<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="16468" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/16468?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-09T21:44:31+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="49605">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/bd206875a1280057822b8d9eddb01597.pdf</src>
      <authentication>3ec60e54ae408bf825a7ebf8d4761644</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="52647">
                  <text>"

"

"'· .·..

. I

.

. •·-

.

it.... ~- -~

'.

I

,

.

.

.

AT Al-L. TIME$ WE'~~
. WEA~ A ~A~ETY
HAI(N6i~6, HOO)(.g('J

-.

.

LOS ANGELF.S. (UP!) - JlreaklDg a self-lmpoeed 1f&gt;.year
silence, Howard H~ has ~nounced hla "auloblography" as
a lraud- IIIC! says be hopes· 1100n .to aliendon bll eccentric,
recluaive life atyle becauae It attracts too much attentioo.
And, Hugbe~ hinted, mooey can't buy blppiness.
"Am I bapp)o and content? The answer II no."
·
Hueb., spoke by telephooe to Los Angeles Friday from his
Illite. of rooma at the Brlttaria Beach Hotel oo Paradise laland
Naaaa\1, The Blbamas.,A speaker amplified the reedy voice of
tbe ~Yeat-old billlonatre induBtrialilt, who for a dacade and a
·half lias gcil~ to Incredible Iengtha tO avoid pubu~·scrutiny.
.
Huebes-wu Identified by hill voice and scores of references to
events, plllr ' S and persons In the twH!our
40 miDute conver·
.
'
satioo. The ,,even newsmen who Interviewed him agreed without
~J~estioo the ~bodied voice be10118e•l'lo iiiiCbes.
In the rambling, fascinating discourse, HugheS said:
In Good' Health
-The \'Autobiography" to be printed by McGraw-Hill in
March Is a fake,
·

.................... "

.

-He plans to return to bls gambling-industrial empire in Las
VegaS.
'
·
·
-His health 1a good.
-Court actions forced him to become a recluse.
.- The bulk of his estate will be left to medical research.
-'-He Is worried aboat spendiDg
the rest
of hillr life in courl.
•
~'
-Someday be would like to make moUon pictures ilgam.
Rapl Book Pro)eet
His' voice was,clear and Jll06t of his rei:olleCtlons definite. He
appeared to \!IIJOY the question and answer session wi!h newsmen
!roln United Pniu In!ernatlonal, Lo,a ~eles Times, The New
York Times, 'the 1.(!11 Angeles. Herald-Examiner, tbe Chicago
Trlbun~. Aa8oclated Preu 'and NBC neW-amen.
·
·.
.: AU saven had contact with Hughes more than a decade ago and
uked ideniilying questiona before embarking on \he news quiz.'
The McGraw.Jilll BOok Company and Time In&lt;:. drew Hughes'
wrath with their annOWICed Intention to publish a purported
autobiography which they claim Hughes worked on with novelist
Clifford Irving.

He denied any knowledge of the project or the men connected
with it.

.

\

~

. .

"This episode is just so fantulic that it taxes your imagination
to believe that a tblng like this could happen," Hughes said.
UP! - "! take it, sir, you do not know a man named Clifford
Irving?"
H\lghes- "! don't know him. I never saw him. I hive never
even heard of him unWa matter of days ago when this thing first
came to my attention.
And, incidentally, where does he live?"
.
UP! -"bl Spain, sir, at the moment."
H\lghes -"Spain? Well, be doesn't claim I came to Spain to see
him , does 'h'e.?"
UP! -"No, he claims you traveled around the Western
Hemisphere with him over a period of several months ending late
last year. Have you left the hotel there in the Bahamas in the last

·siX
months?"
._:
••
Criticizes Publlshers ,
H118hes -"Well, left the hotel? You are getting into a pretty

'

touchy area. Let's say I haven't left the Bahamas, and I certainly
blven 't seen Mr. Irving."
-Asked If the biography might be a carefully structured plot to
discredit him, Hughes reillled, ''my attorney thinks that it could
be. I wouldn't attempt to pass judgment on McGraw'Hill's ·
motives in Ibis thing."
·
ll\18hes refused to guess If the manuscript was tbe result of a
plot or Innocent gullibillty.
" ... well, obviously the motive t'or Irving could be money, but
certainly McGrawHill and Time-Life don't have to deal 'tn fake
manuscripts or that sort of thing In·order to survive. They surely
!)ave a business that operates on a higher plane than that."
Why, Hughes was asked, has be played the mystery man, the
recluse?
~lfe;~tyle To Cllange
"I don't really know," he said."! will tell you one thing.! am
rapidly planning to come out of it. I am not going to continue
being quite as reclusive, ss you call it, as I have been because it
(Continued on Page 8)

•

Now You Know

TO THI6_ J..INe
· WHrN GOING-

Weather
Partly cloudy and a little
cooler tonight and Tuesday.
Low tonightfrom the mid 20s to
the low 30s. High Tuesday in
t'le upper 30s and 40s. ·

The U.S.·Mexican border is
1,933 miles long.

I'O~WMOO((

AFT, .

Devoted To 'I'M lnteruta Of~ Meig&amp;-MOIOii Area

..•

&amp;JT -LOOK ~!! TMI'f'~L AWlS e&gt;E:.
. TOADS,. WT AH WON'T AL.LU&amp;- e&gt;E MF.!!

.

year of the Pomeroy National. Several "Centennial"
programs are plallned by the bank and will be announced by
President Edison Hobstetter during the birthday year.

NEW BANKING FACILITY - The new. facUlty above
will h0111e tli&amp; Rutland Branch of the Pomeroy National Bank
which Is to be completed and occupied this year,. the, IOOth

-AN''MEBeE. SOMEWHAR

AH'L.L. 8LDSSOt.\'INTO LOVE:.I.'{ 'fOUNG
WOOMINHOOD

.
Adam
d
-Dale
s Honore for

News. ... in Briefs
.

MI'\KE:. OUT TH'

Wlo41T£ HOUSE!!

T INVITED

HOUSE PAATV

DON'T SM

AN'WHICMO'

C~II.E:.~OOD

WILL

!! .....s-...s:~

CHUMS,

BE. ON THEM .

.·

'

'

'

BY UNITED PREBS INTERNATIONAL
• WASBJNQI'Off-lt1RGif.OIII GillNElw. Jesse L. Steinfeld
urged tilt tobacco Industry to
lllloktng leu hazar·
dout bJ ~ the hannful subetances In cigarettes begtnntnc 'with carbon monoxide, nicotine and tar.
In tilt sixth surgeoo general's report to Congress on the ·
health C~~~~¥K~Uances of 11111oklng, Steinfeld said carbon nionoxlde
In cigarette 11111oke may even be bannful to nearby non 111111Jkers,
espectaUy those with clironlc lung and bear! dlaease, and that It
II too early to tell if a trend toward kicking the IIIIIOking habit has
affected the national disease and death rate.

today

LL
OF'F MA~ FE~T011\~CI&lt;L'f TO TH'

make

.

"-15T&amp;?

'

DACCA ":" BANGLADESH PRESIDENT Sheikh Mujibwj
Rahman satd today that the ties between his country and West
Pakistan are snapped for good. He ,made the ·announcement
llhortly a.fler returning borne !&gt;Y plane from Londoo.
When be arrived In Dacca, al'med troops were needed to
control the near hysterical crowd&amp; who screained "Long Live
9lelkb Mujib!" It ·11'81- the Sheikh's first appearance in his
country since hill arrest 9~ months ago.

•

•
SAioao. -ONE AMERICAN 80LDIER WAS killed and two
othen were wounded in an iunl!uab today 24 mlles from Saigon.
Iii the air, a u. S. fighter-bomber attacked North. Vietnam
$lnday in the year's third "protectlw reaction" strike.

•

And In Thailand, American B5,2's suffered their flrit damage
li the war from enemy action. Communist guerrillas damaged
three of the big planes during an attack on the strategic bomber
base at u.Tapao,

'

by Crooks &amp; · Lawre~t.ce

CAPTAIN EASY

PHONE 992-2 156

TEN CENTS

Probe into_Blast

With to_
a ds
o ·.z:o~ ve
.

®

MONDAY, JANUARY 10. 1972

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL XXIV NO. 189

•

~-

HONG KONG - 'lHE QUEEN ELIZABETH sank today in
Hong Kong harbor after bufning for more than 24 )lours, The
wreckage of the former monarch of the seas will be used as ~ap
metal.
.
All2,000 persons who Werll aboard tbe. vessel when II caught
fire escaped. No deaths and ouly 14injurles were reported, The
ship had been undergoing ~ittlng as a fioattng campus for .
Chapman College of !&gt;range, Calif.

FRANI&lt;l-Y, DON'T
THINK THF: WOF:l-P I~
F:E:ADV FOR' ANOTHE!~

1:2.-FOOT GOI&lt;:ILLA 1

NEWYORK-'IHEFIRSTnongovernmentmedicalexpert
to eumlne the X•ays and pliotograpba li (&gt;resident John F:
Kennedy after hla auasstnation said SUnday be is convinced Lee
11arvey Ollwaldalone fired the fatal allots. Dr. John K. Lattimer
of Columbia University's College of Pbysicilps and Surgeons
laid hla euminatlon li the pathological evidence ''eliminates
any doubt completely" aliout the findings of the Warren Coolmission, which conducted tbe official Investigation of the
asseasinatlon.
'
·
He said lis eumlnation of them showed the path of tbe fatal
bullet was cOilliderably steeper than Indicated by the published
lketchel. &amp;me critics of the Warren Report contend that this
bullet waa fired !tom a greasy knOll 1n front li the car whlle th~ .
brain wound was inflicted from behind 80 there must have been
two aasauins. Lattimer said, "If anyo~e were to have shot him
from thefroot, they would have to be squatting on the fioor of the
In fro{lt li him."
.cat.

.60 Yeal-s in Masonry
'' .

Dale 'Adlllili, il fonner Meigs
countlan, was presented a so.
year award for hla service In
masonry by Homer -Fannon,
secretary, and Arnold Fisher,
master, of Sabina Lodge ,No,
324 Thur.s_day, Jan. 6, at
Sabina.
Mr. Adams, who was born at
Keno 81 years ago, became a
member of Shade River Lodge
No. 453 at Chester on Jan. 3,
1912. After moving to Sabina,
be transferred Ids membership
in A\lgust of 1919.
Mr. Adams.enjoys the best of
health. He was pleased to see .
two members of Shade River
Lodge, William Will, and
Roger Keller, who traveled to
Sabina to attend the award.
Also visiting the Lodge were'
Montaomery and Mllton Will,
brothers of William WW.
After the presentation, Mr.
Adams gave an interestlhg and.
informative talk about his 60
years i,n masonry,

'

"

years.

..

Civil Defense search parties,
meantime, planned to resume
exploring the depths of the turbulent Ohio River for two missing deckhands who apparently
died in the holocaust.
Jack Stephenson, 49, a.first
mate with 15 years' experience
on the tow, and hill son,
Charles, 18, dllappeared after
ihe barge exploded and plowed
into a pier at the B&amp;O railroad
bridge. ·
First reports from the tugboat's pilot said t'* blast bad
~en touched off by sparks
from electric pumps the Ste.phensons used to drain excessive gasoline. The two barges,
each the size of a football field,
llllllk aftet smacking the bridge
pier.
1 Cmdr. B. C. Burns of the
Coast Guard In Huntington said
the "Marlin" was Involved In a
llmllar barge explosion May
12, 1969, near La Grange, Mo.,
where six men died. An inves·
ligation by the Nation~! Trans·

Wheat Crop
Diversion

Is Urged
'

Cars Collide
In Syracuse at
Intersection

• Ohio Congressman Clarence
, E. Miller today telegraphed
Secretary of Agriculture Earl
Batz urging that immediate
action be taken to implement a
DALE ADAMS
voluntary wheat diversion
- - - - - - - - - program for the 1972 crop year.
Miller,
Ohio's
only

Pour KU'l-..l
teu r'n

L' I

A two-car accident oceurr&amp;l
in Syracuse Sunday and a doe
deer was killed near Chester,
ea R rBS
the Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept. reported,
IRONTON, Ohio (UP!) At 11:45 a. m. at. the in- Four persons were killed
tersectlon of SR 124 and Sunday when a car went left of
Bridgeman St., Edward Spitz!, centeron0hio93near this Ohio
2!!, Syracuse, pulled off of River community and crashed
Bridgeman St. onto 124 into the headon into an oncoming
path of a car driven by Russell pickup truck.
E. Quillen, 65, Racine, Rt. 2.
The victims of the crash
Velma Quillen, a passenger In were identified as Clyde
the Quillen par, sustained an Boothe and Lakle Burns, 42,
injury to her righlleg but was both of Huntington, W. Va.;
not Immediately treated. Billie Bradahaw, 52,. Hanging
'There was heavy damage to Rock, .Ohio; and Mrs. Mary
both cars. Spitz! was cited to Adkins, 49, Ironton.
court on charges of failure to
Ohio highway patrolman
yield at an intersection.
said Boothe's car crossed the
Ad!!e deer was k11led Sunday center line and s~ck the
IUCRON (UP! )- With thepos- . cienUy and cheaper at other at12:15 p, m. when it ran into northbound truck driven by
slbillty ol3,700 jobl being ellm· Goodrich planta thro\lghout the the path of a car driven by Bradshaw . Burns was a
lnated, the membership of United States and in other · Larry M. Bissell, 19, Colum· pass~nger in the ~ar and M~.
bus, . driving on SR, 248, five Adkms was riding with
Ul!ited Rubber. Worken Local 5 coun1i-les.
voted .Sunday to reopen their
In the past seven years, mires east of SR 7 at Chester. · Bradshaw.
Jcontract with B.F, Goodrich Co.
Local , 5 has lost more than There was heavy damage to his ,
~--" ,
to negotiations although II still 1,500 members due to Good- car.
has a year and a half to run. rich's transfer of producUon to
ELDERLY PARTY!
'
.
' COLUMBUS (UP!)
Goudrlch bad satd the talks · other planla.
8
~ r~presents workLOCAL TEMPS
William Bush was 100 years old
were necessary If eHorll are to ers~aU
aVotbe
llbe
rod
·
1
r ru r P ucers
The temperature in down- ' on ·Sunday. Attending his birth· be made to run the plant here be
more efficiently and at less Core{irestone Tire &amp; Rubber,. town . Pomeroy at 11 a :m. day ce,lebration here was his
Tire &amp; Rubber Monday was 46 degrees, under sister, Mrs. Sarah Bush More,
cost. It 'said work being done Co.·•andoodyear
General Tire &amp; Rubber 1 d . kl
·
c ou y s es.
98. .
bere could be done more. eHI- Co.

URW Hedging On Jobs~ Loss

PARKERSBURG, W. Va.
(UP!) - U. S. Coast Guard
offfcials today began laying the
framework for an intenSe investigation inw Friday's barge
explosion here, the second foJ
the tugboat "Martin" in three

ffl do

c

h

portation Boord showed that
explosion apparently was
caused by a gasoline spill
Ignited by the t\lgboat, Burns
told UP!.
Burns said the Coast Guard
would taunch its probe by interviewing the surviving crewmen of ·the "Martin " then
'
cbeck physical evidence, after
a derrick barge removes the
sunken barges. Divers already

have scanned the river's bot. Deputies said the search
tom, preparatory to the remov- parties led a shore patrol from
al operation.
the point of tbe explosion to
Little
Flocking, Ohio, several
Either a one-man or three.
member board of inquiry is to mlles downstream.
At leaat 180 windows and
direct the Investigation, which
in tum will be submitted to the storefronts here and across the
NTSB for final approval, \he river in Belpre, Ohio, were
shattered in the blast, and 11
commander said,
A day-long search Swxlay other persons were injured,
failed to turn up any trace of some by glass that shot
the
missing
crewmen. through the air like shrapnel.

HUH in Again
PHILADE~

':

..

./
NIAL SALSER
Nlal E. Salser, Syracu1e,
has accepted employment
with the maintenance
department of the Meigs
County . State Highway
Department and began hll
duties on Jan. 3. He and his
wife, Virginia, have two
sons, John Pape of Racine,
and James Pape, of
Syracuse. Before accepUng
emploYIIIent with the highway department, Salser was
employed in construction.

Ashhrook Low
With Consumer

representativeCommittee,
on. the House
Agriculture
said · WASHINGTON (UP! ) - Rep.
that production forecasts for John M. Ashbrook, R-Ohio, is
the present year "indicate one of nine !louse members
near-record wheat plantings who voted against consumer inwhich would mean an over- terests on eight issues last
production of wheat."
year, according to the Consum"Over-production and er Federation of America .
resulting surpluses would
The issues concerned interest
lower prices and liann the rates on government bonds,
farmer's overall income," creation of a committee to inMiller commented.
- vestigate energy resources, leCurrent USDA figures in- gal aid to the poor, child dedicate that there are already velopment programs, war on
312 million more acres in poverty authorizations, powers
winter wheat this . year as of a proposed federal consumcompared to one year ago. The er protection agency, which
1971 harvest for all wheat came up twice, and creation of
(winter and spring) was 128 the consumer protection agen·
million bushels greater than cy ·
the previous year, 1970.
Miller said that his concern
. was direcUy related to record
corn crop surpluses. "With
. Ohio corn cribs · already
.
overflowing, ·we cannot afford . Meigs ?o~nty Juvenile Judge
another surplus burdening the F. H. 0 Br~en today. reported
farmer," Miler said. "! have results of mne Juvemle cases
tatre'n this action in the interest beard m his court Saturday.
o!,.the farmer," Miller sa,id.
Ronnie Pickens, 15, no
operatqr's license', and Terry
Stobart, 17, permitting an
unlicensed driver to operate a .
·
CLINIC SET 1
A Meigs Area Cotn Clinic motor vehicle, were ordered to
will .be held from 10 a.m. to 3 pay damages, attend court
p.m. Tuesday at the Episcopal .school, and had their license
suspcnde~ for ind~finite
Pa1ish House in Pomeroy.

(UPI) Hubert H. HUJnllhrey declared
his candidacy for the
Democratic presidential
nomlnl!tiim today, pledging to
make \he "falluns of the Nlmn
admlnlatratioo" the subject of
Ids campaign .
He said an end to the Vietnam War was the most urgant
need and be repeated a pledge
be milde as Ids party's unIUCcesaful 1988 standard bearer - promising a cu«tre,
an end to the bombing and an
immediate troop wllhl:b:awallf
elected.
The SO.year.old Minnesota'
senator chose a meeting of
local advertising men to make
bll announcement, Instead li a
paid national television spot as
did some of his Demoa:atic
opponents -notably Sens. Edmund S. Muskie and H~nry M.
Jackson.
In becoming the eighth of.
ficlally announced candidate
for
the
Democratic
nomination, Humphrey said
the nation's 200th anniversary
is nearing and the man who Is
president in 1976 "bas the
obligation and the opportunity
to revive that feeling of
common purpose which once
inspired this. nation -that

OPEN TO PUBLIC
The Appalachia Culture
program sponsored by the
Meigs County Extension
Homemakers Council
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at
the St. Paul Lutheran
Church In Pomeroy Is open
. to the public.
Emphasis will be on the
people, the food and the
music of Appalachia with
speakers to be Fred Snuffer,
soclologlsi of Rio Grande
College, Miss Edelene Wood
of Parkersburg, and Miss
Gloria Winfield and Bob
Conta of Galllpoli1.

mutual respect among
generations, among the races
and lbe groops In !hill country."
.
"History will note the
failures of the Nixon admlnlatratloo and they will be
the subject of this campaign.
Regrettably we cannot esc&amp;J!e
their consequences. What we
do now, however, can belp
overcome \hem," he said In the
seven-page statement an·
nouncing his candidacy .
· Of the war, Humphrey said;
"It is taking Mr. Nlmn
longer. to withdraw out troops
than It took us to defeat Hitler,
Had I been elected, we would
now be out of that war. I repeat
that pledge."
After \be war, he listed the
other Issues as putting people
back to work, creating a
reapect for law and justice to
fight crime, attacking drug
abuse, cleaning up the cities,
raising farm income, fighting
water pollution and giving
every American family proper
housing, food , health and
education.
~·:~=•··

......, .....

~

,~···w

FACTORY EXPLODES
DAYTON (UPI) - An
explosion and fire waa
reported today at the United.
Fireworks Co. just west of
here In Montgomery County,
Fint reports Indicated at
least three were Injured.
F'lre and reserve equiP'
menl from several nearby
communities was dlspa~hed
to the scene. No ,further
details were Immediately
avallable. ·

.....· . ...... . .

WANTS COURT SEAT
CINCINNATI, (UP!)
Attorney John M. Anders~n, a
native of Newark, will seek the
Democratic nomination for
~upreme Court justice this
May.

Nm·e Juvenile .case·s Heard
·»·-x-:-x~·;·».:·;.;-:-.."o!o·~..x-~·»XX&lt;
:,
... , , . ·'· .•A"':o:v.•.•:.:O~•:o".O:~

period; Tommy Quillen, 16, no
operator's license and leaving
scene· of accident, ordered to
pay damages on a wall 8Jid
attend court school.
·
Scott Walton, 16, reckless
operation, one accident, not
maintaining assured clear
distance , second accident,
license suspended for indefinite period; Linda Rupe,
16; no maintaining assured

clear distance;
Debra
Wisecup,
11, reckless
·operation ; Jeffrey Morris ,
17, reckless otleration; Hom-·
er Mills, Jr., 15, ·no
operator's license; Ch~ster
Roush, 17, not.cited as traffic
violator, but found guilty of
lYing under oath when called as .
witness on one of the traffic
violatons, ordered to pay
rlamages on a wall and attend
caurt school.

�..

' .

..

2- ~Dally Settlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Jan. to, 1m

.r---------------~------~----~

•

~

!Heleti Help· Us l ~~ce
~
Hele~
~ along
Br'Way
By

Bottel

-

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

Tiiey11 Do It :every Time

TR'i 16 HE /MY SHOP F'OREMAJ-.1

F005T'ER CAN'T GET' THE L.EI'ST' T1JMBLE
FROM HENNA CE THE 6TEOO POOL· • ·

Coll11nlellve !.ellen Ill op.iaa, Ia 11111 IMte, . .
wt~eomell. '1\e edit« ftlen'tll llle Nld le
Jilin;
All !ellen 1111111 be 1ipe4, wllll a fall addrwa, a1* at
llllllall may be lMtl 1po11 reqllllll.
•· !

•rta

.B~_j~~~~

••• ~.. laUJI"l,:

Pushes for Higher Supports
tr.

Lead Deceives Oppo~ent.

•sN~TH

2.

,.••

or Not to

~erga·nic-

Foo'ds··

3. .• .•

ca·use Confusion

Charges Cloud Penn Central's· Rebirth

11-:-,:em

,.

\

3- The llliJySentlnel,M!ddJepart~oy,O., Jan.10,1m

:T.

I

HOW I SPENT 11IE HOUDAYS
Dear Readers :
..!===Today's coliUllll will eJplain why the rest of this week's
BY JACK O'BRIAN
output is oot Bottled in Bahn Bottel. It will be a hodgepodge of
ACAPULCO
DESERVES
-:hatever comes to mind (or in my mail) and will p-obably
Fo1'UJard Strides Recognized
NOKNQCKS
surprise IJie as much as ifdoelt you. These are not' normal times
NEW YORK (KFS)- We
Bidwell, &lt;lllo
at Helen's House. Actually, it's my year to kick Santa Claus!
stepped
off
a
jet
from
Acapulco
January 4,111'12
.Last October I distinctly remember writiru! in HHU. "All!
want for Olristmas is an R&amp;R triP, to Hawaii." Do you suppose whence we'd sneaked off for a
Dear Slr:
tl)e old party at the North Pole is getllng senUe? What he GAVE Yule holiday - we'd dreamed
'lbiB 'is a letter of commendation fpr the strldee fonrilrd
of a green.IJiueilink Christmas
me was a trip to the HOSPITAL- for major surgery yet.
being made in Caring for neglected, dependent chUdten ln"Gallla
· ("look, Dear Santa, isn't it time you turned your rollle over -and first N.Y.·newspaper we
County.
.
·
,'
to a younger man ? Or at least had your glasses changed? Rest peruaed contained a full-blown
For
IOIDe
weeks
now
Jim
and
Jan
Singleton
have
been
the
and Recuperation l got, but with the tab nudging $iOO a day, well, knock at the marvelOUII resort
perman~t superintendent and matron of the GaUia Coiintf
next time remember, str, I prefer white sand under a soft we'd just jetted away from
Qrllcnn's ·Home, Route 160. This (these) appoinbnll!t(a) ,have
tropical sun to precision~uared. sheeis on a hospital bed that most reluctantly.
already reaulted in slgnlflc~~Dt changes for the bett~ent of.~e
Having analyzed the piece on
goes up when YO!! push the 'down' button.")
children Uving 1n this home. People should know about tbls good .·
Now I'm a common garden variety female who, if her toaster a quick second reading, we
\leglnnlng, I think, so let me Jist a few of the advantqes to
quits, gives it a good thump, applies positive thinking, a~d came to the conclusion thst If.
chllcren this appoinbnent has made. . · , ..... .
!l'esto: toast! So, though I'm faithful about my regular the travel knocker had conFirst, for the first time In many years, ~ chlldren have In
checkups, l never ~eally expect anything to go wrong that I can't • sidered the splendid Items and
areas
of
Acapulco,
there'd
residence
a positive father figure. On the plus side, Jim Singleton
fix with the stock whammy: "Zap, symptom, you don't exist!"
Is a veteran of ll'Ofesslonal baseball, currently _qualified to train
Writer Jean Kerr knows what I mean. We women, she says, have been no bitter conclusions
to
make
...
He
blunted~
own
drive our husbands bonkers with weird descriptions of what
Tennessee Walking Horses and judge horse shows; u well as
might behappeninginsideofus. We even sigh a bit if we think we points inevitably with meagre
being"" allof'Oimd sportsman. He is taking~ to take the boys
aren't getllng proper sympathy. Then, when we're up on that · camouflage down toward the
hunting, teach them sporis and generaUy lead th~m In~ Inend of his packaged
~ck e:raminirQ!; table and the doctor asks, "Any problems?" we
volvement in community activities previously ~mcommon to
dissatisfactions . . . He conchtrp, "Heavens, no! I'm Just fine, never better - liut fthii1li my
boys and girls at the home.
cluded the chic people no
husband's got this worry hangup ... "
Secondly, Jan Is also a caseworker on the Ollld Welfare
My doctor, however, knows the feminine mind. He also longer go to·Acapulco; but the - By BERNARD BRENNER was seeking business and con- 25 per cent. It has been clear- Board's siaff. Her professional expertise and personal warmth
WASHINGTON(UPI) -Ina sumer allies to help push the ed urtanbnouoly by a Senate
believes that anY!hing worth doing should have been done John Waynes and the Charles
make a wonderful difference In the chUdten's lives;
challengetoadministtaUonoffi·
measure through the Senate: agriculture subcommittee and
yesterday. So when he decreed, ''Operation!" and I said, "Sure, Revsons were In residence on
'DIIrdly, though this Is only an lmt!resslon•.a vlslt at the hOme
Doc, I think I can save a spot of time for you like about a week their formidable yachts; quite cials who want to defeat a bill The controversial - bill, ap.. is eJpected get quick COO·
over
the holidays left me with ,the dislinct1impresslorr that the
from nell September 13th, he handed me his "Truth in Un· so, we saw them floallng to boost support rates for proved by the House in Decem· sideration ·by the full commitpackaging" lecture, no holds barred.lt starts, "Any woman who lavishly in the great Acapulco grains, the National Farmers, ber, would raise support rates tee when Congress gels back to (home) staff morale is higher than I've seen It because of the
combined favoratile factors Jim and Jan have 11-ought to the )Ob.
puts this kind of thing off even a month is playing games with her I'lay, large enough to contain Union announced last week it for wheat and feed grains by work Isler this month.
For these greatly needed irn(ll'owments in eowiy ·care of
Agriculture Secretary EarlL.
life!" I warms up with crisp allusions to Russian roulette and all the navies of the world at
Butz, who Is trying to . boost children, It seems to me special thanks ~uld be given JUdge
''head in the sand," and ends with ''Of course, Helen, I don't one time; alas, no such bristle WIN AT BRIDGE
·corn prices by buying grain FloweD, Judge of the Probate Court; the ailld Welfare .~
mean to scare you, so I'm giving you six days to get everything of global menace, just a
settled up at home ... "
sprinkling of the Mexican
from the open market, has Itself; and any persans' who helped bring about this fortunate
Navy's
smaller
battle-gray
caUed for defeat rl. the bill on clrcui,itBiance.
Scare me? "Everything settled up" isn't the happiest cboice
GratefullY,
of words, Doctor! It fetched visions of Hi,tler and Eva frantically vessels tied up In (Mll't adangle
grounds It would damage ex·
awhile
and
decided
that
AI
with
strings
of
holiday
lights
•
burning government documents just before (dim lights, 110ft
(Mll'tsales proapecbi and cripple
(Mrs.) Wllllam Ji:. M~y
10
had led from nine-small. This efforts to operate.1972 surplus·
music) ... The End. I thought, "Migawd, aU thoae files of other for the Yule season; turned
• -5
marked East with queen-tenpeople's secrets"' and my diary that I can't even find and have their caMons into Christmas
Where is Your Boy Tonight?
small and gave declarer a control programs.
and you can't get
forgotten what's in it ... and thoae awful pictures Bob snapped ornaments,
'
t K 964
chance to avoid th'e loss of But Tony T. Dechant,. NaUon- Dear Editor:
when I'was sick on the fis(Jin~ boat."
,
more pacifically chic thsn thst,
a
trump trick against that a1 Farmers Union president,
"' ~ 3
EAST
As I watched chUdren, especially boys, playing last summer,
' · s·r
now can you1
''Good-bye now, Doctor, I'w got a date with a match!"
combination. So South cov- said In a statement that Senate
.1094
4Q3
ered the nine with dummy's approval of the blll is urgent. I remembered when my oldest son was small. It seems like Oiily
~ the way home, mY sense of (l'lortUes resurfaced and I
Merle Oberon
was
.AQI052
¥KJ94
jack. East's queen fell to the "Commodity prices have yesterday.
went shopping. Four hours later I drove Into our garage with a presiding over her local al
• J3
. • 87
king.
South entered dummy dropped drastically as a result
To me, he was the most beautiful baby boy I had evil' aeen;
car full of Christmas !l'fBenis and groceries - to be met by a fresco court; the daughter of .J95
.A 10864
with
a
diamond
and
finessed
'
of OVI!I Production in It'll under of CQ,urse the first born is always so. Bill as ·he grew he waa just
rabid husband: "The hospital called and asys you're scheduled an Italian King, Princess
SOUTH (D)
against East's theatrical 10
4
AK872
fur major surgery on Friday. WHAT IS THE MEANING OF Beatrice of Savoy, was par.
of trumps. AI took the trick the dlsaatrous !aeWislde' land Uke other babies: laqghing, playing, and crying. I enjoyed him
.87
THIS?"
tying; Warren Avis, the secret
and led the ace of hearts retirement plan. Part of the so, and of course I wondered :what be would grow up to be. He
t A 1052
'\Help me unload the TV dinners, honey, While I ezplain .. "' of whose social success is, he
and a second heart to East's economic damage to farmers would he the best of whatever It was, I waa sure.
.KQ
We'll skip the ensuing days. SuHiceth to say that Christmas tried harder, was in his fanking. East cashed his ace of can be remedied by prompt · I remember the first day of school, how hard It was to leave
East- West vulnerable
clubs
to set the contract" pa•age of this important ... him, aa he cried when lleft. Also I worried whet) the nurse doled
and New Year's Day passed with Helen still in the fog of tastic vllla; we saw Bob
West North East South
Jim: "The lead Is old-hat legislation," Dechant said.
anesthesia- completely and utterly unaware that ''the season to Taplinger and banker Serge
. the door at the hospital when he had hls tonslla out. Also, lllept
now
in top flight circles.
Pass
be jolly" had come and gone. Oh, well, I'm feeling fine now and, Semenenko at the bullfights,
Pass
close"by at night to see if he was still breathing; and bow many
With any other opening dePass Pass
as for Hawaii: There's always next year I
Pass
and they Invited us to a party
limes I walked the fioor when he had the beUysche; the·tip. I
clarer would bang down the
Opening lead-4 9
for Cary Grant, also In glitace and king of trumps to Signup Delayed
slipped in his. room at night to see if he was warm, and place
tering pers,on the while; so the
drop the queen and make
more covers on his bed.
WASHINGTON (UPI)
edgy travel knocker quoted By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby his game."
Wllh
at
I
tall
011e
move
pendlng
The band..aid I used when he had a scratch or feU down I
To Fertilize
Fertilize Teddy Stauffer, who hadn't Oswald: "Let's talk about (NEWSPAPER ENTElPll51 AIIH.)
to broadaa die IOVet'llllle&amp;l'l
I used to cook his favorite food, and tried •to get clothea he
been able to make his Villa lOs and nines."
l.t'l2 !aria ptodactloa coatrel liked to wear. I held hbn on my knee when he was afraid, arld
Jim : "You don't count any
Ver11. sht1WI'lace a social h$
progrjl!'• l~ifleultare klaaed away his tears wbenSOiiW one said-an~ word&lt; ..,· ~
··:po(~t~.for
them, but 'you u~e
and. so lost it ,... He stress~
DepM.
I IIIIi' tlftl~t ~ , lo
The
bidding
hu
beem
HoW-wy it wis'thiri. ...... _.. .. :-.~~~ ...'-'' ,l': ~
mainly the "Coney Island theu presence or absence to ~·•t North Eut South pve liRlf more elbow room for
decide whether or not to bid
Now, mY boy bas grown up and is overseas fighting a war.
aspects" of Acapulco, as if they m a close situation. 1 assume
ftoll pl'9gram dedlloa• by
I wonder If he has clothes to wear; did he eat his 10pper
hadn't always been there.
Pass
Pass
?
your_remark is the/relude 5••
delaylag tbe period for firmer today, is he warm, does he need a button sewed, or a patdl here
The Coney Island aspects to some hand playe before
You, South, hold: '
earollmeat.
and there? I wonder, did he faD down today, Is there 110meone ·
have been there for decades. J was born. "
.KJ865 tAKI0864Z.8
Ori&amp;biii!Y 1Cbe6iled to raa
Oswald:
"Close.
You
were
near
to kiss awaybis fears; did som1!9ne say ali unkind won( Ia
The old native Mexican
What do you do now? ;
from J•. 17 to Feb. 25, the
two
or
three
years
old
when
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D. they can cause other prob- quarter never was chic; just
A-Bid just live spades. You alp-ap period baa 'tieea ablfted he afraid, is he alone, is he happy, or is he sad?
the
late
Albert
Morehead
lems in environment.
But-roy consolation comes aa I remember God'a· proml.ae,
popular, peopled by local · played a hand very similar want to play in six but don't beck to Feb. 3-Marcb 1!.
Dear Dr. Lamb-What do
w•nt your opponents to save at
who
cater
to
the
that
He was always near, and'rellef came as 1 felt Hia hand on 1' ·
citizens
·
·~·
to this one."
'you think of the increasingly
The difference in the taste
Official• aald ID a attllemeat
seven
hearts.
Jif!I: "It's easy to see what
popular "organic f 0 0 d s1" in a lot of "organic foods " is visitors.
the delay·was ordered to allow mine. And then I knew wlierever my boy wu tonight that there
TODAY'S
QUESTION
Visitors? "Tourisbi" seemed he did. He decided to oren
Can one be assured that they related to the difference in
fo'as a power stronger than mine that would reach out and grasp
You do· bid five spades. Your flll'lllen ud tbe A&amp;rfCIIIture his band In mine.
are grown without chemical when the food is harvested. the teed.off travel writer's a trump and was carefu to
,
fertilizers•
I suspect that a lot of people perjorative term, as If he and lead the nine. Obviously opponents go to six hearts and Departmeat time 1o evaluate
Thelma Berry, Middleport, Ohio, 338 Wllll.im St. -.
·
don't know the dtfference beSouth was a goad plaxer and then to seven hearts after your IDformatloD from a apeclal
we
all
weren't
tourists,
every
six spade bid. East bidS the Ju. Z'l report on farmers'
he fell into the trap. '
Dear Reader-Like many tween a :watermelon ri~ened
visillng
one
of
us;
there
seems
Oswald: "That is just what seven hearts. What do you do? lnteaUooa to plut major li7Z
In referencetomyoldestson, Sgt. Charles W. Berry, serving
people from rural America, ~n the vme ·and one shipped
Answer Tomorrow
a
resenUul
resistance
among
h a P pen e d. South studied
or almost anyone raised be- , half green to the store. Most
In
the
army forces somewhere in Vietnam.
•
CfOJII.
fore World War rr, I grew up of the food m s~p~rm!Jrkets many travelers to e'ven think of
•
' .
on organic food . Every farm IS p1cked· before 1t 1s npened themselves as "tourists,"
boy did. I've hauled manure by nature. And that, has very althoqgh that alone is what
not in .little pails but by the httle to do w1th whethe~ .you Acapulco is there for- to cater
wagonload. It w a 5 custom . hauled l!lanure or ferllhzed to us tourists, including the
ary for people to grow all by chemicals.
ain't-we-chic set which conIncidentally. as __rar as siders its membership
their own food and can it.
The cellar was the winter health ~oe~1 des~1te orgamc
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) - the railroad filed for reorganl- member of the Impeding Central resources for ihelr
current charges and why tb~
~torehouse for w h a t you gardemng
wh1ch was all somehow superior to tourism. Mismanagement, frsud and
zation
under
the
bankruptcy
financial
d!Baster.
The·
report
peraonal
profit.
They
also
said
Take
our
family
of
four,
for
rallroad ,had colla))led.
raised in the summer. Like t h a t was available a few
ideptitude
all
have
been
law·
.
New
charges
about
where
'llllld
the
warnlnp
in
1969
by
•
that
the
diversification
prO:.
all small all-purpose farms ~· ears back, all those people instance, veteran travelers aU,
"There's a lot of lhinp I could
even the livestock were fed eatmg orgamc foods regular- including 13- and 14-year.old charged in the flnancilll col- the blame Ilea are still being Robert S. Ode!\ of San Fran- gram, headed by Be~an, tell, rut I'm not talking," be
on organic food _ c r 0 .p s ly got s1ck and had health Bridget and Kate, who've lapse of the Penn Central made and ewn the most op.. cisco were "rep~atedly drained large amounis of cash said. "I'm not giving out any
raised the natural way. we problems not different from vacationed nine years in a row railroad.
timistlc persoll8 'involved are sidetracked by management." from the railroad and waa inteviews."
even picked potato bugs off those that we contend. With
It Is a year and a half since not saying the trouble Is over,
Court-appointed trusteea of inatrumental 1n bringing about
the vine by hand. So I am to d a,y . Only ~nhblolics in Europe: it was the 42nd
Patman praised ~··
"'lie
are
dellnltely
making
the
railroad, now under banltruptcy.
actions, saying It wa1 In
amused by the new fad of weren t ava1lable m earlier plane trip for Bridget, 40th for
II'Ogress -110lld progress. But reorganization, filed a suit in
.....,._ charged that Bevan, "direct contrast with the li1111t
organic foods. I wish 1 could days and a lo~ of other chem- Kate; neither haS any prideful parlors, Kentu.cky Fried 't
t be
luded that th
fed
....-amc
e · eral court here themselves """~e and I.aulter "con""'•ed emanating from the Juatlce
have shared some of that or. ICals that have saved a lot snootiness about being a Chicken invaders, mostly tp canno Ce tr
1 cr 1a1s has last April charging two former '"""'
.,... to
enn
n
a
in their corporate activities
ganic experience when I was of lives.
tourist. They enjoy it.
Department In Wal!biJcton."
young people, traditionally passe d"
ld
Willi
H
ffl
and
·
, sa
am . o cera
a partner In an •divert 1n excess of t21 million
a boy with some of today 's
I strongly support people
We elders have been to some
The three auapecta, who were
Investment firm with ~g88lng from the treasury of the Penn
enthusiasts.
raisin~ their own .food and 30 to 35 countries - always denizens of the less expensive, Moore, new president and chief
held In $50,000 ball each, denied
I have also raised lots of think It is good clean fun. It satisfyingly as tourists, loving anti-chic areas expounded so executive officer of the raJI. In conspiracy that lost millions Central for themselves and
the
charges, which Bevin, In -a
food using chemical ferti- is a wonderful hobby. But as
regreUully ·
road.
of dollars and contributed to others."
virtually
every
second
of
. statement released throlllh bls
We've rubbed elbows against
Th House B•-'-'- "---•t
lizer. There is nothing wrong a scientist I'll have to stop
e
........
,g
""''"'""
the
bankruptcy.
ll......ter said other - g . attorney, called ''Incredible."
traveltng
·now
almost
unwith it. Nitrogen is good for there and realize that some
the limp wrists of the chic for tee , con c1uding an I'-·
"t""'
"'~'
"""'nth
But although the giant do•~
Included "Laulter's
prothe soil that needs it, wheth- enthusiasts a r e overselling countable limes by air, sea, decades In New York and st dy
Bevan said he wu being
ld
the co11a)llle was a ca,rlei''s lines stretm frml M'"'"~
""' of yonna women to
u
,
sa
.
er it comes in a bag in pow· the idea with wild , unscien- train, limousine, jeep; if you eisewhere; but we got a bigger " t
~
·~·"'
-.., and Ho""e made a "scapegoat" and that
s ory of m1smanagemcnt,
C8nd11d to Missouri · and ac.....,....,~
Bevan
dered form , in the manure lific claims.
can rent It, we've tried it.
Specter, waa making a "grave
boo\ out of meeting assorted poor judgment , cormpUon and traverse 16 states, It ~emalned on -..-...
various junkeis In ""
the mistake."
\ \ wagon or is put in the soil
And so our very-tourist
..
,
for a local cllatrlct attorney to United States and Europe"
by legumes (bean faiJiilY) ,
family' on this Acapulco Yule orbital set McDivltl8, CUn· frivolous behavior."
"EICept for the fact tbat I
~ lants t h a t take mtrogen
nlnghams and • Aldrins and
The Interstate Commerce take the first a-Imina!. action and setting up of other ~
trip
met
nine
American
from the air. Nitrogen after
other absolutely out~f-this- Commission's enforcement Involving the rallroad's col- and stand-ins "to shield the am experiencing It myself, I
astronauts
and
their
families,
would say that this sort of thiDfl
world celebrities thsn aU the st a ff sald p enn centra)' 1 lapae.
r11, .is nitrogen . The ' same Frozen Funds
·.
conspirators."
all
friendly
and
joyfully
unchic
can be said about a lot of
Last Wllek, Philadelphia Dt:J..
A 110urce 1n the dlstrlct at- just cannot happen In Amerl·
as ignored down the posey resident Jelset..!rupposedly-in- management dissipated the
other chemicals used to build
people who are merely railroad's assets and !l'oduced trlct Attorney Arlen, Specter torney's office nlhled at ca," he laid.
up the soil.
schnozz of the dissatisfied relentlesaly
F. Lee BaUey, ·Lassiter's at·
worldly.
"total chaos" after a 1968
111 cr1m1n 1
furth
. There is no doubt that good Partially Thawed
travel writer ... We chatted
The nine astronauts were in
·
swore 0
a warranis
er arrests bill neither torney, labeled .the· chirses·
soil raises good plants. That
merger of the Pennsylvania agalll8t three men, Including Specter nor his top aide first
with one of the few. billionaires
is just common sense. Any
Acapulco without a hint of and New York . Central one who had been the ~sslstant District Att~rney "Frivolous" and promised
WASHINGTON
(UP!)_
The
we've
known,
Glement
Stone
of
g o o d farmer can tell you
publicity; they weren't hiding rallioads.
·
rallroad'.s th!rd·hlghest Richard A. Sprague, would Specter ''the battle of his life.''
that That ,is part . of what Nixon administration, Chicago, who has no lime to be out, just anxious to have some
Amid the swirl of charge.
Rep. Wright Patman, D- ranking executive, charging a · comment on this.
makes the difference in up. responding to heavy farm bloc chic and makes millions of
and
counter·char,es.-court•
natural fun with their wives Tex., chairman of the House conspiracy which he said
And federal authorities also
land iliid bottomland.
and congressional pressure, dollars a ~ear, with which he and youngsters without the Banking Committee, who contributed directly to ' the remained silent on the appointed trustees Gt!Orse P.
On the whole I think the released last week $109 rilnuon supports politicians galore,
Baker, , Richard C. Bond,
organic food movement is a of t216 million in frozen funds notably Including Richard distorted extra-orbital at- sealed the 1970 fate of the collapse of the Penn Central. possibility of any criminal
tenUontheyfearandavoid; the railroad when he refused to
The warrants were against prosecutions Involving the Jervice Langdon 1r., and w.
healthy one. I am not con·
for
rural
electrification
loans.
Nixon;
and
who
assured
us
1972
Willard Wirtz, worked to turn
fused by some of the unscien·
tra~itions Qf naturalness and · .approve a $125 mllllon ad- · David C. Bevan, former Penn Central.
The
action
by
the
Office
of
will
be
a
"great
year,"
and
tlfic claims sometimes made
openness we've)ieen on TV and, ministration -backed loan, chairman of the Penn Central's Louis c. Bechtle, U.S. attor- the fortunes of the ralli'oad
though and know that, as Management and Budget "we're gelling ready for the read about the U.S. astronauta evencrltlci2ed the ICC and the finance committee, Charles ney In Philadelphia, would say around, under the supenlllon
stilted, nitrogen is nitrogen (OMB) was announced by Sen. grea'est sales of our lifetime,"
of U.S. District Judge Jobn P.
In fact, some chemicals thai Herman Talmade, D·Ga:, and though we realize op. as theY. Apollo into tlje once-, Securities and F;xchange Hodge, former chilrman of the only ''the Penn Central investl- Fullam.
.
mystenous yonder Is, we Commission for not ' watchlng lnvesbnent banltlng firm o( gaUon Is being hand!..! by the
are not found in manure are chairman of the Senate timism has been out In recent
In a recent financiAl ala~:
testify from close-up dilly the 'railroad's plight and In· DuPont-Glore-Forgan·, aCI- criminal
divlat;J · -In
need~d for particular soil Agriculture Committee.
social seasons, it's in for this
ment,
the railroad uld ltit '·
observance, Just what 'It forming the public. ,
vlserstolherallroad,andBrig. Wuhlngton. They have
problems.
The OMB had been under New Year which we - rich seemed during their llmellte
losses for the first 11 monlhi of
Patman charged the ICC Gen (Ret) Olbert F J..uli
• Although many people in- considerable pressure to Clement Stone and your headlined exploits : they're "Standa' out a• the __.. inef·
·
·
·
ter, someone assipled to that on a 1971 were about M2 m1111on 11u
,
,
•
.......
fanner president of Executive departmental beals 111 ..thia
clude the question of using release more of the $545 million nsturaUy humble servant - fantastically fine, restralnt!il,
ficlent
and
Ineffective
of
them
Jet Avlatlon'(EJA) Collanbua jUnction."
· than a slrnllar period In lt'lO. &lt;
, . iltsecti~ides in organic gar' ·Congress had approll'iated for drank In together.
natural, underplayed aU" and said ~'the con\mlsslon Ohio
'
'
·
The Noyember, 1171, toaa Uie
denlng - as a purist on the · the rural electrification loan · We wandered through aU casual,
1
he
· f
·
The Justice Depattment 1n 11111 month flgurea were availaroes, more anxtous or peace was ·as surprised as eveey.one
Bevan and Ho!lge, along with Washington had 00 com·
use of the words, I object
ble, was about 311 mllllon leil
· .
to that .wording, w.hether in- (ll'O!ll'am for the current fiscal paris of Acapulco from the and calm than anyone else: el!e when the Penn Central · William R Gtntnecker a ment.
year.
The
rural
cooperatives
€oney
Island
aspects
of
the
thtm
NOVt!IJiber of IflO.
·•
secticides are good _pr bad.
'
they know the 11\YSteries of the 'went ~mder."
former rahd vice president
Stuart T. Sallliders, whc was
who
use
the
government
loans
negative
pie&lt;:e
which
greeleji
I sus~! that insecticides do
future from per!onal odyssey,
The report by the blinking were named In the suit filed
little h a r m if the food i,; to help finance expansion and us- except we enjoyed seeing and want their e1plolis to committee's staff said the last AprU by the trustee• of fx,~ ofIll chairman ' of the
At Its brightest . In ' Ita
properly. wa$hed and pre- other. needs said they were in a the Coney Island element, energize a peaceful universe, Penn Central dlrec(9rs · Penn Centrtil.
1C:: most favorable .
tral
Co.
bef~
.pared before
use, although "credit crisis."
having a fine fast..!~ time at
..
The trustees cbai-ged thtot the railroad flied for bankn •..IcY, with the sun, the pllilet
. assorted chlll-jql,nts, enchilada not just our old truptive, 'repeatedly Ignored ·the warnconstricted world .
ings of a fellow board three ~spired to use' Penn refused to ccmment on the Venus can be seen with the
naked eye at mlddly.

coDJunetlon

•

.'

