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8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. 11, 1972

News • • • in Briefs ~~~!Page
(Continued from Page 1)
Labor Department for the national election in which balloting
ended last Friday throughout the nation's coalrields.

CINCINNAT1 - A SMALL LJ!:SION was removed today
from the lung of Cincinnati Reds catcher Johnny Bench and
doctors said there was no evidence of a tumor or malignancy.
The surgery at Christ Hospital here included taking a frozen
section of the lesion which revealed it was inflammatory. Further testing,to take about 72 hours, was planned to determine the
cause of the growth .
Pleasant Valley Hosplial
DISCHARGES - Charles
(Continued from Page 11
Edwards, Ferndale, Mich .;
Mrs. Jesse Harold , New beyond earth orbit.
Haven; Mamie Huff, Point
Apollo 17 rode the braking
Pleasant; Vada Henry, thrust of its main engine into
Gallipolis Ferry; Dal"ia Mayes, lunar orbit Sunday afternoon
Point Pleasant: Christie and on its first orbit of the
Johnson, Mason: Mrs. James moon, Schmitt sighted·a flash
Beaver, Gaiijpolis; Mrs. of light on the dark horizon
James Oliver, daughter; Mrs. near the crater Grimaldi. He
James Bys, Gallipolis; suggested it might be the exFlorence Cash, Buffalo; Mrs. ptosive impact of a small
Lloyd Hill, Liverpool; Mrs . meteoroid.
•
Albert Sauers, Jr., Point
"It was a bright little flash,"
Pleasant; Mrs: Perry Jeffers, he said. "There was just a
Southside; Bobby Kinniard, pinprick of light."
Southside;· Jacqueline Smith,
It was the first such obWes t Columbia; Suzanne · servation made by moon exDavidson, New Haven; Mrs. plorers and seismologists back
P.,a.ui•C
•ha•d•w•e•ll•,da_u.gh•te•r··_ , on Earth quickly checked data
I
radioed bli'ck from moonquake
meters to look for resulting
vibrations. The moon WB.j still
shaking
seismically, however,
' &amp; Tuesday
Tonight
from the impact of Apollo's
Dec. 11 -12
spent Sa tum rocket stage and
WHAT'S THE MATTER
any smaller vibrations would
WITH HELEN?
have been masked.
!Technicolorl
"Just my luck," Schmitt ·
Shelley Winter
Debbie Reynolds
said, when told by Mission
CG P)
Control that his surprising
Colorcartoons
observation had not been
Show Starts 7 p.m.
confirmed.

Setdown

Soon it will cost so much
monev to send Christmas

11

cards, it will be cheaper to

give a gilt."
Now that you have all the
Gi lts for everyone else, How about yourself? Come
in and browse around and
talk over that job you ' ve

been putting off. Our
" FRIENDLY ONES" will
help you plan it and selec t
the tools and mater ials you
need ...

MEIGS THEATRE

,.

..

reliable source indicated.
Matthews said the gasoline
and .fuel oil bu:;iness will go on
as usual. Six trucks parked on
the grounds were not damaged.
The large storage building
was leveled and cinder block
office building was extensively
damaged, but its walls
remained standing. A nearby
metal building housing some
380 tires was not damaged.
Matthews said the business '
is partially covered· by insurance.
• Matthews and Ed leblute
were lavish in praise of
firemen answering the alarm
from all the nearby stations, to
police, the Civil Defense, to
Mayor John Musgrave and to
th e many volunteers who
assisted in the emergency.
The building was valued at
$50,000, its contents at $150,000.
II took more than five hours
to bring the blaze under control
and because of sporadk fires
fed by cans of oil, firemen were
at the scene all of Sunday.
Even today, fire kept erupting
in the smoldering ruins.

'

For the hol idays, you should be decked out in green.
With money to buy al l the gilts you wa nt to gi ve .

And if you join our wide-awa k e Christmas Club now,
you canllave$100, $200, even $500 to spend next year.

Make the small paym ents regularly for the next forty nine week s and we will make the 50th one fre e. And at
Christmas, your Christmas Club mone·y will leave you in
the pink . Which does m uch more for yo u thim r ed.

&gt;

Ghristmos Glu!J

m~kes i'f!4_so eo.~
. ·..·

POMEROY, OHIO
Member of Federa l Reserve System
On Fridays Our Drive-In Wi~dow is Open 9 a.m. to 1 p. m. (Continuously ). (

The ones you see advertised on TV. Excellent gift for that
man on your list. The new Remington 400 Flexomallc
Shaver and the new Norelco Tripleheader VIP. Also the

William E. Blake, 66, Middleport Route I, died Saturday
evening at the Holzer Medical
Center.
He was born in West Virginia
Feb. 6, 1906, a son of the late
John and Cora Blake. He was
also preceded in death by a
daughter, two brothers and a

·

,

520,000 Ma ximum"lnsurance For

Each Depositor

~·~. .---~-------......~..,~~~-,.....,._..,.11,.........,.J '

skies.

Oilier Business

The board In other business approved a third resolution
commending Denver Hysell for 32 years of service as a bus
driver. Hysell retired Dec. 1.
Mrs. Teresa Cremeans was appointed a bus driver effective
Dec. 1 for the remainder of the school tenn. Appointed as substitute bus drivers were Mrs. Robert Southern, RuUand, and
Harry Clark. Pomeroy, pending approval by the county board
and passage of bus driver's test, and appointed Susan Parker
Carpenter as substitute teacher .

Sleet -or freezing rain,
changing to rain south today.
Rain likely and not as cold
tonight. Lows in 'the 30s.
Showers likely Wednesday.
Highs in the 4118 and low 50s
turning colder,

VOL XXIV .NO. 168

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

BEDSPREADS

See the marvelous collection of new Spreads fo r gift
gi ving in the Drapery Dept . Bates - Morgan - Jones Kirbury . In _thi s com pl ete se lect ion are Velvets, Woven
Cottons and Blends.

Early Am erican Prints, So lids, beautifu l fl ora l prints,
Heirlooms, Modern flor a l prints. Ful l and Twins in a wide
rang e ol co lor s.

REVLON AND COTY GIFT SETS
You really should see the fine selection of Revlon and Coty

Clothes
Hamper
Makes A
Perfect Gift
A
fine
new
selection in the
Housewares
Department · 1st

floor. Choice ot

sizes . These ar e
famo u s
t he
Redman
Ham -

pers

lhat are

k nown fo r thei r
sturdy
co n s truction
and

good looks.

_

_......
=oYROCO® IN THE
DECORATIVE
WALL

ACCESSORIES

Sets in all !he fine fragrances.
Powder · Lipstick - Rouge . Soaps· hand and body lotion.
Also Royal Pub by Revfon . After shave and Cologne sets
for men.
And there are lots of special values in these two fine lines
of cosmetics.

HALLMARK CHRISTMAS CARDS.
-~-

Assorted in a box or
choose
them · in·
dividually . A truly
wonderful
assort ment.

'

...J.I.r. (i0... "" j!. •

'I""'"';;;- ""-';.

The S

.-

Christmas pint

Also Hallmark gift wrap
paper - ribbon - bows - tag s
-seals.

Ha II mark
Party

favors

-

HOUSEWARES
DEPARTMENT
ON THE
1st FLOOR

TEN

CEN~S

lists thought he may have seen
meteoroid impacts.
Challenger landed only 272
feet from its target Monday
af.ternoon, and six hours later,
Ceman and Schmitt had an
American flag flying from
man's sixth base on the moon.
Their home for three days was
ringed by rounded, knobby
mountains and a 300-loot cliff.
The two exj&gt;lorers spent 7
hours~ 12 min11tes on theil" first
~;
marked flQOI' of the valley
called Taurus-Littrow. They
returned to Challenger at 2:07
a.m., tired, dirty and satisfied
with the job they ac·
complished.

.,0!1-•-

"I'm very pleased with what
we got done," said Flight
Director M. Pete Frank after
the astronauts were back in
Challenger and settling in for
eight hours of sleep to recover
from an arduous 22-llour work
day.
"I thought the crew did an
outstanding job. ;rJ~ey worked
extremely hard."
Despite the labors, Cernan
, and Schmitt were In &amp;ood
!lllltl~ "!!rwgttout tile ' 11r1t
~xcurslon . At one poin!, aa he
loped across the surface like a
kangaroo, Schmitt sang,
"Whlle strolling on the moon
one day, in the merry, merry
month of May ...December."

designs. Perlecl gift lo
add a note ol splendor to

See our complete line
including
Uprights
and Tank Types. ·

Another Big
Shipment

and Sale

BICYCLES
At lhe Toy Store. 10 speed
bikes - regular girls and boys
tricycles and the popular 3
speed bikes in boys and girls
styles.

Stop in
select
the
model you
want
and
lave during
this
big
Bicycle
sale. i

..

~

--·
~

'
' •

p.
•;.

....

&lt; '"

""""'"'

FREE PARKING ANYONE? - This is how the parking
lot In Pomeroy's business section looked late Monday when
the Ohio River crested at 44.8 feet, just a bit under flood stage

Broadway Joe upstages Moon explorers i

HOOVER
VACUU'M
SWEEPERS

accessories. Beautifully
made - magnific ie nt

l

o1 461eet. Free ~ on the Iota alone the river Ia belnC
offered during the holl'1a&gt;' se&amp;IOD. However, moet of the two
lots were covered with ·water and there were only a lew extra
brave car owners taking advantage of the offer.

..

i:::::~:~:~::::::::::;::;;:;;;.;::::~-::::::::::::::..:::::~::.:;:;s?.o::::-,.:::::::-.::::-~:~::::~o::::::::::::,:-":Y..::."W"..::::::::::::-.::.

BIG SHIPMENT

A fine line of quality
Syroco decorative wall

SHE'D LOVE A

BISSELL
APOLLO
SWEEPER
Sweeps all Floor surfaces

- tile . wood . cement .
slate · linoleum · brick ·
carpet. /Ideal lor quick
pickups . Handy to use and
store.

SANTA
CLAUS
Will Be At
The Tcrt Sbe
•

Tuesday Evening
7 'til 8

United Pren IDterullooal
The earthman, Eugene Cernan, waa huffing and puffing
and stumbling In the lifeless
dust of the moon. Walking waa
harder than he had thought.
Two hundred and forty
thousand miles away in space,
the earthman, Fred .Blletnikoff, lost his balance while
ruiming on grasa, fell, got back

and up and dived into the air to
catch an inflated rubber
bladder covered by Ia ced
leather.
It was the galaxy "Milky
Way," one solar system away
from the star Alpha Centaur!,
on the 11th day of December,
1972, Julian calendar, earth
time 10:21 post meridian, 1:17
left in· the half.

..•

ews•• in Briefi
llY Unlted Preu lntemlltioaal
KANSAS Cri'Y ....: THE VITAL BODY SIGNS of Harry S
Truman became "unstable" today. The 88-year-old former
president's heart beat and breathing quickened and his temperature rose.
·
"Former President Truman remains serious," said a
morning medical report on his condition. "His vital signs became
somewhat unstable during the night - his respiration, pulse and
temperature increased." John Dreves, spokesman for Research
Hospital, would not divulge Truman's pulse rate, temperature or
blood pressure, although that information had been given at
previous medical briefings.

IiliENOil AIR~RMER ARGENTINE President

Juan
D. Peron was offered the presidential candidacy of his
Justlciallsta National Uberation Front party but will renounce
the nomination and leave for Paraguay Wednesday, a Peron
spokesman said today.
"'
Peron, who returned Nov. 17 after 17 years of exlle lB barred
from running for president anyway by a residence requirement
Imposed by the ruling military junta.
WASHINGTON - A RALPH NADER research group says
women students at many univmllies are being used as gWrM:a
pigs for a "morning-after-pill" to prevent pregnancy despite
"strong evidence" that it causes cancer. Dr. Sidney M. Wolle,
director of the Health Research Group, bued here, said in a
letter to the National Student Allociatlon (NSA) that the drug,
called, diethyllllllbestrol (DES) Is giv~ to coeds "without even
the most rudimentary oblervance of profesaionalstandardl and
Informed conaent."
The organization also sent !etten and copies of it.s report on
DES to the Food and Drug AdmlnlBtritlon and the Unlvetslty of
Michigan, one of the college~ aid tO be dilpenaJnc the pill
fbrout111 ill health aervk:e. The group aald DES lB being Ultd to
preventprecnancy following inlen:olne. In the 1HGIIIKI11501 it
w• ginn to te111 of thoullnda o1 women u .. agenlto preve~~t
miacarrlage. The goup aid 100 daugbten at thele women
treated yean 1119 are a-n to han deveklped vapnal cancer.
WASHINGTON- PUIIIDBNT NIXON hu ordered hla
Alary and that ol ollw 10"11-ill ha~en froren and im.
nounced hla Intention to COIIIlme economic Clllllrola In 1873. But

.

.

(Cootinued on Pa11 10)

Man -"ihe wonder and . the moon-the brown and gray
glory of the universe," as mountains and the black,
Charles Darwin described the cloudless, timeless void
species - hlid again broken the behind.
bonds .of gravity and sent his
Eugene Cernan took a batissue hurUing into space to tery powered drill and bored a
walk on the surface of the pair of holes so he could insert
moon, Not' bad for a bunch of sensors that will measure lhe
apes.
flow of heat within the upper
It was to be the last such lunar crust. And he stretched
adventure In a generation.
· out a golden, ribbon-like wire
"This Is the whole ball of and erected an Instrument
wax," said Frank Gifford, as designed to test Einstein's
the camera zeroed in on theory that . gravitational
Broadway Joe Nai!Uith fading waves sweep through space
back with hawk-like grace for a and cause tidal deformations in
28-yard coinpletion to Don the lunar surface much like
Maynard at the 26-yard line of ocean tides on earth.
the oakland Raiders.
Ceman and fellow astronaut
Far away, another television Jack Schmitt were racing the
camera seamed the surface of clock and were falling behind.

\r

They had taken too much time
setting up experiments and left
too little to explore.
But they were safe. Broadway Joe and the Jets were
dying and there is no tomorrow, as they say in the sports
world.
The last time a television
network cut the cord on a
football gamHuring the last
minutes of a Jets game a few
years back which was preempted for a play called
" Heldt" - there were irate
calls from all over the country
from fans threatening .murder
and mayhem.
So no mere voyage in the
solar system was going to pre(ConUnued on page 10)

Middleport's share of
federal pie one-third
Middleport's first federal
revenue sharing payment
totaled $3,619, covering the
first six months of 1971, Gene
Grate, village clerk-treasurer,
reported Monday night when
Middleport Connell met In
regular session.
The total is only about onethird of the payment received
by Pomeroy Village for the
same period. Solicil« Bernard
Fultz is looking Into the
-poulblllty that there may have
been a mistake In WuhJncton.
Revenue ~ quotas are
based on the local tu rate. For
the periqd covered Middleport
has a tax rate of i!UO milia
compa~ to Pomeroy'l 40.90
in the ·same period. It waa
suggetled the dllference in
rate t.d a belrlng upon. the
paymenlll received by the two
communitiea. .
Council approved
a
J'eiOIUtion grantlnl [lel'lllilllon
to the Lea~ Creek Conservancy Diatrlct to crou
Middleport Hill with 1111 water
linea provided it wUI be
rtlpOIIIlble for repeln and

maintenance.
A letter was received from
Jemo Associates which constructed Riverview Acres in
lower Middleport requesting
that the company being give
official notice that the drive
section has been accepted as
part of the village as far aa
maintenance of sewage, water,
streets and other services Is
concerned. The company wW
be notified of an earUer village
action accompllsblng the incorporation.
Th~ report of Mayor John
Zerkle Showing $2,325.80 In
fines and fees and t147 in
merchant police collectioos for
a total of n,m.ao In November
was accepted. The report of
Fire Chief Bob Byer was read
showing two fire calls, 16 first
aid calls and one nuisance call
bel~ 8111Wtred in November.
A report was given ·an the
renewal of lire contraell with
Otelhire Township, Cheshire
VIllage, the G~n Plant and
Sallsbury Township. Fees are
being raised on two of the
':

,i

PHONE 992-2156

•

Table

covers.
Take time to see the fine
line of Hallmark on the lsi
floor .

ELBERFELDS IN

SPACE CENTER, Houston
"A geologlst:s paradise,"
(UPI) -Apollo •s last explorers said Schmitt, the first geologist
found evidence early today to go to.the moon.
suggesting their picturesque
The astronauts' quest for
base in a lunar valley might be rocks spanning the ages of
the scene of one of the moon's lunar evolution resumes at 5:03
last volcanic upheavals.
p.m. EST today when they
Eugene A. Cernan and drive their moon buggy 3 I&gt;
Harrison H. "Jack" Schmitt miles to an avalanche at the
worked long and hard on the · foot of a sun-washed mountain
. first of three excursions from 7,790 feet high.
the Apollo 17 spacecraft ChalIn orbit overhead, command
Ienger. They were rewarded module pilot Ronald E. EVans
....,.._,., ·~ ! ,Ill
..Jlllll..lM. 'l'l II' 1: \'I! "-1$
exquisite lunar scenery seeii on a lonely lllll'VI!!llance mlslirst-lland by man:
sion. He added to~ ~entiflc
"Oh · my golly, un- output of the nations final
bellev~ble '' exclaimed Cernan planned moon expedition by
when he flrst set foot on the sighting two flashes of light on
moon .
the dark lunar horizon. Scien-

Chri stma s

napkins - Paper cups

f.

Devoted To The Interest. Of'T1u?:Meigs-Mwon Area
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1972

Volcanic ·evidence
turned up on moon

· Mrs. Hwnphrey
:: died on Sunday

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperture in downtown
Pomeroy at 11 a.m. Monday
was 38 degrees under cloudy

Two resolutions of coriunendation were approved by the board.
One commended Dwight 'Goiml, Fred Ruth, tbe Meigs Band
and the Meigs BJfid Boosters for the '1ine job" they did during
the football season,
They also commended Charles Chancey, Homer Hysell, the
Meigs ~Athletic Boosters and the men who are providing equipment and labor for the improvement of the land behind the new
high school building.
Meeting with board was High School Principal James Diehl to
explain a tutoring program. Diehl presented a detailed plan of
the program and listed the students involved.
He explained that last year the tutor service did not work out as

Recommendations of the appointments were made by Supt.
George Hargraves.
.
·
Hargraves also reported a receipt of confirmation by Common
Wealth Systems Corp., of a plan to include a fire hydrant at
Salem Center, Harrisonville and Bradbury, and receipt of fotir
new buses which were assigned to Mary King, Emest Wood, Btn
Smith and Mont Vance.
The board dlsCU85ed the possibility of putting seat belts in
buses. It was decided to write the State Department of Education
and Bernard Fultz asking if the boBI'!I would be legally within its
rights to do so.
Hargraves said he still needs a · French·English teacher,
although presently he has an adequate substitute.
The board approved a short term lease with the Pomeroy Post
Office which calls for payment of •1 a month with the Postal
Department bearing-all expenses now and later to put the old
Pomeroy High building back In order when the post office
department leaves. Also discussed was additional bus garage
space. The board adjourned to meet with teachers at Bradbury
School.
Attending were Porter, Mullen, Joe Sayre, Virgil King, and
Carroll Pierce, board members; Hargraves, and Lee McComas,
clerk .

Weather

Sunbeam shaver for men .

your sty le of decor .

COOLVILLE
Mrs.
' Florence Humphrey , 82,
' · Coolville, died Sunday evening
. at the Arcadia Nursing Home
here following a lingering
illness.
Mrs: Humphrey was born
near Bashan in Meigs Coun ty,
the daughter of the late Henry
and Emma Jones Rose . During
her life, she was a school
teacher several years . She
belonged to the Coolville
United Methodist Church and
Troy Grange No. 90ii.
Surviving are a daughter,
Mrs. Frank (Roberta ) Kerce!,
Coolville, and several nieces,
nephews and cousins. She was
preceded in death by her
husband , Herbert S. Humphrey
In 1917 and by two sisters and
four brothers.
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the
White Funeral Home here with
the Rev. Roy W. Rose officiating. Burial will be in the
Coolville Cemetery. Friends
. may call at the funeral home
from 2 to 4 and from 7 to 9 p.m.
Tuesday.

well as it should.
"Earlier this year," Diehl explained; "we offered a tutoring
program again and had two responses. We prepared a ·form on
which all the student had to do was answer 'yes' or 'no' if interested. We had 50 who were interested and we now have a
program in effect, under the supervision of the guidance
department," he said.
There are approximately 10 students being tutored at the
present time. Plans for next year's program will begin this
spring,' Diehl said.
Don Mullen said he was ''very well pl~ased" with the report
submitted by Diehl.

ON THE 1st FLOOR

Emily Ohlinger
died op. Sunday

The wide-owoke

slitutional rights. He eniphaaized that since the consolidation of
the schools !ius routes are larger and bus drivers have much
longer routes and should be compensated for tbe-extra work
involved. Haynes continued that the board is considering these
employes as "second class citizens, ••and apparently concluding
they do no1 have the same rights as employes in pl'lvate industry.
To this Porler replied, "1 would not call them second class
citizens. I call them first class."
Porter suggested that plans be made for the board to meet with
the OAPSE to discuss their problems, to which Haynes agreed.

Skylab astronauts will relax
by throwing darts in the zero
gravity of their Earth orbiting
space station next year.

SEE THE NEW ELECTRIC

William Blake
died Saturday

Miss Emily Leona Ohlinger,
66, of 161 Locust St., Pomeroy,
died Sunday evening at the
Holzer Medical Center. Miss
Ohlinger was preceded in
death by her parents, William
Henry and Cla ra Rapp
Ohlinger, two sisters, and a
brother.
A member of the Pomeroy
Church of Chr-ist, Miss
Ohlinger is survived by three
brothers, Herman, Collrad and
Troy, all of Pomeroy, and
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be at I
p.m. Wednesday at the EwiJ ,g
Funeral Home with Mr. Hoyt
Allen olficiating. Burial will be
in Beech Grove Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home any time.

. r./0!1-academic employes of Jll:elgs Local School District were
denied a request Monday night that their "association" be
recognized and pennll:ted to negotiate for improved salaries,
hours, and working cmditions.
·
.
Fred Haynes and ~Ice Globokar, representing the district unit
of the Ohio Association of Public School Employes, made the
request of the district board of education at its regular December
meeting.
· ·
The request was turned down because, as Board President
Frank W. Porter put it: "When it comes to dollars and cents we
don't have any money to bargain with." ·
Porter speaking for the board explained that a similar request
had been made by the teachers which the board also deelnell.
"Until the legisll!ture prescribes' a bargaining procedure, we
do not have the right to bargain. We are a temporary board; new
board members might not endorse any action we might take on
the matter," Porter said.
The board, however, recognizes _the legal existence of the
OAPSE. Porter suggested a meeting with members of the
OAPSE to air all pl-oblems, 1'hi8 could be of great benefit, Porter
thought.
Haynes, the spokesman, responded that In essence what the
board was saying was non-academic employes don't have con-

Now You Know

Surviving are his wife, Virgie
. , L. Boggs Blake; two
,.. daughters, Mrs . Dwight
. . (Sylvia ) Sayre, and Mrs.
Edward (Goldie ) Willet, both
of New Haven, W. Va.; five
sons, O-'Dell, Middleport ;
Pearl, Hartford and Billy, Roy
and Delbert, all of McHenry,
Ill. ; a brother, James, of West
Columbia, and 19 grandchildren.
Funeral services will be at 2
p.m. Tuesday at the RawlingsCoats Funeral Home with the
• Rev. Ches ter Tennant officiating . Burial will be in the
Suncrest Cemetery at Point
Pleasant. Friends may call at
the fu neral at any time,

50th Payment
FREE

The Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co. ·

'

There are many new arrivals daily. Excellent gift merchandise. Big shipm~nt of
Bicycles - Mens Sweat Shirts - Mens Socks - Hoover Sweepers - Easy Chairs on
the Jrd floor . New selection of Jewelry - Timex Watches - Mens and Boys
Toboggans - Smocks - Aprons - Daytime Dresses " Portable TV's - Tape Play.ers.Recorders - .Buster Brown Knitwear and many others.
Shop In every department - Stop on every floor for excellent selection of mer_c handise for every one o.n your gift list.

sister.

r9nly Janlil belongs in the ret!

School Board.turns down OAPSE bid

ELBERF£LDS ARE OPEN UNTil.9 IN THE EVENING EVERY
WEEK·
DAY UNTIL CHRISTMAS - DO YOUR CHRISTMAS
.
.
SHOPPING ANY DAY 9:30 AM TO 9 PM AT THE MAIN ·
STORE· THE TOY STORE. MECHANIC STREET WAREHOUSE

1)

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lJr

L

\

contract.! that expire on
January 1, one with .Cheshire
Village and the other Cheshire
Township.
A report was given on Insurance on structures owned
by the village and recommendations were made by the
council cQmmlttee on increases to be made on some
structures. Council agreed to
purchase the insurance
coverage !_rom the Mllls
Agency.
Mayor Zerkle reported that
.Mr. and Mrs. Terry Beechler,
who have been occupying the
apartment in village hall,
moved Saturday and that Mr.
and Mrs. Ronald Mullins have
teen appointed to replace them
as dispatchers and to serve
meals to prisoners. Mullins
also serves on the pollee
department.
Attending were Mayor
Zerkle, Clerk-Treasurer Grate,
and council members Mrs.
Roger Morgan, Lawrence
Stewart, David Ohlinger, Fred
Hoffman ind Wll!larrt Walters.

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2 Escape
car thru

.~~:'.· ,;:

&lt;·~·:

wm•dow

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lfs a job she loves

I

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Llun Murphy, Ohio Teacher
of the Year,sayslbe feela sorry for "people wbo eel up
.. and go to a Job they bate."
~&lt;

"I studle1
go to a departmeot
job I love," at
M111
Murphy,West
whoTeeb
beadaHigh
the
social
Cleveland
School, l8ld Mooday.
~f
"II It weren't for the mortgage (Jiymenlll, I would
~ teach for notblng."
~
Mill Murphy, a 11111lve of Point Marlon, Pa., accepted
her teaching award from 1lale Seboola Superlalendeot
~· Martin W. E&amp;1ex In a ceremony bere.
~j
Mlso Murphy bu beeiiiD the Cleveland ~ehools)'ltem
$, sluce 1951. She wu cited for the award for IDnovallve
:::: teaching, partlcipalloa In • youth-vole realall:ation
~ pnlgram &amp;lid tutoring handicapped cblldren.
;~

'*

·

~

~~
Two persons escaped
I' possible death Monday evening

when their car left the highway
and plunged into the high water
of Georges Creek, near
~ Kanauga,
«
Gallia County sheriff 's
f.}.
deputies and the Ohio State
~
I Highway Patrol said Dana D.
~fl::YJOoX«or..o.z.:o~n·.;.•,.
,"'•,'.-.,
O:·,···,.•,,:.,•.y,.;.;.;•:•:···;.·,.;.:•:•:•:•:•:•:•!•'•!•!•!-';!·~·~
,.-.91;•~-H/.o:o:.:tYo~. , y •(•!•'"~~·.•.o.•.•.-.•.-,.:.·,.-,•,
• ....-. ..-......... v,o;o,.., ,._.,".;,,-.,,
, ,__.,,, ...•• • .-..-. • .-•• • .•.-. - .-:-. • • •
.
Garber, 2$, Rt. I, Patriot,
traveling north on Rt. 7, attempted to turn his car onto
Georges Creek Rd. but lost
control.
His car went off the
RUTLAND
Losses recenUy completed an addition
estimated exceeding $23,000 to the house and had remodeled left side of the road Into deep
water and submerged.
were suffered when the tWo- all its rooms.
,
Garber and a passenger,
story frame home here of Mr.
Cause of the blaze has not
Carol
Jan ice Parsons , 16,
and Mrs. Orville Johnson and been detennined. Insurance .
the
family 's
personal coverage amounted to f23,000, Ironton, escaped by rolling
belongings were destroyed by but will not equal the famlly's down a window and scrambling
fire early Sunday moming.
Joss. Firemen of the Rutland out.
Garber was charged with
The Johnsons and their four Dept., called al 5:50a.m., were
children had left home about 4 on the scene until about 10 a.m. reckless operation. His car was
a.m. to visit relatives in Cherry A vacant house next door was demoliuhed.
Two semi truck accidents
Fork near Cincinnati. Barking saved,
of the family dog led neighbors
Mr . and Mrs . Johnson were investigated Monday
to discover the blaze which was operate the All Weather night. The first occurred on Rt.
35 at the junction to Rt. 7 where
out of control when firemen Roofing Co. In Middleport.
a semi operated by Amos T.
reached the scene. All of the
Harper, 58, Charleston, lost·
belongings of the family except
control
on the icy road and
the clothing they wer.e wearing
and a change of clothing were .. Veterans Memorial Hosplllll struck a guardrail causing
ADMITTED - Pauline minor damage.
lost.
A similar accident occurred
The Johnsons had ' left .1o Brewer, Portland: Anna Hart,
phone number where they Pomeroy; Evelyn Murray, at the same location at 11:57
could be reached and were Middl eport; Ruth Baer, p.m. when a semi driven by
unaware of the fire until they Minersville; Dana Snouffer, Fred Collins, 47, Dobson, N. c·.,
Pomeroy; Elsie Roush, slid on the icy pavement _
returned Sunday night.
'!'he Johnsons, now living Rutland ; Pauline Deren- striking a guardrail.
with . ~ehitives, had only berger, Pomeroy, and Jo Ann
Milliron, Racine.
DISCHARGED - Mary
Weyersmiller
, Cloyd
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Brookover, Burdell Black,
Oblo Elleoded Outlook Shirley Bishop, Evelyn MontThursday thnougb Satunlay:
gomery, Clyde Smith and
A ChaliCe of IDOW Hurries
northeast Thursday aad Wesley Clark.

t

Fire loss high

snow or nlin over the otale
Friday alld Saturday. Hlgbs
Ia !be ~ north aad 3011
elewbere. Low mid teens to
mid 3011.
~,.,,,,.,:~:~Z:?ZfX~

TREE BY TERRELL
Pomeroy 's commQnity
Chrisimas ~ located on the•
upper parking lot ha1 lleen
dQnated by John Terrell.

�.'

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Z-TheDallySentlnel,Mlrlrlleoort-Pomerov. 0 .. Dec.12, J9n 1

PRESIDENTS OF MANIFEST DESTINY

'

do it. "

SixNenth Prnidont Ab&lt;aham lincoln
(flrot Administration' March 4, 1861·March 3, 1865)

"A house divided . . . cannot stand''
Abraham Lincoln, breaking new political
groun4 as the fir~t Republican President, parlayed
a deep-seated inferiority complex, a fearful ambivalence about God, a manic-depressive neurosis and
uncanny political intuition into a rampart nationalism that enabled him to become the most powerful
of American Presidents and America the most powerful of. nations.
Honest Abe had ambled awkwardly along the
twisting road to the White House as an undcr·privileged child, itinerant farmer, poorly paid clerk,
terrified suitor, devoted husband and father, moderately · successful lawyer, mediocre congressman,
transfiglired anti-slavery zealot and minority Pre.sident so indecisive at first that he was derided by
politicians and newspapers.
· "The Lincoln Administration is cowardly, mean
and vicious," the New York Herald wrote, "and
it is all the fault of the incompetent, ignorant and

.\nd he did it. Although melancholy repeatedly
descendtxl upon him l.ike ·a shroud, Lincoln fought
patiently and resolutely for his and the nation's
unity . He fought with humor and with humoring,
with prayer and with blood, with an ageless wisdom and a new-found presidential power.
He told his endless jokes because "laughing kept
him from crying." The White House became Army
headquarters as the harassed President planned
strategy and mapped campaigns. And he changed
commanding generals like some men change their
socks; replacing McClellan with Pope, Pope with
ML.Ciellan, McOellan with ·Burnside, Burnside
with Hooker, Hooker with Meade and Meade with
Grant.
Throughout it all Lincoln had two overriding
aims: to defeat Gen. Robert E. Lee's Army of
Northern Virginia and to issue the Emancipation
Pmclamation. But Union victories were so elusive
that Lincoln finally concluded that it was because
Lee was praying to the same God he was, and that
God's purpose ·was different from either of theirs .
Nevertheless, the Battle of Antietam on Sept.
17, 1862, came close enough to a Union victory
to justify Lincoln's purpose. He at once issued a
preliminary edict, and Jan. I, 1863 , he issued the
formal proclamation.
As he so often did, President Lincoln spoke with
unsurpassing eloquence in asking Congress to make
the proclamation an amendment to the Constitution. "In giving freedom to .the slave, we assure
freedom to the free," he said. "We shall nobly save,
or meanly lose, the last best hope of earth."
In his acceptance speech when nominated by
the Illinois Republicans in 1858 to run for the U.S .
Senate against Democrat Stephen Douglas, Lincoln
had caught the popular fancy with his famous "A
house divided against itself cannot stand" speech.
Now the phrasemaker was the chief decisionmaker
in a "house" divided as never before or since.
Cw .... ltn LOS ANGIIII IIMIS

WIN AT BRIDGE

&amp; THINBS

Generation Rap
By Helen and Sue Bouel

. ,.

.. ·.' ·.

, BY PAUL CRABT~JIJ.E

Uberatloo's Ve:ulio•
Helen and Sue:
My boyfriend is just plain cheap - or maybe he takes
women's liberalion personally.
·
Every time we go out to dinner and the movies, he accident..lly (that's what HE says) forgets his.money and I end up
paying.
His parents are well off. He gets a good allowance and even
works off' and on, which l don't. .
Please tell me what to do before I go - BROKE
Dear Broke :
.
Leave your purse at home - and be aure he notices
BEFORE you order. - HELEN'

+++

Broke :
Why don't you spring for a 69-cent ·"statement" pad; then
each time your b.f. "borrows" from you, whip it out, write down
lhe amount, date, items, etc., and give him a copy? If you can
keep"tt funny, you'll keep the guy whil~ still teaching him a
lesson. - SUE

+++

Rap :
I'm not a staunch women's libber, but I'm beginning to see
lhe light, as they say, after this experienCe:
I went out lo dinner last niglit with Toby, a guy from school.
The invitation itself was a big production. He practically kissed
my hand when I accepted - and I had a feeling it wouldn't be a
Golden Arches evening. So great a girl needs more than Big
Macs and French fries in her life. But .so
MUCH more?
He rang the door bell. My father answered. He asked for me
wilh proper deference. My dad looked stunned. He's not used to
guys who sorta bow from the waist.
I greeted Toby . He helped me slip my coat on, opened the
front door, opened lhe car door and helped me in. Afterwards, get
lhis: he fastened my seat belt! When we arrived at the
restaurant (on time!), l kinda made a move for the car door, but
he said, "Stay right there," so out he popped, trotted around to
my side (seemed like hours that I waited), opened my door,
unfastened my seat belt, escorted me by lhe arm into the
restaurant. Inside, he pu~ out my chair, helped me off with my
coat and ordered for me!
When our food came, I reached for the salad (family style in
a big bowl) but 1 wasn't fast enough. He served me. Ditto soup,
pasta- and he even buttered my bread! He also bung on my
every word like I was wonderful, when I KNOW I'm only dumb
old normal me.
We went through lhe same door-opening, seat belt.fastening
routine on the way home, and at my door he took my band and
said, "I had an enjoyable evening. Thanks for con'iing. You're
really a FUN person."
Now I ask you, how could I be fun when I was no more than
his puppet? I got the feeling I couldn't even breathe without him
checking out lhe air first.
My mother lhinks he's the greatest thing since Cary Grant.
What do you lhink, Sue? - Would YOU enjoy life on a high
pedestal? !like him, but how do I get him off the "adoration"
trip? - ORDINARY GIRL .

