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White
Falcons
ROast-Red
Devils
Letters .of
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Winfield
Genenls.
Winfield
hold the dyke or would ] bey
Stastic wise for the White.
~elealed
;
t
he
·~Old"
W:blle
lose their comprosure to the Falcons as a team. Wahama
Ravenswood full coUrt press1" shot allzzllng 88 pertt~~l on 37 Faleooa tw'lblll!k on the 27th
The opening muiutes of the of 60 from the field and was of December in Winfield
final stanza. ' looked Uke the even hotter trom. the .charitY'
WAIIAMA (It) . .
answer to that question w.S stripe by ~- ~ fantastic Player
FG F.T TP
yei; bllt the Red Devils would 25 of 27 attemPII for 92 percent. DinSey .
1~15 .6-1 ~t·
·not give up. A(ter the Falcons,.. 'lbe Red ~ _ill)ot a very . Mitchell
7·10 . W . 19
jumped out 'to their li~est respectivel45 percent trl!lll the Crawford
9-14 2-2 20 ·
lead of the game of 11'points at field on38 of II attempta. From · Lan)berl
~14 '-7 .. ,.
$1-«l the R~ Devils ~tarted the foul line Jli.Venlwood hit on Howard
3-4 1·1 .7
stealing the .baU ·and forcing . 18 of 'rl for 66 percent.
Clark
1-Z S:.. 6
the Faic()ns into numeroua
lndlvidllllly fer · the White ·Ch. Roush
· 1-1 2-2 4
miscues. Before Wahama Falcons, they bad a total of
. ·- ---------.
knew what hit them their 11 nine stars which was the entire
37-60 ~ 99
point lead had dwJndled to illBt ' leanl ·l!ecJuse .the win over
RAVENSWOOD (N) !
three points at 97-94. Dingey Ravenswood was truly a team
Jaccar
18 4-7 40
was then fouled imd calmy iced .victory. The Wl)lte Falcons
Fox
8 3-3 19
the game with two free throws were led by Roger Oingey with
Romeo
4 4-5 1%
in the Warning seconds of the 26 points; Rindy Crawford, 20;
3 3-6 9
game to give · the Falcons a Mark Mltcttell 19;, 1111d Robbie WoHe
Seagraves
2 4-6 .I
hard fought 99-94 victory.
Lainbert iuid 18 to rotind out
Durallti
3 t).Q . 6
the double figure scorers.
. Ravenswood had three.tlouble
figure ~orers in the game,
'!beY were led by a fine 42 point
poiNT WINS
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Mrs. McNabb was preceded effof! by Mike Jaccar and a 19
Point Pleasant over the
in deati) ·by her . parents, point performance by Joe Fox. weekend ·won ·easily over
·wuUam J. and Armlnd Harless · Sam Romeo c_hipped in with 12 Southern FreJiunen, 52 to ·26,
tallies.
'Blankenship, three st..ters, and
In
the
rebounding with Gerlack getting 18.
For Southern Klni Maurer
. department lliark' Mitchell
a brother·
grabbild 16, Dlngey 13 and 1\ad 12, DoDBld Shaffer&amp;, Terry
Funeral services will be held Mike Howard 6 to lead the Sayre .4, Buddy Ervin 2, Tom
at 2:30 p.m. Wednesday at the . White Falcons.
Barnhart and Dave Jenkinl
' Davis Funeral Home at
one each. ~
Willoughby. Burial will be in
Tlin Maurer had 18
Wahama wiU be ·looking for
Western Reserve . Memorial their third conaecutlVe victory rebounds, 'Keith Sayre six
Gardens at Chesterland. on Tuesday nlght when they rebounds and Shaffer, Hill and
Friends may caU at Ewing roll out the welcome mat to the Barnhart each bad three.
Funeral Home from 6-9 p.m.
.this evening, and. at the Davis
Funeral home from 7-9 p.m·.
Tuesday,
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WIOD
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l.etlln ill tplai111 Ill weieemed: Tiley sbollld fie 1e.i
lba • wardt IIIII (ur be aabject to redllelllll by lbe edlle!')
· a.t
be uo.d wltlllbe ~~·· addnet. fl!a• 111Q
~ wllllheld apoa pablleaU111, however, 111 ftqa ...t. 1.et1en
~ be ID SOOII tuto, ad~lq Isla.., Dot penanallllel.
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SurJ)rise, Surprise!
January II, 1972
Dear Mr. Editor:
1 can't express the ljUI"J&gt;fise and shock I experienced while
reading the article in your paper, January 10, written by a
supposedly, well educated, teacher. I am very happy that my
children will not attend Meigs High School if this is an example of
the type o(teachers there.
The type of child-rearing has changed. The children are now
allowed to ask why, and think for themselves, instead of 'letting
their parents do their thinking for them.
.
This is the 1970s, not the 308. Why should our children follow
the same rules in these modern and rapidly changing times?
Most important is the fact that the clothes and hairstyles do
not make the individual. Why should this teacher even think.Qf,
looijng under the hair and throogh the whiskers to see what kind
of person is ~hind the disguise? This individual is eiractly the
same' with short hair and shaven, The _difference is in the
beholder's eye and mind. The reason this so-called degenerate
turns to drugs could be due to being put down and discouraged by
narrow minded people who have caused a generation gap.
Since when has society started serving us aU so richlj? War,
pollution, Inflation, over crowded schools, is thiS richly?
I would love and respect my parents more had I been given
the· Cilance to ask why, and to discuss their reasoning. My
childnln will be taught to ask the reason why, and fight for what
they believe In regardless of rank or age.
1 don't expect to see this letter In your paper, but at least I
feel better.
Also I am very thankful fort ·:ng 'll years old and out of the
reach of such suppressors.
By the way, I am also a legal secretary and see the results
. these people cause every day. Thank you for your time. .
Mrs. Pat Merlano, 1677 Fairgate Place, Columbus, Ohio
~. 1-&amp;lt Ul 5321.
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Shocked at Meigs County Parents
Uke other mothers of Meigs County I do not agree with the
dress code. I don't feel the school persoMel has the right to teU
our children how to dresS.
But I thought Meigs County parents had enough pride to want
their children to look neat when they went to. school. That was
before I saw !he picture of the ·boys that had been suspended in
our paper.
n our son looked llke they do, instead of calling in lawyers
and teaching our child to defY school authorities, we would send
him to the barber.
If aU parents would use a little common sense the dress code
would be unnecessary.
n being 25 y-ears behind the times keeps our boys from
looking like Chicago hoods, then I woula rather we stay 25 years
behind the times.
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Name Withheld on !'@Quest.

Think they 'Have a Right'
Dear Editor:
I think too much is being said over, the long hair situation in
Meigs schools. I think the young men have a right to wear their
hair as they Uke it. Most of the fB!IlOUS men in history, poets,
artislll, even our presidents of the United States, had long hair
when we never had good schools way back \here.
Even In my school years the boys could wear their hair as
they pleased. Also their pothes. The girls and women In the 20s
wore their stockings rolled below their ~tRees. They wore kickers
and ootlandish looking clothes. The people are fighting against
school dropouts as they call them. What more could make a
student want to drop out if they can't wear their hair to suit
them; besides, as long as they keep it combed and neat and dean
I think they look nice.
Education is the issue, not the length of hair. Athens County
t.. mostly all long hair, beards and mustaches. If they can learn
and go through college, why can't the men in Meigs County do the
same?

I don't think Meigs is 25 years behind time, it Is mostly fifty.
I think if the school board would drop the dress code
everything would go back to normal. It is just a fad, and will
pass.The students will get tired of their long hair and will wear it
short before long. So I don'tsee why they cannot be left alone and
dress as they please.
H the boys have to shorten their hair, why don't the school
' board made the girls lengthen their skirt:; to two inches above the
kn~ that the dress code calls for the skirts to be.
- I'd say it was more Uke two inches bl!ow the thighs on some
of them. Am I right? So if the girls can break the dress code, on
the length of their clothes, the boys should be allowed 'to wear
their hair as they please. I'm not against the giriB either, I just
think there should be enforcement for both, if for one.
Respectfully,
Mrs. Mattie Sprouse, Rt. 1, Middleport, Ohio
P.S.: Besides au ·that, I'm sure if the teilche'r's decided to
wear their hair long they would do it; also, ruffles on their shirts,
or big ties, like they used to in olden days.

Mason Area, News, Notes
Mrs. Vicki Keefer, Mason
. . County . Ho~t;,makers Agent,
· Pt. ·Pleasant, and Mrs. Ray
Fox,
Charles Ibn\..,. Area
Representative, Clifton, W. Va.
will at!end the West Virginia

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Homemakers Stale Planning
meeting In Clarksburg, W. Va.
on Thursday and Friday. ·
Miss Lena Fox, Clifton, fell
recently and broke her other
hip. She is hospitalized at
Holzer M~ical Center. She is
.the sister of Ray and Elver Fox
of Clifton.
Recent guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Vernon Roush and famUy
were Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Walker of New Jersey ; Mr. and
Mrs . Charles Walker, Jr.,
McConne~llle, Ohio; Mr. and
Mrs. Ted Riley of Clifton; Mr.
and Mrs. Ronald Zerkle, 'J r.
and daughter of Pt. Pleasant,
.and Mrs . Ronald · Zerkle,
Letart.

Vetel'los Memorial Hospital
SATIJRDAY ADMISSIONS
-Anna Wines, Racine; Minnie
Johnson, Athens; Florence
Rowe, Middleport ; Kate
Loudin, Cheshire; Ora Clark,
Syracuse; Mary Ford, Letart.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Raymond Salser, Elizabeth
Hay.. , Richard Bearhs, Lydli
Roush, Grant Hickman.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS · Arthur Goodin, Pomeroy ;
Edna Richmond, Middleport;
WEISSMAN llfAMED
Judy Ginther, Chester;
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Elizabeth Wicliham, Ches~r; Stanley Weissman, 40, CenHoward Largent, Syracuse; · terville, has been named a
Chirlet YOUII(l, Chehslre. .
member of the Air Pollution
SUND~Y DISCHARGES - Control Board by Gov. John J.
Donald Diehl, Herbert Shields. Gilligan.

OJl a lone foul shot by Mark

game. This lead was shortBY GAI\Y CLARK
The Wahiuna White Falcons Mitchell and took a 1-0 lead. li ted as Roger Dingey. came
basketbaU team made it two In Ravenswood tied the game at through and the White Falcons
a row Saturday nl!!ht when 1-1 by converting a foul shot took a slim four pouit lead iniQ
: they literally roasted the and from·then on thril .the rest the dre.ss\ng . room at
Ravenswood Red Devils ~94 . of the quarter the White . intermis.slon . Dingey took
Falcons were on top. Randy scoring honors for the second
It was a cold three below zero Crawford provided the 'scoring quar~r by popping in 12 poliJts.
outside the Red Devil gym but punch for the Falcons bY During the first. half the
for the White Falcons who were dumping in 12 points In the Falcon8 shot 20-34 from the
inside the .temperature was eight minute span. At the end field for 56 percent while
r.ij!ht ~t ~ . boiling poipt.. In ~ o.f thef~~t turn Wah.ama held a hitting 10 of 12 from ' the free
·throw line for 83 j)ercent.
what 'was probably the hottest f1ve pomt lead 26-21.
Roger
Dingey again
shooting night in Wahama High
The second ttuarter saw the provided the scoring power in
School history the Falcons
Wahama
quintet open up all the third quarter which saw the
defeated Ravenswood for only
-their third victory of the season guns in the first six minutes of White Falcons widen their lead
the quarter and take a ten point to seven points. Dlngey scored
against five .setbacks.
The first period began with lead at 'K/·21. It was now time a total of 10 points in the period.
the Red Devils controlling the for Ravenswood to · catch on Going in to the final turn
tip only to lose the ball .on a fire and roar.back to take a 42- Wahama led 77-7Q. The Big
turnover. The Falcons scored 41lead for the only t!nie in the question was, "Could Wahaina

Athens Girls

[ Market Report

J Mrs. McNabb Dies Sunday

Ptlneroy pollee will get a new radio
POilleluy ·coun~U upon accepting a bld
111bmilled by Bobier Electronics Co.,
ParUnbllr11, at a coat oi $5,M.
Tha eoat, which Includes inatallation,
wtU be paid by the Ohio Law Enforcement
. P~~'-Agency, De!!al'llnent Of Urban
. Affalril. The. Bobier bid was the only one
reCeived and was opened Monday.
In . other ~neaa. ·council passed' a
resolution granting authority to the
Coliunbus ·and SOUthern Ohio Electric
Qomjlany ' to _lnatall aU mercury vapor
Ughts In the village. Council also accepted
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Meigs Lasses

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lloyd Swan Dies Sunday

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ery Paper Reveals
How piciuresque Beech kep~ before 1892 when the City
Grove Cemetery got its start ts of Pomeroy purchased the
part of the wealth of historical original cemetery from W. H.
material on Pomeroy in the old Lasley . Trustees at that time
days - including pictures ..:. were D. A. Russell, Georse
collected by Edison Hob,stetier, Plantz and John McQuigg.
president of the Pomeroy
By 1899, Trustees McQuigg,
National Bank, which is George A. Minich1 Jr., and H.
celebrating its 100th birthday Osborn had adopted new rules
in 1972.
and regulations. These rules
A paper which reveals the said:
cemetery's history ivas
"Horses must not be left
prej&gt;ared by the late Hart .· unhitched, nor shall they be
Stanbery, a former bank fastened to trees. Fast riding
president, who served on the or driving is not allowed.'!
cemetery's board of trustees.
The trustees indic;tted they
According to Stanbery's "welcomed visitors" but
account, . Beech Grove ca~tioned that visitors were
Cemetery was started after the not permitted to drive or walk
Civil War, on Nov. 21, 1867 upon upon lots and "they are strictly
adoption of the constitution and prohibited from plucking
by-laws.
· either wild or cultivated
OrlgiJially, tbe Beech flowers, or writing upon or
Grove Cemetery Assn. was · _ injuring any monument or .
limited to 30 •memben who monumental device.
appointed five truatees to
"Children should always be
five year Ierma. Time bas accompanied by their pafents
changed thiDga, however. or some elder person who is
Today, ·the cemetery Is · familiar with the rules.''
govenu!d by alooard of tbree
, The trustees prohibited in·
trusleea appointed by the toxicated persons or any
.mayor and approved by person "lounging around after
eouneU. Now !erving on the dark.'' Gates were. closed at 6
board are Alfred Elberfeld, p.m. and hunting was
Roy Mayer and Pbll prohibited.
Globokar.
In 1899, Sarah Pomeroy
Fencing, surveying and Wellman of Rugby, Tenn.,
platting the cemetery was asked to have the remains of
haphazard · in 1888 and com- the Pomeroy Family, which
prehensive records were not were burled in &amp;•cemetery at

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Carole Donley

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THE FARMERS BANK AND SAVINGS 00.

News... in Briefs

BAKER'S
.· BUDGET

SHOP

same

SHIRT

InexpenSive ·
Home

BAK-ER
FURNITURE

SAME DAY
SERVICE
In At 9-0ut At 5.
IJst Our FrH P•rkong ,_,.,

aean.s

11' E. 2nd, Pomeroy

BY vNITED PRES!!' INTERNATIONAL
SEN. HAROLD ELRUGRES OF IOWA cUmbed aboard Sen.
·Edmund s. Muskle•s crowded Democratic presidential bandwqon Monday and the MulDe aenator contended he has pulled
even with President Nixon In a nationwide po[)U]Mity poll.
Htl(lhes' endorsement was the Ia~ In a swles collected by
M~e, 'wbo Is rated the leadlnll contender for the Democratic
nolnlllallon.
nWill colllldered Important ~use Hughaa .Is a longtinne
.oppouent of the Vietnam War and lias a widespread following
IIDOI1C doves wbo have 1Jejm disalfected fnm the Democratic
party. In CoJun;lbul, Ohio, Monday, Muskle said a Kanis poU
showed he had pulled "'en with Nixon.

For

FINISHING,
Robinson's

News•.. in Briefs

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I'JIILVMBus -'DIE CLEVELAND
Conservation Committee

llol• ". Bytell

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We, the· undenJined dlrectora, atteat the' cmrectn. of ~ nparl
ol
. condition and declare that It hu been epmlned by t!l·lllld to.lbe bell of CIUI'
.knowledge am beUef Is true ll1d cmrect. ·
.
'nm I e T. Reed, Jr.
R oW B. 8allill - Dlrecton

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&gt;

State of Ohio; County of Melp, • : '
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Sworn to and "'blcribed before me this 14th day. of J1n11ir7, 1m. ·
My Commilllon EKpire1

Ju1J I, 11'14.
t

the rear of the old V. B. Horton
homestead in Naylors Run,
moved to Beech Grove
Cemetery. Also moved was a
monument created by the
citizens of Pomeroy at the
grave of Mrs. Wellman's
grandfather, Samuel Wyilis
Pomeroy, in whose honor the
town is named.
Trustees donated a corner lot
at the top of·the main driveway
and paid· for moving the
monunlent. The ·expense of
moving the bodies was paid by
private subscriptions in charge
of Judge P. B. Stanbery.
Automobiles coming onto the
scene were frowned on by the

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In '1889, the remainl Ol the Samuel Pomeroy fanilly were
moved from a cemetery at the rear of the V. B. Horton
bomeslelld in Naylor's Run to Beech Grove Cemetery. This
mt~~umenl, erected by Pomeroy dtize111 In memory of
Samuel WyWs Pomeroy for whom the town is named, was
moved at the
time. Samuel W. Pomeroy, pioneer In·
duatriallat, died June 5, 1841.

llarJP. Y.....
. .NellqNIIc

. lllid today Ohio'• P'-' for clelni., up air pollution WGU!d be "of
Utile 111e" unlea certain omilllons are corrected. Mn. Patricia
Smith, Clevtllnd, a·CAa:; apoke11111111, told the arlo'Air PoUutlon
' Cclntrol Baird the 011joi omlulon In the plan II Ita faUure to
-lion what air quality controllillldarda It II d..tgnect to meet.
· '!be ~beld alonnll Plbllc ~on tha new llanlards
todiJ. Mrs. anlth objected to the llate'a 11111111ption ''tlilt
wiU readily conform to regulatlo111 of the Air
Pollution Board, 1111kinllincere efforts to elq1lore all avenues of
control tedmOioiY·"
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aM'AWA -' JHTERNATIONAL AIR

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was crippled

trustees who in 1912 prohibited
autos from· entering· the
cemetery at any time!
In ·1913, Oren Jones was
named sexton replacing S. A.
Eblin, who had died. The
salary was $1,50 a day.
In 1918, the trustees were
Harry Felger, widely known in
the area as a photographer;
David Geyer and Hart Stanbery. These men served for the
next 10 years.
Stanbery closed his paper
with a plea to future residents
that they strive to lleep the
"holy place intact." He asked
-that the trees of the cemetery
be spared by · future
generations.

Hired by B~ar~

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EXTENDED 0\ITLOOK
Oblo extended- outlook,
Thursday through Saturday:
Colder Thursday and'
war111lng up . again on
Saiurday. Chance of snow
Friday and raiD on Saturday.
Hlgb temperatures from the
upper 20s north to the upper
30s · or lower 40s soutb porUon, rising to the 40s and
lower 50s Saturday. Lows at
nigbt mostly In the 20. ex• ·
cept In the 30s at tbe end of
the period.

Racine; a sister, Mrs. John
CHESfER- Eldon Gaul, 63, '
(Opal) Wickham, Chester;
well known ebesler area
four grandchildren, and
.businessman, died Monday at
nieces and nephews.
several
Veterans Memorial. Hospital
Preceding him in death were
following a lingering illness.
his
parents, Frank and Daisy
Mr . Gaul owned and
Smith Gaul, and an infant son.
operated Gaul's M~rket In
Funeral services will he held
Chester 44 years. He belonged
at 2 p.m. Thursday at the
to Shade River Masonic Lodge
Ewing Funeral Home with the
453, F&amp;AM, Bosworth CouncU
Rev. Robert Card 'officiating.
46, Royal Arch Masons,
Burial will be in Meigs
Chapter 80; Ohio · '(alley · .
Memory Garden. In lie~ of
Commandery 24, Knights
flowers friends may contribute
Templar, and helped organize . .
CLUB TO MEET
to the Meigs County Chapter of
The Twin City Shrine Club
the Tuppers Plains-Chester .
ELDON GAUL
the American Cancer Society. will meet at 7:30p.m. Thurs·
Water District Mr. Gaul bad
served as secretary-treasurer (Gayann) Clay, Chester; a Friends may call at the funeral day at the clubhouse in Racine.
Refreshments will be served.
of the district until he. was brother, Orville Jacob Gaul of home anytime.
forced to resign due to ill
health.
Surviving are his wife,
Evelyn Ebersbach Gaul; a son,
Richard of Chester; a
daughter, · Mrs. Ronald .

Charge8 Filed
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Charges have been fUed in
tw.o accidents ·investigated
Saturday in Pomeroy by the
Pomeroy Police Department.
Orvel Davis, 74, ,Langsville,
was charged with ' Improper
backing after hacking his car
into one driven by Virgil Lee,
41, ' Pomeroy, on Union Ave.
Pollre said Davis attempted to
pa!.S a car at the traffic light
but, unable to do so, reversed
gears and struck Lee's vehicle.
Damage . to both · cars was
mediwn.

Charles ~ vaughan, 20,
Pomeroy, was cited to mayor's
court for falling to yield right of
way after he pulled from a
parking space .on East Second
St., into an eastbound car
driven by John Dean, 20, also bf
Pomeroy. Medium- damage
was reparted to both vehicles.
Thare were no lnjuriealn eliher
accident.
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Sub·Teachers
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Eldon
Gaul Dies
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Fumishings

POMEROY'S HIS'IpRICAL Beech Grove Cemetery goes
hack to just after the Civil War. The entrance, as It looks
today, has a sign fixing ·8 p.m. as the closing hour. Early
trustees ordered the cemetery closed at 6 p.m. and forbade
automobiles to enter the cemetery.

~wz

THEATRt.

. "VISIT

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

TUESDAY, JANUARY 18, 1972

History of Beech Grove

Bargains All Over The Store .

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Cloudy and mild · tonight.
Occasional light rain likely
over the southeast baH Wednesday morning. The low
tonight 40 to 45 and the high
Wednesday in the upper 40s
and lower SOs south.

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· POMEROY-MIODLEPORT, OHIO

VOL. XXIV NO. 195

At Elberfelds ·In Pomeroy

Died Sunday

COW!cll member _noted .that th-. village of
Po~eroy is not m the equipment rental
busmess.
.
Pomeroy has drilled II test well in the
vUiage of Syracuse to provide a new water
· syste".' for the people of Pomeroy.
Baromck noted that council ~ould agr~
to help out the village of Syracuse in case
of an emergency.
,
.
~!tending were Ba~omck, Lucien
Poulin, Ralph Werry, Willlam Snouffer,
Elma Russell, Jim.Mees, and Don Collins,
councU members, Jane Walton, clerk ;
Phyllis Hennessy • treasurer, and Chief
Webster·

· Devoted To 'lJre lnteresb Of The Meigs·MasiJn Area

·in the January Sale

;:y~time::

. Snowden, Ohio B~reau of Mines, which
described the ser10usn~ of the recent
rock slide, a l~tter published Sunday.
~ Baronick said people should be
notified of the danger from the rocks.
Council agreed that people should be
awar.e of the situation . Members fell that
residents already have been well informed
following the report in the Sunday TimesSentineL
A request made bY. Syracuse Council
to use the village owned backhoe was
turned down. One council member stated
that they should let Syracuse take care of
its problems and Pomeroy theirs. Another·

Weather

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Carrlacou Island In the '
Caribbean baa 80 telephones aU of them operated by the
gDvernment.

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for bids on a new. police cruiser.
Aletter from the Drane Co. to upgrade
all ordinances was read by Jane Walton,
• cl~rk. Total cost to upgrade the ordinances
would he $3,10Q! Council earlier had
allocated $1,500 f~ the service. No action
was taken.
Council earlier had advertised for bids
for the sale of village owned property
loca!ed on Pomeroy's East Main St. be
cancelled becatise council ran lhe ad·vertisement In the local newspaper two
times instead of the I'@Quired five .
Baronlck presented a letter to council .he
had received from Ralph Dean and Arnold

'

Now You Know

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO,
SYRACUSE - Mrs. Luna B.
Saturdi!y, Jan. u, 197!
(Peggy) McNabb, Syracuse,
S~LES REPORT OF
66, who died ~unday at
Ohio Valley Uves.tock Co.
Veterans Memorial Hospital, Is
HOGS - 17&amp; to 220 lbs. 23.50 survived by her husband,
. to 24; 220 to 250 lba. 22.50 to 24; Joseph G. McNabb; two
Light 18 to 23.10; Fat Sows 19 to daughters, Mrs. Evelyn Egbert
Meigs won over Athens 34 to 21.25; Stags 18 Down; Boars and Mrs. Marjorie Jones, both
32 in the Girls Interscholastic 17.50 to 20; Pigs 7 to 14; Shoats of Dayton; two ste(Hiaughters,
Basketball League Saturday at 14 to 22.50.
Mrs. Mary Lou Naughton, and
CATrLE - Steers 28 to Mrs. Pauline Chapman_, both
Meigs High, which was the first
time Meigs giriB beat Athena 37.75; Heifers 23 to 31.50; Baby KirUand, Ohio; a step-son,
Beef 35 to 45.50; Fat Cows 18 to Richard Neal M~Nabb ,
girls In four years.
For Meigs, Debbie Oblinger 21; Canners 18 to 22.85; Bulls Painesville; a sister, Mfs. Sue
had 14 points, Sherrie King 10, 24.50 to 31.50; Milk Cows 135 to Hager, ·syracuse, N. Y.; 17
Leanne Sebo and Pal Harris ' 290,
grandchildren and several
VEAL CALVES - Tops · nieces and nephews.
each had 3, and Ava Sayre and
50.30; Seconds 45.60 to 48.75;
Sharon Cogar each 2.
F.or Athens, Linda Hunaicke~ Medium 40 to 45; Com. &amp; Hvs.
got 18 points. Rosenberg had 8, 36 to 45; Culls 38 Down.
Soltow 4, and Hollinger 2.
Baby calves 15 to 55.
SYRACUSE - Lloyd G. Mariam Jenkins, Nashville,
By Quarters
Lan!bs - Tops '11.50.
Swan, 60, of Syracuse, died Tenn.; seven grandchildren
Meigs
11 23 29 34
Sunday at Holzer Medical and severaL .nieces .... an~ ..
Athens
6 10 19 32
Center.
nephews.
I
.
In the second contest, Kyger
I
.
Pleasant Valley H111pital
He is survived by his wife,
Funeral services will be at 3
dumped Southern 4Z to 23.
ADMISSIONS: Mrs. Thomas . Eileen Damewood Swan; a p. m. Tuesday at the Ewing
For Kyger Creek, Shellie
Walker, Penny Livingston, daughter, Mrs. Gladys Sue Funeral Home with burial In
Hall had 18, Nunn 11, Sayer 5,
Emil L. Hoffman, Mrs. Leona HU11ter, Nashville, Tenn.; a the Tuppers Plains Christian
Gardner 4, Hall 3 and Springer
Wamsley, Point Pleasant; son, L. C. Swan, 'Richmond, Church Cemetery. Friends
I.
Mrs. Allred canirell, Hun- Va.; two brothers, W. W. of may call at the -funeral home
"·
For Southern, Debbie West
tington; Mrs. Charles Utch·bit 7, Pam Hill 6, P. Gooch 5,
Msdlson, Tenn.,
andtwoFrank,
of .
: ·_ _ _ _ _ _
field, Southalde; Mrs. George Henderson,
Tenn.;
sisters,
Nancy Crow-and Janie Reese, 2
Green, Hartford.
Mrs. Marie Brown, Greeneach and Carole Michael I.
Dl.SCHARGES:
Mrs. sbrier, Tenn., and Mrs .
Saturday Meigs will play
Clarence Embrick, Mrs. Arlee
Relem DlllrictNo.4
Gallipolis at Meigs at 10 a.m.
Raynes, Stephen Colley,
State J'llo, zzax
.... ·.·. ,• . .·.. ·.·. ........;.:- .. ·.·.:;......... ·. Thomas Dalton, Mrs. ' Uoyd
CONSOUDATED RI!:PORT OF CONDmON OF
Hill, Dewey Adkins, Mrs.
FATAL JOY
Arthur Gheen, Donald Nibert,
MACERATA, Italy (UP!)
Mrs. Carl Dove, Mrs. Brycil
. - When1Carlo Palomblni, ;13,
.
'
Durst, William Kimes, Mrs.
Mrs. carole Johnson Donley,
relurned home Sunday after
of Pomeroy, Oblo ud FOI'dp 'Ud Domellle Sablfdl•l ;•.:~, Ill tbe dole .Of
RQy , Smith, Mrs. Forrest t7, of SyraCIIIIe . dilld Sllnday
weelu In a hospital, bls 5o
busiDeu~•ll;lm,wBiteM•iocllllllab«&amp;o'"m..t~ .
·
Skl4more.
· · . ..
. nightatHolzer Medical cenlel'.
year-old son Lnca .was
under·die biM!ni·IIIWt'tl tlle'1111lte'"lllda' mtin!Jer ilf ·t~~e· ftde!il·~
BmTH, Jan. 15, a son to Mr. She is survived -by her ·
overwhelmed by joy.
Syste111. i'ublls~ed ID accordiaee wltll a ea11 lUIIe by tbe State &amp;a•~t~c
and Mrs. Dennis Krilow, Leon. husband, the Rev. Forrest
He embraced and killed
Anthoritl.. and by tile Feder.! Relerve BIDk Gl IIIII Dlllrict.
Donley, pastor of the Syracuse
.
. . ASSEtS
his lalher. Suddenly Utile
Cluster of Methodist Churches,
Lllca turned pale. Minutes
cash and due from banks - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - $1,018,388.'01
later the boy was dead. A
Q-What is the meaning a son, Keith, of Dayton; a
U.S. Treasury securltles • - - .• - • • - - - - - -· - - - - - - 1,151,477.35
of "caveat emptor"?
daughter, Mrs. Betty Meagher
doctor said the excitement
Securities
of other .U.S. Government agencies
. •
A-" Let the buyer be- of Fairborn; a brother, James
· killed blm.
andcorporatio111---- • ••. - - . - - - - - - - - - - ~ 318,tz1.38
ware."
S. Johnson, South Webster, and
....·.·:· · ..·.··:· ...' . . .;...;.:-.·:·:·:·.. :·.·:·:···.········
ObUgations of States and poUtical subdivisions - - - - - -. - - 588,171.71
a sister, Mrs. Marjorie
Othersecurities
--- - - - - - - - - - - --- - - -- •• 21,000,00
Harrison, Fairborn.
Federal funds sold and securities purchaaed
·
She was preceded in death' by
under agreements to reseD - - - - - - • - ;
1,1110,000.00
her parents and one sister.
Other loans - - - - - - - - - - - • - ·•
- - - • 7,8M,580.08
Memorial services will be held
(Continued from Page I)
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
at Christ United Methodist
other aasets representing bank p111nlses • •
- - - 460,111.30
Nixon cut short a weekend visit .to Camp David, Md., -Church In South Webster at 2
Real
estate
owned
other
than
bank
pl'eJilises
p.rp.
Wednesday.
- - 1,.0.13'
returning to the White House by helicopter Sjmday evening after
Otberalsets--.
.·
•••
The
(amlly
will
receive
- - ;m.33,
watching Dallas defeat Mismi, 24 to 3, in the Super Bowl. Before
friends
at
the
residence·
In
f12,472,83S.M
TOTAL
ASSETS
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
leaving, the President telephoned congratulations to Dallas
LIABn.rriES
Cowboys Coach Tom Landry on winning the professional football Syracuse from 7-9 this evening
and
at
the
D.
W.
DaVis
Demand
deposita
of
IndiViduals,
partnerships,
championship. Landry said Nixon "told us we played an almost ::
residence
In
South
Webster
· and corporatWns • - • • • • • • • - - - - - - - - - $2,574,MS.GJ
perfect game.''
'
after 4 p.m. Tuesday:
Time and savings deposits of lndlviduala,
Friends may make con·
partnerships, and tu (lel'iliolll • - • • • - - - - - - - - 8,444,885.24
NEW DEUII -INDIAN DEFENSE minister Jagjlvan Ram
trlbution5 to the carole Donley
Deposits
of United Statea Govenunent • - - - - - - - - - • 32,8&amp;1.18
criticized President Nixon's decision to send part of the U.S. 7th
Memorial Fund at the Christ
Deposits of States and pOlitical subdivisions - - - - - - - - - • %10, 'IU.llll
Fleet to the Indian Ocean during the lndia·Paklstan War and ssid United Methodist Church in
Deposits of commercial banks • - • - . - • - • - ·- • - • 2,128.78
,India could sink the nuclear carrier Enterprise, the Press Trust South Webster.
Certified
alld offlcen' checks, etc. - • - - - - , - - - • • .• 48,'104.45
of India (PTI) news agency said today.
AIDE DIES
TOTAL DEPOSITS • • • • • • • - - f11.311.115U8
Ram made the statement at a speech Sunday in the town of
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla.
(a) Total demand deposits - - • - - - - - f 2,1l87,010.74
Gauhati, the site of a military airfield, In eastern lndis. He said (UPI) - Paul Quick, 52, a
(b) Total time and B&amp;vlngs deposits - -' - - - f 8,~8115.31
Nixon's move was "gunboat diplomacy" and warned lndisn press aide to former Gov.
Other liabllities ' - - - - - - - - - - - - • • • - -.-::m=•,.,:n==
forces could sink the Enterprise just as India sank the Ghazl, a James A. Rhodes and a former
TOTAL IJABIIJTIES • • • • • - ; - • • · • • • • - $11 1874,844.77
.former U. S. submarine sent to Paldstan under an American reporter ·photographer for the
' RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECUIUTIES
.
military assistance program. The Enterprise is on its way back old Columbus Citizen in Ohio,
Reserve for bad debt loues t11 loa111
,
to illl station off Vietnam.
died of cancer. He was in the
(set up pursuant to IRS rulingB) - - - - - - • • - • - - - - - ~.157.83
real estate business here.
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS SECURITIES • • $39~157 .83
TYRONE, PA. -FIREMEN USED pickaxes, tons of salt and
CAPlrAL
ACJOOUNTS
'
heavy road equipment In zero temperature today trying to pierce
Mf.lti:S
Equity.capital, total - - - - • - • • - - • ·- '158,830.84
10inchesoficeshieldlngthedebris of a burnedouthotelin which
To~lght &amp; Tuesdly
Conunon stock-total par value - - • •
300,000.00
13 persons perished. Workers could aee four bodies under the Ice
J1nuary 17-11
No.
shares
authorized
12,000
as they chipped and smashed their way to the victims.
• THE BEGUILED
No. shares outstanding 12,000
Seven of the dead were members of the family that owned
Clln! Easlwood
Surplus-------; •••
- - - - - - - ••• - 400 00000
and operated the 75-year&lt;Jld, three-atory frame Pennsylvania
'
Geraldine Page
.
UDdlvidedproflts
•
•••
••
••• - - .- - 58,830.84
House Hotel. Flames began when an oll furnace overheated in 1~
"R"
TOTtCAPlrALACOOUNTS - - - ,
below zero weather Sunday destroyed the hotel and two adjacent
Disney Co rtoon5
'158,830.N
TOT. IJABIIJTIES, RESE!\VES, AND
wood buildings and extensively dama::;ge;;d~tw;o~b;ri;ck;·js;tru;c;tur:.;;es~.~=S:H:O:W:S:T:A:R:T;S:7:P.:M:.
CA TALACJOOUNTS - - - • •
MEMORANDA
""LF.S UP
~
.. ' . '
Average of total deposita for: the 15 calendar
COLUMBUS ( U.PI)
.Record auto sales - up 136 pet.
days endl{lg with call date - - - - ·- • - • - - - • • - - - f11,311,916.51
- In November boosted Ohio
Average of totall01111 for tile 15 celo!ndar
. ·
retail sales to 22 pet. above the
days ending with caUdate - - • - • • • • • • ' • ·, • • - U,331,18Utl 1
same month In 1970, the Ohio
SUPPLEID!:NTAL MDI()RANDA
''
State University Center for
Pledged 11111eta antllleCIIritlelloaned (book value):
Business and Economic
U.S. GoverJ1QIIJIIt obllfilionaa' dlrectllld gua-anteed,
Research reports.
pledged to ~ deposita 11111 athll' UabWtlel - - - - - - - ! $131,010.00
TOTAL • • • • • - • • • • - - - • - • • - - ·• • ·• $131,010.00
Q- Whaf is the ba.•ic unit
of all life?
I, Rog!l' W. Hyaell, Cashier, of the above-named bat* do hereby declare
.\ - The cell.
that this report of condititllis true to the best of my lmowl!dce and belief.

Defeated by

a mutual aid fire prolection allN!fment . for the first aid room at the ·I'@Quest of first
,
· definite period.
Council discussed at length. the two
· Police Chief Jed Webst~r asked vacant high school buildings ln. Pomeroy.
· COUDcil to Consider adoptlrig a w.ork or- · They believed that the buildings could
dinance which would ll"rml~ ~ers ·be put to some use. It was suggested that a
confined in.the ~ounty Jail .to work for the meeting be arraQged with ihe Meigs Local
village of Pomeroy. QQUDcil asked Well- ·Sch90l board to discuss ~ of the
ster to investigate such an ordinance and ·buildings.
report his findings at the next regular
Mayor William Batonlck suggested an
tin
· ' ·
ordiruince be adopted in regard to trailers
d~u voted to send viilage policeman being set up in the village. Council also
'Ronnie Anderson to pollee school at discussed zoning, but no action was taken.
Jackson beginning Jan. 24 at the viUage's . The mayor also suggested an ordinance lie
. expense. Council also agreed to 'buy paint draWb up authorizing councll ,to advertise

ayatem, It wia decided Monday night by with the Rutland Fire Dept. for . an ln- aid members.

'

OOoKIE SALE ,_ Mrs. Thomas Smith, girl scout cookie saie chairman, displays a tray of
the five varieties of cookies which will be sold by the scilulll next week. Pictured here holding
oneoflhepollerswhlchwillbe placed around the county to promote the sale is the chairman's
daughter, Paige Smith, an acllve member of Pomeroy Troop 81 and one of the top salesgirls
lut year. Paige II' hoping to top her last' year's sales figure of 175 boxes to earri credit· to go to
camp. See page 5 •account of Cookie Sale.

.

