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J '

'

•·. , •

The American Farm~r in 1972:
A Dwindling Troubled Breed
By JESSE BOGUE
United Press Iolernatlonal
In 1870, Ebner Zeis' grandfather loaded
his household goods into a wagon and left
Ne1v York state for the west, to the threeyear-old state ol Nebraska .
It was not a unique event. By the
thOU!allds, others were doing the same or
already had headed for those rich prairies
beyond the Mississippi and the Missouri.
Now, by the millions, their descendants
~\ave left the soil, and gone back to the
cities and towns.
But Ebner Zeis still is on a Nebraska
!ann, living in the farmhouse where he
wu born, working 600 acres of levellapd
northeast of the town of Valley, 18 miles
west of the bustling city of Omaha where
other descendants of the covered wagon

I

© 1971 by IUA, 1"·•

voyagers now live the urban life.
. A. Deellnhlg Breed
Zels, a hard-working and thoughtful
man, represents a. declining breed-a
fanner who has stayed on the land. He
plans to continue his life there.
The shrinkage of the United States fann
population is shown by government figures
for the post-World War II years.
In 1949, an estimated 26 million persons
were on farms, representing 17.5 per cent
of the total United States population at that
time. In 1959, it was down to 16.6 million,
representing 9.4 per cent of the total, or a
little more than half of what had been the
proportion 10 years earlier. By 1969, it was
10.3 million, 5.1 pet. of the total; and
the estimated population for 1970 wu 9.7
million, or 4. 7 per cent.

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

:\

'

•

Nixon Certairi
en1ng
China Talks Finest Act
Highway

Found Devaluation of

-""'

Deaths

U.S. Dollar Toughest
MISS AMERICA, Ulurie Lea Schaefer, who began her climb to international fame as Miss
Southern Ohio in 1968at Pomeroy, looks on as Gov. Gilligan (left ) and North American Rockwell President Robert Anderson (right) discuss the beneflts of doing business in Ohio. Miss
Schaefer has joined Ohio's development team on several ocCBBions to help promote the
ooainess opporlunities which exist in the state. The governor is holding an Ohi&lt;rmade
product, Moon Oleeze, produced by Fisher Cheese Co., Wapakoneta, home of Neil Armstrong,
first man on the moon.

-..--

lllttl _ _ _ _

LIKE '10

THAR'S &amp;I
OF 'EM,AL~
"ROUND US!! EACH ONE WIF
SHARP LI'L TEETf-1-

!;AID. PANTLESS," f1E
WHO'S SCRATCH Il-l'
HAIN'T P\JNCHIN'.'r'
THANKS A LOT-

f

-'

~~~~-~~·-·
• •
•--• •-••••

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. . . . . . .. . . . ..... . . . . . . .. .~
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o o oo&lt;oo~ooooo&lt;o~o*

I N~ws. . •in Briefs I
By United Press International

~R·R·R! ,,

ffiA~'f'~NOT

OUT OF THE

wooo5 'le:r..

WITH ON8
L.E'6 IN A
!E:AR TRAP!

51...AZE5r
WHAT A ME?7!

CAt.J'T VEL.!. FOR
HEL.P•• OR THAr
CONNIVI~G FE:MAL.S
AND HSF:. FATHE:R

by Crooks &amp; Lawrence
OH,OH; WHAT':7 THAI I HSAR~ ...
50ME ANIMAL. CREI:Pir-16 LJP ~

MA'{ 55 AFTE:R
ME: A6AIIJ WIT"'
50TH BARRE:l.S&gt;
II

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5URE. I BETCHA!,,
GO L.OOK AT THE:'
TI&lt;'AP.l;'J&lt;'E~CH'il

N · G£:6 WHIZ, EA~Y! ... Mci&lt;E:E:

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c ~AID
'IOU ViER!= 1"-' IMP 0/JOR.
WITH.J..ORD PERTWI:IS .AI\IP HI?

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DAU6HTER-

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IDI CUI.OU!!!&gt;!

THI:&gt; 17

Tree Lights

Blamed for

WASHINGTON -ON NEW YEAR'S DAY, FBI Director J.
Edgar Hoover will celebrate his 77th birthday. He describes his
health as "excellent" and says he never has considered stepping
down.
"I have never considered stepping down from my position in
the FBI u long u I can be of service to my country and have the
health, vigor and enthusiasm to perform my responsibilities in
the manner my superiors and the public have a right to expect,"
Hoover said. Hoover made the comment in answer to written
questions submitted him by UP!.

CAPTAIN EASY

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992·2156

MONDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1971

Time's Man of the Year

HAS 'IO'INER. SEEN

A H()SQUITO? -

In Fresno, California, in the land from
which much of the United States gets its
fruits and other land products, Vernon
Wynn is manager of the Production Credit
Assoclatioo, source of farm loans. He said
the farmer could not have witmtood inDation had he not increased efficiency and those who could not make !he grade
are mostly gone.
Wynn said the average loan made by
PCA was $20,000 in 1961, and has jumped to
about $75,000 today. Farmers are having a
tough time meeting expenses from their
own resources, he said, and are borrowing
for longer periods of time.
In some cases, he hu told a farmer \o
find an "outside" job, or even to have his
wife get a job in order to make enough
money to live upon.

Devoted To Tlte Interestl Of The Meigs-Mason Area

-THE'I WON'T BITE ~017'1'
THE'I'5 50 SMALL!! AN' ~.-"\ UNLE.SS Tf.\E'I'~ FLAVORED
THE'I'S SO FlloaiCI&lt;'I'··
WIF SWEET PATOOTIE POLLEN-

5E.E.N A
MOSQUITO-BUT

TH' "SAVE. NOW,
PM LATER''
PLAN-

want to stay on the farm.
"We're still waiting for things to get
better. Ten years ago, I would have
thought by now we would not have any
financial problems -and we shouldn't, but
we do.
·
"I keep doing more very year to try and
expand - like I want to put 100 more acres,
in crops and increase my feeding
operation. Yet, I'm afraid of the prices.
"I don't think the government has solved
anything since it began creating
agricultural programs," Zeis continued,
"But I don't think now it;.could leave
suddenly. I wouldn 'I prefer any more
permanent help from the government; but
they got us into it, they should get us out ...
pricing and tax relief are things the
government could do pretty easily."

Cloudy today, tonight and
Tuesday, chance of light rain
or drizzle today, rain changing
.. w showers tonight and
ruesday. Low tonight in the
low 40s to low 50s south. High
Tuesday in the 60s south,
turning cooler in the afternoon .

Tht: Worst is
Yet to Come

ME.!! !:V'R'IOOD'i'S

tax relief are things the government can do pretty easily. ... '
. . . . .·. .... ........ ...... ................. .;.,.....:·.·:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·.·. ·............··.·. .

Many English graves are
adorned with hatchments,
diamond-shaped wooden or
canvas plaques which by their
coloration and design told of
the
deceased's
accomplishments, sex and
marital status

00 WONDER. NOe&lt;ODY I!YI.R DID

AH'LL HANDLE

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

Weather

•

YORE CASE O!J

•

. ..

'The government got us into this, it can get us 'out; pricing and

Skyrockellug Costs
ment for under $1,000," he said. "The
Zeis, helped out by his wife, Irene, and .combine I bought this fall cost $20,000; l
sons Mike, 14, and David, 12, grows about pay all that and use it one month out of the
330 acres of corn, some hay, and feeds year. Then I have to trade a piece or two
about 300 head of cattle a year. He is a each year just to keep current."
Zeis estimates he has $50,000 tied up in
fann bureau'member, and president of the
machinery, and another $25,000 in storage
Douglas Couilty Extension Board.
To Zeis, price fluctuations are part of the buildings and bins. "It's just as if someone
overall picture that has seen the small in the city would try to get along with what
fanner leave his land to a larger en- they made 30 years ago," he said.
Cost factors are ahnost as bad in the
terprise.
Asked to pinpoint the main problem livestock area, he continued. Buy beef for
facing farmers, he gave an answer which feeding at $36.50 per hundred pounds; add
might be typical of any small buslhess- to that the costs of feed; a death loss of lto
man: Crop and livestock prices might be 2 per cent; .7 to 7% per cent interest on
satisfactory if it were not for the money borrowed to buy ·livestock;
skyrocketing costs of equipment and machinery prices; fence and building
upkeep, veterinary costs ...
maintenance.
"You can't get a piece of small equip·
"We're not crybabies," Zeis said. "I just

1

PRIC!'.I NO oeJ!'.CK,
PANTLE.SS P!'.RKINS!." oJI'.ST
SAvE MAH &gt;JOSE. FUM
61TTIN' FLATTENED BY
ROTTEN RALPH IE.,
TOMORR'I-

·..

• •·.·.·.••·••·.·.·,•,-.-,· , •,·,·.·.·.·.·-············· .·.• ·.·.·.·.-.·.-.·.·.·.·.. ·• .u·.. •·• •

Now You Know

VOL. XXIV NO. 179

®

·.·.-. _.-

$2,000 Loss

Damage lo the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Jerry Grueser,
Laurel St., Pomeroy, were
estimated at $2,000 as a result
of fire Saturday night.
WASHINGTON- 'DIE U.S. CHAMBER of Commerce's
Pomeroy Fire Chief Henry
chief economist predicts American economic output wlll jump Werry said that the family was
9.5 pet. in 1972 while the inflaUon rate wlll he cut substantiaUy. in Athens on a visit and had left
The opl1mlstic forecast wu made Sunday by Dr. Carl H. the lights burning on their
Madden in a year.end paper. He predicted a "record economic Christmas tree. A defective
advance" next year.
wire apparently started the
"The streugth and breadth of accelerated economic grojVIh fire in the tree. The blaze
will extend to every sector, including consumer buying and spread upstairs between
blslness investment," Madden wrote. "All the economy gathered rafters, causing heavy smoke
!trength, the jobless rates will fall along' with the rate of pMce damage to the contents of the
house .
Increases."
The call was received at 9:35
other business leaders polled by Nation's Business magazine
generally agreed the economy should be on the upswing in 1972 p.m. Saturday. It had not been
bit had difficulty assessing President Nixon's economic policy. determined Monday morning if
the two story frame home or its
WASHINGTON - EARL L. BUTZ, THE NEW agriculture contents were covered by insecretary, has set a colllslon course with Congress by demanding ' surance.
The fire was discovered by a
defeat of a bill to boost wheat and feed grain price supports for
fanners by 25 pet. Butz earlier had merely said he was studying neighbor who turned in the
the legislation for Us posalhle impact, although other ad- alann.
mlnlstration fann off!ctsis had denounced it.
But Ina weekend "Wasblngton Window" interview with UPI,
the secrelary urged the Senate to kill the price support blll, ·
already passed by the House, on grounds it would ''wreck" farm
export prospects and the government's !ann surplus suppOrt
program. Butz also said in the interview that he opposed any
reduction in the currept $55,IJOO.iler-crop ceiling on government
Two cars collided at the
subsidies to blg fanns, although he planned to vigorously enforce
intersection of Bridgeman and
the current limit.
Second Sts. in the vlllage of
Syracuse Friday at 5:20 p.m.,
THE NEW B~GLA DESH GOVERNMENT issued a formal
Marshall Milton Varian
appeal today asking Bengalill not to take revenge against East
reported.
Pakislani collaborators. The request was the first from the new
A car driven by Ronnie M.
government asking Bengalill to stop reprisals against oon- Pickens, 15, Syracuse, collided
Bengalissince the 14-day war between India and Pakistan ended with another driven by
Clarence A. Searls, 54,
Dec. 17.
Cheshire. There were no in·
An Indian official said earller Indian troops would not step
juries. The.r e was minor
Into local affairs and planned no action to try to stop conununal
strife. Ben gall residenla of the People's Republic of Bangla Desh damage to both vehicles.
Pickens was cited to juvenile
- formerly East Pakistan - said West Pakislanl troops and
court
on charges of no
collaborators corrunltted thousands of atrocities In the country
operator's license.
since civil war broke out March 25.
.

Collide at
Comer

McLEAN, VA. - RETIRED GEN. Emmett "Rosie"
O'Dormell Jr., credited with "one of the most distinguished
careers In the history of the U.S. AJr Force, died here SUnday. He
was 65.
·
O'Donnell died of coronary artest at his home In Mclean a
•
(Con~wed on Page 8}

LOCAL TEMPS
.
The temperature in downtown Pomeroy at 11 a.m.
Monday was 57 degrees under
J

t'lnud,v_ lllki~,«.l.

Top 600

NEW YORK (UPI) - President Nixon said Sunday his most
bnportant decision of 1971 was opening cOmmunications with
China, a move he believes will contribute more to world peace
than anything else he has done .
The most difficult domestic decision this Y.ear was to impose
wage-price controls and devalue the dollar, the President said.
Named "Man of the Year" by Time magazine, Nixon's
remarks were made in an interview published by the magazine
Sunday.
"The most important
decision I made this year wu
the decision to open com·
munications with Olina," he
said. "I believe that it will
make a grealer contribution to
the next generation, to peace in
the world, than anything else
we have done.
"It was a mixed bag u far as
publlc reaction was concerned," the President said. "I
knew that it posed many
rcoblems with many of our
friends in the world. But It had
to be done and this country had
to make that move. No other
country could; ironically, the
Soviet Union was unable to."
Discussing his economic
moves on the domestic front,
Nixon said, "It became apparent that if the U.S. was
going to mainlain Its competitive positron in the world, some
very strong medicine had to be
taken by the patient, the U.S.,
and also given to our trading
partners in the world.

"I wsa troubled by It because
I am committed to the free
market. "But I would be much
more troubled If this had been
done by someone else. I don't
believe in controls as an end in
themselves or on a pennanent
basis."
·
Nixon said he believed he has
a greater opportunity than any

Be~Jrd

President in history to help
create a new structure of peace
in the world.

$500 Won

In Pomeroy
Kathleen Hesson, New
Haven, was the grand prize
winner in Pomeroy's annual
merchant holiday promotion
program. She was awarded a
$SOil prize Friday afternoon.
Winners of $5 glft certifi1ates
we':'e Belly Denny, Middleport;
Mary Roush, Pomeroy;
Nondus Hendricks, Racine;
Eliza Powell, Pomeroy Route
4; Fay Gum, Pomeroy, Route
4;
Elizabeth
Ohlinger,
Pomeroy; Eileen Swan,
Syracuse; Mrs. S. F.
Nicholson, Rutland ; Nancy
Bragg, Point Pleasant; Walter
Grinslead, New Haven; Robert
Brown, Pomeroy; Mary
Robinson, Coolville Route 2;
Mary Kauff, Pomeroy; Vernal
Well, Shade; Mrs. Paul
McElroy, Pomeroy; Nancy
Adams, Racine; Mildred
Zirkle, Hartford; Wilma
Davidson, Rutland; Greg
Poston, Worthington; A. Abbott, Pomeroy Route 3; Leon
McKnight, Pomeroy; Berela
Dalley, Pomeroy, and C. R.
Hysell, Middleport.

~.

:

...

'f

Car Destroyed by Fire

Shed in Pulpit

· BROOKTON, Mass. (UPI)-Carolyn
O'Brien was never particularly fond of
her husband's beard. She wasn't
exactly wlld about the way he decided
to shed it either.
"I felt like crawling under the pew,"
she said Sunday alter her lwsband, the
Rev. James O'Brien, produced a pair
of .clippers and an electric razor to
shave the five-month growth during a
sennon from the pulpit of the First
Pal1sh Congregational Church. His
topic wu judging people by appearances.
Mrs. O'Brien said later, however, she
was.pleased with the outcome. ''I think
he looks younger without it."
Her children, Kathryn, 11, and David,
·9, who mu.mured ' \ don't belleve it"
...hi1lll thoir f'o.thoa.r

Unlled Press Jnlernatlonal
The Christmas holiday
traffic death toll passed the 600
mark today, far surpassing
last year's total of 504 and
closing in on the upper end of
the National Safety Council's
estimate for this year's holiday
'
weekend.
Despite an all-out effort by ·
•·
most states to curb this year's
traffic death toll, the death
figure soared. Many states
issued special holiday direcUves to policemen to especially
"concentrate on areu of high
traffic and heavy traffic."
Florida Gov. Reubin Askew
ordered the highway patrol to
MRS. ROGER miL, Racine, gave birth to a six-pound,
"get every available man on
one-l!alf ounce boy Christmas Day in the Holzer Medical
the road ... to keep people from
Center, Gallipolis. The baby arrived at 6:48p.m., and was the
killing themselves."
first of four Christmas Day babies born in HMC Saturday.
The NSC had estimated that
between 520 and 620 persons
would die In traffic accidents
before the 78-hour holiday
period that began at 6 p.m.
A car was destroyed by fire County Sheriff Dept. reported. Thursday local time ended at
and another demolished in a
Saturday at 5 p.m. a car Sunday .midnight.
A United Press International
single car accident over the driven by Claire Emerson
holiday weekend the Meigs Mitchell, 36 1 Pomeroy, Rt. (, count at 9 a.m. EST showed 616
caughtfire moving on township persons died In traffic acroad 41. The 1971 Plymouth cidents during the holiday
Accidents Run
was completely destroyed. period.
A breakdown:
Mitchell escaped without inTraffic
616
To Total of 10
Juries.
Fires
65
According to the activity
Planes
10
Sunday at 9 a.m. on county .
report of the GaUia-Meigs Post road 26, eight tenths of a mile Other
34
State Highwa:r Patrol, 10 southwest of Five Points,
Total
725
traffic accidents were in, Daniel Charles Bissell, 38,
California reported 64 traffic
vestigated over the Christmas Chester, was traveling nor(Continued on Page 8)
holidays in which four persons thwest when his vehicle went
..........-:..·.•,•.-.·.·.· .......... .
were injured. There were no off the highway on the right RC.It!:li.!IHi
fatalities.
PICKUP DAYS
and struck a tree. The driver
The patrol arrested 46 said he fell asleep.
RACINK- There wW be a
persons, issued 60 warnings
trub
pickup In this village
Bissell was taken to VeteranS
and made 15 assists to Memorial Hospital by the
tomorrow, Wedllesday and
motorists. Eleven persons Pomeroy E·R unit where he
on every Tuesday thereafter,
were charged with driving was admitted. No citation was
Mayor Charlu Pyles anwhile under the influence.
nounced today.
issued.

•hovl ..cr ;.., l•f'\nf

of an astonished congregation, later

turned thumbs down on their dad.
saying he looked more ''hip" with the
growth.
For his part, the 37-year-old minister
said his act served the purpose.
"I did it as an objectlesson, but It was
a lot of good fun, too. I asked them if I
were any different going bearded into
the pulpit than coming out clean·

shaven."
The minister said he rec.elved "a lot
of flak" from his congregation when he
appearf\1 with the beard after his vacation last summer.
"I'm just finishing up eight years so
people know me well enough to know
that I'm not a kooky guy," he said, "but
when I appeared with the beard I had
I,..,~ .~

.,i;..,a ,...

f t - - - "' '

Probes Seek Oases
MOSCOW (UPI) -The Soviet
Union's Mars 2 and Mars 3 probes are
looking for "oases" on ihe red planet
that might contain life.
Two scientists said Sunday the
mission of the two unmanned craft
orbiting Mars Is "to study Mars
thoroughly and see .whether there are
what might be called "osaes &lt;111 the
surface --aections more suitable for life
than other."
Writing in Pravda, the Communist
Party newspaper, Prof. Georgi Petrov
and Dr. V. Moroz said. .
"The biosphere, II there is such, must
be concentrated in such oases. They
must be warmer and situated In low
places where there Ia more inOlsture."
Their commentary made clear that a
search for Martlu llffl

.......,....__lha

Soviet Mars program. They defended
the !rOKram against skeptics who
contend Mats Is barren.
"U there is life anywhere else in the
solar system, It is on Mars," they

wrote.
"We know the climate of Mars is
severe, but that Is not enough to force.a
negative reply to the question whether
there Is life on Mars."
The i!Cientlala said "the general
direction of our program Ia to prepare
· for the senllna of autCIIUited biological
labocatarlee to Mar~."
Man 2 and Mara 3_are the vquard
of such pnpm'lltloo, they llllid.
"Ufe fofllll, 11¥1 eapeclallJ the
life fOI'IIll, haYe I 'Vel'J' broad
l .l i m p l e l t

..__ tl

tMn

n

thlnr .,..,.

�'
:...

.,

3-The DaUy Sentlnel,MldcDeport-Plmeroy,O., ~- 27,1971
I

Morris·less Marauders at South Point Tuesday

"

2-Tbe Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pomeroy,O.,Dec. 'll, 1971

·aass A Lunches
To Cost 5c More
RACINE - The Southern
Local School District, which
includes five schools, Racine
Grade, Letart Grade, Syracuse
Grade, Junior High, and the
high school, will continue
serving a Class Ameal as it has
in the past. Included below is
the menu for the next five
weeks which will be served at
all five schools making the
meals more unified, diversified, and better planned to
assure better nutrition .
All five schools in the
Southern Local School District,
as of January 3, 1972, will
charge an additional five cents
for students who pay for their
meal. At present it is 25c per
student and with an additional
five cents it will be 30 cents per
student.
also to 40 c as of Jan. 3. The

manu :
Jan . 3 - Macaroni and
~ heese, celery slick, pears,
Choco lat e oat meal

cook ie.

Jan . 12 ~ Fish sandwich,
buttered
corn,
buttered

potatoes, iello and topping,
milk .

Jan . 13 - Chili, crackers,
peanut butter sandwiches.
fruit , celery stick, milk .

Jan . 14 - Bologna sandwich.

green beans, irult. potato
chips , milk .
Jan .·17 - Hot dog and sauce,

pork and beans. pineapple

cake , carrot, milk .

Jan . 18 - Baked lunch meat,

potatoes , cole slaw , fruiL
bread and butter, milk.

Jan . 19 - Beef stew, cheese,
fruit, hot biscuits and butter,

milk .

Jan. 20 -

Chicken and

noodles, mas hed potatoes,
lettuce salad, fruit, bread and

buller , milk .

Jan . 21 - Sloppy Joe sand-

wich, green beans and corn ,
choco late pudding, cookie,

milk .

Jan . 24 -

Hamburgers,

pickles. polalo chips, buttered

corn, pears, milk .

Jan . 25 - While beans, cole

slaw, corn bread and butter,
cheese. fru i t.
Jan . 26 -

Pork sausage,
kraut, potatoes, fruit, bread

and butter, milk.

Jan. 27 -

Fish sandwich,

bread and buller, milk .
Jan . 4 - Sloppy Joe sand-

peas and carr ots, fruit. cake.

fruit , milk.
Jan . 5 - Ham sala d, green

peanut buffer sa ndwich, fruit
and cook ie, milk.

wich, potatoes. buttered corn,

tiE!ans , car rot stick, apple

crisp, whipped lopping, milk .
Jan . 6 - Whi te beans, corn
bread, cheese stick , cole slaw,
fruit. milk.

Jan . 7 - Meat loaf, mashed

potatoes and gravy, lettuce
salad, fru it, bread and butter,
milk .

Jan . 10 -

Hamburg ers ,

pickles, buttered peas, fruit,
cookies , milk.

Jan . 11- Spaghetli and meal
sauce, vegetable salad, apple
sauce, hot rolls and butter,

milk.

milk .

Jan . 28 -

Jan . 31 -

Ch ili. crackers ,

Veterans Memorial Hospital
FRIDAY ADMISSIONS Vidia Girolami, Pomeroy; Jeff
Morris, Pomeroy; John
Stevens, Vinton ; Carole Roush,
Cheshire;
Eric Knotts,
Nelsonville.
FRIDAY DISCHARGES William Dye, Anna Williams,
Thurman Martin, James
Roush, Ethel Moore.
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
- Homer Goeglein, Pomeroy;
Florence Hennegar; Hartford ;
Ralph Brewer, Portland.
SATURDAY DISCHARGEVidia Girolami.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Louise Myers, Pomeroy ; linda
Stewart, Cheshire; Danny
Bissell, Chester; Daniel Lewis,
Middleport; Lillian Triplett,
Middleport; Albert Frank,
Pomeroy; Ross Kent, Addison;
James Hollon, Minersville ;
Kathy Quivey, Shade; May
Johnson, Pomeroy; Howard
Searles, Pomeroy ; James Ray
Hill, Racine ; Mary Hasbargen,
Cambridge; Pamela Young,
Cheshire.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Cynthia Hazelton, Dewey
Simpson.

New Books At Eddy's
Mr. Eddy has released the
new books below during
December:
Gingrich, Arnold, Nothing
But People.
Furst, Jeffrey, The Return of
Frances Willard.
Tomaino, Sarah F., ~r­
sephone, Bringer of Spring.
Harris, Janet, A Single
Standard.
Manej.li, Mleczyslaw, War of
the Vanquished.
Boyd, Malcolm, You Can't
Kill the Dream.
Weisberger, Bernard A., The
American Heritage History of
the American People.
Harter, Walter L., Your
Career in· Unusual Occupations.
Fisher, Leonard E., The
Shipbuilders . .
Ehrlich, Jacob W., The Lost
Art of Cross Examination.
Levy, Howard, Going to Jail.
Darby, Ray, Conquering the
Deep Sea Frontier.
Eaton,
Theodore
H.,
Evolution.
Guilcher, Jean M., The
Hidden Life of Flowers.
Leen, Nina, The World of
Bats.

First Annual

beans,

mixed

fruit salad, cookie. milk .
Feb. 1- Spaghetti with meal

~~~~

Therapy Given In Decoratzon~

Bere, Rennie Montague,
Antelopes.
B
Elliott, Sarah M., Our Dirty
Holiday decorations were in the demonstrations. The ·
Air.
Cruso, Thalassa, Making made by students of the special children were shown how to :
make doOr decOrations of bell ,
educationcU.Wof~.Thetma
Things Grow OUtdoors.
Schilt, Stephen J., Enamel Campbell during a garden · replicas using styr,ofoam cups. ,
therapy session with members A Christmas bauble was tied to :
Without Heat.
Brouwer, Abde, Creating of the Rutland Friendly a length of yarn and then 1
strung through a bole in the
Gardeners recenUy.
with Flexible Foam.
Mrs . William Willford, bottom of the cup, forming the '
Morton, Brenda, Mascot
gaiden therapy chairman, was ' clapper of the bell. The bell
Toys.
Bernstein, Marlon H., Off. assisted by Mrs. Tom Stewart ; replicas were then guttered
and three were hung together
Loom Weaving.
at varying lel18ths to complete
Woolley, AI E., Creative
an attractive yet simple and ·
Modern Times.
35mm Techniques.
Luckett, Richard, The White inexpensive decorations. Each .
Stevens, Harold, Design In
child made a set to take home.
Generals.
Photo-Collage.
Thisties were sprayed with
Baldwin,
Gordon
C.,
Altman, Richard, The
paint
in colors of red, green, i
Pyramids of the New World.
Making of a Musical.
Davia, Burke, Getting to
Guttman, Allen, The Jewish
Know
Thomas Jefferson 's
Writer in American.
·
Sunday's Flgbt R~ults
Hough, Henry B., Tuesday VIrginia.
United
Pres• lnleroallonal
Yarmollnsky, Avrahm,
will be DHferent.
ZURICH ; Switzerland.
Dostoevsky; Works and Days,
Ttch, Herbert, Himalaya.
(UPI) - Muhammad All, 220,
Biography.
Foater, F., Dahomey.
Cherry
Hill, N. J., knocked out
Woodcock, George, Canada Adams_, Alexander B.,
Juergin Blin, 198, West GerGeronimo, Biography.
and the Canadians.
Bell, Margaret E., To Peril many (7); Mac Foster, 221,
Gllmore, Betty, A Guide to
Fresno, Calif., stopped Bepl
Strait, Biography.
Uvlng in Mexico.
Bickham, Jack M., Jllly's Ros, 2'!1, Italy (8), Rudi LubDelmer, Sefton, The Counbers, 198, The Netherlands,
Canal, Fiction.
terfeit Spy.
Lelberman, Gerald F., The stopped Macan Keila, 192,
Hasler, Joan, The Mak!J\g of
Guinea (2 ).
Russia : from Prehistory to Sea Lepers, Fiction.
1

'f

SADDLE

OXFORDS
Blk. &amp; White and
Brown &amp; Black

'6"

Gordon, of Cleveland; seven

grandchildren; five greatgrandchildren; two brothers,

All This Week At Rutland Furniture Co.

Slated Today

sa uce, celery or car rot, cheese ,
fruit, hot rolls and butter, milk .

END

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

50TH

The Athens County
savings &amp; Loan Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

mber Federal Home Loan
Bank.
Member Federal Savings &amp;
Loan Insurance Corp. All
ccounts Insured

,000.00.

up

1o

They were two of 11 children
of William C. and Lola Mae
Forbush Fielder of Apple
Grove.
The Mason County sheriff's
office identified ihe driver of
the car as Monty Wayne
Pearson, 21, of Henderson. No
charges were filed.
The accident occurred about
15 miles south of Point
Pleasant.
In addition to the parents, the
Fielder brothers are survived
by six other brothers, Edwen
Elwood , James Elmer,
Clarence Ray, Leonard
Eugene and Richard Randall
Fielder, all of Apple G?'ove,
and Charles Edward Fielder of
Glenwood; three sisters, Patty
Ann, Lorraine Mae and Linda
Louise Fielder, all of Apple
Grove, and the maternal
grandmother, Ada Mae For.
bush of Gallipolis Ferry, W.
Va.

20% OFF
ON
LIVING
ROOM

20% OFF
ON

BEDROOM

20%oFF

REAL ESTATE OWNERS
The tax books are now open for the
December or first half collection of,the
1971 Real Estate Taxes. Also for
delinquent tax. Closing date will be
February 3, 1972.
'

'

Howa'd E. Frank
. -·----

-

Include-s Sun da y T•mes -

~

..
..

..

'

Centra I Division

Nova Scot!a 7 Boston 3

W. L. Pet. GB Providen ce 3 Sprtnglield 2
Baltimore
13 22 .371 ... Rochester 3 Hershey 2
Cleveland
ll 23 .361 '12 Tidewater 2 Richmond 0
Atlanta
11 24 .333 1112
Monday's Games
Cincinnati
10 24 .294 1'11
(No
games
scheduled )
Western Conference
Midwest Division

•• Milwaukee

W. L. Pel. GB

HL Standings
By United Press ln1ernational

31 6 .838
Chicago
25 12 .676 5
Phoenix
20 16 .555 10112 New York
Detroit
14 22 .389 16'12 Boston
Montrea l
Pacific Division
W. L. Pel. GB Toronto
LosA119eles 34 J .919 ... Detroit

W. L. T. Pts

24
23
20
16
12

-•
.•

..

HANDCRAFTED

-

"
•

Regular Stock

W. L. T. Pis

Chicago

25

Minnesota

20

Catitornia
Philadelphia
Pittsburgh
St . Louts
Los Angeles
Sunday's

7 3 53
11

11 18
II 17
II 29
9 21
8 26
Results

4

7
5
5
6
t

Vancouver 6 California 2
New York 5 Montreal 1

Boston 3 Toronto I

Detroit 5 Minnesota 1

5 6 54 Buffalo 6 St. Louis 3
6 4 50 Chicago 6 Los Angeles 3
6 7 47 Philadelphia 6 Pittsburgh I
Monday ' s Games.
II 8 40
(No games scheduled)
17 6 30

•

--

West

-4-4

29

27
27
24
I7

FLOOR DISPLAY MODELS ALL REDUCED !
SOME 1WitH SMALL SCRATCHES.
NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED.
I
JUST IN IN TIME FOR SALE A.LARGE SELECTION OF COLOR TV.

.

