to Tatum and
Jones, hnebacker Phtl Vtl· Dave Elmendorf of Los An·
lap1ano and safely Jack Tatum geles
The runmng backs are John
The rookte of the year for
Brockmgton of Green Bay, the each conference wtll be an·
most productiVe rookte rusher nounced later thts month
Ill NFL h1story, and John
The durable Plunkett, who
Rtggms of the New York Jets, dtd not mtss an offenSive play
a brutser who steooed m for the fo r the Patrwts thts season,
Injured Matt Snell thts season threw 19 TD passes to set a
Btlly Parks of San Otego, " ho rookte record

Vataha,dropped by the Rams
m tratmng camp but stgned by
New England on Plunkett's
adv1ce, IS one of the success
ston es of 1971 He set a club
record w1th receptwns and
tratled only Fred Btlelntkoff of
Oakland and Otts Taylor of
Kansas City recelVIng m the
AFC
Parks, drafted two) ears ago,
left the Charge r camp last
year, clatmmg he didn't want
to play any more But he
re turned lhts season and kept
Jerry Levtas, a veteran sU.r
acqwred from Houston , on the
bench most of the year
Brockington ga tned 1,099
yards and scored four TDs for
the Packers, averagmg better
than ftve yards a carry and
ngg ms, the flfst back selected
1n the dra ft, gatned 769 ya rds
and "'as among the club leader
tn receptwns
Whtle fllled a light end slot
that has been a problem for
Buffalo for the past few years
Holland and Montgomery, both
htgh draft chotces, lived up to
the1r repul&lt;ltwns as the best
l&lt;lckles m college football last
season by filling maJOr prob·
!ems m the offenSive hne of
the1r clubs

Allison moved mto a .startmg
slotm the Philadelphia hne and
the Eagles feel he's a future
star whlie Jackson. drafted by
Houston but traded to Denver
early m the year, blossomed
wtlh the Broncos
Jarvts, a &amp;-foo J.7 center, hlled
one of the gaping holes m the
Buffalo hnc
Ham s' dcve topmentat defen.
s1ve end v..a s a b1g rea son for
Phtladelphta s la te season suc.
cess and Jones, a 12\h·ranked
picked fr om Loutsville, blended
Into the Oakland front four wtlh
hiS aggresSive play Pollard, an
tlth round ptck, moved m as
startmg tackle when Dave
Rowe and Mtke Ttlleman were
traded and was tmpresstve all
season

Vtllap1ano and Robertson
already ha ve established them.
selves as two of the hardest
httters 1n the league and
Hornsby, who moved m as a
starter late m the season, has
shown grrat promise.

Hayes and Scott both were
htghly tmpresstve at corner.
back. one of the most dlfftcult
post\tons for a rookte, whlle
Elmendorf and Tatum showed
tremendous potential to the
safety slots

OPEN EVENINGS
SELECTED GROUP
OF TV ADVERTISED

NBA Slandmgs

ABA Standmgs
By Untted Pr ess

Buffalo

shows up m a ca rtoon vers 1on
of " A Chrtstma s Caro l,' w tlh

Alasfatr Stm as Scrooge 7 30

p m Ch 12

+++

For mustc of the season tr y
tocat(h the Parkersb urg H tgh

ca tch Through the Ages" al
I 45 p m
+ + +
There are somethmg l1ke a
hal f doze n
spec1afs
on
Tuesday n1ght, and we ' ve onl y
menttoned two ol t hem "Scrooge " beca use 11 s n ew,
and the profile of Prestdenl
N1 xo n' s day , because 11 s

S.:hool Madr~gal S1ngers at 7
1mportant
pm , Ch 7

+ + .,.

Th1s 15 a night for spec1a ls

Frank l y
networks

( resent what the
are trymg to do

10

They'" obviously stack1ng all

the L 1fe of the Pres1dent ' on

the1r
publt c
5erv1ce
programm •ng "
tnfo
one
even1ng knowmg 1! doesn t

w1lh Dec 6, 1971

A Day

Chs 2 &amp; 7 tak1ng lop hooors,
7 30 p m
MOV IES

+++

Pori Alr.que ' 4

p m . and " Three Strangers
t 1 JO p m , both Ch 10

+++

pu ll the best rat 1ngs and 1t all

three netv1orks do 1t at once.
no one gets hu rt too badly As
a re!iul l some SI Qntflcant and
mformattve programm 1ng IS
rammed up back to- back In

WEDNE SDAY
Ch 9
repeats the deligh tful " Night pro footba ll. that would be
Belore Chmtmas" at t 30 called a cheap shot at the
p m , and "Circle of Lights," v1ewers
at 2 p m Or you may want to

6.47
581 21 ~

14

427

71~

11 19 367 9

Centra I D1 vtson

CALL POINTV!EW : 992 · 2505
Cl'le of the lew really new
offer mgs of the holt day season

27 12
18 13
19

W L Pet GB

Ba lf1more
Cleveland

Atlanta

12

20

37 5

11

22

333

10 21

LosAngeles

Seattle
GoldenSiate
Houston
Portland

°

11 ~

312 2

n

Cmcmnah
10
3D
Whlern Con ference
Mtdwesl DI VIS ion

lnte~nattonal

East

W L Pet GB

2

W

Kentucky
V1rgm1a
Pttt 5burgh

Flond1a ns
New York
Carolina

Utah
In d ia na
Memphi S
Denve r

\ tStl MOTIIER
Dr .IIlii \11S Everett A
1 racy, ( ol11mbus, spent the
weekend w11h h1s mother, Mrs

REDUCED UP TO

Nelhe fral ~ Pomeroy

•
Mlnn e~ota

19

9

4

Cal1for n'1
Ph 1lad" lph1a
Ptttshurgh
St L OUI '&gt;
Los Ang• In

10
10
10

16
16
18

9

19

7
7
5
5
I

7 73

Monday '!. Re sults
1No qr1 m(! ~ '&gt;chedu lcd)
Tontg ht s Ga m es

l

Los An qt lr s ill M 1n ne5olil
I On I y q,lme &lt;&gt;c hcdu led )

AHl Slandmgs
By Un1ted Pres s Interna tional
Ea st
W L T P!s
7d &gt;t 3 51
Boston
I&lt; 10 B 36
N ova ~c o l 1 1
1111 719
Spr1ngf tf' ld
Roch es t~&gt;r

Provt dr nu•

we.. t

11 17
B 17

4 26
7 23

W L T Pis

Ba lfl m orr
He r shey
Clevel and
Richm ond
Crncmnat
T1dewater

16

13

4 36

1S

8

11
11'

10

12
15
1.t

S 35
6 32

l

~0

5 'J9
8 28

Hurry! Come In Now!

3 17

Mondays Re sults
Boston 6 Cleveland 3

(Only game "heduledl

WE CLOSE AT 6 ON DEC. 24

Tuesda ys Games
( No gam es c,ch eduledl

OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 9:00 PM UNTIL CHRISTMAS EVE

Pro Standings
Boston
New York
Phtladelph 1a

I

the overttme , then fell behmd
W1th 20 seconds left, West

By United Press lnternatwnal two free thro~ s by Mac Otten edged Walsh, 72-70
Oluo Umverstly lost Its mag1c "'th 14 seconds left that clinchIn Al hance, Ohw, Barr) Rtng
touch over Btg Ten teams Mon. ed the wm for the Rot kets
uf Mt Umon pwnped m lt
da) mght , falhng to Mtclugan
po111
ts to lead Ute Purple Ra 1d
The &amp;-foot-11 Koze lko, who
87-111
made All .State at Tt averse er.s to a 120-118 overtune \\Ul
In other Ohto collegtale bas Ctty, Mtch netted 24 of Ius 36 over Ma l one
ketball ac l10n , Oh10 Stale, aid- pomts m the fir st half and f111
Mount had led by as man)
ed b) the return of Allan Horn· tshed the game makmg 12 of as 21 pmnls early m the sec.
yak defeated Brown 62·56, l o. 17 field goal attempts
ond half, but Malone s Je11)
ledo edged Detrotl 77-76 and
In other games, Akron took ru" nsend and Dave Berry who
Kent Sta te lost to Sanl&lt;l Clara tts 23rd consecutive home VIC- scored 32 and 29 pom ts respec
79 to 65
tor) by beltmg St Vmcent 1(1(). lively, helped send the game
Ohw U had posted wms over 62
Ill to overtime
B1g Ten li'1embers Ohio Sl&lt;lle
Len Paul got the Ztps off to In addttton to Ute fmal 111ght
and lnd1ana earher lhts month, a stormmg start, scor m g 18 of the Mtchtgan and Mar~on
but lost the touch agamst Mtch· pmnts m the first ~even nun lt1u1neys ton1ght, CmcJnna! Jen1gan at the M1ch1gan 1nvttall0n· utes In a three and a half Itt tams Cle m son, Kenyon 1s at
a! Tournamenlm Ann Arbor
mmuteslrelch Akronoulscored Wr~g ht Sta te, Youngsto\\n State
Two ftee throws wtlh 5!i sec. the Pennsyl'8ma learn 1&amp;-.l
host.s Oh10 Domm1can and
onds left plus a lay·up 39 secW
est F'londa plays at Rw
Paul was the game's lugh
onds later by Wayne Grabtec scorer wlth 24 pmnts St Vm. C1rtmde
teed the wm for the Wolvennes cent, 1~. was led by Chns
In Colwnbus tomght, the Cap·
Michtgan 4·1, plays Toledo Youngs 15 pomts Akron has lt,d Classtc gets underway, wt\h
tomght for the tourney cham· )o:o)t oui} onee 1n ~eve n sla rls ~hna (Mtch ) playmg Edmhoro
p10nsh1p, wh1le the Bobcats, 3Cle\eland Sl&lt;lte rallied for " St.. te 1Pa ) and host Capttal
2 take on Detr01t tn the con. 72-7 1 v1ctm ~ over Sa n F'ra n c1s* mcelmg Berea (Ky ).
sula twn game
Co nsolation and chamco StaLe It"' as sophomore D.Jn
Htgh-scon ng Henry Wtlmore Lee h1ltmg a pa1r of fret• pwnshtp games wtll be pia) ed
earned M1ch1gan to a 47-14 lhro\\ sw JLh 1 08rematnmg th.11 Wednesda) mght
halftune lead wtlh 22 pmnts, lied the score and Uten gcwe
but mtssed the entne second Cleveland Stale the go-&lt;Jhc,lll
half "hen he suffered a bad!) p01nt
brutsed nght knee after he fell
Cleveland State IS 2-1 \\llllc
followmg a lay·up attempt
Sa n Fram:1sco Slcill' 1s 5-J
rhc Wolvennes were led the
At the Manon Chnstm,tS
second half b"y Erme Johnson, Tourney. Wooster look a 69-58
HAC!NE - Southern Local
who scored 26 pmnts for Ute Win over Fmdlay and Ame r~can Dt slrtcl's etg hth grade
mght Ohio 's sconng was led Jnternallonal defeated Hetdel ba sketba ll team r lobbered
by Tom R1ccard1 wtlh 23 and berg 88~3
Glouster Etghters 65-29 her~
Tom Corde's IB
fh e wmners meet tomght {OJ Monday wt\h Greg Dunm ng of
The Bobcats and Wolvermcs the champwnshtp and tht• los Southern lcadmg all scorers
exchanged leads m the second ers play 1n the consolatJun l'O II 111 \h 18 pmnts Secund h1gh for
half , unttl Grabtec, who had 14 test
th1• wmners was M1ke Robet ts
pomts, hi\ Ius free throws to
Wooster \\as led ill Mtke v.1 th 12 H1gh ror f.lou ster \\el e
gtve M1c h1gan an 84-110 margm Grcnert "'1th 17 po1n1.~ dnd llunter With l I and Slidfcr wtlh
H1s basket made 11 86-8! \\1\h teammate M1ke Stoll added 14 9
16 seconds to play
Bob Hall led Ftndlay with 14
Suut hern s tc.1111 now ts 5·1
In the to urney opener, Tom pomlc:;
Its Seventh Grade tea m IS 5-0
Kozelko marked hts return to
On the West Coast Mond,1y
1Mh squ.11ls pJ ••y at home
h1s nattve state by sconng 36 mght, Kent State dropped a 79 agamol Wahama teams m U1e1r
poml' to lead Toledo to &amp;-77-76 65 de&lt;islon to Sanl&lt;l Clara At next outmg
wm over Delrotl But 1t was Pomt Park , Pa , Pmnt Park
ttY QUARTERS
Glouster
5 6 It 7- 29
Souther n
26 18 9 t2- b5

Atlanttc Dtvtston

Stnl.nel

Hw shot ahead four pomts m

OU Loses; Bucks Win

Eastern Conference

"Now, 1f you REALLY want something that'll stand out,
- how about thiS wild natural·shoulder, narrow lo~l,
gray flannel three·bulton suit w1th culls on the pants'"

Flortda 's bench,

ond a couple qutck goals b)
H1o the regulatwn game ended
'
111 an 8H4 tie

4 3 11

Jordan ( onvc1ted two free
thro\\ s "1th st·vcu seconds

By Umted Pres s International

•a•;,; ,':

.J gamst West

Florida 's Terr) Wilhams put
RIO GRANDE (10 11 1
Bent
ley 11 0 28 Ha trston 57
the home club ahead 9t-89 Rw
12 W1ll 1ams J 0 6 Jor dan 4 2
came back at the buzzer to knot 10 Bartram 9 2 20 Lamber t
the count on Capt Roger 1 0 4 Rouse 2 0 tl Ha rt 2 1 5
Mart n 5212 TOTALS 469
Bentley s lo11g )Wll per
101
In the set ond O\-erbme,
WEST
FLORIDA

Three Patriots on All-Rookie List

~Dsvrrs

1

'" th two mmutes left m the
Jcg ulatwn game However.
follow tng a techntcal foul

23
21
16
15
"
12
Wesl
W
23
19
14
12

L

Pet GB
8 742
" 600 4
20 444 91/7
19 441 91/~
18 437 91/?
21 364 12
L Pet GB
9 119
13
18
19

"The Store Of Thousands Of Gifts"
WIDE. WIDE SELECTIONS NOW ON DISPLAY
CHRISTMAS DECORATIONS-

All k1nds m a w1de select1on,

hghts for 1ndoors and outdoors.
Artd lcl ol tr ees, read y for your
se lect ton

~fl~t'l3!ft~
J

G1fl boKe s, Ioney po•
pen, tags, seals .•
you nome tt, we hove
1t at thr~fty low

594 4
437 9
387 10111

pr1 ces .

SHOP EARLY

W L Pel GB Da llas Monday 's12 Re22sults353 12
31 3
917
1No games schedu led!
22 Ia 611 10
Tontght' s Game s
18 16 529 13
Ken tu cky al P1ltsburgh

Pactflc

12

343 191f?
242 22 11~

23
8 25

DIVISIOn

W
Los Ange les 31
22
Sea !tie
Golden State 18
12
Houstoo
8
Portland

L
3
u
t6
23
25

1No games scheduled I
Too1ght's Games
Detrott at Chtcago
Phdadelph1a at Phoen 1x
Houston at Portland
New York at Go lden Sta te

Los Angeles at Buffalo
!Only games v ~e du ' ed l

GRE
Box assortments and
1nd1v1dual co rd s

lOO's Of Ideas For Home and Family

•

Use Our Convl!ntent Lay A Way Plan

Uth at Dallas
!Only games scheduled)
GB

Pet
9t2
611 to
529 13
343 191/ 2
242 22112

Monda y's Resu ll s

Ind iana at Denver

CHRISTMAS
WRAPPING

A Small DepoSil Will Hold Your Selection
As You Make Payments At Your

NHL Standtngs
By Un~te d Press tnternattonat

Ill

Conv1ence

MAKE POMEROY YOUR SHOPPING CENTER

Sh1pmen l of Live Parakeets Just Arnved.

East
New York
Bo ston
Montreal

Tortonto
Detro1t
Vancouver

Buffalo

Ch 1cago

W
21
21
19
15
10
West

L T P!s
5 6 48
6 3 45
• 7 45
9 8 37
16 6 26

8 2
7 210

4 2
6 2"'0

W
23 L7 T3 Pis
49

Reg
Reg
Reg
Reg
Reg

SPECIALS
II OOJumboColonngBook s
14 66 Monopoly Game
S2 77 Malibu Barbie Doll
11 so Bo• Assorted Chnstmas Card
StJ 916'!2 FooiS.:otch Pine Tree

Reg 98c Hot

Wheels large se lectton

Reg IJ 66 Spirograph

66c
14 ll
It 97
II 25
11.99
57c

each

12 97

l..~~~~n~y~M~o~re~S~po~Cl:al~s~T~h~ro~u:g~ho:u~I~T:he~SI~o~re~

~o~EN'F~o!~~~~N•
992 3498

POMEROY, OHIO

OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 9:00
A GOLD STAR STORE"

GOLD
STAR
STORE

. .~!::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=IJ
II

�2- The DIIUySedlllel,Ml ,. pwl.f'wauy,o.• Die. 21.1rn

The Toys That'Thlked: a Christmas Fantasy

WIN AT BRIDGE

.._.::~___;,.

A Hand for
All Reasons

FASTER,
EL!:PHANT 1•...-.._

Year-Round Game

--

'

Rio Nips West Florida 101-100 In 2 Overtimes

Zl

NORTH

.1+

4 J972

-- - ---

AK86

~

---

... J 764

WEST
4 KB
. KJI083
• Ql09

... A95

3 -The Dati) Sentinel. Mtddleporl·Pomeroy, 0 , Dec 21. 197t

the Sports

EAST
4 54
. Q9652
+ 5432

By Chet Tannehill

... 102

SOUTH (D)

4A Ql063
• A4
• J7

EDITORIAL

Sincere Holcum

How Will History
Look at Azores?
Recent lm tory 1s studded w1th pulittcally loaded place
names , thooe handy geographic labels we have gotten
mto the hailit of affiXIng to some of the more momentous
events 111 the often devw us and contrad ictory dealings of
natiOns seckmg advantage or survtval
Mentwn the place 11 occun ed and an event Itself ts
reca lled "' th all tis conn o I a t 1on s of tnumph or dts
as ter-somettmes a btl of both dependmg upon pomts of
view
M11mch ts perhaps as diSmal an example as comes 1m
medi ately to mmd a word by now so negallvely colored
that 1\ has almost become a common noun , a synon ym
ior failure and betrayal Pear t Har bor stands for a dts
aster ol a dtfferenl order and Yalta 1s st1ll good for an
argument m some quarters
In a cnsts·donnnated wotld , examples wtth posttt ve
connotallon s a re not so easily ctted But there arc such as
Bretton Wood s the 1944 monetary confe rence whtch blue
pnnted one flll ancw l struct ure of the post World War II
world and sought to ensure that so long as men of good
sense ra little good will as well would help) were m
charge of the nal10nal tteas u11es the fatlu re of coopera
twn and communicat ion wh1ch made of the grea t depres
• s10n a world wide dtsaster would not occur agatn Bret
ton Woods stands fot a successful meldmg on natwnal
mterests to the be neftt of the lllternat10nal community
At lhts pomt we m1ght well wonder how history ts go mg
to load refere nce to the Azores Wtll the mtd AtlantiC
meellng between the Fre nc h and Amcncan prestdents
wh1c h made devaluatw n of the dollar offtctal be recalled
as a gtan t step forwa rd m renovat mg the Bretton Woods
structure to confm m to the realittes and reqUirements of
the world of the 70s and beyond' Or Will 11 be rem em
bered tf at all, as mere ly another convolutiOn m the con
tmumg cun ent &lt;:ns1s')
To say that the Azores dects1on was momentous ts the
easy oart To spell out exac tly what the practtcal econom
tc effects wtll be ts somethm g else In a se n se, the
Azores announcement was merely the public yteldmg of
that pound of contnt10n other nattons, wtlh France m the
forefront , have demanded for our economtc sms--chromc
budget deftctts and our preference for exportmg mflat10n
rather than acce p!Jng the unpleasant consequences of
dealing wtth 1! at home For all practtcal purposes, the
dollar was devalued m August when Prestdent Ntxon
ended gold converltbtltty and maJor tradmg natw ns let
values of the!f currenctes float
Costs of 1m ports wtll be affected upward , whtch IS what
the soectal 10 per cent added duty IS s upposed to have ac·
complished already Exports should ptck up , now pnced
1n cheaper dollars, prov1dmg we do not promptly rem
flate our pnces But pmes and wages at home, where a
dollar ts a dollar no matter how much gold 1t does or does
not theorettcall)' contatn, wtll be determmed by how ef
fecllvely we dea l wtth home-generated mflalion pressures
In the long run tf !ogre IS permttted to prevail , the
Azo res rallflcatton of devaluatiOn should take pressure
off the dollar as the leadmg reserve currency and accel
crate the ex1slln g trend toward demonttiZmg gold whtch
may soon become too expenstve to use for money anyway 1
and the subst1tuhon of bookkeepmg credtts m settlmg ac
counts among nat10ns-an arttftclal money such as the
Amencan·favored Standard Drawmg R1ghts whtc h the
InternatiOnal Monetary Fund has already 1nslltuted The
res ultlllg vas tly greater flextb tilty tn m!ernat10nal reserve
funds-potentially mftmte expanston of suppl y to meet
demand- plus conttnwng good sense a nd wtll should put
world trade and fm ance on a much firmer foundalion fo1
decades to come
How htstory colors future reference to the Azores wtlt
depend on what Washmgton, Pans and other key captlats
make of the present opportumt1es It 1sn't the end of the
currency crtsts But 11 could be as wa s satd at another
turmng pomt m recent htstory, the end of the begmnmg

AS DffiECTOR

"

14

Pass

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Look at the North South
cards only There ts a paten
hal spade slam Is tt a good
slam ' The answer ts that ·1t
ISn't
There ts a su re club loser
and declarer has to ptck up
the km g of spades Then
tsn't 1t a 50 per cent slam '
Not qUite' There m1ght well
be two club losers Sutts
have been known to break
4·1
Thts 1sn t the sort of slam
that people get around to
btddmg South has a mce
comfortable spade opemng
and most North players
would ta ke the stmple ro ute
to game of JUSt btddmg tt
Suppose you are declarer
West opens the ace of clubs
and co ntmu es the sutt after
receiVIng an encouragmg 10
spot from East Do you try
the trump fwesse'
It doesn t matter much m
rubber br1dge Your con·
tract IS sa fe, but m duphcate
you had better forget about
the fmesse and settle for
ftve odd If you do fmesse,
West wtll gtve hts partner '
ruff and you wtll make JUSt
tour for a very bad score
Thts hand was played tn
a duplicate game At some
tables West overcalled wtth
two hearts Thts tsn't a very
good call Hts hand IS too
balanced to tnd1cate any rea·
son to compete when vulner.
able
At a couple of tables, East

scene

;uc·

He shakes ever v hand on the bus. "does' the Toledo
alfport go 1ng and comm g, ts the last to leave " place so
everyone can see and greet htm They all know who
they're greetmg He may be an old face but he IS very
much a known face
for Humphrey m 1971, thts ts mdeed heady stuff Watch
mg htm hstenmg to htm m pnvate conv ersatiOn you
ge t the feehng he sees htmself as a seasoned old btrd who
knows just about everythmg there 1s to know about run
mng for prestdenl
lie has wanted the tlung from at leas t as far back as
that fam ous etght·hour chat wtt h the Sovtet leader
Khrushchev m 1959 when he was flung onto the natwn s
front pages
He looks back uoon 1968, wtth the Chtcago conventwn
debacle and hts close loss to Ptestdent Ntxon as an unfalf
lest He was like a quarterback wtth a bad arm Hu m
phrey s handtcap was hts mescapably close lie to Lyndon
.Johnson and the controverstal Vtetnam wa r Says he
'In IOOll I fell I had a load to carry
1! was a very
dtfftcullltme m th ts country '
To Hube rt, then, 1972 1s not Just another go " He sees
1t as h1s 'great opportumty" the chance to btd for the
htgh spot Without handtcaps imposed by events and by
other men Glowmg, he adds
TOday I'm my own man
th1 s ts my show "

Metromedta Records veep smglng m Central
Park for contrtbutions He tells us weekend
troubadours twangmg away for handouts make

Pas.&lt;;

More than one old Marshall grad, and others not grads but
followers of Herd basketball from Metgs and Galha came home
Saturday mght from Huntmgton tmgling wtth the convtctton they
had wttnessed a fme basketball team defeat seventh ranked St
Jo ~llS tn the fmal round of the Marshall Memonal Tournament
Hundreds of others who watched the game on the tube rna)
have fa tied to rece tve the tmpact of that howlmg mob of fans 1
did, watchmg sporadtcally only
One Herd fan, Bob Saunders of Gallipolis, testtfted he had
never, ever, been a part of such a charged crowd at a basketball
game as m HlUltington Saturday rughl
Marshall went after tts 7th stra tght vtc\ory last mght
(without defeat) agatnst the Un~&gt;ers1ty of Mame t:i-1), wuuung

Openmg lead- • A

BOWLING GHr,EN Oh1 ' \IEAJ
[he mmd boggles Sen Hubert Humphrey the '"epres
stble, m a bus again In ano ther ca mpa1 gn' Nu 11 s not a
tn ck of the memory, a flashback to We&gt; t VlfgJni J '" 1960
It 1s 1971 and tl s all true
Stxty years old now but slill calhng up resourc'' of un
flaggmg e nergy Hubert spends a day probably muc h like
a thousa nd olhers he has put 1n on the pres1dentw l tratl
'" the last dozen years- lalkmg to farmers , 11\llmg a
nurs mg home, chattermg away under hot pte" confer
ence lights m an atrport gnndmg through a long heartng
on rural developme nt meeling wtlh pme pockd ~ e Gov
.John Gtl li gan Democ1 at
Tech ntcall} he's not yet a candtdate f01 the W7! Demo
c ral~e prestdenttal no mmat10n but that little f, mailty
w11l soon be Wken ca(e gf
I expe&lt;..:t to go he says later m an airplane JIJ 11 rv1ew
Wha t he means by go' you have l&lt;' see to br 111 ve He
1s a genumel) good-hearted man, but the onl y ~ ·• I I can
charactenze h1s road-show performance Js tu s(1 Y that he
ts the absolute master of Si ncere hokum
On a day uf raw raut, here we go mto the Wo,,d County
Nurs mg Home to see elderly, somet imes ICI"' ""d folks
who are sttl1ng out thelf last years
' I gotla say hello to th1s old gentleman h01 e says
Hum phrey as he comes upon a thmmn g man of% restmg
m a wheelchair He roam s through comdors ""' ks hops,
hosptta lltke 1ooms, bubblmg ht s effu sive g r eet ' "~' to the
old people, the staff a1des the wattresses
S1ng those Chnstmas carols good today
I II JUSt
hold your hand
Ito a man pamtmg pottery 1 I wuuldn 't
be good at th iS l can't hardl y patnt the stde of a barn
Ito women workmg wtth fabric 1 my wtfe 1s an expert
needlepomter-she JU St needlepomts up a storm
I'm
you ha ve a marvel
so pleased to see th ts ntce facility
ous kttchen Good factllttes mean so much
Ito a fellow
who has seen htm on the tube! that televiSion gets us all
acquamted, doesn t tt'"
The good·Wtl l sptgot IS never lut ned off Whettver he IS
even tf only for moments Hu mphrey works the hum an

,

NEW YORK (KFS) -Otto Prerrunger told
us the amazmgly unpredictable Elame May
actually wrote the screenplay for his newest
"Such Good Fnends" corruc-flhocker· "It was m
her contract that she must not get billing as the
writer Elame only wants wrttlng credit If she
also dtrects a f1lm"
Actress Esther Dale
decorates the offtctal scrtbble-hstings Bdwy
jress agent Lee Sabin son turned actor in "Such
Good Frtends"
Bdwy 's theatre.
concentratiOn slowly IS decentrahzmg;
Seymour Kaba ck's Mercer Arts Center
downtown on Mercer St - ftve Uteaters shortly will add the 5th, the Brecht, when
$300,000 in alterallons are completed It's our
suspiCion the N Y theater distrtct tS set to shlft
again as ttlong ago traveled from the Bowery to
14th St , then 23rd , later to 42nd , now north from
that sad and seedy sm-street - and east, to the
3rd Ave and 57th St -florth area (27 movte
theaters already and film-magnate Joe Levme,
who owns scads or 3rd Ave real estate,
prorruses to build three film houses - and two
legit theaters).
Mike Lee opened the Mustc Barn on E 64th
St (see') and etther IS ftghting mflation or
facmg the recession'~ truth floor show seven
nights a week and charges netther cover nor
_minimum
Fmest supper club star around,
Bobby Short disports m the Carlyle Hotel, way
uptown - Madison Ave and 76th St .
James Lale, real surname Lategano, who
works days at the Fulton Fish Market and tttled
his first song albwn just that, has a nifty sense
of self;~lmed lrumor: told us about the time he
was hired to entertain a convention, started
singing hlS "Fulton Fish Market" chanteys, all
about the big, rough, tough, steel-ltook..armed,
strong flshmen - and half the audtence walked
out - they were Women's Libbers Then he
shifted to prelty"flll"l-1-love·you songs and the
rest of some 600 in the early audience flounced
out in a pink huff - they were Gay
Llberatlonlsts ... James wu discovered by a

Pass

Hy HRlKh IHOSSAT

!Voice along Broadway !
BY JACK O'BRIAN
MAY FLOWERS ONLY

p..,

Irrepressible HH
Blazes '72 Trail

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

I

... KQ83
Both vulnerable
West Nurth East Soulh

BRUCE BIOSSAT

I~

dectded to sacnftce at five
We don l approve of that bid
at all and those Easts who
dtd make 1t found them·
selves pay 1n g I 100 powt
penalhes

I.

The btddmg ha s been
Wrst
North
East

Military Shrugs
Off Even Nixon

Pass
Pass

2•
3.

Pass
Pass

B' RA V CRO\ILEY
South

Dble
3+
?

You South hold
4 AQ4.K6 +AQI08 5... KI09
What do you do now?
A-Bid four no-t rump

If

partner doesn't hold an are ,
f1ve spades should still be safe
TODAY 'S QUESTION
Your partner b1ds hve dtamonds to show one ace What do
you do now?

··· ·e:::».».::&amp;:::::!w-.&amp;~;~z:~oo:::o»&gt;..:?n&gt;.:.~&amp;..-..:,.aoz~·:::-h!~.,

i
~

i

(Got a problem? Or a subject for d!Bcuuion, two-generaUon
style? Dirett your que.tlona to eilher Sutor Helen Bollel -or
both, in care of thli newspaper, !I you want a combinadon
mother4auebler -wer.}
PARENTS A HANDY EXCUSE
Dear Sue and Helen
I am 17, Bo Is 19 We went together SIX months and
everything seemed perfect I really thought tt was love He's the
type who always KNOWS he's right, so I tried every way to
change so I'd he just the way he wants a girl. I thought I succeeded We never even fought.
But suddenly he decided we shouldn't see each other so much
because his parents "were hassling hun " He suggested that we
oooltt for a month
Two days later I saw him with another girl, and after that he
was always with this girl.
Finally I decided to have II out so I asked him if tt was all
over He said, "Yes," but not becall5e of the girl. In the time he
hadn't seen me, he said, he looked at "us" with an open mind and
realized we were so different In thoughts, ideals and
backgrounds that we'd never make It But he still loves me, he
added.
I have a lot of love Invested in him and the way I feel now, I'll
By United Press lnlernatlonal
always
have But when hl8 mind Is made up, no one can change
Today 18 Tuesday, Dec 21st,
tt, and he's so dam sure he's always right! Is he this time? the J55th day of 1971
ThiS IS the fll"sl day of wmter HURTING
The moon Is between tts new
SUE'S VIEWS
Dea Hurtin
phase and ftrst quarter
r
g
The mormng stars are
More and more guys, It seems, are U8Uig the copout, "My
Mercury and Jupiter
parents are hassling me; let'acool!t for a while ." Guess It gtves
The evening stars are Venus, them time to think up a new excuse. Really, a simple "It's over"
Mars and Saturn
would be lots kinder.
Those born on thlS date are
The next dodge - your two personaUUes couldn't make 11 under the sign of Capricorn
doesn •t go down either. Opposites usually attract The dilSovtet Premier Josef Stalm ferences add excitement. Maybe what Bo LS trying to say Is,
was born Dec. 21, 1879
"We're getung too much aline and It's a drag."
On thlS day m hiStory
I'm glad you wrote thiB letter (though I'm sorry you're
In 1620 the Pilgrims set foot hurting} because It g1ves me a chance at a bit of advice · Gtrls,
for ~ fll"st time on Amen can don't change for your guy 10 you'll be like him. He doesn't really
sot! at Plymouth, Mass
want that becaWJe'then he sees in you a reOection of hJnlSelf
In 1912 the US Supreme What a ~ 1
Court upheld the validity of Slit·
And guys Say what you mean ' Aclean break heals faster. _
week dtvorces granted m SUE
Nevada .
Dear Hurting ·
In 1944 horse racing was
1 don't thlnk much of a fellow who leaves a relatlonslup
suspended m the United States
~--I' air adyd d And h he' "a!
right" to
for ~ duration of World War hanging w,..,., t s e
ea .
w en s ways
boot - weU, you'liiiOOnreallze how wrong he was for you. (Say m
11
about a month, or maybe less !I you make the clean break
The Daily Sentinel yourself.) - HELEN
DEVOTED TO THE
Dear Sue and Helen:
1NT EREsT oF
I broke my wrist roller-6kaUng down a steep hill l got my
CH~~~~~'tA~~:::~~~L, cast off three weeks ago but now I'm scared stlfl of even the
Exec Ed.
smallest hill. Will 1ever get over 11• - J M.
ROBERTHOEFLICH
DearJ·.
City Edttor
Pubr !S hed da1 1y ex cept
Yea! But only lfyou thlnltof thatfear as a challenge. And try
Satvrdav by The OI'I•O V alley
Pubt ,s h'"g company , 111 the baby hills first . - SUE
Court st. Pomeroy , Oh,o Dear
45769 Busmeu Oft• c~ Phone
J .:
9922156, Ed•torra l Phone 99 2
Howaboutregalnlngyourconfldence!narink'Excusemelf
2157
I make noises like a mother, but roller lkatee on st...,
Sidewalk
Second class post•ge pa•a i!ll
.......,..
Pomeroy. Oh,o
hills can be hazardous not only to tbe wearer but to the person he
0
r • ~ ,'.',', n~: /,.: d
~ ~ ,g meets on the way down. (And I know, because I once crashed into
Gallagher, Inc, 12 Eut &lt;2nd ' a lady carrying two dozen eggs beck in my roller..UUng
StSubsc,
, New York
New York
•
ptlonCityrates
De prime.}- HELEN

"an easy $50 or $60 a day " Play that on your
welfare check
Manhattan lelia named Fred Ferrazzano
was an agent here, wanted to own a restaurant,
dectded N Y now LS not a proplllous time or
place - and opened Flavto's m San FranciSCO
mstead He's bankrolled by aN Y syndtcate
for $200,000
Dandy Don Meredith may quit
gridcastlng for actmg Dean Martin touts the
gamecaller as another Spencer Tracy Tv
skyrocket Burt Reynolds al!to jotned the
Meredith the Actor Fan Club Mel Ferrer had
a heart attack Had to quit squtrlllg his 3().years.
younger bride to nightly parties and !lay-up
cafes - then tenrus and ndmg at 9 am
Ingrtd Bergman's son, Robertino Rossellini,
wants to wed a 17-year-&lt;&gt;ld Venezuelan beauty
Ingrtd cautioned, "Love her but don't marry
her"
ShubertAlleybuzzhasittheSanunyDavJs.
starred all-black "A Tree Grows in Brooklyn"
ml!Slcal revival has been postponed until Sch·
mulke Jr gets hls strength back ... Donna
McKechnie, best Bdwy, dancer Since Marilyn
Miller, and Ed Sullivan-imitator Will Jordan
hadarrrreally-blg-&lt;tlurpofChinesecomestibles
at the new Number I Son Chinese Noodle Shop
on3rdAve Thelsraell "OnlyFoolsAreSad"
mustcal came toW 47th St. just m time to keep
Tom O'H rg f
Uz!ng th as
t t t'
o an nmmonopo
ree s
theaters: he's the director of "Hair," at the
'Le "
th
tk
the
B lt
I more,' nny at e A inson and
bruninent
•·
U "!Mer City" at the Barrymore .. The
..rae jollity Is at the Edison Theater.
East VtUage htpples now call their giddy
tdiom "Wlngllsh" - "rams" means deltrium
tremens , "searf up " means t o eat ; a 8ll"1 LS a
"tuna", flshy?
Roseland's champ amateur l t vered by carrter wher e
terpers must be photog Jack Abruzzo and wife avadable so cents per week ,
Bv Motor Route where carr,er
they've won more than 40 trophies there . The serme not av~llable One
month Sl 75 By mall tn Oh.o
Gl enn Millerblg-banderuptsintoRoselandJan and
w va , One yoar St&lt; oo
H
The Gay 90s slW has tis speakeasy· SIX monlhs 17 25 Three
J m (' nlh s SA 50
SUb'iCripltOn
aperture on Lhe front door. Smce 1932.
pr. ce mc ludes Sund &lt;JY T•m es

Civilian Control?

