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lndos, Paks Moving on Dacca
By Uilltect'Press International
India recognized the rebel
government of Bangia Pesh
today and Indian troops and
rebel forces advanced to the
East Pakistani capital of Dacca
in hopes of a quick victory.
In Dacca, UP! Correspondent
Joseph Galloway said two
lnclian MIG2Is made two
attftcks on the city's airport
shortly before a United Nations
evacuation airplane was scheduled to arrive to pickup
foreign community dependents
and minutes before a truce
requested by the United Nalions apparently was scheduled
to begin.
In New Delhi, Indian Prime
M.. ,ister Indira Gandhi, speaking in English to the lower
House of the Parliament,
announced the formal recognilion of the Bangia Desh
(Bengal Land) government.
The. attacks at the Dacca
airport caught a group of about
10 British women and children
who had just arrived to board

AMIGO, NO MATTSR

W'riAT YOU e"A'Ii IF

YOU SUCCEED YOU ·
ANP YOUft FAMII.'/

WI I.!. MAKi· · .
.N&amp;W~.

''fEP!rO~ NcW5 TI1AT HE' h'ACJ
FOUND A FOOP

CO~F'O~TION

~OCE§51NG­

W/1/CH WOUl-D
PICK UP i11E C05T OF OUJ(
PFCOP06EP T~i\N5Ail.ANTIC.

VOYAG~ ON HEATH~~ WENT
WHEN KEVIf.l 5AIV' Hli
PAFCT OF A .PFCOMOT/ONAl. ::tr.Hl:Mt

1-0V~~IJOY, i'HI5

HAPPEN, ON~Y

CAlli

ONG!i IN A
l.IPETIMi,

the evacuation flight. They
went through lhe attacks
without injury.
Indian MIG Attacks
Galloway said the Indian
MIGs attacked the airport
between 9: 30 a.m. an d 10 a.m.
and made a second sweep 20
minutes later.
The United Nalions had asked
for a truce to evacuate
dependents.
On war fronts, Indian spokesmen said their forces repulsed
two tank attacks near Kashmir
on the West Pakistan border
and destroyed 23 Chinese-made
, T59 tanks of the Pakistani
Army.
Indian military spokesmen
said their military leaders in
East Pakistan had orders to
bypass the garrison city of
Jessore, which is only 24 miles
from the Indian border, and
move towards Dacca . Other
troops are also moving in
towards Dacca from the north
and northeasl.
India claimed air superiority

over both East and West
Pakistan and its navy claimed
a major victory off the West
Pakistan seaport city of Karachi.
Pakistani spokesmen said
their planes have downed 61
Indian jets and deslroyed II
tanks .
Members · of the Indian
Parliament broke into cheers
and began thumping their desks
before Mrs. Gandhi eould finish
her statement announcing formal recognition of the rebels.
"Now that Pakistan is waging
war on us, the hesitation which
the government was feeling in
according recognition to the
Bangia D!'sh movement has
lost significance." she said.
The legislators replied with
cries of "Jai (Long Live)
Bangia Desh."
India has covertly supported
the rebel movement since the
Pakistani civil war last March
when the West Pakistan
government with headquarters
1,000 miles away across Indian

J.l5iEN, t CAN''!'
CONT~CT TO C.OMPJ.E~
/HE VOYAGE; NO ~EAJ.
~AIJ.OFC: C.OUl.P Oli:WOUl-P.

The U.S. State Department '
sa'd Indian planes bombed and
strafed one U.S. Merchant
ship - the Buckeye State -off
Chittagong and intercepted a
second sh!P- The Epediterwhich was escorted toward the
port of Madras. The United
States lodged a formal protest
over the incidents.
Indian spokesmen said about
6,000 Pakistani troops supported
by about 45 tanks attacked
Indian positions at Devamandalia in the Ankhur section of
Kashmir. The action was
described as a "Major tank
battle" and the spokesman said
more attacks were expected.
Indian spokesmen said about
6,000 Pakistani troops supported
by about 45 tanks attacked
Indian positions at Devamandalia in the Ankhur section of
Kashmir. The action was
described a~ a "Makor tank
battle" and the spokesman said
more attacks were expected.

A NATIVITY scene Monday night in the annual Christmas operetta has in it, 1-r, Olris
Arney as ·Joseph, Tammy Simms, Mary; .James White , Paul Rupe and Martin Shuler, the three
shepherds . 'The operetta will be staged at Salem Center Elementary at 7:30p. m. See more
pictures on Page 2.

Devoted To The lnterest.s Of The Me~s-Mason Area

NO. XXIV

·THE' ~EA V'i!CIP!i&amp;,
.

territory, sent troops into Easl
Pakistan to suppress the
followers of the rebels' Awami
League political party, which
declared East Pakistan independent last March 26.
Some 10 million East Pakistani's fled to India after the start
of the civil war, straining
India's resources.
Two rebel government figures
- acting Presidenl·Syed Nazrul
Islam and Prime Minister
Tajuddin Ahmed - flew to New
Delhi during the weekend for
talks with Indian officials about
recogni lion .
Chittagong Afire
Indian military spokesmen
said the main East Pakistan
port of Chittagong was in
flames and was cut off from
reinforcements on the north.
The second largest port,
Chalna , was attacked by Indian
planes later .
Foreign ships were warned to
stay out of East Pakistani ports
or face the danger of Indian
attacks

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT OH!O

MONDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1971

PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENTS

NOT U$.

Peace Blocke
Her MaJ·es t t,J '$
Nose
®
GETS HIS FIRST- J. F. Yoi\Jlg, 13-year.()ld son of Mr.
and Mrs. Dick YOUfl8, Racine, bagged his first deer Saturday
in the Tanners Run area . The youfl8 buck was approximately
two and one~alf years old. This is the second season "J. F."
has gone deer huntill8 .

GOES
THE'i'JORLP
CELEflP,ATES

• LAe.oR PA'I~
BUT IN

i)(X,~TCHIT}
·wA~TU

BURPIN 11&gt;N' PICKIN' Tf.\AR
TEETH. AN' RESTS UP :WHILE. WI. LAI:()P.5

LtiBORs
df..l. T~'
TURNIP

CRoP

AGIN- ,---""'

'f'.V'R'i
'i•AR-

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.
II.
: 1 ,ews••• ln
rle1s :

LADOR 1:¥1'1'-

I

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I

Wf!SIN NO MOOD FO'RIDDLES~~
Wf.\'1 DON'T '10' USE YORE eRAI NS
TO SOLVE. TI-l'

AJ(. "llT WHAT
TROU&amp;.E.IS
60\INA DO 10 '10'FIOOER OUT Wf-IAT
'fO' Kl N D.$) 10 IT-

POINTEP.rf SHE F9J..L.YS IT, TH'
.TERMITES FOLLY

I

By United Press International
CALCUTrA- AN INDEPENDENT EAST Pakistan under
the control of a government friendly lo India still may not solve
India's massive refugee problems.GQvernment officials estimate
50 to 70 per cent of the 10 million persons who fled the civil war in
East Pakistan are Hindus who may not want togo back.
Pakistan is primarily a Moslem state with Hindus a small and
occasionally ill-treated minority. The attitude of an independent
Bangia Desh government toward the Hindu minority still is not
clear. There were an estimat.ed seven million Hindus among East
Pakistan's 75million population before civil war broke out March
25. Officials believe nearly all the Hindu population fled to India to
escape the fighting.

IT'S
A NATCHEAAL- BORN TURNIP

PIU:IIL.UM?

.

HIA-AN'

DOIM~ II 111.\NTATED!!

UNITED NATIONS (UPI)The Soviet Union vetoed a
Security Council resolution Sunday night calling for an
immediate cease-fire in the
Indo-Pakistani war.
The 15-nation council scheduled another session on the
Indo-Pakistan i crisis today to
come within hours after the full
131-member General Assembly
begins a new round of debate in
another theater of conflict-The
Middle East.
Israeli Foreign Minister Abba
Eban scheduled a major
address to the assembly today
in reply to Egyptian Foreign
Minister Mahmoud Riad's demand Friday for sanctions
against Israel on grounds it
refused to implement a Nov. 22,
1967 council resolution directing
Israel to withdraw its forces
from occupied Arab territory .

Reed Leading Holzer Drive

'

.

PHNOM PENH- TilE CAMBODIAN COMMAND said today
that hand-to-hand fighting flared up today In the wake of the
North Vietnamese seizure of a railroad town 18 miles above
Phnom Penh. Enemy troops trained heavy fire on the retreating
Cambodians during their capture of th~ town, and field reports
said untold numbers of Cambodian soldiers and civilians were
killed and more than 500 were wounded.

'
•' .

SEOUL -A STATE OF EMERGENCY was proclaimed
today in South Korea by President Park Chung~ee because of the
admission of Communist Olina to tbe United Nations and what he
described as a serious threat from North Korea. The chief
executive charged that the Communists have made the whole of
North Korea into a massive garrison with huge fortifications.

CAPTAIN EASY

WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT NIXON AND Canadian
Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau are expected to center
their talks today on their countries' conunon problems, rather
than discuss international affairs. The Canadian leader is due to
arrive at the White House for his meeting with the President at 4
p.m. Esr.

Riot Guilty Plea Made

WHY, PAT!:~l FANCY
PID'-l'T.1HAT l'!&gt;L.16HTER,
MEET INt. 'IOU HERE:! McKE::E::,1fL.J.. '/OU'l~D ARRIVED
. . . . . FOR THe HUNTIIJ' 5EM01-J l ,

. I BHAioJ'T
Be 11-J. 'IQUf:t. .
WAY. .. JUi$T CAME
F'Of:t. A ~ COZ)"

I-I MPH~ THIG CHAP IM:;Y... Mci&lt;EEM5NTIONE:D KIM ..$EE-N.TRIFWJ

. WITH ·'IO. U~ AFFE::CTION?~

was set, but Foglesong's atwrney said he would ask for
probation pt time of sentenc'\lg· .
Foglesong was never a
student at Kent State. ·
As Foglesong was entering
his plea, jury selection started
in the case of one of three
women included among the 25
persons indicted in the disorders.

·*'*"-'*"-'X::'JS~"*w~.&lt;-::&gt;:&lt;

Cloudy with periods of rain
today, tonight and Tuesday.
High today in the 406 to the
lower 50s extreme south.. wws
tonight in the lower to m1d 406
and highs Tuesday in the 506.
BOND FORFEITED
Duane Sidders, 24, Shade,
forfeited a $23.70 bOnd In
Pomeroy Mayor Charles.
Leger's Court Saturday night
posted on a speeding charge.
Fined $25 and , costs by the
mayor Saturday was Samuel
Gibbs, 24, Rutland, on conviction of leaving the scene of
.an accident.

;&lt;!ql,

'?.P.PPe1R•·'A,
·.· tOt? .fl.~t= ~

•
-:f!

RAVENNA, Ohio (UP!) Thomas Foglesong, 21, Akron,
today entered a plea of guilty to
a charge of first-&lt;legree rio~ in
Portage County Common Pleas
Court in connection with the
May, 1970, Kent State
University disorders.
State prosecutors said they
planned to drop a charge of
interfering with a fireman at
the time Foglesong is sentenced. No date of sentencing

TWO

DEER KILLED
.
Two more deer were killed
In Meigs County's highways
Saturday night accordlll8 to
the Sheriff's Dept. '
AI 10:45 o'clock on SR 33 a
deer ran Into the path of a car
driven by Wayne Allen
Hubbard, 25, Syracuse. Tbere
was medium damage to his
car. At 11:15o'clock on SR 143
Robert S. Shaffer, 23,
Pomeroy Ill. 1, also hit a
deer. Tbere was light damage
to Shaffer's car.
- 0::X
... , ' ..... ·.·. .......
tLii .. 111

Weather

Steadfast in Moscow's sup- which would inevitably result in
port of India: Soviet Ambassa- a cessation of hostilities." The
dor Yakov A. Malik used the Soviets and Poland voted for it
Russian veto for the 107th time and the 12 other council
in the council to strike down a members, including the United
cease-fire and mutual troop States, abstained.
withdrawal resolution offered
by eight small nalions, all of China's vote did not constithem nonpermanent council lute a veto because a majority
members except Poland and of the council did nol · Vote for
Syria.
the pro-India measure. Peking
II was the second Svoiet veto supports Pakistan in the war.
of a C&lt;!ase-fire resolution in 24 Still pending before the
hours and came in the face of council was a Chinese resolusevere criticism of the Russian lion condemning India 's invaposilion by China and the sion of East Pakistan. China
United States. The veto ended said the invasion was designed
without concrete results sun-· to create an· independent stat~ ··
day's five-hour debate of the of Bangia Pesh while SubvertIndia-Pakistan conflict.
ing, dismembering and commitMinutes earlier, Chinese Am- ling aggression against Paklsbassador Huang Hua cast the tan . It was Peking's first
sole vote against a Soviet formal demand for U.N. action
resolution seeking a "political since it entered the world body
settlement in East Pakistan Oct. 25.

Theodore T. Reed, Jr ., "! ha t these chairmen will
president of the Farmers Bank develop an organization to work
and Savings Co. of Pomeroy, with them throughout the
has been appointed Meigs county to help get the landCounty Chairman of the $165,000 scaping accomplished at Holzer
Holzer Medical Center Land- Medical Center."
scaping
and
E&lt;lerior
A member of the Holzer
Beautification Fund Raising Hospital Foundation Board of
Drive.
Trustees, Reed re-emphasized
General Chairman J. Tim the need for the landscaping
Evans said, "We are all happy project.
that Ted has decided to give us "Although it is located in a
his support in this endeavor. neighboring county, Holzer
With county chairmen of this Medical Center is still a
caliber, I'm sure we will reach hometown hospital to many
our goal by the end of this Meigs Countians," he said,
year."
"and while we've raised $20
Reed said he would announce million to. construct the most
soon chairmen for Middleport, . modern rural medical center in
Pomeroy, Racine, Rutland and the world withoul adding adSyracuse.
diti9nal taxes to the people, we
"It Ia my hope," he said, need this $165,000 to preserve

BIG MAN - Dennis Eichinger, Eastern High School's basketball Mr . Do-ll-All, is bringing
down a rebound against Southern Saturday night . Rick Williams (14) of Eastern also wanted
the ball,and Roger Wilford (31) of Southern had the action to his back. See Page 3.

8 Hurt
In Blast

the beauty of the area and make
the complex look like the $20
million structure it is. "
"Based on last year's
figures," he continued, "Meigs
Countians accounted for 17
percent of the total patient load
at Holzer Medical Center. This
means we should be able to give
$28,000 of the $165,000 total
figure."
He said he is sure the people
of Meigs County have enough
pride in Southeastern Ohio to
pass the $28,000 goal before the
end of the year.
Reed is active in Ohio banking
groups as well as area !raternity, church and civic affairs.
His wife is the former Nancy
Bean of Gallipolis. They have
three sons, Tom, Bruce, and
Paul. Nancy is the daughter of
the late Dr. Leo ·c. Bean one of
the founders of the original
Gallipolis Clinic which merged
with Holzer Hospital in 1968.

Study Planned

Of New

Type

University
ATHENS -Consideration of
a new, non-traditional "extended" university for residents
of Southeastern Ohio . and
beyond will be undertaken by a
special Ohio l)niversity study
group named last week by Dr.
Beaumont Davison , vice
president for regional higher
education.
Tiie "extended" or 11 0pen"
university is a new concept
which would provide decentralized educational opportunities for persons not now·
served
by conventional
educational progrwns.
The study group appointed by
Dr . Davison is being asked to
survey programs in operation
or under development at other
institutions, to consider the
location and unique characteristics of Ohio University, and
HOSTS FOR OPEN HOUSE ,- The Rev . and Mrs.
to submit recommendations
Dwight Zavits were hosts for an Open House Sunday at the , regarding a regional program.
manse of the First United PresbyteriiL, Churct in Mid·
A report has been asked for by
next June 30.
dleport. See accounl on Page 4 today .

ACOUPLE OF curiES were in the act helping lead the
cheering for their boys during the Southern-Eastern
basketball game Saturda.Y night at Eastern. They are Lori
Wolfe, left, and Bev Hart, who were cheering for Southern.
Velerans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS Joseph Marcinko, Reedsville;
Olarles Bissell, Chester; Philip
Hood , Middl•port.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Joseph Quivey, Lottie
Leonard, Maggie Gilmore ,
Mary Gilkey, William King,
Linda Stewart, Carolyn
Thon.psun , Che ssie Comer,
Mannin·g Kloes, Dorothy
O;Toole, Joy Rife.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Robert Perkins , Racine ; Ethel
Betzing , Syra cuse , Patrick
Johnson, Racine ; Eetty
Thoma s. Poinl Pleasant;
William 9ye, New Haven; ·
Freda Henderson, pomeroy.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES PhyllisCiay, Cla1r Lurch, Ana
(Wart.

IRONTON, Ohio (UPI J- At
least eight persons were injured
one critically, in an explosion
and fire here today at the
Dayton Malleable Iron Co.
duri ng start-up operations
following a three-week strike.
Most seriously injured was
Britton Fraley, Ironton, who
suffered first, second and third
degre~ burns. He was transferred to University Hospital's
burn unit in Columbus.
Plant officials said workers
were beginning normal start-up
operations following the strike
over a new contract when hot
metal in a cupola, a unit where
iron is melted, began to cool too
rapidly . ,
Spokesmen said the bottom of
the coupola was released to
allow the metal to fall. When it
fell it struck an accumulation of
water and caused the explosion.
Company officials said
damage was expected to be
"considerable" in the incident.
Two of the burned persons
were admitted to a local
hospital in fair condition and the
others were treated and then
released.

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown
Pomeroy at 1l a. m. Monday
under cloudy skies was 41
degrees.
TANK EXPLODES
CANTON (UPI) - An overheated asphalt tank exploded
and burned Sunday in a fire that
sent flames high in the sky.
More than 40 volunteer and city
firemen battled the blaze.
ARSON, MAYBE
CANTON (UPI)- Arson was
suspected in a Sunday fire at
Al's Discount Store here. Officials said they found three
fire-bombs in the debris after
the blaze was put out.

"'

........................... .
THlRf ') 1'91flflt lO 00

{lid

CHRISTM~S

Sl M'

MOR£ TO

�~- ""' ....11y Sentmel,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Dec

-

6, 1971

HOSPITAL NEWS
HJizer Medical Center, F1rsl
Ave , and Cedar St General
VISilmg hours 2-4 and 7-8 p m.
Mntcrn oly v1s1tmg hours 2 30 to
4 30 p m. Parents only on
Pediatncs WHrd
H1rths
M1 and Mrs Lew1s K.
Tayl01, Galhpohs, a son; Mr.
and Mrs R1chard W Rawlings,
Pomeroy, a son . Mr and Mrs.
James T McDonald, Jackson, a
dat•ghler. M1 and MIS Hannon
E Hager, Jr , Gall1pohs, a
daughter, Mr and Mrs Gerald
L Bnghl, Plmy , a daughter and
Mr and Mrs Pat~ Clifton
Pierce, Pome1OJ, a son

Marauders Sharp at Wahama 74-50
.... &amp;

_ __ '\

DIScharges
CaralenH Ban ell, A1 thur 0
FORTY EIGHT STUDENTS of Salem Center ElemenBethel , Yvonne Bla u , Delores
Operetta wh1ch w1ll be staged Monday at 7.30 p rn at the school Front row , 1-r, Sus1e Bowles,
tary make up the choir that will be participating in the anCleland , Sanfm d Cozart,
Harold Fetty, Jllllllly Metheney, Jack m the box; Shirley McDonald, second row Cml Whil e,
nual Clmstmas Operetta that will be staged Monday night at
Randal A Fisher, Mrs Le~da B
Mike Willford , Greg Burnem, Jeanette Freeman, Tammy Ward , Ke1th Johnston Berna1d
Frost, Phyllis Glass burn, Mrs
Rllmme, Rocky Johnson, Danny Hackney and Dav1d Barrett Mrs. Mam1ta Miller, \ocalmusiC
Lorna M J ewell , Brooke
mstructor, 1s director
uilmbert, Russell M L1ttle,
Cat olyn Marcum, Mrs Michael
L Massie and son. Mrs Jumor
Lee Mattox and son, Mrs
Everett J !vllchael and
By VITO STELLINO
stunned Detrmt 23-20, San
dau ghter, Thomas Rankm, Dim
UP! Sports Writer
D1ego shocked Minnesota 3().14
C Russell , Elbert Shifflet, John The field 111 the race to the and Atlanta upended Oakland
A Stone. OrVIlle E Swart, Mrs. super bowl apparently doesn't 24-13
Eurena J . Thomas, Mrs Ervm mclude a super team
Baltimore moved w1th1n a
Tolliver, Glendon J Willis, Mrs
It was somehow symbolic half-game of M1anu by blanking
Mary t. Woods and Floyd A that on a day when the M1am1 Buffalo 24-ll, Los Angeles
Brewer
Dolphms, Mmnesota V1kmgs, moved mto a VIrtual tie With
Te~ry D Adams, Ga1net L Oakland Ra1ders and Detrmt san FranCISCO by whlppmg New
Baxto•r Margaret Brackman, Lions were all beaten, the Orleans 45-28 and Washmgton
Mrs 01a Brown, Honda J. Cleveland Browns clinched the remamed a half-game behind
Dun can, Mrs r1mothy H fi rSt playoff spot Sunday w1th a Dallas by downmg the New
Gertv Elnora A H1ll, Cathermc somewhat less than 1mposmg 7- York Gtants 23-7.
Ireland. Bradley Johnston, 5 record
In the games m wh1ch ne1ther
Esther F McCartney, Anna P. The day of upsets left only team 1s a •contender, Denver
MyeiS James R Parker, Loms one pro football team - M1am1 topped Ch1cago 6-3 and St.
M Pasquale. Jr, Kelson S - w1th less than three losses Loms lied Green Bay 16-16 In a
Ph1ll1ps. :&gt;1rs Denrns L. Roush and the Dolphms, who were Saturday game, Dallas contiand daughte1, Zoann S Roush, Just starling to be touted as the nued 1ts wmning streak by
Eadke1 Russell, Mrs Ralph N team of the future, wenen't routmg the New York Jets 52ELVES, DOLLS, TOPS AND Toy soldiers m the Chnstmas operetta to be staged Monda)
Sands. Jr .. and daughter. Cra1g exactly super m a 34-13 hckmg 10
rughtat Salem Elementary School are, front, 1-r , Barbara Shuler, Shern Jewell. Tanmo) Fell\
Sm1th, A Loretta Tiemeyer, at the hands of - 1magme - the
Cmcinnah Jumped to a 2().7
and Melmda Harless, dolls. back row, Denrus Thornton , Mark McGurre, Alvm Barrett , ell es
Teresa
D
Tolbert,
Dewey
J
lead agamst Cleveland but the
New England Patnots
Mary Sm1th, Shern Freeman. tops ; Lawrence Sullivan, Curtiss Sm1lh, l'mltn\ T&lt;ickell and
W1lcoxon, August W1mgman ,
Browns fought back and
Complex Playoff Set-Up
Gms Lee , soldiers Curtam tmoe 1s 7 30 p 111
Frede11ck L Young, Lmda J
Cleveland was able to claun eventually won tlle game on
Sp~res. Betty Shope, James H the Central DIVISIOn AFC t1tle Leroy Kelly's four-yard touchli 1cholson and Bess1e Ande rson · w1th a 7-5 mark after edgmg down run w1th I :48 left 111 the
Cmcmnat1 31-27 because Pitts- game B1ll Nelsen hit on 14 of
!
bur gh. now 5-7 , lost to 28 passes for 244 yards and two
1
1 I
By Helen Bottel
Houston 29·3 If both teams TDs for the Browns
I
INSTANT CRACKER CRUMBS'
J1m Plunkett, who celebrated
f1msh at 7-7, Cleveland ts sllll
I
Dear Helen
the champiOn because 1! has h1s 24th birthday Sunday, and
When 1 VISited our son and daug hter-m-law recently, I was
wound up 1ts diVIsiOn schedule his old Stanford receiVer Rsndy
myst1f1edat wha t happened on a shoppmg tnp w1lh her
w1th a 5-1 mark wh1le Vataha - who was 23 Saturday
I
She bought a box of crackers, mdlvlduall y packaged m four I
Pi ttsburgh IS 3-2 w1th a game ~l eb rated w1th a pa1r of TO
I
passes to giVe New England 1ts
secllons She took each of these sectwns, put them mto separate
left
B)' Bob Hoeflich
I
VIctory
over Miami The
plastic bags wh1ch you get m the vegetable departme nt . then mlo
But explammg the rest of the
I
playoff picture 1s like trymg to Patrwt vic tory snapped Miapaper sacks
I
The board of the Me1gs ::io1l and Water ConservatiOn has figure out Phase II. There are mi 'se1ght-game wmnmg streak
When she pulled mto her dnveway, she stopped, la1d the fom
bags conlammg the crackers one m front of each t1re Then siJe presented a $25 g1ft to the treasury of the B1g Bend Mmstrel Assn four clubs - M1am1, Ballunore, Ailing Bob Gnese played for
hopped back m the car, drove over the crackers and mto the The g1ft was m apprec1at10n for the mmstrel's gtoup progtam Kansas C1ty and Oakland - sttll tlle Dolphins but was lifted m
presentatiOn at the recent dmner meetmg of the conse~ vatwn vymg for the other three spots the th1rd penod after Larry
garage.
m the AFC SIX clubs -Dall ~s. Carwell's 53-yard touchdown
I looked ag)last at the crushed packages lymg behind her car distnct held at tlle Salisbury Elemenlili'Y School.
Wash1 ngton, Mmnesota, Detro1t, return of a Griese pass.
only to have her smile and say, " Instant cracker crumbs 1"
VIking 's lli'd Loss
SEEMS ALMOST A CRIME to mentwn Easter \\ lth Chmt· San Franc1sco and Los Angeles
Well , I went home and sent them a ble nder for their onmas beanng down, but M1 and Mrs Robert Lew1s and children . - ale pnme contenders for the Mmnesota had put together
ruversary No dtce
Last week I was there agam , and she made mstant crumbs m Carol and DaVId , seem to have the colored Easter egg s1tua twn fo01 spots 111 the Nl'C and back-to-hack 12-2 seasons but
Atlanta st1ll has an outs1de the V1kmgs were beaten for the
her same old way She says she hkes the blender for other tlungs, well m hand
th1rd lime in 1971 when San
but her "car " way 1s faster and qmcker for crackers, and bes1des
They have some Araucanas - somellmes called the Easter shot
D1ego exploded for W points m
Lead Decided Tonight
tllere's no mess to clean up - and 1t's much more fun Says she egg chicken -whiCh lay colored eggs m shades from pale to deep
Thmgs are so close tha t the the fmal period. John Hadl's
unagined the crackers were whoever she was angry w1th, and she blue, green,pmk ,ohve and anllquc gold By the way, they say the
lead m both the NFC and AFC f1ve-yard TO pass to M1ke
got a lot of frustrations out of her system by smashmg them eggs have 10 percent more nutritwn than ordmary eggs
West w11l be at stake tomght Garrett started the rally and
The chickens, themselves, come m a w1de assortment of
(Could it be me')
whe n San Franc1sco meets two Denms Partee field goals
I know there's a ge neratwn gap (she's 19 ) but th1s 1s an ab)ss 1 colors and types - black, buff , c1nnamon, brown. red and wh1te Kansas City
and Pete Barnes 36-yard
My husband 1s no help (h1s daughter-In-law can do no wrong) He Some have topknots, some have whiskers and others h"ve bunIn the other three upsets touchdown run w1th an u.terJust laughs and says, " li 1t works so well , why don 't you do 11 that ches of feathe1s growmg from each s1de of the head
bes1des New England's con- cept!On fimshed 1t
The
Lew1s
home,
of
course
,
IS
a
pretty
mterestmg
place
to
way too '" -MIL
quest of M1am1, Philadelphia Tom Hayes 6().yard fumble
\OS II The fam1ly has all sorts offoul and birds
Dear MIL
return for a touchdown sparked
You've e~t her got a wacky d-1-1 or a wild 1magmat10n
Atlanta to its triumph over
On second thoug)lt, maybe "llred crumbs" aren't such a bad
THE DEADLINE for mmlmg Chnstmas packages and cards
Oakland. Hayes scooped up a
1dea. When a blender IS too slow, a rollmg pm too meassy, just get JUSt seem to get ear her - or do they'
Marv Hubbard fumble on h1s
International own 40 and ran 11 m. A parr of
behind the wheel - and that's the way the cracker crumbles Out-&lt;&gt;f-town packages should have been sent !rum your post By Un1ted Press
EAST
touchdowns by Art Malone, on
offtce by Dec. 1; local packa ges and out-of-town cards by Oec. 10, Steton Hall 81 Harvard 80
H
Holstra
58
La
Salle
56
a 15-yard pass by Bob Berry
and local cards by Dec 15 Bet you're not nearly as ready for
Dear Helen
Pennsylvania 94 Na vy 74
and
a one-yard run, wrapped it
You once remmded parents that the1r children aren't Chnslmas as you thought after readmg those deadlines, huh '
N1agara 84 Gannon College 69
"owned" by them, but only borrowed for a little wh1le
Sl John'siN Y I 98 Vanderbilt up for Atlanta.
B
Pete Liske's f1ve-yard TO
For parents who need further remmdmg that they mustn 't try
MRS. DOLLY HAYES, executive secretary of the Me1gs l
Prov1dence 81 Brown 61
pass to Kent Kramer w1th one
to run therr children 's hves, here's a lovely b1t of blank verse County Tuherculos1s and Health Assn , wh1ch annually conducts Syracuse 91 Army 77
Sorry, I don 't know the author
the Chnstmas seal sale to ra1se funds with wh1ch tu fight tuber- Phil Tex tile 66 Kma 's Pm nl 62 nunute left gave Philadelphia
Your children are not your children
culosis, report~ that the sale 1s laggmg behmd last year at th1s Boston U 103 GeorRelown DC 93 the v1ctory over Detroit and
Faormon! S! 93 Wheelmg 73
spolled the Uons' chance to
They are the sons and daughters of Life's longmg for Itself pomt. Mrs Hayes asks everyone to use the return envelope en- Holy Cross 69 Temple 68
cap1tahze on Minnesota's loss.
They come through you but not from you,
closed with the seals and to kee p those letters w1th contnbuhons No Carolma 90 P1!!sburgh 75
F1fty-three seconds before the
Penn St 99 Cornell 75
And though they are w1th you, yet they belong not to you
comm '
W Vorgmla 70 Calif ( lr v1ne) 66 Liske-Kramer score, Detroit You may g~ve them your love but not your thoug hL~
Rulgers 92 Colgate 80
which trailed 16-0 at halftime For they have the1r own thoug)lts
HEADS OF BOTH the Me1gs County Jnhrmary and the Me~gs
had taken a 2().16 lead on Greg
SOUTH
You may house the1r bodies but not their souls,
County Children's Home report that they've been anythmg but Old Dommion
91 Bapt1s l 74
Landry's five-yard TO run .
For their souls dwell m the house of tomorrow.
swamped "1th phone calls from res1dents mformmg them that Florida S! 96 Eastern Ky 83 Tom Dempsey, who kicked his
Wh1ch you cannot VISit, not even m your dreams - A they will do something for one or the other of the homes for Lou1Sv1 tl e 116 Bellarmtne 58
Floroda \16 U of So Florida 87 record 63 yarder against the
Chnstmas
READER
Memphos S! 84 Okla Sl 68
Lions last year, had three field
Dear Reader (And Readers )
Ifs a real worry situatiOn smce counly funds provtde for .no No Carolina St 92 Georgia 81 goals includmg a 52-yarder.
To prmt poetry Witho ut glvmg credit lS hke announcmg ' the Christmas remembrances whatsoever for e~ther mshtuhon If Sows In La . 105 Wstrn Ky 84
3 Passes Intercepted
Ky Wesleyan'l'l Alcorn A&amp;M82
winnah" as "whatzisname "I seldom do lhts, but hked the above you plan to send somethmg along , do let Mrs Roberta Musser at Cheyney St. 81 Murray S! SO
Houston intercepted three
)llece so well! wanted to share 1t w1th all of you
the children's home, or Mrs. M1ldred Jacobs, at the mf1rmary, Wake Forest 100 Rice 62
Terry Bradshaw pllllSes to set
Jacksonville 77 E Carolma 68
Will someone please giVe us the name of the author Thanks know
up a 16-pomt surge in the frrst
Maryland 117 Geo. Wash 96
- H.
There are 17 ch1ldren at the home and 12 men and women at Dav1dson 76 Clemson 65
half and beat Pittsburgh
V1rgm1a
Tech
83
R1chmond
58
Dear Helen:
the mf1rmary. Employes at e1ther place w1ll lel you know what
Tackle Leo Brooks intercepted
Wm and Mary 110 Furman 91 a pass to set up a touchdown
How can women ever really make 11 m poht1cs when we're would make a SUitable g1fl for someone at eilher locatwn Just Tulane
72 W1scons in 70
first-named so consistently'' In our local electiOns, the men's g1ve them a rm g
l ex A&amp;M 91 Nowstn La St 75 and safety John Charles set up
named came out m headlines as "Sm1th , Green,'' etc , but the one
two f1eld goals With a parr of
MIDWEST
thefts.
woman who ran for office was consistently ·Judi!h" I'll bet 1f
M1ch 90 Ws!n MICh. 69
In other games, Larry Brown
Shirley Chisholm runs for President, 1t Will be "N1xon , Muskie,
lnd1ana 65 M1am1 (Ohio) 50
WEST
M1ssour1 74 Arkansas 73
Purdue
94
Estn
Mlch
84
scored
two touchdowns and
McCloskey, McGovern ~ .. etc, etc, - and "Shirley." Why ' - M 1nnesota 72 Iowa St 58
Utah 93 Ulah Sl 74
Oh1o
Sl
B4
·oregon
69
Curt Knight kicked three field
UCL A 106 Iowa 72
W1 ch 1ta Sl 74 Nebra ska 61
ffiKED AGAIN
MICh St. 87 So Alabama 72
Marque tte 84 Bowlmg Green 64 SlnCal ltl02 Uo!SFmco82
Bradley 92 Culver Stockton 57 goals m Washmgton's win over
Dear Irked .
UC Sla BrbraBB Smfrd(Aia) 71
Nor thwes tern 76 Oh1o 65
DePaul lOS Rocky Ml Colt. 84 the G1ants; Willte Ellison
Because pobllcal wnters are almost all male , too Women m C1n'l1 85 Ath letes In Action 80 Calif 79 Anz 76
Villanova
83 Detroit 64
scored on an 8().yard run,
Portland 70 Puget Sound 61
politics could stop this "pat on the head" approach, v1a fn endly Not re Da me 81 Vatpara1 so 71
Wheaton 82 Calv1n 78
, Dra ke 87 Butler 77
TraviS Wtlliams returned a
St LouiS U 75 Dayton 71
discussions w1th edttors - H
kickoff 105 yards and Rllman
Evansv ill e 83 Assumption 80
So!n
Ill
100
U ofWIS (Mil ) 75 Gabriel threw three TO passes
By
fi:J
Eau C l a~re 95 Oshkosh 79
In the Los Angeles victory over
New Orleans ; Norm Bulaich's
SOUTHWEST
' i•••alld his~ry!Mstfrlendsman!
w~re
lll moiS 70 Oklahoma 65
one-yard TO run and Johnny
£cwG·t:AfiU&gt; IW3tJIT
M1ssour1 73 Arkansas 72
Umtas' first TO pass of the
Kenl ucky 79 Kan sas 69
W Tex St 100 Tex (Arlington) year sparked Baltimore past
84
Buffalo; Jim Turner's 33 and 37
Tex. Tech 91 So.Dako!a S! 73 field goals offset Mac PerciTexas~5 Alabama 83
val's 34,yarder as Denver
SMU 110 Ausll n Call. 69
No lex Sl 61 Sin MISS 52
topped Chicago and Tim
Hous lon 67 Tennessee 65
Webster's
27-yard field goal as
Ariz St 96 Calif (R1vers1de) 87
the gun sounded bfted Green
La Tech 106 TrmlivrTex l 76
Tulsa 64 S! Mar y's (Tex) 57
Bay to 1ts lie with St Loms
S!pnFAstnl18 Pn eVwA&amp;M 107
Mineral Bowl
Baylor 86 Okta City 82
Bethany t Kans) 17 Mo Valley
N MexiCo 78 N MexiCo S! 76
14
A1r Force 77 Colorado 76
NAJA Div. Two ChampionShip
SI Mary!Cal 1t) 93 FresnoS! 89
Anz Sl 96 UC RiverSide 87
Calif. lui 30
LBeachSI 83 Nev LVegas 72
Westnunster IPA I 30

THE TOY BAND at Salem Center Elementary w11l be taking part 10 the annual Chnstmas

Day of Upsets

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

!Helen

Help Us

r--------------------------Beat ....