..-

9

RIDENOUR YEAR-END SALE

--

All
Merchandise
From

21 s 24
21 . 4 22

8

Buffalo
Vancouver

Chiefs Saturday in the longest
game in pro football history
and Baltimore advanced Sunday by overwhelming the
Cleveland Browns 20-3.
·Dallas and San Francisco
wlU battle for the National
Conference crown at Irving,
Tex., next week. The Cowboys
moved · into the conference
finals Saturday by beating the
Minnesota Vikings 20-12 and
San Francisco made it Sunday
with a 24-20 triumph over the
Washington Redskina.
Perhaps the most-talked
about game for some time to
come will be Miami's sixthperiod victory over Kansas
City, drr tded by Garo
Yepremian's 37-yd. field goal
after 32mlnutes and 40 seconds
of play. Yepremlan, a left'looted Cypriot, made his field
goal.. alter the Chiefs' Jan
Stenerud, a Norwegian soccerstyle kicker, had failed to
convert a 29-yarder in the
second period, a 33-yarder with
just 31 seconds left in regulation time and had another
blocked from 42 yards away in
the first overtime period.
Calls Loss Incredible
Yepremian, who was left off
the All-Conference Pro Bowl
team announced Saturday in
favor of Stenerud, said he

CIHIIIOMACOLOK

t-Screen 23" Console

•...
~

SUITES

20%oFF
ON

LIVING ROOM
TABLES
1
I

~

--...
.-

Take
Advantage
Of These ~
Once-A·
Year
Savings

20% Off
ON

DINEnE
SETS
.

-

20% Off

!
1

1

Decorative wrap-around gallery
and ba se rail. .

••

--•..
-..
----..

DINING ROO

..
....

•.•

TliE ·MARIN C4519W
CONTEMPORY STYLE CABINET
Chromacolor Picture Tube with new Glare-Ban Picture
Face

The RIBERA
C4SI8

r:DII DILIVIDY

(

I

Mediterranean . styled compact
console with casters. Flaring full
base.

."
-...."
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RIDENOUR

-

: .............M...............

0

- " - - - - - - -111.1'1'1 A.Uft ft

.
~

~

'

t

A THOUGHT
FOR TODAY •

:
-.. for trouble . Thai Is the it
: best way I know of to find -t1
iC II."
iC
-tc
-Lee Thayer :

-"
--.
.,.
.

RUTLAND FURNIT.URE

it."
Baltimore's defense, led by
Bubba Smith, constantly
harassed Browns' quarterback
Bill Nelsen and Don Not~­
ham, a 17th-round draft choice
plowed for 92 yards and the
game's only two touchdowns in
the Colts' victory.
"Our defense is what did it
for us," said Baltimore coach
Don McCafferty. "They were
fantastic, especially In the first
quarter when' tbe Browns had
us In bad field Position."
Smith blocked two field goal
attempts and the Colts never
were in trouble again. Nottingham, playing In place of the
injured Norm Bulalch, highlighted the running game and
John Unitas' passing complemented the running.
''Nottingham did a great
job," said McCafferty. "It was
just like a homecoming for
him. His folks were used to
watching him play on
television but since they lived
near here, they came up to see
the win and It was great."
Nottingham is from Kent State.
Allen Cites Errors
Nelsen, lntimldsted all day
by the Colts' pass rush, was
Impressed with the Baltimore
defense. "They just knocked
the heck out of me," he said .
"Even when I decided to throw
some screen passes, the Colts
always seemed to be ther•' . I
think the Baltimore defense
was much stronger today than
when we beat them in September. The big difference was
the fact that we didn't score
rig~! away and put the
pressure on them."
San Francisco's defense
stopped Washington on a.
crlilcal fourth-and:One on the
Forty Niners' II and llt a fire
under the offense . Frank
NWtley tackled Larry Brown
for a loss on the play and three

·!t "You are always looking

·SUITES·

NOW!

physical team, the Marauders
will become a scrappy .
pressing team relying on
quickness and outside shooting
rather than board strength and
inside shooting, according to
head mentor Carl Wolfe.
, "We'll have to keep running

dreamed of a kick like tllat plays later John Brodie threw a
ever since he saw Jim 78-yard TO pass to Gene
O'Brien's field goal help Bal- Washington. 1\ pass inUmore to a Super Bowl victory .terception by Rosy Taylor set
up Brodie's two-yard TO toss to
over Dallas last January.
"Before he (O'Brien) kicked Bob Windsor and a fumbled
it, I wished to God I was in his punt in the end zone gave San
position," said Yepremian. "I Francisco another touchdown.
"I was surprised they went
knew that kick would make me
or break me. There was a little for it," said Nunley. "Knowing
pressure on me before the kick. how conservative they are, I
I could hear the crowd. I just really expected them to go for
told everybody to give me the field goal. When they lined
enough time to kick and not to up for the run, I knew they
weren't going up the middle.
let anybody through."
Larry Csonka's 29-yard run You have to give Charlie
to the Chiefs' 36 set up the (Kr ueger) and Earl (Ed·
winning field goal. " It was the wards) credit for that. Even if
first time we used that play all they did, the front line had 'em
day," said Bob Griese, the stopped cold. All I had to do
Miami quarterback . "The was slide outside and in."
George Allen credited mis:
game was so long we'd used all
our other plays so we thought takes with his club's downfall .
we'd try it. Csonka likes to run "We made too many mistakes," said the Redskins'
so we used it."
Hank Stram, the Kansas City coach. "And they didn't make
coach, called the loss, "abso- any. I always maintain that the
lutely unbelievable. It's a club which makes the fewest
shame to fight that hard, play mistakes wins and that's what
that well and not win. ,But you happened."
have to give them credit for
coming back the way they did
and playing so well. It all boils
down to a kick. They made
theirs and we missed olD's. If
you get a shot, you gotta make

t

•,.

ON

break offense and a pressing
defense. The Pointers, hands
down, are one of the tougher
teams the Marauders face all
year.
·The loss of Morris will
revamp the entire Meigs type
of play.lnstead of a slow-down,

.... **************!"'

••

~

on

1
,
I

console.

&lt;

~

Appliances and Televisions are exempt.
Ask about our ipeCial offers
these. Save!

1

1

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

The INNESS
C4517M
Beautifully crafted Early
American Styled lowboy compact

a

:

1

••

••

1

1

--•.
..
---

~

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CHAIRS

Second class postaot paid at

pric~

"
•
••
•
•
•

By JOE CARNICELU
UPI Spor!s Writer
The National Football Lea·
gue's annual demolition derby
-the playoffs -roared
through
the
Christmas
weekend, leaving four teams
by the wayside and allowing
four more to do battle another
day.
The American Conference
title will be decided next week
in Miami with the Dolphins
playing host to the Baltimore
Colts in the third meeting this
season between the Eastern
Conference powers . Miami
earned that right with a
sensational 27-24 sudden death
victory over the Kansas City

••

2157.

Pomeroy , Ohio .
N.ational advertising
reprnentetlve
8ot1inelli ·
Gallagher, Inc .• 12 East 42nd
St. , New York Cltv , New York .
Sub scrip t ion rates : De .
livered • by ca rr i er where
lllailable 50 cents per week ;
Bv Motor Rout &amp; where ca rr ier
service not available : One
. month S1 .75. 8v ma ll In Oh io
and w. va ., One veer $14.00.
' Six months $7 . 25 . Three
mo11ths $4 .50 . Subs cripti on

•

•

ON

Sentinel

-MEIGS COUNTY

action thus far this year, but
has played well when called on .
Werry is just coming off a
shoulder injury from football.
South Point, which won the
first meeting of
the
two teams in November, 81·60, uses · a fast

~

ROBERT HOEFLICH,

'

•

..-..•.
-

It's Clearance Time at Rutland Furniture! It's also
personal property tax time and we are trying to beat
the'Oeadline. So we give you the savings NOW. All our
good famous brands are included. Of course, there are
floor samples, one-of-a-kind pieces, closeouts and odds
&amp; ends, but all will go now at a big, fat 20 per cent off.
Plan to shop early!

SUITES

MIAMI (UPI ) - The director
of the Mahl Shrine North-South
football game says if he has his
way tOnight the two coaches
will shake hands and come out
throwing.
Andy Gustafson prides him·
self on picking quarterbacks for
the game that go high in the
pro draft despite a lack of
publicity during college, and he
says tonight's game is no
exception.
"We get out lists of talent
from friends In the pros and
both quarterbacks Dean Carl·
son (Iowa State) of the North
and Jim Hamilton (Arkansas
State) of th South are high on
!heir lists," he said.
"There's been so many great
BOU'ITIER'S PLANS
football players who didn't get
PARIS (UPI) -European a line of irik in college and their
Welterweight Champion Jean- satisfaction must come from
Claude Bouttier said SWlday he making it in the pros,"
~auld like to have four more Guslafson said. "This gives the
ftghts before his proposed North-South spectators a
m~eting next June w_ith World __ chance to say they saw -80-llnd·
M•ddleweightChampiOn Carlos so play while he was still an
Monzon of Argentina.
unknown."
Bouttier successfully defendHamilton wlll be throwing to
ed his era~~ earlier this month speedy Fred Graves and James
agamst Bntish Commonwealth Quinn of Virginia Tech and
challenger Bunny Sterling.
Carlson \VI)l be tossing to AI
Ranna:h of Wisconsin and Barry
GUESTS AT DINNER
Pearson of Northwestern.
Christmas dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Kelly,
The Daily
Middleport, and children,
D,EVOTED TO THE
Tommy and Janell, were Mr.
INTEREST OF
ME IGS· MASON AREA
and Mrs. Vincent Dabo and
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL ,
Mrs. J. K. Smith.
Exec. Ed.

LEGAL-

-•"
•
-..

·-

$100.000.00 Stock Reduction
Starts Tomorrow

Shrine Tilt
Rated Tossup

Pub I ishe d daily exceP.t
Sa turda y l)y The Ohio Valle'y
Publishing Company . 111
Court St. , Pomeroy, Ohio ,
45769 . Business. Office Phone
992 -2156, Ed itorial Phone 992 .

-

••

..•

North-South

Citr Editor

Seattle
22 17 .564 13
Golden
State
18 18 .500 15'12
By Uni1ed Press International
Ho uston
13 24 .351 21
East
8 28 .222 25'12
W. L. Pel. GB Portland
Sunday's
Results
Kentucky
·26 9 .743 "'
Cleve.land
108
Baltimore
102
VIrginia
22 15 .595 5
Milwaukee II&lt; Atlanta 92
16 19 .457 10
Floridians
Los Angeles 137 Houston 115
17 22 .436 II
Pittsburgh
Chicaao
103 Seatlle 102
14 21 .400 12
New York
·
I
Only
games
-scheduled)
Carolina
13 24 .351 14
Monday 's Games
West
W. L. Pel. GB Golden Stale at Boston
Uton
26 9 .743 ... Portland at Atlanta
Indiana
21 16 ,568 6 Philadelphia at Buffalo
(Only games scheduled)
Memphis
16 19 .437 10
Denver
13 20 .394 12
AHL Standings
Dallas
13 23 .361.· 13 112
By
United
Press ln1ernationa l
Sunday's Results ·
East
Carolina 123 New York 11 7
w. L. T. Pis
Indiana 117 Kentucky Ill
24 5 4 52
Boston
(On ly games scheduled!
15
10 8 JS
Nova
Scotia
Monday's Games
12 I 7 31
Springfield
New York af· Floridians
12 12 7 31.
Springfield
Pittsburgh at Dallas
1
2 18 4 28
Rochester
(On ly games schedu led)
9 18 7 25
Providence
West
NBA Standings
W. L. T. Pis
By United Press International Baltimore
16 13 5 37
Eastirn Conferenc,
Hershey
IS 9 6 36
A11an1ic Divi sion
Cleveland
14
13 6 34
W. L. Pel. GB Cincinnati
II 14 8 30
Boston
24 12 .667 ... Richmond
12 16 6 30
New York
22 13 .629 t'n Tidewater
8 20 3 19
Philadelphia 14 21 .400 9' '
Sunday's
Results
Buflalo
II 21 .344 II
Cincinna ti 7 Cleveland 4
ABA Standings

•

FURNITURE

Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League's leading rebounder
and eighth top scorer.
Starting in place of Morris
Tuesday, and probably for the
remainder of the year, will be
big Mark Werry. Th.e 6-4, 244
lb. junior has seen only limited

Remain in Super Bowl Contention

.
•

0 oDISCOUNT

of star center Jeff Morris for
the remainder df the year.
Morris, 6-3 leading scorer and
rebounder and third team allleague in basketball last year,
suffered a broken collarbone in
an automobile accident last
Friday. Morris was the

Dolphins, Colts, Cowboys, 49'ers

"'

YEAR·

TEMPE, Ariz. (UPI) -If the
regular season is any indica·
mashed potatoes, cole slaw,
tion, Arizona State and Florida
fr ui t, bread and butler, milk .
Feb. 3 - Ham salad sand- State may take a while to get
wich, green beans, fruit, potato their offensive machines
chips, milk.
cranked up in this afternoon's
Feb. 4 - Spanish rice, letfirst Fiesta Bowl.
tuce sa lad, fruit and cook ie,
The sixth ranked Devils,
bread and buller, milk .
playing in their own
stadium as the Western Athleti c Conference
champion , scored only 72
Clyde Lynch, Columbus, and and 75 points in the first two
Morris Lynch, Chicago, Ill., quarters this year, but after
and lour sisters, Mrs . Ada intennission they have explod·
Miller, Mrs. G41dys Walker, ed for 132 and 138 points.
Florida State, while not able
Mrs. Kathryn Fox, and Mrs.
Gwen Keith, all of Cincinnati. to match ASU's scoring mark
She was preceded in death by which was fourth best in the
her husband, Dewey, and her nation, scored only 37 points in
opening periods but did a lot of
parents.
damage
in the second period
The body will be brought to
the Mount Moriah Church with 92 points.
Wednesday morning and will
ASU, whose only loss In a HJ.l
season
was to Oregon State,
lie in state until the time of
services. The Rev . Nyle ranked as the favorite for the I
Borden and the Rev. Henry p.m. contest on the strength of
Key will officiate at the ser- a balanced attack that features
vices and burial will be in the three sophomores in the backRiverview Cemetery.
field -Danny White passing
and Woody Green and Ben
Malone running.
White, in just nine games
because of an early season
injury, passed for 1,393 yards
and 1~ tou~hdowns while Green
added 1,209 yards and Malone
857 on the ground.
Feb. 2 - Steak and gravy,

Brothers Killed
On Christmas Day
- PT . PLEASANT - Two
Mason County brothers were
killed Christmas day when
struck by a car at 12:15 a.m.
while walking along W. Va. 2
near their home at Apple
Grove near here.
Bobby Lee Fielder, 11, was
killed instanUy; his brother,
William S. Fielder, 21, died at
2:30a.m. in Holzer Hospital at
Gallipolis.

•

•

Guthrie Services Wednesday
Funeral services for Mrs.
Goldie Guthrie, 72, who died
Friday in a Cincinnati hospital
following a two-week illness,
will be held at I p.m. Wednesday at the Mount Moriah
Baptist Church, Middleport.
Mrs. Guthrie, fonnerly of
Middleport, has made her
home with her daughter, Mrs.
Ma•ine Burris of Cincinnati
the past five years. She is
survived by her daughter; two
sons, Bill, of Middleport, and

. BY KEITH ·WISECUP
The Meigs MaraU!jer cagers
will play their third of four nonleague games this season
Tuesday night at South Point
against the tough Pointers
without their top scorer and
rebounder.
Meigs has lost the services

\i'j

gold, blue and silver, glittered ~ ·
and then arranged In a. green
container. Mrs. Wlllfordl
reviewed design Information
which the clai!S members had .
studied previously.
Name tags were foil covered .
chocolate candy ihat can be
hung as a Chrl.stmas ornament. ·
Materi•ls for the therapy
project were donated by M.
·and R. Bargalnland, with Mrs.
Harold Wolfe furnlsblrig
refreshments of Christmas
cookies, ice cream, camly and
soft drinks.

Fiesta Bowl

Hot dogs with

sauce, baked

,~~~;rr: iMT$1Miiii:: F_ tW&amp;WtHi%%~~ffi%¥.:~Wmm;::tHmWtMDW:i!fl:EMI¥if!fllii\ll~

·'

I

Zenith Titan eo Handcrafted Chassis for greater dependability
•
Automatic Tint G.uard Control
Super VIdeo Range 82-Channel Tuning System
Chr.omatlc Brain Color Demodulator
AFC- Automattc ·Fine-tuning Control

TV &amp; APPLIANCE
GAS SERVICE

1r****

t

It's Quick! Easy

i

DRIVE-IN
BANKING

t
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il
il
:
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in fresh players throughout the
game to attempt to wear down
the opposition from now on,"
said Wolfe.
The starting lineup for the
Marauders will have Rich
Bailey, 1&gt;-9 junior, and either 59 junior Jimmy Boggs or 1&gt;-9
junior Bill Vaughan at the
guards. Tony Vaughan, 6-2
senior, and Steve Dunfee, 6-0
senior, will be at forwards with
Werry at center.
The other three Marauders,
who undoubtedly will see
plenty of action, are 1&gt;-10 junior
guard Andy Vaughan, 6-0
junior forward Mike Sayre,
and 1&gt;-9 senior guard Rick Ash.
So far , the Mara uders own a
2-4 record overall and 1..1 in
league play. Their two wins
have been a 74-50 decision over
non-league opponent Wahama
and league foe Jackson, 62-58.
Both wins have been on the
rond. The Marauders are 0.3 at
home and 2-1 away from home.
The next game following
Tuesday's battle will be in the
Ironton Ti~ers' "snake pit"
Friday,~.

t

-11
~

Reser ve System

Insurance
Atent
Wirner

7.

Whether · you
auto,
life
homeowners
surance, we will de:!~~~~
a policy .to fit
Individual
requ i rements
Discuss your SPE!Ciflcl
needs with us.

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS
210 E. 2nd
PomerOY.

Davis-Warner Ins.
Phone 992·2966

114 CourUt.

Phone 992-542S

Pomeroy

ALL CHRISTMAS
DECORATIONS

POLISHES

AS

IT Q.EANS

and

GIFT WRAPPING
NYLON SRI STLE

QUICK
SWEEP
BROOM
LIGHT WEIGHT
REGULARS
$1 .29

ge

12PIICE

SAVE ON YOUR
NEXT YEAR NEEDS!
5 DAY SALE!

FULLY LINED

PLASTIC
DRAPES
EXTRA WIDE

S DAY SALEI

!OLIOS

ALL
TOYS

PRINTS

12PRICE
INCLUDES
EVERY TOY

IN
OUR STOCK!
REGULAR $5.94
BULKY ORLON

AND

TRI-COLOR .SHAG
RU
'
DRASTICALLY REDUCED!

Polyester and Acryle Blend. Unique
thrre color combination can be
blended for color schemes In every
room. Machine Washable

REG. $3.87

$266
ENTIRE STOCK!

' 'BEACON''

SCHOOL
SUPPLIES

ELECTRIC
BLANKET
FULL BED Sl ZE

12 PRICE
t.OIDAY THRU FRIDAY!

24'' PORTABLE

Clearing our stock · - •
Regular and X-Lg .
Sl7.t'' . While and Colors. ·

IRONING
BOARD

$ 99

FOR

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OR

TRAVEL

1FARMERS BANK i
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-t1 · POMEROY, OHIO
-II
Member FDIC
-II
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Your

(Upon Request)

.
!

INSURE_.. ._. . .•

rices In Effect Mon.· Dec. 27

WOMENS
•
£ CARDIGANS
SWEATERS
•

Fridays Only
iC
The Drive· In Window
is Open
-tc
9 A. M. to 7 P. M.
iC
(Continuously)
.:
Other Banking Hours 9 to l
and 5 to 7 as usual on iC
Fridays.
II

API118110111D

2-HOUR
CLEANING

..

i

Coach Bill Wickline's little
Marauders won their !tussle
with South Point earlier, 32-20,
and own a 4-2 overall slate
while still in contention for a
league titie with a. 2-2 record .
Starters lor the reserves are
Terry George, Floyd Burney ,
Bill Myers, Bill Chaney, and
Fred Burney. Top alternates
are Steve Price, Mick Ash, and
Ron Couch.

"POl NT PLEASANT
•GALLIPOLIS
•MASON

-II
:
-tl

OPEN EVERY HIGHT

«

·····~·********•
'

.i. '

'"

.

�'
:...

.,

3-The DaUy Sentlnel,MldcDeport-Plmeroy,O., ~- 27,1971
I

Morris·less Marauders at South Point Tuesday

"

2-Tbe Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pomeroy,O.,Dec. 'll, 1971

·aass A Lunches
To Cost 5c More
RACINE - The Southern
Local School District, which
includes five schools, Racine
Grade, Letart Grade, Syracuse
Grade, Junior High, and the
high school, will continue
serving a Class Ameal as it has
in the past. Included below is
the menu for the next five
weeks which will be served at
all five schools making the
meals more unified, diversified, and better planned to
assure better nutrition .
All five schools in the
Southern Local School District,
as of January 3, 1972, will
charge an additional five cents
for students who pay for their
meal. At present it is 25c per
student and with an additional
five cents it will be 30 cents per
student.
also to 40 c as of Jan. 3. The

manu :
Jan . 3 - Macaroni and
~ heese, celery slick, pears,
Choco lat e oat meal

cook ie.

Jan . 12 ~ Fish sandwich,
buttered
corn,
buttered

potatoes, iello and topping,
milk .

Jan . 13 - Chili, crackers,
peanut butter sandwiches.
fruit , celery stick, milk .

Jan . 14 - Bologna sandwich.

green beans, irult. potato
chips , milk .
Jan .·17 - Hot dog and sauce,

pork and beans. pineapple

cake , carrot, milk .

Jan . 18 - Baked lunch meat,

potatoes , cole slaw , fruiL
bread and butter, milk.

Jan . 19 - Beef stew, cheese,
fruit, hot biscuits and butter,

milk .

Jan. 20 -

Chicken and

noodles, mas hed potatoes,
lettuce salad, fruit, bread and

buller , milk .

Jan . 21 - Sloppy Joe sand-

wich, green beans and corn ,
choco late pudding, cookie,

milk .

Jan . 24 -

Hamburgers,

pickles. polalo chips, buttered

corn, pears, milk .

Jan . 25 - While beans, cole

slaw, corn bread and butter,
cheese. fru i t.
Jan . 26 -

Pork sausage,
kraut, potatoes, fruit, bread

and butter, milk.

Jan. 27 -

Fish sandwich,

bread and buller, milk .
Jan . 4 - Sloppy Joe sand-

peas and carr ots, fruit. cake.

fruit , milk.
Jan . 5 - Ham sala d, green

peanut buffer sa ndwich, fruit
and cook ie, milk.

wich, potatoes. buttered corn,

tiE!ans , car rot stick, apple

crisp, whipped lopping, milk .
Jan . 6 - Whi te beans, corn
bread, cheese stick , cole slaw,
fruit. milk.

Jan . 7 - Meat loaf, mashed

potatoes and gravy, lettuce
salad, fru it, bread and butter,
milk .

Jan . 10 -

Hamburg ers ,

pickles, buttered peas, fruit,
cookies , milk.

Jan . 11- Spaghetli and meal
sauce, vegetable salad, apple
sauce, hot rolls and butter,

milk.

milk .

Jan . 28 -

Jan . 31 -

Ch ili. crackers ,

Veterans Memorial Hospital
FRIDAY ADMISSIONS Vidia Girolami, Pomeroy; Jeff
Morris, Pomeroy; John
Stevens, Vinton ; Carole Roush,
Cheshire;
Eric Knotts,
Nelsonville.
FRIDAY DISCHARGES William Dye, Anna Williams,
Thurman Martin, James
Roush, Ethel Moore.
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
- Homer Goeglein, Pomeroy;
Florence Hennegar; Hartford ;
Ralph Brewer, Portland.
SATURDAY DISCHARGEVidia Girolami.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Louise Myers, Pomeroy ; linda
Stewart, Cheshire; Danny
Bissell, Chester; Daniel Lewis,
Middleport; Lillian Triplett,
Middleport; Albert Frank,
Pomeroy; Ross Kent, Addison;
James Hollon, Minersville ;
Kathy Quivey, Shade; May
Johnson, Pomeroy; Howard
Searles, Pomeroy ; James Ray
Hill, Racine ; Mary Hasbargen,
Cambridge; Pamela Young,
Cheshire.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Cynthia Hazelton, Dewey
Simpson.

New Books At Eddy's
Mr. Eddy has released the
new books below during
December:
Gingrich, Arnold, Nothing
But People.
Furst, Jeffrey, The Return of
Frances Willard.
Tomaino, Sarah F., ~r­
sephone, Bringer of Spring.
Harris, Janet, A Single
Standard.
Manej.li, Mleczyslaw, War of
the Vanquished.
Boyd, Malcolm, You Can't
Kill the Dream.
Weisberger, Bernard A., The
American Heritage History of
the American People.
Harter, Walter L., Your
Career in· Unusual Occupations.
Fisher, Leonard E., The
Shipbuilders . .
Ehrlich, Jacob W., The Lost
Art of Cross Examination.
Levy, Howard, Going to Jail.
Darby, Ray, Conquering the
Deep Sea Frontier.
Eaton,
Theodore
H.,
Evolution.
Guilcher, Jean M., The
Hidden Life of Flowers.
Leen, Nina, The World of
Bats.

