<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="16462" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/16462?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-13T11:19:05+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="49599">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/58f332b47b772852bdcaae43dd1dc5e6.pdf</src>
      <authentication>c04374e433163dd3e3968d79ea2b028d</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="52629">
                  <text>.

'

,, ·
',

•

··NUOn ·Eirm · on Release· POWs

•

r

.)
·

.. . . .

W~TQN (UPi) -Prelldeni Nixon ..uci Suuday ~tall .

"rcee

...

I

• "Bui if PoW's ijte still retained-by North Vietn:rn,.. Bdded

Nixon icknowledged Vice President Spiro T. Aetew has been
conii'Owralal, but Jll'alaed him and said "he lho'!ld stay on the

U.S,
qould be out' of Soutlt Vlelnan) by elec:IIGo time In
Nlzon, ''tn ordet to have any bargaining position at aU wiih the
NoveiD!Mr lf1111 American pj'iJonen of war were rele~ by the teaJn,••
Vietnamese, the North VIetnamese, we· will have to continue. to
Omnunlall by then,
'
.
ioJ for the eeonoiny, Nlion viewed 1m op!iJnllllcaUy, seeing retain a residual force In Vietnam, and we will have to continue ·
' Unleulliat CCIIIdltlon Is met, the Festd~t said the Communist the lllet11Piorment rate (ftpping to below the 5.1 per' cent thepossiblllty 9falr strikes ori the North VIetnamese."
side can expect -to ~ a continuing ·residual f~e of 25,000 to . average of the 19601, and Predicting liOIIIe 'Cill)trols may be' lifted
During his comments about the POW's, Nixon disclosed that
•,DOOAmerican military men In tbe 1011tli and poaslbly renewed before the year Ia out.
.
·
_
.
Dr. Henry A, Kissinger discussed the Issue with Ollnese Premier
bo~ of,the north.
.
. · ·:
·,;. : · ·
•
Nison ~lld out U.S. Vietnam poUcy In wofdlng that did not . Olou·EIHai when the presidential adviser for national secwity
'l'lle carrot«&lt;ct-use of tht; POW lalue blghllghted il one-bour · differ from past stateme~ts b!ll which did reflect a possible shift affairs visited the Ollnese leader In preparation for Nixon's visit .
televiaion, Interview of the. President &amp;mday night by CBS In emphesla.
In February. .
'
.
'
COI'I'eiJPOndent Den Rather Foreign Potlcy dominated the aeesion,
Nixon did not Indicate what response Kissinger received from
. ''Our goal Is to enr;! the anneriC!UI Involvement In Vietnam
~!&lt;ll!!l.fore an unllgh\ed firePlace In Nlion's White House oval
befOre the end of this year and before the election, not just O.ou. But 'be characterized as "a slightly hopeful note" the
office.
b,lcaUBe it is an elecUon,. but ·because these are lbe ways our ~nt release by the O.lnese of two American prisoners held for
,• Nixon also noted that when the ldea 'of setting a deadUne for plans are working out," Nixon said. "· ·
,
many years. He described this -Ollnese ptiltude as '~nuch more
total u,s. Withdrawal 'fu eii:hange for·release of f'OW's ' Was
His preference; he added, wu to end the fighting through · clviUzed than that of the North Vietnamese."
floated out thla !aU, the North Vietnamese totally rejected II." negotiations, but if that !ailed the United States would disengage
During the Interview, the president also :
-Assessed the recent new five days of Intensive bombing of
On domesllc affairs, Nixon said he would reveal his reelecUon through the administration's VletnamU;allOn pi8n-the progfBIII
plans by Jan.14, but added "there Is, of course, good reason" to IUider which American forces turn over prosecution of the·war to ' North Vietnam as ''very, very effecilve," llrnited to "military
think that he would seek· a ·second term.
the South Vietnamese.
(Coollnoed oo Page 8)
•

"'

~NO. XXI('

.••

f

.

•

.e
.

'

.•

'

S. Sgt. GaryE.Jenldns, left,andW. R. Lobell

at

Medal Awarded S-Sgt; Jertkins
.

1Jevo14?d To The lnkre.ll Of The Meiga• MQM)n. Area

N,;;.;O·..;l.;,84;..·~-· .:. PO: .:M: .:E:'R.O:..:Y...:;·M:.:.:ID:.:D=:LE::..P:
;,
O_. .:R:IT•:.,::
::; ~Os:::l:l:::IO:__ _.. . ,:M: :.:O: :N: : :DA:.:,.:Y.!. . ,J: :_:A:.,: NU: :;A~RY!.' .3~·..!.19~7::_2--'-.........:..P.:.::HO:::N::,E_:9~92:,.::·2::-15~6----.,---~T~EN~CE~N_'_':\_TS·
1

.&amp;SGT. GARY E. JENKINS, U. S. Marine Corps, son of Mr .
and Mrs. Fred Jenkbis, Syracuse, was awarded the Navy
Achievemen.t medal with combat V on Nov. 24 for' Meritorious
, Service from June 1966 to March 1968 while stationed in Vietnam .

!~s~~~=~· director 9th Marine Corps District, made the

A letter with the award said: "WhUe serving with Force
llSM~llil:llll'l'M~SiSiiiiiiQi~'~:!::::::~:::::::.-::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::-;:::::: Logistic Support Group Bravo, Force Logistic Command in
connection with a combat operations against the enemy in the
Republic of Vietnam, Sgt. Jenkins performed his duties in an
exemplary manner. AB group chief clerk, he displayed out·
standing initiative and perseverance despite the extremely
PHILADELPIDA (UP!)- Frank L. Rizzo, a high ~ adverse conditions and difficulties associated with a combat
'
'
school dropout who worked his way from beat patrolman
environment. By his consistently high level of efficiency, he
to commlssloner 'of poUce, was sworn In !Qday as mayor
materially enhanced the operations! effectiveness of his unit and
'
.
of Philadelphia and promised Jaw and order and no tax
. gained the ~ct and admiration of all who associated with
Increases despite a·combined clty«hool board deficit of
about $100 mU1Ion. ·
•
and with meticulous attention to detail,
"There will be no abuse of police power In any
he ably prepared all required reporta and affiliated corre·
community. AI. the same time, I will not tolerate gang
spondence accurately and expeditiously, and ensured their
rule or anarchy In the streets," Rizzo said. Rizzo, who
prompt submission to higher headquarters, thereby providing
'
has
caUed
for
an
additional
800
policemen
to
bolster
the
his command with outatandlng admlniBtrative support. ·
· OONOORD, N.H. (UPI)- ference he would like to get 15 campaigning."
he wanted to give Republican ..
·
poUce
force
In
PhUadelphia,
the
nation's
fourth
largest
:'$
Alb brook said be could spend conservatives-whom he said •.•.
" In addition, serving as order writing clerk and rest and
.Rep. Jolm M. Ashbrook, R· .to 20per cent of the RepubUcan
·!·!
city, add'ed:
Ohio, said toda)' he had half tj!e vote lri the March 7 primary up to $100,000·In the one-elate were the majority of the party !•!•
recuperating
clerk, he established procedures which resulted in
.•..
....
campaign.
.
'
"I pledge you this: This administration will do
s!P,ature1 neidec:l to me In the which kicks off the nation's
. the orderly handUng and control of these vital areas. Sgt.
-an alternative to Nison's
::::
He
announced
his
New Hampablre prealdentlal presidential runoffs.
everything possible to see to It that anyone will be able to
poUclee.
,
Jenkins' outatanding professional ability, untiring deter·
~
primary and enoUgh 111011ey to
"We might get more than presidential candidacy last
"Regardless of what he ·:-:
operate
a
business
without
fear
In
any
section
of
this
mlnation, and steadfast devotions to duty throoghout his tour In
:-:·
mount a stroog clllllpilp.
that," he slid. ."We · have Wednesday, saying he hoped to does,"
Ashbrook said, :::: · city." 'l'lle lnauguratioo made Rizzo the first pollee
the RepubUc of Vietnam reflect great credit upon hlmseH, the
~by ,about li youths- enough ~- to mount a head off the leftward drift of ''Regardless of how far to the :::: commissioner to.become mayor of a large Amerlean
Marine Corps, and the United States Naval Service."
many of them membera of the strong -campaign in N'ew the Nixon administration.
left he goes,. he has ·!he .•..•.::~. city.
Sgt. Jenkins ill presently stationed at Headquarters 9th
con ae rv a tl v e Youn-g - Hampshire.
"I think we expe&lt;;ted a Wide Republican C01Jservatives, the .•
,.......~.~···~·
.,.,.,......~.....,_.,..'
F ""'"'~&lt;!l'. .WSI:&gt;.l
Marine Corps District, 9401 Santa Fe Drive, Overland Park,
.................
-.•••••,....-...........:.Nn~-.!;;;&amp;;;.0
o; t .~~····"•"~~•
. . . . '.w.li8iSi:mliil
.
Americans for Freedom~
" I plan to 11pend more than difference between this admi- mainstream conservatives,
Kansas 66212.
.
Aahbrook told a news con· :In days In the state personaUy nistration and previous ones;" locked Into his campaign."
EXTENDED OUTI.OOK
he told the news conference In • Ashbrook said he would
Oblo: Elllended outlook
the senste chamber of the State spend Jll!1 of the rest of the.day
Wednesday tbrougb Friday
House. "We dldr,J 't get II.
In an effcrt to gain more
Fair and cold Wednesday
"This administration has signatures for .bls candidacy
aad Thursday, hlgb tem·
eontlnued almost In locll«ep petitions which muat be, flied
perature
ID the upper 20s to
with prevtous administrations. by 'l'llursday.
' '
mid lOs, LoWJ at DIPI Ill tbe
~ ·We've 1Dt ..over half the
Business . •• · usual in
. "
...... ; ___, . - -'i~J!l* leelll' to illld·... Friday
ltepubUcim Pou!ics Isn't 'good legll requtrlment, but that'~
BY UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
m911ly cloudy and uot aa cold,
enough, as far as. we're con· not aU we ·want," he said. He
.
chance of aoow north and raiD
'
'
cerned ."
needa 1,000 signatures and a
R~ -A ROME DOCTOR said 1,000 fingers were am·
'
or
aoow
south
pori!ODJ.
HIP•
The Ohio congressman said $500 filing fee.
putated and poUce said at leut 2,000 persons were Injured In a
The Meigs Soil and Water packet, $5.50.,
ID the 301 .nortb, and t0s soutb
United
Press
IDtemalloaaJ
wet and wild weekend of New Year's celebrations. ~ewspapera
Conservation District again
Crown Vetch will be packed
~t!ollJ· Low at nigbt In the
The
New
Year's
weekend
llld II liD like wartime Italy.
•
this year In offering Wlldllfe In 50 crown )Qta only aud will be
death toll neared the upper end :iilt.
Planting Packets, Crown $7.
· Romans and Neapolltana uaed up tons of !lm'Orks, much of
'
of a pre-holiday estimate · ··:·:·:·:-:·:·.·.·:·:·.···.·.·:·.····.·:····:-:-:·:·:·. ·.·.·:·.·.·:·: Vetch, Song,Bird
Packeis and
The "Song Bird Packet" will
II illepl, and Ut up the llides of their cities for hours: Genoese .
today.
quantity
bundles
of
any
of
the
contain
the foUowing (it will
&amp;-ank more than one mlltlon boltles of wine. The girls of Matera
The
National
Safety
Council
seedlings Included In the not be possible. to substitute or
let their hair go stringy and knotted.
had estimated that between 400
packets for sale this year'
e-nullte changes in the assort·
and 500 persons would die In
WildUfe
Packeta
will
contain
ment): 3 White flowering
AYRSHIRE,IOWA-A YEAR AG0,19-year-old Jody Smith
traffic accidents during the 78the following varieties.
Dogwood, 8-12", 2 Manchu
Pomeroy poUce inveetlgated Main St. when cars driven by
w1111'teven old enough to vote in Iowa. Today he takes ofllce as
bour period that began at 6
25
large
White
Pine,
2-yr.
Cherry,
8,12", 3 Gray
the mayor of this amalJ central Iowa COOllllunity -and becomes three accidel!ts over the ,John Ridgway, Jr ,, 191 New p.m. local time Thursday and
seedlings - ~", eight small Dogwood, 6-12" and 2 Mountain0 .
holiday weekend.
Haven; and Edna Slusher, 53, ended midnight Sunday.
the -young~ mayor In the nstion.
packeta.
ABh - 4-3 ...
AI 12:30 p. m. Saturday, a Pomeroy, collided. Damages
Smith Ia several months ybunge,r than Ohio's youngest
A United Press lnlernationaf
15 large Red Pine, 2 yr.
Any of the seedlings listed In
mayor - 19-year-old Ron Hooker of Newcomerstown, who was car driven by Rodney Sayre, were heavy' but there were no count at 9 a.m. EST showed 452
seedlings - 3-li", five small either of the above packets
. sworn In last month. Smith, a freshman at Enunetslmg JIDiior 23, 1\fiddleport, struck the rear Injuries.
persons had died In traffic
packets,
!JUlY be ordered in quantity. ·
CoUege, was put ,Into office on a promise to ·fix the town's streets, of a truck driven by Marvin
accidents.
15 large Scotch Pine, 2 yr. Orders must be placed in
Fry, 41, West Columbia, which
At 3:50 'p. m, Friday on East
defeating Incumbent Mayor E:l!. Swanson by a vote of~.
A bteakdown of accidental
seedlings
- 3-5", five small multiples of 25. "
'
One deer was killed and a
had stopped for the traffic Ught Main St. a car driven by Scott deailis:
second one Injured In separate packeta.
The following rates will be
"'
PARIS-TWO CL08E'fi'RIENDS KEPT a lonely vigil over at the Intersection of Nye Ave. Walton, 16, Pomeroy, struck. Traffic
452 auto accidents over the holiday
10
large
Colorado
Blue
charged
for each variety :
and Main St. There were no the rear of a car driven by Fires
41 weekend the Meigs County Spruce, 4 yr. seedlings 8-12", White Pine, Red Pine, Scotch
the ~.qt. P!!aurlce tbevaUer today, mOurning the death of the
to the Fry vehicle but Violet Walker, 51, Pomeroy, Planes
I Sheriff's Dept. reported.
man who entertained tile world for 60 years With hla special damages
three small packets.
Pine, 25 for f2.50 ; Colorado
heavy to the Sayre car. Sayre who had stopped to make a left Other
43
brand of Parisian charm.
,
10
large
Nor\vay
Spruce,
:J..
Blue
Spruce, Norway Spruce,
Sunday
at
1:29a.
m.
onSR
7,
was · arres.ted for allegedly
Total
537 sill·lentha of a mile north of yr. seedUngs - 12-18", three White, 25 for $3.75; Chinese
Although telegrl!lll of sympathy poured In from all ovet the leaving the scene of an . ace turn. Walton was cited to
world, no vlsltora were allowed inlide .the large white house at cldent and reckless operation. juvenUe court for falling to · California, as over , the Five Points, a deer was killed small packets.
Chestnut, Manc)lu Cherry,
maintain a~sured clear Christmas holiday period,
Marnes-La Coquette, Outside Paris, where the body of the 8:J.
PoUce are continuing their distance. Medium damages {'eported the most traffic when It ran Into the side of a 10 large White Spruce, 4 yr. White or Gray Dogwood, 25 {or
year~ld en~r:!llner J4y,
investigation of an accident at were reported to both vehicles. fataUUes - 58. Texas reported car driven by Donald Curtis seedlings - 1:1-16, three small S6.25; MoiUitain Ash, 25 for
Roush, 22, Pomeroy, Rt. 3. packets.
$12.50.
4:411 a. m. Saturday on East There were no liljurles..
33
traffic
deaths,
Florida
MIDLAND- MICII·. -"AN F.STIMATED 2,000 persons were
5 large White flowering
ADyone wishing to place
There was medium damage to
'
COIDited· 31, Michigan 24 and the car.
Dogwood - 8-12", two small orders should either caU the
evacuated from' their bomes SUnday night and early today when
Georgill 23. ·
Meigs Soil and Water Con.
TCII!ay~~a. m. on SR 124, packets.
a truck driver ml"•lrflly pumped ~.ooo gallons of gasolk\e Into
Only three slates, New two=~lle west of
5
larK§
.
.Gray
Dogwood
servation
office 992-3628 or
the city aewerlystem/ .
.
,
.
Hampshire,
Alaska
and
Langsville, a deer was Injured 6-12", two small packeta. · write the office Box 432,
Acc1lmuiaUona of gas fumes resulted In fires which heavUy
RACINE - Carroll V. Corp. and was In charge.of the
Delaware
were
without
any
when it ran into the path of a
5 large Chinese Chestnut Pomeroy, Ohio for an order
damaged threehom~andcauaedlesaer damage to two others. A Grlnun, 77, Racine· Rouli! 2, baseball program of the
traffic
fataUties.
car
driven
by
Buddy
Gene
12-18",
three
small
packeta.
form
for ord~rlng the packets,
minor explo*lon also occurred but pollee said there were .no died Monday at Veterans COm(Nil!Y·
Kuhn, 31, Clover, W. Va. There
Sur"&lt;lvlng are two brothers,
100 large Total Seedlings, 34 .J flr crown vetch. Orders must be
Memorial Hospital. The son of
reported injuries.
was
medium
munage
to
the
amaU packeta.
placed by February . 1st and
.
the late Joseph L: and Letha Ernest J. Grimm and Bert
Grimm,
both
of
Racine
Route
ADMISSION
NOTED
car.
The
cost
on
the
large
packet
will
be received during the first
MONROVIA, LIBERIA. RlaiAI\D M. Nixon and , Pickens Grimm, he ,tlao was
Admission to see the ftxas
A minor accident occurred Will be $11 and the small week of April.
W11llam R. Tolbert, the pr,!i•ent.oeelgnate of this African preceded In death by his wife, 2, and several nieces and
nephews.
Cowgirls,
professional
·
gcrls
Sunday
at 8:45 a. m. at the
country, heard evangellat BUJy Graham tell an overfloW'crowd Etta Womeldorff Gr~, and
Funeral services Will be held basketbaU team, who will play Sohlo Service Station In
·
&amp;mday that liberia could bi!oome' a 'lll)lirltual superjlower.'.'
a sister • Mrs. Bessie Hum.
I p.m. Wednesday at the aL Southern Hi~ School
Mrs. NIXon, the first wile of. U. S. preSident to OfflclaUy P~!·G .. .
.
. at
Ewing
Funeral Home with the Tuesday night, s ' $1 lor
rep.-entlier huablllid lrl Afriea.Is making an eight-day tour of - '"'· nnun was a member of ·
Rev.
Freeland
Norris of· studenls an~ $1.50 or adults. Pomeroy, Rt. 4, was at the gas .
, the Letart FaUs Methodist
.
• .
A deer was killed at 5:30 a . car, traveling east, ran off the
liberia, the lvory.Coast ani! Thana. Today she aUenda Tolbert s Church and of ' Battle Creek flclaling, Burial will be In ti)e . The girls will p ay Lhe pumps when he backed up and
Inauguration ceremoi)J',_occupying a seat bealde Ivory Coast Lodge No. l2, F&amp;AM, BatUe Letart Falls Cemetery:· coaches of Southern Local scraped a car pulling In unseen m. today on Rt. 7, two-tenths of highway after failing to roimd
a curve. The car rolled over
President Felix Houphoue\eBolgny and Mauretanian ,head of Creek, Mich. He was a reUred Friends may call at the funeral School District. Game time is 8 by Turner driven by CU!ford a mile north of Rt. 35.
According
to
the
Gallia·
three times, Morrison being
state, Mohktar Ould Dllddah.
employe of the General Foods home ally ttme.
p.m.
Whittington, 39, Harrisonville.
Meigs Post State Highway thrown out. He was charged
I'
.
'
There were no injwies or
•
Patrol, the animal ran into the with reckless o~ration ~nd
arrests.
path of a car driven by Ruth having· no operator's license . '
Ann Corbin, 27, Rt. I, Cheshire. There was heavy damage to his
There was moderate damage car.
to her car.
·
'
•
The first accident of 1972,
Another deer was killed at 10
'
LOS ANGELEs (UPI)- "1 muat get help" said the husband couldn't make It out.
·"No one would stop to help me: By Saturday I
Chance of snow tonight and however, investigated by the p. m. Friday on Rt. 7, four and
,.oman, slaggerlng In exhauatlon from a three hour
"We were snoWbound. We had no phone."
couldn't stay any longer."
Tuesday, possibly mixed with patrol , occurred · at noon two. tenths miles north of
hike throul!h hiplleep snow. "My husband Is1dead
~e found !!he could not l!)'en open the door of the
It took lllrs. Culter 3"2 hours to walk the 112 mDes to or changing to rain in the south Sunday on Rt. 325, four·tenths Gallipolis. Officers said It ran
. back In our trailer,"
·
, l
trailer becallse of the weight of snow against It, she . the road. Two 'mDes down tlie road, she found people', Tuesday. Lows tonight ·In the of a mile north of County Rd. illto the path of a car operated
.
·' Themanllhehadlllkedforhelpturnedawar.
said. Herhuaband, Stanley, 53, baa moved their 35e apparently city dwellers who had brought their upper teens to mid 2tm. High 32, where vehicles driven by by Dennis E. Lane, 29, Rt. 1,
,,Ulysses· G. Davis, 21, Rt. I, Gallipolis. There was minor
_jf I
"I Clli't help you," he said, pointing to his chlldren · by.., foot trailer to a remote ridge so that he could be children out to play In the mountains in the mow .
Tuesday in the 30s.
liulldlnc a mowlnan on their outing In the snow. out of the smog of the lowlands and breathe purer
Northup , and Ronald ·E. damage to Lane!s car.
She uked one ttuln for a ride to the nearest town,
(:OVerechnountalna. _''The c:hlldren are· playing)'
mowitaln air. He had heart trouble and emphysema. Gorma9. He said he Wll!l going the other way . Another
""""' ··'
Stephens, 16, Rt. 2, Patriot,
A llnul mishap occurred at
·
: Mri. Georgina CUlver, 49, told Sunday how she . In their Isolation dlle to the &amp;nowstonn, her dldn 'I want .to interrupt his children's ·snowman·
TWO FORFEIT BONDS
~oliided . There was minor 11:25 p. m. on the Kerr·
·
pnt four dlyiiiiOWbound In a traUer on a remote husband's supply of oxygen In tanks was ellha118ted building.
J'Wo Meigs Countians for. damage to both cars. No Harrisburg Rd ., four-tenths of
·(ldlli In the Tehachapi Mountains north of Los · . and they'!rere unable to bring In rno~. Wednesday
a mile west of Rt. 160 where a
She tried to.hltch a ride, she said, but no one would felted $3P8 bonds each this charges were filed .
~eiN with the boclr of her OOaband.
morning be told her, "I can't breathe," gaaped as he
plck .her up.
·
morning ' In
Gallipolis
Three. minor ~ccidents were · wheel came Jff an aut~
' When llhe did manase to get out, people she asked 1 sat ontheedgeofthe bed,andfelloverdeild,llhe said.
Municipal Court on highway Investigated Fn day, the last operated by Geor ge A.'
"I just plodded along," she said.
for .&amp;d Would not help her, she said. When she found a
"The sun came out and I got out a sheet and painted
Westfall, 23, Vinton. The In·
Four miles and slx hours after she left the trailer, patrol charges of driving while . day of 1971.
hllbway, motoriltl would not slop for her.
·
'help' on II In big letters and wtlt on the roof of the she reached a restaurant In Gonnan and telephoned under the influence. They were
Jerry Morrlsrn, 23, Rt,. I~ cident caused Westfall to lose
• ''LIIIS\IIIday,thelllowbepntofaU,"piesaid. "It trailer . HeUcopters passed over many times, and I friends.
Clyde J. fngies, 56, Middleport, . VInton, sufferM minor injuries control and .run into a ditch.
c:ame down unW It wu sill reet deep/l'he car was waved for help. I even tried slgnaJIIn( them at night
Sherlfi's deputies brought out the body of her and Maxine M. DitMie, 41, in a slngle~ar accident on Rt. There was moderate damage
IIIOWI(IIn. It's a mUe and 1 hall to the I'OIId .and my with 1 flalhJtght. "
R~d ne .
· 554. The patrol said Morrison 's to his car.
·
·
husband
SUnday.
1
' '

Ashbrook Hopeful·
In ew Hampshire

Law and Order Mayor Strom
.

it
'

'

'

:

1,..-&gt;i•'·
·~J'~
'

•i'

' .:
'

'

&lt;

•'

'. '

•

i

'
'

'

®
MAKE.
MAH
LIFE.i-ONc;
,DREAM

'

him."Wof{~lessly

Coffin

COME. .
:rp,uE.-

NeW$.•• in BriefS

Seedling fackets

wunt is
Ove.r 500

Three Accidents
Are Investigated

Have ·9,Varieties

Two Deer

Struck by

Vehicles ,

'
'

'

.

....,..

CAPTAIN EASY
· •• NOU

YOU MEAN

THAT.M-

OF

McKE&amp;

FIR~T

MU~T ·
DEVELOP

;nle: CHARI~M6

,-,, .,

,,'\',.,

Carroll Grimm Dies on Monday
.

OF l..f:AI'ISR?HIP
ANP'AOOPT A

. I./F6 f,T'/te,H
''
'

I

.,
'

I

Mas.

~::~~~:~ttTurner,Sr.,s9.

Deer Killed Early Today

0

AND UN(.!!!j? WI:: WI?H TO

She Met only C6Id Heart~d Americans
'

Weather

f

�•

'

I

·.

.

.

..:

.

~

},

' \1 .

•..uy Sentinel,
Middleport-Pomeroy,
0.,. Jan. 3, 1972. .
.
' .

·. . •

'

.

'._ '

I

I

..

' .

.

II

3-Tbe Dilly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., JJn. 3; 1972
'

.

BuCks Entertain CreightOn-Five .
.

eighth straight victory Without expect to catch them .a few
a loss, all played at home.
Urnes."
.~· OhioState,playjngtheBrulns
"By the time It was 3().10 we
Taylor's teain came back In
at LOJ Anl'les tn the flnala of W.re almost on our way to ·the second half, once cut,Ung
· the. Bruin Claailc:, got behind Disneyland," aeid Ohio State the margin to 10 points.
. No. I ranked UCLA.ll-l..at the Coach Fred Taylor, who did
'·'Our players may get whip-

· powaMUCLA.

I"

-

\•'

If J011 ·have ·wafted .~· · ·
· · THis,~r ··
.36" WIDE NYLON

99~ PER FOOT

If you've waited 'til now to get new carpet
you're In luck! .We've drastically price cut
scores of rolls and room size i'UQS to bring
you fabulous va'luesl Wool, nylon, olefin and
acrylic fibers In famous names are In·. ·
eluded.

501 NYLON
Gold, Green, Blue &amp; Red

Red, Green, .O!ange

}lllsses for 103 yard,9 and ran StBuhach must have used up
scrambled Is a much better . a good 15 or :lj) seconds eluding
word -for 55 yards In eight · Forty Niner tacklers before he
lries.
threw the hall -but, very
But, as Steubach pointed Importantly -the Ilallae offenout:
sive linemen stuck to their
"I didn't heve ~ very good posts and there was . no
day ... b!lt I'U have better. We "linemen downfieid"
won ... it was a champlanahlp penalty.
"We practice that," said
game and all that really
mattered was that we won."
tackle ·Rayfield Wright·. "We
But, Usten to the dissiiiters: work on It particularly with
"Staubach's scrambling was Roger at quarterback."
the illfference ... we couldn't·
Staubach went on to hlt.e 2ZCO)Italn him," said Nolan after yal"der · to Billy Truax and
hls Forty Nlners · had been scrambled for eight y~ in
victimized by Dallas for the that 80-yard drive and the
second year in a row In the Cowboys got the salting kluchNatlonal Football Conference down for a 14-3lead with 9:17
championship game.
left to play.
The Cowboys, who lost to · They had gotten the first
Baltimore In Super Bowl V, touchdown on the eighth play of
Will meet the Miami Dolphins the second quarter when An·
tn the sixth version !i l!le . drle stewed in front of a
champimahlp game Jan . 16 In Brodie screen pass to Ken
New Orleans.
,
WUlard at the Forty Niner IIJ.
MiaJ\u beat Baltimore 21~ yard line and chugged It back
Sunday to win the American to the two-yard line. HUI went
Conference Iitle.
over two plays later.
Staubach didn't confine hls
The Cowboys tbefted three
scrambling strictly to running, Brodie passes In aU, but that
either. On the key 80-yard drive · was the only one which could
for the pullaway touchdown -a be caUed crucial. The other two
,-..._..---..~~~~"-',~"", drive that ate up 7:~ of the came .in the fading minutes
Jhe Daily Sentinel · second half, Staubach scram- while the Forty Nlners were
~EVOTED/fO THE
' ' bled wide and deep before he desperate.
·
. INTEREST OF
1 flnall
ked .
clal 17
Th lr 1 lnt had
MEIGS·MASONAWEA
1
yuncor
a cru
•
e onypo ,s
come
C~ST.ER L. TANNEHILL, yardpasstoawldeopen 0al.¥!y backlnthethlrdperiodona28ROIE=~·~-lEdFLiCH ,
' Reeves.
'yard Bruce Gossett field goal
•
Cllr l&lt;lllor
i
Published dally oxcopl ·
Saturday by Tho Oh io Valley !

=·

Stock! :All Rolls and
Patterns! Short Ro11s!
Act Now Fot Never Before, Never Alain .
Floor Covering :Bargains Atlnge&amp; FumHure!

WAS $695
12.95 '
.

:

. SQUARE YARD

'

l

1

·,

.

.

•

.-•

~-

•

.•

• • .PLUS

:_
·-

Merchan~6i$e''.
'(This Sale On~)

George Ingels Is marking· down
prices · on finest quan~ · all new
furniture
and
appliances
throughout the store~· Why dots 118 ·
do it? 'It's inventory· tlmel
George's loss is your gain NOWI
Every item on this page, plus
many more. Hurryl Be here
Saturday at 9 a.m.

1

WAS s399
NOW

$299

MJW -record
directly
from your Zenith

7"'lf"

Tape lnpu1/0u1put jacks plus provision tor

ELEC. RANGE ,.

optional extension speaker
wilh ootibnal adapter kit

$299

WAS:.

· With Free o.n QIDare ·
30" GIBSON

'\to~ Receive Free

$24

NOw.;. .... ~ .... ,

9.pC. Dine.tt. 8 Set

\¥ITH FREE IcE MAKEit

,
3 9.

WAS~!! $79
~NGELS-

8 CHAIRS AND
72 INCH TABLE .

WAS '1ft, NOVII·~·-··•••·•~··•• ··WITH FREE 48 PC. DINNERWARE SET ·
,

TWIN BED COMPLETE

I

•

•

f49·
· ·

'

'

".

'

•

..

•

'

•

f

•

• •

END TABUS, COFFEE TAl' a.·1C11it1a .
and pictures
O/ · ,
all diiCOUnted. •.
_/0 01',·.

25
o-

BASSETT WAIM~ DINING'

..

...

•,.

.

WINYL. REaJNER, Was '89 ---------·NOw '69
PlATFORM ROCKER. Was-'69 ...... .a---~ NOw '49
16" ZENITlf qK.OR TV. WAS '349.~-~NOW '299~
23'; ZENITH ·cOLOR TV, WAS '519 --.NCM '499:
•

"
"

.

.

15 .CU.FT. AMANA REFRIGERATOR

::;:·:.:.:.;;·~: ·29

Was_'m .
, NOW •• .

.Box Spring &amp; Mattres5

WAS .'499,

·2 PC. LIVING ROOM SUITE
...

.ELEC•. RANGE ..

..

.

F·URNITURE • .NllllD.LEPORT
,•

r'

'--'~

CHRI-STMAS DECORATIONS AND
ORNAMENTS
.

'

I

·· NO LAY-AWAYS - NO RETURNS

·•·

, GOOD -LUCK. IN '72
We exten.d this hearty wish to our
mMJ . . friends Md custom81S.

I

'.

40

37
37

36

34

21 ·

NHL Studlngs
By United Press lnternotlonol
Eost

W. L. T. Pis
25 6 6 56
25 6 s 55
21 8 7 49
18 12 8 44

•

"The blil thing la that they
came up with the big plays and
we didn't," said McCafferty.

tallortcl .to ·nil ails.
Whether yo".

auto, ·
life
homeowners
•ur.,ce, we will~~~~
1 pollC)I .,to fit .
lndlvldUIII
requirements
DIK\Iss your lf*'lflc:
need&amp; W¥1th Ul·

·il4,

I'IIIMm-JtM

~ •• .,

IlL

nere'sonly
one reason
to have a baby. ·
Because you really want one.
-Every child should be
a welcome addition.
Not an accidental
. . ... .. burden.
'

that."

Colts COIIch Don McCafferty
declined to blame Baltimore's
·o!fenalve problema on the fact
tha\ rushinc leader Norm
Bulalch waa Ull8ble to play at
all becauae of an tnjilry and
that their No. 2. runner, Tom
Matte, w11 able ' to play very
tittle.

•

.High payments
a problem ?
•

·Planned.Parenthood
Children by choice.
Not chance.

I

'

1

good a team for

'

.

...

for doWilll at their eight-yard
nne while protecting a ~even­
point lead, blocked a field goal
attempt and Intercepted a total
of three Jobmy Unltas puaes,
Sunday marted the first lime
tn 93 gamea, dalinll back to
Dec. 5, 11185, when the Chicago
Bears ' blanked them, that the
Colts have failed to score.
"I'm so }X'oud of our football
team, especially · today
knocklnc off the world
champl0118," Shula IBid, ''Our
player. heard talk all week
about !hi' Baltimore defense
and It must have rubbed off.
The Colli blamed lhemaelvea
for allowing Warfield ID score
thet first touchdown when he
was truppOIIed to be double
teamed.
"I had him lnelde and Res:
Kern should have bad him on
the outside," complained Rick
'vol)l. "But Re:t got fooled by
the play action and Grleae juat
laid the ball out there. Then It
waa just a foot race."
No Colt wae more up~et ihan
de~der Bubha Smith, who
admitted "I'm not a very good
' loser."
Smith said dejectedly that he
blamed the Colts for the defeat.
"We juat blew It," he 88ld. "We
should have been on the board
twice In the first half. We're too

•

••

W. L T. Pis

Hershey
17 9 6
Baltimore
16 1~ S
Cincinnati
U 15 9
Clevelan!l
15 15 6
Richmond
1~ 16 6
Tidewater •
9 23 3
SundAy's Rtsults ·
Cinclnnatl6 Cleveland 3
Providence 5 Boston 4
Rlchlnond 6 Nova Scotia ~
Tidewater 6 Rochester 1
(Only games scheduled)
Monday's .,_;,,,
(No games scheduled)

Monday Marchanb
Tum
W. L
Mason Co. Benk
86 3~ .
Hart's Used Cars
74 ~
West Va. Nat. Guard
66 5~
Mason Auto Mart
62 58
Penn Central '
51 69
Keefer's Serv. Station 51 69
Miller's Insurance
50 70
Hoffman's
40 80
Team 3 games - Mas6n Co.
Bank 2~ ; t&lt;arrs Used Cars
2833. /"
Team game - Hart's Used
Cars996; Hart's Used Cars 983.
Ind. 3 games - D. Mason
671 ; W. King 660.
Ind. ga:tt - Pough US ; H.
·- Silk-D-•.-/tbiOft .IIQ. ""'--'""'
. ,

.

