<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="16799" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/16799?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-09T14:48:37+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="49948">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/ba7ac32772037ed5c3a9bf380dbb5ff9.pdf</src>
      <authentication>c8cdc8bd46d945852c1b6e21a054c774</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="53644">
                  <text>.•

J

NowYouKnow
•• - u.e 1J11UY :IentineI, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Dec. 20, 1972

'

.

.

•
HARTNETI'DIES

Floyd Brewer of Rutland is .dead
Floyd Brewer, 62, Rutland
RD 1, died Tuesday afternoon
at home. He was born Nov. 19,
1910, in Point Pleasant, the son
of
Emmaline , Brewer,
Lucasville, and !he late Henry
Brewer.
Surviving In addition to his
mother, are a daughter, Mrs.
Katen Turley, Mason ; a son,
Michael, Mason ; two brothers,
Ralph, of Jackson, and Henry,
in West Virgtnia; his grand·
mother, Mrs. Mary Donohue,
London, Ohio, and a grand·
child. Funeral services will he
.held at :i p. m. Ji)iday at .the
Martin Funera(Home with the
Rev. David Sheets officiating.
Burial wlll be in Miles
CANDIDATES - Candidates for Snow Prince and
Princess of Wahama High School are, front row, 1-r, Jeannie
Ingles, seventh grade ; Karen Smith, eighth grade; Terri
Oliver, sophomore; Clarice Davis, senior, and Sue Lieving, ·
freshman. Back row, David Bocook, seventh grade; Jimmy
· Oliver, eighth gra!le; Chuck Samgell, sophomore; Lawrence

Weaver, senior; Robbie, Belcl)er, junior; and Jack Young,
freshman. Absent was the junior candidate, Dawn Isanogle.
Winners of the penny-a-vote contest will he announced
Friday night at a dance to be held in the high school
auditorium. The event is sponaored by the ·junior class. A
candle contest will also be held and ~nta will appear.
·

· Cemetery, Friends may call at
the funeral home anytime
Thursday.

AUTOS COLLIDE
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept. investigated a two car
accident Monday at 8 a. m. on
SR 124 one-tenth of a mile nilrth
of county 'road 403 In Minersville. There were no personal
injuries, Roy Lee Buchartan,
Minersville, pulled onto the
highway in front of a car driven
by Bessie Sylvester, Syracuse,
who was traveling west. .There
was damage to the front of both
vehicles. No cliations were
Issued.

PAGEANTSET
·
RACINE - The junior high
CIHCAGO (IJPI) - CharieJ
glee club under direction of ''Gabby" !W"tnett, a f~
Mrs. Lee Lee will provide Chicago Cul1s catcher and ;a
music for t:1e Chdstmas member of baseball's Hill fll
Pageant to be presented to the Fame, died at Lutheran
student body at 1111 assembly General Hospital In suburban
Thursday morning at the , Park Ridge today on his ~
Junior High aucltorium. Mrs- birthday,
Delores Wolle Is the ac· ·
·
companlst. The Christmas
story will he depicted with
MARRIAGE UCENSE
scenes and narration.
Guy Emile Bing, 56, Mid~
dleport, and Fre1111 Mae
Kennedy, 48, Middlepcift. ·

Shop Tonight and Every Night This Week Til 9

"'

RACINE
The Southern soloist, and the choir, "Who
High School choir under Would Be a Shepherd Boy"
direction of Mrs. Lee Lee, and featuring Barhilra Fisher on
the high school band under the bassoon ; a medley of
direction of R. Thomas Christmas songs by the 17
Phillips, will present a concert, senior choir members, and
"The Many Moods of Christ. "Contique de Noel," sung by
mas"Thursdayat8p.m. atthe · LarryFisher,amemberofthe
high school. The public is junior high school glee club.
welcome.
·
Mrs. Jocelyn Baer is concert
The choir wiD sing these accompanist and Roma Nease
selections, "A Star Shone
Bright. " uNoel," "Joseph Was
Trave'ting," " The ' Little
(Continued from Page I)
Dnunmer Boy " "Where Is the
,
'
, ta
nd personal and
Chlld," "Holid.iy Blessing," assls nee, a
"Ring '!'hose Christmas Bells," · marital counseling.
The Meigs care Line is a
, "Hallelujah Chorus,"
from
• h·
special project o,, th e Me1gs
Handel's Messl8 .
Special nqmbers will be "A County Alcoholism and Drug
,.._,c
Abuse Committee. Everyone
"'uiotmas Eve. Prayer," sung
by the girIs ellSelDble ; " Silver wishing more information
Bella' with Jeanie Sellers .as ahout the Care line before it
opens on Jan. 1 may call the
program director, the Rev.
. .- - - - - - - -. . · Arthur C. Lund at 992-2010. If
there is no answer, call992-3723
and leave a number to be
called.
CLOSED
'
Dec. 17 thru Dtc. 21rd
The Rev, Stanten Sm1'th ,
I
president of the committee, is
'MERRY CHRISTMAS
in charge of a fund raising
.:
Sun., Mon., Tues.
project to help pay the cost of
IlK. 24-25-21
Care Line. Organizations
THE REVEfiiGERS
'b
d
!Techtlicolarl
willing to contn ute may sen.
! .
Suyn Hayworth
a donation to the Meigs County
William Holden
Aocoholism and Drug Abuse
j
CARTOONS
Committee, 231 East Second
Show Stem 7 P.M.
\
St., Pomeroy.

Care Line

MEIGS THEATRE

:

.....____.

the ·rehearsal accompanist.
The band wt' ll play the
Christmas Suite including ''O
· Come, 0 Come Immanuel,"
"The Sleep of the Child Jesus,"
"Ring Christmas Bells " and
"What Child is This :, and •
•
"Three CarolsforChrislm$s,"
ending the program
·
·
Choir members are, 1Irs1
sopranos. De&amp;ble Ar'nott,
Rhonda Ash, Megan - Brown,
Beverly
Molly· Fisher,
Debble HErvin,
Henarden. Denose
drix, Kosle Hysell. Valerie
Johnson. Cindy Lawson, Elaine
Lehew; Diana Norris, Lee Ann
Nease. Barbara Nease, Pam
Parsons, . Palsy Proffitt,
Amanda Roush, Connie Roush,
Corona Rhodes.c Becky
Sams,
Laura Theiss, oo kl e Weddl e.
Rhooda West.
Second sopranos. Hope Bird.
Della Cross. Nancy Crow,
Tem· ·Fl ndt ey, Bar ba ra Fi•he
• r,
Susan Gooch. Becky Harris,
Beverly Hart, Elisa McMillan,
Sandy Norris, Tammy Roush,
Becky Sayre, Patsy Sayre,
Jeannie Sellers, Jill Warner,
Sandy Winebrenner.
Altos. Denise Cross. Gall
Evans, Cindy Gooch, Lola
Greer, Irene Knlghllng. Cheryl
Moore,
Roma
Nease.
stephanie Ord,
Lee Ord,
Judi
Roberls. Debbie Roush, Karen
Rhodes. Rhoda South, Connie
Smith, Helen Wltcoxen ,
Melanie Wol~nlg , Vickie
Wolfe.
Bass, Greg Donohew, Jay
Hill , Jeff Hill. Ronnie Hill.
Sieve Hupp. Nick Ihie. Mike
Nease. Rodney Nelgler, Terry

the War

(Continued from Page I)
bombers.
-Although no official figures
were available, estimates were
that well over 20 ooo tons of
bombs have hit No~ Vietnam
since the raids reswned Mondsy. The force of the atomic
bomb which hit Hiroshima on
Aug, 6, 1945, was estimated at
20 000 tons of TNT.
'

Night patrol
SC8reS

The most attractive th ing about any of the people
who work foo· this bnnk is what they'll do to help yo u.
We feel om· employeea enjoy un u"'"' popularity
because they nre good pe 0ple with br ight idea•. They
work at a!Uhings ha vi ng to do with money. Their
purpo8e is to provid e the mop;t cotwenient and l'ewnrd!ng serricc-8 for money management.
·
Vi~it om· wide-awake bank. E\·er.rone here will
open your eyes to how

ea,:~y

banking cn n be.

The wide-owake bank
makes it!#!Jo ea~~
•

Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co.
. POMEROY, OHIO
Me(!lber of Federal Reserve System

On Frid•ys Our Drive.tn Window is Open 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.

(Continuously).

SlO,OOO Ma•imum Insurance for Ea ch Depositor

thief

Sheriff's Deputies Steven
Hartenbach and David Jeffers
apparently frightened a thief
away empty-handed from the
Trading Post at Royal Oak
Park on county road 25 at I a.
m. today.
When Hartenbach and
Jeffers pulled up at the post on
a routine patrol they noticed a
window had been broken out.
Sheriff Robert Hartenbach was
called to the scene. Upon
further investigation it was
determined that a person had
apparently · entered the
building just before the officers
arrived. The road is patroled
constantly throughout the
night. Nothing apparenlly was
taken.

INSURANCE CUT
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Nationwide Mutual In·
surance Co., Ohio's largest
auto Insurer, today an·
nounced an acrou·the-board
reduction In premiums for
Its 600,000 Ohio policy
holders.
,

THIS YEAR

Norris, Bob Sayre, Gene
Shiveley, Larry Wilcoxen .
Terlors, Keith Circle, Dave
Huddleslon. Bob Johnson. Ray
Mills. Mitch Nease. and Glenn
51 ~,Fn~n;,;embers are, flutes,
Diana Norris, Della Cross,
Susa~ Gooch. Lois . Ball~y.
Bobbo Chapman.
Connoe Smoth,
Carol
Glenn; Donna
Deel.
Debbie Norris; clarinets.
Koste Hysell. t;lenlse Hendrix,
Beverly Har.f, Tracl Weese,
Donna Taylor, Molty Fisher,
Mary Blg~s, Anna Frank,
Cheryl
oseberry,· bass
clarlnel, Denise Cross; alto
•axophones, Corena Rhodes,
Gail Evans, Glenn Simpson,
Nancy
Crow ,·
baritone
saxophone, Sharon Drake;
percussion, Jeannie Sellers,
Brenda Lawrence, David
Smo'th, Cookie Weddle· , Meagan
Brown ; limponi , Valerie
Johnson; bassoon. Barbaro
Fisher; horn, Rom a Nease;
cornels and trumpels. Jaye
Ord, Hope Bird. Heidi Ashley,
Kim Taylor, Scoll Wolfe, Alisa
Harris, Sharon Baker, Jull
Gooch, Laura Theiss, Dreama
Jenkins ; trom~&gt;ones, Ste~hanle
Ord ,' Paur Cross, Ethan
Slearns, Becky Harris, Keith
Circle,
Lori
Guinther;
barl!ones, Vicki Wolfe, Tim
Nease, Tony Carnahan and
bass. Jim Holman.

Give Practical Gifts

LEE WORK SUITS.
There's an excellent
selection of Lee Tech
Twill pants and shirts.
This fine quality work
suit Is 50 percent cotton . ·
50 percent polyester and
never needs ironing.
See all the other fine Lee
work clothes so ideal for
gifts.

• Lee Coveralls
• Blue Denim Overalls
• Lee Work Caps

Sale!

• Lee QuiRed Nylon

. Mens
· and ·iqs

Jackets .

• Lee Carpenter and
. Painter Overalls

Three
fined by
.

CQATS-and· JA6KB-$-

Mayor Zerkle

TO HOSPITAL
The Middleport E·R squad
answered a call to the Fla~
Sigman residence, 75 Pearl St.,
at 2:55 p. m. Tuesday. She was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital and admitted
following a possible stroke.
FALCONS LOSE
RIPLEY - Trailing by as
many as 16 points in 'the first
half. Ripley stormed from
behind In the final quarter to
down Wahama 76-70 Tuesday
night.

Nationwide President
John E. Fisher estimated the
lower prices will save Oblo
policy holders $1 miUion a
year. ne overall reduction
averages 6.6 per cent or
$11.30 per car for a full
coverage policy wllb $100
deductible collision.

BLUE
DENIM

Visit the Housewares Department on the 1st
Floor
FOR EXCELLENT GIFT IDEAS

WESTERN JACKETS
Extra heavy wiehgt blue denim • unlined · true
western styling. Regular ahd longs. Sizes 38 to

so.

Also : Boys Lee Western Jackets like the mens sizes. 4 through 16.

Another Big ·

Shipment

. J.S.I. TV
BAN LON
SOCKS

1~~l~l;m~~;~;;~~;1~~;~~~l;;~m;;i~~~~~11~l~1il~l~~l1~~~;~j~l~~1;~~i~f*l~~~~Mrt:~~~~*~~ij;~~~~~;~*~~~~r¥~t~B.

News • •.. in Briefs

Buy the color you want
. ~,.., size. fits all sizes
10 through 13.

made just

Cookware. dinner ware · small electrlcat "appliances such as
electric sklllels . cornpoppers · can openers · grills . per.
colalors. loeslers · blenders, Cornlngware In sels or by !he
Individual piece.
.
.
Slalnless sleet knives and forks In line gift sels - Club
Aluminum cookware · Westclox Alarm Clock.
And many other llneglfls - Slop In and look around.

V"ISit The

••

ano1

Toy Stc!re
And Take

~fety

Of The

Sale
of
Bkydes

.
er
Bak
Struble'

aceountlwon . . .
·

~

•.

•

t·

......

~

•

...

"

'

. complete

. •

j

• r

·"

The case represented the first criminl!l fraud charge ever
flied against high officers of a major Wajl street investment
banldrig finn, and the second such indictment ever filed against
pertners of a national accolUlting firm. The' indictment charge~
the eight inflated earnings through the use of falsely certlfiep
financial statements to sell hundreds of millions of dollars of
stock and debentures to the public in America and overseas,

.

Santa Will Be At The Toy Store Thursday 2 to 3 p.m.
Scaua All Of Your SalelllpiProm

IN

JEN

CEN~S

·e ave

'

SAIGON (UP!) - U, S.
military authorities today
announced the combat 1088 of
three more B52 bombers,
ral!lng the total downed since
the resumption of full scale a ir
raids Monday over Nor.th
V-ietnam tosix . lt was the most
costly day of the entire warfor
the u. s. Air Force.
·
' Two of the huge bombers
' ~ere shot near Hanoi early

today and another crashed in
Thailand, the U. S. command
said, Three other B~2s were
shot down in 'other raids
Monday, TUesday ot 'Wed·
nesday. The 12 cre1'men
aboard the two B52s down near
Hanoi were listed as misaing
·
while the six in the bomber .
down In Thailand parachuted
to safety.

CANDIDATES ANt:l ATTENDANTS - Candidates for MlsUeloe King and f.!Ueen !1. South·
ern.High School are front row, 1-r, Jay HUI, Judy Roberts, Denise CrOIIS and Debbie Milliron;
absent were Gary Roush and Jeff Davis, cBndidatesfor King;-hack row,l-1', are the attendants,
Becky Kouns, Stephanie Ord and Sandy Norris. The selection of the King and Queen is made by
the student body. The winners will be announced Saturday night at a dance sponsored by the •
Southern High School Tri-M Club (Modern Music Masters). The dance will be held at the high
school from 9 to 12, Music will be provided by "The Foxx", Making up the band are Van
Johnson, Rick Miller, Marty Vaughan, Gary Lyons and Marc Dally. The dance Is open to the
public,
.~:i:~:~:?.~:~:~:-::::~:::::::::8::::!::8::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;~:::::;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::-':::;::::::;w,:;:~::::::::::~::~:~~~==~~=~

.

~
~

\\

Ouistmas concert well received

~~

A large and receptive audience attended the annual Christmas concert of the Meigs
·High School Band and Chorale Tuesday night in the high school auditorium.
.
A trumpet trio composed of Patti WeD, Diana carsey and Roxie Patterson was
featured on "Bugler's Holiday" in the band's portion of the program. Floyd Burney
presented a vocal solo during the Chorale's secUon.
· Mrs. Christine Guthrie, director of the chorale, and Dwight Goins, band director, were

»
:;:;

~!~;

:!!\

!~.

s;:

~1 pres~~: f.~; special recognition to Mrs. Margaret Ella Lewis, art .Instructor, and

{:!
""
:::(

Willard Miller, welding instructor , Work by students of the two instructors was on display
in the school lobby preceding the program, ·
·
Welding craftsmen exhibiting were Rick Carter, Ed Hayes, Paul Pallins, Greg Lane,

course ~: ;·_:;, - -~~=~~~=·:c=~ ~! ~ulnkst!~J.Ields, Ttm Krautter, Jim Snyder,

~
»

I
~

~~

~

\j
l~

~
~

'I•

,

~

J.·.·:·

lst Case
is lost
OOVER, Oltlo (UP!) - The
state of Ohio has lost the first
case to go to ttial under the
new, stringent strip mine
reclamJtion Jaw,
Tuscarawas County Court
Judge Kenneth Ferrell
dismissed six charges against
the Hardy Cos! Co. of Berlin,
Ohio Wednesday and told state
attorneys they bed a "poorly
prepared case."
The state then dropped four
other charg111 II bed brOUfiht
against the company and told
the judge lt wilhed to re-flle
them later. Ferrell said he
would not allOI!' It becaUR it
would constitute double

I•OIIII'dr •

,, . ~ cbergea agaJIIJt Hardy
~
I alle~edly occurred In Sull•r·
Two Meigsthe
County
men have
county
area Service
of the :•.•.•:o.
.:~;:o=-»·····.-·.-·.·&lt;· ····"'·······=-··········:-·············,.,······-.:•:o.:•;!:•;•:Q~·;·:·
·.:-·······o:o!o'
O:O'•'•'•'...'•.'...................
.:···=-································
..·····.-.·.·.-.·.···········
...........,...,.$,: creek Twp; of Tuscarawas
completed
standard
fn.. seven
Emergency
-Medical
:.o ..:•:.:o;o:•.·:·.·:·.:-:·.-.·.···················
...........~.:-:.:·!.:.:..•..:.:.•••«-....•.,··.....·····=...-·······
····· ..................
,.......................
,•.•.•.•-,.;,o.•.•.•.•.-;.o;.•.-.·,o;.o,o;r,o;.o;.

structor course as a part of the
Southea.s t Ohio Emergency
Medical Service scheduled
soon to go into operation to
upgrade area emergency
medical facilities.
Completing the instructor
courses were Joseph Struble,
Pomeroy, and Larry Baker,
Middleport, wh~-wlll conduct
classes in Racine. Struble will
instruct in Pomeroy.
•
According to the Ohio Valley
Health Services Foundation,
Inc., which is organizing the
program, many people In .the

CHICAGO- A NORm CENTRAL AIRLINES DC9, taking
off in fog at O'Hare ' International Airport Wednesday night,
struck the taU section of a Delta Airlines Confair 880 and burst
into flames, killing nine of 45 persons aboard, At leasll5 persons
were injured, nine seriously. Two of the Injured were aboard the
Delta jet, which carried 93 persons, ·
'
VIsibility at the airport was reduced to one quarter mile in the
fog, and the smaller North Central jet was taking off when ' it
struck the Delta plane. The Delta plane had crossed the North
Central's plane's path at an intersecting runway after landing. .
Under normal circumstances the Delta plane should not ba\le
been on the taxi way on !he side of the terminal where the ac.
cldent occurred. However, a FAA spokesman ssid It was dot
certain what instructions the ground controll~r had given tj!e
crew.

More B52s,crewmen 1(/)st

and lor girls. Standard bikes • 3 speed
bl kes and the very popular 10 speed
bicycles.

PHONE 992-215.,

ofPOWs could

.PARIS (UP!) - The Vietnamese Commun~lll walked out of
the Paris. peace ialks today in protest against what they called
" the "demented" hombing of North Vietnam, They warned that
the large&lt;!cale attacks could endanger American prisoners of
war held in North Vietnam.
The question of the safety .of the American POWs was raised
by newsmen at a Communist briefing that followed the tnmcated
session. Asked If the POWs were in danger, Nguyen Than Le, the
North Vietriamese spokesman, replied :
"!think so, because the camps of U, S, prisoners 8fj! in areas
against which are directed the current raids - .both in Hanoi and
other provinces." He did not say if any prison camps had been hit
so far.
Le said White House adviser next Thursday, but the United
Henry A. Kis,singer threatened States said only it would
to resume air raids and break contact the other side to fix a
\
off negotiations during his re- new date. It appeared no
cent roUI)d of secret talks with session would be held then
Le Due Tho of Hanoi.
since the United States earlier
,I'I'
Le said the Americans began proposed a suspension for the
making threats during the Nov. Christmas-New Year holidays.
REGINA McGUIRE, ahove, is giving the final con1bing:
2().25 talks.
The CommlUlists delivered
to the new permanent wave of Jean Windon in the •
"The U.S. side threatened to their statements then departed ·
cosmetology department of Meigs HighSchool. Women of the,
resume escalation agai nst without waiting for the Ameri·
Meigs County Infirmary visited the department Wednesday
North Vietnam and tO suspend can or South Vietnamese reply.
to receive permanent waves from senior cosmetology!
the negotiations In the sub- · U. S. Spo~esman David
students. Mrs. Mary Powell is instructor of the girls.
sequent round of secret talks" Lambertson said the walkout
Dec. 4to 13, Le said.
was no. surprise and added:
Le spoke In harsh tones and "Channels remain very much
wagged his finger in the air for open,"
emphasis. ·
He said a fifth meetin~ of
The Hanoi and Viet Cong technical experts was set for
delegates proposed that the Saturday. "More serious work
By United Press International
172nd session convene as usual (ConliDued on f'age 12)•
NEW YORK - A FJi:DERAL GRAND JURY Wednesday
Indicted eight men on charges of conspiring to fraudulently i~­
flate earnings of the now defunct Four Seasons Nursing Center's
of America, Inc., a "glamor stock" of 1969. Named were three
.
former officials of Four Seasons, two current or former officials
of Walston &amp; Co., a Wall street brokerage house, and two part·
.
ners and an employe of ,Vthur Anderson &amp; Co. a nationwide

·-

An extra fine seleotlon of bikes for boys

.

scale attacks say Reds

WASHINGTON -ARNOLD R. MILLER, who defeated Tony
Boyle for the presidency of the United Mine Workers In a court·
ordered election, says he is studying how to deal w1th an ap.
parent approaching power struggle with Boyle supporters. r,e
union's International Executive Board, dominated by Boyle
supporters, took steps in New York Tuesday to block Miller f~?"'
purging any pro-BOyle union officials or employes. It del)led
Miller $50,000 expense money before he takes office. . ·
It granted Boyle a full-Mlary, $50,000-a·year pens1on and
dared Miller to trY to' keep his promise to eliminate the pension,

Soecial

.

be endangered by large

1

AdvMtage

.

ates

KANSAS CITY, MO.- FORMER PRESIDENT Harry. S
Truman 88, was fed today by a rare intravenous method
designed to give him nourishment while bypassing his kidneys,
which have not been funcUoning adequately.
. Truman, who was hospitalized 18 !lays ago, remained 1 ip
"very serious" .condi!lon, suffering from a weak heart, . hilr·
dening of the arterie~, lung congestion and failing kidneys. / ~

.

NEW YORK -A SKY MARSHAL and a CWiloms agent were
shot and wounded at Kemedy International Airport today by an
"edgy" man as they attempted to search hia briefcase. Police
said the assailant struck ooe of the security ~ and grabbed the
¢fleer's gun when the pelr attempted to ~e~rch hllattache cue
and guitar caae at the P•n Amerlcu Wcrld Airways terminal.
He fired about allllhola at the two, Bhoot!ng one In the leg and
the other in the groin. He then ran from the bulldlng and onto a
runway where he wBIIItaken IJito custody by 2 Port Authority
polieemen. Tbe Injured, wbo are recoverlnl, were ldentlfled u J.
T, McCarthy, fl, a Cllllomllletlt from Commack, N, Y., and
Anthony Pelt aeel Jr., M, alky Qlll"lha1 of~· N. J.

VOL XXIV NO. 175

(.;onsiderable fog and drizzle
likely today, tonight and
Friday north and west and rain
likely soulheast. High tOday
and Friday in the upper 4&amp; and
low 50s south. Low tonight in
low to mid 40s south.

enttne

. Devoh!d To 1he lntere~.u Of The Meig!·Mason Area ·
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1972

BELFAST -GUNMEN KILLED EIGHT MEN, five of them
in a Londonderry pub, and wounded a dozen more WedneS&lt;lay op
the bloodiest day in Northern Ireland since British army troo~
opened fire on demonstrators on "Bloody Sunday'' last Janua..Y.
It was the bloodiest one day for gunmen since the outbreak df
violence in Northern Ireland In mid-1969. The highest death toll
on any one day was 13 ~ tile number of persons killed Jan. 30
when British paratroops opened fire on crowds demonstrating in
Londonderry. The victims Wednesday included five men
machine gunned to death when two masked men burst into a pub
In Londonderry owned by a Roman catholic and three other men
slain In three separate shootings by gunmen cruising in cars.

Mens Sizes
36to50

White · black and a
complete new selection
of solid colors and
heather tone.

(Continued from Page 1)
assistant Treasury secretary.

euv Jackets now for gifts and save
on. what you need. There's a fine
selection, excellent styles.
. I
Boys sizes 2-20. Mens sizes J6 to 46
and extra large sizes 411 to 54.

Let us help you find your
correct size and style.

Three defendants were fined
and four others forfeited bonds
in Middleport Mayor · John
Zerkle's court Tuesday night.
Fined were Ardella Herd·
man, 37, Pomeroy, $100 and
costs and three days in jail,
driving while intoxicated;
Norena C. Mash, 49, Mid·
·dleport, $5 and costs, stop sign
violation, and Larry W. Fields,
19, Syracuse, $10 and costs,
speeding,
Forfeiting bonds were
Harold K. Price , $37,
Gallipolis, SJ: eeding; Gilmer
Hensley, 31, Huntington, $30,
parking in a no parking zone;
Robert M, Newell, 'lJ, Mid·
dieport, and Donald A. Ferr!Ui,
no age or address, $30 each,
disturbing the peace,

'

WPRth~l'

••

a -1

PROGRAM SET
The Christmas program of
LOCAL~S
the Syracuse United Methodist
Temperature In downtown
Church will lie held at 7:30 p,
Pomeroy
Weclnesday at II a.
m. Friday, The public is in·
m. was 48 degrees and raining.
vi ted.

ELBERFELD$ IN ·POMEROY

Choir, hand will present con~ert

•

The feniale of the tropical
spider, Nephila, is 1,300 times
as large as the male and, in
common with most spiders of
related species, is can•
nibalistic. ·

TIM KING
Ttm KlnJ, son of Mr. and

Mrs. Robert King, Mid·
dleport Route 1, a senior at
Meigs High School, will he
Installed as master councilor
of Meigs Chapter, Order of
OeMolay, at 7:30 p. m.
Friday at the Middleport
Masonic Temple. the In·
stallatlon Is open to the
public.

.

pro grain are · engaged In
classwork hoping to qualify for
the rank of emergency medical
technician.
,
Of the approximately 400 to
he trained In the basic course,
56 will be hired on a full-time
basis and 328 on a part-time or
volunteer basis,
A registered emergency
medical technician must pass
the 6().hour course which is
based on the .354-page
"Emergency Victim Care
Manual" and taught by a state
board of education certified
instructor. Twenty hours of
actual emergency room ex·
perience is also required .
Classes in Pomeroy and
Racine will start next monU!.
Page Chevrolet of Athens has
been awarded the bid on 18
modular ambulances for the
program, Delivery of the first
vehicles should begin the latter
part of January or early
February. The ambulances
will be inspected by proper
governmental agencies and the
southeast Ohio Emergency
Medical Service •taff before
they are accepted. All of the
vehicles are expected to' he
delivered by March 15.
Tbe Economic Development
Administration (EDA ) has
granted Southeast Ohio
Emergency Medical Service 46
per cent of the monies to
construct five new ambulance
stations one of which will he at
Veterans Memorial Hospital in
Pomeroy, Each county will be
responsible 'for the 54 per cent
of needed Junds not provided
by EDA.

128 Deer killed
in Me· ·s' hills.

Youdon'tneedag~kiU' a

deer.
The fact is, according to
Gary Swope, Meigs County
game protector, 89 deer have
died so far this year in the
.
county,s highways
- freeway,
state, county and township
road.t - victims of the four·
wheeled hun~r armed with no
more than a driver.
In contrast hundreds of
heavily ar-~ed hunters

roaming Meigs' hills in the
recent ·gun season brought
down 128 deer.
The successful hunters - on
foot - were :
Marshall Roush . Racine;
Gle~n Robinson, Coolville;
Fred George, Rulland ; oavld
Koblentz. Pomeroy ; Clair
Mlphl . Middleport ; R. E.
Grondley, Mlnersvltte ; George
Folmer, ' Pomeroy; Jeff
Lightfoot.. Pomeroy ; Howard
Birchfield, Rutland ' Rov
(ConUnued on Pag~ 6l

Light refreshments were served at the close of tho program.

County,
The judge dismlued four
counts of nllnln• within 50 feet
of adjoining prqperty without
the written consent !1. owners,
'
one count of failure to prevent
siltation and one count of
failure to p&lt;i!lt a proper sign at
the operation slta ,
Ferrell dlsmlosed the
program.
charges saying the state had
The 4-H Program A&amp;olstarit
not complied with Its own law
will he hired on a. half-time
basis. Federal funds will cover by failure of the reclamation
chief to notify the company of
the salary during 1973. Ap.
violations.
·
pllcants may contact the
State attorneys had argued
County Extension Office.
that point was not important
Attending were Dorsey because notification Is an
Jordan, vice-chairman; Roy administrative matter while
Miller, secretary; and Mrs. the charges were a criminal
Ivan B. Walker, Mrs. Pansy matter, The state dropped four
Jordan, Mrs, Roy Holter, Jan counts of mining outside a
Holter, Ingrid Hawley, Bur· licensed area.
zener Bego, Annie Moon ,
Brenda Donohue, Steven
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Stanley, Carol Pierce, Jack
Mild with a cbaace of rain
Welsh, Jennifer Sheela and C, dally. Hlgba In · the 40s ud
E. Blakeslee.
50!. Lows to the 301 and 401.

Broader programs reaching
Meigs youths .are proposed
Insuring service to all yolUlg
folks in Meigs County without
regard to race, color, or
national origin was the chief.
topic when the Meigs County 4·
H Expansion and Review
Committee met Dec. 14,
Carl Barnhill presided over
discussions of methods of
reaching a greater portion of
the Meigs County population
between the ages of 9 and 19
with 4-H club and other youth
programs,
There are approximately
4,484 youths in the colUlty
between the ages of 9 and 19,
The 1972 enrollment of 4-H club

and other youth members was
643!
The group proposed a variety
of . ways to assure that aU
Extension 4-H and other youth
programs (Including clubs,
activities, events, camps and
special Inter st groups) are
provided to all young citizens
on a nondiscriminatory ' basis
without regard to race, color,
or national origin.
The group also recommended that Meigs County
avail itself of the opportunity to
hire a 4-H Program Assistant
whose major thrust will be In
connection with a 4-H rural
commun ity development

Doves to be revived in January
WASHINGTON (UPI ) ..,. If
the peace that was almost "at
hand " when Congress ad·
journed In October Is not
achieved in January, look for a
new and more determined
effort on Capitol Hill to
legislate an end to American
participation In the Vietnam
War.
Even though the breakofl of
peace talks, the resumption of
Intense bombing and the heavy
loss of U. S. aircraft and air·
men have stiffened the spine of
the end-the-war bloc, the
prospects of success appears
no stronger than in the past
In any event, it will take
months for Congress first to
find Its collective will and then
to force lts will on President
Nixon, who has managed for
four years to run the war free
of congressional restraints,
Even before Congress has
assembled, there have been and there . 'will be more demands :
- That Congress set the final
date for a U. S. presence in
Southeast Asia, contingent only
upon the Communists' release
of American prisoners and

FOUR FINED
Four defendants fined in the
court of Pomeroy Mayor
William Baronlck Wednesday
regardless of the effect with· government of President night . were Carl Moore,
drawal may have upon the Nguyen Van Thleu.
Syracuse, and David Hysell,
Middleport, $5 and costs each
for defective exhausi: Richard
Hayman, ReedsviUe, flO and
costs, reckless operation, and
Robert Collins, Pomeroy, $5
and costs, assured clear
distance.

Best religious display

won by the Bruce Mays

RUTLAND - Mr. and Mrs.
Bruce May put together the
best display of werall religious
home decorations In the
Rutland decorating contest
sponsored by the Rutland
Frieodly Gardeners according
to the judges, Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Morrow and Mrs. Evelyn
Lucke.
Mrs. Larry Edwards and
Mrs. Harold Wolfe took the
judg~ on a tour of Rutland
Tuesday night to see all
decorations , Chairman of the
contest for the Rutland Club
was Mrs. Howard Birchfield.
Other winners In the overall
religious division were Mr. and
Mrs, Dana Hoffman, second,
and Mr. and Mrs. W. C. J.ewetl,
third.
Iri the non-religious overall
category winners were Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Hysell, first; Mr,

and Mrs. Roy Snowden,
second, and Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Parker, third.
Mr. and Mrs, Howard Birch·
field were first and Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Williamson, second in
the religious
doorway
category, and Mr. and Mrs.
carl Hysell, Mr. and Mrs, Fred
Williamson, and Mr. and Mrs.
Keith Kennedy were the
winners In the non-l'eliglous
doorway category, first ,
second and third respeoUvely.
Follbwlng the judging the .
committee and the judges went
to the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Wolfe for a' sal«d course. Gifts
were presented to the judges.
Prizes of $10, $5 and S3 were
awarded In the overall com·
peUIJon, with prizes of $5, $3,
and $2 In the doorway
category.

DEER KILLED
A doe deer was struck and
killed Wednesday on county
road 53, nine-tenths of II mile
northeast of SR 7, when it ran
in front . of a truck driven
southeast by Frank EUI:Iene
YolUlg, -Chester, the Meigs
County Sheriff's Dept.
reported. There was medlwn
damage to the right front of !he
truck,
CLOSING NOTED
Offices of the Middleport
Mayor and the M~t
Board of Public Affairs will
close at 1 p. m. Friday for !be
christmas holidays. ~ will
not reopen until huday
morning, Dec. 28, at lbe .
re'sular hour.

�1-Tile llall7 Sogtlei,MiddJeport-PIIneroy, 0., Dec. 21.1972

by Patterson and Patrick

"PRESIDENTS OF MANIFEST DESTINY

Twonty-flnt !'fHido'lJ Chesler A Arthur
(Adminlltrotion September 20, 1881-March 3, 1885)

The Spoilsman Who Turned Reformer
Seven months after he was fired from his lucra·
tive government job by President Rutherford B.
Hayes for putting partisanship ahead of citizenship,
Chester A. Arthur was President.
Arthur was removed from his post as collector
of the Port of New York for vwlating an executiVe
order prohibiting federal administmors from
engaging in political party activities. Since by well·
established custom such activities comprised the
collector's chief function, . Arthur casually tgnored
the decree.
Caught in a political power play between the
honest Hayes and the corrupt Republican state
boss, Sen. Roscoe Conkling, '\rthur appears to
have been more sinned against than sjnner.
The road to the Presidency was easy for Arthur.
Graduating from college at 18 with a Phi Beta
Kappa key, he taught school and practiced law unul

in the Civil War he was appmntcd a brigadier
general of miliua in New York.
.\cti\'C in both the \holitionist muvemcnt and
the Republican Party , :\rthur was an important factor m sccurmg the Pro~i~lcncy fur Gen . Grant . lie
"as rewarded with the customs house post, long
one of the chmce plums in the federal "spoils system ."
When "Half Breed" Jamt-s !1 . Garfield slipped
by the sulematc between Grant and James G .
Blaine to get the presidential nommation in IRRO,
the vtce-prcsidcntial nomination was thrown to
\rthur.
Thus, while President Garfield lay dying during
rhe summer of 1881 from an assassin's bullets, the
natural apprehensum of the public was worsened
hy the prnspect of Arthur becommg President .
.\!though Garfield' was almost totally incapacitated fur II Wt'Cks, \rthur flatly refused to assume
presidential powers as long as Garfield was alive.
When :\nhur assumed the Presidency, however, he SUfPrised everyone by completely reversing his old political ways. Once Cunkling's
henchman, he was no man's henchman now. Once
a ruthless "spoilsman," he advocated and signed
into law the Pendleton Civil Service '\ct. Twn of
this act's major features were the prohibiting nf
assessments against federal employees and the
requiring that certam federal jobs be filled from lists
resulting from open competitive examinations.
He estahllshed a territorial government in
\Iaska (ceded to the United States by Russia during
\ndrew Johnson's \dministration), granted exclusive nghts to Pearl Harbor, Hawa1i, as a repair and
coaling station for the U S. Navy and s1gned a
treaty with Nicaragua for the construction of an
isthmian canal.
Thus, the Manifest Destiny of the ' United
States, dormant smce Polk's Presidency because of
the pressing demands of abolluon, secession, war
and Reconstruction, was on the march again.
Arthur had hoped to wm a second term "in h1s
own right," but because he refused to play the pa. ronage game as President he lost the nommation
to percnmal candidate James G . Blame of Maine.
Although historians generally rate Chester
Arthur as only an average President, one distinguishcd citizen of his ume thought otherwise.
"I am but one of 55 million," Mark Twam said.
"Still, in the opmion of this one-fifty-five-millionth
of the country's population, it would be hard to
better President !\rthur's .\dministration...
'
10! • NGt ti S \ llol l

Generation Rap

.SDFHH:
Good point! Why not make It !(I your principal? Like with a
letter to the editor of your school paper? H the principal and
teachers still lhumbs-4own hand-lloldlng, then ask them nicely to
knock off the "groWIHlp" jargo . - SUE

+++
Dear Slapped Down :
Principals who waste Ume enforcing silly rules subtract
valuable time from the learning process. They end up with
resentful students and teachers-turned-ball-monitors (often
against their wills).
I suspecthand-lloldlng isn't the big issue here, but rather the
general "Big Brother is watching YOU" attitude.
Good luck with your campaign. - HELEN

+++

Dear Rap:
This is a different kind of question. 1have a dog that I want
. mated to the male dog of a good-looking man friend. No problem
.....00 gets one of the pups. But we're both kind of shy-and kind
of attracted to each other, though we haven~ dated yet.
lt'sgoingtobeveryembarrassing,takingmydogovertoget
her married. Could you give me some kind of bright little off~
hand quip to say as we (the guy and I) meet at the door? -NEW
WORKING GIRL
Dear Girl:
How about: ''WeU, here 's my" dog to meet her maker."? _
HElEN

+++
Dear N.W.G.:
Why be embarrassed? Just hope the guy will take you out for
dinner during the doggie hooeymoon. - SUE

+++

Helen and Sue:
Here's one way of teaching these chicks that women's
liberation has its drawbacks.
My girl figures she can do anything a man can do, and to
prove it she's operating a fork llfe in B'lnanufacturing plant. She
doesn't look like the truck·dnver type.
The other night I asked her over to meet my folks, but I told
them that I was bringing a fork lift operator from the plant. Then
I sat back and guffawed at the startled looks on my parents'
faces.
Lemme tell you, even the most liberated girl doesn't want to
The Almaoac
In 1942, the U.S. Supreme be introduced as "My friend, the truck driver." She spent the
By United Prell Ialernational Court upheld the validity of six- whole evening showing us all bow feminine she was. - CHUCK
2
granted in THE TRUCK DRIVERS' FRIEND
(•~ 1 ' 1' ' lf1)

WIN AT BRIDGE

Slam Not There, but Makes
Z1

Vitamin A
Can Be Toxic

load_.

(*

Voice along Br'Way

ii

u

•• ••

r,e.....,

tiiiJ.i.:.

. Southw~s'"rn snapped a
,four-year, 5I-game losing
' streak on the hardwood
=nesday night by upending
nan, W. Va., 57-64.
Last Highlander basketbaU
triumph prior to last night was
~over Southern on Jan. 17,
1970 · Southwestern lost its final
eight starts under Coach T. J.
Riggs . du~ the 1969-70
campatgn.
lng 1970-71 and
1971·72, the Highlanders went
0-J,t both years. The Ohtoans

Bud Rogers cut his e~teeth as a television m:ecutlve down In
Huntingtoa, at Channel 3, and he was generally very good, indeed, for television in our region.
He assembled a news staff that ill still prwminent In local
coverage. It ia THE electrooic authority to this day ..
He also Introduced the ccncept of handling cootroverslal and even taboo -topics onto lite small screen, a dCJCen or more
years ago. At that time, about the most debatable Item oo TV was
the amount of decoUetage revealed by Dagmat or the actual age
of Milton Berle's joke file.
He got, and deserved, a promotion to an m:ecutive position
with Taft Broadcasting in Cincinnati, where he now presides as
Lawrence H. Rogers II, president of Taft Broadcasting. The
chain includes WTVN-TV, Columbus, which is seen locaUy, and
WKRC-TV, In Cincinnati, which ill not.
Last m011th, TV Guide's Richard !loan reports, Bud Rogers
blew bis cool.
During Dick Cavett's sabbatical fnm TV, before he and
Jack Paar begin sharing late talk-show duties oo ABC DeJ:t ~ar.
the network pre~~ented several late-night speciab!,) IOme very
good -satire, comedy, concerts.
One of these specials was a rock performance by a group
called Allee Cooper. There ain't no Allee Copper,folks.
What there is is a bunch of wildly-dressed men, some of'them
in tra!WVesttite costumes, using a variety rJ. vaguely obscene and
always offensive tricks and ''Surprises" to shnclt, stlmulale and
otherwise enchant Uieir audleilces. 1belr musiciatishlp, if any,,
disappears li such a pathetic burly-burly.
Anyhow, Bud was sitting in hlB living room or somewhere
when Allee Cooper came on. He watched this ill-Ired m:•mple rJ.
had taste for about fifteen minutes- and then ordered WKRCTV to jerk it aff the air.
The result: bedlam. More than 4,000 letters poured in and
were about 4to 1against the station's (meaning l!ud's) actioo. A
bomb threat and assorted plcketa and protesters also showed up,
according to Doan.
Okay, up to this point, Bud Rogers is 'acting true to form decisive, a little bellicose, controversial, and totally unafraid to
stand by his convictions. Those are the qualities I always admired in him -although in this particular case, I think be was
wrong: the public could watch (or not watch), and let Allee
&lt;looper hopefully disappear from a massive turn-df by the
viewers.
But the years may have done something to Bnd. He has
apparently relented, and telecast and "edited" version of the
show in early December.
Even though I disagree with Bud's Initial decision, I am
sorry he succumbed to public pressures. The old Bud Rogers
would never have let a bunch of foul-mouthed kids (or anyone
else) pressure him into anything. And that is a pity, because TV
needs some people like Bud.

canned a two pomler at the
buzzer.
Coach Richard Hamilton's
Highlanders were trathng 15-12
going into the second quarter
when the Me began to change.
Carter hit five long shots and
Uoyd Wood, 6-2 sophomore,
began hitting to lead the
Gallians to a 32-24 lead at the
half.
Carter had 10 points during
the rally while Wood added
eight pomts. southwestern

..

By KEITH WISECUP
The Eastern Eagles will risk
~~ tlleir surprising fil-st ·- place
position in the Southern Valley
Conference thiS Friday wh'en
they tangle With the Southern
.;J
~
~·· Local Tornadoes at Racine.
~:i
By MILTON RICHMAN
;:;l
The Eagles, predicted to
···
UPI Suorts Edllllr
~
NEW YORK (UP!) -Marie Lombardi's life certainly has ftmsh htgh but not at the top of
the pack, are 3-0 m the SVAC
changed In a way, yet in another way,1t hasn't.
, Much of il still is wrapped up in football, the vehicle which and 3-1 overall. That loss was
to the Federal-Hocking Lan·
instantly brings back all those wonderfuUy warm memories.
cers,
74-64, two weeks ago.
Thirteen miniature gold footballs dangle from a bracelet she
Coach Bob Ord's Tornadoes,
wears around her left wrist. They all represent various cham·
pionshlps with which her lale husbaod was associated during his m a drastic rebuilding year,
have a 1-3 overall record and
years in the collegiate and professional ranks.
are
1·2 in the SVAC. Their only
Another gold charm Marie Lombardi wears is a tiny football
helmut given to her by the Green Bay Packer players her win was a 78-71 o~ertune affair
husband coached in Super Bowl I, and still another is the actual over the Kyger Creek Bobcats.
In a comparison of scores, the
tie lac Vli!Ce Lombardi always wore.
·
Eagles defeated the Bobcats
"How Much?"
·- "You ask me how much I loved him?" smiled the vibrant 74·54.
Southern will be without its
energetic woman who was his wife for the better part of three
top·notch
guard, Bobby Miller.
decades.
"I adored him. I couldn't stand to be away from him for five
minutes. We fought like cats and dogs, but do you know why?
Because I baited him. Honestly. We'd get mad at each other, '
maybe we wouldn't speak for awhile and then one of my fnends
would say to me, 'Marie, do you kMw why Vince IS upset? It's
because you baited him, that's why.'"
One rJ. the things that inunediatety strikes you about Marie
!Ambardi, a striking woman herself, is how much like her late
husband she Is. You can see it in her speech, her walk and her
little mannerisms .
"I guess a lot of him did rub off on me," she confesses.
Vince Lombardi and his wife seldom were apart very long. In
NEW YORK (UP!) - Two
12 years, she missed only two games. Once when the Packers
Cincinnati
Bengals were
were being quartered at Ft. Bragg, N.C ., an Army post where no
· women were permitted and another Ume when the !Ambardi's named today to the United
Press International 1972
No. 2 grandson was born.
American FootbaU Conference
No Way to Describe It
"Some people ask me how much I miss Vince," said Mane All.Star Team
A third Bengal and a
Lombardi. "I have no way to describe it. He will never die. Those
who didn't really know him usually pictured him as a hard man. member of the Cleveland
The truth is he was as soft as putty. He was a very shy man.
That's wh;r. he was terribly misunderstood. His shyness bothered
:::j

j Today's

:::l

..

I Sport Parade

flf

·Pro Standings

stre

continued to play aggressive
learn bali durmg the third
period.
Led by Terry Bush, 5-8 Senior
guard and Wood, the
Highlanders held a mne pomt
lead gomg into the fmal eight
minutes.
Hannan never qu1t. The
Wildcats came roaring back
m1dway In the fmal stanza.
With three minutes left in the
game, SW lost the services of

Wood, Kevin Walker and Mike
Dillon.HannanqUicklyjumped
rnto a four pomt lead before
LewiS' hero1c efforts.
Lewis had only five pomts
but collected a season high of
19 rebounds.
Carter and Bush were the
leading scorers for the
Highlanders with 14 poigts
each. Wood had 11 pomta.
Larry Hill led Hannan with 16
pomts, R. Black had 13 and
Holley canned 10

The left-handed 5-9 junior won
a starting JOb after bemg the
SIXth man on the bench a week
mto the season. He has
averaged around 10 pointa
smce then and played very well
all-around Lust week aga1nst
Southwestern, Miller suffered
a shoulder dislocation and will
be out about etght weeks.
The Southern starters are 6.1
junior Norman Curfman and 511 semor N1ck lhle, forwards;
5-8 semor Rodney Holman and
5-10 senior Mike Nease,
guards, and 6-3 senior Ron Hill,
center.
Coach Bill Phillips' Eagles
are expected to go With 5-9
senior Randy Boring and &amp;.I
sophomore Tim Spencer,
guards; 6.1 senior Alan Duvall
and 6-1 junior John Sheets,

forwards, and 6-2 junior Steve
Dill, center.
,,
The Eagles, as seen m the
prol)able starting lineups, have
a huge height advantage. But
the smaller Tornadoes will
probably have the edge in
qu1ckness . The only excepUon
to thlsm1ght be Eastern's fleet.
footed Randy Boring.
Should the favored Eagles
faller, they'd remain in first
place though tied With Hannan
Trace and Symmes Valley, all
wtth one loss.
In other Southern Valley
Conference action, the Sym.
mes Valley Vikmgs, 2·1 In
league play, play the North
Gallla Pirates, 2-2 in SVAC
acl!on at Symmes Valley
where opponents' victories are
few and far between.

. NBA Standings
By United Press International
Both teams hit 36 pet. from
the fioor. SW sank 24 of 66
attempts while Hannan hit 18 of
50. The Wildcats hit 18 of 32 foul
shots while the Htghlanders
converted only nine of 20. SW
held a 41).36 rebounding edge.
Hannan captured the reserve
game, 55-53. Chapman led the
winners with 16 points. Dav1d
Whitt had 21 in a losing cause.
Southwestern wiiL_play
Kyger Creek In the Holiday
Tournament at Rto Grande
College on Friday, Dec. 29
SOUTHWESTERN C57)
Dillon 3-0.6; Frasher 0 1 I ,
Lewis 21 -5. Wood 3·5·11, Bush
6-2 14 , Carter 7-0-14; Walker 3
0 6, Crouse 0 0 0. TOTALS 24·9·
57 .

HANNAN (54) - Barnette 0
9 9, Holley 3·4 10, Hill 6·4·16,
Black 6·1· 13, Black 3-0-6
TOTALS lS-19·54.
By Quarters
Southwestern 12 20 16 9- 57
Hannan
15 9 15 15-54

Television Logi
THURSDAY, DEC. 21, 1972
00- News 3, 4, S, 15, News 6, 8, 10, I Dream of Jeannie 13,
Designing Women 33.
7· oo - What's My Line 8; Big Re~ Jvbl1eJ! _t~ ;,.Nuw,V 1 tO;, Bea1, 1·,i
The Clock 4 , Arri~zlrig Wt*id' 'dt'KI~sRI~'1!, ~~. Co • 20. ·"
·courseofOurTimesJJ;TruthorConseq.lc!\ ~·
· o!'
7. 30 - 1'11 See You In Court4; Hollywood Squares 3; 'fo Tell The •
Truth6; Wild Kingdom 10; LassieS ; Beat the Clock 13; Zoom
20, Black Journal 33
8 00- Flip Wilson 3, 4, IS; Mod Squad 6, 13; Advocates 20, 33,
The Waitons 8, tO
9 00 - Ironside 3, 4, 15; International Performance 20, 33;
Assignment. Vienna 13, Oral Roberts on Campus 6; Movie
6

l!l!ll{~~~n Mfrli¥ ~ll!!;!riijjho lillie !t."'