. By KEITH WISECUP
ROCK SPRINGS - ·Tony
Vaughan put on the greatest
individual effort ever perfo~ by a Meigs eager in
ding ,theMarauderstoa ~
53 win over the Wahama White
Falcbns .here Friday night 1n a
non-league game. .
Vaughan, a 6-2 senior for·
ward-center, hit on 10 of 21
shtrots !rpm the field, five of 10
~ the foul line for 25 polnis,
.and pulled down an amazing 31
rebounds, nearly balanced
between offensive and
defensive retrieves. .
' Vaughan, needless to say,
was· everywhere against the
Falcons. The 31 rebounds in

lea

.

.'
one game is

tui aU-lime Meigs

lll&amp;h SChool record, eclipsing
·thst held by Doxie Walters,
1969-70, and Jeff Morris, 1970.
· 71, of 21. His 25 polnbi was also
themostscoredinonegameby
a Marauder this season.
· Steve Dunfee, the only other
starting senior on the Meigs
squad, popped In 11 points and
·pulled down six rebounds.
Ahdy vaughan, In bls second
straight start, played another
· fine defeoive game, getting II
rebOunds and sill: polnbi. Rich
Bailey helped out the
Marauder cause with ·mght
points.
Ronnie ·Lambert; slick little
Falcon guard, led 'Wahama

with 12 points whlle Mark
Mitchell and Randy Clark each
•added 10~ Mike Howard led the
Falcons In \he rebo9ndlng
deparlrnent with 11.
Coach
Carl
Wolfe's
Marauders jumped out to a
quick 11-2 lead, only to lose it
.- when the Falcona came back
with six straight to go ahead at
8-8. Tralllng 10·8, Meigs
dropped in two twin-pOinters In
the final minute to take a 12-10
first quarter advantage.
The lead see-sawed during
the sec~ quarter, ·wahama
having the lead at the 2:10
mark, 21-18. Bqt in those flnal
two minutes; f11ny Vaughan
and Mike Sayre dropped in two

\

'

buckets each and Rick Ash
connected on a three.point play
while the FalciJ!ls managed
only a free throw. Meigs led,
. 29-22, at the half.
The lead slowly swelled to
nine, then toil, and uq to 16 at
47-31 before the Falcons cut the
:lead to 12 at ~ after three
·•quarters.
The largest Meigs lead was
61-41, coming with 4:41 left in
the game. Wahama came back
with eight straight points to
narrow the final margin to 12.
With the win, Meigs snapped
a five-game losing streak and
won its first game witliout Jeff
Morris, lost for the season. The
Marauder record is 3-6 overall

and 1-4 in Southeastern Ohio
, Athletic League play.
Wahama is now l.Q on the
year, Its only win a
clob- bering of winless Hannan, W.
Va. Roger ·Oingey, 6-4 Junior
forward, w.as ~~~}able to start
for the Falcons against the
Marauders due to an injury,
but plsyfll about silt: minutes in
the final quarter, scoring six
points.

77_..

Meigs hit on 'll of 64 for a
respectable t2 pet. but hit on
only 11 of 'rl from the foul line
for 41 pet. Wahama made 19 of
60 for a chilllsh 31 per cent and
connected on 15 of 24 from the
free throw line for 63 per cent.

.

.

MEIGS.WAHAMA CAGE STATISTICS
FG-FTA FT·FTA RB PF
Dunfee
,
4·.12 3· 5 6 4
'f. Vaughan
10·2i 5·i0 3i
3
2· s
2· 9 i)
3
A. Vaughan
Boggs ·
3· 7 0· 2 3 2
BaUey
. 4· 8 0· 0 D 3
o. o 0· 0 1 0
Werry
The Marauders will be B. Vaughan
1·2 o. o i ' 1
looking for win number tf&lt;o 1n Ash
1· 2 1· 1 0 0
league play this Tuesday night Sayre
2· 4
0· 0 2 1
27·64 11.27 s~ 17
against the Wellston Golden TOTALS
:
Rockets at I'!feigs High School. Wahama
4
Howard
3· 9 •. 1 11
Wellston is also 1-4 in league Mitchell
3· 7 ~· 4 5 . 5
play. ,
I
5· 10 2· 5 2
Lao:nbert
Meigs plays next Friday at Crawford
i·IJ 2· 2 7 2
4·11
2· 6 7 4
Logan, also 1-4 In league play. Clark
Ch.
Roush
0· 2 3· 4 3 2
Thus this week will settle
o. 3 1· 1 2 2
Cu.
Roush
whether the Marauders will
Dingey
3· 5 0· 1 2 2
finish near the bottom, or TOTALS
19·60 15·24 34 22
somewhere in the middle of the
BY QUARTERS
12
league race,
3 4
Wahama
10 i2 i6 i5
Meigs
12 17 21 ·15
Officials, Craft and Wallis.
The Marauders commanded
the boards, often getting
second and third shots. They
outrebounded the Falcons, 5534.

Bagles ·Clobber Highlanders 65-29
r~

loop play. The Pirates will . team with I:i potnis. Dale Whitt
By Quarter~:
battle Eastern Saturday -night had slx markers. Eastern led Eastern
21 8 19 16---fiS
and Symmes V¥Uey Saturday 21-4 at the end of the first Southwestern
4 8 8 8--29
evening.
;
period, 29-12 at the half and 41NHL Standings
NBA Standings
21 going into th~ fourth stanza.
Eastern (651 - Eichinger 9- By United Press International
By United Press International
The Little Eagles also 4-22; caldwell 5-1-11; Cross 3-3East '
Eastern Conference
Dennis Eichinger, lh'l.senior
W
.
l
.
T.
Pis.
Atlantic Division
captured
their
seventh
victory,
center' a three lime .member of
9; Duvall 3-3-9; Young Z-1-li; New York
27 6 6 60
W. l. Pet. GB
· the aU SVAC team, scored 22 44-31, to remain unbeaten In Boring 244; Milhone 1+2; Boston
27 7 5 59 Boston
29 i6 .644
2J 9 7 53 New York
25 i7 .595 2112
poln18 in paclllg the Eagles. reserve play. Sheeis led the Spencer 1+2 and Kirkman 1).]. Montrea&gt;
Toronto
79
13
9
47
Philadelphia
i9 25 .432 9'12
Bob 'Caldwell, 5-10 sento·r winners with 22 polnis. Terry I. Tolala 26-13-65.
Detro)!
16 18 7 39 Buffalo
i2 2'1 .283 i5
guard, had 11 points. Cross and Carter had 12 points for'South·
Southwestern (29j-Smitlr3- Buffalo
8 24 iO 26
Central Division
•
Duvall had nine ~olntS each. western.
ft.I2; ,Whitt ~;Trowbridge 2- Vancouver
10 24 ~ 24
W. l . Pet. GB
West
Balflmore
19 22 .463 ...
Southwestern wlll host South 0-4; OiUoq 2-0-4; Fortner 1+2;
Mark Smith, i-3 senior, led
W.
L.
T.
Pis.
Cleveland
i5 27 .357 4'12
Coach Richard Hamllton 's Webster Tuesday night.
and Lewis I).].J. Totals 11·7-29. Chicago
28 8 4 60 Atlanta
15 28 .349 5
M&gt;nnesota
22 i2 5 49 Cincinnati
iO 3i .244 9
Ca)lfornla
12 22 9 33
Western Conference
Philadelphia
i2 20 7 31
Midwest Division
St.louis
12 22 7 31
w. L. Pel. GB
Pittsburgh
11 23 7 29 Milwaukee
36 8 .818 ...
los Angeles
11 . 30 1. 23 · Chicago
• 30 i2 .71&lt; 5
Sunday's Results
Phoenix
25 19 .568 11
Chicago 5 Montreal 2
Detroit
i7 27 .386 i9
2
Buffalo
i
"
Pacific
Division
·Toronto
By BilL MADDEN
McGuire 'escaped ~th a 72-71
Both Mcpuires, whUe .. ex. In the game, cut the Warrior New York 8 los Angeles 0
w. L. Pet. GB
UPI Sporti Writer
. win owr the fourth r8l)ke'd pounding on an excellent game margin to 72-71 on a jumper. Philadelphia iO C4)1fornia 3
Los Angeles ~9 4 .907 ...
(Only games scheduled)
Seattle
26 i9 .578 i4
It figured that when two , once beqten South Carolirul by both !el!ffiS, sof\iledalled · Marquette then missed lf&lt;o
Monday's
Games
Gol~enState
24 i9 .558 i5
"fighting Irishmen" named Gamecocks ol Frank McGuire the fight which saw S.C.'s Tom opportunities on the free throw
No games scheduled
Houston
i5 28 .349 24
McGuire from the streeis of 001 not before (I) two key Riker and Marquette's Bob line but Joyce missed a pair of
Portland
iO 35 ..222 30
New}!'ork lroughtthelr college players were. ejected for Lackey eje'cted from the game jumpers for S.C. which could
Sunday's Results
AHL Standings
By United Press International Baltimore 109 Phoenix i03
buketball teama tqgether fire. fighting, (2) Marquette tnistM!il' early In the second half. .
have woo the game.
Mllw. i20 Los Angeles i04
East
Marquette was In command
"When Peterson started hitworks would fly, and SUnday's a pair of last Second onMn-one
L. T. Pis. Detroit iOi Buffalo 96
w.
Marquette.South Carolina situations and (3) South throughout most of the game ting I said: 'Who the hell is this Boston
24 9 7 55 Chicago los Cincinnati iO~ loll
18 13 9 45 Golden State 113 Houston 112
gamellveduptoallltsadvance carollna's· star Kevin Joyce despite a partls.an ·pack'ed guy'?," said AI McGuire. "We Nova Scotia
Spr&gt;ngfleld
i5 i3 . 8 38 Seattle i25 Boston 119
hooplah.
twice miSsed opportunities io house at Carolina Coliseum, were ·very fortunate to wln - Prdvldence
11 i9 9 31
(Only Games Scheduled)
The second ranked unbeaten • Wlfl the game with a final but with one minute remaining, you'll never see Kevin Joyce Rochester
i2 20 5 29
Monday's Gomes
West
Game~k soph Ed Peterson,
that cold again,"
Marq\[ette Warriors of AI bucket.
ABA ,Standings
W. l. T. Pis. By United Press International
who hit se~n of eight baskeis
Frank McGuire, who noW
Hershey
20 i0 6 46
East
has seen his charges loae two Baltimore
19 i5 5 43
w. l. Pel. GB
heartbreakers by a point each Richmond
i6 i6 6 38 Kentucky
349 9 .791 ...
i6 i6 6 38 Virginia
lime 'this season, was philoso- ·Cleveland .
27 i7 .6i4 71h
·Cin'
c
lhnatl·
i4 i8 9 37 F&gt;or'l~lons
19 N .442 is
phical 'hi · defeat~" "Yoii "win' Tidewater
9 25 4 22 New York
i8
25 .4i9 i6
some and you loae' some and It
Sunday'• Results
Pittsburgh
18 28 .391 17'12
doesn '! hurt u much when a Richmond 8 Hershey 3
Carollna
i5 39 .333 20
Baltimore 6 Clnclnnatl 2
West
good team beats you. Losing to Springfield
4 Providence 1
W. l . Pet. GB
AI today was like losing to a Nova Scotia 8 Rochester i
Utah
3i 13 .705 ...
ll;other," the veteran Game- Boston 1 Tidewater 1
Indiana
24 i9 .55S 6'h
Monday's Gomes
Denver
i7 23 .425 i2
cock mentor said.
No games scheduled
Memphis
18
25 .4i9 i2'h
In Saturday's games, top.,
Dallas
i9
27 .41l i3
half," said Jabbar. "It seemed why it ended."
ranked UCLA continued on the
1By JOE CARNICEW
Sunday's
Results
Adams 77
UPI Sporll Writer
to work out aU rigllt.''
- The three previous Los unbeaten traU with an easy 93- Cleveland John
Indiana iOO Utah 97
Cleveland East 43 New
York i05 Dallas 97
It took a superli effort by the
Blames Tul'IIOven
Angeles losses this season 68 wln over Oregon., Third- Youngstown No. 44 Akron East
Memphis
118 Floridians i08
National Basketball AssociaLarry Costello, the Mllwauk· came when West was out of the ranked
North Carolina 43
(Only
games
scheduled)
Akron No. 60 Walsh Jesu)t 49
tion's M01t Valuable Player ee coach, felt his club should lineup with·an Injured leg.
trounced Furman 11~ in Celina
Monday's
Games
82 Sidney 70
and the league champions to have broken the Laker streak.
No
games
scheduled
Well's ZO Polnll
tuning up. for next weekend's St. Henry 83 Coldwater 52
•
finally end the Los Angeles "I'm glad we were the ones to
Lucl111 Allen hit IS poinis and key matchup with surprising
Lakers' pro record wltmlng end that streak," said Costello, John Block added 17. for the unll.eaten VIrginia. The II'"
streak at 33 games,
who devised a defense to Bucks whUe West led the Laker ranked Cavaliers proved they
Kareem · Abdui.Jabbar, thwart
Los
Angeies' attack with 20 pointa. The were for real by beating N.C.
taklnB advantage . of rival famed
fast-breat
at- game was cloee untU the third State 114-73 at Raleigh.
seven-footer Wllt Cham· tick. "We should have quarter when the Lakers tied
Fifth-ranked Indiana
00
ber~ool troublee, erupted been the onei to break it. Our th~ score at~ with 4:39 left dropped lis second· straight .
&lt;ifl!llllvely1n the second half to defense won the game for us. and Milwaukee went on a 11).2 decision 52-51 to Minnesota,
United Pren International
Perry 56 Clakwood 47
lead the MUwaukee Bucks to a We feU back fut and cut off tear to push ahead.
sixth.:rated Loujsvl])e dumped Newark Plme 94
Tuslaw 55 lake 43
·120-lot victory over the Lakers their fast break.''
'
In other NBA action Sl!llday, Cincinnati 84-76, No. 7 Penn ·
Coshocton Sacred Hesrl82 Barberton 90 Akron Firestone
&amp;mday, ending a streak1 that
Blll Shannan, the Laker Chicago whipped Cincinnati trounced Harvard 81.Q2, No. 9 Cleveland Baptist Christian 77 51
~ceola (Mich.) Chrlstlan6i
Ravenna 53 Akron Eliot 52
had ~ on Oct. 31.
coach, credited turnovers with 108-104, Golden State edged Ohio State defeated Purdue 76- Cleve&gt;and
John F. Kennedy 89 Akron Buchte) 76 Sp'gfleld
JabiiU-'1 II Points
his team's loss. "You can't Houston 113-112, Baltimore 70, and tenth-ra~ Maryland .
Cteve&gt;and John Hay 46 Twp. 74
Jabber, who won the MVP have tbat many turnovers (Sf) downed Phoenix 109-103, des ambushed 63-61 by Cleveland West Tech 54
Akron Centra. Hower 52
"-·ton 1..
d
·
Cleveland Rhodes 45
Akron St. Vlncent36
award as .Lew Alclndor , last and ~xpect to wln," said SeatUe beat"""
...-119 an
emson.
Parma Normandy 56 Shaker Edgerton 69 Paulding 68
season, hit 11-d-15 allots from Shannan. "You might be able . Detroit defeated Buffalo 101-86.
Southern Cal began the road Hts 44
Stryker 50 Della 4.5
tbe floor In the second half and to beat some poor teams, but
Chet Walker scored seven of back after Its embarrassing BeachwOOd Bi cardinal 70
Fairview 98 Hilltop 50
Fayette 6i Hicl&lt;svllle 52
bls · 33 polnta In overtime aa , defeat to Penn in the Kodak Cleveland lutheran East 58
flnlalled with II points and :/AI not the' World Champs."
Newbury 50 Ayrsvllle 75 Pettisville 48
reboundll.
,Jerry West, the !..akers' star Chicago beat the Royals, Classic. The Trojans, matching Co&gt;umbla a~ Keystone 45
No. Central 73 Montpeller 51
Jabber, who hit only 7-d-19 guard who played In bls first Cincinnati's 14th conaecutive strides with UCLA 1n the Brecksville · 65
Toledo Woodward 75 Bryan 55
shots In the first half, went to loslilg game this season, said, loss. Cincinnati led by as many Pacific Eight, thumped Oregon Western Reserv,e Academy 39 Tl nora 70 Ed on 58 .
lincoln 53 Can. South 46 Defiance 63 Bowllng Green 60
work u Chamberlain picked "We just didn't play well at aU. as 20 polnis in the first half State 85-75 for a weekend Can.
Can. Lehman 85 Col. Mof1awk Cleveland Benedictine 61
up bls fourth personal foul. He You can't take anything away before the Bulla rallied to win. sweep of the Oregon schools. 51
Cleveland Colllnwood 58
dominated action under the from the Bucks, though. They
Cmle's 3-polnl Play
Florida State, No. 12, routed
Tlmkln 66 Can. Glenwqod Cleveland East Tech 95
·
Cleveland Gelnvllle 72
offl!llllve backboard and hit pJsyed aggressive ball and
Cazzie Russell scored 31 East Tennessee State 106-63, Massillon. 59 Canton c.c. 57
Cleveland Hoi{. Name 84
oonslstently on allort jump really-did a job. Their defense poinis, lreludlrlli a key .three- but St. John's lost 86-33 to lou&gt;svllle 6i North Canton 53
G eveland Sooth 65
llhois.
Cleveland St. Ignatius 78
was great. 'fhey kept our of. point play with 51 seconds left, Syracu.se. For the 13th-ranked Fairless 57 Jackson 33
Cleveland John Marshall 54
"I was missing the hoolt so I fense outstdjl and we juat as Golden State beat the ' Redmen, It was their second Kidron Central Ch~~s;;~~e6s~ 62
Bush 67 East Cleve: Shaw 62
just sort of manuf!lctured a couldn't penetrate. We really Rockets .for Its sixth straight straight loss.
.
Sandy Valley 7i
Euclid 86 Gar.field Heights 55
little jump shot In the second couldn't do a~thlng and that's victory.
The remainder of the top 20
Indian Valley North 62 lakewood 65 Parma Valley
Valley 6i
Forge 6i (ot)
all wer'e v1ctorlous Saturday. Conottcn Tuscarawas
Valley 59
VIllanova USth tied) beat Cambridge 74 coshocton 67
Canlslus 69-65, Kentucky River VIew 75 Heath 53
U
bested Mlsslsslppl93-62, South- ~dian Valley So. 80 lakeland
"fl
j
•
Louisiana sneaked by Garaway 33 Mans . St. Peters 59
. North GaUla, behind a 22Federal-Hocking jumped
The Pirates hit 23 of 51 field western
Northeastern Louisiana 75-73 New Phlla. 59 Claymont 57
point effort by Arthur Clark,&amp;- into a 12-10 lead "In the first goals for 42 pet. They also Missouri nlpped·OhJo U. '1&amp;-71l .Warren }f'al 79 Pt. Pie&lt;~sant.
R
5 senior center, defeated p period as Hall; Schloss and converted 15 of 28 charity
and Brigham Yoimg 'topJl!ed
Wahama cw.va.) 53
.
stubborn Federal-Hpcking Mitch Daugherty broke thq 'tosses. Federal-Hocking
Steubenville
50
ieam, 61.Q3 Saturday night in a Pirates' :tone defense.
Trldolphla
(W. Va.l JO
·
canned 23 fl~ld goal atte~pls Arkansas Tech 88-67.
Paden City, W. va . 72 River 70
·
.
non-league game at North
NorUi GaUia went inio a and seven of 11 free throws ..
-:'
, ~-., 'otl
,
Gallla. It was North Gallla's man-to-man-defense In the
North Gallia had 52 rebounds
The Daily S.ntu ';t": McKinley 66 Akron Gart.
sbtth Win 1n eight gamu. The second period and took a 'll-25 with Clark grabbing 22 and
DEYOT&amp;DTOTHE
Lorain Catholic 82
E d
Lancers are 4-3 on-the year.
lead at t~e half. Glark, Crosswhite getting 16.
ME 1::.~~~~~ ~FREA
' louisville St. 'Thomas Aquinas · 210 'ln
Pomeroy
Clark was the ll\8jor scoring Crosswhite and Stout were the
Tl)e Pirates won the reserve ·
CIM:STEA L. TANNEHILL, 12
Pllonli9J2.S428
threat for Coach Jim F01ter's point-maker• during the tilt, 29-28.
Extc. Ed.
ROBERT
HOEFLICH,
Green and White Machine, He · scoring surge. The first half
North Gallia hosts Eas~rn
City Editor •
ssnk nine field goals in 11 at- featured sloppy ball handling Friday night In an important
Publ is hed dally 'except
Saturday
by The Ohio Valley
tempis.
.· .
from both teams. .
SVAC contest and Symmes
Publishing Company, 111
Two others 1n double figtirea
North Gallla, · playing 11 Valley Saturday night.
Court St., Pomeroy , Ohio,
•
45769. Buslnns
fU'RNITURE
were Gary Crosswhite, 6-4 sletidy third period moved Into
992.2i56,
EdllorialOffice
PhonePhone
992 .'
By
Quarters:
junior forward with 16 points a 43-37 lead going Into the final
2157.
se,ond class postage paid at ,
~•g 1110 ·
111d Pat ~I, 5-10 senior eight tn\mltes of action. With' Federal Hocking 12 25 37 53 , Pomeroy,
Ohio .
....~ •ilfl
10 27 43 61
guard finished with . 13 4:36 remaining, the Lancers North Gallia
National ' advertising
·-.
SlS.OO 'DownFedeni·Hocklna (53) - : representat ive. Boltlnelli .
markers. Larry JUlius, 6-4 using 1 preu, cut the Pirates'
Gallagher, Inc ., 12 East &lt;2nd
Balan"t On
Russell 2-0-4; ,Schloss 4-:1-10; St ., New Vork City, New York .
1111nior forward, who scored 28 lead· to four points, 51-47.
'"',
polnti Friday night, had only
North Gallla upPed Its lead to Smith 3-3-9; Daugherty 244; • 1 Subscription 'roles: De · I Convenlt'll
Term~.
three Saturday night. Justus etghtpolnll on baskets by Tony Hall 5-2-12; Dunfee 44!1; and ~ :ael~:~~~ 1bs~ c~~~~~:~r ~~:~~
.
By
Motor
Route
where
carrie;
Meek
~.
Total•
23-7-53.
ut out two quarlers suffering Glassburn, 6-2 senior forward
service not available :" One ·
N~rtb Gallla (II) -Justus 1). month $1.75 . By mall In OhiO
from a bout with the flu.
ana .Harvey Brown, ii-4 senior
Dann:r ~U had 12 points In . guard. With 31 seconds left, the 3-3; Crosswhite 7-71-16; Clark &amp;- , and W. Va ., One Ytlr $1•.oo~ ·
Sl)( months S1 . 25 . Three
pac1na the l01ert1. Jim Schloaa Pirate• led 58-63 aild had a 4-22; Stout 4+13; tlrown 244; , mopths
S-4 .50 . S~bscriptlon
•
Includes Surlday Times . I '•
poUre&lt;t 1n 10 potnll for CO.Ch technical foul shot plus the and Glassburn J.J.J. Totals .23- . price
sentin•l
ii Mason. W.Va.
15-41.
Mark Smith's Lancers.
)lall.
""
·: _ __;i '
........_ __, - - - - - - - - - : - - - - - - - .
Coach BID Phllllpa' Eastarn
Eagles posted their seventh
vl~tory In elg()t attempts
Saturday night by downing the
winless Southwestern
lli&amp;hlanders, ~29 in an SVAC
tilt at Southwestern. Eastern Is
In second place in the loop
standinp with a 6-1 record.
Coach Wayne W~lte's
Syirm\es Valley VIkings are in
the driver's seat with ah 8-0
reclll'd and 8-0 mark in the
league. North Gallla Is 5-1 in

~ists

Fly ln·i. Marquette•SC Tilt .

Bu~ks. ,S nap :LA Str~ak:·:;

At 33 In Row, 120-i-0~

Saturday's Ohio High
Sch [ Cage R esul1S

fs"'

,'Z;.~!·65

3 ROOMS
I NEW•

I

MASON

FURNITURE

•

8
0

2
3
4
65
7

iO
i2
4
10
3
i
6

53
F

53
65

Little Ms Win 41-31
ROCK SPRINGS - The
Meigs Marauder reserves
snapped a two-game losing
streak by defeating the
Wshama reserves here Friday
night, 41-31.
An outbreak in the third
quarter gave the little
Marauders their fifth win in
nine outings. They trailed 8-6
after the first quarter and 17-12
at the half. IP the third period,
Coach Bill Wickline's Meigs
squad produced 14 polnbi to
only four for the little Falcons.
Bill Chaney again led the
little Marauders in scoring
with 12 while Steve Price
pumped In II and Floyd
BuF,ney 10. Haymaker led
Wahama with .II.
Meigs made 14 of 37 from the
field for 37 pet. and 13 of 28

from the foul line. Wahama
connected on 10 of 38 from the
field for '1:1 pet. and 11 of 15
from the charity stripe.
MEIGS, Price 4-3-11, Myers
0-0-0, Olaney 5-2-12, Floyd
Burney 4-2-10, Fred Burney 1-24, George 1).[.], Couch 1).].],
Ash 1).1-1, May 0-0-0, Kiser 1).].
I, Lefebre 0-0-0. Totals 14-13-41.
WAHAMA, Haymaker 2-7·11,
Gardner 3-0-6, Riley o-2:2,
Lewis 4-0-8, Keeper 1·1·3,
Buzzard 0-0-0, Ferguson 0-0-0,
Kearns 0.1-1. Totals 11).11-31.
By quarters :
Wahama
8 9 4 1()...'11
Meigs
6 6 14 15--41
Officials, Sarver and Reger.

AIDITI1411 II
lllSUitE'"Itll • . • •

OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
BASKETBALL SCORES
Berksh&gt;re 64 Rlchmont His. 62
Kirtland 67 Fairport Harbor 45
North Ridgeville 69 Amherst 63
lorain Clearvlew 73 Mldview
61
Wellington 90 Vermillion 82
()eve. lutheran West 66 Avon
63
Buckeye 92 Highland 62
Bay V&gt;llage 70 Berea 4i
Palnesv)lle Harvey 61 Motor 48
Cleveland Cathedral latin i02
Gilmour Academy 80
Ashtabula Harbor 90 Madison
7i
Lorain Adm . Kng 84 Southview

60

-:·-".....\.~

,

Borromeo Seminary 41
Cuyahoga Valley 36
Farmington 17 ledgemont 64
South Amherst 70 Ledgemont
64

..

So. Amherst 70 Flrelands 55
Columbus Walnut Ridge 76 ·
Columbus Whetstone 54
Columbus North 7~
Columbus East 59
Cols. South ii5 Cots. Central 96
Columbus Eastmoor 70
Columbus Brookhaven ~8
Columbus St. Charles 60
Columbus St. Rita 48
Grove City Si ~ols. Westland 53
lucas 78 Nw A&gt;bany 66
Cols. Academy 69 Danville 6i
Newark Cath. 60 Centerburg 58

you .• wa.ntl
life
homeowners
·~urll!&lt;:e. we wll1 ~~~~
a policy ·.to fit
Iildlvldual
requlr'emenh
Dlll!:uss ~our specHit:l
needs with us.
Whether

auto,

..

DlviWnrl•
114

It's another pair of feet to
shoe. Another body to clothe.
A whole other life to be
provided for.
That's why it's important
to plan for each child.

2. OUR
CLEA
' NlNG

'Pirates Knock Off Lancers·

.

TP
11
25
6
6

Meigs :

(U

pon ~Uest)

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

Planned Parenthood
Children by choice.
..·Not chance.

For further infol'mation, write
·Planned Parenthood, Box 431
Radio City Station, N.Y. 10019
lldwortlslnl conlrlblottd lor tilt PAJbllc ,&amp;aod In COOHrltiOft with
Ill~ Aclvcrti3ln&amp; Cllu~ll •nd tht lntetr. ;\•Jriel "•wa,a,.r AdwtrUifftl t:lla..Uvt•

�..

' .

..

2- ~Dally Settlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Jan. to, 1m

.r---------------~------~----~

•

~

!Heleti Help· Us l ~~ce
~
Hele~
~ along
Br'Way
By

Bottel

-

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

Tiiey11 Do It :every Time

TR'i 16 HE /MY SHOP F'OREMAJ-.1

F005T'ER CAN'T GET' THE L.EI'ST' T1JMBLE
FROM HENNA CE THE 6TEOO POOL· • ·

Coll11nlellve !.ellen Ill op.iaa, Ia 11111 IMte, . .
wt~eomell. '1\e edit« ftlen'tll llle Nld le
Jilin;
All !ellen 1111111 be 1ipe4, wllll a fall addrwa, a1* at
llllllall may be lMtl 1po11 reqllllll.
•· !

•rta

.B~_j~~~~

••• ~.. laUJI"l,:

Pushes for Higher Supports
tr.

Lead Deceives Oppo~ent.

•sN~TH

2.

,.••

or Not to

~erga·nic-

Foo'ds··

3. .• .•

ca·use Confusion

Charges Cloud Penn Central's· Rebirth

11-:-,:em

,.

\

3- The llliJySentlnel,M!ddJepart~oy,O., Jan.10,1m

:T.

