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U- •he [lp tly Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pomerny, 0., Dec. 26, 1972

Mrs. Pillsbury died on Monday

Bombs

MASON - Mrs . Norma
Loui8e PiUsbury, 51, Johnstown, Ohio, · former Mason
County resident, died Mondsy
at her borne.

Mrs. Pillsbury was the ·
daug
of the fate Lou Roush
(Continued from page I)
and ts. ea I.Slewart.F.ox,-of heaviest raids in the history of
Johnstown . Besides her the Indochina war and included
mother, Mrs . Pillsbury is B:i2 missions over the Hanoisurvived by her husband Haiphong area for the first
.
Henry C. (Arky) Pillsbury; a·' time.
daughter, Mrs.
Jatnes
The North Vietname8e said
Radebaugh, Oak Park, Ill., and the big Stratoforts laid down
her stepfathe·r, Billie Fox, carpets ' of bombs on civilian
't
Joh'nstown.
areas in the capital and in
She was a member of the · other cities and towns. ComNew Albany United Methodist mand spokesmen today said
Church at Johnstown and Nixon's order to resume _the
"The Two of Us" Ea;tern Star Chapter 71 at unrestricted raids over the
Beaumont, Texas.
North included all but civilian
Funeral services will be at 11 . targets.
I
a.m. Wednesday at the Crouse
In Paris, Hanoi delegates to
. Galfipolis, 0.
and Son Funeral Home In the stalled peace talks 'said
Johl)stown. The body will be U.S. bombings of the Hanoi,
..- - - - - - - - • brought to the ' Foglesong Haiphong area contlnued
Funeral Home here where through Christmas Ql!irnlng,
friends may call from 7 to .9 ·"making many victims among
Tonight
p.m. Wednesday. Local funeral the Civilian population." The
December26
services will be at the Heights latest Hanoi Radio. broadcast
THE REVENGERS
United Methodist Church in reported raids on the area
(Technlcolor)
Susan Hayword
· Point Pleasant at 1 p.m. Thurs- Christmas Eve.
.
,.
William Holden
day with the Rev. Charles
~e spokesma~ lll Satgon
. Colorcartoons
Frum officiatjng. The body will swd today Hano_t reports of
lPG)
Show Starts 7 p.m .'
be at the church from noon ' U.S. air raids durlllg the bomb
until time of services. Burial halt were not neceasar.ily false.
Wednesday &amp; Thursday
will be in !Qrkland MemQrial U.S. reconnai~sance planes
December 21.21 ·
Gardens.
may ha;~ been fired on b)(
NOT .OPEN
· NQI'th Vtetnamese gunners, he
said, and ,es~ort , fighterbombers in such a case woold
hav~ attacked the gun
positions.
The Christmas truce that'
went into effect at 5 a.m. EST
Sunday was not announced In
advance, the U.S. command
apokesman said, because ''we·
believe an advantage would
accrue 'to the enemy of
foreknowledge of a stand

Now Appearing
In The
· Paddle Wheel
lounge

HOLIDAY INN

MEIGS THEATRE

For anything having to do with
money, -we .can make arrange-

We'll do the work on any
piece of your banking or

handle your 'entire financial
p!eturo.
'
~ doeo it lllf you il the
dolilf Is done at the wideawa~e

Charles H. Diehl, ~1.
Pomeroy, a Democrat Pa_rty
leader and a former Pomeroy
postmaster, died Moni\By at
University Hospital In
Columbus following a lingerinl!
illness.
Mr ·Diehl was employed with
· the National Life Insurance Co.
arid was a member of Middleport's
Feeney-Bennett
128, American
Legion .Post
Ue
belonged to the Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church.
Surviving are his wife,
Bertha ·, two sons, Louis, of
Cleveland, and Charles, Jr., at
home ; two step-cni,ldren,
Roger Staats, serving_with the
U. S. Arm in Texas and

~a~J'so:.~=he=~~:;"~e;,

bank.

lhe tvit!e-itulfllre brmk mokes i{fjj_so en..w ·

Co.

Farmers Bank &amp;
POMEROY, OHIO

Member of Federal Reserve S)'slem
On Fridays Our Drive-In Window Is Open 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.

(Continuously).

S20,000 Muimum Insurance for Each Depositor

Thomas Denney, 20, Rt. I,
·G
Galli_
11 polis, was arrested by the
d a ta1m County
t s d sheriff's
. epar
en f un ay night on
h
c arges o possession of
marijuana and carrying_ a
concealed weapon.
Sheriff-elect James W.
Saunders said this morning

·A Ulos CO ll!IUe
J-_
·
- The departm ent of She~iff

.Denney was pulled over
Sunday drivin'g on Georges
Creek dHd., apparenUy on a tip,
while epuli'18 were on routine
patrol. Denney~ granted offleers permission to search his
car. They found one package of
marijuana of about two O\lflCes
in the car's trunk.
The car then was ·towed tO
th bull
beh' d th
e
pen area
m
e
· GaUia County Jail where it was
Searched thoroughly by Deputy
Johh Knapp's mariJ'uanasniffing dog which found
another two-ounce package
under the front seat.
Also confiscated were two
pipes and cigarette paper. '
Saunders said a pistol was
found in the glove com·
partment.
Denney will appear in
Gallipolis Municipal Court
Wednesday
on led
the
h
f h morning
·
0
c arge
avmg a concea ·
deadly .weapon . The other •

charge may not be heard until
after Jan. 1:-"
•
Denney is presently on
probation on conviction of
breaking and entering.
.- Sheriff's deputies also in·
vestigated a B&amp;:E Sunday at
the residence of Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Neekamp on Bull Run
Rd.

De 11
'd
pu es sat someone en·
tered the home and took a set of
dishes which were g_ift
wrapped under the Chrisim_as
tree,
Other arrests were Virgil
Booten, 49, Rt. I, Gallipolis,

charged with OWl, hlwklp,
driving under revocation
resisting arrest; Roger ~
·
Miller, 23, Columbus,
fl Ut·
Ji'
toxication and open as !
Ralph D. Lavender, 34',
Syracuse, DWI; James Gary
Straight, 26, Rt. 1, Patriot,
DWI; Valjean Ronald Cleell-,
44, South Charleston, DWlj
G L J hna 19 Rt 4 Oak
ary . o on, , . , . , .
Hill, reckless operation atl4
Gerald Dillow, 36, ironton, wli:l
1
transferred to Gallla Coun•,•
'
from the Lawrence County Jajl
for safekeeping.
::
.;
,..

~'

a_r_ ·u.

pomp and pageantry and who exchanges will be closed.
said men provide their own
Nixon . and his wife .. Pat
fonn I ol dignity 0 planned hiS ' planned tony to Indepetldence
own funeral and stipulated that during the la,te afternoon, lay a
there,be no riderless borse, no wreath at the Trwnan Library
carriages and no drumbeats at and pay their respects to the
the ceremony.
family. The Nixons will return
President Nixon, hailing to WaShingtOn four hours later.
Trwnan as a man' of ''viBlon They will not attend the simple
and Iguts" declared a 30-day funeral R(anned for Thursday.
, perij'd of mourning with flags
Former President Lyndon B.
on all covernment buildings Johilson, his wife Lady Bird,
flying . at half staff, and and their daughters. and their
'proClaimed Thursday a husbands, also announced
-national day · of mourning. plans to fly to Independence
Thete will be no mail delivery this afternoon. Johnson
that day, and both the New remembered·Trwnan as ·a man
York
and American stock . ''wbo was never flinching in
l

ea

resz ent

the face of crucial national ble."
choices."
· Other momentous decisions
nie Toughest Choice
Truman made during his two
Truman said the. toughest terms, 1~5-1953, included !
choice he made as president
- The go-ahead for develo()was sending U.S. troops to ment of the hydrogen . bomb.
Korea in'a "police action" that
- The Berlin airlift to foil
kept Coiillilunist soldiers from Russia's blockade of the
taking over territory south of isolated city .
the 38th Parallel. He said that
- The "Truman Doctr-ine" to
decision overshadowed all oth· keep Russia out of southern
ers, including his order to drop Europe.
the atomic bomb on Japan.
- The creation of the North
The atomic bomb order, · Atlantic Treaty Organization
Truman ·said, ''was pur~ly a (NATO) .
mUitary matter that saved
Messages of sympathy and
thousands of American lives. sorrow arrived from dlgnala·
No other course was conceiva· ries and chiefs of state around

the world as well as !tom the ident," Johnson, 64, said from ·
common people Trtirnan tUs Li!J Ranch In central
identified with.
Texas. "I shall miss him in
"The whole town is mourning most personal and private
for the President," said Gerald way, and I shall be grateful all
Gilkey, mayor of Lamar, . the my days for the privilege of
rural southwestern Missouri having known so great a man."
town where Truman was born.
Nixon praised Truman as
"The old Truman house has "one of the most courageous
been closed."
· presidents in our history."
A Most Respecled Advisor
"He did what had to be done
Former President Lyndon B. when it had to be ' done and
Johnson said Truman was one generations to come will be In
of his mo~t respected advisors his debt,': Nixon said. He said
when Johnson was in the White the world's 'people adritired
House.
him "in a description he
"Harry Truman was my himself might have apfriend before he was pres(Continued on page 12)

a

'

Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Area
VOL. XXV NO. 178 ,

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1972

PHONE 992·2156

TEN CENS

•

anoz ravaged

Succeeded

.

ELBERFELDS .IN P'OME-ROY

BRI\&amp;GIRDLE

Save up to SZ.OJ on these
treat 'Pia,.. .,,,.,

STOREWIDE

Fabric Reductions
Trims • Accessories

family borne in Independence,
Mo., slilce leavir« office Jn .
1952, a familiar figure to
townspeople through his
famous early morning walba habit he had to curtail and
finally end as he grew older
and more feeble.

25%
TO

50% OFF
SALE STARTS TODAY,
TUES., DEC. 26

The Fabric Shop
THE SINGER STORE
115 W. Second
992-2284

·INDEPJ;:NDENCE, Mo. day.
(UP!) -Americans from the
The body of the tough little
Missouri farmlands where he "Man of Independence,"
was reared to the White House whose· momentous decisions
where ·he served as 33rd during and after World War 11
President mourned Harry s· shaped the destiny of his
Truman today. His body lay in country, died Tuesday at the
repose in a funeral home, .the age ~ 88 after a three-week
casket permanently sealed.
battle against old age and
Bess Trwnan, his childhood disease.
sweetheart and wife for 53
His body will lie in state in
years, their only daughter the sealed coffin in the Truman
Margaret Daniel, and other Library. Truman will be buried
~lose relatives. and friends on the grounds near his home
gatheredlntheTrulnan family '.he loved -''in the courtyard,
. home in Independence for the near the rose garden" of the
· funeral, a small , private library.
·
ceremony planned for Thurs.
Truman, who was opposed to

•

•

·

The Fabric Shop's YeQr-End

Save

.

•

atzon ·m ourns

ani!

M. Peenles. is dead

J.Je BJazer
died
M da

Truman

menta to your satisfaction.

,

died on Monday

;

R0 be. r t Har t en bach In •
vestigated _a tw!H'Br accident
oo Townshtp Road 43 near the
l!pshan Store at 4:25 p.m.
"mondaY· .
A ~r driven by Mayford
M.
.
'(lret
Hams, 52, Long Bottom,
• e•
r
pulllng from a drtve":'ay,
Mrs. Margaret · M. Peeples, employed in consume~
Y
' • · struck an ~as\ bound car drtven
67, of' 840 North Trimble Road, • research analysis work with
·
by David Allen Carter,
of
Mansfield, died Saturday .the Columbus Dispatch.
;
Cleveland; his mother, Pomeroy. There .~as light
evening at the Mansfield
She was a member of th~
. hi , p mneroy Route damage
. . 0 1e
Gimerai Hospital. .
Lexington Church of Chris~.'
Ge orgla
. to the Harrts, car and
2, and two brothers, Paul, of medtum to_ Ca~ter s. There
Mrs. Peeples had resided in Daughters of America, Prlc~
Culumbus, and Ivan, Texas. were _- no InJUries and no
the Mansfield area the past 10 207, Columbus Chapter ot
· ther, LoUvoe
"' hi ,preceded arrests
years . . She had lived In White Shrine, the Mansfield
Htsfa
At 6·. 35
S d
d h
hi 111
· d th
· p.m. un ay 0 n
Pomeroy and later In Grotto i\axiliary ail I ~
m
ea · . . .
. County Road 28 t'n Sutton T •JJ•
te
Columbus
where she was Disabled Arnertcan Veharans
Funera I servtces will.be held ., sh'
b k. d
·
.,., d
eer was
.
. . .
.
.
,
A,uxiliary, Columbus C pter
t I
1 the .own IP. a uc
a . p.m. • .. urs ay a
struck and killed by a car
Ewmg Funeral Home \\'ttjl the driven by Beverly J. Dowell, . ·
. OU
On y · Vet~rans· Memorial Hospital 13Surviving are her h~band·,
~~\ Ro~ert 1B~;~~ ~- 22, Racllie Route I. Damage to NEW HAVEN - Mrs. Lillie SATURDAY ADMISSIONS William B. Peeples; a son,
lela mg. ~ta WI
m e the car was light. There were Johnson Blazer, . 89, died - Terri Hurlow, Mason; Earl William C., of lexington; two
R~ck Sprmgs Cemetery· no personal injuries.
Monday at her residence in the Harless, Dexter, and Michael brothers, )l.aymond Lohn,
Frtends may call at the funeral
u· c
'ty
N
Johnson Ra ·
mon ommunt near ~w
• cme.
Westerville, and _Otto Lohn of
home any time.
Haven. Mrs. Blazer was born
SATURDAY DISCHARGES Pomeroy, and five grandCALL ANSWERED
Nov. 7, 18831n Mason County, - Martha McElroy , Nara children.
The Middleport E·R squad the daughter of the late James Hartman, Walter Wilson and
Funeral services will be held.
answered a call to Page st., at P. and Sarah Hart Johnson.
Gregory lewis.
·
sda t th
1' 30 p.m. Wedne y a e
SUNDAY
A
.DMISSIONS
at
6:54 pm. Sunday for William
Surviving are a ·daughter,
Snyder Funeral Home, 2553
(Continued fro!D page I)
Brunning, Cedar Grove, W. Mrs. Lillian Jackson, Newell , Edward Freeman, Pomerny; Lexington Ave., Mansfield,
National Guard arid going to Va., who while walking along W. Va.; two sons, Thurman, Mary Fori!, Letart, W. Va.; with Mr. ')l.oger Doty ofEurope during ' World War I. the street collapsed. Suffering Jr., and Chester, both of East George Batey, Pomeroy; ficiatlng. Burial will be in the
down"
After the war, Truman chest palns, he was taken to Liverpool; two sisters, Mrs. David Whitsell, Pomeroy; Greenlawn Cemetery,
Truce Extended
returned to ~nsas aty and
The liming of today's ooml&gt;- married the former Bess Veterans Memorial Hospital Edna Weaver,. Canton, and Cynthia Fox, Pomeroy, and Columbus. Friends may call at
where he was admitted. Just Miss Ann&amp; Johnson, local.
Gilbert Mees, Pomeroy.
the funeral home anytime.
ing resumption meant the
Funeral services will be at 3
SUNDAY DISCHARGJ;:S Wallace in 1919. Their only after !Opm, Monday the squad
truce had been extended 12 child, Margaret, was born in was called for Robert Craig at p.m. Thursday at the Union Flavy Sigman, Mary Weyerslnurs beyond the Initial 24 1924.
the residence, also on Page St. Methodist Church with the miller, Tamala Bowers,
hours. Informed Saigon
An Army friend, Jim Pen- Mr. Craig was dead upon the Rev. Bobby Woods officiating. Patricia Cleland, Roy Searsn Christy, Pomeroy; William
sources said earlier today
squad's arrival.
Burial will be in the Union Clara Smith, Arthur Goodin Brunning, Cedar Grove, W.
Nixon ·had ordered an in- dergast whose uncle was
Kansas City political leader
Cemetery. Friends may call at and Betty Ups ton.
Va., and Barbara Whittington,
definite extension of the bomb
Tom "Boss" Pendergast, got
the
Foglesong
Funeral
Home
MONDAY
ADMISSIONS
LOCAL
TEMPS
Pomeroy.
bait but later In the day, a 35Truman a job as county )lighTemperature in downtown · any time after 3 p.m. on Iris Morris, New Haven; Carl, MONDAY DISCHARGES.round Communist rocket
way overseer. Truman went to Pomeroy at 11 a.tn. Tuesday Wednesday. The body will be Moodispaugh, Middleport; I David 'Whitsell, Harrison
barrage hit the S)irawling Da
night school to study law and was 38 degrees, with snow taken to the church one hour Charles Frazier, Gallipolis; Robinson, Terri Hurlow and
Nang airbase 370mUea north of
moved through the Pendergast falling.
preceding the services.
Amy Eynon, Syracuse; Cora Kevin Barton.
Saigon . It was not known if
machine until he sought and
Nixon's order to resume the air
won a U.S. Senate seat In..1934.
,, .
war was linked to the Da Nang
He was te~lected In 1940 pnd
Incident.
chosen by Roosevelt as vice
~esldentlal nominee in 1944.
.As successor to Roosevelt,
whose more than three terms
through a depression and a
(Continued from page I)
world war made him a legend,
. freedom's cause."
Truman stood In a bold
ATruman family spOkesman Shadow. But he earned a
said: "It 'Is the wish of the reputation as a decisionfamily that In lieu of tlowers, maker, even among those who
friends make memorial dona- disagreed with those decisions.
tions to the Harry S Truman
''The Buck Stops Here," read
Library Institute, Indepen- the motto on his Oval Room
dence, Mo., or the charities of desk. And he 'iived and
their choice."
governed by the philosophy.
'
Jessie said Truman probably
He once admired an Arizona
would be buried "in the tombstone epitaph that said:
courtyard, near the rose "Here lies Jack Williams; He
garden" of the library he done his damodest.:•
established in 1957.
'
Truman said his most diffi.Truman was 467 days short cult decision was sending
of reaching his dream of living troops to KQI'ea in 1950. But
to age 90.
political histoi.lans rate high
his postwar Marshall Plan,
which helped rebulid Western
Europe economically, and his
support for the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization, which
. '
helped protect it militarily.
His Truman Docirine told
Russia to stay out' of Greece,
Turkey
and
Southern
Europe,
Angry at a nagging columnist, Truman called !be offendIng newspaperman
an
"S.P.B." When a music critic
was unkind to the professional
singing of his daughter
LIVING.BRAS
Margaret, Truman threatened
NEW! NO VISIBLE MEAN$ OF
SUPPORr-BRAS
to punch him In the nose.
(A) Style #132-Living Comfort Styled
ON SALE FOFI THE FIFIST TIME EVER
Bra ... ON SALE FOFI THE FIFIST
Stretch
In ll!e 1948 elections, Truman
...So Sheer. So leminine you'd never beTIME
EVEFI-(A,B,C)
...
Reg.
$6.50
ea
...
was an underdog because of
!ievelt supports ...
Now
'5.49.
(D Cups) ... Now •8.48.
.charges of corruption and "soft
Styl• #146-S/Ieer Lace .
Style #159-Liylng Stretch Bra-Stretch
· on Commun~" against his
!D)
Style
#148-Siteo;.
Straps ...(A.B.C) ... Reg. S4.95 ... Now 2 For
administration With public opi. Style 18148-Sheer (Beige)(A, B,Cl
18.40. (D Cups)... Now 2 For '10.40.
nion polls predicting his defeat ,
Style #179-Living ~ Stretch Bra-Rigid Reo. IMO... Now 14.49. (0 Cups)
Strap5 ... (A,B,C) ...Re&lt;,l. 14.50... Now 2 For ... Now.S.4t.
and newspapers publishing
17.50. (0 Cups) ... Now 2 For •.UO.
early editions giving the
DOUBLE DIAMONDs-GIRDLES
(B)Style 1186-LMng Und6rwlre Stretch Full Fronl Panelo For Firm
election to Dewey, Truman
Bra ... (B,C) ... Reg.$7.00... Now U.89.
Tummy Control ...
pulled off one of the upsets of
(0 Cups)... Now $8.99.
(E) Style #2830-Girdle ...(S, M, L. ~L'.
the century.
XXL',
XXXtl, XXXXit) ... Re&lt;,l. S10.95 ... Now
LIVING" LONGLINE BRAS
He had lived quietly at his

.

easy doesit!

Man held on marijuana possession

Otaries Diehl

•

•

Pomeroy

,,

FREE CJ..()TIIING
Free clothing day wiD be
held from 10 a.m. to 12 noon
Thursday at the Salvalion
Army headquarter~ on Butternut Ave., Pom~roy. All ln
the s(UT~undilll area Jn need of
clothing are welcome to attend.

(C) Style 1232-Liv/ng Stayless Lonoline

Bra ...ON SALE FOR THE FtFIST TIME
EYEFI-(B,CJ... Re&lt;,lcS9.95 ... Now 18,84...
(D Cups),.Now S9.84.
·
Style #259-Liv/ng Stretch Long/ineStretch StrapS ... (A,B ,CJ ... Reg. s1 .ils ...
Now 18.84. (0-CupsJ ... Now $7.94.
Style #239-Living 3/4 Length Longllne
-Stretch Straps ... (A.B,C) ... Reg. s 7.95 ...
Now $8.84. (0 Cups) ... Now $7.84.
Style t270-Livlng Stretch Longline with
2" Comtort Wsi!l Band-Stretch StrapS ...

(A,B.C) ... Reg, S8.95 ... Now H.84. (0
Cups)... Now 18.94.

U.84.

Style #2820-Shortle ... (S. M, L, XL') ...
Reg.$12,50 ... Now"0.4t.
Style #2B22-Average Leg ... (S, M, L,
XL'),.Reg.'12.95 ... Now 110.84.
Style 12834-Lon&lt;J Leg ...(S, M, L, XL',
XXL', XXXI1, XXXXUJ ... Reg. 113,95 ... Now

, ,,84,

NEW! DOUBLE ,DIAMONDS WAIST
CONTROLLER GIRDLES . ON BALl

FOFI THE FIFISTTIME EVE Fl.
Style t2878- Waitt Controller Panty ...
(S, M, L, XL'. XXL'J ... Re&lt;,l. 116.00 ... Now
113.19.
•
Style f2878-Walsl Controller Girdle ...
(S. M.. L. XL'. XXL'J ...Re&lt;,l. 114.00...Now
, , .•. (XL'. ahdXXL' •1.00 more, xxxtt
andXXXXItU.OO more).