Don and Edna

l

~-· ~ ,

ZENITH USED, ~3" 8&amp;~ TV -------~-ONLY ,25

••

.

AND

6 Otai15, Table,a Hutch .
'49$,0o,-Now ·~zgg.
. 18 lB. NORGE DRYER, ·Was ~19-~-~--~-NOW ~1.zg

S3

Local Bowling

D0 l. n hzns
• 'J'.
e
h
.J ·rzum~ .

(

SUITE .

WHI

s

8

16 12 9 ~1
U 12 · 7 35
12 . 19 ~ 28
10 18 8 28

Boston
27 14 659 , .. Boston
New York
24 14 .631 1'12 Montreal
Philadelphia 16 244 .400 1011, Toronfo
Buffalo
11 26 .297 1~
Detroit
15 17 6 36
Central Division
Buffalo
s 22 10 26
W. L, Pet. GB Vancouver
923~ . 22
Baltimore
15 22 .405 ...
Wast
Cleveland
15 2~ .385 1
W. L T. Pis
Atlanta
14 25 .359 2 Chicago
2s 8 3 55
Cincinnati
10 27 .270 5 1 Minnesota
21 11 5 47
We•tern Conference
Calitornla
11 20 8 JO
Midwest Division
Philadelphia
11 19 6 21
W. L. Pet. GB Pittsburgh
11 21 6 28
Milwaukee 32 7 .821 ... St. Louis
10 21 7 27
Chicago
27 10 .730 4 Los Angeles
10 27 1 21
Phoenix
23 17 .575 9'1'
Sundoy's Results
Detroit
15 24 .385 11
Los Angeles 6 Vancouver, 3
Pacific Division
Detroit 6 Montreal 4
W. L. Pet. GB Boston ~ New York 1
Los Angeles 37 3 .925 ,, Buffalo 4 California ~
Seattle
23 18 .561 "'!' Chicago 6 Phlladelpl\la 2
GoldenState 20 19 .513 16'h
(Only games ~heduled)
Houston
14 26 .350 23
Mondoy'l Gomes
Portland
9 32 .220 281h
(No games scheduled)
Sundoy's Results
Philadelphia 148 Cleveland 119
Detroit 109 Houston 107
A sliver eagle with wings
Atlanta 116 Phoenix 111
outspread sits on top of the
Los Angeles 122 Boston 113
globe on the mace, symbol
Portland ~OS Buffalo 90
of a .uthor lty In the U.S.
I Only gamesscheduledl
House of Representatives.
Monday'• Gomes
Milwaukee at New York
(Only game scheduled)

'

'.r

2~

Gii New York

C a m e I s and elephants
17 .0·
9.9
roamed North America after
the lee Age.
.

102
6
Morris
T.
Vaughan
7•
69
Morris outforseason afterslx games with in/urles.

ItnoviurtanalimonalentTourpntats.
r
-, monlh Sl.75 . .By mall In Ohio I ed Yale 7:Ml9
Dayton beat
""
~ end W, Va .• One y... r $14.00. 1
ha
1d
M ·
::,: ' Six months sus . Three East Carolina 116-72, both on
m ( n .) and Defiance at
anetta, John Carroll,
Ohio Northern.
. Edinboro and ~ against
- mo~lhs u.so . Subscription , Saturday.
MIAMI (UP!) -'A loi of
,:; . ~~~ct~n1:,clu~os Sunday Times-_1 Tonight's schedule is headed
Missouri wW be at Ohio Uni- each other for the tlUe. It
football fans thoug!lt Don Sbula
·:. -=-:;:.~. .
. I by Ohio State vs. Creighton at versity Tuesday night. Other · conclude$ Wednesday night. waa slUllllllin« wblln he left the
'•
prosperous Baltimore Colts
two years ago to try ID make
'
BOIIIethlng of the then rag-tac
Miami Dolphins.
But thanks to Sunday's
atartling 21.0 victory over those
Colts, Shula' and hla Dolphins
are headed for the penthouse
'
eulte of prof018lonal footbali '
the ~per Bowl.
'
The Dolplllne, wbo won ihe
American Football Conference
tilie by beating the Colts, meet
the National Football Confer.
•
ence
champiOn
Dallas
CowboYs - 14-3 -w'tnners over
' San Francisco Sunday -In the
-·
SUper Bowl Jan. 16 at New
Orleans.
· "We've accomplished the
flr8t two· alepl, Kanaaa City
(whlcb Mlaml beat 27-:14 In a
lengthy sudden-death overtime) and 'Balllniore," said
Shula. "Now for ·the big one.
"I've l011t one (when the New
.York Jets beat the Colts three
years ago) and won none In the
~per Bowl. All I want right
"M
now
la to be 50-40."
'
The Dolphtna, on)y sl:t years
t1
old, capitalized on big plays
and a tremendoua defenalve
'
effort to beat the Colts Sun·
''
day.
••
They !~Cored on a 75-yard Bob
Grlese.to-Paul Wallfleld pau tn
the aecond period, on a liZ-yard
'
p111 interception by Diet
Andet'IOilln the third and all().
yard Grlae-to-Warlleld paea
·eel up Larry Clonta 'a fiveyard touchdown run In the final
perioc!,
.
·In addition, the Dolphins held

~- ·

W. L Pet .

G RB AVG

SALE STARTS TODA.YI

OOSE:o..r-1"'"E1 TAPE

W. L. T. Ph

Boston
Nova Scotia
Springfield •
Rochester
·Providence

~·

I

STEREO

Majestic Mediterranean styled catlinet fn ~hoice
of Oak veneers or Pecan veneers with select
hardwood solids. exclusive of decorative front.

gameslnciudeNlagaraa tBow1•
lngGreen, Baldwin- Wallace at
St. Bonaventure, CleVeland
State at Detroit Capital at
Denison and the' start of the

· ~~:~~0.-;.~ LEAD~·~s,

r

C~le Stereo with ,1971

A908 • THE MENARD

•

Atlonll&lt; Division

.

- really the only time they
threatened tl)e Dallas goal.
Brodie wound up hitting 14 of
30 paases for 184 yards, but to
use Brodle~s words:
''We didn't sustain enough of
:an offense to be able to do all'
the things we wanted to do.
Wbatever we were doing, we
weren't doing It well enough to
beat them."
The San Francisco defense the front four ·'and the' corner
SOUTHERN INDIVIDUAt· BA:SKETBALL SCORING
backs, partlcularly, deserved
(Through flrstsevsn (limes)
much !Jiore credit than it Will
Gtmeever receive for putting a
G TP AVG HIGH
halter on the Dallae rushing Jim Hubbard
7 106 15.1
21
game except In that one drive . .Jerry Hubbard
7 95 13.6
29
Bruce Hart
7 6~ 9.1
15
But, It wasn't enoug~ Nick
lhle
7
39
5.6
14
especially since Staubech was
Steve Jenkins
6 27 4.5
11
on the other side of the line of Brett Hart
7 27 3.9
9
scrimmage.
Roger Wilford
5 25 5.0
13
Mike Nease
4 12 3.0
7
Stan Kiser
ORIENTATION SET
4 10 2.5
6
Tim lhle
6
91.5
5
HUNTINGTON, W. Va. Ron
Hill
,
6
61.0
4
Orientation for Marshall Rodney Holman
3
20.7
2
University freshman and Jeff Hill
2
3
2 0.7
transfer students wW begin TEAM
29
7 ~24 60.6
Monday, January 10 at 8 a.m.
MEIGS INDIVIDUAL BASKETBALL SCORING
Students participating in
(Through First Seven Gomu)
Orientation ahould report to
GAME-·
Smith Music Hall on 'the corner
G TP AVO HIGH I
of Tlllrd Avenue and Sixteenth Jeff Morris, c
6 102 17.0 21
Street.
-Steve Dunfee, t
7 73 10.4 20
Tony Vaughan. t-c
7 67 9.6 16 (X)
My great concern Is not Rich Salley, g
7 5~ 7.7 12
whether God is on our side, Jimmy Boggs, g
7 39 5.6 15
mygreatconcernistobeon BIIIVaughan,g
5 28 5.6 10
God's side.-Abraham Lin- AndyVaughan,g-1
7 19 2.7
s
coin.
Mike Sayre, 1
6 15 2.5
6
Mark Werry, c
6
~
0.7 2 (X)
Rick Ash, g
s
2
0. ~
2
TEAM (2., .
7 403 57.6 21

:: :::~g!~~n~F~:£7f~f.~~:~~~ j tn:th~w:~e~d~~::~o::
a~t~wy:t~t·tenn,(f~r.g~t.:Ashl~anvredtra,DrtAkrEarak:ln-' :rTnh~ee_tta
8ml

TAPE PLAYER FRE~ '

I

Colwnbus The Buckey-es ' nex t
14 games after tonight are aU
lntheBlgTen.Flrstconference
foewillbePurdueonSaturday
Also tonight, Houston is ai

AHL St.,dings
By United Pros International
Etsl
· .

NIIA Standings
By United Press International

EASTERN INDIVIDUAL BASKETBALL SCORING
(Through first six (lllmtsl
Go me. G TP AVG. HIGH
Dennis Eichinger
6 107 17.8
28
Bob Ca Idwell
6 96 16.0
2~
Al-n Duvall
6 58 9.7
16
Rick Williams . x
4 37 9.3
26
Randy Boring
4
35 8.8 1~
Mike Benedum
6325.3
9
Rick Sanders
4225.5
9
Dave.Mil hone
4 JV ~. 8
9
Randy Young
4
B 2.0
6
Richard Cross
4 61.5
6
Bryon McCoy
4 41.0
2
TEAM .
6 424 70.1
28
x - No longer with team.

'

::;,
Second class
._,. Pomeroy,
Ohio.Po~"'u•
•1- poid al ' ByUnlledPresslnternalioaal'
- reprtstntatlvt
Na11o n al a 1 vert
is In u· ~ . College basketball quickens
_.
Bottlnelll
·
: Gollolihor, Inc .. 12 East ~2nd I lis tempo this week after a
- St.,NewYorkCIIy,Now Y
. ork . I New Yea·r•s weekend rest for
11
:.;. .,S~r~'dC.rlfv"ocnar~r::s ~h~~~ i most teams.
. .

-

Eastern Conference

-.; H2-2156, Ectlloriol hono m . ·

- · 2157 .

.

ABA Standings
half," 'Taylor 88ld. "The rest By United Pr15slnternotlontl
were fade-aways or broken up-·
. E~st L Pel. · GB
.shots that really didn't have Ken tuck~'
30 9 .769 ...
·much chance .of golng In the ·Virginia
25 15 · .625 51;-,
basket.
Floridians
18 21 . ~2 12
New York
16 23 4.10 "
·
"And I reallu Walton might Pittsburgh
17 25 .«&lt;s U 1h
have been goal tending on some. Carolina
13 28 .317 171;-,
· of the shots he bloeked, but •
West
thai's not the point. With him , Uillh
W. L oPel. GB
tn there waiting to swat the Indiana
~ ~~ :~fs 61;-,
· ball, why try to force It up Denver
16 21 .&lt;132 12
through him•
Memphis
16 23 4.10 13
·
Dallas
15 26 .366 ll
"1\{aybe It's like hltUng yourS..nday's Gamts ·
self on the head With a ham- Floridians 119 Utah 113
mer. 11 really feell good when Kentucky 116 New York 84
Oevern 103 ·Dalla 84
you stop."
(Only games scheduled)
Monday'd ·Games
Indiana at Dallas
(Only game scheduled)

'

i

BUY ANY STEREO
AND GET ·

bounds; but It was UCLA's sen..atlonal 8- foot · II aopbomore
center BW Walton who wae
named the tourney's moll val'
uable player.
'-...'
Wa'lton, desplte.belng saddled
With four fouls early In the
second half, scored 14 paints,
grabbed 13reboundsand lntim·
idaled Buclteye &amp;hooters With
hls defense .
.
'Wal ·
'
'
ton 11 stroncer than we
thought he would be, but Luke
look only about one stationary
shot agalnet him In the first

Meigs Cage Scoring

E~;;~:·:~~:~n.';~i~;:f~~~~~ Ac..;on
R·esum.es~~~~).n
&amp;.I''.L 0 .· ig.h;r·-·- . · ·

,,r,rJfYIO)

\

3 Pc. Walnut Bedroom Suite

.

.

.

'

'

.:::. IRVING, Tex. (UPi)
: Every body -friend and foe
~~ alike credited Roger
,;, Slauhacb With the key role tn
-: .. the Dallas Cowbo:,s'. 14-3
,. victory Wet San Franclaco
~ . that sent then\ to SUper Bowl
,:_ VI -everybody, that Is, but
-:.• Slaubscb blmaelf.
~ C8lWt Hill and Duane Tho::;. mu got ~ lwo Dallae touch, ::: dolllll, ~nslve end George
t·· Andrle ln'iercepted a Jobn
pau - one of three
.;.': Dallas thefla th~t set up
: Dallaa' first touchdown and
;::; the Dallae defenle held the
.:::Forty f:ilners to 81 y,ards
- I'Qiblng and no touchdolllll.
So what did Slauhach do to
.::: bring on 111ch rava from San
- Francisco ' I.'O&amp;Cb Dick Noland
:::and 111..t of a San Franclaco
-· defensive unit that really dld a
- IIPiendld job contatntng all the
- Cowboy~ -acept Staubach?
: ; SlatJet!cally, the former Na:- Yll Academy Hellman Trophy'
~· wlmer, whO haen't piloted a
- lollng game Iince he became
No. 1 quarterback ntne games
- 11110, ccmpleted but ntne of118

FREE
EUREKA
SWEEPER.

Out Goes Entire Hugb

ACRilAN CARPET
·

from side to aide."
·Ohio State's ' 7-foot center
Ulke Witte led ali IC~rs with
19 points and picked off 13 re-

~Sta
.....
.....-

8

7.99

It ahould be hindled, wll!l pene!ration, not 1hrowlng the ball

'

: Brodie

$4·99

.

achGuides
fDallas
To
F
inals
.
-

HALL RUNNER

WAS

~

COLUMBUs (UPI) - ·Ohio outset, later traUed 36-IQ and take l)la squad to the Wall DIS- ped, but they hang m· there ·
• State entertaiN Creighton to. . WO\IIId lip losing.'n-53.
, ney playground the next dsy. pretty good," he said. "In the
nisht .and the Buckeyes wW be
II wae Ohio State's second . "We didn't l1'811tto try and second half we ran aome ofout to ~- the memories cif loss In ntne gainea and UCLA's run," Taylor said. "But we' did fenae end handled the preas as
1t. Jut week'• frultrating loss to

Is Furniture TGJ~ay,

ONLY

-'

'

Pro. Standings

2nd AVE.

'

i$ the. all$wer
'

•

992-5515

992-2171
125 E. Main·.

Pomeroy, 0.
•

't.DI.i eltttt tltO ···-· f Otttt. Qot~·····+tl I I Dttttt0

For further information, write
Planned.Parenthood, Box 431
Radio City Station, ~.Y. 10019 ·

ffw..,.,

Qm~····~. .

•

0

.&lt;'o~,.c."'•

,
1\fYirtllll'l conlflbilltd tot tilt plltltlc IDOd In t:~tltrettofl 1111'1~
l~t AfttrUtlnc Caunclt alld tilt hltlraalloNI
All't'lftlliltf [Jte.tkoti '

'-r-------------------1~-

�•

'

I

·.

.

.

..:

.

~

},

' \1 .

•..uy Sentinel,
Middleport-Pomeroy,
0.,. Jan. 3, 1972. .
.
' .

·. . •

'

.

'._ '

I

I

..

' .

.

II

3-Tbe Dilly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., JJn. 3; 1972
'

.

BuCks Entertain CreightOn-Five .
.

eighth straight victory Without expect to catch them .a few
a loss, all played at home.
Urnes."
.~· OhioState,playjngtheBrulns
"By the time It was 3().10 we
Taylor's teain came back In
at LOJ Anl'les tn the flnala of W.re almost on our way to ·the second half, once cut,Ung
· the. Bruin Claailc:, got behind Disneyland," aeid Ohio State the margin to 10 points.
. No. I ranked UCLA.ll-l..at the Coach Fred Taylor, who did
'·'Our players may get whip-

· powaMUCLA.

I"

-

\•'

If J011 ·have ·wafted .~· · ·
· · THis,~r ··
.36" WIDE NYLON

99~ PER FOOT

If you've waited 'til now to get new carpet
you're In luck! .We've drastically price cut
scores of rolls and room size i'UQS to bring
you fabulous va'luesl Wool, nylon, olefin and
acrylic fibers In famous names are In·. ·
eluded.

501 NYLON
Gold, Green, Blue &amp; Red

Red, Green, .O!ange

}lllsses for 103 yard,9 and ran StBuhach must have used up
scrambled Is a much better . a good 15 or :lj) seconds eluding
word -for 55 yards In eight · Forty Niner tacklers before he
lries.
threw the hall -but, very
But, as Steubach pointed Importantly -the Ilallae offenout:
sive linemen stuck to their
"I didn't heve ~ very good posts and there was . no
day ... b!lt I'U have better. We "linemen downfieid"
won ... it was a champlanahlp penalty.
"We practice that," said
game and all that really
mattered was that we won."
tackle ·Rayfield Wright·. "We
But, Usten to the dissiiiters: work on It particularly with
"Staubach's scrambling was Roger at quarterback."
the illfference ... we couldn't·
Staubach went on to hlt.e 2ZCO)Italn him," said Nolan after yal"der · to Billy Truax and
hls Forty Nlners · had been scrambled for eight y~ in
victimized by Dallas for the that 80-yard drive and the
second year in a row In the Cowboys got the salting kluchNatlonal Football Conference down for a 14-3lead with 9:17
championship game.
left to play.
The Cowboys, who lost to · They had gotten the first
Baltimore In Super Bowl V, touchdown on the eighth play of
Will meet the Miami Dolphins the second quarter when An·
tn the sixth version !i l!le . drle stewed in front of a
champimahlp game Jan . 16 In Brodie screen pass to Ken
New Orleans.
,
WUlard at the Forty Niner IIJ.
MiaJ\u beat Baltimore 21~ yard line and chugged It back
Sunday to win the American to the two-yard line. HUI went
Conference Iitle.
over two plays later.
Staubach didn't confine hls
The Cowboys tbefted three
scrambling strictly to running, Brodie passes In aU, but that
either. On the key 80-yard drive · was the only one which could
for the pullaway touchdown -a be caUed crucial. The other two
,-..._..---..~~~~"-',~"", drive that ate up 7:~ of the came .in the fading minutes
Jhe Daily Sentinel · second half, Staubach scram- while the Forty Nlners were
~EVOTED/fO THE
' ' bled wide and deep before he desperate.
·
. INTEREST OF
1 flnall
ked .
clal 17
Th lr 1 lnt had
MEIGS·MASONAWEA
1
yuncor
a cru
•
e onypo ,s
come
C~ST.ER L. TANNEHILL, yardpasstoawldeopen 0al.¥!y backlnthethlrdperiodona28ROIE=~·~-lEdFLiCH ,
' Reeves.
'yard Bruce Gossett field goal
•
Cllr l&lt;lllor
i
Published dally oxcopl ·
Saturday by Tho Oh io Valley !

=·

Stock! :All Rolls and
Patterns! Short Ro11s!
Act Now Fot Never Before, Never Alain .
Floor Covering :Bargains Atlnge&amp; FumHure!

WAS $695
12.95 '
.

:

. SQUARE YARD

'

l

1

·,

.

.

•

.-•

~-

•

.•

• • .PLUS

:_
·-

Merchan~6i$e''.
'(This Sale On~)

George Ingels Is marking· down
prices · on finest quan~ · all new
furniture
and
appliances
throughout the store~· Why dots 118 ·
do it? 'It's inventory· tlmel
George's loss is your gain NOWI
Every item on this page, plus
many more. Hurryl Be here
Saturday at 9 a.m.

1

WAS s399
NOW

$299

MJW -record
directly
from your Zenith

7"'lf"

Tape lnpu1/0u1put jacks plus provision tor

ELEC. RANGE ,.

optional extension speaker
wilh ootibnal adapter kit

$299

WAS:.

· With Free o.n QIDare ·
30" GIBSON

'\to~ Receive Free

$24

NOw.;. .... ~ .... ,

9.pC. Dine.tt. 8 Set

\¥ITH FREE IcE MAKEit

,
3 9.

WAS~!! $79
~NGELS-

8 CHAIRS AND
72 INCH TABLE .

WAS '1ft, NOVII·~·-··•••·•~··•• ··WITH FREE 48 PC. DINNERWARE SET ·
,

TWIN BED COMPLETE

I

•

•

f49·
· ·

'

'

".

'

•

..

•

'

•

f

•

• •

END TABUS, COFFEE TAl' a.·1C11it1a .
and pictures
O/ · ,
all diiCOUnted. •.
_/0 01',·.

25
o-

BASSETT WAIM~ DINING'

..

...

•,.

.

WINYL. REaJNER, Was '89 ---------·NOw '69
PlATFORM ROCKER. Was-'69 ...... .a---~ NOw '49
16" ZENITlf qK.OR TV. WAS '349.~-~NOW '299~
23'; ZENITH ·cOLOR TV, WAS '519 --.NCM '499:
•

"
"

.

.

15 .CU.FT. AMANA REFRIGERATOR

::;:·:.:.:.;;·~: ·29

Was_'m .
, NOW •• .

.Box Spring &amp; Mattres5

WAS .'499,

·2 PC. LIVING ROOM SUITE
...

.ELEC•. RANGE ..

..

.

F·URNITURE • .NllllD.LEPORT
,•

r'

'--'~

CHRI-STMAS DECORATIONS AND
ORNAMENTS
.

'

I

·· NO LAY-AWAYS - NO RETURNS

·•·

, GOOD -LUCK. IN '72
We exten.d this hearty wish to our
mMJ . . friends Md custom81S.

I

'.

40

37
37

36

34

21 ·

NHL Studlngs
By United Press lnternotlonol
Eost

W. L. T. Pis
25 6 6 56
25 6 s 55
21 8 7 49
18 12 8 44

•

"The blil thing la that they
came up with the big plays and
we didn't," said McCafferty.

tallortcl .to ·nil ails.
Whether yo".

auto, ·
life
homeowners
•ur.,ce, we will~~~~
1 pollC)I .,to fit .
lndlvldUIII
requirements
DIK\Iss your lf*'lflc:
need&amp; W¥1th Ul·

·il4,

I'IIIMm-JtM

~ •• .,

IlL

nere'sonly
one reason
to have a baby. ·
Because you really want one.
-Every child should be
a welcome addition.
Not an accidental
. . ... .. burden.
'

that."

Colts COIIch Don McCafferty
declined to blame Baltimore's
·o!fenalve problema on the fact
tha\ rushinc leader Norm
Bulalch waa Ull8ble to play at
all becauae of an tnjilry and
that their No. 2. runner, Tom
Matte, w11 able ' to play very
tittle.

•

.High payments
a problem ?
•

·Planned.Parenthood
Children by choice.
Not chance.

I

'

1

good a team for

'

.

...

for doWilll at their eight-yard
nne while protecting a ~even­
point lead, blocked a field goal
attempt and Intercepted a total
of three Jobmy Unltas puaes,
Sunday marted the first lime
tn 93 gamea, dalinll back to
Dec. 5, 11185, when the Chicago
Bears ' blanked them, that the
Colts have failed to score.
"I'm so }X'oud of our football
team, especially · today
knocklnc off the world
champl0118," Shula IBid, ''Our
player. heard talk all week
about !hi' Baltimore defense
and It must have rubbed off.
The Colli blamed lhemaelvea
for allowing Warfield ID score
thet first touchdown when he
was truppOIIed to be double
teamed.
"I had him lnelde and Res:
Kern should have bad him on
the outside," complained Rick
'vol)l. "But Re:t got fooled by
the play action and Grleae juat
laid the ball out there. Then It
waa just a foot race."
No Colt wae more up~et ihan
de~der Bubha Smith, who
admitted "I'm not a very good
' loser."
Smith said dejectedly that he
blamed the Colts for the defeat.
"We juat blew It," he 88ld. "We
should have been on the board
twice In the first half. We're too

•

••

W. L T. Pis

Hershey
17 9 6
Baltimore
16 1~ S
Cincinnati
U 15 9
Clevelan!l
15 15 6
Richmond
1~ 16 6
Tidewater •
9 23 3
SundAy's Rtsults ·
Cinclnnatl6 Cleveland 3
Providence 5 Boston 4
Rlchlnond 6 Nova Scotia ~
Tidewater 6 Rochester 1
(Only games scheduled)
Monday's .,_;,,,
(No games scheduled)

Monday Marchanb
Tum
W. L
Mason Co. Benk
86 3~ .
Hart's Used Cars
74 ~
West Va. Nat. Guard
66 5~
Mason Auto Mart
62 58
Penn Central '
51 69
Keefer's Serv. Station 51 69
Miller's Insurance
50 70
Hoffman's
40 80
Team 3 games - Mas6n Co.
Bank 2~ ; t&lt;arrs Used Cars
2833. /"
Team game - Hart's Used
Cars996; Hart's Used Cars 983.
Ind. 3 games - D. Mason
671 ; W. King 660.
Ind. ga:tt - Pough US ; H.
·- Silk-D-•.-/tbiOft .IIQ. ""'--'""'
. ,

.

Don and Edna

l

~-· ~ ,

ZENITH USED, ~3" 8&amp;~ TV -------~-ONLY ,25

••

.

AND

6 Otai15, Table,a Hutch .
'49$,0o,-Now ·~zgg.
. 18 lB. NORGE DRYER, ·Was ~19-~-~--~-NOW ~1.zg

S3

Local Bowling

D0 l. n hzns
• 'J'.
e
h
.J ·rzum~ .

(

SUITE .

WHI

s

8

16 12 9 ~1
U 12 · 7 35
12 . 19 ~ 28
10 18 8 28

Boston
27 14 659 , .. Boston
New York
24 14 .631 1'12 Montreal
Philadelphia 16 244 .400 1011, Toronfo
Buffalo
11 26 .297 1~
Detroit
15 17 6 36
Central Division
Buffalo
s 22 10 26
W. L, Pet. GB Vancouver
923~ . 22
Baltimore
15 22 .405 ...
Wast
Cleveland
15 2~ .385 1
W. L T. Pis
Atlanta
14 25 .359 2 Chicago
2s 8 3 55
Cincinnati
10 27 .270 5 1 Minnesota
21 11 5 47
We•tern Conference
Calitornla
11 20 8 JO
Midwest Division
Philadelphia
11 19 6 21
W. L. Pet. GB Pittsburgh
11 21 6 28
Milwaukee 32 7 .821 ... St. Louis
10 21 7 27
Chicago
27 10 .730 4 Los Angeles
10 27 1 21
Phoenix
23 17 .575 9'1'
Sundoy's Results
Detroit
15 24 .385 11
Los Angeles 6 Vancouver, 3
Pacific Division
Detroit 6 Montreal 4
W. L. Pet. GB Boston ~ New York 1
Los Angeles 37 3 .925 ,, Buffalo 4 California ~
Seattle
23 18 .561 "'!' Chicago 6 Phlladelpl\la 2
GoldenState 20 19 .513 16'h
(Only games ~heduled)
Houston
14 26 .350 23
Mondoy'l Gomes
Portland
9 32 .220 281h
(No games scheduled)
Sundoy's Results
Philadelphia 148 Cleveland 119
Detroit 109 Houston 107
A sliver eagle with wings
Atlanta 116 Phoenix 111
outspread sits on top of the
Los Angeles 122 Boston 113
globe on the mace, symbol
Portland ~OS Buffalo 90
of a .uthor lty In the U.S.
I Only gamesscheduledl
House of Representatives.
Monday'• Gomes
Milwaukee at New York
(Only game scheduled)

'

'.r

2~

Gii New York

C a m e I s and elephants
17 .0·
9.9
roamed North America after
the lee Age.
.

102
6
Morris
T.
Vaughan
7•
69
Morris outforseason afterslx games with in/urles.

ItnoviurtanalimonalentTourpntats.
r
-, monlh Sl.75 . .By mall In Ohio I ed Yale 7:Ml9
Dayton beat
""
~ end W, Va .• One y... r $14.00. 1
ha
1d
M ·
::,: ' Six months sus . Three East Carolina 116-72, both on
m ( n .) and Defiance at
anetta, John Carroll,
Ohio Northern.
. Edinboro and ~ against
- mo~lhs u.so . Subscription , Saturday.
MIAMI (UP!) -'A loi of
,:; . ~~~ct~n1:,clu~os Sunday Times-_1 Tonight's schedule is headed
Missouri wW be at Ohio Uni- each other for the tlUe. It
football fans thoug!lt Don Sbula
·:. -=-:;:.~. .
. I by Ohio State vs. Creighton at versity Tuesday night. Other · conclude$ Wednesday night. waa slUllllllin« wblln he left the
'•
prosperous Baltimore Colts
two years ago to try ID make
'
BOIIIethlng of the then rag-tac
Miami Dolphins.
But thanks to Sunday's
atartling 21.0 victory over those
Colts, Shula' and hla Dolphins
are headed for the penthouse
'
eulte of prof018lonal footbali '
the ~per Bowl.
'
The Dolplllne, wbo won ihe
American Football Conference
tilie by beating the Colts, meet
the National Football Confer.
•
ence
champiOn
Dallas
CowboYs - 14-3 -w'tnners over
' San Francisco Sunday -In the
-·
SUper Bowl Jan. 16 at New
Orleans.
· "We've accomplished the
flr8t two· alepl, Kanaaa City
(whlcb Mlaml beat 27-:14 In a
lengthy sudden-death overtime) and 'Balllniore," said
Shula. "Now for ·the big one.
"I've l011t one (when the New
.York Jets beat the Colts three
years ago) and won none In the
~per Bowl. All I want right
"M
now
la to be 50-40."
'
The Dolphtna, on)y sl:t years
t1
old, capitalized on big plays
and a tremendoua defenalve
'
effort to beat the Colts Sun·
''
day.
••
They !~Cored on a 75-yard Bob
Grlese.to-Paul Wallfleld pau tn
the aecond period, on a liZ-yard
'
p111 interception by Diet
Andet'IOilln the third and all().
yard Grlae-to-Warlleld paea
·eel up Larry Clonta 'a fiveyard touchdown run In the final
perioc!,
.
·In addition, the Dolphins held

~- ·

W. L Pet .

G RB AVG

SALE STARTS TODA.YI

OOSE:o..r-1"'"E1 TAPE

W. L. T. Ph

Boston
Nova Scotia
Springfield •
Rochester
·Providence

~·

I

STEREO

Majestic Mediterranean styled catlinet fn ~hoice
of Oak veneers or Pecan veneers with select
hardwood solids. exclusive of decorative front.

gameslnciudeNlagaraa tBow1•
lngGreen, Baldwin- Wallace at
St. Bonaventure, CleVeland
State at Detroit Capital at
Denison and the' start of the

· ~~:~~0.-;.~ LEAD~·~s,

r

C~le Stereo with ,1971

A908 • THE MENARD

•

Atlonll&lt; Division

.

- really the only time they
threatened tl)e Dallas goal.
Brodie wound up hitting 14 of
30 paases for 184 yards, but to
use Brodle~s words:
''We didn't sustain enough of
:an offense to be able to do all'
the things we wanted to do.
Wbatever we were doing, we
weren't doing It well enough to
beat them."
The San Francisco defense the front four ·'and the' corner
SOUTHERN INDIVIDUAt· BA:SKETBALL SCORING
backs, partlcularly, deserved
(Through flrstsevsn (limes)
much !Jiore credit than it Will
Gtmeever receive for putting a
G TP AVG HIGH
halter on the Dallae rushing Jim Hubbard
7 106 15.1
21
game except In that one drive . .Jerry Hubbard
7 95 13.6
29
Bruce Hart
7 6~ 9.1
15
But, It wasn't enoug~ Nick
lhle
7
39
5.6
14
especially since Staubech was
Steve Jenkins
6 27 4.5
11
on the other side of the line of Brett Hart
7 27 3.9
9
scrimmage.
Roger Wilford
5 25 5.0
13
Mike Nease
4 12 3.0
7
Stan Kiser
ORIENTATION SET
4 10 2.5
6
Tim lhle
6
91.5
5
HUNTINGTON, W. Va. Ron
Hill
,
6
61.0
4
Orientation for Marshall Rodney Holman
3
20.7
2
University freshman and Jeff Hill
2
3
2 0.7
transfer students wW begin TEAM
29
7 ~24 60.6
Monday, January 10 at 8 a.m.
MEIGS INDIVIDUAL BASKETBALL SCORING
Students participating in
(Through First Seven Gomu)
Orientation ahould report to
GAME-·
Smith Music Hall on 'the corner
G TP AVO HIGH I
of Tlllrd Avenue and Sixteenth Jeff Morris, c
6 102 17.0 21
Street.
-Steve Dunfee, t
7 73 10.4 20
Tony Vaughan. t-c
7 67 9.6 16 (X)
My great concern Is not Rich Salley, g
7 5~ 7.7 12
whether God is on our side, Jimmy Boggs, g
7 39 5.6 15
mygreatconcernistobeon BIIIVaughan,g
5 28 5.6 10
God's side.-Abraham Lin- AndyVaughan,g-1
7 19 2.7
s
coin.
Mike Sayre, 1
6 15 2.5
6
Mark Werry, c
6
~
0.7 2 (X)
Rick Ash, g
s
2
0. ~
2
TEAM (2., .
7 403 57.6 21

:: :::~g!~~n~F~:£7f~f.~~:~~~ j tn:th~w:~e~d~~::~o::
a~t~wy:t~t·tenn,(f~r.g~t.:Ashl~anvredtra,DrtAkrEarak:ln-' :rTnh~ee_tta
8ml

TAPE PLAYER FRE~ '

I

Colwnbus The Buckey-es ' nex t
14 games after tonight are aU
lntheBlgTen.Flrstconference
foewillbePurdueonSaturday
Also tonight, Houston is ai

AHL St.,dings
By United Pros International
Etsl
· .