I

HOW I SPENT 11IE HOUDAYS
Dear Readers :
..!===Today's coliUllll will eJplain why the rest of this week's
BY JACK O'BRIAN
output is oot Bottled in Bahn Bottel. It will be a hodgepodge of
ACAPULCO
DESERVES
-:hatever comes to mind (or in my mail) and will p-obably
Fo1'UJard Strides Recognized
NOKNQCKS
surprise IJie as much as ifdoelt you. These are not' normal times
NEW YORK (KFS)- We
Bidwell, &lt;lllo
at Helen's House. Actually, it's my year to kick Santa Claus!
stepped
off
a
jet
from
Acapulco
January 4,111'12
.Last October I distinctly remember writiru! in HHU. "All!
want for Olristmas is an R&amp;R triP, to Hawaii." Do you suppose whence we'd sneaked off for a
Dear Slr:
tl)e old party at the North Pole is getllng senUe? What he GAVE Yule holiday - we'd dreamed
'lbiB 'is a letter of commendation fpr the strldee fonrilrd
of a green.IJiueilink Christmas
me was a trip to the HOSPITAL- for major surgery yet.
being made in Caring for neglected, dependent chUdten ln"Gallla
· ("look, Dear Santa, isn't it time you turned your rollle over -and first N.Y.·newspaper we
County.
.
·
,'
to a younger man ? Or at least had your glasses changed? Rest peruaed contained a full-blown
For
IOIDe
weeks
now
Jim
and
Jan
Singleton
have
been
the
and Recuperation l got, but with the tab nudging $iOO a day, well, knock at the marvelOUII resort
perman~t superintendent and matron of the GaUia Coiintf
next time remember, str, I prefer white sand under a soft we'd just jetted away from
Qrllcnn's ·Home, Route 160. This (these) appoinbnll!t(a) ,have
tropical sun to precision~uared. sheeis on a hospital bed that most reluctantly.
already reaulted in slgnlflc~~Dt changes for the bett~ent of.~e
Having analyzed the piece on
goes up when YO!! push the 'down' button.")
children Uving 1n this home. People should know about tbls good .·
Now I'm a common garden variety female who, if her toaster a quick second reading, we
\leglnnlng, I think, so let me Jist a few of the advantqes to
quits, gives it a good thump, applies positive thinking, a~d came to the conclusion thst If.
chllcren this appoinbnent has made. . · , ..... .
!l'esto: toast! So, though I'm faithful about my regular the travel knocker had conFirst, for the first time In many years, ~ chlldren have In
checkups, l never ~eally expect anything to go wrong that I can't • sidered the splendid Items and
areas
of
Acapulco,
there'd
residence
a positive father figure. On the plus side, Jim Singleton
fix with the stock whammy: "Zap, symptom, you don't exist!"
Is a veteran of ll'Ofesslonal baseball, currently _qualified to train
Writer Jean Kerr knows what I mean. We women, she says, have been no bitter conclusions
to
make
...
He
blunted~
own
drive our husbands bonkers with weird descriptions of what
Tennessee Walking Horses and judge horse shows; u well as
might behappeninginsideofus. We even sigh a bit if we think we points inevitably with meagre
being"" allof'Oimd sportsman. He is taking~ to take the boys
aren't getllng proper sympathy. Then, when we're up on that · camouflage down toward the
hunting, teach them sporis and generaUy lead th~m In~ Inend of his packaged
~ck e:raminirQ!; table and the doctor asks, "Any problems?" we
volvement in community activities previously ~mcommon to
dissatisfactions . . . He conchtrp, "Heavens, no! I'm Just fine, never better - liut fthii1li my
boys and girls at the home.
cluded the chic people no
husband's got this worry hangup ... "
Secondly, Jan Is also a caseworker on the Ollld Welfare
My doctor, however, knows the feminine mind. He also longer go to·Acapulco; but the - By BERNARD BRENNER was seeking business and con- 25 per cent. It has been clear- Board's siaff. Her professional expertise and personal warmth
WASHINGTON(UPI) -Ina sumer allies to help push the ed urtanbnouoly by a Senate
believes that anY!hing worth doing should have been done John Waynes and the Charles
make a wonderful difference In the chUdten's lives;
challengetoadministtaUonoffi·
measure through the Senate: agriculture subcommittee and
yesterday. So when he decreed, ''Operation!" and I said, "Sure, Revsons were In residence on
'DIIrdly, though this Is only an lmt!resslon•.a vlslt at the hOme
Doc, I think I can save a spot of time for you like about a week their formidable yachts; quite cials who want to defeat a bill The controversial - bill, ap.. is eJpected get quick COO·
over
the holidays left me with ,the dislinct1impresslorr that the
from nell September 13th, he handed me his "Truth in Un· so, we saw them floallng to boost support rates for proved by the House in Decem· sideration ·by the full commitpackaging" lecture, no holds barred.lt starts, "Any woman who lavishly in the great Acapulco grains, the National Farmers, ber, would raise support rates tee when Congress gels back to (home) staff morale is higher than I've seen It because of the
combined favoratile factors Jim and Jan have 11-ought to the )Ob.
puts this kind of thing off even a month is playing games with her I'lay, large enough to contain Union announced last week it for wheat and feed grains by work Isler this month.
For these greatly needed irn(ll'owments in eowiy ·care of
Agriculture Secretary EarlL.
life!" I warms up with crisp allusions to Russian roulette and all the navies of the world at
Butz, who Is trying to . boost children, It seems to me special thanks ~uld be given JUdge
''head in the sand," and ends with ''Of course, Helen, I don't one time; alas, no such bristle WIN AT BRIDGE
·corn prices by buying grain FloweD, Judge of the Probate Court; the ailld Welfare .~
mean to scare you, so I'm giving you six days to get everything of global menace, just a
settled up at home ... "
sprinkling of the Mexican
from the open market, has Itself; and any persans' who helped bring about this fortunate
Navy's
smaller
battle-gray
caUed for defeat rl. the bill on clrcui,itBiance.
Scare me? "Everything settled up" isn't the happiest cboice
GratefullY,
of words, Doctor! It fetched visions of Hi,tler and Eva frantically vessels tied up In (Mll't adangle
grounds It would damage ex·
awhile
and
decided
that
AI
with
strings
of
holiday
lights
•
burning government documents just before (dim lights, 110ft
(Mll'tsales proapecbi and cripple
(Mrs.) Wllllam Ji:. M~y
10
had led from nine-small. This efforts to operate.1972 surplus·
music) ... The End. I thought, "Migawd, aU thoae files of other for the Yule season; turned
• -5
marked East with queen-tenpeople's secrets"' and my diary that I can't even find and have their caMons into Christmas
Where is Your Boy Tonight?
small and gave declarer a control programs.
and you can't get
forgotten what's in it ... and thoae awful pictures Bob snapped ornaments,
'
t K 964
chance to avoid th'e loss of But Tony T. Dechant,. NaUon- Dear Editor:
when I'was sick on the fis(Jin~ boat."
,
more pacifically chic thsn thst,
a
trump trick against that a1 Farmers Union president,
"' ~ 3
EAST
As I watched chUdren, especially boys, playing last summer,
' · s·r
now can you1
''Good-bye now, Doctor, I'w got a date with a match!"
combination. So South cov- said In a statement that Senate
.1094
4Q3
ered the nine with dummy's approval of the blll is urgent. I remembered when my oldest son was small. It seems like Oiily
~ the way home, mY sense of (l'lortUes resurfaced and I
Merle Oberon
was
.AQI052
¥KJ94
jack. East's queen fell to the "Commodity prices have yesterday.
went shopping. Four hours later I drove Into our garage with a presiding over her local al
• J3
. • 87
king.
South entered dummy dropped drastically as a result
To me, he was the most beautiful baby boy I had evil' aeen;
car full of Christmas !l'fBenis and groceries - to be met by a fresco court; the daughter of .J95
.A 10864
with
a
diamond
and
finessed
'
of OVI!I Production in It'll under of CQ,urse the first born is always so. Bill as ·he grew he waa just
rabid husband: "The hospital called and asys you're scheduled an Italian King, Princess
SOUTH (D)
against East's theatrical 10
4
AK872
fur major surgery on Friday. WHAT IS THE MEANING OF Beatrice of Savoy, was par.
of trumps. AI took the trick the dlsaatrous !aeWislde' land Uke other babies: laqghing, playing, and crying. I enjoyed him
.87
THIS?"
tying; Warren Avis, the secret
and led the ace of hearts retirement plan. Part of the so, and of course I wondered :what be would grow up to be. He
t A 1052
'\Help me unload the TV dinners, honey, While I ezplain .. "' of whose social success is, he
and a second heart to East's economic damage to farmers would he the best of whatever It was, I waa sure.
.KQ
We'll skip the ensuing days. SuHiceth to say that Christmas tried harder, was in his fanking. East cashed his ace of can be remedied by prompt · I remember the first day of school, how hard It was to leave
East- West vulnerable
clubs
to set the contract" pa•age of this important ... him, aa he cried when lleft. Also I worried whet) the nurse doled
and New Year's Day passed with Helen still in the fog of tastic vllla; we saw Bob
West North East South
Jim: "The lead Is old-hat legislation," Dechant said.
anesthesia- completely and utterly unaware that ''the season to Taplinger and banker Serge
. the door at the hospital when he had hls tonslla out. Also, lllept
now
in top flight circles.
Pass
be jolly" had come and gone. Oh, well, I'm feeling fine now and, Semenenko at the bullfights,
Pass
close"by at night to see if he was still breathing; and bow many
With any other opening dePass Pass
as for Hawaii: There's always next year I
Pass
and they Invited us to a party
limes I walked the fioor when he had the beUysche; the·tip. I
clarer would bang down the
Opening lead-4 9
for Cary Grant, also In glitace and king of trumps to Signup Delayed
slipped in his. room at night to see if he was warm, and place
tering pers,on the while; so the
drop the queen and make
more covers on his bed.
WASHINGTON (UPI)
edgy travel knocker quoted By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby his game."
Wllh
at
I
tall
011e
move
pendlng
The band..aid I used when he had a scratch or feU down I
To Fertilize
Fertilize Teddy Stauffer, who hadn't Oswald: "Let's talk about (NEWSPAPER ENTElPll51 AIIH.)
to broadaa die IOVet'llllle&amp;l'l
I used to cook his favorite food, and tried •to get clothea he
been able to make his Villa lOs and nines."
l.t'l2 !aria ptodactloa coatrel liked to wear. I held hbn on my knee when he was afraid, arld
Jim : "You don't count any
Ver11. sht1WI'lace a social h$
progrjl!'• l~ifleultare klaaed away his tears wbenSOiiW one said-an~ word&lt; ..,· ~
··:po(~t~.for
them, but 'you u~e
and. so lost it ,... He stress~
DepM.
I IIIIi' tlftl~t ~ , lo
The
bidding
hu
beem
HoW-wy it wis'thiri. ...... _.. .. :-.~~~ ...'-'' ,l': ~
mainly the "Coney Island theu presence or absence to ~·•t North Eut South pve liRlf more elbow room for
decide whether or not to bid
Now, mY boy bas grown up and is overseas fighting a war.
aspects" of Acapulco, as if they m a close situation. 1 assume
ftoll pl'9gram dedlloa• by
I wonder If he has clothes to wear; did he eat his 10pper
hadn't always been there.
Pass
Pass
?
your_remark is the/relude 5••
delaylag tbe period for firmer today, is he warm, does he need a button sewed, or a patdl here
The Coney Island aspects to some hand playe before
You, South, hold: '
earollmeat.
and there? I wonder, did he faD down today, Is there 110meone ·
have been there for decades. J was born. "
.KJ865 tAKI0864Z.8
Ori&amp;biii!Y 1Cbe6iled to raa
Oswald:
"Close.
You
were
near
to kiss awaybis fears; did som1!9ne say ali unkind won( Ia
The old native Mexican
What do you do now? ;
from J•. 17 to Feb. 25, the
two
or
three
years
old
when
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D. they can cause other prob- quarter never was chic; just
A-Bid just live spades. You alp-ap period baa 'tieea ablfted he afraid, is he alone, is he happy, or is he sad?
the
late
Albert
Morehead
lems in environment.
But-roy consolation comes aa I remember God'a· proml.ae,
popular, peopled by local · played a hand very similar want to play in six but don't beck to Feb. 3-Marcb 1!.
Dear Dr. Lamb-What do
w•nt your opponents to save at
who
cater
to
the
that
He was always near, and'rellef came as 1 felt Hia hand on 1' ·
citizens
·
·~·
to this one."
'you think of the increasingly
The difference in the taste
Official• aald ID a attllemeat
seven
hearts.
Jif!I: "It's easy to see what
popular "organic f 0 0 d s1" in a lot of "organic foods " is visitors.
the delay·was ordered to allow mine. And then I knew wlierever my boy wu tonight that there
TODAY'S
QUESTION
Visitors? "Tourisbi" seemed he did. He decided to oren
Can one be assured that they related to the difference in
fo'as a power stronger than mine that would reach out and grasp
You do· bid five spades. Your flll'lllen ud tbe A&amp;rfCIIIture his band In mine.
are grown without chemical when the food is harvested. the teed.off travel writer's a trump and was carefu to
,
fertilizers•
I suspect that a lot of people perjorative term, as If he and lead the nine. Obviously opponents go to six hearts and Departmeat time 1o evaluate
Thelma Berry, Middleport, Ohio, 338 Wllll.im St. -.
·
don't know the dtfference beSouth was a goad plaxer and then to seven hearts after your IDformatloD from a apeclal
we
all
weren't
tourists,
every
six spade bid. East bidS the Ju. Z'l report on farmers'
he fell into the trap. '
Dear Reader-Like many tween a :watermelon ri~ened
visillng
one
of
us;
there
seems
Oswald: "That is just what seven hearts. What do you do? lnteaUooa to plut major li7Z
In referencetomyoldestson, Sgt. Charles W. Berry, serving
people from rural America, ~n the vme ·and one shipped
Answer Tomorrow
a
resenUul
resistance
among
h a P pen e d. South studied
or almost anyone raised be- , half green to the store. Most
In
the
army forces somewhere in Vietnam.
•
CfOJII.
fore World War rr, I grew up of the food m s~p~rm!Jrkets many travelers to e'ven think of
•
' .
on organic food . Every farm IS p1cked· before 1t 1s npened themselves as "tourists,"
boy did. I've hauled manure by nature. And that, has very althoqgh that alone is what
not in .little pails but by the httle to do w1th whethe~ .you Acapulco is there for- to cater
wagonload. It w a 5 custom . hauled l!lanure or ferllhzed to us tourists, including the
ary for people to grow all by chemicals.
ain't-we-chic set which conIncidentally. as __rar as siders its membership
their own food and can it.
The cellar was the winter health ~oe~1 des~1te orgamc
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) - the railroad filed for reorganl- member of the Impeding Central resources for ihelr
current charges and why tb~
~torehouse for w h a t you gardemng
wh1ch was all somehow superior to tourism. Mismanagement, frsud and
zation
under
the
bankruptcy
financial
d!Baster.
The·
report
peraonal
profit.
They
also
said
Take
our
family
of
four,
for
rallroad ,had colla))led.
raised in the summer. Like t h a t was available a few
ideptitude
all
have
been
law·
.
New
charges
about
where
'llllld
the
warnlnp
in
1969
by
•
that
the
diversification
prO:.
all small all-purpose farms ~· ears back, all those people instance, veteran travelers aU,
"There's a lot of lhinp I could
even the livestock were fed eatmg orgamc foods regular- including 13- and 14-year.old charged in the flnancilll col- the blame Ilea are still being Robert S. Ode!\ of San Fran- gram, headed by Be~an, tell, rut I'm not talking," be
on organic food _ c r 0 .p s ly got s1ck and had health Bridget and Kate, who've lapse of the Penn Central made and ewn the most op.. cisco were "rep~atedly drained large amounis of cash said. "I'm not giving out any
raised the natural way. we problems not different from vacationed nine years in a row railroad.
timistlc persoll8 'involved are sidetracked by management." from the railroad and waa inteviews."
even picked potato bugs off those that we contend. With
It Is a year and a half since not saying the trouble Is over,
Court-appointed trusteea of inatrumental 1n bringing about
the vine by hand. So I am to d a,y . Only ~nhblolics in Europe: it was the 42nd
Patman praised ~··
"'lie
are
dellnltely
making
the
railroad, now under banltruptcy.
actions, saying It wa1 In
amused by the new fad of weren t ava1lable m earlier plane trip for Bridget, 40th for
II'Ogress -110lld progress. But reorganization, filed a suit in
.....,._ charged that Bevan, "direct contrast with the li1111t
organic foods. I wish 1 could days and a lo~ of other chem- Kate; neither haS any prideful parlors, Kentu.cky Fried 't
t be
luded that th
fed
....-amc
e · eral court here themselves """~e and I.aulter "con""'•ed emanating from the Juatlce
have shared some of that or. ICals that have saved a lot snootiness about being a Chicken invaders, mostly tp canno Ce tr
1 cr 1a1s has last April charging two former '"""'
.,... to
enn
n
a
in their corporate activities
ganic experience when I was of lives.
tourist. They enjoy it.
Department In Wal!biJcton."
young people, traditionally passe d"
ld
Willi
H
ffl
and
·
, sa
am . o cera
a partner In an •divert 1n excess of t21 million
a boy with some of today 's
I strongly support people
We elders have been to some
The three auapecta, who were
Investment firm with ~g88lng from the treasury of the Penn
enthusiasts.
raisin~ their own .food and 30 to 35 countries - always denizens of the less expensive, Moore, new president and chief
held In $50,000 ball each, denied
I have also raised lots of think It is good clean fun. It satisfyingly as tourists, loving anti-chic areas expounded so executive officer of the raJI. In conspiracy that lost millions Central for themselves and
the
charges, which Bevin, In -a
food using chemical ferti- is a wonderful hobby. But as
regreUully ·
road.
of dollars and contributed to others."
virtually
every
second
of
. statement released throlllh bls
We've rubbed elbows against
Th House B•-'-'- "---•t
lizer. There is nothing wrong a scientist I'll have to stop
e
........
,g
""''"'""
the
bankruptcy.
ll......ter said other - g . attorney, called ''Incredible."
traveltng
·now
almost
unwith it. Nitrogen is good for there and realize that some
the limp wrists of the chic for tee , con c1uding an I'-·
"t""'
"'~'
"""'nth
But although the giant do•~
Included "Laulter's
prothe soil that needs it, wheth- enthusiasts a r e overselling countable limes by air, sea, decades In New York and st dy
Bevan said he wu being
ld
the co11a)llle was a ca,rlei''s lines stretm frml M'"'"~
""' of yonna women to
u
,
sa
.
er it comes in a bag in pow· the idea with wild , unscien- train, limousine, jeep; if you eisewhere; but we got a bigger " t
~
·~·"'
-.., and Ho""e made a "scapegoat" and that
s ory of m1smanagemcnt,
C8nd11d to Missouri · and ac.....,....,~
Bevan
dered form , in the manure lific claims.
can rent It, we've tried it.
Specter, waa making a "grave
boo\ out of meeting assorted poor judgment , cormpUon and traverse 16 states, It ~emalned on -..-...
various junkeis In ""
the mistake."
\ \ wagon or is put in the soil
And so our very-tourist
..
,
for a local cllatrlct attorney to United States and Europe"
by legumes (bean faiJiilY) ,
family' on this Acapulco Yule orbital set McDivltl8, CUn· frivolous behavior."
"EICept for the fact tbat I
~ lants t h a t take mtrogen
nlnghams and • Aldrins and
The Interstate Commerce take the first a-Imina!. action and setting up of other ~
trip
met
nine
American
from the air. Nitrogen after
other absolutely out~f-this- Commission's enforcement Involving the rallroad's col- and stand-ins "to shield the am experiencing It myself, I
astronauts
and
their
families,
would say that this sort of thiDfl
world celebrities thsn aU the st a ff sald p enn centra)' 1 lapae.
r11, .is nitrogen . The ' same Frozen Funds
·.
conspirators."
all
friendly
and
joyfully
unchic
can be said about a lot of
Last Wllek, Philadelphia Dt:J..
A 110urce 1n the dlstrlct at- just cannot happen In Amerl·
as ignored down the posey resident Jelset..!rupposedly-in- management dissipated the
other chemicals used to build
people who are merely railroad's assets and !l'oduced trlct Attorney Arlen, Specter torney's office nlhled at ca," he laid.
up the soil.
schnozz of the dissatisfied relentlesaly
F. Lee BaUey, ·Lassiter's at·
worldly.
"total chaos" after a 1968
111 cr1m1n 1
furth
. There is no doubt that good Partially Thawed
travel writer ... We chatted
The nine astronauts were in
·
swore 0
a warranis
er arrests bill neither torney, labeled .the· chirses·
soil raises good plants. That
merger of the Pennsylvania agalll8t three men, Including Specter nor his top aide first
with one of the few. billionaires
is just common sense. Any
Acapulco without a hint of and New York . Central one who had been the ~sslstant District Att~rney "Frivolous" and promised
WASHINGTON
(UP!)_
The
we've
known,
Glement
Stone
of
g o o d farmer can tell you
publicity; they weren't hiding rallioads.
·
rallroad'.s th!rd·hlghest Richard A. Sprague, would Specter ''the battle of his life.''
that That ,is part . of what Nixon administration, Chicago, who has no lime to be out, just anxious to have some
Amid the swirl of charge.
Rep. Wright Patman, D- ranking executive, charging a · comment on this.
makes the difference in up. responding to heavy farm bloc chic and makes millions of
and
counter·char,es.-court•
natural fun with their wives Tex., chairman of the House conspiracy which he said
And federal authorities also
land iliid bottomland.
and congressional pressure, dollars a ~ear, with which he and youngsters without the Banking Committee, who contributed directly to ' the remained silent on the appointed trustees Gt!Orse P.
On the whole I think the released last week $109 rilnuon supports politicians galore,
Baker, , Richard C. Bond,
organic food movement is a of t216 million in frozen funds notably Including Richard distorted extra-orbital at- sealed the 1970 fate of the collapse of the Penn Central. possibility of any criminal
tenUontheyfearandavoid; the railroad when he refused to
The warrants were against prosecutions Involving the Jervice Langdon 1r., and w.
healthy one. I am not con·
for
rural
electrification
loans.
Nixon;
and
who
assured
us
1972
Willard Wirtz, worked to turn
fused by some of the unscien·
tra~itions Qf naturalness and · .approve a $125 mllllon ad- · David C. Bevan, former Penn Central.
The
action
by
the
Office
of
will
be
a
"great
year,"
and
tlfic claims sometimes made
openness we've)ieen on TV and, ministration -backed loan, chairman of the Penn Central's Louis c. Bechtle, U.S. attor- the fortunes of the ralli'oad
though and know that, as Management and Budget "we're gelling ready for the read about the U.S. astronauta evencrltlci2ed the ICC and the finance committee, Charles ney In Philadelphia, would say around, under the supenlllon
stilted, nitrogen is nitrogen (OMB) was announced by Sen. grea'est sales of our lifetime,"
of U.S. District Judge Jobn P.
In fact, some chemicals thai Herman Talmade, D·Ga:, and though we realize op. as theY. Apollo into tlje once-, Securities and F;xchange Hodge, former chilrman of the only ''the Penn Central investl- Fullam.
.
mystenous yonder Is, we Commission for not ' watchlng lnvesbnent banltlng firm o( gaUon Is being hand!..! by the
are not found in manure are chairman of the Senate timism has been out In recent
In a recent financiAl ala~:
testify from close-up dilly the 'railroad's plight and In· DuPont-Glore-Forgan·, aCI- criminal
divlat;J · -In
need~d for particular soil Agriculture Committee.
social seasons, it's in for this
ment,
the railroad uld ltit '·
observance, Just what 'It forming the public. ,
vlserstolherallroad,andBrig. Wuhlngton. They have
problems.
The OMB had been under New Year which we - rich seemed during their llmellte
losses for the first 11 monlhi of
Patman charged the ICC Gen (Ret) Olbert F J..uli
• Although many people in- considerable pressure to Clement Stone and your headlined exploits : they're "Standa' out a• the __.. inef·
·
·
·
ter, someone assipled to that on a 1971 were about M2 m1111on 11u
,
,
•
.......
fanner president of Executive departmental beals 111 ..thia
clude the question of using release more of the $545 million nsturaUy humble servant - fantastically fine, restralnt!il,
ficlent
and
Ineffective
of
them
Jet Avlatlon'(EJA) Collanbua jUnction."
· than a slrnllar period In lt'lO. &lt;
, . iltsecti~ides in organic gar' ·Congress had approll'iated for drank In together.
natural, underplayed aU" and said ~'the con\mlsslon Ohio
'
'
·
The Noyember, 1171, toaa Uie
denlng - as a purist on the · the rural electrification loan · We wandered through aU casual,
1
he
· f
·
The Justice Depattment 1n 11111 month flgurea were availaroes, more anxtous or peace was ·as surprised as eveey.one
Bevan and Ho!lge, along with Washington had 00 com·
use of the words, I object
ble, was about 311 mllllon leil
· .
to that .wording, w.hether in- (ll'O!ll'am for the current fiscal paris of Acapulco from the and calm than anyone else: el!e when the Penn Central · William R Gtntnecker a ment.
year.
The
rural
cooperatives
€oney
Island
aspects
of
the
thtm
NOVt!IJiber of IflO.
·•
secticides are good _pr bad.
'
they know the 11\YSteries of the 'went ~mder."
former rahd vice president
Stuart T. Sallliders, whc was
who
use
the
government
loans
negative
pie&lt;:e
which
greeleji
I sus~! that insecticides do
future from per!onal odyssey,
The report by the blinking were named In the suit filed
little h a r m if the food i,; to help finance expansion and us- except we enjoyed seeing and want their e1plolis to committee's staff said the last AprU by the trustee• of fx,~ ofIll chairman ' of the
At Its brightest . In ' Ita
properly. wa$hed and pre- other. needs said they were in a the Coney Island element, energize a peaceful universe, Penn Central dlrec(9rs · Penn Centrtil.
1C:: most favorable .
tral
Co.
bef~
.pared before
use, although "credit crisis."
having a fine fast..!~ time at
..
The trustees cbai-ged thtot the railroad flied for bankn •..IcY, with the sun, the pllilet
. assorted chlll-jql,nts, enchilada not just our old truptive, 'repeatedly Ignored ·the warnconstricted world .
ings of a fellow board three ~spired to use' Penn refused to ccmment on the Venus can be seen with the
naked eye at mlddly.

coDJunetlon

•

.'

. By KEITH WISECUP
ROCK SPRINGS - ·Tony
Vaughan put on the greatest
individual effort ever perfo~ by a Meigs eager in
ding ,theMarauderstoa ~
53 win over the Wahama White
Falcbns .here Friday night 1n a
non-league game. .
Vaughan, a 6-2 senior for·
ward-center, hit on 10 of 21
shtrots !rpm the field, five of 10
~ the foul line for 25 polnis,
.and pulled down an amazing 31
rebounds, nearly balanced
between offensive and
defensive retrieves. .
' Vaughan, needless to say,
was· everywhere against the
Falcons. The 31 rebounds in

lea

.

.'
one game is

tui aU-lime Meigs

lll&amp;h SChool record, eclipsing
·thst held by Doxie Walters,
1969-70, and Jeff Morris, 1970.
· 71, of 21. His 25 polnbi was also
themostscoredinonegameby
a Marauder this season.
· Steve Dunfee, the only other
starting senior on the Meigs
squad, popped In 11 points and
·pulled down six rebounds.
Ahdy vaughan, In bls second
straight start, played another
· fine defeoive game, getting II
rebOunds and sill: polnbi. Rich
Bailey helped out the
Marauder cause with ·mght
points.
Ronnie ·Lambert; slick little
Falcon guard, led 'Wahama

with 12 points whlle Mark
Mitchell and Randy Clark each
•added 10~ Mike Howard led the
Falcons In \he rebo9ndlng
deparlrnent with 11.
Coach
Carl
Wolfe's
Marauders jumped out to a
quick 11-2 lead, only to lose it
.- when the Falcona came back
with six straight to go ahead at
8-8. Tralllng 10·8, Meigs
dropped in two twin-pOinters In
the final minute to take a 12-10
first quarter advantage.
The lead see-sawed during
the sec~ quarter, ·wahama
having the lead at the 2:10
mark, 21-18. Bqt in those flnal
two minutes; f11ny Vaughan
and Mike Sayre dropped in two

\

'

buckets each and Rick Ash
connected on a three.point play
while the FalciJ!ls managed
only a free throw. Meigs led,
. 29-22, at the half.
The lead slowly swelled to
nine, then toil, and uq to 16 at
47-31 before the Falcons cut the
:lead to 12 at ~ after three
·•quarters.
The largest Meigs lead was
61-41, coming with 4:41 left in
the game. Wahama came back
with eight straight points to
narrow the final margin to 12.
With the win, Meigs snapped
a five-game losing streak and
won its first game witliout Jeff
Morris, lost for the season. The
Marauder record is 3-6 overall

and 1-4 in Southeastern Ohio
, Athletic League play.
Wahama is now l.Q on the
year, Its only win a
clob- bering of winless Hannan, W.
Va. Roger ·Oingey, 6-4 Junior
forward, w.as ~~~}able to start
for the Falcons against the
Marauders due to an injury,
but plsyfll about silt: minutes in
the final quarter, scoring six
points.

77_..

Meigs hit on 'll of 64 for a
respectable t2 pet. but hit on
only 11 of 'rl from the foul line
for 41 pet. Wahama made 19 of
60 for a chilllsh 31 per cent and
connected on 15 of 24 from the
free throw line for 63 per cent.

.

.

MEIGS.WAHAMA CAGE STATISTICS
FG-FTA FT·FTA RB PF
Dunfee
,
4·.12 3· 5 6 4
'f. Vaughan
10·2i 5·i0 3i
3
2· s
2· 9 i)
3
A. Vaughan
Boggs ·
3· 7 0· 2 3 2
BaUey
. 4· 8 0· 0 D 3
o. o 0· 0 1 0
Werry
The Marauders will be B. Vaughan
1·2 o. o i ' 1
looking for win number tf&lt;o 1n Ash
1· 2 1· 1 0 0
league play this Tuesday night Sayre
2· 4
0· 0 2 1
27·64 11.27 s~ 17
against the Wellston Golden TOTALS
:
Rockets at I'!feigs High School. Wahama
4
Howard
3· 9 •. 1 11
Wellston is also 1-4 in league Mitchell
3· 7 ~· 4 5 . 5
play. ,
I
5· 10 2· 5 2
Lao:nbert
Meigs plays next Friday at Crawford
i·IJ 2· 2 7 2
4·11
2· 6 7 4
Logan, also 1-4 In league play. Clark
Ch.
Roush
0· 2 3· 4 3 2
Thus this week will settle
o. 3 1· 1 2 2
Cu.
Roush
whether the Marauders will
Dingey
3· 5 0· 1 2 2
finish near the bottom, or TOTALS
19·60 15·24 34 22
somewhere in the middle of the
BY QUARTERS
12
league race,
3 4
Wahama
10 i2 i6 i5
Meigs
12 17 21 ·15
Officials, Craft and Wallis.
The Marauders commanded
the boards, often getting
second and third shots. They
outrebounded the Falcons, 5534.

Bagles ·Clobber Highlanders 65-29
r~

loop play. The Pirates will . team with I:i potnis. Dale Whitt
By Quarter~:
battle Eastern Saturday -night had slx markers. Eastern led Eastern
21 8 19 16---fiS
and Symmes V¥Uey Saturday 21-4 at the end of the first Southwestern
4 8 8 8--29
evening.
;
period, 29-12 at the half and 41NHL Standings
NBA Standings
21 going into th~ fourth stanza.
Eastern (651 - Eichinger 9- By United Press International
By United Press International
The Little Eagles also 4-22; caldwell 5-1-11; Cross 3-3East '
Eastern Conference
Dennis Eichinger, lh'l.senior
W
.
l
.
T.
Pis.
Atlantic Division
captured
their
seventh
victory,
center' a three lime .member of
9; Duvall 3-3-9; Young Z-1-li; New York
27 6 6 60
W. l. Pet. GB
· the aU SVAC team, scored 22 44-31, to remain unbeaten In Boring 244; Milhone 1+2; Boston
27 7 5 59 Boston
29 i6 .644
2J 9 7 53 New York
25 i7 .595 2112
poln18 in paclllg the Eagles. reserve play. Sheeis led the Spencer 1+2 and Kirkman 1).]. Montrea&gt;
Toronto
79
13
9
47
Philadelphia
i9 25 .432 9'12
Bob 'Caldwell, 5-10 sento·r winners with 22 polnis. Terry I. Tolala 26-13-65.
Detro)!
16 18 7 39 Buffalo
i2 2'1 .283 i5
guard, had 11 points. Cross and Carter had 12 points for'South·
Southwestern (29j-Smitlr3- Buffalo
8 24 iO 26
Central Division
•
Duvall had nine ~olntS each. western.
ft.I2; ,Whitt ~;Trowbridge 2- Vancouver
10 24 ~ 24
W. l . Pet. GB
West
Balflmore
19 22 .463 ...
Southwestern wlll host South 0-4; OiUoq 2-0-4; Fortner 1+2;
Mark Smith, i-3 senior, led
W.
L.
T.
Pis.
Cleveland
i5 27 .357 4'12
Coach Richard Hamllton 's Webster Tuesday night.
and Lewis I).].J. Totals 11·7-29. Chicago
28 8 4 60 Atlanta
15 28 .349 5
M&gt;nnesota
22 i2 5 49 Cincinnati
iO 3i .244 9
Ca)lfornla
12 22 9 33
Western Conference
Philadelphia
i2 20 7 31
Midwest Division
St.louis
12 22 7 31
w. L. Pel. GB
Pittsburgh
11 23 7 29 Milwaukee
36 8 .818 ...
los Angeles
11 . 30 1. 23 · Chicago
• 30 i2 .71&lt; 5
Sunday's Results
Phoenix
25 19 .568 11
Chicago 5 Montreal 2
Detroit
i7 27 .386 i9
2
Buffalo
i
"
Pacific
Division
·Toronto
By BilL MADDEN
McGuire 'escaped ~th a 72-71
Both Mcpuires, whUe .. ex. In the game, cut the Warrior New York 8 los Angeles 0
w. L. Pet. GB
UPI Sporti Writer
. win owr the fourth r8l)ke'd pounding on an excellent game margin to 72-71 on a jumper. Philadelphia iO C4)1fornia 3
Los Angeles ~9 4 .907 ...
(Only games scheduled)
Seattle
26 i9 .578 i4
It figured that when two , once beqten South Carolirul by both !el!ffiS, sof\iledalled · Marquette then missed lf&lt;o
Monday's
Games
Gol~enState
24 i9 .558 i5
"fighting Irishmen" named Gamecocks ol Frank McGuire the fight which saw S.C.'s Tom opportunities on the free throw
No games scheduled
Houston
i5 28 .349 24
McGuire from the streeis of 001 not before (I) two key Riker and Marquette's Bob line but Joyce missed a pair of
Portland
iO 35 ..222 30
New}!'ork lroughtthelr college players were. ejected for Lackey eje'cted from the game jumpers for S.C. which could
Sunday's Results
AHL Standings
By United Press International Baltimore 109 Phoenix i03
buketball teama tqgether fire. fighting, (2) Marquette tnistM!il' early In the second half. .
have woo the game.
Mllw. i20 Los Angeles i04
East
Marquette was In command
"When Peterson started hitworks would fly, and SUnday's a pair of last Second onMn-one
L. T. Pis. Detroit iOi Buffalo 96
w.
Marquette.South Carolina situations and (3) South throughout most of the game ting I said: 'Who the hell is this Boston
24 9 7 55 Chicago los Cincinnati iO~ loll
18 13 9 45 Golden State 113 Houston 112
gamellveduptoallltsadvance carollna's· star Kevin Joyce despite a partls.an ·pack'ed guy'?," said AI McGuire. "We Nova Scotia
Spr&gt;ngfleld
i5 i3 . 8 38 Seattle i25 Boston 119
hooplah.
twice miSsed opportunities io house at Carolina Coliseum, were ·very fortunate to wln - Prdvldence
11 i9 9 31
(Only Games Scheduled)
The second ranked unbeaten • Wlfl the game with a final but with one minute remaining, you'll never see Kevin Joyce Rochester
i2 20 5 29
Monday's Gomes
West
Game~k soph Ed Peterson,
that cold again,"
Marq\[ette Warriors of AI bucket.
ABA ,Standings
W. l. T. Pis. By United Press International
who hit se~n of eight baskeis
Frank McGuire, who noW
Hershey
20 i0 6 46
East
has seen his charges loae two Baltimore
19 i5 5 43
w. l. Pel. GB
heartbreakers by a point each Richmond
i6 i6 6 38 Kentucky
349 9 .791 ...
i6 i6 6 38 Virginia
lime 'this season, was philoso- ·Cleveland .
27 i7 .6i4 71h
·Cin'
c
lhnatl·
i4 i8 9 37 F&gt;or'l~lons
19 N .442 is
phical 'hi · defeat~" "Yoii "win' Tidewater
9 25 4 22 New York
i8
25 .4i9 i6
some and you loae' some and It
Sunday'• Results
Pittsburgh
18 28 .391 17'12
doesn '! hurt u much when a Richmond 8 Hershey 3
Carollna
i5 39 .333 20
Baltimore 6 Clnclnnatl 2
West
good team beats you. Losing to Springfield
4 Providence 1
W. l . Pet. GB
AI today was like losing to a Nova Scotia 8 Rochester i
Utah
3i 13 .705 ...
ll;other," the veteran Game- Boston 1 Tidewater 1
Indiana
24 i9 .55S 6'h
Monday's Gomes
Denver
i7 23 .425 i2
cock mentor said.
No games scheduled
Memphis
18
25 .4i9 i2'h
In Saturday's games, top.,
Dallas
i9
27 .41l i3
half," said Jabbar. "It seemed why it ended."
ranked UCLA continued on the
1By JOE CARNICEW
Sunday's
Results
Adams 77
UPI Sporll Writer
to work out aU rigllt.''
- The three previous Los unbeaten traU with an easy 93- Cleveland John
Indiana iOO Utah 97
Cleveland East 43 New
York i05 Dallas 97
It took a superli effort by the
Blames Tul'IIOven
Angeles losses this season 68 wln over Oregon., Third- Youngstown No. 44 Akron East
Memphis
118 Floridians i08
National Basketball AssociaLarry Costello, the Mllwauk· came when West was out of the ranked
North Carolina 43
(Only
games
scheduled)
Akron No. 60 Walsh Jesu)t 49
tion's M01t Valuable Player ee coach, felt his club should lineup with·an Injured leg.
trounced Furman 11~ in Celina
Monday's
Games
82 Sidney 70
and the league champions to have broken the Laker streak.
No
games
scheduled
Well's ZO Polnll
tuning up. for next weekend's St. Henry 83 Coldwater 52
•
finally end the Los Angeles "I'm glad we were the ones to
Lucl111 Allen hit IS poinis and key matchup with surprising
Lakers' pro record wltmlng end that streak," said Costello, John Block added 17. for the unll.eaten VIrginia. The II'"
streak at 33 games,
who devised a defense to Bucks whUe West led the Laker ranked Cavaliers proved they
Kareem · Abdui.Jabbar, thwart
Los
Angeies' attack with 20 pointa. The were for real by beating N.C.
taklnB advantage . of rival famed
fast-breat
at- game was cloee untU the third State 114-73 at Raleigh.
seven-footer Wllt Cham· tick. "We should have quarter when the Lakers tied
Fifth-ranked Indiana
00
ber~ool troublee, erupted been the onei to break it. Our th~ score at~ with 4:39 left dropped lis second· straight .
&lt;ifl!llllvely1n the second half to defense won the game for us. and Milwaukee went on a 11).2 decision 52-51 to Minnesota,
United Pren International
Perry 56 Clakwood 47
lead the MUwaukee Bucks to a We feU back fut and cut off tear to push ahead.
sixth.:rated Loujsvl])e dumped Newark Plme 94
Tuslaw 55 lake 43
·120-lot victory over the Lakers their fast break.''
'
In other NBA action Sl!llday, Cincinnati 84-76, No. 7 Penn ·
Coshocton Sacred Hesrl82 Barberton 90 Akron Firestone
&amp;mday, ending a streak1 that
Blll Shannan, the Laker Chicago whipped Cincinnati trounced Harvard 81.Q2, No. 9 Cleveland Baptist Christian 77 51
~ceola (Mich.) Chrlstlan6i
Ravenna 53 Akron Eliot 52
had ~ on Oct. 31.
coach, credited turnovers with 108-104, Golden State edged Ohio State defeated Purdue 76- Cleve&gt;and
John F. Kennedy 89 Akron Buchte) 76 Sp'gfleld
JabiiU-'1 II Points
his team's loss. "You can't Houston 113-112, Baltimore 70, and tenth-ra~ Maryland .
Cteve&gt;and John Hay 46 Twp. 74
Jabber, who won the MVP have tbat many turnovers (Sf) downed Phoenix 109-103, des ambushed 63-61 by Cleveland West Tech 54
Akron Centra. Hower 52
"-·ton 1..
d
·
Cleveland Rhodes 45
Akron St. Vlncent36
award as .Lew Alclndor , last and ~xpect to wln," said SeatUe beat"""
...-119 an
emson.
Parma Normandy 56 Shaker Edgerton 69 Paulding 68
season, hit 11-d-15 allots from Shannan. "You might be able . Detroit defeated Buffalo 101-86.
Southern Cal began the road Hts 44
Stryker 50 Della 4.5
tbe floor In the second half and to beat some poor teams, but
Chet Walker scored seven of back after Its embarrassing BeachwOOd Bi cardinal 70
Fairview 98 Hilltop 50
Fayette 6i Hicl&lt;svllle 52
bls · 33 polnta In overtime aa , defeat to Penn in the Kodak Cleveland lutheran East 58
flnlalled with II points and :/AI not the' World Champs."
Newbury 50 Ayrsvllle 75 Pettisville 48
reboundll.
,Jerry West, the !..akers' star Chicago beat the Royals, Classic. The Trojans, matching Co&gt;umbla a~ Keystone 45
No. Central 73 Montpeller 51
Jabber, who hit only 7-d-19 guard who played In bls first Cincinnati's 14th conaecutive strides with UCLA 1n the Brecksville · 65
Toledo Woodward 75 Bryan 55
shots In the first half, went to loslilg game this season, said, loss. Cincinnati led by as many Pacific Eight, thumped Oregon Western Reserv,e Academy 39 Tl nora 70 Ed on 58 .
lincoln 53 Can. South 46 Defiance 63 Bowllng Green 60
work u Chamberlain picked "We just didn't play well at aU. as 20 polnis in the first half State 85-75 for a weekend Can.
Can. Lehman 85 Col. Mof1awk Cleveland Benedictine 61
up bls fourth personal foul. He You can't take anything away before the Bulla rallied to win. sweep of the Oregon schools. 51
Cleveland Colllnwood 58
dominated action under the from the Bucks, though. They
Cmle's 3-polnl Play
Florida State, No. 12, routed
Tlmkln 66 Can. Glenwqod Cleveland East Tech 95
·
Cleveland Gelnvllle 72
offl!llllve backboard and hit pJsyed aggressive ball and
Cazzie Russell scored 31 East Tennessee State 106-63, Massillon. 59 Canton c.c. 57
Cleveland Hoi{. Name 84
oonslstently on allort jump really-did a job. Their defense poinis, lreludlrlli a key .three- but St. John's lost 86-33 to lou&gt;svllle 6i North Canton 53
G eveland Sooth 65
llhois.
Cleveland St. Ignatius 78
was great. 'fhey kept our of. point play with 51 seconds left, Syracu.se. For the 13th-ranked Fairless 57 Jackson 33
Cleveland John Marshall 54
"I was missing the hoolt so I fense outstdjl and we juat as Golden State beat the ' Redmen, It was their second Kidron Central Ch~~s;;~~e6s~ 62
Bush 67 East Cleve: Shaw 62
just sort of manuf!lctured a couldn't penetrate. We really Rockets .for Its sixth straight straight loss.
.
Sandy Valley 7i
Euclid 86 Gar.field Heights 55
little jump shot In the second couldn't do a~thlng and that's victory.
The remainder of the top 20
Indian Valley North 62 lakewood 65 Parma Valley
Valley 6i
Forge 6i (ot)
all wer'e v1ctorlous Saturday. Conottcn Tuscarawas
Valley 59
VIllanova USth tied) beat Cambridge 74 coshocton 67
Canlslus 69-65, Kentucky River VIew 75 Heath 53
U
bested Mlsslsslppl93-62, South- ~dian Valley So. 80 lakeland
"fl
j
•
Louisiana sneaked by Garaway 33 Mans . St. Peters 59
. North GaUla, behind a 22Federal-Hocking jumped
The Pirates hit 23 of 51 field western
Northeastern Louisiana 75-73 New Phlla. 59 Claymont 57
point effort by Arthur Clark,&amp;- into a 12-10 lead "In the first goals for 42 pet. They also Missouri nlpped·OhJo U. '1&amp;-71l .Warren }f'al 79 Pt. Pie&lt;~sant.
R
5 senior center, defeated p period as Hall; Schloss and converted 15 of 28 charity
and Brigham Yoimg 'topJl!ed
Wahama cw.va.) 53
.
stubborn Federal-Hpcking Mitch Daugherty broke thq 'tosses. Federal-Hocking
Steubenville
50
ieam, 61.Q3 Saturday night in a Pirates' :tone defense.
Trldolphla
(W. Va.l JO
·
canned 23 fl~ld goal atte~pls Arkansas Tech 88-67.
Paden City, W. va . 72 River 70
·
.
non-league game at North
NorUi GaUia went inio a and seven of 11 free throws ..
-:'
, ~-., 'otl
,
Gallla. It was North Gallla's man-to-man-defense In the
North Gallia had 52 rebounds
The Daily S.ntu ';t": McKinley 66 Akron Gart.
sbtth Win 1n eight gamu. The second period and took a 'll-25 with Clark grabbing 22 and
DEYOT&amp;DTOTHE
Lorain Catholic 82
E d
Lancers are 4-3 on-the year.
lead at t~e half. Glark, Crosswhite getting 16.
ME 1::.~~~~~ ~FREA
' louisville St. 'Thomas Aquinas · 210 'ln
Pomeroy
Clark was the ll\8jor scoring Crosswhite and Stout were the
Tl)e Pirates won the reserve ·
CIM:STEA L. TANNEHILL, 12
Pllonli9J2.S428
threat for Coach Jim F01ter's point-maker• during the tilt, 29-28.
Extc. Ed.
ROBERT
HOEFLICH,
Green and White Machine, He · scoring surge. The first half
North Gallia hosts Eas~rn
City Editor •
ssnk nine field goals in 11 at- featured sloppy ball handling Friday night In an important
Publ is hed dally 'except
Saturday
by The Ohio Valley
tempis.
.· .
from both teams. .
SVAC contest and Symmes
Publishing Company, 111
Two others 1n double figtirea
North Gallla, · playing 11 Valley Saturday night.
Court St., Pomeroy , Ohio,
•
45769. Buslnns
fU'RNITURE
were Gary Crosswhite, 6-4 sletidy third period moved Into
992.2i56,
EdllorialOffice
PhonePhone
992 .'
By
Quarters:
junior forward with 16 points a 43-37 lead going Into the final
2157.
se,ond class postage paid at ,
~•g 1110 ·
111d Pat ~I, 5-10 senior eight tn\mltes of action. With' Federal Hocking 12 25 37 53 , Pomeroy,
Ohio .
....~ •ilfl
10 27 43 61
guard finished with . 13 4:36 remaining, the Lancers North Gallia
National ' advertising
·-.
SlS.OO 'DownFedeni·Hocklna (53) - : representat ive. Boltlnelli .
markers. Larry JUlius, 6-4 using 1 preu, cut the Pirates'
Gallagher, Inc ., 12 East &lt;2nd
Balan"t On
Russell 2-0-4; ,Schloss 4-:1-10; St ., New Vork City, New York .
1111nior forward, who scored 28 lead· to four points, 51-47.
'"',
polnti Friday night, had only
North Gallla upPed Its lead to Smith 3-3-9; Daugherty 244; • 1 Subscription 'roles: De · I Convenlt'll
Term~.
three Saturday night. Justus etghtpolnll on baskets by Tony Hall 5-2-12; Dunfee 44!1; and ~ :ael~:~~~ 1bs~ c~~~~~:~r ~~:~~
.
By
Motor
Route
where
carrie;
Meek
~.
Total•
23-7-53.
ut out two quarlers suffering Glassburn, 6-2 senior forward
service not available :" One ·
N~rtb Gallla (II) -Justus 1). month $1.75 . By mall In OhiO
from a bout with the flu.
ana .Harvey Brown, ii-4 senior
Dann:r ~U had 12 points In . guard. With 31 seconds left, the 3-3; Crosswhite 7-71-16; Clark &amp;- , and W. Va ., One Ytlr $1•.oo~ ·
Sl)( months S1 . 25 . Three
pac1na the l01ert1. Jim Schloaa Pirate• led 58-63 aild had a 4-22; Stout 4+13; tlrown 244; , mopths
S-4 .50 . S~bscriptlon
•
Includes Surlday Times . I '•
poUre&lt;t 1n 10 potnll for CO.Ch technical foul shot plus the and Glassburn J.J.J. Totals .23- . price
sentin•l
ii Mason. W.Va.
15-41.
Mark Smith's Lancers.
)lall.
""
·: _ __;i '
........_ __, - - - - - - - - - : - - - - - - - .
Coach BID Phllllpa' Eastarn
Eagles posted their seventh
vl~tory In elg()t attempts
Saturday night by downing the
winless Southwestern
lli&amp;hlanders, ~29 in an SVAC
tilt at Southwestern. Eastern Is
In second place in the loop
standinp with a 6-1 record.
Coach Wayne W~lte's
Syirm\es Valley VIkings are in
the driver's seat with ah 8-0
reclll'd and 8-0 mark in the
league. North Gallla Is 5-1 in

~ists

Fly ln·i. Marquette•SC Tilt .

