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32 - The Sunday T1mos · Sent met, Swlda) .

l•rinw

r:th· al

o,.,.. 9, t9i:l

Farmers begin figuring income, expense in '73

10 . ::: I I.O(HI jt"ltnl tu

NEW YORK t UPil - First
National Cit\' Bank raist'd the
interest r3te ror prime , MASON, IV Va . . - Army
busine-ss loans to large Spec ialist 4 Conley D. Dudley
customers to 10 pet . Friday. J r ., 20, whose parE"nts li \'e on
River Street, participated with
effective Monday.
other
American and alli ed
It was Citibank 's second
prime rate boost in consecuth•e troops in exercise Reforger V
weeks. Should the 10 pet. rate m German} in October. The
become general it would be the mthl:lry airlift command new
17th increase this year and the approximately 11,000 U. S. .
rate would be exactly double based soldiers and more than
the 5 pet. prime rate in effect a 1,000 tons of equipment to three
year ago. Under the two.tier different airfields m Germany
prime rate system in effect m in preparation for the event.
recent months, most banks Spec. Dudley 1s re gularl y
maintam a second prime rate assigned to the 26th Si~nal
somewhat lower for small Battalion's HQ as a drtver for
the sergeanl maJor.
businesses,

er
TERRY

While many people own

more than one car to serve
1n different capacit ies, or a

car and a motorcycle for
motoring and racing ,
others combine
their
motoring needs and get an
automobile specifically
designed to serve dual
capacity, both com'pet ition

and transportation
Th1s is accomplished
w ith a sports car, a car
whli:h IS smart looktng and
funct i onal for ordinary
transportation
yet
mechan1cally perfect and
powerful in performance to
be used 1n competitive
ra cing .
Do yourself a favor Look
into the dual capacity that
the modern mobde home
serves . Wh ile be1ng a
com plet e home t o begin
with . and economical to
ma1ntajn ,
it
Is also
relocatable and can be
moved and parked as often
and wherever you l ike It
doesn't cost a cent t o.
inquire about and inspect
th e mobile homes on
display here. We have a
vanety of models, makes
and size s featuring eve ry
d es1 rabl e peri od from
Early
Amer.ican
to
Modern . Howe ve r , once
you see these fabulous
homes you won't be able to
r es ist the des1re to own one
ot your own
JOHNSON ' S MOBILE
HOME SALES
1110 Eastern Avenu e
Galhpo••s, Ohto
Phone 6l4-446-3547

By C. E. Blak•slee
Cow1ty Extension Agent, Agriculture
POMEROY

0t.'t'l'!llb('r is th~ time when farmers begin

addmg up the1r inCflrnl!
greater than expenses .

and expenses. They hope the int'Onlt" is

Shortly after Jan. 1 they start their tabulation or income and
exp&lt;·nditures preparator~ to their income tax reporting deadline
of March I.
Most farmers complete their return and pay tbeir tax due by
March I. However. tbey do have an alternative. They can make
an estunate and pay their estimated income tax by January 15.
Then they have until April 15, the same as other taxpayers, to
make their final return,
Ea ch year: the Cooperative Extension Service. in cooperation

the NE W in FARMING

w1th the Internal Revenue Service, the Ohio Income Tax
Department, Workmen's Compensation, and Social Security
Offices, schedule a two.day workshop for farmers and tax
practitioners interested in receiving the latest informaUon on
rules, regulations, and changes in income tax procedure . Five
Meigs County people attended the school a week ago at
VAN METER PROMOTED
Chillicothe.
They were Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Cross, Rowena
POMEROY - Marine Sgt.
Steven R Van Meter , son of Vaughan, Roy Miller, and myself .
We were given souDd lnform.ation on Income tax
Mr . and Mrs. Leanord E. Van
procedures. One suggestion was that it is possible to adjust
Meter of 104 Locust St. ,
1973 income before the end or the year.
Pomeroy, was promoted to his
present rank while serving at
Every farm operator has an important job to do during
the Marine Corps Base here .
December It's projecting probable expenses and expected
receipts for the remainder of the year, adding theSt&gt; to your
He is a 1970 graduate of Meigs
High School.
transaetions to date, and figuring what your taxable income is
likely to be. That was the suggestion of John E. Moore, Extension
economist, and R. H. Baker, agricultural economist, Ohio State
University.
U it looks like your taxabl~ income is going to be much higher
than usual ; you might lower 1t by e1ther delaying the sale of grain
or livestock until1974 or by buying fertilizer, seed, or feed early
- before the end of the year.
THERE IS ONE THING to beware of in attempting to reduce
1973 income by delaying sales until January.
• Don't let it cause you to hold livestock until they are past
pnme market weight or condition or until it throws them into a
surplus supply period, thus losing more in decreased returns
than in the possible tax saving.
A more conunon practice is to increase tax deductions and
~ thus reduce reported net earnings by preiJ8ying next year's
necessary business expenses. If you report on a cash receipts and
disbursement basis, you must not only make arrangements for
but also pay for the good or service in 1973 in order to claim the
deduction for business, Baker cautions.
Just paying $1,800 to your feed dealer for purchases that you
may make in 1974 does not make it an allowable expense. This is
simply an advance, one that could be reversed and not much
different from a loan. After January I, you might return to the
dealer and ask to have your advance payment returned.
HOWEVER, AN AGREEMENT to purchase six tons of a
particular da1ry supplement at $164 per ton to be delivered some
time between February I and May I, 1974, would be an en.
For help with all your
forceable contract and be considered by I.R.S. as an allowable
family insurance needs,
expense in 1973 if paid for in 1973.
see:
Another ·suggestion is to rebuild your machinery this fall
before the end of the year. Make the repairs early enough and
pay for them in 1973 in order to qualify as expenses during this
.
year.
good
P a rk Cenf r at
Hot e l Bldg .
One type or choice that can be made after January I, but
Second Ave .
planned
for now , has to do with depreciation policy on new
Gal11polts, Ohto
machinery purchased in 1973. Any one of several methods or
Ph o ne 446 · 4290

Like a

good netgt

State Farm

is there.-----,
Carrol K. Snowden

I

orr at the rate of !·loth each ye'lf.
But an accelerated method such as double declining balance
1DDB) penn1ts writing off investment at twice as high a rate.
The rate - 20 pet. if the expected life is 10 years - is figured
times the unrecovered balance each year.
REGARDLESS OF THE DEPRECIATION method used for
other machinery, you are free to choose any of the accelerated
methods for any new purchases, the economists point out.
The effect or accelerated depreciation is not to allow any
more total depreciation, but simply to permit a higher proportion
or tbe investment to be written off earlier in the life of the tool.
lnvestm&lt;!nt credit is the top tax saving tip, so don't overlook
filin g for it, Moore advises. The 7 pet. investment credit was
restored in 1971 and can actually reduce your tax biU dollar for
dollar.
Afew of the eligible property item purchases that qualify for
investment credit are machinery, equipment, silos, grain
storage, feeding floors and bunks, tile drainage, fencing, el&lt;o.
ONE OTHER OPTION OPEN
to a
farmer
much
higher
taxable
income
this
experiencing
year
is
income
averaging.
If
1973
income
exceeds the average of his last four years taxable income by

.....

..

...

..

Signs of the Season
JOIN THE

Ouistmas

Uuh

WITH THE

BONUS

Savings
Accounts

Make all the first 49 of the
.scheduled payments in your
coupon book . We will add the
50th payment as a " bonus" .

50th Payment
FREE

---------------------ThoughtfUl Gift!
Give An ACS&amp;L

SAVINGS ACCOUNT
FOR CHRISTMAS

Save All of

Your Saleslips

~

o

!•
:
•
:
~
,t

"

•
••

..

!..

salt - Salt kills plants and contaminates
water supplies.
-Drive ecologically - Car pools
lessen traffic jams, parking problems
and emissions. Don't let engine idle when
you're waiting.
- Use mass transit when possible Trains, buses and planes are less
polluting than cars. They use less fuel per
passenger and are less ••pensive.
- Landscape thoughtfully - Shrubs
and trees can help "air condition" your
home, screen out dirt and noise and also
help return oxygen to the air.
--Combat utter - Whether you are in
the forest, around your home or just
taking a walk, leave things as clean as
you found them or cleaner.
WE CAN BE AN Important part of the
fight against pollution and help proteet
the environment by choice in our
everyday activities such as those listed
above, by joining and supporting
voluntary organizations that fight
pollution and by our action in supporting
business and government programs
which are proposed to reduce pollution.
There are many other ways to help
make our environment much cleaner and
safer to live in. How many can you think
of? Rather than just think of them, put
them into practice. We need the support
of everyone to conquer pollution.

Q

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~

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••••

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•..

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•••
•

Wh1tes . .. washab le wh1tes by We.mlon.
th em all

e Shop every floor. Visit every
department for gifts for
everyone
on
your
I ist.
Housewares · Lingerie . Jewelry
· Handbags - Fanny Farmer
Candy· Kodak. Polaroid - RCA.
Mens and Boys
Panasoni'c
Wear. Complete selection. of
Toys in our Toy Store - Guitars .
Binoculars.

•

Give
the gift
thatkeep1

'

~.

DEPOSITS EARN AT THE HIGH
RATE FROM S%% TO 6'12%

Make Elberfelds in Pomeroy
your Christmas Gift Shopping
Center.

Give an
Club membei'Jhipl
Call or visit ...
EVEN WASH lT

FR£SH AS NEW
fMI WEIILON

OPEN EVERY NIGHT UNTIL 9

E

school,
college
and
professional greats.
He reminded Roo alumni that
Rio Grande College is
represen ted in the Halt of
Fame - Clarence (Bevo)
Francis' warmup jacket,
picture, and the ball wiat which
he scored 113 points agamst
Hillsdale, Mich • at Jackson,
Ohio in February, 1954 , are on
display there. Francis was
unable to attend the weekend
activities.
In closmg, W1ltiams said:
"I'm proud you invited me
here for today's induction
ceremony. It's been a great
experience for me ."
Diles, making his second
appearance in southeastern
Ohio in less than a month 1he
spoke at the Meigs High grid
banquet on Nov. 121 was
introduced by Dr. A. R.
Christensen, Rio Grande
College president.
Recalling his early days in
journalism, Diles told of the
time he was ready to "hang it
up" after being severely
(Continued on Page 2)

Phone meet cancelled
CHESTER - A public
meetmg called for 7 o'clock
Tuesday night at the Chester
Fire Dept. headquarters to
discuss action to secW'e ex..
tended area services for
s ubscribers with "985"
numbers of the Southeastern
Ohio Telephone Co. at Coolville
to the Pomeroy area has been
cancelled.
Mrs .
Sandy
Griffith,
chauman of a committee
promoting the extended area
service, said today that the
Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio and the Southeastern Ohio
Telephone Co. have both in·
dicaled that there apparently
will be no problem in providing

the extended area service. As a
result there is no need for a
meeting at this time.

Doe deer killed
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept. investigated an accident
at 2 a.m. Sunday in which an
auto driven by Myles R. Blake,
17, Rt.1, Reedsville, struck and
killed a deer.
According to the report,
Blake was traveling east on CR
50 one mile west or SR 124 in
Olive Twp., when the doe ran
into the path of his auto. The
car had moderate damage
while Blake reportedly suffered no injuries.

WASHJNGTON ( UPI) - The
White House has turned over a
"significant number " of tape
recordings and a "substantial
number" of documents beyond
those subpoeniled in the
Water gate case. special
prosecutor Leon Jaworski said
today.
In a brief statement,
Jaworski said the additional
tapes and papers were
delivered to his office during
the weekend. The statement
did not identify the materials
and a spokesman for Jaworski
declined to elaborate .
The
stateme nt
said,
"responsive to requests of
recent weeks, White House
counsel on Saturday de1ivered
to the special prosecutor a
significant number of tape
recordings, the contents of
which will be ca refully
analyzed.
"Such of these as contam
information matenal to the
specia l prosecutor's investigations will be presented
to the (Watergate ) grand jury
without delay.''
The s tatement added, " a
substantlal number of the
documents requested by the
special prosecutor were also
delivered and assurances have
been given by White House
counsel that searches are now
in progress for certain
documents for which requests
are outstanding."
Jaworskt is known to have
been seekmg White House
tapes and documents pertairung to the Watergate break·
in and its cover~up, in additiOn
to materials that the While
HouSt&gt; provided two weeks ago
under subpoena.
He also IS known to be
seeking materials pertinent to
related cases such as dairy
industry contributions to the
1972 Nixon election campaign
and a settlement in 1971 of an
antitrust suit involving lnternatwnal Telephone and

Telegraph Corp.
Federal court do cuments
di sclosed last week that
Jaworski on Nov. 14 requested
a number of tape recordings
and memoranda mvolving
Wh1te House meeting m early
January or this year.
Jol),n W. Dean Ill, former
White House counsel, testified
at Senate Watergate hearings

last summer that discussions that blocked out a presidential
took place during that penod conversatiOn on Wat er gate
relative to granting executive three days after the burglary
clemency to one of the occurred.
Electroni c: experts are exWatergate conspirators, E .
pected to give Sirica a report
Howard Hunt.
this week on whether they
Federal Judge John J . Sirica might be able to restore the
listened last week to one of the original conversatiOn, and
other White House tapes - one possibly also what caused the
containing an 18-minute hwn erasure.

METERS COVERED - DeMolay boys, as part of their public service projects, covered
meters Sunday in Middleport that signifies parking is free until through the shopping season .
The Middleport Chamber of Commerce and Merchants' Committee, in cooperation with the
village administration, annually makes the free parking possible. Front row, l·r, are John
Stewart and John Hoffman, visiting helpers; second row, A:fike von Drlckson, Ron Rom:1h, Paul
Voss and Bill McCoy, and third row, Burt Moshier, Kent Hoffman, George Stewart and Don
Vaughan. Not pictured are G. F. Gabristch and Don Gabrist&lt;oh. The work was under the
direction of John Werner of the Merchants' group and Bob King, DeMolay advisor.-

Power plant locatings may
run into red tape· blocks

In a state hearing Friday in
Colwnbus, concern that Ohio's
future electric power supply
may be jeopardized by ex·
cessive "red tape" in power
plant site selection was exw
pressed by Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric
Company.
WASHINGTON
A number of hearings have
Congressman Clarence Miller been held to give compames
has been advised by the U. S. and the public an opportunity
Civil Service Commission that to answer the proposed rules
applications for summer and regulations or the Ohio
employment with a number of Power Plant Siting Comfederal agencies are now being mission.
accepted. Filing deadlines for
In speaking for the company,
the limited job opportunities John Apel, staff assistant for
vary among the agencies environmental programs, said
participating in the program. the newly-created Conumss10n
Rep . Miller stated that the has a very serious responfree summer job booklet sibility to assess the en.
outlining various positions and vironmental
of
impact
application procedures is proposed facilities and at Ute
available through his office. same time not act as an
Write or call the following rnadvertent deterrent to the
locations: Rep , Clarence development of facilities
Miller, 128 Cannon House needed to provide electrical
Office Bldg., Washington, D. C. energy.
11
20515, (202) 225-5131, or Rep.
Regulations now being
Clarence Miller, 212 South proposed by the Power Siting
Broad Street, Lancaster, Ohio Commisslon could result in
43130, (614) 654·5149.
delays up to three years in the

Miller offers
job data for

this summer

construction of major utility
facilities throughout Ohio,"
Apel said.
Columbus and Southern
contends that in today's age of
energy crisis and high costs it
is not in the interests of the
general public to delay a power
facility for months on end due
to objections of intervenors
which have no basis in fact.
"The cost of one week's
delay in a 1000 megawatt
power plant operation would be
on the order of $1 million and
these costs would ultimately be
passed on to customers," Ape I
said.
"Although we support the
'one stop' and open planning
concepts intended with the
Legislature's creation of the
Commission, delays by inTOYS NEEDED
The Salvation Army in
Pomeroy is in need of n~w and
good used toys for distribution
to underprivileged children
during the Chrislmas season.
Contributions may be left at
the headquarters, liS But·
temut Ave., Pomeroy.

tervenors can run into months,'' he stated.
He strongly recommended
that the Commission establish
rules and regulations for intervention so that deliberate
intervention to delay without a
basis in fact would be
discouraged.
Columbus and Southern
pledged to work on an interim
procedure with the Commission and, if necessary, the
Legislature until the Com·
mission has adopted explicit
and realistic standards.
The Company recommended
that the Commi~s1on adopt a
set of rules and regulations as
soon as possible after con ..
sidering the comments being
made in the he•rings, but
encouraged a delay in the
implementation until a model
application can be prepared by
the CommiSSion for use by the
utilities .
"This would allow realistic
and responsible decisions to be
made by all concerned - the
utility companies, the Commission and general public, "
Apel concluded.

Nikita-Kennedy letters recall six tense days

Also Christmas Cards by
Hallma;k- Gift Wrapping Paper
· Card tnserts . Ribbon . Tags.

All Accounts Insured by the Federal Savi ngs and Loan
Insurance Corporation up to $20,000.00 .

t!News •• zn Brzefs·:.:

bestowed upon them earlier m
the day.
Williams then touched on
how the game or basketball
was founded in America . After
tracing the game 's history ,
Williams sa id ba sketball is now
played in 131 nations around
the world .
The speaker said basketball
IS one of Amenca's greatest
speclator events today. He told
how the Basketball Hall of
Fame m Spnng!Jeld became a
reality. followmg the dea th of
Dr. Naism1th in 1939.
There were numerous
committee meetings in the late
1940s following World War II.
Fund raismg campaigns were
conducted in the 1950s, and
finally, construction began in
the mld·1960s . The Naismith
Basketball Halt of Fame was
dedicated in 1966. IV1thin five
years, 88 cage greats have
been inducted into the National
Hall of Fame.
Willia ms said the basketball
shrine was unique in that 1t
honors Ute game's total par·
tic1pants - amateurs, high

BIRMINGHAM, ALA . - GO V. GEORGE C. Wallace will
announce shortly after Jan. 1 whether he intends to seek an
unprecedented third term as governor, his news secretary said
Sunday. Wallace would not confirm or deny the report. But his
press aide, Billy Joe Camp, said, "! think he will run. Any an·
WASHINGTON (UP I) - The
nouncement would come after the first of the year.''
once top secret letters began
WaJiace, 54, has been confined to a wheelchair since an with 1 'Dear Mr. President'' and
11 0ear Mr. Chairman," and
assassination attempt during his 1972 presidential primary
closed with words like 11SinM
campaign le!! him paralyzed from the waist down. By means or a
cerely," or even "Respectfulspecially built podium, equipped with hand gr~ps and a
backstrap, the governor does stand occasionally for speeches. , ly ."
Wallace would face opposition in the May Democratic
But in between the saluta·
tions were threats and warnprimary from State Sen., Gene McLain of Huntsville, and
ings which II years later
possibly, former Gov. Albert Brewer, whom Wallace unseated in
revive the drama arxl fears of
1970. Wallace, apparently eyeing another try at the presidency in
1976, has been attempting to mend fences with blacks, who still
the six tense days when
remember his 1963 inaugural speech calling for "SegregatiOn
President John F. Kennedy
now! Segregation tomorrow! Segregation forever! 1'
and Premier Nikita Khrushchev clashed over construction
WASHINGTON - A PANEL OF ELECTRONICS experts is
of Soviet missile bases in Cuba.
expected to report to U. S. District Judge John J . Siricu this week
Ten letters were exchanged
whether there is any technical explanation for an IB&lt;TJinute him
during the missile crisis of
in one of Presldent Nixon's Watergate tapes. Vice President
October, 1962. The last fourGerald B. Ford said during a Sunday broadcast interview ABC's
two from each man-were
"Issues and Ans~ers" that the 18-minute void "does raise a
made public at the time, but
question." He added: "I think the best way to have that resolved
the seal · of secrecy only
is. have these experts ... technically make a decision as to
recently was lifted from lhe
whether there was an erasure or a remova1 or whatever you caH
first s1x.
it. 1 believe the President, but the experts will be the best judge."
The crisis actually began
Sirica also is in the process or listening to a number of the
about mid-month, when
watergate tapes in the privacy of his chambers. Electronics
Kennedy was called home from
experts disagree on whether any altering of such tapes could be
a ca mpaign trip be cause
(Continued ov Page 2)
photogrophs taken from U.S .

eShop the Furniture department
on the 3rd floor - Furniture for
every room in your home.
Smaller gift items, too, such as
Mirrors - Lamps - Tables Pictures - Smokers.

on giving ••

33 Court Sf., Gall•polis
Phone: 446-06t9 or
992-2590, Pomeroy

Middleport Sentinel white a
juni or at Middlepor t High
School m 1947, revealed he ism
the process or purchasing
property in the Rac tne area. It
IS his intention, one of these
days, to return to his native
Me1gs Coun ty,
Williams, who presented
Rio's initial Hall of Fame
inductees plaques during
Satu.-day's impressive
ceremonies during the
halftime of tho Rio GrandeCedarville basketball game,
told the audience, "You're
my kind of people."
While discussmg prestige,
Williams praised the 12 athletic
Hall of Fame mductees of the
great honor which had been

THE ARABS MOVED TO STRENGTHEN THEIR
diplomatic , military and oil weapons today in preparation for
next week's scheduled M1ddle East peace tall&lt;s . Israel conceded
1t may have "to eompromise" at the peace table, but denied any
U. S. pressure for concessions. In a move to strengthen its
bargaining position, Egypt asked France and Bl'itain, Cairo's
closest European allies, to sit in on the !uU.. cale peace talks.
Israel and Amenca gave tile suggestion a coolt·eception. t.
Egyptian officials in Cairo said President Anwar Sadat met
with British Ambassador Sor Philip Adams last week. He called a
meeting today to ask visiting French State Foreign Affairs
Minister Jean de Lipkowski for support. Israeli Defense Minister
Moshe Dayan arrived back on Tel Aviv today after a 4J!.hour visit
to the United States and said no An!erican officials "demanded or
us that we do anything or declare anything before the peace
talks ."

• Shop the Warehouse on
Mechanic Street - Whirlpool
appliances · Hoover washers .
Magic Chef stoves . Carpet by
the yard.

KNOT lT

BY HOBART WILSON JR.
Two celebrities associated
w1 th national sports activities
shared the speakers platform
in the Rio Grande College
Cafeteria Saturday night
where 275 persons attended the
Ftrst Annual Ri o Grande
College Ha)l of Fame banquet.
Lee Williams, executive
director, Naismith Basketball
Hall of Fame, Springfield,
Mas.s ., and area native Dave
Diles (Middleport ) ABC·TV
sports commentator, . shared
their experiences Wlth the 1973
homecoming and Hall of Fame
audience .
Diles, who began his jour·
nahsm ca reer with the
Gallipolis Daily and Pomeroy •

By United Press International
HOUSTON - MANY PICTURES TAKEN of the Earth from
Skylab 3 have been overexposed because astronaut William R.
Pogue forgot to put the light filters in, according to space of·
ficials . Pogue, Gerald P. Carr and Edward G. Gibson, taking
most or today off With only a hght work schedule, may get a
chance to recoup some of the lost scientific information later trl
the 84-day flight when Sky lab flies over the same spots again .
Flight Director Neil Hutchinson said Sunday Pogue checked
out the instruments during the fi rst week or the nussion but
forgot to put the filters in the cameras. Without the filters, the
settings on the battery of six cameras were wrong and too much
light was let in, overexposing the film .

Cr~·stal

camera) with former Rio Coach Newt Oliver (left) looking on
prior to Saturday night's F~rst Annual Hall of Fame banquet
in the Rio Grande College cafeteria.

Celebrities launch
Rio Hall .of Fame

~

•

I

CRUSH IT

and Lee Williams, (nght), confe1· With Rio Grande
College Sports Information Director Bitt Gray (bac k·to·

•

Wemlon 1s when you want to sweep her off her feet ...
Wemlon 1s when you ' re on a busmess trip and you get soup
on your t1e . . . Wemlon IS when you want to tell the world

NOW PARACHUTIST
RACINE - Private First
Class Charles W. Cornell III,
19, whose parents live at Route
1. Racine, has received a
parachutist badge upon his
recent completion of the threeweek airborne course at the U.
S. Army Infantry School, Ft.
Benning, Ga.

AUTO Q.UB OF
SOUTHERN OHIO

.

. HALL OF FAME SPEAKERS Dave Dotes (center dark

SUI\ )

i"}~·:::=:=:-::::;.:::::.::::;.::;:::;:;:::;:;:·:::.:::::·. :· :··:~:;:.:·:::·: :.;:·:::::;:::::::::::::·:•.· :·:·:·:·::·:·.·:·:·:·:::•::::::::::::::~::

ARMY RE·ENTERED
VINTON - Barry R. Bias,
20, son or Mr. and Mrs. Robert
R. Bias, Van Buren St., Vinton,
has left!or Fort Knox, Ky.' Bias
first took his training at Fort
Knox, Ky. and served in
Vietnam and was discharged
from the service October 1970.
Bias is a 1966 graduate of North
Gallia High School.

TEN CENTS

PHON1:. 992·21 56

~~

•

WEMLON®

From
Ellierfelds.

iiU:____ _ _ _--==M=
~·~A!. DECEM BEll 10. I 97~ _

..::..1.)1_·

..::..r
.

3

Be Thrifty!

Night fishing at Park is proposed
Krodel Park, if action at a
special Point Pleasant City
Council meeting Th'ursday
night is approved.
Council asked Carroll Casto,
City Attorney, to amend the
present ordinance for fishing at
the local !acili ty and to present
this at the regular January
Council meeting. Electric
motors would be permitted. No
boats could be left in the take
unattended.

!,

The average man would
we1gh two tons on the sun .

De11oled To The Interest. O.{Thf' Meig.•-Mmon Area

'""'VOjloiii
.X
iiiXiiii
V~NO;. ;16;7;;;;;;;;;--~P..O:.:..
: . M :_
UI~U_
~' M
_ I-DD:.:L..::..l
:- P
:.:.O:.:.
K

'

OPEN EVERY NIGHT UNTIL 9 PM

Stale Farm

PT. PLEASANT - Night
fishing will be permitted at

"

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

depreciatwn can be elected. Most people use a uniform rate
called straight line. A tractor expected to last 10 years is charged

Bloomington, Illinois

example. Show your family, friends and
neighbors how you feel. Participate in
your community cleanup projects .
Become a do.it.yoursetr anti.polluter by
fighting inaction, fighting waste and
fighting a lack of awareness.
The following items are some specific
ways in which we, as individuals, can
fight pollution and protect the environment.
-Use re-usable containers - Use
lunch box instead of paper bag. Use re:
usable plastic containers instead of foil
and plastic wraps !or storing food.
- Choose returnable bottles Disposable bottles and cans too often end
up as litter: one-third to one-half or the
price may be for the container.
-Run waahers at full capacity - Both
dish and clotheS waaher. It saves power,
water and cleaning agent.
-Buy and use appliances wisely - '
Many gadgets and "special features" are
expensive unnecessary power wasters.
-Re-cycle newspapers, steel cans,
alwninum cans and glass.
--Conserve power - Turn orr lights
and use lower wattage where possible.
-Save fuel - Weatherstripping and
insulation pay for themselves in fuel
savings. Close off unused rooms- you'll
need less heat.
·
- Use sand on icy pavements instead of

enttne

flurnes .

..

By Allaa T. Woller
District Raager
IRONTON - ME - what can I do to
fight pollution and help protect the en·
vironment?
This question is often ask~ of us by
people today. The simple answer is that
ecology (our relationship to the en·
vlronment) begins at home and so does
;pollution. Every purchase we make,
. :every trip we take, every activity we
::share in is a vote for or against our en ..
·: vironment.
:
Each of us uses water, uses power,
creates waste, operates motor vehicles,
uses chemicals, burns fuel and demands
·~~;i&lt;th
each Of us can be a
1~erefore
p
fighter.
Environmental protection - It's
:;:;"''en a big job, where do l start?
There are two basic areas to start
one is by your attitudes, the other is
actions.
attitude you can thtnk
easy to be a pessimist, but
a lot of optimists working together can
help get the job done. You can also take
the time to learn . Learn about the
ecology of your neighborhood • where
your power, water, fuel, food comes from
• how they are produced · where wastes
. ,go.
By your actions you can set a good

•

Variable cloudi ness and
colder tonight with scattered
snow flurries. Low e~per t ed
from mid teens to mid 20s.
Tomorrow partly cloudy and
cold with chance of snow

$3,000 more than 120 pet. of the average, tax can be saved by
averaging. U $10,000 taxable income has been averaged for~
last four years and 1973 taxable income is $20,000, by averagmg
.
tax savings would be $120.
Some years of high taxable income are due to bunching sales
or two crop years in one calendar year. This .causes much mor~
variability if one is on the caah receipts and disbursement than if
one is orl the accrual method of reporting.
In years of net operating toss (NOL) a taxpayer is deprived
of valuable deducations such as exemptions for dependents and
personal deductions . True he can carryback NOL ~ an earlier
year and possibly receive refund of income tax pa1d m reports
three years, two years, and me year earlier. .
. .
But engaging in tax management - planrung the timing or
when income is received or expenses incurred so as to nQt have
NOL- can result in lower tax being paid over a period or years.
Give some tholll!hl to vour exoected tax while there is still
time to make some good tax saving deciSions, the economists
encourage.
The Farmer's Income Tax Guide for 1973 is expected to be
available in the County Ei:tension Office dwing the next week.
Copies will be available without charge.

Your Wayne National Forest

Home 446 45 18

Insurance Companies
Home Offices:

Weal her

RFELD

spy planes showed work under
way on what military experts
said could only be a nuclear
missile instaUation in Cuba.
The mystery ended-and the
suspense began-Del. 22 when
Kennedy went on national
'television to tell the American
people he had ordered a naval
"quarantine" or Cuba and had
demanded that Russia dismantle the installations and
remove tue missile components.
One hour earlier he had a
letter delivered to the Russian
Embassy in Washington and
cabled an identical copy to the
U.S. Embassy in Moscow for
delivery to the Kremlin.
''I have not assumed," he
said, "that you or any other
sane man would, in this
nuclear age, deliberately
plunge the world into war
whicl\ it is crystal clear no
country could win and which
rrsu lt
on
could
only
f'HI.clslrophk ronRequrnccs to

•

••

·'

I

)

J

the whole world, including the
aggressor."
In the letter, which began
"Dear Mr. Chairman," and
was signed " Sincerely,' '
Kennedy also said : "I hope
that your government will
refrain from any action which
would widen or deepen this
already grave crisis."
The Khrushchev reply, received the following morning,
was addressed "Mr. President," and was signed only
with the name "N. Khrushchev." It said:
"I must say !rankly that
measures indicated in your
statement constitute a serious
threat to peace and to the
. secunty of nations ...
"We reaffirm that the armaments which are in Cuba,
regardless of the classification
to which they belong, are intended solely for defensive
purposes in order to secure the
Republic or Cuba against the
attack of an ag_gressor . "

Kennedy's reply, sent the
same day, was brief and curt:
"I think you will recognize that
the step which started the
current chain of events was the
action of your Government in
secretly furnishing offensive
weapons to Cuba ....
"I hope you will issue immediately the necessary instructions to your ships to
observe the terms of the
quarantine ... which will go into
effect at 1400 hours Greenwich
time Oct. 24." It was signed
''Sincerely. "

24th, was the one some White
House sources at the time
described Bs "hysterical," according to press reports.
"Imagine, Mr. President,"
Khrushchev wrote, "that we
had presented you with the
conditions of an ultimatwn
which you have presented us
by your action. How would you
have reacted to this? I think
that you would have been indignant at such a step on our
part ...

"You, Mr. President, are not
declaring a quarantine but
The Defense Department rather are setting forth an
estimated that at that time, ultimatum and threatening
about 25 Soviet and satellite that if we do not give in to your
supply ships were heading for demands you will US&lt;' force!
Cuha . Within the next few consider what you are saying!
hours, 12 or them-presumably And you wish to eonvince me to
l"
those carrying key military agree tth
o .
IS ....
equipment~ hanged course lo
This letter was signed "Re·
await the outcome of the spectfully yours."
feverish diplomatic activity.
Kennedy, who was closeted
The next Khrushchev letter, almost around·the.dock with
rC'ceived on the mormng of the his brother Robert and top

..

administration
and
congressional advisers, wrote
a reply delivered in Moscow at
1:59 a .m. Oct. 25. The tone was
softer:
regret very much that you
still do not appear to understand what it is that has moved
us in this matter ... In August
there were reports of important shipments of military
equipment and technicians
from the Soviet Union to Cuba.
In early September I indicated
very plainly that the United
States would regard any
shipment of offensive weapons
as presenting the gravest
issues.
' ~I

HAfter that tlme, this
Government received the most
explicit assurances from your
Governmevt
and
its
repreSt&gt;ntatives, both publicly
and privately, that no offenslve
weapons were being sent to
Cuba ... "

•

•

�•

•
3- The Daily Senlinel, Middlel"'rt-Pom&lt;'foy. 0 ., Dec. 10, I9i3

KC tops Buffalo

ree hospitalized with

27-7

injuries from collision

CAR DEMOLISHED - Officers check the wreckage of
one of two cars involved in a collision early Sunday near

POINT PLEASANT - Three "satisfactory."
persons were admitted to the
Judith Kessler, 17, Rainelle,
hospital with serious injuries W. Va. was adm itted to
received in a two-car collision Veterans Memorial Hospital
early Sunday morning near where she is reported by atHartford when police were tendan ts to be in "satisfac·
chasing one of the cars in- tory" condition toda y with
volved.
possible internal injuries for
Fern Houchens, 23, Ravens· which she is being observed.
wood was fi rs t t a k en to Robert Gene McDowell, 19, of
Pleasant Valley Hos pital Millwood was treated at
where she was placed in the Veterans Memorial for injuries
Intensive Care Unit, but soon and released.
was transferred to St. Mary's
Danny Riley, 20, Mason was
Hospital in Huntington. Today treated at Holzer Medical
attendants reported she is in Center for a bruised knee and
&lt;~critical'' condition with head
released.
lnjuries .
Danny Lee Litchfield, 17,
Gary Houchens, believed to New Haven, apparently suf·
be her husband, and also 23 of fered only bruises but was not
Ravenswood, was admitted to admitted to an area hospitaL
Pleasant Valley Hospital with
Deputy James F. Gaskins,
lacerations and a compound the investigating officer, said
fracture of the left leg . His the accident occurred at 2 a.m.
condition is reported to be Sunday on U. s: 33 near Hart-

w. v ~. in which three perso ns Sllffered injuries
requirin g hospit.ulization . Police were chasing one of the
vehicles.

Hartford ,

ford and in addition to the
injuries, resu lted in one driv:r
being cited for two traffic
violations and the total loss of ·
two cars.
Driver s were identified as
Robert Gene McDowell, and
Danny Lee Utchfield.
According
to
Deputy
Gaskins, McDowell was
headod north on U. S. 33 at a
reported high rate of speed
while being purs ued by
Patrolmen Tom O'Bryan of the
Hartford Police Deparlment.
McDowell appar ently lost
control, police said running off
the roadway to the right and
striking the rock cliff area of
the hill.
From there, McDowell 's car
skidded back on the roadway
hitting Litchfield's in the left
front.
Two persons were thrown out

- - - - - -- -Hall of Fame big success.

Autoworkers
BlRRY'~
woRL~
.
to sign pact

(Continued from Page 1)
criticized by his readers.
"Had not Jim Porter and the
late Harold Wetherholt drove
up to Middleport and talked to
me , I would have probably
ended my newspaper career as
early as 1948, " Diles said .
(Porter was sports editor of the
Tribune , the late Mr.
Wetherholt was publisher at
the time ).
Diles had criticized GAHS
grid Coach James F .
Helderman for permitting the
t948 Blue Devils to roll up an
86-0 grid victory over
Nelsonville. Diles called the
lop-sided GAHS will "unsportsmanlike" because Halderman
did not use · many of his substitutes that night. The column,
,:Musings Around the Circuit,"
stirred up many Blue Devil
fans, including Rev. J. Edward
Hakes, pastor of the First
Baptist Church at the time.
Porter told Diles if he was
going to dish out criticism, he
should be able to accept
criticism. The Gallipolis newsmen persuaded Diles to stay
on, thus his alr~ady successful ·
career in newspaper, radio and
TV was well on its way.
Diles also .praised Paul
(Moon) Clifford, former
Pomeroy
Middleport

~------------

DETROIT (UP! ) - Nea rly
420,000 auto workers at General
Motors Cor-p. approved a new
three.year labor agreement
with the giant automaker by a
better than 9-1 margin, the
United Auto Workers ~m·
noUI)ced Sunday.
That left only ratification of a
contract with GM of Canada
and local contract bargaining
at Ford and GM to wrap up the
1973 round of auto negotiations.
The auto contract ta lks began
at GM in mid-July .
There are 78 of 146 bargai ning units at GM without local
contracts to supplement the
national agreement. At)"ord , 17
of 97 bargaining units still
haven't completed lhe local
negotiations .
UAW President Leonard
Woodcock said, however, there
will be no strike dead1ines in
local negotiations until after the
Christmas holiday. Ratification
by the GM workers means the
average hourly worker will
receive about $600 in pay the
week before Christmas, includ·
ing an average $1&gt;0 in back
pay.
Woodcock, at a late-night
news conference Sunday, de-

scribed the five-month period
as

' jm os l productive ··

with

contracts negotiated to cover
more than DOO,OOO workers at
the " Big Three" in the United

States and Canada .

,

'' To do that thh; quid;ly in as

uncerta in atmosphere as the
present one has been quite an
achievement and obviously
good for the econoniy,',' Woodcock satd.
With voles fr om just five of
the H6 bm'g;lining un its still
uncounted. Woodcock sa id 90.1
per cent uf the wor·kers voted to
ratify and 9.9 per ceut voted to
reject. That was in sharp
con b·ast lo the problems the
union had getting its contract
approved !Jy skilled tradesmen
at Ford .
Unlike the skilled workers ut
Ford, who rejected th~ n;.~tion al
ag reement, 80 per cent .of the
skilled workers at GM voted for
r a tifi cation.
f1rodu ction
workers voted app roval by 92
per cent.
Skilled trades wo rkers in fou r
units voted against approvaL In
these uni ts, however , the
combined vote of production
and skilled workers showed the
majority for ratification .

Firebugs don't

c or
~&amp;;.~

197J b 1 N f A. Inc

" We 're in for it . no w ! The hea t 's

Nixo11's finances to be probed
Wi\SH!NGTON (UPI I - A
congressional commi ttee artd a
California t~t x . . panel begin
exam ining Pres1dent Nixon's
ne&gt;&lt; ly disd w&lt;ed fit:J llcial data
thi.s week tu decide whether he
owes some $:l011,000 in back
~1Xes .

put out ·fires
PITTSBURGH (UP!) - Sen.
Edward Kennedy, D-Mass.,
has criticized the Nixon Ad·
ministration for letting oil
company executives advise it
on ways of solving the energy
crisis .

Speaking before the 46th
annual constitutiOnal convention of the United Mine
Workers Union Saturday night ,
Kennedy said it was not ''too
sw-pfi4ing" that White House
energy policies reflect the
interests of the ma jor oil
companies because they had
donated $4 million to Nixon 's
re-election campaign.
" Oil compa ny executives
have been advising this administration right into the
present crisis," he said. "Now
the administrati on has
proposed to place 250 of those
same executives in cha rge of
. carrying out emergency
measures to deal equitably
with the shortage that their
policies have prod uced.
"When you want to extinguish a fire, you don't call in
a firebug to do the job," he
said.
Kennedy said he and nine
other New England senators
had asked the federal government to tax the excess profits
of the oil companies.
" Let's tax those profits and
put the money into research for
coal development and into
research for other energy
alternatives, he said.
Kennedy said the five-week
congreaoional recess for the
Christmas holiday coul d
determine whether President
Nixon will face irnpe&lt;.~ c hment.

He said the. key to impeachment rests with the
Republican Party •nd GOP

•

•

congressme'n would be seeking
the opinions of their constituents during the holiday
recess.
"We will be able to tell better when the congressmen
return," he said, "but I thiuk
it's up to the members of his
own party and tl1c facts which
have been developed by then."
VISIT I':NDED
Mrs. Dorothy Roller, Mid·
dleport , retur ned r ecently
following a holiday visit in
Maryland with her son, James
Roller , stationed at the Andrews Air Force Base, and his
family. During her visit, the
James Roller fa mily and Mrs.
Roller drove to Westchester,
Pa. to see Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Cooper. MI. Vernon . and
Arli ngton were among the
places of interes t visited by
Mrs. Roller during her visit.

The Daily Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF'

ME IGS · MASON AREA
C HESTER L. . TANNEMIL.L. ,
Ex ec . E d .

ROBE RT HOEFLIC H,
Cit'( Ed itor
Pu blis h ed dl'l il y I! X" CI! PI
Sat utdlly bt Tr1e OJ"ilo V alley
P ub l is h i n g Comp o'l t"l'(, 111

Cou rt St , Po me roy.
45169

Ohio ,

B U! II'IU O f f l ~&lt;' PhotH!