NIIA Standings
By United Press International

EASTERN INDIVIDUAL BASKETBALL SCORING
(Through first six (lllmtsl
Go me. G TP AVG. HIGH
Dennis Eichinger
6 107 17.8
28
Bob Ca Idwell
6 96 16.0
2~
Al-n Duvall
6 58 9.7
16
Rick Williams . x
4 37 9.3
26
Randy Boring
4
35 8.8 1~
Mike Benedum
6325.3
9
Rick Sanders
4225.5
9
Dave.Mil hone
4 JV ~. 8
9
Randy Young
4
B 2.0
6
Richard Cross
4 61.5
6
Bryon McCoy
4 41.0
2
TEAM .
6 424 70.1
28
x - No longer with team.

'

::;,
Second class
._,. Pomeroy,
Ohio.Po~"'u•
•1- poid al ' ByUnlledPresslnternalioaal'
- reprtstntatlvt
Na11o n al a 1 vert
is In u· ~ . College basketball quickens
_.
Bottlnelll
·
: Gollolihor, Inc .. 12 East ~2nd I lis tempo this week after a
- St.,NewYorkCIIy,Now Y
. ork . I New Yea·r•s weekend rest for
11
:.;. .,S~r~'dC.rlfv"ocnar~r::s ~h~~~ i most teams.
. .

-

Eastern Conference

-.; H2-2156, Ectlloriol hono m . ·

- · 2157 .

.

ABA Standings
half," 'Taylor 88ld. "The rest By United Pr15slnternotlontl
were fade-aways or broken up-·
. E~st L Pel. · GB
.shots that really didn't have Ken tuck~'
30 9 .769 ...
·much chance .of golng In the ·Virginia
25 15 · .625 51;-,
basket.
Floridians
18 21 . ~2 12
New York
16 23 4.10 "
·
"And I reallu Walton might Pittsburgh
17 25 .«&lt;s U 1h
have been goal tending on some. Carolina
13 28 .317 171;-,
· of the shots he bloeked, but •
West
thai's not the point. With him , Uillh
W. L oPel. GB
tn there waiting to swat the Indiana
~ ~~ :~fs 61;-,
· ball, why try to force It up Denver
16 21 .&lt;132 12
through him•
Memphis
16 23 4.10 13
·
Dallas
15 26 .366 ll
"1\{aybe It's like hltUng yourS..nday's Gamts ·
self on the head With a ham- Floridians 119 Utah 113
mer. 11 really feell good when Kentucky 116 New York 84
Oevern 103 ·Dalla 84
you stop."
(Only games scheduled)
Monday'd ·Games
Indiana at Dallas
(Only game scheduled)

'

i

BUY ANY STEREO
AND GET ·

bounds; but It was UCLA's sen..atlonal 8- foot · II aopbomore
center BW Walton who wae
named the tourney's moll val'
uable player.
'-...'
Wa'lton, desplte.belng saddled
With four fouls early In the
second half, scored 14 paints,
grabbed 13reboundsand lntim·
idaled Buclteye &amp;hooters With
hls defense .
.
'Wal ·
'
'
ton 11 stroncer than we
thought he would be, but Luke
look only about one stationary
shot agalnet him In the first

Meigs Cage Scoring

E~;;~:·:~~:~n.';~i~;:f~~~~~ Ac..;on
R·esum.es~~~~).n
&amp;.I''.L 0 .· ig.h;r·-·- . · ·

,,r,rJfYIO)

\

3 Pc. Walnut Bedroom Suite

.

.

.

'

'

.:::. IRVING, Tex. (UPi)
: Every body -friend and foe
~~ alike credited Roger
,;, Slauhacb With the key role tn
-: .. the Dallas Cowbo:,s'. 14-3
,. victory Wet San Franclaco
~ . that sent then\ to SUper Bowl
,:_ VI -everybody, that Is, but
-:.• Slaubscb blmaelf.
~ C8lWt Hill and Duane Tho::;. mu got ~ lwo Dallae touch, ::: dolllll, ~nslve end George
t·· Andrle ln'iercepted a Jobn
pau - one of three
.;.': Dallas thefla th~t set up
: Dallaa' first touchdown and
;::; the Dallae defenle held the
.:::Forty f:ilners to 81 y,ards
- I'Qiblng and no touchdolllll.
So what did Slauhach do to
.::: bring on 111ch rava from San
- Francisco ' I.'O&amp;Cb Dick Noland
:::and 111..t of a San Franclaco
-· defensive unit that really dld a
- IIPiendld job contatntng all the
- Cowboy~ -acept Staubach?
: ; SlatJet!cally, the former Na:- Yll Academy Hellman Trophy'
~· wlmer, whO haen't piloted a
- lollng game Iince he became
No. 1 quarterback ntne games
- 11110, ccmpleted but ntne of118

FREE
EUREKA
SWEEPER.

Out Goes Entire Hugb

ACRilAN CARPET
·

from side to aide."
·Ohio State's ' 7-foot center
Ulke Witte led ali IC~rs with
19 points and picked off 13 re-

~Sta
.....
.....-

8

7.99

It ahould be hindled, wll!l pene!ration, not 1hrowlng the ball

'

: Brodie

$4·99

.

achGuides
fDallas
To
F
inals
.
-

HALL RUNNER

WAS

~

COLUMBUs (UPI) - ·Ohio outset, later traUed 36-IQ and take l)la squad to the Wall DIS- ped, but they hang m· there ·
• State entertaiN Creighton to. . WO\IIId lip losing.'n-53.
, ney playground the next dsy. pretty good," he said. "In the
nisht .and the Buckeyes wW be
II wae Ohio State's second . "We didn't l1'811tto try and second half we ran aome ofout to ~- the memories cif loss In ntne gainea and UCLA's run," Taylor said. "But we' did fenae end handled the preas as
1t. Jut week'• frultrating loss to

Is Furniture TGJ~ay,

ONLY

-'

'

Pro. Standings

2nd AVE.

'

i$ the. all$wer
'

•

992-5515

992-2171
125 E. Main·.

Pomeroy, 0.
•

't.DI.i eltttt tltO ···-· f Otttt. Qot~·····+tl I I Dttttt0

For further information, write
Planned.Parenthood, Box 431
Radio City Station, ~.Y. 10019 ·

ffw..,.,

Qm~····~. .

•

0

.&lt;'o~,.c."'•

,
1\fYirtllll'l conlflbilltd tot tilt plltltlc IDOd In t:~tltrettofl 1111'1~
l~t AfttrUtlnc Caunclt alld tilt hltlraalloNI
All't'lftlliltf [Jte.tkoti '

'-r-------------------1~-

�.

•.

''

·eo
'

,

.

.

I

.
'

•

. '

4-The o.lly Senllnel, MJtlclleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 3, 1972

''

Michigan ~t{JJ;[s

Celtics.3lst
Laker Victim
..
8y Uolted Press lntematlonal
' ii may be a new.year bui il~s
like Qld times "lor flle Los

'

.

.

.

'

Long 'J;rip~oine_
PASADENA, Calif. (l(Pl)' The University of Michigan
carried home wifll it today to
· the Big Ten flle wlll'!ling it no
longer cOuld underestimate flle
· defensive mjght of Pacific 8

per cent of flleir field goal
attempts in their ro.ut of
Cleveland, compiling flle higllest point total ever against flle
Cavaliers.
·
Rookie Dave Wohl .added 2ll
pointg as seven Philadelphia
players hit fqr double figures.
Bobby Smith led flle clvaUers
willl 23. ·,

· Angeles Lskers.
.. · The Lakers, behind Gail
\ .
Goodrich's 40-poinl perfor\, ; mance, cruised to a record 31st
consecutive victory Sunday
· night as flley beat flle l!oston
Celtlcs 122-113,
· Jerry Weill and Jiin McMilllanat:ded 27points each as .flle
Portland, led by Sidney
Lakers moved out to a 24-point Wicks' 30 points, broke a
lead and ihen held off a late seven game losing streak and
Bos~ ~ally. The Cellics closed extended Buffalo's to 10. Dahi
to Wlthm five points 1Vllh ~ilL &amp;hlueteradded17forflleTrail
minutes to go before Goo&lt;lrich Blazers while Fred Hilton was
' i811ited los Angeles again.
high man for Buffalo with 26,
The ~kers have not been
Walt Bellamy scored 30
beaten smce Oct. 31, when tbey points and took down 21
lost to Golden State. Bos- rebounds to lead the Hawks·
ton suffered only ·its over Phoenix. lou Hudson.
second defeat In the added 29 points for Atianta,
last 12 games. John Hav- which broke flle·game open in
llcek and Dave Cowens the.lbit1! period. Clem Haskins
seored 29 points each to pace also had 29 to lead the Suns.
flle Celllc offense.
Jimmy Walker 's · 21J.foot
In other ·National Basketball jump shot at flle buzzer gav~
As·s o cia I ion a c t ion , the Pistons flleir victory over
Phil a de !ph I a crushed ..-Houston. Walkerhit.12points in
Cleveland 148-119, Portland the last quarter and finisheC\
beat Buffalo 108-90, Atianta wifll 26. His deciding basket
stopped Phoenix 116-lll and, came after rookie Mike Newlin
Detroit edged Houston 109-107. of Houston had converted a
Billy Cunningham' scored 36 pair of free throws to tie flle
poinJs and flle 76ers hit on 61.6 sc.ore.

teams.

,.

the Sports
By
.Desk
Tide No Match
Chet Tannehill

•

.· .

'

•

Oldtn.ters
Gathered
'Last Time

Evfl! more of a surprise than
tlJe final score of IJ..12ln favor
ci Stanford was flle defensive
sli'engfll cif flle Indlans: It was
' the chief topic of discussion
' among flle Wolverines .after
flleir New Year's Day defeat in
the Rose Bowl.
.
"We'h8d plenty of opportunities to score," sorely dlaappolnted .Michigan coach Bo
Schembechier commented be·
fore ushering his players
aboard a plane Sunday for .flle
. Dighi back to ~n Arbor.
"We've always scored when
we drove deep into enemy
~ rrilory before. But we didn't
b.ock weD."
, And flle players agreed with
Schembechler that Stanford's
powerful defense surprised
them.
"It's hard to say whether
flley are flle best defensive
team we have played," said
star tailback BiUy Taylor. "In
the Rose BO)"I flley plsyed just
great and did a good job of
cutting us off. I dldil'l think
flley ~ould cut off our running
gat11e like that but they did."
And quarterback Tom Slade
conunented Stanford's defense
moved fast to wherever the ball
went.
Alfllough tlJe rushing statistics all went to Michigan which
carried flle ball for 290 yards
on flle ground to Stanford's 118
yards, the Indians demonstrated flleir ability to slop flle
Wolverines when it cowtted
twice in flle second half.

Girl Scouts· , Social
Go Caroling :Calendar

This Week's
·COllege_Games
.

.

At ihe start of .flle thirq
period Michigan drove to a first
down on.flle Stanford five; But
four plsys later tlJe ball was on
tlle &lt;~ne and Stanford had
possession. Tbe confident
Michigan -team gave no
flloughl to trying a field goal.
AndafterMichiganpickedup .
.
.
a safety and a 12-10 lead when
Jim Ferguson was tackled In
tlJe end zone with 3:1Bto plsy ·
,
'
tlJe Wolverines couldn ~make a
first down to ru11 out flle clock.
That spurred flle Indians-Into
.
~,
fllelt' final driV~ on W•otCII Don ,
Bunce completed five ·Of six
pasSes to set up Rod Garcia's
'eld
wi'~
· clutch 31-yard f1 goa1 u• 12 ·
. secbndsleft ~Qat won flle game.
Coach John Ralston, spread·
.
·
all hi•
mg his prarse among
'""
players, said, "our defense was
200 per cent. What can you say
about such guys as (Mike)
Simone, (Pete) Lazetlch, (Jeff)
Siemon and flle rest. It was a
great learn effort."
Busiest of all flle Stanford
.·
· .
.
defensiVemenwasRandyPolli,
a sophom9fe safety who ·was
credited officially wifll 10
.
tackles and four -asa1sts.
Lazetich was not far behind
'fll · ht Ia kl and thr
WI istsels~
c e~ ted
. eehl
ass
unoneass1s one1g
tackles and Siemon assisted on
eight alfllough Michigan ran liS
,.
PIa ys away from u&amp;e AU
AmericaUnebackermostofthe
day
. .
.
F or
Michigan, Mike Keller,
Tom Kee, qregg Ellis and
Frank Guslch did much to halt
Stanford's rushing alfllough flle
Wolverines were burned by flle
passes of quarterback Bunce,
voted Player of flle Game for
.
.
.
his feat m completing 24 of 44
passes for 294 yards.

·· ~ :-r .- - -~---

'

'

'

J)nited PreuJnttrnallonal
~riilly

Creighton at Ohio State
Houston at Dayton
Cincinnati at'Dr~ke
Morlan af.Xavler
' ··
Akron at Wittenberg .
Ashland ot Eatlham. (Ind.)
Deflane&lt;! at Ohio Northern
.
Tu,l!fay
.
Missouri at Ohio .University
Niagara at Bowling Green
S'aldwln-Wallace at ·, St.
Bonaventure