The Almanac
Mercury, Venus and Mars.
By United Press International
The evening stars are Jupiter
Today is Tuesday, Dec. 12, and Saturn.
Ordinary Girl:
the 347th day of 1972 with 19 to
Those born on this date are · How about honesty? Tell him, "Please don't put me on a
follow.
under the sign ol Sagittarius. 'pedestal: I'm afraid of heights." And let him know you're a
,II', Se•d· ~Har · I&lt;ACI!IBY. ·MODERN·book
;,
'I(~!l!j!OIJ..i~.~PI!I:n;I@ing,i.f$,;q
Jphn..Jay, firJt ·~hief •justice •()GoldenArches'"-··HPm!ghtE'vi!il
be reUe~ed!.
:..:. sn~... 'o. . I I
h' ""'"''
'
I h
"J't"i"•
f\!'JJ&lt;t~ ,, "''':T!'tll 1, ~ni.J ('II
to:
"Win
of
Bridge,"
fc
(,
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firs\._H~P.r~~r
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United
Slr:ltes:,
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boiffl·.
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11
1
paper!, P.O. Box 4'/; 'RdNro ~·'t , T~~ ,mormv&amp; .~tars .• ~ r~ '" Dec. lZ- . 1145. . ....
,,..
Station, Now York,, N.Y••JOOJ.9, - ·
·
'"

Somebody at the Public Broadcasting Service ~ hive
been enrolled in tile Journalism 101 course at Mllnhall. '
University aoout 1949 or 1950.
· Wilh admirable candor, the textbook told us what tbe vlrious
''missions" of a conununicattons mediwn should be. In o~ of
Importance, they are:
'
1 - SelfiJl'eservation.
2 - To inform.
~~~· ' .
3 - To ent~.
• ··\ '
4 - To give wise ~dance.
·~: ·
PBShasn'theeded this advice, giving far too much·attenUo!) •·•
toitems2and.4,andnotnearlyeflC)ughto item i.
' .":•
As a result, public broadcasting -: represented here on ·. '
WOUB-TV, OlBlUiel 20 in Athens, and WMUL-TV;Channe1331n
Huntingtoo - may find new programming hard to come by,
come the first of the year. Repeal$ wUJ begin early. Some
programs wUJ get the ax, to be replaced by notbln~ . .
It is posSible, although unlikely, that PBS may vanish
altogether by next season.
This would be a disaster, But, to some extent, the top guna at
PBS asked for it. Here's what hawene&lt;l:
PBS started as a subsidiary of the federal Corporation for
Public Broadcasting, heavily dependent on government funds.
Now, any non-&lt;!Ommerclal network Is going to find the 'road
rocky in trying to compete with the big, entrenched, commercial
networks. Nevertheless, PBS made some spectacular gains.
Some solid dramatic presentations- mostly imports- were
offered, and were so good they were picked up for later reruns on
lhe commercial networka. Some "educational" offerings, such
as "French Chef," drew good audiences.
.
And public broadcasting_l!as linked in lhe mind of TV
viewers with two of the best programs ever made for chtldren "Sesame Street" and "The Electric Company."
This fall, seven-night..a-week programming got under way, .
and while the new offerings were not sensational, they drew goo(!
notices from~ rather narrow, specialized audience.
So, it might appear lhBt PBS had proven itself against stiff
competition, and Is ready to boom along as an alternative 1&lt;1
regular ABCCBS-NBC ~gramming.
Wrong. Dead wrong.
Instead, the people at PBS are hanging on the brink, ruMing·
out of money, and facing curtailment problems.
'
• In the mad rush to ~vide Information and entertainll!ent, ,
along with wise guidance, PBS forgot that all4mportant .first
requirement: the need for self1)reservation. And without tbat,
lhe other three 'mlulona" simply cannot be fulfilled. ·
In brief, PBS gained a .reputatim - unfairly or not - of
biting the hand that feeds it: the Federal Government. And the
results are bad. In the next column, we'll look at what happened.
+++
ON THE TV DIAL: Two fine shows are repeated, at the same
time, darn it: ''The Snow Goose," WSAZ-TV, and "A CharUe
Brown Christmas," WCHS-TV .. . Don Rickles has a comedy
special which I won't watch, 10 on WCHS-TV.
'
.

Don'f Lef Wesf Have Lead
. ' ,• N~TH

1 '1\lll~t

I&amp;

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12

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•.; •,:i •lli~olo '
t AJ 74

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·· DR,111 •·.WRf.. NCEf,1AM8

... 7542

· WEST
.J9753
.J85
• Q52

... 96

EAST
.A106
• 10 9 7 3
• 86

A Tragic Side
;:om2S:W:.~.;~::f$::~(.::..~:::::::::::::::::::~:=i-:::=~i-:"&lt;(.').~$~~~=-":~:-».:-:®wx-~~~:~m-:..;.~.'tx.~v.xp;::~~~~·~~mr&gt;:llll'8l~

· ·QJ108

soum (D)

.K82
• A62
t K 1093
• AK3
Bolh vulnerable
West North East South
1N.T.
P.ass
Pass

.

3 N.T.

Pass

Pass

' Opening lead- • 5

'

By, Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
· 'I:oday's article shows the
same North and South hands
as yesterda,v. The bidding
ana the ,opemng lead are also
the same.
So is the play of the queen
of 'spades from dummy.
South must try to get some
value out ol that card. This
time it turns out that East
wins the trick with the ace
and returns the 10·spot.
South Jets the 10 hold but
has to win the spade continuation.
lle can now count 10 tricks
if he picks up the queen of
diamonds and nine tricks if
he loses the finesse provided that the defender who
holds the queen can't gather
in .two m or e spade tricks
when he gains the lead.
It should be obvious to
South that if anyone holds
the last two spades it is
West. Therefore, West is the
dangerous hand and South
must keep him out ol the
lea&lt;l. r · .
' A finesse against W e s t
makes this certain. South
plaYs his king of diamonds ;
continues wJth the JO.and .iets
it tide lf W e ..s t does not
cover. ·· .
West does have the queen
so the finesse works and
s'buth makes his contract
with an overtrick but South
should take no pride in this.
He has merely played the
hand In workmanlike fashion
and made sure of his contra~ irrespective of the success•of the finesse.
(N,IWIPAPU INTERH.ISI · ASSN.!

1.

The bidding has been:
w..c· North East

!

2• '

,_,
PQ/1
Y'l"o South, hold:

South
1. • .
?

•1¥AQNTS .AU ... KQT
....I clo Y.OII ~o now?

Ai •• twv llearti. Your hand
.. . . . , worth dW - - ' bid.
t'ODAY'I lltfflS'DON
W. continues to lhree clubs,
wld6 1o piiiOII around to you.
Wlllt do J11U do.now~

Raiders eliminate Jets,
face Steelers or Browns

•

by j)atterson and Patrit.k

desperate 'Honest Abe."' EmlxJldenoo by such
comments from the press, Secretary of State William Seward handed to the President a curious
document that, in effect, told Lincoln that he,
Seward,. was better qualified to be President than
Lincoln was .
There are times in the lives of great illen and
women when the surge of vital energy crests in
a "peak experience" that gives intense purpose and
direction to existence .. Lincoln's elan vital crested
now . His reply to Seward was restrained and relevant: "I remark that if this must be done, I must

.

.'

I Voice along Br'Way

Human Side

o

.

. ,. . ,Television\~agJ~:~.~:·:~
.

TUESDAY, DEC. 12, 1972
6:00 - News J, 4, 10, lS ; Sesame Street 20; Around The bend 33.
6:30 - News 3. 4, 6. 8. 10, 15; I D(eam of Jeannie 13; Growing
Him Up 33.
7:oo - What's My LineS; I've Got ASecret 13; Film 15; Electric
Co. 20 : Bealthe Clock 4; Truth or Consequences 3.
7:30 - This Is Your Life 3; Doctors on Call4; To Tell The Truth
6; Price Is Right 8, 10; Beat The Clock 13; RFD 20; Zoom 33.
8:00 - Temperatures Rising 6, 13; Age of Anxiety 33; Ohio: This
Week 20 ; Hall of Fame 3, 4, 15; Peanuts 8, 10 .
8:30 - Hawaii Flve-0 8, 10; Bill Moyer's Journol 20, 33; Billy
Graham Crusade S.
9:00 - Bold Ones3, 4, 15: Behind the Lines 20.
9: JO- Black Journal 20, 33.
10:00 - Marcus Welby M.D. 6, 13 ; America 3, 4, 15; Film 33;
News 20; Don Rickles 8, 10.
11 :00 - News3. 4. 6, 8. !0, 13, 15.
.
11:30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15; Virginian S; Comedy News 6;
Movie. 10; Movie, 13.
1:00 - Your Health
1:30 - News 4, 13.

That'll be $10,000. Howard Cosell? $5,000. Crazy .
BY J~CK O'BRIAN
Oakland Raiders get fan mall from all over
A LITTLE FUNDAMENTAL
about the· gal singing national anlhem before
HINDSIGHT ...
NEW YORK (KFS) - Plastic surgery network games. She's Gisele MacKem:le. A
Canadian ... Instant beer is next. Alleged tasty By Lawrence Lamb, M.D. smoked reali2ed what they
bottom-liftin~, reverse of face-hoisting, has a
Dear Dr. Lamb-1 read a were doing and the effect It
cheeky unofficial $1,500 tag. Over in Eastern suds just by adding water to a . concentrate. letter in your column where would have on their loved
Mediterranean lands, fat fundaments are Nah ; we prefer the good old sptgot ... Ltttle a ~:enUeman questioned the ones, perhaps they would
considered sexier lha n big uptops: Husband lhankee from Jan Morgan' ''Thanks to your . sertousness ol emphysema make a stronger effort to
·
'M h Ad Abo t
d k d 'f 't
stop smoking cigarettes and
WEDNESDAY, DEC. 13, 1972
with botlomless wife lose face.
'bring-the-kids ' tip on
uc
o
u an as e l l was an exag- follow their doctor's advice. 6: oo - Sunrise Seminar 4; Sacred Heart 10.
6:15 - Farmtime 10.
Dim'tbe startled if Pres. Nixon Mmes a )!al Nolhing' we took the whole family and loved it. gerated illness .. One cannot
Occasionally
living
in
New
York
can
be
joyous."
exa~gerate
a
ktller,
I
know.
Dear
Dr.
Lamb-Recently
6:20 - Farm Report ·13.
lo liis Cabinet ... David Janssen is in Israel
.
It killed my lather. I hope I heard on TV that men to· 6:25 - Paul Harvey 13.
filming "Sabra" and his steady, Dani Grego,
Woody Allen-Dick Cavett manager JllCk you will print th.s letter for day are goln~ bald 10 years 6:30 - Columbus Today 4; News, Weather. Sports 6: Bible
Answers 8; Urban League Presents 10.
being unwound from planist-&lt;:rooner Buddy Rollins plans a supper club of his own to t t him and thousands like him earlier than m the previous
new
talent
a
Ia
the
sadly
demised
Blue
Angel.
to
read.
My
dad
had
asthma
generation.
Do
you
have
any
6:35
- Glory Road 13.
Greco, is right on the set ... Walter AMenberg,
our Ambassador to Great Britain, turned down Whose c!Hlwner Jacoby died recently. Rollins flom. birth. He also smoked advice on how a man in his j: ~ = ~~~i ~~;,N:~~~~·e~:~·effers S; Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
13 .
a Queen Liz-ransom for his TV Guide. Philly ·has rented space above Sam's Restaurant heav~ly. ThenT~e %ev~l~ed e~rly 20s ca~ avoid or delay
8:00Tt'-mmCayp1&amp;. KLaangs•iaeroo6. 8, 10; New Zoo Revue 13; Sesame St. 33;
reports say Walter wants back into publishing. plans a "fair" minimum and no cover ... Movie r~r i~sr~aarea ~olde~im ~~ I s process.
Dear Reader - Unforlu·
•
I
In Phllly ...
ass'n boss Jack Valenti takes his nine-year-o d had to stop smoking and take nately, that is our nature. 8:30 - Jack La La nne 13: Romper Room S; New Zoo Revue 6.
S: 55 - Local News 13.
Temporary-mutual fund genius Bernie daughter Courtney to PG...ated pix. His per- it easy. He tried. He even
sonal
"parental
guidance"
includes
clamping
went
to
a
hypnottst.
Anyone
Apparently,
human
beings
9:00- Paul Dixon 4; Phil Donahue 15; What Every Woman
Cornfeld (he's down lo half a dozen live-in babes
.,.
over
her
(inv
ears
and
turns
her
head
who
has
smoked
for
30
yelji'.S
have
been
becoming
less
Wants to Know 3; Mr. Rogers 33; Friendly Junction 10; Capt.
in H'wood ) had as his date at the London his Unl "'
• •v
. "
knows the agony of an Mur hairy, at least on the head.
Kangaroo 8; Ben Casey 13: Concentration 6.
"Deliverance" premiere Xaviera Hollander, when somelhlng 'unsuitable blues lhe screen. without a cigarette. He never for centuries and it is ~ust a 9:30 - To Tell The Truth 3; Jeopardy6; Hazels.
9: 55 - Chuck White Repor.!s 10.
.
.·
lhe shabby "Happy Hooper"; after Bernie's But can ordinary parents know when lhe un- stopped.
natural part of our evo ution. 10: oo- Dinah Shore 3, 15; Phil Donahue 4; In School Instruction
I don't thin k he really Individuals who have a good
33; Columbus Six Calling 6; Joker's Wild 8, !0; Dick Van
negative headlines lhese last several years he suitable words and deeds come along?
Former
Olympics
Gold
Medal
swim
champ
believed
he
was
dying,
but
solid
growth
of
hair
around
Dyke 13.
'
doesn't care what anyone concludes from his
Donna de Varona (the expert voice of ABC-TV's we knew. We watched ~or the sides and b~ck of t11elr 10:30 - Concentration 3, ts; Love American Style 6: Phil
private life ... The recent item lhat Denver has a
.
three years. We saw him head can sometimes have
Donahue4; Price Is RightS, 10: Split Second 13.
, ough 11 :oo - Sale of the Century 3, 151Love American Style 6; Gambit
$1 a dily rent..a-toupee lhat Jesse! might be coverage ol lhe Muruch swims) is the one ga1 drop to 90 sounds We saw h a 1 r transplants (alth
8; Password 13; Electric Co. 20.
interested in brought this wire from beauty sportscaster we've ever heard who Isn't a him grow o d and· weak at these are verY expensJ ··e · 11 :30
- Hollywood Squares 3, 4, 15; Bewitched 6, 13; Love 01 Life
s. 10; Sesame Street 20.
maven Michel Kazan : "Jack, you really know dainty mistake. She has great experience, has 56. It seems quiet now with· when done by competent
been sportspieling in San Francisco and does it out his wracking cough. 1 go people). Other individuals 12:00- Jeopardy 3, 15; ~ob Braun's 50-50 Club 4; Local News 10;
how lo Hertz a guy.''
t th
h h t ed will just have to resort 1o
News 13; Contact S; Password 6.
Lauren Bacall got a package backstage at Mturally, not like a cute little doggie who can
e room w ere ~ s ay
artificial hair pieces or learn 12:30-3 W'sGame3, 15; Split Second6: Search for Tomorrows,
th1 1 ~ last ydealr w~tchJHng telle- to consider baldness the nor10.
her London "Applall8e" lheatre and it was walk on his hind legs not too well.
. ' id
J kl v slon an s eepmg. e on y
d
12: 5~ - NBC News 3, 15.
•. .
rushed to lhe bobbies for bom!Hltudy. Not quite
Fat conuc.Billy Vme s w ow says ac e left to use the bathroom. l mal .characteristic an rr· t:OO - News, Weather, Sports 3; All My Children 6, 13; Green
Acres 10; French Chef 33; Its Your Bet 8; Watch Your Child
so lethal: her favorite cigarets from Swiss pals. Gleason offered a bundle for Billy's great old can still smell the cigarettes. haps popularize "b a I Is
beautiful."
I
routines
she
keeps
on
file
but
for
sentimental
Still
see
the
burn
marks
n
15.
They only take longer.
•t
11
So
f
T
U
k
'-nri
e
m
'
the
car~t where his shaky
tN£w•p;,m INTIRPRtll ASSN.)
1:20
- Lucille Rivers 3.
Lyricist Bob Lorick of the off-Bdwy. hit reasons won se ·
ar ... 91&gt; c e., c
·
•
1:30 - 3 On AMatch 3, 4, 15; The World Turns 8, 10,· Let's "·ke '
opped the sh~rter
,.,.
musical "Har~! " still Is in Roosevelt Hospital ·lown , lhe Dec. 11 wAIF Cinderella Ball at the hands
1
ones. He never complamed,
•-fli 1.., 4..sliMs to Dr. Lomb, 2 : ~ Deg'a~s
Our Lives 3, 4, 15: Newlywed Game 13; Mlke
alter his senseless 8:30p.m. for-kicks shooting Pia za (Afte r a "Young WI nston" showing ) for even
after I saw the know!""
Douglass 6; Guiding Light 8, 10.
by street hOods in the 7Qs on Central Park West. $500..and-higher contributors .... Exiled Greek edge of his own death creep- i• core of t~ll ....,.,.,, , ,0, lor 2:30 - Days of Our Lives 3, 4, 15; Dating Game 13; Edge of
Night 8, 10.
Two brave brutes accosted him for the right composer Milds Theodorakis (the military ing into those bloodshot eyes 7557, o.,.. w, R~io City Slalioo,
regime
let
him
out
when
he
was
ill
with
T.B.)
and
the
starJo:
fear
of
dying.
New
Yort,
H.Y.
IOOI9.
For
copioa
3:00Another World 3, 4, '15; General Hospital 6, 13; Love
time and after he told them, one ordered, "Shoot
I have known since SeptemSplendored Thing 8, 10; RFD 20.
him ." Didn'teven filch his watch or wallet. This
has asked to return. Promised to abstain from ber that my dad probably o1 Dr. ""'""'s boollm • ~· 3, 30- Relllrn to Peyton Place 3, 4, 15; One Life to Live 6, 13;
all
politics.
wouldn't be here for my ., _,..•
Secret Storm 8, 10; Ohio: This We&lt;tk 20.
.
and several other shootings In lhe same area Soon as "Dillinger" finishes shooting in graduation. He went to the - lo ,..r clroleo) 11 tlto 4:00- Mister Cartoon 3; Somerset 15; Fllnlslones 6: Love
rumored the same night! - Didn't even make
Okla.,
AlP
starts
"Black
Caesar"
in
Harlem;
hospital
and
within
a
month
_
.Nroa.
~\'!~~C:; ~~~fe1 ~;::rfil~;;rg~n~i ~rem• St. 331 Gll~l.gan's
lhe papers ... Tiny Teresa Brewer: pushing 40,
4,30- M#Jrv Gr!Hin 4: Andy Griffith 15; Daniel Boone 13:
almost was refused·entrance at the Oak Bar of It's a black gangster flick in the Robinson- he knew only my mother.
Bogart-Muni-Cagney
"Scarface"
and
"Little
Still
another
month
later,
he
Petticoat Junction 3: t Lave Lucy 6.
the Plaza where she's staying. The maitre d'
died.
5:00- Mister Rogers 33; Daniel Boone 6; Santa at the ~II 15;
.
Ponderosa 3, 4.
really lhought she was a below-drlnklng..age Caesar" murder rut.
. UN Sec Gen'l Waldheim moved into a
Some people may thmk it
5:30- Dragnet 8; Elec1rlc Co. 33; Gomer Pyle 13; Marshali
teenstress.
,
was his own fault. I don't
On this day in hlslory:
. Dillon 15; Hodg~ Lodge 20.
The delightful Top of lhe Six's (666 Fifth SUtton Place mansion ... Joffrey Ballet · know the answer. 1 o n I y
In 1792 , falned Pr
. usslan 6t_~- News, Weather, Sports3. 4, 8, 10. 15: Truth or Conseq. 6;
,_me Street 20; Around the Bend 33. .
,
Ave.) has its "St. Patrick's Table" - from ballerina DenlseJa'ckson'soff.to the hospital for know tl)at cigarettes and
surgerY'.
~e·s
Radio
City
Music
HaU
veep
John
emphysema
have
taken
composer
Ludwig
van
Beelllov7:00'Fruth
or
Conaequenc:es
3;
Beat
11M
Clock
4;
News
6,
10;
which you can 'took straight down from huge
Jackson's sprite. Movie deal for Cakier away the only father I have en, then 22, paid 19 cents for
What's My Line I; Anything You can Do 13; Saint 15:
)l'lndows at St. Pat's Calhedral ..Glotious ... The
his first music lesion. ·
Electric ComPiny 20; Know Your Schools 33.
.,
k
In 1901 , a wireless ,.......e. 7:30- Episode: Action 33; To Tell The Truth 6: The JuC!ilt .10;
Census b~reau figgers the average family now Willingham's "Rambling Rose" novel bot- ever nown.
lists includes Nat King Cole's
There is nothing, more I
...__,
~~~t=Thl ~~ 13: Poll&lt;e Surgeon 3; Protedin 1,
is down from 3.6 children (In '60) to lhe present caking up lhe"Rambling
R
,
ord
icing
can
say,
except
don
t
do
this
was
sent
acroas
~
Atlantic
....,..,_,.,
2.L Even Gerber's Baby food (remember ils hu ge-aeDin8
ose rec
vo
to your family or yourself. Ocean for lhe first llrile.
8:00- carol a...
I, 10; Paul Lyndt 6, 13; Adam-12 3, 4, 15;
delightful pitch "Babies Are OUr Business, Oor under lhe film's credits. If the deal jella, Stop before It Is too late. BeIn 1947, John L. Lewis a:.~ar~l~ft-'~":.7. ~5}~ 1 • "Evory ~n NHds OM" 6,
~ly Busineu''J has been forced to diversify ...
songwriters Joe and Noel Sherman will get drfore ,Yohu breakLyiof u r chi!- withdrew hla United Mine
13; Playhouse 20.
$10,000,
Nat's
estate
a
nice
bundle
...
Cornie
en.
s
eart.s.
e
Is
too
Workers
from
the
American
9:00Medical Cent.r 1, 10; Chapter 33,
Lady we know had minor surgery at New York
Federation of Labor for the . :~:
~':.tt.':.~~o.1~~. 'itnrlCln I, 10; Soul! 33; News 20.
Hospital and was stashed in the almost empty Freddie Roman says he's signed a ~.ooo pact precious.
Dear Reader-Thank you SllCood time.
'tr:30- Johnny Carson 3 4, 15; Comedy News 6; Movie "Prlnca
maternity wing; lhe female-~~urgical floors with the Concord in the sour-cream Apls. Not a
thlsone'sfor4Donefor
bringing
out
the
humab
In
1971
American
broadcastVallanr• 13. •
hugeLasVega.wtyledeal:
were awash with abortion C88el!, we were told.
•·
·
side
of
the
tragedy
of
clga.
.
nee'
r
,.._
ld
Sarnoff
died
12:00Vltglnlan 11 MoVIe "Tht OulraiJII" 10.
That plus the pill did It ... You want Joe Namath nigh ..,rs.
rette smoking and emphy- mg PIO , ..... v
1: oo - News 4.
,
·
for a perS01181 appearanCe at your shindig?
sema. If more people who · at the age of ao.
1:30- Ntws 13.

of Emphysema

°.

lJi

...,50"""...,. fh

OAKLAND(UPI)-TheNew for lhe wild card berth into lhe
York Jel.!l are dead and the playotfs.
Oakland Raiders have their · While it was all sweetness
wish.
and joy for the Raiders, the
By beating the Jets 24-18 Jets went home today deflated
Monday night in lheir national- 1111d a little bitter even !hough
ly televised game, lhe AFC Joe Namath and Don Maynard,
w~ ,libamp Raiders assured two of lhe club's most solid
111_eW11'flves of ' meeting Plt- players and stars in their own
tsbili'gh or Cleveland in the right, both achieved distinfirst round of lhe playoffs m-· guished landmarks.
stead of the Miami Dolphins.
Namath, playing with a
And in the process of beating heavy cold, completed 2S-of-46
New York, they ended their old passes for 403 yards. All it
rivals' chances of staying alive netted the Jets was one touch-

On the other side, Daryle
Lamonica threw for two TDs,

the second coming in the fourth
quarter and providing the
Raiders the room lhey needed
to register their nlnlh victory
compared to lhree losses and a
tie.
The Jets slipped to 7-8, and
lhelr game SUnday in New
York with Cleveland now
becomes meaningless for
lhem. Had they beaten the
Raiders , they could have

Tar Heels survive
second half scare
By United Press IntemaiiODal landing a punch that brought

DRMN!HN -Melgl' Andy Vaugh&amp;n (2t) goes high into
!he .air to avoid Roger Dingy, at left, of stopping his layup
drive. At right, Wahama's Roger Dingy (~) and Mark
Mitchell (45) go high for a rebound in the White Falcons

What seemed like an easy
viclory early in the evening
nearly turned into a dillaster
for sixth-ranked North
Carolina.
The Tar Heels surged to a 26unsuccessful bid against Meigs Saturday night in lhe
point lead in the first half
Marauder gym. Meigs won the game handily, 73-46 with lhe
Monday night and then had to
Marauders senior guard Jimmy Boggs scoring a career high
battle for lhelr lives in the
27 points (all from outside). Roger Dingey topped Wahama
second defeat Kentucky 78-70
before a screaming crowd of
'~~:::;;.&lt;:::;;::::;m~:::x:::~:::~:~::::::~:::,::::~&lt;:,:~: 17,50(! fans at Louisville.
BEULAH PARK TOPS
George Karl''s 22 polnta led
COLUMBUS (UP!) _
Norlh Carolina, which doublect
Beulah Park In nearby the score on Kentucky at .52-21i
but had to withstand a lurious
Grove City was the top
revenue producer among the rally lo win.
Ronnie Lyons, ailing from a
state's 17 racing permit
holders lhls year, the Ohio Painful kidney infection,
Racing Commission reports. sparked Kentucky in a comeone of lhe opposing linemen.
The state collected back that sliced North Carol!"He didn't even know he
na's lead 1o 71-65 with 4:02
$1,642,132 from wagering at
completed the pass until Dr.
remaining.
Beulah, a thoroughbred
lppolito (team physician) lold
However, the undefeated Tar
track which reported a
him about it on the sidelines
Heels kept their cool under
handle for 1972 of $21,225,183,
after he overcame his
tremendous defensive pressure
also highest of any Ohio
grogginess. He suffered a
in lhe final four minutes to
track.
severe blow, but came right
The commission meets make off with their fifth
back and did not yield lo 'lhe
straight victory.
Wednesday to consider 1973
punishment. That's lhe mark dale applications from the
The game in Freedom Hall
of a professional . quar- tracks.
produced a near free-for-all
lerback."
near lhe end of the game and
Skorich said Namalh "will ~::~:,::::::::::::~=:::::::::::::::::~'::~:,:::~::::~8'8':~:':':: two unrelated technical fouls
stay in lhe pocket and lhrow,
against Kentucky Coach Joe
minimizin~tchance of runn..nf-npQ
"•" tr-h ..J.. .. •n•rd J•~~..
'
.lh9~~JMl'' C!ri
L&amp;l.«.,.,~ )f\&gt;l""" II'~" 1"~ 1 '""""""·~
"''"''"1
lng !IIIIi __ _ ' bW
Dan · Conner "'ellftlid·' 'lrUl\

Skorich's hopes sit on
two big weekend 'ifs'
CLEVELAND (UP!) Cleveland Browns Coach Nick
Skorlch said Monday he still
has hopes his team will win the
AFC Central Division title
desplte the predictions of the
Las Vegas oddsmakers.
Skorlch admitted If the
Browns are to win lhe title they
must silence the rifle-like
passing arm of Joe Namath
when they meet the Jets Sunday in New York. The San Diego Chargers also could help by
beating Pittsburgh •

West Coast and they'll know
how we fare even before they
kickoff because of the time difference," said Skorich.
"The Steelers had an emotionalletdown Sunday (against
Houston). The possibility ol an
upset existed many times
during lhe contest."
He admitted his team "got
some big breaks and made the
most of lhem when we needed
it" against the Cincinnati
Bengals Saturday. They won
27-24.
_

no

"'*'·· ·

·

w!t~rJ:;il': ~f:~~'"fe!= w~~~~~~l"~eq'!lt~:'~f 'Setlrching . .
!heir record against other Cen- Bengal defensive line which
tral Division teams is better
lhan Pittsburgh's win-Joss rec-

oro.

"We're capable ol defeating
lhe Jets. If we do that, then all
of the pressure wUJ lie.on the
Steelers' s11oulders. Luckily for
LB, the Steelers play on the

has sacked more quarterbacks
lhan any olher team in lhe
NFL.
"Mike has been able to go
back inlo lhe furnace," Skorich said. "He proved it when
he lhrew lhe touchdown pass to
Frank Pitts and got belted by

:~n:u~lr~:. ~~e ~;tete It

Sundays game Will be lhe
first time the B~s have
played in Shea Stad1wn. Shea's
·
unusual wind factor w11J be
studied by the entire coaching
staff, Skorich said.

McRae-Simpson swap could
help Kansas City as well
KANSASCITY,Mo. (UPI)On the surface, at least, it
appears the Cincinnati Reds
made a very good deal In the
two-for-two swap with the
Kansas City Royals at the
winter baseball meetings.
But lhe trade very weD could
work out to be beneficial to
bolh clabs.
The Royals gave up pitcher
Roger Nelson and outfielder
Riehle Scheinbltun in exchange
for pitcher Wayne Simpson and
outfielder Hal McRae, whom
the Royals hope to make into a
third baseman.
Ne~ was the Royals' best
pitcher last season, posting an
11~ record with a 2.08 earned
run average and six shutouts.
Schebiblum, the regular right.
!Ieider, hit .300.
In exchange, lhe Royals got
Simpson (U with a 4.15 ERA)
and McRae, who hit .2781n only
fl at-bats.
· FromCincillnati's·vtewpoint,
the Redlegs obtained a solid
starting pitcher in Nelson and a
good plnciH!itter in Scheinblum, who Ia a switch-hitter.
The Redlegs gave up anolher
pinchhllter in McRae and a
pitcher who has a history of
arin trouble.
From Kansas City's view-

point, lhe ROyals received a
pitcher who has as much or
more potential tban Nelson and
a man who can play every day,
eilher in right field or at third
base. The Royals, . in their
opinion, gave up a pitcher who
also has a history of arm
trouble and an outfielder who,
!hough a very good hitter,
proved to be a defensive
liability.
So, the trade depends upon
which side It's viewed.
Scheinblum has little chance
of playing regularly for lhe
Redlegs, but he wlll be an
excellent pinch-hitter. The
Royals, moving to a new park
with artificial tilrf, felt 'they
were not in a position to afford
lhe luxury of an excellent
pinchhitter at the present time.
And Scheinblum, tho~~Sh he
. was one of the hardest working
players on the team and went
all-out on every play, simply
was not adequate defensively.
He had only six a.sslat.s in 1972
and committed eight errors.
Nelson was the Royals'
stopper last season. But he
started the season on lhe
minor-league roster after a
recurrence of arm trouble in
1971. Though effective, Nelson
suffered circulation problems

For fast money service••.

i$ the an$Wer

:l::=

•

down.

992-2171

125 E, Main St.

I.

t

Pomeroy,O.

•-

j,

for Clues

Cincinnati (UP!) -A benign
lesion slightly larger lhan a
bl
d
nd
mar e was remove Mo ay
from a portion ol Johnny
~ncb's right Iring. Doctors
today were attempting to
determine what caused it.
Bench, 25-year-old Cincinnati Reds catcher and 1972
Most Valua.ble Player in lhe

National League, was reported
in good condition at Christ
Hospital. He will remain there
In his pitching hand lhe latter seven or eight more days.
"There are so many
part of lhe 1972 season. His
to the
fingers turned icy cold after posst'b'lit'
1 tes as
cause
that
it's
impossible
lo
say
what
pitching.
it
might
be
right
now,"
said
The Royals felt lhat by
trading Nelson and Schein- ' Reds' team physician, Dr.
blum, they were getting rid of George Ballou.
questionable performers when
Ballou said it was not a
lhey were worth maximum tumor and was not malignant.
Examination of a frozen
value.
Of course, what lhey got in section of the growlh revealed
return may not be any better. "an lnflanunatory lesion," he
Simpson's arm troubles have said
'
been well-chronicled since he
Tests on "live" portions ol
jumped off to a 13-1 start in the removed lesion will
1970. New Royals Manager hopefully shed light on its
Jack McKeon watched him origins.
Ballou said the growth was
pitch In Puerto Rico, however,
lung itself, but
and reported he is throwing not wl lhln "e
••
was In a fissure between lhe
well.
lower
and upper Jobes of the
McRae was the key to the
lung
.
"As
a consequence, it
trade, as far as lhe Royals are
concerned. The 26-year-old was only necessary to remove
wields a healthy bat. He a small amount of lung tissue,"
he 'd
always has hit well in the
sal ·
Ballou revealed that Bench
clutch and the Royals felt it
was necessary .to find someone decided on lhe surgery himself
to hit behind John Mayberry. after the "spot" was round
The big first baseman too often during the team 's annual
· ti
in Ia
In 1972 was pitched around by physical examina OlllJ
te
September. Doctors allowed
the opposition.
Now lhe Royals are in a Bench to continue playing,
position to put Amos Otis ahead including the leagu·e playoffs
·
of Mayberry and possibly and World Series.
"We
thought
there
was
a
2
McRae and Lou Pin lelia behind
him.
Iier cent chance of it being
Of course, If it turns out malignant," Ballou said.
McRae can do an adequate job "John didn'l Want lo take a
at lhtrd base, lhat will be an chance.''
Bench will require eight
additional bonus for the
Royals. Then lhey can put weeks of convalesence at
Steve Hovley or young Jim home, but the Reds expect him
WOhlford or Kellh MarshaU in to be ready for spring training
and the season opener April ~·
right !ield.
"A type of incision was used
That situation depends a
great dealm Paul Schaal, who so·lhat it was not necessary to
had an off-year at tlm'd base in cu! into back muscles and It
was not necessary lo remove a
1972, hitting .228.
So, a trade depends on how rib," Ballou said.
Bench's parenl.!l, a llater,
' you look at it. Certainly, thla
one figures to help the Redlegs. mother and a friend were at
· But It 1also could help the lhe hospital during lhe 2 1·2
hour operation.
Royals.
"We're 10 bappy it turned out
• There's notlang that says a
trade can't help both teaDII, Ia the way it has," Mrs. Katie
·f!ench said:
there?

'

North Carolina's Bobby Jones,

combined for 43 points as South
Carolina beat off scrappy
Georgia Southern. Ernie
DIGregorio hit for 37 points to
enable Providence lo defeat
Fairfield and Houston got 17
points from Louis Dunbar and
15 from Dwight Jones to upend
St. Mary's.
Sophomore Jimmy Baker
scored 40 points as Nevada-Las
Vegas rallied from a 13-point
halftime deficit to upset previously unbeaten Oral Roberts.
In other games, freshman
Phil Sellers scored 28 points to
leadRutgerstoan811-73victory
• -~1 h nd Lee u--'·'
over """'
g a lnts ...,.,,.
~•·h 30
arried
career
...
.,.
po
c
Neb ask to 7" ••
r Chrl
a ...
a """romp
ru k s ttlo~•
Texas
s ...n. Kc • u beat
es
..
polnl.!l helped
"'
ansas
xavier of Ohio 61-64 and Steve
Mitch 11 hit"" Ka
sta•·
e
""as nsas "'
stopped N0 rth T
s•·te 711exas. ..
62 D M hy' 5 t
fr:ee
· an urp
wo ·
th
with thr
da left
rows
ee secon
ctn"'~~-u a 711-74 ictory
gave """"'
v
Ar'•• Stat
over ...,na
e.

blood from the Tar Heel
player's nose.
Jones, a starter on the u.s.
Olympic tearri· at Munich last
summer, scored two key
baskets in the final moments to
lock up lhe victory for North
Carolina and finished wilh 15
points. Sophomore Ed Stahl
added 14 to the North Carolina
attack.
Sophomore Kevin Grevey's
19 points were high for Kenlucky, which lost ita third game
in a row after beating Michigan
State In Us opener. Lyons
contributed 15 points and
Conner 13 for lhe Wildcata, who
trailed 46-28 at the half and
went more than three minutes
before scoring their first points
of the final stanza.
1n other "action Involving
ranked clubs, Lon• Beach
e
State(7) ripped Colorado~.
South Carolina (13) beat
Georgia Southern 92-77,
Providence ( 14) routed
Fairfield 93-57, Holl8ton (15)
held off St. Mary's of Texas 59Gtin!IYQ
,....."e.,
47 and Oral Roberta (17) was
upset by Nevada-Las Vegas 86- u~~ p~~sRfote~~::,~n;~:
80.
20 major college basketball
Roscoe Poindexter's 20 teams wllh first place votes
points ' carried Lona ~ach andwon-l,ost records In paren.
'
lhem· \•n
,.,
· state palll Colorado lllld"Biiaii''' IF.lr~f weel&lt; )' .,.,, ·

wllege R .

1

I:1~~~~~Wo\3 .01

Winters and Kevin Joyce

w~&lt;:::::::::~:::: :: ,;:: ;:;: ::: ::::::~::,:8:::~:;:: :: : : ::: : :;: :~:::::~::c:x:::;:,:::r.$::;::::::;:;:;:;o. : &gt;: : : : :': : :'o:!~ ;: ~~~~ ~~~~;l
::;!

)~:

~
f:'

I*

Pro Stan d"lllg8

6. N.C. St. (4·0)
1. L.Beach St. 13-01
B. SW La.( 4·0)
9. N. Car. 14-01
10. Missouri 15·0)
1!. P~nn . (3-01

,;

• Pmt'

i:i
1~3

117
67

52
51
47

gained the playoffs by also
beating the BroWilll.
But that game Is a key one
for Cleveland. If the BroWilll
win and Pittsburgh loses to San
Diego, Cleveland would be
division champ and Pittaburgh
the wild card team. The
Raiders will call on AFC
champion and wild card team
will head for the battle with
Miami.
The Raiders wind up the
regular season against the
Otlcago' ~ars Sunday and
lhen get ready for the playoffs.
Bobby Howfield kicked field
goals of 25, 30 and 42 yards and
Namath hit Richard Castar
wilh a 49-yard toes for all ~
New York points. George
Blanda booted a 47-yard fteld
goal and Smith ran one yard at
lhe end of a ~yard drive for
lhe other Raider polntB.

Frosh press
produces
37-34 win
The Meigs Marauder freshman squad· forcild enough
turnovers using a "•ht 1011e
...
preu in the second half to
produce a come-from.IJehlnd
37-34 win over Athens freshmen
at the Marauder e•
""m Monday.
Coach
Jon
Arnett's
Marauders were clown once 282,1 in the third quartet but ·
oulscored the Bullpu[JilU in
the final six minutes.
The win was the first in lhree
outings for Me'••. Athena Is
"'"
also 1-2. Charlie Manhall lind
Micky Davenport led Me1••
with 9pointa each. Other Me'••
..
scorers were Mike May eeven
and Jeff Martin, Jlm\DY Anderson, and Mike Magnotll
·four apiece. Jiml'ny Qua11a
didn't score but p'-'ved
I •ood
'111"'
"'
floor game fort the little

...

M~=~~Greer, • taU center,

1

:~~ ~. game's leading scorer

,

Meigs will play at GaWpolia
Thursday night.
Athens
!3 7 8 6-34
Meigs
6 B 11 12-37

NFL 5tandings
NBAStandings
By United Pr3!~t'"'ernatlonar
Byu~~:f.':~~:~r:~:~:!'og: ~~ c~;.' o/2 . 1 1
~~
w. I. t. pet. pi PI
Allon11cDivlslon
14. Provdnc 11·01
21
•·Washington 11 2 0 .846 319 !94
w. I. pd. g.15. Houston (5-1)
!8
y-Dallas
10 3·o .769 316 217 Boston
22 3 .880
16. Okla. (6·01
16
NY Giants
7 6 a .538 308 2~~ New York
23 6 .793 1 17. 0. Robrts (2·0)
t~
· This wR!i•s s,..;:1ai :
St. Louis
3 9 1 .269 169 280 Buffalo
7 21 .250 16'12' 18. Sen Fran. (4·01
12
Phlla.
2101 .!92122 328 Philadelphia
3 27 .100 2111&gt;•19. vandy (s.o) .
11
Centro!
Central Division
20. Iowa 13-01
10
w. 1. t. pet. pt'pa
w. I pet. g.b. r---------.-,
x.GreenBay 9 ~ 0 .692 27~ 206 Baltimore
15 13 .536
Detroll
7 5 1 .577 305 273 Atianla
15 I~ .517 •;,
1JII n.a.
Sentillf
Minnesota
7 6 0 .538 28~ 232 Houston
11 15 .~23 3
_,
Chicago
4 s 1 .346 20047 Cleveland
9 21 .300 1
DIYOTID TO THI.
INTI II llT OP
West
Wes1ern Conference
MltOI·MASON Alii A
w. I. I. pet. pf pa
Midwest Division
CHISTU L. TANNINILL,
San Fran.
1 5 1 .577 333 232
w. I. pet. g. b.
luc. ld.
Atlanta
1 6 0 .53S 255 257 Chicago
19 8 .704
IIOIIIIT HO.,LICH,
Los Ang .
6 6 1 .500 274 252 Milwaukee
19 9 .679 '12
City Utter
New Or!.
2101 .192195 331 KC-Omaha
16 15 .516 5
PubliShed dolly except
Amerlcon Conference
Detroit
Solurdoy by Tho Ohio vattov
13 1 ~ .481 6 Publishing
·
Compeny, 111
Eosl
pacific Division
court st ., Pomoror, Ohio,
4 door H.T.• lull power, gr.
•·Miami
1:l"o ~ ::Ji/3!,'1~ Los Angeles
;;· ~:2 g.b. ;W:i5:."l~~~::,~·~~r:.,:h:;,~
llnlsh.
gr . vinyl root,
NY Jeto
16 o .538 357 29S Golden State
11 10 .630 6 ' 1117.
loaded
with
equipment,
Baltimore
5 s 0 .385 235 236 Phoenix
13 17 .03 nr;,, SocOfiG clltl potta91 paid 11
!7,000
mi.
Sharp.
Buffalo
3 9-1· .269 233 360 Sealt!e
10 22 .3!3 15•;, Pomoro~. Ohio.
New Eng .
3 10 o .231 171 40! · Portland
~ 22 .21~
,.~:.'.':.~:l,vr •a•o't:l~~n~
Central
Mondav sRosulls
oo'ilelhor. Inc., 12 E"t 42nd
w. t. t. pet. pi Jl&lt;l
INo games scheduled)
st., Now vor- City, Now York.
v.PIIsbrgh
10 3 0.69 319 173
Tuesdoy'sGames
5uDicrlptlon rtlll : Do.
beveland
9 4 o .692 2~2 239
HoustonatBulfalo
tlvorod b~ carrier whoro
Cnclnatl
7 6 o .538 238 212 AtlantaatNewYork
tvollobto so Clftll per wHk J
Houston
112 0 .077 147 319 Clevelandvs.KC-Omahaat ly Motor Route whorl cerrlor
"You'll Like Our Quality
West
LosAngelesatChlcago
10rv1co not ovolltbiO : Ono
.
•Way
of Doing Business."
t
p1
Mllwaukeea!Portland
month
11.75.
ly
mtll
In
Ohio
1· 1· pc · PI
w.
Phil
d
hi
tB
.
tnd
W
.
Vt
.•
Ono
voor
114.00.
GMAC
Fl NANCJNG
0.
11
x- k!and
9 3 1 .731 337 221
a elp aa a rmore
Six months 17.2S. Thrtt
tt2-534~
J'omeroy1
KansasCIIy 1 6 0 .538 270 240 !onlygamesscheduledl
months u.50. Subserlpllon
0peft Evenings 'Tlii:OO .
San Diego
j S 1 .346 262 320
prlco Includes Sundev Tlmts·
Denver
~ 9 0 .308 280 329
ABA S1andlngs
Sonllnot.
~.
TJI5P.M..$at.. ... ..!
X·tl inched division title y- By United Press lnterna11onal
clinched p::J:olf sr.t
East
...,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,;.._ _ _~----. .
Mo ay's uulls
w. 1 pet. g.b..,
Oakland 24 NY Jets 16
Carolina
19 12 .613
iOn I~ game scheduled)
Kentucky
!6 12 .511 p; 2
t1urday's Games
Virginia
18 15 . 5~5 2
Minnesota at San Fran.
New York
!2 15 , 4j~ 5
Baltimore at Mlaml
Memphis
!0 20 .333 s•;,
· !Only games scheduled)
Wost
5unday's Games
w. t. pd. g.b.
Buffalo al Washington
Indiana
lS 12 .600
Chicago at Oakland
Utah
17 14 .548 1'1&gt;
Cincinnati at Houston
Denver
14 13 .5!9 . 2'1•
G!eveland at N.Y. Jets
San Diego
14 t9 .~24 5'1&gt;
Detroit at ~os Angeles
Dallas
!0 16 .385 6
Green Bay at New Orleans
Mondoy's Results
Kansas Clly at Atlanta
(No game scheduled)
New England at Denver
. Tuesday's Games
N.Y. Giants at Dallas
New Vorl&lt; at Dallas
Philadelphia at St. Louis
VIrginia at Utah
Plllsburgh at San Diego
Denver at San Diego
!Only games sched~ledl
Ionly games scheduled)

71 auysler

New Yorker_

!·

17'1•

.,

.•3795

.Karr &amp; Van Zand1

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PHONE 992-2342

MIDDLEPORT, O.