: Of the Bend

College Scores

'I'Ile Toys That Talked: a Christmas Fantasy

Lane Pastoret

the world

...

7: 30p.m. at the school. The operetta ls under the direction of
Mrs. Maunta M1ller, vocal music mstructor.

Pro Standings
NFL Standings
By Umted Press International
American Conference

East

w

Mtamt
Balttmore

l

T. PCT.
SIB

2 I
3 0

9
9

750

5 .7 0 417
New England
8 0 .333
4
NY Jets
I II 0 083
Buffalo
Central
W. l. T Pet.
7 5 0 .583
x.cteveland
5 7 0 .417
Pittsburgh

Cmcmnat1
Houston

4 8 0 .333

2 9 I

.182

W l. T

Pet

West

ABA Standings
By United Press International
East
W. L. Pel. GB
17 6 739
Kentucky
16
10 615 2'12
Vtrg lnta
II
15 .423 7'12
Flori dtans
10 14 417 7'12
New York
11 16 407 8
P1llsburgh
15 375 8112
9
Caroltna
West
W. l. Pel. GB
Utah
18 8 692 ...
tnd1ana
14 10 583 3
Memph iS
II 14 &lt;Wl&gt; 6'1&gt;
Denver
10 14 417 7
Deltas
10 15 400 7'12
Sunday's Results
Memphos 111 v, rgtma 113
Denver 118 Pittsburgh 114

3 1 700
7 3 2 700
5 7 0 417 Ca rol ma vs Florldtans at
Denver
4 7 1 364 Tampa . Postponed
(Only ga mes scheduled)
Nat1onal Conference
Monday's Games
East
W. L. T Pet Kentucky at Utah
9 3 0 750 !Only game scheduled)
Dallas
8 3 I 727
Washm9ton
NHL Standmgs
4 7 I 364
Sl LouiS
Bv
United
Press lnternattonal
364
4
7
I
Ph iladelphia
East
4
8
0
333
NY G1ants
W. l . T. PTS
Central
17 4 4 38
Pel.
New
York
W l. T
15 3 6 36
750
-Montreat
9 3 0
Mmnesota
17 5236
7 4 I 636 Boston
OelrOII
9
8 8 26
6 6 0 500 Toronto
Ch1cago
8
14 5 21
300
De!rod
3 7 2
Green Ba y
7
16 4 IS
Vancouver
West
6 16 5 17
W l. T Pet. Buffalo
West
San Franc1sco
7 4 0 636
W. L T. PIS
Los Angeles
7 4 I 636
M1nnesota
18 S J 39
Atlanta
6 5 I 545
ChiCago
17
7 2 36
400
New Orleans
4 6 2
Sl LOU IS
9 13 4 22
X Clinched DIVISion T1lle
P1!1sburgh
10 15 2 22
Sunday's Results
Ph1
tadelph1a
8 12 5 21
Cleveland 31 Clncmnat1 27
Cal1forn~a
9 16 3 21
New England 34 M1am1 13
Los Angeles
5 21 I It
Washmgton 23 NY G1ants 7
Sunday 's Results
Atlanta 24 Oakland 13
New
York
6 Vancouver 3
Philadelphia 23 Detr01! 20
B
os
ton
5
P1
!1sburgh 3
Ball1more 24 Buffalo 0
51 Louis w Detro• I I
Houston 29 P1!1sburgh 3
Buffal o 3 Minneso ta 1
Denver 6 Chicago 3
Ch1
cago 7 Los Angeles 0
Los Angeles 45 New Orleans 28
Ph1tadetph1a
3 Cal llorn1a 0
San Otego 30 Minnesota 14
(only games scheduled )
St Lout s 16 Green Bay 16
Monday 's GJmes
(Only games scheduled )
(No games scheduled I
Saturday's Results
Dallas 52 NY Jets 10
AHL Standings
!Only game scheduled )
By Un1ted Press International
Monday's Games
East
Kansas Clty at San Francisco
W l T Pis
(IWIIIghl)
IS 3 2 38
Boston
(Only game scheduled )
Nova Scalia
11 8 ~ 30
Saturday's Games
Spnngfoeld
9 9 5 23
Miami at Baltimore
Pr
ov
idence
7 11 6 20
Detroit at Minnesota
Roc hester
8 15 3 19
(Only games scheduled)
West
Sundats Games
w l T Pis
Atlanta at San Franc1sco
Hershey
14 S 4 32
Chicago a! Green Bar,
Cleveland
II 8 s 27
Cleveland al New Or eans
Bal timore
lO 13 • 2A
Dallas a! NY G1an!s
RIC hmond
10 12 3 23
Denver at San Diego
Cinc
innat
i
1 12 7 11
Hou&gt;!on at Buffalo
Tidewater
S 15 l 13
New England at NY Jets
Sunday 1 s Results
Oakland at Kansas C1ty
Boston 5 ClnCinnalll
Pi!lsburgh al Cmclnnatl
Hershey I Nova Scotia I
St LouiS at Philadelphia
Prov1dence 3 Rochester 1
!Only games scheduled)
R1chmond 3 Cleveland 1
Monday's Games
Washmgton at Los Angeles (On ly games scheduled!
Monday's Games
Owlllghll
(No games scheduled)
!Only games scheduled)
Kansas Co!y
Oakland
San D1ego

7

NBA Stand1ngs
By Un1led Press International
Eastern Conference
Atlanhc Division
W l. Pel GB
Boston
ts 10 600
New York
14 II , 560 1
Ph1ladelph1a 12 14 462 3'1&gt;
Butfalo
10 15 400 5
Central Oevis•on
W l Pet GB
Balllmore
10 15 .400
Cleveland
9 16 360 I
Clncmna!1
8 15 .348 I
Allanla
7 17 292 2'h
Western Conference

Cage Scores
Lancaster F1sher 96 Canal
Wmchester 74

Columbus Walnut R1dge SA
Reynoodsburg 72
Columbus Read 92 Columbus
Mohawk 58
Upper Ar lington 61 Worthington
58
Columbus

Wa tterson
West 66

71

Columbus
Toledo St Francis 65
Columbus Eastmoor 57
M1dwest Div1s1on
Oh1o Deaf 83 Indiana Deaf 62
W. l. Pet GB Grove C1!y 77 Teays Valley 66
Milwaukee
23 4 852
Columbus DeSales 65 Grand·
Chicago
17 7 708 4\;2 v1ew 53
Phoenox
14 II 56() 8 Newark CatholiC 70
O.lro11
10 14 417 11'12
Columbus S! Charles 29
Pactfic Dtv1sion
Zanesville 89 Whitehall 51
Seattle 99 Cleveland 91
Faorbanks 65 Marysvi lle 46
Phoenix 120 Golden Slate 87
B1g Walnut 83 Dublin 59
los Angeles 123 Portland 107
Centerburg 50 Cardington 48
(Only games scheduled)
Franklm Heights 56 Logan Elm
Monday's Games
47
(No games scheduled)
Johnstown 57 Licking Valley 55
LICking Helghs 100 Northridge
44
BRYSON IS ILL
Newark 64 Mt Vernon 46
RACINE - Hobart Bryson New Albany 64 Highland SA
was admitted to St. Joseph Cot umbus Wehrle 62
Columbus Academy 45
Hospital, Parkersburg, W. Va. Westerv ille
91 Hilliard 69
Sunday morning after suffering Middletown 90 Wilmington 58
a light stroke. He 1s a patient in Cambridge 71 Marietta 61
M1ddtetown Fenwick 64
Room 222.
•
Mlsslsstnawa Valley 54

TAICING SHOT - Wahama'a Randy t1ark (40) goes up
in the air to fire a jump shot as Meigs Marauder guard RICh
Bailey ( 13) gives a strong defensive effort in Saturday
night's opener for the Falcons. Meigs won the game easily,
74-50.

Browns Clinch
Division Title
CLEVELAND (UP! ) - The
title race 111 the Central DiviSion of the Amencan Conference was all over when the
clock m Qeveland StadiUm
showed :4.1 left to play Sunday.
W1th that much ttme left, a
long pass by the Cincmnah
Bengals' V1rg1l Carter whistled
into the arms of Erme Kellerman, an interception that gave
the Cleveland Browns a hardfought 31-27 win
That win, coupled w1th Pittsburg 's 29-3 loss to Houston ,
clinched the Iitle for the
Browns
Leroy Kelly scored two touchdowns, the last commg on a
four -yard scamper With I 48
left in the game
"Leroy had a great performance ," Coach N1ck Skonch
581d after logging h1s first division title. "He started 1t all.
"He gave us the frrst touchdown and got the last TO to
cap II all. He did everythmg
he had to do "
Muddy Advantage
Kelly, who satd he had an
advantage over the Bengal defense because the turf was
loose and muddy, finished the
afternoon w1th 127 yards m 23
carries, the th1rd week in a
row he gamed over 100 yards
in a game.
"I not1ced the PittsburghHouston score on the board
just before the last touchdown
and I knew we could wrap 11
up today," Kelly sa1d. "It was
great to see the Steelers getting tromped and all we had to
do was wm It was great,
great, great '''
.--~ ------- r

Dai~

The

Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
CMESTER L TANNEHILL ,
Exec Ed

ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
City Editor
"
P ub l iShed daily ex cep t
Slt lurdav by The Oh ro Valley
Pub l rsh r n g

Cour t

51 ,

Company ,

Ill

Pomeroy

Oh•o,
45 7.!.9 BUS ine SS Off iCI! Phone
99 11 156 , Ed 110r1al Phone 992
215 7
Secon d class postage pa1d at

Pomeroy , Oh 1o

Nat 1o na t adv e r hs1ng
r epr ese n ti!lllvl!
Bott.ne lll

Ga llag he r , In c

12 East 42nd
St, New York Cllv, New York
Subs cr 1pl•on rates
De

t1v ered by carrrer where

available 50 ce nt s per week ,

By Motor Ro ute w here earner
serv1ce not av~ihtb l e
One

month Sl 75 Bv mall '" Oh1o
and W v a , Ont year Sl-4 00
Sri( mo nt hs 57 25
Th ree
months S4 50 SubScr!pfiOn
pr1 te 1n clu des Sunday T1mes
Senf1nel

The e1ght-year veteran from
Morgan State notched the title
w1th a four-yard blast over left
tackle on a power play headed
by guard Gene Hickerson.
"Gene had the opllon of gomg outside or up the mtddle,"
Kelly said "He went outside,
threw a great block on (Bill )
Bergey and all I did was follow h1m and tried to leap over
both of them mto the end zone .
"I didn 't know I scored until
[ saw the off1cial w1th h1s
hands up It makes no difference how many times I score
or how many times f gam over
100 yards, just as long as I
help the team wm like we
did "
Fateful Fumble
The Browns, now 7.0, got a
b1g break on the opemng kickoff when Cmcmnatl's Fred Willis fwnbled on the 18 Ken
Brown , activated for the game,
recovered and returned 11 l4
yards to the Bengals' four
Kelly scored the first touchdown of the game on a oneyard burst ove,· left tackle
wnh I 21 elapsed
The Bengals were leadmg 2().
7 when w1th f1ve seconds left
m the f1rst half, Browns quarterback B1ll Nelsen h1t wide receiver Fair Rooker over the
m1ddle for a 39-yard aerial to
cap a three-play, 72-yard drive.
Nelsen completed 14 of 28
passes for 244 yards.
Frank Pitts, a seven-year
veteran from Southern University, snagged a 53-yard bomb
from Nelsen m the thrrd quarter to put the Browns ahead,
21-20
" Lemar Pamsh had the ball
but I took 1t a way and broke
two tackles," Pitts said. "I had
my hand on his chest between
h1s hands and the ball.
Admits "Good Catch"
"Once the ball's m the air
you have to f1ght for 11 so I
did Pamsh told me 'good
play, good catch,' after I
scored. I guess lt was a good
play 'ca use 1t was clean."
Don Cockroft booted a 12yard f1eld goal m the fourth
quarter to complete the scoring
for Cleveland.
Bengal running back Essel
Johnson, who didn't play in
the first half, scored on an 86yard run over right tackle with
12 seconds elapsed in the fourth
quarter and Doug Dressler
broke two tackles and drove
over the m1ddle in the first
half to complete the scoring
for Cincmnati, now 4-8.

BY KEITH WISECUP •
MASON - The Me1gs
Marauders put it all together
here Saturday mght to trample
the Wahama While Falcons 7450 m a non-league basketball
game
The win gave the Marauders
a 2-1 overall record. They
remamedat I~ m Southwestern
OhiO Athletic League action.
The Falcons are (1.1, this havmg
been their season opener.
Coach
Carl
Wolfe's
Marauders Jumped out to a b1g
lead early and were never in
serious trouble. Meigs trailed
only once, that of ~ SIX seconds
in the game when Wahama 's
Roger Dmgey, 6-3 center,
popped m a lay-up and was
fouled, completmg a three-pmnt
play. That was the only f1eld
goal the Falcons got in the f1rst
quarter.
Leadmg scorer for the
Marauders for the third straight
game was b1g 6-3 Jeff Morris
with 19. The senior center led
the " Big Maroon" on the
boards, also for the th1rd
straight lime, with 13 retrieves .
J1mmy Boggs, 5-9 junior
guard, followed Morris with 15
markers Boggs scored the frrst
SIX Me1gs points m the opemng
quarter . Bill Vaughan , 5-9
JUmor guard, started m place of
the slightly mjured R1ch Bailey
and filled the bill w1th 10 pomts
and a great floor game. Tony
Vaughan, 6-2 semor forward,
scored e1ght for the Marauders
and pulled down nine rebounds
wh1le playmg a fme defens1ve
game.
Dmgey paced the White
Falcons w1th 19 markers
foll owed by strong Mike
Howard w1th 14. Howard also
pulled down 16 rebounds, game

high.
The Marauders played the1r
best game of the young season
agamst the Falcons, hm1ting
the1r number of turnovers and
m1stakes to a m1mmum
Wahama
pressed
the
Marauders throughout the
entire game, but 1! had little
success. The Falcons doubleteamed the ball m the second
half , that too bemg unsuccessful
Baile~. a foot InJury still
slowmg h1m down slightly , d1d
not play until the fmal three
nunutes of the game when he
came m and responded wi lh two
qUick buckets Coach Wolfe
tllought 1t better for the JUmor to
s1t most of th1s one out m
preparatiOn for next week's
league battle w1th Waverly
W1thout Bailey, the team
speed of the Marauders was
hampered, but they sllll had
many well-patterned fast
breaks The Marauder team
defense was a thmg of beauty
all mght They forced the
Falcons
1nto
numerous
nus lakes and allowed them only
16 pomts m the f1rst half on a
meager four field goals
The usual fa s t.breakmg
Falcons were stunned at the
great sw1lchmg man-to-man
forced on them by Me1gs. In the
past, the Falcons had forced the
Marauders mto the1r own type
of game, a floor-stompmg affair
Wllh the score moun ling mto the
seve niles or higher. Me1gs now
owns three consecullve WinS
over the Falcons, w1nmng both
times last year after losmg both
games in 1969-70
Me1gs broke open the till midway m the first e1ght minutes
Leadmg 6-0, the Marauders
npped off 10 stra1ght and out-

scored the Falcons 16-2 to take a
2~ 7 advantage after one penod.
Then the Marauders got hot!
The lead continued lo swell
behmd the sconng of the wellbalanced Meigs attack It was
30-8 at the 5:00 mark, 41-13 at
the 1:00 mark, and 42-16 at the
half
Mmutes mto the second half,
the Marauders jumped to their
b1ggest lead, 31 pomts, at 47-16.
It was here that the Me1gs
Juniors, and there's plenty of
the m, started to rece1ve some of
that all Important expenence.
After three quarters 11 was 5527
W1lh Me1gs subslltutes
flooding the court and Wahama
pressing all over the floor, the
Marauder lead dwmdled The
closest Wahama got was 18
points, 66-48, w1th about two
nunutes left
All Marauders got mto the
scoring column Ftrst-hme
scorers were Mark Werry, 6-4
Junior center, and R1ck Ash, 5-9
semor guard, each w1th two
tallies The other Marauders
addmg to the wm were Steve
Dunfee, Andy Vaughan and
M1ke Sayre, who seems to
Improve w1th every outmg and
1s qmckly movmg up to be the
Mara uder Hs1xth mann
The Marauders shot a warm 47
per cent from the field, canning
28 of 59. They hit on 18 of 28 from
the chanty str1pe. Wahama h1t
on 18 of 59 from the field for a
cool 30 per cent wh1le making
good on only 14 of 30 from the
foul hne Meigs had a slight
edge on the boards, grabbmg 43
rebounds to 39 for the Falcons
The Marauders now gel down
to the "mtty-gntty" th1s Fnday
agamst the powerful Waverly
T1gers at Me1gs. On the

SCRAP FOR REBOUND - Meigs' lanky Mark Werry (45) and M1ke Howard (14) of

Wahama battle for a rebound here m the first penod of Saturday mght's game on the White
Falcons' home court Me1gs jumped out to an early lead and scored an easy 74-50 vtctory

followmg,
the
Tuesday
Marauders have another league
game at home, thts one agamsl
the Athens Bulldogs, who Will
sllll be trymg to rebound from a
stunmng defeat at GallipoliS
last Fnday
MEIGS (74) - Dunfee, 2 3 7,

Mitchel l. I 0 2, TOTALS IS 14DENSON SUSPENDED
SO
SAN DIEGO (UP! ) - The
By Quarters
MeigS
22 20 13 19- 74 Mmnesola V1kmgs have susWahama
7 9 11 23- 50
Reserve Store - Me1gs 45 pended mght-year veteran wide
rece~ver AI Denson for falling
Wahama 27
to report to pracllce after he
TRAYNOR ILL
PITTSBURGH (UP! ) - Ha- was lifted from the active
roster and placed on the tall
T Vaughan, 4-0 8, Morn s, 8 3 rold "P1e" Traynor was listed
19, Boggs. 5 515, B Vaughan. m fa1r condtllon Sunday after squad
3 4 10 , A Vaughan . 0 3 3, being treated for a respiratory
Bailey , 2 o4, Werry. 1 0 2. Ash,
Federal
Hock 1ng 62
New
I 0 2, Sayre, 2 0 4 TOTALS 28· a1lment at Allegheny General
Lexmg ton 60
18 74.
Hospital. The 72-year-&lt;&gt;ld for- Caldwell 74 Meadowbrook 64
WAHAMA ISO) - Craw•ord, mer th1rd baseman of the Guernsey Zane Tra ce 82
0 I I, Wh1!e, 0 0 0. Howard, 54·
Mad1son 66
14, Clark 1 3 5, Dongey, 7 5·19 Pittsburgh Ptrates was treated Contmen!al 71 Holgate 48
Ch Roush. 2 0 4, ~u Roush , 0 1 for a sun1lar atiment several L1berty 52 Youngstown Chaney
l, Harns, 102, Lambert, 102. months ago at the hosp1tal
50

Eagles Get Past Southem, 71-66
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Coach Asa Bradbury.
Eastern Eagles were sur- Bob Caldwell, the second link
pnsingly hard-pressed m thetr m the Eagle chain, added 16
71-96 wm over the Southern while Alan Duvall chipped m 10
Local Tornadoes at Eastern for the Eagles
High School near here Saturday Southern was led by 5-11
night m a Southern Valley semor guard, J1m Hubbard With
Conference game
20 markers, a career high for
The Eagles remam unbeaten him. Hubbard's hot shootmg
in four games overall and in was the main reason the Torthree league games . The nadoes put on the teremendous
Tornadoes, on t!ie other hand, showing they did. Nick lhle, 5-10
are wmless m three games JUnior forward, added 14, Jerry
overall and 10 two league llubbard, 5-!0 semor forward,
games. Southern has now lost had 12, and Bruce Hart, 6-1
two of 1ts games by a total of stx semor forward, contrtbuted II.
po10ts
Coach Bradbury, g1v10g
The Eagles were led by the pra1se to h1s enhre team for
Incomparable
Dennts their fantashc game, singled
Eichinger, the 6-3 semor center, out J1rn Hubbard and Bruce
With 28 pomts on 12 field goals Hart for their great defens1ve
and four free throws. Eichmger game besides their strong ofproved to be the difference in fenstve game.
Hubbard
the game, receiving tremen- guarded the Eagles' hlghdous praise from Opposition scormg Rick Williams and held

NICK IHLE has one Uling in mind : a two-point layup, at
Eastern Saturday night. His Southern Tornado mate (21), IS
Jerry Hubbard.

him to only one f!Cld goal and
four po10ts. Hart guarded
E1chmger and, although the
great Eagle star pumped in 28
pomts, the Southern forward
sttll managed to defense him
well
The Eagles were ahead
throughout the first three
quarters, but had their small
lead melt by the scrappy,
surgmg Tornodes 10 the fmal
quarter. The fourth quarter was
nip and tuck, ftrst Southern
taking the lead and then
Eastern. It stayed this way unhl
the final few seconds when tbe
Eagles pulled 11 out of !lte fire.
The five-point bulge by the
Eagles in the final count didn't
show the closeness of the game.
The Eagles scored at the buzzer

on an mtercepted desperatiOn
pass by the Tornadoes. Before
that, the Southern club was
down by only three, at 69-66, and
had the ball, but a tenacious
Eastern defense forced the ball
over.
Coach Bill Phillip's Eagles
led after the first period, 22-16,
at the half, 43-25, and by only
two, 52-50, after three quarters!
Coach Bradbury, havmg
played both SVAC top teams in
Eastern and North Gallla,
compared the two teams. He
said the Pirates appear to have
the better team because they
have three players w1th a great
height advantage where the
Eagles have only one ,
Eichmger, who has good
heighth .

Miami Drops First Tilt
By United Press International
Defendmg Mid-American Conference champ1on M1am1 and
three other MAC teams p1cked
up black eyes Saturday, qmckly learmng the hazards of playing on the road.
M1ami, a solid chance to repeat as Mtd-Am champ, trailed
most of the way against Indiana's Hoos1ers m droppmg a
65-50 deCISIOn
The Redskins, who traded by
as many as 12 points m the
first half and 32-24 at halftune,
cut 11 to 36-35 early m the second half, but the Hoos1ers
scored six stra1ght pomts and
were never agam senously
fllreatened .
Center Steve Downmg, who
left the game w1th an mjured
knee m the second half, led
Indiana with 16 pomts, while
Larry Garloch hud 13, Phil
Lumpkm 12 and Darrel Dunlap
II for M1am1, now 1-1 on the
year.
Ohw Umvers1ty also came out
on the short end agamst Northwestern of the B1g Ten, as the
Wildcats pulled away in the
second half for a 76-65 VICtory
over the Bobcats.
Hentz Tops Wildcats
Barry Hentz scored 22 points
and Mark ·S1bley 20 to pace the
Wildcats wh1le OU's leadmg

scorer was Bob Howell w1th 16
OU hit only 33 per cent from
the field for the game.
At Milwaukee, Bowling Green
played second ranked Marquette on almost even terms
for the first half but Wilted m
the second to suffer an 114-64
loss to the powerful WarriOrs.
The Falcons, led m scormg

+++

+++

most weekdays on cable TV,
Include " Green Acr"s ," 1

+++

Anl1que lovers should get

Tonight's pro 1ootbatt bash
exc1ted about an excellent plls the Chiefs against the
series on Ch 11 ,a! 7. 30 p.m 49ers
two very possible
Ton1ght' s features carnival Super Bowl contenders, 9
glass, por ce la~n, \Also see II at p m , Ch 12
4 p m Tuesday, Ch 11.)
+ ++ I
Another perenmat special,
MOVIES. " Rich, Young and
"Rudolph the Red Nosed You Pretty ," a winning comKnow.What, " comes to Chs 2 bination If I ever hear~o1 one,
&amp; 7 tonight at B p m. I
plus Jane Powett, 4 p.m , and
+++
"Blue Denim,'' Carol lynley,
Rerun ser ies, which appear 11 · 30 p.m .. both Ch. 10
TUESDAY
VIrginia
p m Ch 10
"It Takes a Graham has the Great
Thiel," 5p.m , Ch 4 " t Love Pretender, Geo•_ge Pttmpton,
1lucy" lis 11 ever NOT on ?I. as a g~est, 1 p m., Ch. 6.

'

MASON - The Me1gs
Marauder reserves won therr
second game of three here
Saturday n1ght over the
Wahama reserves, 45-27, in a
non-league game . Coach B1ll
Wickline's httle Marauders
jumped out to an 18-5 advantage
after the firSt quarter and were
never m trouble.
Bill Chaney,~ junior center,
again led the UtUe Marauders
with 19 pomts to lake game
honors. B1ll Myers, 6-0
sophomore forward, a brother
of ex-Marauder star Joe Myers,
followed with nine Haymaker
topped the little Falcons with II
Meigs made 18 of 47 for 38 per
cent and 9 of 18 from the foul
line. The little Falcons made
only 10 of 35 from the field for 28
per cent and 7 of 2!l from the
charily str1pe.

EBERSBACH HOWE. CO.
992-2811
110 W. Main

'

Pomeroy, ·o .

Life
•
Insurance:
Think vou

can"t ·
.afford if?
We h.t H ,1 pohn lor pt:oplc
who thmk th l: y 1.. .1n t
.dlorJ 111 c ln~ ur.tm:e
.dl t h~

m.m lrl.lm Nat1onv. IJ!!

Reserves Win At Mason 45-27

For
HOLIDAY
SHOPPING ...

Santa Claus starts da1 ly 4 30 p m , Ch. 6 .. Daniel
Boone, 5 p m, Ch 6 .. Wttd,
today
Wttd West, B p.m .. Ch. 6

by Jun iOr Dalynn Badenhop 's
24 pomts, trailed only 42-38 at
•otermisswn, but Marquette,
paced by Bob Lackey 's 24
pomts and 20 by Marcus Washmgton, scored the f1rst e1ght
pomts of the second half to
take a 5().38 lead The Falcons
never got closer than e1ght after that
•

affarrs
EASTERN (71 ) - Duvall 2+
10; Williams 1-2-4; Eichinger 124-28; Caldwell 8-().16; Benedum
3-0-8; Bormg 3-1-7 Totals 29-1371.
SOUTHERN (66) - Bruce
Hart 4-3-11 ; Brett Hart 1-1-3;
J1m Hubbard 9-2-20; Jerry
Hubbard 4-4-12; N. lhle &amp;.Z.U;
W11ford 1-4-6 Totals 25-16-96.
By Quarters
Southern
16 19 15 16 - 66
Eastern
22 20 10 19-71

(

CALL POINTVIEW : 992 -2505
appearances on Ch. 6 at 4 p m

"Both are fme fall clubs,"
added the frrst-year Southern
coach Nortll Gallla defeated
Southern on the Meigs Counbans home floor, 115-57.
Coach Bradbury stressed that
1! was the lremendous play of
his Tornadoes that made the
game close, and not that
Eastern Rlayed poorly .
Coach Duane Wolfe's little
Tornadoes fell to defeat to
Coach Bob Ord's little Eagles,
45-31, m the reserve game.
The Eastern Eagles will put
their unbeaten strmg on the lme
next Saturday agamst the
Kyge r Creek Bobcats at
Eastern . The Tornadoes will
also play the Bobcats next
Tuesday m therr only game this
week Both games are SVAC

MEIGS ( ,45) - Fred Burney
0-0-0 ; Floyd Burney 2-1-5;
George ~; Chaney s.:l-19 ;
Myers 4-1-9; Pnce ~ . Couch
~· May ~· K1ser ()..()..()·
'
'
'
LeFebre ~. Totals 18-9-45
WAHAMA (27) - Haymaker
4-3-11 ; Gardner 1-1-3 ; Riley().(}.
0, Lew1s 0.1-1, Smltll 3-0-8 ,
Beleher 0-0-0; Cook 0-0-0;
Dewhurst~; Ferguson 1-1-3;
Kearns 0-1-1 ; Keefer 1-0-2;
Needs ()..()..(). Totals 1().7-27.
By Quarters
Meigs
18 4 13 10 - 45
Wahama
5 9 7 6- 27
Officials : Whi te and HICk-

P. J. PAULEY
PH . 992-2318
301 Spnng Ave
Pomeroy,Oh1o

'-II

"'"J, 111, h l •Y I ~nH (o

ft. ouc illl1" I ••l umhu' Otu ..

man.