Bu~ks. ,S nap :LA Str~ak:·:;

At 33 In Row, 120-i-0~

Saturday's Ohio High
Sch [ Cage R esul1S

fs"'

,'Z;.~!·65

3 ROOMS
I NEW•

I

MASON

FURNITURE

•

8
0

2
3
4
65
7

iO
i2
4
10
3
i
6

53
F

53
65

Little Ms Win 41-31
ROCK SPRINGS - The
Meigs Marauder reserves
snapped a two-game losing
streak by defeating the
Wshama reserves here Friday
night, 41-31.
An outbreak in the third
quarter gave the little
Marauders their fifth win in
nine outings. They trailed 8-6
after the first quarter and 17-12
at the half. IP the third period,
Coach Bill Wickline's Meigs
squad produced 14 polnbi to
only four for the little Falcons.
Bill Chaney again led the
little Marauders in scoring
with 12 while Steve Price
pumped In II and Floyd
BuF,ney 10. Haymaker led
Wahama with .II.
Meigs made 14 of 37 from the
field for 37 pet. and 13 of 28

from the foul line. Wahama
connected on 10 of 38 from the
field for '1:1 pet. and 11 of 15
from the charity stripe.
MEIGS, Price 4-3-11, Myers
0-0-0, Olaney 5-2-12, Floyd
Burney 4-2-10, Fred Burney 1-24, George 1).[.], Couch 1).].],
Ash 1).1-1, May 0-0-0, Kiser 1).].
I, Lefebre 0-0-0. Totals 14-13-41.
WAHAMA, Haymaker 2-7·11,
Gardner 3-0-6, Riley o-2:2,
Lewis 4-0-8, Keeper 1·1·3,
Buzzard 0-0-0, Ferguson 0-0-0,
Kearns 0.1-1. Totals 11).11-31.
By quarters :
Wahama
8 9 4 1()...'11
Meigs
6 6 14 15--41
Officials, Sarver and Reger.

AIDITI1411 II
lllSUitE'"Itll • . • •

OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
BASKETBALL SCORES
Berksh&gt;re 64 Rlchmont His. 62
Kirtland 67 Fairport Harbor 45
North Ridgeville 69 Amherst 63
lorain Clearvlew 73 Mldview
61
Wellington 90 Vermillion 82
()eve. lutheran West 66 Avon
63
Buckeye 92 Highland 62
Bay V&gt;llage 70 Berea 4i
Palnesv)lle Harvey 61 Motor 48
Cleveland Cathedral latin i02
Gilmour Academy 80
Ashtabula Harbor 90 Madison
7i
Lorain Adm . Kng 84 Southview

60

-:·-".....\.~

,

Borromeo Seminary 41
Cuyahoga Valley 36
Farmington 17 ledgemont 64
South Amherst 70 Ledgemont
64

..

So. Amherst 70 Flrelands 55
Columbus Walnut Ridge 76 ·
Columbus Whetstone 54
Columbus North 7~
Columbus East 59
Cols. South ii5 Cots. Central 96
Columbus Eastmoor 70
Columbus Brookhaven ~8
Columbus St. Charles 60
Columbus St. Rita 48
Grove City Si ~ols. Westland 53
lucas 78 Nw A&gt;bany 66
Cols. Academy 69 Danville 6i
Newark Cath. 60 Centerburg 58

you .• wa.ntl
life
homeowners
·~urll!&lt;:e. we wll1 ~~~~
a policy ·.to fit
Iildlvldual
requlr'emenh
Dlll!:uss ~our specHit:l
needs with us.
Whether

auto,

..

DlviWnrl•
114

It's another pair of feet to
shoe. Another body to clothe.
A whole other life to be
provided for.
That's why it's important
to plan for each child.

2. OUR
CLEA
' NlNG

'Pirates Knock Off Lancers·

.

TP
11
25
6
6

Meigs :

(U

pon ~Uest)

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

Planned Parenthood
Children by choice.
..·Not chance.

For further infol'mation, write
·Planned Parenthood, Box 431
Radio City Station, N.Y. 10019
lldwortlslnl conlrlblottd lor tilt PAJbllc ,&amp;aod In COOHrltiOft with
Ill~ Aclvcrti3ln&amp; Cllu~ll •nd tht lntetr. ;\•Jriel "•wa,a,.r AdwtrUifftl t:lla..Uvt•

�...

•

. ...
.

.

.•

a~ M
_
._._._._._~_._._..

J;_'l'beDID111!DJDtl,l6'1 J ~-Poawavy, o.,Jan.

Synth~Jic

Fuels Con,tract ·
.

.

.

'

'

WASHINGTON (UPI) -Rep. JOim f!I ....Ubbrooll, ~
•
Ohl01 bas liked &amp;he Hollie lulerul Secarlly ciuuP"IIIee
011 wbleb he II the rallklllg . . .~,leU, to flad out wllo
leaked claullled govenimenl doetunenll 011 lbe lDdla·
I
~klltan crllll to eollllllllilt Jack Aadenoa •.
·'lbti Route aad Seaale committee already pbias an
lnveatfCalloa, · ·
The announcement last week · and water ~nti-plfllution liquid form by ship from ·
.Aihbroot, a couaervatlve oppoablg Prelldenl Nb:on
that the Columbia Gas System devices, . thus prolk!lhg. both overseas sources · of 111PJlly
lor lbe GOP prealdenllal DDmt.don In lbe New Ramp. . ·.· wouid
purehase 1~ .1i11llion the atmosphere and· the ad- through 'a terminal to 'be
ClEVELAND (UP!) - The Nixon's special asslatant for of imported products, Industry
ablre primary, · contended biJ committee bad tbe
cublc.feet of synthetic pipeline . jacent Chesapeake Bay constructed at Cove Point,_
polidcal«onomic decisions of economic aflairs, said that In Week reported.
jurisdlcdoil to look lnlo lbe leU beea111e tilts oveniJid
quality gas daily .from a ftrels waters.
Md,: 1975; · lliJrttclpatlon . ill
the Pay Board apd individual this year's congressional elec- · .Sucli' legislation ''would reftldudes concerning &amp;he 1~1 elvlllaa employe secarlly
preparatiolJ plimt to bti con- - Other sources of supply studies aimf!l at constnctln'ca
conti'-ict negotiations will pro- tion, labor plans to support ly change the entire shape of
program.
.
structed
near Baltimore, Md., currently being explored by 3,700 mile, . ·ecologically..-fe
duce the biggest beadllnes on only those candidates who fa-· the reladonsbip of this country
. ''Thoae Ia goYei'JIIIIeDI who wo11ld play pmea Wllb . ·is imPortant to present and Columbia and the dele gas ·. pipeline to bring large VoiUJIIel!
lbe collective bargaining front vor restrictive measures. ·
to the rest of the world" and
onr state seCI'ell lbould be made emj;badcally .awm
future customers of Columbia from each source is e~cted to of Alaskan and Canadian ·
thi8 year,Industry Week magLabor's campaign against Indicates "an Inward-looking,
that lbe ndea of lbe ,Pm.. lll'e such thaiU. S. antborides
Ga's of Ohio, Inc., and Ohio •become available include:
Arctic gas to the ' low~ · f&amp;.
azine silld today.
international business, now fo- isolationist stance," l'l!terson ·
will play forkeepa'trllb lbese vudala," be nkl.
.
Valley
Gas
·Co.,
according
to
Construction
of
a
plant
near
·
states
and .acqulsltio!l of rights
· But olber strong force~ cused on pending legislation In said.
F. Laird, Columbus, · Green Springs, Ohio, to \o buy large vo!wnes of )bis·
· ~ by organized labor for both the House and the Senate,
Although many businessmen ~~lltC!l!lflfii!I~-IIJPll~1111W~t~m~~1111WI!Iillilm;w.l'~l.ll, W.
president
of lbe two Ohio-based produfe 88 billion cubic feet of gas, 1978; p~rtlclpation. In .
_leglilatlon'to limit the freedom has been gathering steam. The believe
the
propoSed
retail subsidiaries of ;the natura! ·gas annually · by ' research aimed at converjtng.,'
of action of lnternationaDy ori- bill would Impose restrictiolL! legislation has little chance of ·
Columbia.
Gas System.
reforming petroleum liquids this nation's :vast reserves· of
ented and multinational com- on direct Investment abroad passage, they know labor is
Lall:d Sl!ld that wliile it is inlll piJielpl~ ,q~~~tu~~ 1 l??~; , . •~o,al....i~.~-.,C~!~,~~~ · gas, .
panies-will bear watching be- and on International trade. It bringing enormous pressure on .
·
doubtful
any of the gas importation of natura• gas m 1980.
caue labor Ia eager for such would impose permanent individual senators and
.
4
produced by lbe proposed $200
legislation.
quotas in the trade area begin- representatives' Ill Support lbe
million
facility to be '(\on• .
l'l!ler G. Peterson, President nlng this year on a wide vari~ty legislation.
sttucted by an affiliate of
· At lbe same time, some labor
•
Crown
Central
Petroleum
groupS find themaelves conCorp. of Baltimore would ever
fronted With even more perbe
used' In Ohio, lbe plant's
COLUMBUS (UPI) -'- Gov. creases lbe minimum amual
sonal ' problems-such as
choosing between foregoing Jolm J. Gllllgan was scheduled pay of a beginning teacher With production would Increase the
pay raises or losing jobs, In- to speak to the state Board of a bachelor's degree $800 on . total supply of gas available to
dustry Week said. Faced With -Education at its mon'tlily meet- Jan. lin some school districts the Columbia Syslellt 1111d lbll8
this problem Is the In- Ing today, the first chief execu- and another $800 July 1. Ma'x· improve the ilmount of gas
ternational Union of Electrical, tive ever to do so since the imwns for a teacher With~ a available for use In Ohio.
However, Laird cautioned
11181Jter's degree Will be $713
Radio and Macbir.e Workers board's creation In 1956.
WntL YouR inauranc,e p~y .
that
this new source of gas
Gilligan
was
to
discuss
the
Jan.
l,am
$974
more
on
July
1.
enough
lo replace !he home
Workers may pay more in social security benefits in the (IUE ), AFLCIO. It has minimum teacher salary
The ,school board was ex- would ilot mean 8n early end lo
wage
rollback
received
lost?'
social security deductions in future because the amount of
schedule and other provisions pected to set regulaUons for limitations on new sales to
~f,.,ck your coveragt n,ow..
1972, but lbe increase will lbe social security check is demands from management of education legislation in the programs called for In the industrial and commercial
home and posst:ISIODII
mean higher benefi~ In the based on average earnings," at a growing number of recently approved budget-tax budget-tax package.
probably grown in
customers
that
Columbia
Gas
plants.
future, according to Eugene Mr. Ennatinger said. "But in
measure.
·The grOup also was to consid- of Oblo and Oblo Valley Gu
Ennatinger, Social Security ·figuring that average, we can · Competitive prei18Ul'es and
State
School
Superlntement
er ti'aliSferring land from the now have in effect throughout
District Manager.
only count earnings on which wage disparities are forcing Martin Essex bas been asked Mechanicsburg, Mansfield and the state.
·new
The percentage rate of social sOQial security contributions more firms to take hard second by lbe governor to seek quick Malimee school districts Ill lbe
"First of aU tbll gas will not
looks at contracts signed with
~ ADtMAN CARD
security deductions from have been paid."
Federal
Pay
Board
approval
of
Urbana
School
Distrl~t,
Rich-.
become
available until lbe
lhe
IUE-110111e
more
than
two
POMER9.Y
- Airman
earnings will remain the same.
The "earnings base" that
the teacher pay raises, on the land County board of Educa· winter ofl973-74," Laird said. ·John Card, soo of Mr. and
years
ago
despite
IUE
But tbe amount of earnings counts for social security has
ground "any delay In the full tlon and ll)e Toledo School Dis- "Secondly' even with this new Mrs. Robert R. Card of 211
subject to social security - the gone up gradually over lbe President Paul Jennings' ex· implementation of this legisla- trict: '
source of supply, rising
"earning base'' -will increase years as income levels have pressed opposition to wage cuts tion will continue to seriously The board also will consider dellljlnds for gas over the next Mulberry Ave., bas com·
under any circumstances. Inpleted bli U. S. Air Force
$1,200 a year in 1972.
risen in the country. In 1937, dividual
jeopardize elementary and Essex's recommendetion that few years will sill! exceed the basic !raiDing at lbe Air
IUE
locals
also
are
"If you're an employee, when the social security
secondary eduf8tion resulting Harry Wolford, an einploye In quantities we have available,
you'll still contribute 5.2 pet., program began, contributions making concessions to save from years 'of !Pss than the state· Education Depart- forcing us to maintain the ssles Tralalng Command's
Lackland AFB, Tex. He Is
but it will be on the first $9,000 were paid on the first $3,000 jobs.
adequate funding of Ohio ment four years, be appointed limitations."
The
outlook
in
tbe
steel
InremaiDIDg at Lackland lor
PH. 992-2318
you earn in work covered by earned in a year.
schools."
director •of: the Computer
Referring to the new plant,
dustry,
where
some
jobs
have
training
as
a
security
3~7 Spring Aw:
social security," Mr. Er•
The new pay scheduled in- Services· Division. · ·
Laird said Ibis is ' Just one of pollcemu.
...
Pomeroy·, Ohio
been
eliminated
and
layoffs
Alnnan Card, a
The Increase in the earnings
matinger said. In 1971 the
Th ~ 111.111 fw111 Nafi,lflllh.k i••lfl .' '&lt;lUr .•nJc:.
several
ways
Columbia
is
1970 graduate of Meigs High '
contribution was 5.2 pet. of the base will not generally affect have been numerous, is brightplanning to meet .aU the needs School, Rock Springs, at·
ening.
Steel
demand
Ia expectthe monthly social security
. first fl ,800."
of all its customers In the years
t~aded Mountain Stale
Employers pay an equal checks of the 27 million people ed to Improve gradually during
ahead.
the
first
two
quarters
of this
Btillaess· College, Parkers·
amount. Self-employed people alreadY receiving payments,
N.I IHl UV. u.lL" M utu.Li F l rt lnsuunct c,,
The a·greement for an af. burg.
year,
Industry
Week
said,
and
·
H •ln l~ Offi«' (\ liumhu~ . O h t~.l
contribute 7.5 pet. of their according to Ermatlnger.
reach
a
hlgh
level
In
the
last
RIO
GRANDE
Courses
In generally meet once a week, filiate of the Columbia Gas
covered earnings to social
Social security pays monthly
retirement,
disability, and half. Most steel produCers note business administration and while the late afternoon System to purchase the gas
aecurity.
•
"l'l!ople who earn more than survivors benefits to eligible · Improved confidence among Afro-American culture classes meet twice or three produced at · the plant was
customers.
highllghtthelateafternoonand times weekly. All evening signed Wednesday (Jan. 5) by
$71800 a year can expect higher workers and their families.
JA-NUARt.
As a result, raw steel produc- evening program . at Rio classes are finished at 9:30.
Henry A. Rosenberg Jr.,
tion now is running above the Grande College this semester.
Among the colU'ses offered president of Crown Central,
two mlllion tonH-week level Registration for the second second semester in lbe late and John W. Partridge,
'
for lbe first time since last July ·semester will be Tuesday, Jan. .afternoon and evening l\l'e Wllm\"gton, chairman of the
when steel uSers com)jleted 11, in ·. · tbe ·Davis·:, ;H·an ·accounting;·.:. management;:; · .:&lt;Jolullibli~stem:tllilstlinated .
stockpiling the metal against a Recreation Room.
business law, economics, cost ·•·oaf••, lhe ~u Is ap.steelworkers' strike !bat never
Accordlng to DeanS. Brown, education, English, French proximately $1.05 cents pe~ ·
materialized. Estimated raw director of admissions and health and physical educatio~ thousand cubic feet delivered
steel output in the week ended records, students who have not . and history, as well as political . to Columbia at the plant site.
.'
Jan. 8 was 2,085,000 net tons pre-registered for the semester science, psychology, social
Plant construction is
C01J1pared With lbe (irecedlng are to report to the side en- science, sociology and speech': scheduled to begin in June ·of
For more information on this year (1972) with com·
II)' Ualled Preai blterudOIIai oow :1-7 overall and .G-1 In the week's 2,004,000 .tons. This trance of Davis Hall. He said
makes three of lbe last four registration will be from 9 to 4· registration and class of- pletion In the winter ofl973-74.
Toledo's Tom Kozelko has MAC.
pushed defending champion
At Kent, St. Bonaventure's weeks a two mlllion plus week. and 6:30 to 8, but the offices ferings, contact the Ad- Wilen completed, the plant will
For the third consecutive will be closed from noon to 1 for missions and Records Office at employ more than 3000 perMiami Ill lbe edge of the cliff In Glenn Price and Carl Jackson
week,
continued rlalng demand lunch.
245-5353.
sons. It will be c,apable of
the Mid-American Conference combined for 41 points tO spark
•
•
for
steel
scrap
bas
5ent
prices
Brown
said
that
evening
processing 100,000 barrels a
baakethall race.
the Bonnies to a 76-63 win over
higher
and
deilers
Indicate
•
rates apply to those classes
dey of foreign crude oil.
Kozelko, a 8-8 junior COllVer!- the Golden Flashes.
further
Increases
ate
likely
in
that
begin
at
or
after
6
p.m.,
'WU
In
addition'
to
lbe
minimum
'
ed center, IJCOred 29 points and
The Bonnies led only 34-32 at
~
primary
grades,
Industrr
while
the
late
afternoon
classes
100
cubic
feet
of
gas
daily,
the
pulled down 'I&amp; rebound! In Sat- halftime, but pulled steadily
are considered day classes.
Baltimore . plant will produce
urday nigbt's lfl-67 Toledo vic- away·in the second half, hold- Week reporled.
•
The
price
composite
on
No.
1,
Classes
hegin
Wednesday,
Jan.
residual
fuel oil.lrith a sulphur
tory over the Redskins, hand· inga64-46marglnwlth6:47re•
heavy melting steelmaking 12.
Mrs. Sarah Daniels Starkey, content of 0.3 pet. which will
ing them their second straight 11)81nlng.
••
The purpose of lhe late af- 86, died Sundey at the North- meet the strictest standards
MAC loss. and placing them In
Ruben Vance was high man scrap rose to f33.17 per gross
ton
from
the
piecedlng
week's
ternoon and evening classes at brook, Ill. home 'of her proposed by the Enposition for early title elimina- with 23 points for Kent State,
$32.
The
level
Ia
now
the
highthe
college is to offer deughter, Mrs. Don Laverty. vinronmental Protection
lion.
oow 2-7 on lbe year.
est
since
last
October.
educational opportunities to
A member of the MiddlepOrt Agency of the U. S. GoVernPlus. , .Free Mercharidise
The victory for Toledo, howDayton, paced by sophomore
The
laiest
figure
is
based
on
those
who
are
unable
to
attend
First
Uhlted
Presbyterian
ment,
and
wblch
will
be
sold
ever, puts lbe surprising Rock- guard Donald Smilb With 24
•
I ;
ets In first place with a ~ points, won its third straight lhe following gross ton priceil: college on a full-time basis due Church, Mrs. Starkey made for vl\l'ious power uses.
According to'Crown Central,
conference record and was game and evened its mark 5-5 Pittsb.urgh, $35.50; to work commitments or olber her home In Middleport for
~yyearslrithhersister, Dr. the plant will lncporate' the
their ninth win In 10 starts with an 114-72 decision of lbe Philadelphia f32; and Chicago, obligations.
OPEN- FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS MIDDI.EPORT
$32.
The evening
classes Kathryn Poindexter. Besides latest,most comprehensive air
overall. .
University of San.Diego.
Kozelko, who also held two
The Flyers led ~7 at halfMrs.
Laverty, daughter,
she is survived
by another
Mrs.
· :·
Miami centers, Steve Handy time and maintslried a comforGeorge
Owens,
Fort
Wayne,
and Tom Roberts, to a com- table margin the rest of lbe
Ind., four grandchildren, 'two
. lined six points, blew the Red- way, holding their biggest lead
great-grandchildren,
and two
llkinl out of the ·game In the at 83-65 \oith I:18 to go.
'
Coach Art Lanham's Rio
llrst live rillnutes of the second
Sixth-ranked Louisville,
RIO GRANDE (9%) - brothers, Col. Tom Daniels of
Grande
College
Redmen
return
half as be scored all 13 Toledo paced by Jiip Price lrilb 30
Bentley, 7.J..17; Hairston, 5-G- Lakeland, Pa.; and George
points.
points, handed Cincinnati its home to friendly eonflnes of 10; Lambert, 4-3-11; Bartram, Daniels of Grove City.
His efforts stretched a 3:1-31 fourth loss In II games, 84-76. Lyne Center Wednesday for the 2-1-6; Hart, 14-3-31; Bollineer,
Graveside rites for Mrs.
first time since Dec:4following 2-0-l;t'bompson, 3-0-6; Rouse, Starkey will , be held 1\Jesday
balftlme margin for Toledo to
Price's Spree Decisive
45-311 and broke the game open.
Price bit five baskets In a their folU'th setback Saturdey 0-0-0; Martin,448.TOTALS afternoon at a Toledo
•
After that run, the Rockets led two-minute period midway In In five road outings during the 41·1G-92.
Cemetery. She will be buried
past
month.
by at least 10 the rest of the ~ the second hall to give the
BEREA (10f)- Smith, 1:1-4- beside her late husband,
...
Lander
College
will
visit
Rio
way.
Cards a l(}.polnt lead and de28; Anderson, 1G-2-22; Owens, Robert Starkey.
for a non-league game at 8 1-1·3; . Pierson,
For MIAmi, now 4-5 on the cide the outcome.
4-0-8;
Jear, sophomore guard Phil
Sophomore Uoyd Batts led o'clock Wednesday.
Bacigalupi, 3-U; Fox, 4;o.a;
Saturday night at Berea, Maynard, 1-5-7; Bruner, 448;
Lumpkin w~s-hlgh With 24.
Cincinnati with 27 points while
Ky., the Redmen held a 46-45 Miller, 6-G-12. 1'0TALS 45-1t- 1
Ohio University got off on the Derrek Dickey added 18.
I
CCI
· ight track In its first conferAkron, the nation's lOth halftime lead over the 10..
et\ce game with a 91-89 victory ranked college diviSion teaiit, Mountaineers, but Berea came
James Criswell, Fairlane
over Bowling Green, but not ran its record to 9-1 with an 84- back strong in the second half . COURSE COMPLETED
to
defeat
the
Redmen,
104-92.
.
Drive,'
Middleport,
is
before ~me anxious first half 73 victory over Brockport State
1· Barnhart, recuperating from cbest In·
The
loss
left
Rio
with'
a
5-5
Airman
Wayne
momenta for Coach Jim Snyd. (N.Y.) behind Len Paul's 23
~ .Most people ~ook towl rd . (4% th e fi rst y~ar). That ext ra
Will;;m R. Juries, syffered in a two-car
retlre~ent
as a t1me 9ir.elaxauon Yi %, pa)·able as a bo Qu s at
er.
points. The Zips scored 14 season mark. Berea is now 8-8 son of Mr ·and Mrs.
of 211 Rock St., · colli~on Wo:dnesday afternoon
~nd enjoyment. :\nd,Jt can be . · matunty, applies to all Bond I
The Bobcata, a bot and cold straight points midway in the on the year, and 5;() at borne. Barnhart
Pomeroy, has graduated at on state Route 7
miles
1f y~u prepare for i~'tBut if you issued smce June 1, 1970 . .• ~ith
team so far this year, irailed second half to put the game out
Doug Hart's 31 points paced Sheppa.rd AF.B.• Tex., from the sooth of Middleport.
dor, t,, lt can be a time o~ worry a comparable improvement for
the underdog FalcolL!, 41-32 at of reach.
the Redmen Saturday. Roger tech 1tr
f u
an(i
discontentment. :\ time when all older Bonds.
Bentley, learn captain, finished
mea ammg course or · · Criswell, a passenger In the
Intermission.
you
_
c~n look back and think of
Buy U.S. Sav ings Bonds.
S. Air Force protecUve coating Lawrence · Stewart car, was
a
Late R.ny Wlaa
1n1lhori
ways
that
you
could
They'll
help make vo
with 17. Ron Lambert added II specialists. Airman Barnhart,
Capital, 17th ranked, rolled and
have
saved,
but
didn't.
'
reti
rement
just
what yOuu~ t
Harry Hairston 10.
. who was trained to construct taken by private emergency
Snyder, however, us111g all of to its ninth win without a loss
Well, there's no better time it to be.
· an
Rio hit 41 of'82 shots from the . maintain and repair mason.; out-patient treatment. Criswell '
Iii 21 years' eJperience, raJ. and third in the Ohio Con·
to think ab~]:ut retirement than ...
now, whil~ You're working.
lledbla team In the aecom half, ference wtlb a 103-68 deelston field, and sank 10 of 18 free and concrete buildings Is wasnotlistedasapauengerin ·
One easy way, to s;~,ve on a
_taking advantage of the .slze of over Oberlin. Bob Arnold throw attempts. The Redmen being assigned to Lock~ne the Stew~rt car in the original ·
·-·~·
: ·~
~
M
regular
basis is by purchasing
collected
41
'
rebounds
with
AFB,
Ohio.
He
atiended
Meigs
accident
report
which
apr
guards Todd LaUch and tallied 27 points and Joe
"'l
U.S 1 Savings Bonds through' the
I
•
.
Tommy Corde as the Bobcats
Bent\ey. Hairston and Martin Sigh Scbooi.,His wife, Marsha, peared In Thursday's edition of
Payroll
Savings
Plan
wht:re
,
acored
flna
25 to pace tfie
1a! Cacobus
~the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. The Daily SenuPel.
1
. . ' ~r..fili
you work.
It points In the
Crusaders who led 45-24 at each hauling down nine.
DOOIItea o'f"lllay
·
•
Now there's a bonus intere:;t ·
Smith and At!derson, wllb 28 William ThorntOn of Rt. I,
• 'Lallch, &amp;-6, a~ Corde, 6-l, · halftime.
rate on all-u.s. Savings Bonds- llAh .~ uft. lf':"'· " o!H,III olhu•• , .. t,
and 22 points respectively, Dexter.
for E •Bonds'
531 (10
!/ when held to
-« •tt~•u ...... \\htft """....1, 1hrr n " u. ~~
f8eh flnlahe&lt;l the night With 31
paced.the winners. Berea lilt 45
,
'
u •kt:.l •• ' "' '' ,.. ~~- Tu "IIY I• .t.rnrcd
m'atuflty
or
5
years,
1
0
months
••nil! " 'lrm(' rlo.. .'ln.l ••• • ,. ll'mrml•···
~
Other
games
saw
Findlay
rip
poinll, but LaUch bit 24 and
of 74 field goal attempts, and 14 CYCLQNESSUSPENDMACK •
llon.k ••• l l'fl!'•d • •)• '" '" " ·
'
Cotde lt In the second half, Mercy College of Detroit, 128- of 17 free throws.
. AMES, Iowa (UP!) -Iowa
• with 8nJder ualng biJ ~ men 89, Defiance win Its 11th In a
Following Wednesday's non. State basketball player Gene .
row loo..atl over Cedarville, league game with Lander
Take stqdc in Atntetic:a..
Ill • pkti fClr them.
Mack has been dropped froin
Ashland
humble
Shaw
(Mich.)
Now Roods pay~~ at maturit~
Lalidl wu matched agairist
..
College, the Redmen return to the squad for lbe rest of the·
.. ...
103~,
Ohio
Northern
trip
1\l,jd.OhioConference
play.With
tile F'*-' 6-2 Jeff Lessfg,
•' A
, r~..u ~ r....,_....... ... .... ............... ~ .
season, Cyclones' coach Maury
vEil~ .. ~........ .......... ....... ~.._ ... _ ...,~ """
~ Oirde went agailllt BG 's Wayne State 107-96, Urbana a game at Walsh on Fridey: John Sllid .!he action was taken
n...\-"' _. '"" y,,_, .... Ttw '"'''"""'I ~-~ down Marian (Inc!.) 116-100, . Saturdey night, 'Rio -will play because Mack missed a pre.
UA!Ruu.
SP-IIilO I
• 8r1aD Scanlon led Bowling Kenyon take W &amp; J 87-69, and · another MOC tilt at Malone· game m~ting before ISU'a
I
' Grsen lrith 21 polnta. and Tom Cleveland State beat Bllffalo
Box score of Saturday'~ conf~rence opener .,galnst
ScoU bad 20 for the ~~atcons, State 76-75.
·
se tba ck :
Oklahoma Saturdey night.
'

.,

'.

~

r)ationwidee

I

.I

I· FURNITURE I

~
~

.

Lilm '

Wingetts Hl!st

Holiday Dinner

Theendof

Criswell Hurt
In A •den

three

. -'!. . '
I

' 1.- ,

..

,

i

-I

..'
.'

'i

' .Bat'/ery
Mt''"S

Retiremetit.

I

·«&lt;&lt; u.~:1'l~·'

ChristrmJS Eve .

Racine Social Events

~-~--..:.-::::..::::::::::::::::::::~

'

'«««&lt;m~""*"''

Ramt''ze' Dine

INGELS FURNJTURE

Redmen Lose

;f~·

"r

ALL THIS WEEK
While Quantities Last!

I

CHIVE GROUND BEEF
STROGANoFF
l'r• pounds ground beer
·1 medium onion, c~opped
2 tablespoons butter
1 (2% -oz.I jar sliced
mushrooms
l (6-oz.) can white sauce
2 tablespoons sherry or
. beef bouillon
I cup dairy sour cgam
Sail and pepper to taste
3 tablespoons frozen or
freeze-tlrled chopped
chives
Saute onion in butter until
golden. Add ground beef and
sa u l e, stirring frequentl y
~nd cook until thoroughly

Ro..,.t/an'd TIVVTCC' C Met
rr
1th Mr.·cLaw¥nnce
VV i.
·

'$kins Suffer

!•BEdDING
ZENITH TV AND STEREO

lly AILEEN CLAIRE
NEA l' ood Editor .
Stroganoff a I w a y s ,ha;
been a good dish to serve ·
when entertaining rour to six .
guests or more. A quick and
· r 1a v o r f u I one is Chive
G r o u n d Beef Stroganoff.
This- recipe, using ground· ·
beef, ass ures the hostess her
gue s ts won't race tough
pieces of bee.f which does
happen occasionally. Serve
over noodles or rice and with
a hearty salad .

Wedding Plans Should Include
Brief Time with Photographer

INGELS

Died on Sunday

Ground Beef Stroganof~ ·

of Mrs. Wllllain Woods and Mrs .
;_ .. .-"m~·~"- Polly's Problem ·, , ,' .., ,:,,.'..... , .,,,.,,,.'-&lt;&gt;«
,,. ....&gt;1&lt;, .
·. .
llawers ani vegetablei y0u bave grown In previOWI yean, as well VIrgil Lee.
~
.
as obs . vaU01111 of VJJr!eUea that have appealed to yqu as yon
SOUTHERN ATHLETIC 1\i DEAR POLLY~! know that alabaster cannot be !;,
Ground bee f is bose lor Chive Bee f Stroganoff for
haveeeeothemgrowlnclno!bergardelis, wlllbeofgreatbelpln Boosters Monday 7:30p.m. at · cleaned with water so I hope some of the leaders tc
simple party dish.
can tell me bow to clean my alabaster figurines.- ,;
"'"'- what ._..to
~·-d·
blgh
school.
de..._
order.
·
MEIGS
cHAPTER 53, DAV,
ANN. MARIE
[
. Wbenrnalj!ngoutyourseedorders;k~chleflyt(lvirtetlea - Mondey, 7:30p.m. All mem·'•l.:~-~«»'-~~-~'~it&gt;'1=&lt;:=:».-m·.-."'"'~
w:a:·»:·•J;:rJ\&gt;:~ ~-=&lt;·:&lt;:o:::&lt;~J:•c&lt;.&gt;ito,,·;-t~«-o~:~«'!J
•*"l~'if&lt;:'"'·~~-"")
,-U!i!"'&gt;~~'-'*""*''""'""'w'."'
~~
{j~v&lt;:&lt;~""''·"-'
·""""'"·'"m$.··"~-'""'""'~'· '·i''""
~""''~J::;::;..,
=~ .. mJ~,.
browned. A d d mu shroom s ta ste. Ju st before serving,
o! lmoWII performa!ICe. Klncls that have done well for you be(ore, bers and wives hi vi ted.
mushroom liquid. Mix sttr in sour cream and chi·
and
or P.Jat ll1'e knOwn to tlrtve In your locality. :!lut be venturesome Refreshments.
DEAR POLLY-My Pet Peeve is ' with the litany tele·
with
beef and onions. Add ves. Serve over noodles o:
loloughld. to try1a few of the new kindl of.Ocwiers am vegeta~Jes
RUTLAND pt
' A, 7._ 30 p.m.
vision and radio commercials directed at us in thick
white
sauce and blend thor- nee . Garni sh with additional
.IIi the •••·~·
British accents . .Why do they inject that phony snob
oughly
. Add sherr y and chives . Makes 4 servings.
uull~ . . ·
ca-uea,.the varieties Ute aeedsmen term Rutland Elementary School. appeal in advertising when trying to sell American prod·
!-lend.
Sal t and pepper to
"noveltlea."..BY growing some of the season's noveiUes yoii will
ucts to American consumers?-GERTRUDE
( HE WS P i~. PER ENTERPRISE A55N.)
add zeit .and..fm to your gardening.
.
'
TUESDAY
DEAR POLLY-We mothers all know how hard it is to
Seed catalogues need firat attenUon; but aend too for the
O!UO ETA Phl Chapter., get childreq's b 0 0 t s and
.~
catalopes of nuHerymen,lf tbll spring you Intend to plant any
Beta, Sigma Phi SorOI)ity, 7:30 rubbers on over their regtrees,lhi-uba, evergreena, fruit tree&amp; or blftbea,I'OIIell, pel'!mlllaJa p.m. Tuesday, home of Mrs. ular shoes but last winter I
or other planll; that you will buy as plants rather tj1an as seeds. · · Charlotte Hanning. Cultural discovered a way that .
Early orderln Ia 81
"·'here
program on pictures by Mrs. really works very well. I .. .
. · g
euenas It li With aeed8. It ill of Hanning and Charlotte saved. several old pairs of ' . ·
Ute utmalt Importance to set out planta at the right Urnes for
.
ll
my husband's socks. I slip
their kinds; 1110 late planting li a frequent ca1•~" of distress or
Tallllton. Pizza party to 10 ow. these over the . children's
failure. Only by placing your orders early can. Jd be sure that ·
AMERICAN
Legion shoes, tuck their long pants
MIDDLEPORT _ "The hour your photographer. He can dUring and after the wedding
Ute nurserymen will be able Ill delirer !II Ute most favorable ' • Auxlllary, Lewis Manley Post inside, put on· tbelr snow
"1•
or so you spend with your schedule your formal bridal ceremony.
263• 7 p.m. Tuesda Y·aI the Cants and thEm slip on their
times for pia·"·•.
photographer in planning can portrait well in advance of the
- He will abide at all times
""'"'
h
f
om1 Be tl
oots with the greatest of 1:::2:S:::.
0
Buyonlylromrellabledealersandexpecttopayf!llrprices.
orne Mrs. Na
n ey, ease., This not only makes
make your whole wedding run newspaper deadlines (with by the rules established by
Plants tlfered In senaaUooally worded advertisements, Rutland.
the boots go on easily but adds extra warmth to the chil· fimoother, " ·according to Ken . which he's almost always each particular house of ·
..ped•Uy wh!!li apparentlY lowi!rfced, are very apt to be Jn.
SYRACUSE PTA Tuesday dren's legs and feet. The same idea works for grownups ·Grover, of Grover's Studio, in familiar). And he'll )&lt;now the worship.
....
and
d•·•·poin~-·
7·30
p m Film Marijuana
by putting cotton or ·nylon footlets over shoes before slip· Middleport
• 'Wedding print sizes and finishes most
- He will work in a dignified,
f...or
........,
~....
·
·ood ba. d. · ·:
' · pmg on rubbers.- MRS. K. B.
·
·
Bulbi fot forcing Into bloom early that bave ~n burled g •
• r~t~ ~r wronR.
photography should be planned wanted by his local papers. In professional and unobtrusive
outcio91'11 or kept IIi il cool cellar shoold be brought IJX!oors In Babyaitters will be available
INEws•••~• ~"" ASSN. I
as carefully as the wedding fact, many photographers manner while recording tlils
,
.....
...o
eln
.
·
'-'--I
for
toddlers
and
up.
All
il!·
itself. Careful planning will deliver prints directly to the sacred and memorable
succeulve ba....es. TheBe bulbs lncl,..e . ~ya tha, Mar.,.., 'lerested adults are Invited to
You will re~elve a ~ollar If Polly uses your favorite
ceremony .
and TUlips 81 well as such 1euer bulbs BB Crocnaea, Snowdro)IS ·attend..
homemaking Idea, Pel Peeve, Polly's Problem or solution permit a photographer to bring appropriate editor.
- He will at no-time leave
Your
photographer
will
,_
to a problem. Write Polly In eare of this newspaper.
his professional know-how to
d Sclll Pia ce them In a cooItemperature at first · It ..
anas.
very
RACINE
GIRL
Scout
Troop
,_....:.....
bear, to get the pictures probably suggest scheduling empty cartons, flash bulbs or
"'..,... ..... that they be well rooted before they are brought Jn. 137, 3·.30 ·p.m. Tuesday at
desired without· getting In the your bridal portrait sitting well film pack tops on church
OOorl.
Racine American Legion Hall.
way of the festivities," he said. in advance of the wedding day, property.
F
~t Ia yet generally too early to make sowlnga of planta that Registration fee, $2, to be paid
According to Grover, even if you don't plan
This Code of Ethics has been
are needed for BUDIDler dl8pl8y outdoors, although sowing&amp; of and members to take hand1 1
J J
planning should actually begin newspaper coverage. It saves approved by all major
some kinds that need a very long season of growth; such as
books.
·
before one chooses a time on your wedding day. And American religious
Verbenas; Vinca rcieea and annual carnations may . be made
MIDDLEPORT Lodge 363,
photographer. Following is a you'll be fresher, more relaxed denominations, and Is en·
towll'dlthe em af the monlb.
F&amp;AM, 7:30p.m. Tuesday. One
T
checklist to ensure that the for the sitting because it will fit dorsed by the National Council
PanlieaandSweetPeaa,~nowlna cool house, willlnake candidate to receive EA
J,
I ,C/
photographer employed will do into a more leisurely schedule. of the Churches of Chrllt, the
satisfactory plailta for settlrig In the outdoor garden In early · degree. All Master Masons
, the kirm of work which will
- In planning your wedding Faml,ly Life Bureau o! the
IIJII'Ingandwlllbloomthereoreralongperiod.
invited.
Mrs. Iva Lawrence was brief business meeting. A mean satisfaction now and album, there are some scenes Na tiona! Catholic Welfare
A number of perennials, chief of whlcb are the hybrid
EASTE~ BAND Boosters, hostess for the Thursdey night products party was plannM for happy memories long arter the you know you'll want. But use Conference and the Associadon
the photographer's samples to of .Boards of Rabbla. .
De~mlendjfiiiY Jl¥1 (lrfty;earf~.seeda sown,ln 8 p.m. Tu~y, Eastern High • meeting ,of. , th~ ~W,omen's . !he near.Iutw;e..at.the home of.. weddins. 1 . .
,.
Ja~' : ·
~
':- J,,.r, "' :.:.: · 1 ;\'\o,,r. '1'
~hool. All:~~ : : :"•'$ociety,of.'&lt;Jhl'istian Sel'l(kerofo, Mrs. Jollnson with! all proceeds ; .- ;~a ~.~~~. ;i,n':· ~a\~bll,s.~ed.. ~uggest others. A/t !dt~yo11 ''-'~B.~ s~ .~t_glV~Mr •
k~of
Willow, ForsYthia, Spiraea pl'\llllfolla and attend In IIUv~ •
·'"'We Portland United )'&gt;fethodist · to go into the treasury. Thank· professional? Does be have the do this planning right tl\en, photographer your liome
some o~~ ahl'ubs liiBY be brought Indoors now·
TWIN CITY Shrmettes, Church. ,
.
'
you card was read from the equipment and experience to your phQtogrJIPher will liave dress (or where you'll dress for
andstoodlncOnlainersofwaterlnawarm,llgbtroom.Innotime !!J!wlngsession,lp.m.,bomeof
Mrs .' Ruth E~ersbach Rev. and Mrs. F'rank handle everything from your time to do thiS own planning to the wedding), t~e name alid
at aD, It~, they will be In full bloom, providing a foretaste of Mrs, Henry Ewll!ll. Articles for presided at the meeting. She Ch~sebrew. Arrangements formal bridal portrait to spur- be able to work. most ef- address of your church and_
where the reception will · be·
IIJII'Ing.
Crippled 9hlldren's Hospital to ooened with devotions from were made to pay a furnace of-the-moment candids at a ficiently.
- Let your photographer held. He'll want to go over any
Beware of damage to evergree111 and, Ill a 1easer utent, to be made.
Guide~osts from lbe Upper and fuel bill. Mrs. Carolyn crowded reception?
olh.-plaatsetlllldereaves of the bouae, by snowslldes frCim the
WEDNESDAY
Room, and Mrs. Ferne Price will host lbe February
- Is he well-regarded as a suggest ways of scheduling unfamiliar ground in advance.
- Give your photographer a
roof. When the weather is cold and the brancliea brittle, such
MIDDLEPORT ·• Pomeroy Cheesebrew led the group In meeting.
businessm~n? Does he have an photographs to make the best
abruba 81 Yew, Boxwood, Rhodode!dron and Mountain Laurel Uons Club, Wednesday noon, pr~yer. Articles on Epiphany Refreslunentswereserved to established place of business, use of time and minimize in- list of family and friends YO!!
are eully IJIII!t apart by heavy snowalldes.
·
United Meth~tCburch. . and the New Ye'ar were read by those named and Mrs. · Cora ·and a reputation in the com- terruption~. For example, he want Included In your Wedding
Do aU that you can to prevent beavy accumulatlollll of snow
POMEROY Chapter 80, Mrs. Ebersbacb. Cards were Hilton, Mrs. Ethel Johnson, munity for competence and may suggest photographs of album photographs. And
family members before the designate someone famlliar
!rpm brealdn&amp; e~rgreena. Sbakeor bruab &lt;if the snow before it Royal Arch Masons, stated signed for Mrs. Kenneth Mrs. Kathleen ward, Mrs. service?
beCIIIIIenetandbeavy and beforeltfreaeslntuolid masses. A meeting, 7:30 p.m. Pomeroy McLead and Mrs. F11nn.
Margery Roush and a guest,
- Does his work reflect your family leaves home for the With everyone on the list, but
wooclenrakeandabroomareuaefultoolsforthisjob.
Masonic Temple.
Meditation and poetry were Brenda Lawrence.
own tastes? Ask to see his church, and photographing the not In the Wf&lt;\dlng party, to
'WHITE..ROSELodge,l:30p. included in a program
samples. Every reputable wedding party as the receiving point them out Ill him.
"The whole ldea," said
m. wednesdey, Americ,an presented ~Y Mrs . Shirley
S
photographer will be happy to line forms at the reception.
Let
your
photographer
Grover,
''Ia to spend jus! a little
Legion Hall Middleport.
Johnson w1th ·a n of the
~j
· shoW them. Then, base your
'
'
members participating.
decision on the work you like make
suggestions
on time In planning. This wW
photography
at
the
church.
He
pennlt your photographer to do
THURSDAY
Reports were given during a
best.
probably
knows
the
"growid
the
best work be's capable af ...
POMEROY Chapter 80,
Said Grover:
al Arch Masollll, special
"When you've made your rules" rrom experience. If he's which mealL! a wedding that
By Mrs. Franell Morrla
Gueats of Mr. and Mrs. Steve Roy
Mrs. Opal Hollon entertained
ThurSday night, 7:30
choice,
be· very frank
in a member of the Professional · runs smoothly, and a wedding
oJ,
with
a
Christmas
Eve
family
d'
·
'th
Mr. ani Mrs. D. S. Parsons Badgley were her parents, Mr. meeting,
.m. rank and past master·
IScussmg money WI your Photographers or America, album that will be a treasury af
af Athena RO and Rev. and and Mrs. Ge&lt;qe Simpson and P
party.
Her
guests
were
Mr.
and
Ill be conferr.ed.
photographer. You're a1most Inc. (PP of A) he suhscribes.to memories for years Ill come."
degrees
Mrs.
James
Hollon
and
Mrs. Randel Parsons and daughter and children of
the PP of A'sCode of Ethics for
AFTERNOON . CIRCLE,
'/1-/INt
daughters, Sherry, Teresa and sure to find11 !bat you can Wedding Photography.
daughter, Carolyn, of Tavares, Charleston.
Heath United Methodist ·
Uf (lUI/I
arrange exce ent photography
MOTHER VISITED
Shannon, Minersville; Mr. and
Fla., visited adey'trlth Mr. and
Mrs. Ann Coe relur11ed home Church, Thursday·, 2 p.m. ·at
This Code provides that:
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Johnfor your wedding at a price you
Mrs. Crit Bradford.
from visiting her niece and
Mrs. Robert Parker, Bobby
ff d d h
d
- He will contact the of- son , Jr . or Wheeling were here
Miss Jane E. Bailey is the and Kelly, Marietta, and Mr. can a or . An w en you an
Mrs. Either. C01011tock af family, Mt:. and Mrs. John the church. Mrs. Nan Moore,
ficiating
clergyman to inform over the weekend Ill visit his
leader; Mrs.Norm!J.nWayland, new librarian at lbe Middleport and Mrs. Gerald Hollon and your photographer have
Kanauga spent Christmas Davia at Akrori.
.Mrs ..Mary Rinehart, and Mfs: Public Ul!rary.
family, Columbus.
established a mutually- himself Qf prevailing customs mother, Mrs. Paul Grueser of
holidays With har · son-in-law
Mlaa Kim Taylor and Mlas Walter Hayes, h01tesses
_ .
Miss Ba,lley asswned the
agJ:(!eable budget, you can and regulations in regard to Middleport, who remains
and daughter, Mr. and Mri. Sue Hughes of Gallipolis spent
Other holldey visitors of Mrs. expect him to work within it." taking photographs before, hospitalized. ·
poeition on Jan. 3. For the past H 11
M d Mr E R
J-Brlnker.
a week With the former's
on were r. an
s. · ·
Having ' chosen
the
several months she bas bet:n
Mr. i1lld Mrs. Charlea Spaun grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
conducting a story hour-for Hollon and Mrs. Iva ' singer' photographer il is time to
and family of Rutland spent Frank Cleland.
three and foilr·year old CHbesllter; Mrth· andMrMrs. Ded lmM ar spend about an hour with him,
Chrlltnw With Miss Mildred
Mr. and Mrs. Brian Simpson
·children 011 Mondeya between
on, A elL!;
· an
rs. planning the photography for
Gillilan.
and children of Baltimore
.
Edison Hollon and Linda, the wedding . Grover offers
OPTOMETRIST
Mlldren GIIIUan, Mrs. Spaun visited a few days after
1:30 and 2:30p.m.
MinersVille, and Mr. and Mrs. another checkiiS
' t·.
OFFICE HOURS 9: 30 TO 12,2 TO 5 (CLOSE
A native Meigs Countian, she ,.,.__
d
and family and Sheryl Slmpaon Chrlltmas Wllb Mr. and Mrs.
AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT ST.,
Ia a former teacher In the "'"" ence Stewart an son,
- If you·plan to send pictures
spent Sundey In Columbua Cheater Simpson and Mr. and
E Y.
Mr. and Mrs. Lowell ColUmbus Public Schoola and Columbus.
to your local newspaper, teD
viiiling Mr. and Mrs. Rex Mrs. Ralph Badgley.
Wingett; Pomeroy, bas as lbe Mason County Schoo~. She
Carlyle and family.
• Mr. and Mrs. Wright Roush Christmas dinner guests Mrs. resides with her father,
Mr. and Mrs. Chester of ChiWcotbe called at the Lenuna Ughter, Miss Zeilll
William R. Bailey, in MidSimpson spent a week , In· home c' hi::. and Mrs. Henry Pullin, Mrs. T. A. Riley, ·and
dleport.
cJudlng Christmas With their Roush, Dec. 28.
Mrs. Sharon Ashley and
Her immediate objective,
•on, Mr. and Mrs .. Brian . Rev. and Mrs. Fran,k , deugbter, Paula, Middleport.
SIJ1!plori and children at Cbeesebrew spent New Years Olber guests of the Wingetta on according to Jonathan E.
Louden, ·Library director, will
Baltimore, Ohio.
pay In Gallipolis :Mth Mrs. Christmas Day were Miss Ruth · be to meet the educatioiml,
Mr. and Mrs. Ro)&gt; Funk and Claud Cbeesebrew·
Wingett and her friend George .infonnational and recreational
son of Columbus spent
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Badgley McElroy, Columbus, ~ Bob library needs of the area
Chrlltnw eve and Sunday spent a couple days -In ,Wingett, Point Pleasant.
residents. ·
afternoon Wllb her parents, Baltimore with Mr. and Mrs.
On New Year's Day Mr. and
Mr .I!Dd r.lra. Jake Holman and Brian Sbnpaon and chjldren. Mrs. Wingett entertained with
spent Chrlllmas Day _With his
dlnner;. for . Mrs. Lighter,
parenla In Logan.
. ,
EGG MASK .
mother of Mrs. Wlngelt; and
Chrlatmaa weekend callers
To tighten up facial pores Miss Pullin. Other bolide)'
of Mrs. Ada RaY. and Mrs. and thorougnly 'cleanse the vWtors were Mr. and Mrs. surgery for a fractured hip, is
Ethel Wheeler Included Mrs. face, try a good faeial mask. WJWam .Wingett and . sons, convalescing at home. Mrs.
Walla~ Amberger and son, And you don't have to go Brian and . Jim of Martin, Wingett began 1971 With .a
Bill, of Cheater, Mr. and Mrs. ·· any farther than the re· Telm,, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence fractured leg and ller huSband
Harokl Sargent of Middleport, frigerator. Egg yokes make Eblin, Penny and Patti. ·
ended the year with the blp
Mra Florence Reefer of one of the best .face masks
MI. Wingett, following fracture.
A~. Mrs. James Werry of a.r o u n d. I,t dries hard to
, Morn ing Star • Mrs · Jack t1ghten
O!fd . .M
-------~ ,
c 1o s e s faCI!II
pores. mU8c!es
Wash with·
I' . . - - - - - • - - .
~ent and ~. Dorothy plain water to remove .
NoiTIB, local.
.
·
.'
MiB8 Mary Allee N- .of
IN NEW omcES
·Try OUr Noon s,.ciils
WIUolillhby and Mr. and Mrs.
Tbe Parkerillili'g office of
C11l For ADelicious ·
Dayld Neaae and son of the. FOUl\ Rivera Girl · Scout
•
Baltimore apent several days Council wllich serves the Bit
. With their mother, Mrs. Don Bend ~eighborbriod of Meigs
N-1
~ty; . bas .moved ·Ill 1922
:TODAY I
'PHONE 992·2236
AT
Mr. and &amp;frs. :Alan Griham Seventh St., Parkersburg,
and Erich of Dayton spent a .(Route 50, East).' 'l'!le new ·
wed; and ChristmaS weekend telephone number ~ 422-6474.
With Mr. P,d Mrs. Harry · Th~ office will be closed . 213 N! 2Dd
Mldd~rort
WlllfGrd.
ihJ'Ou8h Wed~lday.