Two substitute teachers, a
parttime teacher, and a substitute bus driver were hired by
the Southern LOcal Board of
Education Monday night.
Ralph Sayre, superintendent, said that Charles
[jutcher, Middleport, and
Wllllam J. Mahle, Albany, are
the new substitute teachers.
Mrs. JaMie F. Spurlock was
hired parttlme beglnniJill the
second semester under Title I
at Racine Elementary.
Robert Spurlock, new Vo-Ag
teacher, was hired as a substitute bua driver.
Sayre also reported on the
school lunch program In the
district. Lunches were raised 5
cents on Jan. ·1 to pupils who
pay. Sayre abo described the
five week menu now used In the
district.
Retroactive pay for all
school employees for October
and November last year will be
made as soon as conflrmatlon
from the state Is received,
Sayre said.
In other business, Robert
Oliver was hired as the goH
coach for Southern High School
following a recommendation
by Sayre.
Mrs. Kathryn H!U, teacher at
Letart Elementary, was
granted a leave of absence due

to personal illness. Mrs. Lee
Lee, vocal music instructor,
was granted permission to
attend the Ohio Music
Education Convention in
Columbus on Feb. 3+5.
The board also approved the
Meigs County Extension
with ·
Service
working
elementary pupils during the
week of Feb. 7-11 in regard 1!)4H work.
The board granted permission to Sayre to attend the
Ohio Association of Local
School Superintendents
meeting in Columbus Jan. 25-

26.
The Meigs Equipment
Sanitation service, ReedsvWe,
was hired to pick up garbage at
the three schools in Racine.
The board accepted the
monthly report of the Southern
.\ctlvltlfS Account ~bmitted
by Marilyn Powell and the
board approved the purchase ·
of a new deep freezer for the ·
Racine Elementary cafeteria.
The next l)leeting will be
Thursday, Feb. 10. Attending
were Charles pyles, David
Nease, Denny Hill and Grover •
Salser, Jr., board members;
Sayre and Nancy carnahan,
clerk.
Teacher granted leave of
absence,t.. Kathryn Will.

Muskie, Humphrey
H~stling Ohioans
.COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
two Democrats considered to
· have the edge on other candidates presenlly yylng for th~ir
p.a rty 's
presidential
nomination -Sens. EdmundS.
Muskie of Maine and Hubert H.
Humphrey of Minnesota- were
•.both in Ohio today, getting
their campaigns in the
Buckeye Siate on a firm
footing:
Humphrey planned to start
his day In Columbua today and
conclude it in Cleveland. The
primary reason for his visit
here was to· preside over the
selectlon ol delegatea to run on
Ute May primary . in Ohio
pledged to him.
.
Muskle flew Into Columbus
Monday after ti brief campaign
s1o1&gt; .In Cleveland, where he got
In several ja"' at Presl.dent
Nixon's anti.poUution efforts
while standing on the banks of
the olly, smelly Otyahoga River.
Later, flanked by an early
· supporter, Gov. John J. GlUl·

gan, Muskle opened his state
headquarters here and told
about 150 well-wishers, "I hope
Ill get a majority, If not more,
of the delegates from Ohio."
ClUes Popalarit)'
Ohio has a total .of 153 delegates to send to the Democratic
National.Convention at Miami,
Fla., this summer. Thirty-eight
are chosen at-large and 115 are
district ' delegates elected In
their congressional districts.
Ohio's wlU be the fifth largest
delegation there.
. Muskie B&amp;id a Harris Poll released Monday shows he has ·
pulled even with President
Nixon in popularity a~ tile
country and "I have no reason
to believe it's any different In
the Midwest or Ohio."
Ah•ndful of young men representing Veterans Asainst the .
War in Vietnam paraded outside the headqulll'\ers, loca•.ed .
A handful of young men repreaenllitti Veter8118l\gainst the
War In Vietnam tl&amp;raded out(Continued on Page 8)

�I

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I-' Tile-Dally Sentinel, MlddleP~Jrl·Pomeroy, 0., Jan, 18, 1972

r------~-----------'

EDITORIAL

·Rip Von

'Viva Mexico' in
, This Gloomy Era
While Americans have been preoccupied with cold wars
in Europe and hot wars in Asia and the Middle East, with
a Communist takeover in Cuba and military coups in
South America, with monetary crises abroad and an economic slump at home, with internal dissent and national
self-doubt as result of the endless Vietnam conflict, a
quiet and almost unheralded revolution has been taking
place right next door.
.
Mexico is knocking on that door and saying, "Hey! Look
at me!"
We are so used to associating instability with Latin
America nations that it comes as some surprise to realize
that Mexico is enjoying the longest periOd of steady,
f"!aceful and impressive economic and political growth m
1!s history, a period that began in the 1930s.
On the economic side , Mexico has registered a 7 per
cent annual rate of growth in real terms for the past two
decades. This is second only to that of Japan.
The importance of this phenomenon to the U.S. economy
lies in the fact that 70 per cent of Mexico's exports go to.
the United States and about the same percentage of its
imports come from the United States.
'li
The Mexican peso is ranked by international bankers
as one of the strongest currencies in the world. Actively
seeking foreign investment, Mexico pays the highest interest rat~s in the world.
On the political side there has been not only stability
but a steady strengthening and broadening of democracy
in Mexico. This has been especially true under the leadership of President' Luis E,cheverria, now in the second year
of his six-year, nonrepeatable term.
Government is taking on an increasingly youthful aspect
in a nation where half the population is under 21 years of
age and 70 per cent is und'er 30.
Mexico prededed the United States by almost two years
in lowering the voting age to 18. In late 1971, under Echeverrta's initiative, a constitutional amendment was
adopted by Mexico's congress to lower the minimum age
for election to its House of Deputies from 25 to 21 and for
election to its Senate from 35 to 30. (In the United States,
current minimum ages are 25 for the House of Representatives and 30 for the Senate.)
·
Another constitutional reform eases representation requirements for minority parties in the House of Deputies.
A sweeping fiscal reform bill is aimed at acbleving a
more equal distribution of wealth; which remains Mexico'.s
chief unfinished business.
In accompaniment with this internal progress, relations
between the 29 United States of Mexico and the 50 United
States of America "are at a peak," says Mexican Foreign
Minister Emilio O.' Rabasa. ~
There are points of friction, as exist between the best of neighbors. One in particular is the salinity of Colorado
River water whi~h the United States delivers to Mexico.
Others are the problem of migratory workers and drug
traffic across the border.
It is significant, 'however, that "Operation Intercept," a
heavy-handed U.S. attempt to curb the flow of drugs, has
been replaced by "Operation Cooperation."
·
Also significant. "in view of the constant barrage from
the left about U.S. "~conomic imperialism," is the fact
that Mexico neither feels smothered by its giant neighbor
to the north nor does it ask for special treatment.
"We realize," says Rabasa, "that the future of Mexico
is up to Mexicans."
There are now 50 million Mexicans, and their future is
bright. No Ionge~ is the stereotyped image true, if it ever
was true, of ¥eXJco as a !lUY re.sting beneath' a sombrero.
The m1dday s1esta break IS a thmg of the past in the country's accelerating business and industrial life.
"Manana"-tomorrow-has become today in modern
Mexico.

I

NORm

18

.AQ62

¥K64
• J85
.J93

EAST

WEST
.K!084
.3
tKQ1043
4764

.953
.QJ8
tA72

4oK1082

SOUTH

(D)

.J7
.A109752
t96
.AQS
East~ West

2•1.

vulnerable

West North
Pass

1•

East South
Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

3•

Pass

Opening lead- •

~.

4•

K

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
South's four-heart call was
quite optimistic, but he
would have made it against
ordinary defense. Just suppose East and West start the
defense with three diamond
leads. South ruffs the third
· one ; leads a trump to dummy's king and a second
trump hck to his ace.
He doesn!t appreciate ·the
bad break but he takes the
spade finesse ; leads a club
to his q_ueen for a 'finesse in
that smt; continues with a
spade to dummy's ace and
. a spade ruff. Then he throws
'•
East in with his last trump.
'•'
Ten tricks have been played
·and East holds K-10-8 in
:; clubs which he must lead
'
away from .
•'
When Bill Grieve and
~
George Rapee of New York
\
'•

t

,'
\

.•
'

•I'
(

-

.

.

z:

&gt;

-

'

-

,

VirlldJa

BY JACK O'BRIAN
a1r after 22 yean, a record :..
J....,..,..,
'I'IUVIA FOR YOUR
48, and lJr, Wm. u .......,_,16, autbarl rt
MEMORY BOOK
"Human SmiaJ R....... lllld "IJuman
NEW YORK (KFS)- Recent NCNI!aJCia ...
Sezual Inadequacy" practice!! whit IIIey
Relilember ¥ . yem; when 'co!UIIIIIllt BW
Jftltrlbed, ad__tbelt ~ spou• llld
l;luddey's lliater'i Pat BuckleY Bor.ell, decided " IIII1Tied eadi otbll', ln an orgy _C'l ~
· during a c,tMJk; Unlmllty happening tl!&amp;t
beadllnea.
·
·
- -. . .
W!IDell'l Uti blgmouth TI.Qrace· Attltl8on's;-:___ PaUI Lukas, film star ldnce 1t2'1, died In
1111eeriq anti·VIrllki MarY llllll'!in81 d11 ted a
Tailgl!l' at 78 ... Jane Fonda oontllnied to bare
minl:violenl,defense, Pat tried to belt TI.Grace
the nation irith her ~us anUwar hl'IIA!rlcJ,
in the Impertinent J)lial but mlsaed in front rt an
which seemed to aei:elerate as ~- llol U
aUCUence rt IIUDI, )ll'lei!B lllld apparently
serloully ground down ;.. Nabokov'a "IAIIJta"
apathetic iaymen; Pat lllonned the ~urn
tried to become a ;BdwY. mwdeal bat got
·shouting "to hell with catbollc Unl.ersity,"
arrested in ill adolescent ~t In
, .then JmeU for a roaary in proteJt with a ~Pot
sOstcll and nopped ... &amp;nuweat co~ we
yoUDII stildenll tnclliding her claugb\11' ClithY,
ever encountered, Belle Bal'tb, died at li8;
19.
· ·
Bob Hope's solution to ending tbe wart
Teddy Kelllledy's_wlfe Joail took to the
"Send Spiro to' Vietnam with a three-wood" ...
-- semi-concert liano on an Andy Wiiliams TV
Milton Berle's: "Pullt on the ABC netwCII'k and
sbow a.nd played, In a com~nt if not nearly
It'll be canCelled ill lJ -weeks" ' ... Natban
~ perfcmlance·, a.. movle tbellie ... In·
Leopold (of Leopold &amp; Loeb; most .horrible
ventor Plillo F~ died at 74; who be? If
kidnapers-murders since women's llbber
he hadn't devek!ped his TV concept in the early
Medea) died at 86. He became a sick-celebrity
*Is and put It to ezpertmental actuality ill1927,
In his )!9st.prison years, turning up at llie Cub
maybe you wouldn't have had Sesame Street, or
Room of the Stork Club, honor guest at sevnl
Flip Wllson in your II~ rooms.
.
parties and i!tber illtc~nts.
·
Harold IJoyd of the golden sllent.ftick-«ge
Mary Pickford and Charlie Chaplalll
died at Tl, rich ... Rockwell Kent, fine arlllt and
released all their old movies and there waa, a
stu~m Marllil8t (Ruaaia gave him the ~
market for them; Olaplin was paid t!$,000,000,
PriZe in 1967 and he gave $10,000 oHt to the Viet
down for his; Mary wW dimate everything her
Coull), died a188 .... George C. Scott 111ubbed the films take in to eharlty ... Pan·Anl Airways usecl
Oscar he'd won, didn't protest when b1s face
a photo of Humpbrey Bogart to advertlie Its
lllllde a Time co.er ... .Later in '71 he tOok up
trips to Claablanca _ Wltil Lauren Baeall "
again with Ava Gardner after another split
sereamecl'a~ow's~kof"Howdafetheyl"
with his wife ... Bob Hope was voted the Family
and Pan-Am lli'OWided the pitch.
of Man Award of the CoiDicll of Churehea, but
• Barbara Howar, 4'ndon Johnson's, ez.pal ·
after a minority of Its young leftlsh members
who was entertained-and-told and Joyce
screamed, the award was Indtall1!otten back
&amp;usldnd,
of TV's lltUe Billmo~. started a
and a. ''aafe" recipient was selected: the
TV series mostly devoted to cheaply 1lll!riJIII
recently drowned Whi~ Younll Jr.... Hope's
Belli; It Bopped and fled .... Mich&amp;el.Field, wbo

'

wife

lf~~l~!i~l~@~lf.tl~iim*!!@@i!Mlf:IRi.!!Mt:1l!l~~!*-!;m~~;~]!!ml1

- ~.J.),l · ~neratiOfi
@:,
~~~::::

y:·:&lt;

By Helen and Sue Bottel
,

ap

(~:!'
~:-

::~~

Syracuse
•

News, Soc1ety

·::;s,

=z.;=:::~::::d~

SF::.:=~=~~

death by, prostitutes near the Hilton Hotel;
Germany s ex.forelgn mirilster Franz Johann
Strauss was aaaaulted highly by three prostles
outside the Plaza Hotel and robbed of wallet and
passport ... Thla oo11llllllllt and Supreme Court
Judge Itvlng Saypol and ailother newsman were
accosted one a~r another as we enler\ld the
Plaza Hotel for a banquet; e1-prosilitute and
heroin addict Barbara -~. author of ber
happy-ended autoblograpby ''Cookie," -also
'revealflji she'd OP«ated arom~d and ill the
Plaza which baa taken more precautions to rid
i'·eH ~t uiat proetle "'•gue.
·
"'
.,_
Dr, -Malt Beberman, creator of the ''New
Math," dlild at 45, before most of us parents
could even fillure it .out - ... Co.founder of
AlcoboUcs Anon., W. G. Wilsnn, died at 75; dry
... Ed Sullivan's weekly TV vaudevWe left the

ward Albee, once a · new write hope of the
th"8ater,nubbedanotberone,porientoualylllled
"All Over," wblch it was, quickly ... Master rt
cinematic boredom .Arid)' Warhol said he
''might" change his name and who could blame
him afl!l' all thnse cavalcades of ennui: hia
choice, he aiUlOUDced, "John Doe."
"lAJve Story" author Erich Segal placed
489tb ,out of a field of Bill in the Boeton
Marathon'~ 2&amp;mlle drUdgery; then back _tq the
critical onslaughts of his jealoUB critiCs ... Old·
Nazi Albert Speer's "Inside the Third "•lch"
""
was translated into Hebrew, for a modei'n and
too-true demonstration of "chutzpah," certainly
out-cbutzpahlng the classical explanation of tbe
Jewish -word _ the boy who kWed both hia
parents and then threwhlmBelf on the meicy rt
the court_ as an orphan.

J:;:;

BRUCE-BIOSSAT .

Someone.Missing:
Harold Stassen

t 8;) :lt!tfiU{ I]

•

.

SHOULD SHE RETURN LOVE RING?
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hysell
Dear Helen and sue:
•
were weekend guest~! of Mr.
Last summer my college boy friend gave me a "love ring," and Mrs. James Hayman in
which spells the word and gracefully surrounds a diamond chip Dayton.
in a heart.! think they're called ''first promise" rings, and they
Mr. and Mrs. Pat Patterson,
2
don'! mean engagements.
children; Mrs. Hallie Cross
Now we've broken up, but we're still friends . No resentments v~ted in Fellsmere, Florida
With the iatters daughter and
hate . st am tual a tin• 0f the ways
or
-JU
u Pr •
·
son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
My question is may I still wear the ring on my right hand? De
It's my favorite piece of jewelry and my ex doesn't mind -he
over Parsons _and famill. •
doesn •t want it back. It means a lot to me - representing happy
ChriStmas ~ner guests of
times and a first love that maybe didn't last but I11 never.forget. Mrs. Elva Dalley were: Mr.
I'm definitely not using the ring as a last vestige to "hold ~nd M;sitoCarl ~uther;o~of
on." We're over each other, except that we may always be good
~ile~; of Lo:ll; M~:
buddies. - STILL LOVING
and Mrs. James Pape and
Dear S.L.:
daughter, local.
. .
.
If you ex doesn't mind, why not wear your favorite piece of
Mr. and Mrs. Archie Lee Miami Beach, Flonda.
jewelry -as long as it remains Y~Uf favorite? -; HE~N
have ·returned home after
Louann Staats of Chester
' "
Dear Still :
·· · .' · ··n· "' . .''':•·:' : :'• ,.,
. enjoying 10 days vacation ill :•~s·',~~t ovem¥tt "·gu~t · of
Butwatchoutitdoesn'tputoff-oUierguys-who'lnlght'not
.•
·" .,
...:.. ·;. : ~
know that~ love ring no longer means you're in love. - SUE
sat E as f and West, they Dear Rap :
·
•
found a defense to foil this
Remember me ?I'm Joey whose sister was blackmailing me
line of play·
with pictures she'd sneaked around and taken.
George opened the king of
Thank yoti for heipino rpe solve my probl«:m. I promised to
diamonds and Bill carefully
-..,
played the deuce instead of let you know how it turned out, so here goes.
the en co u ragIng seven.
like you told me, I handed the ''blackmail" money over to
George decided that Bill her at the supper table without saying a word (after Sis refused
~~~:lyah:~1ft.th6r a;te 1 :S~ to tear up \he pictures because she didn't think I'd teD on her).
By BRUCE BIOSSAT
that Bill could stand a shift. Sure enough, Dad asked "What's this aU about?" So it came out,
WASHINGTON (NEAl
The shift had to be to clubs and boy; was he mad! You were right, biackmalling is more
·The campaign is young, but I miss Harold Stsssen alsince Bill could not hold any· ~rious than smoking (as one of the pictures showed me doing). ready. Evidently he isn't going to run this time. .
thing of value in spades.
He made her get the pictures and he tore them up, and right
Nobody in blstory ever tried so often and so long for
Then George visualized the in front of me he grabbed her and spanked her across his knee. I the presidency (not to mention lesser spots). Nobody ever
whole hand and did lead the couldn't help but laugh. You would have too if you'd seen the endured such crushing adversity wblle trying. Nobody
club seven. Bill c o v e r e d
dummy's nine with the 10 expression on her face. Then Dad took her camera away for a ever uttered such brave words in adversity.
Beginning with 1944, Stassen put his name in the Re·
and South was in with the month, and grounded her.
publican
presidential lists five out of seven times, caused
queen. He tried the same line
As for me, I didn't get pu;.ished for smoking, but was warned
a
special
little stir in·a sixth race, ran twice for governor
of play but when Bill got in thatiflgotcaughtagain,l'dreallygetitgood.
·,
of
Pennsylvahia
and once for mayor of Pblladelpbla.
with the queen of trumi,&gt;S he
Well, now I've got another problem. My sister won't speak to
was able to get out With a
He never won anything In all this time. In fact, the last
diamond and finally scored me. Ifeei had that I laughed when she got smacked, because she political victory he recorded was in 1942, when he gained
reaiiy isn't so bad for a girl. She says she won't talk to me the rest reelection as governor of Minnesota.
the setling trick in clubs.
(NEWSPAPU ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
•of her life and if I ever dO .anything wrong, she1J sque.il to get
In 1948 he made a serious bid for the presidential nomi· ·
nation, only to lose out in the closing weeks to New York's
rTifi:mrTTni~~JI!"n ·even.
How can I ~keup_wlth her? From feeling blackmailed, I,'ve Gov. Thomas E. Dewey. Somehow, Stassen was never the
same again.
switched to feeling guilty. - JOEY
He could not forget his close brush' with blstory. He kept
The bidding has been:
Dear Joey:
West North East
South
How about getting your sister's "sentence" shortened? And trying and trying, up to and including 1968. That year he
had a nice little headquarters in Milwaultejl, and ran up
Pass 2 r!o
Pass
~:
make sure-she knows you put in the plea with your Dad. I'm mire 28,531 votes in the Wisconsin primary. But there wasn't
Pass 3 N.T. Pass
?
that by this time, he realizes he was a little too tough on her.- much else-2,638 in Nebraska and 57 write-ins in Pennsylvania.
You, South, hold:
HELEN
.AKQJI065 ¥A32 tK5 r!o2 Dear Pal Joey:
When the Refublicans convened in Miami Beach,
nephew
J . Rober Stassen put up bls aging uncle's name.
What do you do now?
Take It from a girl whose sister would have llired to plant her
On
the
one
and only ballot1 Sfassen got two votes, his
A-Bid four no-trump. In this permanently quite a few times: the storm blows over - faster
nephew's
and
anotl!er in Oh1o.
sequente this is not Blackwood, than you think.
Famed election chronicler Theodore White left him out
but is a very strong bid. Fou,r
... And then the next one comes along! -SUE
of bls 1968 index.
no-trump should be safe 1f
North has a minimum two-dub Dear Sue:
Yet, along the way, Harold Stassen's spirit never
response..
.
Tell me, are you outspoken? - WONDERING
flagged.
TODAY'S QUESTION
Dear Won:
In 1952, with all eyes on the Intense Eisenhower-Taft
Your partner contmues to five
Only by my mother -sometimes. - SUE
race, Stassen took calmly his relegation to the also-rans·:
diamonds. What do you do now? LAST WORD FROM HELEN:
"People say this Is, for me, a failure. I regard it as a
Answer Tomorrow
Not often - darn it!
success. I never regard any one election, any one
campaign, as· the ·crucial one."
Stassen didn't challenge President Eisenhower's second
Q--Witat tree is struck by term bid in 1956, but he did try to unhorse Vice President
1,11 gmr1mg more frequently Nixon. That didn't work, either, but Stsssen stayed
AND ~E WAITED
other?
buoyant:
·
TILL LAiE .JULYc
oak.
· "I don't feel this enda my career. I've had decisive
TO PUiiN~E
SGiliENS!
defeats, but never bitter ones."
Nevertheless for a while thereafter he set his , sights
.~~~_..~~ .,........, lower. Resident then in Pblladelphia after duty in Ike's
~
administration, he sought the GOP governorship nomlnaTheJ)a"1
SentiM~-, tion in Pennsylvania. He loet to a pretzelmaker named
DEVOTED TO THE
Arthur McGonigle, but struck a cheerful chord: :
INTERESTOF
'
MEIGS-MASON AREA
"I'll go right on working for the Republican party so
CloliESTER L. TANNEHILL, long as God gives me breath." . ' '
·
.
ROBE=~·~oEEdFLICH.
The very ne11t year the Pblladelphia mayoralty
beckoned, and the Republicans Nave Stassen their nomi' City E&lt;lilar
sa~~r~·~~h:: T~:;/:;r, 10 •:;,~:: nation. Democrat Richardson D !worth swamped him by
~uhiiShmg company , ,111 more than 200,000 votes. He took It well:
Cowt St., Pomeroy, Ohio,
"l'eopie were no~ votin~ against me. They were merely
4!R'69. BlJsint'ss Officeo Phone d
· the'
1
'
, 992-2156, EdUortol Phant 992 •
emonstrating 1r unw !bigness to accept, at this time,
2111.
my programs."
· ·
·
·
nosnenc,o,,n,,dv.''""
pootege
paid at
Curiously
Stassen took a pass in 1960 ' but In 1964 he
..-.
OhiO .
·
•
'
; o 1 • d v• r 11s 1n g popped out of the blue to pQst . 107,000 primary votes
~epresenlltive
8olltnelli - against Barry GQidwater's 267,000 in conservative Indiana.
Gallagher. me ., 12 Eut .•2nd ' Then his modest little bid in 1968
,
•
st., New York City, New York
'
·
'
.
. Su~scripUon roles : D·e: . Bright star When first elected Minnesota governor at
, ••••red• by carr;er where ·1 31 able naval aide to Admiral William (Bull) Halsey
evatta~le 50 cents per week; b \IIi
US d 1
N h
nf
t'
By Motor RDute where carrier
fl ant . . e egate to the ~· , c arter co erence a
servoc~ not ovoqable : ono San Francisco in 1945, federpl administrator, a still 'suc·
month sus. By moil in Ohio cessful Pljiladeiphla lawyer at 64'1 this is Stassen.
·
W Va ., One: year $141.00.
months sus. Throe
But who was the man who made those hopeless quests
1 n_,,_,_t~l suo. Subscrir,tion for the presidency after 1948, who always saw triumph In
. mcludes sunday T mes. adversity? Having watched It all since 1940, and I don't
mel.
think I know.
·
·
-"

Defense Foils ·'-Play Plan

--------.----

!·Voice 8Jong _Jjroadw~y :I

Hughes

a

WIN AT BRIDGE

I

,

________

~

Darlene Duncan. Darlene Pt. Pleasant, were recent
accompanied her home and guests of Mr. and Mrs.
spent the dfy.
..,..
Malco~ ind ~Y
.._,_. ~1 "'AdJe' 'o' r ""
cine
"~"" DunCan
~
na
.:f'u
.Jr. ·(Bub)~ New.
visite\J recently WttJi Mrs. Elva ' HaVen spent lrfeW days it the
Dailey, · ·
Guinther home.
, Sjlec.5RobertE.Hudsonhas
Mr. Earl Harden of C.Oion
gone to Fort Tobyhanna, ill visited here with relatives.
Pennsylvania after spending a . :Mr. James Teaford has
30. day leave with his grand· retUtned home from Holzer
mother Mrs. Myla Husoon, Medical Center where he waa a
local, and his mother Mrs. ·medical patient, '
Charles Hoschar and family of . - Mrs. Pauline Morarlty spent'
Letart Falli!. Spec. 5 Hudson Chrlstmss week in Columbui
has completed two, one year ' visiting Mr .• and Mrs. Larry
tOurs of duty ln Vielnajn: , Milr.,ity and famtly; Mlaa
Mrs. Ada Slack spent !Oonnie Morarlty and Mrs.
Chrlstmss weekend the guesi Marty Morarlty. .
It her daughter and son-in-law · Mrs. Margaret Cottrill,
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Jobrison Sharon, praig and pruce .
and family of Wolf Pen.
visited her brOther and llaterPoat Christmas dinner In-law, Mr.' ind Ml'a. Thonias
guests of Mr. ind Mrs. Don J. Quiet of Columbus.
Cottrill 11rere Mr. and ·Mrs.
··
Edward Chapman and Eddie of
Pickeriilgton; Mr. and Mrs.
Flojld Chapman, Shelley and
Kimberly of Columbus; Mr.
and Mrs. Eddie Van Maire of
And he said to them, "Whtl
Mas\)11; Mr. and Mrs. Gordon are you afraid, 0 . men of
West, Debra, . Rhonda, John little faith?" Then he rose
and Melody of Racine; Sharon, a11d rebuked the winds a11d
Craig and Bruee Cotttlll, local. the sea; and there· w'as a
Mr. Sapuny Gibbs and son of great calm.-Matthew 8:26.
• •
Rutland visited their aunt
·Belief
is
truth held in the
·Glenna Soulsby.
mind; faith Is a fire in the
Mrs. sadie Smith of Hart- heart.-J o s e ph F. Newton
ford, and Mr. Robert Smith of clergyman_.
'

....-. ,.,... u.,.

•

'
J'

' '

· s-n..DIIlls.•~nt~MI~y.O.,Jan.li,1t'li

, J~lhaWks

i

r

'
·,

.··: :-:- .· ... :- :.:..

ne

...

.

Zips

Rio . Gmde Colle&amp;e

'chu!oadcn IIIII PI Sl&amp;ml!
Fratenllty 'will c:tlllluet a
biiallre ~ pep tally 811 tile