PUNTY OF FRIE PARKING AT OUR

.MKHAN~

,

WA~
CA•IT • FLOOR COVIinNG .' APPLIANCU

ELBERfELDS IN

JOB PLACEMENT SERVICE- Joe McCauley, left, interviews Don Roush of Chester at
the Ohio Bureau of Employment Services mobile unit located this week in the upper parking lot
In Pomeroy. The facility Is being used to augment the Bureau's I!CrviCe to local communities.
~~~c~Jfered Jnclude reiiUiJ!.t e111Pioyment potentlala, vOil!l~ tra~ throujlh the
, _ ,_,a\nlni11f0Cl'lllll!j OIHheo-JObtralnlng, ~ob Cofp&amp;,c~llng and aP'Iituae !eating,
employer conlact.a and job development as well as community' employment h~. The unit
'Will be lin the lot from 9 a.m. to 4 p._m. Thursday and from 'a.m. to 12 noon Fridsy for
residents desl!!lng information on the opportunities. Bill Kuhner Is In charge of the unit.

ew-;:J;" /i;'f;j~ First baby
·

~

m· '73to
he in Iuck

By United Press lnternallonal
JUNEAU, ALASKA - AN-OIL SUCK, four capsized '
lifeboats and debris are all se91'chers have found of the 13,ooo.ton
Pacrover. which yanlshed in the sto'rilly north Pacific earlier this
week. Ships and planes searched 800 miles south of Kodiak for '
the 570-loot "slretched" cargo ship that left Vancouver, B. C.,
The first baby of Meigs
Dec. 17witha cargo of 20,000tonsof coalfor Yokohama.
Converted from a tanker to a bulk cargo carrier by the ad- County parents born in 1973
dition of a midsection, the Pacrover Dew a Liberian flag .Its crew . will have a head start through
was all Korean. It was owned by the Pacific Coast Shipping Co. the Daily sentinel's annual
and was under charter to the Yamashita - Shinnohon Co. .of Baby Derby with the
Tokyo. ·
· · cooperation of local merchants.
DR. CLAUDIO GALLO, SOUrH EUCLID, Is one of many ' Winners of this year's derby
Ohioans who have responded to calls for help from earthquake will be announced on Jan. 11:A
ravMed Managua; Nicaragua. Gallo, a vascular surgeon Jn the number of merchants are
Cleveland Clinic, flew to Managua Tuesday and carried with him cooperating again this year to
provide the first baby of the
70 pounds of antibiotic medicine.
new
year with gifts.
"We are hoping to get as much medical aid to the country as '
According 'to the rules, the
we can,'' he said, adding four Cleveland area nurses planned to
follow him to Managua later this week. Gallo once lived in the ; baby's mothe~ and father m~t
Nicaragua city and last year was offered the job of chief sw'geon be legal restdents of Metgs
at Baptist Hospilal there, one of the dozens of buildings leveled , • County though the father may
by the eatthquake.
be in the armed forces and the
family stationed at a distant
COLUMBUS- PAYROlLS AT FORD MOTOR Co.'s 12 point. Whatever the location,
plants, two parts depots and four district sales offices In Ohio as long as the parents are legal
exceeded $500 million during 1972 for the first time in history. residents of Meigs County, the
exact llme of birth must be
Ford's Ohio operations are second only to those in Michigan.
I
Average employment at Ford's Ohio facilities during 1972 specified In a written
climbed to a record 35,819, up by 1,530 workers from last year. statement issued by the at·
Payrolls In the eight Ford plant cities were: Cleveland, $203.5 tending physician .
The statement must be
rnlllion; Lorain, $100.3 rnlllion; Cincinnati, $90.7 mllllon; Lima,'
$37.1 rnlllion; Sandusky, $31 rnlllion;, Canton, $27.4 rnlllion; received at The Dally Sentinel
office, 111 Court St., Pomeroy,
Fostoria, $16.8 million and Toledo, $3.4 rnlllion.
no later than Jan. 10.
MANAGUA, NICARA,GUA - DEMOLITION crews using
···. . ........ .. .
'i'JKWJ!imi
dynamite and bulldozers leveled a major section of this city,
entombing unnumbered eatthquake victims while Red Q-os8
All Meigs County post
squada iearched out and burned on site the scattered bodlea of
offlees wlll be c!Oied all day
the other unknown dead today. The government reversed policy
Thunday In accordance wllh
and began feeding the living In what was left of ihe other parts of
an order received W~d­
downtown Managua In an effort to stem widespread looting.
nesday. There will be no
Troops assigned to guard the city have abandon.ed their effort tb
deliveries of any kind.
control it.
:
Outgoing mall will be
A government spokesman said at least 3,000 persons
dispatched.. '
perlsbed In the earthquake last Saturday, but said a final official :;:o:e:;o~;:o~! '· .-.sz...s;;; ~
death toll wu impossible because of the number of bodies burned
in the ruins of Managua. Some experts said the flnal toll mlgllt
.,
reach 6,000.
Not much change in temSANTIAGO, CHILE - RELA:I'IVJi'.S AND officials denied peratures. Lows tonight in the
allegations today that 16 pe1'801111 who survived for 10 weeks after lower 308. Cloudy Thurtlday, a
an a1tp1ane crash In the Andes did so by eating the flesh of their little warnler. Highs in the
dead friends. The survivors tlte1111elvea said no~. But a upper 308 to upper 40. .
dlplcmat said the IS Uruguayans wbo IUI'Viwd 'Ill daYI after the
a-ash of a Urugulyan air force F2'l turllopt op Od. 13 would ~e
aatat«nent.,_ they return Saturday or &amp;lnday to Montmdeb.
LOCAL TEMPS
UMO
lllid tJru&amp;uayan Charge d'Affalrel Celar
The
temperature
in down·
01ar1aae the uViYOn will remain 1n ilolation In their hotel
'
rooms. Allepllm•
of cannlbiiUm bepn drculatina lhorlly town Pomerny· at .11 a. m.
after tbe dramatic newalut weekend that the 16 survived the Wednesday was 32 degrees,
under cloudy Bides.
(Continued on _page 12)

SAIGON (UPI) -More than
1,000 U.S. jet fighter-bombers
and 147 waves ~f B52 bombers
struck North Vietnam. in the
heaviest raids of the Indochina
war 'between Dec. 18 and
Christmas Day, the U.S.
command said today. Communist reports from Hanoi said
the bombs cut a swath through
Hanoi and that tens of
thousands of refugees were
fleeing the city.
In the first detailed report of
the air war that resumed Dec.
18 on orders from President
Nixon, the comm8fld said B:i2
raids slnlck at least 14 times
within 10 roUes of Hanoi, and
some hit within a roUe of the
city's center. It wa.s estimsted
the B52s dropped up to 13,230
tons of bombs and ·the 1,000
fighter-bombers about 6,000
tons.
The command reported the
loss of another B:i2 today -the·
12th officially reported lost.
Another seven fighter-bombers
were lost, bringing to 58 the
number of Americans reported
missing
Communist reports said
eight more B52s were shot

down , bringing to 61 the
number claiined by Hanoi.
Hanoi also reported at least 100
Americans captured.
Reports from Communist
and neutral news agencies
based in the North Vietnamese
capital spoke of widespread
devastation in bomb strikes in

and around Hanoi Tuesday
night and today. One report
said U.S. warplanes blasted
Hanoi's International airport
Tuesday night, demolishing
civilian homes ·near it and
leaving the area "looking like
an earthquake had struck it."
The command said U.S. .
warplanes pounded the North
for the second consecutive day
today following a 36-hour
BANKS CLOSING
Christmas bombing pause and
The banks In Meigs reports from Guam and ThaiCounty, Tbe. Pomeroy land indicated there would be
National Bank, Its Rutland more strikes tonight.
branch, The Fafmen Blink
The cortunand !pokeimen
and : Savings CO,IIIpilnyl · 118id iooay warplanes aimed
Pomeroy; The Citizens only at military targets or
National Blink, Middleport, facilities supporting North
and the Racine Home Vietnam's military effort. The
National Bank, wlll be cloaed report listed no damage to '
Thursday In obaervance of civilian facilities.
the nallonal day of mourning
"Targets struck Included
In tribute to the late rallyards, shipyards, comPresident Harry Truman, mand and control faclllties,
according to Edison Hob- warehouse and transshipment
stetter, pre olden! of the points, communications facili·
Pomerny National Bank.
ties, vehicle repatr facilities,
Also, offices of the Meigs power plants, railway bridges,
County courthouse wlll close railroad rolling stock, truck
all day Thursday in tribute to parks, MIG bases, air defense
the late president.
radars and SAM (surface-to·
(Continued on page 12)

Sure, there's a Santa Oaus
TWIN FAILS, Idaho (UP!) rupted a friendly but un-

- You can't tell Michael Van
Ausdeln, 8, and his brother
Kurt, 10, that Santa--Claus
doesn't exist. They know he
checks up occasionally on the
toys he leaves.
Michael and Kurt were
trying out the walkle.talltie set
they got O!rlstmas morning.
"I can't hear you," Michael
said Jnto the phone set.
''Can :rou hear this," Inter-

familiar voice.
"Yes,'' replied the startled
IO.year-old.
"This is Santa Claus. How do
you like your walkie-talkies?"
"Fine," replied Kurt.
"Where do you live?" Santa
asked .
"In Twin Falls Idaho " the
'
boy answered. '
"Merry Ouistmas to Twin

Fails and to ·you," Santa said,
ending the converliatlon.
The boy's father, Robert Van
Ausdeln, who witnessed the
conversation, Said he doesn't
know how the mystery voice
was picked up, but the boys
have no doubt now there is a
Santa.
"Last year, the oldest one
wasn't quite sure,' ' he said.
"But they pretty well do this
year-that cinched it."

NEW QUEEN -Liz Blaettnar, daughter of Mr. and .Mrs.
John W. Blaettnar, Pomeroy a senior of MeiCJ! Sigll School
wllll&gt;e Jnstalied as honored queen of Bethel62, lnte1111tlonal
Order of Job's Daughters, at 7:30 p.m. 'lbllfll!ay at the
l'oll)eroy Masonic Temple, Debbie Flnlaw Ia guardian and
Tom Edwards is ai80Ciate guardian of the bethel.

19·-· ed m
church bus

New bulldozer
being ordered

Weather

111enL

.

.

FORT SUMNER, N.M. (UP!)
A iolded cattle truck
jackknifed on a narrow bridge In a di!IOlata area Tuelday night
and collided with a chartered bUJ carrying 30 T~ te111'egen
and their chaperons to a Baptist church retreat. Nineteen persons were killed.
The colllslon was so violent the bus and truck looked like they
"just melted together," said Capt. A. C. Jones of the New Mexico
state Pollee. There was no fire.
Nearly all the seats in the bUI were ripped loose and thrown
forward, and the body of the bUJ wu separated from the frame.
The bUI was the second of two heeding lrDm Auatln to a threedsy retreat In the mountainOUIIIId country, The first bUI CI'OIIed
the bridge seconds before the crash Jnvolylng a cattle truck
driven by Ervy Wllmeth of Wllll!eth Cattie Co. In Clovis, About
half of the 40 catUe on the truck were killed In the collision or
Injured so badly they were shot.
"There are 16 bodies In the mortuary here," said de Baca
County Corooer Dr. Roland Q-ane.
Three more unidentified oodles were taken to Clovis, N. M.
Treatment of the Injured was
John Roberts, who drove the
hampered by the remoteness of first bus safely acroaa the
the crash scene, abnost an bridge, said he looked Jn his
hour's drive to major hospital mirror in time to see the
faciliUes In Clovis. An . Air following Ughta of the second
Force surgeon was Down by bus disappear and the truck
helicopter to the wreckage . jackknife.
from Klrtll.nd Air Force Base.
"Everything was normal and
then the lights went out,'' he
said.
'
The parents and relaUves of
the youth group gathered at the
Woodlawn' Baptist Church In
Austin · and learned of the
deaths of 16 of the teen-agers
just after midnight.
''1bese, as far as we can
detennlne, are not alive," said
Rev, James Abington as he
read the list of confirmed dead.
Q-ys of "Oh, God" followed the
announcement of almost every
name. One woman collapsed at
the church.

DRIVE IN 'I'UNNBL - Thla facility for drive.tlJrouch
banking hu been completed at the Citizens National Bank in
MlddlepGrt and will be oPened for business Friday morni,..
Entrattce Into the feclllty Is from the alley at the back of the

bank. Alter a patron has used the window to complete his
banking, he drives onto North Second Ave., and Is required to
turn south. Work on the facility was done by King Bullderr
Supply Co.

The Meigs County Board of
Commissioners voted to advertise for a new bulldozer for
the county highway department Tuesday at the court.
house.
Bids on the new equipment
will be received until 10 a. m.
on Jan. 16. The cDil11llisalonera
also accepted the bid of The
Standard Oil Co. to provide
guollne and diesel fuel to the
county for the next 90 days
effective Jan. I. AttendiDc
were COIIIIIIIuiGnen Cbarlll
Karr, $1'., Robert Clark and
Warden Ours and Clerk
Martha Cbamban.

�'

2- .he Dilly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, Dec. 'l/, 1972

3- The Daily Sent mel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• Dec. 27, 1972

Harry S Truman, 1884-1972

IDD'ORIA1
'

-~-

Harry S Trumar:-a: Topnotcher
By DON OAKLEY
It was just over a quarter-century ago
that the heavy mantle of the pres•dency
fell unexpectedly ujlon the shoulders of a
little-known vice-president. A nation al·
ready mourning the deaths of thousands of
its young men on battlefields around the
world now gneved for the commander-mchief an(l wondered what the future held.
There were few on April 15, 1945, the day
Franklin D. Roosevelt d1ed, who thought
that Harry S Truman, one-lime captam
of artillery, ex-haberdasher, f&lt;Jrmer county
judge and U.S. senator, would be little
more than a caretaker president.
The fighting in Europe was almost over.
the collapse of Japan could only be a matter of months. Truman would merely preside over the conclusion of a war already
won and flU out the remainder of FOR's
fourth term while Americans went back.
once more, to "normalcy.''
Surely there was no one that day who
could foresee that the crises that were to
come in the next few years would be as
grave and as challengmg as any in our h•story, that Jiarry S Truman would be faced
with some of the most difficult and farreaching decisions any president ever had
to make, that he would wm a surpnsing
election to the pres•dency m h1s own right
and would again find h•mself leading the
nation in war.
Withm four months a f t e r fate thrust
him into world leadership, Harry Truman
addressed the first meeting of the United
Nat10ns in San Francisco, met w1th ~talin
at Potsdam and made the histone decision to use the atomic bomb agamst Japan.
Within a year, a new kind of war- the
Cold War-was a reality In 1947, Truman
announced his Truman Doctrine and sent
aid to Greece and Turkey to f i g h t and
"contain" communism, which had already
swallowed Eastern Europe.
The $12-blllion Marshall Plan to rebuild
Western Europe was but the beginning of
the nation's vast, worldwide foreign aid
program.

Us.

U'l Ol' Matchmaking Ma

Dear Helen:
I don't want to be a nosy mother, but my son needs a push.
He Ia 211, dating a ~ar-old girl I've never met. However,
friendl tell me she Ia a good, church1Jolng, moral, well brought\IP girl. Sle's pretty too, as he has a picture of ber In his room.
From what I hear they're so much alike In lutblts and ideals thst
It's uncanny.
But -Ill)' son was deeply hurt three years ago and I think he
Ia afrild ol piling serlo118, tllough he bas daled this girl for about
lib: nr')JI: , ~ I-sn't brought her home , to
1!11ft 111,10 be probably hlln 't tolil her how he feels and she may
ll&amp;1h lt'a "Jalifrlends"IOIIIP awaylrl\m'l\llrt. Gll-ls'ilke her
few and far between -and my 11011l8n't getung any younger.
I t!tlnt he would like to say, "Let's get married," and do just
that In a CGUPle of weeks. Financially, he's able, but a girl wants
a bli wedding, and be llhould give her notice. I can't understand
wily be doesn't bring her home and get everything settled.
Uke I say, I'm not a nosy mother, but shouldn't !have a talk
with him? -MRS. C. M.

are

Dear Mrs. M.:
Back up to "I'm not a nosy mother," add a big, fat exclamation point, and cut the ''buts."
A 25-year-old son needs a mother's ''push" toward
matrimony like he needed her taking him to the barbership at

+++

Dear Helen:
I like mimeographed famUy letters for Cluistlll8B cards,
Jnvlded they're Interesting and fun to read. But when they're
recelwd during the hoUday ruJb, they're seldom appreciated.
Therefore, we send our Chrl.atmas letters out after New
Ytar'a.lt works great Illy then we have heard from our friends,
10we can tack on really personalanawers at the bottom. Also, we
have all the new addresaes. Colored paper, with matching Ink,
Incidentally, llvens
any correapondence,
At. for gifts: .we do our gift giving throughout the year and
that goes for birthdays, too. Whenever we find something just
right for a friend or relative, 'le buy It and send It quickly, with a
note saying IIlla Ia "Your 8Peclal gift arid we couldn't walt for the
special day." How much nicer It 1.! to get a surprise present when
It can be savored all by itself. Chrlatmas we reserve for the
chlldren - and for pie818nt, relaxed family gatherings, unburdened with thoughts of those mountainous bills and aduU
glfla.
Thanks for letting me share my Christmas ideas with you. ALICE M.
Dear Helen:
Here'• an Idea for low-bud&amp;et gUts that really mean
110111ethin8. Our daughter lost her part-time job this fall. !ale
loves to give, but said It wouldn't be right if her parents paid her
bills (thougb she's only 16). So ehe made up fancy litUe I.O.U.
notes, dedrated with humorous drawings, and placed them In
enve~ on the tree. Her married slater and brother and their
IPOtllel each received "TEN HOURS BABY.SITTING, but not
durtngflnala week."The older children got "ONE TRIP TO TilE
BEACH, BIG PICNIC, Payable July 14." She made the younger
onaltuffed anlmala and dotla. And I« us, her parenUI, she had
the greatest gift of all: "3115 DAVS OF l-OVE AND APPRECIATION for two super-Good GIJYI, plll8 two car-waeh-endwu jobl, and ODe day IICI'Ubblng down the kitchen cupboards."

up

-NICE, HUH?

Dear Nice
The nicest! You've got a great daughter there. -H.

"* 'to follolr.
'1111 ._. Is In Its last
J Ia.
Tilt morning stars are
M N), Ve11111 and Mars.

Tilt evenlna stars are
........ and Selurn.
on IIIIa date are
o1 ClpriCGrn,
aoted French
Wll barn Dec.

'

5.00 ......- Mister Rogers 33 ~ Daniel Boone 6; Ponderosa 3, -4 , Santa

AI The Matt 15.
OragneiB , Etec. Co. JJ; Gomer Pyle13, Marsha ll Dil lon
Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
6·00 - News, Weather, Sports 3, 4, S, 10, 15, Truth or Conseq 6;
Sesame St 20; Around the Bend 33
1 oo - Truth or Conseq. 3; Beat the Clock 4, News 6, 10, Whar s
My Line 8, Anything You Can Do 13 , Saint 15; Elec. Co 20 ;
Know Your Schools 33
7 30 - Episode: Action 33 ; To Tell The Truth 6; The Judge 10;
Lassie 15; Beat the Clock 13; Pottce Surgeon 3: Protectors·s;
HodQei)Odqe Lodqe 20
8:1»-C.,rol Burnell S, 10; Paul Lynde 6; Adam-12 3, 4, !5 ,
Sonny &amp; Cher 8, Peter &amp; the Wolf 20. 33 , Blue Gray Game 10.
S: 30 - Banacek 3, 15, Handful of Ashes 33, Movie "Mr. and
Mrs Bo Jo Jones" 6, 13; Playhouse 20
9 00 - Medlcal CenterS , It's Your Buslness 33
9 30 - Pollee Surgeon 4.
10 00- Julie Andrews 6, 13 , Cannons, Soul! 33, News 201 Search
5.30 !5 ;

3, 4, 15.

11 :00 - News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10. 13, 15.
"
11· 30 ~ Johnny Carsonn3, 4, 15; Comedy News 6; Movies " Th e
Captam's Table" 10, "The Sun Also Rises" 13
100 - News4
1 30 - News 13
THURSDAY, DEC. 28, 1912
6:00 - Sunrise Sem1nar 4; Sacred Heart 10
6:15 - Farmtlme 10, Farm Report 13
6.20 - Paul Harvey 13
6:30 - Columbus Today 4, Bible Answers 8, America's
Problems 10.
6. 45 - Corncob Report 3
7 00 - Today 3, 4, 15, CBS News 8, 10, News 6
7.30 - Romper Room 6: Sleepy Jeffers 8, Rocky &amp; Bullwi nkle
13.
s·oo - Capt Kangaroo 10, New Zoo Revue 13 , Sesame Street
33; Timmy &amp; Lassie 6
8 30 ~ Jack LaLanne'13, Romper RoomS
9 00 - Paul Dixon 4; Phil Donahue 15 ; Ven Casey 13 , Romper
Room 8; Peyton Place 13, What Every Woman Wants to
Know 3; Mr. Rogers 33, Captain KangarooS ; Concentrallon
6. Friendly Junction 10.
9. 30 - To Tell The Truth 3, HazelS ; Jeopardy 6.
10 00 - Halhayoga 33, D1ck Van Dyke 13 , Dlnal Shore 3, 15,
Columbus Six Calling 6, Joker's Wild S, 10
10 30 - Concentration 3, 15: Phil Donahue 4, Split Second 13.
Price Is Right 8, 10.
11l00 - Sale of the Century3, 4, 15, GambitS, 10; Password 13;
Electric Co. 20; F Troop 6.
11:30- Hollywood Squares 3, 4, 15, Love of Life S, 10, Bewitched
6, 13; Sesame Street 20.
12·00 - Jeopardy 3, 15, Bob Braun's 50·50 Club 4 ; News 10, 13,
Jackie Oblinger 8, Password 6 ,
12:30 - 3 W's Game 3, Search For Tomorrow 8, 10, Split Second

Ant&lt;~

6.

)

27, 1822.
On thl.! day In histbry:
In 1!MI, Japanese airplanes
bombed Manila In the
Phllippjnea, despite the fact It
hadbeendeclaredanopenclly,,
In 1946, the Unlled Slates,
Russia and Britain annOUIICed
they would govern Korea as
joint trustees for live years,
then grant independence.
In 1963, the u. S. Conunerce
Department J~Uthorlzed the
· sale Qf surpiUJ wheat to RIIISia.
In 1918, the Apollo 8

1

2.3.

&amp; TH/f!GSj

00 0

000

Melanoma Caught in Time

Clolumn Saves Reader

1•

Teday II Wednesday, Dec.
rl, 1111 IDid day of 1972 with

Merv Griffin 4. Andy ' Grlff1th 15; Daniel Boone 13;'
Petticoat Junction J ; I Love Lucy 6

4. -40 -

Very Weak
Two-Opener

••

'l'lle Almuac
UIHed Prea lllteniaUoaal

•

1:00 - News 3; All My Children 6, 13, It's Your BetS; Green
BY JACK O'BRIAN
think.
Acres JO. Watch Your Child 15.
MOMS 4S NOT TOO CHEWSV
The N. V. Knlcks back-court whiz Dean 1:30Let's Make A Deal6, 13; As the World Turns 8, 10; Three
NEW
YORK
(KFS
)
Moms
Mabley
Will
be
"The
Dream"
Memlnger's
off-court
admirable
On
A
Match 3, 4, 15.
WIN AT BRIDGE
2
00
Days
of O•Jr Lives 3, 4, 15, Newlywed Game 13, Mike
the first Copa headliner to announce she'll work hobby: runs basketball clinics at children's
Douglas
6; Guiding Light 8, 10.
there sans teeth ; she's funny that way. RCA · Camp Seneca In Dutchess County and WlU be 2.30- Dodors3, 4, 15; Datmg Game 13, Edge of NightS, 10
3.00- Another World 3, 4, IS, General Hospital6, 13, Love Is a
C~airman Bob Sarnoff and former TV weather duector of its basketball during the regular
Many Splendored Th1ng 8, 10, Behind the Lones 20
gal Jeanne Parr lunched at the late Charlie camping season. Dubbed "Superfly" for his 3,30
- Return to Peyton Place 3, 4, 15, One Life to L1ve 6, 13,
Berns-lounded "21" and dined same evening at super court-flying, Dean's already a legendary
Secret Storm 8, 10; Black Journal 20
'
Charlie's son Tony's Unicorn . Blonde chan- nice guy ... No serious injuries In the final Jets- 4 00 - Mr. Cartoon 3; Love Ameman Style 13; Fllntslones 6,
Gilligan's Isle 8; Sesame St. 33, 20, "Jupiter's Darl;ng"
leuse Basheyba was inVIted by Henry Kiss-Kiss Browns game at Shea Stadium - except two , 15,
10
NORTH
Z7
to sing at th1s week's White House musiCale but prancing beauties in the halftime on.field show 4 30 - Merv Griffin 4; I Love Lucy 6, Daniel Boone 13; Andy
.A3
Griffith 15 ; Pett•coat Junct1on 3, D1ck Van Dyke 15, Da111el
was g1ven a polite last-second cancellation and were brought down by the wind belting their big
¥2
Boone 6.
•
asked to push 11 back to Jan 29 ... Cary Grant flags and upending them. They were carried off. 5 00 - Ponderosa 3, 4; Daniel Boone 6
tAJ8764
.J952
and Ginger Rogers join the board of governors field like gr1d casualties to the waiting am· 5 30 - Marshall Dillon 15, Dragnet 8, Electric Co. 33, Gomer
Pyle 13 ; Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
WEST
EAST
of thd Sam Remo (Italy ) Int'l Club aiiDlng at a bulance.
6·
00NewsJ, 4, 8, 10, 15; Truth or Conseq 6, News 13 ; Around
oH6
.K92
!\lay debut ... Cary gets lots of free vacations
Fine Bdwy. composer Cy Coleman's latest
the
Bend
33; Sesame St: 20.
¥A7653
¥QJ984
6
30
NBC
News
4, 15 , ABC News S, 10, I Dream ot Jeannie 13,
that way.
bachelor-threat IS lovely blonde actress Susan
t KQ5
t93
Designing Women 33.
David Black produced a flock of Bdwy. Shamroy. Oy's newest show-score is for the 7:00 - Truth or Consequences 3; Beat The Clock 4, Course of
.1063
.KQ4
shows
- no h1ts Swears he's fmally finished "Two for the Seesaw" musical version, lyrics
Our Times 33; Dick Van Dyke 4: Whafs My Line' 8; Big Red
SOUTH (D)
Jubilee 15, News 6; Amazing World of Kreskin 13; Electnc
.Ql08754
gettmg famous on the way to the poorhouse ... by Dorothy Fields who wrote some of the
Company
20.
¥Kl0
ChriS Evert IS limng up a real fortune in tennis greatest love-worda in the Tin Pan Alley 7:30 - Hollywood Squares 3; To Tell the Truth 6: Wild Kingdom
tl02
10, I'll See You in Court 4, Lassie 8; Black Journal 33; Zoom
endorsements before she's 21 ... Billy Wilder's language ... Remember only a few Prealdents
.A87
20; t,lewsmaker '72 13.
Botll VUlf\e)'Bbll!\ • ~imp\i&lt;lent ev.I!Qabout hJs·old celluloid herooSI' , ago ~n WE\ , poured ~ 'ZUiiaQf ¥tto'' JlOilltWar 'a·'OO- Mbd•SQuli(lt., b; 'Aci\ibcat~~ ·*.•~o l'lill~1 Wils~n ~~ ~ Yi'1
WhateYer Happened to 72?. , 1 11 ~H» ' , ,r; •JrttE;~
West North Ea.t South ."'rapp,ed ~ Cbap\ln fs ' C:oqstant · cutrate .Japan?- They've forgoUen Rear! Harbor 1...:
9:00
- Hollywood Tele~1slon Theatre 33 ; Ironside 3, 4" 15; 1ln- '
1
philosophizing whatever hiS retroactive gemus Tokyo's Kitano A'kns ' Co. fast' liought the
ternallonal
Performance 20, 33. Life, Health &amp; The American
Pass 2N.T. Pass
and sa1d he'd do a fhck w1th Char he today "if he Murray Hotel at 66 Park Ave. for .1,6110,000.
Woman 6, 13: J T. s, 10.
Pass 3 •
Pass Pass
would only_shut up." ... "The Love Doctors"
Arlene Francis' and Martin Gabel's whiz· 1~ : 00 - Owen Marshall 6, 13 ; News 20: World Press 33; Dean
Pass
3, 15,
author Pat McGrady and frau need a love son Peter, who teaches law at Berkeley wears )1:00Marlin
- News3,4,6,18, 10, 13, 15.
Operung lead ~ • K
doctor.
his half past hi.! shoulders. In P.J. Clarke's, 11·30 - JohMy Carson 3, 4, 15; Dick Cavell 6, Movies "Stage to
Tucson" 8, " Kiss Me Deadly" 10, "The BarbaniJn &amp; The
Cue Mag's Entertainer of the Year will be owner Danny Lavezzo answered Peter's query
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Geisha.'' 13.
·
The North·South pair were Diana Ross ... Burt Bacharach, the pop-song about Dan's brief coiffure with: "My hair is 11:45 - ~ohnny Carson 4
- News 4
playing extremely weak two- composer, owns Rathmann 's in E Norwich, N. short because I'm an undercover resolullonist 1.00
I
30
News 13
,
bids. Their high card point Y., which draws the chic horsey set - polo - in disguise."
range was 5 to 10 and they greats such as Pete Bostwick, Wmston Guest,
Tycoon Frank Ryan was intrigued with a
bid them With any six-card All Vanderbilt etc.; Burt's other equally horsey gentle lady 40 years hi$ senior at a smart party.
su1t. North's two no-trump
response was forcing and we spot, the Dover House, draws the trot-crowd When it ended, Frank offered to drive the ocsee no reason for the bid ex- from nearby Roosevelt Raceway ... Ray togenarian home. Accepted. Would It be out of
cept inexcusable ophm1sm.
Milland's zetz in the artistic eye of Method Frank's way? No; right on his way to P. J . 1'
South's three-club rebid Actors "They're a bloody bore. They can't act Clarke's for a late schmooz with his showbiz- ..__
~-----------~ 1
showed a hand In the ma~i ­ their way ou, of a plastic bag."
journaliskportscas~ pals. Might be escort
BY PAUL CRAB'TREE ,
mum range for this type of
The
CBS.
TV
gridcaster
was
advised
by
his
herforfew
minutes
to
see
the
place
sbe'd
never
--~
'
weak bid and in sp1te of this
encouragement, North could play-mate on TV that Father Dudley "Missed visited? Of course. And so Frank had to confess • I'm not ~•• nrst to say it, but the All-America, AII..State aoo
only go to three spades
you at mass today "; the lalla way feUa right on they hadn't been introduced and didn't know her all-this-or-that teams In football and basketball, now be~
South thought a while be- TV straight-voiced, "I'm trying to quit" Grid name. "Mrs. J. c. Pennedy," she said, and they featured In the papers and on TV, area complete phony.
,
fore pa_ssing. He really ,held Jets owner Phillselin got a warm surprise - hls joined the late-late chattercast of P. J.'s
!know, because I was in on a '1lx" one time, the culmination:
a max1mum In his system
portrait
pamled,
quite
niftii,Y,
by
ex-grid
star
characters.
Stayed
on
as
Frank
got
sleepy
and
of
an
elaborate practicaljoke-andit worked.
and the decision to pass must
Dong Kingman's stylish fought off the dozes whlle the 18-year-old widow
It was a dirty trick, butlsUU get a laugh out of it.
,
have been b a s e d on the Tom McDonald
knowledge that his parlner pam ling drew the biggest b1d at Molly Berns' of the famous American merchandising giant
((Before I start, though, let me say that I don't think~
tended to bid too much
"21 ',' benefit auctiop for the Heart Fund:'$1,200. twinkled on and on, dellghted, younger than baseball's all-etar teams, or a football team selected from a
South won the king of dia- Just about what 1t'd've cost at his Hammer wintertime.
1 given geographical arelf Uke the Big Ten or SEOAL, are
monds with dummy's ace
Gallery show Tax deducbble this way; we
fraudulent. You can really study one football or basketball'
and led a diamond r 1 g h t
league, and vote Intelligently. Similarly, whether selected by
back. His 10 forced West's
fans
or players, the baseball all-filar teams do represent the
queen and 1t was up to West
"stars," in the eyes of the fans, or the players.)
to lead to trick three.
. Anyhow, the staff of The Charleston Gazette back in the midYou can see that a spade
shift Is best and West should
Fifties had its share of flakes and free spirits, compensating in a
have seen this also but West
propensity for hell-raising for what it may have lacked In jour-~
was ready to have a life
naliBtlc polish. (The Gazette was, and IS, the largest paper in'
master bramstorm.
West Virginia.)
He thought a while or at
It 1198med, about 1955 or so, that editors from aU over the
least a c t e d like he was
never be placed on his back.
, thinking and then came up By ~awrence Lomb, M.D. that individuals who act Even in the operating room State were ,being 81Jlred to vote on an alloBtate football team. The
promptlr can ofttimes save
with the amazing lead of a Dear Dr. Lamb _ 1 hope the•r
hves from cancer. when this is done, a tubular ballots were printed and three or four of the Gazette's sports-.
low heart.
this letter reaches you per- Perhaps your experience will mstrument 1s placed In the writers got to vote- because of thst paper's large coverage and
South was surprised to find sonally, because I want to
help pass this knowledge on windpipe at the back of the the many reams In its circulation area.
himself winning the trick thank you for savmg my life to
other people and In the throat .(usually for artificial
Alas, some of us reporters and news desk staffers led the fine
with hls king, but not too sur- I ,had a melanoma on my long run there will be even respiration) which prevents
prised to ruff his o t h e r back and did not realize 1t, more individuals who wlll the tongue from falllng back gentlemen in the sports department astray. With their
heart ; lead dummy's trump or how senous they are. l
blocking the airway. To cooperation and our connivance, we began to boom the gridiron
ace and continue with a high knew I had a mole and that profit from this knowledge. and
prevent airway blockage by JnWess of Alfred Dllley, Superstar.
d i a m o n d. He overruffed my ~lothing was uritating 1t Anybody who has a mole the
Alfred Dllley, superstar, was listed as first-team choice on
tongue an unconscious
East's nine-spot, dropped the 1 re~d an artiCle you wrote anywhere on hiS body which
'
king and jack with a low on moles"T'malignant mel- is enlarging, changing in person lying down should be all the sportswriters' ballots at the Gazette.
on
his
side
or
at
least
posiAferocious ballplayer, he was a 6-2, 195-pound senior guard
trump lead and while he still anomas- m our local paper s1ze or shape, or Is co.nstantly 1rntated, should see a tioned in such a way that the on offense and llnebacker on defense for little Gilmore High
had to lose two clubs he did SIX months ago and prompt- doctor
about the mole. Moles head is turned to the side.
make his contract for an un- ly called my doctor The about the
School, located in Jackson County, W. Va., between Ripley and;
wa1st or anywhere
deBerved good score
Obviously,
if
the
uncon~
mole was removed and a on the body where straps or scious or semi-conscious in- ParkersbiB'g.
(N~WSPAPER EHHRPIISE ASSN )
biopsy revealed it to be l_llB· clothing or shaving 1s lrriIn the space for "comments," Alfred Dilley, superstar, was .
llgnant. After an ope~at1on , tatmg them are the ones dividual is vomiting or bleed- given raves that were almost nauseous: "Great movement on"',;
X rays, and exammat10n of most apt to change to cancer ing, this material can be In- attack," "Constantly kept opponents I'UM!ng bell away from :
my lymph nodes, my doctors
· haled iDto the trachea (wind·
told me they felt 1! was I WISh everyone who has a pipe) obstructing respira- him," "top-level college prospect," and all the rest.
:
The bidding has been
caught
m
lime.
I
have
had
mole
of
this
sort
would
be
as
tion,
or
If
small
amounts
en'¥..t North
East
The ba1lola were completed, and The Gazette sports staff :
two three-month chest X wise as you have been and ter the lung, causing a seri- made sure that a "courtesy" copy of their llatlngs got Into the ,
Pass
rays smce and both were seek Immediate medical at- ous lung infection.
Pass
2N.T.
PBBS
Pw
,.
Pass
clear. I thank you lor what tention when it Is first noted. It is all right for a person hl!nds of every sports editor In the State.
Fearful that they may have overlooked a truly~t player, •
you have done for me perYou, South, hold·
to
be
on
the
back
If
some
sonally and appremate the • Dear Dr. Lamb - Recentthe other edlton slathered along, like Pavlov's dog.
¥AQ18TS tAU .KQ7 many fine articles you wnte. ly I beard two parties dis- one Is careful to see to It that
Result: Alfred DllleJ, !RIPI!rMr' made Uird~ all..tate ;
What do you do now?
cussmg a medical problem. the airway remains open. A
that
year ln Weat VIrginia Iiiii school foqthall.
"
Dear Reader - Of course, One said tt was okay to lay good example of thlsls a perA-1'... Your JNII'iiUtr Ia most
'lbe only prGbltm wu that the real Alfred Dilley wu a 31). '
uaenlhutludo ud you have a I am always P.leased to learn a semi-conscious person who son wbo bas sudden earcllac
minimum jump sbllt
that people like my column, was vomiting and bleeding arrest and needs utemal yell'.old, ntbet pannchJ printer In The Gaette compnoln&amp;
but my greatest satisfaction m the throat Oat on hll back carcllac messaae as an emer- roD, I II!'Nl 111J bat l1lrdl, ID the Gel'!')' Krlmlr clua. And •I
TODA Y'8 QUESTION
gency, lilesavlna procedure.
Instead of b1ddllll two no- does come from learning that Tne other person sald an
!run;p, your partnor has rebid the c olumn has done some- dividual In thla condition While the Individual Is on his Gllnln Hllb School, whldl II no IIIOI'e, didn't even field a :1
;,
lo three clubs. What do you do thing useful for somebody 11 should never be placed flat back, the held Ia turned to foolbd . . . that year.
now?
liD, wiBI 1111 1114ame1Nna tumlare a!I!!!OpMli!J this year, ~
IS a great personal satlsfac- on his back Who is right? Is the side and If necessary
Answer tomorrow
m
o
u
t
b-to-mouth
~
taqlvelllllfi-•USU.clabal
... , .... outallllleye.
;
lion to me to know tnat the there ever an exception?
respiration
Is
al8o
lllmlllDear Reader - That Is a
~
astronauts returned to earth information m the column
provided mformatlon to help good question and an impor- istered. Other thu thele lit·
ON
'lHI
TV
DIAL:
The
Jlhle.Gra)'
Glllll
II
tc'U
ut
1111 •
uatlons, it Is better to have
after a ll'ip around the moon 10 someone as lrl'1our case.
tant one . In general, an un- the
patient lying on hlllldl. •WIJH&amp;illtn!1'V ltl,llll "AIIIIrall Ul1 l;rleti"lolllnttbn., rlcb, ~
Urnes,
Your letter also p~int s out consc10us p c r s o n should

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE

By Helen Hottel

118e 14.- H.

WEDNESDAY, DEC. 27, 1'72

At hom e, inflation , strikes, influencepeddlmg scandals and a Republican Cong;ess gave Harry Truman little rest m office.
Had he been retired m 1948, as everyone
expected, Truman would still have left an
indelible mark on American history. But
agamst all the odds, he won another term
almost smglebandedly, with his own pal·
ented brand of gutty, g1ve-'em-hell campa•gmng
Then, in 1949, came the Berlm blockade,
Russia's explosion or 1ts first atomic bomb,
the Commumst take-over m Chma. NATO,
the Allied military alliance, was born
In 1950· Communist North Korea's mvasion of South Korea and Truman's decision to COQlmil American troops Then,
the Chinese intrusiOn mto the war, the
clash with MacArthur, the military stalemate that cast a shadow over his last
years m off1ce.
Looking back now from our position
of economic prosper1ty at home and a faulv stabilized East-West power balance
abroad, we can judge the decisions that
were made and the acbons that were taken
and not taken between 1945 and 1953.
We can see m1stakes, but we can also
see triumphs.
Not the least triUmph was the fact that
Harry Truman, the m o s t ordinary of
Americans, had the capacity to m e, first,
above the machine politics of Missouri to
become an able senator serving the entire
nallon With his War Profits CommJttee
and, later, to meet the challenge of the
presidency in a manner that strengthened
the enllre free world.
'
H~rry S :r~uman-wh•s!le-s!oppin g, Republican-baitmg, letter-wr1tmg, piano ~play­
mg, helllng-and-damning, peppeFy Harry
S Truman . There was always a llttle of
the pugnacious ward politician in h1m. But
where it counted, behind that lonely desk
m the White House where the s1gn sa•d
"The buck stops here," he ranked w1th th~
best of them

Helen Help

f)

Television Log'

,

.

.

. avzs JUst an
ordinary
guyo
ield
LOS ANGELES (UP!) -

Long after hiS teammates had
left the practi.;. field, Anthony
Davis stood and pahently
answered questions until the
mterview was concluded :
"You sure you got enough ?"
the No. I rusher on the No 1
college football team m the
country asked the sportmvriter.
Assured so, University of
Southern California 's crack
sophomore tailback smiled and
SBld "Thsnk you for your mteres!" before trotting off the
field.
Anthony Davis, the speedster
who personally destroyed
Notre Dame with a sixtouchdown day,ls as unspoiled
as could possibly be.
Winner of the Volt Memorial
Award as the Pacific Coast's
outstanding college football
player for 1972 and a second
team All-America, Davis started the season as a third
stringer.
In fact, he didn't become a
starter (supplanting junior
Rod McNeill) until the middle
of the Trojans' perfect 11-ll

In USC's last four games,
DaviS averaged 169 yards per
contest and sco'red 12 touchdowns . He wound up as
team's leading performer m
three departments; f!!Sh (1,034
yards), scormg (108 pomts )
and kickoff returns (12 for 468
ya\'(ls).
Against Notre Dame in the '
game which brought the Trojans and coach John McKay
their third national champiOnsh1p In II years, the former
high school quarterback from
San Fernando, Calif., had a
368-yard day . He returned
three kickoffs for 218 yards and
two touchdowns, rushed for 99
yards and caught three passes
for 51 yards in a 45-23 rout.
During a workout, Davis IS
the object of good natured
kidding from his teammates.
But the fleet rookie also Is
highly respected, too, and not
just for his onfield work.
"They (his teammates)
know I'm a team ball player
and when I do somethmg I do 1t
100 per cent, practices mclurled," he said. "But we have
a lo&lt; of team players and thst's

season.

why we're wmners."

Vet he came on so fast that
Help Yourself
he became only the fifth
Davis seems to enJOY hunself
running back-and first during an interview. Although
sopliomore-to gain 1,000 yards he 1s only 20, he is relaxed and
ill a year, .'
poised
Davis bears an astonishing
"I conSider myself very
resemblance to two Southern lucky that people want to talk
Cal Reisman Trophy winners to me ," he declared. ,"Wlren
of,the past-the facial features you're a successful football
of 0. J. Simpson and, the size player, you can expect a lot of
and running style of Mike this. You have to repeat
Garrett.
yourself a lot but you're only
The son of a U.S. Postal helping yourself in the long
Service clerk whose mother is run ."
a Head Start teacher, the 5DaviS says he's friendly with
foot-9, 190-pound speedster hss the man whose JOb he took, Rod
lia)l4led h!JI f'!llflf'! Qpatlo!lll!,.i ,l.s Ne\)l, ,pg:) .No,,-2 ~r
taint! wlffiout any probiems. this season with 535 yarilll.
The reaSO!l ?-1U o' '
"We get along very well," he
Stories Don't Help
said. "We had a speaking
"I thmk whst's ahead and not engagement together the other
what's behind," Davis said. day and Rod offered me a ride.
''The season is over and so is I'm sure he feels bad he's not
the Notre Dame game . That's playmg more but there's no
the past, the future is ahead. conflict at all between us."
I'm not going to tell you I don't
DaviS hsd trouble converting
enjoy reading articles about from a prep quarterback to a
myself because I do. But I college running back last year.
forget about an article after Consequently, he carried the
I've read it. You can't win a ball just 51 times for 195 yards
game just because somebody to rank \h1rd among the
has written somethmg mce rushers on the Trojans' fresh-'
shout you,"
man team.

11

...... ,:..
(

.

•

NBA Standings
By Umtecl Press International '
Eastern Conference
Attanticw~t••pnct. g.b.
Boston
28 5 848
New York
28 10 737 2V2
Buffalo
9 25 265 19'12
Phllade~:~~ral
~iv~!
~3 26V2

D.,, •more
~

Atlanla
Houston
Cleveland

10

w. 14
t.
20
20 16
15 IS
10 26

pd
5S8 g b.
556 1
455 4'12

278

M1dwes1 Otvlston

w. t. pet g.b.,

Milwaukee
Chicago
KC Omaha
Detro•!

Davis, "to make the transition.
I fumbled qmte a bit last year
and thst's why I didn't play
more. I guess I was just too

tense,"
Dav1s believes USC's Stingy
defense-;,nd not it's offensewill prove the difference
against Big Ten co-champion
Oh\o State in the Rose Bowl on
New Year's Day.
"They're (Ohio State ) a
good, sound defens1ve team but
it remains whether they'll be
able to do anything against our
defense," he remarked.
" "! know I can't in practice.
To be in the game with us, you
hsve to be a balanced team and
I don't know If they can pass
that well."
Asked about a statement by
Buckeyes' coach Woody
Hayes' that the Rose Bowl
w1nner should be the nat10nal
champion, Davis looked
perturbed.
"I don't see how he can say
that," he said. "We don't plan
to but it doesn't matter If we
lose. We're the national champions. The coaches said so."
NHL Standings
By United Press lnlernalionat
East
w. I I pts gt ga
Montreat 22 5 8 52 143 81
Boston • 23 8 3 49 156 107
NY Rngrs
22 11 3 47 139 96
Buffalo 18 10 7 43 129 101
Detroll 15 16 4 34 106 119
Toronto 10 19 5 25 104 117
Vancver 10 21 5 25 105 150
NY lslndrs
4 25 4 12 6S 158
West
w 1 t. pts gt ga
Chicago 21 11 2' 44 130 89
Minn
18 13 3 '39 119 98
Phlla
16 16 4 36 126 130

~~.~~~ :~ :~ ~ ~ ~~l ::~

26
22
20
16

FREE

HoopIe: sooners penn
state se'ond 8attle

TOOTHPASTE
2 LB. Tl N FRUIT CAKE

CERTIFIED GAS STATIONS

f
N
0
I
0
ew r eons

B

y MAJOR AMOS B. HOOPLE
Father of the Bowl Gomes

Ph'l
1 J ohnson, forward, and Bill
Shsrp, center.
The other Me1gs starters will
probably be B11l Vaughan,

Sunday, Dec. 31

••
•

STARTING
AT 9 P.M.

••
..0
•

i

SERVING

Join Our Gala!

Prilne Rib Dinner

Fun For All!

At 8 'tillO:OO

Dance to the Music of

Per Ptri!On, tnctudlng Meat anH Party
Fovors. Mike rHtrvatlons Nrly. Today .

SID.OO

WILLIE

Adm1111011

AI Door Wltlleut Mu t $5.00.

'

The Meigs Inn
PHO~?ft--29

POM.,Y, OHIO
•

By Unlted Press International
Alexander English and M1ke
Dunleavy don't seem to know
whst 'pressure is.
COTTON HOWL
The pa1r of South Carolina
.Jan l , Dallas, Tex.
freshmen played like a pair of
Alaba ma 24, Te&gt;as 14. Clue old pros Tuesday night as they
kasa w Bob, o11r man I rom combmed for 37 points to lead
Mob1!e, who lipped liS on South Carolina to a surAlabama's shockmg defeat
iJy Aubu•n, assures us 'Barna pnsingly easy 80-64, victory
will bounce back agamst the over previOusly unbeaten
Longh01ns Alabama (10-lJ , Villanova
Southeast champ, and Texas
The VICtory moved the
19-ll , the So uthwest title Gamecoc~• mto the semifinal
holder, are rated No 4 and
;.
5 in the co untry and thai round of the Holiday Feshval
squa. es w•th your correspon-""ln' New York.'
dent's app1a•sal
Michigan, the No. 17 club,
ROSE HOWL
also gamed a semifinal s)ot
Pasadena , Calif.
with an 88-70 rout of B!lston
Jan.
So. California 35, Ohio State College as Henry Wilmore and
14. The m1ghty T r oj a n s Campy Russell combmed for 60
ill-01 , the only learn to go pomts.
t h ro u g h the season un- In other Holdiay Festival
scathed, are too exploSive actiOn, St. John's of New York,
ror the Bucks to contam for
60 mm utes Yo ur favonte sparked by Billy Schaeffer's
c or r e s p on d e n t looks for 40-polnt effort, trounced GramWoody Hayes' Oh1o State lads blmg, IIUIG, despite a 46-point
19-1), to giVe It everything performance by the 'ijgers'
they've got but 11 just won't Aaron James and Manhsttan,
be enough For old friend
J ohn McKay and his Tro)ans with Mike Moore soaring 19
1t will be a glonous wmdup- pomts, ousted North Carolina
har-•·umph '
A&amp;T, 7~1.
'
ORANGE BOWL (N)
St. John's now meets. TenJnn. 1, Miami, Fl•.
nessee and Manhattan tangles
Notre Dame 28, Nebnr.ko Zl. with Niagara In quarter-final
Th1s yo uthful Irish team has action. Both St. John's and
been 1mprovmg all year and Manhattan must play extra
Ara Parsegh•an should ha ve games because of the addition
his lads ready lor a supreme of Grambling and North
effort agamst the talented
Cornhuskers For Nebraska 's Carolina A&amp;T, the first apBob Devaney and h1s boys pearance In the tournament by
11 w1ll be a disappomting the black schools, to the field.
fimsh to a diSappomting season . For a spectacular side
show keep your eyes on Heis·
man Award winner Johnny
Rodgers, who could give the
ln sh fits

1;

The • Old Boy Himself
Conference gave the Hoople
computer a fit as 11 tr1ed to
s epa r a t e all the pertment
data Our final analys•s selects the Volunteers 19-2J,
last-second losers to confel·
ence c h a m p Alabama. to
edge LSU (9-l ·IJ by the mmgm of a fi eld goal •
GATOR BOWL
n~. 30, Jacksonville, Fla.
Auburn 21, Colorado 19. Auburn's Tigers, rated No 7 m
the nation and our exclus•ve
c h o 1c e- kalf-kaff- to upset
Alabama , Will contmue 1ts
w1nn •n g ways by turnmg
back the B u Cf a l oes, who
handed Oklahoma 1ls lone
1972 defeat In a brp•smg,
olose)y.contested game, we
look for Auburn to tn umph
SUGAR BOWL (N)
llec. 31, New Orleans, La.
Oklahoma 38, Penn State 32.
Sporting Identical 10-1 records, the Sooners and Nitlany
Lions clash m the prem1er
contest of the Bowl Season
No strangers to the goallme,
Oklahoma has averaged 34 7
pomts per c ont es t wh1le
Penn State was recordmg
32.5 points per game in '72
Th1s modern Ba ttle of
New Orleans promiSes to be
a h1gh-scormg affair The
wmner of this match m•ght
well be c on s 1de r e d the
nation 's Number One eleven
- har-rumph 1

h~r~.~·.F, r~·d·.·ay

, .,

1972 SEASON
Right Wrong Ties Pet.
440
168
II .724

r---------.
Big Screen

And now , dear readers , as
we fimsh another glorious
year lor the Hoorle Football
Forecast, I wan to wish a
happy and prosperous 1973
to you all
fNI'WSPAP EA ENTERPRISE ASSN )

nt

4o:tr)f\

1f~fl

ZENITH
Color T.V.
Starting At

$43r

1 ~ Jill

,, 01'\~ ~4ql ~ , !Q,9 t,.9~1! amum
1'"'
t~e , ~Wlll, enuriY. con-

guai'd i Andy Vaughan and
M1ke Sayre, forwards, and Bill
Chaney, center.

tent as 1 7 million tons of
coal. 7 2 million barrels of
oil. or ~ 2 billion cubic feet
of natural gas

Simpson named
Player of Year
'

•

m

.

NEW YORK (UP!) -0. J.
Simpson, running behind a hne
nddled by lnjufles, emerged as
pro football's leading rusher
this season with 1,251 yards,
and was rewarded today when
he was named Umted Press
International's American
Football Conference Player of
the Year. Simpson received 15
votes in balloting of 39 pro
football writers, three from
each conference city, to easily
outdistance rookie running
sensation Franco Harris of
Pitts-burgh, second with eight.
Quarterback Earl Morrall of
Miami wa third with six votes
and Dolphin teammate Larry
Csonkaother
took players
fourth with
five.
received

one vote each.
Simpson, the Bills' No. I
draft choice four years ago
after wmnlng the Heisman
Trophy In a sensational recordbreaking career at Southern
California, didn't blossom fully
as a pro until this season. And
the main rea son was the
Buffalo Bills' Coach Lou
Saban.
The Bills concentrated on a
passmg game in recent years
but Saban, who helped develop
Floyd Little into one of the
league's premier runners at
Denver, changed all that. He
made Simpson the Bills'
workhorse and the 6-loot-2, 207pounder responded with six
IOO.yard performances.
Harris, the Steelers' No. I
draft choice out of Penn State,
moved into a starting job
midway though the season
when Frenchy F)IQUa and
Preston Pearson were hurt and
became the most talked about
I'UIIIIer in the AFC. He Ued a
record set by Jim
llmm •ben he llUihed for 100
wmore yards 1n six consecutive game~~ and only a serle1 ol

•aue

ON

A,FC by UPI

~Flve

'
•••

•
•
m
easy wm

"'

P·o ·mt ers

sJ.so

S•.Carolina

r

10 722
13 .629 3';,
20 .500 s
Egad. fne nds, the master19 .457 9V2 mmds behmd the bowls have
Pac1f1c DIVIsion
done it again with nine excelw. t. pd. g.b. lent matchups m the major
Los Angeles 28 6 824
Golden State 21 12 636 6'12 contests The most delectable
m our opmion is the Sugar
Phoenix
17 19 472 12
Bowl
fray pitting Oklahoma
Seattle
11 29 285 21
Penn State in the
agamst
Porlland
9 28 243 20'1&gt;
Tuesday's Results
seco nd Ba t tle of Ne w
Boslon 115 New York 106
Orleans.
Balhmore 121 Buffalo 104
But more on that one tater
Cleveland 115 Allanla 96
U!t
us now assess the conCh•cago 111 KC-Omaha 103
tests
m their chronologiCal
Detroit 112 Molwaukee 105
order
Houston 113 Phoen1 x 110
Seattle 97 Golden St. 95
PEACH BOWL (N)
Los Ang 116 Portland 92
Wednesday's Games
Dec. 29, AUunta, Ga.
Allanta vs Philadelphia
West
Virginia 36, No. Caroat Pittsburgh
!Only game scheduled)
lina St. :!8. The Mountaineers '
potent au and grouhd attack
led by Berme Gahffa and
ABA Standings
By U111ted Press tnlernat1onal Kerry Marbury will prevail
East
m a free-scormg fray The
w. I pet, g.b. Wolfpack knows how to stnke
Carolma
24 14 632
g h the a1r and will
Kentucky
22 13 629 •;, throu
make
11
mterestmg all the
Vlrg101a
20 20 500 4'12 way
Memphis
14 23 37S 9
New York
13 22 .371 9
TANGERINE HOWL (N)
West
Dec. 29, Orlando , Fla.
w. t. pd. g.b.
Utah
23 15 605
Tampa 36, Kent St. 17. The.
lnd1ana
20 15 571 1'1&gt;
Denver
19 17 528 3 hard-nosed Tampa Spartans,
Deilas
15 20 429 6'12 victors o•er M1am1 (Fla ),
San D1ego
15 26 366 9'1&gt; Bowling Green and VanderTuesday's Results
bilt m 1ts last three starts,
Dallas 131 Virginia 120
are lu ~t too powerful for the
Kentucky 129 Indiana 120
Ken State Golden Flashes
Ulah 119 Memphis 112
Tampa
(9·21 should move up
Denver 103 San D1ego 101
m
the
ratmgs
Only games scheduled)
Wednesday's Games
SUN BOWL
New York at Kentucky
Dec.
30,
El Paso, Tex.
VIrginia at Denver
Carolina a1 lnd1ana
North C a r o II n a :!8, Texas
Memphis at Son Diego
Tech 14. Cht mplon of the
(Only games scheduled)
Atlantic Coa st Conference,
North C a r o 11 n a gets the
Hoople nod m 1\s battle with
the Red Ra1ders or the tough
Southwest Conference The
PRO ATHLETE
Tar Heels, losers only to B1g
PHILADELPHIA (UPI)- Ten champ Ohio State tins
The Philadelphia Philhes' year, w11l run its record to
Steve Carlton, 27, the National an ImPr eSS IVe ll·l- Um·
U!ague 's Cy Young Award kumph l
win~er,
was
named ASTRO-BLUEHONNET (N)
ProfessiOnal Athlete of the
Dec. 30, Houston , Tex.
Year today by the Philadelphia Tennessee 27, LSU 24. These
Sports Writers Association.
two fine football teams from
the player-rich Southeastern

FREE

Frosh pace

BOWLING ALONG---

11

Western Conference

lt took me a year/' said

f

+++

Pro Standings

1P"IS!ilih&lt;•ltll !J04 34 b12501113" r '
St ,Lou!$• 1116\61 6 28 u~ t9 , 107 ' ,, •
California· 5, 22 7 17 90 1 146 ., .,
,
,
Tuesday's
Resutls
Th
M
·
M
d
e
Vancouver 4 California 3
e1gs
arau er
Detroit 1 P•tts 1, lie
basketball squad will regroup
Montreal 4 St Louis I
1ts forces Fnday against the
South Point Pointers at Meigs
High School for one of the few
REMAINS EIGHTH
area games over the Chnslmas
NEW YORK (UP! ) - Akron vacation.
remains in eighth place in this
Coach
Carl
Wolfe's
week's UP! ratings of small Marauders are currently 2-4
college basketball teams .
overall and 1-3 in Southeastern
The Z1ps were g1ven 80 votes. Ohw Athletic League play,
Stephen F. Auston IS top- Coach Mike Hughes' Pointers
ranked
are 5-3, but have played a
rugged schedule.
South Point has been beaten
The Daily Sentinel
by powerful Portsmouth, 70-61,
DEVOTED TO THE
and Chillicothe by a narrow
INTEREST OF
MEIGS -MASON AREA
margm. The Pointers opened
CHEST!i'R L. TANNEHILL ,
Exec Ed
thelf season defeating Meigs
ROBERT HOEFLICH .
61-50. The Pointers have won
C1ty Edttor
Up to 5 Tubes GLEEM II fami~ Size
Published da !l y e~~;cept
all four previous meetings with
Saturday by The Oh io Valley
V~LUE!
Me1gs.
Pub h shtng Company , 111
Court St • Pomeroy . Oh io.
Two dead-eye shooters could
AS769 Bus..ness OH•ce Phone
have a duel from beginning to
992 2156. Ed,tor lal Phone 992
2157
end, South Pomt's 6-ll forward
Second c lt ss postage p~ ld at
Pomeroy , Oh io
Ken Hurst and Meigs' 5-9 guard
Nattonel adve-rttstnQ
WITH FREE COUPON YOU GET FROM STATION
Jim
Boggs. HurSt can do 1t all ;
represenlall'tle Bott•nellt
Gallagher, Inc , 1~ East .Und
score, rebound, and play good
St , New York City , New York
defense . Boggs tops the
Suburlptton rates
De .
gg~
livered by carrter where
Marauders with a 19.5 per
avatlable 50 cents per week.
game average, most of his
Bv Motor Route where carrier
serv.ce not available One pomts coming on shots near the
month $1 75 By mall In OhtO
top of the key
and W Va , One vear $14 00
Si x months. S1 2S
Thre!
The other South Pomt
months $4 SO Subscr.ptlon
. 538 W. Main
992-9981
Pomeroy
price Includes Sunday Ti mes
starters are Ronnie Tennant
Sentinel
and Marty Patrick, guards,
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•z

m:

'

USED CARS

injuries to his offensive line
may have prevented him from
breaking it
Harris gained 1,056 yards
despite his slow start and was a
prime reason for the Steelcrs'
first title in 40 years of NFL
play.
Morrall, the 38·year-old
veteran of 17 NFL campaigns,
emerged from the shadows
when Bob Griese was hurl m
Miami's fl[th game and quarterbacked the Dolphins to a
league-record 14 victories
without a defeat. Morrall,
traded from Baltimore to
M1am1 before the season,
emerged as the No. 1 passer In
the AFC.

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2- .he Dilly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, Dec. 'l/, 1972

3- The Daily Sent mel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• Dec. 27, 1972

Harry S Truman, 1884-1972

IDD'ORIA1
'

-~-

Harry S Trumar:-a: Topnotcher
By DON OAKLEY
It was just over a quarter-century ago
that the heavy mantle of the pres•dency
fell unexpectedly ujlon the shoulders of a
little-known vice-president. A nation al·
ready mourning the deaths of thousands of
its young men on battlefields around the
world now gneved for the commander-mchief an(l wondered what the future held.
There were few on April 15, 1945, the day
Franklin D. Roosevelt d1ed, who thought
that Harry S Truman, one-lime captam
of artillery, ex-haberdasher, f&lt;Jrmer county
judge and U.S. senator, would be little
more than a caretaker president.
The fighting in Europe was almost over.
the collapse of Japan could only be a matter of months. Truman would merely preside over the conclusion of a war already
won and flU out the remainder of FOR's
fourth term while Americans went back.
once more, to "normalcy.''
Surely there was no one that day who
could foresee that the crises that were to
come in the next few years would be as
grave and as challengmg as any in our h•story, that Jiarry S Truman would be faced
with some of the most difficult and farreaching decisions any president ever had
to make, that he would wm a surpnsing
election to the pres•dency m h1s own right
and would again find h•mself leading the
nation in war.
Withm four months a f t e r fate thrust
him into world leadership, Harry Truman
addressed the first meeting of the United
Nat10ns in San Francisco, met w1th ~talin
at Potsdam and made the histone decision to use the atomic bomb agamst Japan.
Within a year, a new kind of war- the
Cold War-was a reality In 1947, Truman
announced his Truman Doctrine and sent
aid to Greece and Turkey to f i g h t and
"contain" communism, which had already
swallowed Eastern Europe.
The $12-blllion Marshall Plan to rebuild
Western Europe was but the beginning of
the nation's vast, worldwide foreign aid
program.

Us.

U'l Ol' Matchmaking Ma

Dear Helen:
I don't want to be a nosy mother, but my son needs a push.
He Ia 211, dating a ~ar-old girl I've never met. However,
friendl tell me she Ia a good, church1Jolng, moral, well brought\IP girl. Sle's pretty too, as he has a picture of ber In his room.
From what I hear they're so much alike In lutblts and ideals thst
It's uncanny.
But -Ill)' son was deeply hurt three years ago and I think he
Ia afrild ol piling serlo118, tllough he bas daled this girl for about
lib: nr')JI: , ~ I-sn't brought her home , to
1!11ft 111,10 be probably hlln 't tolil her how he feels and she may
ll&amp;1h lt'a "Jalifrlends"IOIIIP awaylrl\m'l\llrt. Gll-ls'ilke her
few and far between -and my 11011l8n't getung any younger.
I t!tlnt he would like to say, "Let's get married," and do just
that In a CGUPle of weeks. Financially, he's able, but a girl wants
a bli wedding, and be llhould give her notice. I can't understand
wily be doesn't bring her home and get everything settled.
Uke I say, I'm not a nosy mother, but shouldn't !have a talk
with him? -MRS. C. M.

are

Dear Mrs. M.:
Back up to "I'm not a nosy mother," add a big, fat exclamation point, and cut the ''buts."
A 25-year-old son needs a mother's ''push" toward
matrimony like he needed her taking him to the barbership at

+++

Dear Helen:
I like mimeographed famUy letters for Cluistlll8B cards,
Jnvlded they're Interesting and fun to read. But when they're
recelwd during the hoUday ruJb, they're seldom appreciated.
Therefore, we send our Chrl.atmas letters out after New
Ytar'a.lt works great Illy then we have heard from our friends,
10we can tack on really personalanawers at the bottom. Also, we
have all the new addresaes. Colored paper, with matching Ink,
Incidentally, llvens
any correapondence,
At. for gifts: .we do our gift giving throughout the year and
that goes for birthdays, too. Whenever we find something just
right for a friend or relative, 'le buy It and send It quickly, with a
note saying IIlla Ia "Your 8Peclal gift arid we couldn't walt for the
special day." How much nicer It 1.! to get a surprise present when
It can be savored all by itself. Chrlatmas we reserve for the
chlldren - and for pie818nt, relaxed family gatherings, unburdened with thoughts of those mountainous bills and aduU
glfla.
Thanks for letting me share my Christmas ideas with you. ALICE M.
Dear Helen:
Here'• an Idea for low-bud&amp;et gUts that really mean
110111ethin8. Our daughter lost her part-time job this fall. !ale
loves to give, but said It wouldn't be right if her parents paid her
bills (thougb she's only 16). So ehe made up fancy litUe I.O.U.
notes, dedrated with humorous drawings, and placed them In
enve~ on the tree. Her married slater and brother and their
IPOtllel each received "TEN HOURS BABY.SITTING, but not
durtngflnala week."The older children got "ONE TRIP TO TilE
BEACH, BIG PICNIC, Payable July 14." She made the younger
onaltuffed anlmala and dotla. And I« us, her parenUI, she had
the greatest gift of all: "3115 DAVS OF l-OVE AND APPRECIATION for two super-Good GIJYI, plll8 two car-waeh-endwu jobl, and ODe day IICI'Ubblng down the kitchen cupboards."

up

-NICE, HUH?

Dear Nice
The nicest! You've got a great daughter there. -H.

"* 'to follolr.
'1111 ._. Is In Its last
J Ia.
Tilt morning stars are
M N), Ve11111 and Mars.

Tilt evenlna stars are
........ and Selurn.
on IIIIa date are
o1 ClpriCGrn,
aoted French
Wll barn Dec.

'

5.00 ......- Mister Rogers 33 ~ Daniel Boone 6; Ponderosa 3, -4 , Santa

AI The Matt 15.
OragneiB , Etec. Co. JJ; Gomer Pyle13, Marsha ll Dil lon
Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
6·00 - News, Weather, Sports 3, 4, S, 10, 15, Truth or Conseq 6;
Sesame St 20; Around the Bend 33
1 oo - Truth or Conseq. 3; Beat the Clock 4, News 6, 10, Whar s
My Line 8, Anything You Can Do 13 , Saint 15; Elec. Co 20 ;
Know Your Schools 33
7 30 - Episode: Action 33 ; To Tell The Truth 6; The Judge 10;
Lassie 15; Beat the Clock 13; Pottce Surgeon 3: Protectors·s;
HodQei)Odqe Lodqe 20
8:1»-C.,rol Burnell S, 10; Paul Lynde 6; Adam-12 3, 4, !5 ,
Sonny &amp; Cher 8, Peter &amp; the Wolf 20. 33 , Blue Gray Game 10.
S: 30 - Banacek 3, 15, Handful of Ashes 33, Movie "Mr. and
Mrs Bo Jo Jones" 6, 13; Playhouse 20
9 00 - Medlcal CenterS , It's Your Buslness 33
9 30 - Pollee Surgeon 4.
10 00- Julie Andrews 6, 13 , Cannons, Soul! 33, News 201 Search
5.30 !5 ;

3, 4, 15.

11 :00 - News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10. 13, 15.
"
11· 30 ~ Johnny Carsonn3, 4, 15; Comedy News 6; Movies " Th e
Captam's Table" 10, "The Sun Also Rises" 13
100 - News4
1 30 - News 13
THURSDAY, DEC. 28, 1912
6:00 - Sunrise Sem1nar 4; Sacred Heart 10
6:15 - Farmtlme 10, Farm Report 13
6.20 - Paul Harvey 13
6:30 - Columbus Today 4, Bible Answers 8, America's
Problems 10.
6. 45 - Corncob Report 3
7 00 - Today 3, 4, 15, CBS News 8, 10, News 6
7.30 - Romper Room 6: Sleepy Jeffers 8, Rocky &amp; Bullwi nkle
13.
s·oo - Capt Kangaroo 10, New Zoo Revue 13 , Sesame Street
33; Timmy &amp; Lassie 6
8 30 ~ Jack LaLanne'13, Romper RoomS
9 00 - Paul Dixon 4; Phil Donahue 15 ; Ven Casey 13 , Romper
Room 8; Peyton Place 13, What Every Woman Wants to
Know 3; Mr. Rogers 33, Captain KangarooS ; Concentrallon
6. Friendly Junction 10.
9. 30 - To Tell The Truth 3, HazelS ; Jeopardy 6.
10 00 - Halhayoga 33, D1ck Van Dyke 13 , Dlnal Shore 3, 15,
Columbus Six Calling 6, Joker's Wild S, 10
10 30 - Concentration 3, 15: Phil Donahue 4, Split Second 13.
Price Is Right 8, 10.
11l00 - Sale of the Century3, 4, 15, GambitS, 10; Password 13;
Electric Co. 20; F Troop 6.
11:30- Hollywood Squares 3, 4, 15, Love of Life S, 10, Bewitched
6, 13; Sesame Street 20.
12·00 - Jeopardy 3, 15, Bob Braun's 50·50 Club 4 ; News 10, 13,
Jackie Oblinger 8, Password 6 ,
12:30 - 3 W's Game 3, Search For Tomorrow 8, 10, Split Second

Ant&lt;~

6.

)

27, 1822.
On thl.! day In histbry:
In 1!MI, Japanese airplanes
bombed Manila In the
Phllippjnea, despite the fact It
hadbeendeclaredanopenclly,,
In 1946, the Unlled Slates,
Russia and Britain annOUIICed
they would govern Korea as
joint trustees for live years,
then grant independence.
In 1963, the u. S. Conunerce
Department J~Uthorlzed the
· sale Qf surpiUJ wheat to RIIISia.
In 1918, the Apollo 8

1

2.3.

&amp; TH/f!GSj

00 0

000

Melanoma Caught in Time

Clolumn Saves Reader

1•

Teday II Wednesday, Dec.
rl, 1111 IDid day of 1972 with

Merv Griffin 4. Andy ' Grlff1th 15; Daniel Boone 13;'
Petticoat Junction J ; I Love Lucy 6

4. -40 -

Very Weak
Two-Opener

••

'l'lle Almuac
UIHed Prea lllteniaUoaal

•

1:00 - News 3; All My Children 6, 13, It's Your BetS; Green
BY JACK O'BRIAN
think.
Acres JO. Watch Your Child 15.
MOMS 4S NOT TOO CHEWSV
The N. V. Knlcks back-court whiz Dean 1:30Let's Make A Deal6, 13; As the World Turns 8, 10; Three
NEW
YORK
(KFS
)
Moms
Mabley
Will
be
"The
Dream"
Memlnger's
off-court
admirable
On
A
Match 3, 4, 15.
WIN AT BRIDGE
2
00
Days
of O•Jr Lives 3, 4, 15, Newlywed Game 13, Mike
the first Copa headliner to announce she'll work hobby: runs basketball clinics at children's
Douglas
6; Guiding Light 8, 10.
there sans teeth ; she's funny that way. RCA · Camp Seneca In Dutchess County and WlU be 2.30- Dodors3, 4, 15; Datmg Game 13, Edge of NightS, 10
3.00- Another World 3, 4, IS, General Hospital6, 13, Love Is a
C~airman Bob Sarnoff and former TV weather duector of its basketball during the regular
Many Splendored Th1ng 8, 10, Behind the Lones 20
gal Jeanne Parr lunched at the late Charlie camping season. Dubbed "Superfly" for his 3,30
- Return to Peyton Place 3, 4, 15, One Life to L1ve 6, 13,
Berns-lounded "21" and dined same evening at super court-flying, Dean's already a legendary
Secret Storm 8, 10; Black Journal 20
'
Charlie's son Tony's Unicorn . Blonde chan- nice guy ... No serious injuries In the final Jets- 4 00 - Mr. Cartoon 3; Love Ameman Style 13; Fllntslones 6,
Gilligan's Isle 8; Sesame St. 33, 20, "Jupiter's Darl;ng"
leuse Basheyba was inVIted by Henry Kiss-Kiss Browns game at Shea Stadium - except two , 15,
10
NORTH
Z7
to sing at th1s week's White House musiCale but prancing beauties in the halftime on.field show 4 30 - Merv Griffin 4; I Love Lucy 6, Daniel Boone 13; Andy
.A3
Griffith 15 ; Pett•coat Junct1on 3, D1ck Van Dyke 15, Da111el
was g1ven a polite last-second cancellation and were brought down by the wind belting their big
¥2
Boone 6.
•
asked to push 11 back to Jan 29 ... Cary Grant flags and upending them. They were carried off. 5 00 - Ponderosa 3, 4; Daniel Boone 6
tAJ8764
.J952
and Ginger Rogers join the board of governors field like gr1d casualties to the waiting am· 5 30 - Marshall Dillon 15, Dragnet 8, Electric Co. 33, Gomer
Pyle 13 ; Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
WEST
EAST
of thd Sam Remo (Italy ) Int'l Club aiiDlng at a bulance.
6·
00NewsJ, 4, 8, 10, 15; Truth or Conseq 6, News 13 ; Around
oH6
.K92
!\lay debut ... Cary gets lots of free vacations
Fine Bdwy. composer Cy Coleman's latest
the
Bend
33; Sesame St: 20.
¥A7653
¥QJ984
6
30
NBC
News
4, 15 , ABC News S, 10, I Dream ot Jeannie 13,