Cleveland Stata,.at Detroit
Capital at Denison
.
Marlet.ta Invitational '\'our.
nament (Marietta, John
Carroll, Edinboro, Salem) "- .
WednHINy ·
Kenl State at Miami ·
Toledo at Western Mlc~lgan
Youngstown State at Akron
Mount Union at Musklngum
Defiance at Bluffton
Ohio Northern at Findlay ·
Mllllne at Ohio Dominican
t:Jrbana· at Walsh,
Marietta liivltallonal
·,
.
ThundiY
'"'
Thor11as More at Xavier
Kenyon at Ashland
Oberlin at Case Western
Reserve
Rio Grande at Otterbein ·
Cedarville at Wilmington
Wilberforce at Central State
Creighton at Clevelond State
~ti~~::;n~\ 1 ~a;~· l~df:~ (Pa 1
State •
·
Friday
Buffalo State ot Akron
, . Saturday
Ohio State at Purdue
· Louisville at .Cincinnati
Miami at Toledo
Ohio Unlve(slty ·at Bowling
Green · ·
··
St. Bonaventure at Kent State
San Diego at Dayton
Brockport (N.Y.) at Akron
Wittenberg at Ba,ldwlnWallace
Oberlin at Capital
·Mount Union at Denison
Heidelberg at Musklngum
Kenyon al Wash. &amp; ·Jeff.
Marietta at Hiram ·
Ohio Wesleyan at Wooster
Shaw at Ashland
·
Malone at Bluflton
Cedarville at DeflanC&lt;!
Central State at Northwood
(lnd .l
Buffalo State at Cleveland
~~~~Y al Findlay
Wayne State at Ohio Northern
Rio·Grande at Berea (Ky.)
Steubenville at Montlalr State
Marian at Urbana
Calvin at Walsh
Wright State at Wilmington

U one has any Jiiigering doubts abo.ut gi'owiiig oldiiU he has • - T W0 ' ' 0 L DT I ME R ' '
to do is meet himself coming back. Enigmatic?, yes. But let me basebaU teams got togefller in
explain:
1957 on the Portland
The pictures above of "oldtimer" baseball players of the E I em en 1.a r Y Schoo I
Portland.SiiversviU~ cominunities and environs were mailed to playground, some being bona
me last week by our faithful and flloughtful contribulor Goldie - fide practitioners of flle SJ)ort
By GARY KALE
The Alabama loss was the Clendenin. •
.
·
'
before World War I arid during
UPI Sports Writer•
worst suffered by flle Tide in 25
Wrote Goldie : "Enclosed are clippings of old pictures you tlJe 20s. Manr of fllem were
&gt;• It took Nebraska seven bowl trips. The only score by
.
.
sandlot stars m flle dsys when
boy of p Uand
inlnutes to show why flley were coach Bear Bryant's team was may want to use sometime ... flle pictures were found among my Ill f
mofller's
(Laura
Wells)
booka.
She
knew
noflling
.
o
f
sports,
and
St~
armill
s ta . ledor .,:
l~e nation's No. I college a .,\ree-yard TD run by
.
.
1versv e area ng Wlu•
must have kept them because Ruda Durst IS her son-1~-l~w . players of the Racine-Letart
football team.
quarterback Terry Davis.
to be Ill ls 1
Nebraska demolish!!(~ No. 2 The victory was flle 23rd in a Some of tll':ffi I do not know and Chod Van Meter IS dead; W1ck Falls are It
Alabama 3U In flle Orange row for Nebraska, which hasn't Durst Is ~ur storekeeper at Sliversviiie; Warden Ours one of.our lime sue~· a ~~~up gat~rO:.
Bowl Saturday night with an been beaten since t1969loss to commissioners; Bill Cozart_at Racme has a garage and rental Identified then ·in The Daily
explosive first half attack that Missouri.
property there ; Clarence Price farms(! fllink) . Eber Carpenter Sentinel were fllese from Port- ByUaltedPresilllternalloual over tlJe weekend.
had 22 points and 16 rebounda
was compowtded' by seteral Stanford's victory _over Big IS retired from an oil company; Ruda Durst works on tlJe high· iand-Stiversville · (lower
Taki Koroneoa may be flle
Marshall Wingate scored 20 in Oklahc.ma Ctty's trl~.
CrimiJon·Tide turnovers.
Ten champion Michigan in flle way; Hubert Price teaches school; BiD McKelvey also works f9r group), kneeling, ·Buck Van g~atest ~xport from Greece · points, Including 15 In flle
Nebraska scored Its first • Rose Bowl came after a safety an oil company. Chod VanMeter is deceased, George Deem is a M~ter, Wick Durst, warden smce olives.. .
second half, to spark Niagara's, ,
touchdown after an in- by tlle wolverines gave them a retired carpenter. Others I've lost track-of. It's been some lime Ours, Bill Cozart, Clarence ·· · Koro~eo~S~ a ~~omore at victory. Wingate'sperf9rmance
ter;(~, ca,II,J!I!~.~ llall o~ 12-10 lomJi.. JU!l,)'e,rguson ..was ago.'' '
' · ·
· ·
" • eo I' ·': ·' . (F~gin') ,Prlce ,J Eller' Carl ~~R~~ l!i!J'~I!llqn':"l' · earned him the tourney's most.,a
Alballia's . two-y¥.11:•• Une. taekled·.~bl!l~lll~;sQ4li Une-.as ·
YEll, BUT NOT as long as one might. Uiink·. ,Aolot•.of·1th,lli!l penter, ;Ruda Flll'$1;rs!al)dlt1g, 1·· H ..~
n~'@,tb'ilarship. .. ·valuable player award for '~ I'
Johnny RdC!gers fllen !8llied on he tried to run out a short field oldtimers in fllose two pictures are still hale and hearty and Hubert .Price, B1U McKelvey, fie ~ sk~~ . ia a very second y~r in a row.
a 77-yard punt return, Jerry · goal attempt.
d ~si~d as
FredGibaonscored18poinls, makingheltycontrlbutionstoUncleSam on income taxpaying Chod Van Meter, Ron Hart, ~:d
Tagge scored on a one-yard
Mildren, a scholar-athlete, day
Marvin Swan George Deem
er
oun ou
ay. all of fllem In the second half,
·
.
TO
'
. ·
Koroneos,anallve of Afllens as uu topped Corn II· Ro
quarterback keeper and Gary steered Oklahoma's wishbone
These oldtimers meet me on the-way back because it was I
P PICTURE, Racme- scored 33 · ts Mlssissi j
e • n
Dixon on a two-yard ruSh .
attack to its easy Sugar Bowl who snapped camera s~utters of fllem on the Por).land School Letart Falls, sitting, Coulter State upe= v:derbill
Hatch
sco~
30
points
to pace
7 9
In other New Year's Day triumph over Auburn. The diamond in 1957 or 1958
Shuler Tacker McKenzie to · ..
.
Utah State svictory; Joe Sutter
. ·
.
'
'
snap "'e Conunodores' fiVe·
k dD ·
,
··
action, Stanford edged Mlch· Sooners ground out 439 yards
.
To
bring
flle
others
in
the
pic_ture
up
to
date
:
Dr.
To~ Crow Hickey Rou~, Elson Spencer, game winning streak. Taki hit s~ar e
av~ds~n s victory
lgan
13-12
on
Rod rushing and overwhelmed
NATIONWms Insurance caawitb one
Garcia's
31-yard
field Heisinan Trophy winner Pat st1ll puts m a day's work at hiS Pomeroy dental off1ce and Joe Beegle, BiD Stewart, Jerry on ll.of-19 field goal attem' ts Willi 2ll polnla , Ozzle Edwards
evenings
at
flle
Steak
House;
Donald
(Pizzle)
Wolfe
has
transGraham,
George
Nesseiroad;
and
ll.of-13
free
throws
1n
:is
Call
now for
goal wifll· · 12 seconds lefl, Sullivan on defense.
In the Rose Bowl; Quarterback . Penn State left the plsying ferred his conunercial teaching and afllletic administrative kneeHng, Hack Sham, • Clark bestperfonnanceof the season.
In oilier games on Saturday's
Jack Mlldren scored three field in the Cotton Bowl trailing ·expertise to Meigs Local from old Racine High School; yes, ~not~dJ~kes~a~ •. Ray Byers,
touchdowns as Oklahoma 6-3 at halftime. The Nittany Clarence (•'agln) Price, who had as pretty a stride as you'll ever Dranld ~PI 1a;n,Ws~nd~g, skimpy schedule, Niagara de·
GUESTS OF WI.:ES
stampeded past Auburn 4().22 Uons tllen capitalized 0n a see rounding second going to fllird on what sho~d have been a st':a . t y-'z eWhi 01 e, T en feated Canisius 91-82 to win flle
RACINE
- Sunday dinner
1
In llle. Sugar Bowl, and ram series of Texas mistakes in tlle double, does farm, and he dabbles in oil, too; MarVin Swan is still ero:r.~nd ~ A ~~id M0~ Queen ~;:tty Invitational for the guests of Mr. and Mrs. John
· ·
an second s~aight year; Long !hie and family over the
State trampled Texas 30-6 in second half ICJ'ii.ower flleir way engineering with flle Huntington Corps of flle U. S. Army Rhod~s
·
Island Umversity beat Cornell 'Christmas weekend were Mr.
the Cotton Bowl.
to 17 points in tile third period Engineers, though close to retirement; Bill Stewart, much
"I thought going into flle and 10 more in the fourth grayer, continues as flle favorite gatekeeper of Meigs Countlans
7U7 for fllird· plsce In the and Mrs. Chester Reed of
Oraqge Bowl game fllat our quarter.
at Ohio University's Convocation Center on basketball nights
tourney; Utah State edged . Zanesville, Mrs. Jean Mayle
PH. 992-2318
team wa·s one of flle greatest
A seven-yard touchdown run (sometimes, a right mighty valuable guy to know, and be known
steelworkers
~vansviUe 110-89; Davidson and Mr. and Mrs. Donald
io1
Spring Avt.
ever to play college foothall," by Lydell MitcheU gave Penn by), and George Nesselroad is deceased, but his son, George Jr., Team
W. L. whipped William &amp;Mary, 81-68 Sampson and daughter,
Pomtroy,
Ollia
coach Bob Devaney said of flle State the lead for good. continues in his baseball tradition.
!,~~d~~s
:: ~ and Oklahoma City nipped San Wendy, all of Beverly, and g.
• Ca11 IJil,Y oO bala11ct ot
Nebraska squad. "After flle. Quarterback, John Hufnagel
Huble Price, as Goldie knows, still teaches school, and catch Nuts &amp; Bolts
14 2 · Francisco, 77-75. .
.
mongugt 1f you die; or pay
Sgt. and Mrs. Terry :Mayle of
game, I'm convinced of it."
fllen hit ScottSkarrzynski with him in flle picture in a baseball uniform _ flle only one who came Ferros
you 'monthly if ·you c1n't
a 8 None of flle lop 20 major Columbus, Miss . Monday
work due to injury or inneu.
Foote Heels
6 10 coD
tes
11
a !iii-yard TD pass to put flle ready to play - complete wifll "P" for Portiand; hiS patriotism .Stingers·
10
ege
ms was
ac on evening dinner guests of flle
2 14
• Prnttcts J'O"r homt' and
rout in high gear.
PQSselisions · aa:ainst all usual
toschoolandeommunitythenwastotal, asitistoday.
Sk ips
2 14
!hie family were Mrs. Clsrk
hazards - fire, wind. thdl
UT
Wheels
0 16
!hie, Mrs. Charles N. lhle and
ABO
THE OTHERS: Ron Hart, Racine, is gainfully
Team 3 games - Relects
liabilit y. .
1 •
three daughters, Mrs. Frances
employed;· Coulter Shuler lives ~n his farm near Letart Falls; 2452 ; Foote Heels 2398 .
Roberts, all or Racine, Mr. and
Tacker McKenzi~ l one-lln:le poul\ry producer, stiU farms near
Team game - Relecls 892 ;
Foote Heels 853.
Mrs.
Philip Roberts, Patriot,
SWEATER PEOPLE
Racine ; Hicky Roush farms in East Letart· Elson Spencer
Ind . 3 games - B. White 578 ;
ELE'CTION HElJJ
SAME DAY
and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Relyea
Metamorphosis. That's resides in Racine; Joe !leegle, Gerry Graham ~",\d Clark Arnott R. Sines 565.
•The Sabllath School Counsel
SERVICE
what happened to the animal are deceased;~ack Shain resides in flle Racine\;;ea ; Jake Gaul
Ind . game - B. White 236; T. of flle Pomeroy Sevenfll-Day of Flint, Mich., who showed
'i .tlh 'l lll hk \! o~ :u.ol l ,._. l th lll Ilk'~ 11
sweater-s
and
v
e
s
t
s.
No
w
Kea
rns 226.
In At9-0ul AIS
slides of flleir trip to Scotland,
llo•tn e l l:!lw \ •·httul 1•. llh ~&lt;•
people are featured on the (a fine catcher in his day) lives on Bashan Road; Ray Byers is of
Adventist Church recently
Englsnd and Wales.
Tuesday
Industrial
wardrobe. Either glamorous • Tanner's Run; Granddad Shain, of Antiquity, is retired (he T.. m
Jse Our Free Parking Lot
w
.
L. elected clssa teachers for the
faces or s m au peoplelike operated~ store there for eons of limV.;J!eri Stobart Uve8 In' Burton Sunoco
96 32 coming year. They were, Adult
paper cut-out dons are seen. the Racine area, and Vic Whipple is still atO!md, his friends say, Coca Cola
88 38 Class, Mrs. Marie Spires ;
68 60 Teenage Class, Robert ·Lips·
holding hands all around the · and add that Vic In his young days (probably before World War I) Penn Central
216 E.lncl, Pomeroy
sweater.
Mason Agg .
64 66
I .
::
--:-:zii::~.::::::
had flle first knuckle ball pitch in fllis area, and possibly of any New Haven Furn llu re 38 80 · comb; Junior Class, Mrs.
area, a pitch fllatdldn'tshow upon the professional diamonds for Carolina Lumber Co. 16 48 Clara Mae Mcintyre, and
Team 3 games - Burton Primary • Kindergarten Class,
another 30 years.
'
SunocQ 2662; Mason Agg . 2486. Mrs. Elsie Upscomb, with .
. A final note: Goldie recalled that Eber Carpenter is retired
Team game Burton
WI
I
(oil fields) . I'd would add that .Carpenter, who is related to Sunoco 926 ; Mason Agg. 894. Mrs. Effie Black assisting.
3 games- B. Davis 591; Miss Virginia Grogan Is the
OPTOMET~!ST
retired Air Force Lt. General Curtis LeMay, until a very few J. Ind.
Grate 573.
OFFICE .HOURS 9: JO TO 12, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE
years ago continued to fly his own airplane around the eastern
Ind. game - R. Ohlinger 223; subatilute teacher.
F. Reichart 215.
..
I
·AT NOON ON THURS~ J - EAST COURT ST.
parts of Meigs County.
. POMEROY.
'
Which maybe proves it's hard to.keep these old lime baseball
players down on the farm .
.
'
·- ... ' .

For Nebraska

Mississippi Stops 'Vandy
\\'he) II
IMIJ I hr

i:'a

:m:·

murlyayr ~

J!

l.ocal .BOwling

SHIRt
FINISHING

( '

Robinson's Ceaners

':::
1 .

______•

.

Nl

.

MASON
FURNITURE

COMPTON 0. D.
:

..

\,\\~\\, .,HIGHLIGHTS 1;
with Paul Crabtree
CAll P 0 I N T VI E 'N: 9 9 2 · 2 50 5

.

January

DISCOUNT
SALE ·
Starts Today At

\

I

I

I

'

Mason .Furniture ·
+++

Pi\ii Donahue has one of the
;}e st

Ohlo- ori~ n1ed talk
bn~ th~ best

ar&gt;iund,
' '

..

.

.

shows

of his.
.

~

HERMAN GRATE
MASON, W. VA.

r

Parents Know the ,Drug ·nre~t
.

.

BY J . J . CREMEANS
Chief of PoUce, Middleport .

·,

us all food for fllought within oil' own penooal famllylltilatione .

In irytng to analyze drug misuse we must ,cer:taiDiy be• In
,..
REEDSVILLE - Riverview
mind tHat chUdren today are raised In a cbulcii_IOCiety; 111ey ·
.
Girl Scout Troop 67 enjoyed a
. MONDAy
have come to know, from lafallcy, they can go to the doctor and
Today's Subject: 1\e Appeal of prugs 1o Teel8
RACINE CHAPTER, OES,
Theltl8hCGitolfoodplaauedOO.r• wlves60yeara ago just aa holiday party at Stewart Hall
.
get
a shot lor this ailment and a pill for that; It folloWs then that
by the girls ~ing .
M
it does today, 11tcording to an arllcle· which ll(lpeared In the , preceded
Chrialmas carols for ADderiiOn regular seSsion, 8 p.m. onHere are some .1)1. the reasons given by youthful drug users fllere Is a good rea!OII why children have built the linpreulon
Pl!memy "lacier" of -Nov. 28, 1912.
·
B. Kibble at his home and day. Members ce.lebratlon for taking drugs, In a series of national surveys of YOIIIl!i peopl.e flley can be doctored .chemically for any physlcll OC emQii(lnal ·
•
December and January birfll·
n,reldl. In pllt : ''The bouaewives of Pi1meivy are aU fuaied
problem. And, let's-1\ot forget the influence of t.v. Wouldn1t a
presenting
him
with
a
small
-days
to be honored along wlfll in flle high school-eollege age groups:
up o'ver the report that milk 1.1 shortly to be adVilliced from 8tp 10
. I. !lis a wli,y of ~'hlttingback" atparents-gett!N! even with elllld eaaUy C&lt;lllle to feel that there 1.1 a chlliDical cure for
cents a quart. With ml1k at 10 Clllltsand turkey at p a bead, how gift. Later tlJe girls and their conunittees' who served at lllem for tlJe 1001 things parents do and make tlleir chlldren do in
everyflling by watching t.v. coimnerclals?
leaders · tOured Reedsville installations. Officet:s asked to
· can we loot ahead to ~nkagl'llng with Clllnpiacericy.'' :. ·
·
tlJe
growing-up
process.
·
It has been reported that some of the best children, the arsinging carols. Treats were wear or take formai.l for group
2. Taking drugs is a means of feeling love - love in general
ticulate child who brings home good grades and may oflell be a
· Now about the blgb oost of food, unless we're ready tO tum ~. :llngh~o U.,e girls while . pl)otograph. Refreahmettla by
wocflly matron and worflly tenns, not physical necessarily - drugil are a way of returning to student body officer ... even these y.outigSters are hlgb on the ll8l
" flle backyard Jnio a IIJirlna garden or a pig pen, we better settle
Aftel' the tour they .returned oatron.
flle basic fundamentals of life.
of drug abusers. So then, another reason for trying drup ccmes
fill'~ to"etme up witb a few more ways to glorify hamburger
to tlJe b!IU for their party. Gift
THEOOORUS COUNCIL 17,
3. Some students aeld flley felt drug experimentation was in to the front : to be one of tlJe group, to be accepted aa equal, to be
or ground bee!, Whlcbev'er you prefer to caD Jt;
·
exchanges'were placed under a Daughters of America, 7:30 this modern day, a means and part of growing up.
reco811ized as an uiHl()~are .
·
Barbara Doilovan Hines submitted for 1M Cooking Favorites llgh ted tree. Games were Monday night at the IOOF hall.
4. Many said words to tlJe effect thalli was enjoyable to see
Some experta in tlie field of drug abuse say fllat it 1.1 time for
Cookbook put out by the Reglatered N~ Asaoclatlon of lhe played wifll each patrol con· .. Members to take Items to the· their parents get U(lSet about something genuinely. In short, . flle "generation gap" and all such nonsense to come to a cle!td
Holzer MedblCenter, the recipe for Lasagna aa fOllows: ,
dueling them. Prizes went to meeting for a silent auction. taking drugs seems a mefllod of telling the "old man" to go to halt. In oilier words, now is probably the best lime for P.rents to
LASAGNA
, ·
=~ Buch~~~n and K~m Charter wUI be draped for Mrs. · JM:U wifll his hypocrisy. •
.
take the reins once again and find out what is going on among the
18 -ce l*!allie Wlde .DOOdlet, 1 pond Jnnmd ~. 1
5.
There
were
flloae
who
gave
the
excuse
that
drug!'
were
a
children.
Let's begin to reco8lllze flle signs of a sltuaUon
The refreslunenl table was !:::!or ~atey' a charter
eiPI 0111ce .eD leiiiOied t01111to
'4 Cllll llllaced
release from daUy tensions and tlle heavy demands of scliooi developing into a serious problem BEFORE It happens, Instead
onlltlll, '4 tei.poou ~r, 1!. ptillld ar-reiia ebeele, 1
decorated with the ~oUday
MEIGS CHAPTER: Order of work and offered relief from frustrations and flle feeling of of placing ourselves In the position of simply saying, "I'm sorry''
Ia~ ~ oil, Zc:nuhed larUe clovett, I caD or Zl!.
flleme. Gift-wrapped billfo_lds DeMolay, regular meeting, defeat!
after it has happened.
cups tama!CJea, ~~ teupooa alt. 1\ lalpooa orep.uo,
were placed at each plste, gifts 7.30 m Monday Middleport
Naturally, to combat flle drug problem, we must know facts
There are many professional peoP.Ie, doctors, ministers,
from Mr. Kibble. Refresh.
· p. ·
•
attd it. aeut• .1\ -ellp
Pum=e• c)leese,
Masonic Temple.
-·
about drugs, oot perhapa even more important Is knowing some family counselors, and your public services, that stand ready to
Cook the nood1ei until done In salt water and drain. Brown ments of ice cream,. cookies, . RUTLAND GARDEN Club of the ·basic reasons why youngaters are using drUgs In this help you solve problems BEFORE they become·catastro~c In
eandy and pq, were served by
beef ancfgarllc,In salad on. sur In tomatoes, sauca,·onions, salt, Mrs. Don Buchanan, com- will . present radio program, beautiful land of opportunitY we call America. The above reasons nature. Don't wait too long ... that child you save may be your
peAle!', oregano. Cover and simmer for 20 minutes or untO thick. mitlee mother, and Mrs. "Birds" by Mrs. Paul Winn, . are only a small fraction of the entire Uat, I am sure, oot will give
own !
9 a. m.
Alternate ooodles, meat and cheese In bating dish. Top with Haro Id HoIter, Mrs. Roy Mrs. Jonah ColteriU,
·
grated cheelie. Bake at 375 degrees for 20 to 25 minutes.
Hannum, and Mrs. Lyle Monday, WMPO.
Balders~n. lea(lers. ~couts
SnLEM CENTER PTA, 7:30
Donna Wildermuth Nibert's lavorite recipe which she. attending -were: Diana Evans, p.m. at the school. Boy Scout
by_ Katie Crow
submlitett for the cookbook 1.1 for MarJ~g. 'Ibis 10unda really Judy Holter, Bonnie Dalley, Troop 239 and the ilutchlsoll
different and delltloua and aomethtng we plan to try this week. Safa Wells, Canc;ly !;&gt;alley, Jo · Sisters will pre!ent the
LEARNED OF TWO MORE college students who received a
MAIUONG
Ellen Wells, Susan Hannum, program.
srade
ci B or better for the winter quarter. They are Donna
· 1 poud 11'081111 heef, 11!. CUJ!I ellopped celery, 1 eu
Kay Balderson, Kim Reed,
TUESDAY
Weber, dsughter of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Weber, with a 3.30 and
tomato 10ap, daltll toblleo, 10 sreea pepper, 1 mediam
Debra Lewis, Patricia Boeton,
IIJIDDLEPORT Masonle
Wayne Well, son of Mr. and Mrs. Denver Well, with a 3.70.
me oalGa, 1 tlbletiJIOOII Wordlestershlre IAuee IDll 1 Lisa ' Masters, Sheila Lodge 363, F&amp;AM regular
Congratulations.
Buchanan, Theresa Browning
teaspoe;e aupr.
i
and 'guests, Diane Smlfll and meeting, 7:30p.m. Tueadayat
Cook ground beef, green pepper, celery, and onion togefller Mark Holter.
temple .
.
SPEAKING OF accompllahments nlan Holter of Eastern
, in a lkillet slowly until ingredlents are ligllt brown. Add tomato
111gb School and Jeff Morris of Meigs have each been awarded a
At a recent acout meetillg the
WEDNESDAY
soup, worc:helttenhlre ltBuce, tobasco, and augar. Put Jn covered girls finished a Christmas · MIDDLEPORT IJTERARY
foothall scholarship at the University of Kentucky .
dish and eook lit over 32li degrees for one hour. Serve over project of decorating Christ- Club, home of Mrs. Emerson
Congratulations and flle best of luck to you both. •
Olinese Noodle~.
mas balls, a gift for flleir Jones, with · Mrs. Rodney
pare~IS.
'
Downing IP review "Passions
HAVE YOU EVER HEARD of anapplebuttercake? We have
of flle Mind." A Thought on
one recipe and will be pa88ing lt along In the near future.
Psychllltry will be the
WEEKEND VISIT
Meanwhlle, do lhare with us favorites of yours. We'D be happy to
Mr. and Mrs. Chester response.
hear from you.
Knight, Pomeroy, and son,
Our
apologies to Dorothy Glenn. Just tonight while cleaning Dick, and Kathy Yates vlSlted
,.
out our "Fun with Foods" file, we came aci'OIIII her l'eCiuest for a over flle holiday weekend in
recipe clarification. The Information will be on lfB way Caledonia with Mr. and Mrs.
tomorrow. · .
Terry Knight and son, Stevie.
SYRACUSE - The lovely flle best known holiday
home of Mrs. Nial Salser was traditions began," by Mrs.
beautifully decorated for the Parker; "Cards," Mrs. Cotannual Christmas dlruier of the trill; "Gift Giving," Mrs.
'
MR. AND MRS. IIEIUIERT 1100811 '
Th i r d
Wed n e s d a y Harry Bailey; "Trees," by
RACINE
Mt.
and
Mrs.
Herbert
Roush
of
Racine,
Homemakers' Club on Dec. 15. Mrs. Clinton Pierce; ' "Santa
The annual Christmas party
Route
2,
will
celebrate
their
25th
wedding
anniversary
The regular buslnesa meeting .Claus," Mrs. Par~r; "Ways to
The dinllig room of Veterans to Mrs, Harold Massar, Mrs. to tlJe groupa rece)ving flle of tlJe Ladies Aid of flle .AnSunday with an open house from 2 to 4p.m. at flle Shriner's
convened at 10 a.m. wlfll vice Reuse Christmas can1s," by
Memorial Hoapital w:as Bertha Parker, and Mrs. most applause, won by the liqoity Baptist Church was
president, Mrs. Don Cottrill In Mrs. Howard Nolan, and
decorated In the Chrtslmas ArnOld Hayes; 5011h0111''toMrs. choir maater, Mrs. Masser, held recently in the church . Club House In Racine. They were married Jan. 4, 1947 at flle
chaj'ge.
"Ways tO Reule Wrapjllng
Apple
Grove
Methodist
Olurch
by
flle
late
Rev
..
WIDiam
moUf for ihe IIUlual dinner of, R. K. Rowan, Mrs. Albert and her group. Mrs. Parker social room,
Luke , 2 7 14 was read 1
Paper' ·Ribbonr and Yarn,l'·tw·..
Coy)e. Mrs. RoUsh was given Iii marriage by her father, flle
Roush, · and Mrs. Robert · · sang a Stu!!!~ &lt;;laus son~ abe . Frances Pllllson had char11e
devolibns~;
Agnes
Whlte:
w~
MrS.' ~tttilf:'· "'':. ,:om:oa.!.:.
late WllsoniSiaughter,'lind the attendants were'Mril.'rraiices
MCEihliihy lilld a lOll' hour "pili· .. hacl· Wui\f'Gf~~ ag~. ·f!POr"' ci the pritgram, with Beuiah
also read "Cure · For The
Roundrobln get-well. cBnls
rgC:ttbleWiue&lt;.venldwlth to Mrs. Kenneth SeariB.
prize was won by Mrs. Lewis Stobart leading In the opening
Slaughter Parsons, Negley, Ohio, and Mrs. Bessie Slaughter
Blues."
•
were
sent to Ada Slack and
a Chrlltmaa tablecloth, cenA round-robin get-well card Grueaer.
prayer. Games -were conducted
Parsons, Racine. Best man was Mr. Guy Swier o( MidBeware of keeping Christ- Myla Hudson. A letter wu
tered Willi an arrangement ol was given to t.!rs. s:de
Excliange gifta were placed by Barbara Pierce with prizes
dleport.
.
mas but losing Christ, was the read by•Mrs. Nolan from Mrs.
hotly leaves, berries, fel'llland Henderson who was a tlent under the decorated tree.
going to Opal Diddle, Terry
Planlat for the wedding was Mrs. -Ferne B. Hayman and
thought . for the day . A Arthur (Jo) Essington of
red carnatlona. Other small in tlJe hospital at that Uni .
The meeting closed with tlJe ·Shain, and Pearl Adama. Gifts 1 Mrs. Roberta Sayre ThaJ:ton of Florida was soloist. Mrs.
Christmas prayer was given by Milwaukee, Wis., a former
tables were centered with a
Toys were given to
group ainglng, ''God Be Willi . were exchanged and secret
Etta Mae Shields HiU and Mrs. Ramona ADen Yonker were
Mrs. White. The poem of the member . A roundrobln
lighted candle aqd Chrtslmas children's ward by tile Y9U Till We·Meet Again."
Pl!ls revealed. Cate and coffee
the candlelighters. Ushers were the late Clsrence Shields,
monfll, ·" Chrls~~n¥ The Way Christmas card and notes was
Seal placemats. 11le potluck Syracuse Third Wednesday
Attending were Mrs. Asa were served by Maxine and
Clarence Roush, Howard Roush, and Lester Roush. 'Mr. and
Gnd Meant It To Be," was by sent to Mrs. Easingl!il.
dinner was aerved buffet style Homemakers' Club, and tlJe Custer, Myla Hudson, Ada Terry Shain to lh111t named
Mrs. Roush have a son, Roger Herbert Roi1Sh, a third grade
Mrs. Charles' Nease. Roll call
A hostess gift was preaented
wifll table grace by Ber.tha Rock Springa Better Health Slack, Mrs. LUcille Leifheit, and Mildred Adams, Marie
teacher in flle Letart Falls Elementary School. They will be
was answered by 14 wifll a to Mrs. Salser. Bookmatkl
Parker.
Club.
Mrs. Alex Wheeler, Mrs. Boyd, Sarah , Diddle, Mabel
aaslste&lt;j at flle open'bouse by Raymond Adams. Friends and ·1Chrlslmas verse .
were given to each one.
To open ,the meeting that
Mrs. Harold Sauer ;was in Hermari London, Erma Smifll, Moore, Ethel Smlfll, and Agnes
relatives of flle couple are Invited to call during the open
Before partaking of the • January hostesses will be
followed, "0 Come AU Ye charge of the program. Mrs. Mrs. Harold sauer, Mrs. Weeks. It was decided that
house hours.
bountiful
turkey ·dinner, table Ada Slack and Myla liudson.
Faithful" and "Joy .To The Ray Pickens, Sr. read the Gerald Morris, Mrs. Arnold next year there will be no
grace was given by Mrs. John Roll call will be a New Year's
World" -.:as IUDg by Diana Chrtstmaa story from Luke. A ~yes, Mrs. R. K. Rowan, exchange of names but ~t
'
Sauvage.
verse and project, tlJe making
I...ewt. and Betty Will;
reading, "The 23, Channel" Eliza Powell, Mrs. Ernest everyone will take a gift.
POLLY~S POINTERS
In
the
afternoon
a
progrlll'!l
of
flowers . Attending belidel
Mrs. Hugb Bearhs, AtWilaiy was read by Mrs. Parter and Molden, Mrs. George White,
conducted by Mrs. William fllose mentioned above were
chairman, awarded 5().hour ~s. Sauer read, "111e Year Mrs. C«rine Combs, Mrs.
Hayes, Mrs. Herbert Parker, Mrs. Pauline Morality, Mrs.
patches to Mrs. Corrine Wlfllout A Santa Claua."
Hugh Bearhs, Mrs. Dana Lewis Grueser, Mrs. Charlea
Seeks
t,o
Display
and Mrs. Wllllam Eichinger John Bohram, Mrs. Elva
Combs, fo(rs. Robert Tucker,
Those ~!tending were Nelson, Mrs. Russell Spencer, Karr, Mrs. Joan Clark, 'Mrs.
included these readings, "How Dailey, and Mrs. Damon
Sandra Jonea, and Hazel divided Into groupa by Mrs. Mrs. Jlll'!les Heaton, Mrs. Ray Bertha Parker, Mrs. James
Baby's
First
Ferrell.
Smith. U,OOO hour pin went to Sauer and a choir master Pickens, Sr., Mrs. Donald Daniels. Guests were Diana
Myla Hudaon, 2,000 hour to named for aach ,group to sing Diener, Mrs. Harold Maaaar, Lewis, Betty Will, Jean Win. By POLLY CRAMER '
Mrs. Jlltllll Daniela, 1,000 hour Chrlltmas carols. Aprile went Mrs. Robert McElhinny, Mrs. don, and Kathy Morris.
; .~
...~..,.IISI
...IIle
·~mr.APr.AO~Wiill.'Wll!P?tii"IIIPI!I,.IIIIrMPr.APMPM1?~PPM711ill?'lillPI!ll??!il'li!.·IMIII~*II1i~lli
.
.·.·-·.- ......-. ""MIMtiiiiiAIIMtl'tll
nun s
~~~~~~~~~
lVI
''"•"0~"'"'w:.·;•:..
Polly's Problem
.1.";,·;.. : 'ill{
Mr. and Mrs. Delmar A. Ruth Ann Dowler, Mra.
DEAR POLLY- I have seen 'baby's fir.st shoes ~ Canaday entertained with II "Isabelle ·roweD, Mlaa Beverly
·! bronzed and used in various w~ys, but I wonder if f.;
Price, Dr. Harold Brown, Dr.
;·; any of the readers have discovered practical or ~ New Year's Eve party.
Games were played, several and . Mrs, Raymond Boice,
~ 'clever ways of using or displaying baby's first ~
door
prizes were awarded, and MitcheU Chapman, Jennifer
.
'
'
~~~~!~,~:-:~~A~'
~
.
;
~
t
}~,
':;&lt;·~
:
~
·
~
'
&gt;
'
.
"
"
'&lt;W"''"':'«~r"'!"'''~·"'"'"~-&lt;.
"
'
·
'
"
'
»
l
&gt;
'
O
&lt;
'
P
/
'
t
.
:
'
l
:
l
z
t
:
«
.
f
·
w~
a supper of spareribs and kraut Chapman, Barbara Fultz,
·-.:!':'""''" .,.___ .· ·,,,_.. _,
...
Philip Oblinger; Jr., Kevin
· DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve is with the elastic us~ was serve9 at mi,dnlght.
Guests were Mr. and Mrs. Betzlng, Matthew Dlllar,
for the vl!ry top button on blouses that button up the
front. No matter how expensive the blouse, the elastic Wilbur Hood and daughter, David Dlllard, Marsha Dillard,
never holds up for long and it is nearly impossible to Vicki ; Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Melanie Dllllrd, Guy Eddie
replace.- LOREITA
.
Shuster, Mr. and Mrs. WUI1am Guinther, Jr., Dorollly and
DEAR POLLY- I am answering Bernice who wanted' Matlack, Mr. and Mrs. Chester David RuaeU, of Mllimdsvllle;
By BETIY CANARY
to know if the popular nonstick coaling on cooking utensils Knight, Mr. and Mrs. Bob John Dlllard, and Betty CUster.
is poisonous when it flakes off. I quote from a leaflet that Hoeflich and Jayne Lee, Mrs.
I've been concerned with the noisy life I lead and a
came with my ~rille; "Customers . occasionally ask if
recent Ufe magazine arllcle held. out encouragement. I
- on cookware gives food a strange flavor or is any
couldn't take -time to visit a Zen monastery or a Roman
way
dangerous to health. The answer is, " absolutely N(&gt;,"
CathoDe Retreat House but, at least, I could 'search for
in both cases. !his is backed with tests conducted by the
introspection and a little peace and quiet on my own
- Co. ·and the Food and Drug Administration."SYRACUSE - Crow's Steak
The meeting' closed with
home grounds.
·
'
CAROLV.
House In Pomeroy was the preyer. A dessert course wu
The first part was easy. Eliminate noises in the home .
scene
for the annual 6:30 p.m. served during IN! aoclal hour to
DEAR GIRLS-Bernice also wanted to know bow to re(! had Inadvertently begun this e~erclse the day before
move the coaUng from such a pan that hu started to peel. 'Christmas dinner of- the Sun- Rev. and Mrs. Dwight Zavitz,
by dl'opping my daughter's charm bracelet into. the
A company lliald~g these products says, "The co1t to re· shine Makers Clsss of flle First Mr. and Mrs. Herman London,
garbage disposal.) .
.
move the old llnl1h and undercoat and then properly re- United Presbyterian Church on Mrs. Samspon Hall, Mra.
My huaband le:veled the r~frlgerator which not only
. surface would be prohibitive." The Food alld Drur Ad· Dec. 3.
Janice Lawson, Mrs. Clinton .,
stopped the vibrations but assured us no more dishes of
m1nlatraUoa wrote me as follows : "In the matter ol the
After
the
dinner
they
Pierce, Mrs. Don CottriU, Mrs. •
cranberries and chocolate pudding sliding onto the kltch·
pan, It would be n'o bealtb hazard, It would just be that
en floor with loud splals and splashes. I disconnected flle
lhrre would be more of a spot-sUcking of food to the pan returned to the annex ci the Pauline · Morarity, ·Mrs. Don
door chimes, turned down the bells on the telephones. I
i1 mi111Dg." They also 'said a eauae' for church which was beaulifully Hubbard, Mrs. Lalirence
where the ·
considered ~ OIIIing the plugs on washer-,nd dryer but I
the Daldng Is lltat the pan Is heated and coolejl too sud· decorated and exchanged gifts Diddle, Mrs. Dick Harri.l, Mrs.
knew l'c :.. mad withovt their reassuring slosh-ticks
dtnly.-POLLY
'
under the tree. A Chrlslmas Charles Blake, Mrs. Charla~
and whlrrlla¥~ ·
program conducted by Mrs. Nease, Mrs. Agnes White.
DEAR. POLLY- I almost
Agnes White Included readings
Mrs. Howard Largent and
The second exercise was not easy. Keep total silence
cried when I removed my
interspersed
with
group
'
·
Richard
Duckworth joined the
[01' on hour each.doy . I kept a diary of my intended one·
double knit pants suit
wel!k trial.
singing of Christmas carols. group at the church.
!rom the. dryer and found ·
gum
1
spots
all
over
the
Mollday: How dellgbtful to read mY favorite poet. How
fron l. Melting Ice cubes, an
VISITED SISTER
. calm I am. ·How quiet It is! Whl/1&amp;11 so quiet? Where Is
old
standby,
did
not
work
AWAY
ON
VISIT
Mrs
. Allen Hampton,
the puppy! How shall I explain his chewing up a lamp·
this
time
but
my
niece
sugMrs
.
Clyda
Bing
and
shade to my· husband? (,Totai ·time of silence this dayPomeroy, spent the Christmas I
gested
that
I
try
lighter
daughter, Joyce of Bradbury, holiday In Collllllbua VIIIIIIIC •
· ·
. ..7 minutes.)
fluid aid an old toothbrush.
spent a week during the her brother-In-law -and slitter,
I put fluid o~ each spot, •
'l'lle'Way: Pe!lcelully ·I gaze out the dlnlna room window
Chrlstnias holidays with Mr. Mr. and' Mrs . ~ 'ratu. '
back and front of the fabat the anow and the little boy strolllnl throuah the yard.
and Mrs. Lee Wutellch and WhUe there she also visited
ric, and scrubbed br-iskly
It is my neighbor's boy. He Is naked I ITlm H~
family
of BeUe VaUey. )(rs. other relatives.! ·
with the brush. When the
mlnetea.)
gum was all gone. I was.hed and dried the suit. It c~ me Wukelich is the former
We4aelda;y: Unhooking ·the doorbell lel!med • 800&lt;!
out looking like new and .withoul even oile spot.- BAR· Roberta Bing. Mrs. Wukelich
IN ST•. PARIS
idea. How does one siop peopl~ from pou.lldlna on the
BARA B.
.
and
sons,
Bobby
and
Jinuny
Mr
.
and Mrs. Wllllam
door? How does one atop ilttlo nelahllor Donald from
1
'
DEAR POLLY- To make a rug the kids ·will love, buy and Mrs. Martha Wukelich and · Matlack, Pomeroy, and Mrs.
getting stuck while crawlln~ thr.ouah doa d~r t ! 8 mlil.l
a
yard or 36-inch wide fake fur material in the color and son; Mike, returned home wlfll Forrest Bachtel, Middleport, •
' F'r"' ~ : ·: Forgot children gol out of school al .noon .
Tharlday· I'll Ignore the Cout Guard lochoi'n I'll
pattern of' your choice, cui to any 'desired shape With pink· Mrs . · Bing and 'daughter, · spent New Year's Weekend In
Ignore tilt ~lammlna . of the 8&amp;rbaaena~n . I'll 110 cri1111 Donning earmuffs and taping lheir mouths not feasipie .
mg shears · and spray tlie back with rug backing.-JO Wednesday. They also vial ted St. Paris visiting Mr. and Mrs.··
· 1 · ,
If I don't call Penny and ask 'what .-h Wot'\l tu lht' pnrty Give up entire project 1Two seconds. 1
ANNF. .
·
·
with Mrs. 'Lyda ~h.
Georl[e Dallas
chlldrtll.
! Nt:W ~PAP£1 (NT£~PRISI: ASSN .\
·1 lut night. (20 minutes. J
{NlWSI'APlR lHTE.RPRI51 A~ SN . I
. '
'
•
I .

IIi-.

t~

rK;;;;;Notes

Homemaker Club of·

Syracuse at Dinner

Holiday Party

Hospital Auxiliary Dines

Held at Church

•

r

Way

Spoon

;lQI

BETTY CAf.fARY

Canadays are Hosts at Party

••

-

Golden.Silence ••• Tarnished

~;w!;\~&gt;.6"'~:

-.,,~&gt;oJ.,.-.,._:+•''&gt;1:'::

-m.o;. ,,-i;,,,'-"'_;;,.,.M..r!&gt;."i&lt;&lt;!l;.~ .:-.~--~-

Church Class Dinner is Held .

ana

r,

I

•

.

'

.

�.

•.

''

·eo
'

,

.

.

I

.
'

•

. '

4-The o.lly Senllnel, MJtlclleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jan. 3, 1972

''

Michigan ~t{JJ;[s

Celtics.3lst
Laker Victim
..
8y Uolted Press lntematlonal
' ii may be a new.year bui il~s
like Qld times "lor flle Los

'

.

.

.

'

Long 'J;rip~oine_
PASADENA, Calif. (l(Pl)' The University of Michigan
carried home wifll it today to
· the Big Ten flle wlll'!ling it no
longer cOuld underestimate flle
· defensive mjght of Pacific 8

per cent of flleir field goal
attempts in their ro.ut of
Cleveland, compiling flle higllest point total ever against flle
Cavaliers.
·
Rookie Dave Wohl .added 2ll
pointg as seven Philadelphia
players hit fqr double figures.
Bobby Smith led flle clvaUers
willl 23. ·,

· Angeles Lskers.
.. · The Lakers, behind Gail
\ .
Goodrich's 40-poinl perfor\, ; mance, cruised to a record 31st
consecutive victory Sunday
· night as flley beat flle l!oston
Celtlcs 122-113,
· Jerry Weill and Jiin McMilllanat:ded 27points each as .flle
Portland, led by Sidney
Lakers moved out to a 24-point Wicks' 30 points, broke a
lead and ihen held off a late seven game losing streak and
Bos~ ~ally. The Cellics closed extended Buffalo's to 10. Dahi
to Wlthm five points 1Vllh ~ilL &amp;hlueteradded17forflleTrail
minutes to go before Goo&lt;lrich Blazers while Fred Hilton was
' i811ited los Angeles again.
high man for Buffalo with 26,
The ~kers have not been
Walt Bellamy scored 30
beaten smce Oct. 31, when tbey points and took down 21
lost to Golden State. Bos- rebounds to lead the Hawks·
ton suffered only ·its over Phoenix. lou Hudson.
second defeat In the added 29 points for Atianta,
last 12 games. John Hav- which broke flle·game open in
llcek and Dave Cowens the.lbit1! period. Clem Haskins
seored 29 points each to pace also had 29 to lead the Suns.
flle Celllc offense.
Jimmy Walker 's · 21J.foot
In other ·National Basketball jump shot at flle buzzer gav~
As·s o cia I ion a c t ion , the Pistons flleir victory over
Phil a de !ph I a crushed ..-Houston. Walkerhit.12points in
Cleveland 148-119, Portland the last quarter and finisheC\
beat Buffalo 108-90, Atianta wifll 26. His deciding basket
stopped Phoenix 116-lll and, came after rookie Mike Newlin
Detroit edged Houston 109-107. of Houston had converted a
Billy Cunningham' scored 36 pair of free throws to tie flle
poinJs and flle 76ers hit on 61.6 sc.ore.

teams.

,.

the Sports
By
.Desk
Tide No Match
Chet Tannehill

•

.· .

'

•

Oldtn.ters
Gathered
'Last Time

Evfl! more of a surprise than
tlJe final score of IJ..12ln favor
ci Stanford was flle defensive
sli'engfll cif flle Indlans: It was
' the chief topic of discussion
' among flle Wolverines .after
flleir New Year's Day defeat in
the Rose Bowl.
.
"We'h8d plenty of opportunities to score," sorely dlaappolnted .Michigan coach Bo
Schembechier commented be·
fore ushering his players
aboard a plane Sunday for .flle
. Dighi back to ~n Arbor.
"We've always scored when
we drove deep into enemy
~ rrilory before. But we didn't
b.ock weD."
, And flle players agreed with
Schembechler that Stanford's
powerful defense surprised
them.
"It's hard to say whether
flley are flle best defensive
team we have played," said
star tailback BiUy Taylor. "In
the Rose BO)"I flley plsyed just
great and did a good job of
cutting us off. I dldil'l think
flley ~ould cut off our running
gat11e like that but they did."
And quarterback Tom Slade
conunented Stanford's defense
moved fast to wherever the ball
went.
Alfllough tlJe rushing statistics all went to Michigan which
carried flle ball for 290 yards
on flle ground to Stanford's 118
yards, the Indians demonstrated flleir ability to slop flle
Wolverines when it cowtted
twice in flle second half.

Girl Scouts· , Social
Go Caroling :Calendar

This Week's
·COllege_Games
.

.

At ihe start of .flle thirq
period Michigan drove to a first
down on.flle Stanford five; But
four plsys later tlJe ball was on
tlle &lt;~ne and Stanford had
possession. Tbe confident
Michigan -team gave no
flloughl to trying a field goal.
AndafterMichiganpickedup .
.
.
a safety and a 12-10 lead when
Jim Ferguson was tackled In
tlJe end zone with 3:1Bto plsy ·
,
'
tlJe Wolverines couldn ~make a
first down to ru11 out flle clock.
That spurred flle Indians-Into
.
~,
fllelt' final driV~ on W•otCII Don ,
Bunce completed five ·Of six
pasSes to set up Rod Garcia's
'eld
wi'~
· clutch 31-yard f1 goa1 u• 12 ·
. secbndsleft ~Qat won flle game.
Coach John Ralston, spread·
.
·
all hi•
mg his prarse among
'""
players, said, "our defense was
200 per cent. What can you say
about such guys as (Mike)
Simone, (Pete) Lazetlch, (Jeff)
Siemon and flle rest. It was a
great learn effort."
Busiest of all flle Stanford
.·
· .
.
defensiVemenwasRandyPolli,
a sophom9fe safety who ·was
credited officially wifll 10
.
tackles and four -asa1sts.
Lazetich was not far behind
'fll · ht Ia kl and thr
WI istsels~
c e~ ted
. eehl
ass
unoneass1s one1g
tackles and Siemon assisted on
eight alfllough Michigan ran liS
,.
PIa ys away from u&amp;e AU
AmericaUnebackermostofthe
day
. .
.
F or
Michigan, Mike Keller,
Tom Kee, qregg Ellis and
Frank Guslch did much to halt
Stanford's rushing alfllough flle
Wolverines were burned by flle
passes of quarterback Bunce,
voted Player of flle Game for
.
.
.
his feat m completing 24 of 44
passes for 294 yards.

·· ~ :-r .- - -~---

'

'

'

J)nited PreuJnttrnallonal
~riilly

Creighton at Ohio State
Houston at Dayton
Cincinnati at'Dr~ke
Morlan af.Xavler
' ··
Akron at Wittenberg .
Ashland ot Eatlham. (Ind.)
Deflane&lt;! at Ohio Northern
.
Tu,l!fay
.
Missouri at Ohio .University
Niagara at Bowling Green
S'aldwln-Wallace at ·, St.
Bonaventure

Cleveland Stata,.at Detroit
Capital at Denison
.
Marlet.ta Invitational '\'our.
nament (Marietta, John
Carroll, Edinboro, Salem) "- .
WednHINy ·
Kenl State at Miami ·
Toledo at Western Mlc~lgan
Youngstown State at Akron
Mount Union at Musklngum
Defiance at Bluffton
Ohio Northern at Findlay ·
Mllllne at Ohio Dominican
t:Jrbana· at Walsh,
Marietta liivltallonal
·,
.
ThundiY
'"'
Thor11as More at Xavier
Kenyon at Ashland
Oberlin at Case Western
Reserve
Rio Grande at Otterbein ·
Cedarville at Wilmington
Wilberforce at Central State
Creighton at Clevelond State
~ti~~::;n~\ 1 ~a;~· l~df:~ (Pa 1
State •
·
Friday
Buffalo State ot Akron
, . Saturday
Ohio State at Purdue
· Louisville at .Cincinnati
Miami at Toledo
Ohio Unlve(slty ·at Bowling
Green · ·
··
St. Bonaventure at Kent State
San Diego at Dayton
Brockport (N.Y.) at Akron
Wittenberg at Ba,ldwlnWallace
Oberlin at Capital
·Mount Union at Denison
Heidelberg at Musklngum
Kenyon al Wash. &amp; ·Jeff.
Marietta at Hiram ·
Ohio Wesleyan at Wooster
Shaw at Ashland
·
Malone at Bluflton
Cedarville at DeflanC&lt;!
Central State at Northwood
(lnd .l
Buffalo State at Cleveland
~~~~Y al Findlay
Wayne State at Ohio Northern
Rio·Grande at Berea (Ky.)
Steubenville at Montlalr State
Marian at Urbana
Calvin at Walsh
Wright State at Wilmington