9921156 EOotonal f'"hone ~91
~·57

Seco nd cl o'l $s oosta 9e paid
at Pomeroy, Ohio
Na ti on-'ll
advtl'liSln iiJ

rep r uenlo"t !l ve Bo t tln e tll ·
Gallagher , Inc .• 12 Eut 42nd
St ., Ntw 'fo r lo. .. N"ew York
Su!)scr l p t i on r a tii!S ~
Deliv er ed by ca r rier w here
lva ll a bl e SS cents per w eek ;
8 y Mo tor Ro u u
w h ere
c ar r ie r
u r v ic e
no l
IIV&amp;ltabte · One month , n , By
m11 H 111 Oh iO,lind W V.!t , One
Ye11r , 116 , S•x montha , 8 SO
Three
m('r\1~'
s~ &lt;,o

Etsewhere

"'

1e11 r

.,,.,

montM n 50 , IIHf'f' morHM
$6 Subs,crlpl lon pr ice in '
Ch.!&lt;IU
Sund ay
Ti!T11!S

Sent 1nto t

I

on' "

Sentinel sports editor, for
encouragement during hls
early years In the profession.
Diles recalled the small role
he played in Rio Grande
College's success story on the
hardwood while with the
Associated Press in Columbus
during the 1952.03 and 1953-54
campaigns.
"I was proud of you then.
More so today, because you
have proven successful in life
as well as on the basketball
court," said Diles looking
directly toward six of the 12
Hall of Fame inductees seated
at the center table across from
the speaker's table.
The speaker pointed out that
it's not all glamour serving as
co-host of th.e Prudential
College Football Scoreboard on
ABC-TV . "It's rewarding, but
very demanding. I haven't had
a day off since May," he
continued.
That'swhen Diles announced
he was purchasing property in
Racine. ''I want to come back
to this area and live one of
these days. We never seem to
appreciate an area like
southern Ohio until we've lived
elsewhere.' '
Diles said he presently lives
just outside of Detroit. "During
the first 11 months of 1973,

Rep. WiltJur D. ~Hil s , D-Ark. ,
agreed to convene Congtess'
Joinl Committ~e on In teJ·nal
T&lt;.1xation to go over the
P res id ~nt 's federal inc:omc tax
returns. A committee code said
the fi rst meeting would be as
early as possible this week,
perhaps Wednesday .
The California F ranchise Tax
Bo.cwd will discuss the question
of Nixon's income taxes in that
state in Sacramento Tuesday.
In his unpreceden ted d1sclosure StJturday of financial
information going buck 5 1 2
years, Nixon invited congressioual scrutiuy of his taxes and
said that if the committee
decides he owes back taxes, "I
will abide by the committee's
judgment ."
The White House sa id the
iss1.1es concerning the Pl'esident's federal and state taxes
involve no posSible wrongdoing
but only the kinds of questions
on which tax accountants and
tax lawyers often have hones t
differe nces.
Meanwhile, With its work
done oc Gerald R. Ford's
confirmation as vice president,
the House Judiciary Committee
is expected to step up its
investigation this week into
whether grounds exist for
Nixon's impeachment,
The 38-member committee is
organizing a staff Of 45 for the
i nquiry . It has narrowed more
than 100 prospects for the job of
special counsel for the investi~alion down to four .
Newly installed as v1ce
president, Ford sa id in a
broadcast interview Sunday
(ABC's " Issues and Answers")
he sees no grounds for
presidential im peachment or
resignation but that, since th~
imrw.:whmrn l inquir_y is going
(t l
1.
uught to be moved
ahead very swiftly." .
White House so urces sairl that
if b&lt;•lh thr Coliforma Hntl

•

Washington hearings go against
the President on all tax issues,
he might have to pay $296 ,333
in federal taxes and between
$15,000 and $16,000 to California.
Nixon paid no California state
income taxes from 1969 through
1972, although he voted there.
The Whi te House says Califo rnia law exempted him from
-laxa tion beca use his "domicile"
was in Washington. The District
of Colwn bia a lso e;(emp ted him
from local income ta xes, as a
federa l elected official.
The Mills committee will
examine the legali ty of the tax
free sale by Nixon of land
ad joining his San Clemente
property for a profit of $117,370
and the deduction of $.\76,000 he
claimed for giving his vice
presiden tial papers to the
National Archives.
The Washington Post reported today that the President also

News

• •

made a hitherto undisclosed
donation of papers from his
congressional years and his
participation in the 1964 cam·
paign to the National Archives
on Dec. 30, 1968, the day after
they were appraised for $80,000.
It said this resulted in a
"substantial deduction" on his
1968 tax return, which was not
made public because Nixon was
then a private citizen.
The · President's financial
accoWlting Saturday shoWed
that he paid a smaller
percentage of his income in
federal taxes over · the five
years than a family of four
with an income of $8,000. His
net worth tripled since he
became President and he is
now nearly a millionaire.
According to the financial
statement:
- The President over a four-

Deb·oit has recorded a record
696 homicides," Diles said .
" That, plus commuting on the
busy freeways, and pollution
makes life rat~er difficult. It
seems as though society in the
big cities has little regard for
hurilan life. People here in the
hill country are very sensitive
individuals. They give from the
heart - not their pocketbooks.
It's people like you who are
really the rna in s tream of
today 's society in t~is coun·

BY JOE CARNICELLI
UP! Sports Writer
Two weeks ago, the DaUas
Cowboys and the Cincinnati
Be,ngals weren't even in first
placy. Today they're knocking
on the door for division titles.
The Cowboys, who had to
beat Washington by at least
eight points Sunday to take
over first place in the National
Conference East, did it with
ease, completely dominating
the Redskins en route to a Tl-7
romp.
And Cincinnati, wWch fought
its way back into contention
last week with a stunning 27~
upset of Minnesota, blasted
Cleveland out of the playoff
picture with a 34-17 rout.
There were five playoff
berths open at the start of the
weekend and five still remain,
but the picture is considerably
clearer.

The Dallas-Washington
game lost some of its d&lt;H&gt;r-&lt;lie
importance when Atlanta was
stunned by St. Louis, 32-10, and
Cleveland was kn ocked out of
contention when P ittsburgh
clubbed H;ouslon, 33-7.
Entering the !inal week of
the season, the playoff
situation shapes up this way :
AFC East- Miami, stunned
16-3 by Baltimore Sunday for
the Dolphins' second loss of the
year, locked up the title long
ago a nd will host the Central
champion in first round playoff
action.
AFC Central - Cincinnati
must defeat Houston Sunday or
Pittsburgh must lose to San
Francisco Saturday to win the
title. Victories by both would
leave them at 10-4 and the
Bengals would win on most
points in head-to-head competition and Pittsburgh would
enter the playoffs as wild card
tea m. .
AF C West - Oakland
knocked
Kansas City out of the
Nati onal Basketball Associat ion
SfCUidings
running Saturday with a 37-7
By Un it ed Press International
rout and hosts Denver, which
Eastern Conlerenee
Atlantic Division
ripped San Diego 42-28 Sunday,
w. I. pet . g .b.
next
week for the title.
20 s .800
Bos ton
16 13 .552 6
New Yor k
NFC East- Dallas needs
11 17 .393 JOin
Buffa lo
only
a victory over St. Louis to
9 19 .3'2 1 12112
Ph il a
Central Di v ision
win and Washington can wrap
w. 1. pet. g.b.
up a wild card berth by beating
C ~p i fa l
13 l1 .542
Atlan t a
13 14 .481
p ;, Philadelphia.
Houston
11 17 .393
NFC Central - Minnesota,
6
Clevel and
10 '20 .333
Western Conference
which blasted Green Bay 37-7
Midwest Division
w . 1. pet . g.b. Saturday, was the first team in
M l lwa u k.ee
24 4 .857
the league tow in a title and has
Ch icago
22
7 .759 2 lf~
Detro i t
18 11 .62 1 61/2 been playing out the string for
KC -Omaha
B 22 .. 267 17
the last month.
Pacific Division
NFC West- Los Angeles has
w. I. pet . g .b )
15 9 6?'&gt; Golden Stat e
won the title and Atlanta,
Los Ange les
l7 12 .586 'h
which seemed a sure bet for a
Portland
11 17 .393 6
Ph oen ix
10 18 .357 7
playoff spot two weeks ago,
Se attle
10 22 .31 3 9
suddenly is aimost out of it.
Sunday ' s Results
In oth er games Sunday,
Boston li B Bufia lo 1l4
Phoen i)l; 117 Cl eveland 106
Buffalo
swamped
New
Detro it 86 KC -Omaha BO
37-13,
Detroit
ripped
England,
Cap ital 110 Los Angeles 96
Houstoh 110 Seattle 107
Chicago, 4().7, New Orleans
(on l y games sc hedu l ed l
~owned San Francisco, 16-10,
Monday ' s Games
No gam es sch.edul ed
and Philadelphia edged the
New York Jets, 24-23. The New
American Basketball
York
Giants are at Los Angeles
Association Standings
~Y unuea t'reis International
tonight.
EaSt
w. L pet . g.b.
calvin Hill plunged for two
"22 9 .110
Caro li na
TDs and Roger Staubach ran
Ken1ucky
16 . ]0 .615 31'2

of the McDowell car. Riding in
it, in addition to the driver,
were Judith Kessler and Mr.
and Mrs. Houchens.
Danny Riley was a
passenger in the car driven by
Danny Litchfield and owned by
Marion L. Litchfield of New
Haven .
McDowell was cited for
expired registration and
reckless driving .
It was only last week that a
Point Pleasan t woman,
Catherine Stevens, 22, was
seriously injured in a single car
accident near Hartford.
Today Miss Stevens is
reported by attendants to be in
''satisfactory" condition with
head inj uries. Her condition
apparently has improved since
she wa.s first admitted .
Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
- Ha ttie Barringer, Re e d s ~
ville.
D I S·
SATURDAY
CHARGES- Timothy
Cundiff,
Scott
Jus tice,
Duffy, Oti ll ia
Reanelte
Mullins, Diana Athe rton,
Pa uline De renberge r, Ollie
Tyree, Cl a r en ce Murray.
SUNDAY ADM ISSIONS Judith Kessler, Ra inelle, W.
Va .; Holly F riend, Syracuse;
Mark Allen Murphy, Coolville.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Leona Ke nnedy, John Russell,
Mill ard Swartz, Mary Martin.

Pro Standings

'

try ."

In closing, Diles said he
owed bls parents a deep
sense of gratitude - "they
guided me in the right
direction during those
sometimes difficult young
years. ''
Diles thanke&lt;l college of·
ficials for inviting him to take
part in the Hall of Fame '
banquet activities.
· Bill Gray, Rio's sports information director, was
master or ceremonies. Howard
Blanchard, a member of the
Hall of Fame selection committee, told how groundwork
was laid for Saturday's event
and some of the requirements
it takes to be selected for the
Hall of Fame.
Selection committeemen
introduced were Dr. A. R.
Christensen, Mrs. Mar~aret
Thomas, Dr . Rayrnon T.
Allison, Howard Blanchard,
BiU Gray, Coach Art Lanham,
Robert Leith, Roy Moses, Dr.
Charles Weed and Hobart
Wilson, Jr.
A homecQming dance was
held at the Redman Inn
Saturday night to complete the
three-day Homecoming . and
Hall of Fame activities.
Thomas Jefferson refused
to proclaim Thanksgivin g.
denouncing it as a " monarchial practice."

EXTE NDED OUTLOOK
Moderating temperatures
Wednesday through Friday
with chance of showers on
Friday. Highs Wednesday ln
upper 30s and low 40s war·
mlng by Frldoy to upper 40s
and low S:Os. Lows curly
Wednesday In the low 20s
and mid and upper 30s early
Friday.

18 12 .600
Jlh
New York
9 21 ,300 12112
Memp hi s
V irg in ia
7 18 .280 12
West
w . L pet. a.b.
15 13 .53 6
u tah
Indiana
16 14 .53 3
Denver
14 l3 .51 9
•n
san Antonio
15 15 .soo
1
San D iego
11 18 .37 9
4 11:1
.
.
Sunday ' $ Resulh
! No games scheduled )
Monday ' s Games
(No games schedu l ed )

Every year we say it and
w,e' IJ say it ;:tga in : sometimes
it s awfully ha rd t.o hear I he
cry of a li ttle child over the
clan g of th e y ul e c a s h
reg iste rs.

Natio-{lal Hockey League Stand Ings
By United Press International

'

PITTSBURGH - AS COAL ONCE AGAIN becomes "King"
of available energy sources, rank-and.file United Mine Workers
me mbers are putting themselves in a position to capitalize upon
their treasure for the first time in the union's 84-year-history.
Delegate• to the UMW's 46th constitutional convention have
indicated they want to work shorter hours for more pay, with
many of the benefits that unions organized by the mine workers
have enjoyed for yea rs. They also say they are preparing to
carry on a prolonged fight with both the coal iodustry and the
federal goverrune nt at a time when a coal strike would paralyze
a nation already cripp:ed by energy shortages.

'

18

4

3 39 118 66

Montreat 16 7
N.Y Rngr s 13 8
Toronto
}3 10

2 34 86 68
7 33 111 87
5 31 93 75

Buffalo
14
Detrol1
9
vancouver·. 6
N Y . lslndrsA

1 29 93
2 20 79
4 16 57
1 15 57

11
16
14

14

85
120
81
82

WeSI
I. t. pts gJ ga
Phltadelph •16 6 J 35 73 41

w.

Chicago
13
s 7 JJ
Atlanta
12 9 6 30
St . Louis
10 9 6 26
Los Angeles 8 14 " '2 0
Minnesota 6 13 7 19
Pittsburgh 7 15 4 18
California 7 17
2 16
Sunday ' s Results
Buffalo 5 Toronto 2
NY Rangers 6 California
Boston 3 Philadelph i a 3
Ch icago M i nnesota 3
(only games scheduled )
Monday's Games
No games sc heduled

for security purposes and
$68,000 on the home itself for
security-related reasons.
- The President said San
Clemente will be given to the
government after death . of
Nixon and his wife.

84 46
69 70
6-4 60
70 83
71 89
64 102
61 95
3

s

"Do You Think It Will Float?"

---------

World Hockey Auociation
~Tandtngs

By United Press International
East
w . I. I . pts gf ga
Nw Eng l nd 16 10 1 33 101 86
Cleveland 13
Toronto
13

10
14

3 29 87 85
J 29 104 97

Quebec
Chicago

13
11

14
12

J 29 112 100

Jersey

10 16 2 22 65 100
west

1 23 80 83

w . 1. t. pts gf ga
Edmonton 17
9 0 34 90 71
Minnesota 14 12 1 29 102 91
Houston
13 9 3 29 95 78
W inn ipeg 13 13 3 29 105 ltlO
Los Angels 11 17 0 22 81 108
vancouver 9 17 0 18 84 107
Sunday's Results
Houston 5 Vancouver 3
Winnipeg 3 Jersey 1
Toronto 10 MJnnesot11 1
Quebec 6 Chicago 1
New Engl&amp;nd 3 Cleveland 2
&lt;only games scheduled )
Monday's Games
No games sc heduled

I

I

\

MOST GASOLINE STATIONS ACROSS the country were
closed Sunday in compliance with President Nixon's requested
energy-saving measures. Traffic on expressways was reported
light for the second Sunday of the volunteer shutdpwns.
In Ne w Mexico, gasoline dealers reported beavy sales
Saturday befor e the 9 p.m. closing ttme, but state police reported
"very lilt:., traffic" on highways Sunday. Sunday traffic was also
reported lighter than usual throughout most of the New York City
metropolitan region, including parts of New Jersey, Connecticut,
Pennsylva nia and Massachusetts, but police said scattered
heavy rainstorms may have kept some drivers at home.

Euf .
w. I. t . pts gf ga

Bos1on

• in Briefs

(Continued .from Page 1)
detected. But one electronic engineer, who asked not to be
identified for professional reasons, said a tape is ahnost like a
fi ngerpr int - any change could be picked up by highly sensitive
amplifiers.
Another expert, a broadcaster., said a tape is more like a
photograph - it can be "touched up" so as to remove even so
little as a syllable.

•

year period spent only $63,029
of his $266,000 expense allow·
ance and took the rest as
personal income, on which he
paid taxes.
-He borrowed heavily from
friends and $25,000 from his
elder daughter, Tricia Cox, to
buy property at Key Biscayne,
Fla. Mrs. Cox made a $111,270
profit on the transaction over
five years.
-The government spent $6
million to construct and maintain the Western White House
office complex on adjacent
government property, $635,000
on the San Clemente grounds

• •

I

I.

\!

1/JI

! ·:f;

Thi s Week's
Ohio College
Basketball Schedule

By United Press International

Monday
Xavier a t M ichigan
Pe pperdine ( Ca l tl. ) at Da yton
Fair m ont St. (W . V a.) at
St eube nv i l le
Gro ve Ci t y ( Pa . ) at Mount
Un ion
Ott er bein a t F i ndl ay
Tuesday
Shaw (Mtc h.) at Ash land
Malone at Ti ff in
Whee ling at Oh io Domini ca n
K enyon at W i ttenberg
Wednesday
Ball Stal e at Bow ling Green
Wnght Slate a t Cincinnat i
Bl u ffton at Heidel be rg
Earlham ( Ind. ) at Defi an ce

Hiram at Wooster
Urba 11 a at Wa lsh

E.o~s 1

Albany St . 68 Cor !land S. t. 54
Bethany 71 John Carr· ott 60
Boston Coli. 73 Brown 71
Brandeis 90 W ttli ams 87
Cincinnat i 64 Te mple 52
Connecticu1 62 Harvard 41
Delaware 76 Leh igh 45
Dayton BO LIU 69
Lafayette 68 Fordham 62
LaSalle 66 Hofstra 53
LSU 91 Pac if ic 17
Manhattan 87 Rulgers 78
Mi ddlebury 69 Lowel l Tech 63
N .H . U 76 51 . Anselm's 58
Pha . Textile 57 Widener 51
Prtnceton 77 Villanova 70
R PI 79 Roches1er 56
Rhode Isl and 98 Boston St . 84
St. Francis 67 Fairf ield 57
Sp r ingfield 94 Clark 67
Swarthmore 71 John s Hopk ins

70
Syracuse 83 Army 66
Tr i nity 96 MIT 64
Tufts 99 Bates 88
Tu l ane Bl Georgia St . 63
Wesleyan 102 Bow do in 66
V ale 102 Holy Cross 9'2
.
.
South
Fis k 92 Belmont 70
G . Washington 94 St Peter ' s 73
Jcksnv le 82 Ga . Southern 69
Kentucky St . 99 Be tl ar m ine 77
Louisville 91 But ter 81
N Car olina 103 Ver mont 48
.
Th e Citadel 88 Wm . &amp; Mary 65
Tulane 81 Geor gia St . 63
V ir ginia 104 Duke 82
Wes t er n Kentucky 97 Bay lor 81
Witt enber g 8!&gt; Ashla nd 75
Wri gh t St 73 Hei delber g 54
.
Midw est
A kro n 69 Roa no ke 65
Ame r ican U. 85 Buff alo 76
Ar izon a St. 71 Ka n sas St. 66
Ar kan sa s 83 W abas h 77
Ar k . 51 . 91 Sout h F la . 89
Ball St . 78 Western M ich . 72
Swing Gr een 89 Ea stern Ill 71
Denison 81 Walsh 66
Detroi t 70 M i chiga n 59
Dr ak e 80 T ex as 72
Ill inois St.
wa sh . St . 63
Ind ian a 77 Ken tu c ky 68
Kan sa s 94 Northern Io wa 60
MarQuette 86 Iowa 70
M i ami (Oh ioz 86 P urdu e 85
Notre Dam e 94 St . Louis 65
Northwes1e rn 76 De P au l 65
Oh io Nor t h ern 66 Oh io W styn 52
Oh io U 7J Ea stern M ic h . 54
Oh io St . 72 P ~ nn St. 65
Okl a . St. 90 Neb .- Om ah a 65
S.C . 74 M ich . St. 63
So uthern Cali f . 7·1 Illin ois 60
Sou1h er n Il l. 102 Mo -Rolla 64
Steub enville 41 Cen tr; al M ic h . 36
Tol edo 84 L o yola 77
Tulsa 84 NE Lou is iana 72
Wi s. 88 North Dako ta St . 60

n

.
. Southwest
Ea st T e)l;a s 60 Southwest Te x a s

57
Hou ston 97 F lorida 7J
Ri ce 7 9 L amar 67 ( OT)
T CU 74 Oklahoma City 69 f OT )
T ex as Tech 72 Ste t son 61
West
Ar i zona 87 Ca l Pol y Pomona 54
Colo . Col lege 80 M etro Stat e 53
Colo . St . 75 Weber St . 68
N .M . 105 North Dakota 61
N .M . S1m 93 Br igham Youn g 74
Si!n Jose 51. 93 San F ran cisc o
St . 70
UCLA 77 S MU 60
Utah 93 Utah St . 85
Wa sh . 68 Seat1 1e Pa ci f ic 66
Wyom ing 95 Denver 75

Ken yon at Young st own St .

CHRIS~ AS

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AND

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For Your Table
And

S9 N. Second St.
Middleport, 0.

! L' I'Lit.";.',l . ~.~ l • · ma h. (· ~.,1 11
.ll :.:tk- 111 , ,q~· • n n ~l Ill'\\

' .lo:ln• h,lt' ·: n

FRANK SISSON
Smith Nelson Motors
Pomeroy , Ohio

Phone 992-3907

Phone 992 -2174

GEORGE BUCHANON

PHIL BURTON

Pomeroy Motor Co.
Pomeroy I Ohio
Phone 99~ ·2126

Burton's Sunoco Ser .
Mason. W. Va .

JACK FLESHER
Flesher's Texaco Ser.
New Haven, W . Va .

DALE C. WARNER INS. AGENCY
992-2143

Pomeroy, 0.

112 W. Main

Stephen

[}[]rno~

c. Snowcltn

! Grav~l Hill )
Middleport , Ohio
PH. 992-7155
lfAU fAitM

A

lnsur;mca

lNIUa.t.MCI

See Your Heil Dealer
'buted By City Ice &amp;F

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Com~an i H

Home o rtoce-s:
81oom;ngt on. lllinol'

"

cHRl

SPONSORED BY:

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992-7428

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NHL HOCKEY

NOW

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And There's

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EVERY NIGHT TIL CHRISTMAS

MOORE'S

M

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PH.

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TMA 5

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Pomeroy Sunoco Station
Pomeroy 1 Ohio

Our
complete
comprehensive
homeowners' .policy covers loss due to
fire~ theft, storm damage, more. One
premium.

To see for all your
family insurance needs.

r~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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OPEN EVENINGS TIL
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PACKAGE POLICY:
TOTAL COVERAGE

A

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REGULAR 2.59

Welker's Ashland Sta .
Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 992-lSJS

............

THE'
'

Americans, you can live in .warm comfort
all winter long with Heil Central Oil or
Gas System . It's the best you can buy. If
it wasn't. I wouldn't tell you so !

~ ~ , t•, h,

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• • •.,

Dudley's Florist

JACK WELKER

)6...&amp;#~

it's time to heat up!

~

Come In
Select Yours Today!

11. ' ~~:.· \' !" \

't L"'

Is

Kashmir lies in the Himalayan foothills between heatbaked plains and mountains
of eternal snow. Four million people live within its
86,000 square miles.

~
anJ i.l ot

PAUL HARVEY

Candles For Gifts

Heidelberg at A shland
Capi tal at Urbana

11 \ \Jf \1"11

from me,

BEAUTIFUL

My.
t Un1on
.
t Oh "•o Nor thern
oun
a

,,(lr

Take it

SSJ R usse-1 St .

~

St.

If \ 1'\ H ~,1 r' h.t'!l" l \ h
t h rLl . , . . ;n, •·'· l ~~· 1111•1&lt;:
lll ,,,,.n ,, ,_.. li . _ 'h . . \: I..

points while Mark Burch
canned 10.
Kyger Creek sank 26 of 63
fl oor attempts for 41 pet. and
only 13 of 31 free throws.
Buffalo had a cold 24 pet. from
Buffalo (49) - Wa lk.er o o o,
the floor connecting on 21 of 87
Bvrch
S-O 10 , Boggess 3 2 a.
attempts.
Greenlaw 3·2 8 , May s 9 l 19,
The Bisons were seven of 13 Willi ams I I J ; N o ff si nger 0 I
at the charity line . Th e 1. Totals 21 -7·49.
Kyger Creek (65 ) - Hud son
Gallians a!so held a 57-42
57 17 ; Rurnley6·7 14 Tabor 30
rebounding edge.
6 : Clay 6 0 12 ; W tse 4-2 10 :
Head Coach Jim Arledge Sti dham 1 0 ') ; Lu cas 1 0-2:
commented that big David Kern 0 2-1 ; Icard 0 Ot&gt;; Arnett
0 0 0 and Rou sh 0 0 0. Totals 26 Clay turned the game around lJ -65 .
when Hudson and Stidham both
By Ouarters :
Buffalo
13 10 14 11 - 49
got into foul trouble . "I think
Kyger Creek
8 19 17 21 - 65
we·'re coming around as a

Uay Hudson .
Hudson, however. was forced
to sit out half the first period
and all the secoud quarter after
collecting three personal fouls ,
two on c harging calls.
The Bobcats also lost the
services of ~2 junior center Joe
Stidham, who was also charged
with three personals in the first
period .
Big David i Moby) Clay, 6-4 ,
265 pound senior center, came
on strong in the second period
to help on the offensive hoards
and in the scoring attack.
Clay had six points while
Rumley and 5-10 junior Dave
Wise dumped in important
baskets to give the Bobcats the
lead prior to the end of the first
hail.
Hudson, Rumley and Wise
led the Bobcats' 17 point third
period . Hudson canned eight
points on four baskets, Rumley
added two field goals and Wise
had three points .
The Bobcats wrapped it up
with a 21 point fourth quarter.
Hudson led KC with 17 points
on five baskets and seven free
th rows . Run1ley had 14 points
and 18 rebounds; Clay finished
the night with 12 points and 14
rebounds and Wise had 10
poin ts.
Mays led the Bisons with 19

A thought for the day :
American poet Emily Dickinson
said, ' 4Success is counted
sweetest by those who never
succeed." ·

Wilmington at Earlham llnd .t

Powell Sunoco ServiCe
Middleport, Ohio
Phone 992-3451

\lt!"~'''"~""I""'''"'!1¥1~11&lt;N•n~''"""'"''"' ~~'

The Almanac
By United Press International
Today is Monday, Dec. 10,
the 344th day of 1973 with 21 to
follow.
The moon is between its fu ll
phase and last quarter.
The morning stars are
Mercury and Saturn .
Those born on this da te are
under the sign of Sagittarius.
American poet Emily Dickinson was born Dec. 10, 1830.
On this day in history:
In 1817, Mississippi was
admitted to the Union as the
20th state.
In 1898, Spain signed a treaty
officially ending the SpanishAmerican War. It gave Guam,
Puerto Rico and the Philippines
to the United States.
In 1941, Japanese troops
landed on northern Luzon in the
Philippines in the early days of
World War II in the Pacific
Theater.
In 1971, the Senate confirmed
President Nixon's nomination of
. Wtlliam Rehnquist to the U.S
Supreme Court.

!'

Wi lbe rforce at Thomas More

All ianc e ( Pa .) a t Steuben vi lle
Tay lor ( In d .) a t Wilmington
Oh io Northern at Oberlin
Thursday
St . Fran cis ( Pa.) at Cleveland

San Fran ci sco St. at You ngs.
to w n St .
Friday
Cedar vi lle at Marion ( lnd)
Ge!" e va ( ~a_.) at M a l_one
0~•? Oomm t ca~ a t Wilberforce
Ttffln ~~ Oberlm
Baldwtn -Wallace at Waba sh
Wooster a t Adrian ( M ich.)
Saturday
Oh io State at Mi ssouri
Dayto n at M ichigan
Xa v ier at St . Bona venture
Miam i at Cincinnati
LSU (New Or lean s ) at Toledo
Clev eland St . at Buffal o
Steubenville at Ga nnon I Pa.(
Cedarvil le at Tiffin
Akr on at W i ttenberg
Central State at Be ltarmine,
K

W1th four players in double
fi gures, Coach Jim Arledge's
Kyger ('reek Bobcats captured
their second victory in three
starts Saturday night by
defeating Buffalo of Putman
County, 65-49 in the team's
home opener at Cheshire .
After a slow start, the
Bobcals scored 19 points in the
second quarter to lead by four
at the half, 27-23.
In the fi rst period , Coach
Rudolph Raynes' Bisons took a
13-lllead behind the shooting of
Phil Mays, 6-1 junior and 6-0
senior center Jim Boggess.
Kyger Creek's only attack
was generated by 6-0 forward
John Rumley and 6-0 guard

~~1;~','~; a\ 1 /Ja~g~e~t~~:f/f~d 1
Denison at Bet ha ny ( W. Va . )

CARTER FRENCH

~~---

'

