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arr
bF Cou:rse - ~· Millie
-~~ G:AND'/
·.·CANE.S....
.

DRUMS: ••

HORNS ...

'

one

~uman

By CARL E. CIJRISTlENSEN org~nic failure causing a
KANS.\SCITY,Mo. (UP!) - collapse of the cardiovascular
Hlu'ry S Trurtum, 88, tbe 33rd System."
·
Alnerican ~esident, died to- . · Bess 'l'ruman, 87, the former
day. The heart of the fiery man chief executive's c,hildhood
from Missouri failed at tbe end sweetheart whom he married
of a 22-day battle against age more than half a century ago,
and disease.
·
was at their mansion in nearby
· Death came at 7:50 ·a.m. Independence, Mo., when her
(CST) as Truman lay in a deep husband died. She was at his
coma in a sixth Door room of bedside almost 12 hours OlristResearch Hospital, fighting mas Day.
with his \L'lual courage to stay
The funeral will he held later
alive.
this week. In the meantime, the
"The , hon.orable Harry S body '.will lie in state at the
Truman, 33rd President 0! the Truman Memorial Library in
Vnited States, died at 7:50a.m. Independence,.
Truman picked his own
. (CST)," , the official medicaJ
statement said, "The cause of epitaph·. He said his life could
death was a cOmplexity of have no better meanin~ than

I •

the words he 011ce saw inscribed !I a frootier grave:
"Here lies Jack Williams. He
done his damndest."
And Truman said this is the
· way he wanted to be rememhered: "I did what had to he

done."

•

Age simply caught up with
Truman, wbo made some of
this nation's most irr\)lortant
decisions of this century ..,.the
ato!Jlic bom~ing of Japan, Ute
filerlin Blockade, the dispatch
of U.S. troops to Korea and
many more.
Truman's funeral will be
held Friday at the Truman
Library. His body will lie in
s~te one day, Thursilay, for

public viewing. The funeral
will be a private ceremony, his
family said.
Truman outlived most of
those with whom he shared a
· place in history - Stalin,
Churchill, · De
Gaulle,
MacArthur, Eisenhower and
even Thomas E; Dewey, whom
he.defeated for the presidency
in one of the most ~tunning
upsets In American political
history.
The only comtemporary Tru. man did not outlive was '
Chairman , Mao rse-ttmg of
- China, who became 79 today.
Truman waged a bitter war
with Mao over Korea, but both
men lived to see relations

between their nations begin Ill
thaw .
"the people of the United
States, and especially the press
of Utis country, have lost a
great friend," said Ronald
Jessie, a family spokesman.
"While we lost a friend, two
great ladies lost a husband and
father. I know that in your
coverage during Ute next few
days that yQU will show them
Ute same consideration and
respect for their privacy you
did during Qjs lifetime," Jessie
told newsmen.
Lyndon B. Johnson, now the
only living former president,
eulogized Truman in a state.
ment from his LBJ Ranch in

Texas.
"A 20th Century giant is
gone," Johnson ·said. "Few
men or any tirr\es ever shaped
the world as did the man from
Independence. President Truman presided over the destiny
ol this century during one of its
most turbulent eras, never
flinching in the face of crucial
national choices. His qecisions
changed' Ute course of human
events Utroughout the world. 1
"He had his critics and
detracrors, but history Is just
and Harry Truman will live on
In the memory of free people as
one of Ute greatest i:nen to lead
(Continued on Page 12)

GIN6E.R-

BR.E.AD

•

•

Devoted To The {nleresla Of The Meigs-Mason Area

VOL XXV NO 177 ·

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1972

,.

PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENS

.
Citizens rallying to
Bombs away! auaz.n I raise
$5,000 for band

::::::::::~":&gt;.::~t~:::~::.-:::::::::::::~-::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.-:::••

~

SAIGON (UP!) -The U.S.
command announced today
U.s. bomberS had resumed
Uteir raids over North Vietnam
after a 30-hour Christmas halt,
and the North Vietnamese
delegation In Paris said B52s
were hitting Hanoi, Haiphong
and other cities.
The Christmas halt in the
bombings that the Communists
said hit North Vietnam with
40,000 tons of bombs last week
-double the explosive pow~r of
Ute atomic bomb that fell on
Hiroshima -as believed ordered by President Nixon in
hopes the Communists would
return to the jieace table.
Neither
u.s.Florida
command
in
Saigon
northethe
White

A Tat! of'

say whether the bombing
resumed today was airried at
· the Hanoi-Haiphong area or
war. as intensive as last week's
bombing -the most intensive
of the war.
But in Paris the North
Vietnamese issued a statement
saying, · "The Nixon ad- ·
ministration, in the· night of
Dec. 24 and as of Dec. 26 has
multiplied raids by B52s and
various other types of aircraft
with a view of razing to the
ground Hanoi, Haiphong and
numerous other towns and
populous areas of North
Vietnam."
During last week's raids the
u.s. command
gave
details
of the bombing
and few
the

agencies or from diplomats in
Hanoi. Hanoi Radio r~ported
hundreds of persons killed and
thousands made homeless in
Ute raids.
,
"U.S. air crews resumed
operations over North Vietnam
at 1300 hours (midnight EST
Monday) today after a 3s.bour
holiday stand down," the
command said.
"There are no new limitalions on U.S. aircraft since the
bOmbing resumed," a spokesman said, but declined to say
whether 'this meant U.S .
warplanes had resumed raids

~l

.

over Hanoi and Haiphong.
Three hours before the
command announced the resumption of the raids, 852
bombers lined the taxiways at
Andersen A'r Force base in
Guam and began taking off at
five-minute intervals headed
toward Indochina. Military
spokesmen at Andersen
refused Ill say where they were
going.
· U.S. pilots halted their all .out
bombing of the North ·Christmas day. The bomb halt
followed seven days of the
(Continued on page 12)

President Harry S Truman
In late years .

·

•

,
···

frln
'1:'

tO
·

Washlnmon
e "''

Succeeded FDR

1

MASON - Wahama High School's White Falcon Band has
·been invited to represent West Virginia in the
Presidential Inauguration parade in Washington, D. c. next
month, but there'sa lot of money involved if the hand is togo.
In order to participate, the band must raise approximtely
·$5,000. Individuals and business places in the area are being
asked tQ help. Already, several persons have joined a drive to
raise the money.
Tom Fisher, president 9f Fisher Stores Inc., which includes
ownership and operation of Shopper's Maris In Point Pleasant,
Maspn and Gallipolis, was amon~ the first to contribute. Fisher,
who has also been a long time supp,orter of Mason County's three
high school bands, presented Gerald Sinunons with a $100 check
and in doing so challenges other businesses and firms to join him.
In N:ew Haven, the community Is going all outto offer the band
its support. This past weekend collections were taken at Ute
Unitedfund,
Methodist Church In the amount of $110toward the special
band

Truman became president communism after the war, he
April 12, 1945 on Ute death of acted deciBively on the foreign
Franklin D. Roosevelt with front but raised the ire of
World War II climaxing In McCarthy-era conservatives at
Europe and raging In the home. He pualted through the
Pacific.
· Marshall plan In the face of
Critics called him "that little Russian post-war- eiiP8111ion,
man In the White House." That sent U.S. troops to Korea when
Image may have been a hidden , Communists Invaded South
factor In his stunning 1948 re- Korea, .and broke the Soviet
election upset of Thomas E. blockade of Berlin with a
Dewey.
rnaulve airlift.
Truman rose in politics
But be waa caned liy critics
through the Kansas City "soft on Olmm111ilm" for
Pendergast machine to the dlmnlaalng tho Aller Hill case
U.S. Senate and finally to 88 a "red herring;" hls Ollila
become RooseVelt's runrilng policy and the ftrlng of warmate In 1944. As vice prelldenl time hero Gen. Douslaa
House In Key BiScayne would reports of vast destruction to
Peraons wishing to contribute may mail cllecks to Wahama le1111than three montba, he had MacArthUr.
comment on this report, and Hanoi and Haiphong came only
High Scbool, Mason, marking them for the Wahama Band Fund. little time to prepare himlelf
Born May 8, 111M in a frame
the U.S. cOilllllM&lt;I would not from Communi•t news
' Two cars were damaged and failing to yield right of way.
The band, &lt;ilrected by Gl!ralcl Slmmona and Char ea Yeaso, for tl\e awiiOmt dull~ that hollll In !II• town of Lamar In
two drl\lers were cited to Both drivers were ~ken. -by has a merntier' of 85.ln addition, 15 others would make the trip, late ~ Gil~ .
• JOtillrtriiii(Jnlll'l. 'I'~ ,a
lo"..W.W.
f "'".,
• .-..'¥:if.;~· mayor's Cllllft as the r41Bult of private car to Veteraos including chaperones, Ute principal, Booster Club officers and
He later admitted he had age four mov~ with bli
an accident on East Main St., Memorial Hospital for· treat- directors. Estimated coSt is approximately ~ a person.
be'en told ,noth!n8 about the psrenta to Ind8penda1ee, Mo.
Pomeroy, at 6:40p.m, Monday. ment of minor injuries.
A chartered bus would depart from Wabama High School existence of an 1tomlo bomb Hecalledlthome!orthereltof
Pomeroy police . said '·a car
until the day afler he wu hla life.
•
driven by Robert Hemsley, · Police also investi~ated a Thursday, January 18 and return the night of January 20.
sworn
In 88 Prealdent,
Hla parenll · pve him a
By UDlted Press lnteruatiooal
Long Bottom, pulled from Ute second accident on Second St.
Faced with the choice of an middle tnltlel S, with no period,
MANAGUA - '111E GOVERNMENT AGREED today to Landmark Service Station into
Saturday.
A
car
driven
by
invasion of Japan by U.S, land to stand for either of hls
consider usinl! force to drive reluctant survivors of the Managua Ute path or a vehicle driven by
Connie
Radford,
Pomeroy,
was
forces or unleashlns Ute newly grandfather• whose names
earthquake from their ruined city. A Latin American relief of. Ronald Mullins, 31, Pomeroy.
pulling
from
a
parking
space
developed
atom bomb, Tfurnan were Slipp and Solamon.
ficial suggested such action to remove survivors from areas in M:lllins, stopping to a'void a
when it was struck by a car
approved Ute nuclear attacka
Truman wanted to go to Weat
danger of epidemics and shortages of food and water.
collision, was struck from the driven by Dwight Logan,
on Hiroshima and Napaakl Point, but was tlll'lled down
An official ilource said a Venezuelan relief official suggested rear by a car driven by
Pomeroy.
The
Radford
car
A
fire
of
undetermined
origin
ners' home and a mobile home that killed thouundJ of because of poor eyetlgbt. Afler
what he .called "gunpoint evacuation" at a meeting Monday Charlene Barton, 25, Mason.
graduating from blah school,
night at the residence of Gen. Anastasio Somoza, the commander There was heavy damage to then hit a parked car owned by leveled a garage and two were saved after a determined civilians.
Gladys Walker, Pomeroy. outbuildings at the home of Mr. effort.
"It was a military dec!Jion," he worked at variOUJ Jobll
of the national guard and military strongman of Nicaragua. The
Barron's vehicle and medium Damage to the Radford car and Mrs. Joe Turner on Vine
At 3:15a.m., Pomeroy's Fire he said later. "No other course around Kanajls City before
suggestion came as authorities - and hundreds of foreign relief to Mullins'.
being comrniJsloned In the
was
heavy,
to
the
other
St.,
Middleport,
early
today.
Dept. responded to a call for was conceivable."
. workers- grappled with ino:easing problems of health, housing
•
Charlene Barton was cited vehicles, light.
Miss Radford . Middleport firemen, called help. There is no fire hydrant . In the confron~tion with
(Continued on page 12)
and feeding of residents who survived the powerful earthquake for failure to maintain assured
was cited for failing to yield at 2:21 a.m., found the blaze on Vine St., so Middleport
which sh.attered Managua !at~ Saturday.
clear distance and Hemsley for right or way.
was out of control. The Tur· firemen fought the blaze by
using a relay system from
JUNEAU, ALASKA -SEARCH VESSELS criss-crossed the
Beech St. Pomeroy was called
stormy GuH of Alaska today searching for survivors amidst the
to
assist with the relay, to bring
floating debris of a Liberian cargo ship that carried 33 Korean
water, and to assist generally.
crewmen. Navy C130 aircraft spotted an oil slick, some debris
Robert D. (Bob) Craig, 52, the son of the late Harry and
The Turner car was in Ute
and all four capsized lifeboats of the bUlk carrier Pacrover
garage when the fire s~rted widely known Middleport Edna L. Brown Craig. He was a
Monday in heavy seas 750rnlles south of Kodiak Island.
but was removed by a neigh· resident, died at his home at member of the Middleport
One search plane remained at the scene during the night,
Gregory Dean LodWick, 19, Started and LodWICK'S body Mrs . Harry Lodwick, Sr.,
along with two commercial vessels. Two Coast Guai'd cutters Chester, died Sunday ap-· was found over an em- Chester, and a nephew, Jeffrey hor. Antique furniture, lawn 829 Page St., in Middleport Church of Christ and was a
furniture and tools were lost in Monday evening. Mr. Craig 'veteran of World War li having
and the Canadian weather ship Quadra were en route. "We're !J&lt;!renUy from injuries suffeted bankment. He was taken to Roush, Pomeroy.
Ute structures. It was not had been In falling health a served witli\he U.s. Army. He
still continuing an intensive search in the area," a Coast Guard when he was struck by a car as Veterans Memorial Hospital
The sheriff's dept. was known this morning U Mr. and number of weeks, conllned to was a former Middleport
spokesman said. "We're looking for survivors or liferafts." The he Wlllked along State Route 7, by the Chester emergertcy
notified of the accident at 6:15
Liberian registered 13,()()0.(on ship radioed it was sinking Sunday one-tenth of a mile south of squad but was pronoW!ced p.m. The body arrived at Mrs. Turner have Insurance Ute Holzer Medical Center. He village councilman and for 32
was dead upon the arrival of years had worked as a
covering the losses.
and crewmen who managed lo get aboard a liferaft WQUld have Route 248 at Chester.
dead on arrival from multiple Veterans Memorial Hospl~l at
the MiddJeport emergency boilermaker. '
faced wind-whipped seas of up to 55 feet.
Sheriff Robert Hartenbach's injuries.
6:55p.m.
squad al his home. He had only
Surviving are his wife,
depariment said a car driven
The department concluded
Foneralservlces will be held
recently improved enough to Martha Jean Searls Craig;
AT. LEAST 28 PERSONS lost their lives in traffic-related by Mrs. Mabel E. Johl)son, Lodwick was walking on Route at 3 p.m. Wednesday at the
leave
the hospi~i.
three daughters, Jennifer Sue,
mishaps In Ohio during the long Christmas weekerid, turning Long Bottom, apparently 7 when he was hit.
Ewing Funeral Home with the
Born
Sept.
15,
1920
at
Cynthia
Jean and Patricia Lee,
holiday happinei!S Into despair for many families. Four of the struck Lodwl~k. Mrs. Johnson
Surviving are his parents, Rev. Robert Card officiating.
Ravenswood, W. Va. , he was all at home; a son, Stephen D.
deaths during the 78-bour period were caused· by carbon told officers she, "felt her car Juanita and Harry Lodwick of
Burial will be In Chester
Temperatures
!slUng
Ill
the
(Duffy) Craig, at home; a
monoxide poisoning. The Ohio Highway Patrol lists asphyxiatlort had hit something," and she Chester; two brothers, Richard
Cemetery. Friends may call at middle to upper 2Us by evening. mY//hW'P):WZ.Y/////.$WH'.a~ brother, Harry Douglas Craig,
victims in the traffic toll when such deaths occur in motor stopped the vehicie to In- and James, Chester; a sister, the funeral home any tirr\e. In
Cloudy, chance of snow Durries
Jr., Las Cruces, New Mexico ;
EXTENDED FORECAST
vehicles on public property.
vestigate.
Diane Roush, Pomeroy Route Ueu of Dowers, the family in the norUteast . and partly
Thursday , Tbroueh a nephew, several aunts, unTwo Athens Olunty teenagers died of carbon monoxide
However, she foond nothing, 3; his maternal grandparents, requests that donations he sent cloudy elsewhere. Lows in Ute
Salurday, mostly cloudy cles and cousins.
poisoning Sunday in their car along Ohio 329 east of Athens. They and proceeded home from Mrs. Millie Cunningham,
to the Meigs County Com- lower 2Us in Ute east. Cloudy Thursday through Saturday
Funeral services wlll he held
were identified as Dennis Tabler, 18, and Raymond Waters, 18, where she notified the sheriff's Pomeroy, and John Bolin, Atmunity Clas8 which Ute young Wedmisday . High In the lower with a chance of ahowers at 2 p.m. Thursday at the
both of Stewart.
office. An investigation was ens; his paternal grandmother, men attended.
30s.
Thursday and Friday. Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
Daytime highs In the middle with the Rev. Raulin !,foyer
to lower 40s Ia the north aDd officiating. Burial will he in
in the upper 401 In the Gravel Hill · cemetery at
southern sectiou Thursday Cheshire. I'riends may call at
and Friday. lowering Ill the the funeral home after )0 a.m. ·
OOLUMBUS (UP!) - The March, but it went nowhere in
Systeou Olallejlged
bases are unfair because weal- unconstitutional.
Education Association, which upper 301 and lower 401 Wednesday.
incoming chairman of the Qhio the Republlcan-Oominated
Some ii4 school districta with thy districts receive more
No Waterlog Down
has made court challenges Ill Saturday. Overulght Iowa in
House Education Committee House.
taxable valuation in excess of school aid for their taxing
"We want to get some dis- Ohio's heavy reliance on the middle to lower 30s in the
plans
to
re-introduce
Now, the Democrats will he f25,000 per pupil would, to their effort.
cussion and facts before us and property taxes to finance northern sectlou and the ·Unit called out
legislation to revamp the In charge and Pease will he chagrin, have to merge with
Pease said he expects a U.S. see what naws thtll'e are in the schools, to back his proposal, upper 301 to lower 40s In the
state's school financing chairman of the ~catlun nearby dl.stricts and spread the SUpreme Court ruling on the bill," Pease said. "We want to but the position of Gov. John J. soulb.
The Pomeroy ER squad ·
system, bu! he still is unsure of Committee, to which the bill wealth.
lay the ' groundwork for
matter by May 15.
llipn has not yet been made ;-;-;::::.;:::::'*'O't~h~b.'/.WJWJ •JJ•; e•ea answered a call to the Meigs
Its prospects despite hill new will undoubtedly he a1181gned.
County lnfiqnary at 8:25 i.m.
The basic
guarantee
"II is go_ing to ~ke some im· passage. There may be some
bile.
Pease's bill seta up a me. would go frmn S800 per pupil to petua from the court saying we changes in the figures we UBed
position of power.
today for George Hawk, a
The General Assembly has
chanlam
to
fW'IIIah
equallltate
Rep. Donald J. Pease, !).()bpatient, who 1\'88 ill. He wu
$150 per pupil, 1 and school . have to do thi.:l," Pea,e said. last year. "
been confronted with two other
erlin, said Monday he will offer subsldlea for &lt;:ompsrable lax districts oou1d then adopt addi. "The legislature is not likely to
taken to Velera1111 Mi!mOrlal
But Pease said In theory hla major issues Involving the prothe bW gain next month in . effort In aU 6:15 local school tiona! propa l) taxea up io 4$ force consolidation of . these solution to the problem is "a perty
Hospl~l next door.
MOTHER STABBED
~x.
Uniform
hopes of getting some court dlstrlcll in Ohlo.
At 10:42 p.m. Sunday, the
CINCINNATI (UPI) -Mrs.
mllla and receive up to $315 per wealthy districts if it doesn't pure solution, and I'm not assessments were spaced out
Thirty mltls of property pupil extra. One mill eltra have to."
pressure behind it by Apil or
going to water it down before I through 1977 under a bill Regina J. Bonner, 24, Cln·· squad went to the carl Delonc
~xation would he tht balance would bring In $25 per pupil In
May.'
ciQnati, was found slabbed to , residence on Route 143 fer
Pease said his committee introduce it."
enacted Utls year.
The bill, as Peaae deecrihes point. About 150 average and state fundi.
"If the court5 say we have to
wiD hold hearings on · the
And the question assessing death In her home here Sun· Nora Bobo, who - W. llle
It, Ia an attempt to "ellmlnate poor school dlstricta levying
Schoolflnance.wytems In Cal· legislation so It can act do this, then the way I've got it agricultural land on the basis day. Pollee aatd no arrests had waa broqbt to P0111•07,
lhe effect of prGIItl;ly tax dif. more than this 811101111t would lfomla, Tnu, New Jersey and promptly if the court ruling is the most painless way," he of current use rather than mar· been made bllt reported they 1 trallllferred to 811 llllbullnol,
on school operating he required to reduce taxea Minnesota have been challeng- indicates ,Ohio's public school said.
ket value was put off until next were searching for the victim's • and taken to the Bol&amp;er
budgets." He put it in l88t without lll8lng any lltate funds. ed on grounds property tax Onancing system could be held
Medical Center.
husband and children.
Pease can expect the Ohio year.

2 Drz·v··.er,s cz·.ted

1

0
oWI.T'"" "

ews:J,R Briefs .·

Two homes saved

Bob Craig dies

Young man killed

'.&gt;

'I N EASY

\

'

by Crooks &amp; LawreD;oe .
.-----.~~~~~~~

GNAT!'7~ WHAT A t\I!.JI~ANC~~

,

6ETTIN6 .5TRIWDE() J=;ROM
WA?H'~ CAR IN THIS. ~ll..!-Y

,.-.. ·

PART'! CO~TVME!

..

Weather

.

Pease ·still wants equfal school taxing system

EtL..AZE:~! ... I.
~!=EM TO HAVS

?TAR.TLE:D

HIML

NOT EXACTLY,.,
IT~ 'THAT BIG

BIJ~IIJE~5 TYCOON,

v,P. MFI&lt;EEH

state

rerentills

�2-1.11! Dan, Se.alnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. 211,1972

PRESIDENTS OF MANIFEST DESTINY,

by ,atterson and Patrick

IIIL'Ilt spl'L"t,tl.md dtrccl md11tdu.1l .tdl.ll1t.tgcs."
Ptestdcnr dlleh .II kllgth onlhc "till\\ hokSOiliC progeny of palcrn.11tsm" .tnd dcd.orL·d " I h,
kssons of p.ttcrnalism "li!;hl to hl unk.trncd .uul
1he hcttcr lesson t.tughl th.u, 11 htk thL pcopk
should pauiocically .1nd chlwfully S\IPI~Ift thcit
gmcrnmcnl, us functu•ns do nor ind111k thL· supJI&lt;•rl of che p&lt;'&gt;ple ."
Thrt•c months aftl'r Clc1d.tnd look 'ofhcl' , the
Panil· of I H'll struck in full fury l'hr swck nurkl't
collapsed, h.tnkruptnes "ere C&lt;lllllllllll .md gaugs
of :mgry, uncmplnynl men ro.uned rh, coumry
lmking li&gt;r joi&gt;S .tnd finding trouble. It 11 .ts men
likl' these \1 ho nud,· np "Coxcy's \rmy" 11 h&gt;ch
nurchcd on Washington dcm.nuhng .1 $100-nulhon
ro.1d-building progr.un.
lie persuaded C1)ngrl'ss !0 rcpl·.tl the Shcnnuu
Stiver Purchase \cc, hue only after ,, hind· fight
th.1t lett the Democrats hopckssly spin . The tollml ing ye:tr the llnusl' p.tsscd ,1 t.trifl reduce ion btll
th.tt mel hts apprm .tl, hut rhc mc.tsurc got such
rough handling in thl· Scnale th.~l Clc1 cl.md dtsgustedly allo\lcd 11 to hewmt• l.lll 11 ichout hts stg.
n.uurc
l'hc Prcsidcm .ll1tngonizcd puhhc op11111111 .md
th\1,1rtl'll"~1:tnitcst De suny" by blocking the 111111 t•menl In annex ll.111 .ui
lly January, IH'J~, the gold rescnc h.td d\ltndlcd to .tl~&gt;ul $-+0 milhon, .tnd rhe Trc.tsury lkp.lrtment's situ:ltll&gt;tl \1 ,IS desper.nc. l'o lnuld up thl
restTI c, Clc1 el.tnd .trr.tngcd 11 tth .1 synd!l'.11l' ol
'''" York hankers- \ 1organ, Belmont, Rothschild
- to purch.tse .1 ne11 issue of fcder.tl homls \ltlh
gold . The fl'sene II.IS replenished, hut the mtL'fcsr
r.1tes "ere cxurhitam, .md Clcl cl.md II.IS 111dch
lTtticiznl, .1pp.1rcnrly for untlcrpltm.11111g hunun
greed
So unpopul.tr h.td Cle1 cl.md hecolltl' due ihL
Dcmocr:tllc \: .ttional Com emion of I HW. h.tntb!
htm .1 double rebuff hy ' fiorm.tlly rcpudwmg lm
conscnatt\l' liscll pohcv ami by nonun.tting .IS its
st:tndard-be.1rer the tree "" er crus.tder, II illi.un
Jennmgs llry.m of \:cbr.tsk.t.
Cle1 eland IS usu.11i&gt; r.ued hi htsron.tns .ts thl
best Democratic !'reSilient heti1 ecn Jacbon .1nd
\\'ilson . lie l".1rned chis dtsttnctmn .tlmost on
,rcngth of ch.tnll'ter .1lone, lor he \1 as .ts nonp.1rlls.m .IS a successful pnhttnan c.m he
IllS last 11 ords to hiS 11 ifc .IS he Lt y dy mg of
kidney and hean dis&lt;:ts&lt; "ere "I h.11 c tncd so h.ml
to do" right."
'I hcse erght 11 ords epttomizcd rl1e swry of
'Grmer Cle1cl.md's htc.

nw

Twenty.fourth Presidenl Grover Cleveland
(AdminiWation March 4, 1893-March 3, 1897)

'I haw tned J"O hard to do rtght'
\\hen hl· returned 10 the helm nt rhe giKid ship
\rnl'f!C,t he had left sailing rn gently rolhng \1 atcrs
fi1ur rc.trs before, Prcstdcnt Grmer , (]e\cbnd
foumf the centurv-old shtp of st.ttc tacking
haph.1z.trtll) tnto iruuhled fisc.1l .md bch.n tor.tl
sc.:as.
F:1rm prices 11crc fallmg, the tlo\1 of gold to
ti•reign m.trkcts h.ul si,IShcd the rcsrr~ e w helm1
$HK) mtlhon, unemployment \1 as nsmg. labor
unions 11 de bccommg strong .tnd unruly .md the
l:trge Philad~lph1a &amp; R~.,,lin~ R.ui"·'Y h.td gone
bankrupt ,, tc11 days bdorc Clc1 eland s mauguratum.
Cln el.md mer the tssues head-on by smglmg
nut three svmptoms of the "mstdious infirmity that
threatl'ns ,;ur n:ttum.tl 1igor": the l'xposure to degr.1d.1tion of "a sound .md stable currency," ''the \1 astc
of public money ts :1 crime .1gau~sr the etttzen" and.
the danger 111 the "prc1 .tlencc of a po~ular d1Sposttion to expect from the opcr.ntons of the gm ern-

WIN AT BRIDGE

•

~~$./~G~~e~~;i:; ·Rap

i

Ill Marriage Wortb lhe U..le?

Dear Rap :
I am 24 dtvorced, and not about to get. trapped ey marriage
again! {,ike a growing number of other gll'ls and young women,
I'm soltdly for single bliss. I Uke my career, my apartment, my
freedom to move on whenever I please.
Falling in love? That's not out, but why limit myself to a
lifetime (or a costly divorce) with a man I'll surely outgrow in a
lew years, if he doesn't outgrow me first?
Children aren't on my list of priorities, and children are the
only real reason for marriage. They also snap the trap door tight
shut for they keep you in a union you'd rather break.
Hanyone can tell me one good reason for getting married, I
might hsten. So far my married friends are untonvincing. The
wives complain, the husbands try to date me on the side. If ~Y
current boyfriend and I hacked away at each other in pubhc
(probably m private too)) as much as do these wedded couples,
we'd be long parted.
·
.
Yet my bbylriend wants us to be "legal." He says I'm unnatural, not craving wifehood. I love him -lor now -but I don't
intend to spoiltt by tying us both up in prqptises we'd regret.
At least lour of my single wonren friends are also being
pushed against their will by men who want to get married. Don't
these fellows know when they're well off?
Do other career girls agree with me that marriage IS going
out of style? - NOT A CLOD

.

Dear N.A.C.:
This career woman doesn't ~gree with you - and I say it
happily alter 30-00d years of marriage. In a world that becomes
mcreasmgly impersonal, impermanent- and lonely - I think
we need marriage more than ever, but not the restrictive trap
you picture.
However, others believe differently, and they're entitled.
Wedded life is not everyone's dish of tea, as a growing number of
"pemi811ently single by chol~e" people will tell you.
And here's one of those modern switches: Where women
once asked, "How can I get him 10 propose?" now they're
writing: "I love him, but he wants marriage and I don't I"
I predict you'll get many comments on your letter, pro and
con. - HELEN
.
Dear Not:
This career girl is pro-marriage too. I don't think it will ever
go out of style, butitmaychangeforma lot in the nextfe!" years.
Here's my prediction: the divorce rate may drop, what wtth
more people taking the "try belo~e you buy" route and putting
off the ceremony until they're sure of the whole package.
Anyway,l$1'1 it great that people now have choices? Singles
aren't considered these days. Hugband-hunting isn't a
gtrl's biggest preoccupation (but it's still in the top three) . And
when is the last time you heard someone under 30 called an old
Ulaid?- SUE

+++
(NOTE FROM HELEN: Make that "40" at least, or maybe
70, and then only if she acts the part: The term "old maid" is
passe -except as used by lovelorn 17-year-olds. See below.)

Rap:
I think there's a gap in your "IGAP" (I'm Guessing Again
Perception") with respect to the "Doomed Old Maid" (the 17year-old whose parents refused to let her run off and marry her
a poaltlve one by passing. He
/I'OR11I
26
boyfriend who then married another girl while OOM was out of
m111t have b e e n relieved
• AK 9 76
town a few days). You rightly implied she was " 'doomed'
when Eas.~ jumped to three
• K854 2
The
b&gt;dd
ong
has
been·
no-trump.
t 2
lucky," but the situa~on reeks of sub-plot. Was the guy alter
1. West North East South poM to marry him bec.ll~ he ha~ t~~W ~1Jd gll'k~r!. ~nd
Oswald: "He told P\0 he
"'A K
1
Pass
,was until hi&amp; .partner sta~d· ''lfl:st' (bj "' EAST
he preferred to inflict himself for life on
ratlier"Uiin\ ~e fG
pass ,2 N T
Pass
?
lo tllillll er at'ieut ~ped • Void
··'•104
,who was pressuring him~ ,So maybe he got trapped With the
"' You ~ South, hold: "' •· ·~-. '"
t~ con&amp;ldl!t ~aklng S"~ Ill e ' J 9 6
• A73
4112 .AQ9875 tA32 ... KQl proverbial shotgun.
btdorother.'
•
tAKQ98
+Jl0643
Had she run off as she bitterly regretted not doing, she might
What do you do now?
Jim: "I see that when "'QJ1085
•632
South did bid he came up
SOUTH
A-Bid lhroe hearts to show have found herself with 1. a husband who was already an exwith a wonder. He did have
•QJ8532
perienced philanderer, and 2. the potllible.joint responsibility for
you have a good six~tard suit.
a nice two-suit hand, but
• Q 10
'fODA Y'S QUESTION
making child'\S\lpport payments to another woman for tile next 18
West's bid had shown good
t 75
You do bid three hearts and years. Whoopeee-that would be a HURT to live with!-N.M.
spades; East's jump to three
"'9 74
your partner r&amp;t!les you to four
no-trump had shown a strong
aou. vulnerable
hearts. What do you do now~
opener and S o u t h should
have been happy to pass and West Norlh Eut South
let East score his game."
~: ~!
~!. ~.~
Oswald: "East overtook Pa88
:-;- ~·:::-.::-:·~·::··:·;~·:·:·:::·:·~-=-=·:·:·:·:-:·=-=·;::::·::.-::·:·:·:·:::::::-.:::::·:-:::$::::.-:-::::::::.y..-..::::···~::·:::~~·~m'r.:Q"*'~=~*'**'·~mw~
his partn~r·s l a c k of dia·
Opening lead- + K
monds With the queen and
fired his singleton apade at '----.~...------'
poor South. South ducked By Oswald lli James Jacoby
and eventually managed to Contimpng with our serM
score live tricks for minus of bad plays and bids by life
900 but minus 900 was still masters in the fall nationals
we come to one by a namea bottom score."
BY JACK O'BRIAN
Michael ("Hair") Butler's next N.Y. show
INIWSP.I.PIR IMTill'tliSI ASSH I Jess South that Certainly COn·
SOPHIA GESTATES IN JFSI'
rrobablywllllie"Warp."Off.Bdwy.lhilltime ...
stituted a delightful ChristNEW YORK (KFS) -Sophia Loren's never ,..
mas gift to his opponents.
Lord Harlech's daughter, Victoria Ormsbybeen
in the Swiss sanitarium she so widely was
North's two-diamond call
Gore, who recently had a daughter, weds the
The bidding has been:
was not the old fashioned believed to have entered during her )recarious lather, male mnde) Julian Uoyd, this week m8
.....
West North Eut South rock crusher most players maternity : It was simply Soph's way of keeping
church
tn
Wales.
Remember when they did It
1 "'
Pa,.
'
are used to but merely a the paparazzi at continent's-length. She's been
You, South, hold·
good hand with length In t~e confined at her luxurious Marino (near Rome) the other way? ... The Rainbow Grlll will get $50
AQ 1815 +AU ..,KQl ma)or s u Its. Acfually hts
per person New Year's Eve. But the frosting on
•
hand was far stronger than villa aU the gestating while ... LBJ's man Bill Its shake will be Duke Ellington's orchestra.
What do you do now·
11 might have been in the Moyers applied to be top editor of aN. Y. paper.
A-Bid tWG hearts. If you only system he and hls partner Turned down. Ditto a columnist on the same Which again won the Downbeat jazz.poU. The
bid one h..,~ yau will have were using so that his only
Sherry-Netherland Csfe makes It easy for
rreat trouble •hawlnr your lull h e sit at Ion after West paper ... The Frazier-Foreman fight from small-spenders: Open House, meaning no adstrength tater.
lammed the bidding by his Jamaica has several statuHypea buying closed Vance m
. pri-,.Just pay for what you eat and
'~
ive-diamond call was be- circuit reception of the battle for parties in their drink ... Tavern
on the Green in Central Park:
You do bid two hearts and tween live and six spades. own homes - at $10,000 per mstaUatton; some
your partner bids lwo no-trump. Since hjs side ~sed two 100 applications are in ... For most of hiS adult f17.95 per person plus tips and tax.
What do you do now•
aces, the llve·spadehlecision
Prince Egon von Furstenburg's split frOI)I
life, Bdwy. press age11t Eddie Jaffe has repAnswer tomorrow
was certainly the correct
wife
Diane cost them the cover of a_new mag,
sesented assorted gambling casinos - Las
Jet
Set,
due next sprm"g for the monled-6et ...
one.
Vegas, Puerto Rico, Greece, the Caribbean;
West opened the king of currently it's London's Hertford Club headed by Rolls-Royce owners beware: one vandal aims
diamonds and shifted to the
high - he's 10081! with a spray can writing
Lord Hertlord. Eddie's yet to pick up dice or
queen of clubs.
"Reggie - Sutlllll Piace', on n-""""" and an oc·
Greg Smith 174.
cards
nor
wasted
a
quarter
tn
a
slot
...
Bdwy.
Brian
South
won,
led
a
trump
to
High Series
casional Mercedes and BenUey ... Sen. Birch
his queen and went into a )rOducer-emeritus Max Gordon told us he once Bayh wrote a song lor his wife. He'll tntro It
Hamilton 449.
Second High Series - Greg trance when West showed asked Sir Winston Church111 why he's anSmith 436.
out. He could have played a nounced simply that "Singapore has fallen" himself, with guitar, at hia office Yule party ...
Team High Game - Rams second trump and claimed
'nmesSquareia tJileter: cops handed out flocks
during the war but explained nothing lurlher ... of summonJeS to record atores blasting their
928.
but
life
master
South
was
In
Team High Series - a fog and somehow or other Sir Winston told him: "You Yanks came into the
Apaches 2608
had credited East with a war that day. We didn't have much to worry rocksp(!akers.
Maureen O'&amp;Jllivan mltmlghted at the
third trump. So he played an about elsewhere."
h favorite
f
Saturday Banlam
extra round of trumps and
Sherry-Nether1and Ca e on er
:
Ex-basketball
star
Bill
Russell
was
Dec. 9, 1972
could not claim any more.
scrambled
eggs
and
French
champagne
...
delightful on TV with Flip Wilson ... Uza
Standings
M~ Martin's a new exec at Warner Bros.
The hand was still a cinch
since hearts were going to Minnelli 's been commuting to Israel and Desl
Ia I 0 f TV'
Recorda,
and
she's
not
even
are
t ve
s
Jr
where
he's
lllming
"Billy
Two
Hats"
with
break nicely but by now,
finest
Peter
Pan
...
Seems
110
one
bothered
over
South's dream world was one Gr~gory Peck ... Jack Lemmon's considering a
to ttach
da to"HaUtotheOilel"
th
Pis. of nightmares. He led a return to Bdwy. acting but won't make decision
Team
eyears a
wor
·
1!.111 Bombers
24 heart from dummy and alter until Oscar nominations are in. Jaclt tabled .for- later Lanln's added lyrics and sent the first
16 East played low, South proRed Barons
three at the camel Driver with wife Felicia copy to Pres. Nixon.
15 duced the IO·SPOt.
All Stars
Bd '
milli dollars
13
Pin Busters
Just
a
lew
on
ago.
wy. s
Farr
and
his
"Avant!"
co-alar
Juliet
Mills
...
East made a surprise lrtck
favorite
epithetical
phrue lor David Merrick
t2
Cyclones
B.lnana Splits
10 with the jack and East and "Uve and Let Ole" producer Harry Saltzman was "'lbe Abominable &amp;lowman." But James
West had their Christmas snooted Playboy's plea to photograph Roger
High Individual Game
the 1 ....
Kevin Yeauger 159.
pre1ent of a top score.
Y OVou
Moore's slzzling Juat.ecene with black actress Mason and Robert Preaton aay
Second High Ind. Game working
with
the
erstwhile
Bdwy.
8l'lliiiP
who
(NIWI'AI'U lNTUI'.ISE ASSN )
Gloria Hendry, filming here. Meaning there are
Roonle C~acl 114.
produced their "Oiild's 'Pia)"' flick ... Ryan
High Series Kevin Born Los,rs
levels of vulgarity.
Q'Neal too'" ~•- ctMitar in J " - .Moon" to
20'
"
Yeaugor 255.
'A '""
.....British
cutle
Gl)'nll
Johns,
due
on
Bdwy.
tn
20
Second High Series - Ronnie Dlll!l·A-Lings
dinner at Top of the Park: Ilia dau&amp;hter Tatum,
Pin
Busters
18% a musical, saya her training conslatl of giving
"sci 211.
nine ... DavldOpatoshuof tile Yldtlilh theater's
1S
TMm High Game
All Herbie's
up
drlnklng,
and
hUibandl
...
Fine
blind
jazZ
"Yoshe Kalb" at the Eden-.. ...... '•Ji•ri- hla
High Individual Game Stars 733.
• - ,. · pianist
George
lllearing's
taking
a
bllllness
Gene
Davis
191.
Team High Series
All
Secood High Ind. Game - taw course-In correll(lOIItlence braille. Mount " own Able's Irish Rolle role: hil wife II TV wr11er
O'Shea ., ....,_ n;rt:e.. of 1be ·~
Rick Stobart 194.
Pe••v
-..
...,., ....,_,.
Airy
Lodge
offend
RiqUe)
Welch
a
Vegu
me
High Series - Gene Davis
Julia"
ca!ll
II
the
1011 of a ••'M"'Iftl'lal&amp;
&lt;190.
salary to lll'lnl h• aet hertlboutl after ber Las
s.tlurday Sen1or
Second High Series - Rick Vegas Hilton $10G,OCJO.e.-k enpgement. The
gynecologist- who dlllnnd till IIIIMI 111
o.c. t, tm
Stobart
m
Standfngt
Barbra StreiiDtl, David Ill ila, Anlllciay
Team High Game - Gutter Poconoa reltll't offered "fabulous motleY" but
Pis.
Team
Newley
- and lbe prw 1111111 al lbe lbtnr
Dusters 803.
won't aay If It's in the lOOG range. That would
32
Gutter Dusters
'
tn
.......u.. ........
John
26 . Team High Series - Gutter set a new hifl)llor other performers to demand.
s a t the ..._._.
,.._ ·
PlnCr..-hon
Duoters 2309

A Beaut (!) from an Expert Five-Spade Cinch---Blew It!
Z5

1

'

f '

1...