U one has any Jiiigering doubts abo.ut gi'owiiig oldiiU he has • - T W0 ' ' 0 L DT I ME R ' '
to do is meet himself coming back. Enigmatic?, yes. But let me basebaU teams got togefller in
explain:
1957 on the Portland
The pictures above of "oldtimer" baseball players of the E I em en 1.a r Y Schoo I
Portland.SiiversviU~ cominunities and environs were mailed to playground, some being bona
me last week by our faithful and flloughtful contribulor Goldie - fide practitioners of flle SJ)ort
By GARY KALE
The Alabama loss was the Clendenin. •
.
·
'
before World War I arid during
UPI Sports Writer•
worst suffered by flle Tide in 25
Wrote Goldie : "Enclosed are clippings of old pictures you tlJe 20s. Manr of fllem were
&gt;• It took Nebraska seven bowl trips. The only score by
.
.
sandlot stars m flle dsys when
boy of p Uand
inlnutes to show why flley were coach Bear Bryant's team was may want to use sometime ... flle pictures were found among my Ill f
mofller's
(Laura
Wells)
booka.
She
knew
noflling
.
o
f
sports,
and
St~
armill
s ta . ledor .,:
l~e nation's No. I college a .,\ree-yard TD run by
.
.
1versv e area ng Wlu•
must have kept them because Ruda Durst IS her son-1~-l~w . players of the Racine-Letart
football team.
quarterback Terry Davis.
to be Ill ls 1
Nebraska demolish!!(~ No. 2 The victory was flle 23rd in a Some of tll':ffi I do not know and Chod Van Meter IS dead; W1ck Falls are It
Alabama 3U In flle Orange row for Nebraska, which hasn't Durst Is ~ur storekeeper at Sliversviiie; Warden Ours one of.our lime sue~· a ~~~up gat~rO:.
Bowl Saturday night with an been beaten since t1969loss to commissioners; Bill Cozart_at Racme has a garage and rental Identified then ·in The Daily
explosive first half attack that Missouri.
property there ; Clarence Price farms(! fllink) . Eber Carpenter Sentinel were fllese from Port- ByUaltedPresilllternalloual over tlJe weekend.
had 22 points and 16 rebounda
was compowtded' by seteral Stanford's victory _over Big IS retired from an oil company; Ruda Durst works on tlJe high· iand-Stiversville · (lower
Taki Koroneoa may be flle
Marshall Wingate scored 20 in Oklahc.ma Ctty's trl~.
CrimiJon·Tide turnovers.
Ten champion Michigan in flle way; Hubert Price teaches school; BiD McKelvey also works f9r group), kneeling, ·Buck Van g~atest ~xport from Greece · points, Including 15 In flle
Nebraska scored Its first • Rose Bowl came after a safety an oil company. Chod VanMeter is deceased, George Deem is a M~ter, Wick Durst, warden smce olives.. .
second half, to spark Niagara's, ,
touchdown after an in- by tlle wolverines gave them a retired carpenter. Others I've lost track-of. It's been some lime Ours, Bill Cozart, Clarence ·· · Koro~eo~S~ a ~~omore at victory. Wingate'sperf9rmance
ter;(~, ca,II,J!I!~.~ llall o~ 12-10 lomJi.. JU!l,)'e,rguson ..was ago.'' '
' · ·
· ·
" • eo I' ·': ·' . (F~gin') ,Prlce ,J Eller' Carl ~~R~~ l!i!J'~I!llqn':"l' · earned him the tourney's most.,a
Alballia's . two-y¥.11:•• Une. taekled·.~bl!l~lll~;sQ4li Une-.as ·
YEll, BUT NOT as long as one might. Uiink·. ,Aolot•.of·1th,lli!l penter, ;Ruda Flll'$1;rs!al)dlt1g, 1·· H ..~
n~'@,tb'ilarship. .. ·valuable player award for '~ I'
Johnny RdC!gers fllen !8llied on he tried to run out a short field oldtimers in fllose two pictures are still hale and hearty and Hubert .Price, B1U McKelvey, fie ~ sk~~ . ia a very second y~r in a row.
a 77-yard punt return, Jerry · goal attempt.
d ~si~d as
FredGibaonscored18poinls, makingheltycontrlbutionstoUncleSam on income taxpaying Chod Van Meter, Ron Hart, ~:d
Tagge scored on a one-yard
Mildren, a scholar-athlete, day
Marvin Swan George Deem
er
oun ou
ay. all of fllem In the second half,
·
.
TO
'
. ·
Koroneos,anallve of Afllens as uu topped Corn II· Ro
quarterback keeper and Gary steered Oklahoma's wishbone
These oldtimers meet me on the-way back because it was I
P PICTURE, Racme- scored 33 · ts Mlssissi j
e • n
Dixon on a two-yard ruSh .
attack to its easy Sugar Bowl who snapped camera s~utters of fllem on the Por).land School Letart Falls, sitting, Coulter State upe= v:derbill
Hatch
sco~
30
points
to pace
7 9
In other New Year's Day triumph over Auburn. The diamond in 1957 or 1958
Shuler Tacker McKenzie to · ..
.
Utah State svictory; Joe Sutter
. ·
.
'
'
snap "'e Conunodores' fiVe·
k dD ·
,
··
action, Stanford edged Mlch· Sooners ground out 439 yards
.
To
bring
flle
others
in
the
pic_ture
up
to
date
:
Dr.
To~ Crow Hickey Rou~, Elson Spencer, game winning streak. Taki hit s~ar e
av~ds~n s victory
lgan
13-12
on
Rod rushing and overwhelmed
NATIONWms Insurance caawitb one
Garcia's
31-yard
field Heisinan Trophy winner Pat st1ll puts m a day's work at hiS Pomeroy dental off1ce and Joe Beegle, BiD Stewart, Jerry on ll.of-19 field goal attem' ts Willi 2ll polnla , Ozzle Edwards
evenings
at
flle
Steak
House;
Donald
(Pizzle)
Wolfe
has
transGraham,
George
Nesseiroad;
and
ll.of-13
free
throws
1n
:is
Call
now for
goal wifll· · 12 seconds lefl, Sullivan on defense.
In the Rose Bowl; Quarterback . Penn State left the plsying ferred his conunercial teaching and afllletic administrative kneeHng, Hack Sham, • Clark bestperfonnanceof the season.
In oilier games on Saturday's
Jack Mlldren scored three field in the Cotton Bowl trailing ·expertise to Meigs Local from old Racine High School; yes, ~not~dJ~kes~a~ •. Ray Byers,
touchdowns as Oklahoma 6-3 at halftime. The Nittany Clarence (•'agln) Price, who had as pretty a stride as you'll ever Dranld ~PI 1a;n,Ws~nd~g, skimpy schedule, Niagara de·
GUESTS OF WI.:ES
stampeded past Auburn 4().22 Uons tllen capitalized 0n a see rounding second going to fllird on what sho~d have been a st':a . t y-'z eWhi 01 e, T en feated Canisius 91-82 to win flle
RACINE
- Sunday dinner
1
In llle. Sugar Bowl, and ram series of Texas mistakes in tlle double, does farm, and he dabbles in oil, too; MarVin Swan is still ero:r.~nd ~ A ~~id M0~ Queen ~;:tty Invitational for the guests of Mr. and Mrs. John
· ·
an second s~aight year; Long !hie and family over the
State trampled Texas 30-6 in second half ICJ'ii.ower flleir way engineering with flle Huntington Corps of flle U. S. Army Rhod~s
·
Island Umversity beat Cornell 'Christmas weekend were Mr.
the Cotton Bowl.
to 17 points in tile third period Engineers, though close to retirement; Bill Stewart, much
"I thought going into flle and 10 more in the fourth grayer, continues as flle favorite gatekeeper of Meigs Countlans
7U7 for fllird· plsce In the and Mrs. Chester Reed of
Oraqge Bowl game fllat our quarter.
at Ohio University's Convocation Center on basketball nights
tourney; Utah State edged . Zanesville, Mrs. Jean Mayle
PH. 992-2318
team wa·s one of flle greatest
A seven-yard touchdown run (sometimes, a right mighty valuable guy to know, and be known
steelworkers
~vansviUe 110-89; Davidson and Mr. and Mrs. Donald
io1
Spring Avt.
ever to play college foothall," by Lydell MitcheU gave Penn by), and George Nesselroad is deceased, but his son, George Jr., Team
W. L. whipped William &amp;Mary, 81-68 Sampson and daughter,
Pomtroy,
Ollia
coach Bob Devaney said of flle State the lead for good. continues in his baseball tradition.
!,~~d~~s
:: ~ and Oklahoma City nipped San Wendy, all of Beverly, and g.
• Ca11 IJil,Y oO bala11ct ot
Nebraska squad. "After flle. Quarterback, John Hufnagel
Huble Price, as Goldie knows, still teaches school, and catch Nuts &amp; Bolts
14 2 · Francisco, 77-75. .
.
mongugt 1f you die; or pay
Sgt. and Mrs. Terry :Mayle of
game, I'm convinced of it."
fllen hit ScottSkarrzynski with him in flle picture in a baseball uniform _ flle only one who came Ferros
you 'monthly if ·you c1n't
a 8 None of flle lop 20 major Columbus, Miss . Monday
work due to injury or inneu.
Foote Heels
6 10 coD
tes
11
a !iii-yard TD pass to put flle ready to play - complete wifll "P" for Portiand; hiS patriotism .Stingers·
10
ege
ms was
ac on evening dinner guests of flle
2 14
• Prnttcts J'O"r homt' and
rout in high gear.
PQSselisions · aa:ainst all usual
toschoolandeommunitythenwastotal, asitistoday.
Sk ips
2 14
!hie family were Mrs. Clsrk
hazards - fire, wind. thdl
UT
Wheels
0 16
!hie, Mrs. Charles N. lhle and
ABO
THE OTHERS: Ron Hart, Racine, is gainfully
Team 3 games - Relects
liabilit y. .
1 •
three daughters, Mrs. Frances
employed;· Coulter Shuler lives ~n his farm near Letart Falls; 2452 ; Foote Heels 2398 .
Roberts, all or Racine, Mr. and
Tacker McKenzi~ l one-lln:le poul\ry producer, stiU farms near
Team game - Relecls 892 ;
Foote Heels 853.
Mrs.
Philip Roberts, Patriot,
SWEATER PEOPLE
Racine ; Hicky Roush farms in East Letart· Elson Spencer
Ind . 3 games - B. White 578 ;
ELE'CTION HElJJ
SAME DAY
and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Relyea
Metamorphosis. That's resides in Racine; Joe !leegle, Gerry Graham ~",\d Clark Arnott R. Sines 565.
•The Sabllath School Counsel
SERVICE
what happened to the animal are deceased;~ack Shain resides in flle Racine\;;ea ; Jake Gaul
Ind . game - B. White 236; T. of flle Pomeroy Sevenfll-Day of Flint, Mich., who showed
'i .tlh 'l lll hk \! o~ :u.ol l ,._. l th lll Ilk'~ 11
sweater-s
and
v
e
s
t
s.
No
w
Kea
rns 226.
In At9-0ul AIS
slides of flleir trip to Scotland,
llo•tn e l l:!lw \ •·httul 1•. llh ~&lt;•
people are featured on the (a fine catcher in his day) lives on Bashan Road; Ray Byers is of
Adventist Church recently
Englsnd and Wales.
Tuesday
Industrial
wardrobe. Either glamorous • Tanner's Run; Granddad Shain, of Antiquity, is retired (he T.. m
Jse Our Free Parking Lot
w
.
L. elected clssa teachers for the
faces or s m au peoplelike operated~ store there for eons of limV.;J!eri Stobart Uve8 In' Burton Sunoco
96 32 coming year. They were, Adult
paper cut-out dons are seen. the Racine area, and Vic Whipple is still atO!md, his friends say, Coca Cola
88 38 Class, Mrs. Marie Spires ;
68 60 Teenage Class, Robert ·Lips·
holding hands all around the · and add that Vic In his young days (probably before World War I) Penn Central
216 E.lncl, Pomeroy
sweater.
Mason Agg .
64 66
I .
::
--:-:zii::~.::::::
had flle first knuckle ball pitch in fllis area, and possibly of any New Haven Furn llu re 38 80 · comb; Junior Class, Mrs.
area, a pitch fllatdldn'tshow upon the professional diamonds for Carolina Lumber Co. 16 48 Clara Mae Mcintyre, and
Team 3 games - Burton Primary • Kindergarten Class,
another 30 years.
'
SunocQ 2662; Mason Agg . 2486. Mrs. Elsie Upscomb, with .
. A final note: Goldie recalled that Eber Carpenter is retired
Team game Burton
WI
I
(oil fields) . I'd would add that .Carpenter, who is related to Sunoco 926 ; Mason Agg. 894. Mrs. Effie Black assisting.
3 games- B. Davis 591; Miss Virginia Grogan Is the
OPTOMET~!ST
retired Air Force Lt. General Curtis LeMay, until a very few J. Ind.
Grate 573.
OFFICE .HOURS 9: JO TO 12, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE
years ago continued to fly his own airplane around the eastern
Ind. game - R. Ohlinger 223; subatilute teacher.
F. Reichart 215.
..
I
·AT NOON ON THURS~ J - EAST COURT ST.
parts of Meigs County.
. POMEROY.
'
Which maybe proves it's hard to.keep these old lime baseball
players down on the farm .
.
'
·- ... ' .

For Nebraska

Mississippi Stops 'Vandy
\\'he) II
IMIJ I hr

i:'a

:m:·

murlyayr ~

J!

l.ocal .BOwling

SHIRt
FINISHING

( '

Robinson's Ceaners

':::
1 .

______•

.

Nl

.

MASON
FURNITURE

COMPTON 0. D.
:

..

\,\\~\\, .,HIGHLIGHTS 1;
with Paul Crabtree
CAll P 0 I N T VI E 'N: 9 9 2 · 2 50 5

.

January

DISCOUNT
SALE ·
Starts Today At

\

I

I

I

'

Mason .Furniture ·
+++

Pi\ii Donahue has one of the
;}e st

Ohlo- ori~ n1ed talk
bn~ th~ best

ar&gt;iund,
' '

..

.

.

shows

of his.
.

~

HERMAN GRATE
MASON, W. VA.

r

Parents Know the ,Drug ·nre~t
.

.

BY J . J . CREMEANS
Chief of PoUce, Middleport .

·,

us all food for fllought within oil' own penooal famllylltilatione .

In irytng to analyze drug misuse we must ,cer:taiDiy be• In
,..
REEDSVILLE - Riverview
mind tHat chUdren today are raised In a cbulcii_IOCiety; 111ey ·
.
Girl Scout Troop 67 enjoyed a
. MONDAy
have come to know, from lafallcy, they can go to the doctor and
Today's Subject: 1\e Appeal of prugs 1o Teel8
RACINE CHAPTER, OES,
Theltl8hCGitolfoodplaauedOO.r• wlves60yeara ago just aa holiday party at Stewart Hall
.
get
a shot lor this ailment and a pill for that; It folloWs then that
by the girls ~ing .
M
it does today, 11tcording to an arllcle· which ll(lpeared In the , preceded
Chrialmas carols for ADderiiOn regular seSsion, 8 p.m. onHere are some .1)1. the reasons given by youthful drug users fllere Is a good rea!OII why children have built the linpreulon
Pl!memy "lacier" of -Nov. 28, 1912.
·
B. Kibble at his home and day. Members ce.lebratlon for taking drugs, In a series of national surveys of YOIIIl!i peopl.e flley can be doctored .chemically for any physlcll OC emQii(lnal ·
•
December and January birfll·
n,reldl. In pllt : ''The bouaewives of Pi1meivy are aU fuaied
problem. And, let's-1\ot forget the influence of t.v. Wouldn1t a
presenting
him
with
a
small
-days
to be honored along wlfll in flle high school-eollege age groups:
up o'ver the report that milk 1.1 shortly to be adVilliced from 8tp 10
. I. !lis a wli,y of ~'hlttingback" atparents-gett!N! even with elllld eaaUy C&lt;lllle to feel that there 1.1 a chlliDical cure for
cents a quart. With ml1k at 10 Clllltsand turkey at p a bead, how gift. Later tlJe girls and their conunittees' who served at lllem for tlJe 1001 things parents do and make tlleir chlldren do in
everyflling by watching t.v. coimnerclals?
leaders · tOured Reedsville installations. Officet:s asked to
· can we loot ahead to ~nkagl'llng with Clllnpiacericy.'' :. ·
·
tlJe
growing-up
process.
·
It has been reported that some of the best children, the arsinging carols. Treats were wear or take formai.l for group
2. Taking drugs is a means of feeling love - love in general
ticulate child who brings home good grades and may oflell be a
· Now about the blgb oost of food, unless we're ready tO tum ~. :llngh~o U.,e girls while . pl)otograph. Refreahmettla by
wocflly matron and worflly tenns, not physical necessarily - drugil are a way of returning to student body officer ... even these y.outigSters are hlgb on the ll8l
" flle backyard Jnio a IIJirlna garden or a pig pen, we better settle
Aftel' the tour they .returned oatron.
flle basic fundamentals of life.
of drug abusers. So then, another reason for trying drup ccmes
fill'~ to"etme up witb a few more ways to glorify hamburger
to tlJe b!IU for their party. Gift
THEOOORUS COUNCIL 17,
3. Some students aeld flley felt drug experimentation was in to the front : to be one of tlJe group, to be accepted aa equal, to be
or ground bee!, Whlcbev'er you prefer to caD Jt;
·
exchanges'were placed under a Daughters of America, 7:30 this modern day, a means and part of growing up.
reco811ized as an uiHl()~are .
·
Barbara Doilovan Hines submitted for 1M Cooking Favorites llgh ted tree. Games were Monday night at the IOOF hall.
4. Many said words to tlJe effect thalli was enjoyable to see
Some experta in tlie field of drug abuse say fllat it 1.1 time for
Cookbook put out by the Reglatered N~ Asaoclatlon of lhe played wifll each patrol con· .. Members to take Items to the· their parents get U(lSet about something genuinely. In short, . flle "generation gap" and all such nonsense to come to a cle!td
Holzer MedblCenter, the recipe for Lasagna aa fOllows: ,
dueling them. Prizes went to meeting for a silent auction. taking drugs seems a mefllod of telling the "old man" to go to halt. In oilier words, now is probably the best lime for P.rents to
LASAGNA
, ·
=~ Buch~~~n and K~m Charter wUI be draped for Mrs. · JM:U wifll his hypocrisy. •
.
take the reins once again and find out what is going on among the
18 -ce l*!allie Wlde .DOOdlet, 1 pond Jnnmd ~. 1
5.
There
were
flloae
who
gave
the
excuse
that
drug!'
were
a
children.
Let's begin to reco8lllze flle signs of a sltuaUon
The refreslunenl table was !:::!or ~atey' a charter
eiPI 0111ce .eD leiiiOied t01111to
'4 Cllll llllaced
release from daUy tensions and tlle heavy demands of scliooi developing into a serious problem BEFORE It happens, Instead
onlltlll, '4 tei.poou ~r, 1!. ptillld ar-reiia ebeele, 1
decorated with the ~oUday
MEIGS CHAPTER: Order of work and offered relief from frustrations and flle feeling of of placing ourselves In the position of simply saying, "I'm sorry''
Ia~ ~ oil, Zc:nuhed larUe clovett, I caD or Zl!.
flleme. Gift-wrapped billfo_lds DeMolay, regular meeting, defeat!
after it has happened.
cups tama!CJea, ~~ teupooa alt. 1\ lalpooa orep.uo,
were placed at each plste, gifts 7.30 m Monday Middleport
Naturally, to combat flle drug problem, we must know facts
There are many professional peoP.Ie, doctors, ministers,
from Mr. Kibble. Refresh.
· p. ·
•
attd it. aeut• .1\ -ellp
Pum=e• c)leese,
Masonic Temple.
-·
about drugs, oot perhapa even more important Is knowing some family counselors, and your public services, that stand ready to
Cook the nood1ei until done In salt water and drain. Brown ments of ice cream,. cookies, . RUTLAND GARDEN Club of the ·basic reasons why youngaters are using drUgs In this help you solve problems BEFORE they become·catastro~c In
eandy and pq, were served by
beef ancfgarllc,In salad on. sur In tomatoes, sauca,·onions, salt, Mrs. Don Buchanan, com- will . present radio program, beautiful land of opportunitY we call America. The above reasons nature. Don't wait too long ... that child you save may be your
peAle!', oregano. Cover and simmer for 20 minutes or untO thick. mitlee mother, and Mrs. "Birds" by Mrs. Paul Winn, . are only a small fraction of the entire Uat, I am sure, oot will give
own !
9 a. m.
Alternate ooodles, meat and cheese In bating dish. Top with Haro Id HoIter, Mrs. Roy Mrs. Jonah ColteriU,
·
grated cheelie. Bake at 375 degrees for 20 to 25 minutes.
Hannum, and Mrs. Lyle Monday, WMPO.
Balders~n. lea(lers. ~couts
SnLEM CENTER PTA, 7:30
Donna Wildermuth Nibert's lavorite recipe which she. attending -were: Diana Evans, p.m. at the school. Boy Scout
by_ Katie Crow
submlitett for the cookbook 1.1 for MarJ~g. 'Ibis 10unda really Judy Holter, Bonnie Dalley, Troop 239 and the ilutchlsoll
different and delltloua and aomethtng we plan to try this week. Safa Wells, Canc;ly !;&gt;alley, Jo · Sisters will pre!ent the
LEARNED OF TWO MORE college students who received a
MAIUONG
Ellen Wells, Susan Hannum, program.
srade
ci B or better for the winter quarter. They are Donna
· 1 poud 11'081111 heef, 11!. CUJ!I ellopped celery, 1 eu
Kay Balderson, Kim Reed,
TUESDAY
Weber, dsughter of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Weber, with a 3.30 and
tomato 10ap, daltll toblleo, 10 sreea pepper, 1 mediam
Debra Lewis, Patricia Boeton,
IIJIDDLEPORT Masonle
Wayne Well, son of Mr. and Mrs. Denver Well, with a 3.70.
me oalGa, 1 tlbletiJIOOII Wordlestershlre IAuee IDll 1 Lisa ' Masters, Sheila Lodge 363, F&amp;AM regular
Congratulations.
Buchanan, Theresa Browning
teaspoe;e aupr.
i
and 'guests, Diane Smlfll and meeting, 7:30p.m. Tueadayat
Cook ground beef, green pepper, celery, and onion togefller Mark Holter.
temple .
.
SPEAKING OF accompllahments nlan Holter of Eastern
, in a lkillet slowly until ingredlents are ligllt brown. Add tomato
111gb School and Jeff Morris of Meigs have each been awarded a
At a recent acout meetillg the
WEDNESDAY
soup, worc:helttenhlre ltBuce, tobasco, and augar. Put Jn covered girls finished a Christmas · MIDDLEPORT IJTERARY
foothall scholarship at the University of Kentucky .
dish and eook lit over 32li degrees for one hour. Serve over project of decorating Christ- Club, home of Mrs. Emerson
Congratulations and flle best of luck to you both. •
Olinese Noodle~.
mas balls, a gift for flleir Jones, with · Mrs. Rodney
pare~IS.
'
Downing IP review "Passions
HAVE YOU EVER HEARD of anapplebuttercake? We have
of flle Mind." A Thought on
one recipe and will be pa88ing lt along In the near future.
Psychllltry will be the
WEEKEND VISIT
Meanwhlle, do lhare with us favorites of yours. We'D be happy to
Mr. and Mrs. Chester response.
hear from you.
Knight, Pomeroy, and son,
Our
apologies to Dorothy Glenn. Just tonight while cleaning Dick, and Kathy Yates vlSlted
,.
out our "Fun with Foods" file, we came aci'OIIII her l'eCiuest for a over flle holiday weekend in
recipe clarification. The Information will be on lfB way Caledonia with Mr. and Mrs.
tomorrow. · .
Terry Knight and son, Stevie.
SYRACUSE - The lovely flle best known holiday
home of Mrs. Nial Salser was traditions began," by Mrs.
beautifully decorated for the Parker; "Cards," Mrs. Cotannual Christmas dlruier of the trill; "Gift Giving," Mrs.
'
MR. AND MRS. IIEIUIERT 1100811 '
Th i r d
Wed n e s d a y Harry Bailey; "Trees," by
RACINE
Mt.
and
Mrs.
Herbert
Roush
of
Racine,
Homemakers' Club on Dec. 15. Mrs. Clinton Pierce; ' "Santa
The annual Christmas party
Route
2,
will
celebrate
their
25th
wedding
anniversary
The regular buslnesa meeting .Claus," Mrs. Par~r; "Ways to
The dinllig room of Veterans to Mrs, Harold Massar, Mrs. to tlJe groupa rece)ving flle of tlJe Ladies Aid of flle .AnSunday with an open house from 2 to 4p.m. at flle Shriner's
convened at 10 a.m. wlfll vice Reuse Christmas can1s," by
Memorial Hoapital w:as Bertha Parker, and Mrs. most applause, won by the liqoity Baptist Church was
president, Mrs. Don Cottrill In Mrs. Howard Nolan, and
decorated In the Chrtslmas ArnOld Hayes; 5011h0111''toMrs. choir maater, Mrs. Masser, held recently in the church . Club House In Racine. They were married Jan. 4, 1947 at flle
chaj'ge.
"Ways tO Reule Wrapjllng
Apple
Grove
Methodist
Olurch
by
flle
late
Rev
..
WIDiam
moUf for ihe IIUlual dinner of, R. K. Rowan, Mrs. Albert and her group. Mrs. Parker social room,
Luke , 2 7 14 was read 1
Paper' ·Ribbonr and Yarn,l'·tw·..
Coy)e. Mrs. RoUsh was given Iii marriage by her father, flle
Roush, · and Mrs. Robert · · sang a Stu!!!~ &lt;;laus son~ abe . Frances Pllllson had char11e
devolibns~;
Agnes
Whlte:
w~
MrS.' ~tttilf:'· "'':. ,:om:oa.!.:.
late WllsoniSiaughter,'lind the attendants were'Mril.'rraiices
MCEihliihy lilld a lOll' hour "pili· .. hacl· Wui\f'Gf~~ ag~. ·f!POr"' ci the pritgram, with Beuiah
also read "Cure · For The
Roundrobln get-well. cBnls
rgC:ttbleWiue&lt;.venldwlth to Mrs. Kenneth SeariB.
prize was won by Mrs. Lewis Stobart leading In the opening
Slaughter Parsons, Negley, Ohio, and Mrs. Bessie Slaughter
Blues."
•
were
sent to Ada Slack and
a Chrlltmaa tablecloth, cenA round-robin get-well card Grueaer.
prayer. Games -were conducted
Parsons, Racine. Best man was Mr. Guy Swier o( MidBeware of keeping Christ- Myla Hudson. A letter wu
tered Willi an arrangement ol was given to t.!rs. s:de
Excliange gifta were placed by Barbara Pierce with prizes
dleport.
.
mas but losing Christ, was the read by•Mrs. Nolan from Mrs.
hotly leaves, berries, fel'llland Henderson who was a tlent under the decorated tree.
going to Opal Diddle, Terry
Planlat for the wedding was Mrs. -Ferne B. Hayman and
thought . for the day . A Arthur (Jo) Essington of
red carnatlona. Other small in tlJe hospital at that Uni .
The meeting closed with tlJe ·Shain, and Pearl Adama. Gifts 1 Mrs. Roberta Sayre ThaJ:ton of Florida was soloist. Mrs.
Christmas prayer was given by Milwaukee, Wis., a former
tables were centered with a
Toys were given to
group ainglng, ''God Be Willi . were exchanged and secret
Etta Mae Shields HiU and Mrs. Ramona ADen Yonker were
Mrs. White. The poem of the member . A roundrobln
lighted candle aqd Chrtslmas children's ward by tile Y9U Till We·Meet Again."
Pl!ls revealed. Cate and coffee
the candlelighters. Ushers were the late Clsrence Shields,
monfll, ·" Chrls~~n¥ The Way Christmas card and notes was
Seal placemats. 11le potluck Syracuse Third Wednesday
Attending were Mrs. Asa were served by Maxine and
Clarence Roush, Howard Roush, and Lester Roush. 'Mr. and
Gnd Meant It To Be," was by sent to Mrs. Easingl!il.
dinner was aerved buffet style Homemakers' Club, and tlJe Custer, Myla Hudson, Ada Terry Shain to lh111t named
Mrs. Roush have a son, Roger Herbert Roi1Sh, a third grade
Mrs. Charles' Nease. Roll call
A hostess gift was preaented
wifll table grace by Ber.tha Rock Springa Better Health Slack, Mrs. LUcille Leifheit, and Mildred Adams, Marie
teacher in flle Letart Falls Elementary School. They will be
was answered by 14 wifll a to Mrs. Salser. Bookmatkl
Parker.
Club.
Mrs. Alex Wheeler, Mrs. Boyd, Sarah , Diddle, Mabel
aaslste&lt;j at flle open'bouse by Raymond Adams. Friends and ·1Chrlslmas verse .
were given to each one.
To open ,the meeting that
Mrs. Harold Sauer ;was in Hermari London, Erma Smifll, Moore, Ethel Smlfll, and Agnes
relatives of flle couple are Invited to call during the open
Before partaking of the • January hostesses will be
followed, "0 Come AU Ye charge of the program. Mrs. Mrs. Harold sauer, Mrs. Weeks. It was decided that
house hours.
bountiful
turkey ·dinner, table Ada Slack and Myla liudson.
Faithful" and "Joy .To The Ray Pickens, Sr. read the Gerald Morris, Mrs. Arnold next year there will be no
grace was given by Mrs. John Roll call will be a New Year's
World" -.:as IUDg by Diana Chrtstmaa story from Luke. A ~yes, Mrs. R. K. Rowan, exchange of names but ~t
'
Sauvage.
verse and project, tlJe making
I...ewt. and Betty Will;
reading, "The 23, Channel" Eliza Powell, Mrs. Ernest everyone will take a gift.
POLLY~S POINTERS
In
the
afternoon
a
progrlll'!l
of
flowers . Attending belidel
Mrs. Hugb Bearhs, AtWilaiy was read by Mrs. Parter and Molden, Mrs. George White,
conducted by Mrs. William fllose mentioned above were
chairman, awarded 5().hour ~s. Sauer read, "111e Year Mrs. C«rine Combs, Mrs.
Hayes, Mrs. Herbert Parker, Mrs. Pauline Morality, Mrs.
patches to Mrs. Corrine Wlfllout A Santa Claua."
Hugh Bearhs, Mrs. Dana Lewis Grueser, Mrs. Charlea
Seeks
t,o
Display
and Mrs. Wllllam Eichinger John Bohram, Mrs. Elva
Combs, fo(rs. Robert Tucker,
Those ~!tending were Nelson, Mrs. Russell Spencer, Karr, Mrs. Joan Clark, 'Mrs.
included these readings, "How Dailey, and Mrs. Damon
Sandra Jonea, and Hazel divided Into groupa by Mrs. Mrs. Jlll'!les Heaton, Mrs. Ray Bertha Parker, Mrs. James
Baby's
First
Ferrell.
Smith. U,OOO hour pin went to Sauer and a choir master Pickens, Sr., Mrs. Donald Daniels. Guests were Diana
Myla Hudaon, 2,000 hour to named for aach ,group to sing Diener, Mrs. Harold Maaaar, Lewis, Betty Will, Jean Win. By POLLY CRAMER '
Mrs. Jlltllll Daniela, 1,000 hour Chrlltmas carols. Aprile went Mrs. Robert McElhinny, Mrs. don, and Kathy Morris.
; .~
...~..,.IISI
...IIle
·~mr.APr.AO~Wiill.'Wll!P?tii"IIIPI!I,.IIIIrMPr.APMPM1?~PPM711ill?'lillPI!ll??!il'li!.·IMIII~*II1i~lli
.
.·.·-·.- ......-. ""MIMtiiiiiAIIMtl'tll
nun s
~~~~~~~~~
lVI
''"•"0~"'"'w:.·;•:..
Polly's Problem
.1.";,·;.. : 'ill{
Mr. and Mrs. Delmar A. Ruth Ann Dowler, Mra.
DEAR POLLY- I have seen 'baby's fir.st shoes ~ Canaday entertained with II "Isabelle ·roweD, Mlaa Beverly
·! bronzed and used in various w~ys, but I wonder if f.;
Price, Dr. Harold Brown, Dr.
;·; any of the readers have discovered practical or ~ New Year's Eve party.
Games were played, several and . Mrs, Raymond Boice,
~ 'clever ways of using or displaying baby's first ~
door
prizes were awarded, and MitcheU Chapman, Jennifer
.
'
'
~~~~!~,~:-:~~A~'
~
.
;
~
t
}~,
':;&lt;·~
:
~
·
~
'
&gt;
'
.
"
"
'&lt;W"''"':'«~r"'!"'''~·"'"'"~-&lt;.
"
'
·
'
"
'
»
l
&gt;
'
O
&lt;
'
P
/
'
t
.
:
'
l
:
l
z
t
:
«
.
f
·
w~
a supper of spareribs and kraut Chapman, Barbara Fultz,
·-.:!':'""''" .,.___ .· ·,,,_.. _,
...
Philip Oblinger; Jr., Kevin
· DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve is with the elastic us~ was serve9 at mi,dnlght.
Guests were Mr. and Mrs. Betzlng, Matthew Dlllar,
for the vl!ry top button on blouses that button up the
front. No matter how expensive the blouse, the elastic Wilbur Hood and daughter, David Dlllard, Marsha Dillard,
never holds up for long and it is nearly impossible to Vicki ; Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Melanie Dllllrd, Guy Eddie
replace.- LOREITA
.
Shuster, Mr. and Mrs. WUI1am Guinther, Jr., Dorollly and
DEAR POLLY- I am answering Bernice who wanted' Matlack, Mr. and Mrs. Chester David RuaeU, of Mllimdsvllle;
By BETIY CANARY
to know if the popular nonstick coaling on cooking utensils Knight, Mr. and Mrs. Bob John Dlllard, and Betty CUster.
is poisonous when it flakes off. I quote from a leaflet that Hoeflich and Jayne Lee, Mrs.
I've been concerned with the noisy life I lead and a
came with my ~rille; "Customers . occasionally ask if
recent Ufe magazine arllcle held. out encouragement. I
- on cookware gives food a strange flavor or is any
couldn't take -time to visit a Zen monastery or a Roman
way
dangerous to health. The answer is, " absolutely N(&gt;,"
CathoDe Retreat House but, at least, I could 'search for
in both cases. !his is backed with tests conducted by the
introspection and a little peace and quiet on my own
- Co. ·and the Food and Drug Administration."SYRACUSE - Crow's Steak
The meeting' closed with
home grounds.
·
'
CAROLV.
House In Pomeroy was the preyer. A dessert course wu
The first part was easy. Eliminate noises in the home .
scene
for the annual 6:30 p.m. served during IN! aoclal hour to
DEAR GIRLS-Bernice also wanted to know bow to re(! had Inadvertently begun this e~erclse the day before
move the coaUng from such a pan that hu started to peel. 'Christmas dinner of- the Sun- Rev. and Mrs. Dwight Zavitz,
by dl'opping my daughter's charm bracelet into. the
A company lliald~g these products says, "The co1t to re· shine Makers Clsss of flle First Mr. and Mrs. Herman London,
garbage disposal.) .
.
move the old llnl1h and undercoat and then properly re- United Presbyterian Church on Mrs. Samspon Hall, Mra.
My huaband le:veled the r~frlgerator which not only
. surface would be prohibitive." The Food alld Drur Ad· Dec. 3.
Janice Lawson, Mrs. Clinton .,
stopped the vibrations but assured us no more dishes of
m1nlatraUoa wrote me as follows : "In the matter ol the
After
the
dinner
they
Pierce, Mrs. Don CottriU, Mrs. •
cranberries and chocolate pudding sliding onto the kltch·
pan, It would be n'o bealtb hazard, It would just be that
en floor with loud splals and splashes. I disconnected flle
lhrre would be more of a spot-sUcking of food to the pan returned to the annex ci the Pauline · Morarity, ·Mrs. Don
door chimes, turned down the bells on the telephones. I
i1 mi111Dg." They also 'said a eauae' for church which was beaulifully Hubbard, Mrs. Lalirence
where the ·
considered ~ OIIIing the plugs on washer-,nd dryer but I
the Daldng Is lltat the pan Is heated and coolejl too sud· decorated and exchanged gifts Diddle, Mrs. Dick Harri.l, Mrs.
knew l'c :.. mad withovt their reassuring slosh-ticks
dtnly.-POLLY
'
under the tree. A Chrlslmas Charles Blake, Mrs. Charla~
and whlrrlla¥~ ·
program conducted by Mrs. Nease, Mrs. Agnes White.
DEAR. POLLY- I almost
Agnes White Included readings
Mrs. Howard Largent and
The second exercise was not easy. Keep total silence
cried when I removed my
interspersed
with
group
'
·
Richard
Duckworth joined the
[01' on hour each.doy . I kept a diary of my intended one·
double knit pants suit
wel!k trial.
singing of Christmas carols. group at the church.
!rom the. dryer and found ·
gum
1
spots
all
over
the
Mollday: How dellgbtful to read mY favorite poet. How
fron l. Melting Ice cubes, an
VISITED SISTER
. calm I am. ·How quiet It is! Whl/1&amp;11 so quiet? Where Is
old
standby,
did
not
work
AWAY
ON
VISIT
Mrs
. Allen Hampton,
the puppy! How shall I explain his chewing up a lamp·
this
time
but
my
niece
sugMrs
.
Clyda
Bing
and
shade to my· husband? (,Totai ·time of silence this dayPomeroy, spent the Christmas I
gested
that
I
try
lighter
daughter, Joyce of Bradbury, holiday In Collllllbua VIIIIIIIC •
· ·
. ..7 minutes.)
fluid aid an old toothbrush.
spent a week during the her brother-In-law -and slitter,
I put fluid o~ each spot, •
'l'lle'Way: Pe!lcelully ·I gaze out the dlnlna room window
Chrlstnias holidays with Mr. Mr. and' Mrs . ~ 'ratu. '
back and front of the fabat the anow and the little boy strolllnl throuah the yard.
and Mrs. Lee Wutellch and WhUe there she also visited
ric, and scrubbed br-iskly
It is my neighbor's boy. He Is naked I ITlm H~
family
of BeUe VaUey. )(rs. other relatives.! ·
with the brush. When the
mlnetea.)
gum was all gone. I was.hed and dried the suit. It c~ me Wukelich is the former
We4aelda;y: Unhooking ·the doorbell lel!med • 800&lt;!
out looking like new and .withoul even oile spot.- BAR· Roberta Bing. Mrs. Wukelich
IN ST•. PARIS
idea. How does one siop peopl~ from pou.lldlna on the
BARA B.
.
and
sons,
Bobby
and
Jinuny
Mr
.
and Mrs. Wllllam
door? How does one atop ilttlo nelahllor Donald from
1
'
DEAR POLLY- To make a rug the kids ·will love, buy and Mrs. Martha Wukelich and · Matlack, Pomeroy, and Mrs.
getting stuck while crawlln~ thr.ouah doa d~r t ! 8 mlil.l
a
yard or 36-inch wide fake fur material in the color and son; Mike, returned home wlfll Forrest Bachtel, Middleport, •
' F'r"' ~ : ·: Forgot children gol out of school al .noon .
Tharlday· I'll Ignore the Cout Guard lochoi'n I'll
pattern of' your choice, cui to any 'desired shape With pink· Mrs . · Bing and 'daughter, · spent New Year's Weekend In
Ignore tilt ~lammlna . of the 8&amp;rbaaena~n . I'll 110 cri1111 Donning earmuffs and taping lheir mouths not feasipie .
mg shears · and spray tlie back with rug backing.-JO Wednesday. They also vial ted St. Paris visiting Mr. and Mrs.··
· 1 · ,
If I don't call Penny and ask 'what .-h Wot'\l tu lht' pnrty Give up entire project 1Two seconds. 1
ANNF. .
·
·
with Mrs. 'Lyda ~h.
Georl[e Dallas
chlldrtll.
! Nt:W ~PAP£1 (NT£~PRISI: ASSN .\
·1 lut night. (20 minutes. J
{NlWSI'APlR lHTE.RPRI51 A~ SN . I
. '
'
•
I .

IIi-.

t~

rK;;;;;Notes

Homemaker Club of·

Syracuse at Dinner

Holiday Party

Hospital Auxiliary Dines

Held at Church

•

r

Way

Spoon

;lQI

BETTY CAf.fARY

Canadays are Hosts at Party

••

-

Golden.Silence ••• Tarnished

~;w!;\~&gt;.6"'~:

-.,,~&gt;oJ.,.-.,._:+•''&gt;1:'::

-m.o;. ,,-i;,,,'-"'_;;,.,.M..r!&gt;."i&lt;&lt;!l;.~ .:-.~--~-

Church Class Dinner is Held .

ana

r,

I

•

.