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Z-TheDallySentlnel,Mlrlrlleoort-Pomerov. 0 .. Dec.12, J9n 1

PRESIDENTS OF MANIFEST DESTINY

'

do it. "

SixNenth Prnidont Ab&lt;aham lincoln
(flrot Administration' March 4, 1861·March 3, 1865)

"A house divided . . . cannot stand''
Abraham Lincoln, breaking new political
groun4 as the fir~t Republican President, parlayed
a deep-seated inferiority complex, a fearful ambivalence about God, a manic-depressive neurosis and
uncanny political intuition into a rampart nationalism that enabled him to become the most powerful
of American Presidents and America the most powerful of. nations.
Honest Abe had ambled awkwardly along the
twisting road to the White House as an undcr·privileged child, itinerant farmer, poorly paid clerk,
terrified suitor, devoted husband and father, moderately · successful lawyer, mediocre congressman,
transfiglired anti-slavery zealot and minority Pre.sident so indecisive at first that he was derided by
politicians and newspapers.
· "The Lincoln Administration is cowardly, mean
and vicious," the New York Herald wrote, "and
it is all the fault of the incompetent, ignorant and

.\nd he did it. Although melancholy repeatedly
descendtxl upon him l.ike ·a shroud, Lincoln fought
patiently and resolutely for his and the nation's
unity . He fought with humor and with humoring,
with prayer and with blood, with an ageless wisdom and a new-found presidential power.
He told his endless jokes because "laughing kept
him from crying." The White House became Army
headquarters as the harassed President planned
strategy and mapped campaigns. And he changed
commanding generals like some men change their
socks; replacing McClellan with Pope, Pope with
ML.Ciellan, McOellan with ·Burnside, Burnside
with Hooker, Hooker with Meade and Meade with
Grant.
Throughout it all Lincoln had two overriding
aims: to defeat Gen. Robert E. Lee's Army of
Northern Virginia and to issue the Emancipation
Pmclamation. But Union victories were so elusive
that Lincoln finally concluded that it was because
Lee was praying to the same God he was, and that
God's purpose ·was different from either of theirs .
Nevertheless, the Battle of Antietam on Sept.
17, 1862, came close enough to a Union victory
to justify Lincoln's purpose. He at once issued a
preliminary edict, and Jan. I, 1863 , he issued the
formal proclamation.
As he so often did, President Lincoln spoke with
unsurpassing eloquence in asking Congress to make
the proclamation an amendment to the Constitution. "In giving freedom to .the slave, we assure
freedom to the free," he said. "We shall nobly save,
or meanly lose, the last best hope of earth."
In his acceptance speech when nominated by
the Illinois Republicans in 1858 to run for the U.S .
Senate against Democrat Stephen Douglas, Lincoln
had caught the popular fancy with his famous "A
house divided against itself cannot stand" speech.
Now the phrasemaker was the chief decisionmaker
in a "house" divided as never before or since.
Cw .... ltn LOS ANGIIII IIMIS

WIN AT BRIDGE

&amp; THINBS

Generation Rap
By Helen and Sue Bouel

. ,.

.. ·.' ·.

, BY PAUL CRABT~JIJ.E

Uberatloo's Ve:ulio•
Helen and Sue:
My boyfriend is just plain cheap - or maybe he takes
women's liberalion personally.
·
Every time we go out to dinner and the movies, he accident..lly (that's what HE says) forgets his.money and I end up
paying.
His parents are well off. He gets a good allowance and even
works off' and on, which l don't. .
Please tell me what to do before I go - BROKE
Dear Broke :
.
Leave your purse at home - and be aure he notices
BEFORE you order. - HELEN'

+++

Broke :
Why don't you spring for a 69-cent ·"statement" pad; then
each time your b.f. "borrows" from you, whip it out, write down
lhe amount, date, items, etc., and give him a copy? If you can
keep"tt funny, you'll keep the guy whil~ still teaching him a
lesson. - SUE

+++

Rap :
I'm not a staunch women's libber, but I'm beginning to see
lhe light, as they say, after this experienCe:
I went out lo dinner last niglit with Toby, a guy from school.
The invitation itself was a big production. He practically kissed
my hand when I accepted - and I had a feeling it wouldn't be a
Golden Arches evening. So great a girl needs more than Big
Macs and French fries in her life. But .so
MUCH more?
He rang the door bell. My father answered. He asked for me
wilh proper deference. My dad looked stunned. He's not used to
guys who sorta bow from the waist.
I greeted Toby . He helped me slip my coat on, opened the
front door, opened lhe car door and helped me in. Afterwards, get
lhis: he fastened my seat belt! When we arrived at the
restaurant (on time!), l kinda made a move for the car door, but
he said, "Stay right there," so out he popped, trotted around to
my side (seemed like hours that I waited), opened my door,
unfastened my seat belt, escorted me by lhe arm into the
restaurant. Inside, he pu~ out my chair, helped me off with my
coat and ordered for me!
When our food came, I reached for the salad (family style in
a big bowl) but 1 wasn't fast enough. He served me. Ditto soup,
pasta- and he even buttered my bread! He also bung on my
every word like I was wonderful, when I KNOW I'm only dumb
old normal me.
We went through lhe same door-opening, seat belt.fastening
routine on the way home, and at my door he took my band and
said, "I had an enjoyable evening. Thanks for con'iing. You're
really a FUN person."
Now I ask you, how could I be fun when I was no more than
his puppet? I got the feeling I couldn't even breathe without him
checking out lhe air first.
My mother lhinks he's the greatest thing since Cary Grant.
What do you lhink, Sue? - Would YOU enjoy life on a high
pedestal? !like him, but how do I get him off the "adoration"
trip? - ORDINARY GIRL .

The Almanac
Mercury, Venus and Mars.
By United Press International
The evening stars are Jupiter
Today is Tuesday, Dec. 12, and Saturn.
Ordinary Girl:
the 347th day of 1972 with 19 to
Those born on this date are · How about honesty? Tell him, "Please don't put me on a
follow.
under the sign ol Sagittarius. 'pedestal: I'm afraid of heights." And let him know you're a
,II', Se•d· ~Har · I&lt;ACI!IBY. ·MODERN·book
;,
'I(~!l!j!OIJ..i~.~PI!I:n;I@ing,i.f$,;q
Jphn..Jay, firJt ·~hief •justice •()GoldenArches'"-··HPm!ghtE'vi!il
be reUe~ed!.
:..:. sn~... 'o. . I I
h' ""'"''
'
I h
"J't"i"•
f\!'JJ&lt;t~ ,, "''':T!'tll 1, ~ni.J ('II
to:
"Win
of
Bridge,"
fc
(,
o
t
'~
'
.
~
t~~-;
firs\._H~P.r~~r
.•
;I.
,,.i
·
""
1!
••
~··
,~
.~?O
l~1t
United
Slr:ltes:,
"
WJI'
S
boiffl·.
"
·
~
i
,,,
11
1
paper!, P.O. Box 4'/; 'RdNro ~·'t , T~~ ,mormv&amp; .~tars .• ~ r~ '" Dec. lZ- . 1145. . ....
,,..
Station, Now York,, N.Y••JOOJ.9, - ·
·
'"

Somebody at the Public Broadcasting Service ~ hive
been enrolled in tile Journalism 101 course at Mllnhall. '
University aoout 1949 or 1950.
· Wilh admirable candor, the textbook told us what tbe vlrious
''missions" of a conununicattons mediwn should be. In o~ of
Importance, they are:
'
1 - SelfiJl'eservation.
2 - To inform.
~~~· ' .
3 - To ent~.
• ··\ '
4 - To give wise ~dance.
·~: ·
PBShasn'theeded this advice, giving far too much·attenUo!) •·•
toitems2and.4,andnotnearlyeflC)ughto item i.
' .":•
As a result, public broadcasting -: represented here on ·. '
WOUB-TV, OlBlUiel 20 in Athens, and WMUL-TV;Channe1331n
Huntingtoo - may find new programming hard to come by,
come the first of the year. Repeal$ wUJ begin early. Some
programs wUJ get the ax, to be replaced by notbln~ . .
It is posSible, although unlikely, that PBS may vanish
altogether by next season.
This would be a disaster, But, to some extent, the top guna at
PBS asked for it. Here's what hawene&lt;l:
PBS started as a subsidiary of the federal Corporation for
Public Broadcasting, heavily dependent on government funds.
Now, any non-&lt;!Ommerclal network Is going to find the 'road
rocky in trying to compete with the big, entrenched, commercial
networks. Nevertheless, PBS made some spectacular gains.
Some solid dramatic presentations- mostly imports- were
offered, and were so good they were picked up for later reruns on
lhe commercial networka. Some "educational" offerings, such
as "French Chef," drew good audiences.
.
And public broadcasting_l!as linked in lhe mind of TV
viewers with two of the best programs ever made for chtldren "Sesame Street" and "The Electric Company."
This fall, seven-night..a-week programming got under way, .
and while the new offerings were not sensational, they drew goo(!
notices from~ rather narrow, specialized audience.
So, it might appear lhBt PBS had proven itself against stiff
competition, and Is ready to boom along as an alternative 1&lt;1
regular ABCCBS-NBC ~gramming.
Wrong. Dead wrong.
Instead, the people at PBS are hanging on the brink, ruMing·
out of money, and facing curtailment problems.
'
• In the mad rush to ~vide Information and entertainll!ent, ,
along with wise guidance, PBS forgot that all4mportant .first
requirement: the need for self1)reservation. And without tbat,
lhe other three 'mlulona" simply cannot be fulfilled. ·
In brief, PBS gained a .reputatim - unfairly or not - of
biting the hand that feeds it: the Federal Government. And the
results are bad. In the next column, we'll look at what happened.
+++
ON THE TV DIAL: Two fine shows are repeated, at the same
time, darn it: ''The Snow Goose," WSAZ-TV, and "A CharUe
Brown Christmas," WCHS-TV .. . Don Rickles has a comedy
special which I won't watch, 10 on WCHS-TV.
'
.

Don'f Lef Wesf Have Lead
. ' ,• N~TH

1 '1\lll~t

I&amp;

11t

12

..~-~11 " 1 (1 &lt;? · •"' T rn

•

•.; •,:i •lli~olo '
t AJ 74

t

·· DR,111 •·.WRf.. NCEf,1AM8

... 7542

· WEST
.J9753
.J85
• Q52

... 96

EAST
.A106
• 10 9 7 3
• 86

A Tragic Side
;:om2S:W:.~.;~::f$::~(.::..~:::::::::::::::::::~:=i-:::=~i-:"&lt;(.').~$~~~=-":~:-».:-:®wx-~~~:~m-:..;.~.'tx.~v.xp;::~~~~·~~mr&gt;:llll'8l~

· ·QJ108

soum (D)

.K82
• A62
t K 1093
• AK3
Bolh vulnerable
West North East South
1N.T.
P.ass
Pass

.

3 N.T.

Pass

Pass

' Opening lead- • 5

'

By, Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
· 'I:oday's article shows the
same North and South hands
as yesterda,v. The bidding
ana the ,opemng lead are also
the same.
So is the play of the queen
of 'spades from dummy.
South must try to get some
value out ol that card. This
time it turns out that East
wins the trick with the ace
and returns the 10·spot.
South Jets the 10 hold but
has to win the spade continuation.
lle can now count 10 tricks
if he picks up the queen of
diamonds and nine tricks if
he loses the finesse provided that the defender who
holds the queen can't gather
in .two m or e spade tricks
when he gains the lead.
It should be obvious to
South that if anyone holds
the last two spades it is
West. Therefore, West is the
dangerous hand and South
must keep him out ol the
lea&lt;l. r · .
' A finesse against W e s t
makes this certain. South
plaYs his king of diamonds ;
continues wJth the JO.and .iets
it tide lf W e ..s t does not
cover. ·· .
West does have the queen
so the finesse works and
s'buth makes his contract
with an overtrick but South
should take no pride in this.
He has merely played the
hand In workmanlike fashion
and made sure of his contra~ irrespective of the success•of the finesse.
(N,IWIPAPU INTERH.ISI · ASSN.!

1.

The bidding has been:
w..c· North East

!

2• '

,_,
PQ/1
Y'l"o South, hold:

South
1. • .
?

•1¥AQNTS .AU ... KQT
....I clo Y.OII ~o now?

Ai •• twv llearti. Your hand
.. . . . , worth dW - - ' bid.
t'ODAY'I lltfflS'DON
W. continues to lhree clubs,
wld6 1o piiiOII around to you.
Wlllt do J11U do.now~

Raiders eliminate Jets,
face Steelers or Browns

•

by j)atterson and Patrit.k

desperate 'Honest Abe."' EmlxJldenoo by such
comments from the press, Secretary of State William Seward handed to the President a curious
document that, in effect, told Lincoln that he,
Seward,. was better qualified to be President than
Lincoln was .
There are times in the lives of great illen and
women when the surge of vital energy crests in
a "peak experience" that gives intense purpose and
direction to existence .. Lincoln's elan vital crested
now . His reply to Seward was restrained and relevant: "I remark that if this must be done, I must

.

.'

I Voice along Br'Way

Human Side

o

.

. ,. . ,Television\~agJ~:~.~:·:~
.

TUESDAY, DEC. 12, 1972
6:00 - News J, 4, 10, lS ; Sesame Street 20; Around The bend 33.
6:30 - News 3. 4, 6. 8. 10, 15; I D(eam of Jeannie 13; Growing
Him Up 33.
7:oo - What's My LineS; I've Got ASecret 13; Film 15; Electric
Co. 20 : Bealthe Clock 4; Truth or Consequences 3.
7:30 - This Is Your Life 3; Doctors on Call4; To Tell The Truth
6; Price Is Right 8, 10; Beat The Clock 13; RFD 20; Zoom 33.
8:00 - Temperatures Rising 6, 13; Age of Anxiety 33; Ohio: This
Week 20 ; Hall of Fame 3, 4, 15; Peanuts 8, 10 .
8:30 - Hawaii Flve-0 8, 10; Bill Moyer's Journol 20, 33; Billy
Graham Crusade S.
9:00 - Bold Ones3, 4, 15: Behind the Lines 20.
9: JO- Black Journal 20, 33.
10:00 - Marcus Welby M.D. 6, 13 ; America 3, 4, 15; Film 33;
News 20; Don Rickles 8, 10.
11 :00 - News3. 4. 6, 8. !0, 13, 15.
.
11:30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15; Virginian S; Comedy News 6;
Movie. 10; Movie, 13.
1:00 - Your Health
1:30 - News 4, 13.

That'll be $10,000. Howard Cosell? $5,000. Crazy .
BY J~CK O'BRIAN
Oakland Raiders get fan mall from all over
A LITTLE FUNDAMENTAL
about the· gal singing national anlhem before
HINDSIGHT ...
NEW YORK (KFS) - Plastic surgery network games. She's Gisele MacKem:le. A
Canadian ... Instant beer is next. Alleged tasty By Lawrence Lamb, M.D. smoked reali2ed what they
bottom-liftin~, reverse of face-hoisting, has a
Dear Dr. Lamb-1 read a were doing and the effect It
cheeky unofficial $1,500 tag. Over in Eastern suds just by adding water to a . concentrate. letter in your column where would have on their loved
Mediterranean lands, fat fundaments are Nah ; we prefer the good old sptgot ... Ltttle a ~:enUeman questioned the ones, perhaps they would
considered sexier lha n big uptops: Husband lhankee from Jan Morgan' ''Thanks to your . sertousness ol emphysema make a stronger effort to
·
'M h Ad Abo t
d k d 'f 't
stop smoking cigarettes and
WEDNESDAY, DEC. 13, 1972
with botlomless wife lose face.
'bring-the-kids ' tip on
uc
o
u an as e l l was an exag- follow their doctor's advice. 6: oo - Sunrise Seminar 4; Sacred Heart 10.
6:15 - Farmtime 10.
Dim'tbe startled if Pres. Nixon Mmes a )!al Nolhing' we took the whole family and loved it. gerated illness .. One cannot
Occasionally
living
in
New
York
can
be
joyous."
exa~gerate
a
ktller,
I
know.
Dear
Dr.
Lamb-Recently
6:20 - Farm Report ·13.
lo liis Cabinet ... David Janssen is in Israel
.
It killed my lather. I hope I heard on TV that men to· 6:25 - Paul Harvey 13.
filming "Sabra" and his steady, Dani Grego,
Woody Allen-Dick Cavett manager JllCk you will print th.s letter for day are goln~ bald 10 years 6:30 - Columbus Today 4; News, Weather. Sports 6: Bible
Answers 8; Urban League Presents 10.
being unwound from planist-&lt;:rooner Buddy Rollins plans a supper club of his own to t t him and thousands like him earlier than m the previous
new
talent
a
Ia
the
sadly
demised
Blue
Angel.
to
read.
My
dad
had
asthma
generation.
Do
you
have
any
6:35
- Glory Road 13.
Greco, is right on the set ... Walter AMenberg,
our Ambassador to Great Britain, turned down Whose c!Hlwner Jacoby died recently. Rollins flom. birth. He also smoked advice on how a man in his j: ~ = ~~~i ~~;,N:~~~~·e~:~·effers S; Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
13 .
a Queen Liz-ransom for his TV Guide. Philly ·has rented space above Sam's Restaurant heav~ly. ThenT~e %ev~l~ed e~rly 20s ca~ avoid or delay
8:00Tt'-mmCayp1&amp;. KLaangs•iaeroo6. 8, 10; New Zoo Revue 13; Sesame St. 33;
reports say Walter wants back into publishing. plans a "fair" minimum and no cover ... Movie r~r i~sr~aarea ~olde~im ~~ I s process.
Dear Reader - Unforlu·
•
I
In Phllly ...
ass'n boss Jack Valenti takes his nine-year-o d had to stop smoking and take nately, that is our nature. 8:30 - Jack La La nne 13: Romper Room S; New Zoo Revue 6.
S: 55 - Local News 13.
Temporary-mutual fund genius Bernie daughter Courtney to PG...ated pix. His per- it easy. He tried. He even
sonal
"parental
guidance"
includes
clamping
went
to
a
hypnottst.
Anyone
Apparently,
human
beings
9:00- Paul Dixon 4; Phil Donahue 15; What Every Woman
Cornfeld (he's down lo half a dozen live-in babes
.,.
over
her
(inv
ears
and
turns
her
head
who
has
smoked
for
30
yelji'.S
have
been
becoming
less
Wants to Know 3; Mr. Rogers 33; Friendly Junction 10; Capt.
in H'wood ) had as his date at the London his Unl "'
• •v
. "
knows the agony of an Mur hairy, at least on the head.
Kangaroo 8; Ben Casey 13: Concentration 6.
"Deliverance" premiere Xaviera Hollander, when somelhlng 'unsuitable blues lhe screen. without a cigarette. He never for centuries and it is ~ust a 9:30 - To Tell The Truth 3; Jeopardy6; Hazels.
9: 55 - Chuck White Repor.!s 10.
.
.·
lhe shabby "Happy Hooper"; after Bernie's But can ordinary parents know when lhe un- stopped.
natural part of our evo ution. 10: oo- Dinah Shore 3, 15; Phil Donahue 4; In School Instruction
I don't thin k he really Individuals who have a good
33; Columbus Six Calling 6; Joker's Wild 8, !0; Dick Van
negative headlines lhese last several years he suitable words and deeds come along?
Former
Olympics
Gold
Medal
swim
champ
believed
he
was
dying,
but
solid
growth
of
hair
around
Dyke 13.
'
doesn't care what anyone concludes from his
Donna de Varona (the expert voice of ABC-TV's we knew. We watched ~or the sides and b~ck of t11elr 10:30 - Concentration 3, ts; Love American Style 6: Phil
private life ... The recent item lhat Denver has a
.
three years. We saw him head can sometimes have
Donahue4; Price Is RightS, 10: Split Second 13.
, ough 11 :oo - Sale of the Century 3, 151Love American Style 6; Gambit
$1 a dily rent..a-toupee lhat Jesse! might be coverage ol lhe Muruch swims) is the one ga1 drop to 90 sounds We saw h a 1 r transplants (alth
8; Password 13; Electric Co. 20.
interested in brought this wire from beauty sportscaster we've ever heard who Isn't a him grow o d and· weak at these are verY expensJ ··e · 11 :30
- Hollywood Squares 3, 4, 15; Bewitched 6, 13; Love 01 Life
s. 10; Sesame Street 20.
maven Michel Kazan : "Jack, you really know dainty mistake. She has great experience, has 56. It seems quiet now with· when done by competent
been sportspieling in San Francisco and does it out his wracking cough. 1 go people). Other individuals 12:00- Jeopardy 3, 15; ~ob Braun's 50-50 Club 4; Local News 10;
how lo Hertz a guy.''
t th
h h t ed will just have to resort 1o
News 13; Contact S; Password 6.
Lauren Bacall got a package backstage at Mturally, not like a cute little doggie who can
e room w ere ~ s ay
artificial hair pieces or learn 12:30-3 W'sGame3, 15; Split Second6: Search for Tomorrows,
th1 1 ~ last ydealr w~tchJHng telle- to consider baldness the nor10.
her London "Applall8e" lheatre and it was walk on his hind legs not too well.
. ' id
J kl v slon an s eepmg. e on y
d
12: 5~ - NBC News 3, 15.
•. .
rushed to lhe bobbies for bom!Hltudy. Not quite
Fat conuc.Billy Vme s w ow says ac e left to use the bathroom. l mal .characteristic an rr· t:OO - News, Weather, Sports 3; All My Children 6, 13; Green
Acres 10; French Chef 33; Its Your Bet 8; Watch Your Child
so lethal: her favorite cigarets from Swiss pals. Gleason offered a bundle for Billy's great old can still smell the cigarettes. haps popularize "b a I Is
beautiful."
I
routines
she
keeps
on
file
but
for
sentimental
Still
see
the
burn
marks
n
15.
They only take longer.
•t
11
So
f
T
U
k
'-nri
e
m
'
the
car~t where his shaky
tN£w•p;,m INTIRPRtll ASSN.)
1:20
- Lucille Rivers 3.
Lyricist Bob Lorick of the off-Bdwy. hit reasons won se ·
ar ... 91&gt; c e., c
·
•
1:30 - 3 On AMatch 3, 4, 15; The World Turns 8, 10,· Let's "·ke '
opped the sh~rter
,.,.
musical "Har~! " still Is in Roosevelt Hospital ·lown , lhe Dec. 11 wAIF Cinderella Ball at the hands
1
ones. He never complamed,
•-fli 1.., 4..sliMs to Dr. Lomb, 2 : ~ Deg'a~s
Our Lives 3, 4, 15: Newlywed Game 13; Mlke
alter his senseless 8:30p.m. for-kicks shooting Pia za (Afte r a "Young WI nston" showing ) for even
after I saw the know!""
Douglass 6; Guiding Light 8, 10.
by street hOods in the 7Qs on Central Park West. $500..and-higher contributors .... Exiled Greek edge of his own death creep- i• core of t~ll ....,.,.,, , ,0, lor 2:30 - Days of Our Lives 3, 4, 15; Dating Game 13; Edge of
Night 8, 10.
Two brave brutes accosted him for the right composer Milds Theodorakis (the military ing into those bloodshot eyes 7557, o.,.. w, R~io City Slalioo,
regime
let
him
out
when
he
was
ill
with
T.B.)
and
the
starJo:
fear
of
dying.
New
Yort,
H.Y.
IOOI9.
For
copioa
3:00Another World 3, 4, '15; General Hospital 6, 13; Love
time and after he told them, one ordered, "Shoot
I have known since SeptemSplendored Thing 8, 10; RFD 20.
him ." Didn'teven filch his watch or wallet. This
has asked to return. Promised to abstain from ber that my dad probably o1 Dr. ""'""'s boollm • ~· 3, 30- Relllrn to Peyton Place 3, 4, 15; One Life to Live 6, 13;
all
politics.
wouldn't be here for my ., _,..•
Secret Storm 8, 10; Ohio: This We&lt;tk 20.
.
and several other shootings In lhe same area Soon as "Dillinger" finishes shooting in graduation. He went to the - lo ,..r clroleo) 11 tlto 4:00- Mister Cartoon 3; Somerset 15; Fllnlslones 6: Love
rumored the same night! - Didn't even make
Okla.,
AlP
starts
"Black
Caesar"
in
Harlem;
hospital
and
within
a
month
_
.Nroa.
~\'!~~C:; ~~~fe1 ~;::rfil~;;rg~n~i ~rem• St. 331 Gll~l.gan's
lhe papers ... Tiny Teresa Brewer: pushing 40,
4,30- M#Jrv Gr!Hin 4: Andy Griffith 15; Daniel Boone 13:
almost was refused·entrance at the Oak Bar of It's a black gangster flick in the Robinson- he knew only my mother.
Bogart-Muni-Cagney
"Scarface"
and
"Little
Still
another
month
later,
he
Petticoat Junction 3: t Lave Lucy 6.
the Plaza where she's staying. The maitre d'
died.
5:00- Mister Rogers 33; Daniel Boone 6; Santa at the ~II 15;
.
Ponderosa 3, 4.
really lhought she was a below-drlnklng..age Caesar" murder rut.
. UN Sec Gen'l Waldheim moved into a
Some people may thmk it
5:30- Dragnet 8; Elec1rlc Co. 33; Gomer Pyle 13; Marshali
teenstress.
,
was his own fault. I don't
On this day in hlslory:
. Dillon 15; Hodg~ Lodge 20.
The delightful Top of lhe Six's (666 Fifth SUtton Place mansion ... Joffrey Ballet · know the answer. 1 o n I y
In 1792 , falned Pr
. usslan 6t_~- News, Weather, Sports3. 4, 8, 10. 15: Truth or Conseq. 6;
,_me Street 20; Around the Bend 33. .
,
Ave.) has its "St. Patrick's Table" - from ballerina DenlseJa'ckson'soff.to the hospital for know tl)at cigarettes and
surgerY'.
~e·s
Radio
City
Music
HaU
veep
John
emphysema
have
taken
composer
Ludwig
van
Beelllov7:00'Fruth
or
Conaequenc:es
3;
Beat
11M
Clock
4;
News
6,
10;
which you can 'took straight down from huge
Jackson's sprite. Movie deal for Cakier away the only father I have en, then 22, paid 19 cents for
What's My Line I; Anything You can Do 13; Saint 15:
)l'lndows at St. Pat's Calhedral ..Glotious ... The
his first music lesion. ·
Electric ComPiny 20; Know Your Schools 33.
.,
k
In 1901 , a wireless ,.......e. 7:30- Episode: Action 33; To Tell The Truth 6: The JuC!ilt .10;
Census b~reau figgers the average family now Willingham's "Rambling Rose" novel bot- ever nown.
lists includes Nat King Cole's
There is nothing, more I
...__,
~~~t=Thl ~~ 13: Poll&lt;e Surgeon 3; Protedin 1,
is down from 3.6 children (In '60) to lhe present caking up lhe"Rambling
R
,
ord
icing
can
say,
except
don
t
do
this
was
sent
acroas
~
Atlantic
....,..,_,.,
2.L Even Gerber's Baby food (remember ils hu ge-aeDin8
ose rec
vo
to your family or yourself. Ocean for lhe first llrile.
8:00- carol a...
I, 10; Paul Lyndt 6, 13; Adam-12 3, 4, 15;
delightful pitch "Babies Are OUr Business, Oor under lhe film's credits. If the deal jella, Stop before It Is too late. BeIn 1947, John L. Lewis a:.~ar~l~ft-'~":.7. ~5}~ 1 • "Evory ~n NHds OM" 6,
~ly Busineu''J has been forced to diversify ...
songwriters Joe and Noel Sherman will get drfore ,Yohu breakLyiof u r chi!- withdrew hla United Mine
13; Playhouse 20.
$10,000,
Nat's
estate
a
nice
bundle
...
Cornie
en.
s
eart.s.
e
Is
too
Workers
from
the
American
9:00Medical Cent.r 1, 10; Chapter 33,
Lady we know had minor surgery at New York
Federation of Labor for the . :~:
~':.tt.':.~~o.1~~. 'itnrlCln I, 10; Soul! 33; News 20.
Hospital and was stashed in the almost empty Freddie Roman says he's signed a ~.ooo pact precious.
Dear Reader-Thank you SllCood time.
'tr:30- Johnny Carson 3 4, 15; Comedy News 6; Movie "Prlnca
maternity wing; lhe female-~~urgical floors with the Concord in the sour-cream Apls. Not a
thlsone'sfor4Donefor
bringing
out
the
humab
In
1971
American
broadcastVallanr• 13. •
hugeLasVega.wtyledeal:
were awash with abortion C88el!, we were told.
•·
·
side
of
the
tragedy
of
clga.
.
nee'
r
,.._
ld
Sarnoff
died
12:00Vltglnlan 11 MoVIe "Tht OulraiJII" 10.
That plus the pill did It ... You want Joe Namath nigh ..,rs.
rette smoking and emphy- mg PIO , ..... v
1: oo - News 4.
,
·
for a perS01181 appearanCe at your shindig?
sema. If more people who · at the age of ao.
1:30- Ntws 13.

of Emphysema

°.

lJi

...,50"""...,. fh

OAKLAND(UPI)-TheNew for lhe wild card berth into lhe
York Jel.!l are dead and the playotfs.
Oakland Raiders have their · While it was all sweetness
wish.
and joy for the Raiders, the
By beating the Jets 24-18 Jets went home today deflated
Monday night in lheir national- 1111d a little bitter even !hough
ly televised game, lhe AFC Joe Namath and Don Maynard,
w~ ,libamp Raiders assured two of lhe club's most solid
111_eW11'flves of ' meeting Plt- players and stars in their own
tsbili'gh or Cleveland in the right, both achieved distinfirst round of lhe playoffs m-· guished landmarks.
stead of the Miami Dolphins.
Namath, playing with a
And in the process of beating heavy cold, completed 2S-of-46
New York, they ended their old passes for 403 yards. All it
rivals' chances of staying alive netted the Jets was one touch-

On the other side, Daryle
Lamonica threw for two TDs,

the second coming in the fourth
quarter and providing the
Raiders the room lhey needed
to register their nlnlh victory
compared to lhree losses and a
tie.
The Jets slipped to 7-8, and
lhelr game SUnday in New
York with Cleveland now
becomes meaningless for
lhem. Had they beaten the
Raiders , they could have

Tar Heels survive
second half scare
By United Press IntemaiiODal landing a punch that brought

DRMN!HN -Melgl' Andy Vaugh&amp;n (2t) goes high into
!he .air to avoid Roger Dingy, at left, of stopping his layup
drive. At right, Wahama's Roger Dingy (~) and Mark
Mitchell (45) go high for a rebound in the White Falcons

What seemed like an easy
viclory early in the evening
nearly turned into a dillaster
for sixth-ranked North
Carolina.
The Tar Heels surged to a 26unsuccessful bid against Meigs Saturday night in lhe
point lead in the first half
Marauder gym. Meigs won the game handily, 73-46 with lhe
Monday night and then had to
Marauders senior guard Jimmy Boggs scoring a career high
battle for lhelr lives in the
27 points (all from outside). Roger Dingey topped Wahama
second defeat Kentucky 78-70
before a screaming crowd of
'~~:::;;.&lt;:::;;::::;m~:::x:::~:::~:~::::::~:::,::::~&lt;:,:~: 17,50(! fans at Louisville.
BEULAH PARK TOPS
George Karl''s 22 polnta led
COLUMBUS (UP!) _
Norlh Carolina, which doublect
Beulah Park In nearby the score on Kentucky at .52-21i
but had to withstand a lurious
Grove City was the top
revenue producer among the rally lo win.
Ronnie Lyons, ailing from a
state's 17 racing permit
holders lhls year, the Ohio Painful kidney infection,
Racing Commission reports. sparked Kentucky in a comeone of lhe opposing linemen.
The state collected back that sliced North Carol!"He didn't even know he
na's lead 1o 71-65 with 4:02
$1,642,132 from wagering at
completed the pass until Dr.
remaining.
Beulah, a thoroughbred
lppolito (team physician) lold
However, the undefeated Tar
track which reported a
him about it on the sidelines
Heels kept their cool under
handle for 1972 of $21,225,183,
after he overcame his
tremendous defensive pressure
also highest of any Ohio
grogginess. He suffered a
in lhe final four minutes to
track.
severe blow, but came right
The commission meets make off with their fifth
back and did not yield lo 'lhe
straight victory.
Wednesday to consider 1973
punishment. That's lhe mark dale applications from the
The game in Freedom Hall
of a professional . quar- tracks.
produced a near free-for-all
lerback."
near lhe end of the game and
Skorich said Namalh "will ~::~:,::::::::::::~=:::::::::::::::::~'::~:,:::~::::~8'8':~:':':: two unrelated technical fouls
stay in lhe pocket and lhrow,
against Kentucky Coach Joe
minimizin~tchance of runn..nf-npQ
"•" tr-h ..J.. .. •n•rd J•~~..
'
.lh9~~JMl'' C!ri
L&amp;l.«.,.,~ )f\&gt;l""" II'~" 1"~ 1 '""""""·~
"''"''"1
lng !IIIIi __ _ ' bW
Dan · Conner "'ellftlid·' 'lrUl\

Skorich's hopes sit on
two big weekend 'ifs'
CLEVELAND (UP!) Cleveland Browns Coach Nick
Skorlch said Monday he still
has hopes his team will win the
AFC Central Division title
desplte the predictions of the
Las Vegas oddsmakers.
Skorlch admitted If the
Browns are to win lhe title they
must silence the rifle-like
passing arm of Joe Namath
when they meet the Jets Sunday in New York. The San Diego Chargers also could help by
beating Pittsburgh •

West Coast and they'll know
how we fare even before they
kickoff because of the time difference," said Skorich.
"The Steelers had an emotionalletdown Sunday (against
Houston). The possibility ol an
upset existed many times
during lhe contest."
He admitted his team "got
some big breaks and made the
most of lhem when we needed
it" against the Cincinnati
Bengals Saturday. They won
27-24.
_

no

"'*'·· ·

·

w!t~rJ:;il': ~f:~~'"fe!= w~~~~~~l"~eq'!lt~:'~f 'Setlrching . .
!heir record against other Cen- Bengal defensive line which
tral Division teams is better
lhan Pittsburgh's win-Joss rec-

oro.

"We're capable ol defeating
lhe Jets. If we do that, then all
of the pressure wUJ lie.on the
Steelers' s11oulders. Luckily for
LB, the Steelers play on the

has sacked more quarterbacks
lhan any olher team in lhe
NFL.
"Mike has been able to go
back inlo lhe furnace," Skorich said. "He proved it when
he lhrew lhe touchdown pass to
Frank Pitts and got belted by

:~n:u~lr~:. ~~e ~;tete It

Sundays game Will be lhe
first time the B~s have
played in Shea Stad1wn. Shea's
·
unusual wind factor w11J be
studied by the entire coaching
staff, Skorich said.

McRae-Simpson swap could
help Kansas City as well
KANSASCITY,Mo. (UPI)On the surface, at least, it
appears the Cincinnati Reds
made a very good deal In the
two-for-two swap with the
Kansas City Royals at the
winter baseball meetings.
But lhe trade very weD could
work out to be beneficial to
bolh clabs.
The Royals gave up pitcher
Roger Nelson and outfielder
Riehle Scheinbltun in exchange
for pitcher Wayne Simpson and
outfielder Hal McRae, whom
the Royals hope to make into a
third baseman.
Ne~ was the Royals' best
pitcher last season, posting an
11~ record with a 2.08 earned
run average and six shutouts.
Schebiblum, the regular right.
!Ieider, hit .300.
In exchange, lhe Royals got
Simpson (U with a 4.15 ERA)
and McRae, who hit .2781n only
fl at-bats.
· FromCincillnati's·vtewpoint,
the Redlegs obtained a solid
starting pitcher in Nelson and a
good plnciH!itter in Scheinblum, who Ia a switch-hitter.
The Redlegs gave up anolher
pinchhllter in McRae and a
pitcher who has a history of
arin trouble.
From Kansas City's view-

point, lhe ROyals received a
pitcher who has as much or
more potential tban Nelson and
a man who can play every day,
eilher in right field or at third
base. The Royals, . in their
opinion, gave up a pitcher who
also has a history of arm
trouble and an outfielder who,
!hough a very good hitter,
proved to be a defensive
liability.
So, the trade depends upon
which side It's viewed.
Scheinblum has little chance
of playing regularly for lhe
Redlegs, but he wlll be an
excellent pinch-hitter. The
Royals, moving to a new park
with artificial tilrf, felt 'they
were not in a position to afford
lhe luxury of an excellent
pinchhitter at the present time.
And Scheinblum, tho~~Sh he
. was one of the hardest working
players on the team and went
all-out on every play, simply
was not adequate defensively.
He had only six a.sslat.s in 1972
and committed eight errors.
Nelson was the Royals'
stopper last season. But he
started the season on lhe
minor-league roster after a
recurrence of arm trouble in
1971. Though effective, Nelson
suffered circulation problems

For fast money service••.

i$ the an$Wer

:l::=

•

down.

992-2171

125 E, Main St.

I.

t

Pomeroy,O.

•-

j,

for Clues

Cincinnati (UP!) -A benign
lesion slightly larger lhan a
bl
d
nd
mar e was remove Mo ay
from a portion ol Johnny
~ncb's right Iring. Doctors
today were attempting to
determine what caused it.
Bench, 25-year-old Cincinnati Reds catcher and 1972
Most Valua.ble Player in lhe

National League, was reported
in good condition at Christ
Hospital. He will remain there
In his pitching hand lhe latter seven or eight more days.
"There are so many
part of lhe 1972 season. His
to the
fingers turned icy cold after posst'b'lit'
1 tes as
cause
that
it's
impossible
lo
say
what
pitching.
it
might
be
right
now,"
said
The Royals felt lhat by
trading Nelson and Schein- ' Reds' team physician, Dr.
blum, they were getting rid of George Ballou.
questionable performers when
Ballou said it was not a
lhey were worth maximum tumor and was not malignant.
Examination of a frozen
value.
Of course, what lhey got in section of the growlh revealed
return may not be any better. "an lnflanunatory lesion," he
Simpson's arm troubles have said
'
been well-chronicled since he
Tests on "live" portions ol
jumped off to a 13-1 start in the removed lesion will
1970. New Royals Manager hopefully shed light on its
Jack McKeon watched him origins.
Ballou said the growth was
pitch In Puerto Rico, however,
lung itself, but
and reported he is throwing not wl lhln "e
••
was In a fissure between lhe
well.
lower
and upper Jobes of the
McRae was the key to the
lung
.
"As
a consequence, it
trade, as far as lhe Royals are
concerned. The 26-year-old was only necessary to remove
wields a healthy bat. He a small amount of lung tissue,"
he 'd
always has hit well in the
sal ·
Ballou revealed that Bench
clutch and the Royals felt it
was necessary .to find someone decided on lhe surgery himself
to hit behind John Mayberry. after the "spot" was round
The big first baseman too often during the team 's annual
· ti
in Ia
In 1972 was pitched around by physical examina OlllJ
te
September. Doctors allowed
the opposition.
Now lhe Royals are in a Bench to continue playing,
position to put Amos Otis ahead including the leagu·e playoffs
·
of Mayberry and possibly and World Series.
"We
thought
there
was
a
2
McRae and Lou Pin lelia behind
him.
Iier cent chance of it being
Of course, If it turns out malignant," Ballou said.
McRae can do an adequate job "John didn'l Want lo take a
at lhtrd base, lhat will be an chance.''
Bench will require eight
additional bonus for the
Royals. Then lhey can put weeks of convalesence at
Steve Hovley or young Jim home, but the Reds expect him
WOhlford or Kellh MarshaU in to be ready for spring training
and the season opener April ~·
right !ield.
"A type of incision was used
That situation depends a
great dealm Paul Schaal, who so·lhat it was not necessary to
had an off-year at tlm'd base in cu! into back muscles and It
was not necessary lo remove a
1972, hitting .228.
So, a trade depends on how rib," Ballou said.
Bench's parenl.!l, a llater,
' you look at it. Certainly, thla
one figures to help the Redlegs. mother and a friend were at
· But It 1also could help the lhe hospital during lhe 2 1·2
hour operation.
Royals.
"We're 10 bappy it turned out
• There's notlang that says a
trade can't help both teaDII, Ia the way it has," Mrs. Katie
·f!ench said:
there?

'

North Carolina's Bobby Jones,

combined for 43 points as South
Carolina beat off scrappy
Georgia Southern. Ernie
DIGregorio hit for 37 points to
enable Providence lo defeat
Fairfield and Houston got 17
points from Louis Dunbar and
15 from Dwight Jones to upend
St. Mary's.
Sophomore Jimmy Baker
scored 40 points as Nevada-Las
Vegas rallied from a 13-point
halftime deficit to upset previously unbeaten Oral Roberts.
In other games, freshman
Phil Sellers scored 28 points to
leadRutgerstoan811-73victory
• -~1 h nd Lee u--'·'
over """'
g a lnts ...,.,,.
~•·h 30
arried
career
...
.,.
po
c
Neb ask to 7" ••
r Chrl
a ...
a """romp
ru k s ttlo~•
Texas
s ...n. Kc • u beat
es
..
polnl.!l helped
"'
ansas
xavier of Ohio 61-64 and Steve
Mitch 11 hit"" Ka
sta•·
e
""as nsas "'
stopped N0 rth T
s•·te 711exas. ..
62 D M hy' 5 t
fr:ee
· an urp
wo ·
th
with thr
da left
rows
ee secon
ctn"'~~-u a 711-74 ictory
gave """"'
v
Ar'•• Stat
over ...,na
e.

blood from the Tar Heel
player's nose.
Jones, a starter on the u.s.
Olympic tearri· at Munich last
summer, scored two key
baskets in the final moments to
lock up lhe victory for North
Carolina and finished wilh 15
points. Sophomore Ed Stahl
added 14 to the North Carolina
attack.
Sophomore Kevin Grevey's
19 points were high for Kenlucky, which lost ita third game
in a row after beating Michigan
State In Us opener. Lyons
contributed 15 points and
Conner 13 for lhe Wildcata, who
trailed 46-28 at the half and
went more than three minutes
before scoring their first points
of the final stanza.
1n other "action Involving
ranked clubs, Lon• Beach
e
State(7) ripped Colorado~.
South Carolina (13) beat
Georgia Southern 92-77,
Providence ( 14) routed
Fairfield 93-57, Holl8ton (15)
held off St. Mary's of Texas 59Gtin!IYQ
,....."e.,
47 and Oral Roberta (17) was
upset by Nevada-Las Vegas 86- u~~ p~~sRfote~~::,~n;~:
80.
20 major college basketball
Roscoe Poindexter's 20 teams wllh first place votes
points ' carried Lona ~ach andwon-l,ost records In paren.
'
lhem· \•n
,.,
· state palll Colorado lllld"Biiaii''' IF.lr~f weel&lt; )' .,.,, ·

wllege R .