2•

oo\\i

l

Eut-West vulnerable
W011 Narlb IIIII Soulh
Dble
Oble

21•
Puo

1+ 1.

3 N.T. 4.
Pass Pass

Opening lead-. J

8y Olwald &amp; Jamea Jacoby
'

Oswald: "Let's end the
year with a note of encouragement to our reader~ who
wrmder why experts never
make really s t u p i d mistakes."
Jim: "I assume you want
us to show some Idiocies by
life masters in the fall na.
tlonals."
Oswald: "West's double of
oue heart was the 'negative'
double now tn general expert use. It did not indicate
a desire to penalize South,
but lutead told his partner
that West held support for
the two unbid suits and spe.
clflcally lor the unbid major."
Jim: "North:s t w o-c I u b
call was IJiade just in case
East might decide to convert
West's negative double into

I V~i~~ ~~~~g Br'Way

•z ,

Local Bowling
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
s.tturday Junior League
Dec. 9, 19n
Standings
Team
Pis.
Impacts
31
1!.111 Busters
31
Dreamers
191/,
Rams
19
ADachn
1811&gt;
Alloy Cats
16
High Individual Game - Jefl
Couch 116.
Second High lnd Game -

•

&amp; THINGS

Pro Standings

By Helen and Sue Bottel

+++

WIN AT BRIDGE

3- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. 26, 1972

NBA Standings
By Unoted Press International

BY PAUL CRABTR,E,E

lly CHARLES E. TAYLOR
M!AMI (UPI)- As the
Atlantic D•v•s•on
w. I. pet. g.b. Miamt Dolphins ' attack
Boston
27 5 S44
sputtered m the first half
New York
2s 9 757 Ph Sunday, you could hear the
Buffal o
9 24 273 181/~
buzzmg among the 80,010 fans
Philadelphia 3 33 1.083 26
Central Div1sidn
in the Orange Bowl.
w. t. pet. g.b.
"Why doesn 't he try
Ballimore
19 14 576
Griese?" satd one woman. "I
Atlanta
20 15 571
HousJon
14 1s 438 4'h don't see why Griese's not in
Cleveland
9 26 ~57 11
there," sa1d a man. "He's not
Western Conference
even warming htm up,"
Midwest D1v1sion
w. I. pet. g. b. complained another.
·
Mtlwaukee
26 9 743
But midway m the fourth
Chocago
21 lJ 61a w,
KC-Omaha
20 19 51 3 a . quarter, 33-year-old quarterDetrott
15 19 .441 10'17 back Earl Morrall shut everyPac1f1c Dtvis1on
w I. pet. g b. body up. by d1recting the
Los Ange les 27 6 8t8
Dolphins on a determined Jll).
GoldenSta te 21 11 656 5 12
yard scormg drive. It meant a
PhoenJ x
17 18 .4a6 11
Seattle
10 29 256 20
satisfying, if less than artisttc,
Portland
9 27 250 19112 20-14 wm over Cleveland tn the
Monday's Results
AFC playoff opener and MorPhoen1x 115 ChJcago lOs
New York 113 Detrotl 110
rall retained hJs title as "the
Milwaukee 104 KC-Omaha 99 Earl of Miamt."
Portland 116 Seattle 113
And smce Mtami Dolphin
!Only games scheduled)
Tuesday's Games
Coach Don Simla is more inNew York al Baston
terested in wmrung than m art,
Balltmore at Buffalo
Morrall
wtll start next Sunday
Atlanta at Cleveland
KC Omaha at Chlca9o
agatnst Pittsburgh in the AFC
Mtlwaukee at Detro1t
title showdown at Three Rtvers
Phoeni x at Houston
Portland at Los Ang
Stadmm.
Seallle at Golden St
"Earl will start in PittsEastern Conference

Whew! I've just finished reviewing six thousand, nine
hundred movies, and I'm bushed.
. .
~ell, sort of reviewing theiJl. What I've been,domg ts reading
the summaries on 6,900 movies, ranked by mertt, and compiled
by Consumers Uruon, m a one-dollar paperback.
It's revealing, to say the least:
How many movies would you guess have drawn
unqualifiedly excellent ratings by both the crtttcs and CU's own
panel of average viewers in the past 25 years?
Only 35, if I count them correctly.
How many in the past seven years?
Would you believe only one - despite the lifting of taboos, the
new permi.ssiveness, and all that?
Before I list the Top 35, maybe I'd better explam how the
ratings were done :
.
The Cl"ltics, professionally trained and expenence~, wer~
listed by consensus preference in one column. Average vte.wers
choices were listed tn another. (You could he a reviewer, .if you
like movies and belong Ia CU, which costs eight bucks a year.)
Ratmgs were Excellent, Good, Fair or Poor. A mixed ~g of
reviews would merit a double-billing. (For example, a rating of
GF would mean the film was rated good-to.fair, while an FG
meant it was only fair-to-j!ood.)
Here lor what It's worth, is the list of the 35 best films made
tn the 1M7-72 period - the only ones whtch got an "E" from
critics and viewers alike: ·
Bespoke Overcoat, 1947; Best Years of Our Lives, 1947;
Bicycle Thiel, 1950; Boomerang, 1947; Bnef Encounter, 1947;
Bright Victory, 1952; Browning Version, 1952, Death _of a
Salesman, 1952; Encore, 1952; Ftve Pennies, 1959; Forbtdde,n
Games 1953 · From Here to Etermty, 1953; Geltleman s
Agreen:ent, ui48; Great Expectations, 1947; HenryV,I947 ; Last
Bridge, 1958; Little Fugitive, 1954;
umgest Day 1963· Long Day's Journey into N1ght, 1963;
' City,
' 1948; My Fair Lady 1965; Ntu'
Marty, 1955; Naked
a res
Hall-Acre, 1952; Open City, 1948; My Fair Lady, 1965; Nature's
1949; The River, 1952; Room at the Top, 1959; Shoeshine, 1948; To
Uve in Peace, 1947; the Titan, 1950; Torment, 1948; West Side
Story, 1962; Welldigger's Daughter, 1947; "Z," 1970.
' Some interestmg sidelights:
The 1947-48 period when lllOVie.fllakers were unrestrained
by the problems of W~ld War II, was by far the most productive
era, with 13 of the 35 offerings. Another creative surge appeared
in 195U3, when the film industry girded to battle the new
monster, TV.
.
.
But TV has absorbed much of this creative gemus, apparently, and only two post-1963 films made the list: "My Fair
Lady" and "Z."

It's also noteworthy to observe that, contrary to conventional
opinion the viewers were less likely to give an unequivocal "E"
to a m~vie than the critics were. (There were dozens of "EG"
films In the list, so don't be disappointed, if your favorite didn't
make it.)
You may disagree - and so do I, with these ratings. But if
you do, why not jotn CU and become a reviewer yourself?

TeleVision Log·
TUESDAY, DEC. 26, 1972
'6. 00 - News 3. 4; 10, 15,-Sesame Street 20; Around The Bend 33
6:30- News 3, 4, 6, a, 10, 15; I D(ea')h,o(1J!@\!Jll@,l3, Growing
Him Up 33.

Shula almost switched

j

1

7 00 - What's My Llfoe 8, I've Got ASecret 13; Film 15; Electric

Co. 20; Beat The Clock 4.
.,,
7 30 - This Is Your Life 3; Doctors on Call4, To Tell The Truth
6; Price Is Right a, 10; Bea!The Clock 13; RFD 20; Zoom 33.
8 00- Tempartures Rising 6, 13; Ohio This Week 20; Hall of
Fame3, 4, 15; McKonkey's Ferry· Christmas 1776 33
s 30- Hawaii Flve-0 8, 10; Bill Boyer's Journal 20, 33. Movie
"Gidget Gets Married" 6, 13
9.00- Bold Ones 3, 4, 15, Behind the Lines 20
9 30- Black Journal20, 33. "A Death oflnnocence" s, 10
9 30 - Black Journal 20, 33.
10 00- Marcus Welby M.D. 6. 13; America 3, 4, 15; News; Don
Rickles a. 10.

BY JOE CARNICEIJJ

UPI Sports Writer
Don Simla has made hJs
choice. Now Torn Landry is left
with a decision.
Shula said Monday that Earl
Morrall, the 38-year-old veteran, will be the starltng quarterback lor the unbeaten
Mimai Dolphms in Sunday's
American Conference title
game against the Steelers m
Pittsburgh,
There had been talk that
perhaps Bob Griese ,last year's
AFC passing leader who was
out almost all season with a
broken ankle, would be rein-

Morton , his season-long
starter, or Roger Staubach,
last year's hero, for the starting quarterback role.
Morlan was unable to move
the club agamst San Francisco
m Saturday's sernifmal playoff
and Staubach, who missed
virtually all of the season with
an injured should~r, came on to
throw two touchdown passes,
one 1n the last minute, to lilt the
Cowboys to a 31).28 triumph.
The winners of Sunday's
games will meet m the ~uper
Bowl in Los Angeles on Jan. 14.
The four playoff finalists
spent a leiSurely ChriStmas

,.

North tops South
MIAMI (UPI)- The North
came from behind with two
touchdowns in the final period
Christmas night tn the Orange
Bowl to win a game of turnover&amp;, 17-10, over the South m
the annual Shrine College Allstar football clash.
The Southerners were the
victims of their own mistakes,
coughing up the bail seven
times to the Yankee defenders.
California's Bill Armstrong
interr;epted a pass thrown by
South quarterback John
Madeya of Louisville and ran 1t

back 27 yards to set the North
in position at the South 10.yard
lme for a tying touchdown.
Wisconsin's fireplug-eized runner Rufus Ferguson, who won ·
the North's Most Valuable
Player A-ward, collected it in
lour stratght cracks at the line,
going over from the two wtth
13:50 left m the final quarter.
The South turned the ball
over again moments later
when the Umversity of Miami's
Chuck Foreman fumbled at
mtd!Ield and Villanova 's Kevm
Reilly recovered. Purdue

Warfield was
worried man
MIAMI (UP!) - Paul Warfield Is sleeping a little better
thiS week with the Cleveland
Browns off his mind.
Althongh he wouldn't admit
It before Sunday's NFL playoff
game, in which Miami beat
Cleveland 20-14, he afterward
let it off his chest.
"Every mght this week I
slept a couple of hours less than
I usually do,'' said the slender
ncelvel- who'• was'-tradl!d by
Qeveland to the i1lphms in
1970.
.

11 30- News 3, 4, 8, 10, 13, 15

11 30 - Johnny Carson 3, 15; Dick Cavett 6, Rose Bowl Bound 4;
Vlrglntan 8; Movie "Suspense" 10, Movie " A Certain Smile"
13
11 45 - Johnny Carson 4
1 00 - Your Health 4.
1 30- News 4, 13
WEDNESDAY, DEC. 27, 1971
6·00 - Sunrise Seminar 4; Sacred Hearl 10.
6:15- Farmlime 10
6 20 - Farm Report 13.
6 25 - Paul Harvey 13.
6 30 - Columbus Today 4; News, Weather, Spcrts 6, Bible
Answers 8; Urban League Presents 10
6 35 - Glory Road 13
7:00 - Today 3, 4,15, News6, s, 13 ·
7 3013.- ·Romper Room 6; Sleepy Jeffers 8, Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
6 00 - Capt Kangaroo 8, 10; New Zoo Revue13, Sesame St. 33,
s 3~a_:o~a~k La La nne 13; Romper Room 8, New Zoo Revue 6
a 55 - Local News 13
9 00 - Paul Dixon 4; Phil Donahue 15, What Every Woman
Wants to Know 3, Mr. Rogers 33; Friendly Junction 10; Capt.
Kangaroo s, Ben Casey 13, Concentration 6.
9:30 - ToTeiiTheTruth3, Jeopardy6 . Hazels.
9:55- Chuck White Reports 10.
10:00- Dinah Shore3, 15, Phil Donahue 4, In School Instruction
33; Columbus Six Calling 6, Joker's Wild a, 10; Dick Van
Dyke 13.
10 30 - Concentration 3, 15; Love American Style 6, Phil
Donahue 4; Price Is RightS, 10; Split Second 13
11 00 - Saleofthe Century 3, 15; Love American Style 6; Gambit
S; Password 13; Elec. Co. 20.
11 30 - Hollywood Squares 3, 4, 15; Bewitched 6, 13, Love of Life
s, 10, Sesame .SI 20
i2· oo - Jeopardy 3, 15, Bob Braun's S0-50 Club 4, Local News 10,
13; Contact 8, Password 6.
12 30-3W'sGame3, 15; SplltSecond6, Search for TomorrowS,
10.
12· 55 - NBC News 3, 15.
1 00 - News, Weather, Sports 3; All My Children 6, 13; Green
~cres 10; French Chef 33; It's Your Bet 8, Watch Your Chll~
1 20 - Lucille Rivers 3.
1.30-3 On AMatch 3, 4, 15. The World Turns s, 10; Let's Make
A Deal 6, 13
2.00 - Days of Our •Lives 3, 4, 15; Newlywed Game 13; Mike
Douglas 6; Guiding Light s, 10.
2.30 - Dating Game13 , Edge of N1ght s, 10; Doctors 4, 15.
3. 00 - Another World 3, 4, 15, General Hospital 6, 13; Love
Splendored Thing a, 10. RFD 20
3 30 - Return to Peyton Place 3, 4, 15; One Life to Live 6, 13;
Secret Storm 8. 10; Ohio This Week 20.
4 00 - Mister Cartoon 3; Somerset 15. Fllntstones 6, Love
Amencan Style 13; Merv Griffith 4; Sesame St. 33; Gilligan's
Island a, Movie "Yellow Sky" 10.
4· 40 - Merv Griffin 4; Andy Griffith 15; Daniel Boone 13.
Petticoat Junction 3; 1 Love Lucy 6.
5· 00 - Mister Rogers33, Daniel Boone 6; Ponderosa 3 4 Santa
At The ~II 15.
' '
5:30 - DragnetS; Elec. Co 33, Gomer Pyiel3; Marshall Oilton
15. Hodgepodge LodQe 20.
6:00- News, Weather, Sports 3, 4, s, 10, 15, T•uth or Conseq. 6;
Sesame Sf 20; Around the Bend 33
7:00 - Truth or Conseq 3; Beat the Clock 4; News 6, 10 . What's
My Line 8; Anything You Can Do 13; Saint 15; Erec. Co. 20 1
Know Your Schools 33.
7.~- Episode. Action 33; To Tell The Trutl).6; The Judge 10;
lassle15, Beat the Clock 13; POllee Surgeon 31 Protectors &amp;1
Hodqtpocll!e Lodll8 20.
•
1:110-Carol Burnett I, 10; Paul Lynde 6, Adlm. 12 3, ., 15 ,
Sonny &amp; Cher 8; Peter &amp; the Woll20, 33; Blue-Gtay Game 10.
8;30- Banaclk 3, 15; Handful of Ashes 33; Movie "Mr. and
Mrs. Bo Jo Jooes" 6, 13; PlayhouM 20.
9:00- Medical Center a: It's Your Business 33.
9:30- Pollee Sutgeon •·
tO:OO- JulleAndrews6. 13; Cannon I; Soull 33; News20 1 S..rch
n:~~.:W.3 ••• 6.1.10,13,1S.
11:30- Johnny Canonn3, •· 15; Comedy News 6; Movies "The
C.ptaln's Table" 10; "The Sun Also RIMS" 13.
1:001!30- News
News •.
13

stated at quarterback. Morrall
bad problems moVIIIg Miami
through most of the Dolphins'
20-14 victory over Cleveland
Sunday.
.
",Earl will start in P1tts·
rurgh," Shule said. The
Dolphins' coach dtd admit that
he was thinkmg of' insertmg
Grtese when Morrall had a
horrible first half agatnst the
Browns but decided 1o stick
with the veteran quarterback
Landry, who'll · send his 1
Dallas Cowboys agamst the
Redskins m Washington for the
National Conference title, still
hasn't dectded between Cra1g

Monday before getting down to
the task of preparmg for
Sunday 's showdowns.
Pittsburgh Coa ch Chuck
Noll, sttll pretty much m a
state of shock after his club's
storybook victory over
Oakland, satd he, "got
everythmg I i wanted for
Olristmas on Satlll'day."
The Christmas gift came in
the form of a weU'd deflected
pass caught by rookie Franco
Harrts and carrted Into the end
zone for the winnmg touch·
down with only live seconds
left. The scor~ came 1:08 after
Oakland apparently had
clmched the game, 7&lt;;, on
Kenny Stabler's 30.yard touchdown run and gave Pittsburgh
a 13-7 triUmph.
In Washington, Larry
Brown, the Redskins' one-man
rushing gang , said he was at
only 90 per cent efficiency
aga1nst (lreen Bay Sunday as
the Red skins won, 16-3.
"It wasn't until about 7 p m.
Sunday mght that I could really
Sit back and appreciate what
we had accomplished," Brown
satd. "Unlll then, I was just
AHL Standtngs
recuperalmg and catching my
By
United
Press International
breath. I"rn probably about
East
only 90 per cent but I'll be
w I. I. pts gf ga
Nova
Scot1
a
ra
9 8 44 141 92
ready for the Cowboy game. Boston
1S 1l 4 40 11712S
You've got to play m the Roches ler
16 10 6 3s 113 117
Providence 15 11 5 35 1~0 102
playoffs."
9 17 5 23 113 135
The Miamt-Pittsburgh game Springfield
New Haven
723 620112171
will begin at noon EDT and will
West
w. I. I. pis gf ga
be telecast nationally by NBC.
Cmcmnat1
25
9 2 52 156 103
The Dallas-Washmgton game Hershey
16 9 7 39 123 97
will begin at 3 p.m. EST and Vlrgln•a
16 11 6 38 123 112
10 16 7 27 121 127
w11i be camed by CBS. There Cleveland
Ri chmond
12 1s 3 27 116 126
w11i be a blackout wtthm the 75- Balltmore
5 19 7 17 79 133
rn1le radius.
Monday's Results
Providence 5 Spnngfld 1
Boston 3 Ne~ Haven 1
Vt rglnia 4 Clncmnalo 0
!Only games scheduled)
Tuesday's Games
Rochester at Nova Scotia
!Onlygame scheduled)
1

quarterback Gary Danielson
marched his Yankees to the
South 14 from where Bob
McCall lhtted untouched on a
weak-side left run for the
wmning score with 7:39 left m
the game. Marvm Roberts of
Mtchtgan State booted his
second converston.
Roberts also ktcked a 23-yard
field goal m the openmg
minutes of the game, a score
that was set up by Purdue's
Gary Bmgham who stole a
south pass thrown by Joe
Ferguson of Arkansas and ran
it hack Yl yards
And it was Bmgham who
saved victory for the North by
recovenng Foreman's second
fumble of the game wtth 56
seconds remaining three yards
in front of the North's goal
Foreman was the South's
leading rusher and gained his
team's Most Valuable Player
Award despite h1s costly
'}~·
fumbles.
Ferguson, who suffered
three first-balf Interceptions,
put together a 59-yard drtve m
The Metgs Marauder wrest11 plays that led to the South's ling team finwhed !1fth in a stx·
only touchdown with 6 ·10 team match at Chesapeake
rernaming in the second Saturday. Barboursvtlle won
penod. Ferguson hit on lour of the match wtth 101 'k poml&lt;;
nine throws, tossing an 18- wh1le the remainmg order was
yarder to DaVId Knight of Fatrland 92'k , Buffalo 80,
Wllli•th. liid'Mary f~F a laue~- Chesapeake 76, MeigS 66, and
0 '' "' ' ' ' liel(ry 58'k .
d~wrf."""' w
Alfred ~~e convefted the ' v·or the II Marauder wrestextra point to g1ve the South a lers, 10 fmished fourth or
7-3 lead at halftime. Reese better. Terry Ptckens was the
kicked a 23-yard lteld goal with htghest Marauder w1th a
4:57 m the thU'd quarter and second place m the 175 lb.
the ·South looked to be com- class
lortably in front wtth a 10-3
Other Metgs grapplers
lead.
results were Jeff Warner,
However, the Southerners lhtrd, 98 lb.; Jllll McClure,
began blowing themselves out fourth, 112 lb ; Kenny Moore,
of the game with turnovers .
third, 126 lb ; Roger Pearch,
The 1'\orth VIctory evened lhtrd, 132 lb.; Mike Hoffman,
this charity series at IZ-12·1. fourth, 138 lb .; Alan
Although more than 18,000 McLaughlm, fourth, 145 lb ;
tickets were sold, a sUm crowd Steve Bnckles, fourth, 155 lb.;
estimated at less than 10,000 John Lehew, thtrd, 167 lb , and
watched the game on a cool Mike Haley, lhtrd, unltmited
night.
class
Coach John Bentley said
alter the match, "Our boys are
coming along pretty well now.
With a lew gOOd breaks, we
could have finished much
higher. I was nol dtsappointed
with our showmg."
The next Metgs match wtll be
wtlh the Nelsonville-York
Buckeyes at Meigs Saturday,
January 13, at 7:30 p.m.

"And the sleep I nad wasn't
very restful. I couldn't get the
Browns off my mmd for f1ve
minutes all week."
Warfteld was an allieague
wide receiver at the tlme of the
trade, in which Cleveland got a
first round draft choice, Mike
Phipps.
He contmued living in Cleveland and when the Browns beat
Miami 28-0 that year, "people
Jl!St let me know they d1do 'I
thmk the Dolphins were
capable of handling a club like
.the Browns."
"Before the game (Sunday),
I dtdn't want to talk about how
much it meant tOme, but 1t was
special," he said Monday :
Warfield accounted lor 60 of
the 80 yards that brought the
Dolphins Into the end zone lor
the winnmg touchdown that put
Miami's vtctory streak at 15
and kept the team on the track
to the Super Bowl.
The Dolphins meet Pittsburgh 1n the American
Conference tttle game Sunday.
Warfield said he was not
fooled by Cleveland talk hefore
ghe game that it would be
lucky to get through the
national anthem.
"They came in trymg to lull
us to sleep, saying they were
just happy to be here, and all
that'," he said. "Well, back m
1964, when I was with the
Browns and we played Baltimore lor the wolrd championship, we were in the same posi·
tion as the Browns were this
time.
"All we heard all week was
how great the Colts were. And
we laid tt on them 7:14!. You've
NEW YORK (UP!) - For the
got to be leary of teams that third consecutive week, UCLA
low-rate themselves."
recetved all ftrst-place votes
cast by the United Press In·
ternational Board of College
'
Coaches Monday as the
nation's No. 1 major college
. basketball team.
The Bruin&lt;! need only 10 more
wins IAl add to thell' present 51
to set a new record lor most
consecutive victories by a
college cage team after their
89-73 defeat of Pittsburgh
Friday mght and 8U6 drubbing of Notre Dame on
Saturday mght . UCLA is
chasing the record of 60
straight victories held by the
Unlverstty of San Francisco.
UCLA received aU 30 first·
place votes cast for 300 points,
giving the Bruins a huge
margin over second-place
Marquette, which had 239
pomts.
North Carolina State climbed
from fourth to third (lOIIitlon
with 193 points on the strength
ol vlctariea over Davldlon and

G
rappfers in
fi:A-h place

Finish of 6

UCLA still

number One
•

m UPI poll

tba

.... ,1,....,
..

DISCOuNT SAVIXOSr
:t ... DdJ:

.....

already won.
Both Shula and Gnese have
insisted that the youthful hut
experienced quarterback who
led the Ilolphtns into the Super
Bowl last year has not been
ready. But now Shuia says the
llllle may be coming .
"Each week Griese is getting
more and more time to heal
and get back Jn the groove,"
Shula said Monday.
Shula pointed out thai the
Dolphtns' offen s t v e
frustrations Sunday were not
necessarily Morrall's fault He
ya~ds .
satd receivers were havmg
Griese, who dislocated and trouble getting open and the
broke his ankle Oct. 15, was underrated, Brown front four
acltvated rpore than two weeks was giving the Mlarm offensive
ago for the New York Giant Une fits at times.
game, rut because hiS in~¥-- "One time Jim ~lck tripped
has not quite healed his only overlfltnebacker, Shula satd
appearance was a brier one m "Other times the protection
the season finale against just nat broke down ."
Baltimore when the game was
One can't feel too sorry for
Simla. His dilemma is who to
start-this year's AFC passmg
leader or last year's AFC
NEW YOR·K IUPI)- The passing lea de~.
United Press lnternattonal top
20
major
basketball
teams
w1th college
flrsl place
votes ...-------!""'~
and won lost records in parenTh1s We•k's Special
theses• I Th~rd Week)
Team
Points
1 UCLA (30) (6 0)
300
2 Marquette IS0)
239
3 No.Car.St IB-0)
193
4 Maryland (50)
181
5. Minnesota 16-0)
172
6. Long Beach Sl. 18 0) 131
7. Missouri (S 0)
sa
8. Pennsylvania (5 01
63
9 SW Louisiana 16 01
54
10 Vanderbilt (S·O)
33
11 Kansas $1.(71)
22
12 North Carolina (7-1) 19
12 Providence (5·1)
19
PASADENA, C&amp;lif. (UPI) - 14 Brigham Young (6-1) 14
14
The Ohio State football team, t4. Washington ls-1)
14. Indiana (5·1)
14
after a one-day layoff to cele- 17 , Michigan IS 1)
V-s motor, auto trans . and
12
12
power steering
brate Chrtstmas, went back to 17 Florida St. 15-2)
19 South Carolina 15-2)
9
diligent practice today for the 20
Louisville (6 1)
8
Jan. 1 encounter wtth Southern
cat m the Rose Bowl. .
The Buckeyes drilled on
Chnstmas Eve at Citrus
"You'll Like Our Qua lilt,
College near here and af·
GET YOUR MAN Wl'l'HJ:
Way of Doing Business •
terward held a party at the
GMAC FINANCING
Hunltngton Hotel. Starting
992-534~
.pomeroy
Open Evenings'TII8 ;00 '
offensive guard Chuck Bonica,
Tll5 P.M. Sot,
a 256-pound senior, played
Santa Claus.
But Coach Woody Hayes kept
hJs
th b )
in
atm on e OW game,
which he would like to see hJs
underdog Buckeyes pull the
rug from under the nationally
top-ranked Trojans.
"Weconstderthisagamefor
the national
"
Hayes said,
no!
i!)g it ~. ,big ISSue .. for
players.
Starting defensive tackle
George Hasenohrl a senior
.
.
'
'
satd he thmks Ohio State can
heat Southern cat
"Thts ts a young team, very
5 to9· 30-S2 . ~all you can eat, lor Ala Carte).
coachable lor a game like

College Ratings

Buckeyes

retum to

drill field -

'71 OLDS

CUTLASs

COUPE

'2495

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

Want Ad

WHA Standings
By Un1led Press lnlernatoonal
East
w I t pts gf ga
New Eng
22 14 1 45 164 129
Cleveland
~1 14 1 43 131 96
NewYork
20 1a o40 165 142
Quebec
1a 1s 137121 121
Ottawa
15 17 2 32 123 147
12 23 o 24 122 169
Phil a
West
,
w nn,peg ,. 2~ 1 ~ t 2 ~~ ~~~ ~~~ ~
Mtnnesota
19 14 2 40 116 109
Los Angeles 16 17 4 36 126 130
Houston
15 16 2 32 114 118
Alberta
15 20 2 32 112 130
Ch1cago
12 21 1 25 99 124
Monday's Results
Cleveland s Philadelphia 0
New England a New York 2
Ch1cago 3 Alberta 2
(Only games scheduled)
· this," he said. "It's very
Tuesday's Games
stmtlar to our 1968 team." ,
New York at Quebec
Houston al Ottawa
The 1968 Buckeyes scored 11
Philadelphia at Mlnn
27·16 victory over Southern Cal
Chocago at Winnipeg
in the Rose Bowl Jan. I, 1969.
!Onlygames scheduled)
1

TUESDAY EVENING ONLY

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Georgia.
•' Maryland dropped to fourth,
wlllllll poiDIJ, beatq George
Wllhingten, a-'19, In Ill only
1111111 tithe week. Mlnnesot*,
. . . Bud! State, Mlaaottri,
t..li,lalldtwest Lrolstana and
VIJiderlilt COOipleted the top
ten thll week.

burgh," was Shula's flat
statement Monday.
Shula did admit to a tempIa !ion to go to the younger Bob
Griese against Cleveland as he
watched Morrall complete only
three of nine first half passes
lor a net gain of 10 yards. HIS
completions totaled 21 yards,
but he lost 10 yards when he
was nailed twiCe trying to find
a recetver.
Morrall h1t three of four
passes in the second half,
wmdmg up wtth six complet10ns m 13 attempts lor 74

992·2094

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�2-1.11! Dan, Se.alnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. 211,1972

PRESIDENTS OF MANIFEST DESTINY,

by ,atterson and Patrick

IIIL'Ilt spl'L"t,tl.md dtrccl md11tdu.1l .tdl.ll1t.tgcs."
Ptestdcnr dlleh .II kllgth onlhc "till\\ hokSOiliC progeny of palcrn.11tsm" .tnd dcd.orL·d " I h,
kssons of p.ttcrnalism "li!;hl to hl unk.trncd .uul
1he hcttcr lesson t.tughl th.u, 11 htk thL pcopk
should pauiocically .1nd chlwfully S\IPI~Ift thcit
gmcrnmcnl, us functu•ns do nor ind111k thL· supJI&lt;•rl of che p&lt;'&gt;ple ."
Thrt•c months aftl'r Clc1d.tnd look 'ofhcl' , the
Panil· of I H'll struck in full fury l'hr swck nurkl't
collapsed, h.tnkruptnes "ere C&lt;lllllllllll .md gaugs
of :mgry, uncmplnynl men ro.uned rh, coumry
lmking li&gt;r joi&gt;S .tnd finding trouble. It 11 .ts men
likl' these \1 ho nud,· np "Coxcy's \rmy" 11 h&gt;ch
nurchcd on Washington dcm.nuhng .1 $100-nulhon
ro.1d-building progr.un.
lie persuaded C1)ngrl'ss !0 rcpl·.tl the Shcnnuu
Stiver Purchase \cc, hue only after ,, hind· fight
th.1t lett the Democrats hopckssly spin . The tollml ing ye:tr the llnusl' p.tsscd ,1 t.trifl reduce ion btll
th.tt mel hts apprm .tl, hut rhc mc.tsurc got such
rough handling in thl· Scnale th.~l Clc1 cl.md dtsgustedly allo\lcd 11 to hewmt• l.lll 11 ichout hts stg.
n.uurc
l'hc Prcsidcm .ll1tngonizcd puhhc op11111111 .md
th\1,1rtl'll"~1:tnitcst De suny" by blocking the 111111 t•menl In annex ll.111 .ui
lly January, IH'J~, the gold rescnc h.td d\ltndlcd to .tl~&gt;ul $-+0 milhon, .tnd rhe Trc.tsury lkp.lrtment's situ:ltll&gt;tl \1 ,IS desper.nc. l'o lnuld up thl
restTI c, Clc1 el.tnd .trr.tngcd 11 tth .1 synd!l'.11l' ol
'''" York hankers- \ 1organ, Belmont, Rothschild
- to purch.tse .1 ne11 issue of fcder.tl homls \ltlh
gold . The fl'sene II.IS replenished, hut the mtL'fcsr
r.1tes "ere cxurhitam, .md Clcl cl.md II.IS 111dch
lTtticiznl, .1pp.1rcnrly for untlcrpltm.11111g hunun
greed
So unpopul.tr h.td Cle1 cl.md hecolltl' due ihL
Dcmocr:tllc \: .ttional Com emion of I HW. h.tntb!
htm .1 double rebuff hy ' fiorm.tlly rcpudwmg lm
conscnatt\l' liscll pohcv ami by nonun.tting .IS its
st:tndard-be.1rer the tree "" er crus.tder, II illi.un
Jennmgs llry.m of \:cbr.tsk.t.
Cle1 eland IS usu.11i&gt; r.ued hi htsron.tns .ts thl
best Democratic !'reSilient heti1 ecn Jacbon .1nd
\\'ilson . lie l".1rned chis dtsttnctmn .tlmost on
,rcngth of ch.tnll'ter .1lone, lor he \1 as .ts nonp.1rlls.m .IS a successful pnhttnan c.m he
IllS last 11 ords to hiS 11 ifc .IS he Lt y dy mg of
kidney and hean dis&lt;:ts&lt; "ere "I h.11 c tncd so h.ml
to do" right."
'I hcse erght 11 ords epttomizcd rl1e swry of
'Grmer Cle1cl.md's htc.

nw

Twenty.fourth Presidenl Grover Cleveland
(AdminiWation March 4, 1893-March 3, 1897)

'I haw tned J"O hard to do rtght'
\\hen hl· returned 10 the helm nt rhe giKid ship
\rnl'f!C,t he had left sailing rn gently rolhng \1 atcrs
fi1ur rc.trs before, Prcstdcnt Grmer , (]e\cbnd
foumf the centurv-old shtp of st.ttc tacking
haph.1z.trtll) tnto iruuhled fisc.1l .md bch.n tor.tl
sc.:as.
F:1rm prices 11crc fallmg, the tlo\1 of gold to
ti•reign m.trkcts h.ul si,IShcd the rcsrr~ e w helm1
$HK) mtlhon, unemployment \1 as nsmg. labor
unions 11 de bccommg strong .tnd unruly .md the
l:trge Philad~lph1a &amp; R~.,,lin~ R.ui"·'Y h.td gone
bankrupt ,, tc11 days bdorc Clc1 eland s mauguratum.
Cln el.md mer the tssues head-on by smglmg
nut three svmptoms of the "mstdious infirmity that
threatl'ns ,;ur n:ttum.tl 1igor": the l'xposure to degr.1d.1tion of "a sound .md stable currency," ''the \1 astc
of public money ts :1 crime .1gau~sr the etttzen" and.
the danger 111 the "prc1 .tlencc of a po~ular d1Sposttion to expect from the opcr.ntons of the gm ern-

WIN AT BRIDGE

•

~~$./~G~~e~~;i:; ·Rap

i

Ill Marriage Wortb lhe U..le?