AHL'5tand'"''
By UnUtd Pttss lnternattonol
Ell•t
-··
....
M_
beb'··
"'--w.
·te- . ..,..,
,.. wm·
Boston
25 11L. T.7 Pll
51 '
By UnlteciPi'elllattraallonal
'
'
miiiii!J
Hell,
bel"ml
at
.
Nova·
Scotia
21
13
9
51
"
!.kron, No. 8 in the nation •
• ·
7:•1ami&amp;tL'f!leblleveatls
~~~~~~~
·:~ ~ : ~ amq small colleges, got its
o~
lle!N!Mkl .. leillle ...ea Rochester
u 23 5 33 11th win of the season Monday
;
ballleW '-a~ "IP" for
WHt
l
. Wedn ' hy IQbt's b1c MidW. L. T. Ptt night.
Thfl
Zips
whipped past Buffa.
1
"'
_ __
,___
-·-Oblo,Coafereaee 1lline wllh
~[f;~Jre
~~
~ ~
. ~~
." I• ' --·
-·---'
.
' vlslllq -Urbua at Lyae
Ci I II
11 18 9 43 lo 81.S7. Akron has been beaten
BY"- Pnllji,U: aatMnll · 'lbe Bonntes, lliwlllll to 7-f, ' ewer Urllanals lW oa the Cl~~.7~d
18 . 11 6 42 only twice this season.
Credit.the lll!lCk ll)lnklng of were Jlleec! by the liO points (If
_;.
trl
Richmond
17 19 6 liO
In the on\Y other Ohio games,
' · State downed
Coacb
Owl!llll' wjth ' ~eenterGitmnPrlee . ... yeu,
OWDitwo am~
Tidewater
10 28 ~ 24 Tennessee
~·
~ OVIll' "I'Vi never bid I team fill ''- OYer tbi Redmea tllu far·
Monday'sR•sutts
11
Kanaf.!!litaJil.oo.overlbDes thattubebladearJYiaag&amp;JDI!
w, year.;.~rbllc ta- Spl~,~~::m~~:!t~f.~ 1
----M~iiiiiJ!t:. ~
lind then come '-:k to WID," . ¥!ted to_ ·.
~ rally.
Tuesdlr'sO.mes
BaitlmoreafBoston
Ktrsaa State'S ·Undbergb s8ld 'Carolina Coaeb traQk

•

...

g

1

•

.

,.eel.
..a

Whlle· ~~llyliiUiedAu-

Gamilcocb
WOnt ioul were befuddled Ia !be lint half

brey N_, jhe
~boo~* Cll'l!lill Jllfllnk . .d
with 11 li!CIIIdl renl8iniJ\jj in
theseoondovertlineperlodand
Kanaaa ·le!uling, ' 6Ul.· &lt;Wblte
was a mite Ovenealowj Pel
puahed: N~·· to the fioor.
0wens lmmedlate.t:y
j:apltall'l!d _on 'the lituaUon,
clablliaBN88bW..bilrt.
Oweni . ~BICII' Mark

McGtih, whole

'B e· n·ey
0
u zt
ln· 1;9/llf'.J
I'tiJ
. •"'

.

.,

~::~r:~~=:~~~~c~~~:!

IOnlygamHSCheduied)

alo.
Central State 80-M and BaD
State (Ind.) beat Kent State flO..
69.
Tennessee State, the thirdranked smaU college team in
the nation, swept to its 11th
win against one defeat. Uoyd
Neal led the winners with 18
po\nla. Central State, now -1-6,
got 17 points-from Ray Byrd.
Kent State hit· just 39 per

cent fl•om the floor In lOsing its CleVeland State (8-7). In the
loth game iii 12 outir"'s. The Ohio Conference, Denison la at
game was played at Muncie, Otterbein and Kenyon Is at
MWlkiniiUm.
Ind., home of BaD Stste.
Also, Hiram goes to BaldwinJim Regenold bit 20 poin!B to
lead BaD State. Dwlgbt Kenner Wallace, Ohio Northern visii!J
lopped the Flashes with · 17 Heidelberg, Bluffton is. at
Cedarville, Steuben
~at
poln!B.
Duquesne
and.
Clari
''
IP&amp;.)
Tonight's games Include
'
Youngatown State (11·1) at plays at Walsh.

~eker
·~ 0
INGLEWOOD, calif. (UP!)
Chamberlain Ill one of three Cunningham, 6-7, at forwards - Russell.
Bomiea. "We were luckY to
&amp;/U
.
, 1 MORE CUBS SIGN
-Towering Kareem Jabber Los Angeles Lakera who wW and Lou Hudson of AUanta and
For the East Cowens, Clevewin."
.
•·
. CHICAGO (UP!) - The and WDt Ownberlain team to play for the West, wblch is Walt Frazier of New York at land's Butch Beard and_S.lti. John . WWiamson of New
~
-(
· J
e Chicago Cuba repQrted seven. make the West a solid fawrlte coached by BW Sharman of the 111Jards.
more's Jack Marin were
'Mmco. State ind Califctrnla's
'
more players under contra&lt;;t over the East tonight in the Lakers. Jerry Weal and Gail
Eight players-five for the picked for the game for the
AI!JleY 'ftullt 11!/th _picked the "' -'
·1
.
today to boost their total signeii . NatiOilal Baslielball •Allso&lt;:i11- Goodrich are set · to be in West and three for the East - initial Ume.
.
8llllle bight for the greatest
to 23 of their 38 player-roster. lion's 22ncl annual All-Star Sbannan 's starting backcourt. will be piliying the All-star
Sharman, the game's MVP
J18111i'mance'C'ltbelr college
· . .
,
·· .New· additio~U~werepi~rs Game. .
_
,
Game fot tlie lint time. Among in 1916, is coaching in the
careers. Sophomo'r e
Ray Newman and Ron TomAselloutcrowdof17;506wW
Startlnll ~ forwards for the them is Haywood, the Ameri- eontestforthesecondtlme.His
Wlllllunson btoke the HarinOn ' ·
' '• ·
pkins, catcher J. C.' M&amp;ttijl, be on hand at the Flll'111'D10 - Weatare s:i; Spencer Haywood can Basketball Asz!odatlon's West club 11181, 144-124, In 1968
M6ft;whoq~lmlysank'two GYI)lrecordatBerkeley,calif.
first ba~~r Hal ' Br~. watch the West try to win its of Seattle and H Bob Love of MVP in 1969.
while he wps coach of the san
free lhroira toJli!~Jbe Bill Elllht ' with 48 points while eenior
LIN&lt;m.N,, N~ ( : ) ~~ and outf~elilers ' Cleo JllllJI!s, , second game ill a row in Los Chicago.
"
'
'
'.
Other
firSt-time
All-Stars
for
Franclsoo Warriors.
eontiti&amp; ~*it ol *ch.
· 'l:lilltt netted' 311
. , 'lbere :was joy a sa ss 10 • Gene Hi~r ·and Jim Tyrone. Anlleles' first All..Star co~
Heinsohn, who pla~d with
Coaclle.c! by Tpm Heinsohn of the West are Bob Lanier of
Bull Stallworth, who conttlDeflc:lt W4Jeti Oat ' ' '.' NebraUa today·
since 1963. The Western the C,eltics, the East will open Detroit, Portland's Sidney Sharman at Boston, is
lilted eight of Klill88a' 11 · But It was wmiamson 'Who ,l , Exuberant
joy
that
Conference won,108-107, at san with Boston's John Havlicek, 6o Wicks, Paul Silas of · Phoenix coaching ln his first All-Star
~vertlme polnta, paced all Wiped olit a 13iloint Alll!e ~. _Cofhnhusker football Coach
PUT ON WAIVERS
Diego last year.
5, and Pblladelphla's BWy and Golden State's Cazzle Game.
scorers with 26. David HaD deficit When he seCured 1 ' " ''., BOb Devaney has elected to
CHICAGO (UP!) - Mike
Jabbar, who led the
scored 17 for Kaliaas State. . 11e 7:50 from the end ~th a 15- stay on as University of Hershberger, 32, reserve Milwaukee Bucks to the NBA
Tile IBbgti,l1 victory gave the foot jump shot and it ' was - Nebr~ka coach for another outfielder of the Chicago White champlOnsbtp Jast spring will
~
CollegeBaskelbaiiResulls
Jayjla~ a ~ conference Willtainaon who 881ik the next ye~ -"but sadn~ that he will Sox, has been put on waivers be the West's starting ce'nter,
.J.
By United Press International
reeotd. ~ State Is 1-1.
five baakeJa to edge the Bears, . retire from active coachilig for the purpose of giving him The 7.foot-2Buckace and the 7~~~.;~;g; ?Ho~7~s5:
-· b A IAII1il PillltiGil
91'89.
' after that time,
his unconditional release, the 1 Chamberlain present a dif-TJ
Eastern Ill. 99Winona St. 82
Fourth-ranked South - 'lbe 'sopb connected on 19 of
That was the decl$!on Deva~ club announced Monday. f' It obi
to th E t
. .o
org
Lora 85 St Norbert 80
~ found Itself in a 38 floor shots and 10 of 13 foUl ney annoWiced Monday . .'!be Hershberger batted .260 In 74 ICU pr em
e as ' ' · • U
• P
I 1,.1
LSU 76 T~lane 58
position not unlike tllat of the shots to break the court record coach of the national cham- ,games for' tl\e SOJ: ill 1971,
which wW have 6-9 second-year
Houston 115 Sou. Miss. 84
~inGreelt~bologywho of 44 ill!s set in 1988 by pionshipcollegeteam,whohas
man Dave Cowens of the By·JOHNG.GRIFF1N
Bowlhere.
OkCiy102 Hrdn-Smmns100,3
must'I:!Onatlntly jJUiha boulder UCLA':-'L8w Aleindoi .
become _a legend ill his adopted
BostonCeltics as its man ill the
UPI Sperls Editor
But
perhaps
more ~Jams St. 93 Concordia 89
up 'a atetp iilD when Uie In otb!l' contests, Georgia state, s81d he would ~ntbme
iniddle.
. NEW ORLitANS (UP!)
meaningful was Landry's New Mex. Hid 84 Colo. Coli. 79
Gamecocks trailed St. TecbroutedNo'-0....-·, ......, only as athletic directOr.
Dallas Cowboy Coach Tom disclosure that Morton, wbo Campbellsvi8J Kentucky St. 79
"
1.1&lt;11110 , _
Dev
th """"'"d t
·
Landry
not be d let started the 1972 season at least Murray St. 72 Eastern Ky. 69
BoJ1!1VentiJn, 11·1, afte1' the 1nnlliana State 'walloped Tu.. J ollaney, ech""in"~t•"'}s Uo
,ma·
may
rea yto
,
AlA 82 Texas A&amp;M 14
fii'ltbightmlnuflaof!!lay . . lane N; Tennaa11ee erased o~c egecoa
... na _n,
"MostValusblePIByer"Roger ' equalwithStaubachintherace Wichita Sl. 70WestTex. 65
"-'-"-··""""'- "'W ight Fl 'td
.,.
1
881d he wquld recommend
CHARLOTTE
, , N. c. (UP!)
Staubach call signals yet but to be No. I Cowboy quar- S. F. Austin 79 McMurry 66
South .,..vw,.
81 .....,,
,..,
e
or a
n a
!stan
T """.
' · te back
t to be tr ded Angelo St. 105 Tarleton 95
•
'
Ass
t Coach
he paid hun an e·~n
r 'II• be
wan sded if a
Ea•t
belplid'· lit .II0-47'with
jUst 6:58 Soutbeaatem~noegame
·
• om
j , ........,. ..e - Robby Allison · has been
'
" """•ter
• Te•as
" 77 Sui Ross 72
lertln tJie·gam~~beforerlllylng and Rllnnle Hogue 'and Tim to replaC::: ~be I 'Win, lose named auto racing's"Driver of
compliment today by saying he and WI
Ira
" we can Western Ky. 95 Easl Tenn. 12
lor 141tralght l"!ilJts to salvage llilsett oomlined for 54 points ot ·drsw the. CCJ!hin~ ,se'?."n. the Year for lf11 an&lt;! Richard
is willing to trade away his get vafue for him."
Kansas 66 Kansas S~.1 6J
a61-611winasuliBonnleswent to lead a.g1a to an 85-73 . However, he , added, we Petty has received the 1971
other quarterback ' -craig
''IthlnkCraigisontbeverge ~~~s~:;6 15~ 1 :lda -;son 56
aaeoldaatbe~tweatberin triumph
Kentucky In . certainly are planning on its Myers Brothers Memorial
'
Morton.
of becoming a really good O. Roberts 118 Buller 107
·
·
biling
win."
·
In
a
post-Super-Bowl
game
quarterback,"
said Landry. Georgia St. 99 Fla. Tech '78
Buffa!
o. ··14 .
,
.1 another SEC clalb.
"Definitely this wW be it, Award for· the outstanding
con!
before fly
. '" h
"He has a great arm and he Missouri 74 Okla. st. 67
.- &amp;l!li)Omqre' Bryan . WiJ1~
Wes,tern Kentucky, third'
'
contributions to tqe. growth of
erence
,..,g orne
.
Iowa 76 Colorado 59
lei! the t~rrid second-half place flnllher Ill last }'881''8 .said the popular coach who , stock car racing. : ·
to Dallas Monday:, L8ndry 'also has the Intelligence. We wW Delaware St. 66 Lincoln 60
charge for ·the ~lis 18 NCAA tAI1lrllamtillt, e¥ened Ita could. pr~bably be elected
The . awards were made
By ED FlfE
admitted for the first Ume that not trade him unless we can get Fairmont 68 Wesl Lib ..66
80
he ilcored elilht of·the_ ~ 14 recordthtlyearl!tiawitha95- gQvernor if he
chose. The Monday night at the annusl
UP! Sports Writer
.
the Duane Thomas Com- va,l,ue for him.
~kr~ }t"'e~ita~c~t'tle St. 68
points lind wound up with 12 in 72 breeze OV!l' East Tenneaaee. leg~tlire 1.!1 currently eon- banquet of the National
DALLAS (UP!)-The world munlcatlon problem caused
We have an age problem on Tufls 95 Worcester Tech 83
a reserw role. Kevin Joyce led
In pair C'l Big Ellll!t Ulta sidermg ~ measure which Motorsports Press Association. champion Dallas Cowboys re- "some tension'' on the our defensive unit with fellows w.v. Wesler•" 95 Wheeling 82
~with
a 1
ded O'til h ' woUld name a new plush
ted
turned home to a noisy Cowboys' squad and wW have llire Bob Ully, Cluck Howley Kits I Pa. 84 iona 1•
80· th~'
11
u
'now '
14 Mlaaour sba
a oma coliseum ln' his nsme No opA ison, 34, was vo Driver oreeting from 3,000 or more to be straightened out during and Herb Adderley," Landry ~r:~a ~ ~=~~u~V13
-~ potntsandTcimRiteradded 13 State, 74-67, lllld Iowa Stste
'ti is'
ted , ·
of the Year by NMPA mem- ..
the off-aeason.
admitted. "Our. offensive unit Templea2 Delaware 68
,despite a broken hand.
bl8w down Coiiii'II&lt;IO, 7&amp;69.
he ·hoped the hers. A regular on Nascar's ~'!..,
_ jammat
· Loveed illF~ld lllterinlnale
conThe curly-llaired . Staubaeh ts 'younger, But while 1 don't Northwood n Bellarmlne 67 .
,
Grand National Circuit since •...,...,..
~
belle th 1 · oftbesefell
RochHier98Hamlllon92
present coaching staff would 1965, Allison had his best year Monday.
was presented with an autornoo
ve e 08S
~ Georgia Tech 82 Notre Dame62 '
•1 ·
T T.
remain aa Is for the 1972 in 1971.
· Coach Tom Lancry stopped bile as his award for being is Imminent we have to think
•
UISvl ~te
season. H~ had Indicated
H ·dro
H 1ma Mood long eiiOUIIh to a~ept a 31-inch nsmed "Most Valuable" in about' eventual replaeel!lents -i(:•*************~
earllll' he ·woUld announce his M e
~e ~ b o ny. high silver-Plated ".World &amp;lnday's 24-3 victory over the for them."
11
- 11
h,
;
'
•
.....,......,
""""•ord,.
'"·t
the
ereury
'g
t
•
JIIIIjor
Grand
Cham
,,
tr
h
ted
b
Miami
Do•""'
"
"
in
the
Super
La-'-•
thus
tabbed
defen,.
___
A
THOUG-wr
/1.
..,
~·t' ~· ,
_..~·~w
·~ ~ ~
N U l icto l1
f
ps op ypresen
Y
At''""'loi;l
•a.u.1
i'
·n
..,..
".-•·
tr;v \ i - "t,, · urf · . -. . ·~ ·~·1 J'\'~'- otllet
coacties..couldplotiheirn, a. one ·V rea,,.•.seven , o '
·
sive strength and a , backup
·
..,_.
.
~
f;f;
future--. .
·
lfhlch were .on super- tpe !¥Ia• Chamber l!f Plln·
quarterback as items ·t,he 11
... F-OR · TOD~AY i(
-.
· • ·
...
'"
~-·
eed
ua11
rd merce Board Chairman
-..
~
• ·
•
·
Devaney currently has a sp ways, eq ng, a reco
Cowboys would be looking to it
·
••
r, By FRED MeMANE
first lou at Detroit last con- coa""'ftd record of W· set in 1969 .by LeeRoy Yll!'· ,Charles Cullum. !Andry held it
add sometime in the future if 11 beware of him who. 11
. UPI ~}Writer
.
, salilrday and remaJna ·In ,lhe
at·
yomlng and brough. Allison took _home ~somghtlye !~thd ~.~t." w~hed
SO~IE HOM~ ·
they are going to- trade away
~~;:;~sg~s something for
NEW YQR~t"''UPI)
,
W
blle
·
No.
2
position
fO!JOwed
by
$236
295
in
pnze
money
and
""'
,....._
·
·
·
"~
-..
-..
1
.. '
. the division
.
The Cowbo""'
PT. P ·
T - Spec. 4 Mqrton. He s)ressed that the 11
- Bernard Baruch -..
...
• poweiful' UCLA rolll, thunde- North caroltna and South Nebraska. Last year's fimshed
fourth m
:• and the r~·t..
.., "'
11
NebraSka team bad a ~
the.coa""'"d staff fou""'t 1heir Joseph Edward Lish was guest CoWboys have a problem ill ... _
iC
rous)f alpnt.,_ an e:r;-Bruin carolina.
.
- --'.
point standings.
~...
"''
of honor during the holidays at ""lping•~---Jvesbecause, as ..,
..tr
lassiitantiiJ!Iiklnll·somenolse
'1beli comes Louisville fol. '""""u
way through the cheering
'"'
w.......,
11
· ~••••
Iii
of his O'lllk '
lowed by~ Beach State and
crowd with the minimum show the home of his grandparents, world champions, they are low it
11
Denny Crum, new head ado State ill a tie for siJ:th,
of emotion that has markild Mr.andMrs.L.E. Piersall,Pt. on the draft list of college ~
lfs Quick! r:.....
II
coacb 1C'l Loulsvll1e lhiJ year &amp;lutbern Oillfctrnla, Penn and
their, entire Super Bowl week, Pleasant. ~ti ~h ·~t
~~ers.I don't think
0•
after ! three years as an Florida State. Long · Beach
including what should l!ave time was s on a or
we can
11
assistant to John Wooden at StsteisuponenotelifrQmlast
ftROURCe .. been a noisy postgame Rlchardson',l\]aska.Itwasthe baveadynastyinDallas,",sald
•
:~
. • firsttime'~ljvoyearstbatthe
theCowboycoach."Ikno!liTel
~
UCLA, has turned . the Clr- week, ind Oblo State, Southern
(
Cl
AA lte · &gt; celebration•
u~•hramm
boys
al ..,
.,
11
dlnala into a force to be Clllfdrni8 and Florida State
ATHENS ~ A reduction in now a ass
s ) anu
Cullum told Landry that it famllyhad...,nhim. Atte~ Se
(Cow
gener 11
reckoned with in the fins! two areeaehup two placea. Pann's the number of tournament sites Ironton were the other Class A was the greatest day for Dallas were Mr. and •Mrs. Joe Ush manager) foreeaat that bUt be ~
Fridays Only
months of the college lOllS to Princeton dropped the at the sectional level II among tdurney sites last year.
and the state of Teus.
and Usa; Mr. and Mrs. Larry baa a way of putting a,coach on -tc The Drive· lri'Windo'lll t
baskelball season.
Qlakers four places.
several changes Included in the
The five Class A sectional
Landry replied, "Yea. Thilnk Noble, Jeff and Chris; Mr. and the spot. Remem~e have ._
i 5 Open
•
P.
Five coaches from each of 1971-72 'tournament plans winners will compete in the you. It is great to be back as Mrs . Charles Yeager and been drafting 23rd 28th ill the ~
A.M.
to
M.
'!be Cardlnala, loser by one
9
7
11
point to Florida in~ opener, the se.en geographical areas which have been announced for distric't tournament at champs, especially when we Marty; . Mr. and Mrs. Relph ordere.er~ce the two league
Continuously)
~
1
11
have not lost slnr;e and are _of the naUon comprise the UPI prep
cagers
in
the Chillicothe during the week of have been here two or three Ross; Mr. and Mrs. Bob draft came !nto effect.
-II
II
alow'" - . ,.., up in the Ratings Board_. Each week Southeastern District.
March 6.11, with two teams other Urnes just second best." Fenton and Deann of Rayland,
"What II going to hurt us iC Other Ban~ing Hours 9 to 3l~
" --•r""'
Th Cia • .. tea In th advancing to re"'onal play.
Cullumjos!llnglytold Landry Qblo·, "-. Donna Wilson and eventually."
·
it and 5 to 7 as usual on i,
we My United Preas lnterna- they vote on the top 10 te.ams
e ss """ ms
e Sectional tournan:';nts will be
th '"' •
Mr d M
La""-· said the Cowbo"" ·: Frtd• ~··
f
Uonal Board of Coaches rat- andpollltsareawardedona 1(). diSttlct wW again go to Rio
that he thought Landry's An ony; Spec. 4 ·an rs.
·~:
,- .,
-..
inga. Thla past week Louisville H-7-M+3-2-l haali for votes Grande College for their held between Feb, 21 and ''friend" Bllly.Graham, "did 8 Ush.and host and.bostess, Mr. have been fortunate Ill the · 111
·acored two impressive road from first lo 10th places.
sectional ~ent, but only .March 4. ·
pretty good job" praying for and Mrs. L. E. PiersaD.
draft in obtaining stars ilk.e -tc
;
. 11 ;
victories over Dayton and
NEW 'YORK I UP I)-'!'he ' 0?e _team WID ' advance to dls~c~=~n~::~: ~ the Cowboys.
~~: ~t!:!.~bll~~ ~ ~t
Bradley to run Ita winning 20
United Press Infer natiOnal top . dJstnct competition rather hi h they ill be lay! .
hlsLari!li'yra
· ..~!reauntuaualing
~.....w.....,.
~.~
dlcated that one of the "''"POMEROY, Ol:fiO
~·
streak to 111ames;
major college basketball . than two as was the case last w c
w
P ng IS as ·
..,.~~...
M
C
..,
' k
led ·with teams with first place votes year
follows:
said, "Y-. He sure did."
the Cowboys might be looking 11
ember F Dl
..,
and won-lost records liS of Jan.
·
11
M be Fed 1
-..
.'lbat strea , coup
The district tournam t to
CLASS A SECTIONAL$
La'"'- was chalnnan of a
FIVE BREWERS SIGN
to acquire ina trade for Morton ..,
Req)Q r S era
-tcM
Prlneeton'supselofprevlously 15 In par~ntheses: !seventh
en •
Nel•onv.llle-York High
·-•
MILWAUKEE w·IS · (UPI)
_,,.be 1
be dr ft -..
• ese'l&lt;ve ystem
~1
be held ID
· Steube nv i1le •••-···Ae held at the
•
· "
wuwu
a ow num r a •·
•
· !!fib-ranked Pennsylvania w~
,
u"" SChool• (61eomsl - Alexander, Graham "-'""'"'
The Mil ukee
B
enabled the CardlnaiB to tak~ ~ea. umc• A (351 (J 2.01
Pol~~ .year (it was i~ Athens last Miller, Glouster, Starr- Cowboys' Texas stadium home d w~i
rlewers choice.
,. ,..
over the No. 5 spot in this 2. Ma~uette 112_01
announce · ve • payers
,
311 year) will agam match the Washington, Crooksville and last suinmir.
1
72 contracts
Week's ratings.
3. NorthCarollnal11-ll 267 sectional winners from the La~1~~~~~gh School (8 teams)
'!be Dallas coach had coun- r~tur~~ u:.r 1b9ri
Crum'S old team UCLA
4. South Carolina (8-2)
m ' Southeastern and Eastern - Southern, Eastern !Meigs I. tered publicized reports of Slgne on y, nging to 20
! .L
'
'
5. Louisville (11 ·1)
166 Dlatr' Is
North Gall Ia, Southweslern, President NIJ:on's offers of aid the number of players in the
OCIIllliiUe&amp; to reign over the
6. !Tiel Long Bch St. 114-1)130
IC ·
.
,
Ky-r creek; Ironton st.
fold so far
coUese basketball _world,
!Tiel Ohio St. (10·11 130
Tlie reduction In teams JoS:P.,, Sym,mes Valley and to Miami Coach Don Sbula
Signed ~~re outfielders Joe
however. 'l'l1e Bruins stretched ; : ~~~~;.~fai 111·11
1~ ad~ncing from thewlll~ctional Hannan-Trace. .
prior ·· to the Cowboys' 24-3 Lahoud; 24, and- Gorrnlan--l
MI. Malo
fft-1111
their record to 1Z:4J with vic- 10. Florida St. (13-21
43
to e district !eve1
carry teaM~~lor~ H~~~ter~ch?~\kell~ &amp;!per Bowl vlciory by sayiilg Thomas, 21; catcher Darrell
torlea oYer Stanford and· 11 . Vlrt::a(12-1)
,.
41 overtoClassAAandCiassAas Western I Pike), Peebles, that he tliought he would just Porter, 20; pitcher Jerry Bell,
california and once agaip
~~nce~~arn~gl)
~~ wthell. See tionals wllld ofbe held at Seaman, White Oak, Jefferson. asusk."Billy Graham "to pray for 24 , and Infielder Frank
1our in ~~f~~;stern . .and
recel.ed all tbe. ~laca 1~ Brigham Young 111-11 22
ree s1tea instea
Ross
T pedino 24
. votes from the '~b!l' 15: Maryland (10-11
13 ClassAAandfiveinsteadofsix
Chillicothe High School 18
Thetropby ,preaentation was
e
' ·
,.. coadiea board
16. ~~~~~nova (11-11
10 in Class A.
teams)- Paint Valley, Bishop a last m!Qlte substitute for
HaWaii (13-ll
8
The wmner
·
Marquette, .the · on)y ·other · 17.
ofthe eight-team
. Fl aget• Lync h"uurg Cl ay, Lees- wbat the 'Chamber of,.._
'"""""
18 . (Tie) Mlnn 18_31
6
IDibeaten club in major college
!Tiel Tenn 18-21
,
6
Class. AAA sectional at R10 ~~~a, ~~i~~~~~l~n/rr~~~;~ merce bad ,'·planned. The
circles, narrowly escaped Ita
(Tiel Missouri (11-2)
.6 Grande
will , "travel to Huntington Local .
chamber w~ to stage a big Do Your
SteubenviDe March H to meet
Pornmoutn High School '(9 downtown
Pllr&amp;de
and
l - Soulh "We lister .....,.\-tation bu;t~ the Cowboys
the winn er 0f ·a similar sec- teams
Drop, Slip, or Fall?
Bloom, Porl!mouth Oay, W&lt;!SI ..-~-·
~~nai at New Concord, for the Union, Manchester, Ports- dllcouraged it 'because so Don't keep worrying about your
teeth dropplna: at the wronc
l'ight to advanee to regioilal moufh Notre Dllme. Portsof their players were not {alae
time. A debt\UW ILdhesive can help.
competition,
' ··
· mouth East, New Boston, coming btrek from New Olrans FASTEETH.hlveadentures a long'
' \
ftrmiT, ..-...aier hold . Maket eatThere are 24 Class AA teams ~~~~~~~le Valley and Franklin on the team plane. Ten of the er,
inc more enjoyable. For more eecurlty
· ln the district. The seclionals · Section winners advance to Cowb9)'a will be appearing ill and com!ort U10 FASTEETH Dentu~e Adhuive Powder. Dentures
wW be held at lUexandei'· and Chillicothe district meet. .
the Pro Bowl Game at LGs that
fit are euentia1 to health. See
CLASS AA SEj;TIONALS
t.;a
your dentist reeularly . .
,
. ,_
Synunes Valley High Schools,
Lucasvilli Valley High ~'lleles ~~ &amp;mda)'.
• ani cit th~on original 10:30 p.m. ·
·
· both Ill 'which were used as School 18 teams&gt; - Waverly,
chlldrenla priJdrams of the
Those who saw this show tourney sites last year, and Northwesl,,· Portsmouth West,
year. "Zoom.'r which made
lestwoek- featuring • teen. L
Ui V
used f
Minford, Wheelersburg, Oak
Its debut oerlier on Ch. 11,
age rap session - may boi
ucasv e a11ey,
Ill' a Hill, Hillsboro and Greenfield.
LARGER SIZES
shows up today for · its . wonderl119: Was one ot those Class A sectional last year.
Alexander High School (8
~Ids ·on the program about Sites ~ 0 longer being utilized teams) - Federai'Hocklng,
WHITEWALLS
premiere on Ch. '· 3: JO p.m.
+ t ·+
helf·sloned? I'm wondering,
E81te Plk C
nd Belpre, Warren Local, New
•
A mid-week sporlt aoeclal
too.
· . '
are
rn ( e ounty) a
Lexington, Nelsonville-.York,
PHON.E 992-2342
MIDDLEPORT, O.
brings ua !hi NrA Afi·Stor
M0 v 1 E+s":. + , S n ovi Paint ValleY.
· Wellston. VInton County and
game, with ,Joca heroes in
'!be~ Class AA sectional
Sheridan,
· •
the atarti!J,IIn•up. OneTreasure," with James winneril will then compete in
Symmes Valley High School
lime 01110
te groet Jchn
FranciiCIJI belwftn his Mr.(8 toemsl - Chasapeake, Goal
Havlicek wli bt on the East
NovtJ! and Longstroet .,.,, tbediltrictmeetat Rio Grande Grove, Gallipolis; Ironton,
1111Uid. .,whlit WVU'I lm• Q.m., and "Plot to College betweeq Maich 8 and Ro~k Hili, South Point,
.._.,I Jerr" Yiftt will be
Assassinate · Hill•• 11:30 11 with
dis"" 1 ba
Fairland and Meigs.
::0~\-.tort~,West, 10 p.m.,
p.m., both Ch. 10.
c1v'
onte
•uC
cia
mp
Sectional winners advance to
1ng o ~g19ns1 p y.
1"-r ...
,
+
+
+
a
anc
Rio
Grande district moe!.
'
Ch. 12 · +'+ +
'
W5DN~S~AY: We can't
'lbe .39 Class A teams in the
·CLASS AA'A SECTIONAL
"The
App' aiachlan
ll'f1811ne a many woml!ll d'·trlct 'II Ia
t M·
Rio Grande College 18
R-icJnal Commlulon~' would be Interested ~~
,.
WI p y a
eJgs, leamsl - Athens, Chillicothe,
,_;;of tht matt lm~tant
custom· car
d,tslgnlng Nelsonville-York, ChillicotHe Jackson,. Lancaster. Logan,
F dt •1 ""'lfl!l a qtlng
Gtoroe Barris, bill he's on and Portsmouth Hlf!fi Schools Marietta Porhmouth and
' ~.:-_ ~~"il' flltd lght Vlrgfnla Gra~am'• show,
11
Mlaml Trace
·
·
7
I •
anyhOw, C · 6, 2 p.m.
(a repeat locations) and
Sectional winner aJvances to
"Com"""\f. en Ch. 2 at
l:~~j;iilli..iiitiiiili~-------~--.111 Minford. Lucasv:llle Valley Sleubenvlllt district meet.
, J
\:
...........
by tbe shorter bUt

1

na lla S

JYJ;•11•
,. l rng

de c..

.

0

3

1

Mo-*on

Allison Named
Driver
, Of' Year ,

.
weI come

Champs
Horne

onr

o·-

poslnev':.e/=:

Lo · • ..,t,ol'l

l'lOOOS

't"., JtJl!.VJ!,' 'CiJ''

Lip.

R'B..-.figS'

.:1•7

"'w..

t.

t

Sectional. Tournament.'
s:*ue8·A1'e A · · •' d

:a:·

i

. .,

t

DRIVE IN
BA.NKING·

!,

t

FARMERS BANK : •

and SAVINGS

*-*******•

FALSE TEETH

manY

'

co::;

**

*"'

GO GO GOODYEAR
Why Buy Recap Tires
When You Can Buy This ·
Popular Size - 735 x 14 ·.

'

or 775 x 14 at

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IN.SURANCE ~BONDS
. MUTUAL' FUNDS

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"Where'd you get' rhtne secret paper1r'
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west All•Stars .Favored ' TOnla
ht
.a.e

RIZER OIL W.

BERHrS WORlD

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Meils Countjs Oldest and Largest
Insurance Agency

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I-' Tile-Dally Sentinel, MlddleP~Jrl·Pomeroy, 0., Jan, 18, 1972

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EDITORIAL

·Rip Von

'Viva Mexico' in
, This Gloomy Era
While Americans have been preoccupied with cold wars
in Europe and hot wars in Asia and the Middle East, with
a Communist takeover in Cuba and military coups in
South America, with monetary crises abroad and an economic slump at home, with internal dissent and national
self-doubt as result of the endless Vietnam conflict, a
quiet and almost unheralded revolution has been taking
place right next door.
.
Mexico is knocking on that door and saying, "Hey! Look
at me!"
We are so used to associating instability with Latin
America nations that it comes as some surprise to realize
that Mexico is enjoying the longest periOd of steady,
f"!aceful and impressive economic and political growth m
1!s history, a period that began in the 1930s.
On the economic side , Mexico has registered a 7 per
cent annual rate of growth in real terms for the past two
decades. This is second only to that of Japan.
The importance of this phenomenon to the U.S. economy
lies in the fact that 70 per cent of Mexico's exports go to.
the United States and about the same percentage of its
imports come from the United States.
'li
The Mexican peso is ranked by international bankers
as one of the strongest currencies in the world. Actively
seeking foreign investment, Mexico pays the highest interest rat~s in the world.
On the political side there has been not only stability
but a steady strengthening and broadening of democracy
in Mexico. This has been especially true under the leadership of President' Luis E,cheverria, now in the second year
of his six-year, nonrepeatable term.
Government is taking on an increasingly youthful aspect
in a nation where half the population is under 21 years of
age and 70 per cent is und'er 30.
Mexico prededed the United States by almost two years
in lowering the voting age to 18. In late 1971, under Echeverrta's initiative, a constitutional amendment was
adopted by Mexico's congress to lower the minimum age
for election to its House of Deputies from 25 to 21 and for
election to its Senate from 35 to 30. (In the United States,
current minimum ages are 25 for the House of Representatives and 30 for the Senate.)
·
Another constitutional reform eases representation requirements for minority parties in the House of Deputies.
A sweeping fiscal reform bill is aimed at acbleving a
more equal distribution of wealth; which remains Mexico'.s
chief unfinished business.
In accompaniment with this internal progress, relations
between the 29 United States of Mexico and the 50 United
States of America "are at a peak," says Mexican Foreign
Minister Emilio O.' Rabasa. ~
There are points of friction, as exist between the best of neighbors. One in particular is the salinity of Colorado
River water whi~h the United States delivers to Mexico.
Others are the problem of migratory workers and drug
traffic across the border.
It is significant, 'however, that "Operation Intercept," a
heavy-handed U.S. attempt to curb the flow of drugs, has
been replaced by "Operation Cooperation."
·
Also significant. "in view of the constant barrage from
the left about U.S. "~conomic imperialism," is the fact
that Mexico neither feels smothered by its giant neighbor
to the north nor does it ask for special treatment.
"We realize," says Rabasa, "that the future of Mexico
is up to Mexicans."
There are now 50 million Mexicans, and their future is
bright. No Ionge~ is the stereotyped image true, if it ever
was true, of ¥eXJco as a !lUY re.sting beneath' a sombrero.
The m1dday s1esta break IS a thmg of the past in the country's accelerating business and industrial life.
"Manana"-tomorrow-has become today in modern
Mexico.

I

NORm

18

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¥K64
• J85
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EAST

WEST
.K!084
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4oK1082

SOUTH

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East~ West

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West North
Pass

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East South
Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

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Opening lead- •

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K

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
South's four-heart call was
quite optimistic, but he
would have made it against
ordinary defense. Just suppose East and West start the
defense with three diamond
leads. South ruffs the third
· one ; leads a trump to dummy's king and a second
trump hck to his ace.
He doesn!t appreciate ·the
bad break but he takes the
spade finesse ; leads a club
to his q_ueen for a 'finesse in
that smt; continues with a
spade to dummy's ace and
. a spade ruff. Then he throws
'•
East in with his last trump.
'•'
Ten tricks have been played
·and East holds K-10-8 in
:; clubs which he must lead
'
away from .
•'
When Bill Grieve and
~
George Rapee of New York
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VirlldJa

BY JACK O'BRIAN
a1r after 22 yean, a record :..
J....,..,..,
'I'IUVIA FOR YOUR
48, and lJr, Wm. u .......,_,16, autbarl rt
MEMORY BOOK
"Human SmiaJ R....... lllld "IJuman
NEW YORK (KFS)- Recent NCNI!aJCia ...
Sezual Inadequacy" practice!! whit IIIey
Relilember ¥ . yem; when 'co!UIIIIIllt BW
Jftltrlbed, ad__tbelt ~ spou• llld
l;luddey's lliater'i Pat BuckleY Bor.ell, decided " IIII1Tied eadi otbll', ln an orgy _C'l ~
· during a c,tMJk; Unlmllty happening tl!&amp;t
beadllnea.
·
·
- -. . .
W!IDell'l Uti blgmouth TI.Qrace· Attltl8on's;-:___ PaUI Lukas, film star ldnce 1t2'1, died In
1111eeriq anti·VIrllki MarY llllll'!in81 d11 ted a
Tailgl!l' at 78 ... Jane Fonda oontllnied to bare
minl:violenl,defense, Pat tried to belt TI.Grace
the nation irith her ~us anUwar hl'IIA!rlcJ,
in the Impertinent J)lial but mlsaed in front rt an
which seemed to aei:elerate as ~- llol U
aUCUence rt IIUDI, )ll'lei!B lllld apparently
serloully ground down ;.. Nabokov'a "IAIIJta"
apathetic iaymen; Pat lllonned the ~urn
tried to become a ;BdwY. mwdeal bat got
·shouting "to hell with catbollc Unl.ersity,"
arrested in ill adolescent ~t In
, .then JmeU for a roaary in proteJt with a ~Pot
sOstcll and nopped ... &amp;nuweat co~ we
yoUDII stildenll tnclliding her claugb\11' ClithY,
ever encountered, Belle Bal'tb, died at li8;
19.
· ·
Bob Hope's solution to ending tbe wart
Teddy Kelllledy's_wlfe Joail took to the
"Send Spiro to' Vietnam with a three-wood" ...
-- semi-concert liano on an Andy Wiiliams TV
Milton Berle's: "Pullt on the ABC netwCII'k and
sbow a.nd played, In a com~nt if not nearly
It'll be canCelled ill lJ -weeks" ' ... Natban
~ perfcmlance·, a.. movle tbellie ... In·
Leopold (of Leopold &amp; Loeb; most .horrible
ventor Plillo F~ died at 74; who be? If
kidnapers-murders since women's llbber
he hadn't devek!ped his TV concept in the early
Medea) died at 86. He became a sick-celebrity
*Is and put It to ezpertmental actuality ill1927,
In his )!9st.prison years, turning up at llie Cub
maybe you wouldn't have had Sesame Street, or
Room of the Stork Club, honor guest at sevnl
Flip Wllson in your II~ rooms.
.
parties and i!tber illtc~nts.
·
Harold IJoyd of the golden sllent.ftick-«ge
Mary Pickford and Charlie Chaplalll
died at Tl, rich ... Rockwell Kent, fine arlllt and
released all their old movies and there waa, a
stu~m Marllil8t (Ruaaia gave him the ~
market for them; Olaplin was paid t!$,000,000,
PriZe in 1967 and he gave $10,000 oHt to the Viet
down for his; Mary wW dimate everything her
Coull), died a188 .... George C. Scott 111ubbed the films take in to eharlty ... Pan·Anl Airways usecl
Oscar he'd won, didn't protest when b1s face
a photo of Humpbrey Bogart to advertlie Its
lllllde a Time co.er ... .Later in '71 he tOok up
trips to Claablanca _ Wltil Lauren Baeall "
again with Ava Gardner after another split
sereamecl'a~ow's~kof"Howdafetheyl"
with his wife ... Bob Hope was voted the Family
and Pan-Am lli'OWided the pitch.
of Man Award of the CoiDicll of Churehea, but
• Barbara Howar, 4'ndon Johnson's, ez.pal ·
after a minority of Its young leftlsh members
who was entertained-and-told and Joyce
screamed, the award was Indtall1!otten back
&amp;usldnd,
of TV's lltUe Billmo~. started a
and a. ''aafe" recipient was selected: the
TV series mostly devoted to cheaply 1lll!riJIII
recently drowned Whi~ Younll Jr.... Hope's
Belli; It Bopped and fled .... Mich&amp;el.Field, wbo

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wife

lf~~l~!i~l~@~lf.tl~iim*!!@@i!Mlf:IRi.!!Mt:1l!l~~!*-!;m~~;~]!!ml1

- ~.J.),l · ~neratiOfi
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By Helen and Sue Bottel
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Syracuse
•

News, Soc1ety

·::;s,

=z.;=:::~::::d~

SF::.:=~=~~

death by, prostitutes near the Hilton Hotel;
Germany s ex.forelgn mirilster Franz Johann
Strauss was aaaaulted highly by three prostles
outside the Plaza Hotel and robbed of wallet and
passport ... Thla oo11llllllllt and Supreme Court
Judge Itvlng Saypol and ailother newsman were
accosted one a~r another as we enler\ld the
Plaza Hotel for a banquet; e1-prosilitute and
heroin addict Barbara -~. author of ber
happy-ended autoblograpby ''Cookie," -also
'revealflji she'd OP«ated arom~d and ill the
Plaza which baa taken more precautions to rid
i'·eH ~t uiat proetle "'•gue.
·
"'
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Dr, -Malt Beberman, creator of the ''New
Math," dlild at 45, before most of us parents
could even fillure it .out - ... Co.founder of
AlcoboUcs Anon., W. G. Wilsnn, died at 75; dry
... Ed Sullivan's weekly TV vaudevWe left the

ward Albee, once a · new write hope of the
th"8ater,nubbedanotberone,porientoualylllled
"All Over," wblch it was, quickly ... Master rt
cinematic boredom .Arid)' Warhol said he
''might" change his name and who could blame
him afl!l' all thnse cavalcades of ennui: hia
choice, he aiUlOUDced, "John Doe."
"lAJve Story" author Erich Segal placed
489tb ,out of a field of Bill in the Boeton
Marathon'~ 2&amp;mlle drUdgery; then back _tq the
critical onslaughts of his jealoUB critiCs ... Old·
Nazi Albert Speer's "Inside the Third "•lch"
""
was translated into Hebrew, for a modei'n and
too-true demonstration of "chutzpah," certainly
out-cbutzpahlng the classical explanation of tbe
Jewish -word _ the boy who kWed both hia
parents and then threwhlmBelf on the meicy rt
the court_ as an orphan.

J:;:;

BRUCE-BIOSSAT .

Someone.Missing:
Harold Stassen

t 8;) :lt!tfiU{ I]

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SHOULD SHE RETURN LOVE RING?
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hysell
Dear Helen and sue:
•
were weekend guest~! of Mr.
Last summer my college boy friend gave me a "love ring," and Mrs. James Hayman in
which spells the word and gracefully surrounds a diamond chip Dayton.
in a heart.! think they're called ''first promise" rings, and they
Mr. and Mrs. Pat Patterson,
2
don'! mean engagements.
children; Mrs. Hallie Cross
Now we've broken up, but we're still friends . No resentments v~ted in Fellsmere, Florida
With the iatters daughter and
hate . st am tual a tin• 0f the ways
or
-JU
u Pr •
·
son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
My question is may I still wear the ring on my right hand? De
It's my favorite piece of jewelry and my ex doesn't mind -he
over Parsons _and famill. •
doesn •t want it back. It means a lot to me - representing happy
ChriStmas ~ner guests of
times and a first love that maybe didn't last but I11 never.forget. Mrs. Elva Dalley were: Mr.
I'm definitely not using the ring as a last vestige to "hold ~nd M;sitoCarl ~uther;o~of
on." We're over each other, except that we may always be good
~ile~; of Lo:ll; M~:
buddies. - STILL LOVING
and Mrs. James Pape and
Dear S.L.:
daughter, local.
. .
.
If you ex doesn't mind, why not wear your favorite piece of
Mr. and Mrs. Archie Lee Miami Beach, Flonda.
jewelry -as long as it remains Y~Uf favorite? -; HE~N
have ·returned home after
Louann Staats of Chester
' "
Dear Still :
·· · .' · ··n· "' . .''':•·:' : :'• ,.,
. enjoying 10 days vacation ill :•~s·',~~t ovem¥tt "·gu~t · of
Butwatchoutitdoesn'tputoff-oUierguys-who'lnlght'not
.•
·" .,
...:.. ·;. : ~
know that~ love ring no longer means you're in love. - SUE
sat E as f and West, they Dear Rap :
·
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found a defense to foil this
Remember me ?I'm Joey whose sister was blackmailing me
line of play·
with pictures she'd sneaked around and taken.
George opened the king of
Thank yoti for heipino rpe solve my probl«:m. I promised to
diamonds and Bill carefully
-..,
played the deuce instead of let you know how it turned out, so here goes.
the en co u ragIng seven.
like you told me, I handed the ''blackmail" money over to
George decided that Bill her at the supper table without saying a word (after Sis refused
~~~:lyah:~1ft.th6r a;te 1 :S~ to tear up \he pictures because she didn't think I'd teD on her).
By BRUCE BIOSSAT
that Bill could stand a shift. Sure enough, Dad asked "What's this aU about?" So it came out,
WASHINGTON (NEAl
The shift had to be to clubs and boy; was he mad! You were right, biackmalling is more
·The campaign is young, but I miss Harold Stsssen alsince Bill could not hold any· ~rious than smoking (as one of the pictures showed me doing). ready. Evidently he isn't going to run this time. .
thing of value in spades.
He made her get the pictures and he tore them up, and right
Nobody in blstory ever tried so often and so long for
Then George visualized the in front of me he grabbed her and spanked her across his knee. I the presidency (not to mention lesser spots). Nobody ever
whole hand and did lead the couldn't help but laugh. You would have too if you'd seen the endured such crushing adversity wblle trying. Nobody
club seven. Bill c o v e r e d
dummy's nine with the 10 expression on her face. Then Dad took her camera away for a ever uttered such brave words in adversity.
Beginning with 1944, Stassen put his name in the Re·
and South was in with the month, and grounded her.
publican
presidential lists five out of seven times, caused
queen. He tried the same line
As for me, I didn't get pu;.ished for smoking, but was warned
a
special
little stir in·a sixth race, ran twice for governor
of play but when Bill got in thatiflgotcaughtagain,l'dreallygetitgood.
·,
of
Pennsylvahia
and once for mayor of Pblladelpbla.
with the queen of trumi,&gt;S he
Well, now I've got another problem. My sister won't speak to
was able to get out With a
He never won anything In all this time. In fact, the last
diamond and finally scored me. Ifeei had that I laughed when she got smacked, because she political victory he recorded was in 1942, when he gained
reaiiy isn't so bad for a girl. She says she won't talk to me the rest reelection as governor of Minnesota.
the setling trick in clubs.
(NEWSPAPU ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
•of her life and if I ever dO .anything wrong, she1J sque.il to get
In 1948 he made a serious bid for the presidential nomi· ·
nation, only to lose out in the closing weeks to New York's
rTifi:mrTTni~~JI!"n ·even.
How can I ~keup_wlth her? From feeling blackmailed, I,'ve Gov. Thomas E. Dewey. Somehow, Stassen was never the
same again.
switched to feeling guilty. - JOEY
He could not forget his close brush' with blstory. He kept
The bidding has been:
Dear Joey:
West North East
South
How about getting your sister's "sentence" shortened? And trying and trying, up to and including 1968. That year he
had a nice little headquarters in Milwaultejl, and ran up
Pass 2 r!o
Pass
~:
make sure-she knows you put in the plea with your Dad. I'm mire 28,531 votes in the Wisconsin primary. But there wasn't
Pass 3 N.T. Pass
?
that by this time, he realizes he was a little too tough on her.- much else-2,638 in Nebraska and 57 write-ins in Pennsylvania.
You, South, hold:
HELEN
.AKQJI065 ¥A32 tK5 r!o2 Dear Pal Joey:
When the Refublicans convened in Miami Beach,
nephew
J . Rober Stassen put up bls aging uncle's name.
What do you do now?
Take It from a girl whose sister would have llired to plant her
On
the
one
and only ballot1 Sfassen got two votes, his
A-Bid four no-trump. In this permanently quite a few times: the storm blows over - faster
nephew's
and
anotl!er in Oh1o.
sequente this is not Blackwood, than you think.
Famed election chronicler Theodore White left him out
but is a very strong bid. Fou,r
... And then the next one comes along! -SUE
of bls 1968 index.
no-trump should be safe 1f
North has a minimum two-dub Dear Sue:
Yet, along the way, Harold Stassen's spirit never
response..
.
Tell me, are you outspoken? - WONDERING
flagged.
TODAY'S QUESTION
Dear Won:
In 1952, with all eyes on the Intense Eisenhower-Taft
Your partner contmues to five
Only by my mother -sometimes. - SUE
race, Stassen took calmly his relegation to the also-rans·:
diamonds. What do you do now? LAST WORD FROM HELEN:
"People say this Is, for me, a failure. I regard it as a
Answer Tomorrow
Not often - darn it!
success. I never regard any one election, any one
campaign, as· the ·crucial one."
Stassen didn't challenge President Eisenhower's second
Q--Witat tree is struck by term bid in 1956, but he did try to unhorse Vice President
1,11 gmr1mg more frequently Nixon. That didn't work, either, but Stsssen stayed
AND ~E WAITED
other?
buoyant:
·
TILL LAiE .JULYc
oak.
· "I don't feel this enda my career. I've had decisive
TO PUiiN~E
SGiliENS!
defeats, but never bitter ones."
Nevertheless for a while thereafter he set his , sights
.~~~_..~~ .,........, lower. Resident then in Pblladelphia after duty in Ike's
~
administration, he sought the GOP governorship nomlnaTheJ)a"1
SentiM~-, tion in Pennsylvania. He loet to a pretzelmaker named
DEVOTED TO THE
Arthur McGonigle, but struck a cheerful chord: :
INTERESTOF
'
MEIGS-MASON AREA
"I'll go right on working for the Republican party so
CloliESTER L. TANNEHILL, long as God gives me breath." . ' '
·
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ROBE=~·~oEEdFLICH.
The very ne11t year the Pblladelphia mayoralty
beckoned, and the Republicans Nave Stassen their nomi' City E&lt;lilar
sa~~r~·~~h:: T~:;/:;r, 10 •:;,~:: nation. Democrat Richardson D !worth swamped him by
~uhiiShmg company , ,111 more than 200,000 votes. He took It well:
Cowt St., Pomeroy, Ohio,
"l'eopie were no~ votin~ against me. They were merely
4!R'69. BlJsint'ss Officeo Phone d
· the'
1
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, 992-2156, EdUortol Phant 992 •
emonstrating 1r unw !bigness to accept, at this time,
2111.
my programs."
· ·
·
·
nosnenc,o,,n,,dv.''""
pootege
paid at
Curiously
Stassen took a pass in 1960 ' but In 1964 he
..-.
OhiO .
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; o 1 • d v• r 11s 1n g popped out of the blue to pQst . 107,000 primary votes
~epresenlltive
8olltnelli - against Barry GQidwater's 267,000 in conservative Indiana.
Gallagher. me ., 12 Eut .•2nd ' Then his modest little bid in 1968
,
•
st., New York City, New York
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. Su~scripUon roles : D·e: . Bright star When first elected Minnesota governor at
, ••••red• by carr;er where ·1 31 able naval aide to Admiral William (Bull) Halsey
evatta~le 50 cents per week; b \IIi
US d 1
N h
nf
t'
By Motor RDute where carrier
fl ant . . e egate to the ~· , c arter co erence a
servoc~ not ovoqable : ono San Francisco in 1945, federpl administrator, a still 'suc·
month sus. By moil in Ohio cessful Pljiladeiphla lawyer at 64'1 this is Stassen.
·
W Va ., One: year $141.00.
months sus. Throe
But who was the man who made those hopeless quests
1 n_,,_,_t~l suo. Subscrir,tion for the presidency after 1948, who always saw triumph In
. mcludes sunday T mes. adversity? Having watched It all since 1940, and I don't
mel.
think I know.
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Defense Foils ·'-Play Plan