(NEWS PA PER ENTE RPRISE ASSN l

By Helen and Sue Bottel

Almanac

Marshall , from the spots I saw Saturday rught, ts a run and
shoot club Everybody from reputatton knew Russ Lee was a
great one He looked great agamst St John's Mtke D'Antoru ,
whose Pop was seen m thts area recently when Chesapeake came
upnver, ts my kind of guard Btg, qu1ck , techmcally all but
flawless, he hils the open man off the fast break consiStently and
accurately And when he has to shoot he's deadly Playmg a
tough defenstve game, Mtke dtdn t draw hts ftrst (and only)
personal foul untll late m the game
There was s~ - 1dte mumblmg among the Sunday mornmg
coffee dnnkers m Pomeroy about the refereemg of the over\ime
vtctor) mer Sl John's But after tnl"lmg opm10ns on that pomt
from other obseners who "ere on the scene there seems to be
httle to cnllctze The referees themselves, ltke the best and most
honest medical docto rs, admit they can't al11ays be nght
Should the Herd perstsl m wmnmg 11 can ha rd!) escape
natwnal ranking I can't lhmk of a better thmg to happen to a
Marshall athle\ic program They need, real bad, somethmg sohd
to cheer about after the tgnommy of bemg booted out of the Mtd
Ameman Conference m all sports and the football squad's
tragedy of a year ago

RAY CROMLEY

Generation Rap

Today'•

Desk

WAS HINGTON IN EA )
Strong dtssat1sfactwn IS 11fe at the h1 ghest Je,els of the
Ntxo n admtnls lratwn w1th U S mtlitary leadet sht p
Thts reporter has found dtssalisfactw n among the Prest
dent's advi sers tn the State Depa1 tment and m the top
ctvthan leadership of the Defense Department ttself It
extsts m the U S Senate among men who have been the
Pentagon's chtef defender s m the past
The restgnatJOn of Deputy Defense Secretary Dav1d
Packard was m part a Jesuit of thts dtssatlSfactlOn It 1s
known that he personally had come to despair of gettmg a
ha ndle on the top mtlitary bra ss Some months ago, m
fac t, a htgh Ntxon advtser who considered Packard the
best offtctal m the nat to n told thts reporter that Packard
had JUSt about g1ven up
The foremost problem bothet1ng the d1ssalisfied men
close to the P1 es1dent ts the mab1 lity of the Pres1denl htm
self to bnng the mtlitary under complete Civ ilian control
Thts ts not a new problem Defense Secretary Me
Namara faced 1t So did h1 s predecessors
llts not that generals and adm~rals defy ciVIlian orders
The problem 1s more so ph1 slica ted The mthtary bureauc·
racy ts se lecllve m the mformatwn tt sends upsta!fs
Intelligence and nonmtelligence mformalion 1s made up
of tens of thousa nds of bits and pieces each subject to
mterpretatton selectiOn a nd mterpolatwn rn thts process ,
eac h man worktn g on the problem mserts an unconscwus
btas based on ht s bac kgro und and perspecttve By the
ltme these btts of mformatwn are selected and analyzed
through a dozen layers m the m1htary shops , 1! ts fre·
quently tm posstble to recogmze the ongmal bas 1c data
It ts on these final well massaged papers that the CIVIlian
heads must make their declSlons
We are not talkmg abo ut diShonesty any more than we
call most sctent1fi c polllical soctal or econom1c resea rch
dishonest It ts extremely dtfflcult. however, to realize
how much unconscwus emotional slant enters mto mter·
pretatwns when me n genmnely believe the defen se of
thetr country ts at stake and that thelf approach 1s neces·
sa ry to stave off catastrophe
One cannot faul t men for such beliefs But they can
res ult tn disaster all the same
These Ntxon adv tsers ha ve been shocked too, by the
mabtlity of US mthlary leaders to adapt to the dtfferent
kmd of war fou nd m V1etnam They were disturbed that
a poorly equtpped , poorly armed and often poorly led
force could so frequ ently outmaneuver us
These Ntxon adv tsers see 1n the mll ttary hterarchy a
fascmatwn for dramatiC new weapons somettmes only
margmally better than those they replace, or very costly
m terms of effecttveness The military develop repeated
costly tmprovements m old gadgetry, rather than constd
ermg whether a parltcutar weapon ts even requtred, or
whether there tsn't some extstmg 1tem that would be as
effechve wtth mmor modtficatwn
Men get promoted because they don't make mtstakes
and don't make waves or have too many unorthodox
(new) tdeas The men who n se to the lop are too ofte n
managenal spectahsts This has led to greater bureaucrahc emp1re butldmg and ummagt nattve solut10ns
It must be emphaSIZed that the advtsers whose prtvate
vtews are re ported here are dcfense·mmded conserva·
ttves, firmly ant1 Commumst Most could be classtfied as
hawks m the Vtetnam war

~AL~

From Seattle the UPI Monday reported a ndiculous
basketball game m \lhtch at one poml there were only three
players on the floor All the others on both squads had fouled out
It was a regular park board ga me between the Supercymcs
and the F1sh Ftve on each team fouled out The btzarre game
had to be called off when the Supers sank a foul shot and the Ftsh,
With only one player left, were unable to take the ball out of
hounds There was no one to pass to 1 (The Supercymcs had
defeated The !'ISh 52-52

~I

A whtle back Sports Desk suggested that valuatle dogs
perhaps are bemg stolen m the Metgs-Galha area and so ld a\lay
from here
ARacme couple that desU"es names withheld called to report
that m the past stx weeks they have had a basset hound and
German Shepherd dogs stolen from thell" farm
These folks agree 100 per cent wtth the surmtse there ts
something dtrty gomg on m dogdom

AI Martm 's desperatiOn shot same h'o teams will ronfrom the key wtth one second d ude a t\\o--game , senes,
remam mg m a second over- startmg at 9 o'clock Galha
tune gave Coach Art Lanham 's County ttme lomghl
Rw Grande Red men a thnllmg
The first half was a see-sa"
101·100 trtumph over hos t West affalf R10 hmshed strong to
Flonda Umverstty m Pen- l&lt;lke a 45-13 half\ime lea d
sacola Monday mght
The Redmen, \lt\h Berme
It \I SS Rto's hflh victor) m Williams and Steve Bartram
se\en games Thr Argonauts on the bench '"th ftve per
are :Hi on the year These sonals , fell behmd SIX pomts

R1u

Jumped ahead four

UN IVERSITY ( 100)

Br ow n

Bryant, 3 3 9 Wolkes

12 8 32 Wdhams 0 1 1 StroJ1g
3 0 6 Jordan 10 I 21 M c Ra e
3J 9
F1tzpalr tc k , 5 1 11

TOTALS

40

20 100

Score by PertodsRio
45 84

91 101
43 84 91 100

WFU

polllls, but agam West
Florida bouuced back, and
appeared lo have the game
all Mappt•d up after Gar)
left
R10, ,tfl e! d tmte out, came

back to wm

1m

AI Martm s last

second shot
Mar tm, a 6·0 sophomore
gua1d returned to Rw 's lineup
for the ru st tlme ln ,} } ear and

" h,t!f He hmshed wtth 12
pomls
C.tpl Bentley ~a s the btg
gun f01 Rw Wlth 28 pomts
Steve B&lt;u tram fnushed w1th :!0
.md Jdckson :-; big M1ke Hou s('
turned 1n a great de fcns iH

eff01 t for the Hedm1' n 1n the
second half
From the flt'ltl. Rto htt 4ti ol

WE HAVE FINE

89 attempts R10 ( ouvertl'd
nmr of 1:J frrc thnms Wl•s l

HAMS

Flonda htt 40 of titi from lh t•
field. and sank 20 of 35 lree
lhro\\s Rto coll ected 4~

CANNED, SMOKED,
SEMI BONELESS
AND BONELESS

nlmunds

Box

~KUJC

Southern Wins
Over Glouster

NEW YORK IUPI) - J tm
Plunkett and Rand} Vataha,
who shared collegiate glory at
Stanford, are now shanng
honors Ill the Natwnal Football
League
Plunkett, the ftrs\ player
chosen m last season's draft,
and Vataha , se lected on the
final round, were among the
three New England Patnots
selected today for the Umted
Press ln ternatwnal 1971 NFL
AJl.Rookte team
Jo mmg Plunkett, the strong.
armed quarterback who won
the Hetsman Trophy last season
as the outstandmg college
football player Ill the nallon,
and Val&lt;lha, a pre-season reject
who flmshed th1rd m the
Amencan Football Conference
m rece1V1ng,1s defenstve tackle
Julms Adams of the Patnots
The Oakland Raiders also
placed three players on the
squad, all on the defensive
team Selected from Oakland

made Charger fans f01 get the
loss of Lance Alworth almost
unmedtately , Joms Vataha at
wtde recetver whtle Jan While
of Buffalo ts the ltght end
In the mlenor offenSive !me,
Vernon Holland of Cmcmnalt
and Marv Mon tgomery of
Denver were chosen at l&lt;lckie
and Henry Alhson of Phtla·
delphta and Larron Jackson of
Denver were named at guard
The center 1s Bruce Jarv1s of
Buffalo
Philadelphia's Rtchard
Harr is was named at one
defenstve end , jotnmg Jones,
and Bob Pollard of New
Orleans was selected w1lh
Adams atdefenstve tackle The
mt dd le hn eba cker ts Ron
Hornsby of the New York
Gtants and Isatah Robertson of
Los Angeles Joms Vtllaptano at
outstde hnebacker
The cornerbacks are Tom
Hayes of Atlanta and Clarence
Scott of Cleveland and safety
were defensive end Horace honors went to Tatum and
Jones, hnebacker Phtl Vtl· Dave Elmendorf of Los An·
lap1ano and safely Jack Tatum geles
The runmng backs are John
The rookte of the year for
Brockmgton of Green Bay, the each conference wtll be an·
most productiVe rookte rusher nounced later thts month
Ill NFL h1story, and John
The durable Plunkett, who
Rtggms of the New York Jets, dtd not mtss an offenSive play
a brutser who steooed m for the fo r the Patrwts thts season,
Injured Matt Snell thts season threw 19 TD passes to set a
Btlly Parks of San Otego, " ho rookte record

Vataha,dropped by the Rams
m tratmng camp but stgned by
New England on Plunkett's
adv1ce, IS one of the success
ston es of 1971 He set a club
record w1th receptwns and
tratled only Fred Btlelntkoff of
Oakland and Otts Taylor of
Kansas City recelVIng m the
AFC
Parks, drafted two) ears ago,
left the Charge r camp last
year, clatmmg he didn't want
to play any more But he
re turned lhts season and kept
Jerry Levtas, a veteran sU.r
acqwred from Houston , on the
bench most of the year
Brockington ga tned 1,099
yards and scored four TDs for
the Packers, averagmg better
than ftve yards a carry and
ngg ms, the flfst back selected
1n the dra ft, gatned 769 ya rds
and "'as among the club leader
tn receptwns
Whtle fllled a light end slot
that has been a problem for
Buffalo for the past few years
Holland and Montgomery, both
htgh draft chotces, lived up to
the1r repul&lt;ltwns as the best
l&lt;lckles m college football last
season by filling maJOr prob·
!ems m the offenSive hne of
the1r clubs

Allison moved mto a .startmg
slotm the Philadelphia hne and
the Eagles feel he's a future
star whlie Jackson. drafted by
Houston but traded to Denver
early m the year, blossomed
wtlh the Broncos
Jarvts, a &amp;-foo J.7 center, hlled
one of the gaping holes m the
Buffalo hnc
Ham s' dcve topmentat defen.
s1ve end v..a s a b1g rea son for
Phtladelphta s la te season suc.
cess and Jones, a 12\h·ranked
picked fr om Loutsville, blended
Into the Oakland front four wtlh
hiS aggresSive play Pollard, an
tlth round ptck, moved m as
startmg tackle when Dave
Rowe and Mtke Ttlleman were
traded and was tmpresstve all
season

Vtllap1ano and Robertson
already ha ve established them.
selves as two of the hardest
httters 1n the league and
Hornsby, who moved m as a
starter late m the season, has
shown grrat promise.

Hayes and Scott both were
htghly tmpresstve at corner.
back. one of the most dlfftcult
post\tons for a rookte, whlle
Elmendorf and Tatum showed
tremendous potential to the
safety slots

OPEN EVENINGS
SELECTED GROUP
OF TV ADVERTISED

NBA Slandmgs

ABA Standmgs
By Untted Pr ess

Buffalo

shows up m a ca rtoon vers 1on
of " A Chrtstma s Caro l,' w tlh

Alasfatr Stm as Scrooge 7 30

p m Ch 12

+++

For mustc of the season tr y
tocat(h the Parkersb urg H tgh

ca tch Through the Ages" al
I 45 p m
+ + +
There are somethmg l1ke a
hal f doze n
spec1afs
on
Tuesday n1ght, and we ' ve onl y
menttoned two ol t hem "Scrooge " beca use 11 s n ew,
and the profile of Prestdenl
N1 xo n' s day , because 11 s

S.:hool Madr~gal S1ngers at 7
1mportant
pm , Ch 7

+ + .,.

Th1s 15 a night for spec1a ls

Frank l y
networks

( resent what the
are trymg to do

10

They'" obviously stack1ng all

the L 1fe of the Pres1dent ' on

the1r
publt c
5erv1ce
programm •ng "
tnfo
one
even1ng knowmg 1! doesn t

w1lh Dec 6, 1971

A Day

Chs 2 &amp; 7 tak1ng lop hooors,
7 30 p m
MOV IES

+++

Pori Alr.que ' 4

p m . and " Three Strangers
t 1 JO p m , both Ch 10

+++

pu ll the best rat 1ngs and 1t all

three netv1orks do 1t at once.
no one gets hu rt too badly As
a re!iul l some SI Qntflcant and
mformattve programm 1ng IS
rammed up back to- back In

WEDNE SDAY
Ch 9
repeats the deligh tful " Night pro footba ll. that would be
Belore Chmtmas" at t 30 called a cheap shot at the
p m , and "Circle of Lights," v1ewers
at 2 p m Or you may want to

6.47
581 21 ~

14

427

71~

11 19 367 9

Centra I D1 vtson

CALL POINTV!EW : 992 · 2505
Cl'le of the lew really new
offer mgs of the holt day season

27 12
18 13
19

W L Pet GB

Ba lf1more
Cleveland

Atlanta

12

20

37 5

11

22

333

10 21

LosAngeles

Seattle
GoldenSiate
Houston
Portland

°

11 ~

312 2

n

Cmcmnah
10
3D
Whlern Con ference
Mtdwesl DI VIS ion

lnte~nattonal

East

W L Pet GB

2

W

Kentucky
V1rgm1a
Pttt 5burgh

Flond1a ns
New York
Carolina

Utah
In d ia na
Memphi S
Denve r

\ tStl MOTIIER
Dr .IIlii \11S Everett A
1 racy, ( ol11mbus, spent the
weekend w11h h1s mother, Mrs

REDUCED UP TO

Nelhe fral ~ Pomeroy

•
Mlnn e~ota

19

9

4

Cal1for n'1
Ph 1lad" lph1a
Ptttshurgh
St L OUI '&gt;
Los Ang• In

10
10
10

16
16
18

9

19

7
7
5
5
I

7 73

Monday '!. Re sults
1No qr1 m(! ~ '&gt;chedu lcd)
Tontg ht s Ga m es

l

Los An qt lr s ill M 1n ne5olil
I On I y q,lme &lt;&gt;c hcdu led )

AHl Slandmgs
By Un1ted Pres s Interna tional
Ea st
W L T P!s
7d &gt;t 3 51
Boston
I&lt; 10 B 36
N ova ~c o l 1 1
1111 719
Spr1ngf tf' ld
Roch es t~&gt;r

Provt dr nu•

we.. t

11 17
B 17

4 26
7 23

W L T Pis

Ba lfl m orr
He r shey
Clevel and
Richm ond
Crncmnat
T1dewater

16

13

4 36

1S

8

11
11'

10

12
15
1.t

S 35
6 32

l

~0

5 'J9
8 28

Hurry! Come In Now!

3 17

Mondays Re sults
Boston 6 Cleveland 3

(Only game "heduledl

WE CLOSE AT 6 ON DEC. 24

Tuesda ys Games
( No gam es c,ch eduledl

OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 9:00 PM UNTIL CHRISTMAS EVE

Pro Standings
Boston
New York
Phtladelph 1a

I

the overttme , then fell behmd
W1th 20 seconds left, West

By United Press lnternatwnal two free thro~ s by Mac Otten edged Walsh, 72-70
Oluo Umverstly lost Its mag1c "'th 14 seconds left that clinchIn Al hance, Ohw, Barr) Rtng
touch over Btg Ten teams Mon. ed the wm for the Rot kets
uf Mt Umon pwnped m lt
da) mght , falhng to Mtclugan
po111
ts to lead Ute Purple Ra 1d
The &amp;-foot-11 Koze lko, who
87-111
made All .State at Tt averse er.s to a 120-118 overtune \\Ul
In other Ohto collegtale bas Ctty, Mtch netted 24 of Ius 36 over Ma l one
ketball ac l10n , Oh10 Stale, aid- pomts m the fir st half and f111
Mount had led by as man)
ed b) the return of Allan Horn· tshed the game makmg 12 of as 21 pmnls early m the sec.
yak defeated Brown 62·56, l o. 17 field goal attempts
ond half, but Malone s Je11)
ledo edged Detrotl 77-76 and
In other games, Akron took ru" nsend and Dave Berry who
Kent Sta te lost to Sanl&lt;l Clara tts 23rd consecutive home VIC- scored 32 and 29 pom ts respec
79 to 65
tor) by beltmg St Vmcent 1(1(). lively, helped send the game
Ohw U had posted wms over 62
Ill to overtime
B1g Ten li'1embers Ohio Sl&lt;lle
Len Paul got the Ztps off to In addttton to Ute fmal 111ght
and lnd1ana earher lhts month, a stormmg start, scor m g 18 of the Mtchtgan and Mar~on
but lost the touch agamst Mtch· pmnts m the first ~even nun lt1u1neys ton1ght, CmcJnna! Jen1gan at the M1ch1gan 1nvttall0n· utes In a three and a half Itt tams Cle m son, Kenyon 1s at
a! Tournamenlm Ann Arbor
mmuteslrelch Akronoulscored Wr~g ht Sta te, Youngsto\\n State
Two ftee throws wtlh 5!i sec. the Pennsyl'8ma learn 1&amp;-.l
host.s Oh10 Domm1can and
onds left plus a lay·up 39 secW
est F'londa plays at Rw
Paul was the game's lugh
onds later by Wayne Grabtec scorer wlth 24 pmnts St Vm. C1rtmde
teed the wm for the Wolvennes cent, 1~. was led by Chns
In Colwnbus tomght, the Cap·
Michtgan 4·1, plays Toledo Youngs 15 pomts Akron has lt,d Classtc gets underway, wt\h
tomght for the tourney cham· )o:o)t oui} onee 1n ~eve n sla rls ~hna (Mtch ) playmg Edmhoro
p10nsh1p, wh1le the Bobcats, 3Cle\eland Sl&lt;lte rallied for " St.. te 1Pa ) and host Capttal
2 take on Detr01t tn the con. 72-7 1 v1ctm ~ over Sa n F'ra n c1s* mcelmg Berea (Ky ).
sula twn game
Co nsolation and chamco StaLe It"' as sophomore D.Jn
Htgh-scon ng Henry Wtlmore Lee h1ltmg a pa1r of fret• pwnshtp games wtll be pia) ed
earned M1ch1gan to a 47-14 lhro\\ sw JLh 1 08rematnmg th.11 Wednesda) mght
halftune lead wtlh 22 pmnts, lied the score and Uten gcwe
but mtssed the entne second Cleveland Stale the go-&lt;Jhc,lll
half "hen he suffered a bad!) p01nt
brutsed nght knee after he fell
Cleveland State IS 2-1 \\llllc
followmg a lay·up attempt
Sa n Fram:1sco Slcill' 1s 5-J
rhc Wolvennes were led the
At the Manon Chnstm,tS
second half b"y Erme Johnson, Tourney. Wooster look a 69-58
HAC!NE - Southern Local
who scored 26 pmnts for Ute Win over Fmdlay and Ame r~can Dt slrtcl's etg hth grade
mght Ohio 's sconng was led Jnternallonal defeated Hetdel ba sketba ll team r lobbered
by Tom R1ccard1 wtlh 23 and berg 88~3
Glouster Etghters 65-29 her~
Tom Corde's IB
fh e wmners meet tomght {OJ Monday wt\h Greg Dunm ng of
The Bobcats and Wolvermcs the champwnshtp and tht• los Southern lcadmg all scorers
exchanged leads m the second ers play 1n the consolatJun l'O II 111 \h 18 pmnts Secund h1gh for
half , unttl Grabtec, who had 14 test
th1• wmners was M1ke Robet ts
pomts, hi\ Ius free throws to
Wooster \\as led ill Mtke v.1 th 12 H1gh ror f.lou ster \\el e
gtve M1c h1gan an 84-110 margm Grcnert "'1th 17 po1n1.~ dnd llunter With l I and Slidfcr wtlh
H1s basket made 11 86-8! \\1\h teammate M1ke Stoll added 14 9
16 seconds to play
Bob Hall led Ftndlay with 14
Suut hern s tc.1111 now ts 5·1
In the to urney opener, Tom pomlc:;
Its Seventh Grade tea m IS 5-0
Kozelko marked hts return to
On the West Coast Mond,1y
1Mh squ.11ls pJ ••y at home
h1s nattve state by sconng 36 mght, Kent State dropped a 79 agamol Wahama teams m U1e1r
poml' to lead Toledo to &amp;-77-76 65 de&lt;islon to Sanl&lt;l Clara At next outmg
wm over Delrotl But 1t was Pomt Park , Pa , Pmnt Park
ttY QUARTERS
Glouster
5 6 It 7- 29
Souther n
26 18 9 t2- b5

Atlanttc Dtvtston

Stnl.nel

Hw shot ahead four pomts m

OU Loses; Bucks Win

Eastern Conference

"Now, 1f you REALLY want something that'll stand out,
- how about thiS wild natural·shoulder, narrow lo~l,
gray flannel three·bulton suit w1th culls on the pants'"

Flortda 's bench,

ond a couple qutck goals b)
H1o the regulatwn game ended
'
111 an 8H4 tie

4 3 11

Jordan ( onvc1ted two free
thro\\ s "1th st·vcu seconds

By Umted Pres s International

•a•;,; ,':

.J gamst West

Florida 's Terr) Wilhams put
RIO GRANDE (10 11 1
Bent
ley 11 0 28 Ha trston 57
the home club ahead 9t-89 Rw
12 W1ll 1ams J 0 6 Jor dan 4 2
came back at the buzzer to knot 10 Bartram 9 2 20 Lamber t
the count on Capt Roger 1 0 4 Rouse 2 0 tl Ha rt 2 1 5
Mart n 5212 TOTALS 469
Bentley s lo11g )Wll per
101
In the set ond O\-erbme,
WEST
FLORIDA

Three Patriots on All-Rookie List

~Dsvrrs

1

'" th two mmutes left m the
Jcg ulatwn game However.
follow tng a techntcal foul

23
21
16
15
"
12
Wesl
W
23
19
14
12

L

Pet GB
8 742
" 600 4
20 444 91/7
19 441 91/~
18 437 91/?
21 364 12
L Pet GB
9 119
13
18
19

"The Store Of Thousands Of Gifts"
WIDE. WIDE SELECTIONS NOW ON DISPLAY
CHRISTMAS DECORATIONS-

All k1nds m a w1de select1on,

hghts for 1ndoors and outdoors.
Artd lcl ol tr ees, read y for your
se lect ton

~fl~t'l3!ft~
J

G1fl boKe s, Ioney po•
pen, tags, seals .•
you nome tt, we hove
1t at thr~fty low

594 4
437 9
387 10111

pr1 ces .

SHOP EARLY

W L Pel GB Da llas Monday 's12 Re22sults353 12
31 3
917
1No games schedu led!
22 Ia 611 10
Tontght' s Game s
18 16 529 13
Ken tu cky al P1ltsburgh

Pactflc

12

343 191f?
242 22 11~

23
8 25

DIVISIOn

W
Los Ange les 31
22
Sea !tie
Golden State 18
12
Houstoo
8
Portland

L
3
u
t6
23
25

1No games scheduled I
Too1ght's Games
Detrott at Chtcago
Phdadelph1a at Phoen 1x
Houston at Portland
New York at Go lden Sta te

Los Angeles at Buffalo
!Only games v ~e du ' ed l

GRE
Box assortments and
1nd1v1dual co rd s

lOO's Of Ideas For Home and Family

•

Use Our Convl!ntent Lay A Way Plan

Uth at Dallas
!Only games scheduled)
GB

Pet
9t2
611 to
529 13
343 191/ 2
242 22112

Monda y's Resu ll s

Ind iana at Denver

CHRISTMAS
WRAPPING

A Small DepoSil Will Hold Your Selection
As You Make Payments At Your

NHL Standtngs
By Un~te d Press tnternattonat

Ill

Conv1ence

MAKE POMEROY YOUR SHOPPING CENTER

Sh1pmen l of Live Parakeets Just Arnved.

East
New York
Bo ston
Montreal

Tortonto
Detro1t
Vancouver

Buffalo

Ch 1cago

W
21
21
19
15
10
West

L T P!s
5 6 48
6 3 45
• 7 45
9 8 37
16 6 26

8 2
7 210

4 2
6 2"'0

W
23 L7 T3 Pis
49

Reg
Reg
Reg
Reg
Reg

SPECIALS
II OOJumboColonngBook s
14 66 Monopoly Game
S2 77 Malibu Barbie Doll
11 so Bo• Assorted Chnstmas Card
StJ 916'!2 FooiS.:otch Pine Tree

Reg 98c Hot

Wheels large se lectton

Reg IJ 66 Spirograph

66c
14 ll
It 97
II 25
11.99
57c

each

12 97

l..~~~~n~y~M~o~re~S~po~Cl:al~s~T~h~ro~u:g~ho:u~I~T:he~SI~o~re~

~o~EN'F~o!~~~~N•
992 3498

POMEROY, OHIO

OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 9:00
A GOLD STAR STORE"

GOLD
STAR
STORE

. .~!::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=IJ
II

�•

5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. 21, 1971

4- The Daily Sentlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Dec. 21, 1971
Monday's
College Results
U"ited Press International

Vols Nip Arkansas
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UPI J-It
all boiled down to a battle of
talented toes and a disputed
fumble in the heart-stopping
Liberty Bowl Monday night.
Tennessee's George Hun t
tied on the mantle of hero when
his extra point kick defeated
Arkansas, 14-13, with only 1:56
to play followin g a 17-yard run
by fullback Curt Watson.
Arkansas' Billy McClard, the
top kick-scorer in the history of
college football 1Hunt is number two) packed up his
disappointment and went duck
hunting with Rawrback quarterback Joe Ferguson. Ferguson, wbo compieted 18 out of
2B passes for 200 yards, found
little consolatio n in being
named the game's most valuable player .
McClard had kicked field
goals of 19 and 30 yards in the
final period to gi ve Arkansas a
13-7lead and an apparent upset
with time run ning out. In fact ,
Arkansas' dlfense had so
stifled ninth-ranked Tennessee
that it didn't seem to matter
when McC1ard had a 48-yard
field goal nullified by a pen,lly
with le&amp;' than five minutes to
play .
Suddenly, Tennessee had the
ball in Arkansas territory for
the first lime in the second half
With less than three minutes to
play when Volunteer tackle
Carl Witherspoon recovered a
fumble by Jon Richardson on
the Arkansas 37. Three plays
Watson scored and Hunt kieked
his second extra point.
''Tom Reed (of Arkansas)
jumped on that fumble and had
it under his chest," said
Arkansas coach Frank Broyles

Michigan

M ichigan 87 Ohio 81
Holiday

Tour ·

First Round
Pace 91 Praft 73
R utger~! Newark) 63 Newark

st . 7 4

Newark Engineering
Tournament

~orange. ~··

•

~ e wark

Eng . 77

;yevens

Tech 63 Bloomfld

66

Drew

il

East
Duquesne 77 Harvard

n

Ga . Sou thern· 63 Fairleigh

Dick . tRuth.)58

St . Bonaventure 86 Boston C.

6l

N ew Hamp. COli. 66 Hu nter

66
Marsha ll 100 Maine 68
N . Y . Maritime 81
N .Y .
Dominican 64
Queens 92 Potsdam St . 85
Union 105 Ramapo 62

South

Georgia Tech 83 William and
Mary 71
LSU (New Orlean s) 123
Georgia St. 82

Maryland 73 Loyola (Md.l

60
Richmond 54 Va. Tech 82
Sou thern Il l. (Edwa rdsv ille

99
Sou th F la 73

Virginia9J VMI 51
Georgia 11 5 LSU 9l
American 78 Syracuse 74

Va . Commonwealth
Tenn . 71

84 East

Midwest

Northern Ill. 101 Ca l. Poly ll
St .

70

Hamline

~Minn . )68

USC 89 Iowa 51.86
Cre ighton 70 San J ose St . 59
Wayne 51. 82 Mercy 81
Southwest

Browns Going For
The Stars Sunday
CLEVELAND (UPI) - "Put
all your eggs in one basket be·
cause you're going for the
stars, " coach Nick Skorich said
he told his Cleveland Browns,
as the team began work today
for Sunday's playoff game here
against Baltimore.
Skorich said he will use the
same plays he used against the
Colts earlier in the season when
'the Browns won 14-13, "but with
a different look to them ."
Skorich said kicking probably
would play an important part
in the game and he is relying
on field goal specialist Don
Cockroft.
"Kicking will be a key fa ctor, " he sa id . "Baltimore kicker Jim O'Brien is a better per-

centage field goal kicker than
Cockroft, but Don has been
verv effective in his last lew
performances . He'll do the job
for us."
The Browns ended the regular season with a win over
Washington , a contest in which
Skorich said quarterback Bill
Nelsen "called a great game ."
Looking back on the 14-game
sc hedule, Skorich said the
Browns.best effort was against
Cincinnati when the club clinched a playoff spot "because it
was a big effort from all of us
to win . It counted the most."
The Browns had to come
from behind to post a 31-27 win
over the Bengals in the conference championship clincher.

COLUMBUS I UPI J - Ohio
will have its own football bowl
game beginning next year . .
Plans for the Ohio Shnne
Bowl were announ c~:d here
Monday by stale Shnne officials, football coaches and officials of Ohio colleges
The fir st annual 1 k sri ty
game featun ng Ohw crrllege
se niors has been sched uled for
Dec . 9, 1972, probably l11 be
played at the new Fre nk lin
Heights high school fr, r' ball
stadium here .
All proceeds are to W the
Cincinnati Burns Hosp iW l
It is to be an East-Wt' t affair with two 25-man sq•Jads
' .
se lected
A Shrine committee, along
with coaches and writ€r'&gt; . will
pick the All-Star teams
The West squad is to be
made up of players from Bowl·
ing Green, Miami , Toledt1, Defiance, Bluffton ) Wt lmi nl!;ton,
Findlay, Dayton , Xavtcr . Ohio
Northern,Central State.Wittenberg, Heidelberg , Ohio Wes leyan, Capital and Denison
The East team will ' orne
from Kent State, Ohiu University, Akron, Oberlin , Oltl·rbe in,
Marietta, Hiram , Cinunnati,
Youngstown Stale, A.1hland,
Case Western, John Carroll,
Baldwin-Wallace, Musk1ngum,
Mount Union, Wooster and
Kenyon .
Also, m years that Oh w Stale

Akron 100 St . Vincent 62
DePaul93 Parson s 7.)
Mich Sl . 77 Butler 71
Ohio St. 62 Brown 56
Chicago

Southern

Ala . 76

Arizona

66
Arizona

St . 95

Fesno

St .

75
Houston 84 Washington 51.

73
Texa s (Arlington) 84 S W.
Missouri 76
New Mexico St . 91 San
Francisco84

West ·
Oregon St 82 Weber SI 7l
Sa nta Clara 79 Ken I St 65

Sealtte90 Utah Sf 77
UC San Di ego Bl Sonoma Sf

6l

Re dland s 75 Dominquez St.

63
Arizona S f 95 Fresno St 75
South Alabama 76 Arizona

66 .

Monday's Fight Results
By

United

In UPI Ratings

Own .Bowl Tilt In '72

Toledo 77 Detroil/6
Newark
namenl

Bobcats Sixth

Invitational

First Round

of the recovery credited to
Witherspoon. "He even handed
the ball to the official. I
couldn 't believe il when they
said Tennessee's ball.
· " We have nothing to be
ashamed of," he added, "we
played well enough lo win."
"I handed the ball to the
official ," said Reed. " I
couldn 't believe it when he said
A record crowd of 51,140
watched the two teamsplaying lor the first lime since
Tennessee won 14-2 back in
1907 - battle to a 7-7 deadlock.
Tennessee scored first on a
two-yard plunge by Bill Rudder
in the first quarter w cap a 55yard drive in eight plays. A key
pass interference penalty
against Arkansas' Clark Irwin
at the Arkansas 22 kept the
drive alive .
Then Ferguson, a &amp;-2 junior
from Shreveport, La., took
over in the second quarter. He
completed s ix consecutive
passes in a drive that covered
66 yards and threw 36 yards to
flanker Jim Hodge for the
score .
Not only was Ferguson
named the most valuable offensive player, but Arkansas
safety l.ouis Campbell was
named the most valuable
defensive player with three
interceptions to his credit. Two
of them led to McClard's field
goals in the second half.
''It was a nice honor," said
Campbell . "We won everything
but the game. "
Young Tennessee coach Bill
Battle said his Volunteer s
made too many costly offensive mistakes.

Ohio Will Have Its

Press

In ·

lerna tiona 1

PARIS!UPI) - Jean Claude
Bo u !ti er , 1591/1, France,
knocke d out Bunny Slerling,
159 1 7. Eng land ( 14) . ( Boultier
retai ns
European
mid ·

dleweighl title).

Meigs A&amp;B
Both Win
The Meigs Seven th grade
"B" team dumped Kyger
Creek 43lo 18 Monday at Meigs
Jr . High School in Middleport.
Leading scorers fclf Meigs
were Tim Scites anti Tummy
Walters, 12 each; Jeff Beaver
and Danny Buffington, 6 each;
Ricky George 3, and Scott May
and Tim Rawlings, 2 eac h.
For Kyger Creek Westfall
had 8, Baird 3, Fisher, Hood
and Misner 2 each, and Clay, 1.
In a closer contest Meigs
Seventh grade "A" team won
over Kyger Creek 44 to 36.
For Meigs, Greg Browning
led all scorers with 17 followed
by Mark Haggerty with 15,
Bryan Hamilton 4, Lonnie
Taylor and Kevin Fields 3 each
and Steve Randolph , 2.
For Kyger, Baylor had 11 ,
Brown and Taylor 8 each,
Salem 5, and Sands 4. Chuck
Downie is coach of both Meigs
squads.

does not go to the Rose Bowl ,
no more than three players
from Ohio State are to be
chosen for each squad .
Coaches are to be picked on
the basis of th eir previous
year's record. For next year's
game, Jack F'outs of Ohio Wesleyan Will be the West head
coach and Jack Murphy of Toledo will lead the East.
All finan ces are to be handled by the Ohio Shnne. One
week or practice has been planned before the game.
"We have high hopes that
this game will build into the
prominence of other bowl
games ," said Ernie Roush , potentate of the Columbus Aladdin Temple Shrine . "Ma ybe in
three years or so we can play
the game at Ohio State .
"But we do not wish to overextend this first year. This has
been four years in the talking
stage," Roush added. "We have
full endorsement of all six
Ohio (Shrine 1 temples and full
endorsement of the NCAA as to
eligibility ."

Meigs

Property
Transfers
Howard 1. . English, Jr .,
Barbara K. English to James
H. Sellers, Ruth Ann Sellers,
Parcels, Salisbury .
Ray Darst, Irene Darst to
·Kenneth Earl Darst, Robert
Ray Dars t, 75 .32 Acres,
Salisbury.
Audra Frances Weddle to
Daniel R. Roush , Patricia Ann
Roush, 2.81 Acres, Lebanon.
Charles V. Strauss, Evelyn
C. Sl~au&amp;' to Adolph Saelens,
Loretta Saelens. Lot, Middleport.
Ernest Stanford Stockton ,
Alice Stockton to Stephen M.
Sligliez, Jan et A. Stigliez ,
Parcels, Bedford .
Russell Ma so n, Norma
Mason to Elizabeth H. Smith,
21.88 Acres, Scipio.
W. H. Pu lli ns, de c. to
Blanche Pullin s, Howard
Pullins, Gladys Croy, Theima
Watkins, Mildred Brooks ,
Hazel Wedge, Homer Pullins,
Florence
Wyers,
Ruth
Watkins, Julia Deeter, Roy
Pullins, Arlene Coy , Nancy
Blake, Aff. for trans., Olive.
Blanche Pullins, Howard,
Pullins, Eunice Pullins, Gladys
Croy, Thelma Watkins, Paul
Watkins, Mildred Brooks, Paul
Brooks, Hazel Wedge, Roscoe

Mark V iil Semi Finals

I

High for Enco was Vic Dailey
with 20.
BY QUARTERS
Mark V
13 30 51 99
Enco
10 20 32 59

PROCTORVILLE -Mark V
or Middleport won a berth in
the semi-finals of the Fairlapd
Independent Ba s ketball
Tournament here at Fairland
High School Monday night with
a 99-09 victory over Enco of
Hunting ton .
Mark V plays again next
Monday at 6 p.m. for a shot at
the champwnship.
Scoring leaders for the

NEW YORK fU PI J - Ohio
University, which took victories
from two Big Ten teams last
week, made the ratings lor the
first time, and · Ohio State
moved into sixth plaee in this
week 's UP! Board of Coaches
poll .
The Bob&lt;ats , wh o ,;:ere rated ·
15th, rece1ved 25 points in the
poll . Ohio U. took stunning
wins over OSU and Indiana last winne rs were Mi ke Fen- :
derbosch with 34- he couldn 't il
week .
Ohio Slate, &gt;-!this season re- miss m the second half - Jack il
ceived 86 points and moved up I Beep J Mathews with 23, and
one place from last week 's poll. Ron ferguson with 18. Other
The Bucks' top scorer, Allan score rs were Gary FenHornyak, who had been out derbosch 3, Sam Mitchell 3, "'
with a bruised heel, made hiS Dave Fife 4, and Doxie Walters
first appearance Monday night 13.
Walters 6-6 ce nter, blocked 7
against Brown .
opposition
shots from the field •
Among coaches comprising
the UP! major college basket- and pulled down 22 rebounds.
ball ratings board are Jim SnyWomen's Thursday
der of Ohio U. and Fred TayAfternoon League
lor of Ohio State.
Oec. 16, 1971

~******** *******~

!
!

A THOUGHT ·:

FOR TODAY

...

No one is sm all who does
a small JOb 1n a big way .

...
...

t.
•
•

"'

- Anonymous i'

••"'

••

il

:! lfs '***~
$
Quick! EasJ ~

Standings

Team

W. L.
86 34
81 38

New York Clothing
Dave's Tire Land .