Dear Rap :
I am 24 dtvorced, and not about to get. trapped ey marriage
again! {,ike a growing number of other gll'ls and young women,
I'm soltdly for single bliss. I Uke my career, my apartment, my
freedom to move on whenever I please.
Falling in love? That's not out, but why limit myself to a
lifetime (or a costly divorce) with a man I'll surely outgrow in a
lew years, if he doesn't outgrow me first?
Children aren't on my list of priorities, and children are the
only real reason for marriage. They also snap the trap door tight
shut for they keep you in a union you'd rather break.
Hanyone can tell me one good reason for getting married, I
might hsten. So far my married friends are untonvincing. The
wives complain, the husbands try to date me on the side. If ~Y
current boyfriend and I hacked away at each other in pubhc
(probably m private too)) as much as do these wedded couples,
we'd be long parted.
·
.
Yet my bbylriend wants us to be "legal." He says I'm unnatural, not craving wifehood. I love him -lor now -but I don't
intend to spoiltt by tying us both up in prqptises we'd regret.
At least lour of my single wonren friends are also being
pushed against their will by men who want to get married. Don't
these fellows know when they're well off?
Do other career girls agree with me that marriage IS going
out of style? - NOT A CLOD

.

Dear N.A.C.:
This career woman doesn't ~gree with you - and I say it
happily alter 30-00d years of marriage. In a world that becomes
mcreasmgly impersonal, impermanent- and lonely - I think
we need marriage more than ever, but not the restrictive trap
you picture.
However, others believe differently, and they're entitled.
Wedded life is not everyone's dish of tea, as a growing number of
"pemi811ently single by chol~e" people will tell you.
And here's one of those modern switches: Where women
once asked, "How can I get him 10 propose?" now they're
writing: "I love him, but he wants marriage and I don't I"
I predict you'll get many comments on your letter, pro and
con. - HELEN
.
Dear Not:
This career girl is pro-marriage too. I don't think it will ever
go out of style, butitmaychangeforma lot in the nextfe!" years.
Here's my prediction: the divorce rate may drop, what wtth
more people taking the "try belo~e you buy" route and putting
off the ceremony until they're sure of the whole package.
Anyway,l$1'1 it great that people now have choices? Singles
aren't considered these days. Hugband-hunting isn't a
gtrl's biggest preoccupation (but it's still in the top three) . And
when is the last time you heard someone under 30 called an old
Ulaid?- SUE

+++
(NOTE FROM HELEN: Make that "40" at least, or maybe
70, and then only if she acts the part: The term "old maid" is
passe -except as used by lovelorn 17-year-olds. See below.)

Rap:
I think there's a gap in your "IGAP" (I'm Guessing Again
Perception") with respect to the "Doomed Old Maid" (the 17year-old whose parents refused to let her run off and marry her
a poaltlve one by passing. He
/I'OR11I
26
boyfriend who then married another girl while OOM was out of
m111t have b e e n relieved
• AK 9 76
town a few days). You rightly implied she was " 'doomed'
when Eas.~ jumped to three
• K854 2
The
b&gt;dd
ong
has
been·
no-trump.
t 2
lucky," but the situa~on reeks of sub-plot. Was the guy alter
1. West North East South poM to marry him bec.ll~ he ha~ t~~W ~1Jd gll'k~r!. ~nd
Oswald: "He told P\0 he
"'A K
1
Pass
,was until hi&amp; .partner sta~d· ''lfl:st' (bj "' EAST
he preferred to inflict himself for life on
ratlier"Uiin\ ~e fG
pass ,2 N T
Pass
?
lo tllillll er at'ieut ~ped • Void
··'•104
,who was pressuring him~ ,So maybe he got trapped With the
"' You ~ South, hold: "' •· ·~-. '"
t~ con&amp;ldl!t ~aklng S"~ Ill e ' J 9 6
• A73
4112 .AQ9875 tA32 ... KQl proverbial shotgun.
btdorother.'
•
tAKQ98
+Jl0643
Had she run off as she bitterly regretted not doing, she might
What do you do now?
Jim: "I see that when "'QJ1085
•632
South did bid he came up
SOUTH
A-Bid lhroe hearts to show have found herself with 1. a husband who was already an exwith a wonder. He did have
•QJ8532
perienced philanderer, and 2. the potllible.joint responsibility for
you have a good six~tard suit.
a nice two-suit hand, but
• Q 10
'fODA Y'S QUESTION
making child'\S\lpport payments to another woman for tile next 18
West's bid had shown good
t 75
You do bid three hearts and years. Whoopeee-that would be a HURT to live with!-N.M.
spades; East's jump to three
"'9 74
your partner r&amp;t!les you to four
no-trump had shown a strong
aou. vulnerable
hearts. What do you do now~
opener and S o u t h should
have been happy to pass and West Norlh Eut South
let East score his game."
~: ~!
~!. ~.~
Oswald: "East overtook Pa88
:-;- ~·:::-.::-:·~·::··:·;~·:·:·:::·:·~-=-=·:·:·:·:-:·=-=·;::::·::.-::·:·:·:·:::::::-.:::::·:-:::$::::.-:-::::::::.y..-..::::···~::·:::~~·~m'r.:Q"*'~=~*'**'·~mw~
his partn~r·s l a c k of dia·
Opening lead- + K
monds With the queen and
fired his singleton apade at '----.~...------'
poor South. South ducked By Oswald lli James Jacoby
and eventually managed to Contimpng with our serM
score live tricks for minus of bad plays and bids by life
900 but minus 900 was still masters in the fall nationals
we come to one by a namea bottom score."
BY JACK O'BRIAN
Michael ("Hair") Butler's next N.Y. show
INIWSP.I.PIR IMTill'tliSI ASSH I Jess South that Certainly COn·
SOPHIA GESTATES IN JFSI'
rrobablywllllie"Warp."Off.Bdwy.lhilltime ...
stituted a delightful ChristNEW YORK (KFS) -Sophia Loren's never ,..
mas gift to his opponents.
Lord Harlech's daughter, Victoria Ormsbybeen
in the Swiss sanitarium she so widely was
North's two-diamond call
Gore, who recently had a daughter, weds the
The bidding has been:
was not the old fashioned believed to have entered during her )recarious lather, male mnde) Julian Uoyd, this week m8
.....
West North Eut South rock crusher most players maternity : It was simply Soph's way of keeping
church
tn
Wales.
Remember when they did It
1 "'
Pa,.
'
are used to but merely a the paparazzi at continent's-length. She's been
You, South, hold·
good hand with length In t~e confined at her luxurious Marino (near Rome) the other way? ... The Rainbow Grlll will get $50
AQ 1815 +AU ..,KQl ma)or s u Its. Acfually hts
per person New Year's Eve. But the frosting on
•
hand was far stronger than villa aU the gestating while ... LBJ's man Bill Its shake will be Duke Ellington's orchestra.
What do you do now·
11 might have been in the Moyers applied to be top editor of aN. Y. paper.
A-Bid tWG hearts. If you only system he and hls partner Turned down. Ditto a columnist on the same Which again won the Downbeat jazz.poU. The
bid one h..,~ yau will have were using so that his only
Sherry-Netherland Csfe makes It easy for
rreat trouble •hawlnr your lull h e sit at Ion after West paper ... The Frazier-Foreman fight from small-spenders: Open House, meaning no adstrength tater.
lammed the bidding by his Jamaica has several statuHypea buying closed Vance m
. pri-,.Just pay for what you eat and
'~
ive-diamond call was be- circuit reception of the battle for parties in their drink ... Tavern
on the Green in Central Park:
You do bid two hearts and tween live and six spades. own homes - at $10,000 per mstaUatton; some
your partner bids lwo no-trump. Since hjs side ~sed two 100 applications are in ... For most of hiS adult f17.95 per person plus tips and tax.
What do you do now•
aces, the llve·spadehlecision
Prince Egon von Furstenburg's split frOI)I
life, Bdwy. press age11t Eddie Jaffe has repAnswer tomorrow
was certainly the correct
wife
Diane cost them the cover of a_new mag,
sesented assorted gambling casinos - Las
Jet
Set,
due next sprm"g for the monled-6et ...
one.
Vegas, Puerto Rico, Greece, the Caribbean;
West opened the king of currently it's London's Hertford Club headed by Rolls-Royce owners beware: one vandal aims
diamonds and shifted to the
high - he's 10081! with a spray can writing
Lord Hertlord. Eddie's yet to pick up dice or
queen of clubs.
"Reggie - Sutlllll Piace', on n-""""" and an oc·
Greg Smith 174.
cards
nor
wasted
a
quarter
tn
a
slot
...
Bdwy.
Brian
South
won,
led
a
trump
to
High Series
casional Mercedes and BenUey ... Sen. Birch
his queen and went into a )rOducer-emeritus Max Gordon told us he once Bayh wrote a song lor his wife. He'll tntro It
Hamilton 449.
Second High Series - Greg trance when West showed asked Sir Winston Church111 why he's anSmith 436.
out. He could have played a nounced simply that "Singapore has fallen" himself, with guitar, at hia office Yule party ...
Team High Game - Rams second trump and claimed
'nmesSquareia tJileter: cops handed out flocks
during the war but explained nothing lurlher ... of summonJeS to record atores blasting their
928.
but
life
master
South
was
In
Team High Series - a fog and somehow or other Sir Winston told him: "You Yanks came into the
Apaches 2608
had credited East with a war that day. We didn't have much to worry rocksp(!akers.
Maureen O'&amp;Jllivan mltmlghted at the
third trump. So he played an about elsewhere."
h favorite
f
Saturday Banlam
extra round of trumps and
Sherry-Nether1and Ca e on er
:
Ex-basketball
star
Bill
Russell
was
Dec. 9, 1972
could not claim any more.
scrambled
eggs
and
French
champagne
...
delightful on TV with Flip Wilson ... Uza
Standings
M~ Martin's a new exec at Warner Bros.
The hand was still a cinch
since hearts were going to Minnelli 's been commuting to Israel and Desl
Ia I 0 f TV'
Recorda,
and
she's
not
even
are
t ve
s
Jr
where
he's
lllming
"Billy
Two
Hats"
with
break nicely but by now,
finest
Peter
Pan
...
Seems
110
one
bothered
over
South's dream world was one Gr~gory Peck ... Jack Lemmon's considering a
to ttach
da to"HaUtotheOilel"
th
Pis. of nightmares. He led a return to Bdwy. acting but won't make decision
Team
eyears a
wor
·
1!.111 Bombers
24 heart from dummy and alter until Oscar nominations are in. Jaclt tabled .for- later Lanln's added lyrics and sent the first
16 East played low, South proRed Barons
three at the camel Driver with wife Felicia copy to Pres. Nixon.
15 duced the IO·SPOt.
All Stars
Bd '
milli dollars
13
Pin Busters
Just
a
lew
on
ago.
wy. s
Farr
and
his
"Avant!"
co-alar
Juliet
Mills
...
East made a surprise lrtck
favorite
epithetical
phrue lor David Merrick
t2
Cyclones
B.lnana Splits
10 with the jack and East and "Uve and Let Ole" producer Harry Saltzman was "'lbe Abominable &amp;lowman." But James
West had their Christmas snooted Playboy's plea to photograph Roger
High Individual Game
the 1 ....
Kevin Yeauger 159.
pre1ent of a top score.
Y OVou
Moore's slzzling Juat.ecene with black actress Mason and Robert Preaton aay
Second High Ind. Game working
with
the
erstwhile
Bdwy.
8l'lliiiP
who
(NIWI'AI'U lNTUI'.ISE ASSN )
Gloria Hendry, filming here. Meaning there are
Roonle C~acl 114.
produced their "Oiild's 'Pia)"' flick ... Ryan
High Series Kevin Born Los,rs
levels of vulgarity.
Q'Neal too'" ~•- ctMitar in J " - .Moon" to
20'
"
Yeaugor 255.
'A '""
.....British
cutle
Gl)'nll
Johns,
due
on
Bdwy.
tn
20
Second High Series - Ronnie Dlll!l·A-Lings
dinner at Top of the Park: Ilia dau&amp;hter Tatum,
Pin
Busters
18% a musical, saya her training conslatl of giving
"sci 211.
nine ... DavldOpatoshuof tile Yldtlilh theater's
1S
TMm High Game
All Herbie's
up
drlnklng,
and
hUibandl
...
Fine
blind
jazZ
"Yoshe Kalb" at the Eden-.. ...... '•Ji•ri- hla
High Individual Game Stars 733.
• - ,. · pianist
George
lllearing's
taking
a
bllllness
Gene
Davis
191.
Team High Series
All
Secood High Ind. Game - taw course-In correll(lOIItlence braille. Mount " own Able's Irish Rolle role: hil wife II TV wr11er
O'Shea ., ....,_ n;rt:e.. of 1be ·~
Rick Stobart 194.
Pe••v
-..
...,., ....,_,.
Airy
Lodge
offend
RiqUe)
Welch
a
Vegu
me
High Series - Gene Davis
Julia"
ca!ll
II
the
1011 of a ••'M"'Iftl'lal&amp;
&lt;190.
salary to lll'lnl h• aet hertlboutl after ber Las
s.tlurday Sen1or
Second High Series - Rick Vegas Hilton $10G,OCJO.e.-k enpgement. The
gynecologist- who dlllnnd till IIIIMI 111
o.c. t, tm
Stobart
m
Standfngt
Barbra StreiiDtl, David Ill ila, Anlllciay
Team High Game - Gutter Poconoa reltll't offered "fabulous motleY" but
Pis.
Team
Newley
- and lbe prw 1111111 al lbe lbtnr
Dusters 803.
won't aay If It's in the lOOG range. That would
32
Gutter Dusters
'
tn
.......u.. ........
John
26 . Team High Series - Gutter set a new hifl)llor other performers to demand.
s a t the ..._._.
,.._ ·
PlnCr..-hon
Duoters 2309

A Beaut (!) from an Expert Five-Spade Cinch---Blew It!
Z5

1

'

f '

1...

2•

oo\\i

l

Eut-West vulnerable
W011 Narlb IIIII Soulh
Dble
Oble

21•
Puo

1+ 1.

3 N.T. 4.
Pass Pass

Opening lead-. J

8y Olwald &amp; Jamea Jacoby
'

Oswald: "Let's end the
year with a note of encouragement to our reader~ who
wrmder why experts never
make really s t u p i d mistakes."
Jim: "I assume you want
us to show some Idiocies by
life masters in the fall na.
tlonals."
Oswald: "West's double of
oue heart was the 'negative'
double now tn general expert use. It did not indicate
a desire to penalize South,
but lutead told his partner
that West held support for
the two unbid suits and spe.
clflcally lor the unbid major."
Jim: "North:s t w o-c I u b
call was IJiade just in case
East might decide to convert
West's negative double into

I V~i~~ ~~~~g Br'Way

•z ,

Local Bowling
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
s.tturday Junior League
Dec. 9, 19n
Standings
Team
Pis.
Impacts
31
1!.111 Busters
31
Dreamers
191/,
Rams
19
ADachn
1811&gt;
Alloy Cats
16
High Individual Game - Jefl
Couch 116.
Second High lnd Game -

•

&amp; THINGS

Pro Standings

By Helen and Sue Bottel

+++

WIN AT BRIDGE

3- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. 26, 1972

NBA Standings
By Unoted Press International

BY PAUL CRABTR,E,E

lly CHARLES E. TAYLOR
M!AMI (UPI)- As the
Atlantic D•v•s•on
w. I. pet. g.b. Miamt Dolphins ' attack
Boston
27 5 S44
sputtered m the first half
New York
2s 9 757 Ph Sunday, you could hear the
Buffal o
9 24 273 181/~
buzzmg among the 80,010 fans
Philadelphia 3 33 1.083 26
Central Div1sidn
in the Orange Bowl.
w. t. pet. g.b.
"Why doesn 't he try
Ballimore
19 14 576
Griese?" satd one woman. "I
Atlanta
20 15 571
HousJon
14 1s 438 4'h don't see why Griese's not in
Cleveland
9 26 ~57 11
there," sa1d a man. "He's not
Western Conference
even warming htm up,"
Midwest D1v1sion
w. I. pet. g. b. complained another.
·
Mtlwaukee
26 9 743
But midway m the fourth
Chocago
21 lJ 61a w,
KC-Omaha
20 19 51 3 a . quarter, 33-year-old quarterDetrott
15 19 .441 10'17 back Earl Morrall shut everyPac1f1c Dtvis1on
w I. pet. g b. body up. by d1recting the
Los Ange les 27 6 8t8
Dolphins on a determined Jll).
GoldenSta te 21 11 656 5 12
yard scormg drive. It meant a
PhoenJ x
17 18 .4a6 11
Seattle
10 29 256 20
satisfying, if less than artisttc,
Portland
9 27 250 19112 20-14 wm over Cleveland tn the
Monday's Results
AFC playoff opener and MorPhoen1x 115 ChJcago lOs
New York 113 Detrotl 110
rall retained hJs title as "the
Milwaukee 104 KC-Omaha 99 Earl of Miamt."
Portland 116 Seattle 113
And smce Mtami Dolphin
!Only games scheduled)
Tuesday's Games
Coach Don Simla is more inNew York al Baston
terested in wmrung than m art,
Balltmore at Buffalo
Morrall
wtll start next Sunday
Atlanta at Cleveland
KC Omaha at Chlca9o
agatnst Pittsburgh in the AFC
Mtlwaukee at Detro1t
title showdown at Three Rtvers
Phoeni x at Houston
Portland at Los Ang
Stadmm.
Seallle at Golden St
"Earl will start in PittsEastern Conference

Whew! I've just finished reviewing six thousand, nine
hundred movies, and I'm bushed.
. .
~ell, sort of reviewing theiJl. What I've been,domg ts reading
the summaries on 6,900 movies, ranked by mertt, and compiled
by Consumers Uruon, m a one-dollar paperback.
It's revealing, to say the least:
How many movies would you guess have drawn
unqualifiedly excellent ratings by both the crtttcs and CU's own
panel of average viewers in the past 25 years?
Only 35, if I count them correctly.
How many in the past seven years?
Would you believe only one - despite the lifting of taboos, the
new permi.ssiveness, and all that?
Before I list the Top 35, maybe I'd better explam how the
ratings were done :
.
The Cl"ltics, professionally trained and expenence~, wer~
listed by consensus preference in one column. Average vte.wers
choices were listed tn another. (You could he a reviewer, .if you
like movies and belong Ia CU, which costs eight bucks a year.)
Ratmgs were Excellent, Good, Fair or Poor. A mixed ~g of
reviews would merit a double-billing. (For example, a rating of
GF would mean the film was rated good-to.fair, while an FG
meant it was only fair-to-j!ood.)
Here lor what It's worth, is the list of the 35 best films made
tn the 1M7-72 period - the only ones whtch got an "E" from
critics and viewers alike: ·
Bespoke Overcoat, 1947; Best Years of Our Lives, 1947;
Bicycle Thiel, 1950; Boomerang, 1947; Bnef Encounter, 1947;
Bright Victory, 1952; Browning Version, 1952, Death _of a
Salesman, 1952; Encore, 1952; Ftve Pennies, 1959; Forbtdde,n
Games 1953 · From Here to Etermty, 1953; Geltleman s
Agreen:ent, ui48; Great Expectations, 1947; HenryV,I947 ; Last
Bridge, 1958; Little Fugitive, 1954;
umgest Day 1963· Long Day's Journey into N1ght, 1963;
' City,
' 1948; My Fair Lady 1965; Ntu'
Marty, 1955; Naked
a res
Hall-Acre, 1952; Open City, 1948; My Fair Lady, 1965; Nature's
1949; The River, 1952; Room at the Top, 1959; Shoeshine, 1948; To
Uve in Peace, 1947; the Titan, 1950; Torment, 1948; West Side
Story, 1962; Welldigger's Daughter, 1947; "Z," 1970.
' Some interestmg sidelights:
The 1947-48 period when lllOVie.fllakers were unrestrained
by the problems of W~ld War II, was by far the most productive
era, with 13 of the 35 offerings. Another creative surge appeared
in 195U3, when the film industry girded to battle the new
monster, TV.
.
.
But TV has absorbed much of this creative gemus, apparently, and only two post-1963 films made the list: "My Fair
Lady" and "Z."

It's also noteworthy to observe that, contrary to conventional
opinion the viewers were less likely to give an unequivocal "E"
to a m~vie than the critics were. (There were dozens of "EG"
films In the list, so don't be disappointed, if your favorite didn't
make it.)
You may disagree - and so do I, with these ratings. But if
you do, why not jotn CU and become a reviewer yourself?

TeleVision Log·
TUESDAY, DEC. 26, 1972
'6. 00 - News 3. 4; 10, 15,-Sesame Street 20; Around The Bend 33
6:30- News 3, 4, 6, a, 10, 15; I D(ea')h,o(1J!@\!Jll@,l3, Growing
Him Up 33.

Shula almost switched

j

1

7 00 - What's My Llfoe 8, I've Got ASecret 13; Film 15; Electric

Co. 20; Beat The Clock 4.
.,,
7 30 - This Is Your Life 3; Doctors on Call4, To Tell The Truth
6; Price Is Right a, 10; Bea!The Clock 13; RFD 20; Zoom 33.
8 00- Tempartures Rising 6, 13; Ohio This Week 20; Hall of
Fame3, 4, 15; McKonkey's Ferry· Christmas 1776 33
s 30- Hawaii Flve-0 8, 10; Bill Boyer's Journal 20, 33. Movie
"Gidget Gets Married" 6, 13
9.00- Bold Ones 3, 4, 15, Behind the Lines 20
9 30- Black Journal20, 33. "A Death oflnnocence" s, 10
9 30 - Black Journal 20, 33.
10 00- Marcus Welby M.D. 6. 13; America 3, 4, 15; News; Don
Rickles a. 10.

BY JOE CARNICEIJJ

UPI Sports Writer
Don Simla has made hJs
choice. Now Torn Landry is left
with a decision.
Shula said Monday that Earl
Morrall, the 38-year-old veteran, will be the starltng quarterback lor the unbeaten
Mimai Dolphms in Sunday's
American Conference title
game against the Steelers m
Pittsburgh,
There had been talk that
perhaps Bob Griese ,last year's
AFC passing leader who was
out almost all season with a
broken ankle, would be rein-

Morton , his season-long
starter, or Roger Staubach,
last year's hero, for the starting quarterback role.
Morlan was unable to move
the club agamst San Francisco
m Saturday's sernifmal playoff
and Staubach, who missed
virtually all of the season with
an injured should~r, came on to
throw two touchdown passes,
one 1n the last minute, to lilt the
Cowboys to a 31).28 triumph.
The winners of Sunday's
games will meet m the ~uper
Bowl in Los Angeles on Jan. 14.
The four playoff finalists
spent a leiSurely ChriStmas

,.

North tops South
MIAMI (UPI)- The North
came from behind with two
touchdowns in the final period
Christmas night tn the Orange
Bowl to win a game of turnover&amp;, 17-10, over the South m
the annual Shrine College Allstar football clash.
The Southerners were the
victims of their own mistakes,
coughing up the bail seven
times to the Yankee defenders.
California's Bill Armstrong
interr;epted a pass thrown by
South quarterback John
Madeya of Louisville and ran 1t

back 27 yards to set the North
in position at the South 10.yard
lme for a tying touchdown.
Wisconsin's fireplug-eized runner Rufus Ferguson, who won ·
the North's Most Valuable
Player A-ward, collected it in
lour stratght cracks at the line,
going over from the two wtth
13:50 left m the final quarter.
The South turned the ball
over again moments later
when the Umversity of Miami's
Chuck Foreman fumbled at
mtd!Ield and Villanova 's Kevm
Reilly recovered. Purdue

Warfield was
worried man
MIAMI (UP!) - Paul Warfield Is sleeping a little better
thiS week with the Cleveland
Browns off his mind.
Althongh he wouldn't admit
It before Sunday's NFL playoff
game, in which Miami beat
Cleveland 20-14, he afterward
let it off his chest.
"Every mght this week I
slept a couple of hours less than
I usually do,'' said the slender
ncelvel- who'• was'-tradl!d by
Qeveland to the i1lphms in
1970.
.

11 30- News 3, 4, 8, 10, 13, 15

11 30 - Johnny Carson 3, 15; Dick Cavett 6, Rose Bowl Bound 4;
Vlrglntan 8; Movie "Suspense" 10, Movie " A Certain Smile"
13
11 45 - Johnny Carson 4
1 00 - Your Health 4.
1 30- News 4, 13
WEDNESDAY, DEC. 27, 1971
6·00 - Sunrise Seminar 4; Sacred Hearl 10.
6:15- Farmlime 10
6 20 - Farm Report 13.
6 25 - Paul Harvey 13.
6 30 - Columbus Today 4; News, Weather, Spcrts 6, Bible
Answers 8; Urban League Presents 10
6 35 - Glory Road 13
7:00 - Today 3, 4,15, News6, s, 13 ·
7 3013.- ·Romper Room 6; Sleepy Jeffers 8, Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
6 00 - Capt Kangaroo 8, 10; New Zoo Revue13, Sesame St. 33,
s 3~a_:o~a~k La La nne 13; Romper Room 8, New Zoo Revue 6
a 55 - Local News 13
9 00 - Paul Dixon 4; Phil Donahue 15, What Every Woman
Wants to Know 3, Mr. Rogers 33; Friendly Junction 10; Capt.
Kangaroo s, Ben Casey 13, Concentration 6.
9:30 - ToTeiiTheTruth3, Jeopardy6 . Hazels.
9:55- Chuck White Reports 10.
10:00- Dinah Shore3, 15, Phil Donahue 4, In School Instruction
33; Columbus Six Calling 6, Joker's Wild a, 10; Dick Van
Dyke 13.
10 30 - Concentration 3, 15; Love American Style 6, Phil
Donahue 4; Price Is RightS, 10; Split Second 13
11 00 - Saleofthe Century 3, 15; Love American Style 6; Gambit
S; Password 13; Elec. Co. 20.
11 30 - Hollywood Squares 3, 4, 15; Bewitched 6, 13, Love of Life
s, 10, Sesame .SI 20
i2· oo - Jeopardy 3, 15, Bob Braun's S0-50 Club 4, Local News 10,
13; Contact 8, Password 6.
12 30-3W'sGame3, 15; SplltSecond6, Search for TomorrowS,
10.
12· 55 - NBC News 3, 15.
1 00 - News, Weather, Sports 3; All My Children 6, 13; Green
~cres 10; French Chef 33; It's Your Bet 8, Watch Your Chll~
1 20 - Lucille Rivers 3.
1.30-3 On AMatch 3, 4, 15. The World Turns s, 10; Let's Make
A Deal 6, 13
2.00 - Days of Our •Lives 3, 4, 15; Newlywed Game 13; Mike
Douglas 6; Guiding Light s, 10.
2.30 - Dating Game13 , Edge of N1ght s, 10; Doctors 4, 15.
3. 00 - Another World 3, 4, 15, General Hospital 6, 13; Love
Splendored Thing a, 10. RFD 20
3 30 - Return to Peyton Place 3, 4, 15; One Life to Live 6, 13;
Secret Storm 8. 10; Ohio This Week 20.
4 00 - Mister Cartoon 3; Somerset 15. Fllntstones 6, Love
Amencan Style 13; Merv Griffith 4; Sesame St. 33; Gilligan's
Island a, Movie "Yellow Sky" 10.
4· 40 - Merv Griffin 4; Andy Griffith 15; Daniel Boone 13.
Petticoat Junction 3; 1 Love Lucy 6.
5· 00 - Mister Rogers33, Daniel Boone 6; Ponderosa 3 4 Santa
At The ~II 15.
' '
5:30 - DragnetS; Elec. Co 33, Gomer Pyiel3; Marshall Oilton
15. Hodgepodge LodQe 20.
6:00- News, Weather, Sports 3, 4, s, 10, 15, T•uth or Conseq. 6;
Sesame Sf 20; Around the Bend 33
7:00 - Truth or Conseq 3; Beat the Clock 4; News 6, 10 . What's
My Line 8; Anything You Can Do 13; Saint 15; Erec. Co. 20 1
Know Your Schools 33.
7.~- Episode. Action 33; To Tell The Trutl).6; The Judge 10;
lassle15, Beat the Clock 13; POllee Surgeon 31 Protectors &amp;1
Hodqtpocll!e Lodll8 20.
•
1:110-Carol Burnett I, 10; Paul Lynde 6, Adlm. 12 3, ., 15 ,
Sonny &amp; Cher 8; Peter &amp; the Woll20, 33; Blue-Gtay Game 10.
8;30- Banaclk 3, 15; Handful of Ashes 33; Movie "Mr. and
Mrs. Bo Jo Jooes" 6, 13; PlayhouM 20.
9:00- Medical Center a: It's Your Business 33.
9:30- Pollee Sutgeon •·
tO:OO- JulleAndrews6. 13; Cannon I; Soull 33; News20 1 S..rch
n:~~.:W.3 ••• 6.1.10,13,1S.
11:30- Johnny Canonn3, •· 15; Comedy News 6; Movies "The
C.ptaln's Table" 10; "The Sun Also RIMS" 13.
1:001!30- News
News •.
13

stated at quarterback. Morrall
bad problems moVIIIg Miami
through most of the Dolphins'
20-14 victory over Cleveland
Sunday.
.
",Earl will start in P1tts·
rurgh," Shule said. The
Dolphins' coach dtd admit that
he was thinkmg of' insertmg
Grtese when Morrall had a
horrible first half agatnst the
Browns but decided 1o stick
with the veteran quarterback
Landry, who'll · send his 1
Dallas Cowboys agamst the
Redskins m Washington for the
National Conference title, still
hasn't dectded between Cra1g

Monday before getting down to
the task of preparmg for
Sunday 's showdowns.
Pittsburgh Coa ch Chuck
Noll, sttll pretty much m a
state of shock after his club's
storybook victory over
Oakland, satd he, "got
everythmg I i wanted for
Olristmas on Satlll'day."
The Christmas gift came in
the form of a weU'd deflected
pass caught by rookie Franco
Harrts and carrted Into the end
zone for the winnmg touch·
down with only live seconds
left. The scor~ came 1:08 after
Oakland apparently had
clmched the game, 7&lt;;, on
Kenny Stabler's 30.yard touchdown run and gave Pittsburgh
a 13-7 triUmph.
In Washington, Larry
Brown, the Redskins' one-man
rushing gang , said he was at
only 90 per cent efficiency
aga1nst (lreen Bay Sunday as
the Red skins won, 16-3.
"It wasn't until about 7 p m.
Sunday mght that I could really
Sit back and appreciate what
we had accomplished," Brown
satd. "Unlll then, I was just
AHL Standtngs
recuperalmg and catching my
By
United
Press International
breath. I"rn probably about
East
only 90 per cent but I'll be
w I. I. pts gf ga
Nova
Scot1
a
ra
9 8 44 141 92
ready for the Cowboy game. Boston
1S 1l 4 40 11712S
You've got to play m the Roches ler
16 10 6 3s 113 117
Providence 15 11 5 35 1~0 102
playoffs."
9 17 5 23 113 135
The Miamt-Pittsburgh game Springfield
New Haven
723 620112171
will begin at noon EDT and will
West
w. I. I. pis gf ga
be telecast nationally by NBC.
Cmcmnat1
25
9 2 52 156 103
The Dallas-Washmgton game Hershey
16 9 7 39 123 97
will begin at 3 p.m. EST and Vlrgln•a
16 11 6 38 123 112
10 16 7 27 121 127
w11i be camed by CBS. There Cleveland
Ri chmond
12 1s 3 27 116 126
w11i be a blackout wtthm the 75- Balltmore
5 19 7 17 79 133
rn1le radius.
Monday's Results
Providence 5 Spnngfld 1
Boston 3 Ne~ Haven 1
Vt rglnia 4 Clncmnalo 0
!Only games scheduled)
Tuesday's Games
Rochester at Nova Scotia
!Onlygame scheduled)
1

quarterback Gary Danielson
marched his Yankees to the
South 14 from where Bob
McCall lhtted untouched on a
weak-side left run for the
wmning score with 7:39 left m
the game. Marvm Roberts of
Mtchtgan State booted his
second converston.
Roberts also ktcked a 23-yard
field goal m the openmg
minutes of the game, a score
that was set up by Purdue's
Gary Bmgham who stole a
south pass thrown by Joe
Ferguson of Arkansas and ran
it hack Yl yards
And it was Bmgham who
saved victory for the North by
recovenng Foreman's second
fumble of the game wtth 56
seconds remaining three yards
in front of the North's goal
Foreman was the South's
leading rusher and gained his
team's Most Valuable Player
Award despite h1s costly
'}~·
fumbles.
Ferguson, who suffered
three first-balf Interceptions,
put together a 59-yard drtve m
The Metgs Marauder wrest11 plays that led to the South's ling team finwhed !1fth in a stx·
only touchdown with 6 ·10 team match at Chesapeake
rernaming in the second Saturday. Barboursvtlle won
penod. Ferguson hit on lour of the match wtth 101 'k poml&lt;;
nine throws, tossing an 18- wh1le the remainmg order was
yarder to DaVId Knight of Fatrland 92'k , Buffalo 80,
Wllli•th. liid'Mary f~F a laue~- Chesapeake 76, MeigS 66, and
0 '' "' ' ' ' liel(ry 58'k .
d~wrf."""' w
Alfred ~~e convefted the ' v·or the II Marauder wrestextra point to g1ve the South a lers, 10 fmished fourth or
7-3 lead at halftime. Reese better. Terry Ptckens was the
kicked a 23-yard lteld goal with htghest Marauder w1th a
4:57 m the thU'd quarter and second place m the 175 lb.
the ·South looked to be com- class
lortably in front wtth a 10-3
Other Metgs grapplers
lead.
results were Jeff Warner,
However, the Southerners lhtrd, 98 lb.; Jllll McClure,
began blowing themselves out fourth, 112 lb ; Kenny Moore,
of the game with turnovers .
third, 126 lb ; Roger Pearch,
The 1'\orth VIctory evened lhtrd, 132 lb.; Mike Hoffman,
this charity series at IZ-12·1. fourth, 138 lb .; Alan
Although more than 18,000 McLaughlm, fourth, 145 lb ;
tickets were sold, a sUm crowd Steve Bnckles, fourth, 155 lb.;
estimated at less than 10,000 John Lehew, thtrd, 167 lb , and
watched the game on a cool Mike Haley, lhtrd, unltmited
night.
class
Coach John Bentley said
alter the match, "Our boys are
coming along pretty well now.
With a lew gOOd breaks, we
could have finished much
higher. I was nol dtsappointed
with our showmg."
The next Metgs match wtll be
wtlh the Nelsonville-York
Buckeyes at Meigs Saturday,
January 13, at 7:30 p.m.

"And the sleep I nad wasn't
very restful. I couldn't get the
Browns off my mmd for f1ve
minutes all week."
Warfteld was an allieague
wide receiver at the tlme of the
trade, in which Cleveland got a
first round draft choice, Mike
Phipps.
He contmued living in Cleveland and when the Browns beat
Miami 28-0 that year, "people
Jl!St let me know they d1do 'I
thmk the Dolphins were
capable of handling a club like
.the Browns."
"Before the game (Sunday),
I dtdn't want to talk about how
much it meant tOme, but 1t was
special," he said Monday :
Warfield accounted lor 60 of
the 80 yards that brought the
Dolphins Into the end zone lor
the winnmg touchdown that put
Miami's vtctory streak at 15
and kept the team on the track
to the Super Bowl.
The Dolphins meet Pittsburgh 1n the American
Conference tttle game Sunday.
Warfield said he was not
fooled by Cleveland talk hefore
ghe game that it would be
lucky to get through the
national anthem.
"They came in trymg to lull
us to sleep, saying they were
just happy to be here, and all
that'," he said. "Well, back m
1964, when I was with the
Browns and we played Baltimore lor the wolrd championship, we were in the same posi·
tion as the Browns were this
time.
"All we heard all week was
how great the Colts were. And
we laid tt on them 7:14!. You've
NEW YORK (UP!) - For the
got to be leary of teams that third consecutive week, UCLA
low-rate themselves."
recetved all ftrst-place votes
cast by the United Press In·
ternational Board of College
'
Coaches Monday as the
nation's No. 1 major college
. basketball team.
The Bruin&lt;! need only 10 more
wins IAl add to thell' present 51
to set a new record lor most
consecutive victories by a
college cage team after their
89-73 defeat of Pittsburgh
Friday mght and 8U6 drubbing of Notre Dame on
Saturday mght . UCLA is
chasing the record of 60
straight victories held by the
Unlverstty of San Francisco.
UCLA received aU 30 first·
place votes cast for 300 points,
giving the Bruins a huge
margin over second-place
Marquette, which had 239
pomts.
North Carolina State climbed
from fourth to third (lOIIitlon
with 193 points on the strength
ol vlctariea over Davldlon and

G
rappfers in
fi:A-h place

Finish of 6

UCLA still

number One
•

m UPI poll

tba

.... ,1,....,
..