1

I:1~~~~~Wo\3 .01

Winters and Kevin Joyce

w~&lt;:::::::::~:::: :: ,;:: ;:;: ::: ::::::~::,:8:::~:;:: :: : : ::: : :;: :~:::::~::c:x:::;:,:::r.$::;::::::;:;:;:;o. : &gt;: : : : :': : :'o:!~ ;: ~~~~ ~~~~;l
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Pro Stan d"lllg8

6. N.C. St. (4·0)
1. L.Beach St. 13-01
B. SW La.( 4·0)
9. N. Car. 14-01
10. Missouri 15·0)
1!. P~nn . (3-01

,;

• Pmt'

i:i
1~3

117
67

52
51
47

gained the playoffs by also
beating the BroWilll.
But that game Is a key one
for Cleveland. If the BroWilll
win and Pittsburgh loses to San
Diego, Cleveland would be
division champ and Pittaburgh
the wild card team. The
Raiders will call on AFC
champion and wild card team
will head for the battle with
Miami.
The Raiders wind up the
regular season against the
Otlcago' ~ars Sunday and
lhen get ready for the playoffs.
Bobby Howfield kicked field
goals of 25, 30 and 42 yards and
Namath hit Richard Castar
wilh a 49-yard toes for all ~
New York points. George
Blanda booted a 47-yard fteld
goal and Smith ran one yard at
lhe end of a ~yard drive for
lhe other Raider polntB.

Frosh press
produces
37-34 win
The Meigs Marauder freshman squad· forcild enough
turnovers using a "•ht 1011e
...
preu in the second half to
produce a come-from.IJehlnd
37-34 win over Athens freshmen
at the Marauder e•
""m Monday.
Coach
Jon
Arnett's
Marauders were clown once 282,1 in the third quartet but ·
oulscored the Bullpu[JilU in
the final six minutes.
The win was the first in lhree
outings for Me'••. Athena Is
"'"
also 1-2. Charlie Manhall lind
Micky Davenport led Me1••
with 9pointa each. Other Me'••
..
scorers were Mike May eeven
and Jeff Martin, Jlm\DY Anderson, and Mike Magnotll
·four apiece. Jiml'ny Qua11a
didn't score but p'-'ved
I •ood
'111"'
"'
floor game fort the little

...

M~=~~Greer, • taU center,

1

:~~ ~. game's leading scorer

,

Meigs will play at GaWpolia
Thursday night.
Athens
!3 7 8 6-34
Meigs
6 B 11 12-37

NFL 5tandings
NBAStandings
By United Pr3!~t'"'ernatlonar
Byu~~:f.':~~:~r:~:~:!'og: ~~ c~;.' o/2 . 1 1
~~
w. I. t. pet. pi PI
Allon11cDivlslon
14. Provdnc 11·01
21
•·Washington 11 2 0 .846 319 !94
w. I. pd. g.15. Houston (5-1)
!8
y-Dallas
10 3·o .769 316 217 Boston
22 3 .880
16. Okla. (6·01
16
NY Giants
7 6 a .538 308 2~~ New York
23 6 .793 1 17. 0. Robrts (2·0)
t~
· This wR!i•s s,..;:1ai :
St. Louis
3 9 1 .269 169 280 Buffalo
7 21 .250 16'12' 18. Sen Fran. (4·01
12
Phlla.
2101 .!92122 328 Philadelphia
3 27 .100 2111&gt;•19. vandy (s.o) .
11
Centro!
Central Division
20. Iowa 13-01
10
w. 1. t. pet. pt'pa
w. I pet. g.b. r---------.-,
x.GreenBay 9 ~ 0 .692 27~ 206 Baltimore
15 13 .536
Detroll
7 5 1 .577 305 273 Atianla
15 I~ .517 •;,
1JII n.a.
Sentillf
Minnesota
7 6 0 .538 28~ 232 Houston
11 15 .~23 3
_,
Chicago
4 s 1 .346 20047 Cleveland
9 21 .300 1
DIYOTID TO THI.
INTI II llT OP
West
Wes1ern Conference
MltOI·MASON Alii A
w. I. I. pet. pf pa
Midwest Division
CHISTU L. TANNINILL,
San Fran.
1 5 1 .577 333 232
w. I. pet. g. b.
luc. ld.
Atlanta
1 6 0 .53S 255 257 Chicago
19 8 .704
IIOIIIIT HO.,LICH,
Los Ang .
6 6 1 .500 274 252 Milwaukee
19 9 .679 '12
City Utter
New Or!.
2101 .192195 331 KC-Omaha
16 15 .516 5
PubliShed dolly except
Amerlcon Conference
Detroit
Solurdoy by Tho Ohio vattov
13 1 ~ .481 6 Publishing
·
Compeny, 111
Eosl
pacific Division
court st ., Pomoror, Ohio,
4 door H.T.• lull power, gr.
•·Miami
1:l"o ~ ::Ji/3!,'1~ Los Angeles
;;· ~:2 g.b. ;W:i5:."l~~~::,~·~~r:.,:h:;,~
llnlsh.
gr . vinyl root,
NY Jeto
16 o .538 357 29S Golden State
11 10 .630 6 ' 1117.
loaded
with
equipment,
Baltimore
5 s 0 .385 235 236 Phoenix
13 17 .03 nr;,, SocOfiG clltl potta91 paid 11
!7,000
mi.
Sharp.
Buffalo
3 9-1· .269 233 360 Sealt!e
10 22 .3!3 15•;, Pomoro~. Ohio.
New Eng .
3 10 o .231 171 40! · Portland
~ 22 .21~
,.~:.'.':.~:l,vr •a•o't:l~~n~
Central
Mondav sRosulls
oo'ilelhor. Inc., 12 E"t 42nd
w. t. t. pet. pi Jl&lt;l
INo games scheduled)
st., Now vor- City, Now York.
v.PIIsbrgh
10 3 0.69 319 173
Tuesdoy'sGames
5uDicrlptlon rtlll : Do.
beveland
9 4 o .692 2~2 239
HoustonatBulfalo
tlvorod b~ carrier whoro
Cnclnatl
7 6 o .538 238 212 AtlantaatNewYork
tvollobto so Clftll per wHk J
Houston
112 0 .077 147 319 Clevelandvs.KC-Omahaat ly Motor Route whorl cerrlor
"You'll Like Our Quality
West
LosAngelesatChlcago
10rv1co not ovolltbiO : Ono
.
•Way
of Doing Business."
t
p1
Mllwaukeea!Portland
month
11.75.
ly
mtll
In
Ohio
1· 1· pc · PI
w.
Phil
d
hi
tB
.
tnd
W
.
Vt
.•
Ono
voor
114.00.
GMAC
Fl NANCJNG
0.
11
x- k!and
9 3 1 .731 337 221
a elp aa a rmore
Six months 17.2S. Thrtt
tt2-534~
J'omeroy1
KansasCIIy 1 6 0 .538 270 240 !onlygamesscheduledl
months u.50. Subserlpllon
0peft Evenings 'Tlii:OO .
San Diego
j S 1 .346 262 320
prlco Includes Sundev Tlmts·
Denver
~ 9 0 .308 280 329
ABA S1andlngs
Sonllnot.
~.
TJI5P.M..$at.. ... ..!
X·tl inched division title y- By United Press lnterna11onal
clinched p::J:olf sr.t
East
...,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,;.._ _ _~----. .
Mo ay's uulls
w. 1 pet. g.b..,
Oakland 24 NY Jets 16
Carolina
19 12 .613
iOn I~ game scheduled)
Kentucky
!6 12 .511 p; 2
t1urday's Games
Virginia
18 15 . 5~5 2
Minnesota at San Fran.
New York
!2 15 , 4j~ 5
Baltimore at Mlaml
Memphis
!0 20 .333 s•;,
· !Only games scheduled)
Wost
5unday's Games
w. t. pd. g.b.
Buffalo al Washington
Indiana
lS 12 .600
Chicago at Oakland
Utah
17 14 .548 1'1&gt;
Cincinnati at Houston
Denver
14 13 .5!9 . 2'1•
G!eveland at N.Y. Jets
San Diego
14 t9 .~24 5'1&gt;
Detroit at ~os Angeles
Dallas
!0 16 .385 6
Green Bay at New Orleans
Mondoy's Results
Kansas Clly at Atlanta
(No game scheduled)
New England at Denver
. Tuesday's Games
N.Y. Giants at Dallas
New Vorl&lt; at Dallas
Philadelphia at St. Louis
VIrginia at Utah
Plllsburgh at San Diego
Denver at San Diego
!Only games sched~ledl
Ionly games scheduled)

71 auysler

New Yorker_

!·

17'1•

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.Karr &amp; Van Zand1

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PHONE 992-2342

MIDDLEPORT, O.

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MUTUAL FUNDS
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•- The Dally Sentinel; MldcDeport-Pqrn~oy, 0 ., Dec. l2, 197\l

/.(Jok .-;;;;;;;;:~ABA

·~

BY BIU. MADDEN
UPI Sporto wriier
NEWYORK(UPI)-Slxlfe!lye&amp;rsbavepuoedolacetheUDivenltyoiSiiaFrallclseo
last ruled the eollege bask~ball .roOit and since that lime as BID Russell went on to the

~~

1

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~:;

professlonalranb,theDoliSbavesllppedqUl~iiyoutoftheUmellgbt.

~

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t~&gt;

. 1n the latest college basketball ratings of the United Press Iute.matloilal Boanl of
Coaches, howe. ver, alter •ou get by the ·lnevltable unanimous vole for UCLA at No.1, a
quick glan&lt;e down ilte ""*"shows ti lot of new faces tneiudlng San Franclseo at No. lB.
The D.ms, wbo have swept over four straight opponeots and are !avered to C!lpture
their West Coast Athlellc Confereace title this seatl&lt;ln,jobted seven other newcomers 1o the
top 20 in the second week of regutaMeBson balloting by the coaches.
UCLA, once again, was the unanimous.No.1 choice of the coaches, picking up ail 35
lirst place votes fora perfect 35hcore and F1orlda State was once mare setoad.• But at No.
3 there was 11 chaoge as Marquette leaped ahead of Maryland and Minnesota aod N. C.
statemovedaheadofiAingBeachStateatNo.6,
.Southwestern Louisiana was again elghlh but North Carollpa jumped from 12th 1o
ninth aod Mlstl&lt;lurl, one of the elghtnewcomers, came out-of nowhere to No. 10 after
upeDdedBlgTen""wenPurd
.·. ueimdOhloState,thelatterontberoad. '
r•
Othertelimsgalolpgtop20status-forthefirsttlmethlsseasonlnc1udedlodlaM UJth),
~uth Carolina (13th), Houston (15th), Oklahoma (16th), Sao Fran&lt;lsco (18th), Vanderbilt
(18th) and Iowa (20th).
· BesldesSaoFran&lt;iscoandMlssourl,tbeschooldrawingthemostnotlcetblsweekwas
Oklahoma. 'fbe Sooners; never noted as a basketbaU power, have swept over.ofx quick
opponents and, led by 6-11 Alvan Adams, must be considered as potential Big Eight tide
threat.
.

still hungry for merger ·• ·:

LOUISVILLE . Ky. (UPI) - NBA merger squelthed
The ·American Basketball ·speculatloo the ABA had given
Association say~ It will renew up hOpes cl it and would lit• Its ~forts in January to gal!t tempt to "oorner the market"
' Congressional approval of. a · On the natlcin's top basketball
· ' merg~ between it. and the talent.".
·
·
National Basketball Associa- · Carlson said the NBA is
tii&gt;n.
legally obligated to .back !be
"I think the cha.nces of proposed merger by an agreepassage are 50-50," said ABA ment with the ABA which doeS
Commissioner ·Robert Carlson · not expire unill Jan. 4, 1974. He
~· Monday at the beginning of a indica® the newer leagUe
~ two-day league ·· meeting would take legal action it that
:~ here.
.
· support was not forthcoming.
~
Today, the ABA board of · TbeABAeonunisslonersaid
?a trustees, composed of execu- the IQerger bill which wlll be
:~ tlves. from the 10 clubs, was ·introduced , in Congre!!S next
~:; scheduled to take up eX· month is designed to remove
··:'
M pansion., a future televtaion preVI'OU$ ob"'ctl•ns
,.. " by the
~t · contract, an underclassman Play~s Associations of t11e two
:a~~ pro~ sale ot""leagues,
.
.~:;
e lso~r ranc
·
"We feel it is eminently
:¢. Car n s announcement to reasonable and there is n~
@: continue pushing for an ABA- reason why the Players

t:

:t:
~::

~iattOOsorihe NBAshQU!d
oppose it," CarlsOn said. ·
The
NBA
Players
Association has ~ any
m~get that would include a
binding .reserve clause on
pla•ets. ·
C:.rtson Said the bill would
·retain the no-reServe ~tovisi0n
.from legislation amended in
the last Congress and also
would ban the televising of pro
baske.tball on Tuesday, Thur$day and Friday nlghts when It

gelS flag

..

o·ff field

We'

IRCII

Won Lost
76 36

Team6
Team 5

69

43

Friendly Tavern
60 52
Team 2
56 56
Modern Supply
53 59
Team 3
30
82
High Team Series - Team 5
;~ ;:' Team .6. 2074; Te~m 3,
High Team Game - Team 6,
708 ; Team 5, 700; Team 6, 699 .
Hlgh Men Ser les - C. Boyles
555; J. Thomas 55 1; R. Roach
510.
· High Men Game - C. Boyles
200 ; H. Whitlatch 199; A. Roach
192.
High Women Series -

J.
D.

Boyles 470; M. Wilson 464 ;
Hawley 422.
High Women Game .- J.
Boyles 171 ; M. Wilson 163; M.
Wilson 163.

.

Early Sunday Mi•ed League
November tO, 19?2
Won Lost
Tom's Carry Out
70 50
Mark.V
67
53
Eagles Club
62 58
Racine Food Mkt.
58 62
· Team3
57 63
Farmers Bank
50 70
High Ind. Game - Jr. Phelps
201; Julia Boyles 194; Jr.
Phelps 200; Marlene Wilson
193. '
High Series - Jr. Phelps 569
and ·Linda Boyles 481 ; Dick
Dugan 541 and Marlene Wilson
~ 476.
• Team High Gime and Series
- Racine Food Markel. 648
· and 1850.

S'EO all alo'' ne :;:

Coach Buddy Moore's GAHS
freshmen rolled over Ironton
48-30 at Ironton Monday
evening to chalk up their third
consecutive SOutheastern Ohio
League basketball triumph
against two setbacks.
The Gallians led 13-3, 34-10,
and 4il'23 at the quartermarks.
Ironton dropped to 1·2 in league
play.
The Gallians' victory,
coupled with Waverly's 57-73 .
setback at Jackson, left the
Mooremen in first place all
alone in the frosh standings. In
other games Monday, defending champion Logan romped
4~16 over Wellston, and Meigs
slipped past Athens, 37-34.
Gary Snowden led the
winners with 20 points. Brent

Dan Murphy didn't see a lot
of action Monda)! night, but he ·
did the right things when the
ball was in his hands.
The University of Cincinnati
guard popped in two free
throws with just three seconds
left to boost the Bearcats to a
76-74 win over Arizona State.

SBRSOflS

GH8BJPE\rl

1 ,s Members of FTD
we can send the

FTO Season's Gree ter
almost ~ n ywh e re in

the United States or
Ca nada. The co lors
of the season
professionall y arranged
in o ur cxclu:iive, sa tinwhi te r(~ - usabl e

·cont ain er. A yea H o und
remir1der o f yo ur

thoughtfulneS&gt;.

' '

,,JA,~~•

~

Serving Meigs, Gallia and
Mison County areas.

L...---------1

t;:

::~

UPI Sjlorts Editor

Murphy, who finished the
game with only six points, was
fouled by Arizona State's Mike
Contreras as he drove for the
basket near the end of the
game at Cincinnati.
Contreras led all scorers
with 20 points, followed by
Cincinnati's Derrek Dickey
with 19. The Cats are 2-1. Their
opponent fell to 2-2.
In other games, Otterbein
edged David Li~comb (Tenn.)
76-74;' Denison downed Thiel
(Pa.) 7S-ll9; Mount Union whipped Grove City (Pa.) 69-55;
Point Park (,Pa) defeated
Baldwin-Wallace 68-62, and
.Kansas downed Xavier 61-54.
Games tonight include
Miami at Purdue.
Rick Suttle scored 28 points
for the Kansas Jayhawks as
they dropped Xavier to a 1-3
season. Center Bob Fullarton
topped Xavier scorers with 18
"

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FIGHT
SCRANTON, Pa.(UPI)-Eddie "Redtop" Owens, the NQ. 3
ranking light heavywleght, wUl
meet Jinuny Dupree of Jesey
City, N.J., in a lil'round boul,
Jan. 17, with the proceeds
going to the Chtcll Feldman
Memorial Fund.
The tiout Ia being SJlOIIM:ed
by the Friends ~ Baxinc, a
group to which Feldman
be10riged when he died Jan. 7,
1972, while cov~lng a flaht lor
the Scranton Tribune at Midis- .
on Square Garden In New
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truck operator.
rehire him after the 1971-72 pro
,,
OHIO
Dave Harris, a 5-7, 125..pound baSketball sea8on. ,
employe of a service station,
had the 6-2, 237-pound Beauchamp arrested.
Harris \old police Beauchamp'$ car was· blocking a
loading dock at a dOW!Itown
depariment store. He said the
store has a contract with his
employer to tow away offending vehicles.
"I backed my iow truck up to ·
his car and was getting ready
to tow it when he came walking
toward me accompanied by a
woman,'' Harrls said. "He said 1
there was noway !was going to
tow his car away."
A Holiday Bonanza Merchant
Harris said he told BeauMIDDLEPORT
champ he had the alternative
of paying him $lO for making
• Purses
Cordless
Electric
the call.
·
Shoe Kits
"He refused to pay me even
• Slippers
afte~ 1 explained that If I didn't
collect 1 would lose my job,''
• Hose
• Connie Boots
Harris said.
"The next thing 1 knew this
•Converse
big bruiser picked me up and
• Thom MeAn Boots
threw me to the ground."
Beauchamp, 28, who was
Tennis Shoes • Brush &amp; Shoe
drafted by the Bengals in 1968,
their first year, W.fS released

a

BEEFANY AMOUNT .

'

;: ROUND. SIEAK

' ~~~· "-''l''l'&lt;~ - .....;.-

. FROM •••

DEC. 13

TIL 9:00-

USDA CHOICE

NEW YORK (UP!) -Everytime the shoe fits, George Allen
squeaks.
Saunders added 11, and Tony
The latest example is his blast at the Dallas Cowboys, whlcb iw
Folden pumped in 10 for the simple extension works out to be a blast at their head coach, Tom
visitors. Saunders controlled
Landry·
both backboards.
This whole thing centers around what Allen insists was an
D. Fitzpatrick led the Little ''lUegal and vicious" block thrown by Lance Alworth, the
Cubs with 9 points.
Cowboys' wide reciever, at Jack Pardee, one of the Redskins'
The GAHS frosh will host lineback~s. in a 34-24 win over Washington Sa.turday.
M~igs on the varsity hardwood
The block Allen is getting 'so overheated about is known as a
at 4:30p.m., Thursday.
crackback block, so called because a wide receiver will take a
Box score of Monday's fewstepsdownfieldandthencomecrackingback toward the line
triumph :
of scrlnunage to execute it.
GAHS FROSH (48) What makes the'crackback so dangerous is that it's usually a
Saunders 2-1· 11 ; Smith 2·0-4 ;
Snowden 7·8-20; F!&gt;lden 5·0·10; bllndslde block. A linebacker frequently keys on one of !be
Wilson o.1.t; Jordon 1-0·2; enemy backs. He doesn't'see the wide receiver coming back' to
Maynard 0-0·0. TOTALS 17·14- block him, and suddenly,.. crack ...there he Is Oat on his back.
48.
Jack Pardee never saw Lance Atworth until It was too late.
IRONTON FROSH (30) Fritz 2·0-4; Brown 2-0-4; D. Pardee caine out of that first half episode with a banged up knee
VInson 2-0-4 ; R. Vinson 2·3·7·
Fitzpatrick 4·1-9; Stapleton o.o'. andneverplayedanymore in theset:ondhaU.
0; Kriebel 1·0-2; Allen 0-0-0;
George Allen was still steaming over the block Monday.
Black 0-0·0. TOTALS 13-4·30.
"It's something designed to hurt a player and I don't think it
By Quarters:
has
any place in football," he said. "It's illegal and vicious."
GAHS Frosh 13 21 6 8- 48
Ironton Frosh 3 7 13 7- 30
But George Allen overlooked something. Maybe accidentally.
· And then again maybe accidentally on purpose.
He didn't talk about.how Chuck Howley, the Cowboys' vet~an
ll~backer, had to undergo surgery on his left knee after getting
hlt by a crackback ])lock also in Saturday's .contest.· He never
mentioned that Howl~y Is all flrushed for the season and maybe,
,.. ~
, me~!e !I''[;:SV!!Il.-for his ear~"'
• •• f .•! J.:f10»Jbbnd and....,. to appear
. ; ~w,I can'fllititl!l't'ili ilJiame George Allen for rallying to the · · in.Crimlnal O&gt;urt today on the
'defellsll of on~ Of hill players, but he knows perfec_tly well Lance charge.
~Aiworth is not dirty player and that the crackback block is rr~:__
-~~~~~~·~·~·~
·· ~·~
· ~~~~~~~~~!.,
points.
certainly dangerous but not illegal.
Denison gained Its fourth win
Not in pro ball, anyway.
In five tries with little trouble.
Afew years back, the NCAA, hoping to decrease knee Injuries,
The Big Red led 42-35 at the passed a rule calling for a 15-yard penalty against crackback
half and widened the lead io 15 blocks delivered below a man's waist, but the block still is per·
points in the second half. fectly legal among the prQs.
Dudley Brown was high with 23
All prQfesslonal coaches know about the block, and they also
points.
know it is legal, so .when George Allen says It isn't, he's wrong
Otterbein held off a rally to and what's more he knows it.
get its fourth win against two
Actually, Allen was taking more cl a dig at Tqrn Landry than
losses. The Cardinals were led he was at Lance Alworth when he said what he did about the
by David Bromley with 17 crackback block Monday, but Landry doesn't feel like getting
points. Calvin Bailey of David into any shouting match.
Lipscomb was high for the
Apprised of Allen's remarks, he said:
game with 25 points.
"U there is any question of legality, I would suggest you con· ,.
tact the league office. The block was designed as any other block,
to help get a man open. There was nothing vicious about it."
There's no real way of being sure, but I'd guess George Allen
isn't about to press his cl'aira with the league office.
For one thing, aU that the office could teD him ls what he
Monday's Coli Bkb Resul"
already knows- the crackback block is not illegal.
By United Press lnternationol
And for another thing, what can pe say If somebody asks him
· Elst
Concord 78 Dav.·Eik . 62
what about Chuck Howley?
Marls! 69 Bloomlld 59
Bryant 91 Nichols 53
Juniata 90 Del. Val . 72
Tri County League
Now! La, It Away
Mt. Union 69 Grove C. 55
November 18, 1971
Bluelleld 87 W. Liberty 72
Pis·
W. Va . St. 76 Wheeling 63
Davis·Warner Ins.
81
Jer. Cty St. 67 Trnln St. 61 Rawlings Dodge
64
Rutgers 86 Lehigh 73
Gro. Boys
56
Lincoln 69 Morgen St. 62
Pomeroy Cement Block Co. so .
South
H&amp;R Firestone
38
Sewing Machine
Win.Sal. St. 65 Hampton 62
Mayer &amp;Hill Barber Shop 25 '·
Campbell 92 Va. Wes. 64
High Ind. Game - A. L.
For Christmas '72
N. Car. 78 Ky. 70
Phelps Jr. 246, Roger Hill 220, '
S. Car. 92 Ga . Soun n
A. L. Phelps, Jr. 211.
, Small deposit will hold.
'E. Ky. 90 Morhed St. 85
High
Series
A.
L.
Phelps,
1:'..&amp;...:..
Roanoke 74 East Tenn. St. 13 Jr. 621, Darrell Dugan 569, Ed ' .
fCIIIIK.
Miss. 88 5. Miss . 60
'
Voss 553 .
.
Ala. 89 Ga .Tech 73
Team High Game - H&amp;R t 1S w. Second
"2-22a4·
Wm &amp; Mary 73 Appa .71
FirestOne 917.
·
Midwest
Team ~High Series . - .t.·.~·IOI. ..,:.PO:ijMjjiEii;IRO.OiiiY~,~O~H~iO::,...M
Cnclnall76 Ariz. St. 74
Rawlings Dodge 2548.
Loyola 91 St. Nor. 79
Diake 83 Creighton 70
St. Joseph's 68 Tri ·SI. 57
Eastern Ill. 92 DePau.w 81
• Kansas 61 Xavier 54
Southwest
Baylor 63 Dkla: St. 60
Nebraska 12 TCU 58
Houston 59 St. Mary's 47
Ark. 80 lnd.St. 75
Ark. St. 80 Hous. Bop. 72
s. Colo.83 N. Ariz. ao
Wost
E. Mont. 90 Boise St. 89
L. Beach St. 93 Colo. 69

Bearcats nip
Arizona State·By United Press Ioterualloaal

Christmas is ...
lhe FTD

BY MILTON RICHMAN

GROUND

PORk

11i~':

:i.1.:

:;:;

Lean USDA Buy

FniSh &amp; Lean

CROWN •.• •, .. ''

REFEREE SUES
.'
PHILADELPmA (UP!) - •
Earl Strom, an' NBA referee '

..,,.....,.,..• . , . .............., .•....,.,.,.,...,.,..,•,•,·.•,•,.... ............. . . . .... .. .........w

UL..U

-~~f:r:l;·:-~--, :::~=~ E\~~::;:::~ G;~:!
LocalBowlma
wzn, top " Snort
Parade
~
.
·
:
:~ltni::o:a:e::~e
:f:
.
~:vc::;ntoM:~d::r:O~~~
lOLA'S
r
·&lt;
Sunday Late Mixed league

..

. U. S. Government
Inspected

.t
.
J r
. i •r d• . p

Bea·ucham·p
.

Fresh and

would co~flict wlih local ratified a lentative coolrl!~
· college and high school agreement with t~ ·All.\
basketball games: ·
· players AssoclaUon •l!!l
Misslilg from the new bill ronfinned a cbange in the
will be any PI'Q'ilsionrequlrlng formatfortlteflrsttoundofthe
the home team to share a · postsea'IOD ~yoffl.
· ,
· pe'reentage. oftts gate. fecetp' ts. · Under the change, the flnt
with visiting ieaffis. But Carl- place teima In .eacb division
son Indicated this is a will play lhe fourtb..place
negotiable uiaiter and said the . finishers and the eeconil-pla~
ABA has "no philosophical !,e&amp;,·nishemswrsm.. meet tlie
lace
,,,
objections' ' to gate-sharing. "
.· lfe !iaid the ABA would.solicit
ABA offlclabi would ·not
Slippcl!'l for.. the bill on an In- divulge terms of tile contraCt
·divid.Uiil basis froiD the NBA agreement wjth thf ABA
board o1 gover~ors. Each NBA ' Players ~tlon, .•pendl!\g
governoristoreceiveacopyof tl!,tification by the fuU' menitheABA's"""posedleglslation. bership of theA8socia.tlo.ri.
... v
At Monday's
business •
··
session the ABA trustees
··

'I

WI1M

~

.

We Accept Federal Food Stamps
PHONE: 992·3480
I

Corner Mill and Second Sl

"We Reserve The Right To Limit Quantities" '

.

·MIDOLEPQR( O.

�•

.•

r .
'

'

~

•- The Dally Sentinel; MldcDeport-Pqrn~oy, 0 ., Dec. l2, 197\l

/.(Jok .-;;;;;;;;:~ABA

·~

BY BIU. MADDEN
UPI Sporto wriier
NEWYORK(UPI)-Slxlfe!lye&amp;rsbavepuoedolacetheUDivenltyoiSiiaFrallclseo
last ruled the eollege bask~ball .roOit and since that lime as BID Russell went on to the

~~

1

~··

~~

~:;

professlonalranb,theDoliSbavesllppedqUl~iiyoutoftheUmellgbt.

~

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~;

~
, ,

i.":··..

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1:::

~~

i~
~~
~

·?

~

i
t~&gt;

. 1n the latest college basketball ratings of the United Press Iute.matloilal Boanl of
Coaches, howe. ver, alter •ou get by the ·lnevltable unanimous vole for UCLA at No.1, a
quick glan&lt;e down ilte ""*"shows ti lot of new faces tneiudlng San Franclseo at No. lB.
The D.ms, wbo have swept over four straight opponeots and are !avered to C!lpture
their West Coast Athlellc Confereace title this seatl&lt;ln,jobted seven other newcomers 1o the
top 20 in the second week of regutaMeBson balloting by the coaches.
UCLA, once again, was the unanimous.No.1 choice of the coaches, picking up ail 35
lirst place votes fora perfect 35hcore and F1orlda State was once mare setoad.• But at No.
3 there was 11 chaoge as Marquette leaped ahead of Maryland and Minnesota aod N. C.
statemovedaheadofiAingBeachStateatNo.6,
.Southwestern Louisiana was again elghlh but North Carollpa jumped from 12th 1o
ninth aod Mlstl&lt;lurl, one of the elghtnewcomers, came out-of nowhere to No. 10 after
upeDdedBlgTen""wenPurd
.·. ueimdOhloState,thelatterontberoad. '
r•
Othertelimsgalolpgtop20status-forthefirsttlmethlsseasonlnc1udedlodlaM UJth),
~uth Carolina (13th), Houston (15th), Oklahoma (16th), Sao Fran&lt;lsco (18th), Vanderbilt
(18th) and Iowa (20th).
· BesldesSaoFran&lt;iscoandMlssourl,tbeschooldrawingthemostnotlcetblsweekwas
Oklahoma. 'fbe Sooners; never noted as a basketbaU power, have swept over.ofx quick
opponents and, led by 6-11 Alvan Adams, must be considered as potential Big Eight tide
threat.
.

still hungry for merger ·• ·:

LOUISVILLE . Ky. (UPI) - NBA merger squelthed
The ·American Basketball ·speculatloo the ABA had given
Association say~ It will renew up hOpes cl it and would lit• Its ~forts in January to gal!t tempt to "oorner the market"
' Congressional approval of. a · On the natlcin's top basketball
· ' merg~ between it. and the talent.".
·
·
National Basketball Associa- · Carlson said the NBA is
tii&gt;n.
legally obligated to .back !be
"I think the cha.nces of proposed merger by an agreepassage are 50-50," said ABA ment with the ABA which doeS
Commissioner ·Robert Carlson · not expire unill Jan. 4, 1974. He
~· Monday at the beginning of a indica® the newer leagUe
~ two-day league ·· meeting would take legal action it that
:~ here.
.
· support was not forthcoming.
~
Today, the ABA board of · TbeABAeonunisslonersaid
?a trustees, composed of execu- the IQerger bill which wlll be
:~ tlves. from the 10 clubs, was ·introduced , in Congre!!S next
~:; scheduled to take up eX· month is designed to remove
··:'
M pansion., a future televtaion preVI'OU$ ob"'ctl•ns
,.. " by the
~t · contract, an underclassman Play~s Associations of t11e two
:a~~ pro~ sale ot""leagues,
.
.~:;
e lso~r ranc
·
"We feel it is eminently
:¢. Car n s announcement to reasonable and there is n~
@: continue pushing for an ABA- reason why the Players

t:

:t:
~::

~iattOOsorihe NBAshQU!d
oppose it," CarlsOn said. ·
The
NBA
Players
Association has ~ any
m~get that would include a
binding .reserve clause on
pla•ets. ·
C:.rtson Said the bill would
·retain the no-reServe ~tovisi0n
.from legislation amended in
the last Congress and also
would ban the televising of pro
baske.tball on Tuesday, Thur$day and Friday nlghts when It

gelS flag

..

o·ff field

We'

IRCII

Won Lost
76 36

Team6
Team 5

69

43

Friendly Tavern
60 52
Team 2
56 56
Modern Supply
53 59
Team 3
30
82
High Team Series - Team 5
;~ ;:' Team .6. 2074; Te~m 3,
High Team Game - Team 6,
708 ; Team 5, 700; Team 6, 699 .
Hlgh Men Ser les - C. Boyles
555; J. Thomas 55 1; R. Roach
510.
· High Men Game - C. Boyles
200 ; H. Whitlatch 199; A. Roach
192.
High Women Series -

J.
D.

Boyles 470; M. Wilson 464 ;
Hawley 422.
High Women Game .- J.
Boyles 171 ; M. Wilson 163; M.
Wilson 163.

.

Early Sunday Mi•ed League
November tO, 19?2
Won Lost
Tom's Carry Out
70 50
Mark.V
67
53
Eagles Club
62 58
Racine Food Mkt.
58 62
· Team3
57 63
Farmers Bank
50 70
High Ind. Game - Jr. Phelps
201; Julia Boyles 194; Jr.
Phelps 200; Marlene Wilson
193. '
High Series - Jr. Phelps 569
and ·Linda Boyles 481 ; Dick
Dugan 541 and Marlene Wilson
~ 476.
• Team High Gime and Series
- Racine Food Markel. 648
· and 1850.

S'EO all alo'' ne :;:

Coach Buddy Moore's GAHS
freshmen rolled over Ironton
48-30 at Ironton Monday
evening to chalk up their third
consecutive SOutheastern Ohio
League basketball triumph
against two setbacks.
The Gallians led 13-3, 34-10,
and 4il'23 at the quartermarks.
Ironton dropped to 1·2 in league
play.
The Gallians' victory,
coupled with Waverly's 57-73 .
setback at Jackson, left the
Mooremen in first place all
alone in the frosh standings. In
other games Monday, defending champion Logan romped
4~16 over Wellston, and Meigs
slipped past Athens, 37-34.
Gary Snowden led the
winners with 20 points. Brent

Dan Murphy didn't see a lot
of action Monda)! night, but he ·
did the right things when the
ball was in his hands.
The University of Cincinnati
guard popped in two free
throws with just three seconds
left to boost the Bearcats to a
76-74 win over Arizona State.

SBRSOflS

GH8BJPE\rl

1 ,s Members of FTD
we can send the

FTO Season's Gree ter
almost ~ n ywh e re in

the United States or
Ca nada. The co lors
of the season
professionall y arranged
in o ur cxclu:iive, sa tinwhi te r(~ - usabl e

·cont ain er. A yea H o und
remir1der o f yo ur

thoughtfulneS&gt;.

' '

,,JA,~~•

~

Serving Meigs, Gallia and
Mison County areas.

L...---------1

t;:

::~

UPI Sjlorts Editor

Murphy, who finished the
game with only six points, was
fouled by Arizona State's Mike
Contreras as he drove for the
basket near the end of the
game at Cincinnati.
Contreras led all scorers
with 20 points, followed by
Cincinnati's Derrek Dickey
with 19. The Cats are 2-1. Their
opponent fell to 2-2.
In other games, Otterbein
edged David Li~comb (Tenn.)
76-74;' Denison downed Thiel
(Pa.) 7S-ll9; Mount Union whipped Grove City (Pa.) 69-55;
Point Park (,Pa) defeated
Baldwin-Wallace 68-62, and
.Kansas downed Xavier 61-54.
Games tonight include
Miami at Purdue.
Rick Suttle scored 28 points
for the Kansas Jayhawks as
they dropped Xavier to a 1-3
season. Center Bob Fullarton
topped Xavier scorers with 18
"

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FIGHT
SCRANTON, Pa.(UPI)-Eddie "Redtop" Owens, the NQ. 3
ranking light heavywleght, wUl
meet Jinuny Dupree of Jesey
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Jan. 17, with the proceeds
going to the Chtcll Feldman
Memorial Fund.
The tiout Ia being SJlOIIM:ed
by the Friends ~ Baxinc, a
group to which Feldman
be10riged when he died Jan. 7,
1972, while cov~lng a flaht lor
the Scranton Tribune at Midis- .
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truck operator.
rehire him after the 1971-72 pro
,,
OHIO
Dave Harris, a 5-7, 125..pound baSketball sea8on. ,
employe of a service station,
had the 6-2, 237-pound Beauchamp arrested.
Harris \old police Beauchamp'$ car was· blocking a
loading dock at a dOW!Itown
depariment store. He said the
store has a contract with his
employer to tow away offending vehicles.
"I backed my iow truck up to ·
his car and was getting ready
to tow it when he came walking
toward me accompanied by a
woman,'' Harrls said. "He said 1
there was noway !was going to
tow his car away."
A Holiday Bonanza Merchant
Harris said he told BeauMIDDLEPORT
champ he had the alternative
of paying him $lO for making
• Purses
Cordless
Electric
the call.
·
Shoe Kits
"He refused to pay me even
• Slippers
afte~ 1 explained that If I didn't
collect 1 would lose my job,''
• Hose
• Connie Boots
Harris said.
"The next thing 1 knew this
•Converse
big bruiser picked me up and
• Thom MeAn Boots
threw me to the ground."
Beauchamp, 28, who was
Tennis Shoes • Brush &amp; Shoe
drafted by the Bengals in 1968,
their first year, W.fS released

a

BEEFANY AMOUNT .