College Soores

~~~

INSURANCE

.

five yards for another as the
Cowboys rolled past Washington. The Redskin offense was
unable to score a touchpown,
with the only points coming on
a blocked punt. Washington
blew three field goals attempts
in the first half to help the
Cowboys.
Ken Anderson th rew touchdown passes of nine, 70 and 20
yards to rookie Isaac Curtis in
the first half and the Bengals
went on to rip Cleveland for
their fifth straight triwnph :
Charley Johnson's two TO
.passes and Jim Turner's four
field goals helped the Broncos
blast San Diego to insure the
flrst winning season in their
history.
Buffalo erupted for 17 points
in the third period to break
open its game with the
Patriots. O.J. Simpson gained
219 yards to move to within 60
of Jim Brown's single season
rushing record,
Bill Olds ran two yards for
one score and Marty Domres
threw two yards to Tom Mitchell for another as the Colts
upended Miami. Lydell Mitchell had 104 yards rushing
against Miami, which played
without quarterback Bob Grie·
. se_
Archie Manning threw a 37·
yard TD pa ss to Jubilee
Dunbar and Bill McClard
kicked three field goals to lead
the Saints over San Francisco
and Bill Munson passed for two
TDs and Mel Farr ran for two
more as Detroit blasted Chicago. John Outlaw's 4f&gt;.yard TO
run with an interception lifted
Philadelphia over the Jets.

N at ion a I Fool ball League
Standings
By United Press International
Am erlcan Conference
East
w. l. t. pet.
X·M i am i
l l 2 0 .846
Buffalo
8 5 0 .61 5
New Eng l and
5 8 0 .385
NY Jet s
490 308
Baltimor e
J 10 0 .2J1
Central
w . I. t . pet .
P ittsburgh
9 4 0 .692
Ci nc innati
9 4 0 .692
Cleveland
7 42 .61 5
Houston
1 12 0 077
West
w. I. t. pet.
8!~~ae~d
;
~
Kansas Clty
6 5 2 :538 ·
San D iego
2 10 1 .192
National Conference
East
· w. I. t. pet.
Dallas
9 4 o .69'2
Wash ington
9 4 0 .692
Ph ita
S 7 1 .423
St . LOU IS
4 8 1 ·346
N .Y . Gi ants
2 9 1 · 208
Central
w. 1. t. pet.
· X·M lnneso1a
11 2 o .846
Detroi1
6 6 1 .500
Green Bay
4 7 2 .3 85
Chi cag o
3 10 0 .23 1
West
w. I. t . pet.
)C:. Los Ange les
10 2 ·o .833
Atlanta
B s o .615
San Francisco
s 8 o .385
New Orleans
5 8 0 .385
)!; .clinched div ision title
Saturday's Results
Minnesota 31 Green Bay 7
Oakland 37 Ktmsas Ci1v 7
! only games scheduled)
sunaay's Results
Ci nc innati 34 Cleveland 17
Denver -42 San 0 I ego 28
Pittsburgh 33 Houston 1
Salf i more 16 Mi8m l 3
Buffalo 37 New England l3
Detroi1 40 Ch ic ago 7
St . Louis 32 Atlanta 10
New Orleans 16 san Francisco
10
Dallas 27 Washington 7
Ph II adelphia 24 N .Y , Jets 23
(only g.!!tmes scheduled 1
Monday's Games
N .Y . Giants at Los Angeles
(Only game scheduled }
Saturday's Games
Detroit at Miam 1
P itt sburgh at San Francisco
· (only games scheduled )
Sunday's Games
Buff;~lo at N .Y . Jets
Ci ncinnati at Houston
Denver at Oakland
New England at Baltimore
San Diego at Kansas City
Dallas at St . Lou is
Green Bay at Chicago
Minnesota at N .Y . Gian1s·
New Orleans at Atlanta
Phll8delphia at Washington
Cleveland at Los Angeles
I only gam ea scheduled l

N"""'"W"'"'MM-1111-·~oiMIIWJIIIitN\ ~1

"Do you think it will float?"

wut," he sald .
Kyger Creek will ploy
Southern Tuesday night In an
important SVAC contest at
Cheshire . Buffalo's reserve
learn defeated the Bobkittens,
48-42 . .
Bill Smith led the Bisons with
t8 points while Bill Metzner
and Tim Lucas had 17 and 13 in
a losing cause.

I

I

•

�•

•
3- The Daily Senlinel, Middlel"'rt-Pom&lt;'foy. 0 ., Dec. 10, I9i3

KC tops Buffalo

ree hospitalized with

27-7

injuries from collision

CAR DEMOLISHED - Officers check the wreckage of
one of two cars involved in a collision early Sunday near

POINT PLEASANT - Three "satisfactory."
persons were admitted to the
Judith Kessler, 17, Rainelle,
hospital with serious injuries W. Va. was adm itted to
received in a two-car collision Veterans Memorial Hospital
early Sunday morning near where she is reported by atHartford when police were tendan ts to be in "satisfac·
chasing one of the cars in- tory" condition toda y with
volved.
possible internal injuries for
Fern Houchens, 23, Ravens· which she is being observed.
wood was fi rs t t a k en to Robert Gene McDowell, 19, of
Pleasant Valley Hos pital Millwood was treated at
where she was placed in the Veterans Memorial for injuries
Intensive Care Unit, but soon and released.
was transferred to St. Mary's
Danny Riley, 20, Mason was
Hospital in Huntington. Today treated at Holzer Medical
attendants reported she is in Center for a bruised knee and
&lt;~critical'' condition with head
released.
lnjuries .
Danny Lee Litchfield, 17,
Gary Houchens, believed to New Haven, apparently suf·
be her husband, and also 23 of fered only bruises but was not
Ravenswood, was admitted to admitted to an area hospitaL
Pleasant Valley Hospital with
Deputy James F. Gaskins,
lacerations and a compound the investigating officer, said
fracture of the left leg . His the accident occurred at 2 a.m.
condition is reported to be Sunday on U. s: 33 near Hart-

w. v ~. in which three perso ns Sllffered injuries
requirin g hospit.ulization . Police were chasing one of the
vehicles.

Hartford ,

ford and in addition to the
injuries, resu lted in one driv:r
being cited for two traffic
violations and the total loss of ·
two cars.
Driver s were identified as
Robert Gene McDowell, and
Danny Lee Utchfield.
According
to
Deputy
Gaskins, McDowell was
headod north on U. S. 33 at a
reported high rate of speed
while being purs ued by
Patrolmen Tom O'Bryan of the
Hartford Police Deparlment.
McDowell appar ently lost
control, police said running off
the roadway to the right and
striking the rock cliff area of
the hill.
From there, McDowell 's car
skidded back on the roadway
hitting Litchfield's in the left
front.
Two persons were thrown out

- - - - - -- -Hall of Fame big success.

Autoworkers
BlRRY'~
woRL~
.
to sign pact

(Continued from Page 1)
criticized by his readers.
"Had not Jim Porter and the
late Harold Wetherholt drove
up to Middleport and talked to
me , I would have probably
ended my newspaper career as
early as 1948, " Diles said .
(Porter was sports editor of the
Tribune , the late Mr.
Wetherholt was publisher at
the time ).
Diles had criticized GAHS
grid Coach James F .
Helderman for permitting the
t948 Blue Devils to roll up an
86-0 grid victory over
Nelsonville. Diles called the
lop-sided GAHS will "unsportsmanlike" because Halderman
did not use · many of his substitutes that night. The column,
,:Musings Around the Circuit,"
stirred up many Blue Devil
fans, including Rev. J. Edward
Hakes, pastor of the First
Baptist Church at the time.
Porter told Diles if he was
going to dish out criticism, he
should be able to accept
criticism. The Gallipolis newsmen persuaded Diles to stay
on, thus his alr~ady successful ·
career in newspaper, radio and
TV was well on its way.
Diles also .praised Paul
(Moon) Clifford, former
Pomeroy
Middleport

~------------

DETROIT (UP! ) - Nea rly
420,000 auto workers at General
Motors Cor-p. approved a new
three.year labor agreement
with the giant automaker by a
better than 9-1 margin, the
United Auto Workers ~m·
noUI)ced Sunday.
That left only ratification of a
contract with GM of Canada
and local contract bargaining
at Ford and GM to wrap up the
1973 round of auto negotiations.
The auto contract ta lks began
at GM in mid-July .
There are 78 of 146 bargai ning units at GM without local
contracts to supplement the
national agreement. At)"ord , 17
of 97 bargaining units still
haven't completed lhe local
negotiations .
UAW President Leonard
Woodcock said, however, there
will be no strike dead1ines in
local negotiations until after the
Christmas holiday. Ratification
by the GM workers means the
average hourly worker will
receive about $600 in pay the
week before Christmas, includ·
ing an average $1&gt;0 in back
pay.
Woodcock, at a late-night
news conference Sunday, de-

scribed the five-month period
as

' jm os l productive ··

with

contracts negotiated to cover
more than DOO,OOO workers at
the " Big Three" in the United

States and Canada .

,

'' To do that thh; quid;ly in as

uncerta in atmosphere as the
present one has been quite an
achievement and obviously
good for the econoniy,',' Woodcock satd.
With voles fr om just five of
the H6 bm'g;lining un its still
uncounted. Woodcock sa id 90.1
per cent uf the wor·kers voted to
ratify and 9.9 per ceut voted to
reject. That was in sharp
con b·ast lo the problems the
union had getting its contract
approved !Jy skilled tradesmen
at Ford .
Unlike the skilled workers ut
Ford, who rejected th~ n;.~tion al
ag reement, 80 per cent .of the
skilled workers at GM voted for
r a tifi cation.
f1rodu ction
workers voted app roval by 92
per cent.
Skilled trades wo rkers in fou r
units voted against approvaL In
these uni ts, however , the
combined vote of production
and skilled workers showed the
majority for ratification .

Firebugs don't

c or
~&amp;;.~

197J b 1 N f A. Inc

" We 're in for it . no w ! The hea t 's

Nixo11's finances to be probed
Wi\SH!NGTON (UPI I - A
congressional commi ttee artd a
California t~t x . . panel begin
exam ining Pres1dent Nixon's
ne&gt;&lt; ly disd w&lt;ed fit:J llcial data
thi.s week tu decide whether he
owes some $:l011,000 in back
~1Xes .

put out ·fires
PITTSBURGH (UP!) - Sen.
Edward Kennedy, D-Mass.,
has criticized the Nixon Ad·
ministration for letting oil
company executives advise it
on ways of solving the energy
crisis .

Speaking before the 46th
annual constitutiOnal convention of the United Mine
Workers Union Saturday night ,
Kennedy said it was not ''too
sw-pfi4ing" that White House
energy policies reflect the
interests of the ma jor oil
companies because they had
donated $4 million to Nixon 's
re-election campaign.
" Oil compa ny executives
have been advising this administration right into the
present crisis," he said. "Now
the administrati on has
proposed to place 250 of those
same executives in cha rge of
. carrying out emergency
measures to deal equitably
with the shortage that their
policies have prod uced.
"When you want to extinguish a fire, you don't call in
a firebug to do the job," he
said.
Kennedy said he and nine
other New England senators
had asked the federal government to tax the excess profits
of the oil companies.
" Let's tax those profits and
put the money into research for
coal development and into
research for other energy
alternatives, he said.
Kennedy said the five-week
congreaoional recess for the
Christmas holiday coul d
determine whether President
Nixon will face irnpe&lt;.~ c hment.

He said the. key to impeachment rests with the
Republican Party •nd GOP

•

•

congressme'n would be seeking
the opinions of their constituents during the holiday
recess.
"We will be able to tell better when the congressmen
return," he said, "but I thiuk
it's up to the members of his
own party and tl1c facts which
have been developed by then."
VISIT I':NDED
Mrs. Dorothy Roller, Mid·
dleport , retur ned r ecently
following a holiday visit in
Maryland with her son, James
Roller , stationed at the Andrews Air Force Base, and his
family. During her visit, the
James Roller fa mily and Mrs.
Roller drove to Westchester,
Pa. to see Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Cooper. MI. Vernon . and
Arli ngton were among the
places of interes t visited by
Mrs. Roller during her visit.

The Daily Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF'

ME IGS · MASON AREA
C HESTER L. . TANNEMIL.L. ,
Ex ec . E d .

ROBE RT HOEFLIC H,
Cit'( Ed itor
Pu blis h ed dl'l il y I! X" CI! PI
Sat utdlly bt Tr1e OJ"ilo V alley
P ub l is h i n g Comp o'l t"l'(, 111

Cou rt St , Po me roy.
45169

Ohio ,

B U! II'IU O f f l ~&lt;' PhotH!

9921156 EOotonal f'"hone ~91
~·57

Seco nd cl o'l $s oosta 9e paid
at Pomeroy, Ohio
Na ti on-'ll
advtl'liSln iiJ

rep r uenlo"t !l ve Bo t tln e tll ·
Gallagher , Inc .• 12 Eut 42nd
St ., Ntw 'fo r lo. .. N"ew York
Su!)scr l p t i on r a tii!S ~
Deliv er ed by ca r rier w here
lva ll a bl e SS cents per w eek ;
8 y Mo tor Ro u u
w h ere
c ar r ie r
u r v ic e
no l
IIV&amp;ltabte · One month , n , By
m11 H 111 Oh iO,lind W V.!t , One
Ye11r , 116 , S•x montha , 8 SO
Three
m('r\1~'
s~ &lt;,o

Etsewhere

"'

1e11 r

.,,.,

montM n 50 , IIHf'f' morHM
$6 Subs,crlpl lon pr ice in '
Ch.!&lt;IU
Sund ay
Ti!T11!S

Sent 1nto t

I

on' "

Sentinel sports editor, for
encouragement during hls
early years In the profession.
Diles recalled the small role
he played in Rio Grande
College's success story on the
hardwood while with the
Associated Press in Columbus
during the 1952.03 and 1953-54
campaigns.
"I was proud of you then.
More so today, because you
have proven successful in life
as well as on the basketball
court," said Diles looking
directly toward six of the 12
Hall of Fame inductees seated
at the center table across from
the speaker's table.
The speaker pointed out that
it's not all glamour serving as
co-host of th.e Prudential
College Football Scoreboard on
ABC-TV . "It's rewarding, but
very demanding. I haven't had
a day off since May," he
continued.
That'swhen Diles announced
he was purchasing property in
Racine. ''I want to come back
to this area and live one of
these days. We never seem to
appreciate an area like
southern Ohio until we've lived
elsewhere.' '
Diles said he presently lives
just outside of Detroit. "During
the first 11 months of 1973,

Rep. WiltJur D. ~Hil s , D-Ark. ,
agreed to convene Congtess'
Joinl Committ~e on In teJ·nal
T&lt;.1xation to go over the
P res id ~nt 's federal inc:omc tax
returns. A committee code said
the fi rst meeting would be as
early as possible this week,
perhaps Wednesday .
The California F ranchise Tax
Bo.cwd will discuss the question
of Nixon's income taxes in that
state in Sacramento Tuesday.
In his unpreceden ted d1sclosure StJturday of financial
information going buck 5 1 2
years, Nixon invited congressioual scrutiuy of his taxes and
said that if the committee
decides he owes back taxes, "I
will abide by the committee's
judgment ."
The White House sa id the
iss1.1es concerning the Pl'esident's federal and state taxes
involve no posSible wrongdoing
but only the kinds of questions
on which tax accountants and
tax lawyers often have hones t
differe nces.
Meanwhile, With its work
done oc Gerald R. Ford's
confirmation as vice president,
the House Judiciary Committee
is expected to step up its
investigation this week into
whether grounds exist for
Nixon's impeachment,
The 38-member committee is
organizing a staff Of 45 for the
i nquiry . It has narrowed more
than 100 prospects for the job of
special counsel for the investi~alion down to four .
Newly installed as v1ce
president, Ford sa id in a
broadcast interview Sunday
(ABC's " Issues and Answers")
he sees no grounds for
presidential im peachment or
resignation but that, since th~
imrw.:whmrn l inquir_y is going
(t l
1.
uught to be moved
ahead very swiftly." .
White House so urces sairl that
if b&lt;•lh thr Coliforma Hntl

•

Washington hearings go against
the President on all tax issues,
he might have to pay $296 ,333
in federal taxes and between
$15,000 and $16,000 to California.
Nixon paid no California state
income taxes from 1969 through
1972, although he voted there.
The Whi te House says Califo rnia law exempted him from
-laxa tion beca use his "domicile"
was in Washington. The District
of Colwn bia a lso e;(emp ted him
from local income ta xes, as a
federa l elected official.
The Mills committee will
examine the legali ty of the tax
free sale by Nixon of land
ad joining his San Clemente
property for a profit of $117,370
and the deduction of $.\76,000 he
claimed for giving his vice
presiden tial papers to the
National Archives.
The Washington Post reported today that the President also

News

• •

made a hitherto undisclosed
donation of papers from his
congressional years and his
participation in the 1964 cam·
paign to the National Archives
on Dec. 30, 1968, the day after
they were appraised for $80,000.
It said this resulted in a
"substantial deduction" on his
1968 tax return, which was not
made public because Nixon was
then a private citizen.
The · President's financial
accoWlting Saturday shoWed
that he paid a smaller
percentage of his income in
federal taxes over · the five
years than a family of four
with an income of $8,000. His
net worth tripled since he
became President and he is
now nearly a millionaire.
According to the financial
statement:
- The President over a four-

Deb·oit has recorded a record
696 homicides," Diles said .
" That, plus commuting on the
busy freeways, and pollution
makes life rat~er difficult. It
seems as though society in the
big cities has little regard for
hurilan life. People here in the
hill country are very sensitive
individuals. They give from the
heart - not their pocketbooks.
It's people like you who are
really the rna in s tream of
today 's society in t~is coun·

BY JOE CARNICELLI
UP! Sports Writer
Two weeks ago, the DaUas
Cowboys and the Cincinnati
Be,ngals weren't even in first
placy. Today they're knocking
on the door for division titles.
The Cowboys, who had to
beat Washington by at least
eight points Sunday to take
over first place in the National
Conference East, did it with
ease, completely dominating
the Redskins en route to a Tl-7
romp.
And Cincinnati, wWch fought
its way back into contention
last week with a stunning 27~
upset of Minnesota, blasted
Cleveland out of the playoff
picture with a 34-17 rout.
There were five playoff
berths open at the start of the
weekend and five still remain,
but the picture is considerably
clearer.

The Dallas-Washington
game lost some of its d&lt;H&gt;r-&lt;lie
importance when Atlanta was
stunned by St. Louis, 32-10, and
Cleveland was kn ocked out of
contention when P ittsburgh
clubbed H;ouslon, 33-7.
Entering the !inal week of
the season, the playoff
situation shapes up this way :
AFC East- Miami, stunned
16-3 by Baltimore Sunday for
the Dolphins' second loss of the
year, locked up the title long
ago a nd will host the Central
champion in first round playoff
action.
AFC Central - Cincinnati
must defeat Houston Sunday or
Pittsburgh must lose to San
Francisco Saturday to win the
title. Victories by both would
leave them at 10-4 and the
Bengals would win on most
points in head-to-head competition and Pittsburgh would
enter the playoffs as wild card
tea m. .
AF C West - Oakland
knocked
Kansas City out of the
Nati onal Basketball Associat ion
SfCUidings
running Saturday with a 37-7
By Un it ed Press International
rout and hosts Denver, which
Eastern Conlerenee
Atlantic Division
ripped San Diego 42-28 Sunday,
w. I. pet . g .b.
next
week for the title.
20 s .800
Bos ton
16 13 .552 6
New Yor k
NFC East- Dallas needs
11 17 .393 JOin
Buffa lo
only
a victory over St. Louis to
9 19 .3'2 1 12112
Ph il a
Central Di v ision
win and Washington can wrap
w. 1. pet. g.b.
up a wild card berth by beating
C ~p i fa l
13 l1 .542
Atlan t a
13 14 .481
p ;, Philadelphia.
Houston
11 17 .393
NFC Central - Minnesota,
6
Clevel and
10 '20 .333
Western Conference
which blasted Green Bay 37-7
Midwest Division
w . 1. pet . g.b. Saturday, was the first team in
M l lwa u k.ee
24 4 .857
the league tow in a title and has
Ch icago
22
7 .759 2 lf~
Detro i t
18 11 .62 1 61/2 been playing out the string for
KC -Omaha
B 22 .. 267 17
the last month.
Pacific Division
NFC West- Los Angeles has
w. I. pet . g .b )
15 9 6?'&gt; Golden Stat e
won the title and Atlanta,
Los Ange les
l7 12 .586 'h
which seemed a sure bet for a
Portland
11 17 .393 6
Ph oen ix
10 18 .357 7
playoff spot two weeks ago,
Se attle
10 22 .31 3 9
suddenly is aimost out of it.
Sunday ' s Results
In oth er games Sunday,
Boston li B Bufia lo 1l4
Phoen i)l; 117 Cl eveland 106
Buffalo
swamped
New
Detro it 86 KC -Omaha BO
37-13,
Detroit
ripped
England,
Cap ital 110 Los Angeles 96
Houstoh 110 Seattle 107
Chicago, 4().7, New Orleans
(on l y games sc hedu l ed l
~owned San Francisco, 16-10,
Monday ' s Games
No gam es sch.edul ed
and Philadelphia edged the
New York Jets, 24-23. The New
American Basketball
York
Giants are at Los Angeles
Association Standings
~Y unuea t'reis International
tonight.
EaSt
w. L pet . g.b.
calvin Hill plunged for two
"22 9 .110
Caro li na
TDs and Roger Staubach ran
Ken1ucky
16 . ]0 .615 31'2

of the McDowell car. Riding in
it, in addition to the driver,
were Judith Kessler and Mr.
and Mrs. Houchens.
Danny Riley was a
passenger in the car driven by
Danny Litchfield and owned by
Marion L. Litchfield of New
Haven .
McDowell was cited for
expired registration and
reckless driving .
It was only last week that a
Point Pleasan t woman,
Catherine Stevens, 22, was
seriously injured in a single car
accident near Hartford.
Today Miss Stevens is
reported by attendants to be in
''satisfactory" condition with
head inj uries. Her condition
apparently has improved since
she wa.s first admitted .
Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
- Ha ttie Barringer, Re e d s ~
ville.
D I S·
SATURDAY
CHARGES- Timothy
Cundiff,
Scott
Jus tice,
Duffy, Oti ll ia
Reanelte
Mullins, Diana Athe rton,
Pa uline De renberge r, Ollie
Tyree, Cl a r en ce Murray.
SUNDAY ADM ISSIONS Judith Kessler, Ra inelle, W.
Va .; Holly F riend, Syracuse;
Mark Allen Murphy, Coolville.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Leona Ke nnedy, John Russell,
Mill ard Swartz, Mary Martin.

Pro Standings

'

try ."

In closing, Diles said he
owed bls parents a deep
sense of gratitude - "they
guided me in the right
direction during those
sometimes difficult young
years. ''
Diles thanke&lt;l college of·
ficials for inviting him to take
part in the Hall of Fame '
banquet activities.
· Bill Gray, Rio's sports information director, was
master or ceremonies. Howard
Blanchard, a member of the
Hall of Fame selection committee, told how groundwork
was laid for Saturday's event
and some of the requirements
it takes to be selected for the
Hall of Fame.
Selection committeemen
introduced were Dr. A. R.
Christensen, Mrs. Mar~aret
Thomas, Dr . Rayrnon T.
Allison, Howard Blanchard,
BiU Gray, Coach Art Lanham,
Robert Leith, Roy Moses, Dr.
Charles Weed and Hobart
Wilson, Jr.
A homecQming dance was
held at the Redman Inn
Saturday night to complete the
three-day Homecoming . and
Hall of Fame activities.
Thomas Jefferson refused
to proclaim Thanksgivin g.
denouncing it as a " monarchial practice."

EXTE NDED OUTLOOK
Moderating temperatures
Wednesday through Friday
with chance of showers on
Friday. Highs Wednesday ln
upper 30s and low 40s war·
mlng by Frldoy to upper 40s
and low S:Os. Lows curly
Wednesday In the low 20s
and mid and upper 30s early
Friday.

18 12 .600
Jlh
New York
9 21 ,300 12112
Memp hi s
V irg in ia
7 18 .280 12
West
w . L pet. a.b.
15 13 .53 6
u tah
Indiana
16 14 .53 3
Denver
14 l3 .51 9
•n
san Antonio
15 15 .soo
1
San D iego
11 18 .37 9
4 11:1
.
.
Sunday ' $ Resulh
! No games scheduled )
Monday ' s Games
(No games schedu l ed )

Every year we say it and
w,e' IJ say it ;:tga in : sometimes
it s awfully ha rd t.o hear I he
cry of a li ttle child over the
clan g of th e y ul e c a s h
reg iste rs.

Natio-{lal Hockey League Stand Ings
By United Press International

'

PITTSBURGH - AS COAL ONCE AGAIN becomes "King"
of available energy sources, rank-and.file United Mine Workers
me mbers are putting themselves in a position to capitalize upon
their treasure for the first time in the union's 84-year-history.
Delegate• to the UMW's 46th constitutional convention have
indicated they want to work shorter hours for more pay, with
many of the benefits that unions organized by the mine workers
have enjoyed for yea rs. They also say they are preparing to
carry on a prolonged fight with both the coal iodustry and the
federal goverrune nt at a time when a coal strike would paralyze
a nation already cripp:ed by energy shortages.

'

18

4

3 39 118 66

Montreat 16 7
N.Y Rngr s 13 8
Toronto
}3 10

2 34 86 68
7 33 111 87
5 31 93 75

Buffalo
14
Detrol1
9
vancouver·. 6
N Y . lslndrsA

1 29 93
2 20 79
4 16 57
1 15 57

11
16
14

14

85
120
81
82

WeSI
I. t. pts gJ ga
Phltadelph •16 6 J 35 73 41

w.

Chicago
13
s 7 JJ
Atlanta
12 9 6 30
St . Louis
10 9 6 26
Los Angeles 8 14 " '2 0
Minnesota 6 13 7 19
Pittsburgh 7 15 4 18
California 7 17
2 16
Sunday ' s Results
Buffalo 5 Toronto 2
NY Rangers 6 California
Boston 3 Philadelph i a 3
Ch icago M i nnesota 3
(only games scheduled )
Monday's Games
No games sc heduled

for security purposes and
$68,000 on the home itself for
security-related reasons.
- The President said San
Clemente will be given to the
government after death . of
Nixon and his wife.

84 46
69 70
6-4 60
70 83
71 89
64 102
61 95
3

s

"Do You Think It Will Float?"

---------

World Hockey Auociation
~Tandtngs

By United Press International
East
w . I. I . pts gf ga
Nw Eng l nd 16 10 1 33 101 86
Cleveland 13
Toronto
13

10
14

3 29 87 85
J 29 104 97

Quebec
Chicago

13
11

14
12

J 29 112 100

Jersey

10 16 2 22 65 100
west

1 23 80 83

w . 1. t. pts gf ga
Edmonton 17
9 0 34 90 71
Minnesota 14 12 1 29 102 91
Houston
13 9 3 29 95 78
W inn ipeg 13 13 3 29 105 ltlO
Los Angels 11 17 0 22 81 108
vancouver 9 17 0 18 84 107
Sunday's Results
Houston 5 Vancouver 3
Winnipeg 3 Jersey 1
Toronto 10 MJnnesot11 1
Quebec 6 Chicago 1
New Engl&amp;nd 3 Cleveland 2
&lt;only games scheduled )
Monday's Games
No games sc heduled

I

I

\

MOST GASOLINE STATIONS ACROSS the country were
closed Sunday in compliance with President Nixon's requested
energy-saving measures. Traffic on expressways was reported
light for the second Sunday of the volunteer shutdpwns.
In Ne w Mexico, gasoline dealers reported beavy sales
Saturday befor e the 9 p.m. closing ttme, but state police reported
"very lilt:., traffic" on highways Sunday. Sunday traffic was also
reported lighter than usual throughout most of the New York City
metropolitan region, including parts of New Jersey, Connecticut,
Pennsylva nia and Massachusetts, but police said scattered
heavy rainstorms may have kept some drivers at home.

Euf .
w. I. t . pts gf ga

Bos1on

• in Briefs

(Continued .from Page 1)
detected. But one electronic engineer, who asked not to be
identified for professional reasons, said a tape is ahnost like a
fi ngerpr int - any change could be picked up by highly sensitive
amplifiers.
Another expert, a broadcaster., said a tape is more like a
photograph - it can be "touched up" so as to remove even so
little as a syllable.

•

year period spent only $63,029
of his $266,000 expense allow·
ance and took the rest as
personal income, on which he
paid taxes.
-He borrowed heavily from
friends and $25,000 from his
elder daughter, Tricia Cox, to
buy property at Key Biscayne,
Fla. Mrs. Cox made a $111,270
profit on the transaction over
five years.
-The government spent $6
million to construct and maintain the Western White House
office complex on adjacent
government property, $635,000
on the San Clemente grounds

• •

I

I.

\!

1/JI

! ·:f;

Thi s Week's
Ohio College
Basketball Schedule

By United Press International

Monday
Xavier a t M ichigan
Pe pperdine ( Ca l tl. ) at Da yton
Fair m ont St. (W . V a.) at
St eube nv i l le
Gro ve Ci t y ( Pa . ) at Mount
Un ion
Ott er bein a t F i ndl ay
Tuesday
Shaw (Mtc h.) at Ash land
Malone at Ti ff in
Whee ling at Oh io Domini ca n
K enyon at W i ttenberg
Wednesday
Ball Stal e at Bow ling Green
Wnght Slate a t Cincinnat i
Bl u ffton at Heidel be rg
Earlham ( Ind. ) at Defi an ce

Hiram at Wooster
Urba 11 a at Wa lsh

E.o~s 1

Albany St . 68 Cor !land S. t. 54
Bethany 71 John Carr· ott 60
Boston Coli. 73 Brown 71
Brandeis 90 W ttli ams 87
Cincinnat i 64 Te mple 52
Connecticu1 62 Harvard 41
Delaware 76 Leh igh 45
Dayton BO LIU 69
Lafayette 68 Fordham 62
LaSalle 66 Hofstra 53
LSU 91 Pac if ic 17
Manhattan 87 Rulgers 78
Mi ddlebury 69 Lowel l Tech 63
N .H . U 76 51 . Anselm's 58
Pha . Textile 57 Widener 51
Prtnceton 77 Villanova 70
R PI 79 Roches1er 56
Rhode Isl and 98 Boston St . 84
St. Francis 67 Fairf ield 57
Sp r ingfield 94 Clark 67
Swarthmore 71 John s Hopk ins

70
Syracuse 83 Army 66
Tr i nity 96 MIT 64
Tufts 99 Bates 88
Tu l ane Bl Georgia St . 63
Wesleyan 102 Bow do in 66
V ale 102 Holy Cross 9'2
.
.
South
Fis k 92 Belmont 70
G . Washington 94 St Peter ' s 73
Jcksnv le 82 Ga . Southern 69
Kentucky St . 99 Be tl ar m ine 77
Louisville 91 But ter 81
N Car olina 103 Ver mont 48
.
Th e Citadel 88 Wm . &amp; Mary 65
Tulane 81 Geor gia St . 63
V ir ginia 104 Duke 82
Wes t er n Kentucky 97 Bay lor 81
Witt enber g 8!&gt; Ashla nd 75
Wri gh t St 73 Hei delber g 54
.
Midw est
A kro n 69 Roa no ke 65
Ame r ican U. 85 Buff alo 76
Ar izon a St. 71 Ka n sas St. 66
Ar kan sa s 83 W abas h 77
Ar k . 51 . 91 Sout h F la . 89
Ball St . 78 Western M ich . 72
Swing Gr een 89 Ea stern Ill 71
Denison 81 Walsh 66
Detroi t 70 M i chiga n 59
Dr ak e 80 T ex as 72
Ill inois St.
wa sh . St . 63
Ind ian a 77 Ken tu c ky 68
Kan sa s 94 Northern Io wa 60
MarQuette 86 Iowa 70
M i ami (Oh ioz 86 P urdu e 85
Notre Dam e 94 St . Louis 65
Northwes1e rn 76 De P au l 65
Oh io Nor t h ern 66 Oh io W styn 52
Oh io U 7J Ea stern M ic h . 54
Oh io St . 72 P ~ nn St. 65
Okl a . St. 90 Neb .- Om ah a 65
S.C . 74 M ich . St. 63
So uthern Cali f . 7·1 Illin ois 60
Sou1h er n Il l. 102 Mo -Rolla 64
Steub enville 41 Cen tr; al M ic h . 36
Tol edo 84 L o yola 77
Tulsa 84 NE Lou is iana 72
Wi s. 88 North Dako ta St . 60

n

.
. Southwest
Ea st T e)l;a s 60 Southwest Te x a s

57
Hou ston 97 F lorida 7J
Ri ce 7 9 L amar 67 ( OT)
T CU 74 Oklahoma City 69 f OT )
T ex as Tech 72 Ste t son 61
West
Ar i zona 87 Ca l Pol y Pomona 54
Colo . Col lege 80 M etro Stat e 53
Colo . St . 75 Weber St . 68
N .M . 105 North Dakota 61
N .M . S1m 93 Br igham Youn g 74
Si!n Jose 51. 93 San F ran cisc o
St . 70
UCLA 77 S MU 60
Utah 93 Utah St . 85
Wa sh . 68 Seat1 1e Pa ci f ic 66
Wyom ing 95 Denver 75

Ken yon at Young st own St .

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Pomeroy , Ohio

Phone 992-3907

Phone 992 -2174

GEORGE BUCHANON

PHIL BURTON

Pomeroy Motor Co.
Pomeroy I Ohio
Phone 99~ ·2126

Burton's Sunoco Ser .
Mason. W. Va .

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New Haven, W . Va .

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THE'
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Americans, you can live in .warm comfort
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)6...&amp;#~

it's time to heat up!

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Kashmir lies in the Himalayan foothills between heatbaked plains and mountains
of eternal snow. Four million people live within its
86,000 square miles.

~
anJ i.l ot

PAUL HARVEY

Candles For Gifts

Heidelberg at A shland
Capi tal at Urbana

11 \ \Jf \1"11

from me,

BEAUTIFUL

My.
t Un1on
.
t Oh "•o Nor thern
oun
a

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Take it

SSJ R usse-1 St .

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St.

If \ 1'\ H ~,1 r' h.t'!l" l \ h
t h rLl . , . . ;n, •·'· l ~~· 1111•1&lt;:
lll ,,,,.n ,, ,_.. li . _ 'h . . \: I..

points while Mark Burch
canned 10.
Kyger Creek sank 26 of 63
fl oor attempts for 41 pet. and
only 13 of 31 free throws.
Buffalo had a cold 24 pet. from
Buffalo (49) - Wa lk.er o o o,
the floor connecting on 21 of 87
Bvrch
S-O 10 , Boggess 3 2 a.
attempts.
Greenlaw 3·2 8 , May s 9 l 19,
The Bisons were seven of 13 Willi ams I I J ; N o ff si nger 0 I
at the charity line . Th e 1. Totals 21 -7·49.
Kyger Creek (65 ) - Hud son
Gallians a!so held a 57-42
57 17 ; Rurnley6·7 14 Tabor 30
rebounding edge.
6 : Clay 6 0 12 ; W tse 4-2 10 :
Head Coach Jim Arledge Sti dham 1 0 ') ; Lu cas 1 0-2:
commented that big David Kern 0 2-1 ; Icard 0 Ot&gt;; Arnett
0 0 0 and Rou sh 0 0 0. Totals 26 Clay turned the game around lJ -65 .
when Hudson and Stidham both
By Ouarters :
Buffalo
13 10 14 11 - 49
got into foul trouble . "I think
Kyger Creek
8 19 17 21 - 65
we·'re coming around as a

Uay Hudson .
Hudson, however. was forced
to sit out half the first period
and all the secoud quarter after
collecting three personal fouls ,
two on c harging calls.
The Bobcats also lost the
services of ~2 junior center Joe
Stidham, who was also charged
with three personals in the first
period .
Big David i Moby) Clay, 6-4 ,
265 pound senior center, came
on strong in the second period
to help on the offensive hoards
and in the scoring attack.
Clay had six points while
Rumley and 5-10 junior Dave
Wise dumped in important
baskets to give the Bobcats the
lead prior to the end of the first
hail.
Hudson, Rumley and Wise
led the Bobcats' 17 point third
period . Hudson canned eight
points on four baskets, Rumley
added two field goals and Wise
had three points .
The Bobcats wrapped it up
with a 21 point fourth quarter.
Hudson led KC with 17 points
on five baskets and seven free
th rows . Run1ley had 14 points
and 18 rebounds; Clay finished
the night with 12 points and 14
rebounds and Wise had 10
poin ts.
Mays led the Bisons with 19

A thought for the day :
American poet Emily Dickinson
said, ' 4Success is counted
sweetest by those who never
succeed." ·

Wilmington at Earlham llnd .t

Powell Sunoco ServiCe
Middleport, Ohio
Phone 992-3451

\lt!"~'''"~""I""'''"'!1¥1~11&lt;N•n~''"""'"''"' ~~'

The Almanac
By United Press International
Today is Monday, Dec. 10,
the 344th day of 1973 with 21 to
follow.
The moon is between its fu ll
phase and last quarter.
The morning stars are
Mercury and Saturn .
Those born on this da te are
under the sign of Sagittarius.
American poet Emily Dickinson was born Dec. 10, 1830.
On this day in history:
In 1817, Mississippi was
admitted to the Union as the
20th state.
In 1898, Spain signed a treaty
officially ending the SpanishAmerican War. It gave Guam,
Puerto Rico and the Philippines
to the United States.
In 1941, Japanese troops
landed on northern Luzon in the
Philippines in the early days of
World War II in the Pacific
Theater.
In 1971, the Senate confirmed
President Nixon's nomination of
. Wtlliam Rehnquist to the U.S
Supreme Court.

!'

Wi lbe rforce at Thomas More

All ianc e ( Pa .) a t Steuben vi lle
Tay lor ( In d .) a t Wilmington
Oh io Northern at Oberlin
Thursday
St . Fran cis ( Pa.) at Cleveland

San Fran ci sco St. at You ngs.
to w n St .
Friday
Cedar vi lle at Marion ( lnd)
Ge!" e va ( ~a_.) at M a l_one
0~•? Oomm t ca~ a t Wilberforce
Ttffln ~~ Oberlm
Baldwtn -Wallace at Waba sh
Wooster a t Adrian ( M ich.)
Saturday
Oh io State at Mi ssouri
Dayto n at M ichigan
Xa v ier at St . Bona venture
Miam i at Cincinnati
LSU (New Or lean s ) at Toledo
Clev eland St . at Buffal o
Steubenville at Ga nnon I Pa.(
Cedarvil le at Tiffin
Akr on at W i ttenberg
Central State at Be ltarmine,
K

W1th four players in double
fi gures, Coach Jim Arledge's
Kyger ('reek Bobcats captured
their second victory in three
starts Saturday night by
defeating Buffalo of Putman
County, 65-49 in the team's
home opener at Cheshire .
After a slow start, the
Bobcals scored 19 points in the
second quarter to lead by four
at the half, 27-23.
In the fi rst period , Coach
Rudolph Raynes' Bisons took a
13-lllead behind the shooting of
Phil Mays, 6-1 junior and 6-0
senior center Jim Boggess.
Kyger Creek's only attack
was generated by 6-0 forward
John Rumley and 6-0 guard

~~1;~','~; a\ 1 /Ja~g~e~t~~:f/f~d 1
Denison at Bet ha ny ( W. Va . )

CARTER FRENCH

~~---

'

College Soores

~~~

INSURANCE

.

five yards for another as the
Cowboys rolled past Washington. The Redskin offense was
unable to score a touchpown,
with the only points coming on
a blocked punt. Washington
blew three field goals attempts
in the first half to help the
Cowboys.
Ken Anderson th rew touchdown passes of nine, 70 and 20
yards to rookie Isaac Curtis in
the first half and the Bengals
went on to rip Cleveland for
their fifth straight triwnph :
Charley Johnson's two TO
.passes and Jim Turner's four
field goals helped the Broncos
blast San Diego to insure the
flrst winning season in their
history.
Buffalo erupted for 17 points
in the third period to break
open its game with the
Patriots. O.J. Simpson gained
219 yards to move to within 60
of Jim Brown's single season
rushing record,
Bill Olds ran two yards for
one score and Marty Domres
threw two yards to Tom Mitchell for another as the Colts
upended Miami. Lydell Mitchell had 104 yards rushing
against Miami, which played
without quarterback Bob Grie·
. se_
Archie Manning threw a 37·
yard TD pa ss to Jubilee
Dunbar and Bill McClard
kicked three field goals to lead
the Saints over San Francisco
and Bill Munson passed for two
TDs and Mel Farr ran for two
more as Detroit blasted Chicago. John Outlaw's 4f&gt;.yard TO
run with an interception lifted
Philadelphia over the Jets.

N at ion a I Fool ball League
Standings
By United Press International
Am erlcan Conference
East
w. l. t. pet.
X·M i am i
l l 2 0 .846
Buffalo
8 5 0 .61 5
New Eng l and
5 8 0 .385
NY Jet s
490 308
Baltimor e
J 10 0 .2J1
Central
w . I. t . pet .
P ittsburgh
9 4 0 .692
Ci nc innati
9 4 0 .692
Cleveland
7 42 .61 5
Houston
1 12 0 077
West
w. I. t. pet.
8!~~ae~d
;
~
Kansas Clty
6 5 2 :538 ·
San D iego
2 10 1 .192
National Conference
East
· w. I. t. pet.
Dallas
9 4 o .69'2
Wash ington
9 4 0 .692
Ph ita
S 7 1 .423
St . LOU IS
4 8 1 ·346
N .Y . Gi ants
2 9 1 · 208
Central
w. 1. t. pet.
· X·M lnneso1a
11 2 o .846
Detroi1
6 6 1 .500
Green Bay
4 7 2 .3 85
Chi cag o
3 10 0 .23 1
West
w. I. t . pet.
)C:. Los Ange les
10 2 ·o .833
Atlanta
B s o .615
San Francisco
s 8 o .385
New Orleans
5 8 0 .385
)!; .clinched div ision title
Saturday's Results
Minnesota 31 Green Bay 7
Oakland 37 Ktmsas Ci1v 7
! only games scheduled)
sunaay's Results
Ci nc innati 34 Cleveland 17
Denver -42 San 0 I ego 28
Pittsburgh 33 Houston 1
Salf i more 16 Mi8m l 3
Buffalo 37 New England l3
Detroi1 40 Ch ic ago 7
St . Louis 32 Atlanta 10
New Orleans 16 san Francisco
10
Dallas 27 Washington 7
Ph II adelphia 24 N .Y , Jets 23
(only g.!!tmes scheduled 1
Monday's Games
N .Y . Giants at Los Angeles
(Only game scheduled }
Saturday's Games
Detroit at Miam 1
P itt sburgh at San Francisco
· (only games scheduled )
Sunday's Games
Buff;~lo at N .Y . Jets
Ci ncinnati at Houston
Denver at Oakland
New England at Baltimore
San Diego at Kansas City
Dallas at St . Lou is
Green Bay at Chicago
Minnesota at N .Y . Gian1s·
New Orleans at Atlanta
Phll8delphia at Washington
Cleveland at Los Angeles
I only gam ea scheduled l

N"""'"W"'"'MM-1111-·~oiMIIWJIIIitN\ ~1

"Do you think it will float?"

wut," he sald .
Kyger Creek will ploy
Southern Tuesday night In an
important SVAC contest at
Cheshire . Buffalo's reserve
learn defeated the Bobkittens,
48-42 . .
Bill Smith led the Bisons with
t8 points while Bill Metzner
and Tim Lucas had 17 and 13 in
a losing cause.

I

I

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�4

Tht&gt; Dali)· &amp;nlilll'l , Middl~porl-Pomero y , 0 ., Dee. 10, 1973

-

.•.....--.....·.····.......·•·.•••··.-.•·····•·•
........-.·-·-··.•......•.-~-··-·
...-.......
-.-..•...
,,..•.•,•..·.·•···•·•·•·•···•··. -:....
-:-:-.•:::-::-··
.::···························-·-·.·.·-·.·.·.······················
............
•.·,·········-·-·-·-·-·.················
........ ,..

~

~!

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~~

;::

'W
.
,
· eve come
of age'--Brown

•

0

!~:~ :).ton the1r home Ooor Saturday

history, heard of the first human ever to land on the moon or
ri:'Ct"l \ l'd his 20th consecutive contract to manage the same club
A b1t of awe showed an Walter Alst on's voice the other evening,
however .
He was standmg in the lobby of the Houston hotel whtch ser ved
as headquarters for the wmter baseball meetmgs and he
&gt;~ as n ' ! talking baseba ll , he was ta lking bask etball.
'When you stop and think they' re gomg for theJr 78th consecutive v1ctory , tt sounds absolu tely mcred1ble, " he sa td. " I
don't care what kind of tea ms you' re playmg, or even tf they 're
on ly cxhibttion games, 78 straight games without a defeat is
something you just don't see happen in an ordma ry hfetlm e. That
coach of theirs has to be the best I've ever seen "
··May be the best anybody ha s ever seen,' ' one of A1ston's
listeners put m
"I wouldn 't ar~ u e that at all." satd the Dod gers' mana ~er ~
refernng of course to UCLA's John Wooden, whom Alston
remembers play tng high school basketbal1 agamst more than 40
years ago.
.
UCLA didn 't ha ve too much trouble making it 78 m a row
Saturda) night, b1g, red-haired B1ll Wallon popping in 25 points
and latchmg on to 25 r ebounds in a 77-60 breeze over Southern
MethodiSt.
Next Saturday could be 'a little rougher for the Brums.
They go up aga inst North Carolina Stale in St. Louis , a neutral
s1te, and there are some who thmk the Wolfpack, who were 27-0
las t yea1· and have won their only two contests so far this year,
have a good chance to snap the longest wmning streak m college
basketba ll history.
Those who like the Pack to knock off !he Bnuns base !heir
be lief on two prime reasons- super-swmgman David Thompson
an d the fa ct UCA gave evidence of bemg merely mortal las! week
when 1! barely squeaked by Maryland, 65-64, on the BrUins' home
court.
I have to take another ticket on John Wooden though. His ball
clubs taper off now and then and certainly aren 't mvmc1ble , but
1f there is any way humanly possible to win, trust John Wooden to
fmd 1t. More to the pomt, trust him to cornmumcate that way to
hts players. Nobody around today, in any sport, doeS; 1t better .
Key fi gures in the ball game coming up Saturday naturally are
Walton and Thompson, whom North Carohna State go! into hot
water over while r ecrmting him.
Walton and Thompson are considered the two top college
players m the nahan How good tsThompSon'' This good
Torn Hemsohn, the Boston Celtics' coach , says of him- "In our
rating system, the highest number is 5 Thompson gets 10 on his
shootmg alone "
Norm Sloan, his coach, says "he's the greatest athlete I've
ever known ."
And one pro scout puts tt thts way:
"Thompson IS among the 10 best basketball players in the
country, and when l say !hal, I mclude both !he NBA and ABA."
Still, I have to go w1!h UCLA and w1!h Jotm Wooden, the man
who has led his team to the NCAA IItle nine times m the last 10
years He Isn't much for superlahves, but Wooden calls last
yea r's UCLA team the best he has ever seen. Who knows, this one
may turn out even better.
An ytime Walter Alston gets worked up , that should tell you
somf' thing.

Th e And erso n-t o-Curlis
combmatwn resulted m three
touchdowns SundaY, and was
the undomg of the Browns.
Anderson crechted hts offenSIVe !me for g1vmg hm1 "great
protec't10n " so he could watt for
Curtis to hreak into !he clear.
11 lt was easy for one guy to
look good when the team looks
good," said !he 24-year-&lt;Jid Anderson . 11 Today was one of
:)· ~se days."
Cleveland quarterback Mike
Pllipps and tight end Milt Morin said they were fooled by
Cmcmnati's defensive tactics.
" They
changed
their
defenses on us a h!tle today,"
Phipps sa1d. "They surprised
us a little."
Morin satd, 11 We expected
them to use a certain type of
defense about half the time to-

aggrt:'S."iiVC

~~'~t m::':e roud:r~:~ov:~~

mght.
The Lancers, led by !h';
JW1lor Dan Btse with 18 poi nts ,
took a commanding 16-lllead at

NEW YORK (UB :l.J- Walter Alston has extraordin~ry control O\'er his emotions
Nobod}' can remembPr ever seemg hliD Jump up CJ nd down or in
any way dtsplay outward excitement whether it was right arter
he guided the Dodgers to the f1rst wor ld championship in thei r

II) ' '

usin~ ~t tJ~ht,

downed the Eastern Eagles, 62·

UPI Spores Editor

CINCINNATI (UP! ) - Paul
Brown feels his Cmcinnati
Bengals have come of age.
'' We're gomg for the marbles
tf we can." said Brown after
Sunday 's 34-17 wm over Cleveland , which he figured was !he
best game in the six-year hislo ry ol the Bengals.
A "m at Houston Sunday
gn es Cmcmnat1 the championship or the Amertcan Conferenct! 's central division and
sends !he Bengals against !he
M1ami Dolphins in the playoffs.
Three yea rs ago Cincinnati
"on the di VISIOn ti tle , but was
shut out !7.Q by Baltimore in
the playoffs
"This ts a different Situation
than three yea rs ago, " satd
Brown "'fllis IS a capable footb:lll team,''
The emergence of quarterback Ken Anderson and rookte
recetver Isaac Curtis sparks
Brown's optumsrn .
' 'A nderson ts mature , a
splend id man," enthu ses
Brown "As for Curtis, I JUSt
feel so sure that •f !he ball IS
dose , he can just suck Jt right

Eagles defeated by Lancers 62-54
C('rs,

·_
:l.l,f

By MI LTON RICHMAN

day . They used it once m the
entire game. They were as
good as anybody we have
played this year."
Brown didn 't go mto
specifics about his defense, but
just caned it "tenacious ...
Cincinnati runners Essex
Johnson and Boobie Clark both
have good shots at eclipsing !he
1,000-yard mark this season.
Johnson gained 91 yards m 19
Carnes Sunday, giving him 965
yards for the season . Clark
p1cked up 69 yards m 22 carries
for a total of 93!.
Johnson needs just 35 yards
against Houston while Clark
have another 69-yard day to hit
the 1,000-yard tota l
Saturday 's College Basketball

R esu Its

By Un1ted Press l nternat1 ona 1
Tournaments
Cowboy ClaH •C
Champ1on s t'H P
Hard1n Si m mon s 70 So Sf.! 51 67
Conso l at ion
McMurry 7 1 H owar o :?a yn e 65
..:re1ghton (lass tc
Champt onsh tp
·
Okl ... ,,oma 73 Creo g l'1 1on 70
Consolation
San Ot ego S t 87 A or Fo r ce 68

esc Class•c

Champ1onsh1p
Ld llas Baplt s t 85 Ark li tt le
Rock. 78
Consolat,on
Ou achtta 74 E Tex Bapt 1st 71
Mountameer Class1c
Champtonsh'p
W r!S I V1rg in 1a 78 Oregon St 74
Consolat1on
Ca ltlor n ta 8 1 Seton Hall 76
Randolph -Macon Classtc
Champion s hip
R ando lp h M a co n 85 G lassboro
St 61
Con~olatton

Va Un1on 10 1 El i Za be th C1 ly St

"

Show Me ClaSSIC
Championship
M issou r i 68 Texas El P;, so 56
Consolatton
Kent St 8 5 Cornell 49
steel Bowl

the end of the firs t quarter and

never relinq uished it as only

Indiana
topples
K ent u ck y

cam e mt o 1-' rHittj IIIJ~Iit'~
·HtiiWtHbt•r thl' Toronto Hus·
varsity l{tlll 14~ and lui tw&lt;J kt.'\' kl t~s.·' If nul , ho"' .tlxtut Ed
baskets in tht• 6(}.-59 ~\ 111 tJ\'t.'l' S..ld nv. ~k. l. Lt•',\ IJ ,i.\lll~tn, J)i( k
Kygt•r Creek, led a ll scorel's Filz ~l·r,tld
and
Hnt)l'rl
witf, 18 I)OIII ts . lie wa s follmH.:d Holf(• •
closely by Federal ·s Ru,.s&lt;:ll,
Tn\ IH IJUIIlllt..,·wlll bt: happy
who tall1ed 17 pmnts 1n JUSt :J lo !cam that tlrt.· lluskws ~\ C rt'!
quarters.tor action .
tht• last . 'ahom,l Ra~kctball
A-;scu,:t:lliOII h';un to c.tll TuronF C'd Hoc k 1ng 16 I 'J 7.1 ?0 6/ to hom&lt;', wa' b ,)l k u1 1946-47,
Eas tern
8 10 17 19 S-1 and f~d, l .rw, Dl(:k ctnd Holle r I
Federal Hoc ktng (6?)
wcrl' th e t•oach('.s who Jcrl tilt!
L &lt;'lckcy 3 '1 8, Harr.s 4 .1 17
Bt se 9 0 18, Jarv• s 3 ? 8, Dnn lt'am throu~h lhcir on ly

l'v('mng.
" Wl"'rc going tQ make some
c hange s i n our offense,
although not personnel-wt.se,''
smd PhiUips .
" Anyone who has scouted us
so far this season may as well
throw thetr scoutmg reJ&gt;Qrts
out the wtndow because they
won't help at all. We have to
gel our offense going."
The
Fede r a l Hocking Bow e r ~ .S 2 I ?, CL1I~ndu1c 1 0 'J ,
o72
reserves made it a perfect Bibbee
Eastern (54)
Dd I ! I 1 14
mg ht fo r their fans, downing Spen cer 3 1 7, Sheets 1 1 9 ,
!he Eagles 38-33 in overtime. Goe be l 2 o 4, Baurn ? 'J 6.
The Eastern reserves, down · M il hoan 1.0 1, Hollon 1 0 ?,
Athert on 0 0 0
21-16 at the half, came back in
R eser ve Gam e
the th1rd quarter to hold !he
By quar te rs
F
ed
Hock
1na a 13 t 10 5 1R
Lancers to just two third
Eastern
B 8 12 s 0 33
stanza points, as the Eagles
F ede ra l Hock 1n g !J BJ
moved out to a 26-23 lead.
Ru sse l I 5 7 I 7, Househo ld c1· 1 0
The score was tied, 33-all at 2, C ogar 1 0 :1, Jnc kson I I 3
o ck 1-0 ?, O g g 0 '} 2.
!he end of regula!lon play, but Wh11t
Jar viS 1 1 3, RodehfluPr 0 I J,
!he Lan cer offense managed 5 Guess I 1 1
Eas tern (33 1
Blake 1 J 6.
points while holdmg Ea stern
Harr. s 1 3 5, Bailey 7 .1 '8.
scoreless for !he extra period . Et chtnger 1 2 l, Good 0 0 o.
Eastern's Greg Bailey, who Bowen 0 0 0. Hannu m 0 0 0

before Metgs took three
straight as 132 lb . Jeff Musser
pmned Dan Rogers, 138 lb.
Roger Hysell decision ed
Athens' Rober t Wilkinson, 3-2,
and 145 lb. Al McLaughlm
pmned Pat Mace .

m the unhmtted diviSIOn .

Meigs Coach J ohn Bentley ,
in his second yea r a t lhc helm,
c1ted mex pen ence as a factor
in several of the Meigs losses ,
while ment10mng tha t Athens
has a very experienced team
back fr om last year H e
thought the match , despite the
loss , was good ex:penence fm·
h1s grapplers and tt w1ll nwkc
them work ha rdet for the
Ches ap eake tourna men t
comi ng up th1s weekend.