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!·Voice 8Jong _Jjroadw~y :I

Hughes

a

WIN AT BRIDGE

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Darlene Duncan. Darlene Pt. Pleasant, were recent
accompanied her home and guests of Mr. and Mrs.
spent the dfy.
..,..
Malco~ ind ~Y
.._,_. ~1 "'AdJe' 'o' r ""
cine
"~"" DunCan
~
na
.:f'u
.Jr. ·(Bub)~ New.
visite\J recently WttJi Mrs. Elva ' HaVen spent lrfeW days it the
Dailey, · ·
Guinther home.
, Sjlec.5RobertE.Hudsonhas
Mr. Earl Harden of C.Oion
gone to Fort Tobyhanna, ill visited here with relatives.
Pennsylvania after spending a . :Mr. James Teaford has
30. day leave with his grand· retUtned home from Holzer
mother Mrs. Myla Husoon, Medical Center where he waa a
local, and his mother Mrs. ·medical patient, '
Charles Hoschar and family of . - Mrs. Pauline Morarlty spent'
Letart Falli!. Spec. 5 Hudson Chrlstmss week in Columbui
has completed two, one year ' visiting Mr .• and Mrs. Larry
tOurs of duty ln Vielnajn: , Milr.,ity and famtly; Mlaa
Mrs. Ada Slack spent !Oonnie Morarlty and Mrs.
Chrlstmss weekend the guesi Marty Morarlty. .
It her daughter and son-in-law · Mrs. Margaret Cottrill,
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Jobrison Sharon, praig and pruce .
and family of Wolf Pen.
visited her brOther and llaterPoat Christmas dinner In-law, Mr.' ind Ml'a. Thonias
guests of Mr. ind Mrs. Don J. Quiet of Columbus.
Cottrill 11rere Mr. and ·Mrs.
··
Edward Chapman and Eddie of
Pickeriilgton; Mr. and Mrs.
Flojld Chapman, Shelley and
Kimberly of Columbus; Mr.
and Mrs. Eddie Van Maire of
And he said to them, "Whtl
Mas\)11; Mr. and Mrs. Gordon are you afraid, 0 . men of
West, Debra, . Rhonda, John little faith?" Then he rose
and Melody of Racine; Sharon, a11d rebuked the winds a11d
Craig and Bruee Cotttlll, local. the sea; and there· w'as a
Mr. Sapuny Gibbs and son of great calm.-Matthew 8:26.
• •
Rutland visited their aunt
·Belief
is
truth held in the
·Glenna Soulsby.
mind; faith Is a fire in the
Mrs. sadie Smith of Hart- heart.-J o s e ph F. Newton
ford, and Mr. Robert Smith of clergyman_.
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, J~lhaWks

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Zips

Rio . Gmde Colle&amp;e

'chu!oadcn IIIII PI Sl&amp;ml!
Fratenllty 'will c:tlllluet a
biiallre ~ pep tally 811 tile