10 00 - Owen Marshail6, 13; Dean Mart1n 3, 4, 15, Mountaineer
Sports 33; News 20.
11 00-News3,4,6,S, 10, 13, 15.
11 30- Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15, Olck Cavett6 ; Rose Bowl Bound
4; Movie "Satan Never Sleeps" 8; Movie "Gragon Wyck" 10;
Movie "Circus at Fear" 13.
1·00- News 4.
1.30 News 13

6

•
•

I

~'

Lon1 };!f!-{1£~ .State
loops impressive

"Will Penny" 8, lD

FRIDAY, DEC.l2, 1972
00 - Sunrise Seminar 4; Sacred Heart tO
6:15 - Farmtlme 10
6:20- Farm Report 13.
6. 25- Paul Harvey 13.
6· 30- Columbus Today 4; Bible Answers 8; Human Dimenllon
10, Blue Ridge Quartet·t3.
7.00- Today 3, 4, 15; CBS News 8, 10; Flintstones 13.
7 30- Romper Room 6, Sleepy Jeffers 8, Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
13.
s· 00- Capt. Kangaroo 10; Sesame St. 33; Lassie 6; New Zoo
Revue 13.
,
S· 30- Jack LaLanne 13; New Zoo Revue 6; Romper Room 8.
9· 00- Paul Dl•on 4, Phil Donahue IS ; Green Acres 3; Con·
centratlon6; Friendly Junction 10; Ben Casey 13; Mr. Rogers
33; Capt. Kangaroo 8.
9:30- Elec. Co. 33, To Teillhe Truth 3; Jeopardy6; HazelS.
10.00 - Dinah Shore3, 15; Joker's WildS, ]0; Columbus 6 Calling
6; Dick Van Dyke 13; My Kind of Chrlstmas33.
tO· 30- Concentration 3, 15; Phil Donahue 4; Price Is Right 8, 10;
Split Second 13, Circle or Lights 33
11' 00- Sale of the Century 3, 15; Gambit 8, 10; Elec Co 20;
Love, American Style 6; Password 13
tl·JO-Hollywood Squares 3, 4, t5: Love of Life S; Bewitched 6,
13; Sesame St. 20
12:00 - Jeopardy 3, 15: Bob Braun's S0-50 Club 4; News 13;
Contact 8; Password 6.
12· 30 - 3 W's Game 3, 15; Search lor Tomorrow 8, 10; Split
Second 6.
1 oo - News 3, It's Your Bet 8; Green Acres 10; Watch Your
Child 15.
1·30- 3 On a Match 3, 4, 15; k. The World Turns 8, 10: Lers
Make a Deal 6, 13; Christmas Special 33.
2· 00 - Days of Our Lives 3, 4, 15; Newlywed Game 6, 13; Mike
Oouglas6; Guiding LightS, 10: Plot to Overthrow Christmas

·

"l

•

•

•

•

•
•

••
-~

:

~

:
•
!;
•
~

;:
•
:

•

••
•
'

••

•
•

lrJr lfnlr Dflll Nltdl

Bosto~
26 4 867
New York
26 9 .743
Buffalo
9 23 281
Philadelphia 3 31 08S
Central Dlvi•lon
w. r. pet.
Baltimore
18 14 563
Atlanta
IS 15 .545
Houston
tJ 18 .419
Cleveland
9 25 .265
~¥estern Conference
Midwest Division
w. I. pel.
Milwaukee
24 9 727
Chicago
20 tt 645
KC Dmaha
20 t7 .541
Detroit
14 17 452

2il2
1S
25
g.b
'12

4'12
10
g.b.
3
6

9

Pactf1c Division
w. 1. pet. g.b

Los Angeles 27 5 .S44
Golden State 20 t1 .645 6'12
Phoenl•
15 lS .455 12'12
Seattle
10 27 .270 19\1:1
Portland
8 26 .232 20
Wednesday's Resulls
New York 124 Houston 102
Los Ang 96 Baltimore 90
KC-Omaha 121 Seattle 110
Milwaukee 123 Portland 104
Detroit 141 Phliadelphlal t3
(Only games scheduled)
Tflursday's Games

(No games scheduled)

vital says JYFL chief

NEW YORK (UP!) - Pete
Rozelle made it perfectly clear
Wednesday that he thinks the
local TV blackout policy Is vital
to the conUnued success of pro
football.
•
The pro football commissioner, who remembers the da)'ll
when 11 was difficult to give
tickets away to pro football
games, was asked by President
Nixon to lift the blackout for
this weekend's four playoff
games if the games are sold out
48 hours before kickoff.
Rozelle tried to be polite but
his answer was finn : uNo."
Attorney General Richard G.
Kleindienst disclosed in a
statement that on behalf of
Nixon-an avid football fan
Browns were named to the fense, an easy winner.
Cleveland
cornerback
and
especlaUy a supporter of
second team defense.
Cincinnati center Bob John· Clarence Scott and Cincmnati the Washington Redskins-be
son was named to first team of. free safety Tonuny Casanova, discussed with Rozelle the
iense, edging Ptttsburgh's Ray a rookie, were named to the possibility of ending the home·
second team defense.
game blackout.
Mansfield by one vote.
When Rozelle refused, KleinTackle Mike Reid of Cincin- Receiving honorable men- ,
nati was on the first team de- lion were wide recetver Chip dienst sai&lt;l that he promptly
Myers of Cmcinnati · center dehvered a response to Rozelle
Bob Demarco of Cl~veland . on behalf of Nixon. The While
tiaht ends Milt Morin of House subsequently confirmed
'' j •1 • 1•j1;i(,
o •h "'' th&amp;t"'\11 "'S~rvlttg I,'Dotlel! "'~
Clqeve
ana ~no 1:10b loL.,C.
uumpy
of
·•Cincinnati . tackle Walter retaliatory acUon, Kleinclienst
Johnson of Cleveland· and was representing "the Pres.
cornerback Uemar Par~tsh of !dent's view."
Cincittnati
"I adVISed Mr, Rozelle,"
Johnson· received 11 votes, Kleindienst said, "that as •
season with a 6~2 decision.
The difference m that one was Reid 19, Scott 10 and Casanova result of the league's decision,
8-10 Mike Westra, who scored 1. Those receiving honorable the Nixon administration
20 and pulled down 20 rebounds mention had two or more votes. would strongly urge the new
Congress to re-examine the
for the winners.
entire antitrust statute and
In other college achon
seek legislation that is more in
College BKB Resulls
Wednesday night, de'fensekeeping
with the public interInternational
mmded Loui.lVille scored its By Umted Press
East
est."
ftfth straight victory by Lehman S7 NY Mrtme 54
Actually, there are no ·anti·
beatmg Flonda, 69-57, Cin- Adelphi 94 Hunter 62
trust
implications to the local
Clncl 79 Rutgers 58
cinnati ran over young Denison 99 Juniala 71
TV blackout since it has
Rutgers, 79-58, and Canlsius Cheyny 64 Trenln St S8
nothing to do with competition
Wllm. 76 Wilkes 54
outclassed St. Francis, 107-71. Canlslus
among
the member cluba of the
107 St Fran Pa 71
University of Paciftc, which
South
league. Also, the legality of the
would be mthe top 10 if it never Louisvl 69 Florida 57
blackout has been upheld
77
had to venture out of its gym, SE La . 95 Lamar
several times by the courts.
Midwesl
took its 43rd m a row at home Eau Cia~re 73 Rvr Fils 63
But the NFL, 00 a special rider
with a school record 49 field Lf.ola, Ill 86 Wchta St. 79
to an appropri&amp;ti!Jil biD, got an
Mary's 67 Pan Am . 61
goals m a 1~ win over Cal S.
La Crosse 7S Stout 58
antitrust exemption to merge
Poly, San Luis Obispo.
H. Payne 87 SE Otda. 76
But some Coast teams on the Sou Ill. SS Tenn Tech 57
six
agogotwith
the AFL.
The years
NFL also
an exemption
Miami , 0 SB Ball St. S2
road continued to play as Evansvl 56 Seaii -Pac. 55
in 1961 to sell Its gamea to the
though they were homesick. Wright Si 68 Mrieta 63
TV networks as a package.
Yngstwn St 53
Seattle was flattened at Cleve St. 71Soulhwesr
Toward the end of the 97nd
Utah, 86-06, while San Fran- Rice 72 VMI 56
Congress, some senators.
West
cisco State was in too deep at
Coil . 80 Knox 77
Detroit In a 7:H2loss. Hayward Colo
NEW YORK (UPI) - World
Utah 86 Seattle 66
Stale, now 0-9, actually played Boise St.109 Puget Snd 72
Series hero Gene Tenace and
much better than expected in USF S2 Utah St 77
62
losing at Weber State, 8!).79, USC 69 Fordham
Nassau Classic
smce the winners are 6-1 for the
At Uniondale N.Y.
have accepted invltatloos to
Champion
campaign.
play in the $30.000 Arilerlcan
Lng Bch St. 97 Jacksnvl 70
It was Boise State 109, Puget
Consolation
Airlines Golf Classic, Feb. 2-4,
Sound '12, while Seattle Pacific 0. Roberts 74 Holslra 6ll
was edged at Evansville, 56-55.
in San Juan, P.R.

Next month, the Vince Lombardi Award will be presented to
college football's Oittatanding lineman during a special dinner
sponsored by the Rotary Club of Housi.on on Jan. 18.
Jim Stillwagon of Ohio State was tbe recipient of the f1rst
award in 1971, Walt Patulski of Notre Dame received it last year
College Basketball Roundup
and this year's finalista are Tom Braheny of Oklahoma, Rich
Glover of Nebraska, Jolm Hannsh of Alabama and Jerry By United Press International
Could it be that the nation's
Sisemore of Texas.
two
top college basketball
The award was conceived after cancer claimed Vince Lorn·
Ilardi in September of 1970. Proceeds from the award dmner go to teams lurk in Southern Califorthe American cancer Society's research program, and th~ nia?
UCLA ts the unanimous
trophy which the winner receives is a 45-pound mounted block of
choice
for No. 1 while lAng
granite designed by Houston artist Mark Storm. It typifies Vince
Beach State was rated sixth in
lAimbardi perfecUy.
the last UP! poll. But the 49ers
Speaks Some More
Looking at the trophy here, Marie Lombardi spoke some more never looked tougher than in
pasting Jacksonville, 97-70,
about her h!Sband.
"My first reaction after he died was that I was very angry at Wednesday night m the finals
football," she said. "I hoped everybody would lose. I felt football of the Nassau ClaSSic Ul New
had taken too much out of Vince, aU the tension, the pressure and York. It was only JacksonVIlle's second loss against five
everything. He never had any time to enjoy himself.
"He loved to play golf, and he loved to be With hts children, but wins.
Long Beach State's All
he never had time. First with Green Bay and then with
Arilerica
guard, Ed Ratleff, hit
Washington. You know it's pretty lonely up there on that
mountain. Even if you win, you never can enjoy .yourself. You 24 points and wound up as the
tourney's Most Valuable Plsy·
have to do it all over again next year.
"As I say, my first reaction after Vince died wasn 'I a good one, er.
"Our defense took them out
but the Redskim were absolutely wonderful to me, and now I
don't have that feeling any more. !like football again, and go to of the game," said a bouy!lnt
49ers coach, Jerry Tarkanl8n.
all the games.''
Closest approach to Vince Lombardi today, according to his "The key was puttmg Ratleff
widow, is Don Shula, whose Miami Dolphins established an on (Henry) Williams. Ratleff,
an excellent player, forced
NFL record this year by winning alll4 of their games.
, "Don Shula has the same philosophy and approach Vince did," WiU1801S to shoot -from the
outside and nol get too many
says M&amp;rle Ulmbardi.
easy shots."
WilUams scored 14 points in
the f1rst half but only four
jloints in the second half.
It was a pretty good night all
around for West Coast quintets
as the University of San
Francisco outscored Utah
State, 20-6, down the stretch to
tak~ an 82-77 road win for the MINCHER RETffiES
host's first home loss.
OAKLAND (UP!) - Don
Mincher, 34-year-old first
Southern California handed baseman of the Oakland
New
York's
Fordham Athletics who had a .249 career
University ils first loss of the batting average m the majors,
anounced his retirement
Wednesday, saying he wanted
to spend more time with his
Southern Frosh
family
Mincher, who also played for
defeat Pirates
Minnesota, Califorrua, Seattle
and
Texas, played in two World
RACINE - Southern H1gh
"1111 CIIA"IOI 01'
School's freshman basketball Series and one All.Star game.
. .101" .. ' 111110 ,.CIS'
squad coached by Duane Wolfe His best season was In 1967
ftiOI• 992..5759
downed NorUt Galha Monday wht:n he batted · .273, hit 20
homers and drove in 76 runs.
271 N. 111 • ,..,.,
here 40 to 18.
'
'
For Southern, Danny Brown
AM11111tll'...
; 01~rt, a.I.
led with 11 points, Mike
Roberta bad 9, Tim i:Jurfman 6,
Brady Huffman 5, Wyatt South GAME COACHES
4, Paul Sc,.Wtz and Paul Cross sANTA ANA, Ca. (UPI) 2 each and Kenton Holman 1. Bobby Hull and Nick Mlcko.-t
For North Gallla, R. ri Winnipeg will coach lhe
Eagleton had 8.
West and Jack Kelley of New
Southern will play Kyger England will head the Eut
Creek on Jan. aat Racine.
squad in the first W«ld Hockey
SGuthem
H 24 32 40 Association AII.Star gaDM,
NorthGallla
2 8 14 18 Jan. 6, at Qeubec.

Eastern Conferenc::e
Atlantic Division
w. I. pet. g.b.

Blackout policy is

Three Bengals
honored by UPI

'

2 30 - Doctors 3, 4, 15, Dating Game 13; Edge of Nights, 10
3· oo - Another World 3, 4, 15; General Hasp. 6, 13; Love
Splendored Thing 8, 10; 8111 Moyer's Journal 20.
3:30- Return to Peyton Place 3, 4, 15; One Lile to Live 6; Book
Bet 33; Secret Storms, 10; Mouse Tales33.
4 oo- Mr Cartoon 3; Somerset 15, Sesame St. 20, 33; Love
American Style 13; Fllntstones 6; Gllll91n's Island 8; Merv
Gnffln 4; Movie "Underwater Warrior" 10.
4· 25 - Sports Club 6.
4· 30- I Love Lucy 6 ; Merv Griffin 15; Petticoat Junctloo 3;
Andy Griffith 15 ; Daniel Boone 13: Merv Grlltln8.
5 00- Mister Rogers3J; Ponderosa 3, 4; Daniel Boone 6; Santa
at the Mall 15.
5"30- Marshall Dillon 15: Elec. Co 33 ; Dragnet 8; Gomer Pyle
13; HodaePOd!le Lodge 20.
6.00- News 3, 4, 8, to, 15; Truth or Conseq. 6: Sesame St. 20;
Around the Bend 33.
6:30- News6, 13: I DrHm ol JHnnle13; Hathay'!lla 33.
7 00- Truth or Conseq. 3; Beet the Clock 4; Wllat s My Line I;
Wild Kingdom 13; Newt, Weelher, Sports 6, 101 Tom Jones
Chrlstmos Speclal15; Folk Guitar 33; Elec. Co. 20.
7·30- To Tell The Truth 6: Parent Game 10; Porter Waggooer
3; Young Dr. Kildare 4; Beal tho Clock 13; Irs Your Bet I;
Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Marco Sport Lite 33.
1·00- Sanford &amp; Son j, 4. 15; Brady Bunch 6. 13; Mission:
Impossible I, 10; Weshlnaton WHit In Review 20.
8: JO - Little Pecpie 3, 15; Partrldao Family 6, 13; Just
Generation 33; Wall St Wttk 20; AC~rlstmas Story 4.
9: oo- Ghost Story J, 4, 151 Room-m 6, 13; World Press 201
Movle "Miracle on 34th St." 8: Movie "The GrNt Caru110,"
10.
9:30-0dd Couple6, 13; Thirty Minuteo W1th20.
10 00- BanyClll 3, -4, 15; Love American Style 6, 13; Newt 20;
Paul Nuchlms 33;
10:33- Whoda you Think You Ar... 13.
1t·oo- News. Weolher. Sportu. e. 10. 13.
11 · 30- Johnny C.rson 3, tS; Dick C.vett 6; R- Bowl BourMh;
Movie "Thit Gene Krupa Stary" f1 Movie "Sherlack Hoe .....
and the DNcly Necklace" 10; Movle"A Stary 01 O.VId" 13.
l:OD-ROiter Derby 4; Movie "Night C.ller from Outer Spact''
10.
1:30- Nt\VS 13.
2·00- News 4.

were ~going into last night's
encounter With the West
Virginians.
Phil Lewis,i;..ljunior center,
iced the victory wtth a tllree
pomt play with less lhsn one
minute remaining . m the
contest. His three points gave
Southwestern a 55-54 lead.
Hannan took the ball down the
court, shot but lost the
rebound.
SW held pn until Terry
Carter, 5-9 sophomore guard,

~{"~."V.:~!o::.·~·.-,·,~·,•o•U! &lt;;• '-'·!~Y.· •• ,_,. • u.., ·~
~ ,,._..,.
~·CJ!;";";'\"•'""
~· ~~·-'"(•'&lt;'•'•"" ,•,•,•.v!·O'~v.v,-.-.-.•:O:O:.- :.:,;:-.«::..•X::::_.:::o:o:o:•_.::~:::=:::::::•,•,•,&lt;:•,&lt;;•,•:•:\\•:•:•:•:•:•f

+++

33,

r·

Tornados challenge Eastern Friday

ON THE TV DIAL: One of last year's better holiday specials,
"A Joyful Noise," is rerun on WMUL-TV, ata ... Dick Cavett has
a guest whom we didn't think liked TV: Bobby Fischer, at 11:30,
WTVN-TV.

all the way to ga,;,e. What do follow.

oq u:.'.
DR: LAWRENCEEr.tAMB

4•

BY PAUt CRAB'T'RE.E

U::ihi~~o~;:~:io t~ ~::da~'vorces

In 1944, horse racing was Dear Chuck:
you do now?
The moon is approaching the suspended in the tjniled States
We'll bet she spent the next week making you repentant for
.K853
last
quarter.
for
the
duration
of
World
War
.
practical
jokes. Right? -HELEN AND SUE
.K3
The
morning
stars
are
II.
t K742
The U. S. Navy's F·4
.A75
Ip, 196p1, Apollq , ~ b.!aisted off
Phanlool jet was awarded the Me~Ul')", Vef!US ~~d Mars.
WEST,r,-....1,~~'
Daedaihm I••Aivara&gt; iby ·"the • 'rile evenlng stars.are Jupiter • for t]1e moon orbit carrying
.10t7
r
,..
'
0 •1
national ' c'onve'ntion of the and
• ""ll\"!}.
-•• ·'·"
as~cw11uls FI;.an.k BoriJl~n,
.Q872
Those born on this date are James Lovell and William
Order of Daedalians, the
tJ85
Anders.
.KI3
national fraternity of military under the sign of Sagittarius.
Soviet Premier Josef Stalin
SOVTR
pilots. The all-weather carrier.AQH
was
born Dec. 21, 1879.
Athought for the day: British
based jet became operational
•Aa&amp;
On
this
day
in
history
:
poet
Richard Trench said, "We
In 1961 and subsequently
tA98
In 1620, the Pilgrims set foot kneel, how weak. We rise, how
' .Q104
established I~ world speed,
Both vulnerable
altitude and time-to-climb for the first time on American full of power."
soil at Plymouth, Mass.
w..t North r..ot South records.
By Lawreaee Lamb, M.D.
The recommended daily al·
lt
Pass 1•
Dear
Dr.
Lamb-Have
you
lowance
of vitamin A is
Pass 2.
Pus 3N.T.
.
th
1
about
6,000
units in adults
Pia
Pus 6•
any mformat ton on e va ue and less in children and in·
!Ri
~
'~
·
:
:.:":'IW.Y#W
W%711:0":'®"
..
..
:::ti:"O:\'.:oo'il:.o:::.
of Vitamin A in controlling
P. . Posa Pass "
oily skln and hair condition? !ants. Of course, initiaUy you
Openlng
10
might need to take more if
I have been taklng three you have a true vitamin A
25,000 unit VItamin A cap· deficiency, for example up
By O.Wald &amp; James Jacoby
sules a day (not by a doc· to 25,000 IU daily. Once the
Boris Koylchou has reore·
BY JACK O'BRIAN
turned tycoon when he brought his shrewd tor's v.rescr~ption) and in two initial deficiency bas been
sented both France "and
0
'8 OT
week s time this has greatly corrected, there is very little
theatrical knowhow to offstage lighting -such decreased
North America in World
NLY HIS UVER N
the oily condition reason to take more than
as the new Kennedy Center in Washingtm, and of my skln.
ChamJJiOIU!hlp competition.
ON THE ROCX8
5,000 units a day.
He atiJI playa in toui"JUINEW YORK (KFS)- Nick Coados, Martha the new bulldlng where the Hotel Astor 01100 was
Are there any dangers or
Naturally preformed vita·
menta, but most of his cur- Raye's m:~n11band and permanent Ql8!lllger, the class of Thnes Square ... CaUed in to design side effects from taking this min A is fowtd in dairy prodrent activity is in rubber checked into Johns HopldDI HOIIpltal after years the lighting for the Mlnskoff Theater at Astor vitamin A?
ucts and meat. Most mUk
Dear Reader - Some doc· commercially distributed Is
br:t~ebldding was based on of over-imbibing for a thoroul!h checkllp. He Plaza, Abe even had to invent his own light tors
have reported ~ood re· already fortified with vita·
the fact that his side bad a was amazed - ''The only thlnl they didn't find bulbs-nothing available was right for Abe's
suits in using vitamm A for min A. Green and yeUow
part score of eo. • North wrmg with me was my liver," he marveled at concept.
skin conditions such as you vegetables such as spinach
should really have passed at Roseland. "It was perfect!" ... Prince Charles
Adman Art KUcup, who started the describe, although there is and carrots are· partlcularly
three no-trump and the final isn't concerned much about sister Anne's needlepoint ;for-men at the Grenadier, just not unanimous opinion about good sources of material that
slam contract was a horror speeding-troubles. He just ordered a new Astoo sewed up exclusive righta to award-winning tis use.
tne body uses to manufacture
but Boris brought it home Martin v.a with a top ..,.ed of 180 MPH. eoet sports cartoonist Bill GaUo 's famed "Basement
Within limited a m o n t s vitamin A. A person who
with good breaks and help
-.A Is not harmful, but eats a lot of yellow and
from the defense.
$25,000 ... Cbarlle Chaplin baa finished the script Bertha" bueball character. Sports stores will vitamin
in excess quantities, it can green vegetables is not likely
He won the first trump in of his ''lalt" movie: titled '!The Freak," It will carry the new fingertip sport ... Lawyer Bob be dangerous The American to be deficient in vitamin A
bls own hand; cubed a sec. (if produced) star Charlie's daughters Victoria Farrell, who's taken several cracks at news- Medical Assn. 's view on this unless he has some other de·
ond high trump; led a heart and J011etm!ne; be'U direct and play a cameo psper publishing, insists he didn't do so badly as expressed in their 1971 feet in the digestive system.
to dummy's kmg; a second role ... Sir Ralph Richardson, one of the two or with his long1!one papers: "The Brooklyn drug evaluations is "there Is Incidentally, you can eat all
heart back to his ace and three finest actors m:tant, won't dlscuJa acting. Eagle I started with less than $10,000 ran more no satisfactory evidence that of the green and yellow vegeruffed his last bear! wtth He'D talk about parrots or motor bikes, two of than a year and made $1,000,000 in 90 days. The any additional benefits can tables you want and.._ never
be obtained from dally doses get vitamin A toxicny be·
dummy's king of trumps.
his enthl!lluma, but insisted while making "a Dally Mirror I revived started with $100,000 above
25,000 IU." Infants and cause the process of convertThen he played another Doll's H01111e" that he acts for a living, "So after depoilta. The odds against getting It young children are more apt ing the substance in these
t[ump and East had to make
a discard. The jack of hearts there's no point agonizing over It once It's started were 1,IJOO.to.l and for lasting 1 week to have toxic reactions to vegetables to vitamin A in
vitamin A than adults. Toxic the body is so slow that it
appeared to he worthless and over."
10,~1. All I did was run lt months. I left reactions have been noted m won't allow enough vitamin
East let It go.
Tbere'U be more of Juliet MUla to love In both ventures when stockholders moved in. I n fa n t s less than three A to accumulate to cause
Boris led a diamond to "Avantl." She had to add 30 extra pounds which BoW ended after I was gone." Bob's back months of age, when they toxicity
dummy's king and returned jiggle conalderably during her nude scenes. practicing criminal law in Mineola, L. I.
have been given as little as
There Is an o p t i m a I
a diamond.
18,500
IU
a
day.
amount
of almost anything.
Bonnie Bowden, ex.Jane Fonda stand-in
East made the mistake of Jack Lenunon's peeled down, too ... a federal
Indications of vitamln A Too little or too much can
d B 1 h d lookaee Into retailer's losses turned up an of. and look...llke, joined the Sergio Mendes Brasil
I ·
toxicity include loss of ap- both be harmful.
~=Y~~:n~~- ~ea~on 8:"e stri~k fictsl decision that the U. S. baa had more than 77 group ... Barbra Strelsand never likes In- petite, weight lOSS, itching (NIW!PAPIR INTIRPRISI ASSN )
with his ace ; led back his $16 bllllon in property thefts per year via terruptions, but this Ume when a Plaza Hotel of the rectum, cracked and
last diamoi'ld and East was crooked inside-jobbers ~ filched mer· bellnw! dashed right Into the scene in front she bleedlnf I i p s, fatigue, ab·
on lead With nothing but chandlse to fences. Shoplifting isn't even in- didn't mind: It was to report to ''The Way We domina discomfort, b o n e
clubs.
and joint paiD, symptoms S"onti ,,., ,.....,., '" pr. Lomh,
He led the deuce and au eluded In the 16-bill! ... TheN. Y. Prella Cub, Were" aiiSiStant director Howard Koch Jr. that representative of brain tu. in nro of ,~;, ....,.,.,, ,.o. ,.,
Boris had to do was make fonnerly the N• Y· Reporters Ass'~, ~~ been his wife had just phoned from Calif. to announce mo1·,ioss of hair, brittle nails, mr, lloiio City $totioo, H"" Yorl! ,
the right choice between the offered one of the former U. S. lines piers, she'd had a baby girl, Emily.
insomnia and menstrual lr· NY. 10019. For • """' ol Dr. u..m·,
queen and the 10. Needless complete with garden, as permanent H.Q. ...
1bis looks like the beginning of another ~gutarlties. occasion· boollot .., ,.,.,_, iltt, Wli 50
to say, he did make lt. He
Is George Wallace l'lllllling in '76? He's j1181 Lunt &amp; Fontanne legend: Mandy and Ted aUy someone takes a large ceots to tilt , •.,. o44ren •"" ...
dltcarded a small club on swnm!)lled a public relationa firm to map out a Danaon met at Carnegie Tech's drama school, amount of vitamin A over a "" •sot,...., Oiot" -lot.
•76 campaign ... Greatest swt to see the New married and came to N. Y. to seek their period of time and develops 018... _.. .,., _ ......
dummy's last diamond.
symp\oms so slmUar to brain
...,.... ...,., .. ...,..,,.
CNIWSIAPIR INTIIPllll ASSN I Year in ill the Act I restaurant atop the Allied
tumor
that
the
doct9f8
may
SEA'I'IU:
(UPI) -Mark
theatrical fortune~. Thef're already working
Chemical
Tower
on
Tbnes
Square.
Guests
can
think
that
is
what
the
patient
Morrilolt
11
~
his model
together 1n ''The Real ill8pector Hound" hit
•J.t:IIIW,\,·nlt .tt
look down at maybe 250,000 Tlmea Square comedy - understudying the male and femlle bas, from aU the dflrerent airplane apert becaUII that's
unleS8 they find out the _.., _ v be can -t it to
'DM 1'Will hill boon:
celetnntl ... Only bole!IUpper club in N. Y. leade. The GasiiBitt Club quit Ita longtime tests,
that the patient has been
WUI W"'l
&gt;r"
Wilt H-* ._. South lllllkln&amp; a ttylllh go of It-the M•loonette in the baiT(!Om male chauvlnLst rut: has Its first popping vltamin A tablets Florida.
Morrllon's model II a a
,_ 1•
Pus
,
~.....~lla ... Joe Franklin Ql TV and• noetalgla diltaff bartender ... In the Speakeall)' Room, regularly.
• y..., Iouth, hold·
·
...... the Greek Line's O},ympla cruise In jaaman Sol Yaged just started his aecmd · In view of these known foot lang 1111• knp o1 tha Baellll
•• tAClN7I t AIZ •KQf January and reaDy wlllllllke It Memory Lane. engagement - the first luted six yean ... toxic effects from vitamin A ...,....11c tnMpott (SST),
. . . . . JOl! do now!
Joe IIYI he's booked llllpllla&amp;enarian Rudy ~oth ~ Gradano at the Grenadlel': "I'm and the lack of any evidence wblch be bau&amp;bt at an IUdiaD
, .._.... 1lld four lioorto. You VaD.ey, Harry Herablleld, 85, and George ooly ~ to forget the Uquor strike.'' ... that you get any llddltlonal· for $31 DOD when the letMil
beyond 25,000 unlll, It - ... ..:... "deddld DOt to
•
.. r1 'h' a ollm kt 11 Je~l. 75.
BlU'a Gay tell loll its muter chef, Norris benefit
seems
to
me you would be .,.
lor - . , .. ore _ .
The F)!l's crackdown oo organiaed crime Lavalle, off to auiltlanstad, St. Crob, Vlrgln
much wiser to Umlt yout In· flnlnce tha plant.
wlM up ~+1M tile gqt 813 crime boases ccnvleled In !Ileal '72. And Ialande, to ltart bla own reatallflllt. OWner Oble take to 25,000 units dally u
Tbe j1llk dealer piiM to
toD.tn Qua'l'IIC»&gt;
oontllcaled more than $3,210,000 In cult "1114 Bart (aN. J, banker) couldn't be happier- he's a ma~imum· doaap and you 1n1t111 the model In 1 probably don't need that hi pilnlll mOil frGn Dllney
, 1 • • ., lll!llflnl 10 thNe Illegal stuff ... Abe Feder, formerly the back In the kltdten cooking; lo~~eslt.
. _ . ,... ....... 11M ..,.. definitive lightlnuenlulln the Bdwy, thtlter,
much.
W«ld _ , ()rlando, Fla.
!"O&amp;TR (D)

&amp; THINGS

By Helen and Sue Bottel
111wnbl Down 011 Holdlng Hands?
Helen and Sue :
I have a good, steady glrlfriend. When we meet in the haU at
school we think it's okay to hold bandS, but our princiP,al has a
rule that says there can be no physical contact between boys and
girls, Heck, I wouldn't kiss her madly or anything, but what's
wroog with walkmg down the hall hand-in-band? Yet the
teachers watch us like hawks.
They keep preaching ''maturity" at high school and how we
should act grown up. WeD, adults show these little signs of af.
fecti011 and everyone thinks it's great thattbey care. Why not us?
-SLAPPED DOWN FOR HOLDING HANDS