NOTICE
THE RACINE GAS &amp;SERVICE CO.
The Public Utilities Glmmlssion of Ohio
will conduct a public hearing to investigate"'flit.
~upply of natural gas available for consumers
with in this state.
This hearing will beheld at Hearing Room
2, Ohio Departments Building, 65 South Front
Street, Columbus. Ohio on December 13, 1971,
!O:OOA.M.• EST,andthedatesof DeCember 1•
and 15 to be reserveil for continued hearln9s In
the event It becomes necessary.
Any Interested party may attend sud!
hearing and present to the Commission any
information or comment pertinent to such
matter .
Further Information may be obtained
from the Secretary of the Commission.

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION ·OF Ciltlo
125 E . Main
Pomeroy, 0.

992-2171

Henry w. Eckhlrt, Olairmlll

1

-~--·-

J; ,. _ _...:;.._..n"-~···~

�~- ""' ....11y Sentmel,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Dec

-

6, 1971

HOSPITAL NEWS
HJizer Medical Center, F1rsl
Ave , and Cedar St General
VISilmg hours 2-4 and 7-8 p m.
Mntcrn oly v1s1tmg hours 2 30 to
4 30 p m. Parents only on
Pediatncs WHrd
H1rths
M1 and Mrs Lew1s K.
Tayl01, Galhpohs, a son; Mr.
and Mrs R1chard W Rawlings,
Pomeroy, a son . Mr and Mrs.
James T McDonald, Jackson, a
dat•ghler. M1 and MIS Hannon
E Hager, Jr , Gall1pohs, a
daughter, Mr and Mrs Gerald
L Bnghl, Plmy , a daughter and
Mr and Mrs Pat~ Clifton
Pierce, Pome1OJ, a son

Marauders Sharp at Wahama 74-50
.... &amp;

_ __ '\

DIScharges
CaralenH Ban ell, A1 thur 0
FORTY EIGHT STUDENTS of Salem Center ElemenBethel , Yvonne Bla u , Delores
Operetta wh1ch w1ll be staged Monday at 7.30 p rn at the school Front row , 1-r, Sus1e Bowles,
tary make up the choir that will be participating in the anCleland , Sanfm d Cozart,
Harold Fetty, Jllllllly Metheney, Jack m the box; Shirley McDonald, second row Cml Whil e,
nual Clmstmas Operetta that will be staged Monday night at
Randal A Fisher, Mrs Le~da B
Mike Willford , Greg Burnem, Jeanette Freeman, Tammy Ward , Ke1th Johnston Berna1d
Frost, Phyllis Glass burn, Mrs
Rllmme, Rocky Johnson, Danny Hackney and Dav1d Barrett Mrs. Mam1ta Miller, \ocalmusiC
Lorna M J ewell , Brooke
mstructor, 1s director
uilmbert, Russell M L1ttle,
Cat olyn Marcum, Mrs Michael
L Massie and son. Mrs Jumor
Lee Mattox and son, Mrs
Everett J !vllchael and
By VITO STELLINO
stunned Detrmt 23-20, San
dau ghter, Thomas Rankm, Dim
UP! Sports Writer
D1ego shocked Minnesota 3().14
C Russell , Elbert Shifflet, John The field 111 the race to the and Atlanta upended Oakland
A Stone. OrVIlle E Swart, Mrs. super bowl apparently doesn't 24-13
Eurena J . Thomas, Mrs Ervm mclude a super team
Baltimore moved w1th1n a
Tolliver, Glendon J Willis, Mrs
It was somehow symbolic half-game of M1anu by blanking
Mary t. Woods and Floyd A that on a day when the M1am1 Buffalo 24-ll, Los Angeles
Brewer
Dolphms, Mmnesota V1kmgs, moved mto a VIrtual tie With
Te~ry D Adams, Ga1net L Oakland Ra1ders and Detrmt san FranCISCO by whlppmg New
Baxto•r Margaret Brackman, Lions were all beaten, the Orleans 45-28 and Washmgton
Mrs 01a Brown, Honda J. Cleveland Browns clinched the remamed a half-game behind
Dun can, Mrs r1mothy H fi rSt playoff spot Sunday w1th a Dallas by downmg the New
Gertv Elnora A H1ll, Cathermc somewhat less than 1mposmg 7- York Gtants 23-7.
Ireland. Bradley Johnston, 5 record
In the games m wh1ch ne1ther
Esther F McCartney, Anna P. The day of upsets left only team 1s a •contender, Denver
MyeiS James R Parker, Loms one pro football team - M1am1 topped Ch1cago 6-3 and St.
M Pasquale. Jr, Kelson S - w1th less than three losses Loms lied Green Bay 16-16 In a
Ph1ll1ps. :&gt;1rs Denrns L. Roush and the Dolphms, who were Saturday game, Dallas contiand daughte1, Zoann S Roush, Just starling to be touted as the nued 1ts wmning streak by
Eadke1 Russell, Mrs Ralph N team of the future, wenen't routmg the New York Jets 52ELVES, DOLLS, TOPS AND Toy soldiers m the Chnstmas operetta to be staged Monda)
Sands. Jr .. and daughter. Cra1g exactly super m a 34-13 hckmg 10
rughtat Salem Elementary School are, front, 1-r , Barbara Shuler, Shern Jewell. Tanmo) Fell\
Sm1th, A Loretta Tiemeyer, at the hands of - 1magme - the
Cmcinnah Jumped to a 2().7
and Melmda Harless, dolls. back row, Denrus Thornton , Mark McGurre, Alvm Barrett , ell es
Teresa
D
Tolbert,
Dewey
J
lead agamst Cleveland but the
New England Patnots
Mary Sm1th, Shern Freeman. tops ; Lawrence Sullivan, Curtiss Sm1lh, l'mltn\ T&lt;ickell and
W1lcoxon, August W1mgman ,
Browns fought back and
Complex Playoff Set-Up
Gms Lee , soldiers Curtam tmoe 1s 7 30 p 111
Frede11ck L Young, Lmda J
Cleveland was able to claun eventually won tlle game on
Sp~res. Betty Shope, James H the Central DIVISIOn AFC t1tle Leroy Kelly's four-yard touchli 1cholson and Bess1e Ande rson · w1th a 7-5 mark after edgmg down run w1th I :48 left 111 the
Cmcmnat1 31-27 because Pitts- game B1ll Nelsen hit on 14 of
!
bur gh. now 5-7 , lost to 28 passes for 244 yards and two
1
1 I
By Helen Bottel
Houston 29·3 If both teams TDs for the Browns
I
INSTANT CRACKER CRUMBS'
J1m Plunkett, who celebrated
f1msh at 7-7, Cleveland ts sllll
I
Dear Helen
the champiOn because 1! has h1s 24th birthday Sunday, and
When 1 VISited our son and daug hter-m-law recently, I was
wound up 1ts diVIsiOn schedule his old Stanford receiVer Rsndy
myst1f1edat wha t happened on a shoppmg tnp w1lh her
w1th a 5-1 mark wh1le Vataha - who was 23 Saturday
I
She bought a box of crackers, mdlvlduall y packaged m four I
Pi ttsburgh IS 3-2 w1th a game ~l eb rated w1th a pa1r of TO
I
passes to giVe New England 1ts
secllons She took each of these sectwns, put them mto separate
left
B)' Bob Hoeflich
I
VIctory
over Miami The
plastic bags wh1ch you get m the vegetable departme nt . then mlo
But explammg the rest of the
I
playoff picture 1s like trymg to Patrwt vic tory snapped Miapaper sacks
I
The board of the Me1gs ::io1l and Water ConservatiOn has figure out Phase II. There are mi 'se1ght-game wmnmg streak
When she pulled mto her dnveway, she stopped, la1d the fom
bags conlammg the crackers one m front of each t1re Then siJe presented a $25 g1ft to the treasury of the B1g Bend Mmstrel Assn four clubs - M1am1, Ballunore, Ailing Bob Gnese played for
hopped back m the car, drove over the crackers and mto the The g1ft was m apprec1at10n for the mmstrel's gtoup progtam Kansas C1ty and Oakland - sttll tlle Dolphins but was lifted m
presentatiOn at the recent dmner meetmg of the conse~ vatwn vymg for the other three spots the th1rd penod after Larry
garage.
m the AFC SIX clubs -Dall ~s. Carwell's 53-yard touchdown
I looked ag)last at the crushed packages lymg behind her car distnct held at tlle Salisbury Elemenlili'Y School.
Wash1 ngton, Mmnesota, Detro1t, return of a Griese pass.
only to have her smile and say, " Instant cracker crumbs 1"
VIking 's lli'd Loss
SEEMS ALMOST A CRIME to mentwn Easter \\ lth Chmt· San Franc1sco and Los Angeles
Well , I went home and sent them a ble nder for their onmas beanng down, but M1 and Mrs Robert Lew1s and children . - ale pnme contenders for the Mmnesota had put together
ruversary No dtce
Last week I was there agam , and she made mstant crumbs m Carol and DaVId , seem to have the colored Easter egg s1tua twn fo01 spots 111 the Nl'C and back-to-hack 12-2 seasons but
Atlanta st1ll has an outs1de the V1kmgs were beaten for the
her same old way She says she hkes the blender for other tlungs, well m hand
th1rd lime in 1971 when San
but her "car " way 1s faster and qmcker for crackers, and bes1des
They have some Araucanas - somellmes called the Easter shot
D1ego exploded for W points m
Lead Decided Tonight
tllere's no mess to clean up - and 1t's much more fun Says she egg chicken -whiCh lay colored eggs m shades from pale to deep
Thmgs are so close tha t the the fmal period. John Hadl's
unagined the crackers were whoever she was angry w1th, and she blue, green,pmk ,ohve and anllquc gold By the way, they say the
lead m both the NFC and AFC f1ve-yard TO pass to M1ke
got a lot of frustrations out of her system by smashmg them eggs have 10 percent more nutritwn than ordmary eggs
West w11l be at stake tomght Garrett started the rally and
The chickens, themselves, come m a w1de assortment of
(Could it be me')
whe n San Franc1sco meets two Denms Partee field goals
I know there's a ge neratwn gap (she's 19 ) but th1s 1s an ab)ss 1 colors and types - black, buff , c1nnamon, brown. red and wh1te Kansas City
and Pete Barnes 36-yard
My husband 1s no help (h1s daughter-In-law can do no wrong) He Some have topknots, some have whiskers and others h"ve bunIn the other three upsets touchdown run w1th an u.terJust laughs and says, " li 1t works so well , why don 't you do 11 that ches of feathe1s growmg from each s1de of the head
bes1des New England's con- cept!On fimshed 1t
The
Lew1s
home,
of
course
,
IS
a
pretty
mterestmg
place
to
way too '" -MIL
quest of M1am1, Philadelphia Tom Hayes 6().yard fumble
\OS II The fam1ly has all sorts offoul and birds
Dear MIL
return for a touchdown sparked
You've e~t her got a wacky d-1-1 or a wild 1magmat10n
Atlanta to its triumph over
On second thoug)lt, maybe "llred crumbs" aren't such a bad
THE DEADLINE for mmlmg Chnstmas packages and cards
Oakland. Hayes scooped up a
1dea. When a blender IS too slow, a rollmg pm too meassy, just get JUSt seem to get ear her - or do they'
Marv Hubbard fumble on h1s
International own 40 and ran 11 m. A parr of
behind the wheel - and that's the way the cracker crumbles Out-&lt;&gt;f-town packages should have been sent !rum your post By Un1ted Press
EAST
touchdowns by Art Malone, on
offtce by Dec. 1; local packa ges and out-of-town cards by Oec. 10, Steton Hall 81 Harvard 80
H
Holstra
58
La
Salle
56
a 15-yard pass by Bob Berry
and local cards by Dec 15 Bet you're not nearly as ready for
Dear Helen
Pennsylvania 94 Na vy 74
and
a one-yard run, wrapped it
You once remmded parents that the1r children aren't Chnslmas as you thought after readmg those deadlines, huh '
N1agara 84 Gannon College 69
"owned" by them, but only borrowed for a little wh1le
Sl John'siN Y I 98 Vanderbilt up for Atlanta.
B
Pete Liske's f1ve-yard TO
For parents who need further remmdmg that they mustn 't try
MRS. DOLLY HAYES, executive secretary of the Me1gs l
Prov1dence 81 Brown 61
pass to Kent Kramer w1th one
to run therr children 's hves, here's a lovely b1t of blank verse County Tuherculos1s and Health Assn , wh1ch annually conducts Syracuse 91 Army 77
Sorry, I don 't know the author
the Chnstmas seal sale to ra1se funds with wh1ch tu fight tuber- Phil Tex tile 66 Kma 's Pm nl 62 nunute left gave Philadelphia
Your children are not your children
culosis, report~ that the sale 1s laggmg behmd last year at th1s Boston U 103 GeorRelown DC 93 the v1ctory over Detroit and
Faormon! S! 93 Wheelmg 73
spolled the Uons' chance to
They are the sons and daughters of Life's longmg for Itself pomt. Mrs Hayes asks everyone to use the return envelope en- Holy Cross 69 Temple 68
cap1tahze on Minnesota's loss.
They come through you but not from you,
closed with the seals and to kee p those letters w1th contnbuhons No Carolma 90 P1!!sburgh 75
F1fty-three seconds before the
Penn St 99 Cornell 75
And though they are w1th you, yet they belong not to you
comm '
W Vorgmla 70 Calif ( lr v1ne) 66 Liske-Kramer score, Detroit You may g~ve them your love but not your thoug hL~
Rulgers 92 Colgate 80
which trailed 16-0 at halftime For they have the1r own thoug)lts
HEADS OF BOTH the Me1gs County Jnhrmary and the Me~gs
had taken a 2().16 lead on Greg
SOUTH
You may house the1r bodies but not their souls,
County Children's Home report that they've been anythmg but Old Dommion
91 Bapt1s l 74
Landry's five-yard TO run .
For their souls dwell m the house of tomorrow.
swamped "1th phone calls from res1dents mformmg them that Florida S! 96 Eastern Ky 83 Tom Dempsey, who kicked his
Wh1ch you cannot VISit, not even m your dreams - A they will do something for one or the other of the homes for Lou1Sv1 tl e 116 Bellarmtne 58
Floroda \16 U of So Florida 87 record 63 yarder against the
Chnstmas
READER
Memphos S! 84 Okla Sl 68
Lions last year, had three field
Dear Reader (And Readers )
Ifs a real worry situatiOn smce counly funds provtde for .no No Carolina St 92 Georgia 81 goals includmg a 52-yarder.
To prmt poetry Witho ut glvmg credit lS hke announcmg ' the Christmas remembrances whatsoever for e~ther mshtuhon If Sows In La . 105 Wstrn Ky 84
3 Passes Intercepted
Ky Wesleyan'l'l Alcorn A&amp;M82
winnah" as "whatzisname "I seldom do lhts, but hked the above you plan to send somethmg along , do let Mrs Roberta Musser at Cheyney St. 81 Murray S! SO
Houston intercepted three
)llece so well! wanted to share 1t w1th all of you
the children's home, or Mrs. M1ldred Jacobs, at the mf1rmary, Wake Forest 100 Rice 62
Terry Bradshaw pllllSes to set
Jacksonville 77 E Carolma 68
Will someone please giVe us the name of the author Thanks know
up a 16-pomt surge in the frrst
Maryland 117 Geo. Wash 96
- H.
There are 17 ch1ldren at the home and 12 men and women at Dav1dson 76 Clemson 65
half and beat Pittsburgh
V1rgm1a
Tech
83
R1chmond
58
Dear Helen:
the mf1rmary. Employes at e1ther place w1ll lel you know what
Tackle Leo Brooks intercepted
Wm and Mary 110 Furman 91 a pass to set up a touchdown
How can women ever really make 11 m poht1cs when we're would make a SUitable g1fl for someone at eilher locatwn Just Tulane
72 W1scons in 70
first-named so consistently'' In our local electiOns, the men's g1ve them a rm g
l ex A&amp;M 91 Nowstn La St 75 and safety John Charles set up
named came out m headlines as "Sm1th , Green,'' etc , but the one
two f1eld goals With a parr of
MIDWEST
thefts.
woman who ran for office was consistently ·Judi!h" I'll bet 1f
M1ch 90 Ws!n MICh. 69
In other games, Larry Brown
Shirley Chisholm runs for President, 1t Will be "N1xon , Muskie,
lnd1ana 65 M1am1 (Ohio) 50
WEST
M1ssour1 74 Arkansas 73
Purdue
94
Estn
Mlch
84
scored
two touchdowns and
McCloskey, McGovern ~ .. etc, etc, - and "Shirley." Why ' - M 1nnesota 72 Iowa St 58
Utah 93 Ulah Sl 74
Oh1o
Sl
B4
·oregon
69
Curt Knight kicked three field
UCL A 106 Iowa 72
W1 ch 1ta Sl 74 Nebra ska 61
ffiKED AGAIN
MICh St. 87 So Alabama 72
Marque tte 84 Bowlmg Green 64 SlnCal ltl02 Uo!SFmco82
Bradley 92 Culver Stockton 57 goals m Washmgton's win over
Dear Irked .
UC Sla BrbraBB Smfrd(Aia) 71
Nor thwes tern 76 Oh1o 65
DePaul lOS Rocky Ml Colt. 84 the G1ants; Willte Ellison
Because pobllcal wnters are almost all male , too Women m C1n'l1 85 Ath letes In Action 80 Calif 79 Anz 76
Villanova
83 Detroit 64
scored on an 8().yard run,
Portland 70 Puget Sound 61
politics could stop this "pat on the head" approach, v1a fn endly Not re Da me 81 Vatpara1 so 71
Wheaton 82 Calv1n 78
, Dra ke 87 Butler 77
TraviS Wtlliams returned a
St LouiS U 75 Dayton 71
discussions w1th edttors - H
kickoff 105 yards and Rllman
Evansv ill e 83 Assumption 80
So!n
Ill
100
U ofWIS (Mil ) 75 Gabriel threw three TO passes
By
fi:J
Eau C l a~re 95 Oshkosh 79
In the Los Angeles victory over
New Orleans ; Norm Bulaich's
SOUTHWEST
' i•••alld his~ry!Mstfrlendsman!
w~re
lll moiS 70 Oklahoma 65
one-yard TO run and Johnny
£cwG·t:AfiU&gt; IW3tJIT
M1ssour1 73 Arkansas 72
Umtas' first TO pass of the
Kenl ucky 79 Kan sas 69
W Tex St 100 Tex (Arlington) year sparked Baltimore past
84
Buffalo; Jim Turner's 33 and 37
Tex. Tech 91 So.Dako!a S! 73 field goals offset Mac PerciTexas~5 Alabama 83
val's 34,yarder as Denver
SMU 110 Ausll n Call. 69
No lex Sl 61 Sin MISS 52
topped Chicago and Tim
Hous lon 67 Tennessee 65
Webster's
27-yard field goal as
Ariz St 96 Calif (R1vers1de) 87
the gun sounded bfted Green
La Tech 106 TrmlivrTex l 76
Tulsa 64 S! Mar y's (Tex) 57
Bay to 1ts lie with St Loms
S!pnFAstnl18 Pn eVwA&amp;M 107
Mineral Bowl
Baylor 86 Okta City 82
Bethany t Kans) 17 Mo Valley
N MexiCo 78 N MexiCo S! 76
14
A1r Force 77 Colorado 76
NAJA Div. Two ChampionShip
SI Mary!Cal 1t) 93 FresnoS! 89
Anz Sl 96 UC RiverSide 87
Calif. lui 30
LBeachSI 83 Nev LVegas 72
Westnunster IPA I 30

THE TOY BAND at Salem Center Elementary w11l be taking part 10 the annual Chnstmas

Day of Upsets

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

!Helen

Help Us

r--------------------------Beat ....

: Of the Bend

College Scores

'I'Ile Toys That Talked: a Christmas Fantasy

Lane Pastoret

the world

...

7: 30p.m. at the school. The operetta ls under the direction of
Mrs. Maunta M1ller, vocal music mstructor.

Pro Standings
NFL Standings
By Umted Press International
American Conference

East

w

Mtamt
Balttmore

l

T. PCT.
SIB

2 I
3 0

9
9

750

5 .7 0 417
New England
8 0 .333
4
NY Jets
I II 0 083
Buffalo
Central
W. l. T Pet.
7 5 0 .583
x.cteveland
5 7 0 .417
Pittsburgh

Cmcmnat1
Houston

4 8 0 .333

2 9 I

.182

W l. T

Pet

West

ABA Standings
By United Press International
East
W. L. Pel. GB
17 6 739
Kentucky
16
10 615 2'12
Vtrg lnta
II
15 .423 7'12
Flori dtans
10 14 417 7'12
New York
11 16 407 8
P1llsburgh
15 375 8112
9
Caroltna
West
W. l. Pel. GB
Utah
18 8 692 ...
tnd1ana
14 10 583 3
Memph iS
II 14 &lt;Wl&gt; 6'1&gt;
Denver
10 14 417 7
Deltas
10 15 400 7'12
Sunday's Results
Memphos 111 v, rgtma 113
Denver 118 Pittsburgh 114

3 1 700
7 3 2 700
5 7 0 417 Ca rol ma vs Florldtans at
Denver
4 7 1 364 Tampa . Postponed
(Only ga mes scheduled)
Nat1onal Conference
Monday's Games
East
W. L. T Pet Kentucky at Utah
9 3 0 750 !Only game scheduled)
Dallas
8 3 I 727
Washm9ton
NHL Standmgs
4 7 I 364
Sl LouiS
Bv
United
Press lnternattonal
364
4
7
I
Ph iladelphia
East
4
8
0
333
NY G1ants
W. l . T. PTS
Central
17 4 4 38
Pel.
New
York
W l. T
15 3 6 36
750
-Montreat
9 3 0
Mmnesota
17 5236
7 4 I 636 Boston
OelrOII
9
8 8 26
6 6 0 500 Toronto
Ch1cago
8
14 5 21
300
De!rod
3 7 2
Green Ba y
7
16 4 IS
Vancouver
West
6 16 5 17
W l. T Pet. Buffalo
West
San Franc1sco
7 4 0 636
W. L T. PIS
Los Angeles
7 4 I 636
M1nnesota
18 S J 39
Atlanta
6 5 I 545
ChiCago
17
7 2 36
400
New Orleans
4 6 2
Sl LOU IS
9 13 4 22
X Clinched DIVISion T1lle
P1!1sburgh
10 15 2 22
Sunday's Results
Ph1
tadelph1a
8 12 5 21
Cleveland 31 Clncmnat1 27
Cal1forn~a
9 16 3 21
New England 34 M1am1 13
Los Angeles
5 21 I It
Washmgton 23 NY G1ants 7
Sunday 's Results
Atlanta 24 Oakland 13
New
York
6 Vancouver 3
Philadelphia 23 Detr01! 20
B
os
ton
5
P1
!1sburgh 3
Ball1more 24 Buffalo 0
51 Louis w Detro• I I
Houston 29 P1!1sburgh 3
Buffal o 3 Minneso ta 1
Denver 6 Chicago 3
Ch1
cago 7 Los Angeles 0
Los Angeles 45 New Orleans 28
Ph1tadetph1a
3 Cal llorn1a 0
San Otego 30 Minnesota 14
(only games scheduled )
St Lout s 16 Green Bay 16
Monday 's GJmes
(Only games scheduled )
(No games scheduled I
Saturday's Results
Dallas 52 NY Jets 10
AHL Standings
!Only game scheduled )
By Un1ted Press International
Monday's Games
East
Kansas Clty at San Francisco
W l T Pis
(IWIIIghl)
IS 3 2 38
Boston
(Only game scheduled )
Nova Scalia
11 8 ~ 30
Saturday's Games
Spnngfoeld
9 9 5 23
Miami at Baltimore
Pr
ov
idence
7 11 6 20
Detroit at Minnesota
Roc hester
8 15 3 19
(Only games scheduled)
West
Sundats Games
w l T Pis
Atlanta at San Franc1sco
Hershey
14 S 4 32
Chicago a! Green Bar,
Cleveland
II 8 s 27
Cleveland al New Or eans
Bal timore
lO 13 • 2A
Dallas a! NY G1an!s
RIC hmond
10 12 3 23
Denver at San Diego
Cinc
innat
i
1 12 7 11
Hou&gt;!on at Buffalo
Tidewater
S 15 l 13
New England at NY Jets
Sunday 1 s Results
Oakland at Kansas C1ty
Boston 5 ClnCinnalll
Pi!lsburgh al Cmclnnatl
Hershey I Nova Scotia I
St LouiS at Philadelphia
Prov1dence 3 Rochester 1
!Only games scheduled)
R1chmond 3 Cleveland 1
Monday's Games
Washmgton at Los Angeles (On ly games scheduled!
Monday's Games
Owlllghll
(No games scheduled)
!Only games scheduled)
Kansas Co!y
Oakland
San D1ego

7

NBA Stand1ngs
By Un1led Press International
Eastern Conference
Atlanhc Division
W l. Pel GB
Boston
ts 10 600
New York
14 II , 560 1
Ph1ladelph1a 12 14 462 3'1&gt;
Butfalo
10 15 400 5
Central Oevis•on
W l Pet GB
Balllmore
10 15 .400
Cleveland
9 16 360 I
Clncmna!1
8 15 .348 I
Allanla
7 17 292 2'h
Western Conference

Cage Scores
Lancaster F1sher 96 Canal
Wmchester 74

Columbus Walnut R1dge SA
Reynoodsburg 72
Columbus Read 92 Columbus
Mohawk 58
Upper Ar lington 61 Worthington
58
Columbus

Wa tterson
West 66

71

Columbus
Toledo St Francis 65
Columbus Eastmoor 57
M1dwest Div1s1on
Oh1o Deaf 83 Indiana Deaf 62
W. l. Pet GB Grove C1!y 77 Teays Valley 66
Milwaukee
23 4 852
Columbus DeSales 65 Grand·
Chicago
17 7 708 4\;2 v1ew 53
Phoenox
14 II 56() 8 Newark CatholiC 70
O.lro11
10 14 417 11'12
Columbus S! Charles 29
Pactfic Dtv1sion
Zanesville 89 Whitehall 51
Seattle 99 Cleveland 91
Faorbanks 65 Marysvi lle 46
Phoenix 120 Golden Slate 87
B1g Walnut 83 Dublin 59
los Angeles 123 Portland 107
Centerburg 50 Cardington 48
(Only games scheduled)
Franklm Heights 56 Logan Elm
Monday's Games
47
(No games scheduled)
Johnstown 57 Licking Valley 55
LICking Helghs 100 Northridge
44
BRYSON IS ILL
Newark 64 Mt Vernon 46
RACINE - Hobart Bryson New Albany 64 Highland SA
was admitted to St. Joseph Cot umbus Wehrle 62
Columbus Academy 45
Hospital, Parkersburg, W. Va. Westerv ille
91 Hilliard 69
Sunday morning after suffering Middletown 90 Wilmington 58
a light stroke. He 1s a patient in Cambridge 71 Marietta 61
M1ddtetown Fenwick 64
Room 222.
•
Mlsslsstnawa Valley 54

TAICING SHOT - Wahama'a Randy t1ark (40) goes up
in the air to fire a jump shot as Meigs Marauder guard RICh
Bailey ( 13) gives a strong defensive effort in Saturday
night's opener for the Falcons. Meigs won the game easily,
74-50.

Browns Clinch
Division Title
CLEVELAND (UP! ) - The
title race 111 the Central DiviSion of the Amencan Conference was all over when the
clock m Qeveland StadiUm
showed :4.1 left to play Sunday.
W1th that much ttme left, a
long pass by the Cincmnah
Bengals' V1rg1l Carter whistled
into the arms of Erme Kellerman, an interception that gave
the Cleveland Browns a hardfought 31-27 win
That win, coupled w1th Pittsburg 's 29-3 loss to Houston ,
clinched the Iitle for the
Browns
Leroy Kelly scored two touchdowns, the last commg on a
four -yard scamper With I 48
left in the game
"Leroy had a great performance ," Coach N1ck Skonch
581d after logging h1s first division title. "He started 1t all.
"He gave us the frrst touchdown and got the last TO to
cap II all. He did everythmg
he had to do "
Muddy Advantage
Kelly, who satd he had an
advantage over the Bengal defense because the turf was
loose and muddy, finished the
afternoon w1th 127 yards m 23
carries, the th1rd week in a
row he gamed over 100 yards
in a game.
"I not1ced the PittsburghHouston score on the board
just before the last touchdown
and I knew we could wrap 11
up today," Kelly sa1d. "It was
great to see the Steelers getting tromped and all we had to
do was wm It was great,
great, great '''
.--~ ------- r

Dai~

The

Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
CMESTER L TANNEHILL ,
Exec Ed

ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
City Editor
"
P ub l iShed daily ex cep t
Slt lurdav by The Oh ro Valley
Pub l rsh r n g

Cour t

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Ill

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St, New York Cllv, New York
Subs cr 1pl•on rates
De

t1v ered by carrrer where

available 50 ce nt s per week ,

By Motor Ro ute w here earner
serv1ce not av~ihtb l e
One

month Sl 75 Bv mall '" Oh1o
and W v a , Ont year Sl-4 00
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Th ree
months S4 50 SubScr!pfiOn
pr1 te 1n clu des Sunday T1mes
Senf1nel

The e1ght-year veteran from
Morgan State notched the title
w1th a four-yard blast over left
tackle on a power play headed
by guard Gene Hickerson.
"Gene had the opllon of gomg outside or up the mtddle,"
Kelly said "He went outside,
threw a great block on (Bill )
Bergey and all I did was follow h1m and tried to leap over
both of them mto the end zone .
"I didn 't know I scored until
[ saw the off1cial w1th h1s
hands up It makes no difference how many times I score
or how many times f gam over
100 yards, just as long as I
help the team wm like we
did "
Fateful Fumble
The Browns, now 7.0, got a
b1g break on the opemng kickoff when Cmcmnatl's Fred Willis fwnbled on the 18 Ken
Brown , activated for the game,
recovered and returned 11 l4
yards to the Bengals' four
Kelly scored the first touchdown of the game on a oneyard burst ove,· left tackle
wnh I 21 elapsed
The Bengals were leadmg 2().
7 when w1th f1ve seconds left
m the f1rst half, Browns quarterback B1ll Nelsen h1t wide receiver Fair Rooker over the
m1ddle for a 39-yard aerial to
cap a three-play, 72-yard drive.
Nelsen completed 14 of 28
passes for 244 yards.
Frank Pitts, a seven-year
veteran from Southern University, snagged a 53-yard bomb
from Nelsen m the thrrd quarter to put the Browns ahead,
21-20
" Lemar Pamsh had the ball
but I took 1t a way and broke
two tackles," Pitts said. "I had
my hand on his chest between
h1s hands and the ball.
Admits "Good Catch"
"Once the ball's m the air
you have to f1ght for 11 so I
did Pamsh told me 'good
play, good catch,' after I
scored. I guess lt was a good
play 'ca use 1t was clean."
Don Cockroft booted a 12yard f1eld goal m the fourth
quarter to complete the scoring
for Cleveland.
Bengal running back Essel
Johnson, who didn't play in
the first half, scored on an 86yard run over right tackle with
12 seconds elapsed in the fourth
quarter and Doug Dressler
broke two tackles and drove
over the m1ddle in the first
half to complete the scoring
for Cincmnati, now 4-8.