First Annual

beans,

mixed

fruit salad, cookie. milk .
Feb. 1- Spaghetti with meal

~~~~

Therapy Given In Decoratzon~

Bere, Rennie Montague,
Antelopes.
B
Elliott, Sarah M., Our Dirty
Holiday decorations were in the demonstrations. The ·
Air.
Cruso, Thalassa, Making made by students of the special children were shown how to :
make doOr decOrations of bell ,
educationcU.Wof~.Thetma
Things Grow OUtdoors.
Schilt, Stephen J., Enamel Campbell during a garden · replicas using styr,ofoam cups. ,
therapy session with members A Christmas bauble was tied to :
Without Heat.
Brouwer, Abde, Creating of the Rutland Friendly a length of yarn and then 1
strung through a bole in the
Gardeners recenUy.
with Flexible Foam.
Mrs . William Willford, bottom of the cup, forming the '
Morton, Brenda, Mascot
gaiden therapy chairman, was ' clapper of the bell. The bell
Toys.
Bernstein, Marlon H., Off. assisted by Mrs. Tom Stewart ; replicas were then guttered
and three were hung together
Loom Weaving.
at varying lel18ths to complete
Woolley, AI E., Creative
an attractive yet simple and ·
Modern Times.
35mm Techniques.
Luckett, Richard, The White inexpensive decorations. Each .
Stevens, Harold, Design In
child made a set to take home.
Generals.
Photo-Collage.
Thisties were sprayed with
Baldwin,
Gordon
C.,
Altman, Richard, The
paint
in colors of red, green, i
Pyramids of the New World.
Making of a Musical.
Davia, Burke, Getting to
Guttman, Allen, The Jewish
Know
Thomas Jefferson 's
Writer in American.
·
Sunday's Flgbt R~ults
Hough, Henry B., Tuesday VIrginia.
United
Pres• lnleroallonal
Yarmollnsky, Avrahm,
will be DHferent.
ZURICH ; Switzerland.
Dostoevsky; Works and Days,
Ttch, Herbert, Himalaya.
(UPI) - Muhammad All, 220,
Biography.
Foater, F., Dahomey.
Cherry
Hill, N. J., knocked out
Woodcock, George, Canada Adams_, Alexander B.,
Juergin Blin, 198, West GerGeronimo, Biography.
and the Canadians.
Bell, Margaret E., To Peril many (7); Mac Foster, 221,
Gllmore, Betty, A Guide to
Fresno, Calif., stopped Bepl
Strait, Biography.
Uvlng in Mexico.
Bickham, Jack M., Jllly's Ros, 2'!1, Italy (8), Rudi LubDelmer, Sefton, The Counbers, 198, The Netherlands,
Canal, Fiction.
terfeit Spy.
Lelberman, Gerald F., The stopped Macan Keila, 192,
Hasler, Joan, The Mak!J\g of
Guinea (2 ).
Russia : from Prehistory to Sea Lepers, Fiction.
1

'f

SADDLE

OXFORDS
Blk. &amp; White and
Brown &amp; Black

'6"

Gordon, of Cleveland; seven

grandchildren; five greatgrandchildren; two brothers,

All This Week At Rutland Furniture Co.

Slated Today

sa uce, celery or car rot, cheese ,
fruit, hot rolls and butter, milk .

END

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

50TH

The Athens County
savings &amp; Loan Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

mber Federal Home Loan
Bank.
Member Federal Savings &amp;
Loan Insurance Corp. All
ccounts Insured

,000.00.

up

1o

They were two of 11 children
of William C. and Lola Mae
Forbush Fielder of Apple
Grove.
The Mason County sheriff's
office identified ihe driver of
the car as Monty Wayne
Pearson, 21, of Henderson. No
charges were filed.
The accident occurred about
15 miles south of Point
Pleasant.
In addition to the parents, the
Fielder brothers are survived
by six other brothers, Edwen
Elwood , James Elmer,
Clarence Ray, Leonard
Eugene and Richard Randall
Fielder, all of Apple G?'ove,
and Charles Edward Fielder of
Glenwood; three sisters, Patty
Ann, Lorraine Mae and Linda
Louise Fielder, all of Apple
Grove, and the maternal
grandmother, Ada Mae For.
bush of Gallipolis Ferry, W.
Va.

20% OFF
ON
LIVING
ROOM

20% OFF
ON

BEDROOM

20%oFF

REAL ESTATE OWNERS
The tax books are now open for the
December or first half collection of,the
1971 Real Estate Taxes. Also for
delinquent tax. Closing date will be
February 3, 1972.
'

'

Howa'd E. Frank
. -·----

-

Include-s Sun da y T•mes -

~

..
..

..

'

Centra I Division

Nova Scot!a 7 Boston 3

W. L. Pet. GB Providen ce 3 Sprtnglield 2
Baltimore
13 22 .371 ... Rochester 3 Hershey 2
Cleveland
ll 23 .361 '12 Tidewater 2 Richmond 0
Atlanta
11 24 .333 1112
Monday's Games
Cincinnati
10 24 .294 1'11
(No
games
scheduled )
Western Conference
Midwest Division

•• Milwaukee

W. L. Pel. GB

HL Standings
By United Press ln1ernational

31 6 .838
Chicago
25 12 .676 5
Phoenix
20 16 .555 10112 New York
Detroit
14 22 .389 16'12 Boston
Montrea l
Pacific Division
W. L. Pel. GB Toronto
LosA119eles 34 J .919 ... Detroit

W. L. T. Pts

24
23
20
16
12

-•
.•

..

HANDCRAFTED

-

"
•

Regular Stock

W. L. T. Pis

Chicago

25

Minnesota

20

Catitornia
Philadelphia
Pittsburgh
St . Louts
Los Angeles
Sunday's

7 3 53
11

11 18
II 17
II 29
9 21
8 26
Results

4

7
5
5
6
t

Vancouver 6 California 2
New York 5 Montreal 1

Boston 3 Toronto I

Detroit 5 Minnesota 1

5 6 54 Buffalo 6 St. Louis 3
6 4 50 Chicago 6 Los Angeles 3
6 7 47 Philadelphia 6 Pittsburgh I
Monday ' s Games.
II 8 40
(No games scheduled)
17 6 30

•

--

West

-4-4

29

27
27
24
I7

FLOOR DISPLAY MODELS ALL REDUCED !
SOME 1WitH SMALL SCRATCHES.
NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED.
I
JUST IN IN TIME FOR SALE A.LARGE SELECTION OF COLOR TV.

.

..-

9

RIDENOUR YEAR-END SALE

--

All
Merchandise
From

21 s 24
21 . 4 22

8

Buffalo
Vancouver

Chiefs Saturday in the longest
game in pro football history
and Baltimore advanced Sunday by overwhelming the
Cleveland Browns 20-3.
·Dallas and San Francisco
wlU battle for the National
Conference crown at Irving,
Tex., next week. The Cowboys
moved · into the conference
finals Saturday by beating the
Minnesota Vikings 20-12 and
San Francisco made it Sunday
with a 24-20 triumph over the
Washington Redskina.
Perhaps the most-talked
about game for some time to
come will be Miami's sixthperiod victory over Kansas
City, drr tded by Garo
Yepremian's 37-yd. field goal
after 32mlnutes and 40 seconds
of play. Yepremlan, a left'looted Cypriot, made his field
goal.. alter the Chiefs' Jan
Stenerud, a Norwegian soccerstyle kicker, had failed to
convert a 29-yarder in the
second period, a 33-yarder with
just 31 seconds left in regulation time and had another
blocked from 42 yards away in
the first overtime period.
Calls Loss Incredible
Yepremian, who was left off
the All-Conference Pro Bowl
team announced Saturday in
favor of Stenerud, said he

CIHIIIOMACOLOK

t-Screen 23" Console

•...
~

SUITES

20%oFF
ON

LIVING ROOM
TABLES
1
I

~

--...
.-

Take
Advantage
Of These ~
Once-A·
Year
Savings

20% Off
ON

DINEnE
SETS
.

-

20% Off

!
1

1

Decorative wrap-around gallery
and ba se rail. .

••

--•..
-..
----..

DINING ROO

..
....

•.•

TliE ·MARIN C4519W
CONTEMPORY STYLE CABINET
Chromacolor Picture Tube with new Glare-Ban Picture
Face

The RIBERA
C4SI8

r:DII DILIVIDY

(

I

Mediterranean . styled compact
console with casters. Flaring full
base.

."
-...."
....

RIDENOUR

-

: .............M...............

0

- " - - - - - - -111.1'1'1 A.Uft ft

.
~

~

'

t

A THOUGHT
FOR TODAY •

:
-.. for trouble . Thai Is the it
: best way I know of to find -t1
iC II."
iC
-tc
-Lee Thayer :

-"
--.
.,.
.

RUTLAND FURNIT.URE

it."
Baltimore's defense, led by
Bubba Smith, constantly
harassed Browns' quarterback
Bill Nelsen and Don Not~­
ham, a 17th-round draft choice
plowed for 92 yards and the
game's only two touchdowns in
the Colts' victory.
"Our defense is what did it
for us," said Baltimore coach
Don McCafferty. "They were
fantastic, especially In the first
quarter when' tbe Browns had
us In bad field Position."
Smith blocked two field goal
attempts and the Colts never
were in trouble again. Nottingham, playing In place of the
injured Norm Bulalch, highlighted the running game and
John Unitas' passing complemented the running.
''Nottingham did a great
job," said McCafferty. "It was
just like a homecoming for
him. His folks were used to
watching him play on
television but since they lived
near here, they came up to see
the win and It was great."
Nottingham is from Kent State.
Allen Cites Errors
Nelsen, lntimldsted all day
by the Colts' pass rush, was
Impressed with the Baltimore
defense. "They just knocked
the heck out of me," he said .
"Even when I decided to throw
some screen passes, the Colts
always seemed to be ther•' . I
think the Baltimore defense
was much stronger today than
when we beat them in September. The big difference was
the fact that we didn't score
rig~! away and put the
pressure on them."
San Francisco's defense
stopped Washington on a.
crlilcal fourth-and:One on the
Forty Niners' II and llt a fire
under the offense . Frank
NWtley tackled Larry Brown
for a loss on the play and three

·!t "You are always looking

·SUITES·

NOW!

physical team, the Marauders
will become a scrappy .
pressing team relying on
quickness and outside shooting
rather than board strength and
inside shooting, according to
head mentor Carl Wolfe.
, "We'll have to keep running

dreamed of a kick like tllat plays later John Brodie threw a
ever since he saw Jim 78-yard TO pass to Gene
O'Brien's field goal help Bal- Washington. 1\ pass inUmore to a Super Bowl victory .terception by Rosy Taylor set
up Brodie's two-yard TO toss to
over Dallas last January.
"Before he (O'Brien) kicked Bob Windsor and a fumbled
it, I wished to God I was in his punt in the end zone gave San
position," said Yepremian. "I Francisco another touchdown.
"I was surprised they went
knew that kick would make me
or break me. There was a little for it," said Nunley. "Knowing
pressure on me before the kick. how conservative they are, I
I could hear the crowd. I just really expected them to go for
told everybody to give me the field goal. When they lined
enough time to kick and not to up for the run, I knew they
weren't going up the middle.
let anybody through."
Larry Csonka's 29-yard run You have to give Charlie
to the Chiefs' 36 set up the (Kr ueger) and Earl (Ed·
winning field goal. " It was the wards) credit for that. Even if
first time we used that play all they did, the front line had 'em
day," said Bob Griese, the stopped cold. All I had to do
Miami quarterback . "The was slide outside and in."
George Allen credited mis:
game was so long we'd used all
our other plays so we thought takes with his club's downfall .
we'd try it. Csonka likes to run "We made too many mistakes," said the Redskins'
so we used it."
Hank Stram, the Kansas City coach. "And they didn't make
coach, called the loss, "abso- any. I always maintain that the
lutely unbelievable. It's a club which makes the fewest
shame to fight that hard, play mistakes wins and that's what
that well and not win. ,But you happened."
have to give them credit for
coming back the way they did
and playing so well. It all boils
down to a kick. They made
theirs and we missed olD's. If
you get a shot, you gotta make

t

•,.

ON

break offense and a pressing
defense. The Pointers, hands
down, are one of the tougher
teams the Marauders face all
year.
·The loss of Morris will
revamp the entire Meigs type
of play.lnstead of a slow-down,

.... **************!"'

••

~

on

1
,
I

console.

&lt;

~

Appliances and Televisions are exempt.
Ask about our ipeCial offers
these. Save!

1

1

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

The INNESS
C4517M
Beautifully crafted Early
American Styled lowboy compact

a

:

1

••

••

1

1

--•.
..
---

~

~

CHAIRS

Second class postaot paid at

pric~

"
•
••
•
•
•

By JOE CARNICELU
UPI Spor!s Writer
The National Football Lea·
gue's annual demolition derby
-the playoffs -roared
through
the
Christmas
weekend, leaving four teams
by the wayside and allowing
four more to do battle another
day.
The American Conference
title will be decided next week
in Miami with the Dolphins
playing host to the Baltimore
Colts in the third meeting this
season between the Eastern
Conference powers . Miami
earned that right with a
sensational 27-24 sudden death
victory over the Kansas City

••

2157.

Pomeroy , Ohio .
N.ational advertising
reprnentetlve
8ot1inelli ·
Gallagher, Inc .• 12 East 42nd
St. , New York Cltv , New York .
Sub scrip t ion rates : De .
livered • by ca rr i er where
lllailable 50 cents per week ;
Bv Motor Rout &amp; where ca rr ier
service not available : One
. month S1 .75. 8v ma ll In Oh io
and w. va ., One veer $14.00.
' Six months $7 . 25 . Three
mo11ths $4 .50 . Subs cripti on

•

•

ON

Sentinel

-MEIGS COUNTY

action thus far this year, but
has played well when called on .
Werry is just coming off a
shoulder injury from football.
South Point, which won the
first meeting of
the
two teams in November, 81·60, uses · a fast

~

ROBERT HOEFLICH,

'

•

..-..•.
-

It's Clearance Time at Rutland Furniture! It's also
personal property tax time and we are trying to beat
the'Oeadline. So we give you the savings NOW. All our
good famous brands are included. Of course, there are
floor samples, one-of-a-kind pieces, closeouts and odds
&amp; ends, but all will go now at a big, fat 20 per cent off.
Plan to shop early!

SUITES

MIAMI (UPI ) - The director
of the Mahl Shrine North-South
football game says if he has his
way tOnight the two coaches
will shake hands and come out
throwing.
Andy Gustafson prides him·
self on picking quarterbacks for
the game that go high in the
pro draft despite a lack of
publicity during college, and he
says tonight's game is no
exception.
"We get out lists of talent
from friends In the pros and
both quarterbacks Dean Carl·
son (Iowa State) of the North
and Jim Hamilton (Arkansas
State) of th South are high on
!heir lists," he said.
"There's been so many great
BOU'ITIER'S PLANS
football players who didn't get
PARIS (UPI) -European a line of irik in college and their
Welterweight Champion Jean- satisfaction must come from
Claude Bouttier said SWlday he making it in the pros,"
~auld like to have four more Guslafson said. "This gives the
ftghts before his proposed North-South spectators a
m~eting next June w_ith World __ chance to say they saw -80-llnd·
M•ddleweightChampiOn Carlos so play while he was still an
Monzon of Argentina.
unknown."
Bouttier successfully defendHamilton wlll be throwing to
ed his era~~ earlier this month speedy Fred Graves and James
agamst Bntish Commonwealth Quinn of Virginia Tech and
challenger Bunny Sterling.
Carlson \VI)l be tossing to AI
Ranna:h of Wisconsin and Barry
GUESTS AT DINNER
Pearson of Northwestern.
Christmas dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Kelly,
The Daily
Middleport, and children,
D,EVOTED TO THE
Tommy and Janell, were Mr.
INTEREST OF
ME IGS· MASON AREA
and Mrs. Vincent Dabo and
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL ,
Mrs. J. K. Smith.
Exec. Ed.

LEGAL-

-•"
•
-..

·-

$100.000.00 Stock Reduction
Starts Tomorrow

Shrine Tilt
Rated Tossup

Pub I ishe d daily exceP.t
Sa turda y l)y The Ohio Valle'y
Publishing Company . 111
Court St. , Pomeroy, Ohio ,
45769 . Business. Office Phone
992 -2156, Ed itorial Phone 992 .

-

••

..•

North-South

Citr Editor

Seattle
22 17 .564 13
Golden
State
18 18 .500 15'12
By Uni1ed Press International
Ho uston
13 24 .351 21
East
8 28 .222 25'12
W. L. Pel. GB Portland
Sunday's
Results
Kentucky
·26 9 .743 "'
Cleve.land
108
Baltimore
102
VIrginia
22 15 .595 5
Milwaukee II&lt; Atlanta 92
16 19 .457 10
Floridians
Los Angeles 137 Houston 115
17 22 .436 II
Pittsburgh
Chicaao
103 Seatlle 102
14 21 .400 12
New York
·
I
Only
games
-scheduled)
Carolina
13 24 .351 14
Monday 's Games
West
W. L. Pel. GB Golden Stale at Boston
Uton
26 9 .743 ... Portland at Atlanta
Indiana
21 16 ,568 6 Philadelphia at Buffalo
(Only games scheduled)
Memphis
16 19 .437 10
Denver
13 20 .394 12
AHL Standings
Dallas
13 23 .361.· 13 112
By
United
Press ln1ernationa l
Sunday's Results ·
East
Carolina 123 New York 11 7
w. L. T. Pis
Indiana 117 Kentucky Ill
24 5 4 52
Boston
(On ly games scheduled!
15
10 8 JS
Nova
Scotia
Monday's Games
12 I 7 31
Springfield
New York af· Floridians
12 12 7 31.
Springfield
Pittsburgh at Dallas
1
2 18 4 28
Rochester
(On ly games schedu led)
9 18 7 25
Providence
West
NBA Standings
W. L. T. Pis
By United Press International Baltimore
16 13 5 37
Eastirn Conferenc,
Hershey
IS 9 6 36
A11an1ic Divi sion
Cleveland
14
13 6 34
W. L. Pel. GB Cincinnati
II 14 8 30
Boston
24 12 .667 ... Richmond
12 16 6 30
New York
22 13 .629 t'n Tidewater
8 20 3 19
Philadelphia 14 21 .400 9' '
Sunday's
Results
Buflalo
II 21 .344 II
Cincinna ti 7 Cleveland 4
ABA Standings

•

FURNITURE

Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League's leading rebounder
and eighth top scorer.
Starting in place of Morris
Tuesday, and probably for the
remainder of the year, will be
big Mark Werry. Th.e 6-4, 244
lb. junior has seen only limited

Remain in Super Bowl Contention

.
•

0 oDISCOUNT

of star center Jeff Morris for
the remainder df the year.
Morris, 6-3 leading scorer and
rebounder and third team allleague in basketball last year,
suffered a broken collarbone in
an automobile accident last
Friday. Morris was the

Dolphins, Colts, Cowboys, 49'ers

"'

YEAR·

TEMPE, Ariz. (UPI) -If the
regular season is any indica·
mashed potatoes, cole slaw,
tion, Arizona State and Florida
fr ui t, bread and butler, milk .
Feb. 3 - Ham salad sand- State may take a while to get
wich, green beans, fruit, potato their offensive machines
chips, milk.
cranked up in this afternoon's
Feb. 4 - Spanish rice, letfirst Fiesta Bowl.
tuce sa lad, fruit and cook ie,
The sixth ranked Devils,
bread and buller, milk .
playing in their own
stadium as the Western Athleti c Conference
champion , scored only 72
Clyde Lynch, Columbus, and and 75 points in the first two
Morris Lynch, Chicago, Ill., quarters this year, but after
and lour sisters, Mrs . Ada intennission they have explod·
Miller, Mrs. G41dys Walker, ed for 132 and 138 points.
Florida State, while not able
Mrs. Kathryn Fox, and Mrs.
Gwen Keith, all of Cincinnati. to match ASU's scoring mark
She was preceded in death by which was fourth best in the
her husband, Dewey, and her nation, scored only 37 points in
opening periods but did a lot of
parents.
damage
in the second period
The body will be brought to
the Mount Moriah Church with 92 points.
Wednesday morning and will
ASU, whose only loss In a HJ.l
season
was to Oregon State,
lie in state until the time of
services. The Rev . Nyle ranked as the favorite for the I
Borden and the Rev. Henry p.m. contest on the strength of
Key will officiate at the ser- a balanced attack that features
vices and burial will be in the three sophomores in the backRiverview Cemetery.
field -Danny White passing
and Woody Green and Ben
Malone running.
White, in just nine games
because of an early season
injury, passed for 1,393 yards
and 1~ tou~hdowns while Green
added 1,209 yards and Malone
857 on the ground.
Feb. 2 - Steak and gravy,

Brothers Killed
On Christmas Day
- PT . PLEASANT - Two
Mason County brothers were
killed Christmas day when
struck by a car at 12:15 a.m.
while walking along W. Va. 2
near their home at Apple
Grove near here.
Bobby Lee Fielder, 11, was
killed instanUy; his brother,
William S. Fielder, 21, died at
2:30a.m. in Holzer Hospital at
Gallipolis.

•

•

Guthrie Services Wednesday
Funeral services for Mrs.
Goldie Guthrie, 72, who died
Friday in a Cincinnati hospital
following a two-week illness,
will be held at I p.m. Wednesday at the Mount Moriah
Baptist Church, Middleport.
Mrs. Guthrie, fonnerly of
Middleport, has made her
home with her daughter, Mrs.
Ma•ine Burris of Cincinnati
the past five years. She is
survived by her daughter; two
sons, Bill, of Middleport, and

. BY KEITH ·WISECUP
The Meigs MaraU!jer cagers
will play their third of four nonleague games this season
Tuesday night at South Point
against the tough Pointers
without their top scorer and
rebounder.
Meigs has lost the services

\i'j

gold, blue and silver, glittered ~ ·
and then arranged In a. green
container. Mrs. Wlllfordl
reviewed design Information
which the clai!S members had .
studied previously.
Name tags were foil covered .
chocolate candy ihat can be
hung as a Chrl.stmas ornament. ·
Materi•ls for the therapy
project were donated by M.
·and R. Bargalnland, with Mrs.
Harold Wolfe furnlsblrig
refreshments of Christmas
cookies, ice cream, camly and
soft drinks.

Fiesta Bowl

Hot dogs with

sauce, baked

,~~~;rr: iMT$1Miiii:: F_ tW&amp;WtHi%%~~ffi%¥.:~Wmm;::tHmWtMDW:i!fl:EMI¥if!fllii\ll~

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in fresh players throughout the
game to attempt to wear down
the opposition from now on,"
said Wolfe.
The starting lineup for the
Marauders will have Rich
Bailey, 1&gt;-9 junior, and either 59 junior Jimmy Boggs or 1&gt;-9
junior Bill Vaughan at the
guards. Tony Vaughan, 6-2
senior, and Steve Dunfee, 6-0
senior, will be at forwards with
Werry at center.
The other three Marauders,
who undoubtedly will see
plenty of action, are 1&gt;-10 junior
guard Andy Vaughan, 6-0
junior forward Mike Sayre,
and 1&gt;-9 senior guard Rick Ash.
So far , the Mara uders own a
2-4 record overall and 1..1 in
league play. Their two wins
have been a 74-50 decision over
non-league opponent Wahama
and league foe Jackson, 62-58.
Both wins have been on the
rond. The Marauders are 0.3 at
home and 2-1 away from home.
The next game following
Tuesday's battle will be in the
Ironton Ti~ers' "snake pit"
Friday,~.

t

-11
~

Reser ve System

Insurance
Atent
Wirner

7.

Whether · you
auto,
life
homeowners
surance, we will de:!~~~~
a policy .to fit
Individual
requ i rements
Discuss your SPE!Ciflcl
needs with us.

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS
210 E. 2nd
PomerOY.

Davis-Warner Ins.
Phone 992·2966

114 CourUt.

Phone 992-542S

Pomeroy

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INSURE_.. ._. . .•

rices In Effect Mon.· Dec. 27

WOMENS
•
£ CARDIGANS
SWEATERS
•

Fridays Only
iC
The Drive· In Window
is Open
-tc
9 A. M. to 7 P. M.
iC
(Continuously)
.:
Other Banking Hours 9 to l
and 5 to 7 as usual on iC
Fridays.
II

API118110111D

2-HOUR
CLEANING

..

i

Coach Bill Wickline's little
Marauders won their !tussle
with South Point earlier, 32-20,
and own a 4-2 overall slate
while still in contention for a
league titie with a. 2-2 record .
Starters lor the reserves are
Terry George, Floyd Burney ,
Bill Myers, Bill Chaney, and
Fred Burney. Top alternates
are Steve Price, Mick Ash, and
Ron Couch.

"POl NT PLEASANT
•GALLIPOLIS
•MASON

-II
:
-tl

OPEN EVERY HIGHT

«

·····~·********•
'

.i. '

'"

.

�r

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport.,..oy, 0., Dec. 'l/, 1971

.

CLEVELAND t UP[) - The
Baltimore Colts will have just
one thing on their minds when
they meet the Miami Dolphins
next SWlday for the American
Football Coilference championship, and the one thing will not
be Don Shula their former
coach.
The Colts are more interested
in the winning Super Bowl
shares of $23,500 than in any
embarrassment they could
bring to Shula, who walked out
on them two years ago and has
built the Dolphins into a power.
Shula's expansion team is all
that stands in the way of Baltimore and a record third Super
Bowl appearance following the
Colis' easy 20-3 victory over the
Cleveland Browns Sunday.
" Miami edged Baltimore by a
half-game for the AFC east tiUe this season, the Colts making
the playoffs only as a "wild
card " team , but they say they
have no quarrel with their former coach .
"All that 'bitterness' is garbage," says middle linebacker
Mike Curtis. ·•J feel that way
and 95 per cent of the Colts feel
that way.
"Shula 's a good coach and we
have to play a good team . The
rest of it is theatncs invented
by people to keep busy ."
The Colts ' tough defense, still
smarting from suggestions they
deliberately blew their season
finale a weeka~o to draw Cleveland instead of Kansas City as
a playoff rival, bottled up the
Browns' offense at a skimpy
165 yards.
Smith Blocks Two
Bubba Smith blocked two field
goals, Rick Volklntercepted two
passes and the rest of the Baltimore defense came up with two
fumble recoveries and another
interception.
Johnny Unitas, as always the
master, completed six straight
p?ssesinone92-yard touchdown

WHO?
You ReadThe

drive and rookie Don Nottingham from Kent State, the 441st
player chosen In last year's
draft, gained 92 yards on the
ground and seored touchdowns
on one and seven-yard runs to
stake Baltimore to a - ~~ halftime lead.
Nottingham was filling In for
injured Norin Bulaich, who the
Colts hope to have back next
week.
·

Jim O'Brien, the hero of last
year's Super Bowl, accounted
for the rest of the Colts' scoring with second half field goals
of 42 and IS yards, more than
offsetting a 14-yarder by Cleveland's Don Cockroft.
"Our defense did it for us •"
said coach Don McCafferty of
Baltimore. "They were fantas-

Holiday Tournaments

when you can,''lamented Skorich. "We couldn't."
The Colts, who allowed 500
yards less than any other team
In the NFL this year, held Kelly to 49 yards on the ground and
stopped So Scott with 25. aeveland had a net of 69 yards rush·
ing.
The classic perfonnance by
the world champions set up an
ideal match for next SWlday at
the Orange Bowl.
Miami won the AFC east with
a 1~1 reeord whUe Baltimore
was 10 • 4, the teams splitting
their two games.

Dominate Cage Action

Whatever happens, Curtis
gives assurance, Baltimore
wiU not be trying to win for
Shula's sake.

Nick Skorlch of the BroWns, (aiDe won by Cleveland, 14-13.
"the best overaU defensive
"Siroqer 1bu Seplember"
team we've ~n this year."
"I think they were much
aeveland quarterback !Jill stronger than they were In SepNelsen, who was forced Into the tember," Nelsen said. "And we
three lnterteplions by a strong didn't put much pressure on
pass rush, dumped four limes them. They double-teamed the
for losses and got only one pass outside men so I went to the
to a wide receiver aU dsY. ob- backs more, but I didn 'I even
served improvement In the have time to throw to them."
tic."
Baltimore defense since the
The Browns threatened the
"They were," added coach teams met In a Seprember first two limes they had the
ball, twice penetrating deep In·
to Baltimore territory on a 39yard pass from Nelsen to Fair
Hooker and a 48-yard pWlt return by Leroy Kelly, but a fumble and the first of Smith's
blocked field goals stopped the
drives.
"With Baltimore's great defense, you _have to capitalize

tournaments Involving 17 of the
Include
UP! top 20 teams will be held..
nt at
Second..,anked M
Kodak
favored in its o
· waukee aassic
ing fifth·
Classic, third..,ated South ranked Southern California
Carolina wiU highlight the and No. 17 Penn -at
Qaker City tournament, 12th- Rochester, N.Y., the Las Veg111
ranked Florids State journeys Classic, the Palmetto Into Portland to participate In the vitatlooal at Charleston, S.C.,
Far West event, and 16th- , the Roadrunner Classic at Las
ranked Louisville faces Syra- . Cruces, N.M., and the Old
cuse In one offour games being Domln](ll Classic at Norfolk,
MU TILT ON TV
played today In the Holidsy Va., spotlighting eighth-labbed
Tonight's Marshall (7-ll)
Festival.
Indiana and 11th-ranked
and
Wlseooslo
(6·1)
No. 17. Arizona State and Brigham Young. Seventh·
basketball game lo lhe lillb 19th ranked Minnesota are ranked Long Beach State wiU
annual Mllwaukee Classic
featured In the Rsinbow host the Long Beach In·
will be televised over WSAZ. Classic and 20th ranked vitatiooal.
TV Cbaooel 3, begloolq at
Jacksonville is entered in the
Top-ranked UCLA plays host
8:30.
All-College tournament.
In the Bruin Classic beginning
Seven more tournaments get Wednesday while folli'IIH'ated
underway
Tuesday, followed North Carolina is entered In the
Milwaukee Wis., the Holidsy
Festival at New York's Madi- by an additional 10 on Wed- Sugar Bowl Classic, sixthtabbed Ohio State joins UCLA
son Square Garden, the Quaker nesday.
The Queen City Invitational, In the Bruin Classic and ninthCity Tournament" In Philadelphia, the Motor City Tourna- the final tournament of the ranked St. John's will particl·
ment In Detroit, the St. Louis month, begins Thursday In pate in the Maryland lnvilationa!, hosted by the No. 13
Invitational, the Bluebonnet Buffalo, N.Y.
Terrapins.
J&lt;lassic in Houston, the Big ·
Eight Tournament in Kansas
City, Mo., the All-College
Tournament in Oklahoma City,
the Utah State Tournament in
Logan, Utah, the Far West
C1assic In Portland, Ore., and
the Rainbow Claij!ilc in Hawaii. ·
In the next ~ix dsys, 29·
By United Press lnlernatlooal and had 17 assists to help the
The Natiooal Basketball As- Lakers over Houston. Houston
sociation's Central Division held a six-point lead in the third
race is reaching the critical period before Los Angeles
-the
Cleveland ripped off a llh'ltear that put
stage
Cavaliers are threatening for the game away. The victory
boosted the Lakers' record to
first place .
The Cavaliers, who gained M -3 and left West Wldefeated
national recognition last In the 32 games In which he has
season with their extended appeared thi,5 year.
Jerry Sloan hit the deciding
losing streaks, moved to within
basket
with I: 13 to play In the
a halfgame of the division lead
ORLANDO, Fla. (UP!)- The Sundsy night with a 108-102 BuUs' triumph over SeatUe.
University of Toledo, unbeaten victory over the first-place The Sonics had a chance to win
In M games and a 22-polnt fa- Baltimore Bullets. It was with 24 seconds left but Playervorl te over Richmond In Tues· Cleveland's fourth consecutive Coach Lenny Wilkens was
dsy night's Tangerine Bowl victory against Baltimore this called for an offensive blocking
here, put the finishing touches season and moved the Cava- foul to turn over the ball.
Bob Love led the Bulls with
on their pre-bowl game liers to a 13-Z3 mark as COlD·
28 points whUe Spencer Hay·
pared to the BuUets' 13-22.
practices today.
Cleveland could move Into wood's 28 were tops for Seattle.
The Rockets wiU be led on
Milwaukee, which had
first place Tuesday night if the
offense by quarrerback Chuck
dropped ils last two games,
Ealey ,a 21-year~ldsenior from Cavaliers can beat Portland
broke out with an easy victory
Portsmouth, Ohio, who guided and Cincinnati· defeats BaJ.
over Atlanta, Kareem AbduiToledo to an 11-4 record this timore.