'

.

�•

... .
.•

..
&gt;.

•

• •

·.- •.• ·-'lbeDIIIySentlnei\'~-Pilmeroy,O.,Jan. ~,lm·

••

•

•~

.

'

LEGAL NOTICE

'

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

••'
.

.' .

•

.

.

Notice . ·

Cn• No. 20594
Est.-te of George W. Moore,

Deceased .

·· "' 130, Pomeroy , Ohio, hn been
duly appointed Administratrix

the Estate of George W.
..-·. Of
Moore , deceased , late of
'• Middlepor t. Meigs County ,
OhiO.
.

'''

Cr.ed ltors are requ ired to tile
thtlr claims with said fiduc iary

with in four mo,nths .

Dated thiS 28th dc;y 'of
December 1971.
F. H . O'Br ien
(11 J.

•
'

.

10, 17, Jt

Probate Judge
of said County

1971 CHEVEL~EMALIBU CPE.
··um
Sandal--:ood with brown vinyl top, factory air conditioned,
V-8 eng&gt;ne with turbo hydromatic, power steering, E.·
clock, P.B., radio, Rally wheels with w-w tires. Fri. &amp; rear
guards. Retail $4155. Co. Olflcial car &amp; specially priced.

.

'

.

1970 CAMARO CPE . ./
S3095
Less than 1].0110 mli'Os &amp; appear;nce of 72 model. Rally
Spool equipped, Classic copper with sandalwood.lnterlor,
tinted glass, factory air conditioned, sports mirrors,
console , air spoiler, turbo hydromatic ,
steering &amp;

power

brakes, 350 cu. in . V-8 engine. Really Sharp.

PARTY CARDIGANS
Bulky knit cardigans with
fancy cables or s i m p le
ribbed, belted and with ~ V
neckline, can be worn with
ao.bold plaid skirt and serve
as perfect party attire.

.

~

Notice is hereby gl¥en that
Anna M. Ryther , of P . o. Box ,

L ..

,

,

.

. •

,

.

·sentznel-Classifieds ·Get
Action!
Sentinel.Classified~
Get
R_
.
e
s_
u
its!
"

''

'•

. •

~)

Po11eroy Motor Co.
OPEN EYES. 1:00 P.M.
i'ptiiEROY, OHIO

.
'
WANT
AD
r----------- ~- --------------1
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P.M. Day Before Publication
Mandav Deadline 9 a.m.
, ~.a.ifOI1411on &amp; CorrOI'fiQns
I
I .~111 b(! accepted untlf9 a.m. fOr
of Publloatlon
By Helen Bottel
1 · . Day
REGULATIONS
' The Publisher reserves th&lt;
right 'to edit or reject any ad•·
LAMENT OF A YOUNG DIVORCEE
deemed
oblectlonal. The&gt;
Dear Helen :
publisher will not be responsible.
I'm 22, was married three years and have two small tor more than one Incorrect,
children. Now I'm divorced. I'm writing In hope you'll print this Insertion.
RATES
80 maybe some kids won'tbave to suffer what I'm going through.
For W~nt Ad Service
·
5 cents Rer Word one Insertion·
What is being married too young- and divorced?
Mlnlm\JI)1 Charge 75c
It's sitting borne many lonely nights wondering what went
12 cents j&gt;er word three
wrong.
consecutive Insertions.
18 cents per word six conIt's seeing how happy the kids are with their father on
secutl ve Insertions.
&amp;mdays, and then bearing them cry whl!l' they come home
25 Per Cent Discount on pel((
because Daddy baa to leave lind they don't widerstand why.
ads and ads paid within 10 cloys.
CARD OF THANKS
It's feeling 80 guilty because you know that if you and your ex "
&amp;OBITUARY
were more malll'' In mind before you jumped Into man-lage, you
S1.50 for 50 word minimum
Each additional word 2c.
could have spared them all those tears. (And yourselves too.)
BLIND ADS
. It'sgolngout lo clubs with a friend and seeing that you don't
Additional 25c Charge per
. . fit In with the kids your age.
.
Advertlsem,nt. ·
,
OFFICE HOURS
It's finally meeting a guy you think yo ·J could make it with,
8:30 ·a.m. to 5:00p.m. Dally,
' · only to find out six months later that h~ doesn't want to get in· 8:30 a .m. to 12:00 Noon
Sqturday.
· volved with a ready-made family ,
lt'uayingtoyour!!elf, "If only I had li3tened to my mother/ '
a;,d then realizing It's ~late .
Notice
It'sthe feeling of always being used. A divorcee is fair game, KOSCOT KOSMETICS and wigs
for sale . Brown's. Phone 992and If llhe doesn't play that way- it's a lonely, depressing life,
5113.
just one hurt after another.
12-3i -tfc,
It gives you a lot of time to think - something you both
shouldhavedonethreeyearsago! -- T. M.
WIN AT BRIDGE
Dear Helen :
'This man jumps on every bandwagon and rides. off In all
' '
directio111. He thinka be's another Ralph Nader, but I think he's a
•.. ·. little fellow trying to make a big noise because no one notices him
,,• ''·' otherwise.
Recently he concluded a one-man march on our company
· · because its "air pollution cauaes the secretaries' stockings to
NORTH
3
· run." He's very high on population control and ecology, both
•
A974
commendable causes, but must he spend the whole noon hour
• 9862
espousing them? AlOrstwf~ughed, now we groan, but we can't
tKQ4
llhut him up.
.Q4
il'EST
EAST
What can we do with this giddy-giddy man? - FElLOW
•
62
• KS
WORKERS
• Ql075
.J43
Dear Workers:
tJ95
tAI083
Fanaticism may be wisdom wh~ time has not yet co e. I
.A973
.1086 2
SOUTH (D)
the bosses can put up with this ~udo Ralph Nader why not y ?
• QJI083
After all, you can always walk away or out-talk him when th
.AK
crusades get too dull. - H.
• 76 2
• KJ5

:Helen Help Us:
i

,.

.

.

'

'

..

'

. ABOUT ·youR ·wEIGHT ..:·.. t:OAL, limestone. e·xcelslor
overweight ladles, teens and
Salt works .e ·Main St
"1"" Interested In a Weight Pomeroy.· Phone 992-3891 ·•
.Walthers (RJ Class In
4-9-ttc
'Pomeroy write : Welghh
·
Watchers IRJ, 1863 Sectlon. POODLE puf)ples, Silver Toy,
Rd,, Cincinnati, Ohio 45237.
Park•iew Ke~nels, Phone 99210-3-lfc 5443 . •
--"----...,---~·
8-1Hfc
INCOME TAX service, dally - - - - - - e•~ept Sunday, evenings by LONG BOTTOM- Five room
appointment. Mrs. Wanda· house, bath , business or
Eblin, Laurel Cliff Road, I storage building - $6,500.
mile west of Meigs County
l&gt;none 985-3529.
Fairground on Rt. 7 bypass.
12-19-JOic
Phone 992·227~.
1-3-30tc
GAS HEATER, 55,000 BTU,
natural or bottled gas, good
SEWING In my home. Will
condition
. with metal~tos
make drapes, cushions.
chimney,
$50. Phone 949-3211.
Phone 992-6879.
·
12-29-3tc
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _1_:_·3-121p

'

Business Services

.

- - -- - -

- -===::-:

1

LADIES - Opportunity to turn
spare time Into dollars .
Pleasant work. Choose hours.

sound

syste ,

Complete
Remod8ling

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiator to
Smallest Heater Core.
Nllhln Blll!ls
Radiator SpKia)ist

Kitchell$, Baths
Roam Adclitions
And Patil$

SMITH ftELSON
MOTORS, INC.
.
Ph. 992-2174
Pomeroy

992-7608

-----Employment Wanted

buttonholes, sews on buttons,

HAVE. WELDER, will travel. monograms, •and blind hem
Local certified welder with stitch. Full cash price, $38.50.
mobll.e gas welder wants
Budget plan available. Phone
welding lobs. Any evening 992-5641.
after 6:30 and all day
12-29-6tc
Saturday. Phone 992-5271 .
1-3-6tp BAND Saw .and motor. Phone
992-9981.
INTERIOR painting. Call Don
12-31 -3tc
VanMeter 985-3951. 12-19-12tp
' -==:::;::======:..:.~
1

- - -- --

W[LL DO babysitting In my
home. Also housework 2 clays
a week. Phone 992-5972.
12-30-41c

Wanted To Buy
OLD FURNITURE, Round Oak
tables, Brass beds, dishes,
cloch, and-or com~lete
households . Write M. D
·Miller, Rt. 4,' Pomeroy, Ohio:
Call 992-6271.
12-17-tfc

.

EXPERT
Wheel ---Alignment

local Bowling

AFTEit.

'TOO~Y

INNOCENT 'MEN
ARE CONFE651N&lt;O
10 CRIMES ...

MIGI-\T'S WELL. '"--'""

';55

· ·open BTii'S
Ma,nday thru Soturdly '
606 E, Main, Pomeroy, 0 .

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

Home Units
24-Hour Service

Virgil B•..
TEAFORD

POMIROY •

f&gt;IG"''!!

MARTHA ROSE, oWner .
.
1
Locotod on County Rold 34·
ne•r Royal Oak Pork. W1tch.
for Signs.
Open every dly except'
Mondly
·
1 P.M. til7 P.M.

Also Furnace Repair
'

Real Estate For Sale

Jack w. Cartty, Mer.

DON'T PA'/ A~ ATnWnON
TO HIM-Si_GN,KID-

AG~IN'ec-1

_HIDDENTREASURES
GIFT \SHOP

All Commeltial &amp;

PomeiUJ Home ·&amp; Auto

Buy Any Fuel Oil

WEARING 5EI:f
UNIFORMS!

Dolls, all dressed In slyte,'
knitted 1nd crocheted. ( H••
to be seen to be apprecillodl .
Many lt.ms you h1vo been
looking for, ~r INII perfoct
gilt. ' . .

Senice &amp;Repair

.

• PH. 992-7260

C&amp;M
REfRIGERATION
..
SERVICE

,.,.

... I'M SURE TW£ a.D ZAN
Hb.D A LOr OF LDI'AL

1'DU.OWERS.
- THEY'Re
DOUND 10 HEl.P ,HIM!

PdMEROY
·~OME &amp; AUTO

SR.

Take First
Things First

'

IT M&amp;ANS

· KIN USE FIVE.
THOUSAN' A
WEEK-

FURNISHED and unfurnished TROPICAL FISH. fancy ·
NEIGLER Building Supply .
apartments. Close to school guppies, angels and breeders,
992-2094
Bellas
and
supplies.
Phone
Free estimate on building '
Phone 992-543-4.
.
992-5443.
yoyr
new
home.
Will
draw
10-18-tfc
406 ~- M;itn Pomeroy ,
Broker
12-30-ttc
r!hts to suit the lay of your ·
r.
110 Michonlc Strttt
and. Call Guy Nelgler,
50xl2 TWO BEDROOM mobile
. Pomeroy, Ohio
Racine,
Ohio. For reRPir ••d
home, gas heat, Sycamore · 352 FORD motor 10x28 tractor
.. ., £lid
.
.
aluminum
siding, soffet and
St., Middleport. Phone 992- ti re, young fry~rs . Phone 843gutter.
Call
DOnald
Smith,
.
LOT$7004 or 992-3585, Danny 2778.
Racine, Ohio.
·
Thompson .
12-30-6tc IN MEIGS sch~~ l district .
...,.:...
10-7-ttc
Restricted area. $2,000.00.
12-23-tfc - - - - - - - - - Stop• In and See O•i .' ·
Floor Display.
NEW
I;IACKHOE AND OOZER wilr~.
NICE TRAILER; 1 bedrocim, APPLES - Fitzpatrick Orchards,
State
Route
689
,
• BEDROOMS. 2 baths, hot · Septic tanks Installed. George
Ideal for couple, 10 miles
...
.r
' •• •
I Blil) Pullins. Phone 992-2418.
north of Pomeroy. Phone 992- ph~e Wilesvllle, 669-3785. · water heat. Fireplace, dishUPHOLSTERING
SERVICE,
9-3-tfc
washer . Full basement.. _________4-_25-lfc
6452 .
complete selection of fabrics
Double garage. 5 wooded ·
12-15-tfc
and
vinyl to choose from.
acres. Only_$30,000.00.
HARRISON'S TV and Aniema.
Pick-up
and delivery. Slater
service.
Phone
992-2522.
1 BEDROOM and 2 bedroom Mobile Homes For Sale
Upholstering, Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
BEDROOMS
6-10-ttc
I
mobile homes. Adults only .
phone 992-3417.
NICE bath, floor furnace •
Phone 992-5592.
12-27-lOip
fireplace. Dining room, SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
12·19-tfc
basement. Garage, Large lot . Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio, Ph.
• Some fruit. Only $8,000.00 .
O'DE"LL ' WHEEL ·allgnmtlnf
662-:j035.
TRAiLE-IftOTS, Bob's '""'i,jj;'
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
2-12-ttc
None vulnerable
Court, Rt . 124, Syracuse,
2 BEDROOMS
Complete frOiit end service,
Jhlo. 992-2951.
NICE little cozy place. Bath, READY -MIX
Wes t North East South
CONCRETE
tune up end brake service.
beautiful
oak
floors.
4-2-lfc
delivered
right
·to
your•
Wheels balanced elecHigh Individual ' Game
Pomeroy Notionol Bonk
Basement. Only $6,500.00.
··easy.
Free
Ironically.
All
work'l
pro/ect.
Fast
and
~
Pass
3
•
Pass
Greg
Smith
124.
~
senior LNgue
12'
•
14'
·
24'
•
WiDE
.
guaranteed.
Reasonable
est mates. Phone 992-3284
Pa!:S
Pass
Pass
NEW,
12
~ 60, 2 bedroom mobile
Second
High
Ind.
Game
Standings
'3 BEI)ROOMS
..
Goegleln Ready-MI• Co.;
rates. P_hone 992-3213.
home across from Bradbury
Burt 122.
Opening lead-· 5' ~
Teom
Pis. David
NEAT,
l'f2
baths,
Iorge
living,
School
.
Call
992-5308
or
see
Middleport.
Ohio.
.
.
7-27-tfc
High Series - Greg Smith
Thundering Herd
33 220.
dining, wall to wall carpeting,
Charles
Lewis,
2nd
houH
6-30-ttc•
· ··
Raiders
30
gas fireplace. Modern kitBy
Oswald
&amp;
James
Jacoby
south
from
Bradbury
School
.
Second
High
Series
Lori
· Rams
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
25 Faulk, DavidrSmlth 199 .
chen, refrigerator, electric .S_E_P_T-IC-TA_N_K_S_C_L_E_A-NED
Pets welcome.
Strike Outs
19
Oswald:
"Here
is
a
simple
range,
garbage
disposal.
12-27-ttc '
1220 WIShintton Blvd.
Team High Game
Red
Reasonable rates. Ph. 446-4782,
~c.'\~~~9~~~lcJ - - · Bengals
19 Barons
Double garage.
,
hand with features of great
683.
Belpre, Ohio
Gallipolis.
John
Russell,
Racine, Ohio
Zodiac's
18
WE HAVE
Team High Series
Red mterest. North's j u m p to 4 ROOM HOUSE, furnished at
Owner &amp; Operator.
Crill Bradford
High Individual Game
37
PROPERTIES
Barons 1345.
three spades is a limit raise
124 Laurel St., Pomeroy. Call
5-12-lfc
5-1-ffc
Steve Bachner 175.
HELEN L. TEAFO~D,
992-5836
or Inquire at 126 60x12, 2 bedroom, all -electric,
but So.uth has enough above
· second High Ind. Game --~~~~~
=-~-------ASSOCIATE
air conditioned, 8'x20' porch
Laurel St.
Wednesd1y Afternoon
. Steve Bachner 170.
a mtmmum to warrant go992-3325
992-2371
AUTOMOBILE lnsurance'~t:WtNG MACHINES. Repair' ·
and
aluminum
awning,
League
12-J0-6tc
High Series - Steve Bachner
mg
to
game
."
12-31-6tc
bel!!' cancelled? Lost your' service, all makes. 992-2284.
aluminum
skirting
,
com.
Dec.
29,
1971
476.
operator's
license? Call 992- The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.,
Jim
:
"With
pi
th
e
r
the
Standings
NEW 2.BEDROOM, double r.lelely setup, beautiful
Second High Ser ies 2966.
Authorized Singer Sales and
3
BEDROOM
ranch
type
home;
spade
finesse
working
or
the
Team
w.
L.
George Gum 395.
wide,
mobile
home
on
lot
In
~~~
..
~r
~~·~~~2~~~te.
'
'6·15-tfc
service.
We Sharpen Scissors.
Arbaugh
Addition,
Tuppers
Baum
's
Lumber
44
12
ace of diamonds on the right
Team High ' Game - Rams
Syracuse. Completely. fur 12-30-tf&lt;
. 3-29-ttc
Plains. All new with total ·--'--~---'-;~
Team No . 4
38 18 side four spades is a lay
. 940. .
nlshed.
Phone
992-2441
after
5
-electric
and
central
air
No. 1
28 28 down . However, both cards
Team High Series - Rams Team
p.m.
conditioning, bath and o;,,
Welker's Ashland
21 35 are wrong. A · diamond lead
1553.
1-3-lfc FOR THE BEST deal In a new
fully carpeted, full basement, Real Estate For Sale
Ridenour's T.V.
19 37
- or used · mobile home, try
garage In basement. See · by . .
Gaul's Shake Haven
18 38 will defeat the contract. "
'
The
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
Oswald: "Fortunately for D.A.V, home In Pomeroy for
appointment, phone 992-2196 NICE 2-story · home with filii
High Individual Game
Early Sunday
or 992-3585. Danny Thompson.
Barbara Murray 165.
South, . West had a normal
group meetings and parties, Kanauga, Ohio.
basement, 2 lois, new forced'
Mixed League
12-17-901c
Financing
available.
phone
992-5247.
Second
High
In~
.
Game
furnace . Near . Pomeroy,
air
opening
lead
of
a
heart'
so
,,
Doc. 29. 1971
That Li&amp;tens
Patty Thomas 144.
12-30-ttc
12-19-121c
Eiemenlary School. . Phon"'
Standings
that South should have made
High Series - Barbara his contract."
992-7384 to see.
Team
Pts. Murray
S
387
.
11-7-lfc
Tom's Carry CM
82
Jim : "Your use of 'should' 2 BEDROOM mobile home In Auto ales
To You
Se.cond. High Series - Patty'
,
,
Eagles Club
81
. implies that South went
Racine area. Phone 992 ·6329. 1968 PONTIAC Fireblrd J50 Cu
Thomas
360.
Racine Food Market
66
12-14-lfc ln., 4-speed, black-red
'
In-·
Team High Game - Team down. I assume he tr•"ed the
Forest Run Block
63
RACINE - 10 room , house,
spade finesse at trick two
terlor. Phone 949-2921.
Roseberry's Sohlo
54 No. 4 831.
bath, basement, garage, two
Team
High
Series
Baum
and that after taking his For Rent or Lease
1-3-6tp
Farmers Bank
38
lots
. No reasonable offer
·
High Individual Game - A. Lumber 630.
king East was smart enough
refused
. Phone 949-4313 ..
HOME, 2-bedroom, '65 GMC 'h-ton ~lckup, '62
L. Phelps 244.
to lead a low diamond away TRAILER
12-22-121p
Dodge
V2-ton
pickup.
Phone
located
In
Meigs
furnished,
High Ind . Game - Mary
601 East ,Main
from
his
ace."
949-2972.
Co.,
Salem
Township.
Coli
or
Mason Bowling Center
Voss 192.
POMEROY
Oswald : "That's exactly write G. C. Oiler, 880 Elaine
1-3-Jtc
Sporn
High Series - A. L. Phelps
ANOTHER TEMPTING BUY
Rd., Columbus, Ohio 235-1227.
Team
W L what happened . East could
551.
CARNIVAl.
by
Turner
- POME [U).Y - 1 story
King
Pins
u
·
i
·
1-3-31p
see no future for his side
High Series - Mary Voss
MERCURY Monterey In Q'lOd
frame,
2
bedrooms,
with
Rejects
14 2 without two diamonds and '---- - - 531.
condition, power steering,
closets, bath, utility-room In
•
10 6 one club and shot the diaTeam High Game - Forest The P. D.
power brakes. see Weber
basement, hardwood ·floors,
D
-shitt
'a
a
For Sale
Run Block 752.
across from the State Garage.
mond
right
back.
West
evengas
furnace and hot water
6
10
B
-shlft
.
12-30-31p
Team High Series - Forest
tually got in with the aee of' t---:~~-'----~-.--·:.:r·
tank, large lot, EXCELLENT
Unll No. 3
6 10
Run Block 1997.
· Wild Men •'
4 12 c lubs and gave his partner : · · • ·
CONDITION, JUST 11,. ·
'64 PONTIAC Calallna con- 900.00.
. .
A.shlft
•
2 u two diamond tricks."
'
f1
vertible. Come look this over
Team 3 games - King Pins
. Jim : "If South had taken
·.,"d3"x.DG9 • ·
Senior League
at 105 Union Ave., Phone 992- SEE THIS - POMEIM)Y- 6
2493 ; Rejects 2435.
Doc. 18, .1971
',.'
3293 between S p. m. and 8 p.
time
to
think
at
trick
two
he
room · frame, 2 ll'edrooms
Team game - King Pins 863: would have led a club toward ·
Standings
'
m
basement, porches, a•~
Team Rejects
838.
Pts.
12-30-6tc . both,
FORCED-AIR heat, GOING
dummy and set up a discar~
' , Shee
·
: •. Pin Busters
Ind. 3 qames - Ed Wright for
34
dumm y's f o u r of diaAt II,OOO.OG.
•;. Royal Crowns
30 S98; Moore 586.
52
CHEVROLET
pickup,
.
monds.
This
would
g
u
a
r
d
Ind
.
game
Ed
Wrlghl230;
: &lt;. Gutter Dusters
27
perf~ct
condition, $900 . .TUPPERS .PLAINS - A
agamst the aCt u a I card
USED OFFSET PLATES '
• Born Losers
25 Moore 215.
Serious Inquiries only. Phone
BRAND NEW SPLIT LEVEL
~ombination with very iitlle
HAVE ,
~ The Pros
19
992-6083.
.
IIRICKI
6 acres, 3 large
Tuesday
Industrial
; Strikers
9
risk."
"'ANY USES
12-29-101p
bedrooms,
closets galore, 31h
Team
.
W
.
L.
::.; High Individual Game
(Nf:WSPAPER £NTUPRISE A$$H.}
'
baths, rge glaiHII living
96 32
Burton Sunoco
,.;.Rick Stobort 188.
Coca Cola
88 38
room w
stone fireplace,
· • Second High Ind. Game '69 OOOGE Swinger 2 door
Penn
Central
68
60
dining
r
,
built-In kitchen
Rich Bailey 181.
•
hardtop V8 standard, red with
~ iiii'il.uv
-· - . .
ace, utility
64 64
. High Series - Rick ,Siobar i Mason. Agg.
black vinyl top, $1,100. '69 with dlnln
New Haven Furniture 38 80
500. .
llolkswagen, good condition · room, 2 car go rage, hot water
NO QUESTION TODAY
heat, carpet.d throughout, ·
16 48
second High series - Gene Carolina Lumber
S1 ,100. '68 Ford pickup custo,.,;
Saturday's Answer Tomorrow
fxcept baths and kitchen. A
Team J games - Burton
'
,Davis 457 . ·
·
cab, 6-cyl., 3 speed, 25,000
WONDERFUL HOME .
miles, 11,4110. Phone 992.6048.
Team High G.ame - Born Sunoco 2662; Mason Agg. 248'1.
ua.ooo.oe.
.
Team
game
-Burton
Losers 797,
.i2-27-6tp
Son-0-Guns
44
76
Sunoco
926,:
Mason
Agg.
894.
''.
TNm High Series - Born :
34 86
START THE NEW YEAR OFF
Ind. 3 games- B. Davis 591 ; Wool ies
.
Lose.-,
228~ .
111 Court St.
· ·
,•
'
J. Grate 573.
Team 3 games - iry Hards
WITH A HOME OF YOUR
P'omtroy,Ohlo ·
1970 W-30 OLDSMOBILE 442
,, .
OWN, SEE US TODAY.
.
Ind. game- R. Ohlinger 223 · 1944; P1n Spotters 1915. .
:.lr--·---'--~--'--.;J · automatic, factory stereo
F,. Reichart 215. ·
.
'
T~am game - Pin Spotters ..
_ ·'
· tape. Lotsofextras. Likenew. ·
HENRY CLELAND
I ' '
llont1m LNgue
690; Try Hards 681.
,
REALTOR
SINGER aL\tomatlc sewing Calr 992-2441 •f\tr 5 p.m .
Dec. 11, lt71. '
Ind. 3 games - Men, D.
"
Wednesday Mixed
·
Ofllce
992-2259
· Stoilcllngs·
··•.
11-28-ttc
machine . ILike new, In
Rtslanct
992-25M
Pis. Teom ..
W, L. Tennant 589 ; Women, L.
beautiful ~elnul cabinet,
82 38 Yeager 487 ; Men. B. Tennant
12-27-61c
24 Try Hards
\ ' .
makes desl n stitches, Zig- Real Estate For Sale
-'-'18 H&amp; H 71 49 560 : Women, S. Douglas 478.
zags,
button
oles.
blind
hems,
SIX ROOM houH, 133 BUtternu1:
, 71 49
Ind . game - Men, J. Ewing
15 Alley Gators
1
etc.
Will
sell
for
185.
Call
iHOtJS£;
1M2
Lfncoln
Height'
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, 2137
227
;
Women
S.
Douglas
199
Pin
Spotters
,
62
sa
1
15
Ravenswood 273-9'o93 1afltr 5 Call Danny- Thompson, . w,~:; Wadsworth Drive, Columbus,
"Mom' and Pop?
12 Sm/lh &amp; Roush
' · 62 58 Men. D. Ten~nt 223; Women,
". }ffwhlttnlnc their
~
.
.
~H
.
·
·.
.
.
;
Ohio,
·phOM
237-4334.
·
They're
In
the fr.ont
L.
Yeager
182.
54 66
knuOkltt ·at eaoh
17 I Shamrocks
•
11·21·1fc .
7-lt-lf-- .
11-21-lfc
. "
room •••
otherI"

.

AIO!Rii$.

•,

GOT 10 610P

AFTER•SI&lt;i
~SHiON't MU
I'M fiOUIEAA!NG
ANVTHiNG
SPEC··

Christmas
decorations, wearing
apparel, · jewelry,
ceramics.

HILTQN WOLFE '9~H!If
DALE DUTTON, 992·2534

BILL. NELSON 992-3457
TOM CROW, 992-2510

Phone 992-2094

Clearance Sale!

OFFICE SUPPLiES

., .FURNiruRE

_____

I ~TA. Be &lt;lRAreRIL !.:.!,~!! PROF .

~-~· .1/if MOnteR , .....ct T"
~ fAP A COMIOII1tl8ll! ~Iff 0' CRIIE '"

1.4.

POOR BUIO lll:iiR

ciJl!1JMl!l~® IJo.l Jcud!J

MOBil£ HOMES

-------

-------

BENO

I

TERRY

Sale
Alu.m1•n·.u_m

-

./

'

)

'

- ~~~ AXYDLBAAXR

a

LONGFELLOW

(;

•

One letter simply •stands for another. In this sample A Is ll~~
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single leiters, L...;:....-.-;;:..:....:...;..==~'-"'
apostrophes, the length and formation of the' words ar~ all
hints. Each day the code letters ore different.
I

·The
;Daily Sentinel

.'

I

PI-ANlTS

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's hctw to work it:

.20* .

'·

IJ

)

J~dlan

Sl. Indian
weight
.sz. Hairdo of
the 1920'•
35. French
nobleman ·
S6. Golf lnstl'llctor
37. Capek
play

!!::Of

'

I

.

- - - - - -·-

fs -.

tJ

I'

I (

ON YOUR DIAL

•

.

~~s=·r::UR::M=If..~~__L_..J.::.~"

WMP0/13~

Realty

-

l

DICK TRACY

'

A Cryplolfllll Quotation
ATBV
CRSCXD

TD

..

ALCA

SLTML

AJXTW . ~

SLTML . VWZ-D , TW
LVJFVJA

..

AP

BCW

UTRR ,

UTRR.T:WQ

TO
FNA

LTB.-

DHVWMVJ

/

•

. '.

·I

. ' '.

I

.-I,.- ·

I:Famous
poetry's
resident
Unscrimble theae four Jumble~,
Freni;b
muse
5. M. Zola
oqe letter to each 1qum, to
comedian "·Province
6. " form four ordinary words.
5. Island in
of.ltl}y
Hu111e,.
nots"--1
· Ill~ lj(edlt. U . Senepl's
9. Ndt quite
capilli
7. Eating
., ,..........,..,_
JIANIE
.,.,;.
...................
round
43. Cotnlunt 1!. Transpor11. Scout's
U. Ash Wed·
tation
Satardar'• Auwer
badge
nesday to
system
.
13. CheapEuter
10. Steno's
2'7. u_
•skate
45. Breslau's
need
Leigh"
f'l!'l£1.'
}(, French
river
12. Wobble
·,
!'lver ,
17. Massenet 31. Big
spender
15. Asian
DOWN
opera
river
1. Food for 23. Poetltal
33. Biurre
34. Type of
1•. Leatherthought
preposi·
•
smoking
working
:8. Spanish
tion
TH IS F'RIE&gt;JDLY
pipe
province 24. Phi Beta's
tool
t'ARHET
LE.TTER
WRI"TER
18. Dram3. Surposs•
ornament 39. Shoe •
1
shop's
lng the
25. Baffled
shade
15 OFTEN YOURSoffering
rest
%6. Inborn ·
U. - Jima
19. Am able ., ..,......,.,.._...,.,...
r.-r.-'T.:"-.:,20, Lo!
Now arnn(e the circled totten
21. ManicurV
,
to
form the 1urpri1e answer, u
Ing set,
.
f&gt;.
ouueoted
by tli¥ilbove cartoon.
n . one
leaving
U. Kind of
needle
(A.nlwf"rl tomorrow)
25. Host or
S
hostess
.....
rd.\·.·· lumLI"": AVAIL MAIZE FINAL£. BUTLER
ztl. Bert ,n!l'tll'f"r: Jf'hnf 1111' brll rinKt'T """"''' lti.~ tltmf.dttt•r - NELL
. 29. Suspended
3D. Colorado

l

Station

Cleland

'

HOW COMf· I'M Fffi.lrl'

MJLUR

j

.U:.T 60 'IOU WILL
ARR£6T 'fl.IEM I

POLICEWOMAN

PARKER, YOC.l'IIE

·GifT ITEMl

-GUARANTEED-

END OF YEAR

PlloHHt•lll1

Flir,Rent

'.

HA8DCRAFT

our

controls are built in. Sews .
with 1 or 2 needles, makes

DRIED!!

.....

4-

Write Personal Shoppers
Dept., Box 10, Watkins
Products, Inc., Winona, PAINT damage, 1970 Zig Zag
Minnesota 55987 .
sewing machines, sflll In
1-3-llc
orlglniil cartons. No atneeded as

· FREEZE

. '

240 uncoln St. .
Middleport, Ohio
Db1 Anthony Plumbing
We han a complete
HomeMAintenance Service
tho yeor oround. No 1111tt.r
wNif yOur Mod. Compteter'oof or spouting rep1ir.
Interior or exler,lor corpentry. Ceiling tllo ud
P1netlng ond Siding.
Complete Plumbing &amp;
Heating.
Dey Number 992-t550
We hove 24 hr. emergency
service.
742-3947
992-5803
742-4761
We are fully Insured

speed automatic chang ·r.
Balance $68.59. Use our
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
12-29-6lc

tachments

ARE. '4E
TALkiN.'
ABOUT,
ELVINEV ?

ALL WEAlHER ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTION ·
&amp; PWMBING CO.

JdHNSON' MASONRY

STEREO, ·early American . 0---;-------------------------~-----­
stereo, radio comblnlition
AM-FM radio, 4-speaker
. sound system. Balance $79.81. ·
Use our budget terms. Call
992-7085.
12-29-6tc {
WALNUT, modern style,
stereo-radio, AM-FM r§o, 4speaker

.

, WHAT

.

..

Female Hi!lp Wanted

'

'

.~~--------------------~------------~
·· ------~~~~;~~~

For Sale

SAVE up to one halt: Brll)g your
sl ck TV to Chuck's TV Shopi
151 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.
Phone 992-5080.
11-21-ttc

'

\
SEE 'Kl'RE USIN'
' 1""'•" NEW, IMPROVED
PROCESS ON TATER'S
DIAPERS, LOWEE2.V.
..

/

�•

... .
.•

..
&gt;.

•

• •

·.- •.• ·-'lbeDIIIySentlnei\'~-Pilmeroy,O.,Jan. ~,lm·

••

•

•~

.

'

LEGAL NOTICE

'

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

••'
.

.' .

•

.

.

Notice . ·

Cn• No. 20594
Est.-te of George W. Moore,

Deceased .

·· "' 130, Pomeroy , Ohio, hn been
duly appointed Administratrix

the Estate of George W.
..-·. Of
Moore , deceased , late of
'• Middlepor t. Meigs County ,
OhiO.
.

'''

Cr.ed ltors are requ ired to tile
thtlr claims with said fiduc iary

with in four mo,nths .

Dated thiS 28th dc;y 'of
December 1971.
F. H . O'Br ien
(11 J.

•
'

.

10, 17, Jt

Probate Judge
of said County

1971 CHEVEL~EMALIBU CPE.
··um
Sandal--:ood with brown vinyl top, factory air conditioned,
V-8 eng&gt;ne with turbo hydromatic, power steering, E.·
clock, P.B., radio, Rally wheels with w-w tires. Fri. &amp; rear
guards. Retail $4155. Co. Olflcial car &amp; specially priced.

.

'

.

1970 CAMARO CPE . ./
S3095
Less than 1].0110 mli'Os &amp; appear;nce of 72 model. Rally
Spool equipped, Classic copper with sandalwood.lnterlor,
tinted glass, factory air conditioned, sports mirrors,
console , air spoiler, turbo hydromatic ,
steering &amp;

power

brakes, 350 cu. in . V-8 engine. Really Sharp.

PARTY CARDIGANS
Bulky knit cardigans with
fancy cables or s i m p le
ribbed, belted and with ~ V
neckline, can be worn with
ao.bold plaid skirt and serve
as perfect party attire.

.

~

Notice is hereby gl¥en that
Anna M. Ryther , of P . o. Box ,

L ..