that way.
bachelor-threat IS lovely blonde actress Susan
t KQ5
t93
Designing Women 33.
David Black produced a flock of Bdwy. Shamroy. Oy's newest show-score is for the 7:00 - Truth or Consequences 3; Beat The Clock 4, Course of
.1063
.KQ4
shows
- no h1ts Swears he's fmally finished "Two for the Seesaw" musical version, lyrics
Our Times 33; Dick Van Dyke 4: Whafs My Line' 8; Big Red
SOUTH (D)
Jubilee 15, News 6; Amazing World of Kreskin 13; Electnc
.Ql08754
gettmg famous on the way to the poorhouse ... by Dorothy Fields who wrote some of the
Company
20.
¥Kl0
ChriS Evert IS limng up a real fortune in tennis greatest love-worda in the Tin Pan Alley 7:30 - Hollywood Squares 3; To Tell the Truth 6: Wild Kingdom
tl02
10, I'll See You in Court 4, Lassie 8; Black Journal 33; Zoom
endorsements before she's 21 ... Billy Wilder's language ... Remember only a few Prealdents
.A87
20; t,lewsmaker '72 13.
Botll VUlf\e)'Bbll!\ • ~imp\i&lt;lent ev.I!Qabout hJs·old celluloid herooSI' , ago ~n WE\ , poured ~ 'ZUiiaQf ¥tto'' JlOilltWar 'a·'OO- Mbd•SQuli(lt., b; 'Aci\ibcat~~ ·*.•~o l'lill~1 Wils~n ~~ ~ Yi'1
WhateYer Happened to 72?. , 1 11 ~H» ' , ,r; •JrttE;~
West North Ea.t South ."'rapp,ed ~ Cbap\ln fs ' C:oqstant · cutrate .Japan?- They've forgoUen Rear! Harbor 1...:
9:00
- Hollywood Tele~1slon Theatre 33 ; Ironside 3, 4" 15; 1ln- '
1
philosophizing whatever hiS retroactive gemus Tokyo's Kitano A'kns ' Co. fast' liought the
ternallonal
Performance 20, 33. Life, Health &amp; The American
Pass 2N.T. Pass
and sa1d he'd do a fhck w1th Char he today "if he Murray Hotel at 66 Park Ave. for .1,6110,000.
Woman 6, 13: J T. s, 10.
Pass 3 •
Pass Pass
would only_shut up." ... "The Love Doctors"
Arlene Francis' and Martin Gabel's whiz· 1~ : 00 - Owen Marshall 6, 13 ; News 20: World Press 33; Dean
Pass
3, 15,
author Pat McGrady and frau need a love son Peter, who teaches law at Berkeley wears )1:00Marlin
- News3,4,6,18, 10, 13, 15.
Operung lead ~ • K
doctor.
his half past hi.! shoulders. In P.J. Clarke's, 11·30 - JohMy Carson 3, 4, 15; Dick Cavell 6, Movies "Stage to
Tucson" 8, " Kiss Me Deadly" 10, "The BarbaniJn &amp; The
Cue Mag's Entertainer of the Year will be owner Danny Lavezzo answered Peter's query
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Geisha.'' 13.
·
The North·South pair were Diana Ross ... Burt Bacharach, the pop-song about Dan's brief coiffure with: "My hair is 11:45 - ~ohnny Carson 4
- News 4
playing extremely weak two- composer, owns Rathmann 's in E Norwich, N. short because I'm an undercover resolullonist 1.00
I
30
News 13
,
bids. Their high card point Y., which draws the chic horsey set - polo - in disguise."
range was 5 to 10 and they greats such as Pete Bostwick, Wmston Guest,
Tycoon Frank Ryan was intrigued with a
bid them With any six-card All Vanderbilt etc.; Burt's other equally horsey gentle lady 40 years hi$ senior at a smart party.
su1t. North's two no-trump
response was forcing and we spot, the Dover House, draws the trot-crowd When it ended, Frank offered to drive the ocsee no reason for the bid ex- from nearby Roosevelt Raceway ... Ray togenarian home. Accepted. Would It be out of
cept inexcusable ophm1sm.
Milland's zetz in the artistic eye of Method Frank's way? No; right on his way to P. J . 1'
South's three-club rebid Actors "They're a bloody bore. They can't act Clarke's for a late schmooz with his showbiz- ..__
~-----------~ 1
showed a hand In the ma~i ­ their way ou, of a plastic bag."
journaliskportscas~ pals. Might be escort
BY PAUL CRAB'TREE ,
mum range for this type of
The
CBS.
TV
gridcaster
was
advised
by
his
herforfew
minutes
to
see
the
place
sbe'd
never
--~
'
weak bid and in sp1te of this
encouragement, North could play-mate on TV that Father Dudley "Missed visited? Of course. And so Frank had to confess • I'm not ~•• nrst to say it, but the All-America, AII..State aoo
only go to three spades
you at mass today "; the lalla way feUa right on they hadn't been introduced and didn't know her all-this-or-that teams In football and basketball, now be~
South thought a while be- TV straight-voiced, "I'm trying to quit" Grid name. "Mrs. J. c. Pennedy," she said, and they featured In the papers and on TV, area complete phony.
,
fore pa_ssing. He really ,held Jets owner Phillselin got a warm surprise - hls joined the late-late chattercast of P. J.'s
!know, because I was in on a '1lx" one time, the culmination:
a max1mum In his system
portrait
pamled,
quite
niftii,Y,
by
ex-grid
star
characters.
Stayed
on
as
Frank
got
sleepy
and
of
an
elaborate practicaljoke-andit worked.
and the decision to pass must
Dong Kingman's stylish fought off the dozes whlle the 18-year-old widow
It was a dirty trick, butlsUU get a laugh out of it.
,
have been b a s e d on the Tom McDonald
knowledge that his parlner pam ling drew the biggest b1d at Molly Berns' of the famous American merchandising giant
((Before I start, though, let me say that I don't think~
tended to bid too much
"21 ',' benefit auctiop for the Heart Fund:'$1,200. twinkled on and on, dellghted, younger than baseball's all-etar teams, or a football team selected from a
South won the king of dia- Just about what 1t'd've cost at his Hammer wintertime.
1 given geographical arelf Uke the Big Ten or SEOAL, are
monds with dummy's ace
Gallery show Tax deducbble this way; we
fraudulent. You can really study one football or basketball'
and led a diamond r 1 g h t
league, and vote Intelligently. Similarly, whether selected by
back. His 10 forced West's
fans
or players, the baseball all-filar teams do represent the
queen and 1t was up to West
"stars," in the eyes of the fans, or the players.)
to lead to trick three.
. Anyhow, the staff of The Charleston Gazette back in the midYou can see that a spade
shift Is best and West should
Fifties had its share of flakes and free spirits, compensating in a
have seen this also but West
propensity for hell-raising for what it may have lacked In jour-~
was ready to have a life
naliBtlc polish. (The Gazette was, and IS, the largest paper in'
master bramstorm.
West Virginia.)
He thought a while or at
It 1198med, about 1955 or so, that editors from aU over the
least a c t e d like he was
never be placed on his back.
, thinking and then came up By ~awrence Lomb, M.D. that individuals who act Even in the operating room State were ,being 81Jlred to vote on an alloBtate football team. The
promptlr can ofttimes save
with the amazing lead of a Dear Dr. Lamb _ 1 hope the•r
hves from cancer. when this is done, a tubular ballots were printed and three or four of the Gazette's sports-.
low heart.
this letter reaches you per- Perhaps your experience will mstrument 1s placed In the writers got to vote- because of thst paper's large coverage and
South was surprised to find sonally, because I want to
help pass this knowledge on windpipe at the back of the the many reams In its circulation area.
himself winning the trick thank you for savmg my life to
other people and In the throat .(usually for artificial
Alas, some of us reporters and news desk staffers led the fine
with hls king, but not too sur- I ,had a melanoma on my long run there will be even respiration) which prevents
prised to ruff his o t h e r back and did not realize 1t, more individuals who wlll the tongue from falllng back gentlemen in the sports department astray. With their
heart ; lead dummy's trump or how senous they are. l
blocking the airway. To cooperation and our connivance, we began to boom the gridiron
ace and continue with a high knew I had a mole and that profit from this knowledge. and
prevent airway blockage by JnWess of Alfred Dllley, Superstar.
d i a m o n d. He overruffed my ~lothing was uritating 1t Anybody who has a mole the
Alfred Dllley, superstar, was listed as first-team choice on
tongue an unconscious
East's nine-spot, dropped the 1 re~d an artiCle you wrote anywhere on hiS body which
'
king and jack with a low on moles"T'malignant mel- is enlarging, changing in person lying down should be all the sportswriters' ballots at the Gazette.
on
his
side
or
at
least
posiAferocious ballplayer, he was a 6-2, 195-pound senior guard
trump lead and while he still anomas- m our local paper s1ze or shape, or Is co.nstantly 1rntated, should see a tioned in such a way that the on offense and llnebacker on defense for little Gilmore High
had to lose two clubs he did SIX months ago and prompt- doctor
about the mole. Moles head is turned to the side.
make his contract for an un- ly called my doctor The about the
School, located in Jackson County, W. Va., between Ripley and;
wa1st or anywhere
deBerved good score
Obviously,
if
the
uncon~
mole was removed and a on the body where straps or scious or semi-conscious in- ParkersbiB'g.
(N~WSPAPER EHHRPIISE ASSN )
biopsy revealed it to be l_llB· clothing or shaving 1s lrriIn the space for "comments," Alfred Dilley, superstar, was .
llgnant. After an ope~at1on , tatmg them are the ones dividual is vomiting or bleed- given raves that were almost nauseous: "Great movement on"',;
X rays, and exammat10n of most apt to change to cancer ing, this material can be In- attack," "Constantly kept opponents I'UM!ng bell away from :
my lymph nodes, my doctors
· haled iDto the trachea (wind·
told me they felt 1! was I WISh everyone who has a pipe) obstructing respira- him," "top-level college prospect," and all the rest.
:
The bidding has been
caught
m
lime.
I
have
had
mole
of
this
sort
would
be
as
tion,
or
If
small
amounts
en'¥..t North
East
The ba1lola were completed, and The Gazette sports staff :
two three-month chest X wise as you have been and ter the lung, causing a seri- made sure that a "courtesy" copy of their llatlngs got Into the ,
Pass
rays smce and both were seek Immediate medical at- ous lung infection.
Pass
2N.T.
PBBS
Pw
,.
Pass
clear. I thank you lor what tention when it Is first noted. It is all right for a person hl!nds of every sports editor In the State.
Fearful that they may have overlooked a truly~t player, •
you have done for me perYou, South, hold·
to
be
on
the
back
If
some
sonally and appremate the • Dear Dr. Lamb - Recentthe other edlton slathered along, like Pavlov's dog.
¥AQ18TS tAU .KQ7 many fine articles you wnte. ly I beard two parties dis- one Is careful to see to It that
Result: Alfred DllleJ, !RIPI!rMr' made Uird~ all..tate ;
What do you do now?
cussmg a medical problem. the airway remains open. A
that
year ln Weat VIrginia Iiiii school foqthall.
"
Dear Reader - Of course, One said tt was okay to lay good example of thlsls a perA-1'... Your JNII'iiUtr Ia most
'lbe only prGbltm wu that the real Alfred Dilley wu a 31). '
uaenlhutludo ud you have a I am always P.leased to learn a semi-conscious person who son wbo bas sudden earcllac
minimum jump sbllt
that people like my column, was vomiting and bleeding arrest and needs utemal yell'.old, ntbet pannchJ printer In The Gaette compnoln&amp;
but my greatest satisfaction m the throat Oat on hll back carcllac messaae as an emer- roD, I II!'Nl 111J bat l1lrdl, ID the Gel'!')' Krlmlr clua. And •I
TODA Y'8 QUESTION
gency, lilesavlna procedure.
Instead of b1ddllll two no- does come from learning that Tne other person sald an
!run;p, your partnor has rebid the c olumn has done some- dividual In thla condition While the Individual Is on his Gllnln Hllb School, whldl II no IIIOI'e, didn't even field a :1
;,
lo three clubs. What do you do thing useful for somebody 11 should never be placed flat back, the held Ia turned to foolbd . . . that year.
now?
liD, wiBI 1111 1114ame1Nna tumlare a!I!!!OpMli!J this year, ~
IS a great personal satlsfac- on his back Who is right? Is the side and If necessary
Answer tomorrow
m
o
u
t
b-to-mouth
~
taqlvelllllfi-•USU.clabal
... , .... outallllleye.
;
lion to me to know tnat the there ever an exception?
respiration
Is
al8o
lllmlllDear Reader - That Is a
~
astronauts returned to earth information m the column
provided mformatlon to help good question and an impor- istered. Other thu thele lit·
ON
'lHI
TV
DIAL:
The
Jlhle.Gra)'
Glllll
II
tc'U
ut
1111 •
uatlons, it Is better to have
after a ll'ip around the moon 10 someone as lrl'1our case.
tant one . In general, an un- the
patient lying on hlllldl. •WIJH&amp;illtn!1'V ltl,llll "AIIIIrall Ul1 l;rleti"lolllnttbn., rlcb, ~
Urnes,
Your letter also p~int s out consc10us p c r s o n should

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE

By Helen Hottel

118e 14.- H.

WEDNESDAY, DEC. 27, 1'72

At hom e, inflation , strikes, influencepeddlmg scandals and a Republican Cong;ess gave Harry Truman little rest m office.
Had he been retired m 1948, as everyone
expected, Truman would still have left an
indelible mark on American history. But
agamst all the odds, he won another term
almost smglebandedly, with his own pal·
ented brand of gutty, g1ve-'em-hell campa•gmng
Then, in 1949, came the Berlm blockade,
Russia's explosion or 1ts first atomic bomb,
the Commumst take-over m Chma. NATO,
the Allied military alliance, was born
In 1950· Communist North Korea's mvasion of South Korea and Truman's decision to COQlmil American troops Then,
the Chinese intrusiOn mto the war, the
clash with MacArthur, the military stalemate that cast a shadow over his last
years m off1ce.
Looking back now from our position
of economic prosper1ty at home and a faulv stabilized East-West power balance
abroad, we can judge the decisions that
were made and the acbons that were taken
and not taken between 1945 and 1953.
We can see m1stakes, but we can also
see triumphs.
Not the least triUmph was the fact that
Harry Truman, the m o s t ordinary of
Americans, had the capacity to m e, first,
above the machine politics of Missouri to
become an able senator serving the entire
nallon With his War Profits CommJttee
and, later, to meet the challenge of the
presidency in a manner that strengthened
the enllre free world.
'
H~rry S :r~uman-wh•s!le-s!oppin g, Republican-baitmg, letter-wr1tmg, piano ~play­
mg, helllng-and-damning, peppeFy Harry
S Truman . There was always a llttle of
the pugnacious ward politician in h1m. But
where it counted, behind that lonely desk
m the White House where the s1gn sa•d
"The buck stops here," he ranked w1th th~
best of them

Helen Help

f)

Television Log'

,

.

.

. avzs JUst an
ordinary
guyo
ield
LOS ANGELES (UP!) -

Long after hiS teammates had
left the practi.;. field, Anthony
Davis stood and pahently
answered questions until the
mterview was concluded :
"You sure you got enough ?"
the No. I rusher on the No 1
college football team m the
country asked the sportmvriter.
Assured so, University of
Southern California 's crack
sophomore tailback smiled and
SBld "Thsnk you for your mteres!" before trotting off the
field.
Anthony Davis, the speedster
who personally destroyed
Notre Dame with a sixtouchdown day,ls as unspoiled
as could possibly be.
Winner of the Volt Memorial
Award as the Pacific Coast's
outstanding college football
player for 1972 and a second
team All-America, Davis started the season as a third
stringer.
In fact, he didn't become a
starter (supplanting junior
Rod McNeill) until the middle
of the Trojans' perfect 11-ll

In USC's last four games,
DaviS averaged 169 yards per
contest and sco'red 12 touchdowns . He wound up as
team's leading performer m
three departments; f!!Sh (1,034
yards), scormg (108 pomts )
and kickoff returns (12 for 468
ya\'(ls).
Against Notre Dame in the '
game which brought the Trojans and coach John McKay
their third national champiOnsh1p In II years, the former
high school quarterback from
San Fernando, Calif., had a
368-yard day . He returned
three kickoffs for 218 yards and
two touchdowns, rushed for 99
yards and caught three passes
for 51 yards in a 45-23 rout.
During a workout, Davis IS
the object of good natured
kidding from his teammates.
But the fleet rookie also Is
highly respected, too, and not
just for his onfield work.
"They (his teammates)
know I'm a team ball player
and when I do somethmg I do 1t
100 per cent, practices mclurled," he said. "But we have
a lo&lt; of team players and thst's

season.

why we're wmners."

Vet he came on so fast that
Help Yourself
he became only the fifth
Davis seems to enJOY hunself
running back-and first during an interview. Although
sopliomore-to gain 1,000 yards he 1s only 20, he is relaxed and
ill a year, .'
poised
Davis bears an astonishing
"I conSider myself very
resemblance to two Southern lucky that people want to talk
Cal Reisman Trophy winners to me ," he declared. ,"Wlren
of,the past-the facial features you're a successful football
of 0. J. Simpson and, the size player, you can expect a lot of
and running style of Mike this. You have to repeat
Garrett.
yourself a lot but you're only
The son of a U.S. Postal helping yourself in the long
Service clerk whose mother is run ."
a Head Start teacher, the 5DaviS says he's friendly with
foot-9, 190-pound speedster hss the man whose JOb he took, Rod
lia)l4led h!JI f'!llflf'! Qpatlo!lll!,.i ,l.s Ne\)l, ,pg:) .No,,-2 ~r
taint! wlffiout any probiems. this season with 535 yarilll.
The reaSO!l ?-1U o' '
"We get along very well," he
Stories Don't Help
said. "We had a speaking
"I thmk whst's ahead and not engagement together the other
what's behind," Davis said. day and Rod offered me a ride.
''The season is over and so is I'm sure he feels bad he's not
the Notre Dame game . That's playmg more but there's no
the past, the future is ahead. conflict at all between us."
I'm not going to tell you I don't
DaviS hsd trouble converting
enjoy reading articles about from a prep quarterback to a
myself because I do. But I college running back last year.
forget about an article after Consequently, he carried the
I've read it. You can't win a ball just 51 times for 195 yards
game just because somebody to rank \h1rd among the
has written somethmg mce rushers on the Trojans' fresh-'
shout you,"
man team.

11

...... ,:..
(

.

•

NBA Standings
By Umtecl Press International '
Eastern Conference
Attanticw~t••pnct. g.b.
Boston
28 5 848
New York
28 10 737 2V2
Buffalo
9 25 265 19'12
Phllade~:~~ral
~iv~!
~3 26V2

D.,, •more
~

Atlanla
Houston
Cleveland

10

w. 14
t.
20
20 16
15 IS
10 26

pd
5S8 g b.
556 1
455 4'12

278

M1dwes1 Otvlston

w. t. pet g.b.,

Milwaukee
Chicago
KC Omaha
Detro•!

Davis, "to make the transition.
I fumbled qmte a bit last year
and thst's why I didn't play
more. I guess I was just too

tense,"
Dav1s believes USC's Stingy
defense-;,nd not it's offensewill prove the difference
against Big Ten co-champion
Oh\o State in the Rose Bowl on
New Year's Day.
"They're (Ohio State ) a
good, sound defens1ve team but
it remains whether they'll be
able to do anything against our
defense," he remarked.
" "! know I can't in practice.
To be in the game with us, you
hsve to be a balanced team and
I don't know If they can pass
that well."
Asked about a statement by
Buckeyes' coach Woody
Hayes' that the Rose Bowl
w1nner should be the nat10nal
champion, Davis looked
perturbed.
"I don't see how he can say
that," he said. "We don't plan
to but it doesn't matter If we
lose. We're the national champions. The coaches said so."
NHL Standings
By United Press lnlernalionat
East
w. I I pts gt ga
Montreat 22 5 8 52 143 81
Boston • 23 8 3 49 156 107
NY Rngrs
22 11 3 47 139 96
Buffalo 18 10 7 43 129 101
Detroll 15 16 4 34 106 119
Toronto 10 19 5 25 104 117
Vancver 10 21 5 25 105 150
NY lslndrs
4 25 4 12 6S 158
West
w 1 t. pts gt ga
Chicago 21 11 2' 44 130 89
Minn
18 13 3 '39 119 98
Phlla
16 16 4 36 126 130

~~.~~~ :~ :~ ~ ~ ~~l ::~

26
22
20
16

FREE

HoopIe: sooners penn
state se'ond 8attle

TOOTHPASTE
2 LB. Tl N FRUIT CAKE

CERTIFIED GAS STATIONS

f
N
0
I
0
ew r eons

B

y MAJOR AMOS B. HOOPLE
Father of the Bowl Gomes

Ph'l
1 J ohnson, forward, and Bill
Shsrp, center.
The other Me1gs starters will
probably be B11l Vaughan,

Sunday, Dec. 31

••
•

STARTING
AT 9 P.M.

••
..0
•

i

SERVING

Join Our Gala!

Prilne Rib Dinner

Fun For All!

At 8 'tillO:OO

Dance to the Music of

Per Ptri!On, tnctudlng Meat anH Party
Fovors. Mike rHtrvatlons Nrly. Today .

SID.OO

WILLIE

Adm1111011

AI Door Wltlleut Mu t $5.00.

'

The Meigs Inn
PHO~?ft--29

POM.,Y, OHIO
•

By Unlted Press International
Alexander English and M1ke
Dunleavy don't seem to know
whst 'pressure is.
COTTON HOWL
The pa1r of South Carolina
.Jan l , Dallas, Tex.
freshmen played like a pair of
Alaba ma 24, Te&gt;as 14. Clue old pros Tuesday night as they
kasa w Bob, o11r man I rom combmed for 37 points to lead
Mob1!e, who lipped liS on South Carolina to a surAlabama's shockmg defeat
iJy Aubu•n, assures us 'Barna pnsingly easy 80-64, victory
will bounce back agamst the over previOusly unbeaten
Longh01ns Alabama (10-lJ , Villanova
Southeast champ, and Texas
The VICtory moved the
19-ll , the So uthwest title Gamecoc~• mto the semifinal
holder, are rated No 4 and
;.
5 in the co untry and thai round of the Holiday Feshval
squa. es w•th your correspon-""ln' New York.'
dent's app1a•sal
Michigan, the No. 17 club,
ROSE HOWL
also gamed a semifinal s)ot
Pasadena , Calif.
with an 88-70 rout of B!lston
Jan.
So. California 35, Ohio State College as Henry Wilmore and
14. The m1ghty T r oj a n s Campy Russell combmed for 60
ill-01 , the only learn to go pomts.
t h ro u g h the season un- In other Holdiay Festival
scathed, are too exploSive actiOn, St. John's of New York,
ror the Bucks to contam for
60 mm utes Yo ur favonte sparked by Billy Schaeffer's
c or r e s p on d e n t looks for 40-polnt effort, trounced GramWoody Hayes' Oh1o State lads blmg, IIUIG, despite a 46-point
19-1), to giVe It everything performance by the 'ijgers'
they've got but 11 just won't Aaron James and Manhsttan,
be enough For old friend
J ohn McKay and his Tro)ans with Mike Moore soaring 19
1t will be a glonous wmdup- pomts, ousted North Carolina
har-•·umph '
A&amp;T, 7~1.
'
ORANGE BOWL (N)
St. John's now meets. TenJnn. 1, Miami, Fl•.
nessee and Manhattan tangles
Notre Dame 28, Nebnr.ko Zl. with Niagara In quarter-final
Th1s yo uthful Irish team has action. Both St. John's and
been 1mprovmg all year and Manhattan must play extra
Ara Parsegh•an should ha ve games because of the addition
his lads ready lor a supreme of Grambling and North
effort agamst the talented
Cornhuskers For Nebraska 's Carolina A&amp;T, the first apBob Devaney and h1s boys pearance In the tournament by
11 w1ll be a disappomting the black schools, to the field.
fimsh to a diSappomting season . For a spectacular side
show keep your eyes on Heis·
man Award winner Johnny
Rodgers, who could give the
ln sh fits

1;

The • Old Boy Himself
Conference gave the Hoople
computer a fit as 11 tr1ed to
s epa r a t e all the pertment
data Our final analys•s selects the Volunteers 19-2J,
last-second losers to confel·
ence c h a m p Alabama. to
edge LSU (9-l ·IJ by the mmgm of a fi eld goal •
GATOR BOWL
n~. 30, Jacksonville, Fla.
Auburn 21, Colorado 19. Auburn's Tigers, rated No 7 m
the nation and our exclus•ve
c h o 1c e- kalf-kaff- to upset
Alabama , Will contmue 1ts
w1nn •n g ways by turnmg
back the B u Cf a l oes, who
handed Oklahoma 1ls lone
1972 defeat In a brp•smg,
olose)y.contested game, we
look for Auburn to tn umph
SUGAR BOWL (N)
llec. 31, New Orleans, La.
Oklahoma 38, Penn State 32.
Sporting Identical 10-1 records, the Sooners and Nitlany
Lions clash m the prem1er
contest of the Bowl Season
No strangers to the goallme,
Oklahoma has averaged 34 7
pomts per c ont es t wh1le
Penn State was recordmg
32.5 points per game in '72
Th1s modern Ba ttle of
New Orleans promiSes to be
a h1gh-scormg affair The
wmner of this match m•ght
well be c on s 1de r e d the
nation 's Number One eleven
- har-rumph 1

h~r~.~·.F, r~·d·.·ay

, .,

1972 SEASON
Right Wrong Ties Pet.
440
168
II .724

r---------.
Big Screen

And now , dear readers , as
we fimsh another glorious
year lor the Hoorle Football
Forecast, I wan to wish a
happy and prosperous 1973
to you all
fNI'WSPAP EA ENTERPRISE ASSN )

nt

4o:tr)f\

1f~fl

ZENITH
Color T.V.
Starting At

$43r

1 ~ Jill

,, 01'\~ ~4ql ~ , !Q,9 t,.9~1! amum
1'"'
t~e , ~Wlll, enuriY. con-

guai'd i Andy Vaughan and
M1ke Sayre, forwards, and Bill
Chaney, center.

tent as 1 7 million tons of
coal. 7 2 million barrels of
oil. or ~ 2 billion cubic feet
of natural gas

Simpson named
Player of Year
'

•

m

.

NEW YORK (UP!) -0. J.
Simpson, running behind a hne
nddled by lnjufles, emerged as
pro football's leading rusher
this season with 1,251 yards,
and was rewarded today when
he was named Umted Press
International's American
Football Conference Player of
the Year. Simpson received 15
votes in balloting of 39 pro
football writers, three from
each conference city, to easily
outdistance rookie running
sensation Franco Harris of
Pitts-burgh, second with eight.
Quarterback Earl Morrall of
Miami wa third with six votes
and Dolphin teammate Larry
Csonkaother
took players
fourth with
five.
received

one vote each.
Simpson, the Bills' No. I
draft choice four years ago
after wmnlng the Heisman
Trophy In a sensational recordbreaking career at Southern
California, didn't blossom fully
as a pro until this season. And
the main rea son was the
Buffalo Bills' Coach Lou
Saban.
The Bills concentrated on a
passmg game in recent years
but Saban, who helped develop
Floyd Little into one of the
league's premier runners at
Denver, changed all that. He
made Simpson the Bills'
workhorse and the 6-loot-2, 207pounder responded with six
IOO.yard performances.
Harris, the Steelers' No. I
draft choice out of Penn State,
moved into a starting job
midway though the season
when Frenchy F)IQUa and
Preston Pearson were hurt and
became the most talked about
I'UIIIIer in the AFC. He Ued a
record set by Jim
llmm •ben he llUihed for 100
wmore yards 1n six consecutive game~~ and only a serle1 ol

•aue

ON

A,FC by UPI

~Flve

'
•••

•
•
m
easy wm

"'

P·o ·mt ers

sJ.so

S•.Carolina

r

10 722
13 .629 3';,
20 .500 s
Egad. fne nds, the master19 .457 9V2 mmds behmd the bowls have
Pac1f1c DIVIsion
done it again with nine excelw. t. pd. g.b. lent matchups m the major
Los Angeles 28 6 824
Golden State 21 12 636 6'12 contests The most delectable
m our opmion is the Sugar
Phoenix
17 19 472 12
Bowl
fray pitting Oklahoma
Seattle
11 29 285 21
Penn State in the
agamst
Porlland
9 28 243 20'1&gt;
Tuesday's Results
seco nd Ba t tle of Ne w
Boslon 115 New York 106
Orleans.
Balhmore 121 Buffalo 104
But more on that one tater
Cleveland 115 Allanla 96
U!t
us now assess the conCh•cago 111 KC-Omaha 103
tests
m their chronologiCal
Detroit 112 Molwaukee 105
order
Houston 113 Phoen1 x 110
Seattle 97 Golden St. 95
PEACH BOWL (N)
Los Ang 116 Portland 92
Wednesday's Games
Dec. 29, AUunta, Ga.
Allanta vs Philadelphia
West
Virginia 36, No. Caroat Pittsburgh
!Only game scheduled)
lina St. :!8. The Mountaineers '
potent au and grouhd attack
led by Berme Gahffa and
ABA Standings
By U111ted Press tnlernat1onal Kerry Marbury will prevail
East
m a free-scormg fray The
w. I pet, g.b. Wolfpack knows how to stnke
Carolma
24 14 632
g h the a1r and will
Kentucky
22 13 629 •;, throu
make
11
mterestmg all the
Vlrg101a
20 20 500 4'12 way
Memphis
14 23 37S 9
New York
13 22 .371 9
TANGERINE HOWL (N)
West
Dec. 29, Orlando , Fla.
w. t. pd. g.b.
Utah
23 15 605
Tampa 36, Kent St. 17. The.
lnd1ana
20 15 571 1'1&gt;
Denver
19 17 528 3 hard-nosed Tampa Spartans,
Deilas
15 20 429 6'12 victors o•er M1am1 (Fla ),
San D1ego
15 26 366 9'1&gt; Bowling Green and VanderTuesday's Results
bilt m 1ts last three starts,
Dallas 131 Virginia 120
are lu ~t too powerful for the
Kentucky 129 Indiana 120
Ken State Golden Flashes
Ulah 119 Memphis 112
Tampa
(9·21 should move up
Denver 103 San D1ego 101
m
the
ratmgs
Only games scheduled)
Wednesday's Games
SUN BOWL
New York at Kentucky
Dec.
30,
El Paso, Tex.
VIrginia at Denver
Carolina a1 lnd1ana
North C a r o II n a :!8, Texas
Memphis at Son Diego
Tech 14. Cht mplon of the
(Only games scheduled)
Atlantic Coa st Conference,
North C a r o 11 n a gets the
Hoople nod m 1\s battle with
the Red Ra1ders or the tough
Southwest Conference The
PRO ATHLETE
Tar Heels, losers only to B1g
PHILADELPHIA (UPI)- Ten champ Ohio State tins
The Philadelphia Philhes' year, w11l run its record to
Steve Carlton, 27, the National an ImPr eSS IVe ll·l- Um·
U!ague 's Cy Young Award kumph l
win~er,
was
named ASTRO-BLUEHONNET (N)
ProfessiOnal Athlete of the
Dec. 30, Houston , Tex.
Year today by the Philadelphia Tennessee 27, LSU 24. These
Sports Writers Association.
two fine football teams from
the player-rich Southeastern

FREE

Frosh pace

BOWLING ALONG---

11

Western Conference

lt took me a year/' said

f

+++

Pro Standings

1P"IS!ilih&lt;•ltll !J04 34 b12501113" r '
St ,Lou!$• 1116\61 6 28 u~ t9 , 107 ' ,, •
California· 5, 22 7 17 90 1 146 ., .,
,
,
Tuesday's
Resutls
Th
M
·
M
d
e
Vancouver 4 California 3
e1gs
arau er
Detroit 1 P•tts 1, lie
basketball squad will regroup
Montreal 4 St Louis I
1ts forces Fnday against the
South Point Pointers at Meigs
High School for one of the few
REMAINS EIGHTH
area games over the Chnslmas
NEW YORK (UP! ) - Akron vacation.
remains in eighth place in this
Coach
Carl
Wolfe's
week's UP! ratings of small Marauders are currently 2-4
college basketball teams .
overall and 1-3 in Southeastern
The Z1ps were g1ven 80 votes. Ohw Athletic League play,
Stephen F. Auston IS top- Coach Mike Hughes' Pointers
ranked
are 5-3, but have played a
rugged schedule.
South Point has been beaten
The Daily Sentinel
by powerful Portsmouth, 70-61,
DEVOTED TO THE
and Chillicothe by a narrow
INTEREST OF
MEIGS -MASON AREA
margm. The Pointers opened
CHEST!i'R L. TANNEHILL ,
Exec Ed
thelf season defeating Meigs
ROBERT HOEFLICH .
61-50. The Pointers have won
C1ty Edttor
Up to 5 Tubes GLEEM II fami~ Size
Published da !l y e~~;cept
all four previous meetings with
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injuries to his offensive line
may have prevented him from
breaking it
Harris gained 1,056 yards
despite his slow start and was a
prime reason for the Steelcrs'
first title in 40 years of NFL
play.
Morrall, the 38·year-old
veteran of 17 NFL campaigns,
emerged from the shadows
when Bob Griese was hurl m
Miami's fl[th game and quarterbacked the Dolphins to a
league-record 14 victories
without a defeat. Morrall,
traded from Baltimore to
M1am1 before the season,
emerged as the No. 1 passer In
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Rutgers

··~

~=~

. , Todav's

~~

r.::c

. Sport Parade

· 5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. ?:1, 1972

t.~

·Rio
in
Findlay
•
_for tournament

~~

~)

,;.;.

~

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Soorto Edllor

defeats.

.. • .::J

NEW YORK (UP!)- Any mugger p•c.Ung on Terry Bradshaw
had better bring his lunch.
Merely because Pittsburgh's blond Bible-reading quarterback
happens to train pigeons, doesn't mean he is one.
Terry Bradshaw is no l!Oft chocolate parlait.
He goes 6-3and 220, a hard, bony 220,and inafighthe'sthe kind
of guy you want on your side. Anybody jumping him In a dark
alley would be in for something of an adventure.
,
Yet Terry Bradshaw madill a point to stay off the streets of
Pittsburgh two years ago. Tha.t was his rookie year with the ·
Steelers, the year everybody connected with them was hailing
JACKSONVILLE, Fla.
· the arriiral of their new Golde.n Boy.
·(UP!) ,-Steve l)lperi had
. No ~Ideo Boy ·.
.
.
·
.
. · · scored only four points aU
Only Terry Bradshaw didn't turn .out to be any ~~te season but be made the basket
Golden Boy. Who ever does? Pittsburgh fans grew llnpatient. that corinted to send Rutgers
They wanted a miracle overnight. Bradshaw couldn't provide it. Into tonight's Gator Bowl
Not that quickly anyway, so they did what fans do the world over, championsl)ip game against
they got on the person with whom they identified so closelyJacksonville University.
Terry Bradshaw.
.
.
''He really gave Wl a good
"!didn't want to go out on the -stre.ets,'' remembers Pitt's 24- effort,'' said Rutgers coach
year.j)ld field leader. "It got so that I stayed inside all the lime Dick Uoyd when asked about
e~cept to go to practice and the game."
Diperi 's rebound basket with
· Things are.different for Terry Bradshaw now. .
eight seconds lef\ In overtime
The fans in Pittsburgh love him. The fans iii Pittsburgh love which gave thi! Scarlet Knights
Tern- Bradshaw, Franco Harris, Mean Joe Greene, Frenchy and 81-79. victory over Florida
Fuqua, Jack Ham, Owight White, Ben McGee and everyone else · Tuesday night.
wM ·wears a Steelers' uniform.
.
"I don't think he has played
Fans play a greater part in a team's success than they more than a minute aU year,"
generally realize. BallptayenJ will tell yoo tbat themaelves, but Continued lloyd.
you don't haw to be a ballplayer to know anybody responds far
Freslunan forward Plill Setbetter to cheers
in his ears or a pat on the back' than to boos or the lers, who teamed with goard
.
cold shoulder.
John Somogyi to keep Rutgers
· Wltb Club 8 Yean
in contention, followed Diperi's
Andy Russell; the Steelers' linebacker and defensive captain, basket with a key block of a
has been with the club eight years.
shot by .Florida's Gene Shy
He can remember the time when the Steelers were the division with three seconds remainiqg
doormats and when the 11-3 record they posted this season was to cinch the victory.
something more remote than the moon. RWJSell remembers how
"If I had to pick a 'play of the
it wu 'then. . ·
.
·
'game,' It was Sellers' block,"
"It was pretty bleak in Pittsburgh,'' he says. "Of course 1 said lJoyd. ''It gave them the
lmaglneltwoilldbein any city when you're not winning, the fans 1rUoutofbounds with only one
are disappointed. I think the more the fans call, really care, the second remaining as opposed
more invulved they are. If they don't care, they're not gonna to the ball being up on the rim
react.
.
with three seconds left, and it
"Pittaburgh fans are very emotionally involved with tbe club. c'OUld have gone in."
When we were 1and 13, or 4 and 10 or whatever It was, they were
Florida (2-4) was unable to
quite unhappy with ua. I can't say I blame 'em. I can remember get another . shot off and
them booing •lot, throwing snowbaUa at us and harasalng ua in Rutgers (5-I) had the victory.
other ways. Now things have changed."
Somogyi scored 25 poirits to
Walled ~ Yean
'
lead Rutgers while Sellers
The fans in Pittsburgh have waited 40 years for a winning added 23 . Florida's Tony
football team, and the only way you can posalbly know what that
means Is to wait~ years for something you want badly yourseH.
The darling of aD tbe Plttaburgh fans right now Is rookie
running back Franco Harril, who ripped off 1,055 yan!s during
the regular season -BI!COnd best ever in Steeler history-and
then turned it aU around Saturday with his superb shoestring
catd! Gf a deflected pass to move Pitt one notd! closer to the
&amp;!per Bowl.
. .
.
Franco Harris' father. Is black, like him, and his mother Is

Unl_ted Preal 1nlemallonal
Ohio tourneys tonight include
Ohio colleges are in the holi· . the Muskingum Holiday
day spirit this week, taking Tournament, Ashland TourPirl in eight tournaments in nament, Wooster Classic,
the state and elsewhere.
Boosters Tournament at
Miami of Ohio will try for Findlay, Mount Union Toitrconsolation honors tonight in nament and · the Urbana
the Gator Bowl Tournament at Holiday Tournament.
Jacksonville, Fla., against Flo- · Central State will participate
in tile Olicago
n"da .
. Classic.
Jacksonville University used
Asiiland meets New York
· its superior height for easy in- State ·untv~lty (Geneseo) toside .scorQB Tuesday night in night In IU tourne)i whUe Earlposting a 66-69 win over Miami ham ~e$ on West VirginiA
in the first round.
StateC~~· Thefinala will be
Guard Phil LumJ*in scored played 'llJltrpd&amp;Y night.
14 llQlnls to pace the Re$~ins, . ·~ In I,!~UI'IIIIIIIen~ games,
nowi&gt;-2.Butch Taylor led Jack- Ohio S I ~oSif Yale,
sonville with 20 points.
nationa·l Y_ · .e1ght~ranked
Jacksonville meets Rutgers Pennsylva11f' ~s at Cincinnati
In the championship game.
and Daylon11B at Seattle.
By

Florida
Miller, hitting conslstenUy
from l9ng range, poured in 31
points, to take scoring honors
for the night.
Jacksonville (7-2) got 20
points and 16 rebounds from 610 center Butch Taylor as tbe
tall~ Dolphins defeated Miami
(Ohio) 86-59 in the other
opening round contest.
"We felt like we could like It
to them inside and get them In
foul trouble and get the higher
percentage shot," said
Jacksonville coach Tom
Wasdin. He said Miami nearly
lulled his team .to sleep with
their d~plined game and lt
was not until late in the contest
that the Dolphins were able to
pull away by going to their
Inside game.
Mlaml (1&gt;-2) was ahead 43-42
with 12:37 left but Taylor and
Abe Steward sparked a Jacksonville surge over the next six
minUtes which flllve the Dolphins a 58-17 edge and Miliml
11188 unable to get closer than
five _points af\er that.
Guard Leon Benbow added
17 for Jacksonville and Abe
Steward had 15 Guard Phil
Lumpkin.led Miami with 14,,
Looking ahead to tonight's
game, Lloyd described
Jacksonville as "awfully big
and awfully physical" and said
the Dolphins will probably be
the strongest team his club has
faced.
"'

Celtics hike .
lea~. foflowiq,g .

.

'

run &gt;I

say

""'

"Ewryone'asharing Franco,'' ;.,ys Andy Russell. "The blacks
in the stands aay 'C'mon, soul brother!' and the Italians are
· claimlDB blm alao. Wbat we have now Is the whole city enjoying
tbe succeu ol Franco."
Andy Rualllln't knocking that at all.
He lhouldn't, beeaue a lol ol tboae people, who used to think
Pitblburgh was 811Ch a big joke, think It's a mighty good football
team right now.
·
NICKLAUS HONORED ·
RANCHO LA COSTA, calif.
(UPI)-Jack Nicklaus, the
first man ever to win $300,000 in
a PGA seaaon, will be honored
as 1972 GoHer of the Year bere
Jan. 8.
Nlcklaw; was chosen by the
West Coast sports media
following his record high
$320,542 year.

Just Arrived

.Ladies'
Half Size

Pant
Suits
101LitA'S

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College Ratings.
NEW ·YORK tUPil - The
United Press International top
20 college division basketball
teams with first place votes and
won.lost records as of Sunday,
Dec. 241n parentheses: !Fourth
Week)
Team
Points
1. S. F. Austin ( 25) (6-0) 309
2. Roanoke
(S) (6-ll 216
3. Eau Claire
(6-0) 212
4.Ken1uckySt.
(4-1) 185
5. La. Tech
(7-1) 168
6. Augustana (Ill.)
(~·0) 101
7. Sam Houston St. ((-0) 90
8. Akron
(6-2) 80
9. Assumption
(21 (3·01 72
10. Philo Textile
(4-1) 61
11. Albany, Ga . Sl.
(4-0) 43
12. Fairmont St.
(4·01 36
13. Fla. Southern
(HI 24
14. Bent!ey
(4-1} 22
15. WesfGeorgla
15-0) 21
16. S.W. Missouri
(4-01 19
17. Carson.Newman (9·1I 18
18. Evansville
(OJ 15
19. LSU-New Orleans (3-21 7
20. Willarnette
14·11 6
The oldest rug that scienlists have discovered comes
from Russian Mongolia. It
has Persian designs dating
from the 400s B.C.

-~'1111111!1~--------"!""--•-'i

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780;,.. Main • Pomeroy
1·t
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BY JOE CARNICEW
UPI Sparta Writer
Dave Cowens, the l).foot-9
temperamental redhead from
F1orida State, scored a careerhigh 38 points and took down 20
rebounds Tuesday night as the
' Boston Celtlcs downed the New
York Knlcks, 111&gt;-106, to take a
2J,&gt;'f!ame lead over New York
in the Atlantic Division.
Cowens hit 16 pointa during a
second-quarter burst that saw
the Celtlcs take tbe lead and
then added 10 more during the
fourth quarter as Boaton blew
open the game. John HavUcek
added 31 points for the Celtics
while Walt Frazier was high
man for the Knlcks with 29.
"Dave Is the most versaWe
center in the league,'' said
Tommy Heinsohn, ·the Celllcs'
coach, "and I've been saying
that for three years now.
Nobody believed me but I think
I'm getting.through to people
now. He was just fantastic on
oor recent road trip out West."
WUlls Reed of the Knicks
disagreed with Heinsohn.' "We
had a so-so game and if Cowens
had a so-so game, we would
have won,'' the Knlclat' center
said.
'
In other NBA action, Seattle
edged Golden State, 97~. Los

Cheer The Sick

JOB Blq DISCOUNT SAVING_~!

.

'

115-106 victory

Angeles crushed Portland, 11692, Houston stopped Phoe~,
113-110, Chicago whipped Kansas Clty.Omaha, 117-103,
Cleveland romped past
Atlanta, 115-96, Detroit
~ed Milwaukee, 112-105,
and Baltimore thrashed
llulfalo, 121-104.
Spencer Haywood hit a
aeaaon-Ngb 42 points u Seattle
beat tbe Warriors. Tbe victory
wu the Sonlcs' first on the
road after 13 llralght loues
IIIII 11111pped a .seven.pme

'

l

With A
Greenhouse Fresh ,

FOLIAGE
GARDEN
Dudley's Flolisl
59 N. Second St.
Middleport, o. ··

_,

losing streak. Nate Thurmond
had 25 polnta and 23 rebounds
for Golden State.
Gall Goodrich scored 25
points as the Lakers continued
their mastery over Portland,
The victory was Los Angeles'
14th without a loss against
Portland since the club came
Into the league.
Rudy Tmr Janovich's 31
poirits, including the go-abead
basket in tbe ftnsl minutes, led
Houaton over tbe Suns and
Garfield He~ C8111&lt; off the
bench to score 19 of his 25
points in the second half as
Chicago beat the Kings.
.Auatin carr and Len Wllkens
combined for 50 points as
Cleveland whipped the Hawks
and Stu Lantz hit eight of
Detroit's last 10 points as the
Platona UIJI!et the Bucks. Mike
Riordan hit 17 0! his 23 pointa in
the lint baH to lead the Bullets
over Buffalo.

·

United Preu lllleraalklllal
The American Basketball
Association's Kentucky Colonels, Utah Stars and San Diego
Conquistadors are all on
streaks. However, San Diego Is
streaking in the wrong direction.
Boll! tbe Colonels and Stars
won again Tuesday night and
.the Q's kept true to recent form
by losing.
Dan lsael's seuon-blgb 38
points, 36 of tbem In the lint
three quarters, powered Kentucky past Indiana, 12t-120.
In tbe only other ABA contest,
Dallas outlasted Virginia, 131-

126.
Kentucky led Indiana by 26
points at one point before the
Pacers' George McGinnis 1Mnt
on a 23-polnt, fourlh..-rter
epree to close the sap.
McGinnis, the ABA'I leCOIId
leading . scorer
beblnd
Virginia '1 JullUI Ervin&amp;,
finished with .32 polnll. Arlil
Gilmore 1:8cked up luel fw the
Colonell with 24 pointe In addillon to pulling down 18
rebounds.

,.

,.,

~

Skorich gets rieu
contract, razse~,
e

John W."Ralferty
Resignation accepted with deep regret: His tireless effort
in great part produced the new $21 million Holzer r,ledical
Center.

Rafferty leaving
medical .center
GALLIPOLIS
An· million dollar medical center Is
nouncement was made today of due in great part to John
the resignation of John W. Rafferty 's inspiration and
Rafferty as Executive Vice tireless efforts. We are grateful
President of the Holzer to him and wish him well in his
Hospital FoWJdation, effective future endeavors."
January 31, 1973.
A native · of Greenfield, InHarland Martin, Chairman diana , Rafferty came to
of the Board of Trustees of Gallipolis in 1963, serving first
Holzer Hospital Foundation, in as a Comptroller of the Holzer
making the announcement Hospital, then as assistant
said: "The Board of. Trustees adminisyator, administrator,
accepted with deep regret John and currently is executive vice
Rafferty's resignation at our president.
recent meeting . .His service
From l949 until 1963 he was
ll!id dedication ~the. ~ita '!r\IJISJirer f J ti Davld Humand the collllnilnlty d~ the . mel iBulldjn
ompany of
past nine years will long be Cincinnati. 'A g aduate of the
remembered. Our new $21' University of Cincinnati with
an AB degree, he received his
.•
1. Accoun Iant
Cerltf1ed PubIC
AID FOR VICTIMS
Degree in 1953, granted by the
SAN JUAN, P.R. (UPI)-A State of Ohio Accountancy
committee
headed
by Board.
Pittsburgh Pirates star
He is a fellow in the Ohio
Roberto Clemente has Society of Certified Public
collected some 22 tons Accountants, a member of
of supplies and $50,000 t~ numerous accounting and
help aid the victims of . h o s PI. I a 1 a f f 1. 1I. a t e d
Saturday's earthquake in organizations, and serves as a
Managua, Nicaragua, and wlU Trustee and Director of
.
.
transport the supplies with the various
non-prof1t. and prof1t
help of planes from the Puerto organizations.
Ricci. National Guard and a
Martin Indicated no decision
commercial airline.
has been made by the hoard of
trustees as to a successor to the
A National Guard plane position of executive vice
which carried six doctors, two president. Rafferty's plans will
tons of medical supplles an.d a be announced later.
portable
radiocommunications system to · JARDINE TO STAFF
Managua Monday night was
HONOLULU (UPI) - John
scheduled to make a return trip Jardine, head footbaU coach at
to the Nlcaragua·n capital the University of Wisconsin,
Wednesday, Clemente said. A Tuesday was named to the
plane from an unidentified North coaching staff for the
airline was to make the trip annual Hula Bowl Football
Tuesday night.
C1asai c Jan.6.
Jardine replaces Northwestern's Alex Agase, who accept.
ed the head coaching post at
Purdue last week. Agase said
he had too much work lnvulving organizing his new
post, making it Impossible to
take part ill the 'l:lth annual
Willie Wise's 23 points paced grid classic.
Jardine will join Syracuse·~
a balanced Utah attack as the
Ben
Schwartzwalder in assist.
Stars placed sb: men In double
figures againat Memphis. Ron lng North Head Coach J'l!n
Boone had 20 polnta for Utah ·owens of Washington.

CLEVELAND (UPI)-Cnach
Nick Skorlch, whose Cleveland
Browns lost aU six exhibition
games this year and three of
their first five regular season
games, was given a generoua
raise in pay and a new threeyear contract Tuesday.
The raise allegedly put
Skorich in the $90,000-a-year ·
bracket. He reportedly had '
been making around $50,000.
Browns' owner Art Modell
tore up Skorich's old contract,
which had a year to run, and
presented him with the long- .
term pact the day before ·
Skorich's 25th wedding anniversary.
Despite their poor start, the
Browns finished 104 In the
American Football Conference
Central Division, and earned a
playoff spot for the second
straight year, this year as a
''wild card."
Sunday they gave tbe heavily
favured Miami D!Jlphins a real
test before losing, 26-14.
"! rather feel it was appreciation for 11 job well done,"
5llid Modell. "Nick earne.fl,tlw
new contracl,,Ws !iie!!'li It~

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year and l'm&gt;grateful to him
and a lot of .people."
Skorich, 51, said tbe new
contract ''takes some of the
pressure off 11,1e. : This helps
with the
. long..-ange planning,"
he said. The contract runs
through the. m5 season,, .
Skorich said he would. retain
the seven-man coachlnjl staff.
.

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College BKB Results
·
· By United Press International
ECAC Holiday Festival
At Mldls~n Square Garden
(F&amp;rst Round)
•
Manhattan 73 N.C. A&amp; T 61
. St. Jno's ·ll2 Grmblng 86
Mich. 88 Boston Coil. 70
·So.Car. IW VIllanova 64
Gator Bowl Classic
,At Jacksonville, Fla ..
. (First Round!
Jaxonvl 66 Mlaml-0. 59
Rutgers 81 F)a. 79, ot
M•dw.st
Wis-Miiw IW ll U 69
South
Mmphs St. 96 Cornell 64

·•·

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1-LB. BOX

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Tl'tAOITIOMAL WI:DOING l'tiNGI

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23'¢
12 oz.
VAC

BOLOGNA

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FILLETS

JOAN OF -ARC

-TOMATO

46

oz.

CANS ·

AMERICAN OR PIMENTO

•

IND. WRAPPED

CHEESE

-

OCEAN PERCH

PAK

JUICE

...•

12 oz.

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·~'
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••
••
••
•

WHITING

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FISH

PoRnoNs

BEm CROCKER

YOUR

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CHOICE

CRISP TATERS
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·-

NEW YORK (UPI)-The·
New York Jlantlen called up
left wing Tom W1IUims fr1111
the Rhode Island Rede
Tuesday and ~e~~t dow!~ Bill ·
Heindl, Jerry Butler and Larry
Sacharuk to the same
American Hockey League
club.
Wllllaml, lnjurld earlier this
:year wltll bnlken rlbe, has
ICmd 10 lOIII IIIII added 13
Mllata In 21 11111e1 for the
Rids. Heindl IIIII BuUer, both
farwardl, llld Slc:haruk, a
clerenleman, were brought up
ncently to 1111 In for Injured
Ranger regulars.

WHITE ·
Square Foot

HOGG &amp; ZU
773-5554

$Jl9
2-LB. PKG.

TASTE OF SEA

'

·-

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M\DDLfPUICI,t U.

•.

ELM HILL

't:...

BEllER
VALUES
ARE
FOUND

MORE

IGA

.,

SEASON G
I..A.O'r' ' $
._A.N ' 1i
'

"IT'S TRUE!"- • •

whUe I.es Hunter and Luther
Rackley paced the Tams with
20 each.

FRESH

,ytttt\\0"'

"

.

·San Diego streaking,
but in wrong direction
By

'
•-e

MIDDtEPORT
.

�. '

4-':..•le O.llySentlnel,Middleport-Pomeroy,O., Dec. ?:1, 1972
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~::::::::;::; ~::.::::::::::::::.:-:::::::::::::.:·:·:·x·:·:·:·:·:·::.\•:·:.,.............

Rutgers

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. Sport Parade

· 5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. ?:1, 1972

t.~

·Rio
in
Findlay
•
_for tournament

~~

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,;.;.

~

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Soorto Edllor

defeats.

.. • .::J

NEW YORK (UP!)- Any mugger p•c.Ung on Terry Bradshaw
had better bring his lunch.
Merely because Pittsburgh's blond Bible-reading quarterback
happens to train pigeons, doesn't mean he is one.
Terry Bradshaw is no l!Oft chocolate parlait.
He goes 6-3and 220, a hard, bony 220,and inafighthe'sthe kind
of guy you want on your side. Anybody jumping him In a dark
alley would be in for something of an adventure.
,
Yet Terry Bradshaw madill a point to stay off the streets of
Pittsburgh two years ago. Tha.t was his rookie year with the ·
Steelers, the year everybody connected with them was hailing
JACKSONVILLE, Fla.
· the arriiral of their new Golde.n Boy.
·(UP!) ,-Steve l)lperi had
. No ~Ideo Boy ·.
.
.
·
.
. · · scored only four points aU
Only Terry Bradshaw didn't turn .out to be any ~~te season but be made the basket
Golden Boy. Who ever does? Pittsburgh fans grew llnpatient. that corinted to send Rutgers
They wanted a miracle overnight. Bradshaw couldn't provide it. Into tonight's Gator Bowl
Not that quickly anyway, so they did what fans do the world over, championsl)ip game against
they got on the person with whom they identified so closelyJacksonville University.
Terry Bradshaw.
.
.
''He really gave Wl a good
"!didn't want to go out on the -stre.ets,'' remembers Pitt's 24- effort,'' said Rutgers coach
year.j)ld field leader. "It got so that I stayed inside all the lime Dick Uoyd when asked about
e~cept to go to practice and the game."
Diperi 's rebound basket with
· Things are.different for Terry Bradshaw now. .
eight seconds lef\ In overtime
The fans in Pittsburgh love him. The fans iii Pittsburgh love which gave thi! Scarlet Knights
Tern- Bradshaw, Franco Harris, Mean Joe Greene, Frenchy and 81-79. victory over Florida
Fuqua, Jack Ham, Owight White, Ben McGee and everyone else · Tuesday night.
wM ·wears a Steelers' uniform.
.
"I don't think he has played
Fans play a greater part in a team's success than they more than a minute aU year,"
generally realize. BallptayenJ will tell yoo tbat themaelves, but Continued lloyd.
you don't haw to be a ballplayer to know anybody responds far
Freslunan forward Plill Setbetter to cheers
in his ears or a pat on the back' than to boos or the lers, who teamed with goard
.
cold shoulder.
John Somogyi to keep Rutgers
· Wltb Club 8 Yean
in contention, followed Diperi's
Andy Russell; the Steelers' linebacker and defensive captain, basket with a key block of a
has been with the club eight years.
shot by .Florida's Gene Shy
He can remember the time when the Steelers were the division with three seconds remainiqg
doormats and when the 11-3 record they posted this season was to cinch the victory.
something more remote than the moon. RWJSell remembers how
"If I had to pick a 'play of the
it wu 'then. . ·
.
·
'game,' It was Sellers' block,"
"It was pretty bleak in Pittsburgh,'' he says. "Of course 1 said lJoyd. ''It gave them the
lmaglneltwoilldbein any city when you're not winning, the fans 1rUoutofbounds with only one
are disappointed. I think the more the fans call, really care, the second remaining as opposed
more invulved they are. If they don't care, they're not gonna to the ball being up on the rim
react.
.
with three seconds left, and it
"Pittaburgh fans are very emotionally involved with tbe club. c'OUld have gone in."
When we were 1and 13, or 4 and 10 or whatever It was, they were
Florida (2-4) was unable to
quite unhappy with ua. I can't say I blame 'em. I can remember get another . shot off and
them booing •lot, throwing snowbaUa at us and harasalng ua in Rutgers (5-I) had the victory.
other ways. Now things have changed."
Somogyi scored 25 poirits to
Walled ~ Yean
'
lead Rutgers while Sellers
The fans in Pittsburgh have waited 40 years for a winning added 23 . Florida's Tony
football team, and the only way you can posalbly know what that
means Is to wait~ years for something you want badly yourseH.
The darling of aD tbe Plttaburgh fans right now Is rookie
running back Franco Harril, who ripped off 1,055 yan!s during
the regular season -BI!COnd best ever in Steeler history-and
then turned it aU around Saturday with his superb shoestring
catd! Gf a deflected pass to move Pitt one notd! closer to the
&amp;!per Bowl.
. .
.
Franco Harris' father. Is black, like him, and his mother Is

Unl_ted Preal 1nlemallonal
Ohio tourneys tonight include
Ohio colleges are in the holi· . the Muskingum Holiday
day spirit this week, taking Tournament, Ashland TourPirl in eight tournaments in nament, Wooster Classic,
the state and elsewhere.
Boosters Tournament at
Miami of Ohio will try for Findlay, Mount Union Toitrconsolation honors tonight in nament and · the Urbana
the Gator Bowl Tournament at Holiday Tournament.
Jacksonville, Fla., against Flo- · Central State will participate
in tile Olicago
n"da .
. Classic.
Jacksonville University used
Asiiland meets New York
· its superior height for easy in- State ·untv~lty (Geneseo) toside .scorQB Tuesday night in night In IU tourne)i whUe Earlposting a 66-69 win over Miami ham ~e$ on West VirginiA
in the first round.
StateC~~· Thefinala will be
Guard Phil LumJ*in scored played 'llJltrpd&amp;Y night.
14 llQlnls to pace the Re$~ins, . ·~ In I,!~UI'IIIIIIIen~ games,
nowi&gt;-2.Butch Taylor led Jack- Ohio S I ~oSif Yale,
sonville with 20 points.
nationa·l Y_ · .e1ght~ranked
Jacksonville meets Rutgers Pennsylva11f' ~s at Cincinnati
In the championship game.
and Daylon11B at Seattle.
By

Florida
Miller, hitting conslstenUy
from l9ng range, poured in 31
points, to take scoring honors
for the night.
Jacksonville (7-2) got 20
points and 16 rebounds from 610 center Butch Taylor as tbe
tall~ Dolphins defeated Miami
(Ohio) 86-59 in the other
opening round contest.
"We felt like we could like It
to them inside and get them In
foul trouble and get the higher
percentage shot," said
Jacksonville coach Tom
Wasdin. He said Miami nearly
lulled his team .to sleep with
their d~plined game and lt
was not until late in the contest
that the Dolphins were able to
pull away by going to their
Inside game.
Mlaml (1&gt;-2) was ahead 43-42
with 12:37 left but Taylor and
Abe Steward sparked a Jacksonville surge over the next six
minUtes which flllve the Dolphins a 58-17 edge and Miliml
11188 unable to get closer than
five _points af\er that.
Guard Leon Benbow added
17 for Jacksonville and Abe
Steward had 15 Guard Phil
Lumpkin.led Miami with 14,,
Looking ahead to tonight's
game, Lloyd described
Jacksonville as "awfully big
and awfully physical" and said
the Dolphins will probably be
the strongest team his club has
faced.
"'

Celtics hike .
lea~. foflowiq,g .

.

'

run &gt;I

say

""'

"Ewryone'asharing Franco,'' ;.,ys Andy Russell. "The blacks
in the stands aay 'C'mon, soul brother!' and the Italians are
· claimlDB blm alao. Wbat we have now Is the whole city enjoying
tbe succeu ol Franco."
Andy Rualllln't knocking that at all.
He lhouldn't, beeaue a lol ol tboae people, who used to think
Pitblburgh was 811Ch a big joke, think It's a mighty good football
team right now.
·
NICKLAUS HONORED ·
RANCHO LA COSTA, calif.
(UPI)-Jack Nicklaus, the
first man ever to win $300,000 in
a PGA seaaon, will be honored
as 1972 GoHer of the Year bere
Jan. 8.
Nlcklaw; was chosen by the
West Coast sports media
following his record high
$320,542 year.

Just Arrived

.Ladies'
Half Size

Pant
Suits
101LitA'S

-P•O---··---•
'
ME Ro y OH 10

• ,~....., .il ""'

College Ratings.
NEW ·YORK tUPil - The
United Press International top
20 college division basketball
teams with first place votes and
won.lost records as of Sunday,
Dec. 241n parentheses: !Fourth
Week)
Team
Points
1. S. F. Austin ( 25) (6-0) 309
2. Roanoke
(S) (6-ll 216
3. Eau Claire
(6-0) 212
4.Ken1uckySt.
(4-1) 185
5. La. Tech
(7-1) 168
6. Augustana (Ill.)
(~·0) 101
7. Sam Houston St. ((-0) 90
8. Akron
(6-2) 80
9. Assumption
(21 (3·01 72
10. Philo Textile
(4-1) 61
11. Albany, Ga . Sl.
(4-0) 43
12. Fairmont St.
(4·01 36
13. Fla. Southern
(HI 24
14. Bent!ey
(4-1} 22
15. WesfGeorgla
15-0) 21
16. S.W. Missouri
(4-01 19
17. Carson.Newman (9·1I 18
18. Evansville
(OJ 15
19. LSU-New Orleans (3-21 7
20. Willarnette
14·11 6
The oldest rug that scienlists have discovered comes
from Russian Mongolia. It
has Persian designs dating
from the 400s B.C.

-~'1111111!1~--------"!""--•-'i

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780;,.. Main • Pomeroy
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BY JOE CARNICEW
UPI Sparta Writer
Dave Cowens, the l).foot-9
temperamental redhead from
F1orida State, scored a careerhigh 38 points and took down 20
rebounds Tuesday night as the
' Boston Celtlcs downed the New
York Knlcks, 111&gt;-106, to take a
2J,&gt;'f!ame lead over New York
in the Atlantic Division.
Cowens hit 16 pointa during a
second-quarter burst that saw
the Celtlcs take tbe lead and
then added 10 more during the
fourth quarter as Boaton blew
open the game. John HavUcek
added 31 points for the Celtics
while Walt Frazier was high
man for the Knlcks with 29.
"Dave Is the most versaWe
center in the league,'' said
Tommy Heinsohn, ·the Celllcs'
coach, "and I've been saying
that for three years now.
Nobody believed me but I think
I'm getting.through to people
now. He was just fantastic on
oor recent road trip out West."
WUlls Reed of the Knicks
disagreed with Heinsohn.' "We
had a so-so game and if Cowens
had a so-so game, we would
have won,'' the Knlclat' center
said.
'
In other NBA action, Seattle
edged Golden State, 97~. Los

Cheer The Sick

JOB Blq DISCOUNT SAVING_~!

.

'

115-106 victory

Angeles crushed Portland, 11692, Houston stopped Phoe~,
113-110, Chicago whipped Kansas Clty.Omaha, 117-103,
Cleveland romped past
Atlanta, 115-96, Detroit
~ed Milwaukee, 112-105,
and Baltimore thrashed
llulfalo, 121-104.
Spencer Haywood hit a
aeaaon-Ngb 42 points u Seattle
beat tbe Warriors. Tbe victory
wu the Sonlcs' first on the
road after 13 llralght loues
IIIII 11111pped a .seven.pme

'

l

With A
Greenhouse Fresh ,

FOLIAGE
GARDEN
Dudley's Flolisl
59 N. Second St.
Middleport, o. ··

_,

losing streak. Nate Thurmond
had 25 polnta and 23 rebounds
for Golden State.
Gall Goodrich scored 25
points as the Lakers continued
their mastery over Portland,
The victory was Los Angeles'
14th without a loss against
Portland since the club came
Into the league.
Rudy Tmr Janovich's 31
poirits, including the go-abead
basket in tbe ftnsl minutes, led
Houaton over tbe Suns and
Garfield He~ C8111&lt; off the
bench to score 19 of his 25
points in the second half as
Chicago beat the Kings.
.Auatin carr and Len Wllkens
combined for 50 points as
Cleveland whipped the Hawks
and Stu Lantz hit eight of
Detroit's last 10 points as the
Platona UIJI!et the Bucks. Mike
Riordan hit 17 0! his 23 pointa in
the lint baH to lead the Bullets
over Buffalo.

·

United Preu lllleraalklllal
The American Basketball
Association's Kentucky Colonels, Utah Stars and San Diego
Conquistadors are all on
streaks. However, San Diego Is
streaking in the wrong direction.
Boll! tbe Colonels and Stars
won again Tuesday night and
.the Q's kept true to recent form
by losing.
Dan lsael's seuon-blgb 38
points, 36 of tbem In the lint
three quarters, powered Kentucky past Indiana, 12t-120.
In tbe only other ABA contest,
Dallas outlasted Virginia, 131-

126.
Kentucky led Indiana by 26
points at one point before the
Pacers' George McGinnis 1Mnt
on a 23-polnt, fourlh..-rter
epree to close the sap.
McGinnis, the ABA'I leCOIId
leading . scorer
beblnd
Virginia '1 JullUI Ervin&amp;,
finished with .32 polnll. Arlil
Gilmore 1:8cked up luel fw the
Colonell with 24 pointe In addillon to pulling down 18
rebounds.

,.

,.,

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Skorich gets rieu
contract, razse~,
e

John W."Ralferty
Resignation accepted with deep regret: His tireless effort
in great part produced the new $21 million Holzer r,ledical
Center.

Rafferty leaving
medical .center
GALLIPOLIS
An· million dollar medical center Is
nouncement was made today of due in great part to John
the resignation of John W. Rafferty 's inspiration and
Rafferty as Executive Vice tireless efforts. We are grateful
President of the Holzer to him and wish him well in his
Hospital FoWJdation, effective future endeavors."
January 31, 1973.
A native · of Greenfield, InHarland Martin, Chairman diana , Rafferty came to
of the Board of Trustees of Gallipolis in 1963, serving first
Holzer Hospital Foundation, in as a Comptroller of the Holzer
making the announcement Hospital, then as assistant
said: "The Board of. Trustees adminisyator, administrator,
accepted with deep regret John and currently is executive vice
Rafferty's resignation at our president.
recent meeting . .His service
From l949 until 1963 he was
ll!id dedication ~the. ~ita '!r\IJISJirer f J ti Davld Humand the collllnilnlty d~ the . mel iBulldjn
ompany of
past nine years will long be Cincinnati. 'A g aduate of the
remembered. Our new $21' University of Cincinnati with
an AB degree, he received his
.•
1. Accoun Iant
Cerltf1ed PubIC
AID FOR VICTIMS
Degree in 1953, granted by the
SAN JUAN, P.R. (UPI)-A State of Ohio Accountancy
committee
headed
by Board.
Pittsburgh Pirates star
He is a fellow in the Ohio
Roberto Clemente has Society of Certified Public
collected some 22 tons Accountants, a member of
of supplies and $50,000 t~ numerous accounting and
help aid the victims of . h o s PI. I a 1 a f f 1. 1I. a t e d
Saturday's earthquake in organizations, and serves as a
Managua, Nicaragua, and wlU Trustee and Director of
.
.
transport the supplies with the various
non-prof1t. and prof1t
help of planes from the Puerto organizations.
Ricci. National Guard and a
Martin Indicated no decision
commercial airline.
has been made by the hoard of
trustees as to a successor to the
A National Guard plane position of executive vice
which carried six doctors, two president. Rafferty's plans will
tons of medical supplles an.d a be announced later.
portable
radiocommunications system to · JARDINE TO STAFF
Managua Monday night was
HONOLULU (UPI) - John
scheduled to make a return trip Jardine, head footbaU coach at
to the Nlcaragua·n capital the University of Wisconsin,
Wednesday, Clemente said. A Tuesday was named to the
plane from an unidentified North coaching staff for the
airline was to make the trip annual Hula Bowl Football
Tuesday night.
C1asai c Jan.6.
Jardine replaces Northwestern's Alex Agase, who accept.
ed the head coaching post at
Purdue last week. Agase said
he had too much work lnvulving organizing his new
post, making it Impossible to
take part ill the 'l:lth annual
Willie Wise's 23 points paced grid classic.
Jardine will join Syracuse·~
a balanced Utah attack as the
Ben
Schwartzwalder in assist.
Stars placed sb: men In double
figures againat Memphis. Ron lng North Head Coach J'l!n
Boone had 20 polnta for Utah ·owens of Washington.

CLEVELAND (UPI)-Cnach
Nick Skorlch, whose Cleveland
Browns lost aU six exhibition
games this year and three of
their first five regular season
games, was given a generoua
raise in pay and a new threeyear contract Tuesday.
The raise allegedly put
Skorich in the $90,000-a-year ·
bracket. He reportedly had '
been making around $50,000.
Browns' owner Art Modell
tore up Skorich's old contract,
which had a year to run, and
presented him with the long- .
term pact the day before ·
Skorich's 25th wedding anniversary.
Despite their poor start, the
Browns finished 104 In the
American Football Conference
Central Division, and earned a
playoff spot for the second
straight year, this year as a
''wild card."
Sunday they gave tbe heavily
favured Miami D!Jlphins a real
test before losing, 26-14.
"! rather feel it was appreciation for 11 job well done,"
5llid Modell. "Nick earne.fl,tlw
new contracl,,Ws !iie!!'li It~

-

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~-

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I

year and l'm&gt;grateful to him
and a lot of .people."
Skorich, 51, said tbe new
contract ''takes some of the
pressure off 11,1e. : This helps
with the
. long..-ange planning,"
he said. The contract runs
through the. m5 season,, .
Skorich said he would. retain
the seven-man coachlnjl staff.
.

\~t\0

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'y\llJ
I oO\)'"'
,~~ fl\

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.
College BKB Results
·
· By United Press International
ECAC Holiday Festival
At Mldls~n Square Garden
(F&amp;rst Round)
•
Manhattan 73 N.C. A&amp; T 61
. St. Jno's ·ll2 Grmblng 86
Mich. 88 Boston Coil. 70
·So.Car. IW VIllanova 64
Gator Bowl Classic
,At Jacksonville, Fla ..
. (First Round!
Jaxonvl 66 Mlaml-0. 59
Rutgers 81 F)a. 79, ot
M•dw.st
Wis-Miiw IW ll U 69
South
Mmphs St. 96 Cornell 64

·•·

GROUND
BEEF

I

5.LB. FAMILY
P.ACK ·oR

•

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SALTINE