John Johnson led the Jabbar led the Bucks with 24
year, the team's third straight
Cavalier
attack with a career- points and John Block added
undefeated season.
19. Lou Hudson had 'll for the
Ealey, who hasn't lasted de- high 40 points and Walt Wesley Hawks.
feat on the football field since took down 21 rebounds,
the ninth grade In high school, Baltimore pulled to within a
has a personal victory string of point with 2:30 left to play but
baskets by Butch Beard and
64 games. He was a UPI AllBobby Smith pulled the
American choice this season, Cavaliers out ol reach.
being named to the second
Wes Unseld led the BuUets
team.
with 22 points.
Toledo'sdevensivemckle Mel
,,
In other NBA action, Los
Long was a UP! first team Angeles extended Its record
choice this season. Long was wirming streak to 28 games
credited with 73 tackles and 103 with a 137-liS rout of Houston,
assists this year.
Oticago edged SeatUe 1o:l-102
The Rockets won last year's and Milwaukee topped Atlanta
MIAMI (UP!) -The NebrasTangerine Bowl with an easy 114-92.
ka Cornhuskel'll and Alabama
Jerry West scored M points Crimson Tide strelch their
victory over William and Mary.
muscles In the Florida SWlshlne
today, in preparation for their
naUonal championship clash
Saturday night In the Orange
By United Press lnlerutional
It may seem like a mild
winter to some but there's a
nation-wide blizzard on the
way, beginning today.
A blizzard of college basketbali tournaments.
The annual holiday-week
madness begins tonight with
the Milwaukee Classic in

Cavaliers Pull WithinHalf Game Of Bullets

Rockets

•••. .You Know!
...__
Eye 35th

Straight

WHAT?
You Read
••• , • You Know!

WHEN?

....._

You Read The Sentine
••• , .You Know!

'Huskers, Tide

Get In Final

WHERE?
You Read The Sentinel
•••• You Know!
...__

Licks For 'tilt

HIGHLIGHTS

with Paul Crabtree

' ' : 99 2-25 0 5
CALL POINTVIEW

WHY?
You Read The Senline
· .•• .You Know!

and

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CaliA

DAILY SENTINEL
_ReiH•tati12
Phone 992·2156

HOORAY! It's New Year's Football? · Sure, there's a
Eve ln.the w&lt;rderful world of game on tap practically every

televiSIOn .

Sure, I know the new year
doesn' t start until Saturday,
but for TV, irs the beginning
of Ihe " Second Season"
tonight. And none too soon,
either, because the networks
really bombed with the First
Season.
The TV equivalent of the
New Year's Baby comes to us
In the persor of one Mrs. Cher
Bono, poker-faced. a pretty
good singer, and one of the
great masters of the fl'Jt-down.
"Sonny and Cher," a nice little
ray of light in a dismal llf!t·
work summer, comes back
tonight as a regular series. 10
p.m., Ch. 8.

day this week.

·

The Fiesta Bowl, first ever,
pits Florida State vs. Arizona
State at Tempe, Ariz., at 3
p.m., Ch. 6.
And the North-South Shrine
Game features some real allstars, with Big Ten stars
dotting the North lineup, and
the South powered by Curl
Watson. who scored that TO
that pulled the Liberty Bowl
tussle out oi the fire for
Tennessee. 9 p.m.. Ch. 12.

+++

Otherwise, It's a quiet,
restful day on the TV front,
just rightfor resting up after a
hectic . Christmas weekend.
Wltn long winter nights ahead,
+++
you might like to hear a
I'm glad we've got a great discussion of Winston Chur·
big power plant coming to the chill's scandalous. very unMid-Ohlo Valley area, and Victorian mother on " Book
three cheers for American Beat,", 1 p.m.. Ch, 9.
Electric Power.
+++
But over In ihe Canaan MOVIES : "The little
Valley area of Wesf Virginia, Kidnappers," ·• p.m., and
people are not nearly so happy "Julie," an early Doris Day
a,boutseelngoneolthe East's opus, 11 :30 p.m., both Ch. 10.
blgges,t and most beautiful
+t +
vacation spots chosen as the TUE.SDA.Y: Remember
site of a power-generatl"!! Johnny Desmond, one of the
facility . Arguments for and better singers of the Big Band
against the plant are Era? Bob Braun hasn't
discussed on the Paul forgotten him, either, and he's
Nuchlms Show tonight, 10 a guest on the 50-SO Club. Ch. •;
noon. ·
p.m., Ch. 9.

Clay·Wins
In Seventh
ZURICH, Switzerland (UP!)
- The toughness and the
courage of an unheralded
Gennan helped Muhammad All
to show that he might whip Joe
Frazier the second time
around.
The former World Heavyweight Champion knocked out
Juergen Blin after two minutes
and 12 seconds of the seventh
roWld Sundsy night at the
Oerllkon Hallenstadion and
looked In much better shspe
than he was for the Jinuny
Ellis and Buster Mathis fights.
"The Swiss mountains helped
me to get Into condition and I
am seriously thinking of making Zurich, the same hotel, the
same gym and the same hills
for my running, the camp for
my next fight", Ali said.
The former Cassius Clay
announced his next fight wiU be
for promotor Chris Dundee at
Miami Beach In March. Ali wiU
leave Zurich for a two-week
Middle East tour before returnIng home just in time to
celebrare his 30th birthdsy In
Jan . 17.
Neither Ellis nor Mathis
made Ali work so hard as Blin
who suffered his first knockdut
In 43 pro fights.
"He had the condition and
was determined to take ali
punches until he could not take
any more," Ali praised Blin.
"He deserves to be ranked
sixth or seventh in the world
rating."
Ali thought it would take him
only two rounds to finish off the
German for whom he had
predicted "no mercy", but Blin

1

22 more than Blin but seven
less than for the Mathis fight
last month. "I did not train
harder, but because of the cold
I did not drink so much. I
always gain weight In a hot
climate." AlthoUgh he was In
pretty good shiipe, Ali said he
was not as sharp as he wanted
to be.
The crowd of about 7,000 fans
were delighted by the actionpacked fight. First, they were
rooting for Blin for attacking
Ali, but once Ali was In
command, the crowd was back
on his side.
The enthusiasm of the Swiss
fans, however, did nol help to
take the promoters out of the
red. Ali received $250,000 whUe
Blin was guaranteed $45,000.

/Hei~.;--H;Ip--u~-1

WtdnJay · '
Ohio State vs. Arizona at Bruin
Classic
Youngstown vs. Western
Illinois In Tangerine Bowl
Tournament at Orlando, Fla.
Miami vs. Rollins at Palmetto,
s. C., Tournament
Lutheran Tournament at
Mus~lngum Tournament
Minneapolis ·
Findlay, Wilmington, Bluffton Wooster Classic
and Defiance In Hoosier- Wittenberg In Luth,ran
Tournament
Buckeye Tournament at
Ohio Wesleyan at Lemoyne
Findlay
Tournament
Ashland vs. Geneseo State in
Hoosler·Buckeye
Tournament
Ashland Tournament
Oberlin,
Malone.
Case·
Western
Cincinnati at Butler
Reserve
In
Cue-WR
Capital at Wayne State
Tournament
Cleveland State at. Kent State
Wright
State at Grand Valley
Tuesday
Tourn111ment
Bowling Green at . Detroit
Ohio Northern at Marshall
Motor City Classic
Tournament
Xavier at Palmetto Classic at
John Carroll at Fort Eustis
Charleston, S. C.
Tournament
MI. Union Tournament
Otterbein vs. Westm inster in Urbana Tournament
-Thursdoy
Musklngum Tournament
Musklngum vs. Clarion In Ohio Stete at Bruin Classic
Youngstown at Tangerine Bowl
Musklngum Tournament
Tournament
,
Wittenberg in · lutheran Marietta
at
Centre
College
Tournament
Tournament
Ohio Wesleyan· vs . New Case.
western Reserve
Hampshire In Lemoyne
Tournament
(N.Y.J Tournament
Hoosier-Buckeye Tournament
Hossier. Buckeye Tournament
Urbana Tournament
Ashland Tourmament
Ohio
Northern at Marshall
John Carroll at Fort Eustis
Tournament
(Va .) Tourmanent
Wright State at Grand Volley John Carroll at Fort Eustis
Tournament
(Mich.) Tournament
Ohio
U. at Marshall
Ohio Northern at Marshall St. Joseph's
(Ind.) at Toledo
!Mich.) Tournament
Kent
State
at
Cincinnati
Urbana Tournament
Friday
Ohio State at Bruin Classic
East Carolina at Dayton
Soturdoy
Yale at Xavier
United Press tntern•llonol
Bowllrig Green vs. $Ianford at
Detroit In Motor City Classic
Baldwin -Wallace, Mount
Union, Hiram in Mt, Union
Tournament
.
Wittenberg vs. Carthage In

On Colleges'
Holiday &amp;heds
ByUnltedPresslnternallonal
Ohio colleges begin a heavy
week of basketball action tonigh~ with many teams playing
in holiday tournaments.
Headlining the tourneys is the
Bruin Classic at Los Angeles,
where Ohio State might get a
crack at the host, top . ranked
UCLA.
The Buckeyes meet Arizona
In Wednesday night's first
roWld game and could go
against the Bruins the
following night.
Ohio collegiate teams are Involved In five tourneys that get
underway tonight, with three
single games also scheduled.
At the Detroit Motor City
Classic, BowUng Green, led by
sharp-shooting Dalynn
Badenhop, meets ,Stanford
tonight. Mount Union hosts its
holidsy tourney tonight, with
Baldwin • WaUace and Hiram
Invited.
Wittenberg meets Carthage
tonight
as
the
Lutheran Tournament gets
underway in Minneapolis
and Findlay is hosting the
Hoosier· Buckeye Tournament,
with Wilmington, Bluffton and
Defiance competing.
Ashland also Is holding its
owntournamentandmeetsGenesco State tonight.
In single games tonight, Cincinnati travels toButler,Capital
is at Wayne State and Kent
State hosts Cleveland State.

FIUON'S NEW RECORD
WINDSOR, Ont. (UP!) Rerve Filion, the first man In
harness racing history to crack
the 500-wln barrier in a single
season, estabUshed a world
record for most victories In a
single program with seven
Sunday afrernooll at the Wind·
sor, Ont raceway.

COST OF BUYING A,

.. -

NEW CAR
,__ ,_- ,
llotlto.WO.

"

including the gG-ahead basket
In the final quarter, to belp
Indiana beat Kentucky and
snap the Colonels' winning
streak at six. Roger Brown,
with 25 pointa, and Fred Lewis
with 23, contributed to the
Pscer's attack.
Dan Issei paced the Colonels
with 28 points, 23 of them In the
second half whUe teammare
Louie Dampier chipped In with
26.
In 1968 the Apollo 8 astronauts returned to earth after
a trip aroW!d the moon 10
times.

FROELUNDA WINS MATCH
GOTEBORG, Sweden (UP!)
-Vaestra FroelWida of Goreborg trounced the Calgarh
Stampeders 9-1ln the opening
match of the International Star
Cu~ Ice Hockey Tournament
Sunday night.

a
handy
budget
•
Improvement
•

kit

,

• NOTE LOANS
• LARGER LOANS
• FINANCING
125 E. MAl N

tf2·211'1
POMEROY, 0.

..

Some hands reach oul to touch and bel~.
others are clenched ·itt pain and despair. 'We ~llask
'"Why?" to the cruel contrasts of our life.
'Why poverty itt a land of fllmiy 1 'Why lontli m
in a world thai would join· hands 1 'Why war w en
the im1Julse of the heart is lo lovt?
.
1he achittd chasm between the real ana the itle I
everywhere flrovoke~ the question .. .
•

HY?

In a world looking for answers
maybe Coil is t~e place to start.
God is hope. God is now.
•

'
gm.
'

....

~

N. W. ·coMPTON. 0. ~ o.

'.

! __ _

season. She sa1d to take mventory of your gardening
tools, seeds, plant foods, a.1d
sprays you will need. Sharpen
garden tools and check handles
for needed repairs. If !lower
beds have not already been
prepared, the soil should be
dug and turned for beneficial
effect of freezing . This turns up
insects which the birds will eat.
Mrs. Edwards also recommended using coal ashes to
loosen the ground, and gave
tips on the care of plant such as
poinsettias, c ·hristmas
begonias, and Jerusalem
cherry.
Mrs. Bolin was chairman for
an educational display of 15
different styles of Madonnas
brought by members. She
assisted Mrs . Snowden in
moderating a discussion on the
use of the Madonna in floral
design. It was pointed out that
the madonna with child is
known as the Christmas
Madonna, while the Virgin
alone is used at other times of
the year, especially at Easter,
lo carry out religious themes.
Afigure of Mary with at t.Iched
container is no t a true
Madonna for judging purposes,
it was noted.
During the discussion it was
also pointed out that dull,
rat her than shiny , surfaces are
more sui ted for show
arrangements as more variety
of flowers can be used. Shiny
surfaces need !lowers such as
the rose, while surfaces are
more suitable to materials of a
coarser texture .
It was noted that when used
in a floral design, the Madonna
is to be the focal point and
should be worked into the
arrangement in such a way
that its removal would leave an
incomplete design. Plans
materials should never
overpower the Madonna nor
should it be or appear to be
standing in water, the
discussion leaders concluded.
Devotions were by Mrs.
Bolin who used "The Wise Men.
Still Adore Him" as her topic.
Members were invited into
the Bolin dining · room for
refreshments served buffet

style from a lace coyered table devotions , with members
centered with an arrangement naming a garden pest for roll
sparked with Christmas or- call . Mrs. Fred Williamson will
naments. Mrs. Bolin presided give February gardening tips,
at the coffee service and Mrs. with Mrs. Bill Williamson
Tom Stewart at . the punch presenting a book review on
bowl. The Bolin home was "Organic Gardening Without
extensively decorated for the Poisons," by Hamilton Tyler.
holiday season.
Mrs. Parker will give a
The next meeting will be held rebutml , "Insects -;-- Why I'm
January 26, at the home of Mrs. For Pesticides," and "Here's
Bolin, with Mrs. Snowden and My Heart" arrangements i
Mrs. Wolfe as co-hostesses. suitable for Valentine's Dayl
Mrs. Parker will have will be brought for judging. •

What are
you waiting
for!

...

COME TO A

FREE OPEN MEETING
OF OUR NEW CLASS IN

POMEROY
OPENING MON., JAN. 3, 7:30P.M.
ST. PAUL'S LUTHERAN CHURCH
231 E. Second St., Pomeroy, Ohio

NO REGISTRATION

NO OBLIGATION

CLASSES ALSO MEET WEEKLY
. IN GALLIPOLIS Grace United

St. LouiS Church
91 State St.

Methodist Church
lnd &amp;Cedar

Tuesdays 7:30p.m.
SJ .OO Registration

Wednesdays 9:30a.m .
$2 .00 Week Dues

WEIGHT ®WATCHERS.
!iome laHcing, some li!lening. and a prosram that works:'
~

Jfl#llll'f~

•11
IUIII-IU 00 W!llloMl •oTCNI"
l"'lt'"'T.oto•o oiO( . r.ll:r':.ICI. H l lwltG041 W&amp;ltNIII IHfi ..J.ItQOI.o~ lfl1

"WIJOIII -lti&lt;IQ" J.NU

C~ildren,

Youths Give P

Bowl.
Nebraske coach Bob Devaney, who arrived here with his
Huskers Frldsy, aends his
players Into an aflernoon
pl'llctice at Dade-North Junior
College Stadium, with the
seiiSion closed to the public.
Devaney generously gave the .
team a dsy off Sunday, after
they held a fuU-!ICale IICI'immage Christmas afternoon
against Alabama's wishbone
attack.
Coach Paul "Bear" Bryant
led the Crlrnllon tide Into town
Sunday, an!l today's. first
practice seiiSlon at Miami
Military Academy wiU be photo
dsy for the preas.
Both teams will get their first
workout on the artlfldal polyturf In the Orange Bowl on New
Year's Eve.

respectively, in each category.
Winners in the religious
members of the Rutland replica of a castle complete doorway category were Mr .
HER VALUES CONFUSED
Friendly Gardeners for shut- with turrets and drawbridge. and Mrs. Richard Grueser, Mr.
Dear Helen:
Ins of the commW!ity were Mrs . James Carpenter took and Mrs. Bruce May and Mr.
I went to stay with my sick sister In another stare for about delivered by Mrs. Harold Wolfe second place for a doll replica, and Mrs. Bill Brown. In the
lliJ: weeb.
and Mrs. Howard Birchfield and Mrs. Larry Edwards third secular doorway category, the
}'bile I Will gone, my husband's ~st friend (female) Stayed Thursday.
for a Hollywood bed design. All winners were Mr. and Mrs .
In oil' home to take care of him. She's a good hoUsekeeper and
The 14 fruit plates for shut-, three
received
prizes . Keith Kennedy, Mr. and Mrs.
cook.
Ins was one of several sunshine Honorable mention went to Bruce Davis and Mrs. C. 0 .
Now than I'm home,! find a very expensive set of pearls and projects carried out by the Mrs. Bruce May and Mrs. Chapm~n. The doorway
my mothe''s wedding ring set Is mlssing.I also discovered a gold Friendly Gardeners during the Robert Snowden. Secret pals categones cames pmes of $5,
brooch lbat belonged to my mother on the floor under our bed. It holiday season. Earlier in the were revealed with the ex- $3 and $2. Honorable mentions
month, holiday arrangements change and names were drawn went to Mr. and Mrs. Roy
bad beellln the box with the other prized family jewelry.
Snowden, Mr. and Mrs. HerHow can I get this Irreplaceable jewelry back without were made and delivered to for '72.
several
elderly
citizens
and
The
holiday
lighting
contest
man Grate and Mr. and Mrs.
callling a disturbance? - TOOK
shut-Ins. Elghreen gifts were was discussed by Mrs. Robert Larry Edwards.
Dear Took:
Merchants donating prize
Perha]JII this "best friend of your husband's" figures lf you sent to members of the Snowden. Mrs. Birchfield
Nature's
Garden
Club
a
drove
the
judges,
Mrs.
Robert
money
for the contest were
are willlnB to llhare your man, you won't quibble over ao·few
p.eces of jewelry,. Let them know where your values lie and you therapy project-· at 'the Crow and Mrs. Walter Best Photo Co., Tillis Trailer
Gallipolis Stare Institure, and a Grueser, around town to judge Sales, ,Stewart's Gun Shop,
may get your ''irreplaceable" possesalons back.
therapy program and holiday the lights. The judges were Hysell s Garage, Mlller
,, But I Blill think you're worrying about the wrong theft. party was held for the special presented gifts at a social hour Brothers Grocery ,_ Nelson's
H.
education children at the following the judging at the Restaurant, Rutland· Furniture
Dear Helen :
Rutland Elementary School. home of Mrs. Bruce Davis.
Store_, ':1artin's F~eral Home,
I have 'lour adorable nieces. We have two fine sons, aged
Tfie fruit plates were taken
Winners were Mr. and Mrs . Archie s .Recreatwn Center,
eight and ten, but no daughters, so we especially enjoy these little by the members to their annual Howard Birchfield, Mr. and Buck's Barber Shop, Rutland
girls. We buy them lnl!lpenslve gifts tmd have them over often. holidsy party at the home of Mrs. Dana Hoffman, Jr. and Branch of Pomeroy National
'lbey return our love- but never In the presence of their mother! Mrs. Joe Bolin Wednesday Mrs. and Mrs. Purl Van Meter Bank, Erlewine's Hardware,
When llhe Is around, they're standoffish and quiet because, night. The party was preceded In the religious category; Mr. Rutlan~ Department Store,
though she's a fine person In every other way, she beco'l!es angry by a dinner at the Martin and Mrs. Homer Parker, Mr. Sellard sMarket, and Jordan's
ad terribly pOssessive when others give attention to her Restaurant.
and Mrs. Harold Wolfe and Mr. Service Station.
children.
Gift wrappings were judges and Mrs. Carl Hysell, Sr., in
Communications were read
Here are examples:
before secret garden pals the secular overall category, from the Athens Ment.Il Health
I. She made her daughters refuse Ice cream we bought for exchanged presents. Taking winning $10, $5 and $3 Center and from Mrs. Gomer
Phillips of the Gallipolis State
them and our 10!18. Said she "could buy cones for them herself."
Institute,
thanking the group
2. She tore out the ribbon I put In her two-year~ld's hair
for participati"ng in therapy
when I baby-eat. Said she dldn 't like ribbons.
programs at the two in· 3. She ripped off a dress I boughi for my godchUd (her oldest
stitutions.
daughter) and said the color was wrong for her. Most of our gifts
Mrs. Wolfe thanked Mrs .
llhe throws away.
Fetty
for serving as chairman
4. She will not allow me or my husband to help dish out food to
for the club's t.Ible entry on
the chUdren when we are together for famUy meals, though she
Vietnam at the Meigs County
helped our sona when they were younger.
Christmas show. Members
Needless to say, thesa episodes upset the youngsters and
made 21 entries in artistic and
cause tears. I ''keep my distance," but sometbnes It's hard, with
educptional divisions of the
kids you truly love.
A weekly feature of Meigs
show'; winning 10 ribbons, with
CoWity Garden Club members.
Yet my sister-in-law Is kind and loving In other ways, and so
one junior entry also a ribbon
good to our sons. She only becomes hostile when I try discussing
winner. The Merry Gardeners,
this with ber.
a junior club sponsored by the
Are these over1lQSseSslve mothers afraid their children wiU
Rutland Friendly Gardeners,
BY MRS. MARJORIE DAVIS
stop loving them If they also love other people? - CONFUSED
won
a special award for an
Rutlaud Friendly Gardeners
AUNT
exhibit of club projects. SerDear Aunt:
ving on show committees were
YOUR CHRISTMAS TREE
0ver1)0118essiveness stems from jealousy, which has its
Mrs.
Bolin, chairman, Mrs.
Why not grow your own Christmas tree?
roots In ln8eclrity. And Insecure people are constantly fearful
There is something special about watching your own tree Carpenter, photography, Mrs.
that others are better loved.
grow. Buy some seedlings and grow your own for a few years Parker, publicity, Mrs .
I hope your stster-lrHaw wiU somehow come to realize that
Willford, smging, with Mrs .
hence. Balsam or Douglas fir or Scotch pine are popular.
love ill like an outdoor cllmblng plant: Push It Into a small, dsrk,
Wolfe and Mrs. Stewart also
However, you may wish to choose a tree that lives on. By
assisting
.
stifling place and, even though pampered, It soon dies. But if you
this,
1
mean
a
fresh
dug,
living,
balled
and
burlapped
conifer
or
Mrs
.
Willford
reported on a
let It grow naturaUy, with only a little "direction," It reaches out
other evergreens. U you consider the price of a cut tree, a living recent session with the special
to becomutronger and more beautiful each day. - H.
one Is a bargain when you can both use it decoratively indoors education children when
Dear Heloile:
and lawr install it permanently in your yard. Also, there's Christmas arrangements using
You ·said "only husbands' minds wander - usually - if
something good about looking at a handsome tree in your yard glittered thistles and bell
they're good guys." I w111 brought up to believe that "Even the
and remem~riiJg the I!!'PPY season when it was the center of replicas of 11tyrofoam cups,
lhliilbt ~"the nilt Bit !bought of~llia!oyalty -Is dlaloyal." And,
&lt;llrlstmas joy.f!!f your family.
yarn, and baubles ·were made .
after three marriage faUures, ftankly I don't give a damn. Before b~g your tree, decide where you will plant it
Mrs. Fred Williamson, llank
REALIST
outdoors, and prepare the hole before the groWld freezes. Cover arrangement chairman,
Dear Realist :
with mulch or plastic to keep the hole ready. You will want to named the following to provide
Your purist plillosophy just might explain your unsuccessful
selectthe tree for Its ultimate purpose. Remember that pines and designs for January : Mrs.
marriages, yes? Show me a man whose mind doesn't wander
spruces become large trees, suited as lawn specimens or wind- Edwards, Mrs. Parker, Mrs.
occUionally, and I'll show you the world's duUest husband! -H.
breakers. Junipers are suitable for foWldstion plantings for a Wolfe and Mrs. Willford. Floral
number of years, but will eventually become large. Yews and arrangements have been made
hollies Clll' be kept in small scale for a long time and can be used by the following during the past
for doorways, corn,er or other locations near the house.
month; for the Holsum Bakery
Moisten the root ball at once.lf the nursery has not already Christmas Party, Mrs. Eddone so, spray the tree, top and root ball, with an anti-desiccant wards , Fetty, Williamson ,
as soon as you receive it. Put the balled tree In a large container Wolfe and Birchfield; Rutland
'Yfl~'lll'l1m and pack around It with moistened peat moss, which you keep Church of Christ, Mrs. Bolin,
I V
I U
moist. You may decorare the tree as you like, except that · Carpenter and Mrs. Brace
Rocking Is not recommended. Lights strung on the tree should be May; for the Rutland Post
Office, Mrs . Parker and
Recitations, a playlet, and To The World." The program placedsothathotbulbsdonottouchfoUage.
After Christmas, move the tree outdoors a phase at a time. Carpenter; Leading Creek
Instrumental and vocal concluded with the Junior and
Watershed Building, Mrs.
selections were Included on the Senior High classes' singing Letts rest a week on a SUJUIY cool porch or breezeway before Carpenter and Stewart;
annual Christmas program of "Silent Night," "It Came Upon taking it on outdoors where the temperature may be sub- Rutland Branch of Pomeroy
the children and 7ouths of the A Midnight Qear ," and "What freezing. This helps to harden growth that became tender In- National Bank, Mrs. Parker,
Pomeroy Unlte4 Methodist Child ls This" accompanied by doors, andreducP.!I sltockfrom theswlfttemperature change .
Davis, Stewart, Bolin,
Church.
Scott VanVranken on the
When planting, handle carefully to avoid breaking the root Snowden and Fetty. M: o.
The program was opened by guitar, Joined by the entire ball. U you plant it In a convenient location, In coming years you Stewart
also
took
Clll)gregallonal singing of, "0 chUdren's department to sing may wish to decorate it as an ou181de Christmas tree. This tree arrangements to shut-ins, Miss
Come Ali Ye Faithful" whUe "We Wish You A Merry may afford you many a Merry Olrtstmas.
Etna Gardner, Mrs , Elsie
the chlldren entered the sane- Christmas."
But If you decide to buy a tree already cut, be sure to choose Bryant and to Mrs. Alma Rupe,
tuary. An organ selecllon of
The program was directed cine that bas been cut as near to the Christmas season as possible. on her 80th birthday.
"'Silent Night" was played by by Mrs. Charles Rsyburn and Some will have been sprayed with an anti-desiccant to keep them
The traveling prize, donated
Janet VanVranken. The kin· Mrs. James Wamsley.
from drying out. Before placing the tree In a large holder with a by Mrs. Wolfe, was won by
dergarten class with Dee
During the morning worship capacity to hold a gaUon of liquid, saw about one inch off the Mrs. Willford, with the door
Wriston and Sherrie Southall service, C. E. Blakeslee, trunk. This wiU remove clotted resins, and allow better ab- · prize going to Mrs. William
gave recitations and chlldren chalnnan of the Pastor-Parish sorption of the solution.
·
Brown.
ol the primary class giving Relations Committee of the
An eaally prepared mixture can lengthen the Indoor life of
Mrs. Edwards, program
recitations were Lori Rupe, "A Pomeroy · Chester Cha'rge, Olristmall trees and keep them looking green and fresh longer chairman, gave gardening tips
Little Child Came To Earth"; • presented a gift to Rev. Robert and more fire retardant.
' for January, noting that new
Tammy Eichinger, "My R. Card and his famUy and
To prepare this formula, to a gallon of bolllng water add and seed ca.talogs are due now and
Wlshea," and Lynn Slater, expressed the thanks of the
four tablespoons micronized iron, 2cups light corn syrup and that one should use them to
Mark Boyd, and J. R. Warns- congregation for their work mix
4 teaspoons of chlorinated household bleach. This is ssid to develop a careful plan for one's
ley, "We Love Him," followed during the past year.
double the Indoor life of most evergreens. Or you may use a pre- garden in the coming growing
by singing of "Mary Had A
The UMYF hosted a
Baby."
Christmas party for children of mixed commercial product.
Today many of us cut trees ~uch as the douglas fir, red pine,
The primary department the church Sunday evening.
gave a play "Trinunlng The Games were played, carols white pine, lodge pole pine, spruce, scotch pine, balsam fir or
Tree," with parts taken by sung, refreshments served, Austrian pine for our au-tstmas trees. Most of these varieties of
Clrtdy
McKinney,
Kim and Santa made his visit · pine are grown on tree farms In Meigs County. The other species
are shipped to local markets at Ouistmas time. 'lbe red pine h111
Krautler, SiJSall Wright, Lori during the evening.
Woods, Dolly Jltou&amp;ey, Janet
spreading branches with long soft needles. The white pine, a
VanVranken, Scott McKinney,
favorite .In the East, h111 blue-green foliage . Lodgepole pine Is
Todd
Rawlings,
Keith ·Wedding Revealed
slimmer than most species. The douglas fir bas close set branKrautrer, and Mark Slater.
ches, a sturdy center stem and soft fiat needles. It holds its
Their part of the program also
Mrs. Vera Roberts Is an- needles longer than other firs and hail non-!Itlcky boughs.
Included singing of "Jesus,
The scotch pine is not native to the United States, so trees of
nouncing the marriage of her
Tender Shepherd, Hear Us."
son, Cpl. Gordon Lee Johnson, this species come from planted stock. With enough open '!PBce,
Junior High ClaSI members
to the former Dianne Lynn this pine grows Into a shspely tree much sought after.
gave a reading, "What To Give
The spruce ill widely p0pular. 'lbe balsam fir Is common in
Harrison, daughter of Mr. and
Him" with Liz Card, Paula Mrs. Warren Harrison, central and eastern Christmas tree markets. The Austrian pine
Eichinger, ·and June Ann
Delaware un Nov. 17. · Capl. Is less well known, but Is one of the shspeliest of the group.
W8llllley taking parts.
Soon, you will find a new hybrid tree on the market. It Is
Johnson Is the grandson of
Members of the JW!Ior High
Mrs . . lielen Johnson of 134 bushy, with closely clustered branches that bear small cones1It
Class, Pam Vaughan, Pat Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy; Cpl.
Is a cross between the lodgepole pine and the shore pine and
Vaughan, Paula , Eichinger,
and Mrs. Johnson are residing prom.lses to be one of the mOll beautif1Jl of Christmas trees.
June Ann Wa1111ley, Jeff
at Jacksonville, N.C. where he
THE CBRISTMAll TREE I PINE FOR
Reuter, and Jeff Warner,
is stationed with the U. S.
formed a brastl &amp;eJ:tet to play
I think 1 shall never be
Marine Corps. They plan to
"Deck The HaUs," "Hark the return to Columbus following
Suld on an artificial tree,
Herald Angels Sing," and "Joy his diScharge on Jan.·14.
A Oni11maa tree with pl111tlc Umbe
Jut dte~~~' t · allr me up to by~;
A tree wllh aeedle1 111.1de of foil;
'lbat grew In factories, aot soU;
ADd tholllb It wiD aot hiii'D or shed,
Will neither be alive nor dead.
, .
. OPTOMETRI$1'
.
Pereaalal, ye1, It lll;AY be,
OFFICE HOURS 9:JtHO 12, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE
ADd formed Ia .perfeet 1ymmetry, .
tiT NOON ON THURS'.)- EAST COURT ST.,
Bul only God can make a tree ·
POMEROY.
Tn sui I nld.faahloncd lunls like me.

Methodist

Pacers Bounce Back