'

;: ROUND. SIEAK

' ~~~· "-''l''l'&lt;~ - .....;.-

. FROM •••

DEC. 13

TIL 9:00-

USDA CHOICE

NEW YORK (UP!) -Everytime the shoe fits, George Allen
squeaks.
Saunders added 11, and Tony
The latest example is his blast at the Dallas Cowboys, whlcb iw
Folden pumped in 10 for the simple extension works out to be a blast at their head coach, Tom
visitors. Saunders controlled
Landry·
both backboards.
This whole thing centers around what Allen insists was an
D. Fitzpatrick led the Little ''lUegal and vicious" block thrown by Lance Alworth, the
Cubs with 9 points.
Cowboys' wide reciever, at Jack Pardee, one of the Redskins'
The GAHS frosh will host lineback~s. in a 34-24 win over Washington Sa.turday.
M~igs on the varsity hardwood
The block Allen is getting 'so overheated about is known as a
at 4:30p.m., Thursday.
crackback block, so called because a wide receiver will take a
Box score of Monday's fewstepsdownfieldandthencomecrackingback toward the line
triumph :
of scrlnunage to execute it.
GAHS FROSH (48) What makes the'crackback so dangerous is that it's usually a
Saunders 2-1· 11 ; Smith 2·0-4 ;
Snowden 7·8-20; F!&gt;lden 5·0·10; bllndslde block. A linebacker frequently keys on one of !be
Wilson o.1.t; Jordon 1-0·2; enemy backs. He doesn't'see the wide receiver coming back' to
Maynard 0-0·0. TOTALS 17·14- block him, and suddenly,.. crack ...there he Is Oat on his back.
48.
Jack Pardee never saw Lance Atworth until It was too late.
IRONTON FROSH (30) Fritz 2·0-4; Brown 2-0-4; D. Pardee caine out of that first half episode with a banged up knee
VInson 2-0-4 ; R. Vinson 2·3·7·
Fitzpatrick 4·1-9; Stapleton o.o'. andneverplayedanymore in theset:ondhaU.
0; Kriebel 1·0-2; Allen 0-0-0;
George Allen was still steaming over the block Monday.
Black 0-0·0. TOTALS 13-4·30.
"It's something designed to hurt a player and I don't think it
By Quarters:
has
any place in football," he said. "It's illegal and vicious."
GAHS Frosh 13 21 6 8- 48
Ironton Frosh 3 7 13 7- 30
But George Allen overlooked something. Maybe accidentally.
· And then again maybe accidentally on purpose.
He didn't talk about.how Chuck Howley, the Cowboys' vet~an
ll~backer, had to undergo surgery on his left knee after getting
hlt by a crackback ])lock also in Saturday's .contest.· He never
mentioned that Howl~y Is all flrushed for the season and maybe,
,.. ~
, me~!e !I''[;:SV!!Il.-for his ear~"'
• •• f .•! J.:f10»Jbbnd and....,. to appear
. ; ~w,I can'fllititl!l't'ili ilJiame George Allen for rallying to the · · in.Crimlnal O&gt;urt today on the
'defellsll of on~ Of hill players, but he knows perfec_tly well Lance charge.
~Aiworth is not dirty player and that the crackback block is rr~:__
-~~~~~~·~·~·~
·· ~·~
· ~~~~~~~~~!.,
points.
certainly dangerous but not illegal.
Denison gained Its fourth win
Not in pro ball, anyway.
In five tries with little trouble.
Afew years back, the NCAA, hoping to decrease knee Injuries,
The Big Red led 42-35 at the passed a rule calling for a 15-yard penalty against crackback
half and widened the lead io 15 blocks delivered below a man's waist, but the block still is per·
points in the second half. fectly legal among the prQs.
Dudley Brown was high with 23
All prQfesslonal coaches know about the block, and they also
points.
know it is legal, so .when George Allen says It isn't, he's wrong
Otterbein held off a rally to and what's more he knows it.
get its fourth win against two
Actually, Allen was taking more cl a dig at Tqrn Landry than
losses. The Cardinals were led he was at Lance Alworth when he said what he did about the
by David Bromley with 17 crackback block Monday, but Landry doesn't feel like getting
points. Calvin Bailey of David into any shouting match.
Lipscomb was high for the
Apprised of Allen's remarks, he said:
game with 25 points.
"U there is any question of legality, I would suggest you con· ,.
tact the league office. The block was designed as any other block,
to help get a man open. There was nothing vicious about it."
There's no real way of being sure, but I'd guess George Allen
isn't about to press his cl'aira with the league office.
For one thing, aU that the office could teD him ls what he
Monday's Coli Bkb Resul"
already knows- the crackback block is not illegal.
By United Press lnternationol
And for another thing, what can pe say If somebody asks him
· Elst
Concord 78 Dav.·Eik . 62
what about Chuck Howley?
Marls! 69 Bloomlld 59
Bryant 91 Nichols 53
Juniata 90 Del. Val . 72
Tri County League
Now! La, It Away
Mt. Union 69 Grove C. 55
November 18, 1971
Bluelleld 87 W. Liberty 72
Pis·
W. Va . St. 76 Wheeling 63
Davis·Warner Ins.
81
Jer. Cty St. 67 Trnln St. 61 Rawlings Dodge
64
Rutgers 86 Lehigh 73
Gro. Boys
56
Lincoln 69 Morgen St. 62
Pomeroy Cement Block Co. so .
South
H&amp;R Firestone
38
Sewing Machine
Win.Sal. St. 65 Hampton 62
Mayer &amp;Hill Barber Shop 25 '·
Campbell 92 Va. Wes. 64
High Ind. Game - A. L.
For Christmas '72
N. Car. 78 Ky. 70
Phelps Jr. 246, Roger Hill 220, '
S. Car. 92 Ga . Soun n
A. L. Phelps, Jr. 211.
, Small deposit will hold.
'E. Ky. 90 Morhed St. 85
High
Series
A.
L.
Phelps,
1:'..&amp;...:..
Roanoke 74 East Tenn. St. 13 Jr. 621, Darrell Dugan 569, Ed ' .
fCIIIIK.
Miss. 88 5. Miss . 60
'
Voss 553 .
.
Ala. 89 Ga .Tech 73
Team High Game - H&amp;R t 1S w. Second
"2-22a4·
Wm &amp; Mary 73 Appa .71
FirestOne 917.
·
Midwest
Team ~High Series . - .t.·.~·IOI. ..,:.PO:ijMjjiEii;IRO.OiiiY~,~O~H~iO::,...M
Cnclnall76 Ariz. St. 74
Rawlings Dodge 2548.
Loyola 91 St. Nor. 79
Diake 83 Creighton 70
St. Joseph's 68 Tri ·SI. 57
Eastern Ill. 92 DePau.w 81
• Kansas 61 Xavier 54
Southwest
Baylor 63 Dkla: St. 60
Nebraska 12 TCU 58
Houston 59 St. Mary's 47
Ark. 80 lnd.St. 75
Ark. St. 80 Hous. Bop. 72
s. Colo.83 N. Ariz. ao
Wost
E. Mont. 90 Boise St. 89
L. Beach St. 93 Colo. 69

Bearcats nip
Arizona State·By United Press Ioterualloaal

Christmas is ...
lhe FTD

BY MILTON RICHMAN

GROUND

PORk

11i~':

:i.1.:

:;:;

Lean USDA Buy

FniSh &amp; Lean

CROWN •.• •, .. ''

REFEREE SUES
.'
PHILADELPmA (UP!) - •
Earl Strom, an' NBA referee '

..,,.....,.,..• . , . .............., .•....,.,.,.,...,.,..,•,•,·.•,•,.... ............. . . . .... .. .........w

UL..U

-~~f:r:l;·:-~--, :::~=~ E\~~::;:::~ G;~:!
LocalBowlma
wzn, top " Snort
Parade
~
.
·
:
:~ltni::o:a:e::~e
:f:
.
~:vc::;ntoM:~d::r:O~~~
lOLA'S
r
·&lt;
Sunday Late Mixed league

..

. U. S. Government
Inspected

.t
.
J r
. i •r d• . p

Bea·ucham·p
.

Fresh and

would co~flict wlih local ratified a lentative coolrl!~
· college and high school agreement with t~ ·All.\
basketball games: ·
· players AssoclaUon •l!!l
Misslilg from the new bill ronfinned a cbange in the
will be any PI'Q'ilsionrequlrlng formatfortlteflrsttoundofthe
the home team to share a · postsea'IOD ~yoffl.
· ,
· pe'reentage. oftts gate. fecetp' ts. · Under the change, the flnt
with visiting ieaffis. But Carl- place teima In .eacb division
son Indicated this is a will play lhe fourtb..place
negotiable uiaiter and said the . finishers and the eeconil-pla~
ABA has "no philosophical !,e&amp;,·nishemswrsm.. meet tlie
lace
,,,
objections' ' to gate-sharing. "
.· lfe !iaid the ABA would.solicit
ABA offlclabi would ·not
Slippcl!'l for.. the bill on an In- divulge terms of tile contraCt
·divid.Uiil basis froiD the NBA agreement wjth thf ABA
board o1 gover~ors. Each NBA ' Players ~tlon, .•pendl!\g
governoristoreceiveacopyof tl!,tification by the fuU' menitheABA's"""posedleglslation. bership of theA8socia.tlo.ri.
... v
At Monday's
business •
··
session the ABA trustees
··

'I

WI1M

~

.

We Accept Federal Food Stamps
PHONE: 992·3480
I

Corner Mill and Second Sl

"We Reserve The Right To Limit Quantities" '

.

·MIDOLEPQR( O.

�•

.'

J

'

f!'...-

~

' .,,

•

7- The Daily Sentlnei, Mlddleport-Pomeroy,,O., Dec.l2.1971

Officers named
by sewing .club

•

•-'nat Dlll1 Sentinel, Mlddleport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Dec. 12,1972

t

FOOD FOR .A..MERICANS . .

POLLY'S POINTEllS

"'

A Fruit Cake or.Giving

Silverfish Bug
Polly's Reader

.

""11.'11----• p IIY' p bl

ro e m i!Otb"!\l«,ll'iS£Wml'l&gt;l
· '..
~
DEAR POLLY - I do hope you or one of the read· ~i
ers can give me a remedy for silverfish. I know ~
there are commercial preparations but I would pre· ~
fer a home remedy if one is available.-C. U.
0

Fruit cakes
desserts
for allmake
kinds popular
of holi·
day affairs. These nuggets of
nut-and·! r u i t-filled delights
also are excellent gifts for
the Christmas season. With a

DEAR POLLY-I work as a medical assistant for a
-~~ very busy doctor and my Pet Peeve is when patients .call
'. · for appointments. After the date and time are determmed
they say "Walt a minute until I find a paper and pencil
'• · to write it down." Multi~ly this by the 20 or more times a
"' day such calls 11re rece1ved and see what a loss of lime
-t on the assistant's part. Please readers, have a pencil and
; paper ready when you make such calls.-J. Z.
DEAR POLLY-Jackie could cover her lampshade
:~
frames with yarn. Start at the top, tie a kuot and then go
·~ up and down with the yarn (around top and bottom wt.res)
.. until the entire frame is covered. After the frame 1s t1ght·
t ly covered tie the yarn securely at the end. Such a shade
is easily cleaned with the vacuum hose or the dust could
·; be brushed off with a whisk broom.- HELEN
DEAR POLLY-Jackie could first remove all the
r.
tattered silk from her old
'I'
lampshades and then re:
cover the shade with a new
•1,
fabric that goes well with
her color scheme. Cut the
fabric on a true bias allowing :Y• -inch extra going
around the shade and one',.
inch extra at the top and
the bottom. Sew together
and then pull over the
'•
~
shade like a stocking for a
~
.
tight fit . Cut whlte lining
,' material in the same manher and pin to the inside. Hand
' sew lining and outsid1f cover neatly together, top and
bottom, and then finish off with braid or a ruHle of the
same material. I have done many shades this wayAN OLD PRO, MRS. 0 . K.

sive gifts for friends and
relatives that carry a very
personal touch. For variety
in the gift P.ackage, bake the
Berry Frmty Cake in different-s1zed muffin pans, ovenware or molds that are
wrapped as part of the gift.
BERRY FRUITY CAKE

•

i
!:

£'~

0

5

'

I cup vegetable shortening
brown sugat
4 eggs
1 cup cranberry juice
cocktail
a cups unsifted ail-purpose
flour
teaspoon
baking powder
1
I teaspoon salt
I pound dried apricots,
chopped
2 cups fresh cranberries,
rinsed and drained

t

.,

DEAR GIRLS-When covering any lampshade frame
with Iabrie I tblnk It Ia far easier and neater If the frame
Ia flnt U,btly wound with thin blat strips tueh as hem
tlpe 1o make a flrin bate for attaching lbe cover and the
llnla«,-POLLY

" Rhodes, Hilliker
Open 2nd lodge

I pound golden raisins
I cup chopped pitted
prunes
2 cups coarsely broken
walnuts
Cream shortening until.
light and fluffy . Stir in brown
sugar. Beat in eggs, one at
.a time . Stir tn juice. Gradually beat in flour mixed
with baking powder and salt.
Stir in fruits and nuts . Spoon,
spreading even I y, into

BAR B S

By PHIL PASTORET
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Even the most fleet of foot
FQI'IIIet Gov. James A. Rhodes can't run away from them·
· andhlaparlner, Don Hllllker of · selves.
• • •
: Bellefontaine, announced
People
look fMword. to
' Monday the qH!nin8 of a
a white Christmas in in·
· second Howard.Johnson Motor
verse proportion to the
! Lodge at Orlando, Fla., near amount of snow they'll
~ Dialley, World.
have to shovel.
i The 250-room, f3 million
• • •
i motel Ia located at the in·
: teraecllon of Interstate 4 and
: Beeline Higlnray and features
t helicopter service to the
~ amuaement park.
~
'!11t". flrat motel built ·by ·
R!iOdea aoo Jnlllker opened In
\ September, 1971; and Is the
~ larsest Howard Johnson motel
; in Florida. Rhodes heads
• • •
An old-timer reeolts
: James A. Rhodes and
when kissing under the
', Associates of Columbus while
mistletoe was a big deal.
!· Hilliker IS president of the Don
' M. Hilliker Co. of Belle!on·
1 Iaine.

I

'

cake and I to Ph hours for
the small cake. Remove
from pans and cool on a
rack. Wrap and store until
needed in a cool , dry place.

Makes about one 8-inch
round ·and 6 to 12 other cakes
depending upon size and York City. He sent letters to
newspapers advising them that
shape.
earthquakes
would occur in
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .&gt;
certain areas of tbe world on
specific dates.
Uncanny prophet
One he is said to have
predicted destroyed the city of
Quetta in India, with a loss of
prediction in interviews with 52,000 lives. He then was called
several newspapers in Arizona an "uncanny earthquake .prl)o
and California earlier this phet."
Greenspan has not always
year.
Greenspan has since made been right, however. In fact,
himself unavailable for
elaboration on the new
doomsday forecast.
In . the published interviews
he said the epicenter of the
quak¢ will be 2 If.. miles south of
San Francisco. It will have a
reading of seven on the Richter

Bay cj.ty jitter_y before quake
By RICHARIJ M. HARNETI .
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)VIcki SetUes wlahes she had
the money to rent a helicopter
for a few hours the morning of
Jan. 4. She thinks she might
witness the destruction of San
Francisco in a great earthquake.
Word Is filtering through this
quake-conscious city that the
date has been set--again-for
that catacly!lpiC shoc;k t~\ the
experta •Y &amp;.clue.o-eomeUme,
But experts also say no one can
forecast a quake.
Residents of some communes where many of the
"hlp" people now live, are
. getting their rusty vans ready
lor a trek to safer ground.
Vicki, however, is not a
commune dweller. She is a

clerk who works in the
ftnancta 1 district, on the 28th
floor of one of the many
skyscrapers that she fears may
come tumbling down precisely
at 9 a.m. on the fourth day of
the vear 1973.
1
Late for work
Vicki and a baH-dozen of her
co-workers are planning to be
out of town. They have passed
the word in their building and
say a lot of ~ple don 'I take it
quite seriously enough to leave.
"Bot a lot of them will be lllte
for work- if the quake does not
happen," she says.
"Look," says the young
office worker, "If we were up
here when it happened and we
didn't know, we couldn't do
anything about it. But when

somebody tells me just when
it's going to ha?pen, I'm going
to get away."
"My mother is going to
L.A.," she adds.
Word about the predicted
quake has been passed by the
"alternative" press and radio
stations. It has not yet been
acknowledged by the scentific
community.
Doomsday
., )'he las&amp; ~)lc.~ .~erctae 111
earthquak8' countdown occurred in 1969, when the mayor
·and others held a fun-filled
"doomsday" party in front of
City Hall on the night that
someone had said San Fran·
cisco would be destroyed.
The Ume lor the predicted
1973 quake was set by Reuben
Greenspan, who has been
called an "independent
geophysicist," He made his

1

much of the city.
The reason that Vicki and
her friends believe this
prediction is that they have
heard Greenspan was right
about some previous quakes.
In fact, Greenspan, now 68,
did achieve some notoriety for
predicting earthquakes. That
was back in 1935, when he was
a mathematics teacher in New

·.

CHAIRS

By .IOSEPH 1. MYLER
WASHING'OON (UPI) -A
cwple ollclenlllta have found
IIOille nlce ~ to say about

Science today
diacarded automobile tires.
They are an eyesore and a
major waste dillposal problem.
But put 1101111! yeasts and other
~~ Ia work on them, and they
can become socially ac·
ceptable again as soU condi-

lloners,
Drs. Walter J. Nickerson and
Marcel D. Faber of Rutgers
University reported methods of
putting old tires· back to work
at' a recent meeting of the
American Chemical Society.
Avariety of fungi and yeasts
thrive on passenger tire scrap.
They use the scrap as a source
of carbon for their metaboltstlc
purposes, converting it into a
fine powder. In so doing they

Weinberger 'Will
Do Us All Good'
By RAY CROMLEY
WASHINGTON !NEAl
Excerpts from a conversation overheard In the halls of
a government building:
"He cut the FTC (Federal Trade Commission) to
shreds. But It came out a much better agency. He'll question every budget Item at Health Education and Welfare,
Including sacrosanct Social Security and make the
proponents justify every last dollar. It won't be enough
to take a '12)lilhon program, ask for ~ miilion more,
and say that"increase is only a drop In the bucket. He'll
want to go back to zero budgeting and ask for a justiflca·
tion for last year's
bllilon that everyone had been accepting as the base."
,
The conversation, not meant to be overheard, was, of
CO\II'Ie .about Caspar Weinberger, President Nixon's new
appointee as head of that monster agency, HEW, now
the largest spender in the federal government , larger
even than Defense.
Tbe two bureaucrats ended their conversation by agree, ing that Weinberger was the man for the job. This sort
of luird-nosed checking, they observed, "will do us all
good."
HEW Ia apparently an area where both President
Nixon and 10me of his maJor opponents, liberal and conHJ'Vative seem to alt'ee ln some measure. Mr. Nixon,
and hil critics u well, have attacked the ineffective
manner In which welfare and other major HEW pro. crams have been cal')'ied out in the past, and the present

'12

reduce its bulk by ten-fold.
With this powder, Nickerson
said, unproductive land may be
made to grow food crops. The
powder has many virtues: it
remains dispersed when mixed
with soli, it promotes retention
of water when mixed with
sand, It permits passage of
water when mixed with clay
soils.
Grew Beans
Nickerson and Faber suc·
cessfully grew kidney beans in
sand which contained tire
scrap fermented Into fine
powder by fungi.
The waste disposal problems
posed by scrap tires have been
among the most worrisome
tackled by environmental of.
flclais. Old tires can't be burled
or burned with happy results,
and they can't be Incorporated
into new tires.
But, Nickerson said,
methods now exist for turning
them Into something useful,
thanks to the harnessing 'of
fungi whose hunger lor carbon
makes them see scrap tires as
· something to feast upon.
The process for putting these
yeasts and other fungi to work
fermenting tire scrap into
beneficial soil conditioners is
complicated but not par-

l

Now ; YPII. , tO\ buy that
c;omtorl.oie 'I' t.a.Z-Bov
chair you've ahyaya .
dreamed of at our low
prices.

MASON
FURNITURE
Hermon Grate

'

Mason, W. VI .

•

ticularly difficult, as Nickerson
tells it.
If non-fermented tire scrap is
mixed with soil, II just accumulates on top of the soil.
But after fermentation by
eager yeasts, its oxygen
content increases strik:ngly
and Its oil content Is reduced .
Enhances Flow
This produces changes in
composition, particle size, and
texture. And the powder remains dispersed when mixed
with soil. This is good because
when fermented scrap tire
power is mixed with sand,
water retention is greatly
Increased. When mixed with
clay, It enhances the flow of
water through material that
otherwise might choke it off.
Nickerson and Faber aren't
just · talking . They got their
crop of kidney beans to prove
their process works.

MEN'S SOFT

CARDS and
TAGS

NOTEBOOK
PAPER

OR LON
SOCKS

Christmas Gifts
that speak fa" themselves.
(

2-HOUR
CLEANING

44"

'

.,
OCia ·

~.

94

ICalendar~

An extension phone is a unique gift when you give it. And a practical one from then on.
You can choose from a variety of colors and models including mod phones,
delicate phones, plain phones and even elegant decorator phones.
There's a style just right for your loved one.
And , to make yo ur shopping easier ca ll our gift specialist.
She'll reserve the phone you want.
TheM, just pick it up at our business office and
put it under your tree. '
We'll install your gift right after the holiday is over.
It will keep Christmas bells
ringing throughout the year.

..•

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

$ 67

Pomeroy
210 E. 2nd
Phone 992·5428

A real

power-p~d:ed

lightweight In the "mini·

.._, I'IIW• to live you a new power-to-size

=

In c:uttiJJI.
..
tor' c:uut.w medium'tlmbler, thil saw
wdl 11'0'1 Ill pnl.maaal pafoJn11nee IIi
fll'taj, JIJalq aild pulpwood cuttiJ11. Farmera
wiD ~It I'Gr c:lllriDI ti'Dblr llld C11111r11ctGn

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POMEROY.HOME &amp;AUTO
ffl·20f4

I

Harry s. Moore. C&lt;Hiostess
will be Mrs. J. 0 . Roedel. Mrs.
Ted Reed will have the
Chriltmas Story.
AFTERNOON CIRCLE,
Christmas dinner, I p.m.
Thursday. PoUuck. A~ Heath
United Methoditt Church,
Middleport.

•SOUTHERN LOCAL School
District Board of Education,
7:30 p.m. Thursday at high
ac!lool.
'

''

•
I

I

'

ICICLES

10 Ccilors
Fits 10 to 13

SI .OOVALUE
FIREPROOF

33~

67~~

Permanent press polyester blends.
Fancy bib fronts, embroidered
lrim, . Jabot ties-~ wide variety
of pretty blouses fhat are perfeci
. tor giving. Regular and extra large
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$ 94

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WONOERFIIL GIFT ITEM

BU·BB_LE
·AiTM
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SLEIGH
. - -.AND
REINDEER
J9c
Value.
Nice
decoration for fable or
mantle.

..

lr

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94

ea

7 IJilfJ SET

Jls 88'

REGUW '1.27

" "'';I

REGULAR '1.17
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In Pink Champane bottle.
ounces.
A unique. useful 911f. 28 fl.

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AMPLON NYLON
VALUES TO 25'

SMALL
TOYS

a~E~

PANTY HOSE
· 2 SIZES THAT FIT!

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One size Ills gals 4ft. 10 ln. to 5
ft. 51nch, other size Ills 5 ft. I"
larger. 4 color Iones .
Crushable nylons.

•

~----------------t:
MADE IN U.S.~ VALUES TO Jgt

COFFEE MUGS
AHUGE ASSORTMENT!
Solid colors with pebble designs, strfpe
mugl, novelty mugs - They all go, at
big, big savings. Pick a set for o gill or
yourself.

ON SALE RIGHT NOW!
22 INCHES TALl

DECANTER
BOnLES
VALUES TO '1.44
Decorators favorite s. Gold,
Blue, Green in the large
bollles at a new low price.

EACH

IDEAL FOR PURSE OR DRESSER

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FOR INSTAMATIC OR I'OLAROID
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In a11racllve gift box .

66~
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REVOLVING MUSICAL
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1000 COUNT

WOMEN'S BLOUSES

GLASS BUD VASES

GEnERAL TB.EPHOOE

(Upon Request)

42~

BRUSHED
GOWNS

!l

em

,.

300 SHEETS
REGULAR 67c

GIRLS KNEE HI SOCKS

SIL~ER

~ s

•.ooo

'

5 HOLE PUNCHED

.· ~·'W.iw~~~~,w.w~,······· ·

u well.

A White House aide once described assistance to ohe
Indian tribe on which this government spent an average
of
per fallllly a year. With only slight literary
lleenae, the aide said the ~.ooo goes to the bureaucrats.
al which there iJ one per family and he Is doing all right .
Bat notlllnl iJ luippening to the Indian families. They are
_.. depladent. after a century than they were when
tbll all bepn.
.. Tbe Wtlaberler appointment Ia part and parcel of Mr.
NIIGa'a attempt to Itt the federal aovetnment out or
a.t It doel worat..,.riumtnaloc:al proarama-and get the
WtllllltltoD apncltl Into what lie believes the federal
llt•IIUIWt dOet beit, eollectlnl and dlatrlbutlng cash,
...,... to 11M atalll 81111 o1U11 more of the control and
W IIIC' "aal mMIDC Ill t11tlomride proarama.
·

PACK ·Of 50

19~

" 'Permal Notes

Authorized Dealer

Old tires can rejuvenate soil

- OPEN TILL 9 P.M.

2

his current prediction Is bia
third slrlke as far as forecasting the big one for San Francisco.
On May, 14,1951, he said San
Francisco would crumble at
9:30a.m. Sunday, June [0 of
that year.
The hour of doom passed
quietly and one concerned
person is reported to have
called back asking: ''Has the
earthquake been
rescheduled?"

. , n7-5592

IN .EFFECT TONIGHT

Size 6-8% and 9-11

LA-Z-BOY .

.,acale-"!nougb'Lto'' ~&gt;'l~ lli&gt;llt

TILE
TRIVETS

Dencil McCoy will seroe
second term as master of
Siloam Lodge No, 456

Berry fruit cake in a variety of containers makes excellent gift .

greased pans. Cover top of
dough with greased brown
paper or foil. Bake in a preheated 3QO.degree oven for
2 to 21h hours for the large

nJESDAY
SOUTHERN Alhleti ~
· . . Officers were elected when remembrances for ' the Elm·
Boosters
Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at
the Sew·Rite Sewing Club met wood ·Rest Home. The group
recently at the home of Mrs. also made. plana to prepare high school. Election of of.
Barbara Mullen in Middleport. individual fruit baskets for the fleers. All members urged to
attend.
Elected were Judy Potter, home.
OAPSE OF Southern LoCal
preaident; Barbara Mullen,
The annual Christmas dinner
vice president; Evelyn was5etfor Wednesday evening District to meet Tueaday at 8
Gilmore, . secretary, and at the Meigs Inn. Martha p.m. at Southern High School.
Pandora Collins, treasurer.
Hoffman received .a secret pal All members urged to attend.
SPECIAL Meeting MidDliring the meeting with Joni birthday gift and guests were
dleport
Masonic Lodge :!63
Hdfftil8n in charge, the group Miss Susan . Andrews and ·
,covered and decorated con. Brenda Platter. A d£ssert F&amp;AM at. Masonic Temple
lainets and plans were made to course was served to those Tuesday, 7:30p.m. EA Degree.
49' VALUE
Jlleet at the borne of Mrs. Flo named earlier and Nettie Ali master masons are invited
S~ckiand ·to ·pack the con· Boyer, Mildred Wells, Shirley to attend.
CAST IRON
MIDDLEPORT Christmas
tainers with homemade Bsity, Lenora McKnight, Ann
.
co~kies
as
Christmas Browning, Lucy White and lighting committee meeting at
8 p.m. Tuesday at the home of
Carolyn McDaniel.
Mrs . Etoilla Cassell, 517
Bryant Place.
LOYAL Bereans, Middleport
Church of Christ, Christmas
79cYALUE
'ENOUGH FOR ALL
SEVERAL ASSORTED
dinner and party Tuesday
YOUR PACKAGE NEEDS!
DESIGNS
night at the church.
JOLLY.Bunch Sewing Club,
Christmas party, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday, home of Mrs. George
'
Hackett, Sr., Middleport.
Hostesses are Mrs. Hackett
and Mrs. Don Mullen, $1 gift
CHESHIRE - Elected and Ralph Rife; treasurer, Fred exchange.
Installed recenUy .to serve a Mack; tyler, Ronnie Reed
WSCS of Forest Run United
OPAQUE NYLON!
second .term as master of Pack, and trustee, James R. Methodist Church, 7:ao p.m.
Tuesday at home of Mrs.
Slloal)l Lodge No. 456 of NeaL
For ·girls and misses.
Cl;eshlre wai Dencii E. McCoy
Officers appointed by Master Alfred Yeauger.
Irregulars of a $1.00 value .
of ·A&lt;ldison. Mr. McCoy has McCoy were, ·Chaplain, Basil
ROCK SPRINGS BeHer
Avai
Iable in the wanted fall.
been an active member of Bert Pack, Sr.; senior steward, Health Club, 11 :45 a .m.
colors. Nice stocking sluffer .
Siloam Lodge since 1967. He is John Rayburn Van Sickle; Tuesday at the Meigs Inn, a
also a member and officer of junior steward, John Furst, Christmas dinner.
the Order of Eastern Star No. and lodge educational officer,
WSCS OF Enterprise United
450 Cheshire, He Is an adviSor Dolan C. Smith.
Methodist Church Thursday
in the Order of DeMolay of
lnstalilng officers, all of evening at home of Mrs. Ed·
PR.
Middleport, and a member, whom are past masters of ward Bowen.
treasurer and deacon of the Siloam Lodge, were, master,
- FOR
SYRACUSE PTA Tuesday,
Addison Freewill Baptist Ruck~r Neal; marshall, James
7:30 p.m. at school. Choir of ...~---jo.llij-----•-_,lill-ll.,.l!i­
Church.
R. · Neal; chaplain, Allen Syracuse
Methodist Church to
oen~il. his wife, lhge, and Hughes; secretary, Doyle
present Chrlsbnas program.
three children, Bobby, Billie, Shuler, and junior warden,
INSTALLATION OF officers
arilt Marlene; have resided in Hortie Roush.
when Racine Lodge 461, F&amp;AM
Adl!ison S!!Ven years. He is a 14
Siloam Lodge meets the meets at 7:30 p.m. tonight at
y~r maintenance deparbnent second Saturday of each month the temple. Refreshments. · ·
eJ!Iployee of Kaiser Aluminum at , 7:30 p.m. Ali Masons are
and ,Chemical Corporation of cordially invited.
RavenSwood.
WEDNESDAY
Other officers installed were
WINDING TRAIL Garden
senior warden, Willard Paul
Club,
Wednesday, 7:30' p.m.
NEAL COX DIES
' Mlkllls; jupior warden, Paul E.
Relatives have learned of the home of Cora Beegle, Racine.
Fraley; senior deacon, Basil death of Neal Cox, fonnerly of Christmas party and gift ex.
'BerJ,Pack, Jr.; junior deacon, Pomeroy, at Marion, Va., change.
, Mlcliael Swisher; secretary, while at his employment.
TENTH District Democrat
Survivors are his wife, a Action Club Wednesday at 6
daughter, four grandchildren, p.m. · at the Duncan Inn, 132
three sisters; all of Virginia Putnam .St., Marietta" Dinner
~-·~~~·! ,Jtill ,lot, •vallall!e .lr~_, ..,
,, ,,
;u·t 'M~Jepl{fl v .. ~·1 t Jlobson. Burial was in ~ar!on, 7:30 p.m. , .
Va.
WHITE
Rose
Lodge
GOLD
,.
Christma,s potluck will be at I
REQ
p.in. Wednesday at the Legion
. ·BLUE
REGISTRATION SET
Hall,
Middleport.
There
wlii
be
Registration for food baskets
Mrs. Ullian Triplett spent from The Salvation Army, a $1 gift exchange. Everyone is
the weekend in Ashville with Butternut Ave., will be from I to bring their own table serWOMEN'S WARM
her sister, Mrs. Ida.Cook. Mrs. to 4 p.m. Friday at the Army's vice.
Cook's husband, Alfred, died headquarters in Pomeroy.
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
recently with funeral services
Garden Club, Wednesday, 8
having tleen held at Ashville on
p.m. at home of Mrs. Haldain
MEETING CANCELLED
~Dec. I.
May,
Christmas meeting and
A meeting of the Neigh; Mrs, William Keith Kincaid borhood Girl Scout Council gift exchange.
NYLONS OR TRICOTS
ol Berwyn, Pa.~ visited scheduled at noon Wednesday
POMEROY· MIDDLEPORT
Waltz length or long length, trimmed or
recently ,with ber sister and in the Columbus and Southern Uona Club luncheon and anbasic styles - Pretty pastel colors. A
brother·in·law, Mr. and Mrs. Ohio Electric Ca. soclnl rooms nual gift exchange at 12 noon
very practical gill she will like.
Mlliard Wildermuth, coming has been cancelled.
Wednesday at the Meigs Inn. ·
....
especially to attend the wed- ,•:~!•, ·~ .:0::-»-~«o"o",.......,y,, ..o;y,~o ,o;o,•Y.o!•!i
POMEROY CHAPI'ER 80,
REGULAR AND X-LG, SIZES
ding of the Mlldermuths' son,
RAM,
7:30p.m.
Wednesday
at
.
t.,
James.
the temple. All companions .
Mrs. Pauline Hysell, a ''•'
~~ invited.
cosmetology instructor at ~
~ MIDDLEPORT LITERARY
Meigs High School, and Mrs. Jo
Club, 2p.m. Wednesday, at the ·
Ann White, Beverly's Beauty
home of Mrs. Arthur Strauss. ·
Salon in Middleport, were In
TO
Christmas program by Mrs. ·
Columbus Sunday to attend a
FRIDAY
Forrest Bachtel. A Christmas ·
hair styling show held at the
PAST
MATRONS, memory Is roll call response.
All REGUlAR VALUES TO 77'
H!ISPitality Inn. Instructor for Evang_ellne Chapter OES
the show on the upcoming hair Christmasparty6p.m. Friday,
THURSDAY
styles was William Wampler, beginning with a potluck
WILDWOOD GARDEN Club,
associated with the Miss dinner, Middleport Masonic
Thursday, 6:30p.m. at home of
WONDERFUL LITTLE GIFT ITEMS
temple. $2 gift exchange,
America Pageant.
Mrs. · Don ·crueser for Christ.
HAND BLOWN-ITALIAN MADE
mas dinner and party. $1 gift
r·---~-·-t·~ exchange.
We've reduced our entire
MEIGS COtrnTY Humfllle
selection of fine bud Yeses. Select
7:30p.m. Thursday at
from a rainbow of colors. See
.
f Society,
these, you'll want several.
Middleport Village Hall. Open
to public.
WILLING WORKERS Class,
Enterprise .United MethodiSt
Church, Thursday evening at
rL.Ar:i .IHtME FROM "LOVE STORY"
home of Mrs. Edward Bowen.
SENIOR
CITIZENS
meeting, Thursday, 7:30 p.m.
at Harrisonville Elementary
~" "' R~mantic figurines; of
School. Pictures of Holy Land
I''" lovers revolve in a gentle
.to be shown. Public welcome.
• /,-, . embrace, while !he en.
INSTALLATION OF of.
chanting "Love Story",
fleers, Thursday, 7:30 p.m.'
. lheme
song
plays.
Figurines
are
hand
when Shade River Lodge 4S3,
painted,
glated
ceramic.
•'
FlAM meets at temple,
7" high gill boxod.
Chester. Refreshmen~. All
Master Muons invi!ed.
EPISCOPAL CHURCH
WOmen will have their BMual
Chriatmas party at 7:30 p.m.
Thlrsday at the home of Mrs.

ALL PRI

By BETI'Y CANARY .
H there are little children in your home, t~en you h~ve
already endured a month . of resisting televiSion ChriSt·
mas sales. "It's only $39.95, mommy," your child burbles.
"Batteries are not included."
No, he doesn't exactly remember what the toy is. but
it's only $39.95.
,
Older children have. outgrown this kind of b~ainwash·
ing and will settle for the . sill! pie things In bfe-a 10·
speed bicycle, a snowmobile, a httle sports car.
There is no point In waving your arms and ~rylng out
against the advertishi!l and brainwashing. It 1swlth us
and we have to live with it. Unless, of course, you plan
to pack up and move to the Arctic Circle.
And I hope I've caught you before you've booked passage. If my information is correct, this year at the Arctic •
Circle they're advertising fully automated life-size pen·
guins guaranteed to catch their own fish. Only $39.95.
With tophat and cane and smoking a Kool, $47.50 . .Em·
peror penguin driving a team of sfed dogs, $79.98.
How we .became a generation of parents whose chU·
dren must be assured of a talking robot in every closet
and two Barbies (one who camps and one who grows her
own garden) In every dresser drawer, I am not sure.
· Some sociologists say it's a hangup from being reared
during depression years. Some theoriSts let Madison Avenue bear all the blame.
Not being an expert, I am inclined to blame myself as
l wander thoughtfully over the layers of broken toys in
the children's bedrooms.
·
How we got into the give-and-take atmosphere (we
give, they take) probably isn't as Important as figUring
out how to escape it.
The simplest solution is to insist upon buying lays the
children use instead of watch. (No doll that Jumps rope,
but a jump rope for your child.) Tell the kids bluntly
you will no longer be surrounded by a pack of inactive
. .
children and a bunch of healthy toys.

2 cups firmly packed

t

'

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fll!l!------~!).--~lti*''"~''!i.:D~""~' ~:.~~ ~!~ ~~.::lu~~ fe~~~~.~~:

'f

··

There's Np Escape
From TV Toy Lure

By AILEEN CLAIRE
NEA Food F,dltor

By POLLY CRAMER
II'

BETTY CANARY

Social
Calendar

MEN'S WORK
A DISCOUNT

O£PARTMENT S1'01tf

sMt)p OUR .BUSY LITTLE STORES
PT, PlEa.sANT • MASON ·SILVER .BRIDGE PWA

SOCKs ·
3 .1AIR

87·'

�•

.'

J

'

f!'...-

~

' .,,

•

7- The Daily Sentlnei, Mlddleport-Pomeroy,,O., Dec.l2.1971

Officers named
by sewing .club

•

•-'nat Dlll1 Sentinel, Mlddleport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Dec. 12,1972

t

FOOD FOR .A..MERICANS . .

POLLY'S POINTEllS

"'

A Fruit Cake or.Giving

Silverfish Bug
Polly's Reader

.

""11.'11----• p IIY' p bl

ro e m i!Otb"!\l«,ll'iS£Wml'l&gt;l
· '..
~
DEAR POLLY - I do hope you or one of the read· ~i
ers can give me a remedy for silverfish. I know ~
there are commercial preparations but I would pre· ~
fer a home remedy if one is available.-C. U.
0

Fruit cakes
desserts
for allmake
kinds popular
of holi·
day affairs. These nuggets of
nut-and·! r u i t-filled delights
also are excellent gifts for
the Christmas season. With a

DEAR POLLY-I work as a medical assistant for a
-~~ very busy doctor and my Pet Peeve is when patients .call
'. · for appointments. After the date and time are determmed
they say "Walt a minute until I find a paper and pencil
'• · to write it down." Multi~ly this by the 20 or more times a
"' day such calls 11re rece1ved and see what a loss of lime
-t on the assistant's part. Please readers, have a pencil and
; paper ready when you make such calls.-J. Z.
DEAR POLLY-Jackie could cover her lampshade
:~
frames with yarn. Start at the top, tie a kuot and then go
·~ up and down with the yarn (around top and bottom wt.res)
.. until the entire frame is covered. After the frame 1s t1ght·
t ly covered tie the yarn securely at the end. Such a shade
is easily cleaned with the vacuum hose or the dust could
·; be brushed off with a whisk broom.- HELEN
DEAR POLLY-Jackie could first remove all the
r.
tattered silk from her old
'I'
lampshades and then re:
cover the shade with a new
•1,
fabric that goes well with
her color scheme. Cut the
fabric on a true bias allowing :Y• -inch extra going
around the shade and one',.
inch extra at the top and
the bottom. Sew together
and then pull over the
'•
~
shade like a stocking for a
~
.
tight fit . Cut whlte lining
,' material in the same manher and pin to the inside. Hand
' sew lining and outsid1f cover neatly together, top and
bottom, and then finish off with braid or a ruHle of the
same material. I have done many shades this wayAN OLD PRO, MRS. 0 . K.

sive gifts for friends and
relatives that carry a very
personal touch. For variety
in the gift P.ackage, bake the
Berry Frmty Cake in different-s1zed muffin pans, ovenware or molds that are
wrapped as part of the gift.
BERRY FRUITY CAKE

•

i
!:

£'~

0

5

'

I cup vegetable shortening
brown sugat
4 eggs
1 cup cranberry juice
cocktail
a cups unsifted ail-purpose
flour
teaspoon
baking powder
1
I teaspoon salt
I pound dried apricots,
chopped
2 cups fresh cranberries,
rinsed and drained

t

.,

DEAR GIRLS-When covering any lampshade frame
with Iabrie I tblnk It Ia far easier and neater If the frame
Ia flnt U,btly wound with thin blat strips tueh as hem
tlpe 1o make a flrin bate for attaching lbe cover and the
llnla«,-POLLY

" Rhodes, Hilliker
Open 2nd lodge

I pound golden raisins
I cup chopped pitted
prunes
2 cups coarsely broken
walnuts
Cream shortening until.
light and fluffy . Stir in brown
sugar. Beat in eggs, one at
.a time . Stir tn juice. Gradually beat in flour mixed
with baking powder and salt.
Stir in fruits and nuts . Spoon,
spreading even I y, into

BAR B S

By PHIL PASTORET
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Even the most fleet of foot
FQI'IIIet Gov. James A. Rhodes can't run away from them·
· andhlaparlner, Don Hllllker of · selves.
• • •
: Bellefontaine, announced
People
look fMword. to
' Monday the qH!nin8 of a
a white Christmas in in·
· second Howard.Johnson Motor
verse proportion to the
! Lodge at Orlando, Fla., near amount of snow they'll
~ Dialley, World.
have to shovel.
i The 250-room, f3 million
• • •
i motel Ia located at the in·
: teraecllon of Interstate 4 and
: Beeline Higlnray and features
t helicopter service to the
~ amuaement park.
~
'!11t". flrat motel built ·by ·
R!iOdea aoo Jnlllker opened In
\ September, 1971; and Is the
~ larsest Howard Johnson motel
; in Florida. Rhodes heads
• • •
An old-timer reeolts
: James A. Rhodes and
when kissing under the
', Associates of Columbus while
mistletoe was a big deal.
!· Hilliker IS president of the Don
' M. Hilliker Co. of Belle!on·
1 Iaine.

I

'

cake and I to Ph hours for
the small cake. Remove
from pans and cool on a
rack. Wrap and store until
needed in a cool , dry place.