~~~~MA IS

i

MAN 'S

•.'\.

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CR~~KERs7··"' '.

,rh •'

·' AI.

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your

. ( f'.

Keepeeke•

1-LB. BOX

'• '

Tl'tAOITIOMAL WI:DOING l'tiNGI

·~

23'¢
12 oz.
VAC

BOLOGNA

•

I

'

l

l-~ ·

&lt;&gt;

~
f.o
....

-~

i

~

•

.

....
'

FILLETS

JOAN OF -ARC

-TOMATO

46

oz.

CANS ·

AMERICAN OR PIMENTO

•

IND. WRAPPED

CHEESE

-

OCEAN PERCH

PAK

JUICE

...•

12 oz.

e

·~'
'
••
••
••
•

WHITING

l·LB. PKG. ·

FISH

PoRnoNs

BEm CROCKER

YOUR

SNACKS

CHOICE

CRISP TATERS
BETCHA BACON
WHISTLES
BUGLES
ONYUMS
PIZZA SPINS

SEVEN UP

IGA
WHITE

THE UNCOLA
32 OZ. NON
RETURNIILE
. ..
.

'•

f•

&amp;onus

16 oz.

LOAVES

6 oz.
32

ONLY
WU..Jt'AMS CAlLED UP

·-

NEW YORK (UPI)-The·
New York Jlantlen called up
left wing Tom W1IUims fr1111
the Rhode Island Rede
Tuesday and ~e~~t dow!~ Bill ·
Heindl, Jerry Butler and Larry
Sacharuk to the same
American Hockey League
club.
Wllllaml, lnjurld earlier this
:year wltll bnlken rlbe, has
ICmd 10 lOIII IIIII added 13
Mllata In 21 11111e1 for the
Rids. Heindl IIIII BuUer, both
farwardl, llld Slc:haruk, a
clerenleman, were brought up
ncently to 1111 In for Injured
Ranger regulars.

WHITE ·
Square Foot

HOGG &amp; ZU
773-5554

$Jl9
2-LB. PKG.

TASTE OF SEA

'

·-

·BAKER ·,_,.RNitURE
M\DDLfPUICI,t U.

•.

ELM HILL

't:...

BEllER
VALUES
ARE
FOUND

MORE

IGA

.,

SEASON G
I..A.O'r' ' $
._A.N ' 1i
'

"IT'S TRUE!"- • •

whUe I.es Hunter and Luther
Rackley paced the Tams with
20 each.

FRESH

,ytttt\\0"'

"

.

·San Diego streaking,
but in wrong direction
By

'
•-e

MIDDtEPORT
.

�'
6- The O.UySentinel,Middleport-Pomeroy,O., Dec. 27,1972

Church program
offers playlet

Pe~nal

·King installed by Shut-ins remembered .
··
bJ1' DeMola1/
unit
~~~e~sereo~:m~~a:~
~~~vid~~~d~~::~~ts
,
'J
· ·

Midd~port

Pomeroy ...

Notes

Pe~al

Notes

Thirty shul-inlo of Rutland the Meigs Local School Board .

HOliday dinner guests
Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. W. 0.
Christmas dinner guests of
Friendly Gardeners with
The meeting followed a
Barnitz were Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Byer .and
'
Christmas arrangemenls, It dinner .at the Meigs Inn. Roll
Harry Young of Gallon and Mr. children were Mrs. Kenneth . Officers of Meigs Chapter,
.
Apastmastercouncilor'spin was noted during a recent call was· answered by U
Aplaylet, "The Greatest Gift "Uve Like Jesus'' by Barbie and Mrs. Hayman Barnilz of Byer, Middleport; Mrs. T, G. Order of DeMolay, were in- was- presented to Duane Wlll meeting of the club members members who related Uieir
of All," was a''feature of the Moyer, "The Angel," by Diana Pomeroy.
Hllldore, Syracuae: Mr. ~ . stalled in ceremonies Friday who also received a certificate at the home of Mrs.c Robert favorite Christmas trad!Uon.
annual Christmas program Lee, and "Good Night," by
Mr. and Mni. John Young, Mrs . Bill McKelvey, Portland; night at the Middleport of merit lor his work with Snowden.
Mrs. Bruce Davis was
presented Sunday night at the Beth Wolfe.
Lisa, Phillip and R,obin, and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Masonic Temple.
DeMolay. Also recognized was
It was also reported that chainnan of games with prizes
Middleport Church of Christ.
Jeff Nash had a piano solo, Lancaster; Mr. and Mrs. B~er, Kenny Lee and John,
Installed were Tim King ; John Kauff, a past master during the month several bemg·awatded.
Taking roles in the skit were "Star of the East," and Amy Dennis Carol, anctnnati: and Middleport.
maaler councilor; Jon Bruce, councUor of the chapter.
members
had
made
Mrs. Fred Williamson was In
Cindy Glaze, Margo Martin, Erwin sang "Christmas." Mr. and Mrs. W. 0. liamitz,
·Mr. and Mrs. John Mayer, senior
councilor:. Don
Also honored was Mrs . arrangements for local charge of gift wrappings with
Frank Martin, Jeff Nash, Bob Several carols were sung by Pomeroy were Christmas ~ohn Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Leo Vaughan, junior councilor; Bill Robert Quickel who has served churches and the post office. Mrs. James Carpenter wlnnlng
Stanley, Angela Baker and the children. Tammy Mowery dinner guesls o! Mr. and Mrs. Skinner, Columbus; and Mrs. Quickel, scri6e; 'Kenny Hoff. three terms as president of the Thank you cards were read theprizel!ith a church replica .
Kat)ly Hess. Recitations during was af the piano and as- Wilson ~rpenter, Mulbercy WiUlam WO!lllan, Gallipolis, ·man, treasurer; Burt Moshier, . DeMolay Mothers' Club.. She from the Holsum Bakery, the Gifts were exchanged and new
the candlellght :service in- slating Mrs . Don Er- Ave.
· were .Christmas guests of Mr. senlcr·deacon; Jeff. Gabritsch, was given a past president's Rutland F11111iture Store, and names . c)Niwn (or Pext year.
cluded "Welcome," by Ann win
with
the
pro- , Mr. and Mrs. Charles and Mrs. GeCI'ge Meinhart:
junlpr deacon: J?avld Ed- pin by Mr .. and Mrs. Robert
The traveling· prlu provided
Marie Reece, "From My gram were Mrs. Martha Downie are in Wesion, Conn.
~!siting. over the holiday wards, senior steward; Her- King. Other mothers attending
byMrs. HowardBirchfieldwas
Heart•"by. Shellie Fox • "Do It Nash and Mrs. Betty McKinley visiting her parepls, Mr. and weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Joe bert carson, junior stewai-d; the installation were presented
lUI r;;;y _
won by Mrs. William WWford.
Right," by. Tracy McMann, . who served as the ann~cer. Mrs. Clifford Smith and Turner were Mr. and Mrs. Bob l:lon Gabritsch, chaplain; red roses.
"Happy Birthday, Baby Steve Stanley was candle family.
\
Turner and children. Mrs. Joe flerman Carson, marshal: · Special. guest was Miss
Jesus," by Jeff McMann, lighter.
Joining Mr. and Mrs. Allen Turner and son, Bob, went to Martin Seelig, orator: David Sherry King, District 11 sweet"Angels Sing/ • by DanieUe
Downie and daughter, Debbie, Point Pleasant to call on Birdie Canterbury, standard bearer; . heart who ssng a vocal solo
l
Reece, "A Wish for AU,'' by, p••••illllll1811!1111oll8i*f for Christmas dinner were Mr. See who remains ill.
Tom Cassell, almoner: Ken- accomPanied at .the organ by
Parker Long, "Two Words,"
and Mrs. Edison Baker,
Christmas dinner_guesls of peth Gilkey, sentinel; Bob her sister, Kathy. A tribute to
by Scott McKinley, "How I
Middleport, and Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. William T. McCoy, Harold Sisson, Oliver motherhood was given .by Pat
Know •" by Darin Wolfe • ''I
Ted . Downie, High St., . Grueser, Grant St., were Mr. Taylor, Duane Will, ·David King, Jr., state senior colinAli of the chil~n of Mr. and The traditio~hl . family
Know," Tina Miller:
Pomeroy. ·
and Mrs. Robert Jay and Mr. Mattox, Joe Anthony, and cilor. Oiher guests were Mrs. Dale Jacobs, Middleport, gathering at Gra~view for a
"God Sent Jesus," by Darln .
Mr. •nd Mrs. ,patrick · and Mrs. Pon Gfueser, Brett Carter, first to seventh . members of Bethel 62, In· were home for the holidays, a dinner party hOllted by Gene
Roach, "Blessing," by Timmy
Lochary were at Amesville Columbus; Mrs. Stella ·preceptor respectively.
ternational Order of Job's gathering probably not to take Grate took place ,ChristmaS
Miller; ''Sleep Baby Jesus," by
Christmas Day for a dinner Grueser,Mr. and Mrs. Michael Making up ·the installation Daughters, the DeMo lay place again for several years. night.
Terri Sprouse, "Wouldn't
His guesls were Mr. and Mrs.
there with Mrs. Lochary's Gerlach, Middleport: and Mrs. team were John Purdum, Mothers' Club, masons, ad'
Mr. and Mrs. Steve
Jacobs,
It • Be Wonderful," by
WEDNESDAY
brother and sister-in-law, Mr. Lelia Curtis, Syracuse. Mr. and master councilor: Jeff vlsory council members.
Terri and Jeff, of the Lock- William R. Grate of South
Sherr! Fox, "My Big
POMEROY· MIDDLEPORT and Mrs. Harry Henry.
Mrs . Gerlach were in Hammond, senior councilor;
Asocial. hour was held 1n the bourne Air Force Base; Mr. Charleston, W. Va.; Mr. and
Wish,'' by Amy Erwin, Lions ~ub, noon Wednesday at
Miss Brenda Ingraham, ChiiUcothe' Christmas Eve to Loring
Lovett,
junior dining room following the and Mrs. John Jacobs, John Mrs. James Grate 311d son,
"My LDve," by Riehle the Meigs Inn.
Jonathan, Huntington, W. Va.;
Athens and Mr. and Mrs. Bill vialthia parents, Mr. and Mrs. councilor; Bill Quickel, meeting.
and Mary, Brooklyn, N. H.;
Long "Christmas is a Happy · OHIO VALLEY Com- Strauss, Mahala and John of
marshall
and
State
Miss Carol Jacobs, Brooklyn, Mr. and Mrs. Edward 'l'ewksby Mary Beth Long, mandery Knights Templar, Belpre, spent Sunday with Mr. Wendell Gerlach.
EVENT
SET
hary, Wellston; Mr. and Mrs:
Mr. and Mrs. John Bowman, seventh preceptor; Jeff
N. Y.; Mr. and Mrs. Tim
"The Best Birthday," by 7:30 p.m. Wedne~day at the and Mrs. Fl~d Weber, Long
A ·.dirmer and dance will be
Miss Susan Bowman, Miss Slattery, senior deacon and
Priddy, Brian and Vicki, Lock- Charles Tewksbary and
Megan Long, "Joy to You," by ,Pomeroy· Masomo Te~ple, Botto.m.
held
for
members
and
guests
at
Paula Trasin, Mr. and Mrs. stale sentinel: and Pat King,
bourne; Mr. and Mrs. Ronnje children, Susie, Becky
Judy Mowery, "GOO's Special ?taled conclave. AU Knights
9
p.m.
Saturday
at
the
Drew
Mr. and Mrs. Bradford Maag Paul Winebrenner, Columbus; Jr., chaplain, and state senior
Jacobs, Crystal and Gene, and David,- Warren: Mr. and
Gil!." by SJlaro!l Johnson, "A mviied.
Webster
Post
39,
American
were holiday weekend guesls and Mrs. 'John Goodrich of councllrir.
·
Rutland; and Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Tom Tewksbary and ·
J,eg!on post home in Pomeroy.
Christmas Wish,'' by Betsy
of their son-in-law and Dayton were Christmas guests
'Ernie· Fraser ., and chUdren, Trisha, McConllj!lsvnle; Mrs:
THURSDAY
Herald, ".Who Loves Us Most,"
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. of Mr. and Mrs. Karl Owens.
'r~ ~~----------------.--------, April and Scott, Mlddleport, Nellie Tewks!lary, Middleport:
FREE CWTHJNG day at Riehard Lowe, and children,
by Bobby Fox, ''Christmas
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Rollin
Wolle
of
I were aU Christmas guests of Mr. and 'Mrs. Leland Brown,
Wish," by TerTI Fox, "Keep the Salvation Army, 115 But- t:olumbus.
Columbus are spending this I
Middleport, and their son,
•••
I Mr. and Mrs. Dale Jacobs.
Christmas a Happy Time," by ternut, Pomeroy, 10 a.m. to 12
Sunday guests of Mr. and week here with Mr. and Mrs. I
•
I In February, steve Jacobs Leland, a student at Ohlo·State
Beciy Fry, "A Whole N.W noon Thursday. AU in need of Mrs. Karl Grueser, Miners· Don Erwin and other relatives.
I
I willleavefora13monthtourol University, and his guest, 'Miss
World," by Angela Martin, clothing are welcome to attend. •·'Ue, were Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Christmas weekend guests of
Brenda Fields.
'
'
Grueser, Crooksville, and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Chester Erwin
Welby Whaley.
·
were Mr, and Mrs. · Michael I B }J b u ,a· h
1 three year tour of duty. Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Karl Erwin and children of 1
Y 0 .uoe,.zc
r, Jacobs an~ children plan to
Grueser and son, Larry, Morgantown, W. Va.
return to Meigs County, while
and Mrs. Welby Whaley spent
Mrs. Margaret Jones Is in
'nle flag ai the home of Mr. and Mrs. Delmar A. Canaday in Mrs. Priddy and children will
Gifts were exchanged around Christmas Day in . Columbus Caledonia visiting her son-In· Pomeroy is being flown at half mast due to the death Tuesday of join Tim in England.
a llgbted tree at the home of visiting Mr. and Mrs. Pat .law and daughter, Mr. and former U. S. President Harry Truman.
Mr. ind Mrs. Harold Burnside Quinn and family and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lucas.
Delmar knew both Mr. and Mrs. Truman, having traveled
when the family gathered at Mrs . Jack McDowell and
CORRECTION'
with the former President on his famous whistle stop train tour
A candJellgbt service by the their Route 2, Pomeroy home family.
Arctic ice jams often pile througb the midwest in 1948. Canaday was on the train for three
OF OUR DEC. 26 ~D
junlCI' and seniCI' youth of the Christmas Eve.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Conde of up 10 to 20 feet above the days and fournigbts and dined with the Trumans. He once visited
PWldo:t First Bapliat Church
In the group were Mr. and Kirksville, Mo. are the holiday ocean surface and some- them in Washington, D. C.
The price of
!
i
m
e
s
plunge
to
100-foot
Motherly
Love?
higblicbled the annual Mrs. E;arl Thoma, KeUy and guesls of Mr. and Mrs. Gene
depths.
The mother sea turtle digs
0&amp; iotuw program Sunday Suzan, Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Conde and other relatives. Jim
SANDRA K. LEWlS, DAUGilTER of Mr. and Mrs. Jack B.
nlgbl.
.
Glenn Thomas, Gail and Linda, is a medics! student at the
t.ewia of Pomeroy Route 3, and granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. a hole on a beach .and lays
Participating were Janet Chester; Mr. and Mrs. Harold Kirksville
School
of
E:tmer Burns of fl1lddleport, has been'nained to the dean's list at her eggs. Then she covers
Should Hav~ Been
a, Keith and ,~e~.~~e 1 ~ger, ,.,'/?!.~.da an~,J,!eJ!~l~ , ,os.lebpathy,:ro~:;. , .;.. ~
~ Qhlo·Sts~ · Uni~rslij'!CJll t,!lhlll q~·.. ~ ,,s'&gt;l ~ ,.,,:· ...:.&lt; them with ·sand and returns
· nH~a
, Ricky COJU!Ij; ,'iiObil! . Chesmre~;~. and 1~.1rTOill
MrS''~W'. g~nij\'1\,returned !
Miss Uwls ls ~jo~ 'in phy~~J, educ(tl&lt;llt.illnd pre- to the sea. The sun hatches
\1g· d:t. ~t6
' g~ i
Genell Kulm, Guy Walker, Burnside, Kim, KeJJy· and today to Memphis, Tenn.,
physical therapy and·IICOI'ed a 3.8 grade point average for the the eggs; thos~ "that are' nilt '
cans
eaten by animals.
LolaWaiker,andDlaneYoung. April,Cincinnati;Mr.andMrs. following two week visit in
I
,
The decorated social room of quarter.
Each one lighted a candle and Richard Houdashelt, daughter, Pomeroy with her son-In-law the Wilmar Res~aurant in
Lucky Sandra will be leaving any day via plane for San
gave a recitation before Audra, Route 2, Pomeroy.
and qaughter, Mr. and Mrs. Parkersburg was the 1111tting on Francl.sco where sh~ will visit friends prior to traveling to
singing "The Ught of the
Oliver Michael. ·
Dec. 18 for the annual Ouist- Pasadena for .the Rose Bowl game and parade. The Lewis' are
World" joined by the
Mrs. Howard Nicholson of mas party of the Rose Garden former residents of the San Francisco Bay area.
congre(latlon. Mrs. Larry
RIGGS ENTERTAINED
Athens spent Christmas Day Club.
.
WUesaang "Silent Ni(lht," and
CHESTER -A buffet dinner with Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hoeflich
Following the dinner gifts
· PAUL HALLER OF WALDO shot his deer within the first
Robin Kuhn presented an was .served by Mr. and Mrs. and daughter, Jayne.
were exchanged by the · hour on the first day of the hunting season on Nov. 27. It was an
organ selection, "Joy to the Ray Riggs at their Chester
Christmas guests of Mr. and members. and there was ei~ht point buck shot on the Clair Shenefield farm near, county
World."
Road
home
following Mrs. Truman Russell were Mr. singiilg of Christmas carols ~d I. The deer was checked in by noon and Haller had the
.
'
REDEEM AT . t •
Recitation was interspersed Christmas services at Trinity and Mrs. J. C. Russell of Wads- with Mrs. Floyd Weber at the Ql!Ota. Both Hailer and Shenefield hunted with .4~ caliber muzzle.
by carols and included "A Church. Their guesls were Mr. worth and Mr. and Mrs. Pat plano. Mrs. Rose Carr, loading guns.
. RUTLAND DEPARTMENT STO.E
Special Prayer," by Jeff and Mrs. Mickey WUUams and Neutzllng and son, Jay, president, had charge of a
RUTLAND, 0.
ROBERT LAUDERMILK, formerly of Pomeroy and now of
Couch, "Merry Christmas," by Terri Lynn Russell, Larry Pomeroy.
short business meeting, and
Thorn Hysell, "Shy," b~ Tracy of New York City;
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Cro~· Mrs . Vercle Stout gave Manchester, Ohio, Is spending the holiday season with his
WAID CROSS SONS
·
Jennifer Couch, "Welcome, Maralynnand caralynn Tracy, returned Tuesday night from devotions which Included the daugbte~, Mrs. Ullian Napper, Minersville.
-~~£~E, 0.
On Christmas, Mr. Laudermilk received a phone call from
Welcome," by Brad Young and Dan Williams, Athens; Terry New Philadelphia where they Christmas story and repeating
Kimberly Deem, "What Dlf. Hendricks, Columbus; Mr. and were the holiday weekend the Lord's Prayer in unison. his sister, Mrs. Helen Osborn of Columbus. It was the first
Good at:
contact
between
the
brother
and
sister
for
over
50
Y811r&amp;.
Mrs.
Rulla"\1
ference Does Cliriatmas Mrs. Marvin Burt, Jeff, guests of their son and
Mrs. Helen Dorst hosted the
Dept.
Store,
Osborn
is
13
and
Mr.
Laudermllk
is
86.
Their
mother
died
when
Make," by A.nna Kathryn student at Bowling Green: daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. party. Thirteen members
IM!a!Mf.
Wiles, and "Farewell," by Randy Burt, student at Ohio Robert W. Crow. An eigbt answered the roll ~aU by they were children and they were placed in an orphangage. They
Scott Hysell, Santa visited and State; Melanie and David Burt, pound daughter, Lori Ann, was making ai\d wearing a Ouist- went with various families and contact was not established until
witcl'&lt;:..o••
GlA~T
Sons, Racine.
presented glfts to each of the Mr. and Mrs. Ben Neutzllng, born to the Robert W. Crows mas corsage. Mrs. Weber was 33 years ago between Mrs. Osborn and Mrs. Napper and this was
SIZE
· With Coupon
the first contact In 50 years between Mr. Laudermilk and Mrs.
chlldreR.
and Miss Sybil Ebershach.
Tuesday.
a guest.
couP.,n Expires 12-30-72
Osborn.
'

1

'

C'hz'l.-l,._nn.
hom·e

on
holidays

·social
Cale·ndar

Family dinner·

at Grateview

Time:"

Beat

I

Gifts exchanged

Candlelight
service held

Of the' Bend

!.~:~~;~~~e:~::~~~~·~~

arou,nd a tree

'HI.C DRINKS

Club members
Jined ~~. ]~

·.··'2'

a

BIG 2
STORES ·

7- The Daily Sentinel,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Dec. 2'1,1972
.
.- .... -·-· ·..···...•.·.. •.•.··.·.·.·...·.-...--..·.·..·.·..·.·..-.-.-.-.·..·.. ·.· ·-· .. ·-. ·.·.•..

---

-----

A wider interpretation lor
participation of women in the
Boy Scouts of America locally
has been announced · by
Richard Monk, president of the
Tri-State Area Council.
Women may now serve as
members and associate
membes of local councils in·
cluding membership on the
Executiv: Board and district
committees. They may also be'
named as institutional
representatives , Explorer
Advisors and Sjtippers,
members of the College
Scouter Reserve, unit commissioners lor Cub Scouting,
t~~rar with your"
at and . as CUb Scouting roundt;~edce with your neighbors, end
table commissioners.
~let every He.w Year find you a .
Monk said Uiat there are
ri!ot,)ftan."
already over 400 women · serving in such positions as den
leaders, den leader coaches,
HAVE A SAFE NEW
assistant den leaders, merit
YEARS HOLIDAYbadge counselors, associate
WE NEED OUR Advisors, and as unit comCUSTOMERS!
mittee chairmen and mem-.

FOR SALE
100,000 BTU Coleman
furnace $299.00. 30
gallon · glass lined
water heater 569.95.

bers.
The long-standing Women's
Reserve has been changed to
Scouter Reserve and may now
include males and females,
Monk said. These people may
be In fathers' or mothers' clubs
and ·serve as unit organizers,
training course faculty, and
Exploring consultanls.

"In addiUon to the opening of
the Boy Scouts of America to
more women," Monk said,
":we're recognizing the
ablllties of younger men and
offering them responslbillUes
that we know they can carry.''
Webelos den leaders, ,
ass is tan t Webelos. dean
leaders, and assistant den

J

Several baptized Dec. 17
CHESTER
.Sunday
morning, Dec. 17, at the
Chester United Methodist
Church and the , Pomeroy
United Methodist Church was
the service ·of baptism and
reception of members.
Amy Jo Murphy, daughler.of

Big Screen

ZENITH
ColorJ.V.
Starting At

'43r
RIDENOUR
T.V. &amp; APPUANCES
GAS SERVICE

985.3307

te
...... r, 0 •

....

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Murphy,
was baptized at the Chesler
Church, as were Susan Renee
Wolf,daughterofMr.andMrs.
Gary Wolfe, and Michael AUen
Frost, son of Mr. and Mn.
Stephen Frost. Also bapllzed at
Chester were Mrs. Barbara
Tripp, Miss Joyce Myers and
Miss VIcki Spencer. Miss Dolly
Rouaey was baptized at the
Pomeroy Church.
Received inlo membenhip of
the Cheater Church were. Mrs.
Bertha Smith, Mrs. Barbara
Tripp, Miss Jane Ann Kerr,
Mill Joyce Myen, 1tWa VIcki
Spencer. •
Sandy wooc1,
and Mr. WUUam Buckley. AI
the Pomeroy Cburcb Mra.
Katerlne U!IHbn, Mia Do117
Rouley, Mill CllhJ Rayburn,
Miss Becky Card, Miss Liz
Card, O.vld Edward&amp;, Jeff
Reuter, Jeff Warner, Tim
Rawllnp, and Todd ~
were recelve.d Into mem·
~-~·

- - - - - - ""'"'"P·

leaders may now be commlssloned at 18 years of age,
and 18-year-olds may serve as
merit badge counselors.
Formerly, younger (!()unselors
could register only for merit
badges In which the principal
requirements were for pysical
sklUs.

NEW GRANDSON
Mrs. Amsnda Murray of
Middleport has a new grandson. The eight pound, two
ounce infant was born to Mrs.
Murray's son and daughter-in- ·
law, Mr. and Mrs. Philip
Rayburn, of Toledo, on Dec. 21.
He has been named Danny
James.

MY-T,fiNE

3%

I

F41lh

1

You'vegot another gift coming/.
.

·Market Report

·
·
t

, ' "'"·•

~

(Uponleiiullt)

"rn, t!. ·t

r..

o.

NELSQNiS

~;;==
. ==========~
Pre-Inventory .
\

•••Plan Now to Try Our Store All Through 1973

PUFF~
20 cl ·29~
•·
T
Facial 1ssues.................... Pkt: ·

We

Glad~

GEORGIAN
10 ' 69~
T01•1 e f y•ISSUe •••••••••••••••.
Chic·ken Bro th
' .COillGE
.....INN...· ...•. 6l3% •1 00
•
Ch oco Ia t e .Ch 1ps ...............
16.oz.
•
Swee t C' h lps .•••••••••••••.••.•••.
.
oz. 89~
JIf Peanu t Bu tt er.............
· 20 tl $139
Trash Ia gs DAVCO 26 GALLON Sllf
roll '
pkg.
ot

cans
12 ot

BAKER'S

pkg.

Accept Fed. Food Stamps

SMUCKER'S PICKLES

,

CRUNCHY

M01day Thru Friday ·

9:00 II!' 7:00
Saturday

For
!=reezer

3 lb.

4 lb.
4 lb.
4 lb.
2 lb.

ROUND STEAK
GROUND BEEF
BULK SAUSAGE
PORK CHOPS
ALL MEAT WIENERS
'

9 to

'

~

CLOSED SUNDAYS

$

5 lb.
4

FINE MEATS

GROUND IIEEF

lib. SLICED IIACON
4 lb. CHUCK ROAST
lib. ROUND STEAK
2lb: ASSORTED LUNCH MEAT

ROAST

SAUSAGE

(173)
lib.
4 lb.
'

PIMMe Us

l lb.
3 Ill.

l lb.
1111.

GROUND BEEF
ROUND STEAK
CHUCK ROAST
STEW MEAT
BULK SAUSAGE
LAROE FRANKS

21b. or
More

VNIFy

BELi.

16 oz.

'

79~·

lb.

lb.

FIENat CITY

FRENal arv

FRANKS
..

WIENERS

. '

.

Pork Shoulder

HOME MADE

lb. SLICED PORK SHOULDER

28
jar

Umited QuantH, Stock Room aa11111ce
Del Monte

PUMPKIN..~ .............. 4· "ta~% $)
Kraft

MAYONNAISE
............
~..~~! 69e
Freshlike
·
PEAS ............................ 4}:soz. $1
Regular or Drip
FOLGER'S COFFE.E.. J!~·. $249
CastlebenJ
. uce.......
.
510~ OZ$1
Hot Dog Sa
cans

•••••••••••••• • .• •••••••• pkg,.

., .--, (172)

2-JI)UR

CLEANING

SYMPATHY
~~Wgt.s .

Dudley's florist

Prices Effective Dec. 27-Jan. 3

·The

.

FOR BONUS PHOTO OR ViP

jar ·

DINNER GIVEN

Mr. and Mrs. Paul Smart
entertained with a family
dinner party at their home
Christmas Day.
Guests were Mr. and Mrs.
George Hackett, Melanie and
Dennis, l3lll Hackett of Akron:
Mt, and Mrs. Marvin Fry,
KlrksvUle, Mo.: Mr. and Mrs.
John Goodwin, Columbus; Mr.
and Mrs. Makklng, Lori and
Lynn, and Kent Kloes, student'
at Ohio Northern University;
·Miss Barbara AnthoUy, Mid. dleport; Miss Marla Neutdin&amp;,
Pomeroy; the Rev. and Mn.
GeCI'(Ie Siddall, Tcm, Laura
and Tim, Cincinnati.

ILBU

STARTER PIOE
ORDERS.

Right reserved to limit quantities

BOX

E'RE OIVI 0I IY

the Veterans' Quiz

Yo~ ·WE liKE"

PUDDING

Manufacturing, business survey to
begin .early in '73; end Feb. 15th

I

.5th and P£Ml. SJ1; RACINE
''The Store With A'-Heart.

oz.

·.·.·-·-·· ..·. ..· ··.·.