BY KEITH WISECUP •
MASON - The Me1gs
Marauders put it all together
here Saturday mght to trample
the Wahama While Falcons 7450 m a non-league basketball
game
The win gave the Marauders
a 2-1 overall record. They
remamedat I~ m Southwestern
OhiO Athletic League action.
The Falcons are (1.1, this havmg
been their season opener.
Coach
Carl
Wolfe's
Marauders Jumped out to a b1g
lead early and were never in
serious trouble. Meigs trailed
only once, that of ~ SIX seconds
in the game when Wahama 's
Roger Dmgey, 6-3 center,
popped m a lay-up and was
fouled, completmg a three-pmnt
play. That was the only f1eld
goal the Falcons got in the f1rst
quarter.
Leadmg scorer for the
Marauders for the third straight
game was b1g 6-3 Jeff Morris
with 19. The senior center led
the " Big Maroon" on the
boards, also for the th1rd
straight lime, with 13 retrieves .
J1mmy Boggs, 5-9 junior
guard, followed Morris with 15
markers Boggs scored the frrst
SIX Me1gs points m the opemng
quarter . Bill Vaughan , 5-9
JUmor guard, started m place of
the slightly mjured R1ch Bailey
and filled the bill w1th 10 pomts
and a great floor game. Tony
Vaughan, 6-2 semor forward,
scored e1ght for the Marauders
and pulled down nine rebounds
wh1le playmg a fme defens1ve
game.
Dmgey paced the White
Falcons w1th 19 markers
foll owed by strong Mike
Howard w1th 14. Howard also
pulled down 16 rebounds, game

high.
The Marauders played the1r
best game of the young season
agamst the Falcons, hm1ting
the1r number of turnovers and
m1stakes to a m1mmum
Wahama
pressed
the
Marauders throughout the
entire game, but 1! had little
success. The Falcons doubleteamed the ball m the second
half , that too bemg unsuccessful
Baile~. a foot InJury still
slowmg h1m down slightly , d1d
not play until the fmal three
nunutes of the game when he
came m and responded wi lh two
qUick buckets Coach Wolfe
tllought 1t better for the JUmor to
s1t most of th1s one out m
preparatiOn for next week's
league battle w1th Waverly
W1thout Bailey, the team
speed of the Marauders was
hampered, but they sllll had
many well-patterned fast
breaks The Marauder team
defense was a thmg of beauty
all mght They forced the
Falcons
1nto
numerous
nus lakes and allowed them only
16 pomts m the f1rst half on a
meager four field goals
The usual fa s t.breakmg
Falcons were stunned at the
great sw1lchmg man-to-man
forced on them by Me1gs. In the
past, the Falcons had forced the
Marauders mto the1r own type
of game, a floor-stompmg affair
Wllh the score moun ling mto the
seve niles or higher. Me1gs now
owns three consecullve WinS
over the Falcons, w1nmng both
times last year after losmg both
games in 1969-70
Me1gs broke open the till midway m the first e1ght minutes
Leadmg 6-0, the Marauders
npped off 10 stra1ght and out-

scored the Falcons 16-2 to take a
2~ 7 advantage after one penod.
Then the Marauders got hot!
The lead continued lo swell
behmd the sconng of the wellbalanced Meigs attack It was
30-8 at the 5:00 mark, 41-13 at
the 1:00 mark, and 42-16 at the
half
Mmutes mto the second half,
the Marauders jumped to their
b1ggest lead, 31 pomts, at 47-16.
It was here that the Me1gs
Juniors, and there's plenty of
the m, started to rece1ve some of
that all Important expenence.
After three quarters 11 was 5527
W1lh Me1gs subslltutes
flooding the court and Wahama
pressing all over the floor, the
Marauder lead dwmdled The
closest Wahama got was 18
points, 66-48, w1th about two
nunutes left
All Marauders got mto the
scoring column Ftrst-hme
scorers were Mark Werry, 6-4
Junior center, and R1ck Ash, 5-9
semor guard, each w1th two
tallies The other Marauders
addmg to the wm were Steve
Dunfee, Andy Vaughan and
M1ke Sayre, who seems to
Improve w1th every outmg and
1s qmckly movmg up to be the
Mara uder Hs1xth mann
The Marauders shot a warm 47
per cent from the field, canning
28 of 59. They hit on 18 of 28 from
the chanty str1pe. Wahama h1t
on 18 of 59 from the field for a
cool 30 per cent wh1le making
good on only 14 of 30 from the
foul hne Meigs had a slight
edge on the boards, grabbmg 43
rebounds to 39 for the Falcons
The Marauders now gel down
to the "mtty-gntty" th1s Fnday
agamst the powerful Waverly
T1gers at Me1gs. On the

SCRAP FOR REBOUND - Meigs' lanky Mark Werry (45) and M1ke Howard (14) of

Wahama battle for a rebound here m the first penod of Saturday mght's game on the White
Falcons' home court Me1gs jumped out to an early lead and scored an easy 74-50 vtctory

followmg,
the
Tuesday
Marauders have another league
game at home, thts one agamsl
the Athens Bulldogs, who Will
sllll be trymg to rebound from a
stunmng defeat at GallipoliS
last Fnday
MEIGS (74) - Dunfee, 2 3 7,

Mitchel l. I 0 2, TOTALS IS 14DENSON SUSPENDED
SO
SAN DIEGO (UP! ) - The
By Quarters
MeigS
22 20 13 19- 74 Mmnesola V1kmgs have susWahama
7 9 11 23- 50
Reserve Store - Me1gs 45 pended mght-year veteran wide
rece~ver AI Denson for falling
Wahama 27
to report to pracllce after he
TRAYNOR ILL
PITTSBURGH (UP! ) - Ha- was lifted from the active
roster and placed on the tall
T Vaughan, 4-0 8, Morn s, 8 3 rold "P1e" Traynor was listed
19, Boggs. 5 515, B Vaughan. m fa1r condtllon Sunday after squad
3 4 10 , A Vaughan . 0 3 3, being treated for a respiratory
Bailey , 2 o4, Werry. 1 0 2. Ash,
Federal
Hock 1ng 62
New
I 0 2, Sayre, 2 0 4 TOTALS 28· a1lment at Allegheny General
Lexmg ton 60
18 74.
Hospital. The 72-year-&lt;&gt;ld for- Caldwell 74 Meadowbrook 64
WAHAMA ISO) - Craw•ord, mer th1rd baseman of the Guernsey Zane Tra ce 82
0 I I, Wh1!e, 0 0 0. Howard, 54·
Mad1son 66
14, Clark 1 3 5, Dongey, 7 5·19 Pittsburgh Ptrates was treated Contmen!al 71 Holgate 48
Ch Roush. 2 0 4, ~u Roush , 0 1 for a sun1lar atiment several L1berty 52 Youngstown Chaney
l, Harns, 102, Lambert, 102. months ago at the hosp1tal
50

Eagles Get Past Southem, 71-66
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Coach Asa Bradbury.
Eastern Eagles were sur- Bob Caldwell, the second link
pnsingly hard-pressed m thetr m the Eagle chain, added 16
71-96 wm over the Southern while Alan Duvall chipped m 10
Local Tornadoes at Eastern for the Eagles
High School near here Saturday Southern was led by 5-11
night m a Southern Valley semor guard, J1m Hubbard With
Conference game
20 markers, a career high for
The Eagles remam unbeaten him. Hubbard's hot shootmg
in four games overall and in was the main reason the Torthree league games . The nadoes put on the teremendous
Tornadoes, on t!ie other hand, showing they did. Nick lhle, 5-10
are wmless m three games JUnior forward, added 14, Jerry
overall and 10 two league llubbard, 5-!0 semor forward,
games. Southern has now lost had 12, and Bruce Hart, 6-1
two of 1ts games by a total of stx semor forward, contrtbuted II.
po10ts
Coach Bradbury, g1v10g
The Eagles were led by the pra1se to h1s enhre team for
Incomparable
Dennts their fantashc game, singled
Eichinger, the 6-3 semor center, out J1rn Hubbard and Bruce
With 28 pomts on 12 field goals Hart for their great defens1ve
and four free throws. Eichmger game besides their strong ofproved to be the difference in fenstve game.
Hubbard
the game, receiving tremen- guarded the Eagles' hlghdous praise from Opposition scormg Rick Williams and held

NICK IHLE has one Uling in mind : a two-point layup, at
Eastern Saturday night. His Southern Tornado mate (21), IS
Jerry Hubbard.

him to only one f!Cld goal and
four po10ts. Hart guarded
E1chmger and, although the
great Eagle star pumped in 28
pomts, the Southern forward
sttll managed to defense him
well
The Eagles were ahead
throughout the first three
quarters, but had their small
lead melt by the scrappy,
surgmg Tornodes 10 the fmal
quarter. The fourth quarter was
nip and tuck, ftrst Southern
taking the lead and then
Eastern. It stayed this way unhl
the final few seconds when tbe
Eagles pulled 11 out of !lte fire.
The five-point bulge by the
Eagles in the final count didn't
show the closeness of the game.
The Eagles scored at the buzzer

on an mtercepted desperatiOn
pass by the Tornadoes. Before
that, the Southern club was
down by only three, at 69-66, and
had the ball, but a tenacious
Eastern defense forced the ball
over.
Coach Bill Phillip's Eagles
led after the first period, 22-16,
at the half, 43-25, and by only
two, 52-50, after three quarters!
Coach Bradbury, havmg
played both SVAC top teams in
Eastern and North Gallla,
compared the two teams. He
said the Pirates appear to have
the better team because they
have three players w1th a great
height advantage where the
Eagles have only one ,
Eichmger, who has good
heighth .

Miami Drops First Tilt
By United Press International
Defendmg Mid-American Conference champ1on M1am1 and
three other MAC teams p1cked
up black eyes Saturday, qmckly learmng the hazards of playing on the road.
M1ami, a solid chance to repeat as Mtd-Am champ, trailed
most of the way against Indiana's Hoos1ers m droppmg a
65-50 deCISIOn
The Redskins, who traded by
as many as 12 points m the
first half and 32-24 at halftune,
cut 11 to 36-35 early m the second half, but the Hoos1ers
scored six stra1ght pomts and
were never agam senously
fllreatened .
Center Steve Downmg, who
left the game w1th an mjured
knee m the second half, led
Indiana with 16 pomts, while
Larry Garloch hud 13, Phil
Lumpkm 12 and Darrel Dunlap
II for M1am1, now 1-1 on the
year.
Ohw Umvers1ty also came out
on the short end agamst Northwestern of the B1g Ten, as the
Wildcats pulled away in the
second half for a 76-65 VICtory
over the Bobcats.
Hentz Tops Wildcats
Barry Hentz scored 22 points
and Mark ·S1bley 20 to pace the
Wildcats wh1le OU's leadmg

scorer was Bob Howell w1th 16
OU hit only 33 per cent from
the field for the game.
At Milwaukee, Bowling Green
played second ranked Marquette on almost even terms
for the first half but Wilted m
the second to suffer an 114-64
loss to the powerful WarriOrs.
The Falcons, led m scormg

+++

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most weekdays on cable TV,
Include " Green Acr"s ," 1

+++

Anl1que lovers should get

Tonight's pro 1ootbatt bash
exc1ted about an excellent plls the Chiefs against the
series on Ch 11 ,a! 7. 30 p.m 49ers
two very possible
Ton1ght' s features carnival Super Bowl contenders, 9
glass, por ce la~n, \Also see II at p m , Ch 12
4 p m Tuesday, Ch 11.)
+ ++ I
Another perenmat special,
MOVIES. " Rich, Young and
"Rudolph the Red Nosed You Pretty ," a winning comKnow.What, " comes to Chs 2 bination If I ever hear~o1 one,
&amp; 7 tonight at B p m. I
plus Jane Powett, 4 p.m , and
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"Blue Denim,'' Carol lynley,
Rerun ser ies, which appear 11 · 30 p.m .. both Ch. 10
TUESDAY
VIrginia
p m Ch 10
"It Takes a Graham has the Great
Thiel," 5p.m , Ch 4 " t Love Pretender, Geo•_ge Pttmpton,
1lucy" lis 11 ever NOT on ?I. as a g~est, 1 p m., Ch. 6.

'

MASON - The Me1gs
Marauder reserves won therr
second game of three here
Saturday n1ght over the
Wahama reserves, 45-27, in a
non-league game . Coach B1ll
Wickline's httle Marauders
jumped out to an 18-5 advantage
after the firSt quarter and were
never m trouble.
Bill Chaney,~ junior center,
again led the UtUe Marauders
with 19 pomts to lake game
honors. B1ll Myers, 6-0
sophomore forward, a brother
of ex-Marauder star Joe Myers,
followed with nine Haymaker
topped the little Falcons with II
Meigs made 18 of 47 for 38 per
cent and 9 of 18 from the foul
line. The little Falcons made
only 10 of 35 from the field for 28
per cent and 7 of 2!l from the
charily str1pe.

EBERSBACH HOWE. CO.
992-2811
110 W. Main

'

Pomeroy, ·o .

Life
•
Insurance:
Think vou

can"t ·
.afford if?
We h.t H ,1 pohn lor pt:oplc
who thmk th l: y 1.. .1n t
.dlorJ 111 c ln~ ur.tm:e
.dl t h~

m.m lrl.lm Nat1onv. IJ!!

Reserves Win At Mason 45-27

For
HOLIDAY
SHOPPING ...

Santa Claus starts da1 ly 4 30 p m , Ch. 6 .. Daniel
Boone, 5 p m, Ch 6 .. Wttd,
today
Wttd West, B p.m .. Ch. 6

by Jun iOr Dalynn Badenhop 's
24 pomts, trailed only 42-38 at
•otermisswn, but Marquette,
paced by Bob Lackey 's 24
pomts and 20 by Marcus Washmgton, scored the f1rst e1ght
pomts of the second half to
take a 5().38 lead The Falcons
never got closer than e1ght after that
•

affarrs
EASTERN (71 ) - Duvall 2+
10; Williams 1-2-4; Eichinger 124-28; Caldwell 8-().16; Benedum
3-0-8; Bormg 3-1-7 Totals 29-1371.
SOUTHERN (66) - Bruce
Hart 4-3-11 ; Brett Hart 1-1-3;
J1m Hubbard 9-2-20; Jerry
Hubbard 4-4-12; N. lhle &amp;.Z.U;
W11ford 1-4-6 Totals 25-16-96.
By Quarters
Southern
16 19 15 16 - 66
Eastern
22 20 10 19-71

(

CALL POINTVIEW : 992 -2505
appearances on Ch. 6 at 4 p m

"Both are fme fall clubs,"
added the frrst-year Southern
coach Nortll Gallla defeated
Southern on the Meigs Counbans home floor, 115-57.
Coach Bradbury stressed that
1! was the lremendous play of
his Tornadoes that made the
game close, and not that
Eastern Rlayed poorly .
Coach Duane Wolfe's little
Tornadoes fell to defeat to
Coach Bob Ord's little Eagles,
45-31, m the reserve game.
The Eastern Eagles will put
their unbeaten strmg on the lme
next Saturday agamst the
Kyge r Creek Bobcats at
Eastern . The Tornadoes will
also play the Bobcats next
Tuesday m therr only game this
week Both games are SVAC

MEIGS ( ,45) - Fred Burney
0-0-0 ; Floyd Burney 2-1-5;
George ~; Chaney s.:l-19 ;
Myers 4-1-9; Pnce ~ . Couch
~· May ~· K1ser ()..()..()·
'
'
'
LeFebre ~. Totals 18-9-45
WAHAMA (27) - Haymaker
4-3-11 ; Gardner 1-1-3 ; Riley().(}.
0, Lew1s 0.1-1, Smltll 3-0-8 ,
Beleher 0-0-0; Cook 0-0-0;
Dewhurst~; Ferguson 1-1-3;
Kearns 0-1-1 ; Keefer 1-0-2;
Needs ()..()..(). Totals 1().7-27.
By Quarters
Meigs
18 4 13 10 - 45
Wahama
5 9 7 6- 27
Officials : Whi te and HICk-

P. J. PAULEY
PH . 992-2318
301 Spnng Ave
Pomeroy,Oh1o

'-II

"'"J, 111, h l •Y I ~nH (o

ft. ouc illl1" I ••l umhu' Otu ..

man.

NOTICE
THE RACINE GAS &amp;SERVICE CO.
The Public Utilities Glmmlssion of Ohio
will conduct a public hearing to investigate"'flit.
~upply of natural gas available for consumers
with in this state.
This hearing will beheld at Hearing Room
2, Ohio Departments Building, 65 South Front
Street, Columbus. Ohio on December 13, 1971,
!O:OOA.M.• EST,andthedatesof DeCember 1•
and 15 to be reserveil for continued hearln9s In
the event It becomes necessary.
Any Interested party may attend sud!
hearing and present to the Commission any
information or comment pertinent to such
matter .
Further Information may be obtained
from the Secretary of the Commission.

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION ·OF Ciltlo
125 E . Main
Pomeroy, 0.

992-2171

Henry w. Eckhlrt, Olairmlll

1

-~--·-

J; ,. _ _...:;.._..n"-~···~

�6-The.DilDy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Dec. 6, 1971

.4- '1'\ll llllb' ''nwl, Mlcldle110rt-Pmlrroy, 0., Dec. 8, 1971

Rutland Club Reviews Holiday Projects

Pastoral Couple Hosts at Open House in Manse.
Green Thumb
Notes .. •.

· The Rev. and Mrs. Dwight
Zavitz entertained Sunday
afternoon with an open house at
Ule newly redecorated manse of
the Middleport First United
Presbyterian Church.
Assisting with the open house
were members of the Syracuse
Church Session and the Deacons
of the Middleport Chtirch. Mrs.
Paul Haptonstall and Mrs .
E\'eretl Bachner conducted
wurs of the manse after the
approximately 90 guests had
been greeted by the Rev. Mr.
and Mrs. Zavitz and Mrs. Karl

A weekly feature of . Meigs
County Garden Club members.

Hqlly for Christmas and Year 'Round
By MRS. VERNON WEBER
Rutland Garden Club
Holly, more than any other plant, has been held in high
esteem the world over. Holly appeared in Uletide decorations long
before the Christmas tree, as the English carol "Deck the halls
with boughs of holly" suggests.
Today in America, true w our English heritage, we
traditionally decoraU! out homes with holly at Christmas time. A
15th cent\U'Y Christmas carol tells of an argument between the
holly andtheivy for the place of honor in the hall. In the duet each
plant sets forth its claim for superiority. The decision favors the
boDy, with its red berries, insU!ad of the ivy with its black
berries because many birds are attracted wthe holly whereas
ooly !be owls find the ivy fruit appealing.
The Humans used boDy boughs to decorate their altar, their
homes, and themselves. The ancient Druids of the British isles
and Gaul believed that the sun never left the holly tree; to them it .
was a sacred plant in which woodtand spirits lived. Their cuswm
was to place holly branches in the home in winter so that the
spirits might take refuge from the rigors of winter.
Throughout the world cures for everything from colic and
tuberculosis to psychological disturbances seem to have been
attributed to brews and salves made of holly. Brandishing,
decorating or wearing some part of the holly plant was a
universal practice. Today, in South America, millions of people
drink Mate which is brewed from leaves of several species of
boDy indigenous to that area. In Europe and China various concoctions are still made of holly for drinking, eating, feeding to
cattle, rubbing on or carrying- the list is ahnost endless. All of
the customs date back many hundreds of years. The amazing part
of the holly stories is that they all note the universal and enduring
persistance the world over of the use of holly and the legends and
mystical powers ascribed wit.
The Christian era legends of the holly are very numberous.
One of the most interesting is the story of the bird which plucked
thorns from Christ's brow to relieve His suffering at the time of
the crucifixion. The bird's breast became permanently stained
with blood. The Robin Redbreast received food for his efforts the berries of the holly which were also stained red by the blood of
Christ. The holly was supposed whave been the thorn plant which
was woven into the crown of the crucixion. The name itself boDy - is believed whe a corruption of the word "holy".
Asurprizing fact wmany people is that the holies all occur as
male and female plants. The female plant has berries, the male
does not. The variation among the different holly species is quite
striking. There are species which are very diminutive - others
grow into giant trees. Some retain their leaves throughout all
seasons and others drop aU of their foliage in the winter. Shape,
size, color and texture of the foliage and the entire plant vary so
widely in many cases that it is hard to believe they are of the same
genus.
Most of the holly which we now use for Christmas greens is a
plant introduced inw this country from England, where it grows
ab~tly in hedgerows almost as a weed. For commercial
productiOn in Ulis country, it is grown in holly ·orchards, largely in
Oregon and WAshington . The leaf of our North American species,
however ,lacks the form and the glossy lustre so much admired in
English holly and the berries are not quite so large nor bright.
English Holly is the holly of fame, fable and fortune . Fame
because of its verdant beauty; fable because of its yuletide use
and legendary connotations; and fortune because of the famed
and fabled prices we pay for sprays to hang on our hearths at
Christmas.
One grower in the Pacific Northwest, besides supplying
quantities of cut branches for the holiday season, has developed
an arboretum of over 300 varieties, mostly of English holly. It
contains plants with green, silver and gold leaves, berries of
yellow and orange and nearly every shade of the predominating
red.fruited kinds. There are also many fine selections of
American holly which are improvements over the ordinary wild
type. Incidentally, American holly is a good landscpae plant for
central Ohio.

Always at Christmas, once a year,

Is the bright green holly found adorning
The mantelpiece on this sacred morning,
When hearts irradiate good cheer.
Always at Christmas, always then,
Is the Christ Child's birthday celebrated
In an atmosphere accentuated
With peace on earth, good will to men.
- Lydia 0 . Jackson.

Owen,presidentof the Women's Everett llachner, Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Kelly,
Association of the Middleport Paul Hapwnstall, Robert L. Mrs . Michael Zirkle and
Church.
Sharp, Mr. and Mrs. carl Michele, Mrs. Bill Sprouse, Mr.
Assorted cookies, glll!'drop Horky, Sheila and Janet, Mrs. and Mrs. James Buchanan, Mr.
and cranberry breads, baked by Rodney Downing, Mrs. Beulah and Mrs. Harry S. Moore, Mrs.
Mrs. Zavitz, were served with White, Mrs. Pearl Hoffman, Carroll Swansoil, Mrs. Vivian
punch, mints and coffee from a Mrs. Sylvia Byers, Mrs. Mae M. Waddell, Mrs . Harry
table centered with an Bailey, Mrs. Evelyn Grueser, Houdashelt, Miss Freddie
arrangement of red Cl!lldles and Mrs. Genevieve Sherman, Mrs. Houdashelt,
Mrs .
Bob
carnations in crystaL A red and Mildred Beeson, all of Mid- Haggerty, Mrs. Richard Owen,
silver color scheme was carried dleport.
Mrs. Helen Sauer, Mrs. Mildred
out in the decorations.
James D. ·Euler, Mrs . Karr, Mrs. Ann Grace Walters,
A corsage and boutonniere Kathryn Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Richard Vaughan, Midwere presented w the pastoral Marcus Chambers, Mrs. Donald dleport.
couplo; by Group II of the Mills, Mrs. Tom Rue, Mrs. Nan Mfs. Margaret Cotterill, Mrs.
Middfeport Church. Presiding Moore, Mrs. M. L. French, Mr . Helen Harris, Mrs . Susie
at the coffee and punch during and Mrs. Richard Chambers, Fischer, Mrs. Gloria Michael,
tlle afternoon were M r s . - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - Michael Zirkle, Mrs. Vivian
Waddell, Mrs. Lawrence
Diddle,Mrs. CharlesBlake, and
1ngs
eWS, 0 eS
Mrs. Walter Burke. Guests
were registered by Mrs. Helen The Carleton Sunday School and Mrs. Olen Harrison and
Harris and Mrs. Titus Pickens. had an attendance of 75 and Othe Scholl spent Thanksgiving
Mrs. Margaret Cottriil and Mrs. offering of $89.35 on Nov. 28. Day with Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Lewis Sauer were assisted with Preaching service followed with Harrison and Scott and Jodi.
Mr. and Mrs . Roy Brickles
other phases of the serving by Rev. Jay Stiles.
Grace
King
and
Harold
While
had as recent visitors Mr . and
Mrs. Tom Rue, Mrs. Richard
were
married
at
the
Carleton
Mrs.
Gregg Brickles of
Karr, Mrs. Ada Slack, and Mrs.
William Morris. Mrs. Francis Church Thanksgiving Day with Columbus and Mr. and Mrs.
Anderson assisted in planning the Rev. Clyde Hinton and Rev. Ralph Carl , local.
Thanksgiving visitors of Mr.
the observance but was unable Jay Stiles officiating.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Philip
Harrison
and Mrs. William King were
wattend due to illness.
and
son,
Rodney,
of
Columbus
Mr . and Mrs. Leo King and son,
The manse was extensively
decorated for the open house. spent the Thanksgiving Michael, and Marcia McDaniels
The Syracuse Church provided holidays with Mr . and Mrs. Olen of Columbus and Mr. and Mrs.
the buffet arrangement and the Harrison . Mr. and Mrs. Philip .Courtney Williams and sons and
Middleport Church the door Harrison and Rodney Harrison Mrs . Jessie carr of Portsmouth.

K•

Social
Calendar
MONDAY
RACINE Chapter 134, OES, 8
p.m. at temple. Officers to wear
formals for initiation, potluck
refreshments.
SALEM CENTER PTA,
Monday, 7:30 p.m. at school,
Christmas play to be presented.
REGULAR MEETING,
Meigs Chapter, Order of
IleMolay, 7:30 p,m. Monday at
Middleport Masonic Temple.
MIDDLEPORT Garden Club,
7:30 Monday night at the home
of Mrs. M. J . Fry, Cheshire.
Christmas party with $1 gift
exchange. Members are to take
gifts for the patients at the
Southe~stern Ohio Mental
Health Center. Roll call will be
a favorite Christmas poem or
caroL
TUESDAY
POMEROY Chapter 186,
OES, annual inspection, 7:30
p.m. Tuesday.
EASTERN Athletic Boosters
Club, Tuesday. 8 p.m., film of
Eastern - Federal-Hocking
basketball game. Refreshments, everyone welcome.
MIDDLEPORT Lodge 363,
F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at
U!mple.
POMEROY WCTU, holiday
potluck dinner, Tuesday, noon,
at the home of Miss Nelle Bing,
Union Ave.
WSCS, Enterprise United
Methodist Church, 7:30 Tuesday
night at the home of Mrs. Ed
B.owen for a Christmas party.
JOLLY BUNCH Sewing Club,
Tuesday, 6:30 holiday poUuck at
the home of Mrs. Nora Mills.
Each member wtake a covered
dish and their own table service. Meat will be provided.
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, Tuesday,
7:30 Colwnbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Co. soclal room.
Electric Co. demonstrator to
serve as hostess. Cultural
report by Texanna Well and
Judy Werry on " Absolute
Music".
WEDNESDAY
WHITE ROSE Lodge, noon
poUuck, American Legion Hall
in Middleport. Members to take
covered dish and their own
table service. There will be a $1
gift exchange. Regular business
meeting to follow .

swag. Among the many
decorations was a ceramic

m~~~~:~:openhousewere

bury N

Mrs. Robert Crow, Mrs. Agnes
White, Richard Duckworth,
Miss Frankie Mumaw, Mrs.
Rachel McBride, Mr. and Mrs.
Dick Winebrenner, Mrs .
Charles Blake, Mrs. Charles
Nease, Mrs. Titus Pickens, Mrs.
Daisy Roush, Mrs. Genevieve
Schneider, Mrs. Eleanor
McKelvey, Mrs. Ada Slack,
Mrs. Lawrence Diddle, Mrs.
Mildred Pierce, Syracuse.
The Rev. L. H. Stebbins,
Gallipolis; Miss candy .Stebbins, Athens; Mrs. Walter
Burke, Racine; the Rev. and
Mrs. Glenn Hueholt; Gallipolis;
Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Dexter,

..........
A1Jii1 filii I III

John Quincy Adams was
the first U.S. president to
use a middle name.

j

i

t~I

FARMERS BANK :
and SAVINGS OO.l
f

:f;

POMEROY, OHIO

il

Member FDIC

•
• .

Member Federal
Reserve System

Lot

Mrs. Eugene Atkins, a gue:&gt;'l,
PARTY PLANNED
won the traveling prize. Mrs. A Christmas party to be held
Lewis will provide the one for Saturday was planned during a
December.
recent meeting of the Modern
Woodme.n of America, Camp
Devotions were given by Mrs. 7230, Birlingham. A potluck
Winn who used Psalms I, 5-33, supper will be served at 6 p.m.
and a poem, "In the Name of with the turkey and coffee to be
God, Amen". Members gave furnished . Each family is to
the creed and college in unison take ·a covered dish. A program
and responded to roll call with a will be presented by the
Thanksgiving thought. Mrs . children and there will be a gift
Max Davis was also a guest at exchange. Santa will visit
the meeting.
during the evening. All memA Thanksgiving motif was bers and their families are
carried out in the salad course invited to attend the party.

,~

The Brotherhood of Good
Neighbors' Day will be
celebrated Sunday at the Forest
Run Baptist Church.
Guest speaker at the af·
ternoon service will be the Rev.
Sa
1
mue Ja ckson of Colwnbus,
pastor of the Naomi and First
Baptist Churches of Pomeroy
and Rutland.
The all-&lt;lay service will begin
with Sunday School at 9:30
under the direction of Mrs.
Cornelius Runc:1. ~torning
devotions will tullow by
Deacons Walter Green and
Robert Armstrong with special
music by the junior choir of the
Forest Run Church urider the
direction of Mrs. Margaret
Armstrong. The Rev.· Eddie
Buffington, supply pastor, will
be the speaker.
A noon luncheon to be
provided by each family will be

followed by devotions at 1:30
p.m. by Deacon Oscar Q•1alls
with several others participating. There will be a panel
discussion by Deacons Arm·
strong, Qualls and Green on the The name Timothy is of
Greek o r i g i n and means
topic "Who Is MY.- Neighbor' " ".Goct.fearing. "
, . - - - - - - - -...

-1111--------..

NOTICE

The Public Ut ili ties Com mi ssion of Ohio wi ll conduct a
pub!i c hea ring to inve: ri~ote th e !'. upply of natural gas
available for con sumers within th is state .
This hearing will be held J ~ H2aring Room 2, Ohio
Departments Building, 65 South Front Stree t, Columbu s,
Ohio on December 13, 1971, 10 00 A.M .. EST, and the qates
of December 14 and 15 to be reserved for continued
hear ings in the event it becomes necessary.
Any interested party ma y attend such hearing and
present to the Commission any mlormat ion or commen t
pertinenrto such matter .
Fu rth er information may be . obtained from the
Secreta r y at the Commission. 111 North High Street,
Columbus. Ohio 43215.

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION OF OHIO
Henry W. Eckhart, Chairman"

~ Brighten
~

Your Home
~ For The Holidays

..

.

I

•

....

GhddenJ
""

J

rr1ve
•

1n

•

Twin bands of 14 Karat Solid Gold
signify husband and wife ... a lustrous
syn theti c stone of the month marks the
birthday of eac h of her children.
Children who can say I love you, in a
.special way.

I
and he
·invites
you

to
JUST

CLIP THE
ENTRY FORMS

~

FROM
NEWSPAPER

..,.,

I,
I

Select Sunbeam or
General
Electric
Toasters, 2 &amp; 4 sli ce;
coffee makers in many
styles &amp; sizes, mixers ·
hand or stand, and a fine
selection of can openers.

ADS
AND TAKE

PICKENS HARDWARE
MASON, W. VA.

t~W.L ••~-•.
··~ ·~....

THEM TO

;;!!t..w..:.~
.mrrrr

PARTICIPATING

GIFT·A·RAMA STORES

•

''··
r
,.

;~

'
'.

..

·'.•

SEE THE 30 PRIZES TO BE GIVEN AWAY DECEMBER 23

'

j

MODEL .512

IN THE COLUMBIA GAS OF OHIO BUSINESS OFFICE WINDOW.

GM THE GlUT OUIJOOIS ...
GM A llfMINGTOII

,,

Other.Baiiking Hours 9to 3~
· and 5 to 7 as usual on~

:r

P~rklng

Miss Mildred Hawley, Mrs.

Fridan Only
.
~: rhe Drive-In Window
il
is Open
:f 9 A.M. to 1 P.M.
:;;
(Continuously J
Fri~•ys.