St'.JSOO

s1zc and enthu!-tiasm of
the t' I'Owd m '1'01 onto Sunday
mght1s any mdLC&lt;J tlon, professional basketball m.:•Y 5oon be
re-occupying all :.11'en.1 tn
Canada on ~l pCimanent basts .
The 10 , 11 :~ fans m '!Qronto
responded to a superb performance by Bu ff::~ Jo centt•r Bob
McAdoo und a th rtlhng: game
bc twl'en the Bt aves ~tn d the
Boston Celt1cs m a manner .
usua ll y r esr rved only for
hockey ll w&lt;.lS the thit d g&lt;Hlle
in a series of nmc rc~wlm
sea ~on matc hes \\'luch w11l bP
played m Toronto.
McAdoo sta rted the t.:I'O \Hl
roarmg \. .-hen he snnk 10 of 11
shots frotn the fteld tn the f1rst
qua rtet while pacing Buffalo lo
Jf

til('

But the Bulldogs responded
wtth three straight wms, as 155
lb . . Ted Ellwtt pinned
Marauder Harold Sisson, 167
lb. Kirk Cwnmings pinned
Marty Dugan and 175 lb. Tun
Gaglc dec1sioned Bill Slack.
In the reserve 01 exhJbttlOn
9-1.
Marauder John Lehew then matches, Just two Marauders
look to the mat and disposed were successful, With Duane
handily of Jay Graham , pin- McLaughlin dectstomng h1s 119
ntng htm in 23 seconds, lb . opponent, Lora 1'1pacs 7'3,
followed by Bulldog B1ll and 13 2 lb . J1tn McClu r e
Moorehead's pin of Paul Clay dectswmng Lucian Spataro fl..{)

Here,s the Man

BEST

A LUES

'

_,...

UNDECIDED ABOUT A GIFT?

Vanderb•lf 1nv11at1onal
C tlam p1onshtp
Vo~~nderbilt 67 Tennes see St 66

II

The Anderson-to-Curtis combmatwn, which y1elded !ouchdowns of 70, 20 and mne yards
m !he £irst half, has . added
another dime nsion to the
Bengals offen•e.
" Kenny is a fine deep
thrower and Curtis has great
speed and tremendous hands,''
said Brown. "Curtis is going to
he a super player ."
Curtis called the game his
"best b) far " and descrihed
Anderson's passmg as "sharp,
really sharp."
"All I wanted to do was
throw the ball and let Curtis
run under It," srud Anderson,
who fired perfecl strikes to
Curtis on all three TD passes.
There wasn't much for
Cleveland Coach Nick Skorich
to say.
"Cmcinnat1 played a great
game,'' he decided . ••Anderson
was passing very well and he
moved the ball club. They're a
better team tban we beat m

I
I

v on Adams and Dave Bing
cad &gt; scored 19 points to lead

Arrangements to
be made by club

Consolatum
St 76 N ebr as Ka

CHRISTMAS
SHOPPING
HOURS

DAILY

SUNDAY

10

.

e~~adl1;;~ ;
S9 N. Second St.

•'

A weekl y featun· of Meigs

CoWlty Garden Club members .

Th ese shopping hpurs will
be in effect Monday, Dec.
1Oth unti I Sunday, Dec. 23.
Po int Pleasant Store only.

Central Operating Company's
Philip Sporn Plant

Whistle while you work
Bend

POINSETTIA
CEMETERY POTS

i Calendar _::.
MONDA.Y
POMEROY Chamber of
Commerce at noon at Meigs
Inn.
YOUNG
ADULT
Class
Bradford Church of Christ 6
p.m. dinner at the church. '
MEIGS CHAPTER 53 DAV
7:30 p.m. at chapter home,
Butternut Ave. Refreshments
All members urged to attend
MEIGS Girls Athl etic
Boosters, 7 p.m. at the high
school.
GIRLS'
ATHLETIC
Assoc10 !JOn of Me1gs High
&amp;hool will meet tonight at 7
p.m at the high school.
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Lodge 363,
F&amp;AM, installation of officers,
7:30 p.m. a{ the Middleport
Masomc Temple. All Master
Masons and their guests invited.
TWIN City Shrinettes
Christmas party at 8 p.m. at
home of Shirley Beegle. A $2
gift exchange.
RACINE Lodge 461 F&amp;AM,
7:30 p.m. Installation of of.
ficers . Refreshments . All
master masons invited
SYRACUSE PTA, 7:30pm
at the Syracuse Elementary
School.
AMERICAN
Legion
Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, Chrisimas party, 6:30
dinner at the hall. Meat ,
beverage and bread furnished. Each member to take a
covered dtsh. $2 g&gt;ft exchange.
WEDNESDAY
JUNIOR American Legion
Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, meelmg 6·30 p.m.
Wednesday to prepare treats
for the Chillicothe Velerans
Hosp1tal b&gt;rthday party on
Thursday. Each junior to take
either a bag of oranges or
apples.
AMERICAN LEGION 1 Posl
128, 7:30p.m. at the hall.
MIDDLEPORT Firemen's
Auxiliary, ChrlStmas potluck,
6:30p.m. at the hall. Each one
to take a covered dish.
MIDDLEPORT Literary
Club, 7.30 Wednesday night,
home of Mrs. Carl Horky. Mrs.
Ben Philson to review "Two

Walker, the
only c harter member at·
tendin~ - She w a~ presented a
pen set by Mrs . Edna Reibel on
behalf or council.
For the dinner fa11 flowers
and red tapers in gold cande labra deeorated the tables
whic h were arranged in a T
formation for Theodoru s. Cake
servers , eye glass cleaner,
poc ke tbook s , and pencils
contributed by the Pomeroy
NalLona l Bank, the Farmers
Bank and Savmgs Co and
Valley Belle were g1ven as
favors. Mrs. Marga rei Stacy of
Belle Praine 269, a member of
the s ta te credenti als committee, gave grace using a
prayer from a greetmg from
the nahonal counc1Ior
Recognized be stdes Mrs
Walker and Mrs. Stacy were
Mrs . Faye Hoselton, Belle
Prairie Council, dis tric t

deputy; Mr s Re1bel , nattonal
representative and deputy or
Theodorus; Mrs Etta Will,
coun c1lor of Theodorus.
The dis trict deputy combined
the anniversary v1stt w1th her
offtesal v1s1t to mspect the
eoWJdl. A donation was made
to !he home and orphans fund
Plans were announced for the
deput&gt; club and past council or 's Christmas observan ce.
G1£ts of pen sets were
presented to Mrs. Hoselton and
Mrs. Stacy after they were
escorted to the altar by the
fla gbearers The prize package
donated by Miss Faye Reibel
was won by Mrs . Eva
Dessauer .
A! a meeting of the counc1l

from Galilee" by Marjorie
Holmes; Mrs. Berna rd Fultz to
give a Christmas classic Roll.
call will be a Christm as wi sh.

Mr. and Mrs . Robert J
Brown have returned to
Bmghamton, N. Y. after being
here for a hohday v1sit w1!h her
mothe r, Mrs. Eloda Webb. and
her s1ster and brother-m·law,
Mr and Mrs. Richard Pickens
For Thanksgiving dinner at
the Pickens home wer e Mr.
and Mrs Brown, Mrs. Webb.
and Mr and Mrs. Ron Evans
'
Scott and J eff of Columbus.
Mrs. Brown Ls the former
Cressa Cwnmings. She and
Robe rt J . Br.own al so of
Binghamton were married on
June 2 a! the St. J oseph Church
in Sanatoria Springs, N. Y. by
the Rev. R1chard McNearney.
Following the weddmg a dinner
and dance was held at The
FoWl tams m Bmghamton. Mr.
and Mrs. P1ckens attended !he
wedding with Mrs. Pickens
escorting his s 1ster-tn-law
down the atsle.

wu s Mrs

N~ncy

AMATE UR Garden Club, 6
p.m., home of Mrs. Harold
Lohse. G1ft exchan ge and
judgmg of wrapped packages.
Progra m by Mrs. J ames
Sheets, "Chnsimas Mus1c of
Appalachia ".
WHITE Rose Lodge, home of
Mrs. Charles Searles , Pearl
St, 6 p.m., potluck dinner and
gift exchange .
WINDING Tratl Garden
Club, 6:30 p.m., dinner at
Trimly Church. Mrs. J ohn
Terrell, hostess. Program will
be by Mrs. Terrell on "The
Littlest Angel". ·
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Gardeners, 7 30 p .m. a! the
home of Mrs . Harold Lohse ,
Pomeroy.
POMEROY • Middleport
Uons Club, noon at !he Meigs
Inn. Chrisimas party and g&gt;ft
exchange.
POMEROY Chapter 80
Royal Arch Masons, stated
meeting, 7:30p.m.; Bosworth
Counc1l 46, 8:30 p.m., both at
the Pomeroy Masomc Temple.
AMERICAN Legion, FeeneyBennett Post 128, 7:30p.m., a!
!he hall.

KEEP THEM
HAPPY

POINSETTIA
. BASKETS s12.00
POINSETTIA
MONUMENT
. MARKERS sn.98

New Haven, W.Va.

A porcupine is armed with
30,000 barbed, hollow qu11ls
from above its eyes to the
t1p of its tall Each has 20
to 30 barbs.

59 N. Second St.
Middleport, 0.

Has Job Openings For Permanent Employment In The Following
Skills

TUESDAY NIGHT IS
FAMILY FUN NIGHT

Mech~nics

.~AT BURGER CHEF!

INCREDIBURG!BL.E!

(ONLY EXPERIENCED PEOPLE NEED APPLY)

Special Family Meal Prices

APPLICANTS MAY CALL.( 304) 882-2126 (collect)
BElWEEN THE HOURS OF 7:30AM TO 4:00 PM

4 p.m. to clo1lng
FOR ADULTS

TO ARRANGE AN INTERVIEW

FIori sf

-....

Middleport . o.

FOR KIDS

Big Shef~
French Fries.
Turnover &amp;
Large Drink

HECK'S
CHRISTMAS
SHOPPING
HOURS

1503 EASTERN AVE.

Ttlophono: orH eodo 304-411·111&gt;

I

SUNDAY
•

Funburger'"
French Fries,
Small Drink
&amp; Lollipop

.,

..

OPTOMETRISTS
181 N. Second Ave.
MIDDLEPORT
PH. 992-3279

CHRISTMAS

SPECIAL

•

MIDDLEPORT

OPEN EVENINGS

- .For Christmas 73

THE
COMELY
CfiRfi\JELLE®
(lft))l()
byBulova
• NEVER·FROST THROUGHOUT

• GIANT 149-LB: FREEZER
• AUTOMATIC ICEMAKER is
included at price shown
• TWIN CRISPER DRAWERS
• ADJUSTABLE CANTILEVERED SHELVES
• FULL-WIDTH FREEZER SHELF .
• PORTABLE EGG BUCKET
• FULL-WIDTH DAIRY BAR
• EXTRA DEEP DOOR STORAGE
• ROLL-AWAY WHEELS
These are our 1ash•on 1avontes
lovely, l1tlle
wa1ches that never go out of style . They're all
p_retty. prec•se and very prudently pnced So
!hey make wonderful g1fls for every lady on your
Christmas l•st. Slop by today and see our full
selection of Caravelle classtcs
ail precision
(eweled and Bulova guaranteed .
Pnced

These shopping hours will
be in effect Monday, Dec.
lOth until Sunday, Dec. 23.
Point Pleasant Store only.

A. Princess "B" Satin silver di.Jt
I. Sllidrnore " £" 17 jlwels Bowknot cue deslr;n.
C. El•lne ''A" swe~tP second Raised numerals

From

D. Sllldmore "M " 17 Jawels Telescope bracelet

39 .95

14.50

To

Goessler's Jewelry Store
Pomeroy

'

Dr. T. J. Bradshaw
Dr. Milton Mason

Your Thom MeAn Store

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

An Equal Opportunity Employer

j

.

DINGO BOOTS
heritage house

Although A Strike Is In Progress, The Company Continues To Operate The Plant.

Post Offlu Box U8, N•w Haven, Wt$1 VJrglni1 25265

to N ew York

Men's and Children's

, DAILY

These Jobs Provide Excellent Wages And A Benefits Program Which Includes
life Insurance, Medical Insurance, Disabillity Insurance , S1ck leave Vacations
Holiday, And Retirement.
'
'

PHII.,IP SPORN .PLANT

Couple returns

Monday nigh! , officers for 1971
were elected . They are Mrs.
W11l, jumor past councLlor ;
Mrs. Ed1th Spencer, associate
Jllnl Or past counc1Jor ; Mrs.
Eva Dessauer, councilor : Mrs .
Glen Wat:tel, vice councilor:
Mrs . I.JIIIe Houck, treasurer ;
Mrs Nettie Hayes, recording
secretary , and representati ve
to state sesSIOf't , and Mrs .
D e s s auer , a lt erna t e
representat1ve.
Read at the rnee tmg was the
Christmas message from Mrs .
Marge Levan, state councilor .
She an nounced her slogan and
motto, '~ B e Proud of the Past,"
" Focus on the Future/' and
urged a special effort to mcrease membersh1p during the
coming year
Plans were made for a
Chnstmas party to hi! held at
next Monday 's meeting with a
g1ft exchange a! that time. A
report was gi ven by Mrs. Edna
Reibel on !he de puty club and
past coun c1lors' party held
Sunday in Belpre. Reported Ill
were Mrs . Mabel Wolfe, home
fr om Ve terans Memorial
Hospital, Mrs. Marcia DeLay ,
Sisler of Mrs. E thel Smith,
home
fr om
Um ve rsi ty
Hosptlal, and Marvm Darst, Ill
at horne .

s4,98

Dudley's Florist

Instrument Repairmen

The lll s l anmversary of
Theodorus
Coun cil
J7,
Daughters of Amerka , was
obser ved r ecentl y with a
dmner party at the 1001' hall
in Pomeroy .
G1ve n s pecia l recogni tion

r~~,,,,,sac:r~,r·:-:,:,:,:l!f

CEMETERY

AMTIL

61st Anniversary observed

Notes ....

CHRISTMAS
FLOWERS

The traditional Christmas gift. A gift the

0

Green Thumb

.P-•••------•

POINSETIIA
~

(~

BY I\IRS. BERT GRIMM
0' the River Garden Club
What's the happiest time of the year ?
Mrs. Chapman reviewed
Christmas, of course !''Frontier Uving" by Edwin
Cheery people get cheerier. Glwn and gloomy people begin
Tunis, and the gardening tips to feel pretty foolish about being gloomy and glum. A kind of
by Mrs. Jarrell included in- magic swirls around in the air and setUes like stardust on human
structions on watering plants, ht&gt;arts and minds liberating all sorts of stifled generosity and
how much and when.
repressed affection.
Miss Diehl gave a poem,
It can even liberate unsnspected talent. I know a young man
"My Creed" for devotions, and who works on a newspaper. Sometimes he writes ed1tonals. Just
members responded to roll call aboul every day he has to write something dull and profound
with a prayer of thanks. Mrs. about the latest crisis in the country or the misdeeds of Congress
Gene Vandemark was a guest. or the latest school strike.
The traveling p~ize provtded
But last year, about this tune on a bright December morrung,
by Mrs. Oleva Cottrill was won be sat down at his typewriter and to his absolute astonishment
by Mrs. Pauline Atkins. During this is what came out on the paper before him :
the past monUl, arrangements
" Now is the time for all good men to take wives and children
for churches and public by the hand and go forth to buy a Chrisimas tree. All over !own,
buildings have been made by evergreen forests are sprmging up reminding one of the north
Mrs. Vernon Weber, Mrs . woods. By !he truckload !hey are arrivmg - short ones, tall ones,
Robson, and Mrs. Pauline thin ones, fat ones. Their days are numbered, but they will be
'l'otkins.
glorious, gleaniing with tinsel, jeweled with br~ght lights and
Refreshments were served crowned wlth a star . .
by the hostesaes. Contributing
"Be sure to follow the prescribed r1tual. Ask the man if the
hostesses were Mrs. Paul Winn tree you have picked out is a good one . 'Of course; he w•ll say
and! Mrs. Maurice Thomson. stoutly, kn!'wing no more about it than you do but eager to please.
Shake it a couple times to make sure the branches are really
attached. They always are. Grasp it firmly and stagger blindly to
your car flattening anyone who crosses your path. Brush !he pine
needles out of your ears and a few stray twigs out of your ha1r .
"Contemplate your hands, sticky with sap, but smelllllg
nicer than usual. You may get stuck to the steering wheel on the
way home, but don't worry for this is part of the game.
"Pay !he man cht&gt;erfully, firmly suppressing the thought
that 11 IS you who is being trimmed, not the tree. Load it into !he
car. If 11 takes up so much room !hat somebody has to be left
Several
members
of Clear" and "Let Us Live
behind, make a brave choice between your wife and one of !he
Theodorus
Council
17, Christmas Every Day" were
children. Drive it home, if you can see where you're going. Set it
Daughters of America, were in read by Mrs. Elsie McAfee of
up in the livmg room. If it is too tall, you can make a temporary
Belpre Sunday for !he annual Belle Pra1rie, and the program
hole in the ceiling. Whistle while you work!
Christmas party of District 13, concluded w1th a medttation,
"Why Whistle?
Deputy Club and Past Conn- "The Priceless Gifts of
"Because
you are happy. Because for a little while the dust
cHars' Association, held at the Christmas" and a Chr~stmas
of dally routine bas blown away, and life is a shining thing.
borne of Mrs. Faye Hoselton . prayer by the hostess.
Because it isn't just a tree you have brought home ... It's the
Arrangements fea turlng
Attending from here were
Spirit of Chr1stmas."
colorful baubles, elves, and Mrs. Edna Reibel, Mrs. Nettie
TRIED AND TRUE HINTS
holly decorated the tables for Hayes, Mrs. Belly Reibel, Mrs.
FOR TRIMMING THE TREE
the dinner. Mrs. Jean Poling, Donna Shato, and Mrs. Eva
Keep
the
tree
in water and in a cool place unbl you are ready
Belle Prairie Council, read the Dessauer. all of Theodorus
to put 1! up.
Christmas story from Luke 2 Council, Pomeroy. Others at
&amp;!w an inch or two from the tree before immersing it in
and Mrs. Essie Varner, also of !he party besides those named
water
to aid in moisture gett1ng through the cut. A seal forms
Belle Praine, presented were Mrs. Una McVay, Mrs.
once the tree has been cut and tht&gt;refore thiS has to be removed.
"What's Christmas." Words to Bea Moyer, Mrs. Hazel Butler,
Set the tree in a container with water.
" It Came Upon a Midnight and Mrs . . Martha Hudnall,
Do not keep the tree up for more than 10 days or two weeks.
Golden Gleem Council of
Keep it away from radiators or heat.
Marietta; Mrs. Faye Parlin
Keep !he extra branches for clever little arrangements
and Mrs. Edith Wakely of
adding
a few baubles, glitter and velvet bows.
Gallia Council 114; Mrs . Edith
. Place lights on first beginning at the top and gomg vertically
.Betzing of Chesler Council 323;
:
Mrs Vera 11ousellold, Perry to the bottom. Then place on the trimmings.
If you want to save energy, use less lights and spray the ends
283; Mrs. Edna Vickers, Mrs.
FOR THE
Erma Barnes, and Mrs. of several branches with liquid glue and then sprinkle with silver
Margaret Stacy, Belle Prairie, or gold sparkle or glitter.
Be sure to hold a container under the branch as the glitter is
Belpre.
sprinkled to- avoid waste.
Beautiful Artificial
Gold or silver enamel can also be used on the ends to make
the tree shine and sparkle.
NOW AT EDWARDS
Use bread fasteners (especially green ones) to fasten lights
S-Sgt. RogerS. Alkire is now
stationed at Edwards Air to branches.
' Turn lights off when out of the room and especially when
Force Base in California. He
From
returned this fall from away from home. Use sparingly this year during the energy
Thialand and has been bere for cr1sis.
Check lights eare!ully before using to avoid danger of wiring
a visit with his parents, Mr.
defects.
Replace any frayed or defective ones.
and Mrs. Felix Alkire, and
From
Last but not least, trun the tree when you are not too tired ...
other friends and relatives. In
and
have fun! !
Califorma with him are his
Wife, the former Charldine
King, and son, Roger
Visiting there with them
Christopher . Their matling
IN COLUMBUS
, . address is 1301 Bailey No. !,
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Struble recenUy were Mrs. Struble's
Edwards Air Force Base, and children, Daneen and mother, Mrs. Ann Webster,
California, 93523.
Designed With A
Steven, have moved from and her grandmother, Mrs. C.
Cincinnati to Columbus. 0. Chapman, Rutland.
Weather Proof Bow
ORDER EARLY

Give A Beautiful Long Lasting

Midd l e Tenn
65

work on !ht&gt; holiday flower
show·of the club and also spoke
on the county Christmas show
held last weekend.
Plans were made for a
Christmas dinner to be held
tonight at Crow's Steak House
followed by a party and gift
exchange at the home of Mrs.
C. 0 . Chapman.

RUTLAND - Christmas
table arrangements for the
Athens Mental Health Center
will
be
provided
by
the Rutland Garden Club,
according to plans made
at
a
recent
meeting
at the home of Mrs. Stella
Aikins and Miss Ruby D1ehl.
A report .was given at the
meeting by Mrs . Pauline
Atkins on the recent therapy
program held for the Good
Luck Club at the Athens
hospital during which time
top1ary trees were 'made .
Assisting with the work with
!he 16 patients were Mrs.
Pauline Atkins, Mrs. Stella
Atkins, Mrs. Eva Robson, and
Miss Diehl.
Reporting on the Chrisimas
Happening at the Full !louse of
Cards was Mrs. Kate Jarrell
who told of the variety of
candles, containers, and dried
rna terials avails ble , Mrs .
Pauline Atkins and Miss Diehl
reported on !he Region II
meeting ht&gt;ld at Eastern High
School attended by them and
Mrs. Jarrell, Mrs. Margaret
Ella Lewis, and Mrs. Robson .
Mrs . "Robson, president,
thanked the members for their

.

Several attend
district 13 party

HECK'S

Cleveland "
Both Cmcinnatt and Cleveland can1e into the game !Jed
w1th Pttt.sburgh for the diVISIOn
lead. To wm almost assuredly
meant a playoff spot nml lo lose
le!l httlc chance for a playoff
berth
Anderson completed II of 19
passes for 201 yards, and
CUrtis, who tted a club record
With hts tin ~e TD t:atches,
plied up 117 yards on fi ve
rece ptions
Despite the happmcss 1n !he
Cincinnattlocker room, Bro\\in
sa1d just nunutes aft er the
game he tssued a warning
about growmg ove rconfid ent
for the Houston game
' I didn't want lo take liJe
edge off the1r exuberance, but
we've got to keep on play ing,"
said Brown.
Bengals cornerba ck Lemar
Parrish said that would be no
problem
" We' ll be gomg nfter
Houston the same way we went
after Cleveland," satd Parnsh.

I

To See for . . .
THE

Sears

Wtn

Cc lt1cs, who ha ve beaten •
Buffalo m every ga me since it
entered the league four years
iii?,O, fr om winning agaln.
Jo J o While scored J7 points,
John Ha vllcek notched 27 and
Dave Cowens added·22 to give
Boston a 116-114 victory and
extend the Celtlcs' domination
over the Braves to 19 stra ight
games.
In other NBA. games,
Phoenix bea t Cleveland , 117lllG, Detroit c'dgod Kansas CityOmaha, 86-80, Ca pital clubbed
Los Angeles, 110-96, and ,
Houston chpped Seattle, 110.
107.
Phocmx, paet.-d by Charhe
Scott's 31 points, had to fight
off a strong fourth-quarter
rally by Cleveland to beat the
Cavs.

Detroit past Ka nsas CityOmaha and gtve the Pistons
their s1xth stra1ght victory.
Elvin Hayes scored 40 points,
pulled down 21 rebounds and
clocked five shots to pace !he
Bullets to an easy win over the
slumping Lakers.
Jerry West, who connected
on Ius first fi ve shots from !he
fl
oor m the openmg period, sat
a 38~30 lead and wf!nt on to
establish two Buffalo records out the entire second half.
!.IIt le Ca lvin Murphy hit for
wi th 21 fidd gmds ~mel 4!1
12 of Ius 25 points in the fourth
pomts
But P\·en McAdoo 's perfor- quarter· to lead Houston past
ll)&lt;lfl t'C ('OU!dn' t pr€'Vt.'llt the &amp; aWe .

B enu.o ls humble Browns

---

OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO ll. 2 TO s (C LOSE'
AT NOON ON THURS .) - EAST COURT &lt;T
P MER Y.

look wl1l!n they hos t th(•
North Galhit Pirtttl~$ Fndc1y

rll'~

l h ( nrh:d f' (t.''~" lnlt•rna liunal

Marauders drop first ineet

PittSburgh 82 F lortda St 60
Consolalton
Cl emson 7 1 Duq uesne 66

OPTOMETRIST

onP l·:&lt;lst('rn player could .l:!.&lt;'lm
c.lct ubl e ft g: ure s, that beUl g
Steve D1U . wtth 24 pomts.
Dill was joined in the
.scorwg t•olwnn by 6-J Seni or
John Sheets ~i!h 9 p&lt;Jints,
jun 1or Tim Spencer w1th 7,
senior Tim Baum with 6, senior
Steve Goe~el With 4 and "I:ony
Milhoan and Cl&gt;uck Hollon w1th
2 each
The Ea gles . who hit a
respectable 46 pel. from the
fl oor while canmng just 6 of 13
shots, didn't get enough shots
off according to coach Bill
Phillips.
Ph1111ps ci ted the t1ght ,
pressing Ferleral defense as
one reason why hts cagers only
got off 52 shots. The Lancers,
however, onl y got off 53 shots
themselves, a cr edit to !he
Eagle defenders who Philhps
said played well
The Eagles h1ghly-touted
durmg pre-se~son but now
wtth just one vict~ry in four
gam es. could have an entirely

CHICAGO (UP! ) - B1g Ten
basketball team s took on a
variety of non~onference foes
&amp;!turday and only four of the
nme active squads came out on
top . But Ind1ana. ranked third
nationally and favored to
repeat as conference champiOn,
d1d the league proud .
The Hoosiers tangled w1th
The
Meigs
Marauder
lith-ranked Kentucky and \\oresUers opened the 1973-74
foWld a hero in 6-foot-5 John sea ~on on a sour note Saturday,
Laskowski, who led a secon d losmg to Athens 45-24, on the
half rally that gave Indiana a Bulldogs' mats. Seven of !he
77-68 victory.
etght Ath ens wins came on
La skowski , who had averaged pins, while four Marauder
just three points in hts team's vtctories were by pins
fJrst two games, scored 16
The afternoon started w1!h
pomts tn the f1rst 11 mmutes of !he Bulldogs pinning their f~rs!
!he second half to lead three op~ one nts, as Don Srmth,
Indiana 's .818 shooting percent- Ph1l Taylor and Mike Br ounk
age for the half
outdueled 9B lb. Mark Tillis, 105
Laskowskt also scored the lb . RICk George and 112 lb
Jwnper that put Indtana into Gary O'Dell respectively
!he lead for good at 47-46 after
The Marauders got th eir ftrst
1t trailed 44-39 at the half. He win of the season m the 119 lb .
finished wt!h a team lugh 23 class when Joe Rosenbaum
points, h1tllng 11-&lt;Jf-15 shots.
deciswned Athens' Gary
Kentucky shot 56.6 per cent Keller, 6-0
from !he field the first half but
Bulldog Joe Hall then pmned
slumped to 32 per cent m the 126 lb Marauder Ken Moore,
secon~ half and lost its second
game in three outings this year .
The le~gue 's other VICtor.s
were OhiO State, 72-65 over
~U
Penn State; Wisconsm, 68-60
over North Dakota State; and
CINCINNATI (UPI) - "We
Northwestern, 76-65 over De- were out to shoot the works,"
Paul All three played at home . said Pm~ Brown, whose CinThe Buckeyes had to fight cinnati Bengals did just that
hard for !he1r victory . The&gt; led Sunday, blas!mg the arch-rival
51-33 w1!h 15 v, minutes to play Cleveland Browns 34-17 to
but Ron Brown and Kevm move a giant step closer to the
Burke ralhcd !he N1ttany Lwns Na!wnal Football League
to Within one pomt at 62-61. But playoffs.
Ohio State's Jack Wolfe lipped
Bengals quarterback Ken
m a mtssed shot and got two Ande1·son teamed wtth rookte
qwck fr 'ie throws to put Ohio w1de receiver Isaac Curtis on
State back ahead ~I w1th three touchdown passes m the
1·25 to go . Wolfe's 18 points and f1rst half to start "shooting the
Wardell Jackson's 20 led the works" and the Browns could
never recover
Buckeyes, now 2~1.
For Wisconsm, it was a romp
Cmcmnatl, wmmng its fifth
to its third victory m a row game in a row and wrappmg up
The Badgers led · 46-24 at a perfect 7.Q home record,
halftime and allowed North upped 1ts season slate to 9-4
Dakota State no closer !han 14 The Bengals need only a vicpoints after that. Kim Hughes tory at Honston next Sunday to
led Wisconsin wttb 16 pomts
win the American Conference's
Northwestern shot only 36 per Central Division and set up a
cent from the floor but DePaul playoff game against the world
committed 11 more turnovers champion Miami Dolphins .
!han the Wildcats. NorthwesCleveland slipped to 7-4-2 and
tern's scoring was led by jumor on ly has a very remote chance
college transfer Willie Williams of making the playoffs.
and Brian Ashbaugh With 17
For Brown, who was ftred by
each as the Wildcats posted Cleveland 12 years ago and had
theLr thtrd wm in four starts .
only a 1-6 record against the
In the Btg Ten losing colwnn Browns commg into the game,
1t was Southern Cahfornia 71 the victory was especially
Illinois 60, South Carolina 74 sweet. lie and CUrtis accepted
Michigan State 63, M1ami of game balls after !he win.
Oh10 85 Purdue 85 in overtime,
"The old father got the game
Marquette 86 Iowa 70 and ball and I will keep this one
Detroit 70 Michigan 59.
with a lot of feeling," said the
&amp;ven!h-ranked Marquette 65-year-old Brown . "The old
built up its margm over !he coach is a happy man today.
Hawkeyes with a 10-point surge
"This is probably as good a
at the end of the first half and performance as we've ever
went on to 1!s fourth straight had," added Brown. "We were
nc!ory . Iowa, now 2-1, was really high for the game. It was
paced by Nell Fegebank with an all or nothmg proposition. I
18
think we were the best team on
South Carohna (No. 20) led !he field and really deserved to
the Spartans only 32-31 at the
half but opened up in the . - - - - - - - - - - - - - . second half. Two-time Big Ten I
I
scoring champ Mike Robinson
of Michigan State was held to
1
21 points but won praise from
1
South Carolma Coach Frank
1
1
McGwre, who said he had
I
never seen a qwcker player,
pro or college.
·
1
1
Purdue hit 46 per cent of its
~I
shots but was behind by a point
, when the overtime penod
ended. Boilermaker center John
Lou Osbo,ne
Garrett had a game h1gh 34
poi'ts In his team's second loos
y
1
1
m four games.
lllln01s fell to USC after
sEA R s
I
leading 58-57 with 4:22 to play .
Catalog Merchant
I
USC reeled off 10 straight
I
points to put the game away .
220 E Mam
Pomeroy 1
26. Dawson led !he Illlm with .... ____________
..I
Jeff
PH. 992-2178

Champton~hip

N. W. _COMPTON, 0. D.

Boston jinx is continued

5- Tht&gt; Da1ly &amp;ntilll'l. Mlddlepor!-POineroy. 0 . Dee. 10. 1973
.
7

'

• .•

•

Open Evenings Til Christmas

Ingels Appliances
174 N. SECOND
MIDDLEPORT
PHONE 992-2635

�4

Tht&gt; Dali)· &amp;nlilll'l , Middl~porl-Pomero y , 0 ., Dee. 10, 1973

-

.•.....--.....·.····.......·•·.•••··.-.•·····•·•
........-.·-·-··.•......•.-~-··-·
...-.......
-.-..•...
,,..•.•,•..·.·•···•·•·•·•···•··. -:....
-:-:-.•:::-::-··
.::···························-·-·.·.·-·.·.·.······················
............
•.·,·········-·-·-·-·-·.················
........ ,..

~

~!

:'i
~~

;::

'W
.
,
· eve come
of age'--Brown

•

0

!~:~ :).ton the1r home Ooor Saturday

history, heard of the first human ever to land on the moon or
ri:'Ct"l \ l'd his 20th consecutive contract to manage the same club
A b1t of awe showed an Walter Alst on's voice the other evening,
however .
He was standmg in the lobby of the Houston hotel whtch ser ved
as headquarters for the wmter baseball meetmgs and he
&gt;~ as n ' ! talking baseba ll , he was ta lking bask etball.
'When you stop and think they' re gomg for theJr 78th consecutive v1ctory , tt sounds absolu tely mcred1ble, " he sa td. " I
don't care what kind of tea ms you' re playmg, or even tf they 're
on ly cxhibttion games, 78 straight games without a defeat is
something you just don't see happen in an ordma ry hfetlm e. That
coach of theirs has to be the best I've ever seen "
··May be the best anybody ha s ever seen,' ' one of A1ston's
listeners put m
"I wouldn 't ar~ u e that at all." satd the Dod gers' mana ~er ~
refernng of course to UCLA's John Wooden, whom Alston
remembers play tng high school basketbal1 agamst more than 40
years ago.
.
UCLA didn 't ha ve too much trouble making it 78 m a row
Saturda) night, b1g, red-haired B1ll Wallon popping in 25 points
and latchmg on to 25 r ebounds in a 77-60 breeze over Southern
MethodiSt.
Next Saturday could be 'a little rougher for the Brums.
They go up aga inst North Carolina Stale in St. Louis , a neutral
s1te, and there are some who thmk the Wolfpack, who were 27-0
las t yea1· and have won their only two contests so far this year,
have a good chance to snap the longest wmning streak m college
basketba ll history.
Those who like the Pack to knock off !he Bnuns base !heir
be lief on two prime reasons- super-swmgman David Thompson
an d the fa ct UCA gave evidence of bemg merely mortal las! week
when 1! barely squeaked by Maryland, 65-64, on the BrUins' home
court.
I have to take another ticket on John Wooden though. His ball
clubs taper off now and then and certainly aren 't mvmc1ble , but
1f there is any way humanly possible to win, trust John Wooden to
fmd 1t. More to the pomt, trust him to cornmumcate that way to
hts players. Nobody around today, in any sport, doeS; 1t better .
Key fi gures in the ball game coming up Saturday naturally are
Walton and Thompson, whom North Carohna State go! into hot
water over while r ecrmting him.
Walton and Thompson are considered the two top college
players m the nahan How good tsThompSon'' This good
Torn Hemsohn, the Boston Celtics' coach , says of him- "In our
rating system, the highest number is 5 Thompson gets 10 on his
shootmg alone "
Norm Sloan, his coach, says "he's the greatest athlete I've
ever known ."
And one pro scout puts tt thts way:
"Thompson IS among the 10 best basketball players in the
country, and when l say !hal, I mclude both !he NBA and ABA."
Still, I have to go w1!h UCLA and w1!h Jotm Wooden, the man
who has led his team to the NCAA IItle nine times m the last 10
years He Isn't much for superlahves, but Wooden calls last
yea r's UCLA team the best he has ever seen. Who knows, this one
may turn out even better.
An ytime Walter Alston gets worked up , that should tell you
somf' thing.

Th e And erso n-t o-Curlis
combmatwn resulted m three
touchdowns SundaY, and was
the undomg of the Browns.
Anderson crechted hts offenSIVe !me for g1vmg hm1 "great
protec't10n " so he could watt for
Curtis to hreak into !he clear.
11 lt was easy for one guy to
look good when the team looks
good," said !he 24-year-&lt;Jid Anderson . 11 Today was one of
:)· ~se days."
Cleveland quarterback Mike
Pllipps and tight end Milt Morin said they were fooled by
Cmcmnati's defensive tactics.
" They
changed
their
defenses on us a h!tle today,"
Phipps sa1d. "They surprised
us a little."
Morin satd, 11 We expected
them to use a certain type of
defense about half the time to-

aggrt:'S."iiVC

~~'~t m::':e roud:r~:~ov:~~

mght.
The Lancers, led by !h';
JW1lor Dan Btse with 18 poi nts ,
took a commanding 16-lllead at

NEW YORK (UB :l.J- Walter Alston has extraordin~ry control O\'er his emotions
Nobod}' can remembPr ever seemg hliD Jump up CJ nd down or in
any way dtsplay outward excitement whether it was right arter
he guided the Dodgers to the f1rst wor ld championship in thei r

II) ' '

usin~ ~t tJ~ht,

downed the Eastern Eagles, 62·

UPI Spores Editor

CINCINNATI (UP! ) - Paul
Brown feels his Cmcinnati
Bengals have come of age.
'' We're gomg for the marbles
tf we can." said Brown after
Sunday 's 34-17 wm over Cleveland , which he figured was !he
best game in the six-year hislo ry ol the Bengals.
A "m at Houston Sunday
gn es Cmcmnat1 the championship or the Amertcan Conferenct! 's central division and
sends !he Bengals against !he
M1ami Dolphins in the playoffs.
Three yea rs ago Cincinnati
"on the di VISIOn ti tle , but was
shut out !7.Q by Baltimore in
the playoffs
"This ts a different Situation
than three yea rs ago, " satd
Brown "'fllis IS a capable footb:lll team,''
The emergence of quarterback Ken Anderson and rookte
recetver Isaac Curtis sparks
Brown's optumsrn .
' 'A nderson ts mature , a
splend id man," enthu ses
Brown "As for Curtis, I JUSt
feel so sure that •f !he ball IS
dose , he can just suck Jt right

Eagles defeated by Lancers 62-54
C('rs,

·_
:l.l,f

By MI LTON RICHMAN

day . They used it once m the
entire game. They were as
good as anybody we have
played this year."
Brown didn 't go mto
specifics about his defense, but
just caned it "tenacious ...
Cincinnati runners Essex
Johnson and Boobie Clark both
have good shots at eclipsing !he
1,000-yard mark this season.
Johnson gained 91 yards m 19
Carnes Sunday, giving him 965
yards for the season . Clark
p1cked up 69 yards m 22 carries
for a total of 93!.
Johnson needs just 35 yards
against Houston while Clark
have another 69-yard day to hit
the 1,000-yard tota l
Saturday 's College Basketball

R esu Its

By Un1ted Press l nternat1 ona 1
Tournaments
Cowboy ClaH •C
Champ1on s t'H P
Hard1n Si m mon s 70 So Sf.! 51 67
Conso l at ion
McMurry 7 1 H owar o :?a yn e 65
..:re1ghton (lass tc
Champt onsh tp
·
Okl ... ,,oma 73 Creo g l'1 1on 70
Consolation
San Ot ego S t 87 A or Fo r ce 68

esc Class•c

Champ1onsh1p
Ld llas Baplt s t 85 Ark li tt le
Rock. 78
Consolat,on
Ou achtta 74 E Tex Bapt 1st 71
Mountameer Class1c
Champtonsh'p
W r!S I V1rg in 1a 78 Oregon St 74
Consolat1on
Ca ltlor n ta 8 1 Seton Hall 76
Randolph -Macon Classtc
Champion s hip
R ando lp h M a co n 85 G lassboro
St 61
Con~olatton

Va Un1on 10 1 El i Za be th C1 ly St

"

Show Me ClaSSIC
Championship
M issou r i 68 Texas El P;, so 56
Consolatton
Kent St 8 5 Cornell 49
steel Bowl

the end of the firs t quarter and

never relinq uished it as only

Indiana
topples
K ent u ck y

cam e mt o 1-' rHittj IIIJ~Iit'~
·HtiiWtHbt•r thl' Toronto Hus·
varsity l{tlll 14~ and lui tw&lt;J kt.'\' kl t~s.·' If nul , ho"' .tlxtut Ed
baskets in tht• 6(}.-59 ~\ 111 tJ\'t.'l' S..ld nv. ~k. l. Lt•',\ IJ ,i.\lll~tn, J)i( k
Kygt•r Creek, led a ll scorel's Filz ~l·r,tld
and
Hnt)l'rl
witf, 18 I)OIII ts . lie wa s follmH.:d Holf(• •
closely by Federal ·s Ru,.s&lt;:ll,
Tn\ IH IJUIIlllt..,·wlll bt: happy
who tall1ed 17 pmnts 1n JUSt :J lo !cam that tlrt.· lluskws ~\ C rt'!
quarters.tor action .
tht• last . 'ahom,l Ra~kctball
A-;scu,:t:lliOII h';un to c.tll TuronF C'd Hoc k 1ng 16 I 'J 7.1 ?0 6/ to hom&lt;', wa' b ,)l k u1 1946-47,
Eas tern
8 10 17 19 S-1 and f~d, l .rw, Dl(:k ctnd Holle r I
Federal Hoc ktng (6?)
wcrl' th e t•oach('.s who Jcrl tilt!
L &lt;'lckcy 3 '1 8, Harr.s 4 .1 17
Bt se 9 0 18, Jarv• s 3 ? 8, Dnn lt'am throu~h lhcir on ly

l'v('mng.
" Wl"'rc going tQ make some
c hange s i n our offense,
although not personnel-wt.se,''
smd PhiUips .
" Anyone who has scouted us
so far this season may as well
throw thetr scoutmg reJ&gt;Qrts
out the wtndow because they
won't help at all. We have to
gel our offense going."
The
Fede r a l Hocking Bow e r ~ .S 2 I ?, CL1I~ndu1c 1 0 'J ,
o72
reserves made it a perfect Bibbee
Eastern (54)
Dd I ! I 1 14
mg ht fo r their fans, downing Spen cer 3 1 7, Sheets 1 1 9 ,
!he Eagles 38-33 in overtime. Goe be l 2 o 4, Baurn ? 'J 6.
The Eastern reserves, down · M il hoan 1.0 1, Hollon 1 0 ?,
Athert on 0 0 0
21-16 at the half, came back in
R eser ve Gam e
the th1rd quarter to hold !he
By quar te rs
F
ed
Hock
1na a 13 t 10 5 1R
Lancers to just two third
Eastern
B 8 12 s 0 33
stanza points, as the Eagles
F ede ra l Hock 1n g !J BJ
moved out to a 26-23 lead.
Ru sse l I 5 7 I 7, Househo ld c1· 1 0
The score was tied, 33-all at 2, C ogar 1 0 :1, Jnc kson I I 3
o ck 1-0 ?, O g g 0 '} 2.
!he end of regula!lon play, but Wh11t
Jar viS 1 1 3, RodehfluPr 0 I J,
!he Lan cer offense managed 5 Guess I 1 1
Eas tern (33 1
Blake 1 J 6.
points while holdmg Ea stern
Harr. s 1 3 5, Bailey 7 .1 '8.
scoreless for !he extra period . Et chtnger 1 2 l, Good 0 0 o.
Eastern's Greg Bailey, who Bowen 0 0 0. Hannu m 0 0 0

before Metgs took three
straight as 132 lb . Jeff Musser
pmned Dan Rogers, 138 lb.
Roger Hysell decision ed
Athens' Rober t Wilkinson, 3-2,
and 145 lb. Al McLaughlm
pmned Pat Mace .

m the unhmtted diviSIOn .