AHL'5tand'"''
By UnUtd Pttss lnternattonol
Ell•t
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·te- . ..,..,
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Boston
25 11L. T.7 Pll
51 '
By UnlteciPi'elllattraallonal
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Hell,
bel"ml
at
.
Nova·
Scotia
21
13
9
51
"
!.kron, No. 8 in the nation •
• ·
7:•1ami&amp;tL'f!leblleveatls
~~~~~~~
·:~ ~ : ~ amq small colleges, got its
o~
lle!N!Mkl .. leillle ...ea Rochester
u 23 5 33 11th win of the season Monday
;
ballleW '-a~ "IP" for
WHt
l
. Wedn ' hy IQbt's b1c MidW. L. T. Ptt night.
Thfl
Zips
whipped past Buffa.
1
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_ __
,___
-·-Oblo,Coafereaee 1lline wllh
~[f;~Jre
~~
~ ~
. ~~
." I• ' --·
-·---'
.
' vlslllq -Urbua at Lyae
Ci I II
11 18 9 43 lo 81.S7. Akron has been beaten
BY"- Pnllji,U: aatMnll · 'lbe Bonntes, lliwlllll to 7-f, ' ewer Urllanals lW oa the Cl~~.7~d
18 . 11 6 42 only twice this season.
Credit.the lll!lCk ll)lnklng of were Jlleec! by the liO points (If
_;.
trl
Richmond
17 19 6 liO
In the on\Y other Ohio games,
' · State downed
Coacb
Owl!llll' wjth ' ~eenterGitmnPrlee . ... yeu,
OWDitwo am~
Tidewater
10 28 ~ 24 Tennessee
~·
~ OVIll' "I'Vi never bid I team fill ''- OYer tbi Redmea tllu far·
Monday'sR•sutts
11
Kanaf.!!litaJil.oo.overlbDes thattubebladearJYiaag&amp;JDI!
w, year.;.~rbllc ta- Spl~,~~::m~~:!t~f.~ 1
----M~iiiiiJ!t:. ~
lind then come '-:k to WID," . ¥!ted to_ ·.
~ rally.
Tuesdlr'sO.mes
BaitlmoreafBoston
Ktrsaa State'S ·Undbergb s8ld 'Carolina Coaeb traQk

•

...

g

1

•

.

,.eel.
..a

Whlle· ~~llyliiUiedAu-

Gamilcocb
WOnt ioul were befuddled Ia !be lint half

brey N_, jhe
~boo~* Cll'l!lill Jllfllnk . .d
with 11 li!CIIIdl renl8iniJ\jj in
theseoondovertlineperlodand
Kanaaa ·le!uling, ' 6Ul.· &lt;Wblte
was a mite Ovenealowj Pel
puahed: N~·· to the fioor.
0wens lmmedlate.t:y
j:apltall'l!d _on 'the lituaUon,
clablliaBN88bW..bilrt.
Oweni . ~BICII' Mark

McGtih, whole

'B e· n·ey
0
u zt
ln· 1;9/llf'.J
I'tiJ
. •"'

.

.,

~::~r:~~=:~~~~c~~~:!

IOnlygamHSCheduied)

alo.
Central State 80-M and BaD
State (Ind.) beat Kent State flO..
69.
Tennessee State, the thirdranked smaU college team in
the nation, swept to its 11th
win against one defeat. Uoyd
Neal led the winners with 18
po\nla. Central State, now -1-6,
got 17 points-from Ray Byrd.
Kent State hit· just 39 per

cent fl•om the floor In lOsing its CleVeland State (8-7). In the
loth game iii 12 outir"'s. The Ohio Conference, Denison la at
game was played at Muncie, Otterbein and Kenyon Is at
MWlkiniiUm.
Ind., home of BaD Stste.
Also, Hiram goes to BaldwinJim Regenold bit 20 poin!B to
lead BaD State. Dwlgbt Kenner Wallace, Ohio Northern visii!J
lopped the Flashes with · 17 Heidelberg, Bluffton is. at
Cedarville, Steuben
~at
poln!B.
Duquesne
and.
Clari
''
IP&amp;.)
Tonight's games Include
'
Youngatown State (11·1) at plays at Walsh.

~eker
·~ 0
INGLEWOOD, calif. (UP!)
Chamberlain Ill one of three Cunningham, 6-7, at forwards - Russell.
Bomiea. "We were luckY to
&amp;/U
.
, 1 MORE CUBS SIGN
-Towering Kareem Jabber Los Angeles Lakera who wW and Lou Hudson of AUanta and
For the East Cowens, Clevewin."
.
•·
. CHICAGO (UP!) - The and WDt Ownberlain team to play for the West, wblch is Walt Frazier of New York at land's Butch Beard and_S.lti. John . WWiamson of New
~
-(
· J
e Chicago Cuba repQrted seven. make the West a solid fawrlte coached by BW Sharman of the 111Jards.
more's Jack Marin were
'Mmco. State ind Califctrnla's
'
more players under contra&lt;;t over the East tonight in the Lakers. Jerry Weal and Gail
Eight players-five for the picked for the game for the
AI!JleY 'ftullt 11!/th _picked the "' -'
·1
.
today to boost their total signeii . NatiOilal Baslielball •Allso&lt;:i11- Goodrich are set · to be in West and three for the East - initial Ume.
.
8llllle bight for the greatest
to 23 of their 38 player-roster. lion's 22ncl annual All-Star Sbannan 's starting backcourt. will be piliying the All-star
Sharman, the game's MVP
J18111i'mance'C'ltbelr college
· . .
,
·· .New· additio~U~werepi~rs Game. .
_
,
Game fot tlie lint time. Among in 1916, is coaching in the
careers. Sophomo'r e
Ray Newman and Ron TomAselloutcrowdof17;506wW
Startlnll ~ forwards for the them is Haywood, the Ameri- eontestforthesecondtlme.His
Wlllllunson btoke the HarinOn ' ·
' '• ·
pkins, catcher J. C.' M&amp;ttijl, be on hand at the Flll'111'D10 - Weatare s:i; Spencer Haywood can Basketball Asz!odatlon's West club 11181, 144-124, In 1968
M6ft;whoq~lmlysank'two GYI)lrecordatBerkeley,calif.
first ba~~r Hal ' Br~. watch the West try to win its of Seattle and H Bob Love of MVP in 1969.
while he wps coach of the san
free lhroira toJli!~Jbe Bill Elllht ' with 48 points while eenior
LIN&lt;m.N,, N~ ( : ) ~~ and outf~elilers ' Cleo JllllJI!s, , second game ill a row in Los Chicago.
"
'
'
'.
Other
firSt-time
All-Stars
for
Franclsoo Warriors.
eontiti&amp; ~*it ol *ch.
· 'l:lilltt netted' 311
. , 'lbere :was joy a sa ss 10 • Gene Hi~r ·and Jim Tyrone. Anlleles' first All..Star co~
Heinsohn, who pla~d with
Coaclle.c! by Tpm Heinsohn of the West are Bob Lanier of
Bull Stallworth, who conttlDeflc:lt W4Jeti Oat ' ' '.' NebraUa today·
since 1963. The Western the C,eltics, the East will open Detroit, Portland's Sidney Sharman at Boston, is
lilted eight of Klill88a' 11 · But It was wmiamson 'Who ,l , Exuberant
joy
that
Conference won,108-107, at san with Boston's John Havlicek, 6o Wicks, Paul Silas of · Phoenix coaching ln his first All-Star
~vertlme polnta, paced all Wiped olit a 13iloint Alll!e ~. _Cofhnhusker football Coach
PUT ON WAIVERS
Diego last year.
5, and Pblladelphla's BWy and Golden State's Cazzle Game.
scorers with 26. David HaD deficit When he seCured 1 ' " ''., BOb Devaney has elected to
CHICAGO (UP!) - Mike
Jabbar, who led the
scored 17 for Kaliaas State. . 11e 7:50 from the end ~th a 15- stay on as University of Hershberger, 32, reserve Milwaukee Bucks to the NBA
Tile IBbgti,l1 victory gave the foot jump shot and it ' was - Nebr~ka coach for another outfielder of the Chicago White champlOnsbtp Jast spring will
~
CollegeBaskelbaiiResulls
Jayjla~ a ~ conference Willtainaon who 881ik the next ye~ -"but sadn~ that he will Sox, has been put on waivers be the West's starting ce'nter,
.J.
By United Press International
reeotd. ~ State Is 1-1.
five baakeJa to edge the Bears, . retire from active coachilig for the purpose of giving him The 7.foot-2Buckace and the 7~~~.;~;g; ?Ho~7~s5:
-· b A IAII1il PillltiGil
91'89.
' after that time,
his unconditional release, the 1 Chamberlain present a dif-TJ
Eastern Ill. 99Winona St. 82
Fourth-ranked South - 'lbe 'sopb connected on 19 of
That was the decl$!on Deva~ club announced Monday. f' It obi
to th E t
. .o
org
Lora 85 St Norbert 80
~ found Itself in a 38 floor shots and 10 of 13 foUl ney annoWiced Monday . .'!be Hershberger batted .260 In 74 ICU pr em
e as ' ' · • U
• P
I 1,.1
LSU 76 T~lane 58
position not unlike tllat of the shots to break the court record coach of the national cham- ,games for' tl\e SOJ: ill 1971,
which wW have 6-9 second-year
Houston 115 Sou. Miss. 84
~inGreelt~bologywho of 44 ill!s set in 1988 by pionshipcollegeteam,whohas
man Dave Cowens of the By·JOHNG.GRIFF1N
Bowlhere.
OkCiy102 Hrdn-Smmns100,3
must'I:!Onatlntly jJUiha boulder UCLA':-'L8w Aleindoi .
become _a legend ill his adopted
BostonCeltics as its man ill the
UPI Sperls Editor
But
perhaps
more ~Jams St. 93 Concordia 89
up 'a atetp iilD when Uie In otb!l' contests, Georgia state, s81d he would ~ntbme
iniddle.
. NEW ORLitANS (UP!)
meaningful was Landry's New Mex. Hid 84 Colo. Coli. 79
Gamecocks trailed St. TecbroutedNo'-0....-·, ......, only as athletic directOr.
Dallas Cowboy Coach Tom disclosure that Morton, wbo Campbellsvi8J Kentucky St. 79
"
1.1&lt;11110 , _
Dev
th """"'"d t
·
Landry
not be d let started the 1972 season at least Murray St. 72 Eastern Ky. 69
BoJ1!1VentiJn, 11·1, afte1' the 1nnlliana State 'walloped Tu.. J ollaney, ech""in"~t•"'}s Uo
,ma·
may
rea yto
,
AlA 82 Texas A&amp;M 14
fii'ltbightmlnuflaof!!lay . . lane N; Tennaa11ee erased o~c egecoa
... na _n,
"MostValusblePIByer"Roger ' equalwithStaubachintherace Wichita Sl. 70WestTex. 65
"-'-"-··""""'- "'W ight Fl 'td
.,.
1
881d he wquld recommend
CHARLOTTE
, , N. c. (UP!)
Staubach call signals yet but to be No. I Cowboy quar- S. F. Austin 79 McMurry 66
South .,..vw,.
81 .....,,
,..,
e
or a
n a
!stan
T """.
' · te back
t to be tr ded Angelo St. 105 Tarleton 95
•
'
Ass
t Coach
he paid hun an e·~n
r 'II• be
wan sded if a
Ea•t
belplid'· lit .II0-47'with
jUst 6:58 Soutbeaatem~noegame
·
• om
j , ........,. ..e - Robby Allison · has been
'
" """•ter
• Te•as
" 77 Sui Ross 72
lertln tJie·gam~~beforerlllylng and Rllnnle Hogue 'and Tim to replaC::: ~be I 'Win, lose named auto racing's"Driver of
compliment today by saying he and WI
Ira
" we can Western Ky. 95 Easl Tenn. 12
lor 141tralght l"!ilJts to salvage llilsett oomlined for 54 points ot ·drsw the. CCJ!hin~ ,se'?."n. the Year for lf11 an&lt;! Richard
is willing to trade away his get vafue for him."
Kansas 66 Kansas S~.1 6J
a61-611winasuliBonnleswent to lead a.g1a to an 85-73 . However, he , added, we Petty has received the 1971
other quarterback ' -craig
''IthlnkCraigisontbeverge ~~~s~:;6 15~ 1 :lda -;son 56
aaeoldaatbe~tweatberin triumph
Kentucky In . certainly are planning on its Myers Brothers Memorial
'
Morton.
of becoming a really good O. Roberts 118 Buller 107
·
·
biling
win."
·
In
a
post-Super-Bowl
game
quarterback,"
said Landry. Georgia St. 99 Fla. Tech '78
Buffa!
o. ··14 .
,
.1 another SEC clalb.
"Definitely this wW be it, Award for· the outstanding
con!
before fly
. '" h
"He has a great arm and he Missouri 74 Okla. st. 67
.- &amp;l!li)Omqre' Bryan . WiJ1~
Wes,tern Kentucky, third'
'
contributions to tqe. growth of
erence
,..,g orne
.
Iowa 76 Colorado 59
lei! the t~rrid second-half place flnllher Ill last }'881''8 .said the popular coach who , stock car racing. : ·
to Dallas Monday:, L8ndry 'also has the Intelligence. We wW Delaware St. 66 Lincoln 60
charge for ·the ~lis 18 NCAA tAI1lrllamtillt, e¥ened Ita could. pr~bably be elected
The . awards were made
By ED FlfE
admitted for the first Ume that not trade him unless we can get Fairmont 68 Wesl Lib ..66
80
he ilcored elilht of·the_ ~ 14 recordthtlyearl!tiawitha95- gQvernor if he
chose. The Monday night at the annusl
UP! Sports Writer
.
the Duane Thomas Com- va,l,ue for him.
~kr~ }t"'e~ita~c~t'tle St. 68
points lind wound up with 12 in 72 breeze OV!l' East Tenneaaee. leg~tlire 1.!1 currently eon- banquet of the National
DALLAS (UP!)-The world munlcatlon problem caused
We have an age problem on Tufls 95 Worcester Tech 83
a reserw role. Kevin Joyce led
In pair C'l Big Ellll!t Ulta sidermg ~ measure which Motorsports Press Association. champion Dallas Cowboys re- "some tension'' on the our defensive unit with fellows w.v. Wesler•" 95 Wheeling 82
~with
a 1
ded O'til h ' woUld name a new plush
ted
turned home to a noisy Cowboys' squad and wW have llire Bob Ully, Cluck Howley Kits I Pa. 84 iona 1•
80· th~'
11
u
'now '
14 Mlaaour sba
a oma coliseum ln' his nsme No opA ison, 34, was vo Driver oreeting from 3,000 or more to be straightened out during and Herb Adderley," Landry ~r:~a ~ ~=~~u~V13
-~ potntsandTcimRiteradded 13 State, 74-67, lllld Iowa Stste
'ti is'
ted , ·
of the Year by NMPA mem- ..
the off-aeason.
admitted. "Our. offensive unit Templea2 Delaware 68
,despite a broken hand.
bl8w down Coiiii'II&lt;IO, 7&amp;69.
he ·hoped the hers. A regular on Nascar's ~'!..,
_ jammat
· Loveed illF~ld lllterinlnale
conThe curly-llaired . Staubaeh ts 'younger, But while 1 don't Northwood n Bellarmlne 67 .
,
Grand National Circuit since •...,...,..
~
belle th 1 · oftbesefell
RochHier98Hamlllon92
present coaching staff would 1965, Allison had his best year Monday.
was presented with an autornoo
ve e 08S
~ Georgia Tech 82 Notre Dame62 '
•1 ·
T T.
remain aa Is for the 1972 in 1971.
· Coach Tom Lancry stopped bile as his award for being is Imminent we have to think
•
UISvl ~te
season. H~ had Indicated
H ·dro
H 1ma Mood long eiiOUIIh to a~ept a 31-inch nsmed "Most Valuable" in about' eventual replaeel!lents -i(:•*************~
earllll' he ·woUld announce his M e
~e ~ b o ny. high silver-Plated ".World &amp;lnday's 24-3 victory over the for them."
11
- 11
h,
;
'
•
.....,......,
""""•ord,.
'"·t
the
ereury
'g
t
•
JIIIIjor
Grand
Cham
,,
tr
h
ted
b
Miami
Do•""'
"
"
in
the
Super
La-'-•
thus
tabbed
defen,.
___
A
THOUG-wr
/1.
..,
~·t' ~· ,
_..~·~w
·~ ~ ~
N U l icto l1
f
ps op ypresen
Y
At''""'loi;l
•a.u.1
i'
·n
..,..
".-•·
tr;v \ i - "t,, · urf · . -. . ·~ ·~·1 J'\'~'- otllet
coacties..couldplotiheirn, a. one ·V rea,,.•.seven , o '
·
sive strength and a , backup
·
..,_.
.
~
f;f;
future--. .
·
lfhlch were .on super- tpe !¥Ia• Chamber l!f Plln·
quarterback as items ·t,he 11
... F-OR · TOD~AY i(
-.
· • ·
...
'"
~-·
eed
ua11
rd merce Board Chairman
-..
~
• ·
•
·
Devaney currently has a sp ways, eq ng, a reco
Cowboys would be looking to it
·
••
r, By FRED MeMANE
first lou at Detroit last con- coa""'ftd record of W· set in 1969 .by LeeRoy Yll!'· ,Charles Cullum. !Andry held it
add sometime in the future if 11 beware of him who. 11
. UPI ~}Writer
.
, salilrday and remaJna ·In ,lhe
at·
yomlng and brough. Allison took _home ~somghtlye !~thd ~.~t." w~hed
SO~IE HOM~ ·
they are going to- trade away
~~;:;~sg~s something for
NEW YQR~t"''UPI)
,
W
blle
·
No.
2
position
fO!JOwed
by
$236
295
in
pnze
money
and
""'
,....._
·
·
·
"~
-..
-..
1
.. '
. the division
.
The Cowbo""'
PT. P ·
T - Spec. 4 Mqrton. He s)ressed that the 11
- Bernard Baruch -..
...
• poweiful' UCLA rolll, thunde- North caroltna and South Nebraska. Last year's fimshed
fourth m
:• and the r~·t..
.., "'
11
NebraSka team bad a ~
the.coa""'"d staff fou""'t 1heir Joseph Edward Lish was guest CoWboys have a problem ill ... _
iC
rous)f alpnt.,_ an e:r;-Bruin carolina.
.
- --'.
point standings.
~...
"''
of honor during the holidays at ""lping•~---Jvesbecause, as ..,
..tr
lassiitantiiJ!Iiklnll·somenolse
'1beli comes Louisville fol. '""""u
way through the cheering
'"'
w.......,
11
· ~••••
Iii
of his O'lllk '
lowed by~ Beach State and
crowd with the minimum show the home of his grandparents, world champions, they are low it
11
Denny Crum, new head ado State ill a tie for siJ:th,
of emotion that has markild Mr.andMrs.L.E. Piersall,Pt. on the draft list of college ~
lfs Quick! r:.....
II
coacb 1C'l Loulsvll1e lhiJ year &amp;lutbern Oillfctrnla, Penn and
their, entire Super Bowl week, Pleasant. ~ti ~h ·~t
~~ers.I don't think
0•
after ! three years as an Florida State. Long · Beach
including what should l!ave time was s on a or
we can
11
assistant to John Wooden at StsteisuponenotelifrQmlast
ftROURCe .. been a noisy postgame Rlchardson',l\]aska.Itwasthe baveadynastyinDallas,",sald
•
:~
. • firsttime'~ljvoyearstbatthe
theCowboycoach."Ikno!liTel
~
UCLA, has turned . the Clr- week, ind Oblo State, Southern
(
Cl
AA lte · &gt; celebration•
u~•hramm
boys
al ..,
.,
11
dlnala into a force to be Clllfdrni8 and Florida State
ATHENS ~ A reduction in now a ass
s ) anu
Cullum told Landry that it famllyhad...,nhim. Atte~ Se
(Cow
gener 11
reckoned with in the fins! two areeaehup two placea. Pann's the number of tournament sites Ironton were the other Class A was the greatest day for Dallas were Mr. and •Mrs. Joe Ush manager) foreeaat that bUt be ~
Fridays Only
months of the college lOllS to Princeton dropped the at the sectional level II among tdurney sites last year.
and the state of Teus.
and Usa; Mr. and Mrs. Larry baa a way of putting a,coach on -tc The Drive· lri'Windo'lll t
baskelball season.
Qlakers four places.
several changes Included in the
The five Class A sectional
Landry replied, "Yea. Thilnk Noble, Jeff and Chris; Mr. and the spot. Remem~e have ._
i 5 Open
•
P.
Five coaches from each of 1971-72 'tournament plans winners will compete in the you. It is great to be back as Mrs . Charles Yeager and been drafting 23rd 28th ill the ~
A.M.
to
M.
'!be Cardlnala, loser by one
9
7
11
point to Florida in~ opener, the se.en geographical areas which have been announced for distric't tournament at champs, especially when we Marty; . Mr. and Mrs. Relph ordere.er~ce the two league
Continuously)
~
1
11
have not lost slnr;e and are _of the naUon comprise the UPI prep
cagers
in
the Chillicothe during the week of have been here two or three Ross; Mr. and Mrs. Bob draft came !nto effect.
-II
II
alow'" - . ,.., up in the Ratings Board_. Each week Southeastern District.
March 6.11, with two teams other Urnes just second best." Fenton and Deann of Rayland,
"What II going to hurt us iC Other Ban~ing Hours 9 to 3l~
" --•r""'
Th Cia • .. tea In th advancing to re"'onal play.
Cullumjos!llnglytold Landry Qblo·, "-. Donna Wilson and eventually."
·
it and 5 to 7 as usual on i,
we My United Preas lnterna- they vote on the top 10 te.ams
e ss """ ms
e Sectional tournan:';nts will be
th '"' •
Mr d M
La""-· said the Cowbo"" ·: Frtd• ~··
f
Uonal Board of Coaches rat- andpollltsareawardedona 1(). diSttlct wW again go to Rio
that he thought Landry's An ony; Spec. 4 ·an rs.
·~:
,- .,
-..
inga. Thla past week Louisville H-7-M+3-2-l haali for votes Grande College for their held between Feb, 21 and ''friend" Bllly.Graham, "did 8 Ush.and host and.bostess, Mr. have been fortunate Ill the · 111
·acored two impressive road from first lo 10th places.
sectional ~ent, but only .March 4. ·
pretty good job" praying for and Mrs. L. E. PiersaD.
draft in obtaining stars ilk.e -tc
;
. 11 ;
victories over Dayton and
NEW 'YORK I UP I)-'!'he ' 0?e _team WID ' advance to dls~c~=~n~::~: ~ the Cowboys.
~~: ~t!:!.~bll~~ ~ ~t
Bradley to run Ita winning 20
United Press Infer natiOnal top . dJstnct competition rather hi h they ill be lay! .
hlsLari!li'yra
· ..~!reauntuaualing
~.....w.....,.
~.~
dlcated that one of the "''"POMEROY, Ol:fiO
~·
streak to 111ames;
major college basketball . than two as was the case last w c
w
P ng IS as ·
..,.~~...
M
C
..,
' k
led ·with teams with first place votes year
follows:
said, "Y-. He sure did."
the Cowboys might be looking 11
ember F Dl
..,
and won-lost records liS of Jan.
·
11
M be Fed 1
-..
.'lbat strea , coup
The district tournam t to
CLASS A SECTIONAL$
La'"'- was chalnnan of a
FIVE BREWERS SIGN
to acquire ina trade for Morton ..,
Req)Q r S era
-tcM
Prlneeton'supselofprevlously 15 In par~ntheses: !seventh
en •
Nel•onv.llle-York High
·-•
MILWAUKEE w·IS · (UPI)
_,,.be 1
be dr ft -..
• ese'l&lt;ve ystem
~1
be held ID
· Steube nv i1le •••-···Ae held at the
•
· "
wuwu
a ow num r a •·
•
· !!fib-ranked Pennsylvania w~
,
u"" SChool• (61eomsl - Alexander, Graham "-'""'"'
The Mil ukee
B
enabled the CardlnaiB to tak~ ~ea. umc• A (351 (J 2.01
Pol~~ .year (it was i~ Athens last Miller, Glouster, Starr- Cowboys' Texas stadium home d w~i
rlewers choice.
,. ,..
over the No. 5 spot in this 2. Ma~uette 112_01
announce · ve • payers
,
311 year) will agam match the Washington, Crooksville and last suinmir.
1
72 contracts
Week's ratings.
3. NorthCarollnal11-ll 267 sectional winners from the La~1~~~~~gh School (8 teams)
'!be Dallas coach had coun- r~tur~~ u:.r 1b9ri
Crum'S old team UCLA
4. South Carolina (8-2)
m ' Southeastern and Eastern - Southern, Eastern !Meigs I. tered publicized reports of Slgne on y, nging to 20
! .L
'
'
5. Louisville (11 ·1)
166 Dlatr' Is
North Gall Ia, Southweslern, President NIJ:on's offers of aid the number of players in the
OCIIllliiUe&amp; to reign over the
6. !Tiel Long Bch St. 114-1)130
IC ·
.
,
Ky-r creek; Ironton st.
fold so far
coUese basketball _world,
!Tiel Ohio St. (10·11 130
Tlie reduction In teams JoS:P.,, Sym,mes Valley and to Miami Coach Don Sbula
Signed ~~re outfielders Joe
however. 'l'l1e Bruins stretched ; : ~~~~;.~fai 111·11
1~ ad~ncing from thewlll~ctional Hannan-Trace. .
prior ·· to the Cowboys' 24-3 Lahoud; 24, and- Gorrnlan--l
MI. Malo
fft-1111
their record to 1Z:4J with vic- 10. Florida St. (13-21
43
to e district !eve1
carry teaM~~lor~ H~~~ter~ch?~\kell~ &amp;!per Bowl vlciory by sayiilg Thomas, 21; catcher Darrell
torlea oYer Stanford and· 11 . Vlrt::a(12-1)
,.
41 overtoClassAAandCiassAas Western I Pike), Peebles, that he tliought he would just Porter, 20; pitcher Jerry Bell,
california and once agaip
~~nce~~arn~gl)
~~ wthell. See tionals wllld ofbe held at Seaman, White Oak, Jefferson. asusk."Billy Graham "to pray for 24 , and Infielder Frank
1our in ~~f~~;stern . .and
recel.ed all tbe. ~laca 1~ Brigham Young 111-11 22
ree s1tea instea
Ross
T pedino 24
. votes from the '~b!l' 15: Maryland (10-11
13 ClassAAandfiveinsteadofsix
Chillicothe High School 18
Thetropby ,preaentation was
e
' ·
,.. coadiea board
16. ~~~~~nova (11-11
10 in Class A.
teams)- Paint Valley, Bishop a last m!Qlte substitute for
HaWaii (13-ll
8
The wmner
·
Marquette, .the · on)y ·other · 17.
ofthe eight-team
. Fl aget• Lync h"uurg Cl ay, Lees- wbat the 'Chamber of,.._
'"""""
18 . (Tie) Mlnn 18_31
6
IDibeaten club in major college
!Tiel Tenn 18-21
,
6
Class. AAA sectional at R10 ~~~a, ~~i~~~~~l~n/rr~~~;~ merce bad ,'·planned. The
circles, narrowly escaped Ita
(Tiel Missouri (11-2)
.6 Grande
will , "travel to Huntington Local .
chamber w~ to stage a big Do Your
SteubenviDe March H to meet
Pornmoutn High School '(9 downtown
Pllr&amp;de
and
l - Soulh "We lister .....,.\-tation bu;t~ the Cowboys
the winn er 0f ·a similar sec- teams
Drop, Slip, or Fall?
Bloom, Porl!mouth Oay, W&lt;!SI ..-~-·
~~nai at New Concord, for the Union, Manchester, Ports- dllcouraged it 'because so Don't keep worrying about your
teeth dropplna: at the wronc
l'ight to advanee to regioilal moufh Notre Dllme. Portsof their players were not {alae
time. A debt\UW ILdhesive can help.
competition,
' ··
· mouth East, New Boston, coming btrek from New Olrans FASTEETH.hlveadentures a long'
' \
ftrmiT, ..-...aier hold . Maket eatThere are 24 Class AA teams ~~~~~~~le Valley and Franklin on the team plane. Ten of the er,
inc more enjoyable. For more eecurlty
· ln the district. The seclionals · Section winners advance to Cowb9)'a will be appearing ill and com!ort U10 FASTEETH Dentu~e Adhuive Powder. Dentures
wW be held at lUexandei'· and Chillicothe district meet. .
the Pro Bowl Game at LGs that
fit are euentia1 to health. See
CLASS AA SEj;TIONALS
t.;a
your dentist reeularly . .
,
. ,_
Synunes Valley High Schools,
Lucasvilli Valley High ~'lleles ~~ &amp;mda)'.
• ani cit th~on original 10:30 p.m. ·
·
· both Ill 'which were used as School 18 teams&gt; - Waverly,
chlldrenla priJdrams of the
Those who saw this show tourney sites last year, and Northwesl,,· Portsmouth West,
year. "Zoom.'r which made
lestwoek- featuring • teen. L
Ui V
used f
Minford, Wheelersburg, Oak
Its debut oerlier on Ch. 11,
age rap session - may boi
ucasv e a11ey,
Ill' a Hill, Hillsboro and Greenfield.
LARGER SIZES
shows up today for · its . wonderl119: Was one ot those Class A sectional last year.
Alexander High School (8
~Ids ·on the program about Sites ~ 0 longer being utilized teams) - Federai'Hocklng,
WHITEWALLS
premiere on Ch. '· 3: JO p.m.
+ t ·+
helf·sloned? I'm wondering,
E81te Plk C
nd Belpre, Warren Local, New
•
A mid-week sporlt aoeclal
too.
· . '
are
rn ( e ounty) a
Lexington, Nelsonville-.York,
PHON.E 992-2342
MIDDLEPORT, O.
brings ua !hi NrA Afi·Stor
M0 v 1 E+s":. + , S n ovi Paint ValleY.
· Wellston. VInton County and
game, with ,Joca heroes in
'!be~ Class AA sectional
Sheridan,
· •
the atarti!J,IIn•up. OneTreasure," with James winneril will then compete in
Symmes Valley High School
lime 01110
te groet Jchn
FranciiCIJI belwftn his Mr.(8 toemsl - Chasapeake, Goal
Havlicek wli bt on the East
NovtJ! and Longstroet .,.,, tbediltrictmeetat Rio Grande Grove, Gallipolis; Ironton,
1111Uid. .,whlit WVU'I lm• Q.m., and "Plot to College betweeq Maich 8 and Ro~k Hili, South Point,
.._.,I Jerr" Yiftt will be
Assassinate · Hill•• 11:30 11 with
dis"" 1 ba
Fairland and Meigs.
::0~\-.tort~,West, 10 p.m.,
p.m., both Ch. 10.
c1v'
onte
•uC
cia
mp
Sectional winners advance to
1ng o ~g19ns1 p y.
1"-r ...
,
+
+
+
a
anc
Rio
Grande district moe!.
'
Ch. 12 · +'+ +
'
W5DN~S~AY: We can't
'lbe .39 Class A teams in the
·CLASS AA'A SECTIONAL
"The
App' aiachlan
ll'f1811ne a many woml!ll d'·trlct 'II Ia
t M·
Rio Grande College 18
R-icJnal Commlulon~' would be Interested ~~
,.
WI p y a
eJgs, leamsl - Athens, Chillicothe,
,_;;of tht matt lm~tant
custom· car
d,tslgnlng Nelsonville-York, ChillicotHe Jackson,. Lancaster. Logan,
F dt •1 ""'lfl!l a qtlng
Gtoroe Barris, bill he's on and Portsmouth Hlf!fi Schools Marietta Porhmouth and
' ~.:-_ ~~"il' flltd lght Vlrgfnla Gra~am'• show,
11
Mlaml Trace
·
·
7
I •
anyhOw, C · 6, 2 p.m.
(a repeat locations) and
Sectional winner aJvances to
"Com"""\f. en Ch. 2 at
l:~~j;iilli..iiitiiiili~-------~--.111 Minford. Lucasv:llle Valley Sleubenvlllt district meet.
, J
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by tbe shorter bUt

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Driver
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s:*ue8·A1'e A · · •' d

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FARMERS BANK : •

and SAVINGS

*-*******•

FALSE TEETH

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GO GO GOODYEAR
Why Buy Recap Tires
When You Can Buy This ·
Popular Size - 735 x 14 ·.

'

or 775 x 14 at

Downing-Childs _Agency Inc.
IN.SURANCE ~BONDS
. MUTUAL' FUNDS

'

"Where'd you get' rhtne secret paper1r'
•

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west All•Stars .Favored ' TOnla
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RIZER OIL W.

BERHrS WORlD

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'

Meils Countjs Oldest and Largest
Insurance Agency

•

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Ground Chuck
Ground
Beef
FRESH,

Choppe~

GROUND FROM

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All

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LfAN BEEF

atoiCE LOIN
. .
SAVE 2f lB.

lb.

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IJNEI FSS BEEF FOR SOUP
lb.
AND BEEF STEW •

lb.·

.

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-

SUPER.IORS.

SLICED

lb.

PORK SAUSAGE
HOME
5 .9~1b.
.MADE

12

POP

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Throw-

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JERZEE CANNED

MILK

I

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for

PILLSBURY

\.

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, I

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SCOT LAD

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39"

MINT FlAVOR
1 OZ. TUBE

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PAPER TOWEls

10~

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SCOT lAD

•

CAT FOOD

150t' '1
cans.
.

4200ct$1

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pak gge

COFFEE

89!r

Extra Right Hand Glove Free
Reg.

89'

·•· ~-· lb.

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POT~'fOES •••• ~ •••••• __

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pkp.

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'

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Fairmont

~~

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YEUOW CORN, WHOLE KERNEL .
PEAS - SPINACH
G.R~~N BEANS- SHELLOUT. BEANS
.
ltPPLE SAUCE

,.

Social Calendar

Our- Vaults Protect
All Vltc:il

.rarty Given for
P:
vt. L. Wanzer

J&amp;F

.

HUT

Pl

l..illiNtw-H••••'."•'

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Meigs Women at

~-lti4!U

Virginia's

Beauty Partor

Board Meeting ·

_____;__;___

Announcement!

.DINING ROOM NOW OPEN

·~

•

'

'

I

J.,
'

'

i

.

Ring can be !!)Ide' to
hold from two to live
birthstones,

Featuring

Serving Dinner

Char Broiled Steaks

I

ln.proeious lOki. yellow
or white gold.

4 P.M. TO 9 P.M.

and A
Selected Menu

.5 cans'.
lb.

SUPER MARKET. ~ Open_.Oailv _9;to 10· ~ Sun.

We Accepl F~ral FO(Ht St~
'
. PHON&amp;: 992·348~ . . ·. · ti&amp;nn
.
.
Comer Mill and Secoild Sts• .'''!'• Rne••• The Right To Li!ftlt Q,uanlities" ....,LEPORT. 0

.

· ·

The MEIGS INN

GoeSsler ·Jewelry Store
Court St.

POMEROY, OHIO

Po~eroy

'
'

!

Sold jQr ·Camp

'7.50

Golden .ftipe

.BANANAS.

'

SHOES

•

Scot Lad Buys!

35 stUdent 1 'ITUr.'
; C"eS tO be Promoted

Is Celebrated

MOTHER

.ICE .
CREAM"

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can

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12

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Sixtk Birthday

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ELM TREE

Chase &amp;Sanborn

Reg. 11.49

PLAYTEX RUBBER GLOVES

- 79~

'

'3'~

TAPES

z .

crtns.

boxes

.POPULAR, CoUt(TRY &amp; WESTERN

DIXIE DISPENSER &amp;.
30 - 9 OZ. CUPS

'

2% MILK ORANG~ ~iUICE ••_
.......8.:-~~:e

.FRISKI£S

~TRACK

'

sa.oT LAD

Trash Can Uners

FACIAL TISSUES

'FilOzEN·
FOOD
. . .
.- .

.ICE _CREAM •••.~~!t-···~•····•:~

WHILE
THEY
LAST

·HEm BRAND

~MFUA

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for

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8. ~~
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Unclassified ·

bxs.
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THURSDAY ONLY
.
. SALE!

EGGS

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lb.

SUPERIOIIS . , . lb.
ASSORTEDeeeu•••••

10 fiw•1

1

Man's inse!U!ilivity to l)ls . Cradle to the qrave"; Mrs. · During the business :.esslon, group for a gift of money. Miss
environment, . -resulting in Joseph Cook, "PeQiile Need members voted to jlllr!icijlllte Demott, a student at the
havoc in a W\)l'ld created by Each Other the Worl&lt;l Over'\ in the .P.toj.el;_t to replenish Eastern Baptist Seminary at
God, was effecllvely depicted Mrs. J : Edward Foster, "In the personal · .items lost by Philadelphia,' Pa., told of her .
with posters and 'displays as End eo· We Choose Star- Gallipolis State Instit~te forthcoming trip to the Holy
the theme of a program vation"; Mrs. Ellen Couch, jllltients in the recent fire Land and indicated that she
presented by Mrs . Oliver "'"ove and Uve"; Mrs. Ivan there. ·
would use the money to assist
Michad at Thursday night's Walker, "Some ~w~rs to the
Arrangements were made With expenses of the trip.
meeting of the Missionary question - 'But What Can 1 lor a visit to ·the Community
Cancelled stamps and bottle
Society of the Pomeroy First Do?"; and Mrs.:. Michael' t:]ass for Retarded Children in caps to he redeemed for cash
Baptist Church. .
"Hopeful Finds."
February. Mrs. Ivan Walker were collected at the meeting.
· :•our _Planet ,Earth The program concluded with · and Mrs. Orval Wiles are
Mrs . Ski.nner and Mrs. Harry
Tro~ble Ln ,Eden was the group singing of "This Is My chairmen lor the visit Bail!!)~' served a dessert course
theme .. H ~ened with a· · Ft~,ther's. World," and prayer llefreshrnents' will be served · ·from a table ~entered with a
recordtng "Creation." Two by Mrs. KU!in. ·
and those who will contribute ' hurricane candle . . Attending
Bibles, one opened to tlle_ story
Mrs. Cook presided at the cookies are asked to contact l&gt;esides those named were Mrs
of the creation m GenesiS and '· meeting. Mrs. Kuhn was at the one of the chairmen. ·
L. P. Sterrett, Mrs. Albert ·
the· othet to Psalnis 24, and ' .piano for "They'll Know
· A letter was read from Miss Smith, Mrs. William Watson
posters , depic,itng
the . ar~ Chrl~ti~ns By Our Love." Nancy Demott thanking the Mrs. T. T. Shelton, and Mrs:
destruction 1by man of God's
&gt;
· .,
"
Les~r Price.
perfect creation and possible
·i · dl, • If
solutions to the ecological
problems of smog, garbage,
pesticides, pollution, were
placed above a scene of debris
strewn about to depict man's
insensitivity ' to · his en- Educational TV for the nine was .announced for Feb. 9 at Mrs. Julia McComas was
classrooms. of the Middleport 7:30p.m. on·the topic "The Art appointed to study the needs,
virorunent.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER CLASS OF 1974 - First
· Readings pertaining to the Elementary School was of Story Telling."
Jean etta Lambert, Gallipolis. Third row, Patricia Lucas
detennine costs, and arrive at
proposed
Monday
night·by
the
A
meeting
of
the
Meigs
row,
1~1 to right: Gle~da Wilcoxon, Ashville; Karen Evans,
topic were given by' Mrs.
funding.
Little Hocking ; Teresa Gardner, Point Pleasant; Connie J~
County Council 'of Parents and
Gellrge Skinner, "The World Middleport PTA. · •
'Oak
Hill;
Deborah
Hunter,
Wellston;
Bridget
Baker,
HunAppointed to the by-law
Tucker, Christiansburg; Emily Grose, Cheshire; Mary
was announced for committee were Mrs. Manning
Speaks; the Word Replies," , . Mrs. Richard Vaughan, ~ice Teachers
tington,
W
.
Va.;
Beverly
Branham,
Stoutsville;
Debra
Bradbury, Middleport; Scharlotte Runyon, Port William;
1
Mrs. Robert Kuhn, "From the president, said cable service Feb. 3 at Racine. At the Kloes, Milfotd Hysell, and Mrs.
Lorbach, Jackson; Ma!y Lucas, Circleville
and
Deborah
Linda Lieving, Point Pleasant; Marcia Smith, Gallipolis, and
. '
lor each of .the rooms is . February · meeting of the Stanley Doss. Mrs. Doss, Mrs.
Greene, Jackson . Second row, Cathy Hutchison Jackson·
Cheryl
Pearson, Gallipolis Ferry. Fourth row Aline Clark
available at a lpmimum ·cOst Middleport unit, Founder's Rober.t Richardson and Mrs.
Alicia Jeffers, Winfield, W. Va.; Gwendolyn 'uewellyn',
Gallipolis; Frances Simon, Wheelersburg; ~borah Wood;
and that local businessmen Day will be observed and the Bradford,Maag were named to
Athens; Betsy Hughes, Jackson; Linda McDougle, Belpre;
Lmg Bottom; Deborah Gollihue, Oak Hill ; Fred Culllp,
have agreed to give used sets to Ohio University juniors the budget committee.
Beverly Rowland, Gallipolis; Deborah Mitcbell, Albany;
Galll~lls;
Judith Fisher, Gallipolis; Barbara Ellen Taylor,
the school.
working at the school will be
Mrs. Jean Thomas, mem~aron Hall, Ironton; Teresa Barker, Ashland, Ky., and
Oak Hill, and Jamie G. Folsom, West Portsmouth.
Mrs. Vaughan suggested that · honored. At that meeting also a · bership chainnan, reported 191
the se'!l c~ be repaired by program will tie presented by membell,.lt was noted by Mrs.
' .
Meigs _High Schoohocational the kirlderg~rten children.
.education
students for use in
A 'report on progress in the Vaughan that District 16 now
· The . sixth . birthday .anhasamep!bersrupof3;953,709
7\
niversary of Zandra Vaughan, the ~lassrooms. Detat,ls of reading P,rogram was given by Tore
)han
the 1976-71 figure.
J
daughter of Mf. and Mrs. securmg the sets, havmg them Robert Morris, princijllll, who ' The 1program presented by
Richard Vaughan, was repaired, and installed at the also discussed several other the bhio University Players
·
·
The Holzer !"edlcal Center Bere?ice Skehan, director of Lieving; treasurer, Linda Medical Center Candys~
celebrated with a family jlllrty school will be worked out with special programs to be in- was entitled "There was a
troduced into the classroom Uttie Boy."
School of Nursmg ~ill hold its Nur~mg Education at Holzer McDouble; parliamentarian, who are Diana Unroe, Hannan
on Sundliy and a Pl!i:ty with her school personnel.'
It
was
announced
there
will
.
soon.
·
Mrs. Jennifer Butcher's annual . pro~OtiO~s and Medical Center.
Scharlotte Runyan; historian, Trace High School; Denise
kinder_garten class on Monday.
be
a
Right
to
Read
program
at
Appr~ximately
$500
was
second grade .won the , at· recogmtion serv1ce this Fflday
Follo~mg . the rot~ call by Bridget Baker; honor court Wright, Gallia Academy High
;Atleildlng the family party
the
Meigs
Inn
on
Jan.
25
at
7:30
cleared
on
ways
and
means
tendance
banner
Th
hild
.'
at
8
p.m.
at
Grace
United
'
Mrs.
Lmda Braun, Instructor representative Marcia Smith· School; Hope Amos, Kyger
besidea Mr. a~rs.. Vaughan
Methodist Church in Gallipolis. and class advisor, caps Will be curriculum co~ittee, Glend~ Creek High School; Dian·~t·- .
!~ere Beth, Don. and Bill p.m. Joy~ r.eyme will ,be ~e ,Prajects, Mrs. Richard Long, led in the pledge' to ~; fla;·~:
~~er,at
_
U
J,e
prpgram
.which
~hairman,
reported.
The
need
open the meetllig. Devotio~
Special mus1c w1ll be pn;sented by the Junior Class. Wilcoxon; and studen 1 ser- Sword, Southwestern lit'gh·;·,.; '
•vaua!WJ·
,· f. Mrs,
: ' An nice
' i
.
School, and Cathy Queen, ·
Ohll1iger, ,.~~t.grandmother IS bemg handled throj~th Mrs. . lor draperies was discussed were by the Rev. Raullin prese~ted by the School of - Th1s ":1ll be followed by a vices, Betsy Hughes.
Gretta.
Suttle,
ele_mentary
·and
Mrs.
Long,
Mrs.
Stanley
Moyer.
Nurstng Glee Club under candlehghting cerem?ny a~td
Usherettes will be Holzer North Gallia High School.
of Zandra, and. Mrs. ~Iizabeth
direction
of
Mrs.
Anne
Fischer
then
the
new
class
will
rec1te
superviSor.
A
second
.~ee~ng
.
·
Doss,
Mrs.
Sarah
Rupe,
and
P81'S0111j, her gra
!her, of
' •,- ·.
.
with Miss Suzanne Thompson the Florence Nightingale
Charleston, W1 ~a · 'I · .
as accomjlllnist.
Pledge led by Miss Sandra
,
On Monday ' '
\Vaughan
The
35-member
-Studen't
Simmons,
president
of
student
served clipea~es, ,1ce cream
Nurse Class of '74 will be government.
and milk to Zandra~' !lftemoon
presented by Mrs. {lope Wolfe,
Freshmen class officers are:
kinderg$rlen classllllltes.
Help send a' ~-1 to' ca ,
Lnslructor, and the acceptance president, Patricia Janel
• ·Favors · were ·balloons.
,
mp·,
area. .
, !
.
will be delivered by the scouts
· ~ Aasti~·.,............._ __ .e """c . You biiJtr~;
t';'-)liriPty try
Ciis1"of the t ookies !Sl ~~• . lhiiveek o{'·'r
.eli I. G1r·Is ar·e of the class Will be~bY. .jlliss....-Lu~s;
vjce-presid~n.t, Jamie
;u-e "'~' ""'·Rn Ulf were bu·ytng atrt
t
ki
MB
Fotsom
·
,
secretary, Llnda
Mlai)i . McMillion, Eric CuJJ..
" scou coo es.
cents per box and there is. a 2 to collect for. the cookies at the
,..._~_..,...
nlngham, and Cheryl Rife.
Mrs. Thomas Sinlth, cookie cent state tax. That's how the time of delivery.
l
sale chairman for the Big Bend cookie "crumbles" to make up
Troop leaders met Monday
Neighborhood, said Monday the customer price of 55 ceqts a night at the home of Mrs. Smith
'
for the first time scouts will be box.
to pick up the sale packets and
given camp credit for each box
Weston Biscuit Company of to sample the cookies which
Doc~ments
of cookies they sell.
' Battle Creek, Mich. provides are being offered for sale this
WEDNESDAY
'ffiURSDAY
The new plan allows credit of the cookies in five kinds - -year.
·WINDING TRAIL Garden
WOMEN OF Eastern
10 cents per Pllckage sold frosties, sandwich cremes, thin '
Club, Wednesday, 7:30p.m. at Athletic Boosters meet at high
tow~d a two .week session at mints, sugared shortbread,
home of Mrs. Lloyd Moore. . school 8 p.m. Thursday to plan
Also""""
Camp Sandy Bend near and peanut b~tter patties. in
BOSWORTH COUNCIL 46 for jitney supper to be staged
Chicken, Shrimp, 0
oi.J'~i~~~~.~ Elizabeth, W. Va. and five ThW coOkies are available to
Dinners and Short
7:30
p.m. Pomeroy Masoni~ at 5 p.m. on Friday, Jan. 28, at
ce11ts per Cjlllkage toward a one th~:i'f)ubllc · onlY'' \tlfough Girl
' HOURS
Temple. Regular business school.
Mon .• Tues., Wed., Thurs.
week session.
Scouts.
·
meeting followed by the conI a.m. tlli12 midnight
EXECUTIVE Board
In addition ,to camp credit, .' Only junior, cadette and
Fri.
&amp;
Sat
..
ferring
of
the
select
master
'I
meeting, Pomeroy Elementary
troop treasufles prof1t in ~e se~ior scouts will be selling
u.m. li)lta.m.
11, ,,
degree
in
full
form.
All
comPTA, I p.m. Thursday at the
sale . .For each box ~ cookies cookies. 'Brownie scouts will
Agoing away party honoring
I•' '
Sunday
panions
urged
to
attend.
school.
'
sold,
the
troop
re~e
ves
fi~e
not
jlllrticijlllte
in
the
program
Pvt.
Larry
Warner,
son
of
Mrs.
2 p.m. Till II p.m.
1
MIDDLEPORT LiTERARY
MIDDLEPORT Child
cents, an~ the Fuur Rivers G1rl which is the main method of . Jean Warner, Pomeroy, was
Club,
2
p.m.
Wednesday,
home
League, 7:30
Conservation
Scout Council if¥. cen~ which support of girl scouting in the held recently at the. Racine
of
Mrs.
0.
B.
Stout.
Mrs.
p.m. Thursday, Columbus and
771
goes .toward the eqwpment, Four Rivers Council.
. home of April Teaford a~d
Dwight
Wallace
to
review
"The
Southern Ohio Electric Co. :
I.U\
.
sup.phes, le,adership and
Girl scouts will be taking Lynda Warner. Pvt. Warner IS
.
House on Jefferson Street" by skit entitled "The 1\oom UpPh.ll2·2416
mamtena~ce of establlshe4:t ~~~-,~lnriing' at 4 p.m. on stationed at Fort Knox, Ky .
Horace Gregory. Response, a stairs." Each member to give
w
•.•v•••.._ .. CBf(lp facilities in the Council ' Jan. '28 and continuing through Attending the jlllrty were favor1te
Fire, Theft. Loss. They can't be
l
poem.
a
nickel
for
each
year
In
CCL.
,.
/ Feb. 7. The cookies ordered Paul Black, Ed Cozart, Toney
foreseen. But, you can protect your
P...,ST PRESIDENTS, Drew
ROCK SPRINGS Better •
1!1111'..,_~~_,~.,...~-~
~.,...---.:.
Manley,
Roger
Pickens,
•
Melanie Walters, Susie Ball, Webster Post 39, American Health Club, 1:15 p.m. Thursdocuments against them with a safe, Susie Thabet, Sue Provo, Alice Legion Auxiliary, 7:30 Wed- day home of· Mrs. George
ty deposit box. It's foolproof, Get ,
Zuspan, Virgil Phillips, Esther nesday night at the home of Skinner. Mrs. f}ladys Morgan,
FLAG COMING
the facts , .. come in today,
An American fiag provided Proffitt, Kim Beck, Kandi· Mrs . George Hackett, Sr., program: Mrs. Amos Leonard,
by Congressman Clarence Sayre, Lynn Black, and Jeff Middleport.
contest.
Low Rental Rates
Tillis.
WILLING
WORKERS
Class,
Miller to the American Legion
Enterprise United Methodist
Auxiliary of Drew Webster
Church, 7:30 Thursday night,
OPENING
Post 39 will be presented 1&lt;1 the
home
of
Mrs.
Eldon
Weeks.
_
' Salisllury Elementary School
SPECIALS
THIRD
WEDNESDAY
in a nag raising ceremony at
Homemakers Club, Wed·
2:15 p.m. Wednesday. Mrs.
nesday, 10 a.m. at meeting
Kenneth Harris, Americanism
house
on Syracuse Municipal
i,,~halmum, will be assisted in
.'
.\ .
Park grounds. Potluck dinner
the presentation ceremony by
Owner &amp; Operator
FOR ·
at noon. All interested
several .legionnaires.
Virginia Hayman
Mrs. Richard Vaughan and homemakers invited.
Phone 667-3041
,.~~~~-"!""'.__;·· Mrs. Harold Lohse were in
PAST PRESIDENTS,
Columbus Thursday and American Legion Aul(iliary,
Located: On Co. Road 46
. MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
(Success Road), between St.
Friday attending a meeting of Drew Webster Post, 7:30 p.m.
Rt. 1 &amp; Chester Road 248.
l\fember Fede~ Dep01lt bql!fi'.DCe Ct1 IIOdtloD
the executive poard of the Ohio Wednesday, home of Mrs.
~l;L
Hhoda Hackett, Middleport.
MISS WONDERFUL , PTA.
~
· Mrs . Vaughan, juvenile r-:----~----:--------------------.:L:.:
'
protection chairman lor the
Rin9 Styio
·Ohio PTA, ·serves ort the
Dress &amp; Casuals
No. 6i
legislation committee. Mrs .
Lohse is the District 16 director
Reg. to
and
a!Bo serves on a state·
$1 }.95 $13.99
comrnlttee. The meeting was
. Set with radiant birthThe New Meigs Inn
held at the Pick-Fort Hayes
stones- one sl~ne for
Hotel.
ueh member of the
fomily.
',.

LUNCH MEATS

gal99~
I

Pork _Neck Bones .

BOLOGNA
00

Superiors All Meat

TOPPS BRAND

"

r

Ed-TV Plan is Proposed

WIENERS

~ILK

,

·

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we

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BRAN()

GRADE A

-

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'Slab Bacon..
. .

~

Ecologjq,4l Blindness

Sirtoin ·Stew Meat

SUPERIORS
.,

SEALTEST - lh GAL 53' '

..... ...

'

.

1-TbelllllySeMiJiel,~rt-l'ollldliy,().,Jan. 11,1972

'11,1972

3 lb.

~.

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'

- lb.

.

I

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.

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.

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Ground Chuck
Ground
Beef
FRESH,

Choppe~

GROUND FROM

GROUND FROM

All

QiOICE USDA
LfAN BEEF

atoiCE LOIN
. .
SAVE 2f lB.

lb.

-

IJNEI FSS BEEF FOR SOUP
lb.
AND BEEF STEW •

lb.·

.

.

-

SUPER.IORS.

SLICED

lb.

PORK SAUSAGE
HOME
5 .9~1b.
.MADE

12

POP

oZJ

Throw-

Away Bottles

JERZEE CANNED

MILK

I

.

t

for

PILLSBURY

\.

..rol .

, I

\\ ' pkg.

SCOT LAD

I

•
GLEEM TOOTHPASTE

39"

MINT FlAVOR
1 OZ. TUBE

l

PAPER TOWEls

10~

'

SCOT lAD

•

CAT FOOD

150t' '1
cans.
.

4200ct$1

~

.

4

.
pak gge

COFFEE

89!r

Extra Right Hand Glove Free
Reg.

89'

·•· ~-· lb.

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69°

POT~'fOES •••• ~ •••••• __

. ~N BREAQ. .........

pkp.

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!OCEAN PERCH~~ ........ ~.~!b:49. ·
'

~~BRAND

'

. ·

Fairmont

~~

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* pl&amp;g_
c

' '

•

YEUOW CORN, WHOLE KERNEL .
PEAS - SPINACH
G.R~~N BEANS- SHELLOUT. BEANS
.
ltPPLE SAUCE

,.

Social Calendar

Our- Vaults Protect
All Vltc:il

.rarty Given for
P:
vt. L. Wanzer

J&amp;F

.

HUT

Pl

l..illiNtw-H••••'."•'

..

Meigs Women at

~-lti4!U

Virginia's

Beauty Partor

Board Meeting ·

_____;__;___

Announcement!

.DINING ROOM NOW OPEN

·~

•

'

'

I

J.,
'

'

i

.

Ring can be !!)Ide' to
hold from two to live
birthstones,

Featuring

Serving Dinner

Char Broiled Steaks

I

ln.proeious lOki. yellow
or white gold.

4 P.M. TO 9 P.M.

and A
Selected Menu

.5 cans'.
lb.

SUPER MARKET. ~ Open_.Oailv _9;to 10· ~ Sun.

We Accepl F~ral FO(Ht St~
'
. PHON&amp;: 992·348~ . . ·. · ti&amp;nn
.
.
Comer Mill and Secoild Sts• .'''!'• Rne••• The Right To Li!ftlt Q,uanlities" ....,LEPORT. 0

.

· ·

The MEIGS INN

GoeSsler ·Jewelry Store
Court St.

POMEROY, OHIO

Po~eroy

'
'

!

Sold jQr ·Camp

'7.50

Golden .ftipe

.BANANAS.

'

SHOES

•

Scot Lad Buys!

35 stUdent 1 'ITUr.'
; C"eS tO be Promoted

Is Celebrated

MOTHER

.ICE .
CREAM"

\; \

can

g

I

. ~;

.

.

oz..gge
12

~ sgrr LAD.FRENCH FRIED

Sixtk Birthday

'we

'

0[;)@00illr10 gge

ELM TREE

Chase &amp;Sanborn

Reg. 11.49

PLAYTEX RUBBER GLOVES

- 79~

'

'3'~

TAPES

z .

crtns.

boxes

.POPULAR, CoUt(TRY &amp; WESTERN

DIXIE DISPENSER &amp;.
30 - 9 OZ. CUPS

'

2% MILK ORANG~ ~iUICE ••_
.......8.:-~~:e

.FRISKI£S

~TRACK

'

sa.oT LAD

Trash Can Uners

FACIAL TISSUES

'FilOzEN·
FOOD
. . .
.- .

.ICE _CREAM •••.~~!t-···~•····•:~

WHILE
THEY
LAST

·HEm BRAND

~MFUA

'

.

for

,
It

.

,..,..r....o#o_____;...___

8. ~~
69~
-

~39~

CAKE ·MIX-

iI•

-

Cook.i~s

RC COLA :

Unclassified ·

bxs.
I

I

'

.

:.ar~e

'

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'

1

THURSDAY ONLY
.
. SALE!

EGGS

~

.\

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79·
O
.

\

\.

00

lb.

SUPERIOIIS . , . lb.
ASSORTEDeeeu•••••

10 fiw•1

1

Man's inse!U!ilivity to l)ls . Cradle to the qrave"; Mrs. · During the business :.esslon, group for a gift of money. Miss
environment, . -resulting in Joseph Cook, "PeQiile Need members voted to jlllr!icijlllte Demott, a student at the
havoc in a W\)l'ld created by Each Other the Worl&lt;l Over'\ in the .P.toj.el;_t to replenish Eastern Baptist Seminary at
God, was effecllvely depicted Mrs. J : Edward Foster, "In the personal · .items lost by Philadelphia,' Pa., told of her .
with posters and 'displays as End eo· We Choose Star- Gallipolis State Instit~te forthcoming trip to the Holy
the theme of a program vation"; Mrs. Ellen Couch, jllltients in the recent fire Land and indicated that she
presented by Mrs . Oliver "'"ove and Uve"; Mrs. Ivan there. ·
would use the money to assist
Michad at Thursday night's Walker, "Some ~w~rs to the
Arrangements were made With expenses of the trip.
meeting of the Missionary question - 'But What Can 1 lor a visit to ·the Community
Cancelled stamps and bottle
Society of the Pomeroy First Do?"; and Mrs.:. Michael' t:]ass for Retarded Children in caps to he redeemed for cash
Baptist Church. .
"Hopeful Finds."
February. Mrs. Ivan Walker were collected at the meeting.
· :•our _Planet ,Earth The program concluded with · and Mrs. Orval Wiles are
Mrs . Ski.nner and Mrs. Harry
Tro~ble Ln ,Eden was the group singing of "This Is My chairmen lor the visit Bail!!)~' served a dessert course
theme .. H ~ened with a· · Ft~,ther's. World," and prayer llefreshrnents' will be served · ·from a table ~entered with a
recordtng "Creation." Two by Mrs. KU!in. ·
and those who will contribute ' hurricane candle . . Attending
Bibles, one opened to tlle_ story
Mrs. Cook presided at the cookies are asked to contact l&gt;esides those named were Mrs
of the creation m GenesiS and '· meeting. Mrs. Kuhn was at the one of the chairmen. ·
L. P. Sterrett, Mrs. Albert ·
the· othet to Psalnis 24, and ' .piano for "They'll Know
· A letter was read from Miss Smith, Mrs. William Watson
posters , depic,itng
the . ar~ Chrl~ti~ns By Our Love." Nancy Demott thanking the Mrs. T. T. Shelton, and Mrs:
destruction 1by man of God's
&gt;
· .,
"
Les~r Price.
perfect creation and possible
·i · dl, • If
solutions to the ecological
problems of smog, garbage,
pesticides, pollution, were
placed above a scene of debris
strewn about to depict man's
insensitivity ' to · his en- Educational TV for the nine was .announced for Feb. 9 at Mrs. Julia McComas was
classrooms. of the Middleport 7:30p.m. on·the topic "The Art appointed to study the needs,
virorunent.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER CLASS OF 1974 - First
· Readings pertaining to the Elementary School was of Story Telling."
Jean etta Lambert, Gallipolis. Third row, Patricia Lucas
detennine costs, and arrive at
proposed
Monday
night·by
the
A
meeting
of
the
Meigs
row,
1~1 to right: Gle~da Wilcoxon, Ashville; Karen Evans,
topic were given by' Mrs.
funding.
Little Hocking ; Teresa Gardner, Point Pleasant; Connie J~
County Council 'of Parents and
Gellrge Skinner, "The World Middleport PTA. · •
'Oak
Hill;
Deborah
Hunter,
Wellston;
Bridget
Baker,
HunAppointed to the by-law
Tucker, Christiansburg; Emily Grose, Cheshire; Mary
was announced for committee were Mrs. Manning
Speaks; the Word Replies," , . Mrs. Richard Vaughan, ~ice Teachers
tington,
W
.
Va.;
Beverly
Branham,
Stoutsville;
Debra
Bradbury, Middleport; Scharlotte Runyon, Port William;
1
Mrs. Robert Kuhn, "From the president, said cable service Feb. 3 at Racine. At the Kloes, Milfotd Hysell, and Mrs.
Lorbach, Jackson; Ma!y Lucas, Circleville
and
Deborah
Linda Lieving, Point Pleasant; Marcia Smith, Gallipolis, and
. '
lor each of .the rooms is . February · meeting of the Stanley Doss. Mrs. Doss, Mrs.
Greene, Jackson . Second row, Cathy Hutchison Jackson·
Cheryl
Pearson, Gallipolis Ferry. Fourth row Aline Clark
available at a lpmimum ·cOst Middleport unit, Founder's Rober.t Richardson and Mrs.
Alicia Jeffers, Winfield, W. Va.; Gwendolyn 'uewellyn',
Gallipolis; Frances Simon, Wheelersburg; ~borah Wood;
and that local businessmen Day will be observed and the Bradford,Maag were named to
Athens; Betsy Hughes, Jackson; Linda McDougle, Belpre;
Lmg Bottom; Deborah Gollihue, Oak Hill ; Fred Culllp,
have agreed to give used sets to Ohio University juniors the budget committee.
Beverly Rowland, Gallipolis; Deborah Mitcbell, Albany;
Galll~lls;
Judith Fisher, Gallipolis; Barbara Ellen Taylor,
the school.
working at the school will be
Mrs. Jean Thomas, mem~aron Hall, Ironton; Teresa Barker, Ashland, Ky., and
Oak Hill, and Jamie G. Folsom, West Portsmouth.
Mrs. Vaughan suggested that · honored. At that meeting also a · bership chainnan, reported 191
the se'!l c~ be repaired by program will tie presented by membell,.lt was noted by Mrs.
' .
Meigs _High Schoohocational the kirlderg~rten children.
.education
students for use in
A 'report on progress in the Vaughan that District 16 now
· The . sixth . birthday .anhasamep!bersrupof3;953,709
7\
niversary of Zandra Vaughan, the ~lassrooms. Detat,ls of reading P,rogram was given by Tore
)han
the 1976-71 figure.
J
daughter of Mf. and Mrs. securmg the sets, havmg them Robert Morris, princijllll, who ' The 1program presented by
Richard Vaughan, was repaired, and installed at the also discussed several other the bhio University Players
·
·
The Holzer !"edlcal Center Bere?ice Skehan, director of Lieving; treasurer, Linda Medical Center Candys~
celebrated with a family jlllrty school will be worked out with special programs to be in- was entitled "There was a
troduced into the classroom Uttie Boy."
School of Nursmg ~ill hold its Nur~mg Education at Holzer McDouble; parliamentarian, who are Diana Unroe, Hannan
on Sundliy and a Pl!i:ty with her school personnel.'
It
was
announced
there
will
.
soon.
·
Mrs. Jennifer Butcher's annual . pro~OtiO~s and Medical Center.
Scharlotte Runyan; historian, Trace High School; Denise
kinder_garten class on Monday.
be
a
Right
to
Read
program
at
Appr~ximately
$500
was
second grade .won the , at· recogmtion serv1ce this Fflday
Follo~mg . the rot~ call by Bridget Baker; honor court Wright, Gallia Academy High
;Atleildlng the family party
the
Meigs
Inn
on
Jan.
25
at
7:30
cleared
on
ways
and
means
tendance
banner
Th
hild
.'
at
8
p.m.
at
Grace
United
'
Mrs.
Lmda Braun, Instructor representative Marcia Smith· School; Hope Amos, Kyger
besidea Mr. a~rs.. Vaughan
Methodist Church in Gallipolis. and class advisor, caps Will be curriculum co~ittee, Glend~ Creek High School; Dian·~t·- .
!~ere Beth, Don. and Bill p.m. Joy~ r.eyme will ,be ~e ,Prajects, Mrs. Richard Long, led in the pledge' to ~; fla;·~:
~~er,at
_
U
J,e
prpgram
.which
~hairman,
reported.
The
need
open the meetllig. Devotio~
Special mus1c w1ll be pn;sented by the Junior Class. Wilcoxon; and studen 1 ser- Sword, Southwestern lit'gh·;·,.; '
•vaua!WJ·
,· f. Mrs,
: ' An nice
' i
.
School, and Cathy Queen, ·
Ohll1iger, ,.~~t.grandmother IS bemg handled throj~th Mrs. . lor draperies was discussed were by the Rev. Raullin prese~ted by the School of - Th1s ":1ll be followed by a vices, Betsy Hughes.
Gretta.
Suttle,
ele_mentary
·and
Mrs.
Long,
Mrs.
Stanley
Moyer.
Nurstng Glee Club under candlehghting cerem?ny a~td
Usherettes will be Holzer North Gallia High School.
of Zandra, and. Mrs. ~Iizabeth
direction
of
Mrs.
Anne
Fischer
then
the
new
class
will
rec1te
superviSor.
A
second
.~ee~ng
.
·
Doss,
Mrs.
Sarah
Rupe,
and
P81'S0111j, her gra
!her, of
' •,- ·.
.
with Miss Suzanne Thompson the Florence Nightingale
Charleston, W1 ~a · 'I · .
as accomjlllnist.
Pledge led by Miss Sandra
,
On Monday ' '
\Vaughan
The
35-member
-Studen't
Simmons,
president
of
student
served clipea~es, ,1ce cream
Nurse Class of '74 will be government.
and milk to Zandra~' !lftemoon
presented by Mrs. {lope Wolfe,
Freshmen class officers are:
kinderg$rlen classllllltes.
Help send a' ~-1 to' ca ,
Lnslructor, and the acceptance president, Patricia Janel
• ·Favors · were ·balloons.
,
mp·,
area. .
, !
.
will be delivered by the scouts
· ~ Aasti~·.,............._ __ .e """c . You biiJtr~;
t';'-)liriPty try
Ciis1"of the t ookies !Sl ~~• . lhiiveek o{'·'r
.eli I. G1r·Is ar·e of the class Will be~bY. .jlliss....-Lu~s;
vjce-presid~n.t, Jamie
;u-e "'~' ""'·Rn Ulf were bu·ytng atrt
t
ki
MB
Fotsom
·
,
secretary, Llnda
Mlai)i . McMillion, Eric CuJJ..
" scou coo es.
cents per box and there is. a 2 to collect for. the cookies at the
,..._~_..,...
nlngham, and Cheryl Rife.
Mrs. Thomas Sinlth, cookie cent state tax. That's how the time of delivery.
l
sale chairman for the Big Bend cookie "crumbles" to make up
Troop leaders met Monday
Neighborhood, said Monday the customer price of 55 ceqts a night at the home of Mrs. Smith
'
for the first time scouts will be box.
to pick up the sale packets and
given camp credit for each box
Weston Biscuit Company of to sample the cookies which
Doc~ments
of cookies they sell.
' Battle Creek, Mich. provides are being offered for sale this
WEDNESDAY
'ffiURSDAY
The new plan allows credit of the cookies in five kinds - -year.
·WINDING TRAIL Garden
WOMEN OF Eastern
10 cents per Pllckage sold frosties, sandwich cremes, thin '
Club, Wednesday, 7:30p.m. at Athletic Boosters meet at high
tow~d a two .week session at mints, sugared shortbread,
home of Mrs. Lloyd Moore. . school 8 p.m. Thursday to plan
Also""""
Camp Sandy Bend near and peanut b~tter patties. in
BOSWORTH COUNCIL 46 for jitney supper to be staged
Chicken, Shrimp, 0
oi.J'~i~~~~.~ Elizabeth, W. Va. and five ThW coOkies are available to
Dinners and Short
7:30
p.m. Pomeroy Masoni~ at 5 p.m. on Friday, Jan. 28, at
ce11ts per Cjlllkage toward a one th~:i'f)ubllc · onlY'' \tlfough Girl
' HOURS
Temple. Regular business school.
Mon .• Tues., Wed., Thurs.
week session.
Scouts.
·
meeting followed by the conI a.m. tlli12 midnight
EXECUTIVE Board
In addition ,to camp credit, .' Only junior, cadette and
Fri.
&amp;
Sat
..
ferring
of
the
select
master
'I
meeting, Pomeroy Elementary
troop treasufles prof1t in ~e se~ior scouts will be selling
u.m. li)lta.m.
11, ,,
degree
in
full
form.
All
comPTA, I p.m. Thursday at the
sale . .For each box ~ cookies cookies. 'Brownie scouts will
Agoing away party honoring
I•' '
Sunday
panions
urged
to
attend.
school.
'
sold,
the
troop
re~e
ves
fi~e
not
jlllrticijlllte
in
the
program
Pvt.
Larry
Warner,
son
of
Mrs.
2 p.m. Till II p.m.
1
MIDDLEPORT LiTERARY
MIDDLEPORT Child
cents, an~ the Fuur Rivers G1rl which is the main method of . Jean Warner, Pomeroy, was
Club,
2
p.m.
Wednesday,
home
League, 7:30
Conservation
Scout Council if¥. cen~ which support of girl scouting in the held recently at the. Racine
of
Mrs.
0.
B.
Stout.
Mrs.
p.m. Thursday, Columbus and
771
goes .toward the eqwpment, Four Rivers Council.
. home of April Teaford a~d
Dwight
Wallace
to
review
"The
Southern Ohio Electric Co. :
I.U\
.
sup.phes, le,adership and
Girl scouts will be taking Lynda Warner. Pvt. Warner IS
.
House on Jefferson Street" by skit entitled "The 1\oom UpPh.ll2·2416
mamtena~ce of establlshe4:t ~~~-,~lnriing' at 4 p.m. on stationed at Fort Knox, Ky .
Horace Gregory. Response, a stairs." Each member to give
w
•.•v•••.._ .. CBf(lp facilities in the Council ' Jan. '28 and continuing through Attending the jlllrty were favor1te
Fire, Theft. Loss. They can't be
l
poem.
a
nickel
for
each
year
In
CCL.
,.
/ Feb. 7. The cookies ordered Paul Black, Ed Cozart, Toney
foreseen. But, you can protect your
P...,ST PRESIDENTS, Drew
ROCK SPRINGS Better •
1!1111'..,_~~_,~.,...~-~
~.,...---.:.
Manley,
Roger
Pickens,
•
Melanie Walters, Susie Ball, Webster Post 39, American Health Club, 1:15 p.m. Thursdocuments against them with a safe, Susie Thabet, Sue Provo, Alice Legion Auxiliary, 7:30 Wed- day home of· Mrs. George
ty deposit box. It's foolproof, Get ,
Zuspan, Virgil Phillips, Esther nesday night at the home of Skinner. Mrs. f}ladys Morgan,
FLAG COMING
the facts , .. come in today,
An American fiag provided Proffitt, Kim Beck, Kandi· Mrs . George Hackett, Sr., program: Mrs. Amos Leonard,
by Congressman Clarence Sayre, Lynn Black, and Jeff Middleport.
contest.
Low Rental Rates
Tillis.
WILLING
WORKERS
Class,
Miller to the American Legion
Enterprise United Methodist
Auxiliary of Drew Webster
Church, 7:30 Thursday night,
OPENING
Post 39 will be presented 1&lt;1 the
home
of
Mrs.
Eldon
Weeks.
_
' Salisllury Elementary School
SPECIALS
THIRD
WEDNESDAY
in a nag raising ceremony at
Homemakers Club, Wed·
2:15 p.m. Wednesday. Mrs.
nesday, 10 a.m. at meeting
Kenneth Harris, Americanism
house
on Syracuse Municipal
i,,~halmum, will be assisted in
.'
.\ .
Park grounds. Potluck dinner
the presentation ceremony by
Owner &amp; Operator
FOR ·
at noon. All interested
several .legionnaires.
Virginia Hayman
Mrs. Richard Vaughan and homemakers invited.
Phone 667-3041
,.~~~~-"!""'.__;·· Mrs. Harold Lohse were in
PAST PRESIDENTS,
Columbus Thursday and American Legion Aul(iliary,
Located: On Co. Road 46
. MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
(Success Road), between St.
Friday attending a meeting of Drew Webster Post, 7:30 p.m.
Rt. 1 &amp; Chester Road 248.
l\fember Fede~ Dep01lt bql!fi'.DCe Ct1 IIOdtloD
the executive poard of the Ohio Wednesday, home of Mrs.
~l;L
Hhoda Hackett, Middleport.
MISS WONDERFUL , PTA.
~
· Mrs . Vaughan, juvenile r-:----~----:--------------------.:L:.:
'
protection chairman lor the
Rin9 Styio
·Ohio PTA, ·serves ort the
Dress &amp; Casuals
No. 6i
legislation committee. Mrs .
Lohse is the District 16 director
Reg. to
and
a!Bo serves on a state·
$1 }.95 $13.99
comrnlttee. The meeting was
. Set with radiant birthThe New Meigs Inn
held at the Pick-Fort Hayes
stones- one sl~ne for
Hotel.
ueh member of the
fomily.
',.

LUNCH MEATS

gal99~
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Pork _Neck Bones .

BOLOGNA
00

Superiors All Meat

TOPPS BRAND

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Ed-TV Plan is Proposed

WIENERS

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Ecologjq,4l Blindness

Sirtoin ·Stew Meat

SUPERIORS
.,

SEALTEST - lh GAL 53' '

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1-TbelllllySeMiJiel,~rt-l'ollldliy,().,Jan. 11,1972

'11,1972

3 lb.

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RESOLUTION NO. 979·72
ANNUAL
APPROPRIATIONS
RESOLUTION
(VILLAGE) 10 meke
•A RESOLUTION
•pproprlotlons . for current
E•Jienses and othor Expendlt!Jrts of the · Vltlage of

'

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Middleport, State of Ohl.o , taken togethor with ell other
during the fiscal year . ending outstanding approprlallons, do
.. December 31 , 1972.
not exceed such official
t'
Section 1. BE IT RESOLVED , estimate or amended official
by the Councillor the VIllage of· estimate . When the ap .
~ Mldd:eport, Statt of OhiC), fhat , proprlatlon does nor exceed
to ~ r ovlde for the current ex - such official estimate, the
ponsos and other expenditures county aud itor shall give such
of tho sold VIllage of Middleport cortlficate torthwllh upon
during the fiscal y .. r ending receiving from the ap .
December 31, 1972, tNe proprlitlng authority a certified
following sums be ·and they are copy of the appropriation
hereby set aside and ap - measure."
•
pr,oprlated as follows, viz :
Section 2. That there be ap - The State of Meigs County, ss.
proprlatedfrom tho GENERAL
I, Gene Grate, Clerk of the
FUND :
VIllage of Middleport In said
GENERAL
County,, and In whose custody
GOVERNM·ENT·
the Fl es, Journals and Records
SERVICES
are required by the L1ws· of the
IPROGRAMC0DE:70l
StateofOhlotobekopt, do
Mayor
hereby certify that the
$1,500.()9 foregoing Annual Appropriation
Poroonel services
Other
6,300.00 Resolution Is taken and copies
/ l.otal for May,or
7,800.00 from the original Resolution
Cierk-C trk·Trtasurer
now on file with said VIllage,
Of comblnedl
that the foregoing Resolution
Personal Services
1.500.00 has been compared by me with
Supplies end Materials 1,000.00 the said original and that the
Total For Clerk ·
same is a true and correct copy
. Clerk-Treasurer
2,500.00 there.
.
SOLICITORWitness my signature, th~
LEGAL ADVISOR
lOth day of January 1972.
Personal Services
500.00
. Gene Grate
Total For solicitorClerk ofthe VIllage of
Legal Advisor
500.00
Middleport, Ohio
Council
·
Meigs County,Ohio
Personal Services
576.00 Ill 18, 25, 2t
.
576 .oo
ToI a I For Counct·1
8uildlnts &amp; Misc.
Other
40,375.00
Total tor Buildings
a, Misc.
NOTICE ON FILING
0 375 00
Total tor General
• ' ·
OF INVENTORY
Governmental Services
AND APPRAISEMENT
70) 5I, 75 1-OO County.
The State
of Ohio, Meigs
( P ro;rem c·•
uue : .
Probate
Court.
SECURITY OF
To the Administratr ix of the
..
PERSONS ~:gPERTY estate; to such of the follow ing
t
(PROGRAM CODE: IO)
as are residents of the State of
t
Pollee Deputment
Ohio, ·vis : - the surviving
• Personal Services
. 15,500.00 spouse, the next of kin , the
~ Other
8,130.00 beneficiaries under the will;
l Total for Pollee
and to the attornev or attorneys
I
D
1
1
representing any of the
330
00
eparFire
menDeparrment26, •
aforementioned persons :
Personal services
Albert L . Hartung , Deceased ,
500 _00
Other
2, 92 o.oo Pomeroy , Ohio, Salisbury
T
Township, No. 20577 .
otal For Fire
You are hereby no.tlfled thai
Department
3,420.00 lh
1
Total For security of
e
nven 1orv and Ap pralsement of the estate of the
Persons and Property
(Program Code: lO) 29 , 750 _00 aforementioned, deceased, late
LEISURE TIME
Of Said County, was illed In this
ACTIV-ITIES
Court . Said Inventory and
(PROGRAM CODE: 40)
Appra lsement will be for
Parkl And Playgrounds
hearing before this Court on the
Personal services
4,200.00 27th day of January, 1972, at
Other
4,100 _00 10:00 o'clock A.M.
Any perSon desiring to file
. Total For Parks and
Playgrounds
8 , 300 _00 exceP.IIons thereto must file
Total For Leisure Time
them at least five days prior to
Activllles
the date set for· hearing ,
Given under my hand and
( P rogram Code :.CO) 8,·300 ·00 seal
of said Court, this 8th day of
COMMUNITY
ENVIRONMENT
January , 1972.
F. H . O'Brien
I PROGRAM CODE; 50)
Judge and ex-officio Clerk
Planilint Commission
of sa ld Court
Personel Services
600.00
Other
400.00
By A.nn B. Watson
Total For Planning
. Deputy Clerk
Commission
1,000.00
(I)
11,
18,
2t
Total For Community
Elvlronment
UProgrom Code :501 1.000.00
Street Lighting
LEGAL NOTICE
Other
1,500.00
lnvltltion To Bid
'Total For Street
Sealed proposals will be
Lighting
•
1,500.00 received at the Village Clerk's
Total For Transportation
Office, Syracuse VIllage Clerk's
Facilities
1.500.00 OfficefSecond Street, Syracuse,
Ohio. ntll 4:00 p.m ., Feb. 3,
1912:, nd opened as soon as
practicable thereafter, for
performing and executing the
contract for the following
1 . Section 6 . That"tt)ere be ap.
building prolect : Syracuse
1 proprlated
trbm
the Town Hall and Fire Department, Third Street, Syracuse,
' CEMETERY FUND
Ohio, In accordance with the
1
Pt,I~'E ~v~ttsLTH
plan~ and specifications, and all
contract documents contained
(PROGRAM C.OOE: 201
herein .
Cemetery Operation
Plans and specifications may
And Malnttntnce·
Personal Services
s,ooo.oo be picked up at the Syracuse
1 ·other
3.400.00 Village Clerk's Office. Second
! Total For Cemetery Oper11tlon Street, Syracur.e, Ohio, 45169, or
j
and Maintenance
8,400.00 ~rom the Mayor of seld VIllage.
A deposit Is required as called
.t Toter For Cemetery
In the "Instructions to
Fund
s.•oo.oo for
b-Idders ." Bids shall be sealed
Adm lnl1tr1tlon-Water
Personal Service'
H,300.00 and enclosed In a sealed en Debt Service
3!,570.00 velope delivered to the Clerk's
Other
33,840.00 Office, Second St ., Syracuse,
Ohio, 45169.
Total For Administration
Each bid must be ac -Water !SubProgram Code : 57) 84,710.00 companied by a bid bond of 10
pet. of the proposed contract at
Total For Water (Revenue)
Fund (Program
the ·time of bid opening and the
Code : 501
u.no.oo successful bidder will be
required to post a 100 pet :
COMMUNITY
performance bond based on his
ENVIRONMENT
bid totai. ·- This amount must be
·Ad m lnlstr 1tlon-Sew1ge
Personal Services
9.500.00 stated In dollars lind cents .
The owners reserve the right
Debt Service
24,360.00
Other
19,200.00 to relect any or ali" bids.
Kathryn H. C(ow, Clerk
Total For Administration
- Sewage {Sub-Program
VIllage df .Syracuse
Code : 511
53.060.00 Ill II, 18, 25, (2) 1, ·•tt
Total for Sewer
·
(Revenue) Fund
(Program Code : SOl 53.060.00
,. ': .
Section 11 . That there be
appropriated
·from
the
FIREMAN'S RELIEF AND
PENSION FUND (PROGRAM
CODE : 101
Other
770.00
Total tor Fireman'•
Christmas dinner gutsl.s of
Rlliet end Pen•lon
Mr. and Mrs. ArvU Holter and
Funcl {Program
~~ d
h
Code: 101
no.oo ""'
on were er parents, Mr,
Section 12. That there be and Mrs. Worley Davis of
appropriated
from
the Dexter, Mr.· and Mrs. Curtis
POLICEMAN'S RELIEF AND
PENSION FUND
Riffle of Middleport, Mr. and
Total For Policeman's Relief Mrs. George Fredrick .and
770.00
and Pension Fund
Section 13. That there be Billy, Chester, and Mr. and
approprioted
from
the Mrs. Gary Holter and son,
GENERAL
BOND
RETIREMENT FUNO
local. Also visiting the Holter'S
Payment of Principal 3,ooo.oo during the holida•s were Mr.
Payment of Interest
630.00
"
300.00 and Mrs. Wilford Bltig Of
Other
Total
General
Columbia
Station, 0 ., and Mr,
BondFor
Retirement
.
Fund
3.930.00 and Mrs. Harold Davis of
Additional Funds
Addl
Section 15. That there be
son.
appropriated from the Meter
Mr. and Mrs."Ralph Trussell
J:~:r'" Fund
2.ooo.oo and family were dinner guesl.s
Total for Moler Deposit
of her brother, Mr.' and Mrs .
Fund Moler Do posit 2,000.00 Roger K'II'kh art an~• children of
&lt;Dept. or Office I ·
ChesU!r.
Ronn·e
Other
2,000.00
Tolll tor Meter
l sml'th spen t a few
Doroslt Fund
2.000.00 days' leave with · his parents,
Toll all
Appropriations
29.,421 .oo Mr. and Mrs. Oris Smith and
section 17. And the Vlllago Kathy. Ronnie is in the U. S.
Clerk Ia hereby authorized to Air Force stationed m' Ind1a
' na.
draw hIs warrants on the
VIllage Treesuror for payments
Mrs. Betty Gaul and Mark
from any of the foregoing apd D 'd islted h
·propor1t1ons upon recelv lng an avt V
er parents,
cerllflcatn ·and Mr. and Mrs. Warden Ours.
proper
vouchers therefor , approved by M k · · t d
1 d
the boord or officers authorized
ar VlSI e severa
ays
· by lew to approve tht same, or during vacatiOI).
In ordinance or re•olution of
Mrs. Thelma Whi'te vist'ted
council to make the tx J)endltures; provided !hot no her sisU!r·in-law,, Mrs. Iris
w1rr•nflsholl be drawn or paid Carr at Veterans Memorial
for salaries or waoes except to
persons employed b.y out~orlly · Hospital.
Of and In accordance with law or
Mr d Mr Har
ordlntn.ce . Provided further
. an
S.
old Trussell
!hot tht appropriations for and Ricky, and Mr . .and Mrs.
conllngttlclts con only be e•- Robert Tayler of Newport
Pttldfld upon tppeel of twothirds vote of Council tor 'lttms News, Va., Mr. and Mrs.
of IXPMH con1tltutlng a It; a I Robe t "'-••••11 d Sa d
·
qbtlptlon og•lnll tht village,
r .. ....,. an
n Y and
oncl for purposes other then Mr. and Mrs. Joltn Ridenour of
!hoot coverfld ~Y the other ChesU!r, Mr. and Mrs. Donald
sPtclflc opproprltllona herein
muo.
TruSBell and Dawn of Mt.
Section 11. This · rtsolutlon V
0
Mr'
d
shill llkt effect 11 the tltrllest
ernon,
·•
· an Mrs.
possible period. ttlowtd by low. Ralph Tr)lssell allll ' children,
Ptllfld Jonuery 10, 197'
local, and Mrs. Jlaye Kirkhllrt
David w. Ohlinger of Marlon, Ind., were supper

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'oFFICE su' PPUES '

Pomeroy Home

omeroy

Mot
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IUT,SIR,THtS
DOESN'T MAl&lt;&amp;.
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HOW FAST
CAN IT GO 1

400 HOR5EPOWER, RADIO
TELEPHONE, !;USIOM I!ODY. ..

BuT, YOU'LL Fl ND
IT'S VOUR FINAL.

AFTER MAKING 11-IE
PAYMENT6, ! CAN'T
, AFFORD THE GA6.

EliAM ...

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The

Orchid' ROonl.

U'LABNER
DIOTHI:.'I
LET '10'
WATCH

' TV IN
THAR?

-AH'LLBE.T
':(0' THAT SWEET OLE
!,.AD'/ WiLL TR'I 10
BRAIN ME. WIF HER
UNIMELLA.~'~-

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:::-==-::===-::;--,

· MOTORS, INC.
Auto

YES,OFCOUR&amp;E. 1~ ...

ER ....&lt;.JUST 1HAT YOU
RI!Wf/Nl).MS OF
eaAEONEJ

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Estate For

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Friday &amp; Saturday
Nigh,t s-10 Til2

2 BEDROOM mobile home, 12 x
, ~.1 ,!!dutts only, , 'Phone 992,
~~ -

,, ·HI

Whispering Pines
N~e

4 PC. BAND&amp;

2 FEMALE SINGERS

Male Help Wanted
TEXAS 'REFINERY CORP.
offers opportunity for high
income PLUS regular cash
bonuses, convention trips and
abundant fringe benefits to
mature man in Pomeroy ·
area . Regardless of ex perience, air mail I. I. Pate,
Pres., Texas Refinery Corp.,
Box 111 , Fort Worth, Texas
76101.
1-16-41p
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley
. tm
AI
Trusse ll on ChrIS
as.
so
visiting over the holidays were
Shirley McGraw of Columbus,
0 ., Larry Cowdery, and Mrs
Mary Grace Cowdery of Long.
Bottom, and Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Fausto! Jamaica, N.Y.
and daughU!r Virginia Kirk- ,
hart and Shawn of Chester.

..

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GASOLINE ALLEY

Saklt.

'

· Buy·'~n·y F~~Cfll$,
tan« clear•ed. Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
.'
662-3035.
2·12-tfc

v.a, auto., radio, w-•·w_ll~es:

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Dry Wall
and
painting .
finisher
Richard I. Dubbtld, phone
742-5825.

'1295
Klfl' ., .van·landt

l..v1,' "'"'""' 1vr&lt;,

"You'll. · like Our GNollty
Woy of Dol~g Business.''
GMAC FINANCING
991-5342 '
I'Omtroy
o;.n · Eveiilnos 'Til 1:10 .•
' . . Til~ P,M. Sit. .. .

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S'IX ROOM house, 133 Butternut SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Ave. Contoct Ed Hedrick, 2137 REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446· .
Wadsworth Drive, Columbus,
4782, Gallipolis. John Russell ;
Ohio, phone 237·4334.
.
Owner &amp; Operator.
11·21-tfc
5-12-tfc ·

Virgll 8 ~ . Deland
TEAFORD ~Realty
•.

I

AN' MY OAOOT'Ll
BE Rt&lt;&gt;HT IMR!

cancelled?
Lost
your ·
operator' &amp; llcen&amp;e? Call 992·
2966.
6-15-tfc

ACROSS
1. Unruffled
4L Young
. cod
11. Nehru
or
G1111dhi
1Z. Clly

-----~

O'DELL WHEEL allghment
localod at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
Complete front end sarvlce,
tun. up and brake service; Wheels balanced electroalcally.
All
work
guaranteed. · Reasonable
roles. Phone 992-3213.

601 Eost Main
POMEROY
EXCELLENT
lll"oker
INVESTMENT BUY
110 rMCI!anlc strtal
POMEROY - large brick -::--:-::-:-:-:---.....:7.::.
·21-tfc
_ ~ Pomti'GY, Ohio
building, 2 story, has 590.119 o
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer .
month Income now, 3 offier ~
' Complete Service
4 ROOMS
lots to Mil, CALL FOR INPilon• 9-49-3121
FULL basement, nice corner FORMATION 'TODAY
Racine, Ohio
lot. Room for mobile home, SUOO.OO.
Crltt Bradford
$2,500.00.
PRACTICALLY
· .2 ACRES
.
NEW BRICK
==-=-:-----::...:5·1-ttc
All utilities available. Located POMEROY - No chlldron SEWING MACHINES. Repair
on blacktop road. $2,500.00. · hazards In this dead end
36" X 23" X .009
service, all makes·. 992-2284
2 BEDROOM mobile home In
3 BEDROOMS
•tree!, 3 bedrooms with
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy:
· Racine area . Phone 992-6329. ·
Large
modem
kitchen,
and
double
closets,
1\':t
baths,
1
Authorized . Singer S..les end
12-14-tfc
dining. Naorly new gas fur- beeullful kitchen with all
_Service•.We Sharpen Scissors.
nace. Garage. Carport. Large b u 11•1 -.1n s, c i r ~ e ted
FURNISHED and unturntShed
·29-tfc
lown .
throughout, full basement ~---.--...:..::3
apartments. Close to school.
OHIO RIV'ER
with recreation room, utility READY-MIA CONI..ttt: t t: de·
Phone 992-5434.
FRONTAGE
room, 1 acre, ALL OF THIS
llver,.t right to your protict.
10-18-tfc
1200 FEET.. Somt land above FOR JUST S2t.5GO.OO.
.
Fut and euy. · Fr ..
---~-flood, . some low tar boot
. SAVE YOUR CAR
USED OFFSET PLATES '
·estimates.
Phone 992-3284.
launching. Drlllod weil. ideal
AND YOUR MONEY,
HAVE
Mobile Homes For Sale ,
Ready-Mix
Co .. .
•Goegleln
lor resorl.
CLOSE IN
MANY USES
Middleport, Ohio.
60X12, .2·Dedroom, an-electrtc,
4 BEDROOMS
POMEROY- 1'12 story frame,
6-JO.Ifc
air conditioned, 8x20 ft. Porch
MODERN kitchen with cook bath, 6 rooms In ali, 3
and aluminum awning,
units. Steel sink. fladlant bedroomo, full basement,
aluminum skirting, coin heat. Carport. 7 room In oil, 2 Iorge lot. GOING AT JUST BACKHOE AN.D DOZER_; work.
~ptlc tanks Installed. Uec&gt;rge
plelely setup. Beautiful :
drilled wells. Foundation for SUOO.OO. WHY PAY RENT
( Blll) Pulllno. Phone 991·2411. ·
8
for
-$1.00
location. OWner leaving state.
2nd house. 10 ACRES. .
EACH MONTH.
Phone 949-4892 or 991·5272.
45 ACRES
~---:---~-~.::.25-tfc
1-10-tfc
WE HAVE SOME ACREAGE
ill•odern •3 bedroom home. COMING UP IN THE NEAR'
S:tiA
FUTURE.
Beautiful kitchen . Full
.
MIDDLEP,
O
RT6·roomhouse
bosement with den and
HENRY CLELAND
and bath, 315 Hamilton Ave.,
REALTOR
fireplace. Gar~, 2 barns·,
prlcod reasonably. Phone 992.
. O!fitt m.m,
Young fruit. Minerals.
204(
'
·
Rasldtnce
992·2561
HOr WATER HEATING
1-18-Jic
Modern 3 bedrooms, basement.
111 Court St.
1-16:0tc
Nice
kitchen;
dlshwo•her
.
.
Pom~troy, Ohio .
Fully carpeted. Carport,
Fenced.
•
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
Auto Sales
Assocl•t• ·
992-:ms
•68 FOR!i' pickup, 2S,o0o miles,
992·2371
. wide bed, custom cab 1-16-6fc
st,ofOO; '65 Mustong, V-8; 4 .- - - - - - - - ' -''mo WuhlniJtpn Blvd.
speed- S225; Phone 992-6048. J'i---, . Belpre, Ohio
1·16-6tc :

W.

For Sale.

Aluminum ·

Sheets

The
Daily Sentinel

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A.n•wert Whal lhf' Jru••maed rocellorH em• nl100·n
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DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
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One letter simply slllllda for another. In thb sample A is
UJed far the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, ·
apoatrophea, the length and foi'JIIIItlon of the words are all
ts. E•ch doy the code letters are dU!erent. .
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A CryptoiJ'UI Qfttallon ·
AKZ

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Yeaierday'a CrnKo&lt;iaOCe: FREEDOM FROM EFFORT IN
THE PRESENT MERELY MEANS THAT THERE HAS BEEN
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u-rambietheae twrJumbles,
one letter to eaeh aquan!, to
·farm four ordinary wordo.

1. Old
Chinese
kingdom

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32. Loki's ·
daughter

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buffalo
4C.Actor
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OITIY

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ZZ. Hill
dweller
%3. Actress
Scala
U. Inquire
Z5. Fluidity
unit
l7. Aversion
to
motion
38. Weasel's
relative

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lB. Modest
20. Native

a. FoollJh

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of South
America
3. Architectural pier
4. The same
5. City
In
in
Texas
&amp;Nursery
Utah
rhyme
11. Sheer
character
11, G.IOAy
7.Bum
bid:
the
15. VanDrumidnight
tenplay ·
oil
17.NepUve
I.W1111der .
word
11, Prettcri be t.Beyond
=.Se.weed It. Duenna's
...-.•,...
ptoduet
title
18.
Reatraln
18. Track
thrill '
ZI.EngU.h
river
!t.IDput
10. '·-·na·
lion indivisible"
~~~i,:~_j..J 31. "Candid"
enthusiast ·
II. Belief
S9. Fortuneteller's ·
. cards
41. Upper·.