Use Our FrH

Mrs. Charles Sauer, Mr . and
OPTOMETRIST
Mrs. Ferman Moore, Mrs .
OFFICE HOURS Y : ~o TO 12, 2 rO 5 (CLOSE'
Edward Tewksbary , Mrs .
AT NOON ON THURS'.) - EAST COURT ST.,
Garen
Stansbury,
Mr.
and'Mrs.
. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ .
Karl Owen, Mrs. Iva Turner, . ._POMEROY
_____

~

DRIVE-IN
BANKING

In .At9-0ul At!

n. W. COMPTON. 0. D.

:t

i

SAME DAY
SE.,~VICE

Snowden, and Miss DiehL Mrs. served by the hostesses, Mrs.
Erlewine, club president, Winn and Mrs. Clarence
displayed a horn of plenty Murray.
arrangement at the meeting .
Tips on gardening for
December were given by Mrs.
Ganaday.

~

&amp;I

'r****** *****"'**~£

*
*
* •
£ lfs Quick! Ezy ir

'FINISI:tiNG

the pub)icity boc.&lt; had beeri
completed. and given to Mrs.
Homer Parker, regional
chairman. It was noted tnat
Mrs. Snowden presented gifts to
last year's officers.
Mrs . Bolin, introduced by
Miss Ruby Diehl , gave a
demonstration on making corn
husk roses. She displayed two
arrangements using the roses,
ore a horn of plenty featuring
pilgrim replicas, pine, bittersweet and fruits, and the
other a Madonna piece using the
roses with wheat and sedge
grass.
It was reported that flower
arrangements have been made
for churches during the past
month by Mrs. C. E. Bishop,
Mrs. Virgil Atkins, Mrs. Dayton
Parkson,
Mrs.
Harvey
Erlewine, Mrs. canaday, Mrs.

Rev. jackson COmtn0

At the Wednesday evening
prayer service Miss Sarah
Green and Miss Shirley Ann
Garnes led in devotions.
Following the BTU Iiible study
by Deacon Green, the girls
concluded the meeting with
prayer..

r-------------------.

class,
Enterprise United Methodist
Church, 7:30 Thursday night at
the home of Mrs. Ed Bowen for
a Christmas party.

~

SH

·

Nelson , one on the club's
Christmas flower show by Mrs.
Roy Snowden, and the county
show by Mrs. Bolin, chairman.
At the county 'Christmas
show, ribbon winners were Mrs.
Robert Canaday, blue in "Ohio
Christmas"; Mrs. Charles
Lewis, while in "Christmas
Day" and blue in collages; Mrs :
Ja~es Nichol~on, w~te In
hortiCUlture; MISS Ruby Diehl,
blue for African violets. Other
exhibitors from the club were
Mrs . Kate Jarrell and Mrs.
Virgil Atkins.
Mn. Lewis prepared the
"Christmas Around the World"
display which won third place
and Mrs. Snowden had on
display a poster of holiday
plants with instruction on their
care .
Mrs. Canaday reported that

•

Birthday No. 97 Cekbrated WILLI~~~~!s
The birthday anniversary of
Mrs. Minerva Childers, who will
be 97 on Wednesday, was observed Sunday with a family
dinner party.
Gifts were presented w Mrs.

Gallipolis ; Mr. aiid Mrll. Max
Harrah, Long Bottom; ' Mrs. ·
Freda M. . Smith, and Elide
&amp;nlth, Pomeroy ..

N t

POMEROY-Middleport Lions
Club , noon Wednesday,
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church, induction of new
members.
POMEROY Chapter 80, Royal
Arch Masons, convocation 7:30
p.m. Wednesday, Pomeroy
Masonic Temple.

.
.
Chtlders and a do;corated .cake
was served followmg the dmner
served by her daughters, Mrs.
Pearl Reynolds and Mrs . Nina
Bland.
Guests were Mr . and Mrs.
Clarence Archer, Charles Leslie
A Thought
and Cheryl Ann and Mr. and
For foday il
Mrs. William carla and cathy,
Akron ; and Mr. and Mrs .
The 1hree ess .... . llct;::. or ~
happin ess
are : ..;:
Wayne Burdette,
Point
il Someth lng
to·
do, il
Pleasant, W. Va.
something to love, and il
·; · something to hope tor. il
SALE SET
-Chalmers ~
A holiday bake sale will be .;c '
held by the Women 's
Association of the Middleport
First United Presbyterian il
Church beginning at 9 a.m.
Saturday at Dudley Florists.
Some bazaar items will also he
on sale by the group.

RUTLAND - Christmas
arrangements destined for the
Southeastern Ohio Mental
Health Center are to be
presented at t.he Dec. 13
yuletid~ party at the Rutland
Garden Club.
Meeting recently at the home
of Mrs. Paul Wino in Bradbury,
members reviewed holiday
plans and projects. The dinner
oo pee. 13 will be held at Crow's
Steak House with. the members
to go to the home of Mrs. C. 0.
Chapman for the gift exchange,
party and regular meeting.
Mrs. Harry Williamson will be
co-hostess.
Mrs. Joe Bolin, new Region 11
director, reported the recent
regional meeting in Gallipolis.
·There were also reports on a
tt•• rapy program at the Mental
Health Center by Mrs. Victor

• 0.

'

'
''
•

'

MAM1-----------------ADOU11-------- -

ADDIIII _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

TIL 110...- , - - - - - - -

n~,

Drow&lt;..-n..c. ., , llocoMOor 11, 1971-1:• ~M.

110.---------

•

~ .•••..~.. J .~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~-

.·•'•
::~

Here's the best gift under the tree. A
custom Hush Disposer, gets rid of gar·
bage so fast .. . so easy! It's a real wife·
saver gift. This Christmas give a useful
gift for the home. Priced from S69.75 up.

NYLON 66: Structural nyiO!\ and ordinance sleet
combine to Give the most accurate, dependable 22
a~lo - loadlng rille ever. Holds 1~ tong rifle car.
tndges .

••

MODEL 1100: Five shot automatic' shotgun. Glvft
up to 55 percent less recoil ... up ~ seven ttmr
tonw lite.

'

pe...,.-

MOD~Lsa2: ·22 caliber bolt adton, fuliular ••
has strongest most pawertul boll ever designed for a
22 caliber hunting rifle. Amazing accurory. Perfect
balance.
·

,.•

�6-The.DilDy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Dec. 6, 1971

.4- '1'\ll llllb' ''nwl, Mlcldle110rt-Pmlrroy, 0., Dec. 8, 1971

Rutland Club Reviews Holiday Projects

Pastoral Couple Hosts at Open House in Manse.
Green Thumb
Notes .. •.

· The Rev. and Mrs. Dwight
Zavitz entertained Sunday
afternoon with an open house at
Ule newly redecorated manse of
the Middleport First United
Presbyterian Church.
Assisting with the open house
were members of the Syracuse
Church Session and the Deacons
of the Middleport Chtirch. Mrs.
Paul Haptonstall and Mrs .
E\'eretl Bachner conducted
wurs of the manse after the
approximately 90 guests had
been greeted by the Rev. Mr.
and Mrs. Zavitz and Mrs. Karl

A weekly feature of . Meigs
County Garden Club members.

Hqlly for Christmas and Year 'Round
By MRS. VERNON WEBER
Rutland Garden Club
Holly, more than any other plant, has been held in high
esteem the world over. Holly appeared in Uletide decorations long
before the Christmas tree, as the English carol "Deck the halls
with boughs of holly" suggests.
Today in America, true w our English heritage, we
traditionally decoraU! out homes with holly at Christmas time. A
15th cent\U'Y Christmas carol tells of an argument between the
holly andtheivy for the place of honor in the hall. In the duet each
plant sets forth its claim for superiority. The decision favors the
boDy, with its red berries, insU!ad of the ivy with its black
berries because many birds are attracted wthe holly whereas
ooly !be owls find the ivy fruit appealing.
The Humans used boDy boughs to decorate their altar, their
homes, and themselves. The ancient Druids of the British isles
and Gaul believed that the sun never left the holly tree; to them it .
was a sacred plant in which woodtand spirits lived. Their cuswm
was to place holly branches in the home in winter so that the
spirits might take refuge from the rigors of winter.
Throughout the world cures for everything from colic and
tuberculosis to psychological disturbances seem to have been
attributed to brews and salves made of holly. Brandishing,
decorating or wearing some part of the holly plant was a
universal practice. Today, in South America, millions of people
drink Mate which is brewed from leaves of several species of
boDy indigenous to that area. In Europe and China various concoctions are still made of holly for drinking, eating, feeding to
cattle, rubbing on or carrying- the list is ahnost endless. All of
the customs date back many hundreds of years. The amazing part
of the holly stories is that they all note the universal and enduring
persistance the world over of the use of holly and the legends and
mystical powers ascribed wit.
The Christian era legends of the holly are very numberous.
One of the most interesting is the story of the bird which plucked
thorns from Christ's brow to relieve His suffering at the time of
the crucifixion. The bird's breast became permanently stained
with blood. The Robin Redbreast received food for his efforts the berries of the holly which were also stained red by the blood of
Christ. The holly was supposed whave been the thorn plant which
was woven into the crown of the crucixion. The name itself boDy - is believed whe a corruption of the word "holy".
Asurprizing fact wmany people is that the holies all occur as
male and female plants. The female plant has berries, the male
does not. The variation among the different holly species is quite
striking. There are species which are very diminutive - others
grow into giant trees. Some retain their leaves throughout all
seasons and others drop aU of their foliage in the winter. Shape,
size, color and texture of the foliage and the entire plant vary so
widely in many cases that it is hard to believe they are of the same
genus.
Most of the holly which we now use for Christmas greens is a
plant introduced inw this country from England, where it grows
ab~tly in hedgerows almost as a weed. For commercial
productiOn in Ulis country, it is grown in holly ·orchards, largely in
Oregon and WAshington . The leaf of our North American species,
however ,lacks the form and the glossy lustre so much admired in
English holly and the berries are not quite so large nor bright.
English Holly is the holly of fame, fable and fortune . Fame
because of its verdant beauty; fable because of its yuletide use
and legendary connotations; and fortune because of the famed
and fabled prices we pay for sprays to hang on our hearths at
Christmas.
One grower in the Pacific Northwest, besides supplying
quantities of cut branches for the holiday season, has developed
an arboretum of over 300 varieties, mostly of English holly. It
contains plants with green, silver and gold leaves, berries of
yellow and orange and nearly every shade of the predominating
red.fruited kinds. There are also many fine selections of
American holly which are improvements over the ordinary wild
type. Incidentally, American holly is a good landscpae plant for
central Ohio.

Always at Christmas, once a year,

Is the bright green holly found adorning
The mantelpiece on this sacred morning,
When hearts irradiate good cheer.
Always at Christmas, always then,
Is the Christ Child's birthday celebrated
In an atmosphere accentuated
With peace on earth, good will to men.
- Lydia 0 . Jackson.

Owen,presidentof the Women's Everett llachner, Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Kelly,
Association of the Middleport Paul Hapwnstall, Robert L. Mrs . Michael Zirkle and
Church.
Sharp, Mr. and Mrs. carl Michele, Mrs. Bill Sprouse, Mr.
Assorted cookies, glll!'drop Horky, Sheila and Janet, Mrs. and Mrs. James Buchanan, Mr.
and cranberry breads, baked by Rodney Downing, Mrs. Beulah and Mrs. Harry S. Moore, Mrs.
Mrs. Zavitz, were served with White, Mrs. Pearl Hoffman, Carroll Swansoil, Mrs. Vivian
punch, mints and coffee from a Mrs. Sylvia Byers, Mrs. Mae M. Waddell, Mrs . Harry
table centered with an Bailey, Mrs. Evelyn Grueser, Houdashelt, Miss Freddie
arrangement of red Cl!lldles and Mrs. Genevieve Sherman, Mrs. Houdashelt,
Mrs .
Bob
carnations in crystaL A red and Mildred Beeson, all of Mid- Haggerty, Mrs. Richard Owen,
silver color scheme was carried dleport.
Mrs. Helen Sauer, Mrs. Mildred
out in the decorations.
James D. ·Euler, Mrs . Karr, Mrs. Ann Grace Walters,
A corsage and boutonniere Kathryn Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Richard Vaughan, Midwere presented w the pastoral Marcus Chambers, Mrs. Donald dleport.
couplo; by Group II of the Mills, Mrs. Tom Rue, Mrs. Nan Mfs. Margaret Cotterill, Mrs.
Middfeport Church. Presiding Moore, Mrs. M. L. French, Mr . Helen Harris, Mrs . Susie
at the coffee and punch during and Mrs. Richard Chambers, Fischer, Mrs. Gloria Michael,
tlle afternoon were M r s . - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - Michael Zirkle, Mrs. Vivian
Waddell, Mrs. Lawrence
Diddle,Mrs. CharlesBlake, and
1ngs
eWS, 0 eS
Mrs. Walter Burke. Guests
were registered by Mrs. Helen The Carleton Sunday School and Mrs. Olen Harrison and
Harris and Mrs. Titus Pickens. had an attendance of 75 and Othe Scholl spent Thanksgiving
Mrs. Margaret Cottriil and Mrs. offering of $89.35 on Nov. 28. Day with Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Lewis Sauer were assisted with Preaching service followed with Harrison and Scott and Jodi.
Mr. and Mrs . Roy Brickles
other phases of the serving by Rev. Jay Stiles.
Grace
King
and
Harold
While
had as recent visitors Mr . and
Mrs. Tom Rue, Mrs. Richard
were
married
at
the
Carleton
Mrs.
Gregg Brickles of
Karr, Mrs. Ada Slack, and Mrs.
William Morris. Mrs. Francis Church Thanksgiving Day with Columbus and Mr. and Mrs.
Anderson assisted in planning the Rev. Clyde Hinton and Rev. Ralph Carl , local.
Thanksgiving visitors of Mr.
the observance but was unable Jay Stiles officiating.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Philip
Harrison
and Mrs. William King were
wattend due to illness.
and
son,
Rodney,
of
Columbus
Mr . and Mrs. Leo King and son,
The manse was extensively
decorated for the open house. spent the Thanksgiving Michael, and Marcia McDaniels
The Syracuse Church provided holidays with Mr . and Mrs. Olen of Columbus and Mr. and Mrs.
the buffet arrangement and the Harrison . Mr. and Mrs. Philip .Courtney Williams and sons and
Middleport Church the door Harrison and Rodney Harrison Mrs . Jessie carr of Portsmouth.

K•

Social
Calendar
MONDAY
RACINE Chapter 134, OES, 8
p.m. at temple. Officers to wear
formals for initiation, potluck
refreshments.
SALEM CENTER PTA,
Monday, 7:30 p.m. at school,
Christmas play to be presented.
REGULAR MEETING,
Meigs Chapter, Order of
IleMolay, 7:30 p,m. Monday at
Middleport Masonic Temple.
MIDDLEPORT Garden Club,
7:30 Monday night at the home
of Mrs. M. J . Fry, Cheshire.
Christmas party with $1 gift
exchange. Members are to take
gifts for the patients at the
Southe~stern Ohio Mental
Health Center. Roll call will be
a favorite Christmas poem or
caroL
TUESDAY
POMEROY Chapter 186,
OES, annual inspection, 7:30
p.m. Tuesday.
EASTERN Athletic Boosters
Club, Tuesday. 8 p.m., film of
Eastern - Federal-Hocking
basketball game. Refreshments, everyone welcome.
MIDDLEPORT Lodge 363,
F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at
U!mple.
POMEROY WCTU, holiday
potluck dinner, Tuesday, noon,
at the home of Miss Nelle Bing,
Union Ave.
WSCS, Enterprise United
Methodist Church, 7:30 Tuesday
night at the home of Mrs. Ed
B.owen for a Christmas party.
JOLLY BUNCH Sewing Club,
Tuesday, 6:30 holiday poUuck at
the home of Mrs. Nora Mills.
Each member wtake a covered
dish and their own table service. Meat will be provided.
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, Tuesday,
7:30 Colwnbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Co. soclal room.
Electric Co. demonstrator to
serve as hostess. Cultural
report by Texanna Well and
Judy Werry on " Absolute
Music".
WEDNESDAY
WHITE ROSE Lodge, noon
poUuck, American Legion Hall
in Middleport. Members to take
covered dish and their own
table service. There will be a $1
gift exchange. Regular business
meeting to follow .

swag. Among the many
decorations was a ceramic

m~~~~:~:openhousewere

bury N

Mrs. Robert Crow, Mrs. Agnes
White, Richard Duckworth,
Miss Frankie Mumaw, Mrs.
Rachel McBride, Mr. and Mrs.
Dick Winebrenner, Mrs .
Charles Blake, Mrs. Charles
Nease, Mrs. Titus Pickens, Mrs.
Daisy Roush, Mrs. Genevieve
Schneider, Mrs. Eleanor
McKelvey, Mrs. Ada Slack,
Mrs. Lawrence Diddle, Mrs.
Mildred Pierce, Syracuse.
The Rev. L. H. Stebbins,
Gallipolis; Miss candy .Stebbins, Athens; Mrs. Walter
Burke, Racine; the Rev. and
Mrs. Glenn Hueholt; Gallipolis;
Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Dexter,

..........
A1Jii1 filii I III

John Quincy Adams was
the first U.S. president to
use a middle name.

j

i

t~I

FARMERS BANK :
and SAVINGS OO.l
f

:f;

POMEROY, OHIO

il

Member FDIC

•
• .

Member Federal
Reserve System

Lot

Mrs. Eugene Atkins, a gue:&gt;'l,
PARTY PLANNED
won the traveling prize. Mrs. A Christmas party to be held
Lewis will provide the one for Saturday was planned during a
December.
recent meeting of the Modern
Woodme.n of America, Camp
Devotions were given by Mrs. 7230, Birlingham. A potluck
Winn who used Psalms I, 5-33, supper will be served at 6 p.m.
and a poem, "In the Name of with the turkey and coffee to be
God, Amen". Members gave furnished . Each family is to
the creed and college in unison take ·a covered dish. A program
and responded to roll call with a will be presented by the
Thanksgiving thought. Mrs . children and there will be a gift
Max Davis was also a guest at exchange. Santa will visit
the meeting.
during the evening. All memA Thanksgiving motif was bers and their families are
carried out in the salad course invited to attend the party.

,~

The Brotherhood of Good
Neighbors' Day will be
celebrated Sunday at the Forest
Run Baptist Church.
Guest speaker at the af·
ternoon service will be the Rev.
Sa
1
mue Ja ckson of Colwnbus,
pastor of the Naomi and First
Baptist Churches of Pomeroy
and Rutland.
The all-&lt;lay service will begin
with Sunday School at 9:30
under the direction of Mrs.
Cornelius Runc:1. ~torning
devotions will tullow by
Deacons Walter Green and
Robert Armstrong with special
music by the junior choir of the
Forest Run Church urider the
direction of Mrs. Margaret
Armstrong. The Rev.· Eddie
Buffington, supply pastor, will
be the speaker.
A noon luncheon to be
provided by each family will be

followed by devotions at 1:30
p.m. by Deacon Oscar Q•1alls
with several others participating. There will be a panel
discussion by Deacons Arm·
strong, Qualls and Green on the The name Timothy is of
Greek o r i g i n and means
topic "Who Is MY.- Neighbor' " ".Goct.fearing. "
, . - - - - - - - -...

-1111--------..

NOTICE

The Public Ut ili ties Com mi ssion of Ohio wi ll conduct a
pub!i c hea ring to inve: ri~ote th e !'. upply of natural gas
available for con sumers within th is state .
This hearing will be held J ~ H2aring Room 2, Ohio
Departments Building, 65 South Front Stree t, Columbu s,
Ohio on December 13, 1971, 10 00 A.M .. EST, and the qates
of December 14 and 15 to be reserved for continued
hear ings in the event it becomes necessary.
Any interested party ma y attend such hearing and
present to the Commission any mlormat ion or commen t
pertinenrto such matter .
Fu rth er information may be . obtained from the
Secreta r y at the Commission. 111 North High Street,
Columbus. Ohio 43215.

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION OF OHIO
Henry W. Eckhart, Chairman"

~ Brighten
~

Your Home
~ For The Holidays

..

.

I

•

....

GhddenJ
""

J

rr1ve
•

1n

•

Twin bands of 14 Karat Solid Gold
signify husband and wife ... a lustrous
syn theti c stone of the month marks the
birthday of eac h of her children.
Children who can say I love you, in a
.special way.

I
and he
·invites
you

to
JUST

CLIP THE
ENTRY FORMS

~

FROM
NEWSPAPER

..,.,

I,
I

Select Sunbeam or
General
Electric
Toasters, 2 &amp; 4 sli ce;
coffee makers in many
styles &amp; sizes, mixers ·
hand or stand, and a fine
selection of can openers.

ADS
AND TAKE

PICKENS HARDWARE
MASON, W. VA.

t~W.L ••~-•.
··~ ·~....

THEM TO

;;!!t..w..:.~
.mrrrr

PARTICIPATING

GIFT·A·RAMA STORES

•

''··
r
,.

;~

'
'.

..

·'.•

SEE THE 30 PRIZES TO BE GIVEN AWAY DECEMBER 23

'

j

MODEL .512

IN THE COLUMBIA GAS OF OHIO BUSINESS OFFICE WINDOW.

GM THE GlUT OUIJOOIS ...
GM A llfMINGTOII

,,

Other.Baiiking Hours 9to 3~
· and 5 to 7 as usual on~

:r

P~rklng

Miss Mildred Hawley, Mrs.

Fridan Only
.
~: rhe Drive-In Window
il
is Open
:f 9 A.M. to 1 P.M.
:;;
(Continuously J
Fri~•ys.

Use Our FrH

Mrs. Charles Sauer, Mr . and
OPTOMETRIST
Mrs. Ferman Moore, Mrs .
OFFICE HOURS Y : ~o TO 12, 2 rO 5 (CLOSE'
Edward Tewksbary , Mrs .
AT NOON ON THURS'.) - EAST COURT ST.,
Garen
Stansbury,
Mr.
and'Mrs.
. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ .
Karl Owen, Mrs. Iva Turner, . ._POMEROY
_____

~

DRIVE-IN
BANKING

In .At9-0ul At!

n. W. COMPTON. 0. D.

:t

i

SAME DAY
SE.,~VICE

Snowden, and Miss DiehL Mrs. served by the hostesses, Mrs.
Erlewine, club president, Winn and Mrs. Clarence
displayed a horn of plenty Murray.
arrangement at the meeting .
Tips on gardening for
December were given by Mrs.
Ganaday.

~

&amp;I

'r****** *****"'**~£

*
*
* •
£ lfs Quick! Ezy ir

'FINISI:tiNG

the pub)icity boc.&lt; had beeri
completed. and given to Mrs.
Homer Parker, regional
chairman. It was noted tnat
Mrs. Snowden presented gifts to
last year's officers.
Mrs . Bolin, introduced by
Miss Ruby Diehl , gave a
demonstration on making corn
husk roses. She displayed two
arrangements using the roses,
ore a horn of plenty featuring
pilgrim replicas, pine, bittersweet and fruits, and the
other a Madonna piece using the
roses with wheat and sedge
grass.
It was reported that flower
arrangements have been made
for churches during the past
month by Mrs. C. E. Bishop,
Mrs. Virgil Atkins, Mrs. Dayton
Parkson,
Mrs.
Harvey
Erlewine, Mrs. canaday, Mrs.

Rev. jackson COmtn0

At the Wednesday evening
prayer service Miss Sarah
Green and Miss Shirley Ann
Garnes led in devotions.
Following the BTU Iiible study
by Deacon Green, the girls
concluded the meeting with
prayer..

r-------------------.

class,
Enterprise United Methodist
Church, 7:30 Thursday night at
the home of Mrs. Ed Bowen for
a Christmas party.

~

SH

·

Nelson , one on the club's
Christmas flower show by Mrs.
Roy Snowden, and the county
show by Mrs. Bolin, chairman.
At the county 'Christmas
show, ribbon winners were Mrs.
Robert Canaday, blue in "Ohio
Christmas"; Mrs. Charles
Lewis, while in "Christmas
Day" and blue in collages; Mrs :
Ja~es Nichol~on, w~te In
hortiCUlture; MISS Ruby Diehl,
blue for African violets. Other
exhibitors from the club were
Mrs . Kate Jarrell and Mrs.
Virgil Atkins.
Mn. Lewis prepared the
"Christmas Around the World"
display which won third place
and Mrs. Snowden had on
display a poster of holiday
plants with instruction on their
care .
Mrs. Canaday reported that

•

Birthday No. 97 Cekbrated WILLI~~~~!s
The birthday anniversary of
Mrs. Minerva Childers, who will
be 97 on Wednesday, was observed Sunday with a family
dinner party.
Gifts were presented w Mrs.

Gallipolis ; Mr. aiid Mrll. Max
Harrah, Long Bottom; ' Mrs. ·
Freda M. . Smith, and Elide
&amp;nlth, Pomeroy ..

N t

POMEROY-Middleport Lions
Club , noon Wednesday,
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church, induction of new
members.
POMEROY Chapter 80, Royal
Arch Masons, convocation 7:30
p.m. Wednesday, Pomeroy
Masonic Temple.

.
.
Chtlders and a do;corated .cake
was served followmg the dmner
served by her daughters, Mrs.
Pearl Reynolds and Mrs . Nina
Bland.
Guests were Mr . and Mrs.
Clarence Archer, Charles Leslie
A Thought
and Cheryl Ann and Mr. and
For foday il
Mrs. William carla and cathy,
Akron ; and Mr. and Mrs .
The 1hree ess .... . llct;::. or ~
happin ess
are : ..;:
Wayne Burdette,
Point
il Someth lng
to·
do, il
Pleasant, W. Va.
something to love, and il
·; · something to hope tor. il
SALE SET
-Chalmers ~
A holiday bake sale will be .;c '
held by the Women 's
Association of the Middleport
First United Presbyterian il
Church beginning at 9 a.m.
Saturday at Dudley Florists.
Some bazaar items will also he
on sale by the group.

RUTLAND - Christmas
arrangements destined for the
Southeastern Ohio Mental
Health Center are to be
presented at t.he Dec. 13
yuletid~ party at the Rutland
Garden Club.
Meeting recently at the home
of Mrs. Paul Wino in Bradbury,
members reviewed holiday
plans and projects. The dinner
oo pee. 13 will be held at Crow's
Steak House with. the members
to go to the home of Mrs. C. 0.
Chapman for the gift exchange,
party and regular meeting.
Mrs. Harry Williamson will be
co-hostess.
Mrs. Joe Bolin, new Region 11
director, reported the recent
regional meeting in Gallipolis.
·There were also reports on a
tt•• rapy program at the Mental
Health Center by Mrs. Victor

• 0.

'

'
''
•

'

MAM1-----------------ADOU11-------- -

ADDIIII _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

TIL 110...- , - - - - - - -

n~,

Drow&lt;..-n..c. ., , llocoMOor 11, 1971-1:• ~M.

110.---------

•

~ .•••..~.. J .~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~-

.·•'•
::~

Here's the best gift under the tree. A
custom Hush Disposer, gets rid of gar·
bage so fast .. . so easy! It's a real wife·
saver gift. This Christmas give a useful
gift for the home. Priced from S69.75 up.

NYLON 66: Structural nyiO!\ and ordinance sleet
combine to Give the most accurate, dependable 22
a~lo - loadlng rille ever. Holds 1~ tong rifle car.
tndges .

••

MODEL 1100: Five shot automatic' shotgun. Glvft
up to 55 percent less recoil ... up ~ seven ttmr
tonw lite.

'

pe...,.-

MOD~Lsa2: ·22 caliber bolt adton, fuliular ••
has strongest most pawertul boll ever designed for a
22 caliber hunting rifle. Amazing accurory. Perfect
balance.
·

,.•

�'
'

S""e7ttf;;;fCl~~;ifieds Get ActiOn! SentinelClassifieds Get Results/
lnstr~~:tlon
n
Po••roy
'
8 u·sme
. · ss'. Servt'ces ' I
2-·
GRADY'S
Of
·

Notice

.

QUALITY

I
Otor C0
•••••••••
•

lf70 CAMARO CPE.
$3095
Less than 11,000 miles &amp; appearance of 72 model. Rally
Sport equipped, Classic copper with sandalwood Interior,
tinted glass, factory air conditioned, sports mirrors,
console, air spoiler, turbo hydromatlc, power steering &amp;

,brakes, 350 cu. ln. V-8 engine. Really Sharp.
1970CHEVROLET IIELAIR4-000R
$2595
Less than 10.000 miles by local owner. Sharp as new In all
ways, while over gold finish, 350 V-8 engine, power
sieerlng, radio, white-walls, wh, covers.

For Sale .

THOUSANDS of men needed In .,- .
•
Trucking Industry . 129,000 _cqAL, limestone . Ex~elsior
jobs open annually according .-all Works, E. Main St.,
.,
S DepI . of Labor . Ex. Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891
to U..
491ft

I!U!MI!

ASHLAND

·.

· ·~

cellent earnings after short

training period . . For ap- POODLE puppies, Silver Toy,
plication and In terv iew call or Park view Kennels, Phone 992write: TRI-STATE DRIVER 5443
TRAINING, 602 Kanawha ,
·
8-l 5·tfc
Valley
Bank . Bldg ., ·
Charleston, West Virginia
25301 . Phone: !3041 346-1556.
Christmas Special! .
Licensed by State of Ohio S52.
.
12-5-21c
23 CU. FT.

Comelnandseeournewllne
of Mud a. Snow Recap Tires.
We also do grease jobs. oil
changes &amp;fix flattires on all
autos 8. trucks, etc.

...

1·
I REG. $309.00
SAVE $60.00
I
I SALE '249
'
I
.

HOUSE with acreage, experlenced at repairs. Phone
992-6564.
'
12-l-6tc

SHOP available in excellent
location for full-time barber
in Tuppers Plains. Phone 66711res. radio&amp; other extras. white finish, clean interior.
616912-l-61c For Rent or Sale
-------LONG BOTTOM - 5 room
.
house and bath , furnace .
,OMIROT-·· .
Phone 985-3529.
I • •.teiiii.W.CirMy,Mtt
ABOUT · YOUR ·wEIGHT
12 5 301
overweight ladles, teens and - - - - - OPEN EVES. I:GO P.M.
- - c ._ _
men interested in a Weight
f'PMEROY, OHIO
Watchers (R) Class in For Sale
CLEAN, guaranteed apPomeroy wri 1~ : Wei~ht:
pllances , value priced .
APPLES - Fitzpatrick Or- Christmas toys, gifts, at
Watchers
!RI.
1863
Sect1on
WANT AD
KUHL's Bargain Center,
Rd,, Cincinnati, Ohio 45237 .. cho rd s, Stale Route 689,
Notice
INFORMATION
phQne Wilesvllle, 669-3785.
10-3-tfc
Tuppers Plains, St. Rt . 7 at
DEADLINES
-~9-3- Hc
REDUCE safe and fast with
the caution light.
5
P.M.
Day
Before
Publication
Gobese tablets and E-Vap12-l-61c
NJgtjday Deadllnl! 9 a.m.
Water Pills. Nelson Drugs.
CHRISTMAS
SALE
at
CHINESE
Ring
Neck
Pheasant.
~- \..aQ(elltliQn_8.~Q~r~IJiiM ~
11 - 17 - 301~
Hayman's Auction , Laurel
Call 895-3972, John Thomas,
Will be accepted until9 a.m. fo1
Cliff
on
PomeroyLeon, W. Va.
Day of Publl&lt;ation
Auto Sales
Middleport
Rt.
7
Bypass,
7:30
12-5-61c
For
RE&lt;OULATIONS
l
1971 PLYMOUTH Duster, 6
p.m .. Dec . 10, 1971. You' ll find
The Publisher reserves rho;
cylinder,
225
cu.
in.,
wrapping paper, perfume ,
NICE 3-Bedroom house, tully right
'to
edit
or
reject
any
ads'
CASTLE
.
trailer,
10
x
50
automatic,
power
steering,
coats, boats, clocks, radios,
carpeted, buill-I n kitchen with 'deemed obI ecllo,nal. The'
white side wall tires, wheel
dishwasher , dining room, ,publisher will not be responsible
blankets, spreads, pillows, $2350, present location also
available. Phone 992-5509.
covers, radio and heater,
candy, deco rations, tools ,
ceramic tile bath, hot water lor more than one Incorrect!
12-l-6tp
14,000 actual miles, tor·red
heat, basement and fenced finsertion .
toys, dolls , jewelry, wa1ches,
high
impact paint. Phone 992yard &lt;, Phone 742-J171 .
toasters, Irons, rugs, chairs
.
RATES
PAINT
damage.
1971
Zig-zag
5785
.
12-6-61c
and many other Items too
For Want Ad Service
sewing machine. Stlfl In
12-3-61p
numerous to mention . Come
Scents per Word one inserfitr~l
original cartons. No at early
to
obtain
seat.
·
MinimUm Charge 7Sc
tachments needed as our
12-5-6tc
12 cent. per word three
controls are built in. Sews '65' FALCON, 4 door, 6-cylinder,
standard. Phone 992-3061.
:onsecutive insertions.
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
12-5-31c
18 cents per word six con
buttonholes,
sew
on
buttons,
Help Wanted

11;. .. ,

1.