·

$1,200 This Year

Mrs. S•n-key

\For Carpet Uqnners

•

seu:otebooU In wblcb you have recorded lbe behavior

Earnings Base Up

·!·FLOOR COVERINGS I

•

.

. Anti-eurling: Hints .

.

Address ··Board-

2nd MAC Loss

.

'

By POLLY CRAMER
MONDAY .
TUPPERS· PLAINS School
DEAR POLLY-Bernice can put one-inch-wide masking
Boosters, 7:30p.m. Mondey at
A wil1liJy ieature of Meigs
tape
on the 'ba~k of' her carpet runner that curls up. Put ·
school gym; UOrdon EddY,
· ·County Gll'den Club .members.
it
all
across, being sure it is even at the edges ~f the run·
.
. Jupt. of Warren Local School ner, press
down firmly, then put a second strip over the
District, guesf speaker.
first one, press down firmly and have no more turned-up
POMEROY PTA, 7:30 p. m. ends. This. has really worked on my runners.-MRS. W. D.
Thlnp to do In January: the Month
·
· at the school. Rev ..Arthur Lund ·
D~AR POLLY- Bernice is concerned about the ends or
T~ Plan Yoilr .Garden on Paper ·
to give devotions. Program.will
her carpet runners 'ty·ning up but all. she has to do is buy
feature . a teacher panel · . double-sided
tape and put it where necessary and her
. BY MBS. HENRY TUiiNEa
• discussion moderated. · by runners will not
rolL-RUTH
.\
. . . Star Garden Club '
Robert MorriS, principal. Mrs.
DEAR POLLY-My mother wants to suggest that BerIf you haven't _sent '"ay fClr the ilew.catalogu.. of favorite Mayme Snider, Mrs. John , nice buy fringe tbpt matches her carpet runners that curl
seedmen, ,c\o so without ,dalay. Seedsmen's C§talogues are M!U'J)by, Mrs, Larry Morrison, and sew lbe fringe all the way round to remove the curl.
fasclnal!ne pabllcatbla I!Dd are ·well wOC!h,close study. ·
greeters; refreshments by Fringe an inch wide or wider gives a decorative look .
thread could be used to sew. it on bot I used
· I.Giili.np .tbile In lilaklng rut your aeejl orderi and se,.ung folU'th grade mothers, Mrs. Heavy-duty
waxed
linen
carpet thread. Place right sides together and
them In; lhU!Bdpen can g!ve more delalled a~ntlon to early· Dwight Cullums,. Mrs. 6rval whip the .fringe
in place, overlapping the ends.- MRS.
pia~ oolers ~ to those .reCeived ln-th~ rusjl of the abiW
, lng ·· Wiles, Mrs. T8&lt;l w.m~ •. Ws. F. M.G.
.
'" ~
·
· John Moon, ,Fiorence Bearha,

·

Registration is Tuesday

.I

Notes, ...

·
w
m
u:overnor
p :

. .

.

. PoJ.J.Y~ l'«tiNTEHS
'
.
.

Social.
Calendar

Green Thurnb ,...
:
,,

lmp~rtartt to Ga~ B11siness

Critical in 1972

1t72

. I

.

'

.

•'

,.

Wants Leak Detected, Patched

•

' ,

.

.
141
4-1bt,DIIIJ!Ielltlntl, 'ilepu.t-P!meroy. 0., Jan.10,1t72
.

.

' -' I I '

°

N. W..COMPTON, O.D.

°

wMPlfTE MEAL$ ·

PIZZA

PHIL &amp; JIM

' '

{

i'.

•

.

�...

•

. ...
.

.

.•

a~ M
_
._._._._._~_._._..

J;_'l'beDID111!DJDtl,l6'1 J ~-Poawavy, o.,Jan.

Synth~Jic

Fuels Con,tract ·
.

.

.

'

'

WASHINGTON (UPI) -Rep. JOim f!I ....Ubbrooll, ~
•
Ohl01 bas liked &amp;he Hollie lulerul Secarlly ciuuP"IIIee
011 wbleb he II the rallklllg . . .~,leU, to flad out wllo
leaked claullled govenimenl doetunenll 011 lbe lDdla·
I
~klltan crllll to eollllllllilt Jack Aadenoa •.
·'lbti Route aad Seaale committee already pbias an
lnveatfCalloa, · ·
The announcement last week · and water ~nti-plfllution liquid form by ship from ·
.Aihbroot, a couaervatlve oppoablg Prelldenl Nb:on
that the Columbia Gas System devices, . thus prolk!lhg. both overseas sources · of 111PJlly
lor lbe GOP prealdenllal DDmt.don In lbe New Ramp. . ·.· wouid
purehase 1~ .1i11llion the atmosphere and· the ad- through 'a terminal to 'be
ClEVELAND (UP!) - The Nixon's special asslatant for of imported products, Industry
ablre primary, · contended biJ committee bad tbe
cublc.feet of synthetic pipeline . jacent Chesapeake Bay constructed at Cove Point,_
polidcal«onomic decisions of economic aflairs, said that In Week reported.
jurisdlcdoil to look lnlo lbe leU beea111e tilts oveniJid
quality gas daily .from a ftrels waters.
Md,: 1975; · lliJrttclpatlon . ill
the Pay Board apd individual this year's congressional elec- · .Sucli' legislation ''would reftldudes concerning &amp;he 1~1 elvlllaa employe secarlly
preparatiolJ plimt to bti con- - Other sources of supply studies aimf!l at constnctln'ca
conti'-ict negotiations will pro- tion, labor plans to support ly change the entire shape of
program.
.
structed
near Baltimore, Md., currently being explored by 3,700 mile, . ·ecologically..-fe
duce the biggest beadllnes on only those candidates who fa-· the reladonsbip of this country
. ''Thoae Ia goYei'JIIIIeDI who wo11ld play pmea Wllb . ·is imPortant to present and Columbia and the dele gas ·. pipeline to bring large VoiUJIIel!
lbe collective bargaining front vor restrictive measures. ·
to the rest of the world" and
onr state seCI'ell lbould be made emj;badcally .awm
future customers of Columbia from each source is e~cted to of Alaskan and Canadian ·
thi8 year,Industry Week magLabor's campaign against Indicates "an Inward-looking,
that lbe ndea of lbe ,Pm.. lll'e such thaiU. S. antborides
Ga's of Ohio, Inc., and Ohio •become available include:
Arctic gas to the ' low~ · f&amp;.
azine silld today.
international business, now fo- isolationist stance," l'l!terson ·
will play forkeepa'trllb lbese vudala," be nkl.
.
Valley
Gas
·Co.,
according
to
Construction
of
a
plant
near
·
states
and .acqulsltio!l of rights
· But olber strong force~ cused on pending legislation In said.
F. Laird, Columbus, · Green Springs, Ohio, to \o buy large vo!wnes of )bis·
· ~ by organized labor for both the House and the Senate,
Although many businessmen ~~lltC!l!lflfii!I~-IIJPll~1111W~t~m~~1111WI!Iillilm;w.l'~l.ll, W.
president
of lbe two Ohio-based produfe 88 billion cubic feet of gas, 1978; p~rtlclpation. In .
_leglilatlon'to limit the freedom has been gathering steam. The believe
the
propoSed
retail subsidiaries of ;the natura! ·gas annually · by ' research aimed at converjtng.,'
of action of lnternationaDy ori- bill would Impose restrictiolL! legislation has little chance of ·
Columbia.
Gas System.
reforming petroleum liquids this nation's :vast reserves· of
ented and multinational com- on direct Investment abroad passage, they know labor is
Lall:d Sl!ld that wliile it is inlll piJielpl~ ,q~~~tu~~ 1 l??~; , . •~o,al....i~.~-.,C~!~,~~~ · gas, .
panies-will bear watching be- and on International trade. It bringing enormous pressure on .
·
doubtful
any of the gas importation of natura• gas m 1980.
caue labor Ia eager for such would impose permanent individual senators and
.
4
produced by lbe proposed $200
legislation.
quotas in the trade area begin- representatives' Ill Support lbe
million
facility to be '(\on• .
l'l!ler G. Peterson, President nlng this year on a wide vari~ty legislation.
sttucted by an affiliate of
· At lbe same time, some labor
•
Crown
Central
Petroleum
groupS find themaelves conCorp. of Baltimore would ever
fronted With even more perbe
used' In Ohio, lbe plant's
COLUMBUS (UPI) -'- Gov. creases lbe minimum amual
sonal ' problems-such as
choosing between foregoing Jolm J. Gllllgan was scheduled pay of a beginning teacher With production would Increase the
pay raises or losing jobs, In- to speak to the state Board of a bachelor's degree $800 on . total supply of gas available to
dustry Week said. Faced With -Education at its mon'tlily meet- Jan. lin some school districts the Columbia Syslellt 1111d lbll8
this problem Is the In- Ing today, the first chief execu- and another $800 July 1. Ma'x· improve the ilmount of gas
ternational Union of Electrical, tive ever to do so since the imwns for a teacher With~ a available for use In Ohio.
However, Laird cautioned
11181Jter's degree Will be $713
Radio and Macbir.e Workers board's creation In 1956.
WntL YouR inauranc,e p~y .
that
this new source of gas
Gilligan
was
to
discuss
the
Jan.
l,am
$974
more
on
July
1.
enough
lo replace !he home
Workers may pay more in social security benefits in the (IUE ), AFLCIO. It has minimum teacher salary
The ,school board was ex- would ilot mean 8n early end lo
wage
rollback
received
lost?'
social security deductions in future because the amount of
schedule and other provisions pected to set regulaUons for limitations on new sales to
~f,.,ck your coveragt n,ow..
1972, but lbe increase will lbe social security check is demands from management of education legislation in the programs called for In the industrial and commercial
home and posst:ISIODII
mean higher benefi~ In the based on average earnings," at a growing number of recently approved budget-tax budget-tax package.
probably grown in
customers
that
Columbia
Gas
plants.
future, according to Eugene Mr. Ennatinger said. "But in
measure.
·The grOup also was to consid- of Oblo and Oblo Valley Gu
Ennatinger, Social Security ·figuring that average, we can · Competitive prei18Ul'es and
State
School
Superlntement
er ti'aliSferring land from the now have in effect throughout
District Manager.
only count earnings on which wage disparities are forcing Martin Essex bas been asked Mechanicsburg, Mansfield and the state.
·new
The percentage rate of social sOQial security contributions more firms to take hard second by lbe governor to seek quick Malimee school districts Ill lbe
"First of aU tbll gas will not
looks at contracts signed with
~ ADtMAN CARD
security deductions from have been paid."
Federal
Pay
Board
approval
of
Urbana
School
Distrl~t,
Rich-.
become
available until lbe
lhe
IUE-110111e
more
than
two
POMER9.Y
- Airman
earnings will remain the same.
The "earnings base" that
the teacher pay raises, on the land County board of Educa· winter ofl973-74," Laird said. ·John Card, soo of Mr. and
years
ago
despite
IUE
But tbe amount of earnings counts for social security has
ground "any delay In the full tlon and ll)e Toledo School Dis- "Secondly' even with this new Mrs. Robert R. Card of 211
subject to social security - the gone up gradually over lbe President Paul Jennings' ex· implementation of this legisla- trict: '
source of supply, rising
"earning base'' -will increase years as income levels have pressed opposition to wage cuts tion will continue to seriously The board also will consider dellljlnds for gas over the next Mulberry Ave., bas com·
under any circumstances. Inpleted bli U. S. Air Force
$1,200 a year in 1972.
risen in the country. In 1937, dividual
jeopardize elementary and Essex's recommendetion that few years will sill! exceed the basic !raiDing at lbe Air
IUE
locals
also
are
"If you're an employee, when the social security
secondary eduf8tion resulting Harry Wolford, an einploye In quantities we have available,
you'll still contribute 5.2 pet., program began, contributions making concessions to save from years 'of !Pss than the state· Education Depart- forcing us to maintain the ssles Tralalng Command's
Lackland AFB, Tex. He Is
but it will be on the first $9,000 were paid on the first $3,000 jobs.
adequate funding of Ohio ment four years, be appointed limitations."
The
outlook
in
tbe
steel
InremaiDIDg at Lackland lor
PH. 992-2318
you earn in work covered by earned in a year.
schools."
director •of: the Computer
Referring to the new plant,
dustry,
where
some
jobs
have
training
as
a
security
3~7 Spring Aw:
social security," Mr. Er•
The new pay scheduled in- Services· Division. · ·
Laird said Ibis is ' Just one of pollcemu.
...
Pomeroy·, Ohio
been
eliminated
and
layoffs
Alnnan Card, a
The Increase in the earnings
matinger said. In 1971 the
Th ~ 111.111 fw111 Nafi,lflllh.k i••lfl .' '&lt;lUr .•nJc:.
several
ways
Columbia
is
1970 graduate of Meigs High '
contribution was 5.2 pet. of the base will not generally affect have been numerous, is brightplanning to meet .aU the needs School, Rock Springs, at·
ening.
Steel
demand
Ia expectthe monthly social security
. first fl ,800."
of all its customers In the years
t~aded Mountain Stale
Employers pay an equal checks of the 27 million people ed to Improve gradually during
ahead.
the
first
two
quarters
of this
Btillaess· College, Parkers·
amount. Self-employed people alreadY receiving payments,
N.I IHl UV. u.lL" M utu.Li F l rt lnsuunct c,,
The a·greement for an af. burg.
year,
Industry
Week
said,
and
·
H •ln l~ Offi«' (\ liumhu~ . O h t~.l
contribute 7.5 pet. of their according to Ermatlnger.
reach
a
hlgh
level
In
the
last
RIO
GRANDE
Courses
In generally meet once a week, filiate of the Columbia Gas
covered earnings to social
Social security pays monthly
retirement,
disability, and half. Most steel produCers note business administration and while the late afternoon System to purchase the gas
aecurity.
•
"l'l!ople who earn more than survivors benefits to eligible · Improved confidence among Afro-American culture classes meet twice or three produced at · the plant was
customers.
highllghtthelateafternoonand times weekly. All evening signed Wednesday (Jan. 5) by
$71800 a year can expect higher workers and their families.
JA-NUARt.
As a result, raw steel produc- evening program . at Rio classes are finished at 9:30.
Henry A. Rosenberg Jr.,
tion now is running above the Grande College this semester.
Among the colU'ses offered president of Crown Central,
two mlllion tonH-week level Registration for the second second semester in lbe late and John W. Partridge,
'
for lbe first time since last July ·semester will be Tuesday, Jan. .afternoon and evening l\l'e Wllm\"gton, chairman of the
when steel uSers com)jleted 11, in ·. · tbe ·Davis·:, ;H·an ·accounting;·.:. management;:; · .:&lt;Jolullibli~stem:tllilstlinated .
stockpiling the metal against a Recreation Room.
business law, economics, cost ·•·oaf••, lhe ~u Is ap.steelworkers' strike !bat never
Accordlng to DeanS. Brown, education, English, French proximately $1.05 cents pe~ ·
materialized. Estimated raw director of admissions and health and physical educatio~ thousand cubic feet delivered
steel output in the week ended records, students who have not . and history, as well as political . to Columbia at the plant site.
.'
Jan. 8 was 2,085,000 net tons pre-registered for the semester science, psychology, social
Plant construction is
C01J1pared With lbe (irecedlng are to report to the side en- science, sociology and speech': scheduled to begin in June ·of
For more information on this year (1972) with com·
II)' Ualled Preai blterudOIIai oow :1-7 overall and .G-1 In the week's 2,004,000 .tons. This trance of Davis Hall. He said
makes three of lbe last four registration will be from 9 to 4· registration and class of- pletion In the winter ofl973-74.
Toledo's Tom Kozelko has MAC.
pushed defending champion
At Kent, St. Bonaventure's weeks a two mlllion plus week. and 6:30 to 8, but the offices ferings, contact the Ad- Wilen completed, the plant will
For the third consecutive will be closed from noon to 1 for missions and Records Office at employ more than 3000 perMiami Ill lbe edge of the cliff In Glenn Price and Carl Jackson
week,
continued rlalng demand lunch.
245-5353.
sons. It will be c,apable of
the Mid-American Conference combined for 41 points tO spark
•
•
for
steel
scrap
bas
5ent
prices
Brown
said
that
evening
processing 100,000 barrels a
baakethall race.
the Bonnies to a 76-63 win over
higher
and
deilers
Indicate
•
rates apply to those classes
dey of foreign crude oil.
Kozelko, a 8-8 junior COllVer!- the Golden Flashes.
further
Increases
ate
likely
in
that
begin
at
or
after
6
p.m.,
'WU
In
addition'
to
lbe
minimum
'
ed center, IJCOred 29 points and
The Bonnies led only 34-32 at
~
primary
grades,
Industrr
while
the
late
afternoon
classes
100
cubic
feet
of
gas
daily,
the
pulled down 'I&amp; rebound! In Sat- halftime, but pulled steadily
are considered day classes.
Baltimore . plant will produce
urday nigbt's lfl-67 Toledo vic- away·in the second half, hold- Week reporled.
•
The
price
composite
on
No.
1,
Classes
hegin
Wednesday,
Jan.
residual
fuel oil.lrith a sulphur
tory over the Redskins, hand· inga64-46marglnwlth6:47re•
heavy melting steelmaking 12.
Mrs. Sarah Daniels Starkey, content of 0.3 pet. which will
ing them their second straight 11)81nlng.
••
The purpose of lhe late af- 86, died Sundey at the North- meet the strictest standards
MAC loss. and placing them In
Ruben Vance was high man scrap rose to f33.17 per gross
ton
from
the
piecedlng
week's
ternoon and evening classes at brook, Ill. home 'of her proposed by the Enposition for early title elimina- with 23 points for Kent State,
$32.
The
level
Ia
now
the
highthe
college is to offer deughter, Mrs. Don Laverty. vinronmental Protection
lion.
oow 2-7 on lbe year.
est
since
last
October.
educational opportunities to
A member of the MiddlepOrt Agency of the U. S. GoVernPlus. , .Free Mercharidise
The victory for Toledo, howDayton, paced by sophomore
The
laiest
figure
is
based
on
those
who
are
unable
to
attend
First
Uhlted
Presbyterian
ment,
and
wblch
will
be
sold
ever, puts lbe surprising Rock- guard Donald Smilb With 24
•
I ;
ets In first place with a ~ points, won its third straight lhe following gross ton priceil: college on a full-time basis due Church, Mrs. Starkey made for vl\l'ious power uses.
According to'Crown Central,
conference record and was game and evened its mark 5-5 Pittsb.urgh, $35.50; to work commitments or olber her home In Middleport for
~yyearslrithhersister, Dr. the plant will lncporate' the
their ninth win In 10 starts with an 114-72 decision of lbe Philadelphia f32; and Chicago, obligations.
OPEN- FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS MIDDI.EPORT
$32.
The evening
classes Kathryn Poindexter. Besides latest,most comprehensive air
overall. .
University of San.Diego.
Kozelko, who also held two
The Flyers led ~7 at halfMrs.
Laverty, daughter,
she is survived
by another
Mrs.
· :·
Miami centers, Steve Handy time and maintslried a comforGeorge
Owens,
Fort
Wayne,
and Tom Roberts, to a com- table margin the rest of lbe
Ind., four grandchildren, 'two
. lined six points, blew the Red- way, holding their biggest lead
great-grandchildren,
and two
llkinl out of the ·game In the at 83-65 \oith I:18 to go.
'
Coach Art Lanham's Rio
llrst live rillnutes of the second
Sixth-ranked Louisville,
RIO GRANDE (9%) - brothers, Col. Tom Daniels of
Grande
College
Redmen
return
half as be scored all 13 Toledo paced by Jiip Price lrilb 30
Bentley, 7.J..17; Hairston, 5-G- Lakeland, Pa.; and George
points.
points, handed Cincinnati its home to friendly eonflnes of 10; Lambert, 4-3-11; Bartram, Daniels of Grove City.
His efforts stretched a 3:1-31 fourth loss In II games, 84-76. Lyne Center Wednesday for the 2-1-6; Hart, 14-3-31; Bollineer,
Graveside rites for Mrs.
first time since Dec:4following 2-0-l;t'bompson, 3-0-6; Rouse, Starkey will , be held 1\Jesday
balftlme margin for Toledo to
Price's Spree Decisive
45-311 and broke the game open.
Price bit five baskets In a their folU'th setback Saturdey 0-0-0; Martin,448.TOTALS afternoon at a Toledo
•
After that run, the Rockets led two-minute period midway In In five road outings during the 41·1G-92.
Cemetery. She will be buried
past
month.
by at least 10 the rest of the ~ the second hall to give the
BEREA (10f)- Smith, 1:1-4- beside her late husband,
...
Lander
College
will
visit
Rio
way.
Cards a l(}.polnt lead and de28; Anderson, 1G-2-22; Owens, Robert Starkey.
for a non-league game at 8 1-1·3; . Pierson,
For MIAmi, now 4-5 on the cide the outcome.
4-0-8;
Jear, sophomore guard Phil
Sophomore Uoyd Batts led o'clock Wednesday.
Bacigalupi, 3-U; Fox, 4;o.a;
Saturday night at Berea, Maynard, 1-5-7; Bruner, 448;
Lumpkin w~s-hlgh With 24.
Cincinnati with 27 points while
Ky., the Redmen held a 46-45 Miller, 6-G-12. 1'0TALS 45-1t- 1
Ohio University got off on the Derrek Dickey added 18.
I
CCI
· ight track In its first conferAkron, the nation's lOth halftime lead over the 10..
et\ce game with a 91-89 victory ranked college diviSion teaiit, Mountaineers, but Berea came
James Criswell, Fairlane
over Bowling Green, but not ran its record to 9-1 with an 84- back strong in the second half . COURSE COMPLETED
to
defeat
the
Redmen,
104-92.
.
Drive,'
Middleport,
is
before ~me anxious first half 73 victory over Brockport State
1· Barnhart, recuperating from cbest In·
The
loss
left
Rio
with'
a
5-5
Airman
Wayne
momenta for Coach Jim Snyd. (N.Y.) behind Len Paul's 23
~ .Most people ~ook towl rd . (4% th e fi rst y~ar). That ext ra
Will;;m R. Juries, syffered in a two-car
retlre~ent
as a t1me 9ir.elaxauon Yi %, pa)·able as a bo Qu s at
er.
points. The Zips scored 14 season mark. Berea is now 8-8 son of Mr ·and Mrs.
of 211 Rock St., · colli~on Wo:dnesday afternoon
~nd enjoyment. :\nd,Jt can be . · matunty, applies to all Bond I
The Bobcata, a bot and cold straight points midway in the on the year, and 5;() at borne. Barnhart
Pomeroy, has graduated at on state Route 7
miles
1f y~u prepare for i~'tBut if you issued smce June 1, 1970 . .• ~ith
team so far this year, irailed second half to put the game out
Doug Hart's 31 points paced Sheppa.rd AF.B.• Tex., from the sooth of Middleport.
dor, t,, lt can be a time o~ worry a comparable improvement for
the underdog FalcolL!, 41-32 at of reach.
the Redmen Saturday. Roger tech 1tr
f u
an(i
discontentment. :\ time when all older Bonds.
Bentley, learn captain, finished
mea ammg course or · · Criswell, a passenger In the
Intermission.
you
_
c~n look back and think of
Buy U.S. Sav ings Bonds.
S. Air Force protecUve coating Lawrence · Stewart car, was
a
Late R.ny Wlaa
1n1lhori
ways
that
you
could
They'll
help make vo
with 17. Ron Lambert added II specialists. Airman Barnhart,
Capital, 17th ranked, rolled and
have
saved,
but
didn't.
'
reti
rement
just
what yOuu~ t
Harry Hairston 10.
. who was trained to construct taken by private emergency
Snyder, however, us111g all of to its ninth win without a loss
Well, there's no better time it to be.
· an
Rio hit 41 of'82 shots from the . maintain and repair mason.; out-patient treatment. Criswell '
Iii 21 years' eJperience, raJ. and third in the Ohio Con·
to think ab~]:ut retirement than ...
now, whil~ You're working.
lledbla team In the aecom half, ference wtlb a 103-68 deelston field, and sank 10 of 18 free and concrete buildings Is wasnotlistedasapauengerin ·
One easy way, to s;~,ve on a
_taking advantage of the .slze of over Oberlin. Bob Arnold throw attempts. The Redmen being assigned to Lock~ne the Stew~rt car in the original ·
·-·~·
: ·~
~
M
regular
basis is by purchasing
collected
41
'
rebounds
with
AFB,
Ohio.
He
atiended
Meigs
accident
report
which
apr
guards Todd LaUch and tallied 27 points and Joe
"'l
U.S 1 Savings Bonds through' the
I
•
.
Tommy Corde as the Bobcats
Bent\ey. Hairston and Martin Sigh Scbooi.,His wife, Marsha, peared In Thursday's edition of
Payroll
Savings
Plan
wht:re
,
acored
flna
25 to pace tfie
1a! Cacobus
~the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. The Daily SenuPel.
1
. . ' ~r..fili
you work.
It points In the
Crusaders who led 45-24 at each hauling down nine.
DOOIItea o'f"lllay
·
•
Now there's a bonus intere:;t ·
Smith and At!derson, wllb 28 William ThorntOn of Rt. I,
• 'Lallch, &amp;-6, a~ Corde, 6-l, · halftime.
rate on all-u.s. Savings Bonds- llAh .~ uft. lf':"'· " o!H,III olhu•• , .. t,
and 22 points respectively, Dexter.
for E •Bonds'
531 (10
!/ when held to
-« •tt~•u ...... \\htft """....1, 1hrr n " u. ~~
f8eh flnlahe&lt;l the night With 31
paced.the winners. Berea lilt 45
,
'
u •kt:.l •• ' "' '' ,.. ~~- Tu "IIY I• .t.rnrcd
m'atuflty
or
5
years,
1
0
months
••nil! " 'lrm(' rlo.. .'ln.l ••• • ,. ll'mrml•···
~
Other
games
saw
Findlay
rip
poinll, but LaUch bit 24 and
of 74 field goal attempts, and 14 CYCLQNESSUSPENDMACK •
llon.k ••• l l'fl!'•d • •)• '" '" " ·
'
Cotde lt In the second half, Mercy College of Detroit, 128- of 17 free throws.
. AMES, Iowa (UP!) -Iowa
• with 8nJder ualng biJ ~ men 89, Defiance win Its 11th In a
Following Wednesday's non. State basketball player Gene .
row loo..atl over Cedarville, league game with Lander
Take stqdc in Atntetic:a..
Ill • pkti fClr them.
Mack has been dropped froin
Ashland
humble
Shaw
(Mich.)
Now Roods pay~~ at maturit~
Lalidl wu matched agairist
..
College, the Redmen return to the squad for lbe rest of the·
.. ...
103~,
Ohio
Northern
trip
1\l,jd.OhioConference
play.With
tile F'*-' 6-2 Jeff Lessfg,
•' A
, r~..u ~ r....,_....... ... .... ............... ~ .
season, Cyclones' coach Maury
vEil~ .. ~........ .......... ....... ~.._ ... _ ...,~ """
~ Oirde went agailllt BG 's Wayne State 107-96, Urbana a game at Walsh on Fridey: John Sllid .!he action was taken
n...\-"' _. '"" y,,_, .... Ttw '"'''"""'I ~-~ down Marian (Inc!.) 116-100, . Saturdey night, 'Rio -will play because Mack missed a pre.
UA!Ruu.
SP-IIilO I
• 8r1aD Scanlon led Bowling Kenyon take W &amp; J 87-69, and · another MOC tilt at Malone· game m~ting before ISU'a
I
' Grsen lrith 21 polnta. and Tom Cleveland State beat Bllffalo
Box score of Saturday'~ conf~rence opener .,galnst
ScoU bad 20 for the ~~atcons, State 76-75.
·
se tba ck :
Oklahoma Saturdey night.
'

.,

'.

~

r)ationwidee

I

.I

I· FURNITURE I

~
~

.

Lilm '

Wingetts Hl!st

Holiday Dinner

Theendof

Criswell Hurt
In A •den

three

. -'!. . '
I

' 1.- ,

..

,

i

-I

..'
.'

'i

' .Bat'/ery
Mt''"S

Retiremetit.

I

·«&lt;&lt; u.~:1'l~·'

ChristrmJS Eve .

Racine Social Events

~-~--..:.-::::..::::::::::::::::::::~

'

'«««&lt;m~""*"''

Ramt''ze' Dine

INGELS FURNJTURE

Redmen Lose

;f~·

"r

ALL THIS WEEK
While Quantities Last!

I

CHIVE GROUND BEEF
STROGANoFF
l'r• pounds ground beer
·1 medium onion, c~opped
2 tablespoons butter
1 (2% -oz.I jar sliced
mushrooms
l (6-oz.) can white sauce
2 tablespoons sherry or
. beef bouillon
I cup dairy sour cgam
Sail and pepper to taste
3 tablespoons frozen or
freeze-tlrled chopped
chives
Saute onion in butter until
golden. Add ground beef and
sa u l e, stirring frequentl y
~nd cook until thoroughly

Ro..,.t/an'd TIVVTCC' C Met
rr
1th Mr.·cLaw¥nnce
VV i.
·

'$kins Suffer

!•BEdDING
ZENITH TV AND STEREO

lly AILEEN CLAIRE
NEA l' ood Editor .
Stroganoff a I w a y s ,ha;
been a good dish to serve ·
when entertaining rour to six .
guests or more. A quick and
· r 1a v o r f u I one is Chive
G r o u n d Beef Stroganoff.
This- recipe, using ground· ·
beef, ass ures the hostess her
gue s ts won't race tough
pieces of bee.f which does
happen occasionally. Serve
over noodles or rice and with
a hearty salad .