PomeroY Bowling Lanes 70 50
Simon' s Mkt .
53 67
Forest Run Block
39 81

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO,
SATURDAY, Dee. l8.197!
Smith's Body Shop
30 90
SALES REPORT OF
High Team 3 games
Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
Dave 's Tire Land 1840; New
HOGS - 175 to 22illbs. 21.50 York. Clothing 1594 ; Simon ' s
to 21.70; 220 to 250 lbs. 20.50 to Mkt ll91.
High Ind . game - Sandy
21.25; Light 16.50 to 18.75; Fat Pha lm 188 ; Julie Bo yles 178 ;·
Sows 16 to 16.75; Stags 14.75 Maxine Dugan 177 .
High Team game - Dave' s
Down; Boars 15 to 16.25; Pigs 6
Ti re Land 654 ; Dave·s Tire
to 11.50; Shoats 10 to 18.50.
Land 604 ; Simon 's Mkl . 592 .
CATTLE- Steers 28 to 35·
High Ind . 3 games - Sandv
Pha
li n, Maxine Dugan, 479 ;
Heifers 22 to 30; Baby Beef
Julie Boyles 464 : Carol Roush
29.75 to 38.75; Fat Cows 18 to 4)5.
22.50; Canners 18 to 22.25; Bulls
22.50 to 27; Milk Cows 185 to
285.
VEAL CALVES - Tops
46.50 ; Seconds 40 to 43.25 ;
Medium 37 to 38.75; Com . &amp;
Hvs. 35 to 39 ; Culls 35.
BABY CALVES - 20 to 63.
LAMBS - Tops 26 ; Seconds
20 to 23.50; Light Wts . 17.50 to
18.

! DRIVE-IN !
! BANKING !
! Fridays Only , "'-tc
• The Drive-In Window il
-t&lt;
is Open
!

.
:
•

9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
(Continuously)

-!&lt;

-1&lt;

•
il
-!&lt; Other Banking Hours 9 to 3 il
,.._ and 5 fo 7 as usua I on •

il

-il Fridays.

•! FARMERS BANK !•
• and SAVINGS CO. !
:

POMEROY. OljtO

il

Member FDIC
Member Federal

-!&lt;

!

Reserve System

t-..

!

C

***************•

Hearty

Appetite?
Enjoy The·Savings

HOLIDAY SPECIAL

Dessert

Frozen Dairy

~gal. 79~

...!c.'-'-... \\,~..\\
"' &lt;.~'-' .
May it be bright and
beautiful, filled with
cheer .

We Will Close AI 5 P.M. Christmas Eve.
See you the First ott he Year-

Dudley's Florist

McCLURES DAIRY ISLE

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

Fourth &amp; Locust

MiddlePOrt

•••411•11\11411"•••••·•.,. .......,..._..,. ...,..,..,. 1., ....,................... ,........... "~411"~''""'•-.eo.e""•••llli.., .. ,. .... ,.. ................,..,....,....,,....,.,.,. .. ,.. .................. .., .....
FREE PRIZES
DRAWING
DEC. 24 at 4 P.M.
No purchase necessary to participate.

Phebe Says:
Ho! Ho! Ho! and a Merry

•••

Christmas t o All! Thank s for
making our store, your store
thi s year as we wish you I he
bes t
of
everything
al
Christmas lime and always .

lr-.::::.:~.....

OUR

12

ORANGE DRINK

And we will have on spec ial. (if they come vta 01g
slive r truck). and who ca re s about gro~er ie s
anyway, it' s Christma s. (and my stockman i s sick
and I've been working too hard) . So please. Santa
make him well or send new one, preferably with
strong ba ck and weak mind . Signed: Phebe.

SAUCE

4cans $}
ANGEL FLAKE

We Glalllv Acceot Fed. Food Stamps
Prices EHactlve Dac. 21·28

With Vodka

Monday Thru Friday
9:00 to 7:00

KRAFT PIZZA
Single
Pkg.

lb.

49~

Saturday 9 to 9

ClDSED SUNDAYS

4 r!~ l.QQ
2

ggt

5 lb.

can

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

BALLARD

BISCUITS

2~~s $1

TANGERINES
Sweet &amp; Juicy
Thin Skinned

doz.

Phebe's

49~

Gooilfes
HOLSUM

Steele's Brand
WITHTHISCOUPONWHEN REG.
YOU BUY A .OZ. JAR OF

14

2, 49

MAXWELL HOUSEII)coFFEE
AT. RACINE FOOD MMKET
WITH

14 OZ. JAR ONlY 1.99

CDUPON

,.

SW. POTATOES

3

No.2~

cans

PAN ·ROLLS
FAIRMONT
ICE MILK
FAIRMONT
EGGNOG
f
!

•

members and friends attended
the short swearing i n ceremony
by outgoing Mayor Chester E.
Sharrock.
·
" I won 't tell you what to do,
but I can sure tell you some
things not to do," the outgoi ng
mayor said to the teenager.
Hooker. a stocky, bespeckied
serious-spoken you th,dressed in
a dark" blue suit, spoke optimistically about the futur e of
his conununlly of 4,300.
''Never Betray Trust"
"When I decided to run for
mayor it was because I thought
I could help to make our hometown grow and be a wonderful
place to live," he said. "Of

course. I also wondered how
many friends I really had . This
I found out, and with the help
of God I will never betray their
trust in me ."
Hooker said he had been offered bribes from "capitalists
and other political . leaders' "
wh om he did not identify.
"I was approached by people
offering me money to see thai
something was done, " he said .
"P,eople offered me money to
mention thei r names during interviews and things of this sor t.
"But I wasn 't about to sell
out. " Hooker said. "I ran for
mayor and that's what I want
to be .' '
Hooker . a junior at Ashland
College. an hour's drive from
here, has scheduled all his
classes on lhree mornings a
week and plans to spend the
rest of the lime on the job
here .
He already is at work trying
to put his campaign promises
into practice .
Hooker pledged to stop speeding and dra g racing on vi llage
streets and has had conferences wi th the police department on how to catch speeders.
He said he would promote
business and Industry in the
community. and since the election he has traveled throughout
the .s tate drumming up interest
i n r\eweomers lown .

New Redistricting Plan
Produced on 3-2 Vote
COLUMBUS ( UPI ) - A
corrected version of the
legislative reapportionment
plan adopted last September
was once again pushed through
the Democratic-co ntrolled
state Apporti onment Board
Monday after .. Democrats
assured themselves that the
plan .met constitutional
requirements.
The new plan, which was
adopted on a 3 - 2 party line
vole, will be submitted to a
three - judge federal panel in
Cleveland Tuesday to lest its
constitutionality.
" We are completely satisifed
that the plan meets the requirements of the state and federal
constitutions," said Gov. John
J . Gilligan, chairman of the
board.
The new plan is essentially
the same remapping ac·
complished by the Democrats
three months ago, but now
includes Zanesville, Van Wert
and other municipalities wh1ch
were inadvertently omitted
from the original. Other errors,
which the courts said made the
plan unconstituional, reportedly were corrected.
Before adopting the plan,
which was designed to help
Democrats gain con!xol of the
General Assembly four Republican plans were rejected.
The Democrats even turned
down a proposal offered from

COI!lJMBUS fUPI) -Ohio
has a new $7.686 billion budget
to last through June 30, 1973,
officially ending a nine-month
fiSCal struggle in the Statehouse
including a record six months
of interim budgeting.
Gov. John J. Gilligan's signature on the giant spending and
tax plan Monday gave the
state:
- Its first personal income
tax, effective Jan. 1.
- Record spending levels
over the next 18months, including hefty increases in state aid
to basic and higher education,
mental hygiene and correction
and other programs.
- An inunediate increase in
the cigarette tax .
- A lawsuit to defend the
new "voucher" system of distributing aid to nonpublic
schools, and openings for court
challenges of other features of ·
the budget-tax.package, including the income tax.
- A statement from the administration that the new revenues will be used as wisely
and efficiently as possible.
The bill -signing, which took
place in a conference room
packed with staff members and
cabinet officers from the Gil-

Senate Minority Leader Anthony 0 . Calabrese, DCieveland, a board member .
Calabrese's measure would
have redrawn the Cuyahoga
County boundaries to satisfy
complaints from Cleveland
area lawmakers who objected
to the governor's plan .
Gilligan ruled Calabrese's
motion out of order after noting
that the se nator was one of
three Democrats who voted
Sept. 17 against a Republica n
motion to allow amendments to
the plan.
· "With some regret I shall
have to rule your amendment
out of order," Gilligan said .
The new plan apparently will
not prevent Republicans from
claiming unconstitutionality .
Rep. Robert A. Manning, RAkron, a board member, said
there were still errors in the
new plan and indicated the GOP
would once again challenge it.
Manning and Secretary of
State Ted Brown, the other Republican board member , said
the new plan left about 5,000
Ohioans unrepresented in
House districts and some 4,000
persons unrepresented in the
Senate.
The Republicans tried to take
court action on the previous
plan but were turned dow n by
the Supreme Court because the
federal court in Cleveland, acting on a suit filed by a Demo-

15 Ct.
Pkg.

1;, Gal.

Crtn.

Quorl

Onty

I

•

ligan administration, capped
the nine months of legislative
battling both for and against
the one-half to 31'. per cent
graduated individual income
tax .
"The signing this afternoon of
this historic measure marks the
end to a long and often difficult struggle that has touched
the lives of every Ohioan," Gilligan said .
•'As I have indicatedpreviously, this bill will not do all that
I had hoped in many of the important fields of state service,"
the governor said. " But it is a
beginning ."
Gi lligan originally had asked
lor a $9.1 billion two-year budg·
et and tax package. The budget
for the last biennium was 16.2
billion .
The new budget includes $790
million worth of net new revenues from the personal income
tax, a corporate net income lax,
increases in taxes on insurance
companies, banks and dealers in
stocks and bonds, and a new
tax on mining natural resources.
It also includes limited homestead exemptions for persons
over~ and a 10 per cent property tax rollba ck for Ohio home-

Kyger Creek Hoitor

Roll Is Announced
John Wickline, Kyger Creek
High School principal, has
released the second six weeks
honor roll for students in
~es seven through 12.
The are :
Twelfth Grade - x - Terry
Moles, x - Glenn Smith, x Debbie McDaniel, x
Pollyanna Thompson, Shelly
Hall, Marion Matusewicz, Pam
Mitchell, April Moody, Debbie
Nibert, Carl Pennington ,
Rosalie Reese, Debbie Rife,
Nancy
Rodgers,
David
Rothgeb, Susan Scruggs,
Ronnie White, Dan Swisher.
Eleventh Grade - Pam
Gerwig, Terry Hall, Diane
Polcyn, Connie Priest, Vinton
Rankin.
Tenth Grade - Patty
French·; Kandy Gindlesberger,
Randy McDaniel, x - Carol

BANANAS ...•.•••••••.•••.••.•.... lb. 10"
TOMATOES ..................... 2 lb. 69•

INSTANT

TOILET TISSUE

Canned Ham

WE Wll..L HAVE CHICKENS, TURKEYS, HAMS
AND ALL OTHER CHRISTMAS TRIMMINGS!

SMUCKER'S

WHilE CLOUD

~~

Round Steak

SIZe

Jar

lb. 59~

•

USDA CHOICE BEEF

14. oz. 49~

SWEET CHIPS
1~ oz. 39~

ROAST

Excellent

COCONUT

Right reserved to limit qu·antities

PORK LOIN

OZ-119

Can

WITH CHEESE (AND INDIGESTION)
OCEAN SPRAY
CRANBERRY

USDA CHOICE PORK

OYSTERS

WAGNER'S

CHRISTMAS
SPECIALS

5th and·PEARL STS., RACINE .
"lhP Store With AHeart
You, WE LIKE"

and In Our Meat Department, We 'II Have
STANDARD PACK

officially begin his four-year
term Jan . 1.
Hooker disclosed last weekend he already has been offered bribes and a $28,000 a
year job, which he turned down
for the "adventure" of taking
the $3,900 a year mayor 's post .
"Money was not my object in
this adventure and nothing will
cause me to betray the trust
my friends placed in me," said
Hooker , referring to the 70 per
cent vote he received . "I hope
I can live up to their expectations. I will ask for your prayers to help make this possible ."
Some 100 onlookers, family

cral , already took action on the
plan .
The federal court ruled that
other suits on the constitutionalalily of the redistricting plan
could not be entertained while
the present plan was to be redone . Sl&lt;!te Rep. Alan E. :-&lt;orris of Westerville and John ~f.
McElroy, former aid to Gov .
James t\. Rhodes, the Republi c&lt;:~n petitioners. were both fined
for contempt of eourt for carry ing ou t the GOP la wsuit in
violatiOn of the fed era l court order .
" I would assume that if the
federal court does not dispose
of this matter." sa ill Ma nni ng.
'·it would be open to cha llenge
in the Supreme Court .' '
'Gilligan, who was closely
questioned by Manning, &lt;:~dmit ­
ted he was not fam iliar with
the census statistics in the report. But, the governor said, a
census expert had checked the
plan and assured him no areas
of the state were omitted or
duplicated .
Before adjourning, the bo•rd
also adopted two resolutions offered by Brown . The resolutions
allow legislative candidates to
have 30 days in which to chan ge
their residences after the new
plan takes eff ect.

Broader Bill
Proposed for

Strip Mining
COLUMBUS tUPit State Sen. Harry L. Arm·
strung. R-Logan, !t•a rlul th••
Hous(• .. w,illlet other mining
bills die," has urged inclusion of day, shah• and
other strip operations in th••
proposed coal strip mine
reform bill.
"All Ohio surfare mining
should be regulated.' ' sa id
Armstrong, vire rhairman of
the Senate Urban and High·
~ay Affairs Committee,
whieh is studying the hill.
The measure was appruvcd
92-0 last Ortober hy lhe
Hous(•.
"I feel the Hous. will lrt
other mining bills die
bl't ause of pressure from th l'
outside," Armstrong said.
"llut take clay mining. It is a
large industry in Ohio and
makes many pollution
problems for the stale.
"We have to clean up the
l' llvironrnent, " he added.
"Th•· people of this state
"ant that and they deserve
it. "
Armstrong bas been
chairing the committee
hearings on the legislation
while chairman Robert
Stockdale, R-Kent, · ls
recuperating from a heart
attack.

The fifth member nf the

boa rd , sl&lt;lte Auditor Joseph T.
Ferguson, objected to the resolutions, making the vote 4-1.

Fiscal Struggle Ended

992-5248

Phebe

NEWCOMERSTOWN ,Ohio(UPI )- Nineteen-year-old Ron
Hooker, arriving at city hall in
a 1925 model-A ford truck; was
sworn in Monday night as mayor of this east central Ohio
community, becoming one of
the youngest city executives in
the nation.
Hooker , who ran last Nq,v. 2
as a non-partisan , write-in candidate and won a landslide victory, said riding to the ceremonies in the old truck was
symbolic.
"The 1920s were good years
for our town and I hope the
early 1970s will be just as good
for us, " said Hooker, who will

il

dairy isle

Wedge, Homer Pullins, Corda
Pullins, Florence Wyers,
Audra Wyers, Ruth Walkins ,
Garrett Watkins, Julia Deeter,
Roy Pullins, Sandra Pullins,
Arlene Coy, Walter Coy, Nancy
Blake, Paul Blake to Garrett
Watkins , Ruth Watkins,
Parcels, Olive .

Young Mayor Sworn-in

Scruggs, Kathy Norris , Mary
Sauer, Dianna Tucker.
Ninth Grade - Debbie
Baird, Tony Burke , x · Marie
Grose, Uz Hood , Sue Hughes,
Terry Lucas, Tim McDaniel,
Judy Sullins.
Eighth Grade - x - Freddie
Westfall, x- George Thompson,
Unda Fife, Connie Haskins,
Cindy Hurley, Mary Roush,
James Smith, Mike Tate ,
Terry Rife, Chris Preston,
Gary Barr, Cindy Price, Cindy
Spaulding, Bob Fulton .
Seventh Grade - x - Arthur
Leach, x - Pauline White,
Ralph Baylor, Steven Darst,
Carol Coleman, Rebecca
Polcyn, Mitch Salem, Donna
Bailey, Susie Saunders, Edith
Dotson, Tony Shamblin .
x - Denotes all A's.

owners.
Cigarette Tax Hike
The tO-cent excise tax on cigarettes went immediately to 15
cents per pack, but the sales
tax, generally two cents a pack.
was elimina ted.
Gilligan said the bill provides
"the most swee ping tax reform
in Ohio's history."
He said hi s administration
will "work to see that every
penny in this budget is spent
wisely and efficiently , and that
every dollar appropriated in
this measure is used to benefit
the citize ns of Ohiu to the
greatest possible degree.
" All of the difficulties we
went thr ough to obtain passage
of this bill - and they were
many - will ha ve been in vain
unless this administration now
meets the challenge ahead of
it," the gove rnor said.
He said he plaQs to "implement in the near future some
innovative and important new
procedures that will pernni t us
to operate the state as efficiently as is humanly possible ."
The governor said these procedures would be in budgeting,
financing and planning, but that
none was ready for announcement yet .
As soon as the governor signed the bill , the American Civil
Liberties Union of Ohio filed suit
in U. S. District Court asking
lor an injunction against distributi on of nonpublic school aid
to parents, claiming it violated
the U. S. Constitution .
The new budget raises nonpublic school aid from S60 to
190 per pupil , provides a 35 per
cent increase in state aid to
elementary and secondary education, a 25 per cent hike lor

Fairview New~ Notes
By MRS. HERBERT ROUSH
MisS Jackie Wines and Neal
Baker of Racine called on Mrs.
Kate Rowe and Ada Sunda)'.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lawson
ar d son of Letart, W.Va. SJll'flt
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Lawson . Miss W'dda
Lawson spent two days with
the Lawsons at Letart, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis of
Clifton, W. Va . spent Sunday
afternoon with Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Roush and family .
David Roush was a dinner
guest of Mrs. Gladys Shields
and Edna Roush Thursday .
Lester Manuel of Logan was
a week end guest of Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Manuel.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush
visited Satnrday evening with
Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Russell at
Middleport and Mr. and Mrs.

Auxiliary Dines at Crow·'-s

Dana Lewis at Clifton, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Carroll White,
Darla , Deanna, Keith and
Kevin spent Sunday evening
with Mr. and Mrs. Don Hupp
and sons.
Mr. and Mrs. James Sayre
accompanied Herbert Sayre to
ColumbiLS. Mr. Sayre consulted
his eye doctor.
Calling on Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Sayre over the week
end were Mr. and Mrs. Norman Styer of Waterford, Paul
Sayre and Danny Sayre of
Syracuse , Mr . and Mrs.
Herbert Shields, local.
Skip Miller of Wichita City,
Texas and Jeff Miller, local,
spent SWlday afternoon with
Roger Roush.
Mrs. Doris Sayre consulted
her doctor" at Gallipolis .
Mooday .

r.---------------------------·
8ea
.

I'
I
I

t....

! Of

the Bend

!

"'~ !

I

I
Both the Pomeroy and Middleport Public Ubraries will be
closed all day on Friday. Dec . 24, and oo Friday , Dec . 31. Both
libraries, of course, will be closed on the Saturday holidays.
Christmas and New Year's Day .
The courthouse, by the way, ~· ill also be closed all day this
Friday and again next Friday on Dec. 31. These closings are in
accordance with the Ohio COOe governing holidays.
MRS. SETH NICHOL.'iON . out Rutland way , reports that
U1 ings were going big with her flowers until the recent cold snap.
The red peonies, Job's tears, Easter lihes and crocuses were up
through the ground an inch or more

MR. AND MRS. KAHL RUSSE LL AND DAUGHTF.R .
Melissa. of Yuma , Ariz., arri\'Pd by plane Saturday in Dayton tu
spend the holidays with Mr. and Mrs. Roy Smith and family ,
Pomeroy Route 3, and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Russell of Ra cme.
They were met at the airport by Mr. and Mrs. Smith.
Both Mr. and Mrs. Russell have just completed their first
se mester at Western Ari:wna O&gt;llege and have enrolled for the
second semester returning to Yuma oo Dec. 30.
And - there was a lauch of sadness to the trip home. The
Russells attended the funeral of his grandmother. Mrs. Dena
llussell Hawk Sunday at the Olllrch of Christ in New Marshfield.

'. I

' ~·.

"

f.. I
I

\.-

Are Paid

BY
~ the Family

•

•
•
Hlld

.Some of the

BILLS
t~re

paid

BY
the other Y2

•
•
•
•

Live Tableau Is Scheduled

.SHIRT
FINISHING
SAME DAY
SERVICE
In AI9-0ul AI S

WHAT'S THE ANSWER?

HIS AND HERS
CHECKING ACOUNT
OPEN YOUR_S IQDAY.
W H! N Y 0 U VI', IT PA i&lt; K f ilf t

PITTSI!URGI'

l.ilbens ;,auorull
.....C.CIHCIHH.l Tl

OHIO

Free Parking lot

116 E. 1nd. Pomeroy

hk

MIDDLEPORT

Robinsoo's Ceaners

higher education and a 33 per
ce nt increase for local governments .
The public welfare budget is
up 52 per cent from !he last
biennium, although increased
welfare caseloads will prevent
a boost in service levels.
Gilligan vetoed two sections
of the bill . They would ha~e proviped a reapportionment attorney at state expense for Secretary of Stale Ted W. Brown
and exempted state universities
fr om reimbursing the state Department of Personnel lor services rendered .

BILLS

~1 .;

TilE f'lr\AL DRAWING FOR PRIZES being given in th e
holida y promotion program of Pomero}' merchants has been
moved from Thursday lD Friday and will be held at the New York
Clothi n~ Huusc . Merchants are lD have their tickets to the
clothin~ store by I :30 p.m. Incidentally, there's a $500 prize included m the final drawing. The program is, of course, a no
purchase required for participation arrangement.

U~ Our

Some of the

\

II

Rachel McBride reading "The
Fourth Wise Man/' and
"Stevie and the Star," by Ada
Slack ; Myla Hudson, "The
Miracle of Christmas; "
"ChrisiJnas . Comes At Different Times," Agnes While ;
"The Legend Of The Bells,"
Janice Lawson ; "The Tale Of
ChrisiJnas Eve," learned as a
child and recited from memory
by Ruth Zavitz; "Martha's
Christmas Prayer, " Laura
Pickens ; "The Joy Of Uttle
Things," Susie Fischer; "Let
Us Pray On This Holy
ChristJnas Day," by Frankie
Mumaw.
Another decoration was a
decorated tree under which
packages lor an exchange of
gifts were placed. A twinkling
ChrisiJnas tree was on the
piano. A group benediction
ra er closed the meetin

Whe11

't \ -

WTI.UAM P. GRUESER, 60, MINERSVILLE , died re&lt;:e ntly
at the Veterans AdminiStration Hoopital in Lexington, Ky . He
had undergooe surge ry and during his l'OIIfinement had used 31
pmts of blood . The problem now is that members of the family and not too immediate, at that - are being billed for the blood at
$25 a pint a sizeable charge.
·
The Rrr . W. H. Perrin expresses hope that residents will
\'ISil a bloodmobile from I to 6 p,m. Monday, Dec. 18, at the
Pomeroy Elementary School and contribute blood so that the 31
pin!.'; &lt;a n t.: replaced. Those giving at the time are urged to tell
the hi,Jdnwbile clerks that the blood iS replacin~ that used by
the late Mr . Grueser .

TREVINO HONORED
RANCHO LA CO.'iTA, Calif.
(UP! 1 - Lee Trevino was
honored as go lf~ of the year
Monday night by West Coast
golf wri ters and broadcasters.

SYRACUSE - From a table
covered with a Christmas
tablecloth, centered with a
poinsettia arrangement and
nanked on either side with a
candleholder, a red candle, a
red sleigh carrying choir girls
an d holly leaves and a reindeer . the F.mily Missionary
Society of the Presbyterian
church here enjoyed a bountiful din ner in the annex
Tuesday, Dec. 7. at noon .
The dinner was prepared by
Jean Hall , Janice Lawson,
Cha rlotte Nease, Ruth Zavitz,
members. and a guest, Eura
Largent. Table grace was
given by the Rev. Dwight
Zavitz .
Fo ll o win~ the dinner a short
business sess ion wa s co nducted by president . !.aura
Pickens .
A program of readings with

' '} 7
...
·· ~

A111 t natiVIty tableau will be " Do You Hear What I Hear "
fea tured 1n front of the and Beverly Wilcox and Brett
Bradbury Church of Christ on Carter sanR "Tell Me the Old,
Wednesday and Thursday from Old Story." Joyce .Davis was
:·~:;:::::~:::::::::::::::::::~=~~=~·:::~·:::::::::.:::::»::::*;::-; 7 to 9 p.m. ond on Friday from 7
narrator for the program. All
GABRIEL UNDER KNIFE
to 8 p " ' On Christmas Eve a of the children were in a choral
SAN TAMONICA, Calif . pra yer service and hymn sing group lor the carol singing . A
1UPI I -Quarterback Roman will he held from 8 p,m. to 8:30 rommunioo service concluded
Gabriel of the Ins Angeles p.m. t&lt;r wh1ch the public is the program .
Rams undergoes surgery today invi ted . t
on his right knee. Gabriel, a 11).
Sunday nwht at the church a
year ve leran from North Chri stmi:t~ program was
Carolina State, suffered liga- presen ted The welcome was
ment damage early in the given h) Hnan Wilcox, Sherry,
season .
Kath) •nd Kevin King sang
PATS CJIANGE POLICY
BOSTON IUPl; - Beginning
next year. New England
Patriots season ticket holder
will no longer be forced to buy
tickets to preaseason as well as
regular season games, club
president Billy Sullivan announced Monday .

Adrienne Hubbard , Mabel
Pickens, Eleanor Bohram ,
Agnes White, and Edith Hood.
Carols were sung between each
reading .
A gift exchange was followed
by a dessert course from a
table beautifully decorated in
the ChristJnas motif as was the
room which included a silver
tree trimmed with large blue
ornaments.
Attending the dinner were
Jean Hall, Phyllis Hendrix,
Sylvia
Zwilling, Janice
Lawson , Mildred Pierce ,
Adrienne Hubbard , Eileen
Clark, Helen Diddle, Doris
Friend, Edith Hood, Agnes
White, Naomi London, Elva
Daily , Eleanor Bohram, Marie
Rizer , Elizabeth Rice, Mary
Pickens, Clara Lavender,
Thelma Grueser, Mabtl
Pickens, Vicki Rizer .

Ladies at Bountiftfl Din!ler

I
I
I

i By Bob Hoeflich

SYRACUSE - Table grace
was given by Edith Hood for
the delicious dinner served to
the Ladies Auxiliary at Crow's
Steak House Friday evening,
Dec. 10.
After ti1e dinner the group
came to their meeting house at
the Municipal park here for a
program prepared by Janice
Lawson and Doris Friend
opening with a reading, "What
Is Christmas," with Marie
Rizer , Vicki Rizer , Doris
Friend, Elva Daily, Mary
Pickens and Clara Lavender,
taking part; "Christmas Is,"
read by Mildred Pierce ; "The
Magic of ChrisiJnas," Eileen
Clark; "Bedtime Of ChrisiJnas
Eve," Jean Hall, and the
ChrisiJnas Story, by Naomi
London, Phyllis Hendrix ,
Sylvia Zwilling, Thelma
Grueser, Elizabeth Rice,

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federal Dep01lt luurr.llCe C.pw1n1uu

Open Nights Until Ch~mas

DID SANTA FORGET TO CHECK
WITH KIPS?

Shoes - Slippers - Handbags

Hosiery - SodaJ Make
Excellent Gijbl

/

( (1/111'

lt\1' ill

·The Electric Climate
If', flf·dfi!Jtr·t

II
\

........... _."_

-··-----····--

-

COLU~BU_~ A~O SOU_T_~~f:1~ 9~~.!J- ~l[CT_Q~C ..COMPAI\JY

How About

COWBOY BOOTS.
for Him?

225 It S.C.d lliddhptlll
•

•

•l

�•

5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. 21, 1971

4- The Daily Sentlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Dec. 21, 1971
Monday's
College Results
U"ited Press International

Vols Nip Arkansas
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UPI J-It
all boiled down to a battle of
talented toes and a disputed
fumble in the heart-stopping
Liberty Bowl Monday night.
Tennessee's George Hun t
tied on the mantle of hero when
his extra point kick defeated
Arkansas, 14-13, with only 1:56
to play followin g a 17-yard run
by fullback Curt Watson.
Arkansas' Billy McClard, the
top kick-scorer in the history of
college football 1Hunt is number two) packed up his
disappointment and went duck
hunting with Rawrback quarterback Joe Ferguson. Ferguson, wbo compieted 18 out of
2B passes for 200 yards, found
little consolatio n in being
named the game's most valuable player .
McClard had kicked field
goals of 19 and 30 yards in the
final period to gi ve Arkansas a
13-7lead and an apparent upset
with time run ning out. In fact ,
Arkansas' dlfense had so
stifled ninth-ranked Tennessee
that it didn't seem to matter
when McC1ard had a 48-yard
field goal nullified by a pen,lly
with le&amp;' than five minutes to
play .
Suddenly, Tennessee had the
ball in Arkansas territory for
the first lime in the second half
With less than three minutes to
play when Volunteer tackle
Carl Witherspoon recovered a
fumble by Jon Richardson on
the Arkansas 37. Three plays
Watson scored and Hunt kieked
his second extra point.
''Tom Reed (of Arkansas)
jumped on that fumble and had
it under his chest," said
Arkansas coach Frank Broyles

Michigan

M ichigan 87 Ohio 81
Holiday

Tour ·

First Round
Pace 91 Praft 73
R utger~! Newark) 63 Newark

st . 7 4

Newark Engineering
Tournament

~orange. ~··

•

~ e wark

Eng . 77

;yevens

Tech 63 Bloomfld

66

Drew

il

East
Duquesne 77 Harvard

n

Ga . Sou thern· 63 Fairleigh

Dick . tRuth.)58

St . Bonaventure 86 Boston C.

6l

N ew Hamp. COli. 66 Hu nter

66
Marsha ll 100 Maine 68
N . Y . Maritime 81
N .Y .
Dominican 64
Queens 92 Potsdam St . 85
Union 105 Ramapo 62

South

Georgia Tech 83 William and
Mary 71
LSU (New Orlean s) 123
Georgia St. 82

Maryland 73 Loyola (Md.l

60
Richmond 54 Va. Tech 82
Sou thern Il l. (Edwa rdsv ille

99
Sou th F la 73

Virginia9J VMI 51
Georgia 11 5 LSU 9l
American 78 Syracuse 74

Va . Commonwealth
Tenn . 71

84 East

Midwest

Northern Ill. 101 Ca l. Poly ll
St .

70

Hamline

~Minn . )68

USC 89 Iowa 51.86
Cre ighton 70 San J ose St . 59
Wayne 51. 82 Mercy 81
Southwest

Browns Going For
The Stars Sunday
CLEVELAND (UPI) - "Put
all your eggs in one basket be·
cause you're going for the
stars, " coach Nick Skorich said
he told his Cleveland Browns,
as the team began work today
for Sunday's playoff game here
against Baltimore.
Skorich said he will use the
same plays he used against the
Colts earlier in the season when
'the Browns won 14-13, "but with
a different look to them ."
Skorich said kicking probably
would play an important part
in the game and he is relying
on field goal specialist Don
Cockroft.
"Kicking will be a key fa ctor, " he sa id . "Baltimore kicker Jim O'Brien is a better per-

centage field goal kicker than
Cockroft, but Don has been
verv effective in his last lew
performances . He'll do the job
for us."
The Browns ended the regular season with a win over
Washington , a contest in which
Skorich said quarterback Bill
Nelsen "called a great game ."
Looking back on the 14-game
sc hedule, Skorich said the
Browns.best effort was against
Cincinnati when the club clinched a playoff spot "because it
was a big effort from all of us
to win . It counted the most."
The Browns had to come
from behind to post a 31-27 win
over the Bengals in the conference championship clincher.

COLUMBUS I UPI J - Ohio
will have its own football bowl
game beginning next year . .
Plans for the Ohio Shnne
Bowl were announ c~:d here
Monday by stale Shnne officials, football coaches and officials of Ohio colleges
The fir st annual 1 k sri ty
game featun ng Ohw crrllege
se niors has been sched uled for
Dec . 9, 1972, probably l11 be
played at the new Fre nk lin
Heights high school fr, r' ball
stadium here .
All proceeds are to W the
Cincinnati Burns Hosp iW l
It is to be an East-Wt' t affair with two 25-man sq•Jads
' .
se lected
A Shrine committee, along
with coaches and writ€r'&gt; . will
pick the All-Star teams
The West squad is to be
made up of players from Bowl·
ing Green, Miami , Toledt1, Defiance, Bluffton ) Wt lmi nl!;ton,
Findlay, Dayton , Xavtcr . Ohio
Northern,Central State.Wittenberg, Heidelberg , Ohio Wes leyan, Capital and Denison
The East team will ' orne
from Kent State, Ohiu University, Akron, Oberlin , Oltl·rbe in,
Marietta, Hiram , Cinunnati,
Youngstown Stale, A.1hland,
Case Western, John Carroll,
Baldwin-Wallace, Musk1ngum,
Mount Union, Wooster and
Kenyon .
Also, m years that Oh w Stale

Akron 100 St . Vincent 62
DePaul93 Parson s 7.)
Mich Sl . 77 Butler 71
Ohio St. 62 Brown 56
Chicago

Southern

Ala . 76

Arizona

66
Arizona

St . 95

Fesno

St .

75
Houston 84 Washington 51.

73
Texa s (Arlington) 84 S W.
Missouri 76
New Mexico St . 91 San
Francisco84

West ·
Oregon St 82 Weber SI 7l
Sa nta Clara 79 Ken I St 65

Sealtte90 Utah Sf 77
UC San Di ego Bl Sonoma Sf

6l

Re dland s 75 Dominquez St.

63
Arizona S f 95 Fresno St 75
South Alabama 76 Arizona

66 .

Monday's Fight Results
By

United

In UPI Ratings

Own .Bowl Tilt In '72

Toledo 77 Detroil/6
Newark
namenl

Bobcats Sixth

Invitational

First Round

of the recovery credited to
Witherspoon. "He even handed
the ball to the official. I
couldn 't believe il when they
said Tennessee's ball.
· " We have nothing to be
ashamed of," he added, "we
played well enough lo win."
"I handed the ball to the
official ," said Reed. " I
couldn 't believe it when he said
A record crowd of 51,140
watched the two teamsplaying lor the first lime since
Tennessee won 14-2 back in
1907 - battle to a 7-7 deadlock.
Tennessee scored first on a
two-yard plunge by Bill Rudder
in the first quarter w cap a 55yard drive in eight plays. A key
pass interference penalty
against Arkansas' Clark Irwin
at the Arkansas 22 kept the
drive alive .
Then Ferguson, a &amp;-2 junior
from Shreveport, La., took
over in the second quarter. He
completed s ix consecutive
passes in a drive that covered
66 yards and threw 36 yards to
flanker Jim Hodge for the
score .
Not only was Ferguson
named the most valuable offensive player, but Arkansas
safety l.ouis Campbell was
named the most valuable
defensive player with three
interceptions to his credit. Two
of them led to McClard's field
goals in the second half.
''It was a nice honor," said
Campbell . "We won everything
but the game. "
Young Tennessee coach Bill
Battle said his Volunteer s
made too many costly offensive mistakes.

Ohio Will Have Its

Press

In ·

lerna tiona 1

PARIS!UPI) - Jean Claude
Bo u !ti er , 1591/1, France,
knocke d out Bunny Slerling,
159 1 7. Eng land ( 14) . ( Boultier
retai ns
European
mid ·

dleweighl title).

Meigs A&amp;B
Both Win
The Meigs Seven th grade
"B" team dumped Kyger
Creek 43lo 18 Monday at Meigs
Jr . High School in Middleport.
Leading scorers fclf Meigs
were Tim Scites anti Tummy
Walters, 12 each; Jeff Beaver
and Danny Buffington, 6 each;
Ricky George 3, and Scott May
and Tim Rawlings, 2 eac h.
For Kyger Creek Westfall
had 8, Baird 3, Fisher, Hood
and Misner 2 each, and Clay, 1.
In a closer contest Meigs
Seventh grade "A" team won
over Kyger Creek 44 to 36.
For Meigs, Greg Browning
led all scorers with 17 followed
by Mark Haggerty with 15,
Bryan Hamilton 4, Lonnie
Taylor and Kevin Fields 3 each
and Steve Randolph , 2.
For Kyger, Baylor had 11 ,
Brown and Taylor 8 each,
Salem 5, and Sands 4. Chuck
Downie is coach of both Meigs
squads.

does not go to the Rose Bowl ,
no more than three players
from Ohio State are to be
chosen for each squad .
Coaches are to be picked on
the basis of th eir previous
year's record. For next year's
game, Jack F'outs of Ohio Wesleyan Will be the West head
coach and Jack Murphy of Toledo will lead the East.
All finan ces are to be handled by the Ohio Shnne. One
week or practice has been planned before the game.
"We have high hopes that
this game will build into the
prominence of other bowl
games ," said Ernie Roush , potentate of the Columbus Aladdin Temple Shrine . "Ma ybe in
three years or so we can play
the game at Ohio State .
"But we do not wish to overextend this first year. This has
been four years in the talking
stage," Roush added. "We have
full endorsement of all six
Ohio (Shrine 1 temples and full
endorsement of the NCAA as to
eligibility ."