Makes about one 8-inch
round ·and 6 to 12 other cakes
depending upon size and York City. He sent letters to
newspapers advising them that
shape.
earthquakes
would occur in
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .&gt;
certain areas of tbe world on
specific dates.
Uncanny prophet
One he is said to have
predicted destroyed the city of
Quetta in India, with a loss of
prediction in interviews with 52,000 lives. He then was called
several newspapers in Arizona an "uncanny earthquake .prl)o
and California earlier this phet."
Greenspan has not always
year.
Greenspan has since made been right, however. In fact,
himself unavailable for
elaboration on the new
doomsday forecast.
In . the published interviews
he said the epicenter of the
quak¢ will be 2 If.. miles south of
San Francisco. It will have a
reading of seven on the Richter

Bay cj.ty jitter_y before quake
By RICHARIJ M. HARNETI .
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)VIcki SetUes wlahes she had
the money to rent a helicopter
for a few hours the morning of
Jan. 4. She thinks she might
witness the destruction of San
Francisco in a great earthquake.
Word Is filtering through this
quake-conscious city that the
date has been set--again-for
that catacly!lpiC shoc;k t~\ the
experta •Y &amp;.clue.o-eomeUme,
But experts also say no one can
forecast a quake.
Residents of some communes where many of the
"hlp" people now live, are
. getting their rusty vans ready
lor a trek to safer ground.
Vicki, however, is not a
commune dweller. She is a

clerk who works in the
ftnancta 1 district, on the 28th
floor of one of the many
skyscrapers that she fears may
come tumbling down precisely
at 9 a.m. on the fourth day of
the vear 1973.
1
Late for work
Vicki and a baH-dozen of her
co-workers are planning to be
out of town. They have passed
the word in their building and
say a lot of ~ple don 'I take it
quite seriously enough to leave.
"Bot a lot of them will be lllte
for work- if the quake does not
happen," she says.
"Look," says the young
office worker, "If we were up
here when it happened and we
didn't know, we couldn't do
anything about it. But when

somebody tells me just when
it's going to ha?pen, I'm going
to get away."
"My mother is going to
L.A.," she adds.
Word about the predicted
quake has been passed by the
"alternative" press and radio
stations. It has not yet been
acknowledged by the scentific
community.
Doomsday
., )'he las&amp; ~)lc.~ .~erctae 111
earthquak8' countdown occurred in 1969, when the mayor
·and others held a fun-filled
"doomsday" party in front of
City Hall on the night that
someone had said San Fran·
cisco would be destroyed.
The Ume lor the predicted
1973 quake was set by Reuben
Greenspan, who has been
called an "independent
geophysicist," He made his

1

much of the city.
The reason that Vicki and
her friends believe this
prediction is that they have
heard Greenspan was right
about some previous quakes.
In fact, Greenspan, now 68,
did achieve some notoriety for
predicting earthquakes. That
was back in 1935, when he was
a mathematics teacher in New

·.

CHAIRS

By .IOSEPH 1. MYLER
WASHING'OON (UPI) -A
cwple ollclenlllta have found
IIOille nlce ~ to say about

Science today
diacarded automobile tires.
They are an eyesore and a
major waste dillposal problem.
But put 1101111! yeasts and other
~~ Ia work on them, and they
can become socially ac·
ceptable again as soU condi-

lloners,
Drs. Walter J. Nickerson and
Marcel D. Faber of Rutgers
University reported methods of
putting old tires· back to work
at' a recent meeting of the
American Chemical Society.
Avariety of fungi and yeasts
thrive on passenger tire scrap.
They use the scrap as a source
of carbon for their metaboltstlc
purposes, converting it into a
fine powder. In so doing they

Weinberger 'Will
Do Us All Good'
By RAY CROMLEY
WASHINGTON !NEAl
Excerpts from a conversation overheard In the halls of
a government building:
"He cut the FTC (Federal Trade Commission) to
shreds. But It came out a much better agency. He'll question every budget Item at Health Education and Welfare,
Including sacrosanct Social Security and make the
proponents justify every last dollar. It won't be enough
to take a '12)lilhon program, ask for ~ miilion more,
and say that"increase is only a drop In the bucket. He'll
want to go back to zero budgeting and ask for a justiflca·
tion for last year's
bllilon that everyone had been accepting as the base."
,
The conversation, not meant to be overheard, was, of
CO\II'Ie .about Caspar Weinberger, President Nixon's new
appointee as head of that monster agency, HEW, now
the largest spender in the federal government , larger
even than Defense.
Tbe two bureaucrats ended their conversation by agree, ing that Weinberger was the man for the job. This sort
of luird-nosed checking, they observed, "will do us all
good."
HEW Ia apparently an area where both President
Nixon and 10me of his maJor opponents, liberal and conHJ'Vative seem to alt'ee ln some measure. Mr. Nixon,
and hil critics u well, have attacked the ineffective
manner In which welfare and other major HEW pro. crams have been cal')'ied out in the past, and the present

'12

reduce its bulk by ten-fold.
With this powder, Nickerson
said, unproductive land may be
made to grow food crops. The
powder has many virtues: it
remains dispersed when mixed
with soli, it promotes retention
of water when mixed with
sand, It permits passage of
water when mixed with clay
soils.
Grew Beans
Nickerson and Faber suc·
cessfully grew kidney beans in
sand which contained tire
scrap fermented Into fine
powder by fungi.
The waste disposal problems
posed by scrap tires have been
among the most worrisome
tackled by environmental of.
flclais. Old tires can't be burled
or burned with happy results,
and they can't be Incorporated
into new tires.
But, Nickerson said,
methods now exist for turning
them Into something useful,
thanks to the harnessing 'of
fungi whose hunger lor carbon
makes them see scrap tires as
· something to feast upon.
The process for putting these
yeasts and other fungi to work
fermenting tire scrap into
beneficial soil conditioners is
complicated but not par-

l

Now ; YPII. , tO\ buy that
c;omtorl.oie 'I' t.a.Z-Bov
chair you've ahyaya .
dreamed of at our low
prices.

MASON
FURNITURE
Hermon Grate

'

Mason, W. VI .

•

ticularly difficult, as Nickerson
tells it.
If non-fermented tire scrap is
mixed with soil, II just accumulates on top of the soil.
But after fermentation by
eager yeasts, its oxygen
content increases strik:ngly
and Its oil content Is reduced .
Enhances Flow
This produces changes in
composition, particle size, and
texture. And the powder remains dispersed when mixed
with soil. This is good because
when fermented scrap tire
power is mixed with sand,
water retention is greatly
Increased. When mixed with
clay, It enhances the flow of
water through material that
otherwise might choke it off.
Nickerson and Faber aren't
just · talking . They got their
crop of kidney beans to prove
their process works.

MEN'S SOFT

CARDS and
TAGS

NOTEBOOK
PAPER

OR LON
SOCKS

Christmas Gifts
that speak fa" themselves.
(

2-HOUR
CLEANING

44"

'

.,
OCia ·

~.

94

ICalendar~

An extension phone is a unique gift when you give it. And a practical one from then on.
You can choose from a variety of colors and models including mod phones,
delicate phones, plain phones and even elegant decorator phones.
There's a style just right for your loved one.
And , to make yo ur shopping easier ca ll our gift specialist.
She'll reserve the phone you want.
TheM, just pick it up at our business office and
put it under your tree. '
We'll install your gift right after the holiday is over.
It will keep Christmas bells
ringing throughout the year.

..•

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

$ 67

Pomeroy
210 E. 2nd
Phone 992·5428

A real

power-p~d:ed

lightweight In the "mini·

.._, I'IIW• to live you a new power-to-size

=

In c:uttiJJI.
..
tor' c:uut.w medium'tlmbler, thil saw
wdl 11'0'1 Ill pnl.maaal pafoJn11nee IIi
fll'taj, JIJalq aild pulpwood cuttiJ11. Farmera
wiD ~It I'Gr c:lllriDI ti'Dblr llld C11111r11ctGn

WOI81111YIIueln a

wide.,..

al euttin1 Jobl.

POMEROY.HOME &amp;AUTO
ffl·20f4

I

Harry s. Moore. C&lt;Hiostess
will be Mrs. J. 0 . Roedel. Mrs.
Ted Reed will have the
Chriltmas Story.
AFTERNOON CIRCLE,
Christmas dinner, I p.m.
Thursday. PoUuck. A~ Heath
United Methoditt Church,
Middleport.

•SOUTHERN LOCAL School
District Board of Education,
7:30 p.m. Thursday at high
ac!lool.
'

''

•
I

I

'

ICICLES

10 Ccilors
Fits 10 to 13

SI .OOVALUE
FIREPROOF

33~

67~~

Permanent press polyester blends.
Fancy bib fronts, embroidered
lrim, . Jabot ties-~ wide variety
of pretty blouses fhat are perfeci
. tor giving. Regular and extra large
·. sizes.

$ 94

'(

MEN'S ROBES

WONOERFIIL GIFT ITEM

BU·BB_LE
·AiTM
,,.I
. '

'

SLEIGH
. - -.AND
REINDEER
J9c
Value.
Nice
decoration for fable or
mantle.

..

lr

IL

-~~

94

ea

7 IJilfJ SET

Jls 88'

REGUW '1.27

" "'';I

REGULAR '1.17
·"CORSAGE" BRAND
In Pink Champane bottle.
ounces.
A unique. useful 911f. 28 fl.

'

88'

......
.
................
.
99' VALUE! SEAMUS$

·---~----

~

AMPLON NYLON
VALUES TO 25'

SMALL
TOYS

a~E~

PANTY HOSE
· 2 SIZES THAT FIT!

IJ:

One size Ills gals 4ft. 10 ln. to 5
ft. 51nch, other size Ills 5 ft. I"
larger. 4 color Iones .
Crushable nylons.

•

~----------------t:
MADE IN U.S.~ VALUES TO Jgt

COFFEE MUGS
AHUGE ASSORTMENT!
Solid colors with pebble designs, strfpe
mugl, novelty mugs - They all go, at
big, big savings. Pick a set for o gill or
yourself.

ON SALE RIGHT NOW!
22 INCHES TALl

DECANTER
BOnLES
VALUES TO '1.44
Decorators favorite s. Gold,
Blue, Green in the large
bollles at a new low price.

EACH

IDEAL FOR PURSE OR DRESSER

PHOTO ALBUM
FOR INSTAMATIC OR I'OLAROID
Holds

19

pholos. Vinyl

· cover, &amp;naps shut. Comes

In a11racllve gift box .

66~
WHITE COl ION

C71h REPLACEMENT

LIGHT
BULBS

I

COTTON FlANNEL

'=" .........

,

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METALIZED ·

WITH DRESSY TRIMS!

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, For H1m • • •·For Christmas '

REVOLVING MUSICAL
FIGURINES

.

1000 COUNT

WOMEN'S BLOUSES

GLASS BUD VASES

GEnERAL TB.EPHOOE

(Upon Request)

42~

BRUSHED
GOWNS

!l

em

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300 SHEETS
REGULAR 67c

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SIL~ER

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u well.

A White House aide once described assistance to ohe
Indian tribe on which this government spent an average
of
per fallllly a year. With only slight literary
lleenae, the aide said the ~.ooo goes to the bureaucrats.
al which there iJ one per family and he Is doing all right .
Bat notlllnl iJ luippening to the Indian families. They are
_.. depladent. after a century than they were when
tbll all bepn.
.. Tbe Wtlaberler appointment Ia part and parcel of Mr.
NIIGa'a attempt to Itt the federal aovetnment out or
a.t It doel worat..,.riumtnaloc:al proarama-and get the
WtllllltltoD apncltl Into what lie believes the federal
llt•IIUIWt dOet beit, eollectlnl and dlatrlbutlng cash,
...,... to 11M atalll 81111 o1U11 more of the control and
W IIIC' "aal mMIDC Ill t11tlomride proarama.
·

PACK ·Of 50

19~

" 'Permal Notes

Authorized Dealer

Old tires can rejuvenate soil

- OPEN TILL 9 P.M.

2

his current prediction Is bia
third slrlke as far as forecasting the big one for San Francisco.
On May, 14,1951, he said San
Francisco would crumble at
9:30a.m. Sunday, June [0 of
that year.
The hour of doom passed
quietly and one concerned
person is reported to have
called back asking: ''Has the
earthquake been
rescheduled?"

. , n7-5592

IN .EFFECT TONIGHT

Size 6-8% and 9-11

LA-Z-BOY .

.,acale-"!nougb'Lto'' ~&gt;'l~ lli&gt;llt

TILE
TRIVETS

Dencil McCoy will seroe
second term as master of
Siloam Lodge No, 456

Berry fruit cake in a variety of containers makes excellent gift .

greased pans. Cover top of
dough with greased brown
paper or foil. Bake in a preheated 3QO.degree oven for
2 to 21h hours for the large

nJESDAY
SOUTHERN Alhleti ~
· . . Officers were elected when remembrances for ' the Elm·
Boosters
Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at
the Sew·Rite Sewing Club met wood ·Rest Home. The group
recently at the home of Mrs. also made. plana to prepare high school. Election of of.
Barbara Mullen in Middleport. individual fruit baskets for the fleers. All members urged to
attend.
Elected were Judy Potter, home.
OAPSE OF Southern LoCal
preaident; Barbara Mullen,
The annual Christmas dinner
vice president; Evelyn was5etfor Wednesday evening District to meet Tueaday at 8
Gilmore, . secretary, and at the Meigs Inn. Martha p.m. at Southern High School.
Pandora Collins, treasurer.
Hoffman received .a secret pal All members urged to attend.
SPECIAL Meeting MidDliring the meeting with Joni birthday gift and guests were
dleport
Masonic Lodge :!63
Hdfftil8n in charge, the group Miss Susan . Andrews and ·
,covered and decorated con. Brenda Platter. A d£ssert F&amp;AM at. Masonic Temple
lainets and plans were made to course was served to those Tuesday, 7:30p.m. EA Degree.
49' VALUE
Jlleet at the borne of Mrs. Flo named earlier and Nettie Ali master masons are invited
S~ckiand ·to ·pack the con· Boyer, Mildred Wells, Shirley to attend.
CAST IRON
MIDDLEPORT Christmas
tainers with homemade Bsity, Lenora McKnight, Ann
.
co~kies
as
Christmas Browning, Lucy White and lighting committee meeting at
8 p.m. Tuesday at the home of
Carolyn McDaniel.
Mrs . Etoilla Cassell, 517
Bryant Place.
LOYAL Bereans, Middleport
Church of Christ, Christmas
79cYALUE
'ENOUGH FOR ALL
SEVERAL ASSORTED
dinner and party Tuesday
YOUR PACKAGE NEEDS!
DESIGNS
night at the church.
JOLLY.Bunch Sewing Club,
Christmas party, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday, home of Mrs. George
'
Hackett, Sr., Middleport.
Hostesses are Mrs. Hackett
and Mrs. Don Mullen, $1 gift
CHESHIRE - Elected and Ralph Rife; treasurer, Fred exchange.
Installed recenUy .to serve a Mack; tyler, Ronnie Reed
WSCS of Forest Run United
OPAQUE NYLON!
second .term as master of Pack, and trustee, James R. Methodist Church, 7:ao p.m.
Tuesday at home of Mrs.
Slloal)l Lodge No. 456 of NeaL
For ·girls and misses.
Cl;eshlre wai Dencii E. McCoy
Officers appointed by Master Alfred Yeauger.
Irregulars of a $1.00 value .
of ·A&lt;ldison. Mr. McCoy has McCoy were, ·Chaplain, Basil
ROCK SPRINGS BeHer
Avai
Iable in the wanted fall.
been an active member of Bert Pack, Sr.; senior steward, Health Club, 11 :45 a .m.
colors. Nice stocking sluffer .
Siloam Lodge since 1967. He is John Rayburn Van Sickle; Tuesday at the Meigs Inn, a
also a member and officer of junior steward, John Furst, Christmas dinner.
the Order of Eastern Star No. and lodge educational officer,
WSCS OF Enterprise United
450 Cheshire, He Is an adviSor Dolan C. Smith.
Methodist Church Thursday
in the Order of DeMolay of
lnstalilng officers, all of evening at home of Mrs. Ed·
PR.
Middleport, and a member, whom are past masters of ward Bowen.
treasurer and deacon of the Siloam Lodge, were, master,
- FOR
SYRACUSE PTA Tuesday,
Addison Freewill Baptist Ruck~r Neal; marshall, James
7:30 p.m. at school. Choir of ...~---jo.llij-----•-_,lill-ll.,.l!i­
Church.
R. · Neal; chaplain, Allen Syracuse
Methodist Church to
oen~il. his wife, lhge, and Hughes; secretary, Doyle
present Chrlsbnas program.
three children, Bobby, Billie, Shuler, and junior warden,
INSTALLATION OF officers
arilt Marlene; have resided in Hortie Roush.
when Racine Lodge 461, F&amp;AM
Adl!ison S!!Ven years. He is a 14
Siloam Lodge meets the meets at 7:30 p.m. tonight at
y~r maintenance deparbnent second Saturday of each month the temple. Refreshments. · ·
eJ!Iployee of Kaiser Aluminum at , 7:30 p.m. Ali Masons are
and ,Chemical Corporation of cordially invited.
RavenSwood.
WEDNESDAY
Other officers installed were
WINDING TRAIL Garden
senior warden, Willard Paul
Club,
Wednesday, 7:30' p.m.
NEAL COX DIES
' Mlkllls; jupior warden, Paul E.
Relatives have learned of the home of Cora Beegle, Racine.
Fraley; senior deacon, Basil death of Neal Cox, fonnerly of Christmas party and gift ex.
'BerJ,Pack, Jr.; junior deacon, Pomeroy, at Marion, Va., change.
, Mlcliael Swisher; secretary, while at his employment.
TENTH District Democrat
Survivors are his wife, a Action Club Wednesday at 6
daughter, four grandchildren, p.m. · at the Duncan Inn, 132
three sisters; all of Virginia Putnam .St., Marietta" Dinner
~-·~~~·! ,Jtill ,lot, •vallall!e .lr~_, ..,
,, ,,
;u·t 'M~Jepl{fl v .. ~·1 t Jlobson. Burial was in ~ar!on, 7:30 p.m. , .
Va.
WHITE
Rose
Lodge
GOLD
,.
Christma,s potluck will be at I
REQ
p.in. Wednesday at the Legion
. ·BLUE
REGISTRATION SET
Hall,
Middleport.
There
wlii
be
Registration for food baskets
Mrs. Ullian Triplett spent from The Salvation Army, a $1 gift exchange. Everyone is
the weekend in Ashville with Butternut Ave., will be from I to bring their own table serWOMEN'S WARM
her sister, Mrs. Ida.Cook. Mrs. to 4 p.m. Friday at the Army's vice.
Cook's husband, Alfred, died headquarters in Pomeroy.
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
recently with funeral services
Garden Club, Wednesday, 8
having tleen held at Ashville on
p.m. at home of Mrs. Haldain
MEETING CANCELLED
~Dec. I.
May,
Christmas meeting and
A meeting of the Neigh; Mrs, William Keith Kincaid borhood Girl Scout Council gift exchange.
NYLONS OR TRICOTS
ol Berwyn, Pa.~ visited scheduled at noon Wednesday
POMEROY· MIDDLEPORT
Waltz length or long length, trimmed or
recently ,with ber sister and in the Columbus and Southern Uona Club luncheon and anbasic styles - Pretty pastel colors. A
brother·in·law, Mr. and Mrs. Ohio Electric Ca. soclnl rooms nual gift exchange at 12 noon
very practical gill she will like.
Mlliard Wildermuth, coming has been cancelled.
Wednesday at the Meigs Inn. ·
....
especially to attend the wed- ,•:~!•, ·~ .:0::-»-~«o"o",.......,y,, ..o;y,~o ,o;o,•Y.o!•!i
POMEROY CHAPI'ER 80,
REGULAR AND X-LG, SIZES
ding of the Mlldermuths' son,
RAM,
7:30p.m.
Wednesday
at
.
t.,
James.
the temple. All companions .
Mrs. Pauline Hysell, a ''•'
~~ invited.
cosmetology instructor at ~
~ MIDDLEPORT LITERARY
Meigs High School, and Mrs. Jo
Club, 2p.m. Wednesday, at the ·
Ann White, Beverly's Beauty
home of Mrs. Arthur Strauss. ·
Salon in Middleport, were In
TO
Christmas program by Mrs. ·
Columbus Sunday to attend a
FRIDAY
Forrest Bachtel. A Christmas ·
hair styling show held at the
PAST
MATRONS, memory Is roll call response.
All REGUlAR VALUES TO 77'
H!ISPitality Inn. Instructor for Evang_ellne Chapter OES
the show on the upcoming hair Christmasparty6p.m. Friday,
THURSDAY
styles was William Wampler, beginning with a potluck
WILDWOOD GARDEN Club,
associated with the Miss dinner, Middleport Masonic
Thursday, 6:30p.m. at home of
WONDERFUL LITTLE GIFT ITEMS
temple. $2 gift exchange,
America Pageant.
Mrs. · Don ·crueser for Christ.
HAND BLOWN-ITALIAN MADE
mas dinner and party. $1 gift
r·---~-·-t·~ exchange.
We've reduced our entire
MEIGS COtrnTY Humfllle
selection of fine bud Yeses. Select
7:30p.m. Thursday at
from a rainbow of colors. See
.
f Society,
these, you'll want several.
Middleport Village Hall. Open
to public.
WILLING WORKERS Class,
Enterprise .United MethodiSt
Church, Thursday evening at
rL.Ar:i .IHtME FROM "LOVE STORY"
home of Mrs. Edward Bowen.
SENIOR
CITIZENS
meeting, Thursday, 7:30 p.m.
at Harrisonville Elementary
~" "' R~mantic figurines; of
School. Pictures of Holy Land
I''" lovers revolve in a gentle
.to be shown. Public welcome.
• /,-, . embrace, while !he en.
INSTALLATION OF of.
chanting "Love Story",
fleers, Thursday, 7:30 p.m.'
. lheme
song
plays.
Figurines
are
hand
when Shade River Lodge 4S3,
painted,
glated
ceramic.
•'
FlAM meets at temple,
7" high gill boxod.
Chester. Refreshmen~. All
Master Muons invi!ed.
EPISCOPAL CHURCH
WOmen will have their BMual
Chriatmas party at 7:30 p.m.
Thlrsday at the home of Mrs.

ALL PRI

By BETI'Y CANARY .
H there are little children in your home, t~en you h~ve
already endured a month . of resisting televiSion ChriSt·
mas sales. "It's only $39.95, mommy," your child burbles.
"Batteries are not included."
No, he doesn't exactly remember what the toy is. but
it's only $39.95.
,
Older children have. outgrown this kind of b~ainwash·
ing and will settle for the . sill! pie things In bfe-a 10·
speed bicycle, a snowmobile, a httle sports car.
There is no point In waving your arms and ~rylng out
against the advertishi!l and brainwashing. It 1swlth us
and we have to live with it. Unless, of course, you plan
to pack up and move to the Arctic Circle.
And I hope I've caught you before you've booked passage. If my information is correct, this year at the Arctic •
Circle they're advertising fully automated life-size pen·
guins guaranteed to catch their own fish. Only $39.95.
With tophat and cane and smoking a Kool, $47.50 . .Em·
peror penguin driving a team of sfed dogs, $79.98.
How we .became a generation of parents whose chU·
dren must be assured of a talking robot in every closet
and two Barbies (one who camps and one who grows her
own garden) In every dresser drawer, I am not sure.
· Some sociologists say it's a hangup from being reared
during depression years. Some theoriSts let Madison Avenue bear all the blame.
Not being an expert, I am inclined to blame myself as
l wander thoughtfully over the layers of broken toys in
the children's bedrooms.
·
How we got into the give-and-take atmosphere (we
give, they take) probably isn't as Important as figUring
out how to escape it.
The simplest solution is to insist upon buying lays the
children use instead of watch. (No doll that Jumps rope,
but a jump rope for your child.) Tell the kids bluntly
you will no longer be surrounded by a pack of inactive
. .
children and a bunch of healthy toys.

2 cups firmly packed

t

'

'

fll!l!------~!).--~lti*''"~''!i.:D~""~' ~:.~~ ~!~ ~~.::lu~~ fe~~~~.~~:

'f

··

There's Np Escape
From TV Toy Lure

By AILEEN CLAIRE
NEA Food F,dltor

By POLLY CRAMER
II'

BETTY CANARY

Social
Calendar

MEN'S WORK
A DISCOUNT

O£PARTMENT S1'01tf

sMt)p OUR .BUSY LITTLE STORES
PT, PlEa.sANT • MASON ·SILVER .BRIDGE PWA

SOCKs ·
3 .1AIR

87·'

�I

J

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o .. Dec. 12, 1972

Sentinel Classifieds ·Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
-

.
,
Po.'. ero
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS
Of
QUALITY

BfRRY'S WORlD

0

.

-

PL UMeiNG and Healing rnan.

.

exper ienced ;

fini sh.

TRUCK SPECIAL!
1969 CHEVROLET ,

·

NOWS209~

2-ton Truck 102" cab ro a xle. m cu. in. eng ine, 15,000 lbs .

2-speed rear axle, 825x2Q, 10 ply tires, full deplh foam seat,
heavy duty springs, solid cab. Ready to go to work.

~ffs'_Y ' phone 991-1511 or 997. '
12·6·11(

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Small~st Heater Core.
Nathan Bitt•
· Radiator Specialist

SMnH NElSON

MOTORS. INC.
Ph. 992-2114
Pomeroy

are.a . , Reqardless of ex.
pertence, arr mall D. I. Pate,
Pres., Tex~s Refinery Corp.,
Box 711 , Fort Worlh, Texas
76101.
. 12-t0-41p

.EARTH MOVING

For Rent

•

Dorer &amp; End l01der work,
ponds, basement, land-

TRAILER ~paces ; extra large
lots, S25 a month, Velma

scaping. We have 2 size : ,

Zuspan , Mason , W. Va .

•

...•

~"

(1)1172 ir NU..

••

. .

1~.~~

"It's GOT to be Henry Kissinger . Who else could it be?"

BRUCE 810SSA1

GOP Must.Watch
The Governorships
.

'

-

By BRUCE BIOSSAT

WASHINGTON i NEA l
With nine of the country's 10 biggest gov.ernorships up
in 1973-74, it looks as if the Republicans are going to press
some of their veteran incumbents to run again to have
real h'ope -of keeping their present 5-5 split or recapturing
the advantage.
In 19Ei9 the GOP held nine of the 10. only Texas being in
Democratic hands.
Three- Pennsylvania, Ohio and Florida- slipped away
in 1970 and Gov. Richard Ogilvie's close loss this fall
dropped Illinois from the GOP list.
Samplings taken at the Republicans' winter Governors
Conference here suggest that some of their veterans are
indeed almost ready to give it another try in 1974.
Massachusetts Gov. Francis Sargent says he is leaning
that way and so does Gov. William Milliken of Michigan.
Such moves by them would amount almost to third-term
bids, since both were elevated from lieutenant governorships early in 1969 when President Nixon pulled their
governors into his Cabinet
Less clear is New York Gov . Nelson Rockefeller's in·
tent, though the chances of his seeking a fifth four-year
term seem to be mounting . His aids told me as far back
as the summertime GOP .national convention that he was
entertaining the thought seriously. .
"
Assuming he serves through his pr sen't term to the end
of 1974, he will by then have become the governor of longest tensure in U.S . history-with 16 years. The present
record is 15.
If he bids for 20 years in 1974 , he'll have something
more on his mind than record tenure. At 64 today , he looks
and acts as vigorous as ever. lf given a fifth term , and
the odds would favor him heavily, he would be 68 by
presidential nominating time in 1976, yet there are several
party leaders who think he can 't be Ignored in that
reckoning, especially if Sen . Charles Percy of lllinois
falters as the choice of the GOP's progressive wing .
Rocky, a solid Nixon backer and a man whose st;~te
gave the President 59 per cent of its 1972 iJresidential vote,
is much more acceptable to the party's conservative
elements than he used to be.
In California the outlook is less promising . Gov . Ronald
Reagan, also aging though still a bit short of 62, has said
he won 't run again . If he stays with that, his state would
really be up for grabs in 1974, with both parties fieldin g
several candidates and none on either side standing out
impressively.
.
With the 1976 presidential battle following closely , it
would be a critical place lor the GOP to lose its grip on
the governorship.
New Jersey Gov . William Cahill insists here that he
hasn 't made up his mind about 1973 when his seat is up.
He probably would have a crear edge if he ran .
If he doesn't, it could be bad news. Winning Republicans
have been scarce at the governorship level in New Jersey ,
If the Republicans hit on a good California nominee and
Rockefeller, Sargent, Milliken and Cahill all go and do
as well as expected , the party may then be set to regain
big-state advantage .
Democratic Gov. William Shapp of Pennsylvania has
been something less than a smash . If Republicans can
coalesce around a promising contender quickly, they have
a good shot there .
In Ohio, Gov. John Gilligan Is suffering the ill fortune
which seems to attend most governors who slap on an
income tax. He' s another vulnerable Democrat
This year the Republican contender in Texas grabbed
48 per cent of the vote, giving some GOP planners the
idea the state may be ready to turn their way , They had
Florida for a term, but the 1970 Democratic winn er , Gov.
Reuben Askew, may be hard to dislodge .
The veteran incumbent Republicans hold the key to
their p~rty ' s prospects . If they play good soldiers, the
1974 mood will be upbeat across the board .

Notice
WANTAPS
INFORMATION
DEADL.INES
KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp; WIGS,
.S P.M . Dey Before Publication .
SPECIAL S MONTHLY .
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
PHONE HELEN JANE
Cancellation- Corrections
BROWN
, MIDDLEPORT .
Will be accepted untll9a .m. for
OHIO 991-Sll 3.
Day of Publication
12-3-tfc
REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserves the
r ight to edit or reiect any ads
enclosed porch sale ; Aunt
deemed objet:tlonal. ThP ONE
Jemima
toaster cov~rs, rag
publisher Will not be· respons iblE
dolls, Chrislmas decorations,
for more than one incorrect
new and old miscellaneous;
insertion .
RATES
starts Thursday, Dec. l41h
For Want Ad Service
and sell till ail gone ; Mabel
S cents per Word one Insertion
Pickens, across from Stale
Minimum Charge 75c
Park In Syracuse.
12 cents per word three
12-12-31c
·consecutive Insertions.
18 cents per word six con
·secullve Insertions .
25 P.er Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid with In 10 days .
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$1.50 for 50 word minimum .
Each additional word 2c .
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per
Advertisement.
OFFICE HOURS &gt;

house, ad~lts
only ; phone 992-5592,
12-5-tlc

3 ROOM furnished

new mobile homes, never
lived in; phone 992-2511. .
12-5-ftc

TWO

-

HOUSE, 4 roorns and bath, 1616
Lincoln Heights ; phone 742-

BARGAIN CENTER

'

;

Poine""'_Home &amp; Auto

LAYAWAY FOR XMAS
Open to7; closed Mondays

OpeniTIU
Monday thru S.lurdly
606 E. Main, Po111eroy,O,

Discount priced.

ot,\ lt7J "r HU , loot.

THE CAD(;T TRAINING

On MitsfAmeriatnC.rs
-GUARANTEED-

~!SA

G000 IDEA .

CONGRATULATIONS,
· MIS$ S!ZiMORE...

· Phone 992-2094, .

...ON YOUR.

PWMBING
HEATING

PARTY PLANNING?

Concrete Work
Remodeling

Care- Free.
· Party
Prepara'tion&amp; at a Low,
Low Cost ·- _ Whether It
be a Wedding ' • Anniversary geMogelher
or a Special Holiday,
we will cater delicious
dishes to•your home
or pa~ty rooms.
CALL 992-5786

AND THAT

... BUT I SOMETIMES lt!INK
HE 1S A LimE 'ri:JLING

RON HARPER
AAS

!1-E

FOR TillS JOB. _,..

IMKII\kaS OF AGOOD OFFICER... )

FORMATIVE
YEARS!

•v1

L£T US DO ntE

CATERING

Chase Hdwe. Co.
Phone992-251i
or 992-3918

PAPER Hanging and painting ;
For Sale
Arthur Musser, phone 74212 10 6t
· - p · 1970 HOMETTE 12 x 60 5223.
r
12-12-3otp
TRAILER, Brown ' s Trailer
housetraller. 2 bedroom, wilh
Court ; phone 992-3324,
or wilhoulair-conditionero and
12-10-ttc
washer ; pay oil ap- WILL CUT or trim trees,
:::-:---::--- -- - - proximately S3,700; Farfesa reasonable. Also clean ouf
POMEROY,
OHIO
' .
FURNISHED 2 bedroom
electric combo organ and basements, attics and cellars.
apartment, _adults only,
arnplifier. S300 ; phone 9Y2· Phone 949-3221.
11 -22-JOtc
Middleport ; phone 992·3874,
3685.
POMEROY
12-12-ttc
12-6-6tp - - - - - - - -- G &amp; E APPLIANCE Repair ;
repair of ail laundry equip·
6 ROOM house with bath, r
~UTO
HOME
.
menl , refrigeration equip located in Middleport , phone
ment and house· wiring; call
992-2094
742-5983.
614-992-6050.
12-12-31p
11 -24-JOtp 606 E. Main Pomeroy
ON PANTS &amp; JEANS
3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
ELNA and White Sewing
unfurnished apartments .
Machines ... service on all
Phone 992-5434.
Boy 2
and
Furnace Controls
makes . Reasonable rates .
4-12-ttc
--·~· Pairs
The Sewing Cenler, MidHUMIDIFIERS
dleport. Ohio.
1
·I -PAIR FREE
11 -16-tlc
Hot Water Heaters
The best buy in the area·.
Stop In and See Our
For Sale
Plumbing
Have slacks &amp; jeons for the
Floor Display.
OO.ZER and back hoe work,
MIXED hay ; phone 992-7692.
whole family, Save OneElectrical Work
ponds
and
septic
tanks;
dll·
12-10-6tc
Third.
ching service; top soli, fill , ~EE US FOR: Awnings, storm"
9.
_
POMEROY
dirt,
limestone; B&amp;K Exdoors and wl~dows, carporls,
STOCK your aquarium now at
Phone
992
-5367;.
cavating.
1i1ii11
Jack
W.
Carse~.
Mgr,
marquees, aluminum sldinQt
our Dollar Sale; Showalter's
Dick Karr , Jr .
and railing. A Jacob, sali!S
Phone 992-2181
. ·
Wet Pet Shop, Chest.er, Ohio.
9-1-lfc
representative. For , free
12-10-61c
estimates, phone Ch'arles
SINGER
A~tomallc sew ing- - - - - ' -- -- " -'
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V.
992-2448
machine. Like new in walnut SEWING MACHINES. Repair
MODERN 5-PC. breakfast
set;
Johnson
and Son, Inc.
!
cabinet
.
Makes
design
slitservice,
all
makes.
992·2284,
will
sacrifice
;
phone
992-2961
Pomeroy,
·
1'2-ttc'
ches, zig zags, buttonholes,
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy,
alter 5 p.m.
blind hems, overcasts, etc.
Authorized Singer Sales and
NO HUNTING or trespass! ng on -:-;;-;;-;-~:;-:::-::---::1_2---:
l0·3tc
$85 . Call Ravenswood 273-9521
Service. We Sharpen Scissors. •BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
lhe Jay Hall Farm oft New CAR RADIO, CB . radio, AKC
or 273-9893.
3-29-llc, Septic tanks Installed. George
Lima Road ; reason 8 head or black registered fernale toy
(Bill) Pullins. Phone 992-2478,
11 -30-tfc
cattle have disappeared ; poodle, spayed; phone 9924-2S.tfc
SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
a1 nyon ~ ha ving any in- 5947.
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
1
orma 1 ton pease
get In touch .
J2.12-3tc
CONCRETE
Pets For Sale
·cLEANED, · REPAIREb . , EADYcMIX
with me . Overt Pullins, -----,-,--- - - delivered
right
to your
MILLER
SA~;I}ATION,
Manager.
~·
.. POODLE
puppies AKC;
proiec~;o , Fut-.and ·euy,. Fr;e
STEWAR;r,
H...,
..
PHONE,
1955
CHeVROLET
,
rebut
II
apricot,
black
sl)ver;
.
"1
.
1210 1
'
~
es1f'mti 1 e~one ·f:f2-3H4.1
- -6 P eng1ne, 1 set side pipe, $40; " hold ' till ChrTstrnas; 'pH61 e 662·303S~
Goeglein 1·1le'ady-Mix Co :,
J im Chadwell, Rt. 1, Reeds- 992 _5443
·
10-4-lfc
YOUR distributor for " Build A ville, Ohio ; phone 667-3652.
Middleport, Ohio.
·
11 -,9-ftc AU 1OMUts 1Lt: msurance been
Town" fun kits is now ready
6-30-ttc
12-12-Jic
to lake your or~er. Special
cancelled?
Lost
your
male toy poodle puppies, 'operator's license? Call 992- SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
rates for schools, Institutions,
American slereo-radio AKC
warmed
and shots, well-bred, 2966,
clubs and organizations; for EARLY
REASONABLE rates, Ph. 446combination, AM-FM radio, 4
more information phone 992$75.
Phone
Coolville 667-6214,
6-lS-tlc
4782, Gallieolis, John Russell,
speaker
sound
systern,
4
7414 .
12·7·121c ---,---- - - - Owner &amp; Operator.
speed automatic changer.
12-10-31c
5-12-lfc
Balance 577 .59 . Use our
Real Estate For Sale
budgel
lerms.
Call
992-7085.
Mobile
Homes
For
Sale
PARASOL Boutique Salon on
12-l 2-61 c CASH paid for all makes and BY OWNER - 'tn .Coolville, 3 c:: BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Rt. 7 next to Skate-A-Way
bedroom horne, attached
Complete Service
Roller Rink , Make your MODERN
garage, permaslone front,
1 t t 1 t
models of rnobile homes.
Phone 949-3821
.
wa nu s Yradio,
e s ereo-4
Phone area code 6H'423-95''L
Christmas and New Year's
split level, l'l2 baths,
Racine, Ohio
radio,
AM-FM
•
appo intments early, Open
speaker sound systern, 4
4-13-tlc fireplace, hardwOOd· floors,
Crill Bradford
Tuesday lhru Saturday and
carpet, new dishwasher, __,__,_,.,....,
speed automatic changer. - - - - - - - - 5-1-tfc
Tu.esday evenln~ by ap Balance $69 .57 , Use our 1970 MOBILE home, like new, automatic washer, dryer.
potnlment; also wrll be open
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
wilh air-conditioner, washer ; central air condlflonlng 1 gas O'UELL WHEEL alignment
evenings from December 19th
12-12-6tc
lot may be rented; phone 985- hot water heat, drilled well,
located at Crossroads, Rt . 124.
4248.
thru lhe 22nd by appoinlmenl.
city water lap. 30 x 40 block
Complete front end service,
Christmas Special - Instant
garage ; two lots ; phone 667up and brake service.
tune
TO lay-off, 8 track stereo -=====.:===:1:2-:8_-6_:,.1p 3130; priced on Inspection.
Conditioner lor your hair, DUE
Wheels balanced elecin walnut console; pay ._
regular $1 , special ol SOc.
12-lO·Jic
tronically .
Ail
work'
balance or $98.80 or pay S8 per
Sandra Trussell Kerns ,
guaranteed.
Reasonable,
phone
992-5331.
•
Air
Conditioners
month
;
Operator. Phone 98S-414L
TWO houses- one 6 rooms, lVz
rates. Phofie 742·3232 or 992·'
12-12-tfc
12-10-121c
•Awnings
bath, full basement; one 5
3213,
rooms, l'h bath, on Rt. 35
7-27-tfc
JUST taken In deluxe Zig-Zag
•Underpinning ·
CARPENTER'S Market
near
new hospital; selling due
sewing
machine . This
previously Sellard s Market
to sickness; phone 992-2936
em - 'complete mQbile hQme
machine
darns,
after
2 p.m.
now accepts USFA Food
brolderles, makes but- · •se~vlce ~ plus gigantic'
Stamps.
'
12-10-Jic
tonholes, all without at Real Estate For Sale
tachments ; pay balance ol 'display of mobile homes
12'7-6tp
S38.50 or pay S6 per month; _''l'ways available at ...
AN ACRE lot,l'/2 miles North of
fairgrounds on old Rl . 33;
HAYMAN'$ Auclion - a good
phone
992-5331
.
MILLER
with 1970 65xl2 3 bedroom
pla ce to go each Fr iday
12·12-tfc
Windsor mobile home with
even ing , 1 p.m. at Laur~l
MO.BILE HOMES,
expando. Phone 992-6615.
Cliff on old l&lt;t , 7, 1 mile west NOW WRECKING the former
of Rock Springs Fa irground .
12-B-6tc
t220 Washintlon Blvd.
Epple' s Grocery Slore
10-10-llc
BELPRE,O.
bu i lding in Pomeroy . All 423-7521
.muse In Long BoHor\t"plione'
kinds ol building materials
985-3529.
I
WILL do babysitting In my
for sale on the job including 2
6-11
-tfc'
home, any week day ; phone
and 3 ln . heavy material, Auto Sales
742-3952.
sheeting and cherry stair
12-10-6tc
railing ; call 992-5946 or 882· 1966 V·8 INTERNATIONAL
110 Mocllltnic St.
3219,
engine (266 cu. In,) and 4
·speed
transmission;
com.
11
-10-tlc
.
P0111eroy,
Ollto4S7"
Wanted To Buy
plete ; phone 992-7384 after 3
N-1-C-E
p.m.
OLO Furniture, oak tables, 1972 ZIG-ZAG Sewing machine
6GI E. Mlltn
~
3
BEDROOMSWith large
organs, dishes, clocks, brass left in layaway . Beautiful
i2-8-6tc
Pomeroy ~
closets. Has a nice bath,
beds, or complete households. pastel color , full size model.
Write M. D. Miller, Rl. 4, All built-in lo. buttonhole, do 1972 MUSTANG with srort roof,
kitchen with dishwasher,
6,000 miles ; sill under
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271. stret ch sewing and fancy
CLOSE TO GAVIN
automatic aas fired hot
warranty ; factory air and
3 B.R,, bath, new FA fur ·
water heating, baSef!lent,'
6-28-tfc slllching . Pay just 548.75 cash
with
extras;
or terms available . Trade-ins loaded
nace, dining roorn, •ullllly R.,
carport, alid fenced ytll'd.
automatic transmission, 351
accepled. Phone 992-5641.
porches , paneling, tiled.
Only a few years old,
motor, perfect condltioo , 1971
lielp Wanted
12-6-6tc
$20,000.00.
Rec. Room, JUST $9,800.00,
MG Midget Roadsler con. -- -- -.-:-:-:--·-RENOVATED
LARGE LOT
MFN 18-24: LEARN CON - .VACUUM
vertible, U,OOO miles; loaded
Cleaner
new
1972
l
story
trame
and
block,
2
3
BEDROOMS
- Nice size ·
5TRUn i(IN SKil LS FOR
with extras, 4 speed ; perfect
modeL Complete with all
B.R
.•
bath,
beautiful
kitchen,
COMBAT ENGINEERING
cl0$el
In
each.
Large
Modern
condition. Will sacrifice as I
cleaning tools. Small paint
dining
bar,
26
fl
.
llv.
roorn
JOB IN EUROPE . Today's dam
bath,
utility
room.
Concrete
am
on
my
way
overseas.
age in shipping . Will take
Army will train competent
and fireplace ~ Good location,
front porch . Nearly an acre
Phone 992-3821.
$27 cash or budget plan
young men In the coml?at ava liable. Phone 992-5641.
carpeted throughout. Sl2,500.
of ,nice loylng land. Only
12-10-3tc
engineering lield . .And
$16,000.00.
'
12-6-61c '
IMMEDIATE
guMantee a job In Europe . -~-.--~-­
1967 D(JDGE Station Wagon,
YOUR
PROPERTY
AP
POSSESSION
You'll assist or engage in the ~=========-1
1966 Olds Toronado; phone 4 B.R., l'h bath, dining R, ·
COULD HAVE BEEN
992-5367.
'
constructi on and main - Give the man In your life that
HERE, IF YOU HAD
tenance ol road s. bridging, gun he wants for Christmas.
12-12-41c utility R., gorage, arrporl, · LISTED WITH US,
close io shopping. Close to
she lt er s and structures .
REC. ROOM
· There are lots of benefits, too .
We have some nlte ones in '70 V.W,, gOOd condition, $1,000 playground . ASKING
FIREPLACE
I.ivlng
Like 30 days paid vacallon a stock ,
$12.800.00,
'
flrrn ; phone 992-3401.
carpeled,
·l
bedrooms,
birch
year. If you' d like to learn
Remington
BUILDING SITES
12-12-5tc
kitchen
w)th
cook
units.
llletlme skills while you live
30 Acres, just out ot
Winchester
Stainless double sink, s~y,
~nd work in Europe, Today' s
Pomeroy, Chester woter
Ithaca
ail
on· one floor . Gas tqrtid
Arm y wa~ts to \oln you. Call
Real Estate For Sale
available. THIS YOU MUST .
air
tumace. Asking only
collect SS G. C ark 593-3022.
Marlin
SEE TO APPRECIATE.
12-7-6tc
HOUSE FOR SALE, 114 B-rick $76,800,00.
S16,500.11Gve
in I lew dayi.
Savage
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio; brick
LAND
CONTRACT
BUILDING
Beretta
house, 3 bedrooms, excellent In STORAGE
MEN
18-H :
BECOME
town,
several
Iota, and A • .s .to 50 ACRES - MOO.OO
locatioo, close to school and
PROFICIENT
WITH
down arid 559.31 a 111onth.
Fias
city ; contact Lou Osborne or rentats,,paylng as of now $90
POWER _ GENERATORS.
IUCRIS '
f)!!r
month.
Out
of
flOOds
and
call 992-5898.
WORK IN EUROPE OR Open MOn.lhru Thursday I
4,
BEDROOMS
- Beth, frea
KOREA. Today's Army neo!ds 1o S. Fri. and Sal. llq I.
11·26-lfc gOOd location. CALL US ON
well
and
all
minerll5.
gas
THIS ONE. 18.200.00.
men who want a challenge.
ts
fenced.
Asking
L•nd
WANTED '"
· Men to learn the tun ·
$15,000.00,
10
ACRES
In
Langsville.
Phone
Hon1e belwMn Pomeroy ond
damenlals of electricity and
992-7791.
Athens, Ohio, will jlay top,
Its application to portable
12-lO·Jic price on this property. Boyer'
generating equipment. We'll
AVOID THE RUSH, BUY
pay r,ou a good salary while
out of county. CALL
·
10 ACRES, just off Rl. 33;
NOW BEFORE SPRING
you earn , Plus lots of other
HENRY E. CLELAND
mostly level, barn, garage,
Pomeroy, Ollio
EVERYONE WILL Wf\lift i.
benefits. Like JO days paid
REALTOR
out - cell~r. 2 sheds, home has 3
992-2975
PLACE THEN.
.
vacation a year, II you'd like
Olfla 992·225t,
the challenge and excitement ' - - - - - - - - - - - ' bedrooms, bath, dining room,
lfnoanswer9H-2,.._fl5.
of living ond' _.king In
·
. new forced air lurnace, 42ot
porches; The Buy of the Year,
HELEN L. Tl4FORO
anolher country, Today's COAL, Llmes_lone, Excelsior
$8.900; Cleland Real Estate, 2 SALESMEN TO SELL
ASSOCI4TI
'
Army wants to j'oln you. Call Salt Works, E. Main Sl.,
YOUR PROPERTY.
phone 992-2259.
collect S.S. G. Cork, 593·3022. Pomeroy. Phone, 992-3891.
NO SUIIOAy IIIOWflfGS
12-l2-61c
•·12-tfC
12-8-6tc
•
• '1""

HEATING &amp;
COOLING _

.