3- Tile llaUy Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pomo.roy, 0.,Dec. 21, 1972

~~~~a:::u;nd':t":::

threatened legislation to force
the NFIL to open up local
telecasts of games that are sold
out 48 hours in advance. The
blll died of inaction in the
adjournment rush, There's
also some quesaon whether the
courts would uphold the constitutionality of such a bill.
"Despite the intense interest
In pro football," Rozelle said,
"six of the last 10 conference
championship games have not
been sold out, and since 11167
when divisional playoff games
were Instituted 011 a regular
basis, six of 17 such games
were played to less than
capacity.''
Rozelle is worried that if the
local blackout is broken, pro
football wlll eventually become
a "studio game" like boxing
wiUi the seata half empty. If aU
the games were on local TV,
the demand for season tickets
would wilt away.
The President, lncldentaUy,
will be in Florida this weekend
and will be able to see the
Redskin game, llut he'll mJss
the .. ~iaml.cleveland ;oon\tlrt
that Will .be bl.aclled .out.l,n the
Miami area.
Ohio High School
Basketball Rosuils
By Uniled Press International
Cols Eastmoor 72 Cois Ready
59

Jonathan Alder 7t Cols. Ready
59

East Kno• 58 Cois Academy 50
Lucas 68 Danville 42
Kenton 61 Otlawa Glandorf 55
Fairbanks 81 Waynesfield 65
Benlamln Logan 81 Indian
Lake 46

NHL Standi"'IS
By United Press lntornaHonai
Eut
w. I. I pts gf ga
Montreal
20 5 S48 132 77
Boston
21 s 3 45145 105
NY Rangers 21 10 3 45 132 91
Buffalo
18 9 7 43 127 95
Detroil
14 14 J 31 99 104
Toronro
9 18 5 23 98 109
Vancouver
9 20 4 22 96 138
NYislanders 325 3 9 60152
West
w. t. I pts gf ga
Chicago
20 10 2 42 122 S3
Minnesota
18 12 3 39 111 94
Phila
15 15 &lt;34 119 121
Pittsburgh 15 t4 3 33 121 106
Atlanta
14 16 5 33 89 105
Los Angeles 14 15 4 32 101104
51 Louis
tO t5 6 26 82 102
California
4 20 7 IS 81135
Wednesday's Rosults
Detroit 4 Los Angeles I
Montreal4 NY lsl11nders 2
Buffalo 6 Vancouver 3
Atlanta 5 Toronto 3
Chicago 4 Philadelphia 1
NY Rangers '5 St. Louis 4
Minnesota 5 Caillornla 2
(Only games scheduled)
Tfiursday's Games
Atlanta at NY Rangers
Vancouver at NY Islanders
Detroit at Boston
Los Angeles at Philadelphia
!Only games scheduled)
AHL Standings
By United Press International
East
w. I. t. pts gl ga
Nova Scotia 16 9 8 40 124 82
Rochester
15 9 636108107
Boston
16 14 4 36 106 119
Providence 14 10 5 33 Ill 98
SprlngCield
8 15 5 21 104 l22
New Haven
6 21 6 18 102 159
West
w. 1. t. ph gl ga
Cincinnati
23 S 2 48 T40 92
Virginia
14 t I 6 34 113 108
Hershey
14 9 7 35 110 92
Cleveland
10 14 7 27 119 115
Richmond
12 17 3 27 113 121
Baltimore
5 17 7 17 74 121
Wednesdey'$ Results
Hershey 5 Cleveland 3
New Haven a Belt 3, tie
Providence 5 Boston 1
!Only games scheduled!
Tflursday's Games

Nova Scotia at Cincinnati
(Only game schedulec;C)
WHA Standings
By Unltod Pross lntemallonal
Etsl
w. r. t. ph gl go
New Eng
21 12 1 .Q 149 117
NewYor1&lt;
19 16 0 38 154 123
Cleveland
18 14 t 37 114 93
Quebec
17 14 1 35 116 11:C
Ottowa
14 16 t 29 108 133
Philo
12 21 0 24 119 154
Wool
w. 1. t. ph gl go
Winnipeg
21 15 2 44 142 116
Minnesota
18 13 2 38 112 t06
Los Angeles 15 16 3 33 116 121
Alberta ,
14 18 2 30 103 120
Houston
14 16 2 30 107 115
Chicago
9 21 i 19 90 11S
Wednesdoy'a Rasulh
Philadelphia 8 Chicago s
(Only game scheduled)
Thurlclay's O.mn
Winnipeg at Mlnnesora
New England at Alberta
New Yor1&lt; at Cleveland
Los Angeles 4t Ottawa
!Only ganl""'-\chedvlec;C)'re:}'ll. ,

L.. ....

. '(,II ..

O.:\ t1f'\ lf

rl•l

The DIM, Slltlnel

DIVOTID TO THI
INTUUTOP
MIIOI·MAION AUA
CHE$11• L. TANNIHILL,

•

•

.......

Clly ldlttr
Publlshtd dollr tlctpt
Solurdav bV Tho Ohio Vtllty
Publishing Companv, Ill
Court St, Pomerov, OP'tlo
45769 luslnoss Ortlct 'hOftt
"2·1156, EdiiOrill Phont ff2.
2157
Socond class PDIIago ptld 11
Pomeroy, Ohio
Natlontl lfvtrllling
rtJ)resenle tlvt
GIIIIOhor, Inc .. 12 les 421ld
It, Ntw York Clly, New York .
lubacrlpiiOn ratoa: lit ·
livered by c~rrltr whtre
••olltblt 50 centa ptl wttk;
ly Motor Routt whtrt cerrler
servlct not l'i'lllablt : On1
MOftlh II 75 ly mall In 0~10
ond w. vo .. Ono yMr 114.00.
51• monlhs 11.15. Thrtt
monllll •• 50 su••crlr,llon
prlct lncludtl SundiY T mil·
Stnllnol.

latt\"''"·

Ohio College Bosketball Scores
By United Press lnltrnalionol
Wright State 69 Marietta 63
(ol)
Cleveland State 11
Youngstown State 53
Ctn . 79 Rutgers 58
Holl of Fome
Holiday Tournoment
Denison 99 Juanita 71
Malone 112 Walsh 92

Lowest"
nnce ever

r----.;.~---~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:..

,

~

on a solid-state

Altf
0
clock radio
4 ., ,
II0 • ·,0 II8

'•

XCI
White e.abfnet

:Z~tfll".,... Cork Soled

Brushed

Antique Leather

Brawney

'14"

B's &amp; AA

.

ROIUT HOI~LICH,

Connie

Brown in
Siles
51!2•9

'

heritage house
~

Register for 1973 Pinto

MIDDLEPORT, O.

Hurryl Get one while they last!
o Wakes you to music or news,
o Solid-state chassis means there are no tubes
to warm-up .. . no tubes to burn out,
and 11 provides instant sound .
o B1g 4·in. speaker if electronically maJched
and balanced to cabinet for excellent sound
reproduction.
• Luminous clock hands make it easy to see
time in a darkened room .

Wemer Radio &amp; T.V.
MIDOlfPORT, 0.

�1-Tile llall7 Sogtlei,MiddJeport-PIIneroy, 0., Dec. 21.1972

by Patterson and Patrick

"PRESIDENTS OF MANIFEST DESTINY

Twonty-flnt !'fHido'lJ Chesler A Arthur
(Adminlltrotion September 20, 1881-March 3, 1885)

The Spoilsman Who Turned Reformer
Seven months after he was fired from his lucra·
tive government job by President Rutherford B.
Hayes for putting partisanship ahead of citizenship,
Chester A. Arthur was President.
Arthur was removed from his post as collector
of the Port of New York for vwlating an executiVe
order prohibiting federal administmors from
engaging in political party activities. Since by well·
established custom such activities comprised the
collector's chief function, . Arthur casually tgnored
the decree.
Caught in a political power play between the
honest Hayes and the corrupt Republican state
boss, Sen. Roscoe Conkling, '\rthur appears to
have been more sinned against than sjnner.
The road to the Presidency was easy for Arthur.
Graduating from college at 18 with a Phi Beta
Kappa key, he taught school and practiced law unul

in the Civil War he was appmntcd a brigadier
general of miliua in New York.
.\cti\'C in both the \holitionist muvemcnt and
the Republican Party , :\rthur was an important factor m sccurmg the Pro~i~lcncy fur Gen . Grant . lie
"as rewarded with the customs house post, long
one of the chmce plums in the federal "spoils system ."
When "Half Breed" Jamt-s !1 . Garfield slipped
by the sulematc between Grant and James G .
Blaine to get the presidential nommation in IRRO,
the vtce-prcsidcntial nomination was thrown to
\rthur.
Thus, while President Garfield lay dying during
rhe summer of 1881 from an assassin's bullets, the
natural apprehensum of the public was worsened
hy the prnspect of Arthur becommg President .
.\!though Garfield' was almost totally incapacitated fur II Wt'Cks, \rthur flatly refused to assume
presidential powers as long as Garfield was alive.
When :\nhur assumed the Presidency, however, he SUfPrised everyone by completely reversing his old political ways. Once Cunkling's
henchman, he was no man's henchman now. Once
a ruthless "spoilsman," he advocated and signed
into law the Pendleton Civil Service '\ct. Twn of
this act's major features were the prohibiting nf
assessments against federal employees and the
requiring that certam federal jobs be filled from lists
resulting from open competitive examinations.
He estahllshed a territorial government in
\Iaska (ceded to the United States by Russia during
\ndrew Johnson's \dministration), granted exclusive nghts to Pearl Harbor, Hawa1i, as a repair and
coaling station for the U S. Navy and s1gned a
treaty with Nicaragua for the construction of an
isthmian canal.
Thus, the Manifest Destiny of the ' United
States, dormant smce Polk's Presidency because of
the pressing demands of abolluon, secession, war
and Reconstruction, was on the march again.
Arthur had hoped to wm a second term "in h1s
own right," but because he refused to play the pa. ronage game as President he lost the nommation
to percnmal candidate James G . Blame of Maine.
Although historians generally rate Chester
Arthur as only an average President, one distinguishcd citizen of his ume thought otherwise.
"I am but one of 55 million," Mark Twam said.
"Still, in the opmion of this one-fifty-five-millionth
of the country's population, it would be hard to
better President !\rthur's .\dministration...
'
10! • NGt ti S \ llol l

Generation Rap

.SDFHH:
Good point! Why not make It !(I your principal? Like with a
letter to the editor of your school paper? H the principal and
teachers still lhumbs-4own hand-lloldlng, then ask them nicely to
knock off the "groWIHlp" jargo . - SUE

+++
Dear Slapped Down :
Principals who waste Ume enforcing silly rules subtract
valuable time from the learning process. They end up with
resentful students and teachers-turned-ball-monitors (often
against their wills).
I suspecthand-lloldlng isn't the big issue here, but rather the
general "Big Brother is watching YOU" attitude.
Good luck with your campaign. - HELEN

+++

Dear Rap:
This is a different kind of question. 1have a dog that I want
. mated to the male dog of a good-looking man friend. No problem
.....00 gets one of the pups. But we're both kind of shy-and kind
of attracted to each other, though we haven~ dated yet.
lt'sgoingtobeveryembarrassing,takingmydogovertoget
her married. Could you give me some kind of bright little off~
hand quip to say as we (the guy and I) meet at the door? -NEW
WORKING GIRL
Dear Girl:
How about: ''WeU, here 's my" dog to meet her maker."? _
HElEN

+++
Dear N.W.G.:
Why be embarrassed? Just hope the guy will take you out for
dinner during the doggie hooeymoon. - SUE

+++

Helen and Sue:
Here's one way of teaching these chicks that women's
liberation has its drawbacks.
My girl figures she can do anything a man can do, and to
prove it she's operating a fork llfe in B'lnanufacturing plant. She
doesn't look like the truck·dnver type.
The other night I asked her over to meet my folks, but I told
them that I was bringing a fork lift operator from the plant. Then
I sat back and guffawed at the startled looks on my parents'
faces.
Lemme tell you, even the most liberated girl doesn't want to
The Almaoac
In 1942, the U.S. Supreme be introduced as "My friend, the truck driver." She spent the
By United Prell Ialernational Court upheld the validity of six- whole evening showing us all bow feminine she was. - CHUCK
2
granted in THE TRUCK DRIVERS' FRIEND
(•~ 1 ' 1' ' lf1)

WIN AT BRIDGE

Slam Not There, but Makes
Z1

Vitamin A
Can Be Toxic

load_.

(*

Voice along Br'Way

ii

u

•• ••

r,e.....,

tiiiJ.i.:.

. Southw~s'"rn snapped a
,four-year, 5I-game losing
' streak on the hardwood
=nesday night by upending
nan, W. Va., 57-64.
Last Highlander basketbaU
triumph prior to last night was
~over Southern on Jan. 17,
1970 · Southwestern lost its final
eight starts under Coach T. J.
Riggs . du~ the 1969-70
campatgn.
lng 1970-71 and
1971·72, the Highlanders went
0-J,t both years. The Ohtoans

Bud Rogers cut his e~teeth as a television m:ecutlve down In
Huntingtoa, at Channel 3, and he was generally very good, indeed, for television in our region.
He assembled a news staff that ill still prwminent In local
coverage. It ia THE electrooic authority to this day ..
He also Introduced the ccncept of handling cootroverslal and even taboo -topics onto lite small screen, a dCJCen or more
years ago. At that time, about the most debatable Item oo TV was
the amount of decoUetage revealed by Dagmat or the actual age
of Milton Berle's joke file.
He got, and deserved, a promotion to an m:ecutive position
with Taft Broadcasting in Cincinnati, where he now presides as
Lawrence H. Rogers II, president of Taft Broadcasting. The
chain includes WTVN-TV, Columbus, which is seen locaUy, and
WKRC-TV, In Cincinnati, which ill not.
Last m011th, TV Guide's Richard !loan reports, Bud Rogers
blew bis cool.
During Dick Cavett's sabbatical fnm TV, before he and
Jack Paar begin sharing late talk-show duties oo ABC DeJ:t ~ar.
the network pre~~ented several late-night speciab!,) IOme very
good -satire, comedy, concerts.
One of these specials was a rock performance by a group
called Allee Cooper. There ain't no Allee Copper,folks.
What there is is a bunch of wildly-dressed men, some of'them
in tra!WVesttite costumes, using a variety rJ. vaguely obscene and
always offensive tricks and ''Surprises" to shnclt, stlmulale and
otherwise enchant Uieir audleilces. 1belr musiciatishlp, if any,,
disappears li such a pathetic burly-burly.
Anyhow, Bud was sitting in hlB living room or somewhere
when Allee Cooper came on. He watched this ill-Ired m:•mple rJ.
had taste for about fifteen minutes- and then ordered WKRCTV to jerk it aff the air.
The result: bedlam. More than 4,000 letters poured in and
were about 4to 1against the station's (meaning l!ud's) actioo. A
bomb threat and assorted plcketa and protesters also showed up,
according to Doan.
Okay, up to this point, Bud Rogers is 'acting true to form decisive, a little bellicose, controversial, and totally unafraid to
stand by his convictions. Those are the qualities I always admired in him -although in this particular case, I think be was
wrong: the public could watch (or not watch), and let Allee
&lt;looper hopefully disappear from a massive turn-df by the
viewers.
But the years may have done something to Bnd. He has
apparently relented, and telecast and "edited" version of the
show in early December.
Even though I disagree with Bud's Initial decision, I am
sorry he succumbed to public pressures. The old Bud Rogers
would never have let a bunch of foul-mouthed kids (or anyone
else) pressure him into anything. And that is a pity, because TV
needs some people like Bud.

canned a two pomler at the
buzzer.
Coach Richard Hamilton's
Highlanders were trathng 15-12
going into the second quarter
when the Me began to change.
Carter hit five long shots and
Uoyd Wood, 6-2 sophomore,
began hitting to lead the
Gallians to a 32-24 lead at the
half.
Carter had 10 points during
the rally while Wood added
eight pomts. southwestern

..

By KEITH WISECUP
The Eastern Eagles will risk
~~ tlleir surprising fil-st ·- place
position in the Southern Valley
Conference thiS Friday wh'en
they tangle With the Southern
.;J
~
~·· Local Tornadoes at Racine.
~:i
By MILTON RICHMAN
;:;l
The Eagles, predicted to
···
UPI Suorts Edllllr
~
NEW YORK (UP!) -Marie Lombardi's life certainly has ftmsh htgh but not at the top of
the pack, are 3-0 m the SVAC
changed In a way, yet in another way,1t hasn't.
, Much of il still is wrapped up in football, the vehicle which and 3-1 overall. That loss was
to the Federal-Hocking Lan·
instantly brings back all those wonderfuUy warm memories.
cers,
74-64, two weeks ago.
Thirteen miniature gold footballs dangle from a bracelet she
Coach Bob Ord's Tornadoes,
wears around her left wrist. They all represent various cham·
pionshlps with which her lale husbaod was associated during his m a drastic rebuilding year,
have a 1-3 overall record and
years in the collegiate and professional ranks.
are
1·2 in the SVAC. Their only
Another gold charm Marie Lombardi wears is a tiny football
helmut given to her by the Green Bay Packer players her win was a 78-71 o~ertune affair
husband coached in Super Bowl I, and still another is the actual over the Kyger Creek Bobcats.
In a comparison of scores, the
tie lac Vli!Ce Lombardi always wore.
·
Eagles defeated the Bobcats
"How Much?"
·- "You ask me how much I loved him?" smiled the vibrant 74·54.
Southern will be without its
energetic woman who was his wife for the better part of three
top·notch
guard, Bobby Miller.
decades.
"I adored him. I couldn't stand to be away from him for five
minutes. We fought like cats and dogs, but do you know why?
Because I baited him. Honestly. We'd get mad at each other, '
maybe we wouldn't speak for awhile and then one of my fnends
would say to me, 'Marie, do you kMw why Vince IS upset? It's
because you baited him, that's why.'"
One rJ. the things that inunediatety strikes you about Marie
!Ambardi, a striking woman herself, is how much like her late
husband she Is. You can see it in her speech, her walk and her
little mannerisms .
"I guess a lot of him did rub off on me," she confesses.
Vince Lombardi and his wife seldom were apart very long. In
NEW YORK (UP!) - Two
12 years, she missed only two games. Once when the Packers
Cincinnati
Bengals were
were being quartered at Ft. Bragg, N.C ., an Army post where no
· women were permitted and another Ume when the !Ambardi's named today to the United
Press International 1972
No. 2 grandson was born.
American FootbaU Conference
No Way to Describe It
"Some people ask me how much I miss Vince," said Mane All.Star Team
A third Bengal and a
Lombardi. "I have no way to describe it. He will never die. Those
who didn't really know him usually pictured him as a hard man. member of the Cleveland
The truth is he was as soft as putty. He was a very shy man.
That's wh;r. he was terribly misunderstood. His shyness bothered
:::j

j Today's

:::l

..

I Sport Parade

flf

·Pro Standings

stre

continued to play aggressive
learn bali durmg the third
period.
Led by Terry Bush, 5-8 Senior
guard and Wood, the
Highlanders held a mne pomt
lead gomg into the fmal eight
minutes.
Hannan never qu1t. The
Wildcats came roaring back
m1dway In the fmal stanza.
With three minutes left in the
game, SW lost the services of

Wood, Kevin Walker and Mike
Dillon.HannanqUicklyjumped
rnto a four pomt lead before
LewiS' hero1c efforts.
Lewis had only five pomts
but collected a season high of
19 rebounds.
Carter and Bush were the
leading scorers for the
Highlanders with 14 poigts
each. Wood had 11 pomta.
Larry Hill led Hannan with 16
pomts, R. Black had 13 and
Holley canned 10

The left-handed 5-9 junior won
a starting JOb after bemg the
SIXth man on the bench a week
mto the season. He has
averaged around 10 pointa
smce then and played very well
all-around Lust week aga1nst
Southwestern, Miller suffered
a shoulder dislocation and will
be out about etght weeks.
The Southern starters are 6.1
junior Norman Curfman and 511 semor N1ck lhle, forwards;
5-8 semor Rodney Holman and
5-10 senior Mike Nease,
guards, and 6-3 senior Ron Hill,
center.
Coach Bill Phillips' Eagles
are expected to go With 5-9
senior Randy Boring and &amp;.I
sophomore Tim Spencer,
guards; 6.1 senior Alan Duvall
and 6-1 junior John Sheets,

forwards, and 6-2 junior Steve
Dill, center.
,,
The Eagles, as seen m the
prol)able starting lineups, have
a huge height advantage. But
the smaller Tornadoes will
probably have the edge in
qu1ckness . The only excepUon
to thlsm1ght be Eastern's fleet.
footed Randy Boring.
Should the favored Eagles
faller, they'd remain in first
place though tied With Hannan
Trace and Symmes Valley, all
wtth one loss.
In other Southern Valley
Conference action, the Sym.
mes Valley Vikmgs, 2·1 In
league play, play the North
Gallla Pirates, 2-2 in SVAC
acl!on at Symmes Valley
where opponents' victories are
few and far between.

. NBA Standings
By United Press International
Both teams hit 36 pet. from
the fioor. SW sank 24 of 66
attempts while Hannan hit 18 of
50. The Wildcats hit 18 of 32 foul
shots while the Htghlanders
converted only nine of 20. SW
held a 41).36 rebounding edge.
Hannan captured the reserve
game, 55-53. Chapman led the
winners with 16 points. Dav1d
Whitt had 21 in a losing cause.
Southwestern wiiL_play
Kyger Creek In the Holiday
Tournament at Rto Grande
College on Friday, Dec. 29
SOUTHWESTERN C57)
Dillon 3-0.6; Frasher 0 1 I ,
Lewis 21 -5. Wood 3·5·11, Bush
6-2 14 , Carter 7-0-14; Walker 3
0 6, Crouse 0 0 0. TOTALS 24·9·
57 .

HANNAN (54) - Barnette 0
9 9, Holley 3·4 10, Hill 6·4·16,
Black 6·1· 13, Black 3-0-6
TOTALS lS-19·54.
By Quarters
Southwestern 12 20 16 9- 57
Hannan
15 9 15 15-54

Television Logi
THURSDAY, DEC. 21, 1972
00- News 3, 4, S, 15, News 6, 8, 10, I Dream of Jeannie 13,
Designing Women 33.
7· oo - What's My Line 8; Big Re~ Jvbl1eJ! _t~ ;,.Nuw,V 1 tO;, Bea1, 1·,i
The Clock 4 , Arri~zlrig Wt*id' 'dt'KI~sRI~'1!, ~~. Co • 20. ·"
·courseofOurTimesJJ;TruthorConseq.lc!\ ~·
· o!'
7. 30 - 1'11 See You In Court4; Hollywood Squares 3; 'fo Tell The •
Truth6; Wild Kingdom 10; LassieS ; Beat the Clock 13; Zoom
20, Black Journal 33
8 00- Flip Wilson 3, 4, IS; Mod Squad 6, 13; Advocates 20, 33,
The Waitons 8, tO
9 00 - Ironside 3, 4, 15; International Performance 20, 33;
Assignment. Vienna 13, Oral Roberts on Campus 6; Movie
6

l!l!ll{~~~n Mfrli¥ ~ll!!;!riijjho lillie !t."'

10 00 - Owen Marshail6, 13; Dean Mart1n 3, 4, 15, Mountaineer
Sports 33; News 20.
11 00-News3,4,6,S, 10, 13, 15.
11 30- Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15, Olck Cavett6 ; Rose Bowl Bound
4; Movie "Satan Never Sleeps" 8; Movie "Gragon Wyck" 10;
Movie "Circus at Fear" 13.
1·00- News 4.
1.30 News 13

6

•
•

I

~'

Lon1 };!f!-{1£~ .State
loops impressive

"Will Penny" 8, lD

FRIDAY, DEC.l2, 1972
00 - Sunrise Seminar 4; Sacred Heart tO
6:15 - Farmtlme 10
6:20- Farm Report 13.
6. 25- Paul Harvey 13.
6· 30- Columbus Today 4; Bible Answers 8; Human Dimenllon
10, Blue Ridge Quartet·t3.
7.00- Today 3, 4, 15; CBS News 8, 10; Flintstones 13.
7 30- Romper Room 6, Sleepy Jeffers 8, Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
13.
s· 00- Capt. Kangaroo 10; Sesame St. 33; Lassie 6; New Zoo
Revue 13.
,
S· 30- Jack LaLanne 13; New Zoo Revue 6; Romper Room 8.
9· 00- Paul Dl•on 4, Phil Donahue IS ; Green Acres 3; Con·
centratlon6; Friendly Junction 10; Ben Casey 13; Mr. Rogers
33; Capt. Kangaroo 8.
9:30- Elec. Co. 33, To Teillhe Truth 3; Jeopardy6; HazelS.
10.00 - Dinah Shore3, 15; Joker's WildS, ]0; Columbus 6 Calling
6; Dick Van Dyke 13; My Kind of Chrlstmas33.
tO· 30- Concentration 3, 15; Phil Donahue 4; Price Is Right 8, 10;
Split Second 13, Circle or Lights 33
11' 00- Sale of the Century 3, 15; Gambit 8, 10; Elec Co 20;
Love, American Style 6; Password 13
tl·JO-Hollywood Squares 3, 4, t5: Love of Life S; Bewitched 6,
13; Sesame St. 20
12:00 - Jeopardy 3, 15: Bob Braun's S0-50 Club 4; News 13;
Contact 8; Password 6.
12· 30 - 3 W's Game 3, 15; Search lor Tomorrow 8, 10; Split
Second 6.
1 oo - News 3, It's Your Bet 8; Green Acres 10; Watch Your
Child 15.
1·30- 3 On a Match 3, 4, 15; k. The World Turns 8, 10: Lers
Make a Deal 6, 13; Christmas Special 33.
2· 00 - Days of Our Lives 3, 4, 15; Newlywed Game 6, 13; Mike
Oouglas6; Guiding LightS, 10: Plot to Overthrow Christmas

·

"l

•

•

•

•

•
•

••
-~

:

~

:
•
!;
•
~

;:
•
:

•

••
•
'

••

•
•

lrJr lfnlr Dflll Nltdl

Bosto~
26 4 867
New York
26 9 .743
Buffalo
9 23 281
Philadelphia 3 31 08S
Central Dlvi•lon
w. r. pet.
Baltimore
18 14 563
Atlanta
IS 15 .545
Houston
tJ 18 .419
Cleveland
9 25 .265
~¥estern Conference
Midwest Division
w. I. pel.
Milwaukee
24 9 727
Chicago
20 tt 645
KC Dmaha
20 t7 .541
Detroit
14 17 452

2il2
1S
25
g.b
'12

4'12
10
g.b.
3
6

9

Pactf1c Division
w. 1. pet. g.b

Los Angeles 27 5 .S44
Golden State 20 t1 .645 6'12
Phoenl•
15 lS .455 12'12
Seattle
10 27 .270 19\1:1
Portland
8 26 .232 20
Wednesday's Resulls
New York 124 Houston 102
Los Ang 96 Baltimore 90
KC-Omaha 121 Seattle 110
Milwaukee 123 Portland 104
Detroit 141 Phliadelphlal t3
(Only games scheduled)
Tflursday's Games

(No games scheduled)

vital says JYFL chief

NEW YORK (UP!) - Pete
Rozelle made it perfectly clear
Wednesday that he thinks the
local TV blackout policy Is vital
to the conUnued success of pro
football.
•
The pro football commissioner, who remembers the da)'ll
when 11 was difficult to give
tickets away to pro football
games, was asked by President
Nixon to lift the blackout for
this weekend's four playoff
games if the games are sold out
48 hours before kickoff.
Rozelle tried to be polite but
his answer was finn : uNo."
Attorney General Richard G.
Kleindienst disclosed in a
statement that on behalf of
Nixon-an avid football fan
Browns were named to the fense, an easy winner.
Cleveland
cornerback
and
especlaUy a supporter of
second team defense.
Cincinnati center Bob John· Clarence Scott and Cincmnati the Washington Redskins-be
son was named to first team of. free safety Tonuny Casanova, discussed with Rozelle the
iense, edging Ptttsburgh's Ray a rookie, were named to the possibility of ending the home·
second team defense.
game blackout.
Mansfield by one vote.
When Rozelle refused, KleinTackle Mike Reid of Cincin- Receiving honorable men- ,
nati was on the first team de- lion were wide recetver Chip dienst sai&lt;l that he promptly
Myers of Cmcinnati · center dehvered a response to Rozelle
Bob Demarco of Cl~veland . on behalf of Nixon. The While
tiaht ends Milt Morin of House subsequently confirmed
'' j •1 • 1•j1;i(,
o •h "'' th&amp;t"'\11 "'S~rvlttg I,'Dotlel! "'~
Clqeve
ana ~no 1:10b loL.,C.
uumpy
of
·•Cincinnati . tackle Walter retaliatory acUon, Kleinclienst
Johnson of Cleveland· and was representing "the Pres.
cornerback Uemar Par~tsh of !dent's view."
Cincittnati
"I adVISed Mr, Rozelle,"
Johnson· received 11 votes, Kleindienst said, "that as •
season with a 6~2 decision.
The difference m that one was Reid 19, Scott 10 and Casanova result of the league's decision,
8-10 Mike Westra, who scored 1. Those receiving honorable the Nixon administration
20 and pulled down 20 rebounds mention had two or more votes. would strongly urge the new
Congress to re-examine the
for the winners.
entire antitrust statute and
In other college achon
seek legislation that is more in
College BKB Resulls
Wednesday night, de'fensekeeping
with the public interInternational
mmded Loui.lVille scored its By Umted Press
East
est."
ftfth straight victory by Lehman S7 NY Mrtme 54
Actually, there are no ·anti·
beatmg Flonda, 69-57, Cin- Adelphi 94 Hunter 62
trust
implications to the local
Clncl 79 Rutgers 58
cinnati ran over young Denison 99 Juniala 71
TV blackout since it has
Rutgers, 79-58, and Canlsius Cheyny 64 Trenln St S8
nothing to do with competition
Wllm. 76 Wilkes 54
outclassed St. Francis, 107-71. Canlslus
among
the member cluba of the
107 St Fran Pa 71
University of Paciftc, which
South
league. Also, the legality of the
would be mthe top 10 if it never Louisvl 69 Florida 57
blackout has been upheld
77
had to venture out of its gym, SE La . 95 Lamar
several times by the courts.
Midwesl
took its 43rd m a row at home Eau Cia~re 73 Rvr Fils 63
But the NFL, 00 a special rider
with a school record 49 field Lf.ola, Ill 86 Wchta St. 79
to an appropri&amp;ti!Jil biD, got an
Mary's 67 Pan Am . 61
goals m a 1~ win over Cal S.
La Crosse 7S Stout 58
antitrust exemption to merge
Poly, San Luis Obispo.
H. Payne 87 SE Otda. 76
But some Coast teams on the Sou Ill. SS Tenn Tech 57
six
agogotwith
the AFL.
The years
NFL also
an exemption
Miami , 0 SB Ball St. S2
road continued to play as Evansvl 56 Seaii -Pac. 55
in 1961 to sell Its gamea to the
though they were homesick. Wright Si 68 Mrieta 63
TV networks as a package.
Yngstwn St 53
Seattle was flattened at Cleve St. 71Soulhwesr
Toward the end of the 97nd
Utah, 86-06, while San Fran- Rice 72 VMI 56
Congress, some senators.
West
cisco State was in too deep at
Coil . 80 Knox 77
Detroit In a 7:H2loss. Hayward Colo
NEW YORK (UPI) - World
Utah 86 Seattle 66
Stale, now 0-9, actually played Boise St.109 Puget Snd 72
Series hero Gene Tenace and
much better than expected in USF S2 Utah St 77
62
losing at Weber State, 8!).79, USC 69 Fordham
Nassau Classic
smce the winners are 6-1 for the
At Uniondale N.Y.
have accepted invltatloos to
Champion
campaign.
play in the $30.000 Arilerlcan
Lng Bch St. 97 Jacksnvl 70
It was Boise State 109, Puget
Consolation
Airlines Golf Classic, Feb. 2-4,
Sound '12, while Seattle Pacific 0. Roberts 74 Holslra 6ll
was edged at Evansville, 56-55.
in San Juan, P.R.

Next month, the Vince Lombardi Award will be presented to
college football's Oittatanding lineman during a special dinner
sponsored by the Rotary Club of Housi.on on Jan. 18.
Jim Stillwagon of Ohio State was tbe recipient of the f1rst
award in 1971, Walt Patulski of Notre Dame received it last year
College Basketball Roundup
and this year's finalista are Tom Braheny of Oklahoma, Rich
Glover of Nebraska, Jolm Hannsh of Alabama and Jerry By United Press International
Could it be that the nation's
Sisemore of Texas.
two
top college basketball
The award was conceived after cancer claimed Vince Lorn·
Ilardi in September of 1970. Proceeds from the award dmner go to teams lurk in Southern Califorthe American cancer Society's research program, and th~ nia?
UCLA ts the unanimous
trophy which the winner receives is a 45-pound mounted block of
choice
for No. 1 while lAng
granite designed by Houston artist Mark Storm. It typifies Vince
Beach State was rated sixth in
lAimbardi perfecUy.
the last UP! poll. But the 49ers
Speaks Some More
Looking at the trophy here, Marie Lombardi spoke some more never looked tougher than in
pasting Jacksonville, 97-70,
about her h!Sband.
"My first reaction after he died was that I was very angry at Wednesday night m the finals
football," she said. "I hoped everybody would lose. I felt football of the Nassau ClaSSic Ul New
had taken too much out of Vince, aU the tension, the pressure and York. It was only JacksonVIlle's second loss against five
everything. He never had any time to enjoy himself.
"He loved to play golf, and he loved to be With hts children, but wins.
Long Beach State's All
he never had time. First with Green Bay and then with
Arilerica
guard, Ed Ratleff, hit
Washington. You know it's pretty lonely up there on that
mountain. Even if you win, you never can enjoy .yourself. You 24 points and wound up as the
tourney's Most Valuable Plsy·
have to do it all over again next year.
"As I say, my first reaction after Vince died wasn 'I a good one, er.
"Our defense took them out
but the Redskim were absolutely wonderful to me, and now I
don't have that feeling any more. !like football again, and go to of the game," said a bouy!lnt
49ers coach, Jerry Tarkanl8n.
all the games.''
Closest approach to Vince Lombardi today, according to his "The key was puttmg Ratleff
widow, is Don Shula, whose Miami Dolphins established an on (Henry) Williams. Ratleff,
an excellent player, forced
NFL record this year by winning alll4 of their games.
, "Don Shula has the same philosophy and approach Vince did," WiU1801S to shoot -from the
outside and nol get too many
says M&amp;rle Ulmbardi.
easy shots."
WilUams scored 14 points in
the f1rst half but only four
jloints in the second half.
It was a pretty good night all
around for West Coast quintets
as the University of San
Francisco outscored Utah
State, 20-6, down the stretch to
tak~ an 82-77 road win for the MINCHER RETffiES
host's first home loss.
OAKLAND (UP!) - Don
Mincher, 34-year-old first
Southern California handed baseman of the Oakland
New
York's
Fordham Athletics who had a .249 career
University ils first loss of the batting average m the majors,
anounced his retirement
Wednesday, saying he wanted
to spend more time with his
Southern Frosh
family
Mincher, who also played for
defeat Pirates
Minnesota, Califorrua, Seattle
and
Texas, played in two World
RACINE - Southern H1gh
"1111 CIIA"IOI 01'
School's freshman basketball Series and one All.Star game.
. .101" .. ' 111110 ,.CIS'
squad coached by Duane Wolfe His best season was In 1967
ftiOI• 992..5759
downed NorUt Galha Monday wht:n he batted · .273, hit 20
homers and drove in 76 runs.
271 N. 111 • ,..,.,
here 40 to 18.
'
'
For Southern, Danny Brown
AM11111tll'...
; 01~rt, a.I.
led with 11 points, Mike
Roberta bad 9, Tim i:Jurfman 6,
Brady Huffman 5, Wyatt South GAME COACHES
4, Paul Sc,.Wtz and Paul Cross sANTA ANA, Ca. (UPI) 2 each and Kenton Holman 1. Bobby Hull and Nick Mlcko.-t
For North Gallla, R. ri Winnipeg will coach lhe
Eagleton had 8.
West and Jack Kelley of New
Southern will play Kyger England will head the Eut
Creek on Jan. aat Racine.
squad in the first W«ld Hockey
SGuthem
H 24 32 40 Association AII.Star gaDM,
NorthGallla
2 8 14 18 Jan. 6, at Qeubec.

Eastern Conferenc::e
Atlantic Division
w. I. pet. g.b.

Blackout policy is

Three Bengals
honored by UPI

'

2 30 - Doctors 3, 4, 15, Dating Game 13; Edge of Nights, 10
3· oo - Another World 3, 4, 15; General Hasp. 6, 13; Love
Splendored Thing 8, 10; 8111 Moyer's Journal 20.
3:30- Return to Peyton Place 3, 4, 15; One Lile to Live 6; Book
Bet 33; Secret Storms, 10; Mouse Tales33.
4 oo- Mr Cartoon 3; Somerset 15, Sesame St. 20, 33; Love
American Style 13; Fllntstones 6; Gllll91n's Island 8; Merv
Gnffln 4; Movie "Underwater Warrior" 10.
4· 25 - Sports Club 6.
4· 30- I Love Lucy 6 ; Merv Griffin 15; Petticoat Junctloo 3;
Andy Griffith 15 ; Daniel Boone 13: Merv Grlltln8.
5 00- Mister Rogers3J; Ponderosa 3, 4; Daniel Boone 6; Santa
at the Mall 15.
5"30- Marshall Dillon 15: Elec. Co 33 ; Dragnet 8; Gomer Pyle
13; HodaePOd!le Lodge 20.
6.00- News 3, 4, 8, to, 15; Truth or Conseq. 6: Sesame St. 20;
Around the Bend 33.
6:30- News6, 13: I DrHm ol JHnnle13; Hathay'!lla 33.
7 00- Truth or Conseq. 3; Beet the Clock 4; Wllat s My Line I;
Wild Kingdom 13; Newt, Weelher, Sports 6, 101 Tom Jones
Chrlstmos Speclal15; Folk Guitar 33; Elec. Co. 20.
7·30- To Tell The Truth 6: Parent Game 10; Porter Waggooer
3; Young Dr. Kildare 4; Beal tho Clock 13; Irs Your Bet I;
Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Marco Sport Lite 33.
1·00- Sanford &amp; Son j, 4. 15; Brady Bunch 6. 13; Mission:
Impossible I, 10; Weshlnaton WHit In Review 20.
8: JO - Little Pecpie 3, 15; Partrldao Family 6, 13; Just
Generation 33; Wall St Wttk 20; AC~rlstmas Story 4.
9: oo- Ghost Story J, 4, 151 Room-m 6, 13; World Press 201
Movle "Miracle on 34th St." 8: Movie "The GrNt Caru110,"
10.
9:30-0dd Couple6, 13; Thirty Minuteo W1th20.
10 00- BanyClll 3, -4, 15; Love American Style 6, 13; Newt 20;
Paul Nuchlms 33;
10:33- Whoda you Think You Ar... 13.
1t·oo- News. Weolher. Sportu. e. 10. 13.
11 · 30- Johnny C.rson 3, tS; Dick C.vett 6; R- Bowl BourMh;
Movie "Thit Gene Krupa Stary" f1 Movie "Sherlack Hoe .....
and the DNcly Necklace" 10; Movle"A Stary 01 O.VId" 13.
l:OD-ROiter Derby 4; Movie "Night C.ller from Outer Spact''
10.
1:30- Nt\VS 13.
2·00- News 4.

were ~going into last night's
encounter With the West
Virginians.
Phil Lewis,i;..ljunior center,
iced the victory wtth a tllree
pomt play with less lhsn one
minute remaining . m the
contest. His three points gave
Southwestern a 55-54 lead.
Hannan took the ball down the
court, shot but lost the
rebound.
SW held pn until Terry
Carter, 5-9 sophomore guard,

~{"~."V.:~!o::.·~·.-,·,~·,•o•U! &lt;;• '-'·!~Y.· •• ,_,. • u.., ·~
~ ,,._..,.
~·CJ!;";";'\"•'""
~· ~~·-'"(•'&lt;'•'•"" ,•,•,•.v!·O'~v.v,-.-.-.•:O:O:.- :.:,;:-.«::..•X::::_.:::o:o:o:•_.::~:::=:::::::•,•,•,&lt;:•,&lt;;•,•:•:\\•:•:•:•:•:•f

+++

33,

r·

Tornados challenge Eastern Friday

ON THE TV DIAL: One of last year's better holiday specials,
"A Joyful Noise," is rerun on WMUL-TV, ata ... Dick Cavett has
a guest whom we didn't think liked TV: Bobby Fischer, at 11:30,
WTVN-TV.

all the way to ga,;,e. What do follow.

oq u:.'.
DR: LAWRENCEEr.tAMB

4•

BY PAUt CRAB'T'RE.E

U::ihi~~o~;:~:io t~ ~::da~'vorces

In 1944, horse racing was Dear Chuck:
you do now?
The moon is approaching the suspended in the tjniled States
We'll bet she spent the next week making you repentant for
.K853
last
quarter.
for
the
duration
of
World
War
.
practical
jokes. Right? -HELEN AND SUE
.K3
The
morning
stars
are
II.
t K742
The U. S. Navy's F·4
.A75
Ip, 196p1, Apollq , ~ b.!aisted off
Phanlool jet was awarded the Me~Ul')", Vef!US ~~d Mars.
WEST,r,-....1,~~'
Daedaihm I••Aivara&gt; iby ·"the • 'rile evenlng stars.are Jupiter • for t]1e moon orbit carrying
.10t7
r
,..
'
0 •1
national ' c'onve'ntion of the and
• ""ll\"!}.
-•• ·'·"
as~cw11uls FI;.an.k BoriJl~n,
.Q872
Those born on this date are James Lovell and William
Order of Daedalians, the
tJ85
Anders.
.KI3
national fraternity of military under the sign of Sagittarius.
Soviet Premier Josef Stalin
SOVTR
pilots. The all-weather carrier.AQH
was
born Dec. 21, 1879.
Athought for the day: British
based jet became operational
•Aa&amp;
On
this
day
in
history
:
poet
Richard Trench said, "We
In 1961 and subsequently
tA98
In 1620, the Pilgrims set foot kneel, how weak. We rise, how
' .Q104
established I~ world speed,
Both vulnerable
altitude and time-to-climb for the first time on American full of power."
soil at Plymouth, Mass.
w..t North r..ot South records.
By Lawreaee Lamb, M.D.
The recommended daily al·
lt
Pass 1•
Dear
Dr.
Lamb-Have
you
lowance
of vitamin A is
Pass 2.
Pus 3N.T.
.
th
1
about
6,000
units in adults
Pia
Pus 6•
any mformat ton on e va ue and less in children and in·
!Ri
~
'~
·
:
:.:":'IW.Y#W
W%711:0":'®"
..
..
:::ti:"O:\'.:oo'il:.o:::.
of Vitamin A in controlling
P. . Posa Pass "
oily skln and hair condition? !ants. Of course, initiaUy you
Openlng
10
might need to take more if
I have been taklng three you have a true vitamin A
25,000 unit VItamin A cap· deficiency, for example up
By O.Wald &amp; James Jacoby
sules a day (not by a doc· to 25,000 IU daily. Once the
Boris Koylchou has reore·
BY JACK O'BRIAN
turned tycoon when he brought his shrewd tor's v.rescr~ption) and in two initial deficiency bas been
sented both France "and
0
'8 OT
week s time this has greatly corrected, there is very little
theatrical knowhow to offstage lighting -such decreased
North America in World
NLY HIS UVER N
the oily condition reason to take more than
as the new Kennedy Center in Washingtm, and of my skln.
ChamJJiOIU!hlp competition.
ON THE ROCX8
5,000 units a day.
He atiJI playa in toui"JUINEW YORK (KFS)- Nick Coados, Martha the new bulldlng where the Hotel Astor 01100 was
Are there any dangers or
Naturally preformed vita·
menta, but most of his cur- Raye's m:~n11band and permanent Ql8!lllger, the class of Thnes Square ... CaUed in to design side effects from taking this min A is fowtd in dairy prodrent activity is in rubber checked into Johns HopldDI HOIIpltal after years the lighting for the Mlnskoff Theater at Astor vitamin A?
ucts and meat. Most mUk
Dear Reader - Some doc· commercially distributed Is
br:t~ebldding was based on of over-imbibing for a thoroul!h checkllp. He Plaza, Abe even had to invent his own light tors
have reported ~ood re· already fortified with vita·
the fact that his side bad a was amazed - ''The only thlnl they didn't find bulbs-nothing available was right for Abe's
suits in using vitamm A for min A. Green and yeUow
part score of eo. • North wrmg with me was my liver," he marveled at concept.
skin conditions such as you vegetables such as spinach
should really have passed at Roseland. "It was perfect!" ... Prince Charles
Adman Art KUcup, who started the describe, although there is and carrots are· partlcularly
three no-trump and the final isn't concerned much about sister Anne's needlepoint ;for-men at the Grenadier, just not unanimous opinion about good sources of material that
slam contract was a horror speeding-troubles. He just ordered a new Astoo sewed up exclusive righta to award-winning tis use.
tne body uses to manufacture
but Boris brought it home Martin v.a with a top ..,.ed of 180 MPH. eoet sports cartoonist Bill GaUo 's famed "Basement
Within limited a m o n t s vitamin A. A person who
with good breaks and help
-.A Is not harmful, but eats a lot of yellow and
from the defense.
$25,000 ... Cbarlle Chaplin baa finished the script Bertha" bueball character. Sports stores will vitamin
in excess quantities, it can green vegetables is not likely
He won the first trump in of his ''lalt" movie: titled '!The Freak," It will carry the new fingertip sport ... Lawyer Bob be dangerous The American to be deficient in vitamin A
bls own hand; cubed a sec. (if produced) star Charlie's daughters Victoria Farrell, who's taken several cracks at news- Medical Assn. 's view on this unless he has some other de·
ond high trump; led a heart and J011etm!ne; be'U direct and play a cameo psper publishing, insists he didn't do so badly as expressed in their 1971 feet in the digestive system.
to dummy's kmg; a second role ... Sir Ralph Richardson, one of the two or with his long1!one papers: "The Brooklyn drug evaluations is "there Is Incidentally, you can eat all
heart back to his ace and three finest actors m:tant, won't dlscuJa acting. Eagle I started with less than $10,000 ran more no satisfactory evidence that of the green and yellow vegeruffed his last bear! wtth He'D talk about parrots or motor bikes, two of than a year and made $1,000,000 in 90 days. The any additional benefits can tables you want and.._ never
be obtained from dally doses get vitamin A toxicny be·
dummy's king of trumps.
his enthl!lluma, but insisted while making "a Dally Mirror I revived started with $100,000 above
25,000 IU." Infants and cause the process of convertThen he played another Doll's H01111e" that he acts for a living, "So after depoilta. The odds against getting It young children are more apt ing the substance in these
t[ump and East had to make
a discard. The jack of hearts there's no point agonizing over It once It's started were 1,IJOO.to.l and for lasting 1 week to have toxic reactions to vegetables to vitamin A in
vitamin A than adults. Toxic the body is so slow that it
appeared to he worthless and over."
10,~1. All I did was run lt months. I left reactions have been noted m won't allow enough vitamin
East let It go.
Tbere'U be more of Juliet MUla to love In both ventures when stockholders moved in. I n fa n t s less than three A to accumulate to cause
Boris led a diamond to "Avantl." She had to add 30 extra pounds which BoW ended after I was gone." Bob's back months of age, when they toxicity
dummy's king and returned jiggle conalderably during her nude scenes. practicing criminal law in Mineola, L. I.
have been given as little as
There Is an o p t i m a I
a diamond.
18,500
IU
a
day.
amount
of almost anything.
Bonnie Bowden, ex.Jane Fonda stand-in
East made the mistake of Jack Lenunon's peeled down, too ... a federal
Indications of vitamln A Too little or too much can
d B 1 h d lookaee Into retailer's losses turned up an of. and look...llke, joined the Sergio Mendes Brasil
I ·
toxicity include loss of ap- both be harmful.
~=Y~~:n~~- ~ea~on 8:"e stri~k fictsl decision that the U. S. baa had more than 77 group ... Barbra Strelsand never likes In- petite, weight lOSS, itching (NIW!PAPIR INTIRPRISI ASSN )
with his ace ; led back his $16 bllllon in property thefts per year via terruptions, but this Ume when a Plaza Hotel of the rectum, cracked and
last diamoi'ld and East was crooked inside-jobbers ~ filched mer· bellnw! dashed right Into the scene in front she bleedlnf I i p s, fatigue, ab·
on lead With nothing but chandlse to fences. Shoplifting isn't even in- didn't mind: It was to report to ''The Way We domina discomfort, b o n e
clubs.
and joint paiD, symptoms S"onti ,,., ,.....,., '" pr. Lomh,
He led the deuce and au eluded In the 16-bill! ... TheN. Y. Prella Cub, Were" aiiSiStant director Howard Koch Jr. that representative of brain tu. in nro of ,~;, ....,.,.,, ,.o. ,.,
Boris had to do was make fonnerly the N• Y· Reporters Ass'~, ~~ been his wife had just phoned from Calif. to announce mo1·,ioss of hair, brittle nails, mr, lloiio City $totioo, H"" Yorl! ,
the right choice between the offered one of the former U. S. lines piers, she'd had a baby girl, Emily.
insomnia and menstrual lr· NY. 10019. For • """' ol Dr. u..m·,
queen and the 10. Needless complete with garden, as permanent H.Q. ...
1bis looks like the beginning of another ~gutarlties. occasion· boollot .., ,.,.,_, iltt, Wli 50
to say, he did make lt. He
Is George Wallace l'lllllling in '76? He's j1181 Lunt &amp; Fontanne legend: Mandy and Ted aUy someone takes a large ceots to tilt , •.,. o44ren •"" ...
dltcarded a small club on swnm!)lled a public relationa firm to map out a Danaon met at Carnegie Tech's drama school, amount of vitamin A over a "" •sot,...., Oiot" -lot.
•76 campaign ... Greatest swt to see the New married and came to N. Y. to seek their period of time and develops 018... _.. .,., _ ......
dummy's last diamond.
symp\oms so slmUar to brain
...,.... ...,., .. ...,..,,.
CNIWSIAPIR INTIIPllll ASSN I Year in ill the Act I restaurant atop the Allied
tumor
that
the
doct9f8
may
SEA'I'IU:
(UPI) -Mark
theatrical fortune~. Thef're already working
Chemical
Tower
on
Tbnes
Square.
Guests
can
think
that
is
what
the
patient
Morrilolt
11
~
his model
together 1n ''The Real ill8pector Hound" hit
•J.t:IIIW,\,·nlt .tt
look down at maybe 250,000 Tlmea Square comedy - understudying the male and femlle bas, from aU the dflrerent airplane apert becaUII that's
unleS8 they find out the _.., _ v be can -t it to
'DM 1'Will hill boon:
celetnntl ... Only bole!IUpper club in N. Y. leade. The GasiiBitt Club quit Ita longtime tests,
that the patient has been
WUI W"'l
&gt;r"
Wilt H-* ._. South lllllkln&amp; a ttylllh go of It-the M•loonette in the baiT(!Om male chauvlnLst rut: has Its first popping vltamin A tablets Florida.
Morrllon's model II a a
,_ 1•
Pus
,
~.....~lla ... Joe Franklin Ql TV and• noetalgla diltaff bartender ... In the Speakeall)' Room, regularly.
• y..., Iouth, hold·
·
...... the Greek Line's O},ympla cruise In jaaman Sol Yaged just started his aecmd · In view of these known foot lang 1111• knp o1 tha Baellll
•• tAClN7I t AIZ •KQf January and reaDy wlllllllke It Memory Lane. engagement - the first luted six yean ... toxic effects from vitamin A ...,....11c tnMpott (SST),
. . . . . JOl! do now!
Joe IIYI he's booked llllpllla&amp;enarian Rudy ~oth ~ Gradano at the Grenadlel': "I'm and the lack of any evidence wblch be bau&amp;bt at an IUdiaD
, .._.... 1lld four lioorto. You VaD.ey, Harry Herablleld, 85, and George ooly ~ to forget the Uquor strike.'' ... that you get any llddltlonal· for $31 DOD when the letMil
beyond 25,000 unlll, It - ... ..:... "deddld DOt to
•
.. r1 'h' a ollm kt 11 Je~l. 75.
BlU'a Gay tell loll its muter chef, Norris benefit
seems
to
me you would be .,.
lor - . , .. ore _ .
The F)!l's crackdown oo organiaed crime Lavalle, off to auiltlanstad, St. Crob, Vlrgln
much wiser to Umlt yout In· flnlnce tha plant.
wlM up ~+1M tile gqt 813 crime boases ccnvleled In !Ileal '72. And Ialande, to ltart bla own reatallflllt. OWner Oble take to 25,000 units dally u
Tbe j1llk dealer piiM to
toD.tn Qua'l'IIC»&gt;
oontllcaled more than $3,210,000 In cult "1114 Bart (aN. J, banker) couldn't be happier- he's a ma~imum· doaap and you 1n1t111 the model In 1 probably don't need that hi pilnlll mOil frGn Dllney
, 1 • • ., lll!llflnl 10 thNe Illegal stuff ... Abe Feder, formerly the back In the kltdten cooking; lo~~eslt.
. _ . ,... ....... 11M ..,.. definitive lightlnuenlulln the Bdwy, thtlter,
much.
W«ld _ , ()rlando, Fla.
!"O&amp;TR (D)

&amp; THINGS

By Helen and Sue Bottel
111wnbl Down 011 Holdlng Hands?
Helen and Sue :
I have a good, steady glrlfriend. When we meet in the haU at
school we think it's okay to hold bandS, but our princiP,al has a
rule that says there can be no physical contact between boys and
girls, Heck, I wouldn't kiss her madly or anything, but what's
wroog with walkmg down the hall hand-in-band? Yet the
teachers watch us like hawks.
They keep preaching ''maturity" at high school and how we
should act grown up. WeD, adults show these little signs of af.
fecti011 and everyone thinks it's great thattbey care. Why not us?
-SLAPPED DOWN FOR HOLDING HANDS

3- Tile llaUy Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pomo.roy, 0.,Dec. 21, 1972

~~~~a:::u;nd':t":::

threatened legislation to force
the NFIL to open up local
telecasts of games that are sold
out 48 hours in advance. The
blll died of inaction in the
adjournment rush, There's
also some quesaon whether the
courts would uphold the constitutionality of such a bill.
"Despite the intense interest
In pro football," Rozelle said,
"six of the last 10 conference
championship games have not
been sold out, and since 11167
when divisional playoff games
were Instituted 011 a regular
basis, six of 17 such games
were played to less than
capacity.''
Rozelle is worried that if the
local blackout is broken, pro
football wlll eventually become
a "studio game" like boxing
wiUi the seata half empty. If aU
the games were on local TV,
the demand for season tickets
would wilt away.
The President, lncldentaUy,
will be in Florida this weekend
and will be able to see the
Redskin game, llut he'll mJss
the .. ~iaml.cleveland ;oon\tlrt
that Will .be bl.aclled .out.l,n the
Miami area.
Ohio High School
Basketball Rosuils
By Uniled Press International
Cols Eastmoor 72 Cois Ready
59

Jonathan Alder 7t Cols. Ready
59

East Kno• 58 Cois Academy 50
Lucas 68 Danville 42
Kenton 61 Otlawa Glandorf 55
Fairbanks 81 Waynesfield 65
Benlamln Logan 81 Indian
Lake 46

NHL Standi"'IS
By United Press lntornaHonai
Eut
w. I. I pts gf ga
Montreal
20 5 S48 132 77
Boston
21 s 3 45145 105
NY Rangers 21 10 3 45 132 91
Buffalo
18 9 7 43 127 95
Detroil
14 14 J 31 99 104
Toronro
9 18 5 23 98 109
Vancouver
9 20 4 22 96 138
NYislanders 325 3 9 60152
West
w. t. I pts gf ga
Chicago
20 10 2 42 122 S3
Minnesota
18 12 3 39 111 94
Phila
15 15 &lt;34 119 121
Pittsburgh 15 t4 3 33 121 106
Atlanta
14 16 5 33 89 105
Los Angeles 14 15 4 32 101104
51 Louis
tO t5 6 26 82 102
California
4 20 7 IS 81135
Wednesday's Rosults
Detroit 4 Los Angeles I
Montreal4 NY lsl11nders 2
Buffalo 6 Vancouver 3
Atlanta 5 Toronto 3
Chicago 4 Philadelphia 1
NY Rangers '5 St. Louis 4
Minnesota 5 Caillornla 2
(Only games scheduled)
Tfiursday's Games
Atlanta at NY Rangers
Vancouver at NY Islanders
Detroit at Boston
Los Angeles at Philadelphia
!Only games scheduled)
AHL Standings
By United Press International
East
w. I. t. pts gl ga
Nova Scotia 16 9 8 40 124 82
Rochester
15 9 636108107
Boston
16 14 4 36 106 119
Providence 14 10 5 33 Ill 98
SprlngCield
8 15 5 21 104 l22
New Haven
6 21 6 18 102 159
West
w. 1. t. ph gl ga
Cincinnati
23 S 2 48 T40 92
Virginia
14 t I 6 34 113 108
Hershey
14 9 7 35 110 92
Cleveland
10 14 7 27 119 115
Richmond
12 17 3 27 113 121
Baltimore
5 17 7 17 74 121
Wednesdey'$ Results
Hershey 5 Cleveland 3
New Haven a Belt 3, tie
Providence 5 Boston 1
!Only games scheduled!
Tflursday's Games

Nova Scotia at Cincinnati
(Only game schedulec;C)
WHA Standings
By Unltod Pross lntemallonal
Etsl
w. r. t. ph gl go
New Eng
21 12 1 .Q 149 117
NewYor1&lt;
19 16 0 38 154 123
Cleveland
18 14 t 37 114 93
Quebec
17 14 1 35 116 11:C
Ottowa
14 16 t 29 108 133
Philo
12 21 0 24 119 154
Wool
w. 1. t. ph gl go
Winnipeg
21 15 2 44 142 116
Minnesota
18 13 2 38 112 t06
Los Angeles 15 16 3 33 116 121
Alberta ,
14 18 2 30 103 120
Houston
14 16 2 30 107 115
Chicago
9 21 i 19 90 11S
Wednesdoy'a Rasulh
Philadelphia 8 Chicago s
(Only game scheduled)
Thurlclay's O.mn
Winnipeg at Mlnnesora
New England at Alberta
New Yor1&lt; at Cleveland
Los Angeles 4t Ottawa
!Only ganl""'-\chedvlec;C)'re:}'ll. ,

L.. ....

. '(,II ..

O.:\ t1f'\ lf

rl•l

The DIM, Slltlnel

DIVOTID TO THI
INTUUTOP
MIIOI·MAION AUA
CHE$11• L. TANNIHILL,

•

•

.......

Clly ldlttr
Publlshtd dollr tlctpt
Solurdav bV Tho Ohio Vtllty
Publishing Companv, Ill
Court St, Pomerov, OP'tlo
45769 luslnoss Ortlct 'hOftt
"2·1156, EdiiOrill Phont ff2.
2157
Socond class PDIIago ptld 11
Pomeroy, Ohio
Natlontl lfvtrllling
rtJ)resenle tlvt
GIIIIOhor, Inc .. 12 les 421ld
It, Ntw York Clly, New York .
lubacrlpiiOn ratoa: lit ·
livered by c~rrltr whtre
••olltblt 50 centa ptl wttk;
ly Motor Routt whtrt cerrler
servlct not l'i'lllablt : On1
MOftlh II 75 ly mall In 0~10
ond w. vo .. Ono yMr 114.00.
51• monlhs 11.15. Thrtt
monllll •• 50 su••crlr,llon
prlct lncludtl SundiY T mil·
Stnllnol.

latt\"''"·

Ohio College Bosketball Scores
By United Press lnltrnalionol
Wright State 69 Marietta 63
(ol)
Cleveland State 11
Youngstown State 53
Ctn . 79 Rutgers 58
Holl of Fome
Holiday Tournoment
Denison 99 Juanita 71
Malone 112 Walsh 92

Lowest"
nnce ever

r----.;.~---~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:..

,

~

on a solid-state

Altf
0
clock radio
4 ., ,
II0 • ·,0 II8

'•

XCI
White e.abfnet

:Z~tfll".,... Cork Soled

Brushed

Antique Leather

Brawney

'14"

B's &amp; AA

.

ROIUT HOI~LICH,

Connie

Brown in
Siles
51!2•9

'

heritage house
~

Register for 1973 Pinto

MIDDLEPORT, O.

Hurryl Get one while they last!
o Wakes you to music or news,
o Solid-state chassis means there are no tubes
to warm-up .. . no tubes to burn out,
and 11 provides instant sound .
o B1g 4·in. speaker if electronically maJched
and balanced to cabinet for excellent sound
reproduction.
• Luminous clock hands make it easy to see
time in a darkened room .

Wemer Radio &amp; T.V.
MIDOlfPORT, 0.

�-

4- The DallJ Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. 21,1972

OVERALL SCORING (As of Dec. 161

.

FG FT "" G Avg
47 20 114 S 22.8
47 44 lOB s · 21 .6

NAME

Gr~

McDaniel, Starr-Wash: ·
Dave S&lt;&gt;uden, Wellston
·
Charlie Chambers, P1. Pleasant
Ric~ Whl111, Alexander
· Jene Myers. Symmes Valley
· Mark Humphrey, Belpre
Mike Oyer, Waverly
Jim Boggs, Meigs
Gil Price. Gallipolis
Mark Mare, Athens

18 7
37 10
'17

2 21 .5
4 21.0
41 2 20.5
99 5 · 19.8
98 5 19.6
oiJ
U

7

43 13
39 20
52 13 117 6 19.5
47 18 112 6 18.7
46 17 109 6 18.2

SEOAL SCORING (As of Dec. 16)
NAME
FG FT Pis
Dave S&lt;&gt;uders. Wellston
38 12 88
Mlke()yer, Waverly
3S 16 86
Jeff Hannon. ironton
38 3 79
Mark Mare. Athens
30 13 73
Gil Price, Gallipolis
29 10 68
Iiiii Maloy, WaverlY
' '
31 6 68
Jlrn Boggs. Meigs
.
2288 68 .6624
Ed Thornpso/1, Waverly
Mark Kiesling, Gallipolis .
22 17 61
Jim Noe, Gallipolis ·
22 17 · 61
TRI-VALLEY SCORING (Asof Dec. 16)
FG FT Pis
NAME
Mark Humphrey, Belpre
23 9 55.
24 3 Sl
.Greg Smathers, Nels-York
8 1 17
Chip Spence, Warren Local
Sam Jackson, Belpre
14 s 33
Jim Schloss, Fed.-Hocklng
13 S 31
Dave Pritchard, Nels-York
21 2 44
Bob Crlssinqer, Belpre
B 12 28
14 0 28
Jell Eberts,.Vinton Co. .
12 3 27
Harold Caudlli,'VInton C011nty
Max Pitts, Nelsonville· York ·
IS 9 39

G
4
4
4
4
4
4
44.
4
4

21 .5
19.8
18.3
17.0
1/.0
1165.05
.
15.3
IS.3

G
2
3
1
2

Avg
27.5
17.7
17.0
16.5

~!.Y:!e

OP
· 296
283
172
375
330
329
228
444
360

302
4.57

2 lS.S

r'.J

I'

TEAMS RANKED
TEAM OFFENSI~~L Y0
Waverly .
410 5
Alexander
323
St.vr-Was'gton
392 54
Symmes Valley 228 3

Avg
82.0
80.8
78.4
76.0

Avg,
17.p
16.0
15.8
15.7

14.0
14.0
13.5
13.4
13.3
13.0
-13.0
13.0

'Belpre
Logan
Kyger Creek
Gallipolis
Hannan-Trace
.im!)ton
Neli:York
Wahama
Point Pleasant
Vinton County
Eastern
Meigs
Athens
Glouster

362 5 12.~
409 6 . 68.2
. 3'40 S 68.0
399 6 66.5
386 6 64.3
319 5 63.8
437 7 62 .4
247 4 6J.8,
123 2 61.5
365 6 60.8
242 4 60.s
352 6 58.7
342 6 57.0
328 6 54.7

Federal-Hocking
Miller
~\~~s'fo~
So
uthern
North Gallia-x

261 5 52.2
2o8 4 52.0

~ ~ ~~ ~~~ ~':,f~~ei;';r"~

Vinton County 3 3 365 384 .
Wahama
2 3 317 293
Feclerat-Hocklng
.
2 3 261 '302
Southern
2 3 249 295
=~ Gallla-x ~ ~ ~~
Ironton
2 4 372 348
Symmes Valley ·1 3 302 329
Warren Local 1 2 164 195
Miller
1 3 209 258
Kyger Creek
1 5. 403 477
11 5s 328
393
. Glc011sler
Jackson
309 436
Point Pleasant o 2 m 131
Southwestern o 5 262 330
Wellston · · o ~ s :i~ 384
x · Record lncludes '-' one
ilhortened ~me.
'

Avg

~2 . 0

3 14.7
2 1M
2 14.0
2 ' 13.5
3 13.0

SVAC SCORING IASOI Dec. 16)
NAME
FG FT Pis G
Jamie Lafon, Symmes Valley
13 8 34 2
Phil Robinson. Symmes Valley
12 8 32 2
Clay Hudson, Kyger Creek ·
26 11 63 4
Dave Robinette, North Gall Ia .,
18 11 47 3
John Lusher, Hannan-Trace
30 10 70 5
Jen.,Myers, Symmes Valley
5 4 14 I
Dave Dunfee, Symmes Valley
12 3 27 2
Mike Caldwell, Hannan-Trace
28 11 67 5
Ron Hill, Southern
15 10 40 3
Terry Bush, Soulhwestern
20 12 52 4
Norman Curfman, Southern
23 6 52 4
Ra~dy Boring, Eastern
lA 11 39 3
'
ALLGAMES
(Asof.Dec.19l
TEAM
W L p
Gallipolis
6 o 399
Waverly
·5 o 410
Alexander
4 o 323
Porlsm011th
5 1 400
Hannan Tt•ce 5 1 461
Belpre
4 1 362
Eastern
3 1 242
South
54 3
LoganPoint
2 576
409
Athens
4 2 342
Starr-Wash' ton 4 2 465

~~ ~ ~:~

249 5 49.8
196 4 49 0
·

!

Avg
43.0

~-~

50 '3
so:H
54- 3
56 6

·

57.0

58.8

~-~

60:4
63.80
64
64's

Bucks. ' Bobcats
ht
·meet .t

·

·

on~g
·

Ullited Pral.lalorutloaal Walter Luckett and Alan
The le~ of the Ohio State Talbert will be at guards. Ohio
basketball team's Cll1ltmas U. beat OSU last year ~­
vacation' will depend on how
In games Wednesday night,
well they do tonlgbt In their Malone won the Hall of Fame
seventh game of the season. Holiday Tournament at
O.eh Fred TaJlor pve hla Canton, beating Walsh 112-92.
3-3 Buckeyes that me11118e to Denison won the consolation
ponder Wemesday as they. game, 98-71, over Juaniata.
geared up for the meeting In
Cindnn,ati downed Rutgers
Columbus with Ohio Un(ver- ~. Wright State ~feated
sity'.
Marietta 6U3 In overtime,
"Regardless, we'll be back Cl~veland State whipped
here to practice ClriBtmas Youngstown State 71-63, and
By

night," Taylor said.
He planned to go with a llneqp of Wanlell Jacbon, BiU Andreas and Luke Witte up front
and Dan Gerhard and Allan
Hornyak at the guards.
The Bobcats have two 8-8 forwards in Dave Ball and George
Green. Denny RU8ch Is at center and probably freshman

Miami downed Ball State
(Ind.) 118-82• .
The Capital City Classic
starts tonight in Colwnbus,
with Valparaiso meeting
Buffalo State and Capital
opposing Wayne State (Mlch.).
Cleveland State beat
Youngstown for the first time
In C.SU's eight-yesr history.

lflolrinR{

Nelsonville· York 453 7 64.7
Warren Looal
-19S 3 65 .0
Gl011ster
393 6 65.5
Point Pleasant
i31' 2 6S s
Starr-Wash'gton 394 6 65:7
Belpre
'
329 5 66.0
Southwestern
330 5 66.0
Jackson
436 ·6 72.7
Wellston
384 S 76.8
· Symmes Valley 238 -5 79.3
Kyger Creek
404 s 80.8
The Second Annual Rio the new head coach at West every collegiate tournament he
For Rio · Grande, Ron
x . Shorlened game not InGrande Holiday Tournament Virginia State, Curtla Price. · had played in. Oden, a senior, Lambert continues to be the
cluded.
·
begins this evening at the Paul .Price is the youngest collegiate averaged more than 25 points a leading scorer with an average
SEOALVARSITY
R. Lyne Physical Education coachinlhecountryattheage game last season and chose of 20.2 · and senior Bernard
~~e~ly
IV4 \ - ~~ g~ Center on the campus of Rio of 23. Price, just a year ago, som · tough competition to Williams has the most
Gallipolis
4 o • 264 200 Grande College.
was a mainstay in the West excel against. Oden scored 32 rebounds with 46.
Log•n
3
1
.273
241
'
Returning
this
year
to
the
Virginia·
Mountaineers line up · and . 20 points agaii!St NAIA
The· tournament· favorite is ,
Athens
3 1 · 237 197
·
Ironton
1 3 240 233 . tourney is West Virginia State, ' of Coach Sonny Moran: Price champion Kentucky S~e Northwood, base(! ~pon the
Meigs
· 1 3 229 276 plus newcomers Concord of inherited an experienced team is ·a complete bali player as he experience of that squad and
~~~i?J'n
~~1 ~~ West Virglaia and Northwood with nine lettennen including scores, rebounds and is · the better competition the Inof Indiana.
the team's top four scorers regarded as Northwood's best diana school has played.
SEOAL RESERVE
.
In
tonight's
semi-finals,
West
from
last season's 12-15 squad. defensive player.
Northwood has defeated both
TEAM
W L Pis OP
Logan
4 0 202 140 Virginia State (2·&amp;} meets .Two outstanding talents wiU
the ltl'diana University branch
Waverly
3 1 176 141 Northwood (6-2} at 7 p.m. and · clash In the State-Northwood
In the second semi-final · and the Southeast branch,
Athens
3 1 168 135
Gallipolis
3 1 152 109 Rio Grande (2-3} versus g;.me. The Yellowjackets have game, the tourney's only un- other wips have been at the
Ironton
2 2 IS3 · ]56 Concord (H) at nine -o'clock. Dwight Street leading the ball defeated team, Concord meets expense of Northern Kentucky;
Meigs
1 3 W 165
Jackson
o 4 '139 185 · The finals will be Frida)' with club. Street, a 6' 6" forward, Rio Grande. Concord brings a Wilberforce, Tiffin and
,
Wellston
o 4 . 89. 189 the consolation game at ~en was an aU conference choice in 4-ll record io Lyne Center. This . Pikeville.
o-clock and the championship the West Virginia In- will be the first road game for
TE~~·VALLE~ VtR~!Y OP game slated for 9 p.m.
tercollegiate Athletic COli· the West Virginia schooL
The Blue Devils were
Belpre
2 o 165 131
A year ago, Urbana defeated ference last season. Street Concord has wins over Cllnth whipped by Bethel College,
Nels· York
2 1 20~ 191 Rio Grande for the cham· ranked first In scoring and Valley, Emory and Henry, Tennessee and last year's
Federal -Hocking! 1 108 114 plonship, 108-92.
rebounding for State in 71-72 Beckley and Davis and Elkins. national champion Kentucky
Warren Local o .J 57 73
The Blue Knights sUpped by averaging 18.7 points and 12.1 Rio Grande, after twelve days State. Kentucky State only beat·
Vlnlon County 0 2 122 139 West Virginia State in the rebounds per game.
off for exams, will try to stop Norli)wood by five points on
TRI-VALLEY RESERVES
semi-finals the night before
the running game of Concord. their home court.
TEAM
w L Pis OP with a 108-95 overtlnJe win. The Northwood will counter with Rio Coa~h Art Lanham saw West Virginia State has
Belpre
22 01 116
77 Redmen made it to the finals Mike Oden, a 6' 4" guard from Concord play recently and was started slow; however, the
Nels· York
133 109
Federal-Hocking
last year by defeating Columbus . The Columbus impressed .with 6' 5" center Yellowjackets have played a
1 I 80 83 Georgetown, 111-ll:l.
South product has been named Milton Arrington and 6' 4" tough schedule and probably
~~~~~-nc~~~~ ~ ; ~ ~~~ Much attention focused on' to the all-tourn~ment' team in forward Jerome Syre.
have the best personnel of the

g!