Wedding Plans Should Include
Brief Time with Photographer

INGELS

Died on Sunday

Ground Beef Stroganof~ ·

of Mrs. Wllllain Woods and Mrs .
;_ .. .-"m~·~"- Polly's Problem ·, , ,' .., ,:,,.'..... , .,,,.,,,.'-&lt;&gt;«
,,. ....&gt;1&lt;, .
·. .
llawers ani vegetablei y0u bave grown In previOWI yean, as well VIrgil Lee.
~
.
as obs . vaU01111 of VJJr!eUea that have appealed to yqu as yon
SOUTHERN ATHLETIC 1\i DEAR POLLY~! know that alabaster cannot be !;,
Ground bee f is bose lor Chive Bee f Stroganoff for
haveeeeothemgrowlnclno!bergardelis, wlllbeofgreatbelpln Boosters Monday 7:30p.m. at · cleaned with water so I hope some of the leaders tc
simple party dish.
can tell me bow to clean my alabaster figurines.- ,;
"'"'- what ._..to
~·-d·
blgh
school.
de..._
order.
·
MEIGS
cHAPTER 53, DAV,
ANN. MARIE
[
. Wbenrnalj!ngoutyourseedorders;k~chleflyt(lvirtetlea - Mondey, 7:30p.m. All mem·'•l.:~-~«»'-~~-~'~it&gt;'1=&lt;:=:».-m·.-."'"'~
w:a:·»:·•J;:rJ\&gt;:~ ~-=&lt;·:&lt;:o:::&lt;~J:•c&lt;.&gt;ito,,·;-t~«-o~:~«'!J
•*"l~'if&lt;:'"'·~~-"")
,-U!i!"'&gt;~~'-'*""*''""'""'w'."'
~~
{j~v&lt;:&lt;~""''·"-'
·""""'"·'"m$.··"~-'""'""'~'· '·i''""
~""''~J::;::;..,
=~ .. mJ~,.
browned. A d d mu shroom s ta ste. Ju st before serving,
o! lmoWII performa!ICe. Klncls that have done well for you be(ore, bers and wives hi vi ted.
mushroom liquid. Mix sttr in sour cream and chi·
and
or P.Jat ll1'e knOwn to tlrtve In your locality. :!lut be venturesome Refreshments.
DEAR POLLY-My Pet Peeve is ' with the litany tele·
with
beef and onions. Add ves. Serve over noodles o:
loloughld. to try1a few of the new kindl of.Ocwiers am vegeta~Jes
RUTLAND pt
' A, 7._ 30 p.m.
vision and radio commercials directed at us in thick
white
sauce and blend thor- nee . Garni sh with additional
.IIi the •••·~·
British accents . .Why do they inject that phony snob
oughly
. Add sherr y and chives . Makes 4 servings.
uull~ . . ·
ca-uea,.the varieties Ute aeedsmen term Rutland Elementary School. appeal in advertising when trying to sell American prod·
!-lend.
Sal t and pepper to
"noveltlea."..BY growing some of the season's noveiUes yoii will
ucts to American consumers?-GERTRUDE
( HE WS P i~. PER ENTERPRISE A55N.)
add zeit .and..fm to your gardening.
.
'
TUESDAY
DEAR POLLY-We mothers all know how hard it is to
Seed catalogues need firat attenUon; but aend too for the
O!UO ETA Phl Chapter., get childreq's b 0 0 t s and
.~
catalopes of nuHerymen,lf tbll spring you Intend to plant any
Beta, Sigma Phi SorOI)ity, 7:30 rubbers on over their regtrees,lhi-uba, evergreena, fruit tree&amp; or blftbea,I'OIIell, pel'!mlllaJa p.m. Tuesday, home of Mrs. ular shoes but last winter I
or other planll; that you will buy as plants rather tj1an as seeds. · · Charlotte Hanning. Cultural discovered a way that .
Early orderln Ia 81
"·'here
program on pictures by Mrs. really works very well. I .. .
. · g
euenas It li With aeed8. It ill of Hanning and Charlotte saved. several old pairs of ' . ·
Ute utmalt Importance to set out planta at the right Urnes for
.
ll
my husband's socks. I slip
their kinds; 1110 late planting li a frequent ca1•~" of distress or
Tallllton. Pizza party to 10 ow. these over the . children's
failure. Only by placing your orders early can. Jd be sure that ·
AMERICAN
Legion shoes, tuck their long pants
MIDDLEPORT _ "The hour your photographer. He can dUring and after the wedding
Ute nurserymen will be able Ill delirer !II Ute most favorable ' • Auxlllary, Lewis Manley Post inside, put on· tbelr snow
"1•
or so you spend with your schedule your formal bridal ceremony.
263• 7 p.m. Tuesda Y·aI the Cants and thEm slip on their
times for pia·"·•.
photographer in planning can portrait well in advance of the
- He will abide at all times
""'"'
h
f
om1 Be tl
oots with the greatest of 1:::2:S:::.
0
Buyonlylromrellabledealersandexpecttopayf!llrprices.
orne Mrs. Na
n ey, ease., This not only makes
make your whole wedding run newspaper deadlines (with by the rules established by
Plants tlfered In senaaUooally worded advertisements, Rutland.
the boots go on easily but adds extra warmth to the chil· fimoother, " ·according to Ken . which he's almost always each particular house of ·
..ped•Uy wh!!li apparentlY lowi!rfced, are very apt to be Jn.
SYRACUSE PTA Tuesday dren's legs and feet. The same idea works for grownups ·Grover, of Grover's Studio, in familiar). And he'll )&lt;now the worship.
....
and
d•·•·poin~-·
7·30
p m Film Marijuana
by putting cotton or ·nylon footlets over shoes before slip· Middleport
• 'Wedding print sizes and finishes most
- He will work in a dignified,
f...or
........,
~....
·
·ood ba. d. · ·:
' · pmg on rubbers.- MRS. K. B.
·
·
Bulbi fot forcing Into bloom early that bave ~n burled g •
• r~t~ ~r wronR.
photography should be planned wanted by his local papers. In professional and unobtrusive
outcio91'11 or kept IIi il cool cellar shoold be brought IJX!oors In Babyaitters will be available
INEws•••~• ~"" ASSN. I
as carefully as the wedding fact, many photographers manner while recording tlils
,
.....
...o
eln
.
·
'-'--I
for
toddlers
and
up.
All
il!·
itself. Careful planning will deliver prints directly to the sacred and memorable
succeulve ba....es. TheBe bulbs lncl,..e . ~ya tha, Mar.,.., 'lerested adults are Invited to
You will re~elve a ~ollar If Polly uses your favorite
ceremony .
and TUlips 81 well as such 1euer bulbs BB Crocnaea, Snowdro)IS ·attend..
homemaking Idea, Pel Peeve, Polly's Problem or solution permit a photographer to bring appropriate editor.
- He will at no-time leave
Your
photographer
will
,_
to a problem. Write Polly In eare of this newspaper.
his professional know-how to
d Sclll Pia ce them In a cooItemperature at first · It ..
anas.
very
RACINE
GIRL
Scout
Troop
,_....:.....
bear, to get the pictures probably suggest scheduling empty cartons, flash bulbs or
"'..,... ..... that they be well rooted before they are brought Jn. 137, 3·.30 ·p.m. Tuesday at
desired without· getting In the your bridal portrait sitting well film pack tops on church
OOorl.
Racine American Legion Hall.
way of the festivities," he said. in advance of the wedding day, property.
F
~t Ia yet generally too early to make sowlnga of planta that Registration fee, $2, to be paid
According to Grover, even if you don't plan
This Code of Ethics has been
are needed for BUDIDler dl8pl8y outdoors, although sowing&amp; of and members to take hand1 1
J J
planning should actually begin newspaper coverage. It saves approved by all major
some kinds that need a very long season of growth; such as
books.
·
before one chooses a time on your wedding day. And American religious
Verbenas; Vinca rcieea and annual carnations may . be made
MIDDLEPORT Lodge 363,
photographer. Following is a you'll be fresher, more relaxed denominations, and Is en·
towll'dlthe em af the monlb.
F&amp;AM, 7:30p.m. Tuesday. One
T
checklist to ensure that the for the sitting because it will fit dorsed by the National Council
PanlieaandSweetPeaa,~nowlna cool house, willlnake candidate to receive EA
J,
I ,C/
photographer employed will do into a more leisurely schedule. of the Churches of Chrllt, the
satisfactory plailta for settlrig In the outdoor garden In early · degree. All Master Masons
, the kirm of work which will
- In planning your wedding Faml,ly Life Bureau o! the
IIJII'Ingandwlllbloomthereoreralongperiod.
invited.
Mrs. Iva Lawrence was brief business meeting. A mean satisfaction now and album, there are some scenes Na tiona! Catholic Welfare
A number of perennials, chief of whlcb are the hybrid
EASTE~ BAND Boosters, hostess for the Thursdey night products party was plannM for happy memories long arter the you know you'll want. But use Conference and the Associadon
the photographer's samples to of .Boards of Rabbla. .
De~mlendjfiiiY Jl¥1 (lrfty;earf~.seeda sown,ln 8 p.m. Tu~y, Eastern High • meeting ,of. , th~ ~W,omen's . !he near.Iutw;e..at.the home of.. weddins. 1 . .
,.
Ja~' : ·
~
':- J,,.r, "' :.:.: · 1 ;\'\o,,r. '1'
~hool. All:~~ : : :"•'$ociety,of.'&lt;Jhl'istian Sel'l(kerofo, Mrs. Jollnson with! all proceeds ; .- ;~a ~.~~~. ;i,n':· ~a\~bll,s.~ed.. ~uggest others. A/t !dt~yo11 ''-'~B.~ s~ .~t_glV~Mr •
k~of
Willow, ForsYthia, Spiraea pl'\llllfolla and attend In IIUv~ •
·'"'We Portland United )'&gt;fethodist · to go into the treasury. Thank· professional? Does be have the do this planning right tl\en, photographer your liome
some o~~ ahl'ubs liiBY be brought Indoors now·
TWIN CITY Shrmettes, Church. ,
.
'
you card was read from the equipment and experience to your phQtogrJIPher will liave dress (or where you'll dress for
andstoodlncOnlainersofwaterlnawarm,llgbtroom.Innotime !!J!wlngsession,lp.m.,bomeof
Mrs .' Ruth E~ersbach Rev. and Mrs. F'rank handle everything from your time to do thiS own planning to the wedding), t~e name alid
at aD, It~, they will be In full bloom, providing a foretaste of Mrs, Henry Ewll!ll. Articles for presided at the meeting. She Ch~sebrew. Arrangements formal bridal portrait to spur- be able to work. most ef- address of your church and_
where the reception will · be·
IIJII'Ing.
Crippled 9hlldren's Hospital to ooened with devotions from were made to pay a furnace of-the-moment candids at a ficiently.
- Let your photographer held. He'll want to go over any
Beware of damage to evergree111 and, Ill a 1easer utent, to be made.
Guide~osts from lbe Upper and fuel bill. Mrs. Carolyn crowded reception?
olh.-plaatsetlllldereaves of the bouae, by snowslldes frCim the
WEDNESDAY
Room, and Mrs. Ferne Price will host lbe February
- Is he well-regarded as a suggest ways of scheduling unfamiliar ground in advance.
- Give your photographer a
roof. When the weather is cold and the brancliea brittle, such
MIDDLEPORT ·• Pomeroy Cheesebrew led the group In meeting.
businessm~n? Does he have an photographs to make the best
abruba 81 Yew, Boxwood, Rhodode!dron and Mountain Laurel Uons Club, Wednesday noon, pr~yer. Articles on Epiphany Refreslunentswereserved to established place of business, use of time and minimize in- list of family and friends YO!!
are eully IJIII!t apart by heavy snowalldes.
·
United Meth~tCburch. . and the New Ye'ar were read by those named and Mrs. · Cora ·and a reputation in the com- terruption~. For example, he want Included In your Wedding
Do aU that you can to prevent beavy accumulatlollll of snow
POMEROY Chapter 80, Mrs. Ebersbacb. Cards were Hilton, Mrs. Ethel Johnson, munity for competence and may suggest photographs of album photographs. And
family members before the designate someone famlliar
!rpm brealdn&amp; e~rgreena. Sbakeor bruab &lt;if the snow before it Royal Arch Masons, stated signed for Mrs. Kenneth Mrs. Kathleen ward, Mrs. service?
beCIIIIIenetandbeavy and beforeltfreaeslntuolid masses. A meeting, 7:30 p.m. Pomeroy McLead and Mrs. F11nn.
Margery Roush and a guest,
- Does his work reflect your family leaves home for the With everyone on the list, but
wooclenrakeandabroomareuaefultoolsforthisjob.
Masonic Temple.
Meditation and poetry were Brenda Lawrence.
own tastes? Ask to see his church, and photographing the not In the Wf&lt;\dlng party, to
'WHITE..ROSELodge,l:30p. included in a program
samples. Every reputable wedding party as the receiving point them out Ill him.
"The whole ldea," said
m. wednesdey, Americ,an presented ~Y Mrs . Shirley
S
photographer will be happy to line forms at the reception.
Let
your
photographer
Grover,
''Ia to spend jus! a little
Legion Hall Middleport.
Johnson w1th ·a n of the
~j
· shoW them. Then, base your
'
'
members participating.
decision on the work you like make
suggestions
on time In planning. This wW
photography
at
the
church.
He
pennlt your photographer to do
THURSDAY
Reports were given during a
best.
probably
knows
the
"growid
the
best work be's capable af ...
POMEROY Chapter 80,
Said Grover:
al Arch Masollll, special
"When you've made your rules" rrom experience. If he's which mealL! a wedding that
By Mrs. Franell Morrla
Gueats of Mr. and Mrs. Steve Roy
Mrs. Opal Hollon entertained
ThurSday night, 7:30
choice,
be· very frank
in a member of the Professional · runs smoothly, and a wedding
oJ,
with
a
Christmas
Eve
family
d'
·
'th
Mr. ani Mrs. D. S. Parsons Badgley were her parents, Mr. meeting,
.m. rank and past master·
IScussmg money WI your Photographers or America, album that will be a treasury af
af Athena RO and Rev. and and Mrs. Ge&lt;qe Simpson and P
party.
Her
guests
were
Mr.
and
Ill be conferr.ed.
photographer. You're a1most Inc. (PP of A) he suhscribes.to memories for years Ill come."
degrees
Mrs.
James
Hollon
and
Mrs. Randel Parsons and daughter and children of
the PP of A'sCode of Ethics for
AFTERNOON . CIRCLE,
'/1-/INt
daughters, Sherry, Teresa and sure to find11 !bat you can Wedding Photography.
daughter, Carolyn, of Tavares, Charleston.
Heath United Methodist ·
Uf (lUI/I
arrange exce ent photography
MOTHER VISITED
Shannon, Minersville; Mr. and
Fla., visited adey'trlth Mr. and
Mrs. Ann Coe relur11ed home Church, Thursday·, 2 p.m. ·at
This Code provides that:
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Johnfor your wedding at a price you
Mrs. Crit Bradford.
from visiting her niece and
Mrs. Robert Parker, Bobby
ff d d h
d
- He will contact the of- son , Jr . or Wheeling were here
Miss Jane E. Bailey is the and Kelly, Marietta, and Mr. can a or . An w en you an
Mrs. Either. C01011tock af family, Mt:. and Mrs. John the church. Mrs. Nan Moore,
ficiating
clergyman to inform over the weekend Ill visit his
leader; Mrs.Norm!J.nWayland, new librarian at lbe Middleport and Mrs. Gerald Hollon and your photographer have
Kanauga spent Christmas Davia at Akrori.
.Mrs ..Mary Rinehart, and Mfs: Public Ul!rary.
family, Columbus.
established a mutually- himself Qf prevailing customs mother, Mrs. Paul Grueser of
holidays With har · son-in-law
Mlaa Kim Taylor and Mlas Walter Hayes, h01tesses
_ .
Miss Ba,lley asswned the
agJ:(!eable budget, you can and regulations in regard to Middleport, who remains
and daughter, Mr. and Mri. Sue Hughes of Gallipolis spent
Other holldey visitors of Mrs. expect him to work within it." taking photographs before, hospitalized. ·
poeition on Jan. 3. For the past H 11
M d Mr E R
J-Brlnker.
a week With the former's
on were r. an
s. · ·
Having ' chosen
the
several months she bas bet:n
Mr. i1lld Mrs. Charlea Spaun grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
conducting a story hour-for Hollon and Mrs. Iva ' singer' photographer il is time to
and family of Rutland spent Frank Cleland.
three and foilr·year old CHbesllter; Mrth· andMrMrs. Ded lmM ar spend about an hour with him,
Chrlltnw With Miss Mildred
Mr. and Mrs. Brian Simpson
·children 011 Mondeya between
on, A elL!;
· an
rs. planning the photography for
Gillilan.
and children of Baltimore
.
Edison Hollon and Linda, the wedding . Grover offers
OPTOMETRIST
Mlldren GIIIUan, Mrs. Spaun visited a few days after
1:30 and 2:30p.m.
MinersVille, and Mr. and Mrs. another checkiiS
' t·.
OFFICE HOURS 9: 30 TO 12,2 TO 5 (CLOSE
A native Meigs Countian, she ,.,.__
d
and family and Sheryl Slmpaon Chrlltmas Wllb Mr. and Mrs.
AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT ST.,
Ia a former teacher In the "'"" ence Stewart an son,
- If you·plan to send pictures
spent Sundey In Columbua Cheater Simpson and Mr. and
E Y.
Mr. and Mrs. Lowell ColUmbus Public Schoola and Columbus.
to your local newspaper, teD
viiiling Mr. and Mrs. Rex Mrs. Ralph Badgley.
Wingett; Pomeroy, bas as lbe Mason County Schoo~. She
Carlyle and family.
• Mr. and Mrs. Wright Roush Christmas dinner guests Mrs. resides with her father,
Mr. and Mrs. Chester of ChiWcotbe called at the Lenuna Ughter, Miss Zeilll
William R. Bailey, in MidSimpson spent a week , In· home c' hi::. and Mrs. Henry Pullin, Mrs. T. A. Riley, ·and
dleport.
cJudlng Christmas With their Roush, Dec. 28.
Mrs. Sharon Ashley and
Her immediate objective,
•on, Mr. and Mrs .. Brian . Rev. and Mrs. Fran,k , deugbter, Paula, Middleport.
SIJ1!plori and children at Cbeesebrew spent New Years Olber guests of the Wingetta on according to Jonathan E.
Louden, ·Library director, will
Baltimore, Ohio.
pay In Gallipolis :Mth Mrs. Christmas Day were Miss Ruth · be to meet the educatioiml,
Mr. and Mrs. Ro)&gt; Funk and Claud Cbeesebrew·
Wingett and her friend George .infonnational and recreational
son of Columbus spent
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Badgley McElroy, Columbus, ~ Bob library needs of the area
Chrlltnw eve and Sunday spent a couple days -In ,Wingett, Point Pleasant.
residents. ·
afternoon Wllb her parents, Baltimore with Mr. and Mrs.
On New Year's Day Mr. and
Mr .I!Dd r.lra. Jake Holman and Brian Sbnpaon and chjldren. Mrs. Wingett entertained with
spent Chrlllmas Day _With his
dlnner;. for . Mrs. Lighter,
parenla In Logan.
. ,
EGG MASK .
mother of Mrs. Wlngelt; and
Chrlatmaa weekend callers
To tighten up facial pores Miss Pullin. Other bolide)'
of Mrs. Ada RaY. and Mrs. and thorougnly 'cleanse the vWtors were Mr. and Mrs. surgery for a fractured hip, is
Ethel Wheeler Included Mrs. face, try a good faeial mask. WJWam .Wingett and . sons, convalescing at home. Mrs.
Walla~ Amberger and son, And you don't have to go Brian and . Jim of Martin, Wingett began 1971 With .a
Bill, of Cheater, Mr. and Mrs. ·· any farther than the re· Telm,, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence fractured leg and ller huSband
Harokl Sargent of Middleport, frigerator. Egg yokes make Eblin, Penny and Patti. ·
ended the year with the blp
Mra Florence Reefer of one of the best .face masks
MI. Wingett, following fracture.
A~. Mrs. James Werry of a.r o u n d. I,t dries hard to
, Morn ing Star • Mrs · Jack t1ghten
O!fd . .M
-------~ ,
c 1o s e s faCI!II
pores. mU8c!es
Wash with·
I' . . - - - - - • - - .
~ent and ~. Dorothy plain water to remove .
NoiTIB, local.
.
·
.'
MiB8 Mary Allee N- .of
IN NEW omcES
·Try OUr Noon s,.ciils
WIUolillhby and Mr. and Mrs.
Tbe Parkerillili'g office of
C11l For ADelicious ·
Dayld Neaae and son of the. FOUl\ Rivera Girl · Scout
•
Baltimore apent several days Council wllich serves the Bit
. With their mother, Mrs. Don Bend ~eighborbriod of Meigs
N-1
~ty; . bas .moved ·Ill 1922
:TODAY I
'PHONE 992·2236
AT
Mr. and &amp;frs. :Alan Griham Seventh St., Parkersburg,
and Erich of Dayton spent a .(Route 50, East).' 'l'!le new ·
wed; and ChristmaS weekend telephone number ~ 422-6474.
With Mr. P,d Mrs. Harry · Th~ office will be closed . 213 N! 2Dd
Mldd~rort
WlllfGrd.
ihJ'Ou8h Wed~lday.

·

$1,200 This Year

Mrs. S•n-key

\For Carpet Uqnners

•

seu:otebooU In wblcb you have recorded lbe behavior

Earnings Base Up

·!·FLOOR COVERINGS I

•

.

. Anti-eurling: Hints .

.

Address ··Board-

2nd MAC Loss

.

'

By POLLY CRAMER
MONDAY .
TUPPERS· PLAINS School
DEAR POLLY-Bernice can put one-inch-wide masking
Boosters, 7:30p.m. Mondey at
A wil1liJy ieature of Meigs
tape
on the 'ba~k of' her carpet runner that curls up. Put ·
school gym; UOrdon EddY,
· ·County Gll'den Club .members.
it
all
across, being sure it is even at the edges ~f the run·
.
. Jupt. of Warren Local School ner, press
down firmly, then put a second strip over the
District, guesf speaker.
first one, press down firmly and have no more turned-up
POMEROY PTA, 7:30 p. m. ends. This. has really worked on my runners.-MRS. W. D.
Thlnp to do In January: the Month
·
· at the school. Rev ..Arthur Lund ·
D~AR POLLY- Bernice is concerned about the ends or
T~ Plan Yoilr .Garden on Paper ·
to give devotions. Program.will
her carpet runners 'ty·ning up but all. she has to do is buy
feature . a teacher panel · . double-sided
tape and put it where necessary and her
. BY MBS. HENRY TUiiNEa
• discussion moderated. · by runners will not
rolL-RUTH
.\
. . . Star Garden Club '
Robert MorriS, principal. Mrs.
DEAR POLLY-My mother wants to suggest that BerIf you haven't _sent '"ay fClr the ilew.catalogu.. of favorite Mayme Snider, Mrs. John , nice buy fringe tbpt matches her carpet runners that curl
seedmen, ,c\o so without ,dalay. Seedsmen's C§talogues are M!U'J)by, Mrs, Larry Morrison, and sew lbe fringe all the way round to remove the curl.
fasclnal!ne pabllcatbla I!Dd are ·well wOC!h,close study. ·
greeters; refreshments by Fringe an inch wide or wider gives a decorative look .
thread could be used to sew. it on bot I used
· I.Giili.np .tbile In lilaklng rut your aeejl orderi and se,.ung folU'th grade mothers, Mrs. Heavy-duty
waxed
linen
carpet thread. Place right sides together and
them In; lhU!Bdpen can g!ve more delalled a~ntlon to early· Dwight Cullums,. Mrs. 6rval whip the .fringe
in place, overlapping the ends.- MRS.
pia~ oolers ~ to those .reCeived ln-th~ rusjl of the abiW
, lng ·· Wiles, Mrs. T8&lt;l w.m~ •. Ws. F. M.G.
.
'" ~
·
· John Moon, ,Fiorence Bearha,

·

Registration is Tuesday

.I

Notes, ...

·
w
m
u:overnor
p :

. .

.

. PoJ.J.Y~ l'«tiNTEHS
'
.
.

Social.
Calendar

Green Thurnb ,...
:
,,

lmp~rtartt to Ga~ B11siness

Critical in 1972

1t72

. I

.

'

.

•'

,.

Wants Leak Detected, Patched

•

' ,

.

.
141
4-1bt,DIIIJ!Ielltlntl, 'ilepu.t-P!meroy. 0., Jan.10,1t72
.

.

' -' I I '

°

N. W..COMPTON, O.D.

°

wMPlfTE MEAL$ ·

PIZZA

PHIL &amp; JIM

' '

{

i'.

•

.

�'

'

.
.

•

'

Se~ti;;;E;~-s~ifieds Get Action! Sentinel(.lassifieth GetResultsl

AUNt LOWEezV!!
Tf1AR'5 A FlATLAND
OUT IN

Wanted To Renf

Apple Grove News, Events
By Mrs. Hei-bertii9UIII
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Wilson
ol Detroit, Mich., Mr. and Mrs.
Done! WUaon and baby of
Charleston , Mr. and Mrs.
Otarl~a Burri and boys of
Bolivar Dam were dinner
811$1 of Mr. and Mrs. Butch
WII!On New Year's Day. :
Mrs. Floyd Norris .and Mrs.
Herbert RooBh called on Bill
Wbeeler and James Ray Hill at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Monday.
Mrs. Iva Orr, Mrs. Herbert
Roush called at the Spencer
Funeral Home In Belpre to pay
respects to Mr. Kenneth
McCleod Sunday .
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Norris
called on Mr. and Mrs. Fern
Norris Tuesday evening at
Racine.
Carl Norris of Junction City
spent a few days with his
lrother, Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Norris, and enjoyed hunting.
Ouistmas dinner Illest! of
Virgil Roush and John Joe
!hain were Mr. and Mrs. Terry
RoU8h of Greensboro, N. C.,
Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Roush
and son, Joey, Fred Shain and
Mr. and Mrs. Virgll Walker of

Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Taylor and
daughters, Polly and Sandra,
of Columbus spent Christmas
with Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Stone
and children at Leon, W. Va.,
and accompanied their
daughters to Columbus on
Sunday and visited until
Thlll'sday. The Taylors and
daughters were also New
Year'sDay IUesiS of the Stones
at Leon.
Mr.and Mrs. Harry Wolfe of
Rlchmood, Ind., visited Sunday with Mrs. Eula Wolfe and

Aaron.
A New Year's Eve party wss
held at the Shrlners Club House
In Racine Friday hosted by
Raymond Adams. Guests
~~tending were Mr. and Mrs.
Manball Adams, Mr. and Mrs.
lMry Grol!lgle and children,
Amy, Scottie and Stevie, of
Columbus, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Ashley and Heidl, Carl
Norris of Junction City, Mr.
and Mrs. Early Roush, Mr. and
Mrs. Herbert Roush, Mrs.
. Un-y O'Brien, Jimmy, linda
and Carol, Mrs. Margaret
Gloeckner, Mrs. Iva Orr.
Refrelhme!lls of sandwiches,
coolrlea, polai!J cblps, corn
h!l,lts and coffee and iced tea
'ftfe aerved.
Mrs. Jane Hill and lions, Dale
Wallace Jr. and Danny, left
&amp;mdayfor Moore Haven, Fls.,
after spending the holidays
with Mr. and Mrs. Dallss Hill
and Mrs. DoUy Wolfe.
Mr. and Mrs. John Htit and
daughter, Linda, left Saturday
for a vacation In Florida.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Johnson
and family of Racine were
dinner 8UesiS Saturday of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Smith .
Mr . and Mrs. Erwin
Gloeckner and Mrs. Ada Norris
were dinner guelltB Thursday
of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Story
and Roaalle at Darwin.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell and
lAma spent Tuesday through
Thursday with Dr. and Mrs.
Earl Grimm and sons at
Columbus. St. Clair Hill accompanied the Bells to
Columbus and visited his
sister, Mr. and Mrs. Harold

Grimm.
!Ucont guests of St. Clair Hill
were Mrs . Doris Hensler,
David and Becky Hensler of
Racine and Harry Hill and
John Hlll.
Mrs. Jane Hill of Moore
Haven, Fla. and Miss Jan Hill
visited Mrs. Lois Bell and
Lorna.
Mr. and Mrs. Hout FeriUSOn
of New Haven &amp;pent New
Year's Day with Mr. and Mrs.
Hlmer Warner.
Mrs . Marie Coleman of
HUI'IIIhaw, W. Va., Is visiting
lu son, Mr. and Mrs. Orville
Jarr'ell and famUy..
Mr : and Mrs . Everette
Ransom of Antiquity were
&amp;tnday dinner IUesiS of Mr.
and Mrs. Jess Anderson.
Mrs. Uzzle Wood and famUy
have moved to their new
mobUe home at Dorcas.
Holiday guella of Mr. and
Mn. Herbert Miller Jr. were
their son, Sgt. and Mrs. Skip
'Miller ol Wichita Falls, Texss,
Mr. and Mrs. David Hadley,
Devin a and Chris, D. T.
Hadley. all of Cincinnati, Mr.
and Mra. Herbert Miller Sr. of
Rutlmd and Mr. and Mrs.
llte¥e llnlltr and Brent of
Colorado.
·,L
·
Mt. 1114 Mrs. steve' lilluler
1114 Brent of Colorado spent the
holldlya with their
Mr. and Mn. Ernest Sillier
and Mr:· aiid Mrs. Philip
Dadovan at Syracuse.
· Mr. and Mra. Virgil Norris
(faiw lllldtlliaJ went by jet

parents,

to Mimi Beach, Fla., 'I1nlrsc11Jio a!.land the orange Bowl

.

'

game New Yeal-'s Day. Mr.
and Mrs. Norris returned to
their home at Mt . Vernon on
Sunday. Virgil is the son of Mr .
and Mrs . Ross Norris et
Styracuse.
. Spending Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs. Ronnie Russell at
Middleport were Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Roush and Sharon,
Cindy, David and Edward, Mr.
and Mrs. Herbert Roush and
Roger, Mrs. Dorsa Parsons,
Mrs. Edna Roush, Mr. and
Mrs. Dana Lewis of Clifton,
and Mrs. lva Orr. Mrs. Brenda
Haggy called in the afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
Hayman and Jodi of Durham,
Conn., visited Mrs. Ferne B.
Hayman recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Early Roush,
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Buck and
Pam were lreaklast guests of
Mr.andMrs. Don Beegle, Zane
and Tracy, Christmss mor-

ning.
Mrs. Virgil (Mary) Roush
wss returned to her home from
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Francis Webb
of Letart visited Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Pearson Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Burri
and boys of Bolivar Dam
visited through the holidays
with Mrs. Erma Wilson. Mr.
and Mrs. Burri were night
111ests of Mr. and Mrs. Francis
Webb.
Mr . and Mrs. Roy Donohew
and Greg spent Wednesday
night with Mr . and Mrs.
GeorRe Donohew and famUy in
Columbus then went to
Cleveland and were Christmas
111ests of Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Webster and Anita. On Sunday
the Donohews, accompanied
by Mrs. Webster and Anita,left
for Clovis, N. M., where they
visited with their son, Mr. and
Mrs, Johnnie Donohew. Their
son, Jeff Donohew stationed at
the Goodfellow Air Force Base,
San Angelo, Texas, joined
them there for a three days
visit. The Donohews returned
home Sunday. Jeff will
graduate Jan. 24 and will be
assigned to Ft. George G.
Meade Air Force Base,
Maryland. ·
Mr. and Mrs, ,Larry Groggel
and children, Alny, Scottie and
Stevie, of Columbus were New
Year's weekend guests of Mr.
and Mrs~ Marshall Adams and
Raymond, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
O'Brien and children. Sunday
afternoon guests of the
Adamses were Mr. and Mrs.
Chrissie Powell of &amp;.cine and
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Prince
and daugpter of Gallipolis.
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon
Donohew visited Tuesday
through Saturday with Mr. and
Mrs. Kearney Donohew, her
brothers and other rclstives at
Marion.
Bill Wheeler Is a medlcal
patient at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Cornwell
of Gallipolis visited Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs . Edward
Miller.

Alfred

Social Notes
Sunday School attendance oil
Jan. 2, was 36, the offering
$13.14 .
Worship Services were held
af n o'clock with the Rev. Lehman bringing the message
from Isaiah ~0:21-31, "Wait
upon the Lord, and thy strength
shall be renewed," to an attendance of 33. Conununion
services were held.
Mr. and Mrs. John Taylor
and famUy who had been
visiting In Dayton, returned to
their. parents home for New
Years, and then left for their
home in Norfolk, Va.
Dale Henderson of Royal
Park, Mich., has been visiting
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Henderson.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Swartz
and family of Ravenna, 0.,
visited . his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Vere Swartz during the
holidays.
Mrs. Iris Carr Is a patient In
Veterans Hospital at Pomeroy .
Among the holiday visitors at
the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Atherton were Mr. and
' Mrs. Clarence Atherton and
family of Long Bottom, Mr.
· and Mrs. Ernest Vineyard of
Mich., Mr. and Mrs. Winnie
Barnhill and Ruth Atherton of
Carthage ; Mr. and Mrs: Chas.
Barr of Belpre; Everett Taylor
of Pomeroy Rd.; Mr. and Mrs.
Hobart Vineyard and Rev. and
Mrs. Lehman and Ricky of
Tuppers Plain&amp;.
Dinner guests of Clara
FoUrod and Nina Robinson on
Sunday were Mr. and Mrs ..Otto
Swirtz of Shade, 0. In the
afternoon , they ali went to

2 SIGIS
OF
QUALITY ·

·Potneroy
Motor.Co.

!,?7Q CAMARO COUPE .
, $2795
3 ~0 v.s engine. aulo,!Patlc. power steering console.
beautiful dark green, finished with green vinyl roof . less
than 22,000.miles by local owner; radio, new w-w ·tires. A

sha rp model priced to please.

' 3 BEDROOMhoosein,Raclneor
Syracuse area. Phone 992i J77 .

.

J.7•31c

i Lo-;st- . - - -- .

LOST- Black and while Beagle
dog, mostly black. Liberal
reward. Phone 742-4157.
1'
.
'
1-6-61p

u

MADAM •• \NOULD .'fOU
MOVE THIS KID SO I
DON'T CUP HIM ON
MY SACKSWIIIJG ?

0

Business SerVices

, 1

I'

Wanted To Buy

1970 DODGE PDLARA
S239S
4 Dr .. V-8 engine. automatic trans .. P.S ., ·factory air, good

ALL ~EATHER ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTION
&amp; PWMBING 00.

FOUR NEW HOMES
OPEN FDA INSPECTION
. ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
1ft() PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom 516,900.00 home can be purchased with a
monihly peymentas low as $65.00 for a family with a bese
salary of $5,000.00 and three children. 7•;, Pd. annual
· percan.tage rate.
·

· OLD FURNiTURE, Round Ook
,. tables, Brass beds, dishes,
clocks, and-or complete
tires, radio &amp; other extras, white finish, clean interior .
240 Lincoln St. !
households. Write M. D.
Middleport,
Ohio
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
1'70CHEVELLEMALIBUHTCPE.
$2995
Dbl
Anthony
Plumbing
Cali 992-6271.
.•
Low mileage by local owner with lots of warranty left,
We hove a complete Home
12-17-ttc
factory air con~llloned, V-8 engine, turbo-hydromatlc. p.
Malnlenonce Service the
steering, gold body. sandalwood vinyl top. radio, vinyl
rear oround. No matter what
Fgr Sale
interior, good w~w tires. This ·car is load~ with eKtras 1
your need. CoiJ'!plete roof or
2 WHITE young guinea pigs. spautinv repair. .Interior or
Phone 992·2301.
exterior carpentry. ctltlng
1·9·31C Hie end Paneling and Siding.
-----'-- - Plumbing &amp;
OPEN EVES. 1:00, P.M.
•
1959.HOLIDAY RambleiMoblle Complete
Healing.
1'PMEROY, OHIO
Home, 8 • 15, priced very
CALL
Day Number 992-2550
reasonable. Ideal for conHILTON WO~FE, 949-3211
BILL
NELSON,
99;2-3657
We hove 24 hr. emergency
struction workers. For furTOM CROW, 992-2580
DALE DUTTON, 992-2534
ther Information phone 742· service.
WANT ADS
Notice
5922 or 742-5602.
·
992-5803
742-U47
INFORMATION
1
·7·3tc
992-3898
742-4761
M~ IGS COUNTY Fish and
DEADLINES
Game Association will hold a
We are fully Insured
5 P.M.
Oay
Before - - -- - 2 YEAR OLD, 5 h.p. Ward's
meeting, Wed., Jan . 12, 7:30
Publication
Riding Mower - 5100, also 9
p.m. at Bob's Mobile Court
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
ft. overhead garage door club rooms a.t Syracuse.
Cancellation &amp; COrrections
$50. Phone Reedsville 667·
Election of officers will be Will be accepted unlll9 a.m. for
3041.
POMEROY
held.
Day of Publication
From the largest
1·4-6tc
l-9-4tc
REGU~ATIONS
Bulldozer
Radiator to the
The Publisher ,reserves the
HOME &amp; AUTO
-GUARANTEEDSmallest
Healer
Core.
KOSCOT KOSMETICS and wigs
right to edit or reject any ads
- for sale. Brown's. Phone 992Nathan Biggs
deemed objectional. The
9?2-2094
Phone 992-2094
5113.
publisher will not be
Rodlalar S,.Ciallsl
606
E.
Main
Pomeroy
responsible for mor'e than one
12-31-lfc
Pomeroy Home &amp;Auto
Incorrect lll$erllon.
ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT ...
RATES
36" X 23" X .009
_ .. .Open 8Ti I 5
OFFICE SUPPUES
overweight ladles. teens and
For Want Ad Service
Monday lhru Saturdly
and
men Interested In a Weight S cents per WOrd one insertion
Ph. 992-2174 · · Pomeroy
606 E. _Miin, Pomeroy, D.
Watchers I R) Class In
Minimum Charge75c
FURNITURE
Pomeroy write : Weight 12 cents per word three
Watchers IR) , 1863 Section consecutive insertions.
Dry ' Wall O'DELL WHEEL allghment
Stop In and See Our CONTRACTOR,
Rd., Cincinnati. Ohio 45237. 18 cents per word six conFinisher and painting .
located at Crossroads, Rt. 1.24.
Floor Display.
Richard I. Dubbeld, phone
10·3'1fc secutive Insertions.
Complete front end service,
.,..--:-:-::---'---25 .Per Cent Discount on paid
' 742-5825 .
tune up and brake service.
USED OFFSET PLATES ·
SAVE up to one half. Bring your
ads and ads paid .within 10
1-10-5tc
Wheels balanced elecHAVE
sick TV to Chuck's TV shop.
days.
Auto
Sales
All
work
tronically.
MANY USES
151 Butternut Ave .. Pomeroy .
CARD OF THANKS
guaranteed . Reasonable
52
CHEVROLET
pickup,
Phone 992-5080.
&amp; OBITUARY
rates. Phone 992-3213.
perfect condition, $900 . Real Estate For Sale
11-21 -ltc SUO for, 50 word minimum .
r-27-tfc
Sericius Inquiries only. Phone
Each additional word 2c.
992-6083.
SEWING In my home. Will
BLIND ADS
c.· BRADFORD, Auctioneer
12·29·10ip &lt;
Additional 25c Charge per
make drapes, cushions.
COmplete Service
8 for $1.00
Advertisement.
Phone 992-6879.
'·
Phone 949·3821
1965 FORD pickup, V-8, custom·
OFFICE HOURS
_ __ _ _ _ _ _
1._3·12tp
Racine, Ohio
cab, with overdrive, A· l
8 ~ 30 a.m. to 5:00p.m. Daily,
Crill
Bradford
condition . Phone 0 . C. Gilpin,
INCOME TAX service, daily 8:30 a.m . to 12:00 Noon
5·1-ttc
Coolville 667-3593.
Saturday.
" except Sunday, evenings by
1-7-3tp
appointment . Mrs. Wanda
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
- - -- - Eblin, Laurel Cliff Road, 1
service, all makes. 992·22.8-1.
Bro~er
'70 CHEVELLE 55. 396, ex.
mile west of Meigs County Notice
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
110 Mechanic Street
cellent co·ndltion, many ex- ·
Fairground on Rt. 7 bypass.
Authorized
Singer Sales and
Pomeroy, Ohio
1ll Court St.
tr as, call
614-992· 2252
Phone 992-2272.
Service.
We
Sharpen
Scissors.
evenings.
i.J.30tc
Pomeroy, Ohio
3-29-ttc
OLDER HOME
1·7·61p
- - - -- 3 bedrooms, bath, large living SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Whispering Pines
and dining. Gdrage. Nice lot. REASONABLE rates. Ph. «6·
'65
CHEVY
Station
Wagon,
SETTLING Estate-60x12
Only $10,000.00.
4182, Gallipolis. John Russell,
phone
992-6256
after
5
p.m
,
Meigs
Barron mobile home, air
4
BEDROOMS
O.Vner
&amp; Operator.
J.9-6tp
Mite Club
conditioned, furnished. Call :--::-:-:::~--Nice living, dining and break·
S.12-lfc
Coolville 667-3838.
last
nook.
Gas
forced
air
1·6·31c '72 DATSUN truck, phone 742·
Fridays &amp; Saturdays
furnace. Double Garage. · AUTOMOB ILE Insurance been
- - - - - - -- 5032.
cancelled?
Lost
your
1-9-3tc $14,500.00.
10'til2
COAL, limestone. Excelsior
RENOVATED
o~rator's license? Call 992·
7 rooms, bath, gas furnace,
2
Salt Wocks, E. ~In St.•
- ~usic by
panelli1g.'1·bedrooms
11
x
17.
·~
· 6-15-tfc
.
P~meroy :· /'h""!! "~-3891.
·iti --~
;' !;I.,~'
'f'l
...,~ ~
G.ar~t",
• ...,.,_ acre . o·nly.
_
·
4-9-llc
.
+"&lt;!lieu band and' 2 female
Sll, -~~ ACRES
HARRISbN:~ TV and Antenna
slngers·from
Beverly, Ohio. POODLE puppies, Sll•er Toy,
POMEROY - Earl W.
3
bedroom
house,
bath,
furnace,
Service. Phone 992·2522.
Par~•lew Kennels, Phone 992·
Cleek, Phyllis A. Cleek, John INSTRUCTION in organ and
6-10-ltc
drilled well. Barn, garage.
5443 .•
Cleek, Macie Cleek to Ohio
·
Small
stream.
Some
limber
.
·
·
B
·i'
5
-ttc
piano. Gerald Hoffner, phone
Only $9,500.00 THIS MONTH. READY-MIX CONC~ETE de992-3825.
Power
Co .,
easement,
114 ACRES
livered right to your project.
U!banon .
1-4-6tc LONG BOTTOM - Five room
Cattle farm. 2 barns, good
Fast and easy. Free
house, bath, business, or
fences. 5 room house, bath,
estimates. Phone 992-3284.
storage building - $6,500.
George W. Folmer Sr., Cora . WANT WORK at home ad·
forced air furnace . Only
Goe3'eln Ready-Mix Co.,
Phone 985-3529.
M. Folmer to Manning D.
dressing and stuffing en12t
•
14t
•
24t
•
WiDE
$18,000.00.
·
Mid leport, Ohio.
,
12-19-JOic
Webster, I acre, Salisbury.
velopes? Rush self-stamped
WE HAY E 32
6-30-llc
Manning D. Webster, Mary
envelope to F. Uribe, Box 36, TROPICAL FISH, laney
PROPERTIES FDA $ALE
A. Webster to George W.
Albany, Ohio, 45710 · · 1-6-tfc guppies, angels and breeders,
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
u·PHOLSTERING · SERVICE;
ASSOCIATE
complete selection of fabrics
Bellas
and
supplies.
Phone
Folmer Sr., CoraM. Folmer, I
992-3325 "2·2378
and vinyl to choose from.
992·5443.
.
.
ace, Salisbury.
Pick-up and delivery. 'staler
1·9-6tc
12·30-tfc
1220 Washiniton Blvd.
Female
Help
Wanted
Upholstering, Rl. 3, Pomeroy,
Robert C. Hartenbach,
llfilpre, Ohio
phone
992·3617.
APPLES
Fitzpatrick
Or.
HOUSE, 1642 lincoln Heights.
Sheriff, Orville E. Watson, EXT!;! A INCOME. 3 hrs. a day
12-27-301p
chards, State Route 689,
Call
Danny
Thompson,
992·
dec.,et. al., to Faye P. Watson,
can average you 510. Work phone Wilkesville, 669-3787. FOR THE BEST deal in a new
2196.
from your own
home,
lots,. Martinsville - Orange.
·
'·3-llc
or
used
mobile
home,
try
7·18-tfc SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller ·
pleasant customer contact
Kanauga
Mobile
Home
Sates,
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
Melvin Sydebotham, Mildred
work . Write Personal Shopper
Kanauga,
Ohio.
3
BEDROOM
ranch
type
home,
662·3035.
Sydebotham to Robert ScarDept., Box 10, Watkins
12·17·901c
Arbaugh Addition, Tuppers ·
2·12-ltc
INVENTORY SALE
Products, Inc ., Winona,
berry , parcels, Sutton Plains.
All
.
new
with
total
Minnesota 55987.
Minersville.
electric and central al r BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
MOBILE HOMES . Large
1-10-llc
Clearance
Sale!
conditioning, bath and&gt;;, fully
selection
8.
10
·
12
wldes,
1
to
•
Dale Boyd, Ethel Boyd to
Septic tanks Installed. George
car~eted, lull basement,
bedrooms,
bank
repos
and
Buy
Any
Fuel
Oi
1
I Bill) Pullins. Phone 9'/jl-2418.
Frank Cleland, Delores M.
garage
In
basement.
See
by
used, some practically new.
Help
Wanted·
Cleland, lot, Racine.
appointment, phone 992·2196 -----------~
Save u~ to •;.. R. A. or Don
t2S.Itc
SIEGLER HEATER
Miller, 705 Farson Street, or 992·3585. Danny Thompson .
Frank Cleland, Delofes M. WYNAN'S
White
Glove
Financing available.
Belpre, Ohio by · Kaiser
Maintenance Service, State's
Cleland to Dale F. Boyd, Ethel
GET
FREE
•
12·30·1fc
Aluminum, phone 423-9531 .
largest Cleaning Contractor,
LEGAL NOTICE
Boyd, lot, Racine.
l-4-12lc
no..y accepting applications '200 Gallons Fuel Oil When
Sl X ROOM house, 133 Butternut
R. V. Weatherl\lan, Niese! A.
for work at New Haven, W. You Buy Any Siegler Heater
NOTICE OF
Ava. Contact Ed Hedrick, 2137
Va., 5 p.m. to 8: 30 p.m., Thru Jan. 15.
APPOINTMENT
Weatherman to Kay E. Smith,
Wadsworth Drive, COlumbus,
Monday fhru Friday. An
Cut No. 20594
Real Estate For Sale
1.80 acre, ·orange. ,
Ohio, phone 237 - .0~4 .
Estate of George w. Moore,
equal opportunity employer.
D
eceesed .
11-2i-lfc
Mabel Cleland to Franklin D.
Phone 485-7531 collect.
·
Notice Is hereby g rver\ that
1-9-6tc
Gheen, parcel, Sutton.
NICE 2-slory home with full Anna M. Rylher, of P. () , Box,
basement, 2 tots, new forced IJO, Pomeroy, Ohio, hn been
air furnace. Near Pomeroy ~t~h:P~irlrd Administratrix
WALNUT stereo, modern
For Rent
walnu1 stereo-radio com Elementary School. Phone Mooro . ~:c:a~:d,G,e1~,! ~i
MOBILE HOMES FOR SALE NICE trailer. 1 bedroom, Ideal
bination, 4-speaker sound
992-7284 to see.
, Middleport, Meigs counly
60X12, 2·bedroom, alf.electrlc, for couple, 10 miles north of
11·7-lfc Ohio.
•
·system, 4-speed changer .
air conditioned, 8x20 ft. Porch
Pomeroy, 565 a month . Phone
Balance
568.70.
Use
our
--Creditors
llr!
requlrtd
to
file
608
Eut
Mlin
and alui'T'Iinum
awning ,
992-7479. .
HOUSE, 4 rooms and bath,' lhelr claims With laid fiduciary
budget terms . .Call 992-7085.
POMEROY
aluminum skirting , com 1-4-tfc
completetv remodeled. New within four months .
1-5-6tc
pletely setup . Beautiful - - -- - - furnac:&amp;, kitchen cabinets, Oe~:::ger t~l7sl . 2Bth day of
MIDDLE
PORT
2
or
3
location. Owner leaving state.
HOUSE,
7 rooms, bath. Inquire COLONIAL Maple stereo-radio,
full
bedrooms,
bath,
fully carpeted. located In
F. H. O' Brien
Phone 949-4892 or 992·5272.
918 So. Third, Middleport,
AM-FM radio, 4 speakers, 4 basement, 2 nice level tots.
Middleport.
Phone
992·2362.
Probate
Judge
i-10-tfc
Phone 992-3689.
speed automatic turntable. carpeted, penelecl. A STEAL
,
I·S.61c
,
,
lt
of
sa
id
County
111 3 10 17
1-9-31p
Balance $79.32 . Use our
AT ·JUST $8,900,00.
budget terms. Call 992·7085.
Gallipolis.
1-5-6tc BUSINESS- CARRY-OUT TRAILER,
Brown·
~
Trailer
Genevieve Guthrie spent
SIDE GLANCES
DOING A GOOD BUSINESS
Park, Mlnersvllre, Ohio,
by Gill Fox
NEW
1971
Zig-Zag
Sewing
Christmas holidays with the
EXCELLENT
LOCATION
phone 992·3324.
Machine
In
original
factory
- ONLY INTERESTED
Delbert Yost family at Sugar
H -6tc
carton. Zig-Zag to make
PARTIES NEED CALL
Grove.
buttonholes, sew on but1ons,
ROOM house. 3rd St. In
New Year's guests of Clara 5 Mason,
monograms, and make laney RUTLAND- BUSINESS FOR
newly painted . Phone· designs
with just the twist of a SALE - has living quarters
Follrod and · Nina Robinson
882-2971.
single
dial.
left In lay-a-way over, MODERN, 3.bedrooms,
were Mr. and Mrs, Gerald
,
1·7·31c
and
never
been
used. Will oell
bath, NOT VERY OLD. AN
Swartz and family of Marietta, - - - - - lor only $47.00 cash, or credit
EXCELLENT BUSINESS
t~rms available. Phone 992.
FOR A COUPLE WITH A
0 ., and .Mr. and Mrs. Clair .1 BEDROOM tralfer aport.
lt41.
GREAT FUTURE . CALL
Follrod, 'Stevie and Kathy,
ments, Ideal for couples.
1-5-6tc
FOR INFORMATION. .
local.
Contact McClure's Dairy Isle,
992-5248 or 992·3436.
Vacuum TO BUY DR SEL~ IN A
Mrs. Clair Woode and Connie
1-9-12tc ELECTROLUX
Cleaner
complete
with at.
HURRY CALL US TODAY.
Sue of Circleville, 0 ., spent a
tachments, , cord winder and
HENRY E. CLELAND
couple of days last week at the BEDROOM and 2 bedroom · point opray. Used but In like
REALTOR
mobile homes. Adults only. new 'condition. Pay $34.45
Wm. Carr home. Mrs. Carr "is
Residence
"2-2568
Phone 992-5592 .
cash or budget plan available.
Office
Phone
992-2259.
hospitalized . in Veterans
12-19-tfc
Phone 992·5641.
1-4-61c
Memorial Hospital and will
1-S.61c
TRAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile - - - - -- - - undergo surgery.
Court, Rt. 124, Syracuse, Ohio Aut S 1
992-2951.
0
eS
6 ROOM house In Rutland,
- - -----.:...•_·2·1fc 1970
OLDSMOBILE 442,
~~r~:rl :.~P~t ctrry'h_:.!\:~a:
automatic, factory stereo
THE SOUND -NEW
2-BEDROOM, double tapa. Lotsotextras. Like new , Y:.i.58!:'.den &amp; large ~ard. Call ·
wide, mobile home on lot.ln Call 992-2441 alter 5 p.m. . .
1-9-31c
OF THE
Sr,racuse. Completely fur11-28-llc
n shed. Phone 992-2441 alter 5 · 1969 FORD 1 I . St k 12 II FOR SALE by -owner. We'll
p.m.
.
on, a e
·
miss our home, but It's too
GOOD
,
1-3-tfc bed, 9,000 miles, like new. E.
large lor elderly 'i:f,le. It's •
L. Riebel, 3 mi. east of
modern brick, 3
rooms, 2
baths, full basement, central"
2 BEDROOM mobile home In Chester, Ohio.
LIFE
1·9·3lp
Racine area . Phone 99H329.
heatl119 and air conditioning,
12-14-tfc . •69 ,FORD lf{ ton · pickup, 6 carpeted, heated owlmmlng
::::-:-:==:---11 d
1h
pool, larg• marble polio,
FURNISHED and unfurnished cy n er w 1 automatic
largtlanascaJ)ed Jot. t'rlce In
I
apartments. Cto5e t0 hoot
transmission, deluxe cab, all
fifties. Terms. 719 McCulloch
Phone
992-~434.
sc
·
~';.'"
lir;;2
~:~r·
reasonable.
Rd., Pt. Pleasant, w. va. Ph.
ON YOUR DIAL
· •
10-i8-tfc
one · ·
304-,7H888.
·
.1-9·31p
1-9·61c