Meigs Coach J ohn Bentley ,
in his second yea r a t lhc helm,
c1ted mex pen ence as a factor
in several of the Meigs losses ,
while ment10mng tha t Athens
has a very experienced team
back fr om last year H e
thought the match , despite the
loss , was good ex:penence fm·
h1s grapplers and tt w1ll nwkc
them work ha rdet for the
Ches ap eake tourna men t
comi ng up th1s weekend.

St'.JSOO

s1zc and enthu!-tiasm of
the t' I'Owd m '1'01 onto Sunday
mght1s any mdLC&lt;J tlon, professional basketball m.:•Y 5oon be
re-occupying all :.11'en.1 tn
Canada on ~l pCimanent basts .
The 10 , 11 :~ fans m '!Qronto
responded to a superb performance by Bu ff::~ Jo centt•r Bob
McAdoo und a th rtlhng: game
bc twl'en the Bt aves ~tn d the
Boston Celt1cs m a manner .
usua ll y r esr rved only for
hockey ll w&lt;.lS the thit d g&lt;Hlle
in a series of nmc rc~wlm
sea ~on matc hes \\'luch w11l bP
played m Toronto.
McAdoo sta rted the t.:I'O \Hl
roarmg \. .-hen he snnk 10 of 11
shots frotn the fteld tn the f1rst
qua rtet while pacing Buffalo lo
Jf

til('

But the Bulldogs responded
wtth three straight wms, as 155
lb . . Ted Ellwtt pinned
Marauder Harold Sisson, 167
lb. Kirk Cwnmings pinned
Marty Dugan and 175 lb. Tun
Gaglc dec1sioned Bill Slack.
In the reserve 01 exhJbttlOn
9-1.
Marauder John Lehew then matches, Just two Marauders
look to the mat and disposed were successful, With Duane
handily of Jay Graham , pin- McLaughlin dectstomng h1s 119
ntng htm in 23 seconds, lb . opponent, Lora 1'1pacs 7'3,
followed by Bulldog B1ll and 13 2 lb . J1tn McClu r e
Moorehead's pin of Paul Clay dectswmng Lucian Spataro fl..{)

Here,s the Man

BEST

A LUES

'

_,...

UNDECIDED ABOUT A GIFT?

Vanderb•lf 1nv11at1onal
C tlam p1onshtp
Vo~~nderbilt 67 Tennes see St 66

II

The Anderson-to-Curtis combmatwn, which y1elded !ouchdowns of 70, 20 and mne yards
m !he £irst half, has . added
another dime nsion to the
Bengals offen•e.
" Kenny is a fine deep
thrower and Curtis has great
speed and tremendous hands,''
said Brown. "Curtis is going to
he a super player ."
Curtis called the game his
"best b) far " and descrihed
Anderson's passmg as "sharp,
really sharp."
"All I wanted to do was
throw the ball and let Curtis
run under It," srud Anderson,
who fired perfecl strikes to
Curtis on all three TD passes.
There wasn't much for
Cleveland Coach Nick Skorich
to say.
"Cmcinnat1 played a great
game,'' he decided . ••Anderson
was passing very well and he
moved the ball club. They're a
better team tban we beat m

I
I

v on Adams and Dave Bing
cad &gt; scored 19 points to lead

Arrangements to
be made by club

Consolatum
St 76 N ebr as Ka

CHRISTMAS
SHOPPING
HOURS

DAILY

SUNDAY

10

.

e~~adl1;;~ ;
S9 N. Second St.

•'

A weekl y featun· of Meigs

CoWlty Garden Club members .

Th ese shopping hpurs will
be in effect Monday, Dec.
1Oth unti I Sunday, Dec. 23.
Po int Pleasant Store only.

Central Operating Company's
Philip Sporn Plant

Whistle while you work
Bend

POINSETTIA
CEMETERY POTS

i Calendar _::.
MONDA.Y
POMEROY Chamber of
Commerce at noon at Meigs
Inn.
YOUNG
ADULT
Class
Bradford Church of Christ 6
p.m. dinner at the church. '
MEIGS CHAPTER 53 DAV
7:30 p.m. at chapter home,
Butternut Ave. Refreshments
All members urged to attend
MEIGS Girls Athl etic
Boosters, 7 p.m. at the high
school.
GIRLS'
ATHLETIC
Assoc10 !JOn of Me1gs High
&amp;hool will meet tonight at 7
p.m at the high school.
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Lodge 363,
F&amp;AM, installation of officers,
7:30 p.m. a{ the Middleport
Masomc Temple. All Master
Masons and their guests invited.
TWIN City Shrinettes
Christmas party at 8 p.m. at
home of Shirley Beegle. A $2
gift exchange.
RACINE Lodge 461 F&amp;AM,
7:30 p.m. Installation of of.
ficers . Refreshments . All
master masons invited
SYRACUSE PTA, 7:30pm
at the Syracuse Elementary
School.
AMERICAN
Legion
Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, Chrisimas party, 6:30
dinner at the hall. Meat ,
beverage and bread furnished. Each member to take a
covered dtsh. $2 g&gt;ft exchange.
WEDNESDAY
JUNIOR American Legion
Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, meelmg 6·30 p.m.
Wednesday to prepare treats
for the Chillicothe Velerans
Hosp1tal b&gt;rthday party on
Thursday. Each junior to take
either a bag of oranges or
apples.
AMERICAN LEGION 1 Posl
128, 7:30p.m. at the hall.
MIDDLEPORT Firemen's
Auxiliary, ChrlStmas potluck,
6:30p.m. at the hall. Each one
to take a covered dish.
MIDDLEPORT Literary
Club, 7.30 Wednesday night,
home of Mrs. Carl Horky. Mrs.
Ben Philson to review "Two

Walker, the
only c harter member at·
tendin~ - She w a~ presented a
pen set by Mrs . Edna Reibel on
behalf or council.
For the dinner fa11 flowers
and red tapers in gold cande labra deeorated the tables
whic h were arranged in a T
formation for Theodoru s. Cake
servers , eye glass cleaner,
poc ke tbook s , and pencils
contributed by the Pomeroy
NalLona l Bank, the Farmers
Bank and Savmgs Co and
Valley Belle were g1ven as
favors. Mrs. Marga rei Stacy of
Belle Praine 269, a member of
the s ta te credenti als committee, gave grace using a
prayer from a greetmg from
the nahonal counc1Ior
Recognized be stdes Mrs
Walker and Mrs. Stacy were
Mrs . Faye Hoselton, Belle
Prairie Council, dis tric t

deputy; Mr s Re1bel , nattonal
representative and deputy or
Theodorus; Mrs Etta Will,
coun c1lor of Theodorus.
The dis trict deputy combined
the anniversary v1stt w1th her
offtesal v1s1t to mspect the
eoWJdl. A donation was made
to !he home and orphans fund
Plans were announced for the
deput&gt; club and past council or 's Christmas observan ce.
G1£ts of pen sets were
presented to Mrs. Hoselton and
Mrs. Stacy after they were
escorted to the altar by the
fla gbearers The prize package
donated by Miss Faye Reibel
was won by Mrs . Eva
Dessauer .
A! a meeting of the counc1l

from Galilee" by Marjorie
Holmes; Mrs. Berna rd Fultz to
give a Christmas classic Roll.
call will be a Christm as wi sh.

Mr. and Mrs . Robert J
Brown have returned to
Bmghamton, N. Y. after being
here for a hohday v1sit w1!h her
mothe r, Mrs. Eloda Webb. and
her s1ster and brother-m·law,
Mr and Mrs. Richard Pickens
For Thanksgiving dinner at
the Pickens home wer e Mr.
and Mrs Brown, Mrs. Webb.
and Mr and Mrs. Ron Evans
'
Scott and J eff of Columbus.
Mrs. Brown Ls the former
Cressa Cwnmings. She and
Robe rt J . Br.own al so of
Binghamton were married on
June 2 a! the St. J oseph Church
in Sanatoria Springs, N. Y. by
the Rev. R1chard McNearney.
Following the weddmg a dinner
and dance was held at The
FoWl tams m Bmghamton. Mr.
and Mrs. P1ckens attended !he
wedding with Mrs. Pickens
escorting his s 1ster-tn-law
down the atsle.

wu s Mrs

N~ncy

AMATE UR Garden Club, 6
p.m., home of Mrs. Harold
Lohse. G1ft exchan ge and
judgmg of wrapped packages.
Progra m by Mrs. J ames
Sheets, "Chnsimas Mus1c of
Appalachia ".
WHITE Rose Lodge, home of
Mrs. Charles Searles , Pearl
St, 6 p.m., potluck dinner and
gift exchange .
WINDING Tratl Garden
Club, 6:30 p.m., dinner at
Trimly Church. Mrs. J ohn
Terrell, hostess. Program will
be by Mrs. Terrell on "The
Littlest Angel". ·
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Gardeners, 7 30 p .m. a! the
home of Mrs . Harold Lohse ,
Pomeroy.
POMEROY • Middleport
Uons Club, noon at !he Meigs
Inn. Chrisimas party and g&gt;ft
exchange.
POMEROY Chapter 80
Royal Arch Masons, stated
meeting, 7:30p.m.; Bosworth
Counc1l 46, 8:30 p.m., both at
the Pomeroy Masomc Temple.
AMERICAN Legion, FeeneyBennett Post 128, 7:30p.m., a!
!he hall.

KEEP THEM
HAPPY

POINSETTIA
. BASKETS s12.00
POINSETTIA
MONUMENT
. MARKERS sn.98

New Haven, W.Va.

A porcupine is armed with
30,000 barbed, hollow qu11ls
from above its eyes to the
t1p of its tall Each has 20
to 30 barbs.

59 N. Second St.
Middleport, 0.

Has Job Openings For Permanent Employment In The Following
Skills

TUESDAY NIGHT IS
FAMILY FUN NIGHT

Mech~nics

.~AT BURGER CHEF!

INCREDIBURG!BL.E!

(ONLY EXPERIENCED PEOPLE NEED APPLY)

Special Family Meal Prices

APPLICANTS MAY CALL.( 304) 882-2126 (collect)
BElWEEN THE HOURS OF 7:30AM TO 4:00 PM

4 p.m. to clo1lng
FOR ADULTS

TO ARRANGE AN INTERVIEW

FIori sf

-....

Middleport . o.

FOR KIDS

Big Shef~
French Fries.
Turnover &amp;
Large Drink

HECK'S
CHRISTMAS
SHOPPING
HOURS

1503 EASTERN AVE.

Ttlophono: orH eodo 304-411·111&gt;

I

SUNDAY
•

Funburger'"
French Fries,
Small Drink
&amp; Lollipop

.,

..

OPTOMETRISTS
181 N. Second Ave.
MIDDLEPORT
PH. 992-3279

CHRISTMAS

SPECIAL

•

MIDDLEPORT

OPEN EVENINGS

- .For Christmas 73

THE
COMELY
CfiRfi\JELLE®
(lft))l()
byBulova
• NEVER·FROST THROUGHOUT

• GIANT 149-LB: FREEZER
• AUTOMATIC ICEMAKER is
included at price shown
• TWIN CRISPER DRAWERS
• ADJUSTABLE CANTILEVERED SHELVES
• FULL-WIDTH FREEZER SHELF .
• PORTABLE EGG BUCKET
• FULL-WIDTH DAIRY BAR
• EXTRA DEEP DOOR STORAGE
• ROLL-AWAY WHEELS
These are our 1ash•on 1avontes
lovely, l1tlle
wa1ches that never go out of style . They're all
p_retty. prec•se and very prudently pnced So
!hey make wonderful g1fls for every lady on your
Christmas l•st. Slop by today and see our full
selection of Caravelle classtcs
ail precision
(eweled and Bulova guaranteed .
Pnced

These shopping hours will
be in effect Monday, Dec.
lOth until Sunday, Dec. 23.
Point Pleasant Store only.

A. Princess "B" Satin silver di.Jt
I. Sllidrnore " £" 17 jlwels Bowknot cue deslr;n.
C. El•lne ''A" swe~tP second Raised numerals

From

D. Sllldmore "M " 17 Jawels Telescope bracelet

39 .95

14.50

To

Goessler's Jewelry Store
Pomeroy

'

Dr. T. J. Bradshaw
Dr. Milton Mason

Your Thom MeAn Store

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

An Equal Opportunity Employer

j

.

DINGO BOOTS
heritage house

Although A Strike Is In Progress, The Company Continues To Operate The Plant.

Post Offlu Box U8, N•w Haven, Wt$1 VJrglni1 25265

to N ew York

Men's and Children's

, DAILY

These Jobs Provide Excellent Wages And A Benefits Program Which Includes
life Insurance, Medical Insurance, Disabillity Insurance , S1ck leave Vacations
Holiday, And Retirement.
'
'

PHII.,IP SPORN .PLANT

Couple returns

Monday nigh! , officers for 1971
were elected . They are Mrs.
W11l, jumor past councLlor ;
Mrs. Ed1th Spencer, associate
Jllnl Or past counc1Jor ; Mrs.
Eva Dessauer, councilor : Mrs .
Glen Wat:tel, vice councilor:
Mrs . I.JIIIe Houck, treasurer ;
Mrs Nettie Hayes, recording
secretary , and representati ve
to state sesSIOf't , and Mrs .
D e s s auer , a lt erna t e
representat1ve.
Read at the rnee tmg was the
Christmas message from Mrs .
Marge Levan, state councilor .
She an nounced her slogan and
motto, '~ B e Proud of the Past,"
" Focus on the Future/' and
urged a special effort to mcrease membersh1p during the
coming year
Plans were made for a
Chnstmas party to hi! held at
next Monday 's meeting with a
g1ft exchange a! that time. A
report was gi ven by Mrs. Edna
Reibel on !he de puty club and
past coun c1lors' party held
Sunday in Belpre. Reported Ill
were Mrs . Mabel Wolfe, home
fr om Ve terans Memorial
Hospital, Mrs. Marcia DeLay ,
Sisler of Mrs. E thel Smith,
home
fr om
Um ve rsi ty
Hosptlal, and Marvm Darst, Ill
at horne .

s4,98

Dudley's Florist

Instrument Repairmen

The lll s l anmversary of
Theodorus
Coun cil
J7,
Daughters of Amerka , was
obser ved r ecentl y with a
dmner party at the 1001' hall
in Pomeroy .
G1ve n s pecia l recogni tion

r~~,,,,,sac:r~,r·:-:,:,:,:l!f

CEMETERY

AMTIL

61st Anniversary observed

Notes ....

CHRISTMAS
FLOWERS

The traditional Christmas gift. A gift the

0

Green Thumb

.P-•••------•

POINSETIIA
~

(~

BY I\IRS. BERT GRIMM
0' the River Garden Club
What's the happiest time of the year ?
Mrs. Chapman reviewed
Christmas, of course !''Frontier Uving" by Edwin
Cheery people get cheerier. Glwn and gloomy people begin
Tunis, and the gardening tips to feel pretty foolish about being gloomy and glum. A kind of
by Mrs. Jarrell included in- magic swirls around in the air and setUes like stardust on human
structions on watering plants, ht&gt;arts and minds liberating all sorts of stifled generosity and
how much and when.
repressed affection.
Miss Diehl gave a poem,
It can even liberate unsnspected talent. I know a young man
"My Creed" for devotions, and who works on a newspaper. Sometimes he writes ed1tonals. Just
members responded to roll call aboul every day he has to write something dull and profound
with a prayer of thanks. Mrs. about the latest crisis in the country or the misdeeds of Congress
Gene Vandemark was a guest. or the latest school strike.
The traveling p~ize provtded
But last year, about this tune on a bright December morrung,
by Mrs. Oleva Cottrill was won be sat down at his typewriter and to his absolute astonishment
by Mrs. Pauline Atkins. During this is what came out on the paper before him :
the past monUl, arrangements
" Now is the time for all good men to take wives and children
for churches and public by the hand and go forth to buy a Chrisimas tree. All over !own,
buildings have been made by evergreen forests are sprmging up reminding one of the north
Mrs. Vernon Weber, Mrs . woods. By !he truckload !hey are arrivmg - short ones, tall ones,
Robson, and Mrs. Pauline thin ones, fat ones. Their days are numbered, but they will be
'l'otkins.
glorious, gleaniing with tinsel, jeweled with br~ght lights and
Refreshments were served crowned wlth a star . .
by the hostesaes. Contributing
"Be sure to follow the prescribed r1tual. Ask the man if the
hostesses were Mrs. Paul Winn tree you have picked out is a good one . 'Of course; he w•ll say
and! Mrs. Maurice Thomson. stoutly, kn!'wing no more about it than you do but eager to please.
Shake it a couple times to make sure the branches are really
attached. They always are. Grasp it firmly and stagger blindly to
your car flattening anyone who crosses your path. Brush !he pine
needles out of your ears and a few stray twigs out of your ha1r .
"Contemplate your hands, sticky with sap, but smelllllg
nicer than usual. You may get stuck to the steering wheel on the
way home, but don't worry for this is part of the game.
"Pay !he man cht&gt;erfully, firmly suppressing the thought
that 11 IS you who is being trimmed, not the tree. Load it into !he
car. If 11 takes up so much room !hat somebody has to be left
Several
members
of Clear" and "Let Us Live
behind, make a brave choice between your wife and one of !he
Theodorus
Council
17, Christmas Every Day" were
children. Drive it home, if you can see where you're going. Set it
Daughters of America, were in read by Mrs. Elsie McAfee of
up in the livmg room. If it is too tall, you can make a temporary
Belpre Sunday for !he annual Belle Pra1rie, and the program
hole in the ceiling. Whistle while you work!
Christmas party of District 13, concluded w1th a medttation,
"Why Whistle?
Deputy Club and Past Conn- "The Priceless Gifts of
"Because
you are happy. Because for a little while the dust
cHars' Association, held at the Christmas" and a Chr~stmas
of dally routine bas blown away, and life is a shining thing.
borne of Mrs. Faye Hoselton . prayer by the hostess.
Because it isn't just a tree you have brought home ... It's the
Arrangements fea turlng
Attending from here were
Spirit of Chr1stmas."
colorful baubles, elves, and Mrs. Edna Reibel, Mrs. Nettie
TRIED AND TRUE HINTS
holly decorated the tables for Hayes, Mrs. Belly Reibel, Mrs.
FOR TRIMMING THE TREE
the dinner. Mrs. Jean Poling, Donna Shato, and Mrs. Eva
Keep
the
tree
in water and in a cool place unbl you are ready
Belle Prairie Council, read the Dessauer. all of Theodorus
to put 1! up.
Christmas story from Luke 2 Council, Pomeroy. Others at
&amp;!w an inch or two from the tree before immersing it in
and Mrs. Essie Varner, also of !he party besides those named
water
to aid in moisture gett1ng through the cut. A seal forms
Belle Praine, presented were Mrs. Una McVay, Mrs.
once the tree has been cut and tht&gt;refore thiS has to be removed.
"What's Christmas." Words to Bea Moyer, Mrs. Hazel Butler,
Set the tree in a container with water.
" It Came Upon a Midnight and Mrs . . Martha Hudnall,
Do not keep the tree up for more than 10 days or two weeks.
Golden Gleem Council of
Keep it away from radiators or heat.
Marietta; Mrs. Faye Parlin
Keep !he extra branches for clever little arrangements
and Mrs. Edith Wakely of
adding
a few baubles, glitter and velvet bows.
Gallia Council 114; Mrs . Edith
. Place lights on first beginning at the top and gomg vertically
.Betzing of Chesler Council 323;
:
Mrs Vera 11ousellold, Perry to the bottom. Then place on the trimmings.
If you want to save energy, use less lights and spray the ends
283; Mrs. Edna Vickers, Mrs.
FOR THE
Erma Barnes, and Mrs. of several branches with liquid glue and then sprinkle with silver
Margaret Stacy, Belle Prairie, or gold sparkle or glitter.
Be sure to hold a container under the branch as the glitter is
Belpre.
sprinkled to- avoid waste.
Beautiful Artificial
Gold or silver enamel can also be used on the ends to make
the tree shine and sparkle.
NOW AT EDWARDS
Use bread fasteners (especially green ones) to fasten lights
S-Sgt. RogerS. Alkire is now
stationed at Edwards Air to branches.
' Turn lights off when out of the room and especially when
Force Base in California. He
From
returned this fall from away from home. Use sparingly this year during the energy
Thialand and has been bere for cr1sis.
Check lights eare!ully before using to avoid danger of wiring
a visit with his parents, Mr.
defects.
Replace any frayed or defective ones.
and Mrs. Felix Alkire, and
From
Last but not least, trun the tree when you are not too tired ...
other friends and relatives. In
and
have fun! !
Califorma with him are his
Wife, the former Charldine
King, and son, Roger
Visiting there with them
Christopher . Their matling
IN COLUMBUS
, . address is 1301 Bailey No. !,
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Struble recenUy were Mrs. Struble's
Edwards Air Force Base, and children, Daneen and mother, Mrs. Ann Webster,
California, 93523.
Designed With A
Steven, have moved from and her grandmother, Mrs. C.
Cincinnati to Columbus. 0. Chapman, Rutland.
Weather Proof Bow
ORDER EARLY

Give A Beautiful Long Lasting

Midd l e Tenn
65

work on !ht&gt; holiday flower
show·of the club and also spoke
on the county Christmas show
held last weekend.
Plans were made for a
Christmas dinner to be held
tonight at Crow's Steak House
followed by a party and gift
exchange at the home of Mrs.
C. 0 . Chapman.

RUTLAND - Christmas
table arrangements for the
Athens Mental Health Center
will
be
provided
by
the Rutland Garden Club,
according to plans made
at
a
recent
meeting
at the home of Mrs. Stella
Aikins and Miss Ruby D1ehl.
A report .was given at the
meeting by Mrs . Pauline
Atkins on the recent therapy
program held for the Good
Luck Club at the Athens
hospital during which time
top1ary trees were 'made .
Assisting with the work with
!he 16 patients were Mrs.
Pauline Atkins, Mrs. Stella
Atkins, Mrs. Eva Robson, and
Miss Diehl.
Reporting on the Chrisimas
Happening at the Full !louse of
Cards was Mrs. Kate Jarrell
who told of the variety of
candles, containers, and dried
rna terials avails ble , Mrs .
Pauline Atkins and Miss Diehl
reported on !he Region II
meeting ht&gt;ld at Eastern High
School attended by them and
Mrs. Jarrell, Mrs. Margaret
Ella Lewis, and Mrs. Robson .
Mrs . "Robson, president,
thanked the members for their

.

Several attend
district 13 party

HECK'S

Cleveland "
Both Cmcinnatt and Cleveland can1e into the game !Jed
w1th Pttt.sburgh for the diVISIOn
lead. To wm almost assuredly
meant a playoff spot nml lo lose
le!l httlc chance for a playoff
berth
Anderson completed II of 19
passes for 201 yards, and
CUrtis, who tted a club record
With hts tin ~e TD t:atches,
plied up 117 yards on fi ve
rece ptions
Despite the happmcss 1n !he
Cincinnattlocker room, Bro\\in
sa1d just nunutes aft er the
game he tssued a warning
about growmg ove rconfid ent
for the Houston game
' I didn't want lo take liJe
edge off the1r exuberance, but
we've got to keep on play ing,"
said Brown.
Bengals cornerba ck Lemar
Parrish said that would be no
problem
" We' ll be gomg nfter
Houston the same way we went
after Cleveland," satd Parnsh.

I

To See for . . .
THE

Sears

Wtn

Cc lt1cs, who ha ve beaten •
Buffalo m every ga me since it
entered the league four years
iii?,O, fr om winning agaln.
Jo J o While scored J7 points,
John Ha vllcek notched 27 and
Dave Cowens added·22 to give
Boston a 116-114 victory and
extend the Celtlcs' domination
over the Braves to 19 stra ight
games.
In other NBA. games,
Phoenix bea t Cleveland , 117lllG, Detroit c'dgod Kansas CityOmaha, 86-80, Ca pital clubbed
Los Angeles, 110-96, and ,
Houston chpped Seattle, 110.
107.
Phocmx, paet.-d by Charhe
Scott's 31 points, had to fight
off a strong fourth-quarter
rally by Cleveland to beat the
Cavs.

Detroit past Ka nsas CityOmaha and gtve the Pistons
their s1xth stra1ght victory.
Elvin Hayes scored 40 points,
pulled down 21 rebounds and
clocked five shots to pace !he
Bullets to an easy win over the
slumping Lakers.
Jerry West, who connected
on Ius first fi ve shots from !he
fl
oor m the openmg period, sat
a 38~30 lead and wf!nt on to
establish two Buffalo records out the entire second half.
!.IIt le Ca lvin Murphy hit for
wi th 21 fidd gmds ~mel 4!1
12 of Ius 25 points in the fourth
pomts
But P\·en McAdoo 's perfor- quarter· to lead Houston past
ll)&lt;lfl t'C ('OU!dn' t pr€'Vt.'llt the &amp; aWe .

B enu.o ls humble Browns

---

OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO ll. 2 TO s (C LOSE'
AT NOON ON THURS .) - EAST COURT &lt;T
P MER Y.

look wl1l!n they hos t th(•
North Galhit Pirtttl~$ Fndc1y

rll'~

l h ( nrh:d f' (t.''~" lnlt•rna liunal

Marauders drop first ineet

PittSburgh 82 F lortda St 60
Consolalton
Cl emson 7 1 Duq uesne 66

OPTOMETRIST

onP l·:&lt;lst('rn player could .l:!.&lt;'lm
c.lct ubl e ft g: ure s, that beUl g
Steve D1U . wtth 24 pomts.
Dill was joined in the
.scorwg t•olwnn by 6-J Seni or
John Sheets ~i!h 9 p&lt;Jints,
jun 1or Tim Spencer w1th 7,
senior Tim Baum with 6, senior
Steve Goe~el With 4 and "I:ony
Milhoan and Cl&gt;uck Hollon w1th
2 each
The Ea gles . who hit a
respectable 46 pel. from the
fl oor while canmng just 6 of 13
shots, didn't get enough shots
off according to coach Bill
Phillips.
Ph1111ps ci ted the t1ght ,
pressing Ferleral defense as
one reason why hts cagers only
got off 52 shots. The Lancers,
however, onl y got off 53 shots
themselves, a cr edit to !he
Eagle defenders who Philhps
said played well
The Eagles h1ghly-touted
durmg pre-se~son but now
wtth just one vict~ry in four
gam es. could have an entirely

CHICAGO (UP! ) - B1g Ten
basketball team s took on a
variety of non~onference foes
&amp;!turday and only four of the
nme active squads came out on
top . But Ind1ana. ranked third
nationally and favored to
repeat as conference champiOn,
d1d the league proud .
The Hoosiers tangled w1th
The
Meigs
Marauder
lith-ranked Kentucky and \\oresUers opened the 1973-74
foWld a hero in 6-foot-5 John sea ~on on a sour note Saturday,
Laskowski, who led a secon d losmg to Athens 45-24, on the
half rally that gave Indiana a Bulldogs' mats. Seven of !he
77-68 victory.
etght Ath ens wins came on
La skowski , who had averaged pins, while four Marauder
just three points in hts team's vtctories were by pins
fJrst two games, scored 16
The afternoon started w1!h
pomts tn the f1rst 11 mmutes of !he Bulldogs pinning their f~rs!
!he second half to lead three op~ one nts, as Don Srmth,
Indiana 's .818 shooting percent- Ph1l Taylor and Mike Br ounk
age for the half
outdueled 9B lb. Mark Tillis, 105
Laskowskt also scored the lb . RICk George and 112 lb
Jwnper that put Indtana into Gary O'Dell respectively
!he lead for good at 47-46 after
The Marauders got th eir ftrst
1t trailed 44-39 at the half. He win of the season m the 119 lb .
finished wt!h a team lugh 23 class when Joe Rosenbaum
points, h1tllng 11-&lt;Jf-15 shots.
deciswned Athens' Gary
Kentucky shot 56.6 per cent Keller, 6-0
from !he field the first half but
Bulldog Joe Hall then pmned
slumped to 32 per cent m the 126 lb Marauder Ken Moore,
secon~ half and lost its second
game in three outings this year .
The le~gue 's other VICtor.s
were OhiO State, 72-65 over
~U
Penn State; Wisconsm, 68-60
over North Dakota State; and
CINCINNATI (UPI) - "We
Northwestern, 76-65 over De- were out to shoot the works,"
Paul All three played at home . said Pm~ Brown, whose CinThe Buckeyes had to fight cinnati Bengals did just that
hard for !he1r victory . The&gt; led Sunday, blas!mg the arch-rival
51-33 w1!h 15 v, minutes to play Cleveland Browns 34-17 to
but Ron Brown and Kevm move a giant step closer to the
Burke ralhcd !he N1ttany Lwns Na!wnal Football League
to Within one pomt at 62-61. But playoffs.
Ohio State's Jack Wolfe lipped
Bengals quarterback Ken
m a mtssed shot and got two Ande1·son teamed wtth rookte
qwck fr 'ie throws to put Ohio w1de receiver Isaac Curtis on
State back ahead ~I w1th three touchdown passes m the
1·25 to go . Wolfe's 18 points and f1rst half to start "shooting the
Wardell Jackson's 20 led the works" and the Browns could
never recover
Buckeyes, now 2~1.
For Wisconsm, it was a romp
Cmcmnatl, wmmng its fifth
to its third victory m a row game in a row and wrappmg up
The Badgers led · 46-24 at a perfect 7.Q home record,
halftime and allowed North upped 1ts season slate to 9-4
Dakota State no closer !han 14 The Bengals need only a vicpoints after that. Kim Hughes tory at Honston next Sunday to
led Wisconsin wttb 16 pomts
win the American Conference's
Northwestern shot only 36 per Central Division and set up a
cent from the floor but DePaul playoff game against the world
committed 11 more turnovers champion Miami Dolphins .
!han the Wildcats. NorthwesCleveland slipped to 7-4-2 and
tern's scoring was led by jumor on ly has a very remote chance
college transfer Willie Williams of making the playoffs.
and Brian Ashbaugh With 17
For Brown, who was ftred by
each as the Wildcats posted Cleveland 12 years ago and had
theLr thtrd wm in four starts .
only a 1-6 record against the
In the Btg Ten losing colwnn Browns commg into the game,
1t was Southern Cahfornia 71 the victory was especially
Illinois 60, South Carolina 74 sweet. lie and CUrtis accepted
Michigan State 63, M1ami of game balls after !he win.
Oh10 85 Purdue 85 in overtime,
"The old father got the game
Marquette 86 Iowa 70 and ball and I will keep this one
Detroit 70 Michigan 59.
with a lot of feeling," said the
&amp;ven!h-ranked Marquette 65-year-old Brown . "The old
built up its margm over !he coach is a happy man today.
Hawkeyes with a 10-point surge
"This is probably as good a
at the end of the first half and performance as we've ever
went on to 1!s fourth straight had," added Brown. "We were
nc!ory . Iowa, now 2-1, was really high for the game. It was
paced by Nell Fegebank with an all or nothmg proposition. I
18
think we were the best team on
South Carohna (No. 20) led !he field and really deserved to
the Spartans only 32-31 at the
half but opened up in the . - - - - - - - - - - - - - . second half. Two-time Big Ten I
I
scoring champ Mike Robinson
of Michigan State was held to
1
21 points but won praise from
1
South Carolma Coach Frank
1
1
McGwre, who said he had
I
never seen a qwcker player,
pro or college.
·
1
1
Purdue hit 46 per cent of its
~I
shots but was behind by a point
, when the overtime penod
ended. Boilermaker center John
Lou Osbo,ne
Garrett had a game h1gh 34
poi'ts In his team's second loos
y
1
1
m four games.
lllln01s fell to USC after
sEA R s
I
leading 58-57 with 4:22 to play .
Catalog Merchant
I
USC reeled off 10 straight
I
points to put the game away .
220 E Mam
Pomeroy 1
26. Dawson led !he Illlm with .... ____________
..I
Jeff
PH. 992-2178

Champton~hip

N. W. _COMPTON, 0. D.

Boston jinx is continued

5- Tht&gt; Da1ly &amp;ntilll'l. Mlddlepor!-POineroy. 0 . Dee. 10. 1973
.
7

'

• .•

•

Open Evenings Til Christmas

Ingels Appliances
174 N. SECOND
MIDDLEPORT
PHONE 992-2635

�'
6 - Th&lt;&gt;Da1hSenlmo.'l Muldleport Pomu o1 lJ lltt 10,1971
IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY 0Ht0

EDISON HOSSTETTER:
Admtnt&lt;;froltor
of
Es1ate of Merle E

dece-ased

Ih 0

"Defendants

RHODELL STEFFY et al
No 20 909
NOTICE FOR SERVICE
BY PUBLICATION
To
Ed tlh RtCl' Wh OSe ad
dress 1S un kn o wn a nd cannot
w tth reaso f\abl~;&gt; d I gence be

ascerta tned

1971 DODGE POLARA

To The unknown he ir!. and
de\ltsees of Ed t th R 1ce
t

To

Mae Prtce

whose ad

dress ts un kn own and can not
Wtfh reasona bl ;&gt; dll gence be
To

1 Copper 70c R~d1ators
33c brass JOe battenes 90&lt;:
M A Hall Reedsv ille Phone
37 8 6249 Beet H•des $5
12 7 tfc

NO

$ll9S

POMEROY, OHIO

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 PM Day Before Pue f,cat•on
Monday Deadt1ne 9a m
Cancet tat ton ~ Correct 1ons
W1ll be accepted until 9 a m for
Day ot Pub lication
t
REGULATIONS
The Publ1sher reserves the
nght to edtt or re1ect any ads
deemed
ObJect on,al
The
publisher wdl not be respon
S1ble tor more than one m
co rrect tnscrt1on
RATES
For Wan1 Ad SerVICC
5 cen ts per Word one nsert1on
M1n1mum Charge $1 00
14 cents per word three
consecut•ve msert ons
26 cents per word s1x con
secut ve msert1ons
25 Per Cent D •sco unl on pa1d
ads and ads pa 1d w 1thm 10
day s
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$2 00 for 50 word m 1n
1mum Each add1t10nal word

3c

BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per
Advertisement
OFFICE HOURS
8 30 a m to 5 00 p m Dad y
8 30 a m
to 12 00 Noon
Saturday

166

H1gh Ser~es ~ Carolyn
Teaford 434 Mary G lilian 426
Team H1gh Game - Newell
Sunoco 762
Team H1gh Senes - Newel!
Sunoco 2232

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No 21 085
Estate of RALPH JOHNSON
Deceas ed
NOilCe IS hereby g1ven that
Gustava 10hnson of Route 2
Rae ne OhtO has b.een duly
appo1nted Executrix of the
Esta te o f Ralph Johnson
deceased late of Me1gs County
Oh o
Cred tors are requ 1red to ftle
th eir cla1ms w1th sa1d t duclary
w1thm four months
Dated lh s 29th day of
November 1973
Mannmg D Webster
Judge
cour t of Common Pleas
Pr obateD v s on
{12 } 10 17 24 3tc

Arthritis and
the weather
DEAR DR LAMB - We are
constde nn g movtng to St
Petersburg, F1onda, and
would appreciate j~OY advlCe
you can g1ve on the' beneft Is, 1f
any for anyone suffenng from
arthnl!s Is the cltmate more
beneftcJal thrm for mstance,

York chmate ? I have an

elderly mother who ts worned
about the dampness and feels 1t
would be detnmental to her
arthntlc conditiOn, which ts not
really the cnpplmg kmd She
does have pam tn her neck and
spme She has hved all of her
hfe m New York City and 1s
hes1tant to take up hvmg m
Flmtda berause of the dampness
r pe• sonall) feel, havmg
tned both climates, that
Flond" would be better for her
Any adv1ce you can gtve would

ec1ated

DEAR READER - When
you have hved all of your hfe m
one place, }OU always hesJt.ate
to pull up stakes and move to
any new locatiOn Fnends,
rela tives
and
hfe long
assoc1at1on s bec o me m ore

OUT OUR WAY
PRETTY

Cll.AFTY 6RAMP
5UT ITH k.IK I
k:tJOW WHERE
YOU HIO' CJ.IR 51

MAS
TH!S YEAR

Important as a person grows
older
As far as climate and ar~
UlntJs are concerned, I suspect
11 has been over exaggerated
The most 1mportant aspect of
managmg •rlhnhs ts good
medical supervtston, and there
are many fme doctors and
med1cal fac1hties m St Petersburg I know a lot of doctors tn
tllat area and constder mediCal
practiCe lhere to be top notch
From a chmate pomt of
VIew, I am convmced that older
people do better m m1lder
chmates BatUmg the elements
gets harder and harder as the
years pass by
Where you hve 1s very much
a personal thmg There are many factors mvolved I thmk
the dunate m St Petersburg ts
g reat and do not thmk •t •hould
pose any real medical
problems for )OU that you
wouldn't have elsewhere
DEAR DR LAMB - Does
diabetes usually strtke after or
when a person has a shock or
11lness' Also, I have a blood
sugar test every four months

by Neg Cochran

Not1ce

models of rnobtle homes
Phone area code 61.4 423 9531
4 13 ftc
OLD furniture oak tables
clocks Ic e boxes brass beds
dishes
or
complete
households
Wr~te M
0
Miller Rt 4 Pomeroy Oh10
call 992 6271 ~
s 13 tfc

------~-------

LADY TO H EL P WITH LIGHT
HOUSEWORK
AND
COOK IN G
FOR
OLDER
COUPLE
WITH
MILO
IL LNESS
R EFERENCES
CALL 992 7680
12 7 Jtc
SOMEONE to l 1ve tn to take
care of home whtle owner 1S
away Cal l 992 293 6
12 9 3tc
-...---~ -----~--~

AN OHIO OIL CO
offers
PLENTY OF MONEY plus
cash bonuses frmge benef1ts
t o mat ure tn d1v 1dua l tn
Middleport
Pomeroy area
Regardless of exper1en ce
a1rm(\d D I Read
Pres
Am er1can Lubricants Co
Box 696 Dayton Ohto 45401
12 9 -4tP.
--~ -~---- - ----

Employment Wanted
INTERIOR pamt1ng by hour or
co ntra ct Phone 992 5083
12 4 7tc
WILL haul coal 1n Meigs and
Mason area
638 E
Matn
Street Pomeroy
12 9 6tc
LADY to care for elderly
woman or will d o l ight
housekeeping Must l1ve m
Call 378 6319

____________ 2.2_6!-'P

EXPE RIEN CED
pa1nter
lnter1or and extenor Phone
985 3951
12 5 26tp
------~- - ~-

whtch never shows any sugar
Do you thmk I still have Jt? Or,
1s 1! only under control? 1 am
only on a diet for dlabetes
DEAR READER - The
diabetes 1s usually there
ong1nally, and after a severe
Illness or shock 11 gets severe
enough to be not1ced or
d1agnosed In other tnslances,
the problem m handhng sugar
JUS! gradually gets worse until
11 f1ts the classlflcallon of
dtabetes
Your blood tests do show
sugar (glucose), but I presume
that the amount IS w1thm the
normal range Or, at least they
are normal enough that your
doctor ts unconcerned aboultl
A person who really has
diabetes ts not cured of tl
Rather, the proble!!l 1s controlled That means the blood
sugar 1sn 'l too high, and the
person lS dotng fme Many
persons w1th d1abetes are well
controlled by d1et alone Th1s 1s
part1cularl ·••e tf the dtabetes
lsnottoo'/ ' ' ; 1dthepallent
IS falth!t.~ , {ollowmg the
d1et plan lh• doctor has g1ven
hun
Send your questions lo Dr.
Lamb, in care of this
newspaper, P 0 Box 1551,
Radio City Station, New York,
N Y 10019 For a copy of Dr.
Lamb's booklet on lbe
menopause, send 50 cents to
the same address and ask for
'' Mt&gt;nopause'' booklet

Marco

Polo

stopped at
ca ravansar~es to adm1re the
carpets and Jade sllU
crafted m Com m u n 1 s t
Chma 's Smk1ang Provmce

FARMERS
Hol1day
Greet1ngs from A I Ca ttle
TechniCian Leland Parker
992 2264 Pomeroy restdence
or Coolville 667 3251
An
swenno Servtce
12 9 13tc

Sell Yours To

The Rosenberg
Recycling Co.
Athens, Oh10
We close each Fnday at noon
for balance of week Also
closed 24
25
31 and 1 )
January

CLOSE OUT on new Z1g Zag
Se wmg Machmes For S1!W1ng
stret ch fabr cs buttonholes
fancy des1gns etc Pamt
sl •ghtly blem1shed Cho1ce of
ca rry 1ng case or sewmg
stand $-49 80 cash or te rm s
ava1lable Phone 992 2984
12 5 ttc

1

For Rent
TRAILER 1n Syracuse on
large tot Adults only Ca l l
992 3525
12 4 He

-..------------HAVE YOUR trophy mounted

-1------~--~----

7 ROOM house w1th bath Phone
698 4499
12 7 Jtc
3

BEDROOM trailer
con
struct1on workers preferred
Call 992 2960 after 2 p m
12 9 3tp

FLORIDA
frutt
Hamlm
see dles s oranges
navel
oranges
white and pmk
grapefruit Can be picked up
now at the Meigs Vo Ag
department or the former Or
Butrlmus home or call 992
2737 or 992 2158 or contact
any FFA member
12 6 Stc
EXCELSIOR Salt Works
E
Matn St Pomeroy All k 1nd s
of salt water pellets water
nuggets block sa lt and own
Oh10 Rtver Sa lt Phon e 91f2
38 91
6 s ffc

MODERN 2 bedroom turn1shed
up sta ~r s apartment
$75 per
month
no pets
depos t
r eq utred Robert H11l Racme SALT FOR ICE AND SNOW
9-493811
Rock sa lt tor townsh ps
11 JO ate
town s and bus1nesses n
-~-----A- ~-----bulks and bags tor ce and
snow ExcelSIOr Salt Work s
PRIVATE meet1ng room for
any organ1zat on phone 992
Phone 992 389 1
3975
11 11 tt c
3 11 tf c
=- ~-==--=--- -- -- -SHE A RED
WHITE
P I NE
3 AND 4 ROOM furniShed and
Xmas trees needles really
unfurn1shed
apartments
stay on
K UHL S BARG AIN
Phone 992 543.4
CENTER Rt 7
at caut1on
4 12 tfc
l tght Tuppers Plams
12 2 1Btc
~- -- --~- -~~--TRAILER
Mason
W
Va
co uple only phone 992 5693 19 HEAD of Horses Regtstered
Tenn
Walkmg
Horses
1116tfc
Reg1stered Quarter Horses
Grade Horses and Pon1es $40
SMALL trat le r 1dea1 for couple
and up Call 367 7481 or 388
10 miles north of Pomeroy
9991
$75 per month Call 992 7479
12 4 10tc
11 23 tfc

3

BEDROOM
house
tn
Pomeroy
Ltv ng
room
dm.ng room
some wall to
wall carpetmg firepla c e full
basement 2 car garage $130
per month Phone 1 (30-4) 743
6326
12 5 6tc

TRAILER
Browns Tra ile r
Park Phone 992 3324
12 5 tfc

for Sale
REDUCE safe &amp; fast wtth
GoBese Tablets &amp; E Vap
water pills
Nelson Drug
12 10 ltp

------------·

1972 350 NOVA SS Excellent
cond1t1on Call 992 5196 after 5
pm
12 4 6tc

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

It's Snow T~re T1me!