SVACVARSITY
TEAM
W L Pis
Eastern
3 0 178
Hannan-Trace A I 312
Southern
2 2 215
N~r ;:, Gallia
2 2 196
Symmes Valley 1 I 159
Kyger Creek
1 ' 3 264
Southwestern o ~ 203

OP
154
238
236
202
134
308
245

TEAMSVAC RESERVES
W L Pis OP
Symmes Valley 2 o ' 86 81
North Gallla
3 1 147 142
Trace
·
Southern
2 2 193 146
Kyger Creek
·I 3 199 ~~~
4
Southwestern
Ill
FRIDAY
Symmes v~~~~ 81 North
Gall Ia
Eastern at Southern
OTHERS
Portsmouth East at Jackson
Logan at New Lexington
Alexander
at Wellston
, RQJs Southeastern
at Federal·
Hocking
Nelsonville-York at Glouster

;~ ~ ~:~ ~=~f.~~-

TEAMS RANKED
DEFENSIVELY
TEAM
Pis G
Afexan.l"r
172 ••
..,
~:n;::;J;~race ~~~ :
Athens
302 6
NOmh Gill Ia202 4
217 4
Wlh•'!'• "'i
283
5
Wa~r/~
· East~rn
228 4
Ironton
2~4 5
t'~~~rn
:
Federal-Hocking 302 5
Meigs
383 6
Vinton C011nty
384 6
Miller
258 4

I

Rio Invitational

statisti~s

Cage

~ ~ ~~ ~~:

°

~~~t,tel~t~n fiiat~!!il,ll'l[',
SATURDAY ~·
~
· ,
Athens at lancaster "" '
lronlon at Portsmouth
Federal-Hocking at Miller
Lancaster Fisher at Alexander
Athens at ~~~r~\ur
Waverly at DEC
Portsmoul!,
9
•2

~~:~e~o~~~:.' a't'il~~ntler
Wahama at Point Pleasart
Guilla
County
mas
Tournament
at RioChris
Grande:
Hannan· Trace vs. North
Gallia, 7' 00
Kr.ger 8C3r0ee.k vs. Southwes ern, :
Alexander Hot Iclay Tour·
naS~~~~ Webster vs. Hun :
tlrigton (Ross), 7, 00
Alexander
vs .
Ross
Southeastern, 8:30
DEC. 30
Gallla County Christmas
Tournament at Rio Grande Championship and Consolation
games.
Alexander Holiday Tournament
Championship and Consolation Jlllmes.
Next SEOAL slats will be
released on Jan. 4 (not In·
eluded with this week's
releases)
Next scoring and standings
after games of Dec. 30 - Tom
Metters.

TWO NAMED
NEW YORK (UP!} -John
Wooden, who has coached
UCLA . to six straight NCAA
basketball tournament titles,
and tennis star Billie Jean King
were named Wednesday Spotts
nlustrated's sportsman and
sportswoman of the year.

four tournament IMmo Calc111,
Curtla Price's team iiiiiPICied
to mate &amp;Miber pad
at thia year's event.
Conc(rd, a~ to Rio
boss Art Lanham, Ia a very
quick team whkh llkea to fast
b~k; and 011 dele..., Coocord pqts heavy pre••ure 011
the 1oppclllltion at ulid COIII't.
Lanhan noted Concord ill not a
big team, but In hla worda:
"They are tD excellent condition."
· Awards wiU be presented
following the cham'plonshlp
game Friday. There will be a
trophy for the championship
·and · runnerup teams. Five
players will be chosen for the
ali-tolirnalnent team and an
individual trophy for the ·
tournament's most valuable
player. Urbana's Mark Todd
received the MVP award In
1971 wben he scored 39 polnta In
asinglligametosetanewLynt
Center record.
Advance tickets for both
nights of the tournament are on ·
sale at BQb Saunders' Quaker
State, Lanna's Salon of Beau!)
and the Kelsli!lg Barber Shqj
In Gallipolis; in Jackaon al tht
Playhouse; till! Ohio V~
Bank branch at Rio Gra~
Foster's Grocery and L~
Center and in Pt. Pleasanl at
the Lowe Motor Hotel. Prl~
are adults, $1.75 and studenlll
$1.
•
:

ling

Local Bow '

"•

ANew Groop At The Meigs Inn

GIFTS, TOYS,. FOR All AGES, SHOP ALL DAY SUNDAY

....

'

DOXIE
~WALKING &amp;BARKING
DOG
..

-"'

AM/FM DIGITAL CLocK

'

RADIO

WITH INTENSITY
LAMP

MOVIE CAMERA

PORTABLE RADIO

•
•

MSOOMATIC S/80 INSTANT
LOADING FOR SUPER 8 MOVIES

FM/AM BATIERY OR ELECTRIC

.

;

in our exclusive, satin-

FLORIDA

·container. A year-round
reminder of your

FRESH DRESSED

'

··TANGEtos·l.,

;.thlilt; ~- «

They ballmce It up very well.
They have a great ' defense
against the run and a grest
defense against the pass. It's a
team that appears to have no
real weaknesses."

ROSS SOLID STATE

KATONE

.white re-usable ·

Serving Meigs, Oollio and
Mllson County areas.

Pfli:SCRIPTION

'•

•ill

~··

TURK\EY~

t,•u

f'i""!A

., '

'

BUY THE BEST
NO THAWING

5 LB. BAG

ELEGANT.

FREE

DRESS
BOOTS
BY

FQIL
18"

c

WITH

EACH '
TURKEY

Hush

REFILL_.

lliPP.!~!f .
.

LB•.

.

FRONT LACE
SIDE ZIPPER

·FOLGER
.
'
INSTANT.

SWEET &amp;JUICY

CRUSHED
LEATHER

COFFEE

TANGERINES

and

WHITE
BROWN

Q- What is the · fatal nature of the tsetse fly?

...........,.._rotMIM_____ . ................._......____,...-.

...

'

'

As Members of FTD
we can send the
no Season's Greeter .
almost anywhere in·
the United Stales or .,
Canada . The colo rs
of the season
professionally arranged

YOU MAY NEED A

A-It carries the psrasites
that cause sleeping sickness.
It is found only in Africa.

'

.r I •

~~::;!~SCementBiockCo. ~

Early Sunday Mi•ed
December 17,1972
Won Lost
Tom's Carry Out
76
52
Mark V
75
53
Eagles Club
64
64
Racine Food Mkt.
64
64
Team3
59
69
Farmer's Bank ·
50
78
HIRh Ind. Game - Jr. PheiD!I
208, Betty · Smith 192; Larry
Dugan 205, Julia Boyles 180.
High Series- Jr . Phelps 592.
Betty Smlth, 513 ; John Tyree
572, Julia Boyles 495.
Team High Game and Series
- Racine Food Market 715 and
1939.

WE STILL HAVE A FINE SELEcTION
OF .
.

~

.who returns on ihe short end of
a score has not had a good
time," he said.
Hayes said the squad was
able to work outside on only
two days last week because of
snow' and rain and welcomed
the sun here.
"Of course, I don 't know how
my players will feel after they
practice for a couple of hours in
this heat," he said.
"We've studied USC and we
saw them on television against
Notre Dame," said Hayes.
"We're probably playing the
best tesm Ohio has ever faced.
We are impressed with their
~ ~llj)ll

.

..
ti&gt;ERgQfl£ -..,
Gr~Em -

tr .

=

'"

Christmas is ••.
the FTD

We'rehere to win-Woody
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - the Rose Bowl game Jan. I at eyes won the ip to the Rose
Bright sunshine, no smog, 80 Pasadena.
Bowl with "hard work." The
degree temperature and kisses
The coach also told newsmen Bucks shared tbe Big Ten title
awaited the Ohio State football he might have a few gimmicks with Michigan, whom theyqeat
team when it deplaned here for the undefeated Southern In the season fmale.
Wednesday.
Cal Trojans,
Hayes was guarded w,hen
Salli Noren, queen of the · "We always have a few gim- asked what rules he would
Tournament of Roses, was mick plays," he joked. "We're have for his, players off the
among three young ladles who. more versatile than you think. practice field.
bestowed kisses on Coach We don't always run that off·
"That'sourbusiness,"hereWoody Hayea, who seem~ tackle play to the right. Some- plied. "We're a family. A good
startled by the attention.
times, we run it to the left."
family doesn't go downtown
After wiping the lipstick
Hayes . also permitted foilr talking about its business. If we
Ia
11
iffi ul
II
from his cheek, Hayes P yers, a co-captains, to have any d' c ty, we' just.
returned to business and an- answer questions.
keep that on the squad."
d
ha
edl'-.1
ports
Both
th
h
and
George
He a dmItte d Ohi o Sta te
nounce t t accr
s
e coac
writers would be admitted to Hasenohrl, a 262-pound . should be the underdog In the
Buckeye practices at Citrus defensive tackle, agreed that game, but added, "The only
t~~~ in ~~~~ ••Th~ ~.Anthony Da,~lit, ..U&amp;C's.,tll!l $lt'witll • •u have to
lteatnwiUcaUAzulhomeuntil "' runner, was not their main lose, !Q -be P1Q fll,a t position
"· "".
"'
~
'
oblem
l
d
d ' '!ik 1 . "
pr"
. .
ari we on t e osmg.
The mam problem with
OSU, 9-1, lost this season to
·
USC is they have such a , Michigan State. USC was 11.{).
POMEROY LANES
halanced attack," Hasenohrl
The Buckeyes began two-aTrl County Lea que Pis said as Hayes beamed ap-d day practices today.. They
Davis-Warner Ins.
95 proval. ''They pass well an
planned only a morning
Rawlings' Dodge
74 they open it up for Davis a lot. practice Friday with a trip to
But we've come out here to Disneyland in the afternoon.
H&amp;RFirestone
. 44 playfootballandwe'llhaveto · OhioStateplayedStanfordin
Mayer &amp; Hill Barber Shop 29 play a great game to heat a the Rose Bowl two years ago
High Ind. Game - Bob
Bowen 220·, Jack Bachner, 217, great team.".
and lost 27-17, and Hayes does
/&gt;,. l.. Phelps, Jr., 208.
John Hicks, an All-American not want a repeat.
High Series - Bob Bowen
kJ
ld ·
1
Ia
"You want the p yers to
576 , Harvey Van Vranken 568 , offensive tac e, sa , m rep Y
A. L. Phelps, Jr .. SS9.
to a question, that the Buck- have a good tim'e, but anyone
Team High Game and Series
- Davis-Warner Ins. 882 and
2485·

...

.__... ...

NAVY

._

10 Ol .JAR

In most cases, we can .refill tha~
prescription for you, but there
are tlmH when a pharmacist
must say, "Sorry, I can't." It
may.be due to Federal law or'the
physician may have limited the .
number of refills. Depend on us

SKIN FIT
LINING

D

0
I.

GifT BONANZA

1973 PINTO
DEPOSIT AT ANY MIDDLEPORT To Be Given

GIFT BONANZA

SPECIAL
'
,

...................
SUN'

POMEROY, OHIO

,;·

E

.

STORE

N

COUPON

STORE

~~

tbl
• 7

Friday Nite 10 • 2
The Meigs Inn

z

,.

DEPOSIT AT ANY MiDDLEPORT 1tn P'INTO
TohGIAway

~B BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS!

.7®II toW.t DeUy
M.ain8UIIdly
• Pomeroy
1-i
,
,

P.M.

Open i very Nlgllt Till: 30

·~ ..
t

THE 5101 IG

TRUCK LOAD. OF FRESH FRUITS
ARRIVING DAILY, tAST TRUCK ·LOAD SA·T.
'

.

'

.

~- SHOP ~OW FOR THE LOWEST PRICED FRUIT &amp; VEGETABLES
..,....
IN THE AREA. SHOP YOUR I.G.A. STORE
"

"•'

M&amp;R

•

·'·
I

CENTER......,.

r-----:-· M&amp;R
I

.

I!INSTANT
FOLGERS
1

coFFEE

COUPON·~-----·

J

.

68' 'l
r
RTO_________ .
10

I UMIT ONE PER PERSON

OL

WITH

SAVE '1.19 QJUPON

EXPIRES 12-24-72JI

�-

4- The DallJ Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. 21,1972

OVERALL SCORING (As of Dec. 161

.

FG FT "" G Avg
47 20 114 S 22.8
47 44 lOB s · 21 .6

NAME

Gr~

McDaniel, Starr-Wash: ·
Dave S&lt;&gt;uden, Wellston
·
Charlie Chambers, P1. Pleasant
Ric~ Whl111, Alexander
· Jene Myers. Symmes Valley
· Mark Humphrey, Belpre
Mike Oyer, Waverly
Jim Boggs, Meigs
Gil Price. Gallipolis
Mark Mare, Athens

18 7
37 10
'17

2 21 .5
4 21.0
41 2 20.5
99 5 · 19.8
98 5 19.6
oiJ
U

7

43 13
39 20
52 13 117 6 19.5
47 18 112 6 18.7
46 17 109 6 18.2

SEOAL SCORING (As of Dec. 16)
NAME
FG FT Pis
Dave S&lt;&gt;uders. Wellston
38 12 88
Mlke()yer, Waverly
3S 16 86
Jeff Hannon. ironton
38 3 79
Mark Mare. Athens
30 13 73
Gil Price, Gallipolis
29 10 68
Iiiii Maloy, WaverlY
' '
31 6 68
Jlrn Boggs. Meigs
.
2288 68 .6624
Ed Thornpso/1, Waverly
Mark Kiesling, Gallipolis .
22 17 61
Jim Noe, Gallipolis ·
22 17 · 61
TRI-VALLEY SCORING (Asof Dec. 16)
FG FT Pis
NAME
Mark Humphrey, Belpre
23 9 55.
24 3 Sl
.Greg Smathers, Nels-York
8 1 17
Chip Spence, Warren Local
Sam Jackson, Belpre
14 s 33
Jim Schloss, Fed.-Hocklng
13 S 31
Dave Pritchard, Nels-York
21 2 44
Bob Crlssinqer, Belpre
B 12 28
14 0 28
Jell Eberts,.Vinton Co. .
12 3 27
Harold Caudlli,'VInton C011nty
Max Pitts, Nelsonville· York ·
IS 9 39

G
4
4
4
4
4
4
44.
4
4

21 .5
19.8
18.3
17.0
1/.0
1165.05
.
15.3
IS.3

G
2
3
1
2

Avg
27.5
17.7
17.0
16.5

~!.Y:!e

OP
· 296
283
172
375
330
329
228
444
360

302
4.57

2 lS.S

r'.J

I'

TEAMS RANKED
TEAM OFFENSI~~L Y0
Waverly .
410 5
Alexander
323
St.vr-Was'gton
392 54
Symmes Valley 228 3

Avg
82.0
80.8
78.4
76.0

Avg,
17.p
16.0
15.8
15.7

14.0
14.0
13.5
13.4
13.3
13.0
-13.0
13.0

'Belpre
Logan
Kyger Creek
Gallipolis
Hannan-Trace
.im!)ton
Neli:York
Wahama
Point Pleasant
Vinton County
Eastern
Meigs
Athens
Glouster

362 5 12.~
409 6 . 68.2
. 3'40 S 68.0
399 6 66.5
386 6 64.3
319 5 63.8
437 7 62 .4
247 4 6J.8,
123 2 61.5
365 6 60.8
242 4 60.s
352 6 58.7
342 6 57.0
328 6 54.7

Federal-Hocking
Miller
~\~~s'fo~
So
uthern
North Gallia-x

261 5 52.2
2o8 4 52.0

~ ~ ~~ ~~~ ~':,f~~ei;';r"~

Vinton County 3 3 365 384 .
Wahama
2 3 317 293
Feclerat-Hocklng
.
2 3 261 '302
Southern
2 3 249 295
=~ Gallla-x ~ ~ ~~
Ironton
2 4 372 348
Symmes Valley ·1 3 302 329
Warren Local 1 2 164 195
Miller
1 3 209 258
Kyger Creek
1 5. 403 477
11 5s 328
393
. Glc011sler
Jackson
309 436
Point Pleasant o 2 m 131
Southwestern o 5 262 330
Wellston · · o ~ s :i~ 384
x · Record lncludes '-' one
ilhortened ~me.
'

Avg

~2 . 0

3 14.7
2 1M
2 14.0
2 ' 13.5
3 13.0

SVAC SCORING IASOI Dec. 16)
NAME
FG FT Pis G
Jamie Lafon, Symmes Valley
13 8 34 2
Phil Robinson. Symmes Valley
12 8 32 2
Clay Hudson, Kyger Creek ·
26 11 63 4
Dave Robinette, North Gall Ia .,
18 11 47 3
John Lusher, Hannan-Trace
30 10 70 5
Jen.,Myers, Symmes Valley
5 4 14 I
Dave Dunfee, Symmes Valley
12 3 27 2
Mike Caldwell, Hannan-Trace
28 11 67 5
Ron Hill, Southern
15 10 40 3
Terry Bush, Soulhwestern
20 12 52 4
Norman Curfman, Southern
23 6 52 4
Ra~dy Boring, Eastern
lA 11 39 3
'
ALLGAMES
(Asof.Dec.19l
TEAM
W L p
Gallipolis
6 o 399
Waverly
·5 o 410
Alexander
4 o 323
Porlsm011th
5 1 400
Hannan Tt•ce 5 1 461
Belpre
4 1 362
Eastern
3 1 242
South
54 3
LoganPoint
2 576
409
Athens
4 2 342
Starr-Wash' ton 4 2 465

~~ ~ ~:~

249 5 49.8
196 4 49 0
·

!

Avg
43.0

~-~

50 '3
so:H
54- 3
56 6

·

57.0

58.8

~-~

60:4
63.80
64
64's

Bucks. ' Bobcats
ht
·meet .t

·

·

on~g
·

Ullited Pral.lalorutloaal Walter Luckett and Alan
The le~ of the Ohio State Talbert will be at guards. Ohio
basketball team's Cll1ltmas U. beat OSU last year ~­
vacation' will depend on how
In games Wednesday night,
well they do tonlgbt In their Malone won the Hall of Fame
seventh game of the season. Holiday Tournament at
O.eh Fred TaJlor pve hla Canton, beating Walsh 112-92.
3-3 Buckeyes that me11118e to Denison won the consolation
ponder Wemesday as they. game, 98-71, over Juaniata.
geared up for the meeting In
Cindnn,ati downed Rutgers
Columbus with Ohio Un(ver- ~. Wright State ~feated
sity'.
Marietta 6U3 In overtime,
"Regardless, we'll be back Cl~veland State whipped
here to practice ClriBtmas Youngstown State 71-63, and
By

night," Taylor said.
He planned to go with a llneqp of Wanlell Jacbon, BiU Andreas and Luke Witte up front
and Dan Gerhard and Allan
Hornyak at the guards.
The Bobcats have two 8-8 forwards in Dave Ball and George
Green. Denny RU8ch Is at center and probably freshman

Miami downed Ball State
(Ind.) 118-82• .
The Capital City Classic
starts tonight in Colwnbus,
with Valparaiso meeting
Buffalo State and Capital
opposing Wayne State (Mlch.).
Cleveland State beat
Youngstown for the first time
In C.SU's eight-yesr history.

lflolrinR{

Nelsonville· York 453 7 64.7
Warren Looal
-19S 3 65 .0
Gl011ster
393 6 65.5
Point Pleasant
i31' 2 6S s
Starr-Wash'gton 394 6 65:7
Belpre
'
329 5 66.0
Southwestern
330 5 66.0
Jackson
436 ·6 72.7
Wellston
384 S 76.8
· Symmes Valley 238 -5 79.3
Kyger Creek
404 s 80.8
The Second Annual Rio the new head coach at West every collegiate tournament he
For Rio · Grande, Ron
x . Shorlened game not InGrande Holiday Tournament Virginia State, Curtla Price. · had played in. Oden, a senior, Lambert continues to be the
cluded.
·
begins this evening at the Paul .Price is the youngest collegiate averaged more than 25 points a leading scorer with an average
SEOALVARSITY
R. Lyne Physical Education coachinlhecountryattheage game last season and chose of 20.2 · and senior Bernard
~~e~ly
IV4 \ - ~~ g~ Center on the campus of Rio of 23. Price, just a year ago, som · tough competition to Williams has the most
Gallipolis
4 o • 264 200 Grande College.
was a mainstay in the West excel against. Oden scored 32 rebounds with 46.
Log•n
3
1
.273
241
'
Returning
this
year
to
the
Virginia·
Mountaineers line up · and . 20 points agaii!St NAIA
The· tournament· favorite is ,
Athens
3 1 · 237 197
·
Ironton
1 3 240 233 . tourney is West Virginia State, ' of Coach Sonny Moran: Price champion Kentucky S~e Northwood, base(! ~pon the
Meigs
· 1 3 229 276 plus newcomers Concord of inherited an experienced team is ·a complete bali player as he experience of that squad and
~~~i?J'n
~~1 ~~ West Virglaia and Northwood with nine lettennen including scores, rebounds and is · the better competition the Inof Indiana.
the team's top four scorers regarded as Northwood's best diana school has played.
SEOAL RESERVE
.
In
tonight's
semi-finals,
West
from
last season's 12-15 squad. defensive player.
Northwood has defeated both
TEAM
W L Pis OP
Logan
4 0 202 140 Virginia State (2·&amp;} meets .Two outstanding talents wiU
the ltl'diana University branch
Waverly
3 1 176 141 Northwood (6-2} at 7 p.m. and · clash In the State-Northwood
In the second semi-final · and the Southeast branch,
Athens
3 1 168 135
Gallipolis
3 1 152 109 Rio Grande (2-3} versus g;.me. The Yellowjackets have game, the tourney's only un- other wips have been at the
Ironton
2 2 IS3 · ]56 Concord (H) at nine -o'clock. Dwight Street leading the ball defeated team, Concord meets expense of Northern Kentucky;
Meigs
1 3 W 165
Jackson
o 4 '139 185 · The finals will be Frida)' with club. Street, a 6' 6" forward, Rio Grande. Concord brings a Wilberforce, Tiffin and
,
Wellston
o 4 . 89. 189 the consolation game at ~en was an aU conference choice in 4-ll record io Lyne Center. This . Pikeville.
o-clock and the championship the West Virginia In- will be the first road game for
TE~~·VALLE~ VtR~!Y OP game slated for 9 p.m.
tercollegiate Athletic COli· the West Virginia schooL
The Blue Devils were
Belpre
2 o 165 131
A year ago, Urbana defeated ference last season. Street Concord has wins over Cllnth whipped by Bethel College,
Nels· York
2 1 20~ 191 Rio Grande for the cham· ranked first In scoring and Valley, Emory and Henry, Tennessee and last year's
Federal -Hocking! 1 108 114 plonship, 108-92.
rebounding for State in 71-72 Beckley and Davis and Elkins. national champion Kentucky
Warren Local o .J 57 73
The Blue Knights sUpped by averaging 18.7 points and 12.1 Rio Grande, after twelve days State. Kentucky State only beat·
Vlnlon County 0 2 122 139 West Virginia State in the rebounds per game.
off for exams, will try to stop Norli)wood by five points on
TRI-VALLEY RESERVES
semi-finals the night before
the running game of Concord. their home court.
TEAM
w L Pis OP with a 108-95 overtlnJe win. The Northwood will counter with Rio Coa~h Art Lanham saw West Virginia State has
Belpre
22 01 116
77 Redmen made it to the finals Mike Oden, a 6' 4" guard from Concord play recently and was started slow; however, the
Nels· York
133 109
Federal-Hocking
last year by defeating Columbus . The Columbus impressed .with 6' 5" center Yellowjackets have played a
1 I 80 83 Georgetown, 111-ll:l.
South product has been named Milton Arrington and 6' 4" tough schedule and probably
~~~~~-nc~~~~ ~ ; ~ ~~~ Much attention focused on' to the all-tourn~ment' team in forward Jerome Syre.
have the best personnel of the

g!

SVACVARSITY
TEAM
W L Pis
Eastern
3 0 178
Hannan-Trace A I 312
Southern
2 2 215
N~r ;:, Gallia
2 2 196
Symmes Valley 1 I 159
Kyger Creek
1 ' 3 264
Southwestern o ~ 203

OP
154
238
236
202
134
308
245

TEAMSVAC RESERVES
W L Pis OP
Symmes Valley 2 o ' 86 81
North Gallla
3 1 147 142
Trace
·
Southern
2 2 193 146
Kyger Creek
·I 3 199 ~~~
4
Southwestern
Ill
FRIDAY
Symmes v~~~~ 81 North
Gall Ia
Eastern at Southern
OTHERS
Portsmouth East at Jackson
Logan at New Lexington
Alexander
at Wellston
, RQJs Southeastern
at Federal·
Hocking
Nelsonville-York at Glouster

;~ ~ ~:~ ~=~f.~~-

TEAMS RANKED
DEFENSIVELY
TEAM
Pis G
Afexan.l"r
172 ••
..,
~:n;::;J;~race ~~~ :
Athens
302 6
NOmh Gill Ia202 4
217 4
Wlh•'!'• "'i
283
5
Wa~r/~
· East~rn
228 4
Ironton
2~4 5
t'~~~rn
:
Federal-Hocking 302 5
Meigs
383 6
Vinton C011nty
384 6
Miller
258 4

I

Rio Invitational

statisti~s

Cage

~ ~ ~~ ~~:

°

~~~t,tel~t~n fiiat~!!il,ll'l[',
SATURDAY ~·
~
· ,
Athens at lancaster "" '
lronlon at Portsmouth
Federal-Hocking at Miller
Lancaster Fisher at Alexander
Athens at ~~~r~\ur
Waverly at DEC
Portsmoul!,
9
•2

~~:~e~o~~~:.' a't'il~~ntler
Wahama at Point Pleasart
Guilla
County
mas
Tournament
at RioChris
Grande:
Hannan· Trace vs. North
Gallia, 7' 00
Kr.ger 8C3r0ee.k vs. Southwes ern, :
Alexander Hot Iclay Tour·
naS~~~~ Webster vs. Hun :
tlrigton (Ross), 7, 00
Alexander
vs .
Ross
Southeastern, 8:30
DEC. 30
Gallla County Christmas
Tournament at Rio Grande Championship and Consolation
games.
Alexander Holiday Tournament
Championship and Consolation Jlllmes.
Next SEOAL slats will be
released on Jan. 4 (not In·
eluded with this week's
releases)
Next scoring and standings
after games of Dec. 30 - Tom
Metters.

TWO NAMED
NEW YORK (UP!} -John
Wooden, who has coached
UCLA . to six straight NCAA
basketball tournament titles,
and tennis star Billie Jean King
were named Wednesday Spotts
nlustrated's sportsman and
sportswoman of the year.

four tournament IMmo Calc111,
Curtla Price's team iiiiiPICied
to mate &amp;Miber pad
at thia year's event.
Conc(rd, a~ to Rio
boss Art Lanham, Ia a very
quick team whkh llkea to fast
b~k; and 011 dele..., Coocord pqts heavy pre••ure 011
the 1oppclllltion at ulid COIII't.
Lanhan noted Concord ill not a
big team, but In hla worda:
"They are tD excellent condition."
· Awards wiU be presented
following the cham'plonshlp
game Friday. There will be a
trophy for the championship
·and · runnerup teams. Five
players will be chosen for the
ali-tolirnalnent team and an
individual trophy for the ·
tournament's most valuable
player. Urbana's Mark Todd
received the MVP award In
1971 wben he scored 39 polnta In
asinglligametosetanewLynt
Center record.
Advance tickets for both
nights of the tournament are on ·
sale at BQb Saunders' Quaker
State, Lanna's Salon of Beau!)
and the Kelsli!lg Barber Shqj
In Gallipolis; in Jackaon al tht
Playhouse; till! Ohio V~
Bank branch at Rio Gra~
Foster's Grocery and L~
Center and in Pt. Pleasanl at
the Lowe Motor Hotel. Prl~
are adults, $1.75 and studenlll
$1.
•
:

ling

Local Bow '

"•

ANew Groop At The Meigs Inn

GIFTS, TOYS,. FOR All AGES, SHOP ALL DAY SUNDAY

....

'

DOXIE
~WALKING &amp;BARKING
DOG
..

-"'

AM/FM DIGITAL CLocK

'

RADIO

WITH INTENSITY
LAMP

MOVIE CAMERA

PORTABLE RADIO

•
•

MSOOMATIC S/80 INSTANT
LOADING FOR SUPER 8 MOVIES

FM/AM BATIERY OR ELECTRIC

.

;

in our exclusive, satin-

FLORIDA

·container. A year-round
reminder of your

FRESH DRESSED

'

··TANGEtos·l.,

;.thlilt; ~- «

They ballmce It up very well.
They have a great ' defense
against the run and a grest
defense against the pass. It's a
team that appears to have no
real weaknesses."

ROSS SOLID STATE

KATONE

.white re-usable ·

Serving Meigs, Oollio and
Mllson County areas.

Pfli:SCRIPTION

'•

•ill

~··

TURK\EY~

t,•u

f'i""!A

., '

'

BUY THE BEST
NO THAWING

5 LB. BAG

ELEGANT.

FREE

DRESS
BOOTS
BY

FQIL
18"

c

WITH

EACH '
TURKEY

Hush

REFILL_.

lliPP.!~!f .
.

LB•.

.

FRONT LACE
SIDE ZIPPER

·FOLGER
.
'
INSTANT.

SWEET &amp;JUICY

CRUSHED
LEATHER

COFFEE

TANGERINES

and

WHITE
BROWN

Q- What is the · fatal nature of the tsetse fly?

...........,.._rotMIM_____ . ................._......____,...-.

...

'

'

As Members of FTD
we can send the
no Season's Greeter .
almost anywhere in·
the United Stales or .,
Canada . The colo rs
of the season
professionally arranged

YOU MAY NEED A

A-It carries the psrasites
that cause sleeping sickness.
It is found only in Africa.

'

.r I •

~~::;!~SCementBiockCo. ~

Early Sunday Mi•ed
December 17,1972
Won Lost
Tom's Carry Out
76
52
Mark V
75
53
Eagles Club
64
64
Racine Food Mkt.
64
64
Team3
59
69
Farmer's Bank ·
50
78
HIRh Ind. Game - Jr. PheiD!I
208, Betty · Smith 192; Larry
Dugan 205, Julia Boyles 180.
High Series- Jr . Phelps 592.
Betty Smlth, 513 ; John Tyree
572, Julia Boyles 495.
Team High Game and Series
- Racine Food Market 715 and
1939.

WE STILL HAVE A FINE SELEcTION
OF .
.

~

.who returns on ihe short end of
a score has not had a good
time," he said.
Hayes said the squad was
able to work outside on only
two days last week because of
snow' and rain and welcomed
the sun here.
"Of course, I don 't know how
my players will feel after they
practice for a couple of hours in
this heat," he said.
"We've studied USC and we
saw them on television against
Notre Dame," said Hayes.
"We're probably playing the
best tesm Ohio has ever faced.
We are impressed with their
~ ~llj)ll

.

..
ti&gt;ERgQfl£ -..,
Gr~Em -

tr .

=

'"

Christmas is ••.
the FTD

We'rehere to win-Woody
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - the Rose Bowl game Jan. I at eyes won the ip to the Rose
Bright sunshine, no smog, 80 Pasadena.
Bowl with "hard work." The
degree temperature and kisses
The coach also told newsmen Bucks shared tbe Big Ten title
awaited the Ohio State football he might have a few gimmicks with Michigan, whom theyqeat
team when it deplaned here for the undefeated Southern In the season fmale.
Wednesday.
Cal Trojans,
Hayes was guarded w,hen
Salli Noren, queen of the · "We always have a few gim- asked what rules he would
Tournament of Roses, was mick plays," he joked. "We're have for his, players off the
among three young ladles who. more versatile than you think. practice field.
bestowed kisses on Coach We don't always run that off·
"That'sourbusiness,"hereWoody Hayea, who seem~ tackle play to the right. Some- plied. "We're a family. A good
startled by the attention.
times, we run it to the left."
family doesn't go downtown
After wiping the lipstick
Hayes . also permitted foilr talking about its business. If we
Ia
11
iffi ul
II
from his cheek, Hayes P yers, a co-captains, to have any d' c ty, we' just.
returned to business and an- answer questions.
keep that on the squad."
d
ha
edl'-.1
ports
Both
th
h
and
George
He a dmItte d Ohi o Sta te
nounce t t accr
s
e coac
writers would be admitted to Hasenohrl, a 262-pound . should be the underdog In the
Buckeye practices at Citrus defensive tackle, agreed that game, but added, "The only
t~~~ in ~~~~ ••Th~ ~.Anthony Da,~lit, ..U&amp;C's.,tll!l $lt'witll • •u have to
lteatnwiUcaUAzulhomeuntil "' runner, was not their main lose, !Q -be P1Q fll,a t position
"· "".
"'
~
'
oblem
l
d
d ' '!ik 1 . "
pr"
. .
ari we on t e osmg.
The mam problem with
OSU, 9-1, lost this season to
·
USC is they have such a , Michigan State. USC was 11.{).
POMEROY LANES
halanced attack," Hasenohrl
The Buckeyes began two-aTrl County Lea que Pis said as Hayes beamed ap-d day practices today.. They
Davis-Warner Ins.
95 proval. ''They pass well an
planned only a morning
Rawlings' Dodge
74 they open it up for Davis a lot. practice Friday with a trip to
But we've come out here to Disneyland in the afternoon.
H&amp;RFirestone
. 44 playfootballandwe'llhaveto · OhioStateplayedStanfordin
Mayer &amp; Hill Barber Shop 29 play a great game to heat a the Rose Bowl two years ago
High Ind. Game - Bob
Bowen 220·, Jack Bachner, 217, great team.".
and lost 27-17, and Hayes does
/&gt;,. l.. Phelps, Jr., 208.
John Hicks, an All-American not want a repeat.
High Series - Bob Bowen
kJ
ld ·
1
Ia
"You want the p yers to
576 , Harvey Van Vranken 568 , offensive tac e, sa , m rep Y
A. L. Phelps, Jr .. SS9.
to a question, that the Buck- have a good tim'e, but anyone
Team High Game and Series
- Davis-Warner Ins. 882 and
2485·

...

.__... ...

NAVY

._

10 Ol .JAR

In most cases, we can .refill tha~
prescription for you, but there
are tlmH when a pharmacist
must say, "Sorry, I can't." It
may.be due to Federal law or'the
physician may have limited the .
number of refills. Depend on us

SKIN FIT
LINING

D

0
I.

GifT BONANZA

1973 PINTO
DEPOSIT AT ANY MIDDLEPORT To Be Given

GIFT BONANZA

SPECIAL
'
,

...................
SUN'

POMEROY, OHIO

,;·

E

.

STORE

N

COUPON

STORE

~~

tbl
• 7

Friday Nite 10 • 2
The Meigs Inn

z

,.

DEPOSIT AT ANY MiDDLEPORT 1tn P'INTO
TohGIAway

~B BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS!

.7®II toW.t DeUy
M.ain8UIIdly
• Pomeroy
1-i
,
,

P.M.

Open i very Nlgllt Till: 30

·~ ..
t

THE 5101 IG

TRUCK LOAD. OF FRESH FRUITS
ARRIVING DAILY, tAST TRUCK ·LOAD SA·T.
'

.

'

.

~- SHOP ~OW FOR THE LOWEST PRICED FRUIT &amp; VEGETABLES
..,....
IN THE AREA. SHOP YOUR I.G.A. STORE
"

"•'

M&amp;R

•

·'·
I

CENTER......,.

r-----:-· M&amp;R
I

.

I!INSTANT
FOLGERS
1

coFFEE

COUPON·~-----·

J

.

68' 'l
r
RTO_________ .
10

I UMIT ONE PER PERSON

OL

WITH

SAVE '1.19 QJUPON

EXPIRES 12-24-72JI

�.
I.

r

'.

7- The Dally Sentinel,ltllddleport..PGmerry, O., Dec. "'• ~m
waDI to llellr m. lludeall Ia
eleiDHtary, )IIDler JdCII, aealw 11111a
sclloola ... - · lfldaalet Ill llle
.sciiOola Ia G.W. 111111 Melt• CGIIIlllea.
.
This 18 a chagce for you to give a
little re&lt;:!lflnlllon to the teacher who has
given YoU somelhlnt very Important.
Teachers namlnated will be lilted ln
are involved In giving such a gift to this column early next year. E~ch
youngsters. One of the most active teacher na!Jied wiU receive a letter of
givers of a "desire to learn" is a good congratulations frool yours truly,
teacher.
Remember,aend your letter to: Dr.
Although we realize that teachers Edward W~n. Rio .Grande College,
who give such a valuablegiftdoitout of . Rio Grande, Ohio 45674.
concern for the student and not for
Letters !lillY alao be sent to the
recognition, we wish to .recognize those Tribune or Daily Sentinel office.
teachers·in Gallia and Meigs counties
We have some excellent teachers in
who have given th.eir students a "love of our a~a : We hav.e some teachers ,who
learning.
have given us much to be treasured. Let
Therefore, we are asking you to us ui!e thls sjlecial time of yl!!lr. to give
send to us the name, school and grade them ·a liltie bit of our love for their
or subje.ct taught ol lbe teacher who · contribution to our lives.
has given you such a gift. AIJo, please
Meanwhile, have a happy holid!iy
tell what this teacher has done to and may thls be your Merriest
create your "desire to leam." We Chrisbnas ever.

. Let us recognize our
best.school teachers
'

'

By Prof. Ed (Doc) Wallen
Rio Grande College
This is a beautiful time of year. It is
a season of festive occasions and
sharing. It is a season of well.wishing
and gift.giving.
The young are often the focal poin\
of this particular holiday. We adults
often try to give them gifts that wtll be
meaningful to the_lll, But we realize that
the most import;mt gifts we can give
are not material in nature. The best
gifts are things yo~ can't touch, or pic~
. up, like peace, hope and love.
.. .
Another important gift for .a young
· : person to receive is a "desire to learn"
or a "love of learning;" Many people

G-T to spend $76;956,000
for modernization in 1973
MARION- The continuation
of programs to reduce party
lines and provide for growth is
highlighted in a $72,1156,000
construction budget for 1973, it
was announced here Wednesday by General Telephone
Co. of Ohio and Northern Ohio
Telephone Co,
The outlsy is part pf a 19\31976 capital expansion pian
that will total almost $300
mtllion, said Robert M. Wopal
of Marion, president of both
companies. The 1973 figure is
17.~ per cent higher than the
1972 budget.
Headquartered in Marion,

Legion to sack
candy treats
Members of F,eeney-Bennett'
Post 128, American Legion,
will meet at the post home at 7
p.m. Thureday to sack candy
for the annual Middleport
corrununity Chrlsbnas party to
be held from 5 to 7 p.m. on
Friday at the post home in ,
Middleport.
~~Will be dlslrjbljted to
at
that time. On Saturday af·
ternoon, post members will
deliver baskets of fruit and
candy to the Meigs County
Chlldren'sHoll)eandtheMeigs
County Infirmary.

c~ot,dil•l.'tlllilfiunltY

CLUB TO MEET
The Twin City Shrine Club
· wlllmeetthiseveningat7:30at
the Shrine Club House in
Rliclne . Ali members are
urged to attend.

SHIRT
FINISHING
SAME 'DAY
SERVICE
in At 9-0ut AI S
Use our Free Parking.Lot

Robinson's Oeanels
216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy

the companies are subsidiaries
of General Telephone &amp;
Electronics Corp. (GTS), New
York: They serve-jibou\675,000
phones in some I 800 communities throughout 79 of
Ohio's· 88 counties.
The donars wtil take th e
form of new buildings, callswitching equipment, ex. ded ca ble networ. ks, new
pan
instruments and other com.
munlcailons eq:uiJBilent.
WopaI said a chief challenge
will be to meet new party-line
requirements by Dec. 31, 1976.
This new standard, affecting
all phone companies, was
. ed
·
1S8U September, 1971 by the
Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio.
·
Also fac ing the companies
are rising costs, changes in
technology and the need to
.
maintain adeq:~ate earnings.
Financing the construction
...
ogram will be accompliahed
r
largely by borrowing on shortterm notes, he said. Permanent financing later will be
achieved through sale of bonds
and common stock.
Construction in 1973 actuaUy
will be a continuation of
programs JIIBI'IAld
The
party~lne reduction program
has been beefed up to comply
with the PUCO standard.
During the 1973-76 period an
estimated· $60 million of the
$300 mUllon figure wiU be put
intonewfacilitiesinconnection
with party-line improvement.

111197~,

The 1971 PUCO order called
for completion of the party-Uue
reduction by yearend 1976. It
will restrict new lllstalladons
to two-party resldeDI!ai and
one-party .business Unes In
urban areas. Rural service Is
- artY
to be .limited to fi veop
residential and tw,..party
business. (General and Nor· ,
lhem w01 exceed th. e PUC0
· standard by setting four-party.
lines as the Umlt for mral
res ld en tial servlce. )
In addition to party-line
work ' the companies
.
I .plan
.
major expanston of ~clllties
for Pilch of the 23long distance
te
d
cha
cen rs serve · 1n1erex ~e
and local caU-handhng
eq:ulpl!lent Is earmarked for
.
.
j ril of
expans1on m a rna o Y
exchanges.
Four long distance centers
.
wiU be converted to direct
distance dialing in 1973. They
are Cadiz I Cambridge ' Circleville and Oxford. Three toll
centers are to be modified for
single-digit access to ODD Ashland, Bowling Green and
Port Clinton
·
New local exchange systems
are being readied for North
.Georgeto!wn,
Edon, LaRue, Resaca,
Chatham and Spencer.
Ashland is scheduled for a new
suboffice. A major eiJlllnslon
of toll.free calling for cadiz
area exchanges also is on the
worksheet. According to
forecaststhecompanlesexpect
.
to gam 33,774 phones.

attended , the meeUng. Diener
expresaed his appreciation to
the volun leers. A gift of $20 to
the auxiliary flower fl!Dd was
presented by Mrs. Mildred
Withee In memory Of Mrs.
Kathryn McGowan.
A potluck supper was
followed by a Christmas
program of readings and songs
by Mrs. Ethel Grueser, Mrs.
Bertha Parker, Mrs. Jessie
White, Mrs. Faye Sauer, Mrs.
Betty Wills, Mrs. Jack Jacobs
and Miss Diana Lewis.
VeteraN Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED Arthur
Goodin, Pomeroy; Roy Sears,
Middleport; Mary Weyersmll)er, Pomeroy; Pamela
Bowers, Reedsville, and
William Buckley, Middleport.
DISCHARGED - Barbara
Crabtree, William Ellis, Edna
SU!es, Kathy Walker, Eva ·
Shaffer, lola Collins, WUllam
Milliron, Elsie S. Roush,
Myrtle Hayes, Richard Bearhs
and Marjorie Hunt.