---------------~
·
'l.elten If .,..... 1re
wzl-ed. ,..,. + ..d be leA
._.IIWdl....,(orbenbjeeUerzlllrtknbytl•eedller) · 1
On the children's home switch
....... belipedwtllltlleillpee'IUIII!U.~IUYbe I
. .
.
f''-111
'
'
I •
..,.. JlllbUealloa, 11a1 wDI be reteale4 • rerpllt. I missioners shouldn't get people in this home for just a lew'
11. '-*~ llltiiN be .la pod lUte,~ lAHI, lilt per· I. months and after .we get USed to one coup!~'$ rules and then
The next canvass of the Jines .
this group will be obtained by form of Organization and by·
.1 ---lei
·
' C ..·.- L
·:
·
· II change to other people! Joann and ·u. ·-·-••• hav.e taught us kids to Natlon,'s
·
manufacturi~ and
In the Census of Manulac- the Census Bureau from ad~ single- and muiU-unlt firms. ·
1
.~ .
·
1 respectothers.WeallloveJoannandHarryandwewantthemto business rirms - theEconomic lures information will be ministrative records of · other The census law protecls the
I
~
I $lay. Theyaretheonlyonesthathaveevermeantanything to us. · Censuses- wiU get und. erway sought on inputs such as em- government agencies.
privacy of all information
1
·
•
1 They are more like a mother and a father to us than any others
I •••
•
•
1 ·could be. We appreciate them more·than words can ever ssy. We in early 1973 and will cover ployment, coSt of materials, Results of the censuses will reported to the Census Bwuu
I
1 love them more than the~ wiU ever know.
calendar 1972.
and capital inve;trnent and be published lor the United by providing that the· in!
1.
From the poor loved orphans at the hom'e, Robyn Wllis and
The censuses, ' to be con- . outputs of manufactured States as a whole ; for each formation reported to the.
Cheryl Mowery.
dueled by the Bureau o( the products. Cost and generally State: and, usually within each Bureau (I) may be used only
Census, a part of the U. S. quantity informalton will be State, for coun ties, cities,.imd for statistical purposes; (2)
Dear Editor:
Department of Commert·e s collected for some 1,000 · for Standard Metropolitan may not be pub!~ so that
All a concerned citizen of Meigs County, I think the people r1.
Dear Sir:
Meiga County should ppen thelf eyes and ear's and li!1d out more .
· I, as a concernedci\izen and employee, am (!()ncerned about Social and Economic Statist':•; materials and quantity .and Statistical Areas (SMSA 's).· . information for any business
about what's gplng on in their county.
the kids here 'I the home. I think Joann and Harry have done a Adl)linislration, will upd~ ' value data lor approximately Once again retall trade ligures firm can be idlmtified: and, (3)
10,000 products.
wil,l be pr9jjuelld lor Major may not · be seel) by ,anyon\\ ·
I'm !Jli!!Bking of the replaeernent of Joa1111 and Harry Cla'l'k
wonderfuijobwith the home and the kids and I think I. can speak statistics on ' America
manufacturing,
mining,
Iran~
·
The
Nation's
2.1
m.
i
llion
·
Retail
Centers (MRC's) - this other than sworn census e!"·.,
as matron and superintendent of the Meigs Coljnty Children's
for the kids that they.love Joann and Harry more than anyone
home. ·
·
·
that has been here at the Children's home because they treat ·· portallon, retail trade and larger business and industrial time for the MRC's 'within all of ployees. Census reporls may•'
other business activities.
firms wiU get the question- the Nation's 267 SMSA's.
not be used for purposes of
I think it reaDy Is a shame that there aren't enoug)l conthem as a family.
·
Due
date
for
the
return
of
the
nsires
lor
the
1972
Economic
Apart
from
the
data
for
taxation,
Investigation, or ·
cerned citizens In our county that knows the good they've done up
I think they should consider the kids here because it isn't
there and could go to bat for them. ' .
: their fault thatJQIInn and Harry are here and they should have a mailed out questionnaires is Censuses. Only a small sample different areas the results of regulation.
of the remaining 2.9 mi!Uon the censuses will be sum- ··
This is supposed to be a country of free speech, but several
little to say about the ones who work and take care of them. February IS, 1973.
The 1972 censuses continue a businesses will have any direct marized by indpslry and in
.,
have said they would stand up for them, but are afraid of losing
Joann and Harry do a real good job of making the kids mind and
series
of
measuremenls
of
the
involvement
in
·the
censuses
tl!eir jobs. I think, personally, that is a pity, that people can't
other ways, such as by sales- . No state .of the Union rnay·
teaching them manners.
Nation's
industry
and
business
since
inlomi.
a
tion
for
most
of
size,
employment-size, legal Issue or com money. .
·
speak their own feelings.
Joann sees to it that the home is clean, and that means a lot,
which
was
started
in
1810
and
!.happen to kl)ow for a fact that the home .wasn 'I fit to live in
too.
when the ctarks came.In five short months they have got it half
If money is the problem here they should be able to work have been conducted at
. periodic. intervals since then.
WilY decent, and they are the ones to thank for working sti hard to
something out for the kids' sake.
.
·
The Economic Censuses now
get It that way.
Concerned citizen, Mrs. Barbara Phillips.
are 'taken at S year intervals
I also think the county officials should consider the kids'
.
and cover the years ending In
fee!ingsin the matter. They have come to love the Clarks as they
"2" and "7".
would their parenls, because they've irealed them as they would
More particularly the centheir own family.
·
suses
include the fo.llowillg
t.hesr that the biggest gripe is the money spent in repairs,
'
fields, manufactures, mineral
but If the cOunty had been on its toes and kept repairs up to begin
,
(TRUE
AND FALSE)
industries (mining, quarrying,
with, the .Clarks wouldn't have to have had It done . But because
1,
A
Veteran
does
not
have
to
occupy
the
house
he
purchases
etc.),
retail trade, wholesale'
they are the onds. who did lt, they get the blame; but it doesn't
through a G. I. Loan. (FALSE)
trade, selected service in·
seem to me the blame lies in their laps. They only did what had to
2. Severely wounded Vietnam Veterans receive complete dustrles, construction in·
be done.
by the VA prior to separation at a military hospital. dustries · and transportation.
EveryQne is always traising the Humane Society for lis fine counseling
(TRUE)
To be continued in the 1972,
work, and that's only for a cat or dog. Aren't chUdren and their
3.
SocialSecurltypaymenlshave
no
effect
whatsoever
on
the
Economic Censuses will . be
wellbeillg much more lmporlant? Somet.imes I really wonder!
amount of Disability Compensation received by , a Vetera.n, questions for architects,
Ajso, it seems there is never a fuss or exchange of words
(TRUE)
.
engineers, and lawyers. These
when the 90U"ty wants a ilew piece of equipment or the county
4. A Veteran holding National Service Life Insurance with groups wer.e included for the
wants a garbage truck they don 'I need. If they'd take that wasted
Term Insurance may convert to a permanent plan at any time. first time in 1967 at the request
money they could reaDy do wonders at the home, but probably (TRUE)
of their professional or trade
the main reason for that is the kids l!l'en't old enough to cast a
~. The deduction for Medicare premiums from Social
The Nation's
associations.
wte ill theelectloos; so therefore, theJ just forget them.
Ju.r bring your hoi/thy film Into
Security does not have to be reported as income for vA pension travel agencies also will be
The kida aren't up there by choice, bot the county is making purposes. (FALSE)
HIIY NE/,SON'S Drug Store
them pliy for something they had nothing to do with.
requested to report their
•t•rtiug lJec. 26th thru f•n. llrd.
(Presen\ed as a weekly PUblic Service by your Meigs County business activities again .
There probably isn't a person (parent) that would have put · Veterans
Ymt 'II got fa of, profeoololl.ll
Office).
l'h"t"fiulohins.
&lt;fnd 111 II·
These
firms
were
queried,
for
their son or daughter up there before Harry and Joann put
frHrtlve,
dur•ble
photo olbum
the first time in 1967. ,,
repairs on it. ,
MOST oUTSTANDING
Htlll rleHi Jlla•fit: f111K• with each
As in the past censuses all
1msy be'wrong, but It looks like there are enough people in
Hmt ll,'l Photo ur ViP urdtJr. The
Meigs County to back the Clarks and keOR them where they are
SCIOTO LIVESTOCK .
PITTSBURGH (UP! ) - firms being canvassed wlll be
""""" IH QUf holithy lflft to you.
Pittsburgh Steelers' Coach asked to report on the number
loved by aU and needed by the children more than anyone knows.
Atul yuu'll continue lu ntceive
Steers:
Choice,
37.90-38.40;
Chuck
Noll
has
of
employees,
payrolls
and
And I think they are doing a beautiful job. The county officials Good-Choice, 35-37.70: Stan1rfbum
fJifl(t!l witli eacla,. n.e&amp;D
been
named
by
the
Post
value of sales or shipments on
should consider the fact that the kids do Jove the Clarks as they
/lonu• Photo '" YIP order, A.
75·
dard-Good,
34-34.
Gazette
•
Dapper
Dan
Club
l'fllltillla;nggiftl
an
establishment
basis.
Retail
have done so much for aU of them.
Heifers: Choice, 36-37.40;
Signed, a concerned citizen (name withheld upon request). Good-Choice, ~.75 ; Stan- as Pitlsburgh's Most Outstand- firms again will be asked to
YoiJ htve a choice of prlntt, too.
o BONUS PHOTO gl¥11 yo01 1 photo Ia
report
on
ssles
of
merchandise
All
with prorecllve velour turlac••·
lhlrt
1nd
one
to
aparef
OVer
$2.00
worth
"ood
••
•
lng
Sporls
Figure
for
1972,
just
da r d"' , ,.,4.90.
of Wllltt prints - eair•.
'
Cows: Commercial, 28-29 . 7~; edging Steeler rookie Franco
'
tOr pick VIP PRINTS. Thoy're bordorlm,
Save the happlnes, of the
Utility, 25 ,50-27.60: Canners Harris.
glwlng you In 1 - lllot•o 20% 111110&gt;
holidays
forever with photos
Ihon regulor, wllltHdgod prlnlt.
and CUtters, 2"-23.SO.
' Nol.l, the first Steelers' coach
Pluo round cornora.
Irom NELSON'S whert you
Children's Home Hill,
,.
to
th
1 "D
Bulls: Commercial, 34.10.
~.'" e annua
apper
I And thort'o UNI·PAINT1 iht ~9,~QIIIY• 1 .u ~~ aet 8 cho/08 ofprlrts1A(l .
~~
~
~ Romer9y •QhiA. , "•-k •. Feed
"
aww;d jo~ the le!lll!t
ICOC! quoMtYI!i._IHirl011 Dlll'ptt' N"til'' • Qo orr. •'A :1 1 • . t
•
11 11 "
Editor·
q
"""' er ..
ers&gt; •:Sialil
l. ii!!9'
' 10"' t · .. ..:·...... ~
!'l/~""'1'"''"'19~,
•• I tpiCiol to~tli''lhl ' rlu.
'lfJ. ndh~ bldJib,R,,~Qti,Y'''' ·r~WI
We, the kids a~, the Children's ~ feel th~t joa~ and 'Calves, 4o-45.50ljlleifer Cllh)es J, • ~ • • ·' • a.n · ' pur seas9ns
i BASK'E'TS .llil'.:''l 'o, j;'ll . , Urll-1'1
nt ordoro. Wo'll glvo youon olbum
ng, you( ol sy •lm In ror
"-·
3(1.37 50 y r
N
' (!()aChed Pitlsburgh from a 1·13
paga wllh ttch order!
developing right aw•yl
Harryhave'&gt;l"'~agreatjobhereatthzihomeandwefeelthatthe
· ; ear mgs, one.
record to the American Foot•VASES
.
'
(!()nunissloners should have some consideration for us. Joall{l . VeaiCalves, None.
ball Conference Central Dlvi• . SPRAYS
and Harry have changed this place up here so it won't look like 11
Lambs, None.
sion championship, the first
32
shack of some kind. We have really appreciated their work azfft
Hogs, .56-32.90.
title 1n the club's 4().:
26
4
repairs done on this home. If the commissioners weren't such
~ws: 250-400, ; moG, 28- history, and a berth in ~~:
26
DRUG ITD..EB
tight wada with the money they have and gripe about spending
· ·
day's AFC championship
59 N. Second St.
We Clfe about your picture• , • . ·
money on needs it wouldn't be so bad. We thlnk .that the comBoars:' UghtBoars, ~24.50: game.
Middleport,
Heavy Boars, 23.90.

TIDE

Greater role for women planned in Scout area

..

~. •1.19

.BANANAS
Golden
Ripe

lb.
New Solid

CABBAGE

u. s. No.1 Maine

POTATOES
20

...

�'
6- The O.UySentinel,Middleport-Pomeroy,O., Dec. 27,1972

Church program
offers playlet

Pe~nal

·King installed by Shut-ins remembered .
··
bJ1' DeMola1/
unit
~~~e~sereo~:m~~a:~
~~~vid~~~d~~::~~ts
,
'J
· ·

Midd~port

Pomeroy ...

Notes

Pe~al

Notes

Thirty shul-inlo of Rutland the Meigs Local School Board .

HOliday dinner guests
Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. W. 0.
Christmas dinner guests of
Friendly Gardeners with
The meeting followed a
Barnitz were Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Byer .and
'
Christmas arrangemenls, It dinner .at the Meigs Inn. Roll
Harry Young of Gallon and Mr. children were Mrs. Kenneth . Officers of Meigs Chapter,
.
Apastmastercouncilor'spin was noted during a recent call was· answered by U
Aplaylet, "The Greatest Gift "Uve Like Jesus'' by Barbie and Mrs. Hayman Barnilz of Byer, Middleport; Mrs. T, G. Order of DeMolay, were in- was- presented to Duane Wlll meeting of the club members members who related Uieir
of All," was a''feature of the Moyer, "The Angel," by Diana Pomeroy.
Hllldore, Syracuae: Mr. ~ . stalled in ceremonies Friday who also received a certificate at the home of Mrs.c Robert favorite Christmas trad!Uon.
annual Christmas program Lee, and "Good Night," by
Mr. and Mni. John Young, Mrs . Bill McKelvey, Portland; night at the Middleport of merit lor his work with Snowden.
Mrs. Bruce Davis was
presented Sunday night at the Beth Wolfe.
Lisa, Phillip and R,obin, and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Masonic Temple.
DeMolay. Also recognized was
It was also reported that chainnan of games with prizes
Middleport Church of Christ.
Jeff Nash had a piano solo, Lancaster; Mr. and Mrs. B~er, Kenny Lee and John,
Installed were Tim King ; John Kauff, a past master during the month several bemg·awatded.
Taking roles in the skit were "Star of the East," and Amy Dennis Carol, anctnnati: and Middleport.
maaler councilor; Jon Bruce, councUor of the chapter.
members
had
made
Mrs. Fred Williamson was In
Cindy Glaze, Margo Martin, Erwin sang "Christmas." Mr. and Mrs. W. 0. liamitz,
·Mr. and Mrs. John Mayer, senior
councilor:. Don
Also honored was Mrs . arrangements for local charge of gift wrappings with
Frank Martin, Jeff Nash, Bob Several carols were sung by Pomeroy were Christmas ~ohn Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Leo Vaughan, junior councilor; Bill Robert Quickel who has served churches and the post office. Mrs. James Carpenter wlnnlng
Stanley, Angela Baker and the children. Tammy Mowery dinner guesls o! Mr. and Mrs. Skinner, Columbus; and Mrs. Quickel, scri6e; 'Kenny Hoff. three terms as president of the Thank you cards were read theprizel!ith a church replica .
Kat)ly Hess. Recitations during was af the piano and as- Wilson ~rpenter, Mulbercy WiUlam WO!lllan, Gallipolis, ·man, treasurer; Burt Moshier, . DeMolay Mothers' Club.. She from the Holsum Bakery, the Gifts were exchanged and new
the candlellght :service in- slating Mrs . Don Er- Ave.
· were .Christmas guests of Mr. senlcr·deacon; Jeff. Gabritsch, was given a past president's Rutland F11111iture Store, and names . c)Niwn (or Pext year.
cluded "Welcome," by Ann win
with
the
pro- , Mr. and Mrs. Charles and Mrs. GeCI'ge Meinhart:
junlpr deacon: J?avld Ed- pin by Mr .. and Mrs. Robert
The traveling· prlu provided
Marie Reece, "From My gram were Mrs. Martha Downie are in Wesion, Conn.
~!siting. over the holiday wards, senior steward; Her- King. Other mothers attending
byMrs. HowardBirchfieldwas
Heart•"by. Shellie Fox • "Do It Nash and Mrs. Betty McKinley visiting her parepls, Mr. and weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Joe bert carson, junior stewai-d; the installation were presented
lUI r;;;y _
won by Mrs. William WWford.
Right," by. Tracy McMann, . who served as the ann~cer. Mrs. Clifford Smith and Turner were Mr. and Mrs. Bob l:lon Gabritsch, chaplain; red roses.
"Happy Birthday, Baby Steve Stanley was candle family.
\
Turner and children. Mrs. Joe flerman Carson, marshal: · Special. guest was Miss
Jesus," by Jeff McMann, lighter.
Joining Mr. and Mrs. Allen Turner and son, Bob, went to Martin Seelig, orator: David Sherry King, District 11 sweet"Angels Sing/ • by DanieUe
Downie and daughter, Debbie, Point Pleasant to call on Birdie Canterbury, standard bearer; . heart who ssng a vocal solo
l
Reece, "A Wish for AU,'' by, p••••illllll1811!1111oll8i*f for Christmas dinner were Mr. See who remains ill.
Tom Cassell, almoner: Ken- accomPanied at .the organ by
Parker Long, "Two Words,"
and Mrs. Edison Baker,
Christmas dinner_guesls of peth Gilkey, sentinel; Bob her sister, Kathy. A tribute to
by Scott McKinley, "How I
Middleport, and Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. William T. McCoy, Harold Sisson, Oliver motherhood was given .by Pat
Know •" by Darin Wolfe • ''I
Ted . Downie, High St., . Grueser, Grant St., were Mr. Taylor, Duane Will, ·David King, Jr., state senior colinAli of the chil~n of Mr. and The traditio~hl . family
Know," Tina Miller:
Pomeroy. ·
and Mrs. Robert Jay and Mr. Mattox, Joe Anthony, and cilor. Oiher guests were Mrs. Dale Jacobs, Middleport, gathering at Gra~view for a
"God Sent Jesus," by Darln .
Mr. •nd Mrs. ,patrick · and Mrs. Pon Gfueser, Brett Carter, first to seventh . members of Bethel 62, In· were home for the holidays, a dinner party hOllted by Gene
Roach, "Blessing," by Timmy
Lochary were at Amesville Columbus; Mrs. Stella ·preceptor respectively.
ternational Order of Job's gathering probably not to take Grate took place ,ChristmaS
Miller; ''Sleep Baby Jesus," by
Christmas Day for a dinner Grueser,Mr. and Mrs. Michael Making up ·the installation Daughters, the DeMo lay place again for several years. night.
Terri Sprouse, "Wouldn't
His guesls were Mr. and Mrs.
there with Mrs. Lochary's Gerlach, Middleport: and Mrs. team were John Purdum, Mothers' Club, masons, ad'
Mr. and Mrs. Steve
Jacobs,
It • Be Wonderful," by
WEDNESDAY
brother and sister-in-law, Mr. Lelia Curtis, Syracuse. Mr. and master councilor: Jeff vlsory council members.
Terri and Jeff, of the Lock- William R. Grate of South
Sherr! Fox, "My Big
POMEROY· MIDDLEPORT and Mrs. Harry Henry.
Mrs . Gerlach were in Hammond, senior councilor;
Asocial. hour was held 1n the bourne Air Force Base; Mr. Charleston, W. Va.; Mr. and
Wish,'' by Amy Erwin, Lions ~ub, noon Wednesday at
Miss Brenda Ingraham, ChiiUcothe' Christmas Eve to Loring
Lovett,
junior dining room following the and Mrs. John Jacobs, John Mrs. James Grate 311d son,
"My LDve," by Riehle the Meigs Inn.
Jonathan, Huntington, W. Va.;
Athens and Mr. and Mrs. Bill vialthia parents, Mr. and Mrs. councilor; Bill Quickel, meeting.
and Mary, Brooklyn, N. H.;
Long "Christmas is a Happy · OHIO VALLEY Com- Strauss, Mahala and John of
marshall
and
State
Miss Carol Jacobs, Brooklyn, Mr. and Mrs. Edward 'l'ewksby Mary Beth Long, mandery Knights Templar, Belpre, spent Sunday with Mr. Wendell Gerlach.
EVENT
SET
hary, Wellston; Mr. and Mrs:
Mr. and Mrs. John Bowman, seventh preceptor; Jeff
N. Y.; Mr. and Mrs. Tim
"The Best Birthday," by 7:30 p.m. Wedne~day at the and Mrs. Fl~d Weber, Long
A ·.dirmer and dance will be
Miss Susan Bowman, Miss Slattery, senior deacon and
Priddy, Brian and Vicki, Lock- Charles Tewksbary and
Megan Long, "Joy to You," by ,Pomeroy· Masomo Te~ple, Botto.m.
held
for
members
and
guests
at
Paula Trasin, Mr. and Mrs. stale sentinel: and Pat King,
bourne; Mr. and Mrs. Ronnje children, Susie, Becky
Judy Mowery, "GOO's Special ?taled conclave. AU Knights
9
p.m.
Saturday
at
the
Drew
Mr. and Mrs. Bradford Maag Paul Winebrenner, Columbus; Jr., chaplain, and state senior
Jacobs, Crystal and Gene, and David,- Warren: Mr. and
Gil!." by SJlaro!l Johnson, "A mviied.
Webster
Post
39,
American
were holiday weekend guesls and Mrs. 'John Goodrich of councllrir.
·
Rutland; and Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Tom Tewksbary and ·
J,eg!on post home in Pomeroy.
Christmas Wish,'' by Betsy
of their son-in-law and Dayton were Christmas guests
'Ernie· Fraser ., and chUdren, Trisha, McConllj!lsvnle; Mrs:
THURSDAY
Herald, ".Who Loves Us Most,"
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. of Mr. and Mrs. Karl Owens.
'r~ ~~----------------.--------, April and Scott, Mlddleport, Nellie Tewks!lary, Middleport:
FREE CWTHJNG day at Riehard Lowe, and children,
by Bobby Fox, ''Christmas
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Rollin
Wolle
of
I were aU Christmas guests of Mr. and 'Mrs. Leland Brown,
Wish," by TerTI Fox, "Keep the Salvation Army, 115 But- t:olumbus.
Columbus are spending this I
Middleport, and their son,
•••
I Mr. and Mrs. Dale Jacobs.
Christmas a Happy Time," by ternut, Pomeroy, 10 a.m. to 12
Sunday guests of Mr. and week here with Mr. and Mrs. I
•
I In February, steve Jacobs Leland, a student at Ohlo·State
Beciy Fry, "A Whole N.W noon Thursday. AU in need of Mrs. Karl Grueser, Miners· Don Erwin and other relatives.
I
I willleavefora13monthtourol University, and his guest, 'Miss
World," by Angela Martin, clothing are welcome to attend. •·'Ue, were Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Christmas weekend guests of
Brenda Fields.
'
'
Grueser, Crooksville, and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Chester Erwin
Welby Whaley.
·
were Mr, and Mrs. · Michael I B }J b u ,a· h
1 three year tour of duty. Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Karl Erwin and children of 1
Y 0 .uoe,.zc
r, Jacobs an~ children plan to
Grueser and son, Larry, Morgantown, W. Va.
return to Meigs County, while
and Mrs. Welby Whaley spent
Mrs. Margaret Jones Is in
'nle flag ai the home of Mr. and Mrs. Delmar A. Canaday in Mrs. Priddy and children will
Gifts were exchanged around Christmas Day in . Columbus Caledonia visiting her son-In· Pomeroy is being flown at half mast due to the death Tuesday of join Tim in England.
a llgbted tree at the home of visiting Mr. and Mrs. Pat .law and daughter, Mr. and former U. S. President Harry Truman.
Mr. ind Mrs. Harold Burnside Quinn and family and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lucas.
Delmar knew both Mr. and Mrs. Truman, having traveled
when the family gathered at Mrs . Jack McDowell and
CORRECTION'
with the former President on his famous whistle stop train tour
A candJellgbt service by the their Route 2, Pomeroy home family.
Arctic ice jams often pile througb the midwest in 1948. Canaday was on the train for three
OF OUR DEC. 26 ~D
junlCI' and seniCI' youth of the Christmas Eve.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Conde of up 10 to 20 feet above the days and fournigbts and dined with the Trumans. He once visited
PWldo:t First Bapliat Church
In the group were Mr. and Kirksville, Mo. are the holiday ocean surface and some- them in Washington, D. C.
The price of
!
i
m
e
s
plunge
to
100-foot
Motherly
Love?
higblicbled the annual Mrs. E;arl Thoma, KeUy and guesls of Mr. and Mrs. Gene
depths.
The mother sea turtle digs
0&amp; iotuw program Sunday Suzan, Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Conde and other relatives. Jim
SANDRA K. LEWlS, DAUGilTER of Mr. and Mrs. Jack B.
nlgbl.
.
Glenn Thomas, Gail and Linda, is a medics! student at the
t.ewia of Pomeroy Route 3, and granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. a hole on a beach .and lays
Participating were Janet Chester; Mr. and Mrs. Harold Kirksville
School
of
E:tmer Burns of fl1lddleport, has been'nained to the dean's list at her eggs. Then she covers
Should Hav~ Been
a, Keith and ,~e~.~~e 1 ~ger, ,.,'/?!.~.da an~,J,!eJ!~l~ , ,os.lebpathy,:ro~:;. , .;.. ~
~ Qhlo·Sts~ · Uni~rslij'!CJll t,!lhlll q~·.. ~ ,,s'&gt;l ~ ,.,,:· ...:.&lt; them with ·sand and returns
· nH~a
, Ricky COJU!Ij; ,'iiObil! . Chesmre~;~. and 1~.1rTOill
MrS''~W'. g~nij\'1\,returned !
Miss Uwls ls ~jo~ 'in phy~~J, educ(tl&lt;llt.illnd pre- to the sea. The sun hatches
\1g· d:t. ~t6
' g~ i
Genell Kulm, Guy Walker, Burnside, Kim, KeJJy· and today to Memphis, Tenn.,
physical therapy and·IICOI'ed a 3.8 grade point average for the the eggs; thos~ "that are' nilt '
cans
eaten by animals.
LolaWaiker,andDlaneYoung. April,Cincinnati;Mr.andMrs. following two week visit in
I
,
The decorated social room of quarter.
Each one lighted a candle and Richard Houdashelt, daughter, Pomeroy with her son-In-law the Wilmar Res~aurant in
Lucky Sandra will be leaving any day via plane for San
gave a recitation before Audra, Route 2, Pomeroy.
and qaughter, Mr. and Mrs. Parkersburg was the 1111tting on Francl.sco where sh~ will visit friends prior to traveling to
singing "The Ught of the
Oliver Michael. ·
Dec. 18 for the annual Ouist- Pasadena for .the Rose Bowl game and parade. The Lewis' are
World" joined by the
Mrs. Howard Nicholson of mas party of the Rose Garden former residents of the San Francisco Bay area.
congre(latlon. Mrs. Larry
RIGGS ENTERTAINED
Athens spent Christmas Day Club.
.
WUesaang "Silent Ni(lht," and
CHESTER -A buffet dinner with Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hoeflich
Following the dinner gifts
· PAUL HALLER OF WALDO shot his deer within the first
Robin Kuhn presented an was .served by Mr. and Mrs. and daughter, Jayne.
were exchanged by the · hour on the first day of the hunting season on Nov. 27. It was an
organ selection, "Joy to the Ray Riggs at their Chester
Christmas guests of Mr. and members. and there was ei~ht point buck shot on the Clair Shenefield farm near, county
World."
Road
home
following Mrs. Truman Russell were Mr. singiilg of Christmas carols ~d I. The deer was checked in by noon and Haller had the
.
'
REDEEM AT . t •
Recitation was interspersed Christmas services at Trinity and Mrs. J. C. Russell of Wads- with Mrs. Floyd Weber at the Ql!Ota. Both Hailer and Shenefield hunted with .4~ caliber muzzle.
by carols and included "A Church. Their guesls were Mr. worth and Mr. and Mrs. Pat plano. Mrs. Rose Carr, loading guns.
. RUTLAND DEPARTMENT STO.E
Special Prayer," by Jeff and Mrs. Mickey WUUams and Neutzllng and son, Jay, president, had charge of a
RUTLAND, 0.
ROBERT LAUDERMILK, formerly of Pomeroy and now of
Couch, "Merry Christmas," by Terri Lynn Russell, Larry Pomeroy.
short business meeting, and
Thorn Hysell, "Shy," b~ Tracy of New York City;
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Cro~· Mrs . Vercle Stout gave Manchester, Ohio, Is spending the holiday season with his
WAID CROSS SONS
·
Jennifer Couch, "Welcome, Maralynnand caralynn Tracy, returned Tuesday night from devotions which Included the daugbte~, Mrs. Ullian Napper, Minersville.
-~~£~E, 0.
On Christmas, Mr. Laudermilk received a phone call from
Welcome," by Brad Young and Dan Williams, Athens; Terry New Philadelphia where they Christmas story and repeating
Kimberly Deem, "What Dlf. Hendricks, Columbus; Mr. and were the holiday weekend the Lord's Prayer in unison. his sister, Mrs. Helen Osborn of Columbus. It was the first
Good at:
contact
between
the
brother
and
sister
for
over
50
Y811r&amp;.
Mrs.
Rulla"\1
ference Does Cliriatmas Mrs. Marvin Burt, Jeff, guests of their son and
Mrs. Helen Dorst hosted the
Dept.
Store,
Osborn
is
13
and
Mr.
Laudermllk
is
86.
Their
mother
died
when
Make," by A.nna Kathryn student at Bowling Green: daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. party. Thirteen members
IM!a!Mf.
Wiles, and "Farewell," by Randy Burt, student at Ohio Robert W. Crow. An eigbt answered the roll ~aU by they were children and they were placed in an orphangage. They
Scott Hysell, Santa visited and State; Melanie and David Burt, pound daughter, Lori Ann, was making ai\d wearing a Ouist- went with various families and contact was not established until
witcl'&lt;:..o••
GlA~T
Sons, Racine.
presented glfts to each of the Mr. and Mrs. Ben Neutzllng, born to the Robert W. Crows mas corsage. Mrs. Weber was 33 years ago between Mrs. Osborn and Mrs. Napper and this was
SIZE
· With Coupon
the first contact In 50 years between Mr. Laudermilk and Mrs.
chlldreR.
and Miss Sybil Ebershach.
Tuesday.
a guest.
couP.,n Expires 12-30-72
Osborn.
'

1

'

C'hz'l.-l,._nn.
hom·e

on
holidays

·social
Cale·ndar

Family dinner·

at Grateview

Time:"

Beat

I

Gifts exchanged

Candlelight
service held

Of the' Bend

!.~:~~;~~~e:~::~~~~·~~

arou,nd a tree

'HI.C DRINKS

Club members
Jined ~~. ]~

·.··'2'

a

BIG 2
STORES ·

7- The Daily Sentinel,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Dec. 2'1,1972
.
.- .... -·-· ·..···...•.·.. •.•.··.·.·.·...·.-...--..·.·..·.·..·.·..-.-.-.-.·..·.. ·.· ·-· .. ·-. ·.·.•..

---

-----

A wider interpretation lor
participation of women in the
Boy Scouts of America locally
has been announced · by
Richard Monk, president of the
Tri-State Area Council.
Women may now serve as
members and associate
membes of local councils in·
cluding membership on the
Executiv: Board and district
committees. They may also be'
named as institutional
representatives , Explorer
Advisors and Sjtippers,
members of the College
Scouter Reserve, unit commissioners lor Cub Scouting,
t~~rar with your"
at and . as CUb Scouting roundt;~edce with your neighbors, end
table commissioners.
~let every He.w Year find you a .
Monk said Uiat there are
ri!ot,)ftan."
already over 400 women · serving in such positions as den
leaders, den leader coaches,
HAVE A SAFE NEW
assistant den leaders, merit
YEARS HOLIDAYbadge counselors, associate
WE NEED OUR Advisors, and as unit comCUSTOMERS!
mittee chairmen and mem-.

FOR SALE
100,000 BTU Coleman
furnace $299.00. 30
gallon · glass lined
water heater 569.95.

bers.
The long-standing Women's
Reserve has been changed to
Scouter Reserve and may now
include males and females,
Monk said. These people may
be In fathers' or mothers' clubs
and ·serve as unit organizers,
training course faculty, and
Exploring consultanls.

"In addiUon to the opening of
the Boy Scouts of America to
more women," Monk said,
":we're recognizing the
ablllties of younger men and
offering them responslbillUes
that we know they can carry.''
Webelos den leaders, ,
ass is tan t Webelos. dean
leaders, and assistant den

J

Several baptized Dec. 17
CHESTER
.Sunday
morning, Dec. 17, at the
Chester United Methodist
Church and the , Pomeroy
United Methodist Church was
the service ·of baptism and
reception of members.
Amy Jo Murphy, daughler.of

Big Screen

ZENITH
ColorJ.V.
Starting At

'43r
RIDENOUR
T.V. &amp; APPUANCES
GAS SERVICE

985.3307

te
...... r, 0 •

....

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Murphy,
was baptized at the Chesler
Church, as were Susan Renee
Wolf,daughterofMr.andMrs.
Gary Wolfe, and Michael AUen
Frost, son of Mr. and Mn.
Stephen Frost. Also bapllzed at
Chester were Mrs. Barbara
Tripp, Miss Joyce Myers and
Miss VIcki Spencer. Miss Dolly
Rouaey was baptized at the
Pomeroy Church.
Received inlo membenhip of
the Cheater Church were. Mrs.
Bertha Smith, Mrs. Barbara
Tripp, Miss Jane Ann Kerr,
Mill Joyce Myen, 1tWa VIcki
Spencer. •
Sandy wooc1,
and Mr. WUUam Buckley. AI
the Pomeroy Cburcb Mra.
Katerlne U!IHbn, Mia Do117
Rouley, Mill CllhJ Rayburn,
Miss Becky Card, Miss Liz
Card, O.vld Edward&amp;, Jeff
Reuter, Jeff Warner, Tim
Rawllnp, and Todd ~
were recelve.d Into mem·
~-~·

- - - - - - ""'"'"P·

leaders may now be commlssloned at 18 years of age,
and 18-year-olds may serve as
merit badge counselors.
Formerly, younger (!()unselors
could register only for merit
badges In which the principal
requirements were for pysical
sklUs.

NEW GRANDSON
Mrs. Amsnda Murray of
Middleport has a new grandson. The eight pound, two
ounce infant was born to Mrs.
Murray's son and daughter-in- ·
law, Mr. and Mrs. Philip
Rayburn, of Toledo, on Dec. 21.
He has been named Danny
James.

MY-T,fiNE

3%

I

F41lh

1

You'vegot another gift coming/.
.

·Market Report

·
·
t

, ' "'"·•

~

(Uponleiiullt)

"rn, t!. ·t

r..

o.

NELSQNiS

~;;==
. ==========~
Pre-Inventory .
\

•••Plan Now to Try Our Store All Through 1973

PUFF~
20 cl ·29~
•·
T
Facial 1ssues.................... Pkt: ·

We

Glad~

GEORGIAN
10 ' 69~
T01•1 e f y•ISSUe •••••••••••••••.
Chic·ken Bro th
' .COillGE
.....INN...· ...•. 6l3% •1 00
•
Ch oco Ia t e .Ch 1ps ...............
16.oz.
•
Swee t C' h lps .•••••••••••••.••.•••.
.
oz. 89~
JIf Peanu t Bu tt er.............
· 20 tl $139
Trash Ia gs DAVCO 26 GALLON Sllf
roll '
pkg.
ot

cans
12 ot

BAKER'S

pkg.

Accept Fed. Food Stamps

SMUCKER'S PICKLES

,

CRUNCHY

M01day Thru Friday ·

9:00 II!' 7:00
Saturday

For
!=reezer

3 lb.

4 lb.
4 lb.
4 lb.
2 lb.

ROUND STEAK
GROUND BEEF
BULK SAUSAGE
PORK CHOPS
ALL MEAT WIENERS
'

9 to

'

~

CLOSED SUNDAYS

$

5 lb.
4

FINE MEATS

GROUND IIEEF

lib. SLICED IIACON
4 lb. CHUCK ROAST
lib. ROUND STEAK
2lb: ASSORTED LUNCH MEAT

ROAST

SAUSAGE

(173)
lib.
4 lb.
'

PIMMe Us

l lb.
3 Ill.

l lb.
1111.

GROUND BEEF
ROUND STEAK
CHUCK ROAST
STEW MEAT
BULK SAUSAGE
LAROE FRANKS

21b. or
More

VNIFy

BELi.

16 oz.

'

79~·

lb.

lb.

FIENat CITY

FRENal arv

FRANKS
..

WIENERS

. '

.

Pork Shoulder

HOME MADE

lb. SLICED PORK SHOULDER

28
jar

Umited QuantH, Stock Room aa11111ce
Del Monte

PUMPKIN..~ .............. 4· "ta~% $)
Kraft

MAYONNAISE
............
~..~~! 69e
Freshlike
·
PEAS ............................ 4}:soz. $1
Regular or Drip
FOLGER'S COFFE.E.. J!~·. $249
CastlebenJ
. uce.......
.
510~ OZ$1
Hot Dog Sa
cans

•••••••••••••• • .• •••••••• pkg,.

., .--, (172)

2-JI)UR

CLEANING

SYMPATHY
~~Wgt.s .

Dudley's florist

Prices Effective Dec. 27-Jan. 3

·The

.

FOR BONUS PHOTO OR ViP

jar ·

DINNER GIVEN

Mr. and Mrs. Paul Smart
entertained with a family
dinner party at their home
Christmas Day.
Guests were Mr. and Mrs.
George Hackett, Melanie and
Dennis, l3lll Hackett of Akron:
Mt, and Mrs. Marvin Fry,
KlrksvUle, Mo.: Mr. and Mrs.
John Goodwin, Columbus; Mr.
and Mrs. Makklng, Lori and
Lynn, and Kent Kloes, student'
at Ohio Northern University;
·Miss Barbara AnthoUy, Mid. dleport; Miss Marla Neutdin&amp;,
Pomeroy; the Rev. and Mn.
GeCI'(Ie Siddall, Tcm, Laura
and Tim, Cincinnati.

ILBU

STARTER PIOE
ORDERS.

Right reserved to limit quantities

BOX

E'RE OIVI 0I IY

the Veterans' Quiz

Yo~ ·WE liKE"

PUDDING

Manufacturing, business survey to
begin .early in '73; end Feb. 15th

I

.5th and P£Ml. SJ1; RACINE
''The Store With A'-Heart.

oz.

·.·.·-·-·· ..·. ..· ··.·.

---------------~
·
'l.elten If .,..... 1re
wzl-ed. ,..,. + ..d be leA
._.IIWdl....,(orbenbjeeUerzlllrtknbytl•eedller) · 1
On the children's home switch
....... belipedwtllltlleillpee'IUIII!U.~IUYbe I
. .
.
f''-111
'
'
I •
..,.. JlllbUealloa, 11a1 wDI be reteale4 • rerpllt. I missioners shouldn't get people in this home for just a lew'
11. '-*~ llltiiN be .la pod lUte,~ lAHI, lilt per· I. months and after .we get USed to one coup!~'$ rules and then
The next canvass of the Jines .
this group will be obtained by form of Organization and by·
.1 ---lei
·
' C ..·.- L
·:
·
· II change to other people! Joann and ·u. ·-·-••• hav.e taught us kids to Natlon,'s
·
manufacturi~ and
In the Census of Manulac- the Census Bureau from ad~ single- and muiU-unlt firms. ·
1
.~ .
·
1 respectothers.WeallloveJoannandHarryandwewantthemto business rirms - theEconomic lures information will be ministrative records of · other The census law protecls the
I
~
I $lay. Theyaretheonlyonesthathaveevermeantanything to us. · Censuses- wiU get und. erway sought on inputs such as em- government agencies.
privacy of all information
1
·
•
1 They are more like a mother and a father to us than any others
I •••
•
•
1 ·could be. We appreciate them more·than words can ever ssy. We in early 1973 and will cover ployment, coSt of materials, Results of the censuses will reported to the Census Bwuu
I
1 love them more than the~ wiU ever know.
calendar 1972.
and capital inve;trnent and be published lor the United by providing that the· in!
1.
From the poor loved orphans at the hom'e, Robyn Wllis and
The censuses, ' to be con- . outputs of manufactured States as a whole ; for each formation reported to the.
Cheryl Mowery.
dueled by the Bureau o( the products. Cost and generally State: and, usually within each Bureau (I) may be used only
Census, a part of the U. S. quantity informalton will be State, for coun ties, cities,.imd for statistical purposes; (2)
Dear Editor:
Department of Commert·e s collected for some 1,000 · for Standard Metropolitan may not be pub!~ so that
All a concerned citizen of Meigs County, I think the people r1.
Dear Sir:
Meiga County should ppen thelf eyes and ear's and li!1d out more .
· I, as a concernedci\izen and employee, am (!()ncerned about Social and Economic Statist':•; materials and quantity .and Statistical Areas (SMSA 's).· . information for any business
about what's gplng on in their county.
the kids here 'I the home. I think Joann and Harry have done a Adl)linislration, will upd~ ' value data lor approximately Once again retall trade ligures firm can be idlmtified: and, (3)
10,000 products.
wil,l be pr9jjuelld lor Major may not · be seel) by ,anyon\\ ·
I'm !Jli!!Bking of the replaeernent of Joa1111 and Harry Cla'l'k
wonderfuijobwith the home and the kids and I think I. can speak statistics on ' America
manufacturing,
mining,
Iran~
·
The
Nation's
2.1
m.
i
llion
·
Retail
Centers (MRC's) - this other than sworn census e!"·.,
as matron and superintendent of the Meigs Coljnty Children's
for the kids that they.love Joann and Harry more than anyone
home. ·
·
·
that has been here at the Children's home because they treat ·· portallon, retail trade and larger business and industrial time for the MRC's 'within all of ployees. Census reporls may•'
other business activities.
firms wiU get the question- the Nation's 267 SMSA's.
not be used for purposes of
I think it reaDy Is a shame that there aren't enoug)l conthem as a family.
·
Due
date
for
the
return
of
the
nsires
lor
the
1972
Economic
Apart
from
the
data
for
taxation,
Investigation, or ·
cerned citizens In our county that knows the good they've done up
I think they should consider the kids here because it isn't
there and could go to bat for them. ' .
: their fault thatJQIInn and Harry are here and they should have a mailed out questionnaires is Censuses. Only a small sample different areas the results of regulation.
of the remaining 2.9 mi!Uon the censuses will be sum- ··
This is supposed to be a country of free speech, but several
little to say about the ones who work and take care of them. February IS, 1973.
The 1972 censuses continue a businesses will have any direct marized by indpslry and in
.,
have said they would stand up for them, but are afraid of losing
Joann and Harry do a real good job of making the kids mind and
series
of
measuremenls
of
the
involvement
in
·the
censuses
tl!eir jobs. I think, personally, that is a pity, that people can't
other ways, such as by sales- . No state .of the Union rnay·
teaching them manners.
Nation's
industry
and
business
since
inlomi.
a
tion
for
most
of
size,
employment-size, legal Issue or com money. .
·
speak their own feelings.
Joann sees to it that the home is clean, and that means a lot,
which
was
started
in
1810
and
!.happen to kl)ow for a fact that the home .wasn 'I fit to live in
too.
when the ctarks came.In five short months they have got it half
If money is the problem here they should be able to work have been conducted at
. periodic. intervals since then.
WilY decent, and they are the ones to thank for working sti hard to
something out for the kids' sake.
.
·
The Economic Censuses now
get It that way.
Concerned citizen, Mrs. Barbara Phillips.
are 'taken at S year intervals
I also think the county officials should consider the kids'
.
and cover the years ending In
fee!ingsin the matter. They have come to love the Clarks as they
"2" and "7".
would their parenls, because they've irealed them as they would
More particularly the centheir own family.
·
suses
include the fo.llowillg
t.hesr that the biggest gripe is the money spent in repairs,
'
fields, manufactures, mineral
but If the cOunty had been on its toes and kept repairs up to begin
,
(TRUE
AND FALSE)
industries (mining, quarrying,
with, the .Clarks wouldn't have to have had It done . But because
1,
A
Veteran
does
not
have
to
occupy
the
house
he
purchases
etc.),
retail trade, wholesale'
they are the onds. who did lt, they get the blame; but it doesn't
through a G. I. Loan. (FALSE)
trade, selected service in·
seem to me the blame lies in their laps. They only did what had to
2. Severely wounded Vietnam Veterans receive complete dustrles, construction in·
be done.
by the VA prior to separation at a military hospital. dustries · and transportation.
EveryQne is always traising the Humane Society for lis fine counseling
(TRUE)
To be continued in the 1972,
work, and that's only for a cat or dog. Aren't chUdren and their
3.
SocialSecurltypaymenlshave
no
effect
whatsoever
on
the
Economic Censuses will . be
wellbeillg much more lmporlant? Somet.imes I really wonder!
amount of Disability Compensation received by , a Vetera.n, questions for architects,
Ajso, it seems there is never a fuss or exchange of words
(TRUE)
.
engineers, and lawyers. These
when the 90U"ty wants a ilew piece of equipment or the county
4. A Veteran holding National Service Life Insurance with groups wer.e included for the
wants a garbage truck they don 'I need. If they'd take that wasted
Term Insurance may convert to a permanent plan at any time. first time in 1967 at the request
money they could reaDy do wonders at the home, but probably (TRUE)
of their professional or trade
the main reason for that is the kids l!l'en't old enough to cast a
~. The deduction for Medicare premiums from Social
The Nation's
associations.
wte ill theelectloos; so therefore, theJ just forget them.
Ju.r bring your hoi/thy film Into
Security does not have to be reported as income for vA pension travel agencies also will be
The kida aren't up there by choice, bot the county is making purposes. (FALSE)
HIIY NE/,SON'S Drug Store
them pliy for something they had nothing to do with.
requested to report their
•t•rtiug lJec. 26th thru f•n. llrd.
(Presen\ed as a weekly PUblic Service by your Meigs County business activities again .
There probably isn't a person (parent) that would have put · Veterans
Ymt 'II got fa of, profeoololl.ll
Office).
l'h"t"fiulohins.
&lt;fnd 111 II·
These
firms
were
queried,
for
their son or daughter up there before Harry and Joann put
frHrtlve,
dur•ble
photo olbum
the first time in 1967. ,,
repairs on it. ,
MOST oUTSTANDING
Htlll rleHi Jlla•fit: f111K• with each
As in the past censuses all
1msy be'wrong, but It looks like there are enough people in
Hmt ll,'l Photo ur ViP urdtJr. The
Meigs County to back the Clarks and keOR them where they are
SCIOTO LIVESTOCK .
PITTSBURGH (UP! ) - firms being canvassed wlll be
""""" IH QUf holithy lflft to you.
Pittsburgh Steelers' Coach asked to report on the number
loved by aU and needed by the children more than anyone knows.
Atul yuu'll continue lu ntceive
Steers:
Choice,
37.90-38.40;
Chuck
Noll
has
of
employees,
payrolls
and
And I think they are doing a beautiful job. The county officials Good-Choice, 35-37.70: Stan1rfbum
fJifl(t!l witli eacla,. n.e&amp;D
been
named
by
the
Post
value of sales or shipments on
should consider the fact that the kids do Jove the Clarks as they
/lonu• Photo '" YIP order, A.
75·
dard-Good,
34-34.
Gazette
•
Dapper
Dan
Club
l'fllltillla;nggiftl
an
establishment
basis.
Retail
have done so much for aU of them.
Heifers: Choice, 36-37.40;
Signed, a concerned citizen (name withheld upon request). Good-Choice, ~.75 ; Stan- as Pitlsburgh's Most Outstand- firms again will be asked to
YoiJ htve a choice of prlntt, too.
o BONUS PHOTO gl¥11 yo01 1 photo Ia
report
on
ssles
of
merchandise
All
with prorecllve velour turlac••·
lhlrt
1nd
one
to
aparef
OVer
$2.00
worth
"ood
••
•
lng
Sporls
Figure
for
1972,
just
da r d"' , ,.,4.90.
of Wllltt prints - eair•.
'
Cows: Commercial, 28-29 . 7~; edging Steeler rookie Franco
'
tOr pick VIP PRINTS. Thoy're bordorlm,
Save the happlnes, of the
Utility, 25 ,50-27.60: Canners Harris.
glwlng you In 1 - lllot•o 20% 111110&gt;
holidays
forever with photos
Ihon regulor, wllltHdgod prlnlt.
and CUtters, 2"-23.SO.
' Nol.l, the first Steelers' coach
Pluo round cornora.
Irom NELSON'S whert you
Children's Home Hill,
,.
to
th
1 "D
Bulls: Commercial, 34.10.
~.'" e annua
apper
I And thort'o UNI·PAINT1 iht ~9,~QIIIY• 1 .u ~~ aet 8 cho/08 ofprlrts1A(l .
~~
~
~ Romer9y •QhiA. , "•-k •. Feed
"
aww;d jo~ the le!lll!t
ICOC! quoMtYI!i._IHirl011 Dlll'ptt' N"til'' • Qo orr. •'A :1 1 • . t
•
11 11 "
Editor·
q
"""' er ..
ers&gt; •:Sialil
l. ii!!9'
' 10"' t · .. ..:·...... ~
!'l/~""'1'"''"'19~,
•• I tpiCiol to~tli''lhl ' rlu.
'lfJ. ndh~ bldJib,R,,~Qti,Y'''' ·r~WI
We, the kids a~, the Children's ~ feel th~t joa~ and 'Calves, 4o-45.50ljlleifer Cllh)es J, • ~ • • ·' • a.n · ' pur seas9ns
i BASK'E'TS .llil'.:''l 'o, j;'ll . , Urll-1'1
nt ordoro. Wo'll glvo youon olbum
ng, you( ol sy •lm In ror
"-·
3(1.37 50 y r
N
' (!()aChed Pitlsburgh from a 1·13
paga wllh ttch order!
developing right aw•yl
Harryhave'&gt;l"'~agreatjobhereatthzihomeandwefeelthatthe
· ; ear mgs, one.
record to the American Foot•VASES
.
'
(!()nunissloners should have some consideration for us. Joall{l . VeaiCalves, None.
ball Conference Central Dlvi• . SPRAYS
and Harry have changed this place up here so it won't look like 11
Lambs, None.
sion championship, the first
32
shack of some kind. We have really appreciated their work azfft
Hogs, .56-32.90.
title 1n the club's 4().:
26
4
repairs done on this home. If the commissioners weren't such
~ws: 250-400, ; moG, 28- history, and a berth in ~~:
26
DRUG ITD..EB
tight wada with the money they have and gripe about spending
· ·
day's AFC championship
59 N. Second St.
We Clfe about your picture• , • . ·
money on needs it wouldn't be so bad. We thlnk .that the comBoars:' UghtBoars, ~24.50: game.
Middleport,
Heavy Boars, 23.90.

TIDE

Greater role for women planned in Scout area

..

~. •1.19

.BANANAS
Golden
Ripe

lb.
New Solid

CABBAGE

u. s. No.1 Maine

POTATOES
20

...

�-

t - The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. 27, 1972

1- The Dilly Sentinel, Middleoort-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. '1:1, 197:: ·

Trulttan: &lt;:;ommon Man, with
abilities recognized by everyone
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as uncommon .

TRUMAN
HIGHLIGHTS

By Ualted Press International and consequence, not only for
The abilities of Harry S the nation but the world as

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Truman were anything but
common.' But , to his courr
trytrien and the world be came
to symboijze the potential,
when history demands it, of the
common man.
The "man of Independence"
molded the destiny of the
United Stetes and the world
with unprecedent ed
decisions- the atomic born·
bing of Japan, the Marshall
plan, the Berlin blockade
airlift, the dispatch of U.S.
.troops to Korea-and many
more.
"I did what had to be done,"
he once said.
. That is the way the fiery little
Missourian· wanted to be
remembered.
Fate permitted · Truman to
outlive most of those with
whom he shared a place in
history-Stalin, Churchill, de
Gau 11 e , Mac A r I h ur,
Eisenhower and even Thomas
E. Dewey, whom he defeated in
the 1948 presidential elections
In one of the most stunning
upsets in U.S. Political historv.
Favorite Epllapb
He once said that a man
could have no be~ter epitaph
than one he saw l(lscrlbed on a
frontier grave in Arizona. It
uld:
"Here lies Jack Willlams;
He done his damndest."
·
Truman truly was a man of
Independence. It w~ his way
cti life as well 811 his hometown.
He was vice president the
clay that Franklin D. Roosevelt
led on AJI'II 12, 1945, and
faund htm If holding the reins
of the mlghlielt nation in the
wwldlnoneoftbemostcritical

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periodlln bist«y.