::

. K_aal Estate For

. MILLER ..
,MOBILE HOMES

•

RfAL lltcf 0'

Hut~; ANNie! Me.. AN'
PROF "' I MEAN.&lt; ·jlle

--,-----AUTOMOBILE Insurance been

Real Estate For Sale

SR.

I.

~t: ~ 1 IC

2 DR. H.T.

"

liM/IT 'WltD~=-:;;;;,;_l, ===~~~;::=:;:,;_ .:,~.

mu_y 5eT ME UP?

BARRACUDA

NICE trailer. 1 bedroom, Ideal STEREO, Early American
for couple, 10 miles north of
style, AM-FM combination, 4
Pomeroy, $65a month. Phone
speaker sound system, 4
992-7479.
speed automatic changer.
1-4-tfc
Balance 579.67. Use our
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
1-12-6tc
NEW 2-BEDROOM, double
wide, mobile home on lot In
NEEDLE
Sewing
Syracuse. Completely fur . TWIN
nished. Phone 992-2441 after 5 Machine !971 Model in walnul
stand. All features built-In to
p.m.
make fancy designs and do
1·3-lfc
stretch sewing. Also but1 BEDROOM trailer apart- tonholes, blind hems, etc.
ments, Ideal for couples. $43.35 cash price or ternls
available. Phone 992-5641.
Contact McClure's Dairy Isle,
1-12-61c
992-5248 or 992·3436.
1·9·12tc
S"i'!:REO-Radlo Console, 4
HOUSE , 1632 Lincoln Heights, 4 ~~~ Intermixed changer,
rooms and bath, basement, s ake:olume. control, 4
picture window, fenced In
sound system, lovely
yard , all newly painted. ualnut finish. Balance 569.52.
Phone. 992-2780 or 992-3432.
se our budget terms. Call
1. 18.1fc 992-7085.
- - - -- - -- 1-12-6tc
UNFURNISHED 3 room and r - - - - - - - - - ,
ba th; see a t 408 Spring
Avenue.
1-18-ttc

The Almanac
By United Press IDtemaUonal
Today is Tuesday, Jan. 18,
the 18th dar of 1972.
. The moon is between Its new
phase and first quarter.
1lhe morning stars are
Mercury and Jupiter.
The evenilf8 stars are Venus,
Mars and Saturn.
Those born on this day are ·
under the sign of Capricorn.
American orator•Daniel Websl!.r was born Jan. 18, 1782.
On this day inhisto"Y :
In 1943 Moscow announced
the Nazi siege of Leningrad had
.
.. '69 , VOLKSWAGEN, 2 door
been lllted. It had started in ' FOR THE BEST deal
In a new , sedan, dtfu•e, 4 speed, radio
the fall of 1941.
or used mobile home, try
- 51, 100; '69 Dodge Swinger
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
2 door hardtop; V-1, atandard:
In 1966· the daughter of the
Kanauga,
Ohio.
yellow wllh bia~k vinyl top;
late Indian ' Prime Minister ·
12-17-901c · 36,000 m.llll, still under
Nehru, Indira Gandhi, was
"
M"'O"'Ii""'TI:=I:-H
~O:-M_,.e-,-.- L-arge
~~anty -·$1,~75. Phone 992named the new prime minister
seledlon 8- lo · 12 wldes, 1 to 4.
1-16-61c
of that c&lt;iuntry.
bedrooms, bank repos and
In 1968 Ute United Sta~ and
used, some practically new. 1970 ··.ousl ER, 6 cylln•·· -.
Saye up to v•. R. A. or Don ·
RU8Sla agreed on a draft of a
Millet', 705 Farson Street,
11.600; 1967 International
nuclear nonproliferation treaty.
Belpre, Ohio by Kaiser
pickup truck - $700; phone
In 1970Mormon leader David
Aluminum, phone 423-9531. : 742-3615.
.
· !-16-llc
1-1 8. 121c
McKay died at the age of 96.

o:

.. f !&lt;IOJJ

68 PLYMOUTH

SIEGLER HEATER
GET FREE

· 200 Gations i=ual Oil Whtn
· You Buy Any Siegler H.. ter · '
Tltru Jan. 15.
TRAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile
Court, Rt. 124, .Syracuse, Ohio
I'OMIIOY · .·
991-2951 .
J ..lw.corsoy,Mtr.
4-2-lfc
'
. . . - l f t·llll .

and the Ambassadors.

Julie Rose of Columbus
visited her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. John Rose and Mandie.
Mrs . Faye Kirkhart of
Marion, Ind., spent a few days
with her daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Trussell and
family . Also visiting them were
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Faust of
Jamaica, N. Y., and Mr. and ·
Mrs . Roger Kirkhart and
children, Chester, 0., and
Deidra Cowdery, of Newark.

.1

1-11-ltc

,, -aea~ance

BEDROOM and 2 bedroom
mobile homes. Adults only.
Phone 992-5592 .
12-19-lfc

Club

Music by Red Stewart

I

Ba Shan'N.eWS

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. .'

· REGULATIONS
·
·
·
HOM
.. I &amp; ~UTO .
The Publlsher reserves the
1970 DODG.E POLARA
·
523" "
· rlgh toedltorrefectanyads
40r .• v.eeng!ne,automatlctrans.,P.S,factoryalr,good
!
W
9t2' 094
deemed objectional. The ·
tires, radloS.othere•tras. while finish, clean lnlerlor.
;
~
·2
publisher will not be
lf7.QCHEVELLE MAL,BU HTCPE.
. · · ,' $2"5.
·.&amp;
Dl~
.
U:.
606 E. Main Pomeroy
responsible for more tha'n one
Low mileage bd local owner with lots of warranty left,
llliftlnl
·fl,
k'l
t1
tl
- ·
··, ·
correc nser on.
factory air con llloned, V·8 engine, turbo.hydromallc, p.
-GUARANTEE[)RATES
steering, gold body, sandalwood vinyl lop, radio, vinyl ·
240 Uncoln 51:
Ph
._
For Want Ad Service
lnlet'Jor, good w-w tires. This car Is loaded wlthe•tras.
_
. Middltport,Ohlo
0111.•,~_&lt;;,2094 ·
·:
and·
. .
5 cents per Word one Insertion
1969 CHEVY II NOVA 2 DR.
·
·
516" .
0111 Anttlony Plumbing
&amp; Aulo
Minimum Charge75c
307 V-8 engine, 3 speed floorshlft, spotless cl..n blk. vinyl'
w. heW • o»m"'•tt 'TIOnit .
FURNITUR~
l2 cents per word three
interlor,darkblueflnlsh.w.wtlres, llkenew.redlo. Local ·
- ,.....
· ..
' ·
consecutive InsertionS.
owner
car.
Malnteunce
~.
a
rYICI
.
the
,
Open1TII.5
1
Steip In and See Our :
..
y..rlround.Nom.lflt:wh•l
Motld•ythruS.tvrdlly
18 ·cents per ·word six con'
secutlv.e Insertions.
your' ~ ..... Com"'"lt......, o.r
E Mal p
·o
Floor pispiii!V·
,....,
,... • 606 •
n, omeroy, .
•25 Per Cent Discount on paJd.
spclutiilg ~.-ir. lnltrior or .
ads and .ads paid within 10
~
exterior carpentry. Ceiling
days.
tile and-Pantllngand Siding
ALL KINDS OF
CARDOFTHANKS
' •.
.
·.
I
e
1·
p· t bl
i,
&amp; OBITUARY
•
•
Complete
um ng
GLASS
$1.50 for 50 word nilnlmum .
·' '()P.!N EV~S. 1:00 I'.M..
Ht•tlng. '
For.,Eve?'! Purpose , ·
E h ddltl
d
_.,..EROY OHIO
1'
Day N~mller 992·25'"
ac a
ona 1 war 2c·
r,_
'
' 1 Wt havt 24 h'r . tmlr~~nWe
s~lillit it •uta gJ.u ·
'
'
BLIND AD$
:.L-~----:----------,---~--,.ll
• ••
on
the
spot lnstoll•tlon.
Additional 25c Charge per
service.
Make reservations for your ;
·Mirrors.
Tobie Tops - Plat.
Advertisement.
;92.$803
742-3947
private parties, banqueli, • ·
Glass.
Small
home 1'!1]1111~ '
OFFICE HOURS
For Sale
991-3198 742-4761
special occoslons.
.
windows
storm
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Daily, Notice
weortlull_ylnsured
screens
Ideal for meeting RJ~ce 8· 30 am to 12 00 N00
4 WHE .EL wagon, :.~1 of
.
repaired.
with or without kitchen
'
. .
:
n INCOME Tt~X· service, dally
FREE ESTIMATE
Saturday.
except Sunday, evenings by harrows , Phone 247 ·2161 ·
privileges.
. ·
Point r&gt;~nt &amp; Mason
appointment. Mrs. Wanda
H6·6fc
· Individual Catering
In Memory
Eblin, Laurel Cliff Road, 1
AUTO GLASS
Will seat up to 1so' people.
'I
t 01 M
' 1 C ty '52 FORO Troctor, good con- ·
AI Conorcl, Mgr,
• gs
IN LOVING memory of our
mte wes
oun
dillon, new rubber - $650; '
Phone
dear husband, father and
Fairground on Rt. 7 bypass.
Phone
304-773-5710
phone 992-60~.
Phone 992-2272.
Mason,W.V,o.
992-3975
992-5786
grandfather, James S. Hood,
Route
33
·
1-16-6tc
who passed away 22 ·-y
"' ears ago
1-3·301 c --~-----...,_________
10 HEAD Holstein cows, fresh
today, Jan . 18, 1950. He is not
From the largest
cold beneath the ground, Now
and' close up Springers.
Bulldozer Radiator
closed within the tomb. That Wanted To Buy
FOUR NEW HOMES
Homer Circle, phone 949-2177. .Smallest Heater Core.
living In our Father's man 1-18-3tc
OPEN
FOR INSPECTION
W
N•""'n Biggs
POCKETknives, - - - - - - - - slon, aitlng for us to join OLD
. ONE HOME IN RACINE
Roell• lor Specialist
especially Case XX. Also NORWEGIAN
him soOn . Sadly missed by
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
have other old knives to trade
t:iKnouna pups.
wife, Edith, daughters and
992
2362
ONE
110ME IN MIDDLEPORT
Phone
'
·
1-12-61c
or sell. Phone 992-2343.
grandchildren.
NO MONEY DOWN
1·18-ltp
1-18-lfc
tOO PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
- - -- - - - -~------VACUUM CLEANER. Electro
A ~ bedrool)l 516.1&gt;00.00 home can be purchased with a
Ph. 991-2174
.
OLD FURNITURE, Round Oak
Hygiene New .Demonstrator
Notice
n;tonthly payment as low as 565.00 for a family iNIIha base
tables, Brass beds, dishes,
has all cleaning attachments
clock's, and-or complete
salory
of $5,000.00 and three children.- 7'1• Pet. annU.t•
plus the new Electro Suds for
I(QSCOT KOSMETICS and wigs
Sales
households. Write M. D.
shampooing carpet. Only
percen!lae rateT ~
•
,, .for sale. Brown's. Phone 992·
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
S27.SO cash price or terms 1972 MERCURY, 4,000 m,lles.
5113.
Call 992-6271.
available. Phone 992-5641.
1~· 31 - lfc
Call '773-5119.
12-17-lfc
1-12-6tc
1-14-61p
ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT ...
overweight;· ladles, teens and WANTED to buy, Hardesty's LONG BOTTOM- "tve room '19i0 W·30 vLu&gt;MOBILE «2~
. men Interested In a Weight
Hislorlcal and Geographical
house. bath, business, or
automatic·, factory· •tereo
Watchers ( RI Class In
Encyclope~la Illustrated,
storage building - S6.500.
tape. Lotsofe•lras. Like new. ·
1
Pomeroy write : Weight
~~i~~~in~f o'IJ.~r:s mt~u,;'t~~ Phone 985-3529.
12-19·30tc
.Call 992-2441 after s ~-r'ie-ttc
Watchers (R), 1863 Section
Rd., Cincinnati, Ohio 45237 .
published 1883 by H. H. ~----.,--BIL'N
CAL~,
·
Hardesty and Co., Publishers. TROPICAL. FISH,
fancy ' .19r1 Cn EVY ,. Vega . with ,
• ELSON,tft-3657
niL TON.WOLFE, 949-321f'
10-3-tfc
Write Oneila M. Hutton, 301
guppies. angels and breeders,
studded snow !Ires ~ounted L~T~O~M~CR~O~W~,991~-~2580~---_':D~A:L:E~~~~~~~J
SAVE up to one half. Bring your
Kenilworth Dr .. Akron, Ohio
Bellas and supplies. Phone
plus two extra regular tires:
·
sick TV Ia Chuck's TV shop.
44313.
992-5443.
$1,700.00; Also reac stereo .
'· ·
.
INTER lOR and f.. exterl.or
151 Butternut Ave .• Pomeroy:
1-t3-6tc - -. , . - - -- - 12· 30-ffc
cassette player-recorder tor Real
Sale
painting, roofing and gutter
Phone 992-5080.
use with home stereo system
•
work
don9. Phone· 1143-2826.
11 -21 -lfc
COAL, limeSTone. ExcelSior - SSO; Phone.-742-3887 or 742- HOUSE, J6.42'.Lfncoln Heights. ·.
..
,
.I· 1-1fl..12!c
For
Rent
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
4447 from 9:30 a.m. to 2:30 ' C. II Danny 'Thompson, 992·
WANT WORK at home ad·
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
p.m. ilnd after 5 p.m.
. , . 2196 ·
,. '··
SEPTIC tanks . Cleaneil. l'ree
dresslna and stuffing en- 3 ROOMS and bath. furnished In
4·9-llc
pipe lnspeciiQr\. ·Paul SteinSyracuse. Phone 992-5462,
velopes'!' Rush self-stamped
•·.
metz,
phone. 742·586-l.
envelope to F 1:/rlbe; Box. 36,
1-16-Jtc POODLE puppies, Silver Toy,
·,
' ·
'7·1.8-lfc
1-18-6tc
Albany, Ohio. 45710.
Park view Kennels, Phone 991·
1-6-tfc 2 BEDROOM mobile home,
5443.
furnished, utilities paid,
8-15-lfc
available now. Phone 9927384 .
t-16-Jtc
INVENTORY SALE

i
I,

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

Classifieds.Gei Results!

Attest . Gene Grete
INFORMATION
Clerk of Council
DEADLINES
.
CERTIFICATE
_ '
-• ...
Section 1705.39, R.c. ~ "No
5 P.M.
Day
Before
appropriation menure shell
Publication
becomewith
effective
until there Is
Mond~y Deadline
9 a .m.
flied
the appropriating
Cancellation
a. Corrections
authority by the county auditor Will be accepted unlll9 a .m. for
• cortlflcele that tho total ap·
Day of Publication .
proprlatlons from &amp;ech fund,

•

'

' .

•

,.

WEAR .

1'16611

FOR A Ri.ILE CEMES,
50 5i-IOULO THE

,_
ACliJALLf(, I
THINK I PREFER
THE TITLE.
'' 6ARRIS'TER "

�'

.