DISCOuNT SAVIXOSr
:t ... DdJ:

.....

already won.
Both Shula and Gnese have
insisted that the youthful hut
experienced quarterback who
led the Ilolphtns into the Super
Bowl last year has not been
ready. But now Shuia says the
llllle may be coming .
"Each week Griese is getting
more and more time to heal
and get back Jn the groove,"
Shula said Monday.
Shula pointed out thai the
Dolphtns' offen s t v e
frustrations Sunday were not
necessarily Morrall's fault He
ya~ds .
satd receivers were havmg
Griese, who dislocated and trouble getting open and the
broke his ankle Oct. 15, was underrated, Brown front four
acltvated rpore than two weeks was giving the Mlarm offensive
ago for the New York Giant Une fits at times.
game, rut because hiS in~¥-- "One time Jim ~lck tripped
has not quite healed his only overlfltnebacker, Shula satd
appearance was a brier one m "Other times the protection
the season finale against just nat broke down ."
Baltimore when the game was
One can't feel too sorry for
Simla. His dilemma is who to
start-this year's AFC passmg
leader or last year's AFC
NEW YOR·K IUPI)- The passing lea de~.
United Press lnternattonal top
20
major
basketball
teams
w1th college
flrsl place
votes ...-------!""'~
and won lost records in parenTh1s We•k's Special
theses• I Th~rd Week)
Team
Points
1 UCLA (30) (6 0)
300
2 Marquette IS0)
239
3 No.Car.St IB-0)
193
4 Maryland (50)
181
5. Minnesota 16-0)
172
6. Long Beach Sl. 18 0) 131
7. Missouri (S 0)
sa
8. Pennsylvania (5 01
63
9 SW Louisiana 16 01
54
10 Vanderbilt (S·O)
33
11 Kansas $1.(71)
22
12 North Carolina (7-1) 19
12 Providence (5·1)
19
PASADENA, C&amp;lif. (UPI) - 14 Brigham Young (6-1) 14
14
The Ohio State football team, t4. Washington ls-1)
14. Indiana (5·1)
14
after a one-day layoff to cele- 17 , Michigan IS 1)
V-s motor, auto trans . and
12
12
power steering
brate Chrtstmas, went back to 17 Florida St. 15-2)
19 South Carolina 15-2)
9
diligent practice today for the 20
Louisville (6 1)
8
Jan. 1 encounter wtth Southern
cat m the Rose Bowl. .
The Buckeyes drilled on
Chnstmas Eve at Citrus
"You'll Like Our Qua lilt,
College near here and af·
GET YOUR MAN Wl'l'HJ:
Way of Doing Business •
terward held a party at the
GMAC FINANCING
Hunltngton Hotel. Starting
992-534~
.pomeroy
Open Evenings'TII8 ;00 '
offensive guard Chuck Bonica,
Tll5 P.M. Sot,
a 256-pound senior, played
Santa Claus.
But Coach Woody Hayes kept
hJs
th b )
in
atm on e OW game,
which he would like to see hJs
underdog Buckeyes pull the
rug from under the nationally
top-ranked Trojans.
"Weconstderthisagamefor
the national
"
Hayes said,
no!
i!)g it ~. ,big ISSue .. for
players.
Starting defensive tackle
George Hasenohrl a senior
.
.
'
'
satd he thmks Ohio State can
heat Southern cat
"Thts ts a young team, very
5 to9· 30-S2 . ~all you can eat, lor Ala Carte).
coachable lor a game like

College Ratings

Buckeyes

retum to

drill field -

'71 OLDS

CUTLASs

COUPE

'2495

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

Want Ad

WHA Standings
By Un1led Press lnlernatoonal
East
w I t pts gf ga
New Eng
22 14 1 45 164 129
Cleveland
~1 14 1 43 131 96
NewYork
20 1a o40 165 142
Quebec
1a 1s 137121 121
Ottawa
15 17 2 32 123 147
12 23 o 24 122 169
Phil a
West
,
w nn,peg ,. 2~ 1 ~ t 2 ~~ ~~~ ~~~ ~
Mtnnesota
19 14 2 40 116 109
Los Angeles 16 17 4 36 126 130
Houston
15 16 2 32 114 118
Alberta
15 20 2 32 112 130
Ch1cago
12 21 1 25 99 124
Monday's Results
Cleveland s Philadelphia 0
New England a New York 2
Ch1cago 3 Alberta 2
(Only games scheduled)
· this," he said. "It's very
Tuesday's Games
stmtlar to our 1968 team." ,
New York at Quebec
Houston al Ottawa
The 1968 Buckeyes scored 11
Philadelphia at Mlnn
27·16 victory over Southern Cal
Chocago at Winnipeg
in the Rose Bowl Jan. I, 1969.
!Onlygames scheduled)
1

TUESDAY EVENING ONLY

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Georgia.
•' Maryland dropped to fourth,
wlllllll poiDIJ, beatq George
Wllhingten, a-'19, In Ill only
1111111 tithe week. Mlnnesot*,
. . . Bud! State, Mlaaottri,
t..li,lalldtwest Lrolstana and
VIJiderlilt COOipleted the top
ten thll week.

burgh," was Shula's flat
statement Monday.
Shula did admit to a tempIa !ion to go to the younger Bob
Griese against Cleveland as he
watched Morrall complete only
three of nine first half passes
lor a net gain of 10 yards. HIS
completions totaled 21 yards,
but he lost 10 yards when he
was nailed twiCe trying to find
a recetver.
Morrall h1t three of four
passes in the second half,
wmdmg up wtth six complet10ns m 13 attempts lor 74

992·2094

.••

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na-1518 a5 -15j

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L78-15t9.15-15)

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49.50
52.25
57.50
63.00
58.75
64.50
72.00
74.25

'34.50
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36.50
38.50
40.00
41.50

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2.39
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T~_Daily Ser.tinel, Middleport-Fomeroy, 0., Dec. :!S, 1972

'

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' OpeD Dilly
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SUNDAY
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Heck's Reg. 7~

Heck's

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$39 .'l''allon
$1.99 $2.19

$139

--

••

&amp;Johnson

72' .64~

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Heck's Reg. $29.96t

John5on

-.

'

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. Heck's Reg. $2.29
4

G. E.

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· Heck's Reg. $14.96

'

MICRIN
MOUTHWASH

39~
•,

Heck's Reg. $25.99

.

Heck's Reg. $1.68

-TOOTHPASTE

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•19

'2''
Heck's ·Reg. To $8.10
18 oz.

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302.

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BOARD

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oz.

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�6- 'ihe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. 26, 1!112

f~.:i:;~:*====~~,,~,,,,,,, ~===;:=::@===========,.;,.,,;,:,.,.,.,.:&lt;·=·=·==*====,,,,,,,,,;,,.,.,.,

s

~
r,:.~:, ln.o
~

rt. D a_ra d.e
r.

Coliege holiday cage festivals. resume

@By Ualled Press llllerutiGul
~~ Christmas week ill tour-

Grambling kicks off the
tournament against St. John's
in the first game of an afternoon doubleheader today,
with North Carolina A&amp;T
meeting Manhattan in the
second game.
Boston College will face
pretourney favorite Michigan
and South Carolina, witl oppose
Villanova .in the nighttime
doubleheader.

~l nament week in college hllsket{~
iJy MILJ'ON. RICHMAN
;~ ball - 16 major boliday
....
UPI SpGrts Editor
·-· festivals will g~t under way
WASHINGTON (UP!) - You wouldn't want to meet a -bigger . Tuesday, Wednesday or .
sport than Edward Bennett Williams, one ri the country 's top Friday.
trill I ·lawyen and presiqent of the Washington Redskim.
The first two tourneys
He's not the type to nickeland dime you.
starting today ere the prestilf be Hkes 80mething and wants it, he goes out and pays top gious ECAC Holiday Festival
doUar.
•
at New York's Madison Square
Now you take his football coach, George Allen, who bas the Garden ~nd the Gator Bowl at
Redsldns only one jump away from the Super Bowl.
Jacksonville, F1a.
First-Round Byes
When Edward Bennett Williams told George Allen how much
The ECAC, a five-day affair,
Tennessee and Niagara draw
he wanted him to handle 'his team two years ago, be didn't will have two firsts this year in
first-round
byes and will face
merely tell .him, he SHOWJ!;D him.
its 21st start. Ten teams will
He .gave Allen a seven-year contract as general manager and .participate-the first time this the winners of Tuesday after·
head coach at'$125,000 per. He also threw in a fancy place for . many liciuads have entired the . noon 's . doubleheader on
Allen aoo hiS family to stay in plus a car and a chauffeur. So he festival-and for the first lime Wednesday afternoon.
The Gator Bowl is a tw&lt;Hlay
wouldn't feel neglected, Allen als(l got an option on the Redskins' two all-black college~ram&amp;tock. all the Ice cream he could eat and permanent possession of bling College and Noeth Caroll- tourney involving four teamsany and aU rainbows in the general vicinity of Washington .
na A&amp;T-wlll play in a tour- F1orida, Miami of Ohio; RutIn Relluu
nament at Ma.dlson Square gers ana host Jacksonville.
Seven more Chrisbnas festiIn return for all this, Edward Bennett WUliams occasionally is Garden.
allowed to set foot in the Redskins' clubhouse - if he behaves
himself. Or so the local joke goes.
The Redskins' boss, their REAL boss, has heard the gag and it
makes him smile, too.
. "rm a lawyer," says Edward Bennett Williams. "I have a ~
m8n tBwflrmtorun.ldon'thavellmeto.run.a football team, and
i don't have the inclination tc!. George is the man I want to run it,
and he does. IstiU make the major policy decisions. Presidents o( By United Preis Ipteroatlooal Kojis . Then Abdui.Jabbar hit
other organil:ations want to run the day-to-day operation. I
The Milwaukee Bucks' 7- with 3:58 to play and came
don•t." .J
foot-2 center, Kareem Abdui- back with a three-point play 30
In q,e two years ADen has worked for him, WUliams says Jabbar, Monday night scored seconds later to lock up the
they've never had so l)luch as a single disagreement. What's 32 points, inclUding 10 of the victory.
more, Williams feels Allen is worth every nickel he's getting.
Bucks' last 17, in a I&lt;K-99
Nate Archibald was held to
"H you want something good, you've got to pay for it," says · Milwaukee victory. The win, only 20, his second lowest
Williams. "l never got anything for nothing. Certainly nothing coupled with Chicago's 11f&gt;.IOII output ·of the season. However,
worthwhile.! have no regrets about the deal I made for George. loss to P~oenlx Christmas Little Nate did get 18 assists,
He's unquestionably one of the two or ttiree best coaches in the aftero~oon, gave Milwaukee a which equaled his best output
world. I've never seen a harder or more dedicated worker. He 4'h.game bulge over the Bulls for 1972.
works, -.vorks, works, and his job iS always on his mind. He thinks in the National Basketball
At Phoenix, Chicago led after
of nothing else.
,
Association's Midwest each of the first three quarters,
Comparison DHHcult
Division.
largely on the strength of Bob
"PeOple ask me to compare him with Vince Lombardi, who
In otber NBA action Monday Love's 29 points. But the
had the same job beforP. be did. It's difficult comparing Allen 1dgnt, New York edged Detroit, shooting of Dick Van Arsdale
with Vince. Everybody knoWs how I felt about Vince Lombardi. I 113·110 and Sidney Wicks' and Charlie Scott, who had 32
had a p-eat love affair with him. He was a wonderful human career-high 38 points led and 26 points, reapectively,
being. He and George had this one common denominator- total Portland to a 116-113 triumph coupled with Lamar Green's
devotion to the job.
over ~ttle, the Sonlcs' 13th rebounding, helped the Suns to
"Lombardi did have a different philosophy when it came to consecutive road loss.
tie the score at 99-99 with 5:12
build~ a football team. He was wjlling to wait. George iS not
The Kings moved from an 89- remaining. The Suns went
wiUing to walt. Soine,people saY he mortgages the future. I don't 83 deficit to a tie at !JS.all with ahead to stay at 105-103 on two
think he has, or we have. Hwe accomplish what we're trying to 5:02 to go on' a basket by Don free throws by Van Arsdale
accomplllll, ~mean wln the championship, then we'D be ln a good
position to trade."
When the Redakinl captured their first post-6eason game in 30
SON IS BORN
PARTY ON FRIDAY ·
years Sandly by polllblng olf the Green Bay Packers, 16-3, one of
SYRACUSE - Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Carl Roach entertained
the ha)lllielt persons among the recorl! Cl'()Wd of 53,140 at Robert
night with a party for
Franklin
Hendrix
are
an.
Friday
F. Kemedy Memorial Stadium here was Henry Kissinger,
President Ni.J:on's advisor, taking in the action from President' nouncing the birth of a six teachers of the Primary
pound two ounce son, Roher! Department of the Middleport
wnuama' private box.
~er applauded vigorously and was aU smiles as the Ray, born on Dec. 19 at the Church of Christ. Games were
IICOI'eboard clock ran out, He wasn't any happier though than Holzer Medical Center. played with prizes going to
Edward Bennett Williams, who could remember the kind of Grandparents a~e Mr. and Mrs. Don Erwin, Mrs. Denver
Mra. Wopdrow • Hendrix, Rice, Mrs. Lawrence ~wart ..•,
siMiu a year ago.
"
tile Redaldns go against the Dallas Cowboys next Sunday MilMukee, wq; and •Mrs. Ml[t.,KOtjerLOng won 11\e door '
•
IIIey get past them, they go to the Super Bowl, but a year Sadie Smith of Hartford, W. prize. Gifts were exchanged
ago th«e was only one place for the Redsklns to go and that was Va. Mrs. Lela Hendrix of - and a gift was presented to
home, Williams remembers the whole thing weD, and also Pomeroy is a great- Mrs. Roach from the other
grandmother. Mr. and Mrs. teachers. Mrs. Roach, assisted
remember!~ Allen's reaction.
Hendrix also have a daugh~r. by her daughter, Trudy, served·
"You know George," says the Red$kins' owner, "He's like a
Barbara and a son, Franklin, refreshments to those· named
German general. He thinks he's supposed to commlt suicide
Jr.
and Mrs. Norman Yeauger,
when he loaes.
Mrs. Earl McKinley, and Mrs.
"Anyway, we lost to San Francisco in the playoff game a year
Dale Hysell.
ago. You may remember it was a bad snap that did it. The ball
was poorly handled by our punter, an·d the Forty-Niners feU on it
in the end zone and got a touchdown.
PARTY GIVEN
Dr. and Mrs. Ray Pickens
"On the plane going back home, George was inconsolable.
You'd think II was the end of the world. I told him to forget it, go entertained at their new
home, get aome sleep, take a rest awhile and then start thinking
Lincoln Hill home recently
about nen year.
with a Chris'trnas party for
their. employes and husbands.
"But I couldn't get through to him at all. 'No, no, no,' he kept
saying. The following morning I was still in bed sleeping when 1 A buffet dinner was seved and
gota call. It was George. He said, 'Ed, you're right. I'm thinking guests exchanged gifts. At·
about next year. We're gonna add three minutes to our practice
tending were Mr. and Mrs.
sessions. Do you know what we're gonna practice In those three Gene Conde, Mr. and Mrs. Bert
minutesT'
·
Bodimer, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
"I say, no what?
Hubbard, Mrs.
Lucille
"'Bad snaps,' he says.
•
Harrison, and Mrs . Winona
"You know something? He had the team do It, too."
Hoffman.
'1:'.

. j

26,1972

vals witl begin action Wednes- starting Wednesday inclode · Other two-Qay affairs
day. l.eading the list is the AIJ: the Far West Classic at Par- starting ·Friday ·include the
College Tournament, being Uand, Ore., with fifth-ranked Charlotte Invitational at
.played at Oklahoma City, Okla. Minnesota, the Qu.aker City Charlotte, N.C., the Lobo In-

One of the top 10 teams is en- tournament at Philadelphia,
lered - sixth-ranked Long the Palmetto Invitaliooal at
Beach Slate. Other teams Charleston , S.C., and the
entered include Brigham Poinsetta Classic at GreenYoung,
Florida
State, ville, S.C.
MissiSsippi, . Penn Stale, St. . The week closes with seven ·
FrancisofPa., TexasA&amp;Mand two.&lt;tay tournaments starting
host Oklahoma City.
.on Friday, topped by the Sugar
The Big Eight tournament at
Kansas City features seventhranked Missouri, plus the other
six Big Eight schools.
The Rainbow Cllissic at
.Honolulu features North
Carolina, Washington, and
Louisville. Colorado Slate, ·
For'tlham, Utah and host
Hawaii have also tossed in
their hats.
Other major tournaments

Bowl Classic at New Orleans.
No. I UCLA goes for consecu- ·
live victory number 52 against
Drake Friday, with lllinois
meeting Temple in the other
contest.
Marquette ts tlost. Team
· Second-ranked Marquette
also is in action, as the host
teall\in the Milwaukee Classic.
Rice, Wisconsin and Yale
complete the field.

with 2:45 remaining and won
their fourth consecutive game.
BiD Bradley scored 29 points
and Dave DeBusschere and .
Walt Frazier added 44 more
between them to move New
York to within 1'h games of
idle Boston in the Atlantic
Division.
, ,With 6:44 to g0, the Pistons,
led by Dave Bing, who scored
35 points, went on a 21-4 tear to
close the gap, 107-!Ql, with 2:58
to play. Mter the Knlcks
pushed it to lll-101, the Pistons
went on another tear, 9-2, including six points by Bob
Lanier, who finished with 27.
' Wicks scored 23 of his points
in the first half when Portland
look a 57-M lead and sparked
the Trail Blazers to a 14-point

vitational at Albuquerque,
N.M., the Motor City tour·
nament at Detroit, tbe Oral
Roberts Classic at Tulsa ,
Okla., and the Queen City
Invitational at Buffalo, N.Y.
Fourth-rated Maryland will

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

M·ARK~T

• Open Daily 9 to 10 - Sun. 10 to 10

WeAccep~

PHONE: 992·3480

.,

fourth-quarter lead. It was cut
to one with five · seconds
remaining, but CharUe Davis
made two free throws to put the
game out of reach. Geoff
Petrie added 28 points for Portland while Spencer Haywood
led SeatUe with 35.

lb.
SUPERIORS
ASSORTED
dill and strap. $175.

PANTS

Goessler's

*10.00

JEWELRY
STORE

POMEROY, OHIO

•we will adjust to this

toleranc:~,

If necessary. GUarantee Is for one Ytlr'.

99~

. IIUFI

llols. .

1

I

!

1

,Beef Stew
Meat

COCA~OLA

;

lb. 89~

lb.

,

16 oz.
bots.

99

¢

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CRACKERS••••••••••••••••••••••••••

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Moqre's Service Center . .• · :1. ,"

$17 95
•

CYLINDER
Includes Parts
· and Labor

BRA~ES

MUFFLERS
TAIL PIPES

cans

l·lb.
bxs.
rolls
for ·

Is your car acting up? Has the
winter been hard on your auto?
Nowrs tht! time to have a tune-up. We
•; ,.n, H~ve,~ou . ~ar rul\nl!'g.iOili!'lhly. ~

MOORE'S
Service Center ·
124 W. Main

Pomeroy
PH. 992-2848

~

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ICE CREAM

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FRENCH
FRIES

PIES

41-lb.• ,

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For Holiday Parties

GALLON

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ONLY

SCOT LAD

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ICE MILK

SCOT LAD

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STARTS WEDNESDAY, ,DEC. 27

Save as much as $15000
On Zenith COlor JV
s100 Off on most
Living Room Suites

QUART

FAIRMONT

COTTAGE CHEESE

FAIRMONT HOLIDAY VALUES

LAMPS

FAIRMONT

FAIRMONT

DIP 'N CHIP
aoz. $}00
PKGS.

EGGNOG

.3

BOTTLES

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3

ll.ljJIIl! lljfi ,,,~,,,,1

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160Z. . ,
PKGS.

'lRh11: !I.,! !Ill'!11;

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m~ru
1m=~
tltl!
1111"''
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HA.LF &amp;HALF

Portable Stereos Reduced

3

PTS.
FOR

$}00

POTATOES

FAIRMONT

the

IND• ..del only ebout hall tblt

YELLow·
ONIONS

II

Aliitri.t!u lape e~

I'll think about pll)'lna
lie aid 01111 (the AmlriCID
...... p!l'b) If they Wlnt to
ptJ ~· the difference-tO
!niDkln."

PAK

Diet Rite Cola

'

FROZEN and DAIR.Y VALUES

TUPP!i:RS PLAINS Charles Swogger, principal,
has announced the Eastern
High School honor roD for the
second six weeks grading
period.
Named to the A and B rolls

and

16 oz. bois.

1!4QfF. EE-MA., .E
. ...........................16. oz.79~

SCOT FARM

at Chicago Ia the Idea of inter·
lea1111e play, but San Diego
Pa!lres' official E. J. "Buzzle"
llavasi Ia Ulatly to kill the Idea.
"No clllllct," Baypl aald
llonday. "It IUee only Qlll
to ltGp 11 •di'Ye aot 111e
We paitl tlO miWon fer

On Sale All Week Long!

in no time. save money at Moore's.

EHS honor students announced
Bowen , Deanna Hensl ey, Grossnickle, Lu cy Holter ,
Marsha Kimes, Marylu Mills, Robin Humphrey . Debbie
Karen Reed. Becky Root ; Jeffers, Jane Ann Karr,
Sophomore (B) - Debbie Glenda Lawsoo, Rita MarBoatright, Reg ina Kimes, Jane cinko, Bryon McCoy, Debbie
Bahr, Anita Bu ck ley, Liz Mllthone, Phyllis Newlun ,
Edwards, Vickie Gaul, Lou Beverly Rillle, Nancy Sexon,
Ann Newell , Mandie Rose, Vicki Spencer, Dick Steffler,
Pam Sams.
Barbara Well, Silndy WoodJ
Jun iors (A) - Bernice Senior (B) - Pam Balser,
were:
Freshman (AI _ Sonya Boggs , Virg inia Cline, Jo Steve Boston, Ronald Dillon,
Adams. Cheryl Benedum, Enevoldsen, Crystal Erwin, Alan Duvall, Bob Edwards,
·
Steve Follrod, Steve Goebel, Cindy Farrar, Greg Hackney,
Edna Boggs, Pam Clouch, p tt G
1 kl
L
Denise Dean, Jeff Holter, a Y rossn c e, awrence Vincent LaComb, Donna
Harper, Paula Hauber. Bill Lantz, David Matheny, Elaine
Diana Morris, George Pickens, Hayes, Chryll Kimes, Nancy Mllhone,
Osborne, Cathy
Diana Pullins, Diana Root, Miller, Ir is Pigott, Shelia Pickens, Bill
Rosemary
Debbie Saflders, Julia Schultz, Sa mpson ; Junior (Bi - Bill Debbie Richardson, Reed,
Crissy Morlan.
Amberger, Steve Anderson, Satterfield, Jill Swain, Mark
Ejette
Freshman (B) ~ Betsy Ams· Larry Atherton, Tim . Baum, Upton, S•ndra Van Meter,
bary, Barbara Andrews, Dia'na Sue Burke, Debbie Burns,
Atherton, Thomas Avis, Sheri Marty CaldwelL Dan Chaffee, Debbie Watson, Randy Wolf.
Barringer, Katrina Batey, Teresa Chichester, Melissa
Dale Dillon, Nlesel Duvall, Coleman , Cindy Domlqan ,
Harold !Eagle, Sherry Epple, Jeffrey Gilland, Joy Grober,
Melinda Evans, JoAnne Fick, T
K b
h
Ch 1
Beth Hewlff, Tim Kyhn, Cathy onya
ee aug' •
ery
Kuhn, Pa:n Lanham, Diana
Maxey, Pam Hlllhone, Kathy Larkins, Martha Myers , Gale
Newell , Nancy Ridenour, Osborne, Ann~ Shatter,
James Rucker. Debbie Sams, L 11 s
caro 1 Tay 1or , TOP. IC MAY BE KILLED
Carol
Spurlock, Peo"Y
ore
a
pencer,
•
David Weber, Jarie Whitehead .
Trussell, Jan Wilson, Debbie
Seniors (A) - Melinda Ams.
SAN DIEGO (UPI)-One of
Windon, Patricia Windon.
b
B
arry, , Lana
enedum , the three topics on the agenda
Sophomore IAI - Ph 'll Richard
Cross.
· Bob
I • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • - at the Jan. II meetlng of the
major lea1111e baseball owners

1.00
1.00
1.00
'

•

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large

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8

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3-lb.

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YOUNG AND
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CHUCK

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Canned Picnics

•

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Milwaukee ups lead

E

see action in the Maryland
Invitational at College Park,
Md., on Friday and Saturday,
and Indiana plays In the Sun
Carnival Thursday and Friday.
Eighth-ranked l:'lmnlylvanla
visits Cincinnati . wemescs.y
and San Francisco Friday,
· while 10th-rated Vanderbilt has ·
a single game, at home against
· Memphis St. Saturday.
Third-ranked North Carolina
State and ninth-rated Southwestern Louisiana take the
week off.

•

99~

lb.

ba&amp;

1111

II
L,

20 LB. BAG

·- .._ __________ _

~Pir~·
~ I~~~~
I s:i;~
. lUll
~ :
I

I

••

�6- 'ihe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. 26, 1!112

f~.:i:;~:*====~~,,~,,,,,,, ~===;:=::@===========,.;,.,,;,:,.,.,.,.:&lt;·=·=·==*====,,,,,,,,,;,,.,.,.,

s

~
r,:.~:, ln.o
~

rt. D a_ra d.e
r.

Coliege holiday cage festivals. resume

@By Ualled Press llllerutiGul
~~ Christmas week ill tour-

Grambling kicks off the
tournament against St. John's
in the first game of an afternoon doubleheader today,
with North Carolina A&amp;T
meeting Manhattan in the
second game.
Boston College will face
pretourney favorite Michigan
and South Carolina, witl oppose
Villanova .in the nighttime
doubleheader.

~l nament week in college hllsket{~
iJy MILJ'ON. RICHMAN
;~ ball - 16 major boliday
....
UPI SpGrts Editor
·-· festivals will g~t under way
WASHINGTON (UP!) - You wouldn't want to meet a -bigger . Tuesday, Wednesday or .
sport than Edward Bennett Williams, one ri the country 's top Friday.
trill I ·lawyen and presiqent of the Washington Redskim.
The first two tourneys
He's not the type to nickeland dime you.
starting today ere the prestilf be Hkes 80mething and wants it, he goes out and pays top gious ECAC Holiday Festival
doUar.
•
at New York's Madison Square
Now you take his football coach, George Allen, who bas the Garden ~nd the Gator Bowl at
Redsldns only one jump away from the Super Bowl.
Jacksonville, F1a.
First-Round Byes
When Edward Bennett Williams told George Allen how much
The ECAC, a five-day affair,
Tennessee and Niagara draw
he wanted him to handle 'his team two years ago, be didn't will have two firsts this year in
first-round
byes and will face
merely tell .him, he SHOWJ!;D him.
its 21st start. Ten teams will
He .gave Allen a seven-year contract as general manager and .participate-the first time this the winners of Tuesday after·
head coach at'$125,000 per. He also threw in a fancy place for . many liciuads have entired the . noon 's . doubleheader on
Allen aoo hiS family to stay in plus a car and a chauffeur. So he festival-and for the first lime Wednesday afternoon.
The Gator Bowl is a tw&lt;Hlay
wouldn't feel neglected, Allen als(l got an option on the Redskins' two all-black college~ram&amp;tock. all the Ice cream he could eat and permanent possession of bling College and Noeth Caroll- tourney involving four teamsany and aU rainbows in the general vicinity of Washington .
na A&amp;T-wlll play in a tour- F1orida, Miami of Ohio; RutIn Relluu
nament at Ma.dlson Square gers ana host Jacksonville.
Seven more Chrisbnas festiIn return for all this, Edward Bennett WUliams occasionally is Garden.
allowed to set foot in the Redskins' clubhouse - if he behaves
himself. Or so the local joke goes.
The Redskins' boss, their REAL boss, has heard the gag and it
makes him smile, too.
. "rm a lawyer," says Edward Bennett Williams. "I have a ~
m8n tBwflrmtorun.ldon'thavellmeto.run.a football team, and
i don't have the inclination tc!. George is the man I want to run it,
and he does. IstiU make the major policy decisions. Presidents o( By United Preis Ipteroatlooal Kojis . Then Abdui.Jabbar hit
other organil:ations want to run the day-to-day operation. I
The Milwaukee Bucks' 7- with 3:58 to play and came
don•t." .J
foot-2 center, Kareem Abdui- back with a three-point play 30
In q,e two years ADen has worked for him, WUliams says Jabbar, Monday night scored seconds later to lock up the
they've never had so l)luch as a single disagreement. What's 32 points, inclUding 10 of the victory.
more, Williams feels Allen is worth every nickel he's getting.
Bucks' last 17, in a I&lt;K-99
Nate Archibald was held to
"H you want something good, you've got to pay for it," says · Milwaukee victory. The win, only 20, his second lowest
Williams. "l never got anything for nothing. Certainly nothing coupled with Chicago's 11f&gt;.IOII output ·of the season. However,
worthwhile.! have no regrets about the deal I made for George. loss to P~oenlx Christmas Little Nate did get 18 assists,
He's unquestionably one of the two or ttiree best coaches in the aftero~oon, gave Milwaukee a which equaled his best output
world. I've never seen a harder or more dedicated worker. He 4'h.game bulge over the Bulls for 1972.
works, -.vorks, works, and his job iS always on his mind. He thinks in the National Basketball
At Phoenix, Chicago led after
of nothing else.
,
Association's Midwest each of the first three quarters,
Comparison DHHcult
Division.
largely on the strength of Bob
"PeOple ask me to compare him with Vince Lombardi, who
In otber NBA action Monday Love's 29 points. But the
had the same job beforP. be did. It's difficult comparing Allen 1dgnt, New York edged Detroit, shooting of Dick Van Arsdale
with Vince. Everybody knoWs how I felt about Vince Lombardi. I 113·110 and Sidney Wicks' and Charlie Scott, who had 32
had a p-eat love affair with him. He was a wonderful human career-high 38 points led and 26 points, reapectively,
being. He and George had this one common denominator- total Portland to a 116-113 triumph coupled with Lamar Green's
devotion to the job.
over ~ttle, the Sonlcs' 13th rebounding, helped the Suns to
"Lombardi did have a different philosophy when it came to consecutive road loss.
tie the score at 99-99 with 5:12
build~ a football team. He was wjlling to wait. George iS not
The Kings moved from an 89- remaining. The Suns went
wiUing to walt. Soine,people saY he mortgages the future. I don't 83 deficit to a tie at !JS.all with ahead to stay at 105-103 on two
think he has, or we have. Hwe accomplish what we're trying to 5:02 to go on' a basket by Don free throws by Van Arsdale
accomplllll, ~mean wln the championship, then we'D be ln a good
position to trade."
When the Redakinl captured their first post-6eason game in 30
SON IS BORN
PARTY ON FRIDAY ·
years Sandly by polllblng olf the Green Bay Packers, 16-3, one of
SYRACUSE - Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Carl Roach entertained
the ha)lllielt persons among the recorl! Cl'()Wd of 53,140 at Robert
night with a party for
Franklin
Hendrix
are
an.
Friday
F. Kemedy Memorial Stadium here was Henry Kissinger,
President Ni.J:on's advisor, taking in the action from President' nouncing the birth of a six teachers of the Primary
pound two ounce son, Roher! Department of the Middleport
wnuama' private box.
~er applauded vigorously and was aU smiles as the Ray, born on Dec. 19 at the Church of Christ. Games were
IICOI'eboard clock ran out, He wasn't any happier though than Holzer Medical Center. played with prizes going to
Edward Bennett Williams, who could remember the kind of Grandparents a~e Mr. and Mrs. Don Erwin, Mrs. Denver
Mra. Wopdrow • Hendrix, Rice, Mrs. Lawrence ~wart ..•,
siMiu a year ago.
"
tile Redaldns go against the Dallas Cowboys next Sunday MilMukee, wq; and •Mrs. Ml[t.,KOtjerLOng won 11\e door '
•
IIIey get past them, they go to the Super Bowl, but a year Sadie Smith of Hartford, W. prize. Gifts were exchanged
ago th«e was only one place for the Redsklns to go and that was Va. Mrs. Lela Hendrix of - and a gift was presented to
home, Williams remembers the whole thing weD, and also Pomeroy is a great- Mrs. Roach from the other
grandmother. Mr. and Mrs. teachers. Mrs. Roach, assisted
remember!~ Allen's reaction.
Hendrix also have a daugh~r. by her daughter, Trudy, served·
"You know George," says the Red$kins' owner, "He's like a
Barbara and a son, Franklin, refreshments to those· named
German general. He thinks he's supposed to commlt suicide
Jr.
and Mrs. Norman Yeauger,
when he loaes.
Mrs. Earl McKinley, and Mrs.
"Anyway, we lost to San Francisco in the playoff game a year
Dale Hysell.
ago. You may remember it was a bad snap that did it. The ball
was poorly handled by our punter, an·d the Forty-Niners feU on it
in the end zone and got a touchdown.
PARTY GIVEN
Dr. and Mrs. Ray Pickens
"On the plane going back home, George was inconsolable.
You'd think II was the end of the world. I told him to forget it, go entertained at their new
home, get aome sleep, take a rest awhile and then start thinking
Lincoln Hill home recently
about nen year.
with a Chris'trnas party for
their. employes and husbands.
"But I couldn't get through to him at all. 'No, no, no,' he kept
saying. The following morning I was still in bed sleeping when 1 A buffet dinner was seved and
gota call. It was George. He said, 'Ed, you're right. I'm thinking guests exchanged gifts. At·
about next year. We're gonna add three minutes to our practice
tending were Mr. and Mrs.
sessions. Do you know what we're gonna practice In those three Gene Conde, Mr. and Mrs. Bert
minutesT'
·
Bodimer, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
"I say, no what?
Hubbard, Mrs.
Lucille
"'Bad snaps,' he says.
•
Harrison, and Mrs . Winona
"You know something? He had the team do It, too."
Hoffman.
'1:'.

. j

26,1972

vals witl begin action Wednes- starting Wednesday inclode · Other two-Qay affairs
day. l.eading the list is the AIJ: the Far West Classic at Par- starting ·Friday ·include the
College Tournament, being Uand, Ore., with fifth-ranked Charlotte Invitational at
.played at Oklahoma City, Okla. Minnesota, the Qu.aker City Charlotte, N.C., the Lobo In-

One of the top 10 teams is en- tournament at Philadelphia,
lered - sixth-ranked Long the Palmetto Invitaliooal at
Beach Slate. Other teams Charleston , S.C., and the
entered include Brigham Poinsetta Classic at GreenYoung,
Florida
State, ville, S.C.
MissiSsippi, . Penn Stale, St. . The week closes with seven ·
FrancisofPa., TexasA&amp;Mand two.&lt;tay tournaments starting
host Oklahoma City.
.on Friday, topped by the Sugar
The Big Eight tournament at
Kansas City features seventhranked Missouri, plus the other
six Big Eight schools.
The Rainbow Cllissic at
.Honolulu features North
Carolina, Washington, and
Louisville. Colorado Slate, ·
For'tlham, Utah and host
Hawaii have also tossed in
their hats.
Other major tournaments

Bowl Classic at New Orleans.
No. I UCLA goes for consecu- ·
live victory number 52 against
Drake Friday, with lllinois
meeting Temple in the other
contest.
Marquette ts tlost. Team
· Second-ranked Marquette
also is in action, as the host
teall\in the Milwaukee Classic.
Rice, Wisconsin and Yale
complete the field.

with 2:45 remaining and won
their fourth consecutive game.
BiD Bradley scored 29 points
and Dave DeBusschere and .
Walt Frazier added 44 more
between them to move New
York to within 1'h games of
idle Boston in the Atlantic
Division.
, ,With 6:44 to g0, the Pistons,
led by Dave Bing, who scored
35 points, went on a 21-4 tear to
close the gap, 107-!Ql, with 2:58
to play. Mter the Knlcks
pushed it to lll-101, the Pistons
went on another tear, 9-2, including six points by Bob
Lanier, who finished with 27.
' Wicks scored 23 of his points
in the first half when Portland
look a 57-M lead and sparked
the Trail Blazers to a 14-point

vitational at Albuquerque,
N.M., the Motor City tour·
nament at Detroit, tbe Oral
Roberts Classic at Tulsa ,
Okla., and the Queen City
Invitational at Buffalo, N.Y.
Fourth-rated Maryland will

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

M·ARK~T

• Open Daily 9 to 10 - Sun. 10 to 10

WeAccep~

PHONE: 992·3480

.,

fourth-quarter lead. It was cut
to one with five · seconds
remaining, but CharUe Davis
made two free throws to put the
game out of reach. Geoff
Petrie added 28 points for Portland while Spencer Haywood
led SeatUe with 35.

lb.
SUPERIORS
ASSORTED
dill and strap. $175.