chances of a cease.fire are rted him, appeared Subdued
and less bouyant than U8WII.
remote.
~er laughed off repcrlll
Americlln officials say they
believe Hanoi may 10011 make of a rift with Nillon over
a decision on ihe one fun· Vietnam policy. Ziegler said
damental point that hamstrung Wednesday that the President
the talks. It Involves ac· and KI.sslnger have a ''unity of
ceptance of , some vague point of view" on seUiement ·
reference to a demarcation tenns. He blamed "diploolatic
rumors" for speculation that
between two Vietnams.
Nixon flew .to Key Biscayne differences had arisen between ·
Wednesday night with biB wife the two.
Nixon awaits the return of
Pal for a quiet Christmas
celebration and a bit of work KI.sslnger's deputy, Maj. Gen.
~d , relaxation. Ziegler said Alexander M. Haig; Thursday
Nixon's mqod was "good, very evenil)g or Friday morning .
after consultations with South
good ....
But Nil!on's ~hief foreign Vietnameile President Nguyen
affair$ ·adviser, Henry A. Van Thieu and other Southeast
Kissinger, who also accompa- Asian leaders.
The . President ·plaaned to
worlc quietly on his second
inaugural addfess aixf the ~
. Meigs area farmers are
federal budget he wiU submit ·
mvlted to reserve two dates for
to Congress next month.
special meetings early In
•
. He 'planned to announce
January.
C. E. Blakeslee, county
CHILLICOTHE, Ohio' (UPI) in 90 days," said John Linta, several new appointments and
(Continued from page 1)
extension agent, said the -A 15-member prlsojer com- spokesman for the state resignations today. Amorig the
changes expected IS the reml)Armes, Jr., Minersville; Larry Meigs-Washington Area millee at Chillicothe Correc- Department of Rehabilitation
Sellers, Pomeroy; Gary Commercial Vegetable ilona! Institute presented nine and Correction. "!lull don't val of CIA director Rlcliard
George,
Rutland;
Fin· , Growers .,.,boo
•· 1wl11 convene at demandsto stateoff.ICIB
' · lsW ed- know if the inmates know this. Helms and 'hls appointment as
dley, Raclrie;
SteveRickMorris,
ambassador to Iran.
Racine ; J~mes Karr, Mid· the Episcopal Parish House in nesday and asked to negotiate It's undoubtedly a main
dlei&gt;o.rt a\id Homer Baxter~ Pomeroy on Wednesday Jan their work stoppage with three grievance."
Pomeroy.
· ha ndpicked outsiders.
Greg Grover, Pomeroy; 3, from lOa. mcto 3p.m. •
The prisoners Wednesday
ANNOUNCEMENT
Ralph Nelgler, Racine;
An Alfalfa and Forage
The prisoners specifically ga·ve the list of demands to
My office will be closed
Freddie Moore, Ches~lre; Glen Production School will be held asked for the bargaining deputy Corrections Director
Thol)lpSOI\, Pomeroy ; John ·
·
of
King, Rutland; t.arry Brown, · Tuesday, Jan. 9 from 10 a.m. cmmmttee to consist Mrs. Joseph Palmer; George
Dec. 23 thru Jan. 2.
Pomeroy; Pauline t.aBonte, to 2:30p.m. with Don Myers Ysabel Rennie of Columbus, a Denton, chief of the Adult
.'
Long
Bottom
:
Dean
Weber,
'
member
of
the
governor's
ta
k
p
1
A
th
't
·
Middleport ; Harold Newell, Extens.1on Agronomist, and
s
aro e u or1 y; 'Slate omChester; Scollle Smith, john Underwood, Area Ex· force on prison reform; budsman George Miller and
AARON BOONSUE,
Racine; Robert
Lewis, tension Agent Agronomy as · Cuyahoga · County Judge · Bernard Barton, director of
'
Pomeroy;
Merwin
. .ting experla.
•
'
Be mard Fn'edman, and state' institutional operations.
Pomeroy; VIrgil
Price.Sm.llh,
Long v151
M.D.
Bottot)'l; DonRid Miller, Ad·
Pictures wiU be shown of Sen. William F. Bowen, ·1 ). • The 15-member prisoner
1
11
205 N. 2nd Ave. ·
Pdlson; . PhM 1 Ph 1 R8adford, several alfalfa fields in Meigs Cincinnati.
·
committee was selected after
omer.oy,
c
ae
urke,
·
Slat
ffl
1
1
of
1s
Middl~port,
Ohio
Pomeroy 1 Jerry McDaniel. County taken about the middle ··
e
o c a s were state ficia refused to meet
Pomeroy; Randall Davis, of November. Six to eight tons preparing a written answer to with all the strikers.
1 Olin
Middleport
BootHe, per acre of allaHa or allaHa the nine demands today and
Pomeroy; Bru.ce
. Nelgler;
Racine; Jim Smith, Mid· mixtures appear to be, within did not disclose whether the
die port; Gerald Burke, the reach of most Mei•s area meeting between the prisoners
Reedsville; Paul Sigman,
•
d Bo
Friedman
d
Middleport: Merlin Mitchell, farmers, Blakeslee said. an
wen,
an ·
Rull~nd; and Paur Harris,
Copies of the programs may Mrs. Rennie would be
MIRnerspvl!fe; R
..
be secured by contacting the arranged.
·
oy earson, actne, Peggy
''I
illin' t 0 h 1 if
Moore, Pomeroy; Greg Roush, extension office.
.am w g
e P both
Syracuse: Welter . Haggy,
sidell want me," said 1\lrs.
Rutland; Clolst Badgley,
Ren!lle, who admitted state
Racine; Roger Leifheit,
Pomeroy 1 Jim An.derson,
er giVen
' officials had contacted her
Pomeroy ; Tim' lhle, Raclnr
after getting the request from
1
Harold
Smith,
Mlddlepor
t
·
}
·
the irunates.
Ross Stewartj Minersville ;
0
Tom Karr, Pome(oy 1 George
Bowen also said he would
Collins, Reedsville; Dale
"be glad to help." Friedman
~e~~s, R::J~v",r/! 1," ' ~~adr~ Mi. and Mrs. Marvin Geasgo reportedly was unable to be
Edwards, Long Bottom; Carl entertained employes of inlmediately contacted.
ChI chos fer • Reedsvllle ; Modern Supply Co. and their
All but 50 of the institution's
Richard Abies, Long Bottom: guests at the Meigs Inn
James Duvall. Reedsville;
1,050 prisoners have refUBed to
James Smith, Hemlock Grove; Monday night.
work since Tuesday Superin·
A
Christmas tendent
GriiY
Riffle, Mlddleporl. Darrell &amp;nerwuenJoye&lt;lb)r,Mr. and " were iWOI lists ot'~m· •
Napp_tr, Pomeroy; Richard Mrs.EugeneRitchieandJoyce one local - "houiekeeping
~~~~~,'' p:r:;:;o~~d \,~~X Ann Ritchie, Portland; Mr ·and problems" - and the other
Roush, Pomeroy. .
Mrs. Thomas Weaver, "I,Dajor."
Hobart Vi~yard, Reeds· Syracuse; Orville Rhodes,
Chief among the "major"
· ~t1!~~s~0jJ1 ~n 6::~it,Tw:".b~ Searles,
Racine; Mr. and Mrs. Kehneth complaints was credit for time
Rutland, and these
ed ·
ville:. H. L. Henderson,
serv m county jails prior to
Minutemaster~
Coolvolle(· Montie Sanders. special guests, Mr. and Mrs. being sentenced to prison.
Reedovll e; Donald Flt~h. Ther on Johnson Ra ·
d
Pomeroy; Donald Koenig,
e
• erne, an
A fe.deral court recently
Cook bacori strips in 2 minutes. 4 frozen luncheon
Lillie Hocking; Fred Chap- the host and hostess. Agift was ruled that pre«ntencing time
hamburgers in 5 minules. A beautifully browned 4man , Reedsville; Hehry presented Mr. and Mrs. Glasgo would be credited toward
lb. dinner roast in 22 minutes. Cook· meals in
the
Hunter, Pomeroy ; James b the
1
Ridenour, Chester; Lewis
Y emp oyes.
mlni!num time served. The
timet
Butterworth, Albany; Mellssla
Following dinner, Buhia, the decision affects' ali Ohio inYou do it all. thanks to these Litton firsts : An aulo·
Proffltt, Protland: Lester magician, entertained.
malic
defroster thai defro~ts . 16 oz. steak in 4 min.
Howell, Albany; Granville
mates.
Easy·.clean
acrylic interior. Plus the largest interior
Stout, Albany; Rich Sanders,
"The policy goes into effect
of any counter-top Qven! (Cooks a 20-lb. turkey}
Reedsville; James Cotterill,
REEFER·AFIRE
Rutland ;
Dan · Woolen,
FREE COOKBOOK TOO. Tells everything about
The Middleport Fire Dept.
Pomeroy ; Rex Cheadle, Jr ..
Late Shopper's
cookmg, defrost1ng, roast1ng. 168 pages. 300 recipes.
Albany, and Raymond But. answered a call to the James
Come in for a demonstration!
SPECIAL
terworlh. Albany.
Hawiey
residence
on
Route
7
Jack Jordan, Albany; ,Dan
Reg. $12.95 Ladies'
Cotterill, Rutland; Douglas below Hobson at 12:30 p. m.
Carr,· Tuppers Plains; Sterling Wednesday
where
a
Amey, Ewlngton; Glen Jeffers,
Albany ; Jim Williams, refrigerator had caught fire.
Minersville; Clarence Barker, Damage was light.
Litton
Microwave Ovens
Rutland ; Bert Teaford,
Nobody
knows
more
about
mlorowa~Je
cooking than Lillon, Nobody.
Racine; Gene Coleman,
Rutland ;
Neal
White,
LOCAL TEMPS
Pomeroy ; Nancy Holsinger,
Temperature
in downtown
Racine ;
Denver
Well ,
Pomeroy
Pomeroy ; John Hetzer, Pomeroy Thursday was 45
Open Evenings
Reedsville; Leonard Barber.
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
Jr. , Long Bottom; Steve degrees at II a.m. under
Cowdery, Reedsville ; Tony cloudy skies.
Milhoan , Long Bottom ;
Howard Knight, Pomeroy;
Dale Rockhold, Long Bottom ;
Larry Bailey, Chester;
Richard Browning, Reedsville;
Delmar Baum, Chester;
Robert Reed, Reedsville; Sol
'
Bigley, Reedsville; 1 Ray
.Hanning , Pomeroy; Albert ~
Harmon , Pomeroy; Weldon
Bart rum , Pomeroy; Larry

PROGRAM SET
'RACINE - The annual
Christmas program of the
Wesleyan United Methodist
Church here wiU be at 8 p.m.
Sat~rday. The public is Invited.

Casters. Walnut veneers. Super
Chroirlaeolor-e brighter plcture ·than lhe

I....

famous original Chro'llacolor lllbe. AFC.

I

CONFIDENCE ...
,,.............-knoldlf )W em'! buy a better color~

·INGELS FURNITURE

--

..._._

M!"DLEPORT

-~,.........

Two dates
for farmers

The spacious and at·
tractively decorated home of
Mrs. Joe Bailey was the se~tlng
Tuesday night for the annual
Christmas party of Group II,
Women's Association, Mid·
dleport
First , United
Presbyterian Church.
Gills were exchanged by the
members, and a program on ·
Christmas Included a reading
by Mrs. Bailey, 1•Just One
Ufe," a meditation "Let's
Keep Chtistmas" by Peter
Marshall presented by Mrs.
Dwight Zavitz, and · " A
Christmas Story" by Mrs.
Richard Karr. The group also
enjoyed a ca,rol sing.
' During the business mee'ting

BISCAYNE, Flli.
(U~l) -President Nixon
settled down for a Christiii8S
holiday stay at biB Florida villa
today and remained silent on
the renewed full«ale bombing
of Norih Vietnam.
Niion has not publicly
discussed the bombing or the
chances of peace since his
election eve address to the
nation. Press secretary Ronald
Ziegler said Nixon "at this
time" plans no statement to ihe ·
nation_on Vietnam.
Nixon had said he wanted
peace proclaimed by Thanks·
giving Dliy, then Chrli!tmas.
Now it appears that even on
nauguration day, Jan. 20, the

n·

eman.' ds made
·-

128 Deer

lbe

Dinn

·'

•n

emp oyees

~andlelighl

f)'~k

~there

Microwave cooking comes of age with
the practical Litton
v.

SLACKS
'7.95
lOLA'S

EELITTQN ,

Foreman &amp;Abbott

POMEROY ROAIL MERCHANTS

Darst, Albany; Lowell Stanley,

·

Albany ;
Jack
Morris, 1
Pomeroy ; Sammy Darst, •
Dexter; Clarence McDonald,
Dexter; David Ll~scor:nb .
Syracuse; Larry Cleland,
Chester.
Larry
Banks,
Pomeroy ; Edward Anderson,
Dexter ; Kenneth Payne,
Harrisonville; George
Donovan, Coolville; Jim Crisp,
Langsville ; Wilbur Robinson:
Coolville; Robert Sawyers,
Pomeroy. -and Ronald Black,
Langsvl le. ·

Mrs. Bailey hosts party

Tht KEMBLE D4752W
Modern styled lull base console.

Social

KEY

Wllke11v~lt,. ~~=~r~Qil~::,~~~~ ,~~

Longserricereco~d
Pins in recognition of long
service were awarded at the
Christmas meeting of the
Women's Auxiliary of Veterans
Memocial Hospital Tuesday
night.
Receiving awards were
Harriett Neigler, 3,000 hours; •
Louise Bearhs, 2,000; Nettie
Hayes, 2,000; Clara Burris,
500; Corinne Combs, ~00; Ruth
Morris, ~00 , and Helen
Williams, 100.
Donald
Diener,
administrator of the hospila~ and
Dr. L. D. TeUe and family

Nixon hoHday hegins

new officers were elected.
They are Mrs. Paul Haptons tall, chalrmlln; Mrs.
Bailey, co-chairman; Mrs.
Myron Miller, treasurer; and
Mrs. Ethel Lowery, secretary.
Mrs. Norman Humphreys
and Miss Kathryn Hysell were
guests at the meeting. Fawrs
of ceramic Madonnas were
given and holiday refreshmenta were 11rved. Attending
besides thoee named were Mrs:
Carl Horky, Mrs. Ada
Ohlinger, Mrs. Lewil Sauer,
Mrs. Tom Rue, Mrs. William
Mil!Tis, Mrs. Harry s. Moore,
Mrs. Karl Qwena, Mrs. Dwight
Wallace.

Gold Star Christmas Giveaway

FREE TICKETS AT STORES DISPLAYING
~

r

•

THE GOLD STAR.

•
. NO PURCHASE IS NECESSARY TO RE~EIVE TICKETS

$1,500 in PRIZES
FINAL DRAWING
DEC. 23-3 P.M.

..

15 cu. ft. REFRIGERATOR

CONSOLE STEREO WllH TAPE .·PLAYER
.
· CONSOl£ COLOR TEL£VISIOM
SponsOied By
Pomeroy Ch1111ber of Commerce

FREE PARKING
IN POMEROY RMKING LOT

THRU DEC. 23
POMIROY

Calendar

, niURSO~Y
: TWIN-CITY Shrlnettes, 7;30
Thursday at the hotne of Mrs.
Harry Moore.
. WOMEN'S ASSN., Middleport
First
United
Presbyterian /Church, 7:30
p.m. Thursday. Christmas
program. Mrs. Karl Owens,
devotional leader; Mrs. Carl
Horky, Mrs. William. Ohlinger,
Mrs ..Tom Rue, Mrs, Charles
ShU!IIllker, Mrs. Richal'll Karr,
Mrs. Russell Lyons; hostesses:
CHRISTMAS program at
'Pllrlland Elementary School, 1
p.m. Tl!ursday, Playlets by the
varioua ·grades and a Christmas pageant. Parents invited . .
c!miSTMAS program 7:30
p.m. Thursday at the Freedom
Gospel Mission.
REGULARLY scheduled
Meigs Democrat · Execulve
Committee ·meeting . set for
Thursday cancelied. Next
meeting, Jan. 18.
TWIN CITY Shrinetles
Chrlsbnas party Thursday 7:30
p.m. hOme of Mrs. Jean Moore,
Middleport. Gift exchange.
MIDDLEPORT CHILD
·Conservation Leaguer, Christmas party, Dec. 21, 7:30p.m. at
the home of Mrs. Carolyn
·Thomas. Roll can wUI feature
an exchange of homemade.
decorations.
FRIDAY
MEIGS CHAPTER, Order of
Demolay, Installation of of.
fleers, 7:30 p.m•. Friday.
Dinner at 6:30 p.m. for
Demolays, installing officers,
and their families.
VALLEY Freewill Baptist
Y\lllth wiU have a Chrisimas
program al 7 p.m.
SYRACUSE UNITED
Methodist Church Christmas
·program, 7:30 p, m. Friday.
Public invited. '
SNOWBALL DANCE,
Pomeroy Junior High School, 9
to 12 .Friday. Music by Foxx,
sponsored by Meigs High
junior class.
ANNUAL CHRISTMAS·.
,program at Chester Church of
the Nazarene, r::io p.m.
Friday. PubUc invited.
Mn\ERSVJLLE
.
Chrl~s pf9gram,
Friday. PubUc lttflted. ·
EAGLE RIDGE Community
Church Christmas program,
1:30 p.m. Friday. Public in·
vi ted.
CHRISTMAS drama,
"Chrisbnas Eve and All is
Well" by young people, 7:30
p.m. at the Syracuse
Presbyterian Church Friday.
Also recitations, singing and
arrival of Santa. 'Those taking
part to be at church by 5:30.
SATURDAY
CHRISTMAS program, Long
Bottom United Methodist
Church, 7:30 p.m. Saturday., ·
PubUc welcome.
MISTLETOE Bail, 8 to 11
p.m. Saturday at Eastern High
School. Music by WUlle.
SUNDAY
POMEROY BAPTIST
Church, 7 p.m . Sunday,
Christmas program, climaxed
by a visit from Santa.
THE REGULAR Sunday night
service at the Valley Freewill
Baptist Church, Porter, wiU be
held at 7 p.m. Chrisbnas Eve
instea&lt;l of 7:30p.m.
LAUREL CLIFF Free
Methodist Church Christmas
program, Sunday night, 7:30 '
p.m., taking the place or the
regular evening worship.
CHRISTMAS Program at
Wesleyan Holiness Church,
Harrisonville Road, 7:30 p.' m.
Sunday. .Public invited .
ANNUAL CHRISTMAS eve
candlelight service, St. John
Lutheran Church, Pine Grove,
Cheiler·Raclne Road, 8 p. m.
Sunday. All welcome.
CHRISTMAS EVE candleUaht service will be held at'
7:30p.m. Sunday at ·the Enterprise United Methodist
Church by the choir and the
Youth Fellowship of the
church. The children will have
recitations.
SERVICES this .Sunday at
the Firllt Baptist Church in
M8IClil are at 6 p. m. inatead of
7:30 p. ~·

SANTA
will be scMduled
each d•y until
Christm•s on iht
StrHtsOf
f&gt;omeroy

OPINMNINGS

. DANCESAnJRDAY
RACINE - The Tri·M Club
of Soulhem High School wiU
- hold Its ~nnual Chrlstmu
dance Saturday at' the high
~ehoolaodilcrlum frtllll t to 12.
Millie will be proYided by The
Fou. Admlmon II tUI per
. penctll, or " a couple. The
dance Is open Ill the public .

•

.,

'
t

20 JOLLY UGHT

a.ocK RADIO
Solid State
AM·FM

.12 ROLL

Replacement

MIDGET
SET

CHRISTMAS

BULB

.GIFT .

C7lf2

WRAP

$2,54 VALUE

HANGERS
FOR
CHRISTMAS
ORNAMENTS

$2~98

ON
BOWS

VALUE

'

FOR HIM:
NORELCO

NORELCO

TRIPLE
HEADER

: Hall Of Fame

SOCKS

\: BEAUTY
. / ~LON

DRY ROASTED
PEANUTS U oz.

.

GUM

PENCILS

Jumbo Pack
2 for 3Sc

39c V~LUE

89c VALUE .

'

WAGNERS '

PlAYING
CARDS

HOME
CHEESErff

(Make Cheese In
Your Home)
Reg. 57.95

49c VALUE

Darks &amp; Heathers
Reg. $1.00 .

AMITY
$~.00

Bullseye

BIBLES

STADIUM
CHECKERS

PUZZLE

$2.99 Value

"YORK"

.,,,

.

Doll

Hand &amp; Body

REG. 4.59
1

Lotion

FOR$

NURSERY
Rhyme Top

Rook Cards
1.90 Value

1

99~

Henen Scent

Ann

$'1.99 Value

SYLVANIA
FLASHWBES

"CIG BEN"
$1.20 VALUE

JIGSAW

$4.5'l

TROUBLE
' After Shave
LOTION

JIGSAW
PUZZLES

LoVe Doll
CLOTHES
$2.50 VALUE

$1.19 VALUE

Value

Pocket Watcll---

Match Box
Seri~

PLAY DOH
4 Pack

Sl:inny
Dip
Beauty
Tote

No.35

,',

84~~~~

ANITA
DOLL t'f/Jit.. /J.~'
S3.00 Value ~..;!'·:P;

INTIMATE DIAMOND
FACET
SPRAY MIST

Free
G1'ft Wrap

1 ~J_____
au:~ _.
99

SYLVANIA
MAGIC
CUBES

KIT

HAl

K~RATE

After Shave
Reg. Sl.75
4

oz. 9f
------------·
--·
Gift Qlllection ·
$4.25

VALUE

LUDENS HARD
CANDY

MADISON
MIX

HOME
PERMANENT

Barbara Ellen

ORNAMENTS
Box of

F.RUIT
CAKE

12

Milk Dlocolate

Covered Peanuts
14 ot. Box

$281

S1.90

. ALL

STUFFED
'

TOYS

50%0FF

TRAVEL KIT
Reg. $5.50

PLANTERS

Wholesale suggested
retail price.

$399

,

�.
I.

r

'.

7- The Dally Sentinel,ltllddleport..PGmerry, O., Dec. "'• ~m
waDI to llellr m. lludeall Ia
eleiDHtary, )IIDler JdCII, aealw 11111a
sclloola ... - · lfldaalet Ill llle
.sciiOola Ia G.W. 111111 Melt• CGIIIlllea.
.
This 18 a chagce for you to give a
little re&lt;:!lflnlllon to the teacher who has
given YoU somelhlnt very Important.
Teachers namlnated will be lilted ln
are involved In giving such a gift to this column early next year. E~ch
youngsters. One of the most active teacher na!Jied wiU receive a letter of
givers of a "desire to learn" is a good congratulations frool yours truly,
teacher.
Remember,aend your letter to: Dr.
Although we realize that teachers Edward W~n. Rio .Grande College,
who give such a valuablegiftdoitout of . Rio Grande, Ohio 45674.
concern for the student and not for
Letters !lillY alao be sent to the
recognition, we wish to .recognize those Tribune or Daily Sentinel office.
teachers·in Gallia and Meigs counties
We have some excellent teachers in
who have given th.eir students a "love of our a~a : We hav.e some teachers ,who
learning.
have given us much to be treasured. Let
Therefore, we are asking you to us ui!e thls sjlecial time of yl!!lr. to give
send to us the name, school and grade them ·a liltie bit of our love for their
or subje.ct taught ol lbe teacher who · contribution to our lives.
has given you such a gift. AIJo, please
Meanwhile, have a happy holid!iy
tell what this teacher has done to and may thls be your Merriest
create your "desire to leam." We Chrisbnas ever.

. Let us recognize our
best.school teachers
'

'

By Prof. Ed (Doc) Wallen
Rio Grande College
This is a beautiful time of year. It is
a season of festive occasions and
sharing. It is a season of well.wishing
and gift.giving.
The young are often the focal poin\
of this particular holiday. We adults
often try to give them gifts that wtll be
meaningful to the_lll, But we realize that
the most import;mt gifts we can give
are not material in nature. The best
gifts are things yo~ can't touch, or pic~
. up, like peace, hope and love.
.. .
Another important gift for .a young
· : person to receive is a "desire to learn"
or a "love of learning;" Many people

G-T to spend $76;956,000
for modernization in 1973
MARION- The continuation
of programs to reduce party
lines and provide for growth is
highlighted in a $72,1156,000
construction budget for 1973, it
was announced here Wednesday by General Telephone
Co. of Ohio and Northern Ohio
Telephone Co,
The outlsy is part pf a 19\31976 capital expansion pian
that will total almost $300
mtllion, said Robert M. Wopal
of Marion, president of both
companies. The 1973 figure is
17.~ per cent higher than the
1972 budget.
Headquartered in Marion,

Legion to sack
candy treats
Members of F,eeney-Bennett'
Post 128, American Legion,
will meet at the post home at 7
p.m. Thureday to sack candy
for the annual Middleport
corrununity Chrlsbnas party to
be held from 5 to 7 p.m. on
Friday at the post home in ,
Middleport.
~~Will be dlslrjbljted to
at
that time. On Saturday af·
ternoon, post members will
deliver baskets of fruit and
candy to the Meigs County
Chlldren'sHoll)eandtheMeigs
County Infirmary.

c~ot,dil•l.'tlllilfiunltY

CLUB TO MEET
The Twin City Shrine Club
· wlllmeetthiseveningat7:30at
the Shrine Club House in
Rliclne . Ali members are
urged to attend.

SHIRT
FINISHING
SAME 'DAY
SERVICE
in At 9-0ut AI S
Use our Free Parking.Lot

Robinson's Oeanels
216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy

the companies are subsidiaries
of General Telephone &amp;
Electronics Corp. (GTS), New
York: They serve-jibou\675,000
phones in some I 800 communities throughout 79 of
Ohio's· 88 counties.
The donars wtil take th e
form of new buildings, callswitching equipment, ex. ded ca ble networ. ks, new
pan
instruments and other com.
munlcailons eq:uiJBilent.
WopaI said a chief challenge
will be to meet new party-line
requirements by Dec. 31, 1976.
This new standard, affecting
all phone companies, was
. ed
·
1S8U September, 1971 by the
Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio.
·
Also fac ing the companies
are rising costs, changes in
technology and the need to
.
maintain adeq:~ate earnings.
Financing the construction
...
ogram will be accompliahed
r
largely by borrowing on shortterm notes, he said. Permanent financing later will be
achieved through sale of bonds
and common stock.
Construction in 1973 actuaUy
will be a continuation of
programs JIIBI'IAld
The
party~lne reduction program
has been beefed up to comply
with the PUCO standard.
During the 1973-76 period an
estimated· $60 million of the
$300 mUllon figure wiU be put
intonewfacilitiesinconnection
with party-line improvement.

111197~,

The 1971 PUCO order called
for completion of the party-Uue
reduction by yearend 1976. It
will restrict new lllstalladons
to two-party resldeDI!ai and
one-party .business Unes In
urban areas. Rural service Is
- artY
to be .limited to fi veop
residential and tw,..party
business. (General and Nor· ,
lhem w01 exceed th. e PUC0
· standard by setting four-party.
lines as the Umlt for mral
res ld en tial servlce. )
In addition to party-line
work ' the companies
.
I .plan
.
major expanston of ~clllties
for Pilch of the 23long distance
te
d
cha
cen rs serve · 1n1erex ~e
and local caU-handhng
eq:ulpl!lent Is earmarked for
.
.
j ril of
expans1on m a rna o Y
exchanges.
Four long distance centers
.
wiU be converted to direct
distance dialing in 1973. They
are Cadiz I Cambridge ' Circleville and Oxford. Three toll
centers are to be modified for
single-digit access to ODD Ashland, Bowling Green and
Port Clinton
·
New local exchange systems
are being readied for North
.Georgeto!wn,
Edon, LaRue, Resaca,
Chatham and Spencer.
Ashland is scheduled for a new
suboffice. A major eiJlllnslon
of toll.free calling for cadiz
area exchanges also is on the
worksheet. According to
forecaststhecompanlesexpect
.
to gam 33,774 phones.

attended , the meeUng. Diener
expresaed his appreciation to
the volun leers. A gift of $20 to
the auxiliary flower fl!Dd was
presented by Mrs. Mildred
Withee In memory Of Mrs.
Kathryn McGowan.
A potluck supper was
followed by a Christmas
program of readings and songs
by Mrs. Ethel Grueser, Mrs.
Bertha Parker, Mrs. Jessie
White, Mrs. Faye Sauer, Mrs.
Betty Wills, Mrs. Jack Jacobs
and Miss Diana Lewis.
VeteraN Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED Arthur
Goodin, Pomeroy; Roy Sears,
Middleport; Mary Weyersmll)er, Pomeroy; Pamela
Bowers, Reedsville, and
William Buckley, Middleport.
DISCHARGED - Barbara
Crabtree, William Ellis, Edna
SU!es, Kathy Walker, Eva ·
Shaffer, lola Collins, WUllam
Milliron, Elsie S. Roush,
Myrtle Hayes, Richard Bearhs
and Marjorie Hunt.

chances of a cease.fire are rted him, appeared Subdued
and less bouyant than U8WII.
remote.
~er laughed off repcrlll
Americlln officials say they
believe Hanoi may 10011 make of a rift with Nillon over
a decision on ihe one fun· Vietnam policy. Ziegler said
damental point that hamstrung Wednesday that the President
the talks. It Involves ac· and KI.sslnger have a ''unity of
ceptance of , some vague point of view" on seUiement ·
reference to a demarcation tenns. He blamed "diploolatic
rumors" for speculation that
between two Vietnams.
Nixon flew .to Key Biscayne differences had arisen between ·
Wednesday night with biB wife the two.
Nixon awaits the return of
Pal for a quiet Christmas
celebration and a bit of work KI.sslnger's deputy, Maj. Gen.
~d , relaxation. Ziegler said Alexander M. Haig; Thursday
Nixon's mqod was "good, very evenil)g or Friday morning .
after consultations with South
good ....
But Nil!on's ~hief foreign Vietnameile President Nguyen
affair$ ·adviser, Henry A. Van Thieu and other Southeast
Kissinger, who also accompa- Asian leaders.
The . President ·plaaned to
worlc quietly on his second
inaugural addfess aixf the ~
. Meigs area farmers are
federal budget he wiU submit ·
mvlted to reserve two dates for
to Congress next month.
special meetings early In
•
. He 'planned to announce
January.
C. E. Blakeslee, county
CHILLICOTHE, Ohio' (UPI) in 90 days," said John Linta, several new appointments and
(Continued from page 1)
extension agent, said the -A 15-member prlsojer com- spokesman for the state resignations today. Amorig the
changes expected IS the reml)Armes, Jr., Minersville; Larry Meigs-Washington Area millee at Chillicothe Correc- Department of Rehabilitation
Sellers, Pomeroy; Gary Commercial Vegetable ilona! Institute presented nine and Correction. "!lull don't val of CIA director Rlcliard
George,
Rutland;
Fin· , Growers .,.,boo
•· 1wl11 convene at demandsto stateoff.ICIB
' · lsW ed- know if the inmates know this. Helms and 'hls appointment as
dley, Raclrie;
SteveRickMorris,
ambassador to Iran.
Racine ; J~mes Karr, Mid· the Episcopal Parish House in nesday and asked to negotiate It's undoubtedly a main
dlei&gt;o.rt a\id Homer Baxter~ Pomeroy on Wednesday Jan their work stoppage with three grievance."
Pomeroy.
· ha ndpicked outsiders.
Greg Grover, Pomeroy; 3, from lOa. mcto 3p.m. •
The prisoners Wednesday
ANNOUNCEMENT
Ralph Nelgler, Racine;
An Alfalfa and Forage
The prisoners specifically ga·ve the list of demands to
My office will be closed
Freddie Moore, Ches~lre; Glen Production School will be held asked for the bargaining deputy Corrections Director
Thol)lpSOI\, Pomeroy ; John ·
·
of
King, Rutland; t.arry Brown, · Tuesday, Jan. 9 from 10 a.m. cmmmttee to consist Mrs. Joseph Palmer; George
Dec. 23 thru Jan. 2.
Pomeroy; Pauline t.aBonte, to 2:30p.m. with Don Myers Ysabel Rennie of Columbus, a Denton, chief of the Adult
.'
Long
Bottom
:
Dean
Weber,
'
member
of
the
governor's
ta
k
p
1
A
th
't
·
Middleport ; Harold Newell, Extens.1on Agronomist, and
s
aro e u or1 y; 'Slate omChester; Scollle Smith, john Underwood, Area Ex· force on prison reform; budsman George Miller and
AARON BOONSUE,
Racine; Robert
Lewis, tension Agent Agronomy as · Cuyahoga · County Judge · Bernard Barton, director of
'
Pomeroy;
Merwin
. .ting experla.
•
'
Be mard Fn'edman, and state' institutional operations.
Pomeroy; VIrgil
Price.Sm.llh,
Long v151
M.D.
Bottot)'l; DonRid Miller, Ad·
Pictures wiU be shown of Sen. William F. Bowen, ·1 ). • The 15-member prisoner
1
11
205 N. 2nd Ave. ·
Pdlson; . PhM 1 Ph 1 R8adford, several alfalfa fields in Meigs Cincinnati.
·
committee was selected after
omer.oy,
c
ae
urke,
·
Slat
ffl
1
1
of
1s
Middl~port,
Ohio
Pomeroy 1 Jerry McDaniel. County taken about the middle ··
e
o c a s were state ficia refused to meet
Pomeroy; Randall Davis, of November. Six to eight tons preparing a written answer to with all the strikers.
1 Olin
Middleport
BootHe, per acre of allaHa or allaHa the nine demands today and
Pomeroy; Bru.ce
. Nelgler;
Racine; Jim Smith, Mid· mixtures appear to be, within did not disclose whether the
die port; Gerald Burke, the reach of most Mei•s area meeting between the prisoners
Reedsville; Paul Sigman,
•
d Bo
Friedman
d
Middleport: Merlin Mitchell, farmers, Blakeslee said. an
wen,
an ·
Rull~nd; and Paur Harris,
Copies of the programs may Mrs. Rennie would be
MIRnerspvl!fe; R
..
be secured by contacting the arranged.
·
oy earson, actne, Peggy
''I
illin' t 0 h 1 if
Moore, Pomeroy; Greg Roush, extension office.
.am w g
e P both
Syracuse: Welter . Haggy,
sidell want me," said 1\lrs.
Rutland; Clolst Badgley,
Ren!lle, who admitted state
Racine; Roger Leifheit,
Pomeroy 1 Jim An.derson,
er giVen
' officials had contacted her
Pomeroy ; Tim' lhle, Raclnr
after getting the request from
1
Harold
Smith,
Mlddlepor
t
·
}
·
the irunates.
Ross Stewartj Minersville ;
0
Tom Karr, Pome(oy 1 George
Bowen also said he would
Collins, Reedsville; Dale
"be glad to help." Friedman
~e~~s, R::J~v",r/! 1," ' ~~adr~ Mi. and Mrs. Marvin Geasgo reportedly was unable to be
Edwards, Long Bottom; Carl entertained employes of inlmediately contacted.
ChI chos fer • Reedsvllle ; Modern Supply Co. and their
All but 50 of the institution's
Richard Abies, Long Bottom: guests at the Meigs Inn
James Duvall. Reedsville;
1,050 prisoners have refUBed to
James Smith, Hemlock Grove; Monday night.
work since Tuesday Superin·
A
Christmas tendent
GriiY
Riffle, Mlddleporl. Darrell &amp;nerwuenJoye&lt;lb)r,Mr. and " were iWOI lists ot'~m· •
Napp_tr, Pomeroy; Richard Mrs.EugeneRitchieandJoyce one local - "houiekeeping
~~~~~,'' p:r:;:;o~~d \,~~X Ann Ritchie, Portland; Mr ·and problems" - and the other
Roush, Pomeroy. .
Mrs. Thomas Weaver, "I,Dajor."
Hobart Vi~yard, Reeds· Syracuse; Orville Rhodes,
Chief among the "major"
· ~t1!~~s~0jJ1 ~n 6::~it,Tw:".b~ Searles,
Racine; Mr. and Mrs. Kehneth complaints was credit for time
Rutland, and these
ed ·
ville:. H. L. Henderson,
serv m county jails prior to
Minutemaster~
Coolvolle(· Montie Sanders. special guests, Mr. and Mrs. being sentenced to prison.
Reedovll e; Donald Flt~h. Ther on Johnson Ra ·
d
Pomeroy; Donald Koenig,
e
• erne, an
A fe.deral court recently
Cook bacori strips in 2 minutes. 4 frozen luncheon
Lillie Hocking; Fred Chap- the host and hostess. Agift was ruled that pre«ntencing time
hamburgers in 5 minules. A beautifully browned 4man , Reedsville; Hehry presented Mr. and Mrs. Glasgo would be credited toward
lb. dinner roast in 22 minutes. Cook· meals in
the
Hunter, Pomeroy ; James b the
1
Ridenour, Chester; Lewis
Y emp oyes.
mlni!num time served. The
timet
Butterworth, Albany; Mellssla
Following dinner, Buhia, the decision affects' ali Ohio inYou do it all. thanks to these Litton firsts : An aulo·
Proffltt, Protland: Lester magician, entertained.
malic
defroster thai defro~ts . 16 oz. steak in 4 min.
Howell, Albany; Granville
mates.
Easy·.clean
acrylic interior. Plus the largest interior
Stout, Albany; Rich Sanders,
"The policy goes into effect
of any counter-top Qven! (Cooks a 20-lb. turkey}
Reedsville; James Cotterill,
REEFER·AFIRE
Rutland ;
Dan · Woolen,
FREE COOKBOOK TOO. Tells everything about
The Middleport Fire Dept.
Pomeroy ; Rex Cheadle, Jr ..
Late Shopper's
cookmg, defrost1ng, roast1ng. 168 pages. 300 recipes.
Albany, and Raymond But. answered a call to the James
Come in for a demonstration!
SPECIAL
terworlh. Albany.
Hawiey
residence
on
Route
7
Jack Jordan, Albany; ,Dan
Reg. $12.95 Ladies'
Cotterill, Rutland; Douglas below Hobson at 12:30 p. m.
Carr,· Tuppers Plains; Sterling Wednesday
where
a
Amey, Ewlngton; Glen Jeffers,
Albany ; Jim Williams, refrigerator had caught fire.
Minersville; Clarence Barker, Damage was light.
Litton
Microwave Ovens
Rutland ; Bert Teaford,
Nobody
knows
more
about
mlorowa~Je
cooking than Lillon, Nobody.
Racine; Gene Coleman,
Rutland ;
Neal
White,
LOCAL TEMPS
Pomeroy ; Nancy Holsinger,
Temperature
in downtown
Racine ;
Denver
Well ,
Pomeroy
Pomeroy ; John Hetzer, Pomeroy Thursday was 45
Open Evenings
Reedsville; Leonard Barber.
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
Jr. , Long Bottom; Steve degrees at II a.m. under
Cowdery, Reedsville ; Tony cloudy skies.
Milhoan , Long Bottom ;
Howard Knight, Pomeroy;
Dale Rockhold, Long Bottom ;
Larry Bailey, Chester;
Richard Browning, Reedsville;
Delmar Baum, Chester;
Robert Reed, Reedsville; Sol
'
Bigley, Reedsville; 1 Ray
.Hanning , Pomeroy; Albert ~
Harmon , Pomeroy; Weldon
Bart rum , Pomeroy; Larry

PROGRAM SET
'RACINE - The annual
Christmas program of the
Wesleyan United Methodist
Church here wiU be at 8 p.m.
Sat~rday. The public is Invited.

Casters. Walnut veneers. Super
Chroirlaeolor-e brighter plcture ·than lhe

I....

famous original Chro'llacolor lllbe. AFC.

I

CONFIDENCE ...
,,.............-knoldlf )W em'! buy a better color~

·INGELS FURNITURE

--

..._._

M!"DLEPORT

-~,.........

Two dates
for farmers

The spacious and at·
tractively decorated home of
Mrs. Joe Bailey was the se~tlng
Tuesday night for the annual
Christmas party of Group II,
Women's Association, Mid·
dleport
First , United
Presbyterian Church.
Gills were exchanged by the
members, and a program on ·
Christmas Included a reading
by Mrs. Bailey, 1•Just One
Ufe," a meditation "Let's
Keep Chtistmas" by Peter
Marshall presented by Mrs.
Dwight Zavitz, and · " A
Christmas Story" by Mrs.
Richard Karr. The group also
enjoyed a ca,rol sing.
' During the business mee'ting

BISCAYNE, Flli.
(U~l) -President Nixon
settled down for a Christiii8S
holiday stay at biB Florida villa
today and remained silent on
the renewed full«ale bombing
of Norih Vietnam.
Niion has not publicly
discussed the bombing or the
chances of peace since his
election eve address to the
nation. Press secretary Ronald
Ziegler said Nixon "at this
time" plans no statement to ihe ·
nation_on Vietnam.
Nixon had said he wanted
peace proclaimed by Thanks·
giving Dliy, then Chrli!tmas.
Now it appears that even on
nauguration day, Jan. 20, the

n·

eman.' ds made
·-

128 Deer

lbe

Dinn

·'

•n

emp oyees

~andlelighl

f)'~k

~there

Microwave cooking comes of age with
the practical Litton
v.

SLACKS
'7.95
lOLA'S

EELITTQN ,

Foreman &amp;Abbott

POMEROY ROAIL MERCHANTS

Darst, Albany; Lowell Stanley,

·

Albany ;
Jack
Morris, 1
Pomeroy ; Sammy Darst, •
Dexter; Clarence McDonald,
Dexter; David Ll~scor:nb .
Syracuse; Larry Cleland,
Chester.
Larry
Banks,
Pomeroy ; Edward Anderson,
Dexter ; Kenneth Payne,
Harrisonville; George
Donovan, Coolville; Jim Crisp,
Langsville ; Wilbur Robinson:
Coolville; Robert Sawyers,
Pomeroy. -and Ronald Black,
Langsvl le. ·

Mrs. Bailey hosts party

Tht KEMBLE D4752W
Modern styled lull base console.

Social

KEY

Wllke11v~lt,. ~~=~r~Qil~::,~~~~ ,~~

Longserricereco~d
Pins in recognition of long
service were awarded at the
Christmas meeting of the
Women's Auxiliary of Veterans
Memocial Hospital Tuesday
night.
Receiving awards were
Harriett Neigler, 3,000 hours; •
Louise Bearhs, 2,000; Nettie
Hayes, 2,000; Clara Burris,
500; Corinne Combs, ~00; Ruth
Morris, ~00 , and Helen
Williams, 100.
Donald
Diener,
administrator of the hospila~ and
Dr. L. D. TeUe and family

Nixon hoHday hegins

new officers were elected.
They are Mrs. Paul Haptons tall, chalrmlln; Mrs.
Bailey, co-chairman; Mrs.
Myron Miller, treasurer; and
Mrs. Ethel Lowery, secretary.
Mrs. Norman Humphreys
and Miss Kathryn Hysell were
guests at the meeting. Fawrs
of ceramic Madonnas were
given and holiday refreshmenta were 11rved. Attending
besides thoee named were Mrs:
Carl Horky, Mrs. Ada
Ohlinger, Mrs. Lewil Sauer,
Mrs. Tom Rue, Mrs. William
Mil!Tis, Mrs. Harry s. Moore,
Mrs. Karl Qwena, Mrs. Dwight
Wallace.

Gold Star Christmas Giveaway

FREE TICKETS AT STORES DISPLAYING
~

r

•

THE GOLD STAR.

•
. NO PURCHASE IS NECESSARY TO RE~EIVE TICKETS

$1,500 in PRIZES
FINAL DRAWING
DEC. 23-3 P.M.

..

15 cu. ft. REFRIGERATOR

CONSOLE STEREO WllH TAPE .·PLAYER
.
· CONSOl£ COLOR TEL£VISIOM
SponsOied By
Pomeroy Ch1111ber of Commerce

FREE PARKING
IN POMEROY RMKING LOT

THRU DEC. 23
POMIROY

Calendar

, niURSO~Y
: TWIN-CITY Shrlnettes, 7;30
Thursday at the hotne of Mrs.
Harry Moore.
. WOMEN'S ASSN., Middleport
First
United
Presbyterian /Church, 7:30
p.m. Thursday. Christmas
program. Mrs. Karl Owens,
devotional leader; Mrs. Carl
Horky, Mrs. William. Ohlinger,
Mrs ..Tom Rue, Mrs, Charles
ShU!IIllker, Mrs. Richal'll Karr,
Mrs. Russell Lyons; hostesses:
CHRISTMAS program at
'Pllrlland Elementary School, 1
p.m. Tl!ursday, Playlets by the
varioua ·grades and a Christmas pageant. Parents invited . .
c!miSTMAS program 7:30
p.m. Thursday at the Freedom
Gospel Mission.
REGULARLY scheduled
Meigs Democrat · Execulve
Committee ·meeting . set for
Thursday cancelied. Next
meeting, Jan. 18.
TWIN CITY Shrinetles
Chrlsbnas party Thursday 7:30
p.m. hOme of Mrs. Jean Moore,
Middleport. Gift exchange.
MIDDLEPORT CHILD
·Conservation Leaguer, Christmas party, Dec. 21, 7:30p.m. at
the home of Mrs. Carolyn
·Thomas. Roll can wUI feature
an exchange of homemade.
decorations.
FRIDAY
MEIGS CHAPTER, Order of
Demolay, Installation of of.
fleers, 7:30 p.m•. Friday.
Dinner at 6:30 p.m. for
Demolays, installing officers,
and their families.
VALLEY Freewill Baptist
Y\lllth wiU have a Chrisimas
program al 7 p.m.
SYRACUSE UNITED
Methodist Church Christmas
·program, 7:30 p, m. Friday.
Public invited. '
SNOWBALL DANCE,
Pomeroy Junior High School, 9
to 12 .Friday. Music by Foxx,
sponsored by Meigs High
junior class.
ANNUAL CHRISTMAS·.
,program at Chester Church of
the Nazarene, r::io p.m.
Friday. PubUc invited.
Mn\ERSVJLLE
.
Chrl~s pf9gram,
Friday. PubUc lttflted. ·
EAGLE RIDGE Community
Church Christmas program,
1:30 p.m. Friday. Public in·
vi ted.
CHRISTMAS drama,
"Chrisbnas Eve and All is
Well" by young people, 7:30
p.m. at the Syracuse
Presbyterian Church Friday.
Also recitations, singing and
arrival of Santa. 'Those taking
part to be at church by 5:30.
SATURDAY
CHRISTMAS program, Long
Bottom United Methodist
Church, 7:30 p.m. Saturday., ·
PubUc welcome.
MISTLETOE Bail, 8 to 11
p.m. Saturday at Eastern High
School. Music by WUlle.
SUNDAY
POMEROY BAPTIST
Church, 7 p.m . Sunday,
Christmas program, climaxed
by a visit from Santa.
THE REGULAR Sunday night
service at the Valley Freewill
Baptist Church, Porter, wiU be
held at 7 p.m. Chrisbnas Eve
instea&lt;l of 7:30p.m.
LAUREL CLIFF Free
Methodist Church Christmas
program, Sunday night, 7:30 '
p.m., taking the place or the
regular evening worship.
CHRISTMAS Program at
Wesleyan Holiness Church,
Harrisonville Road, 7:30 p.' m.
Sunday. .Public invited .
ANNUAL CHRISTMAS eve
candlelight service, St. John
Lutheran Church, Pine Grove,
Cheiler·Raclne Road, 8 p. m.
Sunday. All welcome.
CHRISTMAS EVE candleUaht service will be held at'
7:30p.m. Sunday at ·the Enterprise United Methodist
Church by the choir and the
Youth Fellowship of the
church. The children will have
recitations.
SERVICES this .Sunday at
the Firllt Baptist Church in
M8IClil are at 6 p. m. inatead of
7:30 p. ~·

SANTA
will be scMduled
each d•y until
Christm•s on iht
StrHtsOf
f&gt;omeroy

OPINMNINGS

. DANCESAnJRDAY
RACINE - The Tri·M Club
of Soulhem High School wiU
- hold Its ~nnual Chrlstmu
dance Saturday at' the high
~ehoolaodilcrlum frtllll t to 12.
Millie will be proYided by The
Fou. Admlmon II tUI per
. penctll, or " a couple. The
dance Is open Ill the public .

•

.,

'
t

20 JOLLY UGHT

a.ocK RADIO
Solid State
AM·FM

.12 ROLL

Replacement

MIDGET
SET

CHRISTMAS

BULB

.GIFT .

C7lf2

WRAP

$2,54 VALUE

HANGERS
FOR
CHRISTMAS
ORNAMENTS

$2~98

ON
BOWS

VALUE

'

FOR HIM:
NORELCO

NORELCO

TRIPLE
HEADER

: Hall Of Fame

SOCKS

\: BEAUTY
. / ~LON

DRY ROASTED
PEANUTS U oz.

.

GUM

PENCILS

Jumbo Pack
2 for 3Sc

39c V~LUE

89c VALUE .

'

WAGNERS '

PlAYING
CARDS

HOME
CHEESErff

(Make Cheese In
Your Home)
Reg. 57.95

49c VALUE

Darks &amp; Heathers
Reg. $1.00 .

AMITY
$~.00

Bullseye

BIBLES

STADIUM
CHECKERS

PUZZLE

$2.99 Value

"YORK"

.,,,

.

Doll

Hand &amp; Body

REG. 4.59
1

Lotion

FOR$

NURSERY
Rhyme Top

Rook Cards
1.90 Value

1

99~

Henen Scent

Ann

$'1.99 Value

SYLVANIA
FLASHWBES

"CIG BEN"
$1.20 VALUE

JIGSAW

$4.5'l

TROUBLE
' After Shave
LOTION

JIGSAW
PUZZLES

LoVe Doll
CLOTHES
$2.50 VALUE

$1.19 VALUE

Value

Pocket Watcll---

Match Box
Seri~

PLAY DOH
4 Pack

Sl:inny
Dip
Beauty
Tote

No.35

,',

84~~~~

ANITA
DOLL t'f/Jit.. /J.~'
S3.00 Value ~..;!'·:P;

INTIMATE DIAMOND
FACET
SPRAY MIST

Free
G1'ft Wrap

1 ~J_____
au:~ _.
99

SYLVANIA
MAGIC
CUBES

KIT

HAl

K~RATE

After Shave
Reg. Sl.75
4

oz. 9f
------------·
--·
Gift Qlllection ·
$4.25

VALUE

LUDENS HARD
CANDY

MADISON
MIX

HOME
PERMANENT

Barbara Ellen

ORNAMENTS
Box of

F.RUIT
CAKE

12

Milk Dlocolate

Covered Peanuts
14 ot. Box

$281

S1.90

. ALL

STUFFED
'

TOYS

50%0FF

TRAVEL KIT
Reg. $5.50

PLANTERS

Wholesale suggested
retail price.

$399

,

�a-The O.Uy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. 21, 1972

Annual dinner ·held
at church
LETART FALLS - The Nora Pearson; a quiz on yule
annual holiday turkey dinner of fun by Mrs. Barbara Dugan;
the Women 's Society of "Christmas Wishes" by Mrs.
Christian Service of the East Mary Roush; a Christmas
Letart United . Methodist meditation by Mrs. M.ildred
Church was held Tuesday o.;,nahue; a cake quiz by Mrs.
evening at the church.
Betty Shiveley;·. "Ten Uttle
Following the · dinner Christians" by Mrs, Hazel
membersmoved to the sane- Fox;aBiblequlzbyMrs.Mary
tuary which was decorated · Roush; "What's on a Penny"
with red tapers and greenery by Mrs. Clara Mae Sargent;
for the program conducted by "The Christ Cbild Comes Once
Mrs. Mabel Shields. Each one More" by Mrs. Facie Hayman ;
presented something on a Christmas recipe ·by Mrs:
Christmas. These included "A Julia Norris and the
Christmas Reading" by Mrs. benediction by Mrs. Roush.
Doris Admas; "Scrambled
Others attending the dinner
Carols" b.y Mrs. Marlene and party were Robin Sauvage,
Fisher, · "Touch of God's Dixie Dugan, Mrs . Belva
Hand" and Helen Steiner Fisher, Mrs. Margaret
Rice's "God of Creation .Save Gloeckner, Sally Sauvage ,
Our Nation" by Mrs. Ferne B. Mrs. Ruby Hupp, Mrs. Dorothy
Hayman,
Johnson, Joyce White, Sue Ann
Other selections were Buck, and Mrs. Clara Adams.
"Christmas carols" by Mrs. The group exchanged gifts.·

Racine Social Events
By Mrs. Fralleli Morris
Silent Night! Holy Night! .
sung by the group opened the
meeting of the Booster Class,of
• Flnt Baptist Church School
, · Fridl\y evening, Dec. 15, with
! Mrs. Gretta Simpson, hostess,
• at her home, beautifully
'• decorated for the Christmas
•
- Scripture from St.
•• Luke 2 wu read and prayer
• wu by Mrs. ~jorie Grimm.
I Readings brought by members
! were, '"!be Inn~" '"A Few
\ Choice Words about Christ-

: mas," "To Show the. Way,"
; "Frienda ~t Christmas,"
j "Keeping Christmas," "A
Happy Birthday, Jesus," "A
Christmas Spirit," ''One SniaU
• Child," "The Christmas
Heart,'! "Christmas 1972;• 11At
Christmas," "Blessed Be Your
Hame at Christmas." · In the
buaWu seulon, a nominating
ciiiiiiiiittee nam8d was Vera
Beegle,~ Badgley and

w._

~Helen S!..,P.an)toll c&amp;y
· a,.-ered by giving a favCXite
Christmas carol, "0 Come, All
Ye Faithful" was sung and the
Lord's Prayer In unison closed
the meeting. Gifbl were placed
under a lighted Christmas tree
an4 exchanged. The class
praented a gift to Margie
Grimm, teacher of the class,
and to Mrs. Enna Norris, the
mlnllter's wife. 'J'he. h&lt;JIIess,
Mn. Simplan, served delicious
refnlhiDenta at a large dining
table decorated with a lovely
Ocnl arrangement of red allli
white DIUIIll given her by her
son-In-law and daugilter, Mr.
and Mrs. Ernest Shiller and
white tspen. Favors were
Christmas corsages. Mrs.
N..-ris gave table grace, Mrs.
Helen Simpson was surprised
with a large decorated and
inscribed birthday cake
presented by Isabel and Grella
which abe cut and aerved to the
group who sang "Happy Birth·
day."
The Happy Hustlers Sunday
School claal of the Methodist
Church held their Christmas
party Friday evening, Dec. 15.
Asix o'clock turkey dinner was
served in the dining area. The
tables and room were
beaulifully decorated. Mter
the-dinner tbe group assembled
in the sanctuary for a program
presented by Mrs , Bertha
Spencer, consisting of group

FOR SALE
100,000 BTU Coleman
furnace $299.00. 30
gallon glass lined
water heater S69.95 .'

Qlase Hardware

Co.

Phont 992-l511or ~92 - 3911

'·

singing and prayer by Rev.
Shiveley. Several members
gave rea4ings ,.and an in·
strut:nental'-1lllet by Mrs .
Lavinia Simpson and Mrs.
Mattle Circle .and a pIaylet by
several members. The men of
the church were special guests,
also Mr. and Mrs. Olden
Thaxtorland Mr. and Mrs. Bert
Grimm. The program closed
with all singing "God Be With
You ." Mrs. Grace Krider,
president, presented a
Christmas gift to Rev. and
M1's. Shiveley and a poinsettls
to .Mrs. Mlna Lewis, teacher,
and Mrs. Bertha Spencer,
asalstsnt teacher. A gift exchange followed, closing with
prayer.
TWINS ARE BORN
Mr. and Mrs. carl Circle are
announcing the birth of their
sons, James Jarrod and Jason
Edward, born on Dec. 14, 1972
at the, Holze~ 'l,edlcal !Je~~ter.
They llre welcomed ~ya sister,
Patrece, two years old.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Yost and
paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Homer Circle. Great..
grandmothers are Mrs. Mattie
Y&lt;Jit and Mrs. Edward Foster.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cleland,
Mrs. Betty Sayre arid Mr. and
. Mrs. David Hensler attended a
famliy Christmas reunion at
the home of their parents, Mr.
and Mrs. William Wood at
Jacksonville.

Apple Grove
News, Events
By MRS. HERBERT ROUSH
Mrs, Gene Jewell and
children of Letart Route spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald Hayman.
Mr. and Mrs . Randall
Roberts were shopping in
Parkersburg Thursday.
Mrs. Junior Salser returned
to her horne from Veterans
Memorial Hospital Friday
after undergoing surgery.
Mr. and Mrs . Charles
Matthew of Colwnbus, Mr. and
Mrs . Junior Salser and son,
Mike, were dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Pearson
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs . Larry Jensen
and Miss Brenda Hawkins of
Salem spent Saturday evening
with Mr. and Mrs. Roy Pearson
at Dorcas.
John Day and George Fish of
Gallipolis were dinner guesbl
Sunday of Raymond Adams
and Mr. and Mrs. Marshall
Adams.
Weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Jim Roush were Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Jensen and Brenda

The tax books are now open for the
December or first half collection of the
1972 Real Estate· taxes. Also for
delinquent tax. Closing date will be
January 20, 1973.

...

'

..

Howard E. Frank
Meigs County Treasurer
'·

Circle meets

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

Bridal shower given

Pomerrt~ ~- ..