Truman won re-election in
lMI, defeaU. Dewey in what
1110111 call the biggest political
..,_In !Utory.
GaYe ~bOrders
~ 'l;'nlmall - the 33rd pres!dent cti the United StateS and
the 321111 manto bold the office.
Be served WJtll Jan. 20, 1953,
the ~ay Gen. Dwight D.
, Eilenhower succeeded bini in
the White House.
During his yean~' af decision
.

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well, he gave the order to drop
the atomic bomb that ended the
war with Japan in the Pacific.
He gave the g~head lor the
development of the hydrogen
bomb, called Russia's blu!f In
Berlin and ordered an airlift to
keep the city supplied with food
and medicine despite a Soviet
blockade.
His most difficult decision,
Truman said, was ordering
troops into Korea in a "pollee
action" that kept Communist
troops from advancing past the
~ parallel.
Had Enemies
He enunciated the Truman
Doctrine to keep Russia out of
southern Europe, suppot:ted
the Marshall Plan for keeping
Russia out of Western Europe, .
presided at the birth of the
United Nations and was a key
mover in creation of the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization
(NATO).
Truman devised the Point
Four pian of technical assistance to underdeveloped
nations, serving not only as
commander -in-chief of the
u.s. armed forces, but as the
chief executor of the nation's
foreign policy.
Truman had enemies. He
was the object of an
assassination attempt during
his presidency. He had many
critics who disagreed with him,
quarreled with him and
Fidiculed him at times.
But nobOdy ever a&lt;:Clised
Truman of not making decl·
sions.
Tbree Unpopular Decisions
History will remember, too,
that he referred to the Alger
Hiss case as a ''red herring,"
that he once seized the steel
industry in an action which the
Supreme Court ruled illegal,
and tllat he unceremoniously
fired Gen. Douglas MacArthur
during the Korean oonfllcl.
. In point of public reaction,
these three decisions probably
were the most unpopular
things he did during the seven
years and nine months he
served as president. But
Truman never publicly

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AfXJStle of "Benevalmt Assimilation"
It was gold I'Crsus sil\'Cr in the election of i896
as gold standard-hearer Willi:tm McKinley spoke
cmnpnsc:dly and consen·atil'dy from the front porch
nf his hnncym&lt;Hin hmne in Canton, Ohio, to large
cmwds brought to him hy cxmrsion trains, while
sih·erite Democrat William Jennings Rryan roamed
the nat.iun in a ho,rtatnry, fist·pounding, whistle-stop
campatgn.
McKinley's audiences were ddil'ered partly prepaid by. the $.1 million campaign fund raised hy
wealthy industrialist ~\iark Hanl]a.
Bryan's famous "Cross of &lt;inld" speech had
•tirrc:d the Democratic (onl'~ntion delegates ro a
•
fll.'tr-n:ligi&lt;•us frenzy, and his glih diatribes against
rhc lll&lt;mcylxl interests and trust s kept his adherents
•n11111.•d In a fercrish pitch . llur .\ 1d\ inkv's implied I
:;I ~sc ~,f "a full dinner pnil" app:trcn'tly carried
' 'ftlllRi \W18ht, fnr he won cusiil• 11·ith 65% nf the
--.....1\lutes,
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.\h:l\ihi~'Y Md a lnng rc~nnl nf :tmhil':tlcncy nn

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Potsdam Conference In 1945: Josef Stella, President Truman, Winston Chu..,blll.
.

"Pray for me," he asked the
newsmen.
On his 61st birihday, May 8,
1945, he proclaimed vic·
torr. over Germany; endin~ the
warinEurope.Butjust95days
after he had taken office,
mankind entered a new era
which outmolded the type of
warfare th&lt;tt had defeated the
Nazis. .
The Atomic Age was born
July 16, 1945, with the esplosion
of an experimental bomb on
the desert at Alamogordo,
N.M. It was christened with
Truman's decision to use the
new weapon on Japan in order
to speed an end to World War
New in the White House.

wavered in the belief that they wrote a lt!tter while President
were the right things.
threatening a music critic with
Truman also was a political · bodily harm for being unkind tci
leader, the devoted head of the the singing voice of his
Democratic party while Presi· daughter, Margaret.
dent and Its elder spokesmanThe music critic had hit
but occasional caustic ob· Truman where it hurt most-in
server -afterward.
his family. For Truman was a
He rose from precinct devoted family man, and he
captain in brawling Kansas · would not tolerate any asper.
City, through county office and sions'on his wife, Bess, whom
the U.S. · Senate to the most he called "'The Boss," or on his
important public office in the daughter.
nation. He loved politics and
And Truman, a Baptist, was
played it well.
·
a religious man. He once said
in a television interview, after
Berated Critics
He was a colorful pUbUc he had left the White House,
figure, lojl. He wore gaudy that religion had sustained him
sports shirts on his vacations in in many of his more difficult
Key West, Fla., he played the periods.
piano, he wore steel-r;imqled
. Ato~~ Age Bem
glasses, he spoke with a pep.
Truman was vice president
pery, Midwestern twang, and on the mOI'Iling of April 12,
he took long walks in the early 1945. At 7:09 that night, he was
morning hours.
president, liaving been sworn
He hurled invective at some in at a hastily Improvised
of his critics, once referring to ceremony in the cabinet room
a columnist as an "s.o.b." He of the White House.

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PRESIDENTS OF MANIFEST DESTINY

Twenty·fiflh President William McKinloy
(first Administration: March 4, 1897.Morch 3, 1901)

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by Patterson and Patri,k

the golil/silver issue and wanted to base his campaign
on his advocacy pf the ·high pr(itective tariff.
However, when Bryan came out so dramatically
· for free silver, McKinley realized that "sound
money," not the tariff, was the attention-grabbing
matter.
Following 10 years of law practice, a wealthy
marriage, the loss of his two daughters in childh&lt;xH.I
and the subsequent invalidism nf his wife, 14 years
in Congress, two terms as governor of Ohio, a weak
presidential candidacy in 1888, a strong one in 1892
and a winning one in 1896, William McKinley st&lt;x&gt;d
on the Capitol steps in Washington's bright but
chilly sunshine to ddivcr the nation's 32nd inaugural
address.
His rambling 3, 967 -word speech placed special
emphasis on a policy of noninterference in foreign
affairs, and he was so concerned over the $1 H6 million debt incurred during Cleveland's second tcrrn
that he called Congress into immediate special session to "put the government upon a sound financial
' basts.
. "
amI econnmtc
.\1eKinley stx&gt;n would he pressured into a decision which caused him to fail to aehie1·c either of
these laudable aims.
Pro-war pmpaganda by newspaper publishers
William R. Hearsra nd Joseph Pulitzer aroused war
fervor and kept it high hy "yellow journalism" gim!lticks. Then it\ February , lH\18, the battles hip
\1:tine hlew up in Hal'ana llarhor, killing UiO seamen ami lxxJSting the war mania to feverish intensity. Six weeks later, thl' President asked Congress
to declare war.
·
,\s wars go, the Spanish-.'\merican War was one
of mankind's great mism:uches. Thus, in his second
annua·l report nine months later, President McKinley told Congress that the St:trs and Stripes were
\\':t\'lng &lt;.)\'e~ Cuha, Pt~c!to Rico and the Phil ippine~
hy the stgmng of the I rcaty of Paris.
The .\t~t~rican Flag was not ~ying tranquilly
ol'cr the Phtltppmes, hml·c,·cr, because the Filipinos
wultl sec ltttk atl~· antage in CKchanging a Spanish
for an Amcric:tn master. Many prominent ,\mericans, including members of McKinley's Cabinet,
agreed that the Filipinus should he left alone. The
President did not agree.
"The currents of destiny arc flowing through
the hc.arts of the :\merican people," he said.
,
Wtthout waiting t&lt;•r Senate ratification nf the
treaty- it iinally passGd with a single rote to
'span'-Prcs idcnt \1cKinlcy , prodaimin~ an .\mcri·
can policy of "hcncl'&lt;llent assimilatinn, ' onlered a
ll)i\itary forct to tdkc possession uf the Philippines.
Shteldcd hy :\merican armor, .\mcrican ltnpcri•tl·
ism h~d im':t&lt;k'd .\sia.

n.

The United States .held a
monopoly on the weapon, but
Truman offered to turn over its
secrets to the world for control
under an international bodyonly, however, if there were
"fool'{lroof" safeguards.

Russia rejected this condilion, while working diligently
to perfect an atomic weapon of
i.ts own. On Sept. 23, 1949,
Truman announced to the
world that . the Soviets had
· sucreeded.
Nuclear Gap Narrows
The following January, he
authorized U.S. scientists to go
ahead with development .of the
hydrogen bomb. But, only a
short while after Truman left
office, the Russians caught up
on the H-bomb, too. ,
This narrowing of the
nuclear gap between the
United States and Russia was
only one of the major setbacks
to the free world duririg the
1\'uman administration. There
also was the fall of China to the
Communists, a development
for which Truman was scorchingly bl;lmed by his foes.
The charge that Truman lost
China became one ol the big

Christmas lull
prodding peace
KEY BISCAYNE, Fla.
(UPI) - President Nixon
observed Christmas In
seclusion amid growing signs
today that he has extended a
holi!lay bombing pause to ']ll'od
Hanoi back to the peace table.
Nixon, operating with a
skeleton staff at his festively
decorated baylront villa, has
studiously refrained from any
public statement on last week's
escalation' of the air war over
Vietnam.
But there were indications of
'
.
behind-the-scenes
diplomacy
to get the secret Paris peace
talks, broken off on Dec. 13,
back on tlie track.
Some officials were saying
the stalled peace negotiations
may resume ''sooner than you
expect." In Moscow, Premie!'
Alexei N. Kosygin Monday told
Hanoi's Ambassador Vo Thuc
Dong that the Soviet Union
"expects" the United States to
Immediately halt bombing of
North Vietnam and sign a
cease-fire accord.
No Comment
· But the Florida White House
had no comment on KosYgin's
statement, reported by the
Tass news agency, nor would II
discuss reports of a prolonga.
lion of the truce in the born·
bardment above the 2oth
Parallel in North VIetnam.
The President and Mrs.
Nixon celebrated Christmas
privately, opening their gilts in
the morning arqund a gUttering eight.foot Scotch pine
tree in the living room. They
also took turno talking to their
two daughters ard sons-In-law,
Tricia and Edward Cox and
Julie ana David Eisenhower

who telephoned from Athens,

~~::.~ where they are vaca-

Aides declined to describe
the gifts the Nlxons exchanged.
·Nixon went tttating in the
afternoon on Biscayne Bay
with his close friend and next •
door neighbor, banker Charles
G. "Bebe" Rebozo.
R~turns to Office
Then he returned to his office
where he got on the phone t'o
wish a "Merry Christmas" to .
hii.s brother, Donald Nixon of .
Newport Beach, Calif., and
several friends, including Gov.
Ronald Reagan of California;
Secretary of State WiUiam P.
Rogers; former presidential
aide Robert Finch and two of
his political advisers in the last
election-lormer Secretary of
Treasury John B. Connally and
Clark MacGregor, who
directed the Conunittee to Re·
elect the President.
With Rebozo as their guest,
the Nixons sat down in the
evening to a roast turkey
dinner with all the trimmings.
For the third day in a row
there were small anti-war
demonstrations in front of the
presidential compound.
Protesters sang "Silent Night"
and carried placards reading:
"HaU to Dick the War King"
and "Peace Now. u
Nixon alao moved on several
fronts over the holiday
weekend to step up aid to
earthquake-stricken Nic·
aragua. He instructed his
Cabinet to make an "all out
effort" to assist the victims as ,
relief teams and supplies were
being rushed to devastated
Managua.

'

issues of the 1952 presidential;
· campaign, which the Dem()o
crats lost alter 20 years in
power.
Truman acted swiftly on
Korea. He lis\ld his executive
authorlzy and did not ~sk
Congress for ·a declaration of'
war. He ordered air, sea and
ground support for the South
Koreans.
He placed the . aggression
before the United Nations for
action.
Truman Doctrine
The decision of Korea had
b~n made fundamentally
three years earlier.
On March 12, 1947, Truman
enunciated to Congress a basic
change in foreign policy.
This was what has become
known as the "Truman Doc·
trine."
It meant specifically that
instead of abstaining from
world pallUcs in peacetime, the
United Sta)es became an ac·
live participant.
On ·june 5, 1947, Gen. George
c. Marshall, whom Truman
had appointed Secretary ·of
State, made a speech at
Harvard University in which
he outlined a plan for U.S.
assistance in the economic
recovery of Western Europe.

Benefits
3
p
t
up
C e
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COLUMBUS (UPI) - State
workmen's compensation
will
increase
benefits
automatically by 3 per cent
Jan. 1 to keep in line with the
cost of living index, Gov. John
J. Gilligan said Saturday.
It Is the first increase in ben·
eflts to injured : workers and
their famllles not requiring
specific approval by the Ohio
legislature.
Gilligan signed into law last
September a landmark btU
providing for the adjustment Of
maximum rates of compensatIon on an automatic basis to
coincide with the rate of Increase in the cost of llying Index. 1
"Injured workers and their
families had lor many years
been forced to sustain them·
selves on a small, fixed income
while prices at the supermark·
et and department stores have
soared," Gilligan said.
"Even though the maximum
benefits are well below what I
orginally requested, the Income of the injured worker will
at least keep up with the rising
cost of living," be said,
Temporary total benefits will
bx:reue from $84 weekly to
$88.52 for the first 12 lreektt of
disability, Tempot:ary and per·
manent partial benellbt will increase from flO to $72.10 week·
ly.

0

It became known BB the

Marshall Plan.
On April 4, 1949, the Atlantic
Pact, establishing the North
Atlantic Tt·eaty Organization,
was signed in Washmgton by
the foreign ministers of 12
nations.
Goes to War
Harry S Truman was born
May · 8, 1884, in an unpretentious franie house '" the
little southwestern Missouri
town of Lamar. His parents,
John and '!!{artha Young
Truman lived a normal farm·
boy Ufe; forming his chores and
attending school. .
Between chores and sChool,
Truman learned to play the
plano-at his mother's besistence-and became an accom·
plished amateur musician.
Since his parents could not
afford to send him to college,
he went to work after graduating from high school. He
worked for $3 per week in a
drug store. Then he worked in
the circulation department of
the Kansas City Star, was
timekeeper for a constrqction
gang, and worked as a bank
clerk.
He enlisted in the Na'li'"al
Guard. And when the Umted
States entered World War I, he
uas commissioned as a first
lieutenant and later became
captain of Battery D, 129th
Field Artillery, 36th Division.
Enten Poilllcti'
Returnins from. France,:he
held a majoc's~mmission' In
the reserve. and later was a
reserve colonel.
On June 28, 1919, Truman
married his childhood sweet.
heart, Bess Wallace, the
daughter of one of the oldest
and most prominent families in
the area.
Friends regarded the
Truman marriage as ideal.
The couple had one child, their
daughter, Margaret, who was
born in 1924.
.
Truman entered politics and
won election as a member of
the county co~ county
admlnlstraUve body simlbtr to
county commissioners In other
states.
Having made his. record in
the county court, Truman
looked toward new fields. He
' entered the U.S. senatorial
race in ill34 and won. He was
reelected In 1940, Truman's
greatest ' fame before he
became president aroae from
his work as chairman of the
Senate committee on national
defense. The group came to be
called the Truman War Investigating Committee, and It
kept a cloae watch on war
production to guard against
profiteering and faulty work·
manship.
TWO TO COMPETE
UNIONDAlE, N.Y. (UPI)Metropolitan New York
Knlgbbt of Colwnbua Meet
Director J8111«1 E. Foley announct!!l Monday that Olympic
gold medalists Dive WotUe
and Rod Milburn have · accepted lilvltatioits to com'te
In the meet, schedule&amp; for ·
Saturday nltlht, Jan. 13, at
Nassau Coiilewn.
Wottle;the 8IJO.rneter 'lrinner
at Munich and world record-holder
at
that
dlatance in I: 44.3, will
compe'e in lhe 1,000.
yard run, Milburn, l!Old·
medal wlmer In the wotltf

record-tying time ot

u·.2

, Hconds In tbe llOometer

lll!'d1el, wiD lppell' In tha 16meter burdlea.

WHERE ECONOMY O.RIGINATES/i

Full
Cut,

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YOU!

A&amp;P POLICY:

AIWI)'I do Whit 11 '""'-t ond lolr lor Mill customer.

RAINCHECK:

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U.S. GOY'T INSPECTED

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RIB HALF PORK LOIN

'BCMCiofi

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3-Breast Qlrs. w/backs
3-Pkg. Giblets
3..,...Win~:s
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Pork Roast STYLE
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Fresh Picnics • • • •
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F'tesh Ham •• • •
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Pork Chops •• •
WHOLE. DRESSED
Rainbow Trout • • •
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Boneless Sirloin Tip • • lb. 1 .1·
BEEF ROAST
$4 l9 . .
Boneless Rump Roast • 1 I
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$4 39 I '
Boneless Top Round • • ,. . 1· 1:
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A&amp;P ottera en unconditional mont)'•blck IUirlntll. No 1n1tter
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Holiday Store Hours!
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CLOSED SUNDAY DEC. 31st

AND MONDAY JAN. 1st

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Soft Weve~~~~~E

$1
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Liquid Dttergeonl

OVERNIGHT

Pampers
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47c
Margarine • • • .~~ow~
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With This Coupon On
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DETERGENT

Chiffon Liquid • •
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Rice Chex ...•.............. .,.... •••·
Corn Chex . • •... , .. ..... . ............ 44-:
Su~:ar Twin
Replacement . , •·••· ..1. 3; c
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lb.89C -r-.......1• Loin
with purchase of
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ptri.blt Item at llie 11me 1ptcl1l price •.

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It 1n advertised special Ia ' hlr sold out 11k the Man•aer for a
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price the followlna we1k. Or if you wllh wt'll &amp;lVI '10U 1 com·

'

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t - The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. 27, 1972

1- The Dilly Sentinel, Middleoort-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. '1:1, 197:: ·

Trulttan: &lt;:;ommon Man, with
abilities recognized by everyone
I,

I

as uncommon .

TRUMAN
HIGHLIGHTS

By Ualted Press International and consequence, not only for
The abilities of Harry S the nation but the world as

r
•

i

Ii
~

,..,

r

Truman were anything but
common.' But , to his courr
trytrien and the world be came
to symboijze the potential,
when history demands it, of the
common man.
The "man of Independence"
molded the destiny of the
United Stetes and the world
with unprecedent ed
decisions- the atomic born·
bing of Japan, the Marshall
plan, the Berlin blockade
airlift, the dispatch of U.S.
.troops to Korea-and many
more.
"I did what had to be done,"
he once said.
. That is the way the fiery little
Missourian· wanted to be
remembered.
Fate permitted · Truman to
outlive most of those with
whom he shared a place in
history-Stalin, Churchill, de
Gau 11 e , Mac A r I h ur,
Eisenhower and even Thomas
E. Dewey, whom he defeated in
the 1948 presidential elections
In one of the most stunning
upsets in U.S. Political historv.
Favorite Epllapb
He once said that a man
could have no be~ter epitaph
than one he saw l(lscrlbed on a
frontier grave in Arizona. It
uld:
"Here lies Jack Willlams;
He done his damndest."
·
Truman truly was a man of
Independence. It w~ his way
cti life as well 811 his hometown.
He was vice president the
clay that Franklin D. Roosevelt
led on AJI'II 12, 1945, and
faund htm If holding the reins
of the mlghlielt nation in the
wwldlnoneoftbemostcritical

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Truman won re-election in
lMI, defeaU. Dewey in what
1110111 call the biggest political
..,_In !Utory.
GaYe ~bOrders
~ 'l;'nlmall - the 33rd pres!dent cti the United StateS and
the 321111 manto bold the office.
Be served WJtll Jan. 20, 1953,
the ~ay Gen. Dwight D.
, Eilenhower succeeded bini in
the White House.
During his yean~' af decision
.

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

well, he gave the order to drop
the atomic bomb that ended the
war with Japan in the Pacific.
He gave the g~head lor the
development of the hydrogen
bomb, called Russia's blu!f In
Berlin and ordered an airlift to
keep the city supplied with food
and medicine despite a Soviet
blockade.
His most difficult decision,
Truman said, was ordering
troops into Korea in a "pollee
action" that kept Communist
troops from advancing past the
~ parallel.
Had Enemies
He enunciated the Truman
Doctrine to keep Russia out of
southern Europe, suppot:ted
the Marshall Plan for keeping
Russia out of Western Europe, .
presided at the birth of the
United Nations and was a key
mover in creation of the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization
(NATO).
Truman devised the Point
Four pian of technical assistance to underdeveloped
nations, serving not only as
commander -in-chief of the
u.s. armed forces, but as the
chief executor of the nation's
foreign policy.
Truman had enemies. He
was the object of an
assassination attempt during
his presidency. He had many
critics who disagreed with him,
quarreled with him and
Fidiculed him at times.
But nobOdy ever a&lt;:Clised
Truman of not making decl·
sions.
Tbree Unpopular Decisions
History will remember, too,
that he referred to the Alger
Hiss case as a ''red herring,"
that he once seized the steel
industry in an action which the
Supreme Court ruled illegal,
and tllat he unceremoniously
fired Gen. Douglas MacArthur
during the Korean oonfllcl.
. In point of public reaction,
these three decisions probably
were the most unpopular
things he did during the seven
years and nine months he
served as president. But
Truman never publicly

......·....

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AfXJStle of "Benevalmt Assimilation"
It was gold I'Crsus sil\'Cr in the election of i896
as gold standard-hearer Willi:tm McKinley spoke
cmnpnsc:dly and consen·atil'dy from the front porch
nf his hnncym&lt;Hin hmne in Canton, Ohio, to large
cmwds brought to him hy cxmrsion trains, while
sih·erite Democrat William Jennings Rryan roamed
the nat.iun in a ho,rtatnry, fist·pounding, whistle-stop
campatgn.
McKinley's audiences were ddil'ered partly prepaid by. the $.1 million campaign fund raised hy
wealthy industrialist ~\iark Hanl]a.
Bryan's famous "Cross of &lt;inld" speech had
•tirrc:d the Democratic (onl'~ntion delegates ro a
•
fll.'tr-n:ligi&lt;•us frenzy, and his glih diatribes against
rhc lll&lt;mcylxl interests and trust s kept his adherents
•n11111.•d In a fercrish pitch . llur .\ 1d\ inkv's implied I
:;I ~sc ~,f "a full dinner pnil" app:trcn'tly carried
' 'ftlllRi \W18ht, fnr he won cusiil• 11·ith 65% nf the
--.....1\lutes,
·
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Potsdam Conference In 1945: Josef Stella, President Truman, Winston Chu..,blll.
.

"Pray for me," he asked the
newsmen.
On his 61st birihday, May 8,
1945, he proclaimed vic·
torr. over Germany; endin~ the
warinEurope.Butjust95days
after he had taken office,
mankind entered a new era
which outmolded the type of
warfare th&lt;tt had defeated the
Nazis. .
The Atomic Age was born
July 16, 1945, with the esplosion
of an experimental bomb on
the desert at Alamogordo,
N.M. It was christened with
Truman's decision to use the
new weapon on Japan in order
to speed an end to World War
New in the White House.

wavered in the belief that they wrote a lt!tter while President
were the right things.
threatening a music critic with
Truman also was a political · bodily harm for being unkind tci
leader, the devoted head of the the singing voice of his
Democratic party while Presi· daughter, Margaret.
dent and Its elder spokesmanThe music critic had hit
but occasional caustic ob· Truman where it hurt most-in
server -afterward.
his family. For Truman was a
He rose from precinct devoted family man, and he
captain in brawling Kansas · would not tolerate any asper.
City, through county office and sions'on his wife, Bess, whom
the U.S. · Senate to the most he called "'The Boss," or on his
important public office in the daughter.
nation. He loved politics and
And Truman, a Baptist, was
played it well.
·
a religious man. He once said
in a television interview, after
Berated Critics
He was a colorful pUbUc he had left the White House,
figure, lojl. He wore gaudy that religion had sustained him
sports shirts on his vacations in in many of his more difficult
Key West, Fla., he played the periods.
piano, he wore steel-r;imqled
. Ato~~ Age Bem
glasses, he spoke with a pep.
Truman was vice president
pery, Midwestern twang, and on the mOI'Iling of April 12,
he took long walks in the early 1945. At 7:09 that night, he was
morning hours.
president, liaving been sworn
He hurled invective at some in at a hastily Improvised
of his critics, once referring to ceremony in the cabinet room
a columnist as an "s.o.b." He of the White House.

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PRESIDENTS OF MANIFEST DESTINY

Twenty·fiflh President William McKinloy
(first Administration: March 4, 1897.Morch 3, 1901)

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by Patterson and Patri,k

the golil/silver issue and wanted to base his campaign
on his advocacy pf the ·high pr(itective tariff.
However, when Bryan came out so dramatically
· for free silver, McKinley realized that "sound
money," not the tariff, was the attention-grabbing
matter.
Following 10 years of law practice, a wealthy
marriage, the loss of his two daughters in childh&lt;xH.I
and the subsequent invalidism nf his wife, 14 years
in Congress, two terms as governor of Ohio, a weak
presidential candidacy in 1888, a strong one in 1892
and a winning one in 1896, William McKinley st&lt;x&gt;d
on the Capitol steps in Washington's bright but
chilly sunshine to ddivcr the nation's 32nd inaugural
address.
His rambling 3, 967 -word speech placed special
emphasis on a policy of noninterference in foreign
affairs, and he was so concerned over the $1 H6 million debt incurred during Cleveland's second tcrrn
that he called Congress into immediate special session to "put the government upon a sound financial
' basts.
. "
amI econnmtc
.\1eKinley stx&gt;n would he pressured into a decision which caused him to fail to aehie1·c either of
these laudable aims.
Pro-war pmpaganda by newspaper publishers
William R. Hearsra nd Joseph Pulitzer aroused war
fervor and kept it high hy "yellow journalism" gim!lticks. Then it\ February , lH\18, the battles hip
\1:tine hlew up in Hal'ana llarhor, killing UiO seamen ami lxxJSting the war mania to feverish intensity. Six weeks later, thl' President asked Congress
to declare war.
·
,\s wars go, the Spanish-.'\merican War was one
of mankind's great mism:uches. Thus, in his second
annua·l report nine months later, President McKinley told Congress that the St:trs and Stripes were
\\':t\'lng &lt;.)\'e~ Cuha, Pt~c!to Rico and the Phil ippine~
hy the stgmng of the I rcaty of Paris.
The .\t~t~rican Flag was not ~ying tranquilly
ol'cr the Phtltppmes, hml·c,·cr, because the Filipinos
wultl sec ltttk atl~· antage in CKchanging a Spanish
for an Amcric:tn master. Many prominent ,\mericans, including members of McKinley's Cabinet,
agreed that the Filipinus should he left alone. The
President did not agree.
"The currents of destiny arc flowing through
the hc.arts of the :\merican people," he said.
,
Wtthout waiting t&lt;•r Senate ratification nf the
treaty- it iinally passGd with a single rote to
'span'-Prcs idcnt \1cKinlcy , prodaimin~ an .\mcri·
can policy of "hcncl'&lt;llent assimilatinn, ' onlered a
ll)i\itary forct to tdkc possession uf the Philippines.
Shteldcd hy :\merican armor, .\mcrican ltnpcri•tl·
ism h~d im':t&lt;k'd .\sia.

n.

The United States .held a
monopoly on the weapon, but
Truman offered to turn over its
secrets to the world for control
under an international bodyonly, however, if there were
"fool'{lroof" safeguards.

Russia rejected this condilion, while working diligently
to perfect an atomic weapon of
i.ts own. On Sept. 23, 1949,
Truman announced to the
world that . the Soviets had
· sucreeded.
Nuclear Gap Narrows
The following January, he
authorized U.S. scientists to go
ahead with development .of the
hydrogen bomb. But, only a
short while after Truman left
office, the Russians caught up
on the H-bomb, too. ,
This narrowing of the
nuclear gap between the
United States and Russia was
only one of the major setbacks
to the free world duririg the
1\'uman administration. There
also was the fall of China to the
Communists, a development
for which Truman was scorchingly bl;lmed by his foes.
The charge that Truman lost
China became one ol the big

Christmas lull
prodding peace
KEY BISCAYNE, Fla.
(UPI) - President Nixon
observed Christmas In
seclusion amid growing signs
today that he has extended a
holi!lay bombing pause to ']ll'od
Hanoi back to the peace table.
Nixon, operating with a
skeleton staff at his festively
decorated baylront villa, has
studiously refrained from any
public statement on last week's
escalation' of the air war over
Vietnam.
But there were indications of
'
.
behind-the-scenes
diplomacy
to get the secret Paris peace
talks, broken off on Dec. 13,
back on tlie track.
Some officials were saying
the stalled peace negotiations
may resume ''sooner than you
expect." In Moscow, Premie!'
Alexei N. Kosygin Monday told
Hanoi's Ambassador Vo Thuc
Dong that the Soviet Union
"expects" the United States to
Immediately halt bombing of
North Vietnam and sign a
cease-fire accord.
No Comment
· But the Florida White House
had no comment on KosYgin's
statement, reported by the
Tass news agency, nor would II
discuss reports of a prolonga.
lion of the truce in the born·
bardment above the 2oth
Parallel in North VIetnam.
The President and Mrs.
Nixon celebrated Christmas
privately, opening their gilts in
the morning arqund a gUttering eight.foot Scotch pine
tree in the living room. They
also took turno talking to their
two daughters ard sons-In-law,
Tricia and Edward Cox and
Julie ana David Eisenhower

who telephoned from Athens,

~~::.~ where they are vaca-

Aides declined to describe
the gifts the Nlxons exchanged.
·Nixon went tttating in the
afternoon on Biscayne Bay
with his close friend and next •
door neighbor, banker Charles
G. "Bebe" Rebozo.
R~turns to Office
Then he returned to his office
where he got on the phone t'o
wish a "Merry Christmas" to .
hii.s brother, Donald Nixon of .
Newport Beach, Calif., and
several friends, including Gov.
Ronald Reagan of California;
Secretary of State WiUiam P.
Rogers; former presidential
aide Robert Finch and two of
his political advisers in the last
election-lormer Secretary of
Treasury John B. Connally and
Clark MacGregor, who
directed the Conunittee to Re·
elect the President.
With Rebozo as their guest,
the Nixons sat down in the
evening to a roast turkey
dinner with all the trimmings.
For the third day in a row
there were small anti-war
demonstrations in front of the
presidential compound.
Protesters sang "Silent Night"
and carried placards reading:
"HaU to Dick the War King"
and "Peace Now. u
Nixon alao moved on several
fronts over the holiday
weekend to step up aid to
earthquake-stricken Nic·
aragua. He instructed his
Cabinet to make an "all out
effort" to assist the victims as ,
relief teams and supplies were
being rushed to devastated
Managua.

'

issues of the 1952 presidential;
· campaign, which the Dem()o
crats lost alter 20 years in
power.
Truman acted swiftly on
Korea. He lis\ld his executive
authorlzy and did not ~sk
Congress for ·a declaration of'
war. He ordered air, sea and
ground support for the South
Koreans.
He placed the . aggression
before the United Nations for
action.
Truman Doctrine
The decision of Korea had
b~n made fundamentally
three years earlier.
On March 12, 1947, Truman
enunciated to Congress a basic
change in foreign policy.
This was what has become
known as the "Truman Doc·
trine."
It meant specifically that
instead of abstaining from
world pallUcs in peacetime, the
United Sta)es became an ac·
live participant.
On ·june 5, 1947, Gen. George
c. Marshall, whom Truman
had appointed Secretary ·of
State, made a speech at
Harvard University in which
he outlined a plan for U.S.
assistance in the economic
recovery of Western Europe.

Benefits
3
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COLUMBUS (UPI) - State
workmen's compensation
will
increase
benefits
automatically by 3 per cent
Jan. 1 to keep in line with the
cost of living index, Gov. John
J. Gilligan said Saturday.
It Is the first increase in ben·
eflts to injured : workers and
their famllles not requiring
specific approval by the Ohio
legislature.
Gilligan signed into law last
September a landmark btU
providing for the adjustment Of
maximum rates of compensatIon on an automatic basis to
coincide with the rate of Increase in the cost of llying Index. 1
"Injured workers and their
families had lor many years
been forced to sustain them·
selves on a small, fixed income
while prices at the supermark·
et and department stores have
soared," Gilligan said.
"Even though the maximum
benefits are well below what I
orginally requested, the Income of the injured worker will
at least keep up with the rising
cost of living," be said,
Temporary total benefits will
bx:reue from $84 weekly to
$88.52 for the first 12 lreektt of
disability, Tempot:ary and per·
manent partial benellbt will increase from flO to $72.10 week·
ly.

0

It became known BB the

Marshall Plan.
On April 4, 1949, the Atlantic
Pact, establishing the North
Atlantic Tt·eaty Organization,
was signed in Washmgton by
the foreign ministers of 12
nations.
Goes to War
Harry S Truman was born
May · 8, 1884, in an unpretentious franie house '" the
little southwestern Missouri
town of Lamar. His parents,
John and '!!{artha Young
Truman lived a normal farm·
boy Ufe; forming his chores and
attending school. .
Between chores and sChool,
Truman learned to play the
plano-at his mother's besistence-and became an accom·
plished amateur musician.
Since his parents could not
afford to send him to college,
he went to work after graduating from high school. He
worked for $3 per week in a
drug store. Then he worked in
the circulation department of
the Kansas City Star, was
timekeeper for a constrqction
gang, and worked as a bank
clerk.
He enlisted in the Na'li'"al
Guard. And when the Umted
States entered World War I, he
uas commissioned as a first
lieutenant and later became
captain of Battery D, 129th
Field Artillery, 36th Division.
Enten Poilllcti'
Returnins from. France,:he
held a majoc's~mmission' In
the reserve. and later was a
reserve colonel.
On June 28, 1919, Truman
married his childhood sweet.
heart, Bess Wallace, the
daughter of one of the oldest
and most prominent families in
the area.
Friends regarded the
Truman marriage as ideal.
The couple had one child, their
daughter, Margaret, who was
born in 1924.
.
Truman entered politics and
won election as a member of
the county co~ county
admlnlstraUve body simlbtr to
county commissioners In other
states.
Having made his. record in
the county court, Truman
looked toward new fields. He
' entered the U.S. senatorial
race in ill34 and won. He was
reelected In 1940, Truman's
greatest ' fame before he
became president aroae from
his work as chairman of the
Senate committee on national
defense. The group came to be
called the Truman War Investigating Committee, and It
kept a cloae watch on war
production to guard against
profiteering and faulty work·
manship.
TWO TO COMPETE
UNIONDAlE, N.Y. (UPI)Metropolitan New York
Knlgbbt of Colwnbua Meet
Director J8111«1 E. Foley announct!!l Monday that Olympic
gold medalists Dive WotUe
and Rod Milburn have · accepted lilvltatioits to com'te
In the meet, schedule&amp; for ·
Saturday nltlht, Jan. 13, at
Nassau Coiilewn.
Wottle;the 8IJO.rneter 'lrinner
at Munich and world record-holder
at
that
dlatance in I: 44.3, will
compe'e in lhe 1,000.
yard run, Milburn, l!Old·
medal wlmer In the wotltf

record-tying time ot

u·.2

, Hconds In tbe llOometer

lll!'d1el, wiD lppell' In tha 16meter burdlea.

WHERE ECONOMY O.RIGINATES/i

Full
Cut,

• • • FOR

Bone

In

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YOU!

A&amp;P POLICY:

AIWI)'I do Whit 11 '""'-t ond lolr lor Mill customer.

RAINCHECK:

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U.S. GOY'T INSPECTED

·I

RIB HALF PORK LOIN

'BCMCiofi

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3-Leg Qtrs. w/ backs
3-Breast Qlrs. w/backs
3-Pkg. Giblets
3..,...Win~:s
·

BUTT
Pork Roast STYLE
• • •
SEMI-BONELESS
Fresh Picnics • • • •
WHOLE OR SHANK HALF
F'tesh Ham •• • •
BONELESS
WHOLE
Fresh Ham &amp;~
•
CENTER .RIB CUT OR SIRLOIN
Pork Chops •• •
WHOLE. DRESSED
Rainbow Trout • • •
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59c ~~~: ~&amp;P S
Jb.79c

BEEF ROAST

Boneless Sirloin Tip • • lb. 1 .1·
BEEF ROAST
$4 l9 . .
Boneless Rump Roast • 1 I
BEEF ROAST
$4 39 I '
Boneless Top Round • • ,. . 1· 1:
3-LB. PKG. oR LGR.
1
Ground Chuck • •
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SUPER-RJGHJ
C
Corned Beef Brisket

lb.

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lb,'129

FRESH, LEAN

lb.

GUARANTEE:
A&amp;P ottera en unconditional mont)'•blck IUirlntll. No 1n1tter
whet it 11, no matter who makt' It II A6P 11111 It A&amp;.P prantets

it.

Holiday Store Hours!
Wed.·Thurs.-Fri.
9 a.m. to 9 p.m.

CLOSED SUNDAY DEC. 31st

AND MONDAY JAN. 1st

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ASSORTED AND WHITE

Soft Weve~~~~~E

$1
00 ~~:~
4
l·roU

pkp.

·

Coupon

Liquid Dttergeonl

OVERNIGHT

Pampers
·~
47c
Margarine • • • .~~ow~
!. $279
I House •iJ
Maxim Clll• · . •
hoxof

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39

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Co11pot1

6ood Thrv Sot .. Otc. lOth
At All AlP wtO'o-Colt. Div.

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At All AlP WEO'o-Colt. p;,,

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box

69c .1~1:

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At All A&amp;P WEO 't-Colt. Div.

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INSTAKT

......

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.............. sic

.... 1-·-39c
Drln~ " " - · ... 65c
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Save 20'

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All

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Wll1o

......

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&amp;oH Thru S.t., 0... lOth
At All"" \VEO'o-Coh. Oiv,

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89c

With This Coupon On
2-lb. Carton of Cop'n John
WIOh
Tllh

CoiiPO"

6oo4 Thru Set., Doc. lOth
At All A_, WEO't-Colt. Div.

Cod or.Fiounder
Breaded Portions
6ood Thru S•t., Doc. lOth
At All AlP WEO'o-Cols. Plv,

DETERGENT

Chiffon Liquid • •
MARGARINE
Fleischmann's • .
INSTANT
Folgera' Coffee •
VACUUM PACKED
Folger's COffee •
I

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lj,

lib.
pk~.

'

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•

Wheat Chu . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. " .... ""'· 3lc
Rice Chex ...•.............. .,.... •••·
Corn Chex . • •... , .. ..... . ............ 44-:
Su~:ar Twin
Replacement . , •·••· ..1. 3; c
Nabisco
. . . . . . . 3 tv, .... - · · \li.UU

.-c

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( ... II·~~~ 1•'1 JIH .u~l ! l' " "' h

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'$418 'II
lb.
1 1
$4 39 l l

lb.89C -r-.......1• Loin
with purchase of
Half Pork Loin Boneless Bottom Round

.

I.

lb.
BEEF ROAST

I

I

3--Necks

ptri.blt Item at llie 11me 1ptcl1l price •.

'I

koaaf,
lb.

It 1n advertised special Ia ' hlr sold out 11k the Man•aer for a
Relncheck. It entitles you to the 11me Item 1t the .,,. tpetlll
price the followlna we1k. Or if you wllh wt'll &amp;lVI '10U 1 com·

'

..

�r 10- The Daily Sentinel,f.l:iddleport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. Z7, 1972

.

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KOSCOT KOSMETICS ~WIGS .
SPECIALS MONTHLY.
PHONE HELEN JANE
BROWN , MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO 992-5113.
12-J-tfc
. - - - - - - - --

LEGAL NOTICE
RESOLUTION

A Resolution to ESTABLISH

A SPECIAL FUND KNOWN AS
THE FEDERAL GENDRAL
REVE NUE SHARING TRUST
FUND

j

Be it Resolved by the
Trustees of Olive Township as
follOW$ :

t

Cong ress has .ena cted the State
and Local Fiscal Ass tstan~e Act .
of 1972 prov i ding a system of
general revenue sharing w ith
states and units of local

f

OF
QUAliTY

For Sale

Sec . 1. That whereas,

the

government. and

Business Services . .

·Motor Ct.

ON P~NTS&amp; Jf;"NS

''

1971 CHEVROL•ETCAPRICE
13995
4-door, new car title &amp; balance of warranty, covert' Color
with blk. vinyl roof, tinted glass, factory air, !root &amp; rear
guards, rad io&amp;' rear speaker. whitewall tires. Nice and
clean. Retail 14860. Priced to move .
1971 CHEVROLET BEL AIR
ll89S
4-door, local I owner, low mileage car, beige finish with
brown v'lnyl top,_vinyl Interior, factory air, 350-englne.
power steering &amp; brakes, Ox, bumpers, wh. covers, · ll~e
.. new w.w fires, ra.dio &amp; other 11ne accessories. A sharp car
&amp; one you would like.

Pomeroy Motor co.
OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.

Buy 2'
....._..,.;;Pairs

).

.J·

FRIOJi •.

The best buy in the area.
Have slacko &amp; jeans for the
whoto family. Save OneThird.
. __
:9 • _
POMEROY
··
6'ill JackW.Carse,y,Mgr.•
·
Phono991·118t. ,'

'

._l ----------"--.---,--::----------:"'

of the feder_al act requires each

.NFORMATtciN

un it of local government to

,.PEADLINES

establish a trust fund to receive

i P.M. Day Before Publication .
Monday Oeadllne 9 a.m .

·

r-------~

992-2094
606 E. Main

Pomeroy

DmCE SUPPLIES

federal revenue sharing , and

FURNITURE

•

Dozer &amp; End to.dtr -~~; ·
ponds, basemen1, land· ·
scapi nO. we have '2 size .
'dozers, 2 size loaders. Work: .
done by_ hour or (;OR tract. ·
·Free ~stimates. We also ·
haul till dirt, loP soil. Dump
trucks and low-boy tor hire.
see Bob or Roger Jeflers,
Pomeroy. Phone 9P1-35H
.after 7 p.m. or phone 992•
5232.
.

From the largest Truck or·
Bulldozer ~adlalor to the
Small~st Heater Core.
Nathan Biggs

SM'Ill:I .NELSON .
·. MOTORS. _
INC. __
Ph,. 991,1174

, ·Pomeroy

NEW YEAR'S
EVE DANCE

Oiase ·Hdwe. Co.

Pels

SPENI) TIME
SAVES's

· KUHL'S
Rt. ·7 "at caution lighl'i
TUPPE~S PLAINS
Used furniture, appliances .
Clean &amp; guaranteed.
NEW -FURNITURE
Sofa Beds ~ ReciiMrs .
Discount priCed.

-

Sale

..
12.- 1.1

AND 111E6E DECDY
1'EAM6 HAVE

LSN'T 'ROGER S!IARl&lt;l:l'

1'/0RKING IN T~ I S
~EPARTMSNT "'

~55, BUT~

ON

HIS TiiN-M IN'JTE
Bli:eAi&lt;

I'VE GOT TO TALK
WITH HIM 1 MA~ 1
'JSE ·VOUR P~ONS ~

RE&lt;OL.U;n:D IN
MIWY ARRE6Tb.

HELLO,.. FASHION
MODELS J

EXPERT
·iWheel AJigOment
'5.55
on

.

PomeiVy_

--..,.,..

How

-or r11 put

she?
She

contract .motner

can .

9Util

on her!!

don't

Oh...."'""'"'' ,,
rt:smy

you're
tal Kin~

about-

KnOUJ

me.

-

Dec.

WHAT

.

J

Sale

Lost

Notice

"HElL"·

LEGAL NOTICE

Wanted To Rent

HEATING &amp;
COOLING .

Furnace Controls

Rent

Local ~wHng. .
' tarl~ -~~./~';;'Mix.;

. AR!~LP ..

.

..

"''BRO I nERS~'._.

Real Estate

Sale

Real Estate

Sale

.

I

....,,

~,~~

Teaford, Sr.
Broker

Help Wanted

- - - -- -

We talk tQ you
like a ·I*SQn.

WMP0/1390
Oft YOUR DIAL

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

Jm

•r:.:r

Yewlerday'a Cryploojuote1 A MAN SllOVELS SNOW FOR
THE SAJo!E REASON HE CLUIBS A MOUNTAIN-BECAUSE
IT'S THEIIB.-NATHAN NIELSEN
(0 1172 Klnr Joaluno Syndloote, !ne.l

by THOMAS JOSEPH
At'a088
I, Prize
name

..

ws.

home, new bath,
down.
South
Ave.,
MaJce
reasonable

l lilllllll~l ll lll l ll l llil l! )

Virgil B.

For Sale

urge
up ...lrs,
location,
dleport,
olt'ar.