PANTS

Goessler's

*10.00

JEWELRY
STORE

POMEROY, OHIO

•we will adjust to this

toleranc:~,

If necessary. GUarantee Is for one Ytlr'.

99~

. IIUFI

llols. .

1

I

!

1

,Beef Stew
Meat

COCA~OLA

;

lb. 89~

lb.

,

16 oz.
bots.

99

¢

.·

'

.
.
.
MILK ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5
·4
CRACKERS••••••••••••••••••••••••••

·moUBLE·FREii
DRMNG
•••
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,.,.~~-..
'

Moqre's Service Center . .• · :1. ,"

$17 95
•

CYLINDER
Includes Parts
· and Labor

BRA~ES

MUFFLERS
TAIL PIPES

cans

l·lb.
bxs.
rolls
for ·

Is your car acting up? Has the
winter been hard on your auto?
Nowrs tht! time to have a tune-up. We
•; ,.n, H~ve,~ou . ~ar rul\nl!'g.iOili!'lhly. ~

MOORE'S
Service Center ·
124 W. Main

Pomeroy
PH. 992-2848

~

~

.

·8

INSTANTCREAMER

.

~~

SCOT PRIDE

ICE CREAM

.,,

ORE-IDA

HARRIS LARGE

FRENCH
FRIES

PIES

41-lb.• ,

PUMPKIN
MINCE
CHERRY

~oxes

(

16 'oz.
bots.

DAD'S ROOT BEER

~

pak

49~

16 oz.

bottles

For Holiday Parties

GALLON

BISCUITS

ONLY

SCOT LAD

-

COKE

ICE MILK

SCOT LAD

ICE MILK

lh gal.
carton

STARTS WEDNESDAY, ,DEC. 27

Save as much as $15000
On Zenith COlor JV
s100 Off on most
Living Room Suites

QUART

FAIRMONT

COTTAGE CHEESE

FAIRMONT HOLIDAY VALUES

LAMPS

FAIRMONT

FAIRMONT

DIP 'N CHIP
aoz. $}00
PKGS.

EGGNOG

.3

BOTTLES

.

.

3

ll.ljJIIl! lljfi ,,,~,,,,1

00

160Z. . ,
PKGS.

'lRh11: !I.,! !Ill'!11;

' m··jftl

FAIRMONT

QU~T 49~

m~ru
1m=~
tltl!
1111"''
· Ill!

HA.LF &amp;HALF

Portable Stereos Reduced

3

PTS.
FOR

$}00

POTATOES

FAIRMONT

the

IND• ..del only ebout hall tblt

YELLow·
ONIONS

II

Aliitri.t!u lape e~

I'll think about pll)'lna
lie aid 01111 (the AmlriCID
...... p!l'b) If they Wlnt to
ptJ ~· the difference-tO
!niDkln."

PAK

Diet Rite Cola

'

FROZEN and DAIR.Y VALUES

TUPP!i:RS PLAINS Charles Swogger, principal,
has announced the Eastern
High School honor roD for the
second six weeks grading
period.
Named to the A and B rolls

and

16 oz. bois.

1!4QfF. EE-MA., .E
. ...........................16. oz.79~

SCOT FARM

at Chicago Ia the Idea of inter·
lea1111e play, but San Diego
Pa!lres' official E. J. "Buzzle"
llavasi Ia Ulatly to kill the Idea.
"No clllllct," Baypl aald
llonday. "It IUee only Qlll
to ltGp 11 •di'Ye aot 111e
We paitl tlO miWon fer

On Sale All Week Long!

in no time. save money at Moore's.

EHS honor students announced
Bowen , Deanna Hensl ey, Grossnickle, Lu cy Holter ,
Marsha Kimes, Marylu Mills, Robin Humphrey . Debbie
Karen Reed. Becky Root ; Jeffers, Jane Ann Karr,
Sophomore (B) - Debbie Glenda Lawsoo, Rita MarBoatright, Reg ina Kimes, Jane cinko, Bryon McCoy, Debbie
Bahr, Anita Bu ck ley, Liz Mllthone, Phyllis Newlun ,
Edwards, Vickie Gaul, Lou Beverly Rillle, Nancy Sexon,
Ann Newell , Mandie Rose, Vicki Spencer, Dick Steffler,
Pam Sams.
Barbara Well, Silndy WoodJ
Jun iors (A) - Bernice Senior (B) - Pam Balser,
were:
Freshman (AI _ Sonya Boggs , Virg inia Cline, Jo Steve Boston, Ronald Dillon,
Adams. Cheryl Benedum, Enevoldsen, Crystal Erwin, Alan Duvall, Bob Edwards,
·
Steve Follrod, Steve Goebel, Cindy Farrar, Greg Hackney,
Edna Boggs, Pam Clouch, p tt G
1 kl
L
Denise Dean, Jeff Holter, a Y rossn c e, awrence Vincent LaComb, Donna
Harper, Paula Hauber. Bill Lantz, David Matheny, Elaine
Diana Morris, George Pickens, Hayes, Chryll Kimes, Nancy Mllhone,
Osborne, Cathy
Diana Pullins, Diana Root, Miller, Ir is Pigott, Shelia Pickens, Bill
Rosemary
Debbie Saflders, Julia Schultz, Sa mpson ; Junior (Bi - Bill Debbie Richardson, Reed,
Crissy Morlan.
Amberger, Steve Anderson, Satterfield, Jill Swain, Mark
Ejette
Freshman (B) ~ Betsy Ams· Larry Atherton, Tim . Baum, Upton, S•ndra Van Meter,
bary, Barbara Andrews, Dia'na Sue Burke, Debbie Burns,
Atherton, Thomas Avis, Sheri Marty CaldwelL Dan Chaffee, Debbie Watson, Randy Wolf.
Barringer, Katrina Batey, Teresa Chichester, Melissa
Dale Dillon, Nlesel Duvall, Coleman , Cindy Domlqan ,
Harold !Eagle, Sherry Epple, Jeffrey Gilland, Joy Grober,
Melinda Evans, JoAnne Fick, T
K b
h
Ch 1
Beth Hewlff, Tim Kyhn, Cathy onya
ee aug' •
ery
Kuhn, Pa:n Lanham, Diana
Maxey, Pam Hlllhone, Kathy Larkins, Martha Myers , Gale
Newell , Nancy Ridenour, Osborne, Ann~ Shatter,
James Rucker. Debbie Sams, L 11 s
caro 1 Tay 1or , TOP. IC MAY BE KILLED
Carol
Spurlock, Peo"Y
ore
a
pencer,
•
David Weber, Jarie Whitehead .
Trussell, Jan Wilson, Debbie
Seniors (A) - Melinda Ams.
SAN DIEGO (UPI)-One of
Windon, Patricia Windon.
b
B
arry, , Lana
enedum , the three topics on the agenda
Sophomore IAI - Ph 'll Richard
Cross.
· Bob
I • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • - at the Jan. II meetlng of the
major lea1111e baseball owners

1.00
1.00
1.00
'

•

Install:

. SHOCKS

large

SCdTLADSALTINE

8

With $3.00 Purchas•.
No Limit on Quantity.

16.. oz..

WILSON &amp; CARNATION

· PROFESSIONAL TUNE-UP .

can

Pork Roast

INGELS' YEAR-END

lranclllle

lb.

FRESH CUBED

LUNCH
MEATS

I,

COURT ST., POMEROY

lOLA'S

3-lb.

Tender, Lean Meaty
BONELESS

'

New Shipment

PALAZZO

YOUNG AND
TENDER

Rc COLA

GROUND
CHUCK

So exact is the Accutron
. tuning 'fork movement,
that accuracy is guaranteed to
within a minute a month. •

OJTE AND DAY " U"
Stalnl!!n steel. Sil~er
dial .
$175.

Canned Picnics

•

WE FEATURE

Bulova

DIU aND DAf "Q"
Stainless steel. Blue

MIDPLEPQRT, 0.

ARMOUR USDA CHOICE

•

AU. DAY
.MON.,
JAN. 1

Fe(leral Food Stamps

. ·we ReserVe The Right To Umit Quantities"

Give him everything ...
the time, the day, the date
~~ by

Tune Into A TUNE-UP Here, Soon

Expert~

SUPER

Pack

PORK CHOPS

OPEN .

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Accutron

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the most accurate watch in the world .

Milwaukee ups lead

E

see action in the Maryland
Invitational at College Park,
Md., on Friday and Saturday,
and Indiana plays In the Sun
Carnival Thursday and Friday.
Eighth-ranked l:'lmnlylvanla
visits Cincinnati . wemescs.y
and San Francisco Friday,
· while 10th-rated Vanderbilt has ·
a single game, at home against
· Memphis St. Saturday.
Third-ranked North Carolina
State and ninth-rated Southwestern Louisiana take the
week off.

•

99~

lb.

ba&amp;

1111

II
L,

20 LB. BAG

·- .._ __________ _

~Pir~·
~ I~~~~
I s:i;~
. lUll
~ :
I

I

••

�r
'1.

••
•~

l

l'

'I

BARNEY

. BARNEY

1

:t

1\LWA'IS

WONDERED HOW
OOME 'IOU NEVER
HAD A 006, MISTER

.

LEOS~ER

IT
THAT!GOT

~---.--

BALL&lt;;

WE JEST DON'T NEV ER
HAVE NO SCRAPS

ENN'ITHIN6
AG'INST
DOGS,
5NUFFY-·

---r--:---;--------;

REALLY!

I(JlAl I.U\S IT

T t tEAIJIT AI.'.OVT

FIRE!!'

I WISH FER ONCE
COUlD GOON
A DADBURN
MUl"'&gt;t. CAll--

- -..,-'----:;;-- - - - . : - --

\OJ l A.' " !JI&lt;il1T, !*.FROID'

ABOJr1

WI I HOUI
HAV IN ' A

OAOBURN
BLOWOUT

I

•

·: I

l

t ··~

I 5/W'/ YOU Dlli!ECTI NG
Tli!AFFIC AND ! HEARD
YOUR WHIGTLE 10

STOP!

MAYEIE POLICEPE~ON
lRAGK IS FOR WOMEN'S
LIB , BUT

WITH YOU I&gt;PRAWLED

... ON ~E HOOD OF MY CAR,

EIUT fOW COULD

'IOU1RE ON I.Y
A t:IX&gt; 61..lT

YOU CER'T'AINLY
KNOW Yt.Jl.ll&lt;:

NOf,
ARE 'IOU,
LAr7Y '?

)'t)U 'I&lt;'E

I PUlL OVER
5AFELY WHEN

I HAD ll&lt;OUBLE
SEEING ...

AN

AN NIV5RSARY ~

YOUR
SIRT~DAY

I'M 1HE

3

MASTER AND
'o01-4 1RE ALWA%

-z.. ; • .

AT MY CALL . .

0

~lR~ts~~~~~~~!la

ISCROIJ:&gt;eo,~~q·
IT 1'-UNA'('S,

U'L ABNER
How'd yo · l i Ke

some

0

mile - hi~h

0

0

0

0

0

0

0
0

0

0

monster eat in'
YOre home"' --

My dear. I've ai!Llays
·t au9ht you that worms
whci~row

in nice

neighborhOods are
nice worms -

That:s why,when
you were an infant,
we ·moved from
'J\bie'5 Irish P-ose"
to 'Little Women'

You've never
Elat.en a r~,Jth in~
but "Little women·:
absorbil1!2 t.he

Don't ~row yourself

away on a worm from
''Crime in America"lt's t.he worst
neighborhood in
the library!!
,------c
,

finest trapitions!!

I/

-~

J,) =

C &lt;&gt;f' l'-

.

'

WINNIE WINKLE
® 1H05E ORDER!&gt;
WILL AlMOST PAY
FOR

HEV, Guz .

•

GRAB HOlD,

YOU TWO,

AND I'LL

PULL 'W:)IJ ,UP I

lilts IS
I'U.. 'TELL 'iOV
W&gt;N lT'&lt;;
Rfa.l ~IIJ/o ot-l
t:.HRISTM/&gt;.S

~'S

1).)/o.~ OF TJ:;t.L-1~

~tJTY-1

C:::!.AJJ$

III;'S 015./&gt;,PRJ\~D
lllHIMFOR~

SRI~ItJio
IIJH~T I

DA'i "'

Me
riO! 'ltltl'l!f II:!IH&lt;i 6TUPIIll'f!
fii11oll HER. INTO litE 'D()()8lf X's"t
SHE COULD Be A 14&lt;\U!III!I.E ~SSET .

~Re:D!

10 ~ I'CNfMEHT!

6Lw."~
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

1, Side dish
8. Venerate
11. Come
about
ll.Noton
your life!
IS. Team
·regular
(by ph.
wd.)

HELP US NOT TO
OVERESTIMATE OUR
IMPORTANCE

i5.-

Wallach
II. King
(Fr.)

11. Phlllppine

tree

11. Bearnalae
ZO. Swedish
ftlm alar,

' lnllrldIS. Glrl'a
· name
n. Clllrvoy
ance
(2wdl.)
It, S111re
It~ Stram!
(2 wds;)
11. Reserve
IS. Earth

MJ:/1A5K 6EI6AI. M·,~•RP
~TIT I~

OF TIIJG5

11115 TIMI'r TMT fli!R

Yealerday't ernto.110te: A CHRISTMAS GAMBOL orr
·COULD CHEER THE POOR MAN'S HEART THROUGH
. HALF THE YEAR.-SlR WALTER SCOTl'
(C 1812 Klnr Footurn S7ndleate, lne,)

3. Italian
river
4. Dolt
5. Leave
a
sleeper
6. caper
?, The

.

Heaven"

ACROSS

I. Solicited
8. CaJrs cry
11. Roofing
material

.

lvl&lt;lr•&gt;"•'"'\llll'

·-I ll

l!."Bridal"

IIIII

UI1ICI'IIIlblolhue tour Jumbles,
one letter 1o each oqll&amp;l't, 1o
form four ordlnar1 word1.

path
13. Do well
(colloq.)
(4wds.)
15. "Canal"
builder
18. "-Clear

DICK TRACY

EXCHANGE
IN PROGRESS

AND GPIXNY NON ON
ANOTHER
TWO 81.00&lt;5

D1y"

(Zwds.)
11. Plethora
Zl. Frolic·
some
femmes
(II.)
(2 wda.)
U. Native of
Odense
IS, Mlaa
Sldnner's
middle
name
16. Cheap
(3 wds.)
at. Three, in
Rome
IL-esprit
U. Tapers
H. Keyboard
number
40: Comic
strip
tyke

A.T 8TH ANO NAOOER!'

again"
(2 wdl.)
U.Old
Chlneae
kingdom
28. Lawyer
(abbr.)
Z8. Snake
U.Hot'ilrinK
33. Mulllgan

(J

WHAT

FEEL LIKE QOING
AFTER 1'/NNE~. '

II

_..

LtSAL, 1!Rir( OL'

JI."Ailey

RfqilmroR

1'1. Sort

H. Denoting
a severe
bum
(2 wds.)
U. Called
It quits
«.Nota soul
(2wds.)
U. Folk
singer
Guthrie
t8. Of aound's
quality
DOWN
1. Trustworthy
z. Seed
coating

s........,..•

·

.

l

~

ne••

{AM .......

nRENCE lEE

lo....,aLOUA CNAI TYPNUI MOIIAII

-....,

.,.,

~

we

Yeoterday'l Cryptoquole: I ALWAYS LIKE THE Gin'S 1
GET, BUT HOW 1 LOVE THE GIFTS I GIVE'-CAROLYN
WELLS
·
.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

·c1J1JJJJOOIDRJ]; IJ.J =!!:! .-1 c:

(Ger.)

8. Roman
poet
9, Rocldlah
10. Therefore
14. Mate
sense, as
an idea
(2 wda.)
18. Overftows,
ua
liquid
19. Choice
ZO. Attentiongetting
sound
21. "Leave
-to

~HoW

SNAPP!!~

COM ti.tJ'I1

p!Ko of CAoplao ,....,.,,

.a .,._.,.,_,CHOI"'

6. Oscar
Winner,
Martln 1.Lively
tune
8, Written
Jetter
9.-Baba
10, Cowpoke's
name
U.Japanese
aborigine
11. French
port
18. The
Emerald
Isle
U, Fool
ZO. "Age of
Aquarius"
musical
Zl. "The
drlnksare

_..

(2 wds.)

CC 1972 KinK Feature• Syndicate. lne.l

3WJMID~;-"-':•n" '-'c
Unatnmblelhele four Jumblet.
letter 1o ueh oquut, lo
form four ordlnarr word1.

OM

I
Yeaterday'l Alllwer
22. Fairway
3%. Cbew the
gadget
tal
33, A
33. Icelandic
Dlckena
meuure
pen
3f, Elbe
name
tributary
35. Discard
U, Pesticide
(abbr.)
38, Attention
21, Moder·
31. Daughter
ated
ol Cadmus
21. Gainsay
38. African
Zl, Leut
antelope
original
39, Attempt

I'EXI..E

·~7~t:J-

I I

I

) II

I
t~IIS1'EY ~

I ()

I
KJ I I I

!1'ASTLE

1Jlrillillt

=-·

~-

.

TH! RUNNER
SAii6FIEP HIS
'l'HI~T AFT!R '11-116.

1A r r In I I I J

u.~lf

U. Circular
43. Not on
time

PI \ ' l 1-..

DOWN

1. Rowan
z. Lost
footing

_..

3. ''Kiss Me

4. English
school
s. Texas city

DAWY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here'~ how to work It:

A :1 Y D L B A A X a
Ia LONGFILLOW
One letter simply alanda for 111other. In thla aniple A 11
used for the three L'1, X lor the two O'a, etc. Sinele !etten
apootrophea, the lencth and formation of the worda are ari
blntl. Eleh day the code letten are different..

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

A"\' D L BAA X It

l1 L 0 N G F I! L L 0 W
One ' letter slmpl7 stonds lor onother. In this sample A is
used for t~e thr&lt;e L's, X for the two O's, etc. Sin!rle letters,
apostrophes, thr length and !ormation or the words are all
hmls. Each day the code letters are dltrerent.
CRYPTOQUOTES
C BCW DLI'KVRD DWPS EPJ ALV
'
DCBV JVCDPW LV MRTBFD C

*

CllYPTOQIJOTES
N DSMD .F I SNXK GJK BNCGI N BKG,
~&lt;•
lltN•ill - ~
0 E .G J H M N S H Q K G J K 8 N C G I N Will"
.:l
•·::i.!i:
•-::::=::.•
: __ _ _..,~

B P N WAC T W- F

WCALCW WTVROVW

Bf'l(lki·-VDZilSFA MKSSI

.l\
'

VM C N D V

}

'·

T A' U A! , V J V.-

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

I DID NOT GIVE I{OU

A ST!1:1NG OF PEARLS
FOR

CH~I5TMA5..

I'LL. SAU,T

'r'OU Dl DN'T!

�r
'1.

••
•~

l

l'

'I

BARNEY

. BARNEY

1

:t

1\LWA'IS

WONDERED HOW
OOME 'IOU NEVER
HAD A 006, MISTER

.

LEOS~ER

IT
THAT!GOT

~---.--

BALL&lt;;

WE JEST DON'T NEV ER
HAVE NO SCRAPS

ENN'ITHIN6
AG'INST
DOGS,
5NUFFY-·

---r--:---;--------;

REALLY!

I(JlAl I.U\S IT

T t tEAIJIT AI.'.OVT

FIRE!!'

I WISH FER ONCE
COUlD GOON
A DADBURN
MUl"'&gt;t. CAll--

- -..,-'----:;;-- - - - . : - --

\OJ l A.' " !JI&lt;il1T, !*.FROID'

ABOJr1

WI I HOUI
HAV IN ' A

OAOBURN
BLOWOUT

I

•

·: I

l

t ··~

I 5/W'/ YOU Dlli!ECTI NG
Tli!AFFIC AND ! HEARD
YOUR WHIGTLE 10

STOP!

MAYEIE POLICEPE~ON
lRAGK IS FOR WOMEN'S
LIB , BUT

WITH YOU I&gt;PRAWLED

... ON ~E HOOD OF MY CAR,

EIUT fOW COULD

'IOU1RE ON I.Y
A t:IX&gt; 61..lT

YOU CER'T'AINLY
KNOW Yt.Jl.ll&lt;:

NOf,
ARE 'IOU,
LAr7Y '?

)'t)U 'I&lt;'E

I PUlL OVER
5AFELY WHEN

I HAD ll&lt;OUBLE
SEEING ...

AN

AN NIV5RSARY ~

YOUR
SIRT~DAY

I'M 1HE

3

MASTER AND
'o01-4 1RE ALWA%

-z.. ; • .

AT MY CALL . .

0

~lR~ts~~~~~~~!la

ISCROIJ:&gt;eo,~~q·
IT 1'-UNA'('S,

U'L ABNER
How'd yo · l i Ke

some

0

mile - hi~h

0

0

0

0

0

0

0
0

0

0

monster eat in'
YOre home"' --

My dear. I've ai!Llays
·t au9ht you that worms
whci~row

in nice

neighborhOods are
nice worms -

That:s why,when
you were an infant,
we ·moved from
'J\bie'5 Irish P-ose"
to 'Little Women'

You've never
Elat.en a r~,Jth in~
but "Little women·:
absorbil1!2 t.he

Don't ~row yourself

away on a worm from
''Crime in America"lt's t.he worst
neighborhood in
the library!!
,------c
,

finest trapitions!!

I/

-~

J,) =

C &lt;&gt;f' l'-

.

'

WINNIE WINKLE
® 1H05E ORDER!&gt;
WILL AlMOST PAY
FOR

HEV, Guz .

•

GRAB HOlD,

YOU TWO,

AND I'LL

PULL 'W:)IJ ,UP I

lilts IS
I'U.. 'TELL 'iOV
W&gt;N lT'&lt;;
Rfa.l ~IIJ/o ot-l
t:.HRISTM/&gt;.S

~'S

1).)/o.~ OF TJ:;t.L-1~

~tJTY-1

C:::!.AJJ$

III;'S 015./&gt;,PRJ\~D
lllHIMFOR~

SRI~ItJio
IIJH~T I

DA'i "'

Me
riO! 'ltltl'l!f II:!IH&lt;i 6TUPIIll'f!
fii11oll HER. INTO litE 'D()()8lf X's"t
SHE COULD Be A 14&lt;\U!III!I.E ~SSET .

~Re:D!

10 ~ I'CNfMEHT!

6Lw."~
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

1, Side dish
8. Venerate
11. Come
about
ll.Noton
your life!
IS. Team
·regular
(by ph.
wd.)

HELP US NOT TO
OVERESTIMATE OUR
IMPORTANCE

i5.-

Wallach
II. King
(Fr.)

11. Phlllppine

tree

11. Bearnalae
ZO. Swedish
ftlm alar,

' lnllrldIS. Glrl'a
· name
n. Clllrvoy
ance
(2wdl.)
It, S111re
It~ Stram!
(2 wds;)
11. Reserve
IS. Earth

MJ:/1A5K 6EI6AI. M·,~•RP
~TIT I~

OF TIIJG5

11115 TIMI'r TMT fli!R

Yealerday't ernto.110te: A CHRISTMAS GAMBOL orr
·COULD CHEER THE POOR MAN'S HEART THROUGH
. HALF THE YEAR.-SlR WALTER SCOTl'
(C 1812 Klnr Footurn S7ndleate, lne,)

3. Italian
river
4. Dolt
5. Leave
a
sleeper
6. caper
?, The

.

Heaven"

ACROSS

I. Solicited
8. CaJrs cry
11. Roofing
material

.

lvl&lt;lr•&gt;"•'"'\llll'

·-I ll

l!."Bridal"

IIIII

UI1ICI'IIIlblolhue tour Jumbles,
one letter 1o each oqll&amp;l't, 1o
form four ordlnar1 word1.

path
13. Do well
(colloq.)
(4wds.)
15. "Canal"
builder
18. "-Clear

DICK TRACY

EXCHANGE
IN PROGRESS

AND GPIXNY NON ON
ANOTHER
TWO 81.00&lt;5

D1y"

(Zwds.)
11. Plethora
Zl. Frolic·
some
femmes
(II.)
(2 wda.)
U. Native of
Odense
IS, Mlaa
Sldnner's
middle
name
16. Cheap
(3 wds.)
at. Three, in
Rome
IL-esprit
U. Tapers
H. Keyboard
number
40: Comic
strip
tyke

A.T 8TH ANO NAOOER!'

again"
(2 wdl.)
U.Old
Chlneae
kingdom
28. Lawyer
(abbr.)
Z8. Snake
U.Hot'ilrinK
33. Mulllgan

(J

WHAT

FEEL LIKE QOING
AFTER 1'/NNE~. '

II

_..

LtSAL, 1!Rir( OL'

JI."Ailey

RfqilmroR

1'1. Sort

H. Denoting
a severe
bum
(2 wds.)
U. Called
It quits
«.Nota soul
(2wds.)
U. Folk
singer
Guthrie
t8. Of aound's
quality
DOWN
1. Trustworthy
z. Seed
coating

s........,..•

·

.

l

~

ne••

{AM .......

nRENCE lEE

lo....,aLOUA CNAI TYPNUI MOIIAII

-....,

.,.,

~

we

Yeoterday'l Cryptoquole: I ALWAYS LIKE THE Gin'S 1
GET, BUT HOW 1 LOVE THE GIFTS I GIVE'-CAROLYN
WELLS
·
.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

·c1J1JJJJOOIDRJ]; IJ.J =!!:! .-1 c:

(Ger.)

8. Roman
poet
9, Rocldlah
10. Therefore
14. Mate
sense, as
an idea
(2 wda.)
18. Overftows,
ua
liquid
19. Choice
ZO. Attentiongetting
sound
21. "Leave
-to

~HoW

SNAPP!!~

COM ti.tJ'I1

p!Ko of CAoplao ,....,.,,

.a .,._.,.,_,CHOI"'

6. Oscar
Winner,
Martln 1.Lively
tune
8, Written
Jetter
9.-Baba
10, Cowpoke's
name
U.Japanese
aborigine
11. French
port
18. The
Emerald
Isle
U, Fool
ZO. "Age of
Aquarius"
musical
Zl. "The
drlnksare

_..

(2 wds.)

CC 1972 KinK Feature• Syndicate. lne.l

3WJMID~;-"-':•n" '-'c
Unatnmblelhele four Jumblet.
letter 1o ueh oquut, lo
form four ordlnarr word1.

OM

I
Yeaterday'l Alllwer
22. Fairway
3%. Cbew the
gadget
tal
33, A
33. Icelandic
Dlckena
meuure
pen
3f, Elbe
name
tributary
35. Discard
U, Pesticide
(abbr.)
38, Attention
21, Moder·
31. Daughter
ated
ol Cadmus
21. Gainsay
38. African
Zl, Leut
antelope
original
39, Attempt

I'EXI..E

·~7~t:J-

I I

I

) II

I
t~IIS1'EY ~

I ()

I
KJ I I I

!1'ASTLE

1Jlrillillt

=-·

~-

.

TH! RUNNER
SAii6FIEP HIS
'l'HI~T AFT!R '11-116.

1A r r In I I I J

u.~lf

U. Circular
43. Not on
time

PI \ ' l 1-..

DOWN

1. Rowan
z. Lost
footing

_..

3. ''Kiss Me

4. English
school
s. Texas city

DAWY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here'~ how to work It:

A :1 Y D L B A A X a
Ia LONGFILLOW
One letter simply alanda for 111other. In thla aniple A 11
used for the three L'1, X lor the two O'a, etc. Sinele !etten
apootrophea, the lencth and formation of the worda are ari
blntl. Eleh day the code letten are different..

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

A"\' D L BAA X It

l1 L 0 N G F I! L L 0 W
One ' letter slmpl7 stonds lor onother. In this sample A is
used for t~e thr&lt;e L's, X for the two O's, etc. Sin!rle letters,
apostrophes, thr length and !ormation or the words are all
hmls. Each day the code letters are dltrerent.
CRYPTOQUOTES
C BCW DLI'KVRD DWPS EPJ ALV
'
DCBV JVCDPW LV MRTBFD C

*

CllYPTOQIJOTES
N DSMD .F I SNXK GJK BNCGI N BKG,
~&lt;•
lltN•ill - ~
0 E .G J H M N S H Q K G J K 8 N C G I N Will"
.:l
•·::i.!i:
•-::::=::.•
: __ _ _..,~

B P N WAC T W- F

WCALCW WTVROVW

Bf'l(lki·-VDZilSFA MKSSI

.l\
'

VM C N D V

}

'·

T A' U A! , V J V.-

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

I DID NOT GIVE I{OU

A ST!1:1NG OF PEARLS
FOR

CH~I5TMA5..

I'LL. SAU,T

'r'OU Dl DN'T!

�.

'

11 - The Dally S\!ntlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. 26, 1972

' 26,1972
10- ne Daily S\!n\inei,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec.

,

2 Gifts
approved

Sentinel Classifieds Gel Action! Senti~el Classifieds Get Results!
WANT AD.S
INFORM,lTUiN
,PEADLINES

Notice

.s P .M . Day Befor~ Publication.
MQ"da.v Deadline 9 e.m ,

Cancellation - corrections·

WIU be accepted until9 a.m . tor,
Day of Public;ation

INTERNATIONAL Songwriters
Club; recording. publishlng.free memb~:nship ; write
I.S.C., Rt. 1, Box 210, Mid·
dleport. Ohio 45760.

Po•eroy
•tor Ct.··

12·12-~tc

REGULATIONS

The Publisher reserves the

·rtoht to edrt or reject anv ads I WILL NOT be 'responsible lor
deemed
oblee-tlonal.
The
PUbl isher' will not be responsible.

for more than one incorrect
insertion .

RATES

For Want Ad Se.rv lee
5 cents per Word one Insertion
Minimum Char.ge 75c
11 cent'f' per word three .
con!;eculive Insertions.

1970 CHEVROLET IMPALA
$219$
Sport Cpe., lSO engine. Turbo hydramafic trans., power
steering &amp; brakes. blk. fihish, red vinyl interior/ w-w tires.
a 1 owner trade-In &amp; it's nice ..

any debls contracted by

anyone other than myself.

Signed : Basil L. Haynes. Rt.
I, Middleport, Ohio.
12-22-3tp

1970 CAMARO'

11999

SPEND TIME
SAVE $'s

PWMBING
HEAnNG

Pomeroy Motor Co.

OFFICE

"HElL"

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
o.

Peggy If.ubbard

is December bride

Officers named
by adult class

r.

'

-:-:-====----

Program given
during party

.

..l'"-MitUI

EXPERT
'Wheel Alignment

KUHL'S

BARGAIN CENTER

*5.55

Rt. 7 "at caution light~'
TUPPERS PLAINS
l)sed furniture, appl iances.
. Clean &amp; guaranteed.
NEW FURNITURE
Sofa Beds &amp; Recliners .
Discount priced .

On Mosl American C.rs
-GUARANTEED-Phone 992-2094

Pomerot Home &amp; Auto
.

open 8TI15
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pl!meroy, 0 .

LAYAWAY FOR XMAS
Open to 7;' closed Mondays

EARTH MOVING
. '

·Dozer

&amp; End !oader work,
ponds. basement, land·.,
scaplng. We have· ' 2 size
dorers, 2 she loaders. Work. ·.
done b~. hour or contract. · ·
·Free estimates. We also ·
haul fifl dirt, top soil. Dump
trucks at•l"low·boy for hire.
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Po.meroy . l!hone 192.3525
after 7 p.m. or phone 992·
5232. .

From the !argest T ...::.
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Small'l't Heater Core .
Nathan Biggs ·
· .Radia!Dr Specla!ist

FURNITURE

HEATING &amp;
. COOLING

Presbyterian ladies dine

.SMITH NELSON
MOTOR~ INC.
992·2174
Pomeroy

· - - - - - - - - - - ' - .DOZER and back hoe work,
ponds and septic tanks, dlt·
READY.MIX
CONCRET
service; top soli, fill
chlng
delivered right to your
dirt, limestone; B&amp;K Exproject. Fast and easy. Free
esti mates , Phone 992·3284. cavating. Phone 992·5367,
Dick .Karr, Jr.
Goeglein Ready-Mix Co.,
9·1-tfc
Middleport, Ohio.
6·30.tfc -S-E-PT_I_C_T_A_N..,..
K-S - A-RO
.,-BIC
-~---........-'
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEANSEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
ED, REPAIRED. MILLER
REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446·
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell, SANITATION, STEWART,
OHIO. PHONE 662-3035.
Owner &amp; Operator.
10·4-tfc
5· nile
~-------

~-----

c.

BRADFORD, Auctioneer PAPER Hanging and painting ;
Arthur Musser, phone 742·
Complete Service
5223.
Phone 949·3821
12·12-JOtp
Racine, Ohio
Crill Bradford
5·1 ·ttc SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 992·2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
CAR PENTRY, repair, work
Authorized Singer Sales and
additions, kitchen cabinets
Service. We Sharpen Scissors,
and paneling ; ca ll Guy
Nelgler. Racine, Ohio.
3-29·tfC
12·22·3tc,
SEE US FOR : Awnings. storm
doors and windows, carports~
Real Estate For Sale
marquees, aluminum siding
and
railing. A. Jacob, sales
HOUSE In Long Bottom, phone
representative . For tree
985·3529.
estimates, phone Charles
6·11 -tfc
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
3·2·tfC
-:::B-AC-:-K-H_O_E_A_N-.D-DO_Z_E_R_w-ork.
Septic tanks Installed. George
(Bill} Pullins. Phone 992·2478.
4·25·tfC

- - -- - -

~irgil B.

Teaford, Sr.
Broker

E LNA and White Sewing
Machines ... service on all
makes . Reasonable rates.
The Sewing Cenfer, Mid ·

110 Mechanic Street

Pomerpy;IQhlo45.76f .t,\tf. W'~'dl~ltl.tl.JJJo
• 1 ··~- .~~ t ,·li· ,1,, 1 / 1g ·~iJ+ 1 u 1 w(

OVER RIVER LAND
3.33 ACRES - Brand new
1972 Fleetwood 3 bedroom
. b
' S
I'Y'O .lie home .,
creened
~tlo, drilled 'flell. All level
w1th road to river. A wondertul place tor only
$21 ,500.00.
liS ACRES
HUNTING LAND - With
gas well, 6 room house, barn,
and several other buildings
in need of repair. We are
asking $20,000.00.
BUNGALOW
. 2 BEDROOMS - Nice bath,
large living and kitchen.
Next door to store on level
lot. Only $4,500.00.
98 ACRES.nd
MOBILE HOME LOT Wit~ well and electric. The
rest Is wild land, Ideal for
setting of pines. A producing
gas well and minerals. Only
$16,500.00,
ONE ACRE
T. P.
water,
electric
available. Some trees. Only
$2500.00.,'
SYRACUSE
5 ROOMS - Bath, nice
kitchen. front and back
porches. Full basement and
large extra lot. Only
$10,600.00.
2YEARS OLD
NEAR RACINE - 2niceslze
bedrooms with closets.
Utilit y room and large
modern kitchen. Carport and
'h acre. Asking $14,000.00.
NEW LISTING
NEASE SETILEMENT - J
bedrooms, nice closets In
each, large modern kitchen
with bar. Utility room with
washer and dryer hookups.
Stove. and refrigerator in·
eluded In sale. Now the price
Is just $12.500.00.
HAVING SOLD A NUMBER
OF HOMES. WITH A VERY
SUCCESSFUL YEAR, WE
NOW NEED SEVERAL
GOOD
PROPERTIES.
PRICED RIGHT, FOR THE
NEW YEAR . WE WANT TO
THANK ALL 6F YOU FOR
MAKING .IT POSSIBLE .
HELEN L."TE~FORD,
ASSOCIATE
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS
9t2-332S

;£~~'

t.'"'".,uJ

11 -16·,1fc

G &amp; ~ APPLIANCE Repair ;
repaor of all laundry equipment, refrigeration equop·
ment and hOuse wiring ; call
614-992·6050.
·
11·24-30tp
AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
you r
operator's license? Call 992·
2966.
6· 15·tfc

·--1 YEAR-END
I SPECI~

.

I · ALL OVER

II OUR
STORE
,
I CHECK US
BEFORE
YOU BUY

FURNITURE
APPLIANCES
ACCESSOR I

A weekly feature of Meigs
CoWlty Garden Club members.

Christmas a time for

SYRACUSE - The Ponderosa Restaurant In Parkersburg was the setting for the
annual Chrisbnas dinner of the
Third
Wednesday
Homemakers• Club Christmas
dinner Wednesday, Dec. 20.
The afternoon was spent
shopping. In the evening they
gathered at the meeting house
. at Municipal Park here for
their program and exchange of
gifl.&lt;l.
The room was beautifully
decorated with a Christmas

.