Pet'Dlal Notes

Ingels. The shower, h&lt;JIIed by
)Irs. JQieJlh Goot, f,fn. Ivan
Walker, Mrs. orval Wiles and
Mrs. Elmu' Wickham,' was
held In the social room of the
Pomeroy First Baptist Church. ·
Games were played with
pri:tes going to Miss Ma~n
Hennesy, Miss Kuhn and Mrs.
Edna Triplett. A cake
decorated in the ced and green
colors, coffee and tea ,.ere
served.
Attending besides those
named were Mrs. Robert
Kuhn, motber of .the .llrldeelect, Mrs. Harry Lee Bailey,
Miss Becky Triplett, , Miss
Debbie Stone, Mrs. George
Skinner, Mrs. EUen Couch,
Mrs. Leslie Price, Mrs.
William
Watson, Mrs. 'Albert
.
Smitli, . Mrs. Lillian Pierce,
Janelle and Robin Kuhn:
Presenting gifts were Mrs. T.
T. Shelton, Mn. Wickham,
Mrs. John Bentley, Mrs. James
Diehl and Jo Ellen, Mrs. Ar-thur Slusher, Mrs. Raymond
'
Jewell, Mrs. Wilson Carpenter,
Miss Brenda Edwards, Mrs.
· William Miller, Mrs- Clyde
Ingels, Mrs. William Barnha~,
Mrs. Bill Reed and Mrs. Oliver
Michael.
'

A 'red and green , color
prepared for shut4ns, and a $1
scheme waa carried out in the
gift was aent to Sam Ter·
Airman David Kuhn will decorations Saturday night for
zatpolous for his birthday.
return tomorrow to the tbe bridal shower of Miss Karla
· Arrangements were made ~ngley Air Force Base in· Kuhn, bride-elect of ;John
for the circle to . handle Virginia after being here to
hnspilality for the Sanborn visit his parents, the Rev, and
meeting on Jan. 2. Mrs. Arland Mrs. Robert Kuhn.
King had the lovdlngegift
Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Kelton
SONBORNDEC.zt
dedication using a rea
"It were In Huntington, W. Va.,
Mr. ani!' Mrs. Euge~ Smith
Is For Love." Devotions by Saturday night for a dinner and of Middleport announce the
Mrs. Ethel Hughes included dance at the GatE&gt;way Inn birth of a son, Dec. 20, at the
reading of Luke 2 and a given by B. F. Shaw Co. for Its Holzer Medical Center. 'The
meditation entitl~ "Gift for a employes in supervision at the Smiths. have four .o.ther
Lonely Father." The love gift Gavbiand AmQS Power Plants. children, Tim, John, Cindy and
offering was $21 and the
Miss Pam Buck of Racine
· Mark. Grandparents are Mr.
regular offering was $20.
· will be the dbiner guest tonight and ,Mrs. Lincoln Smith,
Relreshments were.aerved to . of Mrs. Ferne B. Hayman, Middleport, and Mr. and Mrs;
thOBe named and Mrs. Isabelle · East Letart;
William Fred Smith, Brad·
Winebrenner, Mrs. Elizabeth
Mrs. Be11lah Ewing has been bury'. Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Slavin, Miss Rhoda Hall, Mrs. In Huntington visiting her Durst of Middleport are great..
youngs~rs
Charles Edwards, · Mrs. sister, Mrs. Carl G. Hall, a gr811dparenta ,, .
Charles Simons, Tony Fowler, patient at the CabelDoor swags were made
Michl and Marsha Beth King. Huntingtorl Hospital. Mrs. Hilli
during a garden therapy
A contribution to the Otter· fell recently and (ractured her
session of the ~Ulland Friendly bein Home was made, $100
hip.
Gardeners Club with children was given to the general fund
ATTEND DINNER
of Mrs. Carol Wolfe's class at of the church, and a food
Mrs. Freda Duffy attended
the Meigs Conununity Class for basket was prepared for
the Christmas dinner at Craw's
the Retarded.
Melvina Davidson, a 'shut-in,
Steak House and a party
Mrs. Richard Fetty, Jr · and during the recent Christmas
following. at the home 'of Miss
Mrs. Bill Brown met with the
Sybil Ebersbach of the Third
children and assisted them in meeting of the Willing Workers
SOM'O,..;t~11
Friday Club. Her name was
Class of the Enterprise United
f I f J ',/'
constructing swags from pine, · Methodist Church.
unintentionally omitted from
Pine cones and. ribbon. At the
·
Twenty decorated cans of an earlier account of the party.
Meeting at the horne of Mrs.
Gt' ft wrappings' were judged homemade cookies and can
conclusion of the work sess't'on, Marjorie
Bowen,
a
report
on
•
refres hmen ts were served by the success of the holiday and prizes given to Carolyn d'1es were prepared and '
the club members.
bazaar was given. Mr•. Bowen Satterfield, CaroL McCullough, deliv ere d to shut-1ns an d
Beehtlet and Linda ·Riffle elder1Y res1denbl of tbe comgave devotions usm'•g "The Sarah
at the annua holiday party of
'ty
mum Tuesday by the Rock
Greatest Gift" as her . topic.
.
the Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of S ·
B tie H lth C1
.
There was group singing of · Beta Sigma Phi Sorority held pnngs e r ea
ub. '
'
·!
VISIT IN DAYTON
"Hark the Herald Angels Sing" Tuesday night at the RifOe
Meeting at the home of Mrs.
Mr.andMrs. Arthur Skinner lllld Mrs. Agnes Dixon read h
William Folmer, the treabl
were In , Dayton over the from St. Luke 2. Each member 0::.\onorable mention in gift were prepared along with trays
.
of fruit
for diabetic
weekend vis1' ting Mr. and Mrs. gave though•·
"' on the self· W'rappmgs
wen t to Barbara Mr
WIUlam
!me resldenbl.
d
•
contained
Christmas.
Prayer
s.
Fo
r
an
Mrs.
D•~ Farmer. Mrs. Farmer s
Logan. The cultural reports Scott Folmer served refreshbirthday was observed.
was by Mrs. Beulah utterbach. were given by Doris Ewing, ments.
Mrs. Mlldi'ed Mitch donated "When Joy Came" and Janet
Present to assist with the
lbe wonder box which was won Pickens, "~eople."
. project were Mrs. At:Ue Abbott,
Hawkins of Salem.
by Mrs. Bowen. Pictures of the
Mrs. Rtffle, Mrs. M~· Mrs. Hugh Bearhs, Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Lowen Taylor group were taken. Atl!!nding Cullough and ~artha McPhatl Harold Blackston, Mrs. James
and children of Radnor were besides those named were Mrs. were hQitesaes for the party. Conkle, Mrs. Fred Goegleln,
recentvisltors of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Frick, Mrs. Beatrice Attending besides those named Mrs. William Crueser, Mrs.
Ll,lrry O'Brien and children. Buck, Mrs. Willard Wilson, wer~ Mrs. A. R. Knight, Louis Grueser, Mrs. Welby
Mrs. June Wickersham and Mrs. Eldon Weeks, Miss Freda sponsor, Carol Adams, Becky Whaley, Mrs. William Radsons, Tim and Jeff, ~nd Mrs. Lelving, Mrs. Mary Bowen, Anderson, Susan. Baer, Connie ford, Mrs. Gladys Morgan.
Ferne B. ·Hayman were Mrs. Ethel Smith, Mrs. Mabel ·Bailey, Phylhs Bennett,
weekend guests of· Mr. and Moore, Mrs. Delores Will and Debbie Buck, Lynn Daniels,
Mrs. Don Hodge at Columbus Patty Edwards.
Jeannie Ebersbach, Debbie
' .
and did some Christmas
Finlaw, Vikki Gloeckner,
ON DEAN'S LIST
Desk Model, 6x6 Inches, genuine walnut wtth
shopping.
Charlotte Hanning, Darla
Mary Lou King, daughter of
gold
trim. Clock contains 1 Silver Dollar, 1
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Fox and
Hawley, Kathy King, Sandra Mr. and Mrs. Virgil King,
Half Dollar, 2 Quarters, 8 Dimes- all Sliver..
son, David were recent
Korn, J.ynn Kitchen, Beverly Pomeroy Route 2, has been
and uncirculated. This clock contains a. flll,ly·
weekend guests of 'Mr. ·and
.
Long, Karen McGraw, Sandra named to the dean's list for the
guaranteed
battery operated movement.
Mrs: Ray RusseU at Newark. · Trays of cookies ~nd candies Sargent, Linda Sauvage, !aU term at Mount Vernon
Mr. and Mrs. Don·BeU and 1 for shut-ins were prepared Edwina Scott Jennifer Sheets N'va~,fMl.. Co!!!'uwp,t _.Mount
daughter, Lorna, spent a Tuesday nighl at a meeting \lt . Karen $taruJ Marilyn Swan". el'1\~·8hlo. 'f.~ ,named -to 1 11 '~ ; ,
.reeent weekend with Dr. and the Lole Joy Circle of the B. H. Bessie Sylve~ter Charlo it~ thj! dean s list, a stpdent must
Mrs. Earl Grimm at Colurn- Sanborn Missionary Society, Taunton Texanna 'weD Edith have a grade of at least 3.3 of a
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
.
bus.
Middleportth Fth'rst Bfaptist Zirkle, ~nd Sue Zirkle. '
possible four point.
Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Hill , Church, at e orne o Mrs.
Mrs. Dolly Wolfe .visited St. Dale Walburn .
Clair Hill and Mrs. Isabella
Mrs . W~lburn gave the
Carnahan at Holzer Medical · Christmas story and a poem
Center
"Christmas As I Remember."
Butch Ables of Indianapolis, Plans were made for the Circle
Ind., spent the weekend with to present the program at the
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Jan. 2 meeting of the Sanborn
Ables,
'
Society. Mrs. Manning Kloes
Art Hili of Moorehead presided at the meeting W_Jth
, College at Moorehead, Ky., and Mrs. Bert Bodimer ~onducting
Mrs. Debbie Roush are the love gift dedication. A
spending their Christmas de~rt course was served by
vacations at home Artwithll'.r. the nstess.
and Mrs. Dallas Hill and
Debbie of Rio Grande College
with her family, Marshall
Roush and son, Joey.
The Ladies Aid of the EnMr. and Mrs. Wiley Ours of
terprise
United Methodist
Racine Route spent Sunday
afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Church meeting last Thursday
at the church voled to donate
Roy Donohew.
Bill Wheeler is home for the $100 to the church lreasury and
holidays from Ohio State to purchase a fiourescent light
University with his parenbl, for the Sunday school room as
Mr. and Mrs. Alex Wheeler. a special holiday project.
Members quilted until noon
Mrs. Virgie Roush visited
and
then enjoyed a holiday
her_ father, Fred Shain, at
potluck and gift exchange. In
Racine Sunday.
Sunday guesbl of Mr. and the group were 'Mrs. Fred
Mrs. Jesse Anderson were Mr. Clark, Mrs. Beatrice Buck,
and Mrs. Leo Wiggington and Mrs. Mildred Mitch, Mrs. Anna
children of St. Albans, W. Va., Wilson, Mrs. Mabel Moore,
Mr. and Mrs. Everette Clark Mrs. Ethel Smith and Mrs .
and children, Sheila and Paul, Eldon Weeks.
of Cottageville.
Mrs. Benny Boggess and son,
'
Wayne, were dinner guests
Sunday of Mr. and Mrs.
Everette Ransom.
Jack Adams was returned
RACINE ...,. The Tri-M Club
home Saturday from Veterans
(Modern
Music Masters) of
Memorial· Hospital where he
had been a surgical patient. Southern High School went
caroling recently, entertaining
Jerry Johnson Jr., Bobby
Memorial ·
Johnson, Gene Shively, David at · Veterans
Kiser of Racine spent Sunday Hnspilal, the Children's Home,
with Mr. and Mrs, Robert Meigs County Infirmary and
Because natural gas has always been so inexpensive,
several
private
homes.
Smith and helped them do
there has never been a great urge to conserve iL
Following tbe caroling, tbe
some Christmas decorating.
·
Until now.
group was entertained with a
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Smith
Right now, there's just not enough natural gas
party at the home or their
received word that their son,
to
supply
aU the new demands for thiHieanest-burning fuel. ·
sponsor Mrs. John R. Lee,
Joe Derouin of Crafton, Pa., Racine.
Of course, as a gas cus!omer, you d~n't have to worry about getting
.
was engaged to Cecills (Sue)
the gas you need for the appliances now m yoUr home . .. or their replacements.
Refrealunenta were served to
Copar, daughter of Mr. and
But the shortage of natural gas, indeed, the shortage of ali clean -burning fuels, is becoming 1
Hope Bird, Della Cross, Denise
Mrs. William Copar of
a grave threat to our community's economic growth. More clean-burning gas is desperately needed.
CrQsl, Nancy Crow, Sharon
Millville, Pa. Tl1e wedding will
Not only to stimulate economic growth and provide more jobs, but simply to maintain current requirements.
Drake, Barbara Fisher, Cindy
lake place in May.
A healthy economy needs natural gas. And 8 healthy environment needs natural gas.
Gooch, Susie i:looch, Beverly
Mr. and Mrs. ROd Grimm of
Use ges wisely in your home and business. It's too valuable to waste.
Hatt, Elisa McMillan, Barbara
Racine were dinner guesta
And the gas you save, together with the new gas Columbia is
Neaae, Lee Ann Nease, Roma
Thuraday of Mr. and Mrs,
working hard to develop, can help ease the gas shortage.
Neaae, Stephanie Ord, Bob
MarahaU Adams.
Write to Columbia Gas for the free booklet:
Sayre, Pall)' Sayre, Jeannie
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Rouah
"30 Ways to Save."
.
Sellen, Elhln Stearns, Glenn
and son Roger have moved
Simpson, Cmnle Smith, JIU
G111 il fJI'RiOUI. pure energy .. • use it wisely.
from tbe Hanna Coal Company
Warner,
Cooldt Weddle,.Sandy
property to the Earl Adami
Winebrenner, Helen WilcOJ;eri,
farm on Adams Rd. Racine Rl.
Victle Wolfe and R. 'Thomas
2. The Rouah tslephme number
jjb;IUPI, cHpolllar, who Is
la247-al6t
Southern'• band dlnc~r.
Gifts of money will be sent to
both the Meigs County
Chlldrens' Horne and the Infirrnsr).-by the Elecla Circle of
the B. H. Sanborn Society of the
Middleport First Baptist
Church.
PVT. JUS'nl8
· Meeting Tuesday nighlat the
PVT. JOHN R. Justus, son home of Mrs. Tony Fowler, the
of. Marie DIVtetro, Sy· , circle voted to send the gifts of
racuse Is spending a Ill- money to be used in someway
day Je~ve at bis home lrom to brighten the holiday at the
Fort Carson, Colorado.
two county homes. Trays of
cookies candy. and fruit were
'
· .
·

Swags made

by

Help given
by class

n ,

,

rnzes gtven .

bry

Decorated cans
given shut-ins

..

CHRISTMAS SUGGESTION

Coin Clock ..... .

. '39.95

Cookies, candy
treats prepared

u.s.

BAKfR :·:f~.~~IT.W,E ~~~~~

•

$100 Given to
church treasury

IS•

preciOUs,

Tri-M singers
went caroling

Use
. it

WISe

j

I

Benefits to Rise
With Livin-g Cost
(First in

d Series.)
"'--

By BRUCE BIOSSAT
NEA WuhiDJton
Correspolldent

Eastem

Local News
Charles Frecker and friend
recently, visited his grand,
niother; Mrs. Mary Reed.
· Cecila McCoy has returned
to college at Glenville.
M In
.
N 11
rs. ez ewe ' spent an
afternoon recently with Mrs.
MaryReed.
.
Mrs . Gladys Rector and
daughter of Mineral Wells
vislt(.d Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Gray.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Ji&gt;e Connally
visited Mr. and Mrs. A. C.
Woods at Belpre.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenny Frecker
and daughters and Raymond
· Hand went to Cleveland to visit
Mr, Frecker's sister, Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Boyle and family.

'
WASHINGTON - (NEA)
- The 1972 changes in · the
Social Security system were
the most sweeping In many
years. Their biggest goal was
to make the vast complex of
protective benefits largely
inf)alion-proof and keep it in
pa_ce with rising ·ear11lngs Rising earnings levels are
levels..o-:er the years. · . newly tied ~0 Suclal Security
A ~ertes of general cash In still a· thrrd way. Starting
~nefti Increases .from early Jan. 1, 1973, Social Security
1_970 through late 1972 have retirees may earn $2,100 a
lifted payment lev~ls by year (formerly $1,680) withr01,1ghly 50 per cent m that Qut any loss of retirement
Sunday dinner guests of Mr.
span. This has been a pres- benefits. And the \ amount
s~e game of . ·:catch-up" they may earn in a given and Mrs. Okey Connally were
wtth spir11llng livmg ~osts. month without such loss will his parenbl, Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Le3:ders -in C~ngress and in rise from $140 to $175. But Connally.
·
Soctal Securtty seem to these limits · too will ad- · Mrs. Sandra Massar, Diana
agree this phase! now has· vance as earnhigs levels and Chuck, were visiting her
ended.
climb. In other words, the parenbl, Mr. and Mrs. D.
From 1973 on, · so-called better the national earnings
"11utomatics" come into play level, the more a retiree' can · Boyles at Tuppers Plains.
in an effilrl to keep the bene- earn and .still get his allotMr. and Mrs. Mere! Camp- ,
bell of Smithville were recent
fit structure up··to date and ted benefits.
properly financed.
Th\ is one more Inter- visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Joe
The new law provides, of estin link between living Connally.
course, that henceforth So- costs d the Social SecurityMrs. Leota Massar and Mrs.
cia! Security cash benefits Medicare structure. The part Sandra Massar, Mr. and Mrs.
will be Increased in reason- of Medicare called medical Okey ConnaUy and Mr . and
ably close alignment with insurance, which lar11ely Mrs. Joe Connally were among
Increases in the cost of covers doctor bills , reqUires those calling at the White
living.
payment of monthly premiThe formula . calls for a urns by beneficiaries. These Funeral Home in Coolville to
comparison che&lt;!k of price have . been going up from pay respect to the late Charles
levels over a year's time, year to year in tandem with Larkins.
from one June quarter to the rising medical costs.
Pearl Koehler received a
next. If the index. has ris~n But from mid-1973 on, phone call froVJ his son, Airthree per cent or, more m government authorities will. man Randy Koehler, who is
tbat ~pan, there.n be . a not be allowed to increase sf&lt;ltioned at Keesler, Miss., Air
boost m Soctal the prem1urns
.
b y any per- Force Base.
· matching
·
;;ecurlty _benefits the follow- centage greater than that deMr. and Mrs. Sam Laird of
mg Jal!uary. If the price ad- creed for Social Security Parkersburg, Mr. and Mrs. Joe
vance IS less ~han three per cash benefits under the cost- Connally visited Dana McCain .
cent,
will _hold of-liv'ng provisions.
Mr. and Mrs. Okey Connally
steady.benefits
But the compariSons
will be made every year.
People at retirement age and son were yisiting Mr. and
Another . key automatic- who are qualified for Sucial Mrs. Gail McCain at CooiviUe
feature relates . to general Security benefits don't al- Sunday afternoon.
earnings levels. As these ways wish to retire at 65.
Mrs . Edna Summerfield
advance, and it is assumed ·Heretofore, if they kept on visited her daughter, Mrs.
they ·will go up roughi Y five their
working,
it' added
nothing
to M'ld
1 re d Caldweuand attended
ultimate
)lenefits.
From
per cent a year, there wil'
·
the United Methodist Church
be a comparable percentP
1973 forward, however, they S d
Tu
Pia '
increase in the maxir ..m can collect an extra one per un ay a1 ppers
ms.
Mrs. Herbert Parker, Mrs.
base from which WO!Kers' cent In · ~nefits for every
Social . Security tax.;s are year the:Y stay at work up to Roger Adams arid daughter,
taken each year.
age 72.
Lori, spent Thursday afternoon
This steady anticipated
FinaUy, beginning next with Mrs. Edna Summerfield.
-Sandra Massar
rise in the tax base, some of year, low-wage workers unit already scheduled and der Social Security for 30
some merely projected, is years can get a special
considered by the experts as minimum payment of $170 a
sufficient assurance of con- month ($225 a couple) . But
stantly enlarging funds to fi- the payment drops S8.50 (per
month) for each . year less ' DaleWeish"Jr. caUed on Mr.
ag~t a
·IU_,t 111an ._ lilt" t1141 regular o~u... M
d_.,.,.,,. .ivrlQ .•m.•'""
' liiWl . .""' . 0 f ... 50 is reached •nu I'll : ~ wayne uncKJes ' a
. also does ca
r a ' scale of m1mmum ovx•
t ' "'Uii
&lt;''""
tax RATE increases, but
ENTERPRISE ASSN .)
recen even g.
Mrs . Nelsel Weatherman
these
are
mostly
intended,
to
returned
home from O'Bieness
cover the part of Social

-T
·· uppers
- - - PIaiDS
•
Society News ·

~iiji

t••ws••m

(NEXT: New Benefits
for widows.)

Security which finances
Medicare's hospital insurance protection.

I~---------------------------,
11-.t Social Security Book
.
I P.O.
(~AMI Of ~IWSPAPil)
.
•
.
lOX &lt;II, RADIO CITY STATION
I

DIPARTMI~T

/oi

•

I HIW YOU, H.Y. 10011
I Sood poolpoid
I sus oach.. Enclo11d lo

' .
,~~ """

book(o).

-- - ·
-z:::~.c-;;:

I Mokt chtcl or ,..., order poyob!e to
I "Bio11o1 Boot" J.l/ow 3
for dolirorr.

•Hk•

·=~

I1 H~• --------------------------~

Addrm --------------------------

1. City - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1 Slalo
Zip - - -

l------------------------~--

Memorial H~pltal In Athens
where she spent several days
after suffering a stroke.
Mrs . Russell Spencer of
Chester called on Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne Brickles Saturday
afternoon.
Mrs. Eleanor Boyles went
witn the Bible Study group of
the Chester Methodist Church
to the Elmwood Nursing Home
Sunday and put on a small
program. She was later a
dinner guest of Mr. and Mrs.
Purley Karr.

Hocking Tech .expanding cul'riculum
NELSONVILLE ...:. Hocking
Technical College here will
offer part-time day and
evening classes in January.
Day·lime registration will be
held January 2, classes will
resume January 3. Evening
registration will be held
Jan. 3rd and 4th, from 6 to 9.
Classes will resume the week
of January 8.
The daytime schedule in·
eludes: Hotel-Motel Operation,
Intcoductlon to Busineas, Hotel
Management I, Survey of
Data, Accounting I, ~taU
Store Operation, Ststiatical
Quality Conlrol (Induatrial),
Seminar
in
Induatrial
· Problems, Buic Metal, In·
dustrlal Supervision. North

1',uppers Plains
Society News

American Wildlife I, Ohio
Trees, Fish Management,
Juvenile Delinquency, and
Pollee Administration,
The Evening schedule offers
Accoun ling II, PsYchology II,
Communications 11, Sociology,
Political Science, Cobol IB,
Shorthand I, Economicil I &amp; 11,
Crlminalistics II, Advance
Pollee Photography, Drug
Abuse, Laws of Search &amp;
Seizure, and Tu:ldermy I &amp; II.
Hocking Technical College Is
a state-supported institution

Stals
Th_ursday

governed by the Ohio Board of
Regenbl. All courses are also
approved by the Veterans'
Administration . Eligible
veterans may draw bene!!Is for
this program.
Inquiries should be directed
to the Admissions Office or Mr.
Roy Palmer, Director of Adult
Continuing Education, Hocking
Technical College, Route 1,
Nelsonville, Ohio 45764,
telephone, 753-3514. Offices are
open at Hocking Technical
College,from 8a.m. untll9 p.m,

:1&gt;'\ll
~~~~'~"''!:•, ~~ ~~"~»~' ·~~,:Wi'IJ.•' ,'l'J;~, lt'\1,_.,,~~~~ 11~''-rJ,·
tf&gt;\..-,;_.. ,1.1~~~ ~~'7\~ .r~\1"'a~ ;-.~~~;~\ ,, '"I·~Wfl.\~~~ ~'),~

Any Bedroom Suite
In Stock Now •••

dinner .
Mr. and Mrs. Dinamore
Bo7la took Ilia ..... ID the
111port at ~ · where
abe lOOk a plane ID her bome in
Orand Blanc, Mlc:h., after
Wieral daJI villi ,with ,the

Excellent Mltction, come and see! Open
every night until I: 30.

Cuts!
Free
Parki
. ng
;

DftfDTBUY5··

~-­

T'·

OUR E_NTIRE STOCK REDUCED!

WOMENS

Big Savings Here
LINED VINYLS

DUSTERS

.WOMENS
. GLOVES

~ She re.ally . wears these- so gill her with a new duster.
~ - select from solids, Pfints, checks, stripes, etc.
Every on&amp; reduced 1o two low sale priCes for lilte
shoppers.R

'

Regular $3.94

egular
$4.94 an.d $5.94

$299

$399

AND

Actual $7.95 Value! Artificial

n :oo Value.
Warm
her
hands with this '

smart,

pensive gill for
under Ihe tree.

Girls and Womens

••

PR.
,·

. For$

$4,87
Va .lue

00

Pair

SALI or·

BONUS BUY

Regular 10c

TEENS AND WOMENS

CANDY .

~(""M,

·BA:RS ~:":·1(· .

All your favorites. Hersheys, Clarks,
Mounds , Almond Joy, etc. - Gel the

Values Ia 56.94 . No wale corduroy, polyester,

families candy needs now at

denims, brushed denims. Sizes 8 to 18 ilnd 32
to 44. See these, you ' ll want several pair. 4

Shopper's Marl. SAVE CASH .

Day Sale!

LIMIT 45 BARS!
PRICE IN

$.

FOR

00

EFFECT

THURSDAY
4

P.M.

66
PAIR

THRU
SUNDAY!

NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY!

50%
off

I

Pi\
Our Everyday Stock . "Your Caprice Brand
If you have worn 11 Your Caprice~~ Panty Hose - you
know how !hey fit - IT you hve nol , now fs the
opportunny TO try them. Sheer, se1m1ess SfTefch tn
four color tones. Save 61c p11ir. Great gift items.

10 inch J.._
Size ~Jf

EJIER YTHING GOES!
Dolls, friction cars, stuffed
animals, games, puzzles, etc. It's
our annual cleanup of a II toys - at
a price you expect after Christmas. Come take them away - at
tremendous savings.

Pity
Kind

1 PRICE
2
2 Sizes -

Boxer Style!
Sizes 4 To 7
Stripes and Solids

A$2.44 Value!
TEFLON II
• COLORED

·BOYS
PANTS

FRY
PAN'

Regular $1.67

Red-Green-Gold
While
They
Last!.

REGULAR 12c

Values To 35c

$ 66

Each

e Pcint Plan . .

one fih 7 to

9 other 9 to 11 .
lrrevut.rs of • wtll
known $1 .00 broncf',

Mason Fumlture

Bo¥111'.

·

Acrylic orion and nylon bltncl. Soft,
fully washoble. Stretches to Ill lltt
10 to 13. 1 colors.

branches, s~ts up easily, box
for storage .

Of

A DISCO \.I NT

OOARTM£NT STOtt!
'

~

MENS ORLON
DRESS SOCKS

PR .

w: Ya.

.

·

Our Stock!

HERES A REAL
STOCKING STUFFER

EVER
NIGHT
TILL

If Perfect You Would Pay 79' Pair

GIRLS STRETCH NYLON

Dtii'III'Y In nmt for Olrlstmas
m-5592
Hermen Grift
Mason,

inex-

lri

Nol many to sell- but even If
yoo are thinking of next year
-now is the lime to !.vy. Full

Returns

20%0FF

7.
7

f:N

ONE SIZE FITS ALL

Whatever
Is
Left

SCOTCH
PINE
•
4,FT. CHRISTMAS
TREE

No

WY41oiidays
SPECIAL!

By Mn. E!el)'ll8rickl~
Sunday School attendance
was 47 and offering wu '18.01.
Worship attendance was 25 and
offering $31.$1.
Sgt. and Mn. Roger Coe and
daughter c1 South carolina are
spending a weekend here wltb
het puenll, Mr. and Mrs. Guy
Spencer.
Mr. and Mrs. ~II Archer
of Lottrldge entertained their
!Iunday School cia• with •
dinner at their home Saturday
e1ening. Mn. Dlnamore'
- - and cJausbler, Mn.
J1icnnce Spencer atlended the

4 PM!
Deep
Price

PR.

• Mal, w. Ya.
• Sil't'er Plaia
PRICES Ill EfFtCI'
TODAY-A PMI
Open Till 9 Every

I

�a-The O.Uy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. 21, 1972

Annual dinner ·held
at church
LETART FALLS - The Nora Pearson; a quiz on yule
annual holiday turkey dinner of fun by Mrs. Barbara Dugan;
the Women 's Society of "Christmas Wishes" by Mrs.
Christian Service of the East Mary Roush; a Christmas
Letart United . Methodist meditation by Mrs. M.ildred
Church was held Tuesday o.;,nahue; a cake quiz by Mrs.
evening at the church.
Betty Shiveley;·. "Ten Uttle
Following the · dinner Christians" by Mrs, Hazel
membersmoved to the sane- Fox;aBiblequlzbyMrs.Mary
tuary which was decorated · Roush; "What's on a Penny"
with red tapers and greenery by Mrs. Clara Mae Sargent;
for the program conducted by "The Christ Cbild Comes Once
Mrs. Mabel Shields. Each one More" by Mrs. Facie Hayman ;
presented something on a Christmas recipe ·by Mrs:
Christmas. These included "A Julia Norris and the
Christmas Reading" by Mrs. benediction by Mrs. Roush.
Doris Admas; "Scrambled
Others attending the dinner
Carols" b.y Mrs. Marlene and party were Robin Sauvage,
Fisher, · "Touch of God's Dixie Dugan, Mrs . Belva
Hand" and Helen Steiner Fisher, Mrs. Margaret
Rice's "God of Creation .Save Gloeckner, Sally Sauvage ,
Our Nation" by Mrs. Ferne B. Mrs. Ruby Hupp, Mrs. Dorothy
Hayman,
Johnson, Joyce White, Sue Ann
Other selections were Buck, and Mrs. Clara Adams.
"Christmas carols" by Mrs. The group exchanged gifts.·

Racine Social Events
By Mrs. Fralleli Morris
Silent Night! Holy Night! .
sung by the group opened the
meeting of the Booster Class,of
• Flnt Baptist Church School
, · Fridl\y evening, Dec. 15, with
! Mrs. Gretta Simpson, hostess,
• at her home, beautifully
'• decorated for the Christmas
•
- Scripture from St.
•• Luke 2 wu read and prayer
• wu by Mrs. ~jorie Grimm.
I Readings brought by members
! were, '"!be Inn~" '"A Few
\ Choice Words about Christ-

: mas," "To Show the. Way,"
; "Frienda ~t Christmas,"
j "Keeping Christmas," "A
Happy Birthday, Jesus," "A
Christmas Spirit," ''One SniaU
• Child," "The Christmas
Heart,'! "Christmas 1972;• 11At
Christmas," "Blessed Be Your
Hame at Christmas." · In the
buaWu seulon, a nominating
ciiiiiiiiittee nam8d was Vera
Beegle,~ Badgley and

w._

~Helen S!..,P.an)toll c&amp;y
· a,.-ered by giving a favCXite
Christmas carol, "0 Come, All
Ye Faithful" was sung and the
Lord's Prayer In unison closed
the meeting. Gifbl were placed
under a lighted Christmas tree
an4 exchanged. The class
praented a gift to Margie
Grimm, teacher of the class,
and to Mrs. Enna Norris, the
mlnllter's wife. 'J'he. h&lt;JIIess,
Mn. Simplan, served delicious
refnlhiDenta at a large dining
table decorated with a lovely
Ocnl arrangement of red allli
white DIUIIll given her by her
son-In-law and daugilter, Mr.
and Mrs. Ernest Shiller and
white tspen. Favors were
Christmas corsages. Mrs.
N..-ris gave table grace, Mrs.
Helen Simpson was surprised
with a large decorated and
inscribed birthday cake
presented by Isabel and Grella
which abe cut and aerved to the
group who sang "Happy Birth·
day."
The Happy Hustlers Sunday
School claal of the Methodist
Church held their Christmas
party Friday evening, Dec. 15.
Asix o'clock turkey dinner was
served in the dining area. The
tables and room were
beaulifully decorated. Mter
the-dinner tbe group assembled
in the sanctuary for a program
presented by Mrs , Bertha
Spencer, consisting of group

FOR SALE
100,000 BTU Coleman
furnace $299.00. 30
gallon glass lined
water heater S69.95 .'

Qlase Hardware

Co.

Phont 992-l511or ~92 - 3911

'·

singing and prayer by Rev.
Shiveley. Several members
gave rea4ings ,.and an in·
strut:nental'-1lllet by Mrs .
Lavinia Simpson and Mrs.
Mattle Circle .and a pIaylet by
several members. The men of
the church were special guests,
also Mr. and Mrs. Olden
Thaxtorland Mr. and Mrs. Bert
Grimm. The program closed
with all singing "God Be With
You ." Mrs. Grace Krider,
president, presented a
Christmas gift to Rev. and
M1's. Shiveley and a poinsettls
to .Mrs. Mlna Lewis, teacher,
and Mrs. Bertha Spencer,
asalstsnt teacher. A gift exchange followed, closing with
prayer.
TWINS ARE BORN
Mr. and Mrs. carl Circle are
announcing the birth of their
sons, James Jarrod and Jason
Edward, born on Dec. 14, 1972
at the, Holze~ 'l,edlcal !Je~~ter.
They llre welcomed ~ya sister,
Patrece, two years old.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Yost and
paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Homer Circle. Great..
grandmothers are Mrs. Mattie
Y&lt;Jit and Mrs. Edward Foster.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cleland,
Mrs. Betty Sayre arid Mr. and
. Mrs. David Hensler attended a
famliy Christmas reunion at
the home of their parents, Mr.
and Mrs. William Wood at
Jacksonville.

Apple Grove
News, Events
By MRS. HERBERT ROUSH
Mrs, Gene Jewell and
children of Letart Route spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald Hayman.
Mr. and Mrs . Randall
Roberts were shopping in
Parkersburg Thursday.
Mrs. Junior Salser returned
to her horne from Veterans
Memorial Hospital Friday
after undergoing surgery.
Mr. and Mrs . Charles
Matthew of Colwnbus, Mr. and
Mrs . Junior Salser and son,
Mike, were dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Pearson
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs . Larry Jensen
and Miss Brenda Hawkins of
Salem spent Saturday evening
with Mr. and Mrs. Roy Pearson
at Dorcas.
John Day and George Fish of
Gallipolis were dinner guesbl
Sunday of Raymond Adams
and Mr. and Mrs. Marshall
Adams.
Weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Jim Roush were Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Jensen and Brenda

The tax books are now open for the
December or first half collection of the
1972 Real Estate· taxes. Also for
delinquent tax. Closing date will be
January 20, 1973.

...

'

..

Howard E. Frank
Meigs County Treasurer
'·

Circle meets

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

Bridal shower given

Pomerrt~ ~- ..

Pet'Dlal Notes

Ingels. The shower, h&lt;JIIed by
)Irs. JQieJlh Goot, f,fn. Ivan
Walker, Mrs. orval Wiles and
Mrs. Elmu' Wickham,' was
held In the social room of the
Pomeroy First Baptist Church. ·
Games were played with
pri:tes going to Miss Ma~n
Hennesy, Miss Kuhn and Mrs.
Edna Triplett. A cake
decorated in the ced and green
colors, coffee and tea ,.ere
served.
Attending besides those
named were Mrs. Robert
Kuhn, motber of .the .llrldeelect, Mrs. Harry Lee Bailey,
Miss Becky Triplett, , Miss
Debbie Stone, Mrs. George
Skinner, Mrs. EUen Couch,
Mrs. Leslie Price, Mrs.
William
Watson, Mrs. 'Albert
.
Smitli, . Mrs. Lillian Pierce,
Janelle and Robin Kuhn:
Presenting gifts were Mrs. T.
T. Shelton, Mn. Wickham,
Mrs. John Bentley, Mrs. James
Diehl and Jo Ellen, Mrs. Ar-thur Slusher, Mrs. Raymond
'
Jewell, Mrs. Wilson Carpenter,
Miss Brenda Edwards, Mrs.
· William Miller, Mrs- Clyde
Ingels, Mrs. William Barnha~,
Mrs. Bill Reed and Mrs. Oliver
Michael.
'

A 'red and green , color
prepared for shut4ns, and a $1
scheme waa carried out in the
gift was aent to Sam Ter·
Airman David Kuhn will decorations Saturday night for
zatpolous for his birthday.
return tomorrow to the tbe bridal shower of Miss Karla
· Arrangements were made ~ngley Air Force Base in· Kuhn, bride-elect of ;John
for the circle to . handle Virginia after being here to
hnspilality for the Sanborn visit his parents, the Rev, and
meeting on Jan. 2. Mrs. Arland Mrs. Robert Kuhn.
King had the lovdlngegift
Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Kelton
SONBORNDEC.zt
dedication using a rea
"It were In Huntington, W. Va.,
Mr. ani!' Mrs. Euge~ Smith
Is For Love." Devotions by Saturday night for a dinner and of Middleport announce the
Mrs. Ethel Hughes included dance at the GatE&gt;way Inn birth of a son, Dec. 20, at the
reading of Luke 2 and a given by B. F. Shaw Co. for Its Holzer Medical Center. 'The
meditation entitl~ "Gift for a employes in supervision at the Smiths. have four .o.ther
Lonely Father." The love gift Gavbiand AmQS Power Plants. children, Tim, John, Cindy and
offering was $21 and the
Miss Pam Buck of Racine
· Mark. Grandparents are Mr.
regular offering was $20.
· will be the dbiner guest tonight and ,Mrs. Lincoln Smith,
Relreshments were.aerved to . of Mrs. Ferne B. Hayman, Middleport, and Mr. and Mrs;
thOBe named and Mrs. Isabelle · East Letart;
William Fred Smith, Brad·
Winebrenner, Mrs. Elizabeth
Mrs. Be11lah Ewing has been bury'. Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Slavin, Miss Rhoda Hall, Mrs. In Huntington visiting her Durst of Middleport are great..
youngs~rs
Charles Edwards, · Mrs. sister, Mrs. Carl G. Hall, a gr811dparenta ,, .
Charles Simons, Tony Fowler, patient at the CabelDoor swags were made
Michl and Marsha Beth King. Huntingtorl Hospital. Mrs. Hilli
during a garden therapy
A contribution to the Otter· fell recently and (ractured her
session of the ~Ulland Friendly bein Home was made, $100
hip.
Gardeners Club with children was given to the general fund
ATTEND DINNER
of Mrs. Carol Wolfe's class at of the church, and a food
Mrs. Freda Duffy attended
the Meigs Conununity Class for basket was prepared for
the Christmas dinner at Craw's
the Retarded.
Melvina Davidson, a 'shut-in,
Steak House and a party
Mrs. Richard Fetty, Jr · and during the recent Christmas
following. at the home 'of Miss
Mrs. Bill Brown met with the
Sybil Ebersbach of the Third
children and assisted them in meeting of the Willing Workers
SOM'O,..;t~11
Friday Club. Her name was
Class of the Enterprise United
f I f J ',/'
constructing swags from pine, · Methodist Church.
unintentionally omitted from
Pine cones and. ribbon. At the
·
Twenty decorated cans of an earlier account of the party.
Meeting at the horne of Mrs.
Gt' ft wrappings' were judged homemade cookies and can
conclusion of the work sess't'on, Marjorie
Bowen,
a
report
on
•
refres hmen ts were served by the success of the holiday and prizes given to Carolyn d'1es were prepared and '
the club members.
bazaar was given. Mr•. Bowen Satterfield, CaroL McCullough, deliv ere d to shut-1ns an d
Beehtlet and Linda ·Riffle elder1Y res1denbl of tbe comgave devotions usm'•g "The Sarah
at the annua holiday party of
'ty
mum Tuesday by the Rock
Greatest Gift" as her . topic.
.
the Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of S ·
B tie H lth C1
.
There was group singing of · Beta Sigma Phi Sorority held pnngs e r ea
ub. '
'
·!
VISIT IN DAYTON
"Hark the Herald Angels Sing" Tuesday night at the RifOe
Meeting at the home of Mrs.
Mr.andMrs. Arthur Skinner lllld Mrs. Agnes Dixon read h
William Folmer, the treabl
were In , Dayton over the from St. Luke 2. Each member 0::.\onorable mention in gift were prepared along with trays
.
of fruit
for diabetic
weekend vis1' ting Mr. and Mrs. gave though•·
"' on the self· W'rappmgs
wen t to Barbara Mr
WIUlam
!me resldenbl.
d
•
contained
Christmas.
Prayer
s.
Fo
r
an
Mrs.
D•~ Farmer. Mrs. Farmer s
Logan. The cultural reports Scott Folmer served refreshbirthday was observed.
was by Mrs. Beulah utterbach. were given by Doris Ewing, ments.
Mrs. Mlldi'ed Mitch donated "When Joy Came" and Janet
Present to assist with the
lbe wonder box which was won Pickens, "~eople."
. project were Mrs. At:Ue Abbott,
Hawkins of Salem.
by Mrs. Bowen. Pictures of the
Mrs. Rtffle, Mrs. M~· Mrs. Hugh Bearhs, Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Lowen Taylor group were taken. Atl!!nding Cullough and ~artha McPhatl Harold Blackston, Mrs. James
and children of Radnor were besides those named were Mrs. were hQitesaes for the party. Conkle, Mrs. Fred Goegleln,
recentvisltors of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Frick, Mrs. Beatrice Attending besides those named Mrs. William Crueser, Mrs.
Ll,lrry O'Brien and children. Buck, Mrs. Willard Wilson, wer~ Mrs. A. R. Knight, Louis Grueser, Mrs. Welby
Mrs. June Wickersham and Mrs. Eldon Weeks, Miss Freda sponsor, Carol Adams, Becky Whaley, Mrs. William Radsons, Tim and Jeff, ~nd Mrs. Lelving, Mrs. Mary Bowen, Anderson, Susan. Baer, Connie ford, Mrs. Gladys Morgan.
Ferne B. ·Hayman were Mrs. Ethel Smith, Mrs. Mabel ·Bailey, Phylhs Bennett,
weekend guests of· Mr. and Moore, Mrs. Delores Will and Debbie Buck, Lynn Daniels,
Mrs. Don Hodge at Columbus Patty Edwards.
Jeannie Ebersbach, Debbie
' .
and did some Christmas
Finlaw, Vikki Gloeckner,
ON DEAN'S LIST
Desk Model, 6x6 Inches, genuine walnut wtth
shopping.
Charlotte Hanning, Darla
Mary Lou King, daughter of
gold
trim. Clock contains 1 Silver Dollar, 1
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Fox and
Hawley, Kathy King, Sandra Mr. and Mrs. Virgil King,
Half Dollar, 2 Quarters, 8 Dimes- all Sliver..
son, David were recent
Korn, J.ynn Kitchen, Beverly Pomeroy Route 2, has been
and uncirculated. This clock contains a. flll,ly·
weekend guests of 'Mr. ·and
.
Long, Karen McGraw, Sandra named to the dean's list for the
guaranteed
battery operated movement.
Mrs: Ray RusseU at Newark. · Trays of cookies ~nd candies Sargent, Linda Sauvage, !aU term at Mount Vernon
Mr. and Mrs. Don·BeU and 1 for shut-ins were prepared Edwina Scott Jennifer Sheets N'va~,fMl.. Co!!!'uwp,t _.Mount
daughter, Lorna, spent a Tuesday nighl at a meeting \lt . Karen $taruJ Marilyn Swan". el'1\~·8hlo. 'f.~ ,named -to 1 11 '~ ; ,
.reeent weekend with Dr. and the Lole Joy Circle of the B. H. Bessie Sylve~ter Charlo it~ thj! dean s list, a stpdent must
Mrs. Earl Grimm at Colurn- Sanborn Missionary Society, Taunton Texanna 'weD Edith have a grade of at least 3.3 of a
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
.
bus.
Middleportth Fth'rst Bfaptist Zirkle, ~nd Sue Zirkle. '
possible four point.
Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Hill , Church, at e orne o Mrs.
Mrs. Dolly Wolfe .visited St. Dale Walburn .
Clair Hill and Mrs. Isabella
Mrs . W~lburn gave the
Carnahan at Holzer Medical · Christmas story and a poem
Center
"Christmas As I Remember."
Butch Ables of Indianapolis, Plans were made for the Circle
Ind., spent the weekend with to present the program at the
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Jan. 2 meeting of the Sanborn
Ables,
'
Society. Mrs. Manning Kloes
Art Hili of Moorehead presided at the meeting W_Jth
, College at Moorehead, Ky., and Mrs. Bert Bodimer ~onducting
Mrs. Debbie Roush are the love gift dedication. A
spending their Christmas de~rt course was served by
vacations at home Artwithll'.r. the nstess.
and Mrs. Dallas Hill and
Debbie of Rio Grande College
with her family, Marshall
Roush and son, Joey.
The Ladies Aid of the EnMr. and Mrs. Wiley Ours of
terprise
United Methodist
Racine Route spent Sunday
afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Church meeting last Thursday
at the church voled to donate
Roy Donohew.
Bill Wheeler is home for the $100 to the church lreasury and
holidays from Ohio State to purchase a fiourescent light
University with his parenbl, for the Sunday school room as
Mr. and Mrs. Alex Wheeler. a special holiday project.
Members quilted until noon
Mrs. Virgie Roush visited
and
then enjoyed a holiday
her_ father, Fred Shain, at
potluck and gift exchange. In
Racine Sunday.
Sunday guesbl of Mr. and the group were 'Mrs. Fred
Mrs. Jesse Anderson were Mr. Clark, Mrs. Beatrice Buck,
and Mrs. Leo Wiggington and Mrs. Mildred Mitch, Mrs. Anna
children of St. Albans, W. Va., Wilson, Mrs. Mabel Moore,
Mr. and Mrs. Everette Clark Mrs. Ethel Smith and Mrs .
and children, Sheila and Paul, Eldon Weeks.
of Cottageville.
Mrs. Benny Boggess and son,
'
Wayne, were dinner guests
Sunday of Mr. and Mrs.
Everette Ransom.
Jack Adams was returned
RACINE ...,. The Tri-M Club
home Saturday from Veterans
(Modern
Music Masters) of
Memorial· Hospital where he
had been a surgical patient. Southern High School went
caroling recently, entertaining
Jerry Johnson Jr., Bobby
Memorial ·
Johnson, Gene Shively, David at · Veterans
Kiser of Racine spent Sunday Hnspilal, the Children's Home,
with Mr. and Mrs, Robert Meigs County Infirmary and
Because natural gas has always been so inexpensive,
several
private
homes.
Smith and helped them do
there has never been a great urge to conserve iL
Following tbe caroling, tbe
some Christmas decorating.
·
Until now.
group was entertained with a
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Smith
Right now, there's just not enough natural gas
party at the home or their
received word that their son,
to
supply
aU the new demands for thiHieanest-burning fuel. ·
sponsor Mrs. John R. Lee,
Joe Derouin of Crafton, Pa., Racine.
Of course, as a gas cus!omer, you d~n't have to worry about getting
.
was engaged to Cecills (Sue)
the gas you need for the appliances now m yoUr home . .. or their replacements.
Refrealunenta were served to
Copar, daughter of Mr. and
But the shortage of natural gas, indeed, the shortage of ali clean -burning fuels, is becoming 1
Hope Bird, Della Cross, Denise
Mrs. William Copar of
a grave threat to our community's economic growth. More clean-burning gas is desperately needed.
CrQsl, Nancy Crow, Sharon
Millville, Pa. Tl1e wedding will
Not only to stimulate economic growth and provide more jobs, but simply to maintain current requirements.
Drake, Barbara Fisher, Cindy
lake place in May.
A healthy economy needs natural gas. And 8 healthy environment needs natural gas.
Gooch, Susie i:looch, Beverly
Mr. and Mrs. ROd Grimm of
Use ges wisely in your home and business. It's too valuable to waste.
Hatt, Elisa McMillan, Barbara
Racine were dinner guesta
And the gas you save, together with the new gas Columbia is
Neaae, Lee Ann Nease, Roma
Thuraday of Mr. and Mrs,
working hard to develop, can help ease the gas shortage.
Neaae, Stephanie Ord, Bob
MarahaU Adams.
Write to Columbia Gas for the free booklet:
Sayre, Pall)' Sayre, Jeannie
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Rouah
"30 Ways to Save."
.
Sellen, Elhln Stearns, Glenn
and son Roger have moved
Simpson, Cmnle Smith, JIU
G111 il fJI'RiOUI. pure energy .. • use it wisely.
from tbe Hanna Coal Company
Warner,
Cooldt Weddle,.Sandy
property to the Earl Adami
Winebrenner, Helen WilcOJ;eri,
farm on Adams Rd. Racine Rl.
Victle Wolfe and R. 'Thomas
2. The Rouah tslephme number
jjb;IUPI, cHpolllar, who Is
la247-al6t
Southern'• band dlnc~r.
Gifts of money will be sent to
both the Meigs County
Chlldrens' Horne and the Infirrnsr).-by the Elecla Circle of
the B. H. Sanborn Society of the
Middleport First Baptist
Church.
PVT. JUS'nl8
· Meeting Tuesday nighlat the
PVT. JOHN R. Justus, son home of Mrs. Tony Fowler, the
of. Marie DIVtetro, Sy· , circle voted to send the gifts of
racuse Is spending a Ill- money to be used in someway
day Je~ve at bis home lrom to brighten the holiday at the
Fort Carson, Colorado.
two county homes. Trays of
cookies candy. and fruit were
'
· .
·

Swags made

by

Help given
by class

n ,

,

rnzes gtven .

bry

Decorated cans
given shut-ins

..

CHRISTMAS SUGGESTION

Coin Clock ..... .

. '39.95

Cookies, candy
treats prepared

u.s.

BAKfR :·:f~.~~IT.W,E ~~~~~

•

$100 Given to
church treasury

IS•

preciOUs,

Tri-M singers
went caroling

Use
. it

WISe

j

I

Benefits to Rise
With Livin-g Cost
(First in

d Series.)
"'--

By BRUCE BIOSSAT
NEA WuhiDJton
Correspolldent

Eastem

Local News
Charles Frecker and friend
recently, visited his grand,
niother; Mrs. Mary Reed.
· Cecila McCoy has returned
to college at Glenville.
M In
.
N 11
rs. ez ewe ' spent an
afternoon recently with Mrs.
MaryReed.
.
Mrs . Gladys Rector and
daughter of Mineral Wells
vislt(.d Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Gray.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Ji&gt;e Connally
visited Mr. and Mrs. A. C.
Woods at Belpre.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenny Frecker
and daughters and Raymond
· Hand went to Cleveland to visit
Mr, Frecker's sister, Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Boyle and family.

'
WASHINGTON - (NEA)
- The 1972 changes in · the
Social Security system were
the most sweeping In many
years. Their biggest goal was
to make the vast complex of
protective benefits largely
inf)alion-proof and keep it in
pa_ce with rising ·ear11lngs Rising earnings levels are
levels..o-:er the years. · . newly tied ~0 Suclal Security
A ~ertes of general cash In still a· thrrd way. Starting
~nefti Increases .from early Jan. 1, 1973, Social Security
1_970 through late 1972 have retirees may earn $2,100 a
lifted payment lev~ls by year (formerly $1,680) withr01,1ghly 50 per cent m that Qut any loss of retirement
Sunday dinner guests of Mr.
span. This has been a pres- benefits. And the \ amount
s~e game of . ·:catch-up" they may earn in a given and Mrs. Okey Connally were
wtth spir11llng livmg ~osts. month without such loss will his parenbl, Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Le3:ders -in C~ngress and in rise from $140 to $175. But Connally.
·
Soctal Securtty seem to these limits · too will ad- · Mrs. Sandra Massar, Diana
agree this phase! now has· vance as earnhigs levels and Chuck, were visiting her
ended.
climb. In other words, the parenbl, Mr. and Mrs. D.
From 1973 on, · so-called better the national earnings
"11utomatics" come into play level, the more a retiree' can · Boyles at Tuppers Plains.
in an effilrl to keep the bene- earn and .still get his allotMr. and Mrs. Mere! Camp- ,
bell of Smithville were recent
fit structure up··to date and ted benefits.
properly financed.
Th\ is one more Inter- visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Joe
The new law provides, of estin link between living Connally.
course, that henceforth So- costs d the Social SecurityMrs. Leota Massar and Mrs.
cia! Security cash benefits Medicare structure. The part Sandra Massar, Mr. and Mrs.
will be Increased in reason- of Medicare called medical Okey ConnaUy and Mr . and
ably close alignment with insurance, which lar11ely Mrs. Joe Connally were among
Increases in the cost of covers doctor bills , reqUires those calling at the White
living.
payment of monthly premiThe formula . calls for a urns by beneficiaries. These Funeral Home in Coolville to
comparison che&lt;!k of price have . been going up from pay respect to the late Charles
levels over a year's time, year to year in tandem with Larkins.
from one June quarter to the rising medical costs.
Pearl Koehler received a
next. If the index. has ris~n But from mid-1973 on, phone call froVJ his son, Airthree per cent or, more m government authorities will. man Randy Koehler, who is
tbat ~pan, there.n be . a not be allowed to increase sf&lt;ltioned at Keesler, Miss., Air
boost m Soctal the prem1urns
.
b y any per- Force Base.
· matching
·
;;ecurlty _benefits the follow- centage greater than that deMr. and Mrs. Sam Laird of
mg Jal!uary. If the price ad- creed for Social Security Parkersburg, Mr. and Mrs. Joe
vance IS less ~han three per cash benefits under the cost- Connally visited Dana McCain .
cent,
will _hold of-liv'ng provisions.
Mr. and Mrs. Okey Connally
steady.benefits
But the compariSons
will be made every year.
People at retirement age and son were yisiting Mr. and
Another . key automatic- who are qualified for Sucial Mrs. Gail McCain at CooiviUe
feature relates . to general Security benefits don't al- Sunday afternoon.
earnings levels. As these ways wish to retire at 65.
Mrs . Edna Summerfield
advance, and it is assumed ·Heretofore, if they kept on visited her daughter, Mrs.
they ·will go up roughi Y five their
working,
it' added
nothing
to M'ld
1 re d Caldweuand attended
ultimate
)lenefits.
From
per cent a year, there wil'
·
the United Methodist Church
be a comparable percentP
1973 forward, however, they S d
Tu
Pia '
increase in the maxir ..m can collect an extra one per un ay a1 ppers
ms.
Mrs. Herbert Parker, Mrs.
base from which WO!Kers' cent In · ~nefits for every
Social . Security tax.;s are year the:Y stay at work up to Roger Adams arid daughter,
taken each year.
age 72.
Lori, spent Thursday afternoon
This steady anticipated
FinaUy, beginning next with Mrs. Edna Summerfield.
-Sandra Massar
rise in the tax base, some of year, low-wage workers unit already scheduled and der Social Security for 30
some merely projected, is years can get a special
considered by the experts as minimum payment of $170 a
sufficient assurance of con- month ($225 a couple) . But
stantly enlarging funds to fi- the payment drops S8.50 (per
month) for each . year less ' DaleWeish"Jr. caUed on Mr.
ag~t a
·IU_,t 111an ._ lilt" t1141 regular o~u... M
d_.,.,.,,. .ivrlQ .•m.•'""
' liiWl . .""' . 0 f ... 50 is reached •nu I'll : ~ wayne uncKJes ' a
. also does ca
r a ' scale of m1mmum ovx•
t ' "'Uii
&lt;''""
tax RATE increases, but
ENTERPRISE ASSN .)
recen even g.
Mrs . Nelsel Weatherman
these
are
mostly
intended,
to
returned
home from O'Bieness
cover the part of Social

-T
·· uppers
- - - PIaiDS
•
Society News ·

~iiji

t••ws••m

(NEXT: New Benefits
for widows.)

Security which finances
Medicare's hospital insurance protection.

I~---------------------------,
11-.t Social Security Book
.
I P.O.
(~AMI Of ~IWSPAPil)
.
•
.
lOX &lt;II, RADIO CITY STATION
I

DIPARTMI~T

/oi

•

I HIW YOU, H.Y. 10011
I Sood poolpoid
I sus oach.. Enclo11d lo

' .
,~~ """

book(o).

-- - ·
-z:::~.c-;;:

I Mokt chtcl or ,..., order poyob!e to
I "Bio11o1 Boot" J.l/ow 3
for dolirorr.

•Hk•

·=~

I1 H~• --------------------------~

Addrm --------------------------

1. City - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1 Slalo
Zip - - -

l------------------------~--

Memorial H~pltal In Athens
where she spent several days
after suffering a stroke.
Mrs . Russell Spencer of
Chester called on Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne Brickles Saturday
afternoon.
Mrs. Eleanor Boyles went
witn the Bible Study group of
the Chester Methodist Church
to the Elmwood Nursing Home
Sunday and put on a small
program. She was later a
dinner guest of Mr. and Mrs.
Purley Karr.

Hocking Tech .expanding cul'riculum
NELSONVILLE ...:. Hocking
Technical College here will
offer part-time day and
evening classes in January.
Day·lime registration will be
held January 2, classes will
resume January 3. Evening
registration will be held
Jan. 3rd and 4th, from 6 to 9.
Classes will resume the week
of January 8.
The daytime schedule in·
eludes: Hotel-Motel Operation,
Intcoductlon to Busineas, Hotel
Management I, Survey of
Data, Accounting I, ~taU
Store Operation, Ststiatical
Quality Conlrol (Induatrial),
Seminar
in
Induatrial
· Problems, Buic Metal, In·
dustrlal Supervision. North

1',uppers Plains
Society News

American Wildlife I, Ohio
Trees, Fish Management,
Juvenile Delinquency, and
Pollee Administration,
The Evening schedule offers
Accoun ling II, PsYchology II,
Communications 11, Sociology,
Political Science, Cobol IB,
Shorthand I, Economicil I &amp; 11,
Crlminalistics II, Advance
Pollee Photography, Drug
Abuse, Laws of Search &amp;
Seizure, and Tu:ldermy I &amp; II.
Hocking Technical College Is
a state-supported institution

Stals
Th_ursday

governed by the Ohio Board of
Regenbl. All courses are also
approved by the Veterans'
Administration . Eligible
veterans may draw bene!!Is for
this program.
Inquiries should be directed
to the Admissions Office or Mr.
Roy Palmer, Director of Adult
Continuing Education, Hocking
Technical College, Route 1,
Nelsonville, Ohio 45764,
telephone, 753-3514. Offices are
open at Hocking Technical
College,from 8a.m. untll9 p.m,

:1&gt;'\ll
~~~~'~"''!:•, ~~ ~~"~»~' ·~~,:Wi'IJ.•' ,'l'J;~, lt'\1,_.,,~~~~ 11~''-rJ,·
tf&gt;\..-,;_.. ,1.1~~~ ~~'7\~ .r~\1"'a~ ;-.~~~;~\ ,, '"I·~Wfl.\~~~ ~'),~

Any Bedroom Suite
In Stock Now •••

dinner .
Mr. and Mrs. Dinamore
Bo7la took Ilia ..... ID the
111port at ~ · where
abe lOOk a plane ID her bome in
Orand Blanc, Mlc:h., after
Wieral daJI villi ,with ,the

Excellent Mltction, come and see! Open
every night until I: 30.