:;,Y{',IV:&lt;
W.RRI~

'•,

BARGAIN CENTER

Concrete Work
Remodeling

WHISPERING
PINES
NITE Q.UB

'CHANGE

·:jARTH MOVING

Radl. ~~_l!r Speciafi~L

and

PWMBING
HEATING

Auto Sales ,

I'M SICK AN'TIRED .OF LOOKIN'
ATTHESEOI.! LONESOME HILLS
DAV IN AN' DAY OUT, LOWEE2V ..
I: NEED A
DADBURN

CWIJSWIJG

EXPERIENCED
iiadlato
Service

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

taken In deluxe Zig-Zag Stop In and See Our .
sewing . machine.
This _Floor• Di.s play· .
machine
darns,
em ·
brolderles, makes but, J.;..._ _ _,;__:__ _ _..J
lonholes, all without at tachments; pay balance cif
138.50 or pay S6 per month ;
phone 992·5331 .
12-12-lfc

Notice

willti'(AOS

BARNEY

~--------------------------~~----~-'

I .JUST

, fi]MEiiOY, ()tf!O

Whereas, Section 123 lol II)

'

M0st American Cars
. 1967 FURY Ill, 4 door, 383
Whereas, the Bureau of In -GUARANTEE()spection and Supervision of
Cancellation~ Correctio,is
engine, good condition, 1800;
'
Public Offices has approvec;t th€ Wilt be acc~pted Untll9 a.m. for
Freddie Thabet, Mason, W.
Phone
992-2Q94
establishment of a "Feder a '
· ' Day of Publication · ·
Va.; phone 773-5651.
REGULATIONS
General Revenue Sha.ring Trus·,
The Pubtl5her reserves. tht
12·15·1fc
Home &amp; Auto
Fund" in each subdivision
receiving ass istance under the right to edit or reject al')y ad!
Open8Til5
• Phone 992-2511
federal act. as required by deemed oblettlonal. Tht&gt;
Monday
thru·Saturd.IY
.. .. ....
section 5705 . 12, · of the Oh io PUblisher ~tnq.t be responslblf
For
or
992-3918
606
E.
Main,
Pomeroy,
0.
Revised 'code;
for more than one incorrect
.1.. . . •
Open to 7; closed Mondays
Insertion.
·
AKC
Toy
Poodles,
wormed
and
Now Therefortt Be It Resolved
RATES
housebroken. Will hold tor
by the Trustees of OJ ive
, For Want Ad Service
CONCRETE SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC DOZER and back hoe work,
Christmas. Phone 742-3872. READY-MIX
Township, State of ?hio t.hat : 5 cents per Word one Insertion
ponds and septic tanks, ditSunday
Night,
31
dellyered
right
to your
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEAN·
Sec .. II . Ther~ rs hereby
M inimum Charge 1Sc
..
12-14-121c
ching
service; top soli, fill
project.
Fast
and
easy.
Free
ED,
REPAIRED.
MILLER
established a 11speetal fund to be 1 12 cent't per word three·
dirt, limestone; B&amp;;K Exestimates, Phone 992·J284.
SANITATION, STEWART,
known as the Federal Gener~! .consecutive insertions.
,;' Get Your Tickets Now
PARKVIEW Kennels going out
cavating . f'hone 992-5367,
Revenue Shari~g_ Trust Fun.d · 18 cents per word -she conGoegleln Ready -Mix Co.,
OHIO. PHONE 662·3035.
For Reservations
of business. Big price
under the prov1S10n~ of sec.t•on ·secutlve insertions.
·
Dick Karr. Jr.
Middleport, Ohio.
·
10-4-tlc
5705.12 of the OhiO Rev.sed ' 25 F-er cent Discount on paid
reduction on all dogs. All AK·
9·1-ttc
6·30-tlc .
C. 592 Broadway &amp; . Ash - - - - - - - - Cosdeec. Ill All monies pa id to the ads and ads j)ald within 10days
PAPER Hanging and painting;
CARD OF THANKS '
· ·
FREE to good home: German Streets, Middleport, Ohio. .
SEPTIC ·TANKS CLEANEO
Arthur Musser, phone 742·
Township under file State and
&amp; OBITUARY
12·13-ttc REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446Shepherds, 2 pups; 1 rnale, 1
.5223.
Local Fiscal Assist_ance Act, '?f
51 .50 fDt 50 word minimum
female; 8 months; 1 male dog ------~--­
i2-12-301p
4782, Galll~olls, John Russell,
1972 ·shall be cred1ted ~o Said
Each additional word 2c .
NOTICE OF FILING
fund .and .ex pen.ded tn ac BLIND ADS
l'h yrs.; phone 667-3512 or see
Owner &amp; Operator.
OF INVENTORY
cordance With the terms and . Additional 25c Char'ge pe1
Bob Young on ·Success Rd. Mobile Homes For
· 5-12-ttc SEWING MACHINES. Repair
AND APPRAISEMENT
provisions of said feder~l ac.t . \dvertlsement. .
·
(Co. Rd. 471.
service, all makes. 992·2284. The State ot .Ohio, Melu
Sec . IV , ThiS resolUtiOn IS
OFFICE HOURS
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy. County. Probate Court.
12-27-Jtp CASH paid tor all makes and
hereby declared to be an
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m . Oail ,
To the Executrl)( of the
Authorized Singer Sales and
models of mobile homes.
emergency meas~,Jr~ necessary ~ : JO a.m . to 12:00 NoJ'n
estate: to such of the following
We
Sharpen
Scissors.
Service.
Phone
area
code
614·423·9531.
tor the preservat•on of the saturday
are residents of the State of
3-29-tlc as
public peace , health, safety and
·
4-13-tfc
Ohio. viz.: - the surviving
welfare,
suCh emergency
spouse. the ne)(t of kin, the
arising out of the need to
beneficiaries under the will;
3 BEDROOM trailer, partially ------------,.5·1 -tfc
provide o lawful fund into which
and to the attorney or atforneys
some
underpinning
furnished,
federal general revenue sharing
'72 OHIO license plate, number
representing any of the
and steps ; phone 742-4833.
payments can be credited for
SEE US FOR : Awnings, storm
Z235G. If found phone 949NOTICE
OF
aforementioned
persons :
.e)(penditures in the manner. and
12-22-6tc
doors and windows, carports,
APPOINTMENT
William Bailey, Deceased,
4074.
for the purposes provided under
marq~ees, aluminum siding
Case No. 20828 Reedsville,
Ohio,
Olive
12·27-Jic - - - - - - - - the State and Local Fiscal
and
railing.
A.
Jacob,
sales
Estate
of'
Frederick
William
Township, No. 20,800.
·
1970
MOBILE
Home,
airAsslstante Act of 1972; where
Ohlinger Deceased.
You
are
hereby
notified that
representative.
For
free
conditioner,
like
new,
fully
this resolution shall take effect
NQtice Is ~ereby gjven that the Inventory and Apprelsemnt
estimates, phone Charles
carpeted, S3,100; phone 985·
and be In force from and after
Mildred
Bailey of Route 1, of the estate of the efor.emen Syracuse,
V.
·v.
Lisle,
4248.
its passage.
·
Middleport,
Ohio, has been duly tloned, deceas.ed, late of said
sec . v . This Resolution shall
Johnson and Son. Inc.
TEACHER needs a small
12-22·61p
appointed
Executrix of the COunty, was flied In this Court.
take effect and be In force from
J.2.1fc Estate of Frederick
apartment, furnished or
William , Said Inventory and Ap .
and after December, 1972.
unfurnished. Call S92-l349
Ohlinger
deceased
tate of pralsement will be for hearing
Passed the lOth day of
MiddlepOrt
,
BACKHOE
AND
DOZER
work.
Meigs
'
County,
before ttl is Court on the 29th day
after
4
p.m.
December 1972.
ol December, 1972 at 10 :00
Septic tanks Installed. George Ohio .
12-27-Jic
;. Air Conditioners
Creditors are requ ired to file o'clock A .M .
(.Bill! Pullins. Phone 992·2478.
osCar Babcock
•Awnings
their
clalms wit.h said fiduciary
Any person desiring to file
HUMIDIFIERS
4·25-ttc
Olive Twp . President
within four months .
exceptions thereto must file
•
·
·Underpinninq
Attest: Ada Bissell
For
Dated this 16th day of them at least five days prior to
. hlle . SewlnH
Hot Water Heaters
Clerk
: ELNA and W
December 1972.
the date •set for hearing .
Plumbing
TWO BEDROOM mobile home Complete mQblle hQm• ' 1 Machines ... service on a
Manning D. Webster,
Given under my hend end
1121 27, 28, 2t
on Old Rt. 33, adults only; '·service ~ plus gigantic:'· · makes. Reasonable rates.
Judge seal of said Court, this 16th day
Electrical Work
phone 992-6294 or 992·6385 'display of mobile home·;
The. Sewing Center, Mid·
court of common Pleas, ol December 1972.
alter 6 p.m.
dleport Ohio
Probate Division
Manning D. Webster
12·24-101&lt; ;always available-at...
'
.
111611
MelgsCounty,Ohlo
Judgeandex-otflcloCierk
.
..
•
.
· · c
·
of said court
7
-F-U-.R..,'N -t.S-.H--e--"'0.::"-a-~-a-rtT~-e-nt, 3 '' '· ; ~JJ!I;.JJI ~w-~.'\£';/~ lfl 1'0 BllEJn; ah'ce been · 11 v 20 " 27 111 ~· 3 ' '
,;J
, evAnn'B':'wits~n
un\
,.croon\s and · bath, mdilein; - :. OBILE MIOMES '· ··•'tancelled? ) 0$1
your
· · '
Clerk
League
phone 992-2623. ·
·
'
operator's llcen~e? Call 992LEGAL NOTICE
Dec. 71. 1972
992-1448
12-17-ltc
1220Washlnglon Blvd.
2966.
RESOLUTION
LEGAL NOTICE
Standings
Pomeroy, 0.
--------413-7521
BELPRE,O,
6·15-lfc
A
RESOLUTION
TO
RESOLUTION
Team
Pis.
OUSE,
4
rooms
and
bath,
full
,
.
ESTABLISH
A
SPECIAL
A
Resolution
IO ESTABLISH
H
Mr. and Mrs.
67
FUND KNOWN AS THE A SPECIAL FUND KNOWN AS
Alley Cats
56 GUN Shoot. al$0 rifle matches
basement, automatic heat,
For
FEDERAL
GENERAL THE FEDERAL GENERAL
Lincoln Heights ; phone 742·
For
REVENUE SHARING TRUST REVENUE SHARING TRUST
Lucky Strikers
52
- open silO$ only and s'lfeclal
Allin the Family
46
deer slug match; Forked Run
51112 .
HOUSE FOR SALE, 114 Brick FUND
: FUND
12-22·61p 8 ROOM house and bath, nice
St 1 p
Oh
Be II Resolved by the
Be i1 Resolved by the
Them and Us
37
Sportsman Club, Sunday ,'
large lot, natural gas, buill-In
h;e;!.· 3 ::,er,::r~ ~o; ~~lc~ Trustees of Orange Township as Trustees of Columbia Township
Four Jakers
30
December 31 , 12 noon.
u tj'
r
s, )(Ce en follows:
es follows·.
·
Ioca
Team · High series - Lucky
12-27-3tc TRAILER spaces; extra large Cabinets In kitchen • Close to
on. c 1ose Io sc.hoo I and
Sec. 1. That whereas, the
Sec. 1. That whereas, the
~trlkers2119 ; Allin the Family
city; contact Lou Osborne or congress has erected the State c
h
·
t d th 51 8 1
lots, S25 a month, Velma radio station In Bradbury,
Phone 992·2602.
and Local Fiscal Ass'1stance Act and
ongr.ess 1 5 enac 8
e Acte
2069 .
Zuspan,
Mason,
W.
Va.
.call
992-5898.
Local
Fiscal
Asslstanct
Songwriters
12-21·201p
Team high game - Lucky INTERNATIONAL
11-26.1fc
ol
1972
providing
a
system
of
of
1972
providing
a
system
of
11
-29·301p
Club; recording, publishing,
Strikers 792 ; All In the Family
~-------general
revenue
5harlng
with general revenue sharing with
free membership ; ·write
states and units ot Local states and units of local
772.
!.S.C.• Rt. 1, Box 210, Mid- TWO new mobile 'homes, never 2 STORY HOME, full basement,
government, and
Government, and
Men's high series - Gene . dleport,
Ohio
45760.
Whereas.
Section
123
fa)
(1)
Whereas, Section 123 (a) (1)
lived
In;
phone
992-2511.
bath
&amp;
•;,,
extra
lot
and
atMurrar 559; Willie Halthlll531 .
of this fedeal act requires each of the federal act requires each
12·22-61c
12-5-tlc
tached
garage;
available
Meo s high game - Willie
unit of local government to unit of local government to
now; may be had with basic
Halfhill 224; Gene Murray 208.
establish
a trust fund to receive establish a trust fund to receive
FURNISHED 2 bedroom
furnlture1 near Pomeroy
Women's high series federal revenue sharing, and federal revenue sharing, and
apartment, adults only,
Elementary School; phone
Whe'reas, the Bureau of In·
Whereas, the Bureau of In Sandy Korn 440; Barb Hensley
992·3874.
Middleport;
phone
992-738~
or 992-7133.
spection and Supervision of spection and Supervision of
405.
12-12-ttc '
12-24-6tc
Public Ofllces has approved the · Public Offlcos has approved the
FOR THE position of hall -lime
Women's High game establishment
of a "Federal establishment of a "Federal
4-H Program . Asslslar\1.
Sandy Korn 173; Barb Hensley
Revenue
Sharing
Trust Fund" General Revenue Sharing Trust
3
AND
4
ROOM
furnished
and
C.
B.
RADIOS,
antennas,
also
Contact the County Extension
152.
in
the
subdivision
receiving Fund" In each subdiviSion
unfurnished
apartmonts
.
pollee scanners; Dailey's
Office In the basement of the
110 Mechanic Street
assistance under the federal recelv\ng assistance under the
Phone
992-5434.
Radio
Shop,
Box
21
B,
Long
County Home. Phone 992·.3895
act, as requ_ired by section federal llct, as re!=lulred by
Dec. 14, 1971
4-12-ttc
Pomoroy, Ohio U76f
Bottom, Ohio.
,
tor details. The Cooperative
5705.12 of the Ohio Revised section 5705.11, of ' the Ohio
Standings
,
12-24-6fc
Co.de .
·
Revised Code;
Extension Service Is ~n E~ual
Team
Pts.
Now
Therefore,
Be
It
Now Therefore Be It Resolved
OVER
RIVER
LAND
Opportunljy
Employer.
HOUSE,
New
Haven
on
Midway
Mr. and Mrs .
73
Resolved by the Trustees of·, by the Trustets of Columbia
3.33
ACRES
Brand
new
Training
~ond
high
school
Dr.,
5
rooms
with
3
bedrooms.
Allen Cats
56
In Long Bottom, phone
I$ desired but not required.
1972 Fleetwood, 3 bedroom Orange Township, State of Ohio Townshr~, state of Ohio that:
attached
garage
and HOUSE
Lucky Strikers
54
985-3529.
Sec. I. There Is hereby
Applicant must have a car
large
lot;
basement;
mobile home. Screened th~~c . 11. There Is hereby
Allin the Family
S2
6-11 -lfc
established
a
special
fund
established
a S_P.eclal fund to be
available.
available
Feb.
lsi;
Arthur
well
:
All
level
patio, drilled
Them and Us
45
known
as
the
Federal
General
known
as
the
' Federal General
12·24-Jip
Smith, phone 882-2052, Box 64,
with r06d to river. A wonFour Jakers
32
Revenue
Sharing
Revenue
FIJnd
under
the
d
th
1 Truatf Fund"
New Haven, W. Va. 25265.
Team high series - Them
derful place for only provisions of section 5705.12 of un er e prov 1sons
o section
12·27-61~
and Us2105; Mr. and Mrs. 1918. PLUMBING and Heating man,
121,500.00.
the Ohio Revised Code.
r:Je~2 of the Ohio Rtvlsed
Team high game - Them
experienced ; It not ex·
liS ACRES
Sec. 111. All monies paid to the
Sec. 111. All monies pwld to the
CLELAND·
and Us 719; Them and Us 7111.
perlenced and honest, do not .UNFURNISHED 6 rooms and
HUNTING LAND - With
Township under the State and Township under the State and
Men's high series - Gene
apply; phone 992·2511 or 992Lout Fiscal Assistance Act of Local Fiscal Assistance Act of
gas well, 6 room house, barn,
REALTY
bath, full basement and unMurray 491; Wally Hatfield
1972 shall be creditld to said 1972 shall be credited to sa id
3918.
and several other buildings fund
furnished upstairs, 6 rooms &amp;
601 E. Main
and upended In ac - fund end expended In ac ·
488.
12-6-tlc
In need of repair. We are cordance
bath ; phone 992-5993 or 992·
Pomeroy
with the terms and cordance with the terms and
Men's high game - Gene
asking 120,000,110.
9915.
provisions Of said federal act. proviSions of said federal aot.
Murray 189; George Hensley WE ' LL SEND
t2-27-6tc
BRIGHT, •
BUNGALOW
Sec . I.V. This -resolution Is
Sec. IV . This resolution . Is
187.
JUST RENOVATED
hereby declared to be an hereby declared to be an
YOUNG
MEN
TO
SCHOOL
2
BEDROOMSNice bath,
Women's high series - Barb
MIDDLEPORT - 1 story
measure necessary emergency measure necessary
FOR RADAR JOBS IN '
$50 Portrait
large' living and kitchen. . emergency
Hensley 434; Sandy Korn 417.
for
the preservation of lhe tor the preservation ot the
frame, 2 bedrooms, dining
EUROPE.
II
you'd
like
to
live
Next door to store on level public peace; health, safety and public peace, health, safety and
Women'• high game A portrait of Gen. Ulysses
room, bath, 26 fl. llvln_g
and work In Europe, there's
lot.
Only $4,500.110.
Sandy
Korn
162
;
Barb
Hensley
welfare , such emergency welfare, such emergtncy
S. Grant graces the face of a
an exciting· job walling for EARLY American st~r&amp;o·radlo room, carpeted throughout. 2
98
ACRES
and
arising
out of the need to arising out of the need to
161
.
$50 bill. The U.S. Capitol em·
combination, AM-FM radio, 4 car carport. $12,500.00.
you wllh·loday's Army. You'll
provide a lawful fund Into which provide a lawful fund Into which
MOBILE
HOME
LOT
speaker •ound system, 4
bellishes the back.
learn to supervise and control
LARGE COLONIAL
federal
revenue
general tederal general revenue Sharing
With well and eledrlc. The sharing
speed automatic changer.
ground
surveillance
radar
payments
can pevments can bt credited for
POMEROY
- RECENTLY
Wednesday Afternoon
rest Is wild land, Ideal for be
Balance
$77.69.
Use
our
credited
for
4!!)(· expenditures In the manner and
units.
With
full
pay
while
RENOVATED
The
kif·
Tbe llrst nigh t major
League
setting of pines. A producing pendllures In the manner tor for the purposes provided undtr
budget terms. Call 992-7085. chen Is a house wife's dream,
you're
In
school.
And
lots
of
league ba.ebaU game was
Dec. 10, 1972
gas well and rnlnerals. Only the pUrposes provided under the the State and Local Fiscal
. 12-27-6tc
other benefits. Like 30 days
EVERYTHING BUll TIN, 4'
Standings
played at Crosley Field, Cin·
$16,500.00.
State and Local Fiscal Assistance Act of 1972; where
paid vacation a year. If Y.,OU're
bedroon1S, 2 baths, utility R.
W. L.
&lt;innali, 0 h i o; on May 24, Team
Assistance Act of 1972 ; when this resolution shall take effect
ONE
ACRE
MODERN
Walnut
style
stereo·
looking tor this kind of
78 SO
Gaul's Shake Haven
this resolution shell take effect and be In force from and after
radio, AM-FM radio, 4 carpeted . EXCELLENT
T.
P.
water,
electric
cha
llenge
and
excitement.
Lodwick's Mkt.
71 57
be fn force from and after Its passage .
speaker sound system, • STREET. $17,500.00.
aYallable. Some trees. Only and
Today's Army wan1s to join
its passage .
•
Sec. V. 1'hfs Resolution shall
Ridenour's T.V.
66 62
.IS
ACRE
.
~peed
automatic
·
changer.
you. For complete details call
12500.00.
Sec. v . This resolution shall take effect and be In force from
Riggs Used Cars
63 65
RACINE
Beautiful
older
Balance 165.89. Use our
collect SS G. Clark 593·3022.
SYRACUSE
take effecl and be In force from lnd after December 22, 1972.
R. C. Cola
62 66
budget
terms. Call 992-7085. home, new kitchen, 9 rooms,
and alter Dec . 18, 1972.
Paned the 22nd day of
t2-20·61c
5
ROOMS
Bath,
nice
Good's l?ennzoll
44 84
5 bedrooms. fl/7 baths, full
Passed 1he 18th dey of December 1972.
12-27-6tc
kitchen,
1front
and
back
High Ind. game - Florine
basement, gareQe and other
Arnold Jordan
porches. F.ull bosement and December 1972.W. s. Henderson
Ginther 156; second - Florine HIGH SCHOOL ' SENIORS .
Co
tum
bla
Ty;op. President
buildings.
1
Enlist now- stay home until USED MAYTAG Washer;
large extra lot. Only
Ginther 149.
Orange Townahlp President Attest: Gloria Hulton
LARGEHTORY
after gr~duallon. Guaranteed
wringer type ; good condition,
' High series Florine
~10,6110.110.
Attest : Nina Robinson, Cltrk
Clerk
5
MIDDLEPORT
assignments 1o Europe,
SSO; also used couch and
Rt. 2Coolvllle,Ohlo&lt;5723 112126• 21 • 21
Ginther 436; Pearl Russell 388 .
2VEARS
OLD
bedrooms, 1'12 baths, nice
Hawaii. Korea, or selected
recliner, $30; phone 882-2052,
Team high game - Gaul 's
NEAR RACINE- 2 nice size (121 26, 27. 21
kitchen, cellar, garage, 2
locations In the U.S. See your
Arthur Smith.
Shake Haven 328.
bedrooms with closets. ;;·,--:--'-:-------:--:---":?"":":~:-~-".....,
gl•. ssed
sunporches.
local Army representative tor
Team high series - Gaul's
12-27-6tc
Utility room and large ' '
. ,.. lltca,oclly facts about the 180-Day
$12,800.110.
Shake Haven 943.
modern
kitchen.
Carport
and
Mavtot
FROM USTOYOU
Delayed Entry Program· and COAL, Limestone, EK&lt;elslor
'h acre. Aslclng $14,000.00.
Avtomatlu
the Army's new pay raise. s 11 w k
E
·
A GREAT BIG
NEW LISTING
2 speed operation .
For more Information call
a
or s,
· Main St., • HAPPY NEW YEARS
The average South Korean
NEASE
SETTLEMENT3
Cholet
01 woter
collect SS G. Clark 593-3022. · Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
In
ttmpr ,
Auto .
bedrooms,
nice
closets
farm measures only 1.'3
12-27-6tc , - - - - - - - -4-_
12-lfc
wat .. r
level
HENRY E. CL.E.LANO
each,
large
modern
kitchen
control
,
Lint
acres .
~--:-::-:-""":"::-­
tndASSOCIATES
with bar. Utility room with '
Flltor or Power
FIHD RADIO MECHANICS ONE NEW 031 Stlhl chain saw,
washor and dryer hookups.
Fin Agltllor. •
NEEDED IN EUROPE AND
OlfJct m-m•
$190. Phone 742-5322, N. E,
KOREA. FULL PAY WHILE
Stove, and refrigerator In·
,.,me-l'rHo
Vanaman.
If no anawtr m-2s.e or m.
YOU TRAIN. T~ay's Army
420,.
.
eluded In sale. Now the price
Maytat
12·2&lt;·31c
Hilt If HUI
will · train you to be a lleld
I I I $12 5110 110
' us
• · · ·
· 8r\ltn
radio .mechanic. Then give SINGER Automatic sewing .ApPROXIMATELY '1'2 acre · HAVING
4 bedr.oom
SOLD A NUMBER
Sorrounot ctollln
you a lob In Europe and
level lof with ttepllc tank and OF HOMES, WITH A VERY
with ·"""'' avon
machln,. Like new In walnul
V2 ' b~th
Excellent
Korea. You'll Install, check
c~blnet . Makes design sill·
power
pole;
setup
for
troller;
SUCCESSFUL
YEAR,
WE
lltat.
Nohollpo",
and adjust communications
285
Third
Midches,
zig-zags,
buttonholes,
.
p;,
mlln
out
of
Harrl101'1vllle
NOW
NEED
SEVERAL
no
ovtrdrylng
..
equipment. With lime left
blind
hems,
overcasts,
etc.
on
Rt
143;
phone
742-3125
or
GOOD
PROPERT-IES,
f'IM
MHII
Lint
Ollio.
il
over to enjoy the lifestyle of
$85. Call Ravenswood 273-9521
PRICED RIGHT, FOR THE
f'lllor.
742 '
another country. You gel 30
or 273·9893,
'
NliW
YEAR.
WE
W"NT
TO
WIIIIICieiiHIIt
12-27·4!C
days paid vacation a year .
11-JO-ttc
THANK
A~L
OF
YOU
FOR
MAYTA.
And lots of other benefits. It
George S. Hobstelter Jr.
1
MAKING IT POSSIBLE.
y_ou'd like to live and work In DUE TO lay-oft, 8 track stereo 1 ACRE LOT, 1 17 miles North of
HILIN L TIAFORD,
Rock
Sprlngl
Fairground
on
Rea I ·Estate Broker
Europe or Korea, Today 1s
In walnut console; pay
..
old
Rt.
33
with
1970
65
x
12,
3
ASSOCIATE
Army wants to \oln you. Call
P. Q, lox 101, Pomeroy, Ohio
be lance of $98,80 or pay Sl per
moblll
bedroom
Windsor
NO
SUNDAY
SHOWINGS
collect SS G. C ark 593·3022.
month; phone 992·5331.
Phone 985-41U
home; phone 992-6615.
741-4211
992-U2S
Rutllnd
12-27-6tc
12-12-tfc
12-27-41c
'

!

2 SIGIIS ~·

HAYMAN'S 1\uctioo - a good
place to go each Friday
evening, 7 p.m. at Laurel Cliff
on old Rt. 7, 1 mil~ west of
Rock Springs Fairground. ·
10-10-tfc

.

I The Busy Bee Society of the
·,i Carpenter Baptist Church met
' with Vivian Gaston for their
December meeting . Mella
. I Fisher Jed devotions. Present
• were Emma Whittington, Mae
i Jordap, Anna Lich, Lynn Ann
! McWhorter, Helen Jeffers, Ida
~ Cheadl'e, Freda Smith, Bonnie
~ Cheadle, Metta Fisher and the
hostess.
• Mr. and Mrs. Clifton Fraley,
Sr., Curtis and Ricky, Mallory,
( West Virginia and Mr. and
~ Mrs. Tim Hawxhursl 1 a?d
Michael , Johnstown, Oh10,
were here for the weekend for
the wedding of the Fraleys'
daughter; Bonnie, to Dale
Jordan, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Clay Jordan ..They also visited
relatives in the area.
Mrs. Goldie Gillogly called at
.the home o[ her daughter, Mrs:
Dorotlly Frazier and family in
f Gallipolis.
j 1 Murl Galaway spent several
1,. days at the qome of her son-in·
~ law and daughter, Mr .. and
'~ Mrs. Rolland Crabtree. ·
Mr . and Mrs. Arthur
Crabtree and Mr. and Mrs.
.. ·Cecil Gillogly attended a party
: for Field Employees 0\ Ohio
• State Testing Laboratories
'
.
'
~ which was held at : Olentangy
:· Inn, Columbus. The Crabtrees
; also called on her sister,
! Bernice McKnight.
·
i, · Tbe Christmas programs at
l Carpenter Baplist and Temple
:: Churches were well attended.
~ Miss Lois Gasron, daughter
: of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Gasron,
local, has graduated from
( Career Academy in Columbus
: and is now employed as a
!· dental assistant in the office of
1Dr. James Halterm,an ~n
• Athens.
; Mr. and Mrs. William Miller
, and daughters visited his
J parents, Mr. and Mrs. Chester
Miller. at Caledonia, Ohio and
called on other relatives in that
area.
i Mr. and Mrs. Walter Jordan,
Gallipolis, were· here for the
' .wedding of his cousin, Dale
-.foulu, IIIMHionnie fraley on
~turday afternoo1(ii'Ap visited
, relatives in the evening.
: Vina Rutherford, Columbus,
:· spent ~ nlgqt at the home of
t Mr. and Mrs. Lavern Jordan.
:• Mr. and Mrs. Rex Cheadle
: entertained with a party for
: youth of the Carpenter church
- ~ following the program at the
•• church on Sunday evening.
• Those present were Allee and
Wanda Peck, Nancy Smith,
• Tina Radekin, Sara Nelson,
James Cotterill and the host
family, Mr. and Mrs. Rex
Cheadle, Don, Kathy and
Rexle.
The December meeting of
Temple W.S.C.S. was held at
the home of Mrs. Arthur
Crabtree. Mrs. Robert Matrox
led devotions and used ChrlstrnaM for the theme . .Gift exchsnge was enjoyed and secret
pals were revealed with new
names being drawn. Those
present were Goldie Gillogly,
Hazel CUlwell, Pauline Comer,
Leah Crabtree, Elizabeth
Jordan,
Betty
Mattox,
Rosemary Miller, Margaret
Gasron, Roxie Arbaugh and the
hostess. Delicious refreshments were served.

_,....,.,

.

r· -::··'----~----'·'---,---,--.... ,r·

Notice

j, Carpenter

i

•.

·sentin~l Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel
Classifieds
·
G
et
Results!
.

'''~

j

.

DICK T~ACY

C. Oriental
nursemaid
11. Redolence
11. SllaciOUI
11. Very
friendly
(hypb.
wd.)
lf.Hilh
(mUJ.)
11. Always,
poeUcally
lt. Quall:en
11. Fencinc
foil
U. Hawaiian
bland
Zli. African
antelope
Kin motion
·rr. Mrs. eopperfteld
II. Split
!t. John
O'Hara
brainchild

DOWN
I. California
wine
dlltrlct
2. Vin voce
a. Roll of
goodi
f. German
river
5.Amnged
In atrata
Wlie
about
T. Wire
meuure·
ment
I.Onager
t. Call for
attention

e.

U.Dam

U. UlUmate
17. Ofllcloua
II. Facts or
ftJUres

I
lt.Knlfe
(II.)

H. Fiery

n

Drooping
U. Brulllan
river
Zf. Engllah
river
H. Dlltilllng

apparatus

Zl. Enlllsh

'

poe\

30. Wom-cut
32. Valhalla

host
JJ.-IIxe
Jf. Harp constellation

II. Jujube

18. Swlq
eanton
n. Clanaor
II. Fiddler
erab-

UTI'E

I NOAGY I
1

rJ I I I

] I

tJ I

'DOMBEYl

"""··
*-' r..

..........

11M &amp;jill&amp;

WMt II

M I II.WIM ..... &amp;IHI

MUt

(2wdt.)

(IIHIIl

uo uaur•wt
J.....,, IXPII. AWIUL mMII LARIT
(A

tJ.Prepare
for war
U.Houllon

product
II. Very

chummy
(hyph.
' wd.)
at. "Keystone
State"
city
fl.llore

lelid

fl. Parme·
1111'1

exterior
fl. Crete'•
capilli

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to

work It:

AXYDL!IAAXIt

II LONGFILLOW

One letter almply standi for another. In this sample A ia
UMd lor lbe three L's, X for the lwo O's, etc. Single letter..
aPOiti'OPhew, the ltnl\h and formation of the words are all
blnta. lach day die code letten are dllerent.

CI!PI'OClVO'n8
BTO'DG HGIIYUGI . VASSEG MPG KUGC
IIIEE BTO GZGHYANQ AN YMDIATC . MCTC

1 DID NOT 61VE 1{00 A
MINK STOLE FOR CHRISTMAS

I'LL SAY

YOU DIDN'T!

.y

l'-~

.'
' '

�r 10- The Daily Sentinel,f.l:iddleport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. Z7, 1972

.

•

I

•

!;

\

'

...

l News, Event
I

i

•
j

KOSCOT KOSMETICS ~WIGS .
SPECIALS MONTHLY.
PHONE HELEN JANE
BROWN , MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO 992-5113.
12-J-tfc
. - - - - - - - --

LEGAL NOTICE
RESOLUTION

A Resolution to ESTABLISH

A SPECIAL FUND KNOWN AS
THE FEDERAL GENDRAL
REVE NUE SHARING TRUST
FUND

j

Be it Resolved by the
Trustees of Olive Township as
follOW$ :

t

Cong ress has .ena cted the State
and Local Fiscal Ass tstan~e Act .
of 1972 prov i ding a system of
general revenue sharing w ith
states and units of local

f

OF
QUAliTY

For Sale

Sec . 1. That whereas,

the

government. and

Business Services . .

·Motor Ct.

ON P~NTS&amp; Jf;"NS

''

1971 CHEVROL•ETCAPRICE
13995
4-door, new car title &amp; balance of warranty, covert' Color
with blk. vinyl roof, tinted glass, factory air, !root &amp; rear
guards, rad io&amp;' rear speaker. whitewall tires. Nice and
clean. Retail 14860. Priced to move .
1971 CHEVROLET BEL AIR
ll89S
4-door, local I owner, low mileage car, beige finish with
brown v'lnyl top,_vinyl Interior, factory air, 350-englne.
power steering &amp; brakes, Ox, bumpers, wh. covers, · ll~e
.. new w.w fires, ra.dio &amp; other 11ne accessories. A sharp car
&amp; one you would like.

Pomeroy Motor co.
OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.

Buy 2'
....._..,.;;Pairs

).

.J·

FRIOJi •.

The best buy in the area.
Have slacko &amp; jeans for the
whoto family. Save OneThird.
. __
:9 • _
POMEROY
··
6'ill JackW.Carse,y,Mgr.•
·
Phono991·118t. ,'

'

._l ----------"--.---,--::----------:"'

of the feder_al act requires each

.NFORMATtciN

un it of local government to

,.PEADLINES

establish a trust fund to receive

i P.M. Day Before Publication .
Monday Oeadllne 9 a.m .

·

r-------~

992-2094
606 E. Main

Pomeroy

DmCE SUPPLIES

federal revenue sharing , and

FURNITURE

•

Dozer &amp; End to.dtr -~~; ·
ponds, basemen1, land· ·
scapi nO. we have '2 size .
'dozers, 2 size loaders. Work: .
done by_ hour or (;OR tract. ·
·Free ~stimates. We also ·
haul till dirt, loP soil. Dump
trucks and low-boy tor hire.
see Bob or Roger Jeflers,
Pomeroy. Phone 9P1-35H
.after 7 p.m. or phone 992•
5232.
.

From the largest Truck or·
Bulldozer ~adlalor to the
Small~st Heater Core.
Nathan Biggs

SM'Ill:I .NELSON .
·. MOTORS. _
INC. __
Ph,. 991,1174

, ·Pomeroy

NEW YEAR'S
EVE DANCE

Oiase ·Hdwe. Co.

Pels

SPENI) TIME
SAVES's

· KUHL'S
Rt. ·7 "at caution lighl'i
TUPPE~S PLAINS
Used furniture, appliances .
Clean &amp; guaranteed.
NEW -FURNITURE
Sofa Beds ~ ReciiMrs .
Discount priCed.

-

Sale

..
12.- 1.1

AND 111E6E DECDY
1'EAM6 HAVE

LSN'T 'ROGER S!IARl&lt;l:l'

1'/0RKING IN T~ I S
~EPARTMSNT "'

~55, BUT~

ON

HIS TiiN-M IN'JTE
Bli:eAi&lt;

I'VE GOT TO TALK
WITH HIM 1 MA~ 1
'JSE ·VOUR P~ONS ~

RE&lt;OL.U;n:D IN
MIWY ARRE6Tb.

HELLO,.. FASHION
MODELS J

EXPERT
·iWheel AJigOment
'5.55
on

.

PomeiVy_

--..,.,..

How

-or r11 put

she?
She

contract .motner

can .

9Util

on her!!

don't

Oh...."'""'"'' ,,
rt:smy

you're
tal Kin~

about-

KnOUJ

me.

-

Dec.

WHAT

.

J

Sale

Lost

Notice

"HElL"·

LEGAL NOTICE

Wanted To Rent

HEATING &amp;
COOLING .

Furnace Controls

Rent

Local ~wHng. .
' tarl~ -~~./~';;'Mix.;

. AR!~LP ..

.

..

"''BRO I nERS~'._.

Real Estate

Sale

Real Estate

Sale

.

I

....,,

~,~~

Teaford, Sr.
Broker

Help Wanted

- - - -- -

We talk tQ you
like a ·I*SQn.

WMP0/1390
Oft YOUR DIAL

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

Jm

•r:.:r

Yewlerday'a Cryploojuote1 A MAN SllOVELS SNOW FOR
THE SAJo!E REASON HE CLUIBS A MOUNTAIN-BECAUSE
IT'S THEIIB.-NATHAN NIELSEN
(0 1172 Klnr Joaluno Syndloote, !ne.l

by THOMAS JOSEPH
At'a088
I, Prize
name

..

ws.

home, new bath,
down.
South
Ave.,
MaJce
reasonable

l lilllllll~l ll lll l ll l llil l! )

Virgil B.

For Sale

urge
up ...lrs,
location,
dleport,
olt'ar.

:;,Y{',IV:&lt;
W.RRI~

'•,

BARGAIN CENTER

Concrete Work
Remodeling

WHISPERING
PINES
NITE Q.UB

'CHANGE

·:jARTH MOVING

Radl. ~~_l!r Speciafi~L

and

PWMBING
HEATING

Auto Sales ,

I'M SICK AN'TIRED .OF LOOKIN'
ATTHESEOI.! LONESOME HILLS
DAV IN AN' DAY OUT, LOWEE2V ..
I: NEED A
DADBURN

CWIJSWIJG

EXPERIENCED
iiadlato
Service

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

taken In deluxe Zig-Zag Stop In and See Our .
sewing . machine.
This _Floor• Di.s play· .
machine
darns,
em ·
brolderles, makes but, J.;..._ _ _,;__:__ _ _..J
lonholes, all without at tachments; pay balance cif
138.50 or pay S6 per month ;
phone 992·5331 .
12-12-lfc

Notice

willti'(AOS

BARNEY

~--------------------------~~----~-'

I .JUST

, fi]MEiiOY, ()tf!O

Whereas, Section 123 lol II)

'

M0st American Cars
. 1967 FURY Ill, 4 door, 383
Whereas, the Bureau of In -GUARANTEE()spection and Supervision of
Cancellation~ Correctio,is
engine, good condition, 1800;
'
Public Offices has approvec;t th€ Wilt be acc~pted Untll9 a.m. for
Freddie Thabet, Mason, W.
Phone
992-2Q94
establishment of a "Feder a '
· ' Day of Publication · ·
Va.; phone 773-5651.
REGULATIONS
General Revenue Sha.ring Trus·,
The Pubtl5her reserves. tht
12·15·1fc
Home &amp; Auto
Fund" in each subdivision
receiving ass istance under the right to edit or reject al')y ad!
Open8Til5
• Phone 992-2511
federal act. as required by deemed oblettlonal. Tht&gt;
Monday
thru·Saturd.IY
.. .. ....
section 5705 . 12, · of the Oh io PUblisher ~tnq.t be responslblf
For
or
992-3918
606
E.
Main,
Pomeroy,
0.
Revised 'code;
for more than one incorrect
.1.. . . •
Open to 7; closed Mondays
Insertion.
·
AKC
Toy
Poodles,
wormed
and
Now Therefortt Be It Resolved
RATES
housebroken. Will hold tor
by the Trustees of OJ ive
, For Want Ad Service
CONCRETE SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC DOZER and back hoe work,
Christmas. Phone 742-3872. READY-MIX
Township, State of ?hio t.hat : 5 cents per Word one Insertion
ponds and septic tanks, ditSunday
Night,
31
dellyered
right
to your
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEAN·
Sec .. II . Ther~ rs hereby
M inimum Charge 1Sc
..
12-14-121c
ching
service; top soli, fill
project.
Fast
and
easy.
Free
ED,
REPAIRED.
MILLER
established a 11speetal fund to be 1 12 cent't per word three·
dirt, limestone; B&amp;;K Exestimates, Phone 992·J284.
SANITATION, STEWART,
known as the Federal Gener~! .consecutive insertions.
,;' Get Your Tickets Now
PARKVIEW Kennels going out
cavating . f'hone 992-5367,
Revenue Shari~g_ Trust Fun.d · 18 cents per word -she conGoegleln Ready -Mix Co.,
OHIO. PHONE 662·3035.
For Reservations
of business. Big price
under the prov1S10n~ of sec.t•on ·secutlve insertions.
·
Dick Karr. Jr.
Middleport, Ohio.
·
10-4-tlc
5705.12 of the OhiO Rev.sed ' 25 F-er cent Discount on paid
reduction on all dogs. All AK·
9·1-ttc
6·30-tlc .
C. 592 Broadway &amp; . Ash - - - - - - - - Cosdeec. Ill All monies pa id to the ads and ads j)ald within 10days
PAPER Hanging and painting;
CARD OF THANKS '
· ·
FREE to good home: German Streets, Middleport, Ohio. .
SEPTIC ·TANKS CLEANEO
Arthur Musser, phone 742·
Township under file State and
&amp; OBITUARY
12·13-ttc REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446Shepherds, 2 pups; 1 rnale, 1
.5223.
Local Fiscal Assist_ance Act, '?f
51 .50 fDt 50 word minimum
female; 8 months; 1 male dog ------~--­
i2-12-301p
4782, Galll~olls, John Russell,
1972 ·shall be cred1ted ~o Said
Each additional word 2c .
NOTICE OF FILING
fund .and .ex pen.ded tn ac BLIND ADS
l'h yrs.; phone 667-3512 or see
Owner &amp; Operator.
OF INVENTORY
cordance With the terms and . Additional 25c Char'ge pe1
Bob Young on ·Success Rd. Mobile Homes For
· 5-12-ttc SEWING MACHINES. Repair
AND APPRAISEMENT
provisions of said feder~l ac.t . \dvertlsement. .
·
(Co. Rd. 471.
service, all makes. 992·2284. The State ot .Ohio, Melu
Sec . IV , ThiS resolUtiOn IS
OFFICE HOURS
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy. County. Probate Court.
12-27-Jtp CASH paid tor all makes and
hereby declared to be an
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m . Oail ,
To the Executrl)( of the
Authorized Singer Sales and
models of mobile homes.
emergency meas~,Jr~ necessary ~ : JO a.m . to 12:00 NoJ'n
estate: to such of the following
We
Sharpen
Scissors.
Service.
Phone
area
code
614·423·9531.
tor the preservat•on of the saturday
are residents of the State of
3-29-tlc as
public peace , health, safety and
·
4-13-tfc
Ohio. viz.: - the surviving
welfare,
suCh emergency
spouse. the ne)(t of kin, the
arising out of the need to
beneficiaries under the will;
3 BEDROOM trailer, partially ------------,.5·1 -tfc
provide o lawful fund into which
and to the attorney or atforneys
some
underpinning
furnished,
federal general revenue sharing
'72 OHIO license plate, number
representing any of the
and steps ; phone 742-4833.
payments can be credited for
SEE US FOR : Awnings, storm
Z235G. If found phone 949NOTICE
OF
aforementioned
persons :
.e)(penditures in the manner. and
12-22-6tc
doors and windows, carports,
APPOINTMENT
William Bailey, Deceased,
4074.
for the purposes provided under
marq~ees, aluminum siding
Case No. 20828 Reedsville,
Ohio,
Olive
12·27-Jic - - - - - - - - the State and Local Fiscal
and
railing.
A.
Jacob,
sales
Estate
of'
Frederick
William
Township, No. 20,800.
·
1970
MOBILE
Home,
airAsslstante Act of 1972; where
Ohlinger Deceased.
You
are
hereby
notified that
representative.
For
free
conditioner,
like
new,
fully
this resolution shall take effect
NQtice Is ~ereby gjven that the Inventory and Apprelsemnt
estimates, phone Charles
carpeted, S3,100; phone 985·
and be In force from and after
Mildred
Bailey of Route 1, of the estate of the efor.emen Syracuse,
V.
·v.
Lisle,
4248.
its passage.
·
Middleport,
Ohio, has been duly tloned, deceas.ed, late of said
sec . v . This Resolution shall
Johnson and Son. Inc.
TEACHER needs a small
12-22·61p
appointed
Executrix of the COunty, was flied In this Court.
take effect and be In force from
J.2.1fc Estate of Frederick
apartment, furnished or
William , Said Inventory and Ap .
and after December, 1972.
unfurnished. Call S92-l349
Ohlinger
deceased
tate of pralsement will be for hearing
Passed the lOth day of
MiddlepOrt
,
BACKHOE
AND
DOZER
work.
Meigs
'
County,
before ttl is Court on the 29th day
after
4
p.m.
December 1972.
ol December, 1972 at 10 :00
Septic tanks Installed. George Ohio .
12-27-Jic
;. Air Conditioners
Creditors are requ ired to file o'clock A .M .
(.Bill! Pullins. Phone 992·2478.
osCar Babcock
•Awnings
their
clalms wit.h said fiduciary
Any person desiring to file
HUMIDIFIERS
4·25-ttc
Olive Twp . President
within four months .
exceptions thereto must file
•
·
·Underpinninq
Attest: Ada Bissell
For
Dated this 16th day of them at least five days prior to
. hlle . SewlnH
Hot Water Heaters
Clerk
: ELNA and W
December 1972.
the date •set for hearing .
Plumbing
TWO BEDROOM mobile home Complete mQblle hQm• ' 1 Machines ... service on a
Manning D. Webster,
Given under my hend end
1121 27, 28, 2t
on Old Rt. 33, adults only; '·service ~ plus gigantic:'· · makes. Reasonable rates.
Judge seal of said Court, this 16th day
Electrical Work
phone 992-6294 or 992·6385 'display of mobile home·;
The. Sewing Center, Mid·
court of common Pleas, ol December 1972.
alter 6 p.m.
dleport Ohio
Probate Division
Manning D. Webster
12·24-101&lt; ;always available-at...
'
.
111611
MelgsCounty,Ohlo
Judgeandex-otflcloCierk
.
..
•
.
· · c
·
of said court
7
-F-U-.R..,'N -t.S-.H--e--"'0.::"-a-~-a-rtT~-e-nt, 3 '' '· ; ~JJ!I;.JJI ~w-~.'\£';/~ lfl 1'0 BllEJn; ah'ce been · 11 v 20 " 27 111 ~· 3 ' '
,;J
, evAnn'B':'wits~n
un\
,.croon\s and · bath, mdilein; - :. OBILE MIOMES '· ··•'tancelled? ) 0$1
your
· · '
Clerk
League
phone 992-2623. ·
·
'
operator's llcen~e? Call 992LEGAL NOTICE
Dec. 71. 1972
992-1448
12-17-ltc
1220Washlnglon Blvd.
2966.
RESOLUTION
LEGAL NOTICE
Standings
Pomeroy, 0.
--------413-7521
BELPRE,O,
6·15-lfc
A
RESOLUTION
TO
RESOLUTION
Team
Pis.
OUSE,
4
rooms
and
bath,
full
,
.
ESTABLISH
A
SPECIAL
A
Resolution
IO ESTABLISH
H
Mr. and Mrs.
67
FUND KNOWN AS THE A SPECIAL FUND KNOWN AS
Alley Cats
56 GUN Shoot. al$0 rifle matches
basement, automatic heat,
For
FEDERAL
GENERAL THE FEDERAL GENERAL
Lincoln Heights ; phone 742·
For
REVENUE SHARING TRUST REVENUE SHARING TRUST
Lucky Strikers
52
- open silO$ only and s'lfeclal
Allin the Family
46
deer slug match; Forked Run
51112 .
HOUSE FOR SALE, 114 Brick FUND
: FUND
12-22·61p 8 ROOM house and bath, nice
St 1 p
Oh
Be II Resolved by the
Be i1 Resolved by the
Them and Us
37
Sportsman Club, Sunday ,'
large lot, natural gas, buill-In
h;e;!.· 3 ::,er,::r~ ~o; ~~lc~ Trustees of Orange Township as Trustees of Columbia Township
Four Jakers
30
December 31 , 12 noon.
u tj'
r
s, )(Ce en follows:
es follows·.
·
Ioca
Team · High series - Lucky
12-27-3tc TRAILER spaces; extra large Cabinets In kitchen • Close to
on. c 1ose Io sc.hoo I and
Sec. 1. That whereas, the
Sec. 1. That whereas, the
~trlkers2119 ; Allin the Family
city; contact Lou Osborne or congress has erected the State c
h
·
t d th 51 8 1
lots, S25 a month, Velma radio station In Bradbury,
Phone 992·2602.
and Local Fiscal Ass'1stance Act and
ongr.ess 1 5 enac 8
e Acte
2069 .
Zuspan,
Mason,
W.
Va.
.call
992-5898.
Local
Fiscal
Asslstanct
Songwriters
12-21·201p
Team high game - Lucky INTERNATIONAL
11-26.1fc
ol
1972
providing
a
system
of
of
1972
providing
a
system
of
11
-29·301p
Club; recording, publishing,
Strikers 792 ; All In the Family
~-------general
revenue
5harlng
with general revenue sharing with
free membership ; ·write
states and units ot Local states and units of local
772.
!.S.C.• Rt. 1, Box 210, Mid- TWO new mobile 'homes, never 2 STORY HOME, full basement,
government, and
Government, and
Men's high series - Gene . dleport,
Ohio
45760.
Whereas.
Section
123
fa)
(1)
Whereas, Section 123 (a) (1)
lived
In;
phone
992-2511.
bath
&amp;
•;,,
extra
lot
and
atMurrar 559; Willie Halthlll531 .
of this fedeal act requires each of the federal act requires each
12·22-61c
12-5-tlc
tached
garage;
available
Meo s high game - Willie
unit of local government to unit of local government to
now; may be had with basic
Halfhill 224; Gene Murray 208.
establish
a trust fund to receive establish a trust fund to receive
FURNISHED 2 bedroom
furnlture1 near Pomeroy
Women's high series federal revenue sharing, and federal revenue sharing, and
apartment, adults only,
Elementary School; phone
Whe'reas, the Bureau of In·
Whereas, the Bureau of In Sandy Korn 440; Barb Hensley
992·3874.
Middleport;
phone
992-738~
or 992-7133.
spection and Supervision of spection and Supervision of
405.
12-12-ttc '
12-24-6tc
Public Ofllces has approved the · Public Offlcos has approved the
FOR THE position of hall -lime
Women's High game establishment
of a "Federal establishment of a "Federal
4-H Program . Asslslar\1.
Sandy Korn 173; Barb Hensley
Revenue
Sharing
Trust Fund" General Revenue Sharing Trust
3
AND
4
ROOM
furnished
and
C.
B.
RADIOS,
antennas,
also
Contact the County Extension
152.
in
the
subdivision
receiving Fund" In each subdiviSion
unfurnished
apartmonts
.
pollee scanners; Dailey's
Office In the basement of the
110 Mechanic Street
assistance under the federal recelv\ng assistance under the
Phone
992-5434.
Radio
Shop,
Box
21
B,
Long
County Home. Phone 992·.3895
act, as requ_ired by section federal llct, as re!=lulred by
Dec. 14, 1971
4-12-ttc
Pomoroy, Ohio U76f
Bottom, Ohio.
,
tor details. The Cooperative
5705.12 of the Ohio Revised section 5705.11, of ' the Ohio
Standings
,
12-24-6fc
Co.de .
·
Revised Code;
Extension Service Is ~n E~ual
Team
Pts.
Now
Therefore,
Be
It
Now Therefore Be It Resolved
OVER
RIVER
LAND
Opportunljy
Employer.
HOUSE,
New
Haven
on
Midway
Mr. and Mrs .
73
Resolved by the Trustees of·, by the Trustets of Columbia
3.33
ACRES
Brand
new
Training
~ond
high
school
Dr.,
5
rooms
with
3
bedrooms.
Allen Cats
56
In Long Bottom, phone
I$ desired but not required.
1972 Fleetwood, 3 bedroom Orange Township, State of Ohio Townshr~, state of Ohio that:
attached
garage
and HOUSE
Lucky Strikers
54
985-3529.
Sec. I. There Is hereby
Applicant must have a car
large
lot;
basement;
mobile home. Screened th~~c . 11. There Is hereby
Allin the Family
S2
6-11 -lfc
established
a
special
fund
established
a S_P.eclal fund to be
available.
available
Feb.
lsi;
Arthur
well
:
All
level
patio, drilled
Them and Us
45
known
as
the
Federal
General
known
as
the
' Federal General
12·24-Jip
Smith, phone 882-2052, Box 64,
with r06d to river. A wonFour Jakers
32
Revenue
Sharing
Revenue
FIJnd
under
the
d
th
1 Truatf Fund"
New Haven, W. Va. 25265.
Team high series - Them
derful place for only provisions of section 5705.12 of un er e prov 1sons
o section
12·27-61~
and Us2105; Mr. and Mrs. 1918. PLUMBING and Heating man,
121,500.00.
the Ohio Revised Code.
r:Je~2 of the Ohio Rtvlsed
Team high game - Them
experienced ; It not ex·
liS ACRES
Sec. 111. All monies paid to the
Sec. 111. All monies pwld to the
CLELAND·
and Us 719; Them and Us 7111.
perlenced and honest, do not .UNFURNISHED 6 rooms and
HUNTING LAND - With
Township under the State and Township under the State and
Men's high series - Gene
apply; phone 992·2511 or 992Lout Fiscal Assistance Act of Local Fiscal Assistance Act of
gas well, 6 room house, barn,
REALTY
bath, full basement and unMurray 491; Wally Hatfield
1972 shall be creditld to said 1972 shall be credited to sa id
3918.
and several other buildings fund
furnished upstairs, 6 rooms &amp;
601 E. Main
and upended In ac - fund end expended In ac ·
488.
12-6-tlc
In need of repair. We are cordance
bath ; phone 992-5993 or 992·
Pomeroy
with the terms and cordance with the terms and
Men's high game - Gene
asking 120,000,110.
9915.
provisions Of said federal act. proviSions of said federal aot.
Murray 189; George Hensley WE ' LL SEND
t2-27-6tc
BRIGHT, •
BUNGALOW
Sec . I.V. This -resolution Is
Sec. IV . This resolution . Is
187.
JUST RENOVATED
hereby declared to be an hereby declared to be an
YOUNG
MEN
TO
SCHOOL
2
BEDROOMSNice bath,
Women's high series - Barb
MIDDLEPORT - 1 story
measure necessary emergency measure necessary
FOR RADAR JOBS IN '
$50 Portrait
large' living and kitchen. . emergency
Hensley 434; Sandy Korn 417.
for
the preservation of lhe tor the preservation ot the
frame, 2 bedrooms, dining
EUROPE.
II
you'd
like
to
live
Next door to store on level public peace; health, safety and public peace, health, safety and
Women'• high game A portrait of Gen. Ulysses
room, bath, 26 fl. llvln_g
and work In Europe, there's
lot.
Only $4,500.110.
Sandy
Korn
162
;
Barb
Hensley
welfare , such emergency welfare, such emergtncy
S. Grant graces the face of a
an exciting· job walling for EARLY American st~r&amp;o·radlo room, carpeted throughout. 2
98
ACRES
and
arising
out of the need to arising out of the need to
161
.
$50 bill. The U.S. Capitol em·
combination, AM-FM radio, 4 car carport. $12,500.00.
you wllh·loday's Army. You'll
provide a lawful fund Into which provide a lawful fund Into which
MOBILE
HOME
LOT
speaker •ound system, 4
bellishes the back.
learn to supervise and control
LARGE COLONIAL
federal
revenue
general tederal general revenue Sharing
With well and eledrlc. The sharing
speed automatic changer.
ground
surveillance
radar
payments
can pevments can bt credited for
POMEROY
- RECENTLY
Wednesday Afternoon
rest Is wild land, Ideal for be
Balance
$77.69.
Use
our
credited
for
4!!)(· expenditures In the manner and
units.
With
full
pay
while
RENOVATED
The
kif·
Tbe llrst nigh t major
League
setting of pines. A producing pendllures In the manner tor for the purposes provided undtr
budget terms. Call 992-7085. chen Is a house wife's dream,
you're
In
school.
And
lots
of
league ba.ebaU game was
Dec. 10, 1972
gas well and rnlnerals. Only the pUrposes provided under the the State and Local Fiscal
. 12-27-6tc
other benefits. Like 30 days
EVERYTHING BUll TIN, 4'
Standings
played at Crosley Field, Cin·
$16,500.00.
State and Local Fiscal Assistance Act of 1972; where
paid vacation a year. If Y.,OU're
bedroon1S, 2 baths, utility R.
W. L.
&lt;innali, 0 h i o; on May 24, Team
Assistance Act of 1972 ; when this resolution shall take effect
ONE
ACRE
MODERN
Walnut
style
stereo·
looking tor this kind of
78 SO
Gaul's Shake Haven
this resolution shell take effect and be In force from and after
radio, AM-FM radio, 4 carpeted . EXCELLENT
T.
P.
water,
electric
cha
llenge
and
excitement.
Lodwick's Mkt.
71 57
be fn force from and after Its passage .
speaker sound system, • STREET. $17,500.00.
aYallable. Some trees. Only and
Today's Army wan1s to join
its passage .
•
Sec. V. 1'hfs Resolution shall
Ridenour's T.V.
66 62
.IS
ACRE
.
~peed
automatic
·
changer.
you. For complete details call
12500.00.
Sec. v . This resolution shall take effect and be In force from
Riggs Used Cars
63 65
RACINE
Beautiful
older
Balance 165.89. Use our
collect SS G. Clark 593·3022.
SYRACUSE
take effecl and be In force from lnd after December 22, 1972.
R. C. Cola
62 66
budget
terms. Call 992-7085. home, new kitchen, 9 rooms,
and alter Dec . 18, 1972.
Paned the 22nd day of
t2-20·61c
5
ROOMS
Bath,
nice
Good's l?ennzoll
44 84
5 bedrooms. fl/7 baths, full
Passed 1he 18th dey of December 1972.
12-27-6tc
kitchen,
1front
and
back
High Ind. game - Florine
basement, gareQe and other
Arnold Jordan
porches. F.ull bosement and December 1972.W. s. Henderson
Ginther 156; second - Florine HIGH SCHOOL ' SENIORS .
Co
tum
bla
Ty;op. President
buildings.
1
Enlist now- stay home until USED MAYTAG Washer;
large extra lot. Only
Ginther 149.
Orange Townahlp President Attest: Gloria Hulton
LARGEHTORY
after gr~duallon. Guaranteed
wringer type ; good condition,
' High series Florine
~10,6110.110.
Attest : Nina Robinson, Cltrk
Clerk
5
MIDDLEPORT
assignments 1o Europe,
SSO; also used couch and
Rt. 2Coolvllle,Ohlo&lt;5723 112126• 21 • 21
Ginther 436; Pearl Russell 388 .
2VEARS
OLD
bedrooms, 1'12 baths, nice
Hawaii. Korea, or selected
recliner, $30; phone 882-2052,
Team high game - Gaul 's
NEAR RACINE- 2 nice size (121 26, 27. 21
kitchen, cellar, garage, 2
locations In the U.S. See your
Arthur Smith.
Shake Haven 328.
bedrooms with closets. ;;·,--:--'-:-------:--:---":?"":":~:-~-".....,
gl•. ssed
sunporches.
local Army representative tor
Team high series - Gaul's
12-27-6tc
Utility room and large ' '
. ,.. lltca,oclly facts about the 180-Day
$12,800.110.
Shake Haven 943.
modern
kitchen.
Carport
and
Mavtot
FROM USTOYOU
Delayed Entry Program· and COAL, Limestone, EK&lt;elslor
'h acre. Aslclng $14,000.00.
Avtomatlu
the Army's new pay raise. s 11 w k
E
·
A GREAT BIG
NEW LISTING
2 speed operation .
For more Information call
a
or s,
· Main St., • HAPPY NEW YEARS
The average South Korean
NEASE
SETTLEMENT3
Cholet
01 woter
collect SS G. Clark 593-3022. · Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
In
ttmpr ,
Auto .
bedrooms,
nice
closets
farm measures only 1.'3
12-27-6tc , - - - - - - - -4-_
12-lfc
wat .. r
level
HENRY E. CL.E.LANO
each,
large
modern
kitchen
control
,
Lint
acres .
~--:-::-:-""":"::-­
tndASSOCIATES
with bar. Utility room with '
Flltor or Power
FIHD RADIO MECHANICS ONE NEW 031 Stlhl chain saw,
washor and dryer hookups.
Fin Agltllor. •
NEEDED IN EUROPE AND
OlfJct m-m•
$190. Phone 742-5322, N. E,
KOREA. FULL PAY WHILE
Stove, and refrigerator In·
,.,me-l'rHo
Vanaman.
If no anawtr m-2s.e or m.
YOU TRAIN. T~ay's Army
420,.
.
eluded In sale. Now the price
Maytat
12·2&lt;·31c
Hilt If HUI
will · train you to be a lleld
I I I $12 5110 110
' us
• · · ·
· 8r\ltn
radio .mechanic. Then give SINGER Automatic sewing .ApPROXIMATELY '1'2 acre · HAVING
4 bedr.oom
SOLD A NUMBER
Sorrounot ctollln
you a lob In Europe and
level lof with ttepllc tank and OF HOMES, WITH A VERY
with ·"""'' avon
machln,. Like new In walnul
V2 ' b~th
Excellent
Korea. You'll Install, check
c~blnet . Makes design sill·
power
pole;
setup
for
troller;
SUCCESSFUL
YEAR,
WE
lltat.
Nohollpo",
and adjust communications
285
Third
Midches,
zig-zags,
buttonholes,
.
p;,
mlln
out
of
Harrl101'1vllle
NOW
NEED
SEVERAL
no
ovtrdrylng
..
equipment. With lime left
blind
hems,
overcasts,
etc.
on
Rt
143;
phone
742-3125
or
GOOD
PROPERT-IES,
f'IM
MHII
Lint
Ollio.
il
over to enjoy the lifestyle of
$85. Call Ravenswood 273-9521
PRICED RIGHT, FOR THE
f'lllor.
742 '
another country. You gel 30
or 273·9893,
'
NliW
YEAR.
WE
W"NT
TO
WIIIIICieiiHIIt
12-27·4!C
days paid vacation a year .
11-JO-ttc
THANK
A~L
OF
YOU
FOR
MAYTA.
And lots of other benefits. It
George S. Hobstelter Jr.
1
MAKING IT POSSIBLE.
y_ou'd like to live and work In DUE TO lay-oft, 8 track stereo 1 ACRE LOT, 1 17 miles North of
HILIN L TIAFORD,
Rock
Sprlngl
Fairground
on
Rea I ·Estate Broker
Europe or Korea, Today 1s
In walnut console; pay
..
old
Rt.
33
with
1970
65
x
12,
3
ASSOCIATE
Army wants to \oln you. Call
P. Q, lox 101, Pomeroy, Ohio
be lance of $98,80 or pay Sl per
moblll
bedroom
Windsor
NO
SUNDAY
SHOWINGS
collect SS G. C ark 593·3022.
month; phone 992·5331.
Phone 985-41U
home; phone 992-6615.
741-4211
992-U2S
Rutllnd
12-27-6tc
12-12-tfc
12-27-41c
'