CO-OP COUNTRY
SQUIRE 120
Pos•hve Stop and Go In Mud
&amp; Snow

ALL SIZES IN STOCK
Let Us lns1all Nowl

SUPER SERVICE STA
COAL FOR SALE JAYMAR
COAL
COMPANY
THE
9 .. _- JackW Carsey,Mgr
MEIGS &amp; GALLIA LINE
6itl Phone 992 9932
STATE
ROUTE
7
AT
CHESHIRE OPEN 7 AM
TILL 6 30 PM 5 DAYS A
SINGER sew1ng machtnes 1972
WEEK PHONE 992 5693
model tn beaut1ful walnut
12 10 5tc
cabmet Makes des1gn stlf
ches
z1g zag
buttonholes
blind hems etc L rke new
ELECTROLUX Sweeper deluxe
Only $89 95 can Ravenswood
model
Complete wtth all
273 9521 or 273 9893 after 5 00
cteantn~ attachments and
12 1 tfc
uses paper bags Sl1ght1y used
but c leans and looks l1ke new
Will sell for $37 25 cash or 8 HEAD Holste1n 1st calf
Hetfers
All m product1on
terms available Phone 992
SS 000
For
further
1n
298 4
formation
call
949 3777
12 5 IIC
Rac1ne Oh1o after 8 p m
12 7 6tc
GROCERY busmess fv, san:
Budding for sate or lease
Phone 773 5618 from 8 JO p m
LOTS ot chrysanthemums to ~
to 10 p m for appointment
sale ffeld grown We only
have one color - yellow 10
3 20 tfc
bunches for S5 We hao.Je some
out In full bloom some lUSt
WE HAVE all your uphOholttry
budding Reynolds Flower
needs
Burlap
dentm
Shop Mason W Va Call 773
c ambr.c foam glue z1ppers
5147
ta ck ing stnp spnngs and
9 26 tfc
......_
c t 1ps
chiPboard
button
twtne sew1ng thread legs
upholstery books dacron
webb1ng spring tw1ne tacks
w elt co rd
cotton
sw•vel A K C Reg rs tereel toy chocolate
ba ses .and foam foam foam
poodles Lovable Chrtstmas
Pomeroy Re covery 622 East
g tfts Phone 992 5066
Mam Stre et Pomeroy Phone
12 5 6tc
992 7554
11 20 26tc

________ ___

~-

Pets For Sale

992 7474
Johnson Masonry
&amp; (Rem ode lmgl
992 7608

the
lu•lt to Your ' Spetl

Delivered to Job Sit.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

FREE EST

Ph '992 217&lt;1

EXPERT

Porr

HOGG &amp;ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO
Mason W V•

~roy

•5.55
On Most Amencan Cars

Area s Most
Reasonable Pnces

TIIS

Monday 1hru Saturday

All work guaranteed

606 E. Ma10, Pomeroy, 0 .

P&amp;J HEATING
AND COOLING
Res tdence commerctal or
mobtle hom es Save on parts
&amp; labor
Mtddleport
215 N 2nd Ave
Phone 992 3509

SEW IN G MA CHINt S Repatr
serv1ce all makes 992 2284
The Fa bn c Shop Pomeroy
Authonzed Smg er Sales ind
Servtce We Sharpen Sc ssors
J 29 tfc

s

6
6
6
6
6

C BRADFORD Auchoneer
Comple t e Servtce
Phone 949 3821
Rac1ne Oh o
Cr~t t Brad f ord
5 1 ftc
EXCAVATING dozer loader
and backhoe work
sept1c
tanks mstalled dump trucks
and lo boys for h~re wdl haul
fill d~rl top soli l 1mestone
and grao.Jel Call Bob or Roger
Je ff ers day phone 992 7089
n1ght pl'lone 992 3525 or 992
5232
2 11 tfc

t:.LNA and
Wh1te Sew•ng
Machm!!S
Serv1ce on all
makes Reasonabfe rates
The Sew1ng Ce nter M 1d
dleport Oh10
11 16 tfc
G &amp; E al)p Jdnce repat
~ ")ooat the s.hop 992 3802 or 9.49
4254
~
11 26 26tp

-----------

OPfiCE SUPPLIES
anti

FURNITURE

16
6
7

'

Stop In and See Our
Floor D1splay .

7

8

AUTOMOBILE msur ance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator s l1cense Call 992
7428
6 15 tfc

8

FOR FREE estima t es on
alummum Std1ng
Stor m
Doors and Wmdows
Car
ports Marquees and Rallmg
Phone
Charles
L t sle
Sy racuse Oh10 Carl Jacob
Sales Representative V V
Johnson and Son I nc
6 22 tfc

8

9
9
9
10
10

------~- ~------

11
M

READY MIX
CONCRETE
del•vered rtght to your
pro1ect Fas t &amp;nd easy Free
es ttm a te s Phone 992 3284
Goegleln Readv Mtx Co
M ddleport Oh10
6 30 ttc

ll
12

12
12

-=~:=:-

PRI CE
CO N STRUCT I ON
Roofmg
spout 1ng ktfchens
and bathroom s Complete
remodeling Phone 742 6713
12 3 tt c

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE rates Ph
4782 Gallipolis John Rus ell
Owner and Operator
5 12 ttc

f.6

12
l

1

=--~ ---------

-

DOZER and bacK hoe work
ponds and sept c tanks d I
chmg serv ce fop sot! ftll
d~rt
limes to ne
B&amp;K
Escavattng Phon e 992 5367 or
992 3861
•
9 1 ttc
~- ----- L -~~-~~-

HATF IELD
water l 1nes
l1 nes Phone
126 18fc

SEPT I C
TANKS
cleaned
Modern San1ta t1 on 992 3954 or
992 73&lt;19
10 23 tfc

Real Estate For Sale
6 ROOMS and bath In town
$11 000 Call 992 3975- or 992
2571
9 28 ttc

-------~-----SE PTIC
TA'iK~
AkOBI

C
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
CLEANED
REPAIRED
MILLER
SANITAT ION
STEWART OH 10 PH 66~
J035
10 4 fl o""

A LOVELY new Home 1h mile
from Me 1gs H1gh School
Three bedrooms two baths
full basement w1th two car
garage Large lot
$27 500
A ts o recently remodeled
three bedroom older home ' "
Pomeroy
Pnce of SIS 000
•ncl udes furn 1ture Owner Will
help f1nance e1ther of these
two propert1es Ca ll 593 5667
Athens
12230tc

u UELL AI nementwork c an be

Q

done by appotntment only at
present t 1me due to tllness 1n
fam ly
Phone
for
ap
po.ntment 742 32J2
11 25 tfc

2
3

J
PtANO tun1ng &amp; repa lrmo
Lane Oan1els 259 Broadw ay
M•ddleport Phone 992 208~
12912tp

Real Estate For Sale

NO RTII

'MObile Homes For Sale

BARGAIN -

On Rl 7 w1th 2

large bedroom s
mce bath
large l1vtng and co mpact
k i t chen Garage and 1 acre

DISPERSAL
SALE

Only $8500 00
WARM H otwat er heat
{ natural
gas
boller )
3
bedroom s n tce b ath porch
garage on good lot Red uced to

$18 000 00
, RANCH - In Syracuse wtfh 3
bedrooms gas furnace bath
garage and niCe lot
/ILL
PANELED
4
bedrooms w1th large closets
nice large convement k lichen
Spacious bath and 11!2 acres

$18 000 00
MODERN - Only a few years
old 2 bedrooms ntce kitchen
w 1th cook and bake un1ts
Otntng room
porch
and
garage S16 000 00

NEW LISTING - On Rutland
Pomeroy road 5 room s bath
anv most of the furn1ture
Owner movmg to F lor ~"" Only

NO MONEY
NEEDED UNTIL
JANUARY 1974

MILLER
HOMES

one of

these

HOME S WITH LOWER
TAXES
MINERSVILLE - I story
frame 3 bedrooms Bath
K1tchen has lots of cabtnets
Lots of ground
In good
condlfton $6 500

JUST OFF

bedrooms
furna(.:e Large Rec room
Lot s of new l 1le and panelmg
Doubl e lot sa 000
POMEROY - Close m 1 36
Acres 2 story frame 4 B R
Bath Paneling a-nd tile Coal
furnace heat 59 500

MIDDLEPORT - 2 slory
frame 4 B R Bath Ga rage
Lots of fr ontage ASKING
$9 500
LET US 5ELL YOUR
PROPERTY
HENRY E CLELAND
YOUR
FRIENDLY BROKER
992 22S9
lf no answer 992 2568

INFORMATION ABOUT:
JOB OPPORTUNITIES
SOCIAL SECURITY
CONSUMER PROTECTION

AND
GREAr COUNTRY

STEREO
92.1 FM
WMPO
J1g

&lt;

Pitll'i

May tag
AutomatiCS
speeq Operat;on 1
~·ce of water
hm l)s
Auto
water
le'tftel
control
Lint
Filter or Power
Ftn 'Ag1tator
Perma-Preu

DOWNTOWN
BELPRE
OHIO

"J.

1971 ALL ELECTRIC Windsor
mobile
home
60x12
J
bedroom air cond1t1oner, 13
foot Exp11ndo 1 acre ground
on Old Route 33 north of Rock
Sprmgs Call 992 5677 after 6
pm
12 4 uc

Maytag
lialo of Hut

Dryer$

..... rround clothe$
With genue even
heat Nottot spots, ,
no
overctrylng
Fine Mes~ L lnt
F11ter
We Specl11lze In

~--------__.----

\971 HILLCREST 3 bedrooms
central air cond•tion•ng Call
992 5296 after 5 p m
12 " 6tp

RUTLAND

'" ooo

741-4211

--------------

AAV.TAO

FURNITURE~~~~~::·'
Arnold Grate.

Rutland

North

East

2+
Pass
Pass 49
Pass
Pass
Opemng lead-K•
t•

RT

-Middleport F'omeroy

1972 ARLINGTON 12x50 mobile
home like new two bedroom
partially furntShel!t carpeted
1nctudes central a~r con
dittonmg underplnnmg and
awning Financing a\'aiiSble
Call 1 304 773 5194
12 7 Jtc

Wes t

7 3
New bath New

$7500 00
THINK
BIG
WHILE
THINKING BUY ONE OF
THE ABOVE OFFERINGS
AND FE~L SECURE

I YEAR
GUARANTEE
BEST SERVICE
IN
OHIO VALLE.]'

6

Mr Cartoon 3 Love Amencan Style 13 Somerset IS
Sesame St 33 Speed Racer 6 Sesame Street 20 Movte
N owhere t o Go 10
30 - 1 Love Lucy 6 Green Acres 3 Jeopardy 4 Gilligan s
I sland 13 Lucy Show 8 Santa Claus 15
oo--Mr Rooers 33 20 Merv Grtfftn 4 Andy Grtff1th 8 I
Dream of Jean nte 13 M1ss1on lmposst ble 6 Bonanza l~
30 - Beverly H•llbtllies 8 Elec Co 33 Gomer Pyle 13
Hodarmncioe l odoe 20
55 - Earl N tghtmgale 15
oo - N ews 3 4 a 10 15 6 Sesame Street 20 ABC News 13
Nurst ng Process 33
30 - NBC New s 3 4 15 ABC News 6 CBS New s 8 10
Hogan s Heroes 13 Your Future Is N ow 33
Dusty s Trail 13 Marco Spor tllte 33 Beat The Clock 4
News 10 TBA 15 Electnc Co 20 Truth or Conseq ue nces 6
What s My Lme 8
30 ~ World of Survtval4 To Te ll the Truth 6 RFD 20 More
Than You Are 33 Ne w Pnce l s Rtght 8 10 Beat The Clock
13 New Oattng Game 3 T BA IS
00 - Chase 3 4 15 Maude 8 10 War and Peace 20 33
Temperatures Rtsmg 13 Ozzte s Gtrls 6
30 - Hawa11 Ftve 06 10 Mov1e The Cat Creature 6 13
30 ~ Performan ce 20 33 Shaft 8 10
oo - Pol~teStory3 415 Marcus Welby MD 613 News2 0
Our Stree t 33
30 ~ Woman 33
OO ~ News3 4 6 8 10 13 15 Janakt33
30 - Johnny CarsonJ 4 15 M tss Wor ld6 13 Movtes A Ktnd
of Lovtng a The Bells of St Mary s 10
00 - Tomorrow 3 4 N ews 13
00 - N ews 4

oo -

7

7

a
a
9
tO

11

11
1
2

;oy Oswald &amp;

DearS
Better an unused sweater (couldn't you lend II to an ap.
prec1ale fr~end'J than a hUrt relative
Returnmg an lnapproprtBte gift 18 chancy, even if yoo know
the gtver mtunately Don't rlSk losm~ oouch wtth a new found
cousm JUst because you "hate waste " That's WASTING
Fnendsh1p' - H
P S Have you tried wearmg the sweater over a 1ong-&lt;!l..,ved
top for Ute " layered look" ?

·-'1 ...

Helen Help
By H
Us. • •
elt'n Hottel

This Finder Not a Keeper

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
40 Greek
t Con
letter
structed
41 Franco
5 Emesto
Belg1an
r1ver

Guevara
8 TurkiSh
flag
9 Actual
bostl1
attcs
(2 wds )
13 Old

I

2 Fore1gn
3 Song

1nvolvang
fa la las

tune

4 Uncle tn

monetary

(3 wds )
11 Excite
12 Extract
16 Unadul
terated
19 Synan
caty
22 Stcthan
City
23 Selected

Dundee

umt

5 One

lt Chng

horse

15 Nether
lands
rtver
16 Livmg
ham
11 We1ght
18 Rhapsodize
(colloq )
20 Paul

:U Gorge
25 Satisfy
fully
21 Judge's
chamber
29. Shoelace
30 Habituate
S1 Wrath
36 Devoured
S7 Kmd
of

10 Seasonal

(3 wds )

Indaan

veh•cle
6 Enghsh
rustle
1 Ne1ghbor
of
Somaha

(abbr)

sauce

Newman
film
21 Lepond
22 Gaehc
23 --de
men the

25 Scoff
26. Sunk
fence

21 Bast•·
nado

28. Eggs
29. Fme
tobacco

Jl1JWID'i1rn;;

/k,i - u , J ,_J

32 Yellow
ocher
33 Wooden
core
34. Hostelry
35. Twme
together
37. Com
fortablc
38 Home... steader
39 Bugbear

~

l n:o;t: r 1mb h.• these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordtnary lliords

r

1

lIII
[J () ]
11
t
I I I : IJ

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

RYHUR

D

One letter stmply stands for another In this sample A IS
used for the three L s, X for the two O's etc Single letters
apostrophes the length and formatton of the words are all
hmts Each day the code letters are different

[HYSERRI

I

fl
V\....'"0R""'
1

~

. . _

J

_ _

CRYPTOQUOTES
Now arrange the c1rc Ied Iet t ers
to form the eurprtse answer, a!J
suggested by the above cartoon

~~::::Prill=llle~SIII=PII==ISI::::ANSWIII~he=re:::,1 "ffi J-ffi j"

(Anew~r• tomorrow )

Jmuhlt

P

PARCH DALLY

PERSON

AVENGE

1 t 1111 ~ (lllellt Jmt fnr g11 lf- A HANDY CAP

JNDLQLG
DP

EVSTRLH

VSCDRLGLSKL

RVMNCVSM
NVH

DJS

W

CNL

VS

PRWYLH

WYLGVKW

PVGL

HEY VIE~

WHAT S

SOME. f'EOA..E SH:::UlDtJ T
J5E. N...LO~E.D TO .Do

A 2.7-LeTTf..R IAJCRD

FOR. APft€SAU::6

('RQSS~D

RJZZlES

BSTLGSLWCN

NDYL - NWGDRT

L

HCWHHLS

(@ 1978 Kmg Feature• Syndicate, Inc )

\YORE DlFFEREh,

AFTER '!liE ACCIDENT HE

''VES, IT WAS
AN

TO FOOl. TH! POI.ICE,

P\,ANNEO TO GET O£N'IU~ES,

-THE DIAMONDS f&gt;I..W/111(5
10£NTIFIED;_::~)-f~

South

1.,

2.,
Pass

Jam es Jacoby

: Oswald One of the d1sad·

~vantages of betng an expert

IS that people don t expect
you to make m1stakes
J 1m
Beg1nners make
t m1stakes
Average p1ayers
~ make mi stakes So do ex
perts but they make fewer
: mtstakes than others
Oswald
Today's South
g rabb e d th e s pade lead,
cashed h1s ace and kmg of
trumps and proceeded to lose
the d1amond fmesse East led
~ack a s pade and South
,"'WOUnd up losmg two spades
m add1t10n to the kmg of d1a·
monds and the queen of
trumps

OFF,

~'
1~

'OJ'RE ltJ

I

' ' J 1m

It IS easy to see that
wasn t an expert An
: expert would let West hold
' the f~rst tr1ck He would wm
: the second spade and play
' the same way the actual
1 South d•d but when East got
; m he would not have a spade
1 to lead to hts partner and
: eventually South would get to
• d 1scard one losmg spade on a
: d1amond '
- Oswald "South explatned
~at he took the f1rst spade
' because he was afratd that tf
: he ducked the second spade
: would be ruffed Th1s was a
possibility but one that
should have been 1gnored
because 1f the second spade
dtd get ruffed 1t would almost
, surely be ruffed w1th what
1 would have been a leg1t1mate
~ trump tnck later '
1 South

ALLEYOOP
A /31RD CAN T~ITE.FROM

HIS ~ uGH'- GOP.L FRIEND FOR
A FEW CENfURJES WITHot/T
SOM£ W/C£ GUY 8~0WING
HISCOV~'.'

J

~ INEWSPAPER E:NTERPI\lSE ASSN )

I BETTER HI DE MY
BUTTER·AN·AIG MONEV

The b•ddmg has been
East
North
~ West
Pass
t+
Pa,..
2N T
~ Pa ss

'

I' You South

10
South

AFORE PAW GITS HOME
LOOKIN FER CARD
PLAVIN MONEY

One day she asked
her husband 1f he had
seen her new belt

1.,

"Jle]t?"he satd .. Oh,
I'm sorry I thougt.t 1t
was a dog collar I
have 1t on GoodAuthonty •

hold

I •KJ65 .,A832 tKI04.65
~ Whal do you do now'

1~

A -Bid three notrump Your
r-;.artner has 18 Qr 19 ~alanced
points You have 11 so you have

I,

'

,I

'

VH

Yesterday's Cryploquole: IT IS NEVER TOO EARLY TO DO
YOUR CHRISTMAS SHOPPING EARLY -SOURCE UN·
KNOWN

no slam Interest

'

DOWN
1 Kind of
syrup

DICK TRACY

t AQ9 8 3
... AK
WEST
EAST
• KQJ!0 2
\'Q 9
\'J86
t6 5
+K42
"'Jt087
... 96532
SOUTH 101
• A86
\' ,\K 103 2
• J 107
... Q4
North South vulnerable

HAVE YEAR S OF FU N - al
GIFT SHOP - And r es 1dence
on Rt J5 A pnme locat1on tor
contractor or busmess ven
ture 600 Ft of frontage
MART LOCATION - 10 acres
on sew age and c 1ty water l1nes
Route 7 Loop

5
6

-.x,;·:·:·":,.-., .,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,., ,.,.;.: :.;.;.

10

.74

lowes t cost ~ m

Busmess for sale
Good
Motorola dealershtp and
equ 1pment 1n Rac 1ne Oh10
Call 949 4499 or 949 3151
12 9 6tc

5

~L&gt; -=~

v

• 9 53
"7 54

FUN the older you get the
more d costs 1 YOU LL

0 U E to the death of owner TV

5

Experts describe proper play

E MAl
POMEROY

-

4

»

::;:,.::::.,.... ..

Dear Helen
To the woman who sa1dshe was "So Sorry" that too late, she
reahzed she had thrown her husband at another woman I could
be the other woman m her husband's hfe If I am, she sllll has a
chance, and she'd better show him she has changed - very soon
- or he may fmd someone w1th less scruples than r
My marnage was a total dlSasler For 17 years I live m
Hell - no kmd words, each pregnancy blamed on me, always
slapped around I stayed for tbe children's sakes, wh1ch was a
m1st.ake They suffered too
At work 1 starled havmg lunch With a kind, considerate,
tu1derstanding man whose wife e1ther sleeps w1th her children or
on the couch (Just as "So Sorry 'does ) He doesn't1ie be says he
has a good w1fe and mother for h1s k1ds, but she gets fits if he
touches her Get tillS he still loves her '
He likes me and WANTS me physically I've fallen deeply m
love w1tll HIM And so I'm gomg to qmt my JOb to avmd temptation I'm sure be'll fmd a surrogate partner, but how much
better 1f the woman he loves could warm up 1
To "So Sorry" I say Get out the filmy gowns and the
seductive atrs, pursue htm, break down yOW' reserve, get r1d of
your hang-ups, stop taking hun for granted If you can't feel real
passiOn, show warmth and responsiveness, and maybe the
pass1on wtll develop wtth tune
Remember, S S, for every women like me, there are f1ve
who would rather have crumbs than nothmg al all Get sexy' SO LONELY
Dear Helen
I hate waste And I adhere to honesty So I have a problem
Recently, I've been corresponding w1tll a distant cousm I've
never met She sent me a hand-crocheted sleeveless sweater, and
I never wear anything sleeveless, or so open - you can see
through It
The sweater lS very pretty, and someone else could enJOY 11
Should I return tt to my relative tellmg her I do not want 1t? - S

4 00 -

WIN AT BRIDGE

6011

----- ----~~~--

Farm Report 13
Paul Harvey 13
30 - B1ble Answers 6 News 6 F1ve Mmutes to Live By 4
Rev Cleophus Robrnson 13
35 - Columbus Today 4 Farmttme 10
45 - Corncob Report 3 Farm t1m e 10
00 - Today 3 4 15 CBS News 8 10 Fllntstones 13 Romper
Room 6
30 - Rocky &amp; Bu l lw1nkle 13 N ew Zoo Revue6
00 - Capt Kangaroos 10 New Zoo Revue 13 Sesame St 33
Ttmmy &amp; Lass1e 6
30 - Huck &amp; Yog1 6 D1ck Van Dyke 13
55 - News 13
00
Paul D1xon 4 Frtend ly Junction 10 AM 3 Ph1l
Donahue 15 Brady Bunch 6 Abbott and Costello 8 Mov1e
Zorba the Greek 13
30 - To Tell The Truth 3 Secret Storm 8 Mtchaels&amp; Co
55 - Chuck White Reports 10
00 - Dtnah Shore J 15 Joker s Wild 8 10
30 - Baffle3 d 15 $10000Pyramtd8 10 M1keDo ualas6
00- Gamblt10 Password 13 WI lard of Odds 3 4 15 Haze l 8
30 - Hollywood Squares 3 4 15 Love of L1fe 8 10 Brad y
Bunch 13 Bowling 6
55 - CBS N ewsB Dan lmel s Wor ld 10
00 ~ Jeopardy 3 15 Bob Braun s 50 50 Club 4 Pa ssword 6
News 8 10 13
30 - 3 W s 3 15 Splt t Second 6 Search For Tomorrow 8 10
45 ~ E lectnc Company 33
55 - News J 15
00 ~ News 3 All My Chtldren 6 13 Not For Women Only 15
Concentration 8 What s My Ltne 10
30 - 3 On A Match 3 4 IS The World Turns 6 10 lets Make
A Deal 6 13
00 - Days of Our Lives 3 4 t 5 Newlywed Ga m e 6 13
Gutdmg L tght 8 10
30 .-- Edge of N1ght 8 10 G1rl ln My Llfe 6 13 Doctors 3 4 15
oo - Another World 3 4 15 General Hosp1tal 6 13 Pnce ls
R tght 10 Book Beat 20 Men From Shi loh 8
30 ~ Re t urn to Peyton Place3 15 O ne Life TO L•ve 13 Secret
Storm 10 Phil Donahue 4 Chan Ese Way 20 Huc k ahd Yog1
6
20 25 -

10

Real Estate For Sale

TWO bedroom house at 173'
Sycamore Street m Mtd
dleport Vacant Call 992 5310
11 21 26tc

scatologtcal meanmg - then, for goodness sake, let's do lhe
same w1th another "G" word gladtolus
The glad10lus IS a lovely flow er, but some tdiot gave 1! a
totally WlSUttable name, Latm m ongm, and reqmrmg the Latm
pural for words endmg m "us " Thus, two or more flowers are
gladtoh
Now just try to say "gladioli" m everyday conversation A
few hortt~ultunsls and garden club members can manage 11, but
most amateur gardeners, and ordinary folks , wmd up saymg
"glad-OLE-yuh" or JUSt s1mply "glads " The plural, if used at
all, lS 'glad..,le-yuhs "
1 suggest lhe Nattonal Garden Club Cotu1c1l, or whoever tt lS
that dec1des such thmgs, elinunate the word enllrely, usmg
"glads," whtch IS descrtpttve, and - even better - pronounceable

00 ~ Sunnse Sem.nar 4 Sacred Heart 10
15 - Concern &amp; Comment 10

~:x iiX:%}

I
I

He wasn't, I'm sure
U "gay" lS destmed for the scrap ptle - except for 1ts new

TUESDAY DEC 11,1973

992 2094
606 E Mam Pomeroy

~

PtANO tun •ng and repalrmg
Lane Oan1els 259 Broadway
M iddleport Phone 992 2082
12 2 12tp

28 New Homes To Be
I·
SOLD
At
USED
and
REPOSSESSED
PRICES
To make room for the
many
new
un1ts
arnvmg m Jan , 1974.
DELAYED
DELIVERY
AVAILABLE
W1th the e•n!J:.an of a
small depos1t

I

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

GAS and OIL
SALES&amp; SERVICE

MOBILE home repair Elec
tr .c al plum bmg and heating
Phorte 992 5858
715tfc

Personality and Behav•oral Development J3
6 30 -- NBC News 3 4 15 ABC News 6 CBS News 8 10
Hogans Heroes 13
7 oo --- Truth or Consequences 3 6 What s My Line 8 Beo)1 the
Clock 4 News 10 Electnc Company 20 C~rcus 13 TBA 15
Who Is Man' 33
1 30 - Bobby Goldsboro 3 To Tell the Truth 6 Buck O.Vens B
Lock Stock and Barrel 20 MuntCipal Court 10 Beat the
Clock 13 Wacky World of Jonathan Wtnters 1S Eptsode
Act i on 33 Hoi lywood Squares d
Lotsa luck 3 4 15 Rook.tes t3 Nattonal Geographtc 6
Or Seuss Cartoon 8 10 The Plot 10 Overthrow Chnstmas 33
Berlioz s Requ1em 20
8 JO - D•ana3 15 FrostytheSnowman8 10
9
Pro Football 6 13 Caroling Caroling 33 Mov1e Key
West 3 4 15 Perry Como 8 10
9 30 - Book Beal 20 33
10 00 - Medtcal CenterS 10 News20 Paul Nuch rms33
11 oo - News3 4
1015 Janakt33
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 IS Movies M1ck.ey One 8
Buffalo Btll ' 10
12 00 - News 6 13
lf 30 ~ Movte The Lttlle Fug1 t 1ve 13
1 00 - Tomorrow 3 4
'1. 00 - News 4 13

a oo -

I

.

WILL tnm or cuf trees and
shrubbery Also clean out
basements afttcs e t c Call
949 3221 or 742 A441
11 21JOt c

Open )lOUr dicllonanes to the lt&gt;tll'r 'G" loday, k1dd1es, and
let's look at a coupleolwords - one of them destroyed beyond alt
recall and the other whiCh deserves a Slmllarfall'
F,'rst lets look at 'gay "The homosexuals of th1s country,
seekmg a~ appellative term to descr~be Uletr sexual tendenctes,
picked on this mnocent httle three letter word, and 1t Will never
be the same If you doubt me, check w1th the Gay l.Jberation
Front
Why "gay"' Search me As recently as 1965, the Mernam·
webster Colleg 1ate Dictionary d1dn't even hst 'homosexual ' as
one oflts meamngs (but the 1970editl0n d1d)
But homosexuals became " gay," and word has lost all1ts
meamng • happily exctted, br1ght, hvely, etc"
No tuned-m author today would dare use the word m the
proper context, even though Shakespeare, Str Walter Scott, and
other hterary lltans employed 1! m tis mnocent context
I thmk 1 would be JOined by vtrtually all the people who hve m
Gay, Fort Gay, or Motult Gay, W Va , if we orgaruzed a campalgn to make homosexuals (who are known by many other
titles, most of them unprmtable here) cease and destst from
usmg this poor, maligned word
And I'm sure we 'd be JOmed by the ghosts of the g1lded
figures of the Gay Nmelles (pretty much a he-man era of our
history) and tile spmt of tile Enghsh poet John Gay ( 17~1832 )

oo -

See or Call
Bob or Roger Jeflers
Day 992 7089
N1ght 992-3525
or 992 -5232

Pamllng A Specialty

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

CHARLES R
mm1 backhoe
footer s dra n
7-42 6092

Water Ltnes and Power
Lmes All work done by the
foot or con tract Also dozer
work and sephc tanks 1n
stalled

Lincoln Hill Pomeroy , 0

--GUARANTEEDPhone 992 2094
O~ena

DITCHING SERVICE

Ph 992 5271

BY PAUL CRABTREE

Hodgepodge Lodge 20
6 00 - News 3 4 6 8 10 15 Sesame Street20 ABt Ne-ws 13

713 SSS-1

-Gene's
Body Shop

Wheel Alignment

Mobile Homes For Sale

NEW LARGE r ec1m1n~ c ha irs
m v1nyt matenal buy now or BERRY MILLER Mobtle Home
Sales has a lot to offer when
lay away for Christmas Onlv
you start shopp1ng for your
S89 95 sw1vet rockers 1n
mobile home You can beat
velo.Jet nylon and prmts that
the h•gh depreCiatton you II
make a wonderful gtft for
have on your home for the
yovr w•fe Only $69 95 All
f1rst two years by shoppmg
tlems cash and carry or 60
tor a tate model used mobile
day
lay away
Pomeroy
home Here are some every
Recover
622 E
Main
day
low
prices
60x 12
Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
Champion S4 495 00 60 x 12
11 20 26tc
Rembrandt
S3 995 00
4
bedrooms 50 x 12 Detrotter
UPHOLSTERY Fabncs by the
54 795 oo
44 x 12 Regent
yard 54 mches w 1de as low as
S3 795 00 65 x 12 Detroiter
51 95 per yard velvets as low
ss 295 00 60 x 12 Wtnston
as 53 45 1m ported vel\'ets
$5 495 00 , 60 'X 12 P M C
59 95 We also hao.Je nylon
S5 995 00 very n•ce 65 x 12
hercuton
cotton
pr1nts
Liberty
S4 500 00 50 x 10
vmyls and remnants by theR ICh&amp;rdSOn $2 6QO 00 SS X 10
yard or by the ptece Pomeroy
Vmdate
S2 995 00
35 x 8
~ecovery
622 East Main
Oetrolter SI 995 00
45 x 8
Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
Anderson Sl 995 00 These
112026tc
are mostly all tate model
homes and the pnces Include
FOAM to f 1ll your old couch and
your delivery and complete
cha•r cushtons as tow as
setup so for an honest to
S10 95 Upholstery books only
goodness good deal stop m
soc
4 Inch covered foam
today at Berry Mtller Mobtle
mattresses for standard sJZe
Home Sates
70S Farson
bed
$29 95
Pomeroy
Street Selpre OhiO phone
Re~overy
622 E
Main
423 9531 Closed Sundays
Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
12 6 6tc
11 20 26tc
-~----- ------ -

From the taroest
Bulldozer Radiafof to
~maltest Heater Lor~
Nathan B1ggs
Radtalor Spec1a1tst

ELECTRIC stove refrigerator RON SHEPARD Floor Wall
brown studiO couch black and
Remodelmg
Ceram1c lite
white TV electr1c gu1tar and
baths Box 280 Rutland 7-42
amp Cal199'12960after2p m
3664
12 9 3tp
6 26 H e

79 Depot Street

3 JO
Return to Peyton Place J IS One L1te JO L..1ve 13 Secret
Storm 10 Ph1l Donahue 4 Huck and Yogi 6 French Chef 20
4 oo - Mr Cartoon J Love Amencan Style 1l Somerset 1S
Sesame St JJ Speed Racef 6 Sesame St 70 Movie Apache
Uprtsmg tO
4 JO - I Love Lucy 6 Green Acres 3 Jeopardy 4 Gilltgan s
Island 13 Santa Claus 15 lucy Show 8
5 00 - Mr Rogers JJ 10 Bonanza 3 Merv Gnffm 4 Andy
Gnfltth 8 I Dream of Jeanme 13 MtSSion lmposstble- 6
Bonanza 15
5 30 - Beverly Htltbillies 8 Elec Co 33 Gomer Pyle 13

Sl2 SO Perm For
Req Ha1r S8 SO

------- -~- ~--~

Wh1 te IBM Cards
$5 00 per 100 pounds

butldmg we Will c lose Dec
31 We also would l1ke to
thank all our customers
LOUISe S Bakery 105 Court
Street
Pomeroy
Oh10
Vernal and Lou1se Well
129l8tp

Help l'lanted

FIR EWOOO 12 to 24 lgths
No logs
$14 ptckup load
Delivery available beat the
f ue l 9hortage
Burn wood
Phone 992 2826
1293tp

Sera p Newspapers
Bundled or Sacked
$1 25 per 100 pounds
Brown
Corrugated Boxes
$1 30 her 100 pounds

OU E to the cond• t•on of the

deer heads sma l l an1mats
and b1rds H oward B1rchf eld
Mulberry St r ee t Rutland
Phone 742 6834
11 261fc

1 WHITE double Youngstown
k1tchen s1nk l 1ke new 4 doors
and 2 drawers 1n cabmet base
w1th f1xtures $50 Phone 985
4211
12 9 Jtc

WANTED

THE CHESTER Fabrtc Shop
a c ross from the Chester
grade schoo l has rece•ved a
new shtpmenl of polyester
double knit beaut•ful new
colors Come In
shop for
Christmas any day of week
From lOam tdl4 p m Many
other fabncs and not1ons
Owned by Mr
and Mrs
Hobar t Newell
12 9 31p

t C H ER P1ano Se rv ce
Tu n tng &amp; Repa1r Call 698
7731
11626tp

BAKERY equ ipment 1nqu1re
Court
at LOUISe S Bakery
Street Pomeroy
12 9 6tp

:&gt;fEEL casttron etc Call 985
4297
tl25ttc

KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp; WIGS
Spec 1als each month We wdl
gladly show you our line of
Kosmet1c S Jn the pnvacy of
your horne at your con
ven en ce Remember Chrtsl
mas 1S not far away so phon e
Helen Jane Brown 992.5113
11 9 tt c

~-" LI:::

ELECTROLUX
vacuum
c l eaner A 1 cond 11lon uses
paper bags has cordwmder
and many attachments Also
shampooer attachment m
e luded !only 4 available) at
$.37 70
cash
or
terms
available Phone 992 2984
12 9 tf c

&amp; THINGS

MONDAY, DEC 10 1973

-~-------------

ASH pa1d tor all makes ana

POM~~~!v~?~~~ CO.'(l\ I
~
-------=-

Janet Morns
Cle rk of th e Co1.1rt
of Common Pleas
Probate DIV SIOn
Metgs County Oh o
December 10 1973

Pol)leroy Bowling Lane s
Morn1ng Glones
Nov 27 1973
Name
Pomts
Newell Sunoco
61
ExcelSIOr Oil Co
60
G &amp; J Auto Parts
53
Pockltngton Canst
50
G1bbs G rocery
48
Spencer s Mkt
40
H gh lnd Game
Mary
Gillilan 172 Donna McFarland

be app1

S 169S

1970 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill

tape comb•nat10n 4 speaker
sound
system
Balance
s 103 98 or use our budget
terms Call 992 3965
12 9 ttc

Wanted To Buy

Th e un know n he rs and

(12 ) 10 17 24 31 (1)7 14 6tc

New

AM FM stereo rad tO 8 track

4 door V 8 automat1 c power sleer tng rad1o good t1res
blue f 1n1sh spofless mtenor

dev t sees of
J
Q
R tc e
deceased
You ar e he reby not tl ted that
you have been named Deten
dants •n a lega l action ent 1tled
Ed•son
Hob ste tt e r
Ad
mm •strator o f the Estate o t
Merle E R ice Ptamhff vs
Rhodell Steffy et a!
Oet en
dants Th •s act•on has been
ass gned C~s e N o 10 909 •n the
Cou rt ot Common
Pl eas
Probate
D v •S•on
Me g s
County Oh10 -4 5769 Addre ss
Pomero y Oh 10
Theob ,ectotth eC ompla .nt s
to sell the r eal es t ate of th e
decedent s tuated at 391 North
Fourth Avenue Midd le port
Oh o
Wh 1C h real es tate 1s
descn bed as follows
The f ollow ng dcsc r 1bed rea l
estate s1tuated 1n the V1llage of
Middleport
n the County of
Me 1gs and State of Oh o
Bemg 125 feet off ot the east
end of Lot No 68
Deed Referen c e Volume 148
Page 436 and Volume 255 Page
399
Meigs
County
Deed
Records
The purpose of the sale IS to
pay the debts and cos ts of ad
mmisterlf'\9 the estate of the
decedent
You are r equ1red to answer
the Complamt w,th•n 28 days
after the last publ1cat•on of th s
not1ce wh ch will be publ shed
once each week for SIX con
secut vc weeks
The tast
publication w II be made on 14
January 1974 and the 28 days
for answer w 11 commence on
that date
In case of your failure to
answer or otherw1se respond as
reQu red by the Oh o Rules of
Ctvtl Procedure judgment by
default will be rendered aga nst
you for rei ef demanded tn the
Complamt

Dated

$169S

.;~utom.1!1c

f

deceased
To The unknow n he rs and
devrsees of Merle E
R•ce
deceased and
To

~ 1291fc

_.._

Television Log

Johmes Beauty
Salon
NOV SPEC

z,g

4 door gold ftmsh spotless c lean tn l eno r V 8 eng me
au lomattc power . s tcenng rad•o A hone y of a buy

The unknown hetrs and

Ma e P r,ce

Door V 8

1970 CHEVELLE MALIBU

ascerta ned
dev tsees o t

NEW 1913 ZIG ZAG S EWING
Allen
MACHINE S
10
OrtQinal
1963 SKYLARK
Phone
fa c tory c arton
Zag to
D1ll Rt J
.' -rr~t-~ke buttonnole
sew on
985 3
'
3tc
bu tons
monogra s and
ma
fan cy des•gns 1th tust
the 1
St
l al Lefl
10 lay a way and never been
64 vw BUG runs good Phone
used Wtll sell for only $47
99 2 !)?36 or 992 5910 after S
cash
or terms available
pm
Phone 992 2984
17 s 61 C

power stee rmg &amp; brakes fa c tor y
atr radto good 1st lme ftre s clean tn l enor green ltnt sh
J

For Sale

Auto Sales

r-----------------------lr---------------------2 SIGNS'
Pomeroy
OF
Motor
Co.
QUALITY

Rtc e

Platnllff

deceased

Business-Services

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!