Pom•roy Motor Co•.

WHAT IN
THUNDER
DQES· HE
WANT?

.

...: ..

A GROCER'~' StORE
6HOPPING CART 1
~VE

THREE OR FOI.IR
IF VOU Lit&lt;&amp;

.

I

THEN Wlff IS tT

BEN, W.VEN T 'IOI.l}IAP
1-iiGIHif''E~D, DEFEN61VE,

®

YOU CAN NEVER
f.IANDLE ...

AND I'UR6UIT DRIVER
TRAININ6?

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

NO·e.t.JT
'iOOR

'ANS
DO ..

..

s5,55

- - - -- -

For Sale

-

. - --. . . .

SMITH .NELSON ·
MOTORS. INC.

Aluminum
Sheets

- -- -- - -

Virgil B~
TEAFORD ,

The
Daily Sentinel

SR.

DANCE

GAS()~

AILEY '

·,

'Jbu have a Cl.l'tomer,
Don't keep him' waltinq!

We don't want to
j~e our nice job!

Property

Transfers

- - - -- -

_!h_e_Kasuals

Mci~i~ Hom,t(Foi Sale'··

MILLER

MOBIL£
HOMES
.

-----

JJW/~)1)];"'-'.=-'t!...J

- -- -- -

ACROSS
1. Un·
scathed
. 5. Highway
speed
11
detective11
.&amp;.;.l...-'---'-----'----•-o. Swedish
wine
measure
U. California
city
12. Stringed
instru·
ment
l3.Led
If. Volcanic
matter

Cleland

river

·

DOWN

1. Waldorf

or Caesar

2. Beguile
3. Lewis

Carroll
ballad
4. Prior to
5. Regretted

16. Portu·
guese title
17. With
great

6. In the
style of
7. "String
bean"
8. Very
small
space YNirrda1'• ADIWn
9. Braves
27. Ranch ·
11. Popul11·
employee
quotees
28.
Hosiery
15. Dashing
thread
chap
29.
Stage
lB. Grudge
direction
19. Fork
31.
Lager or
21. Kind of ftu
·
stout
22. Scenic
region of 34' ~~~~~~~Canada
24. Plant of
35.
the lily
The Borfamily
stal-"

~~~an's

Unscramble thtte rour Jumblet,
one letter to each equare, to
rorm rour ordinary wordo.

1

Ooo

•

\

-·
THfCJX&gt;KS~AWNffOF~

tilT PIMONfll5 L!AI!M 10 J!!

'Wf,I.Y. !HfY WIU. 11iN01!1! QJI~

oEl;os
PYNOH

.,

19. Wat• correspond·
ent of
note
ZO. Artist
----aiiao::::.oaiOiaeaiitol Irvin
2l.Song- ·
writer
Harold
:12. Dazzled
, 23. Chimn&lt;')'

I

TRYSOF ~·
J

.

11

~motion

- - -- --

I .
.

..,
~
~

1-Y.:.:'AN.:r;IJ;O:r--=-T...:·~r-;--r--,

1

V
'I
1\ A.

1

.

Now arnnp the clrclad letlen
I to ronn the lurpr\HIIIIWer, u
. IU(Jtltad bJ the abofe eva-.

I

.

IC=3MII~'~..~..
~~-~"W~III~...~=JI J XI i I )
(A.IweN to. .rntw) '
!iat•nl·~··

Jumht.t•

NOISY MOUTH DtlUTI fllON'f

.tn~owr:r 1

Thil miKftr mmt•lu• Olfl! -A MINUS

grimt~

UHnL llt!l' t&lt;NOW

24. British

•olrlicrstatesman ~ ~+-+----1f-25. Tourist
haven
26. Competent
%7. Bargain
3G. t;oinedia n.
Blanc
~+-+----1~+-31. Dc.cl~rr
verboten

I CAN'T 60 10 5CIIOOL
WEA~ I NG A DRE% ... I
Jt!5T CAN'T !

I&gt; AlLY t'RYI'TOqlJO'ft; - Here's how to work it :

- --- -,-----

AXYD. LBAAXR
is J, .0 N G F I! J, L 0 W
Om• ;,:lll'l" •imtrl)• &gt;tan;l, !OJ· another. In this .sample' A is
llse&lt;l for the three L's, X fo•· the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes. the length and formation of the words are all
hints. ~ach ria)· the rode letters ire diiTerent.

a

W-30

=--- -'------

'

0 .' MHOGZMOZ

J. .A Y II Z

11 C: II I&lt; N

.TYNAZQ·GM - VJ!L
~I Z 11 7. Q Z M X R , - A , V .

GH

E

TZMOR~M

Saturda)·'s Crypt~quotr: A SKI RESORT IS U S U ~LLY
,KNOWN FOR lTS SETTING OF SNOW, .~NP MO liNT.~INS­
ANil BONES.-SOUIICE t 1NKNOWN .
( f) 1U7i! Kin)!' Feat.u ru S\·ndleatt:, luc.)
.j

'

WHAT AM I 60iNG To CO ?
Wfl'&lt; 00 THE'I HAVE TO
HAVE A. DRess COI'E ?

A Cryptogram Quotation

WMP0/1390

I

glan~e

38. Philippine
island
39. Belgian

15.0yst~r -

Realty

\ '

32. Waterfall
. (Scot. )'
33. Ascended
35. Defeat
36. Reported
37. Lotharlo's

=

..

IF ~V ~I(E lir, BUT IXlN'T
OPEN '&lt;(OUR E'/EG, WILL.

TKE M'&lt; 60 AliJA'i ?

..

'•

�'

'

.
.

•

'

Se~ti;;;E;~-s~ifieds Get Action! Sentinel(.lassifieth GetResultsl

AUNt LOWEezV!!
Tf1AR'5 A FlATLAND
OUT IN

Wanted To Renf

Apple Grove News, Events
By Mrs. Hei-bertii9UIII
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Wilson
ol Detroit, Mich., Mr. and Mrs.
Done! WUaon and baby of
Charleston , Mr. and Mrs.
Otarl~a Burri and boys of
Bolivar Dam were dinner
811$1 of Mr. and Mrs. Butch
WII!On New Year's Day. :
Mrs. Floyd Norris .and Mrs.
Herbert RooBh called on Bill
Wbeeler and James Ray Hill at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Monday.
Mrs. Iva Orr, Mrs. Herbert
Roush called at the Spencer
Funeral Home In Belpre to pay
respects to Mr. Kenneth
McCleod Sunday .
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Norris
called on Mr. and Mrs. Fern
Norris Tuesday evening at
Racine.
Carl Norris of Junction City
spent a few days with his
lrother, Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Norris, and enjoyed hunting.
Ouistmas dinner Illest! of
Virgil Roush and John Joe
!hain were Mr. and Mrs. Terry
RoU8h of Greensboro, N. C.,
Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Roush
and son, Joey, Fred Shain and
Mr. and Mrs. Virgll Walker of

Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Taylor and
daughters, Polly and Sandra,
of Columbus spent Christmas
with Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Stone
and children at Leon, W. Va.,
and accompanied their
daughters to Columbus on
Sunday and visited until
Thlll'sday. The Taylors and
daughters were also New
Year'sDay IUesiS of the Stones
at Leon.
Mr.and Mrs. Harry Wolfe of
Rlchmood, Ind., visited Sunday with Mrs. Eula Wolfe and

Aaron.
A New Year's Eve party wss
held at the Shrlners Club House
In Racine Friday hosted by
Raymond Adams. Guests
~~tending were Mr. and Mrs.
Manball Adams, Mr. and Mrs.
lMry Grol!lgle and children,
Amy, Scottie and Stevie, of
Columbus, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Ashley and Heidl, Carl
Norris of Junction City, Mr.
and Mrs. Early Roush, Mr. and
Mrs. Herbert Roush, Mrs.
. Un-y O'Brien, Jimmy, linda
and Carol, Mrs. Margaret
Gloeckner, Mrs. Iva Orr.
Refrelhme!lls of sandwiches,
coolrlea, polai!J cblps, corn
h!l,lts and coffee and iced tea
'ftfe aerved.
Mrs. Jane Hill and lions, Dale
Wallace Jr. and Danny, left
&amp;mdayfor Moore Haven, Fls.,
after spending the holidays
with Mr. and Mrs. Dallss Hill
and Mrs. DoUy Wolfe.
Mr. and Mrs. John Htit and
daughter, Linda, left Saturday
for a vacation In Florida.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Johnson
and family of Racine were
dinner 8UesiS Saturday of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Smith .
Mr . and Mrs. Erwin
Gloeckner and Mrs. Ada Norris
were dinner guelltB Thursday
of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Story
and Roaalle at Darwin.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell and
lAma spent Tuesday through
Thursday with Dr. and Mrs.
Earl Grimm and sons at
Columbus. St. Clair Hill accompanied the Bells to
Columbus and visited his
sister, Mr. and Mrs. Harold

Grimm.
!Ucont guests of St. Clair Hill
were Mrs . Doris Hensler,
David and Becky Hensler of
Racine and Harry Hill and
John Hlll.
Mrs. Jane Hill of Moore
Haven, Fla. and Miss Jan Hill
visited Mrs. Lois Bell and
Lorna.
Mr. and Mrs. Hout FeriUSOn
of New Haven &amp;pent New
Year's Day with Mr. and Mrs.
Hlmer Warner.
Mrs . Marie Coleman of
HUI'IIIhaw, W. Va., Is visiting
lu son, Mr. and Mrs. Orville
Jarr'ell and famUy..
Mr : and Mrs . Everette
Ransom of Antiquity were
&amp;tnday dinner IUesiS of Mr.
and Mrs. Jess Anderson.
Mrs. Uzzle Wood and famUy
have moved to their new
mobUe home at Dorcas.
Holiday guella of Mr. and
Mn. Herbert Miller Jr. were
their son, Sgt. and Mrs. Skip
'Miller ol Wichita Falls, Texss,
Mr. and Mrs. David Hadley,
Devin a and Chris, D. T.
Hadley. all of Cincinnati, Mr.
and Mra. Herbert Miller Sr. of
Rutlmd and Mr. and Mrs.
llte¥e llnlltr and Brent of
Colorado.
·,L
·
Mt. 1114 Mrs. steve' lilluler
1114 Brent of Colorado spent the
holldlya with their
Mr. and Mn. Ernest Sillier
and Mr:· aiid Mrs. Philip
Dadovan at Syracuse.
· Mr. and Mra. Virgil Norris
(faiw lllldtlliaJ went by jet

parents,

to Mimi Beach, Fla., 'I1nlrsc11Jio a!.land the orange Bowl

.

'

game New Yeal-'s Day. Mr.
and Mrs. Norris returned to
their home at Mt . Vernon on
Sunday. Virgil is the son of Mr .
and Mrs . Ross Norris et
Styracuse.
. Spending Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs. Ronnie Russell at
Middleport were Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Roush and Sharon,
Cindy, David and Edward, Mr.
and Mrs. Herbert Roush and
Roger, Mrs. Dorsa Parsons,
Mrs. Edna Roush, Mr. and
Mrs. Dana Lewis of Clifton,
and Mrs. lva Orr. Mrs. Brenda
Haggy called in the afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
Hayman and Jodi of Durham,
Conn., visited Mrs. Ferne B.
Hayman recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Early Roush,
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Buck and
Pam were lreaklast guests of
Mr.andMrs. Don Beegle, Zane
and Tracy, Christmss mor-

ning.
Mrs. Virgil (Mary) Roush
wss returned to her home from
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Francis Webb
of Letart visited Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Pearson Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Burri
and boys of Bolivar Dam
visited through the holidays
with Mrs. Erma Wilson. Mr.
and Mrs. Burri were night
111ests of Mr. and Mrs. Francis
Webb.
Mr . and Mrs. Roy Donohew
and Greg spent Wednesday
night with Mr . and Mrs.
GeorRe Donohew and famUy in
Columbus then went to
Cleveland and were Christmas
111ests of Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Webster and Anita. On Sunday
the Donohews, accompanied
by Mrs. Webster and Anita,left
for Clovis, N. M., where they
visited with their son, Mr. and
Mrs, Johnnie Donohew. Their
son, Jeff Donohew stationed at
the Goodfellow Air Force Base,
San Angelo, Texas, joined
them there for a three days
visit. The Donohews returned
home Sunday. Jeff will
graduate Jan. 24 and will be
assigned to Ft. George G.
Meade Air Force Base,
Maryland. ·
Mr. and Mrs, ,Larry Groggel
and children, Alny, Scottie and
Stevie, of Columbus were New
Year's weekend guests of Mr.
and Mrs~ Marshall Adams and
Raymond, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
O'Brien and children. Sunday
afternoon guests of the
Adamses were Mr. and Mrs.
Chrissie Powell of &amp;.cine and
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Prince
and daugpter of Gallipolis.
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon
Donohew visited Tuesday
through Saturday with Mr. and
Mrs. Kearney Donohew, her
brothers and other rclstives at
Marion.
Bill Wheeler Is a medlcal
patient at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Cornwell
of Gallipolis visited Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs . Edward
Miller.

Alfred

Social Notes
Sunday School attendance oil
Jan. 2, was 36, the offering
$13.14 .
Worship Services were held
af n o'clock with the Rev. Lehman bringing the message
from Isaiah ~0:21-31, "Wait
upon the Lord, and thy strength
shall be renewed," to an attendance of 33. Conununion
services were held.
Mr. and Mrs. John Taylor
and famUy who had been
visiting In Dayton, returned to
their. parents home for New
Years, and then left for their
home in Norfolk, Va.
Dale Henderson of Royal
Park, Mich., has been visiting
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Henderson.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Swartz
and family of Ravenna, 0.,
visited . his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Vere Swartz during the
holidays.
Mrs. Iris Carr Is a patient In
Veterans Hospital at Pomeroy .
Among the holiday visitors at
the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Atherton were Mr. and
' Mrs. Clarence Atherton and
family of Long Bottom, Mr.
· and Mrs. Ernest Vineyard of
Mich., Mr. and Mrs. Winnie
Barnhill and Ruth Atherton of
Carthage ; Mr. and Mrs: Chas.
Barr of Belpre; Everett Taylor
of Pomeroy Rd.; Mr. and Mrs.
Hobart Vineyard and Rev. and
Mrs. Lehman and Ricky of
Tuppers Plain&amp;.
Dinner guests of Clara
FoUrod and Nina Robinson on
Sunday were Mr. and Mrs ..Otto
Swirtz of Shade, 0. In the
afternoon , they ali went to

2 SIGIS
OF
QUALITY ·

·Potneroy
Motor.Co.

!,?7Q CAMARO COUPE .
, $2795
3 ~0 v.s engine. aulo,!Patlc. power steering console.
beautiful dark green, finished with green vinyl roof . less
than 22,000.miles by local owner; radio, new w-w ·tires. A

sha rp model priced to please.

' 3 BEDROOMhoosein,Raclneor
Syracuse area. Phone 992i J77 .

.

J.7•31c

i Lo-;st- . - - -- .

LOST- Black and while Beagle
dog, mostly black. Liberal
reward. Phone 742-4157.
1'
.
'
1-6-61p

u

MADAM •• \NOULD .'fOU
MOVE THIS KID SO I
DON'T CUP HIM ON
MY SACKSWIIIJG ?

0

Business SerVices

, 1

I'

Wanted To Buy

1970 DODGE PDLARA
S239S
4 Dr .. V-8 engine. automatic trans .. P.S ., ·factory air, good

ALL ~EATHER ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTION
&amp; PWMBING 00.

FOUR NEW HOMES
OPEN FDA INSPECTION
. ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
1ft() PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom 516,900.00 home can be purchased with a
monihly peymentas low as $65.00 for a family with a bese
salary of $5,000.00 and three children. 7•;, Pd. annual
· percan.tage rate.
·

· OLD FURNiTURE, Round Ook
,. tables, Brass beds, dishes,
clocks, and-or complete
tires, radio &amp; other extras, white finish, clean interior .
240 Lincoln St. !
households. Write M. D.
Middleport,
Ohio
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
1'70CHEVELLEMALIBUHTCPE.
$2995
Dbl
Anthony
Plumbing
Cali 992-6271.
.•
Low mileage by local owner with lots of warranty left,
We hove a complete Home
12-17-ttc
factory air con~llloned, V-8 engine, turbo-hydromatlc. p.
Malnlenonce Service the
steering, gold body. sandalwood vinyl top. radio, vinyl
rear oround. No matter what
Fgr Sale
interior, good w~w tires. This ·car is load~ with eKtras 1
your need. CoiJ'!plete roof or
2 WHITE young guinea pigs. spautinv repair. .Interior or
Phone 992·2301.
exterior carpentry. ctltlng
1·9·31C Hie end Paneling and Siding.
-----'-- - Plumbing &amp;
OPEN EVES. 1:00, P.M.
•
1959.HOLIDAY RambleiMoblle Complete
Healing.
1'PMEROY, OHIO
Home, 8 • 15, priced very
CALL
Day Number 992-2550
reasonable. Ideal for conHILTON WO~FE, 949-3211
BILL
NELSON,
99;2-3657
We hove 24 hr. emergency
struction workers. For furTOM CROW, 992-2580
DALE DUTTON, 992-2534
ther Information phone 742· service.
WANT ADS
Notice
5922 or 742-5602.
·
992-5803
742-U47
INFORMATION
1
·7·3tc
992-3898
742-4761
M~ IGS COUNTY Fish and
DEADLINES
Game Association will hold a
We are fully Insured
5 P.M.
Oay
Before - - -- - 2 YEAR OLD, 5 h.p. Ward's
meeting, Wed., Jan . 12, 7:30
Publication
Riding Mower - 5100, also 9
p.m. at Bob's Mobile Court
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
ft. overhead garage door club rooms a.t Syracuse.
Cancellation &amp; COrrections
$50. Phone Reedsville 667·
Election of officers will be Will be accepted unlll9 a.m. for
3041.
POMEROY
held.
Day of Publication
From the largest
1·4-6tc
l-9-4tc
REGU~ATIONS
Bulldozer
Radiator to the
The Publisher ,reserves the
HOME &amp; AUTO
-GUARANTEEDSmallest
Healer
Core.
KOSCOT KOSMETICS and wigs
right to edit or reject any ads
- for sale. Brown's. Phone 992Nathan Biggs
deemed objectional. The
9?2-2094
Phone 992-2094
5113.
publisher will not be
Rodlalar S,.Ciallsl
606
E.
Main
Pomeroy
responsible for mor'e than one
12-31-lfc
Pomeroy Home &amp;Auto
Incorrect lll$erllon.
ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT ...
RATES
36" X 23" X .009
_ .. .Open 8Ti I 5
OFFICE SUPPUES
overweight ladles. teens and
For Want Ad Service
Monday lhru Saturdly
and
men Interested In a Weight S cents per WOrd one insertion
Ph. 992-2174 · · Pomeroy
606 E. _Miin, Pomeroy, D.
Watchers I R) Class In
Minimum Charge75c
FURNITURE
Pomeroy write : Weight 12 cents per word three
Watchers IR) , 1863 Section consecutive insertions.
Dry ' Wall O'DELL WHEEL allghment
Stop In and See Our CONTRACTOR,
Rd., Cincinnati. Ohio 45237. 18 cents per word six conFinisher and painting .
located at Crossroads, Rt. 1.24.
Floor Display.
Richard I. Dubbeld, phone
10·3'1fc secutive Insertions.
Complete front end service,
.,..--:-:-::---'---25 .Per Cent Discount on paid
' 742-5825 .
tune up and brake service.
USED OFFSET PLATES ·
SAVE up to one half. Bring your
ads and ads paid .within 10
1-10-5tc
Wheels balanced elecHAVE
sick TV to Chuck's TV shop.
days.
Auto
Sales
All
work
tronically.
MANY USES
151 Butternut Ave .. Pomeroy .
CARD OF THANKS
guaranteed . Reasonable
52
CHEVROLET
pickup,
Phone 992-5080.
&amp; OBITUARY
rates. Phone 992-3213.
perfect condition, $900 . Real Estate For Sale
11-21 -ltc SUO for, 50 word minimum .
r-27-tfc
Sericius Inquiries only. Phone
Each additional word 2c.
992-6083.
SEWING In my home. Will
BLIND ADS
c.· BRADFORD, Auctioneer
12·29·10ip &lt;
Additional 25c Charge per
make drapes, cushions.
COmplete Service
8 for $1.00
Advertisement.
Phone 992-6879.
'·
Phone 949·3821
1965 FORD pickup, V-8, custom·
OFFICE HOURS
_ __ _ _ _ _ _
1._3·12tp
Racine, Ohio
cab, with overdrive, A· l
8 ~ 30 a.m. to 5:00p.m. Daily,
Crill
Bradford
condition . Phone 0 . C. Gilpin,
INCOME TAX service, daily 8:30 a.m . to 12:00 Noon
5·1-ttc
Coolville 667-3593.
Saturday.
" except Sunday, evenings by
1-7-3tp
appointment . Mrs. Wanda
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
- - -- - Eblin, Laurel Cliff Road, 1
service, all makes. 992·22.8-1.
Bro~er
'70 CHEVELLE 55. 396, ex.
mile west of Meigs County Notice
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
110 Mechanic Street
cellent co·ndltion, many ex- ·
Fairground on Rt. 7 bypass.
Authorized
Singer Sales and
Pomeroy, Ohio
1ll Court St.
tr as, call
614-992· 2252
Phone 992-2272.
Service.
We
Sharpen
Scissors.
evenings.
i.J.30tc
Pomeroy, Ohio
3-29-ttc
OLDER HOME
1·7·61p
- - - -- 3 bedrooms, bath, large living SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Whispering Pines
and dining. Gdrage. Nice lot. REASONABLE rates. Ph. «6·
'65
CHEVY
Station
Wagon,
SETTLING Estate-60x12
Only $10,000.00.
4182, Gallipolis. John Russell,
phone
992-6256
after
5
p.m
,
Meigs
Barron mobile home, air
4
BEDROOMS
O.Vner
&amp; Operator.
J.9-6tp
Mite Club
conditioned, furnished. Call :--::-:-:::~--Nice living, dining and break·
S.12-lfc
Coolville 667-3838.
last
nook.
Gas
forced
air
1·6·31c '72 DATSUN truck, phone 742·
Fridays &amp; Saturdays
furnace. Double Garage. · AUTOMOB ILE Insurance been
- - - - - - -- 5032.
cancelled?
Lost
your
1-9-3tc $14,500.00.
10'til2
COAL, limestone. Excelsior
RENOVATED
o~rator's license? Call 992·
7 rooms, bath, gas furnace,
2
Salt Wocks, E. ~In St.•
- ~usic by
panelli1g.'1·bedrooms
11
x
17.
·~
· 6-15-tfc
.
P~meroy :· /'h""!! "~-3891.
·iti --~
;' !;I.,~'
'f'l
...,~ ~
G.ar~t",
• ...,.,_ acre . o·nly.
_
·
4-9-llc
.
+"&lt;!lieu band and' 2 female
Sll, -~~ ACRES
HARRISbN:~ TV and Antenna
slngers·from
Beverly, Ohio. POODLE puppies, Sll•er Toy,
POMEROY - Earl W.
3
bedroom
house,
bath,
furnace,
Service. Phone 992·2522.
Par~•lew Kennels, Phone 992·
Cleek, Phyllis A. Cleek, John INSTRUCTION in organ and
6-10-ltc
drilled well. Barn, garage.
5443 .•
Cleek, Macie Cleek to Ohio
·
Small
stream.
Some
limber
.
·
·
B
·i'
5
-ttc
piano. Gerald Hoffner, phone
Only $9,500.00 THIS MONTH. READY-MIX CONC~ETE de992-3825.
Power
Co .,
easement,
114 ACRES
livered right to your project.
U!banon .
1-4-6tc LONG BOTTOM - Five room
Cattle farm. 2 barns, good
Fast and easy. Free
house, bath, business, or
fences. 5 room house, bath,
estimates. Phone 992-3284.
storage building - $6,500.
George W. Folmer Sr., Cora . WANT WORK at home ad·
forced air furnace . Only
Goe3'eln Ready-Mix Co.,
Phone 985-3529.
M. Folmer to Manning D.
dressing and stuffing en12t
•
14t
•
24t
•
WiDE
$18,000.00.
·
Mid leport, Ohio.
,
12-19-JOic
Webster, I acre, Salisbury.
velopes? Rush self-stamped
WE HAY E 32
6-30-llc
Manning D. Webster, Mary
envelope to F. Uribe, Box 36, TROPICAL FISH, laney
PROPERTIES FDA $ALE
A. Webster to George W.
Albany, Ohio, 45710 · · 1-6-tfc guppies, angels and breeders,
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
u·PHOLSTERING · SERVICE;
ASSOCIATE
complete selection of fabrics
Bellas
and
supplies.
Phone
Folmer Sr., CoraM. Folmer, I
992-3325 "2·2378
and vinyl to choose from.
992·5443.
.
.
ace, Salisbury.
Pick-up and delivery. 'staler
1·9-6tc
12·30-tfc
1220 Washiniton Blvd.
Female
Help
Wanted
Upholstering, Rl. 3, Pomeroy,
Robert C. Hartenbach,
llfilpre, Ohio
phone
992·3617.
APPLES
Fitzpatrick
Or.
HOUSE, 1642 lincoln Heights.
Sheriff, Orville E. Watson, EXT!;! A INCOME. 3 hrs. a day
12-27-301p
chards, State Route 689,
Call
Danny
Thompson,
992·
dec.,et. al., to Faye P. Watson,
can average you 510. Work phone Wilkesville, 669-3787. FOR THE BEST deal in a new
2196.
from your own
home,
lots,. Martinsville - Orange.
·
'·3-llc
or
used
mobile
home,
try
7·18-tfc SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller ·
pleasant customer contact
Kanauga
Mobile
Home
Sates,
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
Melvin Sydebotham, Mildred
work . Write Personal Shopper
Kanauga,
Ohio.
3
BEDROOM
ranch
type
home,
662·3035.
Sydebotham to Robert ScarDept., Box 10, Watkins
12·17·901c
Arbaugh Addition, Tuppers ·
2·12-ltc
INVENTORY SALE
Products, Inc ., Winona,
berry , parcels, Sutton Plains.
All
.
new
with
total
Minnesota 55987.
Minersville.
electric and central al r BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
MOBILE HOMES . Large
1-10-llc
Clearance
Sale!
conditioning, bath and&gt;;, fully
selection
8.
10
·
12
wldes,
1
to
•
Dale Boyd, Ethel Boyd to
Septic tanks Installed. George
car~eted, lull basement,
bedrooms,
bank
repos
and
Buy
Any
Fuel
Oi
1
I Bill) Pullins. Phone 9'/jl-2418.
Frank Cleland, Delores M.
garage
In
basement.
See
by
used, some practically new.
Help
Wanted·
Cleland, lot, Racine.
appointment, phone 992·2196 -----------~
Save u~ to •;.. R. A. or Don
t2S.Itc
SIEGLER HEATER
Miller, 705 Farson Street, or 992·3585. Danny Thompson .
Frank Cleland, Delofes M. WYNAN'S
White
Glove
Financing available.
Belpre, Ohio by · Kaiser
Maintenance Service, State's
Cleland to Dale F. Boyd, Ethel
GET
FREE
•
12·30·1fc
Aluminum, phone 423-9531 .
largest Cleaning Contractor,
LEGAL NOTICE
Boyd, lot, Racine.
l-4-12lc
no..y accepting applications '200 Gallons Fuel Oil When
Sl X ROOM house, 133 Butternut
R. V. Weatherl\lan, Niese! A.
for work at New Haven, W. You Buy Any Siegler Heater
NOTICE OF
Ava. Contact Ed Hedrick, 2137
Va., 5 p.m. to 8: 30 p.m., Thru Jan. 15.
APPOINTMENT
Weatherman to Kay E. Smith,
Wadsworth Drive, COlumbus,
Monday fhru Friday. An
Cut No. 20594
Real Estate For Sale
1.80 acre, ·orange. ,
Ohio, phone 237 - .0~4 .
Estate of George w. Moore,
equal opportunity employer.
D
eceesed .
11-2i-lfc
Mabel Cleland to Franklin D.
Phone 485-7531 collect.
·
Notice Is hereby g rver\ that
1-9-6tc
Gheen, parcel, Sutton.
NICE 2-slory home with full Anna M. Rylher, of P. () , Box,
basement, 2 tots, new forced IJO, Pomeroy, Ohio, hn been
air furnace. Near Pomeroy ~t~h:P~irlrd Administratrix
WALNUT stereo, modern
For Rent
walnu1 stereo-radio com Elementary School. Phone Mooro . ~:c:a~:d,G,e1~,! ~i
MOBILE HOMES FOR SALE NICE trailer. 1 bedroom, Ideal
bination, 4-speaker sound
992-7284 to see.
, Middleport, Meigs counly
60X12, 2·bedroom, alf.electrlc, for couple, 10 miles north of
11·7-lfc Ohio.
•
·system, 4-speed changer .
air conditioned, 8x20 ft. Porch
Pomeroy, 565 a month . Phone
Balance
568.70.
Use
our
--Creditors
llr!
requlrtd
to
file
608
Eut
Mlin
and alui'T'Iinum
awning ,
992-7479. .
HOUSE, 4 rooms and bath,' lhelr claims With laid fiduciary
budget terms . .Call 992-7085.
POMEROY
aluminum skirting , com 1-4-tfc
completetv remodeled. New within four months .
1-5-6tc
pletely setup . Beautiful - - -- - - furnac:&amp;, kitchen cabinets, Oe~:::ger t~l7sl . 2Bth day of
MIDDLE
PORT
2
or
3
location. Owner leaving state.
HOUSE,
7 rooms, bath. Inquire COLONIAL Maple stereo-radio,
full
bedrooms,
bath,
fully carpeted. located In
F. H. O' Brien
Phone 949-4892 or 992·5272.
918 So. Third, Middleport,
AM-FM radio, 4 speakers, 4 basement, 2 nice level tots.
Middleport.
Phone
992·2362.
Probate
Judge
i-10-tfc
Phone 992-3689.
speed automatic turntable. carpeted, penelecl. A STEAL
,
I·S.61c
,
,
lt
of
sa
id
County
111 3 10 17
1-9-31p
Balance $79.32 . Use our
AT ·JUST $8,900,00.
budget terms. Call 992·7085.
Gallipolis.
1-5-6tc BUSINESS- CARRY-OUT TRAILER,
Brown·
~
Trailer
Genevieve Guthrie spent
SIDE GLANCES
DOING A GOOD BUSINESS
Park, Mlnersvllre, Ohio,
by Gill Fox
NEW
1971
Zig-Zag
Sewing
Christmas holidays with the
EXCELLENT
LOCATION
phone 992·3324.
Machine
In
original
factory
- ONLY INTERESTED
Delbert Yost family at Sugar
H -6tc
carton. Zig-Zag to make
PARTIES NEED CALL
Grove.
buttonholes, sew on but1ons,
ROOM house. 3rd St. In
New Year's guests of Clara 5 Mason,
monograms, and make laney RUTLAND- BUSINESS FOR
newly painted . Phone· designs
with just the twist of a SALE - has living quarters
Follrod and · Nina Robinson
882-2971.
single
dial.
left In lay-a-way over, MODERN, 3.bedrooms,
were Mr. and Mrs, Gerald
,
1·7·31c
and
never
been
used. Will oell
bath, NOT VERY OLD. AN
Swartz and family of Marietta, - - - - - lor only $47.00 cash, or credit
EXCELLENT BUSINESS
t~rms available. Phone 992.
FOR A COUPLE WITH A
0 ., and .Mr. and Mrs. Clair .1 BEDROOM tralfer aport.
lt41.
GREAT FUTURE . CALL
Follrod, 'Stevie and Kathy,
ments, Ideal for couples.
1-5-6tc
FOR INFORMATION. .
local.
Contact McClure's Dairy Isle,
992-5248 or 992·3436.
Vacuum TO BUY DR SEL~ IN A
Mrs. Clair Woode and Connie
1-9-12tc ELECTROLUX
Cleaner
complete
with at.
HURRY CALL US TODAY.
Sue of Circleville, 0 ., spent a
tachments, , cord winder and
HENRY E. CLELAND
couple of days last week at the BEDROOM and 2 bedroom · point opray. Used but In like
REALTOR
mobile homes. Adults only. new 'condition. Pay $34.45
Wm. Carr home. Mrs. Carr "is
Residence
"2-2568
Phone 992-5592 .
cash or budget plan available.
Office
Phone
992-2259.
hospitalized . in Veterans
12-19-tfc
Phone 992·5641.
1-4-61c
Memorial Hospital and will
1-S.61c
TRAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile - - - - -- - - undergo surgery.
Court, Rt. 124, Syracuse, Ohio Aut S 1
992-2951.
0
eS
6 ROOM house In Rutland,
- - -----.:...•_·2·1fc 1970
OLDSMOBILE 442,
~~r~:rl :.~P~t ctrry'h_:.!\:~a:
automatic, factory stereo
THE SOUND -NEW
2-BEDROOM, double tapa. Lotsotextras. Like new , Y:.i.58!:'.den &amp; large ~ard. Call ·
wide, mobile home on lot.ln Call 992-2441 alter 5 p.m. . .
1-9-31c
OF THE
Sr,racuse. Completely fur11-28-llc
n shed. Phone 992-2441 alter 5 · 1969 FORD 1 I . St k 12 II FOR SALE by -owner. We'll
p.m.
.
on, a e
·
miss our home, but It's too
GOOD
,
1-3-tfc bed, 9,000 miles, like new. E.
large lor elderly 'i:f,le. It's •
L. Riebel, 3 mi. east of
modern brick, 3
rooms, 2
baths, full basement, central"
2 BEDROOM mobile home In Chester, Ohio.
LIFE
1·9·3lp
Racine area . Phone 99H329.
heatl119 and air conditioning,
12-14-tfc . •69 ,FORD lf{ ton · pickup, 6 carpeted, heated owlmmlng
::::-:-:==:---11 d
1h
pool, larg• marble polio,
FURNISHED and unfurnished cy n er w 1 automatic
largtlanascaJ)ed Jot. t'rlce In
I
apartments. Cto5e t0 hoot
transmission, deluxe cab, all
fifties. Terms. 719 McCulloch
Phone
992-~434.
sc
·
~';.'"
lir;;2
~:~r·
reasonable.
Rd., Pt. Pleasant, w. va. Ph.
ON YOUR DIAL
· •
10-i8-tfc
one · ·
304-,7H888.
·
.1-9·31p
1-9·61c

Pom•roy Motor Co•.

WHAT IN
THUNDER
DQES· HE
WANT?

.

...: ..

A GROCER'~' StORE
6HOPPING CART 1
~VE

THREE OR FOI.IR
IF VOU Lit&lt;&amp;

.

I

THEN Wlff IS tT

BEN, W.VEN T 'IOI.l}IAP
1-iiGIHif''E~D, DEFEN61VE,

®

YOU CAN NEVER
f.IANDLE ...

AND I'UR6UIT DRIVER
TRAININ6?

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

NO·e.t.JT
'iOOR

'ANS
DO ..

..

s5,55

- - - -- -

For Sale

-

. - --. . . .

SMITH .NELSON ·
MOTORS. INC.

Aluminum
Sheets

- -- -- - -

Virgil B~
TEAFORD ,

The
Daily Sentinel

SR.

DANCE

GAS()~

AILEY '

·,

'Jbu have a Cl.l'tomer,
Don't keep him' waltinq!

We don't want to
j~e our nice job!

Property

Transfers

- - - -- -

_!h_e_Kasuals

Mci~i~ Hom,t(Foi Sale'··

MILLER

MOBIL£
HOMES
.

-----

JJW/~)1)];"'-'.=-'t!...J

- -- -- -

ACROSS
1. Un·
scathed
. 5. Highway
speed
11
detective11
.&amp;.;.l...-'---'-----'----•-o. Swedish
wine
measure
U. California
city
12. Stringed
instru·
ment
l3.Led
If. Volcanic
matter

Cleland

river

·

DOWN

1. Waldorf

or Caesar

2. Beguile
3. Lewis

Carroll
ballad
4. Prior to
5. Regretted

16. Portu·
guese title
17. With
great

6. In the
style of
7. "String
bean"
8. Very
small
space YNirrda1'• ADIWn
9. Braves
27. Ranch ·
11. Popul11·
employee
quotees
28.
Hosiery
15. Dashing
thread
chap
29.
Stage
lB. Grudge
direction
19. Fork
31.
Lager or
21. Kind of ftu
·
stout
22. Scenic
region of 34' ~~~~~~~Canada
24. Plant of
35.
the lily
The Borfamily
stal-"

~~~an's

Unscramble thtte rour Jumblet,
one letter to each equare, to
rorm rour ordinary wordo.