Sunday dinner guests of Mr.
word 2c.
and Mrs. Wayne Beal were Mr. ::ach additional
BLIND ADS
Hygiene new demonstrator
and Mrs. George Warner and
Additional 25c Charge pe1
has all cleaning attachments
,
family of Wolf Pen. Other Adverlis~t.
plus the new Electro Suds for Real Estate For Sale
HOURS
OFFICE
Shampooing carpet. Only
guests were Rogez Dixon,
8:30a. m. to 5&gt;00 p.m . Dally
$27 .50
cash
or
terms
Russell Well, local, and Georgia 8:30 a .m. to 12: 00 NODI
available. Phone 992-5641.
Mason
&amp;
Hartford
Stillwell and Sharon Hedt of ·Saturdav.
12-Htc
Athens and Mr. and Mrs. Roger
PHONE 992-2156 SINGER automatic sewing
In Memory
Young and son, WesUey.
machine. Like new . in
Mrs. William King and Mrs. IN MEMORY OF JAMES A.
FOR
DETAILS!
beautiful walnut cabinet,
ROBSON WHO PASSED
Delores King took Mary Lou
makes design stitches, zigAWAY 27 YEARS AGO,
zags, buttonholes , blind hems,
back to Mount Vernon where
DEC. 6, 1944. MAGNA.
Broker
WOMEN to do housework in
etc. Will sell for $85. Call
she Is attendlilg college. They
12-6-ltc
110 Mechanic Street
Pomeroy area . Write Fran.
Ravenswood 273-9893 after 5
also stopped at Reynoldsburg to
Pomeroy, Ohio
p.m.
Box 23, Pomeroy .
11 -30-6tp
11 -28-tfc
visit Mr. and Mrs. James Notice
o/ acres - Good tences. Farm
CWnmins and Mrs. Cummins
house of 5 rooms, bath, fur Kosmetics and wigs. Male Help Wanted
GAS heater, 55,000 B.T. U.,
who fractured her arm KOSCOT
nace .
Garage,
barn.
Yes we have Koscot Produds
natural or bottled gas, good
Minerals.
Only
$10,500.
and wigs In stock for your EMPLOYED MAN . Repair
re~nUy .
condition with metalbestos MIDDLEPORT - 3 bedrooms,
immediate needs. Yes we do
typewriters part -time . We
chimney - $50. Phone 949Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd King and
bath, large living. Garage.
deliver. Would you like to
train . Local interview. For
3211.
children were Thanksgiving
Corner
lot . Only $10,000.
application details. write:
select your own customers
12-5-Jtp 120 ACRES - Ot fertile land.
guests of his mother, Mrs. Mary
and have your own route and
Regional Manager, Box 25,
Nice laying fields. Plenty of
make
good
money?
Cali'
Glenshaw, Pa .
King at Shade.
barn space. 5 bedroom house.
Brown's in Middleport 99212-5-5t p POOL Table. Call 882-2382, New
Thanksgiving guests of Mr.
Haven .
bath, furnace . 2 farm ponds.
5113, distributors of Kosco!
12-5-6tp
A farmer's farm .
and ~· Ralph Carl and
Kosmetics.
..
··
, 1 ·~
MINERSVILLE
- Neat 3
·· - - ...,. · n -ro,trQ"· Employment Wanted
Mr. and Mrs.
'
bedroom renovated home .
MEN'S
WORK
uniforms,
Boy's
Virgil f!ilt\ imd family and Mr. SKATE-A-WAY holiday parties. INTERIOR painting . Call Don and girl's school clothing .
Bath, gas furnace. 7 rooms in
all.
Garage. Large loj. ()lly
and Mrs. Dwight Carl and
Christmas party, Friday ,
VanMeter 985-3951.
Jeffers Clothing Store, Rock
$11,000.
11-26-121p
Dec.
17,
New
Year's
Eve
Springs
Rd.,
going
toward
family of Snowville.
arural - Otf Rt. 7. Three
party, Friday, Dec. 31 from - - - -- - fairgrounds.
Mr. and Mrs. John Dean were
bedroom home, bath, fur .
7:30 p.m . to 12:30 a.m . HOUSECLEANING in Mid ·
12-2-6tc
nace,
cellar, garage. Only
Thanksgiving dinner guests of
Schedule your holiday parties
dleport and Pomeroy area ..
'
$7,000.
now. Available on Monday,
Phone 992-2876.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Markins
POMEROY - 4 bedroom, 1'1&gt;
Tuesday and Thursday
12-3-12tc
at Racine.
baths, gas forced air furnace .
nights. Also Saturday and
Mr . and Mrs. Robert
.
Storm
doors, windows. CW11y
Sunday afternoons. Open WOMAN ava il able to do
'6" X i:J 11 x..D:Ci9
$7,000.
Wednesday , Friday and
Swearington and son, Bobby, of
hou sewo rk in Pomeroy' MIDDLEPORT - 4 bedrooms,
Saturday nights. Phone 985Chester area. Phone 985-3900. ·
Dayton visited with her mother,
bath, dining, gas forced air
3929, 985-3585 or 985-9996.
11 -30-6tp
Mrs. Jennie Holley and also
furnace . Double garage .
12·5-121c
s1~.soo .
with Mr. and Mrs. Nev White
WANTED Interior painting, dry
YOUR
HOUSE COLO, BUY
$25 REWARD lor information
walling, install paneling and
and family .
ONE
OF
THESE.
leading to the arrest and
,USED OFFSET PLATES
ceilings. Phone 992-2889.
Four generations enjoyed
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
conviction of the party that
ll -30·61c
ASSOCIATE
removed an Iron wheeled
Thanksgiving dinner at the
MA~~
vuEs'E5
992-3325-991~378
trailer from my property in
home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
NEAR KROGERS
Chesler Township. SIGNED: Wanted To Buy
Sayre of Wolf Pen Road. Mrs.
.
12·2-61c
Allen E. Ball .
10
BRASS
beds.
10
corner
Sayre's mother, Mrs. William
12-3-31p
cupboards, 10 round oak
tStorSl.OO
-· -· .
Eichinger, 91 years old, Rock
pedestal dining tables and all
, NICE 2-story hom e with lull
SAVE
up
to
one
half.
Bring
your
Springs, braved the snowy
other antiques. Phone 667-3481
basement, 2 lots, new forced
sick TV to Chuck's TV Shop&lt;
before 8 a.m . or after .4 p.m .
air
furnace. Near Pomeroy.
weather to have dinner at the
151 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy .
Mrs. Harold Barnhart, Rt. I.
Elementary School. Phone
home of her daughter, Mr. and
Phone 992-5080.
Reedsville, Ohio.
992-7384 to see .
11-21 -ttc
Mrs. Charles Sayre . Other
12-1-61&lt;
11-7-lfc
dinner guests were Mr. and MEIGS County Fish 8. Game
111 Coun :,t.
Furniture, dishes. clock\,
Mrs. Billy Sayre of Columbus
will meet Wednesday, Dec. 8, OLD
Pomeroy,
Ohio
and-or complete households.
1971. 7: JO p.m. at the Coon
and Mr. and Mrs. Fritz Sayre
Write M. D. Miller, Rl. 4,
Hunter's Club House.
.and three children of Olester.
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271. DACHSHUND puppies, A.K.C.,
12-J-31c
8-25-lfc

Virgil

DEMON·

'IOOAY

SR.

Rodn?"J Wet-e ·

'

- · -·~

For Sale -

.Aluminum
Sheets

The

Daily Sentinel

NORTH

6.

• 43

.A8654
• AJ65
.A8
~T

EAST

.J97 2

.Q IOS

.QI07

.J9 3
• 92
4K 6542

• 7
.QJI0 93

SOUTH (D)

.AK 86
• K2

.7

.KQ lp843

w.. t

Both vulnerable

North

East

P111
pp.,.

p.,.
p.,.
Openjnc

I.••I.
5•

South

Pus Pass

!.ad-· Q

By Oswald I&lt; lames Jacoby

knew that he was trying for
a slam . Up to that stage of
the proceedings, SQuth had
done nothing to show that he
held a really good hand. His
bid of five hearts clearly told
his partner that he held sec·
ond round heart control and
wanted to be in six or

hold for Christmas . Phone
992-6469.
12-5-6tc

seven."
Jim : "North's jump to seven diamonds was a slightly
calculated risk but he must
have felt that if South didn't
want to get to seven . SQuth
would simply have jumped
to six diamonds over five
clubs."
Oswald : "That is the exact
inference South meant to

convey.''

Jim : "Do I know· South ?"
Oswald : " Rather well ' I
was South ."
(p.f(WSPAPU EHTU:Pl15£ ASSN.)

CLELAND REAL TV
·T"AILER 1.bTS, Bob-'s ~i&gt;ii'e'
608 East Main
. Court, Rt . 124, Syracuse,
POMEROY
MODERN Walnut Sterec&gt;-radlo
. Jhio.
,. 992-7951.
POMEROYCARRY-OUT combination,
four
speed
in4-2-lfc
beer
and
wine, GOOD
termixed changer. 4 speaker
.
.
LOCATION,
GOOD BUSsound system , separate
~OUSE, 1632 Lincoln Heights,
NESS,
EQUIPMENT
AND
controls . Balance $69.88. Use
Available after Dec. 10, 1971.
STOCK
GOING
ATONE
LOW
our budget terms. Call 992All newly painted, picture
PRICE
.
LOW
RENT,
C-1,
C-2
7085.
window and fenced In yard.
LICENSE
.
ONLY
IN11 -30-6tc
Phone 992-2780 or 992-3432.
TERESTED PARTIES
11 -26-Hc
COLONIAL Maple Sterec&gt;-radlo, CALL.
beautiful Early American
FURNISHED. and unfurnished
style, AM-FM radio, 4 TUPPERS PLAINS - RURAL
- 6 ACRES, NEW HOME, 3
apartments. Close to school.
speakers, 4 speed automatic
baths, powder room, BUILTPhone 992-5434.
changer . Balance 581.22 . Use
10-18-tfc
our budget terms. Call 992- IN KITCHEN, living room
with STONE FIREPLACE,
7085.
UNFURNISHED apartment, 4
11 -30-61c utility room , 2 car garage,
BEAUTIFUL
BRICK
rooms and bath over Mark V
CONSTRUCTION,
A
HOME
Sto re ,
M idd leport . SINGER Sewing Ma chine .
TO MARVEL AT. JUST
Reasonably priced . Phone
equipped. $41.60. Call 992- $47,773.00.
992-2331.
7085.
12-3-3tc
11 -30-61c
TUPPERS PLAINS - NICE
..
LOT, Large building, coal
2 BEDROOM mobile home In FOUR wheel dr ive 1965 In- heat,
water, good locat ion
Middleport. Adults only.
ternational Travelall , V·B,
JUST
$6,900.
Phone 992-5247.
1966 Ford '12 pickup. Phone
TO BUY OR SELL SEE US
ll -28-12tp 304-485-2339.
HENRY E. CLELAND
12-3-31p
REALTOR
TRAILER, Brown ' s Trailer
Office 991-2259
Park , Minersville. Phone 992- SLINGERLAND snare drum,
Residence 992-2568
used 7 months. Phone 9923324.
12-2-6tc
2301.
ll -30-6tc
12-3-3tc
FURNISHED sleeping room
ove-r Wine Store. Rent by POTATOES. Phone 949·3971.
month. Phone 992-5293.
12·5-3tp
11-26-tfc
.

HOME &amp; AUTO)
992-2094
606 ~- M~in Pomero1
And

FURNITURE '
Stop In and See
Floor Display.

NEW &amp; OLD WORK· . ,
A.ll We•ther ll,cioflng &amp; '
Construction -Ca. and An· : '
ltlony J'lumblng .·&amp; Htlllng. ·
Comp.tete . Plumbing, ·
Heating . and A,jr Con-_- .
t I difioning.
I
: . 2~ Lincoln St .. ~iddloport

"'

OFFICE SUPPLiES

our

Phone 9'12-25$0
Insured- Experienced
Work Guaranteed
See u&gt; tor
t-ree
.Estimate on Furnace
·lnst.alation.

EXPERT
'Wheel Alignmen\

_,.55

Complete
.
Remodeling

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

-

Pomeroy Home &amp; 11u10 .

1.

South liked his. hand. It Is
possible to give SQuth one
ace with a minimum hand
and wind up with no play for
stx, much less seven."
Oswald : ''Exactly . . When
Harold bid five clubs SQuth

'

.

.

.

. ;I

up the Idea of a slim.

3 ROOM apartment and bath.
TODAY'S QUESTION
Built-in electric wall oven and
Instead or bidding two apades,
table lop range, double bowl
your partner has, jumped to
sink, overlooking the Ohio
thr-~ ~;pade!l over West's two
River, real clean and nice.
Phone Gallipolis 446-9539
hearts. What do you do now ?
after. 5 p.m.
11 -30-lfc

3 ROOMS
' NEW~

THE SOUND
OF THE
GOOD
LIFE

AH THOUGHT
'10' FOLKS

Christmas
decorations, wearing
apparel, · jewelry,
ceram~g.

KEP''HIM

- eN PUTTIN' A 100TH
UNDER HIS PILLDW
SATIDDY NIGHTS-

-AND TOOTH DEMON
WP,S HAPP'/ AS
CLAM. BUT MOW INJUNS
l1JO SMART TO
e&gt;ELIEVE IN DEMONS!!

UNDER

CONTROL--

-

THI''/ STOPPED
BRINGING SATIDD'I
NtGf\T TOCJTH-50
HIM

OH,HE'S OUT
P~A'-IING 6ALL

WITH

MAD!!

I~RIIIURE
1

G'(llANO!

.

'

Dolls, all dressed In style,
kniHed and crocheted. (Has
to be seen to be appreciated)
Many Items you have boon
looking for, for lhll perfect
gill.

·'-.

HIDDEN
JREASURES

GIFT H)P

I

~

I
•'

Kitchen's, B•ths
Room Addition~
And Pa!IQS

• Open 8 Til1
Monday lhru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomtrov, 0 .

'
MARTHA ROSE, ~r
Located on County Road 34
near Royal Oak Park. Watch
for Signs.
Open every day ercept
Monday
I P.M. 1117 P.M.

O.RIGINAL CABINET
COMPANY

Endloader Work

BACKHOE AND DOZER work .
Septic tanks lnslolled. George
(Bill I Pullins, Phone 992-2478.
4-25-tfc

COMPLETE

992-7608

BUILDING
SERVICES

c:-:--------

uPHOLSTE
RING
Reupholstering,

... OR

1 have
never

tasted
finer
food!

ll.·&amp;

THE

;Ll'l'I'LE ORPHAN ANNID

'

n('t;ID

IT'S SIMPL~ lERRIBLI:
l'H6 WA~ I KEEP
FORGotmiN'&lt; V «:eT
NeW eATIERlGS ~
M~ FLA'.&gt;HL.Ir&lt;&gt;HT. ..

-.

estimates.

LEGAL NOTICE
Charles F . Pow~ ll, whose las ~
known place of resi dence is
• 6-15-tfc
Rout~ l, M idd leport, Oh io, is
NEIGLER
Build
ing
Supply
.
----~---hereby
notified th at on the 21'51
Free estimate on building day of S~pt~mber
HARRISON'S TV and Antenna
, 1971 L~la A .
Service. Phone 992-2522.
yor,r new home. Will draw Powell , be in g plaintiff f l l~d her
pr; t. ·to suit the lay ot your pet iti on aga inst h i m as
6-10-lfc
Ia d. Call Guy Nelgler , def~ndant In t he Court of
Racine, Ohio. For repair and Common Pleas . Me igs County ,
O' DELL-WHEEL allgnm~nl
aluminum siding, soffel and Ohio, Cne No. 1",935 , pra-ylno
located at Crossroads, Rl. 124.
gulfer. Call Donald Smith, tor divorce from said Char les F .
Complete front end service,
; Powell on the grounds of gross
Racine, Ohio.
tune up and brake service. ,
t of duty and extreme
10-7-tfc .neglec
Wheels balanced elec •Cruelty , support and alimony '
troni ca lly .
All
work
and division of property , and
guaranteed.
Reasonable SEWING MACHINES. Repair other prop~r rel let ; sa id caun
rates. Phone 992-3213.
be for hearing on or after
service, all makes. 992-2284. will
the
11th
day of December , 1971.
7-27-lfc
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.·
Lela A. Powel l. pla int iff
Authorized Singer Sales and
J 8 . O' Br ie n, attorney
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
for plaintiff .
3-29-tk I Ill 1.8, 15, 22 , 29 I 1216, 61

2966.

IT DID, U'ITn.

ON10 MY MEN AT TWE
EDGE OF TWE JUNGlE!

in reGtaurant!;!

PH. 992-7796

operator's license? Call 992·

AT~

'IOLR I(JNQ QJZ STUMBLE!&gt;

I'm60 usecj to eatinq

service. SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Sanitation, Stewart. Ohio. Ph .
repairing,
· From drofting to completion
662&lt;j035.
rebuilding . Complete
2-12 -lfc , of homt or business.
selection of beoullful fabri cs,
plus naugahvde, bollaflex and
CONCRETE
koroseal In vinyl to choose READY -MIX
delivered r ight to your
from . Pick- up and delivery .
project. Fast and easy. Free
Slater Uphoioterlng, Rt. 3,
estimates.
Phone 992-3284 .
Pomeroy . Phone 992 -3617.
Goegleln Ready -Mi x Co.. C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
12-5-61c
Cornotete S.llf.Yl~e
Middleport, Ohio.
Phone 9*1-3421
6-30-tfcl
AWNTNGS, sto~ doors •nd
Racine, Ohio
.
windows, ~ arports. Crill
Bradford
marquees, aluminum siding ALLSIDE Builders &amp; General
5-1-lfc
Contractors, Gallipolis, Ohio.
and rolling . Call A. Jacob,
Complete line ot aluminum,
sales representative. For free
vinyl and steel siding .
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
estlm·ates , _phone Charles Complete
line
of
building,
Reasonable
rates. Ph. 446- ~782
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V.
additions, and remodeling.
Gallipolis . Jo hn Russell :
Johnson and Son, Inc.
All work guaranteed. ComONner &amp; Operator.
5-27-llc
• mercial and residential
5-12-lfc
roofing . No job too small . ----~~--~--AUTOMOBILE Insurance
I
Phone 446 -3839 tor free
been cancelled? Lost your
ll -18-30tc

- -·

LEAI&lt;J A

c:R!IPY, HOtliST
reM I~ RIADY
'!0 TilliE Oli
HOIUR
IIIGH'IOWIR.

WTL8 CLOSER,
PLEASE!

( Jllll) 'Wit
!lYia '!HE etJKD

.IIJU!'S

llillfJIROLt.!) •"

•

CHRISTMAS
· IN YOUR OWN

'.

12' · 14' · 24' · WIDE

-~ ~~~ wasnn'Qiton b~~-

· ,

Belpre, Ohio

lyn~

DOWN
1. Prepare
for an ·

.

I

Real Estite For Sale
SIX ROOM house, 133 Butternu1 ,
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, 2137
Wadsworth Drive, Columbus,
Ohio, phone 237-4334.
11 -21 -lfc

Pick your own wall-lc&gt;-wall carpeting for a new 3 bedroom

BELIEVABLE DOWN PAYMENT AND MONTHLY
PAYMENT. Call 992-7034 or 1-268-1810 collect for appointment !9 ~ee.
LTERRY

JEMO ASSOCIATES, INC.

YOU\'t 5fftlel' A TOO LOII!I. W1IEll KU!
IN&amp; l2l&gt; 1tlU 10 l'lNI

j:or. Park &amp; Sycamore
Middleport
Ph. 991·7034

5111P,

rHOIJ;E;'
1642 Lfncoln
Helghf,.l
Call Danny
Thompson,.
m-- 1- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . 2196.
·
" ..
~
..
l-JB-t'&lt;' 1
6 ROOM house and bath, ·
Syracuse, Ohio. New painted
Inside and out. Priced for
quick sale, Also 2 lots with
double door commercial
garage with holst, air com- '
pressor, A·frame, with winch .
Phone '19:1·3223.
~., 1 6tc

19, Cream of
the crop
21. Double or
triple
22. Think
23. Boundary
2t, " - My
Souve-

Looking for a.piano
tuner who strikes
the right chord?

·

form four ordlnarr wordo.

• ~:~.r::.=.-

SHECS

chicken

11. Crossing
out
2. European
17.
Broke
capital
fast
3. Boot·
%8.
Flu If
Iicker
(2 wds.)
22. Spanish or
4.-esprit.
Western
5. Digger's
23.Prude
impleU.Eternal
ment
!5. Signify

role
15. Brooks or
Allen
16. Striplin~
18. Eth[opian

ranch . House completed and ready for occupancy. UN-

UNCramble theM four Jumbles,
one letter to eaeh oquore, to

exam

prince

. ~

~&amp;D~•u.J=:!::! ~r:: ~-.

6. French
river
7, Teacher's
pet
(3 wds.) ·
8. Required
9. Large

fabric
U.Word
with
bleary or

Story"

MILLER

'MOBIL£ HOME~ ·

u . Suiting

ACROSS
1. Zodiac
sign
5, Less
chancy
10. Lassoed
12. Upright
or grand
13. Sufficient
U.A"West
Side

MObile _Homes for Sale·

.

.· · Oswald : " In a recent Swiss
' 1 team match I saw a hand
that was Ideal for sldpping
Blackwood. Seven was
The bidding hu ~n :
reached rather eaally after Wool North
South I BEDROOM trailer apartEut
ment, Ideal for couples .
Harold Feldheim of New
Dble
McClure's Dairy Isle,
Contact
York elected to bid five clubs 2•
2•
Pas.
992-5248
or 992-3436.
'
rather than lqpr no-trump."
You, SQuih, hold :
12-1-6tc
Jim: "He might well have .AQ4.K8. AQl035.Kiet
SLEEPING room . Phone 992tried Blackwood after South
What do you do now?
54.40.
bid · four diamonds, but he
1
12-l-6tc
A-Ju1t
bid
four
sp1dea.
Give
. reaUy wanted to lind out If

•GIET 1TEM~~

Realty

standard 6 weeks, 25 champions In s generations. Will

A Time to Skip Blackwood

'HQ[)QWT

l

Cleland"

For Rent

HILTQN WOLFE. ~4i3iii;_ .
DALE DUTTOIU91-2534 l

BILL NELSON 991-3657
TOM CROW,'992-2580

RooFING ·&amp;CARPENTER
L----------'
WORK
'SPOUTING, ·
PdMEROY
'ROOF PAINTI"~

B~ _

TEAFORD

WIN AT BRIDGE

I .. • • , U\ ,.., Ot•

~

Pomeroy

Piq91-2174

stitch . Full cash price, $38.50 1970 W-30 OLDSMOBILE 442,
or budget plan available. automatic, factory stereo
Phone 992-5641.
12-l-6tc tape . Lots of extras. Like new.
Call 992-2441 after 5 p.m.
11 -28-tfc
VACUUM cleaner . Electro

SENTINEL
CARRIERS
IN POMEROY

~HI ~. ,., '

STIATION

monograms and blfnd hem

WANTED!

1971

FEMALE

'

1

Kingsbury

News, Notes

L ~=

SMITH NELSON .
MOJO.RS INC.

Sale

ads and ads paid within 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp;OBITUARY
$1.50 for 50 word minimum.

.rv ce

Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specialist

.

secutive Insertions.
25 Per Cent Discount on pale

·

'From the Largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Healer Core .

_;_::::'!..1

Reai Estate

E.XPERIE. NCED
d..
S I

--

1I QtEST FREEZER

Wanted To Rent

1970 DODGE POLARA
.
S2J95
4 Dr., V-Benglne. automatic trans, P.S., factory air, good

--

Ra

1

We're here to HELP YOU.
So come in and try us.
Owner, Raymond Grady

.·•·

.. .. _

r-------1. -..

Phone992-2836

Syracus~. Ohio

HE SHORE
ENUFF IS,
ELVINEV--

THAT.TATER SHORE
IS A.CHIP OPF'N
TH' Ol! BLOCK I
LOWEEZV

27. Intelll·
gence
29. Carried
33. -

t
I)
I ·I ---

1-WOLLY

Sommer

34.Remove,
with

'jout"

36. Work unit
38. St. sign

tDOYLOB±

J

K

j

nirs"

25. Paint ingredient
-· 26.Money
(slang)
27. Way-out
28. Hebrew
1udge

.

I

)amble" UPIO

s.tunl•y'•
AntwlfJrt

YODEL

(A.wen •••• oo.}
UNfOLD

CRAFTY

Whallo ~M rite man witt. •of'fU!lhU., rfl
aay - YOUIIAI
'•

Z9. SlJ• ,'"'

30. French
art ide
31. Sioux
32. Freshness
· symbol
35. Anes.
the tic
37.-d'hote
39. Austere
40. Elicit

DAILY

Yellow

Pages

C~YPTOQUOTE-Here's

$35.00 li'lllwn"Selanc;e ·on
, Convenient
Terms. ·

I

.

A ~ Cryptogram

PBK
WO

JP

PE

JVK

RKKN

LGYWPOWJD

Quotation

OKLYKJO
PGY

A.

'

/

,

___

-~-

(C,. lP71 KLn,; F&lt;'alurt!l

S~· nd ir l\te ,

I~

...-:v

. •"&gt;,

IIi

IIJITH ME ..

1111
·,

DID 't'OU CAU.,

HAN050Mf AND·GRACEFUL ...

SWEETIE ?

•

/ ~ -1

AWEK

'I
__i

NVKANO

Saturday's Cryploquote: ONE LAUGH OF A CHILD WILL
MAKE THE HOLIEST DAY MORE SACRED STILL.-A. G.
INGERSOLL

'

I NEED A PARTN~ Wl40

WBJKAAKLJGUA

ULGJK . -M .

-

ll ··

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PE

501.\EONE'Rl

I .il tl/1!11

how to work it:

AXYDLBAAXR
is LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

'349.95

I'LL 6ET [ COVLO tiE IN IT IF [

WE'Re HAVING
A CHRISTMAS
5HOWATOUR
SKAnNGCLU6
iHIS ~EAR ..

_1 1\1

. '

i_lllli l l llf

. ·•

[nc,)

-

~·

�'
'

S""e7ttf;;;fCl~~;ifieds Get ActiOn! SentinelClassifieds Get Results/
lnstr~~:tlon
n
Po••roy
'
8 u·sme
. · ss'. Servt'ces ' I
2-·
GRADY'S
Of
·

Notice

.

QUALITY

I
Otor C0
•••••••••
•

lf70 CAMARO CPE.
$3095
Less than 11,000 miles &amp; appearance of 72 model. Rally
Sport equipped, Classic copper with sandalwood Interior,
tinted glass, factory air conditioned, sports mirrors,
console, air spoiler, turbo hydromatlc, power steering &amp;

,brakes, 350 cu. ln. V-8 engine. Really Sharp.
1970CHEVROLET IIELAIR4-000R
$2595
Less than 10.000 miles by local owner. Sharp as new In all
ways, while over gold finish, 350 V-8 engine, power
sieerlng, radio, white-walls, wh, covers.

For Sale .

THOUSANDS of men needed In .,- .
•
Trucking Industry . 129,000 _cqAL, limestone . Ex~elsior
jobs open annually according .-all Works, E. Main St.,
.,
S DepI . of Labor . Ex. Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891
to U..
491ft

I!U!MI!

ASHLAND

·.

· ·~

cellent earnings after short

training period . . For ap- POODLE puppies, Silver Toy,
plication and In terv iew call or Park view Kennels, Phone 992write: TRI-STATE DRIVER 5443
TRAINING, 602 Kanawha ,
·
8-l 5·tfc
Valley
Bank . Bldg ., ·
Charleston, West Virginia
25301 . Phone: !3041 346-1556.
Christmas Special! .
Licensed by State of Ohio S52.
.
12-5-21c
23 CU. FT.

Comelnandseeournewllne
of Mud a. Snow Recap Tires.
We also do grease jobs. oil
changes &amp;fix flattires on all
autos 8. trucks, etc.

...

1·
I REG. $309.00
SAVE $60.00
I
I SALE '249
'
I
.

HOUSE with acreage, experlenced at repairs. Phone
992-6564.
'
12-l-6tc

SHOP available in excellent
location for full-time barber
in Tuppers Plains. Phone 66711res. radio&amp; other extras. white finish, clean interior.
616912-l-61c For Rent or Sale
-------LONG BOTTOM - 5 room
.
house and bath , furnace .
,OMIROT-·· .
Phone 985-3529.
I • •.teiiii.W.CirMy,Mtt
ABOUT · YOUR ·wEIGHT
12 5 301
overweight ladles, teens and - - - - - OPEN EVES. I:GO P.M.
- - c ._ _
men interested in a Weight
f'PMEROY, OHIO
Watchers (R) Class in For Sale
CLEAN, guaranteed apPomeroy wri 1~ : Wei~ht:
pllances , value priced .
APPLES - Fitzpatrick Or- Christmas toys, gifts, at
Watchers
!RI.
1863
Sect1on
WANT AD
KUHL's Bargain Center,
Rd,, Cincinnati, Ohio 45237 .. cho rd s, Stale Route 689,
Notice
INFORMATION
phQne Wilesvllle, 669-3785.
10-3-tfc
Tuppers Plains, St. Rt . 7 at
DEADLINES
-~9-3- Hc
REDUCE safe and fast with
the caution light.
5
P.M.
Day
Before
Publication
Gobese tablets and E-Vap12-l-61c
NJgtjday Deadllnl! 9 a.m.
Water Pills. Nelson Drugs.
CHRISTMAS
SALE
at
CHINESE
Ring
Neck
Pheasant.
~- \..aQ(elltliQn_8.~Q~r~IJiiM ~
11 - 17 - 301~
Hayman's Auction , Laurel
Call 895-3972, John Thomas,
Will be accepted until9 a.m. fo1
Cliff
on
PomeroyLeon, W. Va.
Day of Publl&lt;ation
Auto Sales
Middleport
Rt.
7
Bypass,
7:30
12-5-61c
For
RE&lt;OULATIONS
l
1971 PLYMOUTH Duster, 6
p.m .. Dec . 10, 1971. You' ll find
The Publisher reserves rho;
cylinder,
225
cu.
in.,
wrapping paper, perfume ,
NICE 3-Bedroom house, tully right
'to
edit
or
reject
any
ads'
CASTLE
.
trailer,
10
x
50
automatic,
power
steering,
coats, boats, clocks, radios,
carpeted, buill-I n kitchen with 'deemed obI ecllo,nal. The'
white side wall tires, wheel
dishwasher , dining room, ,publisher will not be responsible
blankets, spreads, pillows, $2350, present location also
available. Phone 992-5509.
covers, radio and heater,
candy, deco rations, tools ,
ceramic tile bath, hot water lor more than one Incorrect!
12-l-6tp
14,000 actual miles, tor·red
heat, basement and fenced finsertion .
toys, dolls , jewelry, wa1ches,
high
impact paint. Phone 992yard &lt;, Phone 742-J171 .
toasters, Irons, rugs, chairs
.
RATES
PAINT
damage.
1971
Zig-zag
5785
.
12-6-61c
and many other Items too
For Want Ad Service
sewing machine. Stlfl In
12-3-61p
numerous to mention . Come
Scents per Word one inserfitr~l
original cartons. No at early
to
obtain
seat.
·
MinimUm Charge 7Sc
tachments needed as our
12-5-6tc
12 cent. per word three
controls are built in. Sews '65' FALCON, 4 door, 6-cylinder,
standard. Phone 992-3061.
:onsecutive insertions.
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
12-5-31c
18 cents per word six con
buttonholes,
sew
on
buttons,
Help Wanted

11;. .. ,

1.