Meigs

Property
Transfers
Howard 1. . English, Jr .,
Barbara K. English to James
H. Sellers, Ruth Ann Sellers,
Parcels, Salisbury .
Ray Darst, Irene Darst to
·Kenneth Earl Darst, Robert
Ray Dars t, 75 .32 Acres,
Salisbury.
Audra Frances Weddle to
Daniel R. Roush , Patricia Ann
Roush, 2.81 Acres, Lebanon.
Charles V. Strauss, Evelyn
C. Sl~au&amp;' to Adolph Saelens,
Loretta Saelens. Lot, Middleport.
Ernest Stanford Stockton ,
Alice Stockton to Stephen M.
Sligliez, Jan et A. Stigliez ,
Parcels, Bedford .
Russell Ma so n, Norma
Mason to Elizabeth H. Smith,
21.88 Acres, Scipio.
W. H. Pu lli ns, de c. to
Blanche Pullin s, Howard
Pullins, Gladys Croy, Theima
Watkins, Mildred Brooks ,
Hazel Wedge, Homer Pullins,
Florence
Wyers,
Ruth
Watkins, Julia Deeter, Roy
Pullins, Arlene Coy , Nancy
Blake, Aff. for trans., Olive.
Blanche Pullins, Howard,
Pullins, Eunice Pullins, Gladys
Croy, Thelma Watkins, Paul
Watkins, Mildred Brooks, Paul
Brooks, Hazel Wedge, Roscoe

Mark V iil Semi Finals

I

High for Enco was Vic Dailey
with 20.
BY QUARTERS
Mark V
13 30 51 99
Enco
10 20 32 59

PROCTORVILLE -Mark V
or Middleport won a berth in
the semi-finals of the Fairlapd
Independent Ba s ketball
Tournament here at Fairland
High School Monday night with
a 99-09 victory over Enco of
Hunting ton .
Mark V plays again next
Monday at 6 p.m. for a shot at
the champwnship.
Scoring leaders for the

NEW YORK fU PI J - Ohio
University, which took victories
from two Big Ten teams last
week, made the ratings lor the
first time, and · Ohio State
moved into sixth plaee in this
week 's UP! Board of Coaches
poll .
The Bob&lt;ats , wh o ,;:ere rated ·
15th, rece1ved 25 points in the
poll . Ohio U. took stunning
wins over OSU and Indiana last winne rs were Mi ke Fen- :
derbosch with 34- he couldn 't il
week .
Ohio Slate, &gt;-!this season re- miss m the second half - Jack il
ceived 86 points and moved up I Beep J Mathews with 23, and
one place from last week 's poll. Ron ferguson with 18. Other
The Bucks' top scorer, Allan score rs were Gary FenHornyak, who had been out derbosch 3, Sam Mitchell 3, "'
with a bruised heel, made hiS Dave Fife 4, and Doxie Walters
first appearance Monday night 13.
Walters 6-6 ce nter, blocked 7
against Brown .
opposition
shots from the field •
Among coaches comprising
the UP! major college basket- and pulled down 22 rebounds.
ball ratings board are Jim SnyWomen's Thursday
der of Ohio U. and Fred TayAfternoon League
lor of Ohio State.
Oec. 16, 1971

~******** *******~

!
!

A THOUGHT ·:

FOR TODAY

...

No one is sm all who does
a small JOb 1n a big way .

...
...

t.
•
•

"'

- Anonymous i'

••"'

••

il

:! lfs '***~
$
Quick! EasJ ~

Standings

Team

W. L.
86 34
81 38

New York Clothing
Dave's Tire Land .

PomeroY Bowling Lanes 70 50
Simon' s Mkt .
53 67
Forest Run Block
39 81

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO,
SATURDAY, Dee. l8.197!
Smith's Body Shop
30 90
SALES REPORT OF
High Team 3 games
Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
Dave 's Tire Land 1840; New
HOGS - 175 to 22illbs. 21.50 York. Clothing 1594 ; Simon ' s
to 21.70; 220 to 250 lbs. 20.50 to Mkt ll91.
High Ind . game - Sandy
21.25; Light 16.50 to 18.75; Fat Pha lm 188 ; Julie Bo yles 178 ;·
Sows 16 to 16.75; Stags 14.75 Maxine Dugan 177 .
High Team game - Dave' s
Down; Boars 15 to 16.25; Pigs 6
Ti re Land 654 ; Dave·s Tire
to 11.50; Shoats 10 to 18.50.
Land 604 ; Simon 's Mkl . 592 .
CATTLE- Steers 28 to 35·
High Ind . 3 games - Sandv
Pha
li n, Maxine Dugan, 479 ;
Heifers 22 to 30; Baby Beef
Julie Boyles 464 : Carol Roush
29.75 to 38.75; Fat Cows 18 to 4)5.
22.50; Canners 18 to 22.25; Bulls
22.50 to 27; Milk Cows 185 to
285.
VEAL CALVES - Tops
46.50 ; Seconds 40 to 43.25 ;
Medium 37 to 38.75; Com . &amp;
Hvs. 35 to 39 ; Culls 35.
BABY CALVES - 20 to 63.
LAMBS - Tops 26 ; Seconds
20 to 23.50; Light Wts . 17.50 to
18.

! DRIVE-IN !
! BANKING !
! Fridays Only , "'-tc
• The Drive-In Window il
-t&lt;
is Open
!

.
:
•

9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
(Continuously)

-!&lt;

-1&lt;

•
il
-!&lt; Other Banking Hours 9 to 3 il
,.._ and 5 fo 7 as usua I on •

il

-il Fridays.

•! FARMERS BANK !•
• and SAVINGS CO. !
:

POMEROY. OljtO

il

Member FDIC
Member Federal

-!&lt;

!

Reserve System

t-..

!

C

***************•

Hearty

Appetite?
Enjoy The·Savings

HOLIDAY SPECIAL

Dessert

Frozen Dairy

~gal. 79~

...!c.'-'-... \\,~..\\
"' &lt;.~'-' .
May it be bright and
beautiful, filled with
cheer .

We Will Close AI 5 P.M. Christmas Eve.
See you the First ott he Year-

Dudley's Florist

McCLURES DAIRY ISLE

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

Fourth &amp; Locust

MiddlePOrt

•••411•11\11411"•••••·•.,. .......,..._..,. ...,..,..,. 1., ....,................... ,........... "~411"~''""'•-.eo.e""•••llli.., .. ,. .... ,.. ................,..,....,....,,....,.,.,. .. ,.. .................. .., .....
FREE PRIZES
DRAWING
DEC. 24 at 4 P.M.
No purchase necessary to participate.

Phebe Says:
Ho! Ho! Ho! and a Merry

•••

Christmas t o All! Thank s for
making our store, your store
thi s year as we wish you I he
bes t
of
everything
al
Christmas lime and always .

lr-.::::.:~.....

OUR

12

ORANGE DRINK

And we will have on spec ial. (if they come vta 01g
slive r truck). and who ca re s about gro~er ie s
anyway, it' s Christma s. (and my stockman i s sick
and I've been working too hard) . So please. Santa
make him well or send new one, preferably with
strong ba ck and weak mind . Signed: Phebe.

SAUCE

4cans $}
ANGEL FLAKE

We Glalllv Acceot Fed. Food Stamps
Prices EHactlve Dac. 21·28

With Vodka

Monday Thru Friday
9:00 to 7:00

KRAFT PIZZA
Single
Pkg.

lb.

49~

Saturday 9 to 9

ClDSED SUNDAYS

4 r!~ l.QQ
2

ggt

5 lb.

can

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

BALLARD

BISCUITS

2~~s $1

TANGERINES
Sweet &amp; Juicy
Thin Skinned

doz.

Phebe's

49~

Gooilfes
HOLSUM

Steele's Brand
WITHTHISCOUPONWHEN REG.
YOU BUY A .OZ. JAR OF

14

2, 49

MAXWELL HOUSEII)coFFEE
AT. RACINE FOOD MMKET
WITH

14 OZ. JAR ONlY 1.99

CDUPON

,.

SW. POTATOES

3

No.2~

cans

PAN ·ROLLS
FAIRMONT
ICE MILK
FAIRMONT
EGGNOG
f
!

•

members and friends attended
the short swearing i n ceremony
by outgoing Mayor Chester E.
Sharrock.
·
" I won 't tell you what to do,
but I can sure tell you some
things not to do," the outgoi ng
mayor said to the teenager.
Hooker. a stocky, bespeckied
serious-spoken you th,dressed in
a dark" blue suit, spoke optimistically about the futur e of
his conununlly of 4,300.
''Never Betray Trust"
"When I decided to run for
mayor it was because I thought
I could help to make our hometown grow and be a wonderful
place to live," he said. "Of

course. I also wondered how
many friends I really had . This
I found out, and with the help
of God I will never betray their
trust in me ."
Hooker said he had been offered bribes from "capitalists
and other political . leaders' "
wh om he did not identify.
"I was approached by people
offering me money to see thai
something was done, " he said .
"P,eople offered me money to
mention thei r names during interviews and things of this sor t.
"But I wasn 't about to sell
out. " Hooker said. "I ran for
mayor and that's what I want
to be .' '
Hooker . a junior at Ashland
College. an hour's drive from
here, has scheduled all his
classes on lhree mornings a
week and plans to spend the
rest of the lime on the job
here .
He already is at work trying
to put his campaign promises
into practice .
Hooker pledged to stop speeding and dra g racing on vi llage
streets and has had conferences wi th the police department on how to catch speeders.
He said he would promote
business and Industry in the
community. and since the election he has traveled throughout
the .s tate drumming up interest
i n r\eweomers lown .

New Redistricting Plan
Produced on 3-2 Vote
COLUMBUS ( UPI ) - A
corrected version of the
legislative reapportionment
plan adopted last September
was once again pushed through
the Democratic-co ntrolled
state Apporti onment Board
Monday after .. Democrats
assured themselves that the
plan .met constitutional
requirements.
The new plan, which was
adopted on a 3 - 2 party line
vole, will be submitted to a
three - judge federal panel in
Cleveland Tuesday to lest its
constitutionality.
" We are completely satisifed
that the plan meets the requirements of the state and federal
constitutions," said Gov. John
J . Gilligan, chairman of the
board.
The new plan is essentially
the same remapping ac·
complished by the Democrats
three months ago, but now
includes Zanesville, Van Wert
and other municipalities wh1ch
were inadvertently omitted
from the original. Other errors,
which the courts said made the
plan unconstituional, reportedly were corrected.
Before adopting the plan,
which was designed to help
Democrats gain con!xol of the
General Assembly four Republican plans were rejected.
The Democrats even turned
down a proposal offered from

COI!lJMBUS fUPI) -Ohio
has a new $7.686 billion budget
to last through June 30, 1973,
officially ending a nine-month
fiSCal struggle in the Statehouse
including a record six months
of interim budgeting.
Gov. John J. Gilligan's signature on the giant spending and
tax plan Monday gave the
state:
- Its first personal income
tax, effective Jan. 1.
- Record spending levels
over the next 18months, including hefty increases in state aid
to basic and higher education,
mental hygiene and correction
and other programs.
- An inunediate increase in
the cigarette tax .
- A lawsuit to defend the
new "voucher" system of distributing aid to nonpublic
schools, and openings for court
challenges of other features of ·
the budget-tax.package, including the income tax.
- A statement from the administration that the new revenues will be used as wisely
and efficiently as possible.
The bill -signing, which took
place in a conference room
packed with staff members and
cabinet officers from the Gil-

Senate Minority Leader Anthony 0 . Calabrese, DCieveland, a board member .
Calabrese's measure would
have redrawn the Cuyahoga
County boundaries to satisfy
complaints from Cleveland
area lawmakers who objected
to the governor's plan .
Gilligan ruled Calabrese's
motion out of order after noting
that the se nator was one of
three Democrats who voted
Sept. 17 against a Republica n
motion to allow amendments to
the plan.
· "With some regret I shall
have to rule your amendment
out of order," Gilligan said .
The new plan apparently will
not prevent Republicans from
claiming unconstitutionality .
Rep. Robert A. Manning, RAkron, a board member, said
there were still errors in the
new plan and indicated the GOP
would once again challenge it.
Manning and Secretary of
State Ted Brown, the other Republican board member , said
the new plan left about 5,000
Ohioans unrepresented in
House districts and some 4,000
persons unrepresented in the
Senate.
The Republicans tried to take
court action on the previous
plan but were turned dow n by
the Supreme Court because the
federal court in Cleveland, acting on a suit filed by a Demo-

15 Ct.
Pkg.

1;, Gal.

Crtn.

Quorl

Onty

I

•

ligan administration, capped
the nine months of legislative
battling both for and against
the one-half to 31'. per cent
graduated individual income
tax .
"The signing this afternoon of
this historic measure marks the
end to a long and often difficult struggle that has touched
the lives of every Ohioan," Gilligan said .
•'As I have indicatedpreviously, this bill will not do all that
I had hoped in many of the important fields of state service,"
the governor said. " But it is a
beginning ."
Gi lligan originally had asked
lor a $9.1 billion two-year budg·
et and tax package. The budget
for the last biennium was 16.2
billion .
The new budget includes $790
million worth of net new revenues from the personal income
tax, a corporate net income lax,
increases in taxes on insurance
companies, banks and dealers in
stocks and bonds, and a new
tax on mining natural resources.
It also includes limited homestead exemptions for persons
over~ and a 10 per cent property tax rollba ck for Ohio home-

Kyger Creek Hoitor

Roll Is Announced
John Wickline, Kyger Creek
High School principal, has
released the second six weeks
honor roll for students in
~es seven through 12.
The are :
Twelfth Grade - x - Terry
Moles, x - Glenn Smith, x Debbie McDaniel, x
Pollyanna Thompson, Shelly
Hall, Marion Matusewicz, Pam
Mitchell, April Moody, Debbie
Nibert, Carl Pennington ,
Rosalie Reese, Debbie Rife,
Nancy
Rodgers,
David
Rothgeb, Susan Scruggs,
Ronnie White, Dan Swisher.
Eleventh Grade - Pam
Gerwig, Terry Hall, Diane
Polcyn, Connie Priest, Vinton
Rankin.
Tenth Grade - Patty
French·; Kandy Gindlesberger,
Randy McDaniel, x - Carol

BANANAS ...•.•••••••.•••.••.•.... lb. 10"
TOMATOES ..................... 2 lb. 69•

INSTANT

TOILET TISSUE

Canned Ham

WE Wll..L HAVE CHICKENS, TURKEYS, HAMS
AND ALL OTHER CHRISTMAS TRIMMINGS!

SMUCKER'S

WHilE CLOUD

~~

Round Steak

SIZe

Jar

lb. 59~

•

USDA CHOICE BEEF

14. oz. 49~

SWEET CHIPS
1~ oz. 39~

ROAST

Excellent

COCONUT

Right reserved to limit qu·antities

PORK LOIN

OZ-119

Can

WITH CHEESE (AND INDIGESTION)
OCEAN SPRAY
CRANBERRY

USDA CHOICE PORK

OYSTERS

WAGNER'S

CHRISTMAS
SPECIALS

5th and·PEARL STS., RACINE .
"lhP Store With AHeart
You, WE LIKE"

and In Our Meat Department, We 'II Have
STANDARD PACK

officially begin his four-year
term Jan . 1.
Hooker disclosed last weekend he already has been offered bribes and a $28,000 a
year job, which he turned down
for the "adventure" of taking
the $3,900 a year mayor 's post .
"Money was not my object in
this adventure and nothing will
cause me to betray the trust
my friends placed in me," said
Hooker , referring to the 70 per
cent vote he received . "I hope
I can live up to their expectations. I will ask for your prayers to help make this possible ."
Some 100 onlookers, family

cral , already took action on the
plan .
The federal court ruled that
other suits on the constitutionalalily of the redistricting plan
could not be entertained while
the present plan was to be redone . Sl&lt;!te Rep. Alan E. :-&lt;orris of Westerville and John ~f.
McElroy, former aid to Gov .
James t\. Rhodes, the Republi c&lt;:~n petitioners. were both fined
for contempt of eourt for carry ing ou t the GOP la wsuit in
violatiOn of the fed era l court order .
" I would assume that if the
federal court does not dispose
of this matter." sa ill Ma nni ng.
'·it would be open to cha llenge
in the Supreme Court .' '
'Gilligan, who was closely
questioned by Manning, &lt;:~dmit ­
ted he was not fam iliar with
the census statistics in the report. But, the governor said, a
census expert had checked the
plan and assured him no areas
of the state were omitted or
duplicated .
Before adjourning, the bo•rd
also adopted two resolutions offered by Brown . The resolutions
allow legislative candidates to
have 30 days in which to chan ge
their residences after the new
plan takes eff ect.

Broader Bill
Proposed for

Strip Mining
COLUMBUS tUPit State Sen. Harry L. Arm·
strung. R-Logan, !t•a rlul th••
Hous(• .. w,illlet other mining
bills die," has urged inclusion of day, shah• and
other strip operations in th••
proposed coal strip mine
reform bill.
"All Ohio surfare mining
should be regulated.' ' sa id
Armstrong, vire rhairman of
the Senate Urban and High·
~ay Affairs Committee,
whieh is studying the hill.
The measure was appruvcd
92-0 last Ortober hy lhe
Hous(•.
"I feel the Hous. will lrt
other mining bills die
bl't ause of pressure from th l'
outside," Armstrong said.
"llut take clay mining. It is a
large industry in Ohio and
makes many pollution
problems for the stale.
"We have to clean up the
l' llvironrnent, " he added.
"Th•· people of this state
"ant that and they deserve
it. "
Armstrong bas been
chairing the committee
hearings on the legislation
while chairman Robert
Stockdale, R-Kent, · ls
recuperating from a heart
attack.

The fifth member nf the

boa rd , sl&lt;lte Auditor Joseph T.
Ferguson, objected to the resolutions, making the vote 4-1.

Fiscal Struggle Ended

992-5248

Phebe

NEWCOMERSTOWN ,Ohio(UPI )- Nineteen-year-old Ron
Hooker, arriving at city hall in
a 1925 model-A ford truck; was
sworn in Monday night as mayor of this east central Ohio
community, becoming one of
the youngest city executives in
the nation.
Hooker , who ran last Nq,v. 2
as a non-partisan , write-in candidate and won a landslide victory, said riding to the ceremonies in the old truck was
symbolic.
"The 1920s were good years
for our town and I hope the
early 1970s will be just as good
for us, " said Hooker, who will

il

dairy isle

Wedge, Homer Pullins, Corda
Pullins, Florence Wyers,
Audra Wyers, Ruth Walkins ,
Garrett Watkins, Julia Deeter,
Roy Pullins, Sandra Pullins,
Arlene Coy, Walter Coy, Nancy
Blake, Paul Blake to Garrett
Watkins , Ruth Watkins,
Parcels, Olive .

Young Mayor Sworn-in

Scruggs, Kathy Norris , Mary
Sauer, Dianna Tucker.
Ninth Grade - Debbie
Baird, Tony Burke , x · Marie
Grose, Uz Hood , Sue Hughes,
Terry Lucas, Tim McDaniel,
Judy Sullins.
Eighth Grade - x - Freddie
Westfall, x- George Thompson,
Unda Fife, Connie Haskins,
Cindy Hurley, Mary Roush,
James Smith, Mike Tate ,
Terry Rife, Chris Preston,
Gary Barr, Cindy Price, Cindy
Spaulding, Bob Fulton .
Seventh Grade - x - Arthur
Leach, x - Pauline White,
Ralph Baylor, Steven Darst,
Carol Coleman, Rebecca
Polcyn, Mitch Salem, Donna
Bailey, Susie Saunders, Edith
Dotson, Tony Shamblin .
x - Denotes all A's.

owners.
Cigarette Tax Hike
The tO-cent excise tax on cigarettes went immediately to 15
cents per pack, but the sales
tax, generally two cents a pack.
was elimina ted.
Gilligan said the bill provides
"the most swee ping tax reform
in Ohio's history."
He said hi s administration
will "work to see that every
penny in this budget is spent
wisely and efficiently , and that
every dollar appropriated in
this measure is used to benefit
the citize ns of Ohiu to the
greatest possible degree.
" All of the difficulties we
went thr ough to obtain passage
of this bill - and they were
many - will ha ve been in vain
unless this administration now
meets the challenge ahead of
it," the gove rnor said.
He said he plaQs to "implement in the near future some
innovative and important new
procedures that will pernni t us
to operate the state as efficiently as is humanly possible ."
The governor said these procedures would be in budgeting,
financing and planning, but that
none was ready for announcement yet .
As soon as the governor signed the bill , the American Civil
Liberties Union of Ohio filed suit
in U. S. District Court asking
lor an injunction against distributi on of nonpublic school aid
to parents, claiming it violated
the U. S. Constitution .
The new budget raises nonpublic school aid from S60 to
190 per pupil , provides a 35 per
cent increase in state aid to
elementary and secondary education, a 25 per cent hike lor

Fairview New~ Notes
By MRS. HERBERT ROUSH
MisS Jackie Wines and Neal
Baker of Racine called on Mrs.
Kate Rowe and Ada Sunda)'.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lawson
ar d son of Letart, W.Va. SJll'flt
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Lawson . Miss W'dda
Lawson spent two days with
the Lawsons at Letart, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis of
Clifton, W. Va . spent Sunday
afternoon with Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Roush and family .
David Roush was a dinner
guest of Mrs. Gladys Shields
and Edna Roush Thursday .
Lester Manuel of Logan was
a week end guest of Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Manuel.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush
visited Satnrday evening with
Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Russell at
Middleport and Mr. and Mrs.

Auxiliary Dines at Crow·'-s

Dana Lewis at Clifton, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Carroll White,
Darla , Deanna, Keith and
Kevin spent Sunday evening
with Mr. and Mrs. Don Hupp
and sons.
Mr. and Mrs. James Sayre
accompanied Herbert Sayre to
ColumbiLS. Mr. Sayre consulted
his eye doctor.
Calling on Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Sayre over the week
end were Mr. and Mrs. Norman Styer of Waterford, Paul
Sayre and Danny Sayre of
Syracuse , Mr . and Mrs.
Herbert Shields, local.
Skip Miller of Wichita City,
Texas and Jeff Miller, local,
spent SWlday afternoon with
Roger Roush.
Mrs. Doris Sayre consulted
her doctor" at Gallipolis .
Mooday .

r.---------------------------·
8ea
.

I'
I
I

t....

! Of

the Bend

!

"'~ !

I

I
Both the Pomeroy and Middleport Public Ubraries will be
closed all day on Friday. Dec . 24, and oo Friday , Dec . 31. Both
libraries, of course, will be closed on the Saturday holidays.
Christmas and New Year's Day .
The courthouse, by the way, ~· ill also be closed all day this
Friday and again next Friday on Dec. 31. These closings are in
accordance with the Ohio COOe governing holidays.
MRS. SETH NICHOL.'iON . out Rutland way , reports that
U1 ings were going big with her flowers until the recent cold snap.
The red peonies, Job's tears, Easter lihes and crocuses were up
through the ground an inch or more

MR. AND MRS. KAHL RUSSE LL AND DAUGHTF.R .
Melissa. of Yuma , Ariz., arri\'Pd by plane Saturday in Dayton tu
spend the holidays with Mr. and Mrs. Roy Smith and family ,
Pomeroy Route 3, and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Russell of Ra cme.
They were met at the airport by Mr. and Mrs. Smith.
Both Mr. and Mrs. Russell have just completed their first
se mester at Western Ari:wna O&gt;llege and have enrolled for the
second semester returning to Yuma oo Dec. 30.
And - there was a lauch of sadness to the trip home. The
Russells attended the funeral of his grandmother. Mrs. Dena
llussell Hawk Sunday at the Olllrch of Christ in New Marshfield.

'. I

' ~·.

"

f.. I
I

\.-

Are Paid

BY
~ the Family

•

•
•
Hlld

.Some of the

BILLS
t~re

paid

BY
the other Y2

•
•
•
•

Live Tableau Is Scheduled

.SHIRT
FINISHING
SAME DAY
SERVICE
In AI9-0ul AI S

WHAT'S THE ANSWER?

HIS AND HERS
CHECKING ACOUNT
OPEN YOUR_S IQDAY.
W H! N Y 0 U VI', IT PA i&lt; K f ilf t

PITTSI!URGI'

l.ilbens ;,auorull
.....C.CIHCIHH.l Tl

OHIO

Free Parking lot

116 E. 1nd. Pomeroy

hk

MIDDLEPORT

Robinsoo's Ceaners

higher education and a 33 per
ce nt increase for local governments .
The public welfare budget is
up 52 per cent from !he last
biennium, although increased
welfare caseloads will prevent
a boost in service levels.
Gilligan vetoed two sections
of the bill . They would ha~e proviped a reapportionment attorney at state expense for Secretary of Stale Ted W. Brown
and exempted state universities
fr om reimbursing the state Department of Personnel lor services rendered .

BILLS

~1 .;

TilE f'lr\AL DRAWING FOR PRIZES being given in th e
holida y promotion program of Pomero}' merchants has been
moved from Thursday lD Friday and will be held at the New York
Clothi n~ Huusc . Merchants are lD have their tickets to the
clothin~ store by I :30 p.m. Incidentally, there's a $500 prize included m the final drawing. The program is, of course, a no
purchase required for participation arrangement.

U~ Our

Some of the

\

II

Rachel McBride reading "The
Fourth Wise Man/' and
"Stevie and the Star," by Ada
Slack ; Myla Hudson, "The
Miracle of Christmas; "
"ChrisiJnas . Comes At Different Times," Agnes While ;
"The Legend Of The Bells,"
Janice Lawson ; "The Tale Of
ChrisiJnas Eve," learned as a
child and recited from memory
by Ruth Zavitz; "Martha's
Christmas Prayer, " Laura
Pickens ; "The Joy Of Uttle
Things," Susie Fischer; "Let
Us Pray On This Holy
ChristJnas Day," by Frankie
Mumaw.
Another decoration was a
decorated tree under which
packages lor an exchange of
gifts were placed. A twinkling
ChrisiJnas tree was on the
piano. A group benediction
ra er closed the meetin

Whe11

't \ -

WTI.UAM P. GRUESER, 60, MINERSVILLE , died re&lt;:e ntly
at the Veterans AdminiStration Hoopital in Lexington, Ky . He
had undergooe surge ry and during his l'OIIfinement had used 31
pmts of blood . The problem now is that members of the family and not too immediate, at that - are being billed for the blood at
$25 a pint a sizeable charge.
·
The Rrr . W. H. Perrin expresses hope that residents will
\'ISil a bloodmobile from I to 6 p,m. Monday, Dec. 18, at the
Pomeroy Elementary School and contribute blood so that the 31
pin!.'; &lt;a n t.: replaced. Those giving at the time are urged to tell
the hi,Jdnwbile clerks that the blood iS replacin~ that used by
the late Mr . Grueser .

TREVINO HONORED
RANCHO LA CO.'iTA, Calif.
(UP! 1 - Lee Trevino was
honored as go lf~ of the year
Monday night by West Coast
golf wri ters and broadcasters.

SYRACUSE - From a table
covered with a Christmas
tablecloth, centered with a
poinsettia arrangement and
nanked on either side with a
candleholder, a red candle, a
red sleigh carrying choir girls
an d holly leaves and a reindeer . the F.mily Missionary
Society of the Presbyterian
church here enjoyed a bountiful din ner in the annex
Tuesday, Dec. 7. at noon .
The dinner was prepared by
Jean Hall , Janice Lawson,
Cha rlotte Nease, Ruth Zavitz,
members. and a guest, Eura
Largent. Table grace was
given by the Rev. Dwight
Zavitz .
Fo ll o win~ the dinner a short
business sess ion wa s co nducted by president . !.aura
Pickens .
A program of readings with

' '} 7
...
·· ~

A111 t natiVIty tableau will be " Do You Hear What I Hear "
fea tured 1n front of the and Beverly Wilcox and Brett
Bradbury Church of Christ on Carter sanR "Tell Me the Old,
Wednesday and Thursday from Old Story." Joyce .Davis was
:·~:;:::::~:::::::::::::::::::~=~~=~·:::~·:::::::::.:::::»::::*;::-; 7 to 9 p.m. ond on Friday from 7
narrator for the program. All
GABRIEL UNDER KNIFE
to 8 p " ' On Christmas Eve a of the children were in a choral
SAN TAMONICA, Calif . pra yer service and hymn sing group lor the carol singing . A
1UPI I -Quarterback Roman will he held from 8 p,m. to 8:30 rommunioo service concluded
Gabriel of the Ins Angeles p.m. t&lt;r wh1ch the public is the program .
Rams undergoes surgery today invi ted . t
on his right knee. Gabriel, a 11).
Sunday nwht at the church a
year ve leran from North Chri stmi:t~ program was
Carolina State, suffered liga- presen ted The welcome was
ment damage early in the given h) Hnan Wilcox, Sherry,
season .
Kath) •nd Kevin King sang
PATS CJIANGE POLICY
BOSTON IUPl; - Beginning
next year. New England
Patriots season ticket holder
will no longer be forced to buy
tickets to preaseason as well as
regular season games, club
president Billy Sullivan announced Monday .

Adrienne Hubbard , Mabel
Pickens, Eleanor Bohram ,
Agnes White, and Edith Hood.
Carols were sung between each
reading .
A gift exchange was followed
by a dessert course from a
table beautifully decorated in
the ChristJnas motif as was the
room which included a silver
tree trimmed with large blue
ornaments.
Attending the dinner were
Jean Hall, Phyllis Hendrix,
Sylvia
Zwilling, Janice
Lawson , Mildred Pierce ,
Adrienne Hubbard , Eileen
Clark, Helen Diddle, Doris
Friend, Edith Hood, Agnes
White, Naomi London, Elva
Daily , Eleanor Bohram, Marie
Rizer , Elizabeth Rice, Mary
Pickens, Clara Lavender,
Thelma Grueser, Mabtl
Pickens, Vicki Rizer .

Ladies at Bountiftfl Din!ler

I
I
I

i By Bob Hoeflich

SYRACUSE - Table grace
was given by Edith Hood for
the delicious dinner served to
the Ladies Auxiliary at Crow's
Steak House Friday evening,
Dec. 10.
After ti1e dinner the group
came to their meeting house at
the Municipal park here for a
program prepared by Janice
Lawson and Doris Friend
opening with a reading, "What
Is Christmas," with Marie
Rizer , Vicki Rizer , Doris
Friend, Elva Daily, Mary
Pickens and Clara Lavender,
taking part; "Christmas Is,"
read by Mildred Pierce ; "The
Magic of ChrisiJnas," Eileen
Clark; "Bedtime Of ChrisiJnas
Eve," Jean Hall, and the
ChrisiJnas Story, by Naomi
London, Phyllis Hendrix ,
Sylvia Zwilling, Thelma
Grueser, Elizabeth Rice,

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federal Dep01lt luurr.llCe C.pw1n1uu

Open Nights Until Ch~mas

DID SANTA FORGET TO CHECK
WITH KIPS?

Shoes - Slippers - Handbags

Hosiery - SodaJ Make
Excellent Gijbl

/

( (1/111'

lt\1' ill

·The Electric Climate
If', flf·dfi!Jtr·t

II
\

........... _."_

-··-----····--

-

COLU~BU_~ A~O SOU_T_~~f:1~ 9~~.!J- ~l[CT_Q~C ..COMPAI\JY

How About

COWBOY BOOTS.
for Him?

225 It S.C.d lliddhptlll
•

•

•l

�'

.

The .. Daily Senlinol, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., l:le&lt;'. 21,1971

7- The Daily Sentinol, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., l:le&lt;'. 21, 1971

New ·Officers Named

Annual Program
Given at Church ·

Rebecca ]o Steele Betrothed
\ lr and Mrs. Robert M. Steele, Pomeroy Route 3, are
announc ing the engagement of their daughter, Rebecca Jo,
w James V. Broderick, son of Mr . and Mrs . Vincent
Broderick, Pomeroy Route 2. Miss Steele is a 1971 grad uate
of Eastern High School. Mr . Broderick, a 1970 graduate of
Meigs High School, is attending the Tri-&lt;:ounty Technical
School majoring in forestry .
Wedding plans are incomplete .

Recitatwns, ca rols and a
panlomiJJJe were included in
the annual Chris tmas program
of the children 's department of
the Middl eport Chur ch of
Christ Sunday ni ght.
Mrs Carl Roa ch, superintenden t, had charge of the
pr ogram , with Miss Patty
Glaze serving a.s accomp1mist.
The childr en e ntered th e
sanctuary as the congregatton
sang " Joy to the World ."
Amy Erwin gl:tvf' the
welcome . Children of the
cradle roll , Parker Long, Darin
Wolfe , .Judy Mowery , Jeff Hood
and Darin Roach with their
teacher, Mrs . Roger Long,
presented several ~ible finge~
plays.
Recita tions were given by
Beth Ann Wolfe . Mary Beth
Lun~, Scott McKinley , Danny
Thomas, Megan Long, Sheryl
Rifne, Tr,dd May , Shcllle and
Sherrie F'ox , F'rankie M;utin,
Mike Dorst and .Jeff Nash .
Darin Hrn1eh san g " Baby in a
Manger ' ' , and Jeff 1\:ash
pla)'l'LJ pianr, solo, " 0 Holy
Ntght" 1111 ••f the children sang

Dinner Party
Held Recently

New officers were elected at
the holiday meeting of ~e
Third Fnday Club held at the
home of Miss Sybil Ebersbach .
Elected were Mrs . Ben .

"On Chn :-;Lmiis IJCJ} ,· and
'· Awa \· in the Mi:ln 4er
Tak; ng part m a pl.lntrJ!Ilime
"Chri st is Burn·· were dHidren
of the Prim ar\" J c lt~ s~. Robin
Hf·n.dd as \1f:l r.y , B r~ IJ!J~ F1JK. as
,Jusq lh, Anga: B&lt;Jkl'l .\ 1lndy
Lcmg an d B ~c k} J.q!l~ :J 'i the
s hep tle rd s: Ha rh1 1: .\1rry er,
Kathy Hess and :vl1ke IJer.t, the
wisemen .J!'rlfiii: Sto rl!t': was
the narra urr . &lt;..tnd ~CJt h ;. f~a ker,
Janie Va n .\ lt'tto r, Pon. \orth
etnd Tr uJ\· Hrrt1Ch v: t• fl.' the
angels. Thf: gPJUfJ ]•J.r••:d by
Belsy He ra ld. Ttna lltller,
Timmy iVJ!ll cr . CJHd T1 l11.my
Frazer s&lt;:HI!.; ·A n~ l +l \\ I· Have
Heard Dn Hig h ··
Mrs . fV1ach gan: a P·£J ding
'&lt; Christ tJ t the DtJrrr" . &lt;.~ .' lrl .\1iss
Gl::~ze pla yed ··s il ent :\ 1~ ~~ t ' ' on
the (J rgall r·h lfl li' .~ ror
congn:g&lt;:1lion smg1nt4 t/, i. : r·arol.
The snnttuary WiJ S d ! · r ·• ~r &lt;-~led
fur th e seJ srJn b~ the
Homebuilder.'! Cl C~ ~.'i.

Class Installs
New Officen
Mrs. Joseph ( IJIJk rfi.S t8.lled
the offi cers fiJr l!J/2 ;1 l &lt;r r· ecent
meeting rJf the Ow·-lhn-One
CICJ ss uf the P l rrtl t·l"l ·• F'irst
Baptist Ch urch.
fnslil lled were .\1 r, T. T.
Shelton, presidPnt . ~.I rs 1.. P.
Sterrett, vice pn:.s ld• ·nt. Mrs.
.] Edword FrJster. ~ r · r-r" l.ary ;
Mr s.
Will l&lt;t tll
\\";1tson,
treasurer . \1r s
Lr•fJ rge
Skinner prt: sirlt·d ;rt the
rueelin g which opl'wd ;~ lh the
l,(,nl' s Pr&lt;.tyer and 't11' clas.'l
sung . A letter was r1·arl from
Mr . and Mrs. l.t ~ li :ililnley
whu will obsi.'rve tl w1 r 50th
weddin g tm niv ersc• r ~ 11rt Dec.
24. Mrs. Cook wa'i na med
leoc her uf the clas:-.
Fur devolions etwh mi.'m ber
gave &lt;• Chr istmas pr!('m. The
Hev. Hobert Kuhn ga. ve the
bless1ng at the Uible. There
was group singi ng 1Jf ··silent
:-iighl." Attending were Mr.
anti .\1r~ . George Skinner, Mr .
ami Mrs. William Wa ts on, the
Hev . Mr. and Mrs. Kuhn, Mrs.
Stcrrell, Mrs . Shelton, Mrs.
CorJk, Mrs. Leslie Pnee , Mrs.
Albert Smith, Mrs. Lilli a n
Pierce , Mrs. Olive r Michatl ,
Mrs Harry Bailey, Mr s.
Caddie Wickham, and Mrs.
Ellen Couch . De bbi Call was a

crystal candelabra s . The
committee was Martha L.
Beegle, Beulah Stobart , /liora
Cross. Bernice Theiss and
Phyllis Knightin g
Ruth Barnitz and Opal
Diddle registered the guests.
Naomi Brinker and Bernice
Carpenter passed out the
programs and pin-&lt;lns . Bar·
bara Dugan and Naomi
Brinker presided at the coffee
service. All past matrons and
past pa trons of Racine Chapter
were on the welcoming coma
mit tee.
Guests from 31 Order of the
Eastern Star chapters attend ed the insU. IIation .

Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Webb

Webbs Installed
HAC INf. - Cora and Ralph
Webb were Insta lled as wor thy

PANTY HOSE

Bolin, di stri ct president; June
Stanl ey , di s trict treasurer;

VISiting w{)rthJ' matrons and

Kacine Chapter No. 1:14, Order
The CJnnual Chri stma s dinner
of
Eastern Sl.clr , in a ~rand
party of the H(1se Carden Club
installati(J n· ceremony at the
DAlGHTER ADOPTED
and lw o s(ms. Paul 12, &lt;~nd of Tuppers Pll.lln S was held
Racine :vta s! JOJ C Templ e
Mr. and ~Ir s . Carl Shreve of Mark 10. :&gt;Irs. Shreve IS the recently at the .\1y Th ree Suns
Wednesday evemng , Dec . 1j
Hillside Dr ., Cmcinnati , are former Vi cky Clark . Grand- Hestaunmt. Mrs. Charles Carr
Other officers installed were
ann oun cing the Dec. 16 parents are Mr. and Mrs served as hoste ss fur the
l.etha
and Cliffr1 rl.l Morris,
adop ti on of a four-month-old Frank Clark of Hemlock meeting.
assoc ia te matron and patron ;
Members respfJnded tu roll
daughter named Wend y Rae Grove, and ~lr. and Mrs. lithe;
Gretta Simp sr,n, secre tary ;
Lynn . The couple have another Shreve, Coolville .
c::. ll by na min g a Christmas
Chlo
ru s Gn mrn , trea s urer :
adopted daughter, Vickie Sue.
custom of am1ther country .
Lillian Weese, cfJnduttre ss ;
Mrs. Carl Barnhill presided at
Opal
Diddle, asso&lt;:iatc conthe n1ecting with Mrs . Hobert
ductress ; Bt~rbara Dugan .
Dorst g1ving the verse of the
chaplain ; Lt-~uret Circle .
month. Devotional . readin gs
marshal; Velma Qu : 1len ,
and a Christmas prayer was
organ ist ; Mary Be:.l :lwin ,
given by Mrs. Glen Stout, and
Adah; Donna Hill , Ruth :
Mrs . Frederick Goebel
Mildred Dunuhew, Es ther ;
presented a program on the
Opal Cummin s, Marth a.
origin of Chri stmas customs.
EJecta, M&lt;-~r g aret Wes t ;
A report was given on the
Ka thleen Mc:\iekle, warder ;
cuun ty flower show. Members
Charles
Hensley, senllnel.
were rl!miruled to have
The trustl:es are Rernice
Christmas remembrances £or
Carpenter, Ben Philson and
lhe rest home patients to Mrs.
I .uuise Stewart .
Dorst this week. The lr£tveling
The instol!ing offi cer was
prize was won by Mrs. Barn·
Helen
M. Bartley, worthy
hill. A gift exc hange was held
gra nd matron. Assisting were
and Mrs. Ca rr presented gifts
Berntce Carpenter. invit in ~
to the menther" . The January
grand
marshal ; Naomi and
19 meeting wi ll be at the home
guest.
Wi lliam King, installing grand
of Mrs . Ulah Swan .
marshals ; Wilma Styer, in'""""""l(rWII(rWI~~~-~IIt&lt;ll!rl&lt;l!.'i111.'i11'"'"lll:I'O"t stalling grand organist; Louise
Stewart. installing grand
chaplain, Leona Hensley, installin g grand conductress :
William Stewart, installin g
(CLOSE 6 PM CHRISTMAS EVE)
'. gr;md warde r. and Hichard
. Ougon . installing grand sen·
tinel.
Solot :-,L'&gt; were Gaile Dew ,
&lt;l c(·ompanicd
by
Verna
Hammond: Ruth Hea th , ac. cun1pamed by W i~ma Styer :
Ben Philson sang "The Lord 's
Prayer" as the closing solo
ar ron1panied by Margaret
Bl;.teltnar.
Introduce d and welcomed by
the retiring Worthy Matron,
Barbara Duga n were Helen M.
Bartley , worthy grand matron ;
A&gt;,ORT I·Il ( 110 ( OI.A TES
. Roberta K. Mindling, past
crr:. rn s. nuts,
grand matron ; Betty Sperow.
tn111 " t .H .L'Twl~. n •HI_~ -~~ ~- rn f kc -;~,. nrch.
grand
organist:
Jean
l rumht·&lt;., .md di t·w ~ l t 'fll er &lt;;, .ltp pcd 1n ftnc sc
Woodruff , gra nd warder :
dJ rk .t nd mdk t hr)toLtrr
· Marlene Logston, deputy
lb. SHJO
2 lh 51 9)
; lh SS 911 ) lb. S9.75
· gra nd mat ron ; Winifred
Hooper, grand representative
~ '" box H OO
. to British Columbia ; Janet

patrrrns; past matrons and pa st

CHRISTMAS
GIFTS
FOR
EVERYONE .

·Lutherans to Celebrate
Coming of Christ Child
St. Paul Lutheran Church at
231 East Second St., Pomeroy,
will celebrate the coming of the
Christ Child on Christmas Eve,
Friday at 11 p.m. with a candlelight service, a tradition at
St. Paul Church, and always a
high-point of the Church year .
The service this year will
include congregational singing
of the traditional Christmas
carols, the reading of the
Christmas story from the
Scriptures, special music by
the St. Paul Lutheran Church
senior choir directed by Mrs.
Charlotte Elberfeld and accompanied by Mrs. Corrine
Lund as well as the youlh
singing group directed by Mrs.
Cindy Coffman. A Christmas
sennonette will be given by the
Rev. Arthur C. Lund who is the
pastor of the congregation.
The general public is, as

always, most cordially imited
to attend.
The Chrisunas season has
been a very active time for the
members and friends of St.
Paul congregation . The women
of the congregation held their
annual ChriStmas bazaar on
Dec. 3 and 4 which included
many beautiful handmade
items that had been made by
the women of the church. ·
On Sunday afternoon,
December 12, Pastor and Mrs.
Arthur Lund held an open
house at the parsonage for
members and friends of the
cong regation and local clergy
and their wives. Various ladies
prepared the lunch and helped
in the kitchen .
On Sunday evening , l:le&lt;'. 19,
members of the Sunday School
presented
a Christmas

patrons of Racine Chapter, an d
h iJfiCi f" t! d mfJsons .
:vir ""d ;;Irs . Wehbs' theme
fiJr the year is " Peace," and
hr,nunn~ the station or the
warder. The year IS dedicated
trr th ~ memory of Erma A.
S.y fang , the associate gra nd
lnt:~tron , who passed away in
June, 1971. The colors used in
tile de corations of the chapter
f!JOIII, made by Ralph Webb,
we re blue and gold. Their
daughter, Mrs . JoAnn Foster,
and son, Dr . James Webb, se nt
the gold flowers used in the
decorations .
The color scheme of blue and
gold was used in the dining
room by the decorating
commi ttee , Chl orus Grimm,
Grella Simpson and No ra
Cross.
Delicious refreshments were
served to l:ij members and
visiturs £rom a table lighted
with blue and gold ca ndles in

LADIES

SLACKS

By Burlington
and Ballet

Reg . 57.00

LADIES

HOLIDAY
DRESSES

PANT SUITS
Reg.

sn.oo

% Price

only sis
1

2 BLONDE

RACK

WIGLETS

DRESSES

Reg. 515.00

$3.00

on~

sur

Merry Christmas and A
Happy New Year To All

ALINE WEAVER'S DRESS AND
BEAUTY SHOP
5th &amp; Vine

949-3584

Racine

If It's Fine Upholstered Furniture
You Are Looking For. ...

OPEN EVENINGS

You are invited to come, look. create beautiful
rooms! With the finest furnitur e for beauty,
co mfort. and sly ling in th is area.

AT SPECIAL
EASY
TERMS

....... ._ . . . . iiDII-allt'!I44!4UAI(Itl44AiiDIIG4

STORE HOURS:
OPEN DAILY 8 AM TO 10 PM
SUN DAY 10:30 AM TO 12:30 PM
AND 5:00 PM TO 9 PM

GIFT tERTIFICATES
GIVEN AWAY EACH FRIDAY

3-10-17-24

All lie-in to J&gt;U/1 oO a great
1
ook /or th e holiday nn&lt;l yenr round.
Mnny wi!ltl.., colors to .el ecl,

•500 CASH
Given Away Dec. 24

Clothiog House
POMEROY

.·

" A GOL£1 STAR STORE"

p.m. Friday.
MEETING CAN ('Ell FD
The Decelnbe!' meeting ol
Past Matroos, P 001eroy OES
Cbaplef. has been """""lied.

Hysell, Mrs. Norman Yeauger,
Mrs . Raullin Moyer, and Miss
Patty Glaze. Sending gifts
were Mrs . Don Erwin, Mrs.
Lowell Beaver, Mrs . John
Baker, and Mrs. Richard
Moyer.

'

You May Win These
Great Gifts For
Christmas
JUST STOP IN AT HARTS

AND REGISTER
Dra,wing is 6: 00 p.m.

SER\'ICES SET
Clwislmas service; at the
Sacred Heart Catholic Church
ba•·e been announced. Vigil
Mass will be held at 7 p.m. on
Fnday . Christmas Eve.
Chrislmas Mas•es will be at
lnidnighLat8a.m. and 10 a.m.
Criessims will be heard from
; to a p.m . 00 Thursday, from
II a.m. to noon and 3:31l to 4:30
p.m. on Frida)'. No confessions
will he heard before either the 7
p.m. or Midnight Masses.

December 22 at
Han's Used Cars.

RUPP MINI SCRAMBLER

NOTICE
GIVEN BY HART'S USED CARS

We Will Observe
Special Hours On

IF YOU DON'T WIN ONE, BUY ONE!
PRICED FROM

Dettmher 24 and 31

Mason Co . Bank - $25.00 Savings Bond
Appa lachian Tire Co., Pt. Pleasant - Battery
New Haven Super Mkt - Giit Certificate
Oliver's America n Oil Station - Gift Certificate
Millers Super Market -Gift Certificale .
Flecher's Texaco - Gift Certificate
Batey Hardware -Gift Certificate
BurU.n Sunoco - Gift Certificate
Raney 's Market -Gift Certificate
Dairy Haven -Gift Certificate
New Haven Furniture - Set of Lamps
J&amp;S Pizza - 9" Pizza
Pt. Pleasant-Mason Auto. Glass - Gift Certificate
Open All Day Sunday
For the convenience of our customers.

On lhese days our office wil close

at l:OO p.m.
THI ATHIIII$ COUHTY
IAYIMlS a lOAjll CO.

Meigs f.aunty Branch
296

w. SeCond

VISIT IN COLLMBlS
Mr . and Mrs. Bob Hoeflich
and
dau ghter.
J a)'ne,
Pomeroy, spent the weekend in
Colum bus visiting Mr and
Mrs. Mike Hammer, J.oo Ann
1 Kimberly .
:

$12!r TO $32900

WE HAVE A FINE DISPLAY. COME IN AND SEE

PomeniJ, Ohio

HART'S USED CARS
NEW HAVEN

PHONE 882·2• ...
·
........

W. VA.

WE ACCEPT
FEDERAL
STAMPS

DELIVERY

FAIRMONT

EGG NOG .................. !..

* * *

New York

Cwnty )Dfinnary.
FRIDAY
CHRJS']'MAS EVE senires.
!'mid uy Qrurch of Olrist, 1:30

DANCE, BUFFET SET
A New Year's Eve dance and
buffet will be held on Fnda!·.
Dec. 31, beginning at 9 p m al
the American Legwn Home m
Pomeroy . Members of the
Drew Webster Post 3\l and their
guests are invited Orga n
music will be by Armand
Turley .

ICE MILK ................~~...

FREE

MIDDI.EPORT, 0.

VALUABLE MERCHANDISE

NOW NECKWEAR.
Striped, Solid. Pnuerne!l, ~-ft•

Lims Club, Wednesday noon,
Pomeroy United Metllodtst
Qrurch; gift exchange.
omo vALLEY C&lt;&gt;mmander}', 7:30 p.m. Pw!eroy
Masllnic Temple. All inigb!s to
ccme in full llllifonn_ Knights
and their ladies will visit the
children's bcme and the Meigs

DAIRY SPECIALS

BAKER FURNITURE

GIVE-AWAY

I' , lb h&lt;&gt;X S.\.00

POMEROY- MIDDLEPORT

PRICES EFFECTIVE THR

· · SAVINGS ...... . .

POMEROY MERCHANTS
GOLD STAR CHRISTMAS

pa .. k,l ~t' fd!rd
with a \Hit'!\ uf duKnl:ucs .tnd hut ter bon~
· cre.1 m~. nn t(, cw.p ~nd
t'he-v.·r cemer-.

missim. $1.,50.
AN!Ii'UAL Christmas party
for all retired or laid oil employes ol Local Union :i171
Wednesday at Masat Youtll
Cenlff beginning at 11 a.m.

honoring Mrs. Earl McKinley
.....,. a feature of the annual
Christmas party of the
teachers and workers of the
primar;· department of the
Middleport Church of Christ
Sunday School. The party held
Friday night was hosted by
Mrs. Arthur Stobart.
Games were played with
J11i= going to Mrs. McKinley,
~Irs . Denver Rice and Mrs.
U..waa Boyer. Gifts from the
pnmary dl'partment workers
........, presented to Mrs. Carl
Roach. superintendent, and
~h s.s Boyer. past superintendent. ~Irs. Richard Long

was renamed to the flower
committee . Mrs . Harold Wolfe
a~isted Mrs. Stobart in seri
vmg refreshments:
Gifts were presented to Mrs.
McKinley by those named and
Mrs. Roger Long, Mrs. Dale

FOOD

ALL DRAWl NGS
HELD IN THE
POMEROY
PARKING LOT

Pomeroy Stores
Open Evenings

gge

Pomeroy Ben Franklin

lola 's Dress Shop
Nelson's Drugs

Moore's Store
Porf'eroy Cement Block

J&amp;R Sports Shop
Craw's Steak House

Swisher &amp; Lohse Drugs

LYONS MARKET

ORANGES

59~

RIGHT

I

%pt

RESERVED
TO

ATIIIIIlAIID
IIIIIWID IIEI'I', SIORE

LIMIT
QUANTITIE S

PARKAY

6 STICK

2

69~

1

LB.
PKG.

SUPERIORS
!CONTRIBUTORS )

Davis - Warner

ln .

FULLY
COOKED

SEMI-BONELESS

sur~;nce

Cleland Really
Smith Nelson Auto S.IH
The Daily Sentinel
WMPO Rodio

OCEAN SPRAY

CRAN~~.............; .. 29

4

Bank

Blue &amp; Grey Restaurant

Goessler's Jewelry
StiHler's Dept. Store
Marguerite's Shoe Store

Athens Co. S.vings &amp;
loan, !Meigs Branch)

&amp;

lb.

Pomeroy National Bank

Pomeroy landmark

~

Kroger Store
Elberlelds Dept. Store
The l&amp;Z Shop
Ebersb.Jch
Hardware
New York Clolhing
House

"•

Pomeroy Motor Co.
G&amp;J Auto Parts
Welker' s Ashlan d
Station

Free Parkirtg All This Week In Pomeroy Parking Lot

· - ~--------------------_J

FROZEN

· PUMPKIN
PIES

,.

FOR

:

BAKERS SEMI SWEET

..................~;...

49

~ · SHORTENING .......... ~. 79~

3 $1 00

St•tion

GOI.DEiflSLE

GOLDEN ISLE - PURE VEGETABl£

Athens Messenger

Farmers
Savings

Chapman's Shoes

j
•

These participating merchants are
now giving free lickets :
Pom@roy Flower Shop
The Fabric Shop
Sears Catalog Store
Hartley's Shoes
K&amp;C Jewelers

AT WINE
WAID CROSS i!IIS

MARGARINE

French 's Sunoco

No purchase i necessary to
receive free tickets al par ticipating stores .

• .

•

I
l~l!!===
J
AT TUPPERS PIMNS

ge
Wh1ppmg Cream ...........3
•

~1ft

C HRISTM.AS Da nc e ,
Wednesday, 8:JO..ll:JO p.m.,
Southern High School. Music
bv " Willie" sponsored b!' ·
~uthern High Tri-M . Ad-

FOR THE HOLIDAY?

FAIRMONT

_ . . an exqu•me

WEDNESDA\'

CLAN COMING

For That Specml Man!

THE l ;JFr BOX

A surprise layette shower

.•.

TIJESDAY
WOMEN'S Aux ili a q .
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
potluck Christmas dinner and
program, "People Chriswaas
party, hospital dining room . 6
Cards . •· Approximately 155
p.m. Tuesday. $1 gift ...
persons attended the program change.
in which the Chrisunas. story
CHESTER LODGE J!J.
was told again by the various
Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. Ouistmas
Sunday School classes. Charles dinner. Meeting and party
E•·ans. superintendenl of the
follow . $1 gift exchange.
school. welcomed all present
GROUP II , Presbyter1aro
and announced that the
children's white gift offering of Church, 7:30p.m. home of ~Irs
food and the adult offering Harry S. Moore. with ~Irs
would be used for senior Joseph Bailey. co-hostess. l 1
citizens in the area "ith special gift exchange.
CHRISTMAS DA:'\ CE
needs.
The young people in the Tuesday 8:30 to 12 Wahama
Luther League youth group High School Gym sponsored by
have decorated the two Pomeroy.Mason FireChristmas trees in the sanc- Departments. Music by "Tho
tuary witll Christian symbols Willie... Special nwnb&lt;n b)·
the)• have made at previous "Over The Hill Gang ...
meetings. The league \\ill lead
all interested youth and adults
in caroling to area shut -ins on
SON BORN DEC. Jl
Wednesda)·, beginning at 6:30
Mr. and Mrs. W. Lee Roush.
p.m.
Logan, are announcing the
birth of a son, Joseph .tJJen. on
l:le&lt;'.l3 at St. Marys Hospital in
Nelsonville. Grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Roush.
Middleport, and Mrs. Jo;;eph
R. Johnson, Pomeroy. Great"Little Boys" by Mickey Reed : grandmothers are Mrs. Jessie
" Christmas Thoughts" by Sisson, Middleport, and ~Irs.
Susie Hickey; " What lt Nora Johnson, Grow City . Mr.
~leans " by Wanda Hickey; " !
and Mrs. Roush ha.-. t"·o otller
See You.. by Ronnie Arnold ; " I children. a son, Rodney Dean.
Wish" by Pat Arnold, and "The and a daughter. Cheryl Adina .
Bells' Story," by Anna Wiles.
All of the children sang "I
Heard the Bells on Chriswaas
HOME FROlll COlLEGE
Day."
Miss Billie Jeanne Carter . a
The junior class taught by
senior , and Scou Carter. a
Mrs . Eva Walker had
junior, both studenls a t
recitations. Greg Arnold gave
Roanoke Btble C oll e ~e.
"A Christmas Prayer," Elaine
Ellkbeth City , N. r and ~lr
Barnhart had "Suppose," and
Lin Veacy of Georgetown. Del .
Jeff Couch , "A Prayer in the
a friend of Miss Car"'r . ar&lt;
Snow."
here for the holidays w1th Mr
At lhe conclusion of the
and Mrs . Bill Carl&lt;'r ol
program Santa made a visit
Bradbury .
and treats were given to the
r hildren.

A playlet , "Animals of You Glad " by Scou Hysell:
Christmas," was presented at "Merry Christmas ," Todd
tile annual Christmas program Hysell: " My Park" by Tracy
of the Pomer .. First Baptist Reed ; "The Bells Talk" by
Church Sunday night.
Timmy Reed . The children
Youths in the playlet were in were
joined
by
the
native costumin g of the congregation for ·'Joy to the
countries
which
they World ."
represented and carried
The senior high class of the
posters depicting animals and Rev. Rober! Kuhn presented
their role in holiday customs of the na tivity with Janelle Kuhn
the countries . Mrs . Oliver as the narralor . Karla Kuhn
Michael had charge of the was cast as Mary , Jim Wiles as
playlet presented by the junior Joseph, Keith Bailey, David
high class.
Barnhart and Guy Walker as
Taking roles were Keith the shephe rd s; and Rusty
Bailey representing the Holy Walker, Richard Couch, and
Land ; Lynn Reed and Diana Ralph Arnold as the wise men,
Arnold , the Ozarks ; Ri ck and Debi Callas the angel.
Seylor, Russia ; Guy Walker, Karla Kuhn sang "Silent
Ecuador ; Rusty Walker , Night" during the scene .
France; Lola Walker, Den- . Mrs. Orval Wiles' primar~
mark; Rick Couch, England; class had recitations including
Debbie Bailey, Mexico; Ralph " Please" by Sandy Reed :
Arnold , Norway; Jim Wiles,
Belgiwn ; Robin Kuhn, Spain;
FAMILY DINED
Karla Kuhn , Sweden; Ronnie
A pre-Christmas family
C&lt;&gt;uch, Switzerland; and Debi
SON BORN DEC. 12
dinnor party was held Sunday
Call, the United States.
Mr . and Mrs. Jon Hannan, at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
JeneUe Kuhn was narrator Vinton , Va ., are announcing Harry Davis. The group exfor the skit and the posters the birth of a son, Bret changed gifts around a lighted
were made by Mrs. Margaret Michael, born on Dec. 12. The tree . Attending were Mrs .
Ella Lewis and students of the infanl weighed six pounds and Harold Johnson , Mr. and Mrs .
art department of Meigs High is Mr. and Mrs. Hannan 's first Richard Leifheit, Emma Jo
School. At the conclusion of the child. Mrs. Hannan is the and Kirt, Springfield: Mr. and
playlet. the posters were fo rmer Kathy Lacey. Grand- Mrs. Robert I oew, Charlotte,
flipped over to show the parents are Mr . and Mrs. Debbie and R". :n, Colwnbus ;
message, "Merry Christmas." Clarence Lacey of Ashland, Miss Jyl Beaver, Middleport;
Mrs . George Skinner 's Ky. James E. Hannan of Mr. and Mrs. William Lehew,
kindergarten class gave Kenova , v· Va . and Mrs . Jo Ted , John, Billy and Cheryl ,
reciU.tions as follows : "Are Harman of Ashland, Ky.
Pomeroy.

!Jiyette Shower Was a Surprise

Social Calendar

Youths .- Present Playlet

matron and worthy patrun uf

OPEN EVENINGS

Seu tzling , president; Mrs.
Henry Reibel, vice president;
Miss Erma Smith, secreU.ry ;
and :vtrs. Fred Dressauer,
treasurer.
The meeting was preceded
by a dinner at Craw's Steak
House . At the Ebersbach home
extensively decorated in the
Christmas motif, the members
exchanged gifts around a
lighted tree. In the role of
Santa was Miss Smith. Games
were played •'ith prizes going
to Mrs. Reibel, Miss Smith,
Mrs . Fred Dessauer, and Mrs.
:\eutzling .
Christmas punch and cookies
were served by the hostess .
Miss Smith presided at the
punch bowl. Mrs. Freda Duffy
was a guest. Others attending
were Mrs . Albert Ebersbach,
Mrs. Everett Dailey, Mrs. Phil
Meinhart, Mrs. Max Meinhart,
Mrs. Dale Smith, Mrs. Grover
Erb, and Mrs. Mabel Wolfe .

•

I

_
e
Fruit Cocktail...3 89

GOlDEN ISLE

303
CANs

UBBY

Rlt.GER'S

R~

DRIP, REC. PERK

.
llB.$2
OOFFEE ........~.. •

25

atOCOlATt .

12 OL
PKG.

CHIPS

49~

Wnll Coupon

~~EXPIRES 12-24-Jl
Good AI BIG J MARKETS

ANGEL RAKE

COCONUT
2 3~~; 49~
EXPIRES 12-24-71 with coupon
AT BIG 3 MKTS.

2%

PUMPKIN.......~~..... 29~
• _I_

I

'f

r
r

�'

.

The .. Daily Senlinol, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., l:le&lt;'. 21,1971

7- The Daily Sentinol, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., l:le&lt;'. 21, 1971

New ·Officers Named

Annual Program
Given at Church ·

Rebecca ]o Steele Betrothed
\ lr and Mrs. Robert M. Steele, Pomeroy Route 3, are
announc ing the engagement of their daughter, Rebecca Jo,
w James V. Broderick, son of Mr . and Mrs . Vincent
Broderick, Pomeroy Route 2. Miss Steele is a 1971 grad uate
of Eastern High School. Mr . Broderick, a 1970 graduate of
Meigs High School, is attending the Tri-&lt;:ounty Technical
School majoring in forestry .
Wedding plans are incomplete .

Recitatwns, ca rols and a
panlomiJJJe were included in
the annual Chris tmas program
of the children 's department of
the Middl eport Chur ch of
Christ Sunday ni ght.
Mrs Carl Roa ch, superintenden t, had charge of the
pr ogram , with Miss Patty
Glaze serving a.s accomp1mist.
The childr en e ntered th e
sanctuary as the congregatton
sang " Joy to the World ."
Amy Erwin gl:tvf' the
welcome . Children of the
cradle roll , Parker Long, Darin
Wolfe , .Judy Mowery , Jeff Hood
and Darin Roach with their
teacher, Mrs . Roger Long,
presented several ~ible finge~
plays.
Recita tions were given by
Beth Ann Wolfe . Mary Beth
Lun~, Scott McKinley , Danny
Thomas, Megan Long, Sheryl
Rifne, Tr,dd May , Shcllle and
Sherrie F'ox , F'rankie M;utin,
Mike Dorst and .Jeff Nash .
Darin Hrn1eh san g " Baby in a
Manger ' ' , and Jeff 1\:ash
pla)'l'LJ pianr, solo, " 0 Holy
Ntght" 1111 ••f the children sang

Dinner Party
Held Recently

New officers were elected at
the holiday meeting of ~e
Third Fnday Club held at the
home of Miss Sybil Ebersbach .
Elected were Mrs . Ben .

"On Chn :-;Lmiis IJCJ} ,· and
'· Awa \· in the Mi:ln 4er
Tak; ng part m a pl.lntrJ!Ilime
"Chri st is Burn·· were dHidren
of the Prim ar\" J c lt~ s~. Robin
Hf·n.dd as \1f:l r.y , B r~ IJ!J~ F1JK. as
,Jusq lh, Anga: B&lt;Jkl'l .\ 1lndy
Lcmg an d B ~c k} J.q!l~ :J 'i the
s hep tle rd s: Ha rh1 1: .\1rry er,
Kathy Hess and :vl1ke IJer.t, the
wisemen .J!'rlfiii: Sto rl!t': was
the narra urr . &lt;..tnd ~CJt h ;. f~a ker,
Janie Va n .\ lt'tto r, Pon. \orth
etnd Tr uJ\· Hrrt1Ch v: t• fl.' the
angels. Thf: gPJUfJ ]•J.r••:d by
Belsy He ra ld. Ttna lltller,
Timmy iVJ!ll cr . CJHd T1 l11.my
Frazer s&lt;:HI!.; ·A n~ l +l \\ I· Have
Heard Dn Hig h ··
Mrs . fV1ach gan: a P·£J ding
'&lt; Christ tJ t the DtJrrr" . &lt;.~ .' lrl .\1iss
Gl::~ze pla yed ··s il ent :\ 1~ ~~ t ' ' on
the (J rgall r·h lfl li' .~ ror
congn:g&lt;:1lion smg1nt4 t/, i. : r·arol.
The snnttuary WiJ S d ! · r ·• ~r &lt;-~led
fur th e seJ srJn b~ the
Homebuilder.'! Cl C~ ~.'i.

Class Installs
New Officen
Mrs. Joseph ( IJIJk rfi.S t8.lled
the offi cers fiJr l!J/2 ;1 l &lt;r r· ecent
meeting rJf the Ow·-lhn-One
CICJ ss uf the P l rrtl t·l"l ·• F'irst
Baptist Ch urch.
fnslil lled were .\1 r, T. T.
Shelton, presidPnt . ~.I rs 1.. P.
Sterrett, vice pn:.s ld• ·nt. Mrs.
.] Edword FrJster. ~ r · r-r" l.ary ;
Mr s.
Will l&lt;t tll
\\";1tson,
treasurer . \1r s
Lr•fJ rge
Skinner prt: sirlt·d ;rt the
rueelin g which opl'wd ;~ lh the
l,(,nl' s Pr&lt;.tyer and 't11' clas.'l
sung . A letter was r1·arl from
Mr . and Mrs. l.t ~ li :ililnley
whu will obsi.'rve tl w1 r 50th
weddin g tm niv ersc• r ~ 11rt Dec.
24. Mrs. Cook wa'i na med
leoc her uf the clas:-.
Fur devolions etwh mi.'m ber
gave &lt;• Chr istmas pr!('m. The
Hev. Hobert Kuhn ga. ve the
bless1ng at the Uible. There
was group singi ng 1Jf ··silent
:-iighl." Attending were Mr.
anti .\1r~ . George Skinner, Mr .
ami Mrs. William Wa ts on, the
Hev . Mr. and Mrs. Kuhn, Mrs.
Stcrrell, Mrs . Shelton, Mrs.
CorJk, Mrs. Leslie Pnee , Mrs.
Albert Smith, Mrs. Lilli a n
Pierce , Mrs. Olive r Michatl ,
Mrs Harry Bailey, Mr s.
Caddie Wickham, and Mrs.
Ellen Couch . De bbi Call was a

crystal candelabra s . The
committee was Martha L.
Beegle, Beulah Stobart , /liora
Cross. Bernice Theiss and
Phyllis Knightin g
Ruth Barnitz and Opal
Diddle registered the guests.
Naomi Brinker and Bernice
Carpenter passed out the
programs and pin-&lt;lns . Bar·
bara Dugan and Naomi
Brinker presided at the coffee
service. All past matrons and
past pa trons of Racine Chapter
were on the welcoming coma
mit tee.
Guests from 31 Order of the
Eastern Star chapters attend ed the insU. IIation .

Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Webb

Webbs Installed
HAC INf. - Cora and Ralph
Webb were Insta lled as wor thy

PANTY HOSE

Bolin, di stri ct president; June
Stanl ey , di s trict treasurer;

VISiting w{)rthJ' matrons and

Kacine Chapter No. 1:14, Order
The CJnnual Chri stma s dinner
of
Eastern Sl.clr , in a ~rand
party of the H(1se Carden Club
installati(J n· ceremony at the
DAlGHTER ADOPTED
and lw o s(ms. Paul 12, &lt;~nd of Tuppers Pll.lln S was held
Racine :vta s! JOJ C Templ e
Mr. and ~Ir s . Carl Shreve of Mark 10. :&gt;Irs. Shreve IS the recently at the .\1y Th ree Suns
Wednesday evemng , Dec . 1j
Hillside Dr ., Cmcinnati , are former Vi cky Clark . Grand- Hestaunmt. Mrs. Charles Carr
Other officers installed were
ann oun cing the Dec. 16 parents are Mr. and Mrs served as hoste ss fur the
l.etha
and Cliffr1 rl.l Morris,
adop ti on of a four-month-old Frank Clark of Hemlock meeting.
assoc ia te matron and patron ;
Members respfJnded tu roll
daughter named Wend y Rae Grove, and ~lr. and Mrs. lithe;
Gretta Simp sr,n, secre tary ;
Lynn . The couple have another Shreve, Coolville .
c::. ll by na min g a Christmas
Chlo
ru s Gn mrn , trea s urer :
adopted daughter, Vickie Sue.
custom of am1ther country .
Lillian Weese, cfJnduttre ss ;
Mrs. Carl Barnhill presided at
Opal
Diddle, asso&lt;:iatc conthe n1ecting with Mrs . Hobert
ductress ; Bt~rbara Dugan .
Dorst g1ving the verse of the
chaplain ; Lt-~uret Circle .
month. Devotional . readin gs
marshal; Velma Qu : 1len ,
and a Christmas prayer was
organ ist ; Mary Be:.l :lwin ,
given by Mrs. Glen Stout, and
Adah; Donna Hill , Ruth :
Mrs . Frederick Goebel
Mildred Dunuhew, Es ther ;
presented a program on the
Opal Cummin s, Marth a.
origin of Chri stmas customs.
EJecta, M&lt;-~r g aret Wes t ;
A report was given on the
Ka thleen Mc:\iekle, warder ;
cuun ty flower show. Members
Charles
Hensley, senllnel.
were rl!miruled to have
The trustl:es are Rernice
Christmas remembrances £or
Carpenter, Ben Philson and
lhe rest home patients to Mrs.
I .uuise Stewart .
Dorst this week. The lr£tveling
The instol!ing offi cer was
prize was won by Mrs. Barn·
Helen
M. Bartley, worthy
hill. A gift exc hange was held
gra nd matron. Assisting were
and Mrs. Ca rr presented gifts
Berntce Carpenter. invit in ~
to the menther" . The January
grand
marshal ; Naomi and
19 meeting wi ll be at the home
guest.
Wi lliam King, installing grand
of Mrs . Ulah Swan .
marshals ; Wilma Styer, in'""""""l(rWII(rWI~~~-~IIt&lt;ll!rl&lt;l!.'i111.'i11'"'"lll:I'O"t stalling grand organist; Louise
Stewart. installing grand
chaplain, Leona Hensley, installin g grand conductress :
William Stewart, installin g
(CLOSE 6 PM CHRISTMAS EVE)
'. gr;md warde r. and Hichard
. Ougon . installing grand sen·
tinel.
Solot :-,L'&gt; were Gaile Dew ,
&lt;l c(·ompanicd
by
Verna
Hammond: Ruth Hea th , ac. cun1pamed by W i~ma Styer :
Ben Philson sang "The Lord 's
Prayer" as the closing solo
ar ron1panied by Margaret
Bl;.teltnar.
Introduce d and welcomed by
the retiring Worthy Matron,
Barbara Duga n were Helen M.
Bartley , worthy grand matron ;
A&gt;,ORT I·Il ( 110 ( OI.A TES
. Roberta K. Mindling, past
crr:. rn s. nuts,
grand matron ; Betty Sperow.
tn111 " t .H .L'Twl~. n •HI_~ -~~ ~- rn f kc -;~,. nrch.
grand
organist:
Jean
l rumht·&lt;., .md di t·w ~ l t 'fll er &lt;;, .ltp pcd 1n ftnc sc
Woodruff , gra nd warder :
dJ rk .t nd mdk t hr)toLtrr
· Marlene Logston, deputy
lb. SHJO
2 lh 51 9)
; lh SS 911 ) lb. S9.75
· gra nd mat ron ; Winifred
Hooper, grand representative
~ '" box H OO
. to British Columbia ; Janet

patrrrns; past matrons and pa st

CHRISTMAS
GIFTS
FOR
EVERYONE .

·Lutherans to Celebrate
Coming of Christ Child
St. Paul Lutheran Church at
231 East Second St., Pomeroy,
will celebrate the coming of the
Christ Child on Christmas Eve,
Friday at 11 p.m. with a candlelight service, a tradition at
St. Paul Church, and always a
high-point of the Church year .
The service this year will
include congregational singing
of the traditional Christmas
carols, the reading of the
Christmas story from the
Scriptures, special music by
the St. Paul Lutheran Church
senior choir directed by Mrs.
Charlotte Elberfeld and accompanied by Mrs. Corrine
Lund as well as the youlh
singing group directed by Mrs.
Cindy Coffman. A Christmas
sennonette will be given by the
Rev. Arthur C. Lund who is the
pastor of the congregation.
The general public is, as

always, most cordially imited
to attend.
The Chrisunas season has
been a very active time for the
members and friends of St.
Paul congregation . The women
of the congregation held their
annual ChriStmas bazaar on
Dec. 3 and 4 which included
many beautiful handmade
items that had been made by
the women of the church. ·
On Sunday afternoon,
December 12, Pastor and Mrs.
Arthur Lund held an open
house at the parsonage for
members and friends of the
cong regation and local clergy
and their wives. Various ladies
prepared the lunch and helped
in the kitchen .
On Sunday evening , l:le&lt;'. 19,
members of the Sunday School
presented
a Christmas

patrons of Racine Chapter, an d
h iJfiCi f" t! d mfJsons .
:vir ""d ;;Irs . Wehbs' theme
fiJr the year is " Peace," and
hr,nunn~ the station or the
warder. The year IS dedicated
trr th ~ memory of Erma A.
S.y fang , the associate gra nd
lnt:~tron , who passed away in
June, 1971. The colors used in
tile de corations of the chapter
f!JOIII, made by Ralph Webb,
we re blue and gold. Their
daughter, Mrs . JoAnn Foster,
and son, Dr . James Webb, se nt
the gold flowers used in the
decorations .
The color scheme of blue and
gold was used in the dining
room by the decorating
commi ttee , Chl orus Grimm,
Grella Simpson and No ra
Cross.
Delicious refreshments were
served to l:ij members and
visiturs £rom a table lighted
with blue and gold ca ndles in

LADIES

SLACKS

By Burlington
and Ballet

Reg . 57.00

LADIES

HOLIDAY
DRESSES

PANT SUITS
Reg.

sn.oo

% Price

only sis
1

2 BLONDE

RACK

WIGLETS

DRESSES

Reg. 515.00

$3.00

on~

sur

Merry Christmas and A
Happy New Year To All

ALINE WEAVER'S DRESS AND
BEAUTY SHOP
5th &amp; Vine

949-3584

Racine

If It's Fine Upholstered Furniture
You Are Looking For. ...

OPEN EVENINGS

You are invited to come, look. create beautiful
rooms! With the finest furnitur e for beauty,
co mfort. and sly ling in th is area.

AT SPECIAL
EASY
TERMS

....... ._ . . . . iiDII-allt'!I44!4UAI(Itl44AiiDIIG4

STORE HOURS:
OPEN DAILY 8 AM TO 10 PM
SUN DAY 10:30 AM TO 12:30 PM
AND 5:00 PM TO 9 PM

GIFT tERTIFICATES
GIVEN AWAY EACH FRIDAY

3-10-17-24

All lie-in to J&gt;U/1 oO a great
1
ook /or th e holiday nn&lt;l yenr round.
Mnny wi!ltl.., colors to .el ecl,

•500 CASH
Given Away Dec. 24

Clothiog House
POMEROY

.·

" A GOL£1 STAR STORE"

p.m. Friday.
MEETING CAN ('Ell FD
The Decelnbe!' meeting ol
Past Matroos, P 001eroy OES
Cbaplef. has been """""lied.

Hysell, Mrs. Norman Yeauger,
Mrs . Raullin Moyer, and Miss
Patty Glaze. Sending gifts
were Mrs . Don Erwin, Mrs.
Lowell Beaver, Mrs . John
Baker, and Mrs. Richard
Moyer.

'

You May Win These
Great Gifts For
Christmas
JUST STOP IN AT HARTS

AND REGISTER
Dra,wing is 6: 00 p.m.

SER\'ICES SET
Clwislmas service; at the
Sacred Heart Catholic Church
ba•·e been announced. Vigil
Mass will be held at 7 p.m. on
Fnday . Christmas Eve.
Chrislmas Mas•es will be at
lnidnighLat8a.m. and 10 a.m.
Criessims will be heard from
; to a p.m . 00 Thursday, from
II a.m. to noon and 3:31l to 4:30
p.m. on Frida)'. No confessions
will he heard before either the 7
p.m. or Midnight Masses.

December 22 at
Han's Used Cars.

RUPP MINI SCRAMBLER

NOTICE
GIVEN BY HART'S USED CARS

We Will Observe
Special Hours On

IF YOU DON'T WIN ONE, BUY ONE!
PRICED FROM

Dettmher 24 and 31

Mason Co . Bank - $25.00 Savings Bond
Appa lachian Tire Co., Pt. Pleasant - Battery
New Haven Super Mkt - Giit Certificate
Oliver's America n Oil Station - Gift Certificate
Millers Super Market -Gift Certificale .
Flecher's Texaco - Gift Certificate
Batey Hardware -Gift Certificate
BurU.n Sunoco - Gift Certificate
Raney 's Market -Gift Certificate
Dairy Haven -Gift Certificate
New Haven Furniture - Set of Lamps
J&amp;S Pizza - 9" Pizza
Pt. Pleasant-Mason Auto. Glass - Gift Certificate
Open All Day Sunday
For the convenience of our customers.