'

_ Th&lt;' Da1lv Sentmt'l M1ddl•port-Pcmt'rov 0 llt' 10 1973

•

Shortly thereafter,
theu

to go

began

�'
6 - Th&lt;&gt;Da1hSenlmo.'l Muldleport Pomu o1 lJ lltt 10,1971
IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY 0Ht0

EDISON HOSSTETTER:
Admtnt&lt;;froltor
of
Es1ate of Merle E

dece-ased

Ih 0

"Defendants

RHODELL STEFFY et al
No 20 909
NOTICE FOR SERVICE
BY PUBLICATION
To
Ed tlh RtCl' Wh OSe ad
dress 1S un kn o wn a nd cannot
w tth reaso f\abl~;&gt; d I gence be

ascerta tned

1971 DODGE POLARA

To The unknown he ir!. and
de\ltsees of Ed t th R 1ce
t

To

Mae Prtce

whose ad

dress ts un kn own and can not
Wtfh reasona bl ;&gt; dll gence be
To

1 Copper 70c R~d1ators
33c brass JOe battenes 90&lt;:
M A Hall Reedsv ille Phone
37 8 6249 Beet H•des $5
12 7 tfc

NO

$ll9S

POMEROY, OHIO

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 PM Day Before Pue f,cat•on
Monday Deadt1ne 9a m
Cancet tat ton ~ Correct 1ons
W1ll be accepted until 9 a m for
Day ot Pub lication
t
REGULATIONS
The Publ1sher reserves the
nght to edtt or re1ect any ads
deemed
ObJect on,al
The
publisher wdl not be respon
S1ble tor more than one m
co rrect tnscrt1on
RATES
For Wan1 Ad SerVICC
5 cen ts per Word one nsert1on
M1n1mum Charge $1 00
14 cents per word three
consecut•ve msert ons
26 cents per word s1x con
secut ve msert1ons
25 Per Cent D •sco unl on pa1d
ads and ads pa 1d w 1thm 10
day s
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$2 00 for 50 word m 1n
1mum Each add1t10nal word

3c

BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per
Advertisement
OFFICE HOURS
8 30 a m to 5 00 p m Dad y
8 30 a m
to 12 00 Noon
Saturday

166

H1gh Ser~es ~ Carolyn
Teaford 434 Mary G lilian 426
Team H1gh Game - Newell
Sunoco 762
Team H1gh Senes - Newel!
Sunoco 2232

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No 21 085
Estate of RALPH JOHNSON
Deceas ed
NOilCe IS hereby g1ven that
Gustava 10hnson of Route 2
Rae ne OhtO has b.een duly
appo1nted Executrix of the
Esta te o f Ralph Johnson
deceased late of Me1gs County
Oh o
Cred tors are requ 1red to ftle
th eir cla1ms w1th sa1d t duclary
w1thm four months
Dated lh s 29th day of
November 1973
Mannmg D Webster
Judge
cour t of Common Pleas
Pr obateD v s on
{12 } 10 17 24 3tc

Arthritis and
the weather
DEAR DR LAMB - We are
constde nn g movtng to St
Petersburg, F1onda, and
would appreciate j~OY advlCe
you can g1ve on the' beneft Is, 1f
any for anyone suffenng from
arthnl!s Is the cltmate more
beneftcJal thrm for mstance,

York chmate ? I have an

elderly mother who ts worned
about the dampness and feels 1t
would be detnmental to her
arthntlc conditiOn, which ts not
really the cnpplmg kmd She
does have pam tn her neck and
spme She has hved all of her
hfe m New York City and 1s
hes1tant to take up hvmg m
Flmtda berause of the dampness
r pe• sonall) feel, havmg
tned both climates, that
Flond" would be better for her
Any adv1ce you can gtve would

ec1ated

DEAR READER - When
you have hved all of your hfe m
one place, }OU always hesJt.ate
to pull up stakes and move to
any new locatiOn Fnends,
rela tives
and
hfe long
assoc1at1on s bec o me m ore

OUT OUR WAY
PRETTY

Cll.AFTY 6RAMP
5UT ITH k.IK I
k:tJOW WHERE
YOU HIO' CJ.IR 51

MAS
TH!S YEAR

Important as a person grows
older
As far as climate and ar~
UlntJs are concerned, I suspect
11 has been over exaggerated
The most 1mportant aspect of
managmg •rlhnhs ts good
medical supervtston, and there
are many fme doctors and
med1cal fac1hties m St Petersburg I know a lot of doctors tn
tllat area and constder mediCal
practiCe lhere to be top notch
From a chmate pomt of
VIew, I am convmced that older
people do better m m1lder
chmates BatUmg the elements
gets harder and harder as the
years pass by
Where you hve 1s very much
a personal thmg There are many factors mvolved I thmk
the dunate m St Petersburg ts
g reat and do not thmk •t •hould
pose any real medical
problems for )OU that you
wouldn't have elsewhere
DEAR DR LAMB - Does
diabetes usually strtke after or
when a person has a shock or
11lness' Also, I have a blood
sugar test every four months

by Neg Cochran

Not1ce

models of rnobtle homes
Phone area code 61.4 423 9531
4 13 ftc
OLD furniture oak tables
clocks Ic e boxes brass beds
dishes
or
complete
households
Wr~te M
0
Miller Rt 4 Pomeroy Oh10
call 992 6271 ~
s 13 tfc

------~-------

LADY TO H EL P WITH LIGHT
HOUSEWORK
AND
COOK IN G
FOR
OLDER
COUPLE
WITH
MILO
IL LNESS
R EFERENCES
CALL 992 7680
12 7 Jtc
SOMEONE to l 1ve tn to take
care of home whtle owner 1S
away Cal l 992 293 6
12 9 3tc
-...---~ -----~--~

AN OHIO OIL CO
offers
PLENTY OF MONEY plus
cash bonuses frmge benef1ts
t o mat ure tn d1v 1dua l tn
Middleport
Pomeroy area
Regardless of exper1en ce
a1rm(\d D I Read
Pres
Am er1can Lubricants Co
Box 696 Dayton Ohto 45401
12 9 -4tP.
--~ -~---- - ----

Employment Wanted
INTERIOR pamt1ng by hour or
co ntra ct Phone 992 5083
12 4 7tc
WILL haul coal 1n Meigs and
Mason area
638 E
Matn
Street Pomeroy
12 9 6tc
LADY to care for elderly
woman or will d o l ight
housekeeping Must l1ve m
Call 378 6319

____________ 2.2_6!-'P

EXPE RIEN CED
pa1nter
lnter1or and extenor Phone
985 3951
12 5 26tp
------~- - ~-

whtch never shows any sugar
Do you thmk I still have Jt? Or,
1s 1! only under control? 1 am
only on a diet for dlabetes
DEAR READER - The
diabetes 1s usually there
ong1nally, and after a severe
Illness or shock 11 gets severe
enough to be not1ced or
d1agnosed In other tnslances,
the problem m handhng sugar
JUS! gradually gets worse until
11 f1ts the classlflcallon of
dtabetes
Your blood tests do show
sugar (glucose), but I presume
that the amount IS w1thm the
normal range Or, at least they
are normal enough that your
doctor ts unconcerned aboultl
A person who really has
diabetes ts not cured of tl
Rather, the proble!!l 1s controlled That means the blood
sugar 1sn 'l too high, and the
person lS dotng fme Many
persons w1th d1abetes are well
controlled by d1et alone Th1s 1s
part1cularl ·••e tf the dtabetes
lsnottoo'/ ' ' ; 1dthepallent
IS falth!t.~ , {ollowmg the
d1et plan lh• doctor has g1ven
hun
Send your questions lo Dr.
Lamb, in care of this
newspaper, P 0 Box 1551,
Radio City Station, New York,
N Y 10019 For a copy of Dr.
Lamb's booklet on lbe
menopause, send 50 cents to
the same address and ask for
'' Mt&gt;nopause'' booklet

Marco

Polo

stopped at
ca ravansar~es to adm1re the
carpets and Jade sllU
crafted m Com m u n 1 s t
Chma 's Smk1ang Provmce

FARMERS
Hol1day
Greet1ngs from A I Ca ttle
TechniCian Leland Parker
992 2264 Pomeroy restdence
or Coolville 667 3251
An
swenno Servtce
12 9 13tc

Sell Yours To

The Rosenberg
Recycling Co.
Athens, Oh10
We close each Fnday at noon
for balance of week Also
closed 24
25
31 and 1 )
January

CLOSE OUT on new Z1g Zag
Se wmg Machmes For S1!W1ng
stret ch fabr cs buttonholes
fancy des1gns etc Pamt
sl •ghtly blem1shed Cho1ce of
ca rry 1ng case or sewmg
stand $-49 80 cash or te rm s
ava1lable Phone 992 2984
12 5 ttc

1

For Rent
TRAILER 1n Syracuse on
large tot Adults only Ca l l
992 3525
12 4 He

-..------------HAVE YOUR trophy mounted

-1------~--~----

7 ROOM house w1th bath Phone
698 4499
12 7 Jtc
3

BEDROOM trailer
con
struct1on workers preferred
Call 992 2960 after 2 p m
12 9 3tp

FLORIDA
frutt
Hamlm
see dles s oranges
navel
oranges
white and pmk
grapefruit Can be picked up
now at the Meigs Vo Ag
department or the former Or
Butrlmus home or call 992
2737 or 992 2158 or contact
any FFA member
12 6 Stc
EXCELSIOR Salt Works
E
Matn St Pomeroy All k 1nd s
of salt water pellets water
nuggets block sa lt and own
Oh10 Rtver Sa lt Phon e 91f2
38 91
6 s ffc

MODERN 2 bedroom turn1shed
up sta ~r s apartment
$75 per
month
no pets
depos t
r eq utred Robert H11l Racme SALT FOR ICE AND SNOW
9-493811
Rock sa lt tor townsh ps
11 JO ate
town s and bus1nesses n
-~-----A- ~-----bulks and bags tor ce and
snow ExcelSIOr Salt Work s
PRIVATE meet1ng room for
any organ1zat on phone 992
Phone 992 389 1
3975
11 11 tt c
3 11 tf c
=- ~-==--=--- -- -- -SHE A RED
WHITE
P I NE
3 AND 4 ROOM furniShed and
Xmas trees needles really
unfurn1shed
apartments
stay on
K UHL S BARG AIN
Phone 992 543.4
CENTER Rt 7
at caut1on
4 12 tfc
l tght Tuppers Plams
12 2 1Btc
~- -- --~- -~~--TRAILER
Mason
W
Va
co uple only phone 992 5693 19 HEAD of Horses Regtstered
Tenn
Walkmg
Horses
1116tfc
Reg1stered Quarter Horses
Grade Horses and Pon1es $40
SMALL trat le r 1dea1 for couple
and up Call 367 7481 or 388
10 miles north of Pomeroy
9991
$75 per month Call 992 7479
12 4 10tc
11 23 tfc

3

BEDROOM
house
tn
Pomeroy
Ltv ng
room
dm.ng room
some wall to
wall carpetmg firepla c e full
basement 2 car garage $130
per month Phone 1 (30-4) 743
6326
12 5 6tc

TRAILER
Browns Tra ile r
Park Phone 992 3324
12 5 tfc

for Sale
REDUCE safe &amp; fast wtth
GoBese Tablets &amp; E Vap
water pills
Nelson Drug
12 10 ltp

------------·

1972 350 NOVA SS Excellent
cond1t1on Call 992 5196 after 5
pm
12 4 6tc

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

It's Snow T~re T1me!

CO-OP COUNTRY
SQUIRE 120
Pos•hve Stop and Go In Mud
&amp; Snow

ALL SIZES IN STOCK
Let Us lns1all Nowl

SUPER SERVICE STA
COAL FOR SALE JAYMAR
COAL
COMPANY
THE
9 .. _- JackW Carsey,Mgr
MEIGS &amp; GALLIA LINE
6itl Phone 992 9932
STATE
ROUTE
7
AT
CHESHIRE OPEN 7 AM
TILL 6 30 PM 5 DAYS A
SINGER sew1ng machtnes 1972
WEEK PHONE 992 5693
model tn beaut1ful walnut
12 10 5tc
cabmet Makes des1gn stlf
ches
z1g zag
buttonholes
blind hems etc L rke new
ELECTROLUX Sweeper deluxe
Only $89 95 can Ravenswood
model
Complete wtth all
273 9521 or 273 9893 after 5 00
cteantn~ attachments and
12 1 tfc
uses paper bags Sl1ght1y used
but c leans and looks l1ke new
Will sell for $37 25 cash or 8 HEAD Holste1n 1st calf
Hetfers
All m product1on
terms available Phone 992
SS 000
For
further
1n
298 4
formation
call
949 3777
12 5 IIC
Rac1ne Oh1o after 8 p m
12 7 6tc
GROCERY busmess fv, san:
Budding for sate or lease
Phone 773 5618 from 8 JO p m
LOTS ot chrysanthemums to ~
to 10 p m for appointment
sale ffeld grown We only
have one color - yellow 10
3 20 tfc
bunches for S5 We hao.Je some
out In full bloom some lUSt
WE HAVE all your uphOholttry
budding Reynolds Flower
needs
Burlap
dentm
Shop Mason W Va Call 773
c ambr.c foam glue z1ppers
5147
ta ck ing stnp spnngs and
9 26 tfc
......_
c t 1ps
chiPboard
button
twtne sew1ng thread legs
upholstery books dacron
webb1ng spring tw1ne tacks
w elt co rd
cotton
sw•vel A K C Reg rs tereel toy chocolate
ba ses .and foam foam foam
poodles Lovable Chrtstmas
Pomeroy Re covery 622 East
g tfts Phone 992 5066
Mam Stre et Pomeroy Phone
12 5 6tc
992 7554
11 20 26tc

________ ___

~-

Pets For Sale

992 7474
Johnson Masonry
&amp; (Rem ode lmgl
992 7608

the
lu•lt to Your ' Spetl

Delivered to Job Sit.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

FREE EST

Ph '992 217&lt;1

EXPERT

Porr

HOGG &amp;ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO
Mason W V•

~roy

•5.55
On Most Amencan Cars

Area s Most
Reasonable Pnces

TIIS

Monday 1hru Saturday

All work guaranteed

606 E. Ma10, Pomeroy, 0 .

P&amp;J HEATING
AND COOLING
Res tdence commerctal or
mobtle hom es Save on parts
&amp; labor
Mtddleport
215 N 2nd Ave
Phone 992 3509

SEW IN G MA CHINt S Repatr
serv1ce all makes 992 2284
The Fa bn c Shop Pomeroy
Authonzed Smg er Sales ind
Servtce We Sharpen Sc ssors
J 29 tfc

s

6
6
6
6
6

C BRADFORD Auchoneer
Comple t e Servtce
Phone 949 3821
Rac1ne Oh o
Cr~t t Brad f ord
5 1 ftc
EXCAVATING dozer loader
and backhoe work
sept1c
tanks mstalled dump trucks
and lo boys for h~re wdl haul
fill d~rl top soli l 1mestone
and grao.Jel Call Bob or Roger
Je ff ers day phone 992 7089
n1ght pl'lone 992 3525 or 992
5232
2 11 tfc

t:.LNA and
Wh1te Sew•ng
Machm!!S
Serv1ce on all
makes Reasonabfe rates
The Sew1ng Ce nter M 1d
dleport Oh10
11 16 tfc
G &amp; E al)p Jdnce repat
~ ")ooat the s.hop 992 3802 or 9.49
4254
~
11 26 26tp

-----------

OPfiCE SUPPLIES
anti

FURNITURE

16
6
7

'

Stop In and See Our
Floor D1splay .

7

8

AUTOMOBILE msur ance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator s l1cense Call 992
7428
6 15 tfc

8

FOR FREE estima t es on
alummum Std1ng
Stor m
Doors and Wmdows
Car
ports Marquees and Rallmg
Phone
Charles
L t sle
Sy racuse Oh10 Carl Jacob
Sales Representative V V
Johnson and Son I nc
6 22 tfc

8

9
9
9
10
10

------~- ~------

11
M

READY MIX
CONCRETE
del•vered rtght to your
pro1ect Fas t &amp;nd easy Free
es ttm a te s Phone 992 3284
Goegleln Readv Mtx Co
M ddleport Oh10
6 30 ttc

ll
12

12
12

-=~:=:-

PRI CE
CO N STRUCT I ON
Roofmg
spout 1ng ktfchens
and bathroom s Complete
remodeling Phone 742 6713
12 3 tt c

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE rates Ph
4782 Gallipolis John Rus ell
Owner and Operator
5 12 ttc

f.6

12
l

1

=--~ ---------

-

DOZER and bacK hoe work
ponds and sept c tanks d I
chmg serv ce fop sot! ftll
d~rt
limes to ne
B&amp;K
Escavattng Phon e 992 5367 or
992 3861
•
9 1 ttc
~- ----- L -~~-~~-

HATF IELD
water l 1nes
l1 nes Phone
126 18fc

SEPT I C
TANKS
cleaned
Modern San1ta t1 on 992 3954 or
992 73&lt;19
10 23 tfc

Real Estate For Sale
6 ROOMS and bath In town
$11 000 Call 992 3975- or 992
2571
9 28 ttc

-------~-----SE PTIC
TA'iK~
AkOBI

C
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
CLEANED
REPAIRED
MILLER
SANITAT ION
STEWART OH 10 PH 66~
J035
10 4 fl o""

A LOVELY new Home 1h mile
from Me 1gs H1gh School
Three bedrooms two baths
full basement w1th two car
garage Large lot
$27 500
A ts o recently remodeled
three bedroom older home ' "
Pomeroy
Pnce of SIS 000
•ncl udes furn 1ture Owner Will
help f1nance e1ther of these
two propert1es Ca ll 593 5667
Athens
12230tc

u UELL AI nementwork c an be

Q

done by appotntment only at
present t 1me due to tllness 1n
fam ly
Phone
for
ap
po.ntment 742 32J2
11 25 tfc

2
3

J
PtANO tun1ng &amp; repa lrmo
Lane Oan1els 259 Broadw ay
M•ddleport Phone 992 208~
12912tp

Real Estate For Sale

NO RTII

'MObile Homes For Sale

BARGAIN -

On Rl 7 w1th 2

large bedroom s
mce bath
large l1vtng and co mpact
k i t chen Garage and 1 acre

DISPERSAL
SALE

Only $8500 00
WARM H otwat er heat
{ natural
gas
boller )
3
bedroom s n tce b ath porch
garage on good lot Red uced to

$18 000 00
, RANCH - In Syracuse wtfh 3
bedrooms gas furnace bath
garage and niCe lot
/ILL
PANELED
4
bedrooms w1th large closets
nice large convement k lichen
Spacious bath and 11!2 acres

$18 000 00
MODERN - Only a few years
old 2 bedrooms ntce kitchen
w 1th cook and bake un1ts
Otntng room
porch
and
garage S16 000 00

NEW LISTING - On Rutland
Pomeroy road 5 room s bath
anv most of the furn1ture
Owner movmg to F lor ~"" Only

NO MONEY
NEEDED UNTIL
JANUARY 1974

MILLER
HOMES

one of

these

HOME S WITH LOWER
TAXES
MINERSVILLE - I story
frame 3 bedrooms Bath
K1tchen has lots of cabtnets
Lots of ground
In good
condlfton $6 500

JUST OFF

bedrooms
furna(.:e Large Rec room
Lot s of new l 1le and panelmg
Doubl e lot sa 000
POMEROY - Close m 1 36
Acres 2 story frame 4 B R
Bath Paneling a-nd tile Coal
furnace heat 59 500

MIDDLEPORT - 2 slory
frame 4 B R Bath Ga rage
Lots of fr ontage ASKING
$9 500
LET US 5ELL YOUR
PROPERTY
HENRY E CLELAND
YOUR
FRIENDLY BROKER
992 22S9
lf no answer 992 2568

INFORMATION ABOUT:
JOB OPPORTUNITIES
SOCIAL SECURITY
CONSUMER PROTECTION

AND
GREAr COUNTRY

STEREO
92.1 FM
WMPO
J1g

&lt;

Pitll'i

May tag
AutomatiCS
speeq Operat;on 1
~·ce of water
hm l)s
Auto
water
le'tftel
control
Lint
Filter or Power
Ftn 'Ag1tator
Perma-Preu

DOWNTOWN
BELPRE
OHIO

"J.

1971 ALL ELECTRIC Windsor
mobile
home
60x12
J
bedroom air cond1t1oner, 13
foot Exp11ndo 1 acre ground
on Old Route 33 north of Rock
Sprmgs Call 992 5677 after 6
pm
12 4 uc

Maytag
lialo of Hut

Dryer$

..... rround clothe$
With genue even
heat Nottot spots, ,
no
overctrylng
Fine Mes~ L lnt
F11ter
We Specl11lze In

~--------__.----

\971 HILLCREST 3 bedrooms
central air cond•tion•ng Call
992 5296 after 5 p m
12 " 6tp

RUTLAND

'" ooo

741-4211

--------------

AAV.TAO

FURNITURE~~~~~::·'
Arnold Grate.

Rutland

North

East

2+
Pass
Pass 49
Pass
Pass
Opemng lead-K•
t•

RT

-Middleport F'omeroy

1972 ARLINGTON 12x50 mobile
home like new two bedroom
partially furntShel!t carpeted
1nctudes central a~r con
dittonmg underplnnmg and
awning Financing a\'aiiSble
Call 1 304 773 5194
12 7 Jtc

Wes t

7 3
New bath New

$7500 00
THINK
BIG
WHILE
THINKING BUY ONE OF
THE ABOVE OFFERINGS
AND FE~L SECURE

I YEAR
GUARANTEE
BEST SERVICE
IN
OHIO VALLE.]'

6

Mr Cartoon 3 Love Amencan Style 13 Somerset IS
Sesame St 33 Speed Racer 6 Sesame Street 20 Movte
N owhere t o Go 10
30 - 1 Love Lucy 6 Green Acres 3 Jeopardy 4 Gilligan s
I sland 13 Lucy Show 8 Santa Claus 15
oo--Mr Rooers 33 20 Merv Grtfftn 4 Andy Grtff1th 8 I
Dream of Jean nte 13 M1ss1on lmposst ble 6 Bonanza l~
30 - Beverly H•llbtllies 8 Elec Co 33 Gomer Pyle 13
Hodarmncioe l odoe 20
55 - Earl N tghtmgale 15
oo - N ews 3 4 a 10 15 6 Sesame Street 20 ABC News 13
Nurst ng Process 33
30 - NBC New s 3 4 15 ABC News 6 CBS New s 8 10
Hogan s Heroes 13 Your Future Is N ow 33
Dusty s Trail 13 Marco Spor tllte 33 Beat The Clock 4
News 10 TBA 15 Electnc Co 20 Truth or Conseq ue nces 6
What s My Lme 8
30 ~ World of Survtval4 To Te ll the Truth 6 RFD 20 More
Than You Are 33 Ne w Pnce l s Rtght 8 10 Beat The Clock
13 New Oattng Game 3 T BA IS
00 - Chase 3 4 15 Maude 8 10 War and Peace 20 33
Temperatures Rtsmg 13 Ozzte s Gtrls 6
30 - Hawa11 Ftve 06 10 Mov1e The Cat Creature 6 13
30 ~ Performan ce 20 33 Shaft 8 10
oo - Pol~teStory3 415 Marcus Welby MD 613 News2 0
Our Stree t 33
30 ~ Woman 33
OO ~ News3 4 6 8 10 13 15 Janakt33
30 - Johnny CarsonJ 4 15 M tss Wor ld6 13 Movtes A Ktnd
of Lovtng a The Bells of St Mary s 10
00 - Tomorrow 3 4 N ews 13
00 - N ews 4

oo -

7

7

a
a
9
tO

11

11
1
2

;oy Oswald &amp;

DearS
Better an unused sweater (couldn't you lend II to an ap.
prec1ale fr~end'J than a hUrt relative
Returnmg an lnapproprtBte gift 18 chancy, even if yoo know
the gtver mtunately Don't rlSk losm~ oouch wtth a new found
cousm JUst because you "hate waste " That's WASTING
Fnendsh1p' - H
P S Have you tried wearmg the sweater over a 1ong-&lt;!l..,ved
top for Ute " layered look" ?

·-'1 ...

Helen Help
By H
Us. • •
elt'n Hottel

This Finder Not a Keeper

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
40 Greek
t Con
letter
structed
41 Franco
5 Emesto
Belg1an
r1ver

Guevara
8 TurkiSh
flag
9 Actual
bostl1
attcs
(2 wds )
13 Old

I

2 Fore1gn
3 Song

1nvolvang
fa la las

tune

4 Uncle tn

monetary

(3 wds )
11 Excite
12 Extract
16 Unadul
terated
19 Synan
caty
22 Stcthan
City
23 Selected

Dundee

umt

5 One

lt Chng

horse

15 Nether
lands
rtver
16 Livmg
ham
11 We1ght
18 Rhapsodize
(colloq )
20 Paul

:U Gorge
25 Satisfy
fully
21 Judge's
chamber
29. Shoelace
30 Habituate
S1 Wrath
36 Devoured
S7 Kmd
of

10 Seasonal

(3 wds )

Indaan

veh•cle
6 Enghsh
rustle
1 Ne1ghbor
of
Somaha

(abbr)

sauce

Newman
film
21 Lepond
22 Gaehc
23 --de
men the

25 Scoff
26. Sunk
fence

21 Bast•·
nado

28. Eggs
29. Fme
tobacco

Jl1JWID'i1rn;;

/k,i - u , J ,_J

32 Yellow
ocher
33 Wooden
core
34. Hostelry
35. Twme
together
37. Com
fortablc
38 Home... steader
39 Bugbear

~

l n:o;t: r 1mb h.• these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordtnary lliords

r

1

lIII
[J () ]
11
t
I I I : IJ

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

RYHUR

D

One letter stmply stands for another In this sample A IS
used for the three L s, X for the two O's etc Single letters
apostrophes the length and formatton of the words are all
hmts Each day the code letters are different

[HYSERRI

I

fl
V\....'"0R""'
1

~

. . _

J

_ _

CRYPTOQUOTES
Now arrange the c1rc Ied Iet t ers
to form the eurprtse answer, a!J
suggested by the above cartoon

~~::::Prill=llle~SIII=PII==ISI::::ANSWIII~he=re:::,1 "ffi J-ffi j"

(Anew~r• tomorrow )

Jmuhlt

P

PARCH DALLY

PERSON

AVENGE

1 t 1111 ~ (lllellt Jmt fnr g11 lf- A HANDY CAP

JNDLQLG
DP

EVSTRLH

VSCDRLGLSKL

RVMNCVSM
NVH

DJS

W

CNL

VS

PRWYLH

WYLGVKW

PVGL

HEY VIE~

WHAT S

SOME. f'EOA..E SH:::UlDtJ T
J5E. N...LO~E.D TO .Do

A 2.7-LeTTf..R IAJCRD

FOR. APft€SAU::6

('RQSS~D

RJZZlES

BSTLGSLWCN

NDYL - NWGDRT

L

HCWHHLS

(@ 1978 Kmg Feature• Syndicate, Inc )

\YORE DlFFEREh,

AFTER '!liE ACCIDENT HE

''VES, IT WAS
AN

TO FOOl. TH! POI.ICE,

P\,ANNEO TO GET O£N'IU~ES,

-THE DIAMONDS f&gt;I..W/111(5
10£NTIFIED;_::~)-f~

South

1.,

2.,
Pass

Jam es Jacoby

: Oswald One of the d1sad·

~vantages of betng an expert

IS that people don t expect
you to make m1stakes
J 1m
Beg1nners make
t m1stakes
Average p1ayers
~ make mi stakes So do ex
perts but they make fewer
: mtstakes than others
Oswald
Today's South
g rabb e d th e s pade lead,
cashed h1s ace and kmg of
trumps and proceeded to lose
the d1amond fmesse East led
~ack a s pade and South
,"'WOUnd up losmg two spades
m add1t10n to the kmg of d1a·
monds and the queen of
trumps

OFF,

~'
1~

'OJ'RE ltJ

I

' ' J 1m

It IS easy to see that
wasn t an expert An
: expert would let West hold
' the f~rst tr1ck He would wm
: the second spade and play
' the same way the actual
1 South d•d but when East got
; m he would not have a spade
1 to lead to hts partner and
: eventually South would get to
• d 1scard one losmg spade on a
: d1amond '
- Oswald "South explatned
~at he took the f1rst spade
' because he was afratd that tf
: he ducked the second spade
: would be ruffed Th1s was a
possibility but one that
should have been 1gnored
because 1f the second spade
dtd get ruffed 1t would almost
, surely be ruffed w1th what
1 would have been a leg1t1mate
~ trump tnck later '
1 South

ALLEYOOP
A /31RD CAN T~ITE.FROM

HIS ~ uGH'- GOP.L FRIEND FOR
A FEW CENfURJES WITHot/T
SOM£ W/C£ GUY 8~0WING
HISCOV~'.'

J

~ INEWSPAPER E:NTERPI\lSE ASSN )

I BETTER HI DE MY
BUTTER·AN·AIG MONEV

The b•ddmg has been
East
North
~ West
Pass
t+
Pa,..
2N T
~ Pa ss

'

I' You South

10
South

AFORE PAW GITS HOME
LOOKIN FER CARD
PLAVIN MONEY

One day she asked
her husband 1f he had
seen her new belt

1.,

"Jle]t?"he satd .. Oh,
I'm sorry I thougt.t 1t
was a dog collar I
have 1t on GoodAuthonty •

hold

I •KJ65 .,A832 tKI04.65
~ Whal do you do now'

1~

A -Bid three notrump Your
r-;.artner has 18 Qr 19 ~alanced
points You have 11 so you have

I,

'

,I

'

VH

Yesterday's Cryploquole: IT IS NEVER TOO EARLY TO DO
YOUR CHRISTMAS SHOPPING EARLY -SOURCE UN·
KNOWN

no slam Interest

'

DOWN
1 Kind of
syrup

DICK TRACY

t AQ9 8 3
... AK
WEST
EAST
• KQJ!0 2
\'Q 9
\'J86
t6 5
+K42
"'Jt087
... 96532
SOUTH 101
• A86
\' ,\K 103 2
• J 107
... Q4
North South vulnerable

HAVE YEAR S OF FU N - al
GIFT SHOP - And r es 1dence
on Rt J5 A pnme locat1on tor
contractor or busmess ven
ture 600 Ft of frontage
MART LOCATION - 10 acres
on sew age and c 1ty water l1nes
Route 7 Loop

5
6

-.x,;·:·:·":,.-., .,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,., ,.,.;.: :.;.;.

10

.74

lowes t cost ~ m

Busmess for sale
Good
Motorola dealershtp and
equ 1pment 1n Rac 1ne Oh10
Call 949 4499 or 949 3151
12 9 6tc

5

~L&gt; -=~

v

• 9 53
"7 54

FUN the older you get the
more d costs 1 YOU LL

0 U E to the death of owner TV

5

Experts describe proper play

E MAl
POMEROY

-

4

»

::;:,.::::.,.... ..

Dear Helen
To the woman who sa1dshe was "So Sorry" that too late, she
reahzed she had thrown her husband at another woman I could
be the other woman m her husband's hfe If I am, she sllll has a
chance, and she'd better show him she has changed - very soon
- or he may fmd someone w1th less scruples than r
My marnage was a total dlSasler For 17 years I live m
Hell - no kmd words, each pregnancy blamed on me, always
slapped around I stayed for tbe children's sakes, wh1ch was a
m1st.ake They suffered too
At work 1 starled havmg lunch With a kind, considerate,
tu1derstanding man whose wife e1ther sleeps w1th her children or
on the couch (Just as "So Sorry 'does ) He doesn't1ie be says he
has a good w1fe and mother for h1s k1ds, but she gets fits if he
touches her Get tillS he still loves her '
He likes me and WANTS me physically I've fallen deeply m
love w1tll HIM And so I'm gomg to qmt my JOb to avmd temptation I'm sure be'll fmd a surrogate partner, but how much
better 1f the woman he loves could warm up 1
To "So Sorry" I say Get out the filmy gowns and the
seductive atrs, pursue htm, break down yOW' reserve, get r1d of
your hang-ups, stop taking hun for granted If you can't feel real
passiOn, show warmth and responsiveness, and maybe the
pass1on wtll develop wtth tune
Remember, S S, for every women like me, there are f1ve
who would rather have crumbs than nothmg al all Get sexy' SO LONELY
Dear Helen
I hate waste And I adhere to honesty So I have a problem
Recently, I've been corresponding w1tll a distant cousm I've
never met She sent me a hand-crocheted sleeveless sweater, and
I never wear anything sleeveless, or so open - you can see
through It
The sweater lS very pretty, and someone else could enJOY 11
Should I return tt to my relative tellmg her I do not want 1t? - S

4 00 -

WIN AT BRIDGE

6011

----- ----~~~--

Farm Report 13
Paul Harvey 13
30 - B1ble Answers 6 News 6 F1ve Mmutes to Live By 4
Rev Cleophus Robrnson 13
35 - Columbus Today 4 Farmttme 10
45 - Corncob Report 3 Farm t1m e 10
00 - Today 3 4 15 CBS News 8 10 Fllntstones 13 Romper
Room 6
30 - Rocky &amp; Bu l lw1nkle 13 N ew Zoo Revue6
00 - Capt Kangaroos 10 New Zoo Revue 13 Sesame St 33
Ttmmy &amp; Lass1e 6
30 - Huck &amp; Yog1 6 D1ck Van Dyke 13
55 - News 13
00
Paul D1xon 4 Frtend ly Junction 10 AM 3 Ph1l
Donahue 15 Brady Bunch 6 Abbott and Costello 8 Mov1e
Zorba the Greek 13
30 - To Tell The Truth 3 Secret Storm 8 Mtchaels&amp; Co
55 - Chuck White Reports 10
00 - Dtnah Shore J 15 Joker s Wild 8 10
30 - Baffle3 d 15 $10000Pyramtd8 10 M1keDo ualas6
00- Gamblt10 Password 13 WI lard of Odds 3 4 15 Haze l 8
30 - Hollywood Squares 3 4 15 Love of L1fe 8 10 Brad y
Bunch 13 Bowling 6
55 - CBS N ewsB Dan lmel s Wor ld 10
00 ~ Jeopardy 3 15 Bob Braun s 50 50 Club 4 Pa ssword 6
News 8 10 13
30 - 3 W s 3 15 Splt t Second 6 Search For Tomorrow 8 10
45 ~ E lectnc Company 33
55 - News J 15
00 ~ News 3 All My Chtldren 6 13 Not For Women Only 15
Concentration 8 What s My Ltne 10
30 - 3 On A Match 3 4 IS The World Turns 6 10 lets Make
A Deal 6 13
00 - Days of Our Lives 3 4 t 5 Newlywed Ga m e 6 13
Gutdmg L tght 8 10
30 .-- Edge of N1ght 8 10 G1rl ln My Llfe 6 13 Doctors 3 4 15
oo - Another World 3 4 15 General Hosp1tal 6 13 Pnce ls
R tght 10 Book Beat 20 Men From Shi loh 8
30 ~ Re t urn to Peyton Place3 15 O ne Life TO L•ve 13 Secret
Storm 10 Phil Donahue 4 Chan Ese Way 20 Huc k ahd Yog1
6
20 25 -

10

Real Estate For Sale

TWO bedroom house at 173'
Sycamore Street m Mtd
dleport Vacant Call 992 5310
11 21 26tc

scatologtcal meanmg - then, for goodness sake, let's do lhe
same w1th another "G" word gladtolus
The glad10lus IS a lovely flow er, but some tdiot gave 1! a
totally WlSUttable name, Latm m ongm, and reqmrmg the Latm
pural for words endmg m "us " Thus, two or more flowers are
gladtoh
Now just try to say "gladioli" m everyday conversation A
few hortt~ultunsls and garden club members can manage 11, but
most amateur gardeners, and ordinary folks , wmd up saymg
"glad-OLE-yuh" or JUSt s1mply "glads " The plural, if used at
all, lS 'glad..,le-yuhs "
1 suggest lhe Nattonal Garden Club Cotu1c1l, or whoever tt lS
that dec1des such thmgs, elinunate the word enllrely, usmg
"glads," whtch IS descrtpttve, and - even better - pronounceable

00 ~ Sunnse Sem.nar 4 Sacred Heart 10
15 - Concern &amp; Comment 10

~:x iiX:%}

I
I

He wasn't, I'm sure
U "gay" lS destmed for the scrap ptle - except for 1ts new

TUESDAY DEC 11,1973

992 2094
606 E Mam Pomeroy

~

PtANO tun •ng and repalrmg
Lane Oan1els 259 Broadway
M iddleport Phone 992 2082
12 2 12tp

28 New Homes To Be
I·
SOLD
At
USED
and
REPOSSESSED
PRICES
To make room for the
many
new
un1ts
arnvmg m Jan , 1974.
DELAYED
DELIVERY
AVAILABLE
W1th the e•n!J:.an of a
small depos1t

I

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

GAS and OIL
SALES&amp; SERVICE

MOBILE home repair Elec
tr .c al plum bmg and heating
Phorte 992 5858
715tfc

Personality and Behav•oral Development J3
6 30 -- NBC News 3 4 15 ABC News 6 CBS News 8 10
Hogans Heroes 13
7 oo --- Truth or Consequences 3 6 What s My Line 8 Beo)1 the
Clock 4 News 10 Electnc Company 20 C~rcus 13 TBA 15
Who Is Man' 33
1 30 - Bobby Goldsboro 3 To Tell the Truth 6 Buck O.Vens B
Lock Stock and Barrel 20 MuntCipal Court 10 Beat the
Clock 13 Wacky World of Jonathan Wtnters 1S Eptsode
Act i on 33 Hoi lywood Squares d
Lotsa luck 3 4 15 Rook.tes t3 Nattonal Geographtc 6
Or Seuss Cartoon 8 10 The Plot 10 Overthrow Chnstmas 33
Berlioz s Requ1em 20
8 JO - D•ana3 15 FrostytheSnowman8 10
9
Pro Football 6 13 Caroling Caroling 33 Mov1e Key
West 3 4 15 Perry Como 8 10
9 30 - Book Beal 20 33
10 00 - Medtcal CenterS 10 News20 Paul Nuch rms33
11 oo - News3 4
1015 Janakt33
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 IS Movies M1ck.ey One 8
Buffalo Btll ' 10
12 00 - News 6 13
lf 30 ~ Movte The Lttlle Fug1 t 1ve 13
1 00 - Tomorrow 3 4
'1. 00 - News 4 13

a oo -

I

.