ByUnltedPreulolerllllliolllll
Unable ljlhandle one division
leader Saturday night, Indiana
tried the other division front
runner Sunday night with a
much better result as far as the
Pacers were concerned.
Following a 1~129loss at the
hands of Utah, the Pacers
came back to beat Easlml
Division-leading Kentucky 117111 In one of two American
Basketball Association con testa
Sundsy night. In the other
game, Carolina rallied for a 123
-117 victory over the New York
Nets.
Mel Daniels scored 26 points,

II fruitRUTLAND
- Decorated first place waP Mrs. Richard
plates prepared by . Fetty whoae package was a

Notes . ...

ON THE

IYMA~WIQI

•

Holiday Party in Home o Mrs. Bolin

Green Thumb

TO
SAVE

lOW COST INIUII111
AUTO "MANCINO

By Helen Bottel

I
l

Tourneys High

· carried the fight to Ali in the
early?oundsandevenmanaged
to land a couple of hard lefts to
the head of the taller and
heavier Ali.
But once Ali had figured out
the awkward aggression of the
28-yeaNld blond German, h01
toot control of the fight. He
stabbed his left jab at Blin's
head almost at wiU. Ali and~
Blin no longer belonged in the
same clasa by the fourth round.
Bleeding from cuts under both
eyes, BUn took a beating In the
seventh roWld before a rocketlng right cross sent him Into
the ropes. It took about three
seconds Wllil Btln fell down. He
tried gamely to raise, but was
wobbling on rubber legs when
he was counted out by 'Swiss
referee Sepp Suter.
Ali weighed only 220 pounds,

S- The Dally Sentinel, MlddlepOrt·Pomeroy, O.;Dec. 'll, 1971

.

This Week's Cage Game;

Colts Hungry for 3rd SUper Bowl

'

.

..

'

'

Dec. 27- Dec. 31

%
OFF
Storewide
Sale!
All Fabrics
Shop Early!

SINGER SALES&amp; SERVICE
,., McCALL' S&amp;SIMPLICITY PATTERNS

115 W. Second

992-2284

Pomeroy, 0.

�r

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport.,..oy, 0., Dec. 'l/, 1971

.

CLEVELAND t UP[) - The
Baltimore Colts will have just
one thing on their minds when
they meet the Miami Dolphins
next SWlday for the American
Football Coilference championship, and the one thing will not
be Don Shula their former
coach.
The Colts are more interested
in the winning Super Bowl
shares of $23,500 than in any
embarrassment they could
bring to Shula, who walked out
on them two years ago and has
built the Dolphins into a power.
Shula's expansion team is all
that stands in the way of Baltimore and a record third Super
Bowl appearance following the
Colis' easy 20-3 victory over the
Cleveland Browns Sunday.
" Miami edged Baltimore by a
half-game for the AFC east tiUe this season, the Colts making
the playoffs only as a "wild
card " team , but they say they
have no quarrel with their former coach .
"All that 'bitterness' is garbage," says middle linebacker
Mike Curtis. ·•J feel that way
and 95 per cent of the Colts feel
that way.
"Shula 's a good coach and we
have to play a good team . The
rest of it is theatncs invented
by people to keep busy ."
The Colts ' tough defense, still
smarting from suggestions they
deliberately blew their season
finale a weeka~o to draw Cleveland instead of Kansas City as
a playoff rival, bottled up the
Browns' offense at a skimpy
165 yards.
Smith Blocks Two
Bubba Smith blocked two field
goals, Rick Volklntercepted two
passes and the rest of the Baltimore defense came up with two
fumble recoveries and another
interception.
Johnny Unitas, as always the
master, completed six straight
p?ssesinone92-yard touchdown

WHO?
You ReadThe

drive and rookie Don Nottingham from Kent State, the 441st
player chosen In last year's
draft, gained 92 yards on the
ground and seored touchdowns
on one and seven-yard runs to
stake Baltimore to a - ~~ halftime lead.
Nottingham was filling In for
injured Norin Bulaich, who the
Colts hope to have back next
week.
·

Jim O'Brien, the hero of last
year's Super Bowl, accounted
for the rest of the Colts' scoring with second half field goals
of 42 and IS yards, more than
offsetting a 14-yarder by Cleveland's Don Cockroft.
"Our defense did it for us •"
said coach Don McCafferty of
Baltimore. "They were fantas-

Holiday Tournaments

when you can,''lamented Skorich. "We couldn't."
The Colts, who allowed 500
yards less than any other team
In the NFL this year, held Kelly to 49 yards on the ground and
stopped So Scott with 25. aeveland had a net of 69 yards rush·
ing.
The classic perfonnance by
the world champions set up an
ideal match for next SWlday at
the Orange Bowl.
Miami won the AFC east with
a 1~1 reeord whUe Baltimore
was 10 • 4, the teams splitting
their two games.

Dominate Cage Action

Whatever happens, Curtis
gives assurance, Baltimore
wiU not be trying to win for
Shula's sake.

Nick Skorlch of the BroWns, (aiDe won by Cleveland, 14-13.
"the best overaU defensive
"Siroqer 1bu Seplember"
team we've ~n this year."
"I think they were much
aeveland quarterback !Jill stronger than they were In SepNelsen, who was forced Into the tember," Nelsen said. "And we
three lnterteplions by a strong didn't put much pressure on
pass rush, dumped four limes them. They double-teamed the
for losses and got only one pass outside men so I went to the
to a wide receiver aU dsY. ob- backs more, but I didn 'I even
served improvement In the have time to throw to them."
tic."
Baltimore defense since the
The Browns threatened the
"They were," added coach teams met In a Seprember first two limes they had the
ball, twice penetrating deep In·
to Baltimore territory on a 39yard pass from Nelsen to Fair
Hooker and a 48-yard pWlt return by Leroy Kelly, but a fumble and the first of Smith's
blocked field goals stopped the
drives.
"With Baltimore's great defense, you _have to capitalize

tournaments Involving 17 of the
Include
UP! top 20 teams will be held..
nt at
Second..,anked M
Kodak
favored in its o
· waukee aassic
ing fifth·
Classic, third..,ated South ranked Southern California
Carolina wiU highlight the and No. 17 Penn -at
Qaker City tournament, 12th- Rochester, N.Y., the Las Veg111
ranked Florids State journeys Classic, the Palmetto Into Portland to participate In the vitatlooal at Charleston, S.C.,
Far West event, and 16th- , the Roadrunner Classic at Las
ranked Louisville faces Syra- . Cruces, N.M., and the Old
cuse In one offour games being Domln](ll Classic at Norfolk,
MU TILT ON TV
played today In the Holidsy Va., spotlighting eighth-labbed
Tonight's Marshall (7-ll)
Festival.
Indiana and 11th-ranked
and
Wlseooslo
(6·1)
No. 17. Arizona State and Brigham Young. Seventh·
basketball game lo lhe lillb 19th ranked Minnesota are ranked Long Beach State wiU
annual Mllwaukee Classic
featured In the Rsinbow host the Long Beach In·
will be televised over WSAZ. Classic and 20th ranked vitatiooal.
TV Cbaooel 3, begloolq at
Jacksonville is entered in the
Top-ranked UCLA plays host
8:30.
All-College tournament.
In the Bruin Classic beginning
Seven more tournaments get Wednesday while folli'IIH'ated
underway
Tuesday, followed North Carolina is entered In the
Milwaukee Wis., the Holidsy
Festival at New York's Madi- by an additional 10 on Wed- Sugar Bowl Classic, sixthtabbed Ohio State joins UCLA
son Square Garden, the Quaker nesday.
The Queen City Invitational, In the Bruin Classic and ninthCity Tournament" In Philadelphia, the Motor City Tourna- the final tournament of the ranked St. John's will particl·
ment In Detroit, the St. Louis month, begins Thursday In pate in the Maryland lnvilationa!, hosted by the No. 13
Invitational, the Bluebonnet Buffalo, N.Y.
Terrapins.
J&lt;lassic in Houston, the Big ·
Eight Tournament in Kansas
City, Mo., the All-College
Tournament in Oklahoma City,
the Utah State Tournament in
Logan, Utah, the Far West
C1assic In Portland, Ore., and
the Rainbow Claij!ilc in Hawaii. ·
In the next ~ix dsys, 29·
By United Press lnlernatlooal and had 17 assists to help the
The Natiooal Basketball As- Lakers over Houston. Houston
sociation's Central Division held a six-point lead in the third
race is reaching the critical period before Los Angeles
-the
Cleveland ripped off a llh'ltear that put
stage
Cavaliers are threatening for the game away. The victory
boosted the Lakers' record to
first place .
The Cavaliers, who gained M -3 and left West Wldefeated
national recognition last In the 32 games In which he has
season with their extended appeared thi,5 year.
Jerry Sloan hit the deciding
losing streaks, moved to within
basket
with I: 13 to play In the
a halfgame of the division lead
ORLANDO, Fla. (UP!)- The Sundsy night with a 108-102 BuUs' triumph over SeatUe.
University of Toledo, unbeaten victory over the first-place The Sonics had a chance to win
In M games and a 22-polnt fa- Baltimore Bullets. It was with 24 seconds left but Playervorl te over Richmond In Tues· Cleveland's fourth consecutive Coach Lenny Wilkens was
dsy night's Tangerine Bowl victory against Baltimore this called for an offensive blocking
here, put the finishing touches season and moved the Cava- foul to turn over the ball.
Bob Love led the Bulls with
on their pre-bowl game liers to a 13-Z3 mark as COlD·
28 points whUe Spencer Hay·
pared to the BuUets' 13-22.
practices today.
Cleveland could move Into wood's 28 were tops for Seattle.
The Rockets wiU be led on
Milwaukee, which had
first place Tuesday night if the
offense by quarrerback Chuck
dropped ils last two games,
Ealey ,a 21-year~ldsenior from Cavaliers can beat Portland
broke out with an easy victory
Portsmouth, Ohio, who guided and Cincinnati· defeats BaJ.
over Atlanta, Kareem AbduiToledo to an 11-4 record this timore.
John Johnson led the Jabbar led the Bucks with 24
year, the team's third straight
Cavalier
attack with a career- points and John Block added
undefeated season.
19. Lou Hudson had 'll for the
Ealey, who hasn't lasted de- high 40 points and Walt Wesley Hawks.
feat on the football field since took down 21 rebounds,
the ninth grade In high school, Baltimore pulled to within a
has a personal victory string of point with 2:30 left to play but
baskets by Butch Beard and
64 games. He was a UPI AllBobby Smith pulled the
American choice this season, Cavaliers out ol reach.
being named to the second
Wes Unseld led the BuUets
team.
with 22 points.
Toledo'sdevensivemckle Mel
,,
In other NBA action, Los
Long was a UP! first team Angeles extended Its record
choice this season. Long was wirming streak to 28 games
credited with 73 tackles and 103 with a 137-liS rout of Houston,
assists this year.
Oticago edged SeatUe 1o:l-102
The Rockets won last year's and Milwaukee topped Atlanta
MIAMI (UP!) -The NebrasTangerine Bowl with an easy 114-92.
ka Cornhuskel'll and Alabama
Jerry West scored M points Crimson Tide strelch their
victory over William and Mary.
muscles In the Florida SWlshlne
today, in preparation for their
naUonal championship clash
Saturday night In the Orange
By United Press lnlerutional
It may seem like a mild
winter to some but there's a
nation-wide blizzard on the
way, beginning today.
A blizzard of college basketbali tournaments.
The annual holiday-week
madness begins tonight with
the Milwaukee Classic in

Cavaliers Pull WithinHalf Game Of Bullets

Rockets

•••. .You Know!
...__
Eye 35th

Straight

WHAT?
You Read
••• , • You Know!

WHEN?

....._

You Read The Sentine
••• , .You Know!

'Huskers, Tide

Get In Final

WHERE?
You Read The Sentinel
•••• You Know!
...__

Licks For 'tilt

HIGHLIGHTS

with Paul Crabtree

' ' : 99 2-25 0 5
CALL POINTVIEW

WHY?
You Read The Senline
· .•• .You Know!

and

ADVERTISING
wHh

GREATEST IMPACT
More Circulation
More Readers
B'r.'ST RESULTS!

CaliA

DAILY SENTINEL
_ReiH•tati12
Phone 992·2156

HOORAY! It's New Year's Football? · Sure, there's a
Eve ln.the w&lt;rderful world of game on tap practically every

televiSIOn .

Sure, I know the new year
doesn' t start until Saturday,
but for TV, irs the beginning
of Ihe " Second Season"
tonight. And none too soon,
either, because the networks
really bombed with the First
Season.
The TV equivalent of the
New Year's Baby comes to us
In the persor of one Mrs. Cher
Bono, poker-faced. a pretty
good singer, and one of the
great masters of the fl'Jt-down.
"Sonny and Cher," a nice little
ray of light in a dismal llf!t·
work summer, comes back
tonight as a regular series. 10
p.m., Ch. 8.

day this week.

·

The Fiesta Bowl, first ever,
pits Florida State vs. Arizona
State at Tempe, Ariz., at 3
p.m., Ch. 6.
And the North-South Shrine
Game features some real allstars, with Big Ten stars
dotting the North lineup, and
the South powered by Curl
Watson. who scored that TO
that pulled the Liberty Bowl
tussle out oi the fire for
Tennessee. 9 p.m.. Ch. 12.

+++

Otherwise, It's a quiet,
restful day on the TV front,
just rightfor resting up after a
hectic . Christmas weekend.
Wltn long winter nights ahead,
+++
you might like to hear a
I'm glad we've got a great discussion of Winston Chur·
big power plant coming to the chill's scandalous. very unMid-Ohlo Valley area, and Victorian mother on " Book
three cheers for American Beat,", 1 p.m.. Ch, 9.
Electric Power.
+++
But over In ihe Canaan MOVIES : "The little
Valley area of Wesf Virginia, Kidnappers," ·• p.m., and
people are not nearly so happy "Julie," an early Doris Day
a,boutseelngoneolthe East's opus, 11 :30 p.m., both Ch. 10.
blgges,t and most beautiful
+t +
vacation spots chosen as the TUE.SDA.Y: Remember
site of a power-generatl"!! Johnny Desmond, one of the
facility . Arguments for and better singers of the Big Band
against the plant are Era? Bob Braun hasn't
discussed on the Paul forgotten him, either, and he's
Nuchlms Show tonight, 10 a guest on the 50-SO Club. Ch. •;
noon. ·
p.m., Ch. 9.

Clay·Wins
In Seventh
ZURICH, Switzerland (UP!)
- The toughness and the
courage of an unheralded
Gennan helped Muhammad All
to show that he might whip Joe
Frazier the second time
around.
The former World Heavyweight Champion knocked out
Juergen Blin after two minutes
and 12 seconds of the seventh
roWld Sundsy night at the
Oerllkon Hallenstadion and
looked In much better shspe
than he was for the Jinuny
Ellis and Buster Mathis fights.
"The Swiss mountains helped
me to get Into condition and I
am seriously thinking of making Zurich, the same hotel, the
same gym and the same hills
for my running, the camp for
my next fight", Ali said.
The former Cassius Clay
announced his next fight wiU be
for promotor Chris Dundee at
Miami Beach In March. Ali wiU
leave Zurich for a two-week
Middle East tour before returnIng home just in time to
celebrare his 30th birthdsy In
Jan . 17.
Neither Ellis nor Mathis
made Ali work so hard as Blin
who suffered his first knockdut
In 43 pro fights.
"He had the condition and
was determined to take ali
punches until he could not take
any more," Ali praised Blin.
"He deserves to be ranked
sixth or seventh in the world
rating."
Ali thought it would take him
only two rounds to finish off the
German for whom he had
predicted "no mercy", but Blin

1

22 more than Blin but seven
less than for the Mathis fight
last month. "I did not train
harder, but because of the cold
I did not drink so much. I
always gain weight In a hot
climate." AlthoUgh he was In
pretty good shiipe, Ali said he
was not as sharp as he wanted
to be.
The crowd of about 7,000 fans
were delighted by the actionpacked fight. First, they were
rooting for Blin for attacking
Ali, but once Ali was In
command, the crowd was back
on his side.
The enthusiasm of the Swiss
fans, however, did nol help to
take the promoters out of the
red. Ali received $250,000 whUe
Blin was guaranteed $45,000.

/Hei~.;--H;Ip--u~-1

WtdnJay · '
Ohio State vs. Arizona at Bruin
Classic
Youngstown vs. Western
Illinois In Tangerine Bowl
Tournament at Orlando, Fla.
Miami vs. Rollins at Palmetto,
s. C., Tournament
Lutheran Tournament at
Mus~lngum Tournament
Minneapolis ·
Findlay, Wilmington, Bluffton Wooster Classic
and Defiance In Hoosier- Wittenberg In Luth,ran
Tournament
Buckeye Tournament at
Ohio Wesleyan at Lemoyne
Findlay
Tournament
Ashland vs. Geneseo State in
Hoosler·Buckeye
Tournament
Ashland Tournament
Oberlin,
Malone.
Case·
Western
Cincinnati at Butler
Reserve
In
Cue-WR
Capital at Wayne State
Tournament
Cleveland State at. Kent State
Wright
State at Grand Valley
Tuesday
Tourn111ment
Bowling Green at . Detroit
Ohio Northern at Marshall
Motor City Classic
Tournament
Xavier at Palmetto Classic at
John Carroll at Fort Eustis
Charleston, S. C.
Tournament
MI. Union Tournament
Otterbein vs. Westm inster in Urbana Tournament
-Thursdoy
Musklngum Tournament
Musklngum vs. Clarion In Ohio Stete at Bruin Classic
Youngstown at Tangerine Bowl
Musklngum Tournament
Tournament
,
Wittenberg in · lutheran Marietta
at
Centre
College
Tournament
Tournament
Ohio Wesleyan· vs . New Case.
western Reserve
Hampshire In Lemoyne
Tournament
(N.Y.J Tournament
Hoosier-Buckeye Tournament
Hossier. Buckeye Tournament
Urbana Tournament
Ashland Tourmament
Ohio
Northern at Marshall
John Carroll at Fort Eustis
Tournament
(Va .) Tourmanent
Wright State at Grand Volley John Carroll at Fort Eustis
Tournament
(Mich.) Tournament
Ohio
U. at Marshall
Ohio Northern at Marshall St. Joseph's
(Ind.) at Toledo
!Mich.) Tournament
Kent
State
at
Cincinnati
Urbana Tournament
Friday
Ohio State at Bruin Classic
East Carolina at Dayton
Soturdoy
Yale at Xavier
United Press tntern•llonol
Bowllrig Green vs. $Ianford at
Detroit In Motor City Classic
Baldwin -Wallace, Mount
Union, Hiram in Mt, Union
Tournament
.
Wittenberg vs. Carthage In

On Colleges'
Holiday &amp;heds
ByUnltedPresslnternallonal
Ohio colleges begin a heavy
week of basketball action tonigh~ with many teams playing
in holiday tournaments.
Headlining the tourneys is the
Bruin Classic at Los Angeles,
where Ohio State might get a
crack at the host, top . ranked
UCLA.
The Buckeyes meet Arizona
In Wednesday night's first
roWld game and could go
against the Bruins the
following night.
Ohio collegiate teams are Involved In five tourneys that get
underway tonight, with three
single games also scheduled.
At the Detroit Motor City
Classic, BowUng Green, led by
sharp-shooting Dalynn
Badenhop, meets ,Stanford
tonight. Mount Union hosts its
holidsy tourney tonight, with
Baldwin • WaUace and Hiram
Invited.
Wittenberg meets Carthage
tonight
as
the
Lutheran Tournament gets
underway in Minneapolis
and Findlay is hosting the
Hoosier· Buckeye Tournament,
with Wilmington, Bluffton and
Defiance competing.
Ashland also Is holding its
owntournamentandmeetsGenesco State tonight.
In single games tonight, Cincinnati travels toButler,Capital
is at Wayne State and Kent
State hosts Cleveland State.

FIUON'S NEW RECORD
WINDSOR, Ont. (UP!) Rerve Filion, the first man In
harness racing history to crack
the 500-wln barrier in a single
season, estabUshed a world
record for most victories In a
single program with seven
Sunday afrernooll at the Wind·
sor, Ont raceway.

COST OF BUYING A,

.. -

NEW CAR
,__ ,_- ,
llotlto.WO.

"

including the gG-ahead basket
In the final quarter, to belp
Indiana beat Kentucky and
snap the Colonels' winning
streak at six. Roger Brown,
with 25 pointa, and Fred Lewis
with 23, contributed to the
Pscer's attack.
Dan Issei paced the Colonels
with 28 points, 23 of them In the
second half whUe teammare
Louie Dampier chipped In with
26.
In 1968 the Apollo 8 astronauts returned to earth after
a trip aroW!d the moon 10
times.

FROELUNDA WINS MATCH
GOTEBORG, Sweden (UP!)
-Vaestra FroelWida of Goreborg trounced the Calgarh
Stampeders 9-1ln the opening
match of the International Star
Cu~ Ice Hockey Tournament
Sunday night.

a
handy
budget
•
Improvement
•

kit

,

• NOTE LOANS
• LARGER LOANS
• FINANCING
125 E. MAl N

tf2·211'1
POMEROY, 0.

..

Some hands reach oul to touch and bel~.
others are clenched ·itt pain and despair. 'We ~llask
'"Why?" to the cruel contrasts of our life.
'Why poverty itt a land of fllmiy 1 'Why lontli m
in a world thai would join· hands 1 'Why war w en
the im1Julse of the heart is lo lovt?
.
1he achittd chasm between the real ana the itle I
everywhere flrovoke~ the question .. .
•

HY?

In a world looking for answers
maybe Coil is t~e place to start.
God is hope. God is now.
•

'
gm.
'

....

~

N. W. ·coMPTON. 0. ~ o.

'.

! __ _

season. She sa1d to take mventory of your gardening
tools, seeds, plant foods, a.1d
sprays you will need. Sharpen
garden tools and check handles
for needed repairs. If !lower
beds have not already been
prepared, the soil should be
dug and turned for beneficial
effect of freezing . This turns up
insects which the birds will eat.
Mrs. Edwards also recommended using coal ashes to
loosen the ground, and gave
tips on the care of plant such as
poinsettias, c ·hristmas
begonias, and Jerusalem
cherry.
Mrs. Bolin was chairman for
an educational display of 15
different styles of Madonnas
brought by members. She
assisted Mrs . Snowden in
moderating a discussion on the
use of the Madonna in floral
design. It was pointed out that
the madonna with child is
known as the Christmas
Madonna, while the Virgin
alone is used at other times of
the year, especially at Easter,
lo carry out religious themes.
Afigure of Mary with at t.Iched
container is no t a true
Madonna for judging purposes,
it was noted.
During the discussion it was
also pointed out that dull,
rat her than shiny , surfaces are
more sui ted for show
arrangements as more variety
of flowers can be used. Shiny
surfaces need !lowers such as
the rose, while surfaces are
more suitable to materials of a
coarser texture .
It was noted that when used
in a floral design, the Madonna
is to be the focal point and
should be worked into the
arrangement in such a way
that its removal would leave an
incomplete design. Plans
materials should never
overpower the Madonna nor
should it be or appear to be
standing in water, the
discussion leaders concluded.
Devotions were by Mrs.
Bolin who used "The Wise Men.
Still Adore Him" as her topic.
Members were invited into
the Bolin dining · room for
refreshments served buffet

style from a lace coyered table devotions , with members
centered with an arrangement naming a garden pest for roll
sparked with Christmas or- call . Mrs. Fred Williamson will
naments. Mrs. Bolin presided give February gardening tips,
at the coffee service and Mrs. with Mrs. Bill Williamson
Tom Stewart at . the punch presenting a book review on
bowl. The Bolin home was "Organic Gardening Without
extensively decorated for the Poisons," by Hamilton Tyler.
holiday season.
Mrs. Parker will give a
The next meeting will be held rebutml , "Insects -;-- Why I'm
January 26, at the home of Mrs. For Pesticides," and "Here's
Bolin, with Mrs. Snowden and My Heart" arrangements i
Mrs. Wolfe as co-hostesses. suitable for Valentine's Dayl
Mrs. Parker will have will be brought for judging. •

What are
you waiting
for!

...

COME TO A

FREE OPEN MEETING
OF OUR NEW CLASS IN

POMEROY
OPENING MON., JAN. 3, 7:30P.M.
ST. PAUL'S LUTHERAN CHURCH
231 E. Second St., Pomeroy, Ohio

NO REGISTRATION

NO OBLIGATION

CLASSES ALSO MEET WEEKLY
. IN GALLIPOLIS Grace United

St. LouiS Church
91 State St.

Methodist Church
lnd &amp;Cedar

Tuesdays 7:30p.m.
SJ .OO Registration

Wednesdays 9:30a.m .
$2 .00 Week Dues

WEIGHT ®WATCHERS.
!iome laHcing, some li!lening. and a prosram that works:'
~

Jfl#llll'f~

•11
IUIII-IU 00 W!llloMl •oTCNI"
l"'lt'"'T.oto•o oiO( . r.ll:r':.ICI. H l lwltG041 W&amp;ltNIII IHfi ..J.ItQOI.o~ lfl1

"WIJOIII -lti&lt;IQ" J.NU

C~ildren,

Youths Give P

Bowl.
Nebraske coach Bob Devaney, who arrived here with his
Huskers Frldsy, aends his
players Into an aflernoon
pl'llctice at Dade-North Junior
College Stadium, with the
seiiSion closed to the public.
Devaney generously gave the .
team a dsy off Sunday, after
they held a fuU-!ICale IICI'immage Christmas afternoon
against Alabama's wishbone
attack.
Coach Paul "Bear" Bryant
led the Crlrnllon tide Into town
Sunday, an!l today's. first
practice seiiSlon at Miami
Military Academy wiU be photo
dsy for the preas.
Both teams will get their first
workout on the artlfldal polyturf In the Orange Bowl on New
Year's Eve.

respectively, in each category.
Winners in the religious
members of the Rutland replica of a castle complete doorway category were Mr .
HER VALUES CONFUSED
Friendly Gardeners for shut- with turrets and drawbridge. and Mrs. Richard Grueser, Mr.
Dear Helen:
Ins of the commW!ity were Mrs . James Carpenter took and Mrs. Bruce May and Mr.
I went to stay with my sick sister In another stare for about delivered by Mrs. Harold Wolfe second place for a doll replica, and Mrs. Bill Brown. In the
lliJ: weeb.
and Mrs. Howard Birchfield and Mrs. Larry Edwards third secular doorway category, the
}'bile I Will gone, my husband's ~st friend (female) Stayed Thursday.
for a Hollywood bed design. All winners were Mr. and Mrs .
In oil' home to take care of him. She's a good hoUsekeeper and
The 14 fruit plates for shut-, three
received
prizes . Keith Kennedy, Mr. and Mrs.
cook.
Ins was one of several sunshine Honorable mention went to Bruce Davis and Mrs. C. 0 .
Now than I'm home,! find a very expensive set of pearls and projects carried out by the Mrs. Bruce May and Mrs. Chapm~n. The doorway
my mothe''s wedding ring set Is mlssing.I also discovered a gold Friendly Gardeners during the Robert Snowden. Secret pals categones cames pmes of $5,
brooch lbat belonged to my mother on the floor under our bed. It holiday season. Earlier in the were revealed with the ex- $3 and $2. Honorable mentions
month, holiday arrangements change and names were drawn went to Mr. and Mrs. Roy
bad beellln the box with the other prized family jewelry.
Snowden, Mr. and Mrs. HerHow can I get this Irreplaceable jewelry back without were made and delivered to for '72.
several
elderly
citizens
and
The
holiday
lighting
contest
man Grate and Mr. and Mrs.
callling a disturbance? - TOOK
shut-Ins. Elghreen gifts were was discussed by Mrs. Robert Larry Edwards.
Dear Took:
Merchants donating prize
Perha]JII this "best friend of your husband's" figures lf you sent to members of the Snowden. Mrs. Birchfield
Nature's
Garden
Club
a
drove
the
judges,
Mrs.
Robert
money
for the contest were
are willlnB to llhare your man, you won't quibble over ao·few
p.eces of jewelry,. Let them know where your values lie and you therapy project-· at 'the Crow and Mrs. Walter Best Photo Co., Tillis Trailer
Gallipolis Stare Institure, and a Grueser, around town to judge Sales, ,Stewart's Gun Shop,
may get your ''irreplaceable" possesalons back.
therapy program and holiday the lights. The judges were Hysell s Garage, Mlller
,, But I Blill think you're worrying about the wrong theft. party was held for the special presented gifts at a social hour Brothers Grocery ,_ Nelson's
H.
education children at the following the judging at the Restaurant, Rutland· Furniture
Dear Helen :
Rutland Elementary School. home of Mrs. Bruce Davis.
Store_, ':1artin's F~eral Home,
I have 'lour adorable nieces. We have two fine sons, aged
Tfie fruit plates were taken
Winners were Mr. and Mrs . Archie s .Recreatwn Center,
eight and ten, but no daughters, so we especially enjoy these little by the members to their annual Howard Birchfield, Mr. and Buck's Barber Shop, Rutland
girls. We buy them lnl!lpenslve gifts tmd have them over often. holidsy party at the home of Mrs. Dana Hoffman, Jr. and Branch of Pomeroy National
'lbey return our love- but never In the presence of their mother! Mrs. Joe Bolin Wednesday Mrs. and Mrs. Purl Van Meter Bank, Erlewine's Hardware,
When llhe Is around, they're standoffish and quiet because, night. The party was preceded In the religious category; Mr. Rutlan~ Department Store,
though she's a fine person In every other way, she beco'l!es angry by a dinner at the Martin and Mrs. Homer Parker, Mr. Sellard sMarket, and Jordan's
ad terribly pOssessive when others give attention to her Restaurant.
and Mrs. Harold Wolfe and Mr. Service Station.
children.
Gift wrappings were judges and Mrs. Carl Hysell, Sr., in
Communications were read
Here are examples:
before secret garden pals the secular overall category, from the Athens Ment.Il Health
I. She made her daughters refuse Ice cream we bought for exchanged presents. Taking winning $10, $5 and $3 Center and from Mrs. Gomer
Phillips of the Gallipolis State
them and our 10!18. Said she "could buy cones for them herself."
Institute,
thanking the group
2. She tore out the ribbon I put In her two-year~ld's hair
for participati"ng in therapy
when I baby-eat. Said she dldn 't like ribbons.
programs at the two in· 3. She ripped off a dress I boughi for my godchUd (her oldest
stitutions.
daughter) and said the color was wrong for her. Most of our gifts
Mrs. Wolfe thanked Mrs .
llhe throws away.
Fetty
for serving as chairman
4. She will not allow me or my husband to help dish out food to
for the club's t.Ible entry on
the chUdren when we are together for famUy meals, though she
Vietnam at the Meigs County
helped our sona when they were younger.
Christmas show. Members
Needless to say, thesa episodes upset the youngsters and
made 21 entries in artistic and
cause tears. I ''keep my distance," but sometbnes It's hard, with
educptional divisions of the
kids you truly love.
A weekly feature of Meigs
show'; winning 10 ribbons, with
CoWity Garden Club members.
Yet my sister-in-law Is kind and loving In other ways, and so
one junior entry also a ribbon
good to our sons. She only becomes hostile when I try discussing
winner. The Merry Gardeners,
this with ber.
a junior club sponsored by the
Are these over1lQSseSslve mothers afraid their children wiU
Rutland Friendly Gardeners,
BY MRS. MARJORIE DAVIS
stop loving them If they also love other people? - CONFUSED
won
a special award for an
Rutlaud Friendly Gardeners
AUNT
exhibit of club projects. SerDear Aunt:
ving on show committees were
YOUR CHRISTMAS TREE
0ver1)0118essiveness stems from jealousy, which has its
Mrs.
Bolin, chairman, Mrs.
Why not grow your own Christmas tree?
roots In ln8eclrity. And Insecure people are constantly fearful
There is something special about watching your own tree Carpenter, photography, Mrs.
that others are better loved.
grow. Buy some seedlings and grow your own for a few years Parker, publicity, Mrs .