On lhese days our office wil close

at l:OO p.m.
THI ATHIIII$ COUHTY
IAYIMlS a lOAjll CO.

Meigs f.aunty Branch
296

w. SeCond

VISIT IN COLLMBlS
Mr . and Mrs. Bob Hoeflich
and
dau ghter.
J a)'ne,
Pomeroy, spent the weekend in
Colum bus visiting Mr and
Mrs. Mike Hammer, J.oo Ann
1 Kimberly .
:

$12!r TO $32900

WE HAVE A FINE DISPLAY. COME IN AND SEE

PomeniJ, Ohio

HART'S USED CARS
NEW HAVEN

PHONE 882·2• ...
·
........

W. VA.

WE ACCEPT
FEDERAL
STAMPS

DELIVERY

FAIRMONT

EGG NOG .................. !..

* * *

New York

Cwnty )Dfinnary.
FRIDAY
CHRJS']'MAS EVE senires.
!'mid uy Qrurch of Olrist, 1:30

DANCE, BUFFET SET
A New Year's Eve dance and
buffet will be held on Fnda!·.
Dec. 31, beginning at 9 p m al
the American Legwn Home m
Pomeroy . Members of the
Drew Webster Post 3\l and their
guests are invited Orga n
music will be by Armand
Turley .

ICE MILK ................~~...

FREE

MIDDI.EPORT, 0.

VALUABLE MERCHANDISE

NOW NECKWEAR.
Striped, Solid. Pnuerne!l, ~-ft•

Lims Club, Wednesday noon,
Pomeroy United Metllodtst
Qrurch; gift exchange.
omo vALLEY C&lt;&gt;mmander}', 7:30 p.m. Pw!eroy
Masllnic Temple. All inigb!s to
ccme in full llllifonn_ Knights
and their ladies will visit the
children's bcme and the Meigs

DAIRY SPECIALS

BAKER FURNITURE

GIVE-AWAY

I' , lb h&lt;&gt;X S.\.00

POMEROY- MIDDLEPORT

PRICES EFFECTIVE THR

· · SAVINGS ...... . .

POMEROY MERCHANTS
GOLD STAR CHRISTMAS

pa .. k,l ~t' fd!rd
with a \Hit'!\ uf duKnl:ucs .tnd hut ter bon~
· cre.1 m~. nn t(, cw.p ~nd
t'he-v.·r cemer-.

missim. $1.,50.
AN!Ii'UAL Christmas party
for all retired or laid oil employes ol Local Union :i171
Wednesday at Masat Youtll
Cenlff beginning at 11 a.m.

honoring Mrs. Earl McKinley
.....,. a feature of the annual
Christmas party of the
teachers and workers of the
primar;· department of the
Middleport Church of Christ
Sunday School. The party held
Friday night was hosted by
Mrs. Arthur Stobart.
Games were played with
J11i= going to Mrs. McKinley,
~Irs . Denver Rice and Mrs.
U..waa Boyer. Gifts from the
pnmary dl'partment workers
........, presented to Mrs. Carl
Roach. superintendent, and
~h s.s Boyer. past superintendent. ~Irs. Richard Long

was renamed to the flower
committee . Mrs . Harold Wolfe
a~isted Mrs. Stobart in seri
vmg refreshments:
Gifts were presented to Mrs.
McKinley by those named and
Mrs. Roger Long, Mrs. Dale

FOOD

ALL DRAWl NGS
HELD IN THE
POMEROY
PARKING LOT

Pomeroy Stores
Open Evenings

gge

Pomeroy Ben Franklin

lola 's Dress Shop
Nelson's Drugs

Moore's Store
Porf'eroy Cement Block

J&amp;R Sports Shop
Craw's Steak House

Swisher &amp; Lohse Drugs

LYONS MARKET

ORANGES

59~

RIGHT

I

%pt

RESERVED
TO

ATIIIIIlAIID
IIIIIWID IIEI'I', SIORE

LIMIT
QUANTITIE S

PARKAY

6 STICK

2

69~

1

LB.
PKG.

SUPERIORS
!CONTRIBUTORS )

Davis - Warner

ln .

FULLY
COOKED

SEMI-BONELESS

sur~;nce

Cleland Really
Smith Nelson Auto S.IH
The Daily Sentinel
WMPO Rodio

OCEAN SPRAY

CRAN~~.............; .. 29

4

Bank

Blue &amp; Grey Restaurant

Goessler's Jewelry
StiHler's Dept. Store
Marguerite's Shoe Store

Athens Co. S.vings &amp;
loan, !Meigs Branch)

&amp;

lb.

Pomeroy National Bank

Pomeroy landmark

~

Kroger Store
Elberlelds Dept. Store
The l&amp;Z Shop
Ebersb.Jch
Hardware
New York Clolhing
House

"•

Pomeroy Motor Co.
G&amp;J Auto Parts
Welker' s Ashlan d
Station

Free Parkirtg All This Week In Pomeroy Parking Lot

· - ~--------------------_J

FROZEN

· PUMPKIN
PIES

,.

FOR

:

BAKERS SEMI SWEET

..................~;...

49

~ · SHORTENING .......... ~. 79~

3 $1 00

St•tion

GOI.DEiflSLE

GOLDEN ISLE - PURE VEGETABl£

Athens Messenger

Farmers
Savings

Chapman's Shoes

j
•

These participating merchants are
now giving free lickets :
Pom@roy Flower Shop
The Fabric Shop
Sears Catalog Store
Hartley's Shoes
K&amp;C Jewelers

AT WINE
WAID CROSS i!IIS

MARGARINE

French 's Sunoco

No purchase i necessary to
receive free tickets al par ticipating stores .

• .

•

I
l~l!!===
J
AT TUPPERS PIMNS

ge
Wh1ppmg Cream ...........3
•

~1ft

C HRISTM.AS Da nc e ,
Wednesday, 8:JO..ll:JO p.m.,
Southern High School. Music
bv " Willie" sponsored b!' ·
~uthern High Tri-M . Ad-

FOR THE HOLIDAY?

FAIRMONT

_ . . an exqu•me

WEDNESDA\'

CLAN COMING

For That Specml Man!

THE l ;JFr BOX

A surprise layette shower

.•.

TIJESDAY
WOMEN'S Aux ili a q .
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
potluck Christmas dinner and
program, "People Chriswaas
party, hospital dining room . 6
Cards . •· Approximately 155
p.m. Tuesday. $1 gift ...
persons attended the program change.
in which the Chrisunas. story
CHESTER LODGE J!J.
was told again by the various
Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. Ouistmas
Sunday School classes. Charles dinner. Meeting and party
E•·ans. superintendenl of the
follow . $1 gift exchange.
school. welcomed all present
GROUP II , Presbyter1aro
and announced that the
children's white gift offering of Church, 7:30p.m. home of ~Irs
food and the adult offering Harry S. Moore. with ~Irs
would be used for senior Joseph Bailey. co-hostess. l 1
citizens in the area "ith special gift exchange.
CHRISTMAS DA:'\ CE
needs.
The young people in the Tuesday 8:30 to 12 Wahama
Luther League youth group High School Gym sponsored by
have decorated the two Pomeroy.Mason FireChristmas trees in the sanc- Departments. Music by "Tho
tuary witll Christian symbols Willie... Special nwnb&lt;n b)·
the)• have made at previous "Over The Hill Gang ...
meetings. The league \\ill lead
all interested youth and adults
in caroling to area shut -ins on
SON BORN DEC. Jl
Wednesda)·, beginning at 6:30
Mr. and Mrs. W. Lee Roush.
p.m.
Logan, are announcing the
birth of a son, Joseph .tJJen. on
l:le&lt;'.l3 at St. Marys Hospital in
Nelsonville. Grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Roush.
Middleport, and Mrs. Jo;;eph
R. Johnson, Pomeroy. Great"Little Boys" by Mickey Reed : grandmothers are Mrs. Jessie
" Christmas Thoughts" by Sisson, Middleport, and ~Irs.
Susie Hickey; " What lt Nora Johnson, Grow City . Mr.
~leans " by Wanda Hickey; " !
and Mrs. Roush ha.-. t"·o otller
See You.. by Ronnie Arnold ; " I children. a son, Rodney Dean.
Wish" by Pat Arnold, and "The and a daughter. Cheryl Adina .
Bells' Story," by Anna Wiles.
All of the children sang "I
Heard the Bells on Chriswaas
HOME FROlll COlLEGE
Day."
Miss Billie Jeanne Carter . a
The junior class taught by
senior , and Scou Carter. a
Mrs . Eva Walker had
junior, both studenls a t
recitations. Greg Arnold gave
Roanoke Btble C oll e ~e.
"A Christmas Prayer," Elaine
Ellkbeth City , N. r and ~lr
Barnhart had "Suppose," and
Lin Veacy of Georgetown. Del .
Jeff Couch , "A Prayer in the
a friend of Miss Car"'r . ar&lt;
Snow."
here for the holidays w1th Mr
At lhe conclusion of the
and Mrs . Bill Carl&lt;'r ol
program Santa made a visit
Bradbury .
and treats were given to the
r hildren.

A playlet , "Animals of You Glad " by Scou Hysell:
Christmas," was presented at "Merry Christmas ," Todd
tile annual Christmas program Hysell: " My Park" by Tracy
of the Pomer .. First Baptist Reed ; "The Bells Talk" by
Church Sunday night.
Timmy Reed . The children
Youths in the playlet were in were
joined
by
the
native costumin g of the congregation for ·'Joy to the
countries
which
they World ."
represented and carried
The senior high class of the
posters depicting animals and Rev. Rober! Kuhn presented
their role in holiday customs of the na tivity with Janelle Kuhn
the countries . Mrs . Oliver as the narralor . Karla Kuhn
Michael had charge of the was cast as Mary , Jim Wiles as
playlet presented by the junior Joseph, Keith Bailey, David
high class.
Barnhart and Guy Walker as
Taking roles were Keith the shephe rd s; and Rusty
Bailey representing the Holy Walker, Richard Couch, and
Land ; Lynn Reed and Diana Ralph Arnold as the wise men,
Arnold , the Ozarks ; Ri ck and Debi Callas the angel.
Seylor, Russia ; Guy Walker, Karla Kuhn sang "Silent
Ecuador ; Rusty Walker , Night" during the scene .
France; Lola Walker, Den- . Mrs. Orval Wiles' primar~
mark; Rick Couch, England; class had recitations including
Debbie Bailey, Mexico; Ralph " Please" by Sandy Reed :
Arnold , Norway; Jim Wiles,
Belgiwn ; Robin Kuhn, Spain;
FAMILY DINED
Karla Kuhn , Sweden; Ronnie
A pre-Christmas family
C&lt;&gt;uch, Switzerland; and Debi
SON BORN DEC. 12
dinnor party was held Sunday
Call, the United States.
Mr . and Mrs. Jon Hannan, at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
JeneUe Kuhn was narrator Vinton , Va ., are announcing Harry Davis. The group exfor the skit and the posters the birth of a son, Bret changed gifts around a lighted
were made by Mrs. Margaret Michael, born on Dec. 12. The tree . Attending were Mrs .
Ella Lewis and students of the infanl weighed six pounds and Harold Johnson , Mr. and Mrs .
art department of Meigs High is Mr. and Mrs. Hannan 's first Richard Leifheit, Emma Jo
School. At the conclusion of the child. Mrs. Hannan is the and Kirt, Springfield: Mr. and
playlet. the posters were fo rmer Kathy Lacey. Grand- Mrs. Robert I oew, Charlotte,
flipped over to show the parents are Mr . and Mrs. Debbie and R". :n, Colwnbus ;
message, "Merry Christmas." Clarence Lacey of Ashland, Miss Jyl Beaver, Middleport;
Mrs . George Skinner 's Ky. James E. Hannan of Mr. and Mrs. William Lehew,
kindergarten class gave Kenova , v· Va . and Mrs . Jo Ted , John, Billy and Cheryl ,
reciU.tions as follows : "Are Harman of Ashland, Ky.
Pomeroy.

!Jiyette Shower Was a Surprise

Social Calendar

Youths .- Present Playlet

matron and worthy patrun uf

OPEN EVENINGS

Seu tzling , president; Mrs.
Henry Reibel, vice president;
Miss Erma Smith, secreU.ry ;
and :vtrs. Fred Dressauer,
treasurer.
The meeting was preceded
by a dinner at Craw's Steak
House . At the Ebersbach home
extensively decorated in the
Christmas motif, the members
exchanged gifts around a
lighted tree. In the role of
Santa was Miss Smith. Games
were played •'ith prizes going
to Mrs. Reibel, Miss Smith,
Mrs . Fred Dessauer, and Mrs.
:\eutzling .
Christmas punch and cookies
were served by the hostess .
Miss Smith presided at the
punch bowl. Mrs. Freda Duffy
was a guest. Others attending
were Mrs . Albert Ebersbach,
Mrs. Everett Dailey, Mrs. Phil
Meinhart, Mrs. Max Meinhart,
Mrs. Dale Smith, Mrs. Grover
Erb, and Mrs. Mabel Wolfe .

•

I

_
e
Fruit Cocktail...3 89

GOlDEN ISLE

303
CANs

UBBY

Rlt.GER'S

R~

DRIP, REC. PERK

.
llB.$2
OOFFEE ........~.. •

25

atOCOlATt .

12 OL
PKG.

CHIPS

49~

Wnll Coupon

~~EXPIRES 12-24-Jl
Good AI BIG J MARKETS

ANGEL RAKE

COCONUT
2 3~~; 49~
EXPIRES 12-24-71 with coupon
AT BIG 3 MKTS.

2%

PUMPKIN.......~~..... 29~
• _I_

I

'f

r
r

�r

''
.I

I

p

•

'

, .

,,

,

'

'

.

.

I

-·

-~
8 - The Daily Sentinel. Middleport -Pomeroy, 0 ., Dec. 21.1971

.

Sentinel Classijieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
Apple Gro,·e

POMEROY LANES
Wednesday Late M txed Leagu e
Decembe r IS. 197 1

Pts
ONe n-Holter
Cas sell Car sey
Rosenba um Mendm-.s

86
72
60

Morrow -Moore

S6

Po~eroy

2 SIGNS

Of

News, Events

Motor Co.

QUALITY

COSTUME PARTY,

.___(·

For Rent

,,

Business Services

NIC E TRAILER. I bedroom,
ideal for couple. 10 miles
north of Pomeroy . Phone 9112 ·

~==~~====~========~==========~~~~==~:===============~==:;~

- ---::-:::------'-2_·15-tic
6452.
TRAILER lOTS. Bob's Mobne ·

II

'

JOHNSON MASONRY

HANDCRAFT
GIFT ITEMS

';..0 ·)

.

r

By MRS. HERBERT ROt.:SH
1]191
Court. Rt. 124, Syracuse,
1971 CHEVELL E MA LIBU CPE
Mr. and Mrs . Owen An)hio. '1'12 -1951.
Sandalnood J'JI Ih br own v myl fop fact or t u 1r (r;.r-d r ·&lt;:. '"~C-d.
F ul t z. Bentle y
54
4 '1 tfc
derS()n
,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Clyde
V a F-ng 1m! .,., 1t h turbo hyd r omot 1c. p o :·r~r &lt;. T:d· r "t; E
Blak esle-e Hoyt
32
Complete
Pa rS()ns and ~linnie Riffle of
clor: K. . P B . r ad 10, Ral l 1 Nheel s w1th u nt ·r'· &lt;. I-" G. · r:-M
Ind . High Game Men )
D.
BE DROOM tra iler apart ·
QtJ ilr d s Retail ~-I ISS Co oll ret a l Cllr &amp; '&gt;(.)(~(
;:.r nrj
Rosenbd um 2C · D. Rosen
Christmas
Leon, W. Va. were dmner
menf , i d eal for couples
From the largest Tr uck or
Remodeling
ba um 20.1 . J Ca rsey llf-1 .• guests of Mr and ~Irs .-\rllfJld
Contac t M cClure 's Da i ry Isle.
decorations, W€ aring
Bulldozer Rad1ator to the
Women - J 0P'1tl ey 177 L
1970
CA
MARO
CPE
S309 S
'
1
'
1
2
5248
or
992
3436.
Anderson Sunday .
appareL
je welry ,
Sma llest Heater Cor e
Gilmore 16-l J Ben tley 16/
1) -15-1 21(
d:~'&gt; thnn IJJJOO m ll(:5 &amp; n pphlranu_. of n r --9; ··' P.., 1
Kitchens, Baths
I nd . H igh Se'l£':.! Men )
0
Nathan Biggs
Mrs. ~rald Ha;man sp&lt;:nt
ceramics.
~)po rt ~·qu rpp!':d . (irl':l ')l( &lt;.O pper Wll h •,anda :, v)r}, r •. 'r, r ,
Rosenbaum 55C· R Hol ter 5/3 .
Rad iator Specia tist
AVA ILABLE
Monday , 2
Monday with Mr. and \I rs Ted
t- 1nlr·d glr)C:. ',, fa ctor r dtr CO ndif iOn{:d ~ p0 • 1 &lt;., ,..,- rr · r &lt;-, ,
Room Additions
Doll s, a II dressed i n ~ty.te , !
0 . Meadows ..:8~ Women
J
bedr
oom
tra
der
,
furn
ished
,
r::onc;,olr· a1 r ', po l lo·~r- . tur bo h;dramat 1c po 11H ·. · :~;!' ,-) &amp;Hayman at Ollumbus
Be ntley 437 L Gil more 419, "~
kn
1
tted
and
cr-ocheted
_
(
Has
uti li ties pa 1d _ Phone 992 -7384
brcl ~":&lt;, 'JSO CIJ 1n '/ 8 r;n gine _ Rr; n ll r SriHf;
O..ven Jl]
Jeff Donohew s1at1oned at
And Palils
or 991 7133 .
to be seen to be apprec ialed )
High TearT' Stcr !eS - ONe n
Good Fellow Air Forte Base ,
l21931c
Many 1fe m s you have been
Holter 175.:.
Rosenbau m
Pom eroy
lookmg for . for lhat perf ect
Texas,
called
his
parents
\lr.
PI\ . 992 -2174
Meadows 17S·j Cassell Ca r sey
M O BI LE home and house, i n
go
ff.
1719.
an d Mrs . Roy Donohe«·
M iddleport. Both idea l for
couple . P hone 992 -5247 .
Wednesda y night arxl ..-hen
FOUR NEW HOMES,
12 19 61p
finishing·· his schooling will he
OPEH EVES. 8:00P .M.
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
assigned to Fort George H.
Wednesd a ·~ Aft er noon league
'IJMEROY, OHIO
D.AV . home in Pom er oy for
ONE HOME IN RACINE
Decembe r 15 , 1971
Meade, Md .
group meetin gs and parties ,
TWO HOME S IN SY RA CUSE
Won Lo sI
phone '1'12 5147.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Smtth
ONE HOM E ~ M I DD L EP ORT
Ba um Lui""' . r··
30
10
11
19
12tc
WANT
AD
NO MONEY OOWN
MARTHA ROSE , Owner
Team 4
30 10 vis ite d Ernest J ohnson at
Notice
INF
ORM
AT
ION
100
PCT.
FINANCING AVAILA~LE
Team 1
?2
18 Holzer Medical Center Sunda,·
DEADLIN E&gt;
located on County Road 14
2
B
ED
ROOM
mobile
home
·1n
J..
1
bedroom
Sl6,900.00
home can be purcha sed w ith a
Ridenour t ~ I
17
17
KOSC0 r ri rJ·,r r. • r·. r;nd wigs.
Sunday guests of \lr. and
~P M Day Bel or(: p ,;b i iC dhon
near Royal Oak Park . Watch
Rac ine area . Phone 992 6329 .
Welker · ~ ,.:. ~~~ and
13 27
monthly
payment
as
low
as
$65 00 for a famity with a base
v r·1:, u &lt;&gt; ~'"' : ; '• ,rc.: Producf s
fi.Q.f1d ay D~nd i Hll' !i d m
Mrs. Herbert Shields Sunday
for Sign s. .
11
14-tl
c
Gaul 's ).,A · e Haven
8
3/
saUtr y_ of S5.000 .00 and th r ee chil dr en_ 7 1 4 Pet. annual
n nd m')'· r • .~ .. 1Qr you r
C.=.ncetrrJ,on &amp; Co rre cf Hms
Open every day except
Higt- ,..., j. Game
Pat
were Mr . and \Irs. Phthp
Jm mr·d ,... ,. ,,,·~-&lt;:
-'':'. Ne do
t1 I ht• rtcu·pk:d un l 1i 11 &lt;1 m tor
Thorn .• · ') and Pat Thomas Ra dfor d and Sleph;,me ,,f
Monda y
d~l 1v~ r //0' •: , ro l1 ke to F UR NI SHED slee ping room
Oa
t
of
Pub
l
1r.
.1t',on
154. H q~ Series - Pa l Thoma s
over
Wine
Stor
e.
Rent
by
I P.M. till P.M.
sf' l e-c t 1rJ'J ' •.. .-.~ ',', tome r s
REGU LAT IONS
Pomeroy Rte ., Mrs. Oara " ""
460 a nc Ba rba ra M ur ray 35 5
month
.
Phone
992
·5293.
r~nd hd''' f 'J',' ,_,.,. ,,,,Jt e and
The: P1J hi lc, hr: r r r;', •·r I';'&gt; lh(·
Tearr .._. qh Game - Team A Sa rgent, Mrs . "arlene FLsher.
11 -26-lfc
ma k r~ gr10'J ('&lt;'"',. , . ,')
Ca ll
1ht
to
c.d,l
or
r•:t':'
I
rtn
t
nd'i
179 BaJn Lumbe r No 6 97A
Molly. Larry and Amy ,,r 'Jr·~·mr:rJ · 0htr•(I JI') fl,)l
Broun'·.
n
1/
':r:
··
r.;•,
rt
992
Th ~
Sll1 . rJ ,&lt;, tr l b J" •'
.' Koscot
Ra ci ne, and Mrs. Berth;, ,,,Jr,l,',t'r·r :nil no t ho=. rr·'.f)IJFl'Jl blf:&lt;
, ROOFING &amp; CARPENTER
For Sale
t-,,..
mort·
lh
.-1n
onr.·
Jntr1 r r ;;c t
Vo&lt;:.m
t-1
1C
Robinson, local.
MASON BOWLING CENTER
'l',•· rh nn
ll 16 ttc OLIVER 70 tractor . ;321 .
;
WORK
Sporn
BILL NELSON 9n3617
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Bell and
HILTQN WOLFE 949-3211
RA TES
Home lite C Sl cham 'law , used
1 B Sh1ft 65 47 : 2 Unit 3 60
For Wr1nl Ad C:.e r Ill•:
very
l1 t tle.
$1~
Phone
SPOUTING,
TOM CROW, 992-2580
ABOUT YOUR li E ', HT
DALE DUTTON . 9'12·2534
51 3. The P.O. 60 52 . 4 . Rejec ts children of M o r ntn~ S1ar
)
cr:n
h p~? r Wor d on~ 'nsr: rl1on
747
25
47
or
IA1 7543
rJIJ ('r IIC'Ight lrld 1·',
'J;:·;OS
~n
d
vi
sited
Saturday
with
.\lr
.
and
56 ·56 , 5 King Pins 56 -56 : 6_ A
r/ 1n1rrum (h.vg r:/Sc
12 19 Jtc
ROOF PAINTING
rnr&gt; n m!o:.-rr:s·•:d
(l Net g ht
Shift 56 56 : 7. D. Sh11t 53 59 : 8 Mrs. Don Bell.
!? n·nt'. p.-:r mJrd thrPI
W;Jtchfc
r
&lt;,
"R
1
(·I
'&gt;
~
i
n
Wild Men 4) 70
ORIGINAL CABINET
NEW &amp; OLD WORK
Mr . and Mrs. Don Bell CI')OV;r:IJ I I J(· 1nV•r i1 0fl '_,
P vmer o·;
M 1 'f&gt;
Wei g ht 1970 60 , 12, 3 BEDROOM
High Team Ser1es - Re1ects
A
II
Weather
Roofing
6COMPANY
18 r•· nl\ r-:·r no rd ',l lf con
Wat cht r '&gt; rR,, t ~r.J ) eclion
m obile home , good condilion.
2453. W1ld Men 7424 _ H igh visited Dr . and Mrs Earl
'J •f.lj ~ l )I"' o n \ t;r l 10 n ~,
Construction Co. and An i
Rd
,
(Jnr,nnn'
r)r-1r1 45137.
'$.4,700 . swing se t S.20 . owner
Team Game - Rejec t s 881 , Grimm and sons and Mr. and
7') Pr.r C•·nl Q, c, rr)IJnl on p.-1 1d
thony flumbing &amp; Healing
to 3-ttc
lea.,ing state Ph one 992 6120_
Wil d Men 858
Mrs. Har old Grimm at -tO"&gt; rind lid&lt;, pa1d mlh 1n 10 day c;
Compl
et e
Plumb i n-g
COMPLETE
11 11 61c
Ind . High Senes - R Sm i th
CARD OF THANK S
Co
lum
bus
Tuesday
!hr
u
Healing
and
AJr
Con
543 , Sebo S4 1 lnd High Game
&amp; OBIT UARY
dtiiOnmg
Thursday.
- Kor n /34 , Vnn Pel t ~10 .
DEE P w ell p um p , hot water
BUILDING
Sl )(; t)r 'iO NOrd rT II nlm •J m
- GUARANTEED240 Lmco ln St .. Mtdd lepo. t
heater
Phr_.,ne
9BS
389
I
Mr . and Mrs. Homer Warner f .,,. r- rlr frt ,r on.-11 1/Qrt/?c
YOUNG
MEN
Tue~d ay Women
11 12 61p
Phone 992 -2094
BLI NO ADS
SERVICES
Ma son Fu rn iture 86 26 . / . were shopptng at Pl. Pleasant
f rjrj , hrmrll ?'Jr (h,Hql· pt •r
Phone
992
-2SSO
Hair Harbour 78 34, 3 Hart' s Saturday.
C.r! ,,. ,. 1-&lt;; •·mt-·nl
COAL l, m,~\ t on~ E..-cel-:,wr
Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto I From drafting to completion
Used Cars 71 ..11 ; 4. M&amp;R
Insured - Experienced
Mr. and MrS. Alex Wheeler
Salt Wor i-' c,
E Mam Sl .
OF FI CE HOU RS
of home or business.
Food land 65 A7 . 5 Tom Rue
Pomero·; P hon~? 997 389 1
~ lfJ a rn to ~ .IJ() p m Q,, dt .
Work Gua ranteed
and
Bill
spent
the
"·eek
end
Open
8
Till
I
M otor s 53 S9, 6 Roush Con
4 9 ·li e
Jr: .-1 m
t o I) rJO N oon
Monda y thru Saturday
See
us
for
Free
st r uction 52 60 , 7 . In gels with Mr. and \Irs. l..;,rrv
•ft Jrr!rlt
606 E. Mam, Pom e roy , 0 .
Fu rn iture 16 96
Fos te r a nd children a1
Estimate on Furnace
POODLE p u pp 1Pt,. Silver Toy.
High Tea m Sene; - Hair Ollumbus.
Park v1e w Kenn elc:.. Phone 99'1
ln sfalation .
Not ice
Harbour 1858. Hart 's Use d
5443
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Mr
.
and
Mrs.
Ernesl
Grumn
Ca r s 1854 H1gh Tea m Ga me
8
15
lie
Reasonable
r ates Ph. -446-4782 ,
S/l.VE u p to one hrlll Bnng your
Har t 's Used Cars 668. Hair
sp&lt;:nt th e week erxl " 'till \lr
POMEROY
Ga lli pol 1s
John Russell .
"'' ~-' TV to Ch ud· '&gt; TV Sno p,
Har bour 638
Owner
&amp;
Operator
.
and Mrs. Tom Butram near
AP P LES.
F1 ttpatr 1c k Or
I 'it Bun ern ul A,,. , P om ~?r 0 y
lnd Hig h Se r ies - Betl y
cha rd s, S tate Route 689 .
5 12-tlc
Cincinnati
.
P"
.
.
n'·
9(n
saao
HOME &amp; AU'IO
For
Sale
Robinson 516, Ka t hy Da vis 503 .
phone
W il ~.., ·11lle. 669 3785
II
?
1
lf
c
Hi gh lnd Ga m e - Jud y Wh 1le
Susie Jarrell and bab; sp&lt;:nt
9 ] tf c
O' DELL WH EE L al ignme nt
9'12-2094
'107 , Betty Robinson 196.
Monda y with Mrs . Zel pha IP IS TRUC TIONS 1n P'dniJ and
located at Crossr oads , Rt . 124.
606 10. Main Pomeroy
SIN G E R aut om a tiC sew,n g
Complete front end ser vice ,
Boggess.
or-grin Gr-r ald Hofln er . phone
m a chine . L tke ne w . 1n
tune up and brake ser vice .
'l'l? JB71
Mrs. BeMy Boggess. Wayne
Wednesday Mixed
be autiful w a lnut c ab 1net .
OFFICE SUPPLIES
Wheeh
ba l an ce d
elec
17 19 ".li t
1 Try Hards 70-34 ; 2. H&amp; H Rosebury, Norma Jean Jarrell
m akes des.ign st i tches , zig
tron •cally
All
work
And
63-41. J. Alley Gators 57 -47 : 4 were dinner guests Sunday of
zags, bultonholes . bli n d hems,
36" X 23 " X .009 .
g u ara ntee d
Reasonab le
Pi n Spoiler s 54·50 ; 5. Sm ith &amp;
etc Will sell lor S85. Ca ll
rat es Phone 992 3213
FURNITURE
Mr . and Mrs . Jess Anderson.
Roush 54 SO , 6. Sham rock s 50
Raven~w ood 273 9893 after S
7 27-tfc
54, 7. Sons O Guns 38-66 : 8.
pm
Mr . arxl Mrs . Carroll White,
Stop In and See Our
---Wool ies 30 74 .
11 18tlc WRECKING and haul1ng .
Darla
,
Deann
a
,
Keilh
and
Floor Display .
Team High Series ~ Pin
Phone 992-60BJ.
Spotters 1900, Sha mrock s 185 1. Kevin sp&lt;:nt Sunday evenmg
Whdr· lea r ni ng about the pay
D O U BLE p ic k u p electr~c
12 17 lOtp
USED OFFSET PLATES
Team High Game Pin with M'i'. and Mrs. Don llupp
raise . ha ve him expla in how
gui t ar wi th amp. and case .
Spotler s 654 and Pin Spot ter s
HAVE
you m ny en lis t and s.tay
and sdllls.
Bundy cla r inet , Conn trumpet
Suntlay &amp;·hool attcndarwr on
AUTOMOBIL E insu ran ce C. BRADFORD. Auctioneer
6R
MANY
USES
·
hom
e
tor
the
holi
day
s.
wi
th c a ~e . Phone 997 -194 1.
Jim
OlMally,
son
of
Mr
.
and
Comolete Service
been conceited? Los t your
f.J&lt;·e 12 wa s 51 Offering wa ,
Ind . High Series - Men - J
12 19 3tc
Phone949-382 l
oper a tor· ~ license? Call 992
Wolfe 552 and J . Ewin g 547 ;
1\lrs. Everette Olnnall) " a Sl8 li
Rac ine, Ohio
1966.
Women -- H. Ewing 483 , N
Ca ll him al 614 -S9J.J022
medical patient al Hol1er
The WIJ men 's Society of
•6-15 ti c
(r ift Bradford
] - 750 X 16, 8 PLY truck ft re~
Smith 475 .
8 for HOO
Medical Center .
5-1-llc
call collect
for
- S25 . 700 ' 18. B ply truck - - - - - - - - , [hnsha n Service wtll hold 1ls
High Ind . Game ~ M en - J
t1re
.
good
work
pony
,
lar
ge
,
Ew i ng 217, ;
Woll e 1 15;
Guests at the h.ome of ~lr. annual Christmas pa r ty 1m
co mple te details .
gentle for ch i ldren . phone 949
Wom en - J. Foglesong 183, L.
Mobile Homes For Sale
and Mrs. Tom Norns W&lt;-d- Tues&lt;lay eve ning , Dec . 21. 1n
SEP TI C tank s cleaned. Miller
3073
Richardson and H . Ewin g 167
Today's Army wants lo
nesday night after church ~·ere the ch ur ch basement Wllh lhe
Sa n ita t ion , Stewart. Oh io. Ph .
12 19-6tc
662
:j035.
join
you
al
a
much
Rev . 0 . G. McKinney, He\'. S. fanuhes &lt;of the members and
Monda y Merchants
1-12-flc
I. Harts Used Cars n 31 . 2
hi gh er sa lary .
Markham of Olarleston. W.
LONG BOTTOM - Five room
Mason Co. Ban k 70 34 : 3 W. Va ., Mr. and Mrs. Herbert other tnvtted guests . A potluc k
house , bath , business or
Jll Court St.
READY -MIX
CONCRETE
supp&lt;:r ~&lt;111 bt! served and a gt ft
Va . National Guard 64 40 , 4.
stor age b uild ing S6. 500.
Pomeroy , Ohio
deli
vered
r
i
ght
lo your
Roush,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Marshall
Mason Auto Marl 46 58 ; 5.
exchange he ld .
Phone 985-3529.
project. Fast and easy. Free
Employment
Wanted
Miller's Insurance 44 60 ; 6. Adams, Rev. Edward Griffith,
12-19-JOtc
Wilber Parker accompcmied
est imates . Phone 992- 32 8~ .
Penn Central 43-61: Keefer 's
INTERIOR
painting
.
Call
Don
LARGE
fa
rm
lresh
eggs.
Phone
Mrs.
Odessa
Roush
,
Mrs.
Alice
Goegl ein Ready -Mix Co.,
)
Jr
.
and
)Irs.
Herbert
Parker
Service Stat ion 41·63 : 8 Hof f
432778.
Van
Meter
985-3951.
8
SHEARED
Wh
ite
P
in
e
12'
14'
24'
·
WiDE
Middleport , Ohio.
Balser
,
St.
Clair
Hill
,
Re\'.
mans 36-68 .
311d )lr . and Mrs. Howard
12 19 l')tp
l1 -15-61 c
Chr istm as l r ees from Sot ,
6-JO-ttc.
High Team Ser ies - Mason Robert Shook. Refreshmmensl
Parker to )!organ town , W Va
--.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.,.
value
pr
iced
Chr
istmas
toys.
,
=
-Co. Bank 211'10. Harts Used Cars of coff ee, sandwiches and pie
f
g ifts, g lassware at KUH L's
REFRIGERAT ION and a ir
They went to pay last re,per ts
2833 ; High Team Game
condit ioni ng serv ice. Repai r
Help
Wanted
ThiS
Week
's
Special
Barga
in
Ce
nte
r
,
Tuppers
wer
e
served
.
Harls Used Cars 996, Harts
to ~ltss \laude Cr eel. who wa s
Plains
,
Ohio,
St.
Rt.
7
at
the
and serv icing refr igeral ion
Used Cars 983.
Mr . a nd Mrs. Charles Gaskill
father
's
housekeeper
for
thetr
caution
light.
()pen
'til
9
to
12
un its. al so some heating units,
High Ind. Series - D. Mason, of Wellston spent the week end
1220 Washington Blvd.
24
f
urna ces, etc . Phone 992-307•.
many
years.
67 1. D. Mason and Wall is 648
Belpre, Ohio
12-17
-6tc
12 19-6tc
High Ind . Game - Paugh at their cottage.
Clara Follrod and 7-iina
245, H. Sisk, D. Mason 243.
Mrs . Kate McNickles is a
FOR TH E BE ST deal in a new
Robmson spenl a weekend with
medica l patient at Holzer ~lr . and Mrs. Robert Robinso n
or used mob ile home, try BA CK HOE AND DOZER work .
Christmas Special!
Se pt ic tanks installed. George
nauga Mobi le Home Sales .
Medi cal Center .
USED CARS
I Ka
IBi ll ! Pu llins, Phone 992-2•78.
Kyger Creek league
and family at Belpre .
Ka nauga. Oh i o.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Roush
I. A Shift 61-34 : 1. C Shi ll 60
• 2&gt;-flc
)l r. and Mrs. Cla r ence
12-17-90tc
36 ; 3. Odd Balls 58 35 . 4. and Roger were shopping in Pt.
Henderson and Ltnda and
T imber Spl i tter s 50 46 , s
NE IG LER Buil din 9 Su pply .
Rejects 42 -54 ; 6. Str ugg lers 38 Plea sa nt , W. Va . Tuesday Aaron Williams and Mr. and
Free e st ima te on bu ildiog
Real
Estate
For
Sale
Mason
&amp;
Hartford
58 ; 7. B. Shift 38-58 : B. D evening .
your
new hom e. Will draw
)Ir s. Clair Follrod. Slene and
REG . Sl09.00
I
1 Door Ha rdt op wi th 6 cyl. I
Maint. 36 -60.
prints
to su it the la y ol your
Mrs . Lester Roush and
ROOM house . Ill Bullernu&gt;
Ka thy. attended funeral serengine, J speed .
I SIXAve.
I SAVE S60.00
Team 3 Games - Odd Ball s daughter Joann , Mrs. Rogl'r
land
.
Ca ll Guy Nei gler ,
Contact Ed Hedrick , 2137
PHONE 992-2156
, .lct'S 111 Colwnbus for Albert
25'1'1, C. Sh ift 2560 . Tea m High
Ra cine. Ohio . F Or repa ir and
Wadsworth Dr i ve, Columbus .
Game - Odd Ba lls 936, Odd Man uel spent Monday with Mr.
alum in um sidi ng, s.offet and
Pearson. the1r brother-m-law .
Oh
io, phone 237-4334.
5
Balls 922 .
FOR
DETAILS!
gu
tter. Ca ll Dona ld Smilh,
and Mrs . Don Riffle at
tl -21-tlc
Bunal was in Si lver Ridge
High Ind . 3 Games
G. Co lumbus and did some
Ra cine. Ohio.
·
Cemetery .
Shrimplin 643 ; R. Cr emeans
II
POMEROY
I
10-7-ltc
1 s1ory home w tf h full
600. High Ind. Game - G. Chrislmas shopping.
Yo- Jock w. Corsoy, Mtr. I NICE
Recent Sunda y callers of Mr. Wanteli To Buy
basemen
t,
1
lots,
new
forced
I 6ld Phone tf2·1111
M itch 245. R . Cremeans 243 .
A chicken and ham dinner and Mrs. William Carr and
air furnace . Near Pomer oy HARR ISON'S TV and Ante...;,.,
OLD FUR NIT.URE , Round Odk " You' ll Uke Our Qual ity
Service. Phone 992-2522.
was
served
at
the
home
of
Mr.
Elemen tary School _ Phone.
daughters and Mr . and Mrs.
STEELWORKERS
tables. Brass ·beds,-.., dishes.
6-10-llc
Way
of
Do1ng
Bu
si
ness."
992
738&amp;
to
see
.
1. Wonders (1st Half Win. and Mrs . Herbert Roush
(.'has. D. Woode were Mr . and
c l od.s, and -or compl ete
GMAC
FINANCING
11
7
lfc
Real Estate For Sale
ner s} 80 ; 2. Reject s 76 ; 3. Thursday night after church
house h o lds . Write M . D.
SEW ING MACHINES. R.; ir
Mrs. Oair Woode and Conni of
991 -534'2
Pomeroy
Fer ros. 75 ; -4. Foot e Heels 71 , 5.
Miller . Rl. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio
services
at
the
United
Brethren
serv tce, all makes . 992-22a.t
Open
Evenings
'Ti
t
8:00
Urcle.·ille.
They
came
to
visi
t
Nuts &amp; Bolts 66 ; 6. Stinger s JA ;
Call
'1'12-6271.
The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy:
Church to Rev . and Mrs. 0 . G. !heir · aunt , Mrs . Ma r v
Til c; oM. Sat .
7 Skips 40 ; 8. Whee ls 13 .
12-\7ttc
Author ized Singer Sa les and
H igh Tea m Ser ies - Fer ros McKinney, Rev . S. Markham
Se r vice . We Sharpen Scissors.
Schaeffer. at Holzer Hosp1u;l
2517, Rejects 2486 . High Team of Charleston, W. Va., ReL
W I L~, BUY raw furs and beet PUREBRED poll ed Hereford
3-29-tlc
am! accompanied he r lo her
Game - Rejects 915, Re jects
hides Saturday and Sunday
bull. Domino br eeding . Top
Robert Shook, ~lr . and ~Irs. home at Five Points and called
869
eve ry week . Carl Cheval ier .
herd sire . J yea r~ old Call 7ot'} .
H igh In d . Ser 1es
H
Ma rshall
Adams ,
~Irs.
469 1
Rt . 1. Long Bottom, Oh io.
al
the
Schaeffer
home
Whi tlatch 579. N. Hawley 575 Margaret Gloeckner, l\lr. and
11-15-12tp
608 Easl Main
12 21 ] lc
High Ind . Game
H
Phoebe. Hueston and Ruth
POMEROY
Mrs.
Rober!
Ashley,
children
Whi tlat ch 244, R. Long 206
Broker
EARLY Amer ican ster eo-radio
WISHES EVE RY BO:J Y A
Basi m of Little Hoc k1n g
Auto Sales
Keith arxl Heidi, Mrs. Phyllis
110 Mechanic Street
· comb inat ion , 4-speaker sound
GR EAT
BIG
MERRY
Pomeroy . Ohio
O'Brien , children Linda and recenUy \'isited Mrs . Hueston's 1962 DODGE Polaro SOD, tow
system , AM. FM r ad io. 4 CH RISTMAS AN D A HAPPY
Tuesday Industrial
mileage. excellent condit ion .
speed a u t o ma tic c hanger .
NEW YEAR. TH AN KS A
Carol, Mr. and Mrs. Tom niece. Oara Follrod.
1. Burton Sunoco 88 24 . '1
tO room
phone
'
1
'
1
2·5417.
ba la nce $78 .31 . U se ou r MIDDLEPORT Chrislrnas
program
will
be
A
MILLION
FOR
YOU R
Coco Cola 74-38 ; l . Penn Norris, Mrs. Alice Balser, Mrs.
12-15-6tc
do uble house. SJSOII.OO.
bu dget te rms. Call '1'12-7085.
KINDNE SS IN TH E YEAR
presented
on
Wednesday
Central 60-S7 ; 4. Ma son Agg
Pearl !\orris, .J1!ff Miller and
OF 197\.
12 -21 -6tc FREE GAS HEAT - 6 room s,
48 -64; S. New Haven F urn ilure
e.·ening, Dec . 22, at the Orange 1970 W-30 OLDSMOBILE 442,
bat h, cellar . Sma ll barn _
HENRY E. CLELAND
Roger
Roush.
l8 66 ; 6 . Carol ina Lumber Co
M ineral s .19 acre. 513. 500.00.
&lt;llristian
Church.
MODERN
walnut
stereorad
io
REALTOR
au
l
omatic
.
tactorl
ster
eo
Mr . arxl Mrs. ~p Miller.
16 32
&lt;l&gt;m bi nat ion, 4-speaker sound TUPPERS PLAINS - Modern 2
Ollite 992-2259
ta pe. Lots of extras . ike new .
Thelma
Hende
r
son.
Nina
H igh Team Series ~ Coca
sta tioned in Wichita Falls,
bedr oom
home ,
qa s
syo;i Pm , J.speed au tomatic
Ca ll '1'12-2441 after 5 p.m.
Resi dence m -U68
Cola 2700, Bu rton Su noco 'lSJ J
auto ma tic he at . Pla ins wafer
changer, separate con tr ol s.
Texas arrive d Saturday to Robmson and Oara Follrod
11-28· lc
12-19-6tc
High Team Game - Coca Cola
4 AC RE S. SIO,SOII.OO .
attended
lh
e
Chns
tm
as
Balance
S64
.
79
.
Use
ou
r
ON YOUR DIAL
952 . Coca Cola and Mason Agg spend the holidays ..-ith Ius
J bedroom
budge t terms Call '1'1 2-7085 RUTLAND CH EV Y Impala , run s geed
ff/ 7.
parents Mr. and Mrs. Herbert pr o ~ ram at the Cool\ lil e '62SlOG,
paneled home Bath . ga s
12-21 6tc
' 51 Chevy pickup, rr " '
H 1gh lnd Series - 0 . M iller
~l ethodtst Ch urch , Sunday
•
heat in g . 11 2 lots . N EW
~I iller and J eff .
condition
.
Phone
94:?
819 C•p•c ity
613. J Grate 582 High lnd
LISTING
56.000
00.
·
l'\·emng.
Dec.,
12.
ONE HYD R AU~IC snow plo".
Moytlt
6083.
Revtval sen·ices closed at
Game D Miller :?53, H'
Automttics
one
hy dr aul iC
ta i lgate LETART - .'; rooms, basement
•p
1
1-17-lO
Grange
was
held
here
on
Mi Iter '134
the United Brethren Omrrh
2 speed opera lion
Large l ot for garden. Asking
spreader , one coa l. for ced air
Friday even in g, Dec. 10.
$5.
000.00,
Cho ice of '*lief
Sunday .
furnace wi t h stoker . li ke new,
196S FORD pickup. custom Cob.
Sunday Mi11ed
temps .
A.uto .
~orman
Will.
a
delegale
to
the
MIDDLEPORT
1
apartone
lady
'
s
wi
nter
coa
t
,
new
:
3
wide bed , Sl ,400 J. '69
Rev. Edward Griffilh and
water
lit~te l 1
1. Dunca n &amp; Sines 78-26; 1.
me.nts - 11 rooms, 2 ba ths.
new dresses . Phone 949-4761 .
Volk swagen. Sl ,IOO, '69 Dodge
c ~nt ; o l. · Liril'
Goodr ich &amp; Roosh 66-44 ; 3. fri end Mrs . Odessa Roush State Grange Conven lion. at
Ad tu nct to shopping .
12-2\
-4fc
Swinger,
2
dr.
hardtop,
V
8,
F1lter o.- Powe-r
Hood and Greene 58-46 ; 4. sp&lt;:nt Wednesday night with Toledo was present and gave a
P. S. 3 ACRES - 6 room liouse.
_
F"
in _Ag itator .
standard
.
Sl
,
100.
'64
Ford
Cremeans &amp; Sm ith 56-48; 6.
report. A gift was presented to
Ouq well f cellar, J outPerm1-Pren • ·
1971
ZIG-ZAG
sewing
machine
Rev.
and
Mrs.
0
.
G.
McKinney
conve
rt
ible,
excellent
c
on
Wr ight &amp; Smith 48-56 ; 7.
bu ild ings. Ask ing SSSOO .OO.
Moylot
left
in
layaway
.
Beautiful
Douglas
Carr,
who
attended
dition,
SSOII
.
Phone
'1'12-60411
.
Fear some F ou r 42-62 ; 8. at Charleston arxl did some
NEW LISTING.
HIID of Heat
12-19-J•p
pastel
color,
full
si
ze
model.
this convention as gr ange
Withers &amp; Blake 20-84.
Dryers
shopping Thursday.
All bui ll in to buttonhole, WE HAVE 40 PROPERTIES
High Tea m Se r ies ~ Duncan
Surround
clathesl
prillCt'.
FOR
SALE .
HOMES,
overcast and fancy sti tch .
1966 WHITE Ford . 6-cytinder
w ith gentle. tven
&amp; Sines 1008, Goodrich &amp; Roush
BUSINESSES,
FARMS
AND
Mr . and Mrs. Bill Follrod and
Pay ·lust S48 .75 cash or terms
heat. No hot spon.
stand ard , needs motor wort..
1994. Tedm •·hgh Game ·COMMERCIAL LAND.
a
va
i
a
b
le
.
T
rade
-i
n
s
a
c
Sue
Ann
of
Athens
were
f
ri
day
bu
t
dr
iveable.
SJ
SO,
297
A
~h
no
overdqr ~ n a . t
Duncan &amp; Sine~ 706, Duncan &amp;
992-3325 - 9nl31B
cepted Phone 992 56J 1
-F ine Mesh L int
St
,
M
iddleport
Sines 69L
night visitors of Clara f ollro&lt;i
Filter .
HELEN L TEAFORD
11 21 6tc -12-2t l'o
High Ind . SE.-r ie~ - M en ~ J
ASSOCIATE
We '-'tcY,iJe in
and :\ tna Robinson .
::---- - Goodr ich 5S8 . R. Sines 5)4 ,
MAYTAG
NEAR
EWING
MORTUARY
A(UUM
cleaner
brand
new
In 19611 Apollo V!ll blasted off
P . Ferguson 488.
Women Red
Co~rp•t
t2 -16-6tc
1971 model. Comp lete with all
For Renf
0 . 5tnes ~~~for the moon orbil carr) mg
A lhougl)l for today : Bri tish F URNISHED and unfurnished cleaning tools . Small pa int
High Ind. Game - Men : .D. astr ona uts Fran k Borman .
damage in shipp ing, Will take :HolJSE-:1642 Lincoln Hefghls.
Du~e&lt;~n 22 t and J. 5mi th 210;
poet R•chard Trench sa id. ··we
, •partments. ClasP tlJ school.
James
Lovell
and
William
S11
cash or bvdgc t plan
. Call Danny Thompson, 'lr.Women - 0 . 5ines lin. C.
Phone '1'11-5AJ4.
kneel.
how
1.-eak.
We
rise".
how
ava
•lable.
Phone 992·5641 .
2t96.
'742-4211
Rou\h \81.
Anders.
10-18-ttc
Al'nold Grate
full 0 pm&lt;!!'r."
Rutland,
12·21-6tc
(J