Sunday dinner guests of Mr.
word 2c.
and Mrs. Wayne Beal were Mr. ::ach additional
BLIND ADS
Hygiene new demonstrator
and Mrs. George Warner and
Additional 25c Charge pe1
has all cleaning attachments
,
family of Wolf Pen. Other Adverlis~t.
plus the new Electro Suds for Real Estate For Sale
HOURS
OFFICE
Shampooing carpet. Only
guests were Rogez Dixon,
8:30a. m. to 5&gt;00 p.m . Dally
$27 .50
cash
or
terms
Russell Well, local, and Georgia 8:30 a .m. to 12: 00 NODI
available. Phone 992-5641.
Mason
&amp;
Hartford
Stillwell and Sharon Hedt of ·Saturdav.
12-Htc
Athens and Mr. and Mrs. Roger
PHONE 992-2156 SINGER automatic sewing
In Memory
Young and son, WesUey.
machine. Like new . in
Mrs. William King and Mrs. IN MEMORY OF JAMES A.
FOR
DETAILS!
beautiful walnut cabinet,
ROBSON WHO PASSED
Delores King took Mary Lou
makes design stitches, zigAWAY 27 YEARS AGO,
zags, buttonholes , blind hems,
back to Mount Vernon where
DEC. 6, 1944. MAGNA.
Broker
WOMEN to do housework in
etc. Will sell for $85. Call
she Is attendlilg college. They
12-6-ltc
110 Mechanic Street
Pomeroy area . Write Fran.
Ravenswood 273-9893 after 5
also stopped at Reynoldsburg to
Pomeroy, Ohio
p.m.
Box 23, Pomeroy .
11 -30-6tp
11 -28-tfc
visit Mr. and Mrs. James Notice
o/ acres - Good tences. Farm
CWnmins and Mrs. Cummins
house of 5 rooms, bath, fur Kosmetics and wigs. Male Help Wanted
GAS heater, 55,000 B.T. U.,
who fractured her arm KOSCOT
nace .
Garage,
barn.
Yes we have Koscot Produds
natural or bottled gas, good
Minerals.
Only
$10,500.
and wigs In stock for your EMPLOYED MAN . Repair
re~nUy .
condition with metalbestos MIDDLEPORT - 3 bedrooms,
immediate needs. Yes we do
typewriters part -time . We
chimney - $50. Phone 949Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd King and
bath, large living. Garage.
deliver. Would you like to
train . Local interview. For
3211.
children were Thanksgiving
Corner
lot . Only $10,000.
application details. write:
select your own customers
12-5-Jtp 120 ACRES - Ot fertile land.
guests of his mother, Mrs. Mary
and have your own route and
Regional Manager, Box 25,
Nice laying fields. Plenty of
make
good
money?
Cali'
Glenshaw, Pa .
King at Shade.
barn space. 5 bedroom house.
Brown's in Middleport 99212-5-5t p POOL Table. Call 882-2382, New
Thanksgiving guests of Mr.
Haven .
bath, furnace . 2 farm ponds.
5113, distributors of Kosco!
12-5-6tp
A farmer's farm .
and ~· Ralph Carl and
Kosmetics.
..
··
, 1 ·~
MINERSVILLE
- Neat 3
·· - - ...,. · n -ro,trQ"· Employment Wanted
Mr. and Mrs.
'
bedroom renovated home .
MEN'S
WORK
uniforms,
Boy's
Virgil f!ilt\ imd family and Mr. SKATE-A-WAY holiday parties. INTERIOR painting . Call Don and girl's school clothing .
Bath, gas furnace. 7 rooms in
all.
Garage. Large loj. ()lly
and Mrs. Dwight Carl and
Christmas party, Friday ,
VanMeter 985-3951.
Jeffers Clothing Store, Rock
$11,000.
11-26-121p
Dec.
17,
New
Year's
Eve
Springs
Rd.,
going
toward
family of Snowville.
arural - Otf Rt. 7. Three
party, Friday, Dec. 31 from - - - -- - fairgrounds.
Mr. and Mrs. John Dean were
bedroom home, bath, fur .
7:30 p.m . to 12:30 a.m . HOUSECLEANING in Mid ·
12-2-6tc
nace,
cellar, garage. Only
Thanksgiving dinner guests of
Schedule your holiday parties
dleport and Pomeroy area ..
'
$7,000.
now. Available on Monday,
Phone 992-2876.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Markins
POMEROY - 4 bedroom, 1'1&gt;
Tuesday and Thursday
12-3-12tc
at Racine.
baths, gas forced air furnace .
nights. Also Saturday and
Mr . and Mrs. Robert
.
Storm
doors, windows. CW11y
Sunday afternoons. Open WOMAN ava il able to do
'6" X i:J 11 x..D:Ci9
$7,000.
Wednesday , Friday and
Swearington and son, Bobby, of
hou sewo rk in Pomeroy' MIDDLEPORT - 4 bedrooms,
Saturday nights. Phone 985Chester area. Phone 985-3900. ·
Dayton visited with her mother,
bath, dining, gas forced air
3929, 985-3585 or 985-9996.
11 -30-6tp
Mrs. Jennie Holley and also
furnace . Double garage .
12·5-121c
s1~.soo .
with Mr. and Mrs. Nev White
WANTED Interior painting, dry
YOUR
HOUSE COLO, BUY
$25 REWARD lor information
walling, install paneling and
and family .
ONE
OF
THESE.
leading to the arrest and
,USED OFFSET PLATES
ceilings. Phone 992-2889.
Four generations enjoyed
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
conviction of the party that
ll -30·61c
ASSOCIATE
removed an Iron wheeled
Thanksgiving dinner at the
MA~~
vuEs'E5
992-3325-991~378
trailer from my property in
home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
NEAR KROGERS
Chesler Township. SIGNED: Wanted To Buy
Sayre of Wolf Pen Road. Mrs.
.
12·2-61c
Allen E. Ball .
10
BRASS
beds.
10
corner
Sayre's mother, Mrs. William
12-3-31p
cupboards, 10 round oak
tStorSl.OO
-· -· .
Eichinger, 91 years old, Rock
pedestal dining tables and all
, NICE 2-story hom e with lull
SAVE
up
to
one
half.
Bring
your
Springs, braved the snowy
other antiques. Phone 667-3481
basement, 2 lots, new forced
sick TV to Chuck's TV Shop&lt;
before 8 a.m . or after .4 p.m .
air
furnace. Near Pomeroy.
weather to have dinner at the
151 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy .
Mrs. Harold Barnhart, Rt. I.
Elementary School. Phone
home of her daughter, Mr. and
Phone 992-5080.
Reedsville, Ohio.
992-7384 to see .
11-21 -ttc
Mrs. Charles Sayre . Other
12-1-61&lt;
11-7-lfc
dinner guests were Mr. and MEIGS County Fish 8. Game
111 Coun :,t.
Furniture, dishes. clock\,
Mrs. Billy Sayre of Columbus
will meet Wednesday, Dec. 8, OLD
Pomeroy,
Ohio
and-or complete households.
1971. 7: JO p.m. at the Coon
and Mr. and Mrs. Fritz Sayre
Write M. D. Miller, Rl. 4,
Hunter's Club House.
.and three children of Olester.
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271. DACHSHUND puppies, A.K.C.,
12-J-31c
8-25-lfc

Virgil

DEMON·

'IOOAY

SR.

Rodn?"J Wet-e ·

'

- · -·~

For Sale -

.Aluminum
Sheets

The

Daily Sentinel

NORTH

6.

• 43

.A8654
• AJ65
.A8
~T

EAST

.J97 2

.Q IOS

.QI07

.J9 3
• 92
4K 6542

• 7
.QJI0 93

SOUTH (D)

.AK 86
• K2

.7

.KQ lp843

w.. t

Both vulnerable

North

East

P111
pp.,.

p.,.
p.,.
Openjnc

I.••I.
5•

South

Pus Pass

!.ad-· Q

By Oswald I&lt; lames Jacoby

knew that he was trying for
a slam . Up to that stage of
the proceedings, SQuth had
done nothing to show that he
held a really good hand. His
bid of five hearts clearly told
his partner that he held sec·
ond round heart control and
wanted to be in six or

hold for Christmas . Phone
992-6469.
12-5-6tc

seven."
Jim : "North's jump to seven diamonds was a slightly
calculated risk but he must
have felt that if South didn't
want to get to seven . SQuth
would simply have jumped
to six diamonds over five
clubs."
Oswald : "That is the exact
inference South meant to

convey.''

Jim : "Do I know· South ?"
Oswald : " Rather well ' I
was South ."
(p.f(WSPAPU EHTU:Pl15£ ASSN.)

CLELAND REAL TV
·T"AILER 1.bTS, Bob-'s ~i&gt;ii'e'
608 East Main
. Court, Rt . 124, Syracuse,
POMEROY
MODERN Walnut Sterec&gt;-radlo
. Jhio.
,. 992-7951.
POMEROYCARRY-OUT combination,
four
speed
in4-2-lfc
beer
and
wine, GOOD
termixed changer. 4 speaker
.
.
LOCATION,
GOOD BUSsound system , separate
~OUSE, 1632 Lincoln Heights,
NESS,
EQUIPMENT
AND
controls . Balance $69.88. Use
Available after Dec. 10, 1971.
STOCK
GOING
ATONE
LOW
our budget terms. Call 992All newly painted, picture
PRICE
.
LOW
RENT,
C-1,
C-2
7085.
window and fenced In yard.
LICENSE
.
ONLY
IN11 -30-6tc
Phone 992-2780 or 992-3432.
TERESTED PARTIES
11 -26-Hc
COLONIAL Maple Sterec&gt;-radlo, CALL.
beautiful Early American
FURNISHED. and unfurnished
style, AM-FM radio, 4 TUPPERS PLAINS - RURAL
- 6 ACRES, NEW HOME, 3
apartments. Close to school.
speakers, 4 speed automatic
baths, powder room, BUILTPhone 992-5434.
changer . Balance 581.22 . Use
10-18-tfc
our budget terms. Call 992- IN KITCHEN, living room
with STONE FIREPLACE,
7085.
UNFURNISHED apartment, 4
11 -30-61c utility room , 2 car garage,
BEAUTIFUL
BRICK
rooms and bath over Mark V
CONSTRUCTION,
A
HOME
Sto re ,
M idd leport . SINGER Sewing Ma chine .
TO MARVEL AT. JUST
Reasonably priced . Phone
equipped. $41.60. Call 992- $47,773.00.
992-2331.
7085.
12-3-3tc
11 -30-61c
TUPPERS PLAINS - NICE
..
LOT, Large building, coal
2 BEDROOM mobile home In FOUR wheel dr ive 1965 In- heat,
water, good locat ion
Middleport. Adults only.
ternational Travelall , V·B,
JUST
$6,900.
Phone 992-5247.
1966 Ford '12 pickup. Phone
TO BUY OR SELL SEE US
ll -28-12tp 304-485-2339.
HENRY E. CLELAND
12-3-31p
REALTOR
TRAILER, Brown ' s Trailer
Office 991-2259
Park , Minersville. Phone 992- SLINGERLAND snare drum,
Residence 992-2568
used 7 months. Phone 9923324.
12-2-6tc
2301.
ll -30-6tc
12-3-3tc
FURNISHED sleeping room
ove-r Wine Store. Rent by POTATOES. Phone 949·3971.
month. Phone 992-5293.
12·5-3tp
11-26-tfc
.

HOME &amp; AUTO)
992-2094
606 ~- M~in Pomero1
And

FURNITURE '
Stop In and See
Floor Display.

NEW &amp; OLD WORK· . ,
A.ll We•ther ll,cioflng &amp; '
Construction -Ca. and An· : '
ltlony J'lumblng .·&amp; Htlllng. ·
Comp.tete . Plumbing, ·
Heating . and A,jr Con-_- .
t I difioning.
I
: . 2~ Lincoln St .. ~iddloport

"'

OFFICE SUPPLiES

our

Phone 9'12-25$0
Insured- Experienced
Work Guaranteed
See u&gt; tor
t-ree
.Estimate on Furnace
·lnst.alation.

EXPERT
'Wheel Alignmen\

_,.55

Complete
.
Remodeling

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

-

Pomeroy Home &amp; 11u10 .

1.

South liked his. hand. It Is
possible to give SQuth one
ace with a minimum hand
and wind up with no play for
stx, much less seven."
Oswald : ''Exactly . . When
Harold bid five clubs SQuth

'

.

.

.

. ;I

up the Idea of a slim.

3 ROOM apartment and bath.
TODAY'S QUESTION
Built-in electric wall oven and
Instead or bidding two apades,
table lop range, double bowl
your partner has, jumped to
sink, overlooking the Ohio
thr-~ ~;pade!l over West's two
River, real clean and nice.
Phone Gallipolis 446-9539
hearts. What do you do now ?
after. 5 p.m.
11 -30-lfc

3 ROOMS
' NEW~

THE SOUND
OF THE
GOOD
LIFE

AH THOUGHT
'10' FOLKS

Christmas
decorations, wearing
apparel, · jewelry,
ceram~g.

KEP''HIM

- eN PUTTIN' A 100TH
UNDER HIS PILLDW
SATIDDY NIGHTS-

-AND TOOTH DEMON
WP,S HAPP'/ AS
CLAM. BUT MOW INJUNS
l1JO SMART TO
e&gt;ELIEVE IN DEMONS!!

UNDER

CONTROL--

-

THI''/ STOPPED
BRINGING SATIDD'I
NtGf\T TOCJTH-50
HIM

OH,HE'S OUT
P~A'-IING 6ALL

WITH

MAD!!

I~RIIIURE
1

G'(llANO!

.

'

Dolls, all dressed In style,
kniHed and crocheted. (Has
to be seen to be appreciated)
Many Items you have boon
looking for, for lhll perfect
gill.

·'-.

HIDDEN
JREASURES

GIFT H)P

I

~

I
•'

Kitchen's, B•ths
Room Addition~
And Pa!IQS

• Open 8 Til1
Monday lhru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomtrov, 0 .

'
MARTHA ROSE, ~r
Located on County Road 34
near Royal Oak Park. Watch
for Signs.
Open every day ercept
Monday
I P.M. 1117 P.M.

O.RIGINAL CABINET
COMPANY

Endloader Work

BACKHOE AND DOZER work .
Septic tanks lnslolled. George
(Bill I Pullins, Phone 992-2478.
4-25-tfc

COMPLETE

992-7608

BUILDING
SERVICES

c:-:--------

uPHOLSTE
RING
Reupholstering,

... OR

1 have
never

tasted
finer
food!

ll.·&amp;

THE

;Ll'l'I'LE ORPHAN ANNID

'

n('t;ID

IT'S SIMPL~ lERRIBLI:
l'H6 WA~ I KEEP
FORGotmiN'&lt; V «:eT
NeW eATIERlGS ~
M~ FLA'.&gt;HL.Ir&lt;&gt;HT. ..

-.

estimates.

LEGAL NOTICE
Charles F . Pow~ ll, whose las ~
known place of resi dence is
• 6-15-tfc
Rout~ l, M idd leport, Oh io, is
NEIGLER
Build
ing
Supply
.
----~---hereby
notified th at on the 21'51
Free estimate on building day of S~pt~mber
HARRISON'S TV and Antenna
, 1971 L~la A .
Service. Phone 992-2522.
yor,r new home. Will draw Powell , be in g plaintiff f l l~d her
pr; t. ·to suit the lay ot your pet iti on aga inst h i m as
6-10-lfc
Ia d. Call Guy Nelgler , def~ndant In t he Court of
Racine, Ohio. For repair and Common Pleas . Me igs County ,
O' DELL-WHEEL allgnm~nl
aluminum siding, soffel and Ohio, Cne No. 1",935 , pra-ylno
located at Crossroads, Rl. 124.
gulfer. Call Donald Smith, tor divorce from said Char les F .
Complete front end service,
; Powell on the grounds of gross
Racine, Ohio.
tune up and brake service. ,
t of duty and extreme
10-7-tfc .neglec
Wheels balanced elec •Cruelty , support and alimony '
troni ca lly .
All
work
and division of property , and
guaranteed.
Reasonable SEWING MACHINES. Repair other prop~r rel let ; sa id caun
rates. Phone 992-3213.
be for hearing on or after
service, all makes. 992-2284. will
the
11th
day of December , 1971.
7-27-lfc
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.·
Lela A. Powel l. pla int iff
Authorized Singer Sales and
J 8 . O' Br ie n, attorney
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
for plaintiff .
3-29-tk I Ill 1.8, 15, 22 , 29 I 1216, 61

2966.

IT DID, U'ITn.

ON10 MY MEN AT TWE
EDGE OF TWE JUNGlE!

in reGtaurant!;!

PH. 992-7796

operator's license? Call 992·

AT~

'IOLR I(JNQ QJZ STUMBLE!&gt;

I'm60 usecj to eatinq

service. SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Sanitation, Stewart. Ohio. Ph .
repairing,
· From drofting to completion
662&lt;j035.
rebuilding . Complete
2-12 -lfc , of homt or business.
selection of beoullful fabri cs,
plus naugahvde, bollaflex and
CONCRETE
koroseal In vinyl to choose READY -MIX
delivered r ight to your
from . Pick- up and delivery .
project. Fast and easy. Free
Slater Uphoioterlng, Rt. 3,
estimates.
Phone 992-3284 .
Pomeroy . Phone 992 -3617.
Goegleln Ready -Mi x Co.. C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
12-5-61c
Cornotete S.llf.Yl~e
Middleport, Ohio.
Phone 9*1-3421
6-30-tfcl
AWNTNGS, sto~ doors •nd
Racine, Ohio
.
windows, ~ arports. Crill
Bradford
marquees, aluminum siding ALLSIDE Builders &amp; General
5-1-lfc
Contractors, Gallipolis, Ohio.
and rolling . Call A. Jacob,
Complete line ot aluminum,
sales representative. For free
vinyl and steel siding .
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
estlm·ates , _phone Charles Complete
line
of
building,
Reasonable
rates. Ph. 446- ~782
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V.
additions, and remodeling.
Gallipolis . Jo hn Russell :
Johnson and Son, Inc.
All work guaranteed. ComONner &amp; Operator.
5-27-llc
• mercial and residential
5-12-lfc
roofing . No job too small . ----~~--~--AUTOMOBILE Insurance
I
Phone 446 -3839 tor free
been cancelled? Lost your
ll -18-30tc

- -·

LEAI&lt;J A

c:R!IPY, HOtliST
reM I~ RIADY
'!0 TilliE Oli
HOIUR
IIIGH'IOWIR.

WTL8 CLOSER,
PLEASE!

( Jllll) 'Wit
!lYia '!HE etJKD

.IIJU!'S

llillfJIROLt.!) •"

•

CHRISTMAS
· IN YOUR OWN

'.

12' · 14' · 24' · WIDE

-~ ~~~ wasnn'Qiton b~~-

· ,

Belpre, Ohio

lyn~

DOWN
1. Prepare
for an ·

.

I

Real Estite For Sale
SIX ROOM house, 133 Butternu1 ,
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, 2137
Wadsworth Drive, Columbus,
Ohio, phone 237-4334.
11 -21 -lfc

Pick your own wall-lc&gt;-wall carpeting for a new 3 bedroom

BELIEVABLE DOWN PAYMENT AND MONTHLY
PAYMENT. Call 992-7034 or 1-268-1810 collect for appointment !9 ~ee.
LTERRY

JEMO ASSOCIATES, INC.

YOU\'t 5fftlel' A TOO LOII!I. W1IEll KU!
IN&amp; l2l&gt; 1tlU 10 l'lNI

j:or. Park &amp; Sycamore
Middleport
Ph. 991·7034

5111P,

rHOIJ;E;'
1642 Lfncoln
Helghf,.l
Call Danny
Thompson,.
m-- 1- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . 2196.
·
" ..
~
..
l-JB-t'&lt;' 1
6 ROOM house and bath, ·
Syracuse, Ohio. New painted
Inside and out. Priced for
quick sale, Also 2 lots with
double door commercial
garage with holst, air com- '
pressor, A·frame, with winch .
Phone '19:1·3223.
~., 1 6tc

19, Cream of
the crop
21. Double or
triple
22. Think
23. Boundary
2t, " - My
Souve-

Looking for a.piano
tuner who strikes
the right chord?

·

form four ordlnarr wordo.

• ~:~.r::.=.-

SHECS

chicken

11. Crossing
out
2. European
17.
Broke
capital
fast
3. Boot·
%8.
Flu If
Iicker
(2 wds.)
22. Spanish or
4.-esprit.
Western
5. Digger's
23.Prude
impleU.Eternal
ment
!5. Signify

role
15. Brooks or
Allen
16. Striplin~
18. Eth[opian

ranch . House completed and ready for occupancy. UN-

UNCramble theM four Jumbles,
one letter to eaeh oquore, to

exam

prince

. ~

~&amp;D~•u.J=:!::! ~r:: ~-.

6. French
river
7, Teacher's
pet
(3 wds.) ·
8. Required
9. Large

fabric
U.Word
with
bleary or

Story"

MILLER

'MOBIL£ HOME~ ·

u . Suiting

ACROSS
1. Zodiac
sign
5, Less
chancy
10. Lassoed
12. Upright
or grand
13. Sufficient
U.A"West
Side

MObile _Homes for Sale·

.

.· · Oswald : " In a recent Swiss
' 1 team match I saw a hand
that was Ideal for sldpping
Blackwood. Seven was
The bidding hu ~n :
reached rather eaally after Wool North
South I BEDROOM trailer apartEut
ment, Ideal for couples .
Harold Feldheim of New
Dble
McClure's Dairy Isle,
Contact
York elected to bid five clubs 2•
2•
Pas.
992-5248
or 992-3436.
'
rather than lqpr no-trump."
You, SQuih, hold :
12-1-6tc
Jim: "He might well have .AQ4.K8. AQl035.Kiet
SLEEPING room . Phone 992tried Blackwood after South
What do you do now?
54.40.
bid · four diamonds, but he
1
12-l-6tc
A-Ju1t
bid
four
sp1dea.
Give
. reaUy wanted to lind out If

•GIET 1TEM~~

Realty

standard 6 weeks, 25 champions In s generations. Will

A Time to Skip Blackwood

'HQ[)QWT

l

Cleland"

For Rent

HILTQN WOLFE. ~4i3iii;_ .
DALE DUTTOIU91-2534 l

BILL NELSON 991-3657
TOM CROW,'992-2580

RooFING ·&amp;CARPENTER
L----------'
WORK
'SPOUTING, ·
PdMEROY
'ROOF PAINTI"~

B~ _

TEAFORD

WIN AT BRIDGE

I .. • • , U\ ,.., Ot•

~

Pomeroy

Piq91-2174

stitch . Full cash price, $38.50 1970 W-30 OLDSMOBILE 442,
or budget plan available. automatic, factory stereo
Phone 992-5641.
12-l-6tc tape . Lots of extras. Like new.
Call 992-2441 after 5 p.m.
11 -28-tfc
VACUUM cleaner . Electro

SENTINEL
CARRIERS
IN POMEROY

~HI ~. ,., '

STIATION

monograms and blfnd hem

WANTED!

1971

FEMALE

'

1

Kingsbury

News, Notes

L ~=

SMITH NELSON .
MOJO.RS INC.

Sale

ads and ads paid within 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp;OBITUARY
$1.50 for 50 word minimum.

.rv ce

Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specialist

.

secutive Insertions.
25 Per Cent Discount on pale

·

'From the Largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Healer Core .

_;_::::'!..1

Reai Estate

E.XPERIE. NCED
d..
S I

--

1I QtEST FREEZER

Wanted To Rent

1970 DODGE POLARA
.
S2J95
4 Dr., V-Benglne. automatic trans, P.S., factory air, good

--

Ra

1

We're here to HELP YOU.
So come in and try us.
Owner, Raymond Grady

.·•·

.. .. _

r-------1. -..

Phone992-2836

Syracus~. Ohio

HE SHORE
ENUFF IS,
ELVINEV--

THAT.TATER SHORE
IS A.CHIP OPF'N
TH' Ol! BLOCK I
LOWEEZV

27. Intelll·
gence
29. Carried
33. -

t
I)
I ·I ---

1-WOLLY

Sommer

34.Remove,
with

'jout"

36. Work unit
38. St. sign

tDOYLOB±

J

K

j

nirs"

25. Paint ingredient
-· 26.Money
(slang)
27. Way-out
28. Hebrew
1udge

.

I

)amble" UPIO

s.tunl•y'•
AntwlfJrt

YODEL

(A.wen •••• oo.}
UNfOLD

CRAFTY

Whallo ~M rite man witt. •of'fU!lhU., rfl
aay - YOUIIAI
'•

Z9. SlJ• ,'"'

30. French
art ide
31. Sioux
32. Freshness
· symbol
35. Anes.
the tic
37.-d'hote
39. Austere
40. Elicit

DAILY

Yellow

Pages

C~YPTOQUOTE-Here's

$35.00 li'lllwn"Selanc;e ·on
, Convenient
Terms. ·

I

.

A ~ Cryptogram

PBK
WO

JP

PE

JVK

RKKN

LGYWPOWJD

Quotation

OKLYKJO
PGY

A.

'

/

,

___

-~-

(C,. lP71 KLn,; F&lt;'alurt!l

S~· nd ir l\te ,

I~

...-:v

. •"&gt;,

IIi

IIJITH ME ..

1111
·,

DID 't'OU CAU.,

HAN050Mf AND·GRACEFUL ...

SWEETIE ?

•

/ ~ -1

AWEK

'I
__i

NVKANO

Saturday's Cryploquote: ONE LAUGH OF A CHILD WILL
MAKE THE HOLIEST DAY MORE SACRED STILL.-A. G.
INGERSOLL

'

I NEED A PARTN~ Wl40

WBJKAAKLJGUA

ULGJK . -M .

-

ll ··

{.
PE

501.\EONE'Rl

I .il tl/1!11

how to work it:

AXYDLBAAXR
is LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

'349.95

I'LL 6ET [ COVLO tiE IN IT IF [

WE'Re HAVING
A CHRISTMAS
5HOWATOUR
SKAnNGCLU6
iHIS ~EAR ..

_1 1\1

. '

i_lllli l l llf

. ·•

[nc,)

-

~·

�8 _ Th(· Daily Se nlln~l , MiddleJX&gt;rt-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. t;, 1!171

Syr :use Honor Pupils Named
SYRACUSE - The scholastic
honor roll for the second six
weeks grading period at the
Syracuse Elementary School
has been announced. Named to
the roll were :
Grade 1 - Ricky Chancey,
Sandra Foley.
Grade 2 - B. K Armes,
Krystal Wmebrenner, Cheryl
Ables, Vicky Arnold , Denise
Deem (all A's), Enc Lipscomb.
Grade 3 - Pattla Barnett,
Teresa Holstein, Donna Hub-

CLUB TO MEET
The Wildwood Garden Club
will meet at 6.30 p.m. Thursday
at Bowers Restaurant in
Pomeroy for a 6:30 Chmtmas
dinner, followed by a meeting
and a girt exchange .

MEIGS THEATRE
Tomgh1 &amp; Tue sday
December 6-7

Amencan National 's
" COUGAR COUNTRY "
~T ec hn tcolorl

Anot her

p1cture

of

'71: Big

bard, Mary Beth Slavm, Cindy
Smith, John Williams.
Grade 4 - Meg Amberger,
Tonia Ash, Carrte Guinther,
Rosemary Hubbard.
Grade 5 - Randy Arnold,
Lori Chapman , Ken Koehle r,
Debbie Pickens. Cindy Patterson.
Grade 6 - Brent Arnold,
M ar~ Forbes, Lori Guinther,
Tim Nease, Mike Norton, Jaye
Ord tall A's). Jean Ann Bitchhart, Kelly Winebrenner .

the

Frozen

No r thwoods ,
prOduced by Rambow Ad -

SPEAKING PARTS IN the annual Christmas operetta to be held Monday night at 7:30 p.
m at the school will be taken by, l.r, front row, Kevin Jewell, Ray Janey, Joe Garnes, Ricky
Ramsburg, Terry Walker ; back row, Belinda Johnson, Vicky German, Teresa Garnes, Sheila
Harman, Judy Holliday, Diane Howell, Beverly Shultz, Deidra Tyree, Barbara Jacks, Darlene
Thornton . See more pictures on Page 2.

BURNED BY CAR.
venture F1lms
a SISter
CINCINNATI tUPI I - Ron
piC ture to NORTH CO UN
Mason, 16, Cincinnati, died
TRY'
Sunday
m General Hospital
"G"
after bemg burned during the
Co lorca r1oons
CINCINNATI (UP! ) - The
Adnms •on
weekend when gas ignited the
Cincinnati
Reds today acquired
Adul ts, Sl 00 Children. 75c
engine of his car he was
outfielder Ted Uhlaender from
'--S•HO•W-S
•T•A•R•T•S•7•P•M•._ I working on.
the Cleveland Indians tn a trade
for pitcher Milt Wilcox.
:~:~:~~~~~~~~~~~~It~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~~~:~~Ir~~~:~~t~~::(?~f~j~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~?~~~tt~tt~~~t~~rt~:~~~~~~~~ The announcement was made
jointly by Reds general
manager Bob Howsam and
Indians general manager Gabe
Paul.
Uhlaender, 32, was the
Arnencan League's lOth leading
hitter in 1971 with a .288
average.
Howsam said he expects
Uhlaender to add depth to the
outfield and balance the club
with his lefthanded hlttmg.
The Baylor University
graduate broke mto baseball tn
1961 and cracked the majors tn
WEATHER - PROOF
1965 with the Minnesota Twins.
ERN WITH BATTIODVI
He was traded to Cleveland
REG 4 19
J77
after the 19£9 season and has
played regularly with the Indians since then.
Wilcox, 21, spent 1971 playmg
with both the Reds and their
12 FOR
Triple A farm club m Indianapohs. He was 2-2 with the
Reds, sporting a 3.35 ERA in 43
mmngs, and was lh'i at Indianapolis.
. The young righthander was
BACKBOARD &amp;
Signed by the Reds m 1967 and
jomed the club after an imGOAL-~-~
pressive ye~r at Indianapolis in
1970. He pitched In ooth the
champiOnship senes and the
1970 World Ser1es.
OFFICIAL
It was Cincinnati's third trad~
BASKETBALL
in the past week .
Last Monday, How sam sent
UG . 7811
slugging f1rst baseman Lee
May, second baseman Tommy
Heims and utility player Jimmy
Stewart to the Houston Astros
for five players - second
baseman Joe Morgan, infielder
Denis Menke, righthander Jack
1

Wilcox Traded

s

1488

TABLE TENNIS TABLE
Fold-N-Roll

3788

REG
49 95

! ~or glure '''"~h tGp 1 •
w~ t ers

tur

,,,o.,.uhd,r~

Str '!Jed ww r I 1, ., ~~

FO lDS TO
22' WIDE

.TABLE TENNIS SET

788

SALE PRICE

FELT TOP
GAME TABLE

R" EG. 36 95

BEVELED EDGE

li

Fu l d~

lin! h·l! ~ u . .. r ~ llllls
HS!fll

DOOR
MIRROR
16''

l

1:1

F U ~N 1 1UIIf

CHILD'S WOODEN
TOY CHEST

60"

REG 11 95

1688

gas

Jr.

High

Honor List
Announced

MICHI GA N lADDER

~

1

1, •

\.. I'll' "
1 ' vt l ~ I

II

\It I

I"

KAl AMAZ OO

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

50TH

REG.
\995

1688
DElPfoiOS BENDI NG

The Athens County

POMEROY CEMENT

Savings &amp; LOiUl Co.

BLOCK CO.