I hope your stster-lrHaw wiU somehow come to realize that
Willford, smging, with Mrs .
hence. Balsam or Douglas fir or Scotch pine are popular.
love ill like an outdoor cllmblng plant: Push It Into a small, dsrk,
Wolfe and Mrs. Stewart also
However, you may wish to choose a tree that lives on. By
assisting
.
stifling place and, even though pampered, It soon dies. But if you
this,
1
mean
a
fresh
dug,
living,
balled
and
burlapped
conifer
or
Mrs
.
Willford
reported on a
let It grow naturaUy, with only a little "direction," It reaches out
other evergreens. U you consider the price of a cut tree, a living recent session with the special
to becomutronger and more beautiful each day. - H.
one Is a bargain when you can both use it decoratively indoors education children when
Dear Heloile:
and lawr install it permanently in your yard. Also, there's Christmas arrangements using
You ·said "only husbands' minds wander - usually - if
something good about looking at a handsome tree in your yard glittered thistles and bell
they're good guys." I w111 brought up to believe that "Even the
and remem~riiJg the I!!'PPY season when it was the center of replicas of 11tyrofoam cups,
lhliilbt ~"the nilt Bit !bought of~llia!oyalty -Is dlaloyal." And,
&lt;llrlstmas joy.f!!f your family.
yarn, and baubles ·were made .
after three marriage faUures, ftankly I don't give a damn. Before b~g your tree, decide where you will plant it
Mrs. Fred Williamson, llank
REALIST
outdoors, and prepare the hole before the groWld freezes. Cover arrangement chairman,
Dear Realist :
with mulch or plastic to keep the hole ready. You will want to named the following to provide
Your purist plillosophy just might explain your unsuccessful
selectthe tree for Its ultimate purpose. Remember that pines and designs for January : Mrs.
marriages, yes? Show me a man whose mind doesn't wander
spruces become large trees, suited as lawn specimens or wind- Edwards, Mrs. Parker, Mrs.
occUionally, and I'll show you the world's duUest husband! -H.
breakers. Junipers are suitable for foWldstion plantings for a Wolfe and Mrs. Willford. Floral
number of years, but will eventually become large. Yews and arrangements have been made
hollies Clll' be kept in small scale for a long time and can be used by the following during the past
for doorways, corn,er or other locations near the house.
month; for the Holsum Bakery
Moisten the root ball at once.lf the nursery has not already Christmas Party, Mrs. Eddone so, spray the tree, top and root ball, with an anti-desiccant wards , Fetty, Williamson ,
as soon as you receive it. Put the balled tree In a large container Wolfe and Birchfield; Rutland
'Yfl~'lll'l1m and pack around It with moistened peat moss, which you keep Church of Christ, Mrs. Bolin,
I V
I U
moist. You may decorare the tree as you like, except that · Carpenter and Mrs. Brace
Rocking Is not recommended. Lights strung on the tree should be May; for the Rutland Post
Office, Mrs . Parker and
Recitations, a playlet, and To The World." The program placedsothathotbulbsdonottouchfoUage.
After Christmas, move the tree outdoors a phase at a time. Carpenter; Leading Creek
Instrumental and vocal concluded with the Junior and
Watershed Building, Mrs.
selections were Included on the Senior High classes' singing Letts rest a week on a SUJUIY cool porch or breezeway before Carpenter and Stewart;
annual Christmas program of "Silent Night," "It Came Upon taking it on outdoors where the temperature may be sub- Rutland Branch of Pomeroy
the children and 7ouths of the A Midnight Qear ," and "What freezing. This helps to harden growth that became tender In- National Bank, Mrs. Parker,
Pomeroy Unlte4 Methodist Child ls This" accompanied by doors, andreducP.!I sltockfrom theswlfttemperature change .
Davis, Stewart, Bolin,
Church.
Scott VanVranken on the
When planting, handle carefully to avoid breaking the root Snowden and Fetty. M: o.
The program was opened by guitar, Joined by the entire ball. U you plant it In a convenient location, In coming years you Stewart
also
took
Clll)gregallonal singing of, "0 chUdren's department to sing may wish to decorate it as an ou181de Christmas tree. This tree arrangements to shut-ins, Miss
Come Ali Ye Faithful" whUe "We Wish You A Merry may afford you many a Merry Olrtstmas.
Etna Gardner, Mrs , Elsie
the chlldren entered the sane- Christmas."
But If you decide to buy a tree already cut, be sure to choose Bryant and to Mrs. Alma Rupe,
tuary. An organ selecllon of
The program was directed cine that bas been cut as near to the Christmas season as possible. on her 80th birthday.
"'Silent Night" was played by by Mrs. Charles Rsyburn and Some will have been sprayed with an anti-desiccant to keep them
The traveling prize, donated
Janet VanVranken. The kin· Mrs. James Wamsley.
from drying out. Before placing the tree In a large holder with a by Mrs. Wolfe, was won by
dergarten class with Dee
During the morning worship capacity to hold a gaUon of liquid, saw about one inch off the Mrs. Willford, with the door
Wriston and Sherrie Southall service, C. E. Blakeslee, trunk. This wiU remove clotted resins, and allow better ab- · prize going to Mrs. William
gave recitations and chlldren chalnnan of the Pastor-Parish sorption of the solution.
·
Brown.
ol the primary class giving Relations Committee of the
An eaally prepared mixture can lengthen the Indoor life of
Mrs. Edwards, program
recitations were Lori Rupe, "A Pomeroy · Chester Cha'rge, Olristmall trees and keep them looking green and fresh longer chairman, gave gardening tips
Little Child Came To Earth"; • presented a gift to Rev. Robert and more fire retardant.
' for January, noting that new
Tammy Eichinger, "My R. Card and his famUy and
To prepare this formula, to a gallon of bolllng water add and seed ca.talogs are due now and
Wlshea," and Lynn Slater, expressed the thanks of the
four tablespoons micronized iron, 2cups light corn syrup and that one should use them to
Mark Boyd, and J. R. Warns- congregation for their work mix
4 teaspoons of chlorinated household bleach. This is ssid to develop a careful plan for one's
ley, "We Love Him," followed during the past year.
double the Indoor life of most evergreens. Or you may use a pre- garden in the coming growing
by singing of "Mary Had A
The UMYF hosted a
Baby."
Christmas party for children of mixed commercial product.
Today many of us cut trees ~uch as the douglas fir, red pine,
The primary department the church Sunday evening.
gave a play "Trinunlng The Games were played, carols white pine, lodge pole pine, spruce, scotch pine, balsam fir or
Tree," with parts taken by sung, refreshments served, Austrian pine for our au-tstmas trees. Most of these varieties of
Clrtdy
McKinney,
Kim and Santa made his visit · pine are grown on tree farms In Meigs County. The other species
are shipped to local markets at Ouistmas time. 'lbe red pine h111
Krautler, SiJSall Wright, Lori during the evening.
Woods, Dolly Jltou&amp;ey, Janet
spreading branches with long soft needles. The white pine, a
VanVranken, Scott McKinney,
favorite .In the East, h111 blue-green foliage . Lodgepole pine Is
Todd
Rawlings,
Keith ·Wedding Revealed
slimmer than most species. The douglas fir bas close set branKrautrer, and Mark Slater.
ches, a sturdy center stem and soft fiat needles. It holds its
Their part of the program also
Mrs. Vera Roberts Is an- needles longer than other firs and hail non-!Itlcky boughs.
Included singing of "Jesus,
The scotch pine is not native to the United States, so trees of
nouncing the marriage of her
Tender Shepherd, Hear Us."
son, Cpl. Gordon Lee Johnson, this species come from planted stock. With enough open '!PBce,
Junior High ClaSI members
to the former Dianne Lynn this pine grows Into a shspely tree much sought after.
gave a reading, "What To Give
The spruce ill widely p0pular. 'lbe balsam fir Is common in
Harrison, daughter of Mr. and
Him" with Liz Card, Paula Mrs. Warren Harrison, central and eastern Christmas tree markets. The Austrian pine
Eichinger, ·and June Ann
Delaware un Nov. 17. · Capl. Is less well known, but Is one of the shspeliest of the group.
W8llllley taking parts.
Soon, you will find a new hybrid tree on the market. It Is
Johnson Is the grandson of
Members of the JW!Ior High
Mrs . . lielen Johnson of 134 bushy, with closely clustered branches that bear small cones1It
Class, Pam Vaughan, Pat Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy; Cpl.
Is a cross between the lodgepole pine and the shore pine and
Vaughan, Paula , Eichinger,
and Mrs. Johnson are residing prom.lses to be one of the mOll beautif1Jl of Christmas trees.
June Ann Wa1111ley, Jeff
at Jacksonville, N.C. where he
THE CBRISTMAll TREE I PINE FOR
Reuter, and Jeff Warner,
is stationed with the U. S.
formed a brastl &amp;eJ:tet to play
I think 1 shall never be
Marine Corps. They plan to
"Deck The HaUs," "Hark the return to Columbus following
Suld on an artificial tree,
Herald Angels Sing," and "Joy his diScharge on Jan.·14.
A Oni11maa tree with pl111tlc Umbe
Jut dte~~~' t · allr me up to by~;
A tree wllh aeedle1 111.1de of foil;
'lbat grew In factories, aot soU;
ADd tholllb It wiD aot hiii'D or shed,
Will neither be alive nor dead.
, .
. OPTOMETRI$1'
.
Pereaalal, ye1, It lll;AY be,
OFFICE HOURS 9:JtHO 12, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE
ADd formed Ia .perfeet 1ymmetry, .
tiT NOON ON THURS'.)- EAST COURT ST.,
Bul only God can make a tree ·
POMEROY.
Tn sui I nld.faahloncd lunls like me.

Methodist

Pacers Bounce Back
ByUnltedPreulolerllllliolllll
Unable ljlhandle one division
leader Saturday night, Indiana
tried the other division front
runner Sunday night with a
much better result as far as the
Pacers were concerned.
Following a 1~129loss at the
hands of Utah, the Pacers
came back to beat Easlml
Division-leading Kentucky 117111 In one of two American
Basketball Association con testa
Sundsy night. In the other
game, Carolina rallied for a 123
-117 victory over the New York
Nets.
Mel Daniels scored 26 points,

II fruitRUTLAND
- Decorated first place waP Mrs. Richard
plates prepared by . Fetty whoae package was a

Notes . ...

ON THE

IYMA~WIQI

•

Holiday Party in Home o Mrs. Bolin

Green Thumb

TO
SAVE

lOW COST INIUII111
AUTO "MANCINO

By Helen Bottel

I
l

Tourneys High

· carried the fight to Ali in the
early?oundsandevenmanaged
to land a couple of hard lefts to
the head of the taller and
heavier Ali.
But once Ali had figured out
the awkward aggression of the
28-yeaNld blond German, h01
toot control of the fight. He
stabbed his left jab at Blin's
head almost at wiU. Ali and~
Blin no longer belonged in the
same clasa by the fourth round.
Bleeding from cuts under both
eyes, BUn took a beating In the
seventh roWld before a rocketlng right cross sent him Into
the ropes. It took about three
seconds Wllil Btln fell down. He
tried gamely to raise, but was
wobbling on rubber legs when
he was counted out by 'Swiss
referee Sepp Suter.
Ali weighed only 220 pounds,

S- The Dally Sentinel, MlddlepOrt·Pomeroy, O.;Dec. 'll, 1971

.

This Week's Cage Game;

Colts Hungry for 3rd SUper Bowl

'

.

..

'

'

Dec. 27- Dec. 31

%
OFF
Storewide
Sale!
All Fabrics
Shop Early!

SINGER SALES&amp; SERVICE
,., McCALL' S&amp;SIMPLICITY PATTERNS

115 W. Second

992-2284

Pomeroy, 0.

�.

r

J

'

6- The Dally 9elalnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o ., Dec. 27,1971

,

.

Sentinel Classijieds ·Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get. R~sults! ·
Carpenter

Card of Thanks
remembered me durirfg the

OF
·QUAliTY

hoi iday season . I wish each of

News, Event
Mrs. Verlin Howery spent
some tfule recently with her
son-in-law and daughter, Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph Chapman and
family at St. Henry, Ohio .
Mr . and Mrs. Arthur
Crabtree attended a Christmas
party for district ministers
and wives at Trinity United
Methodist Church in Logan .
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Jordan
and Clay William, Stanton,
·Kentucky, were overnight
guests of her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Lewis Cottrill and helped
Mrs. Cotlrill celebrate her
birthday . They also called on
his mother, Faye Jordan, and
other relatives.
Columbia Grange No. 2435
held their December meeting
and enjoyed an oyster supper.
Installation of new officers was
held. Dona lions were made to
the TB fund and the State
Grange Camp Fund.
Captain David Tinsley , .
Bismarck, North Dakota,
visited his aunt, Mrs. William
Lawson and family. His
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Tinsley, Charleston, W. Va.
also were guests at the Lawson
home.
Murl Galaway has been
re leased from O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital where she
received treatment for some
time. She is somewhat improved .
Mr . and Mrs . Harold
Gillogly, Vicky and Bruce
spent a Saturday night and
Sunday· in Colwnbus with his
sister, Mrs. Bernice McKnight
and family .
Mr . and Mrs. Dwaine Jordan, Bryan and Keith, spent
Sunday with Mrs , · Jordan's
brother-in-law and sister, Mr.
rnd Mrs. Alfred Rice and sons.
Mr. and Mrs. James Gaston
entertained with a family
dinner on Sunday . Those
present were Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Gaston and family and
Ricky McDaniel, Albany ; and
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gaston
and Roy, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Gaston, and Mr. and Mrs.
Clifford Smith and Nellie,
Athens.
Carl Greenlees visited his
brother, Dean Greenlees ,
Fleming, and his brother and
sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Chester Greenlees, at Barlow
on Monday.
Mrs. Martha Mays was a
business visitor to her home in
Strasburg and attended a preChristmas family gathering at
the home of her son and
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Albert Quivey, Dover, Ohio.
Other guests were Mr. and
Mrs. Sidney Parker, Bolivar ;
Anna Parker, Cleveland; Mr.
and Mrs. Tom Parker and
Stacy, Strasburg, and Kenneth
Erickson, locaL She also
visited frienda in the Strasburg

area.
Bernice McKnight and
Roger, Columbus, wtre guests
of Mr , and Mrs. D. 0 .
McKnight, Mrs. Goldie
Gillogly and other relatives
here.
Mr, and Mrs. Cecil Gillogly
and family visited Mrs.
Gillogly's brotber-in-Iaw and
sister, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Grover
and daughters,
Pomeroy.
The Christmas program at
the MI. Union Church on
Sunday night was well attended. Mrs. ll&lt;ln Wilson was in
charge.
The Busy Bee Society of the
Carpenter Baptist Church met
with Mrs. Rex Cheadle. Mrs.
Cheadle was program leaders.
Others present were Helen
Jeffers, Ida Cheadle, Mella
Fisher, Mae Jordan, Freda
Smith , Emma Whittington,
Vivian Gaston, Anna Lich,
Lynn McWhorter and Kathy
Cheadle.
Dale Dye accompanied his
grandson and wife, Mr. and
Mrs , Thad Dye to Thurman
where they spent a day with
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Walker
(Dawn Dye) and family.
The W.S.C.S. of the Temple
Olurch met at the ·home of
Mrs. Arthur Crabtree. Tbe
Christmas program was
presented by Mrs. Don Comer.
The Carpenter Baptist
O.urch held their Christmas
program on Sunday evtning
with ,. good crowd attending.
Mr. and Mrs. Rex Cheadle
entertallled tile youtb group
with a Chrisbnas party after
the program. ThOBe present
were Patricia Wabll, Mary,
Allce,.Wanda, and Helen Peck,

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Peck,
N•lhln Brady, Nancy Smltll,
IUid the holt family, Mr. and
Mrs. Rex Cheadle, Don, Kathy,
1111d Rule.
SUnday dinner guests of Mr.

you a Happy and Prosperous
New Year.

Edna E. Wiggins.
12-27·llp
THE FAMILY of ·Melvin B.
Grimm desires

to express

their heartfelt "thanks " to

Dr. Brady, the nurses and
staff of Holze r Med ic a l
Center ; the Ewing Funera l
Home ; the Rev . Forrest

Donley of the Asbury United
Method Is I Church, also to
Mrs ~

Lucy Spenser who was

sofaithfulln our time of need ;
to all our friends and neigh-

bors for the beautiful floral

Ponteroy
Motor"Co.

2 51615

I WANT to thank all those wh o

t971 DODGE POLARA

$2895

Custom V-8, 4 door, power steering &amp; brakes, automa ti c
trans . oark green finish with green vinyl roof. spotless
interior with sea t covered with clear pla ~ t ic. Less than

13,500 miles by loca l owner. Full equipment Includes
a car like

END OF YEAR
Buy ~y Fuel Oil

SIEGLER HEATER
GET FREE
200 Gallons Fuel Oil When
You Buy Any Siegler Heater
Thru Dec. 31.

radio, w-w tires , wh. covers . You can appreciate
thi s, bu t we priced it for immediate sa le.

1971CHEVELLEMALIBUCPE.

Sa ndalwood with brown vinyl top, factory air conditioned,

guards. Retail $4155. Co. offi cial car &amp; specia ll y priced.

arrangements, for the food
se nt in ; for their express ions

Pon~eroy

Syracuse Ladies ' Auxilia ry
for the dinner they sent in on

llotor Co.

Service &amp; Repair

iWheel AligniJlent
15.55

All Com men:ial &amp;

Pomeroy Home &amp;Auto

For Sale
LONG BOTTOM - Five room
house , bath , business or

of sympathy ; and to the

EXPERT
- GUARANTEED-Phone 992-2094

$3595

V-8 engine with turbo hydromatlc, power steer ing. E.
clock, P. B:, radio. Rally wheels with W· W fires, Frt. &amp; rear

Business Services

Clearance Sale!

storage building Phone 985-352'1.

$6,500.

• Open BTII'5
Monday lhru S.turday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, o.

NORTH

27

• K976
¥ A KQ J 108 7

+Void
... K7
\VEST ( D )
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+2
olo Q32

.A
SOUTH

deeme d object ional .
The
publisher will not be responsible
for more than one 'incorrec1
insertion.

RATES
For Want Ad Ser vice
5 cents per Word one inserti on
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EAST
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Minimum Charge 75c
cents

per

word

three.

consecutive insertions.

18 cents per word six con

secu tive insertions.
25 Per Cent Discount on paid

ads and ads pa id within 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
SUO for 50 word min imum.
Each additional word 2c.

Help Wanted

WANTED!
SENTINEL
CARRIERS

All built in to buttonhole,

over cast and laney stitch .
Pay ·\ust S~8 . 75 cas h or term s
avai able. Trade -ins ac-

Pomeroy

· FOUR NEW HOMES
OPEN FOR INSPECTIQN
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom $16,900.00 home can be purchased with a
monthly payment as low as $65.00 for a family with a base
sal~ry of $5,000.00 and three children. 7'1• Pet. annual
E"!'ceii"t·age· rate.

BILL NELSI)N 992-:U57
TOM CROW, 992-2580

damage in shi pping . Will take
S27 cash or budget plan
12·21-6tc
APPLES -

Fitzpatrick Or-

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO
992-2094
606

1:. Main

Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPLIES

HILTQN WOLFE 949-3711
DALE DUTTON, 992-2534

ROOFING &amp; CARPENTER
WORK
SPOUTING,
ROOF PAINTIN~
NEW &amp; OLD WORK'
All Weather R.oofing &amp;
Construction Co. and An
thony flumbing &amp; Heating.
Complete
Plumbing ,
Heating and A,jr Con-

·'

'·"IJD 0 '-.!£ FOR
lt\E ROI\D ...

M'l MAN
SNUFFY MIGHT
NOT 8ET.H' ·
.GOODEST
CRITTER ON
·TH'TOP OF
THIS GREE N
AIRTH

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Home Units
rl-27

24-Hour Service

Also Furnace Repair

NOTHING'J
STU Dlit NG ON A
SKI LIFT JS
NOTWtNG 1

Ph. 992·3074

I HAI?DL'f KNOW
WHERE 10 SE&lt;SIN!

SOME DAYS
I\Vl11-ll N6 HAPPENS,
/&gt;ND OIHE~ ...

c&amp;M

REFRIGERATION
SERVICE
HA~DCRAFT

It;)

1tll ~ NU.,

toe .

GIFT ITEMS
Christmas
decorations. wearing
apparel. · jewelry,
ceramics .

cepted. Phone 992-5641.
12-21-61c
------VACUUM cleaner brand new
1971 mode L Complete with all

available. Phone 992· .5641 .

PHONE .9 92-2156
FOR DETAILSI

Ph. 992·2174

left in layaway . Beautiful
pastel co lor, full size model.

cleaning tools. Small paint

Mason &amp; Hartford

SMITH ·NELSON.
MOTORS, INC.

12-19-30tc

Friday , to the pallbearers.
EARLY American stereo-radio
OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.
May God's rich blessings
comblna1ion, 4-speaker sound
f'PMEROY, OHIO
come to each is our prayer .
system,
AM-FM radio, 4·
The Melvin Grimm fami ly I_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ __:__ _ _ _ _ _...,...J sp~e d automdtic
changer ,
12-27-llc
balance $78 .32 . U se our
budget terms . Call 992-7085.
WANT AD
Wanted
To
Buy
12-2t-61c
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
OLD FURNIT'URE , Round Qak MODERN wa lnut ster eo-radio
WIN AT BRIDGE 5 P.M. Day
Before Publication
tables; Brass beds, ·dtshes,
com bination, 4-speaker sound
MQI]day Deadline 9a.m.
clocks, and -or com plete
system, 4-speed automatic
Can~JI.rltion &amp; Corrections
households . Write M. D.
changer , sepa rate controls.
Will beaccepteduntll9a .m . for
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Balan ce $64 .79 . Use our
Day of Publl&lt;alion
Call 992-6271.
budget
terms. Call 99J.7085.
REGULATIONS
12·17-lfc
12-21-61c
The Publisher reserves the - - - -- - - - ri gh t 'to edit or reject any ads
1971 ZIG-ZAG sewing machine

The Best and
the Worst

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Sma llest Heater Core .
Nathan Biggs ·
Radiator Specialist

.. •

G-E&lt;,fi-IN&gt;J~I&gt;, f&lt;lll-1! HO'f/'V IOU
~N0¥1

IS THE CUTEST OF THE
MIL.L.Io-JAIRES WHCNE 5EEN .
5EGGI'-JG ME 10 MARR'I'
THEM-

I

Dollo, all dressed in style,
knitted and crocheted. I Has
to be seen to be oppreclatedl
Many items you h1ve been
looking for, for that perfect
gift.

·-

HIDDEN

·~

TREASURES
GIFT SHOf
MARTHA ROSE, Owner
Locoted on County Road J4
near Royal Oak Park. W1tch

BLIND ADS
chard s, State Route 689 ,
And
Ad dit iona l 25c Charge per L - - - - - -- - -- '
phone Wilesville, 669-3785.
Advertisement.
·,
·
9-3·lfc
for Signs.
FURNITURE
OFFICE HOURS
Employment
Wanted
Open every day except
8:30a.m. to 5000 p.m. Dail y
ditioning.
Stop·
In
and
See
Our
Monday
8 30 a .m. to 12: 0&lt;1 Noo n
24Q Lincoln St., f.liddlepofl
INTERIOR painting. Call Don 2425 FT. TRAILER, completely
Saturday.
Floor Display.
1 P.M. till P.M.
redecorated interior. Must
VanMeter 985-3951.
sell
,
$975.
Call
992-5171
.
12-19-12tp
Phone 992-25SO
12-24-31c
Notice
NEIGLER Build ing Suppl y.
Insured· Experienced
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby NEW Year's Eve Dance and
Free estimate on building
SINGER automatic sewing
Buffet Lunch, Friday, Dec. For Rent
Work Guaranteed
your
new
home.
Will
draw
machine . Like new, in
Oswald: " 1971 has been a
31. 9 p.m. for members of
prfnts
fo
suit
the
lay
of
your
be a utifu I walnut ca bi ne t,
See us for
Free
Po m eroy American L eg ion NEW, 12 x 60, 2 bedroom mobile
good year for us. You and
land
.
Call
Guy
Neigl
er
,
home
across
from
Bradbury
makes
design
stitc
hes,
zig
Post and gu ests . Organ music
:V o u r teammates not only
Estimate on Furnace
Racine, Ohio. For repair and
Sc hool. Call 992-5308 or see zags, buttonholes, blind hems.
by Armand Turley.
Complete
won the World's championaluminum
siding,
soffet
and
lnstalation .
Char les Lewis, 2nd house
etc . Will sell for 585. Call
12-n3tc
guHer.
Call
Donald
Smith,
; hip for the second straight
south from Bradbury School.
Ravenswood 27J.9893 after 5 Racine, Ohio.
·
BACKHOE AND DOZER work .
year, but you will represent
p.m.
Pets welcome.
Remodeling
SAVE
up
to
one
half
.
Br
ing
your
10·1·1fC
Septic tanks Installed . George
12-27-lfc
the United States in the 1972
lt
-28-tfc
sick TV to Chuck's TV Shop,
-----~
1Bill) Pullins. Phone 992-2478.
Olympiad and defend your
151 Butternut Ave ., Pomeroy .
HARRISON'S
TV
and
Antenna
4-25-tfc
Kitchens, Baths
FURNISHED cottage, 3 rooms
title as World's champions
Phone 992-5080.
Service. Phone 992-2522.
and bath, utilities pa id except Mobile Homes For Sale
in 1973' '
11 -2t-lfc
6·10-tfc
Room Additions
phone. Phone Sa m Arnold ,
LEGAL NOTICE
Jim : " It wasn't too bad
Syracu se, 992·2360.
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
NOTICE OF
And Patios
for you. You served as non.
12-24-tfc
service, all makes. 992-2284.
APPOINTMENT
YOUNG
MEN
playing captain for the thi rd
Adminl5,rltrlx With the
The 'Fabric . Shop. Pomeroy .
straight year and I am very
Will Annexed
Author
ized
S.inger
Sales
and
SOx \2 TWO BEDROOM mobile
No. 70519
sorry you elected to resign
Service. W€S harpen Sc issors.
home, gas heat, Sy"c amore
Estate of FREDA FAUBER
after we won in Taiwan."
3-29-lfc Deceased .
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
St., Middleport. Phone 992·
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph .
is
hereby
given
that
Notice
7004
or
992
·3585,
Danny
Oswald : " Like politicians ,
VIVIAN
PO
STON
whose
Post
662-lll3l.
Thompson
.
DELL WHEEL al ignm ent Office Address Is 6046 Sedgw ic k
non-pI a y i n g captains are
12' · 14' · 24' • WiDE O'located
12-23-lfc
2·12-ttc
at Crossroads, Rt. 124. Roa d, Worth ing ton, OhiO ha s
li kely to consider tbemselves
Complete
front
end
service,
been duly appointed as Ad ·
indispensable. I had held th e
CO N CR~TE
FURNISHED and unfurnished
tune up and brake service. min islratri x w ith the Will an . READY -MI X
job long e nough and am able
delivered
right
to your.
apartments. Close to school.
Wheel s balanced elec · nexed of the Estate of Freda
project. Fast and easy. Free
to quit a winner. Not that l
Phone 992-5434.
Ironicall y.
All
work Fau ber late of Melo s County.
esti mates . Phone 992-3284 .
don't think that your team
10-18-tfc
guaranteed .
Reaso nable Ohio, deceased ,
Da
ted
this
9th
day
of
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co.,
rates. Phooe 992-3213.
1220 Washington Blvd.
De ce mber 1971
and Lee Hazen, the new nonMiddleport, Oh io.
Belpre, Ohio
7-27-lfc
NICE TRAILER,
bedroom,
Joh n C. Bacon
playing ca ptain won't win
6-30-tfc .
Acting Judge of
ideal for couple, 10 miles
again, but contrary to poputhe
Proba
te
Court
north of Pomeroy. Phone 992· FOR THE BEST deal in a new SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
lar belief the captain worries
Meig s County, Ohio
6452.
Reasonable rates. Ph. 446-4782, 112 I IJ. 20, 77,
LEGAL NOTICE
31
along with the team and l
12-15-tfc or used mobile home, try
Gall ipo li s. John Russell,
Kanauga
Mobile
Home
Sales,
NOTICE OF
am glad a younger man has
O..ner 8. Operator.
APPOINTMENT
Kanauga. Ohio.
the job."
l-12-tfc
TIMES FOR HOLDING
'
Case No. 20st2
TRA ILE-R lbTS, Bob's Mobile
12-17-90tc
COURTS OF APPEALS .
Estate of Anna Mozelle Burton
Jim : " What do you think
Court , Rl. 124, Syracuse , - - - - - - - -D. 1172
Deceased .
AUTOMOBILE Insurance STATE OFA. OHIO
)hio. 992·2951.
was the worst hand of 1971 ?"
. FO URTH
Nntlce Is herebv a lven that
been
cancelled?
Lost
your
4-2-tfc Auto Sales
( 4thl Judic ial Distr ic t Court of Goldie Hawk of Pomeroy, Oh io,
Oswald : "! g u es s the
operator's license? Ca ll 992- Appea ls
has be en dul y appointed
1970 W-30 OLDSMOBILE 442.
2966.
It is ordered that the time of executrix of the Estate of Anna
1
1 BEDROOM trailer apart- automatic , factorr stereo
6- 15-Hr the beginning of the terms of the Mozelle Burton , deceased, lat e
Send $1 '"JACOBY MODERN book
While learning about the pay
ment. ideal for couples .
tape. Lots of extras. ike new. - - - - -Court of Appeals of the several of Pomero-y , Meigs County,
to : "Win at Bridge," (c/o this newsraise, have h im explain how
Cootact McClure's Dairy Isle, Call 992-2441 after 5 p.m.
_
Counties in said
Ohio .
C. BRADFORD, Auctlooeer
paper), P.O. Box 489, Radio Cily
992-5248 or 992·3436.
ADAMS
County
on
the
5th day
you may enlist and sta y
11 -28-tfc
Creditors are required to fil e
Complete
Service
of APR. I L and the 18th day of their claims with said fldu clar v
12-15-12fc
home for the holidays.
Slotion, New York, N.Y. 10019.
Phooe 949-3821
OCTOBER .
within tour months.
Rac ine, Ohio
'62 CHEVY Impala .. runs good
ATHEN S County on t he 17th
Dated th Is Bth day of
MOBILE HOME. Adults only . $100, '52 Chevy pickup, mint
Crill Bradford
day of FEBRUARY and the 28th December 1971.
grand-slam swing that oc·
Call him at 614-593-3022
Phone 992-5592.
condition.
Phone
9'/2.
5-1-tf c day of SEPTEMBER .
John C. Ba con
curred in your match to de- · call collect · for
12-22-lfc
BROWN Co un ty on the 6th
6083.
- -- - -- -Judge
cide the 1972 team . It didn't
day of APRIL and the 19th day
Court
of
Common
Pleas,
12-t7-t0tp
WRECKING
and
hauling
.
of OCTOBER .
j)robate Division
affect the result . You won by complete details.
D.A. V. home in Pomeroy for - - - - - - - - Phone 992-6083.
GALL lA County on the Jrd 1121 IJ, 20. 27 . 31
seve~a l miles but it was quite
group meetings and parties,
12-17-1otp
day of FEBRUARY and the Uth
Today's Army wants to
phone 992-5247.
a swing."
day of S EPTEMB~R .
join you at a much ·
12-19-121c
GH LAND County on the 4th
UPHOLSTERING SERVICE, dayHIOf
Jim: " It was an IMP
NOTICE OF
APRIL and the 17th day
highersalary.
complete selection of labrlcs of OCTOBER
APPOINTMENT
match . Honors don 't co unt
.
and vinyl to choose from .
CISt No. 20574
in those matches . The optiHOCKING County on the 18th
2 BEDROOM mobile home in
Estate of JOSIE ROUSH .
Pick-up and delivery. Slater day of APR. I L and the 14th day Deceased
Rac ine area . Phone 992-6329.
mum score for North-Soulh ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT
.
Upholstering, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, of NOVEMBER .
12· t4-tfc
e
Is hereby given that
Notic
was seven no-trump bid and
overwe igh t ladies, teens and
JACK
SO
N
County
on
the
7th
phone 992-36t7.
Le~ra
Young
Rt . 1. Ra ci ne,
m ad e . Bob Goldman and
men interested in a Weight
t2-27-30fp day of MARCH and th e 3rd day Oh 10 , has beenof duly
'appointed
of
OCTOBER
.
Watchers (RJ Class In FURNISHED sleeping room
Mike Lawrence of our team
Executrix
of
the
Estate
of Josle
LAWRENCE County on the
Broker
did bid seven no-trump. The ·Pomeroy write : Weigh1 : over Wine Store. Rent by
Roush, ~eceased , late of
8th
day
of
MARCH
and
th
e
4th
1tO Mechanic Street
Wat che rs (R) , 1863 Section month. Phone 992-5293.
hidding in the box shows
day of OCTOBER .
, Ra ci ne, Meh~s County, Ohio.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Rd:,
Cincinnati,
Ohio