'5.55 .

· Rt.!"atcaution lighl"
TUPPERS PLAINS
. Used furniture, appliances.
Clean &amp;_guaranteed.
NEW FURNITURE
Sota Beds &amp; Recliners .

5092.

•••THtiiY WEI7e IN A

TM~oN!

gv1ACI(!!

•

Tl\ESE SAL.OM£-/&amp;JRGERS
ISAS 1ll6N AS THAT L.l'L
CRITTER HERSELF PPOB'L'f

WOULDeE-

SHAMMY'S
CATERING SERVICE
'

nHEIL"

8:30a .m . lo 5 :00p .m . Da il y.
8:30 a.m. fo 12 :00 Noon
Saturday .

dozers, 2 size loaders. Work done by hour or contract,
Free l!stl111ates. We also
haul fill dirt, top soil. Du111p
trucks and low-boy lor hire.
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3525
after 7 p.m. or phone 992S2Jl.

11 -29-JOip

BANK!!

Wheel Alignment

KUHL'S

· mature man In Pomeroy

1 MEMJ i'&gt;TER
TH£ SHOT · PUT
COMPETITIC/oJ I

Business Services

qualifications and experience

lo Box 729-B. c-o The Dally
Sentinel. Pomeroy., Ohio
45769.
12-8-6tp
-:;T:;:E-cX::A-;S-;;R;:
E;:
F~
IN
-:-:E:;:.R::':Y':"":C~
O RP.
offers opportunily for high
tncome PLUS cash bonuses
and convention trips to

- ' - - - - ''"--..;.·.....-..
- - - - - - ------,,--- " '..

HERE TO TH'

~~~~~~~~~
SPEND TIME
EXPm
SAVES's
..
.

EXPERIENCED girl tor olllce
work wllh knowledge or
bookkeeping rnachlnO$; apply
by leiter only slalmg

OPEN EYES. 1:00 P.M.
f'OMEROY, OHIO

PLAV HIM BACK OVER

'IE GOT A NIBBLE, TATER ..

HANG ON TIGHT!!

el( -

pericnccd and honest, do not

Pomeroy Motor Co.-&lt;!-'----

not

if

•

1968 CHEVY BELAIR
$995
St. Wagon, 2 seats. V-8, std. tra ns., good tires, radio, grn .

,....-....,....·- -,,----'-----,--,---'-----:--::-.-------t

Help Wanted

1-1&amp;1'. BABY, ~.1\l"R€
'tlU DOIIJG. TO/JIG&gt;\T ?

- -.=-_:. -.·:;
:. --: ;:;:;:;==:::__,

IS li /N:AILY

NECESSA~

TO FII.L OUT
iAAi W~O\..E

l

- - - -- -

FO~M1'

®MONSIEUR
PJ.ATI, WE
HAVC A

OFFICE SUPPLIES

N01l-I IN0, EXCEPT HE 15 5TAYIN0

MAKE IT A SIJrrE WI'TH A
VIE':~ANDC~RGE: ALL
BILL::&gt; 1011-lE. (30NNA!
CO\Ifl&lt;\NY. I A"' 'THEIR
F!EPRESE:NT,A·nvE.

AT THE POSHEST

HOTE:L IN PARIS!

FURNITURE

Card of Thanks
I WISH to thank everyone lor ail
their nice cards, letters and
flowers that I received while a
. palient at lhe Holzer Medical
Cente~ ; I also wish to thank
Dr , Patterson and all the
nurses.
Nellie Brogan
12-12-ltc

Lost
LOST or stolen, G78 15" truck
tire and wheel in Sumner,
Chesler, Middleport area;
contact Lloyd Blackwood, 985·
3805 or 992-2148.
12-10-3tp

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
o.

I

We talk to you
like a person.

------

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

Moore -Morrow

papa'! I keep a· e~e
on t h' t reaGure, Gon! You
run riqht alonq!
ll. ·l l.
,, ' "' _

'

J

------

Pis

Rosenbaum-Meadows
Holler -Rawlings
56
Blakeslee-Hoy I
55
Fullz-Benlley
40
Carsey-McDonald
32
High Ind. Game - Men : Roy
Holter 219, Russ Moore 211 , Vic
Wipple 193 ; Women : Betty
Smith 174, Daisy
B. 169,
Virginia H. 169,
High Series - Russ Moore
568, Roy Holter 522. Fred
Morrow Sl4 ; Women : Belly
Smith .490, M.ary Morrow .414,
Daisy Blakeslee 411 .
Team High Game
Blakeslee -Hoyt.
Team High Series - MooreMorrow.

A th ought for the day :
English writer Samuel Butler
sa id , "A hen is only an egg's
way or making another egg."

,,

T~&amp; L.A~T

TIME ~&amp;WA!&gt;

iN,J&lt;E 5.6.1D THE
A'.RKING 1!\ETER
WAS A ~~F- &gt;O)R~'ST!

Virgil B.

'

ACROSS
1. Fellow
5. "It Came
Upon a
Midnight

"

10. American
inventor
11. Word with
· share or
house
13. Swedish
wine
measure
14. Each
15. King (Sp,)
16. Eel (O.E. I
17. Briny
18. Had a
threebagger
20. Young
Cratchit
21. Political
cartoonist
22. Wine's
delicacy
(Fr. I
23. Terrify
25. Certain
in111ate
26. Heavy
book
27. Bombay
attire
28. Allar constellation
29. Withdrew
32. Freight
weight
n . 'Mctri('
land

DICK TRACY
ENDS

·Teaford, Sr.
Broker

OKAY, 'IOU 5TUNTEP PWARI',
NAME '1001 PRa! ALL Tiff
HAM8UR~ lOU CAN

EAT7 HOW AIIOIJT A TON

~~:!&gt; Of r!OCK RI!CO!I'i:&gt;SV

!'LORI
ilSH. U.••ST. '
Di6 MOINES,
IOWA,
~DQIW

J&amp;MID~;a..t.::::!!:! .,..jc

38. Become
profound
39. Latvian
40. Do
business
41. So that's
how!
(2 wds.)

UnocramblethneblrJumblet,

one letter to eech oquan, to
form four ordinary word1.

l

DOWN
1. Diagram
Yesterday's Answer
2. Four·
bagger
8. Christmas 25. Lingerie
3. Christmas
carol
trim
carol
(2 wds.)
27. Tranquil
(4wds.)
9, Get
29. Blustered
4. Through
12. Finishing 30. Bring
5. Swiss·
tool
joy to
style
18. Otherwise 31. house
19. Trim
Alighicri
6, Cantered
2Z. Father
38. Brazilian
7. Lord of
23, Declared
tree
U . Small
37. the
Hebrews
crown
MacGraw

1'VIW

e ~'1;-.~-,;:;-

I I

I I tJ I
IEN1'0DE

~

.WHAi iHE

CE!I:AMICS l'o'ORKER
WA&amp; PEVel.OPINe.

I I j II

t~=Prill~·~~~~~~~~~~~IIISWII~~=-11 or r x1
l'llYN1:4

'i

,1

I.

~

I, I,

...

r1

y,.,, ..,d.,.•

Now lfl'lllle the elrcle41e114R
to form the 1urpriM wwer, u
IUUtlled by the ...... earloon.

lumbl•" IUIAL ADMIT ENSIGN IOUGHT
An~wer1

Jf'hGI htt 'nitl all rlwt a11rolngy
bull K~C~I-"TAURUS"

JWT 50MEIIOW I FEtL 111AT
I DON'HEALLI( WANTTO GQ
TH~ THE WfiOLE f'SVCHIATRIC
fjiL 'ftlU I(N(]W WHAT! MEAN?

measure

' ''

·:

"

'
,,•

' I
'

AXYDI.BAAXR
Is I. 0 S G F E I. L 0 W
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
userl for lho lhree L's, X (or the two O's, etc. Single lellers,
' , ·, oph&lt;•s, Ihe length and formation of Ihe words ore all
hints. Each day the code letters are diiTerrr'

AilGOLliTEL'&lt; ...JUST !iTEP

OVER HERE, PLEA!iL

CNL NWZZV' ,,(;
VH CNI. YWS JND
PGVLST . NI.

KWS

YVHLG
HWQI.H

••
••

,.",,•

,.,.
.;
'•
'•

.

DS

LWGCN

BZ

LQI.GA

YWEI. ,- GDXLGC

''

"'

'

,.

L,

HNLGJilllT
(

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6QOO, SOUND,
!M[~E~L~ AD'fiCE

CRYPT#V\a "•' I ...:s

fft.ms

'

·C~

.
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Het·e'A
how to work it:

TIJC:b Sales

.,'

c..

3f. Guido's
note
35. Hire
S7. Sen.
Cranston
of
California

Gaafely

~...,......~~ ,....., '!)

(C 1972 .King Fenturn S)•ndlcRtc, tn r . l

by THOMAS JOSEPH

----·-- - - - -

I'INii·.Pil.Ylll! Tlil.I.
lolls__~I.E 01" I'.OE· ..

Yesterday'• Cryploquole: NOWADAYS THERE ARE
THREE CJ,ASSES: THE HAVES, THE HA VE-NOTS AND 'l'HB
CHARGE-ITS.- ANONYMOUS

~

- -- - -70
59

l..6TlNI~TOTHE

_1

•

____

Local Bowling
Wednesday late Mixed
December 6, 1912

.-

GASOUNE ALLEY

I
I

'

�I

J

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o .. Dec. 12, 1972

Sentinel Classifieds ·Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
-

.
,
Po.'. ero
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS
Of
QUALITY

BfRRY'S WORlD

0

.

-

PL UMeiNG and Healing rnan.

.

exper ienced ;

fini sh.

TRUCK SPECIAL!
1969 CHEVROLET ,

·

NOWS209~

2-ton Truck 102" cab ro a xle. m cu. in. eng ine, 15,000 lbs .

2-speed rear axle, 825x2Q, 10 ply tires, full deplh foam seat,
heavy duty springs, solid cab. Ready to go to work.

~ffs'_Y ' phone 991-1511 or 997. '
12·6·11(

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Small~st Heater Core.
Nathan Bitt•
· Radiator Specialist

SMnH NElSON

MOTORS. INC.
Ph. 992-2114
Pomeroy

are.a . , Reqardless of ex.
pertence, arr mall D. I. Pate,
Pres., Tex~s Refinery Corp.,
Box 711 , Fort Worlh, Texas
76101.
. 12-t0-41p

.EARTH MOVING

For Rent

•

Dorer &amp; End l01der work,
ponds, basement, land-

TRAILER ~paces ; extra large
lots, S25 a month, Velma

scaping. We have 2 size : ,

Zuspan , Mason , W. Va .

•

...•

~"

(1)1172 ir NU..

••

. .

1~.~~

"It's GOT to be Henry Kissinger . Who else could it be?"

BRUCE 810SSA1

GOP Must.Watch
The Governorships
.

'

-

By BRUCE BIOSSAT

WASHINGTON i NEA l
With nine of the country's 10 biggest gov.ernorships up
in 1973-74, it looks as if the Republicans are going to press
some of their veteran incumbents to run again to have
real h'ope -of keeping their present 5-5 split or recapturing
the advantage.
In 19Ei9 the GOP held nine of the 10. only Texas being in
Democratic hands.
Three- Pennsylvania, Ohio and Florida- slipped away
in 1970 and Gov. Richard Ogilvie's close loss this fall
dropped Illinois from the GOP list.
Samplings taken at the Republicans' winter Governors
Conference here suggest that some of their veterans are
indeed almost ready to give it another try in 1974.
Massachusetts Gov. Francis Sargent says he is leaning
that way and so does Gov. William Milliken of Michigan.
Such moves by them would amount almost to third-term
bids, since both were elevated from lieutenant governorships early in 1969 when President Nixon pulled their
governors into his Cabinet
Less clear is New York Gov . Nelson Rockefeller's in·
tent, though the chances of his seeking a fifth four-year
term seem to be mounting . His aids told me as far back
as the summertime GOP .national convention that he was
entertaining the thought seriously. .
"
Assuming he serves through his pr sen't term to the end
of 1974, he will by then have become the governor of longest tensure in U.S . history-with 16 years. The present
record is 15.
If he bids for 20 years in 1974 , he'll have something
more on his mind than record tenure. At 64 today , he looks
and acts as vigorous as ever. lf given a fifth term , and
the odds would favor him heavily, he would be 68 by
presidential nominating time in 1976, yet there are several
party leaders who think he can 't be Ignored in that
reckoning, especially if Sen . Charles Percy of lllinois
falters as the choice of the GOP's progressive wing .
Rocky, a solid Nixon backer and a man whose st;~te
gave the President 59 per cent of its 1972 iJresidential vote,
is much more acceptable to the party's conservative
elements than he used to be.
In California the outlook is less promising . Gov . Ronald
Reagan, also aging though still a bit short of 62, has said
he won 't run again . If he stays with that, his state would
really be up for grabs in 1974, with both parties fieldin g
several candidates and none on either side standing out
impressively.
.
With the 1976 presidential battle following closely , it
would be a critical place lor the GOP to lose its grip on
the governorship.
New Jersey Gov . William Cahill insists here that he
hasn 't made up his mind about 1973 when his seat is up.
He probably would have a crear edge if he ran .
If he doesn't, it could be bad news. Winning Republicans
have been scarce at the governorship level in New Jersey ,
If the Republicans hit on a good California nominee and
Rockefeller, Sargent, Milliken and Cahill all go and do
as well as expected , the party may then be set to regain
big-state advantage .
Democratic Gov. William Shapp of Pennsylvania has
been something less than a smash . If Republicans can
coalesce around a promising contender quickly, they have
a good shot there .
In Ohio, Gov. John Gilligan Is suffering the ill fortune
which seems to attend most governors who slap on an
income tax. He' s another vulnerable Democrat
This year the Republican contender in Texas grabbed
48 per cent of the vote, giving some GOP planners the
idea the state may be ready to turn their way , They had
Florida for a term, but the 1970 Democratic winn er , Gov.
Reuben Askew, may be hard to dislodge .
The veteran incumbent Republicans hold the key to
their p~rty ' s prospects . If they play good soldiers, the
1974 mood will be upbeat across the board .

Notice
WANTAPS
INFORMATION
DEADL.INES
KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp; WIGS,
.S P.M . Dey Before Publication .
SPECIAL S MONTHLY .
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
PHONE HELEN JANE
Cancellation- Corrections
BROWN
, MIDDLEPORT .
Will be accepted untll9a .m. for
OHIO 991-Sll 3.
Day of Publication
12-3-tfc
REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserves the
r ight to edit or reiect any ads
enclosed porch sale ; Aunt
deemed objet:tlonal. ThP ONE
Jemima
toaster cov~rs, rag
publisher Will not be· respons iblE
dolls, Chrislmas decorations,
for more than one incorrect
new and old miscellaneous;
insertion .
RATES
starts Thursday, Dec. l41h
For Want Ad Service
and sell till ail gone ; Mabel
S cents per Word one Insertion
Pickens, across from Stale
Minimum Charge 75c
Park In Syracuse.
12 cents per word three
12-12-31c
·consecutive Insertions.
18 cents per word six con
·secullve Insertions .
25 P.er Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid with In 10 days .
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$1.50 for 50 word minimum .
Each additional word 2c .
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per
Advertisement.
OFFICE HOURS &gt;

house, ad~lts
only ; phone 992-5592,
12-5-tlc

3 ROOM furnished

new mobile homes, never
lived in; phone 992-2511. .
12-5-ftc

TWO

-

HOUSE, 4 roorns and bath, 1616
Lincoln Heights ; phone 742-

BARGAIN CENTER

'

;

Poine""'_Home &amp; Auto

LAYAWAY FOR XMAS
Open to7; closed Mondays

OpeniTIU
Monday thru S.lurdly
606 E. Main, Po111eroy,O,

Discount priced.

ot,\ lt7J "r HU , loot.

THE CAD(;T TRAINING

On MitsfAmeriatnC.rs
-GUARANTEED-

~!SA

G000 IDEA .

CONGRATULATIONS,
· MIS$ S!ZiMORE...

· Phone 992-2094, .

...ON YOUR.

PWMBING
HEATING

PARTY PLANNING?

Concrete Work
Remodeling

Care- Free.
· Party
Prepara'tion&amp; at a Low,
Low Cost ·- _ Whether It
be a Wedding ' • Anniversary geMogelher
or a Special Holiday,
we will cater delicious
dishes to•your home
or pa~ty rooms.
CALL 992-5786

AND THAT

... BUT I SOMETIMES lt!INK
HE 1S A LimE 'ri:JLING

RON HARPER
AAS

!1-E

FOR TillS JOB. _,..

IMKII\kaS OF AGOOD OFFICER... )

FORMATIVE
YEARS!

•v1

L£T US DO ntE

CATERING

Chase Hdwe. Co.
Phone992-251i
or 992-3918

PAPER Hanging and painting ;
For Sale
Arthur Musser, phone 74212 10 6t
· - p · 1970 HOMETTE 12 x 60 5223.
r
12-12-3otp
TRAILER, Brown ' s Trailer
housetraller. 2 bedroom, wilh
Court ; phone 992-3324,
or wilhoulair-conditionero and
12-10-ttc
washer ; pay oil ap- WILL CUT or trim trees,
:::-:---::--- -- - - proximately S3,700; Farfesa reasonable. Also clean ouf
POMEROY,
OHIO
' .
FURNISHED 2 bedroom
electric combo organ and basements, attics and cellars.
apartment, _adults only,
arnplifier. S300 ; phone 9Y2· Phone 949-3221.
11 -22-JOtc
Middleport ; phone 992·3874,
3685.
POMEROY
12-12-ttc
12-6-6tp - - - - - - - -- G &amp; E APPLIANCE Repair ;
repair of ail laundry equip·
6 ROOM house with bath, r
~UTO
HOME
.
menl , refrigeration equip located in Middleport , phone
ment and house· wiring; call
992-2094
742-5983.
614-992-6050.
12-12-31p
11 -24-JOtp 606 E. Main Pomeroy
ON PANTS &amp; JEANS
3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
ELNA and White Sewing
unfurnished apartments .
Machines ... service on all
Phone 992-5434.
Boy 2
and
Furnace Controls
makes . Reasonable rates .
4-12-ttc
--·~· Pairs
The Sewing Cenler, MidHUMIDIFIERS
dleport. Ohio.
1
·I -PAIR FREE
11 -16-tlc
Hot Water Heaters
The best buy in the area·.
Stop In and See Our
For Sale
Plumbing
Have slacks &amp; jeons for the
Floor Display.
OO.ZER and back hoe work,
MIXED hay ; phone 992-7692.
whole family, Save OneElectrical Work
ponds
and
septic
tanks;
dll·
12-10-6tc
Third.
ching service; top soli, fill , ~EE US FOR: Awnings, storm"
9.
_
POMEROY
dirt,
limestone; B&amp;K Exdoors and wl~dows, carporls,
STOCK your aquarium now at
Phone
992
-5367;.
cavating.
1i1ii11
Jack
W.
Carse~.
Mgr,
marquees, aluminum sldinQt
our Dollar Sale; Showalter's
Dick Karr , Jr .
and railing. A Jacob, sali!S
Phone 992-2181
. ·
Wet Pet Shop, Chest.er, Ohio.
9-1-lfc
representative. For , free
12-10-61c
estimates, phone Ch'arles
SINGER
A~tomallc sew ing- - - - - ' -- -- " -'
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V.
992-2448
machine. Like new in walnut SEWING MACHINES. Repair
MODERN 5-PC. breakfast
set;
Johnson
and Son, Inc.
!
cabinet
.
Makes
design
slitservice,
all
makes.
992·2284,
will
sacrifice
;
phone
992-2961
Pomeroy,
·
1'2-ttc'
ches, zig zags, buttonholes,
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy,
alter 5 p.m.
blind hems, overcasts, etc.
Authorized Singer Sales and
NO HUNTING or trespass! ng on -:-;;-;;-;-~:;-:::-::---::1_2---:
l0·3tc
$85 . Call Ravenswood 273-9521
Service. We Sharpen Scissors. •BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
lhe Jay Hall Farm oft New CAR RADIO, CB . radio, AKC
or 273-9893.
3-29-llc, Septic tanks Installed. George
Lima Road ; reason 8 head or black registered fernale toy
(Bill) Pullins. Phone 992-2478,
11 -30-tfc
cattle have disappeared ; poodle, spayed; phone 9924-2S.tfc
SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
a1 nyon ~ ha ving any in- 5947.
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
1
orma 1 ton pease
get In touch .
J2.12-3tc
CONCRETE
Pets For Sale
·cLEANED, · REPAIREb . , EADYcMIX
with me . Overt Pullins, -----,-,--- - - delivered
right
to your
MILLER
SA~;I}ATION,
Manager.
~·
.. POODLE
puppies AKC;
proiec~;o , Fut-.and ·euy,. Fr;e
STEWAR;r,
H...,
..
PHONE,
1955
CHeVROLET
,
rebut
II
apricot,
black
sl)ver;
.
"1
.
1210 1
'
~
es1f'mti 1 e~one ·f:f2-3H4.1
- -6 P eng1ne, 1 set side pipe, $40; " hold ' till ChrTstrnas; 'pH61 e 662·303S~
Goeglein 1·1le'ady-Mix Co :,
J im Chadwell, Rt. 1, Reeds- 992 _5443
·
10-4-lfc
YOUR distributor for " Build A ville, Ohio ; phone 667-3652.
Middleport, Ohio.
·
11 -,9-ftc AU 1OMUts 1Lt: msurance been
Town" fun kits is now ready
6-30-ttc
12-12-Jic
to lake your or~er. Special
cancelled?
Lost
your
male toy poodle puppies, 'operator's license? Call 992- SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
rates for schools, Institutions,
American slereo-radio AKC
warmed
and shots, well-bred, 2966,
clubs and organizations; for EARLY
REASONABLE rates, Ph. 446combination, AM-FM radio, 4
more information phone 992$75.
Phone
Coolville 667-6214,
6-lS-tlc
4782, Gallieolis, John Russell,
speaker
sound
systern,
4
7414 .
12·7·121c ---,---- - - - Owner &amp; Operator.
speed automatic changer.
12-10-31c
5-12-lfc
Balance 577 .59 . Use our
Real Estate For Sale
budgel
lerms.
Call
992-7085.
Mobile
Homes
For
Sale
PARASOL Boutique Salon on
12-l 2-61 c CASH paid for all makes and BY OWNER - 'tn .Coolville, 3 c:: BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Rt. 7 next to Skate-A-Way
bedroom horne, attached
Complete Service
Roller Rink , Make your MODERN
garage, permaslone front,
1 t t 1 t
models of rnobile homes.
Phone 949-3821
.
wa nu s Yradio,
e s ereo-4
Phone area code 6H'423-95''L
Christmas and New Year's
split level, l'l2 baths,
Racine, Ohio
radio,
AM-FM
•
appo intments early, Open
speaker sound systern, 4
4-13-tlc fireplace, hardwOOd· floors,
Crill Bradford
Tuesday lhru Saturday and
carpet, new dishwasher, __,__,_,.,....,
speed automatic changer. - - - - - - - - 5-1-tfc
Tu.esday evenln~ by ap Balance $69 .57 , Use our 1970 MOBILE home, like new, automatic washer, dryer.
potnlment; also wrll be open
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
wilh air-conditioner, washer ; central air condlflonlng 1 gas O'UELL WHEEL alignment
evenings from December 19th
12-12-6tc
lot may be rented; phone 985- hot water heat, drilled well,
located at Crossroads, Rt . 124.
4248.
thru lhe 22nd by appoinlmenl.
city water lap. 30 x 40 block
Complete front end service,
Christmas Special - Instant
garage ; two lots ; phone 667up and brake service.
tune
TO lay-off, 8 track stereo -=====.:===:1:2-:8_-6_:,.1p 3130; priced on Inspection.
Conditioner lor your hair, DUE
Wheels balanced elecin walnut console; pay ._
regular $1 , special ol SOc.
12-lO·Jic
tronically .
Ail
work'
balance or $98.80 or pay S8 per
Sandra Trussell Kerns ,
guaranteed.
Reasonable,
phone
992-5331.
•
Air
Conditioners
month
;
Operator. Phone 98S-414L
TWO houses- one 6 rooms, lVz
rates. Phofie 742·3232 or 992·'
12-12-tfc
12-10-121c
•Awnings
bath, full basement; one 5
3213,
rooms, l'h bath, on Rt. 35
7-27-tfc
JUST taken In deluxe Zig-Zag
•Underpinning ·
CARPENTER'S Market
near
new hospital; selling due
sewing
machine . This
previously Sellard s Market
to sickness; phone 992-2936
em - 'complete mQbile hQme
machine
darns,
after
2 p.m.
now accepts USFA Food
brolderles, makes but- · •se~vlce ~ plus gigantic'
Stamps.
'
12-10-Jic
tonholes, all without at Real Estate For Sale
tachments ; pay balance ol 'display of mobile homes
12'7-6tp
S38.50 or pay S6 per month; _''l'ways available at ...
AN ACRE lot,l'/2 miles North of
fairgrounds on old Rl . 33;
HAYMAN'$ Auclion - a good
phone
992-5331
.
MILLER
with 1970 65xl2 3 bedroom
pla ce to go each Fr iday
12·12-tfc
Windsor mobile home with
even ing , 1 p.m. at Laur~l
MO.BILE HOMES,
expando. Phone 992-6615.
Cliff on old l&lt;t , 7, 1 mile west NOW WRECKING the former
of Rock Springs Fa irground .
12-B-6tc
t220 Washintlon Blvd.
Epple' s Grocery Slore
10-10-llc
BELPRE,O.
bu i lding in Pomeroy . All 423-7521
.muse In Long BoHor\t"plione'
kinds ol building materials
985-3529.
I
WILL do babysitting In my
for sale on the job including 2
6-11
-tfc'
home, any week day ; phone
and 3 ln . heavy material, Auto Sales
742-3952.
sheeting and cherry stair
12-10-6tc
railing ; call 992-5946 or 882· 1966 V·8 INTERNATIONAL
110 Mocllltnic St.
3219,
engine (266 cu. In,) and 4
·speed
transmission;
com.
11
-10-tlc
.
P0111eroy,
Ollto4S7"
Wanted To Buy
plete ; phone 992-7384 after 3
N-1-C-E
p.m.
OLO Furniture, oak tables, 1972 ZIG-ZAG Sewing machine
6GI E. Mlltn
~
3
BEDROOMSWith large
organs, dishes, clocks, brass left in layaway . Beautiful
i2-8-6tc
Pomeroy ~
closets. Has a nice bath,
beds, or complete households. pastel color , full size model.
Write M. D. Miller, Rl. 4, All built-in lo. buttonhole, do 1972 MUSTANG with srort roof,
kitchen with dishwasher,
6,000 miles ; sill under
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271. stret ch sewing and fancy
CLOSE TO GAVIN
automatic aas fired hot
warranty ; factory air and
3 B.R,, bath, new FA fur ·
water heating, baSef!lent,'
6-28-tfc slllching . Pay just 548.75 cash
with
extras;
or terms available . Trade-ins loaded
nace, dining roorn, •ullllly R.,
carport, alid fenced ytll'd.
automatic transmission, 351
accepled. Phone 992-5641.
porches , paneling, tiled.
Only a few years old,
motor, perfect condltioo , 1971
lielp Wanted
12-6-6tc
$20,000.00.
Rec. Room, JUST $9,800.00,
MG Midget Roadsler con. -- -- -.-:-:-:--·-RENOVATED
LARGE LOT
MFN 18-24: LEARN CON - .VACUUM
vertible, U,OOO miles; loaded
Cleaner
new
1972
l
story
trame
and
block,
2
3
BEDROOMS
- Nice size ·
5TRUn i(IN SKil LS FOR
with extras, 4 speed ; perfect
modeL Complete with all
B.R
.•
bath,
beautiful
kitchen,
COMBAT ENGINEERING
cl0$el
In
each.
Large
Modern
condition. Will sacrifice as I
cleaning tools. Small paint
dining
bar,
26
fl
.
llv.
roorn
JOB IN EUROPE . Today's dam
bath,
utility
room.
Concrete
am
on
my
way
overseas.
age in shipping . Will take
Army will train competent
and fireplace ~ Good location,
front porch . Nearly an acre
Phone 992-3821.
$27 cash or budget plan
young men In the coml?at ava liable. Phone 992-5641.
carpeted throughout. Sl2,500.
of ,nice loylng land. Only
12-10-3tc
engineering lield . .And
$16,000.00.
'
12-6-61c '
IMMEDIATE
guMantee a job In Europe . -~-.--~-­
1967 D(JDGE Station Wagon,
YOUR
PROPERTY
AP
POSSESSION
You'll assist or engage in the ~=========-1
1966 Olds Toronado; phone 4 B.R., l'h bath, dining R, ·
COULD HAVE BEEN
992-5367.
'
constructi on and main - Give the man In your life that
HERE, IF YOU HAD
tenance ol road s. bridging, gun he wants for Christmas.
12-12-41c utility R., gorage, arrporl, · LISTED WITH US,
close io shopping. Close to
she lt er s and structures .
REC. ROOM
· There are lots of benefits, too .
We have some nlte ones in '70 V.W,, gOOd condition, $1,000 playground . ASKING
FIREPLACE
I.ivlng
Like 30 days paid vacallon a stock ,
$12.800.00,
'
flrrn ; phone 992-3401.
carpeled,
·l
bedrooms,
birch
year. If you' d like to learn
Remington
BUILDING SITES
12-12-5tc
kitchen
w)th
cook
units.
llletlme skills while you live
30 Acres, just out ot
Winchester
Stainless double sink, s~y,
~nd work in Europe, Today' s
Pomeroy, Chester woter
Ithaca
ail
on· one floor . Gas tqrtid
Arm y wa~ts to \oln you. Call
Real Estate For Sale
available. THIS YOU MUST .
air
tumace. Asking only
collect SS G. C ark 593-3022.
Marlin
SEE TO APPRECIATE.
12-7-6tc
HOUSE FOR SALE, 114 B-rick $76,800,00.
S16,500.11Gve
in I lew dayi.
Savage
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio; brick
LAND
CONTRACT
BUILDING
Beretta
house, 3 bedrooms, excellent In STORAGE
MEN
18-H :
BECOME
town,
several
Iota, and A • .s .to 50 ACRES - MOO.OO
locatioo, close to school and
PROFICIENT
WITH
down arid 559.31 a 111onth.
Fias
city ; contact Lou Osborne or rentats,,paylng as of now $90
POWER _ GENERATORS.
IUCRIS '
f)!!r
month.
Out
of
flOOds
and
call 992-5898.
WORK IN EUROPE OR Open MOn.lhru Thursday I
4,
BEDROOMS
- Beth, frea
KOREA. Today's Army neo!ds 1o S. Fri. and Sal. llq I.
11·26-lfc gOOd location. CALL US ON
well
and
all
minerll5.
gas
THIS ONE. 18.200.00.
men who want a challenge.
ts
fenced.
Asking
L•nd
WANTED '"
· Men to learn the tun ·
$15,000.00,
10
ACRES
In
Langsville.
Phone
Hon1e belwMn Pomeroy ond
damenlals of electricity and
992-7791.
Athens, Ohio, will jlay top,
Its application to portable
12-lO·Jic price on this property. Boyer'
generating equipment. We'll
AVOID THE RUSH, BUY
pay r,ou a good salary while
out of county. CALL
·
10 ACRES, just off Rl. 33;
NOW BEFORE SPRING
you earn , Plus lots of other
HENRY E. CLELAND
mostly level, barn, garage,
Pomeroy, Ollio
EVERYONE WILL Wf\lift i.
benefits. Like JO days paid
REALTOR
out - cell~r. 2 sheds, home has 3
992-2975
PLACE THEN.
.
vacation a year, II you'd like
Olfla 992·225t,
the challenge and excitement ' - - - - - - - - - - - ' bedrooms, bath, dining room,
lfnoanswer9H-2,.._fl5.
of living ond' _.king In
·
. new forced air lurnace, 42ot
porches; The Buy of the Year,
HELEN L. Tl4FORO
anolher country, Today's COAL, Llmes_lone, Excelsior
$8.900; Cleland Real Estate, 2 SALESMEN TO SELL
ASSOCI4TI
'
Army wants to j'oln you. Call Salt Works, E. Main Sl.,
YOUR PROPERTY.
phone 992-2259.
collect S.S. G. Cork, 593·3022. Pomeroy. Phone, 992-3891.
NO SUIIOAy IIIOWflfGS
12-l2-61c
•·12-tfC
12-8-6tc
•
• '1""

HEATING &amp;
COOLING _

.

'5.55 .

· Rt.!"atcaution lighl"
TUPPERS PLAINS
. Used furniture, appliances.
Clean &amp;_guaranteed.
NEW FURNITURE
Sota Beds &amp; Recliners .

5092.

•••THtiiY WEI7e IN A

TM~oN!

gv1ACI(!!

•

Tl\ESE SAL.OM£-/&amp;JRGERS
ISAS 1ll6N AS THAT L.l'L
CRITTER HERSELF PPOB'L'f

WOULDeE-

SHAMMY'S
CATERING SERVICE
'

nHEIL"

8:30a .m . lo 5 :00p .m . Da il y.
8:30 a.m. fo 12 :00 Noon
Saturday .

dozers, 2 size loaders. Work done by hour or contract,
Free l!stl111ates. We also
haul fill dirt, top soil. Du111p
trucks and low-boy lor hire.
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3525
after 7 p.m. or phone 992S2Jl.

11 -29-JOip

BANK!!

Wheel Alignment

KUHL'S

· mature man In Pomeroy

1 MEMJ i'&gt;TER
TH£ SHOT · PUT
COMPETITIC/oJ I

Business Services

qualifications and experience

lo Box 729-B. c-o The Dally
Sentinel. Pomeroy., Ohio
45769.
12-8-6tp
-:;T:;:E-cX::A-;S-;;R;:
E;:
F~
IN
-:-:E:;:.R::':Y':"":C~
O RP.
offers opportunily for high
tncome PLUS cash bonuses
and convention trips to

- ' - - - - ''"--..;.·.....-..
- - - - - - ------,,--- " '..

HERE TO TH'

~~~~~~~~~
SPEND TIME
EXPm
SAVES's
..
.

EXPERIENCED girl tor olllce
work wllh knowledge or
bookkeeping rnachlnO$; apply
by leiter only slalmg

OPEN EYES. 1:00 P.M.
f'OMEROY, OHIO

PLAV HIM BACK OVER

'IE GOT A NIBBLE, TATER ..

HANG ON TIGHT!!

el( -

pericnccd and honest, do not

Pomeroy Motor Co.-&lt;!-'----

not

if

•

1968 CHEVY BELAIR
$995
St. Wagon, 2 seats. V-8, std. tra ns., good tires, radio, grn .

,....-....,....·- -,,----'-----,--,---'-----:--::-.-------t

Help Wanted

1-1&amp;1'. BABY, ~.1\l"R€
'tlU DOIIJG. TO/JIG&gt;\T ?

- -.=-_:. -.·:;
:. --: ;:;:;:;==:::__,

IS li /N:AILY

NECESSA~

TO FII.L OUT
iAAi W~O\..E

l

- - - -- -

FO~M1'

®MONSIEUR
PJ.ATI, WE
HAVC A

OFFICE SUPPLIES

N01l-I IN0, EXCEPT HE 15 5TAYIN0

MAKE IT A SIJrrE WI'TH A
VIE':~ANDC~RGE: ALL
BILL::&gt; 1011-lE. (30NNA!
CO\Ifl&lt;\NY. I A"' 'THEIR
F!EPRESE:NT,A·nvE.