'
'
·~Tile o.)ly 9ti)Unel, ~-rt-Pomeror. o.,_Jan. 1&amp;.1~..

,

l'

,
·
RESOLUTION NO. 979·72
ANNUAL
APPROPRIATIONS
RESOLUTION
(VILLAGE) 10 meke
•A RESOLUTION
•pproprlotlons . for current
E•Jienses and othor Expendlt!Jrts of the · Vltlage of

'

@)
(#.

Middleport, State of Ohl.o , taken togethor with ell other
during the fiscal year . ending outstanding approprlallons, do
.. December 31 , 1972.
not exceed such official
t'
Section 1. BE IT RESOLVED , estimate or amended official
by the Councillor the VIllage of· estimate . When the ap .
~ Mldd:eport, Statt of OhiC), fhat , proprlatlon does nor exceed
to ~ r ovlde for the current ex - such official estimate, the
ponsos and other expenditures county aud itor shall give such
of tho sold VIllage of Middleport cortlficate torthwllh upon
during the fiscal y .. r ending receiving from the ap .
December 31, 1972, tNe proprlitlng authority a certified
following sums be ·and they are copy of the appropriation
hereby set aside and ap - measure."
•
pr,oprlated as follows, viz :
Section 2. That there be ap - The State of Meigs County, ss.
proprlatedfrom tho GENERAL
I, Gene Grate, Clerk of the
FUND :
VIllage of Middleport In said
GENERAL
County,, and In whose custody
GOVERNM·ENT·
the Fl es, Journals and Records
SERVICES
are required by the L1ws· of the
IPROGRAMC0DE:70l
StateofOhlotobekopt, do
Mayor
hereby certify that the
$1,500.()9 foregoing Annual Appropriation
Poroonel services
Other
6,300.00 Resolution Is taken and copies
/ l.otal for May,or
7,800.00 from the original Resolution
Cierk-C trk·Trtasurer
now on file with said VIllage,
Of comblnedl
that the foregoing Resolution
Personal Services
1.500.00 has been compared by me with
Supplies end Materials 1,000.00 the said original and that the
Total For Clerk ·
same is a true and correct copy
. Clerk-Treasurer
2,500.00 there.
.
SOLICITORWitness my signature, th~
LEGAL ADVISOR
lOth day of January 1972.
Personal Services
500.00
. Gene Grate
Total For solicitorClerk ofthe VIllage of
Legal Advisor
500.00
Middleport, Ohio
Council
·
Meigs County,Ohio
Personal Services
576.00 Ill 18, 25, 2t
.
576 .oo
ToI a I For Counct·1
8uildlnts &amp; Misc.
Other
40,375.00
Total tor Buildings
a, Misc.
NOTICE ON FILING
0 375 00
Total tor General
• ' ·
OF INVENTORY
Governmental Services
AND APPRAISEMENT
70) 5I, 75 1-OO County.
The State
of Ohio, Meigs
( P ro;rem c·•
uue : .
Probate
Court.
SECURITY OF
To the Administratr ix of the
..
PERSONS ~:gPERTY estate; to such of the follow ing
t
(PROGRAM CODE: IO)
as are residents of the State of
t
Pollee Deputment
Ohio, ·vis : - the surviving
• Personal Services
. 15,500.00 spouse, the next of kin , the
~ Other
8,130.00 beneficiaries under the will;
l Total for Pollee
and to the attornev or attorneys
I
D
1
1
representing any of the
330
00
eparFire
menDeparrment26, •
aforementioned persons :
Personal services
Albert L . Hartung , Deceased ,
500 _00
Other
2, 92 o.oo Pomeroy , Ohio, Salisbury
T
Township, No. 20577 .
otal For Fire
You are hereby no.tlfled thai
Department
3,420.00 lh
1
Total For security of
e
nven 1orv and Ap pralsement of the estate of the
Persons and Property
(Program Code: lO) 29 , 750 _00 aforementioned, deceased, late
LEISURE TIME
Of Said County, was illed In this
ACTIV-ITIES
Court . Said Inventory and
(PROGRAM CODE: 40)
Appra lsement will be for
Parkl And Playgrounds
hearing before this Court on the
Personal services
4,200.00 27th day of January, 1972, at
Other
4,100 _00 10:00 o'clock A.M.
Any perSon desiring to file
. Total For Parks and
Playgrounds
8 , 300 _00 exceP.IIons thereto must file
Total For Leisure Time
them at least five days prior to
Activllles
the date set for· hearing ,
Given under my hand and
( P rogram Code :.CO) 8,·300 ·00 seal
of said Court, this 8th day of
COMMUNITY
ENVIRONMENT
January , 1972.
F. H . O'Brien
I PROGRAM CODE; 50)
Judge and ex-officio Clerk
Planilint Commission
of sa ld Court
Personel Services
600.00
Other
400.00
By A.nn B. Watson
Total For Planning
. Deputy Clerk
Commission
1,000.00
(I)
11,
18,
2t
Total For Community
Elvlronment
UProgrom Code :501 1.000.00
Street Lighting
LEGAL NOTICE
Other
1,500.00
lnvltltion To Bid
'Total For Street
Sealed proposals will be
Lighting
•
1,500.00 received at the Village Clerk's
Total For Transportation
Office, Syracuse VIllage Clerk's
Facilities
1.500.00 OfficefSecond Street, Syracuse,
Ohio. ntll 4:00 p.m ., Feb. 3,
1912:, nd opened as soon as
practicable thereafter, for
performing and executing the
contract for the following
1 . Section 6 . That"tt)ere be ap.
building prolect : Syracuse
1 proprlated
trbm
the Town Hall and Fire Department, Third Street, Syracuse,
' CEMETERY FUND
Ohio, In accordance with the
1
Pt,I~'E ~v~ttsLTH
plan~ and specifications, and all
contract documents contained
(PROGRAM C.OOE: 201
herein .
Cemetery Operation
Plans and specifications may
And Malnttntnce·
Personal Services
s,ooo.oo be picked up at the Syracuse
1 ·other
3.400.00 Village Clerk's Office. Second
! Total For Cemetery Oper11tlon Street, Syracur.e, Ohio, 45169, or
j
and Maintenance
8,400.00 ~rom the Mayor of seld VIllage.
A deposit Is required as called
.t Toter For Cemetery
In the "Instructions to
Fund
s.•oo.oo for
b-Idders ." Bids shall be sealed
Adm lnl1tr1tlon-Water
Personal Service'
H,300.00 and enclosed In a sealed en Debt Service
3!,570.00 velope delivered to the Clerk's
Other
33,840.00 Office, Second St ., Syracuse,
Ohio, 45169.
Total For Administration
Each bid must be ac -Water !SubProgram Code : 57) 84,710.00 companied by a bid bond of 10
pet. of the proposed contract at
Total For Water (Revenue)
Fund (Program
the ·time of bid opening and the
Code : 501
u.no.oo successful bidder will be
required to post a 100 pet :
COMMUNITY
performance bond based on his
ENVIRONMENT
bid totai. ·- This amount must be
·Ad m lnlstr 1tlon-Sew1ge
Personal Services
9.500.00 stated In dollars lind cents .
The owners reserve the right
Debt Service
24,360.00
Other
19,200.00 to relect any or ali" bids.
Kathryn H. C(ow, Clerk
Total For Administration
- Sewage {Sub-Program
VIllage df .Syracuse
Code : 511
53.060.00 Ill II, 18, 25, (2) 1, ·•tt
Total for Sewer
·
(Revenue) Fund
(Program Code : SOl 53.060.00
,. ': .
Section 11 . That there be
appropriated
·from
the
FIREMAN'S RELIEF AND
PENSION FUND (PROGRAM
CODE : 101
Other
770.00
Total tor Fireman'•
Christmas dinner gutsl.s of
Rlliet end Pen•lon
Mr. and Mrs. ArvU Holter and
Funcl {Program
~~ d
h
Code: 101
no.oo ""'
on were er parents, Mr,
Section 12. That there be and Mrs. Worley Davis of
appropriated
from
the Dexter, Mr.· and Mrs. Curtis
POLICEMAN'S RELIEF AND
PENSION FUND
Riffle of Middleport, Mr. and
Total For Policeman's Relief Mrs. George Fredrick .and
770.00
and Pension Fund
Section 13. That there be Billy, Chester, and Mr. and
approprioted
from
the Mrs. Gary Holter and son,
GENERAL
BOND
RETIREMENT FUNO
local. Also visiting the Holter'S
Payment of Principal 3,ooo.oo during the holida•s were Mr.
Payment of Interest
630.00
"
300.00 and Mrs. Wilford Bltig Of
Other
Total
General
Columbia
Station, 0 ., and Mr,
BondFor
Retirement
.
Fund
3.930.00 and Mrs. Harold Davis of
Additional Funds
Addl
Section 15. That there be
son.
appropriated from the Meter
Mr. and Mrs."Ralph Trussell
J:~:r'" Fund
2.ooo.oo and family were dinner guesl.s
Total for Moler Deposit
of her brother, Mr.' and Mrs .
Fund Moler Do posit 2,000.00 Roger K'II'kh art an~• children of
&lt;Dept. or Office I ·
ChesU!r.
Ronn·e
Other
2,000.00
Tolll tor Meter
l sml'th spen t a few
Doroslt Fund
2.000.00 days' leave with · his parents,
Toll all
Appropriations
29.,421 .oo Mr. and Mrs. Oris Smith and
section 17. And the Vlllago Kathy. Ronnie is in the U. S.
Clerk Ia hereby authorized to Air Force stationed m' Ind1a
' na.
draw hIs warrants on the
VIllage Treesuror for payments
Mrs. Betty Gaul and Mark
from any of the foregoing apd D 'd islted h
·propor1t1ons upon recelv lng an avt V
er parents,
cerllflcatn ·and Mr. and Mrs. Warden Ours.
proper
vouchers therefor , approved by M k · · t d
1 d
the boord or officers authorized
ar VlSI e severa
ays
· by lew to approve tht same, or during vacatiOI).
In ordinance or re•olution of
Mrs. Thelma Whi'te vist'ted
council to make the tx J)endltures; provided !hot no her sisU!r·in-law,, Mrs. Iris
w1rr•nflsholl be drawn or paid Carr at Veterans Memorial
for salaries or waoes except to
persons employed b.y out~orlly · Hospital.
Of and In accordance with law or
Mr d Mr Har
ordlntn.ce . Provided further
. an
S.
old Trussell
!hot tht appropriations for and Ricky, and Mr . .and Mrs.
conllngttlclts con only be e•- Robert Tayler of Newport
Pttldfld upon tppeel of twothirds vote of Council tor 'lttms News, Va., Mr. and Mrs.
of IXPMH con1tltutlng a It; a I Robe t "'-••••11 d Sa d
·
qbtlptlon og•lnll tht village,
r .. ....,. an
n Y and
oncl for purposes other then Mr. and Mrs. Joltn Ridenour of
!hoot coverfld ~Y the other ChesU!r, Mr. and Mrs. Donald
sPtclflc opproprltllona herein
muo.
TruSBell and Dawn of Mt.
Section 11. This · rtsolutlon V
0
Mr'
d
shill llkt effect 11 the tltrllest
ernon,
·•
· an Mrs.
possible period. ttlowtd by low. Ralph Tr)lssell allll ' children,
Ptllfld Jonuery 10, 197'
local, and Mrs. Jlaye Kirkhllrt
David w. Ohlinger of Marlon, Ind., were supper

f\ I

Po•eroy
(o
or e

2 ....U
~~
Of'
·
QUALITY

!ti'

.

'.

Business Services

I

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.

; ·~=========;:;-;:::::====:::::=:::::;-r=======-::;;==~·
·' ·
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MM.I -Y
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nut
··&amp; MNmUCfiON

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·.CO.

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5TEEL-eeLTED 11RE6;.

'oFFICE su' PPUES '

Pomeroy Home

omeroy

Mot
.

o•

(o

IUT,SIR,THtS
DOESN'T MAl&lt;&amp;.
~

·

HOW FAST
CAN IT GO 1

400 HOR5EPOWER, RADIO
TELEPHONE, !;USIOM I!ODY. ..

BuT, YOU'LL Fl ND
IT'S VOUR FINAL.

AFTER MAKING 11-IE
PAYMENT6, ! CAN'T
, AFFORD THE GA6.

EliAM ...

®
'f#. . !·

I,

The

Orchid' ROonl.

U'LABNER
DIOTHI:.'I
LET '10'
WATCH

' TV IN
THAR?

-AH'LLBE.T
':(0' THAT SWEET OLE
!,.AD'/ WiLL TR'I 10
BRAIN ME. WIF HER
UNIMELLA.~'~-

-

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&gt; l '.
· , ,;;,; ,

,.SM!m NELSON .

:::-==-::===-::;--,

· MOTORS, INC.
Auto

YES,OFCOUR&amp;E. 1~ ...

ER ....&lt;.JUST 1HAT YOU
RI!Wf/Nl).MS OF
eaAEONEJ

-------

Estate For

l

DANCE

Friday &amp; Saturday
Nigh,t s-10 Til2

2 BEDROOM mobile home, 12 x
, ~.1 ,!!dutts only, , 'Phone 992,
~~ -

,, ·HI

Whispering Pines
N~e

4 PC. BAND&amp;

2 FEMALE SINGERS

Male Help Wanted
TEXAS 'REFINERY CORP.
offers opportunity for high
income PLUS regular cash
bonuses, convention trips and
abundant fringe benefits to
mature man in Pomeroy ·
area . Regardless of ex perience, air mail I. I. Pate,
Pres., Texas Refinery Corp.,
Box 111 , Fort Worth, Texas
76101.
1-16-41p
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley
. tm
AI
Trusse ll on ChrIS
as.
so
visiting over the holidays were
Shirley McGraw of Columbus,
0 ., Larry Cowdery, and Mrs
Mary Grace Cowdery of Long.
Bottom, and Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Fausto! Jamaica, N.Y.
and daughU!r Virginia Kirk- ,
hart and Shawn of Chester.

..

-f:~~§~§~t-1[2~-6~tpl

GASOLINE ALLEY

Saklt.

'

· Buy·'~n·y F~~Cfll$,
tan« clear•ed. Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
.'
662-3035.
2·12-tfc

v.a, auto., radio, w-•·w_ll~es:

•!
•

,J
,'

Dry Wall
and
painting .
finisher
Richard I. Dubbtld, phone
742-5825.

'1295
Klfl' ., .van·landt

l..v1,' "'"'""' 1vr&lt;,

"You'll. · like Our GNollty
Woy of Dol~g Business.''
GMAC FINANCING
991-5342 '
I'Omtroy
o;.n · Eveiilnos 'Til 1:10 .•
' . . Til~ P,M. Sit. .. .

~

J

THRT~

S'IX ROOM house, 133 Butternut SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Ave. Contoct Ed Hedrick, 2137 REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446· .
Wadsworth Drive, Columbus,
4782, Gallipolis. John Russell ;
Ohio, phone 237·4334.
.
Owner &amp; Operator.
11·21-tfc
5-12-tfc ·

Virgll 8 ~ . Deland
TEAFORD ~Realty
•.

I

AN' MY OAOOT'Ll
BE Rt&lt;&gt;HT IMR!

cancelled?
Lost
your ·
operator' &amp; llcen&amp;e? Call 992·
2966.
6-15-tfc

ACROSS
1. Unruffled
4L Young
. cod
11. Nehru
or
G1111dhi
1Z. Clly

-----~

O'DELL WHEEL allghment
localod at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
Complete front end sarvlce,
tun. up and brake service; Wheels balanced electroalcally.
All
work
guaranteed. · Reasonable
roles. Phone 992-3213.

601 Eost Main
POMEROY
EXCELLENT
lll"oker
INVESTMENT BUY
110 rMCI!anlc strtal
POMEROY - large brick -::--:-::-:-:-:---.....:7.::.
·21-tfc
_ ~ Pomti'GY, Ohio
building, 2 story, has 590.119 o
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer .
month Income now, 3 offier ~
' Complete Service
4 ROOMS
lots to Mil, CALL FOR INPilon• 9-49-3121
FULL basement, nice corner FORMATION 'TODAY
Racine, Ohio
lot. Room for mobile home, SUOO.OO.
Crltt Bradford
$2,500.00.
PRACTICALLY
· .2 ACRES
.
NEW BRICK
==-=-:-----::...:5·1-ttc
All utilities available. Located POMEROY - No chlldron SEWING MACHINES. Repair
on blacktop road. $2,500.00. · hazards In this dead end
36" X 23" X .009
service, all makes·. 992-2284
2 BEDROOM mobile home In
3 BEDROOMS
•tree!, 3 bedrooms with
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy:
· Racine area . Phone 992-6329. ·
Large
modem
kitchen,
and
double
closets,
1\':t
baths,
1
Authorized . Singer S..les end
12-14-tfc
dining. Naorly new gas fur- beeullful kitchen with all
_Service•.We Sharpen Scissors.
nace. Garage. Carport. Large b u 11•1 -.1n s, c i r ~ e ted
FURNISHED and unturntShed
·29-tfc
lown .
throughout, full basement ~---.--...:..::3
apartments. Close to school.
OHIO RIV'ER
with recreation room, utility READY-MIA CONI..ttt: t t: de·
Phone 992-5434.
FRONTAGE
room, 1 acre, ALL OF THIS
llver,.t right to your protict.
10-18-tfc
1200 FEET.. Somt land above FOR JUST S2t.5GO.OO.
.
Fut and euy. · Fr ..
---~-flood, . some low tar boot
. SAVE YOUR CAR
USED OFFSET PLATES '
·estimates.
Phone 992-3284.
launching. Drlllod weil. ideal
AND YOUR MONEY,
HAVE
Mobile Homes For Sale ,
Ready-Mix
Co .. .
•Goegleln
lor resorl.
CLOSE IN
MANY USES
Middleport, Ohio.
60X12, .2·Dedroom, an-electrtc,
4 BEDROOMS
POMEROY- 1'12 story frame,
6-JO.Ifc
air conditioned, 8x20 ft. Porch
MODERN kitchen with cook bath, 6 rooms In ali, 3
and aluminum awning,
units. Steel sink. fladlant bedroomo, full basement,
aluminum skirting, coin heat. Carport. 7 room In oil, 2 Iorge lot. GOING AT JUST BACKHOE AN.D DOZER_; work.
~ptlc tanks Installed. Uec&gt;rge
plelely setup. Beautiful :
drilled wells. Foundation for SUOO.OO. WHY PAY RENT
( Blll) Pulllno. Phone 991·2411. ·
8
for
-$1.00
location. OWner leaving state.
2nd house. 10 ACRES. .
EACH MONTH.
Phone 949-4892 or 991·5272.
45 ACRES
~---:---~-~.::.25-tfc
1-10-tfc
WE HAVE SOME ACREAGE
ill•odern •3 bedroom home. COMING UP IN THE NEAR'
S:tiA
FUTURE.
Beautiful kitchen . Full
.
MIDDLEP,
O
RT6·roomhouse
bosement with den and
HENRY CLELAND
and bath, 315 Hamilton Ave.,
REALTOR
fireplace. Gar~, 2 barns·,
prlcod reasonably. Phone 992.
. O!fitt m.m,
Young fruit. Minerals.
204(
'
·
Rasldtnce
992·2561
HOr WATER HEATING
1-18-Jic
Modern 3 bedrooms, basement.
111 Court St.
1-16:0tc
Nice
kitchen;
dlshwo•her
.
.
Pom~troy, Ohio .
Fully carpeted. Carport,
Fenced.
•
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
Auto Sales
Assocl•t• ·
992-:ms
•68 FOR!i' pickup, 2S,o0o miles,
992·2371
. wide bed, custom cab 1-16-6fc
st,ofOO; '65 Mustong, V-8; 4 .- - - - - - - - ' -''mo WuhlniJtpn Blvd.
speed- S225; Phone 992-6048. J'i---, . Belpre, Ohio
1·16-6tc :

W.

For Sale.

Aluminum ·

Sheets

The
Daily Sentinel

I .
I
'11!11TIOII.U!FI' MCe.~.

'

WMP0/1390 ·
,

.

I

,

· ON YOUR DIAL

. ..'

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3S. Component

3t.Old

hair-do
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36. Ruasl•n
mountsln
range
S7. Beyond
hope
tO. Thrice
(!!IUS.)

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IIJTIAND
Arnold Grift

142-4211

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URCHIN 111111.1

A.n•wert Whal lhf' Jru••maed rocellorH em• nl100·n
ptri .... - THE RUNAROUND
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DOWN

AN't'OilE HAS THE

IN M~
OPINION

'' ~EN T~E REASON

f'ER!&lt;JN WHAT SHE

CODE 15

RULE ITSELF "

I DON'T sELJEI'E
•

RI6Hn reu. AtllTHe~ THE OR~
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DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
One letter simply slllllda for another. In thb sample A is
UJed far the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, ·
apoatrophea, the length and foi'JIIIItlon of the words are all
ts. E•ch doy the code letters are dU!erent. .
\
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A CryptoiJ'UI Qfttallon ·
AKZ

ZRS

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K

FKO

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Yeaierday'a CrnKo&lt;iaOCe: FREEDOM FROM EFFORT IN
THE PRESENT MERELY MEANS THAT THERE HAS BEEN
. ~,!FORT STORED UP IN THE PAST.-TIIEODORE ROOSE·
, ..LT
·
·
(0 1171. Kine Fulurtt Syndicate, Inc.)

Rutlllld, 0. ·

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PUQW 1 WUF.-LRWKOO
MKAXKY

Toy~, ,

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u-rambietheae twrJumbles,
one letter to eaeh aquan!, to
·farm four ordinary wordo.

1. Old
Chinese
kingdom

•
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II. Fume
32. Loki's ·
daughter

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U.Klndof
buffalo
4C.Actor
• Luther

OITIY

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2l.lnhabltant
ZZ. Hill
dweller
%3. Actress
Scala
U. Inquire
Z5. Fluidity
unit
l7. Aversion
to
motion
38. Weasel's
relative

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111. Likely
lB. Modest
20. Native