45237.
11
-26-tfc
C_red Iton are requirtd ro file
MEIGS
County
on
the
2nd
day
what happened at the other
Real Estate For Sale
th _e•r. cla ims with sai d fidu ciary
10-3-.lfc
of
FEBRUARY
and
the
13th
day
t a b I e. The bad diamond
w•thm four months .
of SEPTEMBER .
CHESHIRE - Large bloc k
D~tted th is lOth day of
break condemned seven dia- KOSCOT Kosmetlcs and wigs.
PICKAWAY
County
on
th
e
business
building
on
Rt.
7.
December
1971 .
For
Rent
or
Sale
. 2nd clay of MAY and the 16th
monds to defeat."
Yes we have Koscot Product s
Suitable for restaurant, store,
John C. Bacon
day of NOVEMBER
and wigs In stock for your 1970 12 FT. WIDE , 2 bedroom
Act ing Probate Judge
garage Or servic~ station .
Oswald : "A bad break , but
PIKE
County
on
the
22nd
day
mobile home, available Jan . RURAL - One acre with old
immediate needs. Yes we do
one that should have been
of said County
of MARCH and the 31st da y of ( l 2) 1i. 20 , 27
1. Albert Hill, Racine, 949·
deliver.
Would
you
like
to
OCTOBER
house. moo.oo CASH
guarded against in top fli ght
2261 ,
ROSS County on the 19th day
select your own customers
BUSINESS BUILDING- East
competition."
12-27-61c
of APRIL and the 15th day of
and have your own route and
Main . 9 rooms, 1 bath, 3
NOVEMBER ·
(H£WSPAPU ENTERPR ISE -'SSN .J
608 Eut Main
make good money? Call
restrooms . $18,500.00 IF
SCIOTO County on the 23rd
POMEROY
Brown's in Middleport 9'/2.
SOLD THIS YEAR.
day ot MARCH and the lst day
5113, distributors of Kosco! For Sale
RURAL - 6 rooms, bath, gas
of NOVEMBER .
Kosmetlcs. ,
furnace .
Also . Business ANOTHER TEMPTING, BUY
VINTON County on th e ls t
Building,
30x44.
.
POMEROY
1
story
11
-16-tf
c
day
of FEBRUARY and the 12th
NO QUESTION TODAY.
frame~ 2 bedrooms, with day of SEPT~MBER .
3 HOUSES - 2 rented. Other
Saturday's Answer Tomorrow
WA SHIN GTON County on the
closets, bath, utility-room In
one has 3 bedrooms, bath, gas
15th
day of FEB R UAR. Y and the
Wanted To Buy
basement,
hardwood
floors,
l6" X:.t..s A .D.UY ·
forced air furnace with free
26th day of SE PTEMBER
gas
furnace
and
hot
water
gas
to
all
.
NOW
ONLY
WILL BUY raw furs and beef
Said terms to . begin at 9:30 .
tank, la rge lot, EXCELLENT o'clock
$16,000.00.
and Mrs. Robert Mattox were
A .M .
hides Saturday and Sunday
INVEST YOUR 19~1
CONDITION,
JUST $7,·
Hom er E . Abe le
every week . Ci!lrl Chevalier,
Mrs. Mattox's father, Charles
PROFITS.
BUY
NOW.
Earl
E. Stephenson
900.00.
Rf. 1, Long Bottom, Ohio.
Yates, Hamden, and her
Gordon
B. Gray
HELEN
L.
TEAFORD,
12·15-121p
Judg es .
SEE THIS - POMEROY - 6
ASSOCIATE
brother-in-law and sister, Mr.
U5EDOFFSET PLATES
1121 13, 20, 27. 31
room
frame
,
2
bedrooms,
992-3325
992-2371
and Mrs. Edward Tague,
HAVE ,
bath, basement, porches, gas
12-23-6tc
Auto Sales
ON YOUR DIAL
Columbus.
MANY USES
FORCED-AIR heat, GOING
AT $5,000.00. ,
'69 DODGE Swinger 2 door
. ~ICE 2-slory home witK fut i
hardtop V8 standard, red with
basement, 2 lots, new forced TUPPERS PLAINS
A ., .,_-----:-=-:::-::-:-,.-===black vinyl top, $1 ,10&lt;1. '69
air
furnace
.
Near
Pomeroy.
Volkswagen, good condition,
8 for St .oo
BRAND NEW SPLIT LEVEL
Elementary School. Phonr
!BRICKI 6 acres, 3 large
$1 ,100. '68 Ford pickup custom
992-7384 lo see.
:ab, 6-cy l., 3 speed, 25,000
bedrooms, closets galore. 3'12
11 -7-lfc
baths, large glassed living
miles, $1 ,400. Phone 992-6048.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Waldeck
12-27-6tp
room with stone fireplace,
and two children of GIOU$ter,
dining room, built-In kitchen
HOUSE, 1642 Lincoln Heights.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Brown of
with dining · space, utility ·
Call Danny Thompson, 99~room, 2 car garage, hot water
·.rt ,
2196.
Fay, 0 ., Mrs. Alice Davis of Dec. 21 were Mr. and Mrs,
Schenck
of
Birmingham,
Ala.,
heat,
carpeted
throughout,
!IICourtSI.
7-18-11'
Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs.
Pomeroy, Ohio
except baths and kitchen. A sJs.oo uownFrank Epple and two children Mr. and Mrs. Walter Jordan,
WONDERFUL HOME. ·&amp;~a nc;e On
-..J
.
RACINE
10
room
house,
$48,000,00.
of Middleport were dinner Cincinnati, Mrs. Louise Gilkey
!&gt;lith. basement, garage, two
Convenient
lots . No reasonabl e offer
guests of the M. A. Epples and Karen of Albany and Mr. COAL, limestone . Excelsior
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
refused. Phooe 949-43t3.
and Mrs , Bob Alkire and son
Sunday.
sr,:~~ T~EH~~~ YQ)A~g~: Terms:
Pomeroy.
Phdne
992·3891.
12-22-12tp
Ray, local. The occasion was
4-9-ffc
OWN, SEE us TODAY.
the 74th birthday of Ava Gilkey
HENRY CLELAND
SIX ROOM house, 133 Buiternu&gt;
SlUlday guests of Mrs. Earl
POODLE
puppies,
Sliver
Toy,
and the 27th anniversary of the
AYe. Contact Ed Hedrick, 2137
1
Foil, Sr. were Mr,. and Mrs.
Park view Kennels, Phooe 992Wadsworth
Drive, Columbus,
Clinton Gi!keys, Clinton and
5443.
Residence
992-2$68
j
,
Haning of Burlingham:
Ohio, phone 237-4334.
Tad were sick and not able to
8-ls.tfc
12·27-6tc
i
Mason, w. If a.
11 -2t-lfc
SUpper guests of Ava Gilkey attend.
- - - - - - . I ·.
-

1\WI\ED '!l&gt; flfiD

f~f~E ~HICI£~!

--

AND "!HeY a'XOI'fR

7HIIT THEY HAVe
MilCH IN Cl:»1MON.

JOHNSON MASONRY

-----~

992·7608

YOUR LOCAL ARMY
REPRESENTATIVE
WANTS TO

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

1

- -----

TALK TO YOU

ABOUT THE NEW

ARMY PAY RAISE

8ENN~·lli6·DIP'

l«lliEST IOM'6 GIVIN ' AVIAY TliE PWI06
T' POOR PEOPLE tJIHO HEfO 'Eiol! SOOtt'&amp;

PROF. CREa&gt;Y Fllf08 OUT, ~
1J8m J' ~ ~ ~D £!lQf!!P f8!!

IS. More

Involved

S9. IsraeU
port

40. Declare
fl. Converge

Virgil B.

TEAFORD

DOWN
1. Of John
or

SR.

·Paul

!. Get up
S. Unanl·
mowly
(3 wds.)
t. Tardy
5.Evened

Cleland

tile
store

Realty

Harrisonville
Society News

~f!UMID~•~::::.:-t.c

8. What
spellbinders
do
7. Edible

UMmllllble thele four Jumbl..,
one letter to e..h ........, to
form four ordinar1 worda.

root

11. Colo11l1
I!UU80

(3 wda.) Ynlerda_,-'• An1wer

11. Woman of :15. Ruuian
Aatolat
river
1!. Pertain
27. Noble
18. Dolores
folk
29. Asian
· -Rio
Eel (old
peninsula
Eng.)
31. Glde
22. Avluy
H. As.sal1
sound
U. Propltla·
Z3.1nellned
tory gifts
:U. Sullen
35. Shine

ROHAB

SULOE

:n.

II
THJBLE

II

LKR.4LTE I
Iii
::~~::::~ t I XJ I I I 5T.:::.o:
lhe cln:led lettm

THE SOUND
OF THE
GOOD
LIFE

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets

1HANK iOU FOR 'lOW. w,.t.l.l;T,

THE [

I I I 1OF THE [ II XI )
(Aoowen 10-w)

Sa1•nla7'•

Jombleot PAill
wwer~

UNCLI OOODL T IIAUTY

n... ,..,.. ....,, loolc IM•n c..,.U.. IOO -·r

.wulloo-IAUPUL

·--

WMP0/1390

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6- The Dally 9elalnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o ., Dec. 27,1971

,

.

Sentinel Classijieds ·Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get. R~sults! ·
Carpenter

Card of Thanks
remembered me durirfg the

OF
·QUAliTY

hoi iday season . I wish each of

News, Event
Mrs. Verlin Howery spent
some tfule recently with her
son-in-law and daughter, Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph Chapman and
family at St. Henry, Ohio .
Mr . and Mrs. Arthur
Crabtree attended a Christmas
party for district ministers
and wives at Trinity United
Methodist Church in Logan .
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Jordan
and Clay William, Stanton,
·Kentucky, were overnight
guests of her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Lewis Cottrill and helped
Mrs. Cotlrill celebrate her
birthday . They also called on
his mother, Faye Jordan, and
other relatives.
Columbia Grange No. 2435
held their December meeting
and enjoyed an oyster supper.
Installation of new officers was
held. Dona lions were made to
the TB fund and the State
Grange Camp Fund.
Captain David Tinsley , .
Bismarck, North Dakota,
visited his aunt, Mrs. William
Lawson and family. His
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Tinsley, Charleston, W. Va.
also were guests at the Lawson
home.
Murl Galaway has been
re leased from O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital where she
received treatment for some
time. She is somewhat improved .
Mr . and Mrs . Harold
Gillogly, Vicky and Bruce
spent a Saturday night and
Sunday· in Colwnbus with his
sister, Mrs. Bernice McKnight
and family .
Mr . and Mrs. Dwaine Jordan, Bryan and Keith, spent
Sunday with Mrs , · Jordan's
brother-in-law and sister, Mr.
rnd Mrs. Alfred Rice and sons.
Mr. and Mrs. James Gaston
entertained with a family
dinner on Sunday . Those
present were Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Gaston and family and
Ricky McDaniel, Albany ; and
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gaston
and Roy, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Gaston, and Mr. and Mrs.
Clifford Smith and Nellie,
Athens.
Carl Greenlees visited his
brother, Dean Greenlees ,
Fleming, and his brother and
sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Chester Greenlees, at Barlow
on Monday.
Mrs. Martha Mays was a
business visitor to her home in
Strasburg and attended a preChristmas family gathering at
the home of her son and
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Albert Quivey, Dover, Ohio.
Other guests were Mr. and
Mrs. Sidney Parker, Bolivar ;
Anna Parker, Cleveland; Mr.
and Mrs. Tom Parker and
Stacy, Strasburg, and Kenneth
Erickson, locaL She also
visited frienda in the Strasburg

area.
Bernice McKnight and
Roger, Columbus, wtre guests
of Mr , and Mrs. D. 0 .
McKnight, Mrs. Goldie
Gillogly and other relatives
here.
Mr, and Mrs. Cecil Gillogly
and family visited Mrs.
Gillogly's brotber-in-Iaw and
sister, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Grover
and daughters,
Pomeroy.
The Christmas program at
the MI. Union Church on
Sunday night was well attended. Mrs. ll&lt;ln Wilson was in
charge.
The Busy Bee Society of the
Carpenter Baptist Church met
with Mrs. Rex Cheadle. Mrs.
Cheadle was program leaders.
Others present were Helen
Jeffers, Ida Cheadle, Mella
Fisher, Mae Jordan, Freda
Smith , Emma Whittington,
Vivian Gaston, Anna Lich,
Lynn McWhorter and Kathy
Cheadle.
Dale Dye accompanied his
grandson and wife, Mr. and
Mrs , Thad Dye to Thurman
where they spent a day with
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Walker
(Dawn Dye) and family.
The W.S.C.S. of the Temple
Olurch met at the ·home of
Mrs. Arthur Crabtree. Tbe
Christmas program was
presented by Mrs. Don Comer.
The Carpenter Baptist
O.urch held their Christmas
program on Sunday evtning
with ,. good crowd attending.
Mr. and Mrs. Rex Cheadle
entertallled tile youtb group
with a Chrisbnas party after
the program. ThOBe present
were Patricia Wabll, Mary,
Allce,.Wanda, and Helen Peck,

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Peck,
N•lhln Brady, Nancy Smltll,
IUid the holt family, Mr. and
Mrs. Rex Cheadle, Don, Kathy,
1111d Rule.
SUnday dinner guests of Mr.

you a Happy and Prosperous
New Year.

Edna E. Wiggins.
12-27·llp
THE FAMILY of ·Melvin B.
Grimm desires

to express

their heartfelt "thanks " to

Dr. Brady, the nurses and
staff of Holze r Med ic a l
Center ; the Ewing Funera l
Home ; the Rev . Forrest

Donley of the Asbury United
Method Is I Church, also to
Mrs ~

Lucy Spenser who was

sofaithfulln our time of need ;
to all our friends and neigh-

bors for the beautiful floral

Ponteroy
Motor"Co.

2 51615

I WANT to thank all those wh o

t971 DODGE POLARA

$2895

Custom V-8, 4 door, power steering &amp; brakes, automa ti c
trans . oark green finish with green vinyl roof. spotless
interior with sea t covered with clear pla ~ t ic. Less than

13,500 miles by loca l owner. Full equipment Includes
a car like

END OF YEAR
Buy ~y Fuel Oil

SIEGLER HEATER
GET FREE
200 Gallons Fuel Oil When
You Buy Any Siegler Heater
Thru Dec. 31.

radio, w-w tires , wh. covers . You can appreciate
thi s, bu t we priced it for immediate sa le.

1971CHEVELLEMALIBUCPE.

Sa ndalwood with brown vinyl top, factory air conditioned,

guards. Retail $4155. Co. offi cial car &amp; specia ll y priced.

arrangements, for the food
se nt in ; for their express ions

Pon~eroy

Syracuse Ladies ' Auxilia ry
for the dinner they sent in on

llotor Co.

Service &amp; Repair

iWheel AligniJlent
15.55

All Com men:ial &amp;

Pomeroy Home &amp;Auto

For Sale
LONG BOTTOM - Five room
house , bath , business or

of sympathy ; and to the

EXPERT
- GUARANTEED-Phone 992-2094

$3595

V-8 engine with turbo hydromatlc, power steer ing. E.
clock, P. B:, radio. Rally wheels with W· W fires, Frt. &amp; rear

Business Services

Clearance Sale!

storage building Phone 985-352'1.

$6,500.

• Open BTII'5
Monday lhru S.turday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, o.

NORTH

27

• K976
¥ A KQ J 108 7

+Void
... K7
\VEST ( D )
. QJ85
¥ 96532
+2
olo Q32

.A
SOUTH

deeme d object ional .
The
publisher will not be responsible
for more than one 'incorrec1
insertion.

RATES
For Want Ad Ser vice
5 cents per Word one inserti on
12

EAST
. !0432
¥ 4
• J 10 8 3

olo l096 5

¥Void

+AK Q97 65 4
olo AJ84
No rth -South vul nt!rafde
West
North East South
Pass
1¥
Pass 7 •
Pass
Pass
Pass
Opening lead- ¥ 3

Minimum Charge 75c
cents

per

word

three.

consecutive insertions.

18 cents per word six con

secu tive insertions.
25 Per Cent Discount on paid

ads and ads pa id within 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
SUO for 50 word min imum.
Each additional word 2c.

Help Wanted

WANTED!
SENTINEL
CARRIERS

All built in to buttonhole,

over cast and laney stitch .
Pay ·\ust S~8 . 75 cas h or term s
avai able. Trade -ins ac-

Pomeroy

· FOUR NEW HOMES
OPEN FOR INSPECTIQN
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom $16,900.00 home can be purchased with a
monthly payment as low as $65.00 for a family with a base
sal~ry of $5,000.00 and three children. 7'1• Pet. annual
E"!'ceii"t·age· rate.

BILL NELSI)N 992-:U57
TOM CROW, 992-2580

damage in shi pping . Will take
S27 cash or budget plan
12·21-6tc
APPLES -

Fitzpatrick Or-

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO
992-2094
606

1:. Main

Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPLIES

HILTQN WOLFE 949-3711
DALE DUTTON, 992-2534

ROOFING &amp; CARPENTER
WORK
SPOUTING,
ROOF PAINTIN~
NEW &amp; OLD WORK'
All Weather R.oofing &amp;
Construction Co. and An
thony flumbing &amp; Heating.
Complete
Plumbing ,
Heating and A,jr Con-

·'

'·"IJD 0 '-.!£ FOR
lt\E ROI\D ...

M'l MAN
SNUFFY MIGHT
NOT 8ET.H' ·
.GOODEST
CRITTER ON
·TH'TOP OF
THIS GREE N
AIRTH

. ..
'

.,

-

..

.. .
..

·,. ,.

.. ..·

...

Home Units
rl-27

24-Hour Service

Also Furnace Repair

NOTHING'J
STU Dlit NG ON A
SKI LIFT JS
NOTWtNG 1

Ph. 992·3074

I HAI?DL'f KNOW
WHERE 10 SE&lt;SIN!

SOME DAYS
I\Vl11-ll N6 HAPPENS,
/&gt;ND OIHE~ ...

c&amp;M

REFRIGERATION
SERVICE
HA~DCRAFT

It;)

1tll ~ NU.,

toe .

GIFT ITEMS
Christmas
decorations. wearing
apparel. · jewelry,
ceramics .

cepted. Phone 992-5641.
12-21-61c
------VACUUM cleaner brand new
1971 mode L Complete with all

available. Phone 992· .5641 .

PHONE .9 92-2156
FOR DETAILSI

Ph. 992·2174

left in layaway . Beautiful
pastel co lor, full size model.

cleaning tools. Small paint

Mason &amp; Hartford

SMITH ·NELSON.
MOTORS, INC.

12-19-30tc

Friday , to the pallbearers.
EARLY American stereo-radio
OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.
May God's rich blessings
comblna1ion, 4-speaker sound
f'PMEROY, OHIO
come to each is our prayer .
system,
AM-FM radio, 4·
The Melvin Grimm fami ly I_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ __:__ _ _ _ _ _...,...J sp~e d automdtic
changer ,
12-27-llc
balance $78 .32 . U se our
budget terms . Call 992-7085.
WANT AD
Wanted
To
Buy
12-2t-61c
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
OLD FURNIT'URE , Round Qak MODERN wa lnut ster eo-radio
WIN AT BRIDGE 5 P.M. Day
Before Publication
tables; Brass beds, ·dtshes,
com bination, 4-speaker sound
MQI]day Deadline 9a.m.
clocks, and -or com plete
system, 4-speed automatic
Can~JI.rltion &amp; Corrections
households . Write M. D.
changer , sepa rate controls.
Will beaccepteduntll9a .m . for
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Balan ce $64 .79 . Use our
Day of Publl&lt;alion
Call 992-6271.
budget
terms. Call 99J.7085.
REGULATIONS
12·17-lfc
12-21-61c
The Publisher reserves the - - - -- - - - ri gh t 'to edit or reject any ads
1971 ZIG-ZAG sewing machine

The Best and
the Worst

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Sma llest Heater Core .
Nathan Biggs ·
Radiator Specialist

.. •

G-E&lt;,fi-IN&gt;J~I&gt;, f&lt;lll-1! HO'f/'V IOU
~N0¥1

IS THE CUTEST OF THE
MIL.L.Io-JAIRES WHCNE 5EEN .
5EGGI'-JG ME 10 MARR'I'
THEM-

I

Dollo, all dressed in style,
knitted and crocheted. I Has
to be seen to be oppreclatedl
Many items you h1ve been
looking for, for that perfect
gift.

·-

HIDDEN

·~

TREASURES
GIFT SHOf
MARTHA ROSE, Owner
Locoted on County Road J4
near Royal Oak Park. W1tch

BLIND ADS
chard s, State Route 689 ,
And
Ad dit iona l 25c Charge per L - - - - - -- - -- '
phone Wilesville, 669-3785.
Advertisement.
·,
·
9-3·lfc
for Signs.
FURNITURE
OFFICE HOURS
Employment
Wanted
Open every day except
8:30a.m. to 5000 p.m. Dail y
ditioning.
Stop·
In
and
See
Our
Monday
8 30 a .m. to 12: 0&lt;1 Noo n
24Q Lincoln St., f.liddlepofl
INTERIOR painting. Call Don 2425 FT. TRAILER, completely
Saturday.
Floor Display.
1 P.M. till P.M.
redecorated interior. Must
VanMeter 985-3951.
sell
,
$975.
Call
992-5171
.
12-19-12tp
Phone 992-25SO
12-24-31c
Notice
NEIGLER Build ing Suppl y.
Insured· Experienced
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby NEW Year's Eve Dance and
Free estimate on building
SINGER automatic sewing
Buffet Lunch, Friday, Dec. For Rent
Work Guaranteed
your
new
home.
Will
draw
machine . Like new, in
Oswald: " 1971 has been a
31. 9 p.m. for members of
prfnts
fo
suit
the
lay
of
your
be a utifu I walnut ca bi ne t,
See us for
Free
Po m eroy American L eg ion NEW, 12 x 60, 2 bedroom mobile
good year for us. You and
land
.
Call
Guy
Neigl
er
,
home
across
from
Bradbury
makes
design
stitc
hes,
zig
Post and gu ests . Organ music
:V o u r teammates not only
Estimate on Furnace
Racine, Ohio. For repair and
Sc hool. Call 992-5308 or see zags, buttonholes, blind hems.
by Armand Turley.
Complete
won the World's championaluminum
siding,
soffet
and
lnstalation .
Char les Lewis, 2nd house
etc . Will sell for 585. Call
12-n3tc
guHer.
Call
Donald
Smith,
; hip for the second straight
south from Bradbury School.
Ravenswood 27J.9893 after 5 Racine, Ohio.
·
BACKHOE AND DOZER work .
year, but you will represent
p.m.
Pets welcome.
Remodeling
SAVE
up
to
one
half
.
Br
ing
your
10·1·1fC
Septic tanks Installed . George
12-27-lfc
the United States in the 1972
lt
-28-tfc
sick TV to Chuck's TV Shop,
-----~
1Bill) Pullins. Phone 992-2478.
Olympiad and defend your
151 Butternut Ave ., Pomeroy .
HARRISON'S
TV
and
Antenna
4-25-tfc
Kitchens, Baths
FURNISHED cottage, 3 rooms
title as World's champions
Phone 992-5080.
Service. Phone 992-2522.
and bath, utilities pa id except Mobile Homes For Sale
in 1973' '
11 -2t-lfc
6·10-tfc
Room Additions
phone. Phone Sa m Arnold ,
LEGAL NOTICE
Jim : " It wasn't too bad
Syracu se, 992·2360.
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
NOTICE OF
And Patios
for you. You served as non.
12-24-tfc
service, all makes. 992-2284.
APPOINTMENT
YOUNG
MEN
playing captain for the thi rd
Adminl5,rltrlx With the
The 'Fabric . Shop. Pomeroy .
straight year and I am very
Will Annexed
Author
ized
S.inger
Sales
and
SOx \2 TWO BEDROOM mobile
No. 70519
sorry you elected to resign
Service. W€S harpen Sc issors.
home, gas heat, Sy"c amore
Estate of FREDA FAUBER
after we won in Taiwan."
3-29-lfc Deceased .
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
St., Middleport. Phone 992·
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph .
is
hereby
given
that
Notice
7004
or
992
·3585,
Danny
Oswald : " Like politicians ,
VIVIAN
PO
STON
whose
Post
662-lll3l.
Thompson
.
DELL WHEEL al ignm ent Office Address Is 6046 Sedgw ic k
non-pI a y i n g captains are
12' · 14' · 24' • WiDE O'located
12-23-lfc
2·12-ttc
at Crossroads, Rt. 124. Roa d, Worth ing ton, OhiO ha s
li kely to consider tbemselves
Complete
front
end
service,
been duly appointed as Ad ·
indispensable. I had held th e
CO N CR~TE
FURNISHED and unfurnished
tune up and brake service. min islratri x w ith the Will an . READY -MI X
job long e nough and am able
delivered
right
to your.
apartments. Close to school.
Wheel s balanced elec · nexed of the Estate of Freda
project. Fast and easy. Free
to quit a winner. Not that l
Phone 992-5434.
Ironicall y.
All
work Fau ber late of Melo s County.
esti mates . Phone 992-3284 .
don't think that your team
10-18-tfc
guaranteed .
Reaso nable Ohio, deceased ,
Da
ted
this
9th
day
of
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co.,
rates. Phooe 992-3213.
1220 Washington Blvd.
De ce mber 1971
and Lee Hazen, the new nonMiddleport, Oh io.
Belpre, Ohio
7-27-lfc
NICE TRAILER,
bedroom,
Joh n C. Bacon
playing ca ptain won't win
6-30-tfc .
Acting Judge of
ideal for couple, 10 miles
again, but contrary to poputhe
Proba
te
Court
north of Pomeroy. Phone 992· FOR THE BEST deal in a new SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
lar belief the captain worries
Meig s County, Ohio
6452.
Reasonable rates. Ph. 446-4782, 112 I IJ. 20, 77,
LEGAL NOTICE
31
along with the team and l
12-15-tfc or used mobile home, try
Gall ipo li s. John Russell,
Kanauga
Mobile
Home
Sales,
NOTICE OF
am glad a younger man has
O..ner 8. Operator.
APPOINTMENT
Kanauga. Ohio.
the job."
l-12-tfc
TIMES FOR HOLDING
'
Case No. 20st2
TRA ILE-R lbTS, Bob's Mobile
12-17-90tc
COURTS OF APPEALS .
Estate of Anna Mozelle Burton
Jim : " What do you think
Court , Rl. 124, Syracuse , - - - - - - - -D. 1172
Deceased .
AUTOMOBILE Insurance STATE OFA. OHIO
)hio. 992·2951.
was the worst hand of 1971 ?"
. FO URTH
Nntlce Is herebv a lven that
been
cancelled?
Lost
your
4-2-tfc Auto Sales
( 4thl Judic ial Distr ic t Court of Goldie Hawk of Pomeroy, Oh io,
Oswald : "! g u es s the
operator's license? Ca ll 992- Appea ls
has be en dul y appointed
1970 W-30 OLDSMOBILE 442.
2966.
It is ordered that the time of executrix of the Estate of Anna
1
1 BEDROOM trailer apart- automatic , factorr stereo
6- 15-Hr the beginning of the terms of the Mozelle Burton , deceased, lat e
Send $1 '"JACOBY MODERN book
While learning about the pay
ment. ideal for couples .
tape. Lots of extras. ike new. - - - - -Court of Appeals of the several of Pomero-y , Meigs County,
to : "Win at Bridge," (c/o this newsraise, have h im explain how
Cootact McClure's Dairy Isle, Call 992-2441 after 5 p.m.
_
Counties in said
Ohio .
C. BRADFORD, Auctlooeer
paper), P.O. Box 489, Radio Cily
992-5248 or 992·3436.
ADAMS
County
on
the
5th day
you may enlist and sta y
11 -28-tfc
Creditors are required to fil e
Complete
Service
of APR. I L and the 18th day of their claims with said fldu clar v
12-15-12fc
home for the holidays.
Slotion, New York, N.Y. 10019.
Phooe 949-3821
OCTOBER .
within tour months.
Rac ine, Ohio
'62 CHEVY Impala .. runs good
ATHEN S County on t he 17th
Dated th Is Bth day of
MOBILE HOME. Adults only . $100, '52 Chevy pickup, mint
Crill Bradford
day of FEBRUARY and the 28th December 1971.
grand-slam swing that oc·
Call him at 614-593-3022
Phone 992-5592.
condition.
Phone
9'/2.
5-1-tf c day of SEPTEMBER .
John C. Ba con
curred in your match to de- · call collect · for
12-22-lfc
BROWN Co un ty on the 6th
6083.
- -- - -- -Judge
cide the 1972 team . It didn't
day of APRIL and the 19th day
Court
of
Common
Pleas,
12-t7-t0tp
WRECKING
and
hauling
.
of OCTOBER .
j)robate Division
affect the result . You won by complete details.
D.A. V. home in Pomeroy for - - - - - - - - Phone 992-6083.
GALL lA County on the Jrd 1121 IJ, 20. 27 . 31
seve~a l miles but it was quite
group meetings and parties,
12-17-1otp
day of FEBRUARY and the Uth
Today's Army wants to
phone 992-5247.
a swing."
day of S EPTEMB~R .
join you at a much ·
12-19-121c
GH LAND County on the 4th
UPHOLSTERING SERVICE, dayHIOf
Jim: " It was an IMP
NOTICE OF
APRIL and the 17th day
highersalary.
complete selection of labrlcs of OCTOBER
APPOINTMENT
match . Honors don 't co unt
.
and vinyl to choose from .
CISt No. 20574
in those matches . The optiHOCKING County on the 18th
2 BEDROOM mobile home in
Estate of JOSIE ROUSH .
Pick-up and delivery. Slater day of APR. I L and the 14th day Deceased
Rac ine area . Phone 992-6329.
mum score for North-Soulh ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT
.
Upholstering, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, of NOVEMBER .
12· t4-tfc
e
Is hereby given that
Notic
was seven no-trump bid and
overwe igh t ladies, teens and
JACK
SO
N
County
on
the
7th
phone 992-36t7.
Le~ra
Young
Rt . 1. Ra ci ne,
m ad e . Bob Goldman and
men interested in a Weight
t2-27-30fp day of MARCH and th e 3rd day Oh 10 , has beenof duly
'appointed
of
OCTOBER
.
Watchers (RJ Class In FURNISHED sleeping room
Mike Lawrence of our team
Executrix
of
the
Estate
of Josle
LAWRENCE County on the
Broker
did bid seven no-trump. The ·Pomeroy write : Weigh1 : over Wine Store. Rent by
Roush, ~eceased , late of
8th
day
of
MARCH
and
th
e
4th
1tO Mechanic Street
Wat che rs (R) , 1863 Section month. Phone 992-5293.
hidding in the box shows
day of OCTOBER .
, Ra ci ne, Meh~s County, Ohio.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Rd:,
Cincinnati,
Ohio
45237.
11
-26-tfc
C_red Iton are requirtd ro file
MEIGS
County
on
the
2nd
day
what happened at the other
Real Estate For Sale
th _e•r. cla ims with sai d fidu ciary
10-3-.lfc
of
FEBRUARY
and
the
13th
day
t a b I e. The bad diamond
w•thm four months .
of SEPTEMBER .
CHESHIRE - Large bloc k
D~tted th is lOth day of
break condemned seven dia- KOSCOT Kosmetlcs and wigs.
PICKAWAY
County
on
th
e
business
building
on
Rt.
7.
December
1971 .
For
Rent
or
Sale
. 2nd clay of MAY and the 16th
monds to defeat."
Yes we have Koscot Product s
Suitable for restaurant, store,
John C. Bacon
day of NOVEMBER
and wigs In stock for your 1970 12 FT. WIDE , 2 bedroom
Act ing Probate Judge
garage Or servic~ station .
Oswald : "A bad break , but
PIKE
County
on
the
22nd
day
mobile home, available Jan . RURAL - One acre with old
immediate needs. Yes we do
one that should have been
of said County
of MARCH and the 31st da y of ( l 2) 1i. 20 , 27
1. Albert Hill, Racine, 949·
deliver.
Would
you
like
to
OCTOBER
house. moo.oo CASH
guarded against in top fli ght
2261 ,
ROSS County on the 19th day
select your own customers
BUSINESS BUILDING- East
competition."
12-27-61c
of APRIL and the 15th day of
and have your own route and
Main . 9 rooms, 1 bath, 3
NOVEMBER ·
(H£WSPAPU ENTERPR ISE -'SSN .J
608 Eut Main
make good money? Call
restrooms . $18,500.00 IF
SCIOTO County on the 23rd
POMEROY
Brown's in Middleport 9'/2.
SOLD THIS YEAR.
day ot MARCH and the lst day
5113, distributors of Kosco! For Sale
RURAL - 6 rooms, bath, gas
of NOVEMBER .
Kosmetlcs. ,
furnace .
Also . Business ANOTHER TEMPTING, BUY
VINTON County on th e ls t
Building,
30x44.
.
POMEROY
1
story
11
-16-tf
c
day
of FEBRUARY and the 12th
NO QUESTION TODAY.
frame~ 2 bedrooms, with day of SEPT~MBER .
3 HOUSES - 2 rented. Other
Saturday's Answer Tomorrow
WA SHIN GTON County on the
closets, bath, utility-room In
one has 3 bedrooms, bath, gas
15th
day of FEB R UAR. Y and the
Wanted To Buy
basement,
hardwood
floors,
l6" X:.t..s A .D.UY ·
forced air furnace with free
26th day of SE PTEMBER
gas
furnace
and
hot
water
gas
to
all
.
NOW
ONLY
WILL BUY raw furs and beef
Said terms to . begin at 9:30 .
tank, la rge lot, EXCELLENT o'clock
$16,000.00.
and Mrs. Robert Mattox were
A .M .
hides Saturday and Sunday
INVEST YOUR 19~1
CONDITION,
JUST $7,·
Hom er E . Abe le
every week . Ci!lrl Chevalier,
Mrs. Mattox's father, Charles
PROFITS.
BUY
NOW.
Earl
E. Stephenson
900.00.
Rf. 1, Long Bottom, Ohio.
Yates, Hamden, and her
Gordon
B. Gray
HELEN
L.
TEAFORD,
12·15-121p
Judg es .
SEE THIS - POMEROY - 6
ASSOCIATE
brother-in-law and sister, Mr.
U5EDOFFSET PLATES
1121 13, 20, 27. 31
room
frame
,
2
bedrooms,
992-3325
992-2371
and Mrs. Edward Tague,
HAVE ,
bath, basement, porches, gas
12-23-6tc
Auto Sales
ON YOUR DIAL
Columbus.
MANY USES
FORCED-AIR heat, GOING
AT $5,000.00. ,
'69 DODGE Swinger 2 door
. ~ICE 2-slory home witK fut i
hardtop V8 standard, red with
basement, 2 lots, new forced TUPPERS PLAINS
A ., .,_-----:-=-:::-::-:-,.-===black vinyl top, $1 ,10&lt;1. '69
air
furnace
.
Near
Pomeroy.
Volkswagen, good condition,
8 for St .oo
BRAND NEW SPLIT LEVEL
Elementary School. Phonr
!BRICKI 6 acres, 3 large
$1 ,100. '68 Ford pickup custom
992-7384 lo see.
:ab, 6-cy l., 3 speed, 25,000
bedrooms, closets galore. 3'12
11 -7-lfc
baths, large glassed living
miles, $1 ,400. Phone 992-6048.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Waldeck
12-27-6tp
room with stone fireplace,
and two children of GIOU$ter,
dining room, built-In kitchen
HOUSE, 1642 Lincoln Heights.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Brown of
with dining · space, utility ·
Call Danny Thompson, 99~room, 2 car garage, hot water
·.rt ,
2196.
Fay, 0 ., Mrs. Alice Davis of Dec. 21 were Mr. and Mrs,
Schenck
of
Birmingham,
Ala.,
heat,
carpeted
throughout,
!IICourtSI.
7-18-11'
Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs.
Pomeroy, Ohio
except baths and kitchen. A sJs.oo uownFrank Epple and two children Mr. and Mrs. Walter Jordan,
WONDERFUL HOME. ·&amp;~a nc;e On
-..J
.
RACINE
10
room
house,
$48,000,00.
of Middleport were dinner Cincinnati, Mrs. Louise Gilkey
!&gt;lith. basement, garage, two
Convenient
lots . No reasonabl e offer
guests of the M. A. Epples and Karen of Albany and Mr. COAL, limestone . Excelsior
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
refused. Phooe 949-43t3.
and Mrs , Bob Alkire and son
Sunday.
sr,:~~ T~EH~~~ YQ)A~g~: Terms:
Pomeroy.
Phdne
992·3891.
12-22-12tp
Ray, local. The occasion was
4-9-ffc
OWN, SEE us TODAY.
the 74th birthday of Ava Gilkey
HENRY CLELAND
SIX ROOM house, 133 Buiternu&gt;
SlUlday guests of Mrs. Earl
POODLE
puppies,
Sliver
Toy,
and the 27th anniversary of the
AYe. Contact Ed Hedrick, 2137
1
Foil, Sr. were Mr,. and Mrs.