AT THE POSHEST

HOTE:L IN PARIS!

FURNITURE

Card of Thanks
I WISH to thank everyone lor ail
their nice cards, letters and
flowers that I received while a
. palient at lhe Holzer Medical
Cente~ ; I also wish to thank
Dr , Patterson and all the
nurses.
Nellie Brogan
12-12-ltc

Lost
LOST or stolen, G78 15" truck
tire and wheel in Sumner,
Chesler, Middleport area;
contact Lloyd Blackwood, 985·
3805 or 992-2148.
12-10-3tp

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
o.

I

We talk to you
like a person.

------

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

Moore -Morrow

papa'! I keep a· e~e
on t h' t reaGure, Gon! You
run riqht alonq!
ll. ·l l.
,, ' "' _

'

J

------

Pis

Rosenbaum-Meadows
Holler -Rawlings
56
Blakeslee-Hoy I
55
Fullz-Benlley
40
Carsey-McDonald
32
High Ind. Game - Men : Roy
Holter 219, Russ Moore 211 , Vic
Wipple 193 ; Women : Betty
Smith 174, Daisy
B. 169,
Virginia H. 169,
High Series - Russ Moore
568, Roy Holter 522. Fred
Morrow Sl4 ; Women : Belly
Smith .490, M.ary Morrow .414,
Daisy Blakeslee 411 .
Team High Game
Blakeslee -Hoyt.
Team High Series - MooreMorrow.

A th ought for the day :
English writer Samuel Butler
sa id , "A hen is only an egg's
way or making another egg."

,,

T~&amp; L.A~T

TIME ~&amp;WA!&gt;

iN,J&lt;E 5.6.1D THE
A'.RKING 1!\ETER
WAS A ~~F- &gt;O)R~'ST!

Virgil B.

'

ACROSS
1. Fellow
5. "It Came
Upon a
Midnight

"

10. American
inventor
11. Word with
· share or
house
13. Swedish
wine
measure
14. Each
15. King (Sp,)
16. Eel (O.E. I
17. Briny
18. Had a
threebagger
20. Young
Cratchit
21. Political
cartoonist
22. Wine's
delicacy
(Fr. I
23. Terrify
25. Certain
in111ate
26. Heavy
book
27. Bombay
attire
28. Allar constellation
29. Withdrew
32. Freight
weight
n . 'Mctri('
land

DICK TRACY
ENDS

·Teaford, Sr.
Broker

OKAY, 'IOU 5TUNTEP PWARI',
NAME '1001 PRa! ALL Tiff
HAM8UR~ lOU CAN

EAT7 HOW AIIOIJT A TON

~~:!&gt; Of r!OCK RI!CO!I'i:&gt;SV

!'LORI
ilSH. U.••ST. '
Di6 MOINES,
IOWA,
~DQIW

J&amp;MID~;a..t.::::!!:! .,..jc

38. Become
profound
39. Latvian
40. Do
business
41. So that's
how!
(2 wds.)

UnocramblethneblrJumblet,

one letter to eech oquan, to
form four ordinary word1.

l

DOWN
1. Diagram
Yesterday's Answer
2. Four·
bagger
8. Christmas 25. Lingerie
3. Christmas
carol
trim
carol
(2 wds.)
27. Tranquil
(4wds.)
9, Get
29. Blustered
4. Through
12. Finishing 30. Bring
5. Swiss·
tool
joy to
style
18. Otherwise 31. house
19. Trim
Alighicri
6, Cantered
2Z. Father
38. Brazilian
7. Lord of
23, Declared
tree
U . Small
37. the
Hebrews
crown
MacGraw

1'VIW

e ~'1;-.~-,;:;-

I I

I I tJ I
IEN1'0DE

~

.WHAi iHE

CE!I:AMICS l'o'ORKER
WA&amp; PEVel.OPINe.

I I j II

t~=Prill~·~~~~~~~~~~~IIISWII~~=-11 or r x1
l'llYN1:4

'i

,1

I.

~

I, I,

...

r1

y,.,, ..,d.,.•

Now lfl'lllle the elrcle41e114R
to form the 1urpriM wwer, u
IUUtlled by the ...... earloon.

lumbl•" IUIAL ADMIT ENSIGN IOUGHT
An~wer1

Jf'hGI htt 'nitl all rlwt a11rolngy
bull K~C~I-"TAURUS"

JWT 50MEIIOW I FEtL 111AT
I DON'HEALLI( WANTTO GQ
TH~ THE WfiOLE f'SVCHIATRIC
fjiL 'ftlU I(N(]W WHAT! MEAN?

measure

' ''

·:

"

'
,,•

' I
'

AXYDI.BAAXR
Is I. 0 S G F E I. L 0 W
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
userl for lho lhree L's, X (or the two O's, etc. Single lellers,
' , ·, oph&lt;•s, Ihe length and formation of Ihe words ore all
hints. Each day the code letters are diiTerrr'

AilGOLliTEL'&lt; ...JUST !iTEP

OVER HERE, PLEA!iL

CNL NWZZV' ,,(;
VH CNI. YWS JND
PGVLST . NI.

KWS

YVHLG
HWQI.H

••
••

,.",,•

,.,.
.;
'•
'•

.

DS

LWGCN

BZ

LQI.GA

YWEI. ,- GDXLGC

''

"'

'

,.

L,

HNLGJilllT
(

'·'

''

6QOO, SOUND,
!M[~E~L~ AD'fiCE

CRYPT#V\a "•' I ...:s

fft.ms

'

·C~

.
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Het·e'A
how to work it:

TIJC:b Sales

.,'

c..

3f. Guido's
note
35. Hire
S7. Sen.
Cranston
of
California

Gaafely

~...,......~~ ,....., '!)

(C 1972 .King Fenturn S)•ndlcRtc, tn r . l

by THOMAS JOSEPH

----·-- - - - -

I'INii·.Pil.Ylll! Tlil.I.
lolls__~I.E 01" I'.OE· ..

Yesterday'• Cryploquole: NOWADAYS THERE ARE
THREE CJ,ASSES: THE HAVES, THE HA VE-NOTS AND 'l'HB
CHARGE-ITS.- ANONYMOUS

~

- -- - -70
59

l..6TlNI~TOTHE

_1

•

____

Local Bowling
Wednesday late Mixed
December 6, 1912

.-

GASOUNE ALLEY

I
I

'

�·Now You Know

10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. 12,1972

Gerber will ·h ead Mid-Ohio
• •
Valley Mayor's Association
•

A Christmas dinner and
election of new officers
highlighed last night's meeting
of the Mid-Ohio Valley Mayor's
Association held at the Wilmar
Cafeteria in Parkersburg.
Mayor Clarence Gerber of
St. Marys, W. Va., was elected
president for 1973 after serving
as vice president during the
current year. Vice president is
Mayor James Schweiket,
Marietta,
who served as
secretary during 1972. The new
secretary is Mayor Donald
Barrett of Athens and the 1972
treasurer re-elected is Mayor
Margaret Bowersock of
Belpre.
Outgoing president, Mayor
William P. A. Nicely of
Parkersburg, was host for the
annual Christmas party and
served as master of.
ceremonies. He aLso conducted
the election and thanked his coofficers for their support
during his Ill-month term:
Mayor Curtis Ubi, Vienna,
W. Va., presented Mayor
Nicely a plaque in appreciation
of his services to the
association and commended
him for "a job well-done."
The dining room was
decorated for the Christmas
season and a steak dinner was
served to the 90 mayors,
spouses and guests attending.
Mayor Carl Rinehart, Pennsboro, W. Va. furnished
gla$Sware gifts to everyone.
The gifts, donated by the
Pennsboro Glass Co., were all
hand-blown. The ladies were

•

also presented . a box of . and stated that he betieves the
chocolates.
Mid-Ohio Valley Mayor 's
The program consisted of · Association is the very best or
music rurnished by a bar- its kind in West Virginia. The
bershop quartet the "River mayors working together have
·Bend Four" who sang selec· · been very successflll in obtions such as, "The Good Ole taining federal assistance and
Days " and "Daddy San g keeping abreast on h~ppenings
Bass".
in lhe area.
The Mid-Ohio Valley Mayors
Association was organized five . Mayors from the area atyears ago and is composed of tending were Mayor William
mayors in the Southeastern Baronick, Pomeroy.; r.,ayor R.
section of Ohio and adjoining E. Harless, Mason; Mayor
John Thorne, New Haven, and
section of West Virginia.
The newly elected president, Mayor Ludena Stollings,
Mayor Gerber, spoke briefly Vinton .

Funds total is reported
Active and Inactive Mid·
dleport Village funds as of Nov.
30 totaled $196,1194.14 village
clerk~treasurer, Gene Grate,
rep&lt;rted Monday night when
village council met In regular
session.
Receipts and expenditures
from each fund during the
month and the clerk·

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight, Dec. 1l
WHAT'S THE MATTER
WITH HELEN?

lTechnicolorl
Shelley Winter
Debbie Reynolds
(GP)

Colorcartoons
Show Starts 7 p.m.
Wednesday &amp; Thursday

December 13·14
NOT OPEN

treasurer's balance as of Nov.
30, respecUvely, follow:
General, $11,326.62, $1,561.96,
$44,732.19; cemetery, $414.23,
$551.96, f651.69; fire equipment, no receipts, $210.85,
$135.95; swimming pool, no
receipts, $114.30, $3,1164.21;
planning commission, no
receipts, $42.99, $330.01.
Street maintenance, $179.96,
$10,989.56, $2,113.119; sanitary
sewe~ 1 ,$~.0~~~2. $~,136.99,
$24,765.119; wale~. $6,355.95,
$6,273.64, $25,971.78; water
meter deposit trusts, $150,$175,
$6,36§.23; sanitary sewer
escrow, no receipts, no
disbursements, $59,671.86; fire
house. construction, no
recefpts, $6,726, $9,939.69;
general bond retirement,
$2,205.42, $1,455.38, $111,297.75.
Receipts for the month into
all funds totaled $24,667.10
while disbursements from all
funds totalf'd $33,039.14.

Supt. Charles Withers said,
"It's been ll years ago since
employes received a raise. We
asked all groups for ideas: This
is one time they've had a voice
in what's in the levy."
However,
after
full
discussion, nothing final was
determined.

Gerald Newland
died Tuesday
Gerald Howard (Red)
Newland, 67, Charleston, W.
Va., died there early today
following an extended illness.
Mr. Newland was born in the
Joppa area of Meigs County
M~rch 29, 1905.
Preceding him in death was
his first wife, Mary, in 1932.
Surviving are his wife, Alma
Barbara; his mother, Mrs.
Louise Newland, Tupp.ers
Plains; sister, Mrs. Mildred
Ingels, Bentonville, Va.; three
sons, Richard, Barberton, and
Roger and Jerry, both of
Charleston; five daughters,
Mrs.
Sandra
Britton,
Charleston; Judith. Ann, at
home ; Norma Newland,
Tul'pers Plains, and Mrs. Ilene
Osborn and Mrs . Irene
Wiersteiner,
both
of
Charleston, and six grandchildren.
Mr. Newland was a retired
emp,l~Y,e of. Qll~ont at ~e~~. W.,
Va , The body was taken to the
Cunningham Funeral tlome In
Charleston where
arrangements are being
completed.

a

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Pomeroy E·R squad was
called to East Main St., a\7:49
a.m. Tuesday £or Stanley
Aleshire who had £allen on icy
steps . He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where his injuries were being
evaluated this morning.
WOMEN TO MEET
The Xi Gamma Mu will meet
Thursday at 7:45p.m. at the
home of Shirley Custer.
LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown Pomeroy at 11 a.m.
Tuesday was 40 degrees, under
partially cloudy skies.
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No. 20122
Estate ot Hugh Everett Loud in
Deceased .
Notice Is hereby given that
Winifred J . Franklin of Rf . 1,
Amesv ille, Ohio , has been duly
appointed Executrix of the
Estate of Hugh Everett Loudin ,
deceased , late of Rt . 2.
Cheshire , Meigs County, Ohio .

• Creditors are required to file
' their clalms ,wlth said fiduciary
w ith in four months .
Dated this Bth
December 1972.

day

of

Mann ing 0 . Webster

Judge
Court of Common Pleas ,
Probate Di vision

11 1) 12, 19 , 26 , 31

THinKinG OF A new
../LEIGH •• THI/ YEAR?
Maybe you're wondering how
you can afford a new car and still
play "Santa" at Christmastime.
It's easy with an auto loan here.
You'll find our rates will save you
money, are most convenient.

INCLUDE MR. EDDY
"We want to be a part of
the Christmas bollday
season," said Mrs. Vilma ·
Pikkoja Monday, supervisor
of Mr. Eddy, U.e county
bookmobile.
Tbe
staff of tbe bookmobile
is urging· cblldrea to
take home boob to read over .
the Christmas boilday
season.
"We In no way want

children discouraged from
taking out books lor tbe
holiday season and keeping
them during this perlod
when they won't be Ia school.
Our books are just not happy
on the shelves," Mrs.
Pikkoja sald.

Football

Excess levy 1:llldecided
PT. PLEASANT - Proposed
salary increases and matching
money pertaining to the
proposed excess levy were
major points considered
Monday evening at a special
board of education meeting.
In addition to the five·
me~ber board comprised of
Stevens, Harry Siders, Charles
Eshanaur, Bill Withers and
Ray Fields, two new board
members-elect were invited
and were present. These in·
elude Bill Brady and Robert G.
"Bob" Adkins.
Also present to express ivews
were:
Adrian · La they,
president of the Mason County
School Service Personnel;
Sara Buffington, _president of
the Mason County Education
Association, and Elaine Rouse
and Jim Langdon of MCEA.

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Cue No. 20,814
Estat e of FRAN K E . TITU S,

(Continued from page 1)
empt Howard Coselle and
Monday Night Football this
time. The digging of moon
rocks is too dull -even to preempt a re-&lt;'un of a 1964 movie
and other routine fare on other
networks.
At
halftime,
Frank
Reynolds, looking hurried,
burst in with 30.seconds of live
pictures from the moon and
was quickly cut off so the fans
could be returned to the reruns
of weekend games.
"We're back live," said
Coselle, as he showed movies
of the Packers and Vikings.
"Oh, how this Green Bay
team, young.as it. is, has come
alive this season."
Cernan bored a third hole in
the moon, extracted a core in
the upper eight feet and inserted a probe in the hole.
He was amazed at how much
energy it tilkes to keep from
falllhg down l'ith the huge
backpack in one-sixth the
gravity. His bear! was beating
120 per minute, with peak
spurts to 150. Cernan said he
]VaS beginning to get droppy.
Instruments flew out of his
hand.
The earth continued to rotate
below him, a blue and green
sphere £ull of hwnans which
the spacemen could cover with
a thumb . Schmitt, the
geologist, said he was too busy
with rocks io look.
"And now it's all come down
to \hie.'' aal\1 GIHbrd, ••
Nan\ath moved his Jets lllllide
the Raiders 10, pushing up his
helmet in utter despair as· a
pass was dropped in !he end
zone.
"That's the end of the season
for the New York Jets," said
Coselle, thanking Roone Ar·
ledge, "the siowiDo crew" and
everyone else who had helped
make Monday night footbaU a
success.
After the late, late news,
Reynolds came back and
sbowed pictures of the two
planetary representatives
stumbling and falling down in
the barren ash heap that glows
like sUver at night.

DINNER PLANNED
The 70th anniversary aild
annual Christmas dinner of
Guiding Star Council 124,
Daughters of America, will be
held at 6 p.m. Thursday at the
lodge hall. Meat, rolls and
beverage will be furnished.
There will be a $1 gift ex·
change.

Deceased .
Notice Is hereby g iven that

Viv ian K . Titus , of Pomerov ,
Oh io. has been duly appointed
Executri x of the Estate of
Frank E. T itus., deceased , late
Of Melg! County , OhiO .
Cred itors are required to file
the ir claims with sa id fiduciary
within tour months .
Dated this 7th day of
December 1972.
Mann ing D. Webster , Judge
· Common Pleas Court
Pr,obate Ohdsion
Meig s County , Oh io
{121 12, 19. 26. 31

·eu 's plan criticized
By ntEOIJORE M. SfANGER
PARIS (UPI) - Peace
negotilitors broke up into three
different groups ·in Paris
suburbs today for the most
acUve day on record In talks
striving for Vietnam peace.
But a possible new setback
developed when President
Nguyen Van Thieu in Saigon
offered his own plan for settlement. The Communists in
Paris labeled' it "absurd and
unreasonable."
Henry
A.
Kissinger,
President Nixon's national
security adviser, and Hanoi
Politburo member Le Due Tho
met for more than four hours in
their continuing private talks
Monday. The U.S. delegation
said the men would meet
again today in Gil sur Yvette
following two sessions by other
negotiators schedule&lt;! for the
morning hours.
.
In one of the special
meetings, the U.S. deleg;~tion
said, Undersecretary of State

for Southeast Asian Affairs
William Sullivan and U.S.
delegation chief William
Porter were to meet at Neuilly
sur Seine with Hanoi
representative~ Nguyen Co
Thach and Xuan Thuy.
The other session, to be held
concurrently at choisy Le Roi,
brought together technical
advisers and experts from the
U.S.
and
Communist
delegations apparently to work
out minor details.
The talks In the past
generally have not lasted more

than a daily four-hour aeaalon
and neither side offered any
explanatloo for the sudden
jump.in the negotlatioo pace.
Nixon administration
sources in Washington Monday
continued to caution against
undue pessimism In the
progress of the talks and
Chinese Premier Chou En.Jai,
quoted by the French radio
station Europe' No. I, said in
Peking that a peaee agreement
could be reached "within two
or three days."
•
Thieu in an hour-long ad-

dress to the National AYembly
proposed a Christlll88 ln!ce
and exchange ol war pri8oner8
IXJt again rejected the U.S.·
Hanoi accord aMOUilCell In
October. He said peace could
oot come while North Vietnamese troops remain iii South
Vielnam, a provision oot dealt
with in the October riraft.
Conununist delegates to the
Paris peace lalks rejected his
cease4lre terms as an attempt
to delay pel!ce and called on
the United States to siiln the
pact Immediately.

·$50 ·Million kitty for
better schools asked -

handicapped youth of Ohio, with in!lationary factors so
including Increased op- they will not be forced to place
portunities for the handicapped additional burdena on the local
to prepare for employment and property
tax.
special
legal provisions which would recognition was urged for the
permit
more cooperation "critical education problems" ·
Two sentenced to
among school districts in the faced by urban districts,
education of handicapped "which require additional
Ohio reformatory
youngSieJll.
.
resources in the effort ld solve
- Additional expansion of serious behavioral and learJohn Adam Jacobson, 25, Rt.
vocatinal classes for high ning difficulties,"
1, Rutland, and Walter William
school Juniors and seniors,
Benson, 25, Rt. 3, Albany, each
-In recognition of major
further
expansion
.
or
career
·
were sentenced to two years
(\OUI"t decisions in other states
education
curriculums
for
requiring equality of fln!mclal
and not more than five iri the
students below grade 11 to resour'*s for the educalioo of
Ohio Reformatory upon
assist them in making wise all children, additional
arraignment before Meigs
· career choices and ap- modifications in the ~tate
County Common Pleas Judge
propria lion of state funds to Foundation Program are
John C. Bacon Monday. They
match locally-voted monies for needed to alleviate the
had pled guilty to cultivating
the construction of vocational di.sparl~ in resources among
marijuana without first obeducation facilities.
Ohio school districts.
taining a license. They were
- Formalizing, on a contin- Centralized bus bidding to
arrested Sept. 9. David Sheets,
uons,
regular
bui.s,
a
process
save the state $2 million a year
sheriff's deputy, took them to
which
would
provide
new,
in pupil transportation costs.
Mans£ield today.
expanding · knowledge and
~Restoration of full funding
Improved
methods
of
tesching
for special lelrning exCOW KILLED
in
a
fonn
readily
available
to
periences to aid disadvantaged
A 1200-pound cow was killed
·ohio's more than 100,000 pupiles. The $3)0 per pupil
Monday at ·7 a.m. on county
teachers.
authorized by law was
road 20 by a pickup truck
-Require
all
school
diatricts
decreased to $156 because of
driven northeast by Robert W.
to
offer
kindergarten,
more eligible students and
Reed, Pomeroy, Rt. 2, the
inasmuch
as
more
than
96
per
districts.
Meigs County Sheriff's Dept.
cent
of
the
state's
five-year
- Assistance In the funding
reported. The cow was owned
olds
have
access
to
these
of
basic classroom facilities for
by Edison Hart, Pomeroy, Rt.
learning experiences which needy districts and ~on·
2. There was damage to the
have proven to be amply struction funds to encourage
front of the truck. The driver
rewarding.
needed
school
district
was not injured,
-All school districts to be reorganization among smau,
recognized for additional poor districts unable to s~ply
PLEASANT VALLEY
creased
oppor1wliu..
for
tile
funding to permit 1llem to cope lheH flllldi.
DISCHARGES:
Stanley
,,1,,,,, iHIH.it:
",
•I'
l I' · '
'II
'"
Cook, Southaide; Mrs. James
Johnson, Mason; Mrs. James
Bump, Gallipolis; Paul Lutton,
Gallipolis; Eunice Rollins,
Leon; Mrs. George Baer, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Wymer
Newman, Point Pleasant; .
Wallie Schoonover, Gallipolis;
Josephine
Voss, · Point
Pleasant.
It was announced today by permitting, and should be
When
completed
the
PROGRAM NOTED
the owners of Galiia completed by May 1, 1913.
buildings will consist of 2 - 50
MASON - The Christmas Development I~c . , that plans
Included in the new foot by 200 foot steel buildings
program of the Mason are almost completed for a new buildings, known as "Spring finished with glass and brick
Assembly of God Church will shopping plaza. The new plaza Valley Plaza" will be a new fronts and with a colonial look.
be held at 7:30p.m. on Sunday, will be located 4\2 miles west of "Clothing Care Centre," (TM),
The owners are taking
Dec. 17. The public is invited. Gallipolis on U.S. Route 35.
the ultimate in coin-operated another step forward with their
It will be built on frontage laundry and dry cleaning confidence In the future growth
DINNER SI-.'T
recently acquired from Evans equipment. Also planned is of GaDia County.
Rock ' Springs Grange
Enterprises In rront of Spring office spaces of any size and a
Gallla Development Inc. Is
Christmas dinner will be held Valley Estates.
new fast food store. Space will owned by George Carter,
Thursday at the home of
Construction is expected to be available for other shops
CLUB TO DINE
Darwyn Enevoldsen, Tup~rs start Immediately, weather that can be designed for Forest Mullins and Merrill
TUPPERS PLAINS ..:. The
Evans, all' of Gallipolis.
tenants' requirements.
Tuppers Plains Community P!ain5.
Club will meet at 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday at the Wilmar
Cafeteria in Parkersburg for
dinner and a Christmas party.
Officers for the coming year
will be installed and a $1 gift
exchange held.

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Pomeroy E·R squad was
called to the Paul Baer
residence, Minersville Route 1,
at 3:28 p.m. Monday for Mrs.
Baer who was ill. She was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where she was admitted.

News ••• in.Briefs
(Continu~d

.'lltf ~ YOU m11. PARK i Rf I

r· .r

i_rom page 1}
·
Democrats in Congress' Joint Economic Committee say controls
should be li£ted immediately.
The Economic Stabilization Act, which gave the Pre:'ldent
authority to appoint the Pay Board and Price Commission as
monitors of the econOilly, expires April 30. The law can be ex· .
tended only with congreaaional approval. Treasury Secretary
George P. Shultz and Director caspar W. Weinberger of the
Bureau of Management and Budget told reporters Monday of the
Prsldent's lntenU0111.
.·
"I'm ruling out just going back to an ltncontrolled system
With a statement that everyone ought to behave in such and 811Ch
a fashion and hoping that they do,!' Shultz said.

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
state Board of Education
recommended Monday that the
legislature appropriate a total
of $50 inUIIon in new building
assistance funds for . schooLs.
The recommendation was ineluded in a IQ.point legislative
plan released by tbe board.
The board said additional
funding for all school diatricts
is needed "so they will not be
forced to place additional bur.·
dens on the local property
tax."
It pointed out that no new
buDding aid funds have been
appropriated by the legislature
since 1965.
The board recommended
that $40 million be set aside to
help school districts build
classrooms and another $10
million be nuide available for
construction "to encourage
small, poorer districts to
reorganize for efficiency
economy and Improvement of
educational quality."
The plan will be forwarded to
Gov. John J. Gllllgan and the
General Assembly,
The board outlined 10 "criti·
cal" areas and needs of
schooLs. They were:
_ Continued lnprovement
and expansion of services to
habilitate the handicapped
youth of OJiio, including in·

Plan new shopping plaza
west of city on Route 35

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
~very ·Day

This Week Until

THE MAIN STORE
THE TOY STORE
AND THE WAREHOUSE
ON MECHANIC STREB
..

Weatllf~l'

•

The largest moon rock
brOUght to Earth is called the
Muly Rock from Apolo 16. It
weighed 25.7 pounds.

enttne
Devoted To The lnlere,ds Of TherMeigs-Mason Area

VOL XXIV NO. 169

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1972

• •
IS SID

PHONE 992·2156

Washington flight and
report to the President

Oerk named by ·
COmmiSSlOners

Is roun

HAK's plane ready for

Racine area contests
, RACINE - Nine cash prizes
and a grand prize of an apHOME LIGHTING CONTEST
pliance will be awarded in a
1 wish to enter the Racine area Holiday
Racine Christmas home
Home Decorating Contest.
decorating contest sponsored
. this year by the Bend 0 ' the ·
Name
River Garden Club and the
auxiliary of the Racine Fire
Department.
Address
The contest is divided into
three categories, religious ,
My category : &lt;check oneJ Religious - non-religious and entrance
non-religious
entranceway - way. The top three winners in
each will receive cash prizes of . 1 ---:---------~----------'
$101 $5 and $3. The Columbus Residents must register ,
and Southern Ohio Electric Co. however, to be judged. The
is providing an electrical application from below may be
appliance to be awarded as the completed and mailed to Mrs.
• •
grand prize to the best Edward Simpson, Racine.
decorated home in the contest Anyone wishing further inarea to be judged by Mrs. John £or mation on the contest should
The Meigs County ComTerrell, Mrs. Lloyd Moore and call Mrs. Bert Grimm, Letart missioners Tuesday approved
Mrs. Robert Thompson of the Falls.
appointment of Elizabeth
Winding Trail Garden Club.
Judging will take place be- Hobstetter . as clerk of the
• The contest is open to tween 6:30 and 9:30 p.m. on county court effective Jan. 1,
residents inside the coporation Thursday, Dec. 21. Response 1973.
•
limits of Racine on its from contributors to the
In other business the comdownriver side, and to those in contest in order that prizes mission agreed to advertise for
Letart FalLs, Apple Grove, may be awarded has been bids for gasoline and diesel
Dorcas and areas in between. excellent, Mrs. Grimm said. fuel. Bids are to be submitted
by 9 a.m. on Dec . 26. They also
voted to advertise in the Daily
Sentinel specifications for a
motor grader for the Meigs
County Highway Department
(diesel engine driven motor
grader ) with bids to be subBy United Press International
mitted by 10 a.m. on Jan. 2,
KANSAS CITY, ~0. - THE {&gt;OCTORS REPOII,'fS say '1973.
fOI'IIUlr P.resldent lial'r)' S.'l'ruman Ia l!el'toualy Ill With a weak
A!tending: were Charles:.:a.
heart and his recovery Ls uncertain. But people in his native
Karr, Bob Clark and Warden
northwestern Missouri hav&lt;! £aith their No. 1citizen will recover. Ours, commissioners and
"He's a rugged guy who's hanging in there and he's going to Martha Chambers, clerk .
make it," Dr. Elbert C. Cole, preacher of the . Central United
Methodist Church in Kansas City Sllid Tuesday.
·
Truman 88, was reported sleeping quietly early today. The
latest medic'ai statement issued Tuesday night said, "His condition remains serious and could fluctuate within the category of
serious for some time."

JEN CEN1S .

•

o en

Big prizes offered in

Mostly c•uuuy a,nd windy
today with a chance of snoW .
flurries northeast highs in the
30s. Partly cloudy and cold
tonight with a chance of snow
rfurrles northeast lows 'Upper,
teens to mid 20s. Mostly sunny
Thursday highs lc the 30s and
low 40s.

. PARIS (UP!) - Henry A. Kissinger met with North Vietnam's Le Due Tho for the ninth time in 10 days today in a
climactic session which was to end the current round of secret
talks. Kissinger's plane was prepa~ed for a flight to Washington.
A spokesman at Orly Airport said Kissinger's plane was
scheduled to depart at 7p.m. (I p.m. EST) .
The respected French newspaper Le Figaro said Kissinger
was to confer with President Nixon, then present a new draft of a
Vietnam peace settlement to South Vietnamese President
Nguyen Van Thieu.
For the third day in a row technical experts from both sides
- believed hard at work on the precise wording of a new
agreement - met separately for 90 minutes in the same mansion
where Kissinger and Tho met later.
The two top negotiators There were persistent
began meeting at 10:30 a.m. reports that Kissinger had
and. t!~ree hours later were still 1·eached a compromise on the
cloistered inside the mansion sticky issue or North Vietowned by American-born namese troop withdrawals.
jeweler Arnaud Clerc. An This has been the major
American embassy van stumbling block to final set.
delivered wine and hampers of ll emen t of the marathon
rood £or the peace envoys about Vietnam war.
12:30 p.m .
A Communist diplomat said
At Orly Airfield , three it was up to Washington to
crewmembers of Kissinger's overcome Thieu's opposition to
U. S. Air Force jet went to the the draft accord negotiated in
aircrart early today for ground Paris. In rererence to Thieu 's
checks. They had flown the truce of£er, he said there had
plane here from Germany on been many truces in the past
Tuesday.
but they settled nothing .

Settlement in January?
WASHINGTON (UP I ) an
unexpected
Baring
breakthrough in the Paris
peace talks, a settlement of the
Vietnam war will come no
sooner than January, ad' n\(nislration officials are
saying now.
Their previous predictions of
a peace agrelljllenl ready for

signing by Christmas might
have been optimistic, wellplaced administrative sources
say.
The White House and Slate
Department have declined to
speak publicly about prospects
of settling the· war be£ore
Christmas as they had several
(Continued on Page 12)

LIGHTED CROSS HIGH over Pomeroy oo Shulter HW 'h u symbolized men's uplrationa
for moral improvement through the Christian faith since 1~0.

Lighted Cross above Pomeroy symbol of-faith

ATLANTA - ISOLATED CASES OF influenz? closely
resembling the new "London Flu" virus have b~n reported in
five major l,f. S. cities, the Federal Center £or D1sease Control
(CDC) said Tuesday.
The strain has not been successfully treated with any
specific vaccine yet available. The CDC said the_cases showed up
in Memphis, Tenn. ; Kansas City, Kan.; Baltunore, Md. ; AnchOrage, Alaska ; and Seattle, Wash.
CINCINNATI- OFFICIALS AT CHRIST HOSPITAL here
said today "permanent microscopic tests" of tissues re~oved
from the lung of Cincinnati catcher Johnny Bench confll1lled
there is "no evidence of . a malignancy." Bench underwent
surgery Monday for a lesion on his lung. Immediate tests showed
that the lesion was not malignant. The report today was for
' tissues around the lesion which proved to be benign.
Bench was reported to have spent a very comfortable night
and the tube in his chest has been removed. The Reds star has
aLso been moved from the intensive care unit into a regular
hospital room. ·
UNITED NATIONS- DIPLOMATS PREDICTED the U. N.
General Assembly will vote approval today of a United States
proposal to reduce its share of the world org~ni2ation's budget by
more than six per cent - from 31.52to 25pct.
But the Soviet Union continued lobbying up to the last minute
against the proposed reduction. The vote came several weeks
after the U. S. Congress itself voted to reduce the Am~rlcan
share of the U. N. budget and after the Asse~bly s admlnlstrative ahd budget committee voted 67-30 w1th 32 abstentions on Dec.1 to go along with Congress.
CHARLESTON, W. VA.- AN EMBAR~ AGAIN~T all
swine entering the state from P~lvan1a was unposed
Tuesday by state Agriculture Corruruss1oner Gus Douglass to
prevent an outbreak Gf hog cholera.
.
.
At the same time, however: Douglass lifted a blackout
inst feeder pigs sent in from ne1ghbormg Kentucky. Douglass
:~1 federal officials had traced interstate movements of swine
ir a garbage-feeding setup in New Jersey to and through three
li::tock markets in Pennsylvania, and detected the cholera.
CINCINNATI- COACH PAUL BROWN ~id Tues~y the
Cin . nati Bengals should have a good mcentlve to wm their
finale this weekend. A win wo~ld make the Bengals 8-6
d NFL teams draft college players mversely from the order
:'ey finished the year, Those teams with worse records than
Cincinnati pick ahead.
"I'll say this, for the welfare of the players' own sakes, they
mould surely do it (win) because the later they can make us
draft, 11 might save some careers," Brown said.

sea:

Miner taking edge on Boyle .
WASHINGTON (UP!) Challenger Arnold R. Miller
forged intO the lead today
against incumbent Pre~ident
Tony Boyle in the counUng of
votes by government officials
in the United Mine Workers
union election.
A morning tabulation on S6

UMW locals showed Miller
with 11,774 votes and Boyle
with 10,673.
· Chip Yablonski, a spokesman for Miller, said the results
. included some from ,working
locaLs and showed a "definite
pattern" in Miller's £avor.

First built in 1940, its lights
remind all who pass this way of
men's deepest well of strength
BY BOB HOEFLICH
Agiant lighted cross on top
or one of Pomeroy's highest
hills almost a third of a century
is a silent reminder to people of
the area and others who pass
this way that mankind 's
greatest strength is in
Christian faith .
Lighted every evening
throughout the Christmas
holiday season, the cross has
special significance on
religious occasions.
Two organizations of the
Trinity Church in Pomeroy

maintain the cross. Their
members hope that in some
way the lighted silent symbol
will give comfort to all who see
•it.
Located on the property of
Mrs. Nolan Shuster, Lincoln
Hill, the first cross was placed
there on a temporary basis just
be£ore Christmas in 1940. At
that time, the Oxford Group
was conducting its crusade for
Moral Rearmament, calling
upon men and women lo
rebuild their lives to conform
with Christian morality anH

idealism.
The original cross was
built in the parsonage or the
then Federated Church, since
named the Trinity Church, by
the Rev. Ralph Keuther, who
no w holds a pastorate in
Michiga n, and the late Olan
Goodwin. Harold Sauer, Meigs
High School faculty member,
assisted with the project.
The Ohio Power Co. placed
the cross on the hill and for a
rew years supplied the elec·
tricity free. The cross was so
favorably received that it lost
its
temporary
status.
Travelers often commented on
the beauty of the cross which
appeared to be suspended in
air high over Pomeroy.
After 10 years the origina l

cross becam e unsafe. The
church circle of Trinity Church
acce pted the placement or a
permanen t steel cross as one or
its projects.

Glenroy Ewing, now of
Columbus, was the origina l
"kee per or the cross," turning
it on and off at regular Intervals.
However, in recent yeai'S,
Louis Reibel, a long-time Mrs. Shuster and the late Mr.
ac ti ve member Of the church, Shuster tended the cross each
had a major role in the con. weekend throughout the yea r
stru ction of the steel and during the Lenten , Easier
replacement cross which was and Christmas seasons when it
compleled and placed on the is ligh ted more rrequently.
Shuster property on May 10,
The Rev. Robert Hegnauer
,
was
pastor when the second
190 0
• Assembl ed by Cha rles · cross was dedicated on May 28,
Neuman in the ya rd of his 1950.
home in Syracuse, the presen t
. M aintena ~.ce cosl&lt; are .no
cross is 36 feet high and H reel rnmor 1lcm . I he Happy Harwide. IU; luster, visible many vestcrs Class or the ch u ~ch has
miles in the Big Bend area, assumed the upkeep With the
shines from 250 light bulbs. Busy Bee Quil tmg C ~r c l e
Frank Carson, a cousin of Mrs. payi ng the uti li ty bi lls.

Recently, Hilda Ohlinger
McClain, a former resident of
Pomeroy, contributed towards
the maintenance of the cross.
Occas ionally, the group
recei ves a contribution from
someone who has been im·
pressed by the lighted symbol
and wishes to help with its
expenses. Of course, the two
church groups are more than
happy for these " helping
hands."
Those wishing to make a
contri bution to help keep the
cro&amp;&lt; "lighting the way ," may
send a dona tion to Mrs. Stella
Kioes, Mulberry Ave., or to
Mrs. Phil Meinlwrt. Spring
Ave.

,·

'

Blue Cross.has increase from judge
COLUMBUS (UPI) - A
Franklin County common
pleas judge Tuesday reversed
the order of the state insurance
superintendent and granted
Blue Cross of Central Ohio a
$1.2 million rate increase for
direct pay subscribers.
Judge Craig Wrigh.t held that
the rate hike was proper, al·
though Insurance Superlnten· ·

Two convicted
Two defendants were fined
and sentenced to jail upon
conviction of driving while
intoxicated Tuesday night In
hearings conducted . by Mid·
dleport Mayor John Zerkle .
David L. Darst, 19, Mid·
dleporl, Route 1, was fined $150
and costs, and Freddie Eugene
Boggess, 23, Ripley, W. Va.,
$100 and costs. Both were given
mandatory three day jail
sentences. Paul 0. Miller, 19,
Middleport, appeared in court
on a charge of permitting an
unlicensed driver to operate
his motor vehicle. His fine was
suspended and.he was assessed
costs only.

dent Kenneth DeShetler had
denied it after a public hearing
Aug. 9-10.
DeShetier had turned it down
on grounds Blue Cross took a
paternalistic attitude toward
hospitals and did not exert an
effective influence over hospltal costs by "vigorously representing the interest of its subscribers."
Wright stressed that his ruJ.
ing considered only whether

the request rate increase was
He
said
reasonable.
DeShetler's order had the
effect of denying a rate increase "until such time as Blue
Cross meets a standard as yet
unannounced
by
the
superintendent in anythi ng
other than the vaguest terms."
"This court is not unsympathetic to the problem of evermounting hospital costs but the
superintendent's action has no
foundation in the law of the
state of Ohio," Wright said.
"Blue Cross has demonstrat-

ed by a prepondere nce or the
evidence tha t it is -effectively
continuing hos pita l costs in
areas subject to its efforts," he
said, although adding he did
not agree Blue Cross had the
responsibility o.f keepi ng
hospital costs down.
Wright pointed out DeShetjer
has the power to investigate
the contractual re lationship ror
rates charged by hospitals and
could bill Blue Cross for the
cost of that investigation .

Levy clobbered
Both parties got
away undamaged

CALL ANSWERED
The Pomeroy E-R squad
answered a call at 4:56 p.m.
Tuesday to the John Hess home
on old Route 33. Charlotte
Hess, who was ill, was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where she was admitted . At
• 9:13p.m., the squad went to the
Homer Bradshaw home on
Cole St., from where Brad-·
shaw, ' having difficulty
breathing, was ' taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
and. admitted.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Friday through Su.nday.
Warm trend through the
period. Chance of rain or
snow Friday and north
portion Saturday. Highs In
the 30s Friday warming lo
the 40s &amp; upper 30s by Suo·
da y. Lows In the teens and
low 20s Friday morning
rising to the mid and upper
20s by Sunday.

A deer was struck but not
injured, and there was no
damage to the Meigs Coun ty
Sheriff's cruiser, the sherirr's
department reported, when the
deer ran in front of the cruiser
on SR 124, two tenths of mile
from Raci ne Tuesday at 10:44
li .ITI .

Deputy Raymond E. Manley,
Middleport, was driving west
at the time . The deer was
kn ocked down but ra n ·away
apparently uninjured .

by city voters

Program will
feature band,
chorus and arl
The Meigs High School band
and chorus will present a
Christmas concert at 7 p.m.
Tuesday at the high school
audi torium .
In addition to the concert,
there will be an art show in the
main lobby and hall by the high
school ar t classes and immediately following the con.
cert light refreshments will be
se rved to all. The entire
program is free.
Band selections in the concert include Gounod's "Marc he
Romaine,'' Markham 's ' 1Home
for Christmas," "Highlights
from Camelot," by LernerLowei 1'Three Bach Chorales,''
arranged by Eller ; "Bugler's
Holiday,' ' Anderson i O'Brien's
~~ Jesu s Chris t, Superstar, "
Anderson 's " A Christmas
·Festival ," excerpts from
"Symphony No. 3 ~'inai e," and
Cacava 's ''At Chrislniastime.''

Voters in the Gallipolis City
School District Tuesda y
overwhelminglydefeated a two
mill , fi ve year improvement
levy ror new classrooms and
general repair.
Final tabul ati on by the
Ga lli a co,unty Board of
Elections showed the levy was
defeated by 1,043 votes when
639 persons voted ror it and
1,662 oppose~ it.
·
MARRIAGE LICENSE
Last November, the levy lost
Roger Dale Jordan, 20,
by just 147 votes. Tuesday, it Carpenter, and Bonnie Sue
lost in all 16 precincts.
Fraley, 19, Carpenter.

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