2-HOUR
--- '
CLEANING
(Upon Request)

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

cover on the table which was
centered with an arrangement
of fruit and flowers, and red
candles in .silver holders. The
mantle above the unique ·
flr:eplace was also decorated
and gifts were placed under a
decorated tree.
The program under the
direction of Janice Lawson,
Elva Dailey, and Mildred
Pierce opened with prayer by
Edith Hood with Jean Hall
giving the Christmas message.
How various traditions ·
started, gift giving, Santa
Claus, tree, carol singing, and
cards were given by Mabel
Pickens, Jean Hall, Agnes
Wlilte , Eleanor Bohram,
Eileen Clark, and Janice
Lawson ; "My Whole Being"
from Devotional booklet given
by Emogene Holstein; "Room
For Love" by Linda FerreU;
VIrginia Salser, read "The
Wonder Of Christmas" ; God's
Gift of Love, by Margaret
Eichinger ; Bedtime on Christmas Eve by Margaret Cettrlll:

"IT'S TRUE!"· · ·

CHAIRS

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

'

&lt;"'-,

....

FUIMmlll
.
,... ,

m4lft

~.

M,w, V..

"···-... u ........ 1112

All
Kroger
Regular
Houn •:~=~~
S•
New Year's Eve
All Kroter Stores Open
New Year's Day

12 Noon to 9 P.M.
24·Htir Stem WUI R-ln
Open 24-llt•r New Year's

En 1ml Ntw '••r'•
Poochkt All MHt

Wieners

'

Potluck dinner
enjoyed Dec.
19 by Star Chss

SYRACUSE - A .potluck
dinner was held at noon
Tuesday, Dec. 19, in llle First
United Presbyterian Church
annex by the Star Class of the
Sunday School. Following
dinner, gifts placed under the
Christmas tree were exchanged and a gift was
presented to Rachel McBride,
teacher of the class. · ,.
A short business session in
charge of the president,
Frankie Mwnaw, was held
after which a program of
Christmas. readings was beld.
This was closed with prayer
and the singing ol Silent Night.
There will be no meeting in
January or February . If
weather permits there will be a
1meelini ln~ .and ,~-1'011
call word ~ jle "wind.''
'
Attending were guests the
Rev. Dwight Zavilz and
Richard Duckworth for the
dinner, Frankie Mumaw, Susie
Fischer, Florence Potts, Ada
Slack, Myla Hudson, Agnes
White, and Rac~J!!l McBride.

Christmas, by Edith Hood;
Charolette Nease read Is His
Name. At The Top; This Is
Chrlstmaa, by Elva Dalley;
What Christmaa Means to me,
Irene Parker; The Missing
ChOir Boy, Geneva Nolan;
These Gifts We Bring, Pauline
Morarily; I Saw Santa Claut,
Jean Hall; The Man Who Kept
Christmas, Janice Lawson;
Story of Two Brbthers, Geneva
Nolan and Live Christmas
Ever'y Day, Margaret Cottrill.
The group ·sang these carols,
Joy To The World, Away In A
Manger, 0 Little Town of
Bethlehem, 0 Come All · Ye
Faithful, and Silent Night.
Evening refreshments
served were cooltles, cake,
punch, coffee and party mix.
· Attending the dinner were
Eileen Clark, Edith Hood,
Edna
Edwards,
Mabel
Pickens, Thelma Grueser,
Charlotte Nease, Margaret
Eichinger, Janice Lawson,
Jean Hall, Agnes White, Irene
Parker, Virginia Salser, linda
Ferrell, Mildred .Pierce, Ann
Sauvage, Jean Weaver,
Margaret Bailey, and Brenda
Hylll!ll. The last four named did
not attend the evening
program and exchange of gifts.
Additional ones attending the
evening affair were Elva
DaUey, Pauline Mrarity, Helen
Diddle , Margaret Cottrill,
Eleanor Bohram, Geneva
Nolan, Opal Zerkle, Emogene
Holstein.

Regular, Drip or Electra Perk
VatPak

20fo Lowfat

Pork

100,000 BTU Coltman
furnace

S299 .00.

30

tallon glass lined
water heater $69.95.

BAKER

fURNRUIE
IIIIIL£l'Dif. 0.

' Cello f'ok

K;oltr Pure

'kroytn

Orange .

Fresh
Kale

Juice

'Ia

O•l·

l ~~$,99
i::· 49;

88c ,o••z.agc
IIi&amp;
Pkr~

32

5WH1htorl" Lll'ftf- 3,5·01

lor

Bea•IJ Bar Siap
Liquid Dttergent

Lux

Kroger

Stnooth

PeatuiBuHer
. Poll•ent
1obltto- 26-Ct. P~g .

79•38

Coltatt ltS,ular, Menthol

or

Li~t~l- 11••·

Con

ltslant Sllaye Cream Slzo {
r=..to~IIH
2•t;:·69;

Pftngles
Potato Clips

1;69-'

2.01Pt....
•

1

With~..;..

o- foo ..,_ '"""'

(hlpos

'"""•·'. . 49;

~

.,.

~~~~~~i~f•o•"; Chicke11, Tur,k•r, ChoJ~pec:l

Salhbwry Steak, MtQit Loof &amp;
OtMr Select Varltfitl

Facial Tissue

4.....

Lflj~o~fd

Cltcliner

Top Joll

•0-••·79
... '"" .... "'·"
Ill.

9-oa. to
16-oz. Pkg.

.......,

FOR SAL£

Dialer

MAlON

'·""
.· ...
~ 11ll, "' .,., Ct.
liiMI
'""'"
' IMititr
........
tt 0.1111'1

{

Clll!• "~"' , ......, • · 1m
"hil)ICt " ...u..........

...

Now you can buy that
~omfortable
La·1;·8oy
chair you' ve always
dreamed of at our low
.PI'icos.

· Authorized

Gill.&lt;! of $50 to home missions
and ' $100 toward church roof.
repair were made w)len the
Homebuilders Class of the
Middleport Church of Christ
met in the recreation room of
• the William Grueser home,
Grant St., for a holiday party.
Co-hostesses for the · party
were Mr. and Mrs. Grueser,
Mrs. David Bwngardner, and
Mr. and Mrs. Clay Tuttle .
Plans were made during the
meeting to · prepare communion in January and
February. The cheer fund
· collection was taken to
remember the .children at the
Meigs Coun"ty Home on their
birthday anniversaries.
Named as hostesses for the
January meeting were Mr. and
Mrs. Raullin Moyer, Mr. and
Mrs. Osby Martin, and Mr. and
Mrs. WiUard Boyer.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Stewart, Mr. and
Mrs. Moyer, Mr. and Mrs.
Chester Erwin, Mr. and Mrs.
Denver Rice, RusseU WUson;
Mrs. Nonnan Yeauger, Mrs.
Raymond Baker, Mrs. Leonard
Van Meter, and Mrs. Carl
Roach.
. .

BABY YOU
BUDGET
'
WITH • • • • •

Homemakers ' Party held

INGELS
MIDDLEPORT

Green Thumbs ·

MRS. MAXINE ·WINGE'IT
Beocl 0' the Rlvtr Garden Club
The Christmas season is Indy a lime when a Green Thumb
can really prove to the world the wonderful joys of life.
Oirtst's birth was surrounded by many natural, significant
forms of life, bOth great and lllllll~; the ~!limBis (donkey, sheep,
camels~ dog, cattle), human beiilgs; Mary, Joseph, shepherds;
wise'men, imkeeper, many' travelers', and the angels. Also the
glorious shining star, the kinds ol trees and.plants growing in the
holy place of Bethlehem, all played parts in the birth of our
Savior.
'
•
In our modern day, we, in America, have developed many
Christmas· customs. The gathering together of our families,
remembering the more unfortunate one&amp; in the name of Jesus,
and becoming more conscious and appreciative of God's divine
gift to all mankind.
Our customs of decorating olir churches, homes, communities, business pia~. etc. throughout the land is growing
more beautiful each year. Every place, in 119Y direction we are
happily made aware of Christmas, God&gt;s great gift to and for
each of us.
•
·
. .Thinking of the many green and flowering plants and trees
being used in celebrating Christ's birth, the results of plans made
in the past become a reality. The more groWing, live things used,
provides for more knowledgeable and grateful hearts. Of all
green thumb trees, the many species of pine trees provide us
with the traditional Christmas tree. It is the most desirable
because of its shade of green, the extended branches so suitable
for lights and other ornament.&lt;~, and the many types of needles in
different lengths and groupings from two needles together to as
many as five or six.
The pine tree holds its needles, without dropping off more
than any of the other evergreens.
·
Holly is another evergreen that can be used for decorating.
Even the red berries add greatly. The green color represents
eternal life and the red of the berries means love. The five sharp
points of the leaves have religious meaning,s, similar to the five
pointed Christmas Star of the East.
.
Another impOrtant Christmas plant is the beautiful poinsettia.- The most practical color Is the red, ·but.they are available ·
with blooms of pink and white. The bloom that looks like petals is
actually leaves of the plant. This ts why the poinsettia blooms
last .so-long. It should be kept in a temperature of 65 degrees to 75
degrees. Water the pisntheavUy then do not water agQin until the
top dirt looks dry . Never let the plant sit in water. This will make
the leaves fall too early, and lack of water will also cause the
leaves to wilt and drop too soon.
Remember the birds . ._Many green thumbs have been
providing food, all kinds of seeds, suet, etc. that are so necessary
for our birds to have to eat ln tbe winter. They need our help in
the cold, snowy times, but they more than repay us with their
songs and beauty all the time.
·
When our growing plants need protection during ·our
summer they become mankind's great protectors because of
their swnm~ diets of insects ahd weed seeds. Remember, God
. "kn?'!~
when e*-'tht&gt;...-owtfaUa. W~a cio ow: part !Or th~
'1biros,and help_wl!h the ecology for all our sakes. ·
Christmas - keep It alive in our hearts. The green thumb of
God's spirit should always be growing, well fed, and healthy in
our daily lives..
As tilly Tim sayd, "God bless us, everyone," is our Christmas prayer for the whole world. May all of our efforts be moving
through God's imiversallove toward peace for all mankind.

110 E. 2nd
Pomeroy
Phone 992-5421

FURNITURE

,.

LA~Z-BOV

We talk to
like a person.

.,D...,

I.

Wanted To Buy
OLD Furniture, oak tables, .
organ~. dl.shes. clocks. brass
beds, or complete households.
Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pofll.eroy, Ohio. Call 9'12·6271 .
6-28-tlc

Notes • • ••

!

Business Services·

~7

HAYMAN'S Auction - a good
Concrete Work
Hardtop coupe, _tocai loW mileage, 1-owner car, 307place to go each Friday
Auto
Sales
Remodeling
·engine, 3-speed transmission, bucket seats, console blue
evening, 7 p.m. at Laurel Cliff
967
FURY
Ill,
4
door,
.383
18 cents per word she. con.
finish,
radio.
SHARP
IS
THE
WORD!
on old Rt. 7, 1 mile west of
engine, good condition, $800;
secuflve Insertions .
Rock Springs Fa irground.
Freddie Thabet, Mason, W.
25 Per Cent. piscqunt pn paid
10·10·1fc
1971 PINTO FORD
11599
1dsand ad_s pa1d w ffhi n 10 days.•
Va .-; phone 773·5651.
2-door, local 1-ow.ner, low mileage, good tires, clean Jn.
CARD OF THANKS. '
12-15-tfc
&amp; OBITUARY
, KOSCOT KOSMETICS&amp; WIGS,
terior:
green
finish,
radio,
2000cc
engine,
•·•reed.
SPECIALS MONTHLY .
$1.50 for SQ wOrd minjmUin ,
Phone 992-2511
PHONE HELEN JANE
Eact'l ~ddltional word 2c:
For
Rent
or 992-3918
BLIND ADS '
BROWN, MIDDLEPORT,
Additional 25c Charge per
TWO BEDROOM mobile home
OHIO 992·5113.
Advertisement.
·
on Old Rt. 33, adults only ;
12-J-tfc
.
OFFI~E HOURS
phone 9'12-6294 or 992-6385
OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.
8:30a.m. lo 5:00p.m. t;&gt;ally , THERE will be no Shooting
POMEROY
after
6 p.m.
.,PMI!IOY I OHIO
8: 30 a .m. to 12:00 Noon
12·24-10tc
Saturday.
·
Match at the Racine Gun Club
•HOME &amp; AUTO
this weekend due to ChristFURNISH ED apartment, 3
mas Holid~vs .
992-2094
rooms and bath, modern;
12·21·3fC Help Wanted
LEGAL NoTtce
In Memory '
RESOLUTION
phone 992:2623.
606 E. Main Pomeroy
WANTED:
EXPERIENCES
A
RESOLUTION
TO
IN MEMORY of our mother,
12·17-tfc .
SPECIALTY SALESMAN TO ESTABLISH A SPECIAL
Anna Stiles, who pa$Sed away
ESTABLISH NEW AC· FUND KNOWN AS THE HOUSE, 4 rooms and bath, full
SUPPLIES
one year ago today.
COUNTS.
GUARANTEED FEDERA L GENERAL basement, automatic ' heat,
Oece,.,ber 26:
and
WEEKLY DRAW AGAINST REVENUE SHARIN G TRUST Lincoln Heights ; phone 742·
II doesn't matter where we
FUND
•
go, a·nd no matt~r what we do,
COMMISSIONS. One,call
Be 11 Resol ved by fhe 50'12.
There. will always be some
closer, such as ,an who has · Trustees of Orange Towns!'lip as
12·22-6tp
s u ~cessfully sold Iandi In- follows :
thing's, To make us think of
surance1 mutual funds, ~Orne
Sec. L That whereas , the TRAILER spaces ; extra large . Stop In and See Our
you.
Floor Display . ·
Improvements, franchlses 1 Congres~ has erected the Sta te lots, $25 a month, Velma
Your face and voice arg fresh In
vending,
freezer
plans,
and
Loca
l
Fisca
l
Assistance
Act
mind, We never shall lorget.
Zuspan, Mason, w. Va.
educatlon 1 etc . Can have of 1972 provid ing a system of
No · matter ·how lhe years go
Furnace
Controls
11-29-JOtp
brlghtfuture with nationally general reVenue shar ing with
by, Our love Is with you yet. states and unit s of Loca l
Frances, Helene and Rolli n.
HUMIDIFIERS
advertised company. Ex- GOvernment. and
J ROOM furnished house. adults
12-26-ltp
1remely high earnings
Whereas, Section 123 la l 111
Mob~e Homes For Sale
only ; phone 992-5592.
Hot Water Heaters
potential . Our top producers of th is fedeal act requires each
12·5·tfC
earn commiSsions of $25,000 unit of local government to
TO COMMEMORATE the
Plumbing
CASH paid for all makes and
to $50,000 per year. If you can establish a trust fund to rece ive TWO new mobile homes, never
birthday of Ethel Fox Elias,
moofels of mobile homes .
Electrical Work
travel extensively and have a federal revenue sharing , and ·
born December 26. 1884:
Phone area code 614·423·953!.
lived
in;
phone
992-2511.
Whereas, the Bureau of In .
Remembrance is a golden
good car, we'll prove it to you. spectton and suPervision of
4·13.tfc
12·$-lfc
chalr;.Death tries to br~k but
For additional Information Public Offices has approved the - - - - - - - · all In vain; To have~ to love
and personal IntervieW~ call es tablishment of a " Federal FURNISHED 2 · bedroom
3 BEDROOM trail er, partially
and then to part. Is the
Mr . Por-ter, toll free at (800) Revenue Shar ing Trust Fund "
apartment,
adults
only,
furnished, some underpinnhig
. 621 -1006, (8001 621·8182, (800} In lhe subd ivis ion receiving
gr~&amp;atest sorrow of one's
Middleport ; phone 992·3874.
and steps; phone 742·4833.
621 -7501.
assistance und er the federal
heart. The years may wipe
. 12·12·ffC
act, as required by section
99H448 ·
12-22-6fc
out m~ny things, But this they
12'24-lfp 5705.12
of the Oh io Rev ised
wipe out never - The
Pomeroy,
Code .
3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
memory of those happy days, '
FOR THE position of half-time
No w Therefore,
Be
It
unfurnished apartments. 1970 MOBILE Home, air·
When we were all together. - s'HOTGUN MATCH, Sunday,
• · H Program Assistant. Resolved b y the Trustees of
conditioner, like new •. fully
Phone 992·5434:
Sadly missed by Family, Dec. 24th, 12 noon . Side Hill
Contact the County Extension Orange Townsh ip, State of Ohio
carpeted . $3,100; phone 985·
4·12·tfc
that ,
Sisters· and Brothers.
4248.
Office
In
the
basement
of
the
Gun Club; factory choke guns
Sec . 11 . There is hereby
12-26-ltp only
Counly
Home.
Phone
992·3895
12·22-6tp
; no alcoholic beverages
esta blished e specia l fund Pets For SC~Ie
for
details
.
The
Cooperative
allowed ; assorted' meats ; soft
a.s "th e Federal General
Extension Service is an Equal known
~evenue
Fund under th e
drinks will be sold ; free
Toy Poodles, wormed and NEED ANOTHER BEDROOM,
OpportunIty Em pi oyer. provisions of section 5705.12 of AKC
DEN OR FAMILY ROOM
coffee ; directions to match housebroken.
Will hold for
Training
beyond
high
school
the
Ohio
Revised
Code.
FOR
YOUR
MOBILE
31f&gt;miles North of Rutland to
Christmas. Phone 742-3872.
is
desired
but
not
required.
Sec
.
Il
l.
A
It
monies
paid
to
the
HOME?
EASILY
DONE
Forest Acres Park, take
12·14·12tc
Applicant must have a car Township und er the State and
WITH A VEMCO ADD·Agravel road to first road left
Local ·Fiscal Assistance Act of
available.
. ROOM. SEE · IT AT :
'h mile ; there will be signs
1?72 shall be credited to said PARKVIEW Kennels going out
12·24C
3tp
YOUNG'S MOBILE HOME
from park to match; not
fund and expe nded In ac ..
of business . Big P(ice
SALES,
ST. RTE . 7 &amp; 35
cordan ce with the ter ms end
responsible for accidents.
reduction on all dogs. All AK·
BRIGHT. prov isions of said federal act . C..
(BELOW
SILVER
·
12·21-3tc WE'LL SEND
592
BrQadway
&amp;
.Ash
·
YOUNG
MEN
TO
SCHOOL
MEMORIAL
BRDG . I.
Se~~
1
v
,
ThIs
resolution
is
SYRACUSE - The wedding
Streets, Middleport, Ohio.
FOR RADAR JOBS IN hereby declared to be an
GALLIPOLIS.
12-13.tfc
vows· given by the Rev .
EUROPE . It you'd like to live emergency measure necessary
12·24·61c
for
the
preservation
of
th
e
and work In Europe, there's
Freeland Norris, of Racine
REGISTERED
Iris
h
Setter
-public peace, health , safety and
an excltllig job waiting for welfar.e,
such em erg ency
wtited In marriage Miss Peggy
puppies.
4
weeks
old;
call992·
you with today's Army. You'll arising out of the need to
Hubbard, daughter of Mr. and
learn to supervise and control provide a lawful fund into which son
·Air &lt;;onditioners ·
12·22·31c
ground surveillance radar federa l revenue general
Mrs. Oris Hubbard and Robert
·•
• Awnings
units. With full pay while Shari ng
payments
can
Anthony of Colwnbus, at the
credited
for
ex .
you're in school. And lofs of be
: ·Underpinning
For Sale
home of the bride's parents at 7
Officers were elected at a
olher benefits. Like 30 days penditures in the manner for
ald vacation a year . If you're the purposes prov ided under th e DUE TO lay.off, 8 track stereo 'Co mplete mqblle hQme' :
p.m. Dec. 16.
· recent meeting of the Adult
Fisca l In walnut console; pay
ookl ng for this .kind of Sta te andAct Local
·service ~ plus gigantic'
ot 1972 : when
Tile brlde was attired in a Class of the Bradford Church of
balance of $98.80 or pay $8 per 'display
challenge and excitement, Assistance
of mobile homes
this resolution sha ll take effect &lt;IJ10~t~
; ~ho~e '12-5331, ,
' ;illwa.y's lovafjaJflli!llt&gt;l...l' · '
Today'~. Armx wants to join an~ be In forc e ;tq~ll'f and • after
fK leiJI!III blue ~own With a Christ. , 1 ,
.
}.. n ~h,.111"1-.H,..o~ 12'· 12-1fc
you. For complefe'd~falls call !ts passage.
' 1;1. tt
~ ap.d pink corsage. The
Elected were Mrs. Mliared
1
collect,, SS G1 Clark 593·3022. Sec . V . This resolution shall --------~-, ~
brrdesmald "'was
Carol Sisson, president ; Mrs.
12·20·6tc take effect end be in force from JUST taken in deluxe Zig.Zag
and after Dec . 18, 1972.
sewing
machine.
This
aogardis, and the best man Frances
Hysell ,
vice
Passed the 18th day of machine
darns ,
em- MO.BIL~ HOMES
WANTED. male Social Security December
1972.
was the groom's brother , president; Mrs. Marge Wilt,
broideries, makes but.
or Old Age penSioner to help
1220 Washinglon Blvd. ·
W. S. Henderson
wl
lhout
at.
tonholes
,
all
Frank Anthony, both of secretary, and Mrs . Nora
move male from bed to chair.
423-7521
BELPRE, 0.
Orange Township President
tachments;
pay
balance
of
Contact
Mrs.
Ed
J
.
Smith.
·
Altest
:
Nina
Ro
binson
,
Clerk
Columbus. The couple is Cambron, treasurer. Mrs .
phone 992·2853. ·.
Rl. 2 Coolville. Oh io 45723 $38.50 or pay S6 per month; ,r---------..J
r~siding in Columbus.
Helen Miller will continue as
phone 992-5331.
12·21·31c (121 26, 27, 21
12·12-tfc Real Estate For Sale
Attending were Mr . and Mr$. card secretary , and news
'
Robert Anthony, Sr., Frank reporter will be Mrs. Hysell. PLUMB .ING and Heating man,
SINGER
Automatic
sewing 8 ROOM house and bath, nice
experienced ; If not ex.
LEGAL NOTICE
large lot. natural gas, bullf.in
and Linda Anthony, James and
Devotions by ' Mrs . Jackie
machine. Like new In waihut . cabinets
perlenced and honest, do ·not
RESOLUTION
in kitchen, close to
cabinet.
Makes
design
·
slit·
apply · phone 992·2511 or 992· A Resol ution to ESTABLISH
Barbara· Mitchell, David Reed opened the meeting. She
radio
station
in Bradbury.
ches. zig-zags, buttonholes.
3918 '
. A SPECIAL FUN D KNOWN AS
Phone
992·2602.
Anthony, Fred Anthony, John read scripture, Matthew 1, Ill·
THE FEDERA L GE NE RAL
blind hems, overcasts ~ etc.
12·21·20fp
12·6·1fc REVENUE SHA RING TRUST
$85. Call Ravenswood 273-9521
Anthony, and Ed Anthony, 25 and poems, "His Name at
~-------FUND
ColUmbus; George Shaw, the Top" and "Ten C~m­
Be it Resolved by the or 273-9893.
11.JO.tfc HOUSE FOR SALE, 114 Brick
Trustees ot Col urn bla Township
Glena and Randy Lilley, mandments for Christmas LEGAL NOTICE
Street. Pomeroy, Ohio ; brick
as fallows :
Sec
.
I.
That
whereas,
the
house,
3 bedrooms, excellent
Ironton; David Flowers and Shopping," concluding with
NOTICE OF
Cong ress has enacted the State
location,
close lo school and
APPOINTMENT
Carol Lape, Columbus; Mr. prayer. Report.&lt;~ were read and
Local Flsca1 Assistance Act
city; contact Lou Osborne or
Case No. 20622 and
of 1912 provid ing a system of
and Mrs. Donald Van Langen approved.
call 992.5898.
Es tat e of Hugh Everett Loudin general
revenue sharing with
Deceased
.
11·26-tfc
and children, Columbus; Mr.
Homer Forrest gave the
and units of local
Notice is hereb y given that $fates
government,
and
and Mrs . Charles Salser, benediction and refreslunents Winifred J . Franklin of Rt . 1.
Sec:tlon 123- (a 1 ( 1)
2 STORY HOME, full basement,
Amesville, Ohio. hu been duly of Whereas.
act requires eac h
Racine ; Mr. and Mrs. Michael of oyster soup was served to appo
bath &amp; 112. extra lot and, at.
inted Executrix of the unitthe offederal
loca
l
governm
ent
to
!ached
garage ; available
Estate
of
Hugh
Everett
Loud
in,
Hubbard, Bidwell, and Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Homer Forrest,
a trust fu nd to receive .
now;
may
be had with basic
deceased , late of Rt . 2, establish
Mrs. Wayne Hubbard, local. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Miller, Cheshire, Meigs County. Ohio . federal revenue sharing1 . and ·
furn
iture
;
r&gt;ear. P0 meroy
.
1
PAIR
FREE
Whereas, the Bureau of In Creditors are required to file spection
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Sisson, Mrs.
Elementary
School ; phone
ahd Supervision of
The best buy In the area·.
their clai ms with SQid·fidu clary Public Offices
CYC PARTY HELD
992·7384
or
992·7133.
has
approved
the
Cambron , Mrs. Norma within rou r months.
Have-slacks &amp; Jeans for the
of a " Federal
12·24-6tc
Dated th is 8th da y of establishment
The
Christian
Youth Russell, Mrs. Tressie Henwhole
family. Save One.
Genera l Revenue Shar ing Trust
December 1972 .
Third.
Crusader Christm~s party was dricks, Mrs. Reed, Mr. and
C. B. RADIOS, antennas, also
Manning D . Webster Fund " In each subdivis ion .
receiving
assistance
under
th
e
.
•
•
POMEROY
pollee · scanners; Dalley's
Judge
held Friday night at the Laurel Mrs. Tip Wilt; Mrs. Eleanor
Ail Jack w. carsey, Mgr.•
cour t of Common Pleas, iede~al act, as required by
Radio Shop, Box 21 B, Long
Cliff Free Methodist Church Hoover, Mrs. Verna HyseU,
5705.12. of the Ohio
·
Phone- 2181
Probate Division sectoon
Bottom. Ohio.
Revised
Code
;
no£baseme nt. Mrs. Richard Mrs. Frances HyseU, Belinda {12 1 12, 19, 26. Jt
12·24·61c
. Now Therefor e Be it Resolved ·
·
C
·
by
the
Trustees
of
Columb
ia
1964
CHEVROLET
onvertlble
Friend read the scripture. and Edie Grimm.
Townshir, stat e ol Ohio that : Impala, 3 .speed; $195. 16
NOTICE OF
Gill.&lt;! were opened and games
sec . I. There is hereby gauge 3 shot boll acflon
APPOINTMENT
established
a·speclal fund to be Mossburg, adlustable choke,
were played with cookies and
Case
No
.
20,814
WATCH SERVICE
known as the "Federa l General $30· 670·15 mud &amp; snow tire on
Estate
ol
FRANK
E.
TITUS.
CLELAND
punch being served. At the
Revenue Sharl~g Trust Fund "
Fo~d or Dodge wheel , $5;
There will be a watch service Decease·a .
REALTY
iSions of sec.tlon
Raymond Pierce, 949·237.4. ·
Notice Is hereby given that under theol prov
party were Mrs.' Friend and at the Ash Street Freewill
the Ohio Remed
,
Vivian K . Titus, of Pomeroy, 5705.12
21
lot e. Moln
12
3
· - c
Mrs. Doris Buckley, directors, Baptist Church in Middleport, Ohio, has been duly appointed Code.
Pomeroy
Sec . 111 . All monies paid to the -=:-:=--:-:-:-:-:-:--::--:-Execu tr ix of th e Estate of
Ricky· Baker, Angie Baker, Dec. 31, at 7:30p.m. There will Fra11k
Township
under
the
Stat
e
and
ONE
NEW
031
Stlhl
chain
saw,
E. Titus, deceased , late
Local Fisca l Assistance Act of $190. Phone 742-5322, N. E.
Crystal Buckley, Sharon be various singing groups and Of Meigs County, Ohio.
JUST RENOVATED
1972 sha ll be credited to said·
Vanaman .
Creditors
are
required
to
file
Buckley, Mark Friend, Linda several ministers will preach. their claims with sa id .flduciary fund and expended in ac MIDDLEPORT
- 1 story
12·24·31c
cordance with the terms and
frame. 2 bedrooms, dining
Friend, Sherri Clark, John Everyone is welcome to attend within four months.
room, bath, 26 ft. living
Dated th is 7th day of provisions of said federal act . .- -- -- - - - Smith, Laura Gail Smith, this all night camp meeting. Decem
Sec . II/ . This. resolution is EAR LY Ameri can stereo-rad io room. carpeted throughout. 2
ber 1972.
comblt\ation, AM·FM radio, 4
Mann ing D. Webster . Judge hereby declared to be an
Diane Smith, Angie Barton, For more information, call446emergency measure necessary speaker sound Sy$tem, 4 car carport. $12.500.00.
Common
Pleas
Court
• LARGE COLONIAL
and
Joyce
Baker 4448.
speed au1omallc changer;
Probate Div ision for the preservation of the
POMEROYRECENTLY
publ
ic
peace,
health
,
safety
and
balance
$79
.31
.
Use
our
Meigs County , Oh io
{ 12 ) 12, 19, 26. 3t
welfare , such · emergency budget terms. Call 992·7085.
RENOVATED
The kit·
ar ising· out of the need to
chen
is
a·house
wife's
dream,
provide a lawful fund In to wh ich
12-l9·6tc
EVERYTHING BUILT IN, 4
federal general revenue sharing
bedrooms. 2 baths, utility R.
payments can be credited for MODERN , Walnut style stereo.
SYRACUSE :_ The Sunshine mas Tree, Hark The Herald
expend it ures In the manner and radio, AM-FM redlo, 4 carpeted . EXCELLENT
tor the pUrposeS; prov ided under rspeaker sound sys1em, 4 STR EET. $17,500.00.
Makers' Sunday School Class Angels Sing, We Three Kings,
the Stale and Local Fiscal
"d
t
ti
h
.8SAtRE
Assistance Act of 1972 ; where spe&lt; au oma c c anger.
·held itb annual Christmas and It Came Upon the Midnight .
RACINE - B~utltul older
this resolution shall take effect Balanc e S68.57. Use our
dinner at Crow's Steak House Clear.
an d be In Ioree 11om and alter budget terms. Call 992-7065.
home, new kitchen, 9 rooms,
its passage .
12·19-7065. 5 bedrooms, l'h baths, full
Monday, Dec. 18, at 6:30p.m.,
An article " Birthdays,
The annual Christmas dinner
Sec . v . This Resolution shall
12·19·6tc
basement, garaQe and other
then returned to the annex of Holidays and other Disasters" and party of the Bradford take effect and be In for ce from
buildings.
the First United Presbyterian was read by Mrs. Dwight Church of Christ Adult Class and alter December 22, 1972. 1.72 ACRE lot ; phone 742- ~
LARGE 2 STORY
Pused the 22nd day ol
12·24-2tp
Church annex for a program Zavitz. This was followed with was held recently at the December 1972.
MIDDLEPORT
5
Arnold
Jordan
bedrooms.
Ph
baths,
nice
and gift from Secret Pals prayer.
&amp; N DAY old or started
church. Mrs. Edith Forrest
Columbia Twp . Presldenl H Leghorn
kitchen, cellar. garage. 2
pullets. Both floor
Attest
:
Gloria
Hutton
which were placed under a
A skit "Always The Same presented a program entitled
glassed
sunporches.
or
cage
grown
available
.
Clerk
decorated tree. Those not Christmas" was given by Jean "No Room." ·Mrs. Mildred
Poultry
housing
&amp; $12.800.00.
FROM USTOYOU
automation . Modern Poultry.
having Secret Pals exchanged Hall and Janice Lflwson. A gift Sisson read a verse, "The {12 I 26, 17 , 21
A GREAT BIG
399
W
.
Main,
Pomeroy,
992·
gifts.
of money was presented to the Shepherds' Gifl.&lt;l," and there
2164.
HAPPY NEW YEARS
A Christmas prayer was Rev. and Mrs. Javitz. Cake, was a carol sing. Harry
12·24·11c
'lven In unison, history of brownies, cookies, cof!ee, lind Hendricks closed with prayer.
HENRY E. CLE_LAND
COAL. Limestone,. E&lt;eelsior
)'OU
Cluistnlall carols wlis read by pop were served.
and ASSOCI~TES
Gifts were exchanged and
Sail Works, E. Main St.,
Office 9t2-2259
Unda Hubbard and after each
Attending were Jean Hall, secret pals revealed. Attending
Pomeroy. Phone 992.3891.
If
no
onswer
9t2·2568 or 9154·12-tfc
reaclng one of the8e was sung, Charlotte Nease, Beatrice were Mr. and Mrs. Homer
4109.
Ole* The Halla, Angels From Blake, Janice Lawson, Thelma Forrest, Mr. an~ Mrs. Paul
'ft!t S.lml Of Glory, God Grueser, Helen Diddle, Helen Sisson , Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Ye Merry Gentlemen, Harris, Agnes White, Mildred Wilt, Mr. dnd Mrs. Harry
0 Come All Ye Pierce, Margaret Cottrill, Hendricks, Mr. and Mrs. Jim
lllent Night, Joy To Linda Hubbard, Doris Wilt, Reed, Mrs . Eleanor Hoover,
I Heard The Bella Pauline Morarity, and the Rev. Mrs . Verna Hysell, Mr~ .
. . . . Day, Away In A and Mrs. Dwight Zavitz.
Frances Hysell and Mr. and
Flm Noel, Oh ChristMrs. Kenneth Carson :

--------

Green Thumb

r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ;··-

'

Ajax

........ 99",
5-1~.

l,.oupbrl

"'..,. Dvty Oot......

Uquld Wlsk

n-••·68"
Ill.

,

wllh coupon ond purch... of
ony two pockooe•
!..1UIOII1 C.U!

1·

f.

�.

'

11 - The Dally S\!ntlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec. 26, 1972

' 26,1972
10- ne Daily S\!n\inei,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Dec.

,

2 Gifts
approved

Sentinel Classifieds Gel Action! Senti~el Classifieds Get Results!
WANT AD.S
INFORM,lTUiN
,PEADLINES

Notice

.s P .M . Day Befor~ Publication.
MQ"da.v Deadline 9 e.m ,

Cancellation - corrections·

WIU be accepted until9 a.m . tor,
Day of Public;ation

INTERNATIONAL Songwriters
Club; recording. publishlng.free memb~:nship ; write
I.S.C., Rt. 1, Box 210, Mid·
dleport. Ohio 45760.

Po•eroy
•tor Ct.··

12·12-~tc

REGULATIONS

The Publisher reserves the

·rtoht to edrt or reject anv ads I WILL NOT be 'responsible lor
deemed
oblee-tlonal.
The
PUbl isher' will not be responsible.

for more than one incorrect
insertion .

RATES

For Want Ad Se.rv lee
5 cents per Word one Insertion
Minimum Char.ge 75c
11 cent'f' per word three .
con!;eculive Insertions.

1970 CHEVROLET IMPALA
$219$
Sport Cpe., lSO engine. Turbo hydramafic trans., power
steering &amp; brakes. blk. fihish, red vinyl interior/ w-w tires.
a 1 owner trade-In &amp; it's nice ..

any debls contracted by

anyone other than myself.

Signed : Basil L. Haynes. Rt.
I, Middleport, Ohio.
12-22-3tp

1970 CAMARO'

11999

SPEND TIME
SAVE $'s

PWMBING
HEAnNG

Pomeroy Motor Co.

OFFICE

"HElL"

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
o.

Peggy If.ubbard

is December bride

Officers named
by adult class

r.

'

-:-:-====----

Program given
during party

.

..l'"-MitUI

EXPERT
'Wheel Alignment

KUHL'S

BARGAIN CENTER

*5.55

Rt. 7 "at caution light~'
TUPPERS PLAINS
l)sed furniture, appl iances.
. Clean &amp; guaranteed.
NEW FURNITURE
Sofa Beds &amp; Recliners .
Discount priced .

On Mosl American C.rs
-GUARANTEED-Phone 992-2094

Pomerot Home &amp; Auto
.

open 8TI15
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pl!meroy, 0 .

LAYAWAY FOR XMAS
Open to 7;' closed Mondays

EARTH MOVING
. '

·Dozer

&amp; End !oader work,
ponds. basement, land·.,
scaplng. We have· ' 2 size
dorers, 2 she loaders. Work. ·.
done b~. hour or contract. · ·
·Free estimates. We also ·
haul fifl dirt, top soil. Dump
trucks at•l"low·boy for hire.
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Po.meroy . l!hone 192.3525
after 7 p.m. or phone 992·
5232. .

From the !argest T ...::.
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Small'l't Heater Core .
Nathan Biggs ·
· .Radia!Dr Specla!ist

FURNITURE

HEATING &amp;
. COOLING

Presbyterian ladies dine

.SMITH NELSON
MOTOR~ INC.
992·2174
Pomeroy

· - - - - - - - - - - ' - .DOZER and back hoe work,
ponds and septic tanks, dlt·
READY.MIX
CONCRET
service; top soli, fill
chlng
delivered right to your
dirt, limestone; B&amp;K Exproject. Fast and easy. Free
esti mates , Phone 992·3284. cavating. Phone 992·5367,
Dick .Karr, Jr.
Goeglein Ready-Mix Co.,
9·1-tfc
Middleport, Ohio.
6·30.tfc -S-E-PT_I_C_T_A_N..,..
K-S - A-RO
.,-BIC
-~---........-'
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEANSEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
ED, REPAIRED. MILLER
REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446·
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell, SANITATION, STEWART,
OHIO. PHONE 662-3035.
Owner &amp; Operator.
10·4-tfc
5· nile
~-------

~-----

c.

BRADFORD, Auctioneer PAPER Hanging and painting ;
Arthur Musser, phone 742·
Complete Service
5223.
Phone 949·3821
12·12-JOtp
Racine, Ohio
Crill Bradford
5·1 ·ttc SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 992·2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
CAR PENTRY, repair, work
Authorized Singer Sales and
additions, kitchen cabinets
Service. We Sharpen Scissors,
and paneling ; ca ll Guy
Nelgler. Racine, Ohio.
3-29·tfC
12·22·3tc,
SEE US FOR : Awnings. storm
doors and windows, carports~
Real Estate For Sale
marquees, aluminum siding
and
railing. A. Jacob, sales
HOUSE In Long Bottom, phone
representative . For tree
985·3529.
estimates, phone Charles
6·11 -tfc
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
3·2·tfC
-:::B-AC-:-K-H_O_E_A_N-.D-DO_Z_E_R_w-ork.
Septic tanks Installed. George
(Bill} Pullins. Phone 992·2478.
4·25·tfC

- - -- - -

~irgil B.

Teaford, Sr.
Broker

E LNA and White Sewing
Machines ... service on all
makes . Reasonable rates.
The Sewing Cenfer, Mid ·

110 Mechanic Street

Pomerpy;IQhlo45.76f .t,\tf. W'~'dl~ltl.tl.JJJo
• 1 ··~- .~~ t ,·li· ,1,, 1 / 1g ·~iJ+ 1 u 1 w(

OVER RIVER LAND
3.33 ACRES - Brand new
1972 Fleetwood 3 bedroom
. b
' S
I'Y'O .lie home .,
creened
~tlo, drilled 'flell. All level
w1th road to river. A wondertul place tor only
$21 ,500.00.
liS ACRES
HUNTING LAND - With
gas well, 6 room house, barn,
and several other buildings
in need of repair. We are
asking $20,000.00.
BUNGALOW
. 2 BEDROOMS - Nice bath,
large living and kitchen.
Next door to store on level
lot. Only $4,500.00.
98 ACRES.nd
MOBILE HOME LOT Wit~ well and electric. The
rest Is wild land, Ideal for
setting of pines. A producing
gas well and minerals. Only
$16,500.00,
ONE ACRE
T. P.
water,
electric
available. Some trees. Only
$2500.00.,'
SYRACUSE
5 ROOMS - Bath, nice
kitchen. front and back
porches. Full basement and
large extra lot. Only
$10,600.00.
2YEARS OLD
NEAR RACINE - 2niceslze
bedrooms with closets.
Utilit y room and large
modern kitchen. Carport and
'h acre. Asking $14,000.00.
NEW LISTING
NEASE SETILEMENT - J
bedrooms, nice closets In
each, large modern kitchen
with bar. Utility room with
washer and dryer hookups.
Stove. and refrigerator in·
eluded In sale. Now the price
Is just $12.500.00.
HAVING SOLD A NUMBER
OF HOMES. WITH A VERY
SUCCESSFUL YEAR, WE
NOW NEED SEVERAL
GOOD
PROPERTIES.
PRICED RIGHT, FOR THE
NEW YEAR . WE WANT TO
THANK ALL 6F YOU FOR
MAKING .IT POSSIBLE .
HELEN L."TE~FORD,
ASSOCIATE
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS
9t2-332S

;£~~'

t.'"'".,uJ

11 -16·,1fc

G &amp; ~ APPLIANCE Repair ;
repaor of all laundry equipment, refrigeration equop·
ment and hOuse wiring ; call
614-992·6050.
·
11·24-30tp
AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
you r
operator's license? Call 992·
2966.
6· 15·tfc

·--1 YEAR-END
I SPECI~

.

I · ALL OVER

II OUR
STORE
,
I CHECK US
BEFORE
YOU BUY

FURNITURE
APPLIANCES
ACCESSOR I

A weekly feature of Meigs
CoWlty Garden Club members.

Christmas a time for

SYRACUSE - The Ponderosa Restaurant In Parkersburg was the setting for the
annual Chrisbnas dinner of the
Third
Wednesday
Homemakers• Club Christmas
dinner Wednesday, Dec. 20.
The afternoon was spent
shopping. In the evening they
gathered at the meeting house
. at Municipal Park here for
their program and exchange of
gifl.&lt;l.
The room was beautifully
decorated with a Christmas

.

2-HOUR
--- '
CLEANING
(Upon Request)

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

cover on the table which was
centered with an arrangement
of fruit and flowers, and red
candles in .silver holders. The
mantle above the unique ·
flr:eplace was also decorated
and gifts were placed under a
decorated tree.
The program under the
direction of Janice Lawson,
Elva Dailey, and Mildred
Pierce opened with prayer by
Edith Hood with Jean Hall
giving the Christmas message.
How various traditions ·
started, gift giving, Santa
Claus, tree, carol singing, and
cards were given by Mabel
Pickens, Jean Hall, Agnes
Wlilte , Eleanor Bohram,
Eileen Clark, and Janice
Lawson ; "My Whole Being"
from Devotional booklet given
by Emogene Holstein; "Room
For Love" by Linda FerreU;
VIrginia Salser, read "The
Wonder Of Christmas" ; God's
Gift of Love, by Margaret
Eichinger ; Bedtime on Christmas Eve by Margaret Cettrlll:

"IT'S TRUE!"· · ·

CHAIRS

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

'

&lt;"'-,

....

FUIMmlll
.
,... ,

m4lft

~.

M,w, V..

"···-... u ........ 1112

All
Kroger
Regular
Houn •:~=~~
S•
New Year's Eve
All Kroter Stores Open
New Year's Day

12 Noon to 9 P.M.
24·Htir Stem WUI R-ln
Open 24-llt•r New Year's

En 1ml Ntw '••r'•
Poochkt All MHt

Wieners

'

Potluck dinner
enjoyed Dec.
19 by Star Chss

SYRACUSE - A .potluck
dinner was held at noon
Tuesday, Dec. 19, in llle First
United Presbyterian Church
annex by the Star Class of the
Sunday School. Following
dinner, gifts placed under the
Christmas tree were exchanged and a gift was
presented to Rachel McBride,
teacher of the class. · ,.
A short business session in
charge of the president,
Frankie Mwnaw, was held
after which a program of
Christmas. readings was beld.
This was closed with prayer
and the singing ol Silent Night.
There will be no meeting in
January or February . If
weather permits there will be a
1meelini ln~ .and ,~-1'011
call word ~ jle "wind.''
'
Attending were guests the
Rev. Dwight Zavilz and
Richard Duckworth for the
dinner, Frankie Mumaw, Susie
Fischer, Florence Potts, Ada
Slack, Myla Hudson, Agnes
White, and Rac~J!!l McBride.

Christmas, by Edith Hood;
Charolette Nease read Is His
Name. At The Top; This Is
Chrlstmaa, by Elva Dalley;
What Christmaa Means to me,
Irene Parker; The Missing
ChOir Boy, Geneva Nolan;
These Gifts We Bring, Pauline
Morarily; I Saw Santa Claut,
Jean Hall; The Man Who Kept
Christmas, Janice Lawson;
Story of Two Brbthers, Geneva
Nolan and Live Christmas
Ever'y Day, Margaret Cottrill.
The group ·sang these carols,
Joy To The World, Away In A
Manger, 0 Little Town of
Bethlehem, 0 Come All · Ye
Faithful, and Silent Night.
Evening refreshments
served were cooltles, cake,
punch, coffee and party mix.
· Attending the dinner were
Eileen Clark, Edith Hood,
Edna
Edwards,
Mabel
Pickens, Thelma Grueser,
Charlotte Nease, Margaret
Eichinger, Janice Lawson,
Jean Hall, Agnes White, Irene
Parker, Virginia Salser, linda
Ferrell, Mildred .Pierce, Ann
Sauvage, Jean Weaver,
Margaret Bailey, and Brenda
Hylll!ll. The last four named did
not attend the evening
program and exchange of gifts.
Additional ones attending the
evening affair were Elva
DaUey, Pauline Mrarity, Helen
Diddle , Margaret Cottrill,
Eleanor Bohram, Geneva
Nolan, Opal Zerkle, Emogene
Holstein.

Regular, Drip or Electra Perk
VatPak

20fo Lowfat

Pork

100,000 BTU Coltman
furnace

S299 .00.

30

tallon glass lined
water heater $69.95.

BAKER

fURNRUIE
IIIIIL£l'Dif. 0.

' Cello f'ok

K;oltr Pure

'kroytn

Orange .

Fresh
Kale

Juice

'Ia

O•l·

l ~~$,99
i::· 49;

88c ,o••z.agc
IIi&amp;
Pkr~

32

5WH1htorl" Lll'ftf- 3,5·01

lor

Bea•IJ Bar Siap
Liquid Dttergent

Lux

Kroger

Stnooth

PeatuiBuHer
. Poll•ent
1obltto- 26-Ct. P~g .

79•38

Coltatt ltS,ular, Menthol

or

Li~t~l- 11••·

Con

ltslant Sllaye Cream Slzo {
r=..to~IIH
2•t;:·69;

Pftngles
Potato Clips

1;69-'

2.01Pt....
•

1

With~..;..

o- foo ..,_ '"""'

(hlpos

'"""•·'. . 49;

~

.,.