,

,

.

. •

,

.

·sentznel-Classifieds ·Get
Action!
Sentinel.Classified~
Get
R_
.
e
s_
u
its!
"

''

'•

. •

~)

Po11eroy Motor Co.
OPEN EYES. 1:00 P.M.
i'ptiiEROY, OHIO

.
'
WANT
AD
r----------- ~- --------------1
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P.M. Day Before Publication
Mandav Deadline 9 a.m.
, ~.a.ifOI1411on &amp; CorrOI'fiQns
I
I .~111 b(! accepted untlf9 a.m. fOr
of Publloatlon
By Helen Bottel
1 · . Day
REGULATIONS
' The Publisher reserves th&lt;
right 'to edit or reject any ad•·
LAMENT OF A YOUNG DIVORCEE
deemed
oblectlonal. The&gt;
Dear Helen :
publisher will not be responsible.
I'm 22, was married three years and have two small tor more than one Incorrect,
children. Now I'm divorced. I'm writing In hope you'll print this Insertion.
RATES
80 maybe some kids won'tbave to suffer what I'm going through.
For W~nt Ad Service
·
5 cents Rer Word one Insertion·
What is being married too young- and divorced?
Mlnlm\JI)1 Charge 75c
It's sitting borne many lonely nights wondering what went
12 cents j&gt;er word three
wrong.
consecutive Insertions.
18 cents per word six conIt's seeing how happy the kids are with their father on
secutl ve Insertions.
&amp;mdays, and then bearing them cry whl!l' they come home
25 Per Cent Discount on pel((
because Daddy baa to leave lind they don't widerstand why.
ads and ads paid within 10 cloys.
CARD OF THANKS
It's feeling 80 guilty because you know that if you and your ex "
&amp;OBITUARY
were more malll'' In mind before you jumped Into man-lage, you
S1.50 for 50 word minimum
Each additional word 2c.
could have spared them all those tears. (And yourselves too.)
BLIND ADS
. It'sgolngout lo clubs with a friend and seeing that you don't
Additional 25c Charge per
. . fit In with the kids your age.
.
Advertlsem,nt. ·
,
OFFICE HOURS
It's finally meeting a guy you think yo ·J could make it with,
8:30 ·a.m. to 5:00p.m. Dally,
' · only to find out six months later that h~ doesn't want to get in· 8:30 a .m. to 12:00 Noon
Sqturday.
· volved with a ready-made family ,
lt'uayingtoyour!!elf, "If only I had li3tened to my mother/ '
a;,d then realizing It's ~late .
Notice
It'sthe feeling of always being used. A divorcee is fair game, KOSCOT KOSMETICS and wigs
for sale . Brown's. Phone 992and If llhe doesn't play that way- it's a lonely, depressing life,
5113.
just one hurt after another.
12-3i -tfc,
It gives you a lot of time to think - something you both
shouldhavedonethreeyearsago! -- T. M.
WIN AT BRIDGE
Dear Helen :
'This man jumps on every bandwagon and rides. off In all
' '
directio111. He thinka be's another Ralph Nader, but I think he's a
•.. ·. little fellow trying to make a big noise because no one notices him
,,• ''·' otherwise.
Recently he concluded a one-man march on our company
· · because its "air pollution cauaes the secretaries' stockings to
NORTH
3
· run." He's very high on population control and ecology, both
•
A974
commendable causes, but must he spend the whole noon hour
• 9862
espousing them? AlOrstwf~ughed, now we groan, but we can't
tKQ4
llhut him up.
.Q4
il'EST
EAST
What can we do with this giddy-giddy man? - FElLOW
•
62
• KS
WORKERS
• Ql075
.J43
Dear Workers:
tJ95
tAI083
Fanaticism may be wisdom wh~ time has not yet co e. I
.A973
.1086 2
SOUTH (D)
the bosses can put up with this ~udo Ralph Nader why not y ?
• QJI083
After all, you can always walk away or out-talk him when th
.AK
crusades get too dull. - H.
• 76 2
• KJ5

:Helen Help Us:
i

,.

.

.

'

'

..

'

. ABOUT ·youR ·wEIGHT ..:·.. t:OAL, limestone. e·xcelslor
overweight ladles, teens and
Salt works .e ·Main St
"1"" Interested In a Weight Pomeroy.· Phone 992-3891 ·•
.Walthers (RJ Class In
4-9-ttc
'Pomeroy write : Welghh
·
Watchers IRJ, 1863 Sectlon. POODLE puf)ples, Silver Toy,
Rd,, Cincinnati, Ohio 45237.
Park•iew Ke~nels, Phone 99210-3-lfc 5443 . •
--"----...,---~·
8-1Hfc
INCOME TAX service, dally - - - - - - e•~ept Sunday, evenings by LONG BOTTOM- Five room
appointment. Mrs. Wanda· house, bath , business or
Eblin, Laurel Cliff Road, I storage building - $6,500.
mile west of Meigs County
l&gt;none 985-3529.
Fairground on Rt. 7 bypass.
12-19-JOic
Phone 992·227~.
1-3-30tc
GAS HEATER, 55,000 BTU,
natural or bottled gas, good
SEWING In my home. Will
condition
. with metal~tos
make drapes, cushions.
chimney,
$50. Phone 949-3211.
Phone 992-6879.
·
12-29-3tc
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _1_:_·3-121p

'

Business Services

.

- - -- - -

- -===::-:

1

LADIES - Opportunity to turn
spare time Into dollars .
Pleasant work. Choose hours.

sound

syste ,

Complete
Remod8ling

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiator to
Smallest Heater Core.
Nllhln Blll!ls
Radiator SpKia)ist

Kitchell$, Baths
Roam Adclitions
And Patil$

SMITH ftELSON
MOTORS, INC.
.
Ph. 992-2174
Pomeroy

992-7608

-----Employment Wanted

buttonholes, sews on buttons,

HAVE. WELDER, will travel. monograms, •and blind hem
Local certified welder with stitch. Full cash price, $38.50.
mobll.e gas welder wants
Budget plan available. Phone
welding lobs. Any evening 992-5641.
after 6:30 and all day
12-29-6tc
Saturday. Phone 992-5271 .
1-3-6tp BAND Saw .and motor. Phone
992-9981.
INTERIOR painting. Call Don
12-31 -3tc
VanMeter 985-3951. 12-19-12tp
' -==:::;::======:..:.~
1

- - -- --

W[LL DO babysitting In my
home. Also housework 2 clays
a week. Phone 992-5972.
12-30-41c

Wanted To Buy
OLD FURNITURE, Round Oak
tables, Brass beds, dishes,
cloch, and-or com~lete
households . Write M. D
·Miller, Rt. 4,' Pomeroy, Ohio:
Call 992-6271.
12-17-tfc

.

EXPERT
Wheel ---Alignment

local Bowling

AFTEit.

'TOO~Y

INNOCENT 'MEN
ARE CONFE651N&lt;O
10 CRIMES ...

MIGI-\T'S WELL. '"--'""

';55

· ·open BTii'S
Ma,nday thru Soturdly '
606 E, Main, Pomeroy, 0 .

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

Home Units
24-Hour Service

Virgil B•..
TEAFORD

POMIROY •

f&gt;IG"''!!

MARTHA ROSE, oWner .
.
1
Locotod on County Rold 34·
ne•r Royal Oak Pork. W1tch.
for Signs.
Open every dly except'
Mondly
·
1 P.M. til7 P.M.

Also Furnace Repair
'

Real Estate For Sale

Jack w. Cartty, Mer.

DON'T PA'/ A~ ATnWnON
TO HIM-Si_GN,KID-

AG~IN'ec-1

_HIDDENTREASURES
GIFT \SHOP

All Commeltial &amp;

PomeiUJ Home ·&amp; Auto

Buy Any Fuel Oil

WEARING 5EI:f
UNIFORMS!

Dolls, all dressed In slyte,'
knitted 1nd crocheted. ( H••
to be seen to be apprecillodl .
Many lt.ms you h1vo been
looking for, ~r INII perfoct
gilt. ' . .

Senice &amp;Repair

.

• PH. 992-7260

C&amp;M
REfRIGERATION
..
SERVICE

,.,.

... I'M SURE TW£ a.D ZAN
Hb.D A LOr OF LDI'AL

1'DU.OWERS.
- THEY'Re
DOUND 10 HEl.P ,HIM!

PdMEROY
·~OME &amp; AUTO

SR.

Take First
Things First

'

IT M&amp;ANS

· KIN USE FIVE.
THOUSAN' A
WEEK-

FURNISHED and unfurnished TROPICAL FISH. fancy ·
NEIGLER Building Supply .
apartments. Close to school guppies, angels and breeders,
992-2094
Bellas
and
supplies.
Phone
Free estimate on building '
Phone 992-543-4.
.
992-5443.
yoyr
new
home.
Will
draw
10-18-tfc
406 ~- M;itn Pomeroy ,
Broker
12-30-ttc
r!hts to suit the lay of your ·
r.
110 Michonlc Strttt
and. Call Guy Nelgler,
50xl2 TWO BEDROOM mobile
. Pomeroy, Ohio
Racine,
Ohio. For reRPir ••d
home, gas heat, Sycamore · 352 FORD motor 10x28 tractor
.. ., £lid
.
.
aluminum
siding, soffet and
St., Middleport. Phone 992- ti re, young fry~rs . Phone 843gutter.
Call
DOnald
Smith,
.
LOT$7004 or 992-3585, Danny 2778.
Racine, Ohio.
·
Thompson .
12-30-6tc IN MEIGS sch~~ l district .
...,.:...
10-7-ttc
Restricted area. $2,000.00.
12-23-tfc - - - - - - - - - Stop• In and See O•i .' ·
Floor Display.
NEW
I;IACKHOE AND OOZER wilr~.
NICE TRAILER; 1 bedrocim, APPLES - Fitzpatrick Orchards,
State
Route
689
,
• BEDROOMS. 2 baths, hot · Septic tanks Installed. George
Ideal for couple, 10 miles
...
.r
' •• •
I Blil) Pullins. Phone 992-2418.
north of Pomeroy. Phone 992- ph~e Wilesvllle, 669-3785. · water heat. Fireplace, dishUPHOLSTERING
SERVICE,
9-3-tfc
washer . Full basement.. _________4-_25-lfc
6452 .
complete selection of fabrics
Double garage. 5 wooded ·
12-15-tfc
and
vinyl to choose from.
acres. Only_$30,000.00.
HARRISON'S TV and Aniema.
Pick-up
and delivery. Slater
service.
Phone
992-2522.
1 BEDROOM and 2 bedroom Mobile Homes For Sale
Upholstering, Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
BEDROOMS
6-10-ttc
I
mobile homes. Adults only .
phone 992-3417.
NICE bath, floor furnace •
Phone 992-5592.
12-27-lOip
fireplace. Dining room, SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
12·19-tfc
basement. Garage, Large lot . Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio, Ph.
• Some fruit. Only $8,000.00 .
O'DE"LL ' WHEEL ·allgnmtlnf
662-:j035.
TRAiLE-IftOTS, Bob's '""'i,jj;'
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
2-12-ttc
None vulnerable
Court, Rt . 124, Syracuse,
2 BEDROOMS
Complete frOiit end service,
Jhlo. 992-2951.
NICE little cozy place. Bath, READY -MIX
Wes t North East South
CONCRETE
tune up end brake service.
beautiful
oak
floors.
4-2-lfc
delivered
right
·to
your•
Wheels balanced elecHigh Individual ' Game
Pomeroy Notionol Bonk
Basement. Only $6,500.00.
··easy.
Free
Ironically.
All
work'l
pro/ect.
Fast
and
~
Pass
3
•
Pass
Greg
Smith
124.
~
senior LNgue
12'
•
14'
·
24'
•
WiDE
.
guaranteed.
Reasonable
est mates. Phone 992-3284
Pa!:S
Pass
Pass
NEW,
12
~ 60, 2 bedroom mobile
Second
High
Ind.
Game
Standings
'3 BEI)ROOMS
..
Goegleln Ready-MI• Co.;
rates. P_hone 992-3213.
home across from Bradbury
Burt 122.
Opening lead-· 5' ~
Teom
Pis. David
NEAT,
l'f2
baths,
Iorge
living,
School
.
Call
992-5308
or
see
Middleport.
Ohio.
.
.
7-27-tfc
High Series - Greg Smith
Thundering Herd
33 220.
dining, wall to wall carpeting,
Charles
Lewis,
2nd
houH
6-30-ttc•
· ··
Raiders
30
gas fireplace. Modern kitBy
Oswald
&amp;
James
Jacoby
south
from
Bradbury
School
.
Second
High
Series
Lori
· Rams
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
25 Faulk, DavidrSmlth 199 .
chen, refrigerator, electric .S_E_P_T-IC-TA_N_K_S_C_L_E_A-NED
Pets welcome.
Strike Outs
19
Oswald:
"Here
is
a
simple
range,
garbage
disposal.
12-27-ttc '
1220 WIShintton Blvd.
Team High Game
Red
Reasonable rates. Ph. 446-4782,
~c.'\~~~9~~~lcJ - - · Bengals
19 Barons
Double garage.
,
hand with features of great
683.
Belpre, Ohio
Gallipolis.
John
Russell,
Racine, Ohio
Zodiac's
18
WE HAVE
Team High Series
Red mterest. North's j u m p to 4 ROOM HOUSE, furnished at
Owner &amp; Operator.
Crill Bradford
High Individual Game
37
PROPERTIES
Barons 1345.
three spades is a limit raise
124 Laurel St., Pomeroy. Call
5-12-lfc
5-1-ffc
Steve Bachner 175.
HELEN L. TEAFO~D,
992-5836
or Inquire at 126 60x12, 2 bedroom, all -electric,
but So.uth has enough above
· second High Ind. Game --~~~~~
=-~-------ASSOCIATE
air conditioned, 8'x20' porch
Laurel St.
Wednesd1y Afternoon
. Steve Bachner 170.
a mtmmum to warrant go992-3325
992-2371
AUTOMOBILE lnsurance'~t:WtNG MACHINES. Repair' ·
and
aluminum
awning,
League
12-J0-6tc
High Series - Steve Bachner
mg
to
game
."
12-31-6tc
bel!!' cancelled? Lost your' service, all makes. 992-2284.
aluminum
skirting
,
com.
Dec.
29,
1971
476.
operator's
license? Call 992- The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.,
Jim
:
"With
pi
th
e
r
the
Standings
NEW 2.BEDROOM, double r.lelely setup, beautiful
Second High Ser ies 2966.
Authorized Singer Sales and
3
BEDROOM
ranch
type
home;
spade
finesse
working
or
the
Team
w.
L.
George Gum 395.
wide,
mobile
home
on
lot
In
~~~
..
~r
~~·~~~2~~~te.
'
'6·15-tfc
service.
We Sharpen Scissors.
Arbaugh
Addition,
Tuppers
Baum
's
Lumber
44
12
ace of diamonds on the right
Team High ' Game - Rams
Syracuse. Completely. fur 12-30-tf&lt;
. 3-29-ttc
Plains. All new with total ·--'--~---'-;~
Team No . 4
38 18 side four spades is a lay
. 940. .
nlshed.
Phone
992-2441
after
5
-electric
and
central
air
No. 1
28 28 down . However, both cards
Team High Series - Rams Team
p.m.
conditioning, bath and o;,,
Welker's Ashland
21 35 are wrong. A · diamond lead
1553.
1-3-lfc FOR THE BEST deal In a new
fully carpeted, full basement, Real Estate For Sale
Ridenour's T.V.
19 37
- or used · mobile home, try
garage In basement. See · by . .
Gaul's Shake Haven
18 38 will defeat the contract. "
'
The
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
Oswald: "Fortunately for D.A.V, home In Pomeroy for
appointment, phone 992-2196 NICE 2-story · home with filii
High Individual Game
Early Sunday
or 992-3585. Danny Thompson.
Barbara Murray 165.
South, . West had a normal
group meetings and parties, Kanauga, Ohio.
basement, 2 lois, new forced'
Mixed League
12-17-901c
Financing
available.
phone
992-5247.
Second
High
In~
.
Game
furnace . Near . Pomeroy,
air
opening
lead
of
a
heart'
so
,,
Doc. 29. 1971
That Li&amp;tens
Patty Thomas 144.
12-30-ttc
12-19-121c
Eiemenlary School. . Phon"'
Standings
that South should have made
High Series - Barbara his contract."
992-7384 to see.
Team
Pts. Murray
S
387
.
11-7-lfc
Tom's Carry CM
82
Jim : "Your use of 'should' 2 BEDROOM mobile home In Auto ales
To You
Se.cond. High Series - Patty'
,
,
Eagles Club
81
. implies that South went
Racine area. Phone 992 ·6329. 1968 PONTIAC Fireblrd J50 Cu
Thomas
360.
Racine Food Market
66
12-14-lfc ln., 4-speed, black-red
'
In-·
Team High Game - Team down. I assume he tr•"ed the
Forest Run Block
63
RACINE - 10 room , house,
spade finesse at trick two
terlor. Phone 949-2921.
Roseberry's Sohlo
54 No. 4 831.
bath, basement, garage, two
Team
High
Series
Baum
and that after taking his For Rent or Lease
1-3-6tp
Farmers Bank
38
lots
. No reasonable offer
·
High Individual Game - A. Lumber 630.
king East was smart enough
refused
. Phone 949-4313 ..
HOME, 2-bedroom, '65 GMC 'h-ton ~lckup, '62
L. Phelps 244.
to lead a low diamond away TRAILER
12-22-121p
Dodge
V2-ton
pickup.
Phone
located
In
Meigs
furnished,
High Ind . Game - Mary
601 East ,Main
from
his
ace."
949-2972.
Co.,
Salem
Township.
Coli
or
Mason Bowling Center
Voss 192.
POMEROY
Oswald : "That's exactly write G. C. Oiler, 880 Elaine
1-3-Jtc
Sporn
High Series - A. L. Phelps
ANOTHER TEMPTING BUY
Rd., Columbus, Ohio 235-1227.
Team
W L what happened . East could
551.
CARNIVAl.
by
Turner
- POME [U).Y - 1 story
King
Pins
u
·
i
·
1-3-31p
see no future for his side
High Series - Mary Voss
MERCURY Monterey In Q'lOd
frame,
2
bedrooms,
with
Rejects
14 2 without two diamonds and '---- - - 531.
condition, power steering,
closets, bath, utility-room In
•
10 6 one club and shot the diaTeam High Game - Forest The P. D.
power brakes. see Weber
basement, hardwood ·floors,
D
-shitt
'a
a
For Sale
Run Block 752.
across from the State Garage.
mond
right
back.
West
evengas
furnace and hot water
6
10
B
-shlft
.
12-30-31p
Team High Series - Forest
tually got in with the aee of' t---:~~-'----~-.--·:.:r·
tank, large lot, EXCELLENT
Unll No. 3
6 10
Run Block 1997.
· Wild Men •'
4 12 c lubs and gave his partner : · · • ·
CONDITION, JUST 11,. ·
'64 PONTIAC Calallna con- 900.00.
. .
A.shlft
•
2 u two diamond tricks."
'
f1
vertible. Come look this over
Team 3 games - King Pins
. Jim : "If South had taken
·.,"d3"x.DG9 • ·
Senior League
at 105 Union Ave., Phone 992- SEE THIS - POMEIM)Y- 6
2493 ; Rejects 2435.
Doc. 18, .1971
',.'
3293 between S p. m. and 8 p.
time
to
think
at
trick
two
he
room · frame, 2 ll'edrooms
Team game - King Pins 863: would have led a club toward ·
Standings
'
m
basement, porches, a•~
Team Rejects
838.
Pts.
12-30-6tc . both,
FORCED-AIR heat, GOING
dummy and set up a discar~
' , Shee
·
: •. Pin Busters
Ind. 3 qames - Ed Wright for
34
dumm y's f o u r of diaAt II,OOO.OG.
•;. Royal Crowns
30 S98; Moore 586.
52
CHEVROLET
pickup,
.
monds.
This
would
g
u
a
r
d
Ind
.
game
Ed
Wrlghl230;
: &lt;. Gutter Dusters
27
perf~ct
condition, $900 . .TUPPERS .PLAINS - A
agamst the aCt u a I card
USED OFFSET PLATES '
• Born Losers
25 Moore 215.
Serious Inquiries only. Phone
BRAND NEW SPLIT LEVEL
~ombination with very iitlle
HAVE ,
~ The Pros
19
992-6083.
.
IIRICKI
6 acres, 3 large
Tuesday
Industrial
; Strikers
9
risk."
"'ANY USES
12-29-101p
bedrooms,
closets galore, 31h
Team
.
W
.
L.
::.; High Individual Game
(Nf:WSPAPER £NTUPRISE A$$H.}
'
baths, rge glaiHII living
96 32
Burton Sunoco
,.;.Rick Stobort 188.
Coca Cola
88 38
room w
stone fireplace,
· • Second High Ind. Game '69 OOOGE Swinger 2 door
Penn
Central
68
60
dining
r
,
built-In kitchen
Rich Bailey 181.
•
hardtop V8 standard, red with
~ iiii'il.uv
-· - . .
ace, utility
64 64
. High Series - Rick ,Siobar i Mason. Agg.
black vinyl top, $1,100. '69 with dlnln
New Haven Furniture 38 80
500. .
llolkswagen, good condition · room, 2 car go rage, hot water
NO QUESTION TODAY
heat, carpet.d throughout, ·
16 48
second High series - Gene Carolina Lumber
S1 ,100. '68 Ford pickup custo,.,;
Saturday's Answer Tomorrow
fxcept baths and kitchen. A
Team J games - Burton
'
,Davis 457 . ·
·
cab, 6-cyl., 3 speed, 25,000
WONDERFUL HOME .
miles, 11,4110. Phone 992.6048.
Team High G.ame - Born Sunoco 2662; Mason Agg. 248'1.
ua.ooo.oe.
.
Team
game
-Burton
Losers 797,
.i2-27-6tp
Son-0-Guns
44
76
Sunoco
926,:
Mason
Agg.
894.
''.
TNm High Series - Born :
34 86
START THE NEW YEAR OFF
Ind. 3 games- B. Davis 591 ; Wool ies
.
Lose.-,
228~ .
111 Court St.
· ·
,•
'
J. Grate 573.
Team 3 games - iry Hards
WITH A HOME OF YOUR
P'omtroy,Ohlo ·
1970 W-30 OLDSMOBILE 442
,, .
OWN, SEE US TODAY.
.
Ind. game- R. Ohlinger 223 · 1944; P1n Spotters 1915. .
:.lr--·---'--~--'--.;J · automatic, factory stereo
F,. Reichart 215. ·
.
'
T~am game - Pin Spotters ..
_ ·'
· tape. Lotsofextras. Likenew. ·
HENRY CLELAND
I ' '
llont1m LNgue
690; Try Hards 681.
,
REALTOR
SINGER aL\tomatlc sewing Calr 992-2441 •f\tr 5 p.m .
Dec. 11, lt71. '
Ind. 3 games - Men, D.
"
Wednesday Mixed
·
Ofllce
992-2259
· Stoilcllngs·
··•.
11-28-ttc
machine . ILike new, In
Rtslanct
992-25M
Pis. Teom ..
W, L. Tennant 589 ; Women, L.
beautiful ~elnul cabinet,
82 38 Yeager 487 ; Men. B. Tennant
12-27-61c
24 Try Hards
\ ' .
makes desl n stitches, Zig- Real Estate For Sale
-'-'18 H&amp; H 71 49 560 : Women, S. Douglas 478.
zags,
button
oles.
blind
hems,
SIX ROOM houH, 133 BUtternu1:
, 71 49
Ind . game - Men, J. Ewing
15 Alley Gators
1
etc.
Will
sell
for
185.
Call
iHOtJS£;
1M2
Lfncoln
Height'
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, 2137
227
;
Women
S.
Douglas
199
Pin
Spotters
,
62
sa
1
15
Ravenswood 273-9'o93 1afltr 5 Call Danny- Thompson, . w,~:; Wadsworth Drive, Columbus,
"Mom' and Pop?
12 Sm/lh &amp; Roush
' · 62 58 Men. D. Ten~nt 223; Women,
". }ffwhlttnlnc their
~
.
.
~H
.
·
·.
.
.
;
Ohio,
·phOM
237-4334.
·
They're
In
the fr.ont
L.
Yeager
182.
54 66
knuOkltt ·at eaoh
17 I Shamrocks
•
11·21·1fc .
7-lt-lf-- .
11-21-lfc
. "
room •••
otherI"

.

AIO!Rii$.

•,

GOT 10 610P

AFTER•SI&lt;i
~SHiON't MU
I'M fiOUIEAA!NG
ANVTHiNG
SPEC··

Christmas
decorations, wearing
apparel, · jewelry,
ceramics.

HILTQN WOLFE '9~H!If
DALE DUTTON, 992·2534

BILL. NELSON 992-3457
TOM CROW, 992-2510

Phone 992-2094

Clearance Sale!

OFFICE SUPPLiES

., .FURNiruRE

_____

I ~TA. Be &lt;lRAreRIL !.:.!,~!! PROF .

~-~· .1/if MOnteR , .....ct T"
~ fAP A COMIOII1tl8ll! ~Iff 0' CRIIE '"

1.4.

POOR BUIO lll:iiR

ciJl!1JMl!l~® IJo.l Jcud!J

MOBil£ HOMES

-------

-------

BENO

I

TERRY

Sale
Alu.m1•n·.u_m

-

./

'

)

'

- ~~~ AXYDLBAAXR

a

LONGFELLOW

(;

•

One letter simply •stands for another. In this sample A Is ll~~
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single leiters, L...;:....-.-;;:..:....:...;..==~'-"'
apostrophes, the length and formation of the' words ar~ all
hints. Each day the code letters ore different.
I

·The
;Daily Sentinel

.'

I

PI-ANlTS

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's hctw to work it:

.20* .

'·

IJ

)

J~dlan

Sl. Indian
weight
.sz. Hairdo of
the 1920'•
35. French
nobleman ·
S6. Golf lnstl'llctor
37. Capek
play

!!::Of

'

I

.

- - - - - -·-

fs -.

tJ

I'

I (

ON YOUR DIAL

•

.

~~s=·r::UR::M=If..~~__L_..J.::.~"

WMP0/13~

Realty

-

l

DICK TRACY

'

A Cryplolfllll Quotation
ATBV
CRSCXD

TD

..

ALCA

SLTML

AJXTW . ~

SLTML . VWZ-D , TW
LVJFVJA

..

AP

BCW

UTRR ,

UTRR.T:WQ

TO
FNA

LTB.-

DHVWMVJ

/

•

. '.

·I

. ' '.

I

.-I,.- ·

I:Famous
poetry's
resident
Unscrimble theae four Jumble~,
Freni;b
muse
5. M. Zola
oqe letter to each 1qum, to
comedian "·Province
6. " form four ordinary words.
5. Island in
of.ltl}y
Hu111e,.
nots"--1
· Ill~ lj(edlt. U . Senepl's
9. Ndt quite
capilli
7. Eating
., ,..........,..,_
JIANIE
.,.,;.
...................
round
43. Cotnlunt 1!. Transpor11. Scout's
U. Ash Wed·
tation
Satardar'• Auwer
badge
nesday to
system
.
13. CheapEuter
10. Steno's
2'7. u_
•skate
45. Breslau's
need
Leigh"
f'l!'l£1.'
}(, French
river
12. Wobble
·,
!'lver ,
17. Massenet 31. Big
spender
15. Asian
DOWN
opera
river
1. Food for 23. Poetltal
33. Biurre
34. Type of
1•. Leatherthought
preposi·
•
smoking
working
:8. Spanish
tion
TH IS F'RIE&gt;JDLY
pipe
province 24. Phi Beta's
tool
t'ARHET
LE.TTER
WRI"TER
18. Dram3. Surposs•
ornament 39. Shoe •
1
shop's
lng the
25. Baffled
shade
15 OFTEN YOURSoffering
rest
%6. Inborn ·
U. - Jima
19. Am able ., ..,......,.,.._...,.,...
r.-r.-'T.:"-.:,20, Lo!
Now arnn(e the circled totten
21. ManicurV
,
to
form the 1urpri1e answer, u
Ing set,
.
f&gt;.
ouueoted
by tli¥ilbove cartoon.
n . one
leaving
U. Kind of
needle
(A.nlwf"rl tomorrow)
25. Host or
S
hostess
.....
rd.\·.·· lumLI"": AVAIL MAIZE FINAL£. BUTLER
ztl. Bert ,n!l'tll'f"r: Jf'hnf 1111' brll rinKt'T """"''' lti.~ tltmf.dttt•r - NELL
. 29. Suspended
3D. Colorado

l

Station

Cleland

'

HOW COMf· I'M Fffi.lrl'

MJLUR

j

.U:.T 60 'IOU WILL
ARR£6T 'fl.IEM I

POLICEWOMAN

PARKER, YOC.l'IIE

·GifT ITEMl

-GUARANTEED-

END OF YEAR

PlloHHt•lll1

Flir,Rent

'.

HA8DCRAFT

our

controls are built in. Sews .
with 1 or 2 needles, makes

DRIED!!

.....

4-

Write Personal Shoppers
Dept., Box 10, Watkins
Products, Inc., Winona, PAINT damage, 1970 Zig Zag
Minnesota 55987 .
sewing machines, sflll In
1-3-llc
orlglniil cartons. No atneeded as

· FREEZE

. '

240 uncoln St. .
Middleport, Ohio
Db1 Anthony Plumbing
We han a complete
HomeMAintenance Service
tho yeor oround. No 1111tt.r
wNif yOur Mod. Compteter'oof or spouting rep1ir.
Interior or exler,lor corpentry. Ceiling tllo ud
P1netlng ond Siding.
Complete Plumbing &amp;
Heating.
Dey Number 992-t550
We hove 24 hr. emergency
service.
742-3947
992-5803
742-4761
We are fully Insured

speed automatic chang ·r.
Balance $68.59. Use our
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
12-29-6lc

tachments

ARE. '4E
TALkiN.'
ABOUT,
ELVINEV ?

ALL WEAlHER ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTION ·
&amp; PWMBING CO.

JdHNSON' MASONRY

STEREO, ·early American . 0---;-------------------------~-----­
stereo, radio comblnlition
AM-FM radio, 4-speaker
. sound system. Balance $79.81. ·
Use our budget terms. Call
992-7085.
12-29-6tc {
WALNUT, modern style,
stereo-radio, AM-FM r§o, 4speaker

.

, WHAT

.

..

Female Hi!lp Wanted

'

'

.~~--------------------~------------~
·· ------~~~~;~~~

For Sale

SAVE up to one halt: Brll)g your
sl ck TV to Chuck's TV Shopi
151 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.
Phone 992-5080.
11-21-ttc

'

\
SEE 'Kl'RE USIN'
' 1""'•" NEW, IMPROVED
PROCESS ON TATER'S
DIAPERS, LOWEE2.V.
..

/

�.
'

i,

'

'

~ ·-'lbeDIU)'Senllnei,Middeport·PmleroY,O.,Jan.3,1r12

'':

'

•

,.

;j

:.; ;l·Rockets
•

' . ,.,

'

t

;

'

SAIGON (UPI) - Guen;illas
· ' ' ftr~ four rockets into the hllge
U.S. Alr Force base at Da Nang ·
today in the first attack there
: Iince Aug. 25 and heavily
·-: libelled three South Vlet•namese bases near the
' ' · ·: Cam!Jodian crossroads town of
• Krek, military sources
·· reported.
• It was the second shelling
·.attack against the three Krek
.;bases in two days. The com' manct&gt; also reported the
, .:Communists hit South Vietna-mese positions just -below the
· Demilitarized Zone Sunday
,. with 10 rounds of 82 millimeter
. mortar shells.
About one-fifth of the recent
five days of air strikes against

.

~

Nortl1 Vi~tnam were: flown
fiom Da Nang and the rocket
attack appeared to be in
retaliation. It came shortly
after the Communists ended
their three-day : New Year's
truce. One man was hurt and
three planes damaged,
In tl1e Krek area of Cambodia, about 85 miles northwest .
of saigon, the Comrilunists
appear¢ to be tsking advantage of a partial South"
Vietnamese withdrawal from
the rubber country.
. Military ~urces said tl1e
guerrillas moved in close
enough to one armored cavalry
base camp tl1ree miles northeast of Krek to fire shortrange
B40 rocket grenades at it. They

South
VietnaA
mese airbol'l\e division was
pulled out of the area last W&lt;!!k
and sent to the Central
Highland!!' where a major
9!mmunist offWisive is ex.. ·
peeled . .
At Da Nang, 370 miles north
of Saigon and 100 mile~
southeast of the Demilitarized
Zone, the Communists fired
Soviet-built 100 i&gt;ound 122 mm .
,rockets.
,

Common Cause Sets Targets
'

.·
(Continued from Pilge -11
::wrgets and supply build-up areas" and made necessary by what
;:he claimed were enerriy activities that imperiled remaining U.S.
::forces in the South.
:: -Maintained tl1at despite, some skepticism about summit
::meetings, he was heading for sessions with the RuSllians and
::a.tnese because "unless we talk about differences eventually we
may ~d. up fl&amp;hling abuut them!'
.
. "
-Ji[hted that he had decided to resume the sale of Phantom jet
fighters to Israel. But he gave no details on bow many planes
·were involved and when the shipments would begin.
-Left somewhat unclear what -If any ..ground rules he
would set down on granting amnesty to young men who have fled
the country to avoid the draft. The President said he would be
"very liberal" on the question after Americans were no longer
fighting in Vietnam and all U.S. POW's had been freed . He added
it would have to be on the basis of individuals "paying the price,
of course, that an.vone should pay, for violating the law."

f•*************£ Jlaul RVallace

.~

i
il

-tr

THOUGHT ~
FOR TODAY
Fear not that thy life shall !
come to an end, but ..,..
A

Dies on Sunday

t Wallace,
DEXTER Paul
78, Dexter Route 1,
A.

rather fear that If shall il died Sunday morning at
~ never have a beginning . il O'Bleness Hospital in Athens.
il
Mr . Wallace was a retired
il
-Cardinal Newman • farmer of the Salem Center
11: area and was a member of Star
il
: Grange 778. He had farmed
• lfs Quick! ~ 'il over 30 years.
ir
i(
Surviving &lt;li re his wife,
il Lottie; a foster daughter,
il
: Gertrude
Newheart
of
il California; a sister, Mrs. May
il
F 'd
Onl
il Arbogast, Huntington, W. Va.;
'il
n_ a YS .Y
il a brother, Joe in Montana, and
i1 The Drfe· in Wmdow : ahalf-brother, Henry, of Utah.
:
IS Open
il Funeral services wili be held
il
·9 A.M._to 1 P.M.
. : at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the
:
( Conhnuously)
ir Martin Funeral Home . in
il Other B~nking Hours 9 to 3 il Rutland With the Rev. Williard
il and s to 1 · as usual on il Dutcher officiating. Burial will
il Fridays.
il be in the Standish Cemetery at
il
: Dexter. Friends m&amp;Y'C&amp;Iiatlhe
il funeral home any time
beginning Tuesday.
il
i1
COUNCIL TO MEET
POMEROY, OHIO
il Installation of officers will be
'II: , Member FDIC
: held when Chester Council No.
il
Member Federal
il 323 Daughters of America
Reserve System
c m~tat the halL Officers are t~

t

:

1t****

: DRIVE-IN
: BANKING

: fARMERS BANK
• and SAVINGS CO• t

t

!.