a. FoollJh

i2' • 14' · 24; . WIDf

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:.Monkey
of South
America
3. Architectural pier
4. The same
5. City
In
in
Texas
&amp;Nursery
Utah
rhyme
11. Sheer
character
11, G.IOAy
7.Bum
bid:
the
15. VanDrumidnight
tenplay ·
oil
17.NepUve
I.W1111der .
word
11, Prettcri be t.Beyond
=.Se.weed It. Duenna's
...-.•,...
ptoduet
title
18.
Reatraln
18. Track
thrill '
ZI.EngU.h
river
!t.IDput
10. '·-·na·
lion indivisible"
~~~i,:~_j..J 31. "Candid"
enthusiast ·
II. Belief
S9. Fortuneteller's ·
. cards
41. Upper·.

::

. K_aal Estate For

. MILLER ..
,MOBILE HOMES

•

RfAL lltcf 0'

Hut~; ANNie! Me.. AN'
PROF "' I MEAN.&lt; ·jlle

--,-----AUTOMOBILE Insurance been

Real Estate For Sale

SR.

I.

~t: ~ 1 IC

2 DR. H.T.

"

liM/IT 'WltD~=-:;;;;,;_l, ===~~~;::=:;:,;_ .:,~.

mu_y 5eT ME UP?

BARRACUDA

NICE trailer. 1 bedroom, Ideal STEREO, Early American
for couple, 10 miles north of
style, AM-FM combination, 4
Pomeroy, $65a month. Phone
speaker sound system, 4
992-7479.
speed automatic changer.
1-4-tfc
Balance 579.67. Use our
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
1-12-6tc
NEW 2-BEDROOM, double
wide, mobile home on lot In
NEEDLE
Sewing
Syracuse. Completely fur . TWIN
nished. Phone 992-2441 after 5 Machine !971 Model in walnul
stand. All features built-In to
p.m.
make fancy designs and do
1·3-lfc
stretch sewing. Also but1 BEDROOM trailer apart- tonholes, blind hems, etc.
ments, Ideal for couples. $43.35 cash price or ternls
available. Phone 992-5641.
Contact McClure's Dairy Isle,
1-12-61c
992-5248 or 992·3436.
1·9·12tc
S"i'!:REO-Radlo Console, 4
HOUSE , 1632 Lincoln Heights, 4 ~~~ Intermixed changer,
rooms and bath, basement, s ake:olume. control, 4
picture window, fenced In
sound system, lovely
yard , all newly painted. ualnut finish. Balance 569.52.
Phone. 992-2780 or 992-3432.
se our budget terms. Call
1. 18.1fc 992-7085.
- - - -- - -- 1-12-6tc
UNFURNISHED 3 room and r - - - - - - - - - ,
ba th; see a t 408 Spring
Avenue.
1-18-ttc

The Almanac
By United Press IDtemaUonal
Today is Tuesday, Jan. 18,
the 18th dar of 1972.
. The moon is between Its new
phase and first quarter.
1lhe morning stars are
Mercury and Jupiter.
The evenilf8 stars are Venus,
Mars and Saturn.
Those born on this day are ·
under the sign of Capricorn.
American orator•Daniel Websl!.r was born Jan. 18, 1782.
On this day inhisto"Y :
In 1943 Moscow announced
the Nazi siege of Leningrad had
.
.. '69 , VOLKSWAGEN, 2 door
been lllted. It had started in ' FOR THE BEST deal
In a new , sedan, dtfu•e, 4 speed, radio
the fall of 1941.
or used mobile home, try
- 51, 100; '69 Dodge Swinger
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
2 door hardtop; V-1, atandard:
In 1966· the daughter of the
Kanauga,
Ohio.
yellow wllh bia~k vinyl top;
late Indian ' Prime Minister ·
12-17-901c · 36,000 m.llll, still under
Nehru, Indira Gandhi, was
"
M"'O"'Ii""'TI:=I:-H
~O:-M_,.e-,-.- L-arge
~~anty -·$1,~75. Phone 992named the new prime minister
seledlon 8- lo · 12 wldes, 1 to 4.
1-16-61c
of that c&lt;iuntry.
bedrooms, bank repos and
In 1968 Ute United Sta~ and
used, some practically new. 1970 ··.ousl ER, 6 cylln•·· -.
Saye up to v•. R. A. or Don ·
RU8Sla agreed on a draft of a
Millet', 705 Farson Street,
11.600; 1967 International
nuclear nonproliferation treaty.
Belpre, Ohio by Kaiser
pickup truck - $700; phone
In 1970Mormon leader David
Aluminum, phone 423-9531. : 742-3615.
.
· !-16-llc
1-1 8. 121c
McKay died at the age of 96.

o:

.. f !&lt;IOJJ

68 PLYMOUTH

SIEGLER HEATER
GET FREE

· 200 Gations i=ual Oil Whtn
· You Buy Any Siegler H.. ter · '
Tltru Jan. 15.
TRAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile
Court, Rt. 124, .Syracuse, Ohio
I'OMIIOY · .·
991-2951 .
J ..lw.corsoy,Mtr.
4-2-lfc
'
. . . - l f t·llll .

and the Ambassadors.

Julie Rose of Columbus
visited her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. John Rose and Mandie.
Mrs . Faye Kirkhart of
Marion, Ind., spent a few days
with her daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Trussell and
family . Also visiting them were
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Faust of
Jamaica, N. Y., and Mr. and ·
Mrs . Roger Kirkhart and
children, Chester, 0., and
Deidra Cowdery, of Newark.

.1

1-11-ltc

,, -aea~ance

BEDROOM and 2 bedroom
mobile homes. Adults only.
Phone 992-5592 .
12-19-lfc

Club

Music by Red Stewart

I

Ba Shan'N.eWS

.

. .'

· REGULATIONS
·
·
·
HOM
.. I &amp; ~UTO .
The Publlsher reserves the
1970 DODG.E POLARA
·
523" "
· rlgh toedltorrefectanyads
40r .• v.eeng!ne,automatlctrans.,P.S,factoryalr,good
!
W
9t2' 094
deemed objectional. The ·
tires, radloS.othere•tras. while finish, clean lnlerlor.
;
~
·2
publisher will not be
lf7.QCHEVELLE MAL,BU HTCPE.
. · · ,' $2"5.
·.&amp;
Dl~
.
U:.
606 E. Main Pomeroy
responsible for more tha'n one
Low mileage bd local owner with lots of warranty left,
llliftlnl
·fl,
k'l
t1
tl
- ·
··, ·
correc nser on.
factory air con llloned, V·8 engine, turbo.hydromallc, p.
-GUARANTEE[)RATES
steering, gold body, sandalwood vinyl lop, radio, vinyl ·
240 Uncoln 51:
Ph
._
For Want Ad Service
lnlet'Jor, good w-w tires. This car Is loaded wlthe•tras.
_
. Middltport,Ohlo
0111.•,~_&lt;;,2094 ·
·:
and·
. .
5 cents per Word one Insertion
1969 CHEVY II NOVA 2 DR.
·
·
516" .
0111 Anttlony Plumbing
&amp; Aulo
Minimum Charge75c
307 V-8 engine, 3 speed floorshlft, spotless cl..n blk. vinyl'
w. heW • o»m"'•tt 'TIOnit .
FURNITUR~
l2 cents per word three
interlor,darkblueflnlsh.w.wtlres, llkenew.redlo. Local ·
- ,.....
· ..
' ·
consecutive InsertionS.
owner
car.
Malnteunce
~.
a
rYICI
.
the
,
Open1TII.5
1
Steip In and See Our :
..
y..rlround.Nom.lflt:wh•l
Motld•ythruS.tvrdlly
18 ·cents per ·word six con'
secutlv.e Insertions.
your' ~ ..... Com"'"lt......, o.r
E Mal p
·o
Floor pispiii!V·
,....,
,... • 606 •
n, omeroy, .
•25 Per Cent Discount on paJd.
spclutiilg ~.-ir. lnltrior or .
ads and .ads paid within 10
~
exterior carpentry. Ceiling
days.
tile and-Pantllngand Siding
ALL KINDS OF
CARDOFTHANKS
' •.
.
·.
I
e
1·
p· t bl
i,
&amp; OBITUARY
•
•
Complete
um ng
GLASS
$1.50 for 50 word nilnlmum .
·' '()P.!N EV~S. 1:00 I'.M..
Ht•tlng. '
For.,Eve?'! Purpose , ·
E h ddltl
d
_.,..EROY OHIO
1'
Day N~mller 992·25'"
ac a
ona 1 war 2c·
r,_
'
' 1 Wt havt 24 h'r . tmlr~~nWe
s~lillit it •uta gJ.u ·
'
'
BLIND AD$
:.L-~----:----------,---~--,.ll
• ••
on
the
spot lnstoll•tlon.
Additional 25c Charge per
service.
Make reservations for your ;
·Mirrors.
Tobie Tops - Plat.
Advertisement.
;92.$803
742-3947
private parties, banqueli, • ·
Glass.
Small
home 1'!1]1111~ '
OFFICE HOURS
For Sale
991-3198 742-4761
special occoslons.
.
windows
storm
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Daily, Notice
weortlull_ylnsured
screens
Ideal for meeting RJ~ce 8· 30 am to 12 00 N00
4 WHE .EL wagon, :.~1 of
.
repaired.
with or without kitchen
'
. .
:
n INCOME Tt~X· service, dally
FREE ESTIMATE
Saturday.
except Sunday, evenings by harrows , Phone 247 ·2161 ·
privileges.
. ·
Point r&gt;~nt &amp; Mason
appointment. Mrs. Wanda
H6·6fc
· Individual Catering
In Memory
Eblin, Laurel Cliff Road, 1
AUTO GLASS
Will seat up to 1so' people.
'I
t 01 M
' 1 C ty '52 FORO Troctor, good con- ·
AI Conorcl, Mgr,
• gs
IN LOVING memory of our
mte wes
oun
dillon, new rubber - $650; '
Phone
dear husband, father and
Fairground on Rt. 7 bypass.
Phone
304-773-5710
phone 992-60~.
Phone 992-2272.
Mason,W.V,o.
992-3975
992-5786
grandfather, James S. Hood,
Route
33
·
1-16-6tc
who passed away 22 ·-y
"' ears ago
1-3·301 c --~-----...,_________
10 HEAD Holstein cows, fresh
today, Jan . 18, 1950. He is not
From the largest
cold beneath the ground, Now
and' close up Springers.
Bulldozer Radiator
closed within the tomb. That Wanted To Buy
FOUR NEW HOMES
Homer Circle, phone 949-2177. .Smallest Heater Core.
living In our Father's man 1-18-3tc
OPEN
FOR INSPECTION
W
N•""'n Biggs
POCKETknives, - - - - - - - - slon, aitlng for us to join OLD
. ONE HOME IN RACINE
Roell• lor Specialist
especially Case XX. Also NORWEGIAN
him soOn . Sadly missed by
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
have other old knives to trade
t:iKnouna pups.
wife, Edith, daughters and
992
2362
ONE
110ME IN MIDDLEPORT
Phone
'
·
1-12-61c
or sell. Phone 992-2343.
grandchildren.
NO MONEY DOWN
1·18-ltp
1-18-lfc
tOO PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
- - -- - - - -~------VACUUM CLEANER. Electro
A ~ bedrool)l 516.1&gt;00.00 home can be purchased with a
Ph. 991-2174
.
OLD FURNITURE, Round Oak
Hygiene New .Demonstrator
Notice
n;tonthly payment as low as 565.00 for a family iNIIha base
tables, Brass beds, dishes,
has all cleaning attachments
clock's, and-or complete
salory
of $5,000.00 and three children.- 7'1• Pet. annU.t•
plus the new Electro Suds for
I(QSCOT KOSMETICS and wigs
Sales
households. Write M. D.
shampooing carpet. Only
percen!lae rateT ~
•
,, .for sale. Brown's. Phone 992·
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
S27.SO cash price or terms 1972 MERCURY, 4,000 m,lles.
5113.
Call 992-6271.
available. Phone 992-5641.
1~· 31 - lfc
Call '773-5119.
12-17-lfc
1-12-6tc
1-14-61p
ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT ...
overweight;· ladles, teens and WANTED to buy, Hardesty's LONG BOTTOM- "tve room '19i0 W·30 vLu&gt;MOBILE «2~
. men Interested In a Weight
Hislorlcal and Geographical
house. bath, business, or
automatic·, factory· •tereo
Watchers ( RI Class In
Encyclope~la Illustrated,
storage building - S6.500.
tape. Lotsofe•lras. Like new. ·
1
Pomeroy write : Weight
~~i~~~in~f o'IJ.~r:s mt~u,;'t~~ Phone 985-3529.
12-19·30tc
.Call 992-2441 after s ~-r'ie-ttc
Watchers (R), 1863 Section
Rd., Cincinnati, Ohio 45237 .
published 1883 by H. H. ~----.,--BIL'N
CAL~,
·
Hardesty and Co., Publishers. TROPICAL. FISH,
fancy ' .19r1 Cn EVY ,. Vega . with ,
• ELSON,tft-3657
niL TON.WOLFE, 949-321f'
10-3-tfc
Write Oneila M. Hutton, 301
guppies. angels and breeders,
studded snow !Ires ~ounted L~T~O~M~CR~O~W~,991~-~2580~---_':D~A:L:E~~~~~~~J
SAVE up to one half. Bring your
Kenilworth Dr .. Akron, Ohio
Bellas and supplies. Phone
plus two extra regular tires:
·
sick TV Ia Chuck's TV shop.
44313.
992-5443.
$1,700.00; Also reac stereo .
'· ·
.
INTER lOR and f.. exterl.or
151 Butternut Ave .• Pomeroy:
1-t3-6tc - -. , . - - -- - 12· 30-ffc
cassette player-recorder tor Real
Sale
painting, roofing and gutter
Phone 992-5080.
use with home stereo system
•
work
don9. Phone· 1143-2826.
11 -21 -lfc
COAL, limeSTone. ExcelSior - SSO; Phone.-742-3887 or 742- HOUSE, J6.42'.Lfncoln Heights. ·.
..
,
.I· 1-1fl..12!c
For
Rent
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
4447 from 9:30 a.m. to 2:30 ' C. II Danny 'Thompson, 992·
WANT WORK at home ad·
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
p.m. ilnd after 5 p.m.
. , . 2196 ·
,. '··
SEPTIC tanks . Cleaneil. l'ree
dresslna and stuffing en- 3 ROOMS and bath. furnished In
4·9-llc
pipe lnspeciiQr\. ·Paul SteinSyracuse. Phone 992-5462,
velopes'!' Rush self-stamped
•·.
metz,
phone. 742·586-l.
envelope to F 1:/rlbe; Box. 36,
1-16-Jtc POODLE puppies, Silver Toy,
·,
' ·
'7·1.8-lfc
1-18-6tc
Albany, Ohio. 45710.
Park view Kennels, Phone 991·
1-6-tfc 2 BEDROOM mobile home,
5443.
furnished, utilities paid,
8-15-lfc
available now. Phone 9927384 .
t-16-Jtc
INVENTORY SALE

i
I,

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

Classifieds.Gei Results!

Attest . Gene Grete
INFORMATION
Clerk of Council
DEADLINES
.
CERTIFICATE
_ '
-• ...
Section 1705.39, R.c. ~ "No
5 P.M.
Day
Before
appropriation menure shell
Publication
becomewith
effective
until there Is
Mond~y Deadline
9 a .m.
flied
the appropriating
Cancellation
a. Corrections
authority by the county auditor Will be accepted unlll9 a .m. for
• cortlflcele that tho total ap·
Day of Publication .
proprlatlons from &amp;ech fund,

•

'

' .

•

,.

WEAR .

1'16611

FOR A Ri.ILE CEMES,
50 5i-IOULO THE

,_
ACliJALLf(, I
THINK I PREFER
THE TITLE.
'' 6ARRIS'TER "

�.

·.,

8- Tbe DIUy Sentir)ei,Middleporl-PomeNy, O.,Jan/18,1972 I

News••• in. BriefS
(Continued from Page I)
·
and commercial alrcran In Canada grounded today by a
nationwide walkou~ by Canada's 1,600 aU: .traffic controllers. The
strike began at 4 a.m. EST Monday at 116 airp9rts, It affected
about 50,000 passengers who travel Canadian skies daUy and
halted all air mail and freight, except cargo to remote communities and emergency flights, such as medical evacuation.
Figures released by the airlines showed that the flrst :strike
· by controllers was costing the Canadian airline industry an
estimated $2 million a day in lost revenues.

'

New

ly Assured..

Now You Know
··

Hy LEE LEONARD
election is still two weeki Springfield~ territory.
silnilarly may have cllued · the Envil'orurienl ('.ommll;!ee,
..,,· ielill McNIIDII'I,
1• not,_..·~ o1f
UPI Statehouse Reporter
away, but .. Sen. Roberl R.
Lampson, 67, is chairman of Rep.
·
_,,,.
.
o,J•nnboJI,
.Ho
cbalrman
, II.
Howard A. Knlgl)t, R- , .. - • a c:ontelt .....
·
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The Shaw, R-co!uinbuJ, and _Rep5. ' the tax-writing House Ways Fremont, chairman of the Rep. ,J.awrence E. Hugbea, R- pow•fal ·. UN_
opening gun has yet to sound , Uoyd George Kerns, R- arid Means Comm!ttee. He was Houae Agrlulture, Commerce CoiUI!!bUI, another reap- 1 ·Colnmfltee and an
for legislative primary cam- . Rayinond,andE. W.l..am!ieon. not burt by .reapportionment, and Labor Conunlttee,· away · porU&lt;•u••it vlcllm.
veteran, bll bten
paigns, but It is already evident. RJeffer11011, are nOt ellpeCted to blit both he and Kerns were from a primary conteat.
Hou.e Majclrlty Whip Walter . · portlaned Into a dlltrlct
the 1972 elections lVill change seek re~ection.
subjected to hea-vy Pft!8!IUI'I!S
" - - •ed 'con...,...
to
jlep. Kemeth B. Creasy, R-, L . White • u&amp;Y'UIIMI,"'
prtpa~d .,......'!mpop!Ne
'ID leave the
the face of the Ohio General
9law, with 19 years In the during the Y.ear-long debate on Delaware
a veteran of 13 years to run for the Senate after 15 an ,..-Assembly .
Senate and 10 In the House, is the budget and tax b!ll. Amore In ihe Houae and chairman of yelll'llin the Hollie.
lalatUre.
' .
Retirement announcements chairman of the budget- relaxed pace awaits Jampaon
HOLLY'\VOOD -TilE STRIPPERS at the Classic Cat were are coming forth in ample making Senate Finance at . the weekly Jefferson
w;der orders to leave some strategic covering in place tonight numbers, and reapportionment Committee. He Is 68, Gazette, whlcll he puNilbes;
and cool down their more abandoned gyrations.
has upset the plans of more recovering from surgery for a
Other lawmakers have
Tonight is "Senior Citizen's Night" at the burlesque club on than a few Republican in- hip aliment and would have to resigned because of .the long
the Sunset Strip, with a special show for 160 oldsters from three cumhents.
cllange his residence to run session, or they plan to ~etlre ill
retirement oomes. The viewers range in age to their 80s and 005.
In fact, reapportionment, because of reapportionment. the end of this year. · ·.
SAIGON (UP!)- Two North
In:Salgoo, guerrlllu set off a Vietnamese and U.S. television .
While the girL, at the Classic Cat usually dance nude there will be a:ge and the lengthy and
DeaiiSimllarBiow
Sen. James K. Leedy; a- Vietnamese MIG jets crossed box of hand grenadea In a stations early today. Ell·
some costumes tonight, although some of the girls will be topless, frustrating 1971 session have Kerns, an 11-year veteran and Wooster1 resigned last· month Into LaO!! and attacked two pollee truck parked inside ' a ploslons and fires went on for a
said club owner Allan Wells.
combined to bring about the ch~nofthe House Finance -to spend more time with his U.S. F4 Phantom jets with air- ·compound housing South half hour.
·
. INir missiles but failed to hit
retirement of three of the most Commlttee, was dealt a simiJF family and law .practice.
Sen. John POds Jr., D-Akron, the American plan~s. the U.S.
WASHINGTON- AGENERAL tightening of security within powerful commlttee chairmen blow by the Democraticthe administration to stop Information leaks similar to those in the General Assembly - a controlled Apportionment said last week he would seek a · Conuiland said today.
Involving American deliberations on the India-Pakistan war bas trio with almost a half-century Board. He would either have to county office "so my three kids
£'1
_ L-·__ .
AU.S.conununiquesaidthe ~-;..!..-.. n'--~ts
Soviet-buill
MIG21s
fired
three
""'ll&amp;el
DUll
geu
'--'IUUJe
of
experience
in
the
move
or
run
against
House
don't
grow
up
while
I'm
not
been ordered personally by President Nixon.
.
.
Speaker Pro Tempore Charles home." Reps. Gordon M. missiles in the attack Monday
Ronald L. Ziegler, lbe White House press secretary, said legislature.
The deadline for filln~ for re- E. Fry In the latter's Scherer and Dale G. Schmidt, afternoon : but that the · JUNEAu; Alaska (UPJ) -A terrltortBI watel'll ·t.• miles off
Monday the President wanted to make certain thatlnfonnation,
a pair of Cincinnati American all'craft did not fire Coast Guard lcebrealter seized Cape Upright near !It; Matthew
on policy discusSions does "not flow froin private meetings."
Republicans, also have their ba~k at the Communist planes, two Soviet fishing veasels fl!rly Island Monday night and ·
"We can't operate effectively when these things become
eyeS on county offices and ,have wh1ch ~ped back , across the today following .11 · two-houi placed .prize· crews aboard
public," Ziegler said. Syndicated columnist Jack &amp;derson
announced
they will not run for border mto North Yletnam. _ -· chase In the Bering Sea after preparatory to taking them to a
obtained classified documents which showed Nixon ordered a U.
The communique located the they attempted to break and U.S. port. St. Matthew~ b
the legislature again.
S. "tilt"ln favor of Pakistan during the December war.
John Utsinger, 50, Dayton,
Some lawmakers have attack so miles northeast of the ·run with u.s. boarding parties · about 250 miles off the Alaska
LETART, W. Va. - Mrs. decided nollo run because it is Plain of Jars and 30 miles aboard
mainland.
.
DETROIT - FUNERAL SERVICES wlli be held here died Sunday in a Dayton Garnette L. Clarke, 72, Route I, not worth $12,750 for them to
hospital.
Mr.
Utsinger
was
a
inside
La~.
.
Coasi
Guard
headquarters
In
The
Soviet
ships
then
turned
Thursday for Edward F. Fisher, one of seven brothers who
U.S. military spokesmen Wasbing.ton
gave
the and ran for the open sea with
former resident of Rutland, died Tuesday morning at abandon their private jobs and
formed a company which later became the Auto Body Division of having graduated from Holzer Medical Center.
spend all year IIi Columbus.
refus~d to say what. the ICI!bl'eaker Storis permission io the U.S. sailors slill aboard.
General Motors Corp. Fisher, who was 80, died Monday.
She is survived by her
Gol To Be Rich
Rutland High School.
AmeriCan planes were domg In fire warning shots across the
He was vice president of General Motors and ge~ral
He was preceded in death by husband, Robert G. Clarke, "You've either got to be rich Laos but they appeared to· be bow of the Soviet ships as they
Manager.of the Fisher Body Division during World Warll.
his father, ·lhe late Frank Sr.; ason,RobertG.Ciark,Jr., or retired to be in the leglsla- bombl~g North Vietnamese left the 12-mlle timu of
TAKEN TO HOLZER
Columbus,
Ind.;
five lure any·more," sald' Poda.
Infiltration routes from Bar- American territorial wa~rs off
WASHINGTON -TilE UNlTED STATES Supreme Court Ulsinger.
The Middleport E-R squad.
Mr. Utsinger is survived by daughters, Mrs. Marie Roush, Rep. J ames J . Flannery, D- thelemy Pass to the Plain of an Alaskan Island and headed was called to the ajJarlme11t of
refu!ied Monday to hear arguments challenging O)lio's election
New Haven; Mrs. Kathleen Cleveland, the ranking Oemo.
into ~n, sea, but the Coast Mrs, · Lemma Lighter, ·North
law which bars candidates from seeking nomination and election his wife, Margaret; two sons; Walters, Columbus, Ind.; Mrs.' cr t on the House Ways and Jars.
11
one
daughter;
his
mother,
The
U.S.
communique
also
GUard
ship later reported the Second :Ave., at 1:16 a.lll.
by a political party other than the party affiliation voted in four
Ellen
Forbes,
Charleston;
Mrs:
Means
Conunlttee,
also
got
his
reported
the
loss
of
an
ships
had
surrendered and Tuesday. Mrs. Lighter,
Grace Utsinger, Rutland; two
previous years. The request had been flied by Thomas W. Lippitt,
Lucy
Kaylor,
local,
and
Mrs.
fill
of
pressure
on
taxes
last
American
AH1
Cobra shots were not necesskry.
sisters, Mrs. Tom Stewart,
believed to have suffered a
Cleveland, who unsuccessfully sought the Republican
Marjorie
Walburn,
of
Midyear
and
is
running
for
Cuyahelicopter
gunship
shot
down
The Storts found the two 'heart alta'*, was taken to
Rutland, and Mrs . Kelson
nomination for the House in Ohio's 22nd Congressional district In Phillips, Wellston, and one dleport; 14 grandchildren, hoga County Auditor where he . Monday 35 miles northwest of Soviet ships within U.S.
Holzer Medleal Center.
the 1970 primary election.
·
brother, Wendell, of West ghree great-grandchildren, will be closer to bis wife and the central coastal city of Qui
Lippitt bad sought this year to run for the same Alexander.
two sister, Mrs. Ocie Oldaker, eight children.
Nhon. The two U.S. crewmen
Congressional seat but as an American Independent Party
Funeral services will be held of near here, and Mrs. Susan Rep. Carlton E. Davidson, R- escaped Injury in the crash.
candidate. Ohio law provides: "No person shall be a candidate Thursday at 2 p.m. at the Edwards, New Haven, and four Ironton, a former conunlttee
for nomination or election at a party primary if be voted as a Zimmerman Funeral Home in brothers, Herbert, Garland, chairman and 11-yelir veteran
member of a different political party at any primary election West Alexander. Masonic Edwin and John King, all of ·is retiring. His diatrict lv~
combined with Rep. · Ralph
· within the next preceding four calendar years."
services will be held this near here.
PLEASANT VALLEY
The daughter of the late Welker, R.Pomeroy, 'who is
evening at 7.
ADMISSit&gt;NS: Angus
Quincey and Stella Graham seeking reelection. ·
'
CINCINNATI - PROVIDENT BANK Monday lowered its
Robbins,
Point Pleasant; Mrs.
King, Mrs. Clarke was a Some powerful Republican
prime rate from S¥c pet. to 4'14 pet., the first Cincinnati bank to Judgment Suit
member of the Broad Run lawmakerJJ •were stung . by Ollie Crawford, Apple Grove;
follow the lead of New York lending Institutions. Carl Lindner,
Mrs. Thomas Jones, Cheshire;
Lutheran
Church.
reapportionment
but
may
land
Provident's chairman of the board, said the decrease ''reflects FUed in Court
Detner Roush, Clifton; Mrs.
Funeral services open to on their feet.
our strong belief in the success of President Nixon's economic . •
d.
Amanda
Murray, Middleport;
li · "
A judgment for money an a members of the family and Sen. Oakley- C. Collins, R- William VanMater, Clifton;
po ~~:~expect this move to add stimulus to the,local economy ~uit for_divorce have been filed relatlves only will be held at Ironton, a senator for 17 years Charles Parsons, City; Donald .
'
and it is In keeping with our commitment to the greater Cln· ~ M~gs County Com~on 1:30 p.m. Thursday at the and chairman of the powerful Parsons, Point Pleasant; ' '
Foglesong Funeral Home with Senate Education Committee
1
Christine Jeffers, Southside,
cinnati area," Lindner said. Other local banks said they had
Feas f ourf ·mily Found Inc. the Rev. George Welric~ of- was left without a district but
.
, eli und
tud
a1r ax a
,
and
Elza Blain, Gallipolis
Proy.dent s a on
er s Y·
Louisville, Ky., filed suit ficiatlng. Burial will be at Said to be moving into the nextBroad Run Cemetery. There door district of Sen. Max H.• Ferry.
against
William
and
Ruth
WASHINGTON -SEN. JACOB K. JAVITS said today he will Stevens, Sr., Middleport, in the are no calling hours-"
Dennis,, R-WIImlngton,
·nominate a New York girl for admission to the U. s. Naval amount of $772.89, interest and
chalnrnin of the Judiciary
Academy, even though the Navy is d~d set against her breaking costs.
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
Comrillttee who Is reported
the school's 127-year-old all-male tradition.
Paul ·Burns, Locust St., retiring.
James A Fultz, Tuppers
Javlts said he would announce his selection, an 16-year-old Plains, filed suit for divorce Pomeroy, was taken by the
Call No. C80
CbarterNo. U8l
NalloaalllllakRegionNo. 4
Avoid ConteII
colle11e freshman, at a news conference one week from today. against Janet L. Fultz, Tup- Pomeroy E-R unit to Veterans House Majority Leader RobREPORT OF CONDmoN, CONSOLJDATING
The New York Republican, w))o broke Senate tradition by pers Plains, charging gross Memorial Hospital where be ert E. Levitt, R-Canton,ls said
DOMESTIC SUBSIDIARIES, OF
naming the first girl page, has suggested to the Navy Depart- neglect of duty and extreme was admitted after liecoming to be moving Into an oJ)en disment that a nurses training program be added to the academy's cruelty.
ill at his home Monday af- trict to avoid a primary conteat
curriculum so that women may enroll.
ternoon.
with Rep. Richard G. Reichel,
R-Massillon.
BROUGHTTO HOSPITAL
of Pomeroy In the Stale of Ohio, at the clo1e of llll•lnesa oa Deeember 11, 1m,
WASHINGTON -mE 92ND CONGRESS returned for a
Rep. Robert E. Netzley, RLori Casto, Mason , was
published In respoase to Call made by Comptroller of tbe Cumncy, under Title
LOCAL TEMPS
Laura, an 11-year veteran and
politically oriented second session today ready to give final taken to Veterans Memorial
1%, United States Code, Section 111.
The temperature In down- Chairman of the House lnsurapproval to controversial legislation Imposing-the first real Hospital where she was ad.
A&amp;'IETS
controls on campaign spending. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D- mitted at 7:45p.m. Monday by town Pomeroy lit 10:30 a.m. ance Committee, apparently is
Cash and due from banks - - - - - - • - • • - • - - - - - - - f1,2ij,889.84
Mass, gave a hint of the partisan atmosphere which will pervade the Mason E-R unit after Tuesday was 44 degrees, under strong enough to force Rep.
U.S. Treasury seclll'itles : - - - - - - - - - • • - - - - - - • 5,526,903.75
sunny skies.
Jack P. Oliver, R-Arcanum, inthe session when he delivered one of his strongest broadsides becoming ill at her home.
Obligations
of olber U.S. Go\&gt;ernment agencies
retirement because reapporagainst President Nixon. He said the administration was guilty - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - to
tionment combined their disand corporations - - • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - • - - - 569,148.38
of a civil rights abdication unrivaled since Reconstruction.
tricts.
. , Obligations of States and political subdivisions - - - .. - - ·• - 996,037.03
"Twenty.five million black Americans starving for the bread
House Speaker Cllarles F. .
Other aecurlties • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 25,742.50
of
hope
and
notice,"
Kennedy
said
Monday
night,
"and
all
they
Kurfess,
R-Bowllng
Green,
•
Ff$1eral funds sold and securities purchased
An open house will be held -have from the administration is a cake lnacribed with names like
·
IUider agreements to resell - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1,350,600.00
Sunday from 2 to 5 p.m. at the
Carswell
and
benign
neglect,
and
opposition
to
every
meaningful
Tonight, Jan. 11
Needlecraft Shop, located on
LOans • • • • • ·- · -. - · - - · - - - -- •
-- - 5t""'
...1b875
I
'
civil rights bill that Congress tries to pass." Earlier In the day
Bank
premises,
furniture
and
fixtures,
and
Route
124
at
the
south
entrance
THE BEGUILED
(C!'fltinued from Page 1) .. , , .
Clint Eastwood
of Syracuse. Mrs. Martha Jane Kennedy reaffirmed his decision not·to run for the presidency by
:· other assets representing bank premtses • - • - -~ - 137,917.48
Geraldine Page
asking
that
his
name
be
withdrawn
from
the
Florida
primary
side
the
headquarters,
located
Williams and Mrs. Marguerite
Other asseis - - - - - • - - - , • - - - .. - - - • - • :llt2 55
where it had been automatically entered.
across the 'street from the
Karr,
owners
of
the
shop;
will
TOTAL ASSETS • • • • • • • - • • • • - - - - - • $15,243,44o.28
Disney Cartoons
siatehouse, to welcome the
award door prizes and serve
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.
LIABILITIES
SAN FRANCISCO -GOV. TOM McCALL of Oregon flew to candidate. They carried signs
coffee and cookies throughout
Demand deposits of individuals, partnershipa,
the afternoon. Knitting lessons Washington, D. C., today to plead on behalf of seven Western reading: "Welcome :t&lt;fuskle' ...
Wednesday &amp; Thursday
and-allons
- - - - - - - . - - - - - - - - - • • , ....
•••••33755
_,_
"'!". .
will begin the first week in states for federal Intervention In the resumption of a 101klay Amnesty for Deserters and
January 19-20
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
·
NOT OPEN
West Coaat dock strike by 15,000 longshoremen. Picket lines were Draft Resisters.".
February.
partnerahlpa, and corporations - - - - - - - - - - - - 8,'128,192.81
posted at 24 ports In California, Oregon and Washington Monday
Muskie again assailed Nlmn
. Deposits of United States Gowmment - - - - - - - - - - • 101,174.75
after a 22-hour marathon negotiating session between the in a rally speech Monday night
Deposl~ of States and political subdivisions - - - - • - - - - 1,235,185.94
longshoremen and shippers broke down over the financing of a before 400 persons gathered at
Certified
and offlcel'll' c;becks, etc. - • - - - - - - - - • . - • 91,208.26
$5.2 million guaranteed arurual wage. Oth~ issues, Including a downtown hotel to nominate
TOTAL DEPOOITS • . - . - • • • • • " $14;038,109.32
the 38 delegates to run at~arge
jurisdiction over container han&lt;!llng, wa.i reportedly. settled.
(a) Total deniand dep!JII.ts - - - - - - - - H566.G3'1.Sa
The Nixon admlnistratlon said congressional action ''may be In May,
(b)
Total time and savtnga deposita - - - - - f 9,472,571.79 ·
.
."The economic ,obj~ctive of
the only remedy" to prevent the new walkout from crippling the
Other llabWlles • • • • - • .. - • - - - - ·• - • • . - 85 261119
nation's economy. ''The collective bargaining process bas the Nixon admlnistratjon is a
TOTAL l.JABILITJES • • • • ~ • •. • • • • • • • • ~..123:m:51
broken down irreparably In the West Cout dock strike," McCall jobless rate' 40 per cent higher
:·
c•
.
'
RESERVES ON LOANS SECURITIES
·
than when he took office,,..
said Monday night. "Immediate congreaslonal action to settle
~· for bild debt loeses _on loans
.
Muskle said.
· the controversy is mandatory If the public Interest is to trans(lie!·up pq,rsuant to IRs l'llllnp) - - - - - - - - - • - - ••• !83.8!1.90
cend the Interest of either labor or management In this
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES • - - • • $83,8!1.90
Veteraas Memorial Hospital
llituation." McCall said be represented the governol'll of
CAPlrAL ACOOUNTS
ADMITrED- Hilda Warth,
California, Washington, Hawall, Alaska, Idaho and Montana.
Reedsville; Donald Hunnel,
E&lt;julty capital-total - - - - - • - - - - - • • •
- 1,038,219.87
Common Stock-total par value • • •
Pomeroy; Barbara Snidel)
:100,000.00
No. shares authorized 8,1100
Pomeroy; Harrison Robinson,
No. shares outstanding 8,1100
Letart, W.Va.; Cheryl Dillon,
. Reedsville; Paul Burns,
Surplus - - - - • - • • , • • • • •
600,000.00
Pomeroy; Joe Halfhlll,
UnOJvided profits. - - • • - • '. • - •
238.219,87
Cheshire; Elsie Pooler,
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS • - - - • • •
'
!1.038,219.87
r
Pomeroy; Franklin Martin;
.)'
TOTAL l.JABILITIES, RESERVES, AND
Middleport; James Durbin,
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS . .. • • - $15,243,440.28
Mason; Melinda Groves,
MEMORANDA
Middleport; Lori Casto,
Average of total, di!polits for the iS calendar
Mason; Albert Roush, Middays ending wit11 call diaie· - - - - - ~ ·- - - - - - - - - - f13,740,S32.30
••• #riiA
dleport.
,
Average of total loans for the !5 calendar
·
·
DISCHARGED ..;... Hobart
days ending with can date - - - - ... - • - - - - - - - ~ u;ao.,872.'84 . ,?
Add charm and richness at lowt&lt;Cost
Day, Mildred Hudson, Mildred
from (!Ur
·Roush, Gary Erlewlne, Donald
Quick and Easy to install
Martin, !lolly Humbel.
I, Maxine Griffith, Cashier, of the lb!&gt;ve-named ba111! do hereby !leclare ·
for PORCHES • PATIOS • POOLS
that this report ol condition is tru.e
correct to the best !i
knowledge and
belief.
'
. .
•
• ROQM DIVIDERS • STAIRWAYS

MIGs .invade Laos .·Air
Se!--..1 Alfter'

'

John Otsinger
Of Dayton Dies

'

Mrs. Oarke

Dies Tuesday

Bargains All Over The·Store
in the January Sale

At Elberfelds In Pomeroy

b

POMEROY NATIONAL BANK

~-wm.•.,v,y,wm.~,

•.M;QN~~-"'il'o-..;vn;v.•.·

MEIGS THEATRE

Mu. skie

PRlCES ARE RIGHT

"'

--

/

~

-

ORNAMENTAL IRON

BUDGET
SHOP I

-· On~ s549
4' Sect'IOn·......••••.•..•.••••.
The Department Store of Building Since 1915.

\

BAKER

·FI-NISHING .
SAME DAY
SE.RVICE

•

Pomeroy Cernent Block Co.

..SHIRt

•
flllllWI
MltKiPolf,O.

\

•

In At 9-0ut At 5

ana

.

my

Moine Gi-lmth
We, the~ dlleeton attest the COi1~b1.;.. o~ this~ of condition lind dedare tblt It hu been ermined by ua llli!IID the, best ol owknowledge .and 'bel!" Ia true lind COllect.
U..a ll1btleller
Alfred M. n uMd - Dlrecton
,.
,Eldoa J!!, WMIII

~

Tbe I!Cbool newl!pllper at the
Medica,! Callege of Georgia is
"T11e Cadaver."

.'

'

e'

enttne

.

.

Weather
Increasing cloudiness
tonight, lows in the mid :Ins to
mid 30s. Cloudy with rain likely
Thursday and· a little _warmer,
highs in the mid 40s !&lt;&gt; mid 50s·.

/)evoted To 'lJw lnter~u Of 'I~ Meigs-Mawn Area

.

VOL XXIV NO. 196

POM EROY-M IOOLEPORT, OHIO

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1972

Sidewinder Gets ·MIG21
•

'L

'

.

'

'

*'=*'';'¥S~1"'~"':m;s:s;:;:::~,w.~·~.=::::=::x~-::.~::::::::m:"*1

Miller
Irked

Real Shocker in N~on Budget

i

U. S. R econ Aircraft

· ·.

der eovy Fire from
n
*SuJ.ace Ar·r sr·les
,
J• .

WASHINGTON (VPI) -Pres'ldentNixon will send ~ T T.
u
Congress a red-Ink federal bl.;dget Moaday caDing, for
V
l lI P
.
spending of about $246 biDion In .the fiscal year th~_t
begins oest Jaly l, govermnen.t sources said taday.
:::l
JlllS.
Thespendlngflgurewlllbearecord-asallrecent W
I
•.1:1.
1r~.1
federal bude~!ls have been. II will show a deficit; ~
f h
probably between $10 billion and $20 bUllon, making 11 ~&lt;
SAIGON (UP!) - A U.S. Navy F4·mlssile.flring jet 1g ter
. the 1'2aibudgetln the.last 13 yearilln which spending ~ shot down a North Vietnamese MIG21 over North Vietnam
I
0··~ shorUy after American reconnaissance planes came under a
excteded revenues. ·
t-i
8ut the biggest shocker may be the ad- ~ , heavy barrage of Communist surface-to-air missiles and anmlnialralloa'sofficlal re-&lt;!stlmate of the deficllfor the =~ tialrcraft fire, the U.S. command reported today.
~
:~
It was the first North Vietnamese warplane shot down since
current flseal year that ends June 30. Government ;~,:~
.d
of the So · t d MIG
sources said 11 would top $30 bllUou, perhaJ18 coming
another F4 Pllantom downe one
VIe -rna e . s on
*-'0
billion
May
28,
1970.
l t0
,
c ose ~
•
··~
The aerial dogfight In which the F4's "Sidewinder" missiles
•' ............
..t~,....,
·"' ··~·~~·;•;:;:;:;!';;:o•o•;!o:;.::•;o;•;•;••:.:.:·
..··:·:·:···~«!::».:t&lt;:!:;z:s~:s~::::g::~:8:·
::~ found· their targ·et came over the Quang Lang airfield near Ha
,..••.............o!;o;.o;.=
................
..... . x.o:.o....... ».
»:.••.

ij

WASHINGTON (UPI) . Rep. Clarence E. Miller, ROhio, said today too many
cougre!srnen are off on trips
when they should be here
working and ttie result is, 1m
"erid-of...eason rat race" to dO
the· work that bas backed up.
Miller has Introduced legislation In the House of Representatives that corresponds
with a constitutional amendment offered In the Senate by
Sen. Margaret Chase Smith, RMaine, expelling any member
whO misses 40 per cent of the
roll tall votes. ·
RACINE . - The Earl P.
"I have no quarrel with presIdential ropefuls, or travelers, Cross fall))ly has been named
or reimbursed lecturers '- as the Farmers Home Adlong as such activities do not ministration Athens area
result in their dereliction. of Farm Family of the Year for
collgressional duties," ~er 1971:
said..
,
Milton E. Roush, FHA
"Increasingly, chronic supervisor, said the Cross
absenteeiSm has retarded the . family ' was selected as the
progress of congres,slonal outstanding farm family from
business by makil!g It difficult, the Athens, Hocking, Meigs
If not Impossible, to obtain a and Vinton counties area.
The family owns and
simple quorum to conduct
operates a 215-acre farm at
buslni!Jlll.
"Congressional absenteeism Racine Route 1. Mr. Cross has
results ln.·legislative backlogs always lived on this farm. Mr.
which, In tum; force the Con- and Mrs. Cross have used
gresa Into an ~nnual end-of- Farmers Home Administration
session rat race to debate and services· through a farm
act on matters whiCh should ownership loan and operation
have· been deliberated and loans.
acted upon much sooner,"
Members of the family are
Miller said. "These fire runs active members of the First
happen every year -without Baptist Church and are Grange
fall and certainly without 'members. Mr. and Mrs, Cross
justification."
have five daughters.
Miller uld be bas answered
The Farm Family of the
every roll call since c~ to Year is Sponsored by the FHA
Congress in 1987.
and New Holland Division,

*

.
•
y
H
,
d
~:nr;~=:~r~~!e~~:z~e
Fam.il
0 n 0 re ,
~,;o:..;

~

News•.. in BriefS
By United Prenlnternatloaal

COLUMBUS- OHIO'S 49,000 STATE workers will not get
pay lncrf:iises Friday because the federal pay board first wants
to see whether they fall within the guidelines. State Auditor
Joseph T. Ferguson said TueSday employes would get their usual
Checks this week, but "hopefully we'll be able to Include the pay
raises. granted by the legislature· Saturday In the Feb. 4
paycll~ks."
.
"It'snot the fault of anybody In Ohio that state employes w1U
not get the pay raises this Friday," Ferguson said. "It's because
President Nixon's Pay Board hasn't approved them.

SAN FRANCISCO- ABAN ON the shipment of all military
.cargo,.lilcludlng guns and ammunition for the Vietnam War, was
ililposed by West Coast shippers Tuesday In a move to hasten a
settlement In 'the renewed longshoremen's strike.
,
llblps currently In port for mllltary equipment and supplies
were being loaded today but they will be the last vessels
available the Paclflc Maritime Association said. About 70
merchant shipa caught at sea by the strike have diverted to
vancouver, B. c., straining the port facilities there, while other
vessels headed toward Ensenada, Mexico for unloa&lt;!ing.
EGYPTIAN PRESIDENT ANWAR SADAT SAID Tuesday
the United States has entered the baUle against the Arabs and
has placed ltaelf In a 'position slmll,ar to the situation America
faces In·VIetnam .
sadat spe!lklng to a new 32-rnan cabinet formed to prepare
Egypt for' a new Middle East war, said the decision to allow
Israel to manufacture American military hardware put the
United States In a ''flagranUy aggressive position, similar only to
the role America Is playing In Vietnam."
.
.
.
SPACE CENTER, HOUSTON - T~ NATION'S second
pair !i moonwalkers and seven space roolues have been chosen
to orbit 270 miles above earth nen year in a laboratory the size of
a lhree-bedrooM rouse.
·
.
· Charles "Pete" Conrad Jr. and Alan L. Bean, who explored
the moon's Ocean of Storms together ln ,N01(embar, 1969 on
. ApoJlo 12, \Viii comman.d the first and second three:man crews
selected for the First U. S. space station, Skylab: The space
agency annoiUiced the! crew assignments Tuesday. The third
crew ts an all-rookie contingent commanded by Gerald P. Carr,
39 a Marine jet pilot from Denver with a masters degree in
ae'ronautlcal engineering from Princeton Universicy.

I
1 ..

•I L......

~-

·

·

·

'
Sperry Rand Corp. This is the

first year for the program in
Ohio. Selection of the outstanding farm families is
based ori their progress in the
farming operation, production
records, management prac!ices, quality of total farm
operations, noteworthy accompliSlpnents in community
activities and
general
c.;.peration of the family.

coast about 120 mil_es north of

Minutes before a U.S. reconnaissance plane and it~ es&lt;Wrts
came ul)(ier .heavy antiaircraft fire from the CommuniSt ~se.
U.S. spokesmen said eight of
:
the Soviet-supplied SAM2 had been building up resey~tly .
· missiles and ·bursts of con- A F4 was jumped 'by a
ventional antiaircraft fire squadron of MIG21s and 'shot
aimed · at the Navy RA5 down last Dec. 18. Two other
reconnaissance plane and its Phantoms were chased by the.
escorts caused minor damage MJGs until they ran out of fuel
to One A7 Corsair jet fighter. and crashed near the norihern
They said, however, that all port city of Haiphong.
the planes returned safely to
The United States also has
their aircraft carriers in the stepped up bombing raids as
Tonkin Gulf with no casualties. troop withdrawals continue.
Air aftivity over the north About one-third of the entire U.
S. B52 bomber fleet was
reported carrying oui the
heaviest raids in almost two
years against Communist
positions in the Central

Printed
Linoleum
Doctors' Fees
Hi~:~~~no!P~~~~~i~~~i
On Show
May b·e Posted
1

WASHINGTON (UP!) -The October, but we will oppose 'it,"
admfl!istl-ation will ask Con- an AMA spokesman said today.
gress" n~xt week to require "We do not believe that the
doctors \ and other health regulation requiring that
service ; proyiders to .keep ; Jillysicillns llll!intaip a schedule
pennanent schedules of their .of fees will have any effect on
fees and charges available for stabilizing prices. Patients
ttie public after President rarely choose their physician
Nixon's . wage-price controls on the basis of a fee.
expire. !
Physicians are usually ch&lt;isen
The iegulations will also on the basis of ability."
apply to hospitals, nursing
HEW plans to announc~ the
homes and health insurance proposal at a news conference
carriers but not to phar- early next week and to submit
mac!sts1accordiqg to sources it to the Ways and Means
at the Health Education and Committee as part of its
Welfare' Department (HEW). 'National Health Insurance.
The American Medieal As· 'Partnership Act:
sociatlon (AMA), Informed of
National health insurance
the up~mlng admlnistr~tion legislation will be a major item
proposal, promised oppos,ition in the . current session ,of
that thteatened to touch off Congress;with plans offered by
another o;loctor-governl!lent the ·administration and · Sen .
l)l\ttle oyer federal moves Into EdwardM: Kennedy, D-Mass.,
private medicine.
holding the spotlight. The
Docto~s currently are not administration pliln ' would inrequired to list their fees. The crease private health inonly con\rol to which they have surance coverage for workers
been subjected during the post- and their families, while the
freeze era is that their fees Kennedy organjzed bill would
may not lise more than 2.5 per charge taxtiayers more for
cent annually when justified by cradle-to-grave Insurance for
costs. '
all 'Americans.
HEW told the House Ways
and Means Commlttee last Oct.
19 to expect legislation to help
LOCAL TEMPS
consumers become better
The
temperature
in downshoppers , for health services
and to control the 12.9 per cent town Pomeroy at 11 a. m.
Wednesday was 50 degrees,
annual rise in health costs.
"We didn't say anything last under sunny skies.

waves of the Stratofortresses,
based in Thailand, dumped
about 900 tons of high explosives during the past, three
days on the thickly jl)ngled
mountains near where !South
Vietnam, Laos and Ca111bodia
meet.
Allied ·intelligence had
reported North VietnameS'e
and V'iet Cong forces massing
in the area for what. they said
will ·be a new Communist of.
,fensive timed for ~sident
Nixon's Feb. 21 visit to China.

x~-.:;-;;;:w$i.:'*);:~l$::»"?.::.--:q»,~:se;.:~

i

FALLING OUT
CONCORD, N.H. IUPI) Rep. John M. Ashbrook's top
campaign aide for the New
Hampshire primary has
resigned In protest :or the
selection of Rep. George E.
Gordon as tbe ' Ohio
Republican's slate campaign chairman.
Richard Howard said the
appointment made II Impossible for him to slay on
Ashbrook's staff because he
regarded •'Gordon as a rightwing screwbali who gives
respoasible conserv.alives
like myself a bad name."
Ho.ward worked · In the
successful 1968 'election
campaign · of President
Nixon In New Hampshire.

MASON - A linoleum
printing show sponsored by the
Wahama High School Art
Department is on display at
Wahama High School this
week. ·
Called multiprints, they can
be printed over and over. The
technique includes drawing a
desired design directly onto the
linoleum block in reverse.
. The block is carved and the
unwanted linoleum is removed
using special linoleum cutting
tools. The block is inked with a
water soluble printing ink and
the block is placed on the type
paper the · student chooses.
Pressure is applied to the
block, and the ink is transferred to the paper. All white
or light areas represent the
part of the linoleum carved
away. The matte, or framing,
of the prints is equally important in presenting a finished
product.
Viewing the art display,
above, are, l-r, Neal Tennant,
Tony Grimm, Jack Slavin, art
instructor, Carol Johnson, and
Janet Harris .
At right, Jack Slavin,
Syracuse, art ,instructor at
Wahama High School, is shown
with footprints leading to the
print show on display at the
school. Students of the senior
and junior high schools took
part in the project. ,

...

.

SAIGON -U.S. B5ZII CARRIED out more raida against Viet
Cong positions near the area where Cam.bodia, Laos and Vietnam come together toaay In the heaviest aerial attacks on the
Central,Higblands In nearly two years. The attacks were the 11th
by the B52s In ·three days In the Central Highlands and the
bombers droppl!d more than 900 tons of bombs on what the
Communistlt call base area 690, a formidable stronghold that
straddles part ol each country.
·
The B52s blve dropped more than 1,000 tons of explosives in
· ·lheCentraiHigblanda In the paat '12bour'ln a·campalgn to blunt
wbat allied intelligence hu said will be a Communist offensive to
be timed for President Nixon's Feb. 21 visit to Ch\llll. Military
oblervers In Saigon said the North Vielnamese are detel'mined to
make a big lllllitary move juat before Nixon arrives In China to
dllcourage the Olin- froljl''seUJJw them out," lh the words of
Prellident Nguyen Van Thleu.
.

-,

I

The week of Feb. 5 to 11 was
set as Chaplain Week when
Drew Webster Post 39 of the
American Legion met Tuesday
night. Paul Casci said 1,000
pamphlets will be~ dlstributed
to area churches during the
week.
'
Charles Swatzel gave the
finance report which was
accepted. Me.mbers confined to
a hospital are Donald Hunnel,
Raymond Jewell, Arthur

CHESTER - The Chester
Volunteer Fire Department
answered 17 cans during 1971
holding proper.ty losses to a
mere $20,1100.
Calls answered by the
&lt; department were seven to
Orange Township, five in
Chester Township, · ope in
S&lt;~,li~bury, three in Olive and
one
in Bedford. An average of·
Casci Tueaday. The certlflcate, for services render.ed to the
10 men responde1 to the calls
U.S. P06tal Service, was sent to Mrs, Fultz by Clarence B.
with the department traveling
Gels, deputy postmaster of region five . Shown are, 1-r, Greg
350 miles. There were 200 rna~
Arnold, David Smith, Ronnie Eblin, Mrs. FUltz, Cascl , Ricky
hour&amp; expended.,
-&amp;nith, and Steve Manley .

1'

·~IPJiiASJimm THE heai'Y mail delivery during the
Cbrtstmaueason with a skit, "Piease·Mall Early," pupils of
Ml'll. Betty Eultz, Bradbury School, were presented. a Certificate 101 Appreciation by Midd~eport Postma 51 ~r Paul

Skinner and Gerald Wildermuth.
In other business, the MidWinter Conference was announced for Columbus on Jan.
30 with the national commander the principal speaker.
Past Commander Night of Post
39 will be held Jan. 26 with
wives and families invited.
A report or the Eighth
District conference last Sunday at Athens was given when
it was reported that the Eighth
District leads the state in the
"Gifts For Yanks" program.
Paul Casci is its chai!man.
Named to serve on the annual birthday party committee
were Leonard Jewell, Don
Hunnel and Casci. Members
agreed to charter a bus for
legionaires and friends to
attend one of the Cincinnati
baseball \Sames this year.
F~fresbments were served by
Roy Reuter.
The post has been commended by the department
commander for achieving its
membership quota of 324,
be(ore Jan. S.

Firemen Answer 17 Alarms
'

'

--

Week Planned

WINS GOLD BAR
COLUMBUS - Dennis L.
Weber, Rutland, has been
commissioned a second
lieutenant upon completion or
the U: S. Air Force Reserve
Officers Training Corps
program at Ohio State
University . Lt. Weber, sor, of
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Weber of
Main St., Rutland, also
received his B. S. degre~ in
· food technology. The lieutenant
is a 1967 graduate of Rutland
High School.

•••

MEMPHIS, TENN. -A CIVIL !\IGHTS leader ~ys he will
IConttnued on page 8)

"

•

The department has elected
1972 officers who include Bru(:e
Myers, president ; Harold
Newell, vice president; Robert
Wood, secretary; John
Wickham, treasurer; Victor
BAhr, trustee; Ross Cleland,
chief; Roy Christy, assistant
chief; Larry Cleland, captain;
Don Van Meter, news reporte~,
and Hobart Newell, Rober!' L.
Wood, Tom Gumpf, J;&gt;anny
Bissell, Richard LOdwick and .
Don Van Meter, lieutenants.

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