Cuts!
Free
Parki
. ng
;

DftfDTBUY5··

~-­

T'·

OUR E_NTIRE STOCK REDUCED!

WOMENS

Big Savings Here
LINED VINYLS

DUSTERS

.WOMENS
. GLOVES

~ She re.ally . wears these- so gill her with a new duster.
~ - select from solids, Pfints, checks, stripes, etc.
Every on&amp; reduced 1o two low sale priCes for lilte
shoppers.R

'

Regular $3.94

egular
$4.94 an.d $5.94

$299

$399

AND

Actual $7.95 Value! Artificial

n :oo Value.
Warm
her
hands with this '

smart,

pensive gill for
under Ihe tree.

Girls and Womens

••

PR.
,·

. For$

$4,87
Va .lue

00

Pair

SALI or·

BONUS BUY

Regular 10c

TEENS AND WOMENS

CANDY .

~(""M,

·BA:RS ~:":·1(· .

All your favorites. Hersheys, Clarks,
Mounds , Almond Joy, etc. - Gel the

Values Ia 56.94 . No wale corduroy, polyester,

families candy needs now at

denims, brushed denims. Sizes 8 to 18 ilnd 32
to 44. See these, you ' ll want several pair. 4

Shopper's Marl. SAVE CASH .

Day Sale!

LIMIT 45 BARS!
PRICE IN

$.

FOR

00

EFFECT

THURSDAY
4

P.M.

66
PAIR

THRU
SUNDAY!

NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY!

50%
off

I

Pi\
Our Everyday Stock . "Your Caprice Brand
If you have worn 11 Your Caprice~~ Panty Hose - you
know how !hey fit - IT you hve nol , now fs the
opportunny TO try them. Sheer, se1m1ess SfTefch tn
four color tones. Save 61c p11ir. Great gift items.

10 inch J.._
Size ~Jf

EJIER YTHING GOES!
Dolls, friction cars, stuffed
animals, games, puzzles, etc. It's
our annual cleanup of a II toys - at
a price you expect after Christmas. Come take them away - at
tremendous savings.

Pity
Kind

1 PRICE
2
2 Sizes -

Boxer Style!
Sizes 4 To 7
Stripes and Solids

A$2.44 Value!
TEFLON II
• COLORED

·BOYS
PANTS

FRY
PAN'

Regular $1.67

Red-Green-Gold
While
They
Last!.

REGULAR 12c

Values To 35c

$ 66

Each

e Pcint Plan . .

one fih 7 to

9 other 9 to 11 .
lrrevut.rs of • wtll
known $1 .00 broncf',

Mason Fumlture

Bo¥111'.

·

Acrylic orion and nylon bltncl. Soft,
fully washoble. Stretches to Ill lltt
10 to 13. 1 colors.

branches, s~ts up easily, box
for storage .

Of

A DISCO \.I NT

OOARTM£NT STOtt!
'

~

MENS ORLON
DRESS SOCKS

PR .

w: Ya.

.

·

Our Stock!

HERES A REAL
STOCKING STUFFER

EVER
NIGHT
TILL

If Perfect You Would Pay 79' Pair

GIRLS STRETCH NYLON

Dtii'III'Y In nmt for Olrlstmas
m-5592
Hermen Grift
Mason,

inex-

lri

Nol many to sell- but even If
yoo are thinking of next year
-now is the lime to !.vy. Full

Returns

20%0FF

7.
7

f:N

ONE SIZE FITS ALL

Whatever
Is
Left

SCOTCH
PINE
•
4,FT. CHRISTMAS
TREE

No

WY41oiidays
SPECIAL!

By Mn. E!el)'ll8rickl~
Sunday School attendance
was 47 and offering wu '18.01.
Worship attendance was 25 and
offering $31.$1.
Sgt. and Mn. Roger Coe and
daughter c1 South carolina are
spending a weekend here wltb
het puenll, Mr. and Mrs. Guy
Spencer.
Mr. and Mrs. ~II Archer
of Lottrldge entertained their
!Iunday School cia• with •
dinner at their home Saturday
e1ening. Mn. Dlnamore'
- - and cJausbler, Mn.
J1icnnce Spencer atlended the

4 PM!
Deep
Price

PR.

• Mal, w. Ya.
• Sil't'er Plaia
PRICES Ill EfFtCI'
TODAY-A PMI
Open Till 9 Every

I

�.

I

. 10-Tile Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Dec. 21, 1972

.

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

~

WAI'II A~.
INFORMATION
~EADLINES

.S P.M. Day Before PublicatiOn
Mqnday Deadline 9 a.m.

5

rHE CLUB af Racine will be WANTE.D- A black male cat;
phone. 843-2641 .
open Sunday, December 24th
for Christmas Oinne·r under
. 12-19-3fc

.
no · Shooflng

Clncelletlon- Corrections . . new manageme:nt ; · meals
Will b•acupt~ ufltll9 a.m. for
served till 6 p.m.; closed

.

ADJOINING lots
In
Harrisonville, ne•f to school,
each lot 120ft. deep with 100
ff . frontage on .Rt. 143; price
S990 each lof; ferms S100

Business

GOING OUT·
OF BUSINESS ;

PWMBING
HEATING

Chase Hdwe. Co.
.

~==================:,

"HE IL"

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

and to lhe atlorney or attorneys
represenllng any of the
Case No , 20824
Est.a te of Laura L~ltheit , aforemenfloned persons:
Charles Hyatl, Deceased ,
Deceased. .
Notice Is hereby giVen tha_t R.acine, Ohio R. D.. sutton
Kathryn Peters, of Box 17, · Township, No. 20702.
You are hereby notified lhat .
Arcadia, Oh~o. has been duty
appointed Adm lnistratriK of the tlie 1 , Inventory
and
Ap Esta1e of \,.aura Leifheit, pro sement Of the esfale Of the

deceased, late of

Syracuse,

aforementioned, deceased, late

of said county, was filed In this
Court. Said Inventory and
will
ppralsement
hAearlng
before this
Courtbeon for
the
2nd
day
of
January,
191 3, at
Dated this 5th day of 10:00 o'clock A.M.
December 1912.
Manning o . Webster. , Any person desiring to me
Judge, exceptions thereto must file

Meigs County , Ohio.
Creditors are required to file
their claims with said fidUc iary
within four months .

Common

1

Pleas
Court,
Probate Division
Meigs County, Ohio

(12) 7, 14, 21, Jt

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

-Furnace Controls
HUMIDIF·IERS
H0t· Wa ter Heaters
PI

um 1ng
Electrical Work

ARNQLD

BROTHERS

them at least five days prior to

the ~ate sef for hearing .

992·2448

Given under my hand and

~7"/;~~;~We~01'f,'{_ this

Pomeroy, 0.

lBth day
Manning D. WebSier

Judge and ex .offlclo Clerk

HELP WANTED
WANTED, male Sociai·Securlty
or Old Aoe pensioner to help

of said Court

b'

Help

WI d
an e

wrecked front -end; phone 992- - - - - - - - - - . , -

(12 )

21,

28 , 21

6732.

12. 19.31 P STARCRAFT CHRISTMAS
SALE . 24'7 WS 54892
for $3892; 22'7 $4475 for
1967 FURY Ill, 4 door, 383
,
,
WS
$3954
53579
engine, good condition, ssoo; for $3 16520
,. 718•7 ws 53499
Freddie Thabel, Mason, W.
va .; phone 773-5651.
for $2799; self contained,
sleeps six with convertori

same high diSCOUnf on fold ."

downs; some

used

unitsi

ea

side

Unico

1

ta e

From th&lt;.-largest Tro•i-k
Bulldozer Rad)ator lo the
Small9st Heater Core.
Nathan Biggs
R~diator Specialist

.SMUI:LN.ELSQN i
MOTORS.L.-,romeriif
INC.
H1-2174

;

~

i
i'

•

.-ll--~--1 ~

~UNOREOS"

OF

WJMS AN I&gt; POPS
8U'I' RAZORS ...

...AND ON t&gt;ECE/11/IER 26,

WUN~S OF BEARDED '10UNG

DUI&gt;ES RETURN THEM

SPEND TIME
SAVES's

EXPERT
'Wheel Alignment
'5.55

· J(UHL'S
BARGAIN CENTER .
Rl. 7 "at caution light"
TUPPERS PLAINS
l,lsed ,furniture, appliances.
C)ean . &amp; guaranteed.
. Ne.W FURNITURE
Sofa Beds &amp; Recliners.

~.

On Most A~erica~ Car."'

ANO'itlU, Mc6LUT10N, ARE.

' -GUARANtEED-;
·
Phon&lt;:! 992·2094

"GUILT'r' 01= O.AIMING TI-\ERE.'S
AN't'Tl-IING THIS SIDE OF HEA\/EN

AS DB.ICJOOS AS A CSINUIN£
IWAA\CJ&amp; Aa.A&amp;AMMUS !!

·Pomerov Home &amp; Auto

Discount priced .

LAYAWAY FOR XMAS
Open to 7; closed Mondays

Reai ·Estate For Sale

OpeniTiiS
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main. Pomeroy, 0 .
- . --··-· . - '
SEE US FOR: Awnings, storm
doors and windows, carports,
marquees, aluminum siding
and railing. A. Jacob, sales
representative. For free
estimates, phone Charles
Lisle, .Syracuse, V. V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
3-2-ttc
-B-AC_K_H-:-0-E_A_N_D_D-:-0-ZE-R:-w-on:.
Septic tanks Installed. George
I Bllll Pullins. Phone 992."2478.
·
4·25-Hc

I

WINNIE WINKLE
\\W .

-•

E LNA and White Sewing
camp Conley starcraff Sales, HOUSE FOR SALE, 114 Brick Ph-STORY, 2-bedroom brick
Machines ... service on all
•
Rt.62 N. ofPoint Pleasant, w.
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio; brick house In Middleport. Carmakes. Reasonable rates.
Va., behind Red Carpet Inn ,·
excellent
The Sewing Center, Mid ·
peted, paneled. Kitchen and
1house,
I' 3 bedrooms,
1
1
h 1 d
"Air Conditioners
phone 675-5384.
oca •on, c ose o sc oo an
dining room tiled. Complete
dleport, Ohio.
, Awnings
12.1 5.6tc city; contact Lou Osborne or · with drapes, $6.500. Call 992·
11-16-Hc
call 992-5898."
346S.
·· ·Underpinning
·NOW WREC.KING the former
11 -26-tfc
G &amp; E APPLIANCE Repair;
repair of all laundry equip,
Epple ' s
Grocery · .Store
Complete mQblle hQm•' I building In Pomeroy. All t
ment,
refrlgerallon equip·
' service ...... plus giganflc1' ;
kinds of building materials
menf and house wiring; call
'display of mobile homes
for sale on lhe job including 2.
614-992-6050.
;ijlwavs avallable-. at ...
and 3 in. heavy material,
11-24-~0tp
CLELAND

Mobile Homes for Sale

-

-==========:.....,

MILLER
MO.BJLE HOMES

sheeting

and

cherry

stair

railing; call 992-5946 or ~82·
3219.
11 -10-lfc

REALTY
6G8 E. M~in
Pomeroy

Jmi;~Wlbl· a~at""

For ·sale

We talk to you
like a person.

Virgil B.
Teaford, Sr.
Broker

. AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Call 9922966.

110 Mechanic St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

6-15-tfc
DOZER and back hoe work,
ponds and septic tanks, dll·
chlng service; lop soli, fill
dirt, limestone; B&amp;K Ex·
cavatlng. Phone 992-5367,
Dick Karr, Jr.
9-1-lfc

ALL NEW LISTINGS
3 BEDROOMS - With
closets, bath, electric heat
!Ohio Power Co.). Copper
plumbing, paneling and
carpeting, Front porch, full
~~-.~-lf_G_E_\,-~-~~-M-5-ACR::-Lil-. ~~
basement, '!l'{l drilled well. • ~-=-$}Near Rutlard. S2Q,500.oq,
ED, - REIIAIIU:O. MIUER
SANITATION, . STEWART,
SCHULTZ MJ.:$J.ME
12x
dro
gas
OHtq. PHONE 662-3035.
force
r
, patio
·
10.4-Hc
Drilled well ·
PAPER Hanging and painting;
on nice lot, near Rutland.
Arthur Musser, phone 742·
NEW HOME
5223.
4 BEDROOMS -'IV, baths,"
12-12-Jotp
large kitchen with electric
range. All electric on large
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
lot in the country. Olly
service, all makes. 992-2284.
521,000.00.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
AutHorized Si~ger Sales and
MOBILE HOME .
Service. We Sharpen Scissors .
8x45--2 bedrooms, bath, oil
3-29-Hc
·
furnace. Lot 200x250. Asking
only $3,000.00.
R EADY· MIX
CONCRETE
NEW HOUSE ,
delivered right to your
9 ROOMS- 5 bedrooms, w,
project. Fast and easy. Free
baths, all electric. Full
estimates, Phone 992-3284.
Goeg1ein Ready-Mix Co .,
basement with garage and
Middleport, Ohio.
,
roc. room. Copper plumbing,
6-30-tfc
beautiful kitchen wllh
- ----:-:-:-:
dining. You'll need a real job
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
tO support this one.
REASONABLE rates. Ph. 4.46·
NEW HOUSE
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell,
FIVE POINTS AREA - 3
Owner &amp; Operator.
bedrooms, bath, nice kit5-12-tfc

6x1~e.

.

-·

Complete Service
Phone 949·3821
Racine, Ohio
Crill Bradford

'

UTl'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

W1l Y'Rf '«lU
SCAAtD T' TALl&lt;
lJ ME.., WEI!JIE?

--

~-

SOMElHIN' I ·
DfD ..·ORBAIOf

Want to save time and
money In · buying your new
home, then see us, now.

ACROSS

1. Kingly
6. Bit
10. Actress
Ryan .
11. Neophyte
12. Legend·
ary film
star
(2 wds.)
U.Store
bargain
15. With32

S-1-Hc

Across,

-----~

WILL CUT or tdm ·,rees,
reasonable. Also clean
basements, attics and cell
Phone 949-3221.

HELEN L. TEAFORD,
ASSOCIATE
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS
992-33l5

JI&amp;WID~;&amp;.J
.... .. ,::::!!:!
.,,, {\ " "'\ I .-J
' d '" c
'" '''

by THOMAS JOSEPH

OICK .TRACY

." ..
I J
~

.

-.)'

•' 0.

' 0v

l)

'

.. .

v

v

supposed
. remark by
12 Across
· (3 wds.)
19. Tease
2Z.San-,
Italy
23. Kind or
hatch
25.Jellled

dish
27. Silk.
fabric

2. Follow
the "prim·

Ut~~&lt;ramb1ethese f&lt;Nr Jumbl&lt;~,
one letter to ea(h ~quare, to
form four ordinary wordo,

rose path"

3.Wow!
4. Tiny
tunneler
5. Minimal
6. Perplexed
(3 wds.)
7. Phoenician port
&amp;.Eye

9. Cow talk
13. Sluice,
e.g.
15. Choleric
16. German
river
17. Sufficient
18. Waste
fiber
19. Proportion
Zt. Of the
bees

ESSOU

Yellerdsy's Aaiwer
21. Sort
Z4.Summon
26. Break·
front,
e.a.
29. Conduce

33.Famed
musk·
eteer
34. Free
ticket

25. Obtain
38.Carmen
M.,_..
37. Table
aerap
38. Coal
• by·
product.
39. Greek
letter
U . Rumanlan

tiNJOAD~

] I

HISVA/,

cotn

!

J

K

Now onanatlho dreW!eUin

1 toounetw.l
form tho ....,m. a .....
b71hoabofe-.

A(IIIIIIII.l
(.U. ... ,.

• . .,

glance
(know

immedi·

ately)
(2 wds.)
'SO. An;mias
31: Before
32. See15

'
THE
ACT_ION IS

00 1{0() lil&gt;INT 'TO
6ET U~ 01t 5HOIJLO
I JIIST 5HOVE. IT

ACI'OSI

(2wds.)
34. Uquid
measure
l5, 1932 film
starring
12 AcrOSB
(2 wds.)
41. Alleviate
42. ~peechify
f3. Trial run
f-1. Strasgler

PUBLIC AUCTION
SATURDAY, DEC. 23
STARTING 12 NOON
IN A HEATED BUILDING

UNDER ~E sNoW?

DOWN'

1. Oil-well
apparatus
'

1973 CHEVY TRUCKS BADY
'·

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE.:.. Here's how to
AXYDLBAAXR
II L o·N G F E L L 0 1f

to GO

112 Ton Pickups, 6 cyl. &amp; acyl.
3/4 Ton Pickups- ¥4 Ton 4-wheell)rlve

work

It:

One letter aimply stands for onother. In this ll(llple A Is
\lied tor the three L'a, X for the two O's, et&lt;. Slnale !etten,
apostrophes, the lenath and formaUon of the words are 111
hints. Eaeh day the eode !etten are diluent.

El Camino

Items Too Numerous to Mention

CIYPTOQUOTES
SRKE QMF liRUH

DELL'S DOLLAR SAVER

NMH ·VBZN FZ VR1

GF KFN IKFQ KFQ NF QCRO BN DO . -

OWNERS

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

305 2nd Ave.
'
Middleport
Auctioneer: 'Bradford Auction Co.
·
Not Responsible for Accidents

I I KJ

28.-a

GO WHERE

Christmas TQys
Furniture - Glassware
Lamps - Gift Items
Pictures - Radios
New and Used Furniture

lnnn

-c. ---BRADFORD, Auctioneer

chen. gas furnace. Over an

acre of land. with plains
water . A,sklng $18,000.00.

WMP0/1390

WE'LL
SEND BRIGHT,
There was an attendance of
YOUNG
MEN TO SCHOOL
18 at the annual Grange
FOR RADAR JOBS IN
Cbristmas program, held In the
EUROPE . If you 'd like fo live
and work In Europe, there 's
Grange Hall Saturday evening,
an exciting job walling for
Dec. 16. Mary Carr, lecturer,
you with loday's Army. You 'll
had the program. There was a
learn to supervise and control
ground surveillance radar
tree, a Santa, a treat, and a gift
units . With full pay while
exchange.
you're
in school. And lots of
block.
·
other benefll$. Like 30 days
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Swartz
paid vacaflon a year. If you're
Bidd er lo subm 11 del aile d
and family of Williarruttown, speci
ficat ion s of equ i pment
looking for fhls kind of
·
W.Va., visited his parents, Mr. off ered .
challenge and e.cllement,
A deale r 's r epresentativ e
Today's Army wants to join
and Mrs. Hobart Swartz, shall
provide Instr uctions in th e
you. For complete details call
proper opera tions and mainSunday afternoon.
collecl
SS G. Clark 593·3022.
ce, s t the t ime of delivery .
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Kuhn and tenan
12-20.6fc
One com plete set of parts,
family of Uttle Hocking, 0 ., ser vice , repair and operator 's
man vat sha ll be provided with Wanted To Buy
vlalted her parents, Mr. and each
un il .
The
dealer mnd manufacturer
Mra. Millard Swartz, Mr. and
shall pr.ov Ide a one year OLD Furnltu"re, oak tables,
Mra. Terry Swartz and Sandra warranty for the grader and organs, dishes, clocks, brass
supplied . The ~beds, or complete households.
~ Mandie Williams Sunday altachments
Write M. o. Miller, Rt. 4,
warrantv period shall not limit
lfternoon; and all attended the operating h~urs .
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271.
Dealers
to
furnish
their
own
6-28-lfc
church Chriltmas program bid fo.rms . The front of the en ·
velope enclosing the bids must "''O;o;L;;O.,.-,"'Fu
Mre.
=r=n'-11-ur-e-,-oa-k--labl;s,
be marked " Motor Grader
organs, dishes, clocks, brass
1/or. and Mrs, Clarence Bid ."
beds, or complete households
The County Comrnlssioners
Hender10n, Mr. and Mrs. may
Write M. D. Miller, Rf. 4;
accept ttle lowest bid or
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271.
Dmd WlJllama and Aaron, Mr. select the best bid tor the fn .
tended
purpose,
~nd
reserve
the
_. Mn. Clair li'ollrod, Steve rlgtlt to reject anv or all b ids, or - - - -=---6...:..
·28-ffc
at Katby, lttended the annual any pari !hereof.
WANT-EO
Old upright
pianos, grand pianos, old
fllnUy get~o.gether for
BOARD OF COUNTY
pump organs. Any condition.
COMMISSIONERS
Cllrlllmaa 111 tbe heine of tl1eir
Payl'!ll SlO each. Write giving
IIIOihtr, Edith Harper, at CLERK MARTHA CHAMBERS,
dlrect•ons. Witten Plano Co.,
Bo• 118, Sardis,. Ohio 439# .
..... Plalnl &amp;lnday, Dec.
12·15-6fp
It,
{12) ]A, ~I, 2t

~

ELVINEY

5232.

ae

Social Notes

Heater and defroster.
Foot accelerator . 1
Oecelerlltor .
A ll hydraulic conl rols or all
hyd ra ulic ov er mechanics.
Pow er steeri ng .
Hour meter .
Oil clu tch.
24 ~oil electr ic sys tem .
Tran sm iss ion - 6F . . .t1R.
Pa int ed Omaha Orange,
Trade in ooe 1964 Model
LW666 Grader 1 without push

GO LOOK AG 'IN,

•

.t.ozer &amp; End i&lt;Yder wk; ,
ponds, baseme.nt, ~ land· .
scaping. we have 2 size•
11ozen, 2 sizt loaders. Work
dona b~ ho.'t' or c:ontr1ct• .
·Free E"stimites. We also ..
haul fill dirt, top soil. Dump 1
trucks a.nd tow-boy for hire.
See Bob ·or Roger Joffers,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3525
alter 7 p.m. or phone 992-

freezer

Alfred

15.

I'M WORE TO A FRA"21LE, TETCHEO IN TH' HAlO,
ELVINE'I·· I JEST DUG UP LOWEE1.'1 .. I JEST
THAT OCSTUMP INTH'
SEEN SNUFFY LEANIN'
FRONT
ON IT

Servic·e~,

HOUSE In Long Bottom, phone
985-3529. .
refrigerator, one year
6·11-Hc
old, like new; 3 electric
heaters. and one pair large
table lamps; can be seen al 8 ROOM house and bath; nice
George Holler Farm, Miners- large lot, natural gas, built-In
cabinets In kitchen, close to
ville.
station In Bradbury,
12·19-3tc radio
Phone 992-2602.
R I E$ I F01 S I
12-21-2otp
by

WOMAN to slay with elderly.
ambulalory lady ; may live 1n
Contact Mrs. Ed J. Smith,
or go home nlghls; contacl
1220 Washington Blvd.
phone 992-2853.
COAL, Limestone, Excelsior
Floyd Cummins, phone 247· 423-7521
BELPRE, D.
12-21 -Jfc
Sail Works, E. Main St.,:
2101
.
NOTICE ON FILING
· 11• LEVEL ACRES
12·19-31c ,
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3891 .
OF INVENTORY
HARRISONVILLE
4-12-lfc
AND APPRAISEifENT
1970 MOBILE home, 12 x 44, .- - -- - - - - , Corner ~creage . Lovely
The Stafe of Qhio, Meigs - - - - - - - - PLUMBING and Heating man,
·$4,000. Phone 773-5429 or 992· ·DUE TO lay-off, 8 track stereo older home. 3 or 4 B.R., 1112
County. Probate Court
experienced; if not ex 500,1. ·
in walnut console ; pay baths, kitchen has dining
To the Executor of the estate ;
to such of the following as are
perlenced and honest, do not :-;-;;-:---;--;-;-~-;;--""1...,2-:17·61p
balance of $98.80 or pay $8 P,er bar, loads of upper &amp; base
residents of the Stat8' of Ohio,
apply; phone 992-2511 or 992·
fh h
992 5331
cabinets, dining R. Utility
3918.
CASH- paid for all makes and
mon ; P one
·
·
viz : - the survlvJng spouse, the
next of kin, the benef iciaries
12-6-ffc
models of mobile homes . · ~
'
12·12-tfc space, ....,enclosed SUIJ. porch.
Under the will : an·d to. the at
· + ' jA
"
,
• .1
•
Phone area code 614-423-9531.
IW. toW. c~r~n~ fJ I floor,
orney '"f!t.tt.l'OI{ 1 "'~ ettorney
ta~en In deluxe 'Zig-Zag
on represen'tMg
" any ~. of
the Y~U~EEM~~b GL~~~Af~~~ t
}~ t ,.,
.~tM!' 4-13-lfc JUST
sewing
machine.
This qwn water 'YII~W -' Large
frame building facing back
Dec. 17 was 49, the offering aforementioned l)&amp;rsons :
machine
darns,
em ·
TURBET REPAIR JOB IN 1970 MOBILE home, like new,
Elizabeth Wise Allman ,
st.
40x70. THIS you MUST
broid.
e
rles,
makes
butS21.88. Attendance at worship Middleport, Ohio , Sal isbury EUROPE GUARANTEED . . with air-conditioner, washer;
tonholes,
all
without
atSEE.
S2J.SOO.
Here's an opportunity to live
lot may be rented ; phone 985·
service was 24, the offering Township , No. 20803 .
tachments;
pay
balance
of
OVER 1 ACRE
You are hereby notified thai
and work In Europe. At a job
4248.
$18.10. Rev. Lehman spoke the · Inventory and Ap $38.50 or pay $6 per month; JUST OFF RT. 7 - NICE
lhat's as challenging as you
12-.1S-61p
i sement ot the estate of I he
phone 992-5331.
!run Isaiah 9:2-7 "For Unto Us pra
want it fo be . You 'll learn lo
MOBILE HOME," 3 B.R.,
eforementioned, deceased , late
12-12-tfc bath, ·utility space, ••tended
operate
and
perform
mainA Cbild Is Born".
of said County. was flied In this
tenance on the revolving For Sale
Said InventOry and
SINGER Automatic sewing L.R., beautiful kitc~en . ALL
The annual Christmas Court.
Appra i sement will be tor · turret and weapons . And
machine. Like new In walnut SET UP. 12x60. ASKING
you ' ll gef · 30 days paid 1964 CHEVROLET Convertible
)X'ogram of the church was hearing before this Court on the
cabinet. Makes design stit- JUST $7,500 .00 COMPLETE .
Impala, 3 ,SPeed ; $195 . 16
day Of January , 1973, at
vacation a year to see a lillie
well attended on Sunday 2nd
FURNISHED
ches, zig-zags, butfonholes,
10 :00 o'clock A.M·.
·
gauge 3 shot boll" acllon
of lhe world . If you 'd like a
blind
hems,
overcasts,
elc.
Any
person
desir
ing
to
file
l'h
story
frame, completely
Mossburg
,
adjustable
choke,
evening, Dec. 17, under tlle
challenging job In an e"'lllng
exceptions thereto must file
$8S.
Call
Ravenswood
273-9521
$30
;
670-15
mud
&amp;
snow
tire
on
renovated 3 yrs. ago. 2 B. R.,
place, Today•s Army wants to
direction of Unda Williams them at least five days prior to
or 273-9893.
Ford .or Dodge wheel, $5;
bath, storm doors &amp; . winjoin you. Call collect SS G.
the date set for hear ing .
11-30-Hc dows, large lot 105x135,
Raymond Pierce, 949-2374.
1111d Dorothy Calaway, assisted
Clark 593-3022.
Given under my hand and
12-21-ltc
12·17-61c
by Florence Spencer at tlle seal of said Court , this 18th day
private local ion . JUST
of December 1972.
S8,500.00
COMPLETE .
Pets
!Uno. Doris Dillinger read the
Manning D. Webster YOUNG MEN : WE'LL SEND
BRICK
Judge and ex -officio Clerk
program arid lloyd Dillinger
YOU TO SCHOOL FOR
PARKVI EW Kennels going out
SYRACUSE
- 2 level lots,
of sa ld Court
MISSILE OPERATIONS JOB
assisted in many ways.
of business . Big price
11!2
story,
4
bedrooms,
baih ,
IN EUROPE . H you'.-e
reduction on all dogs. All AK·
By Ann B. Watson
The program consisted of
utility,
some
carpeting
,
looking for a challenging job
Deputy Clerk
C. 592 Broadway &amp; Ash
cellar,
porches,
gas
torced
recitations by the small folks, a 11 2) 21. 28, 21
In an lntereslin~ place,
Sireets, Middleport, Ohio.
air furnace. EXCELLENT
foday 's Army has 1!. You'll
play, "Wiggle Worm" by the
12-13-tfc
receive full pay while you
LEGAL NOTICE
CONDITION $17,900.00.
Buy 2
lntennediates and a tableau by
learn
basic
missile
WANTED
AKC Toy Poodles, wormed and
.........;; Pairs
Notice to Heavy Equipment
operations. And you'll gel 30
the Junior class, assisted by Dealers
Nice
home,
3 bedrooms,
Will
hold
for
housebroken.
:
days paid vacation a year, lo
I
:1-PAiRFREE
younger ones. Cluistmas
Christmas.
Phone
742-3872.
bath,
basement.
would like
In accordancewilh Sec . 307 .86
do a little exploring on your
The
best
buy
in
the
area.
·
ot
The
Ohio
Revised
Code,
12·14-12fc
level lot. Not too far ouf In
anthetns wer~ sung by tlle sealed bids wlll be recei ved by own. PI us Iofs of other
Have slacks &amp; jeans for the
$16,000.00
range. Buyer from
benefits.
If
you'd
like
to
live
audience. There. was a Santa, a The Meigs County Com .
whole
family.
Save
on
..
Trafford Pa .
and work In Europe, Today's
In their office in the
Third.
beautiful lighted tree, and a · missioners
Court House, Pomeroy , Ohio
HENRY E. CLELAND
Army wanfs to join rou. For
gift exchange bY the Sunday 45169 unlll 10 :00 A.M. on complete ~tails cat collect
.. .0
POMEROY
REALTOR
January 2nD , 1973-; at wh ich
·Ail
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr
SS
G. Clark 593-3022.
Office
9'12-2259
School classes and a candy tim
e and place the bids will be
· '
Phone 992-2181
12·17·61c
If
no
answer
992-2568
or 985opened
and
read
aloud
for
the
treat for the entire audience.
pur chase ot a n ew Di esel
4209.
A Christmas party lor the Eng ine Driven· Motor Gr ad er SOMEONE to brush hog 13 GIVE a Gift Certificate this
3 Salesmen to assist you.
acres land In Pomeroy. Call
Willing Workers SUnday School equipped with scar ifi er and
Christmas from Showalfer's
manufactur er s standa r d ac Virgil B. Teaford, 992-3325.
Wet Pet Shop, Chesler, Ohio.
class, ,taught by Vicki Carr, cessories.
12-19-3tc
12-20-31p .
e motor grad er must meet
was held at the Russell Archer tl:l Th
--------=
e
follow ing
mini mum
LADY to' clean house once a PRE -CHRISTMAS SALE home on Saturday, Dec. 16 with spe c if ical ions :
week ; must have r eferences ;
Flower Arrangementst many
Six
( 6 ) CylJ.D,der Diesel Engin e
11 In attendance.
150 H.P.
· phone 992·5947 .
gifts; also flowers for
l .tl x 24 inch, 12 ply tires front
Mrs. Nina Robinson and
12·20-3tc
cemetery ; Smalley's Gift
and rear .
ON YOUR DIAL
Shop, Chesfer, Ohio.
Sherman HenderllOQ attended
12 foOt power Shift mold MAN familiar with conslrucllon
12-1Hic
!lie annual "Township Clerks board .
and general office work ;
Weight 27,000 lbs.
phone 698-7131 for apAssociation" meeting held ln
Cab complete.
pointment.
Heat
lights
front
and
rear.
Pomeroy Friday evening, Dec.
Flasher lights front end rear .
12-20-2fc
By

move male from bed fo chair.

Ann e . Watson
Deputy Cler.J&lt;

or

12 . 15 .tfc

l
!

'IE BETTER

1~ r~====~====~;:;;;:;:;:=;~~;:::;;:::;;=~-==========~' 1
£AR1H MOVING

For

·. GOOD'S PENNZOIL -c::-- - -----

spoose, Ihe ne?(t of kin, the
beneficiaries under the will ;

'IE MUST BE

'lARD

THERE will be
Day o~ Publication
Christmas.
&gt;
Match at fhe Racine Gun Club
Rent
REGULATION$
months; balance
Samuel Lewis,
Rt. 4;
within
12-20-3tc
this weekend due to Christ- FURNISHED apartment, 3 down,
The Publisher reserves the
phone
992-6179.
POMERO
, y
mas Holldavs.
right to edit Of reject any ads
rooms
and
bath
,
modern
;
12-15-6tc
deemed obfettlonal. · Tt~e I'ARASOL Boutique Salon on
12-21·3lc
phone 992-2623.
Rl. 7 nexf lo Skate-A-Way
:Dublisher will not be responsible
· 12-17-tfc GRETSCH flat -top guitar, cost
'~or mare than 01te incorrec1
Roller Rink . Make your
HOME &amp; AUTO
new $270; will sacrifice· for
1
insertion .
Christmas and New YMr S
ONE bedroom apartments;
$175; also 20 ga. bolt action
RATES
992-2094
appoinlmenh early . Open
.. For W.ent Ad Serv ice
ideal
for
couples
;
phone
992shotgun
for S20; phone 949,
thru
Saturday
and
Tuesday
,606 E. Main Pomeroy
S· cents per Word one insertlor
5248 or 992-3436.
5913.
'
Tuesday evenin~ by ap Minimum Charge 75c
12-17-6fc
'
12-1S-61c
12 centt per word threE · poilllment : also woll be open
I·
OFFICE
SUPPLIES
· consecutive Insertions .
.
eve:n ings from DeCember 19th
TRAILER
spaces
;
extra
large
1960
FORU
PICkup
w;th
camper
l8 cents per word s ix cori
lhru lhe 22nd by appointment.·
lofs, $25 a month, Velma top, V-8, $425 ; Hoover washer,
and
secufive insertions .
Christmas Special - Instant
Z.
u
span,
Mason,
W.
Va.
S60 ; · Allis Chalmer B with
25 Per Cent Oisc·o unt on pafd
Conditioner for your ha.ir t
1H9·30tp ·plows and cultivators; phone
ads and ads '-~ld- wltl)in 10 days.
'FURNITURE
regul'ar
$1. special of SOc .
• CARD OF THANKS
"7"-.,.....,--"7"---:
949-3746.
. .
.
' .
Sandra Trussell . Kerns ,
&amp; OBfTI!A!iY
3
ROOM
furnished
house.-adu.lts
,
12-i9-31c
Stop
In
and
See
Our
All work left over 30
Operator. Phone 985-4141.
$1.50 fGr SQ word min ifTlum .
only ; phone 992-55'12 .
. ·.
.Fl.oor Display.
12-10-121c days &amp; not picked up .
Each additional word 2c.
.12·5-lfc EARLY American stereo-radio L...:.._ _...:.__;_ _ _ _.J
.
BLIND ADS
by Fri., Dec. 22nd will : -----~--combination, AM-FM radio, 4
Additional 25c Char"ge · per HAY MAN'S Auction - a qood
TWO
new
mobile
homes,
never
speaker sound system •. 4
Advertisement .
place to go each Froday be sold for labor,
lived I ~ ; phone 992·2511 .
OFFICE HOURS
speed autom~tic changer;
evening, 7 p.m. at Laurel Cliff L - - - - - - - - _ _ , j
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Dally
12-5-lfc balance S79 .31. Use our
on old Rt. 7, 1 mile west of
8 : 30 a .m . to 12 : 00 Noor
·
SHOTGUN MATCH, Sunday, FURNISHED 2 bedroom budget terms. Call 992-7085.
Rod&lt; Springs Fairground.
Saturday . .
12-19-6tc
10·10-Hc Dec. 241h, 12 noon, Sid.e Hill
.
apartment, adults only.
Gun Club ; factory choke guns
Middleport; phone 992-3874. MODERN Walnut style .stereo- .
only ; no alcoholic beverages
In Memory
12-12-lfc radio, AM-FM radio, 4
allowed; assorted meats ; soft
Concrete Work
-speaker sound system, 4
IN MEMORY of Charley W .
drinks will be sold ; free 3 AND 4 ROOM furnished
Remodeling
and speed aulomalic changer .
King and his granqdaughter,
coffee; directions to malchapartments.
Balance
$68.57.
Use
our
unfurnished
Connie
Phillips ;
This
3'12 miles North bf Rulland lo
.
Phone 992-5434.
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
Chrl stmas we· m.·iss~ your
12-J-Ifc
Forest Acres Park , take
'
4-1
.
2
.
Hc
12:19·7085.
smiling faces, nO : bne can
gravel road to first road left --------~
12-19-6tc
know how milch ; but in our
v, mile; !here will be signs . TRAILER, no pets; Earl -----~--­
hearts you are always with LEGAL NOTICE
.
from park to match; not
Custer, Syracuse , . Ohio; TEXTURED Velvet, low, low
us, we loved you both so much
responsible for accidents.
Phone
992-2511
prices;
beautiful
for
and would have loved fo keep
NO.TICE ON FILING
12·21-3tc . phone 992-5249.
12-20-3tc
or 992-3918
Christmas;
also
sample
you with us; But God needed
AND
APPRAISEMENT
fashion
frocks;
drastically
you and took you home.
OF INVENTORY
The st.ote ot Ohto, Meigs
' Auto Sales
reduced; 4 new "kanekon wigs
Ida King and Myrtle Robinson County.
Probate Court.
priced right for Christmas
12-21 -lfp
Trade
To the Admlnlstralrix of the
1966 CHEVY II Super Sporl, 327 gifts and already slyled; Stop For Sale
estate; to such of the following
4 speed, gcod running
in af fhe N &amp; F Sewing Confer ONE 2'h year old slud pony or
as are residents of the State of
condiifon ; '63 Chevy Impala,
in
Chester.
frade for small calf; one side
the -surviving
au1omatic
transmission ,
12-19-4tc
Ohio , viz : -

LEGAL NOTICE

.

'

For Sale

Notice

Notice

.

"Your Chevy Deller'
IVtl. Till

9.92·2126
I

RCKFXG VXRWFQ
f

Pomeroy

YefllerdiJ's CrJp!Go)-: L1TI'LE. GIFTS MAINTAIN
FR1F.NDSHIP; GUAT ONES MAINTAIN LOVE.-DECOLY
(0 lf7J ltlnJ Ftolu"o "Sr~dleato, 1n~.) ·

I AATE F"VNNI(

IIA HA

(l,lb.ITER~ !

AAAA
AA!

jl

.t

II
!I
"11

•

•

..

-.·'

,.

•

�.

I

. 10-Tile Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Dec. 21, 1972

.

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

~

WAI'II A~.
INFORMATION
~EADLINES

.S P.M. Day Before PublicatiOn
Mqnday Deadline 9 a.m.

5

rHE CLUB af Racine will be WANTE.D- A black male cat;
phone. 843-2641 .
open Sunday, December 24th
for Christmas Oinne·r under
. 12-19-3fc

.
no · Shooflng

Clncelletlon- Corrections . . new manageme:nt ; · meals
Will b•acupt~ ufltll9 a.m. for
served till 6 p.m.; closed

.

ADJOINING lots
In
Harrisonville, ne•f to school,
each lot 120ft. deep with 100
ff . frontage on .Rt. 143; price
S990 each lof; ferms S100

Business

GOING OUT·
OF BUSINESS ;

PWMBING
HEATING

Chase Hdwe. Co.
.

~==================:,

"HE IL"

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

and to lhe atlorney or attorneys
represenllng any of the
Case No , 20824
Est.a te of Laura L~ltheit , aforemenfloned persons:
Charles Hyatl, Deceased ,
Deceased. .
Notice Is hereby giVen tha_t R.acine, Ohio R. D.. sutton
Kathryn Peters, of Box 17, · Township, No. 20702.
You are hereby notified lhat .
Arcadia, Oh~o. has been duty
appointed Adm lnistratriK of the tlie 1 , Inventory
and
Ap Esta1e of \,.aura Leifheit, pro sement Of the esfale Of the

deceased, late of

Syracuse,

aforementioned, deceased, late

of said county, was filed In this
Court. Said Inventory and
will
ppralsement
hAearlng
before this
Courtbeon for
the
2nd
day
of
January,
191 3, at
Dated this 5th day of 10:00 o'clock A.M.
December 1912.
Manning o . Webster. , Any person desiring to me
Judge, exceptions thereto must file

Meigs County , Ohio.
Creditors are required to file
their claims with said fidUc iary
within four months .

Common

1

Pleas
Court,
Probate Division
Meigs County, Ohio

(12) 7, 14, 21, Jt

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

-Furnace Controls
HUMIDIF·IERS
H0t· Wa ter Heaters
PI

um 1ng
Electrical Work

ARNQLD

BROTHERS

them at least five days prior to

the ~ate sef for hearing .

992·2448

Given under my hand and

~7"/;~~;~We~01'f,'{_ this

Pomeroy, 0.

lBth day
Manning D. WebSier

Judge and ex .offlclo Clerk

HELP WANTED
WANTED, male Sociai·Securlty
or Old Aoe pensioner to help

of said Court

b'

Help

WI d
an e

wrecked front -end; phone 992- - - - - - - - - - . , -

(12 )

21,

28 , 21

6732.

12. 19.31 P STARCRAFT CHRISTMAS
SALE . 24'7 WS 54892
for $3892; 22'7 $4475 for
1967 FURY Ill, 4 door, 383
,
,
WS
$3954
53579
engine, good condition, ssoo; for $3 16520
,. 718•7 ws 53499
Freddie Thabel, Mason, W.
va .; phone 773-5651.
for $2799; self contained,
sleeps six with convertori

same high diSCOUnf on fold ."

downs; some

used

unitsi

ea

side

Unico

1

ta e

From th&lt;.-largest Tro•i-k
Bulldozer Rad)ator lo the
Small9st Heater Core.
Nathan Biggs
R~diator Specialist

.SMUI:LN.ELSQN i
MOTORS.L.-,romeriif
INC.
H1-2174

;

~

i
i'

•

.-ll--~--1 ~

~UNOREOS"

OF

WJMS AN I&gt; POPS
8U'I' RAZORS ...

...AND ON t&gt;ECE/11/IER 26,

WUN~S OF BEARDED '10UNG

DUI&gt;ES RETURN THEM

SPEND TIME
SAVES's

EXPERT
'Wheel Alignment
'5.55

· J(UHL'S
BARGAIN CENTER .
Rl. 7 "at caution light"
TUPPERS PLAINS
l,lsed ,furniture, appliances.
C)ean . &amp; guaranteed.
. Ne.W FURNITURE
Sofa Beds &amp; Recliners.

~.

On Most A~erica~ Car."'

ANO'itlU, Mc6LUT10N, ARE.

' -GUARANtEED-;
·
Phon&lt;:! 992·2094

"GUILT'r' 01= O.AIMING TI-\ERE.'S
AN't'Tl-IING THIS SIDE OF HEA\/EN

AS DB.ICJOOS AS A CSINUIN£
IWAA\CJ&amp; Aa.A&amp;AMMUS !!

·Pomerov Home &amp; Auto

Discount priced .

LAYAWAY FOR XMAS
Open to 7; closed Mondays

Reai ·Estate For Sale

OpeniTiiS
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main. Pomeroy, 0 .
- . --··-· . - '
SEE US FOR: Awnings, storm
doors and windows, carports,
marquees, aluminum siding
and railing. A. Jacob, sales
representative. For free
estimates, phone Charles
Lisle, .Syracuse, V. V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
3-2-ttc
-B-AC_K_H-:-0-E_A_N_D_D-:-0-ZE-R:-w-on:.
Septic tanks Installed. George
I Bllll Pullins. Phone 992."2478.
·
4·25-Hc

I

WINNIE WINKLE
\\W .

-•

E LNA and White Sewing
camp Conley starcraff Sales, HOUSE FOR SALE, 114 Brick Ph-STORY, 2-bedroom brick
Machines ... service on all
•
Rt.62 N. ofPoint Pleasant, w.
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio; brick house In Middleport. Carmakes. Reasonable rates.
Va., behind Red Carpet Inn ,·
excellent
The Sewing Center, Mid ·
peted, paneled. Kitchen and
1house,
I' 3 bedrooms,
1
1
h 1 d
"Air Conditioners
phone 675-5384.
oca •on, c ose o sc oo an
dining room tiled. Complete
dleport, Ohio.
, Awnings
12.1 5.6tc city; contact Lou Osborne or · with drapes, $6.500. Call 992·
11-16-Hc
call 992-5898."
346S.
·· ·Underpinning
·NOW WREC.KING the former
11 -26-tfc
G &amp; E APPLIANCE Repair;
repair of all laundry equip,
Epple ' s
Grocery · .Store
Complete mQblle hQm•' I building In Pomeroy. All t
ment,
refrlgerallon equip·
' service ...... plus giganflc1' ;
kinds of building materials
menf and house wiring; call
'display of mobile homes
for sale on lhe job including 2.
614-992-6050.
;ijlwavs avallable-. at ...
and 3 in. heavy material,
11-24-~0tp
CLELAND

Mobile Homes for Sale

-

-==========:.....,

MILLER
MO.BJLE HOMES

sheeting

and

cherry

stair

railing; call 992-5946 or ~82·
3219.
11 -10-lfc

REALTY
6G8 E. M~in
Pomeroy

Jmi;~Wlbl· a~at""

For ·sale

We talk to you
like a person.

Virgil B.
Teaford, Sr.
Broker

. AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Call 9922966.