~~~~~~i~f•o•"; Chicke11, Tur,k•r, ChoJ~pec:l

Salhbwry Steak, MtQit Loof &amp;
OtMr Select Varltfitl

Facial Tissue

4.....

Lflj~o~fd

Cltcliner

Top Joll

•0-••·79
... '"" .... "'·"
Ill.

9-oa. to
16-oz. Pkg.

.......,

FOR SAL£

Dialer

MAlON

'·""
.· ...
~ 11ll, "' .,., Ct.
liiMI
'""'"
' IMititr
........
tt 0.1111'1

{

Clll!• "~"' , ......, • · 1m
"hil)ICt " ...u..........

...

Now you can buy that
~omfortable
La·1;·8oy
chair you' ve always
dreamed of at our low
.PI'icos.

· Authorized

Gill.&lt;! of $50 to home missions
and ' $100 toward church roof.
repair were made w)len the
Homebuilders Class of the
Middleport Church of Christ
met in the recreation room of
• the William Grueser home,
Grant St., for a holiday party.
Co-hostesses for the · party
were Mr. and Mrs. Grueser,
Mrs. David Bwngardner, and
Mr. and Mrs. Clay Tuttle .
Plans were made during the
meeting to · prepare communion in January and
February. The cheer fund
· collection was taken to
remember the .children at the
Meigs Coun"ty Home on their
birthday anniversaries.
Named as hostesses for the
January meeting were Mr. and
Mrs. Raullin Moyer, Mr. and
Mrs. Osby Martin, and Mr. and
Mrs. WiUard Boyer.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Stewart, Mr. and
Mrs. Moyer, Mr. and Mrs.
Chester Erwin, Mr. and Mrs.
Denver Rice, RusseU WUson;
Mrs. Nonnan Yeauger, Mrs.
Raymond Baker, Mrs. Leonard
Van Meter, and Mrs. Carl
Roach.
. .

BABY YOU
BUDGET
'
WITH • • • • •

Homemakers ' Party held

INGELS
MIDDLEPORT

Green Thumbs ·

MRS. MAXINE ·WINGE'IT
Beocl 0' the Rlvtr Garden Club
The Christmas season is Indy a lime when a Green Thumb
can really prove to the world the wonderful joys of life.
Oirtst's birth was surrounded by many natural, significant
forms of life, bOth great and lllllll~; the ~!limBis (donkey, sheep,
camels~ dog, cattle), human beiilgs; Mary, Joseph, shepherds;
wise'men, imkeeper, many' travelers', and the angels. Also the
glorious shining star, the kinds ol trees and.plants growing in the
holy place of Bethlehem, all played parts in the birth of our
Savior.
'
•
In our modern day, we, in America, have developed many
Christmas· customs. The gathering together of our families,
remembering the more unfortunate one&amp; in the name of Jesus,
and becoming more conscious and appreciative of God's divine
gift to all mankind.
Our customs of decorating olir churches, homes, communities, business pia~. etc. throughout the land is growing
more beautiful each year. Every place, in 119Y direction we are
happily made aware of Christmas, God&gt;s great gift to and for
each of us.
•
·
. .Thinking of the many green and flowering plants and trees
being used in celebrating Christ's birth, the results of plans made
in the past become a reality. The more groWing, live things used,
provides for more knowledgeable and grateful hearts. Of all
green thumb trees, the many species of pine trees provide us
with the traditional Christmas tree. It is the most desirable
because of its shade of green, the extended branches so suitable
for lights and other ornament.&lt;~, and the many types of needles in
different lengths and groupings from two needles together to as
many as five or six.
The pine tree holds its needles, without dropping off more
than any of the other evergreens.
·
Holly is another evergreen that can be used for decorating.
Even the red berries add greatly. The green color represents
eternal life and the red of the berries means love. The five sharp
points of the leaves have religious meaning,s, similar to the five
pointed Christmas Star of the East.
.
Another impOrtant Christmas plant is the beautiful poinsettia.- The most practical color Is the red, ·but.they are available ·
with blooms of pink and white. The bloom that looks like petals is
actually leaves of the plant. This ts why the poinsettia blooms
last .so-long. It should be kept in a temperature of 65 degrees to 75
degrees. Water the pisntheavUy then do not water agQin until the
top dirt looks dry . Never let the plant sit in water. This will make
the leaves fall too early, and lack of water will also cause the
leaves to wilt and drop too soon.
Remember the birds . ._Many green thumbs have been
providing food, all kinds of seeds, suet, etc. that are so necessary
for our birds to have to eat ln tbe winter. They need our help in
the cold, snowy times, but they more than repay us with their
songs and beauty all the time.
·
When our growing plants need protection during ·our
summer they become mankind's great protectors because of
their swnm~ diets of insects ahd weed seeds. Remember, God
. "kn?'!~
when e*-'tht&gt;...-owtfaUa. W~a cio ow: part !Or th~
'1biros,and help_wl!h the ecology for all our sakes. ·
Christmas - keep It alive in our hearts. The green thumb of
God's spirit should always be growing, well fed, and healthy in
our daily lives..
As tilly Tim sayd, "God bless us, everyone," is our Christmas prayer for the whole world. May all of our efforts be moving
through God's imiversallove toward peace for all mankind.

110 E. 2nd
Pomeroy
Phone 992-5421

FURNITURE

,.

LA~Z-BOV

We talk to
like a person.

.,D...,

I.

Wanted To Buy
OLD Furniture, oak tables, .
organ~. dl.shes. clocks. brass
beds, or complete households.
Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pofll.eroy, Ohio. Call 9'12·6271 .
6-28-tlc

Notes • • ••

!

Business Services·

~7

HAYMAN'S Auction - a good
Concrete Work
Hardtop coupe, _tocai loW mileage, 1-owner car, 307place to go each Friday
Auto
Sales
Remodeling
·engine, 3-speed transmission, bucket seats, console blue
evening, 7 p.m. at Laurel Cliff
967
FURY
Ill,
4
door,
.383
18 cents per word she. con.
finish,
radio.
SHARP
IS
THE
WORD!
on old Rt. 7, 1 mile west of
engine, good condition, $800;
secuflve Insertions .
Rock Springs Fa irground.
Freddie Thabet, Mason, W.
25 Per Cent. piscqunt pn paid
10·10·1fc
1971 PINTO FORD
11599
1dsand ad_s pa1d w ffhi n 10 days.•
Va .-; phone 773·5651.
2-door, local 1-ow.ner, low mileage, good tires, clean Jn.
CARD OF THANKS. '
12-15-tfc
&amp; OBITUARY
, KOSCOT KOSMETICS&amp; WIGS,
terior:
green
finish,
radio,
2000cc
engine,
•·•reed.
SPECIALS MONTHLY .
$1.50 for SQ wOrd minjmUin ,
Phone 992-2511
PHONE HELEN JANE
Eact'l ~ddltional word 2c:
For
Rent
or 992-3918
BLIND ADS '
BROWN, MIDDLEPORT,
Additional 25c Charge per
TWO BEDROOM mobile home
OHIO 992·5113.
Advertisement.
·
on Old Rt. 33, adults only ;
12-J-tfc
.
OFFI~E HOURS
phone 9'12-6294 or 992-6385
OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.
8:30a.m. lo 5:00p.m. t;&gt;ally , THERE will be no Shooting
POMEROY
after
6 p.m.
.,PMI!IOY I OHIO
8: 30 a .m. to 12:00 Noon
12·24-10tc
Saturday.
·
Match at the Racine Gun Club
•HOME &amp; AUTO
this weekend due to ChristFURNISH ED apartment, 3
mas Holid~vs .
992-2094
rooms and bath, modern;
12·21·3fC Help Wanted
LEGAL NoTtce
In Memory '
RESOLUTION
phone 992:2623.
606 E. Main Pomeroy
WANTED:
EXPERIENCES
A
RESOLUTION
TO
IN MEMORY of our mother,
12·17-tfc .
SPECIALTY SALESMAN TO ESTABLISH A SPECIAL
Anna Stiles, who pa$Sed away
ESTABLISH NEW AC· FUND KNOWN AS THE HOUSE, 4 rooms and bath, full
SUPPLIES
one year ago today.
COUNTS.
GUARANTEED FEDERA L GENERAL basement, automatic ' heat,
Oece,.,ber 26:
and
WEEKLY DRAW AGAINST REVENUE SHARIN G TRUST Lincoln Heights ; phone 742·
II doesn't matter where we
FUND
•
go, a·nd no matt~r what we do,
COMMISSIONS. One,call
Be 11 Resol ved by fhe 50'12.
There. will always be some
closer, such as ,an who has · Trustees of Orange Towns!'lip as
12·22-6tp
s u ~cessfully sold Iandi In- follows :
thing's, To make us think of
surance1 mutual funds, ~Orne
Sec. L That whereas , the TRAILER spaces ; extra large . Stop In and See Our
you.
Floor Display . ·
Improvements, franchlses 1 Congres~ has erected the Sta te lots, $25 a month, Velma
Your face and voice arg fresh In
vending,
freezer
plans,
and
Loca
l
Fisca
l
Assistance
Act
mind, We never shall lorget.
Zuspan, Mason, w. Va.
educatlon 1 etc . Can have of 1972 provid ing a system of
No · matter ·how lhe years go
Furnace
Controls
11-29-JOtp
brlghtfuture with nationally general reVenue shar ing with
by, Our love Is with you yet. states and unit s of Loca l
Frances, Helene and Rolli n.
HUMIDIFIERS
advertised company. Ex- GOvernment. and
J ROOM furnished house. adults
12-26-ltp
1remely high earnings
Whereas, Section 123 la l 111
Mob~e Homes For Sale
only ; phone 992-5592.
Hot Water Heaters
potential . Our top producers of th is fedeal act requires each
12·5·tfC
earn commiSsions of $25,000 unit of local government to
TO COMMEMORATE the
Plumbing
CASH paid for all makes and
to $50,000 per year. If you can establish a trust fund to rece ive TWO new mobile homes, never
birthday of Ethel Fox Elias,
moofels of mobile homes .
Electrical Work
travel extensively and have a federal revenue sharing , and ·
born December 26. 1884:
Phone area code 614·423·953!.
lived
in;
phone
992-2511.
Whereas, the Bureau of In .
Remembrance is a golden
good car, we'll prove it to you. spectton and suPervision of
4·13.tfc
12·$-lfc
chalr;.Death tries to br~k but
For additional Information Public Offices has approved the - - - - - - - · all In vain; To have~ to love
and personal IntervieW~ call es tablishment of a " Federal FURNISHED 2 · bedroom
3 BEDROOM trail er, partially
and then to part. Is the
Mr . Por-ter, toll free at (800) Revenue Shar ing Trust Fund "
apartment,
adults
only,
furnished, some underpinnhig
. 621 -1006, (8001 621·8182, (800} In lhe subd ivis ion receiving
gr~&amp;atest sorrow of one's
Middleport ; phone 992·3874.
and steps; phone 742·4833.
621 -7501.
assistance und er the federal
heart. The years may wipe
. 12·12·ffC
act, as required by section
99H448 ·
12-22-6fc
out m~ny things, But this they
12'24-lfp 5705.12
of the Oh io Rev ised
wipe out never - The
Pomeroy,
Code .
3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
memory of those happy days, '
FOR THE position of half-time
No w Therefore,
Be
It
unfurnished apartments. 1970 MOBILE Home, air·
When we were all together. - s'HOTGUN MATCH, Sunday,
• · H Program Assistant. Resolved b y the Trustees of
conditioner, like new •. fully
Phone 992·5434:
Sadly missed by Family, Dec. 24th, 12 noon . Side Hill
Contact the County Extension Orange Townsh ip, State of Ohio
carpeted . $3,100; phone 985·
4·12·tfc
that ,
Sisters· and Brothers.
4248.
Office
In
the
basement
of
the
Gun Club; factory choke guns
Sec . 11 . There is hereby
12-26-ltp only
Counly
Home.
Phone
992·3895
12·22-6tp
; no alcoholic beverages
esta blished e specia l fund Pets For SC~Ie
for
details
.
The
Cooperative
allowed ; assorted' meats ; soft
a.s "th e Federal General
Extension Service is an Equal known
~evenue
Fund under th e
drinks will be sold ; free
Toy Poodles, wormed and NEED ANOTHER BEDROOM,
OpportunIty Em pi oyer. provisions of section 5705.12 of AKC
DEN OR FAMILY ROOM
coffee ; directions to match housebroken.
Will hold for
Training
beyond
high
school
the
Ohio
Revised
Code.
FOR
YOUR
MOBILE
31f&gt;miles North of Rutland to
Christmas. Phone 742-3872.
is
desired
but
not
required.
Sec
.
Il
l.
A
It
monies
paid
to
the
HOME?
EASILY
DONE
Forest Acres Park, take
12·14·12tc
Applicant must have a car Township und er the State and
WITH A VEMCO ADD·Agravel road to first road left
Local ·Fiscal Assistance Act of
available.
. ROOM. SEE · IT AT :
'h mile ; there will be signs
1?72 shall be credited to said PARKVIEW Kennels going out
12·24C
3tp
YOUNG'S MOBILE HOME
from park to match; not
fund and expe nded In ac ..
of business . Big P(ice
SALES,
ST. RTE . 7 &amp; 35
cordan ce with the ter ms end
responsible for accidents.
reduction on all dogs. All AK·
BRIGHT. prov isions of said federal act . C..
(BELOW
SILVER
·
12·21-3tc WE'LL SEND
592
BrQadway
&amp;
.Ash
·
YOUNG
MEN
TO
SCHOOL
MEMORIAL
BRDG . I.
Se~~
1
v
,
ThIs
resolution
is
SYRACUSE - The wedding
Streets, Middleport, Ohio.
FOR RADAR JOBS IN hereby declared to be an
GALLIPOLIS.
12-13.tfc
vows· given by the Rev .
EUROPE . It you'd like to live emergency measure necessary
12·24·61c
for
the
preservation
of
th
e
and work In Europe, there's
Freeland Norris, of Racine
REGISTERED
Iris
h
Setter
-public peace, health , safety and
an excltllig job waiting for welfar.e,
such em erg ency
wtited In marriage Miss Peggy
puppies.
4
weeks
old;
call992·
you with today's Army. You'll arising out of the need to
Hubbard, daughter of Mr. and
learn to supervise and control provide a lawful fund into which son
·Air &lt;;onditioners ·
12·22·31c
ground surveillance radar federa l revenue general
Mrs. Oris Hubbard and Robert
·•
• Awnings
units. With full pay while Shari ng
payments
can
Anthony of Colwnbus, at the
credited
for
ex .
you're in school. And lofs of be
: ·Underpinning
For Sale
home of the bride's parents at 7
Officers were elected at a
olher benefits. Like 30 days penditures in the manner for
ald vacation a year . If you're the purposes prov ided under th e DUE TO lay.off, 8 track stereo 'Co mplete mqblle hQme' :
p.m. Dec. 16.
· recent meeting of the Adult
Fisca l In walnut console; pay
ookl ng for this .kind of Sta te andAct Local
·service ~ plus gigantic'
ot 1972 : when
Tile brlde was attired in a Class of the Bradford Church of
balance of $98.80 or pay $8 per 'display
challenge and excitement, Assistance
of mobile homes
this resolution sha ll take effect &lt;IJ10~t~
; ~ho~e '12-5331, ,
' ;illwa.y's lovafjaJflli!llt&gt;l...l' · '
Today'~. Armx wants to join an~ be In forc e ;tq~ll'f and • after
fK leiJI!III blue ~own With a Christ. , 1 ,
.
}.. n ~h,.111"1-.H,..o~ 12'· 12-1fc
you. For complefe'd~falls call !ts passage.
' 1;1. tt
~ ap.d pink corsage. The
Elected were Mrs. Mliared
1
collect,, SS G1 Clark 593·3022. Sec . V . This resolution shall --------~-, ~
brrdesmald "'was
Carol Sisson, president ; Mrs.
12·20·6tc take effect end be in force from JUST taken in deluxe Zig.Zag
and after Dec . 18, 1972.
sewing
machine.
This
aogardis, and the best man Frances
Hysell ,
vice
Passed the 18th day of machine
darns ,
em- MO.BIL~ HOMES
WANTED. male Social Security December
1972.
was the groom's brother , president; Mrs. Marge Wilt,
broideries, makes but.
or Old Age penSioner to help
1220 Washinglon Blvd. ·
W. S. Henderson
wl
lhout
at.
tonholes
,
all
Frank Anthony, both of secretary, and Mrs . Nora
move male from bed to chair.
423-7521
BELPRE, 0.
Orange Township President
tachments;
pay
balance
of
Contact
Mrs.
Ed
J
.
Smith.
·
Altest
:
Nina
Ro
binson
,
Clerk
Columbus. The couple is Cambron, treasurer. Mrs .
phone 992·2853. ·.
Rl. 2 Coolville. Oh io 45723 $38.50 or pay S6 per month; ,r---------..J
r~siding in Columbus.
Helen Miller will continue as
phone 992-5331.
12·21·31c (121 26, 27, 21
12·12-tfc Real Estate For Sale
Attending were Mr . and Mr$. card secretary , and news
'
Robert Anthony, Sr., Frank reporter will be Mrs. Hysell. PLUMB .ING and Heating man,
SINGER
Automatic
sewing 8 ROOM house and bath, nice
experienced ; If not ex.
LEGAL NOTICE
large lot. natural gas, bullf.in
and Linda Anthony, James and
Devotions by ' Mrs . Jackie
machine. Like new In waihut . cabinets
perlenced and honest, do ·not
RESOLUTION
in kitchen, close to
cabinet.
Makes
design
·
slit·
apply · phone 992·2511 or 992· A Resol ution to ESTABLISH
Barbara· Mitchell, David Reed opened the meeting. She
radio
station
in Bradbury.
ches. zig-zags, buttonholes.
3918 '
. A SPECIAL FUN D KNOWN AS
Phone
992·2602.
Anthony, Fred Anthony, John read scripture, Matthew 1, Ill·
THE FEDERA L GE NE RAL
blind hems, overcasts ~ etc.
12·21·20fp
12·6·1fc REVENUE SHA RING TRUST
$85. Call Ravenswood 273-9521
Anthony, and Ed Anthony, 25 and poems, "His Name at
~-------FUND
ColUmbus; George Shaw, the Top" and "Ten C~m­
Be it Resolved by the or 273-9893.
11.JO.tfc HOUSE FOR SALE, 114 Brick
Trustees ot Col urn bla Township
Glena and Randy Lilley, mandments for Christmas LEGAL NOTICE
Street. Pomeroy, Ohio ; brick
as fallows :
Sec
.
I.
That
whereas,
the
house,
3 bedrooms, excellent
Ironton; David Flowers and Shopping," concluding with
NOTICE OF
Cong ress has enacted the State
location,
close lo school and
APPOINTMENT
Carol Lape, Columbus; Mr. prayer. Report.&lt;~ were read and
Local Flsca1 Assistance Act
city; contact Lou Osborne or
Case No. 20622 and
of 1912 provid ing a system of
and Mrs. Donald Van Langen approved.
call 992.5898.
Es tat e of Hugh Everett Loudin general
revenue sharing with
Deceased
.
11·26-tfc
and children, Columbus; Mr.
Homer Forrest gave the
and units of local
Notice is hereb y given that $fates
government,
and
and Mrs . Charles Salser, benediction and refreslunents Winifred J . Franklin of Rt . 1.
Sec:tlon 123- (a 1 ( 1)
2 STORY HOME, full basement,
Amesville, Ohio. hu been duly of Whereas.
act requires eac h
Racine ; Mr. and Mrs. Michael of oyster soup was served to appo
bath &amp; 112. extra lot and, at.
inted Executrix of the unitthe offederal
loca
l
governm
ent
to
!ached
garage ; available
Estate
of
Hugh
Everett
Loud
in,
Hubbard, Bidwell, and Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Homer Forrest,
a trust fu nd to receive .
now;
may
be had with basic
deceased , late of Rt . 2, establish
Mrs. Wayne Hubbard, local. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Miller, Cheshire, Meigs County. Ohio . federal revenue sharing1 . and ·
furn
iture
;
r&gt;ear. P0 meroy
.
1
PAIR
FREE
Whereas, the Bureau of In Creditors are required to file spection
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Sisson, Mrs.
Elementary
School ; phone
ahd Supervision of
The best buy In the area·.
their clai ms with SQid·fidu clary Public Offices
CYC PARTY HELD
992·7384
or
992·7133.
has
approved
the
Cambron , Mrs. Norma within rou r months.
Have-slacks &amp; Jeans for the
of a " Federal
12·24-6tc
Dated th is 8th da y of establishment
The
Christian
Youth Russell, Mrs. Tressie Henwhole
family. Save One.
Genera l Revenue Shar ing Trust
December 1972 .
Third.
Crusader Christm~s party was dricks, Mrs. Reed, Mr. and
C. B. RADIOS, antennas, also
Manning D . Webster Fund " In each subdivis ion .
receiving
assistance
under
th
e
.
•
•
POMEROY
pollee · scanners; Dalley's
Judge
held Friday night at the Laurel Mrs. Tip Wilt; Mrs. Eleanor
Ail Jack w. carsey, Mgr.•
cour t of Common Pleas, iede~al act, as required by
Radio Shop, Box 21 B, Long
Cliff Free Methodist Church Hoover, Mrs. Verna HyseU,
5705.12. of the Ohio
·
Phone- 2181
Probate Division sectoon
Bottom. Ohio.
Revised
Code
;
no£baseme nt. Mrs. Richard Mrs. Frances HyseU, Belinda {12 1 12, 19, 26. Jt
12·24·61c
. Now Therefor e Be it Resolved ·
·
C
·
by
the
Trustees
of
Columb
ia
1964
CHEVROLET
onvertlble
Friend read the scripture. and Edie Grimm.
Townshir, stat e ol Ohio that : Impala, 3 .speed; $195. 16
NOTICE OF
Gill.&lt;! were opened and games
sec . I. There is hereby gauge 3 shot boll acflon
APPOINTMENT
established
a·speclal fund to be Mossburg, adlustable choke,
were played with cookies and
Case
No
.
20,814
WATCH SERVICE
known as the "Federa l General $30· 670·15 mud &amp; snow tire on
Estate
ol
FRANK
E.
TITUS.
CLELAND
punch being served. At the
Revenue Sharl~g Trust Fund "
Fo~d or Dodge wheel , $5;
There will be a watch service Decease·a .
REALTY
iSions of sec.tlon
Raymond Pierce, 949·237.4. ·
Notice Is hereby given that under theol prov
party were Mrs.' Friend and at the Ash Street Freewill
the Ohio Remed
,
Vivian K . Titus, of Pomeroy, 5705.12
21
lot e. Moln
12
3
· - c
Mrs. Doris Buckley, directors, Baptist Church in Middleport, Ohio, has been duly appointed Code.
Pomeroy
Sec . 111 . All monies paid to the -=:-:=--:-:-:-:-:-:--::--:-Execu tr ix of th e Estate of
Ricky· Baker, Angie Baker, Dec. 31, at 7:30p.m. There will Fra11k
Township
under
the
Stat
e
and
ONE
NEW
031
Stlhl
chain
saw,
E. Titus, deceased , late
Local Fisca l Assistance Act of $190. Phone 742-5322, N. E.
Crystal Buckley, Sharon be various singing groups and Of Meigs County, Ohio.
JUST RENOVATED
1972 sha ll be credited to said·
Vanaman .
Creditors
are
required
to
file
Buckley, Mark Friend, Linda several ministers will preach. their claims with sa id .flduciary fund and expended in ac MIDDLEPORT
- 1 story
12·24·31c
cordance with the terms and
frame. 2 bedrooms, dining
Friend, Sherri Clark, John Everyone is welcome to attend within four months.
room, bath, 26 ft. living
Dated th is 7th day of provisions of said federal act . .- -- -- - - - Smith, Laura Gail Smith, this all night camp meeting. Decem
Sec . II/ . This. resolution is EAR LY Ameri can stereo-rad io room. carpeted throughout. 2
ber 1972.
comblt\ation, AM·FM radio, 4
Mann ing D. Webster . Judge hereby declared to be an
Diane Smith, Angie Barton, For more information, call446emergency measure necessary speaker sound Sy$tem, 4 car carport. $12.500.00.
Common
Pleas
Court
• LARGE COLONIAL
and
Joyce
Baker 4448.
speed au1omallc changer;
Probate Div ision for the preservation of the
POMEROYRECENTLY
publ
ic
peace,
health
,
safety
and
balance
$79
.31
.
Use
our
Meigs County , Oh io
{ 12 ) 12, 19, 26. 3t
welfare , such · emergency budget terms. Call 992·7085.
RENOVATED
The kit·
ar ising· out of the need to
chen
is
a·house
wife's
dream,
provide a lawful fund In to wh ich
12-l9·6tc
EVERYTHING BUILT IN, 4
federal general revenue sharing
bedrooms. 2 baths, utility R.
payments can be credited for MODERN , Walnut style stereo.
SYRACUSE :_ The Sunshine mas Tree, Hark The Herald
expend it ures In the manner and radio, AM-FM redlo, 4 carpeted . EXCELLENT
tor the pUrposeS; prov ided under rspeaker sound sys1em, 4 STR EET. $17,500.00.
Makers' Sunday School Class Angels Sing, We Three Kings,
the Stale and Local Fiscal
"d
t
ti
h
.8SAtRE
Assistance Act of 1972 ; where spe&lt; au oma c c anger.
·held itb annual Christmas and It Came Upon the Midnight .
RACINE - B~utltul older
this resolution shall take effect Balanc e S68.57. Use our
dinner at Crow's Steak House Clear.
an d be In Ioree 11om and alter budget terms. Call 992-7065.
home, new kitchen, 9 rooms,
its passage .
12·19-7065. 5 bedrooms, l'h baths, full
Monday, Dec. 18, at 6:30p.m.,
An article " Birthdays,
The annual Christmas dinner
Sec . v . This Resolution shall
12·19·6tc
basement, garaQe and other
then returned to the annex of Holidays and other Disasters" and party of the Bradford take effect and be In for ce from
buildings.
the First United Presbyterian was read by Mrs. Dwight Church of Christ Adult Class and alter December 22, 1972. 1.72 ACRE lot ; phone 742- ~
LARGE 2 STORY
Pused the 22nd day ol
12·24-2tp
Church annex for a program Zavitz. This was followed with was held recently at the December 1972.
MIDDLEPORT
5
Arnold
Jordan
bedrooms.
Ph
baths,
nice
and gift from Secret Pals prayer.
&amp; N DAY old or started
church. Mrs. Edith Forrest
Columbia Twp . Presldenl H Leghorn
kitchen, cellar. garage. 2
pullets. Both floor
Attest
:
Gloria
Hutton
which were placed under a
A skit "Always The Same presented a program entitled
glassed
sunporches.
or
cage
grown
available
.
Clerk
decorated tree. Those not Christmas" was given by Jean "No Room." ·Mrs. Mildred
Poultry
housing
&amp; $12.800.00.
FROM USTOYOU
automation . Modern Poultry.
having Secret Pals exchanged Hall and Janice Lflwson. A gift Sisson read a verse, "The {12 I 26, 17 , 21
A GREAT BIG
399
W
.
Main,
Pomeroy,
992·
gifts.
of money was presented to the Shepherds' Gifl.&lt;l," and there
2164.
HAPPY NEW YEARS
A Christmas prayer was Rev. and Mrs. Javitz. Cake, was a carol sing. Harry
12·24·11c
'lven In unison, history of brownies, cookies, cof!ee, lind Hendricks closed with prayer.
HENRY E. CLE_LAND
COAL. Limestone,. E&lt;eelsior
)'OU
Cluistnlall carols wlis read by pop were served.
and ASSOCI~TES
Gifts were exchanged and
Sail Works, E. Main St.,
Office 9t2-2259
Unda Hubbard and after each
Attending were Jean Hall, secret pals revealed. Attending
Pomeroy. Phone 992.3891.
If
no
onswer
9t2·2568 or 9154·12-tfc
reaclng one of the8e was sung, Charlotte Nease, Beatrice were Mr. and Mrs. Homer
4109.
Ole* The Halla, Angels From Blake, Janice Lawson, Thelma Forrest, Mr. an~ Mrs. Paul
'ft!t S.lml Of Glory, God Grueser, Helen Diddle, Helen Sisson , Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Ye Merry Gentlemen, Harris, Agnes White, Mildred Wilt, Mr. dnd Mrs. Harry
0 Come All Ye Pierce, Margaret Cottrill, Hendricks, Mr. and Mrs. Jim
lllent Night, Joy To Linda Hubbard, Doris Wilt, Reed, Mrs . Eleanor Hoover,
I Heard The Bella Pauline Morarity, and the Rev. Mrs . Verna Hysell, Mr~ .
. . . . Day, Away In A and Mrs. Dwight Zavitz.
Frances Hysell and Mr. and
Flm Noel, Oh ChristMrs. Kenneth Carson :

--------

Green Thumb

r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ;··-

'

Ajax

........ 99",
5-1~.

l,.oupbrl

"'..,. Dvty Oot......