1

Ooo

•

\

-·
THfCJX&gt;KS~AWNffOF~

tilT PIMONfll5 L!AI!M 10 J!!

'Wf,I.Y. !HfY WIU. 11iN01!1! QJI~

oEl;os
PYNOH

.,

19. Wat• correspond·
ent of
note
ZO. Artist
----aiiao::::.oaiOiaeaiitol Irvin
2l.Song- ·
writer
Harold
:12. Dazzled
, 23. Chimn&lt;')'

I

TRYSOF ~·
J

.

11

~motion

- - -- --

I .
.

..,
~
~

1-Y.:.:'AN.:r;IJ;O:r--=-T...:·~r-;--r--,

1

V
'I
1\ A.

1

.

Now arnnp the clrclad letlen
I to ronn the lurpr\HIIIIWer, u
. IU(Jtltad bJ the abofe eva-.

I

.

IC=3MII~'~..~..
~~-~"W~III~...~=JI J XI i I )
(A.IweN to. .rntw) '
!iat•nl·~··

Jumht.t•

NOISY MOUTH DtlUTI fllON'f

.tn~owr:r 1

Thil miKftr mmt•lu• Olfl! -A MINUS

grimt~

UHnL llt!l' t&lt;NOW

24. British

•olrlicrstatesman ~ ~+-+----1f-25. Tourist
haven
26. Competent
%7. Bargain
3G. t;oinedia n.
Blanc
~+-+----1~+-31. Dc.cl~rr
verboten

I CAN'T 60 10 5CIIOOL
WEA~ I NG A DRE% ... I
Jt!5T CAN'T !

I&gt; AlLY t'RYI'TOqlJO'ft; - Here's how to work it :

- --- -,-----

AXYD. LBAAXR
is J, .0 N G F I! J, L 0 W
Om• ;,:lll'l" •imtrl)• &gt;tan;l, !OJ· another. In this .sample' A is
llse&lt;l for the three L's, X fo•· the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes. the length and formation of the words are all
hints. ~ach ria)· the rode letters ire diiTerent.

a

W-30

=--- -'------

'

0 .' MHOGZMOZ

J. .A Y II Z

11 C: II I&lt; N

.TYNAZQ·GM - VJ!L
~I Z 11 7. Q Z M X R , - A , V .

GH

E

TZMOR~M

Saturda)·'s Crypt~quotr: A SKI RESORT IS U S U ~LLY
,KNOWN FOR lTS SETTING OF SNOW, .~NP MO liNT.~INS­
ANil BONES.-SOUIICE t 1NKNOWN .
( f) 1U7i! Kin)!' Feat.u ru S\·ndleatt:, luc.)
.j

'

WHAT AM I 60iNG To CO ?
Wfl'&lt; 00 THE'I HAVE TO
HAVE A. DRess COI'E ?

A Cryptogram Quotation

WMP0/1390

I

glan~e

38. Philippine
island
39. Belgian

15.0yst~r -

Realty

\ '

32. Waterfall
. (Scot. )'
33. Ascended
35. Defeat
36. Reported
37. Lotharlo's

=

..

IF ~V ~I(E lir, BUT IXlN'T
OPEN '&lt;(OUR E'/EG, WILL.

TKE M'&lt; 60 AliJA'i ?

..

'•

�a- The Dilly !!Minel, Midcleplrt-l'towun;r, o., Jan.1t. JJ'/2
~.~;..ct~~_-;:ote;;; ~:,, In-,,;;··ta:te~ a.:-1
welcomed; The editor reserves tbe right to aborteD letten.
All lett~rs must be algned, wttb a tuu· addresa, altboup
Initials may be uaed upon request. ·

Children Respect No Authority
Dear Parents of Meigs ijigh School Students :
As a teacher, it has become apparent to me.- and to most
otl:er teachers, I am sure - that in the past eight or 10 years we
ha·•e seen an increasing number of children in our classrooms
who have little, if any, respect for classroom authority.
It has become lhe popular thing to give our children anything
that they desire while we permit them to do anything that they
wish to do. We show our "love " for our children by never saying
no to them.
The result of lhis type of child..fearing is a child who, because
he has no respect for his parents, also has no respect for his
teachers or for school property. TheSe children are totally
lacking in those characteristics which are necessary to become a
weli..founded person and a good citizen of his community.
As a teacher I have tried to learn to look under the hair and
through the whiskers to discover what kind of person is hiding
behind this disguise. Many times the young people involved are
really quite normal, decent youngsters who are only going along
with the crowd in !heir appearance. But more often the person with the long hail', etc., is the one who turns ellsily to the
drug and hallucinogenic scene, joins the draft card burners, and
grows up to feel no responsibility at aU to the society which has
served him so richly. It is this reasoning I am sure which has
prompted school officials and the student hody to put into effect a
dress code which does not seem to be unreasonable.
Letting students tell the school board and school authorities
what to do can ol)}y lead to a complete breakdown of school
authority and I am sU.:e that most of us do not wiBh this to hap.
pen.
It is time for a few parents to learn how to control their
children and to teach them to respect authority rather than to
defy it. It is also time for those of us who do stand behind the
school hoard to Jet them know that .we do support them in this
matter. H yoU are interested in discipline being maintained in
our high school, you must go to the meeting tonight and express
these views to the school board members.
An Interested Teacher (Name withheld on request).

· Market Report
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO.
Satarday, Jan. 8, 1972
SALES REPORT OF
Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
HOGS- 175 to 220 lbs. 22.50
to 23.70; 220 to 250 lbs, 21 to
22.SO; Light 16 to 21; Fat Sows

16 to 18.25; Stags 14.50 Down;
Boars 14.50 to 16; Pigs 8 to
13.SO; Shoats 10 to 14.SO.
CAmE - Steers 28 to
35.50; Heifers 28.50 to 30.SO; .
Baby Beef 30 to 40.50; Fat Cows
18 to 2UO; Canners 16.75 to
22.10; Bulls 23.SO to 27.80; Milk
Cows 175 to 327.50.
VEAL CALVES - Tops
S0.25; Seconds 45.50 to 4f25;
Medium 42.50 to 44.60; Com. &amp;
Hvs. 42.35 to 48.SO; Culls 40
Down.
BABY CALVES - 20 to 60.

MEIGS THEATRE ·
Tonight &amp; Tuesday
Jana·u arv 10·11

LAWRENCE OF
ARABIA
ll'echnicolorl

Oniar Sharif
Peter O'Toole

"G"

COLORCARTOONS
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.

~~************'­
A Though
t

+:

f:

For Today

+:

t

II is not death or hardshi
f: that is a fearf u I thing bu f:
-1r the fear of hardship or +:
.jl death.
-1r

·~

.,.

~

- Epictetus

f

.,.

:
t

**'*
!• lfs Quick! Easy •:
f:

t DRIVE-IN t

tt

tt

BANKING

Fridan Only
f: The Drive-In Windowt
is Open
f:
if
9A.M.to7P.M.
(Continuously J
f:

t
t

t

-1&lt; Other Banking Hours 9 to lf:

it and

S to 7 as usua I on_.

-1r Fridays.

.

-ic

t FARMERS BANK i
t and SAVINGS OO.t:
t+: POMEROY, OHIO tf;
1'
.;

Member FDIC
Member Federal
Reserve System

f:
_.,

•..*************~•

Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
- Gary Hysell, Pomeroy;
Lydia Davis, Pomeroy;
'charles Young, Cheshire ;
General Hall, Racine; WilliaiP
Zerkle, Syracuse; Arthur
Fletcher, Long Bottom;
Willard Faudree, Harrisonville.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Garnet Potts, Lillian
Maynard , Ronald Fraley,
Mona Gibbs, Regina Swift,
William Dye, Betty Pooler.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Harvey Erlewine, Rutland;
Kimberly Riffle, Syracuse;
Dorothy McDaniel, Middleport; Mildred Roush, New
Haven;
Henry
Werry,
Pomeroy; Donald Baxter,.
Winfield, W. Va.; · William
Barrell, Langsville.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Carrie Baumgarn.er, Jason
Bush.
· JAYCEES TO MEET
The Meigs County Jaycees
will meet at 8 p.m. Tuesday at
Pomeroy City Hall when the
upcoming membership t::ive
will be discussed. All members
and guests are urged to attend.
All young men between 21 and
35 .interested in the betterment
of''their community are invited
to join the Jaycees.
SALON TO MEET
Meigs Salon No. 710, 8 and 40,
will meet at 7:30 this evening at
the home of Mrs. Mary Martin .

:·

Hughes Autobiography

Clyde Ranoolph Died Satu~y

(Continued from Page 1l
apparently hasattractedso much attention that! have just got !Q.
live a somewhat modified life in order not to be an oddity."
Hughes thought it strange that he should be forced to conform
to standards~havior other than biB own.
Were he to ppear publicly, Hughes said, "it seems whave the
appearance
I I am going w spend the rest of my life in a
courtroom."
"[don't know why people are given such broad latitude to
influence the lives of others or to interfere with them, whatever
you want to calli!. But that seems to be our way of life.
"So until! can get some of these iBsues, in which 1 am the
defendant, so to seeak, put to rest lcan'l make any
definite plans."
}4
Asked if he had any chronic ailments requiring regular me·dication, Hughea replied: "Nothing of that kind at this time. 1
suppose 1 ought to be knocking wood ... "
He spoke bitterly of Robert Maheu, ex-manager of his Las
Vegas holdings. Maheu is suing Hughes for $50 million damages
and contract settlement. But Hughes sJid Maheu helped him
·
f
Plan his departure from Nevada before he ordered Maheu Ired.
"Now as regards my departure from Nevada, 1 have been
inclined for over a year to come down here (Bahamas), and
!hal's the interesting part of this which so clearly shows the
duplicity and unbelievability of Mr. Maheu -is that Mr. Maheu
and his man Hooper made all the arrangements for my trip down
here through all the past year -1 mean the year prior to my
departure ... they were making arrangements in this area for me
and they made some trips down here and reported on various
hotels that might be suitable ...
·

REEDSVILLE - Clyde retired employe of the FMC
Randolph, 65, died 'unex· Corp., Parkersburg, where he
pectedly saturday at his worked 38 years with only flve
Reed;wille, Route 1 home.
days absence. He spent the
Born in Meigs · County, he ·: greater part of his life in the
was the son of Mrs. Nellie Rood Reedsville area and was a
Randolph, Reedsville, and the long-time · member of the
late Sid Randolpi1. He was a Textile Workers of America,
Local 9.
Surviving besides his
•J
mother, are his wife, Bernice
Rood Randolph; a daughter,
US
Mrs. Roxie Ford, Hockingport;
a son, Russell Randolph,
Mrs. Mary Amos Riley, 76, Reedsville; a brother, Claude,
formerly of Meigs County, died of Reedsville; four sisters,
Sunday evening at Riverside Mrs. Georgia Mayes, Little .
Hospital in Columbus.
Hocking; Mrs. Loretta Long,
Mrs. Riley is survived by her Tempe, Ariz., and Mrs. Nora
husband , Russell; a son, Buchanan and Mrs. Elva Rood,
Charles Amos, Columbus; both of Reedsville, and three
seven daughters, Mrs. Pete grandchildren .
Besides his fathe,r, he '!as
(Betty) Morrone, Mrs. D. H.
(Mary Ann) Blanton, both of preceded in death by three
Columbus ; Mrs. Max (Maxine) daughters.
,
Nelson, Perrysburg; Mrs. Arle
Funeral services will be held
(Margaret) Price of Linworth; at 2 p. m. Tuesday at the While
Mrs. James (Jane) Redden, Funeral Home In Coolville with
Grove City; Mrs. Kenneth the Rev. Eldon Blake of. .
(Shirley) Bell, and Mrs. ficiating. Burial will be in Eden
Charles (Glenna) Graham, of Cemetery near Reedsville.
New Castle, Ohio; three Friends may call at the funeral

Marv Riley of

Col

urn

b

Dies

.

.

. .. .

'
.

·.··.···· ·.....

Pointers Lose to Warren Local
Coach Earl ~berfield's vialling Warren Local Warriors
added to the miseries of the frustrated Point Pleum!t Big
Blacka with a convincing 79-« victory Silturday evenlnf In the
local rifle plt.
.
The loss was .the thlnll8st weelt .agalnst major opponenta
and stretched the locals winlels streak to six.
1be Warriors, riding the top I'IUI8 of the Tri-V.Jley
Conference in Ohio, were sparked to their 6th win of the year by
6.2senlor Mark Elder. They have loa\ only once.
Elder scored in each period, connecting on ~t buckets
and 7-of-8free throws for atolalof23.
Ken Richmond with 12 and Charlie Chamber 10 were the
only twi!Higure scorers for the Blacka wbo fell behlnd early and
had to play catch-up ball virtually all the way.
•.·.·.·.•.•.·.·.·• .·.·.· .·.·.·.·. ·.·.•.·..·.·.·.·.·..·•· ····:···:·:·:·:-:·:···:·:-:-:-:- ::-··..·.··. ·.···.:·.·.·.. ·.· ........·.·..·

Make -Eiberfelds In P()meroy
Your Shopping Center
Be Thrifty!

Save All of Your Saleslips Fro

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

"They prepared and laid out this trip in detail antl were aware brothers, Herman and John . ;:om:e:.:af:te:r~n:oo:n:.:tod:ay~·--~!::========::::::::::=:
of ilfor one full year before I left Nevada:"
Warner of Pomeroy, and Dale ~
Hughes said he almost came to the Bahamas before deciding to Warner of Albany; four sisters,
live in Las Vegas.
Mrs. Lorenzo (Zelda) Davis,
"I had been interested in this area for some time," he said. "As Pomeroy ; Mrs. ·Deica Mohler,
a matter of fact -thiB Is one very interesting thing. II was a Rochelle, Ill.; Mrs. Howard
hairline decision when I left Boston -to go to Nevada instead of (Ina) Curl, Columbus, and
coming down here. When I left Boston on this widely publicized Mrs . Herbert (Cledieth)
23
train trip that received so much attention, I came within one inch Johnson, Columbus;
of coming to the Bahamas then instead of going to Nevada.
grandchildren, and 18 great.
"Actually, when I first went to Nevada I only expected to stay grandchildren.
Mrs. Riley was a member of
there a very short time. I became interested in what I was doing
in Nevada (buying hotels, casinos and real estate) ... and I just the Westhill Church of Christ in .
Columbus.
stayed mi. That's all."
·
Hughes scoffed at a description of himself publish ed m Funeral services will be held
d
at 2 p. m. Thursday at the
November picturing him as having 11-inch fingernails, a bear ~ 0 Rutland Church of Christ
his waist and weighing only 94 pounds.
with Rev. Fred Whilacre of.
Hughes said he kept his fingernails at a normal length, and had ficiating. Burial will be in
worn a Van Dyke beard for many years. .
Miles Cemetery. Friends may
"The statisiics," he said, "are that I am six feet, three and call at the Martin Funeral
thr~uarter inches, which is wha.l.l have always been ... as to Home in Rutland from 2 to 4
·the weight, l would guess in the 14ll to ISO area. I am thin. I have and from 7 to 9 p. m. Wedalways been thin."
\nesday.
Dept.
Class
Credit
Days
Time
At one point Hughes expressed pl~~sure in seeing his old film
4
Bus. Ad.- 204 Introduction
6:30-8:30
MW
productions on television, saying they measured .up to others of T A
Bus. Ad.-214 Principles of Account. I
4
5: 00-6:00
MTH
lhe era.
.
· · , •. ·.
, ...
II'
Bus. Ad.- 223 Principles'of Management
3
6:30-9:30
TH
But he returned often to the disputed biography manusc•ipt:
Bus. Ad.- 314 Business Law
3
6:30-9:30
T
Hughes was told it had been reported Irving had been paid a
3()
Econ.- 303 Public Finance
3
6:30-9:30
T
$300,000 advance for the book.
Econ.- 313 Wages, Employment, Labor
3
4:00-5:00
MWF
"That's what I've been told," Hughes said. "And that's what
Econ. - 403 History of. Econ. Thought
3
4:00-5: 30
TTh
Logan edged Meigs 36-30 in
we are trying to run down because that's the one thing I don't
Educ.442
Tch.
Soc.
Sci.
in
Sec.
Ed.
2
MW
4:00-5:3.0
understand here. There has got to be a bank record somewhere of the Girls Interscholastic
Eng.223
Journalism
3
MWF
4:00-5:00
Basketball League Saturday.
this transaction. .
Eng. - 253 Developmental Reading
3
6: 00·9: 00
M
Trailing at the end of the
"And Chester Davis (Hughes' attorney) will tell you I have
-313Seminar
in
Brilish
Lit.
Eng.
3
4:00-5:30
TTh
third period 31 to 12 Meigs
been very, very critical of him for not being able to uncover the
French-2131nter.
French
II
3
4:00-5:00
MWF
came on strong in the fourth
path of these funds, because they even claimed to have my en· but couldn't catch up. This was
2
HPE -202 Water Safety In st.
Th
6:30
dorsemenl or my signature on a check, and yet they won't the first league game.
HPE-243 TFeatmentof Injuries
3
6:30
T
produce II.
H PE - 413 Adapted Phys. Ed.
For Meigs,' Sherrie King had
3
6:30
M
"And I don't understand how any such money as this could be 14 points, Leanne Sebo 9, Pal
Hist.-343 ihe U.S.: 1828-1 870
3
8:00-9:30
Ml=li
passed through any normal channel without leaving a trail a mile Harris 4, Debbie Ohlinger 2and
Pol. Sci.- 343 The U.S. Constitution
3
MWF
4:00-5:00
wide and a bright pink, or some such color.
Ava Sayre I. For Logan,
Psych.- 403 Educational Psychology
3
4:30-6:00
TTh
"I don't understand why Time-Life and McGraw-Hill, who are McBrown had 14 and Bell 13.
Psych. - "423 Abnormal Psychology
3
6:30-9:30
supposed to have a reputation for legitimacy and integrity to
Meigs will play Eastern at
Soc. Sci. - 203 Principles of Geography
3
MW
4:00-5:30
some degree ... won'tcooperate with us in finding out what really Eastern Tuesday at 6:30 p.m.
Soc. Sci. - 253 Afro-American Culture
3
6: 30-9; 30
happened because this money didn't come out of any of my bank Mrs. Joy Bently is coach.
Soc. - 213 Sociology Qf Education
J
6: 30-9:30
Th
accounts. And it didn't enter any of my bank accounts, and it
Sp . - 353 Persuasion
3
6:00-9:00
T
wasn't given to any charity with my knowledge or direction.
Sp . - 413 Criticism
3
6:00-9:00
"So what happened to the money? ... I couldn't hide that
ATTEND FUNERAL
amount of money without running into all sorts of difficulties
Mr. and Mrs. Dick
with the Treasury Departmenl ...
Winebrenner, Mrs. Rachel
McBride&gt;and David Mills, all of
Mrs. Lloyd Hill, Liverpool; Syracuse, were in Columbus
Pleasant VaUey Hospital
ADMISSIONS: Mrs. Alpha Mrs. Samuel Plants, Gallipolis Saturday to attend the funeral
Woodall , Point Pleasant; Ferry; Stephen Colley, of Mr. Merrill Thompson. Mr.
Sherry Arthur, Leon ; Donald Patrick, 0 .; Nellie Nowell. Thompson is survived by his
Miller and William Miller, Southside; Judith Worster, wife, the former Mary
Henderson; Neale Knight, Canton , 0 ., and Hollace Margaret Mills, daughter of
Middleport; Mrs. Paul Byus, Stacker, Greenville, 0 .
the Rev. and Mrs. Delbert S.
Point Pleasant; Daisy Mil·
Mills, former Syracuse
chell, West Columbia; Jeffery
DISCHARGES: Mrs. Roy E. resi~ents, and two cl)ildren,
Clendenin, Letart; Mrs. Betty Bostic, Charles Bonecutter, Mrs. Warren (Merrillyn( Self
Grube, Kan.auga, 0. ; James Patricia Condee, John Newell, and Joseph Thomspon, both ot
Davis , Glenwood; Mary Jr., Dale VanSickle, Carrie Columbus.
VanHorn, Point Pleasant; Smith, Lewis Woodall, Jr.,
Thomas Dalton , Glenwood; Michal Smith, Joseph Ellis,
Mrs. Larry Angel, New Haven; Mrs. Paul Smith, Howard
Mrs. Chester Perry, Athens; Kiser, Mrs. Charles Willet,
Mrs .
James
Thomas, Leota Waq~sley, Angela
Charleston; Chessie Anderson, ' Chapman, Perry Burns,
Mrs . Arthur Gheen, Point Raymonrt Taylor, James
Pleasant; Mrs. Clifford Napier, Mrs. Vernie Roach,
Bellamy, Mrs. Roger Clark, Mrs. Thomas Mo~, Janice
Mrs. Homer Bonecutter, Mrs. Weasey, Mrs. Joshua Combs,
Ethel Wandling, Mrs. James Brenda Donohue, Christopher
Dabney, all Point Pleasant; Odell.

SCHEDULE OF
LATE AFTE-RNOON

• §AJLE•
AU

WINTER

FABRICS

.

School Appropriation ·" for '72 Near ·$2 Million
A resolution appropriating
$1,898,424 to operate · Meigs
Local Schools in 1972 was
adopted by the district board of
education Monday night.
· Expenses detailed in the
resolution are, adminisiration,
$56,449; iristruction, $1,143,869 ;
coo~dinate activities, $8,000;
Auxiliary agencies (transportation), $74,257; operation
of school plant, $60,666;
maintenance, $11,715; special
services, $100; supplies,
$129,400; materials for

maintenanc.e , $24,200;
equipment rerrtl!~emenl,
$28,1SO; contract and open
order service, $69,550; fixed
charges, $281,418; contingent,
$8,7~0, jiDd capital outlay,
$1,900.
The board in other business
approved a leave of absence
for Amos Tillis, bus driver, for
the remainder of this school
year. Kenneth Jacks and
Kenneth Little were appointed
substitute custodians.
George ·Harg'raves ,

.I.AJgan

King Edward I of England
· passed an air pollution control
law in 1273, forbidding the
silversmiths of Nottingham under pain of beheadin~ - to
burn soft coal, which produced
a smok~ lh~t botheres his
queen.

~oted

•

The Meigs Locar School
District board of education
voted four to one in favor
continuing the district dress
code in its present form
Monday night after meeting
with an estimated 200 parents
and sludents at the junior high
school in Middleport.
Although the board voted to
leave the dress code stand for ·
the time being, it agreed in lhe
same motion to take a "strong
look" at the code in the future.
Changes coulsl be made for ·the
next school year, it was in·
dicated.
The mass meeting came
about as the result of 1'1 male
students being given l(kiay
suspensions at the high school
on Jan. 3 when they returned to
classes following the Christmas vacation period. The
students allegedly did not
comply with the dress code
covering their hair length.
Principal James Diehl said
the students had been warned
previously to get their hair cut.
"The suspensions," he said,

Win 36 tO

w
w

Reappraisal

w

Must Begin

DAVIS HALL RECREATION ROOM

QUALITY FACTORY FINISHED

GP

CALL POINTVlEW: 992 · 2505

MONDAY,JAN. lO
A nice little children's program shows up at 6 p.m. this
evening on Ch. II. In ·animated puppetry, the show tells a
favorite fairy tale, "The Brave Little Tailor."
And there's a dandy special on Ch. 6 at 8 p.m., the first of a
' series on ABC. Called "Hollywood, the Dream Factory," it
goes into a history of film-making , and puts the spotlight on
the biggest film factory of the Golden Age : MGM. Scenes
from such hits as "Gone with the Wind, " ''Ben-Hur," and
"the Wizard of Oz" are shown. Dick Cavett narrates.

'
I

29

PRICES
ST.ART FROM

...,.....---

Hollywood Television The~tre has a·treat: "The Scarecrow,"
an old but timeless romantic drama about witchcraft. 8 p.m.,
Ct.. 11.
Monday' night football is gone, and ABC is running movies
at9 p.rp., Ch . 12. Tonight Dean Marlin, Karl Malden and
Ann·Margert replace Frank Gifford, Don Meredith and
Howard Cosselll Ann:Margret for Howard Cassell! ???) in
" Murderer's Row," which sounds like a description of the
Dallas Cowboys' front four.
-MOVIE:S: "The~vtarrying Kind:" 4 p.m., and "The Clown," ·.
ll :30 p.m.. both Ch. 10.
TUESOA Y: Anew religio~ series begins on Ch. 11
at 3 p.m. Entitled "Breakthru," it deals with moral -Issues
among the young.

POMEROY
CEMENT-- BLOCK CO.
The Department Store of Building Since 1915

ALL BY HERSELF -Penny Smith, a member ol Racine
Girl Scout 'l,'roop 137, presents a check for $14.96 to Mrs.
Phillip F;isher, Racine, troop leader. The money is to be used
for troop activities and was raised by Penny over the past six
weeks by collecting bottle caps from products of the Roya)
Crown Bottling Co. in Middleport. Penny, the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Harrison Smith, Racine Route I, attends the Racine
Elementary School.

I '

•

Clear · and colder tonight.
Low in the 20s . Partly 'cloudy
with little change in temperature Wednesday . High
Wednesday in the middle 40s to
near 50.

To The lntere3b Of 'l7u! Meigs-Mason Area

TUESDAY, JANUARY 11, 1972

"came ·' in carryihg out the ·
regulations provided in the
dress code as approved by the
district board of education."
By last Thursday, seven of
the II students suspended had
complied with the code enough
to return to classes. Several
meetings were held In regard
to the matter with parents and
students dissatisfied with
provisions of the dress code (in
regard to hair) laking part.
Friday, a Columbus attorney of
the American Civil Liberties
Union, Edward Harter, mel
with parents and students

when it was agreed to
"respectfully request" at last
night's meefing that the board
drop the part of the dress code
pertaining to hair of male
students and leave the matter
to the discretion of parents.
The code provides that hair of
male students be worn above
the eyes, ears and collar.
Despite the large number of
students and parents on hand
last night, the meeting was
orderly. Parents' - speaking
both in support and against the
hair requirements, as well as
students, who voiced their

I

Utility

PHONE 992·2156

Fred Crow, of lhe Crow,
Crow, and Porter law firm,
disclosed Monday represen•
tatives of the Ohio Power
COmpany will attend a public
meeting - if one is arrangedto discuss what Meigs County
may do to accommodate new
people coming into the area.
Crow told the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce at
Bowers' Drive-In Restaurant

News ... in Briefs

.
COLUMBUS- GOV. JOHN J. GILLIGAN ann9unced plans
today to merge the state departments of development and urban
affairs and put present Development Director David C. Sweet, In
charge of it, Scripps-Howard Newspapers reported in a
copyrighted article .
. Scripps said Gilligan planned to make the formal an·
ooWlcement of the merger at a noon news conference commemorating his flrst amiversary as governor.
CLEVELAND - REP. ROBE!t:r F. DRINAN, O.M11511.,
Monday called Pres. Nixnn a "barbarian" fo~ ·the recent U. S.
alr attacks on North Vietnam. "President Nixon is a barbarian,"
said Drlnan, the first priest ever elected to Congress. "Never in
our history have .l{e seen anything like the shameless strafing of
.imocent clvillans ln Indochina the five days before Christmas.
DIVORCE ASKED
REFUND AUTOMATIC
Woodrow Hall, Racine, Rt. 2,
COLUMBUS ( UPI) - State
has filed suit for divorce in Tax Commissioner Robert J.
l\leigs County Common Pleas Kosydar said Monday persons
Court from Margaret !If. Hall, paying the new state personal
Lansing, W. Va., chargi~g income tax will autqmatically
gross neglect of duty and ex· qualify for a refund If their tax
treme cruelty.
Is overpaid:

Byer Chief of

Fire Company
In Middleport
The

Middleport

All Middleport Village funds
totaled $164,429.55 as of Dec. 31,
1971, according to the monthly
report of Clerk·Treasurer Gene
Grate to council Monday night
in its first regular session of
1972.
Receipls and disbursements
from each fund for the month
plus the balance, respectively,
of each, follow:
General, $16,448.31, $7,217.86,
$34,269.26; cemetery, $417.63,
'$114.44, $560.92; parkingmeter,
no receipts, $140.54, no
balance; lire equipment, $100,
$98.44, $157.07; swimming pool,
$8.75, $7.85, $2,830.90; planning

disapproval of the hair ruling
- were able to express
themselves freely. Board
President Frank W. Porter
presided.
Later, not only Porter but
several other board members
commended parents and
students for the "excellent
behavior" during the hour-long
discussion.
During the period, a letter
that had been written to Supt.
George Hargraves from
Harter was read. It suggested
that the hair provisions in the
dress code violate· the con-

ill

he has been assured that a
representative from the firm's
Canton offices would attend a
meeting. lle said an evening
meeting could be arranged and
suggested that the Pomeroy
and Middleport Chambers
sponsor it.
the deep mine at Salem
Center is expected to hire 2,000
persons and the Gavin plant at
Cheshire an additional 400.

In 60 Days Middleport Has Surplus

Meigs County Auditor
Gordon Caldwell has been
given 60 days by the Ohio
Board of Tax Appeals to begin
reappraisal and reassessment
of all real property in Meigs
County.
According to the com·
•
munication received by
Auditor Caldwell, the new
reappraisal and reassessment
must be completed by June I,
1974 and that all assessed
values of all the real property
BY UNITED PREsS INTERNATIONAL
of the county entered upon and
WASHINGTON- AN INDEPENDENT oil wildcatter from made a part of the tax list and
Wichita, Kan., told a congressional hearing today that political lax duplicate for the collection
contributions from oil industry giants' pay off in tax favors that of taxes for the tax year of 1974.
are driving small oil men out of business,
~opies of the order were sent
Petroleum geologist Alfred Jamea III said attempts to .by registered mail not only to
reform tax· laws to deny the industry's ~!ants the advantages the auditor but to the county
they enjoy always are stifled by the giants' political clout. As a prosecutor and county comresult, he said, the independents, who account for about85 pet. of missioners .
' are being driven out of business by
all drilling for new oil fields,
The last reappraisal was
conglomerates controlling the business from the well to the
completed for the tax year of
service station pump.
1968. Ohio law requires that
• reappraisals be completed
WS ANGELES- HOWARD HUGHES is so determined to· every six years. Appraisal
squash the book billed as his autobiography that he may emerge firms as approved by the Ohio
Board of Tax Appeals are
from his cherished seclusion to battle it out in court, according to
being notified of the reap.
a spokesman for the mysterious billionaire.
praisal and will be asked w
RICHMOND, VA. - FEDERAL DISTRICT Court Judge submit bids on the local work,
Caldwell concluded.
'
Robert H. Merhige Monday ordered Richmond's largely white

'

..

detailed account of what the
group would do In maintaining
the building and submit the
report at 'the next board
meeting.
,l.lso meeting with the board
were Rita Slavin, Robert
Hamm and John Mora of the
Meigs County Teachers '
Association to discuss the
proposed salary increase ·for
tea chers . Others attending
were Mr. and Mrs. Don Wilson,
Mike Gerla·ch and Gary
Walker.

Weather

'-

suburbs brought into the city's predominantly black school
system.

•

Also meeting with the board
was George Wright who asked
for the use of the Pomeroy
Junior ~High School as a
community youth center.
Porter advised Wright that
none of the buildings '!"ill be
available since no one knows
what impact the coal mine in
the western part of the county
will have on school enrollment.
However, the board advised
Wright that it might consider
the request on a temporary
basis. Wright is to submit a

TEN CENTS

tan

air

G' Is

TUESDAY, JANUARYll

released by the Eastern l,ocai · Meeting with the board was
Bo•rd of Education on Jan. 3 Floyd Rupe who, acting ·as an
who are living in the Eastern interested parent, pointed out
District but are attending the problems with drugs facing
school administrators irl other
Meigs High School.
· Frank Porter, president, districts.
extended thanks to the Eastern · Hargraves said that the
has
introduced
Board for its consideration in school
programs
to
combat
the drug
the matter.
Attending were Porter, problem. Pamphlets have been
Hargraves, Larry Morrison. sent home with students about
assistant superintendent; Don the TIP program (Turn In a
Mullen, Joe.Sayre, Virgil King, Pusher) . Hargraves said, "One
and Carroll Pierce, members, child on drugs is one too
many ."
and L. W. McComas, clerk.

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL. XXIV NO 190

SEMESTER 1971-72

REGISTRATION FOR SECOND SEMESTER

tioard.
The board also approved a
salary increase of 20 cents per
hour for all non-certified
employees effective Jan . I ,
1972. However, all payments
made under this resolution
shall be in compliance with. the
regulations of the Federal Pay
Board.
Hargraves, in reporting on
the Mine Mechanics Course,
stated thai the U.S. Bureau of
Mines is cooperating.
The board accepted students

•

RIO GRANDI antEG£

~_ECOND

...s.uperintendent,
\Vas
authorized to testify before the
House Education and Labor
Committee when it ; conducts
hearings Thu~sday at the
. University of Kentucky in
Lexington.
· The Meigs local board
adopted the first step of the
new state minimum teachers'
salary schedule effective Jan.
I, 1972. All payments made
under lhis schedule will be in
compliance
with
the
regulations of the federal pay

Now You Know

AND EVENING CLASSES

jANUARY
CLEARANCE

.

escrow, $805.28, no disbur·
sements, $57,184 .12; water
construction, no receipts,
$781.01, no balance, closing out
the fund; general bond
retirement, $1,826.65.
Receipts for the month were
$35,431.54. Disbursements
totaled $21,294.98.

stitutional rights of students
and parents.
Edwin Charle, chairman of
the Athens Chapter of the
American Civil Liberties
Union, said he feels it irn·
portant that the Individuality of
students be recognized. Society
rests on the wholesomeness of
its rules, he said. Charle noted
that changes In the hair code in
the Athens and Logan schools
had been beneficial in easing
tension among students.
Board member Don Mullen
led the inove for the board
action to support the dress code

elp

Crow said residents of this
who left Meigs County due
to lack of employment will
return if they can secure jobs
and adequate, moderate cool
housing. Crow said he would
rather _see former reslents
return to take jobs rath~r than
new people.
"We must make every effort
to make people coming into the
area feel at home," .crow said.
Jack Kerr, president, stated
that he -had received a letter
from a- represenlative of the
new mine asking for a
brochure of Meigs County. The
letter was referred to Crow.
In other business Kerr said
he has recei ~ another ap.
plication for the secretary
position of the chamber. Kerr
also said office space in the
courthouse may become
available.
Kerr said George Hargraves,
superintendent of Meigs Local
are~

School District, informed him
that the Christmas lights may
be stored in one of the unused
high school bulldings In the
district.
Kerr also suggested that the
boulders that ,fell behind the
Pomeroy Poot Office could be
used to support the upper
parking lot wall that needs
reinforcement.
Kerr also reported that a
profit was made on the annual
Christmas promotion. It was
suggested . that the money
balance be transferred to a
separate account .to purchase
future Christmas lights.
The membership approved a
resolution of congratulations
to the Pomeroy National Bank
which is observing its IOOth
anniversary thiB year,
Attending were Kerr, Crow,
Carson Crow, Jack Carsey,
Richard Chambers, Bob
Jacobs and Dennis E. Keney.

Honor Roll System Changed

Eastern High School's honor
roll system was changed upon
the request of the student
council by the Eastern Local
commission, no receipts, District Board of Education
$35 .08, $1,091.37; street Monday night.
maintenance, $5,259. 70,
Meeting with the board were
$2,627.37, $9,433.16; sanitary Randy Young, president of the
sewer, $3, 721.28, $3,321.13, student
council ,
and
$19,061.44'; water, $6,743.94, representative Vicki Spencer.
$6,390.56, $22,892.41; water They asked the honor roll be
meter deposit trusts, $100, $172; determined by averaging
$5,679 .81; sanitary sewer grades earned by the student
~~~'mf?.-Y@.',fl;$:&lt; for a six weeks period rather
than on the basis of each grade
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
in
each subject being con·
Oblo Extended Outlook · Thursday through Saturday: sidered. The board approved
Mostly cloudy wiih.periods the change.
faculty
Carl Dodrill,
of rain or showers Ukely
each day. Temperatures wdl member, was spokesman for
average well above normal teachers and non-certified
with daytime highs ranging personnel who brought several
from the upper . Ws to the subjecls before the board .
The first request was that the
uppe( 50s and overnight lows
ranging from the lower 30s to board pay a part of the
hospitalization insurance of the
the lower 40s.
.
. district's employes. This will
:;:;:;:?,.::=::::;::;:::::.~~~ ~-$&gt;;~~·~ be taken into consideration.

The
teachers '
assn.
recommended also that three
of four more persons be employed in the district's
elementary grades in art and
physical education, and that a
School nurse be hired. The
board will consider this, the
final decision depending upon
whether money for such ad·
ditional staff members. is
available.
A request for hiring teacher
aides for both the high school
and the elementary schools
was also made to the board, as
was a request for consideration
of a cost of living salary• in·
crease in January, 1973.
The board added two names
- William Downie and James
Butcher - to the list of substitute teachers with proper
certification and approved
home instruction for Jodie
Smith, 'who has been ill .
Carolyn Parker was named
teacher for the home instruction.

Fire

Baccalaureate was set for 2
p.m . May 2i at the high school
with commencemeut at 8 that
evening. A combined eighth
grade commencement was set
forB p.m. on May 22 at the high
school. The board granted
permission to the extension
service to use the building for
the annual 4-H siyle Revue on
Aug. 8.
The board purchased
burglary insurance from .the
Barton Agency at Chester and
set a special session for next
Monday to hear about portable
school facilities from a
representative of Budy and
Hill, Inc. Bills were approved
for payment.
·
All board members, Roger
Epple, I. 0. McCoy, OriB
Smith, Clyde Kuhn and
Howard Caldwell, Jr., were
present, as were Clerk Creston
Newland, Principal Bob Ord,
Supt . John Riebel, and
representatives from employes
of the district.

the now abandoned sanitary
landfill, and from which
anticipated income did not
come.
The appropriations 'include :
General Government Ser~,vices :

Mayor, personal, services,
$1,500; other , $6,300; total
$7,800.
Clerk-Treasurer ·- personal
services; $1,500; other, $1,000 ;
total, $2,500. •
I
Solicitor - personal ser·
vices, $500.

Council- personal services,
$576. •
Buildings and miscellaneous,
$40,375 . Total for general
governmental services listed .
above $51,751.
Security of Persons and
Properly ;
Police Department .- personal setvices, $15,500; other,
$10,830; total, $26,330.
Fire Department- personal
services, $500; other,- $2,920;
total, $3,420. Total for security
of persons and property!,

Bastion
Given up
SAIGON (UPI)-South Viet·
nam abruptly abandoned its
major Cambodian base at Krek
today to m~e~ a growing
Communist threat to the
Saigon area. The withdrawal
triggered a mass desertion by
2,400 Cambodian troops who
fled into South Vietnam after
them.
President Nguyen Van Thieu
has predicted a general Com·
munist offensive throt.ghout
Indochina to coincide with
President Nixon's February
visit to Peking, and a North
Vietnamese offensive in Laos
moved on unchecked despite
massive U.S. air attacks.
U.S. mititary spokesmen disclosed the North ·Vietnamese
have moved miBsUes deep into
southern Laos for the first time
and said two SAMs were fired
at a F4 Pha.nlom jet near
Sepone, but missed. Military
sources In recent days have
reported an increase in MIG
activity along the Ho Chi Minh
Trail, too.
BS2s operating out of Bang·
kok pounded Communist
supply trails and the U.S.
command said a FI05 Thunderchief fired a missile at a
North Vietnamese antiaircraft
base after electronic devices
discovered the Communists
were about to fire at the
bombers. It was the fourth
such "protective reaction"
strike this year.
Despite the i!ir raids North
Vietnamese drove Laotian
troops out of the village of Ban
Nhik in southern laos near the
town of Pakse, inflicting heavy
losses and virtually slicing off
the southern tip of Laos. They
also drove close to the CIA base
of Long Chen 80 miles north of
Vientiane.

32 Arrested

InDecember

Thirty-two arrests were
made' in December by' the
Middleport Police Depart·
ment.
According to Chief of Pollee
J . J . Cremeans, 12 were for
$29,750:
intoxication, nine lor speeding,
Leisure Time Activities :
and four for driving while
Parks and playgrolinds
intoxicated . Other arrests
personal services, $4,200; included two for stealing and
other, $4,100; total, $8,300.
trespassing; one each for
Community Environment: .· re~kless operation, squealing
Planning commission, $600; tires, assault and battery, and
other, $400; total, $1,000.
dumping trash in the village.
Transportation Facilities:
The c~uiser was driven 4,828
Street lighting - Other, . miles and parking meter
$1,500; total, $1,500.
. revenue was $538.50. Meters
From genePal fun\1 for were free for over a week
contingencies, $600. Total all . before
Christmas
in
general fund appropriations, "ooperation with Middleport
(Continued on page 2)
merchants.

~~;n;;rr~~;~~l:~;~;: Middleport to Spend $~94,421
Fire officers are Bob E.
BY BOB HOEFLICH
Byer, fire chief; Larry Fox,
Middleport Village Cotincil
assislanl chief; David Zerkle, Monday night approved an
•captain;
Wayne Davis, appropriations resolution
Howard A. Dailey; and James providing for expenditures
Daniels, lieutenants.
:totaling $294,421 to operate uie
First aid officers are Russell !town in 1972.
Mills, chief; Tom Darst,
Clerk-Treasurer Gene Grate
assislant chief, and Charles · said the appropriations were
Wayland, captain.
comparable to the total ap·
Adminis'tratlve oificers are propriations in 1971.
·
David Ohlinger, p~esident; .
Appropriations in 1971
Tom Darst, vice president;
totaled ~4,156 ol which
Bob McElhinney, . treasurer, approxlmaMy $40,000 was
and Carl Platter, secretary. earmarked for operation ol

as it now stands. Mullen ad·
mitted that he does not like
long hair, but he feels lhis
probably should be a matter
for parents to control. He said
that, perhaps, changes in the
code should be made.
However, he emphasized
that he is against changing the
code In the middle of the school
year . He said the code should,
in his opinion, be allowed to
stand as it is now but that the
board should review it and,
perhaps, make the requested
. change for the next school
(Continued on Page 8)

I

'

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="721">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11121">
                <text>01. January</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="52649">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="52648">
              <text>January 10, 1972</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="907">
      <name>daniels</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="638">
      <name>randolph</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="849">
      <name>riley</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2014">
      <name>starkey</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