!

2 SIGIIS ~·

HAYMAN'S 1\uctioo - a good
place to go each Friday
evening, 7 p.m. at Laurel Cliff
on old Rt. 7, 1 mil~ west of
Rock Springs Fairground. ·
10-10-tfc

.

I The Busy Bee Society of the
·,i Carpenter Baptist Church met
' with Vivian Gaston for their
December meeting . Mella
. I Fisher Jed devotions. Present
• were Emma Whittington, Mae
i Jordap, Anna Lich, Lynn Ann
! McWhorter, Helen Jeffers, Ida
~ Cheadl'e, Freda Smith, Bonnie
~ Cheadle, Metta Fisher and the
hostess.
• Mr. and Mrs. Clifton Fraley,
Sr., Curtis and Ricky, Mallory,
( West Virginia and Mr. and
~ Mrs. Tim Hawxhursl 1 a?d
Michael , Johnstown, Oh10,
were here for the weekend for
the wedding of the Fraleys'
daughter; Bonnie, to Dale
Jordan, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Clay Jordan ..They also visited
relatives in the area.
Mrs. Goldie Gillogly called at
.the home o[ her daughter, Mrs:
Dorotlly Frazier and family in
f Gallipolis.
j 1 Murl Galaway spent several
1,. days at the qome of her son-in·
~ law and daughter, Mr .. and
'~ Mrs. Rolland Crabtree. ·
Mr . and Mrs. Arthur
Crabtree and Mr. and Mrs.
.. ·Cecil Gillogly attended a party
: for Field Employees 0\ Ohio
• State Testing Laboratories
'
.
'
~ which was held at : Olentangy
:· Inn, Columbus. The Crabtrees
; also called on her sister,
! Bernice McKnight.
·
i, · Tbe Christmas programs at
l Carpenter Baplist and Temple
:: Churches were well attended.
~ Miss Lois Gasron, daughter
: of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Gasron,
local, has graduated from
( Career Academy in Columbus
: and is now employed as a
!· dental assistant in the office of
1Dr. James Halterm,an ~n
• Athens.
; Mr. and Mrs. William Miller
, and daughters visited his
J parents, Mr. and Mrs. Chester
Miller. at Caledonia, Ohio and
called on other relatives in that
area.
i Mr. and Mrs. Walter Jordan,
Gallipolis, were· here for the
' .wedding of his cousin, Dale
-.foulu, IIIMHionnie fraley on
~turday afternoo1(ii'Ap visited
, relatives in the evening.
: Vina Rutherford, Columbus,
:· spent ~ nlgqt at the home of
t Mr. and Mrs. Lavern Jordan.
:• Mr. and Mrs. Rex Cheadle
: entertained with a party for
: youth of the Carpenter church
- ~ following the program at the
•• church on Sunday evening.
• Those present were Allee and
Wanda Peck, Nancy Smith,
• Tina Radekin, Sara Nelson,
James Cotterill and the host
family, Mr. and Mrs. Rex
Cheadle, Don, Kathy and
Rexle.
The December meeting of
Temple W.S.C.S. was held at
the home of Mrs. Arthur
Crabtree. Mrs. Robert Matrox
led devotions and used ChrlstrnaM for the theme . .Gift exchsnge was enjoyed and secret
pals were revealed with new
names being drawn. Those
present were Goldie Gillogly,
Hazel CUlwell, Pauline Comer,
Leah Crabtree, Elizabeth
Jordan,
Betty
Mattox,
Rosemary Miller, Margaret
Gasron, Roxie Arbaugh and the
hostess. Delicious refreshments were served.

_,....,.,

.

r· -::··'----~----'·'---,---,--.... ,r·

Notice

j, Carpenter

i

•.

·sentin~l Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel
Classifieds
·
G
et
Results!
.

'''~

j

.

DICK T~ACY

C. Oriental
nursemaid
11. Redolence
11. SllaciOUI
11. Very
friendly
(hypb.
wd.)
lf.Hilh
(mUJ.)
11. Always,
poeUcally
lt. Quall:en
11. Fencinc
foil
U. Hawaiian
bland
Zli. African
antelope
Kin motion
·rr. Mrs. eopperfteld
II. Split
!t. John
O'Hara
brainchild

DOWN
I. California
wine
dlltrlct
2. Vin voce
a. Roll of
goodi
f. German
river
5.Amnged
In atrata
Wlie
about
T. Wire
meuure·
ment
I.Onager
t. Call for
attention

e.

U.Dam

U. UlUmate
17. Ofllcloua
II. Facts or
ftJUres

I
lt.Knlfe
(II.)

H. Fiery

n

Drooping
U. Brulllan
river
Zf. Engllah
river
H. Dlltilllng

apparatus

Zl. Enlllsh

'

poe\

30. Wom-cut
32. Valhalla

host
JJ.-IIxe
Jf. Harp constellation

II. Jujube

18. Swlq
eanton
n. Clanaor
II. Fiddler
erab-

UTI'E

I NOAGY I
1

rJ I I I

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tJ I

'DOMBEYl

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WMt II

M I II.WIM ..... &amp;IHI

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(2wdt.)

(IIHIIl

uo uaur•wt
J.....,, IXPII. AWIUL mMII LARIT
(A

tJ.Prepare
for war
U.Houllon

product
II. Very

chummy
(hyph.
' wd.)
at. "Keystone
State"
city
fl.llore

lelid

fl. Parme·
1111'1

exterior
fl. Crete'•
capilli

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to

work It:

AXYDL!IAAXIt

II LONGFILLOW

One letter almply standi for another. In this sample A ia
UMd lor lbe three L's, X for the lwo O's, etc. Single letter..
aPOiti'OPhew, the ltnl\h and formation of the words are all
blnta. lach day die code letten are dllerent.

CI!PI'OClVO'n8
BTO'DG HGIIYUGI . VASSEG MPG KUGC
IIIEE BTO GZGHYANQ AN YMDIATC . MCTC

1 DID NOT 61VE 1{00 A
MINK STOLE FOR CHRISTMAS

I'LL SAY

YOU DIDN'T!

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12- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport,Pooleroy, 0:, Dec. 27,1972

Hanoi

Mourns

(ConUnued from page 11
air mlslile) and AM (anartiU ) 81't " 8
ttall'craft
ery
es, ·
statement said.
~esmen said among the
targels for the B52s and
fighterbombets were the three
~8rt th~al power pmnts
In North Vietnam, two of tliem
near Hanoi and the other near

(Continued from page I)
predated the most-as a man

Haiph!JIIg.
a•z strikes within a mUe of
""

!so

the city center were a
reported
and600"
spokesmen
said
''more than
missiles were
·
th
ftred at US. planes durinfth e
weeklongcampaign before e
Olrislmas
AU.s. AI. rbomb
Forcehalt.
F4!"hantom

fighter $hot down one COmmunist MIG plane that ro~ to
challenge the AmeriCans
during the strikes, spokesmen
said. They refused to give the
date of the downing, or supply
aUs
additional det ·
A spokesman told reporters
that detaUs of the rat'ds cou ld
not be given before ~lyon~t ·~~
protect the securt
.
ongoing operation and to insure
lhe safe!)' mthe cr~s m the
ongoing operation." .
. ·
The Hungarian News Agency.
MTI said American warplanes
bombed Hanoi early today and
thai ''tens of thousands m
inhabitants with every conceivable m.eans of conveyance
are fleeing from the operation
me of · lhe new barbarous
attacks."
.
t
. MTI's Ha~01 Corresponden
Pal loth S&amp;ld he ~ad;:n 8:
~hshbot.:~: dunng'r lhe '
wu.o; e
night unUl early today·
A Pentagon apoke~an reported Tu~y the ratds were
so devastmg ~~t they could
destroy aU military targets
around Hanoi in 8 matter m
weeks. The US. ~ In
IIUIOUIICing today's ra reported the loss of a.1152 and ~n
A7 Corsair Jet , and satd
"llborlly befure noon (11 p.m.
E;ST Tuesday) U.S. crews
t'OI1duded air :t:val~pe:
tiorut aplnst
.. ry rg
.In North Vietnam.
Sausage making, w hi c h
goes back as far as recorded
· h 18 t 0 r y, origi~ated as a
means of presen'mg meat.

5~%
INTEREST
On 90-Day
C.ll'flflcates
of Deposit
SV2 per cent per year
paid on ?0 day Certificates of Deposit.
SI,OOO.OO Minimum.
Interest
Payable
Quarterly.

Meigs

1;o. Branch

The Athens Count~
S.vinp &amp; Lo;Jn Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

All Accounts Insured To
$20,000.00 bv FSLI('

•
•

....

.-;

~.,..

•

.

with guts."

Truman •s widow and daughter who spent a long, grim
vigll at Research Hospital
during most of lhe 22 days
Truman lay ill and near death,
spent about 30 minutes
Tuesday afternoon in the
Carson Funeral Horne.
Casket Is Sealed
They were accompanied by
Mrs. Daniel's husband, E.
Clifton Daniel, a New York
Times executive, the Trwnans'
maid, and Mrs. · George P.
Wallace,)lfrs. Truman's sister,
who lt'ves next door in Independence. After their visit,
lhe casket was sealed.
Trwnan, who became president April12, 1945, at the death
of Franklin D. Roosevelt,
outlt'ved hiS
' historica.l ronternporart'es ,..,urchiU, talin, De
-......
Gaulle, MacArthur.
Et'senhower and even Thomas
E. Dewey, the Republican he
defeated for the presidency In
1943 in, one of the biggest
political upsets in American
history.
Truman grew up on his
parents' farm, where be did his
chores, went to school and
learned to play the piano at his
mother's insistence. He
educated hlmseH and by the
time he was 12 be had read
every book in the Ind~pendence Ubrary. Since his
d
parents could not afford to sen
blm to c~llege, he went to work
\.n a drug store, His first week's
pay was three silver dollars.
Works at Vartoua Jobs
Trwnan worked as a bank
clerk, on a co'nstrucllon g~~ng,
and in tbe Circulation Department mthe Kansas City Star·
He enlisted in the U.S. Army
during world War I and ,advanced to the rank of captain.
After the war, he and Bess,
the little girl be met in Sunday
school when he was 6 and she
was 5 were married June 'lJI,
1919 . He and an Army friend
opened a haberdashery in
Kansas City, but it faUed
during a 1921 depression and
Truman lost $15,000.
Another Army friend, .run
Pendergast, introduced
Truman to his uncle Tom
Pendergast, "boss" of
Democrats in Kansas City, who
gaye the former captain his
start iri politics.
Truman rose from precinct
captain through county office
and wanted to run for the"
House mRepresentatives, but
Pendergast said he should try
instead for the Senate. He
waged a vigorous .campaign in
1934 and won.
Truman reluctantly accepted the vice presidential
nomination from Roosevelt in
1944 and became president
three months after the
inauguration when Roosevelt
died.
s·

MISS BAH.'EY DIES
Miss Permella Bailey, at, ·
formerly of Mason and
Pomeroy, died Tuetday al st.
Rita's Rest Home in Ollumbus.
S!e was the dausbter m the
late .riDI and Susan Cllrpenlll"
Batley. Her father, who employed on the Cbampioo n
ferry boat, also had 'Worked at
'
.
the While ROck Salt Co. Mll8
Bailey was employed by the
state of Ohio over 30 years. She
ed u but • graduated from high school at
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - tlcipa. lion in the ceremonies mourning
· " I and order t aoffices Mason. The only local relaUve
surviving is MiSs Elizabeth A.
President Nixon rues to In- .honoring the former president essenya
(Lyde) liyan of Mason .
dependence, Mo., today to pay to fit the pattern of sompliclty closed. In addiUon, be
a 3lklay
of
his fina 1 respects to HarrY S ·desired by the Truman family, that durin_g the
flagspenod
on all
Trwnan, 8 man he eulogized as coming a day before the · mournmg .
.
"one or the most "i:ourageOijs funeral setvices to 'pay · his government buildmgs at home
OFFICES ro CLOSE
Presidents In our histon'."
personal respects and call on
and on all U. S.
COLUMBUS (UPI) . Accornpan1'ed bY Mr
Ni
·
lhe
family.
Navy
ships
be
flown
at
half,
Gov. John J. Gllllgan said
. s. . x9n, .
taff
the President was scheduled to
He proclaimed Thursday, the s ·
. today state gQvernmenl
fly to Rlchard-Debaur Air day mburial, a day of national
offtees will be closed
Force Base at midafternoon
Thu~day as part ofo~~ day of ·
and go directly to the 'l'ruman
THREEFINED
mourning for former
Library where be will lay a
NOT ON ROAD
Three defendants have been
President Harry S Truman
f th ld
The bookmobile will not be fined and a fourth forfeited
wbo died Thursday. ··
wreath at the bier o e o
on
the
road
Thursday
in
Meigs
bond in the coilrt of Middleport
"The decision lo close is In
political foe that he long ago
came to admire.
County in respect to the late Mayor John Zerkle. They were
keeping with President
d h'
Harry
S
Truman.
Clarence E. Lee, 26, Pomeroy,
Nixon's order of a national
Nixon tailore
1s par$100and costs and three days in
day of mourning," said
\::?::;:::;~~;:::;:~~&lt;::::~
jall for driving while inRobert Tenenbaum,
Marriage Uceose
Gilligan's news . secretary, .
Bruce R. Laferriere, 23; toxicaled; Del L. Ogdin, 22,
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Rutland, $5 'and . ·costs, , no. _:;;:;:~::::::;;;;:;:::;:::;::::::::::::~:~:::::~:=~::::::~::::;;:;. ·
Mild with periods ~I .rain Martins Ferry, Ohio, and operator's
license, and Billy
.
.
on
Friday.
Clearing Linda Diane Welsh, 20, Mid- Joe McDaniel, 33, Middleport,
DIVORCE GRANTED
dleport,'
Saturday and Sunday. Hlgb
$100andcostsandtbreedaysin
Helen Hubbard has been
temperatures In the upper
jail for DWI, and forfeiting a granted a divorce from Larry
40s Friday aod In the lower
$200 bond for OWl was Mark D. Hubbard on grounds of gross
IN IIOSP!TAL
40s on S.turday and Sunday.
Bud Crew, formerly of Almendinger, 68, Richwood, neglect of duty and extreme
O~ernlght lowa In the lower Pomeroy, is a patient at Mount Ohio.
cruelty.
tOs Friday and S.lurday aod Carmel Hospital in Columbus
In the middle 308 early where he will undergo surgery
Sunday.
Friday. His room number is
.. •,•,·. ·.·.·.·•·.·•·• .·.·.· .· . ....
1527.
•
(ContlnuEl(l from page I)

'I

CHRISTMAS CARDS
WRAPPING PAPER,
RIBBON, BOWS,
LIGHT SETS, .
ORNAMENTS

Y2 P.IICE

d~cted

News • • .. in Briefs

· HOSPITAL NEWS
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Myrtle Marie
Click, Mt. Alto •. W. Va.;
Pauletta Sigman, Middleport;
Janet Sigman, Middleport;
Gary F.' Batey, New Haven;
Gay Guinther, Chester;
George Hawk , Pomeroy;
LoUise Bartel~. ·Pomeroy;
Mary Lawhorn, Mason ;
George Keefer, Leon, W.Va.; ·
Nancy Selt!On, PomeroyLeroy terrill, Pomeroy, and
Retha Yost, Rutland.
DISCHARGED - Nors
Reuter, Lloyd Roush and
Raymon_(l Arnold.
·
Holzer MediCal Center
(bl.cbaqed)
Tracy Howard, Mary An\lerson, Delores Riege), Fred
Parks, Donna Cook, E·Qrl
Weinman, Gertrude Markle,
Charlote Wamsley, Bertha
Craig, David Jackson, Nancy
Stewart.
(Births)
Mrs. Daniel Arlhur, Jackson,
a son, and Mrs. Wayne Cooper.
Jackson, a son.

Holzer Medical Center
DISCHARGES
(Dec. 22, 23, 24, 25)
Leah Hart, Thomas Frye, .
George Henry, Lou Ellen Zinn,
Rosie Yates, Dallas Sheline,
Nellie Fulk, Percy Roach,
Zelia Howell, Jean Kay Trace,
Doshia Wyckoff, Cynthia
Fernow, Inf. twin son of Mr.
and Mrs. James Circle, Ernest
North, Hosmer Roush, Ebb
Tomblin, Thomas Bush, Milo
Sergent, Albert Gabrielli, Amy ·
Jo Radin, Connie Jean Zeoli,
Roy Snowden, Henry Varney,
Uoyd Roush, Hattie Roush,
Dorothy Long, Kevin Price,
Juanita Mcintyre, Louise
Michael, Margaret Lemmon,
Theda Joseph, Stanley Evans,
lti Mal'W. l!!lfiott, kimberly
Gooderhan, Gomer Donnelly,
Otta Casto, Alberta Davis,
John ' Bryant, Isaiah Crump,
Jr., Paul F. Thomas, Sr.,
Arleen Roush, Charles Hughes,
Sr., Ruth Bowman, Mrs. Victor
Crwn and daughter ; Mrs. John
Davis and son; Leona Roach,
Judith Metzler, Raymond
Hugbes, Mrs. Milton Newman
and daughter; Allee Raines,
John Spearry, ·Jean Siders,
Ralph Estelle, Girree Moore,
Lena Ralke, Gaylord Woomer.
Mrs. Uncoln Smith and son,
Frances Redman, Lori Renee
Redman, Morrise North, Oscar
McConnell, Betty Hutchinson,
George Hart, Robert Greene,
Shawn Gray, Verda Cremeans,
Charles Cook, Jr., Mrs.
Robert Codner and son, Mrs.
Gary Allen and son, William
Slone, Deborah Hammond,
Mildred Cribben, Perry
Eisnaugle, Thelma Kuhn,
Wanda Malone, Lora Riely,
Phillis Hendrix, Nevin Wood,
Letha Wood, Coetta Thomas,
Mrs. Roger Spaun and infant
twin son, Mrs. Eldie Simpson
and son, ROsemary Neal, Anna
Morris, Stanley Miller, Joseph
M!Uer, Jr. Inez McGuire,
James Howard, Homer Houck,
Christopher
Craft,
Nancy Cox, Jo Anne Hill,
Mrs. Clarence Utcbfield and
daughter; Mrs. Eugene Fisher
and daughter, Mrs. Sol Stiltner
and daughter, Mra. James
Emmert and daughter,
I

1

I

lj

NOW YOU KNOW
Caiifornla's land mass shifts
about two Inches a year along
lhe San Andreas earthquske
fault with land west of the fault
moving northward and land
east of lhe fault moving southward.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight &amp; Thurscloy
Oec. 27-28
NOT OPEN
Frld1y &amp; Saturday

Dec. ~9-JO
MURDER IN THE
RUE MORGUE
· ( Ttchnlcolor)
Ja- Robards
Christine Kaufman
!GP)

Also
MAN IN THE
WILDERNESS
(ltchnlcolorl
.

Show Starts 7p.m.

(GP)

Denver Logue and ~on, Mrs.
Terry Farley and son, Ipfant
twin son mMr. and Mrs. Roger
Spaun, Cynthia Munn, Myrtle
Brumfield and Harold
Bowman.
BIRTHS
(Dec. 2!, 23, 24, 25)
Mrs. Danny Exline, son,
Jackson ; Mrs. James Emmert, faughter, Harnden; Mrs.
Terry Furley, son VInton; Mrs.
Clinton Gillman, son, Bidwell;
Mrs. Olarles Hill, son, Pt.
Pleasant; Mrs. Kenneth
Gilkey, son, New Haven; Mrs.
Eugerie Fisber, ,daughter, Oak
Hill; Mrs. James Gillenwater,
daughter, GaUipoUs; Mrs.
Donald Meadows, daug~ter,
Letart; Ml'l. Ru.ueU Johnson,
Jr., son, Galllpolls; Mra. Larry
Hoschar, daughter, Cot·
tageville, Mrs. Ke~neth 'Barr,
son, Bidwell; Mrs. Allen
Zornes, son, Jackson, and Mrs.
William Eggleton, son, Bidwell .

crash high on an ley Andes slope. Then the chief of the rescue
squad which first reached the site of the crash said Tuesday he
found evidence of cannibalism in _and around the wreckage of the
plane, located on a 13,500.foot slope of Tlngulririca volcano about
120 mUes from SanUago.
A TOTAL OF 592 PERSONS died on the nation's highways
.during the Chrislmas holiday weekend, a final count showed
Tuesday. 'The National Safety Council estimated another 430 to
530 persons "ould die in traffic accidents New Year's weekend.
The council said nearly too lives could be saved next wee~end_ if
safety belts and shoulder harnesses are worn by automobile
travelers.
. The United Press InternaUonal Christmas count showed 592
persons died in traffic accidents, 53 in fires, 9·in plane mishaps
and 34 in other accidents, for a total m688 acctden.tal deaths
between 6 p.m. local time Friday and midnight Monday. In the
78-bour period, California counted 46 traffic fatalities, Texas 42
and Pennsylvania 34. Three states, Alaska, Montana and Vermont, and the District of Columbia, reported no highway
fatalities.

•

13.5 million :rate
Increase
..
•

Cost to average ·home
phone user would be an
increase of Be pel' day

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Public Utilities Con\rnission of
Ohio has ordered General Teli'
phone Co. to resolve problems
which caused 123 complaints to
be filed by customers in the
Sinking Springs exchange in
Highland County.
Henry W.Eckhart, chairman
m the commission said the
complaints included:
- Telephones frequently out
morder.
- Difficulty in having telephones repaired.
- Difficulty in hearing con:
versations.
- Difficulty in dialing and
(Continued on page 5)

and&lt; abr~ad

sr.::::~:!:?.!S:~W::::~:~:::::&gt;.•:::::::::::::::::::::::::::~ Pamela Sue Adams, Mrs.

Hallmark

Utility told
to listen

'Nixon in ·Independence
gov~~en

.'

G~T asks

.

Pleasant Valley H01pltal
Discharges: Mrs. Oshel
Patterson, son, Henderson;
Charles Leach, · Mrs. Michael
Walker, Point Pleasant,
Birth - Dec. 26, a daughter
to Mr . and· Mrs. Eadker
MRS. DIEHL DIES
Russell
mLeon.
HARRISONVTLLE - Mrs.
Orville (Margaret) Allen, S::-Ko~'$::~@
·-- d • bb5b. J ,,a-a
HmT~nville, bas l~d m
. KENNEDY FIRED
the death mMrs. Mere! Diehl
PORTSMOUTH, Ohio
on Christmas Day. Mrs. Diehl,
formerly of Laurel Cliff, (UPI) -In a surprise move
resided in Spo~ane, Wash. S!e Tuesday, tbe Portsmouth
was an aunt of Charles Diehl city council voted c-2 to fire
who died here, also on City Manager Huxley
Olristmas day. Mrs. Diehl was Kennedy, effective Feb. 1,
the wife of the late John Diehl. 1973.
Councilman William
Funeral services will be held ll)
Anderson, wbo IDittated the
!lpokane.
action, said that . while
Kennedy "... may bave
many attributes as a
manager, I feel that for the
Immediate and long range
.plaDUlug of lhe city w~ need
a new manager." Keuuedy
became city manager In
February, 1967. No successor was Immediately
named.

·~·

..

· G~neral Telephone Co. mOhio, whicli serves Qbout 30 per
cent of Ohio, including mo.st of Meigs County, Wednesday filed a
request for ~ $1M million annual ratecIncrease wllh tlje Public
Utlllties Commission (f'UCO) of Ohio.
·
It would amount to an average boost of almost elgbt cents a ·
day in basic Service rates for resldenUal customers.
Robert M. Wopat of Marlon, preaident, uld $13.5 million
would add .19 per cent to the compariy's total openUng revemes.
He cited rising costs, growing service demanrll and lnflaUon as
the reason for seeking increased revemes. Tu• would take
. SWORI'I IN -These officials mMeigs County who will begin new terms
slightiy more than baH the $13.5 figure, or aboUt
mlUlon, be ·
'COUnty commissloner ; Bernard Fultz, prosecuting attorney; Howard Frank,
moffice on Jan. 1 were sworn-in by ·Judge John C. Bacon, common pleas
said.
.
treasurer; Eleanor Rob6on, recorder; Manning Webster, probate and
court division, Wednesday in the courtroom. From the left are Judge Bacon,
"Exlatlng rates are Inadequate to lllellt the clirrenthigh level .
juvenile court judge, and Dr. R. R. Pickens, coroner. Commissioner' Robert
, Larry Spenter, new clerk of courts beginning his first term; Warden Ours,
of opera.ling anti construction COlts", said Wopa\. ''Our earnings
Clark, Sheriff Robert Harlenbach, and Theodore Beegle, county engineer,
must be improved in order to carry out lnlalslve capital exalso will begin new terms of office.
parisian and' improvement required by year end, 1976."
Long distance rates are not
affected by Ibis appllcation. million.
The request does not apply to
Among Increases proposed,
Norlhern Ohio Telephone Co. the char~e for installing a new
which has a separate case residential phone would go
pending before the PUCO. from $12to $25 and for blislness
General . and Northern are from $15 to $30. Wopat said
subsidiaries of General lhese adjustments stlU would
. Telephone and Electronics be Inadequate to c~ver actual
Devoted To The lnteresl8 Of The ·Meigs- Mason Area
Corp. of New York.
costs. .
..
"General's last rate ad•
"But It would remove some
VOL XXV NO. 179
~OMEROY-MIODLEPORT, OHIO
j~sbnent, based on .June 30, of thti burden from existing
· THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1972
PHONE 992·2156
TEN CENS 1969, buslneils conditions was customers,'' he aald.
not authorl•i!ll by. the PUCO
In other Increases proposed,
·.mUI N:ov. 16, 1971," said an unllated phone number
Wopat. "We had requested $9 would go from 50 to 75 cents.
.nllllon but received only $4.7 And the basic monthly rate for
million . Taxes took aU but $2.3 extension phones would be
million."
lncressed 25 cents a month to
I
An appeal on lhat case Is sUU $l.25.
. INDEPENDENCE, Mo. often from the glass wall of his .
pending before the Ohio
The PUCO will study
Truman's mahogany casket "Vanquished Army."
Tuesday allhe age of 88after a
(UPI)- Harry S Truman was library office where he spent
The greatest tribute 10 Supreme Court.
Ge~eral's applicaUon. No rate
President Nixon, Truman's three-week illness.
to be buried today in tbe land his last years happily was. brought to lhe library,
Truman was not the fleeting
"Inflation Is not just a vague adjustmenta can be made until '
high
on
a
knoll,
a~d P1aced ip old political foe, and former
After
placing
wreaths,
each
visits
m
past
and
present
term,"
Wopat ·said. "Slrice a PUCO declllqn Ia reached.
be loved best with a simple surrounded by his White House
the lobby on a black velvet- President LynJon B. Johnson, of Trutnan 's successors paid presidents. It was long lines of mld·1969, for lostance, four The company sarvee · about '
ceremony attended by the momentos.
draped' catafalque to lie in
calls on Bess Truman, 87. She plain folk who stood waiting for union wage increases totaling 460,000 telephones through 191i
peuple who knew blm as neigh''I want to be buried out there state Wednesday until noon Truman's cloSe friend and ally,
did
not leave the century-old hours Wednesday and today to more lhan $4 ml!Uon have been central offlcea CGVe!'lug parts
came separately, placed
bor and companion rather thari so I can get up and walk into
EST today.
wreaths and left. Neither horne on Delawar~ St. where file by his bier.
put Into effect."
of 70 counUil. It hal dlatrlct
as president of the United my office if I want to," be once
Thousands
of
l&gt;ersons,
the
she
and
Truman
lived
during
53
returned
today
for
the
private
states.
From the time the doors
"What's more," he added, offices lh Athens, Brookville,
told Army 'funeral planners. rich and the poor, the famous
years of marriage. .
fuliera)
for
Trwnan,
who
died
opened at 3 p.m. Wednesday "The PUCO. In September, Bryan, Cadiz, Cambridge,
Only his famUy and closest
In death as in life, his desire and · the unknown, workers
for the public viewing , 1971, ordered vast reduction Of C e 11 n a , CIrcle vII I e ,
friends were included in the ·for simplicity prevailed and his wearing dungarees and ~prons
thousands passed the flag. party lines be instituted by Georgetown, Marion, Minerva,
ceremony to bid the 33rd state funeral, embellished with and men carrying babies, lined
draped coffin, some solemn, ilec. 31, 1976. Tbe cost to lm- New Philadelphia, Porl'president a final farewell.
military flourishes, Taps and a tl)e streets of Independence as
sorne slopping to pray sllehtly, plement this wUI exceed ~I mouth,
Sylvania
rnd
Truman himself selected the 21-gun salute, still was a Truman's cortege proceeded to
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP!)- honest and honorable in all men In uniform saluting minion between 19'/2.1967."
Wilmington.
,
burial ·spot In tlie. grassy modest tribute from a grateful the library Wednesday.
The text mthe prayer former things; make me Intellectually sharply, .·
"During this five year period
Here's the requested lpcourtyard. He looked out on It nation to a courageous leader.
Milltary bands played "RUf- President Harry s Truman honest for the sake of right and
The slow-movllig pr~on . our com~any pUj~ to ~nd creases lor phoriea in Mejp
'
fles and FloUrishes" and called his favorite:
honor and withuut lhought of cohtlnued lhrOOR]I t1ie night as · more thiln ~ miUJon In- County served tbrlllJIIh flte
-~·.
·~· •. •.. . • ..
...............,.•~&gt;,:::-::
. .. .
.......
n:.:·~~~eo.v...
·• Y...-»
n~"~?X-.
. ~
"Oh,
Almighty 'and . reward to me. Give me the those who once knew hJm as a eluding the $61 mllilon party- Letart Faile, Pomeroy and
everlasting God, creator m ability to be charitable, $3-a-week helper the corner line program to npand and Portland·ellchanges:
Heaven, Earth and the forgiving and patient wilh my drug store, and Americans improve facllltlu. Without
Relldence -one party,l't&lt;ln
L'ni verse:
fellow men - help me to from far away who kn~ favorable earnings II wW ~ $7.60 to $9.90 par month.
"Help me to be, to lhink, to understand their motives and Truman as ''Give 'em Hell Impossible to borrow money at
By United Press Interuallooal
'
Two party, from S8.71 t
act what is right, because it is ll!eir shortcomings - even as Harry•r came lo say their final reasonable interest rates,'' he · ta.96.
LONDON -ELUSIVE BIWONAIRE Howard Hughes may
right; make me truthful , lhou understandesl mine."
abandon hiS obsession with privacy - a trait·that has made b1m
farewells.
•
conUnued.
Four party, from ~.91i to
the world's most famous recluse, one mhis closest aides said
Monlhly phone bills do nol SB.IO.
PT. PLEASANT - A $100,000
today. "I guess he thinks that life has been passing him. by a lawsuit was filed Wednesday in
directly pay for capital exRural from f8.20 to ~UO.
little," said John Eckersley, who flew with Hughes from earth- U. S. District Court in Hunpanslon programs, he afied.
The Increase for each
quake~evastated Nicaragua where H~ghes had been h~led ~p tington against Mason County
, The cpmpany has to bOrrow residence rangu from ~.10 to
in the InterconUnental Hotel. They arrived Tuesday m Cirmoney for expansion,
f2.30 per month. Tbe requested
Sheriff Troy H. Huffman.
cumstances which already have provoked anger from members
Between June 30, 1969 and increases for businesses in
The suit by William H.
mParUsment.
last
Aprll30, the company put Meigs County include - one
Robinson mFrasiers Bottom in
"He (Hughes) is going to change that," Eckersley said. "He Putnam County alleges that
$94.9 million Into expansion party, from $14.40 to fl9.60;
is hoping to live more ma life if people will Jet him."
and modernization of facilities. two party from $12,70 to
Huffman severely beat him
An Qddltlonal $47.3 million Is and rural bulllnl!lll, from $11.?5
Harry Armstrong, (Rand arrested him without a
" Harry Armstrong haa
BANGKOK- FOUR SELF-DESCRWED members of lhe
earmarked
for construction in to $16.75. · Tbe business lnwarrant last New .Year's Eve. Logan) ·Senatorial District 17, emerged as one mthe hardest
Arab guerrilla Black September organization seized the Israeli
1973. The company listed the creases range from $4.90 to
Sheriff Huffman arrested will serve as chairman of a new working senators and responds
Embassy today, took five hostages and threatened to kill them
value of Ita property at $289 $6.20 a month.
Ohio Senate Committee on coolly under fire as evidenced
unless 36 prisoners held in Israel were released. The guerrillas Robinson on charges of drunk Agriculture, Conservation and
driving and hit and run without
in the responsible manner be
gave Israel an Bp.m. EST deadline to release the prisoner;s. .
a warrant, according to ll!e Environment during the IIOth handled the new strip mine biD
In Tel Aviv, Prime Minister Gold Melr called her cab met mto
General Assembly session enacted Ibis yes r," Senator
emergency session to discuss the situation. Government sources ~ult. The incident occured hear convening on Jan. 1,. it was
Hartford.
Gray commented.
said Mrs. Meir received a report on the seizure from the Israeli
Currently serving his second
The suit contends that the announced today by Theodore
Ambassador to Thailand Rehavam Amir, who lives inside lhe
M.
Gray,
chairman
of
lhe
arrest was in violation of
term in the senate, Sen. 4rm·
Bangkok compound but was not there when the four Palestinians
senate
committee
on
comRobinson's Civil rights.
strong came to the Senate In
seized the building and hostages.
mittees.
1966, after having spent tivo
terms
in thz House of
SAIGON (UP!) - U. S. mUltary source~ 8lld American
. WASHINGTON- ADMINISTRATION OFFICIALS indicate
The agriculture, con- Representatives . Sen. Armplanes struck deep into North Vietnam apin today despite
"Phase III" of President Nixon's economic program may see the
servation and environment strong's district is comprised
growing
losses mmen and planes. The U.S. command has Usled
dropping ol rent controls next year and changes in the profit
Cloudy tonight and Friday. committee is designed to
of all of Athens, Gallla,
only military targeta aa objects mthe massive raids, but Com·
margin rule disliked by business.
.
Lows tonight in lhe mid 30s. recognize the interrelating Hocking, Lawrence, Meigs,
munlst dispatches from Hanoi said parts mthe capital ''have
President Nixon has said be wants some form of continued Highs Friday In the mid and problems arising from the
Pickaway,
Ross
and Vinton
been erased from the face of the earth."
stabilization authority when the present Economic Stabilization upper 40s. Pr,ecipitation near regulation of use of natural
The ccmmand said Communllt gunnera shot down two more
Act expires April 30, and officials emphasized that Nixon will zero per cent today, 10 per cent resources and protection of Counties and part of Fayette,
Jackson and Washington
B52a and a Jolly Green Giant rescue helicopter over Laos to
tonight, 20 per cent Friday. . future quality of living.
(Continued on page 5)
Counties.
bring to 23 the number maircraft Ioiii, Including 14 of the $8'
million B52s. Hanoi Radio claims 71 American planes loot, 31 m
them B52s. It said two were shot down Wednesday night.
Holiday sales at
President Nguyen Van Thleu
met for an hour and 45 minutes that the U.S. will stop bombing
new record high
today with U.S. Ambassador areas above the 20th ParaDe! in
Ellsworlh Bunker and Gen: the next few days in order to
Frederick C. Weyand, the resume the talks In Paris."
SEN, ARMSTRONG
NEW YORK (UPI)
American commander in VIetThe newspaper, quoUng a
·Christmas 1972 may have been
nam,
presumably
to
discuss
· "reliable source," said that
a sales record-~~etter according
the
U.S.
bombing
operations
"the meeting took place after
to esUmates by credit comagainst
North
VIetnam,
the
Communists in Paris
panies and retail stores.
Tin
Song,
the
dally
demanded tha't the bombing
Official figures complied by
newspaper
closest
to
Thleu,
above the 20th Parallel be
uie Department of Commerce
said
that
Thleu,
Bunker
and
stopped and the talks reremain to be tabulated, but
The
1973
4-H
Club
and
FFA
Weyand
met
"amid
tumors
(Continued on page 5)
reports indicate total salea
S~er Feeding Project will get
across the country may weD
underway on Monday morning,
have topped last year's. by
New
Year's Day, at 10 a. m.
more than 10 per cent. ·
Jan. I.
Government economists had
All s leers to be enrolled in
Eighi defendants were fined
predicted incre88es of around 5
the project will be weighed in $5 and costa each by Pomeroy Rutland, bolh having an open
to 7 per cent.
flask.
at lhe Karr's Royal Oak Farm M~yor Wllllam Baronlck
Forfeiting bonds were
scales starting at 10 a. rn. New Wednesday night.
Thomas . Pullllll, Point
Year's morning. The cattle will
They were Darrell McKin- Pleasant, fll. pusllljl on a
be freeze branded at that time. ney, Shade, unsafe veblcle;
Identification cards for each William Harden, Racine, double )lllow Une; Hlllary
GLASSES ORDERED
Turley, Middleport, ... DWI;
animal
are
required.
running
a
red
light;
Connie
The Pomeroy-Middleport
James Eakina, RadDe, '15,
Radford, Pomeroy, faUure to failure to yield right of way;
Uons Oub voted to purchlle
FIREMEN CALLED
yield right ol way; Olarlene Gerald Arnold, Ponliivy, $15,
eye glaaa for one penm, •
The
Middleport
Fire
Dept.
Barton, Mason, faUure to keep in!DelcaUm; .1o1m Rltcbbut,
club project, when members
went to the mobile home of assured clear dlatance: Robert
met Wedneldly for a Dorothy
Harmon,
645 Hensley, Long BoltOn!, failure Syracun, '11.71, IPHdiJll:
"SANTA'S
1'(«1
~11"
atlbt
hciDe
ol
Mr.
and
Mrs.
lancllean at tile Mtlp Inn. Don
. die belt -.a dlcwatlons in Mkldleport, 11le - 1
Sycamore St. at about 10:30 p. to yield right ol way; Paul Robert Ml'iwtl•·llh,11 ~
Pau!SIIwt,atU. . , . . rillleccind Aw. and Uncoln St., is a
Pearelt, prellldut, wa1 in
conlelt *Sd by the Middleport Garden Club, the
m, Wednesday when a furnace Milliron, Racine, dtl1cUve Lake, ru., ... eqt'M Ill llril.
feature
of
die
holklay
r
oo.
Their
laM
was
JucltJed
having
cllup 01 lbt lllarl ~
and Alfred RMb, lftrt, W.
Middlepcrt Amatew Garden Club and the Middleport
•
I
motor
becaflll
overheated.
David
Priddy,
exhaust;
D1amber t1 C•"iiN«-e.
Va., .-o, ~ OJ 1111&amp;1.
There was min« dama&amp;f.
Ru~nd and J111111 ,&amp;.man,

.-.a

•

. SNOWBALL QUEEN -Miss &amp;Isle Jeffers, daughter m
Mr. and Mrs. Neal Jeffers, Dexter, and a junior at .Meigs
High School, was named snowbaU queen a_t a ~lmslmas
dance held Friday at the former Pomeroy Jumor High School
by the jUnior class of Meigs High. Miss Jeffers was presented
a tiara and bouquet of yeUow roses.

a

EMS class to organize Jan. 3
RACINE - An organiz;ttional meeting for persons
interested
in
attending
classes in emergency medical
services training here will be
held at Racine town hall
Wednesday, Jan. 3, at 7:30 p.
m. to meet the instructor and
establish hours . for the
training.
The training is required in
order ·tO maintain the present
emergency service. Classes
are · open to any individual
interested in emergency
rescue work and who can
qualify. Sufficient trained
personnel · is required to

maintain 24-hour emergency
service. Bolh male and female
applicants will be accepted.
The trai.ning program is not
restricted io members of lhe
present emergency squad.
PARTY TONIGHT

The Ladies Auxiliary of
Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
American Legion, Middleport,
will hold · a potluck supper at
6:30 this evening at the post
horne. They wi\1 be joined for
lhe dinner by the Legionnaires
of the post. The annual
auxiliary party and $1.50 gift
exchange will folio~ .

e

ST ceremony simple, q U l et
Prayer for others, too

1

.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

ews .. in Briefsj Huffman
is sued ·

DRESS UP for the

Sen. Armstrong will .
chair new committee

·New Year Holiday With
.A New Dress From Our
.

Big Colle.ction of Dresses,

W th
ea er

FE4.TURING WELL-KNOWN BRANDS
•BUTTE KNIT
•JONATHAN LOGAN
•VICKY VAUGHN
•TONI TODD
•R&amp;K ORIGINALS
•BERKSHIRE
And Many Others
A Complete Selection of

. Styles and Colors in

Steer feeding
begins Monday

Junior Petites - Juniors
, ~isses - Half ~rze•s 1t

JEWELRY, HANDBAGS AND

Eight ·draw $5 penalty

OTHER Aa:ESSORIES
ON THE MAIN FLOOR.

E

m.ao,

Parts of Haitoi
are wiped out

Pant Suits and Ensembles.

· .

in

ELBERFB.DS MEatANIC STREET WAREHOUSE FOR FURNISiUNGS FOR YOUR
ti)ME. APPLIANCES • CARPET • FLOOR .OOVERINGS
•

ELBfRFELDS I
\&gt;

l

-.I

'

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