Uquld Wlsk

n-••·68"
Ill.

,

wllh coupon ond purch... of
ony two pockooe•
!..1UIOII1 C.U!

1·

f.

�•
U- •he [lp tly Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pomerny, 0., Dec. 26, 1972

Mrs. Pillsbury died on Monday

Bombs

MASON - Mrs . Norma
Loui8e PiUsbury, 51, Johnstown, Ohio, · former Mason
County resident, died Mondsy
at her borne.

Mrs. Pillsbury was the ·
daug
of the fate Lou Roush
(Continued from page I)
and ts. ea I.Slewart.F.ox,-of heaviest raids in the history of
Johnstown . Besides her the Indochina war and included
mother, Mrs . Pillsbury is B:i2 missions over the Hanoisurvived by her husband Haiphong area for the first
.
Henry C. (Arky) Pillsbury; a·' time.
daughter, Mrs.
Jatnes
The North Vietname8e said
Radebaugh, Oak Park, Ill., and the big Stratoforts laid down
her stepfathe·r, Billie Fox, carpets ' of bombs on civilian
't
Joh'nstown.
areas in the capital and in
She was a member of the · other cities and towns. ComNew Albany United Methodist mand spokesmen today said
Church at Johnstown and Nixon's order to resume _the
"The Two of Us" Ea;tern Star Chapter 71 at unrestricted raids over the
Beaumont, Texas.
North included all but civilian
Funeral services will be at 11 . targets.
I
a.m. Wednesday at the Crouse
In Paris, Hanoi delegates to
. Galfipolis, 0.
and Son Funeral Home In the stalled peace talks 'said
Johl)stown. The body will be U.S. bombings of the Hanoi,
..- - - - - - - - • brought to the ' Foglesong Haiphong area contlnued
Funeral Home here where through Christmas Ql!irnlng,
friends may call from 7 to .9 ·"making many victims among
Tonight
p.m. Wednesday. Local funeral the Civilian population." The
December26
services will be at the Heights latest Hanoi Radio. broadcast
THE REVENGERS
United Methodist Church in reported raids on the area
(Technlcolor)
Susan Hayword
· Point Pleasant at 1 p.m. Thurs- Christmas Eve.
.
,.
William Holden
day with the Rev. Charles
~e spokesma~ lll Satgon
. Colorcartoons
Frum officiatjng. The body will swd today Hano_t reports of
lPG)
Show Starts 7 p.m .'
be at the church from noon ' U.S. air raids durlllg the bomb
until time of services. Burial halt were not neceasar.ily false.
Wednesday &amp; Thursday
will be in !Qrkland MemQrial U.S. reconnai~sance planes
December 21.21 ·
Gardens.
may ha;~ been fired on b)(
NOT .OPEN
· NQI'th Vtetnamese gunners, he
said, and ,es~ort , fighterbombers in such a case woold
hav~ attacked the gun
positions.
The Christmas truce that'
went into effect at 5 a.m. EST
Sunday was not announced In
advance, the U.S. command
apokesman said, because ''we·
believe an advantage would
accrue 'to the enemy of
foreknowledge of a stand

Now Appearing
In The
· Paddle Wheel
lounge

HOLIDAY INN

MEIGS THEATRE

For anything having to do with
money, -we .can make arrange-

We'll do the work on any
piece of your banking or

handle your 'entire financial
p!eturo.
'
~ doeo it lllf you il the
dolilf Is done at the wideawa~e

Charles H. Diehl, ~1.
Pomeroy, a Democrat Pa_rty
leader and a former Pomeroy
postmaster, died Moni\By at
University Hospital In
Columbus following a lingerinl!
illness.
Mr ·Diehl was employed with
· the National Life Insurance Co.
arid was a member of Middleport's
Feeney-Bennett
128, American
Legion .Post
Ue
belonged to the Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church.
Surviving are his wife,
Bertha ·, two sons, Louis, of
Cleveland, and Charles, Jr., at
home ; two step-cni,ldren,
Roger Staats, serving_with the
U. S. Arm in Texas and

~a~J'so:.~=he=~~:;"~e;,

bank.

lhe tvit!e-itulfllre brmk mokes i{fjj_so en..w ·

Co.

Farmers Bank &amp;
POMEROY, OHIO

Member of Federal Reserve S)'slem
On Fridays Our Drive-In Window Is Open 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.

(Continuously).

S20,000 Muimum Insurance for Each Depositor

Thomas Denney, 20, Rt. I,
·G
Galli_
11 polis, was arrested by the
d a ta1m County
t s d sheriff's
. epar
en f un ay night on
h
c arges o possession of
marijuana and carrying_ a
concealed weapon.
Sheriff-elect James W.
Saunders said this morning

·A Ulos CO ll!IUe
J-_
·
- The departm ent of She~iff

.Denney was pulled over
Sunday drivin'g on Georges
Creek dHd., apparenUy on a tip,
while epuli'18 were on routine
patrol. Denney~ granted offleers permission to search his
car. They found one package of
marijuana of about two O\lflCes
in the car's trunk.
The car then was ·towed tO
th bull
beh' d th
e
pen area
m
e
· GaUia County Jail where it was
Searched thoroughly by Deputy
Johh Knapp's mariJ'uanasniffing dog which found
another two-ounce package
under the front seat.
Also confiscated were two
pipes and cigarette paper. '
Saunders said a pistol was
found in the glove com·
partment.
Denney will appear in
Gallipolis Municipal Court
Wednesday
on led
the
h
f h morning
·
0
c arge
avmg a concea ·
deadly .weapon . The other •

charge may not be heard until
after Jan. 1:-"
•
Denney is presently on
probation on conviction of
breaking and entering.
.- Sheriff's deputies also in·
vestigated a B&amp;:E Sunday at
the residence of Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Neekamp on Bull Run
Rd.

De 11
'd
pu es sat someone en·
tered the home and took a set of
dishes which were g_ift
wrapped under the Chrisim_as
tree,
Other arrests were Virgil
Booten, 49, Rt. I, Gallipolis,

charged with OWl, hlwklp,
driving under revocation
resisting arrest; Roger ~
·
Miller, 23, Columbus,
fl Ut·
Ji'
toxication and open as !
Ralph D. Lavender, 34',
Syracuse, DWI; James Gary
Straight, 26, Rt. 1, Patriot,
DWI; Valjean Ronald Cleell-,
44, South Charleston, DWlj
G L J hna 19 Rt 4 Oak
ary . o on, , . , . , .
Hill, reckless operation atl4
Gerald Dillow, 36, ironton, wli:l
1
transferred to Gallla Coun•,•
'
from the Lawrence County Jajl
for safekeeping.
::
.;
,..

~'

a_r_ ·u.

pomp and pageantry and who exchanges will be closed.
said men provide their own
Nixon . and his wife .. Pat
fonn I ol dignity 0 planned hiS ' planned tony to Indepetldence
own funeral and stipulated that during the la,te afternoon, lay a
there,be no riderless borse, no wreath at the Trwnan Library
carriages and no drumbeats at and pay their respects to the
the ceremony.
family. The Nixons will return
President Nixon, hailing to WaShingtOn four hours later.
Trwnan as a man' of ''viBlon They will not attend the simple
and Iguts" declared a 30-day funeral R(anned for Thursday.
, perij'd of mourning with flags
Former President Lyndon B.
on all covernment buildings Johilson, his wife Lady Bird,
flying . at half staff, and and their daughters. and their
'proClaimed Thursday a husbands, also announced
-national day · of mourning. plans to fly to Independence
Thete will be no mail delivery this afternoon. Johnson
that day, and both the New remembered·Trwnan as ·a man
York
and American stock . ''wbo was never flinching in
l

ea

resz ent

the face of crucial national ble."
choices."
· Other momentous decisions
nie Toughest Choice
Truman made during his two
Truman said the. toughest terms, 1~5-1953, included !
choice he made as president
- The go-ahead for develo()was sending U.S. troops to ment of the hydrogen . bomb.
Korea in'a "police action" that
- The Berlin airlift to foil
kept Coiillilunist soldiers from Russia's blockade of the
taking over territory south of isolated city .
the 38th Parallel. He said that
- The "Truman Doctr-ine" to
decision overshadowed all oth· keep Russia out of southern
ers, including his order to drop Europe.
the atomic bomb on Japan.
- The creation of the North
The atomic bomb order, · Atlantic Treaty Organization
Truman ·said, ''was pur~ly a (NATO) .
mUitary matter that saved
Messages of sympathy and
thousands of American lives. sorrow arrived from dlgnala·
No other course was conceiva· ries and chiefs of state around

the world as well as !tom the ident," Johnson, 64, said from ·
common people Trtirnan tUs Li!J Ranch In central
identified with.
Texas. "I shall miss him in
"The whole town is mourning most personal and private
for the President," said Gerald way, and I shall be grateful all
Gilkey, mayor of Lamar, . the my days for the privilege of
rural southwestern Missouri having known so great a man."
town where Truman was born.
Nixon praised Truman as
"The old Truman house has "one of the most courageous
been closed."
· presidents in our history."
A Most Respecled Advisor
"He did what had to be done
Former President Lyndon B. when it had to be ' done and
Johnson said Truman was one generations to come will be In
of his mo~t respected advisors his debt,': Nixon said. He said
when Johnson was in the White the world's 'people adritired
House.
him "in a description he
"Harry Truman was my himself might have apfriend before he was pres(Continued on page 12)

a

'

Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Area
VOL. XXV NO. 178 ,

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1972

PHONE 992·2156

TEN CENS

•

anoz ravaged

Succeeded

.

ELBERFELDS .IN P'OME-ROY

BRI\&amp;GIRDLE

Save up to SZ.OJ on these
treat 'Pia,.. .,,,.,

STOREWIDE

Fabric Reductions
Trims • Accessories

family borne in Independence,
Mo., slilce leavir« office Jn .
1952, a familiar figure to
townspeople through his
famous early morning walba habit he had to curtail and
finally end as he grew older
and more feeble.

25%
TO

50% OFF
SALE STARTS TODAY,
TUES., DEC. 26

The Fabric Shop
THE SINGER STORE
115 W. Second
992-2284

·INDEPJ;:NDENCE, Mo. day.
(UP!) -Americans from the
The body of the tough little
Missouri farmlands where he "Man of Independence,"
was reared to the White House whose· momentous decisions
where ·he served as 33rd during and after World War 11
President mourned Harry s· shaped the destiny of his
Truman today. His body lay in country, died Tuesday at the
repose in a funeral home, .the age ~ 88 after a three-week
casket permanently sealed.
battle against old age and
Bess Trwnan, his childhood disease.
sweetheart and wife for 53
His body will lie in state in
years, their only daughter the sealed coffin in the Truman
Margaret Daniel, and other Library. Truman will be buried
~lose relatives. and friends on the grounds near his home
gatheredlntheTrulnan family '.he loved -''in the courtyard,
. home in Independence for the near the rose garden" of the
· funeral, a small , private library.
·
ceremony planned for Thurs.
Truman, who was opposed to

•

•

·

The Fabric Shop's YeQr-End

Save

.

•

atzon ·m ourns

ani!

M. Peenles. is dead

J.Je BJazer
died
M da

Truman

menta to your satisfaction.

,

died on Monday

;

R0 be. r t Har t en bach In •
vestigated _a tw!H'Br accident
oo Townshtp Road 43 near the
l!pshan Store at 4:25 p.m.
"mondaY· .
A ~r driven by Mayford
M.
.
'(lret
Hams, 52, Long Bottom,
• e•
r
pulllng from a drtve":'ay,
Mrs. Margaret · M. Peeples, employed in consume~
Y
' • · struck an ~as\ bound car drtven
67, of' 840 North Trimble Road, • research analysis work with
·
by David Allen Carter,
of
Mansfield, died Saturday .the Columbus Dispatch.
;
Cleveland; his mother, Pomeroy. There .~as light
evening at the Mansfield
She was a member of th~
. hi , p mneroy Route damage
. . 0 1e
Gimerai Hospital. .
Lexington Church of Chris~.'
Ge orgla
. to the Harrts, car and
2, and two brothers, Paul, of medtum to_ Ca~ter s. There
Mrs. Peeples had resided in Daughters of America, Prlc~
Culumbus, and Ivan, Texas. were _- no InJUries and no
the Mansfield area the past 10 207, Columbus Chapter ot
· ther, LoUvoe
"' hi ,preceded arrests
years . . She had lived In White Shrine, the Mansfield
Htsfa
At 6·. 35
S d
d h
hi 111
· d th
· p.m. un ay 0 n
Pomeroy and later In Grotto i\axiliary ail I ~
m
ea · . . .
. County Road 28 t'n Sutton T •JJ•
te
Columbus
where she was Disabled Arnertcan Veharans
Funera I servtces will.be held ., sh'
b k. d
·
.,., d
eer was
.
. . .
.
.
,
A,uxiliary, Columbus C pter
t I
1 the .own IP. a uc
a . p.m. • .. urs ay a
struck and killed by a car
Ewmg Funeral Home \\'ttjl the driven by Beverly J. Dowell, . ·
. OU
On y · Vet~rans· Memorial Hospital 13Surviving are her h~band·,
~~\ Ro~ert 1B~;~~ ~- 22, Racllie Route I. Damage to NEW HAVEN - Mrs. Lillie SATURDAY ADMISSIONS William B. Peeples; a son,
lela mg. ~ta WI
m e the car was light. There were Johnson Blazer, . 89, died - Terri Hurlow, Mason; Earl William C., of lexington; two
R~ck Sprmgs Cemetery· no personal injuries.
Monday at her residence in the Harless, Dexter, and Michael brothers, )l.aymond Lohn,
Frtends may call at the funeral
u· c
'ty
N
Johnson Ra ·
mon ommunt near ~w
• cme.
Westerville, and _Otto Lohn of
home any time.
Haven. Mrs. Blazer was born
SATURDAY DISCHARGES Pomeroy, and five grandCALL ANSWERED
Nov. 7, 18831n Mason County, - Martha McElroy , Nara children.
The Middleport E·R squad the daughter of the late James Hartman, Walter Wilson and
Funeral services will be held.
answered a call to Page st., at P. and Sarah Hart Johnson.
Gregory lewis.
·
sda t th
1' 30 p.m. Wedne y a e
SUNDAY
A
.DMISSIONS
at
6:54 pm. Sunday for William
Surviving are a ·daughter,
Snyder Funeral Home, 2553
(Continued fro!D page I)
Brunning, Cedar Grove, W. Mrs. Lillian Jackson, Newell , Edward Freeman, Pomerny; Lexington Ave., Mansfield,
National Guard arid going to Va., who while walking along W. Va.; two sons, Thurman, Mary Fori!, Letart, W. Va.; with Mr. ')l.oger Doty ofEurope during ' World War I. the street collapsed. Suffering Jr., and Chester, both of East George Batey, Pomeroy; ficiatlng. Burial will be in the
down"
After the war, Truman chest palns, he was taken to Liverpool; two sisters, Mrs. David Whitsell, Pomeroy; Greenlawn Cemetery,
Truce Extended
returned to ~nsas aty and
The liming of today's ooml&gt;- married the former Bess Veterans Memorial Hospital Edna Weaver,. Canton, and Cynthia Fox, Pomeroy, and Columbus. Friends may call at
where he was admitted. Just Miss Ann&amp; Johnson, local.
Gilbert Mees, Pomeroy.
the funeral home anytime.
ing resumption meant the
Funeral services will be at 3
SUNDAY DISCHARGJ;:S Wallace in 1919. Their only after !Opm, Monday the squad
truce had been extended 12 child, Margaret, was born in was called for Robert Craig at p.m. Thursday at the Union Flavy Sigman, Mary Weyerslnurs beyond the Initial 24 1924.
the residence, also on Page St. Methodist Church with the miller, Tamala Bowers,
hours. Informed Saigon
An Army friend, Jim Pen- Mr. Craig was dead upon the Rev. Bobby Woods officiating. Patricia Cleland, Roy Searsn Christy, Pomeroy; William
sources said earlier today
squad's arrival.
Burial will be in the Union Clara Smith, Arthur Goodin Brunning, Cedar Grove, W.
Nixon ·had ordered an in- dergast whose uncle was
Kansas City political leader
Cemetery. Friends may call at and Betty Ups ton.
Va., and Barbara Whittington,
definite extension of the bomb
Tom "Boss" Pendergast, got
the
Foglesong
Funeral
Home
MONDAY
ADMISSIONS
LOCAL
TEMPS
Pomeroy.
bait but later In the day, a 35Truman a job as county )lighTemperature in downtown · any time after 3 p.m. on Iris Morris, New Haven; Carl, MONDAY DISCHARGES.round Communist rocket
way overseer. Truman went to Pomeroy at 11 a.tn. Tuesday Wednesday. The body will be Moodispaugh, Middleport; I David 'Whitsell, Harrison
barrage hit the S)irawling Da
night school to study law and was 38 degrees, with snow taken to the church one hour Charles Frazier, Gallipolis; Robinson, Terri Hurlow and
Nang airbase 370mUea north of
moved through the Pendergast falling.
preceding the services.
Amy Eynon, Syracuse; Cora Kevin Barton.
Saigon . It was not known if
machine until he sought and
Nixon's order to resume the air
won a U.S. Senate seat In..1934.
,, .
war was linked to the Da Nang
He was te~lected In 1940 pnd
Incident.
chosen by Roosevelt as vice
~esldentlal nominee in 1944.
.As successor to Roosevelt,
whose more than three terms
through a depression and a
(Continued from page I)
world war made him a legend,
. freedom's cause."
Truman stood In a bold
ATruman family spOkesman Shadow. But he earned a
said: "It 'Is the wish of the reputation as a decisionfamily that In lieu of tlowers, maker, even among those who
friends make memorial dona- disagreed with those decisions.
tions to the Harry S Truman
''The Buck Stops Here," read
Library Institute, Indepen- the motto on his Oval Room
dence, Mo., or the charities of desk. And he 'iived and
their choice."
governed by the philosophy.
'
Jessie said Truman probably
He once admired an Arizona
would be buried "in the tombstone epitaph that said:
courtyard, near the rose "Here lies Jack Williams; He
garden" of the library he done his damodest.:•
established in 1957.
'
Truman said his most diffi.Truman was 467 days short cult decision was sending
of reaching his dream of living troops to KQI'ea in 1950. But
to age 90.
political histoi.lans rate high
his postwar Marshall Plan,
which helped rebulid Western
Europe economically, and his
support for the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization, which
. '
helped protect it militarily.
His Truman Docirine told
Russia to stay out' of Greece,
Turkey
and
Southern
Europe,
Angry at a nagging columnist, Truman called !be offendIng newspaperman
an
"S.P.B." When a music critic
was unkind to the professional
singing of his daughter
LIVING.BRAS
Margaret, Truman threatened
NEW! NO VISIBLE MEAN$ OF
SUPPORr-BRAS
to punch him In the nose.
(A) Style #132-Living Comfort Styled
ON SALE FOFI THE FIFIST TIME EVER
Bra ... ON SALE FOFI THE FIFIST
Stretch
In ll!e 1948 elections, Truman
...So Sheer. So leminine you'd never beTIME
EVEFI-(A,B,C)
...
Reg.
$6.50
ea
...
was an underdog because of
!ievelt supports ...
Now
'5.49.
(D Cups) ... Now •8.48.
.charges of corruption and "soft
Styl• #146-S/Ieer Lace .
Style #159-Liylng Stretch Bra-Stretch
· on Commun~" against his
!D)
Style
#148-Siteo;.
Straps ...(A.B.C) ... Reg. S4.95 ... Now 2 For
administration With public opi. Style 18148-Sheer (Beige)(A, B,Cl
18.40. (D Cups)... Now 2 For '10.40.
nion polls predicting his defeat ,
Style #179-Living ~ Stretch Bra-Rigid Reo. IMO... Now 14.49. (0 Cups)
Strap5 ... (A,B,C) ...Re&lt;,l. 14.50... Now 2 For ... Now.S.4t.
and newspapers publishing
17.50. (0 Cups) ... Now 2 For •.UO.
early editions giving the
DOUBLE DIAMONDs-GIRDLES
(B)Style 1186-LMng Und6rwlre Stretch Full Fronl Panelo For Firm
election to Dewey, Truman
Bra ... (B,C) ... Reg.$7.00... Now U.89.
Tummy Control ...
pulled off one of the upsets of
(0 Cups)... Now $8.99.
(E) Style #2830-Girdle ...(S, M, L. ~L'.
the century.
XXL',
XXXtl, XXXXit) ... Re&lt;,l. S10.95 ... Now
LIVING" LONGLINE BRAS
He had lived quietly at his

.

easy doesit!

Man held on marijuana possession

Otaries Diehl

•

•

Pomeroy

,,

FREE CJ..()TIIING
Free clothing day wiD be
held from 10 a.m. to 12 noon
Thursday at the Salvalion
Army headquarter~ on Butternut Ave., Pom~roy. All ln
the s(UT~undilll area Jn need of
clothing are welcome to attend.

(C) Style 1232-Liv/ng Stayless Lonoline

Bra ...ON SALE FOR THE FtFIST TIME
EYEFI-(B,CJ... Re&lt;,lcS9.95 ... Now 18,84...
(D Cups),.Now S9.84.
·
Style #259-Liv/ng Stretch Long/ineStretch StrapS ... (A,B ,CJ ... Reg. s1 .ils ...
Now 18.84. (0-CupsJ ... Now $7.94.
Style #239-Living 3/4 Length Longllne
-Stretch Straps ... (A.B,C) ... Reg. s 7.95 ...
Now $8.84. (0 Cups) ... Now $7.84.
Style t270-Livlng Stretch Longline with
2" Comtort Wsi!l Band-Stretch StrapS ...

(A,B.C) ... Reg, S8.95 ... Now H.84. (0
Cups)... Now 18.94.

U.84.

Style #2820-Shortle ... (S. M, L, XL') ...
Reg.$12,50 ... Now"0.4t.
Style #2B22-Average Leg ... (S, M, L,
XL'),.Reg.'12.95 ... Now 110.84.
Style 12834-Lon&lt;J Leg ...(S, M, L, XL',
XXL', XXXI1, XXXXUJ ... Reg. 113,95 ... Now

, ,,84,

NEW! DOUBLE ,DIAMONDS WAIST
CONTROLLER GIRDLES . ON BALl

FOFI THE FIFISTTIME EVE Fl.
Style t2878- Waitt Controller Panty ...
(S, M, L, XL'. XXL'J ... Re&lt;,l. 116.00 ... Now
113.19.
•
Style f2878-Walsl Controller Girdle ...
(S. M.. L. XL'. XXL'J ...Re&lt;,l. 114.00...Now
, , .•. (XL'. ahdXXL' •1.00 more, xxxtt
andXXXXItU.OO more).

PUNTY OF FRIE PARKING AT OUR

.MKHAN~

,

WA~
CA•IT • FLOOR COVIinNG .' APPLIANCU

ELBERfELDS IN

JOB PLACEMENT SERVICE- Joe McCauley, left, interviews Don Roush of Chester at
the Ohio Bureau of Employment Services mobile unit located this week in the upper parking lot
In Pomeroy. The facility Is being used to augment the Bureau's I!CrviCe to local communities.
~~~c~Jfered Jnclude reiiUiJ!.t e111Pioyment potentlala, vOil!l~ tra~ throujlh the
, _ ,_,a\nlni11f0Cl'lllll!j OIHheo-JObtralnlng, ~ob Cofp&amp;,c~llng and aP'Iituae !eating,
employer conlact.a and job development as well as community' employment h~. The unit
'Will be lin the lot from 9 a.m. to 4 p._m. Thursday and from 'a.m. to 12 noon Fridsy for
residents desl!!lng information on the opportunities. Bill Kuhner Is In charge of the unit.

ew-;:J;" /i;'f;j~ First baby
·

~

m· '73to
he in Iuck

By United Press lnternallonal
JUNEAU, ALASKA - AN-OIL SUCK, four capsized '
lifeboats and debris are all se91'chers have found of the 13,ooo.ton
Pacrover. which yanlshed in the sto'rilly north Pacific earlier this
week. Ships and planes searched 800 miles south of Kodiak for '
the 570-loot "slretched" cargo ship that left Vancouver, B. C.,
The first baby of Meigs
Dec. 17witha cargo of 20,000tonsof coalfor Yokohama.
Converted from a tanker to a bulk cargo carrier by the ad- County parents born in 1973
dition of a midsection, the Pacrover Dew a Liberian flag .Its crew . will have a head start through
was all Korean. It was owned by the Pacific Coast Shipping Co. the Daily sentinel's annual
and was under charter to the Yamashita - Shinnohon Co. .of Baby Derby with the
Tokyo. ·
· · cooperation of local merchants.
DR. CLAUDIO GALLO, SOUrH EUCLID, Is one of many ' Winners of this year's derby
Ohioans who have responded to calls for help from earthquake will be announced on Jan. 11:A
ravMed Managua; Nicaragua. Gallo, a vascular surgeon Jn the number of merchants are
Cleveland Clinic, flew to Managua Tuesday and carried with him cooperating again this year to
provide the first baby of the
70 pounds of antibiotic medicine.
new
year with gifts.
"We are hoping to get as much medical aid to the country as '
According 'to the rules, the
we can,'' he said, adding four Cleveland area nurses planned to
follow him to Managua later this week. Gallo once lived in the ; baby's mothe~ and father m~t
Nicaragua city and last year was offered the job of chief sw'geon be legal restdents of Metgs
at Baptist Hospilal there, one of the dozens of buildings leveled , • County though the father may
by the eatthquake.
be in the armed forces and the
family stationed at a distant
COLUMBUS- PAYROlLS AT FORD MOTOR Co.'s 12 point. Whatever the location,
plants, two parts depots and four district sales offices In Ohio as long as the parents are legal
exceeded $500 million during 1972 for the first time in history. residents of Meigs County, the
exact llme of birth must be
Ford's Ohio operations are second only to those in Michigan.
I
Average employment at Ford's Ohio facilities during 1972 specified In a written
climbed to a record 35,819, up by 1,530 workers from last year. statement issued by the at·
Payrolls In the eight Ford plant cities were: Cleveland, $203.5 tending physician .
The statement must be
rnlllion; Lorain, $100.3 rnlllion; Cincinnati, $90.7 mllllon; Lima,'
$37.1 rnlllion; Sandusky, $31 rnlllion;, Canton, $27.4 rnlllion; received at The Dally Sentinel
office, 111 Court St., Pomeroy,
Fostoria, $16.8 million and Toledo, $3.4 rnlllion.
no later than Jan. 10.
MANAGUA, NICARA,GUA - DEMOLITION crews using
···. . ........ .. .
'i'JKWJ!imi
dynamite and bulldozers leveled a major section of this city,
entombing unnumbered eatthquake victims while Red Q-os8
All Meigs County post
squada iearched out and burned on site the scattered bodlea of
offlees wlll be c!Oied all day
the other unknown dead today. The government reversed policy
Thunday In accordance wllh
and began feeding the living In what was left of ihe other parts of
an order received W~d­
downtown Managua In an effort to stem widespread looting.
nesday. There will be no
Troops assigned to guard the city have abandon.ed their effort tb
deliveries of any kind.
control it.
:
Outgoing mall will be
A government spokesman said at least 3,000 persons
dispatched.. '
perlsbed In the earthquake last Saturday, but said a final official :;:o:e:;o~;:o~! '· .-.sz...s;;; ~
death toll wu impossible because of the number of bodies burned
in the ruins of Managua. Some experts said the flnal toll mlgllt
.,
reach 6,000.
Not much change in temSANTIAGO, CHILE - RELA:I'IVJi'.S AND officials denied peratures. Lows tonight in the
allegations today that 16 pe1'801111 who survived for 10 weeks after lower 308. Cloudy Thurtlday, a
an a1tp1ane crash In the Andes did so by eating the flesh of their little warnler. Highs in the
dead friends. The survivors tlte1111elvea said no~. But a upper 308 to upper 40. .
dlplcmat said the IS Uruguayans wbo IUI'Viwd 'Ill daYI after the
a-ash of a Urugulyan air force F2'l turllopt op Od. 13 would ~e
aatat«nent.,_ they return Saturday or &amp;lnday to Montmdeb.
LOCAL TEMPS
UMO
lllid tJru&amp;uayan Charge d'Affalrel Celar
The
temperature
in down·
01ar1aae the uViYOn will remain 1n ilolation In their hotel
'
rooms. Allepllm•
of cannlbiiUm bepn drculatina lhorlly town Pomerny· at .11 a. m.
after tbe dramatic newalut weekend that the 16 survived the Wednesday was 32 degrees,
under cloudy Bides.
(Continued on _page 12)

SAIGON (UPI) -More than
1,000 U.S. jet fighter-bombers
and 147 waves ~f B52 bombers
struck North Vietnam. in the
heaviest raids of the Indochina
war 'between Dec. 18 and
Christmas Day, the U.S.
command said today. Communist reports from Hanoi said
the bombs cut a swath through
Hanoi and that tens of
thousands of refugees were
fleeing the city.
In the first detailed report of
the air war that resumed Dec.
18 on orders from President
Nixon, the comm8fld said B:i2
raids slnlck at least 14 times
within 10 roUes of Hanoi, and
some hit within a roUe of the
city's center. It wa.s estimsted
the B52s dropped up to 13,230
tons of bombs and ·the 1,000
fighter-bombers about 6,000
tons.
The command reported the
loss of another B:i2 today -the·
12th officially reported lost.
Another seven fighter-bombers
were lost, bringing to 58 the
number of Americans reported
missing
Communist reports said
eight more B52s were shot

down , bringing to 61 the
number claiined by Hanoi.
Hanoi also reported at least 100
Americans captured.
Reports from Communist
and neutral news agencies
based in the North Vietnamese
capital spoke of widespread
devastation in bomb strikes in

and around Hanoi Tuesday
night and today. One report
said U.S. warplanes blasted
Hanoi's International airport
Tuesday night, demolishing
civilian homes ·near it and
leaving the area "looking like
an earthquake had struck it."
The command said U.S. .
warplanes pounded the North
for the second consecutive day
today following a 36-hour
BANKS CLOSING
Christmas bombing pause and
The banks In Meigs reports from Guam and ThaiCounty, Tbe. Pomeroy land indicated there would be
National Bank, Its Rutland more strikes tonight.
branch, The Fafmen Blink
The cortunand !pokeimen
and : Savings CO,IIIpilnyl · 118id iooay warplanes aimed
Pomeroy; The Citizens only at military targets or
National Blink, Middleport, facilities supporting North
and the Racine Home Vietnam's military effort. The
National Bank, wlll be cloaed report listed no damage to '
Thursday In obaervance of civilian facilities.
the nallonal day of mourning
"Targets struck Included
In tribute to the late rallyards, shipyards, comPresident Harry Truman, mand and control faclllties,
according to Edison Hob- warehouse and transshipment
stetter, pre olden! of the points, communications facili·
Pomerny National Bank.
ties, vehicle repatr facilities,
Also, offices of the Meigs power plants, railway bridges,
County courthouse wlll close railroad rolling stock, truck
all day Thursday in tribute to parks, MIG bases, air defense
the late president.
radars and SAM (surface-to·
(Continued on page 12)

Sure, there's a Santa Oaus
TWIN FAILS, Idaho (UP!) rupted a friendly but un-

- You can't tell Michael Van
Ausdeln, 8, and his brother
Kurt, 10, that Santa--Claus
doesn't exist. They know he
checks up occasionally on the
toys he leaves.
Michael and Kurt were
trying out the walkle.talltie set
they got O!rlstmas morning.
"I can't hear you," Michael
said Jnto the phone set.
''Can :rou hear this," Inter-

familiar voice.
"Yes,'' replied the startled
IO.year-old.
"This is Santa Claus. How do
you like your walkie-talkies?"
"Fine," replied Kurt.
"Where do you live?" Santa
asked .
"In Twin Falls Idaho " the
'
boy answered. '
"Merry Ouistmas to Twin

Fails and to ·you," Santa said,
ending the converliatlon.
The boy's father, Robert Van
Ausdeln, who witnessed the
conversation, Said he doesn't
know how the mystery voice
was picked up, but the boys
have no doubt now there is a
Santa.
"Last year, the oldest one
wasn't quite sure,' ' he said.
"But they pretty well do this
year-that cinched it."

NEW QUEEN -Liz Blaettnar, daughter of Mr. and .Mrs.
John W. Blaettnar, Pomeroy a senior of MeiCJ! Sigll School
wllll&gt;e Jnstalied as honored queen of Bethel62, lnte1111tlonal
Order of Job's Daughters, at 7:30 p.m. 'lbllfll!ay at the
l'oll)eroy Masonic Temple, Debbie Flnlaw Ia guardian and
Tom Edwards is ai80Ciate guardian of the bethel.

19·-· ed m
church bus

New bulldozer
being ordered

Weather

111enL

.

.

FORT SUMNER, N.M. (UP!)
A iolded cattle truck
jackknifed on a narrow bridge In a di!IOlata area Tuelday night
and collided with a chartered bUJ carrying 30 T~ te111'egen
and their chaperons to a Baptist church retreat. Nineteen persons were killed.
The colllslon was so violent the bus and truck looked like they
"just melted together," said Capt. A. C. Jones of the New Mexico
state Pollee. There was no fire.
Nearly all the seats in the bUI were ripped loose and thrown
forward, and the body of the bUJ wu separated from the frame.
The bUI was the second of two heeding lrDm Auatln to a threedsy retreat In the mountainOUIIIId country, The first bUI CI'OIIed
the bridge seconds before the crash Jnvolylng a cattle truck
driven by Ervy Wllmeth of Wllll!eth Cattie Co. In Clovis, About
half of the 40 catUe on the truck were killed In the collision or
Injured so badly they were shot.
"There are 16 bodies In the mortuary here," said de Baca
County Corooer Dr. Roland Q-ane.
Three more unidentified oodles were taken to Clovis, N. M.
Treatment of the Injured was
John Roberts, who drove the
hampered by the remoteness of first bus safely acroaa the
the crash scene, abnost an bridge, said he looked Jn his
hour's drive to major hospital mirror in time to see the
faciliUes In Clovis. An . Air following Ughta of the second
Force surgeon was Down by bus disappear and the truck
helicopter to the wreckage . jackknife.
from Klrtll.nd Air Force Base.
"Everything was normal and
then the lights went out,'' he
said.
'
The parents and relaUves of
the youth group gathered at the
Woodlawn' Baptist Church In
Austin · and learned of the
deaths of 16 of the teen-agers
just after midnight.
''1bese, as far as we can
detennlne, are not alive," said
Rev, James Abington as he
read the list of confirmed dead.
Q-ys of "Oh, God" followed the
announcement of almost every
name. One woman collapsed at
the church.

DRIVE IN 'I'UNNBL - Thla facility for drive.tlJrouch
banking hu been completed at the Citizens National Bank in
MlddlepGrt and will be oPened for business Friday morni,..
Entrattce Into the feclllty Is from the alley at the back of the

bank. Alter a patron has used the window to complete his
banking, he drives onto North Second Ave., and Is required to
turn south. Work on the facility was done by King Bullderr
Supply Co.

The Meigs County Board of
Commissioners voted to advertise for a new bulldozer for
the county highway department Tuesday at the court.
house.
Bids on the new equipment
will be received until 10 a. m.
on Jan. 16. The cDil11llisalonera
also accepted the bid of The
Standard Oil Co. to provide
guollne and diesel fuel to the
county for the next 90 days
effective Jan. I. AttendiDc
were COIIIIIIIuiGnen Cbarlll
Karr, $1'., Robert Clark and
Warden Ours and Clerk
Martha Cbamban.

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