***************" weilr white.

PRlCES ARE RIGHT!

Gardner, in 8 UP! Washington Window interview, said his
230,01)().member group would
eschew partisan polltics and
instead concentrate Its efforts
·
on Congressional
and state
legislative reform, on campaign spending limitations
andmon lobbying controls.
He called state legislatures
"among the most scapdalous1y
operated instrumentalities in
this country.
·
"It's going to be a long time
before we have full time state
· wo uld be
legislatures, bo t 1t
cheaper at the price,
believe me ... Most of
them are ~iddled with
conflict of interest, riddled with corruption and
wholly inadequate instruments
of self government. "The conflict of interest in
the state legislatures is the
worst evil that they have,"
Gardner added. "Tbere are
men making Jaws who most of
the time are iii the employ of
the interests they are making
the Jaws about."
Gardner's a Republican who
was Secretary of Health,
Education and Welfare during
the Johnson administration. He
also said taxpayers would be
saving money if they supported
government-financed political
campaigns.
• "I think it would be the
biggest bargain the American
people ever got if !My just took
over the cost of campaigning
he
said.
thl!mselves,"
"Because whep tl1ey hand the
cost of campaigning over to
these big interests, what comes
back to tl1ose big interests in
political favor's is 10, 20, 30, 100
· times as much money out of
our taxpayers' pockets."

'

WASHINGTON (UPI)- In
another report on the collapse
of the Penn t;entral Railroad,
congressiona} investigators
have detailed the unsuccessful
efforts of one of the line's board
members to prevent the
bankruptcy.
The House Banking Committee stsff rep_ort said board
member RobertS. Odell of San
Francisco started, in the fall of
1969, to warn other board
members of the railroad's
troubles. The bankruptcy
occurred in June of 1970.
The investigators said
Odell's effor.ts · to deal with

BUDGET
SHOP!

· BAKER

"com~

pletely ignored" by Stuart T.
Saunders, chairman of the
railroad; and the line's chief
financial . officer, David C.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight &amp; Tuesday
- :.January 3·4

FOOL'S PARADE
(Hchnlcolorl
Ja"]es Stewart
George Kennedy

fiiNITUII
IIDDI.IPOIT, 0.

"G P"

1

1oi~:,rvcotorcartoons':

'

and Wilbur
the Dog
Note

SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

•

.

,
.

I ,

Five to 10 ·pet': · increases
authorized for 2.5 million
veterans and survivors by two
· bills signed December 15 will
be reflected in February
checks the Veterans Ad·
ministration reported tod~y.
The ·increases are effective
Jan. I but wiU not show up in
checks unUI early February.
The increases will cost an
estimated $195 million the first
year.
-CommenUng on the two new
laws at ·a recent ·press conference, Administrator· of
Veterans Affairs Donald E.
Johnson declared:
"I cannot begin ' to tell you
how very pleaaed the President
and all of us are with this new
legislation. This is chiefly
because those who benefit are
mostly older low-income
veterans who are totally
disabled .and widows and
children who most need this·
financiat-support."
Public Law 92-198 provide.s
6.5 pet. ·cost of living increases
11&gt;2.2 million veterans, widows
and children who · draw VA
benefits based on the death or
disability of veterans for
nonservice .. connected caut:es.
First year cost of the increases
is estimated at $127.2 million.
By signing this legislation
tl1e VA Administrator pointed
out the President has
prevented hardships which
would have arisen January I
wben social security increases
become effective. Without the
legislation 1,150,000 pensioners

· R 0U8h es ObServe
Grover
·
.
Anniversary
· Nuinher 65 ·

-

-

.

-

. _,

,'i ,'!

TV. ·~

'\

l

Rev. Neace of

I

'

-

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

President of Council ·,

. VOL XXIV

NO.

Mr. Collins, a hauling con.
tractor in high'l'aY construction, is married .to the
former Pandora Strickland.
T~ey re~i~e on Lincoln Heights
and are lhe parents of one son,
Ronald.
Council gave three required
readings to the appropriation
budget providing $621,906.28
for 1ocal government for the
fiscal year 1972 (see detsils
elsewhere).
Mayor Baronick named the
following committees:
, Safety and parking meter
committee, Lucien Poulin,
chairman, ·Jim Mee~ and Don
Collins; finance committee,
Ralph · Werry, chairman,
Poulin, arid William Snouffer ;
utility and sanitary committee,

•

Now You Know

. The dove actually is one of
.the most warlike creatures on
earth. Unlike most animals,
birds and fish which have ~uilt­
in inhibitions against ki!Ung or
even seriously hurting
members of their own species,
·the dove has no such
Inhibitions.

Pomeroy Council in 'its first
session of the new year Monday night approved its annual
: budget, elected Don Colllna its .
presid'ent, and appointed
former Mayor Charles .Legar
lo tl1e Board of Public Affairs.
Legar was named to the
.. board. to fill the varancy
created by tl1e resignation of .
· newly-elected Mayor William
B'aronick, who succeeded
Logan ,Jan. 1. .
Mr. Collins first became
president of council on Jan. I,
1970, a year ago, when he
succeeded Leslie Fultz, who
resigned. He began his service
on council on 1959 when ap'
pointed to fill the unexpired
term of· Don Mullen, who
resigned.

sell, ordinance commlttee,

Russell, chairman, Snouffer
and Poulin; street committee .•
Collins, chairman, Werry and
Mees.
In o.ther roullne actions,
· council gave three required
readi~gs to an ordinance lo
renew notes covering a loan of
$12,000 used to resurface
village streets. Total amount of
the original notes was $15,000
which is to be paid by 1976.
Council also renewed its
lease with the Pomeroy
Emergency Squad, Inc., for
two years.
Co\incil approved the appointment· of Calvin Lane as
· street commissioner for

•

at

e

Mees, . chairman, Collins
and Mrs. Elma · Rus-

Rain spreading eastward
across southern Ohio, changing
to snow this afternoon. Accumulations of I to 3 inches,
higher amounts in the north.
Colder tonight, lows in the low
20s. Wednesday highs in the
uoner 30s.

'

1::85::..__ __ _ _ _ _PO.:._M_E_:RO_Y·_M1+DD_LE_P_OR_:T,_O_HI
_O_ _ _ _ _ _T.:_UE_SD_A...:.Y,~JA_N_UA_RY_4.:..,_
19_
72_-'---~-•

Meeting with council were
members of the Methodist
Church Youth Fellowship with
(Continued on page 8)

Weather

Devoted To Tlae Intereats OJ The Meigs-Mason Area
·

another year and re-appointed
Phil Globolw' lo the b&lt;iar~ of
cemetery trJlllleeS.
Baronick,, fulfilling his
campaign promise, appointea
three per11ons to a new
"cultural and restoration
committee." Its members
selected at-large, ·Will' oriake
recornmendallons to' council
·relative lo buildings that might
better be lorn down or rebuilt,
and to a general cleanup of tl1e
town. Appointed on the committee were Dorothea Fisher,
chairman, Nancy REred and
Doris Ewing.

PHONE

TEN CENTS

992-2156

•

Medical Copters
In Vietnam Carry
Machine Guns too
•

.

• HOLIDAY HAPPINESS came to residenls of the Melgil County Infirmary from many
directions, Among the young persons.taking time to make the hollday brighter for the folks at
the infirmllry were these boys of Middleport Cub Scout Pack 24o.

N~ws... in

Briefs
'

BY UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
THERE WERE 1%5 pollcemen murdered last year - the
highest one-year toll ever and 25 more than in 1970. The FBI said
Monday 20 of the officers died in ambush-type attacks, 24 were
killed responding to robbery calls, 20 were slain making traffic
stops an~ 22 died attempting arrests for crimes othef than
burglary an(j.-GJi1jery.
The rest were slain in various circumstances ranging from
attacks by the mentally deranged to fights with prlsiJners in their
custody.
·

,Eleven at ·
Meigs High
Suspended

By ARTHUR HIGBEE
SAIGON (UPI)-The U.S.
command today disclosed that
American ambullince helicopters carry machlne . guns .along
with their Red Cross markings
and have done so for 10 years.
Military spokesmen made
the disclosure when asked for
details of the Monday ambush
of an American patrol 40 miles
northeast of Saigon.
·
One Gl wasl killed and 14,
wounded. It was the heaviest
U.S. casualty count in a single
action since last May I when
five men were killed and 10
wounded near the A Shau
Valley, although there have
since been heavier casualties
. in shellings . and air crashes.
Military sources said tl1e
Communists also blew up two
South Vietnamese armored
personnel carriers with [\lines
along Highway 7 about five
miles south of Snuol in the
Cambodian rubber plantation
counlry today.

Thirteen government
soldiers were wounded and the
tracked carriers were heavily
damaged, ·the source~ said.
Four helicopters-()ne OH6
observation craft and three
UH1 Huey Me~evac helicopters were shot i Jwn by the VIet
Cong as they arrived to help
the U.S. troops under attack.
At least two of the choppers
had to be airlifted out by other
helicopters because they were
put out of action.
Military spokesmen, In reply
to newsmen's questions; sail
M60 machine guns were
mounted on the medical
evacua lion helicopters
although in this case, the guns
were not fired.
"The military command
feels this does not violate the
Geneva Conv~nUon, In the
sense that they are armed for
the purpose of defending the
crews and the patients involved," the. spokesman said.
"This is the same as a medic

'

carrying weapons in the field."
"Our helos get shot up all the
time and when they are
protecting patients they ljave a
right to shootback," said a
spokesman for the U.S. Anny
Medical Cqmmand. He said the
policy had been in effect for 10
years.
Nevertheless, the combat
unlls al-e taking the guns ·off
their choppers and painting
them .white under a new
program that seems to be
cutting
down
losses,
a · spokesman' said. Until
last fall, ambulanlOI' helicopters were painted olive drab
Uke other choppers and carried
dim Red Cross signs that were
difficult to see from the
ground. As a resuli, they were
frequently shot at.
The U.S. command also
announced belatedly that a
U.S. Air Force F4 PhantOm jet
was lost over the Laotian upper
- panhandle last Friday and both
crewmen were misaing,

I
CANDIDATE IN BABY DERBY4urtlas Fr.anldln
English,bornall:M p.m. New Year's Day at Holzer Medical
Center, is a leading candidate for the prizes offered by
' babY, born of Meigs
merchants in the bend area to the first
County parents in 1972. Holding Kurliss is his mother, Mrs.
Wllllam T. English, of 652 .Beach St., Middleport. His fa•.her,
one of Pomeroy High School's great football players of the
1950s, is employed in the maintenance department at the
PhWp·Sporn Plant in Mason County. Grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Harry Games, Middleport, and Mr. and Mrs.
Howard English, Pomeroy. Kurtiss checked in at 7 lbs. 13'h
ounces and 20-inches tall.- Picture by Jack Carr.

Eleven male students of
Meigs High School have been
given 10-day suspensions from
classes unless they get a
haircut.
District ad!jlinistralors said
today that the 11 students had
CIIASE, MicH. -ANDY HORUJKO, A LOCAL hermit who been ordered so~~ fime ago to
yearned to go for a long walk, has completed hiS&lt;12,01)().mile trek have haircuts in accordance
from Anchorage, Alaska, to T12rre del Fuego at the tip of South with the dress cnde of the
school as approved by the
America.
Meigs Local School District
MONROVIA, LIBERIA - AN INAUGURAL banquet for Board of Education.
Whep the students returned
President WlDlam R. Tolbert today climaxed the final day of the
first part of Mrs. Richard M. Nixon's diplomatic visit to three to classes Monday fr,om their
Christmas vacatipn, they had
'Mrs. Georgia Williamson, 80,
African nations:
not complied, it was reported. well-known Meigs County
COLUMBUS, OHIO - AFJ...CIO CHIEF Frank King has They were sent home but can resident, died Monday at' her
return to · school when they horne on the Pomhoy •
indicated ihe executive board of the labor organization would aid
comply with the rules of the Harrisonville road.
opponents of Sen. Edmund Muskie, D-Mail]e, in the . Ohio .
schooL
Mrs. Williamson, who was
presidential primary in May but did not say whether tbe group
One of the II had complied by ' assoc.iated with the Meigs
.\ A
budget
providing personal services $39,000, other personal services $150, debt
would endorae a candidate.
Tuesday morni~g and returned County Welfare Dept. a
. $621,906.28 in 1972 was ap- $20,aoo, total $o9,8oO, fire service $42,075. Total $42,225 .
"We don't llke to see It (the primary) foreclosed in Ohio and to classes. The lengtl1 of the number of years, and who was
General bon'd retirement
proved by Pomeroy Council department, personal services
yet that's just what is going to happen unless somebody does hair of tl1e offenders exceeded a devoted sports fan, died in
$1,~00,
supplies
and
materials
fund, person~! services ·$7 ,000,
Monday night in its first
something to help some of the other candidates," said King. that provided in the dress cnde, the family home where slie was
$1,500, other $4,240, total, payment of principal $4,462,50.
session
of
the
year,
ApKing said two weeks ago that Gov. John J. Gilligan's en- officials said.
born and wt.ere she had reared '
prdpriations, by departments, $10,040. Total for security of Tolal, $11,462.50.
dorsement of Milskie was "ill adv~ and ill timed.:·
her four children.
persons and property $69,890.
1fere:
street
bond
Special
The dailghter of the late
Street lighting, utility, retirement fund , payment of
Mayor's fund $1,200, clerk
WASHINGTON -CATTLE AND SHE.EP coming to marKet'
Ge·orge and Sarah Hysell
fund .$1,200, treasurer's fund $13,1m.50, street department, principal $4,000, payment of
on or alter Saturday, Jan. 8, must comply with a new regulation
Moore, she was a lifelong
personal services"--$17 ,000, interest $168.78. · Total,
~. soli("'tor's fimd $2,000,
which officials hope wiD keep hormone .residues. out of the
Republican and a member of
supplies
and materials $2,500, ' $4,168.78.
elections $500, council fund
the Trinity Church in Pomeroy.
nation's meat supply, Agriculture Department officials said
capital outlay $3,000, oilier
mo.
Besides
her
parents,
she
was
· today.
1
General Administration, $9,157.00. Total, $31,657.&gt;0.
preceded in death by her
The regulation requires producers wbo use the growth· personal services, $4,500, sup- Special street repair $15,000.
on
·
('Conjinued
on
page
8)
MRS.
WILLIAMSON
promoting hormone dleihylslilbestrol (DES) to withdraw It from
plies and materials $1,200, Total for street construction,
cattle and sheep feed seven days ,before slaughter. Also, as ,a
capital outlay $1,000, other mainter.ance and repair fund,
Ralph Gerald Spencer, 66,
$46,6ii7,50.
'backstop, animals coming to slaughter must be accompanied by
$6,400, lots! $13,100.
'
,/"'-.
educator and.youth and c~urch
State Highway fund, percert~icate$ stating the seven-day withdrawal rule has beep
General Governmental
leader; of 1608 Nye Ave.,
Services, pollee department, sonal services $500, other
complied with.
•Pomeroy, died Monday at the
$3,000. Total state highway
The McGovern for President
Holzer Medical Center where
· improvement fund, $3,500,.
Committee will hold a public
:, JS ANGELES - ACI'OR ROGER DAVIS wiU take over the he was taken after suffering a
'
Cem~tery
op~ration
and
caucus on Jan. 9 at Baker
role in the television series "Alias Smith and Jones". that had heart attack at his home.
Stanley Wells, 25, Rt.l, Long maintenance, personal ser- Center Ballroom, Athens, from
been ph.yed by Peter Duel, the ABC network announced Monday.
The son of the late Albert and
Bottom, was cited to Meigs vices $7 ,oOO, supplies and 1 to 5 p.m., to select the adDuel, 31, died Friday of a bullet through the head, apparently Myrtle Heaton Spencer,-he was
County
Court
Monday materials $1,400. Total, $6,900, visory list of district delegates
suicide. Davis, of Louisville;Ky., studied at Columbia University a school teacher 39 years 36 of
1
following a traffic mishap on
Water puniplng, personai and alternates for candidacy in
and UCLA, and appeared in the afternoon television serial "Dark which were in the Pomeroy
Frank W. Porter and Don second Monday of each month. ·Rl. 218, nine tenths of a mile services $25,600, supplies and tl1~ Ohio primary for election to
Shadows." He will step into tbe role of HaMibal Hayes for the SchOQis. He atlf,nded Rio Mullen were
reelecte&lt;\ Previously, th~ board met in East Rt. 7.
materials $1,000. Total, $26,600.. ~rve at the .1972 Democratic
Jasi.'four episodes of this season.
Grande College antl graduated president and vice president, · regul~r sessions on the secbnd · According to the GalliaWater distribution, personal National Convention, lOth
from tlhio University . He respectiv*y, Monday nigh( by Tuesday of each month,
Meigs State Highway Patrol, services $7,000, supplies and Congressional District
served auring his long career the Meigs [.ocal School District
Following the organization Wells' car sideswipe;&lt;! another materials $12,000, other $9,000, Democrat~ were notified
in leaching as principal of the Board of Education in its _an- session, · l!Je board met . in a operated by Garrett Reed, 7~, · · total, $28,000. Total for water today.
Pomeroy Elemenlary School nual organizational session. special session 'to accept, the coolville. Wells was charged system operation, $54,600.
The meeting will ·be conon Mulberry Ave. He retired
Preceding the election, Carol resignation of ~ohn Teaford as with driving left of center and
Administration, ·water , due ted pursuant to Robert's
Charles R. Karr was Carl Nelson courthouse from leaching in 1966.
Pierce, a new 'member, and welding instructor , in the hit-skip.
personal services ,1,000, debt Rules of Order and the Ohio
Mr .J Spencer was a scout- return in&amp; board members vocational department of the
reelected .president and Bob .•custndiails, Lowell Greer, dog
AGallia County accident was service $44,000. Total, $45,000. Vemocratic Constitution. and
Clark vice president for 1972 warderi, and Mrs . . Sharon master ln Pomer.oy 25 years Virgil King and Joe Sayre were high school. Charles Neuman, investigated .in Bidwell where - Water, ~ mprovetben t .~byAaws...ana_
"NaUonal .•·;
Tuesday . when the . Meigs Wright custodian!Jor offices- and in I~ presen~tl\e given their oaths of office by Syracuse;. \\'lis employed as autos dri ven by John A. $235,000,other,$15,000,totalfor Guidelines ." A state-wide ·
County -B~rd . of - eom-:- liicaied at the: county in · Silver . Seaver Medal for· his Lee W. McComas, clerk. All substitute .welding teacher Birchfield, 21, Rt. 1 Bidwell, waler fund, $280,000,
caucus will be held at the
missioners met -f~r its firmary . Attending' Tuesday work . He . w~s an active are beglnnlngTfour yel\1' terms. effective Jan. 3.
and Randall M. Spencer, 10,
Sewer maintenance, per- Imperial Houae N~rth,
orgaillzatlonal meeting.
sessio~s were Karr, Clark,. and . member · of the Enterprise
McComas \vas reappointed
The
board
approved Chilltcothe, collided. Spencer sonal aervices $11,600, supplies Columbus, on Jan . .18 at 7:30
The commissioners reap· Warden Ours, commissioners, United · Methodist Church clerk for · four years effecllve · payment o( annual dues for was cited to Gallipolis and materials $11,000. Tolal ' p.m. to select an advisory list ·
where he was · Sonday School Jan . I, 19?2:. Regul~r monthly membership in ll ,e Ohio Sch~l Municipal Court for failure \o · $22,600, ·
pointed Mrs. Mar~ · Cham: and Mrs. Cha'l!bers, clerk. ·
·
of delegates anrt alternates
ben clerk, ,Jim CorneD and
~
·
(Conlin~ed on page 8)
t,mgs we;·e se t r·or the.. Boar&lt;ls Assn.·
1eId t1·~ r1g
· ht o.( wa~, Adntl' nistratlon -- ..n., .. o;. .nntlAr llint!h ru\."!ee
y
'
I

Mrs • .Williamson Dies
&lt;

$621,906 Appropriated.

To Run Pomeroy in '72

Bevan.
"The detailed description of
Odell's futile attempts to force
Penn Central's board ana
management to act in
·a · responsible fortright
manner to S9lve mounting problems is one of
the most vivid examples
imaginable of the complete
breakdown of the director system in a great American Corporation," said ,.Rep. Wri;:ht
Patman, D-Tex., chairman of
the Banking Committee. "It
clearly spotlights the need for
reform. "
The milage report called
entire affair "a story of mismanagement, poor judgement,
corruption and frivolous b~­
havlor."
The document also said the
director~ voted more tl1an $215
million in . dividends between
1963 and ,!'969, even· though the
railroad needed all the investment money itcmild dig up - a
foolhardy policy, according to
tl1e investigators.
· The report blamed the collapse on the railroad's "disastrous" diversification inw non-.

Public Seroice
T~mis Begin

TAKE OATH OF OFFICE - Newly-elected Pomeroy M•yor William Baronick, left, adririnisters the oath of office to the two newly-elected council members, Jim Nees, center, and
William E. Snouffer, pr\or to Monday night's council meeting.
·

Weston Dies

Mrs.

\

·Board of Affairs

.: :In Review

By RICK DU BROW
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Memolr on the New year's
weekend ·television football
lunacy:
All right, elerybody, we can
open the drapes now. Say hello
to your wife and brats. Introduce yourself if you liave lo.
What's the baby's name again?
Find out what everybody's
been doing arouqd the house
since Friday. Are we at war or
anything? And,,oh yes, Happy
New Year.
It was a great weekend for
·learning the national anthem.
And aU those parades and
floats, with the enormous funds
poured into them, were really
terrific, weren't they?
The aJUIOuncing of the games
was wonderful too. It was
deeply moving and inspiration
to hear some of the nellfork
sports shills tell us how proud a

Don Collins Elected

-r;;;;ar

Accepts Seat on

'j

Gridiron Gluttony Ends

A
'

Charles

would have had their vA made under some cirpensions reduced and more cumstances to children · and
' titan' 16,000 on VA rolls would parents of · veterans. About
have lost tlielr pensions en- · 53,000 childreq will receive five
percent and ee,ooo parents 6.5
tlrely,
pel increall@ under the law,
The other new law, PL 9%-107, which wiD coat an eslbnated
provides a 10 pet. increase lor, $67.8 m!Wiin the first year.
VA officials stressed that no
186,000 widows of veterans who
appllcatlon
for the !Jlcreases
. died of service • connected
causes. Called Dependency will be necessary, They wiD be
and ll)demnlty Compensation Included automatically In
(DIC), such payments are also February checks.
~

'

Former Mayur

-

team should be even though It
· was Jos!Dg by. about 30 points
because II was putting up a
great scrap. And reminding liS,
with great foresight, that the
losing team !)'auld be back: next
MASON\-_ The year of 1971 Mrs. Edna jtoush,. New Haven;
year Who said It wouldn't?
If a team Is getting creamed&gt;.
was marked witl1 two big ob- Mr. and Mrs. Artie Roush,
. by 30 points, why the Idiotic
servances for Mr. and Mrs. Point Pleasanb; Mrs. Erma
Turnbull,
Mrs.
Lola
Jefferies
announcing cbarade telling 1J.!!
Grover Roush of Mason. Mr.
that the boys on both aides are
Roush, a retired coal miner, and Mrs , Joyce Carson,
hitting really hard? What are
recently celebrated his 87th Mason; Mrs. Kate Roush,
they supposed to be doing, ,
birthday at a family dinner Letart; Mrs. Chloe Fick,
after
all? Dancing with each
Pomeroy, and Mrs , Ruth
hosteq by Mrs. Roush.
other? And CBS still treats Its
The couple, well known in the Wallace of Wisconsin.
Jl'O games as though they were
bend area, also celebrated
some kind of holy ceremony.
tl1eir 65th wedding anniversary
And NBC though sllghUy
the past year, The Roushes are Veterans Memorial Hospital
looser, has enougti of :an
tl1e parents of two sons, Clyde
FRIDAY ADMISSIONS alllsnce with football so thalli
Roush of Camp Conley near Gaye Smalley, Chester;
also tends to be on the overly
Point Pleasant and Harold Homer Mills, Syracuse; Mary
polite side. I like Curl Gowdy,
Roush of Philo, Ohio, and five Smith, Middleport; Hobart
but I'd Jlke to hear him open up
grandchildren and 11 great- Smalley, Chester; Dana Mc·
Lo
B
tt
B
·
grandchildren complete the Cam, _ nJ!. o om;_ ermce
even more.
The most exciting New
family.
Grueser, Middleport; Carl
Year's football game was
Mr. and Mrs. Roush were . Jeffers, Syracuse.
underdog Stanford's 13-12 win
married in 1906 at the Union
FRIDAY DISCHARGES Church at Letart with the Rev. Jeff Morris, Mary Roush,
over Michigan in the Rose
PleuutValleyHospllal
Bowl. You never saw a looser,
Robinson officiating.
William Hobstetter, Florence
ADMISSIONS - JosepL more InfOrmal looking team
Mr. Roush for years has been Hennigar, Homer Smith,
Ellis, Cottageville; Mrs. than Stanford. It seemed to be
a devoted o"l!l'dener and is Kenneth Hoffman
, James
.
Claude
Thornton, Le0f1_i Mrs. the only team on the lube all
among the first each spring .lo Hollon, Albert Frank, William
NEW HAVEN- The Rev.
have lettuce and onions on his Zirkle, Eric Knotts.
Oscar Neace, formerly of New Oden Pearson, Mrs. Wllllam weekend that gave the lmpresdinner table. The Roush home ' SATURDAY ADMISSIONS Haven, W. Va., died at his Stewart, Patricia Condee, slon that It knew football was
too, for many years, has been -Elizabetl1 Hysell, Rutland; home in Weston, W.Va., about · Venlla Smith, Mrs. Arnold only a game. II bnproviaed
tl1e scene of a big apple butter 'I:hurman Martin, Minersville; noP,n Sunday, following a Lane, Jack Wheeler, Mrs. OWe- colorflllly llke a good Juz
llllines, Mrs. !Annie., Roe, all band. It wasn't Mlclllgan that
making project.
Mona Gibbs, !Atart, ·w. Va.; lengthy illneSll.
For a number of years Mr. Roy Sears, Middleport; Arthur
The Rev. Mr. Neace would Pt. Pleasant; KeMy Burns, Stanford beat so much as the
Roush.built jon boats but gave Goodwin, Pomeroy ; Linda have been 92years old on Jan. 6 Henderson; Ernest Hudnall, absurd Ylew that football is
tl1is hobby up some time ago. Hackett, Middleport.
this_year. He was preceded In Moundsville; Howard Kaiser, some kind of a holy war. They .
He still buys and sells hides.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES death by his parents, Scot~ and Mason; Mrs. lAona Dines, should call them the Stanford
Mrs. Roush pieces quilts and - Larry Sellers, Ralph Uphrasla Neaf.~ ~nd two Glenwood; 'Mrs. Ronald ragamufllnl.
'' "--engages In other kinds of hand Brewer, Homer Goegleln, . brothers. Surviving are his [.ogan, Gallipolis; Lewis
MarUn,
Robertsburg;
Harry
The
channel
swim: pro
work in her retirement.
Howard Searles, Terry Uttle, wife, Mary; five chlldr.en,
basketball's two top teama Attending the birthday Cloyd Brookover, Pamela seven grandchildren; a 'sister, Surface, Middleport.
DISCHARGES - Addison the Incredible 1M Angeles
dinner were' Mr. and
Fred Young,
Mrs .
Florence
Potts,
[.yons,
David Nibert, Kathy • l.akera, who have 'l!on 311n ,.
Roush of Letart, Mr. and Mrs.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Syracuse; an aunt, Martha
Harold Roush of Philo, Mr. and Everett Dalley, Pomeroy; Thomas of ,Springfield, Pa., Wtle, Maud Jones, Amy . row, and the deflilldlng cham·
Mrs. James Tracy and Brent, William Dye, New Haven; and · several nieces and Byers, James Napier, Mrs. pion Milwaukee [lucka -"~11ll
Frank Epple and daughter on ABC nut Sunday at 2 p.m.
also of Philo, Mr. and Mrs. Myrtle Wolfe, Racine; Mar-- nephews.
Clyde Roush, Point Pleasant~ - jorie Goett, Middleport; Roger
Funeral services will be held Mrs. Stanley Allshlre and son: · EST ... "Lylllon Johnllon TalkB
Mrs. and Mrs. Larry Eblin, Pomeroy; Betty Pooler, Wednesday afternoon tn· Mrs. Clara Meadowa, Monty Polltica," Mnother ptlme Ume
David Ellzi.beth Jones Lellter hour in which the fOi'mer
Luckeydoo, Larry and PhiUp of Middleport; Barbara Lyons, Weston.
Casto:
Mrs. Allen Waugh, president is irJtervlewed by
Charleston; Mr's. Ora Cochran Mason; Clarice Gibson, Long
James Clonch Brian RolllnB Walter Cronkite, airs on CBS
of St. Albans; Willie Grimm, Bottom; H.' D. Goeglein,
'
CLUB
TO
MEET
Jeffery Brown,
Stephen' Jan. 'll.
.. ·
·
Pomeroy; Catherine Wolfe,
'Mrs.
Rodney
Downing
will
CIRCULATION NOTED
Racine; Millard Swartz,
McGraw, Mrs. Harold Stewart,
review Freud's "Passions of Mrs. Charles Glitey and son,
Circu'Iation of tl1e Pomeroy Pomeroy.
and Mi~dleport Public
SUNDAy DISCHARGES _ the Mlrul," and the response -Mrs. Sam Lewis And son, Mrs.
LOCAL TO DINE
. Libraties and the Bookmobile Bessie McKnight, Vaughn will be a thought on psychiatry John Lewis, Marvin Col, Mrs.
Brlcklayet'll Local No. 32 will
service in November totaled Barnhart, Edith McCoy, Ina when the Middleport Uterary Lloyd Huffman.
dine foliowlng its · regular
12,279. Magazine donations for Ferrell, Carl Jeffers, tydia Clu5 meets at 2 p.m. We(lBffiTH - Dec. 31, a son to meeting Thurlday evenln!l 11
ll1~ montl1 were by Mrs. Roscoe Stewart, Beverly Powell, nesdsy at the home of Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Carter the American !Aglon Hill In
Emerson Jones.
~ise and Mrs. To111 Rue.
Harrison Robinson.
/
Smith, Point Pleasant.
Pomeroy.
RIDER KILLED
RAVENNA, Ohio (UP!) -A
snowmobile hit•a barbed wire
fence and flipped over near
here in Portage County, killing
Tirnotl1y Taylor, 20, Mantua,
Sunday.

PCR Board Gets
Committee's Fire
.
'

management were

from our

I

Mr. and Mrs. Grover Roush -

•

:~ POW Question

..

.

'

'

'

The head of the self-&amp;yled
"peoplEi's lobby" coupled lils
attsck "ith a disclosure that
Common Calise plans to spotlight such confllcts of interest
in state lawmaking bodies this
year as a first step in
legislative reform.

.

also flre&lt;tmore than 100 rpunds ,
of heavy 82 mm mortsr lite
and a few 122 mm rock$ into
the other .two baaes, one of
•which is occupied by Cambodians:

treason charges by the former was East Paklstsn.
military government of exBhutto has conferred frePresid•nt Aghan Mohammad quently witl1 Rahman in recent
Yahya Khan but was releaaed days, and informed political
recently to house arrest by sources in Rawalpindi said
Bhulto.
Bhutto tried to convince him
Rahmany party won an that East Pakistan must
absolute majority in the Pakis- remain a part of Pakistan, but
tan Parliament a year ago but witl1 greater autonomy.
Yahyil Khan never permitted
Pakistan radio, monitored in
him to tske office as premier. New Delhi, said a huge public
Instead, tl1ere.was an uprising meeting in Karachi voiced its
in East Pakistan, civil war and . acclaim for Bhutlo's decision to
then tl1e India-Pakistan war release the East Pakistani who
that created the Independent was captured by Pakistani
stste of Bangladesh in what troops when tl1e civil war began

, WASHlNGTON (UPI)-Most
·.state legislatures are riddled
:With corruption and confllcts of
;.interest, and are wholly inade~quate for what tl1ey are sup:posed to be doing, Chairman
;,~r l ,n W. Gardner of Common
· ~use S&amp;id today.

2Y2. Millio~.. VA (Jtecks.'
.
·B~ger Nexf Feb~uary·

.

''

•

'1.

.

'

Siri~~ ·DaNlmg
.

Banglade_sh Leader is Free
By.UnlledPresslaternaUonal
Pakistan President Zulfikar
Ali Bhutto today announced the
uncondltionalrelease of Bengali
Nationalist leader Sheikh Muji, bur Rahman, official Radio
Pakistan reported.
UP! correspondent Robert
Kaylor . reported from New
Delhi the announcement presumably frees Rahman Ill assume
the presidency of the governmentor Bangladesh.
Rahman, leader of tl1e
Awami League party in East
Pakistan, had been tried on

.

•

'

' . &lt;

' '

•

MENS AND BOYS

'

COATS and
J.ACKETS.

Ralph Spencer

...

Of Jlomeroy
Dies Monday

'

In the busy mens al)d boys dep1rtment'on
the 1sf floor - Big January S111e of mens
Jackets and Coats.

• LllllE" BOYS SIZES 2T TO
I•

4fMD 3TO 6X
...

• MEN'S SIZES 36 TO·54
•
An excellent selection In waist length lacllel$ and
the longer car coal lengths. Choose from corduroys ·
wool plaids . dacron·cotlon bl~nds · quilled nylons ·
solid colors and plaids. All are warmly tined· well
made jacketS- arranged for your easy selection. ·

Karr; Clark Are.Reeiected

---------------··
--------~-·
·

railroad properties,
onexpenses
its hnge ....- -. .
qperating
losses; high
invqlving mergers•.. exti!ssive
-labor cost:: and . laqe salary
increases.
-

Public Caucus

·Porter,. Mullen
Are Reelected

·• REGULAR BOYS SIZES 6 TO 2!1

~-·"" ....

.

E•-aERFELDs· liN·
pft
I
V
•

'

'

1

Is Announced

Driver Cited

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="721">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11121">
                <text>01. January</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="52631">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="52630">
              <text>January 3, 1972</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="811">
      <name>carroll</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2678">
      <name>neace</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="8">
      <name>wallace</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