Park view Kennels, Phooe 992Wadsworth
Drive, Columbus,
Clinton Gi!keys, Clinton and
5443.
Residence
992-2$68
j
,
Haning of Burlingham:
Ohio, phone 237-4334.
Tad were sick and not able to
8-ls.tfc
12·27-6tc
i
Mason, w. If a.
11 -2t-lfc
SUpper guests of Ava Gilkey attend.
- - - - - - . I ·.
-

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f~f~E ~HICI£~!

--

AND "!HeY a'XOI'fR

7HIIT THEY HAVe
MilCH IN Cl:»1MON.

JOHNSON MASONRY

-----~

992·7608

YOUR LOCAL ARMY
REPRESENTATIVE
WANTS TO

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

1

- -----

TALK TO YOU

ABOUT THE NEW

ARMY PAY RAISE

8ENN~·lli6·DIP'

l«lliEST IOM'6 GIVIN ' AVIAY TliE PWI06
T' POOR PEOPLE tJIHO HEfO 'Eiol! SOOtt'&amp;

PROF. CREa&gt;Y Fllf08 OUT, ~
1J8m J' ~ ~ ~D £!lQf!!P f8!!

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S9. IsraeU
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40. Declare
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Virgil B.

TEAFORD

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S. Unanl·
mowly
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t. Tardy
5.Evened

Cleland

tile
store

Realty

Harrisonville
Society News

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8. What
spellbinders
do
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UMmllllble thele four Jumbl..,
one letter to e..h ........, to
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31. Glde
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THE SOUND
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GOOD
LIFE

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets

1HANK iOU FOR 'lOW. w,.t.l.l;T,

THE [

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8- The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pollleroy,O,, Dec. r/.11171

DODGE TRUCKS
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EMPLOYMENT DOWN
COLUMBUS (UPI) O&lt;tober employment in Ohio
declined Z per cent from
October, 1910, according to
the .Ohio State University
Center for Business and
Economic Research.
The center also reported a
drop of 5 per cent In Ohio
employment for the first 10
months of the year; com·

pared to the same 1910
period.
Five of the slate's eight
major cities showed October-to-October employment level declines,
ranging from 3 per cent in
Akron and Cincinnati to 8 per
cent for Canton and Dayton.
Youngstown
employment ·
was down 1 per cent.

..

'

NEW CAR WON
Mrs. Ethel Milan, 894 Pearl
St., Middleport, was presented
a 1971 Ford Pinto Friday af.
Sayre Kalatla, Sycacuse, and ternoon in Gallipolis. Mrs.
Mrs. Ruby Burnside, Pomer&lt;&gt;y . Milan was named winner of
The body is at the Fraley The Jones Boys • pre-Otristmas
Funeral Home in Lorain but promotion contest. No purwill be brought to the Ewing chase was necessary to parFuneral Home here where ticipate in the event.
friends may call from 7 to 9 p.
SERVICE SET
m. Tuesday. Funeral services
A Watch Night service will
will be held at 10 a. m. Wedbe
held at the Pomeroy Lower
nesday at the funeral home.
Burial 'wiil be in Beech Grove Light Church on the
HarrisonvUie Road beginning
Cemetery.
at 7:30 p. m. Friday.

James Sayre Died Sunday
James Delbert Sayre, 48,
Lorain, formerly of Pomeroy,
died Sunday at the St. Joseph
Hospital in Lorain. Mr. Sayre
was an employe of the
American Forge and Shipping
Co. and was a member of the
Electricians Union . He
belonged to the Moose Lodge,
Surviving are a daughter,
Mrs. Daniel Bush of Lorain,
and two sisters, Mrs. June

Uestions IAs.ked in Lima Probe Witness Death

MAKE ELBERFELDS IN
POMEROY
YOUR SHOPPING CENTER

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
state attorney general's office
today l!fnt the special prosecut.
or·tn a grand jury investigation into the state Hospital for
the Criminally Insane to Lima
to confer with hospital officials
about the death of a witness in
the probe.
Nicholas Curci, an assistant
attorney general who serv.ed
as special prosecutor In the investigation which resulted in 31
indictments, was to check on
the death of Robert Schneider,
a patient at the hospital since
1962.
He was found dead In his bed
by hospital attendants on
Christmas Eve and buried to

BE THRIFTY! SAVE ALL OF
YOUR SALESLIPS FROM•..

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Starts Tomorrow At Ingels Furniture In Middleport
.

Cyclist Suffers
Fractured Skull
Keith Voreh, 17, Gallipolis, is
listed in good condition at the
Holze~ Medical Center, where
he was admitted Friday night
following a motorcycle accident on Bob McCormick Rd.
According to the GalliaMeigs Post State Highway
Patrol, Voreh was thrown off
after he lost control of his cycle
in a curve, which ran off the
left side of the roadway and
into a ditch. Voreh suffered a
fractured skull. There was
moderate damage to his cycle.
A hit-skip mishap occurred
at 5 p:m. Friday on Rt. 35, two
and one tenth miles east of Rt.
588 where an unknown motorist
forced an auto driven by John
0 . Garnes, :;o, Bidwell, off the
roadway. The case is still
under investigation.
Two persons were injured in
a collision a I 9: 20 p.m .
Saturday on Rt. 141, west of
Centenary where an auto
driven by Lois A. Herrara, 21,
Dallas, Tex., went out of
control in a curve and struck a
guardrail and mail box before
crashing into a ditch .
The driver and a passenger,
Paul D. .ferguson, 22, Rt. I,
Patriot, were both taken to the
Holzer Medical Center for
treatment of minor injuries.
Both were thrown from the car.
Miss Herrara was cited to
Municipal Court for speed in
excess of road conditions.
There was moderate d~age
to her car.
A deer was killed at 7 p.m.
Saturday on Rt. 554 east of
Porter. The animal ran into the
path of a car driven by John A.
Jenkins, 20, Rt. I, Bidwell.
There was minor damage to his
car .

A second deer was struck
and killed in an accident at
11:45 p.m. on Rt. 7, one and one
tenth miles north of Rt. 554.
Tbe animal ran into the path of
a car operated by Albert R.
Maxwell, 60, Killduck, Ohio.
Another deer mishap occurred at 3:30a.m. Sunday on
Rl. 35, two and four tenths
miles from the Gallia-Jackson
County line. Officers said a
deer ran into the path of a car
driven by Harry C. Bone, 56,
Jackson. There was slight
damage to his car.
A two-car accident occurred
at 9:25a.m. Sunday on Rl. 588
on Bob McCormick Rd., where
vehicles driven by George E.
Pope, 26, Gallipolis, and
Robert A. Franklin, 17, Rt. 2,
Gallipolia, collided. There was
moderate damage to both cars.
No one was Injured or cited.
A final mishap occurred on
Double Creek Rd., one and
three tenths miles west of Rt. 7
where a car driven by Marjorie
S. Phillips, 25, Rt. 2, Crown
City, caught fire. The auto was
demolished.

Beard Shed
(Continued from Page I)
all sorts of weird responses."
The lesson to be learned from
the whole thing, he said, was
"don't judge people by externals. Allow me to be me and
I'll allow you to be you."
The lesson also had its
rewards, he said.
"In all the years I've been
here, never have more women
kissed me on the way out of
church."

News ... in Briefs
(Contin11ed from Page I)
suburb of Washington where he had lived since his retirement in
1963. O'Donnell led tbe first B29 bombing raid in Tokyo during
World War II, and went on to become conunandlng general of the
Far East Air Force Bomber Command in the Korean War.
SAIGON - MILITARY INSTALLATIONS AND supply
depots in North Vietnam were hit Sunday by American fighterbombers in one of the biggest U. S. air attacks on the enemy
nation since President Nixon entered the White House.
The Chief Executive gave the assault his personal okay, as
he did six other air blows at North Vietnam during his administration.

Died Sunday

Tables At Lower-Than-Usual Prices!
REG. ss9.95 TABLES

REG. s99.95 TABLES

~g~R CHOICE $49 95
ALL WITH CARE-FREE ffiRMICA TOPS

:8~ CHOICE $69

Coc kt ail hble

Square Dr. Commode

He~a go n

Weather
A chance of showers
changing to snow flurries .
Clo•tdy l,llltil Thursday ,

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1971

PHONE 992-2156

lose to Hanoi
Zerkle Ends 29 Years

Release of
POWs May

Of Service on Council

Be Delayed

cleared the way for his acceptance of the position of
mayor to which he was elected
in November. Mayor C. 0.
Fisher who did not seek
reelection, commended Zerkle
for hi! many years of work as a
councilman. He said Zerkle,
"is thoroughly familiar with all

MIDEAST- EGYPI'IAN PRESIDENT Anwar Sadat called
a special joint session of parliament and the nation's political
leadership today to outline his plans for action against Israel.

Df. Commod!!

COLUMBUS - THE OIUO Taxpayers' Action Committee
announced today it wUI attempt to get on the November ballot a
constitutional amendment giving Ohio voters control over the
newly-enacted personal income tax. Lewis E. Basom, chairman
of the group, said units are being organized in every county to
circulate pelltlons and obtain the required 330,000 signatures for
placing the proposal on the ballot.
Basom said the proposed constitutional amendment would
require that any individual state income tax, or a change to such
a tax, be sul:mitted to the electorate. While be conceded the
current income tax, which takes effect Jan. 1, would not be
subject to referendwn, he indicated the public could control the
rates If his amendments gets on the ballot ard is adopted.
NEW YORK - A FEDERAL JUDGE today ordered 16
Vietnam veterans, who for two days have barricaded themselves
Inside the Statue of liberty in an antiwar proteitt, to leave the
national monument and reopen it to the public.
Judge Lawrence W. Pierce issued a temporary restraining
order directing the protestors "to open tbe doors, remove aJI
obstructions as well as themselves except during normal visiting

Cockta il Table

holD"S.,
'

MOSCOW- THE SOVIET MARS 2 and Mars 3 probes have
discovered the presence of oxygen and atomic hydrogen in the
upper atmoSflllerc of Mars, theTassnewsagencysald today.
"A hydrogen corona was located at a height of 6,200 to 12,400
miles, while oxygen was detected up to an altitude of 434 miles to
MAl miles," Tass scientific commentator Gherman Berezhkov
said. "Measurements were made of temperature changes on the
Martian surface. Individual areas on Its diurnal side have a
temperature not exceeding five degrees," Berezhkov said.

Cocldail Table

'·

/'"

INGEL FURN,ITURE

PH~· 992·2635

FREE DELIVIRY

.

~-

"There is absolutely no
suggestion whatever from any
aspect of this case that he was
a plant." But other U.S. officials said they would have a
close look at information
Chebotaryev provided while
living in a Washington apartment with a U.S. intelligence .
(Continued on Page 10)

TEN CENTS

Thir

WNDON -PREMIER CHOU ENLAI, WITH THE backing
of O!alnnan Mao Tse-tung, has taken over as China's "political
supremo" after smashli!g opposition to negotiations with
President Nixon, diplomatic sources reported from Peking.

Coc ktail Table

EXTENDED WEATHER
Ohio Extended oullook,
Wednesday through Friday:
Cool Wednesday with a
chance of snow flurries
northeast. Partly cloudy and
cool Thursday and Friday.
Highs ln the mid 30s to lower
40s. Lows in the upper 20s to
lower 30s Wednesday
morning and overnight lows
In the mid .to upper %08
Thursday and Friday.

r.&gt; a•

POMEROY·MIDDlEPORT, OHIO

By United Prcu IDternatlooal
BELFAST, NORTHER IRELAND - PREMIER Brian
Faulkner today criticized plans to stage a 2\Hlour British
television '1rlbwial" on violence and civil strife in Northern
Ireland, only hours after scattered gunfire and bombings broke a
three-day lull in violence across Northern Ireland.

deaths, Texas counted 43,
Florida 36 and Georgia 32.
Pennsylvania and New York
each reported 28 traffic deaths.
Only Maine, North Dakota,
Idaho, Montana and the
District of Colwnbia reported
no traffic fatalities. In the
single worst holiday tragedy,
seven members of an Arlington
Heights, m.,family were killed
Christmas Eve by a fire that
officials said started "in or
near" a Christmas tree.
In New Orleans, George
Forstall, a 5a-year-())d fireman
working his very last shift
before retirement, and two
other firemen were killed
Christmas Day when a building
collapsed as they fought a
blaze. Thirteen other firemen
were injured, six seriously.

... t ; ,

Chebolaryev, a rna jor in the
Russian military intelligence
branch. He boarded a Soviet
airliner Sunday night after
immigration authorities
decided following a hearing
that he was returning of his
own free wm.
A State Department spokesman, Charles W. Bray In, said

.

. VOL XXI't NO. 180

News... in Briefs

(Continued from Page I)

"'''~UIC~AD

WASHINGTON (UP!) - A
Soviet defector has returned
home at his own request after
more than two months in the
United Slates during which he
briefed American intelligence
officials, the State Department
mer :: she said.
announced Monday.
Nobel said an attendant found
The man was identified as
Schneider's body at 8 a.m. Anatoly Kuzmich

Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Area

The resignation of John
Zerkle, owner of the Zerkle
Trucking Co., a councilman 29
years since 1940, was accepted
~fi.tctive Dec. 30 when Middleport village council met in a
brief regular seaslon Monday
night.
Zerkle's stepping down

Deaths

Color cartoons:
Red Tractor
Brothers in Outer Space
Stooge

95

Lima, the slate refused comment.
"We can 'I make any.furtljer
comments.as of the moment,"
said a spokesman for attorney
General William J . Brown.

Soviet Defector Undefects

•

Squar!! Dr . Com moue

MEIGS THEATRE

CHICAGO -A STORM SYSTEM IS SWEEPING out of the
Western Plains and has set off inclement weather throughout a
good part rl ~ country.
Hazardous driving ~r travelers' warnings are up in parts of
Nebruka Kanlls,lowa, South Dakota, Oklahoma and Missouri.
'
.
.

Christmas day in the second · galion and three others formerfloor of the hospital 's lop seeur- ly worked there.
ity ward .
The charges against the 31
Twenty-eight of the 31 per- ranged from sodomy to torture
sons indicted worked at the hos- of patients.
pital at the time of the investiOther than sending Curci to
•

.•. """

HUNTINGTON, W. Va. (UPI) - A city
man, Charles Bennett, ao,' turned himself in
Monday to a justice of ~eace on a charge of
possession and sale of heroin.
Accompanied by two attorneys, Bennett
posted a '25,000 bond with Magistrate Andrew
Kitchen for a preliminary hearing Jan.' 5.
Bennett was the object of an arrest
warrant following ,a massive drug raid 'in the
city Dec. 15.
Bennett is the 21st persoo to be charged In
the city wide narcotics crackdown, and the
12th facing a felooy count.

phases of the village operation
and the town will be in capable
hands."

Zerkle thanked Mayor
Fisher and council members
for their past cooperation.
Zerkle , Clerk-Treasurer
Gene Grate, and two new
council members, William
Walters and Fred Hoffman,
will be sworn Into office by
Mayor Fisher Thursday night
al village hall. The ceremonies
will follow a dinner to be staged
by the new mayor, Zerkle, at
the Martin Restaurant for all
village officials - including old .
and new council members and their spouses. Walters and
Hoffman are new members of
council replacing Mrs. Roger
Morgan and
Lawrence
Stewart. Neither asked
reelection. Both were serving
by appointment.
Zerkle has 30 days to name
his replacement on village
council. If he has not named a
replacement by then, the
council makes the appointment. There is one year
remaining on his term.
Attending Monday night's

))

.

~

SAIGON , (UPI)-Hundreds
of U.S. jets bombarded North
Vietnam today in the third day
of the most sustained air
assault ever ordered by President Nixon then returned to
their bases to rearm for what
military sources said would be
a fourth day of attack on
Wednesday.
CHRISI'MAS WISH ANSWERED -Newsboys ~tfare llhowe!ed with glfta durlng the
Hanoi reported another U.S.
holiday season. Micky Oiler, of the county children's home, probably had his No. 1 Wish anplane shot down and warned
swered in lull when his customers, Mr. and Mrs. Emmett Blackburn, Lasley St., gave htm a
that the strikes would delay
new
bicycle. Oiler was asked to help the Blackhurns "move something" in their basement.
release of American prisoners
Oiler went along willfugly to help, and when he reached the basement, the something proved to
of war held since the great
be the new bike !
bombing attacks of the early
1960s against the Haiphong and
Hanoi areas.
Military sources said the jets
which took part in today's
mission returned to the aircraft carriers Coral Sea and
Constellation off the Vietnam
coast, to the big U.S. air bases
at Da Nang in South Vietnam
and Ubon and Udorn in
Thailand, to refuel and rearm.
wUI forward that amount to the
The U.S. command refused
Nwnerous inquiries indicate property tax receipts.
comment on the Hanoi radio some confusion may still exist
Such is not the case, ac- proper county office," Essex
reports of a sixth U.S. plane that the property lax rollback cording to State Superin- said.
As a result, neither school
Shot down in three days but and the homestead exemption tendent of Public Instruction
districts nor other local
said only the American jets provided in the state's lax- Martin W. Essex.
were still hitting targets in the budget bill will result in Ohio
Essex said Amended Sub- governments will receive any
north under the sustained air school districts losing local stitute House Bill 475 provides less funds than they woUld
assault ordered by Presideni
for :
. have received had the 10 pet.
Nixon.
- A 10 pet. property lax rollback not been in effect.
As the air war escalated, the
The
same
general
rollback for aJI real estate,
allied ground effort in neighprovisions,
Essex
said,
apply
including personal tangible
boring Laos was deteriorating.
property and utility tax to the homestead exemption.
North Vietnamese troops and
Persons over 65 will receive
payments; and,
Laotian guerrUias captured the
certain
reductions if their
- A homestead exemption
Bolovens Plateau town of
provision to provide property annual income is less than
Paksong in southern Laos
tax relief to Ohio citizans 65 $8,000. Again the slate will
today with the effect of
years of age or older having replace these ·reductions by
widening the Ho Chi Minh Trail
annual incomes of less than forwarding income tax
over which the Communists
receipts to each of Ohio's 88
$8,000.
COLUMBUS
(UPI)
John
ship war materiel into South
The slate of Ohio, Essex said, counties.
W. Welch, Reynoldsburg, has will provide the funds from the
Vietnam.
"While citizens of our state
The principal targets of the been named chief of the In- income tax to replace 10 pet. of will be paying lower property
strikes into North Vietnam come Tax Division with the each property taxpayer's bill. taxes," Essex said, "neither
were airfields, missile pads Ohio Department of Taxation, "If his tax bUI were $500, the Ohio schools nor local
and gun platforms harboring State Tax Commissioner county officials wUI provide governments will have any less
the Soviet-built MIG jets, Robert J. Kosydar announced him with a $50 payback or funds to provide local sersurfaceto-air missiles and today.
reduction. In turn, the state vices."
antiaircraft artillery.
Welch, 37, has headed the
Radio Hanoi said the Ameri- department's Planning and
cans bombed at least one Development Section since
school and two hospitals in the March, 1971.
'
strikes that extended to within
Welch has also served as
35 miles of Hanoi.
manager of general accounting
American military sources and tax manager for SCOA
denied the Hanoi report and Industries Inc., Columbus.
said the targets of the
"Mr. Welch supervised a
COLUMBUS (UP!)- About organizations,
charitable
American planes were large stall responsible for 250,000more persons, including groups, colleges and persons
military.
maintaining original hooks of 75,000 state employes, wUI be- employed by private firms
The Hanoi military newspa. record for some 850 retail shoe come eligible for unem- with one or more workers.
per Qtan Dol Nhan Dan said outlets throughout the nation ployment benefits beginning
"We estimate that It wm cost
today, "So long as Nixon does as well as bank accounts lor 450 next year.
Ohio $500,000 a year to provide
not stop his aggressive war, the subsidiary corpora tions, ~~
"The inclusion of state em. benefits," Pound said. "State
captured U.S. pilots cannot Kosydar said of Welch 's duties ployes is mandatory," Beman employes eligible for benefits
return home ."
with SCOA.
Pound of the Ohio Bureau of wUI receive them and the
The report of the newspaper,
Employment Services ex- OBES will he reimbursed by
carried in a Hanoi Radio
plained today. "However, the Ohio, which will be billed
broadcast and heard in Tokyo Veterans Memorial Hospital coverage for those employed
quarterly."
specifically mentioned KenADMITTED . - Margaret by other political subdivisions
Since a person must work 20
neth Richard Johnson, who Stevens, Vinton; Carolyn -county, city, township, etc.
weeks before becoming eligible
Nhan Dan said was captured Wood, Pomeroy; Etta Custer, - is optional."
to receive benefits, the newDec. 18 after he bailed out of Minersville; William HobPound, who is director of the comers will have to be employhis burning plane over North stelter, Rutland : Mark Clark, employment compensation
ed until May to receive aid.
Vietnam.
Pomeroy : Morga ret Jones , division, said an ordinance or
The extended coverage will ·
"The more reckless Nixon Pomeroy; Kay Hockman, resolution must be approved
not include part~ime students,
becomes .. . the weaker Cheshi l'e;
Charles before other public employes unclassifted state and univerbecomes the position of Ken- Winebrenner, Mi&lt;jdleport; are included in the coverage.
sity employes, elected of.
neth Richard Johnson.'' The William Wheeler, Racine.
Others becoming eligible for flclals, real estate salesmen,
report did not further identify
DISCHARGED - Harold benefits Jan. I wUI include some security salesmen and
the American airman.
Gibbs, Lucinda Wolfe.
those employed by non profit mUe truck drivers, Pound said.

To Schools Protected

ANOTHER of those Chaplin girls Is In pictures.
Josephine, 21, makes her
debut In a French picture,
"The Wild Beasts' Scent,"
the second of Charlie Chaplin daughters to launch a
film career.

$14 Million Cut
From GOP's Bill
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov.
John J . GiUigan vetoed about
$14 million worth of projects he
called "nothing more than a
waste of taxpayers' dollars"
Monday when he signed a measure containing $239 million
worth of capital improvements
at state facilities. '
The Republican measure represented· re-appropriation of
money to complete projects
already started, but Gilligan
said liOIIle of them already are
finished . He also complained
some of the appropriations
were too large for the projects'
priority, and some were too
small for practical use.
Of the items vetoed, $12.3 million worth came out of funds for
parks and recreation.
The Republican - controlled
General Assembly tossed out
Gilligan 's $425.5 mUiion capital
improvements bUI in favor of
the re-appropriations. The bill
, included $98 million lor higher
education projects, $83 million
for mental health facilities and
$)6.8 million for parks and recreation facilities.
Nine projects . to~lilng $9.8

·-"'-.

; -:.-: .

Property Tax Receipts

session were Mayor Fisher,

Zerkle, who is council
president; council members
David Ohlinger, Richard
Vaughan and Mrs. Roger
Morgan, Chief of Police J . J.
Cremeans,
Grate,
and
Maintenance Supervisor
Harold Chase.

~,

I
~~

Mrs. Sidney Russell, Middleport, has learned of the
death of her cousin, Arthur
Steele, in Columbus. Mr.
Steele, formerly of Langsville,
was a retired B&amp;O Railroad
detective.
He was the son of the late
Elbert and Mary Steele. He
was also preceded in death by
his wife, Cassie Rumlield
Steele. Funeral services were
held in Colwnbus today.

Jack Nicholson
Karen Black

tal) hew as under jurisdiction to
Lima and was sent back there."
The Cleveland Plain Dealer in
today'sedilion printed copies of
the indict.nients against three
attendants ,
Harold
E.
Stephens, Robert Heidenscher
and Allen E. Peoples for
aggravated assault.
All three were charged with
assaultingSchneideronorabout
the day Schenider testified
against the three.
"I don't know if the beatings
had anything to do with his
death but he was beaten something·awful that time last swn-

.

ALL WITH CARE-FREE FORMICA TOPS

Cousin is Dead

TORONTO - A MAN CARRYING A GRENADE hijacked
Sunday night an Air Canada DC9 with 89 persons aboard just five
minutes before It larded at the Toronto airport. He ordered it
Named 'fo Finance Post
flown to Cuba, and it returned to Canada today after three hours
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Alvin
in Havana with the six crew members still aboard. The
K.
Peterjohn, legislative ·
passengers had been pennitted to leave the plane at Toronto.
Ahalf hour after the DC9 was hijacked, a youth made a futile budget officer for Republicans
in tbe Ohio General Assembly,
effort to hijack an American Airlines 107 while it was over
has been named city finance
Wyoming, The plane with 97 aboard was en route to San Frandirector by Mayor-elect
cisco from the same Toronto airport which was Involved in the Thomas Mondy.
other hijacking, but the two incidents appeared unrelated. The ,
second hijacker was subdued by two crewmen and tw
~o----... "",/,
1
passengers and was handed over to the FBI.
is a German name
meaning power.
CAIRO - FOREIGN MINISTERS OF THE Ar League
conferred today at the group's headquarters by the e River on
the possiblllty of convening an Arab summit eeting next
month.
Tonight &amp; Tuesday
The conferees presumably would talk about what steps to
December 27·28
take against Israel; and,also on whether five of its members
FIVE EASY PIE US
should re-establillh diplOmatic ties with West hermany.
&lt;Ttchnicolor)

since he was five years old.
"But the doctors at Lima Hospital never called to tell me he
was on heart pills or that he
was even very sick," said Mrs.
Mathers. "I know that he had
not been given good treatment
otherwise he might be alive today."
The funeral was held at the
Bissler Funeral Home at Kent
where Schneider grew up and
was graduated from Roosevelt
High School.
"Bob was in trouble since he
got out of the ·Army
and couldn 'l make it on the outside," she said. "I didn't want
him at Lima but alter he committed himself at Tiffin (Hospi-

The Pyramids of
Egypt, the tombs of Egyptian kings, are the only a~­
cient wonders still standing.

Anna Stiles
Mrs. Anna Mary Stiles, 76,
Zanesville, formerly of
Pomeroy, died in Good
Samaritan Hospital Sunday.
She was preceded in death by
her parents, Christopher and
Frances Eblin Schneider.
Survivors include a son,
Rolland Stiles, Colwnbus; two
daughters, Mrs . Frances
Waters, Zanesville, and Mrs.
Helen Fox, S. Zanesville; two
sisters, Mrs. Edith Davis,
Pomeroy, and Mrs. Helen Fell,
Pomeroy; six grandchildren,
and 12 great-grandchildren.
Friends may call at the
Delong and Baker Funeral
Home in Zanesville from 2 to 4
and 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday and at
the Ewing Funeral Home on
Wednesday from 2lo 4 and 7 to
9 p, m.
Funeral services will be held
at the Ewing Chapel Thursday
at I p, m. with burial in the
Beech Grove Cemetery.

ket was kept closed.
"He called me on the tele'phone last .Thursday and he
was in good spirits then," Mrs.
Mathers said. "I can't understand wh~t could have
happened since then and why
his body was so badly
deteriorated. I don't know why
they (hospital officials) ignored my pleas about how sick
my hoy was and didn't keep
him In a hospital bed."
Allen COunty Coroner William
E. Noble said an autopsy
showed Schneider died of a
heart seizure brought on by a
disease known as pericarditis.
Mrs. Mathers said her son
had suffered from the disease

Now You Know

~~::::.~!!m:~'"t.::::::=:!Sm

WALLY AMBERGER, salesman for R. H. Rawlings
Sons Company, Middleport, poses with four famous "Dodge
boys" from the sports world at Dodge's "Top Banana" truck
Introduction recently in Cincinnati. The sports stars are (left
to right) : Rick Dudley of the Cincinnati Swords hockey team,
Royal's Matt Guokas, Cincinnati Red's pitcher Gary Nolan,
and Bengats' linebacker Bill Bergey. Over 100 bright yellow
Top Bananas and their respective Dodge dealers from Ohio,
Kentucky and Indiana were assembled at the Marriott Inn
lor the introduction of Top Banana to the public.

day in Kent where his mother
said she was not satisfied with
the care he received at the hospital.
"They,didn't call me unti!IO
o'clockSaturday morning to tell
me he had died during the
night," said Mrs. Eleanor Ma·
!hers of Piqua. "And I think he
wasn '!getting the proper care."
Mrs. Mathers said her son
was In good spirits when she
spoke with him over the tele- ·
phone just one day prior to his
death.
She said an attendant at the
institution told her son Jeff
"Bob's body was blue and
bloated and that on the advice
of the funeral director the cas-

million were vetoed because
they required revenue bonds
and the legislature failed to
include debt service funds in.
the budget.
They were Burr Oak State
Park, $850,000; Crane Creek
· StatePark,$7SO,OOO; Deer Creek
State Park, $825,000; Delaware
State Park, $20,000; East Harbor State Park, $1,950,000; Geneva Slate Park, $1,700,000; Indian Lake State Park, $500,000;
Paine Creek Reservoir State
Park, $1,255,000, and West
Branch Reservoir State Park,
$1 million.
Approved were similar projects for ·which the debt service
money was provided - at Portage Lakes State Park and Mohican State Park.
Also vetoed were these projects:
-Loramie State Park, $988,000. ProTect on land not yet
owned by the slate.
- West Branch State Park,
$579,000. Some work completed,
rest disproportionate to available funds and total park needs.
- Augla!ze - Mauroee River
(Continued on Page 10)

Welch Will
Boss Newest

T ax Agency

250,000 More Persons

Eligible for Benefits

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