UNK SNUFFY

HOW 'IE LOOK ,
JUGHAID -·-

AUNT LOWEEZV

------

Local Bowling

GO SHOW 'lORE
I'M ALL SOT TO
GOTO JAMEV'S

BADGf,; GUYS

,

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Pomeroy Motor Co.

S GT BLOTTER, WE HAD

BUT WHEN WE
FINALL'I GOT AN
OKAY TO MAKE
11-jE ARRESI, .

A SEARCH WARRAN ~ A
COURT - APPOINTE D
ATTORNEY. AND

Tl1REE MEMBERS
OF Tl1E MAYOR'S
COMMI TTEE .

'

THE SUSPECT
HAD MOVED.

992-7608

HIDDEN
TREASURES
GIFT SHOP

NO

HOW J.IUMIUATIN6!!
COMING HOME B'i

GARBAGE TRUCK-

OTHER
WA'i,
AUNT
BESSIE!!

I

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
SS.55

WINNIE

WINKLE.

BUGS BUNNY

.MutJCH .. .

THA"T' LL.

CHOMp.. .
S.,;~~~(!

P55T••• BUGS!

SEALL
FOil NOw,
MR . FUDO!

SNI!'AK A LOOK
MV CHART,

l'D LIKE 1t&gt; KNOW

AT

HOW

1 FEEL.!

WILL '70U?

1

I'

4

YOUR LOCAL ARMY

I

REPRESENTATIVE

PH. 992-7796

WANTS TO

TALK TO YOU

ABOUT THE NEW

ARMY PAY RAISE

1Ui·(·d

."'m·iul \o/(•s

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets

Prett~ quiet back there, Chip'

Joel cloe,;;n't know we're cominq
to fix up his shack, &lt;;tubb6?

The
Daily Sentinel

MILLER

SENTINEL
CARRIERS

NOW 1595
Karr &amp; Van Zandt

23 CU. FT.

1

£l.TAA.?

TilE BORN LOSER

0
0

•

')

--- ....

IT'S ~ INJ(), IT'S A flt,Aii'N ~!
'f()J fo.mV IT 1D IMK£ V~L.F
MQJI(; P..1TmTI1/Ei!
PLEAS E,, WITHOUT

Hf'( !:lUDDY ·-· tlOW'D YA LIKE ANOTHER
PIANC DJR r 0 1EAP--- UKE N0 1HIIi '
00\IJN AN ' NOTt11r1'A WEE K?

M'( PtAtfO I a\ HNOT

FIGHT THlS !l'/ill.!J. illl!!i'
9' P\l'ASURE l !:lQJ WHEN l Cir!'f' ~-~f

I GOTTA

MA Kf A L\VIf1G!

THAT PIAII_9 YillHOliT MP,KlN' B 1'110ftT

Ori

!J:!E D!;AL' IT ' S A SIGN 0' WEAKNE SS

TI1ATU GEl ME A 6R. T &lt;N TH£ EAR BY
PROF. CRHPY ·· ·I.' !!fEVER fiN DS Q\!.T
'
~l !.!,--

~~
ACROSS
I. Baker's
need
8. Urchin
ll. Love
poetry's
muse
12. Expun ge
13. Yuletide
carol
(2 wds. I
15, M.ichel·
angelo
statue
16. Mak e lace
.._~-'11 19. Pay dirt
1'
20. "Arlie"
~~~
author
\ '\'"'""123. Greci an
theaters
25. Tow ered ,
as a
mountain
'----'-LL-.L.:..J 27. See13

I SALE •249 :
._ ________ _J

SR.

Deland

Realty

HAVE

TAIC'E -

10 THf PIG~

- l l f ! I twr !WIELY
ESCAI'fP WITH MY LlfE

TH! G!JARVS!
1 HAVE 5POKEH OF
~

I. Maneuver

5. Prologue
si nger In
"I PagJi.
acd"
6. Refined
7. Tosca's
"Visai
d' Arte"
B. Publicalion, for

short
9. Suffix
meaning
so mewhal
10. Tennis
equipment

tC 1971 King Featurea Syndic11Le, Inc.)

Unocrunble theH four Jumbl..,
one letter to ea&lt;h oqual't!, to
form four ordinary wor4•·

36. Louise
37. Seragllo
chamber
38. Includes
39. Cheering
word
tO. European
country

volcanic

mountain
28. fncor·
poreal
33. High strung
35. Soprano,

n

Lucrezla

35. Cop styl&lt;·
37. See 13

COLlfAGUf5 WHO
HAVE I
AHP

A

·~er-,;-

I

liMARK

/ ~\

[J I

II

(abbr.)

Childol
Loki
U . Attempt

14. Domain

r ROFUI.

,_,

ea..tvt.

I [)

1

WFUES

III

'•

-~pon

DAY

ACQ!Jt~P

mulberry

16. Namely
(2 wds.)
17. Turkish
city
lB. Irascible
20.Aseended
21. Dullwilted
2%. Guest
%4. Peer
Gynt's
mother
26. Kyushu 's

29. Bent

IIIII -

HAPPY

MlfN I

2. Silkworm
3. Indian

Y..tuday's Cryploquole: THE SECRET OF EDUCATION
LIES IN RESPECTING THE PUPIL - RALPH WALDO·
EMERSON
.: ..

Across
(2 wds.)

30. Thessalian
mou ntai n
31. Scottis h
river
JZ. Caught
U.Bard's

~-,-;;;,

11

(A-wn ·~·

"

I-.. IINIIL CAIGO nNIILI PIITLI
YetCerM,"t
I AM••r1 ..4 ('CH~Nd'cn. 011llrosd n7- TICKII TAPI
. ,1... ·-··' ....... ..
PI\" 1-. ...

eve·rlt

Acr o~s

WMP0/1390

'RlfnAND FURNITUR'EI&lt;t

IFQlH! CO.W r&lt;UCW-UP
Ql &lt;;a,\£; OF 'THO&gt;G ~
~t~ SHe LA~ Qt ~.~~?!

r----

lJTrLE ORPHAN ANNIE

- -----

I CHEST FREEZER I

Virgil B. ,
TEAFORD

-----.

RfALH THE ZAN! L . .

--.

r---------•I

1
I

1969 MUSTANG

6UMP1N

You two &lt;;till with us?

MOBILE tllMES

WANTED!

... ELlAJt ~D rT WAS
lHE ~WA.VlO

---~--~~-~-

20'

I

-·

---,---~-

(3 wd s. 1

'

U. Mik ado's

·~

court
44. Snort
45. Jell ied
••lad
C8. Pri meval
I-I'VE

~0

IDEA WHAT
¥0U'RS TALKIN6
AS O ~T!

DOWN
l. Word of
Inquiry

DAILY CRYI'TO(jUOTE- Here's how to work it:
Is

AXYDLBAAXR

REAL PARTRtDGES VE~ ~LDOM

I. 0 N G F E L L 0 W

FALL OJT OF FEAR TREES

One leit er simply slands for anolher. In this .sample A i'
URed for the throe I.'s, X for the tw.o O's, ole. S1ngle lelten&lt;.
aposlrophrs. th e length Hnd formalton of lhr word' art all
hint ,;. F:ach rl t~ ~ !h(• r odr lt•llrrs arr cllff&lt;'rent .

J

:\ Crvptogram ()uoWI,•n
0 T
II 1 T

,,

~

_, 1. II

ll 11
II

Y \1 V

r

11 Y ;\ 1'

F Z (; I
II Y

~·

T P

1

~:

1: 7. .-\ T t'

II Y M (i I . - T I. L 1. T

l

)

(;F.II n YF'

o.

•
I

awwJ

t

�r

''
.I

I

p

•

'

, .

,,

,

'

'

.

.

I

-·

-~
8 - The Daily Sentinel. Middleport -Pomeroy, 0 ., Dec. 21.1971

.

Sentinel Classijieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
Apple Gro,·e

POMEROY LANES
Wednesday Late M txed Leagu e
Decembe r IS. 197 1

Pts
ONe n-Holter
Cas sell Car sey
Rosenba um Mendm-.s

86
72
60

Morrow -Moore

S6

Po~eroy

2 SIGNS

Of

News, Events

Motor Co.

QUALITY

COSTUME PARTY,

.___(·

For Rent

,,

Business Services

NIC E TRAILER. I bedroom,
ideal for couple. 10 miles
north of Pomeroy . Phone 9112 ·

~==~~====~========~==========~~~~==~:===============~==:;~

- ---::-:::------'-2_·15-tic
6452.
TRAILER lOTS. Bob's Mobne ·

II

'

JOHNSON MASONRY

HANDCRAFT
GIFT ITEMS

';..0 ·)

.

r

By MRS. HERBERT ROt.:SH
1]191
Court. Rt. 124, Syracuse,
1971 CHEVELL E MA LIBU CPE
Mr. and Mrs . Owen An)hio. '1'12 -1951.
Sandalnood J'JI Ih br own v myl fop fact or t u 1r (r;.r-d r ·&lt;:. '"~C-d.
F ul t z. Bentle y
54
4 '1 tfc
derS()n
,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Clyde
V a F-ng 1m! .,., 1t h turbo hyd r omot 1c. p o :·r~r &lt;. T:d· r "t; E
Blak esle-e Hoyt
32
Complete
Pa rS()ns and ~linnie Riffle of
clor: K. . P B . r ad 10, Ral l 1 Nheel s w1th u nt ·r'· &lt;. I-" G. · r:-M
Ind . High Game Men )
D.
BE DROOM tra iler apart ·
QtJ ilr d s Retail ~-I ISS Co oll ret a l Cllr &amp; '&gt;(.)(~(
;:.r nrj
Rosenbd um 2C · D. Rosen
Christmas
Leon, W. Va. were dmner
menf , i d eal for couples
From the largest Tr uck or
Remodeling
ba um 20.1 . J Ca rsey llf-1 .• guests of Mr and ~Irs .-\rllfJld
Contac t M cClure 's Da i ry Isle.
decorations, W€ aring
Bulldozer Rad1ator to the
Women - J 0P'1tl ey 177 L
1970
CA
MARO
CPE
S309 S
'
1
'
1
2
5248
or
992
3436.
Anderson Sunday .
appareL
je welry ,
Sma llest Heater Cor e
Gilmore 16-l J Ben tley 16/
1) -15-1 21(
d:~'&gt; thnn IJJJOO m ll(:5 &amp; n pphlranu_. of n r --9; ··' P.., 1
Kitchens, Baths
I nd . H igh Se'l£':.! Men )
0
Nathan Biggs
Mrs. ~rald Ha;man sp&lt;:nt
ceramics.
~)po rt ~·qu rpp!':d . (irl':l ')l( &lt;.O pper Wll h •,anda :, v)r}, r •. 'r, r ,
Rosenbaum 55C· R Hol ter 5/3 .
Rad iator Specia tist
AVA ILABLE
Monday , 2
Monday with Mr. and \I rs Ted
t- 1nlr·d glr)C:. ',, fa ctor r dtr CO ndif iOn{:d ~ p0 • 1 &lt;., ,..,- rr · r &lt;-, ,
Room Additions
Doll s, a II dressed i n ~ty.te , !
0 . Meadows ..:8~ Women
J
bedr
oom
tra
der
,
furn
ished
,
r::onc;,olr· a1 r ', po l lo·~r- . tur bo h;dramat 1c po 11H ·. · :~;!' ,-) &amp;Hayman at Ollumbus
Be ntley 437 L Gil more 419, "~
kn
1
tted
and
cr-ocheted
_
(
Has
uti li ties pa 1d _ Phone 992 -7384
brcl ~":&lt;, 'JSO CIJ 1n '/ 8 r;n gine _ Rr; n ll r SriHf;
O..ven Jl]
Jeff Donohew s1at1oned at
And Palils
or 991 7133 .
to be seen to be apprec ialed )
High TearT' Stcr !eS - ONe n
Good Fellow Air Forte Base ,
l21931c
Many 1fe m s you have been
Holter 175.:.
Rosenbau m
Pom eroy
lookmg for . for lhat perf ect
Texas,
called
his
parents
\lr.
PI\ . 992 -2174
Meadows 17S·j Cassell Ca r sey
M O BI LE home and house, i n
go
ff.
1719.
an d Mrs . Roy Donohe«·
M iddleport. Both idea l for
couple . P hone 992 -5247 .
Wednesda y night arxl ..-hen
FOUR NEW HOMES,
12 19 61p
finishing·· his schooling will he
OPEH EVES. 8:00P .M.
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
assigned to Fort George H.
Wednesd a ·~ Aft er noon league
'IJMEROY, OHIO
D.AV . home in Pom er oy for
ONE HOME IN RACINE
Decembe r 15 , 1971
Meade, Md .
group meetin gs and parties ,
TWO HOME S IN SY RA CUSE
Won Lo sI
phone '1'12 5147.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Smtth
ONE HOM E ~ M I DD L EP ORT
Ba um Lui""' . r··
30
10
11
19
12tc
WANT
AD
NO MONEY OOWN
MARTHA ROSE , Owner
Team 4
30 10 vis ite d Ernest J ohnson at
Notice
INF
ORM
AT
ION
100
PCT.
FINANCING AVAILA~LE
Team 1
?2
18 Holzer Medical Center Sunda,·
DEADLIN E&gt;
located on County Road 14
2
B
ED
ROOM
mobile
home
·1n
J..
1
bedroom
Sl6,900.00
home can be purcha sed w ith a
Ridenour t ~ I
17
17
KOSC0 r ri rJ·,r r. • r·. r;nd wigs.
Sunday guests of \lr. and
~P M Day Bel or(: p ,;b i iC dhon
near Royal Oak Park . Watch
Rac ine area . Phone 992 6329 .
Welker · ~ ,.:. ~~~ and
13 27
monthly
payment
as
low
as
$65 00 for a famity with a base
v r·1:, u &lt;&gt; ~'"' : ; '• ,rc.: Producf s
fi.Q.f1d ay D~nd i Hll' !i d m
Mrs. Herbert Shields Sunday
for Sign s. .
11
14-tl
c
Gaul 's ).,A · e Haven
8
3/
saUtr y_ of S5.000 .00 and th r ee chil dr en_ 7 1 4 Pet. annual
n nd m')'· r • .~ .. 1Qr you r
C.=.ncetrrJ,on &amp; Co rre cf Hms
Open every day except
Higt- ,..., j. Game
Pat
were Mr . and \Irs. Phthp
Jm mr·d ,... ,. ,,,·~-&lt;:
-'':'. Ne do
t1 I ht• rtcu·pk:d un l 1i 11 &lt;1 m tor
Thorn .• · ') and Pat Thomas Ra dfor d and Sleph;,me ,,f
Monda y
d~l 1v~ r //0' •: , ro l1 ke to F UR NI SHED slee ping room
Oa
t
of
Pub
l
1r.
.1t',on
154. H q~ Series - Pa l Thoma s
over
Wine
Stor
e.
Rent
by
I P.M. till P.M.
sf' l e-c t 1rJ'J ' •.. .-.~ ',', tome r s
REGU LAT IONS
Pomeroy Rte ., Mrs. Oara " ""
460 a nc Ba rba ra M ur ray 35 5
month
.
Phone
992
·5293.
r~nd hd''' f 'J',' ,_,.,. ,,,,Jt e and
The: P1J hi lc, hr: r r r;', •·r I';'&gt; lh(·
Tearr .._. qh Game - Team A Sa rgent, Mrs . "arlene FLsher.
11 -26-lfc
ma k r~ gr10'J ('&lt;'"',. , . ,')
Ca ll
1ht
to
c.d,l
or
r•:t':'
I
rtn
t
nd'i
179 BaJn Lumbe r No 6 97A
Molly. Larry and Amy ,,r 'Jr·~·mr:rJ · 0htr•(I JI') fl,)l
Broun'·.
n
1/
':r:
··
r.;•,
rt
992
Th ~
Sll1 . rJ ,&lt;, tr l b J" •'
.' Koscot
Ra ci ne, and Mrs. Berth;, ,,,Jr,l,',t'r·r :nil no t ho=. rr·'.f)IJFl'Jl blf:&lt;
, ROOFING &amp; CARPENTER
For Sale
t-,,..
mort·
lh
.-1n
onr.·
Jntr1 r r ;;c t
Vo&lt;:.m
t-1
1C
Robinson, local.
MASON BOWLING CENTER
'l',•· rh nn
ll 16 ttc OLIVER 70 tractor . ;321 .
;
WORK
Sporn
BILL NELSON 9n3617
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Bell and
HILTQN WOLFE 949-3211
RA TES
Home lite C Sl cham 'law , used
1 B Sh1ft 65 47 : 2 Unit 3 60
For Wr1nl Ad C:.e r Ill•:
very
l1 t tle.
$1~
Phone
SPOUTING,
TOM CROW, 992-2580
ABOUT YOUR li E ', HT
DALE DUTTON . 9'12·2534
51 3. The P.O. 60 52 . 4 . Rejec ts children of M o r ntn~ S1ar
)
cr:n
h p~? r Wor d on~ 'nsr: rl1on
747
25
47
or
IA1 7543
rJIJ ('r IIC'Ight lrld 1·',
'J;:·;OS
~n
d
vi
sited
Saturday
with
.\lr
.
and
56 ·56 , 5 King Pins 56 -56 : 6_ A
r/ 1n1rrum (h.vg r:/Sc
12 19 Jtc
ROOF PAINTING
rnr&gt; n m!o:.-rr:s·•:d
(l Net g ht
Shift 56 56 : 7. D. Sh11t 53 59 : 8 Mrs. Don Bell.
!? n·nt'. p.-:r mJrd thrPI
W;Jtchfc
r
&lt;,
"R
1
(·I
'&gt;
~
i
n
Wild Men 4) 70
ORIGINAL CABINET
NEW &amp; OLD WORK
Mr . and Mrs. Don Bell CI')OV;r:IJ I I J(· 1nV•r i1 0fl '_,
P vmer o·;
M 1 'f&gt;
Wei g ht 1970 60 , 12, 3 BEDROOM
High Team Ser1es - Re1ects
A
II
Weather
Roofing
6COMPANY
18 r•· nl\ r-:·r no rd ',l lf con
Wat cht r '&gt; rR,, t ~r.J ) eclion
m obile home , good condilion.
2453. W1ld Men 7424 _ H igh visited Dr . and Mrs Earl
'J •f.lj ~ l )I"' o n \ t;r l 10 n ~,
Construction Co. and An i
Rd
,
(Jnr,nnn'
r)r-1r1 45137.
'$.4,700 . swing se t S.20 . owner
Team Game - Rejec t s 881 , Grimm and sons and Mr. and
7') Pr.r C•·nl Q, c, rr)IJnl on p.-1 1d
thony flumbing &amp; Healing
to 3-ttc
lea.,ing state Ph one 992 6120_
Wil d Men 858
Mrs. Har old Grimm at -tO"&gt; rind lid&lt;, pa1d mlh 1n 10 day c;
Compl
et e
Plumb i n-g
COMPLETE
11 11 61c
Ind . High Senes - R Sm i th
CARD OF THANK S
Co
lum
bus
Tuesday
!hr
u
Healing
and
AJr
Con
543 , Sebo S4 1 lnd High Game
&amp; OBIT UARY
dtiiOnmg
Thursday.
- Kor n /34 , Vnn Pel t ~10 .
DEE P w ell p um p , hot water
BUILDING
Sl )(; t)r 'iO NOrd rT II nlm •J m
- GUARANTEED240 Lmco ln St .. Mtdd lepo. t
heater
Phr_.,ne
9BS
389
I
Mr . and Mrs. Homer Warner f .,,. r- rlr frt ,r on.-11 1/Qrt/?c
YOUNG
MEN
Tue~d ay Women
11 12 61p
Phone 992 -2094
BLI NO ADS
SERVICES
Ma son Fu rn iture 86 26 . / . were shopptng at Pl. Pleasant
f rjrj , hrmrll ?'Jr (h,Hql· pt •r
Phone
992
-2SSO
Hair Harbour 78 34, 3 Hart' s Saturday.
C.r! ,,. ,. 1-&lt;; •·mt-·nl
COAL l, m,~\ t on~ E..-cel-:,wr
Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto I From drafting to completion
Used Cars 71 ..11 ; 4. M&amp;R
Insured - Experienced
Mr. and MrS. Alex Wheeler
Salt Wor i-' c,
E Mam Sl .
OF FI CE HOU RS
of home or business.
Food land 65 A7 . 5 Tom Rue
Pomero·; P hon~? 997 389 1
~ lfJ a rn to ~ .IJ() p m Q,, dt .
Work Gua ranteed
and
Bill
spent
the
"·eek
end
Open
8
Till
I
M otor s 53 S9, 6 Roush Con
4 9 ·li e
Jr: .-1 m
t o I) rJO N oon
Monda y thru Saturday
See
us
for
Free
st r uction 52 60 , 7 . In gels with Mr. and \Irs. l..;,rrv
•ft Jrr!rlt
606 E. Mam, Pom e roy , 0 .
Fu rn iture 16 96
Fos te r a nd children a1
Estimate on Furnace
POODLE p u pp 1Pt,. Silver Toy.
High Tea m Sene; - Hair Ollumbus.
Park v1e w Kenn elc:.. Phone 99'1
ln sfalation .
Not ice
Harbour 1858. Hart 's Use d
5443
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Mr
.
and
Mrs.
Ernesl
Grumn
Ca r s 1854 H1gh Tea m Ga me
8
15
lie
Reasonable
r ates Ph. -446-4782 ,
S/l.VE u p to one hrlll Bnng your
Har t 's Used Cars 668. Hair
sp&lt;:nt th e week erxl " 'till \lr
POMEROY
Ga lli pol 1s
John Russell .
"'' ~-' TV to Ch ud· '&gt; TV Sno p,
Har bour 638
Owner
&amp;
Operator
.
and Mrs. Tom Butram near
AP P LES.
F1 ttpatr 1c k Or
I 'it Bun ern ul A,,. , P om ~?r 0 y
lnd Hig h Se r ies - Betl y
cha rd s, S tate Route 689 .
5 12-tlc
Cincinnati
.
P"
.
.
n'·
9(n
saao
HOME &amp; AU'IO
For
Sale
Robinson 516, Ka t hy Da vis 503 .
phone
W il ~.., ·11lle. 669 3785
II
?
1
lf
c
Hi gh lnd Ga m e - Jud y Wh 1le
Susie Jarrell and bab; sp&lt;:nt
9 ] tf c
O' DELL WH EE L al ignme nt
9'12-2094
'107 , Betty Robinson 196.
Monda y with Mrs . Zel pha IP IS TRUC TIONS 1n P'dniJ and
located at Crossr oads , Rt . 124.
606 10. Main Pomeroy
SIN G E R aut om a tiC sew,n g
Complete front end ser vice ,
Boggess.
or-grin Gr-r ald Hofln er . phone
m a chine . L tke ne w . 1n
tune up and brake ser vice .
'l'l? JB71
Mrs. BeMy Boggess. Wayne
Wednesday Mixed
be autiful w a lnut c ab 1net .
OFFICE SUPPLIES
Wheeh
ba l an ce d
elec
17 19 ".li t
1 Try Hards 70-34 ; 2. H&amp; H Rosebury, Norma Jean Jarrell
m akes des.ign st i tches , zig
tron •cally
All
work
And
63-41. J. Alley Gators 57 -47 : 4 were dinner guests Sunday of
zags, bultonholes . bli n d hems,
36" X 23 " X .009 .
g u ara ntee d
Reasonab le
Pi n Spoiler s 54·50 ; 5. Sm ith &amp;
etc Will sell lor S85. Ca ll
rat es Phone 992 3213
FURNITURE
Mr . and Mrs . Jess Anderson.
Roush 54 SO , 6. Sham rock s 50
Raven~w ood 273 9893 after S
7 27-tfc
54, 7. Sons O Guns 38-66 : 8.
pm
Mr . arxl Mrs . Carroll White,
Stop In and See Our
---Wool ies 30 74 .
11 18tlc WRECKING and haul1ng .
Darla
,
Deann
a
,
Keilh
and
Floor Display .
Team High Series ~ Pin
Phone 992-60BJ.
Spotters 1900, Sha mrock s 185 1. Kevin sp&lt;:nt Sunday evenmg
Whdr· lea r ni ng about the pay
D O U BLE p ic k u p electr~c
12 17 lOtp
USED OFFSET PLATES
Team High Game Pin with M'i'. and Mrs. Don llupp
raise . ha ve him expla in how
gui t ar wi th amp. and case .
Spotler s 654 and Pin Spot ter s
HAVE
you m ny en lis t and s.tay
and sdllls.
Bundy cla r inet , Conn trumpet
Suntlay &amp;·hool attcndarwr on
AUTOMOBIL E insu ran ce C. BRADFORD. Auctioneer
6R
MANY
USES
·
hom
e
tor
the
holi
day
s.
wi
th c a ~e . Phone 997 -194 1.
Jim
OlMally,
son
of
Mr
.
and
Comolete Service
been conceited? Los t your
f.J&lt;·e 12 wa s 51 Offering wa ,
Ind . High Series - Men - J
12 19 3tc
Phone949-382 l
oper a tor· ~ license? Call 992
Wolfe 552 and J . Ewin g 547 ;
1\lrs. Everette Olnnall) " a Sl8 li
Rac ine, Ohio
1966.
Women -- H. Ewing 483 , N
Ca ll him al 614 -S9J.J022
medical patient al Hol1er
The WIJ men 's Society of
•6-15 ti c
(r ift Bradford
] - 750 X 16, 8 PLY truck ft re~
Smith 475 .
8 for HOO
Medical Center .
5-1-llc
call collect
for
- S25 . 700 ' 18. B ply truck - - - - - - - - , [hnsha n Service wtll hold 1ls
High Ind . Game ~ M en - J
t1re
.
good
work
pony
,
lar
ge
,
Ew i ng 217, ;
Woll e 1 15;
Guests at the h.ome of ~lr. annual Christmas pa r ty 1m
co mple te details .
gentle for ch i ldren . phone 949
Wom en - J. Foglesong 183, L.
Mobile Homes For Sale
and Mrs. Tom Norns W&lt;-d- Tues&lt;lay eve ning , Dec . 21. 1n
SEP TI C tank s cleaned. Miller
3073
Richardson and H . Ewin g 167
Today's Army wants lo
nesday night after church ~·ere the ch ur ch basement Wllh lhe
Sa n ita t ion , Stewart. Oh io. Ph .
12 19-6tc
662
:j035.
join
you
al
a
much
Rev . 0 . G. McKinney, He\'. S. fanuhes &lt;of the members and
Monda y Merchants
1-12-flc
I. Harts Used Cars n 31 . 2
hi gh er sa lary .
Markham of Olarleston. W.
LONG BOTTOM - Five room
Mason Co. Ban k 70 34 : 3 W. Va ., Mr. and Mrs. Herbert other tnvtted guests . A potluc k
house , bath , business or
Jll Court St.
READY -MIX
CONCRETE
supp&lt;:r ~&lt;111 bt! served and a gt ft
Va . National Guard 64 40 , 4.
stor age b uild ing S6. 500.
Pomeroy , Ohio
deli
vered
r
i
ght
lo your
Roush,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Marshall
Mason Auto Marl 46 58 ; 5.
exchange he ld .
Phone 985-3529.
project. Fast and easy. Free
Employment
Wanted
Miller's Insurance 44 60 ; 6. Adams, Rev. Edward Griffith,
12-19-JOtc
Wilber Parker accompcmied
est imates . Phone 992- 32 8~ .
Penn Central 43-61: Keefer 's
INTERIOR
painting
.
Call
Don
LARGE
fa
rm
lresh
eggs.
Phone
Mrs.
Odessa
Roush
,
Mrs.
Alice
Goegl ein Ready -Mix Co.,
)
Jr
.
and
)Irs.
Herbert
Parker
Service Stat ion 41·63 : 8 Hof f
432778.
Van
Meter
985-3951.
8
SHEARED
Wh
ite
P
in
e
12'
14'
24'
·
WiDE
Middleport , Ohio.
Balser
,
St.
Clair
Hill
,
Re\'.
mans 36-68 .
311d )lr . and Mrs. Howard
12 19 l')tp
l1 -15-61 c
Chr istm as l r ees from Sot ,
6-JO-ttc.
High Team Ser ies - Mason Robert Shook. Refreshmmensl
Parker to )!organ town , W Va
--.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.,.
value
pr
iced
Chr
istmas
toys.
,
=
-Co. Bank 211'10. Harts Used Cars of coff ee, sandwiches and pie
f
g ifts, g lassware at KUH L's
REFRIGERAT ION and a ir
They went to pay last re,per ts
2833 ; High Team Game
condit ioni ng serv ice. Repai r
Help
Wanted
ThiS
Week
's
Special
Barga
in
Ce
nte
r
,
Tuppers
wer
e
served
.
Harls Used Cars 996, Harts
to ~ltss \laude Cr eel. who wa s
Plains
,
Ohio,
St.
Rt.
7
at
the
and serv icing refr igeral ion
Used Cars 983.
Mr . a nd Mrs. Charles Gaskill
father
's
housekeeper
for
thetr
caution
light.
()pen
'til
9
to
12
un its. al so some heating units,
High Ind. Series - D. Mason, of Wellston spent the week end
1220 Washington Blvd.
24
f
urna ces, etc . Phone 992-307•.
many
years.
67 1. D. Mason and Wall is 648
Belpre, Ohio
12-17
-6tc
12 19-6tc
High Ind . Game - Paugh at their cottage.
Clara Follrod and 7-iina
245, H. Sisk, D. Mason 243.
Mrs . Kate McNickles is a
FOR TH E BE ST deal in a new
Robmson spenl a weekend with
medica l patient at Holzer ~lr . and Mrs. Robert Robinso n
or used mob ile home, try BA CK HOE AND DOZER work .
Christmas Special!
Se pt ic tanks installed. George
nauga Mobi le Home Sales .
Medi cal Center .
USED CARS
I Ka
IBi ll ! Pu llins, Phone 992-2•78.
Kyger Creek league
and family at Belpre .
Ka nauga. Oh i o.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Roush
I. A Shift 61-34 : 1. C Shi ll 60
• 2&gt;-flc
)l r. and Mrs. Cla r ence
12-17-90tc
36 ; 3. Odd Balls 58 35 . 4. and Roger were shopping in Pt.
Henderson and Ltnda and
T imber Spl i tter s 50 46 , s
NE IG LER Buil din 9 Su pply .
Rejects 42 -54 ; 6. Str ugg lers 38 Plea sa nt , W. Va . Tuesday Aaron Williams and Mr. and
Free e st ima te on bu ildiog
Real
Estate
For
Sale
Mason
&amp;
Hartford
58 ; 7. B. Shift 38-58 : B. D evening .
your
new hom e. Will draw
)Ir s. Clair Follrod. Slene and
REG . Sl09.00
I
1 Door Ha rdt op wi th 6 cyl. I
Maint. 36 -60.
prints
to su it the la y ol your
Mrs . Lester Roush and
ROOM house . Ill Bullernu&gt;
Ka thy. attended funeral serengine, J speed .
I SIXAve.
I SAVE S60.00
Team 3 Games - Odd Ball s daughter Joann , Mrs. Rogl'r
land
.
Ca ll Guy Nei gler ,
Contact Ed Hedrick , 2137
PHONE 992-2156
, .lct'S 111 Colwnbus for Albert
25'1'1, C. Sh ift 2560 . Tea m High
Ra cine. Ohio . F Or repa ir and
Wadsworth Dr i ve, Columbus .
Game - Odd Ba lls 936, Odd Man uel spent Monday with Mr.
alum in um sidi ng, s.offet and
Pearson. the1r brother-m-law .
Oh
io, phone 237-4334.
5
Balls 922 .
FOR
DETAILS!
gu
tter. Ca ll Dona ld Smilh,
and Mrs . Don Riffle at
tl -21-tlc
Bunal was in Si lver Ridge
High Ind . 3 Games
G. Co lumbus and did some
Ra cine. Ohio.
·
Cemetery .
Shrimplin 643 ; R. Cr emeans
II
POMEROY
I
10-7-ltc
1 s1ory home w tf h full
600. High Ind. Game - G. Chrislmas shopping.
Yo- Jock w. Corsoy, Mtr. I NICE
Recent Sunda y callers of Mr. Wanteli To Buy
basemen
t,
1
lots,
new
forced
I 6ld Phone tf2·1111
M itch 245. R . Cremeans 243 .
A chicken and ham dinner and Mrs. William Carr and
air furnace . Near Pomer oy HARR ISON'S TV and Ante...;,.,
OLD FUR NIT.URE , Round Odk " You' ll Uke Our Qual ity
Service. Phone 992-2522.
was
served
at
the
home
of
Mr.
Elemen tary School _ Phone.
daughters and Mr . and Mrs.
STEELWORKERS
tables. Brass ·beds,-.., dishes.
6-10-llc
Way
of
Do1ng
Bu
si
ness."
992
738&amp;
to
see
.
1. Wonders (1st Half Win. and Mrs . Herbert Roush
(.'has. D. Woode were Mr . and
c l od.s, and -or compl ete
GMAC
FINANCING
11
7
lfc
Real Estate For Sale
ner s} 80 ; 2. Reject s 76 ; 3. Thursday night after church
house h o lds . Write M . D.
SEW ING MACHINES. R.; ir
Mrs. Oair Woode and Conni of
991 -534'2
Pomeroy
Fer ros. 75 ; -4. Foot e Heels 71 , 5.
Miller . Rl. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio
services
at
the
United
Brethren
serv tce, all makes . 992-22a.t
Open
Evenings
'Ti
t
8:00
Urcle.·ille.
They
came
to
visi
t
Nuts &amp; Bolts 66 ; 6. Stinger s JA ;
Call
'1'12-6271.
The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy:
Church to Rev . and Mrs. 0 . G. !heir · aunt , Mrs . Ma r v
Til c; oM. Sat .
7 Skips 40 ; 8. Whee ls 13 .
12-\7ttc
Author ized Singer Sa les and
H igh Tea m Ser ies - Fer ros McKinney, Rev . S. Markham
Se r vice . We Sharpen Scissors.
Schaeffer. at Holzer Hosp1u;l
2517, Rejects 2486 . High Team of Charleston, W. Va., ReL
W I L~, BUY raw furs and beet PUREBRED poll ed Hereford
3-29-tlc
am! accompanied he r lo her
Game - Rejects 915, Re jects
hides Saturday and Sunday
bull. Domino br eeding . Top
Robert Shook, ~lr . and ~Irs. home at Five Points and called
869
eve ry week . Carl Cheval ier .
herd sire . J yea r~ old Call 7ot'} .
H igh In d . Ser 1es
H
Ma rshall
Adams ,
~Irs.
469 1
Rt . 1. Long Bottom, Oh io.
al
the
Schaeffer
home
Whi tlatch 579. N. Hawley 575 Margaret Gloeckner, l\lr. and
11-15-12tp
608 Easl Main
12 21 ] lc
High Ind . Game
H
Phoebe. Hueston and Ruth
POMEROY
Mrs.
Rober!
Ashley,
children
Whi tlat ch 244, R. Long 206
Broker
EARLY Amer ican ster eo-radio
WISHES EVE RY BO:J Y A
Basi m of Little Hoc k1n g
Auto Sales
Keith arxl Heidi, Mrs. Phyllis
110 Mechanic Street
· comb inat ion , 4-speaker sound
GR EAT
BIG
MERRY
Pomeroy . Ohio
O'Brien , children Linda and recenUy \'isited Mrs . Hueston's 1962 DODGE Polaro SOD, tow
system , AM. FM r ad io. 4 CH RISTMAS AN D A HAPPY
Tuesday Industrial
mileage. excellent condit ion .
speed a u t o ma tic c hanger .
NEW YEAR. TH AN KS A
Carol, Mr. and Mrs. Tom niece. Oara Follrod.
1. Burton Sunoco 88 24 . '1
tO room
phone
'
1
'
1
2·5417.
ba la nce $78 .31 . U se ou r MIDDLEPORT Chrislrnas
program
will
be
A
MILLION
FOR
YOU R
Coco Cola 74-38 ; l . Penn Norris, Mrs. Alice Balser, Mrs.
12-15-6tc
do uble house. SJSOII.OO.
bu dget te rms. Call '1'12-7085.
KINDNE SS IN TH E YEAR
presented
on
Wednesday
Central 60-S7 ; 4. Ma son Agg
Pearl !\orris, .J1!ff Miller and
OF 197\.
12 -21 -6tc FREE GAS HEAT - 6 room s,
48 -64; S. New Haven F urn ilure
e.·ening, Dec . 22, at the Orange 1970 W-30 OLDSMOBILE 442,
bat h, cellar . Sma ll barn _
HENRY E. CLELAND
Roger
Roush.
l8 66 ; 6 . Carol ina Lumber Co
M ineral s .19 acre. 513. 500.00.
&lt;llristian
Church.
MODERN
walnut
stereorad
io
REALTOR
au
l
omatic
.
tactorl
ster
eo
Mr . arxl Mrs. ~p Miller.
16 32
&lt;l&gt;m bi nat ion, 4-speaker sound TUPPERS PLAINS - Modern 2
Ollite 992-2259
ta pe. Lots of extras . ike new .
Thelma
Hende
r
son.
Nina
H igh Team Series ~ Coca
sta tioned in Wichita Falls,
bedr oom
home ,
qa s
syo;i Pm , J.speed au tomatic
Ca ll '1'12-2441 after 5 p.m.
Resi dence m -U68
Cola 2700, Bu rton Su noco 'lSJ J
auto ma tic he at . Pla ins wafer
changer, separate con tr ol s.
Texas arrive d Saturday to Robmson and Oara Follrod
11-28· lc
12-19-6tc
High Team Game - Coca Cola
4 AC RE S. SIO,SOII.OO .
attended
lh
e
Chns
tm
as
Balance
S64
.
79
.
Use
ou
r
ON YOUR DIAL
952 . Coca Cola and Mason Agg spend the holidays ..-ith Ius
J bedroom
budge t terms Call '1'1 2-7085 RUTLAND CH EV Y Impala , run s geed
ff/ 7.
parents Mr. and Mrs. Herbert pr o ~ ram at the Cool\ lil e '62SlOG,
paneled home Bath . ga s
12-21 6tc
' 51 Chevy pickup, rr " '
H 1gh lnd Series - 0 . M iller
~l ethodtst Ch urch , Sunday
•
heat in g . 11 2 lots . N EW
~I iller and J eff .
condition
.
Phone
94:?
819 C•p•c ity
613. J Grate 582 High lnd
LISTING
56.000
00.
·
l'\·emng.
Dec.,
12.
ONE HYD R AU~IC snow plo".
Moytlt
6083.
Revtval sen·ices closed at
Game D Miller :?53, H'
Automttics
one
hy dr aul iC
ta i lgate LETART - .'; rooms, basement
•p
1
1-17-lO
Grange
was
held
here
on
Mi Iter '134
the United Brethren Omrrh
2 speed opera lion
Large l ot for garden. Asking
spreader , one coa l. for ced air
Friday even in g, Dec. 10.
$5.
000.00,
Cho ice of '*lief
Sunday .
furnace wi t h stoker . li ke new,
196S FORD pickup. custom Cob.
Sunday Mi11ed
temps .
A.uto .
~orman
Will.
a
delegale
to
the
MIDDLEPORT
1
apartone
lady
'
s
wi
nter
coa
t
,
new
:
3
wide bed , Sl ,400 J. '69
Rev. Edward Griffilh and
water
lit~te l 1
1. Dunca n &amp; Sines 78-26; 1.
me.nts - 11 rooms, 2 ba ths.
new dresses . Phone 949-4761 .
Volk swagen. Sl ,IOO, '69 Dodge
c ~nt ; o l. · Liril'
Goodr ich &amp; Roosh 66-44 ; 3. fri end Mrs . Odessa Roush State Grange Conven lion. at
Ad tu nct to shopping .
12-2\
-4fc
Swinger,
2
dr.
hardtop,
V
8,
F1lter o.- Powe-r
Hood and Greene 58-46 ; 4. sp&lt;:nt Wednesday night with Toledo was present and gave a
P. S. 3 ACRES - 6 room liouse.
_
F"
in _Ag itator .
standard
.
Sl
,
100.
'64
Ford
Cremeans &amp; Sm ith 56-48; 6.
report. A gift was presented to
Ouq well f cellar, J outPerm1-Pren • ·
1971
ZIG-ZAG
sewing
machine
Rev.
and
Mrs.
0
.
G.
McKinney
conve
rt
ible,
excellent
c
on
Wr ight &amp; Smith 48-56 ; 7.
bu ild ings. Ask ing SSSOO .OO.
Moylot
left
in
layaway
.
Beautiful
Douglas
Carr,
who
attended
dition,
SSOII
.
Phone
'1'12-60411
.
Fear some F ou r 42-62 ; 8. at Charleston arxl did some
NEW LISTING.
HIID of Heat
12-19-J•p
pastel
color,
full
si
ze
model.
this convention as gr ange
Withers &amp; Blake 20-84.
Dryers
shopping Thursday.
All bui ll in to buttonhole, WE HAVE 40 PROPERTIES
High Tea m Se r ies ~ Duncan
Surround
clathesl
prillCt'.
FOR
SALE .
HOMES,
overcast and fancy sti tch .
1966 WHITE Ford . 6-cytinder
w ith gentle. tven
&amp; Sines 1008, Goodrich &amp; Roush
BUSINESSES,
FARMS
AND
Mr . and Mrs. Bill Follrod and
Pay ·lust S48 .75 cash or terms
heat. No hot spon.
stand ard , needs motor wort..
1994. Tedm •·hgh Game ·COMMERCIAL LAND.
a
va
i
a
b
le
.
T
rade
-i
n
s
a
c
Sue
Ann
of
Athens
were
f
ri
day
bu
t
dr
iveable.
SJ
SO,
297
A
~h
no
overdqr ~ n a . t
Duncan &amp; Sine~ 706, Duncan &amp;
992-3325 - 9nl31B
cepted Phone 992 56J 1
-F ine Mesh L int
St
,
M
iddleport
Sines 69L
night visitors of Clara f ollro&lt;i
Filter .
HELEN L TEAFORD
11 21 6tc -12-2t l'o
High Ind . SE.-r ie~ - M en ~ J
ASSOCIATE
We '-'tcY,iJe in
and :\ tna Robinson .
::---- - Goodr ich 5S8 . R. Sines 5)4 ,
MAYTAG
NEAR
EWING
MORTUARY
A(UUM
cleaner
brand
new
In 19611 Apollo V!ll blasted off
P . Ferguson 488.
Women Red
Co~rp•t
t2 -16-6tc
1971 model. Comp lete with all
For Renf
0 . 5tnes ~~~for the moon orbil carr) mg
A lhougl)l for today : Bri tish F URNISHED and unfurnished cleaning tools . Small pa int
High Ind. Game - Men : .D. astr ona uts Fran k Borman .
damage in shipp ing, Will take :HolJSE-:1642 Lincoln Hefghls.
Du~e&lt;~n 22 t and J. 5mi th 210;
poet R•chard Trench sa id. ··we
, •partments. ClasP tlJ school.
James
Lovell
and
William
S11
cash or bvdgc t plan
. Call Danny Thompson, 'lr.Women - 0 . 5ines lin. C.
Phone '1'11-5AJ4.
kneel.
how
1.-eak.
We
rise".
how
ava
•lable.
Phone 992·5641 .
2t96.
'742-4211
Rou\h \81.
Anders.
10-18-ttc
Al'nold Grate
full 0 pm&lt;!!'r."
Rutland,
12·21-6tc
(J

UNK SNUFFY

HOW 'IE LOOK ,
JUGHAID -·-

AUNT LOWEEZV

------

Local Bowling

GO SHOW 'lORE
I'M ALL SOT TO
GOTO JAMEV'S

BADGf,; GUYS

,

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Pomeroy Motor Co.

S GT BLOTTER, WE HAD

BUT WHEN WE
FINALL'I GOT AN
OKAY TO MAKE
11-jE ARRESI, .

A SEARCH WARRAN ~ A
COURT - APPOINTE D
ATTORNEY. AND

Tl1REE MEMBERS
OF Tl1E MAYOR'S
COMMI TTEE .

'

THE SUSPECT
HAD MOVED.

992-7608

HIDDEN
TREASURES
GIFT SHOP

NO

HOW J.IUMIUATIN6!!
COMING HOME B'i

GARBAGE TRUCK-

OTHER
WA'i,
AUNT
BESSIE!!

I

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
SS.55

WINNIE

WINKLE.

BUGS BUNNY

.MutJCH .. .

THA"T' LL.

CHOMp.. .
S.,;~~~(!

P55T••• BUGS!

SEALL
FOil NOw,
MR . FUDO!

SNI!'AK A LOOK
MV CHART,

l'D LIKE 1t&gt; KNOW

AT

HOW

1 FEEL.!

WILL '70U?

1

I'

4

YOUR LOCAL ARMY

I

REPRESENTATIVE

PH. 992-7796

WANTS TO

TALK TO YOU

ABOUT THE NEW

ARMY PAY RAISE

1Ui·(·d

."'m·iul \o/(•s

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets

Prett~ quiet back there, Chip'

Joel cloe,;;n't know we're cominq
to fix up his shack, &lt;;tubb6?

The
Daily Sentinel

MILLER

SENTINEL
CARRIERS

NOW 1595
Karr &amp; Van Zandt

23 CU. FT.

1

£l.TAA.?

TilE BORN LOSER

0
0

•

')

--- ....

IT'S ~ INJ(), IT'S A flt,Aii'N ~!
'f()J fo.mV IT 1D IMK£ V~L.F
MQJI(; P..1TmTI1/Ei!
PLEAS E,, WITHOUT

Hf'( !:lUDDY ·-· tlOW'D YA LIKE ANOTHER
PIANC DJR r 0 1EAP--- UKE N0 1HIIi '
00\IJN AN ' NOTt11r1'A WEE K?

M'( PtAtfO I a\ HNOT

FIGHT THlS !l'/ill.!J. illl!!i'
9' P\l'ASURE l !:lQJ WHEN l Cir!'f' ~-~f

I GOTTA

MA Kf A L\VIf1G!

THAT PIAII_9 YillHOliT MP,KlN' B 1'110ftT

Ori

!J:!E D!;AL' IT ' S A SIGN 0' WEAKNE SS

TI1ATU GEl ME A 6R. T &lt;N TH£ EAR BY
PROF. CRHPY ·· ·I.' !!fEVER fiN DS Q\!.T
'
~l !.!,--

~~
ACROSS
I. Baker's
need
8. Urchin
ll. Love
poetry's
muse
12. Expun ge
13. Yuletide
carol
(2 wds. I
15, M.ichel·
angelo
statue
16. Mak e lace
.._~-'11 19. Pay dirt
1'
20. "Arlie"
~~~
author
\ '\'"'""123. Greci an
theaters
25. Tow ered ,
as a
mountain
'----'-LL-.L.:..J 27. See13