Pomeroy, Ohio

Th e Dfpartment Store
of Building Since 1915

Park said the North Korean
Communists have turned the
whole of North Korea into a
huge garrison with con·
siderable fortifications. He
said there are 1.4 million
militia and 700,000 Red Youth
guards supporting 500,000
regular army troops.
::::::::x::;::::::;::::::~=:::::~::::::~:.'!:.-:.-::::.-::::~}

Ronald Bailey
Died on Monday
COOLVILLE - Ronald R.
Bailey, 57, Coolville Route 2,
died of cancer early Monday at
the St. Joseph Hospital in
Parkersburg following a seven
months illness.
The son of the late Joseph and
Chloe Wood Bailey, he was born
at Chester. Mr . Bailey was an
employe of the Union Carbtde
Corp., Marietta , 17 years. He
was a veteran of World War II,
having serving in the Army Air
Force.
Surviving are his wife, Elma
Fay Kincade Bailey ; two
daughters, Mrs . Ronald
(Paula ) Flannery , and Miss
Carolyn Jo Bailey, both of
Parkersburg; a sister, Mrs.
Debnar (Kathryn I Baum of

CONGRESS SUBMERGED
CINCINNATI (UP!) - Rep .
Robert Drinan, D-Mass., said
Sunday Congress during the
past year ha s been "submerged, subdued and rendered Chester , and a grandson,
submissive" by the Nixon Joseph Wayne Flannery,
admmi stra tw n.
Parkersburg.
Funeral services wtll be at 2
p.m. Wednesday at Ute Chester
MEETINGS SET
Church of the Nazarene with
The quarterly meeting of the Burial m Me1gs Memory
Pomeroy Lower Light Church Garden. The body wiU be taken
will be Thursday, Friday and to the church one hour prior to
Saturday w1Ut services at 7:30 the service. Friends may call at
each evemng. The Rev . Ralph the While Funeral Home in
Spires of Ewington will be Coolville after noon Tuesday.
speaker.

sta1rs and a renter downstairs,
and Mr. and Mrs. Schneider
escaped. A few clothes and a
little furniture were saved.
Ernest Enevoldsen was a
former postal worker at
Brookings, S. D. He was the
father of Darwyn Enevoldsen,
electrical construction engineer
at the new Gavin Power Plant
at Cheshire. Also surviving are
his wife, Pearl; another son,
Arlo of Brookings; two
daughters, Lou Ann Haywood of
Kentucky, and Joyce Forlinces,
or Akron. FWleral services will
be Tuesday in Brookings.

A delegation appearing
before the Meigs County Board
d Commissioners today vowed
to "fight tooth and toenail"
establishment of a county-wide
landflll dump on the Eagle
Ridge Road in Chester Township.
T'Welve citizens who reside in
'the area of the proposed dump
near the Arvil Holter property
which is Wider verbal option,
made up the delegation.
Victor Hysell, principal
spokesman for the group, said
there could be only about 50

~ow

296 Second St.

Member Federa l Hom e Loan
Bank .

Member Federal Savtng s &amp;
Loan ln-;u rance Corp All
acc .&gt;U n! s insur ed up ~ o

120.000.00

An informal public hearing on
the amendments to the
regulations governing the
operation of the stale's new
Unemployment Compensation
Law will be conducted Der. 17,
starling at 10:30 a.m." in the
Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services Building, 145 South
Front Street, Columbus.
OBES Administrator William
E. Garnes said It was estimated
that a minimum of 70,000 new
unemployment compensation
U!xpaying firms would be added
to the rolls of more than 100,000
firms now paying tne tax .
Administrator Garnes said
that firms employing one or
more persons who do not
receive a tax form from OBES
by the end of the week should
contact their loca l Bureau
Office for proper information .
The new Ia w, signed by
Governor John J. Gilligan on
October 29, increased the scope
of unemployment insurance
coverage effective January l.
Under t:Je exislir ~ law, only
firms .with three or more em-

•

acres of the total 90 acres on the
Holter property that could be
used for the landfill. He said the
entire property has shale WJder
it about five or less feet down.
He said the landfiU, therefore,
in that location would not be
economically feasible in that
the rocl\ would prevent deep
digging to bury trash. The cost
of getting under the rock would
be excessive.
The "run off" also would be
be a vy from a pollution standpoint, he added.
The commissioners pointed

out that any site selected for the
planned landftu must be approved by the federal government and that such approval
has not been secured. When Ute
delegation pointed out that
several locations in the county
where strip mining has taken
place should be used for the
landfill, the commissioners
pointed out that the federal
government already has turned
down four such locations.
John Jeffers, a member of the
delegation, pointed out that
residents also are concerned

ene

I

about the littering which would
U!ke place from open trucks if
the dump were established on
the Holter property. Commissioner Charles R. Karr, Sr.,
pointed out that control of such
incidents could be mainU!ined
by the sheriff when a landfill is
established.
The ooard quickly reviewed
a report on the site prepared
by Meigs Soil and Water
Conservationist David Parry,
but the report indfcated that
testing had been done only at
a depth of from three and a

half to five feel.
Gary Griffith, also of the
delegation, charged that the
commissioners had
not
properly notified residents of
plans to esU!blish the landfill on
the Eagle Ridge Road property.
The commissioners, hearing
suggestions of other sites,
pointed out that sites must have
water and electricity available.
Neither can they be "too
isolated" because or the danger
of theft of equipment needed for
the landfill operation. It was
reported that Dr. Harold Brown

of Pomeroy has 146 acres in the is finally selected.
Pagetown area which he would
Members of · the delega lion
donate for the landfill . spoke highly of Arvil Holter ,
However, the commissioners owner of the property in
said that site would not be question , from a personal
satisfactory because It would be standpoint, but added they are
necessary to build a mile of against the use of the site there
road to it.
for a landfill. It was poinlefl out
Commissioner Karr stated that the purchase price for the
that establishment or a landfiU property is $17,000 for 90 acres.
at the Eagle Ridge site "!s a If the plan 1s followed to use the
long way off." How ever , site, a house nearby would be
Commissioners Warden Ours used for equipment at the
and Bob Clark indicated that landfill and a barn would be
undoubtedly there will be converted to store equipment.
protests from any section which The commissioners were

Weather

VOL. XXIV

Rain today ending in eastern
sections late tonight. CloudY'
with fog again tonight. Lou
tonight 40 to 45. Wednesday,
mostly cloudy with little temperature change. Highs in the
50s to around 60 extreme south.

Devoted To The lnteresu Of The Meigs-Mason Area

NO. 165

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1971

PHONE 992·2156

--~--~~-------------------------------------------TWIRLING TAMMY
national publicity in Drum
Major Magazine which makes
competition much more
competitive than smaller
ocganizaUons who do not have a
twirling publication .
Tammy also won first place in
advanced twirling plus a
strutting and modeling trophy
this past w.eekend in Lancaster .
Tammy attends only NBTA
contests which are published in

Drum Major Magazine.
Mary Beth Hawley also took a
first place trophy in beginners
solo twirling in Lancaster and
after entering only three contests has become an intermediate twirler . She also
won second place trophies in
military strut and fancy strut.
Both Tammy and Mary Beth
qualified for twirl off, advanced
and beginner, respectively.

PLEASANT VALLEY
ADMISSIONS : Clara
Meadows, Point Pleasant ;
William Sydenstricker , Jr. ,
Point Pleasant; Ollie Raines,
Mrs . Charles Wood , Point
Pleasant; Frances Shaffer,
Gallipolis; Cathy Campbell,
Point Pleasant; Thomas
Brown, Bancroft; Mrs . Robert
craig, Middleport; William
Gibbs, Point Pleasant; Mrs .
Howard Cochran Ira Potts
John Fierbaugh, Robert Errett:
Point Pleasant; Timmy See,
Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs. Robert
Holbert Point Pleasant.
DISCHARGES: Mrs. Ernest
Thacker, Mrs. George Green,
Dencil Miller Mrs Frank
Beacer, Mrs. R~bert Hally and
son; Mildred Woomer, Chris
Barnett and Arlee Dillard, Jr.

INROOM384
Mrs. Charles McNickle,
Racine Route 2, is confmed to
the Holzer Medical Center. Her
room number is 384.
FIRMS DESTROYED
ZANESVILLE, Ohio (UP! ) Fire destroyed a three..st&lt;.. y
building housing several firms
here late Sunday. Lost in the
blaze were the offices of Wilson
and Hamilton Moving and
storage Co., Aero-Mayflower
Transit Co., Roush Bullding
Supply Co., Chatfield Paper Co .
and Zane Vending Co.
BIRTHS: Nov. 4, a son tQ Mr.
and Mrs . Wallace Hatfield,
Pomeroy ; a son to Mr . and Mrs.
Edward Blakeman, Point
Pleasant.

MAKE ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY YOUR SHOPPING CENTER

Cottons, dacron and cotton
blends . corduroys tor gals
around the house. You'll like
this selection.
Lingerie Department
tst Floor

A leading Meigs County at- He further suggested that Fred three

torney warned the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce Monday
It should act now to do whatever
it can to attractramilies coming
into the area to live in the
county.
Fred Crow, of the Crow, Crow
and Porter law firm, W. Second
St., Pomeroy, said construction
and operation or the large deep
mine in the Salem Center area
to supply coal to the new Gavin
Plant at Cheshire will
guarantee permanent employment to a minimum or 2,000
heads of families . New
population during the construction phase or the mine, its
conveyor system, and of the
power plant itself over the next
four years, will be much
greater. Ohio Power Co. is
building the plant and mine.
Crow was speaking informally to members of the
Chamber following a lunche11n
at Bowers' Drive-In, East Main
St.
Crow suggested:
"We should get a perspecUve
d what Ute chamber can do to
get the people coming into the
area to sU!y in Meigs County."

Morrow, local manager of the
Ohio Power Co., be invited to
arrange for a represenU!tive of
the power company's Canton,
Ohio offices to meet with the
chamber. He pointed out that
Meigs High School is arranging
training courses in skills needed
in modern coal mines.
Following the regular
meeting, Crow suggested
several housing development
possibilities. One is the old
"Lasley estate" which roughly
is all the high ground between
Pomeroy and Middleport
contiguous on each side to the
COrporation limits of the WWIIS.
He said there would have to
be a cooper a live effort by lots of
people, however, for ·this to
happen. Access to the Lasley
ground can be built, he said.
Jack
Kerr,
chamber
president, announced that Mrs.
Margaret Ella Lewis had asked
him if the chamber would
sponsor the annual Chtlstmas
lighting contest In Pomeroy.
The chamber agreed to
sponsor the annual event and
named Tom Cassell chairman.
Cassell recalled that in the past

merchandise prizes,
Kerr reported that $1,350 had
donated by local utility com- been received in the annual
pames, were awarded as top Christmas promotion with an
prize in the three categories, additional $250 yet to be
doorway, secular, and religious, collected.
second prize of $10 in the three
c. E. Blakeslee, who attended
categories and third prize of $5 the recent Ohio Fesltval
in each category. Cassell fell meeting in Columbus, reported
that the same arrangement for that the chamber 's annual
prizes would be made this year. membership cost of $100 for 1972
Kerr noted that Morrow had is due.
informed him that Ohio Power
Bill Grueser reported that the
would no longer be responsible Lorain Outboard Racing Club
for erecting or taking down has scheduled a racing program
Christmas lights in Pomeroy. at the Big Bend Regatta on JWJe
Morrow said that they would 18. Nine classes of racing will be
U!ke them down this season but offered at a cost of apit would be the responsibility of proximately $1,175.
the chamber to store the lights.
It was alos noted that a
It was suggested that an preliminary brochure for next
inquiry be made in regard to the year's Regatta should be made
vacant school buildings in the as soon as possible. Blakeslee is
district for storage. Kerr will to assist Kerr in making up the
contact George • Hargraves , program.
superintendent" of Meigs High
Ted Reed, who serves on the
School.
Pomeroy Planning ComKerr observed that Jim mission, annoWJced that the
Danner suggested that since commission is functioning ~nd
Gallipolis had purchased new · that studies · by Survey
Christmas lights that possibly Unlimited are being made.
the chamber could purchase the Serving on the commission
old lights at a reasonable figure. along with Reed are Mayor
Kerr will investigate the elect William Baronick, one
matter .
member of Pomeroy Council

PO's Future Unsettled
Decisions on the future or the
Pomeroy Post Office, which
was heavily damaged in a fall of
huge boulders Friday morning,
apparently are not to be made
overnight.
John LeMieux, structural
engineer with the General
Services Administration of the
U. S. Postal Department,
Chicago, IU., ~ed Monday to
study the situation. He is expeeled to be In Pomeroy several
days. Decisions on whether the
post office building is to be
repaired or whether new
quarters will be sought will be

based on his report.
James Souls by , Pomeroy
Postmaster, said he was
notified by the Postmaster
General's office in Washington,
D. C., Monday afternoon that no
geological survey wlll be made
d the cliff overlooking the post
office at this time at government expense. Whether such a
survey is made will depend
upon LeMieux' report.
Two Ohio University geology
professors meanwhile have
indicated they feel there wlll be
additional falls of rocks behind
the post office due to natural

erosion. They have indicated
they may do a survey or the
area .

Meantime, Pomeroy postal
workers were keeping up with
the Christmas rush mail at their
makeshift work quarters set up
partially in the basement after
the rock fall Friday morning.
Soulsby said that the mail
~ration may be moved upstairs where it is normally
conducted, ''within a few days."
The basic problem following
the fall or the rocks was the lack
of heat due to the large section
of the building being knocked
out by the boulders. This area
has been sealed off and the
remainder of the building can
I now be heated.

By United Press lntemaUonal
COLUMBUS- HOUSE MINORITY LEADER A. G. Laoclone, [).Bellaire, today told Gov. John J. Gilligan he wished to
remove his name from consideration for the vacancy on the Ohio
&amp;lpreme Court created by the appointment or Robert Duncan to
the U. S. Military Court of Appeals.
Lanclone expressed his gratitude for being considered in a
letter to the Governor.

BRING THE CHILDREN TO SEE.SANTA CLAUS TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY
AND THURSDAY, 2 TO 3 P.M. AT THE TOY STORE IN THE MIDDLE
BLOCK.
·

CLEVELAND - CLEVElAND INDIANS owner Vernon
stouffer said today he had rejected an offer by a group of local
businessmen to purchase the team because they offered a
''ridiculous price" and said he would continue with his plan to
play some games In New Orleans or he may even sell the tea;'" to
Washington interests, the Cleveland Press reported.
The local group was headed by former Indians third baseman
AI Rosen who was surprised by the tone of Stouffer's rejection and
said "I'm going to give it a no comment for tbe moment."
EGYPTIAN AUTHORITIES HAVE STARTED evacuating
women residents from cities along the &amp;lez canal in case of
renewed hostilltlea In the Middle East, officials said in Cairo
today.
'
A spokesman said women, except in essential services such
88 nursing, were being evacuated from Port Said, Ismallia and
&amp;lez City and from the small townships on the western coast of
the GuU of &amp;lez.
MOSCOW- THE SOVIET NEWS AGENCY TASS said today
that Ruuia's Mars 3effectively soft-landed a scientific device by
parachute on Mars five days ago.
•
It added that the apparatus was relaying data to earth via
Mllrs 3. The device was the second man-made object to land on
Mars.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

UNl'J'ED 'NATIONS -111E GENERAL ASSEMBLY today
will take up the isaue of the lndo-Pakiitani War, which for the past
thfee days h8ll been the subject of
diacuasion in the Security
(Continued on .PICe 10)

ruwe

-

ON THE SPOT!
The Rev. Charles Simons,
pastor of the Middleport First
Baptist Church, will be
moving through Middleport
stores from 2 to 4 p.m.
Saturday to record on the spot
interviews on the question,
"What does Christmas mean
to yo~t"?
At the same time, an interview will be held with
"Santa" for the church radio
program,
"Lights for
Christ", to be broadcast on
WMPO, Sunday, at 7:45a.m.
The program will also IJiclude
Christmas music and a
message by the Rev. Mr.
Simons. On Sunday, Dec. 19,
at 7:45 a.m., the Rev. and
Mrs. Simons and their two
children, Carol, 4, and
Wesley, 9, will all be on the
program to discuss Christmas and the birth of Jesus.

t

1

Any of the sales girls
will gladly assist you .

TEN CENTS.

am er

r---------------------------,
I
7\.T
•
B
.
l.f.
1
11ews••• zn ne1 s :
I

Be sure to see all the
other wonderful gift
items . lingerie
department · slips ·
panties · peignoir sets ·
bras · girdles · paiamas.

questioned about the size of the
farm where the landflll might
be located. Some from flie
delegation said the're would ~
60 acres at tops which could be
used· for the landfill and thiit
amount of groWJd would be
exh"usted in no time. However,
Commissioner 0tlfS pointed ciut
L'Ja t the board has been notlfiiid
that a coWJty the size of Metts
would need to use only two
acres a year.
Several delegation membets
suggested the use of gravel pita
(Continued .oR )lage 10) .·

You Know

John D. Rockefeller Jr.
bought for $6.5 million a rundown area or slaughterhouses
and dilapidated wharves on
Manhattan's East Side and
donated it as the present site of ·
the United Nations.

ployes were required to provide
unemployment insurance.

The new measure, however,
requires all firms with one or
more employes to provide
WJemployment insurance.
In addition, non-profit
organiu.Uons, exempt under
the existing law, wlll be
required to provide unemployment insurance for their
employes.
State employes will be
au tomatically covered by
unemployment compensation.
The new law permits other
political subdivisions to elect
whether or not they want their
employes covered by unemployment compensation . That
decision must be made by
February 1; Administrator
Garnes said.
It was because of the recently
enacted law that new
regulations covering the
operation of the law were
proposed . The in!ormal
hearing, the OBES Ad·
ministralor said, was being
conduc ted to help advise. the
public· on th~ proposed changes.

•

I um

an
•

Will be Aired Dec. 17

"

WQODEN TABLE &amp; CHAIR SET

PT. PLEASANT - Uncle
Willie. star of the show WJder
that name on WCHS-TV, will be
on stage at Heck's store here
Friday, Dec. 10, from 5 to 6 p.
m. highlighting a "ThreeMmute Toy Spree" for kiddies
accompanied by their parents.
Postal cards received from
the store after registering must
be brought to the store Friday.
The drawmg is Wednesday.
The spree IS open to chtldren 5
to l2 years of age only. The
wmner 18 limited to one 3minute shopping spree (all the
toys he can load in a shoppmg
basket ). There is noUting to
buy ; the winner does not have to
be present.

joy.''

Tammy

Amendments to Law

REG 19 95

I

Uncle Willie
Of TV Comes
For Kiddies

SEOUL (UPI)- President
Park Chung-hee declared a
state of emergency today
because or what he termed 8
grave threat from North
Korea and the admission of
China to the United Nations.
He told South Koreans the
price of defending freedom
may include forsaking "some
of the freedoms we now en·

Douhl~ Trouble for Couple

••y \lr

I . ... '

Billingham, outfielder Ceasar
Geronimo and minor league
outfielder Ed Armbrister.
Friday, righthanded reliever
Wayne Granger was sent to
Minnesota for Jift-hander Tom
Hall .
Hall, a thin lefty, was 4-7 in
1971 with a 3.32 ERA. Granger
appeared in 70 games witl! the
Reds JX&gt;Sting a 7-6 record and
3.33 ERA.

RACINE - The honor roll of
Ute Southern Junior High School
for the second six weeks
MASON - It was double
grading period has been an- trouble Fnday for the Darwyn
nounced by Prmcipal Jennings
Enevoldsen family of Letart, W.
Beegle.
Va.
Names to the roll were, Grade
Seven - Patricia Autherson, About 6:10 a.m. Darwyn
Bobbie Chapman, ~d Eric Enevoldsen 's father, Ernest,
Dunmng (~II As ); Juh Gooch, died in a hospital at Rapid City,
Alisa Harns, Steve Hendncks S D At 7 a m the two story
ho;.,~
of Mrs .
(A), Carl Johnston, Debbie f;a~e
Norris, Lee Smith,. Tim L, Enevoldsen's parents, Mr . and
Smith, Timothy SrmUt, Tracl Mrs.
Henry
Kettlewell
Weese, Kevm Willford (A ), Sch "d b
d th
d
Robert Wilson, Scott Wolfe (A).
nei er, urne to . e groun
B"ll B h at New Concord, Oh10.
. ht
Grad e EIg I
us ,
. d"
db M
The fire, tscovere y rs.
Kel.th c·rrc1e, Pau 1 Cro ss ' Mally Sch
.d
U ta ted
Fisher, Denise Hendrix, Kosle . nel er, apparen y s r
. g, Chery1 m the basement. Renters upHyse 11 , lrene Knightm
Larkins, Steve Nease, Sandra
Norris, eorena Rhodes, Becky
Sayre.

HAM il ION

l

.::~::::-:.-:::;:=:::::?:.*!!~"*-"»":-~.

The twirling year ol 1971 is
about over and Ute little girl of
this area who has accomplished
the most in "National Baton
Twirling Association" is seven·
year-old Tammy Eichinger,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Eichinger. Her teacher, Miss
Gloria Buck, reviewed Tam·
my's year as follows:
"She does not coWJt the
number of trophies as being as
important as the quality of the
competition in which she has
won them.
"Tammy has won over 76
trophies, over two-thirds of
which are for first place, and
she was the first twirler or the
area to go into advanced
twirling in NBTA.
"She was the only twirler
from this area to enter and win
in the official NBTA "Miss
Majorette of Ohio" pageant
held in Lancaster by Dick
Picket. She won first place in
fancy strut and fourth in
twirling and thus was chosen
second rWJnerup to "Little Miss
Majorette of Ohio" (this was
listed in Drum Major Magazine,
the only girl of the area listed) .
"Tammy was the only one
from th1s area to enter the official NBTA Ohio State
championship and won the
fourth place trophy in twirling
and fifth in fancy strut.
"Sbe was the only twirler of
the area to enter and win at the
Ohio State " Fair " championship and won second place
solo twirling .
"NBTA has only one official
Ohio State Championship (a
three-day event) and one Miss
Majorette of Ohio Pageant a
year and both of these events
ar~ held in the central part or
OhiO.
"Tammy has been a show
twirler since age five, having
performed in three Big Bend
Minstrel Assoc. shows, 19697()-71. She is a member of the
Wee Glo..,ttes, a member of her
church choir , an "A" student
and swims, having taken mstruction at Middleport pool."
Tammy has taken almost
three years of baton lw1r1Ing
and one year of tap and ballet.
Mi~ Buck is a former ,"Miss
MaJorette of the North USA
1970 chosen by Don Sartel and
his staff, editor and publisher of
"Who's Who in Baton" an~
" Drum 1\1ejor Magazine_.
Gloru• was also a former Miss
' South~rn Ohio of the Miss
Amenca pageant.
Most NBTA contests have

Year .for

SHOPPING DAYS
TO CHRISTMAS
READ OUR ADS

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMIITED - RlU! Stump,
Cheshire;
Mary Bowen,
Pomeroy; Clarence Hayman,
Racine; Monty Wolfe, Minersville; James Johnson, Mason;
John Hanning, Athens; Gale
Cain, Athens.
DISCHARGED - Mary
Gilmore, Harry Wehrung,
Charles Handley.
LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in Pomeroy
at II a.m. Tuesday was 58
degreed with light rain falling.

yet to be named, E. F. Robin·
son, and Dick Follrod.
Chamber members also
discussed the present situation
at the Pomeroy PoSt Office. It
was suggested that Kerr meet
with Jim Soulsby, Pomeroy
Post Master, and offer any
assistance the chamber could
give.
Grueser suggested that some
of the huge rock that fell could
be placed under the upper
parking lot wall. Grueser explained that the rock had to be
moved and the parking area
was greatly in need of rock
support. Kerr will talk the
matter over with Soulsby.
Blakeslee observed that a
letter be directed to Max
Farley, DivisiOn 10 Engineer of
the Ohio Highway Depariment,
Marietta, in regard to a highway from the new mine site at
Salem Center to the SR 7
Bypass. Blakeslee agreed to
prepare the letter.
•. _ -· .. ..
- Attending tile noon meeffng
NEW MEMBERS OF THE SOUTHERN High School Tri-M Club, national Dlllllc honor
were Kerr, Crow, Grueser,
society,
installed Monday night during a candlelight service were, first row, 1-r, Nancy Onrs,
Blakeslee, Carson Crow, N. W.
Teresa Gooch, Connie Warner,and Lee Ann Nease; second row, Barbara Fisher, Jeane Sloter,
Compton, Bob Jacobs, Reed,
Jack Carsey, Richard Cham- Cindy Gooch, and Beverly Hart; third row, Roma Nease, JiU Warner and Janie Rees; fourth
row, Nick !hie, Ray Frank and Bob Cummins, and back row, Rodney Neigler and Ed Cross.
hers, Dennis Keney, Wendell
(See Page 10, picture of officers)
Hoover and Cassell.
-~~~

f:;;,;-e·,:,:,,e,,,,,,,,,,,,Car,,,,,,,,,,,,
,,, ,,, ,,s,,,,ll

Licavoli

Paroled
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Prohibition-era mobster
Thomas "Vonnie" Ucavoli, 67,
former head of the ToledoDetroit based "Purple Gang"
was granted a parole today. He
will live with his wife in
suburban Gahanna and deal in
sU!mp collecting.
The Ohio Adult Parole
Authority said Licavoli's age
and health were the determining factors for granting the
parole to the convicted killer
who had served 37 years of a life
sentence.
"His advanced age or 67
suggests that Licavoli could
become physically or mentally
dependent al any time," said
Parole Board Chairman Joseph
Palmer. "Further confinement
could mean a further subsU!ntial burden of costly care
for an aged person by the state
of Ohio." Licavoli had
previously suffered a heart
attack and eye trouble.
Licavoli was an avid sU!mp
collectQr while In prison and
will continue working along
those lines whell released, said
Palmer.
"He will be a dealer in
stamps," said Paimer.

~~

ID
~'

run aged

voted to have the siren on
Breezy Jieights rebuilt by
Pomeroy Electric Service at .a
cost of $500. It was said a new
siren would cost close to $1,000.
Council discussed briefly the
cliff behind the Pomeroy Post
Office, from which boulders fell
last week, wrecking the post
office. It was the opinion that
more rocks "could fall
anytime."
It was alsQ reported that the
main cable for Cable TV has
been installed, and IS homes are
connected.
Council agreed to purchase a
new police uniform hr meter
patrolman Ronnie Anderson
who hRs worked tllree of his six

months probation. At the end of
the six month period Anderson
will be hired on a permanent
basis.
Jim Mees reported he
had been informed by C. E.
Blakeslee that a new road will
be built that will connect with
Ute present Highland Church
Road which joins the new SR 7
bypass at a cost or $500,000.
Meeting with council were
Mr . and Mrs. William Morgan
of Columbia Township who
alleged a fire alarm four weeks
ago called to the Pomeroy Fire
Department'was not answered.
Mrs. Morgan sUited that a
call was made to the Pomeroy
.
Fke Department informtng the

~l
@.

:l:
~l
~

NEW DELHI (UP!) - The
Indian Army's Eastern Command announced today it had
captured the big PakisU!ni base
of Jessore in East Pakistan
aft.e~ heavy fighting. India and
PakisU!n also were reported
locked in a massive tank battle
in Kashmir.
.
A command spokesman sa1d
the Pakistani soldiers fled the
base into Jessore City where
they entrenched themselves
against advancing Indian
troops. The garrison, which at
one time harbored as many as
:0:%1&amp;18S&gt;.««~:;;::w~:::~~:,:,:,

» Three cars had medium
damages and one driver,
Clinton Pierce was arrested on
a driving while intoxicated
charge as the result of an accidentat4:34p.m.onEastMain
st. Monday.
Pomeroy Police said a car
driven by Clinton Pierce, 54,
Syracuse, struck the rear of a
car driven by Fred Hlll 25
Gallipolis, which in turn sb-uck
a car in front of it driven by
Paul Werner, 52, of Pomeroy.
The Hill and Werner vehicles
EXTENDED WEATHER
were stopped in the Jane of
Ohio Extended Outlook traffic at the time. Werner Thursday througb Saturday:
complained of a neck injury.
A Utile colder Thursday
and
Friday,
warmer
Saturday with a chance of
MORE FOOTBALL
some light rain. High Thurs·
An alumni football game day and Friday norlb portion
between Eastern and Southern in the low to mid 30s; south
High Schools will be played portion in the low to mid 40s.
SWlday at 2 p.m. at Southern Saturday warming up to the
sU!diurn in Racine. Admission mid to upper 40s over ·the
for adults is $1, students 50 entire state. Lows during the
cents.
period ranging from the mid
20s to the mid 30s.
%~"«.~ ;~...tLUJU •• UJYCLLhl!l
BROTHERS OMITTED
The list of survivors of Harry
INVITES NIXON
Bailey, who died Monday, did
WASHINGTON (UPI)
not include two brothers, Harry
Nixon has been inPresident
Lee Bailey, Pomeroy, and Rex
vited to vtsit Pakistan on his
Bailey, Chesler.
way to Peking in February.

Pomeroy Meters Freed 1 Week
BY KATIE CROW
Pomeroy Council Monday
night voted 4-2 to free parking In
the village one week before
Christmas, beginning Dec. 20.
Voting for free meters were
Lucien Poulin, Elma Russell,
Jim Mees and Ralph Werry.
Opposed were Franklin Rizer
and Don Collins.
Mayor Charles Legar said he
has been notified by the
Economic Development Administration (EDA) that the
application made by Pomeroy
for financial assistance on the
new proposed water system had ·
been received and is under
teview.
Council in otlier . business

Jes sore Taken

dispatcher that a house was on
fire and two people were
believed to be in the home.
Columbia Township has a
contract with Pomeroy Village
for fire ;p~otection .
Following a long discussion, it
was brought out that due to a
lack of communication and
instructions the incident did
occur.
It was brought out that had
the firemen went on the call
they would not have been able to
save the home. However, Mr.
Morgan noted that had there
been a high wind a larger and
more damaging fire could have
(Continued on page 10)

5,000 troops, is about three
miles from the city.
Jessore .was a ma.lor ~bstacle
to the Indian Army s drive into
East Pakistan and its avowed
aim of _capturing the capital of
Dacca m support of the Bangia
Desh r.ebel go~~rnment it has
recognued ofhc1ally. Palds~
Radio reported an Indl~D
napalm bomb attack on ~
Dacca. Airport today.
:.
Pakistan acknowledged 1)8
garrison. at Jessore - ll)e
largest smgle gamson In Ea.s!
Pakistan - had been forced to
give g r~Wldd,thebut sp?ktaesmel
of w" lnt
Ra~a pm I,
cap!
ell
Pakistan, reported new suece~s in Kashmir. India
m1tted some losses in th.e
Champ sector o~ extreme southeastern Kashmir.

1

I

I'

*

Roundtable Set
The Meigs-Gallia-Mason
Scout Roundtable will be beld
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the
American Legion hall on South
Fourth Ave., Middleport. All
cub and boy scout leaders,
commissioners and district
corrunitteemen are asked to be
present. Emphasis wlll be on
program information for
January. The Middleport Cub
Scout Pack and Boy Scout
Troop 245 wlll host the meeting.

Bankwoman is Honored
Recognition of Mrs. Rose
Reynolds, concluding 50 years
of service to the Citizens
National Bank, highlighted the
annual Christmas party of the
bank officers, employes and
directors Saturday night at the
bank.
Mrs. Reynolds who will retire
as an officer of the bank Jan. I,
was presented a cash gift.
Expressions of appreciation
were sincere and numerous for
her many years of service and
the contributions she has made
to the welfare of the bank. She
will continue as a director.
A report given by Paul Smart,
president, indicated that 1971
will prove to haVe been the besl

year in the history of the bank In
growth and earnings.
The evening was spent in the
distribution of gifts and playing
games.
A!tending were Mr. and Mn.
Rodney Downing, Mr. and Mn.
Paul S. Smart, Mr. and Mn.
Harold E. Hubbard, Mr. and
Mrs. Edgar Reynolda, Mr. and
Mrs. Bernard V. Fultz, Geile '
Grate, Mr. and Mn. Ednnl
Durst, ~. and Mn. Kennetli -1'•
McElhinny, Mr. and Mn..
Gerald Anthony, Mr. and M....
'J:ony Fowler, Mr. and Mrt.

WUUam Davlll, Mar, HlndJ'.
Mr. and Mn. Dale M. DI"C;
and Mr. and Mn. K""'eell
Wllc011.

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