WILL tnm or cuf trees and
shrubbery Also clean out
basements afttcs e t c Call
949 3221 or 742 A441
11 21JOt c

Open )lOUr dicllonanes to the lt&gt;tll'r 'G" loday, k1dd1es, and
let's look at a coupleolwords - one of them destroyed beyond alt
recall and the other whiCh deserves a Slmllarfall'
F,'rst lets look at 'gay "The homosexuals of th1s country,
seekmg a~ appellative term to descr~be Uletr sexual tendenctes,
picked on this mnocent httle three letter word, and 1t Will never
be the same If you doubt me, check w1th the Gay l.Jberation
Front
Why "gay"' Search me As recently as 1965, the Mernam·
webster Colleg 1ate Dictionary d1dn't even hst 'homosexual ' as
one oflts meamngs (but the 1970editl0n d1d)
But homosexuals became " gay," and word has lost all1ts
meamng • happily exctted, br1ght, hvely, etc"
No tuned-m author today would dare use the word m the
proper context, even though Shakespeare, Str Walter Scott, and
other hterary lltans employed 1! m tis mnocent context
I thmk 1 would be JOined by vtrtually all the people who hve m
Gay, Fort Gay, or Motult Gay, W Va , if we orgaruzed a campalgn to make homosexuals (who are known by many other
titles, most of them unprmtable here) cease and destst from
usmg this poor, maligned word
And I'm sure we 'd be JOmed by the ghosts of the g1lded
figures of the Gay Nmelles (pretty much a he-man era of our
history) and tile spmt of tile Enghsh poet John Gay ( 17~1832 )

oo -

See or Call
Bob or Roger Jeflers
Day 992 7089
N1ght 992-3525
or 992 -5232

Pamllng A Specialty

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

CHARLES R
mm1 backhoe
footer s dra n
7-42 6092

Water Ltnes and Power
Lmes All work done by the
foot or con tract Also dozer
work and sephc tanks 1n
stalled

Lincoln Hill Pomeroy , 0

--GUARANTEEDPhone 992 2094
O~ena

DITCHING SERVICE

Ph 992 5271

BY PAUL CRABTREE

Hodgepodge Lodge 20
6 00 - News 3 4 6 8 10 15 Sesame Street20 ABt Ne-ws 13

713 SSS-1

-Gene's
Body Shop

Wheel Alignment

Mobile Homes For Sale

NEW LARGE r ec1m1n~ c ha irs
m v1nyt matenal buy now or BERRY MILLER Mobtle Home
Sales has a lot to offer when
lay away for Christmas Onlv
you start shopp1ng for your
S89 95 sw1vet rockers 1n
mobile home You can beat
velo.Jet nylon and prmts that
the h•gh depreCiatton you II
make a wonderful gtft for
have on your home for the
yovr w•fe Only $69 95 All
f1rst two years by shoppmg
tlems cash and carry or 60
tor a tate model used mobile
day
lay away
Pomeroy
home Here are some every
Recover
622 E
Main
day
low
prices
60x 12
Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
Champion S4 495 00 60 x 12
11 20 26tc
Rembrandt
S3 995 00
4
bedrooms 50 x 12 Detrotter
UPHOLSTERY Fabncs by the
54 795 oo
44 x 12 Regent
yard 54 mches w 1de as low as
S3 795 00 65 x 12 Detroiter
51 95 per yard velvets as low
ss 295 00 60 x 12 Wtnston
as 53 45 1m ported vel\'ets
$5 495 00 , 60 'X 12 P M C
59 95 We also hao.Je nylon
S5 995 00 very n•ce 65 x 12
hercuton
cotton
pr1nts
Liberty
S4 500 00 50 x 10
vmyls and remnants by theR ICh&amp;rdSOn $2 6QO 00 SS X 10
yard or by the ptece Pomeroy
Vmdate
S2 995 00
35 x 8
~ecovery
622 East Main
Oetrolter SI 995 00
45 x 8
Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
Anderson Sl 995 00 These
112026tc
are mostly all tate model
homes and the pnces Include
FOAM to f 1ll your old couch and
your delivery and complete
cha•r cushtons as tow as
setup so for an honest to
S10 95 Upholstery books only
goodness good deal stop m
soc
4 Inch covered foam
today at Berry Mtller Mobtle
mattresses for standard sJZe
Home Sates
70S Farson
bed
$29 95
Pomeroy
Street Selpre OhiO phone
Re~overy
622 E
Main
423 9531 Closed Sundays
Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
12 6 6tc
11 20 26tc
-~----- ------ -

From the taroest
Bulldozer Radiafof to
~maltest Heater Lor~
Nathan B1ggs
Radtalor Spec1a1tst

ELECTRIC stove refrigerator RON SHEPARD Floor Wall
brown studiO couch black and
Remodelmg
Ceram1c lite
white TV electr1c gu1tar and
baths Box 280 Rutland 7-42
amp Cal199'12960after2p m
3664
12 9 3tp
6 26 H e

79 Depot Street

3 JO
Return to Peyton Place J IS One L1te JO L..1ve 13 Secret
Storm 10 Ph1l Donahue 4 Huck and Yogi 6 French Chef 20
4 oo - Mr Cartoon J Love Amencan Style 1l Somerset 1S
Sesame St JJ Speed Racef 6 Sesame St 70 Movie Apache
Uprtsmg tO
4 JO - I Love Lucy 6 Green Acres 3 Jeopardy 4 Gilltgan s
Island 13 Santa Claus 15 lucy Show 8
5 00 - Mr Rogers JJ 10 Bonanza 3 Merv Gnffm 4 Andy
Gnfltth 8 I Dream of Jeanme 13 MtSSion lmposstble- 6
Bonanza 15
5 30 - Beverly Htltbillies 8 Elec Co 33 Gomer Pyle 13

Sl2 SO Perm For
Req Ha1r S8 SO

------- -~- ~--~

Wh1 te IBM Cards
$5 00 per 100 pounds

butldmg we Will c lose Dec
31 We also would l1ke to
thank all our customers
LOUISe S Bakery 105 Court
Street
Pomeroy
Oh10
Vernal and Lou1se Well
129l8tp

Help l'lanted

FIR EWOOO 12 to 24 lgths
No logs
$14 ptckup load
Delivery available beat the
f ue l 9hortage
Burn wood
Phone 992 2826
1293tp

Sera p Newspapers
Bundled or Sacked
$1 25 per 100 pounds
Brown
Corrugated Boxes
$1 30 her 100 pounds

OU E to the cond• t•on of the

deer heads sma l l an1mats
and b1rds H oward B1rchf eld
Mulberry St r ee t Rutland
Phone 742 6834
11 261fc

1 WHITE double Youngstown
k1tchen s1nk l 1ke new 4 doors
and 2 drawers 1n cabmet base
w1th f1xtures $50 Phone 985
4211
12 9 Jtc

WANTED

THE CHESTER Fabrtc Shop
a c ross from the Chester
grade schoo l has rece•ved a
new shtpmenl of polyester
double knit beaut•ful new
colors Come In
shop for
Christmas any day of week
From lOam tdl4 p m Many
other fabncs and not1ons
Owned by Mr
and Mrs
Hobar t Newell
12 9 31p

t C H ER P1ano Se rv ce
Tu n tng &amp; Repa1r Call 698
7731
11626tp

BAKERY equ ipment 1nqu1re
Court
at LOUISe S Bakery
Street Pomeroy
12 9 6tp

:&gt;fEEL casttron etc Call 985
4297
tl25ttc

KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp; WIGS
Spec 1als each month We wdl
gladly show you our line of
Kosmet1c S Jn the pnvacy of
your horne at your con
ven en ce Remember Chrtsl
mas 1S not far away so phon e
Helen Jane Brown 992.5113
11 9 tt c

~-" LI:::

ELECTROLUX
vacuum
c l eaner A 1 cond 11lon uses
paper bags has cordwmder
and many attachments Also
shampooer attachment m
e luded !only 4 available) at
$.37 70
cash
or
terms
available Phone 992 2984
12 9 tf c

&amp; THINGS

MONDAY, DEC 10 1973

-~-------------

ASH pa1d tor all makes ana

POM~~~!v~?~~~ CO.'(l\ I
~
-------=-

Janet Morns
Cle rk of th e Co1.1rt
of Common Pleas
Probate DIV SIOn
Metgs County Oh o
December 10 1973

Pol)leroy Bowling Lane s
Morn1ng Glones
Nov 27 1973
Name
Pomts
Newell Sunoco
61
ExcelSIOr Oil Co
60
G &amp; J Auto Parts
53
Pockltngton Canst
50
G1bbs G rocery
48
Spencer s Mkt
40
H gh lnd Game
Mary
Gillilan 172 Donna McFarland

be app1

S 169S

1970 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill

tape comb•nat10n 4 speaker
sound
system
Balance
s 103 98 or use our budget
terms Call 992 3965
12 9 ttc

Wanted To Buy

Th e un know n he rs and

(12 ) 10 17 24 31 (1)7 14 6tc

New

AM FM stereo rad tO 8 track

4 door V 8 automat1 c power sleer tng rad1o good t1res
blue f 1n1sh spofless mtenor

dev t sees of
J
Q
R tc e
deceased
You ar e he reby not tl ted that
you have been named Deten
dants •n a lega l action ent 1tled
Ed•son
Hob ste tt e r
Ad
mm •strator o f the Estate o t
Merle E R ice Ptamhff vs
Rhodell Steffy et a!
Oet en
dants Th •s act•on has been
ass gned C~s e N o 10 909 •n the
Cou rt ot Common
Pl eas
Probate
D v •S•on
Me g s
County Oh10 -4 5769 Addre ss
Pomero y Oh 10
Theob ,ectotth eC ompla .nt s
to sell the r eal es t ate of th e
decedent s tuated at 391 North
Fourth Avenue Midd le port
Oh o
Wh 1C h real es tate 1s
descn bed as follows
The f ollow ng dcsc r 1bed rea l
estate s1tuated 1n the V1llage of
Middleport
n the County of
Me 1gs and State of Oh o
Bemg 125 feet off ot the east
end of Lot No 68
Deed Referen c e Volume 148
Page 436 and Volume 255 Page
399
Meigs
County
Deed
Records
The purpose of the sale IS to
pay the debts and cos ts of ad
mmisterlf'\9 the estate of the
decedent
You are r equ1red to answer
the Complamt w,th•n 28 days
after the last publ1cat•on of th s
not1ce wh ch will be publ shed
once each week for SIX con
secut vc weeks
The tast
publication w II be made on 14
January 1974 and the 28 days
for answer w 11 commence on
that date
In case of your failure to
answer or otherw1se respond as
reQu red by the Oh o Rules of
Ctvtl Procedure judgment by
default will be rendered aga nst
you for rei ef demanded tn the
Complamt

Dated

$169S

.;~utom.1!1c

f

deceased
To The unknow n he rs and
devrsees of Merle E
R•ce
deceased and
To

~ 1291fc

_.._

Television Log

Johmes Beauty
Salon
NOV SPEC

z,g

4 door gold ftmsh spotless c lean tn l eno r V 8 eng me
au lomattc power . s tcenng rad•o A hone y of a buy

The unknown hetrs and

Ma e P r,ce

Door V 8

1970 CHEVELLE MALIBU

ascerta ned
dev tsees o t

NEW 1913 ZIG ZAG S EWING
Allen
MACHINE S
10
OrtQinal
1963 SKYLARK
Phone
fa c tory c arton
Zag to
D1ll Rt J
.' -rr~t-~ke buttonnole
sew on
985 3
'
3tc
bu tons
monogra s and
ma
fan cy des•gns 1th tust
the 1
St
l al Lefl
10 lay a way and never been
64 vw BUG runs good Phone
used Wtll sell for only $47
99 2 !)?36 or 992 5910 after S
cash
or terms available
pm
Phone 992 2984
17 s 61 C

power stee rmg &amp; brakes fa c tor y
atr radto good 1st lme ftre s clean tn l enor green ltnt sh
J

For Sale

Auto Sales

r-----------------------lr---------------------2 SIGNS'
Pomeroy
OF
Motor
Co.
QUALITY

Rtc e

Platnllff

deceased

Business-Services

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!

'

_ Th&lt;' Da1lv Sentmt'l M1ddl•port-Pcmt'rov 0 llt' 10 1973

•

Shortly thereafter,
theu

to go

began

�~--A.-;~~-0;;-~th~---~ Old studies pointed to

Gouging sought by IRS
WASHINGTOl\0 1l.IPI\ - In- ··clllllL' M n nda~ mnrnmg 1
ternal Revenur St•n 1CC a~i;'nt.,;: t•xpt•t' t tht·~ wt11 bP nu1 \II
fanm.•d out across tht' nahon fmTt·.··
Wtlham F:. Simon , head of
·•in forcr " toda~· mvr s ti~atm).!
truckers· complaint~ of fut"l tilt• Fl'df'ta l F:nrrg y Adnumstrat ion. prm11Jsed prmnpt a(.·tion
price gougin~ .
An IRS spokesman sal(l Llgams t " those who are exploitSunday he could not estimate ing the current fuel shortage··
how many agt"nts would b(' artrr a meeting with IHS
patrolling the highways , but Commissionrr Donald Alexande-r and a series of con ferences

t-: ruup

i•f

mdt•penci('l\1

trut·kt&gt;rs alsu pi~HHil'd il \\ur k
s tnppat!t' Thursd;~y ~llld Fnday
"l11d1 or~muzt.• rs said &lt;·t,uld
m\·•,lvt• 100,000 drivers,
·· Nl'ithcr Fr&lt;ln k F it7-'illlUllons
nor President Nixon has the
influeute or the powers or the
respec t to stop the shutdown,"
said Mike Pa rkhurst. editor of
the industry publication ··ove rbrtwecn rcprese-ntati ves of dnve" at a Saturday news
truckers, Nixon and govern- ~:on fe rence ,
In other energy-related devement 0fficials .
President Nixon me t Satur- lopments:
- Russell Trai n , head of the
day with Frank E . FitzsimProtection
mons,
pr es ident of t he E nvironmental
Te&lt;:~ms tc r s
Un ion, to hear Agency said Sunday in a UP!
t~U&lt;:kers ' requests for stricter interview that Ameri ca ns can
controls on diesel fu el costs and exp ec t to brea the dirtier aira 60 m.p .h. speed limit on parti cularly on the East Coast
intersta te highways ins tead of - as EPA approves permission
55 m.p.h. whic h Nixon propo- to burn dirtier fuels because of
the energy crisis .
sed .
~ Jn Kuwait, Arab oil producFitzsimmons' asked union
and non-union drivers to ing states said in a Sunday
discard plans for fwther r oad communique that they will lift
blockades or stoppages while their ban on oil shipments to
Washin gton tries to solve the United States the moment
Is rael starts withdrawing from
compla ints.
But the Fraternal Association all Arab territory, including
of Stee l Haulers in Pittsburgh J erusalem, occupied in the 1967
called for a nationwide truck war. A withdrawal timetable
shutd own Thursday and ~' riday would have to be guaranteed by
to protest fuel shortages for the United States.
their vehicles.

MEIGS THEATRE
Toni ghf th ru Th ursda y
Decemb er 10-lJ

,\

(

NOT OPEN
Fr 1. Sat. Sun .
Dec . 14- 15·16

" SSSSSSS "
l Don 't Sa v it , Hi ss If )
(T echni color)
Strother Martin
Dick. Benedict
" PG "·

THE BOY WHO
CRIEO WEREWOLF
tTechnicolor )
Kerwln Matthew s
Elaine OeVry
" PG "
Show Sta rts 7 p .m .

'·

Report deadline
for wool is set
Farmers who own sheep and
sell wool or unshorn lambs
have until Jan . 31 to._ r.eport
sales.
Sales for 1973 wool and unshorn lambs made by Dec. 31,
1973, a re eligible for any ince ntive payment if application
is made by the loca I
Agriculture, Stabilization and
Conservation office by Jan. 31,
1974.
Payment will be based on the
ave rage wool price for 1973
calendar year. 1£ the price is
below the wool incen tiv e price,
farmers will receive payme nt.
lf lhe average price is above
the support pri ce, payment will
not be made .
Farmers who do not make
applicati on by Jan. 31, 1974 wi ll
not be eligible if payments are

" If you spend more time
ca ulk ing and less time
ta lking , you ' ll find y our job
ge ts done fas ter" ...

No matt er wh at you r need s
in cau lk ing or adhesives,
you ~ .'In find it a t .. the
Pome r oy Cem eri t Bloc k
Co., the h ome of lh e
"F RIE N DLY ONE S"

m t~ d ~.

PARTY SET
The Preceptor Beta Beta
Chapl-er of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will hold its annual
Christma s party at the home of
Mary Pickens Friday beginnin g at 9 p. m. with husbands
as guests. There will be no
regul ar meeting of the chapter
in December.

ll•t
;\l'v.
l-la Vl' ll
Um ted
EUWAH)) THEISS
l·:dward
A.
Tlli'ISS,
:\1d1Hdist ('hUrth.
:
Pataskala . Oluo. died at Mt.
Cannel East Hos pital in
L11!Wnbus Frida y aflf' rnoon. Mrs. :\'l ildr(."j Anderson, New
Mr . Theiss, the oldest son of Ha ven ; twu s un ~. Ronald of
M1ch•cl and Ma ry E lizabeth Le tart, RD. and Ray of Paris,
Theiss, i.s surv ivt~ by his wife. Pa .; une s ister , Mrs. Charles
Margar et ; a da u~h ter and son- Yonke r , T&lt;tmpi:l , Fla . ; 12
~n.l~''' , ftP tty a nd Mi chael b'fandchildren, and t7 greatWcUer ; two brothers, Charles grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
and Blythe, both of Racine;
Wednesday
at t :30 p. m. at the
three siste rs, Ellen Hill, of
Florida : The lma We lc h of Foglesong Funeral Home with
Maryland and E thel Orr of the Rev. William DeMoss ofChester. a nd severa l nieces ficiating . Burial wiU be in
Graham Ce metery . Friends
and nephews.
Se r vices will be held mi:ly call at the funera1 home
Tuesday at 1:30 p. m . at the Tuesday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9.
Thurs ton Funeral Home in
Pataskala. Cards may be sent
ARTHU R WANDLING
to Margar et Theiss, Rt. 4,
Arthur H. Wandling, 83 ,
Pata skala.
Pomeroy , died Monday at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
He was preceded in death by
DAISY ZERKLE
his parents, Silas and Jane
Myers
Wandling, and his wife,
NEW HAVEN - Daisy
Zerkle, 84, New Haven, died at Lydia Warner Wandling .
t"v!r residence Sunday evening . Surviving is a brolher·in-laW,
Mrs. Zerkle was born Nov. 22, Herman Warner of Pomeroy.
Mr. Wandling was a veteran
1889, in Ne w Haven, the
of
World War I and was a
daughter of the late George
member of Drew Webster Post
and Martha Porter Cundiff.
39,
American Legion .
Mrs. Zerkle was a member of
FWJeral services will be heid
at 2 p. m. Wednesday at the
Ewing Funeral Home where
friends may call anytime.
Bwial will be in the Chester
Cemeter y.

h~;~~",;\-;;;:;·~~~ "~:gh~~~

Rock group crew
takes lesser plea
Fe lony
c harges
were
reducer.J this morning in
Ga llipolis Municipal Cour t
against four persons employed
by a New York firm to set up
stage and equipment for the
rock a nd roll singing group ,
"The Stories."
Tlte crew , Joseph A. Bianchi ,
27, Pine Hill, N.Y.; Edward V.
Mulgrew III, 20, Woodhaven ,
N. Y.; Michael P. Royal , 22,
Bronx, N. Y., and James Ziga
Farkas, 24, AUanta, Ga. had
been char ged with malicious
destru ction of property on
warrants fil ed by Ralph
Waugh, manager of the College
Hill Motel at Rio Grande .
According to t he complaints ,
the four empl oyed by SAS Inc .
of New York City, were in Rio
Grande Friday se tting up
equipment and a stage for the
Stories' rock conCert at the
Paul R. Lyne Center.
,
They were charged with
destroying property owned by
the motel including a large
lamp, a wall of one of the motel
rooms and a tree in front of the
motel.
Bianchi was reported to have
physically thrown William
Welc h, a member of the rock
group, through the motel wall.
Judge Rober\ S. Betz fined
the quartet $500 and costs each ,
placed them on six months
..

•·.

Now! Lay It Away

SINGER

bl
t f e1 trou es
presen u
WASHINGTON i UI'I J - In
tht&gt; 21 yei:lrs since a
pres ide ntial commission
for ecast a fuel shortage and
s u gges ted new sources of
ener gy, neither the government nor industry has spent
muc h money to solve the
problem.
" No matter how large the
nation's petroleum resources
ultimately prove to be, one fact
is now clear : Eventually the
resources will dwingle and
becom e
progressively
inadequate," the
Paley
Commission, appointed · by
President Harry S. Truman,
said in 1952.
" But as these shortages
develop, the vast reserves of
coal, lignite and oil shale can
move in progressively to fill
the gap."
Headed by William S. Paley,
chairman of the Columbia
Broadcasting System, the
panel recommended that both
industry and government
develop a lternate sowces of
liquid and gaseo us fuels,
principally from oil shale and

CML!tJtuu
alittle merrier
iK

9:30 to 9 pm
Holiday
\,
. .;

Save tonight and Tuesday on
a holiday long dress,

UNIT CALLED
The Pomeroy E-R squad wa s
called Saturday at 5: 17 p. m . to
Landmark for Willie Sellers
who had fallen. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
At 7 a. m. today the squad
tran sported Mrs. Dean Blackwood to · Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

·Our entire stock of Misses,
Juniors and half sizes is
included in this sale.

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Middleport E-R squad
was called Sunday at 9:49a . m.
to Story's Run for Mrs. Ollie
Shuler, 74, who was having
difficulty breathing . She was
taken to Holzer Medical
Center.

• •

JOin our

BUFFET
DINING

accoum ea ch wt'ck a mi ma ke
next Chn !' tnja ~ :1 happiness and
jOy time i n~tc nd of a fm~n cia\
S[rain tnnc.

MONDAY EVENING
AND TUESDAY EV~NING
5 to 9: Jo----AII you

can eat, (or AI a Cartel.

Make 49 Payments

!
!
!
I

Frigidaire
Skinny Mini.
Fits almost
anywhere.

OHIO

520,000.00 Maximum Insurance For
Each Depositor ·

•

Dr;nkc; and
Oe5!&gt;tJfl l:::. .... tra .

WidP Menu

e
m~nu e v er),,;~;,;

5 iu iO.

Permanent Press
''''·'""" Care.
In both Washer &amp; Dryer .
Helps no-iron clothes keep
Ou!1r promise.

Dacron dryer
lint screen.

2-Speed Washer.

Regular plus Delicate ;,t.
tings for the fabric fl"lbll·
ity a. family washer must
have.

Family-Size.

Bookie murdered
NEW YORK (UP!) - Two
masked gWJmen burst Into a
Brooklyn Democratic
clubhouse Monday night, lined
six club members against a
wall and cabnly shot one of
them fatally ; police reported.
Pollee said the six club
members were
In the
Shoreftont Democratic Club
when the gunmen, wearing ski
masks and with guns drawn,
burst in and made them stand
against the wall with their
· hands on their heads.
The assassins s~pped back a
pace or two and fired "six or
seven shots" at Miguel Cosme,
33, hitting him twice in the
back and once in the head,
pollee said.
-The gunmen "calmly" left
the clubhouse, stealing nothing
either from Cosme, the other
five or from the clubhouse,
according to police.
Cosme, described by police

Wa shes and dries fami lysize loads - at the same
time or i ndependent!~ .

The MEIGS INN ·
·PH. 992-3629

WASIDNGTON - A OONGRESSIONAL subcommittee has
been told that the federal government may have delayed
prosecution of a black doctor for "grand larceny" of more than
$1 million in federal funds to avoid "embarrassing" the Nixon
administration.
Curtis Prins, chief investigator for tbe House Banking
Committee, said Monday an audit of. Dr . Thomas Matthew of
New York City, conducted by the Small Business Adminilitration
(SBA), was turned over to the Justice Department for criminal
action two years ago, but no federal action has been taken.

Fine mesh removes lint par·
ticles. Easy to re.ach for
cleaning.

Where the wash is - kitchen,

POM~ROY,

LOS ANGELES - FORMER NEW YORK Yankee infielder
Jerry Priddy was found guilty by a federal court jury· Monday of
attempting to extort $250,000 from a steamship company by
threatening to blow up a luxury ,cruise ship.
U. S. District Court Judge Irving Hall set Jan. 16 for senrencing, Priddy - a veteran of 11 major league seasons and
currently a self-employed advertising executive - faces a
maximum sentence of 20years in prison and a $10,000fine.

•

bath, nursery ... anywhere
you can get adequate wir·
ing,,plumbing and vent ing.

Vrder our regutar

BRUSSELS - SECRETARY OF State Henry A. Kissinger
went into his final round of talks with America's European allies
today, his attempt to repair splits in the Western alliance
overshadowed by a spat with France. French diplomatic sources
described Kissinger's. initial talks with North Atlantic Treaty
Organization (NATO ) foreign ministers as "empty and useless."
" You couldn't figure out who asked for the meeting ," the
sources said. " It ended like water in the desert. "

1
~

POMEROY

l

To Mr. Goins he sa id, ''I &lt;·ommcnd you, your assistant an d
members of the Meigs High School Marching Band for excellent
suc&lt;:ess due to your leadership."
To Coach Chancey Porter wrote that he had watched closely
the past six years the fine success of the teams. '' Your character
has measured greatly in molding fin e men and teams. Each
person is a better person lor having had you a s a coach," Porter
said.
To Mr. McComas : " The public should know what you hav e
done, working 14 to 16 hours a day in your job. I am proud to be
associated with you, and I am a better person because of my
association with you."
To Mr. Hargraves, his letter said, ''I have observed man y
schools throughout the country and, without hesitation, you are
truly a great educator. The school has been blessed for having
you as superintendent."

In other business the board accepted the r es ignation of
Buster Barre tt as a bus driver effectivl· Nov. 19, appointed
Delor es Lynch as bu.• driver effective Dec. 10, appointed Wendy
Fr ieder as substitute adult basic education teac her effective
Dec. 4 (in the absence of Don Stivers, who is ill ); increased from
five to six hours per day, eff ective Nov. 19, th e assignment of
William Forrester as part{tme Adult Mining Program teacher
(paid for with federal monies ); approved the construction of a
partit ion in t he guidance office at the high school by Wilbw
Rowley on a time a nd material basis, the work to be done while
school is closed for Chrilitmas ; appointed Mannin g Kloes for a
seven year term. Jan . 1. 1974 to Dec. 31, 1980, on th e Pomeroy Middl eport Public Libraries Board , approved the occupational
work adjustment wage supplement of 30 cents per hour for the
remainder of the school year, approved the payment of Disadvantaged Pupil Progr am funds (administration allowance of two
percent of $412, with Donna Carr and Lela DeLa val to receive
$206 each for their work with ordering , checking and distributing
materials ); approved the payment of administration allowance
with L. W. McComas and Donald Wolfe to r eceive S.11111 ••r h for

as ~'a known bookie,'' was
rushed to Coney Island
Hospital, where he was dead on
arrival.
"If you ask me," said one
officer, "!hili thing looks like a
mob rubout" because Cosme
had $4,700 In cash and several
betting slips in hili pockets.
Police also foWJd a cardboard
box fllled with more betting
slips in the clubhouse. Police
said they had no descriptions of
the men and no leads "at
present".

VOL XXV NO. 168

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

- - - --

BAKER
FURNITURE
·
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
.
•

' .

WASHINGTON (UPl ) by 1984.
Congr ess is headed towP.rd
The measures are among
final approval of a bill to return more than a dozen pieces of
most of the country to Daylight energy legislation now working
Saving Time, probably by Jan. their way through Congress.
6, in a nationwide effort to
House-Senate conferees gave
conserve energy .
their approval Monday to the
The Senate, in a vote against bill to restore Daylight Saving
what
Sen.
George
S. Time year.round so that more
McGovern, D-S.D., called "gas activities can be conducted in
guzzling monsters,'' passed daylight, and thus save elecMonday a sweeping energy tricity.
conservation measure that
Experts say an energy
would require car makers to saving of I to 1.5 per cent may
boost automobile gas mileage r esult.
to at least 20 miles per gallon
Under the bill, daylight time

Change wari.ted

.'
•

.•

•. . _,~ ' "
••

in bypass light .

THE AGE-OLD STORY of Goldilocks and The Three Bears was told again Monday afternoon at the Rutland Elementary School when a Christmas program was presented by the
kindergarten a!Jd first four grades to a large crowd of parents and friends . Cast in the
chara cters were, I tor , Chriliti Imboden, baby bear ; Theresa Carter, mama bear , and J eff
Carson, papa bear. Sta.nding is Goldilocks played by Cindy Musser. The roles were taken by ·
third graders taught by Mrs. Ann Webster.

(See third group on page

10

today)

Miller in
big test .
PITTS BURGH (UP!) - The
administration of United Mine
Workers president Arnold
Miller faces its sternest test
today when delegates to the
union's 46th constitutional
convention vote on resolutions
to build the UMW's ivar chest
against a possible strike next
·
November.
The
leadership
has
engineered efforts to nearly
double monthly dues and
establish a strike fund ' which
eventually would total $100
million.
Miller, who defeated W. A.
" Tony,. Boyle in a courtordered
election
last
December, based his campajgn partially on providing
better benefit&amp; to the coal
miners.
To do that, Miller has said
the p~i~ers may have to shut
down the nation's coal mines
for as long as six months next
year.
Tbe dues and strike fund
resolutions were expected to
come to a floor vote today.
Delegates turned back two
prior efforts to establish a
strike fWld and balked at a
move Monday to nearly double
dues to $9.75 per month.

Middleport Village Council m1ssmg such days without a
acted Monday night to request doctor's statement will not be
improvements in a caution ·paid for the holiday .
blinker lights arrangement at
Council discussed a~ length
the Route 7 and County Road 5 with Fire Chief Bob Byer bills
intersection in Bradbury.
totaling $2,129 for equipment
Clerk-treasurer Gene Grate which he purchased over the
brought to council's attention a past few months for firemen.
recent article in The Daily Byer said that he attended a
Sentinel on the dangers of the scheduled council meeting in
lights at the intersection. It June and there was no meeting
pointed out that making a left due to Jack of a quorum, but
turn from the Route 7 bypass having discussed the puronto county road 5 into the chases with coWICil members
lights blinds a driver. Council and Mayor John Zerkle he felt
agreed with the article writren that he had a verbal agreement
by Editor Chester Tannebill to proceed.
and agreed to wrire to the
It was agreed to pay about
division office of tbe Ohio $300 on the bills and the
Department of Highways at balance after Jan. 1, 1974. Byer
Marietta and ask · that . asked, however, that council
revise his fund request for next
corrections be made.
A book of the newly codified year because he has asked for
ordinances was exhibited of only $3,600 and the payment of
which !DO copies will be the balance on the bills from
received soon. A Cleveland that appropriation will run his
firm completed the updall.;g of funds low in 1974. Council will
the ordinances Wider contract. consider that matter when the
A
motion
was
passed appropriations resolution is
by
council
to
discour- prepared.
age
absenteeism
by_ The fire chief's report for
village employes on the day November showed three fire
preceding and the day calls answered plus 16
following a paid holiday. The emergency runs including 15
motion stipulates that workers
(Continued on Page 10)

Rigs block truck stop
Donald Gregory, ilssilitant ·
CAMBRIDGE, Ohio (UP!) About 10 tractor trailer rigs . manager of the fuel service
. blocked pumps at the division of the inn, said about
Shenandoah Inn truck stop 100 more trucks are parked in
COSTUMED AS TOYS, these kindergarten children took
near here for the fifth con- the Jot but some are expected
part in a Rutland Elementary School presentation entitled
secutive day early today to to move out later.
" Christmas" Monday afternoon under the direction of Mrs.
"But there are quite a few
protest the rising cost of diesel
Maurita Miller. They are, front, I to r, Tim Mullins, Cindy
just
sitting around and have
fuel.
Fetty, Marvin Teaford, Lori Bowling, Bridget Largent; back
been since last Friday," said
row, I to r, Ronnie Thomas, Brian Denny, Gene Jacobs, Greta
Gregory. "Right off hand I
Board awards
Kennedy, Todd Doczi.
would say there are about 10 in
front of the pumps."
two bus contracts
Gregory said the truckers
are proresting the rising cost of
RACINE - The Southern fuel oil. He said the Inn sells oil
The annual Christmas all th&lt;ir tickets at the Chamber Local School Dilitrict Board of for 43.2 cents per gaUon and !lie
promotion sponsored by the office by noon on th~ day of the .Education, meeting in ad- price has risen several cents
Pomeroy Chamber of Com- drawings. The chamber office journed session Monday night, over the past weeks but it is
merce is "progressing very is located on the ground floor of granted contracts on the also getting harder and harder
well" Earl Ingels, president, the courthouse. The next purchase of two 56-passenger to get.
told members of the chamber meeting of the chamber will be buses.
Awarded the contract to
Monday at a noon luncheon Jan . 14, 1974. ·
provide the chassis for both
APOLOGY MADE
meeting at the Meigs Inn.
·
buses
was
the
.
Meigs
EquipDaily
Sentinel
The
Attending Monday were
During a brief business
ment
Co.
of
Pomeroy
at
a
cost
apologizes
to
the
family
of the
Inge
ls,
Ted
Reed,
Ra
lph
session Ingels said the first
Christmas drawing will be held Werry, Bill Grueser, Jack of $5,736 .95 plus $725 for late Charles Bryson, who died
Saturday at I p._m. at the New Kerr ,. Dale Warner; Richard automatic transmission. last Thursday and was burled
York Clothing House and the Chambers, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Edwin Davis and Son, Langs- Saturday, for having omitted
Virgil Teaford, ville, was awarded the contract through il production error'
second at the same time and Graves,
.
'
Carolyn Thomas, secretary, to supply the two bodies at a publication of the notice on
place on Dec . 22.
Sunday instead of Friday.
Merchants are asked to have Beulah Jones and Ketie Crow. cost of $4,185.

Promotion going well

would remain in effect until
October, 1975. Final approval
by both houses of Congress was
expected this week .
Bill Passes 75-15
The energy conservation bill,
passed, 75-15, by the Senate,
was the first comprehensive
effort by Congress to control
America's growing appetite for
energy and would put into
effect a goverrunent-wide plan
to curtail energy use in both the
public and private sector.
A key provision would
require the Transportation
Department
to
impose
mintmum gas mileage standards on the auto industry by
1978.
The provision sets as a goal a
50 per cent increase in average
fuel economy for new cars over
the next lQ years.
With the present mileage
average of 13.5 miles per .
gallon, that could mean a
minimum mileage average of
at least 20 miles per gallon by
191M.
The rules would go into effect
for the 1978 model year and
new cars not meeting the
standards could not be bought
or sold.
The bill also sets general
energy goals, calls for fuel
saving within the government,
orders energy conservation
research, and would require
appliance
manufacturers
tohtell
purchasers
the
estimated annual opsraing
costs of their products.
Official ReslgDS
In other developments :
- Another high official in the
administration's. energy pro(Continued on Page 10)

Two seeking
divorces in
Meigs court
Two persons have filed for
divorce in Meigs County
Conunon Pleas Court
They were Henry DaUas
Ohlinger, Rt. I, Middleport
against Trudy Anrl Ohlinger,
Rt. I, Middleport, on the
grounds of gross neglect of
duty and extreme cruelty, and
Marvin L. Randolph, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, from Alice M.
Randolph, 8561'. Second St.,
Galtipolis, on grounds of gross
neglect of duty_
Hope Moore, of Pomeroy,
has flied a Jaw suit in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
against Charles Kiesling, 1403
Easrem Ave., Galtipolls, for
the amount of $15,000. Mrs.
Moore charges that on Dec. 15, .
1972, Kiesling assaulted her on
. the neck and jaw area with his
hand in a karate type manner
with great force and violence,
causing her great pain and
suffering.
She says that as a result of
the alleged assaul\ sl\e suffered
a separated disk and injury to
ber neck and asks compensatory
and
punitive
damages in the sum of $15,000.
Charles E. Baxter has been
a warded a divorce from Irene
B. Baxrer on the grollllds of
gross neglect of duty .

'

•

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

TUESDAY, DECEMBER II, 1973

'

A Middleport man was
hospitalized following a single
car accident on Union Ave.,
Monday at 5:27p.m. Pomeroy
police reported.
,
The car, driven by Donald
UtUe, 38, ran into a ditch . .
UtUe was arrested for driving
while
intoxicated.
The
Pomeroy ER squad took him to
the hospital.

Variable cloudiness tonight
and not so cold west portion.
Low In the 20s. Wednesday
parUy cloudy and warmer,
high In upper 30s and low 40s.

The board also approved attendance at the following
meetings : Donald Dixon and Ed Bartels to the Ohio Education
meeting in Akron on Dec. 12-13-14; Joy Bentley to attend the Ohio
Institute on Girls' Sports in Cincinnati on Jan . IG-11-12 ; George
Hargraves to attend the Ohio Advisory Council on Vocatiooal
Education in Columbus on Dec . 12 and 13, and the monthly
meeting of executive conunittee of the Bu ckeye Association of
School Administrators on Dec. 20, in Columbus.
Attending were Porter, Mullen, Joe Sayre, Virgil King, Carroll
Pierce, board members; McComas , clerk ; Wendell Hoover and
Robert Snowden , newly elected members; Linda Roush and
Katie Crow.

Gas mileage must
.
Improve--senators

Driver injured

Weather

Model LC·:Z
~aundry Cenler

work in addition to regular school hours; approved payment of
$450 in dues to the Ohio School Boards Assn ., plus $00 for the
briefcase publication and liability insurance for board members
through the Ohio School Board Assn .; set Jan. I , al 7: 30p.m . for
the organization 11\eeting of the board, and appointed Mrs. Carol
Gheen as principal's aide at Harrisonville under the Disadvantaged Pupil Program fund .

Devoted To 'l7le lntere~~IA Of '171e· Meiga-MtuOn Area

'

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown
Pomeroy Monday at 11 a . m.
was 33 degrees WJder snowy
skies.

director ; Charles Chancey , heM football coach and athleti c
director ; Lee Mc'Comas, clerk, and Genrge Hargraves,
s uperintendent.

OOLUMBUS - STATE COMMERCE DIRECTOR Dennis
Shaul said Monday deadlines for installation of sprinkler
systems and fire alanns at nursing homes in Ohio will be strictly
enforced. Shaul said Gov. John J . Gilligan signed legislation
making sprinkler systems and fire alarms mandatory nea rly a
year ago, and the deadlines have the full Ioree of Jaw.
Some n11rsing home operators have said they will not comply
with the Jan. I, 1974, deadline for fire alarms or the Jan. I, 1975,
sprinkler systems deadline, said Shaul. "Allowing the deadlines
to pass without enforcement action against violators would be a
slap in the face for the majority of nursing homes which have
been willing to comply with the upgraded standards of life
safety," Shaul said.

Your Christmas Shopping Headquarters

Installs almost
anywhere.

Ch·

\

·Bring your children to see
Santa Claus at Our toy store in
the middle block tonight and
Tuesday, 6 to 8 p.m :

(Only 2 feet wide)

50th Is FREE

The farmers Bank
and Savings Co.

'

By United Press lnlematlonar
WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT NIXON s ummoned
Republican party leaders to the White House today to map
strategy for the 1974 congressional elections and to discuss the
impact of Watergate on potential candidates . The meeting was
requested by GOP National Committee Chainnan George Bush,
who is gearing up for next year's races.
Vice President Gerald R. Ford will take part in the-meeting
along with Sen. William Brock, R-Tenn., chairman of the Senate
Campaign Committee, and his House counterpart, Rep. Bob
Mitchell, III. " We are laying the groundwork for the
congressional campaign," said a National Committee spokesman.
The meeting apparently was hastily arranged. Bush was in
Texas Monday for a fund raiser. Brock was flying in from Nashville today.

EACH WEEK
~

Pu1 a li ttle . .. $1, $2 , $5 or $ l 0
or mo r e ... 111 n C hr istm a s C lub

.

Be sure to register at our
Mechanic Street Warehouse for
the Whirlpool Dishwa.s her. No
purchase -necessary. You need
not be present to win.

The Fabric Shop

Christmas Club

.

BY KATIE CROW
Two members of the Meigs Local Board of Education,
President Frank W. Porter and member Donald Mullen, made
term-ending statements of appreciation Monday night in the
regular December meeting of the board. Both have servo&lt;! six
years,
Mullen who spoke first, thanked board members, George Hargraves, superintendent, and Lee McComas, clerk . " I have been
happy serving on the board. We have had a good exchange of
opinions. I have enjoyed my experience and I have no regrets,"
Mullen '"id.
In closing, Mullen said he would like to see a better line of
communication between the students and the administration,
and board members. Mullen added he was disappointed
that the student council did not meet with the board. Mullen also
expressed hi$ thanks to the press.
Porter, who left immediately following the meeting due to the
fact hili father was scheduled to undergo open heart surgery last
night .or early today at University Hospital in Columbus, expressed his feelings in letters directed to Dwight Goins, band

ALBANY, N. Y. - GOV. NELSON A. Rockefeller today .
called a press conference to announce his decision on whether to
seek re-election, but most observers agreed he would resign in
order to run for the 1976 Republican presidential nomination.
Spokesmen in the governor's office would say only that
Rockefeller 's brief statement spoke for itself and that the
'governor was the only person who could - or would - provide
·
further details.
The four-lenn governor who trie&lt;l for the presidential
nomination in 19£C, 1964 and 1968 would complete 15 years in
office on Dec. 31. Sources in the administration and Republican
party circles predicted he would step down and make way for Lt.
Gov . Malcobn Wilson to take over as chief executive of the
nation's second most populous state.

-Dress Sale

BOOSTERS TO MEET
The Southern Athletic
Boosrers will meet and elect
officers this evening at 7:30 at
Our bibuloUs neighbor al - the high school.
For Christmas '73
ways
makes it a fifth at
small deposit w ill hold
bridge.
All we want for Christmas
·115 W. Second
992-2284
is a lot more than we
DIVORCE FILED
POMEROY, OHIO
deserve.
Maxine Sellers, Racine, has
,, ,. . .. ..
filed for a divorce in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
from Gary Sellers, Racine, on
groWJds of gross neglect .of
TWO EVENINGS
duty and extreme cruelty.

NUW

COUNCIL TO DINE
SYRACUSE - Guiding Star
Council 124 , Daughters of
America, will hold its
Christmas dinner Wednesday
evening at the Red Carpet Inn.
Members will meet at the
municipal building at 5:45 p.
m. preparatory to leaving for
the inn. Following dinner the
group will return to the
municipal building for a party
and gift exchange.

Open Every Shopping Day Til Christmas

Sewing Machine

Make next

peaceful uses of atomic energy
since 1952 have totaled $18
billion, altbough atomic energy
now accoWlts for Jess than I
per cent of the nation's electrical power production .
Research spending figures
by industry are not readily
available, but spokesman for
the oil and coal industries
concede that the amount has
not been great. A spokesman
for the American Petroleum
Institute said oil companies
spent about $00milllon over the
past 15 years on ways to
process oil shale .

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

ROBERT PERKINS
Robert E. Perkins, 80, formerly of Letart Falls, who had
been residing at the Syracuse
Nwsing Home, died Monday at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mr. Perkins was preceded in
death by his wife, Delena Hall
Perkins, and s ix . children.
Surviving are four son.s\ Estel,
of Toledo; Ernest of Marion;
Lewis, in Columbus, and
James, of Pomeroy; -two
daughters, Ethel Keese, Oak
Hill, W.Va., and Edith Shaffer,
Perrysburg, and 10 grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
at 10 a . m. Wednesday at the _
Ewing Funeral Home where .
friends may call anytime .
Bwial will be in the .Letart
Falls Cemetery.

probation and ordered them to
make restitution to Waugh
to talin g $425. Jud ge Betz
suspended $400 of the fine.
Robert Marcum, 29, Vinton,
charged with assault with a
deadly weapon in the Friday
night shooting of Robert
Meade, 25. of Vinton, entered a
not guilty plea this morning in
Municipal Court.
Bond was. set at $5,000. A
pfeliminary hearing will be
held later.
The shootin g occurred
following an argument that
apparenUy started because of
Waterga te and the Nixon
administration. Meade is listed
in sa tisfactory condition at the
Holzer Medical Center ,where
he was admitted with gunshot
wounds of the face.
In other cases, Bill Chapman
alias Melvin Spurlock , 51,
Gallipolis, was fined $200 and
costs, senten ced to 10 days in
the county jail and his driv~r ·s
license wa s suspended for six
months for DWI.
Denzil F. Niday, 18, Rt. 2,
Crown City, was fined $10 and
costs for unsafe vehicle , and
Melvin W, Wolfe, 23, Rt. I,
Bidwell, was fined $10 and
costs
for
displaying
registration of a former owner.
Kevin
Drummond, 18,
Gallipolis , and Harold E . Dray,
19, Rt. 2, Bidwell, were fined
$25 and costs each and sentenced to five days in the
county jail for sleeping all
night in the E-Z Laundry Mat
in Gallipolis.

coal. It predicted that commercial production of synthetic
oil from shale or coal would
begin by the early 1960s at the
latest .
Now government officials
say it will be at least another
five years before even
prototype commercial plants
will begin production. The
original goal appa rently faded
into the future simply because·
there has neve r been enough
goverrunent or industry money
put into research and
development.
For instance, the U. S.
Geological Survey spe nt
$45,000 in both 1950 and !951 on
oil shale research. But in 1652,
spe nding dropped to zero and
not another cent was spent
until 1957 when $20,000 was
allocated.
The main gove rnment
research spending on oil shale
has been by the Interior
Department's Bureau of
Mines, but the bureau has
never spent more than $2.6
million in any one year.
Government spending on

ullen end school board terms

'' .

.' .
J

.\

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