I SALE •249 :
._ ________ _J

SR.

Deland

Realty

HAVE

TAIC'E -

10 THf PIG~

- l l f ! I twr !WIELY
ESCAI'fP WITH MY LlfE

TH! G!JARVS!
1 HAVE 5POKEH OF
~

I. Maneuver

5. Prologue
si nger In
"I PagJi.
acd"
6. Refined
7. Tosca's
"Visai
d' Arte"
B. Publicalion, for

short
9. Suffix
meaning
so mewhal
10. Tennis
equipment

tC 1971 King Featurea Syndic11Le, Inc.)

Unocrunble theH four Jumbl..,
one letter to ea&lt;h oqual't!, to
form four ordinary wor4•·

36. Louise
37. Seragllo
chamber
38. Includes
39. Cheering
word
tO. European
country

volcanic

mountain
28. fncor·
poreal
33. High strung
35. Soprano,

n

Lucrezla

35. Cop styl&lt;·
37. See 13

COLlfAGUf5 WHO
HAVE I
AHP

A

·~er-,;-

I

liMARK

/ ~\

[J I

II

(abbr.)

Childol
Loki
U . Attempt

14. Domain

r ROFUI.

,_,

ea..tvt.

I [)

1

WFUES

III

'•

-~pon

DAY

ACQ!Jt~P

mulberry

16. Namely
(2 wds.)
17. Turkish
city
lB. Irascible
20.Aseended
21. Dullwilted
2%. Guest
%4. Peer
Gynt's
mother
26. Kyushu 's

29. Bent

IIIII -

HAPPY

MlfN I

2. Silkworm
3. Indian

Y..tuday's Cryploquole: THE SECRET OF EDUCATION
LIES IN RESPECTING THE PUPIL - RALPH WALDO·
EMERSON
.: ..

Across
(2 wds.)

30. Thessalian
mou ntai n
31. Scottis h
river
JZ. Caught
U.Bard's

~-,-;;;,

11

(A-wn ·~·

"

I-.. IINIIL CAIGO nNIILI PIITLI
YetCerM,"t
I AM••r1 ..4 ('CH~Nd'cn. 011llrosd n7- TICKII TAPI
. ,1... ·-··' ....... ..
PI\" 1-. ...

eve·rlt

Acr o~s

WMP0/1390

'RlfnAND FURNITUR'EI&lt;t

IFQlH! CO.W r&lt;UCW-UP
Ql &lt;;a,\£; OF 'THO&gt;G ~
~t~ SHe LA~ Qt ~.~~?!

r----

lJTrLE ORPHAN ANNIE

- -----

I CHEST FREEZER I

Virgil B. ,
TEAFORD

-----.

RfALH THE ZAN! L . .

--.

r---------•I

1
I

1969 MUSTANG

6UMP1N

You two &lt;;till with us?

MOBILE tllMES

WANTED!

... ELlAJt ~D rT WAS
lHE ~WA.VlO

---~--~~-~-

20'

I

-·

---,---~-

(3 wd s. 1

'

U. Mik ado's

·~

court
44. Snort
45. Jell ied
••lad
C8. Pri meval
I-I'VE

~0

IDEA WHAT
¥0U'RS TALKIN6
AS O ~T!

DOWN
l. Word of
Inquiry

DAILY CRYI'TO(jUOTE- Here's how to work it:
Is

AXYDLBAAXR

REAL PARTRtDGES VE~ ~LDOM

I. 0 N G F E L L 0 W

FALL OJT OF FEAR TREES

One leit er simply slands for anolher. In this .sample A i'
URed for the throe I.'s, X for the tw.o O's, ole. S1ngle lelten&lt;.
aposlrophrs. th e length Hnd formalton of lhr word' art all
hint ,;. F:ach rl t~ ~ !h(• r odr lt•llrrs arr cllff&lt;'rent .

J

:\ Crvptogram ()uoWI,•n
0 T
II 1 T

,,

~

_, 1. II

ll 11
II

Y \1 V

r

11 Y ;\ 1'

F Z (; I
II Y

~·

T P

1

~:

1: 7. .-\ T t'

II Y M (i I . - T I. L 1. T

l

)

(;F.II n YF'

o.

•
I

awwJ

t

�~iddleport-Pcmeroy, 0 .. Dec.

10- The Daily SentinPl

%1, 1971

Mason Council News ..• in Briefs.
Meeting Held
Street paving and garbage pickups still. rate ~uch ~ ~e
attention given by Mason's Town Council at tts pen odic
meetings.
It was during a regular session Monday evening when Gary
Gibbs, Recorder, reported that he has compiled a list of all
property owners .on the streets proposed to be paved and also
has obtained two sets of town maps.
It was suggested by Gibbs and ·
agreed on by council that before council.
any ordinan ce&lt;is ever written an
A dis cussion wa s held
information me~tmg be set to concerning the Emergency
;nform the property owners Employment Act
which
concerned as to the proposed supplies labor for projects that
cost,
stre ets
involved, were in process before July 71 ,
specifications and financing . but council took no action on
A date for the information this.
meeting will br scheduled at the
It was brought out that
next regular r·ouncil meeting it although a copy of the Ripley
was decidec
Fire Department has not been
Garbage J"ickups in the obtained it was agreed that a
corporation i:mits were aired at special meeting would be set at
length by cr.uncil. It was the the next regular meeting for the
consense s of all the town purpose of answering the fire
officials that the town needs to department proposal.
start garha ~ e collections again .
Council announced plans for
A locati on was discussed in closing
of
the
Water
office .
It
length and 1t was agreed to Department
contact {he county health will be closed Friday and
officer fu r approval.
Saturday this week and then
Also furmshing of plastic bags again December 31 and January
was d1scussed as well as the I, due to the holiday season.
cost of ha uling garbage, but no
Council agreed to pay town
figure 11 as reached for this bills in the amount of $254.05
ser l'lce pending a more and water department bills in
thorough investigation .
the amount of $15.34.
Police Chief John Harrah
Mayor Roy Harless presided
in
addition
to
reported to council that the and
num be r of trucks haulin g Mr .
Gibbs,
recorder,
garbage and trash by way of council members present were
Anderso n Street has been Richard Fowler, .Joe Jones
Russell
Barton .
red uced since warning tickets and
have been issued.
Charlotte
Jenks ,
Water
Construction for a storage Department Secretary, was
building to house town tools is also present.
well under way and is
approximately 50 per cent
complete it was reported to
BOY INJURED
Luther Blevins, 11-year old
son of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon
Blevins, Pomeroy, Rt. 3, was
treated and released at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Monday night after being
struck by a car on North
Second St., Middleport.
The boy ran from between
two parked vehicles into the
path of a car driven by
Raymond Durst, 20, Cottageville, W. Va. No citation
was issued.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight, Dec. 21

fHE PROFESSIONALS
( Technicolor)
Lee Marvin
Burt Lancaster

"G"

Colorcartoons :
Father's Day Off

SHOW STARTS7 P.M.
Wednesday &amp; Thursday
December 22-23

NOT OPEN

Downing-Childs Agency Inc.
PHONE 992 -2342

MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

INSURANCE - BONDS
MUTUAL FUNDS
Meigs County's Oldest and Largest
Insurance Agency
•

(Continued from Page I )
customs or being removed from bonded wru ehouses for delivery.
If the surcharge had already been paid on those_ products,
however, it will not be refunded, he said. That meant 1t m1ght.be
several days or weeks, even months, before prices of any foretgn
goods are lowered to reflect removal of the surcharge .

SAN FRANCISCO - THE AVERAGE AMERICAN child
gets $32 worth ot Christmas toys, according to a study by Crocker
Bank.
The study released Monday noted that the California child
fared a little better from Santa, getting $38 worth of toys.
The bank also had a note suggesting that youngsters take
care of their Christmas booty . It said that the Christmas toys are
more than half the toys they will get all year .
WASHINGTON _ THE PAY BOARD may be facing its
worst mternal squabble yet in trying to pass on aerospace industry contracts covering more than 200,000 workers . The board
.
kl th
t'
amid Indications
called a meetmg today to tac e e ques wn,
the public and business members of the board may form a
majority to pare down the size of the raises scheduled fur the first
year of the pacts.
That first year rise is estimated to total nea rly 12I,JCt. when
costoflivingboosts fromtheoldcontractsarefiguredin . Donald
Rumsfeld, director of the Cost of Living Council, predicted last
weekend that the pay panel would not approve the raises .
BELFAST, NORTHERN ffiELAND - BOMBS ripped
through downtown Belfast today for the second straight day,
underscoring extremist vows to reduce the capital to 'a pile of
rubble by Christmas," the army said.
An army spokesman said Jack Lavery was killed when a
blast demolished his pub, Lavery's Bar, on the Lisburn Road in
the city center. The three-story building suffered structural
damage. Another explosion tore the front out of a bicycle shop on
King Street, several blocks away, the spokesman said. No in·
juries were reported.

Laughs

suit of wear on gnding machinery used in pul veril ing the
(Continued from Page 1)
chocolate, " the depar tment exempt himself from the tax.
planed, adding that cf!nsumers
should have "no concern" about
The office of Gov. John J. Gil- eating the candies.
ligan, which has no special afUnless they did n't like the
finity for President Nixon, let it taste of iron .
slip in a news release on the
governor's reaction to Nixon's
No one openl y accused the
announced visit to mainland General Assembly of acting in
China .
haste on budget and l&lt;lx legisla" All Americans welcome any tion this year, but Senate Mimore or jesture (sic) on the nority Leader Anthon y 0. Calpart of our President or other abrese,D-Cleveland ,cameclose
national leaders to ease the in this statement iss ued six
world tension ... "
months after the debate began.
"Whether my colleagues
Freud may also have done a across the aisle have today actpirouette when House Speaker ed in wisdom or haste only the
CharlesF. Kurfess, whodidbat- future will hold the answer," he
Ue with newsmen earlier in the said .
year over secret meetings, was
complimented on his new suit
Edwin G. Lawton , the Ameriby a scribe.
can Independent Party candi"Yeah, it holds a press real date for governor last year, said
well ... I mean it sheds wrink- Toledo Mayor Harry Kessler, in
les, " the Speaker quickly add- opposing an AlP convention in
ed.
Toledo, insinuated members of
his party were a bunch of trouFor pure corn, there was blemakers.
State Auditor Joseph T. Fergu"Nothing is farther from the
son's statement that he was go- truth," said Lawton, noting the
ing to investigate the operation party has a right to hold its
of the office under his beleag- convention in Toledo. "And if
uered predecessor. Roger need be, we will fight for that
Cloud, "to remove any possible right," he said.
cloud of doubt" that might
surround his own adObservers wondered if mayministration .
be a group of Republifan House
conservatives had come up with
The state Department of Agrithe perfect answer to Ohio's
culture issued a comforting note
revenue dilemma when they anafter iron filings were discovernounced what their press reed in certain chocolate candies.
lease described as a "bear"The iron particles are the rebones" tax proposal.

tax.
e

'

.

.•
L

children.
Preceding him in death were
a daughter, two brot:.ers and
two sisters.
Funeral services will be at 2
p.m. Wednesday at the White
Funeral Home in Coolville with
the Rev. Roy W. Rose of.
ficiating . Burial will be in
Coolville Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
anv time.

Howard Headley
Died on Monday

Howard E . Headley, 53,
Parkersburg, W. Va ., died
Monday at the Camden-Clark
Hospital in Parkersburg
following a long illness.
A member of the Epworth
Methodist Church ,
Mr.
Headley is survived by his
wife ,
Eliz:abeth ;
two
daughters, Mrs. Larry Villers
and Mrs. Bernard Dowler, both
of
Parkersburg ;
three
brothers, Clarence and Clyde
of Tuppers Plains, and Harry,
of Vienna, W. Va., and a sister,
Mrs. Julia Myers, also of
Vienna.
LOCAL TEMPS
'
Funeral services will be at 2
Temperature in downtown
Pomeroy Tuesday at 11 a .m. p.m. Wednesday at the
was 44 degrees under cloudy Franklin Funeral Home in
Parkersburg.
skies .

Hurt In
Accident
A Pomeroy woman was
hospitalized after two cars
were demolished in a two-car
accident Monday at 10:25 p.m.
on the SR 7 bypass, the Meigs
County
Sheriff's
Dept .
repocted.
Dora Anestine Carsey, 53,
was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the
Middlepoct E-R squad and:
admitted for lacerations of the
nose and abrasions.
Mrs. Carsey pulling from
County Road 5, turned north·
east on 7, crossed in to the left
lane, and struck a car driven
southwest by David Michael
l.Amsford, 20, West Russell, Ky ·
Mrs. Carsey was cited for
failure to drive on the right half
of a roadway.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED Sandra
Floccari, Middleport; Mary
Gilmore,
Pomeroy ;
H.
Robinson , Letart, W. Va . ;
Anestine Carsey, Harrisonville; Jessie Sisson, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED - Sherrie
Starcher, Carl Still, Harvey
Erlewine.

MAKE ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
Your Christmas Gift Shopping Center

Washable orion acrylic gives
you a combination of lovely
color and unusual design .
Fringed, virgin Orlon(R J
acrylic knit . Front but toned- with side slits, so
your hands are free . Shades
of navy, red. white and
tweed.
One
size
fits
everyone.

ALSO SEE OUR NEW GROUP OF WOMEN'S SWEATERS, CARDIGANS AND
SLIPOVERS. SOLIDS AND STRIPES. All WASHABL£ ACRYUC.

REGULAR SIZES 34 ID 40
EXTRA SIZES 42 ID 46

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

SUGGESTION

Pleasant Valley Hospital
ADMISSIONS: Cathey New,
Vinton, 0.; Ronnie Bostic ,
Point Pleasant, and Howard
Johnson, Point Pleasant.
DISCHARGES: Mrs. Robert
Fowler and son; Mrs. David
Fetty, Gene Hern, Jr.

See your Ford Dealer

,

Summit

ft

· In Ford Country.
i

•

State Rep. Walter A. Rutkow- ~
ski, D-Maple Heights,shouldappeal to voters of all stripes.
"I'm a conservative to middle-of-the-road Democrat who
leans a little to the left,' ' he
said .

standard! Choice of two wheelbases .
Or, take Pinto. It's lower-priced
than the leading import. Comes with
rack -and-pinion steering like Jaguar.
Has self-adjusting brakes. And its
transmission gears are hand ·
matched and fitted ... Ilk~ Ferrari!

)

(Continued from Page 1)
news conference to defend the
record of the first session of the
92nd Congress and, by inference, his own stewardship during
his first year as speaker. He
has been criticized by some
party members as not tough
enough.
In a prepared statement he
said Congress had con. centra ted first on "widening
democracy" by reforming its
own procedures, lowering the
voting age to 18, and plugging
campaign spending loopholes.
Secondly, he said, it concluded that Nixon's economic
policies had produced complete disarray, with the cost of
living up 12 per cent in two
years, unemployment at a 1~
year high of 6 per cent, and
welfare rolls at an all-time
peM..
"The costs of this deliberate
slowdown have been enormous," Albert said. "Far from
bringing down prices as intended, administration policies
produced an unprecedented
combination of inflation and
recession ...
"Believing that the country
could not longer afford inaction, the Congress extended the
authority it had given the
President in 1970 to control
wages and prices and urged
him again to act immediately, " he added .
"The Congress approved
emergency employment
legislation and accelerated
public works authorization to
get the federal government
into the attack on joblessness.
And after the President finally
adopted our recommendations
on Aug. 15, we expeditiously
enacted tax relief to•stimulate
the economy and a further
extension of the economic
stabilization legislation ... "
Albert said .

Emra B. Nester, 73, 'of 1842
Riverside. Drive, Colwnbus,
formerly of Coolville, died
Monday
at
Riverside
in
Methodist
Hospital
Colwnbus following a brief
illness.
The son of the laU! Samuel D.
and Frances Carpenter Nester,
he was born at Spencer, W. Va.
He was a retired oil well driller
and was employed with the
Godfrey L. Cabot Corp .,
Charleston, W. Va ., many
years.
Mr. Nester was a member of
the Cooolville Methodist
Church and a veteran of World
War II .
Survivor s include a son ,
Melvin H., Grove City ; a
daughter ,
Mrs.
Wayne
I Frances ) Chambers ,
Columbus; three brothers ,
Ellet, Perry and Howard H., all
of Spencer ; four sisters, Mrs.
Flora Miller, Sissonville, W.
Va .; Mrs . Nettie Hall,
Liverpool, W. Va .; Mrs .
Martha McCoy, Lubeck, W.
Va ., and Mrs. Virginia McCoy
of Coolville , and seven grand-

A UNIQUE

Never a better time to buy
Ford 1972 engineering and style
Just in time to save money l or early
Xmas shopping' On a '72 Torino
that's the best built , best handling,
roomiest mid-size Ford ever . With
a rugged new body /fra me construction. A new suspensio n sy stem lor
betler handling . Front disc brake s.

•.

!Continued from Page I J
portunities in Eruope," "we in
our own policies, seek to explore those opportunities for
building a structure of peace,
by these significant journeys to
nations with which we have
now and will continue to have
very profound differences of
philosophy ."
In his toast Heath also
referred to the new rela lionship.
"A healthy relationship can
withstand change." Heath
said. "And as the date of
Britain 's entry into the
European community approaches there will indeed be
some changes in our relations.
"I see no cause for alarm or
dismay in this. In many fields
our traditional ties will remain
unchanged . We have always
made it clear that we believe
that a United Europe should
main!ain the closest possible
links with the United States
based on the vast area of
common interests which we
shall
continue to share."
Another head-scratcher came
• out of a Legislative Service
Commission analysis of the provisions of a bill on hit-and-run
accidents .
"Since in the case of a hitand . run death, the victim is
usually not available to give
testimony ... " read the analysis.

repeal
d

Emra .Nester Died Monday

Albert

-,
-~

WEEKEND GUESTS
Mrs. Harold Johnson and Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Leifheit,
Emma Jo and Kirt, of ~
Springfield were weekend
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harry ~
Davis, Pomeroy.

ff
ft

For Only

$20.00

An' able
Now AI

Twenty s1.00 Bills In Gift Package

~
~
,

..... ..

Gran Tori no

The Farmers Bank &amp;-Savings Co.

·eased on manu fac turer ' s suggested retail prices.

KEITH GOBLE FORD INC.
461 South Third Sl, Middleport, Ohio

f'

SHOPPING DAYS

TO CHRISTMAS

POMEROY, OHIO
Member Federal Reserve and Fed. Deposit Ins. Corp.

The

fanneB

Bank

�</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="36014">
            <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="36013">
              <text>December 21, 1971</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="3443">
      <name>headley</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6716">
      <name>nester</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