110 Mechanic St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

6-15-tfc
DOZER and back hoe work,
ponds and septic tanks, dll·
chlng service; lop soli, fill
dirt, limestone; B&amp;K Ex·
cavatlng. Phone 992-5367,
Dick Karr, Jr.
9-1-lfc

ALL NEW LISTINGS
3 BEDROOMS - With
closets, bath, electric heat
!Ohio Power Co.). Copper
plumbing, paneling and
carpeting, Front porch, full
~~-.~-lf_G_E_\,-~-~~-M-5-ACR::-Lil-. ~~
basement, '!l'{l drilled well. • ~-=-$}Near Rutlard. S2Q,500.oq,
ED, - REIIAIIU:O. MIUER
SANITATION, . STEWART,
SCHULTZ MJ.:$J.ME
12x
dro
gas
OHtq. PHONE 662-3035.
force
r
, patio
·
10.4-Hc
Drilled well ·
PAPER Hanging and painting;
on nice lot, near Rutland.
Arthur Musser, phone 742·
NEW HOME
5223.
4 BEDROOMS -'IV, baths,"
12-12-Jotp
large kitchen with electric
range. All electric on large
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
lot in the country. Olly
service, all makes. 992-2284.
521,000.00.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
AutHorized Si~ger Sales and
MOBILE HOME .
Service. We Sharpen Scissors .
8x45--2 bedrooms, bath, oil
3-29-Hc
·
furnace. Lot 200x250. Asking
only $3,000.00.
R EADY· MIX
CONCRETE
NEW HOUSE ,
delivered right to your
9 ROOMS- 5 bedrooms, w,
project. Fast and easy. Free
baths, all electric. Full
estimates, Phone 992-3284.
Goeg1ein Ready-Mix Co .,
basement with garage and
Middleport, Ohio.
,
roc. room. Copper plumbing,
6-30-tfc
beautiful kitchen wllh
- ----:-:-:-:
dining. You'll need a real job
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
tO support this one.
REASONABLE rates. Ph. 4.46·
NEW HOUSE
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell,
FIVE POINTS AREA - 3
Owner &amp; Operator.
bedrooms, bath, nice kit5-12-tfc

6x1~e.

.

-·

Complete Service
Phone 949·3821
Racine, Ohio
Crill Bradford

'

UTl'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

W1l Y'Rf '«lU
SCAAtD T' TALl&lt;
lJ ME.., WEI!JIE?

--

~-

SOMElHIN' I ·
DfD ..·ORBAIOf

Want to save time and
money In · buying your new
home, then see us, now.

ACROSS

1. Kingly
6. Bit
10. Actress
Ryan .
11. Neophyte
12. Legend·
ary film
star
(2 wds.)
U.Store
bargain
15. With32

S-1-Hc

Across,

-----~

WILL CUT or tdm ·,rees,
reasonable. Also clean
basements, attics and cell
Phone 949-3221.

HELEN L. TEAFORD,
ASSOCIATE
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS
992-33l5

JI&amp;WID~;&amp;.J
.... .. ,::::!!:!
.,,, {\ " "'\ I .-J
' d '" c
'" '''

by THOMAS JOSEPH

OICK .TRACY

." ..
I J
~

.

-.)'

•' 0.

' 0v

l)

'

.. .

v

v

supposed
. remark by
12 Across
· (3 wds.)
19. Tease
2Z.San-,
Italy
23. Kind or
hatch
25.Jellled

dish
27. Silk.
fabric

2. Follow
the "prim·

Ut~~&lt;ramb1ethese f&lt;Nr Jumbl&lt;~,
one letter to ea(h ~quare, to
form four ordinary wordo,

rose path"

3.Wow!
4. Tiny
tunneler
5. Minimal
6. Perplexed
(3 wds.)
7. Phoenician port
&amp;.Eye

9. Cow talk
13. Sluice,
e.g.
15. Choleric
16. German
river
17. Sufficient
18. Waste
fiber
19. Proportion
Zt. Of the
bees

ESSOU

Yellerdsy's Aaiwer
21. Sort
Z4.Summon
26. Break·
front,
e.a.
29. Conduce

33.Famed
musk·
eteer
34. Free
ticket

25. Obtain
38.Carmen
M.,_..
37. Table
aerap
38. Coal
• by·
product.
39. Greek
letter
U . Rumanlan

tiNJOAD~

] I

HISVA/,

cotn

!

J

K

Now onanatlho dreW!eUin

1 toounetw.l
form tho ....,m. a .....
b71hoabofe-.

A(IIIIIIII.l
(.U. ... ,.

• . .,

glance
(know

immedi·

ately)
(2 wds.)
'SO. An;mias
31: Before
32. See15

'
THE
ACT_ION IS

00 1{0() lil&gt;INT 'TO
6ET U~ 01t 5HOIJLO
I JIIST 5HOVE. IT

ACI'OSI

(2wds.)
34. Uquid
measure
l5, 1932 film
starring
12 AcrOSB
(2 wds.)
41. Alleviate
42. ~peechify
f3. Trial run
f-1. Strasgler

PUBLIC AUCTION
SATURDAY, DEC. 23
STARTING 12 NOON
IN A HEATED BUILDING

UNDER ~E sNoW?

DOWN'

1. Oil-well
apparatus
'

1973 CHEVY TRUCKS BADY
'·

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE.:.. Here's how to
AXYDLBAAXR
II L o·N G F E L L 0 1f

to GO

112 Ton Pickups, 6 cyl. &amp; acyl.
3/4 Ton Pickups- ¥4 Ton 4-wheell)rlve

work

It:

One letter aimply stands for onother. In this ll(llple A Is
\lied tor the three L'a, X for the two O's, et&lt;. Slnale !etten,
apostrophes, the lenath and formaUon of the words are 111
hints. Eaeh day the eode !etten are diluent.

El Camino

Items Too Numerous to Mention

CIYPTOQUOTES
SRKE QMF liRUH

DELL'S DOLLAR SAVER

NMH ·VBZN FZ VR1

GF KFN IKFQ KFQ NF QCRO BN DO . -

OWNERS

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

305 2nd Ave.
'
Middleport
Auctioneer: 'Bradford Auction Co.
·
Not Responsible for Accidents

I I KJ

28.-a

GO WHERE

Christmas TQys
Furniture - Glassware
Lamps - Gift Items
Pictures - Radios
New and Used Furniture

lnnn

-c. ---BRADFORD, Auctioneer

chen. gas furnace. Over an

acre of land. with plains
water . A,sklng $18,000.00.

WMP0/1390

WE'LL
SEND BRIGHT,
There was an attendance of
YOUNG
MEN TO SCHOOL
18 at the annual Grange
FOR RADAR JOBS IN
Cbristmas program, held In the
EUROPE . If you 'd like fo live
and work In Europe, there 's
Grange Hall Saturday evening,
an exciting job walling for
Dec. 16. Mary Carr, lecturer,
you with loday's Army. You 'll
had the program. There was a
learn to supervise and control
ground surveillance radar
tree, a Santa, a treat, and a gift
units . With full pay while
exchange.
you're
in school. And lots of
block.
·
other benefll$. Like 30 days
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Swartz
paid vacaflon a year. If you're
Bidd er lo subm 11 del aile d
and family of Williarruttown, speci
ficat ion s of equ i pment
looking for fhls kind of
·
W.Va., visited his parents, Mr. off ered .
challenge and e.cllement,
A deale r 's r epresentativ e
Today's Army wants to join
and Mrs. Hobart Swartz, shall
provide Instr uctions in th e
you. For complete details call
proper opera tions and mainSunday afternoon.
collecl
SS G. Clark 593·3022.
ce, s t the t ime of delivery .
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Kuhn and tenan
12-20.6fc
One com plete set of parts,
family of Uttle Hocking, 0 ., ser vice , repair and operator 's
man vat sha ll be provided with Wanted To Buy
vlalted her parents, Mr. and each
un il .
The
dealer mnd manufacturer
Mra. Millard Swartz, Mr. and
shall pr.ov Ide a one year OLD Furnltu"re, oak tables,
Mra. Terry Swartz and Sandra warranty for the grader and organs, dishes, clocks, brass
supplied . The ~beds, or complete households.
~ Mandie Williams Sunday altachments
Write M. o. Miller, Rt. 4,
warrantv period shall not limit
lfternoon; and all attended the operating h~urs .
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271.
Dealers
to
furnish
their
own
6-28-lfc
church Chriltmas program bid fo.rms . The front of the en ·
velope enclosing the bids must "''O;o;L;;O.,.-,"'Fu
Mre.
=r=n'-11-ur-e-,-oa-k--labl;s,
be marked " Motor Grader
organs, dishes, clocks, brass
1/or. and Mrs, Clarence Bid ."
beds, or complete households
The County Comrnlssioners
Hender10n, Mr. and Mrs. may
Write M. D. Miller, Rf. 4;
accept ttle lowest bid or
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271.
Dmd WlJllama and Aaron, Mr. select the best bid tor the fn .
tended
purpose,
~nd
reserve
the
_. Mn. Clair li'ollrod, Steve rlgtlt to reject anv or all b ids, or - - - -=---6...:..
·28-ffc
at Katby, lttended the annual any pari !hereof.
WANT-EO
Old upright
pianos, grand pianos, old
fllnUy get~o.gether for
BOARD OF COUNTY
pump organs. Any condition.
COMMISSIONERS
Cllrlllmaa 111 tbe heine of tl1eir
Payl'!ll SlO each. Write giving
IIIOihtr, Edith Harper, at CLERK MARTHA CHAMBERS,
dlrect•ons. Witten Plano Co.,
Bo• 118, Sardis,. Ohio 439# .
..... Plalnl &amp;lnday, Dec.
12·15-6fp
It,
{12) ]A, ~I, 2t

~

ELVINEY

5232.

ae

Social Notes

Heater and defroster.
Foot accelerator . 1
Oecelerlltor .
A ll hydraulic conl rols or all
hyd ra ulic ov er mechanics.
Pow er steeri ng .
Hour meter .
Oil clu tch.
24 ~oil electr ic sys tem .
Tran sm iss ion - 6F . . .t1R.
Pa int ed Omaha Orange,
Trade in ooe 1964 Model
LW666 Grader 1 without push

GO LOOK AG 'IN,

•

.t.ozer &amp; End i&lt;Yder wk; ,
ponds, baseme.nt, ~ land· .
scaping. we have 2 size•
11ozen, 2 sizt loaders. Work
dona b~ ho.'t' or c:ontr1ct• .
·Free E"stimites. We also ..
haul fill dirt, top soil. Dump 1
trucks a.nd tow-boy for hire.
See Bob ·or Roger Joffers,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3525
alter 7 p.m. or phone 992-

freezer

Alfred

15.

I'M WORE TO A FRA"21LE, TETCHEO IN TH' HAlO,
ELVINE'I·· I JEST DUG UP LOWEE1.'1 .. I JEST
THAT OCSTUMP INTH'
SEEN SNUFFY LEANIN'
FRONT
ON IT

Servic·e~,

HOUSE In Long Bottom, phone
985-3529. .
refrigerator, one year
6·11-Hc
old, like new; 3 electric
heaters. and one pair large
table lamps; can be seen al 8 ROOM house and bath; nice
George Holler Farm, Miners- large lot, natural gas, built-In
cabinets In kitchen, close to
ville.
station In Bradbury,
12·19-3tc radio
Phone 992-2602.
R I E$ I F01 S I
12-21-2otp
by

WOMAN to slay with elderly.
ambulalory lady ; may live 1n
Contact Mrs. Ed J. Smith,
or go home nlghls; contacl
1220 Washington Blvd.
phone 992-2853.
COAL, Limestone, Excelsior
Floyd Cummins, phone 247· 423-7521
BELPRE, D.
12-21 -Jfc
Sail Works, E. Main St.,:
2101
.
NOTICE ON FILING
· 11• LEVEL ACRES
12·19-31c ,
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3891 .
OF INVENTORY
HARRISONVILLE
4-12-lfc
AND APPRAISEifENT
1970 MOBILE home, 12 x 44, .- - -- - - - - , Corner ~creage . Lovely
The Stafe of Qhio, Meigs - - - - - - - - PLUMBING and Heating man,
·$4,000. Phone 773-5429 or 992· ·DUE TO lay-off, 8 track stereo older home. 3 or 4 B.R., 1112
County. Probate Court
experienced; if not ex 500,1. ·
in walnut console ; pay baths, kitchen has dining
To the Executor of the estate ;
to such of the following as are
perlenced and honest, do not :-;-;;-:---;--;-;-~-;;--""1...,2-:17·61p
balance of $98.80 or pay $8 P,er bar, loads of upper &amp; base
residents of the Stat8' of Ohio,
apply; phone 992-2511 or 992·
fh h
992 5331
cabinets, dining R. Utility
3918.
CASH- paid for all makes and
mon ; P one
·
·
viz : - the survlvJng spouse, the
next of kin, the benef iciaries
12-6-ffc
models of mobile homes . · ~
'
12·12-tfc space, ....,enclosed SUIJ. porch.
Under the will : an·d to. the at
· + ' jA
"
,
• .1
•
Phone area code 614-423-9531.
IW. toW. c~r~n~ fJ I floor,
orney '"f!t.tt.l'OI{ 1 "'~ ettorney
ta~en In deluxe 'Zig-Zag
on represen'tMg
" any ~. of
the Y~U~EEM~~b GL~~~Af~~~ t
}~ t ,.,
.~tM!' 4-13-lfc JUST
sewing
machine.
This qwn water 'YII~W -' Large
frame building facing back
Dec. 17 was 49, the offering aforementioned l)&amp;rsons :
machine
darns,
em ·
TURBET REPAIR JOB IN 1970 MOBILE home, like new,
Elizabeth Wise Allman ,
st.
40x70. THIS you MUST
broid.
e
rles,
makes
butS21.88. Attendance at worship Middleport, Ohio , Sal isbury EUROPE GUARANTEED . . with air-conditioner, washer;
tonholes,
all
without
atSEE.
S2J.SOO.
Here's an opportunity to live
lot may be rented ; phone 985·
service was 24, the offering Township , No. 20803 .
tachments;
pay
balance
of
OVER 1 ACRE
You are hereby notified thai
and work In Europe. At a job
4248.
$18.10. Rev. Lehman spoke the · Inventory and Ap $38.50 or pay $6 per month; JUST OFF RT. 7 - NICE
lhat's as challenging as you
12-.1S-61p
i sement ot the estate of I he
phone 992-5331.
!run Isaiah 9:2-7 "For Unto Us pra
want it fo be . You 'll learn lo
MOBILE HOME," 3 B.R.,
eforementioned, deceased , late
12-12-tfc bath, ·utility space, ••tended
operate
and
perform
mainA Cbild Is Born".
of said County. was flied In this
tenance on the revolving For Sale
Said InventOry and
SINGER Automatic sewing L.R., beautiful kitc~en . ALL
The annual Christmas Court.
Appra i sement will be tor · turret and weapons . And
machine. Like new In walnut SET UP. 12x60. ASKING
you ' ll gef · 30 days paid 1964 CHEVROLET Convertible
)X'ogram of the church was hearing before this Court on the
cabinet. Makes design stit- JUST $7,500 .00 COMPLETE .
Impala, 3 ,SPeed ; $195 . 16
day Of January , 1973, at
vacation a year to see a lillie
well attended on Sunday 2nd
FURNISHED
ches, zig-zags, butfonholes,
10 :00 o'clock A.M·.
·
gauge 3 shot boll" acllon
of lhe world . If you 'd like a
blind
hems,
overcasts,
elc.
Any
person
desir
ing
to
file
l'h
story
frame, completely
Mossburg
,
adjustable
choke,
evening, Dec. 17, under tlle
challenging job In an e"'lllng
exceptions thereto must file
$8S.
Call
Ravenswood
273-9521
$30
;
670-15
mud
&amp;
snow
tire
on
renovated 3 yrs. ago. 2 B. R.,
place, Today•s Army wants to
direction of Unda Williams them at least five days prior to
or 273-9893.
Ford .or Dodge wheel, $5;
bath, storm doors &amp; . winjoin you. Call collect SS G.
the date set for hear ing .
11-30-Hc dows, large lot 105x135,
Raymond Pierce, 949-2374.
1111d Dorothy Calaway, assisted
Clark 593-3022.
Given under my hand and
12-21-ltc
12·17-61c
by Florence Spencer at tlle seal of said Court , this 18th day
private local ion . JUST
of December 1972.
S8,500.00
COMPLETE .
Pets
!Uno. Doris Dillinger read the
Manning D. Webster YOUNG MEN : WE'LL SEND
BRICK
Judge and ex -officio Clerk
program arid lloyd Dillinger
YOU TO SCHOOL FOR
PARKVI EW Kennels going out
SYRACUSE
- 2 level lots,
of sa ld Court
MISSILE OPERATIONS JOB
assisted in many ways.
of business . Big price
11!2
story,
4
bedrooms,
baih ,
IN EUROPE . H you'.-e
reduction on all dogs. All AK·
By Ann B. Watson
The program consisted of
utility,
some
carpeting
,
looking for a challenging job
Deputy Clerk
C. 592 Broadway &amp; Ash
cellar,
porches,
gas
torced
recitations by the small folks, a 11 2) 21. 28, 21
In an lntereslin~ place,
Sireets, Middleport, Ohio.
air furnace. EXCELLENT
foday 's Army has 1!. You'll
play, "Wiggle Worm" by the
12-13-tfc
receive full pay while you
LEGAL NOTICE
CONDITION $17,900.00.
Buy 2
lntennediates and a tableau by
learn
basic
missile
WANTED
AKC Toy Poodles, wormed and
.........;; Pairs
Notice to Heavy Equipment
operations. And you'll gel 30
the Junior class, assisted by Dealers
Nice
home,
3 bedrooms,
Will
hold
for
housebroken.
:
days paid vacation a year, lo
I
:1-PAiRFREE
younger ones. Cluistmas
Christmas.
Phone
742-3872.
bath,
basement.
would like
In accordancewilh Sec . 307 .86
do a little exploring on your
The
best
buy
in
the
area.
·
ot
The
Ohio
Revised
Code,
12·14-12fc
level lot. Not too far ouf In
anthetns wer~ sung by tlle sealed bids wlll be recei ved by own. PI us Iofs of other
Have slacks &amp; jeans for the
$16,000.00
range. Buyer from
benefits.
If
you'd
like
to
live
audience. There. was a Santa, a The Meigs County Com .
whole
family.
Save
on
..
Trafford Pa .
and work In Europe, Today's
In their office in the
Third.
beautiful lighted tree, and a · missioners
Court House, Pomeroy , Ohio
HENRY E. CLELAND
Army wanfs to join rou. For
gift exchange bY the Sunday 45169 unlll 10 :00 A.M. on complete ~tails cat collect
.. .0
POMEROY
REALTOR
January 2nD , 1973-; at wh ich
·Ail
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr
SS
G. Clark 593-3022.
Office
9'12-2259
School classes and a candy tim
e and place the bids will be
· '
Phone 992-2181
12·17·61c
If
no
answer
992-2568
or 985opened
and
read
aloud
for
the
treat for the entire audience.
pur chase ot a n ew Di esel
4209.
A Christmas party lor the Eng ine Driven· Motor Gr ad er SOMEONE to brush hog 13 GIVE a Gift Certificate this
3 Salesmen to assist you.
acres land In Pomeroy. Call
Willing Workers SUnday School equipped with scar ifi er and
Christmas from Showalfer's
manufactur er s standa r d ac Virgil B. Teaford, 992-3325.
Wet Pet Shop, Chesler, Ohio.
class, ,taught by Vicki Carr, cessories.
12-19-3tc
12-20-31p .
e motor grad er must meet
was held at the Russell Archer tl:l Th
--------=
e
follow ing
mini mum
LADY to' clean house once a PRE -CHRISTMAS SALE home on Saturday, Dec. 16 with spe c if ical ions :
week ; must have r eferences ;
Flower Arrangementst many
Six
( 6 ) CylJ.D,der Diesel Engin e
11 In attendance.
150 H.P.
· phone 992·5947 .
gifts; also flowers for
l .tl x 24 inch, 12 ply tires front
Mrs. Nina Robinson and
12·20-3tc
cemetery ; Smalley's Gift
and rear .
ON YOUR DIAL
Shop, Chesfer, Ohio.
Sherman HenderllOQ attended
12 foOt power Shift mold MAN familiar with conslrucllon
12-1Hic
!lie annual "Township Clerks board .
and general office work ;
Weight 27,000 lbs.
phone 698-7131 for apAssociation" meeting held ln
Cab complete.
pointment.
Heat
lights
front
and
rear.
Pomeroy Friday evening, Dec.
Flasher lights front end rear .
12-20-2fc
By

move male from bed fo chair.

Ann e . Watson
Deputy Cler.J&lt;

or

12 . 15 .tfc

l
!

'IE BETTER

1~ r~====~====~;:;;;:;:;:=;~~;:::;;:::;;=~-==========~' 1
£AR1H MOVING

For

·. GOOD'S PENNZOIL -c::-- - -----

spoose, Ihe ne?(t of kin, the
beneficiaries under the will ;

'IE MUST BE

'lARD

THERE will be
Day o~ Publication
Christmas.
&gt;
Match at fhe Racine Gun Club
Rent
REGULATION$
months; balance
Samuel Lewis,
Rt. 4;
within
12-20-3tc
this weekend due to Christ- FURNISHED apartment, 3 down,
The Publisher reserves the
phone
992-6179.
POMERO
, y
mas Holldavs.
right to edit Of reject any ads
rooms
and
bath
,
modern
;
12-15-6tc
deemed obfettlonal. · Tt~e I'ARASOL Boutique Salon on
12-21·3lc
phone 992-2623.
Rl. 7 nexf lo Skate-A-Way
:Dublisher will not be responsible
· 12-17-tfc GRETSCH flat -top guitar, cost
'~or mare than 01te incorrec1
Roller Rink . Make your
HOME &amp; AUTO
new $270; will sacrifice· for
1
insertion .
Christmas and New YMr S
ONE bedroom apartments;
$175; also 20 ga. bolt action
RATES
992-2094
appoinlmenh early . Open
.. For W.ent Ad Serv ice
ideal
for
couples
;
phone
992shotgun
for S20; phone 949,
thru
Saturday
and
Tuesday
,606 E. Main Pomeroy
S· cents per Word one insertlor
5248 or 992-3436.
5913.
'
Tuesday evenin~ by ap Minimum Charge 75c
12-17-6fc
'
12-1S-61c
12 centt per word threE · poilllment : also woll be open
I·
OFFICE
SUPPLIES
· consecutive Insertions .
.
eve:n ings from DeCember 19th
TRAILER
spaces
;
extra
large
1960
FORU
PICkup
w;th
camper
l8 cents per word s ix cori
lhru lhe 22nd by appointment.·
lofs, $25 a month, Velma top, V-8, $425 ; Hoover washer,
and
secufive insertions .
Christmas Special - Instant
Z.
u
span,
Mason,
W.
Va.
S60 ; · Allis Chalmer B with
25 Per Cent Oisc·o unt on pafd
Conditioner for your ha.ir t
1H9·30tp ·plows and cultivators; phone
ads and ads '-~ld- wltl)in 10 days.
'FURNITURE
regul'ar
$1. special of SOc .
• CARD OF THANKS
"7"-.,.....,--"7"---:
949-3746.
. .
.
' .
Sandra Trussell . Kerns ,
&amp; OBfTI!A!iY
3
ROOM
furnished
house.-adu.lts
,
12-i9-31c
Stop
In
and
See
Our
All work left over 30
Operator. Phone 985-4141.
$1.50 fGr SQ word min ifTlum .
only ; phone 992-55'12 .
. ·.
.Fl.oor Display.
12-10-121c days &amp; not picked up .
Each additional word 2c.
.12·5-lfc EARLY American stereo-radio L...:.._ _...:.__;_ _ _ _.J
.
BLIND ADS
by Fri., Dec. 22nd will : -----~--combination, AM-FM radio, 4
Additional 25c Char"ge · per HAY MAN'S Auction - a qood
TWO
new
mobile
homes,
never
speaker sound system •. 4
Advertisement .
place to go each Froday be sold for labor,
lived I ~ ; phone 992·2511 .
OFFICE HOURS
speed autom~tic changer;
evening, 7 p.m. at Laurel Cliff L - - - - - - - - _ _ , j
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Dally
12-5-lfc balance S79 .31. Use our
on old Rt. 7, 1 mile west of
8 : 30 a .m . to 12 : 00 Noor
·
SHOTGUN MATCH, Sunday, FURNISHED 2 bedroom budget terms. Call 992-7085.
Rod&lt; Springs Fairground.
Saturday . .
12-19-6tc
10·10-Hc Dec. 241h, 12 noon, Sid.e Hill
.
apartment, adults only.
Gun Club ; factory choke guns
Middleport; phone 992-3874. MODERN Walnut style .stereo- .
only ; no alcoholic beverages
In Memory
12-12-lfc radio, AM-FM radio, 4
allowed; assorted meats ; soft
Concrete Work
-speaker sound system, 4
IN MEMORY of Charley W .
drinks will be sold ; free 3 AND 4 ROOM furnished
Remodeling
and speed aulomalic changer .
King and his granqdaughter,
coffee; directions to malchapartments.
Balance
$68.57.
Use
our
unfurnished
Connie
Phillips ;
This
3'12 miles North bf Rulland lo
.
Phone 992-5434.
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
Chrl stmas we· m.·iss~ your
12-J-Ifc
Forest Acres Park , take
'
4-1
.
2
.
Hc
12:19·7085.
smiling faces, nO : bne can
gravel road to first road left --------~
12-19-6tc
know how milch ; but in our
v, mile; !here will be signs . TRAILER, no pets; Earl -----~--­
hearts you are always with LEGAL NOTICE
.
from park to match; not
Custer, Syracuse , . Ohio; TEXTURED Velvet, low, low
us, we loved you both so much
responsible for accidents.
Phone
992-2511
prices;
beautiful
for
and would have loved fo keep
NO.TICE ON FILING
12·21-3tc . phone 992-5249.
12-20-3tc
or 992-3918
Christmas;
also
sample
you with us; But God needed
AND
APPRAISEMENT
fashion
frocks;
drastically
you and took you home.
OF INVENTORY
The st.ote ot Ohto, Meigs
' Auto Sales
reduced; 4 new "kanekon wigs
Ida King and Myrtle Robinson County.
Probate Court.
priced right for Christmas
12-21 -lfp
Trade
To the Admlnlstralrix of the
1966 CHEVY II Super Sporl, 327 gifts and already slyled; Stop For Sale
estate; to such of the following
4 speed, gcod running
in af fhe N &amp; F Sewing Confer ONE 2'h year old slud pony or
as are residents of the State of
condiifon ; '63 Chevy Impala,
in
Chester.
frade for small calf; one side
the -surviving
au1omatic
transmission ,
12-19-4tc
Ohio , viz : -

LEGAL NOTICE

.

'

For Sale

Notice

Notice

.

"Your Chevy Deller'
IVtl. Till

9.92·2126
I

RCKFXG VXRWFQ
f

Pomeroy

YefllerdiJ's CrJp!Go)-: L1TI'LE. GIFTS MAINTAIN
FR1F.NDSHIP; GUAT ONES MAINTAIN LOVE.-DECOLY
(0 lf7J ltlnJ Ftolu"o "Sr~dleato, 1n~.) ·

I AATE F"VNNI(

IIA HA

(l,lb.ITER~ !

AAAA
AA!

jl

.t

II
!I
"11

•

•

..

-.·'

,.

•

�•••

U-1'bellllll)o Sent.inlel,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. 21,1972

LueUa Hysell dies Thursday ·
Mrs. Luella B. Hysell, 76,
Mi1!dleport Route I, died
Thursday morning at the
Holzer Medical Center. Mrs.
Hysell was born Oct. 28, 1896 in
Gallia Cllunty, the daughter of
the late William and Barbara
Searles Might. · She was also
preceded In death by a brother
and low: sisters.
Surviv~ are her husband,

Hanoi

.

ELBERFElD$ IN POt,t\EROY

Narley; a daughter, Mrs. Faye
Elizabeth Fry, at home; a.son,
Dale William, of Colwnbus; six
·grandchildren, and nine greatgrandchildren. ·
funeral Services will be he.ld
at 2 p.m. Saturday at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
with the Rev, Cecil Wise officiating. Burial .will be in
Riverview Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
from 2 to 4 and from 7 to 9 p.m.
Friday.

OPEN EVERY NIGHT UNTIL 9:00
Many excellent gift ideas on every floor •·in tM!1J
department • new merchandise arriving MIY day f«
·)'OUr selection. Take time to look around all through

(Continued from Psge 1)
wottld'iake place at experts' Troop plans 3
. meetings than here at Kleber,"
site or iodafs regular talks, ·he upcoming events
sald.
Pomeroy Sroui Troop 248
The Communists served Wednesday night planned its
warning the .bombing will not next meeting on Dec. 27, the
force them into surrender·
Order of the Arrow Banquet on
Hanoi delegate Nguyen Minh Dec. 28, to be held in HunVy, told newsmen: "To protest tington, and a hike from
the demented bombing and the Chester to the Issac Walton
U. S. about-face, our League farm on Dec. 30.
delegation, in full agreement · For the hike, scouts are to
with that of the Provisional meet at 8 a. m. near Elberfelds
Rev.olutionary Government WarehoUse on Mechanic St.,
(Viet Cong), proposed to end then go by car to the Chester
the session after having scout cabin and hike from.
delivered Its declaration."
there to the farm. Boys II
Viet C~g ~eader Dinh Ba Thi years old or who .have passed
sald in a silnilar sta~eill that the fifth grade are invited to:
despite the bombmg, the join the troop in the hike or join
Communists were stariding by . as a member;
the origirial lertlll! for peace.
Hank Cleland Is the scoutThi aald they slopPed the master. All meetings are held
conference after protesting at the Odd Fellows Uxlge Hall'
"the escalation Qf the war and on Court St. The troop meets
oombing of unprecedented sa- once a week on Wednesday
vagery against North Viet- evening.

nam."

'

help you with your gift buying. '
•

MEET AT LODGE
Administrators and teachers
from school districts par·
ticlpatlng In the instructional
television · services
of
Educational Television for
Southeastern Olilo, Inc.,
Athellll, met recently at Burr
•Oak .Lodge for ·the &amp;Mual
board of directors banquet.
~tatives from 12 of the
21 plrttclpating districts attended to approve an amendment to the cirganization's bylaws and eleet executive
committee officers. Among
th- attending was Goldie
Stqry, Eutem I.A!ca1 Schools.

KEVIN DYE BORN
LETART FALLS - Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Dye of Colwnbus are
announcing the birth of their
MITCHElL HONORED
fourth child, a son, Kevin,
MASON - Mark Mitchell, at weighing 7 pounds, at River6-li and 225 pounds, senior side Hospital, Columbus.
. linebacker aod offensive end Grandparents are Mr. and
for the Wahama White Mrs. Robert Casper (Delores
FalcOIIS, has been named to the Wolfe) and . Robert Dye of
first team all-state West Columbus and Mrs. Dolly
Virginia Class AA team. Wolfe of Rocine Route 2 is the
Mitchell won his honor for his maternal great-grandmother.
outstanding defensive play.
Mr. and Mrs, Dallas Hill, Mrs.
Dolly Wolfe, Mrs. Darrell
Norris and Joey Roush visited
PLEASANT VALLEY
the Dyes in Columbus Sunday
DISCHARGES: Gene Smith, to see the new baby.
Eleanor; Herman Morgan,
Point Pleasant; Vinton Cossin,
Leon; Rolph Lee, Gallipolls
Ferry; Mrs. Emmons Thomas, FALSE PRETENSE
HAWYARD, Calif. (UP!)Leon ; Mrs. William Morrison,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Ethel The only present Santa Claus
Altice and Joseph Rhoades, had for Richard K. Hughes was
a search warrant.
Point Pleasant.
A Santa, complete with red
suit and beard, showed up at
TREATY SIGNED
Hughes' front door a week
BERLIN (UPI) - The two early and asked to~ let inside.
rival Gennan states founded 23 After Huglles admitted him,
years ago on the ruins of Adolf Santa pulled out a badge and a
Hitler's Third Reich today search warrant.
signed a tJ:eaty for the first
A search of the house turned
titne promising good neigh- up marijuana, hashish, LSD
borly relations.
and other drugs, said officers
who arrested Hughes and two
companions.
Police Said an officer donned
a Santa suit so he could get into
CLOSED
the house before Its occupants
Dec. 17 thru Oec.l3rd
disposed of the drugs.
Sun., Mon./ Tues.
Dec. 24·25·2'

•

Show Starts 7 p.m.
I

(PG)

MEETING CANCELLED
A regular meeting of the
Ladies' Auxiliary of Drew
Webster Post 39, American
Legion, scheduled Tuesday has
been cancelled.

DALLAS (UP! ) - ~lice
Amanda "Mandy" Dealey, the
debutanU! daughU!r-in•law of
the president of the Dallas
Morning News, was released
unharmed today by kidnapers
who held the newlywed blonde
four days, threatened to kill
her and then collected $250,000
ransom for her safety.
The 22-year.old ·beauty, wife
of Joe M. Dealey, Jr., 25, was
described by her husband as "a
little bruised up, a little shaky,
. but in good spirits."

SUpover~

and
Cardigans
'

t

.

•

Smart styles. Make gifts
that are ideal.
Also a fine line of womens
capes - SO . very popular
now. So easy to wear - a~d
a wonderful gift.
·

We have an excellent selection 'for
you.

Lingerie Department
1st Floor .
PulA
New
Handbag
Under
The Tree
This Year

Buy

.. ·. ..•
'*
•

Hosiery
For Her

~~

And choose from our
Berkshire - Beauty
Mist. Paolty hose ·

You'll
Like
This
Fine
Group

regular nylons .and

Supp hose.
Colors you'll like and
in all sizes.

There's a big selection of shorty
gloves, also the longer lengths.
All sizes - excellent styles.
Ready for your selection.
"

'"

.

·~npl'e

greutgiSts
Solid colors · stripes - plaids - all
permanent press · all famous
makes. Sizes small ( 14-14112 ),
medium (15·15 112), large (16-16'12 )
and extra large (17-17112 ). Let us help
you with your selections.

Also AComplete SelectDI
of Dress Gloves For Boys •
Leathers and Vinyls

Ties For Him

Colorful
Christmas Hassocks

ROUND HASSOCKS

RCA Color TV Sets ·
RCA Console Stereos

Brown, Olive Per·
simmon, Gold, Black,.
Orange, Yellow.

ALINE WEAVER DRESS
AND IIAUTY SHOP
5th&amp; Vine

949-3584

Visi,t.. the Music Department on the 2nd floor ..
Select a col.o r TV set by RCA or an RCA Console
Stereo. We'll deliver' in time for Christmas and
you can use our own sensible credit service.

ROUND WITH CASTERS
DiESTS STOOLS

Racine, 0.

~·

~

Also mbre 111odels Panasonic Radios Cassette T1pe Players and Recorders
and Panasonlc Portable TV Sets.

Choose ties from this wonderful selection of
Wembley lies. Four-in-Hand and ready lied ties.
Solid colors - stripes · neat patterns.
·
Free gift boxes. too.

Bring the children for 1 visit with S.nt1
·claus Friday from 2 to 3 at the Toy Store.

Dealey said his father , Joe
M. Dealey, Sr., president and
chief executive officer of the A.
H. Belo Corp., which publishes
the Dallas newspaper, paid the
$250,000 early today through a
secret "drop." The woman
then was released.
"Needless to say, there was a

Also winning prizes in ,the
non-religious theme were Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph McKenzie,
Racine, first place; Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Wolfe and Mr. and
Mrs. Henry Roush, Racine,
tied for second, and Mr. and
Mrs. James Hunt, Letart Falls,
third.
The home of Mr. and Mrs.
James Reese, Sr., Racine, won

-·

..

'

JEN CENTS

lot of crying, a lot of hugs and
kisses," said the husband of the
li-6, 135-pound woman whose
blOnd hair hangs six inches
past her shoulders.
"This is going to be the best
damn Christmas anybody ever
wished for ."
Dealey and Mandy were
married six weeks ago during a
gala affair in Dallas. They
honeymooned at Dragon Bay In
Jamaica. The woman was
abducted Tuesday from the
couple's apartment.

Neither Dealey nor the FBI
would say how many kidnapers
were involved.
·
"She was held at an unknown
location during. the entire
period of time," Dealey said.
"She stayed real cool throughout. We are real proud of her."
He said his wife was "bruised"
because she had marks where
adhesive Iape was ripped from
her wrists and legs following
the ordeal. He said she also had
been bound by handcuffs.
Dealey said telephone calls

'

first in the entrance · way
division with the home of Mr.
and Mrs . Robert Hill, Racine,
taking second. In the religious
category, overall, the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Swain,
Racine, won first and the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Roher! Roy,
also of Racine, second.
In cases of three winners,
prizes of $10, $5 and $3 were
awarded and prizes of $10 and
$5 where there were just first
and second place winners.
Receiving smaller cash prizes
for honorable menUon were
Mr. and Mrs. Coulter Shuler,
Mr. and Mrs. Unley Hart, Mr.
~;..RPbeft Fisher, Mr.
and'lf'rS. 15avld Hill and Mr.
and Mrs. Harry Wilford;
Judges for the conU!st staged
cooperatively by the Bend '0
the River Garden Club and the
Ladles Auxiliary of the Racine
Fire Dept. were Mrs. Lloyd
Moore, Mrs. Robert Thompson
and Mrs. John Terrell of the
Winding Trail Garden Club in
Pomeroy .
Mrs. Bert Grimm and 'Mrs.
Edward Simpson took the
judges on a tour of the area and

entertained them at the
Simpson home which was
decorated extensively In lhe
season's traditions. Each judge
was presented a gift.
Money for prizes ·and the
grand prize were contributed
by businesses. The B. A.
Beauty Shop, which contributed to the contest, was
erroneously omltled from the
original list of contributors.

Auto tax return
up in Novemb~r
Retail sales tax receipts and
sales tax receipts on
autpmobllea wer.e up tor .
November compared to
November, 1971, Mrs. Gertrude
Donohey,
state
treasurer, reports.
Retail sales tax receipts for
November this year totaled
$69,795.56, an increase or
$10,054.11 over last year's total
of $59,741.45 for the month.
Motor vehicles sales tax
receipts for November, this
year, were $30,909.92 compared
to last year's $30,631,83, an
increase of $276.011.

Lawyers, courthouse officials
taking holidays for Christmas
" 'TWAS THE NIGHT BEFORE CHRISTMAS" - In red
flannel nlghshirt and cap, Robert Morris, principal of the
Pomeroy Elementary School, gave an original version of the
traditional Christmas story to pajama-clad mothers, left to

right, front, Mrs. Barbara Colmer, Mrs. Norma Baker, and
Mrs. Margaret Eskew, and back, Mrs. Manue SU!phenson,
Mrs . Ann Hemsley, Mrs. Loretta Brown, and Mrs. Keith Ann
Sisson. The program was presented Thursday afoornoon by
the PTA.

'

ews.• in Briefsf

Veterans Memorial Ho•pital
ADMITTED
Louise
Rhodes, Middleport; Gregory
Lewis, Clifton; William
Morris, Racine; Clara Smith,
Middleport ; Howard L. Searls,
Rutland, and Betty Upton,
Reedsville,
' DISCHARGED - Guy Bolin,
Elsie M. Roush, Goldie Wyant,
Phyllis Mcintyre, Bertha
Hobstetter,, Homer Bradshaw,
Victory Braley and Monte
Wolfe.

·:·:·:·z.:·:·:::::·:·:.:·:·:-:·:·:·:·:-:-:::::·:·:·:·:·=·=·=·:::-:·:;:;:::::::::::::::::::~::::::~:::::::::•::~:::::::•:~:~:~:~::::::::::~=::::x::

;:
f:i
!.i!.:.

,.,

~~

!,.··,,j'.:,::.:

..

t

Tuppers Plains area homes i~
being judged this evening J

~.·

TUPPERS PLAINS - Winners in the Tuppers Plains
Community Decorating contest will be selected this ...
evening beginning at 6:30p.m . from residences that have !:!:

.,\
I

,,.

"

',

LJ~, \4 1 l~&lt;f

..; \

!1

.. ,
J.. ..,., t''
,'."./,1JA

Hr&lt;I\.~A" ~IAJS

Most of the law flnna In Pomeroy d01ed at noon Thun·
day for the Chriotmas holiday weekend and will not be
reopenJng uniil Tuesday, Dec. M.
.
Coinmon Pleas Judge Johu C. l!aeon said all offipeo In
the courlhouoe will he ciosed for the holiday weekend with
the close of hualness alt p.m. today and wlU not open until
Tue•day, with one exception, open on Saturday morning wlll
be the probate court dlvi1lon where matten had been aet
earlier for hearlug by Judge Manlllug D. Weboter. TheBe
matters will be heard on D&lt;c. Z3 u lchedaled.
Cbrtstmas Day, Monday, The DaOy Sentinel will not be
JMibllHhed so that employes may enloy the hoUday at their
homes,

:.,'::::·,··:;!

J

distribute treats to children.
The tree was donated by Mrs. Walter Brown. Prizes :;;:
jiji for the decorating contest are an appliance from the i i!
;j;j Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Co. and cash prizes ~~
!;!; of flO, $5 and $3.
· ~
j;!;
The sponsoring Rose Garden Club also is thanking .~ .
;j;j Mrs. Brown for the tree, Carl Barnhill, Jim Stout, Charles ®
!;!; Carr, Harold Massar and H. A. Cole for getting the tree ®,
~! and putting up the decorations in town, and the electric ®
~ company for the appliance.
.
j·
·:;::~:::::~:=~:=~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;::::::~:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::~::~:::::::::::::::::~::::::::~::~::::::::::~~

By GEORGE HARGRAVES, Supt.
Meigs Local School District
This column will be a brief one. This has
been a very fast-moving week with lots of
matters to consume time.
I would begin by reminding you of Mr.
Morrison's room number _ 1041 - In the
Unlversity Hospilal in Columbus. I know that
he would particularly like to hear from you at
this time. Being in the hospital is no fun . It's

Speakillg of Schools No. 262
CONSUMERS' NOTE
WASHINGTON JVPI) Consumer prices rose O.Z per
Asuit for money and one for
cenl In November, the . divorce have been filed In
·smallest monlltly Increase Meigs cOunty Common Pleas .
since August, the Labor Court. The Farmers Bank and
Departmenl said today.
Savings Company, Pomeroy,
About two-thlrdl of the asks$1,941 .26and interest from
Increase In the coot of living Daniel 0. and Alice E. Toban,
came Ia higher prices for Pomeroy, Rt. 2. !lasil L.
food , clothing and residential Haynes, RuUand, filed suit for
gas, the deparlmenl's divorce against Doris Haynes,
Bureau of Labor Statistics Midalcport , charging gross
iBLSI said.
neglect of duty and e~treme
cruelty .

. from the kidnapers aemanding .
the $250,000 rwom were made
to his father1'bome.
"They were punctuated with
foul language," Dealey said.';They said, 'Deliver the
money or the game's over,' and
they alluded to the fact that
they had her sealed In a·
watertight enclosure.
"But this proved to be false.
She was kept l1l a house during
the enUre Ume and she was
real well treated Iinder the
clrcumatances. We liave no
Idea at this time where the
hollae Is."
One of the demands of the
kidnapers, pollee said, was
that word of the kidnaping not
be "leaked" by the prese,
which new about the case but
· withheld reporting it.
Payment of the, $250,000
ransom was made by an
unknown "intermediary"
through the hours ol darkneaa
Thursday night and early
today.
"The enUre drop procedure
took the better part' of the
evening," Dealey said. '"!'he
drop activities took place
starting about 10 p.m. Thursday and were 'concluded about
4 a.m . this morning.
"The money wu carried by
the Intermediary and
was
tol~ to RO to several telepltone
pay ·et-ll!lll tbroughOIII NCI'th
Dallas, at whJch time he Bot
telephone calls from the kldJI!Ipers, who would tell him to
(Continued on page 5)

he

Haroeys hired
to superintend .
children's home
A resolution to employ Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph Harvey,
Minersville, as llllperlntendent
and matron of the Melga
County Children's Home was
approved 2-1 In a special
meeting, of the Meigs County
Commissioners Thursday.
casting the nay vote was
Charles R. Karr,
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Clark,
who were ~~- as supertntendent and
'on until Jan.
3, 1973, were · lfled by letter
of the termination of their
employment.
.
Attending Thursday's
meeting were. Mr. Karr, ~Bob
Clark and Warden Ours,
commissioners, and Martha
Chambers, clerk.

This an exciting time

lightsChristmas
turned oncarols
by that
willhour.
he sung beginning at 2 p.m.
Sunday, Dec. 24,at theconumunity tree in town . Santa will ..

SUITS FILED

ALA: -

MONTGOMERY,
DEMOCRATIC PARTY Chairman RobertSiraussthlnU Gov. George C. Wallace sh011ld have a
major voice In the revamping of the Democratic Party, and
(j::onttnued on page 5)

!l

f"' ............ ..........

;;;;

KANSAS CITY, MO. - FORMER PRESIDENT Harry S
Truman's sheer determination - "a reflection of his attitudes
toward life" -wasaslmportantas medicine in his hattie against
a weak· heart and ailing kidneys, Truman's doctor said Thursday.
Dr. Wallace Graham said he detected a "favorable trend"ln
Truman's health since a new intr~venous feeding me~od was
used, bat the 81-year.old former chief execuUve's condition was
still listed u ''very ~eriou*. "

•

)

)

. w.:::x:::-1:::-,::;.;:::x=::::::::-.::::::::::~~-==»-::::»':!~::r.~~

........ ' ''" "

•

•

~

LOCAL TEMPS
PHILADELPHIA
THE BANKRUPT Penn · Central
Temparature ln. downtown
Railroad said Thursday.it lost $20 million In November and $185 Pomeroy at 11 a.m. Friday was
million In the first II months of 1972.
49 degrees, under cloudy skies.
The railroad's reported-loss of $20,559,428 last month was a
27.2 pet. Improvement over the Novemller, 1971, lnss of
$28,008,388. The Penn Central lost $37,192,5211 In November ol
1970. The reported Ioas of $185,606,623 for the first II months ol
the year marked a 25.4 pet. improvement over 1971's 11-month
loss ol $248,923,387.

ANO'IHER SHIPMENT

~kers."

'

By United Presa lolernalloual
WASHINGTON - ARNOLD R. MILLER, who bucked the
establishment and won, was formally declared today the new
president of the United Mine Workers of America and served
notice he would move swUtly to change the direcUon of the union
to stress "real democracy.''
.
Miller officially became head of the 205, """-......,..,mb'erI uruon
after stunning labor in general and the UMW leadership In
particular by handily beating Incumbent president Tony. Boyle in
voting in unlon locals across the nation !be first week of this
month.

Easy.to-care·for Vinyl ·
Acrylic crush
Velvet
pile .

Starting In the posh DaUas
suburb of Highland Park,
police and FBiagents began a
manhunt for the kidnapers,
described only as " foul

h~. ~Wl
~::.\'t,,,~

In the busy mens and boys depart·
men!. A truly fine line of dress
gloves In leathers · vinyls. Sizes
small. medium, large and extra
·large.
.
Gloves make perfect gifts for that
man on your list.

MERRY GIFTING

It WllS

BY CIU.RLl!:NE HOEFLICH
Chan~e . from
1the
tradiUonal ean be delightful on
special occasions which Is how
a happening at Pomeroy
Elementary School Thursday
turned out.
It was Christmas program
Ume, but this year, instead ol
having the children entertain
the parents, the parents enU!rtained tl)e children!
Even ll)e school principal
performed, to the delight of the
youngsters who howled when
they got that first glimpl!C of
Bob Morris In a red flannel
night shirt and cap.
His talent for dialogue was
nicely displayed in an original
version of " 'Twas !he Night
Before Christmas," recited to
seven PTA mothers attired in
(Continued on Page 9) ·

Give Him Shirts! Mens Dress Gloves4A
••
shlnts

RACINE - The home of Mr .
and Mrs. Jack Bostick, Dorcas,
was selected the grand prize
winner in a holiday home
decorating contest of the
Racine area Thursday night.
Mr. and Mrs. Bostick
received an electrical appliance. Their
overall
decorations were on t.he nonreligious theme.

. THERUNAWAYPRESENTS-Takingrolesin theskltofthat title were Mrs. Pat Thoma ,
PTA president, as Frosty the Sriowman, Mrs. Patty Chappelear, Mrs. Ann Hemsley and Mrs.
Kathren Johnson as presents, left to right front; and Mrs. Tony Taylor, Santa; Mrs. Ida
Murphy, Mrs. Suzanne Warner,and Mrs. Betty Wiles, presents, and Mrs. Margaret Eskew, the
runaway presents, back row, left to right.

vinyl, suede.

fine lines. Kayser ·

BENQi HASSOCKS

QFF

PHONE 992·2156

Bostick home topped them all

Select Kayser Glcwes
On The 1st Floor

jUST Tf.tE ~ifT
TO .f.tANd liER •••
GlOVES

Give smart hand 1
shoulder strap
bogs. In textured

ON SALE FOR THE HOLIDAYS!

. 1/3

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1972

r1

SQUARE HASSOCKS

.AU DRESSES AND
PANT SUITS

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.

THE REVENGERS
IT~chnicolar)

Devoted To 'The Interest&amp; Of The Meigs-Mason Area

VOL
. XXIV NO. 176

MEIGS THEATRE

Susan Hoyword
William Holden
Co lore• rtoons

MosUy cloudy in the 'South
today, tonight and Saturday,
except rain in the southeast
today. Highs Saturday in the
40sin the south. Lows tonight in,
the low .40s .

•

Senice held
at gravesi&lt;J,e ·
Graveside •funeral serviceS
were held Wednesday at Mi\es
Cemetety for Edgar Carpenter, formerly of Meigs
County, whO died unexpectedly
Monday at his residence in
Columbus.
Mr. Carpenter Is survived by
his wife, Alta; five children, his
mother, Mrs. Dora carpenter,
of Rutland ; three brothers,
Henry, of
Middleport;
Lawrence, of Albany, and
Perry, Long Bottom; four
sisters, Kathleen Carpenter,
Evelyn Rife and Margie
Grueser, aU of ·Rutland, and
Anna Cline of Albany.
'

Weather

The common house rat is
capable of chewing through
lead pipes and concrete.

the store. You'll find Henjoyable and we11

,

·He called on the world to
demand that President Nixon
"atop the bombing and sign
without delay the accord
agreed to 100 per cent last
October."

Now You Know

. particularly difficult at this Ume of the year.
Your cards and letters will cheer him. Your
prayers wlll sustain him . l sincerely ask you for
your help.
Each year in the days just preceding
Christmas vacation, I like to visit as' many
elementary classrooms as possible. It is an
extraordinarily warming experience. As you go
· from room to room and from school to school,
you can't help being affected by the contagious
excitement generated by hundreds and hundreds of children.
Truly, the most emotion packed day of the
entire school year seems to always be the last
day before Cbristmas vacation. The anticipation of a brief break from school work and

the thought of gills and good.things to eat Te411Y
gives young people great stimulation. At the
end of yesterday's activities, the children went
home with hearts filled with happiness and
anticipation . The teachers went home
exhausted but happily looking forward to a few
days of relaxation.
·
At the Junior Hlgh School an afternoon
concert highlighted the danJlctiviUes. At the
Senior High School there wii'S a morning concert and an afternoon party. We hope that
everything went well with all concerned. We
hope that aU arrived home safely and have a
pleasant few days away from school.
!would like tocallyourattenUon to the fact
that the junior class will be sponsoring a dance
at the Pomeroy Junior Hlgli this evening. Next
Friday evening we will play South Point in the
Meigs High School gym. The sehoo) offices
will be closed next Monday and Tuesday, They
will be open from 9-3 p.m. during the remainder
or the week.
:On behalf ol the board Of education, the
admlniStration, and the 200 employees of the
Meigs Local School District, I ext~d the
wannest, best wishes for a happy Chnstmas
time and for a new year that wlll be filled wllh ·
success and joy.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="732">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11132">
                <text>12. December</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="53646">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="53645">
              <text>December 21, 1972</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="29">
      <name>hysell</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="776">
      <name>might</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
